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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
hand loss to·
Wahama

Pick 3:
7.().8

Pick 4:

4-5-5-4
Buckeye 5:
2-6-16-3D-33

Spoi ta on Page 4 .

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2 Sectlona. 12 Proget. 35
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 7, 1997
.

'

: : Magic ,.· · ~

Trash buildup
irks Syracuse
Village Council

· .form~ut· a
?
.
·:Clinton's budget
.:smoke &amp; ·minors, .
.DOP m•tntalns
:ay MARTIN CRUTSINGEA

· By KATHRYN CROW
l)as requested that council purchase •
· :AP Economlca Writer
·
Sentinel
Correepondent
.
lbe water board's half of the new .vii• WASHINGTON - President
Syracuse
village
officials
are
"fed
lage truck. Council agreed with the
, Clinton says his new spending plan
up" wilb the collection of refuse and request
· .contains the magic.formula that will
garbage piled on private property.
Councilwoman · Kathryn Crow
· .balance the bu~p:t not only in 7002 .
Mayor
George
Connolly
and
.
reported
holes on Colle~ Street a~d
bui for two decades~- But to
council
feel
"enough
is
enough"
and
on
the
road
· leading to Snowball
, -Republicans, the Clinton calculus is
at
Thursday
nighl's
meeting,
council
Cenie!ery
in
need
of repair. .
.more snake oil thaq miracle cure..
gave first reading to an ordinance .it
' Connolly said the village would
•I
In the eyes of the GOP, .Clinton
hopes
will
bring
an
end
to
unsightly
take
care of College Street and added
. loaded up his $1.69 triiHon.budget for
and
unhealthy
situations.
·
that
he
will contact Salisbury Town-1998 wilb a host of gimmicks lbat ·
The
Se'Cond
and
third
necessary
ship
Trustees
about Snowball Hill as
· .provide the illusion, blat not the realreadings.
'will
be
given
following
it
is
a
township
rooo .
.ity. of achieving budget baiiUICi:s.
approval by Village Solicitor I. CarCouncil discussed the operation of
. .. "It is disappointing to me lbat he
son
Crow.
·
the
ball lield and the concession
didn't show more polilical courap:,"
Connolly noted he has received stand. Councilman Mony Wood said
• .J8id senate Ml\iority Leader Trent
numerous calls.from .residents lodg· . he feels council should run the entire ,
. . Lou, R-Miss.
ing complaints about trashy areas in operation. Council will give the mat~ · Republicans 'attacked Clinton for
1818 fiiCel year budget. The pr..ldent, vowing
. the.villagec
.
.
ter consideration.
: .putting off nearly two-lhirds of the
to put the r.deral government In the bleck for
Council
approved
its·
annual
Council also discussed a water
· ~ough spending cuts until 20()1 and
two cteeetln, ..nt Cimgres• at $1.88 trillion
appropriations
ordinance
for
1997
in
problem
in Rose Valley 1hat is.under• -2002, after he will be out of office.
budget. (AP)
the
aniounl
of
$242.369.
The
break;
mining
the
road, and insurance on fire .
. • They also chargeillbat the ~i­
down per fund is as follows: gener- trucks and equipment they do not feel
For his pan, Clinton professed billion in 2002; ihe target date lbat
,!lent was .(\ffeiing Jlllpular middle · · In,ail. \he president's b~¥~~et ~
street construction, main- is adequate .
· . -class tax cuts - suCh as a $500 per posed new fees or increases 1n exlst- . optimism that 1997 will be the year · both he and 1be Republicans have al,.$65,100;
tenance and repair, $45,000; fire,
Tim Gillilan, police chief, rcport:Child tax credit and tax breaks for col- jng fees totaliRg $47.3 billion over Washington finally 'arrives at a plan promised to achieve balance for the $24,000; water. $63,275; pool,· ed that various signs are needed and
· Jege education- expenses - bu! five years.
·
to eliminate budget defiCits. He said first lime in three decades.
$30.000; cemetery, $94; guaranty council agreed and placed an order
But to ·make lbe numbers come
· .employing a trigger mechanism.lbat . In addition to auacking this his program would achieve bal11nce
meter,
$4,000.
for the signs.
..
