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MON.·fll. 9·9

, SAT. 9·8
AFTER CHURCH
SUN.1·5

I

n't
•
Truck An ave Your Dough
'At C &amp; 0
...

Broncos" Green
.Bat post wins·
in NFL. playoffs

OPEN .

MBI.·FRI.I·I
.t
111.1·1
AFTil CHURCH
101.1·1

12·14-15·17·38-39
Kicker:

. 2-1-8-3-4-8
3-9-6

Sports on Page 4

..

1998CHEVY

Vol. 48, NO. 182
©1997, Ohio Vallev Publishing Company

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tax
-cutS . Paying down the national debt.
New .federal spending.
)
With the federal budget's red ink
drying up, Democrats and Republicans sparred Sunday over where any
extra money should go.
GOP lawmakers made the case for
lax cuts. Clinton admi nistration offi.
cials cauti oned Ihat the budget isn ' t
even in balaoce yet and urged Con·
gress io ~void any tax-cut package
that would rekindle giant deficits that
occurred during the administrations
of Presidents Reagan and Bush.
"We need to ensure thai before we
get into things like tax cuts ~ parttcularly tax cuts for the well-offthat we need to make sure that we
"'have our lOin I fiscal house in order. ..
.Franklin Raines, director of the
Office of Management and Budget.,
said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Still. House Ways and Means
Committee Chainnan Bill Archer. R·
Texas, said a'way should be found to
lower taxes .
"When you 're getting 21 percent
of the gross naiional product coming
in out of the workers' pockets to
mainlnin lhc current government,,
that's the highest percent of revenue
taken out of production smcc World
War II." Archer said on ABC's "This
Week." "We should have a tax
reduction." ·

AS·
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE T.O D~~ER

_1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB.414
Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Ghrome
Appearance Package and More!
'&lt;!

AS
LOW

AS
·"

r---~Warm ,

_weather-__,
} ·•;

And House Budget Chairman said the president's plan will include
John Kasich, R·Ohio, while advo· an appeal fvr money to give breaks
eati ng paying down the national · to middle-income pepple for day care
debt, also recommended new taX: expenses and, e~ergy conservation
costs .
_)
cuts:
"We want to have a smaller govRubin said the cuts would be
ern111ent," Kasich said on "Meet the financed by closing corporate tax
Press." "Government is at all levels loopholes and eliminating some subconsuming about 43 percent of sidies.
"We' ll be proposing rem~dying
national income. That 's too high. And
taxes are obviousl y too high . So I those. and that will provide resources
think we should do both- out tax- with which to fund the modest and
• v~ry carefully targeted tax cuts that
es and cut government."
Among tax cuts suggested by the we ' ll be proposing," Rubin said.
GOP was elimination of the socalled m&lt;~JTiage penalty, in which
Kasich, meanwhile, said he would
some · married ·couples pay more oppose increasing federal spending
income taxes than they woulchs si n- above limits prdV ided for in last
gle people.
year's balanced-budget agreement.
President Clinton will offer some Some lawmakers from his own partax breaks in the spending plan he's ly, most notably Rep. Bud Shuster, Rproposing next month (or th~ fiscal Pa., chainnan of the Transportation
year begmning Oct. I. They are and lnfrastr~c ture Committee, want
expected 10 be mvch more modest in to use excess money to boost spend·
scope than eliminating the marriage ing for roads and 'bridges.
'
rcnalty.
.
· "We think that it is an important
"The .idea that we ought to take
issue, one that we would be prepared any of this money and expand govto look at at 1he appropriate time," ernment for anything, to have any
Raines said Sunday. "However, it's additional spending beyond the bud- ·
very expensive. And as people throw gel agreement, would be a terrible
out ideas for popular tax cuts, they mistake, and I intend to fight it."
should also 1hrow out how they're Kasich said. "I ~aid, 'There'll be no
going to pay for them."
extra spending over my dead body,'
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, and somebody said, 'John, don't
~peaking .on CNN's "Late Edition ,"
give us the incentive.'"

The spring-like weather enjoyed by area residents ,;ver the last few days has been ·a boon
to those who work outside, like James Clifford and Charlie-Barren Ill, shown here installing a
new roof on the Pomeroy Kroger store. Greg Bailey of Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy, ...
contractor on the project, said the new, 30,000-square-foot DuraLast roof can be installed during winter months, unlike traditional rubber roofs. The new roof consists of a sheet, not unlike
a swimming pool liner, that Is heat-welded together, he said.
'
·.

Ki-rwan Weighs off~r of Ohio ·s tate presidency

1'998 ·ASTRO VAN
ALL ·wHEEL DRIVE
I

Automatic, V6, Chrom~ Wheels, AM/FM Cass.,
Tilt, Cruise, Pwr. Windows &amp; Much
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. More
.
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•
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The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, cit· 59-year-old former math professor
COLUMBUS (AP) -111e presi·
dent of the University of Maryland's ·-ing sources it did not identify. report· had been offered the Ohio Siale
flagship campus is expected to be the ed today that Kirwan had telephoned presidency.
King said he had no knowledge
next leader of Ohio Stale University. Shumate on Sunday to say. he will
that Kirwan had accepted the Colum. William E. "Brit" Kirwan, who accept Ohio State's offer.
Shumate confirmed that he had bus school's offer.
·has headed the College Park, Md.,
Kirwan, who lives on the College
campus for nine years. would replace spoken with Kirwan on Sunday but
Gordon ' Gee a• Ohio Slate's 12th decli ned to commenl further on the Park campus, could nQt be reached
for comment. . The university's
president. Gee became president of discussion .
Lance W. Billingsle chain11an of switchboard was closed for the weekBrown University :last week after
s!x:ncting seven years at the Colum- the board of regents for he U ver· end and no home telephone number
sity Syst~,m of Maryland, said r- could be detcnnined .
,
. bus schooL
wan
would
take
the
job,
ifdfnrnl
and
legis la.
Several
state
officials
University
of
Maryland
"
My
underslanding
is
that
if
the
iors
said
Kirwan
had
become
frusspokesman Roland King said Kirwan
_off~r
was
made,
he
will
accept
it,"
ltated by having to continually fl!lht
had received an offer from Ohio State
·
.
for more money, The Washington
and wi II announce his decision loday. Billingsley said.
said
Kirwan
inf~rmcd
Billingsley
Post reported Sunday. But they said
A)ex Shumate, chainnan of the
Ohio Slate board of trustees, issued him of his deci sion after word they did not know specifically why
a statement Saturday night thm..:on· · reached the university that The Kirwan decided to leave.
Billingsley said Kirwan told him
lirmed the offer but said talk~ were Columbus Dispatch on Saturday had
rcp&lt;ii1ed , in a copyrigh1 story, that the it was time~tp consider new chalcontinuing.

Thousands
flee fertilizer
plant blaze
1

1998 BWER

4 WHJ.l DRIVE
V6, Automatic, Tilt, Cruise,
AM/FM
Cass., &amp; MoreJ
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CIIDIT

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cen1s ""
A Gannett Co.,Newspaper ,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; January 5, 1998

Possible budget surplus
spurs differing· opinions

$

"2.9% FIIWKIIIG
01 APPIOVID GMIC

' Showers tonight, lows ·:
in the 50s. Tuesday~ show- :
ers. Highs near 60. :
Chance of rain 80 percent.

Pick 4:

1-8-6-9

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and lncreasecl Horse Power!! ·

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Super Lotto:

Pick 3:

5-10

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•

MAYSVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Afirc
at a fertili7.cr plant filled with herbi ·
cides and pesticides forced thousands
of people on both sides of the Ohio
River to evacuate their homes.
The fire started early Sunday
morning at the Cargilllne. plant. and
smoke rolled across the river for
more than 14 hours . One firefighter
suffered a minor injury.
About 2,500 people were evacuated 'from their homes in Maysville
and across the river in Brown and
Adams counties in Ohio, about 45
. miles southeast of Cincinnati . They
were allowed to return about 5 p.m.
The fire was discovered at aboul
3 a.m. by a Maysville police officer
who was respondmg loa car fire at a
restaurant ncar the plant. wltich was
not in operati on when the fire start·
ed.
AuJ!loritics decided to let the l.ire
in the 25.000-squarc-foot bu1ldmg
burn itse lf oul rather than tighl it with
water and risk washing toxic chemi·
cals into the Ohio River about 600
yurds away. Fire officials also feared
that dousing the names could create
clouds that could spread to pop,ulat·
cd areas.
Two explosions shook the :plan I
LEFT TO BURN - Smoke biiiQwed from the Cargill Fertilizer
during the 'fire, likely from propane
Plant in Maysville, Ky., on Sunday as authorities decided to let
canisters. officials said.
the fire bum .itself out rather than. risk disturbing over 400 tons
The plant contained stockpiles of · of ammonium nitrate In a baaement vault below the fire-gutted
herbicides and pesticides, as well as
structure. The fire forced the evacuation of over 3,000 area res420 tons of ammonium nitrate, the
id.e nts along the Ohio River shoreline. (AP)
fenili~r that is half ot the mixture
that made up the bomb set off ai-the never be known. It appears to have Ohio River between Maysyille and
Manchester, Ohio. Both were
been accidental , he said,
fe&lt;leral building in Oklahoma City.
Deputy State Fire Mar.;hal Kenny
Authorities also closed a nearby reopened when the evacuation order
CSX rail line .. and I0 miles of ihe was lifted.
Johnson said the cause of the fire may

lenges.
The Plain Dealer said Kirwan
would be paid about $250,000 per
year. Gee's annual salary was
$231.000, plus he received another
$146,000 each year for serving on
five corporate boards.
It was not known if Kirwan would
inherit Gee 's board seats.
"!think that he 'll fit comfortably
into Ohio State," Gee told the CleveIOd newspaper. "Not everyone
·IO
would, but this is a guy who will.
Why? Because he doesn't have sharp
elbows. He 's very affab'lc and very
collegial and listen s very carefully to
people. "
Kirwan became president of the
College Par~ campus in F~bruary
1989. He arrived at the University of
Maryland in 1964 as an assistant pro-

fessor of mathematics.
The school, one of 13 in the Mary·
land system, has 32,000 Sludents.
Ohio Siate has about 48.350 ai its
main campus in Columbus.
Kirwan has been popular as president and received praise for improving student life. He promoted a new
honors program to recruit in-state students and has strongly promoted 1he
university's rCsenrch activities.
"I couldn't imagine a beller thing
for Ohio State," Donald N. Langenberg, chancellor of the University
System of Maryland, told the Dispatch for a slory today. "What you
arc getting is a guy who has demon·
strated in every way that he can, that
he is up to Ihe JOD."
Kirwan was a candidate for the
chance llor of the Uni versity of.Cali-

William E. KitY(an

for11!il at Berkeley last March. But he
took himself out of the running when
it was publicized that he had inlcrviewcd for the job.

Focus on administration's sixth
-year to occupy returning Clinton
WASHINGIDN(AP)- Hiswinter vacation over, President Clinton is
focusing on ihe sixth year of his
admini strati on, looking for ways to
expand Medicare arid crafting hi s
State ~c Union address.
Clin10n also was ready for a new
and hectic round of campaign fund
raising in the runup to the 1998 congressional election s.
Aheall arc attempts to assure the
long-tenn viability of Medicare and
Social Security and budget proposals
aimed at helping families, health care
and the ..:nvironment.
One specific proposal alr~ ad y
announced: expand Jhe Peace Corps
to I 0.000 volunteer. 1n two years
from its present strenglh of 6,500.
Clinton's schedule today included
a budget meeting w.i~h senior aides.
Heplanned a Medicare-related event
on Tuesday and one on chi ld care
·Wednesday.
,
"The child care event will' focus
.on the pre sident's continuing effort&gt;
to help people succeed at home and
at work," deputy White House press
secretary Joe Lockhart said Sunday.
He gave no details.

Fund raising Is 10 kir·k i1 on
Thursday wi th a prc" dcntial trip, lim
to Ne w York and then to evqnts in
McAllen. Brownsville &lt;llld Houston.
Texas.
.,., Jus.ti~c Department and COh~ rc~sional in vestigations ..:ontinuc into the
Clinton-Gore team's fund ra"in g
cffurls in the 1996 re -electi on cam·
p31gn .
But Lockhart sa id the president
will persevere wilh seeking conlri·
but ion s because "as the head of the
party he is corn.rn ittcl,f tu hCipin g
Democrats succeed 111 the \998 cl ec·
ti ons."
Aides said Cl inlon wi ll usc the
Medicare event at the White House to ·
propose loweri ng to 62 the age Amcr·
ican s become eligible for Medicare
·health benefits.
The proposaL which 1f irnpl e· .
rncnted would mark the fi rs t time
, Medicare is made avai labl e 10 those
under 65. will be pari of the preSI·
dent 's proposed budget for the fi scal
year beginning Oct. 1. l hose in the
undcr-65 category would poy up to
$400 a month for Mcdtcare coverage.
Two House co rnrnitlee chairmen

reacted negativel y to the proposal'
Sunday.
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, chairman of I he Ways and Means Commit~told ABC\ " This Week :"
" We id n catc :1 hi parti san r.:ommis·
~i o oR Mrdi'l·;u c to rtgurc out the
long- lcrm answer hccausc it 's going
to go hankrupt in 10 years .... I don't
sec why it makes sc nsc'to ex pand the
program now at a time when we ' re
talking about how arc we goin g lo fi x
it. how arc we going to preserve it ."
Budget Committee Chairman
John Kasich. R-Ohi o. made the same
point on NBC\ " Mecl the Press,"
saying. "When we have a system
that's head ed toward bankruptcy, to
add more peopl e to a syslcm that 's
running out of money do&lt;;,sn' t make
any sense ...
Bu1 a li beral Democrat. Sc·n. Paul
Wellstone of Minnesota. said on
ABC that he l1ked ihe idea hecause
"too many people in the country arc
either not old enough for Medicare,
... ' or they' re not poor enough for
Medicaid. and they 're not fortunale
enough to have a good health insurance plan."

Workshop to address co(JI mining issues
A workshop giving landowners
the tools needed for the protecti on of
their propeny from tbe impact of coal
mining has been set at the Universi·
ty of Rio Grande for 6-9 p.m. Monday, Jan. 12 in Room 138 of the E.E.
Davis Technical Careers Center.
The prpgram, sponsored by the
CoalfitliYCitize.n~ Organizing Project, wlfl offer discussion about sub·

sidence, water loss, blasting and acid
mine drainage. It will begi n with ~
potluck dinner.
·
· those attending will expl ore technical, legal and strategic steps that
everyone can take . Featured speakers
will include coal experts from Den-·
ver, Colo., and Washington, D.C. The
workshop will be guided by the

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questions and mtcrcsts of the partoctpants.
Those plann ing to attend arc
encouraged to bring photcs. letters
and stories about how coal mining
b~s ·affectcd ·thcm. For more infor·
mation. contact the Coalfield Citizens
Organi zing Project, 301 E: Main S(
Barnesville , Ohio 437 13 at 704-425·
1470 .

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:commentary
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Page2

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Monday, Jl!n~ary s, 199~-

Monday, _January 5, 1998

OHIO Weather

t

, Thesday, Jan. 6

politicians of vanuatu
The. Daily ·sentinel · · sungee-ju~ping
•·
.

.

• '£sta6{JSfid 1n 1948
I

'

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992-2157

~
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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICfl
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

'

The Scn11nrl welcomes letters to the editor lrom readers on a broad range of top/a
Short letttfl {300 words or less) have the but chance of Nlh{J published Typed l•t·
ters are preferr~ and ~ II may be edited Each should Include a sJgnature, address,
aHd daytime phone number Specify a date ff rhere sa referenctt to a previous article
or mtttr. Mad to Letters to the Editor, The Sentlrtel ' 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769;

or, FAX to 614·992-2157

_- Res9·lutions ·you
SHOULD tnake

!l.

By JOHN CUNNIFF
· AP Bus~ness Analyst
NEW YORK - If you ms1st on m.1kmg fmanctal resolutiOns for the year
ahead, you can hcgtn by applymg a talent most people have but don't always
ose It rs called common sense
That, at least seems to be the substance of numerous books, art1cles,
adult cduc.111on courses and scm1nars on the subjeCt of handhng money '
.-wiSely What they say, m effect,' 1s that almost anyone can 1mprove thelf
· finances by usmg hrs or her head
' Strange, rsn t tt, that people pay good money for such advrce? But maybe
the rcmmdcr IS worth It
·
. So, the first rule of financtal resoluuons tS to do your own thtpkmg
Thts doesn't mean 1gnonng the vast amount of mfonnauon available on
the Internet and tn almost any pubhc hbrary, but rather to asslmtlate the
Jnfom1al10n avarlable m such resources and make tt one's own
'
It ts not always dOne Mtlhons of small savers and mvestors today seek
to avo1d dect~lon-makmg , hoprng that someone else can dec1de for them
' They SJlend good money to have others thrnk for them, and often are bitter'
ly d1sappowted
wrth the results
Mutual funds, for example , serve a marketplace need, and so have grown
to assets of more than $4 tnlhon from under $100 b1lhon m JUSt 15 years
But mrlhons of mvestors own funds Simply because they fear to se lect stocks
on thclf own
Wh1lc most households now have an Interest m the stock market 'through penSion plans, company mvestment programs, mutual funds, mvestment clubs and the ltke- d~rect ownersh1p of stocks has fallen And thts has
happened dunng the greatest bull market of all time
There rs httle sound reason for th1s betng so m an mfonnatwn era that
offers the sam'e bas1c mvestment mf onnauon to amateur and professtonal
mvcstors ahke. and 1n wh1ch hundreds of large compantes offer shares
drrcctly to the pubhc at mrnrmal commiSSIOns
The second resolutiOn ts to set goals and pnorrlles
Wtthout goals the mvestor ts ltke a shtp that departs the harbor with no
'panrtular destmatJOn tn mmd You'll find that remmder m all the mvestor
.magazmes Without pnorrues, )Ou'll spend on fnvohtles rather than mvest·
lng
And, With neither, almost rncvuably you'\1fall VICtim to procrasunatton,
a cond1t1on tn wh1ch you know whatyou shou ld do but you don't do It It 1s,
says Errc Gelb, one of the wc~rdcst and costliest affl rctlons of mankmd
Though he too docsn t fully understand the condition, Gelb has done h1s
"best wrth "The Personal Budget Planner.· a labor of love Set modest goals
and pnorrt1cs, he says, or depress ion rather than ImplementatiOn will follo'1'
Proerastmatlon 1s cspec1ally d1ff•cult to understand when there are eas~
. 11nd effortless wa) s to save or 1nvcst

Barry's World

....
•

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feet, braking them withm inches of
thetr ground
The custom
began after a
woman, escapmg an abus1ve
husband,
cltmbed and
JUmped from a
banyan tree, a
vtne craftily
tted to her feet Moller &amp;Ander·
The spouse d1dn't know tfns and JUmped after her
to his death The annual rite ts performed by men only, due m part to a
superstitiOn that 11 fertlhzes the soil
for plantmg season Modem legend
holds that a New Zealander who saw
the stunts got the Idea for bungee
Jumpmg
The Pente&lt;:ost rslanders closes~
Imitators '" Vanuatu are '" the cap•
tal , Port Vila. and they are called
poltucrans For the last several
years: they have be&lt;:n crectmg h•gh
towers of rmpenou s government,
and then Jumpmg off them wtth one
scheme or another, somehow never
qu•te crashmg 10 thelf death
Some Vanuatuans protest that thts
15 no.t actually therr faul,t "They wrll

