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•

Pag....12-The o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleport,

-

'

~_l. FebruarY~. 1815

Ohio

Mother makes bad _
example for son
De1r An L••_de~l: My son'a
echool rece~dy dis1nbuted repon
Clrlls.Mylhinl-paderlun_ex~llent
StUdeR! and v,ery COniCJ~DllOUI.
When Johnny loolled II h11 report
~ he turned ~ He had been
~~- a low grade m one of the fine
ans classea.
His school gives a leUer grade for
academic achievement and a n11111ber
grade for elfcrt. Jolumy's ~011 grade
was also very low. He could provide
110 explanation. He teealled getting
several A's on his ICSts and many
commenu in praise of his
performance in class.
I sent a note requesting a
conference witfl the tcaohet Two
days later, she called to explain that
a mis!ake had been made. Jolmny had
accidentally re~eived another
student's grade. He really had earned
an A in fine arts. ·The teacher
apologized and told me she had
· already informed Johnny that his
permanent record would be
corrected.
·
A few days later, I me_t with the

principal and rqlOI'ted Ibis incident.
1Slid 1underslood that mistakes do
happen but I felt that a written
apology Wll in on1et A week laler,
the principal informed me that the
teacher refused to wrile an apolosy
because it wu 'just a clerical cmx•
She said she would issue a special
certificate to my son instead.
·
1 have talkCil with several pan:nts
about this, and they all &amp;giW!that
the school handled the situation
badly. 1 believe a corrected repon
card and an apology from the
principal sbould have been sent
automatically.
Whaldoyouthink?-APARENT
IN MEDINAH, ILL.

force the teacher to eat crow wu
unwise. She could make life vert
uqlleasantforyourson.Hecouldc:nd
up bein&amp; the victim.
Dear Aaa Landrn: Since I have
never seen this dilemma discussed in
your column, I hope you will print
my let~ and advise~- I really~
the opm10n of a~ unb1~ outs1~
Our son has hved w1th a woman
for several years. They have never
married. My husband and I are both
retired and are making arrangements
for the dispositio9 of our assets when .
we die.-We are terribly concerned as
to the legal rights of this wdman. It
is our express desire that she nol
receive anythins from our estate,
especially should our son predecease

DEAR MEDINAH: I think it's too
bad the mistake was made, and I
asrce that it was handled poorly by
the school. This, however, would
have been a splendid opponunity to
demonstrate to Johnny that taking the
high road when you have been
wronged is the way to go.
In my opinion, your attempt to

I have been unable to fmd anyone
who can tell me if living toaether for
a specific period of time c:onatituleS
common-law marriage in Wlsconsin.
Thank you for helping to put my
mind at eue. -- XYZ IN PALM
HARBOR, FLA.
DEAR PALM HARBOR: I am not
qualified to give lepl advice. See a 0562. (/II CtWJda, .stlld $6.25.)

her.

Meigs boys
eliminat~d

_ _ _ _....,.

Ann

La d

Pick 3:
262

by Raiders ·

n erS

lawyer, and pay nim for pulling your
mind at case. II will be wcrth it.
Gem of the Day (an oldie, but 11,
goldie):
Doctor: "I have gnod news ror you,
Mrs. Johnson.•
·
Patient "It's Miss Johnson."
Doctor: "Then I have bad news ror
you, Miss Jolmson.•
What C4ll yoa giW! the perso11 whO
h11s evtryJhlll§? A1111 Llllldtr~'
booklet, "Gtllt.S," is· idtlllfor a
11ighutand or cojJie table. "Gtms" i.t
a collectio11 of A1111 Landers' most
reqiWted poems tJNI usays. Sefid 11
st/fo/Jddressed, loll§, btuillt!ss•sizt
e11vtlope IIIJd a checl: or mollt!y Old.tr
for $5.25 (this iiiCludes postage IIIJd
hDndluig) 10: Gems, cloAMLtlntkrs,
P.O. Box ll562, Chicago,lll. 606JJ.

Ohi.o Lottery
Pick 4:
3303
BuckeyeS:
18-19-21-27-33

Page4

·

Vol. 45, NO. 208
Copyrlghl1995

:.·

.

" ·9&gt;'.
~
. . .. ij·'t4.;&lt;&gt;\.~
'

ELECTRONIC WINNERS -Matt Morrb, left, captured first,
and Kevin Collins, second, in the electronics contest at the VICA
skills competition at Meigs Higb School last Thursday. Morris will
represent bis class in tbe regional competition next month.

APR

FIXED RATE FINANCING
*Up To 41 Months

or

•

ON ALL NEW '95 FORD ESCORTS IN STOCK
OFFER GOOD FEB. 11TH THRU FEB. 27TH
.

.

1995 FORD AS:PIRE
WELDING ·WINNERS -· Jason Pie.rce, left, took first in tbe
welding competition last Thursday at the VJCA &amp;ki~ contest. He,
along with other first place winners, will. compete m tbe Soutll
Central Regionals at Nelsonville next month. Willie Kaulf was second place winner, and Ryan Rowe took tblrd place.

Skills of vocational students
. at Me ills High School w.ere
judged m the annual Vocauon: aVIndustrial Clubs of America
: (VICA) competition sta~ed
· Thursday night at the htgh
school:
First, second and third places
winners were selected in each orthe.caropelition areas = welding auto mechanics, cosmetolo: gy ,' nl)l'sing assistant and elcc· tronies. Students from all three
Meigs COI,Uity high schools are
enrolled in the vocauonal pro-

gram.

Jud,gins the contests were
member representatives of the
Meigs County Vocational Advisory Committee. The committee
is composed of men and women
with expertise on employment
requirements for srudents com~---1- IIIS_uu• of Vocational J!Ogillll}S • ..
priuS for lllC Winness in
the competitive skills contest
were provided by local bust·

nesses.
•
1
The first place winners in
each vocation advances to competition in· the South Central
Region which will be held on
March 4 at the Tri-County

NOW

CQOI!:SIS. .

• • --

The winners, listed respcc·
lively from first, were:
Auto mechanics - Danny
Rees. Rocky Bl~, Dave Neut·
zling, Steve Vance .. and Jay
Sayre.
Cosmetology Trish
Mahl!ffie, Bobbie Butcher, and
Trish'Roush:
Electronics - Matt Morris
and Kevin Collins.
.
Nursing assistants - Jaclyn
Swartz, Tara Erwin, and Beckie

Wood named 'Wildlife Officer of the Year'
By JIM FREEMAN,
Sentinel news stan
· MeiSs County Game Protector
Keith 0. Wood was named 'Ohio
.Wildlife Conservation Officer of
the Year' last weekend by the
Ohio Bowhunters Association.
Wood, 37, was presented an
engraved stag-handled knife,
made by Danny Hughes of
Groveport, during a ceremony
Saturday at Deer Creek State
Park. He was also reco~ by
the Division of Wildl1fe chief,
Richard Pierce.
"The association picks a cooservalion officer of the year and
Keitli was nominated," said association President Steve Meeks.
uHe won it hands down for his
performance in the line of duty,"
·said Meeks. "Everyone seems to
.~ tum ·and he wbtts
With
the sporumans clubs."
"Wnod is a very humble man.
I don't think we could make a
betler choice than what we did,"
Meeks added.
A 14-ycar veteran of the Divi-

A ·Gallipolis man accused of
murder is col)lpetent to stand trial,
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court Judge Joseph L. Cain ruled
last week.
Johnny White entered a not
guilty by reason of insanity plea
following the Dec. 2 shooting death
of his wife, Bonnie White, at their
Chatham Avenue residence in Gallipolis.
.
The insanity plea was withdrawn at a hcarin!! Feb. 16 after
Cain. made his ruhng, based 'on a
psychiatric evaluation by Slutwnec
HONORED • Mel1s
Forer~~ic Center, in Portsmouth.
C0110ty Game Protector Kelf:b ·
. "'11e'j\ldge abo granted a contln0. WOQCI displays a knife ·lie
uancc tii allow attorneys more time
was presented Saturday when
for discovery. The trial, originally ·
JOHNNY WHITE
be was named "Oblo Wildlife
( scheduled
to begin Monday, was
.
.
Coaservatlon Officer of the
reset for 9 a.m. Apri13.
_
DC?nald Whtte survtved the
Year"
by · tbe
Oblo
White surrendered to authorities · shootmg. ..
.
Bowbuntcn
Associatioo.
Dec. 2 at a relative's home after
'!he murder suspect ts also
holding Gallipolis police and Gallia believ~ to have alte~pted to rob
County sherifrs deputies at bay for So~lhsl(le, w:ya., restdents at gunmore than row- hours.
If&lt;l"!t. The restdents reportedly beat
Police· began searching for .White and_ he fled the ~e.
White shordy after midnight when
After hiS arrest, Whtte was trca!·
reVital~ the village by implementhis wife's body was found. Mrs. ed ·for a fnictured ~and. mulu- By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seatinel
News
Staff
ins plans leading to the achieve:
White died of multiple gunshot . pte lacerauons rece1ved dunng the
The
ftrSt
of
several
pllinned
pubmenI of nine goals as. defmed and
woutKis.
alleged robbery attempt,. .
lie
meetings
to
promote
"Vision.
prioritized
in those grQup meelinss.
Wh'ite also races charges in
Mason County ?ff~eials ISSued a
Quest
2005:
Citizens
in
Action",
a
Robinson
described "Vision·
Mason County, W.Va., for a shoot· warrant for Wh1te s arrest after he
program
seared
to
bring
growth
.
Quest
2005:
Citizens
in Action" as
ingandaucmptedrobbery.
failed to_appear to answer charges
After allegedly shooting his . of maliCIOUS assault, burglary and and development to Middlepon, an organization composed of con·
cemed cltltellS, village officials
wife, White repmedly traveled 10 a aucmp~ aggra~a~ robbery· . has been !Cheduled ror March 14.
.
VisionQuest
2005
evolved
from
and business people that have come
bar in Henderson W Va. and shot
Wh1te remams m the Galha
several
sttategic
planning
meetings
together to reach a common goal
his cousin, Donitd Whiie, 37, of County Jail in lieu of a $200,000
attended
by
village
officials
and
-a
beuer commlinily for all, ·
Apple Grove, W.Va., in the face.
cash bond.
community leaders over the past
The initial emphasis, he said,
month. Facilitatins those discus- will be ~s,wer the questions _
sion sessions were development Who are e as a community? and
~IS from Ohio Stale UniverHow do
become a beucr comSity Extension Service who assisted mooi~y.? . ·
·
the group in developing soats for
The objective, the viUase coonthe community.
ct' lman sa 1·d, wt'll be to "take
. Location of the poblic meeting responsibility for our own destiny
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) fund the existins formula used til will be 8IIIIOIIIICCd llW:r. Meanwhile by way of aidins and diJectins ViiFunny thing. Talk about spendins distribute subsidies to local dis·
letters ursina participation are lase Council's attention to the
more money for prisons, and lricts.
going out this week to represcnta- imJlO!Wit rnaaers of the·communinobody in the Legislature mentions
"To try to do that with the lives of all civic and social organi- ty, and to assist the comm!Jnity
raising taxes. More money for 'Robin Hood' method is absolutely zations in the community.
.
lcaderihip 10 brin$ together a part'
schools? Taxes come up.
asinine because what happens there
According to Micldlcpon Conn- ncrship of the pnvate sector, viiAt least that is how a critic or is you take away excellence in pro- cilman Nick Robinson and Middle- lage government and the business
Gov. George Voinovich's school grammins and only raise the bot- . pOJt Community Associat!on Presi- sector".
fooding proposal saw it Tuesday.
tom a lillie biJ," he said.
dent Dennis Hockman, who are
The public meeting is 1 fust step
William Phillis, director of the
MichaeloDawson, Voinovich's heading U{l the ·VisionQucst steer- in getting ~le involved and that
.Ohio COijlilion for Equity and Ade· press secretary, said in response ing oommttJec, the goal will be to
quacy of School Funding, told the there was nothing new in the proHouse Finance committee that posed redistribution of money. .
Voinovich's education plan for the
"Ohio has always taken money
II
"I
"I
lVI
two
startin~g.:.J.:.
ul~y_l::__"'an~d~redi
='s:":tri.buted iL Always.Jhat-is•~~~
the essence of the foundation for·
LOS ANGELES (AP)
SCJIIIched and bloodied. His pager
Ronald Goldman was just making a was knoc.keclaway.
Phillis recommended a dramatic mula," Dawson said in an inter·
.
quick stop at a friend's house, his
His body was found a few hOWll
Infusion of money into the system,
car keys still in his hand, when he later, wnpped around a tree Sturn{',
but declined 10 say how much was VlePhillis heads a coalition that
sued the state to overturn the curwas auacli:ed in the darlatess. Ncar his Pendleton shirt pulled up h1s
needed .
him lay Nicole Brown Simpson, back. Lesa than 5 feel away lay .Ms.
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R-Wooster, rent state-local school funding s~s,
tern. The coalition includes most of
bleeding and perhaps dead.
Simpson, her left hand clenched in
pressed him b a figure.
· Caught by stll'llrise and uapjiCd a "dcalh lriP," a, detective testified
"At some point you have to the state's611 districts. . ·
Judge Linton Lewis of Pel'l'y
against 1 metal lence in a small Tuelday iii the OJ. Sunpson trial.
make some choic~~ between. variCoooty
Common
Pleas
Court
ruled
area. Goldman flailed at his auaokDetecdvc Tom Lange's teslimoous altenuUives, none of which are
July
1
that
the
fooding
mec:hanism
cr.
His
feet
dug
into
the
soil.
His
ny,
which cootinucs today, providideal. but you have to 1fiakc adjustwas inadequate and inequitable
left hand was scraped, his face . ed the molt complete account to
ments," Amst!IIZ said.
: Phillis recall!ld testimony last ·
week before the same committee in
which the Ohio Department of ing is on appeal at Voinovich's
Rehabilitation and Correction pro- direction.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) for eight rivcrboltt cuinos and two
. posed a 30 pen:ent budget iDcrease
- A House Judiciary subcommit- large land-bued resons, if the
to house prisoners.
Dawson criticized Phillis for IIOt tee that met in seeret while consid· canmunilies IIJIIliO'ie.
"I don't recall any discussion providing an estimate of costs to erins a cuino sambling bill was
Delegatc Larry Linch, D-Harriabout where are we fomg to get the comply With the Perry COUDty deci- discussing how to handle dozens of son, said he has about ·2~ amend·
moiley to do that. It s only when it sion. Some school funding experts amendments expected, said Chair- m~IS.
.
comes to education that we wonder P.Congg.eq the. price at about $4 bil- man Evan Jenkins, 0-Cabell.
I~ needs a lot.of amend!nen~.
where we're going to get the lio
.
· Jenkins said the meeting Tues· There s a ~Ill; miSUUSI. W~ don t
money to do that," Phillis said.
"It's time for Bill Phillis to dAy focused on how the bill could want any cnminals,lln!und 1~ any
· The coalition took aim at come clean with the Lesislature . monopo_llze comm~t«__"ou~sel waL . . or flllll, Linch said
.. ~ Voinovich's proposal1o~an~ the taXpayers olthe staie o( MliC Mriwert's aa.enuon wttb little
· Tlte_ rune-m~bcr 1111~comnu~
state .aid from the wealthiest dis· Ohto. He refuses to answer the time lcft.in the session. Jenkins said met wtth Judlcuuy C~an Rick
lricts and give it to poorer schools.
m!'st basic question: How much he plans to take up amendments in Sllton, D-Wyomtog, tn his office
Pllillis, a former assistant state will the Perry C~~W~ty decision cost the subcommittee.
T11esday. When three reporters
schools superintendent, said the tho taxpayers of Ohio?" Dawson
The bill would allow licenses knoc!!:.ed, Mowert
the door
administrabon instead sboold fully said.

·wen

sion of Wildlife, Wood said he
Federation. .
· Wnod recently received aucn;
accepted the award on behalf of
the late Tom Addis of the . tion at the state level with the
Wildlife Legislative Fund of
arrest of suspected poacher
America who died earlier this
Michael R. Barker. 49, of
month.
Charleston, W.Va., who is
"I wanted to honor his effons · accused of assaulting Wood fol- ·
lowing a car chase the morning of
in conservation ... trying to do the
Nov. II, 1994; Barker is awaiting
thin~s we think are right by protrial on felony charges of assault
tecung the en.vironment," Wood
said. "It's an honor to me tQ.
and fleeing along with numerous
receive this award."
poaching charges.
However, Meeks said the inciA Meiss County native, Wnod
dent was not a determining factor .
said it is an honor to work in his
in the decision to give Wood the
home county and pointed out
award.
son'le things he feels ' are suppon
"It was not any one thing,"
the Division of Wildlife's misMeeks said.
sion includins youth prosrams
In addition, to receiving the
and the activities of conservation
clubs.
knife, Wood's name was placed
These things are impoi1ant to on a P.laque displayed m the
Wildlife Council Room at One
the .division; conservation clubs
because of lliefr riielitbers getting Fountain Square, Columbus
invOlved, he explained.
wood, a graduate of Eastern .
"Being part of that is nice,"
High School arid Hocking Techsaid Wnod, who is active in sevnical College, currently resides in
eral county clubs and organiza.
Long Bottom with wife, Paula,
lions including Ducks Unlimited
and children, Chelsey, 9, and 'Jorand the National Wild Turkey . dan, 3.
.

School coalition criticizes
governor's budget plan

is the key to the success of llle program, QCcording to Robinson. He
said that steering committee members will make contacts with organizations and encourage them to
send representatives to the meeting.
The purpose of the town meeting, as defined by "Robinson, will
be to
-bring residents up to date on
the process and where it currently
· Stands,
- to create a forumJor sharing
ideas, talents, and energies,
- to vote on or choose projects
to include public's input, •
· - to {"''Vide a fonun for communicauon on which to build
wuking relationships .
- and to generate public input
on types of industry the village
wanRtsb~r needs. 'd th
h'
o tnson S8l at ac 1evement
will come through involvement and
participation. He referred 10 sharing
with the public the the vision, and
then givins them a choice of projects on which they might like to
work. Thrpugh sharing ideas,
talents and energies, Robinson said.
'

De*ec·tl.'"e bell·eues· "'I.COII'e

---,

600~ ~:~
0

STARTI~G AT$7,669~

Scho~ ~ N~- II!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

sonville
. Winners from that
Vocational
competition will go into state

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport citizens to discuss future March 14

s600 CASH· BAC
.

2 Sectlona, 12 Pagea 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 22, 1995

Judge Cain rules
White competent to
stand trial for murder

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA

• Rabolto Included. Tu, Tlllt &amp; FHI Extro.

~::;go!!~~~~C~-~1':.~

o.

u1'CJS
wr
I

the momentum toward achievini ·
goals will be generated.
The nine soals established and
ranked accordins to priority by the
planning committee will be the·
focus of the discussion at the publii:
meeting. They arc:
·
·
1. Citizen involvemem and pride
in the community.
2. Denne types of industry that
the cOOlmunity wants and needs. ·
3. Development of sites for new
businesses, mcluding the Hobson
site.
·
4. Provide for powth development for small bus1ness and service
indusuies.
5. Address quality of life issues
including crime, education, rccrealion, basic needs and beautincation.
6. Develop a "small town" busi- •
ness StratesY.
•
7. Give suppon to local business
expansion plans.
8. Educate and assist with incen·
lives to local stan-up businesses
.· 9. Develop the M.-ina Park area
and establish a Middlepon Commooity Center.
.

kl•l''ed
·
fi

date of the prosecution's theory of

how Ms. Sunpson and Goldman
wen: killed on June 12.
His testimony was as dry as the
Penal Code, so precise that he save
the size of the terra cotta tiles at
Ms. Simpson's house (II 1/2 inches IM(uare),llld deli~ in a voice
so low lhll the judge had to remind
him to ptill the mfcrophone closer
so the conn reporter could hear
him. ·
·

.~"'-"But as Lange spoke ooemotion·
ally, prosecutor Marcia Clark
flashed dramatic photographs of
the bloody corpses on a 7 -foot
Cj)urtroom screen. One picture had
not been seen before: a close-up of
Goldman's torso and blood-soaked .
jeans, which brought gasps from
his stepmother and sister in the
courtroom.
Lange was thc ·first witness to
~llllnued on page 3

ozens of amendments await gambling subcommittee .

r

but refuse4to let them in.
ers to plan stra1tgy. A reporter said
Mowery cited the state open the media would not know whether
meetings law, which allows com- the meeting pertained only to suatmiuccs and. staff to meet privately egy.
to plan strategy. He also said a
"You have 10 take our word for
Su~e Court opinion allowed. the
it," Mowery said.
·
meeung to be ~laSed to the public.
After about 20 minutes, the
But according to the stale cod~, meeting moved to the committee
that ~ecision apPlied to ~ Pu~bc . room and reponers we~
Sefy1ce Gommtsslon,--whteh-t.s •---=-in. The subCommittee adjourned
JUdtctal body, not a lawmakm~t without actina ori the bill durins
body.
.
lhe ope11 meeting.
Mowery said .the case, deal ins
"Aliything relating to samblin
with Appalachian Power Co., is shady" 11 aid Delesate Am 1~
allows staff 10 meet with lawmak~- Ryan, D-Swnmers, a leading ~
nent of the measure.
I

-.

