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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Tueldlly, February 14,1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Local School District honor rolls announced for secor1d nine weeks
Honor rolls for schools in the Brooks Johnson, Stephanie StoryFifth Grade: Josh Bass, Erin
·Meigs Local School Dislrict for the Schwab, Brandy
Bush, Rebecea Jacks, Josh Napper,
second nine weeks' grading period Shea, Joshua Simpson, Angel ~stal PenningiOO,
have been announced.
S10ne, Emily Story.
.
Kristy Puckeu, Misty Puclcett, JesSrudents caminJ 'a gmde of "B•
Pomeroy Elementary
sica Schuler.
or above in all !heir subjects to be
Kindergarten: Zachary Arms,
Sixth grade: Kendra Cleland,
lisled on the honor
Mark : Cozart, Andrew Garnes, Bethany McMillin, Fawnah
roll are as follows:
Kay Ia Grover, Courtney
McNcilan, Ben Mitchell, Eric
Bradbury Elementary
Haggy, Casey Hubbard, As~ Montgomery, Amber Roush.
Kindergarten: Shauna Clark, Knapp, Scotty Musser, Oro R ,
Salisbury Elementary
Kayla Diddle, Michael Felts, Bob- Hollie Richard, Britnee
First Grade: Derek Brickles,
Sauters, Dakota Smith, Michael Ashton Bush, Travis Butcher,
bieLcc, Bnmdon
Pearson, Bradley Ramsburg, Jen- Blaeuner, Ryan Chapman, Randy Matthew Meadows, Brooke
nifer Smith, Codie Turner.
Comns, Andy McAngus,
O'Bryant, Sabrina Oldaker, Rebec. Sixth Grade: Stephanie Wigal, Casey Richardson, Bradley Souls- ca Rader, Chris VanReeth,
aHA's; De~ek .Johnson, Zach by , Jerod Wyatt, Christeena Nicholas White.
Krautter, Carne Llghtfoot,
Young, Meghan Clelland,
Second Grade: Grant Arnold,
Leah Morrow, Tiffany Qualls, Jan Heather Elam, Mian Herman , Emily Ashley, April Coppiclc, AshStory, Rachel Taylor, Cassie Stephanie Hysell, Tomorrow Dawn ley Graham, Dusty
Vaughan.
Norman, Nate Riddle,
. Lee, Niki Lewis, Elsa Ohlinger.
Fifth Grade: ,Monica Moon, Ch_ri~ Ru!'~on, Brand~~ Shull,
Third Grade: Niklci Butcher,
Tara Wyau, all A s; Heather Fry, Ca1Um W1lliarnson,-Cec1ba Core, Ben Collins, Tia Pratt, Stacy
Corrie Hoover, Richard
·
Heather Finlc, Dustin
. Pullins, Derrick Randolph,
Michael, Rebecca Smith, Tyler Lyons, Jerry Pullins.
Jessica Roster.
Stewart
DHI: Hope Boring, Shawn Day,
Fourth Grade: Marc Barr, Ash. Fifth and sixth grade LD: Dustin Randy Lee, Tiffany Timmons, ley Eblin, Ashley Fields, Jon Halar,
Buleher, Ty Gonzalez.
.
Willie Zahran.
Chris Haning, ·
Fifth and sixth grade DH: ConDHII: Brandy Balcer, Alisha Meghan Haynes, Shawna Manley,
nie Willet, all A's; Crystal Beals, Cremeans Eddie Jones, Zachary Heather Riffle, Cory VanReeth,
Misty Clark, Samantha
Shuler A~y Stover.
· Melody Felts
Marshall. Jodie_ Reeves.
MH: Gene Buckley, Frank
Fiflh G~e: Delana Eichinger,
Harrisonville Elementary
Dermy, Angie Qleen, Ruth Snyder. , Levi Gillette, Mindy O'Dell.
Flfst Grade: Miranda Beha,
First Grade: Weston Yd'e Nalr:i-T_ravis Bu~bridge, Rachael Gard- ta Fitzpalriclt, Cody Hysell,
ner, J.B. Kmg, Amanda
Jeffers lilian
.
L,enigar, Nichole Mull, Joshua JeiWns Tiffany McDaniel Abby
Neutzling, Krista! Norris, Joshua Stewart Alison Woods Mrranda
Spires, William Taylor,
YOIUig Chelsea
. '
Kaleigh Ward.
Dent 'Amanda Jeffers Jordan
Second Grade: Miranda Casteel, Shank Whitney Thoen~ Jac:ob
Jodi Donahue, Peggy Duff; Travis Venoy; Joshua Venoy,
'
Hayes, Carl Noel,_
. .
Jeremy Vincent.·Daniel Young• .
Jenna ..Ydt, Charlie Williamson.
· Second Grade: Jerri Bentley,
Th1td Grade: Maegan Dodson, Sarah Bush, Brittany Cremeans,
· Sarah Lee, Bobbt NaJl!Xll:.
Amanda Hoyt, Regan
Fourth Grade: Jess1ca Preast, s huler Erin Bauserman Jason
Derrick: Fackler, Wesley Call, Jarni DeMo~s. Trevor Depoy, Ivan
Hayes:
.
Eblin, Eddie Fife, Jade
Fifth Grade: Joehne Allen, Hershman Annette Sheets Clare
Amber Haning, Jennifer Reeves.
Sisson. '
'
Si~th Grade: Christopher DodThird Grade: Jaynee Davis,
son, Jonathan Maue, Albert Jenny Proffitt, Brandi Thomas,
Stearns.
Angela Wison Kara
Middleport Elementary
Buffington ~ Fetty Nichole
. Kinderg~rten: flolley Geary, Harper. '
.
_'
If:&gt;•··
Brmany Hanmg, S_teven Hudson._ . f_®IIh. Grade:·.Casste BK~~~~'
Beth Hysell, Joey Kimes, '
Jassiline Carter, Misty Clay, I
Matthew Landers, Cayla Lee. Joel Davis Maria Drenner
Lynch, Christy Miller, Danny Mor- Katie 'Jeffers, Brand~n Ramsburg,
rison, Danielle
Jeremy Roush, Shannon· Soulsby,
Phillips, Kay Ia Priddy, Katie Rode- Jarrod Stewart,
haver, Amanda Schartiger, Jordann Jennifer Zielinslci, Candice Fetty,
Thomas.
.
Robyn Freeman, Jason Murdoch,
Dustm Vanlnwagen, Cass1e \Yhan. Michele Runyon,
Christy Capehart, Kasey Wmter, Ben See.
Michelle Weaver,
Fifth Grade: Stephanie Bell, JesBeth €rem cans, Nickie Bentz, Ash- sica Roush Mary Schultz, Nichole
ley Browning, Cody Davidson, Runyon. '
Laura Eakins, Sarah
Sixth Grade: Michael Day, Cur.Engle, Billy Fink, Chris Goode, tis Hanstine, Melissa Houser, \.ons 11 1
Erinne Kennedy, Tommy Laven- Pickens, Brenna
der, Chalsie Manley,
J/' Sisson, Andy Davis, Ashley HanDavid Poole, Whitney Smith, nabs, Sarah Houser, Andrea
Adam Wilson.
,. Krawscyzn, Shannon
First Grade: Justin Bell, Mau Price, Candice Rausch, Adam
Boyd, Samantha Cole, Michael Shank, Chris Ward.
Durst, Jamie Ellis, Kayla
·Rutland Elementary
Fetty, Alex Hindy, Matt Imboden,
First Grade: Josh Bolin, '""• ··•
Brittany Jacks, Brandon Kimes, Bush, Valerie Diddle, Carira GardMeghan Leslie, Kayla
ner, Samantha Gilbert,
McCarthy, Amber McKown, Eric Adam Humphreys, Brittany Hysell,
VanMeter, Mela Whan, Nathan Sarah Dawn Jenlcins,Tayrn Lentes,
i\ecker, Ashley Engle,
·
Jameson Raines,
Aaron Fife, Byron Haggy, Anna Andrew Stump.
Hartenbach, Laura Hollen, Joshua ·
Second Grade: Kelby Brown,
Kimes, Tara Lee, Jo ·
Justin Coleman, Shane Collins, J.R.
Beth Rixlehaver, CilrY Shea, Tan- Ellis, Kris Ginther,
isba Thomas. ·
·Courtney Rife, Adam Snowden,
Second Grade: Brandon Carpen- Amanda Tobin, Renee ~ailey, Ashtee, Drew Conde, Erin CuUums, Joe ley ·Baylor, Michael
.
Hindy,CassieLee,
Oavis, Jarrid Eskew, Zachar{.
Tiffany Manley, Megan Mayes, Faulk, Adam Hicks, Beth Kau.f ,
Carrie Michael, Kim Miller, Madison King, Heath
Michelle Neece, Lucas RouSh,
Nelson, Dona:van Richmond,
Brooke Venoy, Donnie Whan, Miranda Simpkins, Matthew
. Elizabeth Well, Natasha Wise. Smith, Kimberly'l'aylor, Beth
Elizabeth Thornton, Lisa
Williams.
Gheen, Ashley Johnson, Mike
Third Grade: Tyler Dames,
Clay, Eric Collums, Chuckie Nicole McDaniel, Christina Miller,
Davis, Hollie Dugan, Justin
Amanda Priddy,
•
Goode, Matt Holley, Ashley Litch- Miranda Stewart, Corey Vaughan,
. field, Casey Manley. Jordan Raw-. Jarnitha Willford.
son, Katie Reed, Anna
Fourth Grade: Brook Bolin,
Sayre, Kasi Smith, Mike .Stewart, Melissa Cremeans, Hollie Ferrell,l t.H{:±
Matt Thomas, Chet Wigal, Cassi Crystal Jacks, Jessica
· .
Windsor.
·
Justice, Mallory King, Rachel MoeThird Gntjle: Ashley Payne, all ris, Jennifer Priddy, Jonathan
A's; Amber Alderson, Jamie Chap- Sears, Allison
man, Katie Childs,
Willianson.
Jeremy Dingey, Ashley_Halley,
Fifth Grade: Brad Baylor,
Rogetta Shoemaker, Angie Smith, Gabriel Jenkins, Ryan Kauff Dar'
Kindra Snouffer,
rick Knapp, Johnny
''
Stephan Stamper. T.J. Timmons, Lentes, Amber Snowden.
Rhonda Wagner, David Boyd, Page
Sixth Grade: Derrick Bolin, AliBradbury, Kenny
son Hays, B.J. Kennedy, Beatrice
Carsey. Candace Casey, Jonathan Morgan, Carl
.
.
Larkins, Erica Poole, Jennifer Rickard.
D~nn,Jessica Howell, ·
LD Intermediate: Erick Payne.
Ktm Johnson, Beth Landers, John
DH Primary: Allen Caldwell,
Roush.
Kimberly Miller, Marcus Ward.
. Fourth Grade: Abram Sayre,
DH Intermediate: Debbie BarkHannah Woolard, Lucy Howerton, er.
,
all A's; Heather Phalin.
Salem Center Elementary
Qeth Wilfong, Andy Hysell, Sara
First Grade: Nathan Argabright,
Casto, Carrie Darst, Brittany Shawn Bass, Matt Haefner,Julia
Denny, Casey Dwtfee,
Johnl'Dn, Kimberly
~achary Gilkey, Cole Haggerty,
Johnson, Donna Lambert,' Alexandra Mill:hell, kelly Napper, Joey
1
Sears, Harley ~·
Smallwood. Zachary Weber.
Second Grade: Jeffrey Baughman, Eric Burnem, Zachary Bush,
Jason Crisp, Julia
Cross, Nathan Grimm, Kayla Icen· Audiences can talce a scat - and hower, Aaron lhle, Amanda Johntake a side - at "Oieanna: A Power sen, Samantha
Play."
·
Pierce, Kimberly Reynolds, Carrie
The spellbinding drama ·by the Rife, Curtis Vanan.
Pulitzer prize-winning author
Third Grade: Donald Barnell,
David Mamel, will be staged 8 Joanna Bowersock, Jessica Curfp.m. Feb. 2~. at Te~pleton:Biack- .· m~, Aubrie Kopec, · · .
btlm Alumm Memorial Auditorium Bnttany Powers, Joshua Ray, Jessi. as part of the Performing Arts ca Smith, Philip Smith.
· Fourth Grade: Rachel
Senes.
Tickets are on sale at the audi- Argabright, Lindsay Bolin, Travis
IOCUim box office, 12 to S:30 p.m. Burrt&lt;:m. Ashley Colwell,
.
Monday through Friday. _For more Austm Cross, Megan Haefner;
infonnation or to order ockets call Knstal Johnson, Kelly Johnston,
Carrie Myers.
593-1780.

Nlllhan

·J - - ·

Sixth Grade: Whitney Ashley;
Shandi Bobb, Brandy Graham,
Abby Hubbard, Carson
Midkiff.
.
· Meigs Junior High
Seventh Grade: Orion Barreu,
Steve Beha, Stacey Brewer, Beverly Burdette, Charla
· Burge, Melissa Davis, Lee Ann
DiU, Brant Dixon, P.J. Erwin, Marjorie Halar, Chan tell
Hoffman, Stephanie Kopec, Chris
Krawsczyn, Tangy Laudermilt,
Crystal Leach, Joseph
McCall, Nick Michael, Amanda
Miller, David Napper, Amber
Ptzkins, Seth Rawson, Rena
Riggs, Tommy Roush, Ashley
RuJ;'e. Robert Setlock, Jennifer
Shrimplin, Klye Smiddie,
Jeremiah Smith, Josh Sorden, Julie
Spaun, James Stanley, Wesley
Thoene, Shawn
Workman, Stephanie YOIUig.
Eighth Grade: Lacey Banks,
Vanessa Blevins, Beth Call, Melissa Darnell, Tricia Davis, ·
John Davidson, SIOney Day, Saratt
Dean, Robbie Diddle, Meredith
Felts, Jason Harris,
Misty Hart, Melissa Holman, Virginia Howerton, Amy Johnson, Jes-

sicaJoltn1011,
Shawnita Johnson, Matt Justice,
· v""'NJOUy,
---~ TJ• KiDg, AndY
Kristma
Kitchen, Kelli
Lightfoot, Jenni Mankin, Patrick
Martin, Tamara O'Dell, Stephani
· Pickens, Franco
Rumono, Bobby R upe, BJ. Snu'th •
Rebelcah Smith, Georginia Spears,
April Slewart, Lisa
Taylor, Jeremr Thomas, Jeremy
Thompson, Bridget Vaughan.
MeigsHigb
Ninth Grade: Crystal Eblin,
Elizabeth Farley, Emily Fowler,
DanieUe Gruescr, Myca
Ha;&gt;:iles, David Johnson, Michael
Letfheit, George Miller, Wendy
Shrimplin, Amy Smith,
Sabrina Smith, Eddie Trader,
Aaron Vaughan, Man Williams,
Sandra Young.
Tenth Grade: Adam Barrett,

Megan ·s-maen.
Eleventh Grade: Amber Benneu. Anne Brown.
fi"John c.d, Carrie Counta, Tem ue,
Jake Gannaway, Al~n Gerlach,
Jessyca Hatfteld, Devon HiU, Amy
Hill, Doroth1
.
Leifheit, Futh C
RDIIB,h'Lori Rasaell,
Kim Smith, ynl 11 tewart,
Tabitha Swearingen.
Candice Walker, Angela Wells,
DonalTweldyfthosGL -'•: Sarah Anderson,
,..,..
Anthony Barren. Christy Dill, Tara
Erwin, Wendy
·
Faw Jarrod Folmer, Keith Friend,
Ketiy Grueser, Jered Hill, Ann
Hoeft. Heidi Huffman,
Kimberly Janey, John Jeffers,
Mandy Jones, Lori M.;:Ghee,
Rebecca Meier, Shilo Moore,
Matthew Morris, Rhonda Oiler,
Jamie Ord, Shawn Petrie, Reggie
o

s

~:L~~~JZ" Doidge, Elim- ~~~s~~l!~~~a

Russell,
Ervin, 'Justin Fields, Jennifer Sheridan Russell, A~ril Smith,
Garey, Tara Gruescr. Liberty King. BrentSmid\.;sbaJmc?n Ttaats, ·
Erin Krawsczyn,
. Jaclyn SwariZ, L1sa auerson,
Jessica McElroy, Andrew Myers, . Jason TaylOr, Siephannie Thomas,
Stacie Reed, Josh Roberts, Amy Crystal VauJdwl,
Savage, Eric Siders,
M1chelle Ward, Amanda Well,
Beverly Stewart, .Jessica Stobart, Walu:r Williams, Julie Young.

..,.

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Low tonl~htln 30s. Cloudy.

Tburodoy, cloudy. High In 40s.

•
Vol. 45; NO. 203

•

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 15; 1995

Copyrlght1995

Blames TV commercials

Cremeans has biggest campaigri ·debt
Rep. Frank Cremeans. with the delegation's largest debt oocause ~f
the investment he. made m television ads across southern Ohio.
"Look at my district geographi:
catty and the numoor of media outleis· that I have," Cremeans said
Tuesday . "When you're talking
about five TV markets you're casting a wide 0 et. It's absolutely
essential if'you're going 10. have
some sort of name ID." .
Cremeans, one of four new
Republicans representing Ohio,
began 1995 with a campaign com-

f.; ,._

·,'

,~ .,

.,

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APR
DISCUSSES PROGRAM- Jolin D. Hager, left, area coontina, tor for the Ohio Operating Engineers Apprenllcesblp Fund,
addressed lhe Meigs Couaty Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
afternoon on the apprenticeship program for training heav_r
equipment operators. On rigbt is Chuck Kitchen, chamber president. ,

UTE -FINANCING
•up To.48 Mo1ths

or

s600 CA$H BAC
.

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mittee that had spent $385,589 newcomers were preparing for
more than contributors had donat- Washington and Ohio fund-raisers.
ed.
Cremeans said the campaign
But almost all of that took in around $26,000 in January,
$359,629 - was money owed to had fund-rai sers scheduled for
Cremeans himself.
March and was trying 10 eliminate
Ainong the freshmen, Rep. the red ink by April.
Steve LaTourette had the secondThe LaTourette campaign was
highest debt, $147,075 . But sec - on a similar track, said treasurer
ond-term Rep. Martin Hoke still Scott Coleman: "We should satisfy
had not recovered $174,000 of his all of our debt by the end of March,
own money he invested in his 1992 we hope."
campaign.
Coleman said the campaign had
Cremeans pulled in $18,295 in · paid off about $14,000 in the new
year-end contributions, compare&lt;l year. He was also working on a
with $8,814 for LaTourette. Both Federal Election Commission

repon 10 correct an error that over- increasingly common. Those who
stated the year-end debt by nearly can afford 10 invest large sums usu$7,000. .
ally can count on recovering the
Like Cremeans, LaTourette money if they .win a seat in
went out on a limb to keep his carn- Congress and the accompanying
aign going. He took out bank access to political action commitoans that make up about a third of tees. .
But ~&gt;!ling an officeholder does
the debt He also has large past-due
bills from his campaign's political not guarantee a steady stream of
consultant, adverusmg consulrant · donations. The best example of that
and various small vendors.
·
may be Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio.
Glenn ran for his party's presiSpokesman Larry Van Hoose
de~ial
nomination in 1984. As
said Hoke intends 10 resume fundraising. "The debt will be retired," 1995 began, his presidential committee remained $3,294,826 in
he said.
Campaign debts of that sort are debt

r.

A Meigs County judge granted aiKJ refuses 10 hire additional certian injunction Tuesday partially fied nurses' aides 10 fill vacancies
restricting picketers from demon- leading 10 declining patient care.
A wtion leallet distributed earli;
strating in front of a Pomeroy dener accuses Overbrook of creating a
tist's office. . .
,
The order from Common Pleas skilled care wing staffed only by
Court Judge Fred W. Crow 111 licens¢ practical nurses.
Brown's attorneys arg~ed that
affects District 1199, the Health
Care and Social Service Union, Brown's business, H.D. Brown
SEIU, AFL-CIO. which has held DDS, Inc., is an Ohio Professional
informational pickets concerning Corporation, wholly separate from
Overbrook Center in Middleport, a Overbrook Center.
According to Crow's order, the
nursing home.
.
union
is permanently (estrained
The wtion held an informational
picket on Feb. I in front of the · from interferin,g with Brown's
office of dentist Harold Brown, business, his employees and reprewho is a principal in Meigs County sentatives, patients and others havCare Center, Inc., a general partner ing business with Brown, according
in Meigs Center, Limited, an Ohio to the order which took effect
Limited Partnership doing business Tuesday.
as Overbrook Center in Middleport.
The union is also restrained
Overbrook employees voted 62- from interfering with ingress,
5 on Nov. I0 to join the union egress or vehicular traffic at the
which claims OBNC continues to . office.
appeal
the results of the election
In addition, no more than four
.

State Board of Education
declares independence .
COLUMBUS _._ The State Board of Education declared its
independence Tuesday, saying it will stroagly oppose Gov.
George Voinovich's attempts to make il an appointed body,
"The members of the State Board are accountable to lbe
public," Board President Virginia Purdy said in a news release
after Tuesday's meeting. "Tbe public should keep Its correal
ability to use the power of their vote to determine who Is on ~e
board settiorecl,ueational polic:y for all ,t he schOQis In tb•s
state." .
The 11-member 'boa.r d unanimously passed a resolution
opposing Voinovicb's plan to take it over. Voincrvicb aslced for
the change in his two-year budget proposal.

00

the road into a ditch . The driver, · ship when the driver attempted 10
Patricia Taylor, 28, of Racine. was
turn on Gibson Road. Other probnot injured.
.lems occurred on Bailey Run, Gold
School starling times were Ridge and Briar Ridge, McElroy
delayed in both the Meigs and said.
Eastern School Districts. Meigs , Bus problems were minimal in
started an hour later than usual, and both Eastern and Southern Local
Eastern had a two hour delay in School DistrictS with buses slaying
·off township roads, according to
starting time.
Buses in all three districts srayed Southern Supt. James Lawrence
off many of the slick secondary and personnel in the office of Eastroads. Paul McElroy, tranS)iortation em Supt. Rol!ald Minard.
Bob Byer. Meigs County Emerdirector of Meigs Local, reported
that five of the district buses expe- gency Medical Service director,
reponed a.call for assistance when
riepced trouble negotiating,town. ship roads . He said there was no . a person fell in Middleport midmornin·g. The name of the person
bus damage or personal injury in
any of the incidents. One bus did or a condi1ion report was not
released.
slide off the road in Scipio Town•

Injunction restricts picketing in front of dentist's office

.