tell you they tnhented the squab·
bltng, resource-wastmg nonsense
from their.coloniahst rulers," one
Western diplomat told our associate
Dale Van Atta here "There ts, actu·
ally, some truth to tim"
Vanuatu was once New Hebndes,
ruled from 1906 until 1ts tndepen·
dence m 1980 by a French and Eng·
hsh government called a "condo·
mtmum " It 's the only place those
two compet1t1ve countnes combtned
to form a government, all to keep the
Islands out of Gennan hands.
The" re sult of the condommrum
arrangement was pandemomum
Parallel school systems, pollee
forces and so on were fonned One
group of tslanders learned Enghsh.
another learned French They Irked
the ch01ce For mstance, 1f arrested
for a crime, they could choose the
more lentent Engltsh court If con·
V!Cted, they would choose the
French pnson, where the food was
better
Th1s created decades of confus1on that has only contrnued smce
mdependence 'Jlhe 50-seat parhamentis broken up m French, Engltsh
and loca l nat1vrst factiOns even
mcludmg "cargo cult" adherents

~~~~~~~------~----~~

1 TllillK

TiW~\1/e HaD
a CotNe~anct.~
ON Raca.

iT'S

c1ans

By Nat Hentoff
Twelve-year-old Tracy Latimer
l1 ved rn Saskatchewan m western
Canada where her father, Robert, ts
a fanner She had a severe case of
cerebral palsy atong wtth acute' pam
because of a drsplaced h1p She
could not walk or feed herself and
was unable to speak. but she could
commumcate w1th persons close to
her Doctors had planned surgery
that they felt would make her more
comfortable
In 1993. her father stayed home
with Tracy wh1le the rest of the famrl y went to church He took the gtrl
mto the front seat of h1s ptckup
truck, closed the barn doors, and left
her there With the engme runnmg
Carbon monoxtde from the exhaust
fumes k1lled her
Tracy's condltron had not been
tcnn1nal , but her father foresaw only
more suffcnng for her and sa1d he
had acted out of compassiOn and
love for h1s ch1ld However. there's a
question of the degree and sk tll wrth
whrch pam management had been
mvolved w1th her treatment
And accordmg to Pat Danforth of
the Counc1 l of Canadmns wrth D1s·
ab1l1ttes -· wh1ch has followed the
case m great detail .. ""\'racy's pam
wasn't continuous It was tntcnntt-

r--::::===• beno killed
There rs
ev1dencc of

such a request.
And as Anthony
DePalma reported m the New
York
T1mes,
"Wh1le
Mr
Lattmer and hts
wrfe, Laura, tcstt·
fred abput therr
daughter's agony and her apparent
loss of Interest m hfe, they d1d not
say she had asked them to k1ll her "
Nonetheless, when Lattmer was
convicted of second-degree murder·
· w1th a mandatory m1mmum sen·
tence of 25 years m pnson w1th no
poss1 bt hty of parole for I0 years ·•
there were many protests that a
mercy k1lhng should not be puntshed so severely
Justice Ted Noble, who pres1ded
over the tra1l , agreed with the
protest, say mg that Lattmer's mot•·
vat10n for the k1llmg was love and
compasSion, ahd "the need -· at
least m h1s mmd .. that she should
not suffer any more pam "
Accordmgly. he granted Laumer
a constitUtional cxemptton from the
mandatory pnson t1me and reduced
h1s sentence to two years Now as
Carolyn Jack has reported from
Toronto for Nauonal Pubhc Rad10,
tcnt and situational "
.
There IS the crucral questiOn of "Laumcr wrll probably only spend a
whether Tracy Lat1mer had asked to few months actually m pnson and

"Hey, 'Hillary, guess what' Some more m1ssmg
documents have mysteflously appeared '

V1rg1e Lee Coleman, 98, Galhpohs, d1e~ Saturday, Jan 3, 1998 m Scemc •
Hdl~e Center
·
B Sept. 21,1899 m Mason County, WVa., daughter ofthe1ate James
and ahalta Cremeans Dunn, she and her husband, George Coleman, owned
and operated the Hilltop Grocery Store m Rutland. She had attended the Fa1th
BaptiSt Church m Rodney
.
Her husband preceded her in death olt Feb 14, 1987. She was ,also preceded by a son, George Coleman Jr, and by four brothers and a srster
Survtvmg are a son, Bastl Coleman of Dayton, a daughter, Hazel Stgmon
ofCircle'llle, two daughters·tn·law, Dorothy Coleman of Cheshire, and Roste
Coleman of Dayton, seven grandchildren, II great-grandchtldren and a greatgreat-gnmdch1ld, a~d a StS~er, Pearl Stsson of Beech Htll, W Va
Setvtces will be I p m Tuesday m the McCoy -Moore Funeral Home
Wctherholt Chapel, Galltpohs, With Pastor Bob Sm1th offic1atrng Bunal w1ll
be m the Vrnton Memonal Park. Frrends may call at the chapel from 6-8
tomght

IToledo I54' I
INO

• IColumbu:jl 0W

60'

•

I

WVA

ShoweiS T-stonns. Ram

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Vta Assoctated Press Graph/CSNet

Mild overnight lows set
for next several nights
By The AssQciated Press
•
Don't look for any sharp changes m Oh1o's unseasonably wann weather Forecasters say thmgs w1ll cool down later m the week- but very slowly
Tonrght, m1ld temperatures will contmue, w1th lows mostly m the 50s,
and showers and thunderstonns could develop ahead of an approachmg frontal
system
On Tuesday, the wann and mo1st atr wrll rematn m place across the state
with more showers lrkely Htghs w11l range from the mid-50s to the low 60s.
A slow cooling trend w1ll drop dayt1me temperatures mto the 40s by Fn·
day
"
The record-h1gh temperature for thrs date at the Columbus weather stalton was 65 degrees m 1997 while the record low was 16 below zero tn 1884
Sunset tontght wtll be at 5 21 p m and sunnse Tuesday at 7 53 am

~

Eber Scott Willock
Eber Scott Wrllock, 91, B1dwell, d1ed Saturday, Jan 3, 1998 rn Holzer
Medfcal Center
Born July 6, 1906 m Mtddleport, so~ ofthe late Eber Clarence and Rosel·
Ia May Scott Willock, he attended the Heath Untied MethodiSt Church m
M1ddleport, was a member of the Kmghts of Pythias and worked for New
York Central Rrulroad, playmg on tts baseball team at Hohson
Dunng World War II, he was employed by DuPont Chemtcal and afterward ran a hardware busmess at Albany He graduated tn I 958 from Oh10
Umvemty with a B S tn educallon and taught 12 years at Shade and WahaJ!la
unttl hts rettrement m 1971 In recent years, he and his wtfe restded near
Athens and on the family fann near Btdwell, wintenng m Flor~da near Fort
Myers
Survtvmg are sons and a daughter-m-law, Dr Murray Scott Wtllock of
Galhpohs, and Stanley Dexter and CaVan Willock ofLongv1ew, Texas, and
by a grandson
He was preceded m death by h1s wife of 55 years, Clara Belle Murray
W•llqck, who d1ed m 1997, and by a SISter, Frances Kathryn W1llock
Se't;v1ces wtll be I p m. Tuesday rn the M1ddleport Chapel of the F1sher
Funeral Home , With the fev John Nev1lle offictatmg Bunal w1ll be m Gravel Htll Cemetery, Cheshtre Fnends may call at the chapel on Tuesday from
II am until the t1me of the serv1ce.

Voinovich, legislative leaders
may have to offer testimony

TOLEDO (AP) - The judge who poss1bthty "
first ruled that Ohto 's school fundmg
Wtlham Phillrs, execut1ve d~rector
system was unconstitutional may of the Ohio Coalttton for Equtty and
requlfe Gov. George Vomovtch and Adequacy of School Fundmg, sa1d
the state's top legtslative leaders to Vomov1eh IS wrong to thmk that
testrfy at proposed heanngs
enough has been done
Perry County Common Pleas
"The Vomov1ch clan belreves
Extended rorecast:
Court Judge Lmton Lewts plans to what they 've already 'done is thorWednesday Showers hkely H1ghs 1n the lower 60s
hold hearmgs on the Legtslature's ough and adequate ," Phtlhs sa rd
Thursday Ram [rkcly Lows m the m1d 40s and h1ghs m the upper 40s
school fundtng solutton, The Blade " Dav1dson satd she-thtnks what they
Fnday Rmn lrkely Lows m th e 1111d 30s and hr ghs m the m1~ 40s
reported Sunday
have done ts qurte a b1t And Fman
Lawmakers have unttl March 24 sa1d he didn't know If they've done
r - - -....--,----------------~--__, ~ to come up wrth an alternative to the enough
school fundmg system. The Oh10
"Obv1ously, we wtll go mto court
Suprtme Court ordered the Legtsla- and say 'Thts looks hKe an 011 change
ture to come up w1th a new way to mstead of a systematic overhaul ' "
pay for the publtc schools
Some legislators believe tlie LegObltuari.. ere paid ennouncemtnlt errah)Jad by locel funare1 homta.
The heanngs w11l help Lew1s 1slature should not make any changes
Obltuorlta, ~·· publlahtd •• requ..tad to accommodtlt thott dttlrlng mort
deerde whether the Legislature's to the fundtng system and potnt out
lnformetlon th.n It provided In the eccompanylng Dttth Notletl.
so Iutton comphes wuh the court's the mcreases m spendmg m loworder to overhaul the school fundmg wealth·schoql distncts
system
Lewts sa1d the length of the hear·
N1cholas Plllner1 the attorney who mgs wdl be based on how much eviEber Scott Willock, 91 . of B1~well, dred on Saturday, January 3, 1998 m represcnts the group that challenged dence ts submllted through legal
the fundmg system, said 1t's unclear bnefs or courtroom testimony
at 'Holzer Med1cal Center
He was born on July 6, 1906 m Mtddleport, son of the late Eber Clarence whether VomOVICh, Senate Presrdent \ ':A.rter revtewrng the evtdence,
R1chard Fman or House Speaker Jo ~ w1ll decide whether the state's
W1llockand Ro~ella May Scott Willock
Ann
Davidson wtll be called to tes· response comphes WJih.the Supreme
He grew up on Gravel Hrll , allended publtc schools and the Heath Umt·
Court ruhng Either stde then can
ed MethodiSt Church m M1ddlepon. JOtncd the Knrghts of Pythras, and went t1fy
'It 's premature at thiS pomt," he appeal the dec1s1on to the Supreme
to work for the New York Central Rarlroad's Hobson Shop m lower Mrdsa1d " But we would not rule out that Court
dleport's "Prty Me "
·
Baseball was h1s "greatest love· from the lime he played on the N"(C's
Hobson Team, traveling throuj!hout the M1dwcst. He was proud to have
become 1ts last survrvmg member Many years later he was to organtze, sponsqr, and manage h1s own team at Albany wtthm the Hockmg Valley League Cookie Crunch
The annual Glfl Scout Cookre Crupch wtll be held Thursday, 7 p m m
Dunng World War ll, he was employed by DuPont ChemiCal plants m
West Vlfgm1a, New Jersey, Alabama, Vng10ra and Illtnms, and was Cited for the Bethany Room at the Tnmty Church m Pomeroy
h1 s work 10 the "Manhattan ProJect, · wh1ch led to the first nuclear devtces
Afterward he ran a hardware bus mess ai Albany for some years and enrolled Sutton Trustees
Sutton Townsh1p Trustees wrll hold then 1998 organizational meetmg
'at Oh1o U~rversrty at age 48, graduatmg 10 1958 WJth a B S m EducatiOn.
He taught 12 years at Shade and Wahama unt1l -h~&lt; retirement m 1971 In Tuesday, 7 30 p m at the Syracuse Muntcipal Butldmg, not Monday mornrecent years, he and Mrs Wtllock have rcstctcd ncar Athens and on the fam· tng as announced earlier
lly fann near B1dwell, wmtering m Flonda ncar Fort Myers
"·
He IS surv1ved by sons and a daughtcr-10-law. Dr Murray Scott Wrllock Orange Trustees
·
Orange Townshtp Trustees wtll hold thelf 1998 orgamzatronal meetmg
ol Galhpohs. and Stanley Dcxt~ and CaVan Wtllock of Longv1cw, Texas,
Tuesday, 7 30 p m at the home of Clerk Os1e Foil rod
a grandson, Scott \!an Willock of Longv1cw
He was preceded m death by Ius wrfc ol 55 years, Clara Belle Jl.!urray
Wrllo~:k, w~o d1cd m 1997. by li ve months He was also preceded m death
Board to organiZe
The Southern Local School Drstnct organrzatlonal mccttng Monday at 7 30
by h1s parents and by a s1stcr, Frances Kathryn W1llock
ServiCes Will be I p m Tuesday. Janu,uy 6.1998 m the M1ddlcport Chapel p m at Southern H1gh School
of the F1shcr Funeral Home The Rev John Ncvrllc Will offrcmte and burral
will he m the Gravel Htll Cemetery. Chesh1rc Fnends may call at the chapel
from II am unttl the tunc of the sctv1cc on Tuesday Januat y 6, 19\l8
0

Weather forecast:
Ton1ght Showers Lows 50 to 55 South wrnd 5 to 15 mph Chance of
ram 90 percent
Tuesday Showers H1ghsd near 60 Chance of ram 80 percent
Tuesday mght Showers hkely Lows rn the lower 50s

The Dally Sentinel • P~ge 3

Budget cuts imperU .
legal. aid for the p·oor.
By ROBIN ESTRIN
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - Attorney Bob Sable
perfonns what he calls legal triage
Every year, about 35,000 people
look to Greater Boston Legal Serv1ces for free help - low-mcome
tenants facmg ev1cl10n, 1mm1grants
With documentatiOn problems,
women needmg protectton from abus1ve husbands, parents seekmg ch1ld
custody
Last year, Sable and bts 49 coileagues helped fewer than half of
them
Wuh a budget about half the SIZe
of 1ls peak a fcv. )ears ago, the legal
a1d lawyers can only asSist the most
desperate Under Sable's tnage anal·
ogy, that means turning away some·
one on the bnnk of catastrophe to
help someone who 1s already there
W1th so many legal problems and
so httle fundrng for them,,advocates
say, the poor arc gettmg less than
equal JUStice m the natiOn's courts
"If you need a lawyer on a kmd
of bas1c human need 1ssue and yo~
can 't get 11 from us or our s1ster program, you're stmply not gomg to get
a lawyer," Sable smd
The problems are the same
9auonwrde for the · legal assistance
program that began w1th b1part1san
support under the Ntxon admtntstratiOn
·
Wrth money allocated by Con-.
gress, the nonprofit Legal Serv1ces
Corp diStrtbutes funds to asstst those
who can't afford a lawyer Only peo·
pie ~~ or below the poverty level $20,063 for a family of four- qualrfy One tn five Amencans IS potenttally ehgtble for legal seniices.
More than one-thtrd of the c~se•
handled by the nat• on's legal aid elm·
1cs revolve around family matters,
from d1vorce to domesuc abuse
Housmg and battles over public ben·
efits- mcludmg welfare checks and
soc1al securrty payments - make up
the bulk of the rest The vast major·
1ty of cases are settled out of court
After Its start m 1974, program
fundmg steadtly mcreased, peaking at
$415 mlll10n m 1995 But m 1996,
amrd partiSan b1ckenng, Congress cut
the budget by one-thlfd That means
for ~seal year 1998 $283 m1llton rs

". :" ·.,· ·Obitu~r}(--

wtll serve the rest of h1s ,two-year
term on parole on hrs farm tn
Saskatchewan "
Thr s rs the first umc a constltu
llonal excmptron has been granted m
Canada on a conv1ct1on of murder
Spurred by thrs ca.c, there rs a
move m Canada to create a new category of murder It would be destgnated compassionate hoflltcrdc and
carry a lesser se ntence than other
murder charges Canad1an and
Amencan d1sabrhty organtzauons
are funous at the greatly d1mlmshcd
sentence already g1vcn Lat1mer ..
and the precedent 11 sets
Canad1an actiVISI Kathenne
Frazee .. who IS unable io walk or
use her anns .. prccrsely summanzed that anger when she told
Nattbnal Pubhc Radro that "Tracy's
murder was cruel and unusual punIShment for havmg a dtsabtltty "
Jtm D~rkson , another d1Sab1hty
nghts advocate, goes farther "To
exemp( people who krll us from the
co nsequences of then murder ..
basrd on the asseruon of compasSion as mot1vatron .. IS to put every
dtsablcd person at great nsk "
There has also been consrderablc
debate m thiS country on the k1lltng
of Tracy Latrmer Robert Provan. a
former assrstant attorney general of
Texas, appeared on MSNBC's cable
network, notmg that poho has paralyzed htm from 1he neck down from

the age of 5.
Doctors had advtscd hrs pareGt.-'"l
to end Ius life because, they sard,
would not hve to be 20 He rs now
53, rs marncd , has a 10-year-old
daughter, and runs hts own law finn
Jusucc Nohcl's dcctston m the
Latrmer case, sa!d Provan, rnd1catcs
thai Tracy's life ts not worth as much
as other children's "I am thankful
my J!;arcnts d1dn't have the kmd of
compassron thiS man had "
In Canada, the Crown (the prosecutor) 1s appealmg the sharp reduction of Robert Lat1mcr's sentence
But the Toronto Sta~ has called Justice Nobel "an eth1caj prodcer " l
would say mstead that Just1ce Nobel
has become a poster judge for legal
euthanasia ·• and not only m Cana·
da
~ut that IS a mmonty v1cw Not
Dead Yet, an Amcl'!can d1sab1ilty
nghts group, reports w1th apprchen·
SIOO that Manlyn Scgmn, a founder
, ol Dymg Wllh Drgnlty has told the
New York Ttmes that Laumer's
ongmal severe sentence was uncon·
After all, Scgutn
' sc ronable
cxplamcd, Latimer and h1s w1fc had
already served a scntepce of 12
years .. the length of Tracy's hfe
Nat ' Hen tofT is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Rights . .

years )
The
with your "alu;n""'Stllry It docs not
more
I
read
this
take
an &lt;;xpert to realtze you dtd not
•
asmtne column
wnte the story It was the rmagmg of
· : L - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - , . -- - - - --,---'
of yours, the
one of the government 's d•smformatlon wnters When the government
JH.Carthagc,Mo We11belook more embarwants a wntcr to pose as a wntcr of
rn g lor your prompt correction on rassed I am to
:,
the Larry Lawrence story I am noJ'a be a JOUrnaliSt
a propaganda p1ccc, the government
"'
.
Cltnton Crazre, [JUSt want the rcws becaus~ of Jerks
cannot be turned down
:~ By The Associated Press
mcdta to tell the truth
•
hkc
you
Arc
Joe Damn Fo1lcd agam
• ' ; Toda) IS Mond:)y Jan 5. the filth day of 1998, There arc 360 days lclt rn _
you surpnscd
JH
1s
talkmg-about
a
sensa·
Joe
'•the yea r
EE, San Mateo, Caltf Re .. Out·
t1 onal accusatiOn by Rep Terry that none of ----..-=
Today's H1 ghh ght m H1story
ragcous
Person of the Year Contest
your
proposals
On J.m 5 1896 an i\ustnan newspaper (W1encr Presse l reported the di s- Everett. R-Aia , that Btll Chnto)l
Nommauon
.. Paula Jones Spectflc
has
been
accepted?
Man,
get
a
clue
co' ery by Gc nnon phySIC ISI Wilhelm Roe ntgen of a type ol radtUIIOn that may have exchanged bunal plots 1rl
act
of
outrageousness
.. not closrng
Arltngton National Cemetery for
Joe. TY refers to my occasiOnal her eyes
came to be known as X ra) s '
poht1cal contnbutJOns Talk rad1o suggestion that celebnt1es shou ld
On thts date
lununanes
rap1dly spread THE not masquerade as medta and that
Joe I have wondered myself how
In 15R9 Cothenne de MedKI o! France d1ed at age fl9
TRUTH.
and
then
the
real
truth
pseudo·JOurnahsts
should
·be
th1s
hornfied ma1dcn kept her focus
In 17M 1 a Bntrsh naval cxpcdnron led by Bcncd1c1 Arnol d burn~tl R1ch
emerged
Of
69
wa1vers
granted
for
requlfed
tQ
don
funny
hats,
pamt
red
long
enough to detect a dtst1ngu1shmond Y l1 -.......,_
Arlington
bunal,
68
were
enurely
dots
on
therr
foreheads
and
wear
tng
charactensllc
rn I H95, French Capt Alfred Dreyfu s, conv1ctcd of treaso n was pubh cly
lcg1ttmate One of those mterred, neon nose nngs so readers and vrewCM Hanover Pa Thanks fl)r
stnppcd of h1s rank (He was ultrmately vrnd1cated )
ambassador
to Switzerland Larry ers can tell the bona fide from th~ ~ publtshmg the gt~t of my comments
In 1925 Nelhe T Ross succeeded her late husband as governor of
Lawrence, apparently doctored hrs counterfeit Thrs, as most of you to you .J got nmc calls Almost all
Wyom mg. becomm g the first fem ale governor m U S hrstory
Jn 19B, the 30th preSident ol the Umted States Calvm Cool1dge. dred m resume to make h1mself look hke a surely sunnrsed, was same .. a ltter· mentioned my UN sttckcr ("US
war hero Put another way The story ary devrce to wh1ch TY, who cla1ms out of Untied Nauons . UN World
: Northampton Mass, at age 60
In 1943. ed ucator and sc1enu st George Wash1n gton Carver dred rn was a 99 percent LIE from the get- to be a JOUmahsl, has obv1ously Government Means Foretgn Control
go.
never been tntroduced Most JOUr· of Our Chrldren, Troops &amp; Taxes")
· Tuskegee. Ala . at age 81
In 1949, m hrs State of the Umon address PreSident Truman labeled hiS
naltsts
I know are mtelltgent people. As far as your dtsparagmg remarks
TY, Pl~asanton , Caltf Why
But
once
tn a wh1lc, you do run mto about the "black hj:hcopters," I am
admmtstrauon the "Farr Deal ·
shouldn 't celebnttes be allowed to
In 1970, Joseph A Yablonski an unsuccessful can3'ldate for the pres•- wntc a column? Get off your htgh one who can't sleep on hts srde, lest not part of any lunattc frmge Lastly,
dcnc) of the United Mme Workers was found murdered wtth hiS wtfe and horse, come back down here wtth us cramal matter ooze from hts ears.
the UN ts taking over Yellowstone,
: da ughter at thelf Clarksvtlle. Pa, home
1111n1ons m the newsroom (I've been
CG, Peona, Ill I was amused the Grand Canyon, Yosemtte, lndepend~nce Hall and the Statue of Lib·
•
a reporter and copy edrtor for l7
By Joseph Spear
What's buggmg the body pohllc?
The matlbag knows

t

Virgie Lee Colem.an

•

The good news 1n thts is that
none of these schemes mrght have
come to ltght tf not for the far-stght·
ed appotntment of a hard-chargmg
natiOnal ombudswoman, MarteNoelle Patterson The bad news IS
thai the exposed pohtictans are try·
mg every maneuver they can thmk
of to run her out of office, so they
can contmue sowmg chaos and
alleged corruptton mto the foreseeable future.
Jack Anderson and Jan
MoHer are writers for United Fea·
tore Syndi&lt;ate,Jnc.

;:: TlOday 1n
• hIS
• t ory_

•

C)lfgo cults are the names Sl&gt;CtOI·
ogists gave to strange groups of
quas1-Christ1ah rslanders who developed mytltolog•cal reltg10ns out of
' the cargo that Amencan warships
and planes dumped on therr shores
dunng World War II
Many of the smaller ISland chams
leapfrogged by U S troops on thetr
way to Japan had never seen radiOs,
arrplanes or Jeeps before. So the
ISlanders had no rdt a how the cargo
was manufactured They believed
that rf they leveled ail arrfield, butlt
a wooden rad1o with a vme for an
antennae that the cargo gods would
mag1cally create therr own metallrc
goodies
G1ven such a background, and
the somewhat gullible local attitude,
rt 's not surpnsmg that the government has changed hands several
Urnes m the last few years But It
doesn't forgrvc the pocket-ltnmg
acttvtues that appears to be gomg on
m Vanuatu
In 'one mstancc, top local leaders
came close to bankruptmg the coun
try by 1ssmng $100 mtlllon m letters
of credit because an alleged con
artJSI persuaded them he would g1vc
them back $250 m1llron tn a year
The letters were rctncvcd,tn London
before thelf redemption w1ped Van·
uatu out financially
Most recently, government leaders were fmphcated m passport-sell
mg and hotlsmg scandals that had
Vanuatuans tn an uproar They want
to be saved from therr own polttt·

AccuWeather 0 forecast

Eber Scott Willock

Meig$ announcements

EMS units log 11 calls

Reader responses from the mailbag

••

..

By J~Jck Anderson
and Jan Moiler
SUVA, FtJI -- It takes a pohtrc•an
to screw up a parad1se Or a whole
passel of them
.
".
That's the condus10n of Western
d1plomats vrewrng the sorry stale of
off1c1al affalfs tn Vanuatu, a y.
shaped arch1pelago of more than 80
1slands tn the southwe st Pac1fic
The rsland cham has much to recommend 11 to vrsrtors, mcludmg a
fnendly populauon and fabulous
beaches One of these, Champagn~.
1s arguably ihe best m the world
On one of Vanuatu's tslands,
Tanna, IS Mt Yasur, the world's only
continuously active volcano, wh1ch
VISitors can march up and peer mto
with vmual Impunity Every few
mmutes, day and mght for more than
a centu ry, 11 erupts with loud spasms,
tossmg lava and huge boulders up
agmnst 1ts walls .. but rarely breach·
mg the nm of the volcano
On another ISland, Pentecost, vts·
•tors can vtew an ancJent yam fesuval every May that IS reputedly the
ongrn of bungee JUmpmg Tnbesmen erect wooden towers as htgh as
90 feet, from wh1ch they JUmp headfirst with long vmes tethered to thelf

~

Pomeroy • PJ!Iddleport, Ohio

•

The Daily Sentinel

Stocks

!USPS 213-'1601

erty along wtth 41 other sties
Ignore th1s at your penl
Joe No comment
MH, Oshkosh, Wts We at the
Natunst Soc1cty would l1ke to
express our apprcciatron for your
deSJrc to nom mate (for an OP award)
members of Congress for the If stand
agamst nude beaches I am oencl osmg wtth th1 s letter a comphmcntatoy
copy of the Natun st Society's publtcatton Nude &amp; Natural EnJOY
Joe I thought 11 mteresttng that
396 lawmakers who were sent to
Washrngton to deal with wars and
budgets could ftnd trme to take a
stand agarnst people whose matn
deSire rs to take off thelf clothes
wrthout hcrng hassled Incrdentally,
there was no copy of Nude &amp; Natural m the envelope I tell you thts only
because, you know, there could be a
problem m your ma.•lroom.
Note You may wme to me care
of the Newspaper Enterpnse AssOCI·
at10n, 200 Madtson Ave, New York,
NY 10016.
'
· ~oseph Spear is a syndicated
wnter for Newspaper Ent~rPrise
Association.

'

Am Ele Power ,;. .... ,.............. 51'1•
Akzo .............. ,...................... 86'1.
AmrTech ............................... 82Y.
Ashland 011 ........................ 53'1.
AT&amp;T ..................................... S8'1•
Bank One .......................... 55~.
Bob Evans ........................... 20"'.
Borg-Warner ....................... 51'.&gt;
Broughton ............................. 16~
Champion ............................ 16'!.
Charm Shps ..............................5
City Holdlng ............ ,.............41Y,
Federal Mogul ....................... 40~
Gannett ................................. 61 '•
Goodyear .............................. 62,,
Kmart .................................... 11'i•
Kroger ............................. :.... 36'1.
Lands End ...........................34"1.
limited ................................ 25'1.
Oak Hill Flnl .. ,........... ............. 23
OVB .........................................35
One Valley ............,...............38'Peoplas ................................. 41 '·
Pram Flnl,.... ,........................... 25
Rockwell ..............................53"!..
RD/Shell ...............................55'1.
Sears ....................................46'1.
S~oney's .................................3'!.
Star Bank ................................57
Wendy's ...............................23"!.
Worthington .......................... 17'1.

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D01ty ..................................................... 35 C&lt;nts
..t

Subscnbers not dem.ng to pay the earner may
remtl tn advancl! dtrl!cl 10 The Oatly Scnttnel
on a lhJec, stx or 12 monl.h buts Cn:d1t w1ll be
g1vcn earner each week

No subscnptton by m11l ~rmlllcd In areas
where home earner scrv1« IS availab le
Publtsher reserves 1hc rlghl to adJUSI ra1e1 dur ·
1n11 1he subscnp1100 prnod Subsc11pt10n rate

changes ma~ be Implemented by chang1ng Ihe
durauon of !he subw:npllOn

MAILSUHSCAIPTtONS
Iukie Mclp Cou111ty
13 Weeks
26 Weeks • ~
S2 Weeks

•

$27 J0
$53.1\2 ,
S10ll6

Ratts Outsldt Mctas Count}
I3 Weeks
• S29 :ZS
26 Weeks

l2Wceks

$56 AA
, $10972

1

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advell
of Gallipolis.

Street, Pomeroy, Kathryn Welch,
Veterans Memonal Hospital,
Hi 46 am Saturday, Lrncoln
Hetght s. Pomeroy, Dorothy Douglas,
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
10 47 p m Saturday, Mtll street,
Middleport, Freda Brng. PVH,
8 40 am Sundl}f, Grant Street,
,
• hi "
M1ddl eport, Albe rta Koc er, vctcr.
H
M ddl
M
ans emona1 osprta1, 1 eport
rans Memorial
squad asSisted ,
Satur ay d1scharges - Teresa
7 48 p m Sunday, South Second
Becker, M1ddlepor;t , Mane RobJnson, Avenue, Mrddlcport, Dorothy Roush,
Pomeroy
Holzer Med1cal Center,
Sunday admiSSIOn - Alberta
II 18 p m Sunday, North Second
Koehler, M1ddleport
Avenue, Mrddlcport, Juantta Gerard,
Sunday dtscharges - Kenneth · HMC
Newland, Ractne
CHESTER TWP, VFD
Holzer Medical Center
I 15 am Saturday, Bahr Road,
Discharges Jan. 2 - Mary structure fire at Jane Estep resiMcCiasky. Dereck Green, Maxtne dence, Jane Estep treated at th~
Allbright, Dale Puckett, Robert Bate· sce ne, Tuppers Plams VFD and
man, Dorothy Barrett, Tamara Sayre. squad, and Central D1spatch squad
Birth - Mr and Mrs David asSISted
May, daughter, Galhpohs
MIDDLEPORT
Discharges Jan. 3 - Colleen
5 37 a.m. Sunday, Page Street,
Hoffman, Sadie Ford, Helen Johnson, Mtldred Johnson, HMC
- · RlffLAND
P;~uit\Vallen
.-Birth - Mr and Mrs Timothy
4 20 a.m Saturday, Parker Run,
Haynes, son, Pomeroy.
Paul Thomas, HMC.
Discharges Jan, 4 - Jeffrey