Low tonlaht In 40s. Cloudy.
Thul'!day, cloudy. Hlahs In Jbe
mld 50.,

•

•

�...
Wedneeday, February 22,.1995

Commentar

•

Mercury'will take a nosediv~ Thursday

OHIO Weather

Page 2-The Dally SenUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Y(edneeday, February 22, 1~. .

Tbunday, Feb. 23
Accu-Weadter'" forecast for

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

Wilson looking to influence GOP convention

. SACRAMENI'O,Calif.-Gov. as a power broker.''
Another Wilson friend conPete Wilson has told at least two
frieods recently that he plans 1o run fmned that the governor likes the
in the Califorl!ia pri111ary as a idea of running solely in California
"favorite son" for the 1996
Republican presidential nomination.
By Jack Anderson
According to these friends, howROBERT L. WINGETT
and
ever, Wilson hedged his statement
Publisher
as a "90 percent probability" Michael Blnstein
leaving himself room to change his
mind.
As a "favorite son," Wilson as a means of ''having mme influMARGARET
LEHEW
CHARLENE ..OEFLlCH
only put his name on the ence on the platform, and with the
would
General Manager
Controllcer
California ballot - a race his candidate he supports for presidenL
advisers betieve he could win easi- The friend added that Wilson has
.
Iy. That would leave him in control "also said that there would probal.ETI'jiRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thaD 300
of
16 percent of the delegates need- bly be a lot of relief among Repub"' words long. AU letters an! subject to editing and must be signed with name,
ed for nomination heading into the lican candidates if he did run as a
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letten
obould be in good taste, addr&lt;ssing issues, not personalities.
GOP convention. "It would also favorite son, because they would
give him si~ificant influence in write off California to him and not
the convenuon while sparing him have 10 come out here and spend
from the hardships of a full-scale millions of doUars il) a primary battle."
.
presidential run.
One confidant summed up WilAs of last week, Wilson bad not
son's thinking: "The governor !Old publicly ruled out a full-scale run
me he liked the idea of going into for the presidency, and friends say
:By WALTER R. MEARS
the convention in San Diego that he remains privately ambivalent on
AP SJiecial Correspondent
August (1996) - his hometown the issue. He has bad aides wlll'ldng
WASHINGTON - Next year, when the first real votes are being cast where he was niayor as well ·in the presidential competition of 1996, governors and Slate legislators with those delegateS committed to full-time on both coasts, in Califor::Want to confront candidates and Congress with prqlOSBI• to shift power him. And then he brokers them out nia and Washington, putting out ·
feelers about a Jl9$jtble candidacv.
p!eir way - and keep it there.
• "The timing is probably not accidental," Nebmska Gov. Ben Nelson
Said of the campaign to exert the combined pressure of the SlateS on the
people who run the federal government
.·
To ignore the request of an overwhelming majority of states "would
demonstrste an arrogance that to the American people would be intolera·
ble," said Gov. Mike Leavitt of Utah.
. Republican Leavitt, Democrat Nelson and five state legislators con·
:ferred in WashinglOn I 0 days ago on the next steps 10ward convening a
Conference of the States, an unpreeeden~ forwn in V!hich their governments would write an agenda for reclaiming what they deem their constitutional powers.
President Clinton, once a governor, favors a return of federal power to
the states. How and how much wiU divide Democrats and Republu:ans.
'
.,
: GOP candidates to challenge Clin10n next year are making power shifting a theme. The lOth Amend111ent to the Constitution reserves to the
states and the people the powerS not delegated to the federal government
by the Constitution.
.
Governors complain it isn't working that way. Their planned conference is a step beyond their cuslomary national meetings, one step short of
a constitutional convention. It is aimed at restoring a lost balance in
power.
.
"For the past. 50 years we've been giving speeches, passing resolutions, ;md nothing happens," Leavitt said. So they want a forum 1o0
potent 1o be ignored.
The goal of rescoring power to state governments already is becoming
an issue in the buildup 10ward the 1996 presidential campaign. Sen. Bob
Dole said his prime goal as majority leader in the Republican Senate
would be 10 "dust off the lOth Amendnient and rescore it to its rightful
place." And now that is a theme of his presidential campaign.
There's a GOP consensus on that; other candidates in a crowded field
agree on power shifting.
·
But saying so and doing so are different things. Ronald Reagan was a
champion of shifting government out of Washington but most of it stayed
put The block !!faRIS to states in the Republican program recall revenue
sharing pushed m an earlier GOP administrstion, only 10 erode for lac1t of
federal funds .and questions about the way the state allotments were sometimes spent.
Four trillion, eight-hundred-ten
. This time, the governors and legislatures are bent on Changing more billion, eight-hundred-sixty million Congress must pass a baianced
· than specific programs - reasoning that what Congress bestows it can as dollars. That's how much the budget amendment 10 the Constitueasil:r. rescind. They want to change the process itself, in some cases by national debt amounted to the last lion. The measure recently passed
the House by the requisite two-·
constitutional amendment
time I checlced.
The dilemma is on display as congressional Republicans push for the
· So staggering is that sum of
: balanced budget amendment; GOP governors and many Democrats back money, it is hard for the average
_ Joseph Perkins
: it.l!!!l ~ w;My 9( seeing it d.one at the expense of busting their budgets.
taXpaying
citizen
who
is
liable
Leavitt said "sandbag statutes" wouldn't withstand the pressure to for $18,362 of that debt ..:.. even to
thirds vote. But the amendment is
: switch costs to states when the deadline approaches. So the Republican picture it in his o(her mind.
too close to call in the Senate.
' governors have been promised an attempt, at least, 10 enact a companion
Maybe this wiD help:
Although the vast majority of
· amendment 10 keep it from happening.
· ·
· If you set 4,810,860,000,000 their constituents favor the bal- They'd like the states empowered to take initiatives like that One like- dollar bills end on end, they would
budget amendment, Califor: ly proposal at their planned conference would be a measure Wlder which stretch to the moon and back. If anced
nia
Sens.
Dianne Feinstein and
· f.11ree-fourths could propose a constitutional amendment, 10 be effective you stacked the same quantity of Barbara Boxer
(otherwise known
: unless two-thirds of Congress voted it down within two years. That itself dollar bills one on top of each as Thelma and Louise)
leading
: would take a constitutional amendment, which would need two-thirds other, the pile would exceed the the charge against theare
mel!~!!re .
· votes in Congress.
.
.
height of Mount Everest - a veri- Both have contrived artful defenses
: Another proposal would be an addition to the IOth Amendment lo state table mountain of debt
of their positions.
: that the couns·are responsible for drawing the boundaries of state and fedIf you bWldled all those dollar
Feinstein says she wants Social
: eral power, something the Supreme Court has twice declin~ to do.
bills together, and dropped them Security exempted from federal
.; Still another would enable two-thirds of the states 10 set expiration . from an aircraft trsveling at, say, budgetary considerations. She's so
' dates for federal laws other than those dealing with defense and foreign 30,000 feet, they would hit the concerned about old folks. Boxer
; affairs.
ground with more desttuctive force says she wants disaster relief funds
That's the ·kind of thing Leavitt says the conference, planned in than the atomic bombs dropped on exempt
from the tlalanced budget
Philadelphia ill late October, ought to consider, while avoiding divisive Nagasalci and Hiroshima.
She's
so
concerned about monsoon
social disputes like abortion, school prayer and gun control.
· This gives you some idea about victims.
Once adopted by the conference, power-shifting proposals would the present size of the national
Feinstein and Boxer have
require approval by three-fourths of the states to be sent to Congress. And debt. And the scary thing about it is notBut
suddenly
become champions of
: at that point, the sponsors think, Washington, its political leaders and can- that President Clinton' has just Social Security
recipients and dis: didates running against·them would have to listen and acL
~eleased a budget that btithely pro- aster· victims. They're champions
JCCts a one-quarter growth m the
the status quo. They're carrying
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice pl'tSideot and colum· debt {another $1.2 trillion) over the of
water
for the free-spending
: nist for The Associated Press, bas reported· on Washington and next five years.
Democrats
in Congress who have
natiooal politics for more than 30 years.
There is only one way 1o bring controlled the federal purse strings
the federal -debt monster to heel: for the past 40 years, durinR which

He ·bas also beeD besieged by con- hands-on .JlC!llOII who doesn't like
fidential calls from fellow gover- to split hts concentration. So his
noFS, members of Con~ress and natural mode would be to devote
national fund-raisers urgmg him co all his time and energy to governing until 1998. And then aJI his
enter the race.
Wilson's supporters-see a cen- time and energy for two years
trist Republican who was reoi:lected toward campaigning for president
in a landslide last November after in 2000. Splitting that level of
being left for dead by many ana- attention would .be very difficult
lysts two years earlier. With a giant for Pde."
Another concern for Wilson,
political base in California, they
believe his tough stance oo illegal according to a recent dinner comimmigrants would appeal to GOP panion. is' be the reaction of his
voters in large states like Texas and chief financial backers. Wilson ·
Florida. Wilson is also exJII:Cted 10 fears that many of his largest backsuppon a controversial mitiative ers might be let down should he
expected to be on the California abandon California for the lure of
ballot in 1996 that would repeal national office. Certainly most of
afflflltalive action. This could earn his chief contributors would suphim critical support from whi!e pan a run for the presidency, but
males - whose votes were pivotal would they feel cheated that he
in the GOP's congressional sweep wasn't pushing a Republican ageo.
da in the statehouse, as they had ·
last November.
Why not run? Our associate hoped?
One name mentioned durmg the
Dale Van Aua recently spoke with
·
conversation
was Donald L. Bren,
several Wilson intimates about the
the
reclusive
billionaire chairman
pros and cons of campaigning for
of
Irvine
Co.,
who has supported
the Oval OffiCe.
Wilson
in
all
his
campaigns since
"There's no question that his
1975.
During
Wilson's
gubernatonatural preference would be not to
rial
campaign
last
fall,
Bren
and his
run," one longtime Wilson aide
company
gave
more
than
$100,000.
said. "He is a finisher. He: is a
Although one Wilson aide claims
Bren was "pretty enthusiastic"
about the prospect of Wilson running for president, others were not
as sure.
According to one participant In
a recent strstegy dinner, contribu·
10rs like Bren "bave an enormous
interest in California and wouldn't
like to see the governor turned
loose after all they'vj: done for
him. They expect him t6 Slay at the
helm."
Also troubling Wilson is the fact
that should he run for president,
California would be left in the
hands of Lt. Gov. Gray Davis, a
Democrat. However, this might not
be enough to hold him back. As
one political adviser P.lll it "If he
wins, be has been elecifd president
and a non-elected Deniocratic governor is dealing, not only with aRepublican president wlio' s obviously very interested in California,
but also, in all likelihood, with a
Republican legislature elected part·
Jy on Willian's coauails."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Biosteio are writers ror Ualled
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

111 court street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~Power

shifting

.

.

:Today in history

:uy The Associated Press
.
; Today is Wednesday , Feb. 22, the 53rd day of 1995. There are 312
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 22, 1732, the first president of the United States, George
WashinglOn, was born at his parents' plantation in the Virginia Colony.
On this date:
. In 1784. a U.S. merchant ship, the Empress of China, left New York
'City for the Far EasL
: In 181~. Spain ceded Florida to ihe United States.
In 1865, Tenne~ adopted a new constirution abolishing slavery.
In 1879, Frank W10field Woolworth opened a five-cent slOre in Utica,
N.Y.
In t889, President Cleveland signed a bill to admit the Dakotas, Montana and Washing10n state to the Union,
1
.
· In 1892, the OsCar Wilde play ''Lady Windennere's Fan" was first
perfonned, at London's St. James's Theater.
. In 1924, Calvm Coolidge dclive[ed the ftrSt presidential radio broadcast from the White House.
•
In 1934, the romantic comedy " It Happened One Night," starring
Clark· Gable and Claudette Colbert, opened at New York's Radio City
Music Hall. ·
In 1935. it bec~e illegal for airplanes 10 fly over the Whiie House.
In 1973, the Umted Stales and Communist China agreed to establish
liaison offices.
.
In 1980. in a srunning UPse~ the United States Olympic hockey team
deteated the Soviets at Lake Placid. N.Y .. 4-3. (The U.S. team went oo to
win the gold medal.)
.
.
.
In 1984, a 12-year~old_ Housco ~ boy known publicly only as David,
who'd spent .most hrs life 10 a plasac bubble because he had no immunity
10 disease, dted 15 days after bemg removed from lhe bubble for a boRe'
marrow trsnsplant
·
Ten years ago: Secretary of Slate George P. Shultz, speaking in San
Francisco, called fill' renewc:&lt;~ asstslance to the Nicaraguan Contrss, and
suggested that fatlure to a1d the rebels could mean more direct U.S.
involvement later on.
!
(

South-Central Obio
Tonight ... Becoming mostly
cloudy. Low around 40. Southwest
winds I0 to 20 mph.
Thursday ...Mostly cloudy and
blustery. Turning colder. High in
the mid 50s falling iitto the inid 40s
in the afternoon.
Extended rorecast
Friday ... A chance of snow

times larger .thari Washington,
somehow manages with about
10,000 fewer civil servants. Baltimore. with 120,000 more residents,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Prison offteials believed the prison
· riot in Lucasville was nearing an
end before inmate Jason Robb
became involved in the negotiations.
Robb, 27 •. is being tried in
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court on charges of aggravated
murder 11nd kidnapping stemming
from the It-day uprising at the

Joseph Spear
· gets by with ·20,000 fewer city
employees.
Reported the Washington Post
in July, 1991: "Someone- a
father. a nephew, a gt'l!lldmO~· in one of every six households in
the District gets a paycheck from
the city."
Free market reform will thus be
. painful, but it is utterly necessary if
Wasbing!On is e.Jer to regain its frscal footing. Despite some of the
highest tax rates 10 the nation, and
despite a $600 millioo-plus annual
payment from the federal government, the District is .currently swing at a budget defiCit of $722 million. Its bonds have been rated·the
equivalent of junk. II is under.
investigation by the Securities and •
Excha!lge Commission on the sus- ·
picion that it deliberately masked
the extent of its financial problems
when seeking loans.
Schools are in such a state of
disrepair that some_are_on the vc:rge

Southern Ohio Corn:ctional Facility in Apr111993.
Prison guard Robert Vallandingham and nine inmates died during
the siege at the maximum-security
prison. Robb is accused of being
one of the inmate ringleaders who
ordered the sta;ings of Vallandingham and one o the prisoners.
Robb is also charged with kidnapping guard Danold Clark.

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded eight calls for assistance
Tuesday. Units responding includ-

bert Miller, VMH;
10:16 J.~.m., Willow Lane,
Samuel Wtlliams, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
10:31 p.m., Reedsville, Louise
Posey, VMH.
,
RUTLAND
5:16p.m., Meigs Mine 31, Don
Marcum, GMC vi' LifeFlight II.
TUPPERS PLAINS
9:18 a.m., Betzing Road, Ida
Pooler, St. Joseph's Hospital.
In addition, transfer units han·
died three calls.

MIDDLEPOR'(
11:52 a.m., motor-vehicle accident at intersection of Fourth
Avenue and Main S~t, Bernice
Durst was trsnsported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital while Karen
Gilkey was later transported to Grant Medical Center via ·Grant
LifeFlight I:
· 12:39 p.m .. Mill Street, Hazel
Turner, Holzer MedicAl Center.
POMEROY
10:54 a.m., Vine Stree~ Edward
Evans, VMH.
RACINE
VETERANS MEMORIAL
8:48 'a.m., state Route 338, HerTuesday admissions - Melvin
Morris, Pomeroy; Opal CTemeans,
Pomeroy
.
Tuesday discharges - Gilbert
Am Ele Power .......;......... - ....34 JIB
Zwilling, Pomeroy; Cora Woodar\1,
Akzo ......................... _,...........57 1/4
Pom.eroy; Lee Layne, Racine; HerAsblaod OU ......--....::.... _ ....:U SIB
man Lawson, Pomeroy

time the natioiuil debt has giown by merce Commission and the Rural
1,800 percent.
Electrification Administrstioo. And
Feinstein and Boxer know full certain progtams would be shrunk
well that neither a Democrat nor or pared from the budget altogethRepublican Congress would ever er, like agriculture subsidies. weldeny benefits to folks on Social fare and foreign aid.
Opponents of the balanced bllilSecurity. That would be political
suicide. And they know that neither get amendment suggest all of these
a Democrat nor Republican ·cuts will happen overnight. But
Congress would tum away earth- under terms of the measure now
quake or hurricane or flood vic- before the Senate, Congress will
have until 2002 10 square the federurns.
Foes of the balanced budget al books. Seven years is a sufficient
amendment are demagoguing period of time to whittle a $200 bilSocial Security and disaster relief lion-a-year deficit down· to zero a
to deflect attention away from the year. It's ample time for governareas of the budget where the ment bureaucrats displaced tiy budspending cuts really will come get cuts to fmd gainful employment
from. They don't want co face up to off the public payroll.
the hard choices that wiD be neces- , The mounting federal debt sary if the federal government is no growing at a rate of more than $1
longer allowed to run $200 l&gt;illion billion every business day - is a
clear and present danger to Ameria year defiCits.
If the Constitution requires that ca's future prosperity. Unless
Congress spend no more money Congress does the right thing and
each year than the government passes the balanced budget amendbrings in, every federal agency and . ment, no one reading these words
program will have to justify its will live to see that debt retired.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
continued existence.
Certain Cabinet departments ror The Sao DitRO Uoloa-Trl·
would be ripe targets ·for downsiz- buoe.
(For information on bow to
ing - Commerce, Energy, Education, Housing and Urban Develop~ communicate electronically_with
ment. Obsolete agencies would be this columnist and others, cooeliminated, like the Interstate Com- tact America Online by caiUng J.
800·827-6364, exL 8317.)

of being declared tire haZards. Stu- per hour, requiring visitors to carry
dent test sco.tJ;.LBre ..low. The about a pound of quarters for a
dropout tate is high. The popula- short stay.
tion is shrinking as the mtddle
- With the school srstem in
class, black and white, flees to the terrible disarray, the Distnct Board
suburbs.
of Education, already the highest
There is 'one category, though, . paid in the nation, last fall y.ave
in which D.C . is among the ttself an II percent cost of li&gt;'ing
nation's leaders: One in eight resi- . pay raise. When the story broke,
dents is in prison or jail, or on pro- some members refused to acc.ept
bation or parole. Indeed, there are the hike, then quietly took the raise
SQ m1111y "ex-offenders" in the city
·after the conuoversy cooled.
that recently elected Mayor Marion
Many have offered suggestions
Barry ~ampaigned on the promise for Washington's .salvation. Newt
10 create an "office of ex-offend- Gingrich Wants to cede it bac:k to
ers' affairs." It is a cause dear to Maryland, which donated the land
his heart, perhaps because be is an on which the city sits 200 years
ex-offender himself, having served ago. Patrick Buchanan believes it
should become a federal territory.
time for cocaine use.
Jack
KC~Dp has recommended it be
I haven't the space to impart the
relieved
of federal taxes and turned
true. flavor of life in this tarnished
into
.an
enterprise
zone along the
lown, but let me try to give you just
lines
of
Hong
Kong.
a taste:
I like that. But first it must
- Wbile seeking higher taxes
•.
oo Pllrkinll. cigarettes, gasoline and recant its socialist pasL
Joseph Spear ls a 1711dk:ated
hc8lth caiC. former may!ll' Sharon
PraU Kelly hired a makeup artist to writer ror Newspaper E•terprlle
powder bet nose f.or photo ops~ · Association
(For larormatloo oa ltow to
Kelly also kept a round-the-clock
communicate electrook:ally wllb
security detail that cost $1 million.
- With coffers running dry in tills columnist and otlters, ·coa1994, the council doubled some . tact America OnUne by calUoK.l·
parking me(er rates from $1 to $2 . 800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

not1beast. Dry elsewhere. Lows 20
to 2S and highs in the upper 20s to
mid30s.
Saturday ...Dry. Lows 20 co 25
and highs in the upper 30s to middle40s.
Sunday ...A chance of showers.
Lows in the· 30s and highs in the
upper 40s to lower 50s.

Jurors hear tapes
of talks during riot

Hospital news

LDI.

