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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 18, 1998

.

Tobacco industry says it's flexible on
WASHINGTON !AP) :.... The
tobacco industry. whose demands
for a shield against future lawsuits
have met a cold reception in Congress. says it is willing to consider
. alternatives but has heard nothing
acceptable from the other side.
"We are not wedded to a panicular method to deal with this problem," industry lawyers Meyer
Kaplow told reporters Tuesday. "If
there are other suggestions that work
as well for the industry but cause other people less di fticuhy. we certainly are prepared to talk to people about
them.
" We just haven't heard anything
that would fit that description raised
so far ...
Protections againstlawsuus were
included in a landmark seulement
reached in June between cigarettemakers and the auomeys general of
40 states. In e&gt;change. the industry
would pay $368 billion over 25

years .and change some of its marketing practices.
,Immunity from lawsuits has
become the central issue as Congress
debates whether to approve or rewrite
the seulement. The Clinton adminis·
tmtion has said it prefers a selllement
without immunity but is willing to
consider immunity if necessary to
push the plan through Congress. ·
Coneressional leaders have shown
linle inclination to grant election -year
favors to an industry thal. · a~cording
to papers recently released by cigarelle makers. h&gt;&lt; looked for ways to
hook children on tobacco.

In an interview later Tuesday,
Koplow said his comments did not
reflect a shift in the industry's strategy. ·In fact. he said, his statement
match the testimony he gave to Congress last year.
·
The industry's goals remain the
same, Koplow said. They include
giving tobacco companies ''absolutely certain amount of annuall1ihbility"·
without having to pay additional
puhitive damage payments and the
legal ability to hold adult plaintiffs
responsi~le for choosing to smoke.
"If there's a different way to get
there than the June settlement, we

will look at it," Koplow .aid. " But so
far. in all of the months of negotiations, we haven't heard anything.
suggested other than wl\at's in there
that other people are prepared to
agree to."
In the past. the industry has
demanded that the senlemeiu be
approved as a package.
"When you start tearing down one
end of the compromise. the whole
thing starts to fray." Steven Goldstone. chief of RJR Nabisco. told
Wall Street analysts in October during a speech about whether to raise
the price of cigarelles.

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previous highway and mas'l lrnnsit

funding bill until May I bec:IUse they
couldn't agree on how to distribute
the money-in new legislation.
· McConnell said the "disadvantaged business enterprise" program is
costly. diviSive and unconstitutional.
Instead. he wants states receiving fed·
eral transportation aid to pro&gt;ide
technical and other support to help
"emerging small businesses" com:
pete for contracts .
He has a handful of co-sponsors
- Republican Sens. Jeff Sessions of
Alabama. Tim Hutchinson of
Arkansas. John Ashcroft of Missouri
and Slade Gorton of Washington ...:...
and is counting on the anticipated
debate to allract additional support.
"This is one vote we will delinitely have. " McConnell said in an
interview.
The latest version of Canady's bill
would require participation by federal departments and agencies in
recruitment and outreach efforts rewrite that the congressman hopes
will satisfy critics who said his original bill offered no suitable alternative.
Congre.&lt;s also could reconsider
Lee 's nomination. Clinton gave the
job to Lee on an "acting" basis last
year after a deadlocked Senate Judi ciary Comminee sent hi s nomination
back to the White House .. Clinton
resubmined Lee's name last moAih.

a

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Kicker:

'

'By BARRY SCHWEID
' AP Diplomatic Writer
: NASHVILLE. Tenn. - "A few
:dozen hecklers:· will not deter the
;united States t'rom its mission in Iraq
;_ containing-Saddam Hussein and.
;reducing his ability to use biological
;and chemical weapons. Secretary of
;State Madeleine Albright said today.
: "Our goal ... may not seem real!ly decisive. But we're trying to con·
otain Saddani Hussein. Whenever he
iputs his head up. we push him back.
;we are doing what must be done.''
;sire said on NBC's "Today" show.
; A day after Clinton administration
'Officials were heckled on a college
campus in Columbus. Ohio. former
'professor Albright returned to the
c~ssroom to make a case for threatening to bomb Iraq to drastically

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Albright was · making back-toback appearances at Tennessee State
University here and at the University of South Carolina. She would be
working smaller audiences than at. the
" town meeting" Wednesday at Ohio
State University. where angry critics
at times drowned her out. along with
Defense Secretary William Cohen
and Sandy Berger. President Clinton's national security adviser.
"We know what we have to do...
Albright said on· NBC. Unless Saddam gives United Nations' inspectors
unfettered and unlimited access to
weapons sites. "We will be using
force and the American people will
be behind us." she said.
"If we have to use force. it is
because we are America. We ure the
indispensable nation. We stand tall.
We see further into the future." she
said.

Albright said most Americans inspectors.
back administration policy and the
The protesters at Ohio State were
oflicials will continue to explain the far outnumbered by supporters and
poljcy to the nation.
the undecided at St. John arena. But
"A couple of dozen students dis- from the outset. when she began with
rupti~g it is something that takes
the assertion. "Iraq is a long way
away from the spirit of the project. from Ohio. but what happens there
which is to try to talk 10 the Ameri· mailers here." .Aibright. Cohen and
can people about the stakes and Berger were confronted by jeering
American foreign policy... she said on that sometimes drowned them out.
ABC's "Good Morning America."
Others rose to the microphones
Albright. a former pr,ofessor of with polite but sharp questions about
i-nternational affairs and head of the U.S. goals in Iraq.
women in foreign Policy program at
"I appreciate all of you coming: ·
Georgetown University. would have Berger said at the end of the 90more chance for dialogue with the minute se&lt;sion. "I appreciate most of
students today.
you listening."
She prefers a classroom selling. •
The majority of the students. fac giving her a chance for an exchange ulty and others in the audience did li.s·
of views with both critics and sup- .ten. And Ber:,oer summed up the
porters of Clinton's threat to bomb
· Iraq if Saddam does not open 'his
palaces and weapons sites to U.N.

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administration's case this way after
saying he preferred a diplomatic
solution to the dispute with Iraq:
"There are some things worth fight~
ing for. These include fightin g

aggression. lighting tho,lll who threaten their neighbors. a\JIO mak~: this
world safer and more secure for our
chi lc.lren and yours ...
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan is going to Baghdad in search
of a diplomatic solution where Russia. France and the Arab League all
have failed. Albright cautioned that
the Clinton administration would not
budge from its demand that the U.N.
weapons commission have unlimited
access in Iraq.
"It must be a true. not a phony.
sol,ution ... she said. while Cohen and

Berger offered assurances there
would not bt: ··si~nilicant losses ··
among the 30.(X)() American troops in
the Persian Gulf in the even·! of an
allack.
Many in the half-tilled Ohio State
'ports arena appeared un swayed by
the comments.
Dozens shouted out': "One. two.
three. four. we don ' t want your racist
war... Others held up antiwar banners
and frequentl y interrupted the speakers.
Albright insisted Sadd~m "does·
n't care a Jig about his own people ...
but one protester. Rick Theis. said.
"We. the people of Columbus and
central Ohio. don't want to send a
messag~ with the blood of Iraqi
women and children."

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The status of the district's building
program and wiring of new school
buildings for Schoolnet were discussed when the Eastern Local Board
of Education met in regular session
on Wednesday evening.
Barry Ingham of Vargo. Cassady.
lgham. and Gibbs. architect for the
building program. met with the board
and said that the building projects in
the district are on schedule.
At the new elementary school.
located next to Eastern. High School.
interior painting has be~un. a.nd.windows, whtch a11"1\ied•last' week. are
now being installed.
Ingham said that construction of
the new lobby arta in the high school
will begin in. approximately three
weeks. Demolition of the existing
lobby area will be completed . first
before construction can begin on the
new lobby .
Ingham discussed the need to
vacate classrooms in the high school
so that ceilings can be installed and
ofher work completed in those classrooms. which have been in use during the school year without ceiling or
floor tile.
The board reviewell a list of fur·
nishings that would be needed in the

new elementary building. Among Head Start program in Meigs Coonthe items mentioned by Treasurer ty now uses a mobile van to provide
Lisa Ritchie were curtains for the center activities to children in the
cafetorium platform (stage). tele.,ir Eastern District. because of their dissions and VCR's. a piano for the lance from the program's center in
music lab. supplies and equipment for Rutland .
.
the art and science labs. equipment
Board members indicated their
for the school's clinic, a scorebOard interest in cooperating with the
for the gymnasium. and a telephone agency in using the building. While
system. •
Head Start is not authorized to pay
Board president John Rice ~ug- rent for space used. the program is
gested that a prioritized list of the permitted to pay for other expenses.
purchases be made so that need can such as utilities and parking. which
be detennined. after the existing ele- ' could offset the cost of locating dis mentar)l buildings are inventoried. trict administrative offices in the
Superif\lendent Deryi,.Well noted-that buildillJ!. which the board has been
music texts are scheduled to be considering.
·
replaced next year. and that new
Rice said that the board would be
mathematics textbooks will need to "very interested" in pursuing an
be replaced next year to confonn with arrangement with Head Start for the
the county's math course of study.
u~e of the building. w,hich will be
The district's math books are three vacated after the current school year.
years old; and need to be replaced in
Nancy Larkins. the district's techorder to 1:onfonn with the county nology coordinator. updated the disEducational Service Center's recom- trict on "E-rate" legislation. which
mended curriculum.
will provide iinancial assistance to
Prosecuting Anorney John Lentes the district in installing wiring and
met with the board as a member of tele-phone service for the district's
the Gallia/Meigs Head Start commu- School net computer system. which
nity board. to discuss the possible use will be installed in the district's two
of Tuppers Plains Elementary School new buildings.
as a center site for lhe program next
The funding program . through
year.
the Federal Communications CumLentes noted that the center-ba.sed
Continued on pag• 3

Candidates file as deadline nears
·COLUMBUS (AP)- The public
wants real education reforms and the
plan that voters will consider on May
S will not provide any. Democrat
Bruce Douglas said.
Douglas tiled petitions for governor on Wednesday. one day ahead of
today's deadline. Democratic opponent Lee Fisher and Republican Bob
Taft were expected to lile their petitions tod:ty.
Douglas, a Toledo businessman
who is tinancing his own campaign.
said Ohioans should not vote for the
school-funding plan that the Legi slature approved on Tuesday. He said
people he meets on the campaign trail
tell him lawmakers didn't go far
enough .
.
He criticized the penny-per-qollar
sales tax increase. which would evenly split about $1.1 billion each year
for schools and for property tax
relief. Both Fis.her and Taft are back·
ing the plan.

If voters approve the tax increase. He said the plan voters will mn sider
the Legislature will then decide how does nothinc to reform ef..lm:ation .
to distribute the tax break to homeTaft. Ohio\ secretary of ,late.
owners.
greeled Douglas and his runnin g
"The comment I hear most often mate for li~utenant governor. Mark
is. 'Don't just put money into the sys- Hatch, as they carried in boxes contem . Fundamentally change the sys- tain ing 2.60 I signatures. Major partem and implement the retorms that ty candidates 'Vor statewide oflice
work .... Dougla.s said.
mu st present 1.000 signaturl!s of reg" I lhink the people are going to istered voters.
demand that and I doubt that people
..This is for governor. right?" Tafl
will sellle for something that doesn't deadpanned as he accepted Dougl as'
mak ~ tho\e fundamental reform~ ...
petitions.
·
Fisher was traveling and nnl avail In other campaign news:
able for comment. , aid Alan
- Rep. Edward Kasputis nn
Melamed. hi s carnpai gn director. He Wednesday became the first candi said Fi sher still supports the ballot date to 4uit two ~talewide rOJct:s
1~1.\UC .
when he dropped out of the race lin
"It provides substantial property state treasurer. K~1sputi s. a C levd~lnd ­
tax rel1ef. That's a major pan of this area Republican. earlier quit the secbill. " Melamed said. " We certainly retary of state 's race after Treasurer
intend to ~..-u mpai g n for it."
Kenneth Black-well announced hi s
Last year. Douglas an no~ need his candidac y. He said he will return to
own plan to reform " hool fundi ng. privilh! bus ine ~s when ' his curre nt
It feature s a I 112 sales-tax increase.
Contnued on page J

Hazatdous Syracuse mine shaft filled

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The Hol;r;er Home Health
Service cif Veterans Memorial
Hospital Is ·being ralocated
this week.
The service, which provides health care In the
homes of residents In Meigs
and Mason Counties, has
been located In the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent to
Veterans Memorial since
June, 1989. ·
This week the service Is
being relocated Into quarters
at 507 Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, near the hospital.
The Mulberry Heights location, originally a residence,
has been the headquarters for
the . Meigs Health Service
operated by Dr. James With·
el'ell and Or. Wilma Mansfield
since May, 1989. Ora. Mans·
field and Witherell are now
working In the Meigs Holzer
. Clinic, also on Mulberry
· Heights, ·
Pictured along with the
new quarters of the service
are home health employees
Claudia Thomas, left, and
;Theresa Wolfe, packing
· records and supplies being
moved to the new location.
, The service will receive
, mall at 115 E. Memorial Drive,
· Pomeroy, the same address
as Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal, and lhe phone number of
the service, 992·3231, will
remain unchanged.

99.

Post Cereal

A Gannett

Eastern projects on target

2% Broughton

Strawberries

1 Section. 10 Pages,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 19, 1998

!Aibrig_h t defends United States policy

ENTER TO

Red, Ripe

Cloudy tonight , low in
30s. Friday, cloudy, high
in upper 40s.

en tine

L-------------.J

"Sliced Free"

4·10.11·28·29-42

••

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ENTRY BLANK BELOW

WASHINGTON (AP) - States
are counting on billions in federal
funds to pay for highway and mass
transit projects - the "pork" that
congressmen like to lavish on their
di stricts. But the seemingly unrelated issue of aftinnative action could
put up a roadblock.
Some Republicans want to kill a
program that steers at least I0 percent'
of the transportation funds to minor·
ity- and female-owned businesses.
But they face a fight from Democrats.
Republicans are by no means
united on the issue. but the 1996 GOP
platform put the party on record
against affirmative action. Adding
strength to the move was California\
1996 vote to ban consideration of
race or gender in state hiring, public
conlracling and college admissions.
The merits .of affirmative action
are likely to be debated more than
once in this election-year session of
Congress.
Rep. Charl~s Canady. R-Fia .•
plans to reintroduce a bill to eliminate
scores of federal programs that give
advaniages to women and minorities.
Oth~r . civil rights issues on the
congres~ionaltable include President
Clinton's call for an $86 million
spending increase for civil rights
enforcement and his naming of Los
Angeles allomey Bill Lann Lee to the
Justice Department's top civil rights
· post. Legislation to outlaw jobdis·
crimination against gays is also pend-ing.
Canady and other conservatives,
citing more than a dozen state proposals to end affirmative action pro·
grams. say the public is turning
against " a system that n: inforces
prejudice and discrimination 1n our
society."
"The politicians in Washington
still have not gonen the message from
the American people that it\ tirne for
us to put an end to the divisive policy of preferences," Canady said.
Rep . Maxine Waters. the Congressional Black Caucus chair·
woman . said the failure on two previous occasions of Canady's bill
shows· Republicans are struggling
with the issue. ·
"I would not like t.o have to tight
them but should they continue. I think
we are going to win." Waters. DCalif.. said in an interview.
The lirst vote on atfinnative action
is expected in March or April on a
proposal by Sen. Mitch McConnell.
R-Ky .. to kill the highway program's
set-aside provision.
Last year. lawmakers extended the

l
l State

1Address
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City

9753

149826

.~1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

lI

384
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Vol. 48, NO. 215

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Southe.rn
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Pushing lawmakers to pass the a study published in today'&lt; Journal
lawsuit protections contained in the of the American Medical Association
June selllement,
Brown · &amp; that says tobacco companieS continWilliamson chief Nick Brookes told ue to target children withi)J!yertising. ,
the House Judiciary Committee last despite the industry 's c'laims to the
month: "We cannot agree to any leg- contrary. According to the study.
islation that does not include the lim- magazines with high youth reader,
ited common-sense civil liability pro- ·Sh1ps also receive the most advertis- •
tections."
ing money from the industry.
Industry spokesman, too. have
"This can't be an accident," said
repeatedly said tobacco companies Michael Siegel. assistant professor at
would refuse to participate in the vol- Boston University.
untary provisions of the deal if Con"Tobacco co m~anies do not target
gress rejects the settlement's lawsuit kids. .. indu stry spoke sman Scoll
protections.
Williams said Tuesday when asked
Meanwhile. health officials touted about the study.

Week3
.

Affirmative
action debate
could be
roadblock for
highways

lawsui~

.

/

JIM FREEMAN
sentinel News Staff
.··for years. the Peacock Coal Company of Syracu~e was one uf the
l~rgest employers in the area. until
1937 when the 111ine closed down -le~ving a concre· ,·-lined oval hole
approximately 2u by 15 feet .. and
more than a hundred feet deep.
' The hole. covered by a deteriorating concrete cap. sal near the home
of Gordon Winebrenner and his busi·ness. the Racine Planing Mill. along
ll. state Route 124.
: For years. Winebrenner cautioned
~~ three children to stay away from0
the hole. occasionally dropping a ·
..OCk into the shaft so the youngsters ·
cbuld hear how much time elapsed
· u)liil it splashed into the water below.
a~cording to his daughter, Paula

..

Daughef\y.
"We forbid them to be around it.
because it was dangerous," Winebrenner said. adding that he put a six·
foot-tall barbed wire fence around ihe
mine opening.
In time his children grew and then
came grandchildren. leading to new
worries. about the negle(ted mine
shaft.
The Rurnl Abandoned Mine Program then offered ils assistance.
·Work began Wednesday morning
on reclaiming the mine shaft.
Workers with Kostival Excavation
of Gallipolis removed lhe old con· ·
crete cap and began filling the hole
with rip-rap. large pieces of limestone
that will fill any openings at the bottom of the shaft.
The rip-rap will prevent the small·
ill

er stone to follow from tlowing into
the mine. said contractor Jan Koslival. By the time the $45.000 pruJe~t
is completed, more than 2.fXMl tons of
stone will have poured into the shaft .
After the stone is in place. topsoil
will be brought in to cover the site.
Grass will be planted on the topsoil.
Kostival said.
Today. with the ·exception of the
mine shaft. there is almost nothing to
remind one of the huge mining oper·
ation that once covered Winebrenner's property.
·
In its heyday, the mine employed
600 to 700 people and had shafts
under much of the Syracuse area.
Winebrenner said. A rail line hauled
the coal away.
He said the project was funded by
RAMP on an emergency basis.

MINE SHAFT FILLED · .Work began Wednes·
day on filling a 1110-'plus·foot-deep mine shalt,
all that remains of the Peacock Coal Company
which was once a huge employer In the Syra·
cuse area. Here, property owner Gordon Wine·
~

.brenner, fore, contractor Jan Kostival and an
equipment operator examine the shalt behind
Winebrenner's business, the Racine Planing
Mill.