. ~ould mU,e the tax relief disappear approach as 11 backdoor tax increase, not only in 2002 but until2020, when out correctly in 2002 while still
Council members Lany Lavender
He reported serving one sum.&amp;tier 2000 if the budget deficits bal· Republicans· said powerful interest further adjustments will be needed to offering popular new programs, Oin· and Donna Peterson noted that cable mons, issuing 30 citations and invcsloon higher lban current forecasts.
groups have successfully· lobbied · handle a flood of baby boomer retire- ton adopted a now-you-see-it-now- raJI!s hi.d increased and· they have ligated one complaint and two trartii: ·.
yoU-don't approach.
· : Even on tax cuts, the GOP com- Congress to defeat many of lbese. ments.
reeeived numerous calls from resi· acciilents during the previous month.
"Based
on
lbe
projections
"{!'
.
·
•
~ p·~~~:.;rs~~ bj)lio~ jr. "'tief ideas:~~ the paS!.f¢. ~~likely'?. ~o
d~n~ al?olltlhe in~~.l!'e .
..
. ,. .· Clerl&lt;lfrcasur~r Janice. Zwilling
..,.,:!'or~~ndiv , II!!! .~ ~~~ · w,P'~~~~lA~':,S~ill ~ ~VJI~\I'."·~~~ve...w~~~:'1'~in~ • ~. Two of his ~w ·opendi~· prp- "; eiiuntO 'i'nCmbCrs.said they were •ssued the tollow•og financ1al report:
.
· ilg&amp;jn . 'ttl~ lliW~ •nJill
-~ ~~~'ie to 1oof' else~~re ,to,'.f'ind ilie tain Ullanced bUd"aet fur ti\ore·,tllan grams - federal suppi!rt for school unaware.there..:o\!~~ .B?in1l.. !~ i1e ra.t f.. gener~l •. (-$1 ,584.77); stre~t con- ·'
prilriaply ~ cotpdrations, nch money to make Clinton's deficit pro- two decades," Clinton told r~porters consiruction and . expanded health increase; however, 111s believed that structton, $26,134.41; hoghway,
. investora ~ \irlirie;travelers, 1eav- jections come out right. ·'
.
after sending his 1998 spending blue· coverage for workers between jobs council does not have control over $9.419.'43; fire. $3,674.79 ; water,
lQg only' $22 billion -. a nei redllc· . _ · Even~ unhappy as Republicans print to. Capitol Hill. "This is not - would simply disappear in 2002, CableVision's decision.
$10,111.41; pool, $3,081.23; guaran· ·
' lion in ~ felleral tax burden.
- were at .what they saw as budgetary going to be a one-time lbing."
the year he wants to, achieve a baiContact will be made with the 1y meier, $3 ,104.14; cemetery,
Clinton's bii4J~et also employed an sleight of hand, they were c~ful not
That forecast, if it ~dines true, anced budp:t.
··.
company about the rate increase.
$95.65.
.
old ·Ronald Reagan trick of snea!cing to attach lbe dieaded DQjl. Jabel on would cenainly represent' a major
Gene Sperling, heild of Clinton's
Lavender noted that Larry Ebers·
Also aucnding wen: council mcm·
.• ·tax increases in under the guise of Clinton's new budget.
legacy for Clinton, given the gov- National Economic Council, defend- bach; president of the water board. oorsEberPickensJr. and Bill Roush .•
~ "user fees."
.
"I will not consider it &lt;lead on emrnent's track record. It has ~J~an- ed this ·budgeting idea, saying ll)e
• There would be new fees liD food arrival," said House Ways and Means aged just eight balanced budgets in . construction program was designed
·processors to pay · for Clinton's Chairman Bill Archer, R-Texas. He lbe past half century.
·
10 jump-start local projects, not be a
stepped-up food inspeclion program said that he had been assured by top · · Under Clinton's five-year pro- permanent federal program. He said
. and on drug companies for approvals Clinton o.tr.,:ial~ that the budget rep- gram, the deficit will remain above · eliminating the expanded health cov- .
. of new treatments, plus new fees on . resented . only the admi~istration's last year's $107 billion for the next erage program would allow law.
.
: employeryto help payihe cost of cer- first offer in what_ is _shapin~ up to be three years and then drop dramati- makers to review lbe new program to
: !ifying foreign workers.
an arduous negohatmg pnx;~ss.
cally until achieving a Sl!rplus of$'17 determine whether it was a success.