ACrOSS the nati"On
SciUert'Jd rain and snow flurries
fell in the NorthCISt this morning,
while the West continued to enjoy
spriDglike tempc:raturt3.
•
Cold weather pressing down
from Canada was expected to produce snow across the upper Great
Lahs and upper Middle West.
Unseasonably warm weather
was expected to continue today in
the Nottbwest, with temperatures
reaching into the high 60s and 70s
in Washington and .Oregon and into

· ""'"~
·
the 80s m
~CJm!l_ Record dailY_ hi$11 temperatures
were recorded 10 several Western
~ts. including 78 degrees in Redding , Calif., one degree higher than
~ 1964 ,record. anc1 7~ degrees in
Mtles Cuy, Mont., stx degrees
higher than the 1906 record.
A s!Orm system over northwest
Mexico was fueling scattered
showeu and thunderstorms in
southern parts of California, Aril\01111, New Mexico, extreme southern Utah, southwest Colorado and
western Texas. TemperatureS in the
Southwest were expected in the 70s
and 80s.

contlnuedfrompag• 1
suggest that Ms. Simpson was Lange said: " Perhaps that he was
attacked first. Prosecutors have said surprised."
Under cross-examination by
MJ. Simpson was the target and
Goldman was killed because he defense auomey Johnni~ Cochran ·
showed up at the wrong place at the Jr., Lange acknowledged that Goldwrong time, returning glasses left man apparently put up a fight and
at the restaurant where he waited could have used his keys to woUnd
tables and MJ. Simpson ate her last the assailant. He also acknowledged that the fight between Gold- .
meal.
The tip-off to the order of attaCk man and his killer took place in an
was the victims' feet, said Lange, area 5-foot-8 by 4-foot-2.
Cochran was sugy.esting that
wbo has spent 20 years on the
whoever
grappled wtth Goldman
homicide beaL
would
have
cuts and bruises. He
Ms. Simpson was shoeless, her
has
shown
the
jury pholos of Simpfeet clear of blood. She "~
went down initially before i fi$ht son, his body virtually Wlmarkea
really ensued with the other VIC· two days after the killings.
Near Goldman's feet lay his
tim," Lange said, and "obviously
didn '1 walk through the blood dur- pager. At 10:47 a.m ., before his
body had been loaded inlO a coroing the struggle."
Conversely. there was blood on ner's van, it went off and flashed
the soles of Goldman's white shoes the number of the Mezzaluna
and blood soaked through one toe, restaurant
Lange trscked down the caller.
indicating he bad struggled with his
assailant while Ms . Simpson's It was a co-woricer concerned that
Goldman hadn't arrived for wak.
blood flowed neatby, Lange said.
Earlier Tue.sday, a maid who
Lange also described a "mshly
could
give Simpson an alibi for the
dug-out" hole in the tight area
night
of
the murders was ordered to
where Goldman's body was found.
"Perhaps. this was done with the appear in court Friday so that Ito
flailing of feet or movement within can decide whether to videotape
that area between the suspect and 1rer testimony.
Simpson's lawyers warned that
the victim," he said.
When asked what conclusions the witness, Rosa-Lopez, may flee
he could draw from keys being to her native El Salvador because
knocked out of Goldman's hands, of what she feels is harassment
from the news media.

Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were recorded in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
, Certificate, Mary Elizabeth D.
Chapman to Martha 0. Vennari,
Pomeroy lot;
Deed, Roben A Davis to Kimberly A. Davis, Tuppers Plains lots;
Deed, Lorraine P. Aeiker to
Cindy Aeilcer. Chester:
Deed, Liljda Price to Maureen
Bums. Rutlatid, 17.87 acres;
Deed, William Ray and Rebecca
Barber t_oJe~~ S. !!nd Amy B. ·

Stocks

AT&amp;T ..............- ••·--·-..- ....50 t/8

Electrolysis Provides Painless
Treatment For Hair Removal

•

Cnn dy Cox docs not
remembe r her junior and senior
years of high school. Her
memory and perceptions were
clouded by Valium, drug doctors
presc ribed for her bctausc the y
feh the dark , coarse hair lhllt hnd
covered her face since the age of
14 resu hed from a ~ychological
problem
Co:J;, 36 year-old V1cnna
res1de nt. saJd she did not beheve
thulthe hair covenng the sides of
her face and lip. "like u man 's
bcurd," resulted from her de~ 1res
for anent1on . u the doctor~
s.ugge~lcd .,She 111:11rched for a

Multlm~dla lne. '"'"'"'"''--.l9118

Polo I Banrorp ·--.........._, ____ 19
R~kweU

............_ •• ,............38 7184

Robbins &amp; Myen.. .................lO 314
Royal Dutcb ........- ............... 115 t/2
Shoney's loc ......,____ ....,.... JI JIB
Star Bank ...........- ....·--···--42 1/4

bener nn&lt;wer. Today. she hms

I learned the cause of her d1~rder

Wendy lot'!. --·--·.... - .....-.17 1/2
Worthington 1Dd.................... t9 SIB

-·-·-

Stock reports ue the 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided ·by Advesl or
Ga!Upolls.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lB-96())
Pu bli shed every afte rn oon. M o nd:~y through

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meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Hemlock Grove Christian Church.
Catlierine Russell, a Mexican missionary, will speak.

Round/square daaee set
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 will hold a round and square
dance from 8-11 p.m. Saturday.
Music by the Happy Hollow Boys.

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care needs.
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PICKENS

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

HARDWARE

Inside Mtlp County
13 Week.! ......... . . ......
. ...... $23 92
26 Weeks .. ..... . .
. .... $.47 06
52 WO&lt;b .•... .'........,. ........................... .. $92.56
Illites Oubiklt Melp County
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,MASON, Y. Yl.
304·773·5583

Before Electrolysis

After Electrolysis

HOURS 9·7 TUE -SA T
6000 GRAND CENTRAL AVE VIENNA WV 295·4533

•

h

zero.

Local briefs--..,
Woman

1 •

i~iured in

wreck

A Middleport woman was uansporled via Grant LifeFlight II to
Columbus fill' injuries sustained in an accident late Tuesday morning. according to Middleport Police Department reporu.
.
Bernice A Durst of Middleport was driving along Main Street.10
her 1988 Pontiac when her car was hit in the front end by acardriven by Karen Gilkey, also of Middleport, J!CC(ll'ding to a Middleport
Police report
Gilkey failed to stop at a stop sign while driving on Fourtlt
Avenue and struck Durst's car, teCOids show.
•
Both women were trsnsported by Middlcp!ll't sq~ to Velef!W
Memorial Hospital. Gilkey was then trallSilOI'Ied VII G~t. Uf~
Flight helicopter to Grant Medical Center where she remams m fur ·
condition.
·
A VMH nursing supervisor said Durst was later treated and
released.
·
Gilkey was cited with failure to yield, records show.

Charges to be filed in case
Charges of receiving s10len prilperty will be filed UJainsl a Tuppers Plains youth for possession of a stereo and speakers ~

slolen from a vehicle in Middleport Friday night•. according to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
.
The stereo and speakers were recovered but a radar detector ts
still missing, he added.
·
An additional arrest is expected. Soulsbv said.

Deputies probe vandalism

.. Ttie Meigs County Sheriff's Department received a ~port that
the restroom at ihe roadside rest on U.S. 33 was spray pamted after
10 p.m . Monday.
nh
In addition, deputies Sunday took ~eportS that sev~ml gree OUS·
cs at Harris Farms in Portland leased ~Y Dale Htll and Tyro,ne
Brinager had been. damaged._ The plasuc was cut and fue exun·
guishers were ernpued, ~~ 10 ~e report
The incidents aril Wlder 10vesbgauon.

Today's livestock report
stock Associatioo:
Cattle: 1.00 to 1.50 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 65.0073.00; select62.00-66.50.
Slaughter heifers:· choice 43.0071.50; select61.00-66.50.
.
Cows: steady to 1.00 lower; all
cows 54.00 and down.
BuUs: steady; all bulls 58.75 and
down.
·
Veal calves: higher; choice
140.00 and down.

CHICAGO (Special) • Research
from centers around th~ world report ·
what ancient healers knew thousands
of years ago -- rhat vinegar is tile
wonder elixir for a ileQ/thier life.
Since ancient tiroes a ·daily dose
of apple elder v-inegar hu been
taken for good heithh and l!l control
appetite.
Even Japaii's feared Samurai
warriors of
relied on a
power.
kitchen .

npoitsw

tht curtlllvt

Vinegar ..•

Keep The ~. -~~~~

10% OFF FIRST OFFICE VISIT!
TREATMENT PRICES: 1 HR • $33 ·1/2 HR. $22

4

·
· · 1 d'
eavrer
ratn,
!nc u mg
potentia! fl&amp;Sh noo~IRg, was
expected tn 1011them Arizona.
Sunny but unseasonably cool
weather was .expected today !a the
Southeast. With temperatures tn the
60s and 70s.
Temperatures wen: expected to
be m the 20s to ~s m Ne!" England, 4~s to 5~ m the _M•dwest,
and 50s tn ~;he ~id-Atlanuc SlateS.
The na~on s hot spot Tuesday
was Harltnge~! T_eus_, at 85
degrees. Two ctlles .m Minn~so':',
Orr and Eveleth, hu the nauon s
low temperatwe of S degrees below
o~e

A Teaspoo"
ADay Helps

wu 1ng. ·~ho ~mg or tweezmg
In 1978. Coil bega n
how to treat 11.
Two of h ~ r female rus.tomers Electrolysis treatments 10 further
Now. at her office tn Vien_na. uSe'd stones to try to "5and the come t her problem. but at lhat
she he lp~ others by pl'acllcmg hair off. she 5111 d.
time the treaunem~ were painful
E!~.--ctro l ys1s. a process that use s
''The people that h11ve this She som_ctime s und erwe nt
h1gh frequency curren ts to problem .want something done. E\e(;trolySIS more th an once a
penna11ently rr:move hair.
They'll uy anythmg."
Wee k. "dependi ng on my pam
Her ow n Blectro'lysis
Such temporary methods of tol.::mnceforthat da)'.''
trenlmenu: sparked her mtere ~ 1m· half rem oval can make 1he
Over time. her facial hair
the ne14 Her de~rr.:: . ro_ help problem 'worse, ~he said The grew li~uer and softer.
othen wrth problems slm&amp;lor 10 skin uses hair a1 a defense, and
Knowr ng
what
the
~e r owo. l~elher with her belief grow!i lhlcker ha 1r to proJect Electrolysis treatment hod done
In profe!ullonohsm , led her ro Itse lf when lrrilated. People who fo( her, both from the standpoi~ t
becurnc a c,crt1fied pro~ess1on~l need to undergo muny treat menls of her apperuance and selrEieclrologlst. Co:c. rece1Yed th1s shoul d undeuland that confidence , Cox. enrolled In
designation in October _1989, Electrolysis is less pnJnfultoday : courses_in pcrparationlo. become
lifter
n nnuonal 1ome of her clients have fallen a Cert1f1ed Electrologlll. She
·
· ' -~
asleep during treatment, Cox completed courses through the
"After havin g the hai r said.
, C11.l1fornla
CoJiege
of
problem I turve had myself, I had
Before leaarning how to tn::al Electrology nnd ThennoiQgy in
dnve 10 _myself to help oth7' ' her cond11ion properly, Cox 1986. Oct 14. 1989 she became
pwple ::v•th nn eu:eu hall rem o~ed her facial ho.ir by the finlt Certified Elecuologl51
problem. she Na ld .
shaYJn(l:, ~omelime s twice dally. lh ro ug h
I he
American
Co11 sn1d Eleclolym 11 th_e Soon , dark half ah.o bcaan Elecuology Association in the
I pennnn~nt method of ha1r growing on her breasts, stomach, slate of W. Va In Oct 1990 she
Dunng •he procedun:. a 6ack and ai'm5
,
tra~eled to Modeslo, CA to the
1 probe •s msened 1n1o the
Cox
v•1 rted doclors California Colle1e for more
foll1de, _relen~~ng a cufTI': nl throughout Ohio and underwent u .lensive training with Ihe
that reocts With motsture around eAploratory surgery, hoping to founder of the college. Rose
the harr 10 produce a causuc lye . determme the ca use of her Mineni
·
lye kill~ the hn~r root The condition. It wun"t until 1978,
Co11 's office: on Orand Central
1 then co n be removed wilh however. lhot doctors al John Ave ., m Vienna is under the
'·peuted and the trealm.::nl Hopki ns Universi ty Hos pital name of Candy's Elcctrolys•a .
"'' I
until the cella from found her disorder wu caused The Electrologlsll at Ca ndy 's
the hair grows __nr_e by 11 r&amp;re, gene li c glandular Electroly&amp;iJ have upcrienced
deltroyed When Electrolyasls IS condition that caused her body to their own battle with a hair
performed (;orrect ly,
the produce too much androgen, a problem Wtth their Cllptrience.
surrounding skin 1s not h~ed . male hormone Ihat producer. they ore not only qu11lifled in
S1nce .sh.:: began worlung u ha ir.
rem o~mg unwanted hair, but of
un Electrologis t. Co11 said she
Docto r's pre scribed steroid giv•n g lhe und.::rst11ndmg and
ha~ reahzed many women share med 1ca t1on to control the encoum&amp;emcn t needed hy those
her problem. and are de~pcrate to hor mone product1on of the who h3ve tht problem .
haVe fnc1nl htm rernoved. Most adrena l gland Cox. mu st 11lke the
Write for free brochure.
or them han used temporary medicouon for the (est of her Licensed in Maryltllld.
hair removol mehtods, such as life.

,.

S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio direct hog prices a~ selected
buying points Wednesday by 'The
U.S . Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
acres;
cents lower; demand slighL
U.S. ·1-3, 230·260 lbs., country
Deed, Charles E. and Jennie·
Bowles to Jennie Bowles, Rutland, points 37.00-38.25, a few 38.50;
plants 33.50-37.00.
.85 acres;
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs., country
Deed, Dorothy Whaley to Keith
R. Whaley, Bedford parcel-;
points 33.50-37.00.
Prices from The Producers LiveDeed. Greta M. Suttle 10 Rick L.
and Denise D. Garber. Lebanon
parcels.

Trustees to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
Mexican mls&amp;loaary IPeBks
.
will
meet at 6:30 p.m. March I at
The Meigs County Church of
the
PageviUe
Township building.
Christ Women's Fellowship will

Bob Evans- ·---·---..... _ ....20 SIB
CbiiDploD llld. ··:··"..................,..20
Cbumlng Sbop.. --..·-·----·6 318
City Holdlng ...._ ............._ ....l7 71B
Federal MllJlul.-......,, ___ ;..,181/2
Goodyeu T &amp;R -------... .36 1/2
K·mart ··--········· .. - ..................... 14
Lands End ....... _ ..,,................ 16 71B
Limited (11(.............. _ ....._ .......... 18

\

Barber. Olive, 70 acre lot;
Deed, Hobson Church of Christ
to Hobson Christian Fellowship, ·
Salisbury lot;
Deed, Conway Lumber Co.,
Inc., to Julie Ann and John David
Jr. Wandling, I;ledford, 15.106

Meigs announcements

Bank One·- -·--------·-.28 3/4

Socialism thrives in the District
There is only one sure way for
the District of Columbia to crawl
out of the economic morass in
which it· is about to suffocate: It
must adopt the Spear Foundatioo's
three-step program for fiscal health
and spiritual happiness.
First, the cuy council must
acknowledge in an offiCial resolution thai it is, like' the old Soviet
Union and the natio11s of Eastern
Europe, .;ust one more failed socialISt expenment
Second, the mayor and city
council must throw themselves on
the mercy of the Congress and
plead for help oo the grounds that it
1s at least as deserving as Russia,
Poland. and B~l!fa.ria and other
recovenng soctalist governments
receiving U.S. aid., .
Third. it must adopt li free market economy.
..
I am well aware that this is a
demanding rehabilitation program
for a regime that gives new meaning to the cliche "bloated bureaucra_cy." Qepending On the source
you consult, the District's work
fo(ce is somewhere between
42,000 and 50,000 - about eight
percent of the llltal popO)atiori. By
way of contrast, Chlcag_o, ~ive

· and sunri3c Th~y at 7:14
p.m.

Detective...

Taming the federal-debt monster

.

87 The AIIIOCiated Press
Temperatwes across Ohio will
take a nosedive 00 Thursday after a
b ·ef
lod
~
~ warmup
ay, orecasters
A cold front is expected 10 send
the mercury falling through the day

Thursday after peaking in the
mmning. On Friday the high! will
be mostly in the 20~. the National
Weather Service said.
Some rain and snow is possible
on Thursday.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 70 degrees in 1930
while the record tow was -8 in
1963. Sunset tonight will be at 6: IS

ed:

~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

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Doctor
Away

since the
of vinegar. .
You'll learn
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weight with a meal-time vinegar
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Scientific te$ts ,how OJganic
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vitamins and miner* -- oyer 93
different components -- to fight
ailments.
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than 70 different research
You can charge to your VISN
stu&lt;lics have verified rhat brta ,
MosterCaro by mail . Be"sure to
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~ Sports

Wednaeiday, February 22, 1995

The Daily Sentinel
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page

Wedneedey, February 22, 1995

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

.-----~--~~~------------------:-------------------------------------------------~------------------------------- ~·~·----------~Pag~~·~- =4~·

~ M'~iQ~~ysu;xit cagefest atfer 79-61 loss to River Valley

!

s1de baseline Jumper.
Those {KliDIS, countered by lhree
-•-•-•Cochrane put lhe Raiders back from River Valley in lhe period's
MEIGS
on top when his ~ight-foot jumper last4:35, cut~ Gallians' lead to a
(12-10-23·16::61)
from the nght wtn~ gave them a 52-45 margan that stood at the
Travis Abbott 7/9-0/2-3/5=17,
14-12 advantage w1th 46 seconds q~'send.
.
·
Cass Cleland 6/13-0/0·1/3=13,
lert.
A couple (or hiS players) were Paul Pullins 4/1~1·1/2--9, Gary
Raiders puU away
in foul trou'!,le ll!ld were: playing Stanley __3/6-1/4·0/0=9, Benny
Stanley wasted lillie time filling . not '? lose, sa1d Jenka~s , w~o Ewing W2·2/B..()J3=6, Nick Haning
lhe two-point gap when his right· wasn t lhe only-coach nusmg Cain 0/0-1/2-~5. Adam Hendrix 1/3·
side baseline jumper round the wilh his" players for "not playing 010-0/0=2, Jerod Holman 0/0-011·
mark 49 seconds into lhe second defense.
010=0, Mark Mills 0/1-0/i-0/0=0.
quarter tied lhe game at 14. That
However, lhe 11-for-21 field· Totals: ll/~19-7/15=61
was lhe game's last deadlock.
goal shooting lhe Marauders pro·
Rebounds - 30 (Cleland 8,
The next three minutes cradled ~uced in act~ aban~ them Abbou&amp;Ewing7each)
the Raiders' 14-2 run fueled by m lhe last penod, w~ ~u6-forABiiiiU-N/A
four three-pointers - two by I~ effo~l re~ted ~amly an seven
Steals-N/A
senior guard Jason Stout (5 :56 ma~ses an nan~ tnes from thr~Tumovera -11 .
from lhe left wing and 5:13 from poant l~d. Raver Valley, wh!ch
Fouls-18
lhe left comer) and two from jwiior turned m lhesc field-goal shooting
-guard and eventual marksmanship mwks in lhe previous periods &lt;6·
RIVER VALLEY
winner Greg James (4:48 from· !he 14, 8-15 and 7-15), kept pace w1th
(14-:zt-17-l7=79)
left wing and 3;54 from the left its previous efforts in lhe last eight
Greg James 2/4-3/5-717=20.
comer).
•
minutes (5~10).
.
Jason Stout 1/1-4/6-~16, Doug
The Raiders were able to do that
"Ole Raiders locked up lheu farst Lloyd 7/1 0-0/2-1/2= 15, James
in l?art ~ecause ~f a harrying to~ent victory in two years by Cochrane 1/3-3/4-2/2=13, Jamie
defense m lhe pamtlhat forced making 15 of 20 ~ ~s an the Graham 0/5-1/4-3/4=6, Bruce
Meigs to miss six of seven shots in fourth quarter, ancludmg the Ward 317-0/0-0/3=6, Larry Hunt
the paint in the second quarter. game's last nine poipts.
1/2-0IO-O.Q=2. John Browning 0/0Afler weathering Ward's collecting
·
0/0-112=1, Brett Boolhe 0/1-0/0his tliird foul tale in lhe period and
The Raiders will host third· 0/0=0. Totals: 15/33-11121·
GETIING BY - Melga gllll"d Benny Ewlag gelS by River Val· ·
a five-point Meigs uprising in lhe seeded Warren Local (14-6) Sawr- 16121=79
ley's
Jamie Graham In the seeond quarter of Tuesday-night's Diviquarter's last four minutes, they day at 6:30 p.m. for the upper·.
Rebounds- 32 (James 8)
sion
n
sectional tOurnament opener on the Unlvenlty or Rio Gnnde .
boosted !heir lead to a 13-point gulf bracket title.
'
Ass1s1s- 21 (Graham 9)
campus, where the Marauden lost 79.-61. Ewing ltolsbed with sb:
by halftime on junior center Larry
The Marauders will honor
Steals-4
polots, which came three-pointers. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Hunt's last-second layup.
seniors Benny Ewing, Adam HenTumovera -11
Osborne)
"We missed a lot of shot oppor- drix and Jerod Holman in their
Fouls- 16 '
tunities in the paint early, and they
were shooting threes and making . ,-----~-----~---~----------­
lhem." said Skinner of that portion
of the second quarter.
·The first four minutes of the
third quarler saw both learns play
"you score, I score" until the
Raiders had a 12-point lead with
two minutes left,
Abbott and fellow junior Cass
Cleland, who ended lhe night as the

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Meigs matmen
third in TVC
tournament
. .The Meigs Marauder wrestling
team fmished in lhird place in lhe
Tn-Valley Conference dual championships held at Belpre High
School on Feb. 11.
Belpre, which fanished in fmt
place wilh ~ 204 team score, was·
followed by Nelsonville- York
(169), Meigs (150), Federal Hock·
ing (145) and Trimble (62).
·
Adam Sheets, in the 189-pound
class, fanished wilh farst learn ·allT.V&lt;:; honors by placing first and
pmnang all opponents.
.·
Second-team honors went to
Adam Th&lt;?mas (11 2), Jay Fisher
(130), lyfake Parker (160) and
heavywe~ght Josh Howard
.
Third-place honors "went to
Shawn Taylor (125), Jerod Cook
(140), Shannon Staats (171) and
Craig Knight (215).
In a recent meet at lhe Athens
lnvitationa), lhe ftiarauders placed
fifth. . .
.
Howard waS" second in the
heavyweight division wilh lhree
wins and a loss. Sheets pinned all
opponents en route to another 189pound class title.
The Marauders wiD take part in
the sectionals at Warren Local
High School' Saturday. Other
sc.hools taking part will be Alhens,
R1ver Valley, Gallia Academy,
Morgan, Meadowl:rook, Maysville
Philo and lhe host Warriors. Th~
top four wrestlers will advance to
district tournament action at St.
John's Aren.a in Steubenville on
March 3 and 4. ·

FACTORYAU~

7:30p.m.