�Thursday, Februar}t 19, 1998

Commentary
•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pqe2:

r---Local briefs----i

Thundly, Februay It, 11181 ~

Garage fire reported

lor duyume condlltons and
MICH

The Iraq attack--plenty of cause for concern
By Ben Wattenberg

dam's head on a ptkestaff Even that
There
ts
a
constructtve
aspect
to
would not wholly end the threat of a
'LstUlisML in 1948
the hawkish concern about Prest dent
dangerous 21st century replete wtth
Chruon's plans for bombmg Iraq,
btologtcal chem1cal and nuclear
111 Coull Binet, Pomeroy, Ohio
alas,
wtth
less
than
a
full
plan
to
end
weapons
1 ~ the hands of 1rrespons1114-892-2151• Fax 9112·2157
Saddam Hussem 's cnmmal rule
ble tyrants But 1f we fold our cards,
Sit II, the prestdenl s postlton arttcuwe arc sendmg a message of anarlated on Tuesday afternoon, shuuld
chy A vtolent rogue nation can
be strongly supponed Whatts hke
mvade a ne1ghbor, take a hckmg
ly
to
happen,
what
sho11ld
hapllCn
come
hack ~~ defy the w111 of tht
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
extens1v• bombardment -- can help
Untied Nattons and create an arsenal
set markeft; for a better and safer
of homfic weaponry to threaten; and
ROBERT L. WINGETT
world
on
the
other
stde
of
that
bndge
qu
1te poss1bly use agamst, tts netgh
Publllhtr
to the 21st century
bors and us It's Alfred E Neuman's
There ts plenty of cause for con
fore1gn pohcy "What, me worry?"
cern, from hawks, doves, chtckerrs
Is that the kmd of world that we
MARGARET L,EHI!W
and owls What IS the "extt strate
want? Not domesttcally not tnternaController
gy"? Where are our alltes? Who are
uonally Remember Amenca IS a
our alltes? Are Clinton and hts team
natton that has seen anarchy And
"'"-••••
_ , . .. _ _ _ ..,._,.....,.,..,
tough enough to stand firm 10 the
thecurmudgeonJudgeRoyBeanset
-..t-~- -..-ttw--.otl»&gt;l!tpcH·W ~lof..
face of ugly televtsed ptctures of the
up "lhe law west of the Pecos ' In
~-IIM:h--•olfl,._--.
dead and the matmed? w,n actiOn
more recent decades we saw the
:"!~..,::W~ ~=~=';,~r;::,;=:-= set the so-called' Arab streel ' mto a
degradauon of domestte pohce
fi1W: or. MK to•l--1117.
frenzy ? Shouldn l we get scnous
power m our cutes And evenlually,
"c~·~•.;;;.;.;p;,.;;,.-.,.;;;,;,,-;.;,;..............---about setttng up a senous democrat
we got tough, and some safety
IC pohucal oppOSiti On In Iraq? Docs
returned We saw tyrants rampage
the prcstdent s personal SIIUalton
across the world m the 1930s and
leave tum geopohttcally cmasculat
dtd nothmg for too long We patd a
ed'
terrtble pnce 10 restore peace
Gtven
ByTOMRAUM
r:=;=====================:;===========;-lthe lncky
A11oclated Press Writer
dtplomauc
WASHINGTON- In an era of relattve peace and prospenty, Prestdent
sttuattOn,
Chnton hasn't h'ad much practice tn servmg as commander m-chtef or tn
Chnton's
prepanng the nat10n for war, even a one-stdcd one
formulatiOn
Thus as he seeks to generate pubhc suppon for posstble mtlnary actton
of goals on
agatnstlraq, he's been usmg some of the same mteracttve techmques he used
Tuesday
to sell hts domesttc and soctal pohcy, wtth varymg degrees of past success
sounds tern
He even borrowed a hne from Htllary Rodham Clinton's effons to
poranly
observe the mtllenmum remembenng the past and tmagmmg the future
sohd
"to
"That s not a bad slogan for us when we deal wtth more sober, more dtfsertously
ficult, more dangerous matters," Chnton satd m Pentagon speech Tuesday
dtmmtsh the
He satd those hke Iraqt Prestdent Saddam Hussem "have netther rememthreat and
bered the past nor tmagmed the future ·
senously
Today's sales mstallment was a town-hall meetmg m Columbus, Oh10,
reduce the
prestded over by Secretary of State Mndcleme Albnght, Defense Secretary
capactty" of
Wilham Cohen and nattonal secunty advtser Sandy Berger
Iraq
to
Chmon IS promtsmg Amencans clear answers. but h1s effons so far have
~eve lop and
produced a lot of doubters
dehver
In last month's State of the Unton address, he satd to Saddam "You can
weapons of
not defy the wtll of the world You have used weapons of mass destructton
mass
before We are determmed to deny you the capactty to use them agam '
destrucuon
But Chnton on Tuesday added quahficattons "Let me be clear A mthIn
any
tary operation cannot destroy all the weapons of mass destruction capac tty '
event, tt's
Instead. he satd the stnkes would leave Saddam "s1gmficantly worse off
hts
call
1han he ts now' and that subsequent ratds m12~1 be needed
Ounng the
If that was Clmton 's hne m thr •and, 11 appears to be a shtftmg one
The Whne House accompanied ::lmton's Pentagon speech wnh a glossy
CIA pubhcatton, 'Iraq• Weapon• uf Mass Destruction Program," presentmg
the conclusiOn that "Iraq mam~ •r&gt; a small force of Scud-type mtsstles, a
small stockptle of chemtcal and liOiogtcal mumllolls, and the capabthty to
By Morton Kondracke
than the pm- more than "a body blow" and
qutckly resurrect btologtcal and chemtcal weapons productton "
Instead of hmumg U S atms for
pnck ratd 11 admttted, "Yes, when tt's over, he
But Chnton wtll have to do more to make an effccttve case, some of hts
our
tmpendmg
a(lack
on
Iraq
to
cur
mounted
tn
wtll sull be standmg •
crtttcs suggest •
1993 after Sad
If Saddam does not let U N
Sen Arlen Specter, R-Pa, satd Amencans need to be told more clearly tathng Saddam Hussem's chemtcal
dam tned to weapons Inspectors resume thetr
why attacks mtght be needed tf dtplomacy fall s, saymg hts consllluenls are and btologtcal weapons arsenals, the
Chnton admtntstrauon ought 10 at
assassmate for- work after U S ratds the offictal
'uneasy about an and mtsstle stnkcs "
mer Prestdenl satd, "Sancttons wtll sttll be m
Clmlon s1ans wnh one b1g dtsadvantage compared wnh Prestdent Bush leasl make Saddam thmk the Umted
George Bush m place, no fly zones wtll be m effect,
Lcadmg up to the 1991 war, Iraq had mvaded Kuwan and was threatenmg States means 10 end hts reg1me
Admtntstratwn spokllSmen have
Kuwatt, but no and we'll mcrease our (mtclhgencc)
Saudt Arabta Bu$h was able to lay do~n a clear goal force lraqt troops out
one has the monllonng of Iraq If there ts evt
of Kuwan For Clinton. the goal IS a-more vaguely expressed, We seck to ruled out an assassmatton attempt as
tllegal, a ground mvaston as unwtse
sense
thai dence that he ts trymg to rebutld hts
fi msh the JOb "
Kondracke Desert Thunder arsenal, we can htt htm agam "
But Democrat Chnton held one advantage Republican' Bu&gt;'h dtdn 't a and effons to create an altemallve
wtll match the atr-war phase of
Th1s offictal hkc Secretary of
congresswnalleadershtp that not only stood Wtlh htm, but m some cases was government as unfeastblc
Such talk, seemmgly meant to Desen Storm
Slate Madelemc Albnght, flatly
argumg for even tougher measures "Thts Congress ts very commmed" to
It doesn 't necessanly have to, but ruled out any use of ground lroops
Clmlon 's Iraq pohcy, House Speaker Newt Gmgnch declared Bush faced an counter hawktsh Repubhcan cnttcs
of Chnton pohcy, has the effect of psychologtcally tt would be more
as some Reagantte Republicans
tntltally skepttcal Democrattc Congress
assurmg
Saddam
that
he
can
survtve
cffecuve
for
Saddam
Hussem
to
have
proposed -- and the establiSh
But backmg for Chnton appears 10 he tallenng, with a resoluuon-ot-sup
a
U
S
attauk
thereby
reducmg
hts
thmk
he
was
about
to
suffer
mtghtt
ment
of enclaves tnstdc Iraq where
pon postponed for the current wccklong congrcsstonal recess Some lawmcenuve
to
agree
to
Unued
Nallons
ly
for
hts
noutmg
of
tnlemauonal
antt-Saddam
clements could gather
makers suggested the reason was less-than-persuastvc presentations by Chnweapons
mspect10ns
law
than
to
expect
bombmg
he
could
and
be
rewgmzed
a&lt; an alternauvc
ton s nauonal sccurtty team
The
better
course
woula
be
to
nde
out
and
use
as
a
pretext
for
more
government
Many lawmakers have been hcstlant be&lt;ausc they fear the confl~et could
Such opposltton forces as extst
senously escalate, and they question whclher such stnkes wtll cause Iraq to scare the hell out of htm whtch mtschtef
would
holster
chances
of
aclnevmg
The
admmtslrallon,
m
order
to
arc 'so weak, dtvtdcd. and corrupt
ytcld Others are not sure whal the consequences mtght be of blowmg up
that they couldn't do much The dan
arsenals of chem tcal and btolog1cal weapons and where lhc wmds nught a dtplomattc settlemenl, convmce make Its pohcy dcfenstble at home
foretgn waverers that the Umted - espectally m the face of mounting ger ts, they mtght stan somethtng
carry such contammatton
Rcttred Gen Cohn Powell, the former chatrman of the Jomt Chtels ol States ts deadly senous about lhe cntlctsm that tis war atms are til they couldn t fintsh and expecl us to
Staff, has satd the darkest pan of the Perstan Gulf War was watung for menace Saddam presents, and ·(for defined -- has become mcreasmgly come and rescue lhem - a Bay ol
the most part) umfy domesttc US prcctsc (and hmttcd) m talkmg PIJls slluatton,'' the offictal satd
repons over whether Iraq had unleashed chemtcal or b10logtcal weapons
opm10n
about what 11 wants to accomplish
These arc all reasonable post
Charles N Davts, a former analyst wtth the Defense Intelligence Agency.
It s hard to tell exactly how heavy
Echomg statements from Prest ttons, but for the admmtstratmn to
contends a U S atr attack would undermme the U S posuton m the Gulf
wnhout stoppmg Saddam from contmumg to develop such weapons 'The U S bombtng wtll be tf and when It dent Cluiton and other top poltcy cnunctate them adverttscs to Sad
ncgattve consequences from aU S attack also could be dtsaslrous for netgh bcgms but most observers expect 11 makers, one Whne House offic tal dam that the United States docs not
to last at least for a few days and to satd US war a1ms were to senous really mean to threaten hts hold on
bonng countnes,' he suggest'
Ltke the prestdent, Chnton's top hcutcnants arc now usmg rclauvc terms be dncctcd at mthtary targets and ly dtmmtsh Saddam's capactty to power - the one thmg he really
for the pumshment that an stnkes would mfltcl on Saddam Whv the S&lt;alcd suspected sites where chemtcal and develop and dehver weapon s of cares about
btologtcal warfare agents are devel mass destructton and hts capaclly to
back expectations?
So what should US poltcy be &gt;
mttmtdatc hts nctghbors
Satd Whtte House spokesman Mtke Mc&lt;;.urry As the prcstdcnt has oped and mtsstles arc butlt
Rtchard Haass Mtddle East pohcy
The admmtstratiOn ccrtamly IS
The oftictal acknowledged that coordmator tn the Bush While
watched the dtplomattc dtscusston wmd down lhe preCISIOn wnh wh1ch
stgnahng that 11 wtll 1aunch more the Unned States would deliver no House now at the Brookmgs lnslttu
he ts addressmg the posstble use of mthtary force has mcreased
And why not set a deadhnc or draw a new hnc m lhe sand'
"It's not about antftctal deadhnes,' McCurry satd Its about assunng
that those thmgs the United States and the world commumty arc mmtmg
upon gel achteved '
Mfume to filllhe
By De WAYNE WICKHAM
treatmg 11 senously when the first
top staff JOb lhat
Gannett News Service
two people to run afoul of 11 were
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum has covered the While House for
had
been
vacated
her political alltes
WASHINGTON - Once agam,
The Associated Press in both the Clinton and Bush presidendtsby
Chavts
be NAACP IS m the throes of
On Saturday, the board meets '"
These were
;:hange
New York to ptck tts thud ch&amp;~rman
m five years It should also make
Last week'Myrhe Evcrs-Wtlhams all vtolent sea
some other Important dectstons
announced she wtll not seek r• elec changes m an
' uon as chatrman of the board of orgamzatton that
~bout the NAACP s tuture
dtrectors Her surpme dect ston htstoncally had
Last year, m a confidential selfcame JUSt II days before she was been slow to
assessment
an overwhelmmg
Dear Edttor
Wickham
expected to be elected to a founh change
maJonty of memhers satd the board
But whtle the
dtdn 'I spend enough lime dtscussmg
At thts lime when we hear many negattvc lhmgs g01ng on around us, we one year term - a contest '" whtch
cast
of characters changed wlthm the ctvtl nghts In fact, m the past five
.she had no opposttiOn _
feel we need to wr1te of some very poslttvc thmgs
In the five years smce Ben Hooks na110n 's oldest and largest ctvtl years CIVIl nghts tssucs seldom have
Recently our etght-year-old daughter and her mne-year old fnend were stepped down as executtve d11ector, nghts orgamzatlon, httle else has found thetr way onto the agenda of
oul playmg Rarely do they ever stray out of the yard or away from a close the NAACP has been rocked by a happened m the past five years to board meeungs
httle stream
sex scandal, financtal collapse and a pul the brakes on us shde from
nus has got to change
greatness The back-bumg and tnb
bttter
power
struggle
The NAACP mus1 return to the
As darkness approached paren1s and stbhngs called to no avatl
Ben Chavts, the man who sue ahsm among board memlfers that led bustness of ctvtl nghls It has to
As concern grew our local shenffs depanment was called Wuhm mm- ceeded Hooks, lasted JUSI 16 months to Gtbson's ouster perSisted dunng determme tls place m the arena 11
utes a deputy was here followed by more deputies Shenlf Soulsby, area fire before bemg fired m August 1994, Evers-\Ytlhams three years at the once dommated by offcnng a clear
depanment members, fa mtly fnends and netghbors All wtth one goal - to after he secretly agreed to pay a helm of the NAACP's rumg body and conctsc detinttton of wha1 11
find two lost little gtrls
woman $364 000 to settle the sexual S'o too, dtd the cronytsm that caused belteves lo be thts nallon 's most
harassment clatm she had le veled tis leaders to often allow petty poh pressmg ctvtl nghts problems - and
I m thankful to say both gtrls were found safe
agamst htm Stx months later, a ucs to nse above the best mterests of so luttons
the orgam zauon
To all those who helped, thank you seems ltke so httle ,lo say But tt sharply dtvtded board ousted chatr
For example, what shape should
To her credtt , Evers- Wtlhams
man
Btll
GtbSon,
who
along
wtth
the battle for economtc JUSttce take•
comes from 1he bonom of our heans
Chavts, was blamed for causmg the prestded over the financtal rescue of Should 1he emphasts be on pressur
Also we want to thank all of our church famtly at Vtctory Bapust and also NAACP to smk nearly $5 mtlhon m the NAACP, whtch teetered on the mg corporatiOns to h1re more black
bnnk of bankruptcy when she took workers or heljlmg Afncan-AmenHtllstde Bapllst for all of thetr prayers
debt
'
office
She was ltreless m her fund cans budd a vtable economtc mfraEvers Wtlhams's one-vote vtctoratsmg
efforts - work that caused structure?
ry m that elecuon was followed 22
her
fragtle
health to detenorate She
Dave and Alberta Hysell months later by the selection of
Is there a pohtlcal Option to our
also mststed that the board adopt a
&amp;hen -Maryland congressman Kwetsl
bhnd
allegtance to Democrats and
code of ethtcs, but shted away from
Pomeroy

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

There are two
baste counterarguments to these
sons of quest10ns, and they
are old ones (I)
What happens tf
we don 1 now co
somethmg •!ramatte? and (2)
We only have one
prestdent at a time Wattenberg
There are lots of tm horn , tm-pot
dtctators around lhe world If they
don't yet have a still m the knchen
brewmg up anthrax vtrus or deadlier
concoctiOns many of them soon
wtll Other evtl rulers wtll come
along As Secretary of Defense
Wilham Cohen demonstraled tn a
televtsed show 'n tell a few weeks
ago, a 5-pound bag of anthrax vtrus
could destroy half the populatiOn of
lndtanapohs or Washmgfon DC
ThiS ts not a stmple suuauon Go
the hmu, and beyond Suppose
Amenca launched a full scale land
mvasiOn of Iraq that concluded With
few Amencan casualttcs and Sad-

,... .. ,.--.. ..
•
lnton USing we 11-worn

--------.;...a

tactl"cs to sell Iraq poll"cy

Cold War, hawkish pres~elents said
of Congress "We can't have 43S
secretaries of state " That sull
apphes
It ts true that a hmtted air war
cannot, tn ttself, destroy all of Saddarn's capabilities But such an operauon can take out weapons factltlles
we know of, destroy lraq1 mtlttary
atr fields, stnke at the Repubhcan
Guard that helps keep Saddam
anoat, ehmmale the hebcopters he
has used to terronze h1s own people,
and reduce to fine powder h1s socalled "palaces," wh1ch bkcly house
weapons mstallattons If we get
lucky, perhaps a stray bit of shrapnel
mtghttear Saddam 's head off
In giVIng Prestdent Chnton suppon,Amencansshouldaskforareetprocal pledge No more softball •
When the Iraq• assassmatton plot
agatnst former Prestdent George
Bush was uncovered m 1993 the
Chnton retahauon mvolved JUSt one
slnke OnJUSI one mtelhgcnce facth
ty tn the mtddle of the mght As
Richard Perle says 'That assured
only the clealung ladtes would be
harmed Any such response thts
ume would be worse than nothmg
The bombmg, tf and as tt comes,
should be regarded only as a firs1
step toward closure on Saddam
So Once agam we arc at that spot
m the geopohttcal cquauon where 11
ts asked, "Is Amenca the world s
shenff!" The answer, as before ts
mtxed No, not everywhere, not m
most places, not tn most ctrcumstances And Yes, at certam ttmes, m
cen~m sttu&amp;ttons, tq some places,
when the stakes arc very htgh, hope- :
fully dtplomallcally Wtlh many
alhes. 1f necessary mllttanly and
alone We have learned, to our sorrow, whaltt means to degrade pohce
power, domesttcally and mternattonally Softness on cnmmaht)
breeds cnmmahty
Ben W,ttenbefl, a senior fellow at the Amerkan Enterprise
lllltltute, is the author of "Values
Matter Most" and is the holt of
the weekly public: television pro1ram "Think Tank."

•

w

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five years ago

He had been employed for 18 years tn htghway constructton and had been
a bus dnver and custod tan lor lhe Polk H1gh School He had been employed
mlhe mamtenance department at HedSirom reunng m 1995, and was a delivery person for the Ashland Ttmes Gazette
He wa' a former member of the Ktng B Bowhng League
He ts sumved by h1s wtfe Nancy L Bell Bahr whom he mamed m 1951
a daughter Ktm Bahr Ashland stX sons and four daughters-m law Greo
and Yvonne Bahr West Salem. Vern and Tract Bahr Ashland Jefl and She;
n Bahr, Greenwtch Steve Bahr Ash land Jeff and Shern Bahr Savannah
Tom and Juh Bahr Polk and Alan Bahr Ash land three ststets Mtldred A
Ltpsey, Ulah Ltla Wmters Provo W Vu and Evelyn Well Chester five
brmhers Kyle E Bahr Beckley W Va Clayton R Bahr WtntefHaven Fla
Norman H Bahr Pomeroy and Vtctor A Bahr and Henry E Bahr both of
Long Bottom 19 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren
Bestdes hts parents he was preceded 1n death by a daughter. Dem se D
Bahr, m 1987 and a granddaughter Stacte Lynn Bahr tn 1991
Funeral services wtll be held on Saturday at 2 p m at the Denbow-PnmmKemery Funeral Home •n Ashland, with Rev Edward 0 Hale offictatm o0
Bunal wtll lollow m Polk Ce metery
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Fnday from 7 to 9 p m
Memonal contnbut10ns may be made to the family m care of the Denbow Pnmm-Kemery Funeral Home PO Box 314 Ashland Ohto 44805

'' ' ''
' ' ' ' '
w~

~

Sunny PI Cloudy Cloudy
V11 AsSOCiated P1ess Graph~esNet

'

Today'.s weather forecast
By T~e Assol:lated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Tomght Cloudy Scattered dnzzle
wnh a chance of ral n after mtdntght
Lows tn 'th~ upp~r 30s to lower 40s
West wind 5 to IO mph Chance of
prectptlatlon 50 percent
Fnday Cloudy A chance of ram
m the mommg Then a chance of
dnzzle m the afternoon Htghs m the
upper 40~ Chance of preclpitatton 50
perccntf
_ ___

Y6uth pt'ogrbm planned
Dare 2 B Dttlerent Youth Group
of the New Ltfe Vtctory Church m
Gallipolis 'Wtll be hostlllg a 30 hour
famme for World Hunger Feb 27 and
28 l'ersons wantmg to sponsor or
patlt(tpilfo!'inatcantact the church at
446-861} or 992-4856

..

Correttlon
Sieve Beha 'lind Joy Stewart of the
Metgs County Boafd bf MR!DD and
Adonna W1lsonofO~toLegal RJrhts
were moplfe~JIJ• •&lt;\.eQilfieo;l-as
\.
be rs 0 f')~
1;1
'u
'
t""
••
• c mmt ee apll\''" ,.,. , ~
mvesttgate the operalton 1 tne Metgs
County Home The three were al
Tues~ay s meetmg of the Metgs
County Commts&lt;toners '" order 10
diSCU.~S lhe MR/DD bQ,ilrd.s {ole. 10,
asststmg county home re~tdents net
to endorse a tax levy proposal for the
home~ opemt ton
omiss1on
The name of Manhew Caldwell
was omttted from the Ea~)f19 L&lt;.&gt;!ial
School Dtstnct honor rQIIs 1[1 Tue.~
day's edtllon He ach(eved all A's for
the mpst recent gradmg penod
The name ol Alison Rose was
om11ted from mform~lton provtded
by the dtslnct She achteved the overall honor 1011 ~th are '" tenth grade

..

Fund raiser planned
The .Ea~tern Htgh School Athleltc Boosters are .~ponsortng a gun
gtveaway for Apnl wtth one gun to
be aw'lfded ea.:h day m Apnl except
Sunday Parltctpalton ltckels are
avatlable at Taz's Marathon. Ftve
Pomts Saum Lumber Chester Ltttle Johns Cugo. Tuppers Plams, or
from any booster member For more
mformaltQn on the lund ratser restdents may call Roger Wtllford,
Booster prestdent, 667-3653
Revival services set
Revtval serv"es wtll be held Feb
:!:! lhrough March I at the Berlin
Hohness Church State Route 3:!7
nem Wellstvn. 7 ,~0 each evemng
Evangel .. t' Anios Tlilts wtll conduct
serv~ees and thai:' wtll be spectal
"

,.

~

!

(USPS 213 9601
rubhsh ~; a I: VC I ¥

thcrnutiO Mu ndolv

rhrou~h

Fnd~ y

II r f'ourl St Pomt!roy Ohro lly th ~
OJuo V~ llcy Put'llrshmg ( ompanv/G mnctt Co
Pomeroy Oh10 4"i7(19 Ph 99;! 21'1itl Sec;nnd
class posrasc pard al Po mer~)) Oh o

Mrmbcr The Assocralcd Prcu and the Ohm

Newspaper A151xrahon
POSTMASTER Send ~dllrns C(lrJCCIIo n s ICl
The O:ul)' ~ n!tnel Ill C'o11r1 Sr Pomeroy
Oh10 .1'1769

SU&amp;SCRIP'I'ION RATES
By Carrit,- or Motor Roult

0nt Weet ............................................ ......S2t.llt
Orw Monlh ,
SH 71!
One

Yr~r

S104 Oft

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Datly ....... ...... ,............•. ,....................... JS Cents

Su~rlbers nol des ulnJ lo pav. the cmti!r may
rcmtl 1n ad..,~nc~ duccr 10 The D.,tl) Scnt•ncl
on a three stx Of 12 momh basts C"rcdll wrll be
gJVeR urtltr hch wctk
No subscup11on hy mru l ~rm111ed 1n areas
where hnln~ c lrTICt ~f1;'JCC 1S av;ulllblc

..

