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                  <text>Page-10-The

Ohio

SenUnel

'0 Pioneers' reviewed at -literary club

'
Willa
Calher's 0 Pionur~ was
the book reviewed for the Middleport Literary Club during a recent
mceting at the home or Betsy Par-

sons.

.

Pauline Horton introduced her
presentation by touching on some
aspects of the aathor's life. Willa
Cather was born Dec. 7, 1875.
Although her family lived in Virginia, she seems to belong to the
West, as her father toot over a
ranch in Nebraska when ·she was
eight years old.
.
.
Since schools were few, Walla
was educated at home by her
grandmothers until the family
moved to Red Cloud, Neb., where
she attended high school. Miss
Cather then worked her way
through the University of Nebras·
ka, doing newspaper correspondence. an expenence whtch later
worked Jo her advantage. She

tau_ght for a while as she began to
Mrs. Horton described the setwme poetry and short stories.
ting of the novel in the late 1860s
A volume of poems, April Twi- in the little town of Hanover, Neb.,
lights. published in 1903, brought as "a cluster of low, drab buildings
her popularity and led to the posi- huddled on the gray pairie."
tion of managing editor of From the first pan labeled "The
McClure's Magazine in •New York Wild Land," the reviewer carefully
from 1906 to 1912. While the delineated the four major characauthor aaveled widely, she retained ters - .Alexandra Bergson, the
her interest in the ~ric country dominant character; Carl Linstrum,
and her books with western themes a quiet, sensitive young lad; Emil
are 'those for which she is best Bergson, Aleltalldra's little brother
who needs much comforting and
remembered. Other well-known
works include My Antonia. Death caring for; and Marie Tove~y. an
Comes to the Archbishop ant!
outgoing, coquettish child visiting
Shadows on the Rock. After a . from Omaha who found an inter·rather solitary life, Cather died in esting playmate in Emil.
Mrs. Horton then traced the
1947.
As the title 0 Pioneers suggests, development or these families.
the land and its development has as Aluandra who managed the ranch
great an infl~ce on the c~~ after the death of her parents, Carl
in the st?ry as the rel!lli~n.shtpS who moved away after selling his
which eltJSI among the indiVIduals land to Frank Shabata, a moody,
paranoid person who married the
· themselves.
..

lively, loving Marie, and Emil, who
was educated and somewhat pampered but never fOUDd a love or bis
own excep1 his sister, Alexandra.
Unfortunately, he and the
increasingly frustrated Marie
became amorously involved until
her husband Frank, in a jc~lous ­
rage , finally shoots them both.
Alexandra feels herself very much
alone after the death of her brother
and her dear friend, Marie. Carl,
however. her friend from childhood, returns, and as in romantic ·
novels of that time, the happy ending comes as Alexandra and Carl
walk the path together.
Mrs. Betty Fultz was welcomed
after her recent hospitalizations. ·
She shared with the members a
tape of beautiful music which was
prepared by the Bachtel family to
bring some comfort in her illness.

Southern's
girls post win
in tourney

1994 OLDS
ACHIEVA 2 DR.
:·· 4 c:yl., air c:ond., powar

6 c:yl., auto., air c:ondhlon-

lng, AMIFM c:aaMttl, tilt,
c:rulaa, power ltNrlng,
power brakea, power door
locka, more.

ltHrlng, power braoa,.
power door locka, tlh,
·.. . AM/FM lleNO, air bag,
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"

The Community Calendar Is will review ''Rachel ·Carsoo" and
published as a free service to Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review
DOD-profit groups wlshiag to "King's Oak". ,Members are to
anDouDce meeting and special respond to roll' call by naming a
eveats. The caleDdar is aot biography they have enjoyed.
desigaed to promote sales or
fuad raisers of aay. type. Items
POMEROY - Ohio Valley .
11re priDted as spac:e permitl aad Soap Bolt Derby meeting, WednescaaDot be guaranteed to ruD a day, 5:30 p.m;· Pomeroy .flower .
specific Dumber nf days. .
Shop. All mterested participants
encouraged to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzheimers and
SYRACUSE - Third WednesRelated Disorden Support Group, day Homemaken Club, Wednes1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Mci's day,lO a.m. Syracuse Municipal
Multi-purpose Senior Center. "Pam- -Building. Roll call, a homemade
and Alzheimers, Watchin~ for valentine. Project is tying a quilt,
Clues" will be the topic or discus- Members to take seisson. .
sicin. Public invited.
CHESTER - A special meet. . MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- ing of Shade River Lodge 453,
port Literary Club will meet F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 6 p.m. with
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Sacred work in the master maSon degree.
Heart RectorY. Mrs. Chester Erwin three candidates. Refreshments.

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Child Conservation League
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Rocksprings United Methodist Chureh.
Guest speak~r Cliff Kennedy on
children with learning disabilities.
Brown bag sale to be held.

FRIDAY- Pentecostal Assembly, S.R. 124, near Racine, James
Gillette evangelist; special singing,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Cachet made
for New Year
one-day stamp .

~ERDALE

&lt;::::zi"L

HOMES

We will pay arrangements and
pay for your rapid income tax
refund to use towards your
down payment.

1-800-466-7671
•TAX TIME
NEW 1995 70X4

p.mKathy .McDaniel wa~ guest
speaka' at one of the rneeungs and
talked about how TOPS has helped
her lose over 90 pounds: She also
showed a video on wetg~t loss.
Missy Frazier, Dreama Pickens •.
and Sharon Stewart performed •
valenline skit :tnfocmalion on. the
weight Joss group may be oiJiained
by calling 949-2763.
.

•

1994 FORD
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Other Items 1/2 Price

BAHR CLOTHIE.RS
992-2351

145 North Second

•,

Middleport

Two area riverboat
captains indicted

E~PLAINING TRUCKS..._ Ray Werry of the Ohio Department of Transportatioo poiDted out

the ·differences between ODOT's ofd and new trucks to Salisbury .Etemeatary S,:hool students
Thursday. Some nf the children showo here will be selected to break ground on the rll'st phase of
tbe I·77 CoDneetor Project on .March 6.
·
toward the future," she said
First. second and third
graders will draw pictures while
fourth, fifth and siltth graders
will write essays about OOOT
to determine which students will
perform the ceremony.
The pictures 811d essays will
be based on a visit to the school

early Thursday afternoon by
ODOT employees and trucks
the department uses to Clear
snow from slllle highways.
The students got the opportunity to compare an older truck
with a newer, computerized
niodel and learned how snow
re'moval equipment works.

Studenis ·also learned how
many trucks ODOT has in
Meigs County'(l2) and why the
· salt used in the trucks is dyed
blue (so tl)e drivers can see it).
Yoacham said she will pick
up the essays an~ pi~tures
Thursday and the Silt wmners
(Continued OD Page 3)

CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal indictment alleges that a Cinci~ti
towboat company; one of its retired execu~ves and SIX towboat_caplllliiS
were involved in dumping oil and garbage mto the Ohio and MisstSSIPJll
rivers for more than 20 years.
The nine-count indictment returned Thursday accuses MIG Transport
Services Inc.. J. Harschel Thomassee, 66, of Paducah, Ky .. and the silt
captains of dumping from 1971 through 1993.
. .
.
If convicted, they could face prison terms and millions of doUars m
fines. Arraignment was scheduled for Feb. 27 before U.S. Magtstrate
Robert Steinberg.
·
· .
Grand jurors said M/() Transport employees violated the Clean Water
Act and Oil Pollution Act by dumping oily bilge slops, burned wasteS and
other kitchen and industrial garbage including plastic. metal, glass, ash
and paint chips overboard.
.
·
·
The company and Thomassee deliberately failed to report a July 1990
oil discharge into the Ohio River at Wheeling, W.Va., by ordenng
employeeS to lie to authorities if questioned about the dumpmg, the
indictment said.
The defendants wiD fight them. their lawyers said Thursday.
Not aU of the captains listed in the indictment worked for MIG Transport during all cif the 22 years covered· by the charges, company lawyer
Glenn Whitaker said.
" The company has had numerous towboat captains. l don't know
elt8Ctly why these folks were singled out," Whitaker said . "We've had a
comprehensive environmental program in place for two years now that
served as a model for other companies on the inland waterways.' '
The indicted captains ure Stephen West Pearson, Henderson, W.Va.;
. Jerry L. Ferguson, 44, of Jackson, Tenn.; Melvin G. Herdman, 58, Buffalo, W.Va.; Walter T. Reed, 58, Villa Hills, Ky..; Fred E. Morehead, of
Vienna, W.Va., and RobertS. Montgomery, 63, of Racine.
If.eonvicted, the company could face $4.2 miUion in fines. Thomassee
and the captains could· each face up to five years m pnsoo, plus fines of
up to $500,000 for each pollution count in which they are charged. . .
"'
M/G Transport is a subsidiary of Midland Co., also based m .Cmcmnati. Midland ts not involved in the criminal case.
Crews often live aboard towboats for weeks and generate garbage plus
engine room wastes, all of which is supposed to be di!¥._1~ of on shore.
Thomassee's successor as port engineer, Roger Wtlltamson of Paducah•.Ky., pleaded guilty in December to misdemeanor federal charges of
aiding and
·

Fil.ings Y!i.ll prompt
_pr1mary 1n Pomeroy
1994 LINCOLN TOWN CAR SIGNATURE SERIES
V-8, auto., Cllmata Control, tilt, cruise, pwr. seat,
AMIFM cass., all power equip.

1993 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS ·'

1994 FORD E-350
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V-8, auto., air, AM/FM caaa.,

15 Pua., 5.8L V-8, auto.,

front &amp; rear air iibnd., PS,
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Pwr. ut, PS, PB, PW, POL,
till, crulae, only 13,000 mi.

C:ISI.

1953771

1993 FORD
TAURUS

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120330

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
When the 1-77 Connector ·
Project was first envisioned
prior to th.e opening of the
Ravenswood Bridge in 1981, no
one at the time could possibly
imagine who would perform the
groundbreaking... because they
had not yet been born.
.
Next month, silt students
from Salisbury Elementary
School, one from each grade,
will get the honor of breaking
ground on the connector road .
The groundbreaking ceremony
will be held at 1 p.m. at the
Rock Springs eod of the project
near Meigs High School.
"Weather permitting, Jbey'll
walk the school (students) over
and the six wiD do the groundbreaking," said Ohio Department of Transportation District
10 spokeswoman Nancy
Yoacham.
Salisbury Elementary School
was selected because it is near
the project. Yoacllam said it is
"very appropriate" that the children will conduct the ,ground.breaking.
.
"It gets them interested in
what's going on ... it looks

A Muhlmedla Inc. Nowopaper

~~--:::-;n--......,.---."1

call., Pwr. lilt, PS, PB, . caaa., tlh, crulae, Pwr. 11at,
PW, POL, tilt, erul11, mora.
PS, PB, PW, POL, mora.

•1 Lot Ladies Dresses
Values to 58500
ONLY 51995
•1 Lot Ladied Dresses 1/2 Price .
• Ladies Coats by London Fog
and Sherwood of Ohio 1/2 price

TOPS OH 18'15 . _
Debbie Lowery and Carol Crow
were top .losers at recC!lt meetings
of TOPS held a1 the Syracuse
Nazarene Church. ·
Runners-up for weight loss at
the two meetings were Betsy Jones,
Celia McCoy, Debbie Htll , and
Cindy Wolfe., Meetings are held
ThJKSCiays with. wei3hins !'rom 5 to
6 p.m.llld meetings fiool 6 to 6:45

1994 MERtURY
.,
SABLE·

120420

WINTER SAVINGS

TOPS news

1994 MERCURY·
TOPAZ 4 DR.

American Legion

TURN YOUR TAX REFUND
INTO A NEW HOME!

A unique situation occurred
with the release of the Postal Service's New Year stamp. It virtually
became a one-day stamp.
Jim Sundquist, postmaster at
Beverly and formerly employed at
the Pomeroy Post Office, explained
that the New Year stamp went on
sale nationwide Dec. 31, 1994 as a
29 cent stamp, while in a totally
Separate action, first class postage
changed to 32 cents effective the
ONE-DAY STAMP -This
next day, Jan. 1,1995.
. commemorative cacbet of the
· To commemorate the event, he New Year stamp issued Dec.
created a special cachet based on 31, 1994 was created Jly Jim
an enlarged image of the stamp Sundquist, Beverly postmaswhich was designed by Clarence ter.
Lee of Honolulu, Hawaii. It contains a canceled stamp, plus a full
pane of 20 uncanceled stamps and
retails for $10.
For information on obtaining the
cachet, residen~ may call 614-9844263 or order direct enclosing a
self-addressed label to U.S. Postal
Service, 204 Fifth St., Beverly,
Ohio45715 .

1994 FORD
RANGER 4X2

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 11778 and Star Junior
Grange 11878 regular fun night and
potluclc SUjJI!C{ Satun!a
~~-Y, 6:30 p.m.
at the grange hall AU members and
interested people urged to allelld.

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

2 Sectlono, 12 Pages .35 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 17, 1995

Copyrlght1995

Students chosen
for connector's
groundbreaking

SATURDAY .
CHESTER - Special meeting,
Shade River Lodge, 4.53, F. and A.
M. Saturday, breakfast, 7 a.m.;
lodge opening, 8 a.ni. Work in the
entered apprentice degree for rwo
candidates.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
ChurcH. A1 Anon will meet at the
same time.

RACINE -

,I

Post 602, American Legion, dinner
at 6:30 p.m. meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.

Past masters' night will be
observed.

Vol. 45, NO. 205

Turning
earth

on that. No matter how small or
12~~ii!i~~m~rJi2:::::::::::::::::::~
~imple, with all of the ,people in · • ······•'·~······
ioiW
theJr areas. working toward the
same goal they made themselves
successful, but the key was for
everyone to be in sync.
I would like to thank Reverend
4 cyl., auto., air cond.,
XLT, 4 cyl., 5 apd., AM/FM
Roland Wildm811 for allowing me
AM/FM call., PS, PB, PW,
caaa., PS, PB, sliding baek
to print his quality of life statePOL, Pwr. Hat.
glue, long bed.
ment We should all take a moment
118950
120291
to be grateful for &lt;U surroundings
and then make something more
.from them.
This month's quote: "I always
view problems as opportunilie$ in
wolic clothes. • - Henry Kaiser.

Community calendar:_ _ _ _ __

1...- tonlcbtllltht lower to
mid aos, Clear. Saturday, IUDIIY·
Hlchs llltbe mid 505.

1994 CHEVROLET
BERETTA .

ference -with Commissioner Fred
Hoffman we both realized how
incredibly fortunate Meigs County
is to have all of OlD' agencies working so smoothly toward the same
goal of service IJid advancement
At the Chamber ConfereDce,
Pauy Calaway, Horace Karr, 1eff
Thornton and I became aware of
our vast potential. The successful
areas to the north took a bald look
at what they do have and then built

picnicking, fishing and beautiful
·scenery. Several have campsites.
Because or its location along the
river, and sheltered by the cliffs,
Pomeroy, our county seat has the
finest climate in the entire Midwest
• fact, not brag.
Cost for an average boose for a
family of four would run from
$40,000 to $50,000, with very
competitive .utilities and taxes - an
inexpensive plaee to live. Excellent
medical care is available. Veterans
(Memorial) Hospital offers 69 beds
plus other hospitals at Pt. Pleasant,
Athens, Parkersburg (2) and a.
regional hospital of 269 beds at
Holzer (Medical Center) in ·oatlipolis. There is a helipad and Life
Flight services to both Veterans
and Holzer. Our local schools are
good with a very low drop out rate
d
h' hi
ed b th
an are . tg. Y support
Y e.
co~':"~e Meigs County has
much more than other areas. After
attending the Commissioner·~ Con-

Pick 3:
9-2-6
Pick 4:
4-6-3-3
Buckeye 5:
1-2-17-22-23

Sports, Page 4

High quality of life offered in · Meigs County
And it is a· coimty on the move.
With the new year·just _be~nd
Great
strides are being made in renus and the freshness of spnng JUSt
ovating
and improving the proper- ·
around the corner, I felt that the
ties
and
the central business disfollowing quality of life statement
tricL
Community
pride is growing.
by the Rev. Roland Wildman was
Over
900,000
persons
live within order. It is time to reflect on the
in
100
miles
of
our
county
seat.
many favorable aspects Me~gs
Within
350
miles
of
over
40
perCounty maintains and to take pride
in our neighbon and our efforts to cent of our nation's population,
achieve a better way of life for our- Pomeroy is only 2.5 miles from 1-77
selves. Before anyone from the out- and less than 100 miles from 1-64,
. side will take a chance on us, we 1-70, 1-71 and 1-79. Meigs County
is within 20 miles. of two business
must
"Meigs County is fil_le~ wi~h aiipOrts, at Gallipolis and Albany
friendly people, where 1t 1s sull and within 80 miles are three comsafe to walk the streets at ni~ht and mercia! airports located at Parlc:ers· where life centers about farruly and burg, Huntington and Charleston,
W.Va. aside from Columbus lnrercommunity.
· .
It is a county of churches, wtth national being withil) I00 miles.
Within 60 miles are five colmost major denominations ~pre­
sented and with a beautiful spmt of leges and universities and two technical schools, with all of the culturCIJ,Ilperation am'?ng them.. .
'Nestled agamst the chffs and al advantages they provide. There
along the beautiful Ohio River, is are I0 Ohio State Parks within so
one of the most picturesque areas miles, including Burr Oat and Old
anywhere. The hills, rocks, forests Man's Cave, which have a lodge
and streams combine to provide and cabins and Lake Hope which
. hilS cabins. All have hiking trails,
unequaled natUral beauty.
·

Ohio Lottery

I

$229 ~0,

1993 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

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llnar, ftbarglaaa,
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5
PIY"*WW••

'.&gt;'·,"'

•All ~are a! month fl(:t- -n. PIM"
biMCI on 52,000do'Wn II time o1 delivery.
!til
11t payrnnl HCUrity depod, ,....., In 21 rtrnalnl'lf payment~ .

S....tu• nollndudld.

By CHAnENE.fiOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
Due to an abundance of can~dates, Pomeroy Village will bave a
R~ublican primary ~Jection ~ 2
whtle in contrast, Midflleport, wtth
only one candidate filing for any
office, will forego a primary.
At Thursday's 4 p.m dea&lt;Jline
for candidate filings at the Meigs
County Board of Elections o.fftce,
Pomeroy had three Republicans
seeking nomination to run for
mayor and four residents seekmg
nomination for two seats on council.
On the other hand, Middleport
· had one Republican candidate til-

Ri-ot trial
jury ·hears
talks tape

COLUMBUS (AP) - Jurors
listened intently to a tape recording
of negotiations during the 1993
Lucasville prison riot - · including
a desperate plea by a guardhostage.
Guard Darrold Clark pleaded
with a state negotiator to restore
electricity and water to the cellblock taken over by the prisoners.
"Please do this. Please," Clade
begged negotiator Dave Burchett.
"They want to get out of thi_s
peacefully. ,.. All you g~Jt ~ do, 1f
you want to cooperate, IS JUSI tum
the (expletive) on. This is my life,
buddy." .
In response to Clark's pleas ,
Bur()hett said authorities needed
two hostages released 1as a sign of
.
good faith.
"Here's a show of faith - by
nobody killing one .of these
guards, •·· snarled inmate negotiator
George Skatzes. Skatzes is awaiting trial on charges related to s_layings of guard Robert Vallandmgham and two inmates.
The tape was pta yed Thursday
in the trial for Jason Robb,)6. in
Franklin County Common· Pleas
· Court. He is charged with aggravated murder in the deaths of Vallandingham and inmate David Sommers. He also is charged' with kid-.
napping Clade. ··
The jurors are eltpected to hear a
total of 17 hours of tape from negotiations that took place during the
11-day uprising at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility in April
1991

•

ing for mayor= incumbent DeweyHorton - and no other candidates
for· two seats on council and the
village cledc-treasurer's post.
Neither community had any
Democrats filing-for any office.
Republicans filing for the
mayor's post in Pomeroy were
incumbent Mayor John W. Blaettnar, Kenny Klein and Frank A.
Vaughan. ·
Filing for the two seats on
c'?uncil were incumbent S~tt Ml
DtUon, Bryan S. Shank, Gen Wal- .
ton and Bracy A. Korn. The tenns
of Dillon and William Haptonstall
.JOHN W. BLAE'ITNAR .
. expire this year. Kathy Hysell, petition for re-election.
incumbent clerk-treasurer, ft.led her
On Middlepo_!'l Council, the

.....------.---~-~----:"i

FRANK A. VAUGHAN
· KENNY KLEIN
DEWEY HORTON
Ye sterday's deadline applied
terms of James Clatworthy, who run in the November general eleconly
to Pomeroy and Middleport,
tion.
did not seek re-election, and Beth
which
have the population to qualiCandidates'
petitions
will
be
Stivers expire this year. Stivers, an
.
fy
.for
partisan nominations in th.e
certified
for
validtiy
in
a
meeting
of
undeclared partisan candidate, has
May
primary.
Independent candJthe
Board
9f
Elections
at
4
p.m
.
until the day before the primary.
Tuesday.
(Continueil on Page 3)
May I, to file as an independent to

P,r osecution hits·on Simpson's
reaction when told of murders

WATCIUNG, WAITlNG- Wuda· and Homer Vallaodlagham listened to statements at the trial of JB!lOD RoiJb lu Columbu.
Robb is challled in the kllliag of Corrections Oflker Robert Vallandingham during tbe 1993 Lucasville prison riot. (AP)
·'

.'

Uy MICHAEL FLEEMAN
"All of this is subject to the
Associated Press Writer
jury's estimation of whether the
LOS ANGELES -He has been detective is telling the uuth or mak told his ex-wife has been kiUed, but ing up a version of the conversation
he doesn't ask how. He doesn't ask that is not independently corrobowhy. He doesn't ask when, or · rated by anyone else," said Southwhere.
western University law professor
This, 8CC!lrdirlg to a detective, Robert Pugsley.
.
was O.J. Simpson's reaction upon · Simpson flew to Chicago the
being told of Nicole Brown Simp- night of the killings. Phillips said·
son's death.
that when he told Simpson his eltDetcetive Ronald Phillips, testi- wife had been killed, Simpson said,
fying for the prosecution Thursday, ''Oh, my God ,. Nicole is .killed?
said he called Simpson in hts Oh, my God, she's dead" and
Chicago hotel room the morning became very upset
after the murders of Ms. Simpson
"l finally said, Mr. Simpson,
and her friend Ronald Goldro!lll.
please try to get ahold of yourself. 1
He said Simpson got very upset have your children at the West Los
on the telephone, but did not ask Angeles Police Station . I need to
for any details. The prosecution talk to you about that," said
hopes Simpson's alleged absence Phillips, who made the call from
of curiosity will indicate to the jury Simpson·' s house.
that he already knew how his wife
Simpson said he would take the
had been killed because he was the next flight back to Los Angeles and
murderer.
then talked to his older daughter,
· · "It does at least, in the eyes of Arnelle, the deteCtive said.
the prosecution, give the impresPhillips emphasized he never
sion he doesn't have to ask those used the word " murder" when
questions, he already knows the talking to Simpson about his exanswers," said Loyola University wife.
law professor Stan Goldman. "It
"Did Mi-. Simpson ask you ho.w
su~ests O.J. Simpson was not sur- she was killed?' Deputy District
- •
Attorney Mareia Clark asked.
prised."
The defense is left to c~plain
"No," Phillips said.
just what happened,. possibly
"Did he ask you when she was
through the testimony of Simpson kiUed?" ,
himself. Defense attorney Johnnie .
"No...
"Did he aslc you if you had any
Cochran Jr. continues his crossexamination of Phillips today: .
.

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idea who had done it?"
"No."
"Did he ask you where it had
occurred?''
·
"No."

''Did he ask you anything about ·
the circumstances of how his ex wife had been killed?"
"No.".
Under cross-.e xamination by
Cochran, PhilliPs defended investigators' decision to delay notifying
the coroner's.office for 6 1/2 hours,
when police regulations call for
"immediate" notification.
He said he interpreted ''immediate" to mean "as soon as practicable." · .
Detectives waited until about
6:50 a.m. to make their nrst call
which was only to notify the cora:
ncr's office of the deaths, not to ask
that someone be sent immediately.
About 8:10a.m.. 'Phillips called
agam.
No o)le from the coroner's
office arrived until 9: 10 a.m about nine hours after police
reached the scene of the crime.
The defense contends that
because of the delay, the coroner's
office lost the opportUnity to more
closely fix .the time of death. Prose.
cutors say the killings occurred
about 10: IS p.m., which would
have given Stmpson time to get
back to his house and clean up ·
. before leaving for Chicago about
II p.m.

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Ft1day, February 17, 1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, ohio

·-

ROBERT L. WINGETt
Pubu.ber

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

G-ral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LI!Tl'ERS OF OPINION are wekome. They lhould be less ·tbln 300
wcn11 Ions. All letteni are 'subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
odchu llld telepbone number. No unlipod letten will be published. Letten
. lbould be in good taste, addre11ing iuues, not pononalitiea.

Tug of war
'

ByWALTERR.MEARS
·
AP Special Correspondent .
WASHINGTON - George Bush once said he loved coping with for·
eign policy issues, that it was the most satisfying of his Whire House tasks
because he could make decisions without bargaining them through
Congress.
· la,uniS at th e lillie.
·
· : !'C h0
That drew De!"~C
.The'f haVC ~ IIOOIC
(IQW that_power ts divtded tn the opposlle direchon, forcm~ Prestdent
Clinton to deal with a Republican Congress on every legtSiabve step he
s«lks - or wants to prevenL
·Clinton is in a tug of war with Congress over his foreign and defense
powers, maldng his case against a House Republican bill he says would
unconstitutionally restrict his foreign policy authcrity as presidenL
. It's an argument presidents of both panies have raised before when
Congresses sought, and sometimes vored, to reU them what to do abroad.
They talked, as Clinton does, of defending the constitutional powers of
the presidency against infringements, micromanagement, meddhng.
_ "This is an assault on the authcrity of the president," Clinton wrore
House Speaker. Newt Gingrich of the bill his Republican majcrity is sure

Aecu·Weatb~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

videl basic job ll'linins to dillld- llllll)CC data.
In its response to the~­
VIIIIIjled youtb. But -'Y SO percent or t11e1e IIDdenta drop out or lions Committee ill July- JUS! one
the prosram within tbe fll'st six month after the ReU memo - the
Labor Defartment dropped any
mentioo o violence: "The appar·
By Jack Anderson ently high dropout rates exist
beca11se or the strict diJcipline and
and
behavioral codes aa Job Corps that
are part of its success." In other
Michael Binstein words,
the discipline code is so
months.
'
strict that it tosses out the thugs,
In an internal Labor ~ent which accounts for the high
memo last June, Job Corps nation· dropout numbers.
at direclor, Peter ReU, explained:
In two days of hearings last
"The evidence stronsty suggests month, however, Kassebaum
that the greatest single factor caus- uncovered a ''pattef'!l of unconing students to leave our program · trolled violence" and other misearly is violence.... If students feel conduct at Job Corps centers across
threatened or unsafe at any (Job the country - including munlers,
C~) center, they 'vote with their gang activity and drug abuse. Just a
feet and leave before DininR any few days before Kassebaum's hear·
real bellefit from the pn}gr&amp;m:'"•
· ings, three Job Corps students
But as soon as Job Corps' fund. Knoxville, Tenn., were cb3J£:d
intl came under fire, the Labor with flnt-degm: murder for · g
Department cbanlled its explana.· a classmate.
tion. Later in June, Kassebaum
Labor Department officials
asked the Appropriations Commit- caUed it an isolated incident, but ·
tee to slash Job Corps' $1.1 billion Knoxville police offiCials have said
annual budget because of the that the cnme rate has risen since
dropout rate and other poor perfor- the Job Corps center entered the .

m

NEWSROOM

LONG

urr ~OM

VIQC AI.MEV.