A tanker truck carrying an estimated 8,500 gallons of gasoline overturned :
Thursday 11n State Route 681, forced the road's closure for more than ei~ht ,
hours and led to the evacuation of several nearby resldents,l)le Galha-Me1gs .
Post of lbe State Highway Patrol reponed.
. .
. . The tanker's driver, RogerT. Fisher, 27, 16007 SR 7 South, Crown Coty,
'" '
hold.
eral valve~.
was·not·injured in the 11:35 a._m. accident, but was.transported to Veterans
•:· Racine Village Council met in re1- the Green Thumb project.
Memorial Hospital by the Me1gs EMS. accordmg to Lt. Wayne McGlone,
"ular session Monday evening with
Hill will check with lbe Green
·Hill reported he is collecting back
Hill reponed that Councilman commander of the local patrol posl.
.
.
. ~ayor Scott Hill ~in g.
. Th~mb supervisor, noting lbat. v_illage fines. He turned in $1 ,279 for Janu; John Dudding, former May11r Frank
Fisher .was later treated and released,.a hospnal spokesperson sa1d,
: Hill reported he ts gmng to contact finances will got permit the h~nng of ary, with $340 going back to the state, · Cleland and former·Clerk Jane Bee·
Troopers said Fisher was driving the tanker. owned by City Ice &amp; Fuel . •
;the Ohio Municipal League to get a any additional workers at this_time.
Council approv"cd the purchase of a gle have donated flags for the munic- Point Pleasant, w.Va., eastbound in Olive Township, two miles from SR 7, · .
:quote and information on lbe wor~Council approved contmumg new docket book for the mayor's ipal building. He indicated 'thlittwo · when the rig went off the right .side of the road, into a dnch and ov&lt;;numed.
:~ compensation program !hat 11 using the bin from Modem 'Sanita- coun.
Ohio flags are still needed.
No fuel leaked from the tan~tcer. but McGlone sa1d four to five gallo~s •
tion,
following
a
pn:sentation
'by
Mr.
Hill
reported
he
has
been
in
touch
Hill
and
Dudding
attended
a
meetspilled
from lbe fuel tank of lbe tractor hauling the tanke!.
· ·.
:sponsors.
·
•· : Tina Neigler gave a'report on the ·Zuspan.
·
·
wilb the Buckeye Hill/Hocking Val· ing recently regarding the forthcom- . The accident drew the Ohio Department ofTransportat1on.the slate Envl· ,
:(ire depanmentlailies auxiliary. She
Because of the curbside recycling ley Regional Development District ing sur.vey under the Ohio Rural · ronmental Prolection Agency, a Hazmat team and 1he Thppers Plams Vol- ,
.reported the group is· saving money program in Racine, the amount of about the fil'ng of grant applications. Enterprise Project.
.
.
unteer Fin: Depanmentto the sc~ne, in addi1ion to the patrol and the Meigs .
.for supplies and other items for the refuse collected by the · vill~ge has
He indicated interest in connecting
The information obtained can be County Sheriff's Department.
.
: .
. .
·
been reduced to $200 a week.
waterlines along Vine Street and Yel- used with grant applications forfedAs a precautionary measure, people hvmg near. the accident were evaciiew .fi111 station.
. ·
· ·
Counc 1'1 will review the matter at lowbush Road to give additional · eral and state funds; as a promotion- uated unlillbc scene was declared safe, McGlone sa1d. ODOT closed·lbc sec- .
Junior Heater. 1 Green Thumb
~orlter, approached council about~ · the regular June meeting. . . · · volume and pressure [or Yellowbush altoolto attract small businesses; or tion of highway shonly after the accident and it reopened to traffic around
Road residents.
by the. village
or community
service 8 p.m., McGI one sw·d.
-.
: i&gt;ossibilil)' of beinll hired by the VII·
• Council members indicated they
.
k
.
·
.
lage for additional hours. He cur· wanted to maintain trash seryice in
Council members suggested the orgamzabons to wor on projeCts.
Damage to lbe tanker was listed as severe by the patrol , and the acc1dent :
· (l:ntly works 20 hours and is paid by · the village at $6 a month ~ housep~ro~~ect~sh~o~ul~d:inc~lude~re::p~lac~l~
·ng~se:v:_-_~(~Con~~t;l~nued~
. .~on~Ptge~.!3!_)..__r!,!;em!!!:81
~·n~ed~u!!!;nde~r~~-~~~.