Pubhsllc:r rcscrvu the f!gM to adjust IIICS dur
1ng the sugstupr1nn per1od Suhscnp110n nile
changc=s fM)' 1"" U11p~rnnfJd by Ch1111$1RJ the
duralloo o( lh~: subicnpt1orL.

M,O,ILSVIISCRIPTIONS
laside Mela• Cou11y
13 Weeks.

$27 3tl

26 Weeks

S! 3 H2

.sz Weeks .. ,.

~

.. ~

s'u15 sr.

Riles 01tAde Mtlts C01111ty

13 W.eu
2tiWctks1• .{",... 11 11'
52 Weeks

•

---------------r'---~

129 2S
1 •r , S$6&amp;t
f. .. I' $109!72

smgmg

Man cited in accident
A Rac1ne man was ctted fol lowmg a (\\o

Margie E. Burnem

vehtcle

acc1dent on state

Route 124 tn Rutland around 6 30 thts mormno
James E Randolph :! I was eastbound on ~tate Route 124 when
he fell asleep whtle dnvmg a 1994 Ford Ranger ptckup truck accordmg to a Metgs County Shentfs Department report The truck .,..ent otf
the nght Stde of the road stnktng a parked 1994 Eagle Summit owned
by Jody E Fo.,.. ler Rutland
No "'Junes were reported and both ve11tcle s sustamed hea v) dam
age Randolph was cued on a ch.orge ot la1iure to control

l
j

I

!
I

Man cited by patrol

I

i

The Galha-Metgs Post ol the Htghway Patrol Ctled a Middleport
m.1n for !allure tocomrol on Wednesday followtng a one \ eh tcle .1cc1
dent
P~trtlow
t .It 6 3~ p 111

Accordmg to troopers Alv 1e B

88

wa~

tr,lve lmg north

on State Rome 7 near mtlcposl
when he tailed to n e~n
I tate a cu rve and traveled ollthe lett Side ul the road s lnktn ~ a ditch
and a cui vert
Partlow refused treatment .11 the sce ne D1m 1ge to h" \Chtcle "·"

i

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Margte E Burnem 75 Langsvtlle d1ed Thursday Feb 19 1998 at St
Josephs Hospital m Parkersburg. W Va Arrangements wtll be announced
later by the Mtddleport Chapel of Ftsher Funeral Home

Kermit A. McElroy
Kermit A McEir6y 87, Pomeroy, d1ed Wednesday. Feb 18 1998 at
(') Bleness Memonal Hosp11al m Alhens
t Arettred laborer for Amencan ManufaciUnng Company he wa~ born May
J! 1910 '"Chester, son of the lale Charles and Manha Pullms McElroY,
He was a member of the Eagle Rtdge Commumty Church an Army vel
eran ol World War II and a member ot the Racme Amencan Le•ton Plf~t

1609

CHOICE to meet
Chmce wtll meel at the Ractne
Ltbrary March 3, I 10 3 p m There
wtll be tour of the Southern Htgh
School agnculture depanment and
local greenhouses After that the stu- 1
dents wtll return to the library for •
actiVIties and a meelmg

e

He IS survtved by h1s wtfe Ruth McElroy of Pomeroy a brother Dayton McElroy ot Mtddleport meces and nephews
He was preceded m death by a siSter, Mae Spencer brothers Charles
Dayton and Vtrgtl McElroy
Servtces wtll be held Fnday I0 am at Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy
wtth the Rev Sharon Hausman otlictaung Bunal wtll follow m Metgs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy
.Fnends may call Thursday 7-9 p m at the funernl home

Film lo be shown
r::
•
The Homecommg w•ll be
;,jlow~ atthe Rutland Church of God
I
"un Mqtch 4 a~' 7 p m at the Rutland 1' mtsston wtll provtde up to 70 percent
Church of God. Slate Route 124 The m dtscounted rates for the techntcal
tilm IS a mmtstry ot lhe Btlly Graham servtces and equtpment needed to
EvangeltsliC Assoctatton and speaks tnstallthe educatiOnal computer systo those who have had to strugoie tern
Wtth peer pres, ure, belong.tng ::'nd
Larkms also dtscussed the posstmakmg the nght chotces For more b•ht) of mstalhng a d1gnal telemtormat1on call 742-2060
phone system m the new butldmgs m
conJunctiOn wtth the computer sysOrg;mtzatton meetmg set
tern, whtch would allow telephone
The Chester Basebaii/Soflball servtce at each computer work sta
Assoctat10n wtll meet Tuesday 6 30• uon. ehmmate busy stgnals to those
p mat the fire house Parents, coach
calltng m to the school and allow the
es and pubhc mvlled
diSirtclto use the telephone system to
mform students and parents about
VFWto meet
homework weather delays and othThe Tuppers Plams VFW and er mformallon
Auxtl1ary Post 9053 121h anm verThe dtstnct's computer mventory
sary dtnner 4 p m Saturday
wtll more than double after the new
butldmgs are operatmg Larktns esumated last mght thai the dtstncl has
90 compute.:S '" classrooms now
wh1ch wtll mcrease to 215 next year
Veterans Memorial
Carolyn Rnchte, the dtstrtct s
Wednesday, Feb_ 18
luhchroom
supervtsor advtsed tbe
Admissions -- None
board
that
the
'dtstnct had recently
Wednesday Feb 18
passed
a
state
mspectton
ot us operDischarges--- Betty Gladwell and
.lllon
wtth
no
v10laltons
noted
Ehzabeth Mcintosh
The tnspecuon was performed
Holzer Medical Center
un.mnounced
at Rtvervtew ElemenWednesday, Feb. 18
tal)
School
Discharges--Chanly Chand ler
The board commended the diSBobbt Montgomery Grace Barr. Paul
tnLI
s calelena staff for thetr perlorAnderson, Mrs Danny Stckles and
mance
daughter Wyoma Henderson and
Rllchte also dtstnbuted reports ot
Bente Roberts
the
department s opt:ratton noung
Births
that
ihe program was operatmg ' m
Mr and Mrs Rodenck Pennmg
the
black
Rllchte also reponed that
ton, son Galhpohs, Mr and Mrs
despite
an
tncrease tn patd lunch
Todd Ragan son Btdwell and Mr
pnces
ihts
year
parllctpallon by stuand Mrs D.IVId Swam son Crown
deols
who
pay
for
lunch'" lull had
Cny
not sullered although parttctpallon
by students who quahf} lor free and
reduced lunches had dropped sltghtly
The board approved the use ol the
Sex ~an Watt abstmence program
Am Ele Power . .... . .... . 48";,. m the Jllntor htgh and htgh school. to
Akzo . ..
. . . .... 95'/, be presented by Candace Heer LmAmrTech ... _.. ....... .
41 ),.
Ashland Oil .
547, da Kmg and Kathy Van Meter ol Jhe
Metgs County Health Department
AT&amp;T ............ _ . . . - . 63 ~
Bank One
56"1.
and Famtly and Children Ftrst CounBob Evans ........ _. .... . .. .2oi. Cil
Borg-Warner . . .
56).
The three soc tal workers met wuh
Broughton.. .... .. . .. .... ... 15\1
the
board last ntghtto outlme the pro
Champion .. .... .. .... .. . .
. 16
gram
whtch emphaSizes tire values
Charm Shps .... . .... .. . .. . . 4~.
a&gt;socmted wtth abstammg from sexCity Holdmg ... _.... . .... _.... 45
Federal Mogul . ....... _..... 48').
ual acttvtty, as well as alcohol and
Gannett- ........... ............... .6), tobacco whtle sull m school
Goodyear .. , .... .. ...... ...... 68'·
The boan! authonzed the purchase
Kmart __ , ...... _.. .... •. .... . .. . 13\1
of
a
h1gh JUmp ptl and a l11ght of hurKroger -· . .... .. .. . .... ... . . _41),
dles
fOF the school s track and field
Lands End .............. _... 40"1.
Limited
.
30~.
Oak Hill Flnl ................. - .26\1
OVB . . .
.
35 '.1
One Valley ........... ,.. ,_, ...... - .37'·
Peoples .. .. _
42
Prem Fmt .. -............. _.. .... -23~.
Rockwell .. .... .. . .. .
. .. 58
RD/Shell .............................51 '1.
Sears ..........-.......... __ _.. ........55~.
Shoney's ....... -...... _... _.. .. _.. .. 3"1.
Star Bank ........... .... -- __ ...... 59'.1
POMEROY
Wendy's ..... _,_... _.. ............. 21
Near Pomeroy-Meaon Bridge
Worthington ... __... _.. ........ -..... 1'.1
992·2588
VINTON
Stock reports are the 10:30
Gallle County Diaplay Yard
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
1Sii Mlln St
of Gallipolis-

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

Units ol the Metgs Counly Emer purt molor veh1cle acudent Alv1e
gency Med tcal Servtce recorded II Partlow lre.lted at the scene Midcalls tor asstst.mce Wednesday Umts dleport VFD ·'" "ted
respondmg mclud,d
9 17 p 111 Water Street Syracuse
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Meltnd.i Strang HMC Syracuse
5 04 am Red Htll Road Rutland
squad asststed
Marg1e Burnem VeterliO!'i Mernon,tl
10 :!) p m Rockspnngs Reh.ibil
Hospital Rutland squad asSisted
uauon Center Pomeroy, Ch.1rlotte
7 '20 ,, m Apple Grove Dorcas E.1kms VMH
Road.- Ractne Arden D.lvtdson
SALEMVFD
VMH. Syracuse squad asSisted
10 57 p m Fremont Stevens
10 2'4 .1m Laurel Street Mid- Road garage ltre at Todd Rothgeb
dleport Alvte Partlow Holzer Med- restdence Rutland VFD and squad
ICal Center
-.tsststed no IDJUrtes repurted
II 58 am While Oak Road
SYRACUSE
Pomeroy Carl Casto VMH
I() 42 am . Mtle Htll Road.
2 33 p m . state Route 143
Racme Mar~ K.user, V.MH,
Pomeroy Jtll Lemley HMC
10 17 p m College Road George
6 35 p m state Route 7 MiddleHolman HMC

Gallipolis livestock auction results
Produ cers Ltveslock Market
report Irom Galhpohs lor sales conducted on Wednesday Feb 18
Feeder Cattle
:!00-3tKJ# St $88-$107 HI $68$85 300-400# St $74 $92 HI $70$74 500 650# St $68 $83 HI $61
$78 650-800# St $~8 $75 Hf $54
$67
(Feeder Callie sale ts the second

r;;;SSfern pro•eCfS.. ~ontmued from page J

Hospital news

Stocks

_._ _

38N6o3

•

'

moderate accord1ng to report ~

Extended forecast
Fnday ntght Cloudy wtth a
chance of hght ram or dnzzle Lows
tn the upper 30s
Saturday Mostly cloudy wtlh a
chance of ram Htghs m the lower
50s
Sunday Mostly clear Lows m the
mtd 30s and htghs m the mtd 50s
Monday Panly cloudy Lows m
the mtd 30s and htghs m the mtd 5.0s

Meigs announcements

°

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PA

• IColumbusl42° I

In 5 years, civil rights seldom found way onto NAACP agenda

'About some positive things

Clarence V 'Yogt Bahr 65 Ashland, Ohto, dted unexpectedly on
Wednesday mornmg February 18 1998 at Samantan Hosp11al
He was born on September 7. 1932 m Long Botlom son of the late Ernest
and Bertha Betzmg Bahr
He was a graduate ol Woodrow W1l son Htgh School m Beckley WVa
In 1958, he moved to Polk OhiO where he lived unlil movmg to Ashland

,,,,,

--

tton, thmks that U S bombmg
should go on for "weeks ralher than
days ' to coerce Saddam mto readmlllmg U N mspectors
Haass acknowledges that sustamed bombmg nsks causmg extenstve ctv1han casualues and angenng
Arab naltons But, he says "U has a
logtc and a purpose" that Chnton's
"pumuve" bombmg does not
Bush s undersecretary of State,
Roben Zoelhck, thtnks Chnton
should demohsh Saddam's ehte
Republican Guards, hts home regton
of Ttkrn, and hts mtelhgence and
secret pohcc mfrastructure "and set
the long term lJ S objecttve of gctttng nd of htm, ' creatmg a Radto
Free Iraq and a government m ex tie
nutstde nl tbc country
But Haass and Zoclhck oppose a
U S ground mvnston
' The problem," satd Zoelhck,
"ts lhat we've heen saymg There s
only so much damage we can do,'
lowenng cxpcctattons Saddam IS
hcmg encouraged to stt out the
hombmg'
Zoclhck has 11 nghl Instead of
havmg Amencans worry about what
Saddatn mtght do after U S bombmg stops, Chnton ought to make
Saddam worry about what the U S
ts gomg to do to htm If the
prospects are scary enough, we
mtght wm wtthout a fight
(Monon Kondracke is exuulive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

our cyntcaltreatment al the hands of
Republicans?
Where should the ciVIl nghts bat
tic hre.s be drawn at a ttme when a
blacl man, Ward Conncrly ts lead
tng the. national campatgn tn outlaw
aft n&gt;1altve actton and an mcrca.-.ng
nu, •ocr of Afncan-An·cncans thmk
II tnakes better sense to &lt;pend more
money rebutldmg poor urban and
rural schools than on bustng to bnng
about school mteilralton?
The NAACP must offer the
nation a way through the maze of
Issues that hiler the CIVIl nghts land
scape
Wtthout such a prescnpuon for
leadershtp, the NAACP. wtll - hkc
the Congress of Rac1al Equahty, and
the Southem Chnsuan Leadership
Conference heforc 11, - become
nothmg more than a shell urgam7.atmn Bul wllh such a dcclarattOn, 11
can begm the long chmb back mlo
the front ranks of the movement for
ractal and soctal JUstice 11 spawned
89 years ago
Choosmg a new chatrmon, wllhoul scttmg a course that wtll take II
tnto the next century, w1ll lock the
NAACP mto a dungeon of tis own
makmg lind deal another blow to tts
chance for resurrection

•

• .~

Saddam should be scared into line

Letters to the editor

Clarence V. Bahr
Ir-----""T---..'
Mansfteld 140° I• ' ' ' ' [~~~~I!~]

'

No lnJunes were reponed followmg a garage tire m Salem Town
shtp Wednesday around II p m
Salem Townshtp and Rutland f11efighters were called to 1~e "re
mont Stevens Road restdence ol Todd Rothgeb at ter" kerosene heater
tgn ued gasohne lumes lrom an automobile fuel tank accerdmg to
Salem Volunteer Fife Department Ch1et D1ck L unbert
The car a 1986 BUick was de ~tro yed as was the garage Lambert
reported A tractor parked outs1de the garaJc was also damaged
Twemy hrefighters and five trucks re&lt;ponded the &gt;rene remammg at the sue for about three hours

program at a cost of $3,480 Coach
Casey Cotfey met wuh the board to
dtscuss the need lor eqUtpm~nl, and
noted that the dtstnct ts now unable
to host home track meets because of
the lack of nec"'isary equtpment
The board also approved the pur
chase of fencmg for the baseballli~ld
at a cost of $1.700 from Hockmg
Fence
Tnle I program admmtstrator
James Huff dtscussed changes m lhe
federal program whtch provides
remedtal mathematics readmg and
language arts mstruct10n to qualtfy
mg students m the elementary grades
In connectton wtth Hulfs pre&gt;enlallon the board approved a pur
cha.~ed servtces contract wtth lhe
Metgs Local School Dtslnct lor Title
I se rvtces
The hoard also:
- Approved James Bryan McCar
ley and Mtchael Atkmson as substt
tute teachers Sbeda Connolly as a
subslllute secretary. Jared Spencer
Chns Ntchols and Ktrk Reed a&lt; vol
unteer track coaches, pendmg c~rtt
hcat10n and Pam Douthttt as a home
mstructor for a htgh school student,
Approved a patd tullton student
Approved unpatd leave days tor
an elementary custodtan a mileage
mtc lor exempted udmmtstrattve
employees ol 31 5 cents approved
payroll lor the bUt ldmg prOJCCl.
Approved a field tnp to Wood
County W Va atrport for studenls at
Rtvervtew Elemenlary dunng Rtghl
lo Read Week
Se1 the next meetmg for March
IR at Rtvervtew Elemenlary at 5 p m
lor a work sessiOn and 6 30 for meettng
Presenl were board members John
Rtce Greg Batley M1ke Martm
Rtek Sanders and Roger Wtlltord
Well and Rttchte