"

STARTING AT$7,66900ir

.

Sports, Page 4

...

''

'

·NOW·

0/eanna' to
be staged

Buckeye 5:
1-8-13·18-25

*

1.995 FORD ASPIR-E

.'

9074

lane and Slr\ICk a utility pole. The
The freezing rain early Wednesvehicle was heavily damaged and
day morning created slick road surfaces resulting in one major and towed from the scene.
Whittekind was transported by
several minor accidents in Meigs
.
the
Pomeroy Unit of the EmergenCowtty.
A Middleport youth was cy Medical Service to Veterans
charged with DUI and failure to Memorial Hospital where he was
control as the result of an accident treated for minor injuries and
.
on West Main St in Pomeroy near released.
Several
minor
ice-relaled
accithe intersection of Legion Terrace
dents
were
still
under
investigation
at 6:10 a.m. Ice on the road contributed to the· accident, Pomeroy by the department of Meigs County .
Sheriff James Soulsby late
police reported.
·
The charges were filed against Wednesday · morning. The only
Shawn Whitteltind, 17, who was report compleled was for'an accidriving a 1987 Ford owned by San- dent at 7:38 a.m. on State Route
dra Stewart, Mason, w, Va. Police 338. Deputy Ralph Trussell, ihe
said that Whittekind was north- inves~gating officer, said that the
bound when he lost control. The car hit a patch of ice and went off
car went across the southbound

OFFER GOOD FEB. 11TH THRU FEB. 27TH

$600.

Pick 3:
787
Pick 4:

Middleport youth charged with DUI after wreck

ON ALL NEW 'gs·,FORD E·SCORTS IN STOCK

..

Meigs
slips past
Wahama

By KATHERINE RIZZO ·
Associated Press Writer
WASHJNGTON- As 1995
began, many of the winners of
Ohio's 1994 congressional campaigns were work:ing the phones,
plotting strategy and setting up
fund-raising events.
They're trying to rusrle up
donors for campaigns they've
already won, because they turne&lt;l
to personal savings or bank loans
when election-year contributors
couldn't be found fast enough.
Leader of that pack is freshman

-

Ohio Lottery

people are permitted to plcket in
front of Brown's office. They may
not carry signs encouraging people
to honk or cause other disturbances.
.

. Union members were in ·
Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon wallcing along West Main and Second
Streets to demonstrate solidarity.

Local News in Brief:

Ex-RAC worker wins lawsuit

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- A former Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. worker was awarded $3 million for a· l993 accident
that shattered his leg.
A Kanawha County jury awarded damages 10 George H. Davis.
Davis was injured Aug. 27; 1993, while trying 10 pull a defective
section _of aluminum ingot off a processing line, h~ lawsuit sai~.
Dav1s' attorney, Mike Ranson of Charles10n, argued RAC vtolated workplace safety laws and standards.
"Every time (people) brinJ up safety, instead of saying, ·we ·
need 10 IOQk at it,' they just Ignore it," Ranson said. "Hopefully,
they're going to fmally wake up and implement a real safety program up there."
Ranson said he offered RAC a $1.2 million settlement before the
Lrial, but lhe company rejected it.
RAC spokesman Pat Gallagher said the company would decide
soon.whether 10 appeal. He declined 10 comment further .

Cremeans to open district office
U.S. Sixth District Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipi&gt;lis, officially
opens his Portsmouth district office at 10 a.m. Monday, Feb. 20 at
300 Bank One P137..a.
The Portsmouth office will be staffed hy David P.dyne, district
director; Ryan Erwin, district representative; and Mattllew Raw(.
ings, district assistant. ·

Minor injury reporte_d in accident
A Point Pleasant, W.Va., man received minor injury in a two-car
collision Tuesday on State Route 7 ncar Chester. the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed.
.
Michael C. Grimm, 33. was treated at the scene by the Chester
Township Volunteer Fire Department squad.
The patrol said Grimm was northbound at 8:15 a.m. when he
struck a car driven by Scott D. Wolfe, 35, Racine, the patrol said.
Wolfe was northbound when he turned off toward the berm and
auempted aU-turn, resulting in the cmsh, according to the report.
Damage 10 both cars was severe and Wolfe was cited for failure
to yield.

Woman escapes .injuryin wreck
'.

* Rebelo Included.

·:

No citations or serious injuries were reporWd foUowing a one-car
accident on Cotterill Road in Scipio·Township Tuesday around 2:30

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~ccording 10

a report from the Meigs Cowtty Sheriff's Department. Wanda A. Swearingen. 71, Rutland, was southbound on Cotterill Road when her 1988 Pontiac Grand Am dropped off the right
side of the road and struck a culvert before toing hacil: across the
road and in10 a di1eh.
Swearingen was treated at the scene by a Rutland squad of the
. Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
·
The car susrained heavy and disabling damage, the report stated.

Tox, ntlo &amp; Fuo Extra.

Deer/vtfhicle collisiiHi reported

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Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs Department reported a
single dCC(/vehiclc collision Monday evening.
·
According ui a sheriff's report, Don Allen Harris, 2\ Pomeroy,
was wcstbpund on state Route 124 in Lebanon Township when a
deer·ran from .the side of the road and struck the right-fro\11 fender
. of his 1991 Jeep Cherokee,.causing moderate damage to the vehicle.
The deer ran off following the collision, according to the report.

.

...

'·

'
•

••
I.

�•

Commentar

I

'Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, ~ruary 15, 1995

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ,

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Maruoger

LETil!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
ar&amp; subject to editing and must be signed with name,
llldrw1 ood telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed.,Letten
lbould be in good wte, addressinB issues, not personalities.

wordltonc. Alllellers

Veto strategie.s
By WALTER R. MEARS
"
AP Special Correspondent
.
.
.
.
WASHINGTON - Playing defense now, Prestdent Clinton IS shapmg
a veto strategy to deal with the Republican Congress. It won't win what
he wanlS, but it can keep him from losing Democratic programs he's

Accu-Weamere forecast for

·Prison torture is rampant in Iran
W~SHINGTON House
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga, has
fired a warning shot across the bow
of Iran's ruling elite- and it's
about time.
Gingrich was speaking last
week to a conference of military
and intelligence officers when he
said American strategy should be
"designed to force the re(llacement
. of the current regime in Iran.''
The powerful speaker hinted
broadly that ousting Iran's mullahs
might be a good mission for the
Central Intelligence Agency, which
is still scrambling to redefine itself
and its mission after the devastating Aldrich Ames spy case. Since a
military ouster is out of the question, any efforts to destabilize Iran
would begin with the CIA.
,
Should the CIA get around to it
- after 16 y~s of failed policies
toward Iran that unsettled the
Caner, Reagan and ·Bush administrations - they'll find among
Iran's citizens plenty of dissatisfac tion with t!tc nation's Islamic gov-

•

sources, 'We have learned some of
the ghastly details of the torture
being inflicted upon prisoners in
Iran. The names of more than 3,000
torturers have been documented.
It's a brutal system that would
make even the most hard-line
American politician cringe. It
should also provide fertile ground
for any future destabilization
efforts by the CIA:
.
1
- Rape of female prisoners, ·
including young girls, is common,
and the guards often force the victim 's family members to watch.
- Blocking the urinary tract,
which causes a breakdown of internal organs, is another common torture method.
- Nails have been driven into
prisoners' skulls, legs and feet. One
ex-prisoner reported to us that nails
were driven into her breasts.
- Continuous flogging with
thick electric cables is lhe most
common means of torture. This
occurs on the soles of the feet. the
lower legs, the back and the face. 'It

.

By .J ack Ander$on
t~nd

Michael Binstein
repressive secret police and prison
system. Many Iranians live in such
terror of them that public protest is
out of the question.
But as with all buddin~ revolutions, a spontaneous pubhc explosion becomes inevitable as the
number of angry citizens swells.
When the rebels sense they're in
the majority and the government's
hand i.s weakened, they strike.
That's precisely what happened in
1979, when Islamic rebels overthrew the dictatorship of the Shah.
Those conditions are now building in Iran, From U.S. inteDigence
reports, .eyewitnesses and other

~~this hit list is the House GOP bill to substirute $10 billion in

flexible grants to the cities and counties for the measure enacted in 1994
that is supposed to put 100,000 more police officers on ~rica'.s.streef:'i.
"Anyone on Capiiol. Hill who ~ants to play ~!!~" polli;ICS. w1~
police officers for Amenca should .listen carefully, Clinton said. 10 his
weekly radio address. "I will veto any effort to repeal or undennme die
100,000 I'? lice commitment. Period."
.
. . .
He sa1d sending the money to llle states would nsk: divertlllg 11 from .
!he added police into old-fashioned pork-barrel spending. ·
.
That could be a useful political argument for the fust round in what
amounts to a reverse twist on the veto lactics Republican George Bush
used in coping with a Democratic Congress.
.
Bush was the one who called it playing defense, and he tried to use it
as a bargaining ploy, sometimes threatening to veto measures that.~'t
even been introduced, seekmg to get concessmns or compromises m
advance.
. That works best when the president doesn't want Congress to do much;
an upheld veto makes sure of it. Clinton does want some things out of
Congress, notably his "unfinished agenda" of overhauling welfare and
health care.
"My administration remains committed to providing health !!tsuran'!ll
coverage for every Amencan and contammg health care costs; he S31d
Monday in his annual economic report ro Congress. "The.~ongress can
and should take the first steps toward ach1evmg those goals.
.·
That's far more modest than the health care challenge that prompted
his rlfSt veto warning, early in 1994; "If you send me legislation that does
not guarantee every American private health insurance that ':80 ~ver be
talcen away, you wiD force me to take thiS pen, veto the legtslabOn, and
we'll come right back here and start all over again.:'
The threat was empty, since Congress didn't send him a health care
bill. A veto threat is meaningless when Congress isn't going to do it anrhow. Clinton will be using his to try to preserve Wbat the Democralic
William Andrew Masters was . Two years age_&gt;. a distraught CalCongress did during his first two years.
_out walking late one evening near 1forn1a mom. Elhe Nesler, shot and
.
Sen. Christopher Dodd of Conncc ucut, general chamnan of the Demo- .his home in the suburban commu- k1lled the man who was accused of
cratic Party, cued a couple more: the family and med1cal leave law, nity of Pacoima, Calif. He noticed sexually assaultmg her 6-vear-old
vetoed by Bush, enacted under Clinton; and llle assault-style frrearms ban two young "taggers" scrawling
that was part of the 1994·crime law. "I will not let it be repcaled," ·Clin- graffiti on pillars and walls beneath
Joseph Perkins
ton said in his State of the Union address.
a freeway overpass.
His lop foreign policy advisers also recommend a veto should
Masters thoughi he would be a son. Nesler says the man - who
Congress pass Republican-backed l1mi~ on U.S ..pcilcekeeping .missions "good citizen" by writing down had pre viously received a slap on
abroad, ordering development of a baUtsuc m1ss11e defense system and . the license plate number of weir the wrist for molesting anolllcr .[itpushing to get Poland and Hungary mto NATO.
. · car and turning it over t_o police. tic boy - smirked at her in court.
So Jar, it has been only warmngs. Clmton has not yet vetoed a bill. The vandals noticed him and She blew him away.
.That can't last ~!!h Fwublicans. rynning Congress, JJut far short of the demanded that he give them the
Of course, the most famous act
two-thirds majorities it would take to override a veto. That happened to incriminating slip of paper. A con- of v·igilantism occurred.in 1984 on
Bush only once, even though there was political punch in some of.the fronration ensued (Masters says he the New York subway. Four y,oung
• measures he blocked.
• ·
was threatened with screwdrivers). toughs accosted the slightly built,
· But it also came at a price during his losing campaign against Clinton. He whipped out a 9mm pistol he meek -looking Bernard Goetz.
.. His veto of lllc family leave bill came as Rcpub~cans tried to.claim family carried for protection and shot his Rather than hand over his wallet,
.- values as .their issues, and Democrats called it hypocrisy.
assailants, killing one of them .
Goetz pumped his assailants full of
: :.
Bush's one loss was on a bill to rc- rcgulate the cable television indusLos Angeles Cou.nty prosec,~tors lead.
After each one of these inci: try. That, too, bycame a campaign liability.
.
.
.foun d themsc Ives tn a quan dary.
.:
Indeed, during the closing phase of the 1992 campwgn, congresstonal Should they try a man for murder . den ts, law enforcement aulllorities
Democrats had a counter-veto strategy, trying to enact popular measures who said he simply was trying to mouthed the usual platitudes: Vigithey knew the Republican president would block.
•
do his civic duty? Either fearing !antes arc no 'beuer than criminals
That same ploy could become a risk for C~nton in the buildup to t,he public ouu:ry'if Masters was forced t!1cm sc lvcs. Taking the law i.nto
to stand trial, or recognizing that he one's own hands is the same as
1996 campaign.
·
Prior presidents used differing veto tactics. Ronald Reagan would hint probably would be'acquitted by a breaking the law·
• but wouldn't say whether he would sign or veto a bill until it got to his jury unsympathetic to the vandals
But tfre cops, the prosecutors
• desk. He vetoed 78 in eight years, was overridden nine times. Jimmy he shot, the prosecutors decided and the courts have only them• Carter vetoed 31, with two overrides. During his brief presidency, Gerald that he. ahem, acted in self-&lt;Jefense. selves to blame for the Masters and
Ford vetoed 66 bills, and was overridden on 12. He made vetoes pai1 of
. What we very well may be wit- Neslcrs an.d Goetzes. Vigilantism is
hfs unsuccessful 1976 campaign, so metimes announcing them on the ncssing iri Californiaand other an inevitable consequence when
road, saying he was doing it to hold down government spending and fight crime-ridden states is the return of those charged with upholding the
.. innation.
frontier justice. An increasing num- law fail to protect the public from
:
It is not an easy way to do political or legislative business. "It's essenber of law-abiding citizens have those who prey upon them.
•. iially a negative 10ol;" Rep. Newt Gingrich, now speaker, said during the become so frustraied, it seems, that
Indeed, Justice Department
. Bush years. "It's a club,. not a rapier."
crime so often goes unpunished (or statistics bear out that the critical
underpunished), that they arc talc- link between crime and punishment
EDITOR'S NOTE~ Waller R. Mears, vice president and' columing mauers into their own hands.
has bcc·n broken. Of every I 00
.
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

IToledo I37" I
4

-(f

Who's

~elpipg

Barbara Mason appreciates the

accola~es, she really does. When
the d~rector of the Network
Pre.sc~ 0 ols ·in Alexandria, Va., is

Berry's World

""

HAVING ~'SE.~'5E

OF 5E:Lf' 15 V£(.1(

EMf'oweR lNG.
J

$0 IS 1-\AVtNG

1'01'5 OF MONEY!

'

.

prm;;c11 for prov1dmg so~e of her
c1ty s poorest ch1l~en wtth a free
preschool educatmn, she 1s g':lteful. Whc~ ~ewspa!&gt;frs. magazmes
and televiSion statwns ask .to fea turc ~er, sh~ a~cepts. When The
Washmgton.an tdenufics N.~twork
as one of the l?r!lg~s that m~ts
our c~~mu~111es most presstng
necds, she ts flattered. And when
the Amcncan Bar Assoctat1o~ sars
11 wants .to replicate her project m
other ctties, she files. to New
Orleans and speaks atlllerr convenlion.
.
But fame IS not what Barbara
Mason seeks; she w~nts mo.ney . .
An~ so .far all of thiS notorlCiy.
, whtle mce, has done nothmg to
help Mason keep. her schools
afl~~t.
, .
.
.
.
I Juess I m gelling kmd.of
Jaded, says Mason, who had h1gh
hopes for the attention generated
by the med1a and the ~A hono~.
:·You would thmk wtth all this
mtcrest somethmg emun~ .':'ould
have happened, but tt has~ L Last
year Mason recetv~ a thrrd of h~r
fundmg from the City of Alexandria
and a .quarter from local c_hurches.
She tned to make up the d1fference .
wtth. grants and fund ratsmg, but

r
1

.'

.

Sara Eckel
social services arid tr.ansfer' more
responsibility to private nonprofits,
Mason's task will be even harder in
coming years, as people denied
government funding look to charitics like hers.
Actually, Mason's is exactly the
kind ·Of program that conservatives
point to as proof that the nonprofit
sector works bcner than the govcrnmem. For one. thing, it's effici~nt. According to a. tax analysis
by .The Washingtonian, only 11
percent of ~etwork's annual budget went to administrative. costs;
the cost~ per child are $3,000 annually. for another, it's grassroots.
Network was started after a group
of mothers from the Cameron ValIcy Ho~sing Project tried to set up
th eir own school, after all 17
kindcrgartcncrs from the project
failed to be promoted.
'
"-nd, as most of us have learned,
early-childhood education benefits
society as ,a·whole. Studies, suc.h as
M1ch1gan s fa~ous Perry Project,
show that ch1ldre.n who go to
preschool are more hkely to slay

Across the nation

I

W. VA.

lea

St.my Pt

South-Central Obio
Tonight ... Rain likely before
midnight ... Then cloudy with patchy ·
drizzle. Low in the mid 30s. Brisk
w~st winds 15 to 25 mph diminishing to 10 to 15 mph by morning.
Chance of rain 30 percent
.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy. High
near40. ·
.

WASHINGTON (AP)
DemocratS say they will use President Clinton's proposed minimumwage increa.se to draw a contrast
between their own plans and the
Republican program of tax cuts and
reduced welfare spending.
"While the Republicans are ...
doling out huge tax breaks to the
wealthiest Americans and forcing
deep cuts in programs working
people need most, Democrats are
fighting to raise the standard of living of hard-working people across
the country," House Minority

Cloud( Cloud(

Extended forecast
Friday ...Fair. Lows in the 20s.
Highs 35 to 45.
S~day... Fair. Lows upper 20s
to mitldle 30s. Highs in the 40s to
lower 50s far south.
Sunday... Fair. Lows in the 30s ..
Highs in the middle 40s to middle
50s.

--Area Death-~arguerite

Boyce

The names of four brothers who survive Marguerite Boyce, 84, who
died Sunday at St. Ann's Hospital in Columbus, were omitted from material provided' to The Daily Sentinel for the death notice•.
The brothers are Carl Russell of Columbus; Jed Russell of Oregon, and
Bill and Bob Russell, both of Pomeroy.
.
Funerai'Serviccs will be held at II a.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home. The Rev. Daron Newman will officiate and burial will be ill G!llvel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home
Thursday from 4 to 9 p.m.
·

Leader Dick Gcphardt, D-Mo., said
Tuesday. He spoke at a news conference to mark the formal inuoduction of Clinton's proposed legislation.
. ·
The bill would raise the hourly
minimum wage, in two 45-cent
steps, from $4.25 to $5.15 over two
years.
Gephardt, Labor Secretary
Robert Reich and about a dozen
House and Senate members were
accompanied at the news conference by four minimum-wage workers- from Florida, West Virginia.

Ohio and Maryland - who
described how they are bare Iy making ends meet.
"Right now my children are
laying on the floor because we
don't have enough money for a
bed," said Leticia Garza. a cashier
in Toledo, Ohio, earning $4.25 an
hour.
.
Her husband makes $5 an hour
a·s a forklift operator. They have
two children, ages 6 and 2:
"Depression is my life," said
Annie Busby of Apopka, Fla., a
mother of three who works at temporary jobs. "I call it the mini:

PADUCAH, Ky. (AP) - Officials here are secretly proposmg a
public-private partnership to build
a $350 million plant in wes1ern
Kentucky to demonstrate a new
uranium technology, the Paducah
Sun reported.
'
The proposal by lhe Greater
Paducah Economic Developmen~
Corp. will be presente~ to the
chairman of the U.S . Ennchment
Corp. which currently leases the
. Padudah G~us Diffusion urani·
urn plant from the Department of
Energy.
Harry Ruth, the chief executive

Meigs EMS logs 6 calls

Meigs announcements

Today's livestock report

school and leSS likely to be convict- allow programs like this, programs
cd of a cr_ime in their teens than that have given hope and strength
children who do not.
to our most vulnerable citizens, to
Mason says it's not difficult. to be subject to the whims•of the marlaunch a charity like hers- plenty .. kct? Or should there be some fixed
of foundations and businesses are source of revenue for social prowilling to put their name on an grams- whether public or private
inqovative new project - but the - that have a proven re~ord of
struggle comes after the firSt year, success?·
when the foundation has moved on
'There used to be a greater
to the next big tiling, and the chari- number of shared priorities," says
Read, "where we as a total com1y loses its support. The preschool
Mason opened early this month, for munity said that these !rinds of serexample. is fully funded fc;&gt;r the vices were important to our comnext year. But the bills are piling munity and therefore we were
up at her three other established going to pay for them out of our
preschools.
collective tax doUars."
Pat Read, at the Colorado AssoAre there shared priorities anyciation of Non-Profit Organiza- more? Do we have national stanlions, agrees that Mason's situation dards for how we treat our poor?
is a common one. But she says that Or are standards SQmething we can
with all the expected cuts in federal no longer afford?
· social programs, charities must · As this debate l'lljteS, Mason will
learn to foster even more ·Support keeping trying to nuse funds and to
from their communities. ·
contain her creeping cynicism.
''I've done that," insists Mason, "I'm hoping that one of these
who says that while she has com- things I've been running around
' munity involvement _ employees and doing is ·going to l!o it." she
of the Body Shop volunteer once a says. "But it hasn't happened yet"
week, for example- she still
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
dilesn't have any reliable means, of writer for Newspaper Enterprise
financial support "I had one con- Association.
tractor who promised me a few
(For information on how to
thousand dollars and then said, ' communicate electroaicaiiJ with
'Nab, I'm having a bad ·y"ear, so Ibis columnist and others con- •·
forg~t it"'
- ·
tact America Ontiae by ;;d;ng 1- ·
So that's the question. Do we· 800-827-6364, ext. \317.)