97.
.... ·....... .· '
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Fuel truck overturns;
residents ·evacuated·

....
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:Racine mayor ·t o check on workers' .comp
.

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• Y·&amp; ENGINE

shell SettleS

~Car seat .company strike
:clos~s three Ford plant~
.

· . DE'IROIT (AP) .....:. A strike at a
• company that makes car seals has
· shut dOwn production at three Ford
• Motor Co. pi!IJIII lbat ' rely on the
1'dl'lng 6' BOO workers·
·&lt;
' parts,
· Ford ciOSOII the plants Thursda}
·. ,night as negotiaiQn for the seat sup· plier, Johnson Controls ~nc., and the
·· United Auto Workers un1on sought to
· tesolve a walkout by about soo·
: workers· 10 days aao.
' ·
.
• The decision idled 4,000 workers
··a·t 8 ttuck pla"t 1.n Wayne., 'Mich.;
. · . 1 soo at a plant in Lorain, Ohio, and
. _. t '300 at an assembly plant in Avon
; Ltke Ohio, Ford spokeswoman
'.
: Fr.in~ine Rom.ine-MacBride Jaid

011

;I'

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::.~od;j~ and wtnpany officiala were
. unavailable to common! on the
1 be 'k
., progross of talks to reiO vc I . stn e
:·. tt the twO Joh(IS()n. plants.
· . · &gt;. Earlier. Jeff Stetner, a apOkeaman ·
' for Milwautee-bucd Johnson Con&lt;tols. said lhC t11rea1 of 1 work sua- '
.. pe~ 111 the Ford pi~ had lidded
.. , ap I!I'PIICY to the aea•';l"'· . .
·-: ''Our positi011 remams u It wiS

•

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last week- we're working hopefully for ·a quick resolution,'\ ·Steiner
said. "The ·pressure has been there
since before the strike began.•,. ·
I.JAW spokesman Karl Mantyla
decl1'ned to comment on the effect of
shutdowns. "We're obviously aware
of the impactlbe situation is having."
he said.
'·
Some JOOiworkers.have J 'n on
strike since Jan. ~8111 a Johnsotl plant
in P}ymoulb, Mich., ·which 'llakes
se'ats. for the Ford Expedili9n, and
·
ork
·oo... I'
200 striking w ers at an 'l"r m,
Ohio, plant produce ~~~ for Econoline vans: Ford has n~fused to install
seats millie by nonunion workeh.
Ford workers qualified u~the
national, agreement wilb the . w
wQuld get paid lbrough a work 'I!Qppage, Ms. Romine-MacBride. -~d.

The majoril)' of workers wouN be

covered, she said,
r.
· Roas RobortJ, a viee preaiderii of
Fan!. said that Ford had 8,601,) BapediticJIIS and 6,500 Econoline1 •Jiait·
in1 ·seats.

·-

·plant fire suit
for $2.1 million .
PARKERSBORG, W.Va. (AP) - ..
Hous10n-based Shell Chemical Co. ·.
has agreed to pay $2.1 million to lbe :
family of a man killed in a 1994 Shell :
Chemical Co. plant explosion in Bel· '
pre. Ohio, according to Wood Coun- :
ty court documents.
·
:
Shell reached lbe agreement last ·
monlb wilb the survivors of GiirY :
Reed, 41 , of Williamstown in the :
May27,1994,explosionandfireihat -:
destroyed a unit at the plant, kica~ ·
on lbe Ohio River across frQm Park- ~

I

'ersburj, w.Va.

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Shell declined to disclose detalrs :·.
. . of the settlement, but Wood County ':
ICin:uit JudJC George Hill rocendy :
ruled that details of the scttloitl1at ';
would not be sealed, Thc.Paibilbtlsa ·.
INews rqKXted today.
·
·
It previously 1 waa reported dill ~
SheD hid ~~'reed 10 pay 111r1 :
.I' $2.1 million to t11o _liunU_
ioa of
ocher wotbn killed mlhe o!!Piol1011, ,
'I

I

!wo .:

;Oeorae Nu!kir. ~. of ¢oo1Yillc, .. •Ohio, aiiCI Mille Huria; 1'36i .of ~
Reedville ' Ohlo.
· ' ·. '
. . (Cont,lnutkl
on Page I)
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Commenta

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The Daily Sentinel Diplomatic Immunity takes a hit in

'

.leek Ar.clli.w~
J8nllolllr

'E.rttliiJslid in 1.!H8
111 c-tlt., Pomeroy, Ohio

t14-IIM1M • Fa: 992·2157

.
.!lr
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MAAQAI(ET LEHEW

o.ner.t ...,..,

Controller
'

llloSealln•ID 1 - - · - - - - - " " • .....,_.,...