HOME

Wednesday of each month)

~~~:~:~s
Cull Cows
Well Musded/Fieshed $3X-$42
MediUm/ Aver.tge $16-$38
Thtn/Ltght $30-$32 Bulls $35$56
Back To The Farms,
Cow/Call Pa~rs $350-525

Candidates file ... Continued rrom page 1
two-year House t&lt;rm ends
Kasputts withdrawal .1pp.uen1ly
clears the way lor Hamtlton County
Prosecutor Joseph Deters tu be the
Repubhc.m nommee lor lreasurer
Tax Co mmtsstOncr Roger Tracy also
withdrew tram the GOP race lhiS
week
- Democra! Rtchard Cordr.ty
ltled nommaltng pellllons tn the

tmger ot N!.!wark who

1~ le&lt;.~vrng

the

House thiS week tot 1ke uvtr lor Sen
N.1ncy Chtles D1x who rest1,ned
- Democr.lltc Judge Ronald
Susler satd he wtll run tor Ohtn
Supreme Court a~atnst Rcpublte.lll
Justice Paul Pleiler Susler who
served 16 years tn the House w.IS
.tppo•nted to the Cuyahog,, County
Common Pleas Court "' I ~l)&lt;
.1ttorney ge neral s race aga1nst
- Cleveland bust nessman Robert
Republican mcumbent Betty Mom
E Sallold announced that he wtll
gumery Cordray ,, former slate sohc
see k the GOPnommat1on lor Ihe seal
nor when F1 sher wao,; auorncy gener- now held by Democr 1t1c U S Rep
al also w.a"i a state reprcsentatr vc
LouiS Stokes who ts not seekmg re
- Former DemocratiC slate Sen election Several Democrlts tndud
EUJ&lt;n&lt; Branstool announc~d he wdl mg state Sen Jellrey Johnson and
run lor the scat he held Irom 19K2 to Cuyahoga Counly Prosecutor
1990 Branstool .~ Iarmer I rom U11 Stephante Tubbs Jones have shown
c.1 wi ll l.~e c Republtc.tn J,1y Hot an mterestm the seat

~PRING VALLE~. CI~E~1A
446·4524
., . - . ... .

7

Because we rt:prest:m
The Nationwtdc• Insuran ce f.ntcrpnsc
wh1ch has some of tht fines1 msurance
compan1es mthe nauon we can offer a
wtdc range of CO&gt;tuages for the.: w1dt::tl

speC! rum of dnvt rs We can help you gtl
the msurance }OU need Call us for a frte

3 ..

quott toda)'

ONE EVENING SHOW 7 30
STARTING FRIDAY
PIERCE BROSNAN IN

JAMES BOND 007,
TOMORROW

NEVER DIES POJJ

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of
Your Telephone Service, Then You Can
Call Hol~er Clinic in Ga~lipolis
Toll Free!!

Paula K. D1llon
ASSOCiate Agent
Jtm Rogers &amp; Assoctates
H1lcnd Rd lutle #I, Pomero~ OH 45769
Offtce 740 992 2318 888 445 9426

DIAL

NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE

992·7834
Holzer Clime
2iere 1or 'Jour Heaft!i, Here!or 'Jour Lifet1111£

O

• Nabolwlde Is on you- Side

Na11onw1de Muluat Insurance Company

and afflltaled Compames
Home office One Natlonw1de Plaza
Columbus OH 4321 5
Nat1onwidff 1s a reg stared federal seN1ce
man.: or NationWide Mutual

..

�...

Sports
Divi~ion

The Daily Sent~~~

,.

Thursday, February 19, 1998

IV girls' sectionals b~gin

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs swept the top awards at the
Tri-Valley Conference wrestling tournament held last Saturday at Nelsonville.- York High School. The
Marauders·won the the team charnpionsh•ip, while Marauder senior
Adam Thomas was named the TVC's
Most valuable Wrestler and Marauder coach Jim Sheets was the conference's couch of the year.
Meigs won the title with 207
points, followed by Wmerford with
19~ points. Belpre fini&gt;h ed in third
place with 175 point&gt;. followed 'hy
Nebonville-York with r40 ami Trimble with 27. Federal Hocking ftni&gt;hed
in sixth place. but their team score
was not available.
Thomas is a 145 pound se nior he
defeated Mall Huck of Waterford to
win lop honors in the conkrenrc. The
senior captain leads the Marauders in
takcdowns and team poinh this sea-

Tornadoes cru1se past Miller 43-27
rebounds .
Coach Alan Crisp said. "This w;Js
a great te~1m win. The girls came out
r~ ady to play and came out strong the
fn·q quaner. Nicole I Benson) had the
I V 'et: tion~lltournament win overt he hot h:tml and the other girls rewgs t ru~!!.li n ~ Mil kr Falcons Wednesday ni zecl that. The ·team was . very
nigl;t" at Alexander High School. - unselfiSh in getti11g her the h;dl \\hen
Southern ad' ances to the section- we needed to. Also. Stacy (Lyons) hit
al dwmpion:-. hip against Symmes several key hurket s when Mill er
V:tlk y Saturday at I p.m. at Alexan - tried to shut down Nicole . Every girl
der Hi ~h Sc huul. Pre.- sale tickets for did her part."
Crisp continued. "I think the key
that :; am~ &lt;Ire on sa le at Southern
Hi gh Sclwol at a cost of $3. A por- to the game was (lur m;m-tn-man
tion of p1r --.a\c.; tirkct n:turn~ go to defcnsiYC prCS"'UrC and Jhc f•1ct we've
shot we' ll for two and a h;df ga me~
till' Southl'rn . . port., pro~ ram . v.:hile
in a row. We fini . , heLl ..,tmng ag:1in ..,t
tic~eh at the door do not.
Eastern.
,hot ~earl y 50 percent at
GL·tting stronger and o..; tronger ns
South
Gall1a.
and had · a good ni ght
th ~ )c'ar progre~;set.l. Southern freshman Nllolc Benson com plimented a tonight. Hopefully. this wi ll gtve us
r rcat te.un effort and spar~ cd the Tor- some conlidcnce. Right now we're 10 in the new year. and we're lookm'
nado~~ in with a g~11ne- hi 8h ~() pnint-..
Benson was I 0- 1-1 from the lield. fnr 2-0. We'll have to be ready again
nearly unstoppable tn the fir&gt;t half on Saturday."
Miller's B~th Lanning put the
anJ going down th e ':ill't:l l' h of the
fourth qu;1rter. In her L1"1 outing. the Lady Falcons on top )-0 with a llll lnw-up jumper. hut Kim Sayre retal ninth grader to,-..l'd in IX markers.
Another '(lllll~" l t.' r. \{lphomore iated with a three for Southern at the
Stm.:y Lyon -..·fiiOk~.uh'&lt;llllage or the 5:40 mark to make the score ~-2.
trrmendou' pre,,ure se nior Cynthia Benson hit a jumper from thl' mid ·
Ca ldwell and junior p01111 guard were parameters of the paint. Lyons nailed
gathering arou nd lhc perimeter and u long two rn\m th~ elhm'&gt;'. then Benhit se\e ral crm·ial bucket'\ that son clo'ied \\ ith two ba,cline j umper...
stymied Miller's comch•d bid: for an 11 -2 t:tlly. With 5R.-I second&gt;
Lyons ended the ni ght with ten left. Darcy Conk hit a free throw as
the quarter closed 11-:1 t:dly.
point... .
Bcn'iOil locked nnlhc ~nal r~·)r he r
Kim Sayre had a greo.1t floor g;.1me
in running the Sou thern offense with fourth conq•~o:uli\'c fil'ld ~n;d \\'ithnut
seven point s. Cyn thia Caldwell h"cl a miss. Lyons hit a free throw and a
four, Kim Ihie nne. and Ericu Arnott short jumper. Ihie hit a free thro \''. and
•. one. Patti' Lawrence and Jenny Benson hit another in sparking an KFriend hacl good noor games "nd 0 run to begin the frame .. Heather
heiped pkk up the Tornado defense. Compston broke the Southern -treak,
whi le Heather Dailey came off the however. Miller trailed at 19-5
bench late to grab some key Southern went on to lead~ 1-9 al the

half after Christy Halasz hit one at the
bu zzer.
Miller picked up the pace in the
third frame with a sticky full coun
press and aggressive man -to-man
del:ense. As a-result of SC\ eral steals
ofT the press. and so me forced Southern shot s, Miller went on a 10-3 run
that cut the score tn2S: I9. a six point
margin. In the frame. Miller had five
of their team\ six stea ls. 0
AI I he 2: 10 mark Coach Crisp
called for a time otll that appllrently
did the trick. Southern turned the bltll
over. but a hustling Cynthia Calli well
saved a Miller hucht hy knocking
the ball our of Jennifer Browning's
hands on a break -away l"y-up. Without the save. Southern would have
heen faced with a tight fom point
game .
Crisp added. "We got impatient
early in the third quarter. Kim Sayre
took contro l of the offc;1se. then
Nicole and Stacy hit big buckets to
get us hack on trac ~ . plus then erotire
defense really picked up the pace.
After that we started .to click again ."
Sout hern kd 31-19 :tfter three
rounds then cont inuing an 1 ·1 - ~ run
into the fourth round. pushed ahead
35 -21 . Two C tl.uwell and Benson
scores apiece. 'md a Sayre l&lt;llly
turned t~e trick .
Southern had 18 steals overall in
an aggressive defensive effort. led by
Cald we ll's five and Benson's four.
The Lady Tomadoes pushed on to a
43-:r? final.
Southern.hit 16-35 overall for 45.7
perce nt. hit 10 - ~0 nt the line, and
grabbed . 25 rebounds t Benson 8) .
Southem had 17 turnover&gt;. 18 steals.
I 0 ass ists (Lyon s 4. Ctldwcll 3.
Friend 3): and 15 foul s.
Miller hit 10-36 two-pointers, 0-

3 three-pointers. was 5-12 mthe line.
with 28 rcbmmds (Cook 7. Plant 6) .
Miller had six steals tPI:tnl 4). H
turnovers. fi,e asssists (Compston 3).
and 18 foul s.
Southern. 6-1 S. advances to Saturday's final. while Miller bows out
at 3-18.
·
Quarter L!!JJ!!s
Southern
11 -11-9-12=43
Miller
3-6-1 0-8=27
Southern: Cynthia Caldwell 1-02/3=4. Kim Sayre 0- 1-4/6=7. Stacy
Lyons 4-0-2/5= 10. Kim I hie 0-0"
1/4=1. Nicole Benson 10-0-0=20.
Erica Arnott 0 -0- 1/~= I Totals: 15-110/20=43
Miller: Beth Lanning 2-0-0=4.
Kri"en Plant I -0-0/J=2. Jennifer
Brow nin g 0-0-112= I. Darcy Cook ~0- 1/2= II. Angie Luclls 1-0-0=2. Britnei Mcrckl e 1-0-212=4. Heather
Compston 1-0-0=2. Christy Halasz 10-1/1 =3. Totals: 11-0-5/12=27

•
•
•

'

or

doll4-9. 9-71.
The victory wus the Broncos
l~th in the last 14 games. Washing ton moved into third on the school's
career scoring list with 1.564 points.
The Rockets were paced hy Clay ton Burch with ~7 points.
Central Mi chigan (4-19. 2-13)
showed a "'Piit per"'on:ll ity again~!
Eastern Mkhigan (lo-R. 12-4.). scori~g 70 point s in the second half after
be111g held to I ~ in the lirst h;tlf
The Eagk~ u ~ed 11 2~ -2 run In
open a .1-1-10 lead and were ahead :161~ at the l1alf. That was too much for
the Chippewas to overcome.
"How do )OU explain gh·ing up
I ~ point s in the first half. then turn
around and give up 70?" asked
Eag les coach Milton Barnes. "That's
inexplicahle. I can't accept it. hut it 's
~omc thin t; we ha\'C 10 llndcr~land we
can't let happen."
Ea rl Boykins suired 24 and Derrick Dial 21 for Eastern Michigan.

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center

2nd Set Free
EVERYDAY!

,~
:" '

'

I

..
1

Pomeroy, Ohio

By KEN PETERS
RAI"CHO MIR,\GE. C:tlil IAf')
- Nobnd) -.tn~ "T:tlc Me· Ou t tn the
B :li l 1;a l1l ~ .. \\ith tilL' -.. am~ llllhridk·J
enthu siNlL When llc- kllnweu
·· Hill ) Cn\\. ··t h~: r~.· \\a.., no mi~ta~ing
hi ~ ra-..p~ ,.z\it.'c . H ~lrr ) Ca r~1 y pcrsonifkd h:hehalltnL·ount\e..,~ funs .
A f:tilcd b:tllplayer who wa&gt; a
· hug ~ 'i UL'Ct'SS in tlw hroo.t(ka~l hoot h.
hc pmjrcted hi~o It:li l for the game ;~nd for Iif~ ~ :1nn'~ the airwoavcs for
more 1h:111 a ha~r~ce ntury.
Caray. "hu "'"'believed ,to be 77.
died Wednesda y of cardiac arrest.
His death wa&gt; mourned by many,
inCluding haseb:t ll people. First Lady
Hillary Rbdlwm Clinton and fans
across the cou.ntry.
C:tray. who always considered
himself JUS! one nf the guys in the
bleachers. would
''-You can' t beitt
fun at the old ballpark." And he
see med to live th:ll line.
" It 's reall y hecn a heel or run for
H;uTy - ju'il an ama1ing human
being . He squee7ed every drop out of
(See CARAY on P:1ge 5)

&lt;87

.L jl~· .~ ~

'

"'Y·

'

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Ken1neth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hannlng,R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'Ill

-·

Michael Stacey, Brant Dixon, Ulises Barraza and
Chris Imboden. In the third row are Jim Yeauger,
Vincent Broderick, Adam Thomas, David Shuler,
Franco Rom uno. C.D. Ellis and Corey Stewart. In
the fourth row are John Ambrose, Matt Stewart,
Jason Young, Jeff Brown, Andy Doczi and Brian
Young.

"Harry was one of a ktnd and
nobody could sing 'Take Me Out to
the Ballgame' like he could. And I
hope he's doing a seventh-inning rendition in heaven. " Mrs. Clinton said .
An orphan from a rough St. Lou"
neighborhood. Caray dreamed or
playing major league hn schaH. But '"
a teenager. he atlended a tryout with
the Cardinals and"'" rejected .

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Yoll'

fOP HONOREES -The Meigs Marauders, Tri-Valley Conference
wrestling champions won the top Individual honors at the TVC
. Wrestling Tournament held last weekend at Nelsonville· York High
· ~chool . Longtime Marauder ·coach Jim Sheets (left) won selected
~- as the conference's coach of the year, while two-time TVC champ!·
on Adam Thomas (right) was select'!d as the Most Valuable Wrestler.

Yollr

-

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SUPER BOWL CONTEST WINNER - Chris Varian of Cheshire
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Daily Sentinel. Nobody predicted the correct score of the game won
by Denver 31·24, but Varian was closest as she picked Denver win·
ning by a score of 31-27. Varian received a $50 check for winning
the contest. Presenting the check to Varian Is Dave Harris of the Sentinel's advertising staff.
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TVC WRESTLING CHAMPS - The Meigs
Marauders wrestling team won the Tri-Valley
Conference wrestling championship Saturday at
Nelsonville· York High School. In front are (L· R)
Chris ~rawsczyn, Ben Molden, Jeremy Jones,
Ben Mttchell and f!aul Michaels. In the second
row are Adam Barnett, Chris Snouffer, Benji Call, .

Caray, ,,;_1C=on::.:.l::.:.•n:::.ue::;d:..;l:.:;ro::.:.m:.:...:.P::Jag;,_:e~4:..:)
.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

740-992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094

$1951stPayment

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HARRY CARAY

ford. Bellaire St. John. Fe&lt;leral Hocking . Carrollton, Nehonville-York.
Shenandoah. Trimble, Gallia Academy; Marie!! a and the host Warren
Localteam.
Weigh -ins will b~ from 4:00 to
5:30 on Friday. with the wrestling
getting underway nt 6:30 Friday
evening and · Saturday morning at
10:00.
Atlmission is $5'• per session or $R
for ·an all day pass. Warren Local
High Schnol is located on State
Route 339. You '"ke State Route 7
from Pomeroy and take the State
Route :139 Beverly exi t. Warren
Local High School is loc;ucd eight
miles from Route 7 on the right hand
side.
The sectional tournaments will
also be held at Warren )..ocal High
Scl1ool. The two-day tournament will
start on Friday. Feh. ~7.

about four .lifetimes. He really lived
life to the fullest. " Cubs genera l manager Ed Lynch said.
·
Hall of Farner Stan Musial said:
" Wc're going to miss old Harry. He
was alway s the life or the party, the
life or baseball...
Mrs. Clinton said Carny helped
her celebrate her 50th birthday.

•

..

Harry Caray
dies at 77

son. He has 34 wins and only two
losses with 33 pins. he has ~9 takedowns and 199 team points this
year. He is a two time TVC champion .Thomas was-;the only Marattders
to win first place honors in the tournament. hut Meigs had eight runnerup finishes. Second place finishers
for Meigs in the weight d ;ISSes were
Jeremy Jones ( 103). Benji Call (II~).
Chris Krawsczyn ( 119), Alan Lee
(125). David Shuler 1152). Mike
Parker (171 ). Franco·Romuno 1~15)
and Brian Young (heavyweight).
Meigs will take it's 46-25 'record
to W~rrcn Local High School th is
weekend when they take part in the
Southeast Cla&lt;sic Wrestling Tournament.
The tournament will feature 12
teams from around Southea&lt;tern
Ohio. Taking pan in the tnmnament
will be East Liverpool. Caldwell ,
Jackson. Meigs. River Valley. Water- ·

DON tArE MOrORS, INC.

· Miami hammers Ohio 85-53;
Marshall downs BGSU 70-52
By TIM PUET
until the final two minutes of the first
Associated Press Writer
hlllf, when Wally Szcze rhiak scored
It' s awfully eatly to be making all the points in a 1 0-~ run that gave
predictions for next season. hut Mia- • Miami a 40-25 halftime lead. Szczermi of Ohio coach Charlte Coles biak hit two three- pointers, " jump
shot and a pair of free throws in th"t
already is say.ing Ohio wt ll win the
Mid-American Conference title in stretch.
199R-99.
"We let the game get away from
Coles made the remark after his us in the first half. " Hunter said. " We
RedH&lt;IWh h11cl adminbtcred an 85- as n team needed to he more aware
53 thr:tshin~ to the Bobcats pn Ohio's of Szczerbiak . He reall y put some
home court.
points on the board in a hurry ...
It's been a long season for Ohio
S;llljay Adell led Ohio with 15
(-l-19 overall. :'- 14 conference) and- - poinJs.
coach L:trl)' Huntrr. Miami ( 1.1-1 1. 7In other MAC action Wednesday.
9) made it longer hy rolling up ils Western Michigan movc!d into u tic
largest margin
vtctory at Ohio in
for first place with idle Ball State in
the 90-year history of the &gt;cries.
the West Division by defeating Tole " I fee l for Larry Hunter and I do 86-76. Eastern Mid1igan heat
know what a good coach he is.''
Central Michigan 1!7 - X~ and Marshall
.Cole'i saitl . "Bull can't fed too sorposted a?()-52 victory m·er Bowling.
ry for him hecause he is going to win
Green. Kent is ~1 1 AJ..ron tonight.
the league next year. Ohio will be
Rashod John son srored ~II points
back and that's good news for the and Saddi Washington and Jason
· Ohio-Miami rivalry...
Kimbrough had I Xeach for Western
The teams played a close g;une
Michigan ( IX-5. 12-:1) against Tole.. ·..

PASSES tO'TEAMMATE .._Southern's Kim lhle (14) passes to an
out-of-view teammate while_Miller's (23) delends on the play during
Wednesday night's Division IV sectional opener at Alexander High
School. where the Tornadoes won 43-27. (Photo by Scott Wolfe)

• •

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Meigs wrestlers win TVC title;
Thomas captures MVP honors

Thursday, February 19, .1 998

By SCOTT WOLFE .
· Sentinel Correspondent
Scoring II . unanswered points in
the first quarter. the Southern Lady
l (mladoe&gt; blitzed to a 43 -27 Divi&gt;ion

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
145 N. 2ND AVE.
•

·-

•

MIDDLEPORT, OH .

�.

'

The Daily Sentie.c:l~

By The Bend

Freeloading siSter is ruinir1g her fathef's holJse With dogs ·
four dogs, and they hqvc virtuall y
trashed the pl ace. The liv ing room
Ann
carpet smells like a cow bam. The
house is covered with dog hair, and
Landers
IW7 l •" 1
'nr _., T1m~ ·
since the dogs sleep with Anne. her
S~ndn:- ~1 •' Jn.J Crc~h&gt;P
bedsheets are filthy.
\) nda'JI•'
Despite the fac t th at my parents
fin anc~d her co 11 ege education.
Dear Ann . Land ers: L ·ke . ,,,any Anne, who has always had a good
who grew up du ring the De pre ss ion. JOb, pays rent only sporad tcall y. My
my parents took grcJ t pride in father's rese ntment is eating him
pul ltng the mse lves up by the boot- ali ve.
. , trap:-. . The ir home was the ir c;_tstl c.
This would be easy fo r me to
and they huth worked dtl igc ntly to write off as none of my business. but
m ~un t a in it.
I would li ke my child re n.·ages 2 an d
When mv llllHhc:r died six year~
~li!ll. m\• li r ~tcr. " A nne." now 36.
\\:as livifl!.! at hmth.' with the folks .
Sh~..· ncv~r~ m mcJ nuL An ne now has

the beauti ful· home I grew up in
If there are none in Spence r, hire
bemg turned into a dump is very a cleaning woman. I urge you to get
pamful. ·
going. The longer you wait, the
Dad complains to me constantly worse it will be for all concerned.
about Anne s freeloading. He wants
Dear Ann Landers: My husba,d ·
to remod• l his home but say' he and I have been married for I5
won't do it as long as the dogs are years , and we have three chihren.
there. The uay things are going, I'm Over th e course uf our marriage , ,y
afraid the dogs wt ll outli ve him . husband has had several affairs. This
Please te ll me what to do. Thi s is is well-known by a number or' peocritical. •nd I'm beside myself. -- ple because he appeared publiC'Iy
with various women.
S.L. in Spencer.. N.Y.
Dear Spence r: Have you heard
The most visible affair (al so the
of professional house cleaners? most painful for me) was his liai son
They us uall y work in teams and do a · with my sister. I nearly left him : but
5, to spe nd more time wi th their wonderful job. Look in the phone he pro mised " never again " if I
grandpa.
book. and make an appointme nt would gi ve him one last chance. I
He is gelling on in years. and I You will wonder what took yvu so agreed.
My sister has two children. I have
want to visit more ofte n. hut sc~ing long.

three. The' question is, how much
should I tell the children? This is a
rather small town, and goss ip travels
fast. I would not be at all surprised
to learn that they have already heard
something. Will you please advise
me? -- Indiana Mom
Dear Mom: I see nu reason to
tell them anything. Should they
come to you and as k if the stories
they have heard are true, you must
be honest and say. "Yes, but that is
all in the past. and we don't need to
think about it anymore." To open a
dialogue with children about their
father's infidelity would be puniti ve
and co unterproductive.