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
Sexton, Mrs. Dav1d May and daugh·
4 p m. Saturday, brushf1re on
ter, Laura Hawley, Regina Swift, Pagevtlle Road, no inJunes reported.
James Eakins, Tony A Neal, Melame
TUPPERS PLAINS
Rucker.
5:43 am Sunday, Rtggs Crest
(Published with .Jlermlssion)
Addmon. Wtlliam Carr, VMH.
Umts of the Metgs County Emer·
gency Medrcal Serv~ce recorded II
calls for asststancc Saturday and
Sunday Umts respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4 26 a m Saturday, Ebenezer

)io~ital news

'

bemg dtstnbuted to some 275 pr~­
grams m every county tn the nauon
In Portland, Mrune , Ptnetree Legal
AsSistance lost half of 1ts $1 9 m1lhon
annual budget to cuts The loss of 22
staff posmons htt rural areas the har4·
est, sard Peter Sampson, a spokesman
for the Mame State Bar Association
At Legal Ser~tces for Cape Cod
and Island• Inc m HyanniS, Mass.,
law yers lost fundtng for their Homeless Advocacy ProJect, whtch helped
the poor w1th baste needs such \IS
food and med1cal care
The federal cuts forced Rhode
Island Legal Serv1ces Inc. to close
three branch offices, mcludmg one
that served an 1mm1granl and mmoruy commumty tn Providence The
agency's 13 lawyers used to handle
about 5,800 cases annually, that figure dropped to 4,300 last year
"We JUSt can't represent everyone
There are a number of times when we
JUSt have to say no." satd Robert
Barge, the agency's executrve direc·
tor "If you're gomg to talk about ,
equal JUstiCe , tl should be the same
wuhout regard to one's economtc sta·
tus ."

To make up the loss of about
$270,000 m federal money, the
agency hired a development director
who secured grants from pnvate
foundations The agency also asks
Rhode Island lawyers to donate $100
each and law finns to donate $I 00
per lawyer annually ·
Without help, some try to find
thCif way through the legal system
wtthout a lawyer's help Those who
do, stud1es have shown, fare um- .
fonnly poorly
Many don't understand the law or
thelf nghts, satd Ned Nohs·
McConarty, a Boston lawyer who
heads a bar assoctatron task force on
legal asSistance The process IS espectally pamful for the Illiterate and
non-Englrsh speakers
For the lawyers who represent the
poor, fundmg shouldn't be at nsk
because of poht1cs
"It's about human needs and hclpmg folks who would have no place.
else to'tum ," s;ud Dorothy Lohmann ,
'l;pokeswoman for the Washmgtonbascd Legal Servtccs Corp

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhto drrect hog prtces at selected
buymg· pomls Monday ~s prov1ded
by the U S Department of Agncul·
ture Market News
Barrows and gtlts, unevenly
steady, demand lighYto moderate
With a moderate'llf!i&lt;ement
US 1-2, 230.260 lbs country
pomts 33 00-33 50, few 32 50 and
3'4 00, plants 33.00-35 00
U S 2-3, 230-260 lbs 29 003300,2 10-2301bs 2700-2900
Sows steady to weak
,
US 1-3 300.400 lbs 22 00-24 00,
few 21 00; 400-500 lbs 24 00-26.00,
500-600' 1bs 26 00-30.00, few over
600 lbs 31 00-32 00
Boars 18.00-20 00, few to 17 00
Esumated rece1pts 34,000.
Prices from Producers Live·
stock Association
Hog marKet trend for Monday
steady

Summary of last week'.s auc·
tions at Hillsboro, Eaton, Farrnerstown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta,
Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, Crestc)n,
Caldwell and Gallipolis: '
Hogs I 00-6 50 lower
Butcher hogs· 25 00-36 50
Cattle 'tcady to I 00 lower
Slaughter steers chOtec 60 0068 50, select 54 00-64 00
Slaughter hc1fers chmce 60 00- '
67 25. select 54 00-63 50
Cows I 00 lower to I 00 h1ghcr,
all cows 44 00 and down
Bulls steady to 2 00 hrghcr, all
bulls 50 00 and down
Veal calves I 00 lowct 1 ~ h1gher,
chorce f22 50 and down
Sheep &amp; lambs 2 00 lower to 5 00
h1ghcr, chorcc wools 76 00-88 00,
cho1ce chps 78 00-86 00, feede r
lambs 114 00 and down, aged sheep
50 00 and down

Weekend accidents kill 6
Ptckaway County
By The Associated Press
AKRON - Elroy N Thom.ts, 5H
Stx people were k1lled tndJ'alftc
ol
Akron,
m a onc-vchrdc acCident
accrdents on Ohro roads over the
on
an
Akron
city sttcct
weekend, the Siatc Hrghway Patrol
sa1d today
The patrol counted fataltucs !rom
6 p .m Fnday through Sunday
•
The dead
~NDAY

PIQUA.= Dorali A OmCJr, 48 , of
M1sS1Ssa~ga, Ontano, m a one-veh1·
cle acctdent on Interstate 75 rn She I·
by Countx
SATURDAY
MARION_ Bon me Walker, 11.
and lrcy Walker Jr, 12. both of
LaRue m a one veh1cle accrdent on
a Manon County road
RAVENNA_ Stephen Krng , 22,
hometown unavailable. 1n a two car
d
p
· h l4
acc1 cnt on 0 to
m ortagc
County
FRIDAY NIGHT
CIRCLEVILLE . - Dav1d J
Cnmphell , 4lJ. of C.rdc vlllc a_ pedes·
tnan stru&lt;;.k hy a car on U S 22 m

.

DID YOU KNOW?

The long-established Holzer Home Health Service at
veterans Memorial Hospltallt;J Pomeroy Is ready to serve
you 24 hours a day, seven d~ys a week.
The service's well·tralnad, experienced staff can
provide assistance with your health problems in the
comfort of your own home. Answers to any questions
you have In regard to the servl1can be secured· by
calling 992·3231 .
•

VETERANS MEMORIAL OSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIALDRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO
992·2104
.

.

.., ' .. .

G

-

Ji1.

•

. ' ..

0

.. . . -

. . . .. . .

�/

'•

Sports

Monday, January 5,1998

The Daily Sentiv.~]·
•

I

Broncos outlast Chiefs 14~10
l
to advance to AFC title game
I

)

By DAVE GOLDBERG

KANSAS CITY ~o (AP) John Elway and Many Schotlen
hctmer each have thw demons to
conquer- hke genmg Super Bowl
nngs
'
But when tl comes to the Elway
Schollenhctmer nvalry 1l s no con
test The Denver Broncos and thetr
qu 1rterh IC k have held the upper
hand ove1 Schollenheuner no maner
where he has coached
And so 11 was Sunday- Denver
14 K nsas Ctty 10 - wllhtheBron
cos mo\lng on to Ptllsburgh for next
Sunda) s AFC champronshtp game
I th nk Marty s record m the reg
ular season speaks for tlself satd
Elway a sometrrne oft season golfing
partner of the Kansas Ctty coach
Yes but these are the playoffs
where Schollenhetmer rs 5 I I after
Sunday s loss - the second ltme m
three seasons that hts team has Jostrts
ftrst game at home as the AFC s top
seed As m 1996 when 1l was Jndt
anapol s that won 10 7 Kansas Ctty
had heen unbeaten at home m the
regular season
Tochmcally 11 Willi Elway agamthe quarterback who authored The
Dn vc- thattred the I986 AFC cham
ptonshtp game agamst Schollen
hetmer s Cleveland Browns and beat
those Browns agam the followmg
year
He drove the Broncos mto post
tron for Terrell Dav1s one yard run
for the go ahead touchdown 2 mtn
utes 28 seconds tnlo the fourth quar

Basketball
NPA standmgs
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantlc Di~lslon

GREEN BillY WIS (AP) - The
Green Bay Packers know they Jl
have to play ltke Super Bowl cham
ptons next weekend to have a chance
to become Super Bowl champiOns
aga~hat they dtsplayed tn thetr
first ayoff e[fort Simply won l he
goode ugh
The Packers were ragged for most
o! thetr 2 I 7 v1ctory over the Bucca
neers on Sunday, Luckily tor Green
Bay the playofl novrce&gt; from Tam
pa Bay were tn a charttablc mood
I thtnk we struggled tad •Y
Green Bay rece tver An tonto Freeman
sard But we d1d enough to wtn the
ballgame There ts a lot ol room for
tmprovement
That tmprovemcnt must come
raptdly the Packers play at San
FrancisCO next Sunday for the NFC

•

nearby Cnrdmal Dougherty Htgh
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Alter School before transferrmg tu Mame
Culttno Mobley left hrs seat on the Central lnslllute
hench Rhode Island coach Jrm Har
Mobley who had averaged I3 6
nck reached down to touch n then pomts rn hve prev1ous games agamst
~ Jerked hr&gt; hand back
Even that s Temple tted a school record by hit
hot Hamck satd w1th a smtle
tmg ctght three pomters The Rams
Mobley had the hot hand once (8 2l were 14 Q) 28 from long range
agam for No 22 Rhode Island fol
one shy of the school record for
Jowmg up htS 30-pomt performance three pmnters made
agarnst Stanford last week wtth a 29
I was very emottonal before the
pomt effort m a 74 64 vtctory over game sa1d Mobley who couldn l
Temple on Sunday
hnd enough ltckets for the fnends
It was another memorable home
and lam1ly members tn allendance
commg lor Mobley a Ph1ladelphta
It was a real brg game lor me
~altve who st~rred lor three years at
In fact Mobley sa1d Temple was

Marshall drops 72-49
decision to Toledo
HUNTINGTON W Va (AP) Marshall ltckrng lis wounds tram a
fi'Ah stratght loss on the road IS hop
u\j for redemptton at home Monday
aptnsl Eastern Mtch1gan
The Thundenng Herd (5 5 I 2
Mid Amencan Conference) farlcd to
pitt 11~ game together Saturday mght
lqsmg to Toledo 72 49
• Toledo scored 17 unanswered
pomts on the way to VIClOQI tnclud
tng nm e from Casey ,Shaw and
p"shed Marshall to 0 5 on the road
AI home Marshall ts on a 22 game
w~nmng streak
Eastern Mtchtgan (2 9 0 3 Mtd
Amencan Conference) won at home
Saturday defeattng Oh10 85 64
Marshall coach Greg Whtte &gt;atd
before Saturday s game that hts team
wa,s fru strated by rts poor shootmg
and spent extra pracuce ttme on tree
thtows The Herd was 5 of I 3m tree
throws agamst Akron last week but
1mprovcd to I0 of I 5 or 6 7 percent
ag)unst Toledo
Marshall made only 29 perce nt ol
tts shots from the..noor and 20 percent
of: rts three potnt attempts Saturday
Toledo shot only sltghtly heuer mak
tng 40 percent of tiS naor shots and
25 percent of rts three pmnters
They re upset I assu re you
they re not try trymg to mtss Whlle
sald
Every tr me on the road thiS year
w6en we met some adversity we
P""'cked Wh1tesa1d
We re tr)
mg to mature on the JOb The road IS

II

New York
New Jersey

18

Roslon

16

"

1m1

11 14
17

Wnsh ng on

Phllulklpl

14

Central Division
22 10
21 10
9 II
19 12
19 12
18
14 17
~
4 2R

Cht cago
lnd ana

ClEVELAND

Allanta
Ch:ulone
Detmtl
M lwuukee
Tonmlo

2
1

"4h"
"'
lOO
290
II

17

9 22

H1

[il

641
181
l48
11]

11 lj

DflanOO

,

I. &amp;:1.

20

M

688
677
611

•

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ti\1

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-·-

12.1

18

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Dhblon

W L &amp;:1.

)

I

LONG GAINER- Denver runmng back Terrell
Davis (30) gets ready to go past Kansas Ctty
defenders Anthony Davis (upper left) and Mark
McMtllan (29)for a 41·yard gam tn the third quar

tncluded a fake field goal by the
Ch1efs m1dway through the [ourth
quarter on fourth and stx from the
Denver 30 It was a run by punter
LoUie Agu1ar the holder that wa~
stuffed by Dednck Dodge
We praet1ced that play all week
where eertatn people rush and certatn
people stay back for the lake

ter of Sunday s AFC divisional playoff game__!!L.:-,
Kansas Ctty, where the Broncos won 14 10 to
advance to the conference Iitle game next week

only tune they heat us they needed
a 54 yard fteld goal to do 11
That ktek brought the Broncos
then 9 I back to the pack and they
ended up losmg both the AFC West
and the home held to tl1e Chtcls
Sunday s wtn put them a game
away lrom the Super Bowl tnd
Elway s lourth shot at the nng

they ve ~ever lost m the playoffs (12
0) and have won 27 stratght overall
And they were Jacmg a team m Its
first playoff season smce I982 The
Burs (I I 7) also haven l won a game
wllh the temperature below 42
degrees at k1ckoff tl was 29 at
gamet1me Sunday
Tampa Bay seemed to have stage
fnght pantcularly on special teams
The Bucs had a field goal allempt
blocked another thwarted by a bad
snap and st tll another error when
backup snapper Dave Moores snap
was too htgh for holder Steve Walsh
to handle
Ttent D11fer went I I for 36 for
200 yards and was mtercepted tw1ce
The previOusly potent runnrng game
behmd Offensive Rook1e of the Year
Warnck Dunn and fullbacK M1kc
Alstott stumbled

When you re playmg a great
team you need to make great play~
D1lfer sa1d ~came up a btl short
We re not m e upper echelon yet
but we re clo e
The Packers are there as are the
49ers Levens who rushed for a team
play oft record I I2 yards and a chnch
mg two yard touchdown can t watt
for the tnp to San Francisco
That s the kmd at game you ltve
tor Levens sa1d
Levens who gamed I 435 yards
thrs season after bemg promoted to
first stnng when Edgar Bennell was
mJured tn tratnmg camp had 88
yards rn the second• half He n ade
nearly all the key plays for Green B ty
on offense after hemg held to Y8
yards mtwo regular sclllion wms over
the Bucs
It was a challenge Levens

satd Are they gmng to do 11 agajf\ 1
Or are we gomg to step tl up /nd
prove we can run the ball'
On defense and spec1al teams the
Pack got a more balan~ed etlort
Robert Brooks retummg punts lor
the ftrsl llme m three years broke
free for 28 yards to set up one of
Ryan LQJigwell s two fi eld goals
Freeman had a 90 y~rd ktckotl run
back negated by a penalty
Generally the Bucs weren 1 out
classed They JUSI were mexpen
enced
Por mstancc Tampa Bay tackle
Warren Sapp w 1s the best dclenstvc
player all d;ly He had seven tackles
and threes tcks lorccd two lumhlcs
and recovered one
But he also kept up 1ruunmg wn
versatton wtth Favre that mtght h tvc
taken away lrom h1 s c&lt; m.:cntr 1twn

I lo\ c Ill pi ty wllh l1rm Sapp
satd ol Favre I Jove to pity agmnst
hrm Brett and I had a htt lc con ver
salton I wtshed h11n New Year s
cheer
Favre accepted Alter all despllc
the sloppmcss he had 1 ihrcc yard
touchdown pass to Mark Chmura and
a two pomt conversiOn run

And altcc the Battle ol the B tys
he and the Packers earned a tnp to the
Bay Area
Thts IS the g llnCevcrxhody has
heen talkmg about tnd tl s lrn tlly
here safety LeRoy Butler s 11d
We can get some sourdough sand
wtchcs and relax a ltulc btl But we rc
verywnltdcnt we rc lrcshand were
Jook tn g lorw trd to 11 I thmk they
need to know th 11 hcc tusc we
already know that

one of hiS final three cho1ces when tt
"came down to dec1dmg where he
would go to college Eventually he
chose the Rams over the Owls and
Seton Hall
Under first year coach Hamck
the sentor IS thnvmg He came mto
the game averagmg al most I 7 pomts
a game and was second only to pomt
guard Tyson Wheeler m shots ~nd
three pomtcrs attempted
{

Coach Hamck has g1vcn me
more opportum!Y}O shoot he sa1d
Mobley t1ea( the score agamst
Temple With a ttiree pornter w1th 8 03
Jell m the first half That started a 14
4 run that helpedl1g1vc the RJimS a 33
23 lead at hallttme Rh~e Island
never tratled agam
Mobley s was the ftrsl ol live
strmght 3s for Rhode Island Mobley
hn the ltrst three Preston Murphy

made the fourth and Wheeler hn the
tilth grvmg the Rams a 31 IY lead
Mobley hll a lot of threes wtth a
hand 1n hrs lace and you can t do
much about that sa1d 1emple s
Rasheed Brokcnborough who lm
1Shed wllh 15 po1nts
They drd a real good JOb pcne
tratmg and k1ckmg the ball out Bro
kenborough sa1d You re not gomg
to wm many games w1th guys mak

mg three pmnt shots ltkc they d1d
Mobley s most ttmely trey was hts
last one Temple whrch tratled hy 13
early 111 the second hall had rull1ed
to 62 61 when Lamont Barnes who
Jed the Owls wtth I7 pomts made a
basket and a tree throw wrth 3 20 to

(See TOJ&gt;25 on Page 5)

$ixers best Lakers 113-107 to sweep series
By BETH HARRIS

INGLEWOOD Caltf (AP) The Los Angeles Lakers can l wm
every ume Shaqu1Jie 0 Neal plays
And they can t beat every woeful
Eastern Conference team that enters
the Forum
Wrth 0 Neal m the ltneup for the
Lakers the Ph1ladelph1a 76ers coun
tered With Derrrck Coleman Both
miSsed the 76ers 105 95 wtn over
the Lakers on Nov 28 m Ph1ladel
phta
Sunday mght 11 was Allen lvetson
who proved unstoppable m Ph1ladel
ph1a s surpnsmg I I 3 I07 VICtory
that gave the Stxers thetr fmt season
sweep of the Lakers smce I 982 83
Iverson scored 3 I pomts h1t I0 of
I I free throws and had I I asststs m
47 mmutes as the Stxers hande&lt;hhe
Lakers ther r first loss of the season
wtth 0 Neal m the hneup They were
9.0 wnh thetr b1g man
He was great the whole game
Stxers coac h Larry Brown sa1d of
Iverson He s had some grea t
games but under the ctrcumstances
thiS IS the best one I ve been around
I ve told h1m he s played about as
good as a pomt guard can play He
mrght have topped 1t though because
he played agamst a quahty team
It was Ntck Van Exel s JOb to
guard Iverson and rt was ev1dent he
needed help
It s really hard to try to contam
that k1d because he s so explos1ve
and hiS first step IS mcredtble sa1d
Edd1e Jones Van Exel s backcourt
mate We ktnd of forgot about how
defense 1s supposed to be played We
JUSt let Ntck he one on one agamst
h1m and Iverson s so fast It s hard for
one man to contam h1m
0 Neal led the Lakers w1th 26
pornts and I 6 rebounds 1n 3 I mmutes
I

off the bench m htS second game
back f~the abdommal stram
Colema who came off the InJured
hst Dec
had seven pomts and
c1ght rebou s m 33 m1nutes
I don 1 thmk we really came
mentally prepared 0 Nea l sard
We have to be prepared for every
team Ra~her than talk1ng about It we
JUSt need to go out and do rt No
excuses
Jtm Jackson added 28 pomt,s and
Thea Ratltff had 20 pmnts and 10
rebounds for the Stxers who had lost
mne of thetr prev1ous I I mcludmg a
90 73 defeat at Seallle on Fnday
Seattle JUSt k1nd of toyed w1th
us Brown sa1d Then to come m
and play a team ltkc this where we
don 1 have depth and me we re war
ned about foul trouble and then we
played great I don t know tf t1 gets
any beller than that
The Stxers were Without Aaron
McKte who was stck and took1c
-Ttm Thomas who mt ssed the game
because of a death tn hts fam1ly Jack
son ptcked up hts fifth foul about
three mmutes tnto the fourth quarter
but he came back at 5 46 and htl 6
of 6 free throws down the stretch
Jackson called rt a near peifect
game add1ng that rf tl was a perfect
game we never would have lost the
lead
The S1xers closed ti)e game w1th
a 23 I0 run Iverson and Jackson
scored 19 of the team s final 23
pomts
We played a sohd game but the
most 1mportant thmg ts we kept our
plJJse at the end Iverson sa1d
Even when we got down every
body executed and we [ell hke we
SUJI had a Jeglltmate ShOltO Wtn the
game
After leadmg by seven pomts ear

Jy m the fourth the 76ers went ncar
ly ftvc m1nutcs Without a basket

_ _ ___,..._ _ _ _...,........_ _ _ _ _ ___,..._ _ _ _ _ _...:.__.....;__ _ _ _ __

Temple (6 4) has lost three
stnugl)t, but coach Jolin Chaney satd
he wasn t worned •
Remember we were 3 5 last
year and fimshed 20 I )~haney
sa1d ThiS team ts st1ll ahJ.II of my
expeetatrons We ve beaten tejlms I
d1dn l thtnk we d beat so we re JUSt

$2830 , t1~

2· 100 lb. Cylinders of propane gas,
installed, including regulator and 10
feet of tubing.

s7goo

,(,\X

Oiler t'XI11ft'5 J,111 15tll 1998
Call

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS
742·2511

RUTLAND, OHIO
1·800·837·8217

Midwul

6

811

24

H 150
10

2
~h

655
6JJ

II
11 20

6

194

8 24
1 22

11

2'i0

18

241

17h

Saturday s scores
lnd nna 89 Toronto 17
San Antomo 84 M1nm111

CLEVELAND 9, New Jersey 81
New Y()rk 88 Orlando ll4
Ctucogo 10~ De rotl 96
Mu'lnesotn 109 Den~r 87
Ponlund 91 Houston9S
Utuh rJ7 AIIIUllu 82
Bostan 106 Milwaukee 99
l A Clppeu 97 0.11" 88

Sou1~wr111

Sunday's scores

Tonight's games

Hou51on Ill Toroijto 1 p m
W~hm glon 111New York 7 :\0 p m
Snn An omo a Orlando 1 J0 p m
M !waukee 111 Portland 10 p m

about back. where staned
Elsewhere m the Top ~ No 19
Syracuse beat Rutgers 7 I 68 and No
23 Arkansas defeated LSU 62 59
No 19 Syntuse 71
Rutgen68
At Syracuse N Y Elan Thomas
scored a layup w1th I7 7 seconds left

ruesday s games

ABL st~Jndings

21 276

K

Soulhwaa

Abtlcmc: Ctms1an 8~ Angelo St 44
Bnylor 6"i KnnSM ~9
Cent Oklahoma88 NE0klllhomo.64
Lurn;at 79 TclliU Pan Amenau~ 60
M dwe~1em S Tex~ 6~ Tnrlcton St ~2
OklahoOUl Chrillliln n Aluta PacifiC 62
Okl:tloma St 82 Texus 61
Panhnndle S1 M Texat AAM S1
SW Oklahomati'2 Cameron 49
Sum Housron S1 77 SE LoutllilJlil 6~
Stephen F Aust n 8~ Texas Athngton f:h
Ttus A&amp;M Commerce 71 Teus A&amp;:M
Kmgsvtlle 72
W Te:t;t:~ A&amp;M 74 E. New Mcx co 69
FarWtsl "
Albmson 11 NW Nnz.nrt!ne 60
CS Nunhridge 62 Pordand St 'i7
CS Sa Bc:m I'd no S6 Swl Frlllla~to St 45
Colorndo S 90 UNLV lO
Cunwrtl a Ore 74 Montana Tech 12
Gr. nt1 V~ew 77 F e1no Pnc1fie 61
Montnn 172 ltluho Sl ~'\
P~1 pcrd oe 61 Long Bc:och S1 44
Rocky Mount111n 8' M1no1 St 68

4
6

~

(II

Saturday'~ score~
Ncwlngl nJ70 Ctlo d16l
COLUMBUS 77 Jlh I t.lelpht 61
P t11md77 Atlr a 51
Lt 1 gRc~~.: l H S nJosc~l

Sunday's scor'es

South

7'\ W C ml ()J
C 1 ( r Ina MX St j l)I'C'ph Vt 4'i
UN I V 77 Tul me6 1

St: 11tle MH Long Be :~d KO
P nlmd79 S 1 l lSl67

Vtr~:

No games tomght
Tuesday • pme•

~U!IItm DIVIslon

'
2'

w
6
7

\00

4

m

4
2

' '"'

lJ

2
4

000

I

Wrstrrn Olvlswn

I
2

0 I 00
0 I 00

2
I
I

I 061
I lOO
2 H1
2 111

I

Ovrrall

L &amp;:1.
I
'~'
100

~10

m

7,W kefr~siM

(1

Tournaments
Captlal Kry Clus.ic ste:ond
Memm:lt:k ~6 Albany N Y 4"
Sl Rose 66 Bloomsburg 'i'i
V :~ Wnleyan 61 Ortdgeport 60

Suuth"rd
s: f I SU 'i
Il l H \l
6M

MAC men's standmgs
Conr

t

1\ttdwut
l..rt:!!l nH( Dr kr'i-1
Ill n S ().1 P I 61

New f:np. l nd 1 Scanle I 0 f1 m
Atlant a Lu g Bead 10:10 p n

J.&amp;J,
067

S Orecun 10 E Oreaon S2
S:111 Frnlll:tSI: 75 Idaho 6'i
Southern Cal Coli 64 Evangel SI
St M1111m s 69 Masler s60
UC Davts 69 C 11 Puly Pumonn 'i9
Utah 'i7 Nc:w Memo 48
W Orrgon 69 lin held 67
Wn:;ll ng on 71 Washmston S1 ~8
Weber St 66 Monlana S1 65

w l!

COLUM BUS 6'i Ph huklph a 60

'

6
\

4(10

Lady Lakrr Oauk-dlampklruttlp
Purdut Ca luniL1 76 St Ambrose 64

~10

I

Munt Sl Bllllnp Holiday O•uk
Smtnd round

W Wa.dlinj!.lon 72 CIU'roll Mont 6'i

Ki lt
()()()

Northwn1rrn Iowa HoUd•y Tournament

P1

6

..

6tXl

'i

'i

1

"

'iOO
171

ro.~nd

Clarkr Holiday Tourn•mcnt lhlnl pbtcr
W s Plaltc:vll~ 'i~ Vt erbo 'i2
F1hh plact•
Mounl Mercy 66 Con ord a W11 :'i6
Stovtnlh plarr
&amp;lg11w KM.I72 Dubuque ~6

NCAA DIVISIOn I
women's scores

lHK

8

S DakotaS 69 AUJUIIIlna S 0 "2

S Dakota Tech 104 Huron 59
SW M noun S1 78 Bmd~y 61
SamlloUts6 1 Ala Barnunghtvn ~9
S cna Heaghts 86 Ollvet62

WtS Oshkosh 12 W1s Supenor 34
Wmtnberg 70 Allegheny 68
Youngstown St 10~. NE Illinois 6:'i

I

429

Mklwnt
Baldwtn Wallace 69 Grove Caty 42
Hinck H11is Sl 84 Oakot11 Wesleyan 49
Blufltun :'i7 Musktn8um 50
DowIns Gn:et 102 W Mt~.:htg an b9
Cue Rest:rvc 70 Emlham 67
Concwi.IID Moor 71 St Mllfy 1 Mmn 61
Dako a Sl 6S S oux Fall• 51
Ocn1son 102 L.nt.e Erie 20
E lllno s66 E Kenucky6~
Elmhunt 68 Groce 60
Etq)unu St 71 Mtssoun Rolla44
Ferns S1 'i9 Wayne Mtch l4
F011 Hnys St 11 S Colomdo 65
Grand Valley St 93 Ashlatld 81
Gusl&lt;~v Adolphus 100 Au,sbura6~
Hillsdale 82 Lake Supenor St 59
Hnam Col 12 Thte162
Indiana Sou beast H Fmnkhn 68
Kent 96 N Ill noll 61
Kenyon 84 Woos1er 82 (OT}
Lakeland 66. Mount Seftl¥io 18
lmcoln Mo 72 Mo SO\IIhem b6
Mnc leuer 70 CotleiOR S6
Mt~n 1 Ohto 81 Cenl M ch1,11112
Mn Western 78 Cent Mt.uOIIn 61
N Colorudo 74 Mmnluuo Sl S4
N Dakotn St 92 So11th Dt&amp;ko!B 63
North Oal:ota 102 MommJIIde ~9
Northern S1 S 0 17 MayvtUe S1 !19
Oh o Northern 68 Adrtan 46
OHIO 79 E Michigan 56
Ohto Wesleyan 71 Oberlm ~6
Pu 11borg St 82 Truman St 60
RIO GRANDE 68 Moun! Vernon Nuurene

76

6'H
'i~l

l.SU 76 Mums pp1 St 67
lt:not Rhy"' 71 Ca1awba 68
Unooln Meqmal78 West Alabilm:l7 1
louts ana T«h 72 South Alllbam:~5l
McNtese Sb 6lol N eholls St 61
Ml!n ph s f~ N C Charlo te7 1
MtMmt 70 Seton Hall 66
MuJdle Ten 67 Murrny St :'i6
M llsaes 70 Rus 'iO
M1u alit!}' S 91 Alcorn S1 87
M ~sus pJ1 Co 61 Hownrtl Pay 1e ~~
Morebea St 98 SE M ssoun 9S (OT)
Moms Brown 76 Kentucky St 74
New Oriearu 69 SW Lou sauna n
Nor1h Georgtn 78 Berry 6Q
Presbylf11t1n 77 Newberry ~
Tennessee: 84 Connect ul 69
Tennesk!C' S 78 Ausun Peay Sl -1'
Tt:nntssee l tch H Tenn Manm 72
Ter:u Snn Anromo 88 NW Louts nna 76
UNC Greensburo ~ I W Cnroh11n 61
Valdosta St ~ 1 Nonh Alabama :'iO
Vandertnl bb Mtsnss1pp ~6
YIIJinl a Un10n 7~ Benedic '7
Webber \4 Umun Ky :'il
West Flonda 8 1 Ala Hunt sv tllr 67

Sr Cloud Sr 101 Nebr.ukn Omaha 97
Tol•do
MARSHAlL 55
Valparruso 82 Ctucua,o St 41
W lllinuts 78 Mo Know C ty M
Witbh 71i Tiffin 51
Wts Eau Oaare. 72 WtS R1v fulls60

Far Wtst
Anzumt 87 UCLA 71i
Anzona St tw Soulhctn Cal Ml
Cal Poly SLO 8lJ St Mary 5 C I 71
Colorado Sr 68 Ut lh S1 W
Fresno Sl 112 Howatt H l1 66
Gonzaga 81 Botse St 70
Hawrut 86 Norlolk Sl 67
Loyo\ 1M lfymoun 7b Snn Jose St Ml
Montana 'i4 ld h 1 Sl 4H
Monlana St 11 Weber St 64
N Anzonu81 E W111hing1on 411
Ntw Mex ro 92 Atr FnrL'C ~9
New Mex cu St 84 W Wtuhmgtt n 60
Okl ~~ 1111 69 C loratlo 6H
Ore~u 1 bb Cal form t ~~~
Ptpperdtme 69 UC Snmn Batbw-u 66
s Ulal 70 LA:WII Clurk St M
S n Dtt~o 7H CS De. n mguc:z Htlls 66
Sm Fr&lt;Jm.1sco66 lkl oont46
~ Ia ~ xJ Ml Oregi)R St 4!C
UC in. ~:~ 1 SononaS t 41
Ut I 71 R1 eM
Wy ~II~ :'i'i Long Bc::t~: h St 4:\

Phucnt:.. a lndi nn 7 p m
Hnu s on 111 CLEVELAND 7 10 p n
LA J...ok(rs ul Vnm:ouver 8 p n
l}m1un 11 Chtr go H10 p m
Denver al Dllllas. 8 10 p m
Ph I delpht a U1ah 9 p m
Charlol e 11.1 Srm I( lOp m
L A Cl ppers al Sucrnmen1o I0 JO p m

Wrstrm Confrrtnct
19 II
16 II
I ~
l'i
12 16

Buller 7M Ill Ch ~;a~o 76
ClevdandS 64 W~h1aS1 61(0TJ
Detrou 81 Wu M !waukee ~
Evonsvtlle 76 SW M sSIKJft St 71
llhno! 74 IM ana 72
lndi;u~a St 65 Brudley 61 (OT)
Iowa 91 Nonhwes em ~7
Knnsas 96 Nebrast ' 76
Kansas St Ill Musoun S6
Memj'h ~ 68 Sl ml Lou ~ 62
M1c:h gAll 92 Perm St 7:'i
VillpMruso t12 Clucago St 62
W lllmon tl:'i Mo Kansas Cuy t'll
Wuconsm 64 Ohto St ~9
Wt gh1 St 79 Loyol:t lll 'il
Younss own St 74 NE llhno1s "i1

Arkunsu.s St 94 1 u L~ Pan An~1~ 111 76
Baylur H7 Te:..as 81
Oklahoma St 100 T~.:xus 1\&amp;M b:'i
S am Houslun St 86 SE l.um~ rm62
TexasSouthern 77 Ark PineBiurfel
Texas TL-ch 6b IDwa S1 :'i:'i
Texns Arlington 72 S1e1hen F Auil n 6'i
Te:..ns El Pa.su66 Southern Mcth 64
Tulsa 77 SM D•etzo S1 :'i7

W IShington 109 Phoen 11.99
Scuttle 120 Vancouver 108
Sauamen o 106 Chnrloue 90
Phlladl:lphiP Ill LA l...:lk(rs 107

YPSILANTI Mtch (AP) - Demck Dtal scored 24 pornts and Earl
Boykms added 23 as Eastern Mtchrgan beat Ohto 85 64 Saturday mght
SanJay Adell Jed the Bobcats (2 9 0 3 Mtd Amcncan Conference )
wuh I 9 potnts whtle D1antc Flenorl had I 7
The Eagles (6 4 2 0) led 36 27 at halfttme as Ohto shotJUSt34 3 per
cent from the field
Oh10 lim shed w1th a 4 I 30 rebound advantage over Eastern Mrcht
gan but the Bobcats were 3 of 16 ( 18 8 percent ) Irom three pomt range
Nkech1 Ezugwu had I 3 pomts for the Eagles who shot 54 5 percent
from the r1eld

IOOib. Cylinder

67 Curnpbell61

4
II
l 'i
lh

067

26
19
19

Eastern. Michigan
downs Ohio 85-64

Cooking • Heating Water
* Unvented Heater Construction

1\6

Gl

Fin lntem:\1 OMII06 JacksonvtUe St Ill
j1ond3 8, Tennessee 69
Aor da A&amp;.M 74 Morgan S1 H
Aondn Alltu~II C 60 Smmford ~4
Aonda S1 68 N Cnrohllll S1 ~\
George Muon 66 Eas1Cnroh~ ~I
Georg1a Tech 90 Wofford SS
Oromblmg St 67 Miss Volley St M
Howqrd U. 61 Bethune Cookm11n 'i~
JacksonS 76 Alabama St 64
Ke1uudc.y 71 Vanderbll162
ltbeny 69 K1ng Tenn 42
Lou~a ana T~h ~ Lal'nlll' 49
Mnrque te 71 LOtiiSVJIIe 70
Md.-E Shoo: 96 N Carohna A&amp;T 7~
M dd e Tt!nn 76 Mutnty St 71 ~OT)
M u u ppt 71 South C lmltna :'i4
Mtuus pp St ~6 Alabamu ~ 2
N c Charloue K DePaul ~li
NW l.out Siuna 61l TekllS Snn An on ) 61
New Orle:uu 71 Old Oooun on 62
N11,;holls St 79 Mt:N«le: S1 71
Nonh Carol 1 a 71 Clemson 70
Rtchmond 87 Jnmts Mad so n() ~
S Cnrotina St 89 Hamp~on U 7:'i
SE M uoun 64 Morehc=OO St 61
SW lou1s ann 66 W Kencu ky 61
SW Tuu S 78 NE Lou mna 67
South Alab11ma 72 Jurks&lt;Jn\'llle 'i9
Southern U 80 AI orn St, fi
Sre son 69 Ge0rg1a St 6:'i
Tenn Muntn 82 Tenf)(sse.:T~h 69
Tennessee S 1S Au sun Pe01y :'i'\
Troy S)
UNC0reemboro69 Cr:Wel61
VMI76 Georsm SoUJhern71 (2 OTl
W1Jham &amp; Mary 67 Va Comnlonwe I h :'i1
Wm1hrop 91 S1 Joseph VI :'i2

Paclflc Dlv1slon

0 Neal score&lt;! stx of the Lakers erght
pornts

Need Propane for

\1

2 28

go

Mohley answered wrth a three

641
641

0 2l
lO:\
'''··· ························ ··6
12 \71
2
~ 27
l'i6

(AP)

Dodge satd We saw that m the