.The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Published c:11ery aftemoon, Morlday (hrough
Friday,. Ill Co urt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the

Ohio Valley Publishirlog Compnny/Mll ltirncdla
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769, Ph. 992-2 156
Second class postAge paid nt l'omcroy. Ohio.

officer of the economic group, said
he was not prepared to talk about
the plan because at least two other
communities - Piketon, Ohio, and
Oak Ridge, Tenn. - also are trying
to attracf the so-called AVLIS technology.
"We don't want to reve$l.anything at this point to tip our haild to
the other communities," Ruth told
the newspaper in a copyright story.
"It is something we've been working too hard on."
Gov. Brereton Jones wrote a let·
ter to President Clinton to arrange a
meeting between the economic
I
.
'

points 34.50-38.00.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Canlc: steady to 1.00 higher.
. Slaughter st'eers: choice 67.0076.00; sclect63.00-67.50.
Slaughter heifers : choice 66.5075.50; select, no quote.
Cows: steady to 1.00 higher; all
cows 54.00 and down.
Bulls.: steady to lower; all bulls
58.75 and down.
Veal calves: lower; ·Choice
140.00 and down.
Sh~p and lambs : 4.00 to 5.00
higher; choice wools 66.00-72.50;
choice clips 74 .25 and down; aged
shccp40.75 and down.

POSTMA.Sri~R: Send addrcu correCti on .~ to
The Daily-Sentinel, I l l Coun S1.,
Ohio 4''i769.

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group and William Rainer, chairman of the USEC in Maryland.
Ruth said Clinton has not respond ed.
The AVLIS uranium enrichment
technology - iechnically called
the Atomic Laser Isotope Separation process - will replace the SOyear ·old gaseous diffusion process
used at plants in Paducah and Piketon.
·
One main benefit of AVLIS is
that its lasers use much less .electricity than gaseous diffusion, making it cheaper to operate.
Although the primary purpose
of AVLIS is to enrich uranium for

tricts, changes in a program that
"It's faulty to the core," Phillis
said.
.
aids districts with greater nu':"be~s
"Instead of uniformly raising
of poor students, and a rcd~cuon ·'"
state aid for the 60 wealthtest diS- the bottom and moving the bottom
tricts to make $33 million available toward exceDent programming like
there is at the top, this ·budgel
for other schools.
.
• 'There probably will be some would equa~eat a level of medi adjustments to what. the goveJnor ocrity. Virtually no one in the edu.
has recommended," Amstutz said . cation C01J1munity would support
that son of a move," he said.
in an interview.
House Finance Chairman
"However, I think we all have
Thomas
Johnson, R-Ncw Concord,
to keep in mind that we have han~­
said
Tuesday
he expects legislators
ing over our head a court suu
which could make this look like a will make changes. in the goversmall incremental adjustment nor's proposal.
potentially down the road," he
said.
Amstutz referred to a ruling last
year In Perry County Common
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Pleas Court on a school funding
Monday
admissions - Delbert
lawsuit that a coalition of districts
Pridemore,
Middleport; Gertrude
filed against the state.
·
. The state-local funding system Stivers. Pomeroy. • ·
Mondl!y discharges - Diana
was declared inequitable and madequate. The decision is being Boyd, Middleport; Marlin Wolfe,
Langsville; Frances Scholl,
appealed at Voinovich' s order. .
William Phillis, a former assts- Pomeroy; Gilbert Zwilling,
tant state school superintendent Pomeroy.
Tuesday admissions - Dortha
who is the coalition's execuuve
Ncutzing,
Pomeroy; John Davis,
director, said ~ Voinovich budget
Syracuse;
Pearl
Proffitt, Portland.
discriminated against disabled stuTuesday
discharges
- none.
dents, gifted students, vocatw~al
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
students, and average-wealth dtsDischarges Feb. 14 - Ethel
tricts.
Rife, Ruth Reed, Della Vititoe,
Mrs. Anthony Elkins and son ,
Whitney Knight.
,
(Published with permission)

mum-wage blues."
Supporters of the increase say
70 percent qf minimum-wage earners are adults and 40 percent work
full time, collecting an annual
salary of about $8,800. The proposed increa.jC would raise that to
about $10,700.
But Republicans have argued
that raising the minimum wage wiD .
destroy jobs and make it more dif·
ficult for young, low-skilled workers, many of ·them minorities, to
break into the labor force and
acquire the skills to better llleir circumstances.

use as nuclear fuel, it also can be
used for other industrial applications, such as nuclear medicine. .
Ruth said private investors have
expressed a willingness to help plly ·
the co~t of the project
The current plan by USEC, a
pri vale government corporation,
and the Energy Department is to
build a $1 billion AVLIS plan't to
replace the Paducah and Piketon
gaseous diffusion plants.
.
" We are encouraging USEC to
entertain· the idea of building .a
demonstiation plant as opposed 10
llle initial plan of DOE to build the
big plant all at once," Ruth said. ·

"I think there wiD be a move' to
proteCt some of the districts. We'll
just have to see how that wor.ks
out," Johnson said.
Mike Dawson, Voinovich 's
press secretary, said there were far
more winners than losers in the
governor's budget, but welcomed
legislative proposals.
.
"We don't pass the budget by
executive order," Dawson said. '.'If
they have a better idea how to solve
the historical i!lequities that have
existed for our low-wealth districts
!'in sure they'll incorporate those
in their budget.''

Hospital news

t'Ofoll Hl i 800ft I "Tit I!
"KP:AVYWI!ICKTS"fftJU ST

Fewer prisoners, more
guards forecast by state

GIF1 CE RTIFICATES A.VAULABLE I

COLUMBUS (AP) - The number of inmates i" state prisons
may ~line ove~ the next two years, ~hile 'the ~umfl:« of offendcts
in prison alternatives such as commuruty carecuons mcreases.
At 'the same time, die Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction forecasts growth in die number of prison guards and a
· reduction in inmate crowding.
Director Reginald Wilkinson told the House Finance Committee
on Tuesday that those improvements and others depend on passage
of ~e J&gt;risons budget that Gov. _Gt;a~g~ Voinovich _piotlosed, and on
.legtslauve approval of chan~es 10 cnmmal sentencmg laws.
·

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3" PICTURE BUITON (REG. PRICE $4.85)

MemMr : The Associ ated Prc ~s. :md the Ohi o
New~ paper As~intioo.

•

150 Ohio school districts face loss of state aid

Units of the Meigs County
I :25 p.m ., Sanford-Davis Road,
Emergency Medical Service logged. Shawn Canterbury. Veterans By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
six calls for assistance Tuesday. Memorial Hospital :
COLUMBUS - Talk about the
·Units responding included:
2:33 p.m., motor-vehicle acciMIDDLEPORT
dent on Cotterill Road, Wanda new math. For one-fourth of Ohio's
2:09 p.m:, Overbrook Center, Swearingen, treated at the scene, 611 school districts, the numbers in ·
Gov. George Voinovich' s proposed
Freda Carsey, Pleasant Valley Hos- Middleport VFD assisted.
pital;
. ".
TUPPERS PLAINS
education budget do .not add up.
4:19p.m., S. Second Avenue,
8:24a.m., motor.vehicle acci- they face a loss of state aid ..
Joseph Rhodes .. treated at the dent at state Route 7 and Sumner
A computer simulation of the
scene;
_ _ Road, Mike Grimm . and Scott · effects of Voinovich' s budget pro10:13 p.m., N. Second Avenue Wolfe treated at the scene, Chester posal on schools shows about 210
and Coal Street, Samuel.Williams, VFD assisted.
districts would receive less state
PVH.
Units also handled three transfer money from the basic aid and dis·
runs.
RUTLAND
advantaged pupil programs next
year than at present
Funding would improve in the
second year of the bud!let, but I 50
districtS still would wmd up wllh
ing Workers Class, Saturday. Serv- less state support in budget year
Auxiliary to 111eet
The Rutland Fire Department ing will be from 4 to 6:30p.m. 1997 than in budget year 1995,
Ladies Auxiliary will meet on Soup, sandwiches, and dcsscn will · which ends June 30.
·
The projections should come as
Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the Rutland Fire be served.
no
surprise, Rep . .Ron Amstutz, RStation to go to Pizza Hut for supSpecial
service
.
·
Wooster,
said Tuesday.
per~ They will return to the fire staThe
Believers
Fellowship
MinAmstutz
is chainnan of a House
tion .al 7:30p.m. for their regular
istry
of
Rutland
will
have
a
guest
Finance
subcommittee
that will
monthly meeting : All members
speaker,
the
Rev.
Shawn
Bums
of
study
the
education
budget,
includurged to attend.
Hunt ington, W. Va., at 7:30 p.m. ing changes Voinovich wants in the
Wednesday night (tonight). Rev . complex formula that determines
Soup super to be held
A soup supper will be held at Margaret Robinson, pastor, invites how much state aid a district
receives:
the Tuppers Plains St. Paul's Unit- th e public to ancnd.
Voinovich recommended addied Methodist Church by the Willtion of an equity factor to pump
more money into low-wealth disCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gills: steady to 25
cents higher; demand moderate.
U.S. l-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 38.50-40.25, a few 40.50·
40.75; plants 40.00-41.50.
·U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country

Washington and Oregon. and snow
to inland nonhero and cenual IdahO
and nonhweslim Montana.
:
In Arizona, a rain-trigg:.~
landslide slammed two house- ·
boulders onto a mountain highwa:f
late Tuesday night. No one was
injured in llle slide, about 100 milei
northeast of Phoenix. Earlfer. 0
rain-swollen creek forced the evac•
uation of about 200 people yteai
Sedona, about 30 miles south of
Aagstaff.
•
The nation's hotspot Tuesday
was Miami, where it was 8~
degrees. The lowest temperatur!
was 28 below zero in Eveleth,
Minn.

Officials may build $350 million uranium plant

~,

arc choosing the latter option. They
are barricading their communities
against' outside intruders. They're
forming neighborhood watch
patrols. They're hiring private
security. And manr are acquiring
firearms and learmng how to use ·
them.
Some go a step further. Rather
than simply defend themselves
against criminals, they take the
offensive. They no lon~er wait for
police to apprehend cnminals, for
prosecutors to take them to court,
for judges to sentence them. These
vigilantes administer their own
crude form of justice in subway
cars, in courthouse corridors and
under freeway overpasseS.
The law enforcement community can lament frontier justice all it
wants. The authorities can take
punitive actiQn against citizen
a vcngers like Masters and Nesler
and Goetz to dissuade others from
taking the ·law into their own
hands. But it is almost certain that
we wiII sec more and more acts of
vigilantism until the critical link
between crime and swift and sure
punishment is restored.
Joseph ~erklns is a columnist
for The San Diego Union-Tribune.
(For informatio.n on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and other.s, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

•
•
expected to bring coastal rain tO

Democrats say minimum-wage hike defining issue

-----Weather-----

our nation's helpers? .

u ltimatcly failed to meet the
$300,000 budget for her three
schools.
With Congress pledging to cut

•lcolumbusl37'

or

The return of frontier justice
FELONY complaints by private
citizens; only 30 result in arrests.
Of 30 arrests. only 20 result in
prosecutions. Of 20 prosecutions,
only 15·restilt in convictions. Of 15
convictions, only five result in
prison sentences of one year or
IJlore .. And of those five sentences,
not even one term is fully completed.
It might be something of a comfort .if the convicted felons lWlled
out of prison early were nonviolent
offenders. But that is not the case.
In California, for example, nearly
half of the 32,000 prisoners paroled
each year have been serving time
for violent crimes.
. Of those, more than 3,000 are
sex offenders, nearly half of whom
have engaged in dq~raved acts with
children. Nearly 4,000 ha'~ been
convicted of assault, in most cases
willl a deadly weapon. And roughly
1,500 have heen convicted of
kiUing someone. .
, The PQiice, the prosecutors and
the courts know that many of these
violent offenders will eventually
repeat their crimes. Yet they set
these social deviants free to prey
upon the unsuspecting public. The
law-abiding citizens are left with
one of two choices _ they can
hope that they do not become a
crime statistic, or they can defend
themselves against the criminals in
their midst.
An increasing number of folks

The freezing rain was caused by Rain feU in the Southeast.
By The Associated Pre~
.
The rain will taper off tomght. wet and warm Gulf air pushing
A mix of snow. freezing rain,
but not bef= leaving another sheet over the cold air covering the
and,
rain was falling this morning
of ice across much of northern region.
across
the central Plains and in the
Ohio. Lows will range from the
The ex tended forecast calls for
Ohio
and
Tennessee River Valleys.
low 20s in the northwest to the fair, but cooler weather this weekSome
ice
accumulations were
end.
.
mid- 30s in the south.
in
Nebraska, Missouri,
reponed
The record-high teniperature for
No precipitation is expected
Iowa
and
central
Illinois.
under mostly cloudy sktes on this date at the Columbus weather
Areas
of
rain
and freezing rain
Thursday but temperatures will station was 70 degrees in 1954
.
were
expected
today
across the
tum cooler, r~maining in the 30s while the record low was -4 .in
mid-Mississippi
River
Valley,
Ohio
1978. Sunset tonight wUI be at6:07
most places.
Ohioans everywhere but the p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:23 River Valley and into New England, with some snow in the nonhnortheast were greeted this mom- a.m.
em mid-Atlantic slates.
ing by ice or snow or a combinaShowers and thunderstorms
tion of the two.
Cloudy skies covered much of were expected from New Mexico
Treacherous driving conditions
forced numerous school districts to the East this morning, as a blustery to the Southeast, with sunny weathclose delay the start of classes by snowstorm moved out of the West er expected in the far Southwest
into the Plains and the Northeast.
Farther north, another storm was
an hour or twO.

MICH.

is the most common cause of dead!
in the torture chambers.
- Another widespread method
is burning with electric irons,
stoves, cigarettes, acid or boilillf!
oil.
· - Breaking a prisoner's hones
is also a favored method of torture.
We were told of one.man who had
all the bones in his face broken
before he was put to death in
Tabriz Prison. Other prisoners had
their fingers, hands and legs amputated before they died. Testimony
about these hide&lt;ius deaths is usually provided by grievin~ relatives
who see their loved ones mutilated
bodies when they are returned for
burial.
- ·In Iran's most dreaded place,
Teheran's Evin Prison, one report
· alleges that prison guards injected
morphine into a group of female
prisoners, thereby inducing addiction. This, despite the fact that
drugs are outlawed in Iran. The
hapless victims of this torture were
then denied the drug, bringing on
the excruciating pain of withdrawal.
.
- One former Cabinet official
· ' of the Ayatollah Khomeini regime
pioneered a torture that involves
injecting large amounts of water
under the skin, causing unbearable
pain.
U.S. inteDigence reports and Iranian sources have counted more
than 60 different kinds of torture
used in Iranian prisons. Though the
Iranian regime won't acknowledge
specifics, it has publicly embraced
prison torture as a God-given right
and privilege.
As the late AyatoUah Khomeiili,
who called himself a man of God,
once declared publicly:. "Killing is
mercy, for it seeks to rectify lhe
person. A person sometimes cannot
be rectified unless he is cut up and
heated up. You must kiD, burn and
lock up those who are in opposition:·
Newt Gingrich bas a wellearned rep·utation for issuing
rhetoric that he .can't l)ack up. We
hope this isn't one of those times.
Jack Andersqn and Michael
Binstein are writers for .United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

emment.
One of the primary reasons for
the discontent is also one of the key
reasons
it is bare Iy visible - Iran's
.

.

Fair, but cool weather . f~recast for weekend

OHIO Weath er
Thursday, Feb.l6

The Daily Sentinel

Land transfers
The following transactions were
recorded in the office of Meigs
County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, Paul and Allie Simon to
state of Ohio, Salisbury, 4.197
acres;
Deed , Paul and Allie , ae ·
Simon to state of Ohio
ester
parcel;
"
Deed, Paul and
ie Simon,
Dave Mann, David M. Mann and
Rulll Mann tp state of Ohio, Salisbury parcel;
Deed, Emma Carleton to state of
Ohio, Chester/SalisbUry parcels;
· Deed, Emma Carleton to state of
Ohio, Chester, 1.197 acres;
Easement, James E. and Linda
Diddle to state of Ohio, Ches'ter,
.078 acres.

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'

.

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•
.•

"

-.--

...

\
\..

.

The Dally Sentinel-Page Sf

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 15, 1995

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

-r----- ~--

.(
[

�t

Sport-s

The Daily
.

Sentin~l

Wednesday, February 15, 1995

Bow-e &amp; Foreman want to .fight Tyson after he leaves jail

Ylednnday, February 15,1995

By STEVE HERMAN
. INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Mike
Tyson will get out of jail on time,
and he has a couple of potential
opponents waiting when .and if be
decides to step baclc into !he boxing
ring.
The former heavyweight champion is slated for release on March
25 - more than a month earlier
than his previously set May 9
release date, but the date originally
set when he was fust sentenced.
Current heavyweight champion
George.Foreman said Tuesday he's
heard Tyson would lilce to fight

Meigs gets 57-54 win over Wahama
By DAVE HARRIS
At that point the play got
ragged, in the finJII 1:40 tl)e half
Sentinel Correspondent
·Travis Abbou hit three of four the two teams combined for 15 free
free throws in ·the fma) 21 seconds throw auempts. Meigs went into
to. give the Meigs Marauders a the locker room with a slim 26-25
hard-fought 57-54 victory over lead.
(ross river rival Wahama.
Meigs looked like it .was going
·Abbott hit the first of two free to run away with the game in the
throws with just five seconds third period when Gary Stanley's
remaining, but missed !he second three pointer from deep on the right
one. That gave the White Falcons win gave the Marauders a 39-30
one last chance, but a long range lead.
But the White Falcons fought
three-pointer by James See missed
its marie and the Marauders back and Wahama tied the game at
39 when Tucker completed a threeescaped wilh the win.
Both teams came out of the point play with 4S seconds left.
blocks slow with the White Falcons Cleland's bucket in the paint wit~
taking an early 6-3 advantage. 32 scx:onds left gave Meigs a 41-39
Meigs reeled off six points in a row lead heading into the final period.
The final period was .close all'
to take a 9-6 lead when Gary StanIcy scored off the offensive boards the way, with the score was tied
five times as the teams traded
with I:49 left in the period.
Jeremy Tucker hit a three point- buckets. The Marauders took their
er with 1:30 left to knot the game biggest lead of the fourth period
up at nine. Abbon apd See traded when Ewing came up with a steal
free throws ·in the final 33 seconds and a feed to Cleland to make it a
of the first period ended dead - 52-49 advantage with 3:181eft.
locked at I I.
But Wahama came back and cut
Wahama took its biggest lead of the lead to one (53-52) when Kevin
the night (21-17) with 2: 19 to go in Shields hit one of two free throws
the first peri·od on a bucket by with 42 seconds left. But Ewing
Jason King. But Meigs took a 22- put the Marauders lead back to two
21 lead with I :4 7 left in the half ·when he hirone of two with 39 secwhen Cass Cleland hit the second onds left.
of two straight buckets by the 6Jeremy Tucker then hit a leaning
foot-2 junior.
baseline Jumper from the right side
from 10 feet out· to tie the game at

or

Wahama hit 20 of 56 from !he Door
for 36% and II of 20 from !he line
for 55%. The White Falcons
grabbed 32 rebounds, with Albright
gelling nine. Wahama had 13
turnovers.
Meigs will pll!y its lhird game in
as many nights when they host
Alexander tonight. The reserve
game will start at 5 p.m. The varsi·
ty game wiD follow at6:30 p.m.
Reserve nola: Meigs won 5652 by outscoring Wahama 38-26 in
the second half 10 post the win.
Bradley Whitlarch led the way with
15, Chris Lambert added 11. Owl
Ord led Wahama with 15, Heath
Engle added 10.

54 with 28 seconds left.
Abbott was then fouled wilh 21
seconds left and calmly hit both
shots giving the Marauders a 56-54
lead. Wahama missed a shOL In the
battle fer !he ~. !he Marauders were awarded the ball out of
bounds. Meig~ got the ball into
Abbou, and once again he was
fouled. He then hit one or two with
five seconds left to ice the win.
"It was a hard fought win,"
Marauder coach JeffSlcinner said.
"But any kind or win is a good
win. We played exttemely well in
!he last two and a half minutes and
did !he lhings we needed ui do to
win. Last year at this time we were
0-18, and !hat will never happen
again. We are going to cherish
every win. But as soon as you lake
winning for granted, a loss wi1J get.
you and remind you how it feels ."
Cleland led a trio of Marauders
in double figures wilh 17 points.
Ab,bott added 15, while Pullins had
II. Meigs hit 18 of 53 from the
floor including two of eight from
three point range. Meigs hit 19 of
30 from the line .for 63% The
Marauders pulled in 33 rebounds
with Cleland grabbing 13. Meigs
committed 11 ttunovers and had II
sreals,led by Pullins' four.
Tucker led !he White Falcons
wilh 16 points, while See added II. ·

in the Ohio Division) with 19,
while Jason Waite tossed in II.
Nelsonville took a 16-12 first
period lead, but Eastern cut !he
deficit to 27-26 at the half. Eastern
!orally dominated the second half,
3g.25, taking a 42-39 lead into !he
final round.
Charlie Bissell's bread-and-butter is usually from the field in the
paint. Bissell's. gravy Tuesday
came from the foul line,where the
se nior drilled 11-12 free lhrows.
Bissell had just one field goal.
Ryan Buckley also had a good
night at the line with a 3-4 night
and Stethem was I of 2.
Brian Bowen had another good
noor game for !he Eagles. It seems
as _though when Bowen takes
charge, Eastern ignites. Bowen
sparked the E!-!S offense wilh six

-·-·-·-

WAHAMA
(11-14-14-15=54)
James See 3-1-2=11 ,' Jason King
2-0-0=4, Jeremy Tucker 4-2-2=16,
,Selh Howard 1-0-2..o4, Matt F'ldds
2-0-0=4, Kevin Shields 2-0-3..7,
Gabe Scou 0-0-1=1, Jamie Shiltz
3-0-1=7. Totals: 17·3·11=54

lt L fd.