Dear Ann Landers: We rc•cntl y
.
. thc famt.1y. Th c noucc
had a dcat h '"

COMPUTER
PERFORMANCE
UPGRADES

in the paper read "pri vate graveside
service." An in-law, who had neither
seen nor spoken to a family member
in 20 years, showed up at the cemetery and tagged ~ i 0ng for the wake. I
think this wa&gt; in extremely poor
taste. My husband disagrees. What
do you say, Ann ·.' --G riev ing in Gary.
Ind.
Dear Gary; A graveside service
is not a socia! event. An yone who
chooses to be prese nt should be
made to feel welcome.

CELEBRATES 100TH BIRTHDAYGlada Davis observed her
100th birthday on Feb. 12 with a her children at the hQme of Judy
and Kenny Rockhold of Portland.
"'rs. Davis' son, Clyde Davis visited two days earlier than
the party. At the party were Rockholds of Portland, Cindy Lambert,
Robert and Bea Davis, Middleport; Ronald and Pauline Davis, and
Rita Wal rQr, Dexter; Dian Molden, Langsville; Floyd Weber of Portland; M; ·y K. Holler of Long Bottom; Tina Molden and two s r.ns,
Brande 1 and Justin Hanikla of Rutland, Rebecah Kerns and i1yan
Rockh •in, Portland.
:Jrs. Davi!! rece!ved cards from tr-iends. A cake lnal , ibed
"100" ·-.~as served and pictures were taken.

in cl ose int erpersonal co ntaL'l with

New York University School of

their peers. sc ience has not fully
uncove red the answe r. Indeed .

Medicine
For AP Special Features
Gcneratiqns of high schookrs
and college students call mononucleosis the " ki ssi ng" di sease with good reason. Ex perts believe
that mononucleosis. an infecti on
caused by a virus. is transmitted
through oral secretions and close
interpersonal -contact as well as by
blood transfu sions.
The infection is caused by the
Epstein- Barr virus. a member of the
herpes virus family. Mononucleosis
primarily strikes adolescents ages I5 ·
to 20 years old and rarely occurs in
young children and older adults.
Studies
show that 90 pe rcent of the
BIRTH ANNOUNCED - Mr. and
adult
population
has evidence of
Mrs. Pete Johnson of Pomeroy
Epstein
~
Barr
antibodies,
yet
announce the birth of their son,
appears
in
only
a
mononucleosis
Theron Douglas, born Jan. 9 at
fraction
of
the
population.
Camden Clark Memori61 HospiAlthough the infec tion is easily
tal, Parkersburg, W. Va.
spread,
the--illness is infrequent and
The infant weighed 11
unpredictable.
Unlike measles .and
pounds, 2 ounces and was 20
inches long.
chic,kenpox , where inf~ciion is genHe is the grandson ol Mr. and erally symptomatic and easy to idenMrs. Herbert Short of Chester tify, the source of infection in
and Mr. and Mrs. Butch Johnson mononucleosis is usuall y not
ol Racine, and the great-grand- known, making the disease impossison of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Short ol ble to prevent.
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Why does mononucleos is strike
Carothers of Jasonville, Ind., teen-agers ,, , prevalentl y'' Other
and Mrs. Elizabeth Stover of thanthe factt~~i teen-agers iue often
Racine.

mononucleosis is a common reason

why younger military recruits arc
temporarily disabled and unable to
participate in military ac tion .
Mo.nonucleos is often strikes in
two separate stages. an acute illness
followed by a more indolent condition. Initial sy mptoms include fever.
sore throat . fat igue. loss of appetite
and swollen lymph glands. These
symptoms persist for two In three
weeks. In more than 50 percent of
cases. the splee n enl arges . The li ver
may enlarge sli ghtly. too. and
swollen tonsi ls can make brc athih~
di flicult. Nevertheless, despite the
long recuperati ve period and persistent fat,igue, mononucleosis rarely
leads to more seve re illness.
Often with thi s condition, the
patient begins io feel better and
appears to be on the road to recovery
when a small amount of phy ~cal
exertion or exerctsc hurls him into
mononucleos is' second stage. Light
exercise can elicit extreme fatigue
accompanied by fever. These symptoms can linger for 2 to 3 months,
and in extreme cases, up to six
month s. Some college students who
contract mononucleos is take a leave
of abse nce for a se mester befor~
they are stron ~ enough to return 1&lt;:

JI&amp;J.

·'

POMEROY, OH

James Witherell, MD
Family Practice

Steven
MD
Orthopedics

Joseph Li, MD
Pediatrics

Michael Zirille, MD
Family Practice

Bridget Skinner, MD
OB/Gyn

Wihna Mansfield, MD
Family Practice

Howard Greene, MD .
Ophthalmology

G. Wilson Bowers, MD Pradeep Kandula, MD
Pediatrics
, Pediatrics

Richard Mendieta, MD
Pediatrics

James Orr, MD
Pediatrics

HOLZER
Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
740-992-0060

I. H. Kim, MD
Pediatrics

Jon Sullivan, MD
Pediatrics

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
.GUN SHOOT
SUN.; 1:00 PM

Calif. 90045

school and complete their course nf :
study.
Nn cu re~ for mononm:h.:osis ha ve
hcc n disCllVCrcd. Al'ctamimlphcn tH'
iiSriri n Ci.\11 he USCd l"or fe ver or pain .
(However. as pirin should he avoided
in youn ~ children hccause 11f tl1e
slight pnss ihilit y nl Rcyc's sy n- ·
dromc. a rare hut serious condition .
which ..:an l:ausc inllammalion of lhc
hrain .) Some cnmplil'~ltion s of the
illness. such as sc~~ crc swelling of
the airway. can he treated with eosti cnsteroids. But the hesttrcatment for
infectious mononuclcos i ~ is rest ancl
adequate nutrition until the fever.
sore throat and l'ccling of m&lt;.lktisc ,
disappear.
There is hope on the horizon that .
· a vaccine can be developed to help ; ·
minimi ze the illness' debilitating ·
effects. But no vacc ine is expected :
in the near future. •
As long as viruses are transmit- ·
ted, mononucleosis will likely continue among I5 to 20 year olds. The :
good news is that after the necessary
rest period, nearly all patients recov- •
er and return to their normal activi - ·
ties.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The lottowtng appttcallona
and/or vertned complaints
were received and the lot·
lowing draft, propolod, or
.llnat .actlona were taeuad,
by lht Ohto Environmental
Protection agency (OEPA)
teat week.
"Actions"
l11ctude lha adoption, modi·
· llCIItlon, or repeal of ordart
.(other than e,margtncy
ordere); the laeuanca,
dental, modification or
revocation ol ltcanaea, par·
mlta, taaata, vartancea, or
certtltcatea;
and the
approval or dlaapproval ol
plana and apectllcattona.
"Draft Actions" are wrltt8n
atatemenla ol lht Director
ol
Environmental
Protection'• ·(Dfractor's)
Intent with raapect to the
laeuance, denial, etc. ol a
permit, llcanat, order, etc.
lnltraetad persona may
submit written commants
or request a public meeting
regarding_ Draft Acltona.
Commenta or public meet·
lng ·requests must be alillmtttecl within 30 daya ol
notice ol the Draft Action.
·~ropoeed
Actlona" are
,j,rltton · atatamanta ol lha
llractor'a Intent with
(tlpact to the laauance,
tJnlal, modlltcatton, ravo-

By Dr. Roger E. Wetherbee, ·
Clinical Associate Professor of
Internal Medicine and Infectious ·
Diseases al the New York University School of Medicine.

~lon.

or renewal of a pW"

atll, ttcanae, or variance.
•rttten comments and
(equaeta lor a public meet1!111 regarding a Propoltd
+cllon may bt aubmllled
wllhln 30 daya ol notice of
Cha Propoaed Action. An
"

·'

:scon Smith, DO
Family Practice

William Smith, MD
Orthopedics

K. K. Lee, MD

Pediatrics

John Tyson, MD
Pediatrics ·

•

ervzces
•
•
•·
•
•
•
•
•
•

•

.,

Family Practice
Pediatrics
Orthopedics
General Surgery ·
OB/Gyn
Ophthalmology
LabQratory
Mammography
Physical Therapy
X-Ray

I

'

lntcnqtjw l!l4fiH« tcchniri'KJ

.C ~

135

30 Announcements

's end questions to Ann Landers.
Creators Sy ndicate. 5777 W. 'Centu- ,
;·y Blvd.. Suite 700. Los Angeles. :

(•

JosephFreenlan, DO
Family Practice

fr!

.

, "Build Your ~eam"

.:; ~

•

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

In Memory

far:

360° Communications

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF.

540 WEST UNION STREET

~ ~
ATHENS, .OHIO .&amp;5701
_ . PHONE (7.&amp;0) 59.&amp;·2227 FAX (7.&amp;0) 59.&amp;·662.&amp;

111J 'AMTA Mttnher

113 W. 2ND ST.

•Licttt.ttd l7y Ohi1J Stull Mtdica/ BrJ(JrrJ
Com~Hn•atlon

who passed away
two years ago
today, Feb. 19.
The
world
may
change from year
to year
And friends from
day today,
But never will the
one I love
From memory pass
away.
Wife, Nancy

Room Additions • Roofing

TREE SERVIGE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

FREE ESTIMATES

((J 14) 367·0266

614-992-7643

1·800·950·3359

STARTING
FRI., FEB. 20

Don't let whiter
give you the blues.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

Start today with a new home, new
addition or just a little remodeling .

sky.

In one conversation with Lindsey,
these individuals said. Clinton's con·
tidant tried to persuade Tripp to ~o
see Roben Bennett. the lawyer Clin ton hired to represent hi m in the
Paul a Jones sexual harassment-case.
In the conversati ons the individuals said Lindsey had with Tripp. Cl inton' s adv iser was speaking about an
episode in which a woman oamed
Kathl een Willey told Tripp that Clin ton kissed and fondled her. Tripp said

suit againsl Clinton.

Lindsey's conversati ons with
Tri pp are important because of the
emerge nce in Starr's probe of a key
document - a three-page li st of
"talking poi nts'' that Ms. Lewinsky
allegedly gave to Tri pp last month.
In it. the document urges Tripp to
do the same th ing th at Lindsey
allegedly adv ised her to do last summer - to go see Benne.u.
The "talking poi nts" document ·
suggests that Tripp tile an affidavit in
the · Jones case saying that it was
"pl ausible.. that Wi ll ey made up her
story o( an encounter with tile president.
Willey also was expected to be a
grand jury witness in the investi gation.

,.

told officials she was not trying to kill
herse lf. Still , she was placed her
un'der 24-hour supervision.
Ms. Zamora won't be eligible for
parole until 2038 for killi ng 16-yearold Adrianne Jones in 1995. Ms.
Zamora's ex-fi ance. fonmer Air Force
Academy cadet David Graham, wi ll
tried on a murder charge later thi s
year.
· Prosecutors say the couple ki'lled
Miss Jones after Ms. Zamora learned
Graham had sex wi th the girl.

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates.

Call 614-843·.5426m••~""

2110/1 mo. pd.

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excava1lng
&amp;' Trenching
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
·Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Jt!e N. Sayre

614-742·2138

McFEE ROOFING
&amp; PAINTING
Specializing In:
.New Roolo, !lool Repairs,
GuHera, Interior &amp;
Exterior Painting,
Drywall Repair.
Low11t rates during the
wtnlar months ol
Jan.-Feb.-Mar.
Qualify Work Guaranteed

Free Eat. • Fully lntured
1-614-992-9057
Middleport, Oh.

General Construction
Dozer a: Backh()(,
Septic Systems,
Utilities, Roofing, New
Homes, RemodeUng

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

..

.HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer .Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

(614) 992·3838

U/11Wn

'

LIMESTONE

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Special Thru
March

C/LASSUFIEDSI

8 ton Delivered

ANNOUNCEMENTS

$120

005

Mileage Limit
Call Randy

992-5050

Searching tor Information on an
ancestor. a samu el Reed born
about 176 5, wife Mary, lather of
Major Reed, born 1789 . Joh n
Reed , Box 108, Kam ab , Ut ah

SUSIE
Home for the
llderl31
AI
260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·7147

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10/2Si96/tfn

9jJ2-6810 2/131 mo.

64741.
Stan dating tonight! Have fun .

play Ohio's dating game. 1·800-

WILL HAUL-

ROM.A.NCE . allltension 7 484

JUST CALL.

30 Announcements
Herba l He.allng lor Wome n,

992·2646

March 7th, 10.4. Educational op·
ponunity. Focus on wellness Is·
sues relating to woman's rep ro·
duclive hea ll hcare. lun ch a nd
supplies Included. Wo rks hop
near Albany. Maps sen t upon
. regis t ratiOn . Fee $45 . Con tac t
1-ierba l Sage Farms. 740· 742·
SAGE . herbsage@eurekanet.com

Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt;
Sand. No· Minimum.
(Jleasonallle Jlaus).
(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

WiCKS
HAULING .

40

REMOVAL
Driveways,
Parking Lots, ete.
Call Anytime
Home

· t 1/2 year old female Beagle, runs
rabbi1s. 740·985·4407.

Chickens and Ducks Call Al te r 7
p.m. 1740)

591·1897

KINGS'
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Decks, Painting
Call Us For A Free Estimate

614·742-3090
614-742-3324
61 4·74~;~?!,6,

mn M

Pat's Herb Corner
Located .at Dan's
290 N. 2ncl Ave.,
Middleport, OH

In Memory
In Memory Of
ROSE ANN
STANLEY

2~003

Female cat all willie, orue eyes.
hller tra1necl. 304·458·2218.

Limestone,

Gas stove &amp; refngerato r freezer .
bolh wbrk 304-773·5876.

Gravel, Sand,

Old scrap metal to give away,

Top Soil , Fill Dirt

740-992-7841 .

614-992-3470

Playpen and humidifier. pidl up on
fron t porch . 2872 Third St r eet,

VItamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products

Two 6 months old kl ltens, 740·
992-5486.

CHESHIRE
FOOD HART
4 AM-1 2 PM Mon.·Sal.;
Sun. 6 AM-Midnight
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Coid
Lunch Sandwich
Introducing Plua
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Toppings
Catlin Orders Accepted
740-367.7838

60

Lost and Found

Found : While · Brown-and Black
Hun ting dog. No Collar! Need to
Pro..e Ownsh•p 704-379·9242
Found : A lhasa Ap so White and
Area (740) 3677554
T~n Che5hire

LOST: Black/while S•berian Husky w/blue ·eyes. female. answers
to ·sTAR • i n vicinity ot Dead
man 's Hill. Please call 304·6754860 REWARDI

Lost· Gold Noah's Ark Bracelet, in
GDC Gym Call (740)446-7558

614-992·3141 .
Cell Phone

Giveaway

Syracuse.

Home lmprovemenls

SNOW

Personals
WOME'N EASYI 'You

GET
Pic k
A.nd Choose!! Pick One NOW! 1·
9 00·265· 90 77 Ext . 4566 16+
SetV·U, 61 9-645·8434, $2.99JMtn.

992-7943 992·5404

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
·Room Additions
•New Garages
PI b'
' El ec I r Ica I &amp; urn 1ng
•Roofing
· Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
A!so Con crete Work
(FR EE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUN G til
992·62 15

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AIJ. Yard Sales Mu&amp;l

Be Paid In Advance.
PEAPLtNE ' 2:00p.m.
lhe day belore the o&lt;1
I&amp; to

run.Sunday

ed ition . 2: 00p.m.
Frldoy. Monday edition
-1 0:00 a.m. Saturday.

I
L,._....,....,.:,;._,__, .
Pom eroy, Ohio

Mo vmg Sate· Satu rd ay February

21st ., 9-6 . 238

w_"" Road , Rio

Grande . 4 Miles Pa ss College ,
Route 325 , Furmture, Clothes .
Baoy llem s. OCids and Ends

(740)379-2244

Pomeroy,
Middleport
.&amp; Vicinity

Zamont placed under suicide watch
FORT WORTH, Texas (A P) ~
The. former Naval Academy midshipman sentenced to life in prison
'for murdering her romantic rival was
under a suicide watch after wounding
herse lf with a razor blade.
Diane Zamora, convic ted and sente nced on Tuesday, cut herse lf on the
upper left arm sometime before
Wednesday morning, said Tarrant
County Jai l commander James Skidmore.
Skidmore called the wound
·"superficial," and said Ms. Zamora

LOHG·s
COHSTROOIOH

Call Today~ Free Estimates!
992·5535 or .992·2753

Pomeroy
During the fi rst conversation with
Tripp. Lindsey asked whether there
might be an innocent explanation for
Willey's e ncoun&lt;~ r with the president,
the individuals said. Tri pp said she
was cert ain of what she had seen and
heard and that there was no innocent
explanation. they said.
At the time of Lindsey's contact
with Tripp, the Willey matter was
becoming part o( the Mrs. Jones law·

Fr••JEathnat••

2112/12/tfn

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION

·-

."trltn

2 0 Y rs . Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Sunday Calis)

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE

Ms. Willey·~ lipstick was smeared
and her blouse untucked after she
came out of the Oval Offi ce.
Tripp contac ted Lindsey after
learning that Newsweek magazine
w~ s plannin g a story about the
alleged encounter between Willey
and Cl inton, the individuals said.

0 , 5 coutf'l

JONES'

(No

But even the president's support·
ers note that the pri vilege is normally considered to apply to foreign policy, nati\)nal se~urity or diplomatic
matters. Attorney-cli ent priv ilege
appl ies to communications between a
lawyer and his client . However. an
appeals court ruling in the Whitewater investi gation said the pri vilege
does ~ot apply to· government
lawyers in the face of a grand jury
subpoe na. The Supreme Court
refu sed .to review the ruling. ·
Clinton's political advisers have
cautioned aga in st taking the executive privilege route: they fear that voters who so far have given Clinton the
benelit of the doubt on the Lewinsky
matter wi ll consider the legal maneuver a form of stonewalling.
Lindsey's testi mo ny came amid
indications that last sum mer he. may
have urged a key pote nt ial witness.
Linda Tripp, to contact Clinton's pri vate lawyer.
Tripp brought the allegati ons of a
presidential affair and cover-up to
light in Janu ary after sec retly tapi ng
her conversations with Ms. Lew in-

5

Garage~ • Replacement Windows
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Public Notice
ad!udtcatlon hearing may
be . hold on a proposed
action II a hearing requeal
or oblectlon la ·recalved by
the OEPA wtthln 30 daya ol
WAYNE'S PLACE
teeuance ol the proposed
Presents BAD HABIT
actton. Wrlnen comments,
SAT. NIGHT ONLY
requests lor public matt·
Changes
Beginning Nexl Week
lngt, and adludlcatlon hear·
. Euchre To urn. Now a·pm on
lng requeata must be sent
Tues. Pool tourn. now
to: Hearing Cla~k. Ohto
Environmental Protection
Agency, P.O. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 4321&amp;.
1049 (Telephone: 614-.
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
2129). "Final Actlona" are
actions ol l~e Dtreetor
POMEROY
which are tllectlva upon
leauance or a alated effec·
EAGLES CLUB
tlve datL · Pursuant to Ohio
Revised Coda Section
3745.04, a Final Action may
by · appealed to the
Environmental
Ravtaw
Appeals
Commlsaton
(ERAC) (formerly known 11
~ Public Notice
Public Notice
lhl Environmental Board ol
Review) by a peraon who ActiOn, may be appealed to with 3 days alter ltttng the
was a party to a proceeding the ERAC by ltttng an appeal with the ERAC.
Final approval ol plana
before the Director by filing appeal wtlhln 30 daya ol
a!l aPpe! l wtt!lln 30 days 01 taauance ol the Final and apeciiiCIIIona .
Tuppers Platna - Cht~ter
ni:!t!Ce ot th.- Final Action. Aetlon. ERAC .: appeal a
Purauant to Ohto Revtaed .must be IUad wllh: Water Dtatrlct, Reeclavllta,
Revtaw OhiO, liiUI Dalt 02/09/911
Code Section 3745.07, a Environmental
This llnat aetlon not p18o
llnal action laaulng, deny· Appeals Commt11lon, 236
lng, modifying, revoking, or East Town Street, Room coded by propolld action
renewing a -pem~ll, llcenae, 300, Columbus, Ohto 43215. and ta appealabtt to ERAC.
or variance which · Ia not A copy ol the appeal must Apple Tree Ealalea • Phaee
praceeded by a Proposed be serve~ on the Director It Waterline Project
(2) 19 lTC

31271TFN

~ \tl&amp;Uflt',O ENIOfl CI'TIZEN

f'U'-'-'

New Homes ·Vinyl Siding New

BILL PETTIT

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479

Patient• 21131 , mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

In Loving Memory
·of my Husband,

; WASHINGTON (AP)- Threatening a major leg al showdow n,
\Vhite House lawyers are considering
whether Pres ident Clinton should
a.&lt;sert exec utive pri vil ege in the MoniCa Lewinsky inquiry to lill)it grand
j~ ry test imony of conlidant Bruce
Lindsey.
The decision could come as early
a.&lt; today, when Li ndsey is sc heduled
to ret urn to the grand jury room. two
offi cial s close to the Clinton defense
said Wednesday night.
Only the pre sident can assert the
privil ege and, " he has not asserted it
yet," one official said. Both spoke ori
condition of anonymity.'
·
Invoking the murky legal doctri ne
would heighten the standoff between
Clinton and prosecutor Kenneth Starr.
The indeP,Cndent cou nsel has pulled
several White House aides before a
grand jury investigating whether the
preside nt and Ms. Lewinsky had an
affair and lied about it under oath.
Li ndsey is the president's most
trusted adv iser. a loyal and inteose ly
discreet Arkansas-born lawyer who
has been a close Clinton fri end since
1968.
He in terrupted his sec ret gra nd
jury tes timony for 45 minutes
Wednesday as he and his attorney.
a.long with White House Deputy
Counse l Cheryl' Mill s. went into a