films Kansas Ctty runs all kmds ol
fake plays They have Ill the tncks
And then the I mal stop
I satd the Chtels dtdn 1 want to
see us and I tneant 11 s~td Net!
Smtih the Denver delenstve end who
spent the hrst mnc sc tsnns ul hrs 10
season career m Kans 1s C1ty The

20 II
20 II
\6

L.

~22 RhOde Island gets past Temple; Syracuse also wins
By JOHN f: BONFATTI

w

IWn

Packers return to NFC finals after beating Tampa Bay 21-7
champ onshtp The 49ers aren t hkc
Jy to be as generous
They re a gre u team and tl wtll
be the toughest game we ve played
all year BreJI Favre sa1d
I thmk tht s game w1ll be the
game between the two hest teams 111
the NFL added Regg1e Whrte
I get exerted for b1g games sa1d
Dorsey Levens I want to play well
and not be a hab1hty Hopefully the
guys can depend on you and you
won t be one of thosA. who blows a
game
i'
Green Bay (14 3) eastly could
have blown th1s 0ne In thctr first
meanrnglul game m nearly a mo11th
the Packers rust showed early Thetr
tackltng was sloppy they dropped a
half dozen passes lost a fumble and
Favre was mtercepted twtce
Luck1ly they were at home where

Top 25 hoops•...:. :&lt;c. ; .on.; . t'".; . ued; . :r_rom_P~·s;:.;:.e.:.:. 4&gt;

and the Orangemlm overcame foul
proble!')$ and Geoff B1llet s last sec
and three potnter to dele-at Rutgers
Manus Janut. and Todd Burgan
each scored 19 pomts for Syracuse
(12 I 3 0 B1 g East)
Earl Joh11son scored 17 pomts for
Rutge~ (6 5 9-3) JA()t1ch trailed by

17 m the second half before rallymg tt down and made a layup to put the
No 23 Arkansas 62 LSU 59
Razor cks (I I 2 I 0 SEC) ahead
At Payette~1lle Ark LandiS 60-57 nh 35 seconds remammg :
Willtams made two baskets m the
Aft LSU pulled wrthm one
final mmute to help Arkansas edge \!s pomt R ers Wash1ngton had a
LSU
chance to ve the Ttgers (7 4 0- I)
Wdltams h1t a short JUtnP.Cr then the lead Bu e mtssed two free" .,
deflected a pass at mtdcourt chased throws wtth 4 4 seconds left

Scoreboard
,

After a caulloUs first two quarters
ter That m trked the 44th ltme m h1s
I5 year career that he s authored a the Chtefs finally appeared to score
game savmg dnve rn the frnal pen on Stoyanov1ch s 34 yard field goal
But Greg Manusky was called for
ad
But Elway wasn l even on the holdtng and Stoyanovtch pushed
ft eld when the game was won back I0 yards mtssed from 44 yards
puttmg Denver ( 14 4) ,pne game Then Elway drove the Broncos 65
away !rom becom ng the (ourth wtld ) ards and went ahead 7 0 on the ftrst
card team to make 11 to the Super I yard run by Davts who gamed fOI
Bowl and compcnsaung for lis hrst yards mi 25 carnes
g un~.: cl nunatlon last season
The Broncos mt ssed another
It was the Denver defense that chance to score tn the hnal mmute of
w '" the game - Damen Cordon the half when Elwa) was sacked and
knockrng away an Elvts Grbac pass fumbled
thrown tnto double coverage on a
And after Kansas €ny cut Den
fo urth down from the Broncos 20 ver s lead to 7 3 on a 20 yarder by
w th I2 second s left
Stoyanovtch the Broncos blew a btg
It was a dn ve that took JUSt under chance
lour m1nutes whtk Kansllli C1ty had
Davts went 4 I yards to the Kansas
trouble managmg the clock The Ctty II but had to rest the nbs he
Chtefs took thetr last ltmeout JUSt brutscd last week rn the wtld card
nrnc seconds after the two mmute wm over Jacksonvtlle Two plays lat
warmng when 11 could have saved tl er hiS backup Derek Lov1lle tum
for later And Kansas Cuy took more bled the ba ll away
That allowed the Chtefs to take
than 20 seconds to gel off the last
thetr only lead - on a I2 yard touch
pity
_.....~W1th all the crowd n01se I down pass from Grbac to Tony Gon
couldn t hear the play that was ca~ed zalez rollowmg a 50 yard pass to Itt
tn from the bench said Grbac who tie used Joe Horn who had JUSt two
was 24 of 37 for 260 yards 111 Ius hrst catches tn the regular season
But Denver came nght back
full game srnce breaking hrs collar
helped by another miStake - an
bone Nov 3 I take the 6Jame
Tht,;r was classtc tough playoff unsportsmanltke conduct call on
football - tak1ng place tn Kansas Danan Hughes on the kickoff
C11y because the Chrefs (13 4) had
That gave Denver the ball on t~e
Chtefs
49 A 43 yard Elway to Ed
turned around the AFC race wtth a
McCa[frey
connectiOn put tl on the
24 22 vt ctor) over Denver Nov I6
one
and
Dav1s
took tt m on hiS thtrd
on Pete Stoyanoytch s 54 yard field
try
goal on the final play of the game
Th~t led to the fmal drama wh1ch
Sunday's game had tts mtstakes

""

By BARRY WILNER

The Dally Sentinel • Page' 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, '"ohio

potnlerto mnke 1t6S 61 and w1th the
shot clock down to a few seconds,
Wheeler htt a long three pomter that
put,he Rams up by seven
We have two semor guards that
arc maybe more mature then other
guys and when 11 came down the
stretch Hamck sa1d

j

•

/

•

Champtomhlp
Nonhwc st~&gt;rn

low 1 71 Brtur ~Iff 6M

Southwest

Clyde 41 O"k Harbor 4'i
Co DeS:lles 58 Upper ArhnJIOn H (2
Col Wrll n&amp;lon 41 Maumee Val l7
Coventry btl Akron Buch el 46
Crooksvtlle 77 M ller 2H
Cuyal ogil I ails 64 Akron Ct'*-Hower J4
Cuyal ugu Valley au 41 Akron E 40
Ddt 1 e&amp;O DrY. n l1
{)Qver ~0 Masstllon Ptrry 28
E Ck vd nd Shaw 'i'\ Cle Glenv lie 44E K OK 49 Col Ar.:adc ny '\1
Enstwood 10 M llbury Lake 34
Elgtn 41i N Un1on 41
Eud d b'i Solon 48
Farless 41 Waynedalt n
Fnuport H:Jrbor 61 Beachwood ~I
Fwrvacw Park 46 Lakewood Sl Au&amp;usune 41i
Fostona 5'\ Tol Woodwftrd ~
.Frnnkhn 5~ Preble Slulwnte 44
Fremont Sl Joseph 98 Seneca E 19
Ft JJenrungs 7'\ Parkway :\6
Gnllu•ay W~ land 51 Col Mtrflm 19
,
Genoa ~ 2 Woodmort 49
G~n Dale {W Va) John Mauholl Sl Shennn
doah 41
Gnwmlk 60 Uck ng Val 4~
Hanulton Bodm 61 Dayton Chr 2~
Htbron lakewood W Madtson Plruns 4'\
Holgott: 46 Ma~Jmet l9 t2 on
Hopewe ll Loudon RI FostOnl'l St Wt,nddln

on

Suurhcm Mt=ih 7'i Rsce ~
Texar Oms1nn 70 Tul~a "i4
Far Well

Anzon11 8 1 Sou hctn Cnl69
CS Sou:nmlt:ni\J 91 San Diego 84 (0Tl
Cliliforma 77 Oreaon St 64
Hawau 90 Fresno St 62
R.eJtl 7~ N Me:.. Htghlands 70
Sun Otego St 68 Snn Jose: St :'iS
San Frnnusco St 46 UC Rtvers de 4l
Santa Cltw 61 UC lf\lme ~6
Slanford 97 Oregon 72
UCLA 9'i Anzon:l Sl 71

Tournaments
Caplbl Kry Claulc-th•mptonshlp
St Rosr 12, Memmnck 48
Consolation ro~~nd
Albany N Y 76 Bndgepon ~7
Bloomsburg ~7 W Va Wesltyan 48
Cllrkr Holid•y :r'oumamtnl~hampktnshlp
Cardinal Stnt4;h 69 Wu Pbt t:vtllc S7

Third place
Vtterbo n Oark.e w
Martr,. Hottl Nalsmllb (.1assk
Ch•mplonshlp
Wm Paterson 66 SpnngliciJ '\.1
Third placr
Mtsencotdla 64 Albion 60
Lady Beuc•l lnvtlatlon~~I ;JC hamploruhlp
Brescm71 Cen Mnh00tsl64
Tbird'place
Mllhgan 74 Marton 46

Whltt'rr Wonun 1 Pod Cl•ssic
Smond ""'...

Chapman 7D Ltwts &amp; Clark 6~
Hendrix 81 Wlllanltltt: 6'i
llhnou Waleyan 90 Wh u tr ~
W s l.aC(osse 50 Nebraskit. Wesley

44

Oh10 U.S. boys' scores
Saturday's actton
Akron But::htrl7~ Akron E 4K
Akron Ccn Hower 8b Akron E,I!,Ct 48
Akron Garfield 7(} Akro 1 K~: 1. . .&amp;M

Akron Mand~es~ 6,Cj Tu~ 1t tw s V I 60
Akron N 74 Akron Ftresto tc 61
Akron Spnng ~, Grctnsbur' Gn.: t!t ~2
A.kron St V Sl M 67 Nordon 1 04
Alexander H Belpre B
Ansorun 61 Brookv lie 18
Anthony Wayne M Syh nsu S{'ll hv ~;w 4S
1\n::hbold ~I Sherwood Frurvtew 46
Ashland Crestview 60 New London ~2
Aurora 7S Chagnn Fall,47
Bedford 92 M'P~ Hu l6
Bellam 56 Sl Clairs'lllk ):'i
Bexley 54 W J•~erwn 4~
Bloom-Carroll 81 Amanda Ck um-.:k 69
Bloomfield 64 l..tdaemon• :'iS
Bluffron61 UmaTtmple ~
Bradford 62. An:anum 41
Brecksvtlle 75 N RD)':JI on ,K
Bnstol74 F;urpon Hnrbor 6H
Buckeye Val ~9 B1a Walnut ~2
Bucyrus ~9 Bel~vue ~6
Cilllal Fulton NW IJ.4 Cuy II ~ Vvulky Cl r
Can1on McKmley 69 C nron Gle 10ul: ,,
Cnnlon T1mk~n ~6 C~ nl on C:111l 4~
CurdmaJ 61 Bt!rbh re 41
Can}m~ton 64 Marion Cuth ~ 1
Cedarville 70 E Cl mon 'i7
'1.
Cehna 61 Beuerontnull! 17
Cen ervllle S9 Kenenn_J Aller 46
C n Purcell M~na~~60 Ctn Sc!v~n H 11 ~ 47
C n Woodw3rd 6, Dt:fianct ~
Claymont 61 Crurolhon 44
Cle Benedk11ne 82 Eustlab! N 'i I
Cle: Colhnwooc11S Ash1atM.tl 'i7
Cle Sr rgnauus8, V:tllty fur~e M
Cle Umvmly64 GarfidtiHts 'il
Clevc: land His 87 E Clevtl mtl Sh IW 70
O mron M:w1e ~6 Wtlnung oo40
Clyde 12 Oak H:ubor4Y
Col Acodtmy 64 Ccntt!fburtt liM
Col Brookhaven 79 Ch:tnel61
Col Centenmal S2 Frankl n H 5 4l
Col DeSales 49 Tt:o~ys Vnl 4M
Col Wa 1erson6l Gnh:mn., 'i1
Coldwatei"S1 ltn1a8nth 'il (OTI
Convoy Cn:s111 C! 61t On milt~()
Cru:lersv1lle Perry 62 Hnrtlm N f1h.:rn 'i l
Dalton 62 R uman 47
D:mv1lle 7~ Tree or Ufe ~7
Day Belmonl 78 Len on MonAA ~H
Day Chammadc J\ll cnne 62 D y C r II ott

wiO
ld R IJll\1:4

4l

Oh1o H S g1rls' scores

!OTI

D:~y Chnstmn IOl Preble ShawtiL'\! ~fl
Dt:lptws Jeffmon 66 Arltglon 61 (OTt
Dubhn Coffnwr~4H lan..:as 1~r \M
E L verpovt n Pu stJurgh Wt:5Ungllt usc ~'i
E:ltUil 67. Tn Vtllage n
Edp.ert ~ 92 Ham I on Inti 02
Eln wood X2 AtL-adia "i6
Eve ~m: 77 Fa~nc 60
~ uk!s.'i MS Sandy Vul W
FmUity 66 Oe Soulh 54
F~ 1 n1 Ro~s 12 Sandmky b I
H 'F~ 71 Murty n ~M
Ft Jc 1 p 61 Lin olnv1r.:w +4
I 1 Lor un e flO t'kw Knoxville '\I
Fl Re c,t VL'f}' 'i'i Portland (Inti) J IYC ))Jnty S2
Galton 61 Upper SnnUusky 49
Gull polts -17 Jarbon 14
Gr nJ Vul 6R Pymatunms V I 60
Gr.Uidv tew 7' U k n~ VlJJ 46
Gret!nvllle Ml lroy (1!4
Gro ve C ry 74 C I Bnggs 7
Groveport 71 W Un on 44
HilnHiruD Ru ~ :'i2 C n F nneytuwn 49
Htllsdalr.: Kl Sfl nhvtllc! 'i:'i
Hooslt n "'i ? Mmster41
Hun 1ttlun 74 M lk."r 4~
Huru 1 \9 M .r~awt tiM
l1d1an CI\! k67 W~:n n WVaM
lewl'll St:to W Cumlullon Val 4K
John.~l )Wn b' ll~klh)l: HIS SK

~o~:rv

4h

1\sl c lhul SO Ash abu a f..Ji! wouJ 40
l\aheu67 W Muskint:.um 'i'i
Beaver Uk:al 'i 2 Cad z l1
fk vemcc:k 10~ Spr flJ Sou I 20
Bdhure 7l Do bye lot I "ill
lJcnJ t n l.ogut 61 W L b!!ny S !e 'i
Berea 16 N R Ugc:v lk :W
Bcrhn Htland 4l Garo~way "7
Be:.. lcy 6\ W Jefferson l7
Bu:U"dm:tn 69 W U ou~hby "i 44
OraJf d 44 N\:w n '\2
On:cksv lie 40 N R y;d 2'i
Brun.,Wit:k 50 M1Jp;wk 41
C aldwell:'i2 Momoc:(r.:ntr 141
Cul 1Wmrhcsrer"i2 C I S 11 11
Cruu onCulh 'i6 You M~trc y 'il
Coolon GlcnOak ~7 Un on wn I k 41
Canton MrKmky 71 Akr n N 21i
Cant m S S4 Tusltw 49
Curd nnl ~ Newbury n
Card nglon 4~ N011lmor '\6
Ctnlcrv1lle 61 Xt a ~2
Chanel 'i~ P:rdua 49
Chardon ND-Cl ~8 CIC Calhoht: 'IJ
Ch II rot he 61 Newark C ull ~ l
Cm Mrn:y 62 Wauenon 40
Clear Fork 78 Ashland 1!

Nrw H mpsh n: ~ (} 8 slon U 46
Srmnton K2 ktro 1 b'i
Sltn 64 Cllnt!'ilUS "'i1
Sr J ~1lh s 60 St Du~IYelllun: :H
T~ 'I It! ~M F ,.-Uh:~m ~'i

Other NCAA
D1vis10n ' men's scores •

V l'fmont7~ l&gt;re~~oe l 67

)(;~v tr 7K Lu Salle (II
Vale 'i I Ldugh ~U

Saturday's actmn

South

Ka'il

dOI,I

n Manhanan 4S

R~rt Moms fl'i Fturleigh Di~.:kmsqn 76

&amp;:ion Ha1161 S1 John s ~9
S ena 92 Culg..:c sg
St Bon:.aventurr 8() Xav er 77
St Fronc s NY 76 Monmoulh N J 6-'
St Franc 1 Pa 7b Cc!nl Coon«t~t.:ul St 47
Wts VtrgJnUI 7'} Boston Colle~c S7

South
Ala 8 mungham 62 South Aonda ;ftl
App.tlnchtnn St 6 E Tennessee Sl 51
AutM!m 7, Georgta 62
Cent Aodda 8l Men:er 72
Coli of Charleston 64 Cen e1uvy "i I
Copl'n St 79 O.tnwnre St 66
Outo. 104 Ml!')'hllld 72
E. Kentucky 67. E. lilt nola 6,

Saturday !'I admn
Puhu r ~ l 7

S

N..:w l 1!1 J f
l r. n s...fl \H M k:
,2

Techmcal trammg, expenence, and
compassiOn are what It takes to bet a
good surgeon It's even better when
your surgeon IS close to home Holzer
Chmc phys1c1an, Dr John W Tyson,
IS avaJiable for consultatiOns nght
here m Me1gs
Dr Tyson IS Board Cert1f1ed by the
Amencan Board of Surgery and
expenenced m General, Thorac1c &amp;
Vascular Surgery and IS skilled on the
ABBI System·(Advanced Breast

NYU 00 R M:hcd r .a6

Prin

••

NFL dms10nal
playoff scores

Sunday's action
wl
A.ltlefson 8ruM.kltL~ tOO Pm Johns own~
Allentown 62 Cabnn1 'i:'i
Assun I' 1 71 New Haven 70
IJry ml 72 N\:W Hrunpsh n: Coli 49
Duquet k! 70 R Mxk Island 47
F urhciJ 6M St Pct~'T ' b2
G~'trg W d nJtlun711&gt;y tmH
H ls!r. 14 H U'tforJ ~M
tu 7XM-.Jhtul10
l..oyt II MJ 67 Nt 1~ara ~~
Maryl md 61 W k\: Fvrest 'i'J

Atnen 1 U ()1 N C Wilnul~t 4 J
R tdwd! 110 C rnell-' I
Rufl I K6 Ornl R ~:rts Mol
Colun bt 67 ld l!!h H
C nna:11rut IW N 11rc Uan....: 'iX
D y p66 Fwdh m'i~
Du4~'~ 1' Vttp. nt T\: h 6'i
Georte,c:t wn lilt rr Vtdctlt..'\: li6
IIlla :)() Fturfield ~
Lafnycllc MJ Brown 71
Man k:hU!itt b 11 St J serh ~ 66
Mta u 71 Pi 1:4burgll6'i
NC Asbc:va11.: 71 M\1 Bllttno~Cuu y6M
N agam 62 Radt.&gt;r1 8

Football

Suulh
i\1 t1&lt;n1.:aA&amp;MOii Put~e.W
All ltd ar St 'i2 OmttantM. ga 49
1J rryW J I Jt nC S nu1h K~
Bd lit 1 Kli R:Wfortl60
IJ wtc S1 71 VrJm: St ~(:,
Drtlll: t 79 Man 1n 60
(an 1tbell RK Flortda All IIIII; K2
C~ I Flon Ia 102 $tt:tso n 99 (2 OT)
Cc: t Melhodtst 80 Mt hsnn 74
Ch 1rles o 1 Soul bern 9-4 &amp;.lvu 4 Elkms
Cl~ytoo St n Nonh Aoridil49

~7

Co.u al CllfOhna ~J Elon ~
Colunlbtts St 89 Kcnneuw IH
Cttmbdland Tenn 69 Shurtc=t n
Ederd 63 Kce II:' St :'i 2
F:!.y~evalleSI ti l NC CeatraJ1l
Aa lntnnattoD31 91 Coli orOlarkslon 6~
Rorida A&amp;M 72 Morgan S1 ~R
Florida Tc~; h 7~ Flurhb MetnOI'IPI 'i8
Fun Valley St 76 SuvannM St 56
Frnnca,.Manon 72 S C At ken 48
Frnnklut PiterL't 81 Roll1ns 72
Ga Southwestern 80 Albany Ga 69
GeorJtil Coli 14 Armsrron, A1kult1t: ~:'i
Geor11a St 82. Mercer B
Hampton U
S Carohnn S1 S9
Hownrd U 61 Bethune Cookman 49
In&amp; Pur hidplo 88 Tamp&lt;~ 74
JB&lt;:ka()fl St Rl Alabtunil St ~~

1n

Alabama 64 Suutll Carolsna S4
Antem n U 81 N C WtlllllnJion 69
Duke H7 Georgtu Ttdt 'i6
Eas1 Cuol na M Geo~e M uon 4M
Rorida 100 Kcnrurky :'iR
Florida Southern 71 Franklin Ptcn:c 6(1
Marqueue 79 l.O\usvtllt: ~q
Manlk'hiiSCIU ~8 V1rgmra T~ll S6
North Cn o 1: 10' Flond.1 St 77
Old Dom1n on 80 R ~; hmolld-~K
Southern M ss 12 Hous on 66
Tul&lt;arM: 70 South flonda l9
Va. Commonweal h 79 W lhnm &amp;: Mal) 70
W sconstn 74 Georxm 64 (Of)

MWwnl
Andmon lnd 67 j(.alanw:oo ()1
con~~age 78 w~ Lultcnln 48
Ci~ nn.at 1S DePau1 6~
Drake 79 Cmshton ~7
Findlay 66 Lake Supenor Sr :'i2
Ill nou 88 ColorOOo 48
lllnotsSt 71 Evansv1Ue66
Indiana 88 Nonhwesttm 6.1
lntti:~na St 69 S llhno&amp;a 47
lew" 72, Qunq 57
Nd&gt;&lt;aska 80 Kanoas St 58
Penn St u M~ehoaan 84 ton
Purd~~e 70 Mtchtpr~ St 60
S1 Joseph a IIMI 81. lnduumpolla 67
Texas Tech 79 t.1tSsoun 6~
WIS Mahvuuket 66 Ill Ctllcago n

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

~entatwn)

To schedule an appomtment with
Dr Tyson, contact Holzer MeigsClime

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Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday~

January 5, 1998••

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my fi I journey. It would not have ven ience. --An Independent Thi n.ker
to be a negative thing. I would view in Houston
Jt as quite positive. To say goodbye . Dear Independent Thinker:
and to plan ci ne's own death would The mail on this subject continues ro
1997. Uu An1elci Timc5
truly be a 'gift from God.
be he ated and heavy. The vast
Syndic11e ami Crc~tor~
Syrx.hcatc ·
I would love to plan the tinu;, the majority who wr01e agreed with
music, the guest list, what I wear and you. Keep reading for more on this
so on.
· pighly controversial subject.
Dear Ann Landers: Seldom do 1
Why would one not want 10 do
Dear Ann Landers: The idea
disagree with you. However, on the thi s? It sure beats a surprise. And
that suicide is against the law or
mauerofsuicide, l wish to put in my . what 1f a sick person. lingers for
against somconc's religion makes no
two cents' worth.
b
years? What a out the expense and se nse to me.
I am a woman,'5 J years old, and burden on the f~m i ly'' It could wipe
The underlyi ng assum pti on is
:. would~ov. c to kn ow that the opt ion them out.
·
that
the gove rnmen t, or some reli or sutc'. e IS avm 1able when I am no
Count me 100 percent in fav or of gious group, knows beuer than I do
longer fll to hve the good hfe. If I suicide if one is terminal. You , can what is right for me. I don 't be ltcve
had .a tenmnal dtsease , I would li ke 0 worry about the "sin '" part, Ann , and it.
'
, to get my affatrs 111 order and plan I' 11 worry about the pain and inconAs one who ha~ a family hi story

Ann •
Landers ,

... oh .
,.,e,,• .

.·

BY ED PETERSON
Social Security
.l(thens

liB West Second \Street

&lt;:

PARTS STORES

.

We're BPEN:

~.

_ ·M·ondav to friday:

freeGamouflage Hat
withm.

Purchase*
*

ATURDAY: _8:00 AM. - G;DO PM.
SUN~DAY: 10:00 AM. - 4:00 PM.

..

\ &gt;•I•

P.,.• ''"

"'&gt;! ll:o•r,

POMEROY Meigs · Local
School District Board of Education

· ·

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Page 7
' ;'
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. Monday, January 5, 1998

of mental illness, kid ney di sease and
He li ved for sevei"al more mi sercancer, I do not believe anyone has able years. hating every minute of 11 .
the right to tell me whut I should do I .can assure you 1 that those years
wi th my li fe. We Americans are were as hard ori the fanlil y as they
more humane to our cats and dogs · were on him .
than we are to our term in ally ill and
In my opini op, Dr. K~ \;orkian·
elderl y.
should be give n a Co n g r ~ s :-.m nal
My grandfather suiTercd from Medal of Hnnor, not jail 111111.:. -cancer and spent hi s last eig ht M.E.L. in Alexandria, Va .
months in a hospital bed unti l he
Dear M.E.L.: A lot ol people
weighed on ly 89 pou nds and was 3gree with you . Here ·s one more :
~too weak tony.
Dear Ann Landers: I am the
My father tried five ttrnes to kill executi ve direc tor of the 1-lcmlock
hims9lf hefore he dtcd in a nursing Society. Recently. I wa&lt; on the road
home. At one point. my moth er speaking about the need Hi legalize
found him with a plastic i)ag O\'er his physician aid in dying fur mentally
head. She took it away and said, com pete nt,'terminally illtndi viduals
" We don 't do that. "
'.'lho request 11 .

Several people told me about the
leners in your column from readers
w~e
. lt strongly about the righl to
c ose death with dignity.
:
Hemlock Society has been
advocaung choi ce arid dignity in
dying for 17 years .
Through our 80 chapters, -we provide information about .how to pl an
for a peaceful death, and we sup port
and initiate efforts to change the law
to permit thi s option.
Send questions to Ann Landers, ereators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century
Bl vd., Suite 700. Los Angeles, Calif.

90045

handy.

Soc ial Securit y tol l-free , 1-800-77212 13. If you call Soc tal Security, the
representati ve wi ll need to ask you a
few questions to determi ne your
idenjity.
lf you have an an:ount, you can
call your bunk or Social Sec urity to
switc h to direct deposit. You ' II need
yo ur bank swtemc nt or personal
check , and your Soc ial Security
number. You can expect your benefits to be deposited in your acco unt
within 30 ta60 days. We ' ll send you
a Jeuer telling you when to expect
your benefits to' be in your bank
·account.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Q. How can I contact Social
Seeurity?
A. Thc.eas icsl way to reac h us is
to cull our toll-free number. 1 -~00?.72- 121 :l'. You ca·n get recorded
information 24 hours a day. including· weekends and holi.days . You can
speak to a service rcprcscn_tativc
between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on business days. Our lines are busies t earl y
in the week and early in the month,
so .if your business can· wait, it's be st
to call at other times. When you ca ll.
have your Social Security number

Q. Can I actually increase my
Social Security retirement benefit
by working a little longer?
A. Yes. increased retirement hcnd its arc payable to people who
delay re tiremen t past ful l retirement
age. The delayed retirement credit is
currently set at five percent a year.
'·but will gradually increase to eight
perce nt a year for people who
• become age 65 after 2007 .

Q. .How much can survivors
receive in benefits? ·
A. The higher the earnings of the
deceased worker, th~ higher the hen-

cfits wiil . he. The act.ual b!neftt
amount is a p.crcentage nr the
deceased worker's basic Socia l
Security benefit~ and ranges from 75
to 100 percen t, depending on the
survivor's age and type of benefit.
You can get an estimate of the sur·vivors benefit th at cou ld he paid to
your famil y by calling Soc ial Scc,urity's toll -free number. 1-800-77212 13.
Q. I understand your earnings
can affect your retirement benefits. Do earnings also affect Social
Security survivors benefits?
A. Yes, all Social Security beneficiar ies under age 70 , e.ccpt dtsablcd

beneficiarie s. arc s ubject to the
Soc ial Secumy ear ning s test. Thus,
the amount of your Social Security
survi vors benefits may be reduced tf
your earn ings ex.ccCd cerrain limit., .
This year the limi t is $9, 120. with $1
in benefits withheld for ev~: ry $2
over the limit for those 62 to 65
years of. age, and $14;500 for bcncficiaries age 65 -69 with $1 withheld
fo r ev.e ry $3 over the limit.
To find out more about the Soc1al
Security earnings test, call Soci.al
Secunt v toll -free number, 1-800772- 12i 3 ana request the leaner.
"1-l ow Work Affects Your Social
Security Benefits."

..

organ izati onal meeting Monday, 7
p.m. at the di strict office on the second tloor of the Pomeroy Municipal
Building. R,eg ular meeting will fol low.
RACINE - Racine Coun ci l
meetin g Mo~day, 7 p.m . ·at the
Racine Munic1pal Building.
TUESDAY
'

RUTLAND - Rutland Town- (TR 155) closed Tuesday and
ship Trustees, Tuesday. 6 p.m . Rut· Wednesday for )VO rk. Chester Town land Fire Station, organizational . ~hip Trustees annou nced.
meeting and regular business.
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
MIDDLEP!)RT - Middleport Township Trustees meeting TuesLodge 363, F&amp;AM. , regular meet· day, 6 p.m. at the township building
ing Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
on Rocksprings Road .
CHESTER -

Sugar Run Road

,POMEROY

FOE Auxiliary

217 1 wtll meet Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.

ai the home of Clerk Osie Foil rod.

SYRACUSE - Sutton l&lt;Jwnship
Board of Trustees organizat ional
mee ting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Bui ldi ng.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Literary Cluh. annual business m&lt;!cting, with elec ti on of oft" '&lt;"·
Wednesday, 2 p.m. home of Pauline
Horton. Middleport .. Pat Holter . to
review "Murder. Sh~ Meowed'' by
Rita Mae Brow n.

ALFRED - Orange Townshi p
Trustees will hold their I ~98 organizational meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.

' .

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J

.JPARTS
MASTER

·

UlLAND BOTTLE GAS
JUST R CEIYED 2 LOADS OF NEW TANKS

Check Our Everyday Low Pricing!
.

MONDAY
. POMEROY - Friends of the
Meigs County Public ,Library, 7 p.m .
Monday at the Racine Branch.
POMEROY --;- Meigs County
Board of Elect ions, I p.m. Monday.

limit DRB 1111 per ~,SIIIIIr, .
wllill SllflflliiS IJSI. '

t

·

ommunity CalendaF---------- - - - -

•"."'

.-7:30 a . -7:30pm.

If you already have a ba.nk

Manager, ··account, crlntact your bank or call

It won ' t be long. The co ld winds
of winter arc just around the corner.
II' you sign up for direct deposi t now
you can .sit at home thi s winter,
warm ·and cozy, and know your
money is in the bank every month.
Direct deposit .is the safe, co nve ni ent
way to receive your Social Security
or Supplcthcnt al . Security Income
(SS I).benefits.
You don 't have a bank acco unt ?
Contact your bank, credit union or
savi ngs and ·loan .- They '.Jl be glad to
help you.

.

.

The Daily· Sentinel

Direct depos.it of your Social Security or SSI check : What are you waiting for?

•
PART,S STORES

By -The ~end

'

~n
runs
in
fcivorof
suicide
fbt
terminally
ill
r-======-------,

· ~0 .. ·
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$3.99
·-$1.50*

•

ANTIFREEZE

$2. 49~COO
::::::;;;;;;;;;
LAN;:;;::T~
$9.48/Case
•Man-In rebate

Parts Master
Motor Oil &amp; lt'ans. Fluid

GasUne
Anlifreeze

by Valvolne 10W30,
10W40, 20w50, 30w,
40w, Type FA, Dexron II

12.Oz. #23012

Parts Master
Windshietcf
Washer fluid
1 Gallon #CV1

Starting
Ruid

1Gallon #AV6-1
• See store for details
Limit $3.00 rebatelcust.

15 Oz. #a3011

Next DaY Access to·Ov•r 500,000 Auto, Truck I lndu~trial Parts
Stop in and meet yoaar Pomeroy Parts Team:·
Dave Baldwin, Manager
Harry Cunningham,-OAsst. Manag~~
I

I

I

Jim-Sisson, Installer Service

I

I

.Roger Pullens, Machine Shop service ..

Full Delivery Service!

•

•

ess1ona

'·

.RUTLAND, OH•• THE PLAINS, OH•• ~NNELSVILLE, OH.

YES, WE PRICE MATCH .COMPETITIVE PRJlDUOS!
.

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SEE·
_ , _,STORE FOR DETAILS
..

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JACKSON, OH. • GALLIPOLIS, OH. • TORCH, OH. • LOG~N, OH.

740·742·2511

•

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1·800·837~8217

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:: Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, .January

. Monday, January'

5, 1998

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gallon of warm wa)er. Use the or two, then take two·ar three sheets
squeegee just like outside.
'of facial tissue, lift the foam out of
Should someone spill some wine, the fibers . Don't wipe, use' a graspsoup, pop or whatever, don't scream, , ing motion. Repeat as needed. When
faint, or even bite your lip, just make the stain bas been removed, you can
sure that you have my emergency get rid of the last of the shaving
spill kit on hand . One 'bottle of club foam ~y spri!lkling with club soda
soda, one can foam-st~h! sha,ving and whip up with tissue.
cream, and one or two boxes of barReally bad s tam s~ ranberries
.gain white facial tissues. Always or Kool-Aid, elm usually be cleaned
blot up spills with facial tissue.
with Motsenbocker' s Lift Off (NU) I
Wheb the spill happens, apply Food, Beverage &amp; P.rotcin Stain
about an inch thick, wad of tissue to Remover, (800) 346-1633. You can
the spill and press down gently. find 11 at most good hardware stores
Replace the tissue as it gets filled, and home centers.
and keep increasing the pressure
Now the scoop on snow.
until all the moisture is absorbed. If
You need to clear your sidewalks
the spill is on the carpet, you may from ice and snow. Not all ice
want to stand on the last few wads of 1 rnelters are created equal When tt's
facial tissue so that all the moi st~re relatively warm, above 20 degrees
ts pressed out of the padding.
Farenheit, a salt-based product, like
Should any stain remai n, sprinkle rock salt, Halite, Morton Safe-T-Salt
some club soda on the stai ned area or the new Snow and Ice Melting
and let 11 foam away the stain , then Crystals by Gibraltar, can be used.
repeat the facial tissue steps and The pibraltar Melting Crystals.
absorb the stain away. If any residue (313) 491-3500, are new this year.
remains, repeat'the procedure.
They are competitively priced. and
If the spill turns out to be baked. do a better ice melting job than plain
beans, or ravioli and meat sauce on rock salt.
your new oysier-hued carpet, no
When the. temperature drops
probl em. Ju&gt;t ptck up the solid with , below 20 qegrees Farenheit, salt is
facta! ti ssue. When the bulk is gone, no longer effective and a calcium
spray enough shavmg .foam to c9ver chloride prod uct, like Gibraltar
the sot led area..
DuoFiakc, should be used.
Gently work the foam into ,the
Remember, ice mehers arc JUSt
carpet fibers. Let stand for a minute !'lieant to break the bond between the

walking ~urface and the ·ice or
packed snow. ):'ou must still shovel.
Finally, a few tips on the interior
comfort level at your party.
On the day or night of the party,
dial the furriace down and the water
heater up. All the cooking )'QU are
doing and all the extra people that
are coming into the house add heat
and moisture. Every person adds
about 700 British Thermal Units
(BTUs) of heat. Twenty people
equal an additional 14,000 B.TUs per
hour. That's a lot of hot air, so dial
the thermostat down before the