Orlando ..................38

.792

NewYor:k ..•...... w ••• l0
Botl.m,.,,,,,,,.,,, .. w•.,l9

.4()4

7.S
18.5

Ne.. Jc:ney .......- ...20
Miami .................... 18
l'ltihdctptia .......... t4
Wu~Unatm............ 12

31
29
34
34

.392
.313
.292
.261

19.S
195
:14
2!1

.638

Indiana ...................Zl

20

Chicaao ......- .......... 23

25

-to

Sill

10
17
28

Owloae ................ 31 t8
·CLEVI!UNIL ....2B t9

59

596

574

.479
.469
.381
.383

TO THE HOOP - Meias 11uard Gary Stanley (10) gels past
Wahama cagers Kevin Sbields (left) and Jeremy Tucker (14) oa bis
way to the durin11 Tuesday night's 11ame at Meip Hi11b Scbool, where
the Marauders won 57-54. Stanley llnlsbed with live poiDis. (Seatinel
photo by Dave Harris)

-·-·-·-

EASTERN
(12-14-16-22=64)
Brian Bowen 3-1-0=9, Rvan
. Buclcley 1-0-3=5, Jeff Stethem 2-01=5, Eric Hill 8-1-0= 19, Charlie
Bissell1-0-11=13, Micah OUo 5-1·
0=13. Totals: 20-3-15-111=64

.
•
:
•
'

Alexander ........ .........7 6
EASTERN ........... :....4 g
Trimble .....................2 10

. · ~ I. ~ L

Iwn

San Antoni.o ........... 31
HouslCI1 ................. 30
IJ.I:nvcr ................... 20
Dallu ..................... l9
Mi.nneaota .............. ll

15
17

.674
.638

2.5

'11 .426

14

Ponllnd .................25

8

GoldcnS.!.Ite .......... J-4

32

~ . 304

LA. Clippen ...........8

41 "' ·. 163

9:

p.m.
San Antoriio at U!.ah, 9 p.m.

~6988
'

Major men's
college scores

• Sola/Bed
• lnd~rect LJghhng
• Premium Wo&lt;Xl Pkg.
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-

Loyola, Md. 68,lona S4
Manhattan 73, SL Peter'• 50

w_..,...

col Si

D1y. MCidowd1lo 96. Sprina. South
. 90

E11tlak~N, 90, W. ~:11 66

36
Et,.U 0p&lt;n Door 77, Elrri! 64

Fainnmt 71, O.y. Su:bbinl ~
Federal Hod;ina 71, "lcundcr 66

conFolicily 9t, llahol-Tole 60

lbylor I 11 , Tcu' Christian 104

Far West
SL Mary'1, Cal. 75, SammcnLO SL S7

Fnnldin Hu. 14, MaryiYillo 69
Fnntioo-7a, ShOIIIndooh 75 (2 at)
Gahann• 67, Marion Hantina 60
Gcncv• 66. AahllbW Harbor 57
Gcorgcsown 79, New Richmond 67
Gcnnantown VaUcy Vic.w 11, D1y.
Nnnluidao46
Girud 7S,1Salc:m 61

Glen Eooo 66, N...,ood 51

\

Other Ohio men's
college scores .
·•

Foitfiold SS, Cin. Colerain 53
Foitfiold u- 53, an:teville s2

Southwest

Graham 64; Vandllii-Bud.• 46
Grmvi.J.Je 59, Heath 42
Jl.uili.hoo Badin 13, Day. Oakwood48
lloMib&amp;l Rivor 59, Uniiln Locol46
Hudin Nonhom 73, Allen B. 54 .
Holy Nunc 60, Gadicld H1.1. Trinity

Mid-Ohio Conference
82

F111dlay lOS, Moum Vernon

sa. Nopoloon 411

Elffiwood 46, North

South

In diana 69, Ohio Sl S2

•

Ilefuna~

·Dover SS; W. Hobnc:s 42
.
E. Palciinine 13, Soulheln Loc1162

Mount St. Muy'a, Md . 81

Kansu 91, Ncbmka 68
Tulsa 69. SW Missouri St. 59

•

to-

Nazam-~c:

57
Malone 94, Cedarville 92
RIO GRANDE 101, Walsh 88
Snawncc St. 81, Ti!fUI75

with won~lo.n record through 11mea·or
Feb. 12 (fint·phcc Vlllel i.n pucnthcses):

Iwn

?·Dayton Ctnm.-lul . 18-l .................... .'n
B· Bubcrton (I) 17-1 .................... ......... 66
9·Caruon McKWcy 17-2 .............. :....... 50
I 0-Tol. SL U!'lula 16-1 .......................... 43

Othen

recel~lna

ll or more pOinu:

11 -W. Chester Lakota (I) 23-. 12·Cin ,
W e.~ lcm lliUs 2 1. 13-F.altlakc N. 17.

Iwn

liL

! ·Garfield Hll. Trinity {21 ) 19-0" ........ 223

. 4·Coplcy
t~diRt/.0.~.~~:.~.~-~ .~~.:::::::::::::::~
19·0 ..................................... 146
6-Awan Late 16-2............................ .....94
, 7-0telwsrllnd W. 0ca1111 17-1.. ........... 13
. 8·Cant.on Ccm. C•lh. JS-2 .............. ,..... 62

HC:ruy 93, Patkway 79

9-Dover 111-2 .........................................54
tl&gt;GAU.lA ACADEMY ti-l .............. 3t

Sylvania Nortbview 72, Swanton S9
Teays Val. 90, Amandi-Ce.amcek S6
Tol. Emanuel Bapl. 16, C1lvary
(Mid&gt;.) CM. 6S
.
:[ol. Libbey I.S, t&gt;.,.. Colond White 79
Triod 62, Brio!Janont41
TU~CU~wu Cllh. 61, Oanw1y 44
Tll&amp;low 60, Riamon 53
Uaiololl,l'lk-79
Upper Arlinatm 7S_, Col. Watsarson 51
UiiOa 71,NOdhrid ·· 71 (OT) .
Volloy,W.Vo. 7S,~62
·
Vktory Ow. 76. Chriltian COmmunity
53
'
W. Chca:tor Wolt 66, Cin. Winton
·Woodll63
Wolnu1R;dao76, Col. Brigo 6t
Wurcn Champion 67, Newton Falll
II'! (2 at)
Wurm Hardin&amp; 91 , YounJ. Ur~ulinc
70
w........m. 49. Twinobwa 41
WUNw Rivu Vaew 74, Sheridan 5!5

Othcn reul•lnl n or mlft point.:
11-BCI.lcy 19. 12-Canfield II. t].w.,.
saw River View 14. 14-C~m~lltan 13.

DI•tslon m

Iula

lll.

I-Sherwood Pllrvie.w (12) 19-0..........W
2-S"II"""""" O...way (3) :ZO.O.......... tl3
J.Sorin&amp;. tc... .... Ridp(2) 20-0 ........ 164
4-Ak,uoi' 5L V-.'!L Mlly 0) Il-l ........ 136

5-BEIJ'IU! (I) 20-0 ..............,............. lZl
I&gt; Vcnailleo 20-0 ................................ .101
7-Middlctial.d ~ 19· 1 ........... :.... .'77
8-Doylet\o'lm Chippewa I1·1 ..............66
9-Mincul Rid.. tt:2 ............................S3

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I

•
•

'' '
••
I

Ohio women's
college scores
Ohio Athletic Conference
Baldwin-Wallace 73, John Caaoll62
c. ilat 74, Hirun 54
!!.l'..ot~ 61, Ohio N""""'" 63
Mount Urum 72, Mari«U Sl
~ 72. MuMinpn 56

Auoc. ol Mld-Eut Colleges
Blufftcm 86, Ddianco12

Mid-Ohio Confernco

•'

Othen reubifta tl

Wayneafield 75, Indian Lake !57
Wayncmuo 61, Middletown Madison
41
.
WOIIfoU 70, Ridunond Date sB sa

lll.

1-Donvillo (16) 19-0 ...........................706
2-Now Ri.,.ot (2) t7-0 ........ ................ 1a6
3-S. Owl...., SE t 9- !.....................t 72
4- Bulc ...... (2) t8-o........................ tS1

Wilminlton 63,11unilU&gt;n Rou 53
W-... 62. CanlOll Timll111 59 (at)

5-Jacbon Cmta {I) 20-0 ................... 144
6-l.&lt;nin C.lh. (t) 17-t ..... :................. t04

World Harvc•t IS, Moun1 Vernon

7-M,Donold

Aud. 50
WOI1hi.natonctu. 7!1 E.. Knox 58
Y.... a. Chaney 68, ~ Hobon 56
Youna. Moon~ 49, Awtintown-Fi\Ch
47

tl&gt;2................... :.............. 63

8-0uovillo 16-2............... ...................... 61
9-tlorlin llilaod t6-4 ............................. 35
to-Faycneville(l) 17-1 ....... ...... ......'...... 34

OUien r~lvlna U or more polnl.l1
11-Gatct MillJ Oilmour 29. 12·Georae-

Youna. Rayen 70, Young. Boardman
46

town 13 . 13 (tie)·Moaldore, Zant~Yillc

Youna. Wilton 64,lndian River Sl

R01ocrant 12.

Zane Traoc 62, Paint Vlll. SO
Zarwo..Yi.l..le ROMlCftnl 65, TrimblcSI

.

Hockey

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

NHL standings

Regular-season action
Akron K12t100n: 62, Ak.too Eln11 48
A1uon Sprina. 48, Akron Ellei 45 (011
Akmn Si. V-SlM BO. Bcaumont22
Aohland en..v;.w 48, l't)'IIIOIIIh 29
Atw1tcrCJv. 28, Mopdorc Chr. II
Bollcvue 52. WU!ud 40
Bt.....C....U61,Col. Eut40
Bowlin11 Otem S3, MJilliTirJe 52

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

Atr.nUc IHwUJoft

lt L I U: lA 'fd.

Philodelphio ...... 6 7 t
N.Y·. Wandcn ... ~ 6 I
N._Y. Rqon .... l 6 t

13 3S 40
32 39
1t 32 3t
11

. .
Howland Chr. 70, YOQll· Ouiatian 46
Hubbud 11. BldJCI'"

lniiWI Crook 61, s....a...vm. C.lh. 60
Iacboo 50, Vimon Co. 47
John Gkm 76, MoiJM 52
IYlida 54, Colwnbull Orovo S3 (01)
X.anau l...ako&amp;a 70, Hopewe.U Lo.ldon

This Silver Key can
get'you $1,000 closer
to your new home.

61

.Ka!Mo 74, Moyfield 45
Koo10072.l!lain63
Kirlknil sa. F"oirpaot ll&amp;rbar st
LaBrae 71, YCMII- Uberty 67
i.WIInd 61, c-... VoL 57
LoUViow SO, Bndliold 41
LcipoK 72. oa.vtllo 56
llberly Uniiln 57, Piohor C.lh. 39
Um• C.ddl, Sponcorvillo40
Lincoln Bop1. 52. Wollin- 40
t..i1W1 Milmi 76, Clc!moal Nonheutem5a
Lon4m 6:Z. OnndYiew 51
Louiovillo ..,...., 90. Camt Fullon

f

I .

•

z

4

~

Check
your
-furnace
filters
We have
•
most s1zes

2S

29

3t

39

WESTERN CONFERENCE
CeelraiiM't'tlklll

Ium

Chicalf.o ............
Detnnt......... .....
SLLouil .......... .
Toronto .............

lt I. I U: lA fd.

8
1
'
6
Winnipca .......... 4
DaUu................ 3

41
33

P.dl1c Di~lllon
Calgary ............ . 6 S l . 13 41
SanJwe ....... ..... 5 4 2 ·12 24

ll
33

s

5
3 5
4 g
2 4

16
15
15
U
II
K

5Q
45

11
11
38
41
47
36

EdmoniO'I. .........
Ln. Angeb. .... .
AnAheim.. .......
Vancouwcr ........

4 0
4 l
4 I
S 3
6 J
6 2

2" 12
3
9

so

42

34
36

41
19

0

8 24

41

4

8

40

28

Tuesday's scores
Pilt.abufRh 5, B01tm 3

Quc::bcc), N.Y. IIlmden 2
Philadelphia S, Tampe, lhy 2

Tonight's games
Mmtrea.l at Hartfont, 1 p.m.
N.Y. R.a.ngen: al Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
WuhinJtcl'lll New Jcncy, 7:30p.m.
Flod.da, 7:30p.m.

Otu.w•••
Edmonton
l...t::.

11 Toronlo,

PICKENS

7:30p.m.

HARDWARE

Ansel• 1t O.llu , I :JQ p.m.

Wi.nnipeJ. 1:30 p.m.
VIRCOOvcr at S1n Jwe, 10:30 p.m.

Octm111

.MASON, V. VA.
304·773·5583

Hartford 11 Pitli!MJh, 7:10p.m.
Mootroll•t N.Y. Rqcn, 1:30 p.m.
·. Qu.eboc at·PIW.Idclphil, 7:30p.m.
Cala•ry 1t OUe~ao. 1:30 p.m.

FROM DON WOOD:

The Name Behind
These Mean Total

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92 Ford Festiva L 5 spd., sport stripe... ........ .. ......'4495
90 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 dr , auto ., air, cruise. .. .. .. '5995
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91 Ford Aerostar Auto., air, 7 passenge r. ........ .. ........ '7995
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Codarvillo ". MalaM ...

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11 28
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93 FORD TAURUS GL

•

•
'

Mon.ucal ........... 4 4 3
Hltlfont ............ 2 7 J

6 S t

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FAMILY HOMES INC .

~~orth~Ja..

Mondar • Saturdar: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon_· 6 pm · ·

1S 16

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

DMslon IV

•.,

•••

.............. 7 4 I

Butf~o

01'

Ium

Wdliffe 69, Willrughby S. 63
Willa-Hill Otr. 71, lfawi:en School. 64

•

TDU FREE 1·8110-822~0417 • 872~2844
344·5947. 422·0766

Bwta~

33
22
29

mort polnll:
11. 12·
Wellsville 17, 13-WIUICCil IS.

•'

•

Qu ................. 1 t t 0 22 46

li·Z..netvillc W . \tUikin(um

•

-••

Norlbeut DtvLdon

1O-Coldw1~ 16-2 :....... ... .............. ........ 25

Huber Jlu. Wayne 63, W . Curollton

Non-conference action

30

5-Millertbur&amp; W. lloln-u (1) 18· 1 ..... 117

59
CcnLr•l St. 90, Kentucky St. 10

31
42
26

Thursday's games

Division II

Local ·

Rictwnmd Hu. 65, BrvGI!yn 31
ltidaowood 92, Newoornemown42
Ru.li&amp; 96. Pranklin-Moruoc: 76

Sl

liL

l · Pi.ck.cringi.Cin (19) 11·1 ..................... 216
2·BcavCittCCk (I ) 20-0 ...................... .172
3- WOOAter 18-0 ................................. ..1:57
4·Col. Brookh1Ven20-0........ ,............. 140
5-La.kcwood (I) 19-0 .......................... 129
6-You. Boirdman 18-1 ....................... 104

64, Nelsonville·

8U~Ckeye

6 20

PilllbwJ.h ......... II .0 I 23 56

Division I

7a 1oolmia 57
.
Shod~o 67,11olWro Sl John St
Solon 74, Chordon NJ).Q. 67
Sprir!Jbrm&gt; 50, Lobanoa 47 (011
St. OaiJsvillc 7&amp;, Maldowbrook 68

66

Midwest

•
•'

.

Connoaur77. Modioan 57
Coohoolon 61, Tri-V.U.y66
Cuy•hoaa'V11. Ov. Ac.~d . 90, Root·
•town 71
0~1011 87,1!. Canlm 70

Cit.tdel 69, Gcorgi.l Soulhc:m 62
Miuisaippi S1.. 76, Kmwcky 71

..

•

turns in the auth and final
weekly regubr-aeason 1994 -95 poll for
The Auociued Preu, by Ohio Hiah
School Athletic Auoci1tion divi1ioru ,

Seb .

Day . D.Jnbtr 69, Trolwood Mad.i&amp;on

Siena 97, Niagan 84

.

Lodlthn B.16, Grand Rivor53

OeatfadL1J,Luou 54
Col. BmoHiawm~ 45, Col But 31
Col. ~ 83, Grove. City 76
Col. Euhnoor 76, Col. ~brion·
Fnnili&lt;l.64
"
CoL Undat- McKin.l~y 61, Cal. Whd.·
&amp;tme 65 (01')
Col Mifllin 51, Cot Cen.......W 54
Cot Nanhland 63, Col. o-hm&gt;~~ :1!1
Cot s.. a.a~. 69,
lCilbownoSl
.
Col. We.t 11, tol.lndcpeadau:e 71

Temple S9, Penn 56
ViUano.-a 89, Syncu11e 87 (Olj
Wagt~er93,

350 V•B POWER/SILVERADO

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Co.

ColumbU SO, Ool..ulhonn W. 5[

Mui11 80, SL Francia, NY 66
Rider 85, Monmoulh, NJ. 70

••

CONVERSION VAN ·

Oc.. lndcpendc:ncc 64, Cu)'lhoa• Hta.

Cotumbillll-a..m.w 66, llnilod

Conncclicut91, Oooraaown IS
Fairleigh Dicl.insun 16, Long hland
Univ. 66
George Wuhingtm 80. Ma1UchUiet1S

No Doc Fees Oefflred'

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

CoymmtM,Indiaa Vol. 69

a.. lloriloao 64, Lollo Ridp A ..d. 62

(at)

East ·

•

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIU PICKUP

Lakcrs 11 Saaamen.to, IO:lO p.m.

.

Ea~tem

Richmood Edison S5,
so

Hil.li .S6, Cin. SL Bemud

Cin. Sllmmh Counuy D1y 67, Cin.
Londmodt62
Cin. Tall 57, Cin. Hu&amp;hel S1
Cin. Woodwud 74, Cin. We.tcm Hilla

58

ha~k.c tb all

Middletown Fenwick 60, Lanon-Mon·

Reedni.lle

51

60

1!.1tc panel of lpMI wric.cn and
bro~dcutcn rata Ohio hi~ IChool gi.rla

How a

Yadi52
Ro)'llold•bura S.S, W•lkinl Mcrnori•l
45

Cin. Roser Bacon 65, Day. Ch•mi~en

Middlelown 94, We~~\crVil.lo S. 71
Middlcwwn Chr. 90, Ttpp City Bethd

Ravama SoUthcut62., Rnenna 46

nade-Juliennc 48

New York 1\ Miami, 7:30p.m.
Uoull.on at Chulou.c, I p.m.
CLEVELAND .at Mihvaukcc, 8:30

'

Cin.-

Cin.

Ohio H.S. girls'. poll

MoUnt Vemon 69. Dd.awm~ 61
N. Adam• SO, Eutcm Brvwn 71
N. Con1011 II, New ~dolphil66
N. RoyohGn 60, Buckeye SO
New AlhMy 8S, Berne Union 41
Newbury 64, IJctbhire 57
Nilao 61, Poland 54
Ncm!oni&amp; 71. Field 59
oo Hill6S, srmm.. v~. sa
O.Lorio 64, Sprna lli&amp;htond 40
Orrville 61, Tri••Y SJ
Perry 38, Pym1wnin1 Val23
.
-.villoa3.B
70
. Picltcrin&amp;lon62.-=oll47
Piqua 611', T&gt;pp City S9

ier3S

Denver at Ne.w Jcn~ey, 7:30 p.m.

'

Oillliool.hc 61, Athen. 52
Cin. Aikai 63, Cin. Wo!nuollillc 50
110, Cin.!Wrial&gt;l 56
a..l!lllor72. an. McNldlotu"
Cin. llillcJ$ .., Cin. OuUIWt 12
Cin. Madcin Sot, Cin.. HilJl Chr. Acad.

Cin. Mount Healthy 7S, Cin. NoM· .
wat49
Cin. N. Collctc Hill 71, New MiAmi
35
Cin. 71' Milford 64
Cin. Purcell-Marian 67, Kouerina Al-

Thursday's games

•

w.v•. .s9

44

Tonight's games

.

Canfidd 34, Stl\dhcn43
Culialll 14, F..dacwood 66
CatlclbuJB 73, Col.IWdy 49
Cml.crlillo 64, Troy SO
O.uiOI 76, Cle. C.lhclic 61
QCihirc River Val. 67, PoWPlouw.

2:1
30.5

Minneaoblal Phibdelphla, 7:30p.m.
Orlando at CI.£VELAND, 7:30p.m.
DelJ'Oita\ Indiana, 7:30p.m,
Washingwn at C~cago, 7:30p.m . ..
Portllnd at Phomu, 9 p.m.
Sc.atLle at LA. LU~. 10:30 p.m.
Boston 11 Golden State, I0:30 p.m.

I ~ A.

44

t2

llpp City 45 , Sprina. Nonhwcmm 29

~·62. Lickina nu. 60
' R i d p .S 1, WCI\cm Rc:Ktve 37
Mowl1 Gilold 60, N. Union ~5

Canal Winchaler SO, Hamihon Twp.

11 .

Tuesdity's scores

78

' ND!kcFilf!l~ed'

3

75

New Jersey 109, O!.ulouc 98
Orlando Ill , Indiana 92
Miami 112. Milwaulioc 99
Detroit l06, NewYork94
W11hiilgton 99, Mirmc:soll 96
SIUl Amonio 1J 2. Ut.ah 96
DaU.o 95. Pontand 90
.HOUSI«&lt; 124, L.A. Oipprn.104
Atlanta 99, Dcnwcr 8S
Se.ttlc 118, Golden Stale 108
Sacl"lmct\IO 108, Bosaon 101

•

sa 688**

IS

23.5

.543

5 11.;
2 14 ;

.

.404

37 .229

21

ijelpre .......................9 2 12 5
•
Wellston ...................7 4 9 7
Tuesday's scores
c
MEIGS .....................4 7 7 9
EASTERN 64, Nelsonville- York~
.
Vinion County .: ........4 9 · 4 13 52
NelsonviUe-York......2 II 4 14 .
MEIGS 57, Wahama 54
Federal Hocking 71, Alexande~
HockinII Division
66 (OT)
'
Federal Hocking ..... 10 2 12 4
Zanesville Rosecrans 65, Trimble.
SOUTHERN .......... 10 4 11 8 51
. MiUer........................8 4 9 7

VAN DEALER WITH OVER 300 TO CHOOSE FROM!

28

4

L.A. Lake.n ....., ...... 29 16 .644
Sacramenlo ............ 26 20 .565

TVC boys' cage standings
Obio Division
Div. Overall

.714

Dlwllion 0
Cin St. Ursula 64, Cin. Lawelatld 40
Bclletonlline 70, Day. Ch.risti.&amp;n 51

.... so

BNO!r 71, Cw.lm 56
Bry1n 14, WaynoTncc II
Buc.kcycTrail69, Brid.WW' 41
C. AtlhurWiloon IS, Uberty eM. 7'1
Compbell 70, C~vory Ou:. 53

Sill

14

P1clnc. Dlvlalon
Phomill ...........: ......38 10 .792
Seaule.:.................. 34 12 .739

'
••

BRAND NEW '95 CtEVY AS1RO EXTENDED

lt L f£1.