Basketball

Sacramemo at New Yotk. 7:30 p.m.

~atAdmta, 7:30p.m.

·

Dcboi1at Hw.ton,l:30 _p.m.

....

NCAA Division I

EASTERN CONFERENCE

..
~

IMa

AU.IcDI*....

ll L l.cl.

Orlando .......... ~.;... AO 12 .1fH
New Yo.t ..............33 ·II .647
a.........................21 30 .AI2
New J....y ........... .21 32 .396

•

MUmi .................... l9 32 .373
PhilodoJPUa ........... u :n .211

..

Clw! -................ 33 19 .63.5

w"""'-............ 12.

.,''

31

men's scores'

g

a-c..u.. 7S

Rbodo l~and 76, Ala.-Bizmi.naham 72
SL Ja~qil'l63, Rul£an 61
SL Peter' I 76, Loyol., Md.. "12
SynOUIO IS,I'IIIIIouF 12

25

v

Temple 72. We.t .Virginii.SO

CIJM!LAND .......32 20 .61S
lndiana ...................30 2D .600
OUuao............... ,..2.1 Tl .491
Atlanla .................. .2A :IS .462

•

Mi!woukcc ............ .20 32 .385
32 313

•'

o.c.viL ................... I9

•

Soutb

I

KaWCI&lt;y 72, Alobomo S2
W. CNali.na 13, Oc.:q;ia.Swthcm 76

2

7.5

9
13

Midwest '

m..aucoao 79, SL Xavier sa

I~

g

.6rl .4.5
All · 14.5
.401 IS.S

~

.

•
•

Iam

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Ua.A 88, Slanfml 7'1

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Phocnix ..................40
Scauli .................... 35

...'

L.A. I.Akon ...........n

12 .769

15 .700
11 .6:13

Sacmncnto ............ 28 21
Portllnd ................ Zl 23

•

•
i

.571
.540

IOJ
12

Goldm Stat.c ..........16 34 .320
L.A. Qippen ...........9 43 .173

23

31

Tuesday's scores

..
..

CLEVELAND 99. New Yod&lt; 91
D.Uu 102. Wuhin8'ort97
Oticago 10:5, Atlanta 81
San Antonio 98, HOUMn 91'
Denver 118, L.A. Clippcn80
8o61an 129, Phocnh Ill
Pa1lmd 99, Minntma &amp;6

.,

'Ioolgbt's games
Indiarw. et New Jcne)', 7:10p.m.
Sac~Uncnto

·-•'

uOwlone,. 7:30_1!_.m .

WuhinstM It Milwaukee. 1:JO p.m .
PhocnU. Ill. San Antonio. &amp;:30 p.m.
I.A. ,C lippen • Ullh, 9 p.m.
MinneloU 11 Seattle., 10 p.m.
Phlla4clphia II L.A. Lak.e.n . 10:30

p.m.
Pwtland It Ooldm Sta&amp;e,l0:30 p.m.

Thursday's games

..

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..

I

•

SMITHFIELD

..

·

•

9:30~8 MON-.

TU~~~~AT. .
E

KED PICNIC

.

·
whole LB. ·
Hams •••••••••••••••••••••••••
1

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79

••
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••
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Friday's games
RavenswOod at Point Pleasant
Southern vs. Federal Hocking,
.
Athens, 6:30p.m.
Ironton vs. Alhens at Rio Grande •
6:30p.m.
Rock Hill vs .Gallipolis at Rio
·Grande, 8:15p.m.
Wheelersburg vs. South Webster at
Ironton, 6:30p.m .
Fairland vs. Oak Hill at Ironton,
·
8:15p.m.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

STOKELYS
TOMATO JUICE
460Z.

FROM DON WOOD:

'All 01 These H11ve
Been Inspected 42
Times for You! ·

VAN CAMP PORK&amp;
BEANS

$

16 OZ.

•

94Ford
Ranger ·
Supercab XLT

$-~

Local trade,

clean ................ :.

3,99.5

92 Ford Festiva 2 door, 5 speed . sport stripes .............. '4495
89 Chevrolet Corsica 4 door. compaot sedan ...• ..... 54995
85 Lincoln Town Car Clean. affordable luxury car ....... 54995
86 Mazda RX-7 Automtic, air, cassette ............................. 54995
· 88 Ford Aerostar XL Auto . air. cruise, tilL . ....... '5995
90 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door. auto ..- a•r. rM .. ........... ... '5995
92 Nissan Sentra 4 dr., 5 speed, local trade ... .. ..... '6495
91 Chevrolet S-10 Local trade, 4 cyl., s speed .... ... '6995
89 Buick Regal GS V6, auto • air con d........ ...... ... ....... '6995

G~;D
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8
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COUPON

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Additional Purchases $1 .39 Without Coupon
1'
Good Only Al.Powelf'a Super Valu
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1 ___ • ________ IJ'!!It 1J&gt;tr cuotomer
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YOURINDEPlNDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

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GROUND

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$ .

COUPON . -1--BAG45 i25--

1.89 WITH COUPON

!:

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on ONE Nabisqo Shreclclecl Wheat Spoon Size 17.2 11
oz. stze or Nabtsco Shredded Wheat 'N Bran 18 oz . I
11
size either variety Effective 2·19thru 2-25 -95
1

RETAI~ Ktall General Food1 . Inc. Of 1 aublld•ary w111ra•mDur•• ~~ l•c•
1
valve !;II lh1s coupon plo..11 tw.ndllng If aul;mitted in compha nc11 with 111 Coupon
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Aedemptfc&gt;n PoliCy pt"e\IIOuiiV I)IOYid&amp;d to you ~nrl ava~1'bl• upon requnt
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OtltH" ••pres ; Con•um• ; One couon v•Jid lor rtem(li) 1r.dtCI Itd My 01"-' utt
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14 - 15 oz.

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92 Mercury Topaz 4 dr., auto., air, cruise, tilL .......... '7999
·91 Nissan Stanza Local trade ........ .................................s7995
92 Chevy S-10 5 speed, 4 cyl., sport stripes· ................ '7995
92 Mercury Sable OS V6, auto • loaded!. .....................57995
9:4 Escort XL Wagon Auto., air, cruise. tilt .:............... '9995
89 Ford Bronco 114 wo, auto, air.YS . .................. '10,495
90 Jeep Wrangler 4x4 Auto .. hardtop, low miles ....'12,495
93 Ford Taurus GL 4 dr.• vs. auto.,loaded ....... ,....... '12,995
93 Toyota 4x4 5 speed, local trade ................ :. ....... '13,995
2 o choose) from, atr loaded

STOKELY
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111 Second St., Pomeroy

c

•

~~A!I'A!I'A~A!"•••••••••••••

••

DOWNTOWN POMEROY - 992-3671

4 ROLL PKG.
I

Wash Syslem Helps Remove the
Toug1hesl Food Soils •
•

This Week's Special:
BARBEQUE

(\

4 door automatic, atr sharp car

Saturday's.games
Logan vs. Miami Trace. at Alhens,
8:15p.m.
Greenfield vs. Vinton County, at
Chillicolhe, 3 p.m.
River Valley vs. Warren Local, at
Rio Grande, 6:30p.m. . ·
Jackson vs. Portsmouth , at Rio
Grande, S: 15 p.m.

No·fitist,, 14.4CU . Ft. Rolrlnori1iO.~

CHARM IN
TOILET
TISSUE

92 BUICK SKYLARK

Thursday's game
Wahama at Meigs (titu)

Odendo va. Boatm 1t IWd'cml. Com.,

:-

31(!08 1257
51351 1176
s13116 1089
61166 1083
61398 1282
613171139
81302 1108
71271 1175
8 1421 1340·
101205 1175
11 1221 1297
121311 1393
121139 1176
13 1344 1309
.131246·1297
13 1059 1163 ·
IS 1190 1478

,
Tuesday's SC(!re5
•
Roane County 74, Point Pleasant64
River Valley 79, Meigs 61
Jackson 49. Soulh Point47
Oak HiD 59. Chesapeake 58 (OT)

'Model

Model ET18DKXB

...__

ll 1. I l Of

Monday's score
Southern 62, Nels-York 53

No-Frost,
Retrlgeralor

2liTERS

1994-95-lllgam..

Wbeelersburg ...... 17
Logan ........... :...... IS
Marieuil ................1 s
Warren Loca1 ...... 14
Fairland ............... l4
Greenfield .......... .14
x-Chesapeake ...... l3
Ponsmouth .......... ll
Soulhem ............. .13
Point PleasanL ..... IO
x-Meigs .................9
River VaUey ..........9
Athens ...................8
x-Soulh Point.. ......8
Jackson ..................8
Gallipolis ...............7
Vinton County ......5
x•completed season

Ulah SL 106. c.l Poly-SLO S3
Wuhinp SL 19, Solnlo PlcifiC 71

2A

.:ISO

..

.·: ...... .

. 'Fuii·W•dth Hamper Dom - . .
• Extra-Lar9e Top-Mounted Lmt Screen
• Available mGas (LGA7646A) at
$50 Premtum .
• Available 1n Whl\e.
Almond and Whtle·
on-While

ALL·TVC WRESTLERS -The Meigs wrestlers In the above
photo took home bonora Ill tile recent TVC wrestliDR meet held 11
Belpre High SebooL In front are (L-R) Jerod Cook, Crala Knl1bt.
SbannQ Staats, J01ll Howard and Adam Sbeets. Behind them are
Mike .Parker, Shawn Taylor, Jay Flsller and Adam Thomas. In the
lower photo, Adam Sheets, the confereoce champion Ill Ills weight
class, sllods wltll Jim Shee~ bls father and his coadl.

Cage standings

Ellra·Larue Capacity Electric Dryer with
' . CLEAN TOUCH" Dishwasher .
~'. ...
Model DU8700XB
7 Automatic Cycles
Model LER7646A ·
·
Easy·to·Use Conirols with 15 Cycle/
• AutomatiCDRY·MISER• Control
·i.. Oplton Combinations

FarWesl

Son Anlario ...........33' 16 .673 . 2.5

.

\..-..:.--t....:.::~3

Tcs.u Ouiatian 79, Swlhom Me&amp;h. '75

~............ .....~ .~ ~
Hcu:tm ,_ .....:.......32 19
Dawcr ...................22 29
D.Uu .....................20 29
MinneoW .............. 13 39

..... ~, . ,.,·,.,,, ~lrlpoor

Soutbwesl

Mktw•t DI•Won

...,

=

Muq........ Dcl'oul71
Michiaa~!- S\..61\ Miotu,an ~-

' . WEsTERN CONFERENCE

·.

• 7 Automatic Cycles
• 2Wash/Spin 'Speeds ·
.• Double-Duty SURGILATDR'I
Agitator Promotes
Rollover to Get Clothes
Clean
• MAGIC CLEAN'" SelfCleaning Lint Filter Never
Needs Manual Cleaning
• Available in White,
. Almond and WMe·on. White

c..n.cdcu1 II,
Maine 6l,Hofatn 60

20.5

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., Model LSR7233B

'.

Eul

6.5
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19.5

Central Divblon

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27" Super Capacity
Automatic Washer

Aliladolpbia " Denver, 9 p.m.

NBA stJmdings

...
...

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICiS GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 25, 1995

· Scoreboard

...

12 PK. 12 Ol. CANS

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday·
8 AM~lO PM

: ByG.SPENCEROSBORNE .
foul circle (1:47). Fcirty-lhree sec- Marauders' scoring leaders, final ~Jtll)ar-season game at bome
-~ OVP Stan' Writer
onds laler, Meigs guard Gary Stan- demonstrated wh~ by scoring their Thursday night against the
~ River Valley's Raiders use&lt;! l~y tied lhe game at 12 on his left- team!s las~ 10 poants of lhe quaner. Wah;:uil3 White Falcons.

:- field-goal shooting that stayed
•. close to lhe 50% lll8lk lhroughmll
~ Tuesday night's Divis'ion 11 boys"
~ sectional tournament opener 81 the
: :University of Rio Grande' s Lyne
• Center to post a 79-61 victory over
:: lhe Meigs Marauders.
.
;:
"It was kind or rough inside, but
.- from 10 feet out, we sWied hitting
and it helped us a JOt." sail\ Raide;
:i swingman Doug Lloyd. who fin·
·' ished witli 15 points and six
:! rebounds.
·
·: · How rough was it? Despite
:: Raiders' getting lhe game's first
:·. four points on two Lloyd in-lhe·
. ~ paint baskets before 90 seconds
::; had expired, Jeff Skinner's
·. Marauders burst into the lead on a
=! pair of in-lhe-paint buckets from
' · Junior forward Travis Abbott and
' Abbott's bonus free throw follow·
:: i_ng his 'layup (4:01).
:•
The Raiders cast lhat 5-4 lead
:~ aside when junior forward James
..:. Cochrane's. lhree-pointer from lhe
... right corner put them ahead 7-5
:; wilh 3:41 left in lhe rust quarter.
• But in lhe next minule, classmale
; Bruce Ward picked up two fouls in
; nine seconds, which · forced
. Cochrane to play center in Ward's
: place.
.:
The minute that followed
·: Ward's temporary exit saw Meigs
; guard Paul PuUins and Lloyd trade
baskets, which restored the
. Raiders' lead to a two-point mar·
;. gin . That lead disappeared when·
• Abbou's stickback and bonus free
; throw - senior forward -Brett
: Boolhe's first foul made it neces": sary -. put Meigs ahead 10-9 with
.. 2:06 left
··
~
River Valley took a 12-10 I~
when junior point guard Jamie Gra·
., Iiam buried a ~=~behind jhe

5.

•
•

BEEF
lOt ·

�•
•

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 22, 1995

Wednnday, February 22, 1996

replied ~t I w~ not, I was or
to leave tmmedlllrely. l_was told that
the lobby was for reg~stered guests
Landers on
IY·
•
ted tha
.. ,995, Ldl~
There wete no Signs pos 10 . t
TlmH S'(nCSiclte and
effect. nor
::;'~!,&gt;' ::u~
CfHtorl Syndical• "
10
v•s•tor ~
pus 1
home 1
• .
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a woman llus reslrlcUon. When got
wrore
the
manager
of
the
ho~l
to
in my early 30s. Recently, I had some
1
1
suggesl
~the
JlO.S
a
s•gn
to
~
orm
ajlp&lt;lintments on the campus of a
large, urban university. During a the pub he of th1s h~tel P~hcb I
break, I sat down in lhe lobby of the received no reply, an no Sign as
on-campus hotel to do a bit of been _posted. :
Thts hotel enJoys many benefit;s11
paperwork. The .lobby was nearly
from
its on-&lt;:ampus locauon, and1
empty,Bild I was reviewing my nores
seems ~d ~tIt would:f~~~
for a meeting.
0
.
· 1 was approached by a uniformed umversny VISI~ ~ th'e
15 I'
the.~anagement
:;;~
hotel employee and asked ir I was a
1
rep;isrered guest of the hotel. When I legitimate, the pu ~ oug t 1 bb
mformed before entenng the o Y

w::::=

fi

r

C:r

INDIANAPOLIS
DEAR INDIANAPOLIS: It could
be that the hotel security officer
thought you we~e "soliciting.'
We called two Indianapolis hocels
and were informed that for security
reasons they no longer allow
unregiste'mt guests 10 sit in the lobbJI
We called a third Indianapolis hotel
•• lhe Hyatt •• and were told that
unregistered guests may sit in the
lobby if they wish. So. my advice is.
stay at the Hyatt.
•
Dear Ann Landers·l am a retired
minisrer who is still ~ery active in ·
church work and other activities. My
wife goes to the same church, but
mostofthecongregantsdonotknow
her as well as they know me.
.

wedding and invited to the r«epiiOO,
my wife says I should not go unless
she is also specifically invited. I
always oll'er Ill take hcnlong, but she
refuses to accompany me. She says
that to invile a husband wi~t his •
wife is a grave breach of euqueac.
Furthermore, she insists that if the
invitation is not issued 10 both of us. .
neither Qf us should go.
1disag\'ee. She told me to "askAnn
Landers: so, what do you say? DETROIT MINISTER
DEAR DETROIT: When a
clergyman is asked to perform a
wedding ceremony, and a lunch or
dinner follows, the invitation to dine
should include his wife, unless. of
course, the clergyman is Catholic.

________ Commu~ity calendar

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
·announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or ·
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specilic number of days.

POMEROY - Candace Pope,
Holzer Medical Center Community
Li aison Director, will be at the
Meigs County Senior Citizen~ Center, Thursday, 11 a.m. to d1scuss
the hospital's MaxWell SO program
which is free to persons SO years of.
age or older. Ad&lt;J!tional info"!'ation may be obtatned by calhng
446·5392.

WEDNESDAY

and I were mam~ almost two years

well be up front about 1L
.
ago. We bad a 1mall but lovely
ceremony ~ r« cptioa wi.th about
LoMsome? Take clrargt ofyow lifo
25 auescs - inuncdialc family ancla and tiU'II it arolllld. Wrire for A1111
few close friends.
:
I.muler&amp;'MWbooklet, •HowtoM4e
rm embln'asaed to say !hal I have Frie11ds. and Stop. Btlllg l.o11el1"
llillnouentlhlnk·youDOCeatolhese &amp;ndaself-oddrused.loltg.biubrus·
wonderful people, either for !heir
gifta or, in some instance~, for siu tllvtlope and II CMCk or mtJIIey
tntveling Car 10 lllend the wedding. ordertpr $4.25 (this ilu:lwks posltlgt
AI this 1a1e dale, rm noc quire sure and lrandlillg) to: Friends, clo Ail!
how 10approach thec:omspondence. I.mulers, P.O. &amp;z 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611 .{)562. (/11 CIIIUlda, ttlld
which I still Willi to send.
..
Should I acknowledge my $5.15.)
tardinessandapolosize,orjustwrite
•
a thank-you note? ~-AWFULLY
LATE AND EMBARRASSED IN
CALIRlRNIA
DEAR AWFULLY: By all means,
apologize. Youcanbesurethepeople

..

News Hotline

992-2155

~::sy:a-=~~=

Township .Trustees
'have
announced a public meeting for
Thursda&gt;: at 7 p.m. at the !Ownship
meeting on Joppa Road wtth representatives of the Bellville Hydro
Electric Co. ·

EAST MEIGS - Tickets for •.
Eastern boys sectional game on
Saturday at Alexander, are on sale
in main office of the high school.
All advanced tickets are $3. Eastem plays Beaver Eastern.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
Chapter 17 of the Ohio Association
of Public School Employees will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High cafeteria.

AA, Thursay. 7 p.m. at the Sacred
Hearth Catholic Church. AI Anon
wiU meet at the same time.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group

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

Purchase an All American Home
during our Silver Anniversary and
you can do the celebrating with a
$1,000 manufacturer's rebate.
Choose the home that meets your
needs. lifestyle and budget from a
wide variety of affordable floor plans
and styles. ,
'

Rebate expiration dales vary
between styles, so ... visit our
model home today for full details.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Located at
, Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home VIewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
The.-Sat. Or By Appointment Call614-992-2478

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
• Edended cnass1s
• Dr1ver Side Air Bag
• Anb·l ock. Brakes

• Power Brakes . ·
• Tilt Steermg

• Air Condrt100
• Automatrc 01Jerdll'le

• AM/FM Cassette •
• Power W1ndows
• Power Locks
• 4 Captam,Cha1rs

• Vrsta Bay Wrndaws
• Power Steer1ng

• CrUise

·ln d ~reol

• Rear AnHock Brakes
• Power Steering
• Power BrSkes ·

Ughting

• PremiumWr:nJ Pkg.

• Custom Cloth Interior
• SteeiBelteO Twes

• Sil,erarlir
• 4X4

• 350 V·8 Power

• Full Conversion
·Aluminum Running Boards
ol oadedl

10 TM Dllily Stlllinel.

.