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ITciladol46" I
'lbungstown

ter out of town. Kasaeblum '1 Iliff
has gathered evidence that reveall
23 Job Corps students across the
country have been convicted or
munler in the ·pasa three yean.
Kassebaum's invelligators
charge that the Labor Department
was being "disinsenuous" in ita
letter to the Appropriltions Committee last July; incfthat the c~ep.t.
ment has been dragged "ticking
lltd screaming" into ad!Rssilll die
violence problem. "(The letter)
was a clear indication of their
inability to admit that they had a
~.:em with violence," one
baum aide told us.
Rell sees no contradiction
between the two Labor Depu'lment
memos. ''The vast majority m(liD·
dents) drop out or are terminated
because they can't accommodate
themselves to the fact that they
have to live within some roles,"
Rell told ua. "Part of those ru1ea
are that you cannot engage in violence on a Job Corps cenrer, and a
lot of them have been rerminated .
and have left because they won't
abide by the roles."
Kassebaum argues that the
department's policies aren't warkins. "I've been in correctional
institutions that were better than
Job Corps," Kassebaum told onr
associate Ed Henry.
One witness at the committee's
hearings, 19-year-old Fred Freeman, attended a Job Corps cenrer in
Baltimore but Iefl after only 23
days liecause he was "tired or set·
ling beat up and being tt.reatened
by other students and having the
.center ignore wbat was happening." Freeman testified that drug
use, gang activity, and students Cll·
rying knives and pistols went
unpunished.
Labor Secretary Roben Reicb
has caUed Job Corps the "jewel ill
the cr!)wn" of job-training programs. He recently sent Ka•sebaum
a lcuer saying he's "extremely
concerned about any incidenta of
violence" and that "significant
reform is needed."
That reform might begin with a
straight story.
Jack Anderson and Micllael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

• lcolumbus!w

(f '

. .

Showws T - - Rain

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"1" "': '

s-

Ice

q-.
Sunny Pt

Cio:::fy

Clo::gr

C1995Accu·Woo!Mf, lnc.

Weekend promises end
to
late
winter
doldrums
By Tbe Aisocialed Press
a.m.
A pleasant weekend was forecast for Ohioans, with fair skies
·and unseasonably wann temperatures in the4nl and 50s.
The mild and dry conditions
were· attributed by the National
Weather Service to a high pressure
sysrem and a dry air mass.
However, some showers are
possible on Sunday. forecasters
said. ·
Overnight lows through Sunday
wiU be mostly in the 30s.
The record-high remperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 67 degrees in 1911
while ihe record low was -7 in
197~. SunsettonightwiU beat6:09
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:21

Weather forecast:
TonighL .. Mostly clear with lows
in the lower to rnid 20s.
Saturday ... Mostly sunny with
highs ranginl! from 45 to 50 northeast to the m1d 50s extreme south.
Extended forecast:
·
Saturday nighL .. A chance of a
shower north ... Fair south. Lows
low to ·mid 30s north to lower 40s
south.
Sundny ...A chance of a morning
rain or snow shower north ...Otherwise fair. Highs in the 40s.
Monday ... A chance of rain
north ... Fair south. Lows 30 to '35
with highs 45 to SO.
Tuesday ... Dry. Lows 30 to l5
and highs in the 40s.

Accidents leave 5 injured
· A pair of accidents late Thursday sent five people to am~ hospi·
tats, with one ·of them transferred
by LifeRight to Grant Medical
Cenrer, Columbus.
Mindy K. Brinker, 19, 32649
. Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, was in
fair . condition this morning at
Grant; a hospital spokesperson
said.
She was a passenger in a pickup
truck driven by Scott W. Brinker,
21, also of 32649 Bailey Run Road,
that was southbound on Salisbury
Township Road 165 (Bailey Run),
five-renths of a mile north of State
Roure 124, at 11:25 p.m., the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reporred.
Scott Brinker lost control of the
pickup on 'ice-covered roadway,
went off the right side of the road,
and struck a mailbox and utility
pole. ·
Minor injury .was re~rted by
the patrol to Scolt Bnnker and
Mindy Brinker and they were
transported to Veterans Memorial

Hospital by the Meigs EMS . VMH
had no record of tteallllent for Scolt
, Brinker.
Scott Brinker's pickup was
moderately damatled, the patrol
said.
In the second accident, driver
Candice J. Walker, 16, 33838
Beech Grove Road, Rutland, and
passenger Terri L. Fife, 16, 415 S.
Fourth Ave., Middleport, were
each treated and released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital after
being ~en there by the EMS : ~
Earl M. Johnson, 45, 34424 :;R ·
7, Pomeroy, driver of the other
vehicle, was taken to VMH by the
·EMS, where he was treated and
released.
According to the patiol, Walker
was westbound on SR 124 near
Rutland at 11:15 p.m. when she
lost eontrul of her car on icy roadway, went left of cenrer and struck
Johnson'~ car head-on.
Both cars were severely damaged and Walker was cired for failure to control ..

Today's livestock report .
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
direct hog pices ~ selected bitying
points Friday by the U.S: Depart·
ment of Agricult~ Market News:
Barrows and gtlts: fully 50 cents
lower; demand moderate.
_U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., coun~
pomts 38.00-39.50, a few 4 0.00,
plants 39.25-40.75.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
.
points J4.00- 38 _00_
Prices from -The ProdUcers Livet k Association·
s 0Cau1e: UJO-l.SO lower.
Slaughter steerS: choice 67.0077.00: select 62.00-69.00.
Slaughrer heifers: choice 66.0072.75;-select60.00-67.00;
. Cows: steady; all cows 49.00
and down.
BuDs: sready; aU bulls 55.50 and
down.
·
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 50
cents lower to 2.50 higher; choice
....- - - - -·- - - - - ;

strong point), let alone get into a
debate over characrer.
But Carville's shrewd insight
has, in the past three years, been

It was soon apparent, though,
that if the voters had a tantrum, it
was a highly selective one. Not a
single Republican incumbent, running for re-election as governor,
senator- or congr~,ssman, was
defeated; all of the losses among
incumbents were on the Democratic side. ·
·
This selectivity plainly contradicted Tip O'NeiU's famous diclum
that "All politics is local." If that
were true, then the losses would
have been distributed more eve'IIY
between the panics, in response to
varyins local circumslanCCS.
Even more puzzling was the
apparent contradiction of the slogan emblazoned on the wall of Mr.
Clinton's 1992 campaign headquarters by his canny manager,
James CarviUe: "It's the economy,
swpidl' ' In 1992 the economy was
indeed the Democrats' best issue,
and Carville was absolutely right to
insist on its high priori!)'. He certainly didn't want to discuss foreign policy (President Bush's

••

Flurries

ViaA-tedf'rMoGtopNcsNol

Why are the voters upset?---:-------

"tanlrum."

Word ·has been received here on the death of Elizabeth A. Salser, 76,
Johnstown, who died Thursday, Feb. 16, 1995.
.
She was the wife of former Meigs County resident Giles Salser, who
survives.
Friends may call Sunday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Crouse-Kauber
Funeral Home, Joltnstown.

•

.,,~---~~~

The Daily Sentinel
iUSP8 lU-960)
Publi., hcd every afternoon. M onday 1hrough

Frida y. Ill Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Oh io Valle y Pu blish irtg Compnny!Mu lti mcdin
In c.. Pcuneroy. Ohio 4.5769. Ph . 992·2 156.
Second Clan po.\LUgc.: pai d at Pomeroy, Oh1 0.
Membtr1 T'tle Anociated Press, and the Ohio

Newspaper AnOCiati'o n.
.

. ..

POSTMASTER! Semi a.dtl r c~~ c orr~qion J to
The Daily Sentinel. I l l Co urt St. , Pomeroy,
Ohi o 4576~ .

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given catr\cr ~h week.
No s~bmi ption
mail permiued in areas
where home clUTier service is available.

by

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
1115hh MriKJ County

Stocks

Am Ele Power ____ ;__.34 3/B
Akm.- --------.$73/B
ABblaad OU - - - - - - - -.311/4
AT&amp;T.--~-_:_ ____ .$07/B

..:-------.28
------.20 SIR

Baak One.

3/4

Bob EVIDS--..

Ch101plon IBd------.lll/4
Cbii'IDIDI Shop---------.61!.1
City Holdln&amp;----------.17 1fl
Federal MCJIIIII--.;_____ ,ts 1fl
Goodyur TieR
1/4
K.mart ·-------.-.-----·14 1/8
Lands End ----'- ------·16 718
Limited Inc. ---- - - ----18 318
Multimedia Inc. ·-------.19 1/&lt;1,
Polat
Baacorp
·-~--- ..;.._.31
- ---19
Rockwell
.•_.,. _______
518
Robblna &amp; Myen.--------11
Royal Out&lt;h---------114 3/4

--------.36

Shoney'sln&lt; ..- - -------111/Z

Star Bank ----------Al 1/4
Wendy lnt'L ... - - --·-------17
Wortblngtoo lnd.------- 19 3/4

52 w..u........................................... ,, ... $%. 20

GaWpolls.

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Pomeroy mayor's court
The followinl! cases were
resolved Monday m the Pomeroy
Court of Mayor John W. Blaettnar.
Fined were: Roben V. Buckland, SandrviUe, W.Va., $37S plus
costs, drivmg under the influence:
$63 plus cosiS, driving under suspenston; Joshua Pickens, Pomeroy,
$40 plus costs, speed; $63 plus
costs, fictitious lags; Joy Murphy,
Reedsville, $63 plus costs, driving
under suspension; Timothy Herdman, Pomeroy, $113 plus costs,
public intoxication; Keith Herdman, Middleport,
.
. $1 13 plus costs,

public intoxication : Beatrice
Willi.amson, Pomeroy, $213 plus
costs, pelty theft; Paul Chadwell,
Middleport, $43 plus costs, avoided
traffic light; Matthew Stewart,
Pomeroy, destruction of propeny,
fine suspended"pending restiwtion:
Forfeiting bonds were: Eddena
Russell, Middleport, $60,.speed;
Jeffrey Kimes, Reedsville, $63,
speed; Judith McDugin, Pomeroy,
$60, speed; Carla Grindley,
Pomeroy, $63, speed; Diana
Warneke, Middleport, $45, seat
belt.

~ilings

prompt primary

as

- - - -·Announcements------;.Sorority to meet ·
Board changes meeting time
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter .Of
Due to President's Day, the regular meeting of the Southern Local Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meel
Board of Education has been at 6 p.m. Thursday at the home of
changed to Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. at the .Charloue Elberfeld for a soup sup~
per.
high school.

"EXTRAORDINARY!"
..... _ ... I

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..~-~·
--• c.-.&gt;

1llllct .,..

.EMS units answer 10 calls ·
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 10 calls for assistance
Thursday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
1:03 p.m., South Fourth
Avenue, Evelyn Sedwick, Holzer ·
Medical C!:lller.
.
POMEROY
·08
a
m
1.
. ., 0 ve rb rook Cen 1er,
Lola Bohler, VMH;
1, a.m .. Fisher Street, William
.
Su vers, VMH;
3:04 a.m., Maples Aparunents,
Jane Teaford, HMC;
11:02 a.m., Maples Aparbnents,
Eva Lawson, VMH;
I :31 p.m., West Main Street,
Mildred Rife, HMC:

11 :25 p.m., Pomeroy Volunreer
Fire Department, motor-ve.hicle
accident on HyseU Run Road; Terri
Fife, Pleasant Valley Hospital; Erin
Smith, refused treatment; Candice
Walker, PVH; Mike Johnson,
VMH; Rutland and Syracuse
squads assisted;
II :42 p.m., mo!Of·vehicle accident on Bailey Run Road, Scott
Brinker refused treatment, Mindy
Brinker was transported to VMH
pending transport to Grant Medical
Center via LifeFiight helicopter.
RACINE
6:07 p.m., Manuel Road, Eva
Lawson, VMH.
SYRACUSE
10:32 p.m., Cherry Street, David
Lawson. VMH.
·

U.S. trade deficit deepens
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United States suffered its worst
merchandise trade deficit in history
last' ye.- as a surge in imports
swamped a record level of expo_iu.
The .Com.merce Department
reported today that the deficit in
merchandise trade soared by 25.4
percent last yeitr to $166.29 biUion,
compared to a 1993 deficit of
$132.58 bUlion.
·
While President Clinton has
cited big trade denls as one of his
major achievements since laking
office, the new figures demon&gt;'lnlted in stark terms the challenges the

··.

ago he ran for Pomeroy mayor. He
is self-employed and works with:
Victor Young of Young Construe·;·
lion Co. For several years under·;
Sheriffs James Proffitt and Howard;
Frank, Klein worked in the Meigs:sherifr s deparunent.
.;
Vaughan retired from Public:··
Utilities Commission of Ohio sev-·
eral years ago afrer working there:
for 25 years. He is a lifelong res!-::
dent of Pomeroy, a veteran and ts .
very act ive in th e American :
Legion , having se rved in several •
district and stare positions with that:
organization.
:
Horton, Middlepon's candidate ·
for mayor, served on village coun- :
cil from 1977 to October 1993, '.
wpen as president of counci I he ;
·was appointed mayor, replacing:
Fred Hoffman, who res igned 'to•
accept a position on the Board or:
County Commissione r.s. He has:
beeu a teacher of history and gov- ·
emment at Buckeye Hills Career
Center since 1976.

(Continued from Page 1)
dates for any ol the non·panisan
positions have until Aug. 24 to me
petitions.
Syracuse, Rutland and Racine,
with populations of less than 2,000.
are considered non-partisan and
residents there have until Aug. 24
to me their' petitions of candidacy.
Mayors. clerks and two council
members wiU be elected in each of
those villages in November.
Blaetblar, filling the uRexpired
mayoral rerm of Bruce Reed, who
resigned when he moved out of
slale, is a graduate of Ohio UniverSity with both bachelor and masters
degrees.
He served
a councilman for
two years prior to moving_ into the
mayor's post from president of
council when Reed resigned. He is
a former Meigs Local School District teacher, a veteran lmd a member of the American Legion.
This is Klein's second entry into
the politicat arena. Several years

._~.._c ..,._

United States faces in the global
economy.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THAU THUAS

U&gt;t; ll!
7 :"20 ,9 : 20 Ol. (f,Y
MA~INEF. S

JUST CAUSE
.,

.......""""""""'" ··-·
'"

7: 00,9: ) 0 OA! t. Y
KATIN~ ! S

.

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1:\ 1.1.
II'G- 1l)

' 7 :0 0 ,!J; ) O DAILV
KATIN!BS SAT • SUN
1 : UO, J;]O

I'

I SUN
1~111!1{

ltll&lt;l \!111 hi' II• •II •'

TII~U,

1\\JI '-ilr~:

SAT • SUN

t .:O O J :lO

S ~T

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'"

1: 10 , 'l:10 OAJLY
KATIN!!S ~ AT &amp; 5 ~
1; I 0 , l : 10

I P(O 1 J I
"1 : 00,'1 : 10 DA I LV

KAT HUIES SAT &amp; SUM
1:0 0, ] : 10

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAi.ILABLEI

FROM DON WOOD:

AUsed Car Can Be A1~~~
Gamble Unless It's
·from Don Wood

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
44~23

GENESIS
BIBLE STUDY CLASS

Hospital news

Every Sunday Morning

VETERANS MEMORIAL
wools 70.50-73.00; choice clips
Thursday admissions - Brady
68.00-76.00; aged sheep 40.50 and Huffman, Mi&lt;@lepon.
Thursday discharges - Donald
down.
Barrett,
Langsville; John Davis ,
Students chosen
Syracuse;
Johnnie Nash, Middle(Continued from Page I)
porL
u be anno need biter
wt Yoacha~ said ODOT and , HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Feb. 16 - Matthew
Kokosing the contractor for the
Crabtree, Violet Kraulter, Cecil
·
' 'II b
t F b 27
proJect, wt
e ~ee _e .
Roach, Hannelore Donta, Roy
and 28 and Kokos mg Marcw1llshtartl
Burger, Charlotte Bateman, Mrs.
movmg eqUtpmen1 m
•
Danny Gardner and daughter,
2 and 3.
Paula HaUey. ·
We won:t know which en~
(Published with ~rmisslon)
they are gmng to start on unul
l}le pre-construcuon conference
at the end of the month, she
said.
'
.
The esumated compleuon
date for the $12.3 mtlhon project is June 30, 1996, she S8ld.
. The fllSt Jl?rtion of the new road
w1ll ~e approxtmately 2-112
miles m le~gth.
In addiuon, former U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland secured $4 million toward completion of tile
entire connector project. The
next phase of the project wiU be
froin the Ravenswood Bridge to
Srare Roure 124 near Rolandus.

·
13 Wceks .. ............ ...................... .. ........... $23.92
26 Weeks.:...................... ,........................ $47.06
52 Weeks .................... :....... :................ 19256
· Ritts Outsklt M~lgs CouniJ

~= :

Charles Dennis Gallagher. 81', Huntington, W.Va., died Thursday,Feb.
16, 1995 in SL MarY's Hospital, Huntington.
.
Born Aprill, 1913 in Middleport, son of the lare Otar_Ies_Patrick and
Pauline GaUagher. he was a retired employee of Owens-!Umms and a veteran of World W8t: II.
Survivors include his wife, Opal Adkins Gallagher; and a son, Gary
Dennis Gallagher of Denver, Colo.
Services will be Satul'!lay at.noon in .li!C ~ger FJI!ICf3! ~e. HJil!l,
ington with Pastor Ketth Wtebe offtctatmg. Bunal wtll follow m
Riverview Cemetery, MiddleporL Friends may caU at the funeral home
tonight from 6-9.

Elizabeth A. ·Salser

I

W.VA.

~

Do· these signs of economic immense change in the central p-chealth impact the voters unevenly, ix:cupation of the American elecor perhaps not at all? Or is there torate. There will still be times
something the matter with the when the slate of the economy, or
statistics themselves? On and on even some foreign threat, tem.. the editors go, considering and porarily concerns th!: voters 11101e.
William A. Rusher rejecting every conceivable CJtpla· But the American people know
now where the real trouble with
elevated into a permanent rule of nation.
And then, in its last three sen- their country lies, and they arc
politics, supposedly applicable in
all cases, everywhere. Yet last rences, the article sblmbles onto the bracing themselves to tackle iL
The Republicans do indeed have
November, when the cconorn)' was trutb:
a
"better
handle" on this whole
· "If economic worry weighs less
markedly more robust than 11 had
the Democrats, and
subject
than
been two years earlier and Presi • heavily l/8on voters 3/8 than
therefore
a
priceless
opportunity to
dent Clinton mlsht ordinarily hive many have assliiDCd, then Mr. Clinat
the
head or the
put
themselves
been expected to teap the benefit, ton's anempts to pander to the midimpulse
in Arnerinext
dominant
the wters turned on the Democrat- dle class with tax cuts, or to the
.
can
politics.
But
most
of
them, like
ic ·Party lilr.C a Rouweiler kill ins a working poor by raising the minimost
politicians
everywhere,
would
rabbit. What on earth got into mum wage, may be futile. The
rather
hang
beck,
hoping
to
avoid
a
grearer unease may be over ·social
them?
.
London's Economist is a hqhl_y and moral issues rather tlian lbe messy confrontation.
They are wrong. Once again,
respected magazine, and 11 economy. In which case, Republifortune
wiU favor lbe brave.
observes the American scene with cans may well have a beuer handle
William.
Rusller u a Dlsdashrewd and basicaUy friendly eyes. on the slate of the union than Mr. plslled Fellow
of the Claremoat
I Is passion is free-market eco- Clinton does."
· Jn other words, it's social and Institute for tH StJidy of StaRInomics; for the rest its views are, in
moral
issues, stupid: Things lilr.e maaabip aad Polltlc:al Pllll-American terms, roughly centrist.
the
.family,
and illegitimacy, and pby,
In its Jan. 28 issue, it studies and
(For informaUoa oa bow to
tries to make sense of the current drugs, and abortion, and the SCJtual communicate eledr011kally wltb
revolution,
and
personal
responsiauiwde d the American e)ectonte.
. Ibis colunialat and others, coaFor more than two pages it bili • .
tad America Online by calliDil·
seeks ~ explanation in terms of · ~e are, in fact, wiblessing an 300-827..§364,
en 8317.)
economics. Unemployment is
down; consumer confidence is up;
. Today's Birthdays: Marsarcit Tiurnan Daniel is 71. Actor Hal Holjob tenure is steady. Why, then, is brook is 70. Actor Alan Bates Is 61. Football Hall-of-Famer Jim Brown is
Mr. CliJiton so unpopular, and why 59. Actress Mary Ann Mobley is 56. Retired basketball player MiCbael
Jordan is 32.
.
did his pany lake such a drubbing?

• ""'·

IND.

on

World

1

neishborhocid and local officiala
are DOW trying II) reJocate tbe Clell-

Giving thanks for the simple thing-..s- - - --· .

Ever sUice the smashing Republican victory in last November's
·congressional elections, it has been
agreed among political commentators that the voters were badly
upset. ABC's Peter Jennings
accused them of having a coUective

Charles D. Gallagher

MICH.

What's really g_oing on at Job Corps centers?
I' WASHINGTON- Whether
tt' s a p-esideotial lllllllinltiol. or a
billion-dolllr fedelal pmpam, Sellate Labor and Human Resoarces
Committee Chairman Nancy Lan·
don Kassebaum , R-Kan., can't
seem to get a straisbt story &amp;om
the Clinton adminislration.
Last month, Kassebaum was
misled about the abortioo record or
surgeon general nominee Henry .
Foster Jr., whose confirmation
hearings wiU be held by her committee. During a private phone conversation with Health and Human
Services Secretary Donnit Shalala,
Kassebaum was told that Foster
had performed only one "thmtpeutic' abortion. Since tben, the
administration has been revising
the figure almost daily, and Kassebaum has gotreli a public apology
from the president.
Although it hasn't been on the
front pages, Kassebaum has also
gotten conflicting stories from the
Labor Deparunent over her efforts
to reform the Job Corps program.
Each year, more than 60,000
students enrer Job Corps, the 31·
year-old federal program that pro-