60

. 43

77

11 32
11 38
10 23

·.

petition, so !hat mallei' is closed." ·
Tyson was convicted in 1992 of
raping Desiree Washing1011, 1 teen·
age Miss Black America. beauty
pageant co ntestant m hts hotel :
room in July 1991. He was sen· ··
tenced to si' years at the lndilll8
Youth Center in nearby Plainfield,
but becau se or good behavior,
which cams one day off his 1en11
for each day he stays out of trOUble,
he will be freed from the Plalnfaeld
prison on Mareh 25.
H. Christian DeBruyn, commissioner of the 'Department of Correction . rescinded !he. penalty !hat
pushed Tyson's release date back
more than a month because Tyson
has been a model prisoner since
then and deserves to be credited for
good behavior, spokeswoman Pam
Pattison said ..

Fairfield 49, Cin. Harrisoo 39
Vindalia-BuLlcr 61. D1y . Meadowdal e

Mmurl...ak.cCa.th. 49, Pldlll43
Miomiobwx 83, Doy. Curoll SS
Middlefield Cardinal 71, lAdaema.u

o-..w.

Utah ....................... 35

Day. Cha mina de· Julienne 61, Day .
Colonel White 23

M1uillon Ja ckson 63, Canton
CltmOolt 56
•
Ma..u1on Petry 4.S, Uniontown I.Akc

Morn«67, Vol. Fma•64

BIMmlleld W, Wmdban 61
66, Clooodool' 53

Ium

Muailloa 67, Stow 57

Bcamlto65, Mo..... Vol. 51

Mldwat Dt•b:lon

Cin. Moun1 Neue D1me 59, Odord
Tabw•r\da 4""/
Colc!"llin 35 , Milford 32

MeiaJ 57, Wohoma, W.Vo. 54

Bt.....c....tJ 76, Lopn Elm 61

WESTERN CONFERENCE

41

Mc:Cltin 10, E. Clinton 61

t:t"Ji!3"'

12
12

Cin. Hughea 62, Glen F...lO 54
Cl n. fdcAuley 41, Cin. Weste rn llili.J

Mdlooold 61, Malhewo 52

- - s o . 0......46
74, Pairbonb 60
·
'B, Malvcm 73

a

Dt..Uion I

Cin. An d~a~47, Cin. Wilhrow 3S

Marim PlNIW 94, Bucteyc Val. 58
MariOft Jlivc:tVall2. Ncrthm(W 36
Martini Fony 57. s~. 56

Bellbrook 69' Molar l9

3
75

Tournaments

fl.hdi1on -Plain1 17, S. Chuluton
So.lth.eutsn S3
M..ple Hu. ·a5, Gad'lOld Hu. 11
M.umatha Chr. 7:5, ~"~ Chr. 61

Batavia 74, an. Lock.l.lad 39
BelveteftliCk 71, Illy. Patlerlon «)
a.n.u. 74, Coniboidao 64

2

·

43

Auranll,lleoi:h......t79
Bun111Vill116t, Cadiz 54

.633

Atllnta ................... 23 26
Mllwau.kce ............. 19 30
lleuoiL ................... 18 29

•

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A.m..: Mich. IS, Tol Woodwud 62
AlaOa 0mmlry 10, Oufiold'66
""-lal3, T-.ia Volloy S. 65
An:uum 72.
Shawnee 63
.......... 72. Ri....W. 57
Aohlibllol!dp.....S 63, Aolubut..,
Alhtabult Sl JOOn M. left'CIMit Aft.

Allantk Dlwlllon

Ium

steals, two blocks, 12 turnovers and
16 team fouls.
Eastern gcies to Trimble Friday
and to Federal Hocking Saturday.

NELSONVILLE·YORK
(16-11·12-13::52)
Jeremy Thrapp 3-0-2=8, Ryan
Wildman 1-1-11=5; Jason Gall 91=19, Adam Nolan 1-0=2, Jason
Waite 4-0'3=11, Jason Wickman 21-0=7. Totals: 20-2-6/10=52
Reserve 11ame: NelsonvilleYork 68, Eastern 59

ortgtnally scheduled March 25
release dat e. Newman said he
opposed a petition to reconstaer a
pos sible early relea se that wa s
denied by Marion Superior Coun
Judge Patricia Gifford last weclc.
"My predece ssor had riled a
response (to Tyson' s petition) saying he was taki~g no position and
letting the judge rule however she
ruled," the newly elected prosecutor said. " We filed a new response
.
saying we oppose
any' early release,
and oppose it rather vocifero~sly.
On Friday, the jud ge denied the

Florida.. ............ S 1 I
Tamp Bay ....... 5 7 ,
New Jcncy ....... 4 5 2
wuhiniiOn ..... ' 2 7 2

Con1011 ·c.lh. Si, Foirl&lt;u 38

L-BNih 71, Owdon 56

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

MEIGS
(ll·lS..l5-Ui=57)
Gary Stanley 0-1 ~2=5, Mark
Mills 0-0-2=2, Cass Cleland 8-01=17, Paul Pullins 4-0-3=11, Ben
Ewing 1-0-1=3, Nick Hanning 0-11=4, Travis Abbou 3-0·9~15.
Totals: 16-2-19=57
,'1.._

.

~·

Lowdlvillo77,S. RqeS2

Briolol70, Onnd Vol. 61

assists, while senior Buckley also
had a fme floor game.
Eric Hill had another one of
those nights. Hill wanted the basketball and the guards got it to !he
man with !he hot hand. Hill drilled
9-14 field goals, including several
clutch buckets in Eastern's comeback, plus one three pointer. Micah
Ot_to and Bissell complimented
Hill's effon.
.
Eastern won, the bailie of the
boards 33-27 led by Bissell with 8.
Waite and Gail each had seven for
N-Y. Ea~tcm hit 23-54 fo~ 42 percent from !he floor, hit 3-9 treys
and was 15-18 at !he line. EHS had
nine assists (Bowen 6), had six
ste;lls (Bowen 3). 18 turnovers and
18leam fouls. N-Y hit12-61 for 36
percent, hit 2-11 treys and hit 6-10
free throws. N-Y had 10 assists
(Thrapp/Wildman four each). had 6

defeat Axel Schulz, whom he Herbie Hide on March II for the
meet s on April 22 in the first W BO heavyweight title. "People
defense of the title.
need to lake pressure off him, give
Riddick Rowe also said Tuesday him his space, give him a break and
he'd like to fight Tyson, but Bowe time to adjust."
said the boxing world should give
The boxers' comments came
Tyson some breathing room after after news broke that !he Indiana
he's released.
Department of Correction restored
" I' d like noLhing more in the more than a month of good behavworld than getting Mike Tyson in ior time Tyson had lost due to disthe boxing ring for tlie biggest ciplinary problems early in his
sporting event ever, but I want to prison tenn.
fight a Mike Tyson that is 'prepared
Marion County Prosecutor Scott
both mentally and physically," Newman said there is . no den! to
said Rowe, who is set to challenge spring Tyson any sooner than his

Ncriawesltl

Sluiwneo SL 11, Tdfi.D 75
Wot.b M, RIO 011AND1! 76

NBA standings

"

• Power Brakes
• Tilt Steenng
·Cru1se
• AMIFM Cassene
• Power Windows
• Power Loci&lt;s
• 4 Captau1 Chairs

QbioO.,jnicw 64, thtlua SS

Basketball

'•'

• Extended Chass1s
• Dnver·S1de_A1r Bag
• Ant1·locl&lt; Brakes ·

him, and would be happy to tal&lt;e
him up on the challenge.
"I heard Tyson was getting out
of the jailhouse prel!y quick, and
he said if he gets out today, he'll
whip George tomorrow. I'd like 10
give him that opportunity," said
Foreman, 46, who recaptured the
heavyweight title last Nov. 5 wilh a
I Oth-round kn()\:kout of Michael
Moorer.
Foreman said he'd only fight if
Tyson isn •'t connected with his former promoter, Don King.
But before he can face Tyson, or
another opponent, Foreman must

Scoreboard

Eastern beats Nelsonville-York 64-52
The Eastern Eagles soared to a
64-52 · triumph over the Nelsonville- York Buckeyes Tuesday
night in boys' Tri-Valley Conference basketball action.
Eastern head coach Tony Deem
said; "The boys played really well
tonight. We've been playing good
basketbalL Tuesday night's on !he
road have been good to us. We've
got some momentum going now
and hopefully we can carry that
into the tournaments. We ca·n•t
look too far ahead, though, because
we can be a deterinining factor in
this leag ue, yet"
.
; · Junior swing guard Eric Hill led
:chc Eagles (5- 11 overall &amp; 4-8 in
:th e Hocking Division) wi.th 19
points. while Micah Ouo and Char'lie Bissell each added 13 each.
;: Jason Gail equaled Hill's mark
:(o lead the Buckeyes (4-14 &amp; 2-11

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Aih·~

~

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
1\u~.-Sat. Or By Appoinhnent Call614-992-2478

DON WOOD
"Where Better Really Matters"
East State Street
Athens, Ohio

~

'·

593·6641
' .

�•

Wednesday, February 15, 1995 :

Ohio

Society
scrapbook

Ohio Ur.iversity
College of Osteopath ic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

DRAI NING BAKER'S CYST
WILL GIVE TEMPORARY
RELIEF
. Question: I've been having trouble walking. My knee just doesn't
'eem to work properly. It hurts a
little, but it mostly doesn't work
like it should. My doctor ordered
an " MRI" that showed a Baker's
cyst. What is a Baker's cyst, and
why does it keep my knee from
working?
Answer: To explain the cause of
a Baker's cyst, I need to review for
you the normal structure of the
knee. As you know, the knee is the
flexible connection between the
upper leg bone, the femur, and the"
lower leg bone, the tibia. The connection between the femur and
tibi a is not mechanically strong.
They rest one upon the other with
about as much stability as a book
lying on the coffee table. The knee
is made strong enough to handle
the stress of walking and running
by the additional suppon provided
by very strong ligaments and by
muscles.
The actual area of contact
between the bones or the knee is
covered with a smooth layer of cartilage. This cartilage is bathed by a
small amount of joint fluid that
nourishes and lubricates the joint.
The fluid,
·
called synovial fluid, is made by a
thin tissue sack called the synovial
membrane.
In some conditions, the most
common of which is rheumatoid
arthritis, the "joint capsule" and
synovial lining balloon out at their
weakest point, which is always at
the back of the knee. This bulging
tissue becomes fi)led with synovial
fluid and thereby ,earns the medical
label "Baker'scyst" The cyst causes problems walking because it
mechanically limits bending the
knee. In simple terms, it just gets in
the way . Question: Is the surgery
my orthopedic doctor advised the
only treatment, or will the draining
and cortisone treatment my family
doctor suggested help? Answer:
Your family doctor has suggested
wking a fairly simple approach to
your problem. The doctor puts a
needle into the cyst and removes as
. much fluid as possible. This tern-

porarily shrinks the cyst, and since
it is the size that is causing your
symptoms, you will have immedi·
ate, although temporary. relief. In
most cases, however, the abnormally large amounts of fluid your synovial membrane is producing will,
in a relatively short period of time,
return the cyst to its previous bal·
looned size.
Your family docior also suggested you should have a cortisone
shot. into the cyst. This medication
reduces the inflammuion of
rheumatoid arthritis that is tlie
underlyin~ cause of your Baker's
cyst. While using cortisone will
prolong the period of relief you get
from draining, it won't cure the
underlying condition. It is knowl·
edge of the temporary natw'e of this
treatment that led your orthopedic
surgeon to recomm~nd surgical.
removal of the offending cyst
As you've probably guessed by
now. surgical removal usually
gives more prolonged relief from
the cyst than that obtained from
simply drnining il Also, at the time
of surgery for Baker's cyst. otber
. underlying knee problems are often
addressed. Addressed is the correct
term here, sinre the other underlr·
ing pr.oblems, often rheumatotd
arthritis, aren't totally correctable.
I'm rather conservative-in my
approach to surgery. I recommend
against it until surgery clearly
offers an advantage over other
types of treatment. Draining a
Baker's cyst is a fairly simple procedure that has very ljltle risk associated with it, Therefore, it would
seem like the best first step. However, the amount of other underlying knee problemsQeven·those that
don't cause constant 'painQcan
. swing the balance in favor of
surgery first. Ask both of your doc·
tors to explain why they think their
preferred method of treatment is
best and why the other's approach
is less desirable. Then you will
have to decide which is best for
you.
"Family Medicine"'is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio Unlwnity College or OsfeO.
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
.Athens, Ohio 45701.

A valentine banquet was held by
the youth group of the Hope Baptist Church, Middlepon, Saturday
night for 'members of the church.
In addition 10 serving the dinner,
the youth provided entertainment
including songs, skits, poems, and
inslrumenllll music. Drawings were
held throughout the evening with
prizes going to Mark and Denise
Michael, Judy and John Pat Riley,
Dave and Mary Bryan, Lee and
Bran Williams, Dick and Jeannie
Owen, James and Donna Grueser,
Jim 311d Missy Grueser, Jackie and
Brian Justice, Mary Beals, Emma

Ashley. and Dorothy Kinney.
Royalty was named with Brian
.and Jackie Justice· being named
king and queen . Others anendiilg
were Jarrena and Hailey Ebersbach, Jeremiah and James Russell,
and· Jc'ss ica Juslice. Youth who
served the dinner and provided
entertainment were Matthew Justic.c, Nick Michael, Jason Riley,
Chrissy Williams, Adam Williams
and Rachel Ashley . .
Youth meetings are held at the
Ch!lfCh on Wednesday nights at 7
p.m. Youth, grades seven through
12, arc invited to join.

PomeroyO.
A town of merchants and coal
industry too;
Although I was not born there, 110 Some think. these are hardly
not so:
enough things to do.
But om in a hollow I was raised · The newspaper, the banks, all
and did grow
schools where kids go.
On the limits of the village, 0 The atmosphere so uncalm, 0
f omeroy 0,
Pomeroy 0.
A village so small with a long The light from above grows
parking lot wall,
brighter each day,
whe re folks of all ages hang ·o ut As some of the people become
summer, spring and fall .
humble and pray.
J he moo n shining on the river Deception and lies will no Jon~r
b.nngs a parucular glow,
show 1'
Reflect111 g off th e buildings of 0
Love and peace will spring up in 0

•

8 AM-10 PM

mi4dleofthenighttodiscoveramale
friend in my fourth flool dorm room.
I said, 'What in the world are you
doin&amp; in here?' He did not reply and
ran off immediately.
I chased him all the way to his
room and pounded on his door. When
he opened il, I demanded to know
what he had been doing in my room.
He acted as if he had just gouen .up
and said, • Are you OK?" He seemed
totally bewildered. I walked away
confused and scared.
1 couldn't get this incident out of
my mind, so a few days later, I
decided 10 write him a leuet I told

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 18, 1995

COCA COLA
PRODUCJS
12 PK 12 OZ. CANS

OIL
480Z.

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PomeroyO.
Its streets being rid of trouble and
crime
Is an ultimate hope and vision of
mine.
lls purpose united to live by God's
grace,
You may think it strange but it's
possible by faith.
These things can happen I believe
and I know,
As peace to Jerusalem so be it to
you, 0 Pomeroy 0.
Ronald Coats
Pomeroy

·

::

~!

The Pub.lic Utilities Commission ol
Ohio has set for public heari~g Case
No. 94-101-EL-EFO, to review the
fuel procurement practices and pol~
cies tif Ohio Power Company, the operalion of its Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the Commission offices at 10:00 a.m. on March
14, 1995:'
All interested parties will be given an
oppOrtunity lo be heard. Further information may be obtained by contacting the Commission at 1eo Easl
Broad Streel, Columbus. Ohio

43266-0573.

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111 Stcond St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
.
SINCE 1868

I

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l:::lr-11

THE NASHVILL! NET'WORie.

1-1-llour sports

col'era~ e.

incltuling action from fal'llrite profe .uimw~ tem11.1 .

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TO PERFORM • The Perry Sisters will be performing 7 p.m.
Feb. t 7 at the First Church or God. This southern gospel female
vocal group originated in Huntington, W.Va. in 1974. Their fint ·
national single release in 1984 "Child, You're Soon Coming
Home" remained on lbe southern gospel charts ror eiaht months.

ROAD KILL
BUSHMAN
BAND

LIFETIME

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MIODLEPORT, OH. 45760
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DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

To earn il, Bird achieved and maintained a satisfactory level ofperformance and an unblemished conduct
record for the entire period.
He_i:&gt; currentlr, assigned aboard
the guided misstle frigate U.S.S.
Roben 0 . Bradley, homeported in
Charleston, S.C.
.
A 1990 graduate of Southern ·
High School, he joined the Navy in

scrv_i_ce·_·
· d-ur-ing_a_ro_ur_-y_ear_pe_r_iod_._A_u_gu-st-19_90_
. -

- · Belpre. announce lbe binll of their -~ ·
second child, a daughter, Tiffany ~
4lf.
' Markesa. Tiffany was born, Dec.
· 30 at Camden Clark Memorial
Hospiial, Parkersburg, W.Va. She
weighed 8 pounds, I0 ounces and
was 19 iocbes long.
4lf.
Paterilal great-grandparents nre
Callie Sheets, Lenore. Tenn .. and
· Roselee Johnson, Charleston, W.
Va.; maternal great-grandparents
.
are Mynle Craft. Tuppers Plains, 41(.
and Gay and Laura Field,
_
CoolVille.
'
~
~
Mr. and Mrs. McCann have a
four-year-old daughter, Heather ~ Regular Hq,urs: 9:~0-4:30 Tu~sday·Saturda\' ~
Marie.

90

appreciation frOm sunshine recipients, Roger Tony, Jackie Frosl, and
Richard Barton were heard . Belly
Dean reported on plans for the
focus workshop held Feb. II in
Athens. It was noted tllat OAGC
spring bulb orden nre 10 be turned
in to Dorothy Karr by March 1.
Dean reported on the Meigs
County Fair flower show scores,
noting that overall, the combined
score was 92.2. The judges comments noted the lack of good staging, depth and poor lighting for
public viewing of the classes. She
had excellent comments on the
educational exhibits.
The March I meeting will be
held atthe home of Twila Buckley.
The hostesses served a dessert
course to 14 members. Clarice
Krautter won the door prize.

.Sports.
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Now Available In Your Area

McCann birth •
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Mr. and Mrs. Mark McCann of

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Fo rget to save some of your
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''Nuggets 1J1!1i Dooziu" is the IJIISWi!r.
&amp;nd a self-addr!sst!d,/ong. bu.!illessSiu envelope IJI!d a check or mone}l
order for $.s.2S Ithis inc/udtspostage
and handling) to: Nuggm . c/o AM
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Ill. 606JJ-0562. (In Canada , send

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High School joined the Navy in
July l990.
,
Harold W. Btrd
Navy Pelly Officer 3~d. Class
Harold W. Btr~. son of William H..
and Judy K. Bud of Racme, recently recetved the Navy Good Conduct Medal.
.
The medal recogmzes the service member's "honest and fatthful

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CrMicwss~·

and the animals of the field and
became known as the patron saint
of birds and animals.
Edna Wood gave garden tidbits
on the sweet potato as an ornamenial house plant. She said it is easy
to J!rDW and makes a 'luick show of
fohage. Her instructiOns were to
place the cut side of the potato in
shallow water and place it in a
warm lighted area . Roots soon
appear and green shoots show in
two to three weeks, she said.
. Devotions were by Debbie
Miller who gave readmgs from
Helen Steiner Rice's book, "Somebody Loves You." It was noted that
the gardening magazine, "Birds
noted.
.
..
.
and Bloom" feature a full color
St. FranciS of AssiSt! according photo of a full size flower bed at
to. Mora.. followed a mil•la!Y. career the home of Chester Garden Club
wtth a hfe o~ utter sl.mphctty. H.e· menlber Lula Toban.
communed wtth the btrds or the arr
During the business meeting

Appearing Friday &amp; .Saturday A't

,•

P17·02· 1.50 1-BACOSS 150

895. ~ ~

she said, that distinction rightly
goes.to an lri~ monk. by the name
of Ftacre. Europeans have recognized him as the patron saint of
gardeners since the middle ages. In
the U. S. statues of St. Fiacre can
be found in .many famous gardens
and museums including Cypress
Gardens and The Cloisters at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New Yooc
SL Fiacre reportedUy had a deep
love of silence and found great joy
in plantin~ and harvesting. People
came to htm for food, healing and
spiritual guidance and he Welcorned all to his culinary gardens
that fed the poor and hungry, Mom

.

I•

1
II
II

LEGAL NOTICE

::

KIDNEY BEANS

· . ::

TUPPERS PLAINS- Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 9053 dinner
for men and Ladies Auxiliary at
6:30p.m., Thursday.

I

JOAN OF ARC .LT, RED, CHILl, OR DARK RED

.:
GRADUATE· Cheryl D.
Stevens recently graduated .
from Bowling Green State
University with a bachelor of
arts in political science, and
will be attending law school In
the fall. She is the daughter or
Peggy Stevens, Middleport,
and Charles Stevens, Racine.

COUPON

The Mei$s Soil and Water Conservation Dtstrict Ladies Auxiliary
is offering for sale fruit tree packets
which contain one each of the following: yellow delicious apples,
red delicious· apple, granny smith
apples, stayman winesap apple.
Cost of the fruit tree packet is $21.
Other packets available this year
include single variety packets or
white pine, scotch pine, Colo111do
blue spruce or Norway spruce con.taining 25 tree seedlings for $8..
The backyard packet contauls
two each of burning bush, white
flowering dogwood, forsythia, Per·sian lilac and arrow-wood viburnum for $8'. Crown vetch ground
cover plants are available for $21
for 72 plants.
The American wildflower mix·
ture contains a blend of up to 20
different annual and perennial
wildflower varieties that will give
you many different vivid colors as
the se~ons change. Cost is $2.50
per ounce.
To order any of these uee pacli:· ets or other packets, send order
along with check or money order
to: Meigs SWCDLA, 33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. All
orders must be in by March I0. For
more information, contact the
Meigs SWCD Office at 992-6647.