1 know there are many things I
have not covered, but aftu hearing
from many readers, it seems there
are several lhat want 10 re-create
the past, and have something to
talk about in the future . I have
talked to s.ome older an.d some
younger than myse!f. ~d 1t seems
they all have one lhmg mcommon.
They like to hear about the past,
~the part they may have rlay~
m II, and to be able to tel therr
childr~n and grandchildren, what
lhey did when they we~e young.
I am going to start off by going
fishing. How many remember the
old Chester Mill Dam, and the
good fishing it brought about in
Shade River, both above and below
the dam?
Large catfish, carp, bass al)d
numerous · other species were
caught above the dam in the deeper
water, and the same prevailed
below the dam in the shallow,
swifter water, until about nine or
10 at night, when water dogs we~e
caught by .the dozen, until you
packed up and went home.
Anothcr place was the Forest
Run Mine Reservoir, or dam as we
knew it then. It was overabundant
with liule sunfish that ran~ed in
·size from tluee to five or six mches
in length. It was nolhing 10 be able
to catch a hundred or so, and put
· them on a sttinger of three feet or ·
less. They were .fun to catch, but
: tough .to clean Blld eat because of
· the many small bones.
: There were other places like
' : East. Middle and West Shade
· River, Horse Cave Creek, Kings·
bury, Keno and others. All were
: accessible by wallting or hitching a
ride, if you were lucky enough to
: flag down a Model T Ford, .old
: Chevy, h~WSC and buggy or wagon.
How many of us would do such
things today?
At lhe other end of the county
was Leadin(l Creek, that ran from
the Ohio Rtver at Hobson, up to
Rutland and beyond in different
branches. Many large catfish and

way up from the river during high
water, and were left Slnlnded as tbe
riv!lf receded. A lot of them wm
talccn illegally, especially at night
using a bright ~gbt, with a gig or
spear as they bled to get up some
of the riffies. It was fun 10 match
wits with the law then, as weD as
today . Some emerge as winners
and some losers.
Swimming was another thing
we had to do from early spring in
April, until late fall in September
or October. It was always a chal·
lenge to see who would be the first
to hit the WIHer in the spring.
Sometimes that water was sure
cold, biit we never let on until all
were in and about froze. We all
lived and had fun, or thought we
had.
Do any of.you remember the
two-wheeled scooters that came out
in the early '20s? They arc still
around today, but with many ·
improvements, such as rubber tires,
brakes and, built stron11er than the
old models with their uon·rimmed
wooden wheels and cheap construction ..Nehi and Whistle orange
pop used to sell them for about a
dollar or a slight bit more, and a
certain number of·bottie caps from
their product - a promotion gimmick we stiU use today . .They were
ea:sy 10 ride, for all you had 10 do
was tate the steering handle in
your hands, put one Joot on the

oth~ foot until ~u got tire. then
hop on and r1dc. When you
stopped, repeat the process. If you
lucky enough 10 scrape up the neeessary money and the required
number of bottle caps, you soon
became the pride of the neighborhood on your new red scooter.
Another method was the little
red wagon !hal you put 9IIC knee in
t))c wagon bed and pushed along
with the other fOol outsijlc. It was
sliD fun, sore kneel and all.
Well, I have rtslled my way over
the county, and found ways to get
there l!"d ~~with a little effort,
so I think 11 s ume 10 tum to somethin~ else. I wi!l c.nd this article by
relating a fe.w •nc1deiiiS about cer.
lain people, that may stir up some
memories we have put away for
·

FirSt off, I am go~ng to relale a w~ N?thing wrong wtth the gun:
story of the late Hart Stansbury, ThiS did not 10 ~ 11.00&lt;1 wtth Mr.
who used to run the Stansbury Stansbury, but 11 did get a few
Dru~ S~. ;'Cross from ~ Hoi= laughs from bystanders. I know all
Clinic m Middlepon. It IS another Ibis becljtse I used 10 wort in one
landmark that h.as gav~ w~y to of the trap houses llld was there.
progress. A housmg proJeet IS on
Another thing was the s10ry of
the spot tpday.
.
the killing of the last Indian in
Mr. Stansbury was qutte a trap Meigs County, as he sat by a small
shooter at the Pomeroy Gun Club fire, in a lillie cave one cold night.
on old Route 33, located ~t the located across from !1\e residence
farm of the lale. Dolph Joachim, as of the lare Bill Morgan, father of
we all knew htm. ~· S~sbury Roger Morgan, IC?Catcd on old
had ~ht a new, h1gh-priced .dou· Roure 33. It was ~ that a selller
ble-barrcl shotgun and on~ ~ay shot him with a muzzle loader riDe,
decided 10 try i~ OUL After miSSIDg from the bank, back of where lhe
several clay p1geons, he became house stands today.
disgusted and said ~ gun was ~
liinally, one more ~in(! to tax
good, and would sell II at a bargain. · the memory. was the wmrung of a
The late Dr. Gribble picked it up new Buick automobile by the late
and broke about ten ptgeons in a Prof. A.L. Flanagan of Syracuse.

-

'G

•

Tanks
Sweatshirts
Swimwear
Suntan Produets
Reduced 20% everyday

contest by submitting a· story of
Pomeroy, being the only city in the
United States with 26 miles of
roads and streets without a single
~street They sent a represemauve 10 Pomeroy and pm;cnled him
the new car personally. Meigs
County fmally made it nationaDy.
Well, I hope 1 have revived
some things we had tucked away in
the Old Memory Box, and have
brought a bit or enjoymentiO some
. of the olde r ones like myself.
Excuse all the mistakes 1 may have
made in names, places and dates.
I'D be signing ?ff for now, until I
can begm diggmg m the Memory
Bank, sometime in the ncar future.
Olen Harrison
Pomeroy

0

'

.

0

107 Mill Srreet, Middleport; Ohio 4S760 ·

614-992-3148

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled five local public
hearings in Case No. 94·996-EL·AIR, In the Matter of the Application of Ohio
Power Company for Authority to Amend its Filed Tariffs to Increase the Rates
and Charges for Electric Service and Relaled Matters. The hearings are
scheduled for the purpose of providing an opportunity to interested members
of !he public to leslify in !his proceeding. The local hearings will be held ·at lhe
following times and places:
J.ima. Ohio- Monday, March 6, 1995, at 1:00 p.m., al the Lima Municipal
Center, Council Chambers, 50 Town Square, First Floor, lima, Ohio 45801;
Z!I!Jesyme, Ohio ·'Monday, March 6, 1995, at 7:00p.m., at City Ha[ Council
Chambers, 401 Markel Street; Second Floor, Zanesville, Ohio 43701;
Portsmouth, Ohio· Wednesday, March 8, 1995, at 6:00p.m., at the Municipal
Building, City Council Chambers, 728 Second Street, Second Aoqr, Ports·
mouth, Ohio 45662;
.
Canton, Ohio· Friday, Match 10, 1995, at 1:00 p.m., at City Hall, Council
Chambers, 218 Cleveland Avenue, S.W.. Rrsl Floor, Canton, Ohio 44702;
Steubenville. Ohio· Monday, March 13, 1995, ai?:OO p.m., at the City
.Municipal Building; Common Pleas Courtroom One, 301 Market Slreet, ,
Second Aoor, Steubenville, Ohio 43952.
'
The applicant has requested a revenue increase in the amount of
$152,384,000, an increase ol10.33 percenl over current revenues. The major
issues in this case ate:
a) The appropriate rate base valualion for the applicant's assets;
b) The determination of the appropriale levels of operating revenues·and
operating expenses, including those expenses associated with the applicant's
Gavin scrubbers; ·
cl The determination of the appropriale rate of relurn;
d The determination of !he appropriate allocalion of reveQue among classes of
customers;
e) The appropriate level of working capital allowance;
·
QThe appropriate rate for the applicanl's customer service charge;
gj The apptopriale level of depreciation expense;
h The appropriate treatment of demand·side management expenses; and
i) Other relevant issues which may be raised by parties to !his proceeding.

- r··=-.

1"'\"{-

foi} ·

/7
{

1

woritleaveyou up in the air.

~brried about hanging on to your auto insurance if you happen to get a few tickets or have an accident~
Not if you're insured with Allstate. Your Allstate Agent stand'i hy you, even if your driving reeord gels banged
up, and can continue to qffer you a policy from the Allstate famil~f companies. So you won't have to look
for a new agent or msurance company. Ask about the Allstate
'tt, '
·
Insurability Guarantee. Guaranteed not to leave you hanging. ·

0U1 emgoodhandS,

·
SUbjM m·guaranlr-e terms and conditions. Premiums may be higtu. Only a\lallable In Ohio.
0 19-)5 Allsca~ lnsura11&lt;e Comp-.my and Allstate lndcmntry Cmnpany. Nonhbruok, Illinois.

•

Allstate·

350 V-8 POWER/SILVERADO

S·SERIES PICKUP

·Sola/Bed

~omg to ramble aro.und county,
m10 the past, and see if I can recall
mm-c people and Jllaces, missed in
previous articles I have submitted

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY

CONVERSION VAN .

The Dally SentlneJ.-..Page-7

C?J.~~~,,~,~r~~!!J!'!..e2 .!~~~!~itLnw.f!le past C?L~~~.?'-~~~~~•«N•

Woman upset ove;,: '!P!~t~ l!R ~!!tL'1fl.!!E. 5El~e!!.!~.fl.PP!J:.!~---~
Ann

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"Sale Price 111:1110eaGMAC Frsl
. rrme &amp;yeo h:lf!nliW! tfOuallil«&lt;.

• Automaoc
• Air Condition
• Rear A1r1Heat

• Power Steering
• Power Blakes
• Power Door ,l ocks
• Power Windows
• AWFM Cassette

·n

Cruise Coh~rol
• Trailering Package

1

• Aluminum WhOOis

s.teer~ng

. $21,988
NoOo;Fe. DeWnl'·

BRAND NEW '95 POimAC FIREBIRD

''Sale Pnce
r ro::·~des PIY1:.at
LJnoer :lO rnceonrrve
II Ou~~~~~

• A&lt; Condotoon
• Dual Airbags
• 4Wheel AnHock B&lt;akes
• Power Steeri'lj
• Power B&lt;akes

•AMIFU Casselte

·ConSole
·Custom Ckrth lnteror
• Budrei Seats
.
• Rear Decl&lt; Sp:;fer

• Altmonll1l Whees
• Wol Equwe&lt;i'

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK I ESNIR£
A1r Condition ·
• 3800 V-6 Power
• Dual Airbags
• Anti·l ock B&lt;akes
o

• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes
• Po..r Door Locks
• Power Wondows

• AWFM Sleleo

•nn Steenng·

• Custom C~~ Interior

• Loaded!

S25,888
·P-Btakes
•Doc&lt; locks
•Powe!Wirxlows
• MI'FM cassene

• Cruise Cooo~

• Delay WI""

·Custom

Clothlnterir&lt;

o

Air Cordtion

• Dual Alrbag
• Anti·lock B&lt;akes
·A~atk;

• AMIFM CaS91!ne

K·1500

350 V-8 POWER

• Detu~e Front Bumper

• Chrome Rear Step Br.rnper ·
o Cast Alllllinum Wheels
• Wei ECIUI&gt;I&gt;ed!

FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY • •

BRAND NEW
'95CHEVY
4x4 BLAZER'S

FEB. 24-26 a ,t

FRESH SHIPMENT!

Love to .enhance your home's .·
beauty &amp; energy efficiency?
Is your thumb "green"?
Interested in what's new on the IJlarket?
This show is lor YOU!
And best of all : . . it's free family fun at
,
University Mall.

LSAND LT'S

WE'VE GOT THEM AU.!

Shop Daily 10 am-9 pm and
Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Su~day: Noon ~ 6 pm

Sunday Noon-6 pm
1002 East State Street, Athens •. 5'92-3574
I

I

•

�I

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Wedi"'Hday, February 22, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, 01:11o
AIMIII'ISED ITEM POI.a'· Eath·Of theSe adver~sed lrems Is reqtJred 111 be I'Sidlly available for sale In
each Kluger Smre, except as speclfkally noted In this ad. If we doN\ out of an advertised Item, we
will Offer 'IOU vour choice Of acomparable ltan, When available, ref1ecting the same savings or a
ralncheclt wl"lch Win entitle you m purthase the advertised Item at the advertised price within 30
days. Only onevenclorcouponwlll be accepted per Item (llnhased.

. Wednesday, February 22, 1995

DINO-MfrE

COPYRIGHT 11M • THE KROGER CO. ITEIIS AND PRICES G000 SUND/IY, ·
FEIIRUAII'I' 18, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEIRUAII'I' 25, 11t15 IN GAWPOUII.

POIIIEAOY.
WE AE8EAVE THE RIGKT TO I,JMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO ~RS.

DIVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. - Wed.- Fri. - Set.
1-6

SAVINGS •••
in the Ulassifieds!

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns

Light Hauling,
Sh~ubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Loads of Misc.
Buy•Sell-Trade
992-2060

HAULING

TREE TRIMII.ING
AND REMOVAL

DO'S
IPPLIDCI
·sDVJCI

Umestone
&amp; Gravel

For All Malor
lraads
Used Appliances
for Sale
Call

........... Rates
Joe 11. SaJ"

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
,_,.,

Bill Slack
992·2269

10/511mo

614·992·5515
1C'M111tfn

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We Have Cars and Vans!
Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 44~·9971
Gallipolis, OH~ 45631
!Clift"

/

llilltstllt Low Ratts)

Get Your Message Across
With ADaiiJ Sentinel

WICKS
HAULING

BULLETIN BOARD

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

•

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
CUstcrm Bullcllnt l Rlonodellng
-NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
-NEW GARAGES
oREMODEUNG
oSlDING
oROOFlNG
.PANTING
FA!I! ESTIMATES

. (614) 992-6535

(614) 992·2753

"''"'
Howard L. Wrltesel

Ali:eheimers Disease and
Related Disorders Support
; Group Meeting
Thursday, Feb. 23,
1 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center
Call 675-5236 lor more
information.
The public is invited to auend .

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
.
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

.

VALLEY

The Ohio Valley
Ostomy Asociation
will meet Sunday,
Feb. 26 at 2:30p.m.
in the
French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical
Center.

EASTERN CROWN

ticeAdeaatn
Rom~
Apples
5
one Buy one Get one
auyone Get
.

Topic: Stoma and
Skin Problems
Speaker:
Phyllis Brown

SLb. Bag

1
· -Lb. p\&lt;g.

15-Lb. Bag

·

-.

One Cetone

KEEBLER

zesta

Saltines
15·16-oz.

Buy One Get One

••
FROZEN SELECTED VARIETIES

Plctsweet
vegetables·........ 32-oz.
KROGER

Black
Pepper ............... 1s-oz.
BLACK LABEL

Hormel
Bacon ·............. 1-lb. Pkg.

Family
Medicine

BUY ONE
GETDNE

CHOCOLATE CHIP OR SUGAR

JUmbo .

El

.

cookies ........... 12-ct.Pkg.

BUY ONE
GET ONE

ASSORTED VARIETIES, KROGER

EngliSh .
Muffins ................. s-ct.

El

BUY ONE
GETDNE

KROGER

·Skin care
. Lotion .......

A. . . . . . . . . .

BUY ONE
GET ONE

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES MICROWAVE

Pizza
3.9-4.3-Qz.

FREEl .Buy one Get one

1s.oz.

us ,'

. • .IJ.JI.CHOICI GRAIN

'

'

.
111111'-

·ngdale
Northern
'
SP'! water Bathroom Tissue ro,Bonet
Sll'i'
ess
.
orinkl~!on~- ·~-~
-. - . ~- ~•Oin
-Stea,~
Pound
II

j

..

,

KROGER

Maruchan·
'7/$
Ramen Noodles ••• 3-Qz.

Angel Food ·
2/$
Cake .............................~ 13-oz.

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Hanover
4/$
Pa.s ta ............................... 1s-oz.

Breyer's
Ice Cream ·........ 112 canon
'

I/$

•

•

'I

Ll

985-4473

614-742-2193

985-3879

Apartment
for Rent

Mon.-Fri.

Vinyl &amp; Alum, Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Stonn
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

Low Rate Financing Available
Call992·7434 for more Information.
• 1125M

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New .Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2J12192Jtln

•

110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Come ran With

"Look for the Red and White Awning"

MeAt

992-4119 AI Tro11m, Owner 1·800·291·5600

CALIFORNIA TINS
3.4110 Sugar Run Rd.

Stockbroker
makes first solo
balloon flight .
across Pacific

Public Sale ·
&amp; Auction

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

•

,,,H,IIn

Your authorlz8d
American Standard Dealer

lnst•ll•ll

8·

J I1A

tltMtn

•Cullom Made
•Solid vinyl
retlac•ment
windows
· •Free Estimates
•Starting At

i.

P~wnc ~H:,

EPA and RSES Certified

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

1200

'

MORRISON'S
&amp;COOLING

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

Mobile Welding

ed&amp;B ded 20
Emergency

7122194

Olllce Houra:

DlesellnJector.SVC
InJector Pump SVC
Tun•up!!

j

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO

1 .

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable tolle1a rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly renllll rates.
Job shes •
Slles •
Reunlona &amp; Parties

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

'

--'-4~~olls--

'