--Area Deaths-

Slltunlay, Ftb. 18

topass.
. a bo ut, "G'mgnc
. h sat· d
· "I'm not sure what they ' re comp I.
ammg
Wednesday. "I don't know why they think th~y can't.com~ to .~he
Congress and get approval m advance before th~y nsk Am!:l11:811 hves. ·
MIS LO~G U~T' Of' ~PS
That draws the issue in terms that can't miss politically,-bul presidents
insist it isn't that simple, thl!l delay sometimes can amount to defeaL . ·
-m:T HE NEVE~ USES?
· The administration is 1rying to use this phase of the debare to ratse
iSSues, stir concerns and try .to get _the biU overhauled, if not stopped, in
the Senate larer.
·
·
.
· Clinton argues that the restrictions would put Americans "at grearer
risk by forcing us to'act unilateraUy or not at all."
.
. .
· 'Republicans insist that overslates the unpact of thetr move to hmll U.S.
spending on U.N. o~ons, and to bar ~e use of American ~s un~
fQreign command, agam, unless the prestdent personaUy certified that 1t
was viral.
Back home those points are popular, and the United Nations is nOL
. The U.S. casualties suffered in Somalia in October 1993 fit the OOP
argument for limits. What Bush began ~ a h~mailitarian mission, Clinton
let continue, and 18 Amencans were killed m a street batlle. They were.
under U.S. command, but in a U.N. operation.
.
That led Congress to set a withdrnwal deadline, and Clinton to shake
up leadership at the Pentagon.
·
Defense Secretary William Perry said this week that Clinton never will
relinquish command of U.S. forces, and that the real issue is "operational
NOTE: Tile loUowintl column of the bulbs may be bilmed out. lng-lot aitendant during the week.
blank looks on the faces of the peo- .·
control." That's a fine distinction, but Perry insists it is a vital one,~
Is part or a series of periodic You wiU be made to feel welcome
He never Jllti*CS his sermon in pte in most congregations that kill
that there have been precedents from ~orld War l _to D-Day to the Perstan
releases tailed "A stranger IIC)e8 in the store-front church as you advance. "I get a revelation from mllily a preacher's fervor.
GulfWar.
·
·
_
to cburcb." In these columns, mav not .feel welcome anywhere God when I preach," he said. This
When 1 was a parish minister, 1 .
"Without this flexibility the United States would be forced to go it · Plage~~z critiques cburcb aervk:es
Sunday he spoke on personal righ- , would often take off my glasses
, alone," Perry said.
.
.
.
George R. Plagenz teousness.
when I preached. The congregalion
or various denomioatioll5.
Secretary of Srate Warren Christopher, argwng the same pomt, spoke
.
.
Services on Sunday start about"9 · - would then l!PJIC8f to bC a big blur
- obliquely of what has gone wrong in· the P!ISI: ~ •we certainly h_ave
· The sanctuary wasn't much- else in the world.
, in the morning and end about 2:30 and 1 would,trnagine that everybecome-acutely aware of m1ss1on creep, ·or mtsstons that are authorized
There were only a few of us at or 3. Evening services Sundays, · body had eager, expectant looks on
one end of a vacant dru_gstore.
·without careful enou,\:h consideration."
Instead of slained-glass wmdows, the store-front church I was attend· Wednesdays and Fridays stan at their faces. People didn't know
The Republican btU also seeks expansion of NATO to easrem E~
worshipers looked up at empth ing, but we sang and clapped onr about 7 and end at about 10 or why, ·but they always said I
and a commission to review military spending and preparedness. A proVIshelves that once held things sue
hands and lisrened to each other tell 10:30.
. preached better with my glasses
sion caUing for a national missile defense system was defeated Wednesas
aspirin,
cough
syrup
and
spray
what
Jesus
had
meant
to
ua.
Even
I
Nobody
looks
at
a
watch,
but
off! ·
.
.
.
cans
of shaving cream.
~ot up to make a testimonial. about 12:45 I had to go. I had been
I had never been to a church
- yThose are derails in a long debate. Another phase of it was underscored
The exterior wasn't much either.
'Praise the Lordi·" they all said there since 10:30. I got up and . before that had an overseer who sat
two weeks a~o w~cn Clinton, despaif!ng of qui_ck ~ongressional action,
It looked more like a vacant drug- when I sat down.
·
made another sbort testimooy and on the platform to maintahi deooUSed his prestdential powers to commtt $20 billion m loans and guaranstore than a church. There was a
A little girl 1101 up and sanll said 1 would be back. "Praise the nun. On this momins the !)veneer .
tees to Mexico.
·
. small sign outside, but some of the "God Never Falls" .without any Lord," they aU .said
· .
told the people thill he saw "too
But lines are drawn most clearly when the question is of the deployletrers had faUen off. ''CHURCH accompaniment. Then came the
The pastor at~store-front much whispering, gum-chewing
ment missions and safety of U.S. forces abroad. "Tum around and
0 GO IN CHRIST," the sign said.
prarers. Things the rest or us ccim- church 1 anended washed cars dur- and wallcing to the bathroom whenthere:s 8nother U.S. commitment somewhere in the world," Gingrich
There was a telephone number plain about -like riding the buses · ing the week at a posh high-rise ever you're ready."
complail\ed.
to call for informauon on healing or having to get up in the morning condominium. A quiet, dignified
I didn 't ·notice any of tbose
Bush made his share, but Republicans argue that the process has esca- services ·and prayers for the sict, -these people found a reason 1o . man, he became tranSfOIIIIed in the thinss. Actually, after hearing a
lared under Clinlon, and that their last president at least came to Congress.
but anyone would have had trouble give thanks for.
pulpit. His eyes danced and he young woman soloist sing "His
Bush did and got sanction for the Gulf War, although he said it was not
reaching the number. One of the
One woman who was born in became animated and agilated.
Eye is on the Sparrow," I couldn't .
required lind that he could have acred without it, as commander in chief.
digits was missing.
the South thanked the Lord for
A refrain ran through the ser- remember anything else.
Now it's Clinton's tum. The GOP bill, Christopher said, "would.
Store-front churches have long bringing her to "this nice city rnon (which tasted an hour). "Do
George Plagen~; Is a syndical·
undermine not only this, but every future president's abilil)' to safeguard
been a familiar sight on the dingy, where we can ride the buses." A you hear me?" he would shout eel writer lor Newspaper Eater·
America's security and to command America's armed forces."
down-at-the-heels urban landscape. . man gave thanks that "God woke · afrer he had made a poinL The con- prise AJsociltioll.
Perhaps, but past limits always _have. left presidents ~Ieeway to act,
The invitation in the window me up this morning." .
gre~ation would respond with a
(For Information on bow to
on their own, and at their own pohucal nsk should the_mwston go wrong.
promises salvation and a better life
1be pastor was Elder Samuel, a rollicking "Yes!" ' Amen!" or communicate electrOIIkaiiJ wltla
to all who enrer or pass by. Never big, good-natured man who was "Go ahead!"
tbls columnist and otllen, COli·
:EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colummind that some of the letters in the "saved" 20 yean ago and has been
Such enthusiastic responsive- tad AJnerlca Ontine by caltinll·
niSt lo( The Associated Press, has reported on Wasbinlllon and
sign may be missing or that some preaching ever since. He is a park- ness would improve the perfor- 800-827-'364, ext. 8317,)
nationlll politics for more than 30 years.
·
.
mance of any preacher. It is the

~ Berry's

-

OHIO~ -~-

Page 2-lhe Dilly Sentinel
Pomeroy Mlddlepolt, Ohio
Frtdlly, February 17, 199!5

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10am- 11 am

Ash Street
Freewill
.Baptist Chu"rch
Middleport, Ohio ·
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.
Teacher Les Hayman

992-7410

93 Mercury
Cougat
Low miles.
verY clean

84 Ford Escort Wagon Auto , low miles .......... ............11995 .
'86 Taurus LX Wagon ve. auto. air &amp; pow................:..13995 ·
87 Aerostar XL 7 pass .. air, vs ....................................... 14495
1
92 Ford Festiva L 5 spd., sport stripe . .. ..
4495 •
1
90' Chevrolet
Cavalier 4 dr.. auto . air. cruise .............. 5995
.
.
89 Dodge Dynasty V6, air, cruise, tiL ......................... .15995 ·
90 Grand Am SE Local owner trade... .. ...............15995
91 Ford Aerostar Aulo . air. 7 passenger . ... .. ........... 17995
88 Ford Ranger sc 4x4 V6, XLT, 5 speed ........... .18995 .
92FORDF·1504X2

1

8, 99 5

6 cylrndcr. 5 speed. lo cal lrade

91 Pontiac Grand Prix vs, P win. &amp; locks ....... ......... '9,999 · '
89 Ford Bronco 114 wo Red &amp; white. auto , air,V6 ... 110,495
90 Jeep Wrangler 4x4 Auto , hard1op, low miles•1... 112,495
92 Buick LeSabre White, one owner. . ... .... .. .. .. 113,495
94 Chev. S-1 0 Extended Cab, auto . 11 .000 miles ....... 113,495
93 Toyota 4x4 5 spd ., local trade .......... ... ....... ... .. ., 113,995
94 Ford Ranger V6, ext . cab, auto ... ,........ ..~ ............... 113,995
94 Ford Ranger Super Cab v-s.LXT pkg ......... . '13,995
94 Ford Taurus GL 2 to choose from, air, loaded ....114,998 '

Our lobbi~ will be closed
Monday, February 20
in obsenmce ofPresiden1s' Day.

But if you carry an ATM gu'd wi~b one of these symbols... ' 94 GMC SUBURBAN 4X4
ve leather. loaded'

118~ DCIC4~

1

31 '900

. you have 24-hour access to your accounts·
every day of the year at Ollr SuperT~IIer machines.
Am ens

Marietta

37Bl55

•

Belpre

lowell

Middlepon

593-7761

Nelsonl'ille
753-1955

896·2369
992-666 1
423-751 6
Newark The Plains TDOOnly
788-8820 797-45'7 376-7123

"DON WOOD

• I

'

"Where Better Really Matters"

-·-·-

East State Street
Athens, Ohio .

Stoc:k reporll are the 10:30 a;m.
quotes provided by .Ad vest ol

.- .

-·---

593·6641
+-'

�Frtdlly, FebrUary 17, 1995

Sports

The .Daily Sentinel
.

..

.

tournameni Monday with an 8:15
tip-off at Alexander High SCh&lt;lOI.
Southern advanced to the cham·
pionship game with a 59-38 upset
over top-seeded Green. Miller
defeated Ponsmouth East 58-24 in
the evening's second game.

One of the keys to the contest
was an outstanding swarming
Southern defense. TJ_te Tornadoes
forced 28 turnovers m the contest
an~ held ·th~ Bobcats 10 only 10
pomts co~bmed m the second and
founhpenods.

Scoreboard
Ohio women's
college scores

Basketball
NBA standings

New Ycd .............. 31

17 .646

6.5

Ba~tm ....................20

28
3l

.~17

,404

175
18.:5

Miami .................... ll 30 .37:5

19.5

Philadelphio ........... l4

3S
Wuhin&amp;lon ... -....... 12 3S

1A

.2&amp;6
.2SS

25

Central DI¥Woft
Chatlouc ............. :..Jl 19 .620
CI.EVEI..AND ....... 30 19 .612
lndiana ...................28 20 .SI3
.24 :IS .490
A\l&amp;nta ...................23 26 .469
Milwaubc ............. l9 31 .380

ShaWMOSi:. 91 , Urbana4S

Tiffin 67, Mount Varnon Nu.arat.cS9 .

•

Dloto!Oom

B.... 71, WclUian 2S
Bud!cyoTroll79, Fortfryo 71
Cin. Mariemont 31, Cia. Finne)'\Own

Noo..,.,.,ereDCie
FWlloy 74, C..tnl SL 69 (01)

..-r

Fr1day, February 17, 1995
Page 4

Fedanllloddn1 .u. Alcun""'44
FcliQoy S9, c;,.
Pult :w
Eca.., Ridao 79, Spliq. C•lholic 64
l.u&lt;uville 9.n. 31.~- 34
McD moa.Northwar!J:9, Pikdon S4
• N•liooll Troll6:5, Tri.COW.y N. 2S
00 Hill64, S. W-"211
Plinl Vall. 76, - - 61
Preble Shnmoo 53, Mihaa-Unian !J:l

n-

Ada !J:9, Colum.IKII Glove S4

Abm K.....,.72,N..-70
AnlhooyW•yoc !2. ~ord49
Arudil SJ, Smca E. 49

2
6.S
7.5
12

~ Sl, Ri....W.&lt;II
A&lt;hllbul.llubor71, IWwy 49
Badp46, Soui!Unp 36
llubedon 59. AkJm E. 31
Bcru S6, Mldpul: :14

12

(201)

t=-

MILWAUKEE (AP) - The
Cleveland Cavaliers are dropping
: • t s and shoes at the
at
t the same pace.
Cleveland got six buzzer-beaters, including Terrell Brandon's
halfcourt bank shot at the end of
the lint quarter. in a 106-85 10111 of
the Milwaukee Bucks on Thursday
night
• 'They really make you play
defense for 24 seconds," Bucks
coach Mike Dunleavy said.
"We must have made five or six
shots with the shot clock at either

ra. .aa

l!: J.

Iam

UL&amp;h .......................36
San Ant.oaio ...........JI

Houatm .................31
Denver ...................20
D.U.. ..................... l9
Minnoo""' ............. .12

14 .720
16 · .660

17 .646
21 .417
Z1 .404
31 .&gt;AS

3.5
4
15
lS.5
23.S

.~38

L.A. LU:cn .........: .. 30 17
Sacramento ............ 27 20
Ponhnd ................. 25 22

.574
.Sl2
.298
.163

Golden SLI&amp;c .......... 14 33
L.A. Clipper~ ........... &amp; 41

Oydo66,__.SI

Cn.llino l2. u... 43
Ol)'lhop P.U.l7, Soowl4

New Ieney I 00, Dawer 94

New York 96, Miami 87

Gilm0wc47
44

CLEVELAND at New Jcncy, 7 :30

p.m.
.
Denver at Philadclphil. 7:30p.m.
Detmitat O.ukuo., 7:30p.m. ·
CUcaso at MilwaWr.eo. 8:30p.m.
Allama at San Antoai.o, 8:30p.m.
Hoaon at U\ah, 9 p.m.
~nleat OOO:kn State., I0:30p.m.
L.A. ClipJ*i at Sac:ramctHo, 10:30

.

a.

'1.7

M,... SL Mary'~ Md. II, MorimoUih.

39

N.l l l .
· New HampdJirc 95, Vcrmontl4
Rider 11. WiJJX164
Sl Fr.ncia, Pa. 19, Robcr1 Malrii?S
Temple6l, Ru'Bcn S4

South
Allbuna Sl. BJ •.Allbama A&amp;.M 80
Cent..Florida 82, Cunpbcll62
CoU. of qwlaton 73, SIIUOn 62
Dclawa~

SLI4, Coppin SL 74
florida Atlanlic 75 , Non Soul.heutem
Gcorgio SLII4, Men:... 66
"
JICbuwille 7S, Lama.r 69 .
Ubc.1y 70, Wu&gt;thmp 61
J..ouiUn• Tech 15, Sooth Allhama 66
M'"l"""" 110, Ah.·Qinnin&amp;hun 70
N.C. &lt;laulaue 71 , Vitgini.a Tcc:h 60
N.C.·Grccnaboro SS, N.C.· A•hevil.le

New Orlcana 14, AJ:tan&amp;u SL 66
Nmh c.mw. 66. a ...... 39

52

6 4 2 . 14 7.7

34

s

3

11 39
I 2A
1 29

We sold new- Only 34,000 miles.
Loaded with options &amp; leather interior!
· Lady Driven &amp; Extra Clean
V-8 ENGINE ~ REAR WHEEL DRIVEl

au..,. 2

Q&gt;eboc 4,l'hilodolphi• 2

c.Jpry 2.

Sylvani.t Narthview IS, FOftOria Sr. 41
Sylvutil Soulhvicw 71, Millbwy Lake

(lio)

Tonlght'saames
N.Y. Illacden a1 Ne.w Ieney, 7:30

Tol. Em1.11ucl B1pt. 54, Ouaw1 Hi.I.U

p.m.

OUawa at T~pa S.y, 7:30p.m.

S.....llfloriilo, 7:30p.m.
Edmao~on •llolroit. 7:30pm:
SL l.ouilu W'annipea.l:30p.m.
· San IUM•t Lo. Aft&amp;elcl, lO:lOp.m.
Vanoowcr •t Anahlt:im, 10:30 p.m.

(0)')
.
ToL St. Umda 5:5, Tal Bowlher 36
Tal. Whiuner!J:1, franMtlloal47
Upper SanduU:y SS, Marion Pl.~1ant
•
Wilih J..
Ki&lt;inln
43
Wayncifteld 73, Um.a Shawnee 70
Wclliof.:"".U.Bmob.,.40
,
W.u.villo47, E. Uv...... 3l

o...

capped
win," Sooihcm head coach Jennifer
a bucket at the I :27 mark of the with 1.5 seconds lelt to pvc South- Roush said afler the game. "When I
half 10 give the purple and gold a em a 45-35 lead at the quarter's scouted .them, I knew we had a
30-22 lead. Turley poured .in nine end.
good chance of winning. Tbey
points in the run to lead the TomaTennant scored for Green at the don't press, so I knew we could run .
docs to a 30.23 halftime advantage. start of the final period to cut it to. a on them and wear them down".
Green came out in the third peri- 45-36 Southern lead. But Southern
Monday's title contest will be
od and cut it to a one point gam~ went on anothcrl4-2 run to put the the third game between Southern
when Michelle Rife scored with Cats away and post the win.
and Miller this season. Southern
2:00 left to make it a 36-35 game.
Turley, who led all scorers with has.won the first two games.
But Southern stormed back 10 scOre 20 points, was joined in double figthe perioq's final seven points that ures by Manuel's 13.
Green
was capped off when Turley hit a
Southern hit 23 of 70 from the
(16·7-ll-3=38)
floor for 33% including three or
Stephanie Jamison 2-0·0=4,
nine from three point range. South- Kara Queen 1-1-0=5.; Steohanie
.ern hit 10 of 19 from the line for
· 53%. Southern grabbed 4-1
Golf Course (653)
rebounds with Turley grabbing
GRAVELY TRACTOR
eight, Jess Codner adding seven
Men
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Individual high series - Bub and Manuel getting six. Turley had
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Stivers (536) and Chuck Burton eight of Southern's 18 steals, three
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS
(532)
.
of their six assists and five of the
Individual high game - Bur· seven blocked shots. Southern
CLOSED MONDAY
ton (210) and Larry Dugan (197)
turned tbe ball over 18 times.
TUE.-FRI. 9:D0-5:00;
Women
Tconant and Beritley led Green
SAT. 9:Q0-12:00
Individual high series with 11. points each. Green hit 13
Wendi Maxson (473) and Shirley · of 62 from the field (20%) Mid 11
of 19 (58%). Bentley pulled in 10
Simmo~~5S)
.
lndi ilal high game -Rob- of the team's 25 rebounds.
bie Ri e 83) and Debbie Sayre
"Everyone contributed to the
(175)
·

.r

Willouahby S. 67, Bodlool 3S
WOOIC.c:r78, Tri.w•y6S

w........._

SL U.U. d TCII'On1o., 7:30 pa.
Dalluat Calpry, 10:30 p.m.

Tournaments
DlvWonl

Flirl&gt;am 58, P!!Juo Sl
Hunil1on SO, Cm. Ook llilk 4S
Sidr!oy S7. Spriaa. Soulh 39
Tec:wnaeh. 32, Huber He.. Wa
T1

'

Edman10n 1\ auc.ao. 2:30p.m.
QucNc: It PJOOda, 6 p.m.
B...tf~o It PilllbuzJb, ap.m.

BIWIJ NEW '95 CIEVY AS1RO ~
CONVERSION VAN

••

• E•tended Chass1s

• llnver S~ All Bag

••

lll

Room

• A.ntJ·lock Brakes
• Air Coodit1on
• AutomatiC O~erdr1ve
• • Vista Bay W1nQows
• Power Steer1ng

· · • Power Brakes
• Tilt Steer1ng
• Cru1se
• AMIFM Cassene
· Power Windows

Far West
Ariz:ma 19, Saulhem CillO
BaiJc St. 69, N.- Arizona .51
Cal St. · ~ 69, Pacif1t 63

Hawaii 73, Bri&amp;ht.m Yrung 70

Lo!'ol• Muymwm 70, San

Diof 62

New MWco91,ColondoSt. 7
New MeJjc.a St. 91, Neuda 90,

0....0 .. ...,........... 63
•
--siiil'nnclKo M; Peoadlno 92 !011
TCua-f.l Puo 73, w'y(mina10
UC IrVine 77, San Jo.e St. 49
1JCI.4, 12. Arizuw SL.n (01)
Utah 61 , San Dicao St. S l
Uuh SL 76, UNLV 72
Wubia- St. 94, Onolm SL IS
Wrbct S..19,"ldaho St.)]

. ' .•

Soutllern

(15-15-15-14=59)

Cynthia Caldwell 1-0-0=2, Bea
Lisle 1-0-1=3, Renee Turley 6-15=20, lonna Manuel 4-1-2=13,
Becky Moore 1-1-0=5. Jess Codner
1-0-2=4, Brianne Proffitt 3-0-0=6,
Sammi Sisson 3-0-0=6. Totals: 20·
3-10=59

CELEBRATE IESUS
WITH

MICHAEL PANGIO
You Are Invited To Come

&amp; Celebrate Jesus
. Sunday, February 19th &amp; 26th
7:00P.M.
Seni~r

ttl Dot Fees.

titizens Building • Pomeroy

· Power loc);s

'95 Ford Windstar

Ce~Neteo'

'

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NO Doc ftm. Oehw!rlll'

350 V·B POWERJSILVERADO
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988

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• L~ded!

Southwest

Su:phen F.Au.tin 80, Bay!~ JS
W. Kcntuciay 70. Ark .- l...i.nlc Rack tiK

a. promise acting commissioner
Bud Selig made to a Senate subcom mittee on Wednesday. During
questioning by Sen. Patricli: Leahy,
D- V t.. Selig said season ticket·
holders could get refund~ for ·
replacement games and not lqse
lheir scats.
"Teams have their own individual policies ," said Selig's
spokesman, Rich LeVin. "There is
no major league policy."

sa 688**

1911 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446-2282

Sunday's aames

B r e ath

TIE ·

SINCE 1954

Amhoim II Sild- 11&gt;30 p.in.
VIIMOUYCUl U..AnaeJ."•,IO:lOp.m.

Cin. Mon:y 54, M...,.llcolthy 33

Tennant4-0-3=11, Kim Dyer ·Hl3=5, Amy !lentley 3-0-5=11,
Michelle Riffe 1·0-0=2. Totals:
12-2-11=38

SYSftM

'Buick Pontiac

N.Y. Jt.naon" - - . 7:30p.m.

Quebec at
7::10 p.m.
8aAon •• T~ JJ.y, 1:30-p.m.

You. Ubc.1y Sl, Mopawoool 31

out the ceremonial first pitch opening day if replacemenUI are used.
Mediator Bill Usery, who appears
to be having little effect despite his
$4,000-a-day salary, still was
attempting to schedule the rcsump-.
lion of negotiations for next week.
"I've been talking to both parties,'' he said. "I'll just wait. When
I think the time is right, we'll get
together."
Owners, meanwhile, backed off

GRAVELY

Saturday's aames
Pilul••'lllllllatford,l :30p.m.
New Jcney 11 N.Y. lllandml, 7 p.m.

Tcnn.- Martin 64, AllAin Pr.ly ~"i
Tulane 7&amp;, Sooth Horida 61

Cincinn&amp;ti 91, M"oldlead Sl.. 59
C$Vc.l.lnd St. II. La Salle 78
Dctmit6B, N. £llinc:U 60
Evumrillc 97, Bahuno-Ccdm&amp;n 62
ID.-OUcaao 7&amp;. WiJ.-Grcm B•y 64
M~ 68, O.yoon 61
S. Dlinoil74 , SW MiuOI.lri. St 67
St. Louia I 00, Alcom St. 70
Widtita SL 67,lndiana SL 58
Wia.- Milwau.kce 74. Loyola, llL S6

- binding arbitration;
- a law giving players the right
to sue owners if teams impose new
work rules;
- a presidential commission
that would ·study basebAll whUe the
1995 season goes on under.the old
rules; or
-an agreement
With none of those likely in the
next week or two, President Clln'
ton said he would refuse to throw

Local1 Owner, 10,000 low miles, color
TV, VCR player, tilt, cruise, cassette,
· 4 Captains chairs plus rear sofa
.
"SAVE BIG"

S«&lt;thcm Min 74, LouiJville 63

, Bradley 69, Creighton 59

embarrassing,'' Cleveland catcher
Sandy Alomar Jr. said after .the
meeting of 260 players. "It's
embarrassing for baseball and an
embarrassment fir the fans."
Union head Donald Fehr, who
wiU meet with playc:n Saturday in
Phoenix, said the union would cod
its strike under any of five scenarios:
- a coun order restoring the
old work rules;

1993 FORD MARK Ill
CONVERSION VAN

S. Cuolina Sl. 13, Howard 62

Midwest

•

Locally owned, auto, power witlldc)Wis,l:
32,000 miles, cassette with graphic
·
equalizer, Dark Jade
"SHARP CARl"

40
48
43

-..il2,N.Y. ~.., 2(1io)

hit 10 oC II free throws, ¢(41!p'n'd
to 3-for-6 for the Bucks.
OveraU, tbe Cavalien outJbot
the Bucks 53 pc:rcenl10 .CO pe«eelt
and outrcbouodcd Milwaukee 4533.
.
Day said the Bucks simply ~
ClevelBnd's hurting lineup too
lightly.
.
"We rea II y slacked off on
defense tortigh~" he said. "Offensively, we couldn't throw a penny
into the ocean."
The Cavaliers tmiled 42-37 with
six minutes left ip the first half, but
used a 12-4 run to grab a 49-46
lead at the half.
·

1993
EAGLE TALON

33
42 .

S,HIIft!wd 2

-

some
shots for us. We didn't
want ilwa\lkee to· get started.
Once they get hot, they can be very
hard to beat."
.
Milwaukee was led by Glenn
Robinson's 22 points. Todd Day
and Eric Murdock each added 17.
Mills .and Phills each had nine
points in .the Cavaliers' 33-13
third-period run that stretched a
three-point halftime edge to 82-59.
Cleveland dominated the quarler, outshooting the Bucks 61 pcrcent to 26 percent and outrebounding them 1!1-7. The Cavaliers even

-·-·-·-

· · (Results as ol Feb. 8)
League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standings -Meigs Golf
Course (~6-12), Captain D's (30- .
18), Chatnsaws &amp; Roses (24-:24),
Court Street GriU (24-24). Tony's
Carryout (22-26),1&amp;L Insulation
(20-28), Thunder Alley Cats (2028) and Banks Construction (10· 38).
·
Team hlflh series - Meigs
Golf Course (1875)
Team hl1b game -,- Meigs

BUICK ROAD MASTER SEDAN

Thursday's a:ores

.

·

42

39

Amhoim .......... 4 8 0
v . - ........ 2 s •

You. Moooey 45, You. Ursuline J7

S3

31
4S.

34

to............... 4

Sherwood Ptini.n 106, W•)'M Trace

..aso.

SO
43

c:.lpq ......:...... 6 l 2 14 43
- . . .... ......... 6 s 2 14 31

ToL Notre Dune Sl, Tol. Catholic 48

47

35
:14
29

13 25 7.7
12 31 . 35
9 33 31
• 2S 41

PactllcDI-

Strutben SO, Hubbm142

.

IS 36

Sl.l.oooio ........... 7 4 I . IS
T.................. 6 6 3 IS
W'llllli1"1 .......... 4 7 3 II
Dallu ................ 3. 7 2
I

s.n.r-............

S"""'JYillo 60, B111•nrid&lt; 39

Mauchuoelu73,1luqu""' S6
Md.-Baltim"alc Ccurd.J' n , ToWIOR St

2A SO

l::,.
. . . . . ..lf ~ ~ ~ 'tz ,
-.,;; ..-......... I 4 I t7 SO :II

S~c6l,I'&gt;WdinJlO

Mariat 121, Lona Uland Univ. 98

28
39
42
34

C•lnl DIYIIIDB

S•ndu1k1 Perkin• 60,' Sanduaky St.
Mocy.S!

Maine 63, Hartford .53

25 61

go·

said. "We played good defense and

pas~ ball well. This crealcd

Mason Bowling_ League results_ .

Showroom clean • 1 owner, sunroof,
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RUBY RED &amp; BEAUTIFUL.