--Ill,....,"''"'"""
_.,,..,.,.,.,.,.-..,..,.-•-'a••llli•'
~-- ..· · - - - - - - - - - ·n••· .....
IU. , _ , . . . . (31111

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fie violatioas in his home counay. . flllJI!Id by ~ s.r-. Higb-Je\oel talks
But Makharadze was~ by ensued bet ween Owiltopher llld SheWASfUNGTON - Tlie govem- diplonl8lic immunity, which meant villi~.~ former Soviet ftni1n
nt of the republic ·of Georp ~eorgian officials ha&lt;i every right to mini11er who playOII a key role in
c
uncler intense pressure last
endins the Cold War.
m th after a fatal auto accident
Oeo,..ia's president eventually
involving a top diplomat and a 16acquiesced, and ~id that his governyear old Maryland schoplgirl.
ment would waive diplomatic: immuBut sources close to the case tell
nity. · In the days before ~
us privately that the pressure came
announcement, however, SOI.I'CCS say
from two direc:tions. While Amerithai Shevardnadze carne under
cans were calling for Georg1an dipto!
intense pressure from other heads of
mat Guerorgui Makharadze to pay for simply send their diplomat home, sta~. who didn't want him to set a
his alleged crime, diplomats and rather than leaving him · to face precedent by w&amp;iving immunity.
leaders around the world urged Geor- charges in the United States. And
The beads of state were worried,
' gian President Eduard Shevardnadze that's what probably would have in pan, because of what would hapto stand firm.
happened if not for the public ootrage pen if the situation were reversed.
Briefly, here's the story :
that followed the crash. Days after the Occasionally, American envoys iet
Makharadz.e, his country's No. 2- accident, Washington's airwaves ,caught misbehaving abroad. In those
lei ng envoy to .the Um'ted stales, were filled with calls for the drunk- cases, the State Depanment q~kly
caused a furor in the capital when be en diplomat to be disciplined in invokes diplomatic immunity. But if
sped into a downtown intersection cou11.
the United .Swes insisu on prose·~ · and . slamm~ into a stopped car,
The case quickly became a last- cuting crimes by foreign ·diplomats,
killing the girl ~arly on the momin~ . . minute headache for Secrelalj of then other countrie~ might feel prc;sof.Jan.,3. The d1plomat was alleged- State Warren Christopher, who want- sure to do the same in the fuiure.
ly drunk at the time, and it was later ed the case settled before his succesAnli that's a situation IIIOllt' counre'?'ed that he had a string oLtraf- sor, Madeleine Albright, was 'con· tries want to avoid.

·By Jack Anderson
and
Jail Moller

ROBERT L. WiNGETT

IJ!OfW "'-~- ..

L.--------------..,;,__...,.____. ;. . ,.__ .
- - . , - . _ , . , '--10 .,.,.....,, I!Johntln&lt;l. 111 Couit81.,

- D ) I Olilo U7&amp;; or. FM 10 .,_,IT,

.