guests arrive.
Those guests will also be using
extra hot water. If you usually have
the water heater turned to the economy setting, dial up to meet the added
demand for the party. While you're
downstairs, make sure the power
humidifier is set correctly for the
outside temperature .
If the temperature is 40 degrees
or above , the humidity should be set
at 45 percent . Between 30 and 39, 40
percent ; 20 to 29, 35 percent ; 10 to
19, 30 percent: 0 to 9, 25 percent; -I
to · -10, 20 percent. Any humtdity
above ihcsc settings wtll cause water
.. and-or ice to form on the in side of
the windows.
Now you can have a great party
you can brag about.

Society Scrapbook
Ingels-Saunders
Carne Leanna Ingels and Bt an- ' bride was the maid of honor. The
don Ashl ey Sa unders exc hanged · other · attcna ands were Angelia
wedd ing vows in a double ring cere - Wolfe , cousin of the bride, and
mony on Au~ust 30 at Grace Unttcd Brynn Sauriders, cousm of the
Methodist Church tn Gallipolis. Dr. groom.
David C. Hogg performed' the cereThey wore royal purpl e fl oor
muny, asmted by Rev. Robert leng th gowns with .~ sweetheart
Kuhn, grandfather of the bnde, and neckJi ne and acce nted with purple
Pastor Alvis Poll ard of the First rosettes. They carried a whtte rose
Bapt ist Church.
and wore a locket, which was a gift
The bride ts the daughter of John frotlJ the bride.
: Ingels and Karla Blackburn. She is
Morgan Saunders, brother of the
~ the gmnddaughter of Patsy Ingels. groom. was the best man. The other
and the late Clvdc J. Ingels, and Rev. attendan ts were Joseph Shrader and
Robert Kuhn , &lt;~ nd the late Bea Clayton Saunders. They, along with
Kuhn. She is the great-granddaugh- the fathe rs and the groom, wore
· tcr of Viola Mi ll er.
, m ~tchin g black .tuxedos with tails
The groom .is the son of Ronald and accented wi th purple paisley
ANDREW RYAN LUNDELL
: and Cinda Saunders . He is the vest and bow tie.
: grandson ol Leon and Juamta SaunThe unuy candle was lit by both
TURNS FOUR • Andrew Ryan
· ders, and Lois Shaver, and· the late mothers.
,
Lundell celebrated his fourth
: Wayne Shaver. He' is the greatMusic was prov ided by Ed ie., birth'day with party on Dec. 11
· grandson of Nancy Saunders.
Ross, organist, and lean Newsome, at the home of his parenta, Allan.
Gt von 1n marriage by 'her parents soloist, fri end of the bnde and and Mary Lundell, and sister,
and grandmother, and escorted by groom. Guests were regi stered by Meredith In Lancaster.
her father. the bnde wore a formal Christi, Misty and Shaw na Wolfe,
Grandparents are Gordon
. gown of whi te Italian sati n. The of[: co us m ~ of the bride.
·
· and Susan Winebrenner of Syrathe- shoulder neckline nowed tnto -. The buffet reception was held at cuse and Bonny Lundell, Rosen·
applt qucd . short tunnel sleeves. The the University of J,l. io Grande Din- berg, Texas. Great-grandmothtiucd bochce and Basque ncck lrne nmg Halltmmediately following the ers are Maggie Winebrenner of
fel l into a full bouffant sktn whtch ceremony. Jane Milhofoi" and Wilma SyAicuse, Ernestine Zuspan of
earned a cathedral length train . The Brown p(Csidcd at the cake table. Mason, W. Va., . and Mar11urite ,
trim on the neckline in the front and Tables were deco&lt;atcd with brandy Duff of Lil(,l ngston, Texas. '.
hack was a double satin pleat. The snifters containing fl oating candles. ·
7
back watst has roselles. The ~own
The bride-and groom arc graduwas adorned with diamond seq ·ns ates qfGa lliaAcadcmy High School
and see d pe arls on alocon Ia c and arc currently attending Ohio
New y
: appliques. ·
University.
ear
• The bndes he:ldpiecc was a headImmediately after the reception,
Here it is another New Year,
- hand of white satin rosettes and ale. . the couple . spent:ha week m MauL
we know not what is in store
con lac.c whi ch held a fingertip .illu- They reside in At ens ·
. ltke other' years gone before.

Chatter Club meets
_The December meeting of the
Chatter Club was held at the home
Janice Fetty in Pomeroy.
Refreshm ents were served and
games were played. Chnstmas gifts
were opened '1!116 secret pal s disclosed. Names were drawn for new
secret pals for 1998. Isabelle Couch
won the door prize. There will not
be a meeting iiJlanuary it was decided.

and Jeremy Warden ; Tom Hysell and
Suzy Carpenter, Todd , Roxann and
Megan Varney: Mildred Caldwell ,
Wilma and Howard Parker. all local. ·
Mark Sabrina, Brittany, Marcus
and Clayton Kcr,sey, Jacksonville,
N. C.: Jay Carpenter, Akro0;,_April.
Todd, Kaycee and Sy~ney Lewis, ·
Springfield; Pany and Aaron Parker.
Germantown; Helen and Edson
Parker, Albany; Rodney and Wil lis
Parker, Park~rsburg; Janice and' Bob
Parker, Marieit:i.

Parker family enjoys holiday
reunion

ALFRED PERSONALS
Nina Robinso n visited Bob and
Janet Robinson, Belpre, and Norma
Jean and Gerald Swartz, Reno.
Visitors of Dave and Mary Jo
Barringer were Jim and Karen Pooler, Lindsay and Rande; Mary and
Patrick Worley, all of Co lumbus;
Doug and Susan Trout, Ryan and J.
,1. Bailey, Colds Springs, Ky.

Sarah and Homer Parker of
Stiversville hosted a Parker Christmas season dmner at their home.
Attending were Martha, Joe and
Will Poole and Nellie Parker of
Alfred; Irene Parlier, Nancy Campbell. Lori, Doug, Stacie, Kris Adam

a

p oet S· corne
, r

sio~:~iiBeth

Hinsch, friend of the

Some wtll come in some will go out,
for that is the plan
of mortal man
sin ce time began.
Bu_t tf we keep "God" beside
to be our guide
then there is nothing to fear
as we face another New Year.
Nina Dixson
Pomeroy

Marilyn and Wilbur Robinson
had Christmas dinner with Marlene
Donovan and family. Visitors were
Lea Ann Pick, Columbus; Lori ,
Allen and Cody Morrison and Larry
Ritchie, Caldwell.
Brenda and Gary Johnson spent
Christmas wtth his parents, Clarence
and Eva Jol)nson, Waterford. Others
present were Jason, Jeremy, Amber,
and Mazzi Johnson, Beverly; Mike
Weber and Jcs~ic a Wood, Gallipolis.
Sarah Caldwell spent Christmas
wtth Ktm, Randy and Hannah HawIcy, Tuppers Plains. All the family
were present except Carrie and Martie Barnas.
Visitors of Marie and Charlie
Sargent were Carol , Steve, Jamie
and Paul Erwin; Kay, Joe. Beau., and
Chris Bailey; Pat Spencer, all of
Meigs County; Larry, Brian, Kim,
Allie, and Andrew Spencer, Littl e
Hockmg.

Military News----career specialty.
Freeman, a ·stud.ent at Southern
High School. will report to Fort
Bennmg in Columbus, Ga., for.basic
training in June, 1998.
He is the son of ~eg gy Freeman,
Syracuse, and Mtke Freeman, Fayetteville, N.C.
Brian M. Finkenbinder
Air ·Force Airman Brian M.
Finkenbinder Kas graduated fr&lt;1m
the supply management inventory
apprentice course at Lackland Air
Force Base .in San Antonio, Texas.
Students were taught property
accounting, customer and bench
stock support, mi ssion capable

Michael F. Freeman
Michael F. Freeman has jomed
the United States Army under the
Delayed Entry Program at the U.S.
Army Recruiting Station in Athens.
The ptogram gives young men or
women the opportunity to delay
enlistment mto the A~y for up to
one year before reportmg to bas1c
military training.
The enlistm)lll gives the new soldier the option of learning a new
skill , travel, and become eligible to
receive as much as $40,000 toward a
college education. After completion
fb ·
· ·
Jd '
·
o astc trammg , so ters rccetve
ad
d · d. 'd 1 · · · h
vance In l VI ua trammg '" t e11

(MICAP) procedures, equipment
maQagement, effectiVe warehousing
techniques, and procedures for operating materiel handling equipmen).
They also practiced inventory methods using electronic data processing
cqutpmcnt.
He is scheduled for an assignment to tl1c 56th Supply Squadron at
Travis Air Force Base, Fairticld,
Calif.
•
He ts the son of Peggy L. and
stepson of Ronald L. Mullins of Ruiland. He is a 19';7 graduate of Meigs
High School.

Names in the news - Seinfeld and Brinkley stay busy"
NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry Sci n- one moment where you have to feel
fcld helpC!I define tclev.ision in the the audience i~ still having a great
1990s, but that doesn' t mean he 's in time, and if you get off right there,
tune with what else has happened on they walk out of the theater excttcd," Seinfeld said. ·
the tube 'so far this decade.
WASHINGTON (AP) - David
" I missed the whole '90s," Seinfeld said in lime magazi ne's Jan. 12 Brinkley was back in front of a camissue, which hit newsstands today. era on ABC - but not on the show
" I don't know what happened."
he hosted for 15 years.
Seinfeld recent,ly announced this
Instead, the 77-year-old veteran
would be the last season of "Scin- newsman ·was featured in several
fcld,'' the longtime staple of NBC's new Archer Paniels Midland comThursday night lineup. He said his merctals ai~d during ABC 's "This
stage instmcts told him it was time Week " - his longtime show - on
to exit.
Sunday.
" I just know from being on stage
The ads for the agribus(ness giant
for years and years and years, there's featured Brinkley reporting on the

world of fuod development.
" I will still speak straight and
true. I'll never change th at," Bri n~­
ley satd, sjJcaking to the camera.
"But now I will bring you mformation about food, the cnvironmeni,
agriculture, issue s of .importance to
the American people and the
world."
· They al so arc · issues of importance to Brinkley's new employer,
the Decatur, 111.-based fuod processing company. With 1996,revenucs Qf
$13.3 billion, Archer Daniels Midland was am on~ Fortune magazine'~
1997 listing of th e world 's 500
biggest companies.

(A Donation for Administration would be appreciated but is nol required for any child to teceive shots)

1998 EVENING IMMUNIZATION CLINICS .

CAITLYN HOLTER
. ENJOYS FIRST BIRTHDAY •
,Caltlyn Holter observed tier first
birthday recently at the home of
her parents, Stanlell and Tanya
Holter.
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger
was the theme attending was
Marie y0 ong, her grandmother,
Carrie Becca and M1tthew
Roush' Chuck Odessa and C. J.
Jacks.' · and Caitlyn's br~ther,
Christopher a11d her SISter,
Chelse•.

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY •
Kelse~ Morgan Hudson recently
celebrated her first birthday at
the home of her parents, Heath
and Kyla Sellers Hudson.
A "Winnie ·Pooh and Tigger"
. party theme was carried out witb
a Pooh an d friends cake made
by her grandmother, Pam Sellers. A buffet style dinner was
served to those named and her
grandmother, Mary Hoppe,
Henry Hoppe, Heath•r and
Shawn Hawley, great-grandpar·
ents, Emmett and Zora Rawson,
Greg, Lori; and Jordan Rawson,
Jerry and Debbie Yeauger.
Those sending gifts were
Scott Sellers, Josiah Rawson,
Seth Rawson, Carrie Glaze and
great-grandfather, George Hudson.

Feb.

3 &amp; 17

March

August4 &amp; 18

3 &amp; 17

Sept.' 1 &amp; 15

.

April7 &amp; 21

May5&amp;19

Oct. 6 &amp; 20

Nov.

3 &amp; 17

June2 &amp; 16
Dec.1

Pomeroy • Middlepo~. Ohio

.

.

'.' If I get off now I have a~hance "my heart."
·;
The comedian, who got siarted in
go for."
"
front of live audience, is heading
' Seinfeld revealed a few details of back for more this summer, with a
the season's remaining 10 shows, tour of Europe and Australia before
including the first episode of th~ filming an HBO special called "I'm
show set in New York to be act'ually Telling You for the Last lime."
filmed on location in Manhattan. He
" I would like to be considered a
also said Jerry and Elaine won't mar- great comedian. I don ' t think I'm
ry, and the final episode will be there yet," Seinfeld said, citing
paired with a mock-documentary Richard Pryor and Bill Cosby as two
about its making.
.
who are.
' He ref~sed to confirm reports
He expects to take a few years ofT
NBC offered him $5 million per following ·the summer comedy run to
epi sode to conti nue " Seinfeld " recharge after years of the · same
beyond this year, itsilinth season.
heavy work schedule writing, pro"I don 't really care about the mon- ducmg and starring in "Seinfeld."
ey," he said. "I'm not the kind of perToo busy to watch television himson who ~ould do a show and thi'nk, self, the decade's sitcom king admits
'Well , we've kmd of run out of gas he has some catching up to do.
here, but the money's great and the
"I missed the whole '90s," Seinratings are still good, so let's keep feld said '" I don't know what hapgn~dmg them out.' It would break
pened." .

•

~

NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry Seinfeld's Stage instincts told him II was
. t!ffie to exit. • . '
1 ·
" I felt ... the Moment," the veter.an stand-up comic says .in Time
magazine. "That's the only way I can
describe it."
' Seinfeld,
who'se
recently
. announced plans to shut down his
. highly rated ~itcom shocked his loy, al viewers, is the subject of the magazme's cover story in its Jan. 12 edi.tion, whtch htts newsstands Monday.
" I just know from bei ng on stage
for years and year~ anu years, there's
· one moment where you have to feel
the audience is still hav ing a great
ume, and if you get off nght there,
they walk out of the theater exci ted "
· Se infeld said. " And yet, if you w~it
a little bit longer and try to give them
more for their money, they walk out
feeling not as gpod.
·

at a standing.ovation. That's whai you

'Titanic' holds the helm in. box office battle
By !\OBERT JABLON
Kevin Costner 's "The Postman,"
Associated Press Writer
a nearly three- hour epic, faced oblivLOS ANGELES - "'l'itanic" ion in the nation 's theaters. The $80
sank the competition for a third con- million fi lm about a future America
secutive week with $32.2 million in devastated by war made $3.7 million
ticket sales, playing more theaters in its second week to drop off the top
and Continuing to run sold-out JX:r· I0 li st
formances.
.
"
No new film s got a wide viewing .
Riding good word of mouth and but several had good debuts in limitfacmg little new competition, James ed release.
Cameron 's $200 mtlhon eptc had
"The ~ oxer," with Daniel Daymore than double the weekend tick- Lewis as an Irishman caught in the
et sales of its nearest rival, according middle of the Catholic-Protestant
to Ex hibitor Relations Co., Inc .. on wats, earned $93,504 at three theSunday.
aters. The n\ovie actually opened
"Titanic'.' now has earned $156.4 Wednesday, earning a total of
million in less than a month despite $137,322.
a length toppmg three hours that lim. "Oscar and Lucinda," a penod
.tts the number of screenings. More p1ece stamng IUlph Fiennes and Cate
,theaters were being added.
Blanchett as a couple united by garn"Tomorrow Never Dies," the lat- bhng and a dare to build an all-glass
est James Bond film , was second ~hurch, grossed $82,000 on seven
,with $14.1 million. By comparison, screens.
"Titanic" made $12.7 million on SatFinal figures were to be released
urday alone for its best single day Monday.
'
.sin"ce its release. sa td Wayne
Here are esti!llated grosses for the
Lewellen, president of distributlon top I 0 movies at North American thefor Paramount studibs. '
aters Friday through Sunday:
"We're up to almost I .4 million
I. "Titanic," $32.2 million.
·seats (and ) we still find ourselves
2. "Tomorrow Never Dies," $14.1
selling out shows," Lewellen said
million.
. The romantic comedy "As Good
3. "As Good As It Gets," $12.3
As It Gets," starring Jack Nicholson million.
and Helen Hunt, was in third place
4. "MouseHunt," $8.7 mill ion
witli.$12.3 million.
Public Notice
Public Notice ·
. IN THE COMMON PLEAS Acre Lot No. Two Hundred
. COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY, and Ninety Two (292);
OHIO
Thence South Thirty Eight
MARY CUNDIFF,
(38) Rode and Seven (7)
Plaintiff;
Unka; Thence East Four (4)
VS
Rode and Etght (8) feat:
NORMAN BORHAM, et at. Thence In • aoutheaaterly
Dtltndanta.
direction Twenty Six (26)
Caea No. 97 CV 138
Rod a and Eleven (11) feel to
NOTlCE BY PUBLICATION a atake on the North aida of
To: Norman Borham, tha road; Thence North One
whoae addresaea are (1) Rod and t:lve (5) Links;
unknown; and the unknown Thence Eaat about Elovan
helra and devlaoaa of (11) Rods and Four (4) Unko
Norman Bprham, whose to the Southweat·corner of
Charles C. C~rnall'a Six (6)
addreasea are unlmown;
Annabella Martin, whoaa and Ninety One One
addreaaea are unknow~; Hundredths (91/100) Acre
and the unknown hairs and Lot' Thence North Forty Six
davlaau of Annabella (46) Rode and Four (4)
M.artln, wholt addreaaea Linke to near the Southaaat
art unknown; and
corner of William Rtalng'a
Erneat Martin, Jr., whose Twelve (12) Acre Lot;
addreaaaa are unknown; Thence Weal obout Forty
ind the unknown•helra and (40) Rods and Ton (10)
devlaaea of Erneat Martin, Links to ,the place of
Jr., whoaa addreaata are beginning, contolnlng
unknown.
'
Twelve (12) and Throe
You are hereby ~otlllad l'Nantlatha (3/20) Acres,
that you have been named mora or laaa.
Defendants In a legit action
Saving and excepting the
•ntltled Mary Cundiff, coal ond other mlnerala
Plaintiff va. Norman underlying said pramlaaa
Borham, et al, Dalendanlt. and the right to mine and to
Thll action haa bean remove the aama.
The promlaao hereby
a•• lgned Coaa No. 97-CV136, and Ia pending In the conveyed, being the place
court of Common Pleas of of land convoyed by William
Meigs County, Pomeroy, Metthawao·n and wlla to
Ohio 45769.
Jamaa Matthewson and
The • object of the John G. Matthewson by
Complaint Ia to partltlori dud executed Doc. 17th.,
certain raal estate tn which 1888. Also, tha place of land
the Plaintiff and Defendants conveyed by William
G'
aratha holdera In common, Mallh.w.on
Mattoweon 10byJohn
dead
eald real eatata being
ex.cuted March 5th' 1889,
descrlb ad ao loti owa:
·
"Exhibit A"
Alao the piece of land
PARCEL ONE:
conveyed by the Syracuao
· Tho following dtocrlbad Coal and Salt Co. of
premlaea. Situated In the Hartford, State of Conn., to
Township ot Sutton, County John G. Matthewson by
' of Melga and the State of deed executed April 23d.,
Ohio and In One Hundred 1881.
(100) Acre lot No. Two
Reference Deed: Volume
· Hundred and Ninety Two 100, page 412 of the Meigs
. (292) and Two Hundred and County Deed Recordo.
Ninety Three (293) Town PARCEL TWO: •
Two (2) and Range Twelve The
real eotate
·(12) of the Ohio Compa~y'a
tho County of
.Purchase. And bounded
State of Ohio and
. and described 11 follows: • lb~,:~:.~ and deecrlbed ao
To Wit: Beginning at the If
VIz:
. Southweat corner of the
tho North hall of
· William Rlalng Ten (10) Acre
rwo (No. 2) In
.Lot, In or near the Weatllne
Addition to the
·Ill aald One Hundred (100)

&amp; 15

. (From5 pm-7 pm)

MEIGS MULTI-PURPOSE HEALTH CENTER
112 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio

,

740-992-6626

Walk-ins welcome on the following days or call to make an appointment!
Pl~ase bring your child's immunization record! · ·

...

&amp; 27
July 14 &amp; 28

Feb.10 &amp; 24
Aug •. 11

&amp; 25

March 10 &amp; 24
Sept. 8

&amp; 22

· April14

&amp; 28

Oct. 13 &amp; 27

May12&amp;26 June9&amp;23
Nov. 10

(From 9 am-11 an:~ Qr 1 pm-3 pm)

&amp; 24

Dec. 8
.

&amp; 22

*Dates are subject to change due to public response or weather conditions. Call prjor to
coming to yerjtv clinic standjng.
·
·· · ··

DON'T FOBG,t;T! THE MEIGS COVNTr H&amp;U.TH DEPARTMENT

"""'

YOU

THE. GREAT
81.1\'S IN THE CLASSfiEDS.

.,.
I.

~~ ·~~

5. "Sc ream 2," $8 million.
6. "Jackie Brown," $7.7 million.
7. "Ami stad," $4.7 million.
8. "An American Werewolf in
Paris," $4.6 million.
9. "Fiubber," $4.5 million.
10. " Mr. Magoo,'' $4.'4 million.

Sony to purchase
stake in U.S.
cable ~ompany - ..

NOW OPEN

CELLULAR PHONES

SUPERIOR AU'O BODY

iJ

360° Communications

STATE ROUTE 681
DARWIN,
(Located behind Whaley's Used Cars)
We understand the Investment In an automobile
today 11nd our qualified ataff, all ASE certified, will
restore your auto to the pre-accident condition .
Our main ·obJective Is to give to the cu,tomer the
highest quality of repair work ~salble with a
guarantee.
A. Free Computer Estimates
B. Guarantee Color Match

"
·JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
.

113 W. 2ND ST.

614·992·5479

992-1359

Give Us A Call At
Owner &amp; Operator, John Davis

Chapter 7

Pine Grove Rd.,
Racine, OH

Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney

'

"iALF . .CE

Gravel·
Limestone
Sand· Dirt

USEDftRE
ULE" ·

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Remodeling

M&amp;J

YOUR MESSAGE

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.
I

,

'

~

YOUNG(S

NEW YORK (AP) - Sony Corp.
CARPENTER SEVICE
reportedly is poised to advance in the
·Room
Additions
U.S . cable market's digital eroducts
•New
Garages
race .
Hauling, Excav1t1ng
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
The Japanese consumer-electron&amp; Trenching
•Roofing
ics giant plans to spend $188 million · • Umeltone &amp; Gravel ·
•Interior &amp; Exterior
for a 5 percent stake in a maker of
Septic Systems
Painting
advanced digital 1V set-top boxes,
Also Concrete Work ·
Trailer &amp; House Sltn
The Wall Street Journal reported
(FREE ESTIMATES)
RtlltontlJ/e Riles
today.
•
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Joe N. Sayre
'· Sony would pay about $25 per
992-6215
share for 7.5 million shares of
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-742-2138
NextLevel System, Inc., the newspa.
per said.
The plan was expected to be
Pat's Herb Corner
announced today.
Located at Dan'a
The deal would strengthen Sony's
2110 H. 2nd Ave.,
presence m the U.S. cable market by
Middleport, OH
Driveways,
pw.;itioning its products for an anticParking Lots, etc.
ipated rise in demand for interactive
" Pat Arnold
and digital services m the United
-can Anytime
lnd!'pendent
States..
Distributor
•
· Home
VItamins, Herbal ,
614·992-3141
Public Notice
' Public Notice
Supplements,
Cell Phone
Reference Dead: Volume thence north 35 degreee
Natural
Weight Loss
74, Page 217 of the Meigs east seven (7) roda to the
591·1897
place
of6'
beginning·,
county Deed Recorda.
Producta 1111111 mo
containing one hall (1/2)
PARCEL THREE:
following real estate acre of land, baing tho oame
~~~a1 ted In the County of more or le11, 1/2 acre
TIM DEEM'S
and State of Ohio, botongtng to Mergarot Bolt
an
numbered and Ia In 100 acre lot No. 309;
CARPENTRY
aloo a right of way around
dncrlbld aalollowa, VIz:
VInyl Siding,
Daniel
Rualtll
barn
twelve
Town lot number one (No.
Replacement Windows,
t) In Bridgeman'• AcldHion (12) feet wide to the 11ld
DUMP TRUCK
hall acra lot; aald right of
Decka, Porchaa,
to the Town of Syracuu.
'Excepting and rtllrvlng, way to be In force until uld
KHchena &amp; Bethe
SERVICE
however, to LH. Bridgeman Daniel Ru11ell ehalt see Ill
Some
Concrete
Agricultural Ume,
and a,l llgna, all the coolin to make an outlot on the
Roofing, Plumbing
and under aald premlaea, north oldt of aaid hall (1 /2)
Limestone • Gravel
with the right to mine the aero lot.
··~· ., •• 1111,
Dirt· Sand
Aleo the following real
oame.
II
t11 1111JI.
985-4422
Reference Deed: Volume estate, altuated In tha
882-3921
74, Page 219 of the Malga Townahlp of • Salisbury,
Chester,·Ohlo
County of Malga and State
County Deed Recorde.
1215/1 mo pd.
1ll/25196.lfn
Baing Audltor'a Parcal of Ohio, and bounded and
described
aaloltowa:
Numbers: 18-1)0117, 18·
Baing In on• hundred
00118, 20·00060 and 20ae,.lot No. 309, Town No. 1
00059.
(Lime 9to"!eYou are required to and Range No. 13,
Low Rates)
anawer the complaint beginning at tha northe1at
Sandblasting
within 28 days altar tho laat corner of Daniel Runall'a
publication of thla Notl~a land; thence Iouth 35
Attique Tradors,.Cars
which will be publlahad degreea 00' west 145.5 feet
&amp;Etc.
once each weak lor elx along the aaat line of aald
consecutive weeko. Thtlaat land; thence north 59
32337 Bailey Run Rd
publication will be made on dagraaa 35' weat148 l•t to
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
tho
the
aouthelll
corner
of
January 19, 1ete, and the
Umes one,
Watley S1twart'l lot; thence
(614) 992-7546
28 dayl lor anawar will north 35 degreea 00' eaat
Gravel, Sand,
commence on that date.
Free Estimates
In caee of your failure 10 132 feet along the 1eaatltne
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
a newer or otharwlu of Wtaloy Stawarl e lot to
Roger Coates
reappnd 11 required by the the north line of Daniel
Owner Operator
614-992·3470
Ohio Rulaa 01 Civil Russell's land; thence
Procedure, 1 judgment by south 65 dagreeo 00' east
default will be rendered 149 feet along the north Una
against you lor the rellal of oald land to tho place of
ROBE~tT BISSEll
demandid 1n the c omp'Ill n1. beginning , containing
Pick
up
discarded
47/100
aeroa.
Dated thla 9th day of
CONSTRUCTION
Alao the following real
appllancaa, ballarlea, Dacem....
k.
r,.1997 .
•New Homes
Larry Spencer, estate, altuatod In aaliabury
many metals &amp;
Clerk of courts Townohlp, Malga County,
•Garages
motor blocks.
(12) 15 22 29 (t) 5 12 19 Ohio, In 100 acre lot No.
814-992-4025 8 am-8 om
•Complete
309,
Town
1
and
Range
No.
tc
'
'
'
'
'
'
6
13, described aa followo:
Remodeling
.. Beginning on the east
Stop &amp; Compare
aide of Bona Hollow Road;
Publl~ Notice
south 35 dagraeo oo· weot
CLEAN HOUSE
FREE
115.5 feet from the
NOTICE OF SALE
ESTIMATEES
WITH THE
By virtue of an Order of northwoat corner of Wesley
Stewart'•
lot;
thane•
aouth
985-4473
Sale Issued out of . the 35 dagreu 00' west 21 feet
C!LASSIFIEDSI '
7/22/tln
Common Ptaaa Court of
Melga County, Ohio, In tho along aald road; thence In
eaoe of the Pooplea an oaaterly direction,
Banking &amp; Truat Company, parallel to the aouth Hno ot
Card of Thanks
Plaintiff, VI . Ricky E. said lot, 85 loot; thence
north
35
degreea
00'
eut2t
Hawley, at al., Defendants,
upon a Judgment therein feet to tho south line of nlo
The family of Chester
rendered, baing Caao No. lot; thance In a w·oaterl~
Wells
would like to thank
direction
along
tho
eout~
97-CV-110 In aald Court, I
line
of
nld
lot
85
Ita!
to
the
will offer lor aale at the front
everyone who helped in
door of the Courthouu In place of beginning,
anyway during the illqess
Pomeroy, Meigs County, containing 4/100 acr11.
Rolarenco
Dead;
Voloma
·
and passing of our
Ohio, on the 6th day of
February,' 199S, at 11:00 4, Page 179, Melga eounty
father.
To all the d(lj:tors
•
a.m., the following Ianda Official Recordo.
The above deacrlbod rtal
and nu~cs who assisted
and tenamanh, located at
39489 Bradbury Road ,' totate 11 Identified In the
in anyway. To White
Middleport, OH 45760. A Office of the Malga County
Funeral Home for all
complete legal datcrljltlon Auditor 11 parcel Noa. 14·
of the real estate lo as 01582 .000 and 14·
their kindness. ·To all
01583.000.
•
follows;
those who sent food ,
PROPERTY ADDRESS ;
The following Real Ealllte
Zacary Orlando
39489
Bradbury
Road,
flowers,
cards, gestures
oltuatad In tho County of
Middleport,
OH
45760
Laudermllt
Melga, In the State of Ohio
of ~pathy, love and
REAL
EST ATE
and In the Township of
Born:
contributions. Your act$
Sallabury and bounded and APPft\ISED A'r. $27,500.00.
October
28, 1997
Tha real 111111 cannot be
deacrlbld ae loltowa:
of kindness will never be
sold
lor
leaa
thon
two-thlrda
2:13pm Bibs. 1 oz.
Beginning altha 1:0m1r of
forgotten . To the
two ttreet• If the northwest lhl IPPI'IIIId VIIUI.
~1" long.
TERMS OF SALE: Caah
corner of a two acre tot
churches who had prayer
Mother· Loretta "'"'"mat
being !he corner of the two on dallvary of daad. Sold
chains or said a silent/
Grandparent!street mentioned above; 1ubject to accrued real
praytr.
,
I
thence aouth 65 degr••• eallltl taxll. '
&amp; Edward La'tdermillt,J
J,amaa M. Soultby
eaat eleven roda; thence
Sincerely,
Orland Landermilt
oouth 35 degrees walt tight (12) 29, (1) &amp;, ,12
(8) rode; thence north 65 .,__ _ _ _ _ _ __
The children of
. ~ ParentsBernice &amp;'Clarence Goble
degreea well elaven ..('11)
,Chester Wells
roda to the atreet leading to
'
the Bona !iOitOW Road;