closed session with U.S. District
Judge Nonma Holloway Johnson.
The two officials said Wednesday
night that the discussion involved the
possibility of the president asserti ng
executive· privilege. The discussion
ended with no resolution. and was to
conti,nue today, the officials said.
They decl ined to specify what line
of questioning was under disc ussion.
" I'm not going io talk about my
\testimony," Lindsey told reporters as
he left the courthouse after more than
five hours Wednesday.
Lindsey ~ad not refused to answer
any quest ions Wednesday orr the
basis of executi ve privilege, a White
House offici~ I, sp_ea~ing on condition
of anonym ity. said.
·
The privilege has been invoked
periodically to shield presidents and
those who work closely with them
from haying \Ote l!,tllles to Congress,
courts an~ granil j~ries.

1M1 gee fKW1fl

•Jtrn., •
' chrr!IIIC futig~
•urrhrlli.•
·•spt•m i•jurylprrwmtirm •

Acc•ptlng Worker•

Introducing Meigs Counties'
Holzer Medical Staff

Neal Collins, PA
Family Practice

7

CELLULAR PHONES

MASSAGE THERAPIST

ci) ~ •cltnHiic paia *miUrlt struitUIJpraW

. ite House considers executive
privilege claim for close Clinton aide
Lois Bosley, DO
Family Practice

~j

&gt;. ~ 'miJirainu

Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

olzer· Meigs Clinic
·

T-he Daily Sentinel • Page

J1 s JANICE S. HAYNES, BA, MT

Remodeling

" Your One Stop
l:omputer Shop"

Monoriuceleosis: The viral infection that strikes adolescents
DR. ROGER E. WETHERBEE

Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursda~, February 19, 1998

.

Pome~oy •

All Yard Sa les Mu11 Be Pa id In
Adva nce. Dead line:. 1:OOpm t he
day befo re the ad 11 to r un
S unda Y &amp; Monday edi ti on:

1:OOpm Friday.

May you rest in
God's arms.
liappy Birthday
Loved and
missed very
much.
Dennis, Paula,
Brandy &amp; Josh

80

Au ction
a nd Flea Market

Rick Pear son Auction Company,
. lull time aLICtloneer, complele
service
licen:&gt;e::l
au c lion
lf66 ,0hio &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

J &amp; D Auto Pans . Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles .
304-773-5033

�'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Thursday, February 1

Thursday, February 19, 1998
r

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II

I

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

Sales Representative lOOt Year
Old Compa11y W1th The H1ghest

Absolute Top Dollar All U S 511
ver And Gold Coins Proolsets

Aatmgs In The Llle Insurance In

Diamonds Antique Jewelry Gold

dustry Seeks EnergetiC Career

Flings Pre 1930 US Currency
Sterling Etc Acqu1Srt1ons Jewelry
Avenue GallipoliS 740-446 2842

Mtnded Professional Two Year
Tramlng Prog ram Aggressive
Compensation And 8enef1ts

AntiQues top pnces pa1d( Rrver

Package And Tuition Assistance
For Profess1 onat Development

M T $ Co1n Shop t 51 Second

•ne Antiques Pomeroy Oh1o
Russ Moore owner 740 992

Opportunity For Promot1on To

Sates Management For More In
formatiOn Contact unaa Dunlap

2526

Southern Life Insurance Campa
ny Is An Equal Opportumly Em

pi oyer

992 6576
Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm ith BuiCk Pontiac 1900 East
ern Avenue Galhpohs
TIMBER We pay cash 101 tracts
ol limber II mterested m se111ng
yot.Jr ttmber please let our pro
lesslonal fores try stall manage
your timber lor Income wildlife
1
and a place to enjoy the out /
doors Supenor Hardwoods ol

Ohio Lumber Co PO Box 606

Call l304)6t 5 1051
Leave Me ssage

'SPECIAL OW'S'
Spaoous 38RI2BA
&amp; Set up
Approx $200 per month

t 800 25 t 5070

7323 EOE

12~e65 2 Bedroom w1th expando
on rented lot CA, Porch out
Butldmg and Car Port $12 500

Wattress needed to meet growmg
demand Apply In person Village
P1zza Inn 3004 Jackson Ave
Potnt Pleasant WV

Call 740 388 9062 Or 740 446
PART

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

AVON I All Areas I Shtrley
Spears 304 675 1429
Accepting application s through
Fetlruary 20th tor Reg1stered
Long Term Care nurs1ng ASSIS
tanl tramlng class High schoo l
diploma or equ1valent requ1reC
Pomt Pleasant Nursmg &amp; Aeha
bllltaUon Center State Route 62
Route 1 Box 326 Pomt Pleas
~nl WV 25550 [A Glenmark·
Genesis tactllty) EOE

1973 Cameron 12xt35 2br 1 room

additiOn $4 500 304 882 36 t 2

ences 304·458 1916

1989 14x70 Fatrmont 2 Large
Bedrooms 1 Bath Gas Asking

Expenenced with References W1ll
Tend To The Elderly In Their

$13 000 740 388-1)413

Home (740)256-14"33 Ask For

1992 Oakwood Mob!le Home

Loon W va $13 500 OBO 740
256 6980 After 5 pm

PhilipS 740-992-6576

1998 3br, 2 beth• lots of extras,
set on lot Call for mere tnfo 304·

Georges Portable ·sawmtll don t
llaul your logs to the mtll )US! call

755 7191

304 675-1957

1st Time Buyers E Z Ftnandng
2 or 3 Bedroom around $200 per
month Free delivery &amp; set tJP

Professional Tree Serv1ce Stump
Removal Free Estimates' In
surance B1dwell Ohto 614 388

Call croon una t-800-948-5678

9648 614 367 7010

28K80 Double Wide 3 or 4br 2 1I

3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 1998 model
home 1ncludes Free set-up &amp;
delivery Sklrllng, air, color TV
&amp; VCR Included All tor $219/mo
Only while supplies last Call to-

675 5002

day 304 755-5885

Wtll take care of elderly person
tn the1 r home have 1Oyrs expenance Will do house clean
1ng anyt1me Call 304-Ei75 142Ei
Leave message W no answer

able Price Must Sell Before Jan
31st To Close Out Physical
Year Call Credit line t ·800·948·

8.:32 Office Trailer or use as an
add on of 2 rooms to present mo
bl~

Business
Opportunity

' SPECIAL OW'S '
Delivery &amp; Set-Up Approx $200
OAKWOOD HOMES

Attant!Qn Mobile Horne Owners
Areas Largest Inventory 01 Inter
thdrm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
Air Conditioners Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huge Buym~ Power Means
T~e lowest Installed Price Easy
0\/er The Phone Bank F1nanc1ng
Call Bennetts Mobile Home HTG
&amp; ClG 1 8oo-872·5967

0008

Oe\ectlve Private Investigator
Trainees Good wages 614·523

230

9925
Earn $3K per week Call 1 BOO
636 6773 E~~:t 5066 lor 24 hour
1nf01'mat100

Professional
S41rvlces

Making t.loney With 1 Typowriter or Computer!
Several Unique Ways For lntor
mallon Wnte To

Tina 5ander5 PO Box t 253
Amherst OhiO 44001
Plumbers And Ptpel11ters l U 1
11577 Wtll Be Dtslr1bullng App1en
lice ApplicatiOns Begmnrng Fe
bruary 16 Th rough February 27 11
Applications Can Be P1cked Up
At 123S Gallla Street Portsmouth r
Ohio From 1 30 AM Unlit 4 00 1
P:M $35 00 Appllcatton Fee EEO 1

____________________ ,
PRODUCTION MANAGER

AN SUPERVISORS &amp; RN"S
Eldercare of WV IS now accept
lng appllca!IOns for part time AN
Superv1sors and LPNS e~eperi
anced m long term health care
licensed In WV Apply belwaen
9am Spm at 107 Mtiler Dr ive

Ripley WV EOE

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

tunnies

Special f1nancmg ava1tabte 3(14-

In New Haven 1br furnished apt

736-7295

3 Br f2 Ba

Free Dellv·

110 acre Farm, 3 Bedroom House

One bedroom apartment In M1d

dleport. au utilities pa1d $270 per
month SIOO deposit 740-992-

7806

•

One Bedroom Near Holzer
Range Refrigerator Furnished WI

D Hook-Up $279 Plus Ut1tlt1es De
posiVLease ReqUired (740)4462957

I
I

1 688 736 3332

120 leet long, 80 feet long on oth
er side 75 feet wide, level lot In

Middleport $23 000 OBO 740992-2290
TAX REFUND
'BUY LAND"

bedroom apartment In Mid

740-992 2178

Something That Lasts Forever
NLANO"
All Over Southern OhiO

REAL ESTATE

!
310 Homes for Sale
Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Large I
L•vmgroom large Kttchen 1
Acre Ga111p011s C1ty Schools

$62 000 537 Plymale Roa; 740
446 4323

2 Houses On 2 &amp; Quarter Acres
In GalltpOIIS Overtookmg OhiO
Rtver Mam House 2 3 Bed
rooms t 1/2 Balhs Full Base
ment 2nd House 2 Bedrooms

74044Hl639

Furnished
Rooms

460

40 Acres with Four Bedrooms
Tn level House and 46.:388 Barn

MUST SELL 14x80 3bodrooms

Space for Rent

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jact&lt;son, Ohio, 1-1100·537-9528
Wood For Sale $35 A Load Witt
DeiN!n. 740 388-8010

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipe&amp; wind·
ows, lintels, etc Claude ¥!tinters

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd

PC $275 Call 740-886-6373

qutred WID Hook Up 1 888 840

Twm Beds With Mattresses $115
Full $135 Queen $160 Kin~
$100, See At Used Furniture
Store 130 8ula\lllle Pike Galltpo

lis Ohio MTW Hrs. tQ-4

520

central ~· kl&lt;afe&lt;l In pari&lt; drive In
PI Pleasant Cai(740)44HJt28

Sporting
Goods

Remington match rifle,
IShellland bull barrel Rutger 243
Iicker 22 Mag made In Ca·
nada Combination over/under

22/410 Set of Lord &amp; Lady Der
ringe rs Rossi double barrel w/
1 hammer lOng rifle 304·882·2444

! Rem1ngton Model

10 set up for
shoots
sleeved and
I scoped $450 080 would con
sider lrade, 740.992·6323

530

Antiques

t 983 Mazda ~X 7. 5 speed
cruise, AD, sunroof $500 740
992 7619
t984 Cad llac Seville New Motor
(Not Rebu ilt) Brown leather

Seats Tan Color PS PW PB
AC New Pa1nt Job 740-4462463 Or 740 446 1173 leave
Message, $4 195

(740)381Hl970

Set Up 304 736 7295

3348

I

$24 999 Free Delivery Call tB00-691-6n7

------

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nlshed and unfurnished securlty 1
deposit requrred no pets, 740

992 2218

1br apartment pnvate, qutet Deposit References $250/mo 304·

675-1550
~U~ps~t~a~lrs~A-pa-r~tm_e_n~t-3~R-o-om--s 1
Watef Paid, Private Entrance&amp;

~'!.~~~S, 91 Cedar Street, 614·

1

1
~

1

good cond $3 500 OBO 304· . - ;
675-6850
10"!1

i

1993 Ford F 150 60 000 Miles,oil

1995 Chevy S10 Low M1les (740)
446-t 150

•

'

t 997 Dodge 4x4 Diesel 1 Ton, •'

Dually Compellely loaded Excel- ~ '
lent Condition, Must Sell! 7-40 .. :

44Hl996ANor 4 PM

')

'I

International 2 ton Truck Parte
Motor , trans rear front a.:le,
Spring Frame Etc Prices ara -~

Cheap! F 700 FQf9, Dy!l)A

MDO .•••

"(7-:-40:-).:.448:.:-.:.7.:.:429::.-::-:~~--·•••.
=
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa
St t 500 OBO 740 949 2079

•4

•

1976 Dodge 15 passenger van

1992 Cutlass Supreme SL 2

running boards, auto ale looks &amp;
runs good $3 400 740.247-4292

Doors Factory Alloy Whee ls
Ground Effects, 3 4 lller Eng me

$6 250, 1991 Cutlass Calais
$2 490, Cook Motors, 740-4460103
t 992 Delta 88 Loaded, $6,500
740.682- 7512
1992 Geo Storm amlfm stereo,
a1r 5 speed new tires mini con·

1989 GMC Safari Full Custom

Van, $3.950 740-446 4222
1990 Chevy Silverado 4x4 350
engme 5 speed transmission,

AC cruise etc 54 000 m11ee! ' l

BIG NATE

comes w th 7 1/2 foot Un1-M0Ut1 '
Western snowplow, 1 year old, :-1

1994 MerciJry Cot~gar XA7 8
Cyl PS PB Power Windows,
leather /Cloth llntenor, Electric
Red Exter1or Excellenl Condrllon
Adult Dnven Very Well Taken

Conversion low Top 80,000
m1les, V6 Auto, AC, PW, TowPackage with Hitch and Brake, '
FM Cassetta, New Aluminum

,.

1992 Chevy C:1Jj Van Mark Ill '

'COU THE WAV
SHE CRUSHEt&gt;

i

f'\'(

Wheels and Tires Completely-;

Serviced And Tuned $10,500J~.

(740)441-1013

~
I

'

740

1995 Neon 4 Doors White, Auto,

1988 Yahama YZ 490 motorcy- ,
cle, good shape $1 200 nego 1 • •

Motorcycles

-•

1

1975 Honda CB750 Street Bike .. ~,
Fair Cond1tlon (740)446-t t 70

1996 Honda Shadow 1100," 'I
$6000, 740-742 3302

Now Open Sundll)'S t-4 Mon-Sat
t 1 6 Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop

t 997 Sebring LXI lutly loaded

1997 4 Trax 4x4 300 wlloadlng
ramps, snow blaCe, gun boot &amp;

570

Musical
Instruments

Fender Jaguar Reissue with
case sunburst plays en~ sounds

leather Interior tinted windows
Take over payments 30;4 875

6858

$4,000 88 RX7 loaded $3 000
740 992 2178

Credit Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call

V1c1&lt;1e 740-446-2897

Glbran50rl organ 740.949-2118

auct1on will be held at the OVB
Anne11 143 Thtrd Ava Gallipolis

tt B7GL23X2TS639905

Public

OH on 2128/98 at t 0 00 am The
above will be sold lo hrghesl b id
dar "as IS where 1&amp;" without ex·
pressed or tmphed warranty and
may be seen by ca lling Kellh

Johnson at (740)441-1038 OVB
Farm Equipment

1 Singer
Frank6 River In
Belgium
10 Coruon12 type of
measurement
1yatern
14 Beat
15 Wine holder
16 Plant fluid
17 Bualneaa abbr
19 To the
llheltered aide
20 Perrecuy
23 African nation
26 Kentucky blue
gran
27 Edgltr Allan 30 Hlatorlcal
r..:ord1
32 Wrttten In old
ocrlpt
34 Olllclol _ ,
35 Dlac:ouragea
36 Rubber tree

40 Gods

42 Cry or paln
45 ABobbMy
twin
46 Ending lor
auction
4D Eaprtt de corpa
51 Sleeping·
llekneulty
54 Miele amenda
55 Idle
56 Aide (abbr.)
57 Modern Iabrie
DOWN
1 Ulftthe

2
3
4
5
6

rormote control,
alanglly
Blulah-green
Tarantlno'a Fiction
Greek lettera
One (Scot.)
Poaltlve vote

Pass
Pass

!-lAVE 'fOU EVEJC:
TALKED ON A

MICKE'(

PI-lONE BEFORE?

MOOSE ON
THE PIIONE?

.I

!

13 Fair grade
Rampant
18 Short lleep
Dog In Garfield 20 Teheran's
TV crime
21 l:'!:ve(text)
22 Resembling
wool
23 Actren Pitta
24 Blue dye
25 Author or
Picnic
27-colacla
28 HorMiood

290r-

(thr•t)
31 &amp;.fled
33 Signals
38Give-whlrt

The
tasteless
snobs

40College

olllclala
41 Not out of
42Entertalner
Sumac

43 LMII bit
44Experts

46 Harrow'•

rival
47 Being
48 Walk
unaiNdlty
50 Permit to
52 RA depot

53 Goddnaol

heating

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

~Cipher~.,.. Clftted from qool81idnl by ramooa people put and Pf8MOI
EliCh ~~In thedphl&gt;r ltlndllor anoctwr Tod.tYJ dut R equals M

'XHECWD
AW II WV

FECWVt;iiHECG
I X HE

V X WE

xw

Dl ZW

H

HEP

xw

SXIIIIGWG,

RIITHVI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'Sonny Bono brough1 w1sdom and JOY to lhe House
he wm be missed' - Newt G1ngrich

'::~=, S©\\~lA-~£tfs·

Rearrange '-tters of the
0 lour
ocramblod word• be

lOW" to form

I

four Simple words

CHAPET

.~--,rL_Y,..M-r.I--,Krll ;,'

~ery

I

5
~
..___.__.__.._-L.-J,..
1

I I

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

A colleague was actmg
s1lly at our party Someone
commented that you should let
yourself go only tf you can - - -

l-l-.-::-1~-8r.l;A-r-IN_;Oir8-r-l-1~-~ ~omole1e

There's no
way around it,
Classified Ads

.

.

.

lhe chuckle quoted

. V

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

I

I I I •

UNSCRAM&amp;l~ lETTERS
_.:,:fO:::,R..:;A:;,!NS~W:.:,:ER:.__._,- ' - - ' - -

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

VI/tty· Tnte - Qwlt - Softly- EFFORT
Our son was the water boy for h1s school s team We
told h1m that all endeavors have d1gntty tf you g1ve them
your best EFFORT

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

FEBRUARY19I

reserves lhe nght 10 accepl or
reject any and all btds and w1th·
draw
from sale prior to

CaU M&amp;J Auto, 740-388·9693

Ca-. sold everyday Cell for

change n Inventory Hours 12-6,
~ Thursda)'

,

and Sunday

2d2)

j

ot 2)(CC)

Ripley wv 304·372-3933 or t 1
800 273-9329
': -

ASTRO·GRAPH

SERVICES

----------------.
810
Home
••

-·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Improvements
••
------~~~~------··
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltionallilettme guarantee
local references furnrshed Es

tabllshed 1975 Call (740) 446
0870 Or 1·800·287 0576 Rogers
Waterproofing
•.;P.

1-------------------

"II •

Fnday, Feb.

Appliance Part&amp; And ServiCe
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 7404446

7795

-::-:-:-~---------1988 Bu1ck Skyhawk automatic, C&amp;C General Home Main·
no rust runs excellent $800, jt•1ne1nce- Painting . vmyl siding,
1980 full slztt Bronco 4x4 body carpentry, doors windows baths,
needs work motor and transmls
mobile home repatr and more For
slon good while latter tires $750
free estimate call Chat, 740-992·
1985 Dodge Caravan, blue au
6323
tomattc, runs excellent $995,

t 987 Chrysler New Yorker. all
electnc dlg1tal dash 1n e•celklnt
condn100 $995

Expenence (Part 2of 2i iCCi

I

New gas tanks 1 ton ttuck
wheels &amp; radiators 0 &amp; R Auto,

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

:::::::::::::::-::-~~~-:-:Residential or commercial wiring

"•I

1 ~\
- •
1 "'

•;

,
·•
'• ,.,

" •• •
1

tn
~-

new servtce or repairs Master Ll- 1 .!l
censed electrician A1dthour •!
Elect neal WV000306, 3{)4-675- ~
1786

I

1

20, 1998

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
way can be developed today to
strengthen your econom1c reserves
Although tt may not look ltke much
at first, tt can grow stgntficantly over
tfme Get a JUmp on hfe by understandmg the influences that wtll govern you tn the year ahead. Send for
your Astro-Graph predfcttons by
mailing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o thts
newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, MufTily
Htll Statton. New york, NY 10156
Be sure to state your zodiac s1gn.
ARIES (March 21 - Apnl 19)
Today. if you have a good memory.

,

WOlD
lAM I

- - - - - - - Ulto4 ~y CLAY I ~N

I'

Access Over 10 000 Transmis·
sions &amp;Clutches 740-245-56n

GIVLZWG

IXFECWVAIIDI.'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS·
SfONS, Used /Rebuilt All Typos.

WKKWSI
F G

IlK

304 675 6850

760

.......

Wander
Of an age

Operung lead· • K

u

I'

pendabla, faat good condition. _,
F~rst one with $900 takes It

7
8
9
11
12

by f.ll,ng '" th~t m1ss1ng words
.___.____.___.___.____.__. you de.,.elop from ifep No 3 below

WE'RE 601N6

bow ract&lt; $4 200 304-675-3278

Pass

Paaa

.

TO CALL

7619

Pass
Pass

Pass

.__
Anawer to I'NVIOUI PUZZle

37Mal- '
(cocktail)
39 Make lun ol

70hp mo tor good co Ad S1 000 94 Escort, 26,000 miles like new

Ohio Valley Bani( w111 offer lor sale
a 1996 Dodge Dakota Sena:

610

____________-,:

1991 Honda 4x4 4-wtlealer exc ...

• jI
304-675 7466 after 3pm 304 675- home 304-675-6293
5505
750 Boats &amp; Motors
89 Shadow 4 door Turbo Cru1$8
'
for Sale
Tilt, Ground Elfects Spoller
$1 500 OBO 740.25 1233
1976 Thundercralt 160 V-Haul

great asking $530 740 949
2727

FIIRM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~_:_~_.;_

East

PEANUTS

304·675-64 t8

Honda Sabre V 45 750Cc de-

1998 Ford ZX2 Escort sate or
take over payments Until 3pm

.HOPES

AHO ORE~MS!

1995 Camara Convertible Z28
Black/Black leather lntenor
Vary low M1les loaded! Like New

388 8185

'I WILL CRUSH

ask1ng $15,000 740 992·314f al·:· I
W5pm

(740) 388-t 122

l ,I

1969 Bronco II, XLT. 2 9, V-6,

d1t1on $4995 740.992-6824

Care 01 44 000 Miles 614 4467527 Books For$16,000 Asking
$1 t 000

LO~ER

(0

1997 Camara TTops White, 10
Disc CO, Player, loaded 740·

7903

,p

~~I

3508

looking for Male Wetmaraner for
Stud Services Call (740) 446-

THE BORN

'94 Mercury Villager all ppwor

1996 Honda 4 Trax 300 4K4, hke.
new, excellent condttlon, 740-992- ~ ,

Wormejf 3 Mates $150 E~ch
740.446-6651 740.446-2899

TtL/..

3960

Release $12,000 Call After 5 PM
(Serious Inquiries Ontyl) 740446-4015

Golden Retriever Pups, AKC
Registered 9 Weeks Shots

TtftM TO
IJP AL.PtMrtTI,~L.L.Y ...
fOOl&gt;·G.tiAIN 0,1&gt;~ MIGtiT /..tAl&gt; TO
P,OBL.EM$.

I

76

West
!NT

By Phillip Alder
Once. I auended a tutored wme
tasttng where !he tellow runmng the
show would look al the label on the
bottle to decide whether the wme was
good or bad Everythtng else was
trrelevant
Thts 1s absurd If you hke the taste
of a pantcular wme, tt doesn't matter what anyone else thmks. It ts a
personallhtng, and anyone who says
otherwtse should be tgnored
There ts a stm1lanty m bndge If
you and your panner are happy wnh
a pantcular btddmg conventton, sltck
to tt Havmg a poor agreement ts better than nolhtng
Thts deal features the Landy conventton, tn whtch a two-club overcall
of an oppostng one-no-trump openmg shows length tn both maJOrs. It
enJoys wtdespread populanty, but I
feel1t's meflictent
Afler Nqnh had used Landy,
South went berserk! It is rare one c~n
make o game agamst a strong notrump, let alone a grand slam. Sttll,
South bough1 a great dummy and a 21 trump spilt
Declarer won Jhe first tnck wnh
the club ace and drew trumps Thos
left three trumps m dummy for
SoUJh"s three club losers, but he had
to establtsh dummy's heart su11 10
provtde a parkmg spol lor hts dtamond loser Declarer led a heanlo hts
"ce (th( honor from the short Side
fit&gt;t), played a heart to dummy's
ktng. and rutTed a heart m hand Back
to dummy wuh a club rull, South
ruffed another heart After a &lt;econd
club ruff, declarer Jhrew a dtamond
on Jhe established heart etghl and
clatmed

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$8 500 OBO 740 446 7935,
:E:.:ve::.n:.:'n.::gs::.:.74:_0_-4:_4_t:.:08:.:6:_7~~--=·;: · ;
1994 tzuzu Amigo 4 Cylinder, 5
Speed Air Sunroof Aluminum 1
Wheats. $10 000 OBO 304 675- •