Dave 1.:. Adams
Navy Peuy Officer 3rd Class
Dave c Adams son of Steven· B.
and Deborah Anthony of
Reedsville, recently reported for
duty with Sea Control Squadron ·
.41 , Naval Air Station North Island,
San Diego, Calif.
The 1989 graduate of Eastern
·
·

Force Base near San Antonio,
Texas, Baloy is scheduled to
receive technic.al training in the
security career field. ·
A 1993 graduate of Meigs High
School, Baloy will be earning cred·
it toward an .associate degree in
applied sciences ·through .the Community College ()f the Air Force:

SWCD offers ·
fruit trees

HUNTS
·TOMATO
JUICE
460Z.

(

...
,._._
....

Chester gardeners learn about garden statues

Nathan Baloy
of Stephen
Nathan F. Baloy
F. Baloy of Pomeroy and Rebecca
L. Brewer of Lexington, has enlist·
ed in the Air Force according to
TSgt Ted Corbett, Air Force
recruiter, Parkersburg, W.Va.
After completion of Air Fon:e
basic training at Lacklaqd Au

oz.

..........._....__"t

Ann
'landers

.....-----------Military news-.- -.-· - - - - - - -

·· .,_____..,.___,.
DOUBLE LUCK
GREEN BEANS
14.5

' wildly out ot charactet" It is also also were locked. I had no keys with rescue me. When they saw the way I
entirely possible thai your friend did · me.
was hooked, they slarled to laugh.
not remember coming into your
I 1ried togetoverthe dividing fence ,One resti1U said, ' Tho bad we don't
room.
andcaughtmypants. Fortunately. my have a camera. No one will believe
My question 10 you is this: Why 93-year-old gardener was worlting on us when we teU them about this 911
do you leave your door unlocked at the front lawn. J yelled, ' Help! Help! call!"
night? The next unwelcome guest Help!" at the top of my lungs for 30
They wanted to take me to the
could be far moo: dangerous.
minutes. He could not hear me. _ hospital to be checked over. but I
Dear Ann Landers: I read your
One of my legs was on the patio assured them that I just wanted to go
column in the Houston Chronicle. side or the fence and the other on the in the house and stay there . •. I.D.,
Some, time ago, you printed several outside of the picket fence. My slat:ks HOUSTON
lettm about ~meiJ!ency service. That were caught you-know-where on
DEAR HOUSTON: 'Jbur letter is
colun.tn remmded me of my own those damed pickets, and I couldn't sure to ~mind some readen of their
expenence wtth 911 .
move. The gardener finally looked up funny experiences resulting from
Imagine a 78-year-old woman (me) and saw me. He couldn't get throu~h being locked oul Send 'em on, folks.
working on her plants in the patio. the locked fence, so I told him to call I'll print the best ones.
The glass ~liding door accidenially 911 at once.
.
Gem of the Day: Too often, no one
locked behmd .me. ~e carpon door
Within minutes, the ftre needs a vaca1ion as much as the
and the 7-foot tron ptcket fence gate deparunent and ambulance came to person who juSl had one.

- A program on garden statues
was presented at a recent meeting
of the Chester Garden Oub held at
the home of Partricia Holter.
For roll call memben .displayed
pictures
of or described garden
Christi Lynch has been selected '
stables
they
have enjoyed including
as Valentine Queen by Xi Gamma
such
favorites
as garden. fairies,
Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
animal
replicas,
including rabbits,
Sorority. A dinner in her honor was
turtles and birds, wood nymphs,
held recently at the Olive Garden in
and life size sculptures. Noted
Parkersburg, W. Vfl. .
especially were the large sculptures
Lynch becanie a member of the
at Ameriflora by Sculptor Alfred
Sorority in 1989 and has served on
.Tabor. Fountains were another
several social committees as well
favorite for gardens.
as as corresponding secrewy. This ·
The stawe program was presentyear she is in charge of pledRe
ed
by Maida Mora and fralllred St
training and is serving as chapter
of Assisi and St. Fiacre.
Francis
.vice president
director
of
the
teen
choir,
"MaxiShe
noted
that many gardens hilve
She is employed at Home
·a
secluded
spot reserved for a sta·
mum
Impact"
·
National Bank, works as an indeDaughter.
of
An
and
Jane
Hess,
tus
of
SL
Francis
whom many garpendent beaury consultant and is a
deners
mistakenly
believe 10 be the
Christi
and
her
son,
Josh,
·
r
eside
in
member of the Middleport Church
saint
of
gardeners.
Actually.
patron
Middlepon.
of Christ where she ts assistant

WESSON

k Steak•••••••• ~.!!·...

him to explain himself· or I would
report him to security. He wrote back
within hours, apologizing profusely
andsayingthathehad been so drunk
that night he could not remember
anything. When we talked face-toface later, he seemed sincerely
ashamed. He vowed to do something
about his drinldng problem.
I see 110 reason to pursue the matter
furtbel, but it still bothels me ..For roe
thing, he did not seem drunk a1 the
time. Ann, does alcohol really cause
people to do things thai are so wildly
out of character? What am 1to make
of all this? .. STILL UNEASY IN
N.J.
DEAR N.J.: Alcohol can indeed
to do
that are

Valentine
Queen
selected

~

.
.
8.5 ·10 oz• .
Dinner•••••••••••••••

~--Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
.day, 10 a.m. Syracuse Municipal
POMEROY ...,. Alzhcimers and ·Building. Roll call, a homemade
jl.elated Dtsordcrs Suppon Group, va lentine. Project is tymg a qUtlt,
{ to3 p .m. Wedn es day , Mei·gs Members to take scissors.
Mulu-purpose Scmor Center. "Pain
pild Alzheimer s, Wat chin g for
CHESTER - A special meetClues" will Ill' the totlic of diScus· ing of Shade Rive r Lodge 453 ,
sian. Public invitro ..
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 6 p.m. with
work in the master mason degree,
. MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- three candidates.. Refreshments.
port Literary Club will meet Pa sl masters' night will be
Wednesday at 2 p.Jil . at the Sacrro observed.
Heart Rectory. Mrs. Chester Erwin
will review "Rachel Carson" and
THURSDAY
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review
ROCK SPRINGS- Middle:·:King' s Oak". Members arc to po n Child Conservation League
respond to roll call by nammg a meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Rock·
biography they have enjoyed.
springs Unitro Methodist Church.
Gues t speaker Ciiff Kennedy on
POMEROY - Ohio Valley chtldrcn with learning disabilities.
Soap Box Derby meeting, Wednes· Brown bag sale to be held.
day, 5:30p.m. Pomeroy .Flower
Shop. All interes ted paructpants
PO MEROY - Pomeroy Group
encouraged to attend.
.
·
. of AA will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.
at the Sacred He art Catholic
SYRACUSE - Third Wednes- Church. AI Anon will meet at the
day Homemakers Club, Wednes- same time.

Jersey. Recently. I woke up in the

Monday thru Sunday

M~RTON tv

--~---Poet's corner-----~

0 PomeroyO

DarAaaLallden: lam a female
sopbomOIUta small college in New

2 LITER

STORE HOURS

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A locked door will keep out unwelqome visitor in dorm

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

DEAN'S LIST
Jennifer L. Lisle of Syracuse,
made the dean 's list for the 1994
fall semester at the University ~f
Dayton, where she is enrolled as a
psychology major.
She is the daughter of Lawrence
Lisle of Syracuse. To be named to
the dean ' s Jist a student must
achieve a superior academic record
which at the University of Dayton
is a 3.5 or higher grade point aver·
age.
MYSTERY FARM
Sherry Burke, Reedsville, correctly identified the mystery fann
picture which .apPeared in the Feb.
5 Sunday Times-Sentinel. She will
receive $5 from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. which co-sponsors
the contest with the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District. The
farm belongs to Sherman Render·
son family.
MCBUCKS
Feb. 28 is the last day to collect
McBucks from McDonald's to be
redeemed in March for school programs.
This is the third year for the
fundraiser created by Roscoe and
Greg
Mills,
McDonald' s
owners/operators of Ripley,
. Spencer,. Ravenswood, W. Va, and
Pomeroy.
McBucks are to be turned into
the local McDorial&lt;t's restaurant
from March 1- 15, and then on ·
March 30 at 4 p.m at McDonald's
of Pomeroy checks will be presented to the various school groups
or organizations.
SPELLING BEE
Meigs Junior High School held
its annual spelling bee Thursday,
with seventh-graders Wesley
Thoene and Kim Peavley being
named champion and runner-up,
respectively.
·
· Thoene, son of D~ and Nancy
Thoene of Pom~roy, spelled "cittine" plus the next word on the pronouncer's list, "carbuncle," to be
declared the champion.
, .
Peavley is the daughter of Jack
and Janet Peav ley of Pomeroy.
Pronouncer was Mrs. Ernaline
Pratt, a retired MJHS teacher.
Judges were Mrs. Carla Sael.ens,
Mrs. Mary Grim and Mrs; Sus an
Metts, all reading and spelling
teacbers at !he junior high.
Thoene will represent the school
at the county spelling bee Thursday, 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs Hig~
School music room.
Twenty-six students participated
in the spelling bee.

Hope Baptist youth
groups serves banquet,

Wednesday, February 15, 1995

~-~ ·Mt.;lti-tplti-t.;lti•••-· ~•.-

Call

2~

llnurs A Day 7 Days A Week!

•

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I•
~

____.._ • .L

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I '

·.

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel ·

Wednesday, February 15,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
AIMiriBHIBIPDUCHad1 of these advertiSed ltemsfsreqlired m be readllyavallableflx'saleln
each Kroger Slllre,l!ltl!f)! as specifically noble! In this ad. If we do M out of an advertised Item, we
will offer 'IOU 'II)Ur choice of acomparable Item, when available, re~~etang llle Slime savings or a
ralnchec;ft Which wll entitle 'IOU In pulthase llle advertised ltan at the advertised price within 30
days. Only one wndor coupon wnl be ~ted per llan pllthased.

COPYRIGHT ,_.THE KROGER CO. rTEIIS AND PRICE8 GOOD

lUNDAY,

FURUARY 12, TllllOUOH SA'IURDAY, FE8RUARV , .. liM IN POIEROY.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT OUAimTIES. NONE SOU) TO DEALERS.

Dill'S
IPPLIAIICE
SERVICE
The Meigs Band Boosters
will have a "Soup Supper"
February 16th, 4:00 P..m. to
6:30 p.m., at the Meigs
High Caleteria. Menu
consists of vegetable and
chili soups, cornbread,
dessert and drink. Price
$3.50. Bring containe~s for

Always Good.
Always Fresh~
ALWAYS IIROGII.

Public Notice

YOUR TOTAL VALUE FOOD STORE.

~

.

.

roger
Creenaea
. 14-.IS.Js-oz. ft$

Dole

Chicken areast

•

potjnd

save At
Least $1.00

environmental aaaeament

c:RN, PEAS OR
a

WAMPLERfLONOACRE

. . . SPl•t
I

Us ORADE

A

OFFICIAL NOTICE
· Purouant to Tille IV ot tho
Surtoco Mining Control and
Roclllmallon Act ot 1977, 3D
U.S.C. 1201 et oeq., tho
Ohio Department ot Natural
Rtaourcea, Dlvlalon of
Reclamation, hereby glvoo
notice of lilt avallpbllty ol •
FINDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT tor en
environmental 01ooumont
which concorno . en
ebendonod mined lend
roclomotlon proloct In 1~1
Stlto ot Ohio. The Stole of
Ohio hoo prepared, end tho
Oltlco or Surface Mining
Roclamotlon
end
Entorcomonl, United Stateo
Deportment ol tho Interior
hu approved, tho

Bananas

tor 11!!1 R!Oit!11 whl~h .wu
oubmltted by lho Stole In
eppllcatlon for Title IV
financial

aaalatance

In

reclaiming and roolorlng
land and water reaourcta

odvoraoly ottoctod by pool
mining. A complete cop~ ot

tho
envIron me ntol
ouooomont 11 ovolleble
tram tho Ohio Deportment ·
of · Natural

Reeourcea,

For All Malar
Brands
Used Appliances
for Sale
Call
10/11/tfn

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eetlmateo

Dlvlolon ot Roclomotlon,
1f1VItln
185~ Fountain Square
Court, Building H·~.
Coiu'l'bua, Ohio 43224. ·
Public Notice
Tho project covered by
thlo ectlon 'Ia titled
NOnCE TO VEHICLE
"Lirldh." II Ia locotod on Lot
DEALERS
328 ot Soll1bury Townohlp,
Sulod bldo tor tho
Molgo County, Oh.lo. II purch111 of • mobile m..lo
lnvolvu aeollng mlno delivery typo vehicle will be
ontrlu and lnotolllng received by tho Molgo
aurlace and underground
Commlulonoro ot
drolna to divert wotor from County
their
olllco,
Courthouu,
an ablndonod underground Second Stroot,
Pomeroy,
mine owoy from on Ohio 45769 until 10:00 o.m.
occupied dwelling. Tho Fob. 24, 1995 II 1:00 p.m.
project Ia 1~% federally when blda will be oponod
tundod. II you hove ony and reod aloud for tho
queetlona or concern• following:
obout tho project, plo•••
"Hot Shot" , or approved
contact Mr.
Fronk equlvolont, delivery vohlclo
Brockmoyor ot tho Dlvl1lon capable ot hovlng
of Roclemotlon'o oddrou refrigeration and oven
filled above or at (814) 265- atorage araaa.
1020.
Queatlona concerning
(2) 15; 1TC

ELBOW MACARONI OR THIN

spaghetti.
sauce

'

I

Krager
., .·
Spaghetti ......;32-az.

c campbell's

I

ASSORTED FLAVORS .

Macaroni&amp;
J
Cheese Dinner ....1.2s-az.

26-0z.

Big I

$ ,.99

1
Embassy
· gge
French Fries .......

KROGER

Kroger Deluxe
Ice cream ......... 112-eauon

SOft

24-Pack 12-oz. cans

99

FROZEN

RUTLAND LEGION HONORS ... Paul end Rose Patterson. Mr.
Petterson hilS been In the Ell Dennison Rutland A..,.,rlcan Legion
Post for 42 years. Standing Is Mark TIUis of the posL The Legion
also presented plaque• to: Robert Mulford, 39 years; Joe Hawkins,
l4 years; Kenny Michael, 19 years; and Herman Grate, 39 years.
(Sentinel photo by GeOI'ge Abate)

~

•W••"-'' -Dryen • Ranges
•Refrigerator• •Freezers

•Diahwuhera

-H.W. Heotero

-MJcrOWIYII •OitpoAII
•Thankl Melgal.

(6141 985-3561 or
992-5335 12114/rfn

· TOLLFREE 1 ·800·848-0070

--..~

.,.,

FRESH ·siLVER PLATTER" WHOLE

Boston Butt
Pork Roast
POQ~d

'' gerchunt
.

lilt
run
&amp;.tas. oz. . a

RUfLAND LEGION HONORS ••• Mark and Candy TIUis. Mr.
TIUis has been In the EU DeMison Rutland American Legion Post
for 21 years. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

u e
1.

'

r

~-

if

~--·

-

0

••you Crn•h It • We l 'ix It "

32361 Dewllla Run Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to'/, Inch.
Call Anytime
John Krider
614-843-5192

Harold Person

614-843·5285
112(1115

Deportment ol Devotopmont
Community 1\evotopmonl
Block Grant Program .
. Nolthor tho United Slotoo
now ony ot 111 Doportmonto,
Agoncloo, or omP,Ioyeet lo,
or will be, 1 part or thll
lnvllollon tor bide· or eny
rooulllng contract.
Tho Molgo County

.

.

. .

A petition from the Ohio State
grange master was presented. It
COIIcems desecration of the American flag and was signed by melT!·
hers.
Pat Holter, lecrurer, presented a
pro~ on schools and education.
Arucles written by Abraham Lincoln and George Washington were
read wiih discuS$ions oil is writing
being taught in our schools, and is
history being rewritten in our class-

Commlealonera raaarva the

•Cutom Made
•Solid "lnyl
raplaeemerit
windows
•Free Estimltes
•Starting At

2

lnMemory

In Loving Memory
DO.TTIE LOU SMITH
Feb. 15, 1993
It has been two years
since you'va belln
gone, and not a day
has gone by that we
haven't thought of you.
You will always be
miseed ..
Your nieces: Teresa,
Rhonda, Candace &amp;
Lyndaey.

_one-year ago today
we lost a very
special person;
·mother,
grandmother,
teacher and friend,
SANDRA BAER.
Although time has ·
passed, our love for
.her 11nd sadness for
her absence has
not. In loving
memory, she always
on our mind and
ever in our hearts.
Love,
Marcy, Sonja, Steve,
Grandchildren, family
and friends.

Kayla Chaney, daughter of
Roger and Pamela. Chaney,
Reedsville, celebrated her first
birthday on Jan. 12 with a party at
her home.
A teddy bear theme was fea tured on her cake, which was
served with other refreshments.
Auending were her grandparents,
. Ada Congrove, Reedsville, John
and Dorothy Chaney, Racine, and
her sister, Angela Chaney. S~ng
gifts and cards were Forrest Kibble,
Reedsville, and Dbn and Lois BeU,
Racine.

Richardson in "Tom &amp; Viv,"
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) Redemption."
Winona
Ryder in "Little Women"
Tom
Hanli:s,
who
won
the
best
- "Forrest Gump" received a
and
Su
san
Sarandon in "The
actor
race
last
year,
was
nominated
leading .13 nominations for !he 67th
Client."
·
again
for
"Forrest
Gump."
Also
:Academy Awards today, including
Trailing
:
·o.ump''
with seven
for
best
actor
were
Mornominated
best picture.
nominations
apiece
were
"Bullets
gan
Freemrui
in
"The
Shawshank
The 13 nominations are the
Broadway,"
"
Pulp
Fiction"
Over
Redemption,"
Nigei
·Hawlhorne
in
most for any movie since ,1966's
"Who's Afraid of Virginia "The Madness of King George," and "The Shawshank Redemp Woolf?" The record is 14 nomina- Paul Newman in "Nobody's Fool'" tion."
"Pulp Fiction's" Samuel L..
tions , captured by ''All About and John Travolta for "Pulp FicJackson
was nominated for best
tion."
·
'
Eve" in 1950.
supporting
actor, as were Manin
Jodie Foster was nominated for
Also•nominated for best picture
Landau
in
"Ed Wood," Chazz
were "Four Weddings and a best actress rot her starring role in
in
"B~IIets Over BroadPalmimeri
Funeral," "Pulp Fiction." "Quiz " Nell. " She will face Jessica
Show' ' and "The Shaw shank Lange in "Blue Sky," Miranda v:ay."

In Loving Memory
Of
DOTTIE SMITH,
Who Passed Away
Feb. 15, 1993.
We i:ahnot send you a
present
Your hands we cann'ot
touch
Today there will be
tears and memories
For the one we loved so
much.
For In a graveyard
softly sleeping
Where the flowers
gently wave,
Lies the one we loved
so dearly
But whom we could not
save.
God only knows how
we miss you
As. He counts the tears
we shed.
He whispers, &amp;hf Is
. only ileeplng
Your love done Is not
dead, .
She Is just away,
lorg lve me Lord I
pray.
She was so precious
Why couldn't she have
stayed.
Sadly missed by
daughters, Carla &amp;
Kaal; slater, Connie;
nieces, Teresa &amp;
Rhonda.

-&amp;iiii

*200 lnstelled
"VISIT OUR).5HOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
On~

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

992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1-800-291-5600

1-6

MORRISOI'S
G&amp; COOLIIG

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell· Trade
992-2060 10J511mo ·

HAULING

EPA and RSES Certified
Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
Call992·7434 for more information.
tr25195

Limestone
&amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

right to occepl or roject ony
or all bld1 and/or any port
SAYRE TRUCKIN~
lhtorool or to occoptlho boot
614-742·2138
bid for tho Intended
purpo11.
Glorlo !!:loll, Clerk
Molgo County
Commloolonoro .,..._ _ _ _ _,_"'""!
15 2
&lt;21 8' ; Tc
Comer Tan With

1

MODERN SANrrATION

..

-~-

l_

... -

..

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented. ·'
•
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
'

•

0

0 .

992-3954
Emergency Phone 9B5-341B

CALIFORNIA TANS

1',!\'t l n

34110 Sugar Run Rd.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Long Bottom, OH. 45763
00

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

15 Sessions s1S

All Lotions ~ Off
949·2823t/31/1 mo.

614-992-7643
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•
·• New Hollies
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
- FREE ESTIMATES .

985-4473

(No Sunday Calls)
2/12192/lln

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTQMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
Free Esllimates':&gt;
Insurance Work W~~IC4i&gt;ml'p-

, 7/22194

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Olilo

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling, .
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack .

10121te4/tfn

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a ce~r rental. ,

992·2269

We Hore Cors and Vansl

KINGS'
Home Improvements

Kenny's Auto Center
1_800 _486 _1590
264 Upper River Rd. Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
,..,"

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Addlllons •Siding
•Roofing •t;!alnllng
-Garages •Po'rches
•Pole Barna
FI'H falimate• .
614-742·3090
' 3D4-773-9M5 "'" ....

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

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
614·843-5264

YOUNG'S

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

ClRPEIITER 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

Apartment
for Rent

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse, Ohio

t/2ntn

Kerosene
Heater
Repair
Porltl &amp; Service on Moal
Makos Recine Mower
Clinic

50% off
"In Slock"
Oregon Chain Sow Bare

949·2804

44

Now availble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric o11ly Range,
Refrigerator, AIC on -site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL
614·992-6419 TOO 1-HOD-7!iD-0,750

tit
.

Equal Housing Opportunity

~

•

•
•

PAilftiNG

lhlo vehicle may bo diroclod
to C. su ..n Ollvor, Molg1
County Council on Aging
(8141
902-2111.
Specltlcotlono may bo
obtolnod from th~ Molgo
County Commllolono'r t
ottl·c•, Courthoull, Second
Stroet, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(814) 992-28115. Bidder muol
uao tholr own bid form. Bldl
oholl bo ooolod end marked
11 "Bid tor Delivery
Vohlclo" ond mailed or
delivered
to
tho
Commlaolonoro office by
tho oforeoald dolo ond limo.
Any controcl oworclod
under lhla lnilllotlon lor bldo
11 expected to be funded by
a gnnl from tho Ohio

i

I

'

See store for details.