Athens, Ohio

Custom Homes'

Cash &amp; Carry
Dealers Welcome!

1 mo]M]

Law

•

o

614·992-3220

At

• r

614-592-5025

614-992·5344 '

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding

L&amp;L TIRE BARN

TRUCKING

'"""'"

BANKRUP!CY

C. All Types Insurance Ch~lms

S&amp;L

POMEROY, OH.

"Build Tour Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson
(614) 992~~

HUPP LINDSCIPI·IG
GRAVE BLANKm
Order Now for the Holidays
Custom Made for Your Loved One

SNOW

For Details Call

REMOVAL

Ed

Hupp

(614) 843-5235

John Sargent
Dellve

,., -

(614) 992·7312
Available

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions ~ Roofing

R. L. HOLLON

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

TRQCKIHG

FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7~

(No Sunday Calls)

J••

n.e.

WICKS
HAULING

FREE

.

Under New
Managetnettf

DEER
)pROCESSING

EliM HOME

Cut &amp; Wrapped

209 South 4th Street,
Middleport
• Private Care for
Elderly &amp;
Handicapped
Daily or Contract

$35.00
$5 extra for
skinning

MAPLEWOOD LAKE
949·2734

992-504 2

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Umestone Hauling
House lit Trailer Sites
Land Clearing lit
Grading·
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614).992-3838
12/18/lln

WILLUULJUS,. CALL.
992-7074
· Gravel, Umestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlninum.
(Jioouon•••• Jl•los).

MobUe Home Furnaces
and Heat Pumps

,,

'--

1998 Immunization Schedule
Jan.13

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

).

:.Seinfeld trusts his stand-up.comic.instincts

Winter cleaning tips tor yOu( home
By GLENN HAEGE
The Qetrolt News
.
not going to tell you who to
--:-""'' '· or what to serve at your winter dinner party, ·but I tHought a
round-up of. cleanmg basics might
come in handy.
Fir~t , the work savers. If you
have st lver, chrome or copper, S1ege
Chemtcal. (602) 265-3200, makes a
special Power Cleaner for each surface.
: Soap scum can .be cleaned off
shower walls with the Works Tub
and Tile Cleaner by Li me-0-Sol.
You ' ll find it at most guod hardware
stores and supermarkets.
If the kitchen counters are looking dull , try Counter Top Polishes by
Hope's, (800) 325-4026, or Parker ·
and Bailey, (888) n7-6547. Both
will put the dazzle back into laminate or solid counter tops.
If the outside wmdows look dirty
and it 's too cold to use your conventiona! window cleaner, use auiomonile wmdsh1cl~ washer fluid straight
from the container. Apply the undi luted cleaner with .a sponge.
l&gt;queegee off. then wipe up the drips
with a towel.
You can get inside wmdows and
mirrors brillt antly clean wuh a mixture of fo ur ounces or ltquid hou sehold ammonia. and·one teaspoon !Jf
liquid hand dishwashing soap, in a

5, 1998

~

- Easy Barik Financing 00

Fumaces '28

a monJh

Heat Pumps Installed '38

00

a month

Free &amp;tlmates
credill

lOME
BEAIND 8' COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
1-8tJ0.872·5!HI7 . 1391 Safford

�'
i

1

..

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

.

' \.

'

.

'

Monday, January 5, 1998

Pomeroy • Ml~dleport, Ohio

'

•

Monday, January '5, 1998

•

The Dally Sentl~l • Page 1t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP
'

ACRbss ·

38 Long Umn .
39 Malti
1 Unleu (~.) ~40 And 10 on
IS Blend
(lbbr.)
I Untidy liMp
42 tourt diVIder
12 Loud ety '
43 S.unter
13 Shlde45 Smell quantity
14 Dog In Garlteld 47- Wutc.n
15 NMdle ce.. - 48 Mlatreet
te - culpa
53 Frelhw1ter lith
17 Cltlnge
M Encountored
direction
56 S.lYII
18 Moxtcen dlah 57 Char,
20 Ute. pac1cagecl 56 B1k ng pit
brNd
5t DIM111bertied
22' Putt on
60 Advantage

'

ANNOUNCEMENTS

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

005

Personals
l'o Of Boitd Ohio HousOWIVes t·
900-285-9077 Exl. •585 t8 +
s...-u 61-5-8434 ~99 .t.1in.
LOOKING
FOR
IIOIIANCE?
1·900-289·12•5 E11. 9769 $2.99
/Win.Uust Be 18Yrs.
Start dating tonight! Have fun,
play Ohlo'a dating Qame, 1-800·
ROMANCE. e1ttenlion 7484.

40

Need extra c::ash Southfork Show
Bar Call alter 6pm Wed thru Sat

Giveaway To Good

Home, 614 -441 -1707, After 3

P.M.
3 ""-· 304-882-3970,
Black cat With white paws, tnendly,

a

SELl Owner Financmo

r

Valley Relinlahlng Shop, Larry

PhiHipa, 81~2-6576.

1993 Sunshine

3br, 2ball1. cenlral air, all eleclriC,
parlly furnished, priced to sell

1Sell Avon In All Areas

good

Black labl Collie rflix, ready to gO,

Babysi tter Needed In My Home
For Rotating Sh1ft, 12 &amp; 15 Year

2'Bedroom trailer for renl In Mid·

watte time , reasonable pnces,

VCR And Home security System

6t4-992·0115.

Starling $219 A Monll1, 304-736-

2 Bedroom.

3409.
Professional Tree Serv1ce. Stump
Removal , Free Estimates! In aurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388-

references required,

304-675-3834.

Acces l orlea, VInyl Skirting 2 Bedrooms Near Vmton, Me·
Old 'GirlS, 6t4·446·2639 Alter
9648,614-367-7010.
$299.95, Anchors $5.00, Awn- Claskoy
3·00PM
Road, SIOVa, Re~igoraiDr,
mos. Doors, Windows,· Plumbing
Water, Trash Paid , $210/Mo.,
Cosmotologtst Needed, Gaur- SNOW PLOWING AVAILABLE · Supplies, Waler Heaters, Furnac- Plus Dapo~~ 814-388-9686.
ameed Wages , Paid Vacation, Free Estimates - Call 614 -446 · es, fiberglass Steps, Call 814Free CEU Hour. Full &amp;·Part Want- 45t•. Or Aller 5 P.M Call6t4- 448-94t6 Bannan's Supflly. t3gt 3 bedroom mobile home in Mid·
Salford School Rd. Gallipolis. dlepor~ no pet&amp;, 814-992-5858.
ed Other Benef1ts lncludad, 614- ol46-3703.

OhiO.

448 7267
Dependable And Ftex1ble Ceni hed Nurse Atd Needed For In
Ho me Care Call Adrianne Or An-

FINANCIAL

goe 1-800-481-6334.
6t4·992·5684.
E~ht week old Beagle 1 Shepherd

3bedroom in . ~ason . No pets.

OOUBLE WIOE DISPLAY SALE
$999DOWN
SAVE $1000
Free Delivery &amp; Setup
OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
304-755-5885.

bedroom $t,350/down, $269/mo.
can HIXI-&amp;gt-an7.

Free Ktttens To Good Home

199t GEO Storrl}tG.S.I. auto, air,

ral And lP Gas Furr1aces, life"time Warranty On Heat Exchang-

Blllfel, China Cal&gt;nal, $900 (614)

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vme Street, Call 61-4 -446-7398,

SIOre, 130 Bulav1ile P1ka, Gallipolis, Ohio 50% Off Gift Shop And

2101 Jefferson Ave

Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mon-Sat

304-675-SCFA (7832)

Si berian Husky mixed pupp1es
wl blue eyes , 5wks ~old . to good

home only. :1)4-882·3650.

60 Lost and Found

like Newt 1994 Sultan Electric
Heal Pum~ 2 Bedrooms, 2 8alht,

Nice, clean 2br tra1ler, n1ce deck,
lots ON.pace &amp; land, no inside
pets, partly furmsheCI , deposit,
6mo. lease. S27Simonth. 304-

Twen1y Seven I~ Yeat In The Ask1ng $5,000, 614-448-6688.
Hea~ng &amp; Cooling Bvsinessl 81•·

BARNEY

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

R~ease,

Upright. Ron Evans Enterprises.
Jackson, Oh10, 1·800-537-9528.

(Serious Inquiries Only I) 614·:
446·4015.

530

HondO&lt;son,

wv.

LIMITED TillE ONLYI 48R, 2
BATH $1,448 DOWN $241
MONTH. Free air &amp; skirting. Only

Trailer For Rent, Aefere('lces No
Pets, 614-441-1544 .

at Oakwood Home• Nitro, WV
304-75&amp;-51185.
'

One bedroom apartment In Mid -

Moore owner.

REWARD For Your Good Credit
Interest Rate• As low As 6. 75'4
Only Oakwood Homes Barboura-

Two bedroom trailer for sale or
rent m SyracuSe, partially fur-

540 Miscellaneous
P(erchan~se

nished, call 614-992-4003 or 81•·
992-6559.

560

1 Electric Fu1'iiite S395 ; 1 Gas
Furnace 100,000 BTU $690, 814-

2 AKC Miniature Pomeranians, 1· 882-2621 .

vile 304-736-3409.
N"D"T"rC"E

8559.
REWARD! MISSing :- Adull black
Jcat m vicinity ol upper Mason
ctty corporauon hm11s. Answers
to "Samba" Utll paws. he limps

Americ;a'a largest factoij ouUeP
has purchased local mobile
home dealership! All inverttory
must be sold within 30 days.
Save thounnda. Call now tor

304·773-9194.
Yard Sale

70

Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187 .08 per

ALL Yanl-lluot
Bo Paid In Advance.
QEAQLINE: 2:00 p.m. .,..
tho day before th..d
odhlon · 2:00 p.m. '

Friday. Monday edition
·10:00a.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

1

8gt ·6777.
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 loll!
304-755-7191 .

Now accepting applic::ations-AII
pos1t1ons. lUll &amp; part-time. G1no·s
Pt. ~sant &amp; Gino's Masort

RN'S $16.00 -$29.00 HR.
Choose Your Own Hours Private

Duly And Supplemenlal Slaf11ng,

· LOCAL INTERVIEWS:
Wed ., Jan 7th. t -8 P.M. Or
Thurs., Jan. 81!1, 8 A.M ·11 A.M.

Auctlori
and Flea Market

Holiday Inn, State Rouie 7, Galli·
poh~

OH.
WESTERN MEDICAL

Rick Pearaon Auct1on Company,
full time aucaioneer, complete
SERVICES
For Appointmenr. 614-8413 ·
auction
serv1ce .
Licensed
H8,0hio &amp; West V1rgmta , 304· r":::.::_~-------------

773-5785 Or 30H73-5447

New 28x80 3 or A bedroom.
$39 ,995. Free dellvttry. 1·800 -

Need lead Gunar Player Call
614-446-6964, 614--446-2659.·

Immediate Work Available In
Gallia . ..Mie~gs , And Ross Coun ttes . Venr txpe r1ence Or AClS
Preferred But Not Required.