44

WESTERN CONFERENCE

OlmllodP.U.43, WOIIIUo41
Oroaio41, lblhony B...., 33
PutwaJ 5!11, NewlCnoaville .56
Rovam 60, Kaxlloooovoll 34

N.Y.79

1992
N~SSAN 240 SX

AIIWkDI-

Plaoobwp ......... 12 0 I
Quoboc. ............. 12 I 0
..................... 7 4 I
Bul!olo............. 6 6 I
...... ... 4 s 4
llatfwd ............ 3 I 3
oaa...._.......... t 9 2

Narwalk St. Paul 48, J!rcmont St.
J.. cpb 33

Fail-leish Dickinaon 86, St. FranCi1,

'

Nri- Dlotolon

Monlor LUo C.lh. 62. Clo. ....1111111111

~~~=~·~~.

"CLASSIC CAR"

73, Freepan

l'llikdolpllil ...... 6 I 1 13 37
New-y ....... l S 2 12 7.7
N.Y. Jdondcn. .. S 6 I II 32
T""l" Boy....... .l 7 I II 31
WuiUa.......... 2 I 2 6 22

Mcllon.Ud 4S, l.owcllvillo 31
Medin-. !J:2, Oovcd.CI! 44 .

Now BICIIIICIII 55, SL HIIDIJ' 53

58,000 Actual Miles, One Owner,
Champagne Metallic Finish - Leather
Trim, Loaded, Extra Clean

~
. - H~'lP~~
Florid.o .............. 6 7 I 13 34 31

Cc:ra.-HC*W 35

S2

East

.

s:

Houlton at New Y IXk, 1 p.m.

Rout~ran•

of two' free throws with 24.5 seConds left in the period. But Green
took a 16-15 lead at the end of the
period when Amy Bentley hit a
pair of free throws with 2.1 seconds left Manuel had the hot hand
for Southern with eight fli'St period
points.
Green took a 22-15 lead at the
7:40 mark of the first half on a pair
of free throws by Tennant. But
·Southern exploded for a 14-2 run
that was sparked by Renee Turley.

1989
BUI.CK RIVIERA

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Kalidl70, Oaawa-Oludcrf 57
.
I...inc.clavint 15, Upptr" Scido V.U. 35
Lon.in Calli. 67, Berlin Ccale:r WeaanRAoom23
IAwlonvillo 39' Ccnlnl34
M.L ltinsltJ'S 33, Mu "'"" :14
MauiUOG Pary Sl, Uniaru.own Lake
26
' Ma~tillon Wuhinaton 45, Akron

N. c.,..., Sl, C...... S. 3S
N. Olmaled 40, Puma 25
N. RidpYillo41, Midoiow 21

· to
$10,999

Hockey
NUL standings

Dolphoo So. lolm'• -67, Marion Locol

w...... Rm«vel9

Sunday's games ,

NCAA Division I-A·
men's scores

Chr. Acad. 55,

Foltori• SL Wmdelin S4, McComb Sl
lludin No.&lt;bom 61, Eca10n Sl
H0!&gt;1!...U-Loull..,l3, N. Blllim,.. 22
Humn!J:I,OU:HubarlS
,
Jac:luon Ml.llon 53, Berlin (!enler

3S

Zan•ville

Lakolmd:IA

F.WO. .50, c.nal fli1loa Nonbwe~t 32
nndlor 74. w•.-...... 46
-....,67,AYIOI:Il

p.m.

Milmi. a\ lndian.i., 2:30 p.m.
· Odando at Minneaota,l:30 p.m.
Denver at Wuhington, 6 p.m.
Ullh It Phoenil, 9 p.m.
Pt.\land at L.A. Lakr:n, 9:30 p.m.

.

3&lt;1

Doy........ 6:5,1fi&amp;hl&lt;nd S2
-.N.I9,N'OI\Ionio21
l!ulwoool s~ Kwu Lakcu 44

Tonight's games

Saturday's games

v.u.

Cuyahoa•

HW&amp;1011 !OS, Charloae 89

Miami al New Yotk. 7:30p.m.
Hamon at W~Jhinsuin., 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Orlando, 7:30p.m.'
Indiana It MinnCIIGII, B p.m.
Golden Stato at Phoenix. 8 p.m.
.Deaoit at 0.U:.JO. 8:30p.m.
Atlanta at Dallu,l:30 p.m.
Scan.lc at Pmland, J 0 p.m.
Botton at LA. Clippers, 10:30 p.m

w•..roo~ 63,1le&lt;Dnilla43
Wt111a111 Latham 57, Porumoulh Clay"

Coldwater 57. Miua 29
Columbio S7, LW Ridp 21
~ LUme. 61,Howland 56

cr.EVELAND 106, Milwaukee IS
I.Aah 120, San Antonio 113
Sacmnc:nto9S, LA. Lakcn 12

64

N&lt;lllhlandn, Walnut Rifiae 49

Col

II
11
1J
24
31

Thursday's scores

69

o..r

.

"There are 110 many people to
point to " Fntcllo said. "TerreU
01 us
early and we had diffeta~t ~e tate'over from there.
MichacijC'qe - w~~Cn you push
his buuoos and say, lley, it's your
tum to come in and do somethina;
for Ull' -he steps up and plays ,
huge.
"We were in one of those shot
making modes tonight," FrateUo
said.
•'The shoes wen: just falling and
1 know' that must have been frustrating fO£ the Bucks,'' Mills said. ·
"We were p-eay hot tonight and
hit a lot of buzzer beaters," PhiUs

4
Tornadoes win
...
.....;·_~·_.:_&lt;c_on_tinued_rrom_Pagc~
_ &gt;---~----_...._----=:::--------------­
the run with three from deep in the ri(lht caner
sammi Sisson

Dl ...lon IV
~Vall. 30, S...bwl 23
Day. Jcffenon !50, Cedarlilfe 39
E. Kno&gt;&lt; &lt;47, c..din- 34
Mill• S9.1'1oum...lh E. :14

1-

.· ·

since 1912.
By RONALD BLUM
Pitchers and catchers, those
NEW YORK (AP) '-- On the
magical
words, never seemed more
fliSI day of spnng
' . training, 9lrilring
ordinary.
The only change since
~ leagucn really were in Flori.
players
walked
out last Aug. 12
da: instead of playing on green
was
that
owners
arc attempting to
graaa, though, they met in a ballbreak the strike by starling workroom and talked rough. .
About one-fifth of the strildng outs with minor leaguers, hasIJiayers gathered to meet with beens and ncver-wcre8.
"If you ~re ~etting guys who
union leaden Thursday as replacehaven't
played m five years 10 be
ments began to take the field for
what is thought to ,be the fli'St time the replacement players, that's

53, Ritlunand Dale SaJ.tbeul·

Manchollcr 50, New Boaton OJon ..
wood &lt;47
~ ...... ,.Ohio
22
.New M&gt;..U SS, W•ynaMllo SS
" llocino Soulhom 59, Fnnllin Fumooe
0....31

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• AutomallC

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·PIS. PIB
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Great Midwest Conrerence
~ 61, Doytnn 61

Midwestern Colleglall Conr.
a...bnd SL 11, La S.U. 71

Great Lalt"' Valley Coor.
Aoh]uol64, SL l....,..'._}nd, S6
(

Non-conrerence a&lt;llon
RIO &lt;JRANi&gt;B 109. CoiL

. . 103

.

"'w. v;,.

...

--·--

Easl State Street, Athens, Ohio ~·

593-6641

"ShoSL 99, Wilbmforooll
Wallhi:IA. Ohio V.U.y 103

.

I

'
·,-

Plgi 5

Spring training sees players 1n Florida, but they're still striking

I

~S3,Minfmd42

O..&amp;rin Folb SO,IWtl...s 36
Ca. SL
'12, &lt;loon 0.0.. 39
0... VA-SJ &lt;la, Holy "'Name4J

.4

On the baseball scene,

, I

v...m-54. SpriA1. N . . . - 35
W. M~Mtinpm'l2. Uoiool.oc&lt;l37

34 .
.
Can1aa MI:Kinlc}' !J:I, Akmn FirMone
'1.7

P•clnc Dlrilkla

Pb....U ..... ............. 39 10 .7116
Scaale .................... 34 13 .723

s·a

of
dependable
sales and
service

em41

Bowlina o.en 43, Holland Sprina. 17
B...tnillo S:Z. N.Roy.._ 3l
Broaldiold 61, Auain10wn-Fiu:ti"SJ
Bnoh .u, Moolollu. 37
Canton 01enOak S6, New Pbiladelphia

Mktwctl Dbklon

From

lonna Manuel gave the Tomadoes a 15-14 lead whm she hit one
(See TORNADOES on Page 5) '

41 Years

three, two or one and the ball in the includes Diad Daugherty (back),
air," Cavalic:n coach Mike FIIIICllo leading scorer Mlrlt Price (wrist)
said. "It's difficult for a defense and Gerald Wilkins (IClm AchiUes
when they bust their butts for 22 tendon), the Cavaliers, whose playseconds and give up a basket with ers have milled 124 games due to
injury, improved to 30-19.
two seconds left on the clock."
Chris Mills, Bobby Phills 1111d
That kin~ of clock-eating
offense helped make up for yet Brandon did the damage Thursday.
Mills scored 23 points and
another injured player for ClevePhiUs 22. Brandon added 18 poinUI
land.
.
Forward Tyrone HiU watched in one night after scoring I careerstreet clothes with a sprained left high 31 as the Cavalic:n salllpptd a
hand, but Michael Cage made up thrce-J18111C road losing streat.
The trio combined for 31 poiniS
for his absence with 11 points and
· in a 45-17 spurt over the second
15 rebounds.
·
Despite an injury list that · and third periods that buried the
Bucks.

By ARNIE STAPLETON

.

Ullial~

Bhlfl\m 62, ~ Jaft'GIIOII. 45

WESTERN CONFERENCE

most of the damage for the Bobcals
with eight lint-period poinlll, while
Kana Queen lidded live.

Choose from '10' Low Mileage '94' SunblrdsSome 2 door, some 4 door- options include tilt
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3S

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

.5

.m

30

Teaya Vall. .56, Hamihcm Twp. 41
Tw aty 54, Indian Lake II
Tri·V.U., OO,PIIilo 22

Regutar.....OO ec:tloa

cm..,..................

OdroiL ................... tl

Olm""tl.U• Cc1. Brigo 22
Steubemille 61, Beavti Local 31

Mid-Ohio Conrerence

~ . . . . . . . . Ji I~ -~ .aa
New Jeney ... - ....... 21

CCIIboc:lon Sl, Wanaw River V'aew44
Dover 31, SL C1aiJm11o l6

St. looq&gt;h'•· h&gt;d . 16, AJhland 11

AUandc Dl~lon

February
Celebrates

Dldii•D
BeDefoataine 64, Urbt.aa 14

Great Lakes Valley Coor.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Green (14-2) held an early 1~
15 lead after one period. Slqlhanie
Tennant, a 5-9 senior forward did

The Dally sentinel

Injury-plagued. Cavaliers rout Milwaukee Bucks 106-85

Southern girls beat Green 59-38 in _D-IV sectional game
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspoodent
. It will be Tri-Valley Conference
uvals Sout!'ern. (12-9) and Miller
(5- 16) baUiing 11 out for the lower
bracket championship of the DiVision IV girls' sectional basketbaU

Pomeroy--Micklleport, Ohio

-·

-.

TOU FREE 1·800•822·0417 • 312·2844
344·5947 • 422-11756

.,

'

f

Monday • Satqrday: 9 am - 9 pin
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm
·

I

�•

'

Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Friday, February 17, 1995

Frlday,February17,1995

Legislative GOP studies possible
tax cut as part of new state budget
was unusual in the l~ve panel
By JOHN CHALFANT
!hat is first to leave tts mark. on a
Associated l'ral Writer
COLUMBUS - Oov. George governor's budget I*' ipD&lt;BI
"It's a unique position for a
Voinovicb may not believe the
time has come for a tax cut, but fin1111ce committee because genersome Republican colleagues In the ally finance ccxnmittees are looking
House appear to thin otherwise. at a way to spend more money," he
They an: considering possible cuts said in an interview.
R. Gregory Browning, the govin spending and taxes.
Rep. Roben Corbin, R-Dayton, ernor's top fmancial officer, said in
vice chairman of the House response tbat such decisions were
··
• Finance Committee, said Thursday up to legislators.
.
"We
have
P.roposed
a budget
some members would like to
We
know
it
wtll
be
talked
about, .
j,nclude such reductions in
discussed,
reviewed,
evaluated
and
Voinovich's pending budget bill
amended.
That's
!he
process.
We'll
!hat totals a record $33.7 billion.
Corbin did not say how many work with them on whatever !hey
legislators were working toward · do and go forward," Browning
said.
!hat goal.
Voinovich has been criticized
"I can't say what the numbers
an:, I just know !hat .we have dis- for failing to propose a tax cut,
despite a projected S838 mi!Hon
cussed it, talked about it," he said
Corbin acknowledged !hat con- surplus that likely will approach $1
sideration of spending reductions

COUNTY SPt;LLING BEE WINNERS Lacey Bunting, right, daughter of 'filly and
Janie Burke and an eighth grader at Eastern
Junior High School, took top honors in Meigs
Conaty's annual speDinl bee held at Meigs High
School Thursday night. She became champion
wben sbe correctly spelled "crescent" after Jan
Story mispelled ''corona." Story, left, son or Pat

PARTH:;IPATING SCHOOL CHAMPIONS
· - Tbe annual Meigs County spelling bee
attracted students from across the county
: Thursday night. Tbe contestsnts Included, trom
left, standing, Joshua -Clark and Juli Bailey,·
· Chester sixth graders; Brandon Browning and
Amber Baker, Riverview sixth graders; Jaime
·Whitlock and Tyler Simmons, TupRers Plains
rourtb graders; Lacey Bunting and Michael_"
Sobieski, Easters eighth graders; Ian Story and
Jessica Chapman, Bradbury sixth graders;
Amber Haning, fifth grade, and Wesley Call, · ,
fourth grade at Harrisonville; Brandy Sbea and

a lot of trouble in school. She's bright.
but unmotivated. Both girls seem 10
love their father, but the whole
sitllllion sets off alarms in me.
I feel like 1 coward for not
discussing this with my aUIIt. but I'm
scared of beinB wrortB - or worse,
being right Even if it were true, my
Dear.Aan Landen: For years, I've aunt and uncle would probably deny
wondered whether my uncle was it I'm afraid to slit up a hornet's nest
sexually abusirtg his daughters. My by asking my cousins 10 confide in
aUIIt makes jokes about !he younger me. I was molested by my own
.girl wearing tight pants to please her stepfather, so I know about the
father. He caresses !he girl at family damilge that secre&lt;;y, silence and guilt
gatherings in a way !hat makes them .can do.
Even if the family needs
look. more like lovmlhan father and
cowiseling, I doubt that they would
c!augbtcr. The girl is 16 now.
l:kr sister. who is a few years oldet; go. Should I do anything about my
weighs over 400 pounds and has had suspicions or remain silent for the

Ann
Landers

billion before tbe current fiscal
year ends June 30. .
Browning said Voinovich
brought up the possibility of a tax
cut in his Stale of the State speech.
"He understands that it's a
·legitimate issue as )'QU continue to
have revenues Oowing in and
money going,!"to the ~g~t stabilization fund, Brownmg swd.
Voinovich said in the speech
that he wanted to preserve the $838
.million as a hedge against an economic do\vnturn or loss of federal
aid, but would con~der a tax cut if
. !he full amount was not needed.
How big a surplus does the stale
need?
"We haven't picked a dollar
amount, but there is undoubtedly
an upper limit beyond which you
say we don't need all of this,"
Browning said
·

INTERNET SEMINAR

and ·Elizabeth Story, Is a sixth grader at Brad·
bury Elementary. ,Jeanette "!'homas, center,
Meigs County Board of Education member, presented awards to tbe winaer and runaer-up.
Botb will travel to HuntiJII(oli, W.Va., to com·
pete in the tri-state spelliag bee at 10 a.m.
March 18. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

The following actions to end
marriage were ftled recenUy in ·the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolution askoo - Valerie J.
Leamond, Clinton, S.C., and James
A. Leamond, Pomeroy, Feb. 13.
Divorces asked - Paula Marie
Elks, Rutland, from Edward Moore
Elks Jr., Wilmington, N.C.• Feb.
14; Ralph Fowler, Middleport,
from Odelia Ann Siegrioo, Galion.

Feb. 9.
Dissolution granted - Mary J.
Hawk and William Hawk Sr.• Feb.
I 0; Roben A. Davis and Kimber!)'
A. Davis, Feb. 13.
Divorces granted - Cindy
Rayne Aeilter from Lorraine Patro .
Aeiker, Feb. 10; Tracy ' Lynn
Lawrence from Benjamin Donald
Lawrence, Feb. 13; Amy L. Schartiger' from Donald L. Schartiger,
Feb. 14.
· ·

tests on March 4. J11dglng tbe competitions we~
amtlates of tbe vocational school advisory committee, wbi~b Is composed of men and women
working In the ftelds or weldlna, mecbaalcs, elec·
Ironies,_cosmetoiCJRY, and nurse asslstiag.

''Tnlllitions of Valentines" was Ronda Williams to provide the
the tlevotiooal theme used by Char- music.
.
.
.
lotte Hanning and Jan.e Hysell · The ~unshme frutt basket '!III be
when Bradford Church of Christ given thts !PDilth to Lola Harrison.
Lydia Council met recently at the
Carolyn Nicholson was named
church. ·
_ ·.
· to handle communion In February,
Scripture was taken from and Karleta Stump "! hand!~ tt m
Miltlhew ·S and there was another · March. Next meeung wtll be
reading, "From Ood Wilh Love." __ March 14 wilh Delores Frank and
Plans were discussed for the · Mrs. Stump as hostesses at the
annual mother-daughter banquet to Frank. home.
be held -May 12 at 6:30 at the
Attending were s ·u zie Will,
church. "Find Use Failhful" will be Gerry Lightfoot, Jackie Reed,
the theme of the banquet Speaker Ca_thy atid Me~ Dyer, Sheri')' and
will be Connie Cunningham.
_ Elizabeth Smull, Paull!, Pl&lt;;k~ns,
Nancy Morris opened the meet- . Brenda and Brook Bohn, Drane
ing with pmyer wilh Karleta Stump Bing, _Edie .and Addie Hubbard,
presiding. Officers reports were ~~hne Pamter, C~e, Matthew,
given and a thank you note was &lt;;aJtlm and Jared WtlliamS?D, Karread from JeMy Little for the SUII· ltta Stump, Nancy Morr~s, Jane
shine fruit basket sent to her.
Hysell, and Charlotte Hanmg, and
It was noted that the church Catherine Russell, a missionary
directory is ready and can be from Mexico.
picked up at !he church.
r-::"'!":=:::::::=':"':'::=:~~':'""'1
· Lydia Council meeting night has
PARKERSBURG NISSAN INC.
1~27 Murdock Ave.
been changed to the second Tues485-8451
day of each month. The Ladies Fel9563A '93 NISSAN, 214 Trk.
lqwship wiD be held on Thursday,
Silver. Only $5995
Feb. 23, at the Hemlock Grove
8195A '91 PEUGEOT 405 DL
Church of Christ, it was
5 Spetd. Only $5995
announced.
..
9054A
CHEVROLET S10
The Ladies Day Rally will be
214.
Only $5995
lteld April 2S rrom 9:30 a.m. to 3
8178A
'91
BUICK REGA~
p.m. at the Middlepon Church with
LOICieli.
Only $5995
Vema Brewer
be speaker and

FIRST PLACE.. IN MECHANICS - Danny
Rees, above a senior at Meigs Higb School, displayed bls skill ia replacing brakes on a vehicle.
· ~ees took fll'st place at Thursday night's VlCA
competition at MUS. Wlnnlag quanrres bim to

go into regional competition next montb. Local
mechanics judged the contest and automobile
ageacles and parts busiaesses provided prizes
for tbe winners. (Sentinel photos by Cbarleae
Hoenich)
·

Get·lnto

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Middleport financial report
Fund balances of Middleport por1ation, $33,726.84; recreation,
Village CoWlcil at the end of Jan- $7 ,I 79 .40; cemetery, $4,0 12.25;
uary totaled $51,834.35, according arts council, $1,322.52; $2,1011.48, ·
to a repon of Teri Hockman, clerk- issue 2.
treasurer.
Funds wilh balances were street
Receipts for the month tolaloo maintenance, $3,386.91; ftre equip$80,212.25 with disbursements ment, $3,174.28; water ·system
totaling $1011,718.27.
" improvement, $359.55; water,
The general f~nd showed a $8,897.23; sanitary sewer,
defic11 of $8,937.62. Other funds $31 ,403.02; ODNR waterways,
with deficits were mini-go lf, $927 .32; . revolving
loan,
$1,4~2.08; fire bUcli:,$12&amp;_.59; tree $12,166 .64;
refuse
fund,
planung, $104.19; econonuc devel- S 13,930.62; Jaw enforcement,
opment, $2,355 .94; public trans- $10,024.43.

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Mountain

o;4!~

Duleimer

'Dufdmu•
'lJy

Workshop
: Complete your own 3-strlng plucked
Dulcimer one learn to Play It%
. Only '49.95•
February 21 &amp; 22, I 0:00 a.m.
First Southern Baptist l:hureh
41872 Pomeroy Pike
992-6328
• ()Iller styles avllitoble

_,

'95 Toyota Camry LE
•4 Door
. •Deluxe AM/FM/cassette
•CFC-free air conditioning .
•Power windows and doors
·Tilt and Cruise

$249
per monlh. only 2411U1Ub""
~·

'95
Toyota 4x4
•Chrome appearance package
•AM IF Mstereo
_·Tinted glass
•Sliding rear window -

S'J99
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East State Street, Athens, Ohio

593-6641
-~·.

• $1 ,000 down , plus ta• and lille. first payment anct security deposit due at lease incep1ion. 24 month dosed·end lease. Mileage
based on 12.000 miles per year. Subject to prior sale. Toyota Camry LE. based on MSRP of $20,163. option to purcha&amp;e at lease
end St3.t05.80: Toyota 4x4 , baSed on MSAP $t6.2t2. option to purchase at lease end St3.t05.94.

•

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9070A '90 PONTIAC LEMANS
Air. Only $4495
9185A '90 NISSAN SENTRA
2 dr., red. Only $5795
9186A '90 NISSAN SENTRA
2 dr., lilue. Only $5395
8190A '90 SUBARU
4 dr., auto., blue. Only $5995
404A '90 PEUGEOT 505 '
Slltlon Wagon. o.nly $5995
6195C '89 PEUGEOT M116
Sports Sedan. Only $5995
9505A HONDA CIVIC
4 dr., 5apetd. Only $4595
95458 '89 DODGE DAKOTA
2x4, auto. Only $4995
9045B '88 HYUNDAI
Mechanic's Special. Only $995
9513 '88 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
4 dr., silver. Only $3795
8518A '88 NISSAN REG. CAB
2x4. Black. Only $3995
9542B '88 NISSAN LWB TRK. ·
Black, auto. Only $4595 ·
Da·nielle Susan Daugherty,
8067C '87 SUBARU WAGON 4x4,
daughter of Jim and Paula Wine- - - 61ui, 5 speed. Only $2995 -9529A NISSAN STANZA GXE
brenner-Dauglterty, celebrated her
Auto. Only $4995
second birthday on Jan . 16 at her
6027B '86 STANZA WAGON
home in Mason, W.Va.
.
Auto., blue. Only $2995
. Attending a _party were her ·
9148B '86 BUICK CENTURY
paterrial gfandparents, Fred and
4 dr., loaded. Only $2595
Juanita Daugherty of Pint Pleasant. _
9t67A '86 PLYMOUTH REUANT
W.Va.; her maternal ~dparents,
Yellow. Only $1495 ·
Gordon and Susan Wmebrenner or
8187A '85 DODGE 600
· Syracuse; her great-grandmother,
4 dr., blue, auto. $2295
Maggie WincbreMer, alsO of Syra81 07B '85 NISSAN SENTRA
cuse; uncles and aunts, John
2dr., maroon. $1795
Daugherty and Brenda Scou, Point
9021A '85 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER
Pleasant, Becky Winebrenl)er,
Maroon. $3995
Syracuse, Allan and Mury Wine9174A
'85 BUICK SKYLARK
brenner Lundell and a cousin,
4
dr.,
Maroon. $2795
Andrew Lundell, Galli~lis.
9188B
'85
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
Others presenting gifts were rei·
4
dr.,
gray.
$2595
atives, Bill, Jane, Rachel, Austin
91.05B '84 NISSAN PULSAR NX
and Nathan Hannum of Palmyra,
Maroon. $2995
Va.; and Harold and Mary Weaver
OIL
CHANG_
E &amp; FllTER•••$15.95 '
of St Louisville.

Daugherty
celebrates
birthday

.both at a price you can get .into
at Don WooO Automotive Complex.
•

DEAR CONCERNED COUSIN:
There may be nothing going on, but

I suggest that you get friendlier wilh
your cousins and encourage !hem 10
conrtde in you. TeU !hem about your
experience with your stepfathet If
nceessary, wge them to spea1c to their
molher, an aunt, an uncle, the family
doctor, a clelgyman •. someone.
You cannot stand ,by and remain
silent and do nolhing, A young girl
who weighs 400 pounds did not get
that size for no reason.
Dear Ann Landers: We have a
grandson who is probably two or
three years behind his peers. This

all

to fluffy bedding safety
commission warns
Unsafe use of soft bedding may
contribute to the deaths of up to
1,800 infants each year, according
to a study released this week by the
U.S. Consumer Safety Commis- .
sion.
The two-year study found that
up to 30 percent of the 6,000 babies
· who die of Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome (SlDS) each year may
have suffocated when placed on
top of pillows, comforters, sheepskins and olher soft products.
The findings emphasize the
need for parents to be careful when
putting !heir infants down to sleep
in their cribs, said CPSC chairwoman Ann Brown. Parents should
never put their babies to sleep on
top of soft, fluffy products, she
swd.
"Many parents are buying soft,
fluffy infant products-for -cribs,"
she added. "Such products are
beautiful, but parents must remember: never put flurry products Ullder
a baby." ·
"It is important to note !hat we
have not found a cause for SIDS,"
Brown· said. "But !his study does

STYLE SHOW - The Fifth Annual Afternoon or Elegance, a
prom style show, will be held 1 p.m. Feb. 1!1 at tbe Morris and
Haskins Ariel Theatre. All proceeds will be donated bark to the
theatre. Area linsinesses making the event pll!lSible are Brittany's,
Haskins Tan!!er, Mane Desiggers flair Salon,IIIIIIIJe G11Uery, B!ll!·
kel Delights, Summer Image, Mary Kay Cosmetics, WMGG
Radio, Nexxus Hair Care Products and the Stowaway Restsurant.
Station. The models will be students from River Valley, Gallia
Academy, Meigs, Wahama and Point Pleasant High Schools. Jamie
Harrison, left and Cheryl Caudill, right, owners of Baskets Delight
help model M9nica Ehma11 select a corsage.

show an assoc1a1ton between
infants placed on top of soft bedding and many deaths Bllributed to

sms:·

A team of CPSC investigators
found that about 30 percent of
infants who died of SIDS between
1992 and 1993 were found with
!heir noses and molllhs covered b)'
-soft bedding. Most of those infants
had been placed on !heir sromachs
to sleep and were lying either on
top of sheepskin bedding, on top of
pillows, or on top of comforters.
Rebreathing their own carbon
dioxide may have contributed 10
the infants' deaths, !he researchers
coocluded.
·
CPSC recommends the following safety guidelines for infants
less than eight months old: place
infants to sleep in a crib on a rmn,
flat mattress; do not place soft,
fluffy products, spch as pillows,
comforters, or sheepskins under
infants while they sleep or nap:
place heallhy infants on !heir backs
or sides to sleep, ·as recommended
by .the American Academy of Pediatncs.

Lydia _Council meeting
carries Valentine's theme

In July, Judge Linton Lewis Jr.
of Perry County Common Pleas
Coun ordered legislators to find a
solution to the fuMing disparity
issue, _wl)ich_ ~_e_ rulecldeprives
some Ohio children of an equal
educalion.
Rep. Palrick Sweeney, D-Cieveland, said the rainy day fund projected to be at over $800 million
by June-isnota "sacred cow."