Campaign finance
debate sure to
produce fireworks

ran

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corn~•pondent
WASHINGTON - Facing fireworks over questionable Democratic Party fund raising, President Clinton is urging Congress to pass a campaign
finance reform bill by the Founh of July. He is apt to get Republican rockets instead.
'
•
.
It's unlikely that campaign laws could be overhauled in live'monills even
withput the glare that Republican-run-congressional investigatjons will throw
on foreign contributions to the Democrats and on big donors' .visits to the
White House.
Not that it is new business. By Democratic count there have been 113
votes on campaign finance measures in the past decade; none have passed.
The bill that Clinton advocates was debated and blocked in the Senate in
1996.
These are work rules for the po)jticians who would have to pass them,
and for all the season's talk of bipanisanship, neither side wants to yield an
advantage to the other.
Add theinvesiigations into tainted donations to the Democrats, and there
is lillie prospect for action soon, if at all.
Republican.Jeaders say it will be on the agenda, sometime. Not now.
There's a GOP Senate task force considering the issue. Sen. Don Nickles, the chairman, has said there is no consensus on legislation. Certainly
' not on the bill Clinton endorsed. belatedly during the campaign, urgently in
his State of the Union message Tuesday night . ·
;H.i While the legislation has enough Republican sponsors to be termed bipartt tisan, the push for that bill is largely Democratic. It would prohibit the unlimll ited donations now permitted to political paRies, the money flow behind
fi admittedly improper contributions to the Democratic National Committee.
li ·The bill also would restrict donations by political action commillees, and
~ WO\IId seek to limit spending in congressional campaigns by offering TV
!~
time ,and other incentives to candidates who abide by the ceilings.
~:i
Sen. Trent l,ott, the majority leader, said he sees big problems with that
:.'1 bill, and that ari allempl to push for action now would be premature. He said
i Congress should look into violations of existing laws before passing new

-o.c.
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vre~a.,:.:Pre.~

· ~.I•.:± Area
.

·"

weather forecast

••eoclllled .,...

.

. ,.

.,~ By The
, :'
Tonight... Light snow likely... Mainly after midmght. An 10cll ·or less of
snow accumulation overnight LOw in the upper 20s. Light wind. Chpnce of
• I' ' SnOW 70 percent,
•I
Saturday... Light snow likely. Total accumulation of up to 2 inches possi1~
' •. ble by evening: Hig1'130 to 35. Chance of snow 70 percent.
,.
·••
Saturday night .. :Mostly c)oudy. Low in the mid 20s.
i~
Ext~aded forecut:
'"
Sunday...Panly cloudy. High around·40.
.
d "o Monday ...A chance of rain during the day...Then a chance of hght snow
I· ·. during the night. Low in the upper 20s and high in the mid 40s. .
.
'"
Tuesday.:.Achance of snow or rain. Low in the ui'P"i' 20s and h1gh ID th~
jr lower 405.
~

· IIa McPeek
.·.:·•,..:_ .Mae 'Este
,
.
. ,
Mae Estella McPeek, 86. of Long Bottom, Ohio. died
· ·., 4, 1997 at Holier Medical Center, Gallipolis.
•7, She was born Novei:nber24, 1910 in Long Bottom, a .
of the late
· Alfred and Laura Kathryn Bonar Swan.
~- ,
She was secretary and treasurer of the Sand Hill Cemetery
,- , tom. She was a member of the Long Bottom Communit&gt;: Association, the
Long Bottom· and Meig 5 County Senior Citizens, the Pyth1an S1sters Lodge
in Pomeroy, and the Racine Eastern Star. ·
.
'' · S~:~i~i)~(t,he J...o!JJ!) IoUom United Methodist Church, when:
::
...
•.

'

-Jack Aaderaoa Ud Jllft Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate,' lac.

~~_"~as

,;C

:~~Today's

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.livestock ·reporJ;

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:~.'·! COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- weak to ~0 cents lower; so~s-,lirm.
. ;;~ Ohio direct hoJ! prices at selected
Estimated receipts: 36,000.
•. . buying points Frida)! as provided by
Summtry ol Thursday's Pro,&gt;'· the U.S. Depanmenl' of·Agritt.~ltun: ducers Llvatock Assocititlon aiic:lr~· Market N(;Ws. • '' ""' ·· '
lion at Bucyrus:
.
•ol. Barrows and gilts: ivealc to 50
'Hogs: steady.
·
·, .. cenL' lower; demand . moderate to
Butcher hogs: 40.00-54:;;o.
" light on a moderate movement.
Caule: 2.00 lower.
,.,.
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U.S. 1-2," 230-26\)' Jbs. coun,try
Slaughter steers: choi~f 61.00· ~1 points 5J.5(J.,2.50. few at 51.00 and 68.00; select 55.011-61.00. ,
.. .. 53.00: plants 2.00-53.50, few at . Sla~ghtcr heilcrs: choi~ 60.00-·
.., · 53 1~ · ··•· ' I
"'' ''
· 67.75; iielcctSS.00-60.00. 1, ·
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U.S.' t.'j
··~30-~6(} lbl\. 45.00Cows: 1.00 In 2.00 InWCf1:, aII Cclws
~~'7 51.00:~~19-~~0,}l\.•. ~-5~5.00:
40.00 and down.
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~~~· Sows: stead~ to weak'.
Bulls: steady: all hulls 112.25 and
U.Stl·3 300-450 lbs. 41.00-44.50, down.
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·~. few Ill' 40.SO;_,fl~O-~ 111!1- 44.00Sheep a'nd lambs: I.O!J, tn 4.00
. 41 .00: 500-650 1111&lt;: .47.()()..$2.QO.
lower: choice wcK&gt;Is 96.00.101.00:
Boars: •s00-,900
'
choice
clips
96.()().104 .00: a£cd
', .."
_, . . . .
,
,...
For the week: harrows and gilts sheep 44.50 and dnwn.