80

•••••••1 800-837-32311.
monlh wilh $1075 down. Call t·

• •1111

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper ls subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
10 adverhse ·anY preference,
hmitat1on or discrimination
baSed on race. colOr, religion,
sex lamlltal status or national
Of~m . or any intenJ!on to
make any such preference,
limitation or disaimiflalion •

''

Wanted ,t o Buy
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S Sli-

90

Ne\111 daublewlde- 1 purchas&amp;d ,
wonl Ill on my lot. must sell, will
deliver &amp; set-up at no charge.

bath, starting at $199 per mo.

ONLY $499 DOWN

Diamonds. Anbque Jewelry, Gold

- M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second
'o\IIORI8, Ga~po~~ 6t4-446-2842.

&amp;

1 BedrOOJTI Units

Cleanest In The Area Near Holzer $269/Mo., Plus Utilities ~ Securiry Deposit Required. No Pels.
2 bedroom apartment In Pomeroy,
~~e~ paid, no pets. 614-992·

992-2034
350 Lots &amp; Acreage

614-4-46-3437.

&amp; .mov1es. Cal l 814 · 446-2568 .
Equal HouSing OpprlriUnil)'.

Ready For 'rl&gt;ur Doublewida, SUck

Built, log Cabin Or Manufactured
Home Also land In Jackson. SaOIO, Ross, P1ke, Athens, Meigs,
Vinton Countres. Land Contracts,

Graciou1 living. 1 and 2 bedroOfll
apartmenta at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle-

port. From $236-$304 . Call 814992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·

RENTALS
41 o Houses for Rent
NEW CONSTRUCTION... Beaullful Two StOfy Colonial 414 Thttd
Avenue, Gal~potis. 3 Bedrooms. 2
112 Balhs, LR &amp; FR Forma Dining
Room, Oak. Trim. F~r&amp;place, Mudl
More. Home Elioibleror Tax
Abalement. $179,500 304-273-

2940.
NEW! 3· 4 Bedroom home, AeYer
IJ\Ied 10. all cherry woodwork &amp;
cabinets, Ridgewood Estates,
must see 10 appencate. 304-675-

1 bedroom house in Pomeroy, no
pe11,

8!4·992-5858.

3 Bedroom&amp;, Fenced Yard , AI·

57Q

2566.

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmerila S2951Mo., 614-446·
0006.
One bedroom apartment in Mid -

dleport, all utilitK&gt;s peid, $270 per
month. 1100 deposit, BU-992·
One single bedroom apartment
house 1n upper Gallipolis, utilil!es
paid, $345 per month, 614-992-

3811--U90.

Cab. automalic, air, load9d f·

t969 Dodge Grand Caravan LE,
XLT 4x4.

304 ~

.

1990 Bronco Z 4WD, V-6, XLT:
H1gh Mileage, $4,000 Excellent

Condi1ion,

740

6t4-379-2409.

.

Motorcycles

PEANUTS

1995 Honda •·wheeler. l1ke new

$2,800. 304-882-36t3 Leave

656 International tractor; 350C

town Vent free gas heaters, pro pane &amp; natural gas. on sale now

Side(&amp; Equipment 304-675-742t.

New Farmers un'1oO TQbacco
Warehouse ~lpley, Ohio is now
reco iOJing tobacco. 1st sale Jan .

t2, t998. Call lOll free 1-1188·844·
4365 lor Orv1ll&amp; Whalen or 304·

675.-1858 Edison Uayes.

::.:.;:..:..:::::..:::=:::;::::::;,____
630

Livestock

256-6629.

Golf Shoes, 1 Pair, Size 90, Ma son Turbo-Sport. White lealher
Water Reststapt With Exrras,
New, Still In Box, Patd Over $90

2 Registered Polled Hereford
Bulls - 2 Years ; Hay S2.00 Bale,

Sell $70, Or Trade E V. 614-388·
9t8t Anytime.

640

Good Heavy Out( G. E. Washer,

Bales of hay for sale. 304-675-

6t4-256-6071.

campers&amp;

790

fo'otor Homes
1073 Cobra 30 Ft. 5th Wheel
Travel Tra1ler. $1 ,500, 080 614·

SERVICES

Cook Stove, $85; Chast Drawers
$65 Each, Dresser $75 ; Oryor
Sl35; All tn Good Working Condi -

BAANED-Round ba1ls , ml•ed 810
hay. ntiV&amp;r 1!'8'- 304-682·2077.
Ground ear .corn, $SJ hundred,
198/ ton, your sacks, long Bot-

Home
Improvements
BASEMEf'IT

WATERPROOFING

tom, Oh, 6t4-985-3581 anO&lt; 6pnt

UncondtiiDnal hfeume guarantee

Mi•ed Hay Dalano Jaokson Farm' local ralef&amp;nces lurnished EsPh61H·6-t104, 614-44t-0450.-· lablished t975. Call (6t4) 446·
0870 Or t-800·287-0576. Rogers
Square bales of hay, ear C\rn . Walerproofing
Call o30•·675·t858 EdiSon

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Mayes.'

TRANSPORTATION
710

Magi&lt;: Chef ElectriC Range Euro·
Almond Excellent
Refrigerator, Almond;

Appliance Parts And Serviu: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed,·
French Cily May1ag, 1314·440·

7795.

Autos for Sale

1972 Corvette, 85,000 actual
mtles. marching numbers. 1JW,
auto, 1111, u ., new paint &amp; carpet,

C&amp;C General Home Uliln·
tenence - Painting, vinyl siding!.
carpentry, doors, wmdows, baths,
mobile hame repalr and more. For
free estimate' call Chet, 614·992-

Old; $175, 30 Inch Elec· 614·992·6t90.
UIC Range Gold $50; Slockarmat·
ic Coal Stove, $250 . 614 -3 79- tg86 Ford Escort Exp, Air, 6323.
Cru iat, Title, 5 Speed, low Mile-

ago, $t,700, 6t4·441-1601

1980 ·1990 cats For $100111

Thrlfi Shop now buying
toys, children's clolllln 9JP'IIern condl-

through Friday,

Se~ed

And Sold

Locally This Monll1.
Trud&lt;' •x4's, Ell:.
1-1100·522·2730, X390t.

~~i:.~:~ 4 ~~7 ~owns,

320 Mobile Hames
for Sale
for Rent
t2x80 2 Bedroom Trailer Central
Heat

And

Air

Conditioning,

E•calienl Retail Space

McCoy's Construchon , Commer-.
Clal !Residential, Free Estimates.
Will Be Operat ing Under Th1~

Phone # Only, 6t4·446- tg23,
Pager t 1·800-WVA-BEAR Pin .

I

Triangle Remodeling Masonary

Call

(Stucco, Stone, EIC.J Carpenlry
(Rough And Finish!, Tile JCeram· .
ic, Etc.) Drywa!, Roofing, 8t.-3877351 . '

840 EleCtriCal and

Availa~e.

EloWI1toWn Gallipolis, Send inqu1·

Refrigeration

riel To· P.O. Box 1•t ,&lt;Gallipolis.
OIH5631.

Aesidenlial or commercia! wiring.

._ serylco or repairs. ll~ater IJ-

~oDIIa home aite avallabl• bel·

Washer. Dfyer Hook-Up, In Galli. wean Athens and
polis. 614-446-C893.
6t.-38S.4367. •

I

1284~

Credit Problems? We Can Help.
Eiasy Bank Financing For Used

censad electrician . RIHenour· •

Pomeroy. call

Eleclrlcal, WV000308, 304-8751780.

,,

.

blrda

50 Cltrua
fruit
51 lolm, •·II·

52=)
55

Phlllpa

n

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.
y

. ,
by Luis Campoa
Celebri!v Ciflhtf Cf\'Ptogqma are t'"IIG rrom quotat1001 by famous peoplrt, Pl11 and presen~
Each·liner tn the dphel' standt tor another. Todly's clufl: R «~UU I(

'OZVNX

TO

JDD,

EASAPXZJ

Z N

AJPXPAV ,

T P

KA

1 O·

TPA

Z

·'

XIZPh

JzS H T V X J P X • '
8 I J X

Z X

EAA

XJRAN

XT

PKJ ' N .. BTSAP

XI A

VAOAVAAN.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ; "There's nolhing more
conlradiclory than life itself."- Robert OeNiro.

~ron ic

-or strange .or

-

'~~:t;~, S©·\\.dtl}A-~ttfs·

::::

_ _ _ _;.:_.,: 141to4 loy CLAY R. POlLAN_:.__ _ __

O Reorra~ge

letters

of the

four · st:rambled word' ba·
low to form four simple words

I

I

s c u D·E R
f---1-1.::.,.::....:
·1 ~~~~1 .

I

1::
I I I I P.0
WIRHL

The exercise that wtll most
.------...:..---, drasllcally change your l1fe . is the
AP T E 0 I
., walk down the · · - - -.
·
~

I~_;:,;1...:.._1,;~_;;.1..::..,1:.__1;..5,.._

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Complete 1he chuckle quoted
by ftllmg in,. the misstng words
L..:.-l---L-.L-l__.-J..;_,j vou deve lop from step No 3 below.
_

_

•

NUMBERED lfTIERS IN
THESE SQUARES

@) UNSCRAMBlE

ABOVE lETTERS
TO GU ANSWER

SCfiAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

II'

5072 or 304-675-54t2.

ptaro Dr. 6t•·446-4525

suffix

35 JFK landlr
37 0111 seed
41 Mountain
pall
·43 Old aeylng , •
44 Acted without. •
·worda ·
46 Flat told tn
cloth
48 Fllghtleal

f) PRINT

IMONDAY

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

:~~~~~~~~==~~~~~ray
111156.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
ASTRO·GRAPH ' .
Kibitzers mi~ht bug you 10 distrac·
lion today with their trivial intenuptions. Hold off serious work unt1l you
get rid of some couch potatoes.
PISCES (ficb. 20-March 20)
When socializing with friends today,
dn nol play favorites or show indica'
tions of paniality. You could seriously_
wound a sensitive pal's feelings.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You
may experience bityer's remorse
TueSday, Jan . 6,1997
.
In the year ahead, you might today if you spe nd money oit thing&amp;:
move a1 a more· rapid pace than you. you had earmarked for a more prachave prev1ously. More travel, inter- tical purjmse. Be prudent and thrifty.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The
esting adventures and more recognition in your career are all possibi.li- ability to 'Visualize feasible concepts
could be your best asset' today, 'but
tics.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) you'll need to stop trying to guess
Your judgment in joint endeavors how others will re.act to· your plan.
GEMINI (May 21 ' June 20) Do
should be quite good !oday. It might
not
make concessions today .before
fall short, however, if you have to
k·now what the other guy has to
you
make decisions concerning your own
offer.
You could get tied down to a
entitlements. Trying to patch up a
commitment
that doesn't serve your
broken romance? The Aslro,Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand best interests.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
what 10 do to make the relationship
work. Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o Things should run smoothly for you
this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur- today in your relationships with IJeo-

you' II want to avoid problematic connections.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A dubious
situation looks like it'll work out OK
for you today, but it might be wise not
to broadcast results to others before
they're .verified.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
will treat your peers in an amicable
fashion today, but the same may not
be true when involved with individuals you feel are beneath your station.LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Early in
the day; you might feel like !he world
has a grudge against you. By afternoon , though, yov · may discover
your biggest impediment was negativity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No~. 22) Your
desire for recognition might not be
fulfilled today until you come home
and realize how much your · family
appreciates you. Who needs outsiders?_
SAGIITARIUS (Nov: 23-Dec.
21) Others may bein~ined to bring
their problems to you today. Just
when yciu feel you've had enough,
someone might do something nifty
for you.

-.

suffix

~

By Phillip Alder
It disappoints me when a bridge
writer features great play or defense
without naming the players. It is even
worse when ·they are only 16. With
names, we could look for them in the
future. Still, that doesn 'i detract from
the excellent defense fOund on this
deal by tw_o teen-agers from Krusevac, Yugoslavia.
•
I'm not keen on the bidding. Presumably, South's three-~pade rebid
was forcing (I much prefer to play ·it
as invitational), but why didn 'I he
pass over three no-trump? That contract would have cruised horne.
At the other table in the match,
South was also in four spades. West
led his singleton diamond. Declarer
won with dummy's queen to play a
trump. East flew in with the ace, gave
his. partner ,a diamond ruff, got ·back
in with.. the heart ·ace, and played
another diamond. However. South
ruffed high, drew trumps, played a
heart to dummy's king, and threw liis
club losers on the diamond ace-king
for plus 620 -- no sweat'
At this table, though, teen-ager
West led the_heart jack: queen, ace,
six . Teen-ager East switched to a low
diamond. Again East won the first
trump trick and gave his partner a
diamond ruff. But noWll heart return
burnt up dummy' s entry 10 the diamond, winners before declarer had
had a chance to denude West of
trumps. Whatever declarer did now,
he was doomed to finish two down .
Success at bridge often depends
on timing. As Agesilaus, who lived
· from 444 to ~00 B.C., pointed out:
"It is circumstance and-proper timing
that give ·a n action its character and
make it either goOd or bad."

'-

27 Quaking
31 Give a
rallrig to
33 Aubblah
34 Chemical

Frolic- Tasty- Broke - Induct - DISTORT

New gas tanks, 1 ton uuclt
1 wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R _Auto~

$100, Good Hotpoint Eleculc
llonl6t4-379-2720, After 6 P.M. .
Grubb' s Piano - tunmg '&amp; repa1rs.

Pass

..

25 Roman 2,1DO
26 Comparative

.I never can retell a story correctly . My friend says I
should get the fcicts first then you can DISTORT them.

256-t4t3.

Hay &amp; Grain

Pass

Access Over 10,000 Transm1s·
sian~ &amp; Clutches 614-245-5877

R1pley, WV 304-372-3933 or 1:·
.

1996 Registered Paint Stud, fi14 ·

2t

3NT
Pus

TUMSI.IN6
OUT ..

.:.:..:..__.:.;.:...:.;:..:.:;..:.__ _ j 800·273-g:J29_

New, $250, 6t4 ·4 4~37.

Pass

NO LOVE
LETTERS
CAME·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
BUDGET PRICE TRANSioiiS·
SIONS, Used !Rebuilt, All Types,

23 Foamed

Pass
Pass

AND

760

creature

11 Dlapatchea
19 Tennla hi!
21 Jo~tph't
brother

North · Ea&amp;l
lt
Pass

t995 YZ 250 Rtns Great, S2,80&lt;J,

080, 8t4-446-1t00..

John Deere. Winch. C8110P\'. 6-way 1997 Honda 300 4X4, low ,hours, 3
~ado; 614-949-2t49.
yeat extended warranty, $4,500
·
Hydraul tc oil - lowest price in lirm. 6t4-742·2852.

Franklin Fireplac • Screen, 6
Heal Sheall. All A cesories, ltke

Harley Oavtdson Barbie $300,
614·446-6399.

nlshed. $250Jmo. ... depoSit. 304-

3877

message.

'

and air, depos!t required, no pets
or waterbeds, $275 per month,
appliances furnished, Syracuse,
6t 4-68 7-6372 01 6t•-667-327t.
Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur-

Musical
Instruments

610 .Farm Equipment

0 k &amp;

Ptoblems? Need Tuned? Call the

Village of Middleport; also two
level lots for aale ; 155,000 090,
614-992·2290.

FREE DOll HOMES of Nitro, WV.
304-722-1127.

Clu~

'614-446-4222

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Hickory Spill. Delivered $ o Per
Truck $25 Per/ 16'. Tra~l 8t

2178.
Two bedtoom, all eler:lri&lt;, healing

Two 3 bodroom homes lor aa1e In

UITiled Time Only I

YOU t::J()\\'T I

V.G.C. Wilh Case $125 Or Trade t996 Chevy 4wd, 350 5spd, air:
c::ru1se, am·fm cassette, 3,800
E v. 614-3118-9181 Anytime.
.. ~a, $16,500. 304-675-5332.

Load Will O&amp;liller, 8U-256-9172,
614-256-4440.

firewood . Seasoned

located In Eureka On Stale Ro ute 7, T'ND Bedrooms, Gas Heat,
Rent $325 per Month Deposit

flelrences
1 ,8~7~5-::50::;54:::_.- - - - - - 6t4-446-4g215Requ~red. No Pets. ,.

$899DOWN

•

12 Siring Guitar, Lotus, l125,

or 614-992·2783.
F1rewood For Sale ; $35 Pick-Up

In Nw Haven 1br furnished apt,
deposit &amp; referenc;es. 304 -882·

Ocala, Flortda- fenced lot, well,
septtc, mce home, 2-2 FJorida
room, panty furnished, all appliances. cement dnve, walk, carpar~ screerwd room, A.C. and fur·
naco, $32,000, 352-624-4140.

on all rwlti sectionS.

1987 Ford Ranger KLT 4•4

675-23511
1989 GMC Salari Cuslom. $4,950

Room Suile, $30 , Sleeper Sola
$!10. 814·245;-W64

livered Call 614-446-4362 No Answer le&amp;\IEI Message.

5 Court St. 2 BR. Upsta~rs. WW Upstairs apt on Viand St. in Pt.
Carp&amp;~ Furnished Kitchen, $2851 Pleasant. 2br, 1bath, unfur-

420 Mobile Homes

f-\t::W-J,'tOLl
(£T IT; Tf&gt;..ll.'~

6~t03 .

Oalmatton Fuii·Bioodad Pupp1es
Wormod, &amp; Shots, $75 Eacn, 6t4·

Dinette Set, Electflc Stove, Living

Firewood, $40 ATruck Load De·

51!J8. •.

$499DOWN
on all single seaions

1983 Sierra Classic Full SiztJ·
Blazer, 4x4, With All Op!Jons, Ex;
cellenl ConditiOn I Cook Uotors,

1989 Ford Ranger

tached Garage. $500/lolo .. Cily nlshed. Clean, No Pats, Reference Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Schools , Reference &amp; Oepos1t &amp; peposir Required, 614 -448- can Ron Evans. HIXl-537-~528 . .
Required, 614,4A(Hj555.
1519 _
M,o nth ; Plu1 Utih ttes . Deposit,

'mat£.WIU.:OC ~ 51~1~"''
t-ro.IT. f&gt;.. RAI~ It-1 l'l':l8 ...

'·

$2400, 6t4-742·2944.

1-1100-537-9528.

tunities.

10% Down Call For FREE Maps 7806.

Anthony land Co ., LTD 1·800213-8365 www.coumrytyme.com

THE BORN LOSER

730 vans &amp; 4·WDs

ready 1D go. 304-675-5Ft

Firewood lor sale, 614-092-3031

LASlS FOREVER
So Buy Now, Bvild la!er
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
OALLIA COUNTY
Greenfield T..,., Oil SR 35 West/ 614-448-0390.
SR 279 5 To 10 Acre Country Ro- Now Taking Applications- 3S
alriced BuiiCiing lois Beauutu l&gt;,
Open Rolling Meadows, Po"nd .

DozO&lt;, 614·256·1274.
1994 Ford F-t50 4x4' 302 aula, ·

CFA Himalayan ktllens, 2 males,

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron

$150 Call 6t4-256·t972 Evening
Or 814-446-66n Days .

LAND

Duty Trailer; 450 John Deere

six cylinder, automatic, loaded,

388-8922.

Shoe cafe. Galfipolis.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, "5.2 Weslwood Drive
lrom $260 to $334. Walk to ohop

Tratler &amp; land for sale on 110
Condor S1 ., Pomeroy, Oh • total
electric, partly furnished . 614-

304-875-5633.

Boots By Redw1ng, Chippewa,
Rocky, Wolverine, Sorel Tony
Lama . Guaranteed lowest Prices

E\lans Enterpuses. Jackson, OH

Nkro,WV
304-775-5885

AKC: Reg1stered Aottwetlers , Ger·
man bloodlme, shots &amp; wormecl.

Beaury Shop Equipment 4 Sryling
Chairs; 5 Hair Dryers: 3 Stations;
2 Shampo.o Bowls, Joanne's Kut

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic lanks,

2526

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by Larry Wri~ht

cal betWeen 5:30-9:()(lpm.

ities Paid, $100 Deposit, No Pets,

OnlyatOa-HorMI

two tamales. fawn colored. ta11s
d.ocked , dew c laws rell'loved,
wormed , $200 each, 614·643·

&amp; Kuri 614-446-9496.

sound speakarL

Antiques, 1op pnces paid, Atvet ·
1ne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohto.
Russ Uoore owner, 614 -992 -

·
Goose NeGJ! H1tch: 3 Axle Heavy ·

:
AKC Old English Sheep Dog $3795, 61 4-992-e824.
Pups: ShoiS &amp; Wofmed , $375, 1987 Ford Aeroatar Very Gooci
99::.;;,:2~-22;;;;;t8;:;.~·;;-ii;;;;;-':;;:;;;;;;;;~ ·~ to,ve JllOI!ago before 5:00pm. or 304-523-3719.
Condilion, $2,000 Fifm, 6'14-448"

()w{ler movmg -Make 2 payments,
move In , assume loan, no pay ·
ment rill February 19gs. 1-304·
722:-71•8 or 304-722· 71-40.

$1485/0own
$219/llo.
Once In ALifetime Daallll

1068 Truck 1 112 Ton 600 Seriel
4 Speed, Will1 2 Speed Raar fnd

59,000 m1l es, axe. cond. 304· •

currant market value. Just in time
for Christmas. Call for latest pn1;9
quotH and details., 614-941)..3098

37tt EOH '
·
5 Room Aparlmen! $4251No., Uti~

Tho Entortalrior Has Anlvodl
14x80 at., 2 balh, comes wilh
2T TV, high five VCR, surround

Rings, Pre-1 930 U.S. Currency,
Stefling, Etc,. Acquisitions Jewelry

,..... ... "'"
nished and unfurnished, security
deposlt required, no pets, 814-

Brand New! Great Gift! CO/\Iideo
storage unit. Black and c::herry.
N8\ler out of txu . $125. Holds up
to 940 d1scs, also holds tapes .
Call 614-992·0630 alter 6 pm .
COs &amp; lapes nol included.

736-7295.

ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,

Pets for Sale

Apartments
Baby beCI, dressing table, car 5556
for Rent
~eat, stroller, swtng ,' playpen
AKC Mala M1n1ature Pincher 3
t &amp; 2bedroom lurnlshed apart· 304-e75-4548.
Years Old, Excellent Pedigree &amp;
menta, Mason area: Peflect for Beanie BabieS, hard to get sport Health All Shots, Current Elttra
retirees. 304-773-,5180!
card Inserts, rare comics. hard to Small, Asking $200, 6t4 ·446·
1 and 2 bedroom a~m-ntS, fur- find action figures. Pnced below 886t

2bdrm. apts . ; total electric , appliances furmshed, launihy room
fac1ht1es. olose to school in town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apts. 149 or call 814 ·992-

PARENT PROGRAM
Special Financing'Available, 304·

512t.

-·782

ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIDES
Free Qaijvery &amp; Setup
OAKWOOD HOMES. NITRO
304-755-5885.

SINO~E

720 ll'ucks for Sale

Bloc::k. bnck, sewer pipes, wind·
ows , lintels, etc. Claude W1n1ers,
Rio Grande, OH Call 614- 245

8x32 Office Trailer $5,000 614·

304· 722-7148.
614-448-2!l57.
Oakwood 28x56 3 bedroom. 2
Call H!00-691-em.

6:00 p.m. 614-992-2526. Russ

Building
SUpplies

.
male·$300.
1-lemale-$350.
304·
t994 Ford ~L V-8, 2Wd, 5spd, air, :
Two bedroom rrallar On Happy -141H1306; Hl00-29t·0098.
458-2228.
dual tanks, 28,000 miles. 304·
Hollow Rd., $220 per month, 614- 18 Hole Mlnalure Golf Course.
A Groom Shop -Pet G1 Gomtng. 67S-Jl574.
992-3750.
$3,500 0 B0. Call Dey (81.)446- Featuring
Hydro Bat h. Don
3500,
E-ng•
(61•)258-t874
1995 Ford F-150 2 WD, Wllh
Two bedroom rraiter, S200 month;
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd
SISal UUiily Cab, V-8, AuiOmalic,
three bedroom house, $350 24 Bulb Wall Bed $1 ,000, 614- 614-446-Q23t .
Heavy Duty Suspension, Factory
month, must have relerences, call 446-6982.
AKC Boxer pups, &amp;~gtn weeks old, Tow Package, Aluminum Wheols,
6t4·992-2979.
PW, Pl. $t3,900, 6t4·44H365.

lnb. FREEDOM HOMES of Nitro.
wv 30-4-722-7127.
New 19g8 14x70' lltree bedroom,
includea e months FREE lol rent ,440

GallipOlis
&amp; VlclnHy

Ia to run . Sunday

~

6t4·992·2 t78.

Nallable. 304-458-106g

.550

West

8 lnaplre
9 Training
10 Alluring Ma

Who
were
.they?

:
.
.

Wood For Sale; $35 A load,' Will Upton Used Cars Rl. 62-.3 Miles
Deliver, 614-388-8010.
South ol leon, WV. Financing

Antiques

5 Souvenirs
6- ell France
7 Oec.
holiday

Opening lead: " J

WEEKS I!

$4.99ea . Crlwlord'o Market, E•l S-9368

Lost " Man's Watch, With 20 Yrs
Ser\IICe AwarCI . A.E.P Band Ffi

dK&gt;por~

·

MAW I I l'M GOINr OFF
FLOAT-FISHINr FER TWO

4·wheelars. motor homes. lurnitl.lre, electronuos, computers et&lt;:.
We now have terky seasoning; by FBI, IRS, OEA. Available your
ortg inal, teriyaki &amp; cajun . area now Call 1-800 ·513 -434:r

Buy or selL Riverine Antiques ,
1124 E Main Street, on Rt. 124.
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. tO :OO
a.m. 1q 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

Lost. 8 Month BIW Female Sibe·
nan Hus~y Blue Eyes. Saturday
December 271h, State Slreel
Area, Red Collar, II You Have In·
formation Please Ca ll 614-4.,6·

·

NAME
ON&amp;!!

Jac:kson. Oh~. 1-800-537-g528

-·S t7.900. Leave Msg. 614·4•8·
3653.

19111 Rewardl614-446-6222

MY MAN SNUfFY'S
GOT A FEW
PCIINTS !!

$12,000 Call After 5 PM. ·

Found : Boston Tamer Upper
Second A\lenue. Galhpolls. 614·
446-7620 Leave Message.

675-42t8.

South

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boats,

Mobile home for rent near Apple

Sporting
Gr011e on farm. good dael br right 520
Large selection of used homes.. 2
Goods
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2995. '""'''"· 304-576-2950.
Ou1ck delivery. Call 614·385· Mobile Home For Rent tn Vinton, Smith 6 Wesson Model 29 Clas·
Call A.M. 6t4-3118-6599.
sic, 6 112 Inch Barrel , $450, 614·
982t .
256-6981 :

(6U)245-5555

!0

1Q9S SaMn SC2, Automatic, Air,.