·C~mplete

By CLIFF EDWARDS
Associated Prelrll Writer
John C. Wolf. D.O.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1995 ·
CHICAGO (AP) - He floated
.Associate Professor
farther than any other balloon pilot.
10:00 A.M.
of Family Medicine
enduring temperalures so cold that
Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In
he had to hold his drinking wate~
Mason,
W.Va. will be selling Items from lhe estate
just
know
they
don"t
feel
rested
in
next
to
his
body
to
thaw
it
SLIMMING DOWN CAN OFfEN
Dr.
Keith
Glenn of Henderson W. Va. plus
of
the
morning.
The
most
frequent
When
he
fmslly
landed
in
CsnaCURE ONE COMMON SLEEP
additional
Items
will be sold.
signs
of
sleep
apnea
are
daytime
da
Tuesday
night
after
a
grueling
PROBLEM
FURNITURE
sleepiness and rrregular and loud four-day flight that covered more
9
pc.
cerved
walnut
D.R. suite, 10 pc. 1930's laney
Question: I needed to have a breathing noises while asleep . than 6,000 miles, stockbroker Steve
walnut
D.
R.
suite,
oak
3 door Ice box, round oak table
.hysterectomy a few months ago. Morning headaches and morning Fossett had become the fust person
claw
teet,
carved
oak
Hi-Boy,
oak Hi-Boy wimirrow, t2
One of the ~octors I saw thought I disorientation are also quite com- to fly a balloon solo across the
lin
pie
sale,
two
pc.
step
back
cupboard, fancy lg. oak
Pacific Ocean.
could have sleep apnea and sent me mon.
side
board
w/claw
teet,
Viet
walnut
marble top table,
Sleep apnea' occurs in various
Cold and tired, Fossett celebral·
to have sleep studies at enother
walnut
Sheraton
drop
leal
table,
Viet. drop well
levels of severity. Mild cases cauSe ed as softly as liis 1SO-foot-tall
hospital
dresser, lg. poster bed, lg. wicker stroller, mahogany
I had my surgery without any the symptoms I've described. lndi- heliwn balloon touctled down on a
D. R. suite w/oorner china, child's roll top desk,
problems, but I haven't gone back viduals with more severe problems muddy farmer•s field in Leader,
mahogany china cabinet, oek washstand, spine! desk,
to see the doctor again about the develop high blood pressure, heart Saskatchewan, about 250 miles
butcher black, half comode, oak file cabinet, oak
.
sleep apnea Is sleep apnea impor- failure, and behavioral changes. So, .cast of Calgary.
chairs, early wagon &amp;more.
the amount 'Of symptoms you have
'"He's very laid back about-it."
tant enough to require treabnent?
GLASSWARE &amp; STONEWARE
determine
the
urgency
of
treabnent
said
flight manager Alan Noble.
Answer: Sleep apnea is a fancy
Over 40 pc . American Fostoria ig. flat bottom ice lip
"When he crossed the coast, he
pitcher, cups, plates, bowls, candle sticks, toothpic~
·medical term that means one stops for your sleep apnea:
Question:
What
are
the
treatsaid,
'I've flown the Pacific. I'm
holder, &amp; others, Heisey, pres~ glass , flo blue,
breathing for brief periods of time
·
· over Canada.' No "Whoopee!' or
Depression glass, Ornate slag glass lamp, 3 pc. scrim
during sleep. About 24 percent of menls for sleep apnea?
Answer:
About
40,000
people
·anything like that...
shaw brown stoneware pitcher w/girl praying w/dog,
men and 9 percent of women have
yellow &amp; blue crocks, early stenciled bowl (Redware),
·this problem, so it is quite com- . arc treated in the United Slates~~ Fossett, who took off from
' . mon.
spongeware crock, Breininger 'Pottery, several jars
each year for sleep apnea. Being Seoul, Sotith Korea, on Saturday,
wlblue &amp; crocks w/ blue stone ·jars, D. W. Rhodes
During a sleep apnea episode, very overweight is often the cause, · broke the distance record of 5.208
Cottageville
W.V., Hamilton &amp; Jones, Donahho &amp;
the individual attempts to breathe but slender individuals and those · nautical miles. The eucl distance
others,
3
bal.
open top jar w/lg. flower books. 9 vol. set
but is unable to move air into and wlio consume large amounts of of his flight was still being calcu- ,
John
St(lddards
Lecture's, 29 Vol. 1955-1983
.
.
out of the lungs because the upper alcohol are alsQJr.ll'Juently p{~l-_ fated.
Thoroughbred
Sires
&amp; Dams, Scottish Chiefs Vol I, II,
He hallplanned to land m -Calt. air passages relax so dramatically cd. .
dates
1827.
Childrens
Mag. (1'847) Vol. 7, 19, 22. Life
In manv of these cases the treat- Cornia, but the balloon -decorated
· that they temporarily collapse. This
&amp;
character
of
David
Caldwell dated ' 1842,
is very much like trying to breathe ·ment is obvious lose weight and with the words "Seoul to San FranPlay's
Dated
1809, Little Red Riding
Shakespeares
while somoone pinches your nose stop drinking alcohol. For most cisco" - was at the mercy of the . Hood, My Little Darlings more quality books.
people, however, additional mea- winds.
closed.
COLLECTIBLES
"I'm very satisfied with it,"
Your nervous system controls sures are also required.
Red &amp;. White coverlet w/animais, fruit, flowers &amp;
The most common treabnent for said Fossett, a ·SO-year-old Chicago
the process of breathing by galherpeople wNei'Se, Blue &amp; White coverlet, 114 R. Dep.
sleep
apnea involves wearing a native. "This was the objec:live that
_ing infonnation from a number of
China Doll, small black baby, two old swords, 4'x2x8,
different parts of lhe body. Two of ti~ht-fitting nasal mask that sup- I set out to do a year ago, and it
3'x5 ft. oriental rug, some wear, Early Capital of
the most importll!lt of these "feed- piles air undel modemte pressure .to really was quite satisfying to reach
Virginia picture, painting by Sobrina P. Lathrop Basket
back loops" monitor the concenua- ihe nose. This air pressure counter- · that oll.)Utlve."
o! flowers, several ig. good early ba\~els, 17th
The Pacific had been crOssed by
tion of oxygen and carbon dioxide acts the tendency of the upper airCentury hand forged cast iron standing crane
way
to
collapse
during
sleep,
thus
balloon
only twice before. The pmwithin the blood.
(potholder), cast iron snake, 3 cast iron birds, Thomas
Hili Gallipolis 0 . pot &amp; lid, Ballo 12" pot &amp; lid, lg. coffee
The regular·muscular effons of allowing normal breathing to COih . vious distance record was set in
November 1981 by a four-person
pot, brass fender claw feet, lg. sterling sliver vase sgn.
the diaphragm continue during tinue.
Yale University presented to Class Boy 1po3, Earl
sleep apnea: they are just ineffec- . , In some individuals, medica- crew that flew from 1apan to CovWooden Cane sgn. D. C. Applegate staghandle
tive at moving air into and out of tions are used to help stimulste ~~- elo, Calif., Noble said.
sterling collars wooden bowls, adv. tins, 4 early
the lungs. Consequently. the oxy- ular respiration. In others•.surgery · ---,-------,::-----'--weather vanes plus much more.
gen level in the blood falls and the to make the airway space in the While a tracheotomy al~ys works
.carbon dioxide level rises. Ulti- nose and throat larger &lt;r '"less cot- to relieve obsttuCtive sleep apnea,
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
mately these changes cause the lapt~'f:r~~iy, only about
it's disfiguring and has other fre35 quent
individual to awaken sufficiently
complications. Thetefore, it
AUCTIONEER : RICK PEARSON
that muscle tone returns in the percent of the patients who under- is reserved as the beatmcnl Of last
APPRENTICE AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS
upper airway. allowing normal j!O this surgery receive the desired choice.
IIA-116
benefit from iL In lhe most seve~
"Family Medicine" 1s a weekly
breathing again.
. LUNCH
MASON, WV
n3-57B5
The arousal from 'sleep may cases, an additional opening into column. To suhmlt queslloail,
TERMS:
CASH
OR
CHECK
WITH
I.D.
occur 600 or 700 times each night the windpipe is made.
11
t
J
h
C
w
It
D
0
.
. wr e o o u • o , • .,
Not reeponalble for IICCfdenta or loaa of property
in individuals with sleep apnea.
The windpipe in doctor Imgo Ill Oblo Uulvenily College of O.teoLlceneed and bonded In Ohio, Kentucky I
·
Curiously, though, the individual called the "'trachra," so this proce· patbk Medldae, Groiveuor Hall,
Y/Mt Ylrglnla 166
usually is unaware of this. They dllf\l is known as a Utracheotomy," Atbell!, Obio 45701.
·

FREEl Totino's.

BUY ONE
GETDNE

·

MODERN SANIYATION

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPDAIT 992-2m

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlcklea

Equal Housing Opportunity

-.

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages

J&amp;L INSULATION

614·992-6419 TDD 1·80G-75D-0750.'

~

·-

:

Portable
Ba1dsaw Mill

WAT~RS EDGE.APARTMENTS
Syracuse, Ohio ·
Nowavailble FmHA One BR.apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJC on -site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic, Medicine

,•

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

·H&amp;H SAWMILL

5116194 TFN

44

2/JIIOO

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Long Bottom, OH. 45763
5 00

15Sessions 15

All Lotions 'Y2 OH
·949·2823113111 mo.

KINGS'
Home Improvements
33151

Happy Hollow Road

Middleport, Ohio 45760

•New Homes
•Additions &gt;Siding
•Roofing •Painting
&lt;Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns
Free Ell/mateo
614·742·3090
304-773-9545 ""' - ·

B.IJ.AU'rO
PAitrrUIG

c,.;.,h It .. Wtt F~ It"
32361 Dewitte Run Road
Lang Bottom, OH. 45743

" You

Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to '/• Inch.
Call Anytime
John Krldir

Kerosene
Heater
Repair
·Parte &amp; service oti Moat
Makes Racine Mower

Clinic

50°/o off
"In Stock" ·
Oregon Chain Saw Bora

.. 949-2804

KD'IIPPLIIICI
. IIIIICI
of'octory Aulllarl2ed Porta
&amp; Strvlce

•All Maklta o42 Y•oro
ofaal Aallabto Service
•WIIherl·• Dryertl • Rengel
-Reffi{llrlitora •FrMDre
oOiohw.hera
•H.W. Htal"a
.Ylcrow•- oQlapoulo
•Thonklt Melga &amp;
Surrounding Are•

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 t:!IIW~

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

992·7013 OR
.992·5553 OR

614-843-5192

TOLL FREE 1-800-848.007C

Harold Peraon

DARWIN, OHIO :

614-843-5285

,,....

713H8l TFN

Graded Benefit Whole Ute is now aballabie. The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 whh no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
·
the application: Ages 40-80

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ina. Co.
P.O. Box 1811
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614-843-!!264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

Hcalrh • Accident • Anhui • IRA • Mort

e

One Step Cemplttt Aute to~y Rtptlr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Chuck Stou_.
614-992-a223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work W~lcome

State Rt. 33
· Darwin, Ohio

•

�Wedneectay, Februaty 22,1995

'"

.

Ohio

'

The Dally SenUnei-Page-11

r~LLEYOOP
...
_

AA &gt;i, l.EFFER BEN!
t 11M DELIGilTE 0 m

NEA Crossword Puzzle

SEE WUI

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
Annou ncer•1enb

BEA 'I'TIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Apanment

32 Mobile Homes
. for Sale

".I t .

Kit--

,.., · - 1411ft 3 --..z-.,
Lao :tof.~~:·
Doc*, 111&lt;12 I
Aanlad Lac . .. -.
11111.
•

"The
c..
To
Your Doof.• LocalTllll
C....,.
AvollolbleAI:

-

·~

•:=..u.

.
=
4

n
-(... l'li

1v¥""

Claylon Molllo · -

•

"'"-

.)..JU-J..4J " " ' " "

B

,

1.., - . . . _ 1\0Ciq

IIHoa, Aut-tla. Air, a-~,
=--~010, - - - . 114-

"""'-'-"-!

1111 Dodae .- . . ~
ft3,M. 304.e'l$-llll.
..

Co«&lt;hound

....-.~~·

puppy, appr011. Smol:. old. to

......,..., 4 monthl old Plrl Col- 11
""·a
Shlpud Lo.tng onc1 p~ay- _ _.;.;,:..::;,._:;,;.;,;.;.,:;__
Help Wanted
lui. 614-.2--

8043.

To Good

Hom:-: 1 F~~m~ie,l Part

Spitz, Border Colllo, Sl'&gt;oda,

6

c:•o-

.......

· · "" colullr .,....._ lll1il
-lnthiPOJI*WO'"O.
For moro lnliinnlllon co111.aao.

Loll: Mote 8ord«CollloNamad : Comt&gt;War Uaera nudod, won
BNr, Orongo Collar With Name . own hou,., 20 to 50K!yr. 24 hro., .
Tag, Charolola Hilla Ara, 114- l'lf.UI-3311olll. 11101.
448--2359.
'
Ga
... 'p'!~.!'·~·-~.
Loll : Rod Hound Dot With 1 '_::,"'O~
_
y,
-•
Whlto Eyo, Gun Sfw, K . _ 114-446.
PI•OI
c.oll:
1~411 4641. ~:::::::~~--=::::::-::-=::;:
Rowordl '
Dontll Ofltc. Billing C1ar11
noodad.
Erj&gt;arl..,..
wloollocttona computar I cfan.
Yard sale
7
til billing c.;(!.; prelonad. Sand

g....

,..umt to 8o1 C-21. c/o Pl.
Pl....nt Raalatar, 200 llaJn SR.
Pl. Plooolnt,""WV 25550.

ALL Yard SoiiO Mull Bl Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dar betoN the Mil to run.
Sunday adltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday adhlon • 2:00

p.m. S..ur•r.

8

- -

01
Portebae SewmiiiJ. don'l
hlul to tho mol luat
call :tOW78-1lle7.
K I C Pump lnalallatlon, • •

II ...ldng IM•Innln and 1ft.
dlvlduola lntaraalad In bllng

t

..........

FrM
Mil-..; 24hr. - ·
304-372-4311.

llo4hor In lllddlopc~~t wilt
bobyaR anyllme day a&lt; night,
lola of flln and TLC, all w•laarne, calll.....a-7211.

Protn '~mel TNe Service,
~· T,.. &amp;emo.,
Truck 40 Fl. Rlach,
!Rump
FrM 1:.
~nauno-.
2• Hr.
.call And
S.vef•M-SII
1'M-317·101q.

,._...

a.-

-·al,

••s.

e-- -

~......., School.

-

~~ ec'=t'l!r"
. ~

Elm up to ftOOO- aluHing
...... _
It ......... Slllrl - ·
No ••. . . . -. F,. aupplloa.

Surnnw. fDayo par llMil llllno
lmum 114-441-tll'r.

Sond S.A.S.E to !Rartlng, Dllll.
K, ·P.O. Bo1 1411111; Orlando, FL

Will Blbwoll, My - · I A.M. -e
P.ll. Glllpotl8 AIM. Toddlor To

F-lntormallon. No ~tlon.

Rick PMNM Auetlon Compony,
IIIII limo auct'-r, comploto
auction
nrvlce.
UcMMd
IJM,OIIIo 6 W..t Ylrglnll, 304-

773-578S.

Auction Eolaty Sltunlly, 7:00
P.M. Uppar AI- Road OVC

· ham• Thla WaH.

Auction• every Frlday-Salurdly,
7pm, Mt. Ano Auction, At. 2·33

"Croaf,.do", Ron Price, Bill
Moo,., g,_rloa, plua lola
morol Ed Frular 1130.

1110.

ram:JIIIIng, l)ldg
Expootlnc:ad, quatltlod ca.,.,.. Will •
.-.
oldlng,
t ....,
l111Cri'TI,
Equipment - .
and
cam.nt ~.=-~·No.
Ffnlahul wilt lou1 lyro. U·
........... wantad "" _,_,..,
conatructlon orolect. lionel
Ftnanci al

21 .

45

·-

34ac. wlrad lronllga on Rod""'"R._ Aloo, tom, 1-"'I
- o n lloa.

--.148.

PEANUTS

- - CIA 2:110 p.m.
lla_, WV.

M'&lt; GRAMMA SA'&lt;5 .

10 ...... brand - · flYil
,114-IIN111.

-home-

-=

46 Space for Rent

CGMNo I Ptutlc Sepllc
Tanko, 1100 Thru 2,000 Gottilna
Ron E..,. E n l l - Jlldt·
_,, 011 1~121. ·

Land
For9ur¥ayod211,100,
Slf - AI&gt;- _,ntry. garbolga, - tar IWIIIn
-ntly
IIIII
4 lllloa S. On SR 211, 114- w8t• rnc.u.ct, Clble adllable,
-1111.
~.• Jua1 10 Mlnul• , _
Tycoon Leliloo . OM ecN lol, Alhona,114-t12-2tR
12180 mobllo ........ ._,.
r.lerchandise
wat!',_
- · allolrla,
112,1100,
114-l00·2117.
.

'!Ill
--

36

"
'- ·llllng
S30. 31)4.171.7Mo.
Kld"l
dolu!l
M1, teo, Alta

FlrNood 131 Pldwp Load, WI
Dallv•, I Steck, 114-311-8010.
Fbewcad
$40
PU
loed,
Dallnoad
A Load Pick Up,

41

HOU181

t't;'
:0~~':It~
Corpio1 In ltook. o..r H Pit·

-

-

chalra, good

-

- · :tOW78-1Ul

DnaBII-~For-110;

Dna Conoilructlon
-·
Ka.w1ll
31,000
8TU $148;
100,000 HI EHiclancy F - 1111, 114 441 1~._ 1·
eoo.;!l?-1301;
an.· ....w
Etoctrlc Furnaoa With /IJC Con-

do-

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Corll f '• home ' fumlehlnga.
Noun: lion S.t, N. 114-4411!322,DoiiYOry.
s ...... ou1 - · Pika
F,_

PICKENS FURNITURE
NawiiiHd
No opptl-, HoM I aid fur.
~· 112 nol. Jarolchl Rd. Pt .
Pl-il WY, col --.1450,
114 Ul .. 111

42 Mobile Homu
tor Rent

bridal,
• ._...torpllfzaO,tn--·
.
. - , mon•a,

-1210.

...,.,................ - .

And~ All Rnllnclllanld
And OoUntnloodl 1100 And Up,
Wilt Dilrir. I1WINW1.

lanilpNijla!Na,
-SWAIN
~rl~c, mat~, or 1172 mol&gt;llo home Wl2ac.,
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12 llem Soma wl118'o Army lutpluo,
ec c111 crt• ltoew. OVer 2000 S25CIImo., $300/clopoatl. !1114- OIIYo
••• GalllpoHo.-. Uud by Sonolyviiio Olllca, .....,.
...,. --ory,
· 121,100
to 524-277:1.
Fit-Sun. llony wlnttlr
Sll;IOO:
training, Ill·
lumlturo,
WMiom I
Work
ttoata.114 ·
441 3111.

,..., Gfllllf opontng, .... can
oponll doya. llr. LoUghlin, 112IIMIIIII.

=·,_. . .

VI'AA FURNITURE

2 Badroono Trollor po.. To
UniYarolty Of Rio Gnndo, 114-

=--=

0id butlona, coalumo JawolrY,
old tlgtlt...,_.lran . - . , plO8tltWIIW,g-.-.
tumH~on toot. or 3::edeb •

t•-

tit•, ~ llartln, 114-0ia-1UL

Wlnlad To Buy: Junk With Or Wlth&lt;M Mol-. catl
Larry u..ty. 114 381 1301.
Top Prlcu Paid: ~I Old U.S.
Colna, Gold AI~ S - Colno,
Gold Colna. II.T.Io. Coin lhop,

1111 -

Avanue, GIJIIpoiiL

Wlnlad To Buy IJaod lloGilo
Homo, Colll14-44f.0171. '
Wlnlad : Stlndlng Tlmbor, 1143?t-ml.
wa,.ad: UMd LMga Dot Houaa
Or Konnol RauOnalllli Prtca,
8-1·1415 Anyllmo.

'240-

Atheno, alortlng at
300/mo., cable nalllblo, 114-

--~~~~~--

==-~·~
oe.

• - , -~lt.lotbalar, :tOW'J5.
1211.......

All real estate advertising in
• this newspaper Is subject to

POSTALJOII
~ fl1.41illr. "" ..... and
nrut.
JR it*.. . . :ng.781.
W¥541, litm-lpm,

:r

Sun-1'11,

T h o - CouniY Commloalon

" g-

1:,
"::Prior
o::r.!\1
or=~'=
...,.,... ... oooldng

ol 20-21 - l d bi
hllplul. Tho Individual wiH ..,.
dorgo • training porlod lnd
avonluoiiY wool! 1ioo dan o
filing In ""
lhl lult-41me cook. Appllcotlon
forma moy ba· pldoad up 01 thl
....... Counl~=lllon
Oflloo In tho
bot·
WM11 lhl hoon of I :II0-4:30pon
llon-Fri. Tho ....... Couftly·
Com-18•n_._
tut*y emplow•.

. . . lind"--

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which m3ke5 It illegal
to advertiSe ~any preference,
limh8tlon or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex tamJUal status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitatiOn or discrtmlnatlon.~

This newspaper will not
knowlingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which·Is In vlolaUon of the law.
Our readers are hereby
infonned that all dwellings
advenlsed in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

tl2-2tll
Nloo 2 Badn&gt;e&gt;m 14170 f38Mio.
• Elootrlc • Wllor, a.-n I-I
P.M. 114 441 3111.

chadta). -

114-44WIIII
- Aulo.s
- Table,
Splain,
Quollly Hoo I hold Fumlt1n SellfO
With 8eml
Tum
In-

-· .

Round lllllad H.oy For
llelo, Koplin Born, fl1 Par IJ:~ 73 Vans&amp;4WD'I . ~.
Sc!u... . . . Of !!OJ II
;;~~~~~~~·
o-a. n-tw a 1112 ct.v. Convaralon Von. ;
) .fl-11 Par lleto, ~~
-AitarSP.II.
1114 - · · · · . . . .
'
1184 &amp;,10 tioB....r, ¥4, 2.1 ,
Squora .... Allolfa H.oy, ~o 1 ..~• 4
~~ Pl. Good.;.
-Wit, -1012.
\iOIIIIfUOIIo
1 IIM-446-~.H
Squo,. fl.21to f2.001 par 1110 Dodae Rom Von aOilo,
bolo. Attoollo, CloYar,. Orcnord 72,000 MIIOo, M,OOO, Con Ill"",
AI: 0.111~ DollY'•
- · 304.f71.3110.
.
For-: _ _ , Round Blloa Trlbu~. ~~ Th~d AvatKIO, Oaf..:•
llpol18 UIIIO.
~
-EX. ~
• Onic:hard
.....
114-441-2412 ... 114- 111112 Grand Voy"'iar. 114-2541i;

="

~

--

1531

'

nu
,_, """" driYa, $21110. 458-17113.

Transportal ron

76

.:.11.:.....:Auto::::::.:•;.,:t;o:..rsa;::;le;;_--::

~lr.EFplN~

PipT.

t

44

Apartment
tor Rent

1 &amp; 2 b tum fumiMid .-,,

eome utlllllel paid, depoe~' ,..
qutm. 30W78-7783.

2 ladraom Goraga· Aparl.-ot,
Stova I llohlgarltor, With
Wator, I Clarboga Fur-

nllhed, 114 4'1 0214.

2bdrm. •pta., tat81 tMclrlc, •
plio.- fllmloflld, llunth
room lacllhloa1 "!'* to ochotil
In IIMJI. Alllll-lono nollable
01: VIIAlllo. Ml or
C811814-la4711. EOH. I

·a,_

Employment Services
11

Help wanted

AVON I All ,.,... I

st-... ~--

Shl~ay

AVON I• buy or Hll, lll~trn. tn-

:104-182·:M45 or

1108o8817,

.

A - Sl 418 /Hr.Piuo Fant. .
t~ !IJac!!Unlol Sill At Warl!
~- Ton1forr Oi&gt;Ofonat. Inclop. R4p. 1-.ll12-c'l38.
.

'

-

YOry tlttlo, pr1co -

tlablo, . , . . . .... 7 In
-ng, 114oll24703.
.._

..

~

• - •-• c '"'
,.,
-~ • cholro,
mlac. · - 304.Q5.1710
bit·
_
"-2 tong IIIli okiii 1armo1o, 111
""""
otnlllwhlta 1-.
..tlno ollp.
-old
-c.t
.... 55
Building
Pair women•a m
eiu I,
Suppllel
oond. ~ ....,
4pm • .
a-, br1c1t, olpn, win50 .alt.r muuM IMW, f11i 22 -,_,!fntalo, ate. Claudll Win1aro, 1110 - . 011 Clll 114~ .... 1111.80; Zl n u m , 2 0 - - - , f l l l : 241-112\
12 IIUIIII 1711 -lglon ExproU, 1171: 20 .11""111 pump, !RMI 1.-nga Foctory Dlroct
Blo•autel32d4, 401:711, ~~
f!.l.i II SmMh, IJIII; 311 Coli, 70110,
And SomO Oddll """
- : 28 - . luto. f1211: Endo SALE
E11D1 Fob 21th Or
......... ..... ond tickle, - - llndl Clorwl1- -71110.
II'DIIIng lllltor, UI.IO; toolli
o4 mloc. o..... -p
Pete
Sale
Shop, At. 143, - o r . 114-912· 56

ebt•.