Voinovich does not want·to see
it milked by lawmakers.

Divorces and dissolutions

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

lhinks he is a sissy and a mama's boy best qualirted to tell him this.
and has little conlaCl wilh him. He
The mot=ers counseling.
works until late in the evening and Surely Terry's
Iter must be aware
leaves early in the moming.
of any unu
y childish behavioc
Our whole family is sick about this. Does !he buy's pediatrician know
Terry's molher is setting up Iter son what g,oes on in· that family? Some
for victimization, ·bullying and professional should rescue this
dependency. Site reads your column pathetic young person before the
failhfully and ge.ts her education on situation becomes irreparable.
W!itn planning a wedding, who
child-rearing from every letter you
run that supports her behavioc In fact. pays for wht11? Who stands wlterr?
'The Ann Landtr1 Guide for Brides"
she clips and saves them.
the answers. Se11d a selfI believe this mother should let · has
addressed
, long, businus-siu
go of this child and get a life.
What say you? -- HEARTSICK envelope twi a check or /I'IOney otrkr
GRANDMOTHER for $3. 75 (this inclruks postage tJ1Id
DEAR GRANDMOTHER: The handling) to : Brides , c/o An~~
boy's father needs 10 have his eyes l..tuukrs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
opened and get involved . Think Ill . 60611-0562 , (In Canada. se11d
carefully about the individual who is $455 .)

child is not retarded or braindamaged. The problem is that
"Terry's" mother refuses 10 allow him
to interact wilh other children. She
would not allow him to stan school
until the age of 6 because she
believed he would not be able 10
handle it. He used a jlacitier until he
..as 5 years old.
Terry is afraid of his own shadow.
On the other hand, his mother. my
daughter, allows him to eat what he
likes and go to bed when he pleases.·
She limitS his contact with the rest of
!he family ·• her brolher and sisters
and us, his grandparents.
In my opinion, Terry's molher is
crippling him- in a way !hat could
impact !he rest of his life. His fathtt

Stephenson, Pomeroy; Janel
Thomas, Cheshire; Virginia
Voight, Point Pleasant; Kathy
McDaniel, Long Boaom; Emogene
Johnson, Point Pleasant; Mar7.
Manin, Middlepon; Julia Hysel ,
Syracuse, and Pat Mossman, ·I
Mason.
.
To become a KOPS, members
must reach their goal weight and
maimain it for 13 weeks.
McDaniel, area captain, spoke at
!he open hoose. Meetings an: held
Mondays from 10:30 to II :30 a.m.
with weigh-in from 9 10 10:30 a.m.
Emphasis of the meetings is on
supporting each other in the struggle to loSe weight
·

TOPS 08570
,
Nancy
Manley was the best
OMISSION
loser
with
Janice
Cuny as runnerup
The. name of Failh Dye, a Brad•
at
a
recent
meeting
of Pomeroy
bury kindergarten student, was
of
TOPS
570.
KOPS best
Chapter
unintentionally omitted from the
loser
recognized
at
the
meeting
was
Meigs Local School .District honor
Bernice
Durst,
who
also
won
the
rolls for the second nine weeks
fruit
basket
Curry
won
the
gadget
. grading period.
gift
Jeanette McDonald read a sucTOPSOH l38J
. A TOPS open house/KOPS cess story from the TOPS magarecognition was held Monday night · zine, and olher readings were given
when the Cheshire group met Mon- by Manley. Margaret Henderson
day .at the .Cheshire United was the door prize winner. Ruth
. Delong talked about a new contest
Melhodisl Churell.
Plans were made for an open
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensihouse
Feb. 28.
bly) members recognized were
Helen Trout, Cheshire; Mamie

Casey Dunfee, Middleport fourtli graders;
Nicole Runyon, firth grade and Kayle Davis,
fourth grade at Pomeroy; seated, Beatrice Morgan and Elizabeth Smltb, Rutland slxtb graders;
Kendra Cleland, sixth grade and Lindsay Bolin,
fourth grade at Salem Center; Whitney Ashley
and Euva Stumbo, Salisbury sixtb graders;
·Wesley Thoene and Kim Peavley, Meigs seventh
graders; Laura Wallbrown and Kevin Tapscott,
Portland sixtb graderS; Leasiann Deem, Racine
fourth grader; Mindy Chancey, fourth grade
and Nicole Benson, slxtll grade at Sfr'acuse; and
Jennifer Sbaln and Christopher Rundolpb,
Southern seventh graders.

Troy, D-Willowick,
Instead of taking away from
financially strong schools,
Democrats want to take $100 million from Ohio's rainy day fund, an
account of surplus lax revenue, to
equalize spending among Ohio's
612 school districts.
School spending in Ohio ranges
from $11,000 per pupil per year to
$3,000, Districts rely mostly .on
property taxes 10 pay for education.
Districts wilh more propeny wealth
can spend more for schools. The
state provides about $3,000 per
pupil in basic aid.

sake or peace and harmony? ••
CONCERNED COUSIN IN

-Society scrap.b ook- ..---Prom preparation___, Some SIDS deaths due

Democrats take aim at school funding
COLUMBUS (AP) - House
Democrats don't want Ohio's
wealthy school districts to have to
make sacrifices to cover !he cost of
iml'roving schools in poorer areas
or the stale~
· ·
They argued Thursday that
reform shouldn't come at the
expense of what !hey described as
the slate's "excellent schools."
Gov. George Voinovich's plan
to take slate some funding away
from 210 school districts and give
it to less wealthy schoqls would
lead to "an equal level of mediocrity" in education, Rep. Dan

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

Woman should·follow her instincts with sexual abuse

·The Small business Development Center or Soulheastem Ohio
and the Southeast Ohio Regionat
Free-Net are sponsoring an Internet
seminar for area residents.
The seminar wiD be held from 9
a.m. to noon Saturday a1 the Ohio
University Innovation Center. Cost
is $20 per· person if registered in
advance, and $25 at the door.
Tom Stork of the SEORF will
·facililate !he workshop. The seminar will include basic infonnation
on how to use the Internet.
Those who wish to pre-register
should send payment to !he SBDC
(checks made out to OU) at the
SBDC of Southeastern Ohio, 20
East Circle Drive, Athens.

WELDING WINNER - Jason Pierce took
first place In welding at tbe Vodtdonal lndustrl·
at Club~ or Am.e rlca skills conipetltion beld
Thursday night at Meigs Hlgb School. As win• ·
ner, be will travel to Tri-County Vocational
'School at Nelsonville to compete Ia regional con·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

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o.l'll~ tnt tll4 ~~!toe Clh&lt;~tlr~ Dt•IO!I lt&gt;ernllt• l!l_y_llfiCitod hlat~Gt o~ 1~1 Scttl:•tl P111chliM l'lotram ""I~ 111414 to ,o,., lllgult• l'ur
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moiSture and lemperature extremes . HaoQies htgn

low l'Jass plus two hOrn tweeters. 27" wide.

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8 The Dally SenUnel

Frtday, Febnwy 17, 1 -

-Rev. Williom D.s-lly Sdloal- 9:30 .....
~onllip. 6 p.m:

Church of Chnst
*fOudlrl~

p

212 W. Moia SL

Sdloal - 9:30 ......
Wonhil" 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Semca-7 p.m.
P

.,.,

w-

Cllolrdt riCIIrlll
33226 Oilldlm'• Home Rd.

Wednelday SeiW8 -7 p.m.
- TrfliiiJ Clllln:ll

Sunday Service~- 10:00 Llll. and 7

1'llppln PloiM SL ._.
J'u&amp;or: Sbaroa H111 IINI!!

Gnee ~ pal Cllllnll
326 E. ' SL,I'alleroy

Rcaor. Rev. D. A . ...l'!lnlier

'th IIIII Moia
. ' l'u«: Allluuaa
Y_., Miniaer. Bin Fnzier
SUDday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.

Holy Eadwislaad

Suoday School 10:30 a.m.
. Colla:- foiJowioC

Wonhil" I:U,ID-.30 o.m., 7 p.111.
Wednetday Senoi""' - 7 p.m.

Holiness

I

Keno Cbvrci. of C.rlsl
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdlool - ID-.30 a.m.

. P~Rcv.

Sunday sd&gt;ool - 9:4,
Wonhip - II o.m. ond 7 p.m.
We&lt;meoday Servioe -7 p.m.
Freo WIU Blpd• Chllrdl

Ash Stm:t. Middl'¥'1' .
Putor: Leo Hoymoa

S.nuday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service·7:30p.m.
Kutl1111d Flrol Boptlat Ctiurch

Sunday Scb!'OI- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4, IJD.
.._ ...., Flrll BlpiiJI
Put&lt;&gt;r. Paul S&lt;inson
EadMainSL

41872P&lt;meroy Pike
Puoor: E. Lamar O'BI)Iant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 s.m., 7:00p.m.
~ 7:00p.m.

Flnl Baptist Chun:b
6th ond Palmer St., Middlepod
Sunday School- 9:1' a.m.

Wonhip - IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- ,,30 p.m.
Lonl'a Supper lot Sunday of r:veiJIIDOIIIb.
Wedneoday Service- 7:00p.m.
Radoe Flrill Blplllt
P1110r. Rev. Lorry Haley
Youth Pastor. Aaron Youn1

Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:40a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdneaday Servic:es • 7:00p.m.
·'

SUver Run Bopllll
Putor: Bill Litlle

Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wonhip - lls.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wc:dneldly Services-7:30p.m.

ML Union Blptlat

Puto&lt;: Joe N. Soyn:

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 6:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Semc:ea - 6:30p.m.

Putor: Isdt Colepove
s...day Sdlool-9:30 .a.m.

Col-, lllblt 0 -

Racine,OH
Poaror: Rev. llOtl Sluuer
Sunday SchOOI-10:30 s.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.
Thuroday Servia:s, 7:00p.m.
Old llelllel Ffte WUI
2~1

St. Rt. 7,

=-c:"llrdl
.

Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m. .
Evenin&amp;.- 7:30p.m.
Thuroday Services- 7:30

-.

Hllllldellopll• ChSt. IlL 143 just olf IlL 7
Pu10r. Rev. ]ameo R. Aa.., Sr.
Siiildly Sdioi&gt;l- 10 a.m.

Wonbip- ll&amp;m., 6 p.m.

w~

Services -7 p.m.

Vldary Boplllllllde; eadant
52' N. 2nd SL Middl'¥'1'
Pastor. limes E. *CICICC
Wo,.hip - IO..m., 7 p.m.
Wodneoday Senoia:•- 7 p.m.
Faith Blptlat Cburdl
Rlilroscl SL, Maion ·
Sunday School- IOo.m.
~~- II Lm., 6 p.m.
W.
y Senoicea - 7 p.m.

F_ _ BIIIl..
Pastor : Arius flurt

·

.
8af&gt;t1t1

ML MortU
Fourth A Main SL, Middlo:pon

P-. Rev.~ Crai~o Jr.
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30 ...... •
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m.
. A•tlopiiJ llapllst

~ Sobool

- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4' ia.m.
Thursday s.m... - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WeG1eoday Services -7 p.m.

.Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:4' a.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

B..-,. Ch- ofCIIrl•
Puur. Tom Runyon

. s...day School - 9:30a.m.

Wonhip-10:30a.m.
Youth Moelina - ''30 p.m.
EY&lt;Dina Servi&lt;e -7 p.m.
Wednetday, Bible sa.ty- 7 g.m.
bllud Cb- ofetrW
Put&lt;&gt;r. Euamc: E. Ondetwood
s...day School - 9:30a.m.

Salem St.
Pa1tor. Rev. Paul Tsyto.
Sunday School - 10 IJD .
Bvmin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Socnd Hurt Ca«- Cloolrdl

161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-,898
Puror: Rev. Wallcr E. Heiljz
SaL On 4:4,-S: l~m.; Man- s,30p.m.
Sun. On -4:4,-9." ......
·
Slm. Mass • 9:30a.m. ·
Dailey Mus - 8:30a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Wotk
l:abtnPI M~k 1n ~
Syracuse

l 1... ,. , .. ..
IJ.:.1
:1 .•
l ,

.

Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;oday Service - 7:30p.m.
-otSU..Hoi_O_
ladina Qoek Rd., RoiiiOd
l'ulor. Rev. Dewey Km,
s-ioy sd&gt;ool• 9;jg LDL
Soa&gt;day wonbip,-7 p.m.

Wedn&lt;Jdaypnyer..-.,-7 p.m.
•

Pine Growe .... HoiiiOiiiQ1/l milo olf IlL 325
.Padar: Rev. O'Doll Mlnley
Somda)i Sdlool - 9:30 LID.
·

Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wt:dnelday Servi&lt;e - 7:30p.m.

W-.yu Bille Hot- Cloolrdo
7~ Pearl St.. MiddleporL

Pastor. Rev. Ioba Neville
Sunday 11&lt;boo1- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Service-7:30p.m.
HpoiiRo.H_O_
Palt&lt;r. Robert Mlnlcy

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bracitord CMrdl riOrlot
Comer ol SL RL 124 A Bndbury Rd.
Evanaelid: Den* Spaap

Yruth MiniJta: Mic:blel Tequdm
s...c~ay Sc:hoot - 9:30 a.m.
Woohip- 8:00a.m.,I0:30 a.m., 7:00p.m. '
Wcdnelday Service~ -7:00p.m. ·.
Hkkooy Hlllo Clnsrdl of Chrlol ·
Pastor. Joseph B. HoWns

s-lay Sc:Lool- 9 a.m.
Wonhip - tO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnelday Servi&lt;:ea - 1 p.m.

Llb&lt;rtJ c . - Clnsrdl

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:45 &amp;m., 7 p.m.
Thuroday.Servia: -7:30p.m.
Laurel Cllll' Ffte M... II I Cllolrcll
Putor. Ptfer t~&lt;~D~Uy
.
Sunday Sdloal• 9:30 Lillo
Wonhip -10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
W'edneoday Servia: -7:00p.m.
lullaad c-aallf CIHirdl
Pulor: Rev. Roy Mc:Cany

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
SUnday B....U.,. -7 p.m.
WedDesday Ser+icet -"I p.m.

Dcucr
PUIDr. Woody Call
Sonday n...un1 - 6:30p.m.

R001J1anl_..Cb......, ot ,_.Qrtll

.......~~~e c........ Ch-

ofLalhr DIJSUIII
Ponland-Rac:ine Rd.
Put.cr. JllliCIC Dlllnc:r

Sunday Sdlool.c 9:30un.
· W~- !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia: 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Samt s

Sunday SchOol- 9:30 ...._
Wonhip- 111-.30 o.m.
Wedneaday Servicea · 7:30p.m.

H - GroHCIIoordl

93 MHI Str"t
Middleport. Ohio 46780

P

-9:4, a.m.
Wonhip- II s.m.
Wednesday SeiYioa - 7:30p.m.
Sunday Sdlool

eJOudlri ... N

-

l'u«: Rev. Thomu McQq

Sunday School- 9:30 .....
Wonbip • ID-.30 a.m.ood 6 p.m.
Wedni:sday S.. &lt;ica - 7 p.m.

~~Roder

Sunday Sdloal- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 LID.
F1ai.1Nodl
. • p....., Koilb Roder

1 - C . - o f... N-,...e

F--

Sunday Sdloal- 10 a.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.

P - . Samuel Buye
Sunday Seboal- 9:30a.m.

Wonbip -10:30 s.m.,6:30p.m.
Wedni:sday s.m... - 1 p.m.

Pular: Dlnlll Mea Saoday Sdloal- 10 .....

. . Suaday Scboal-10:00 o.m.

v-

Pu«:
SulliYiil
SUDday ScboOI - 9:30 lUlL
WOnhip- 10:30 Llll.

New Ba- Cllolrdt of ... N . -

l'u«: GleDdoa SUoud

Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip- ID-.30LIII., 7 p.m.

Mlaaii. .
1'1-.lloron Newmm
s.aday School - 9 LIIL

WedDeldays.m...-7~-

Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Other Churches

Paorl Clolptl

Follll Fill Gotptl 0 -

......1
l'u«: Ro!Jert E. RobinSIII&gt;day Sdloal- 9: IS a.m.

Fe1"'1,!f!lllllr7

~,tr.;a:... .

Ser+icet:Wednetday, 7:30p.m. ·
Sunday, 2:30 P.lll·

171~-IOa.m.

Y1JIIth Pellowlhip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

·

Rllllud

·

-·

.... c-••"'IJ c~oarc~o
P-. Then~~~ Durliam

Sunday - 9:30a.m. IPCI 7 pnL
Wedneldoy - 7 p.m.

&lt;•

ThundaySe.Yioa-7p.m.

-c.ator

l!adllme H - ofPnJ•
BualiiJiham churdl oll Roule 33)
Putor: Robert Vance

l'u«: R1lll -

Sunday School- 9:" .....

Wonbip -IO:t' a.m.

·S.U•••
" - ' Flormco Smid!

-.,

H-CIIrlldln Ualoo
' Sunday sdoool, 10 ...._
Sunday eveaioa,7:30p.m.
Wodneoday, 7:30p.m.

Gr1tuim U•lled MelbWonhip ·9:30a.m. (IIIA2Dd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl.t. 4lb Sun)
WeG1eoday Service-7:30p.m.

Middlqood, Ollio

P-. Sam Anc1enon
Suoday ScboaiiO Llll.
Evenina -7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;odayServi&lt;e - 7:30p.m.

ML M..w. C . - riGeol
Racine
-.Rev. ]ames s-rfield
s...c~ay School · 9:4' s.m.

O l d - Bible Orloll• c . Sunday School: 10 LliL

Momio&amp; Wonbip: II lnL
Ewuin. Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wedneldly Senoioe - 7 p.m.

Evenins - 7 p.m.
Wednetday Servic:a - 7 p.m.

ML Ollye U.lled Metllodl•

RullladQ-ofGod
Putor: G!qory L: SOan

Sunday Sdlool- 9:30 IJD.
Wonbip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Sema:s - 7 p.m.

Off 124 behind Wilbsvillc
Putcr: Rev. Ralph Spil&lt;s

Sunday Sdlool-

10 a.m. .
Wonhip-11 a.m.,6 p.ni.
Wednesday Servi011 - 7 p.m.
Apple ond Sc:coad Su.
Putor: Rev. David Ruaaell

Sunday Sdloolood Wonllip-10 L11L
B....U.,.s.m...- 7:30p.m.
w~s.m...-7:30p.m.

•••r:J

Clttlrdil of Ged fll Pt
0.1. White Rd. ol!SL KL 160
Putor: pJ. a..p,.
.
SUDday Sdlool- !O o.m.
WorahiP- II a.m.

Wednesday Service. -7 p.m.

New Lie Cb- of God
S.R. 248 A Kiebel Rood, Cbester

·K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy ·

Melp cooper~~~.. rar~o~o

.

N - - Claller

.

Alfred
Putor: Sharon Haulmlll

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
~

Palter: Sh..... u.u....

Worship - 9t.m.
- 10 a.m.
Thunday Saitk:a -7 p.m.
Sunday School

. 992-5141

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Cp.
ot Columbus, Oh.
e04 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

·-

llJenlle c......IIJ

c.-

Sunday Scboal - 9::10 a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Moin A Pifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wonhip - II :IS &amp;m., 7 p.m.
Weclnetday Servia: -7 p.m.

~leC.arcll

W~-9&amp;111.

Tucsclay S.m... -7 p.m,
lletlleiO.rdt
Towmhi~, 468C
. Sunday
- 9 ...._

Wcnbip - 10 a.m.
W.....oday SCrvica- 10 a.m.
Hodii-'QGnndS...
Sunday Sdloal- 10 a.lll.

Wwmip-lla.m.
W-.lay Serv;.,..- 8 p.m.
T-QClo. Rd. 61
School - 9:30a.m.
WC.robip-t0:30a.m.

'
turra..•lle .......1...... Q Wonbip - 9 Lm.

Sunday SchOol - 9:45 ......

MkklleputPrelll,...._

Sunday School- g &amp;Ol.
Wonbip - 10 a.m.

sunday School - 10 .....

M - Clllpol D•rdt
Larry Faw, SuperWendalt

s...c~ay sd!ool - 10 s.m.

. Wonhip - 7 p.m.
We&lt;lneoday Servia: - 7 p.m.

r·

Seventh-Day Adventtst
Sot 1'·0.1 Attr-

Mulberly Hu. Rd., ..........,
l'u«: Roy La~
Saturday Sesvioa: ,'
Ssllbath Sdloal - 2 p.m.

Wonbip- 3 p.m.

Lqoollouom

Sunday tl:1 - 9:30 &amp;m . .
Wonhip -10:4' e-m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.
ML Oln c--•IIJ Cllolrdt
Putor. ........,.. BUJh

Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 &amp;m.
tiveninl- 7.p.m.
Wedi&gt;eday Semc:e - 7 p.m.

NOTICE OF PUBUC
Tho rool property will bo
HEARING NO. 1
oold to tho hlgh11t
Tht County of Molgo on reoponolbla blddor.
behalf of tht Tupptro Plolna
The praporty to be oold
Aaglonal Sewar Dle1rlct lo:
lntende to apply to tho Ohio
Sltullod In Molgo County,
Reasonable Rates
Dapartmont of Davelopmant Stilt of Ohio ond bolng In
lor funding under tho CDBG Fraction 25, Town 2 North,
Joe H. Sayre
Wtltr
end · Sewer range 13 Watt of the Ohio
Compt11tlvt Grant Program, Company·~ Purchaoa and
a ltdtrtlly-lundtd program being daocrlbad 11 lollowo:
admlnlo1trtd by the etata.
614·742·2138
ot a poln.t In tho
· The County 11 eligible for up beginning
contorllno
of
County
Rood
to $500,000 ot Flocal Year 75, oald paint baing Sou1h
1995 CDBG funding, 89 dagra.. 07' 11" Eaot
providing tho County moata 221.021 ftt1 from on Iron
appllcobla
progrom pin found at the Southwoot
requlrementa.
Corner ollha Malgo County
Come Tan With
The llrot of two public Commlulonaro
Parcel
u
hearing• will be htld Tuaa. daocrlbtd In the Malgo
MeAt
2-28-95 et 7:00 p.m. Orange ·County
Dttd Record:
'!Wp. F.lre Dept. to provide Volume 148, Pogo 356, 80.70
cllluno with pertinent Acre Parcel.
lnformotlon about tht CDBG
34110 Sugar Run Rd.
Thence South 89 dagreoo
program Including an
Long Bottom, OH. 45763
lxplenatlon of ollglble 01' 19" Eaat 224.242 teat to
actlvltlu and program an Iron pin oat, paulng on
00
raqulremtnte. Tht CDBG Iron pin et1 ot 31.13 feet for
Sessions
program can fund projecta reference;
·Thence North 41 dagroaa
which provide water and/or
Lotions
1anlt1ry aewer aervlce to 26' 17" Eoot 230.191 Feet to
prlmorlly reoldantlal uooro. 1 point In tho centerline of
949·2823113111 mo.
The a·c tlvltlaa muot be In ICCOII Right Of Way
daalgntd to primarily from iold County Rood 75
banallt low- and moderate- the communlc•tiOn towera
Income peroona, aid In the on top of tht hill;
Public Notice
prevention ot allmlnotlon of
Thence north 10 dtgreto
alumo and blight, or meet 44' 59" Eall 213.364 feat to OH 45769, but whooe
on urgent need ol the on Iron pin oat on the South prettnt pl'ace of rooldonco
community.
right of lint of uld County lo unknown will toke notice
Cltlzeno oro encourage to Rood 75.
Thence North 38 dogroeo that on November 23, 1994,
attend · thlo matting on
13'
41" Waot 30.00 feet to 1 Federal Ntitlonol Mortgage
Tuao., Feb. 28, 1995 to
, flied . Itt
provide their Input on the point In the centerline ol Auoclallon
Complaint
.In
Caae
No . 94County'• CDBG program..
oold County Road 75;
CV-279 In tho Court ol
(2) 17; 1TC
Thence along tho Cammon Pie .. , Melgo
.centerline of aald County County, Ohio alleging thot
Road 75 along a curve to the Dofandont, Jane Doo,
Public Notice
the right, Chord = Sou1h 62 Unknown Spouae, If any, of
dogr111 511' 13" Wal182.965 Hobert F. Crump, hu or
foot, radluo • 280.44 r..t to clalmt to hove on lntereot In
PUBUC NOTICE
the roal eotate deocrlbod
The Malgt County Board • point;
Thence
South
72
dagreao
below:
ol Cominlulonare Ia
OS'
07"
Wool
101.110
loot
Situated In the Vllloge of
accepting wrlttan oaaled
along·
tho
contorllna
of
told
Pomeroy,
county of Molgo,
bldl for the purch111 ol
cartaln raal property 11 County Road 71to a point; . and Stole of Ohio, and
.Thtnca along tho deocrlbed ao followe, to wit:
dncrlbld below.
Written oaalod bldl m'utl ctnlarllna of uld County Being Lot Number Flvo
.be received In the olllco of Road 75 and elong o curvo Hundred TWo (502) In 1he
the
Molgo
County to the loft, chord • South 44. Village of Pomeroy, County
Co"'ml11lonan, · Mal go degroea 15' 41" Wtlt of Malga, and State of Ohio,
County
Cour(houoe, 287.874 fill, rtdluo • 286.48 and thore II eloo convoyed
herewith, all rlghta wl1h
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 no ftatto 1 point;
Thence South 18 dagrett raopact to the u11 of tho
later than Friday, Fobruory
24, tm, o1 10 a.m. No bide 23' 15" Wtot 148.120 faot oldewalk between Loll
will be accepted pootdated along the ' conttrllna ol otld Numboro 502 and 503 11
later than February 24, 1115. County Road 75to the point woo tronolerrod to tho
The written aealod bldo of beginning, con1al'nlng Grantor horoln.
Tho Pttltlontr . t~rther
ohould Include tho blddtr'o 2.271 ocrao, more ·or le11,
•xetptlng
·
all
lijjal
allege
1 that by reaoon of
name, addraea, telephone
number, • deacrlptlon of lhe ootamentl and . rlghlo of dtloult of the Defondanl(o)
In the payment of ' •
property tho pereon wloheo way.
Reference
Deed:
Volume
promlaaory
note, according
to bid on, lhe prlca tho
Individual 11 bidding on the 148, Poge 365, 60.70 Aero to Ito tenor, tho condition•
ol a concurrent mortgoge
doocribod property, ond the Parcel.
Beorlngo ore booed on dead given to 11cure the
dote tho bid 11 baing mollld.
provlouo ourvoyo In area . payment ol aold note and
and oro IllUmed.
conveying tho premloeo
The above deocrlptlon II ducrlbod, hove been
CLASSlFIEDS
•
baaed on an actual Iurvey broken, and the tame haa
on Nov. 21,11194, By: Robert' blcoma oboolute.
A. Eaton, Ohio P.S. No.. Tht Petitioner proyo that
REAL
7033.
the Dafandan1(o) nomad
Such raol eotota having above bo required to

To Lean
Our Littlf: Boy
Is Now "11J"
appy Birth,day
Reggie! '

Tlt1E

United Brethren
Mt.Ha aaUdtiii.Aw
•• QrlllCinlrdl
• Teuo Commulliay oll Cl 82
Pu«:'Robert Stnden

Sunday Scboal -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Weclnesday Servica -7:30p.m.
Edea llalted -1"0111• Qrlll
2 Ill milu north ol Reedl)lille
... su.c-.124 '
. Pllror: Rev. RobatMartloy

Sunday Scboal- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeMcos , 7:30p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
'
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Pomeroy Flower Shop
106111tt..., ....
992-6454

Veterans
Memorlel Hospital
115 E. Memorial Or. Pomeroy
992-2104
EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"
Established 1913

992·2121
Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp;'LOHSE
PHARMACY

'
I

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES A SERVICE
912·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport,

Pomeroy

s1S
'Y-l OH

anawer and aat up their

lorecloaure

or

eald

at to ony lltno, mortgog11

mortgage, the moroholtlng

or encumbrance• on the

of any Uena, and the aal, of

992-2156

swJt·

men! for the couple.
'
. card .. 'd Mrs Be ,~
. "I dqn't Lhi!Jk I_'U ey~r have another credit
, sat
- . reo os.

•

...,

lii':~:: ::~::·~

-#

---

!

1
"

~

"t- - -

For All Malor
Brands .
Used Appliances
for Sale
Call
614·992·5515

Mobile Welding Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

KIN' I APPLIANCE
I ElliCE

WHAlEY'S AUTO
PARTS

ROBERT BISSELL

•Factory Authorized Parts
&amp; Service .
•All Make• -42 Yeara
•Faat Reliable Service

CONSTRUCTION

•Waahera • Dryer• ·Range•
4

•Refrigerator• •Freezer•
•Dithwaahera

•H .W. Heaters

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

*Microwavaa •Oiepoula
•Thanks .Melga &amp;
Surrounding Areaa