automatic atr V-8 52,000 miles,

yoo

New 16 Wide Mobtle Home Start

lng At Only $17 400 Free Det 1v
ery Call t 8Q0-69t 6777

1991 Chevy S 10 4cyt Sopd,

$2(100, 740 992 7410

Why pay more for your next car
when M&amp;J Auto can save you
hundreds of dollars on depend
able cars? Honest sales people
will help you find the right car for

avail

'
'

1989 Corvette $14 500 Call 304675-586 t after 6pm

Available 304-458- t OE9

.

(740)24!H449
1984 Chevy 112 Ton V 8 Auto
Topper Mag Wheels St 900 Af
tar 5 00 PM 740 256 6867
low m1ieage, very

4NT
SNT

YORE
PAW'S
HOME!!

61 500 mles excellent conditlon.to~

1988 Mercury Grand Marqu1s
black very goo&amp; cond 304 882

Sale CASH OR

Ooubl e~VIde Repo Free Delivery

BARNEY

cond $3 200 304-576-4087 alter
Bpm

Dalmallon Full Blooded Puppies

llvmg Room Suite Never used 2

and brush hog $4600 740 992
6190

South

tlon New 1997 Utility Trailer Tan •
dam 14K8t Rear and Front Axles ,
Brakes Rear and Front Axles ' J.
Hyde Brakes Complete Front ...
End Hood and Fenders Tilt Aa , '
d1ators Auto Transmtsslon and 5 '
Speed 2 Complele 370 2V Mo , :
tors 2, 85 Gal , Gas Tanks Pump ,
and Gauge 20" wheels and T1res ., •
Rough and Straight Tread Drl\le ~
Shafts and
M1sc
Parts
~

new pa1nt

ACI'IOSS

Vulnerable Both
Dealer West

1982 Ford F700 Dump Excellent
1981 GMC Pick-Up Good Condl

1\J95 Saturn SC2, AutomaUc Air
Cruise AM/FM Cassette, Trunk

Wormed &amp; Shots $50 Each 740.
388-8922

Bath &amp; t12 $450/Mo Deposit Ro

Ford F250 300 stx cylinder,
runs good with extras, $1500

AKC Shelties, sable/white, trllbi/
bk vet checked, excellent padl·

24 t 3 Jackson Ave Point Pleas-

R1o Grande Area 3 Bedroom

• 86
6 A9 8 3

740-446.0231

ant 304 675 2063

lrr&lt;!ngi!S

• A 2

Air. Cassette. Tltt 73 soo Miles,
$4 750 00 OBO 740-256-6340
740-256 6467

1 card

New 1998 14x70 three bedrcom
l·in1:ludes 6 months FREE lot rent
skirting deluxe slaps
NEW CONSTRUCTION Beau t
ttul Two Story Colontal 414 Th1rd 1 and tetup Only $187 as per
1
Avenue GaiHpolls 3 Bedrooms , 2 1 month Wtlh $1075 down Call 1t/2 Baths LR &amp; FA Formal D1nlhg 800-837 3238
Room Oak Trim Ftreplace Much
More Home Ellgtble For Tax
New Double Wide 3br, 2 bath 1

Abatement $179 500 304·273
2940

314 200 PSI

AKC Sh1h-tzu pups lor sale lirst
shots and wormed 740 992·

FIRSTTIME BUYERS
E Z Fman clng Call For Pre Ap
proval t 888 736-3332

Bank Repo s Call 1·800 522
2730 X 1709

One

gree AKC Collies, eye cerllfled
trl sable/whne 740-696-1085

2 &amp; 3 bedrOom mobile homes
$260 $300, sewer, water and
trash mcluded 741r992 2167

3960

Upton Used Cars Rl 62 3 Miles
South ol Leon WV Ftnancrng

3br nome 1 acre lot located In
GalliPOliS Ferry across from 84 1
lumber Pr ice reduced nlce
304 675 5010 after Spm

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS
$4,000 t 5 Bdrm Local Gov t &amp;

Each One Portable Sewing Ma-

Wood Fram•s $9 Each

RENTALS

HOME SHOW 304 736-3688

2baths owner llnancrng
(Ewlngton) Phone (740) 388- able
304 736-7295
9352
I

Upright Ron Evans. Enterpnses,

Rio Grande OH Call 740-2455121

9342

1969 Mustang 6 Cylinder Aula
Excellent lnl $5,000 304 575

1967 Ford Taurus Station Wag
on, 1987 Mazda Both Runs Good

Athens and Pomeroy call

Hook-Up $250/Mo $200 Dopa•·

1969 BUICk GS $3,000 740-6827512

615 5244

$tOO Each 20 Old Ham1~0n
Elcln Pocket Watches 12-20x24

11740-:185-4367.

n, References Required 740·446·

Autos for Sale

Steel Beams At/ Sizes &amp; Lengths,
L &amp; l Scrap Metals 740-446·
7300

Mobile home site available bet

N1ce Clean W,it h Utility

N On At 2 304-675 3960 Leave

446 6306 t 800-291 0098

•APECO Copy Maker $90 422

1

Two bedroom, basemen!, garage,

Ph 740 446-1104 740-441·0450

71 0

South
6A9852

740·992 3147

M1xed Hay Delano JacKson Farm

1987 Burck leSabre Custom 4dr,
ale cass lilt cruise, like new
tires brakes struts 63 Sk actual
O[le owner miles ,. $5 000 304-

chine $40 One Auto Tool Chest
W1th 50 Tools $50, One Aadlo
$20 Four Old Mantel

I304 773-5651, Mason WV

DON'TWAITI

And

WARM UP Htgh Efflctency Natu·
rat And LP Gas Furnaces Life·
lime Warranty On Heat Exchang
ar "It You Don t Call Us We Both
lose!" Free Est1ma1esl Add On

1519

Sleeping rooms with cooking
Also trailer space on nver All
hook-ups Call alter 2 00 p m

W1lt Pay For Your Rapid Ta~e Re
fund Use As Down Payment Call
The Cred1 J Lme wl:srwooo

I

Sofa Sleeper $370 Glider Chair
$80 , Kitchen Table 6 Chairs
$340. Small Antique Wardrobe

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stock

Pomeroy 4 bedroom HUO with
stove &amp; refrtgerator, references
no pets oall 740·992·6886 after

EC Manox

78 Massey Ferguson hay spear

$21 95 Per tOO I' 200 PSI

441H&gt;008

polis

Ll~~~ow~:JiR ,

I

Furnittxe

Waterline Spec1a1

Cash Pa1d For Land In Gallla
County Blackburn Realty 740·

t 2001bs·$15 t ,SOOibs-SlO Call
304·675-1487 12Noon Midnight

350/ 360 horse asking

304 773 5341

Up $1 290 Down We Also Have

t Bedroom Trailer Close To Galli-

WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
304-136-3888

Modem 16 Bit Stereo Sound Card
And Speakers Keyboard, Mouse,
Windows Software Less Than 2

land In Gall a Jackson Scioto
Pike Ross Athens Meigs Coun

for Rent

W11i Pay For Your
Rapid Tax Refund
Use as down payment
can the cr&amp;c:11t line

Pentium t 50 MHZ 16MB Ram,
t 2 GB Hard Drive 28 8K Fax I

Second Ave

Real Estate
Wanted

Hay Round bales, ml~eed hay

1969 Ford Ton Truck 304-4581858

882 2575

TRANSPORTATION

Two Antique Typewriters $40

Lots Open Meadows $12,900 •

360

720 Trucks for Sate

k&gt;west prk:e. 888·265 2123

Upstairs ? Aooms &amp; Bath Fur
mshed, Clean, No Pets Reference

450

Cell Today For FREE Maps
ANTHONY LAND CO, LTD
1---213-8365
www countrytyme com

Hay square bales $1 50 bale

Message

Protev8 Touch Senes Computer

• 3
• 10 5

• J 10 9 54 3
• 10 7 6 2

Call or leave message at 304

special All Inventory must golf
170 free channels free monthly
guide tree bonus gift Guaranteed

304 675-4469 aNor 5 30pm

East
•I

(740)4411-4824 or (740)446-0910

Square Bales $2 00 Each 1 M Ia

Protect bags for Beanie Babies
w/lag bags Package ol 20 $5 30

•K8643
t A2
• 5

,-,

square
9 pm

PRIMESTAR· wlntar blowout

Jackson Ohio t 80Q-537-9528

&amp; Deposit Required 740-448

CAMP, HUNT, RETIRE
On One Of Our 5 To 20 Acre
Country Building Lots

420 Mobile Holl)es

LIMITED OFFER
WHY WAIT
DON'T WAIT

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Aobullt In Stock
Coli Ron Evans t 800-537 9528

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

Handymen Special Cash Only
2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1 500 &amp; Up l Small clean quiet carpeted no
pets $275/mo $250 deposit
O n~ 3 Left 304 755-5561
30-1- n3-9t 92
Quick delivery Call 740-385
9621

JET

Twenty Seventh Year In Ttl$
Heat1ng &amp; Cooling Buslnes&amp;l 740·

0521

Large selectton ol used homes 2
or 3 beCrooms Starting at $2995

plano Dr 740-446 4525

Heat Pumps Only Stlghty Higher
Call Us Today t 997 IS The

5 30pm

Ca ll lor pre approval

Thts newspaper will no1
knowmg1y accept
advertisements lor real estate
wh1ch s 1n v•olahOn of the
law Ow readers are hereby
tnformed that all dwellmgs
aCver11sed m thiS neWspaper
are avatlable on an equa l
opportun1ty basis

Grubbs Plano tuntng &amp; repalra
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

$50 New 5 Weeks Except War·

Loaded With GE ap

E Z F1nanctng

ooo

droll&lt;!. 740-245-5393

ENTERTAINER
3bedrooms
2baths start1ng at $219/mo

FIRST TIME BUYERS

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2
Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH

';i

uooa m1xea nay,
bales Call before

Buy, Sell Trade
Used &amp; Antiques

DREAM HOME SERIES

bourSVIIIe WV 304 736 3409

Ear corn for sale, 740·247 ·3042

Now Taking Applications- 35

•

pllances starling at $299/mo
FAMILY 4bedrooms 2 large
baths starting $359/mo Ltm1ted
time offer only at Oakwood Bar

985 3956

Sempies (740)441-1982

Illes pakl, no pets, 740·992·5858

0006

Invest Your Refund In

bales S22 50 and second and
third cutting square bale&amp; 740

1972 Corveue 85 000 actual
miles matching numbers,
auto tilt t 1 , new paint &amp;

330 Farms for Sale

chars Wood &amp; FlberQiass Steps
Roof Coa!lngs Doors Wmdows
Plumbing &amp; Elec1r1cal Suppl1es
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
Morel Call Bennetl s Mob1le
Home Supply At 1 740.448 9416

SUNRISE

Break

R &amp; S Furniture
Maaon,WV

of Nitro WV
304-755-5885

All real estate adver1tstng 1n
thiS newspaper IS SUbjCCilO
the Federal Fa 1r Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes 11 1llegal
to advertiSe "any preference
ltmttauon or dlscnmtna!lon
based on race color rehg1on
se~~: familial status or na!IOnal
ong1n or any intention 10
make any such preference
llm1tahon cr diSCrimination

Metabolism

For tree consultation and Free

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo, 740 446 '

m porter area $115 000 (740)
367-7031

6 K 10 7 6 4

950 tbs stored Inside round

Through Lose 10 to 200 lbs , Call

Ntce one bedroom apartment utll

ery &amp; Set-Up WlAC $19 750 1
800-25 t 5070

Hay &amp; Grain

1969 Nova SS 396 375 Less
Motor &amp; Trans $3 000 (740
682-7512

&amp; references 304 882 2566

NEW SHIPMENT
14K70 s

Amazing

640

Yrs Old Paid $2 395 ASking
$900 740 446 2707 Alter 5 00
PM

Includes washer &amp; dryer deposit

NEW BANK REPO'S, ONLY 3
LEn, HOQ-383·6862

nyt Skirting KitS $299 95 An

lnqulnes On~ EOE

Equal Cltlllortumty Employer

port From $249 $373 Call 740
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor

Otscount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessories Water Heaters V1

ty Stop By Health ManeQement
Services AI 71}2 Second Ave
nue GallipOliS For Appl1ca!lons
Or Call 740 446 3808 Serious

Looking For H1ghly Energet1c
Sales OrlenteC People For Man
agemen1 And Non Management
Positi ons Located In GallipoliS
Full T1me Pay And Benefits With
Bonu s And Incentive Plans
Available Send Resume To PO
Box 175 RIO Grande mt 45674

Gracious living 1 and 2 ,bec1room
financing on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom 1 apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In M1ddfe
homes Peymentl 11 low ••

Oakwood Homea

614·992-7900 Or tn Gallla Coun

RETAIL SALES POSITIONS
AVAILABLE local Buslnass

Single Parent Progrom. Special

Only At

Home Health Agency H1nng
CNA. s And E~eperienced HHA s
For Part-Trme Pos11ions Starling
AI $6 09 Per Hour Pho ne Calls
Please In Me1gs County Cal l

Responsible women neeCed to
care for elderly lad y on wee
kends relerences needed 304
575-4294 after 6pm

I

5566

6157Aftor400

Custom made homes where
the customer sets the
price &amp; we own the bank

Uvmgston s basement water ·
proofing all basement repatrs
done free estimates lifet1me
guarantee 1 Oyrs on Job ex pen
ence 304-675 2145

Experienced man to grub &amp; clean
hills &amp; fields $5hr Send resume
to Box CW 18 clo Po1nt Pleasant
Register 200 Ma1n Sireet Pt
Pleasant WV 25550

trlc, Furnished Kitchen Washer I

tend Contracts 10-to Down

304 736 3409

BUTCHER SHOP - SLAUGHTER

gkl t 800 48 t 6334

I

ties

Barboursville WVA
Dream Home Senes

HOUSE Old Establishment Bus1·
ness Centr811y Located In The
Bidwell ·Porter Area Excellent
Chance To Own Your Own Business Blackburn Realty 7-40 446

Dependable And Flexible Ceru
fled NUfse Atd Needed For In
Home Care Call Adrienne Or An

E~etra Nice 2 Bedrooms All Elec

GALLIA COUNTY NEW 5 Acra

Complete

Per Month 1 800 251 5070

recommends that you do bust
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you have mvestlgated
the offer1ng -

ley WV EOE

01 Ohio 45769

hon-e $5 000 740-446-4782

Spacious 3 BR /2 Ba

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

CNAS
Eldercare of WV 1s now accept
lng applications for part t1me and/
or lull lime CNA S e.:penenced m
long term health care licensed m
WV Apply In person between
9am Spm at 107 M1ller Onve Alp

Area manufacturer IS lookmg for a
"Hands On" type people onented
Production Manger Pos1!10n 1e
QUires 2 years mm1mum e~eperl
ence m low volume (Job Shop)
manulactunng Etectnc rootor mig
e.:penence preferred Applicant
must have a strong background
m ProductiOn and Malena/ Ccn
trot and a1 least 5 years of Super
vlsory e~eperlence m a Un10n en
vlronment Applicants must hctve
goOd computer SkillS Pos1t on olf
ers h gh grow1h potential Compa
ny has excellent fnnge benehts
Forward resume c/o The Dally
Sentmel P 0 Bo.: 729 58 Pomer

nanclng Available Call 304 722·

5678

t-BQ0-736 0168

$160/Mo Utilities Included 740
441-0573

PRE-OWNEO HOMES

E~ecellent Condition, Owner Fl

5 Nbw 1997 14 Wldes-Unbellev-

FINANCIAL

210

Efficiency Apartment, Share Bath
607 Second Avenue Gallipolis

2 bath ONLYI $39 999 Call t800 691 6777

Wtll do weldmg of any kind 304

Avon $8 $18 /Hr No Door To
Door Qu iCk Cash Fun &amp; AelaK
lr&gt;;j

t 4X70 2BA 2 Baths Heat Pump

FurMure repair ref ntsh and res
torat1on also custom orders Oh1o
Valley Refinishing Shop larry

Wtll babysit tn my home any shtft
$10/ day for one $151 for two,
740·949 2463 please leave mes
sage

Applications are being accepted
for In Home Caregivers The sue·
cessful candidates should have
Home Health Aide cert ificatiOn
and 1 2 years experience tn pro
\11d1ng d rect serv~ce care to older
adults Must have reliable 1rans
por1at1on telephone tn the home
and wtlltng to work some wee
kends Apphcattons are available
at the Meigs County Mulllpur
pose Semor Center Mulberry
Heights Pomeroy OH An EOE
Employer/Provider of Serv1ces

Equal Hooslng Opportunity

$180 Call now 304-755-5885

GE appliances excel Cond Rt 2

Help Wanted

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 25Ei8

Dryer Hook-Up Close To Spring
Quiet Country Setting with beautlhJI mob1le home forced to &amp;ell 1 Valley No Pets $375/Mo Plus
Financing available 304 755· 1 References Deposit 740 446

Child Care Monday Fr~day Close
To Leon School, EXcellenl Refer

wood, Leather Pockets, Firm

t -8()()-537-9528

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive

t 2x65 Tra11er 3br t bath $5 500
Call304 675 4678

MUST SELl 14K80 3 Btdrooms
2 Baths Owner F1nanc1ng Avail
able 304 736 7295

Anna

qulred (740)446-71 30

7148

2405

180 Wanted To Do

.Apartment lor rent In Gallipolis
$235 Depos 1!1 Reference Re

(740)245 0452 Mer 5 30 p m

14 x 70 3 Bedroom mob1le home
w1th addthOn new furnace porch
Includes lot $10 500 Home·
stead Bend Broker 304-882·

441188 Connelly Pool Table .Ash-

3711 EOH

Central /VC Unit Please Celt 740·
256 6327 From 8 00 AM To 4 30
PM Monda\/ Thru Frldll)l

Co~lete Del/Very

Pomeroy OhiO 45769
We Buy Autos In Any Condtlton

NEW SHIPMENT
t 4x70 s-3BR/2BA
Free Delivery &amp; Set-up
WIN; $19750
HlQ0-251 5070

Rogls~red Llrnousln Bull and HefetB 740-448-8081

$1 200 740.446-4441

apts total electric, ap
pllances lurnishe.d laundry room
facilities close Ia school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts lf49 9r call 740 992·

2 left Free Delivery &amp; Set-up
Call Finance Una For Free Ap- i
1
proval 1·800-948-5678

One 1978 10 .:46 Olflce Trailer
WHh Electric Forced Air, Heat
And 2 Ton Central AJC Unit One
1987 12'xEi9 Off1ce Trailer Wlth j
Electnc Forced Air, He t And ·

for Sale

WANTED Full lime person for
customer servtce representative
pos1t1on m local Insurance agen
cy Pn or tnsurance e~epenence
and state licensmg a plus but w111
tram and l1cense a qual1f1ed per
son Please send resume to The
Da11y Senttnel PO Box 729 57

W1ntedJo Buy.
EKtra Large Steel Pet Cratr:

POMEROY LAND CONTRACT
Two bedroom ranch style home
w ith one acre Home Is close to
everything with much potenlial

Tt1ree Llbrary A1des needed im
med1ately to work approK eight
hours per week (Saturday 9 5 or
59 rwo mghts per wk l at SS t5
hourly No benel1ts Apphcahons
ava1lable at Bossard Library 7
Spruce Street Phone (740) 446-

7552 after 4 t Spm

304-736-7295
New Aepos Never Lived In Only

320 Mobile Homes

Wellston Ohto 45692 (740)384

51Jn

740 992 2704 after 5pm

2 Bedroom apt all utilities paid
$350/mo + deposit 304·675

New tlouble wide repo $999
down Free delivery and setup

$32 ooo Date E Taylor Realty
740 992 5333 740-992 1064
740 446 1529

At 800 550 0372 Western And

Anuques no Item too large or too
small Also estates appraisals
ref1nlsh1ng custom orders 740-

Middleport Gra\lel Hill 4 bed·
room 1 1/2 bath&amp; large family
room &amp; Uvlng room formal dining
room 2570 SQ 1·1/3 acre lot

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

you could profit from a pamful past
expenence Be pat tent not •mpulstve.
and have a clearly defined goal
TAURUS !Apni20-May 20) Success could be yours Joday, buJ tt
mtght not come swtftly nor ea."IY II
you find yourself agamst !he wall. tt's
ttme to lear down thai tmpedtment
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
wtll have more fnends m your comer
today than you may reahze. There
wtll be a collecttve effort focused on
solvmg a problem of yours.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
mtght do sometbmg excepttonal
today that w1ll wm you 1he respect of
your peers. It may not be easy lo pull
off, but don 'I use that as an excuse
not to try.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do not be
negattve regardong the usefulness of
an tdea With whtch you've been toytOg If it IS put to the test, you 'II discover your feius Were baseless.
VIRGO &lt;Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do not
leave Important matters haiMintshed
today. Conclude them to your saltsfaction, even tf _you have to work

••

harder than you had ant1upated ·
LIBRA !Sept 23-0cl 23) Any
sertous agreemenls you make today
must be lmr lo both parttes concerned Be sure tt ts destgned m such
a w:ry tltnt the lerms can't be ahered
later
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
Make an eiTort to get proper remuneratton for servfces rendered today
If you're a poor collector, thts mtght
not get seuled promptly.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) You~ abtltltes as ?;omanager are
better today than they were yesterday. •
II w1ll be easter for you to get thtngs
done wtthout ruffimg anyone's feathers
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Try to he more watchful Jhan usual
today of people who are under your
charge. Your alertness could spot and
fend off potenttal problems
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) A
cbenshedold friend who you haven't
seen lately ts eager to hear from you.
Drop by his or her place today or. at
the very least, g1ve your buddy a call.

t (CC)

�. ,., ..

.

;Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 19, 1998

..

.Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls .

Open ho!J~e set at Meigs High
School
Meigs High School will be having an open house Feb. 26 from 4 10
?p.m.
A corn bread and bean dinner will
be served in the cafeteria free to all
parents or community members
attendi· · .~. Serving will begin at4: 15
and c~ ntinue until6: 15 p.m.
D. cmg the open house which will
incluo i · all academic and vocational
areas various displays and demon strations will be featured .
V'&gt;Cational students will be doing
district competition demon strations
in the areas of auto mechanics. cosmetology. electronics. nursing and
welding.
VICA (Vocational Industrial
Clubs of America) will ha ve a drawing for door prizes 10 those who register in the various areas of competi -

tion. Prizes have been pr.ovided by
Crow ·s Family Restaurant. Dairy
Queen, McCiurcs. Millics. Golden
Coral. Bob Evans. Ohio Ri ver Bear
Company. the Candle Box. Burgundy and-Brass, and Clark\ Jewel ry Store.

REV. &amp; MRS.

Course for older drivers being
offered
The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community
JOE SAYRE
College through the Office of Adult
and Continuing Education will offer
an Amcric·an Assoc iation of Retired
Persons driving course.
in-law. Tim othy and Kay of Al bany,
An cieht-hour dassroom refresh and one daughter and son-in-law.
er course' to help drivers refine exist Roger and Helena Ri ggs of Rutland.
ing sk1ll s and deve lop safe-defenThe couple also has four grandchil- sive driving techniques. The course
dren and eight great-grandchildren.
will be conducted in two half-day
Mr. Sayre ret1icd from American sessions and teach lifesaving preElec tric Powe r in December. 1990. ventive measures 10 use when dri and is now pastor of Mt. Union Bap- ving.
tist Church. The couple requests
The sessio ns arc designed to meet
gi ft s he omined.
needs of dri vers of all ages, and covers age-related physical changes,
declining perceptual skills, rules of
the road, local driving problems and