-·

tor

~~&amp; mOAWO -.lead
111 Sidon Equl~ eon,.

Ill«:

.

ll!llol-

-

Clltld ..,. In my lloont In Middlo-, _ , thru Friday,
7:00om-1:00pm., 114-~~~2-~~~:M.

3 Badr-•l lkii•ll Ill CountrY
ow... llanl Dn 3
For Solo !II'
'
ng ~

in a hurry... TRY
.CLASSIFIEDS

REAL
TIHE

SAVEItS. ...

. 446-2342
992~2156

675-1333

~. tl,2110, 114-4441-tOil

Hi\/(\t'1JRC::£R
6AIN T\oJO

It-I o

32 Mobile Homu
for sale

0

1M1 Ubtrty, 2 badrocme, 1

-·--.2-

Aptll, M 44~-~Ul

llnlal""' Rait Tor.
·1
·
1 - . 114-4fl.
11:11.

Auto Parts &amp;

·,.,'

Accessories

··

114 411 llli

'

II

3 FMble
4 Impel (2 wdo.)
5 Gem merchant
6 - Lingua

1 DOE'o
aucceoaor
2 - lily

West
4"
. Pass
Opening

North
4•

East

6 11o

All pass

lead: "

s•

K

Last week I gave the rea l name of
Joan Crawford - Lucille LeSueur.
Since th en, my attention has bee n
dra;vn to today' s deal , on whi c h
Crawford was si tting East. I t first ap ·
peared some 20 years ago in the syndi ·
cated column produced by the Aces.
which is now my sister column written
by Bobby Wolff.
South 's five -spade r ebid appears
ebullient . A pass or double se~~
preferable. But perhaps South 's
reasonable. After all , five hearts
bled nets North -South only 500 points,
which is less than th e value of a vulner·
able game. And since the clubs are
breaking 3·2 and neither defender is
apparently able to lead di amonds safe·
ly, the slam looks impregnable.
South won th e heart lead with his ace
and played a trump . Joan Crawford
wasn't tempted to duck her ace foe two
rounds. She kn ew that, as West had to
have a seven-card heart su it for hi s
four-heart bid. there was no heart trick
available to the defense.
Instead. Crawford .won th e second
round of trump s and led the di amond

1...-+-1--+--1

by Luis Campos

' D X U ·v M S ,

y G

EUMM . · -

' DXUVMS ,
FXLYMO

=.:

omlflnl--•· ¥4, ...o. air,
I

V D II
G N

Oklo II Ror• I~
1 Clwnar, OaroOo Koll1. - Llka
-~~~LaoI
1-MH.:....__latdng"
_ _$1,000,
__

This seemed to sacrifice a diamond
trick but really reaped far mure in r e·
turn . Suddenly declarer couldn 't draw
trumps . After winning with th e di a·
mond ace, South had no option but to
play a spade to dummy 's queen . H e
cashed the diamond qu een,. hoping
West had begun with a doubleton jack,
before turning to the clubs. But his luck
was out. 'crawford ruffed the third
round and played a diamond to West's
jack: two down.
·
•
Thi s is a classic Merrimac Coup .
leading a hi gh honor to remove a vital
entry from an opponent"s hand. If only
Joan Crawford hadn't wa sted ·h;:r time
making movies ....

WOlD

I

OROECK

.~=I=Ir=l=~r
...,....Y...;A,...:C:...,::..E..:,D...--1~~,
. PI' I I .:
J
.I .z A.I"R c yl. 1

r

1

1

Looking at his empty wallet,
one old timerturned to his buday
and said , ' You never profit from

TO HAVE AN INNA1E

fEEL FOR. THE. GAME !

C)

•

18 /'

l..-l..-.1..-..L. ......;J
'.

PRINT NUMBFRED

LFTHRS

Q~~:~·let~

the chvckle quoted .
by fdlu"'Q 1n rh~ m1sstng wmd'1
you dewelop from step No J be lo w.

I' I' I' I' 1 I' I' I" I' I
5

•

UNSCR AMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

IIIIII I II

SCRAM.LfTS ANSWERS

Bloody , Vital· Photo · Pencil · HOLE in IT
"That's justgreat," my husbandgrumbled "I boughtasu it
wrth two pairs of pants and I've discovered th&lt;ilt the jacket
has a HOLE in IT "

1

Campers&amp; .

·•-•••

Services
--------~'
81
Home
~
1m
_.,
PIOVII118ntl

~•

. IWIEIIENT
WATERPROOfiNG

U,_,.,lllonal lllollnll gUoroil"'
toa. ~ . - ..... ...............

ASTRO-GRAPH

Col 1.aao.:M?-Gml 01 114-23"
~ Wll-""tt. ~q,
ttlbllahll 1m.

a-. •

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-'"'lzlna

wv

Heating

84

Thursday, Feb. 23. 1995

!1-

I

xov .·

lAM I

&amp;

YOU'vE NEVER 5TUDI'E.D

Develop.l\ents In the year ahead might
stir youl leadership quamies . Once you
commit yourself t6 a for~ard position ,
though , you 're nol apt to abdi~ate your
authority.
PISCES jFeb. 20.March 20) Conditions
continue in your favor as you strive to
achleye an Important material objective .
Keep your eyes on the larget . Trying to
patch up a broken .romance? The Astro·

Graph Mal c hmaker can help you to
understand what to do to make the rela·
tionship worl&lt;. Mail $2 .50 lo Matchmaker.
· P.O. Box 4465, New Vorl&lt;. NY 10163.
. ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) This could
pe a good day to pu t a bold plan into
actiOn . You mustn't procrastinate H you·re
ready lo make your move .
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) Your great·
esl opportunities lor success today could
come from situations in which you share
a vested interest with' another. You must
each conlribule equally.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Authorship
isn't lhe crrttcatlactor today, so don't hesitate to use a companion's ideas or suggestions II you think lhey're bener lhan
yours.
CANCER
(June
21·July
22)
Industri ousness artd productivity could
pay.unusually large dividends today. Put
all your eHort into what you do, especially
il trying to generate income . ·
•
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Contacls made
loday could prove extremely helplulln the
long run. ConduCt yourseH In a manner
lhat will le.ave a positive. lasting impres·

·

TGU
H S 8 IE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : •t never care what !hey say about me in the papers.
as long as it isn't true .· - (Tennis greal) Jimmy Connors.

.,7

CHESS, YET '(QU !oEf:M ·

I

'

.V D II

c.

IODWLYGAD

L -l..-

'

Motor·Home•

I

J G C

WULAWOMV

GBO·

IIIII 9-10,- ltong. ~
12H.
•

1111 C.ntllr D4:o:.r.. ounI ~~~ L.':::"!

w

'

o

or
711
or

D W F

JMMYDGTMU .

1184 Oklo Cut-. ftiiOO. !1114675-S811.

, _ dr• and

30 Folher
31 Lima tree
32 Eoau 'o
country
34 Bakar·a
product
38 Spota
39 Conatructlon
beam
41 Woody
45 Donkey
47 Trinket
48 Well
ventllatecl
4V Beloved
51 Shirt
52 Conceal
53 Aware (al .)
55- de France
57 - Angelle

Celebr1ty Cipher Cryplograma are CtM1er:l lrom Quoltbs by lamot.~s people , pall end prtseol
Each le"er tn the ciJ)htr 1181\dJ !Of another. Tod.ty's clue: L ~UBII S

!04-1~

1184 Oklo Fltonzo, Good Conlfl.
tlon, 11110, 814-25&amp;-1201 Aak For ·

ln11ic1
Kind of poem
Run easily
Furze genus
Neighbor of
Fr.
19 Nut tree
21 A~telope
24 Missing
25 ·Cry of pain
26 Hebrew
month
28 Work like

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I I·

BIG NATE

Truck - · ChiY., Ford, Dodfloj. : .

79

~airline)

7
8
9
10
~..,.."""1'""'1 11

TRAM RO

M,•tlflfHI1... tty CIASSIFIE".

•

DOWN

...
,--------,~ the mistakes you make at the--

,_,.,., . fiii!IIOt, Goal Hoi
W.lltr HMIIr, 114-ZIIIut.

1110 ctarton MdO 'lf.ll .... Lac,
2 aR, 1 011o11;: ~.~
Cllllna. 2
'
:J.:
...... (lUI ... Dn Loft, f21 ......

1'{0.1~?

z:..r:r '

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvcstock

~.-' ........tor,

63

..

5

H=~-..._.
lut . .,..
; : ; c::Maj.
.•:tOW f~·or,iii.=.;
1'/WMii.

Ho Plpww
Pupil

0.-. Addloon - · fiZ,OOO,
114-317•721l

5€5 YOU TO

•

1111 l.lncofil Town Cor, Loadwl CMI, 114oll2-1323.
13400. 1111 CoR VIlla van,
Ron'a TV - .
fi3GO..30W'J5.2440.
In lanlll
wiCii. moil
1111 Oldo Billion
....... brondol. 1·
*-:IJtll.
awner, 45,000 IIIDH, ,.. llrw, -mootl,
A·1 -.~......- . . llnonc•. 82
Plumbing &amp;
!1114-4171-f,.... or ~78-!~~~M.

Jaek A~ terrier pullpln,
$210-h, tiUIUOIO.

3 lldFDOml, 2 ..... .....
Pump, OM Fumloe, 1 Acta,

HOW a!£ DO YOO E:XA...Nf\1 WHY
E:ATING A ~€12.· ~D

Plcii.Up·'
Colli,Dooro,
... llollli''
Aloo, 414 IJriYO Train Pao1o. 3 :
-South Of Cla1Hpo11811. Juo. J
lion At. 7 • Alit•
--ER:
I ''

w-.....

I"IW7W240.

:!. -n.

BORN LOSER
L1 F€ 1~1'1I F/&gt;-1_1::. ...

1111 Pontiac Grand Am, 4 ~!.!t
cac ~ ...._
LE. 3.0 Htar Y-e.- oar, I1DW 1 1 1 - - IIIII 11o1111o 11oNo
OliO. 114...2-eaa.
Rapatr. For tooo - - · -

Aa- Rural Wol•, ~­
- - Pltliol l Norlhupl
Primo Hunting, Prtcad To Sell

61
82

1113 Chawn.., •~o..:, run11
aood."-~. good,
080.

11111 llaroury ~r, V-1,
outomo!C:..:Ir, toou ilnd "'"'
good,
"" to 12ao, 114~m or 114-14NCNS.

neg.~.

Cl TIMIS by NEA, lrte

···:

2213.

111111 Spirit Stond I Cyll....,
$5I1G Rnn, 1 Sol 01 NylOn Hal&gt;
n - camp. 1110 Rrm, e - .
1001.

~I'Or--Ra·
Pi11p'n,~.
::~. ~:z:.';

=

pony. 304-478-"11121.

e-.

••t

Drl-.114 ue Oloo.

drrwo!!L - · - · piU
lng. 1ovx1IO lol, 2nd •
QOoraa lt•• - · 142,000

400 SB Solid ~ Good Cond~
lion, f3,500, 1 ........1513.
111111 Ford Fol.- AI:L IIIIN,
38,1011 .. ¥4 Ellg. Good Cond~
tlon, Rune OoOd, T'"* For
Good Plck.Up Truclt, ·~
•• ~•....
can Au For 0oorp,
1711• •
111111 Rabbit Good _,.. Runa

AmyOrlllt.
111111 calobolty Euro &amp;p
o11lion
~.
. nice,

2111'. 2 both, 2 - .... p .....
Blot tho Sorlna Rualll Gal JDUI' bUlldlftJI -lor, -

-

AVOHSS$SALE!

54 Miscellaneous
Men:hanctlle

18 Wanted to Do
31 H011181 tor Sale · ·
~AI:=o:-:~;--.:.;.:Soo~-;.;•;lca:.,.;Com;;..:.;.:plel:_o___ ,13 AaNo And Blm I - 3
care, 20yra. ex,~. a·lmlu-', .,_ B'drccme, 1 1J2 ....., L!IJ a

. . tmotw. 114-441-1111 or 1.aao. PIYOd

==:

1124 E. llaln • - . on 111. 12f,

\

•.

'
Wlnlad To CWh Aont 18 74
MotorrvcJes
T - Crap Will Pay .IIOC /Lb. • ;_,,;::.;;,;,;;;
· -~
•:..:.;::..,..-:--·•'
114 311 144t.
1ttl-R.Wiar220 4-whteler,::

- . y. Hou,.: M.T.W. 10:00 Two 41" plpo w..nchoa lor Nla, 1 -Conwo Z·21 Nftly Rilllulft

l.m. to 1:00 p.m., SundoiJ 1:00
to I.:OO p.OI. - - ·

eo

king .

).l\d

•

,....,..~::.;:::;:.;.;,;;,;;..-,..~··
•~
1831 Chev. 2tir. n , • II Buotaat Prlcad T,.,orntaatona,;;
VENDING: Won, Got Rich
And Appl- Groltlloola On 1ag'!lad Amp With Grulllc Eq. original, good .body, - - . UMIJ &amp; ,.,IN, Ill typea, llait·
0U1c1t. Wll Gal a llludy, Cwh 311...... .
Pari ~~- d~. . .. • ..u I - . Prico ToW 1.f0o.I:ID.
caah And Conyl AENT.Z.OWN Alllfll Turwr w•h 12 Pr- goOd _,r, amllllant ~~- roo lng It Mt: - - 114-37WIIIt'
114-1112-- up to ......
And Layowoy AloO AYollablo. Tuning, DUll a - l a Dick, c.or. 301 1111 3131 iftar lpm.
43113.
CMVetle p.trta:
F- Dolf..ry Within 28 - . ·
P I - Vallov NIJI!IIng and
Compacl Dlok Ptorar, Wood I ' 1tl7 ChoYralol Plck.Up Cuatlll!l drwna, IlK ra1ora. hMd.l nrlltf.:
llahabllltotlon c:- .. tiOildng
cabl":'dOt
Two Ulta
100 -~-b, ShDIIIIad, St..Sido ! I - brok• 1 Ml......!fi!.~~ 13 lire(,
3br., •It ~' -ldryar, WI-,_Oryar, Color T.V. CB · 0
WIII-, _
I I • W1th
8 .........
Real Estate
•_
lllooctO&lt;
Honing. Tho .......
a rima. 304-~.
.. .~ ,
_ o4..........
ltl
c~
no .,..., · -· 3114 .~ Rod~·--· R...,..,.tor, ~ Pold fl,200, Socraltca lon1 COndition, I-·1SR
'
&amp;m.
,
.
::.114-::;::::,:1238=:·--.--- ....... 114-2116-11011.
loador In hunhoiiW apai:lall;llng
1m Dido Cut- s.....-, JohnMIIII Tranlm......,_ And:-•
S.ovlca, Uoocl And -Ill' '
In ~- ond rahaloiiMolloblle homu In tho couniiY· 53
Antiques
STORAGE TANKS 3~000 Gallon ;J&amp; 1000 octuol mlloa, to Trw.? 'ana. Aa.o, CMh And":
tton: Alllltla.irmuot han • watar, garboga and - • In- ;:--..,...,...:..,.-,...,.,-- Upright, Ron EY.,. ~nta.,.,..... -lava, ,11000. So- cab earrr r....-~aa~ona, ltw7t..,
and tfuiM y.... I'Mft'll 7AII1t
cludad. JUII 10 mlnutn ln&gt;m Buy ow Mit, Rl..trw Antlquaa, Jocltlon, Ohio, 1 -53Ji.0521. · only. !1114-4175-71111.

,......, upertence, excellent

IDLE
CHATiER ..

JTATfftitENTI'

•tart•, .._..

T l - Wlnlad, And
Clair CUlling Avalloblo. F,. On
Sill EotlmaiiL 20 v-. Ex·
11WI7-71181, Or 114-

NOTHING,

MA'AM .. JU$T

~ANK

lllnual Royal 440 t,_rtor,

"""':~": rlbVInYl In 91oclt. lloltohon ucatlonl
btln, $71,aoNI
•!tar
carpato, C14-4611Mf.
lpm.

tor Rent

Uatul"' .t.rnale to c... tor echool
INOTICE!
age chlkhn for lOti dayo In OHIO VALLEY PUILISHIHG CO.
Ajotil, uc:allant P"Y,J!'!* han
thll "you
-.t.r.nc., 114-liiZ·DM,
.
- with
poop11o you k.-1 and
NOT to Hncl- through lhl
moll unlit you hi" ln-lgltad
tho ollorlng.

---:~~-.

MA'&lt;i3E I
SHOULD DO
IF

8RIN6 I-IER SIX OR
SEVEN.MARCIE,AND
SHE CAN MAKE
A PIE ~----

-oddlor
-·
$211.
Hlgllohllr . . good
oond:L..I!!I

an.

Own your own . _ . . a&lt; -

SflE ALWA'&lt;5 6ROU6HT
AN APPLE TO SC~OOL
FOR HER TEACHER ..

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Business

Bual,_ For llelo: Cl- To
s.-.114 441 4012.

11M WONDERING

--"'· -71\W304.

Rent als

56
56
59

By Phillip Alder

:'.:":;a.;:.-: ::.'1 ~r
_,, ...
304·~.

otaome

poem•
Prlaon
Wrl1er Levin
UnemployiOd
Church
cal8ndar
Unit of light
Chengos colOr
of
Hawaiian
lnitrumente

She could
play bridge too

35 Loti &amp; Ac-e

· Opportunny

apply.

YOU WANT TO WIN,
DON'T YOU?

54 Mlscellanaoua
Men:llanciiM

rwaume to: Boi A-14, c/o Pl.
1
P
I -I Rlllll'!\!'
llalnEOE.
!R., 1
Pl. P
L WY 200
25550.
I •--~-----­

Mlnortt ..., ,...,....... Ylt. .,.
and Dlllbled arw encour~~gtd to

5 11o

NEW BAMt REPOSI Only f Ioiii
-IIYad ln. -711-711\ .

Preech0ol,l1t 448 0121.

32814.

a-..-

Public S81e
&amp;Auction

-~~.

, . 1111 14olQ lnciW. llklrt-"
lng, ....... lilaiiu, 1 yoar
hom I 1• I lniUf'anca. lrid I
FREE lol rtnl. Only

Col1-

472-31111.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wanted to Do

18

t•

CHEATIN'
??

In,
......

14r111Nbr. catl -

te20 dcllm oncl tiM par

CollulorDna

Lost&amp; Found

-

A_, Wanta lncllvlduola lntarwtad In Earning .. _... IHr. No
Ooor To Ooor. 1-.e2lU40
lnd.IRop.

HouNbrohn, 814-25&amp;-11102. .

Woahet ID&lt;yar To Gt.._,
Washer Worlce Dry« DoMn"'t
Mull T1k1 Bolhl 114418-VJM.

South

AIN'T
THAT
...... 2 p o - • -

53 tftirry
54

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

"Why does he always have to say, 'Bye
bye ... Don't feel guilty!'?" ·

good home· only. 304-f'IMIIIO
or 175-C302.

PuDDioa: Pori Roltwolllr I ColBlac:k, 2 B.-., 114-388-

;

114-441--.

lomolo

46 Flop
46 ConiuM
50 Type of colfM

• A I0 3

Ru1 Nloo 1110 - - Grond
Prbt, SI,IOO,

Naut-,

Ito 4

..,

Answer to Prev!ous Puzz._

llo4 3 2

Soli:Oood
1111 Caprice
1
101
v-e
.... _ tCloult
t ,

cat To Good Homo~ D'ocla- I
Utter ualnod, AJ»
prax. 2 vu,. Old, 814-&lt;M&amp;-2415.
bot~

EEK&amp;~MEEK

.

NR4',- 114-BI 1114 Dlye:
~1132tE••••

B•utlflll cata To ~ Homo,
614-37li-Z5511.

•rr..t

•

aoor, a..-1c, Air, ClaM iJ~o~•

Adull moll ........
, bolh """' hunlorw.
304 7&amp;+130• .

F._

PI, S

I.DwAir
.... g ' PS:
, fl;415;g. IAir,
......

1112 .....,.,_ 14 000 -

-fvJt!6

Giveaway

3 mlud a..~

· - 081 Ex

111211uotong LX Loadwl, E-.
lonl COndition, ._.1tl:ll

EOH.

12 Type of dance
13 Archhecl -

14 Bullring cry
15 - tu
r----;;;miiTi1!--;:;.;:o::-1116 Singing bird
17 For each
•Q J 10
18 Nearalghled
•s
peroon
.• Q 6 4 2
20 Building
IOddltlon
lloAK Qt08
22 Nothing
EAST
23 Lock opener
11o A 9 4 3
24 Cauatlc
substance •
10973
.. 6542
27 Meadow
• K 75
29 Eat a amall
lloJ 6
amount (of)
SOUTH
33 Guacharo
35 Told tales
~~oK 67652
36 Urge (on)
•A
37 Great Lake

'
•

11191 -

1431.

Dc..