Specializ ing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992-7013 OR
992' 5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848 -0070

DARWIN, OHIO

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 12/t..-..
·~ n

985-4473

7/31 /91 TF N

7rz2/94

Graded Bene!il Whole Lite is now abailable. The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with
physical exam and no health ques tions asked on
the application. Ages 40-BO

no

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
. NEW-REPAIR

ROCKY R. HUPP
America~ General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.

Gutters
Downspouts ·

P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

Gutter Cleaning

614·843·5264

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

Health • Accide nt • Annuity • IRA • Morl gagc

9&lt;\9-2168

-

511004 TFil

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
GaragE!s • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

B.&amp;J.AII'rO
PAIN'riRG
"Yori

Crm~

ir - We Fix It "

32361 Dewltts Run Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to '/, Inch.
Call Anytime
John ·Krlder
614·843-5192
Harold Person
614-843-5285
1120(85

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

Bill Slack

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

. 614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2/12/92flln

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
·when you' need a car rental.
We HIJve (IJrs IJnd. V1Jnsl ·
Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1-800-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
'"'""

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

992·2269

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from At. 7
Tues. - Wed.'§!Frl. • Sat.
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
• Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy·Sell·Trade
992·2060
10/511mo

•Custom Made
•Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
•Free Estimates
•Starting At
'200 Installed
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

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

MORRISON'S
I COOLING
EPA and RSES Certified
Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
Call992-7434 for more information.
1f:i!51115

. MODERN SANITATION
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
Llmeetone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

w-

3 Announcements
All Naturol Dial 8yolom. Eol Tho

Foadt Yov E~oy
Tho
Oulft.
No
Collllne,
No
a.-1e11e. FOf-. lnlormatlon, 114-218 1110.

THE PAMPERED CHEF .

c-

"Tho K•et.. 91.,. Thtl
To Your Door.• t.oc.l Ccontulllnt
AVIIItbloAI:
114-446-4724
LalveMIMIIgO.
Coli For lnh&gt;nnatlon On Onlor-

lngBroch.,.

For luoiF,..

Or
.,.."""",i.P~~unttl...

4

Vllloblo.

Giveaway

Mtdlum 9Dgl : 1 - · 1
Fem11e; 2 Pupe: 1 Mile; 1

. 2

F..,.lo, 114-371-2714.

2-8mo. old ~..Lab •

a.g1o ml1. ~:

.
Adotablo I WHit Old Pu-t
1/Z Roglotorad Yoll• Lab. &amp; 1!2

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

.

Coon Hound. AnV!Imo, 114-:Jn.

2105.

992-3954
Emergency Pt10ne 985·34 18

Announcem ents

n .a'ttn

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

F,_

P....-,_.

Good

Wlllolo 0ogt To Ohtuwioy,

~ Weeki Old,
Vorloty 'Ill ' - • lll.olo •
FNnale, 114411-1710,
.

·~

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Hlmlltpn ldnont born Doc 4,
to "'"- only, 11044la-

614-992-6223
Chuck Stotts
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Pupploo: Po~

State

Rt. 33

Darwln,10hio
10121/IAittn

,....""

3etl.

llo · 4 Black, 2

8043. -

C&lt;&gt;!-

R-ollor I

a-., ,,.___
.

Pert

Small · II wk old puppy,

o.nnan Shtphonl, 304.f78-4217
after 1:00PM.

6

Lost &amp; Found

L,ool:.

Rtddltll borwn l whho

Booglo, Wool C:obanblo . -.
304-773-11142.
' .

.

•

•

949-2804

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

tbova Raal Eotttt.
oald real oolate, and tho
The
Board
of procatdl ol 81ld oolo
Comml11lonaro moy rtltct . applied to the payment ol
.ony bldo and ra,tdvartllt Petitioner'• claim In the
thlo properly until oil tuch proporordor of Ito prl!lrlty,
_ _:__.:.....,...-...:....:....L---------L--..,..-----""'"'f
- property lo oold or lttlld.
and for "tuch other ond
Tarmo of paymen1 oro 11 turthtr relief 11 11 jutt and
11'H E
tollowo: 10 parcont of eq u It 1 b le.
purchlll price pold DEFENDANT($) NAMED
lmmodltlaly by Cllh or ABOVE ~~E REQUIRED
bank check. Remaining TO ANS..,ER
ON OR
balonce duo within 1hlrty BEFORE THE 17th DAY OF
(30) dtyt of 1111.
MARCH, 11195.
.
Mtlga County Board ol BY: Donnlo Reimer Co. LP.A.
County Coml!lltalonoro
Donnlo Raimer,
By KA~N GUf:.LO
(1) 27; (2) 3, 10, 17; 4TC
AHorney at Law
AP Business Wnter
.
b
·
AHornay for
NEW YORK .:.. Emboldened by a healthter e;conomy and seduc~ Y tcn,tpung
Plolntlff-Potltloner
offers of lbw-intcresl credit cards and loans, Amencans have been mcking up billions
Public Notice P.O. Bo• 968
of dollals in new debl for months.
,.
fi
thai bo
TWinoburg, Ohio 44087
Now .wilh many rales on the rise and the economy slowmg,lhe U'SI Stgns
r· LEGAL NOTICE ·.
(216) 425-4201
rowers have overdone it are beginning 10 surface.
.
.
. ard
Jane Doo, Un.known
Federal National Mortgage
Spouaa, If any, of Hobert F.
Auoclotlon
Delinquent payments on plastic are increasing for lhe fii'St ume tn years, credil c
Crump, whooa loot pl1c1 of (1) 13, 20, 27
researchers say.
.. __ ....
.th ·
·,. f[s of '-d con -raoldanca lo known 11, 208 (2) 3, 10, 17; 6TC
Bank deadbeats also are increasing. Many "'!'"'-' say etrrediW!""'cards-o
.""creased. Buttarnut Ava., Pomeroy,
sumer debl - including auiO loans, home equiLy loans and c
t
- m
_,__.;..-'-'---:--':;:-late last year after falling for monlhs..
lh . deb
44
Apartment
Credil counselors who malce a business out of helpmg people manage 1 ~u
tor Rent
say the number
cus10mers jumped
in January ·- even more than It u
Y r-----===:::;:=====:...-~
Chri of
.
does afaer · sunas.
· ·
· 11 all
· back 10 haunt us
A consumer credit binge of lhe las! few y~ IS · n Y COII!t~g .
While economists don't expci;t it to reach a cnsts, !hey are anUctpaung more people
Syracuse, Ohio
wi 11 confrOnt repayment problems.
.
According 10 Lhe Federal Reserve Board, instalimen! credit was. up near1Y 15 perNow ayallble FmHA One BR apts.
cent in December to $911.2 biUion, from $794.3 btUlon m ~~~~]99~.h
A lot of that is credit card debt. Consumers have been munw=u WI COI'I!c-ons
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
from companies offering no-fee .cards a~d artificially low inaerest ~s for limt!ed
Basic monthly Rent ·$269.00.
· riods such as six moruhs. Many people signed up for. and u~. ~ui!IP!e cards.
pe "It's like someone dangling a carrot in front of you and saymg ThiS IS a greaL deal Resident pays electric only Range,
nd who cares about la~er,"' said Sheila Bereolos, a 36-year:old legal secrelaly. Ben:~los sought counseling in. October when payments on crediL _card debts, a mortgage Refrigerator, A/C on -site laundry,
and unexpected medical bills got oul of control.
Community Room, Management,
Bereol~, who lives in a Housli&gt;n suburb, said ~ m~gage payments went from
$650 a rOOflth in 199210$981, partly as a result of h~r mteres.tralts. .
.
Maintenan~e provided
•
1n1eres1 charges on $12,700 in credil card debts
I'O'ie. Wtth hospt':l' bills ~m
a sick child, Bereolos' 10tal debts well exceeded her and her husband s combmed SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

talc:~~T:.:lfris paying off the biU~ through fue Consumer Credit Counseling Ser'vice, which worked out new tenns w1Lh crediiOrs to reach an affordable monthly pay-

"In Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Bora

&amp;Gravel

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS

IT'S RAINING
BARGAINS ...
in the
CLASSIF1EDS

992-5432

parcel no. 16-025W.OOO.

No warrantlee are made

CALL

50% off

• New Homes

Daad Rofarenco: Volume lntaraot In oold raol aotote
141, Pogo 358, Molgo or be forever borrod from
County Dttd Rtcordo.
'oooortlng tho tome, lor

SfiVERS. ...

their

You Don'tHave ToLpok Far
To Spy the Best·Buys In the
Classifieds.

~

Partt 6 Service on Most ·
Makeo Racine Mower
Clinic

Limestone

jSigns showing that
consumers overdid it

Foi.. G_.tOIIrdl

United Folllt Claardl
IlL 7 on IUKroy By-Pall
Pa~tor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednetday Servia: - 7 p.m.

Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 un., 7:30p.m.

CoeiYIIh tl•llld
tw P8r1111
r.-:HelmKline

Joppa

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

11ao1 c-••IIJ o ...
.
OffilL 124
· Paitor. lldoel Hut

OrloiiM Fol-lp c ..u.Salom SL, Rulllad
-Robed E. Muller

M••

In Memory Of
RICHARD
JUNIOR JACKS
who left us
F11b, 18~ 1987.
·• Heari!IChe Is
somelhing that no
one can heal
Memories are
treasures that no
one can steal.
Loving, and kind In all .
of his ways,
Upright and just to the
end of his days.
Gone but not
lorgoHen by his
•• family.
'\ WHe; f'nilla; children

1411 Bricla......, St., Syrocuoe
..._, Rgy (Mike) 'lbompoon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
EV1IIIilla -1ip.m.
Wednetdoy Servia: -7 p.m.

Eull.elui
. r.-: Ken Mollet
Sunday Scboal- 10 a.m.

--

In Memory

From l'u11gy

s,..-MIIIIoa

Wonhip- 10:4' a.m. (lot A 3rd Sun)

Look Who:,
40,
Happy
Birthday Di!

SL IlL 124, Raciue

2

HAULING

All

,.__,&amp;

Pa-: William Hcboc1:
Sunday Sdlool - 10 o.m.
Bvenin1 - 7 p.m.·
Wednesday ServiOa - 7 p.m.

Public Notice

1S

Penteco s tnl
'11

Bvarin1 7 p.m.

Sa-

Puw: Bob Rondolpb
Wonhip .- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School• 10:30 a.m.

RAWLINGS-COATS

FoltiiT..,..._ Clolrdt

Putor: Komedt Bater
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.

-Ken Mollet
Sunday Sdloal - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m. IIIII 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdlool-10 a.m.
Wonblp - 7 p.m.
Thunday S&lt;rvico -7 p.m.

c--!" o.rc11
57S Pearl SL,Middlepod

Wiiiihip -10:30 ...._
• 'l'l!undoy s.m... -7:30p.m.

· Wonhip -9 a.m.
weolnead'oy - 7 p.m.

Cburdl ot .._ Qr1i1,
A......... Folllo
1/4 mile put Fort Meia• Ill! N"' Umt U
Putor: William V• Meter

CllftooTo_C_
Oifton, W.Va.

Chnstran Unron

Un1ted Methodr s t

=:.r.

Tile S.tr•- AnaJ
115 Buat:mut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School- 10:30 •"!'·

lntrim pu10n: Ge&lt;qe C. Weird
Sunday School- 10:00 i.m.

Sunday School- g:4S a.in.
. Wonhip- II a.m.

Re.loldlla ureu...
'00 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Putor: Llwn:nce Fonaian
Scboal •10 IJII.
w
y SeiYioa - 7 p.m.

Wedn&lt;oday servia:- 6:30p.m.

" - ' Ka.-b Baltir
Somday Sd!ool- 9:~ .....

Sunday Sdlool- llo.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Serviceo -7:30p.m.

•

Sunday-7:00p.m.
W...........-7:00p.m.
l'ridsy-1:00 p.m.

Ours••..._ Lulb«M Cbura
Wllnutand U..IJI~., Ravonswood, W.Va.

Pistor: Rev. Dsvid McMaail

Sunday Sdlool9:30 a.m.
· Bvenins -7p.m.

Middleport

l'u«: Komedt Baker
SIOiday School - I0 a.m.
Wonbip- 9 a.m.

THANK YOU
would like to
express
my
heartfelt thanks to
the doctors and
nurses at St. Mary's
Hospital, Gallia Co.
Emergency Squad,
Dr. Ables and staff,
Rev. Roy McCarty,
my pastor and wile,
Rev. and . Mrs. Paul
Taylor, my church,
family, friends, coworkers, for their
concern, ·gifts and
prayers while I was
a heart patient both
times at St. Mary's
Hospital. May God
richly bless all of
you.
Fioss (Bud) Stew111rt

Sll•trnllo Word r1 Folllo
PutAJr: David lloilcy

Wonhip -IO:OO.un-, ?:30p.m.

Somday Sdloal- 10 o.m.
Wcnhip- 9a.rn.

.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

1/1Mfn

CALIFGRNIA TANS

1 Car,d of Thanks

Cal•.-, Pllptlo Olpol

~ywonhip-IOa.m.

BibJe Slud)t. w~'!.d'Y· 6:30P.t:n·

SLPuJu_...,u...,

FalthFil......... er.o-t.raorto~
PutAJr: R... Fnatlla Did!ma
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

NewUmeRd.,
Putor: Rev. Mupm ]. RDI!in-

Tbunday Servico - 7 p.m.

Comer Sycomoro A Sc:coad SL, !'PoClmW..,OYIW
Paa&amp;or: Dawn SpUtina

Sunday Sdlool- ID-.30a.m.
Wonhlp- 9:30&amp;JL, 7:00p.na.
Wodaoiday Sorvioo -7:00 p.IIL .

W~-7p.m.

Tile ......,..

Suoadav School- 9:15 a.m.

LIVE BAND
"KAMAN WENDT'

WodnetdayServi&lt;e -7:30p.m.

Friday -'fello•lbip servia: 7 p.m.

Wcnbip-10:30a.m.
Bible sa.ty'rueadty - I 0 a.in.

Sunday Sdloal -9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 L11L
Wednetday Soma: -7 p.m.

Putor. Stc'le Rood

Sunday School- 9:30 Llll.
Wcnbip- 9:30am. ond 1 p.m.

.Wonhip-IOo.m.

· FEB. 18TH, 9:30 To 1:30.

DAN'S

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

Free Estimates

SAYRE TRUCKING

SATURDAY NIGHT

Coomllollaod

HurisonvilloPu«: Rev. vidor Roonb
Soa&gt;day Sdlool9:30 .....
Wonhip- II a.m., 7:30p.m.

Lona-

FlormoO Smith
Saaday School - 9 Ull.

w....,..

Falnlow JllbloO...
letart, W. Ya. IlL I
l'ulor.- Rood!

Wonhi!l- 6:30 p.nL
Wedn&lt;odaySem... -7p.m.

8-(M--..G

Middleport, Ohio
• WELCOMES

Putor: Rev. Pllillipl!ideaaar

Puuir: ]olm w. "".....

Wanhip -9 L11L

'l1llll*y SeMooo • 6:30p.m.

M~~

Hanford, W.Va.

Wlllle't Cllopot

Pwtlaad F'1nl Q - rlllle N_,.e

Wonhip- tl1:45.a.m. (2nd A 4111 Sun)

Wonhip- II t.m.

Sunday Scboal - 9:30 ...,
Wonhip- 10:4h.m., 7 p.m.
W..... oday Senoia:- 7 p.m.

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
Office Houre: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roo!Jng, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lnsulatl0 n, Storm
Dooril, Storm
Windows, Garages.

33151 tt.ppy Hollow Rood
Mlddlepol:l, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions oSidlng
•Roofing •Painting
-Garages .Porches
•Pole Barna
Frea Eollmore•
614-742-3090
304-n3-9545 2111, _

PubliC Notice

Freed- Gaopll ~
Bald Knob, ... Co. Rd. 31
PUIOr. Rev. Rapr WiDtonl

J&amp;LINSULATION

Home Improvements

Room Addhions
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Worl&lt;
{FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
112/Hn

Friday,
February 17
9:00-1:00

Qwdi

Sunda,Y School~ 9:30 LliL
WonhipSeroico 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service-lot aad 3rd ~. 1 p.w.
NoWildneodayi!...... SeMco

Sunday School·- 9:30a.m.
Wcnbip- II a.~,6p.m.
Wodaeodiy Scm... - 7 p.m.

Wonhip- 9:30 o.m."
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

H..,.... Cllolrcll ot Cllrlolt•
C11rta111n U•loo

. . . . . . . .,

PutOr. ]e(f Smilb

c.-c.-ofuoeN......,
-Rev. lled!on&lt;lnle

ReedAIIIeC.-«Ciortoe
. l'u«: Philip Sbmn

Sunday School: 9:30 ..,_
WonbipService: 10:30 a.m.

Caridoa falft' 'I

· KARAOKE

Kiqsburyllaod

Bailey Run Rood
Pu-. Rev. Emmeu Raw1011
Sunday Scboal - 10:00 a.m.

214 E. Main .
992-5130 Pomeroy

0\\lf S,rw (B..,r.,

Wonhip- ID-.30 LIIL, 6 p.m.
WedDeldaySem...-7pnL

Clnlll
" - ' Komedt Baker
Somday School- 9:30 o.m.

PineGnive
Pastor. Dawn Spoldina

Come Sing with Us

Smsday Sdloal -9 .....
Wonbip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Servia: - 7 p.m.

~ySdloal - 9:30a.m.

SL Jolla Lootb.,. Cllolrdt

Wt\NTADS·

nrw~•

.

l'u«: o-e Syd.olricter

Sil-Ridp

•C..nllfllllleNe 1M
" - ' Rev. Ridt SlwJill

w....,...ySCrvk:ea -IOa.m.

264 South 2nd

Ia BIBLES

Wonbip - 10:45 LIIL, 7 p.m.
Wodaeoday S..•ioa - 7 p.m.
S,a

Sov ........ NIWT tw•

COURT STREET
GRILL

-7:30 ...... .

'lbunday , _ _

Lutheran

992 ·3978

CHURCH SUPPLIIiS

N... Srf'n•C~

~yW~ ·2:30p.m.;

l'u«: ]diD w. Pnulh•

c-..a..
AIIMI~.:-&gt;
Putor:
Newman

. Wonhip-10:30Lm.

....,
w

Sunday Sdloal- 9:30a.m.

Smsday Sdlool· 9 LIL
Wonbip- 10 1L11L
TDOiday s.m- -7:30p.m.

Artlalr Crallme
Sunday
School-9:30a.m.

2 ... ,..

· a.rdlri ... No

Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday - 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

s,_- F1nt a-m of C...

Ro- Ffte Will Blpdtt

Somday Sdlool- 9:30 LDL

Z1oooO-of~

Pomeroy, Hanisaaville Rd. (RLI43)
Putor:RoaerWaiiOO

Church of God

Sunday School - 10 s.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

l'aneroy Pib, Co. Rd.
P.-: Re.t. Bladtwood

Wonhip- 10:30 am:; ti:&gt;Jo p.m.
Wednetday s.m... - 6:30p.m.

Thuroday Servi&lt;e - 6:30p.m.
llellll•em Bapdll ·

Pu10r. Rev. Ridt Maloyed
. Suoday ll&lt;bool • 9:30 &amp;DL
Sunday worship - 10:3S &amp;m. A 7 p.m.
a.ildren'o durdl- 10:3' a.m. Youth 6p.m.

Beorwa-Ridp Cio»rdo of~

Putor: Slonley Mindcs

Flnl Soulh&lt;rn B~

Doanlo H-CIIolrdt

310S7 s- Route 3~. Unplllc

Wednesday pnyer seni&lt;e - 1 p.m.

Tuppen PlaiR Cb- of Clorbl

· Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 un.

Wednesday Services

Putor-lelftey Wsllooe
lot ond 3nl Soa&gt;day

•

Eptscopal

Middleport Qwdl rl Cln111

Putor. Neil T"""""t

ll 1 • •
l'ulor. Rev. a.ulel Mosb

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday_Sdio!JI-I0:30a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

a.m..
Wonbip - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wodneoday SeMca- 7 p.m.

•
•
•
•
•

.
Wonbip- ID-.30 aJL, 6-30 p.m.
W-.lay S..+icet • 7 p.m.
Sdlool-

Sc:coad A Lyon, "-"'Y
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildmm
SUDday sc:hoollllll woubip ID-~

~y Sdlool - II

·Muon, W.Va.

,._,a....,.
A. c:..tilf
s-loy
9:30 .....

Congregational

l'u«: Andrew MileJ

s~

KINGS'

YOIII'S
WPiml SlftiCI

.

�...

••

.'

• • •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

----

7

Galllpolla
&amp; Vlclnhy
All Yllld lluol h Pold In
· DEADLINE: .2:00 p.m.
tho
clay .,......, tho od 1o to run.
Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdoy. llandoy odftion • 2:00
p.m. s.lurcloy,

8

41 Houses for Rent

44

corr' rtl ccwllilll 'II !Ill In Wu of
..,.,, _ o n _ C n o f l
Rd. oft Cntb Cnok Rd. 304-C42773.

~- 2 lldl~ Ullllee

45

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by LuTy Wrtcht
NORTH
•K Q 4
•A Q 2
tA Q J

Fumlahed
Room a

NDittto.-

WEST

EAST

. 9 7 6 3
•10 9 8 7

•10 8 5
5 4
ti D 9 6
61 0 8 7 5

•K
SOUTH
•A J 2
•K J 3

:104-71'WMI,- W'l.

46 Space for Rent
9

---·

Wanted to Buy

ctoon loto llodof Coro Or
Trucu, 11187 llodolo Or - . .
Smith Buick Pontloc 1800
&amp;•.m Avenue, Glllpod•.

-

---;::-:·

·- --

R"""'""

tumhwo.

Antlquoa.

Ruoo llooro, -

2121. Wo buy oil-.

· 814-1112·

Oon, J"'* HI Soli U. Your NonlloJor

Appttoncoo,
Color
T.V.'o, Rotrlgonloro,
Frwlllfi.J ~ ~~ W....,.,
Oryn, ~••· 8
1231.
J 1 D'o Aulo Poria ond Sofvago,
buying wrocka.lunk outoo l
tnocko. Aloo, porto for oofo. 3047n-5343 ,. 77W033.

Worfdng

Tlmbor Wontod,

S-1 And

Cloer Cult!.. Avolloblo. F- On
Silo Eollmot-. 20 YMro Ex·

poMnco, 114-311-~, Or 814317-7054.
Old buttono, c:ootumo jowOfry,
old llghtoro, Iron oldflolo, piC·

tu-. fiAor Wora, gto., china,
-~
•llmfn,
- or ~l/:'
10100,
0111y
8
lWI.

-

11

Help Wanted

_,

.
Top Prbo Paid: All Old U.S.
Cofoo, Gold Ringo,- CofM,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

151 - . I Avonuo, O.lllpotle.

-'"

Wanted To :az,~;:
Horno.Colf8

-':::".r:'Qol.

44

an..

A.ll real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes It Illegal
to adver1ise ·any pref8J8nce,
limitation or discrimination
based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any lntenuon to

u-

==-=-====::

I ;;::=;::-·
lloturo- to • - far-

chlldron lor ,., doyo In
Aj&gt;ffl,
poy, muot ho ..

,..,..,_,114-1112-2184.

!Oo~~~H~IH Trucking Corn-y
Tho Rood
, Over
E1C8110nt
Poy, 8oiril
Ex·

Orfwwo0nfy,l14-112·
Aa. I P.lf. 114-a41-

Plc~oano, DON .. 81M12-M72

for moro lnformollon. E.O.E.

Pori limo driYWI - . coif
814-1112·21101 up 10 8 pm.

2258.

A---'ble - l o
lludont io tt..-ln -

·
2bdnn. apto., total' ofoc1rlo, liP'
plio,_. fumlohod, laundry

C811-4711. EOH.

EMILY! IT'S 50 NICE
';'OU

---u-

., llf!!l-.CIUioklriO , ... _
~ ~· PI D. mo. W/utiiiiiM
~ dopoioft. No plio. :1104-

Count~""""""''""' .2
e ·~ wm Hoolc..Up CA,
~Walor,
!!awol" • -Go"'""", · Dlpoofl
Requliod,

0214.

2-U'

Ewnlngo, 11:1-tZ!·

Help Wanted

11

AVON I All ,.,_. I

Shl~ey

Spooro, 304-1'11-1421.
AVON to buy or Hll, llatttyn, lndopooodelrt rep. 304-882-2d45 or
1.-.e2-&amp;356.
1o10 you lntorollod In nurolng7
-nlng lloo:h 18, HAD!; frio.
wlr ..,oneor a cl... In Paint
Ptlloont to troln you to - . .
a Cortlflod Nurolng Aoofllonl.
Tho 'tralnlnglo ·liM II you ..JTPA lllio IR guldoll- u 1 dfo.
10coled or dloi'O:':
horMm•"-·
For
morw
In 34:1·
tfon oontoct HADE, Inc. !104

4110. EOE

AVON MS SALES
A - .. 411/Hr Pluo Font-

tic Dlooountol Boll At Worlo

-Homo. Territory OpllonoL fn.
dop. Rop. 1-lll2o4738.

Avon Wonto fndlvfduolo Into- ... ~· ~,. No
loci In Eornl...
~" '"
Do« To DoOr. , _ _
tnd./Rop.
Babylltl• In My Horne, Aft•·
Shift, 814-44&amp;-7172, Coif
8 ...11. l 2 P.ll.
CaMial!llaglll Noodod
toed Waaoo, Pold Y-tono.

a.......

814-441-72'87.

,

.._
Eam up 10 t1000 .-lluff• .,.
_ .e,,...1oioco.
_ o1 -F,..
· slon
-·
No
oupptiH.
1
F-In-ion. No Obtl(lotlon.
Bond S.A.S.E to Sl~lng. Dot&gt;l.
~0. Bo• 14t117, Orloiodo, FL

lotiJOOI lo
pm=-lTlI hlaftfy
_,..,ed poroon o morbfM'io

$1,000 A PLAT~ .

32 Mobile HomH
for Sale

P0£.1TI(,AL FUND·

Mro,

ouporlor •rwfoo In Woof Ylr·
glrila. " cc 'ul candidate
1111101 hove zr,.. -or lnolghl
up. Wa oflor _,.."""' -.y
wtlhlncl
pkg
to
tu .,,..,..., earn_ , motc:hod r o l l - pion.
'C ontlct Cindy Dun, 1.a 1143
1881 on llondoy Fob., 20 bet·
....., llm-12pm or tax to Sl33134m.EOIE

--..:••wt•e-

18

Wanted to Do

~AISf~

1111 Uberty, 2 ....llDOfM, 1

~~e

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

- I l e a F..,_ 00. I Hal
Water Hoalor, 114-iiii4i'it.

..

ponw. 304-e'll-11121.

Yerd WDfll

1 - Cloyton 141110 1111 ~
2 IIR, f 1111111, CA, C

8-18

121.-.

-e.

.e

17 I

O Complete

the chuckle quoted
by lrlh ng rn th e mrnrno words
you deve lop from step No . 3 below.

PR INT NUM8ER£D LETTERS
IN .THESE SQUA RES

I' . II'

.p
I

I'
I

I'.

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

UllmD OFI'EIII ,_ 14117D Z.
3br., 1811 DOWN, No Poymonto
...... .,.., Doflvlf)' •
Setup. 304-711 1111.
llou 2 , . , _

a -.

STRI(f A8WN N M Will ON

In,

HGH Pfi.ICES..SHOP Tl-£ CI.ASSF£DS,

, _ 141171) 2·llir. Coli lluoe llw·

-1-2!11.ecno.
NOw 1HI 14"":l lncf- ofdn·
lng, .... .
"' 1 YttOr
homeo...,a I....,_, arid I

I FRIDAY

-.z.

montlio FREE lol · rwil. Only

-r

1120 - . ond tiM ,... mo.
Call1--.
NEW BANK. AEPOBI CnfJ 4 loft!
llvod ln. -788-71111.

eo-

Kille r- Wedge· Tempo- Quorum · TEMPER
Aftertheholidays the conversation always turns toweight
lose. )'veconcluded. after many yearsoflrying, that the only
thing I lose is my TEMPER.

FEBRUARY 17J

Ex--c

~...... £lr ConclllonW,

1177 WUd m I I 21' t\000, ....
441-1111.
•

F1nanc1al
21

Bualness
Opportunhy
INOIICEI

tnOIIAGE TAIIKB a,aoa -

36

44~-n:~t.

Real Eatate

Vendi~ :

_ , Got Rich Quick.

Will Got

ASt~712.

Prlaod lo BoH. 1

Real E5tate
31 Homea for Sale

DIDoofl;
-·----~
1~

2 llory . ..... ~­
Hovon S--ot, bol1am

3 ~'"'" ..... AttachMt
~·::; Dopoolt Roq ..rod,

121.000. 304-·2783.
. imlnOCIIolo ()ponlng faf PI" 3 Bod._ 2 litho, AH'o. Dey ond Ennfng SltfR Pu
Fu
t11 Vlond · :a·.:--·
-·
hOD,
aaaa,
nopila.
•Aolfof, Comf)OiftlvO W~~
mp, Qq
rnoco, 1 kN, dtDO.tll
wffh .• .,..._
Ooroao. Add'- A,.e, tez.aoo, 30k51-1721.
1
apponuntty Emotovor.
oct .:..~;Q;;,~12II~lii;
. d:lj;;;;&amp;;;;;;;;
tM
Oll"'dot · 01 Nuralna, a..Grandl Btvd. nw.. 81droom c;:~ for .... In
PI_, Cora Contor, 11li Nloo N o i g - Prfcocl To I
pt_, Or., Glflpcllo, Oh. - Quic:Wy. 114-4*2324 Ahor

Pt.- ·

I P.ll.

Peta for Sale

.......

. ·

AKC Aoatal- -

JuliO

T-,

-cild,tlll.~.

ll!llol iod

AKC

446-2342
992-2156 ·
675-1333

~

.......
fOr '"'" - · •
Pupploo, 11441Nra.

- Ull belt,
11447114131.

...
Jec~

A- 1-

pi

Mullica!

lnltNmenta
~

Gulli"

Y . ' ' p - Will
Wlh 4 ·12"
Ciolllnll. Lt&gt;ou Uko

An!Pflllor

sa.klr

.-. MOO, 1144'7NIOI.

1

.

pf' 1,

112110 _ , - - ·
Poccowlllll• pccpzl-.
.,. 104
. •

51

.,

BASEMENT

cr..,., ....

m

Col

wt

1~

Or 114-231-

ASTRO·GRAPH

CIC
·-l oHomo
t'or
fiM
ooffmao
To ctill, 11t .a
'
.Call

aww-· - ..........
..._..., • ..._

1117
Col II• an.

On 11oM, II,OOG - .
-ngh,IOO,IM 4" - ·
1N7 loUIU ilpoi1, -.•• I
Door, 1lrw, 1111- Cor, IZ,OOG; 114-

-~~~~
Follurfnt
......

2 Bod,_ Upllal,. Duplox.

Gollpollo. a31Mio.
1100• Sot' Roncll • :lilA, 2 Bolho,
Relwi• a• .._.Ired,
FR, - ~1181.
- · Lorge Yenf
• 2f11.
lm,500,
.
noor ~ rntadalad, 2
boyo: (front bey 40"11U', - ·
boy :12"x231, 100'1411' lot,

MIIDL

41 Houaea lor Rent

Home
lmPIOV8111ents

:::::r.:"'--'lng.....

- ·~
.._._._ .... OH
Cloiolo'
..tCol -114-

Wobb.Ciill

81

WMRPROOFINO
, . . Oldamoblll 4
gino, Hlah ... _ . Ltiolio Good, ~~~lflllmo g•ron.
Rune Good, D.IIOO, 114-441.. IN. ~ .......... lurillohocf..