_,

'

'

ns ~u

u

B.IJ.AUYO

Public Notice

'Forrest Gump' gets 13 Oscar nominations

'•

QUALITY. WINDOW
. . SYSTEMS

!"i16194 TFN

Public Notice

First birthday
celebrated

IC.rON OIL .OR .WA~R

949-2168

7131/9l TFN

A thank you note was sentiO the
county engineer for ~ling a sign
for lh~ grapge atlhe eniillllce 10 the.
fairgrounds . Refreshments were
served by William and Louise Radford.

---------.

985·3879

DARWIN , OHIO

rooms.

(

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PARTS

992-7013 OR
992·55530A

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune· ups

WHALEY'S AUTO
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

Howard L. Wrltesel

MeAt

May.

save At
Least90¢.

s-Lb.

•All MIDI -42 v....
•Fall Rolloble Service

· Project work in the community
was discussed when the Rock
Springs Grange met recently a1 the
home of Frances Gocglein.
One project will be the continuing care of the Rock Springs minipark al the entrance to the fairgrounds. Roy Holler. member of
the Sons of the American Revolution, will nominate the grange for
recognition from the SAR in recognition of flying the American flag.
Barbara Fry, CW A chairman,
reported on contests noting that the
banana cake ·contest will be held in
April. -Rock Springs ·will host the
Pomona grange on March 3 at the
Hemlock Grange haiL Old eye
glasses, frames and lenses are still
being collec1ed, Fry noted
It was reported that the annual
inspection of the grange will be
held in June and that Rock Sprin~
will visit Harrisonville Grange m

ASSO'RTED FLAVORS

Tomato Juice ..... 4&amp;oz.

&amp;Service

.-----.· Years of service-- Community
project ·
work set

Lbs.

GRAY'S

oF..,Iory Aull\orlzed Porto

Surrounding Area•

614·992·5515

per Pound.

ASSORTED VARIETIES, KROGER

DI'IIPPLIIICI
IIDICI

'

�1995

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-M

Ohio

The

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ROMEDIES~IL.L. 'oOU TAKE
CA2E 0~ • loCI WMILE I
SOOW OUil GUE&amp;T ~ND?

ACROSS

42 Vaporln
44 Smear
46 Actor Sliver
47 Promo tape
50 Same
(comb. form I
52-degree
55 Flrot to arrive
58 Extremoly
terrible
59 Peer Gynt'a

1 Actor

PHILLIP
ALDER

Johnny-

5 A81ronaut -

Slayton
9 Rodletlon
measure

Announcements

C)temk:ate. For ~ Inform~..
lion, 614-258-68SO.

• THE PAMPERED CHEF
"Tho Kbchon SION Thot eorToy..,. Do«."t..oeol Conounont
-llobloAI:
.
&amp;f4-1.41-4724
LoovoM-gL

Moko z p o - ....... In,
, _ 14x70 2.ar. Call Ruao II•,..

4

Giveaway

Efticlencr, reference a dlpoefl,

lf'llkn, :
Struts Shoeko, uc.tlont Condf.' ,
lion, ii8,CIOO Mlloo, ,2,150, 114- '

~75.et&amp;2 .

Shophtrdilab mlz, gonllo, bill
good w•tchdog; also 7 wk. old

Shspt'1trd mix pups; 614-742·
260 9.
·
S ix week old mixed breed pup-

.:.11.:....:...H.:.e.:lp:..W_a_n_led
___
AVON- SALES

f.

...
AY8ragt $8 415/Hr Plus Fant. .
tic Dracountsl sell AI Wortc
--Home. Territory Optional. Jn.
dep. Rep. 1-800-1112-4138.

21

Bullneu
Opponunlty

Cooll/Wahrau Part Time, ANI¥
In P8raon 1f Pima's Cove A-.
..urant 814388 1823 After 3

Lolli: Rod HoYnd Dog Wbh 1 ~p::c.m::.=-=-===~==­
Whllo Eyo,lt Hon PINM ctll . Coomolofoglol Noodod Gourontaad Wagee, Paid VacM!one,

814-4464646. Reward! .
L.o.1: Reddleh borwn 1: whtts
Beagle, West Coi1A11bl1 are1.

_b_m_•_p_lo_$1~000~--...,..,~,.,-.'"'..-.,..

304-ffi-9542.

onvel- ot homo. Stort ,_,

e-........72tr1.

ALL Yard Salaa Must Be Paid In

lmmedltte Openlr~a for ptrt time
AN'a, Dty and Ev..,lng Shift

tha day before the ad Is to run.
.Sunday adllion • 2:00. p.m.
Frld1y. Monday .clition .. 2:00
p.m. Saturday,
·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick ·l'earson Aucllon Comp.ny,
full time auctioneer, complete

auction

s·ervlca.

Ucanaed

#66 ,01'1io &amp; Wast VIrginia,

3C)4..

ond lPN'o. ...,_ 1-ootod

ptu•• COfM In 1nd pick up an
appllcallon or contiiCt 8 ..111

·

Wanted to Buy

us·

Freeur~

0')'1111,

VCR's,

Wuherl,

•tc. 614·256·1238.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and Sllvage,
buying , wrec:ks,junk autoa &amp;
trucks. Also, parts tor Mil. 304773-5343 or m-5033.

llmbor Wontod, s.teo1 And
.ctoor Cunlna Avollobto. ftM On
Sl1e EMIINil•. 20 y..,. £x..
perlonco, 114-387-7088, Or 114367-7U54.

lewelry,
okt light.,., Iron aklllli1, piC.
turn, Star Wars, glua, ch1NI,

Old bUfton1, coetLif'IMI

furniture , ICtOII or camDlete _.

tatn,.Osby M•nln, 814-012·11141.
Wantld To Buy: Junk Autoa
Wbh Or W11hout Mo1oro. Cot!

Lorry llvoly.l14-38f.8303 .
Top Prleoo Ptld: All Old U.S.
Colne, Gokl Rings, Sliver Colne.
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin 8hop,
181 Second Avonuo, ClottlpofiL

Employmenl Services
11 · Help Wanted
AVON I All Arooo I
Spoors, 30H75-1429.

Shl~oy

Our readers are hereby

lnlormod !hal all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

tlclpantl. For fur'IMr lnforina.
lion, contact the 111eon County

WIC Oftlco, 304-67&amp;-SZlt or
wrilo wtC Dltwctor, llki-Ohlo
Volley Hoanh Doport. . nt, Z11
81h StrMt ParUraburo, WY

Clean late Modal Car. Or 21101, ot ,... phone 30 • 111 73111.
Trucks, 1987 Models Or: Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac
1900 RovoniWDDd Coro Cantor, 1113
Washington
~trMt,
Eastern· Avenue, Galllpoda.
R1vensWood, WV le currently
Qaeoratad 11oilaware, Willi tel• occopllng oppllcollono ~ Nuoaphones, old lampa. old thlr• lng Aoolotanto (will lrolnl.
mometers, old clocks, antlqua B•n•l"s Include: hlallh ktfurniture. Rl11trine Antiquea. aura nee, flexible ac:hedullng.
Russ Moore, owner. 614-992- pold diHorwnllol, tr.o moolo,
Don'! Junk Itt Sell
Your Non·
Working
Major Appliances,
Color
T.V.'s,
Ralrlgaraton,

advertisements lor real estate
·which Is In vtolatlon of the law.

I&gt;OIItfon tor Rf!..~N,
MED TEC\1 or LAB TE"" tor
Muon Co. WIC lo anlat In cer..
lltlcollono proceoo of por-

1

2526 .. Wa buy estates.

knowllngly acx:epl

PlCken1, OON at 1114-012-&amp;472
Porl~lmo

more! Ed Fr.n ler 930.

Thts newspaper will not

car- ttddor
opportunnr.
bonuMs tor CNA'a, PAID
VACATIONS and comJ*Ittve
wag•.

Apply

wflhln

dlltr.

Rolol'oncM roqulrod.

R-olblo -to c.uotudont to u..~n wHh olnglo
molhor tnd two ch,-idron, &amp;14-

1811.4452.

BECIJRITY OUAADII- "!181 bo
oblo to ony ohlft lnciiMflng

-·good

.
. - polloo
- - lluot Work
cloon.
hlot~, rotlobto ,.,.nd""""'t!::;
drtvoro 1 - o
Dhono. Por otorto 01 14.ZS por
~-~-40 houra!*•ooiL Coil
8,.._.28111,
llondor.fricloy,
1:000m-4:00pm. tor Ojlpofnl·
· mont.

Mot,r Countr llodh
~::,'I:...
I:.= p::;=r:s
cuOiodttn. 311 11our work Tho

wflh hlngo _ , . portop·
ond opptloollono Wltl
bo ....... until ........... 17,
tfltll. Apptleonl 1111101 bo high
g_roduoto or llov8 o
Oonorol ~uiVIItoncr IIIIIIOmo
(GEDI, W«k oomo trollblo
111 and
hours. muM ;

A_,_

lftlllntaln I valid Ohio Ortvw'a

lleonoo. 8otno cuotodlol uportonco
-oory.
.t.p.
plleollono mor bo oblolnod ot
ond rot ..nod lo tho Molgo
County -h llollortmeill
locatlld at 112 E... lllrnor181
Ortva, Pomeroy, Ohk» 45711.

opp011\Jnlty basis.

31 Homes for Sa
. le

1-::=-==~-:-=::-:::-::-=
1100• S1F Ronc11 • 38R, Z Botllo,

FA, Now Roal, Large Yonl -

111,500, ~7111.

-far....,. .- 01 _.h.
llhlnlftllot ttzO/Ino. Golltollalot.
&amp;&amp;1~4~4~eii'~DII~IO~.=--::;;;;:-===-

StN~ roomo

on rtvw,

Atoo tro ter -

aton I rtif, electric hHI pump,

46 Space for Rem

210 lrd St, New Haven, WV.,

$260. mo. ptuo dopooll. 304-7739171.

'

4? Mobile Homes
for Rem

llobtlo homo tar '""' In
o&lt;&gt;untry. gorbogo, tnd
wotor lnciUdod, i:obte o...Uollfo,
S81/mo., luel tO mlnut• Alhono, &amp;i4-la-21&amp;l

1172 mobile home w!2ac.,
$250/mo., $300/d._,.. · 304-

Merch andt se
51

Household
Goods

4pc ook ftnlob dlnolto toblo •
2 Bodroom Mobtlo Homo . rocker raellnw chair. 304-4171$175/Month PI•• $75 Dopooh JIIH .n., spm.
114-37&amp;-2435 or 114-3N-11447.
Corpot I VInyl In Slocll SS.OO 'ld
2 Bedroom Trailer CION To I Up 10 P-mo · ot K Unlwer11ty Of Rio Grandi, 81.(. Carpot In Stock. OV... 38 Pol•
388-91146.
lomo Vlnrt In Slocfl. llotlohon
Carpot., &amp;14-446-ll44.
Mobil• homn In lhe country·
wolor, ' gorbogo ond _ . , In- Carpot I YlnWf In Sloc:IISUD 'ld
cl•dod. J1101 10 mlnuloo from 1 Up 10 P-me Of Ath•ns, lllanlng at •~ carpet In stock.: Over Sl Pill·
300/mo:J. cabll anllable, 61~ temt~ Vlnvt In Stock. MDialwl
;;;m=-21-::1-;'=·=::-:-====· I Carpot.,l14-44&amp;-11144.
· .
Nlco 2 Bodroom 14xlU $350/llo.
COUNTRY FURIIITIJRE
• Elaelrlc &amp; Water, BatWMn ~ -8 Cedar Bedroom Suite, Slit.
P.M. 814-446·2515.
llonrooo llal, Sll
3pc. CIE

~=· S::,

'tp.

,":.

·To~,"1

And La1 ~ Dawn
Mobllo - · 322
up.
Po,_, Eay
llod- Unturnlohod
Avonuo, Gtlllpallt, No Cholro, 1141 up. c..rto. 4 • 5
rooma, 1 S.tll LaatN Near Third
Pets, 614-tq.3748, 814--258--1103. " Chool
,
..
•-•
Vlntan IB&amp;ctwel ~ Call 1-80CJ..
~·wor
1 .• ~.- up. - ·
Rt. 2 North, 1'1. 304448-61101Aok For - - ·
44
Apartment
t7Uiao.
.u- ....,. _
2 ·--·
, .-...,-,
for Rent
GOOD USED APPLIANCIS
Hlven Sup--.ut, bonom
floor CCJUpiMelr r•u dill d. 2 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, Walhera, dryers, ralrlgWMora,
boyw: 1 - bliJ 40'1121', ·roar tumlshed 1nd unfurnished, rongoo. Skoggo Appllo._. 7&amp;
boy 12'1123'), 100'1140' kll, HCurtty depoalt .-.qulred, no Vlno Sl-1 ~ol &amp;-.'1311, 1•
SZt,ODO. 3114-112-2713.
pots, 614-HZ-2218.
·
S led,_ Homo In Country
2bdrm. apta., totlll 'lleclrk:, apFor Solo !IY Owrw,lolltng On 3 pliance• furnished, laundry
All- Aural WOtor, l.iiGolod room· faciiM:In clou to echoOI
l.AVNE'I FURNITURE
Potrlal I N-upi ·tn l.,..n, Apptlcttta,.. ovoiloblo ~0 homo ~~~--­
Prime Hunting, Prtcod To Soli 11: VIlli go Groon Aplo. 1148 01
lllor&gt;8ot, N . 114-4{6.
Clll 614412·371 1. EOH.
0322. S mil• out lutovlllo Rei.
s bodraom, 10101 -ric ·wood 2br., 1ot 11-, kbchon fumlohod, Froo DotiVIIry,
1o1, tzl,iiiO. 304- wa1ner/dryer hook-iip, · 1yr. lloJitg Aulomotlc
1
131'
lsau, no ptt1. 304-e75-e357.
'fNr WorroniJ 1205; Wh.._,
•
I led,_,. 2 Bothe, Hoot l rD9m apt outeklr11 Hender· Aulomtllc Woollor Almond l.lko
Pump, ·a.. Fuinoloo, 1 Acto, oon YWV. SVS. mo. W/U1IIbloo Now 1 Yoor Wtm~nty1• $2011; ·oE
L- Now, 1
CloroCte. Addloon ........ fN,OOO, ptla.1 ~- dopoob. No poto. - . Aulorntllc YNr Worronty 1205; Wh.._,
114-317-71117.
.
675-4&amp;10.
Aulamotlc Woohor boollont
ttSO; Whllfpool
Condbton,
581
Countryaklo
Aporlmonl~
2
=-~nd~~;:; 4
Bedroomt, WID Hook~Up '-'A, Aulotnstlc -llor AdvoCoclo
ConctKton
"10;
od 1340/Mo.
Includes
Water, Ex....nt
Rutloncl - . c ·
441
a.-go l Gorbogo, Dopoo~ W111rlpoot ......_lie ........... - -.
Wotklna Condllton,
Raqulrwd, Evenings, lh3--122~ Whlto -

-

r-. ,

100-4-...

-=

·~--

bu"rdo..,.

-

~ ..

w-

aoo

Nice NelghbDrtuuuL Priced To

Soli Quloldy. &amp;14-4411-:13:14 Allor
• p
• .11 •
t..ogo ,,., nloo 2 boclroom
ronclior on largo lal, $72,000.
304..733-217J or IMve

Af!tlq-,
1124 E. llotn • - . on Rt. 124

-•or.
- II.T.W. 10:00
Lm.to 1:00 fi'talundor 1:00
lo.I:OO p.m. I

?'•.

54 Miscellaneous
Mlrchandlae

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

.,.

..

2 .......do

•• .... 1111, -

WOIII • .,..,..

Pf'* · - ioH,

~.
·I
$100.
-·
· looo, .....

STORAGE TANKS

mnuga.

____ ,
""'*

llolnldUIWI'II

w. c.~ A cam..

.
- . brlcfl, - ....
clowo._!lnlote,

HI; K.,'"""' Dmi SIS; IJ lido AdVocodo hiS;
BEAuTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Cut To liM' _._. Eloctrlc

112114.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wool- Drive
from 1225 to $211. Wolk to ohoD
I movlte. C. II 114 411 2514.
EOH.

. . . . tu0 - · OH

-.atZt:

Col 114-

- 1 Buttclngo FIICIDtJ

....

---TIIoiU..
No Eloal-,. wv-

-

CB ltOifon. Gotoxy lotum
roclo, Nlglll Eotfe D-104 llllc,
POCIOO--,T•atwn

-~.:· ......,_xilnd
Hywoln
-·
werrthlna ...
IV
ol - ·
raiOI ...... -

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

ln-.NTI.~OI

141 D2Jt.

AKc: - - -on Torrtor,
• - cilcl, tt7&amp;. 30M?I-ZOlll.AKc:
~lolCockor

"!• ,_.
...........

AKc: - - ..... Coltloo,
7wtJo
..!!!«"..!..• - - ·

=~·-

--Mot•

While
3 Yoora
Old,tti0,114UIM21.

Musical
lnetrumema

.....cooto -

up, 111 Itt :1027.
Hove llwav? LaM Tho Fol,
Feol Root ""h '1118 FOIPIUI PMI. Cell 1'14o211 1111,

Coratrn.

kolfboonl. munl

......... fM..t12..31ie.
JBL'tOIII(If- -o~ 4 brond

•.a

~ Mt tlalln
Witt
OUitlr Alll(lllftllr With 4 -12"
s-ktr CII1INt. 1.-u Uko

..... 8100. 11441'NII01.

Fill tn Suppltes

&amp; Ltvesloc k

Kh IIIII aail •; all'ooel llowe,
1!111

~-

-.:=·.m·

YOu """' ......

Uvlltock

83

:r:. . . . .

--

Hay &amp; Gl'lln

-----

""""'of hoy:-1700 ... _
,. - .
IJ4.tll.
-01--114.

.......
..or

=: :t':: '=r

fi1MIIIo27D 011-ZIZI.

01 OnJhonl

PC

ua-

noodod. Wotk ..,
h,... 24 hrll. ?M-363-4203 eXI.

1501.

)
.

l

North

East

6 NT

All pa ss

Saarlr'Htn

\ ~

· )_~·

more trick. ·

FAILE£&gt;

However. it is important to try these
suits in [he right order. You should be·
gin with th e -diamonds. With th ~ .
squeeze c hances obscure at best. if
the diamonds don" t divid e 3·3, you
know you need four club tricks. This
requires cashi ng th e ace and "finess ing
dummy"s jack on th e second round .
Sout h did try th e diamonds first .
And when th ey split evenly . South
look the safety-play in clubs ror three .
tricks. He played a club lo dummy's
king fo llowed by a c lub ba c k to h JS
ace. He was preparing to lead back to ·
·ward dummy's jack, except that when
East's queen popped up. South could
pick up the whole sui t and cl~im an
overtrick.
We know Belle Silver man as
Beverly Sills. the operatic star who
has also played bridge in several char·
ity events .
•

El&gt;ISON

'fl#lSTS

f'IIEAiriC

2-f5

BORN LOSER

114.fl2-3011 ..... ~

Corttttod Dorcoro Provldor Wl1h
I Yooro Exportonce. Will Pravtdo
OUolllr Dorcoro llondoy ThN
Frtdor frGm 7 A.ll. To &amp; P.ll.
ctfdtr~lty

u.c.t~,

Tra nspori at 1011

' -

IIIW!MYi

71

1171- . . c..-.

~
10,000 - . Good Condfllon,
V., D11111 dlbtl. 1.........1170.
11111 Oldo Cuttuo
2
Do«, Ful•ro Ctoootc, Mint Condblon, Don' llloo Thlo Onol
PhonO Altor 1:00 P.ll. . _

su..,....

Pol.:l!:J

Oonorol lltlnleno-,
Yonl Work W I - W
ounoro Ctoonod Light H041ftng,
Com~
Slovw:
IM-441-1tltr1.

--tot.

0 ccrgee Portable Sawmllll. don't
houl JOUI" to tho m1N 1uot
coli J04.t7&amp;-1157.

Autos for Sale

2 Doab And Undort1tnntng, On

c•·~'~~. Llaht!

211--1131.

'

4 Actress Z.dore

9 Actor O'Neal

5 Bird of peoce
6 -out (making
do wllhl
7 South ot Neb .

10 Danish island
11 fathers

-441o0471.
- · ..... tt•.aoo.

114o

:till lob ............

by Luis CamP.o.s
Each letler

'0

E' l
r

~nMI

·o

=·

Buclaol · Prlcod T..............,;
u..d' a rebu.lft, d tyPM, •art..1
lng al $81: DWnei' 8~71-28~. ;
Flot Bocl, 14'. 13 opd. Tronoml• ~
olon, lot Buckot s.to/Von. 4:
n,. P215-45R11. - . . . . -•
Computot F01 318 Moanum·
Dodgo Doilolo. Yotk llforoo:
1810 XA 100 R Hondo. 1m:
Chovy C30 Cab and a...q,,
1112 GIIC 1100 . Sorloo. &amp;7'1 .
Dolrott Z30 H.P. 10 Spd.'
Tr..-loofon. Sot lnlornotlonot'
Cut Olio W/AJr Brok•
Flthl
w-. Dump Holst ond Pump.
&amp;14-4411-2445.
,._ S3x1210118 rodlol 11,.;

ECF

embroidered by imaginallon." - Volla1re .

....
WOlD

I

v AI RAy

.I' I I 1 I
3

l

t I r I .-

BIG NATE
I

E'iERvBODY HA5
MIDDLE NAME

SUT

ME.

THOUGHT

mu LIKED

NOI "HAVING
A MIDDLE
NAME

1

I USED
TO! ~UT
NOT

Atl"1' i'IORE1

I'VE RE.A.UZ£1&gt; T&gt;ii\T NOT
&gt;11\VINu A MIDDLE NAME.
Ill\') WOUIJDED m ~ELf ..
11'11\C.E 1 I:T'5 RO&amp;&amp;E 0 ME
OF 1'1'( IDENTITY! IT 'S

l THOUuHT
UHO E.RI'{.HtE\/ING

,

WAS

~O U R
10EtiTtT"( 1

6

r

L

I0

PRtNr NUMBmo 1.'
•

lETTf~ S

c.AU5EO ME TO UIJDER1\ HI EVE 1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Jackal - Weary - April- Tandem - MY LAP
While outside a day care center I heard one doling
grandmothe r say to another, "To me , joy in life is having the
grandchildren fight over MY LAP."