Saerlnen

Auto• tor sale

Cot-··
""'
w:::.".::l·

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEiml liT
BUDGET PRICES AT IACKION
EST~ 12 od Dllw
-&amp; IIIOVIH.total-lo=
C.H' 114 Ul

141111 2 lllodraoma, 2 llolha,
~ In 3 llonlha, -

lMveM ugr
c.ll fell' In-Ion Dn Onlof.
Or For .....
lng
,
_
F,_
...........
lila.

71

for Rent

3 Announc:ementa
REDUCE~ lun off Itt .... ...... ,... ONL,
Fnrth Pharmlcy, .IlEa F ,.....
THE PAMPEReD CHEF

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

40 Fer

, ,..,
42 r-ce.,IOf-&lt;~~.)
5 Shark movlll
43 Shlldti tree
9 Haul wllh ellort 44 Authot - Rand

.VIRGO (Aug. 23·5ept. 22) You will have
the lenacity and dedication to finish probtemalic laill.l!r ulignments today . You
have what il take s to finish whal you
stan .
· LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Your newast
projecl mi9"t be quite lucky lor you,
especially 11 it involves worl&lt;ing with penpie you know and like.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You are slill
in a favorabl e cycle for material affairs .
GiVe priority to improving· your financial
siluation .
s ·AGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dic . 21)
Companions will lind you deligh~ultoday .
When you feel enthusiastic, jt'll be conta·
gious and lighten lhe spirits of all within
earshot
CAPRICORN (Dec . · 22·Jin . 18)
Soil"telhing you've been walling lor. hop·
ing it might come lhrough the good &amp;US·
pica s of anQther, mig~t break loose
today. Be expectant and positive.
AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 111) Your best
assel today will be your ability to make
others feel special and significant. This is
somelhing you can do wllh sincerity .
'

sian . .

(

�Pag&amp;-1.2-The Dally Sentinel

I
Wedneeday, February 22, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ..

Ohio Lottery

Ohio'State
loses another
Big 10 game

Pic:k 3:
lllf

Pic:k 4:

6766
Super Lotto:
18-19-2~27-32-37

Kicker:

PageS

Low IDnl&amp;bt In 301. ClouciJ.
Friday cloudJ. Hlgblln tbt 40s.

076553

a

A C.rdlnal· Affiliated Supermarket
VoL 45, NO. 209

•
'&gt;

I

2 Secttono, 12 Pegee 35 centa
A Muldmedlo Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 23, 1995

Copyrlght1995

· ~2.!!iOf!~~t.!!¥~!P.:~~.9~tr!9~ P~~~~~...sEJ.d

Times-Sentinel Slalf
.~of the co,ntmets 10 lhe Sl~3
m1ll10n Reedsville hydro~lec~c
project were sold last Fnday tn
Columbus, officials announced
Wednesday.
· : The rest of the· contracts including the $73 "'illion power
plant - should be awarded and
then scheduled Friday, said E.
Leon Daggett, executive vice president of American Municipal _Power
.ofOhio Inc.
A $6 million contract was sold

Friday. The trash rake cleans llliSh ly located m West V1rgmia, Will
The hydro-electnc Jlfi?JCCt 1s ~~- Daggett said. The lines will likely
away from the dani,, Daggett said.
produce 42 mcga:-vaus of JX!WI:C·
mally kno~ as the ~io MulllCI- be located betw~ Reedsville and
The hydro-electnc pLiilt may be
Groundbrcakm~ for 1!'1• plant
pa_l ElectriC Generauon Agency a Rutland substallon.
built by the Guy F. Allrinson Con· Should occur someume this March, Jomt _Venture 5_(0MEGA J'(S).
The Federal Energy Regulatory
struction Co. This company, based Daggett said. A date has not been
It mcludes_a hy~lectnc plant Commission held a public meeting
in San Bruno, Calif., placed the set
.
.
on the_ Oh10 R1ver near the last Oc10ber to discuss the impact
lowest bid for the plant at
Originally, an ICC s10~ dlat hit . Bellevt_lle Locks and Dam and · of tJ.e power lines. PERC wiD like$73.873,000.
the northem part of O~o d~layed power lines propo~ 10 stretch 2.5 ly license AMP-Ohio's preferred
"Their bid really looks clean,M signing all contracts Since II was miles from .Reedsv11le 10 an~~- Meigs County line this July, offiDaggl!tt said. "In this case it looks difticultiO gel a quorum. he added. can Electric Power substation m cials stated following an original
really'good."
AMP.Ohio, a.non-profit compa- · Rutland.
.
.
finding released last month.
Three of the 10 bids for the ny. is a collec.u.ve of 42 ~maller
The hydro-electnc proJeCt has
No Mei(!S County residents will
plant were under the ·$76,916,610 Ohio commumues who w1ll har· .been proJCCted to be completed m get electriclly from this proicct, but
estimated Cl)gineers' cost, Daggell ness this renewable resource for at OcL I, 1997. .
.
the plant and line construction
.
·
The power hnes should be bQtlt should employ county residents,

The three-year project will
employ about 225 workers during
the construction phase and about a
dozen permanent employees, he
added.
"I would like to sec as many
permanent jobs go to Meigs Coonty as possible," Daggeu said. "It
will benefit Meigs County."
The Parkersburg/Marietta Build·
ing Construction Trade Council
will hire the laborers for this projects, said Sam Davis, business
manager· for the Parkersburg/Marlcua council.
_

Meigs Local Board OKs '96 budget
By JIM FREEMAN
Seatlnel~~ew~ starr
The Meigs Local Board of Education Wednesday night approved a
bUdget or $12,833,982 for the 1996
fiscal year beginning July I.
The budget is $10,53,3 higher
than the current budget of
$12,823,449
·Acting 'Tre~surer Richard
Koker, who will temporarily
~q~lace Treaslll'er Jane f?. who is
on a leaVe of absence until May 1,
said the district will rmish lhe current fiscal year with ·a deficit
around $190,000. Next year's
deficit will be around $522,569, he

COCA·COLA
&amp; PRODUCET

::::::FREE-'T.VAR; ·
'

1212-CIZ. CAliS

.._ .. ,_W.C..I'ILII... C.. .. P-•......, . , , _ ...,.
_ -~~~

SAN GIORGIO
SPAGHETTI

.
WATf INDICTED • Former Interior Secrelary Ja•es G.
· Watt WIIS Indicted Wednesday 101' bls role as a bollllng CIODSUitaDt
· alter be left tile Reagan admlalstrallon. He was dlarged wltb per·
.jury, unlawful coneealmeat aad obatructloa of justice In a ~5··

:1:::: F . .EE
'

.

toono.PIIH o. c..,. •-•· a. ...,.,

' 'I:QIIIlt bkllc:m.III!L (AP)

ORI....-rTIIII
OR ELIOW MAC
11 OZ. PIG.

SNOW PLOSS
TOMATO CATSUP

WASHINGTON (J\1&gt;) - Former Jnlerior Secretary James Wall
intends lb defend himself at Uial
against charges he covered up bis
consultant work seddng federal aid
· from fOrma' Reagan adrninistmtioo
colleagUeS. . ·
.
A 25-counl indictment was
· obtained Wednesday by Arlin
·Adams, the independent counsel
investi&amp;MJ:f lhe Reagan-tllll housing scan
at the Department of
Housing and Urban Developmenl
It charges Wan with perjury;
unlawful concealment and obstruCtion or justice. Each count carries a
penalty of up 10 five years in prison

BUYONI
a•T
ONI
1

::'~LE
28 OZ. IIOTTLE

l.MYO. . . . . C.. . . , _......... c-..

.

:~· :' .,.,~

.

Watt intends to defend
himself against-charges

c_ ....._ ....

BUYON·F
G•T ON. • EE

•

.

iuida tme. ·

BUY'
ON•
G•T ONI
n=-(]

1-

IMP.RIAL LIGHT
MARGARINE

HO._M.L BLACK
. LAB.L BACON

•uvoNIF
•
EE
GIT
·
O
NI
I

BUYONIFREE
.
~IT ONI . .
::u-CE

....... c.. .

·

IIEI. OR~ SALT

11 OZ.CII12 OZ.
CUTER CUT

Wall was charged with lying 10
Congress and to a grand jury aboUt
lhe bouslag COIIIUitant work he did
after resigning as interior seereWy
in 1983. He ~so is charged with
concealing (or more than four yea'S
doc11m~nts that contradicted his
testialilay and had been subpoe. lUied by the grand jury.
"l did not lie 10 the Congress or
to the gnnd jury nor in any way
obstruct justice," Watt said
throoP his attorney. "The facts
~te no wrongdoing and ...
the Offrce of Independent Counsel
. lawyers know I have not violated

pro=rintendcnt Bill B11ckley
said the district has the option

between going into the state loan
fund or trying 10 cut costs between
now and July. The district is not in
the loan fund at this tilne, he said.
The problem is the district is
getting less money from coal
mines, Buctley 'explained. In addition, all districts are receiving less
tax money from utility companies
due to deprtciation. ·
.
It is going to hurt school districu aiticaUy, he said. ult's worse
on this area." It is not an emcrgen·
cy situation yet, but we are going 10
keep an eye on it, he explained.
Buckley noted the disttict cannot use money from its permanent
improvement levy since dlat money
is allocated solely for permanent

improvements and school buses. ·
The budget is available for
review in the treasurer's ·office,
Buckley said.
In personnel mauers, the board
rehired BuckJey for an additional ,
·five years at his current pay mte.
Buckley is currently in his second
year as superintendent.
The board approved hiring
Koker as temponuy ll'eaSurer effec- ·
tive Feb. 20. He is 'retired from ihe
Federal Hocking School District
and lives in Syracuse.
Linda R. Faulk, Diane L. Rice
and Janice E. New were hired as
substitute teachers for the remain·
der of the school year while Jo
Gilmore 'and Joe Hall were hired as

substitute bus drivers pendin
approval by the county board of
education. Mary Grim was hired as
an assistant softball coach for the
1995 season.
An educational leave of absence
was gmnted to Lorri Barnes.
The board also sold a 1980
GMC pickup truck 'at the bus
garage 10 Elden Walbum for SilO.
Following 11!1 executive session,
the board agreed to award one
week's back pay from 1992 10 nine
non-union employees.
Present. were Buckley, Koker,
~ Presulent Larry Rupe, Vicepres1dent Randy Humphreys and
board members John Hood and
Scott Walton. Board member
Roger Abbott was not present

.Horton'S ·petition declared invalid

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
in10-that pcsltion from pre!ideni of ·regardless of political party. may
· The validity of all other peti·
council when Fred Hoffman · file as an independent
lions of candidacy was certified by
Seatlnel New Slalf
. Th!! petitign of candidacy of resigned 10 ~tan appointment
Horton said late Wednesday the Board when they met Tuesday.
Dewey Horlbn whq filed for the to the· Meigs. C.ounty Board of . ~te~ after beinl! notifir:d that
There wiD be a Republican Prian)' c;r!minal l!!w, ,;
..
. Republican nomination for mayor County CommtsSIODCrB. .
h1s .pebbon had 1)01 been validated, mary m Pomeroy with John w .
The 57-year-old.former Cabinet. of Middleport has been declared
Middleport now has no eandi- that he will "probably run as an Blaettilar, incumbent, Kenny Klein.
member, who lives in Jackson invalid by the Meigs County Board dates for mayor, for either of the independent".
.and Fmrik, A. Vaughan'sewng ~
Hole, Wyo., '"must now suffer of Elections.
two council seats, or for clerk-ttea·
Registered voters also have the · nomination for mayor; and Scott
through the ordeal of a long and
Rita Smith, BOatd of Elections surer, all of which have terms option of taking the route of run- M. Dillon, incumbent, Bryan s.
ex~nsive triallb clear his name," direclor, said that a technical error ·expiring this year.
.
ning as a write-in candidate. A dec· Shank, Geri Walton, and Bracy A.
sa1d William Bradford Reynolds, in comJJ:.'J:SJ:itions resulted
Howcv~r. as explain~d by
laration of intent 10 be a write-in Kom seeking nominations for the
Watt's lawyer.
.
in the ·
·
on.
Smith, the tleatlline for filing as !1!1 candidate must be filed with the ~o open seats on Council
The .government is .expected lb
Horton has served as mayor for independent is.4 P·!"· 011 Monday, Meigs County Board of Elections
No Democ
_ m!S filed for office in
call former HUD Secnl~ Samuel ..._ ....1 15 mon·'"- having moved May I. Any regtstered voter, by4p.m. on S•epL 28. . ·
either Pomeroy or Middi-Pierce and oilier former HUD ofti- u"' ..u~
~rv·~

daiS
against
Watt, as
buttrial
one witnes.es
individual familiar
with the case said !heir memories
of events a decade ago are stale,
and the govenunent aJsp would use
documents as evidence.
Adams said his inv~ga&amp;ion of
Wan will allow HUD ·to recover
almoot $10 millioo ilnelldcd 10 provide low-income housing in the
Virgin Islands, becau~ investigaIOrs discovered the mooey was not
used for such housing. The indictment said the 1985 grant was made
at Watt's request
·
"The public trust was betmyC!I
... by the award of scarce HUD
·housing funds during the 1980s
according 10 the dictates of favored
insiders, mther than the needs of
the poor, and ... by a cover-up of
these facts thai has now e~ttended
for over four years," Adams said.
•

Lange dismisses romance
·theory in murder case
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The · Ronald Goldman. Sex, consensual
candles burned in the living room or otherwise, never entered inlb the
and bathroom. New Age music aaact
"In my observation and my
filled the house. The bath was
drawn. The bed sheets were rUffled. experience, ilell was lhe last thln,4
Nicole Brown Simpson may onthemindofthisanacker,'
have been plannintl for romance the
night she wa inlriered, OJ. Simp. son's lawyers suggested Wednes- an overJdll, a bnltal overkill. There
day. but police igDind thele clues wasnoevidenceofrape.'~
Cochran seemed taken aback by
- ud the poaibility of a mysterious gentleman caller - in their La11ge's statement and tried to
objeet in mid-sentence, but was
· investiplion.
.
Over llld over, defCIIliO aaomey overruled. Court was recessed for
. ·
1ohnnie Coclnn Jr. pressed Detec- lhe day moments later.
The cross-e~ination was p8l1 ~
tive Tom Lange during crossexamination Wednesday. Did rl a long-range defense attempt to
POlice check whether Ms. Simpson . · poibiiJ' the police investigation or
had • male visilor that night? Did the murders of Ms. Simpson and
they pholograph the nine candles Goldman as sloppy and incomplete.
Lange is 10 return lb the stand
burning upllllin7 Did they pt:1f01m
tests to detamine if she bad been today for more croa-examinalion. ·
Meanwhile, Dlstrlcl Attorney
raped? .
Gan:etti
he expected
The nonltally placid Lertge, on Gil
__.._
· saidbethat
dismlsaed
.
next
lhe Iliad for tbe third da • bristled • ......,. JwtJr to
at lhe qliestions. He insisted that . week. ADd a dispute was brewing
tbe only man to visit MJ. Simpson : over whether the defense would
late the night of June 12 was . .Joae anocher key witness.

G·OP .pliess·es·broad spe'ndl·n·g cuts
f

WASIDNG10N (AP)- House
Republicans eager to prove their
meule as budget-cutters arc chopping public broad~ting, housing
'and tbe school lunch program over
cries of outrage from OUillumbered
Democrats. .
· Republicans planned subcommittee votes today on billions in
cuts in housing, environmental,
veterans and NASA programs as
tbe party continued its drive to
deliver on campaign promises 10
ahriDit the gove'mrne~t.
Meeting Wednesday, House
subcommittees approved ibout $7
billion worth of cuts in scores or
programs, a first installment in
whet they hope will be SIS billion
in quick reductioos. L8ter this year
!hey face dte more formidable task
of fmding more than $1 trillion in
reductions to pay for promises to
cut taites and balance the federal
bud~t over the next seven years.
' The American people voted .
for change in November, and
they're tired of seeing special interests cominJ to Congress for scarce
fuilds;" said House Appropriations
Committee Chairman Bob Llv-

I

Iogston, R·La.
· In their hunt for savings, one
House panel approved Republican
plans to gradually cut federal contributions to the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, which pr!Jduces educational and childrens'
programs for public radio and retevision stations.
In a six-hour meeting dlat ended
after I a.m ., the subcommittee
voted to leave ~he corporation's
S28S million budget for this year
unlbuched, but to· trim about 15
percent next year and 30 'percent
the year after. Public broadcasters
'had feared much deeper reductions,
and House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
R-Ga., continues 10 advocate a total
halt 10 federal assistance in futlire
years. .
Democrats, led by President
Clinton, complained that Republicans were slicing programs for
net;C!Y Am~cans too dee_Piy.
The smgle most 1mpor1ant
issue in lhe world lb them seems 10
· be to cut the school lunch pogram
and end it," the president said after
visiting Democrats at the Capilbl.
•'This is really just a show or

their manhood," Said Rep. Richard
Durbin, D-DI., speaking of Republican plans to trim spending for a
fond program for poor children and
women.
Today marks Day 51 of GOP
rule of Congress. Buoyant House
Republicans are racing to deliver
on their "Contract With America"
campai~ pledge 10 force votes on
reshaptng the entire government
before 100 days are up.
The House was a beehive of'
activity as lawmakers scoured the
SI.S trillion federal budget for programs they could revamp, reduce
or eliminate:
-The House Economic and
Educational Opportunities Committee was on the verge of ending
the school lunch program and a
food program for women, infants
and children.
-ThcHouse Judiciary Commit·
'tee was ready to limit damages
people can coUect from companies
that manufacture defective products.
--Subcommittees of the House
Appropriations
Committee .
approved cuts in scores of pro-

grams.
-And the House voted 418-0
Wednesday to require cost-benefit
analyses of government informa- .
lion-gathering programs and annual
10 percent cuts in paperwork in 1111
agencies.
·
The public broadcasting cuts
were included in a measwe bearing
nearly S6 billion in reductions on
seores of education, health and
other social programs. It would kill
a ~ogram that helps the poor pay
untity bilis and reduce spending for.
JOb trammg and AIDS prevention ·
and care, and trim or end aboUt 140
other initiatives. The overall IJIIclt.
age was approved on a party-line 9S ron call.
Other subcommittees also found
Wgets for their budget axes. One
Uimmed foreign affairs spending
by Sl92,million. One cut energy
and water jlrojects by $212 million
another sliced park and culturai r
programs by S327 mil·lion, and
anothe~ .re_duced agriculture and .
food m111auves by S212 million.
Half of the SIS billion in cuts
Republicans sought were 10 be used
10 reduce the deficiL

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.

GREBNVII.LE, S.C. (AP) - In
Its boldings in Ohio include lhe
an allempt to boost ita stock price, Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The
Multimedia Inc. says it will consid· Daily Sentinel of Pomeroy, the
er the possible lillie of all or pans of Sunday Times-Sentinel and in
the company.
'WCs&amp; Virginia, the Point Pleasant
"Onr atoek price has been sort Register
.
of dormant for a wiPie," Robert E.
'rhe company hired Goldman
Hambr Jr., the CO!IIpany's chief Sachs &amp; Co. as its adviser. Multifinancial officer, said WednesdaY.. 'media, which also said it would
~·wethintwehavetheresponsibilconsider possible spinoffs of busiity' to inmase value 10 our shire- ness.units or other strateaic combiholden."
nations, has not had dfscussions
Multimedia owns newspapers, with polaltial acquirers or partners
broadcasting statlona and cable and has not decided on a particular ·
television aad IICCurity systems. It strategy, Hamby said.
allo .....tucea
television talk lhoWa, · Multimedia stock closed 11
...such as Donahue, Sally Jeuy · $29.12 lfl a share Wednesday o .
Raphael md Rush Um~. and -tmding on the Nasdaq Slbck Marit JIO(ItiCCI NcWITalk Television, a tet, down 12 Jfl ~nts from Tues24-~ Clble

nctwolk.l

day.
"The company has ·Rood aaseu
The stock should perform well that are undervalued~' Putnam
in response lb the announcement. said. But management turmoil 11111
said Susan Putnam, ·an tndustry reg~latory pressures in the cable
analyst and portfolio manager with 1V industry have contributed to the
Moran &amp; Associates.
disappointing results, she said
· "It's similar to what !hey did
In June, Donald D. Sbarra took
several years ago,'' she said. over as chief eJtCCutive from tong·"They recapitalized the company time CEO Walter Bartlett. In July
and the stock did cxttemely well Dou-las J. Greenlaw was named
after dial"
"""••dent and bi f
·
The $1.2 billion recapitalization ~--:c e operaung offi.
in 198!1 to fend off a takeover
F&lt;!r years, Multimedia's profit
attempt by Washing19n Redskins margms have been amoog the bift"·
owner Jack l&lt;ent Cooke left Multi- est in the media indus
e&gt;•
media
with
SilO
millioo
in
annual
1·
·
try.
The
com·
pany bepn with the 1968 merger
mtere&amp;t payments and just tl!ree of the Greenville News-Piedmont
times that ir revenues. As other 01. and Southeastern Bma&lt;!cisting
companies expanded, Multimedia . Corp.
cut costs. , .

..

I. .
••

•

.•

.
.
:

·

.

'

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