~~~·

58

v.a.

aoot1. n
to 11410, 114......amortltlti:IMI

_ _ lllfclt,_ ............

Rentals

C:ougor,

1021.

Building

55

wanted

Moroury

1411tl ~ . . . . . Md NM

Upolglil, lion . . . . lnktt&gt;r11 •
JMUoit, OHot, 1-UMfla.
_ , . . . T - Por - , 114-

OHIO VALLEY PUILIBHINO CO. Wlntld To lilY: 1 Or 2 ..._,
""""""'".... lhot you do To BuDd Nlao Homo
....., llflh """""' you kmw1 and S.."able
NOT to Mnd -..y tlwc&lt;lgh tho On. IM-448-7111.
..tl untH you hoYO l,....lgotod
tho ol!o!1!!g.

Hfghlond Rd., P-roy.

-

I I~ I

Phone.,.....

-7717.

1111

A - . 0.111...... And 33101

41131. fl14.446-7112 .

.

Serv1ces

Unlveratty.

-llf

I 1

r

Cot-.

1'11~

r pI

L_.L.-.L.--1.--1.-.J.L.J.

F-,

11WP-T.I42
I14-IIUI2fl

I I" .-"

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

c-1 01

c:~~

I I' I

Our daughter was in tears
afteraheateddiscussionwithmy
husband."Youputyourfootdown. "
. . . . . .
I observed. ··and wound up with
~r~o....w:.:.·,.:U_T.;..,..:.I-.---11 it • • your • - • .. ·

Wortl.lr RMralnlng Fundtl. The•
Fundo Con h UMcf To Poy Tho

Allrolnfng (Tuition,
Telllbookol At A,_
Sc- Buell Ao Tho Unlvorofty
Of Ria Orondo Buckoyo Hille
eo- Contor1-king
Trf.&lt;:ounty •VS. And Olila

·I;,'.

---,,.,o....,r_X"TE::......:NT--11

---14x14,2Bod- . T..._, Efoelifc, Undorptn.
nlng. floody To Into On
Coriior lol Pork Lone llolilta
Court.
110., 114-

-.. . . -e. . . . ..
Emo:I'::J -

POBox212

· cuvHo

WI-

Qua... CfHnod o '-hi Houl'-,
• .,.
Commoifc~ A-•"'"
-dontlol, 111-:

5 Small herring

I I 1I I I

TAAT I£ C£T Cff · ""
5C.HOOt.. ~ f\1~
Bllm\t'».Y 7

Coffing.
-·
....
OUt2 ...
On- loll. :'IW!'.z.1
CorUtlod Doycara PI9Vfcltr Wllh eu ue ea:s.
I YM,. Elporloi10011o.W::.DuofMy Daycora
Y Tltru ' - - 1 4 1 7 1 3 Frtdoy From 7 A. II. To I P.ll. ~2 htlto, ~oom,
Contntty '-od, . Bola- ~. -.On
O.fllpotll
And Ala Orondo, a -ed lol 111,100, I
..... llllllng, I.Mmfng Acll¥111• 17M. .
And Ileal• Ptwl* d. C.l o.wn,
DOUILIWIDI AEPO,
114-241-4121.
no_,..,......
Child ..,. In my In llfd. to q111tltlod In,
"'-· 11M Nflyory
dloporl, _ . , lhru Friday, llltup. 104-7llxllll
7:00om.e:DOpm.,l14-4182.-.
Gollorol llolntononco, ~

Exportoncod. quollflod Corpon- ProloOIIonof T,..
Lobotw•,
Equipment
Opontoro
end
c - t Complole Troo - · Bucliol
· .ao Ft. A-h.
Ffnlehera w/al 11ut 5yra. u- Truck perilnce w1nted tor commerclll Slump R....,..~ F,.. Ea11-•t
lniUronce,
24 Hr.
conotr\IGiion orolecl Sond
,.IIUI'M to: Boi A·M, clv Pt.
-Call And
P I - Rog~.!'l 200 lloln Sl., S.w I l l MtS. 114417-7010.
Pl. Pl-fL WY 255!0. EOE. Bun Veley Nura~ ~ 8chOof.
lllnorftiH, ..moloo, Vllorano Chlidcoroll.f hnto8:1Gpiii Ape
1nd DluitMd IN .neouqg.d to 2-1&lt;, Young ..._. Aao Du!!!ttl
epply. .
S..m-. f DaYtt per Week ..,.._
a.tllo • llolgo Community 1M&gt; !mum 114-441-31a7.
tion Aaonc:y Hoo Avaltoille A
Umftod" .lma&lt;lnl 01 Diofocotod

1010NolthlltRI7

.

BORN LOSER

1-

tho St&gt;Ma Auoltl Got your
lrtmmtn a riio••• lllriced
nc:M 11 SW.ra Equipment eom.

....

oo111o 11o111 eom ...nhy
A&lt;tloit,.....;
JTl'llPorilro. .

'

•

-801=1~187.::·~=c:::=:-=-=­
~

!104-372-4311.

To ~lfy Far Thooo F"""!'1 In,
divldu.lo llull U.uolfy .,...
a - Unemployed Duo To A
B - Ctoofng .Or Roduction
;In r:- ~loyall."-- lo
Nol U.uo
A Foetor. Corteln
Addftlanol
And flo.
...,-to DO Appoy. Priority
Conofclonotlon Will B&lt;i Gt-1 To
-lconto Atr.ody . En railed In
Tiolnlng.
.
H y.., Bottevo You lloy Ouollty,
PI- Coif 114-311-7342 Or 814'
112-16211 To Hove A p,.-tc.
tlon llollod To Y0&lt;1. ........,..
ollclltono All Aloo Available At
'\'ho .ITPA Olflaoo At 188 Third

DINN~,

(~O(liJtfO,T • S04 tXnA)