24 Cowgtrt oa1e- 61 .Emerrncv
25 Clmbrldge ·· .
algna
ICit.
62 Floor piece
28 Heat unll
(abbr.)
IY.IWN
Zlt..rge
1 ,Rulllan veto
contelner ,
word
30 No more titan
32 Strenge lhlnga 2 Lllaat btl
3 Moved In weter
36 Break Ina
4 Homeric epic
glacier

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer; North

loael "' Free Estimates! Add-On
Heat Pumps Only Slighty Higher. 1994 Hyundat Elantra Runs
Call Us Today .J" 1997 Is The Great, looks Good, Dark Green, ,

Washer $100; Dryer $75, Guar - A Need A Car? No Credit, Bad
anleed IO work Call (614)446- Cred11 Bankruplcy, We Can Help
AeEsta~lish Credit, Must Make
:908=8------------l $150
w,.,.ekly Take Home, Down
Waterline Sp~cial: 314 200 PSI Paymerits As tow As $99, To
$21.95 Per 100 ; 1 ~ 200 PSI Quality For This Bank Financing,
$37.00 Per 100; ·AII Brass Com- 614·441-o607.
pression Fittings In Stock

.Polly'o Now &amp; Uood Fumlluro
We row 11ave Army Surplus Ill

304-895-3571

.. 7· 6
• J 6
• A Q4

__:__1 Cru1se , AMI FM Cassette, Trunk ·

10·4, Only.

Country l1ving 1 1J2miles from Pt
Pleasant, 4bedrooms, plus additiOn, dishwasher, gard~en tub,
central heat/air. garage &amp; paved
driveway. $375/mo. plus deposit.

South
•KQJt084

AC, Crui se, Tilt, looks &amp; Runs
Excellent $3,900 Ask For Amos,

446-6306, 1-800·29 1·0098.
.:..:::..::::.::~=.:::..::.::

t-800-499·3499.

'tA9
• 10 7 5 4 2
• J 96

• 9
4. K 8 2

ar. "II You Don't Call Us We 1!0111 614·446·8t72, 6t4-256-6251.

24!&gt;-91180

East
• A 52

• 9 7 3
•Jl08432 ·

Old5 g8 R
3 6 VII
agency, ·
•
614
24
15200
Slngla bed, "'lid cedar. bookcase Loadad
( 1 5-9860

Dinning Room SuiiEt Four Chair,

Moat Furmture Man, Tues. Wed ,

441-Qt81.

Free air, free skirt, t6x80 3 or 4

6t4-985-3504.

headboard, no mattress, $25:

Weal

1990

_s1_•_·99:.:.:2·_7:580::.:.:..----~-----I eJC cond. $4,500. 304-615-5403.
WARM UP: Hlgh"EHiCiency NaiU· 1gfi2 Pontiac Grand AM Black,

.Qeautlful Rivet' V1fM tn Kanauga,
·Forrest Mobile Home Park, 614·

0

Call Hll0-691-Bn7.

friendly, would make. good pet.

1990 Dodge Shadow, 4 Cylinder,
Auto, A1r, New ·Timmg Bell 98,000
M1les, $1,fl00 080, 614-2561233. "'

Couch toveseat &amp; Chau $350,

Movmg Sale : Used Furnnure

Free air, free skirt, 141t70 3 bed·
room, S1,055tdown, $196/mo.

Female Beagle nlk, likes Children,

Record collection- torties aMt !iftlea, t1 00 albums, so~ single
records; one set of Norlhwestern
golt clubs including 3 woods . 8
Irons , putter and bag, $65; four
handCrafted dulc::imers. $85 each;

7795.

304·773-5751.

mix pupp1es, male, brown and ran.

6t4-992-7458.

Household
Goods

no pelS, 3/4 mile out Sandhill Rd. 814-2!;jl-162t Leaue Meesago.

D isco unt Mobile Home Parts &amp;

condition, runs good, $1595, 614-

992·6624 .

304· 773-534t.

Appliances :
Rec;onditloned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri·
graters. 90 Day Gua ran tee!
French C1ty Maytag, 614-446 "

814-388-g18~.

dleporl, OH. 304-882-3267.

Uaod &amp; Antiques
Furniture.

2 Bedroam Mobile Home, You
Pay Utllllles, &amp; Dapoal( In Par!Br

Atea S250JIIo..

Ma1p0n,WV

510

.North
Ot.OS-98
• 6
"K Q 5
t - AKQ83
• 10 7 53

out$2,200. 304-675-4893.
1988 Chrysler F1!111 Avenue, good

- Buy. Sell, Tmda

MERCHANDISE

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, No
Peta, $225/Mo., Includes Water
$100 Deposit, References, 614·
446-3617.

14x72

1g99 Chevy Celebrlly 4dr, 2.5
engine, alr, am-tm, n!ce Inside &amp;

R&amp; S Fuml1ure

367-7554.

1tash Included, 6t4-992·2167.

~~~~~30~4-~r.B~-7~29~~~----~

oG

Dllll6t4-441 ·t3t2 Anyume

2 Male Kittens To Good Home,

hkes ·cnildren, ·give me
home," 614-843-5268

Furniture repair, refinish and restoratlon, also custom orders. OhiO

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260-$300, sewer, wa1er and

2 Bedroom, 2 Baths,

.

Trailer Space For Rent In Gallla
County, Campers Welcomer 614-

'2

304·675-3508.
304-675-5955
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
-\VON 1 All Areas I Shirley ~~~;~ 10 the mm iusl call
N..!~~:rn~= ~ng
Spears, 304-675·1429.
avalla~e. 304-755-5568.
Need your J'louse cleaned for !he
AVON
Holidays or anylime?' We don't LIMITED OFFER Free 27" T.V. I
lndependant Representative

Giveaway

81•·3118-G306
2 Pup~es To

Available For Home Health...tNurse

Ad Pasllion FuN Or Pan· Tifre Ref·
er.-ncea 15 Years Experience.
8f446-3082.

Help Wanted
$$DANCERS$$

110

. 420 Mobile Homes .
for Rent

JANUARY Sf

�_.....,.; •• ~ ..... ...,

.

I

'

~&lt;! ,. • · • ,

"
.

···,

,·'

·I

.OPEN
. MOI.·fRI. 9·9
SAT. 9-6
ARERCHURt

SUN.l.S

REBATES·UP TO $2500~ ·
FINANCING·AS· LOW AS 2• - %APR~
ON -NEW CHEVY TRUCKS:·

OPEN
MON••fRL
•

Best Inventory
B11st Hours (5 day work week, 1 week off every 2 months)
Best Advertisement
.
Best Commissions (Average $40,000 per year) ·
Best Complete Benefit Package ·,
We need 8 of the BEST car Salespeople whq,are willing to
work and be handsomely rewarded .and still have time off to
spend as they please.

'

' ·. "5-5-9 .
Pick 4:
1-7·5-1
Buckeye 5:

99·1t2 defeat

SUN.1·5

. will be hired ...
West Virginia's Largest Chevrolet and Oldsmobile
Dealer will be hiring a few professional sales
people. Any. previous sales experience will be
helpful but will not be essential to obtain a position._
.
C&amp;O Motors New.Car Showroom
ASK FOR STEVE NICHOLS
.

Spor:ts on Page 5

· Showe.rs likely tonight,
lows 50 to 55. Wednelidliy,
showers, highs · in the
lower to mid 60s. Chance
of rain 90 percent.

3-4-15~22-28

.

'

.

••

en tine

WEST VIRGINIA'S LARGEST
.

~~

~ick3:

LOVE
TOYOTA

A FEW GOOD
NEW CAR PEOPLE .

·THE 4TH LARGEST USED
CAR LOT IN THE U.S.A.

~

Eastern Mich.
hatads Marshall

SAT. 9·6
AFTER

3.9%, 60 Month Financing on all New Chevrolet Cars with approved credit.

Ohio
Lottery·
.

TOYOTA DEALERSHIP!!!

West Virginia's #1 Toyota Dealership. We are seeking to hire
·sales tepresent~l(eS willing to learn tfle import automotive
business, but all ~rsons interest11d will 'be considered. A first
· year sales person has the opportunity tQ.make $50,000 plus per
yeat '
·
'
·
ASK FOR DAVE CARNELL OR DAVID SETSER

Vol. 48, NO. ·183
1:11997, Ohio Valley P~bllshlng Companv

2.Sec11ons, 12 Pages, 35 Cer)ts
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, ;January 6, 1998

County Hqme becomes
a temporary residence
NEW 98 510 EXTENDED CAB
LS PACKAGE, AIR, ALUM.
WtfEELS &amp; MO~E

AI
LOW

"'

$13,399

NEW 97 1·10 4x4.

~~~~s~~~~ PWR.

' AI' ..

STEE~ING&amp; ,MOREII

10!1(4'

• Price lnchides All Rebates to Deqler .

~

·, ·

._ .,.# j .
14J1· 5
.·
.,

·

'

,.,

NEW 97 GEO TRACKER 414

AIR, V-6, AM/FM·RADIO,
CHROME GRIU.E AND
.

'

'

$
1
'::'

AI~. AM/FM CASS., PWR. .
STEERING AND MOREl

.AI
LOW

'

.

AI

....

.

,!

'

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS· • USED .TRUCKS •
•

MJIIP AIIDCBOIIIE UID0414
AUTO, AIR P/WINOOWS, PflOCKS
8 TO CHOOSE FROM

19,888

ASUIW As ............... .-.................

96·0LDS I~VADO 4141
AUTO, AIR. LEATHER,P./ SEAT
PI WINOOWS,P/lOCKS
"'OAOED, SUPER NICE
WAS $:23,900 .••.............:.....

By JIM FREEMAN .
on Agipg, Woodland Centers, GalliaSentinel News Staff
Meigs Community Action Agenc:)'
County Commissioners voted and the Meigs County proseculing
Monday afternoon to make the Meigs auorney.
County Home strictly a t mporary
The placemenl committee faces
residence for homeless eigs coun, the immediate lask of finding pertiims, instead of permanent resi- man~nt housing for current residents
dence.
of Ihe counly by March 3\ , while the
The resoluti n approved by a 2-1 criteria committee will develop
vote read~ in p\;;1: "Effective March guidelines and criteria for· fulure
31, 1998, ihe Meigs Counly Home operation of the facili1y. Times and
will ho longer be operated as a home places of 1he committee meetings will
for permanent residenls and will be be· esiablished by Human Services
operated as a temporary housing l)irector Michael Swisher, who will
fac.ility under the guidelines and cri: head both committees.
teria approved by the Meigs County
Hoffman and Commission PresiCommissioners."
dent Janet Howard voted for the one·
Effective inimedialely. no new page resolution, with Commissioner
residents Will bc accepted at Ihe coun- Jeff Thornton dissenting .
ty home on a permanent basis, but the · Thorman said he would prefer to
aclion leftlhe door open 10 the. facil· sec 1hc resuhs of ihe 1wo commillees
ily being used as a temporary sheller before taking action. He also quesfor homeless 'people or Ihose dis -· tioned the legality of lhe action .
placed by natural disasters including
"We should have the crilcria lirsl,"
nood or fire.
~C'Said .
Commissioners created lwo co
The lwo commiuees repl~ce an ad
minces, a placement committee and
oc COI)lmittec with members selecta criteria committee.
cd by Thornton. Thai committee
The commillecs arc to be com- made its recommendations lasl week
prised of people representing Ihe concerning ihe counly home.
Meigs Gounly Department of Human
Bob Smiddie, a member of that
· Services, Meigs Counly Board of commillee, asked Monday afternoon
Mental Retardation/Development how long a person could stay at ihe
Disabilities, Meigs County Counctl rehashed counly home.
"

Hoffman replied ihat 1he aciUal
lenglh of stay would depend' on the
criteria commiuec, and re-emphasized ihat nobody would be put oul
wilhout some place lo go.
Commissioners also resolved in
wri!ing to make "every effort" to
assist employees at the counly home '
to find other cmploymcnl.
Howard said most county residents agreed wilh her iha\ the count,)' home was not meant to be a permanent residence, like a nursing
home.
"The need's of the people can be.
covered.". she said. 'The.safety net is
there ... assislance is available. Bul
(lhc county home) should be there ...
il was used during noods last year; it
will s1ill be there as a Slepping stone.
.. We don't have all the answers; that's
why we're going 10 work it ouL" ·
"There are all kinds of rumors'
going around·," Howard said. "I hate
to see the people who live (at the
county home) hurl and manipulated."
"By March I, we will have a plan
in place. It is wrong 10 wai~until the
last minute to place the residents,"
she said.
"We're not going to tear it down ...
it will remain county property,'' she
added . "Holzer Clinic doesn't want it.
They already have a beautiful build·
. ing up there."·

S.orne·county office$ get more ·
money to work with in '98 budget
. 96 fOlD IIOIICO 414, IDDIIIAUII
AUTO., AIR, LEATHER, P.WINODWS, Pt\.OCKS,

4 DOOR, I,T, LEATHER, AUTO., AIR,

LOAGED. SUPER SHARP
WAS $22,000
...... .. lOW

~.::.499

$191HS

90 CHEV; sUIUIIWI 414

95 CHEV. S-1 0 IIAZII 414
P/WINDOWS, P/LOCKS, ALUM. WHEELS,

. . . ........ . . . '

5

19;330
'

SILIJEAADO, AUTO.-, DUAL AlA, 350 ENG.,
PJWINDOWS, LOADED,

~':.sy s'\"s::,~ILES

...........

M

$13,757

92 CHEY. 3/4 TOII414

95 CHEV, 414 SILVIUDO
5 SPEED, AIR, V.S ENG., PIWINOOWS,
' PILOCKS, LOADED

WAS $20,900..... .

WAS $25,900 . .

AUTO., DUAL AIR, f'/SEAT.
CO PLAYER , COMPLETELY
LOADED, ONI:.Y 17,000 MILES

$18'r'C77
...... lOW

WAS $32500 ................ :... .. -

SILVERADO, AUTO. , AIR , 350 ENG ., P/W,
P/LOCKS, LOADED, EXTRA

'29,890.

!~~·;,,,000

. .. . .... .,. .liow 515,960

STOP BY AND VISIT
Ill SPDRl UTiliTY lOT
94 S-IWII 414 ·
2 OOOF( 5 SPEED, AIR, PIWINDOWS . P/WCKS,

~~~\~~~·...

-·11,444

95 CHM TAHOE

4X4 , 2 DOOR , AUTO, AIR, 350 ENG .,
PIWINDOWS, LOADED EXTRA SHARP.

·3
TAHOES
SUBURBANS 16
4 RUNNERS
3
GRAND
·2
CHEROKEES . . 1
4 CHEROKEES 1
2 WRANGLERS 1

5
2
5
6

EXPLORERS .
S-1 0 BlAZERS
JIMMYS···
TRACKERS
BRONCO
PASSPORT
AMIGO

941SUZU IODEO 414
5 SPEED, AlA, P{WINOOWS,

~~~;~:~~ ~~~~~ -

5

14,990

4lC4 , 4 DOOR, AUTO, AIR, PIWINDOWS.
P/LOCKS, AWM. WHEELS. LOADED, SHARP.

-$16~

-'25,330

96 TOYOTA TACOMA Sl •
AIR, 5 SPEED, BUCKET SEATS .

ONLY 9,000 MILES
WAS S1 2,90(L... .

.. ..... MOW

$10t777
-

$-22l.3~Q.50 from $217,209;
. By JIM FREEMAN
Common pleas ·court. increase.
Sentinel News Staff
Most counly offices will realize a $95, I 08 (rom $93,638 ; ·
Juvenile and probaie court (combudget increas.e th'is year. according
to the 1998 appropriations resolution · bined). increase, $89,348 from
approved by the Meigs County Board $85.038;
Clerk of court, increase, $106,740
of Commissioners Monday after- ·.
from $97,262;
noon.
Coroner. .cut. $23.54J frorll'
Commissieners approved total ··
general hind appropriations for 1998 $25,041:
Counly court. increase. $97,118
. of $3,110,099, compared .to final
1997. approprialions of $3,296,072 · from $91,623:
Board of 'elections. increase,
Figures for \998 arc given fiisL
$135,261.80 from $104,916;
followed by 1996 ligures:
Mainlenan~e and operations,
County commissioners/economic
devclopmcnl. increase, ~ 187,797 increase, $16~,00 from $162,000;
Sheriff. · rease, $486,257.50
from $177,597;
increase, from $469,9 8;
.
County
auditor,
Recorder, increase, $90,552 from
$204,192 from $200.812;
County " treasurer, . increase. $77,996;
$103,736 from $101 ,324:
Oisaster services, remained at
Prosecuting auorney, increase, ' $7 ,000;

Ski $lOpe
accident
kills Bono ·
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif.
(AP) ~ ·Rep. Sonny Bono, the muslachioed, self-deprecating half of the
Sonny and Cher duo who gave up his
entertainment career for city hall and
then Capilol Hill, died in a skiing
accidenl. He was 62. ··
' B'ono, an avid skier, had been
reported missing 1wo hours before his
body was found Monday aflernoon at
Heavenly Ski Resort on lhe Nevada- .
California slate line. some 55. miles
soulh of Reno. He died or head
injuries after hilling a tree.
• His death came less Ihan a week ·
afler Michael Kennedy, lhe 39-yearold son of ihe laic Robert F.. Kennedy,
was killed in a similar accident in
Aspen, Co!o.
Bono had jusl slartcd to ski down
an intermediale ~lope , Upper Or.ion,
when he hil a tree, resort officials
said. Bono was alone al ihe time of
ihe accident.
"This is a lerrible shock," House
Speaker Newl Gingric~ told CNN.
"He had really begun to develop· bpth as mayor and then as a member
of Congress- just. a wonderful.public service career as somebody who
really brought a unique sense of talents and understanding from ' h.is
celebrity days.· .
"I think the, entire house of the
Republican conference will be in
mourning today," Gingrich said. "We
all will feel thai we've lost a very,
very dear friend."
· ·
, Cher, his 'eK-wife and e~-singing

·•

Public defender, remained at
$33,000;
.jOxlension office, increase,
$124,152 from $117,900;
Veterans · .. affairs,
m~rease ,
' $105,601 from $104,708;
. 'Tax map office. increase, $50,400
from $48,400.
Changes in the two largest special
revenue funds were:
Mental retardalion/developmen•
tal disability, $1 ,658,347 from
$1,502,500, imd public assistance,
$4,427,864 from $4,288.514.
'
· , Commissioners increased health
insurance premiums 15 percent, with
county offices participaling m ihc
program to absor!&gt; th'-"increase.
· Family health insurance premiums
will increase from $500 a monlh to
$575 a month, with single premiums
(Continued on Page 3 )"

SWEARING IN - Mayor Fr~~;nk Vaughan,
standing at left, gave the oath of office to four
• Pomeroy Village Council members Monday. ·
They ~tre, from left, JOhn Musser, re-elected for
another four-year term; David Ballard, begin-

ning . his first term on council; and Larry .
Wehrung and George Wright, both r&amp;-elected to
seats on council. Musser was re-elected·president of council.
·
,

~omeroy Village Council gives

all three readings for expenses
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A total of $1,479,602 was approprialed for operating expenses of
Pomeroy village in 1998 at Monday
nighi's meeling of Pomeroy Village
CounciL
Meeting in regular session, Council gave all three readings to ihe
appropriations ordinance and adopt·
ed il during tho regular session.
Kathy Hysell , clerk-treasurer, said
that the total . amount includes
$537.597 .82 in the general fund ,
from which salaries and some other
· operaling expenses of the village arc
paid.
S~e said anticipated expenditures
from ihal fund this year will include
$19,7,000 in salaries for police offi.
ccrs as compared lo the $175,000
spenl in 1997; $90,000 in salaries for
slreel dcpanment workers, and
$93,000 in salaries for employees of
· the wale\ department. Those ligures
do not include benefits, said Hysell,
Other anticipaied expenditures for
1998 lisied by the clerk-lreasurer
were $351 ,99.6 from the special revcnuc fund ; $522.761 from the enter·
prise fund, and $256,696 from ihc
trusl and ag~ nc y fund .
.
Expenditures discussed include
Ihe purchase of a dump truck in April
ihrough the state purchasing program.
It was noted 1hat the truck will cos1
about $40,000 and that an addilional
$.11 ,QOO will be ~sed 10 have il
equipped. Purchasing ihc truck
through the slale, said John Musser.
council president, will save aboul
$20,000. ·
A first reading was given to an
amendment to the village income tax
• ordinance. It was e xplain~d by Hysell

. 'S.
Southern
.
· . ·
oar·d eIect s
B
• Ieaders h IP
• '
Jts

thai 1he amendrnen1 brings ihe ordi·
nance up to slate and federal stan·
dards. It does not change the I percent 1ax. but il does provide for
employers lo deduct the tax and pay
it to the village .on a quarterly basis.
It further provides that taxpayers can
use losses sustained to . offsct other
taxable income.
It wa.s teport~d that a new lift station is being installed ncar Butternut
Avenue wilh funding from the Federal Emergency Management
Agency. The station has not operaied since the last 'nood , Musser rcport ed.
•
David Ballard, a new council
member, asked about llood proloco l
and Mayor Frank Vaughan reponed
that the strcel department supcrin ·
tendcnt docs have a plan, although 1t
is not now in writing.
Ballard also questioned the con . dition of sewer lines and the stench
generated, and aske&lt;l about funding
plifns for improving the ·system.
"We all know how bad the sewer
system is," said· Ballard, to which
Musser replied that he wasn't sure the
sewers a,re bad, arid said, in fact, 1ha1
cameras have be'en puilhrough sevcral sewer lines and the resulis
showed that the lines were preuy.
good . . "
·
Musser wcnl on to explain that
when heavy rainfall occurs, like scvcral rains in the past couple of years,
"!here's really nothing which can be
done to handle thai much run-oil"
The need for upgrading play·
~rounds in ihe village was also raised
by the new ceuncilman and il was
generallyagreedlhaitheoneonBulternut Avenue could be improved
without a large ouilay of fund s.

Musser noted,that currently a refresh·
ment stand and new restrooms arc
being built on ·thc ball field wilh a
grant from Nature Works. ·
.
Zoning ordinance enforcement .
and the possible need for a housing
ordinance for rental properties were
discussed by Councilmen George
Wright and Larry Wchrung.
Wright displayed a copy of Middleport's housing ordinance. which
provides for a fcc for each rental
property, and inspectiQns for compliance with fair housing slandards. He
pro,poscd thatlhe village adopl such

. an ordinanc'c and hire an inspeclOr lo

he paid wilh half of the fcc charged
rental property owners, and 1he rest
going toward tearing down old slructures. The mayor appoinled Wrighl
and Wchrung 10 come up with a hous ~
ing ordinance proposal for consider·
ation by counciL
The poss ibility of applying for
Issue II or olhcr funds for strecl repair
was discussed hy council after Muss· .
cr stressed ihc importance of slr&lt;;_ct
paving this year. .
'We'll have nolhing hul potholes
if we don't get something done soon ,"
commented the council president, '"
he urged members to wmc up with
ideas on funding .
Questioning the status of the par·
tially lorn down house on Sycamore
near the Main Strccl intcrscclion
were council members Gcri Walion
and Scott Dillon. II was reported by
the mayor ihal after a long standstill ,
some work has resumed on geuing
ihe structure razed.
A SuperAmerica liquor license
.trans[er was approved for a change in
name only with no change in loca·
(Continued on Page 3)

Southern Local School Board
members Bob Collins of Portland and
David Kucsma of Racine were elecl·
ed presidenl and vice presidenl,
respectively, at .the board's 1998
organizationalll\eetingMonday night
at Southern High School in Racine.
·Board members Marty Morarity
and Doug Little, both of Racine, and
Ron Cammarata of Portland, were -By JIM FREEMAN
sworn in by Treasurer Dennie Hill, Sentinel News Staff
John Hood and Scotl Wal1on were
with Cammarata being welcomed as
re-elected president and vice presi·
a new board member.
The board esiablished the fourth dent, respectively, of the Meigs Local
Monday of.each monlh as ils regular · Board of Education during its reor' meeting dale . Meetings will be he I~· ganizational meeting Monday n.ight
aCL30.p.m. in· 1he high srb.ool. wilh in Pomeroy.
Wavne Davis was welcomed as a
·later mcelings 10 held in schools
throughout the district. Pay 'ror board new School ooard member, with
members was setal $80 per meeling Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus,administering the oath of 9f[icc to Davis and
..for 13 meetings a year. .
In addition , the board renewed Walton, who was re-elected in
membership in the Ohio School November. Davis was also named as
SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER$- Scott Walton and Weyne Davis,
Board Assoc ialion for $1,099, and lhe clistricfs Ohio School Board leg·
from
left, were sworn in as members o~ the Meigs Local Board
renewed the performance bond for islative liaison for 1998.
of
Education
Monday. Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus administered
Board members approved a budboard members, Supeiintendenl
the
oath
of
office.
James Lawrence ~nd Hill· for $400. get of $11 ,255,826 for the 1998-99
The lreasurer was authorized to pay school year. which also earmarks use
all 'bills as they are presented pro- of permanent improvement lev y Pomeroy. e~iablished board members' ed the resignation of Mick Childs as
vided that funds are available, and to ·fund s for textbooks, school buses. pay at $80 per meeting, and cstab- freshman foolball coach·, effective
secure advances from the county roofing and pavin g projccls and li shed a board service fund 'for board immediately; approved Kelly Sattcrequipment.
·
ex penses at $2 per student'.
fi eld as a subslilute teacher for
auditor when available.
Rhonemus
explained
that
1998-99
Council
also
aulhorized
ihc
1
rcaremainder of the school year; and
The board also authori zed
would
be
last
full
year
for
the
5-year
surer
to
pay
bill
s,
secure
advances
approved
the creat1on of a tw ~· ho ur
I Lawrence to employ temporary ~r­
levy
which·
provides
$!i00,000
annufr.om
the
county
auditor
and
to
in
vesl
secretarial
posttionto ass1st the transsonriel as needed for emergency sil·
ally
for
permanent
improvement
pro·
inactive
funds
when
available.
..
.
pollation/maintenance
supervisor. .
uations and to serve as purchasing
jects.
In personnel mauers, ihe board
Present were Superintendent Bill
agent for the distrit:~. .
The board set meetings for the arproved' a Family and Medical Buckley, R~onemus, Hood, Walton;
In personnel matters, the board
·
second
and fourth Tuesday of each Leave Act leave for. Rosalee Snow- Davis and board members Roger
hired Jared Spencer and Kelly Satmonlh
at
7 p.m. at the board offi ce in · den, effective Dec. 31, 1997; accepl· Abbott and Randy Humphreys.
terfield as substitute teachers. ·

Meigs Local
Board picks
new officers

Sonny ~ono
partner, had no comment, said' a Lo.ndon spokeswoman for (:her's record
company, WEA. "Of course, she is
upset by the news," spokeswoman
Barbara Charone said.
A Bono spokesman, Frank Cullen
Jr.. said the California. congressman
was atlhe resort with hi s wife, Mary
Whitaker, and !heir two c ~ildren , 6year-old Chianna and 9-year-old
Chesarc.
"They were enjoying a '"family
vacation," Cullen said early today.
"He was a very proficient skier. He
skied frequently with his family and,
yes, he was an alhietic guy - he
skied and played tennis." He had
skied oh ahead of other family members when the accident happened,
Cullen said:
·
Two years ago, Bono received a
deep gash on his chin after he ·and
another skier ~ollided at the Big B.ear
take area east of Los Angeles. He
(Contlnued on Page 3)

•

•

::

••

,)

'

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