lice nse renewal requirements.
The sessions will be held
Wednesday and Thursday March 4
and 5 at 12:30 to 4·-10 p.m. The
course fee is $8 payable registration .
Preregistration is re&lt;;•lrcd. For more
inform ~tion or to r·: · •ster, contact
should be made with the Office of
Adult and Continuing Education.
740-245-7325, Ext. 7325.

Couple to celebrate golden anniversary
Rev. Joe and Rosa Iic Turner
Sayre of Rutland will ce lebrate thei r
50th wedding an niversary Sunday
wi th an open house at the Mt. Union
Baptist Ch urch fellow ship hall from
2-4 p.m.
The eve nt wtll he hosted hy their
families.
They were married in Pomeroy
on Feb. 14. 194H.
They have one son and daughter-

$22.
·:
Ground Cover Plants avail.able
th1s year include the English Iry,,: 25
plants for $10. and Crown Vetch, 72
plants for $25.
All orders must be paid when
placed and should be placed by
March 3 I. Packets should be available for pickup on April 9 or :cl. ·
Orders arc to be place1 'Yith
Meigs SWCD, 33101 Hilar,J Road,
Pomc;uy. OH 45769. Residr.-:' r:IJIY
call 992-6647 for addition;,( information .
•f!''

'•

Community Calendar

Ptlmcroy.

POMEROY nf

for prosp~ ~ t ivc U nl \..:r:-.IIY
Rio Grandc-.Mcig s County

Bran&lt;h stude nts at the Senmr Citi·
Ccnta Thur:-.day in two ~cs­
&gt;Wn s. 3-4 and (dO- 7:.10 p 111.. for
,tudcnt s nccdmg additional assis·
lance in the financia l aid pr0o.:css.
t ...:ns

SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778 and Star Jun1or Grange
87K. r&lt;'gular fun n1gh1 Sat urday.
potluck 6 ~0 p.m. followed by
founh degree pracl~&lt;:c at 7::10 p.m.
MONDAY
POMEROY . - Mc1g' County
Garden Clubs Association planning
scss10n to host April mcctmg of
Region II . Ohio Assoc iarion of Garden Clubs. 7:30p.m. Trinuy Church.
All garden cluhs to he represented at
mccring .

FRIDAY
. POMEROY - Meigs County ·
POMEROY - Mcig' Count y
Arthriti &lt; Support Group. Friday. I0 Veterans Service Commissi on. 7:30
a,m . to II :30 am . in conference p.m. Monday. Veterans Service
room . Meigs Scn1or Citizens Center. Office . Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.

Buckeye 5:
12-19-24-33-35

Sports on Page 4

1997 BUICK
.LESABRE
Auto,. A/C, power equipment, leather, V8, crulae,

'

Cloudy tonight , low in
30s. Saturday, mostly
cloudy, high in upper 40s.

•

1996
PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 218

4 DOOR
MINIVAN

SAVE
THOUSANDS

ANDERSON'S
MAnAG
SALES &amp; SERVICE

MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00
OH
992·3671

e

Pomeroy-Middl~port, Ohio, Friday, February 20, 1998

1996 FORD
RANGER
SPLASH

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Preas Writer
LAS VEGAS - The call to the
FBI came from an informant. a cancer researcher who said he had been
contacted by two men who needed to
test their store of anthrax- perjlaps
enough to ".wipe out the city."
In the tense hours that followed,
the FBI tailed the men by ground and
air, briefly losing them in the desert
darkness. The men were arrested
Wednesday night in Henderson, a Las
Vegas suburb, as they allegedly tried
to arrange the lab test with the informant for $20 million.

release bubonic plague on New York
City subways, causing "hundreds of
thousands of deaths" in a massacre
that would ruin the economy, surprise
the military and be blamed on Iraqis.
That man, Larry Wayne Harris.
46, of Lancaster, Ohio, and William
Leavitt, 47, of Las Vegas and Logandale, Nev.. appeared before a federal magistrate handcuffed and shackled at the ankles.
Their detention hearing was
delayed until Monday while the government runs tests to determine
whether the anthrax wa.• military
grade or simply an anthmx livestock
vaccine.
. As the city breathed a sigh of
Leavitt, who has no criminal
relief, the men were charged Thurs- record. owns a microbiology lab in
day with possessing a deadly germ Logandale, north of Las Vegas, and
for use as a weapon. The two-count another in Frankfurt, Germany, the
complaint alleges conspiracy to pos- FBI said. His attorney. Lllmond Mills.
sess and possession of a biological said his client is innocent- and said
agent.
he believed the FBI would find that
The FBI did not discuss a poten- the material in ·the car was merely an
tial motive.
anthrax vaccine used to inoculate cat·
The FBI in an affidavit said one tie and is not illegal to possess.
suspect -was a whtle sup~maCISt
Harris'
attorney.
Michael
who last summer spoke of a plan to Kennedy. said the credibthtv of the

1996 FORD
ESCORT LX
A/C, AM!FM can, apoller

17,000 MILES

ONLY 28,000
MILES

1996 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE

1996 FORD
CONTOUR

Auto, A/C, AM/FM CIH,
crulae, tilt, power equip.

2.YEAR LEASE
TURN IN

A/C, AIIIJFM Cl81,
crulae, tilt

lMIAIU,

2 YEAR LEASE

1996 FORD f·150 EXT. CAB 414
XLT AUTO, VI, A/C, AM/FM CASS, POWER WINDOW5LOCKS, CRUISE, TILT
'.+.

1992 SUBURA
LEGACY
Power . equipment, A/C,
M/FM cau, nice car.

.LOCAL
TRADE IN
1990 DODGE
D·250
ull alze converalon van,
t,tto, V8, AJC, AM/FM
, CD, rallld root, TV

PLUSH
·1989 FORD
PROBE

1994 FORD
CROWN
VICTORIA
uto; A/C, PW, PL, crulae,
lit, alum. wheels.

NEW CAR
TRADE IN
1991
CHEVROLET
LUMINA
A/C, V8, power.

EURO SPORT

ESCORTeD TO JAIL- Suspects William Leavitt Jr., 47, left, and·.
Larry Wayne Harris, 46, of Lancaster, center, are escorted back
to jail by U.S. marshals after they made their Initial appearances
before a federal magistrate Thursday In Las Vegas. the two men
were charged with possessing anthrax for use as a weapon. the
FBI said one bragged In Las Vagas he had enough to "wipe out ·
the city" and .last·year laid out a plan to attack the New York City
subways. (AP)
'

0
c
a
L
I

SUPER
CLEAN CAR

A. Gannett Co. Newopaper

FBI informant "is something we ' re
going to look into.""
The infonnant said Leavitt told
him he had "military grade anthrax"
in !light bags in the trunk of the Mercedes. according to the artidavit.
The informant said he saw eight to I0
bags marked "biological " in the
trunk.
The FBI said the pair were trying
to arrange to buy the infonnant"s testing equipment for S2 million up front
and another $18 million later.
Bobby Siller, the FBI agent in
char~e of Nevada, said authorities
acted aggressively on the tip from the
infonnant because of lhe potential
danger from anthrax. an infectious
disease that usually afTiicts only animals, especially cattle and sheep. But
anthrax spores can be produced in a
dry form suitable for weapons and
can be fatal to humans in microscopic
a111ounts ..
"Our' primary concern was the
safety of the community." said Siller.
who added that there was·no indication the men had any target.
Still, people flooded the lines of

races .
Sara Cammarata,
take shape
ByJIM'FAEEMAW
Sentinel News Staff
·Local races for the May 5 primary ballot have taken shape following
Thursday election filing deadline.
Republicans and Democrats both
will have three candidates to choose
from for the county commissioners
race for the lerm commencing Jan. I,
1999.
Republican candidates include
incumbent Commissioner Fred Hoffman of Middleport ..E. J.im S~eets of
Reedsville and Patty Goeglein Pickens of Pomeroy.
Democrats candidates include
Arthur Knight of Racine, Charles E.
Williams of Rutland and Mich.ael D.
Davenport of Middleport
County Auditor Nancy Parker
Campbell, a Republican, will face no
primary opposition or Democratic
opposition in the Nov. 3 general election.
However, independent candidates
have until 4 p.m. the day before the
primary election. May 4. to tile their
petitions with the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
·
Two countywide issues wiH be
derided includjng the renewal of a 1mill , five-year Meigs County Senior
Citizens levy for providing and maintaining senior citizens services or
facilities , and an additional 1.8-mill,
permanent levy for maintenance,
capital construction and operation of
Carleton School/Meigs Industries for
persons with mef11al reiardation and
developmental disabilities. ,
Voters in the Southern Local
School District will deciile a 4.8' mill,

.

_ ,_..

.. ...

,'\

E. Jim Sheets of near Chester has
. filed ·hi s petition with the Meigs
County Board of Elections for the
Republican nomination to the office
of Meigs County Commissioner.
A retired Ohio State Highway
Patrolman, Sheets for the past seven
years has operated Windleaves Industries, a mobile home delivery service.
' The Meigs County native was
reared in the Dexter community and
moved back here in 1994. He and his
wife, Lisa, and their children.
Melanie and Mark, reside on a farm
on Christy Road.
Sheets served in the U. S. Air
Foree during the Vietnam era.
He was in the Ohio State Highway
Patrol for 22 years serving at
· Steubenville. Delaware. Gallipolis
and in Meigs County. He also worked ,
a year as an operation's officer for the
Gallia County Sheriffs Department.
. In making his announcement.
Sheets said that if nominated and ·
elected he "will serve the people of

•

Las Vegas radio talk shows with
questions and concerns about safety.
In New York . Mayor Rudolph Giuliani at first denied any link between ·
the two men and the city as a ·target ,"
then complained the FBI had not
informed city officials of Harris'
alleged plot.
The arrests, which raised the
specter of domestic terrorism and
memories of the Oklahoma City
bambi ng and the Unabomber, also
come amid escalating tension with
Iraq. where lea\ier Saddam Hussein is
suspected of manufacturing biological weapons such ·a.s anthrax .
After the arrests at. a business
complex in Henderson, the Mercedes the men were driving was
sealed in plastic and taken to Nellis
Alf Force Base.
The FBI artidavit said the informant called Wednesday to say he was
a research scientist and had been contacted by Harris and Leavitt, who
asked him to use some of his equipment to test vials of the bacterium
Bacillus anthracis, which causes
anthrax.

.

23-year bond issue coupled -with a
half-mill, 23-year levy, for a total of
5.39 mills. for construction of a district-wide elementary school and renCl¥ll_\ions and additions to the existing
high sch6ol. The half- milll~vy is for
the purchase of classroom facilities
from the state.
Other levies include:
- An addiiional 1-mill , five,year
tire protection levy in Rutland Township;
·
-A 1-mill. five-yearTenewal levy
for fire protection in Pomeroy:
- A 1.9-mill, five-year renewal
levy for current expenses in
Pomeroy:
- A 2-mill, five-year replacement
levy for tire protection in Scipio
Township;
·
- A 1-mill. five-year replacement
levy for fire protection in Chester
Township.
Voters in some precincts will also
select party committee members.
Candidates for Republican Com.mittee are as follows, by precinct:
Bedford -- Tom R. Reuter and
Brenda S. Roush;
North Chester -- no candidate;
South Chester -- Edward J. Werry ;
·west Chester -- Blair Windon ;
Columbia -- Marco Jeffers;
Lebanon -- Cecil Wayne Roseberry.:
Letan -- Don R. Hill;
Nonh Olive-- Janice Young;
South Olive -- Paula J~ne Fitch
and William D. Durst:
Omnge -- no candidate;
Continued on page 3

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Sard Cammarata. tifth grader a!
the Portland Elementary School, was
the winner of the 1998 Meigs Coun ty Spelling Bee held Thursday night
at Meigs High School. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cammarata of Portland.
First runner-up in the compelition
was Amber Snowden, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jetf Snowden of Rutland, and an eighth gra~er at Meigs
Middle School.
The word missed by Snowden
after nearly two hours of CO!l)petition
was "deceitful" with Cammarata
going on to spell "poised" for the win.
Both the champion and the runnerup will compete in the Annual TriState Spelling Bee to be held at the
Huntington Civic Arena in Huntington, W. Va. Tentative date for that
contest is March 28 beginning at 10
a.m.
Trophies were presented to the
champion and mnner-up and a plaque
listing winners over tile years will be
CHAMPIONS - Trophies were presented to presents a trophy to the Sara Cammarata, the
presented to the Portland school with
the champion and runner-up of the Meigs champion, and Kitty Hazier, TAG coordinator,
Sara Cammarata's name engraved on
County SPelling Bee Thursday night. Here right, gives Amber Sriowden, the runner-up tro-.
it. The plaque travels from school to
Superintendent of Schools John D. Riebel, Sr. phy.
school each year.
Cenificates were presented to
Chris Wakefield, a teacher at nouncer and judges were district Local; Bill Buckley. Meigs Local,
each of the school champions.
Meigs High School wa.s the pro- superintendents. Deryl Well. Eastern and Jim Lawrence. Southern Loca l.

Conservative group sues to block sales
tax increase from ~eaching May 5 ballot

COLUMBUS (AP) - Usually
David Zanotti, one of the leadm of
the 1992 campaign for legislative
term limits, ·is all for having voters
decide major public policies.
But not !his time.
Zanotti 's organization, the conservative, Solon-ba.-.d Ohio Roundtable. asked a Franklin County court
on l'fiurSday to keep a prop&lt;!ftCd state ·
sales-tax increase for schools and
property-tax breaks off !he May primary ballot.
"We think this is a voter scam,"
Zanotti said at a news' conference.
Specifically. he claimed that lawmakers !llisused a 147-year-old provision in the Ohio Constitution to get
the issue to the voters.
The sates-tax increase. from 5percent to 6 pereent, would raise more
than $1.1 billion annually and pro' vide the money to meet the Ohio
Supreme Coun's onlc:r to fi~ the way
. the state pays for. education. Half of
the money·would go to schools and
. the rest would go rowan! properly-tax
culs for homeowners.
EJIM SHEETS
But Zanotti, who also helped
Meigs County with dedication and' defeat casino gambling initiatives in
honesty, and in cooperation with 1990 and 1996, said he has spent a lot
other elected officials."
of time researching the Ohio Consti- ~

Sheets files for Meigs County
Commission seat on GOP ticket

1979
CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

1 Section, 10 Pagee, 35 eents

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charged with gerin warfare plot

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Open house to be held
A community mural open house
will be held Saturday at the
Wilkesv ille Community Building in
Wilkesv ille from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. .
The event is being held to gldQ
community input for possible niu~·
images. ArtiStS Suzanne w~re~r.' I . .,.~·
Oldham and Geoff Schenkel' wi
on hand to take ideas. sketch, arid
answer questions. At noon St~
Rep. Joseph Sulzer will spea~ .
Refre shment s will be served.
To date . the Wilton Elementary
students have painted images on'
local trash cans to generate interest '
and spark ideas from the communi ·;
.. '
ry Whee ler-Oldham has hecn work~
ing with the students and talking' ·
with mcmhers of the community to
hcner provide a mural that will represent the Wilkesville community.
At a later date after the artists have
compi led the ideas and themes, a
community vote will be held to
decide the final mural image. PainLing will hegin in March.

Bed and breakfast seminar to be
presented
A seminar on "How to Stan a
Bed and Breakfast" will be held on
March 3 and 4 in Zanesville by the
Ohio State Extension Service.
The seminar is for entrepreneurs
who have an interest ·in staning a
bed and breakfast.
Operating a B&amp;B can be a full
time occupation according to
Edward Smith, District specialist for
Ohio State University Extension.
He !iBid that like starting any
other business, it is imponant to be
aware of the 1 ~any rules and regulalions. This seminar will include lectures and provide opponunities to
sec an existing B&amp;B in operation.
The sessions at the seminar will
be taught by Extension agents with
MSWCD tree and plant sale Ohio State University Extension.
underway
Business topiq covered in the
The Meigs Soil and Water Con- seminar include planning, organizaservation District Auxiliary is offer- ti on, licensing, financing . insurance
ing for sale tree·packets and ~round and marketing.
cover plants again thi s year.
The seminar stans on March 3 at
Single variety packs containing II a.m. and concludes at IU:30 a.m.
RECOGNIZED-- Karen Blankenship of Cheshire was recent- 25 seedlings each available this year on March 4. The fcc for attending
ly presented the Alpha and Omega Bible Reading Award at the Ash are White Pine, Scotch Pine. Col- the seminar is $99.00 single/$ 109.00
Street Freewill Baptisi Church in Middleport. Being the first to read orado Blue Spruce or Norway double which includes one lunch,
prcakfast. resource materials and
through the Bible, Blankenship was chosen team leader. She Spruce. Each packet sells for $10.
The
hackyard
packet
w
nt
ai
ns
one night's lod~ing in a bed and
accomplished her Bible reading in 18 days according to Pastor Les
two each of the following varieries hrcakfast. Fcc is $35 per person with
Hayman who presented her with the award.
for $10.00 - Forsythia. Oakleaf no over night accommodations.
Hydrangea. Punplclcaf Sand Cherry.
Upon rece ipt of the registration
Butterfly hush and Bittersweet.
fcc. participants will he mailed conNew this year is lhc Hardwood firmation with directions and inforPatket
which contains two each of mation on the local hed and hrcakThe Communll y Caiendar is puh- Dr. James Witherell to talk on upper
the
foll
owing
fo r $8 Sugar Maple~ fast in which they will he staying.
h~h1:d ~'' J . free ~cn·u.:c to no·n-prolit respiratory tract infections and give
Sweet
Gum.
River
Bt rc h and AmerRegistration deadline is Tuesday.
~'foup..; "'I ... lung I n a nn oun ~:c mee ting
guideline!\ on treatment.
ican
Elm
;
and
the
home ow ners and participation is limited.
:.md 'fX'l'IJ I l'Vl'nt~ . The calendar i ~
Fur funhcr in formation or regisnot d~~agncd 10 promote ~a le s or
RUTLAND - Rutland Baseball packet which contains two each of
fund r~11 :-.c r.' of .tn) type . It e m ~ arc Yout h Leag ue sig n-up wi ll he held the fo ll ow ing for $10 - Sugar Maple. tration materials. residents may conprinh:d a~ .,pan.: pcrm ih and cann01 Friday. 6 : ~0- K : ~O p.m. at the Rut - Sweet Gum . Forsy thia. Bittersweet. tat! Ann Smith at the Muskingum
County Extension Office. 225
he guJrantccd to run a ... pcc1fil: nurn - land Firehouse. Bring copy of hinh and White Pine.
This year's fruit tree pac ket con- Underwood St. , R. 6. Zanesville or
hcr of days .
.
certifi cate.
tains one each of Golaxy Tart Cher- phone 7~0-454- 01 44.
RUTLAND - Rutland baseball ry, Stella ~wcet Cherry. Golden
league meeting. Friday, 8:30 p.m. Glory Apple and Spartan Apple for
THURSDAY
Rutland Fire Department headquarPOMEROY - AA meeting ters.
Thursday. 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Mul be rry Avenue. SATURI&gt;AV
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - Sunday school
teachers
traintn g.
Syrm.: usc
MIDDLEPORT - · Middleport Nazarene Church. Route 124. Sat urChild Conscrvauon League, ,Thurs- day. I0 a.m. to 2 p m Lunch providday. 6:30 p m. Roc k Spnng Un ited ed for donation .
Methodist Church. potlu ck. bushand 's ni ght to he ohservcd .
HARRISONVILLE
Harri sonville Youth Leag ue mec un g
REEDSVILLE - Ri verview Saturday. 7 p.m. at the Scipio Fire
Garden Cluh mecung Thursday. Station.
7::10 p.m. at Hicko., Hill s Church of
Chri&gt;l. The progra•. .;n hou,cplants
MIDDL:=PORT - MiJdleport
w1 ll he hy guc&gt;t sp-. akcr SuSie Frnn· Lodge .163, F&amp;AM .. Inspection.
,is. Members arc asked to take frui t F.C . d~~ rrc . 6:30 p.rn _t.l mncr. Saturfor fruit trays and c, small fl ower pol. day.
POM EROY - Mc1gs County
Spelling Bee. Thur&gt;day. 7 p.m..
Mei gs Hi gh School cafeteria.

advance to
district play

tution ·and has never seen anything
Zanoni noted that lawmakers
like the process used to get the tax twice tried to get the ISsue on the bal·
increase on the ballot.
lot through what he considered the
"When we do it, we've got to fol - proper way: by asking voters to
low all the rules because we don t amend the state constitution. IJ was
have the power," he said. "They've only ·after the lawmakers were unable
got the power, so they make up the to get a three-fifths majority in the
House that
turned to the
rules as
:,rw.;;is;;;h:.,."~'..-'"':"- ....-~

be~forc- u sed

consritutional pruv1 sion .

Legislator.&lt; relied on an anomey
general\ opinion that said their fall back posi tion - simpl y writi ng the
tax increase into state law. instead of
amending the &lt;onstitution - w"'

•

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