STRIKE A BLOW IN TI-E. Will ON

HGH PRICES. SHOP THE CWSfiEDS.

IWEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 15 I

__ ,

1

NM1111 R.ctn•• 14d4, 2 Beef.

Vorl&lt;, NY 10163.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

·-·
You'll Come Up Aces With
· The Classifieds ·

"*·-

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

~

·'·

cam .....

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Lawawa
EnterpriMe . T.W• .
Lawawa, 12% 0.. Fu-., a
L-P I Not. Pumpo i ·

1115 Comon&gt;, . V-e outo,. . otr,
omllm co-o,
1,..1112. Eloalrtc Furno-. Froo Eo- ,
23117.
1 - - . N \'ou Don' CaM U. W. .,
1111 Celebrity Euro sr n .... Bolh .._, · - - - - · · lion
~.
' nice, 287-6301, wv - ·
omlfm(c;oo-o, V-e, OUio., otr,
,
_ tiiOo
ond -~
lomiiJ,
12210,
114 tMi -21711 01
01
114-1411-204L
.

•aooo.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 You might
th•nk that you 'll need slrong allies tor a
major undertak ing today. In reality , how·

ever . you 'll have more success as an
•ndependent agent

01110.1 113.000 "orlgiMI 1111'-. Corttttod. Rooldonltot,
cltl. 814-al5-1&amp;11.
1711-1134.

1114 Olcto Cutlooo,

understand ~hal tO d~ to make the rela-

tionship work . Ma•l $2:50 to Malchmaker,
c/o th1s newspaper. P.O Box 4465. New

Froiomtn'o Hooting And Cooling.

11111 DOUBI.EWIOE REPO,
never lived k'l. no d '""""'""'''
to-HftodiMor,INoclltt.wy
a ...... 304-*-IIM

, _ , Tolot Eloctrtc, U.-ptnInto On
Wilt Bob'IOtf, My Homo. I A.11. .. J!Ing. - , To Lal p... Lano P.M. Gotl~le - . Toddtor To eon..
COWl. ,.,.. 114 ... 1101, 114: Pi
hocM, 114 4tl 0121.
441-77n

ASTRO·GRAPH

Chot, 114-1112ol323.

Thursday . Feb . t6. 1995

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Manage
your resources as prudently as possible.
Be doubly cautious it you 're handl ing
someone ~lse' s financial affairs. Trying to
palch up a broken romance? The Astro·
. Graph Matchmaker ca n help you to

I.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Th1ngs could
go awry Ieday 1f you delegale too much
responsi bility. Jhere are certain th1ngs

you are beller equipped 10 handle you r·
self, so don't look for lazy outs.

ARIES (March 21 -April 191 Lening asso·

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 See&gt; strong,
energe"lfc helpers to perform a dJfflcult
physi cal ta sk today . Make s ur e that
nobody takes on more lhan they can
safely handle.

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 A. conipan·

SCORPIQ (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You have

ion m1ght try to mampulate you today by
making you feel gwlty . Hopefully, since
you 've been wamed you 'll recognize thi s

more in fluence over your friends today"

lor whal 11 is
If .you use your common sense in com- GEMINI (May 21-June 20)·Your personal
mercial affairs, success will come easity desires might have Ia be sel aside if duly
in the year ahead . Always take ·a prag· calls today . Although this might annoy
matic view of your circumstances.

LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) Payment ol an
old debt m1ght come due today. 11 cou ld
be neg ol ialed, however . In a way lhat
makes rhe terms rather painless .

c1ates burd en you with I heir problems
loday could 1mpede your work . Take care
of your own responsibilities before doing
someone else 's .Job .·
·
'-'-

you init•alty , you'll ult•malely find the chal-

than you realiz e, so be careful how you
treat them. Avoid displays of favo ritism

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Failure
is inevitable if your goals are d1spropor·
tionate to your abilities. Always lh1nk realistiCally when match 1ng your lalents to
your object1ves.

tenge stimulating.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. t9) Today
CANCER (June 21-July 221 TOC'•y you . your crilical taculf•es may be pa~JCularty
might have Ia supervise someone who acute. Allhough it will be easy for you to
resent s au thority . You ~ill need to be
especially sens11~e and d1ptomattc Ia gel
along wfth lhis tndividua l .

I

I

-.

_Yr-il ;,.

•
----------:

CIC
Gonoral
Homo
llolnt.,.noo ond llobllo Homo
Ropolr. For INo ootlmoto COli

·.

li::--,U_L•T-rR

•'•

rlfeNnc• tumlahed.

E p

. CTZZFL . '

;;Soul:::;hwo;::::::ot;-:.;;:Pick;::;--U=p-;Po::rt::o:-;;:B:::odo;::-,:
Cabll, Door., F. .,. &amp; 1101'1!.:
Atoo, 4x4 Or1w Troln - . 3]
Ill• South Of Gtlllpotlo AI Juctfon Rt. 7 1 Rt. 211, NEW !
PHONE NUMBER: f14..44I.3Jil ';

Colt ·-287~ Or 114-Z3J.
0488 Rogoro Wotorpraollng. Eotobtlohod1175.

L T Z F P

( B T L R X B ·Z T C I
F C L F P Z
E L P F C I F Z .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ' l ove is a ca nvas fu rn is hed by Nature and

I. I. r_ I.
..
I

Joh.-.. Tranomloolono And ·
Sorvlco Unci And Aoltuln :
Tron. .lalono. Atoo, Cooh And,
C.rry Tranamlaelon•, •~ ·
2213.
•

Home
Improvements

Z MF

To me. beach com bing is an
activity that is a worthwhile indulgen(;!!. II satisfies an urge to find
. - - - - - - - - - , s o m e t h i n g of value and gives us
L U F A DE
a sense of -- -- - - - - .. too.
f-. "le~T,--.;r;-;,-,,--i
Complete tke ckuckle quoted
.
.
_
.
.
.
by /,l lmg on the rTh!.Song wordl
'----'--.1---'---'---'- - ' vov develop from 5tep No 3 beloW .

ROBOTMAN

Serv1ce s

EC .ZXCT

ME N I C

end

wlh 10" wldo mog - . monthe old. $110, 114-112.....

0 0 .

V WE J

V X P Z

Z M F J

f"J4.. 1

Auto Parts &amp;
_,
'I
76 Acc:esaorles
-::1m=a=~==:-:r:::~=;:::-,':'
.Sot.:::tlng=-:::P..... ~
I'Ortol -!V
Evorytlltng
,114-24~

v

E

bv famous people . past aM l)rflltlnl

rn the crpher stands tor another TOO,ly "s clo9 B tJqiJIJIS C

ZTPBElDLO .

'

,... ................ *'

potatoes

l-...L........L_.L__L_J "'

11m Pontloo Flrobtrd TraM Alii, lnOiolloUon And S...loo. EM .

ttn SunohiM 14x11 3 .....
2 Iotito, Laund~oom,
Doell, lx1Z ...
On
- - .... 111,!00, &amp;
1111.

17 Sweet

Celebnly Copher ctyptogo!llll'S are created lrom tliJOial!ons

~

82

..

center

CELEBRITY CIPHER

tn-!

_........

81

8 Hurricane

3 Assumed name

10

He has 10 top tricks: three spades.
two hearts . t hr ee di amonds and two
clubs. There are two obvio.us places to
find t he extra two tri cks that are need,
ed . The diamonds might be 3·3, which
would provide trick number 11 . And
.the club s mi ght supply at le ast on e

etort, - -. rkldon i
..Y !IIIIo, uc. - . , IZ100 j
ftrm. 3f14-17&amp;.ZOlll.
'
Block. Orar 11111 ~
~·.O!IIL-.
Mil'

Iars. 12,100,

2 Architect ·

continued?

lom-8pm.

tM. Local

Gtlllpotto And lito o,....., z
Aloro 8olllna, Looming-And lloolo l'rov.ldod. t:ott Down,
814-245-0621.

446-2342
992-2156 .
675.1333

WELL, I'M OFF TO M'(
HERE I COME, WHIRL AROUND
DANCE CLA55 .. EMILY SWEET EMILV! THE FLOOR
IS PROBML'( WAITING TO HERECOME5'1'0Ufl. ME, EMILY ..
DANCE WITH ME AGAIN .. DANCE PARTNER' hr----~1

'

WATERPROOFING
Unconclllonol lllolfmo guoron-

tocated worbr or d l • =
ttomemallar. For rnoN In

-.:ws.

PEANUTS

:,tlltl;:;;;~lloi;:::-~-;F:::ou::r:-:;Tiu=::-;;zoo=.:

!.l!!l!l!t.

1 1944 InvaSion
date

Today's " mys t ery " gu est is Belle
Silverman. Und er what nam e is she
better known ?
If someon e has two names, do yoq,
think that person reacts eq ually t o
each' Or do vou think lh e " n om d e
publicity" lakes cen ter stage'
Having two names made me think of
havi ng tw o c hances to make a con·
tract - as in today's deal. of course .
After a simple quantitative auction.
South was in six po-t rump . West led a
sa fe ~pade 10. How should South have

baH, 4 speed, 28,000 mites, ;

$10,000. 304-5711-2147.

-

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

::19::91::-;Dodgo:;:-:--:4:ccx4:-,-,::-h~o=-~-cw-cho:-:el !_

mnee, 13400.

contraction

20 Yeare: Sp.
21 Sconloh river
23 st..,
26 Furor
29 Charlton 33 Atlanta orena
34 Loved one
38 - Sumac
37 Spring month
38 NoiHI
39 Trickle
40 Valuable fur

-----~~~~~--1
BASEMENT &gt;;

JTPA Tblt IR guldollnoo u o dt..
.

1884 Ford 4x4. 304-675~12.
•
1986 Chav. S.10 4a4. SsPCI .• 11c. •
cond., $5500. 304-175-3S24.
:

111 111 IIOL

Ear IDim IDr ..... ~

A,. you lnt.,.sted In nufiiJlll?
Beginning March 15, HRDE Inc.
wllf sponsor a ·class In Point
Ple..antto train you to becom.
1 C.rtllllld Nul'llng Aalltant.
The training Is ,,.. If you IMIII

4980. EOE

''

_,11f1,

w.t~~t. Cill

Love

19 PoetiC

Sioux fndlon
llloteas
Guided
Dlapetehed
•
Catch atght of

One way
or another

,.,0-

PICKENS FURNITURE

-"'il

73 Vans &amp; 4WD's

West
Pass

lead : •

:
DtroCt 5~19~~~Fo=ni~F~-1~~=-.~4z~4~,6;iCy~H~n~dw:::,
Spood, Air Conditioning, 614- '

Adufto 1
8ponlolo Ftir Pupptoo,11W11-2721.

No oppll- Hoi hold ,.._
-lng. 112 mt. Jorrtcho Ad. Pl.
CiOH tO lown ,2 IChools, 1335
WV, coN J04.4711.1410,
111.411441.
mo., 614-982·5333.

Buutlful lhrH bedroom H.U.D.
approved apartmtnit, Pomeroy,

- · WinwtnCloilcle

Ronrn:-s· ~ Appl-.

::..7311.~1=·...

.
;
.
:

1989 Chav ~ro Van, Mini eon. :
dillon, 1985 K Cor Dodgo AC, ,
Auto, Good Condttlon, Aft., 4 ~
P.M. 114-446-0514.
-.

Building
Supplies

55

614-379-2601.
1985 S-10 Good Concltton,
Wlloolo &amp; Now llroo, Asking
14,000, 080, &amp;14 44&amp; 6581.

'
::
plolo
Of lillortllorm · - · · - . 40o70, 4~, 317--7755.
liiiiO, And Odolo """
'IZBEER " - And Enclo SALE ENOS Feb Or
4•4 2.1 v.. ~ ·
Unll Qonol 1-100 5110-7810.
.... Plllnt. . . . . 080, ...... I
, _ Polio l'lo•IOIJ'tl
MJO~
I
•
56 Pets tor S&amp;le
· .........
-Avlltoblo
- .Col
...
Coollna
4411111 Or~. AM
~
74 Motorcycles
u. o\boul ,.,. ........ -!'fl!lt ·
llllh. Julfo · '113 SIRuld ICJILII1I-..o, rod, 32GD

32 Mobile Homes
fOr Sale

llonconloct HRDE,Inc.

v.... loacMI, 4 ,

'~GOO Oolton 1902 Chov. Convoralon Vo0:

=.~:~·

0::

And Lal ~ Dawn
Po,_, EHJ To...... I Bod1 tolh, .._.... Crvwn City AIM. Colt • - 441
HOt ..... Forllolthow.
lAGrande Blvd. Thrw ledroom

A DEE PLUS A
PADDLIN' FER TRIPPIN'
MARY BETH

Automatic, 68,415 Ac:tu.af Miles, '
l.ooko And Runs Groot 13.000, ;

Amlquea

53

524-2773.

2 Bodroom Furnlthod Cobto
Avtlltblo, Dopooh And A.-..
CH Requlrsd. foetar'l Mobile
Hom• Park. 61of.446-1602.

I NT

1882 Dodge 150, 8 Cylinder, •,

~ Buy .or .... -

with

llooflo41PL CaM oflor 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5&amp;51, Mooon wv.

Small · 2 bedroom, baMment,

Overbrook Center la now ecceptlng eppUcatJOM tor CHA'a

~

1876 Ford f·100 Automatic, ACt i'
New Tires, &amp; Tool Box, 614-~ 1
2218.
.,

Rd. oft Crob CrNk Rd. 304-524•

2m

Rollol. Compottu.. W~l­
wtth •rpMenca
. I
Empiopr.
the
Director
of Nurelna.
' Pir-root Caro Cantor, t11i
Plowcroot Dr., o.ttlpotlo, Oh.
45131. 114-44&amp;-7112

Auctions avery Friday-saturday,
7pm, MI. Atto Auction, Rt. 2·33
"Crossroads", Ron Price, Bill
Moore, groceries, plus lots

9

NIIW home under construction
complolo conotrucUon In tofu 01
rent, located on Horw CrHk

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the FedeJal Fa;r Housing Act
Of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ~any prelerence,
llmftatlon or dlserlmlnatlon
based on race, COlor, religion,
sex familial status or national
orlgln, or any kltention to
make any such preference,
llmltatton or discrimination.·

inuat

72 Trucks for Sale

-urfly,l14-Pa-o,...

ten~ntlal

lor mote lntormollon. E.O.E.

d-,114-1'12-3802.

Lorge I bodr-.. tarm - .
poriiJ fumlohod_,__MOO pi•

Oppo~unby ·

m-5705.

Clanlcs
Broughams or LS,

Rea l Estate

Euy Wotkt Exc:ollonl Ptyl .....
oomblo Produelo AI Homo. Colt
Toll. Froo, 1-100-4&amp;7-556&amp;, Ext.

Advoneo.. DEADLINE: 2100 p.m.

Caprice

V.odlna: _ , Clol llloh Qulok.
Will Ool A~~~=~~-.
,_lolol.

.

313.

41 Houses for Rem

·t h o - -

No oxporlouoo. Froo M~pptfoL
Froo lntormstton. No ·ObtlgOiton.
Sond S.A.S.E lo Slortlng, flooC.
~~· Box 14111~ Orloitdo, FL

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

B

:.:;;,ind
tho.
moluldrou_tn_
od

South

MISS PRUNELLY
GAVE ME A DEE PLUS
IN SCHOOL TODAY

I

1881 Morcury Topoz, outo, olr,'
$11100. 304-175-8801.
'
1112 Sundonee t4 aoo 111~ 1 4•
Door. Automatic, A1r, CleM LIM•
New, ...~~~. 114--211 1114 Dip;
114-258-QH EvenlnSJI. ·
lluot Soil: 1885 Capri Clooole;
305, V-8, Good Sha~, Loaded, •
$1,300, 614-3N-2723•
W1nted to buy· '81 or newer

Rentals

INOTICEt
OHIO VALLE'f PUIUIHINO CO.
r.c aITIIIIMMie thll ~ do IMJII.

Lost: GIISIII &amp; CaM On 11t
Avtnue, CaH H1d Sam't Club
Written On tt. 614-388--9436.

Yard. Sale

BARNEY

or 614-94g..2871.

On.I14-44&amp;-'IS11.

mother

60
61
62
63
64

Vul rterable : Both
Dealer: South

1

1Q88 llorcurr Cougor 110,000
loaded, AC, tiH whMI, crul.. ~
power brtikn, amlfm ca...tt•,..
r wlndowlllock•, BIUII Max•
Ill Edhlor\, 14500, 114-11411-'

Real Estate
wamed

Fm anc ta l

6 · Lost 8i Found

7

4•
G- 0.. ·•

12400, 3~-lf5.6414.

Bobpltlot In ~~l~..J. Ahot•
noon Shih &amp;
7&amp;r., eon · . . ..h ~ rou1
NCJTI0--1
BotwMn 8 A.M. I 2 P.M.

.

,j. A 8 7

ea..

&amp;

vo...,_

• 6 5 i
t A Q 52

1988
ner, high mltu, """"
good, cood cond., 4cwt.. lopd.,

Female, 614--2~780.
101

• A Q 5

Answer to Pr.v~ul Pu.azle

AutorMdc,

371-2586.

fr• PuppiH, 8 WMka Old,

tina a Day GIPtt, 304-895-3357.

SOUTH

Do«, Now 'llroo,
Mll•a•, Nia. Car, S2,oaa. 114- ,

"We mushed 150 miles today, and you
still want a walk after dinner?!" ·

•Q 2

..

1187 leuzu SDolt,

Boollllf•l Colo, 614-3N-2552.
Male

I0 G 5 l

.

1025.

DKiawld, 614' .. 46-4479.

pl01, &amp;14-985-3375.

0J 9 3

• Jt094 "
t I0 8 6

1888 Oklsmobllo .4 CyUnclor Englno,li'!~::Jioogo, I.Doko Good._;
Runt
, 12,500, ~

t Moni:n Okl Male cat, .Grey
'Tlgar
StriDM,
Neutered,

Pup~•• Just In tlmo

1986 Mercury Couglr, v...,
automadc, air, looU and r'UIW ,
aood, reduced to $2450, 114-.

w

EAST
• J 7 6 2

• 10 9 B

• QB3

.

141-2871 01 114-114~

toni Woteh Dogo 614-31'-9447 or
614-379-2435.

Colors,

WEST

•

4464791 Ev•, Wkanda.

2 Do1on GuppiH,I14-44&amp;-26811.

Ot

K .7 4
•K J 9 3
t

~~Q~88~~But~ck~Can~~~u~ry~C:;:uoi=:DIII
_::

3 Small B....ct .,.,. Ooa8, Exc.f.

Variety

"" K7

Cruise, Tilt, Air, New

11111
--:1,~......_
1&lt;o, 1 oklrtyoor
how
• • Mnnce, and •
FRIE lal ron!. Only
ti20 ........ I* .....
Colt--.

Fr•

Broc:hu,. Available.

~!~..~~~ ••~· J:r.· C:.i!

•-

a...

• K 4 3

19811 Font T:."fc! 4 Do« 4

dGcl&lt;1--1010.

c..u For Information On Order·

Opportuntu...

754....c...,tor, secio oliO~.

1115 a_,
304..

-------no polo.

12 Lucy·a hubby
13 Slangy
antrmallvo
14 Yea
t5 Region
16 Grape farm
18 - Can't Hurry

. KIT ' N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

121110 trollor lor - . POll. 114- All Now 1 Bedroom Elllclonoy,
IIIZ.f'lll.
&amp;,._71ll.
UMITED OfFER! . - 14x70 2Aporlmonl, m A
ar. Nil DOWN, No P - - o Eftleloner
WMk U111bloo Pold, &amp;14-381IYro. ,_ DoiYO&lt;Y • 11720.
...... alM-lllll-aM.

Aft Nol•ral Dlol Syotom. Eol Tho
Fbodo Y0&lt;1 Enjov Wlthoul Tho
qutn.
No
Catt.tna,
No

lng llemt, Pa11'-e Or For

Apanmem ·
for Rem

32 Mobile Homll
fOr Sale

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

3 Announcemems

neu

Senti

spot faulls in ~th ~rs , you'd be w1se to
halct your tongue .
'

I . .

.I

.• •

I

..
•

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

•

Wednesday, Februaty 15, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•'•

...

.New B , ...aioWings
Pi:zZa and Wi

ea.

lb.
DEUSUCED

two favorites that

people-together.

&amp;INCH '
SINGLE LAYER

BAKERY FRESJieASS'T. VAR. •
LOW FAT•LOW CHOLESTEROL - .

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl AND BAKERY

•

•
•

.'·
.....
....
.."

COTTONELLE
BATH TISSUE

e

ZESTA
SALTINES ·'

~

"

..."'

.

12

e

ASSORTED VAR.
4 ROLL PIG.

.J~vailable in your choice of hot or mild for Dine-in; Carryout or Delivery.

S4

Buffalo Wings
with any pizza purchase

made'of.'"~

You'/1/ove' the stuff we're
Your pizza is right or it's free.
GUARANTEED.

g.~

---------------------------Miaiev.m 24 wiDp dtliYtred wilbovl Jilu purcii&amp;M. Por pariaiH, Iet us bow within 24 boun.

!l&lt;1•h •I po~1C1pollrl"" 10 Rrfl1"llhfoo dollf .,and (onytl\11 (l&gt;tntl orJI Worp &lt;&gt;llrr

KEEBLER
.
ASSORTED VAR.
16 OZ. PIG.

""'laDir lt&lt;t hmn!&lt;l :101t " po&lt;ll(ll·•:••l otlll&gt; l;motr&lt;!dti o..-1"/ 4!to

~ ... ~ ~&lt;• .S.~i••l•'-1;1~"...! 1to&lt;lon'.1rl md Uod." .. n oo( ~om !lui lr\f Cll\191 ~ .... llur lnt

•

-nUt..

'

For dine-in, carryout or delivery; enjoy genuine Pizza Hutepizza.
,.,. . Check your local yellow pages for the Pil:Za Hut! -nearest-yotL -

PEPSI. COLA
&amp; PRODUCTS.

99
ASSORTED VARIETIES.

2412·0UNCE CANS

,.

.•'
--

__ .. I
.,.______...~

'-

-

I
~

- - ·-&lt;-

.

'

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