1 - Schultz 12110, 2 -

~~~~:;-:":-:::'~~:-;:::~
Ace Troo florvtoo. Complolecaro, :iOyn!. e1p. 1 tnourod, 0111-•.'114-441·1111 or

Eaoy WDflll Excoflont Payl , .
oomble Pnoducto At Homo. Coif K I C Pump lnolallotlon, Tell F-, 1-800-4f7-4aee, Ell . FrM IIIII'NI•, 24hr. NrYice.
313.

~

FRANK &amp; ERNFST

8¥-4462.

Employment Serv1ces

AGAIN ~

Wl-10 AM l
TALKING TO?
WJ.lO . .

111

coftaci.
ofngle
mallw trill 1W0 ehlkhn, BM-

· SALU IXECIITIVE
A AND L TRANSFER, ono ol tho

MA'AM'?W~O
AM I
DANCING
WITH ?

JUST TO SEE
'(OU, AND TO
~OLD YOU, AND:.

TO 6E DANCING WITH

1

oppottunlty basis.

6 1944 lnvaolon
dale
7 Night bird

measure

Today's bridge~playing pseudonym is
Lucille Le Sueur. Under what name did II-.~&gt;--+-~
we know her?
A couple of days ago I had a deal in I I...-&gt;-+~
which it was important to play the right
suit (irst in a contract of six no-trump. 1,......+--1-~-+~1-­
Here's another one. Ho.w w.ould you br+-+-1-+plan the play , given that you cannot
peep into the East or West hand•
I L......I;-J......J..-.1-.;.
As always when playing in a no-trump
contra ct, start by counting your top
ttick.s . Here, there are only eight, a de·
pressingly low total for 34 combined
CELEBRITY CIPHER
high-card points . Bulthe major-suit du~
by Luis Campos
•
plication is unlucky.
Celebn1t Cipher cryplog.r am s are cr ea1ed lrom quotallons bof l tunous people . pas! and Pfnen\
At the table, South won the first trick
ERcllle11er rn tno c rphe r s lands l or ano1her . Toda~ ·s dut~ H 4JQURis P
in th e dummy and imm ediate ly tried
the club finesse . However, when it lost
"' G D
U B N D
K U 0
J'HKEJO
j A
to the singleton king, he couldn't avoid a
.secon d club loser and finished on e
KYZ 0 E 0 T
BOCEOKX
E 0 K .J
8 0
down.
True, he had more Clubs than any ·
DODZTEWEOT
AJZSD ,
K J
thing .else. Yet, as there were various
R J P N D
ways to attack the s uit, he should have
J yz
HZJIPDVR .
left it until later,
( · HRXSUJPJTERK)
The correct line is to win the first
z J p p J Y 8 X. ,
trick in hand and ta ke the diamond fi.
nesse. Let's assume it wins. Return to
PREV IOUS SOLUTION : "'f."e can plant wheat every year. but the people who
are starv1ng die only once . - Fiorello H La Guardia . ,
hand with a spade and repeat the fi ·
nesse, II it loses, declarer will need four
club tricks. He will have to hope th at
East has K·x or K·X·X.
However. when the second diamond
finesse works, South needs only three
club tricks . For thi s, there is a safety·
play. Declarer plays a club Ia his ace.
Here, the king drops and South claims
his contract But if the king doesn'l ap·
SMUNAK
pear, South has ample dummy entries
2
to lead twice toward his Q·J of clubs. He
I
makes the contract unless West started
with K·l(J.x-x of clubs .
We knew Lucille LeSueur as Joan
Crawford.

PEANUTS

. This newspaper will not

of)llflaotton or -oct Shollf

1 Railroad
IIIIIOn
2 Large cat
3 Church
officials
4 Radiation

By Phillip Alder

nW'aad, •u •• 0214.

limltallon or discrimination.•

Our reacters are hereby
Informed that al dweJtings ·
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an eQual

DOWN

Reprise: this way
orthat? ·

Farrn Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

Aporlmont.

make any such preference,

11Tw118ilngni! ytoraccept
real estate
l .a&lt;lve~"",.,
which is In violation ol the law.

23 Top oltho
held
24 Emperor
26 Exit
28 Caak
30 Profit
31 Female run
32 Wldo ohoe alze
33 Eluded

Opening lead: •lO

--.Oil,-···

SloYO I · lloftlj-or. · With
Wa•r, I Gorbogo Fur·

,_, loci1Htao1 · - t o In lawn. -lcatlono OYofloble
01: YllloiJO ·a-. Apto. 11141 or

0

OV..,ooll c.nt« • now ec&gt;
c.ptlna o p p t - for CIIA'o
and LI'N'e. Anrono - e d
piMN 001110 In ond plcll up on

30~.
•le•,

WE'RE JEST
GOIN' FER A
WALK!!

Hummi'J,bftd IIUIIo

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fop ,

ti'a:l' Rll' ........ llle Up To

-urlly do- ,...W, no

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lnltNmenta

bod....m ......-..••

tumw.a .Md
,...,efWa.Zne.

Fonl F-100 liLT 10 000

Fonl 1111 Ton
Aa'lom'd', M,GOG Actual

Apartment
lor Rent

1 ond 2

:150, c/o O.llfpoflo DoilY T~buno
11215 Thlnf Avonuo, O.lllpotlo, iiH
41831

W.niN: Chell l'Y.- Fr..ur In

C&gt;ood - n g Oftlor. 114-:JN.

-

=-=~~Campw
57

BARNEY
ARE YOU AN' ELVINEY
FIXIN' TO HANG OVER
TM' GOSSIP FENCE
ALL DAY LONG ? ?

72 Tnlc:ka for Sale

Household
Good a

Chocollll13 - G. Roblnaon
14 - Oile'o waroo
(Mill
15 llec:lt11111 bored
16 Spenlah cheer
17 Trumon'o
opponent
18 HIWIIIIn
-th
20 Roclty hlllo

An•wer to Prevloua Puate

Vulnerable: North~South
Dealer: South
·
South
West North East
I NT
Pass 6 NT
Pass

,- to.ded,bO4

--.~1112 '!0:2.

I

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• • ...efta ad Dlt¥1,
WV 211141. EOE.
l«af Allolf Store SMk!!lll Poll
11mo HelP IWI1h P...t0111y 01
Full TliiMi Roloff EIIIOfl.,_
Helpful. Sond " - 'ro: Ct.A

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S Ev-

11

- Krlngle
Evening cloak
- Molnet
Glldo otoh
44 Unit of energy
45 Highway to tho
for north
47 Roman 52
48 Actrooo
Piper so Dangero
52 Voporo
53 Sofa
54 Rabbllo
55 Acto

• 5 4 2
6A Q J 2

-to~··orMWir

P.M. IU Ul 2tll5.

o111 014 w- 01-... Bond - T o : len 1 - .

Wa ..od To Buy: J101k Auloo
WI1h Or Wllhouf .... _ Coif
Lorry Llvofy. 11! 311 Ulll.

~ -~
~

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51
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Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Apartment
.f or Rent

1 People of
action

38
39
40
42

Ilea.:

-.

1111 C.nlor, 1t1a1t - . ....
124G6.~.
aood.
_
cionil, 4cyf•• ..,..,••
1- ~n T_, Cor,.._
SMOO. 1111 Col Vlill• van,
t!JOO. ~-

llon"o TV

In -

·,

I
.L

c/o this newspaper. P .O. Bm: 4465. New
Yolk. NY 10163:

00111, 1·

'PISCES (Fab.·211-March 20) Tak1ng care
of busmess m1ghl be for emost '" yo ur
mind to.d ay. You will find il grat1fy mg to
attend to your obligations and io help oth ers w1th theirS .

-~ WV-5711-23N.

B2

Plumbing&amp;
Helling

•

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) If

I;=~!~~~

Certlfllll. AaIIJaMIIJ, Commer,
·~ 11WM-1fl11.

1M

be rewarded.

I

LL ·· · -

Enl:wpri..

Salurdey, Feb. 1B. f 995
T.W. I

1m por·

·

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Today. fo r

Electrtcal &amp;
Refrigeration

IS

rant to do what •s expected of you ioday
before worrying aboul hbw you'll be com pensated lo r your effor1s. Good work will

Lady Luck Will do

'

~er

best to provide

reasons difficull ro ascertain, yoi.J might
be cold t o someone who has always
been you r friend If you see this happen ·
1f"!9 · 1mmed1alely make adJustments

benefic conditions for ~uc::cess in the year GEMINI (May 21·Juna 20) Trust your
ahead. ll will be up to you. howeve'r, 10 1nstin crs m commer c 1al atta1rs today

ment in critical matters will be sound

because you will be able to see peoPle
as they truly are. I~ you beco me suspi ·
ciouS, guard your flanks.

today , yet you might seek re asons to
delay making an important decision . Time
might not be your ally at this· lime. Know
Where to (oak for romance. and you'll lind

is an unbecoming mantle, so do not cloak
yourself in it Ieday n or associa\e w ith.
those wh o prefer to~ wear such a , g8r~ent

reCognize and utilize wtlat is oftered .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fob. 19) Your judg·

I

.

reveals which stgns a re romantically per·
feet for you . Mail $2 .50 to Matchmaker.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

loMoo. _ . , ...~
....,Icing mool

olhof brondo, ·-

1!. The Astra-Graph Matchmaker ins tantly

.

- I

CANCER (June 21·July 22) Selfls.hness

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The good deeds
you do today will be remembered in great
delail. Any 1nfractionS. however. might be
noted and remembered as w ell.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) .You could

•

f&gt;ii.

ex tr emely fortunat e today c oncer ning •
your material Interests. You might not
fare as w ell . though , in social relatio n-

ships
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. :i3) Oo not dilute
your hope with pessimism today . The
resulti'ng formula could lessen your
chances ol f~lfiil.ing your aspirations.

SCORPIO (Oc:1. 24-Nov. 22) This is one
of those days when Lady Luck might lake
you under her wing and deliver you to the

.4

H~is;;i;;-;,~;;;;i;-~;;~~~"-"tNi;;e;.;;;;;:o;;;;*s;;,;w,;:;;7tj;;;;;;;;;g;;-f;,-;;;;;-Jii(iiVi£B;;~;,;;;:;J

ri,g.hl spot at the right lime . Wal ch for
oppo rtunities.

SAGITTARIUS (NoY. 23·Dec . 21) You
have a strong chance of getting something today that you'Ve been wanting. Do
not allow negatiye ass&lt;Jciates to sow
seeds of doubt in your mind.

CAPRICORN CDec. 22·Jin. 19) Toda4
you will be vel)' adept at managing other.
people's situations. Unfortunately . those
ll)'ing to help you might
b&lt;i as capa·
ble . Call your own shcts .

ool

.t
--~ ·

I

'

�(

.

•

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Frfday, February 17, 1995

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Get tested to rule out prostate cancer
PETER
GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've been
having blood in my semen for
about six months. Sometim~ it's
like port wine, other times it's
bright red. This is not associated
with any pain . My urologist has
prescribed three rounds of antibiotics over a period of time, and I do
have kidney stones that don't present,problems. . .
DEAR READER: Blood in the
semen may reflect prostate infection, as your doctor suspects, but it
can also be caused by prostate cancer or benign tumors.
In my opinion, you should be

.examined by another urologist to
make sure that your symptom
doesn't have an eminous basis.
You probably need kidney X-rays
(again) , and you should certainly
have cystoscopy, during which !be
specialist examines your genital
tract with a lighted instrurnenL
In addition , I would order a
prostate ultrasound exam, to see if
you have a growth (or stone) deep
within the prostate gland.
Kidney stones will not cause
blood in the semen, althou~h they
may lead tO blood in the unne. I'd
focus my attention on your prostate
gland. See a urologisL
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free cpPy of my
Health Report "The Prostate
Gland." Other readers who would
like a copy should send $2 plus a
long, self-addressed. stamped envelope to P.O. Box 2433, New York,
NY 10163. Be sure to mention the
title.

DEAR DR. GOTT: My friend
has been diagnosed with lichen
planus. Is this contagious and is
there treatment for the condition?
DEAR READER : Lichen
planus is a recurring, inflammatory
eruption of the skin. 1be cause is
unknown, although some experts
believe that it may be due to an asyet-unidentified micro-organism.
In any case, it is not contagious.
The affliction is diagnosed by biopsy.
No treatment is necessary,
unless the lesions itch, in ~hich
case anti-histamines and steroid
lotions may relieve the symptom . .
Cortisone pills may be necessary if
th.e eruption is widespread or tends
to recur .frequently. Patients with
lichen planus should be under the
care of dermatologists.
DEAR DR. GOTT: Would yoil
guide your re:lders through the
menstrual cycle and give your
opinion as to the safest point where

.--Number crunchers-_,

intercourse would less likely cause
gestation? Is it the ftrst few days
after the end of the. flow? Is pregnancy possibiC during flow?
·
DEAR READER: Let's keep it
simple.
Most women ovulate about two
weeks after dal'_one of their m•.nstrual cycles. Therefore, the best
time to conceive is on or about day
14. Interi:ourse· is least likely to
result in pregnancy if it occurs just
before, during or jiiSt alier menstruation.
Remember that this is ·merely a
rule of thumb. There are reported
instanceS of women conceiving 8l
any point in their cycles, especially
if their menstrual panems arc irregular.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For inrormation on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by c:al6ng 1800-827-li364. ext. 8317.)

Daytona 5_00 preview- C1

SALLY FIELD

· This "Woman" costars Charles
Durning, Brenda Fricker, Tony
Goldwyn, Ron Silver, Jaclc Thomas
and Sheila McCarthy.
It's the hardest thing she's ever
done, Field says. A brealcneck 60day sl!O(Jting schedule, the .sweltering Texas loc~tions, her 170-odd
cosntme changes, those are some·of
thereasonsshecites.
Field fondly recalls the aging·
process she underwent during the
production. "I found that, playing the
unknown of old age, your imagination can allow you to experience
something that you can't really
return to in portrayin~ the youth
you've already known, ' Field, 48,
says. ''The older Bess got, the
more of a kiclc I got out of iL
"In the meantime, I son of lost

Academy will re-evaluate Documentary
Committee after ~Hoop Dreams' flap .
· BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- The Oscar nominating procedure for documentaries will be
reevaluated in the wake of the
snubbing of the acclaimed "Hoop
Dreams.''

"We'll be talcing a close, hard
look al .the procedures of the Documentary Committee to see if
changes need to be made," Arthur
HiDer, president of the Academy of
Motion Picture· Arts and Sciences,

said Wednesday.
"Hoop Dreams" follows two
Chicago high school stars as they
pursue dreams of playing professional basketball. Despite collecting some of the best reviews for
any film last year, the only nomination "Hoop Dreams" received
Tuesday was for best editing.
The committee that nominates
documentaries is composed not of
documentary fibnmalcers, but of 47

veteran Academy members .who
volunteer. The committee has '
bypassed such highly regarded
fibns as "The Thin Blue Line" and
"Ro$er and Me."
H1ller suggested some critics
had not seen this year's five nominated documentaries: "Ma~a Lin:
A Strong Clear Vision," 'Com ..
plaints of a Dutiful Daughter,"
D·Day Remembered," "Freedom on My Mind" and "A Great
·Day in Harlem."

tmts
A Multimedia Inc. , Newspaper
. MATH-A-THON WINNERS- Andy Mora; right, and Chelsea
Young were named nrst and setond place winners respectively,ln
· the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Math-a-lhon at Chester
Elementary School. Tbe program is used to raise money for the
research hospital. Thirty-one students participated, raising
$1,098.12.

•

11

'

own ag~. I didn't feel any par- look tlood," she says. "THAT'S
scary .~•
llcular affi!"tY or. connecbon to any
What doesn't scare her so much
age as bemg mme. My ..own age .
is
Staying
alive iA ShOW business.
be~~!" to be son~ffu;uy.
After
all,
how
scary could it be for
For '!'e, ~~~?llng IS never .~bout
someone
who,
so early on, surEgo ~ra~~cat1on For SallY:• she
vived
"Gidget"
and "The flyirig
e~plams. It has all'? d? w1th ereNun"'?
a~ng a characler ~ ts n~ht for the
"I guess because my struggle
piece, whether she s Gumevere or
sraned
so young, I expect it," says
theHunchbackofNotreDame.
Field.
"I don't know how to be the
"I feel accomplished, which I
lUding-lady type," Field admits,
didn't
use to feel," she allows,
"and pan of me bali felt luunpmed
"but
I
don't ever feel confident
by that. That part of me thinks, 'If I
about
anything.
r never have. Even
were more of a glamorous son of
the
times
that
seemed lite they
movie star, had a sexier quality
should
have
been
the easy times
about me, I would be better.'
were
still
a
struggle
for me.
"But I don't know how to be
"It's
always
a
struggle,
but I
that way." On the conllllry: "I'm
feel
there
are
many
more
hills
to
not afraid if I have to look like dogclimb.
It's
my
responsibility
to
doo.''
"I'm more afraid if I have to scramble."

~
~

HURRY TO DON TATE MOTORS

calendar
•

Tbe Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-pront groups wlsblag to
announce meeting and special
eveats. Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
.
fund raisers or any typ~. Items
BY PASTOR PETER TREMFor example, many dabble ,m are printed as spaee permits and
BLAY
.
astrology, the practice of guiding cannot be guaranteed to run a
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist your hfe by the movement of the . specific number of days.
•
stars. A practice that is directly forChurch
Many people today deny the bidden by the Word of God in
FRIDAY
existence of the devil and. his Duet. 4:29.
RACINE -Pentecostal Assemdemons. They believe themselves
The devil is a subtle creature. bl;&gt;:, S.R. 124, ncar Rac.ine, J~es
to be too enlightenc:d t.oQ sophisti- tie even tells us that it's okay to G•llette evangelist; spee1al slngmg,
cated for such a belief.
carry good luck charms. "What's Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Either you believe the Word of so wrong with good luck charms?" ·
God or you don't. We cannot pick he asks us. What's wrong with
SATURDAY
and choose which pan of God's them is that they are taken directly
CHESTER - Special meeting,
Word was wish to believe. Either .from satanic worship and the prac- Shade River Lodge, 453, F. and A.
we believe all of it or we can have lice of sorcery, again directly fer- M. Saturday, breakfast, 7 a.m.;
no reason to believe any of it.
. bidden by God's word.
lodge opening, 8 am. Work in the
The devil must love it when
Qther people practice spiritism entered apprentice degree for two
people deny his existence. They are by using devices lilce the "divining candidates.
easy prey for him. He will lie to rod" to supposedly find water.
them. He will deceive them. He Some women use superstitious
SALEM CENTER - Star·
will ensnare them, at his will. methods for rmding oot the sex of Grange #778 and Star Junior
Many people that deny the exis- their unborn child. Fanners resort Grange #878 regular fun night and
tence of the devil and demons are to spiritism in planting by the signs potluck supper Saturday, 6:30p.m.
easily led into occult practices. of the Zodiac or by the entrails of at the grange hall. All members and
Tbey seem so innacent. Things like animals. If you don't think so, just interested people urged to attend.
the Ouija board, which is sold as a pick up a copy of the Farmers
game in our stores. Children play Almanac:
MONDAY
with it by ~iving up their wills to
I .recall picking up a calendar
LETART FALLS -Letart
· the poSSCSS•on of an evil spirit who from a local business some years Township BOII(d.of Trustees meetthen directs their hand to move the a.go that contained all of these ing Monday, 6 p.m. at office buildpointed to letters on the board.
superstitious devices for planting, ing.
In Eph. 6: II the Greek work all of which ar~ based on the
translated "Devil" is "Diabolo." occult, spiritism, and primitive reliSata!l is diabolical. He is described gions. God tells us not to imitate
as the''Tempter" and "the Enemy." false religious.
Yes, someone may say, 1 know
In an effon to provide our readEph . 6:12 reminds· us that our
struggle is against Satan and his these are questionable practices, ership with current news, the Gal~
forces that are described as "princi- but they seem to work. I respond, lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
palides and pow~" The New Tes- "So What. Are you a child of God Sentinel will not accept weddings
tament describes him as subtle, or not? What business do you have ·after 60 days from the date of the
mischievous, and a.perverter of going to Satan to find answers? event
righteousness. He must love it You cannot serve God and the
All club meeting$ and other
when he is able to have full_control Devil. Ch~._this day_whom you _ news articles in the society section
over those that deny his extsmrree. - ,Yill serve."
must be submitted within 30 days
Satin ~HI do all he can to mvolve
(To be continued next week)
of occur:ence.. A!l birthdays must
people m the occult by convmcmg
Articles for the weekly Ser- be submuted w1thm 42 days of the
tliem that these practices are mno- monettes may be submitted to occurence.
cent and then he will snare them the' Rev. Peter Tremblay 991All material submitted for publi- .
and,control their lives.
5326
·
'
cation is subject to editting. · ·

N
ews poiJ'·cy

.
-------Aifrednews notes----.

By NELLIE PARKER
· The Alfred United Methodist
·church congregation enJoyed a
soup dinner Sun&lt;!&amp;Y followmg regullu' worship semces.
. • Pastor Sharon Hausm!ln ga•e
thi: blessing. 0t1Jm attendin~ were
. Wilma Henderson, Nina Robmson,
.. Sarah Caldwell, Charlotte Van
Meter Eloise and Russell Arcber,
Iohn Taylor, Rit;hard an.d Florence
. Spencer, Osie a'nd ,Ciau Follrod,
.

.

j

Kathy and Stacie Watson, Dan
Spencer, Doris and Lloyd
Dillinger, Tim Spencer, Susan
Pullins, Thelma Henderson, Joyce
Burke, Gertrude Robinson, Melvin
T111cy, Torn Taylor, Barb Hannum •
Debbie Barbee, Marlene Donovan,
Joe, Laurie, Janae, Ashley, Jessica
and Matthew Boyles, Sandra Massar, Philip Boyles, and Nellie Partter, all local; Eleanor Boyles, Bel-

pre, and Bernice Hawkey,
Grantsville, W.Va
Members signed a card for Rose
Carr who is in University Hospital,
Columbus. .
Thelma Henderson, Sarah Caldwell, and Nina Robinson attended
County Council ·lit the' Rock
Springs Church Monday night.
Joe and Will Poole were business visitors iii Xenia Tuesday.

•
- - - f --·

·.

Tlmii.Sentlnel Staff
: POMEROY- The Meigs County Board of Cornmissioners ma,y have moved ·a step closer to selling
guns confiscated by officers in 1993.
The board is trying to selll,416 guns forfeited to
the county by Roben D. Fife, Middleport, after officers confiscated the weapons from his home and
business in July, 1993.
·
Fife pleaded guilty to a charge of receiving stolen
property. In return for the plea agreement, he agreed
to forfeit the guns, with tf!e county and himself
splittil!g the prdceeds from the sale.
The board advertised the firearms in The Shotgun
News, a national firearm dealers' magazine.
''ln~he last two days we've got lO responses to the
ad," said Clerk of Commission Gloria Kloes.
Kloes said she has fielded calls from North and
South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ok.lahoma, '
Nebraska, Wisconsin, Kentucky and West Virginia.
"I'm pleased with the initial respo~se, but I'm still
waiting for serious offers," said commission President Fred Hoff~J~an.
.
The advertisement. which cost $199.25, is scheduled to run in the Feb. 20 edition of the publication.
The bOard will let dealerS view the guns on March·(!.
The board also agreed to sponsor the Tuppers
Plains Sewer District in obtaining a $500,000 Community Development Block Grant.
Prosecut'ing Attorney John Lentes, who represents
the sewer district, satd the district needs a formal
resolution of suppon from the commission in order to
secure the water and sewer grant.
· In other business, the board:
• Transferred SI 04,Q69 from the county general
fund to the public assistance fund.
· • Made an appropriation of S12,273 to the general
fund at the request of the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation/Developmental Disability.
• Requested County Engineer Robert Eason to
make a recommendation on a request by Chester
Township trustees to add roads in the Hartinger
Addition to township mileage. The board also wants
a recommendation from Eason on a request from
Scipio trustees to close a part of township road 257.

'

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~.

•An prices include

rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; 1ees not
1ncluded.

R.,. Freak
CtemMIM, RGafllpolle,
••ld h• will
carefully
Wllfeh t»wlopmenta regarding the
o.,partment
of Energy and poulble effect• on eouflwm Ohio.

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.
Tlmes.S.ntlnel Stefl
MIDDLEPORT - On the a.o;surnption that "if there is something to do or
something to sec, they will come", the Middleport Community Association is
taking a new approach to making Dave Diles Park in downtown Middlepon a
·gathering place.
The new program which members of the Community Association hope will
"catch fire and take off' is called "Spectacular !'vents". It is geared to
organizations, businesses or anyone who might be interested in sponsoring or
presenting a one-day weekend or evening activity in the .park.
The emphasis, said Tom Dooley, who is heading up the MCA project, is to
"do thin!!'i. here, so we don't have' to go somewhere else - to make our
community the place to come for a good time".
_
But to make the program succeed, Dooley said that it must involve more than
just Middleport groups, that organizations and churches in the county must get
involved.
.
·
''This is not just a ' Middleport thing::,', said Dooley," Drul people need .to .
understand that." He described it as an invitation for people to come in and use
the park in a way which is enriching to the community.
Dooley said that the plan is to offer entertainment and activities on a regular
basis, to give people something they can look forward to and decide to attend.
As for the guidelines, all of the events will have to be approved and
scheduled by the Middleport Community Association. They will be free, and
held on the weekend or in the evening. Preference will be given to events which
are ·of interest to the entire family. Sponsors will be responsible for all
equipment, setup and cleanup, electricity will be available on the stage and in
the depot. and limited adverrising will be provided by the Association.
Fund raisers will be restricted to the sale of refreshments or souvenirs.
Already scheduled are the two annual celebrations of the Community
Association, July 4 and the River Festival on Sept. 16.
Monday night Middleport Village Council voted to be the sponsoring agent
for an Electric Light Pa111de of The Midnight Cloggers directed by Bruce
Wolfe who has been entertaining at Disneyland for the past four years:
The Bend Area Community Band directed by Toney Dingess, organized
with an Ohio Arts Council grant and some local funds from the Middleporr Ar)s
Council, will do a concert in the park in .June.
Otbe! agencies ani! organizations, like the Mei!!'i County Humane Society
on tbe care of animals, and the Extension Service on borne and farm activities,
have expreued. interest in spohSoririg events .

.·'

Ohio lawmakers
look for ways
to cut taxes in
budget proposal

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ReWASHINGTON (AP) - House
publican lawmakers say thcy.,pre trySj)eaker Newt Gingrich has singled
ing to get a better understaniling of
out the Environmental Protection
Gov. George Voinovieh's proposed.
Agency as government bureaucracy
budget as they look for ways to trim it
at its worst, but EPA officials conenough to reduce taxes.
tend his outr.age often focuses on
"We arc looking for ways to cut
problems that have been resolved.
some things that don't make sense,"
As Gingrich outlined his views on
said Rep. Patrick J. Tiberi, R-Columenvirompental protection last week,
bus. He wants to fipd out how much
he said the EPA "may well be the
spending can be reduced in
biggest job-killing agency in the in..Voinovich's $33.76 billion proposal '
ner city in America today.'' He called
.•before he is ready to endorse a tax cut .
its policies "incredibly destructive
House Speaker Pro Tempore Wilto the poor."
liam G. Batchelder, R-Medina, said a
While he did not elaborate, the
. "Significant number" of the 56-memreference seemed to be to failures
ber House Republican caucus would
under the Superfund toxi waste
like tocuttaxes in the 1996-97 budget
cleanup law, which have I ft thoubill now under study in the House
sands of contaminated a abanFinance Committee.
doned pieces of land - k own as
"There's a very, very strong feel -.
"brown fields" - idle n cities
ingalongthose lines," he said. But he
across the nation. Meanw ile, busisaid it·was too early for lawmakers to
nesses.Jiave moved to the suburbs.
be thinking about cutting taxes.
.' ''Our current brown fields policy
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,is irrational and economically dethe senior member ·of the Finance
structive," said Gingric", R-Ga. He
Committee, said he ·is serving as an
said the EPA shouldn't require sites
adviser .
destined for industrial uses to be BLASTS EPA. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, nan ked by Senate Majority leader Bob Dole,
''A lot of these young people feel
cleaned to standards for a kindergar- right, and House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, meets wltb Republican
the same about taxes as I have for '25
ten playground.
. . Congressional leaders. Gingrich singled out the Environmental Protection Agency as governyears,'' Netzley said. ' 'A lot of them
. EPA officials said the agency has m~nt bureau~racy at Its worst.
feel they were elected to make govrecognized the problem with
ernment smaller and take it off the
Superfund and brown fields for some time. Last year, it tried to get that sit idle in cities across this country, to bring them back to life, to" backs of the taxpayers . They were
Congress, as part of a revamping of Su)l!'rfund, to give greater remove ·a blight on the neighbothood, to create jobs to create hope,"
amazed and appalled that the
nexibility to inner cities as they try to clean up sites and return them said EPA Administrator Carol Browner.
governor's budget is a ,10 to .l2 pcrPressing to get regulatory .reform legislation through the House,
to industrial uses. One proposal would have established different
c~nt increase.''
criteria for cleanup depending on future use of.the land.
Gingrich has sprinkled his remarks in recent weeks with examples of
Netzley said the conservative lawRepublicans blocked the reforms in the final days of the last alleged EPA horrors. He revisited several of them Thursday in a
makers believe the current tax strucCongress.
speech to an environmental conference.
.
ture is~generating too much revenue,
Last month, the EPA moved on its own and announced it was
Of the government's long campaign to deal with asbestos, Gingrich
and thai there could be as much as a
taking 25,000 of 38,000 urban sites off the Superfund invento•y, said he has heard complaints from school officials and declared: "I
S1.3 billion surplus by July .
leaving the remaining, minor cleanup to states, and'opening the way know of nobody who's a scientist or who 's in public health who thinks
Voinovich, a Republican, projects
. for their development.
that tearing out the walls to get at the asbestos - in terrns 'of human life
thai $838 million can be put in the
"We are working ... to clean up the contaminated pieces of land incidents - is a rational strategy .''
stale savings account.

Community.association takes
new approach to park activities

1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 53,000 miles, leather, all power .....................:........... $14,995
1991 JEEP WRANGER 4X4, hardtop, 32,000 miles. Must seel ................ ;................... $10,995
1988 FORD RANGER PICKUP, 4 cyl, 5 speed, topper.: ......... ~ ........................................ $4,995
1992 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE SSE, loaded, white ...........,...:........................................ $15,495
1991.GMC SONOMA,4 cyl., 5 speed, 2-tone paint .........................................................$6,995
· 1988 CADILLAC SEVILLE, loaded, V-8, leathe• .............................................................. $7,995
'
1990 i=ORD F150 4X4, 5 speed, 6 cyl ...............................................................
~ ............... $9,999
1993 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, loaded, V6, red ..............................................................$12,995
1985 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN. Hurry! ..............................:......................................... $2,995
1991 BUICK PARK AVE. ULTRA, loaded, leather, all power .........................................$11 ,995
1990 GMC SIERA PICKUP, VB, auto., air, topper. Extra Sharp!.. .................................... $9,~

1994
- • CHEVY
LUMINA

Gingrich singles out EPA
as bureaucracy at its worst

'SPectacular Events' proaram

PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRIJCKS

1994 CHEVY

Meigs County
moves closer
to sale of guns
. By JIM FREEMAN

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

•

1..----'--------....J

1'~~~~1)~N1'~ ])A~ ~Al.~!!

Community

Vol. 30, No.2

AP, T-5 Staff Reporta
serve on the task force.
Sixth District.
over to the De. WASHINGTON - Federal taxpayers could save
'"I~re is not doubt that in order for us to balance the
The Clinton administration already has a plan to reorga- rense Depart . ~illions of dollars by lowering cleanup standards at En- budget we must make government smaller," Cremeans nize the DOE and privatize some of its functions, Deputy mentor the En·
·ergy Department nuclear-waste sites, says thechai.rmanof said. "It is highly appropriate that we examine the func- . Energy Secretary Bill White said. The plans call for DOE vi ron menta 1
a House task force that wants to dismantle the agency.
lions of these departments todetermi11e if they continue to to cut spending by $14 billion over the next five years, he P rote c t i on
"There's just not enough money'to fund what they are be needed."
said.
Agency.
trying to do, to go back to pristine conditions," said Rep.
Tbeeffonbas the support of Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio,
Todd Man in, a researcher for the Spokane, Wash .He said DOE
Todd Tiahn, R-Kan.
chairman of the House Budget Committee.
based Hanford Education Action League, said his watch- has overex"Tbe'se are isolated areas. They are areas that were not
"Of course we've still got to do nuclear weapons dog group is oP.,n to proposals to cut cleanup costs.
tended' itself in
populated when we started. We should perhaps be looking management, but when you talk about cleanup and all the
'• But it is the moral and ethical responsibility of the negotiating cleanup agreements with individual states.
at a containment policy rather than•a pristine policy," he regulation, the overregulation, the~osts, the money - it 's federal government to clean up those sites they made dirty · "Whatever happens, we need to go back and look at the
said.
·
incredible," Kasich said at a Capitol news conference to -to at the very least make sure they are safe for people agreements we negotiated and not try lo fall into that trap
Tiahrt's panel is one of four established by House announce the task-force effon. who live and work thereandfortheenvironment, " he said. again and have to renegotiate some of them," Tiahrt said.
Republicans this week to develop proposals to eliminate,
Cremeans said he will carefully watch developments
Overall, Tiahrt said, long-term plans to clean up radio'·Part of it is going to be through contracting and
· consolidate or privaiize the departments of Energy, Edu- regarding the Department of Energy and possible effects active waste at the nation's former nuclear-weapons plants determining what are the requirements we should hilve ·as
cation, Commerce and Housing and Urban Development. on southern Ohio. The Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion is expected to cost between $300 billion to S1 trillion.
far as getting back to an acceptable level of waste conRep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, was named ;'o;;_.;P,;:Ia:,n::,:ta:;,t,;.P:ik::;et:::ll:;:n;.:is:,::on:,:e::.;o::,:f.:;th;:e;;;la:;,r~ges:::;te::,:m:.:;p~l~oy!:.:e::.rs:,:i,::n.:;;C::,:re::,m;:e;;;a;;:ns;.';;;;;.,·.!_H!:e;.:e:!n!.:v:!:is:_:;io:!!n:s.,:t,::ur!.!n:!:in:!l,;:D::;O::;E;_'s~ci::;ea::,:n:u~p.,:r~e!!spo~n~si_:;b!!,ih:_::ti::;es~..!t!!ro!!.l,._"_:h~e;,;s::a!!id::..,.

~y

FIRST IN SALES!
FIRST IN SERVICE!!! AND
FIRST IN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

•

·rask force.- chair says lowering standards at nuclear waste-sites will sav~ billions

'

•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant . February 19, 1995

House panel takes aim at DOE

DON TAR MOTORS, Inc. &lt;~
,..: 0::;

onPageA2

••

Known for ages, Sally Field portrays a woman's life in NBC m1n1senes
.
. By FRAZIER MOORE _
"Mrs. Doubtfire" and "Forrest
AP Televisioo Writer
Gurnp. ")
NEW YORK (AP) - Sally
In "A Woman of Indel'!:ndent
Field? At a~e 18, she became Gid- Means" the audience w11l rirst
get, that qwntessential 19(i()s Cali- encounter Bess Steed Gamer in ber
fomia girl.
teens. By the end of this six-hour
No one much watched this little NBC miniseries, Sally Field will
·surfside sitcom during its single carry the audience deep into Bess'
season. Yet"Gidget" still made old age. '" Woman" ai~ Sunday,
waves. It launched a star and plant- Monday and Wednesday. from 9 to
ed a'legend. You've been watching II p.m. EST each nighL
Sally Field ever sinee.
Tbe ftlm, which brings the twoThis is worth belaboring as the time Oscar winner back to televiactress who started out a beach sion after more than a decade, is
bunny, then played an airborne based on the 1978 novel by Elizanun, presents herself three decades beth ForSYthe Hailey. Related totallater in a complex role that lets ly through Bess' letters, the book
viewers accompany her, stage by tracks the life of a plucky, loving,
stage, through a colorfully unfold- irascible, needy and unsinkable
ing life. (l(er most recent theatrical woman, from the tum of the centufilms are the box office smashes. ry all the way into the '60s.

Details

Three days on the witness stand -PsgeA7

•

.

HI: 50s
Low: 30a

,.,

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Auditor to speak at GOP ev~nt

Decision pending
on toll-free calling
betWeen Mason,
Meigs counties

'
T.oday's
Times-Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS - State Auditor Jim Peiro will be
16 S.C:tlons - 116 l'llces
the speaker for Gallia County 's annual Lincoln Day
Business
Dinner Tuesday at 6:30p.m . in the AMVJiTS BuildD1
ing.
Calendars
82&amp;4
The dinner is sponsored by the county's RepubliDJ-7
can Party organization.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Classlfteds
Petro, 46, was elected auditor last November after ·
Public Utilities Commission of Comics
Insert
more than two decades of work.in government. He
Ohio has yet to make a decision Editorials
A4
became the assistant to the mayor of Cleveland in
concerning the establishment of
AJ
1971 and was a special assistant to then-U .S. Sen.
toll-free telephone service be- Local
William B. Saxbe the following year.
tween the'Middleport, Pomeroy Obituaries
A6
He served as assistant prosecuting attorney for
and Syracuse exch~nges and rhe Sport•
·c1•8
Franklin County, wqrking as a trial lawyer on adult
Mason, W.Va., exchange.• ·
~Al:-::-:--::h:-::R
::cl:-----..;B:.:J:..:..
.
d
ong t e' ver
felony prosecutions. He later returned to northern
Approximately I 00 Melg1ian
Ohio as assistant law director in Cleveland.
Mason County residents, offi- Weather
A2
Petro opened a private law pr~cti&lt;;e in 1974 and l"as prosecuting attorney in cials and merchants attended a-·
Rocky River. He was elected to Rocky River's city council in 1-977 and was ·laler - PUCO hearing on Nov. t6""in
named the city's law &lt;;lirector.
. Pomeroy lo support establishColumns
He served four terms in the Ohio House of Representatives between 1981 and ment of toll-free telephone ser1991, where he,served on the House Finance Committee. He was also the ranking vice between parts of the two Jack Andcrsop
member on the House Committee for Ethics and Standards and for the Committee counlies.
Fred Crow
on Commerce and Labor. He was elected a Cuyahoga County commissioner in . PUCO attorney examiner' Bob HoeOlcb
1991. and served as chairman of several committees.
Daniel E. Fullin, who presided
Petro is a native of Brooklyn, Ohio. He received a·bachelor's degree from over the meeting, indicated at JimSapds
Denison University and his law degree from Case Western Reserve University. the time the PUCO should reach
a decision on tbe matter during
$5 million condo, office project set for Jackson February ..
Scott Farkas, the attorney examiner worki.ng on the case, is curr~ntly
JACKSON- A $5 million housing and retail development project is planned
working on the case to present it to the commission, a PUCO spokesfor this southern Ohio community.
The planned project, under development by Coriell and McCarry Investments, woman said Thursday afternoon.
will reported contain 43 condominiums, nine office sites, eight locations for retail . Cunently, local officials want to establish toll-free cailing between
the Middleport, Pomeroy and Syracuse exchanges in Meigs Countyand
outlets, and more than 150 parking spaces.
All of the condominiums will be for purchase; none will be available for rental. the Mason and New Haven exchanges in Mason Counfy .
Approximately 35 people testified at the meeting where residents
The only reported obstacle to be \)vercorile is to have the property rezoned.
argued that Loll-free service before the communities, separated by the
Upon approval, work is scheduled to begin around the middle of April.
Coriell and McCarry is headed by Dick Coriell, a partner in Scioto Block, Ohio River, would improve the business climate in the area.
Fullin said the PUCO would consider the testimony prior to making
Portsmouth Bloclc, Portsmouth Building Materials and Martin Block Company,
its decision. .
and Rick McCany of McCa_ny Construction .

1-==:.::.....-----=-

4

•

•
. '

.ct..

-.-

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