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. ~: ~' The Daily Sentinel
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During World Wrr II, Benito MussoHni was dismissed as premier of
Italy in 1943.

Georfle R. '. P/agenz'

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Stocks·'.
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.'· day in history .

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Su~'f1bcrs nor.dc:NirinpiU P"Y lhl: ..-urm.'t nllly
rtmil in ndYorJW dim:l I(• The Dally Sentinel
on" • •· !lis or 12 mnnth ~1!1. C~t will ~
(liven carril.., Ct~Ch WL&lt;ek.

No Nub~pdon b)' mail p..'fmilted in nreu
where borne nrrk,., M:rVK.'C i!t avadablc

'• P'uNishtr l'ellei'YCK IIR fi&amp;ht to adjU:ll I'Mt!l l inJiht Au~ripdon period. Subecriptlon tMe
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I) -

Oppo$irig sides debate
SimpsotJ'S actual worth ·
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) What's in a tainted name?
In . OJ. Simpson's case, it all
depel)ds on the accountant.
Plaintiffs seeking punitive damafes on top of the $8.5 million
they ' ve won in coqapensatory damages said 'J'hunday that Simpson is ·
worth at least $15.7 million, which
includes $2 million to $3 million a
year from siJ!ning autographs and
writing another book. ·
The defense claimed that 1\tesday's .verdict left an already tappedout Simpson $9.3 million in the hole
and argued that the jury should award
the plaintiffs nothing in punitive
damages.
" He can't pax his bills," Sim,Pson's longtim~ business lawyer,
Leroy "Skip" Taft, testified.
The punishment phase \)f the trial
resumes today with more testimony
from Taft and other Simpson money
men, followed by another round of
deliberations to determine a damage
award to · punish .Simpson for two
killings.
• 'The same panel found Simpson
liable for the June 12, 1994, knife
'slayings of c.-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and her friend Ronald Gold·
man. and awarded the $8.5 million to
Goldman's parents as compensation
for the loss of their son's companionship.
-·
Now, the jury is considering
whether to award punitive damages
to Goldman's parents ~nd to Ms .
Simpson's heirs - the two children
she had with Simpson.
.
. Th1s final phase o~ the tnal began
w1th the defense movmg to throw out
.
,

flf.r-?ar~hes~e~~JI~tlor f)•l!l!hJf'-!'~-~~er- ~

Surviving arc one ~ister, Leota.Ferrell of Medway. Ohao; and several mcccs
' "l ~nd nephews. Shil 'was preceded in death by her'husband, Lloyd McPeek:
~- ;~ one brot(jer Sherley Swan; and three sisters, Vera Swan, Leona Hensley, and
. ,;.., Ada Bisseli.
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Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday;l'ebruary 8, 199710 the wti11~ Func~l
.~,, Home, Coolville, with the Rev. Charles Eaton officiating. Buri~t w1ll be m
1 1'' the Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
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Visiiation will be 2-4 and 7-9'JI.m Fnday, February 7. 1997 anh~ funer, ' al home, where Chester Daughters of America services will be holdmg scr.
: ,, vices at 7 p.m.·
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Mcmot:jaiS'may he sent to the Sand H1ll Cemetery, P.O. Box SOl;., oo1v1 11 ~·
. L6 Ohio 45723.
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By William A. Rusher

The secret of the ·Lenten
season
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W.VA.

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years --

aren't.n

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Serviees will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon.
Rick Snyder will offiCiate and burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gatdens.
Fnends m~~ call Ill the fun~ home _rro~ 4-9 p.m. Saturday.
In lieu of nowers. memonal contllbubons may be made to Holzer Hospice, 115 East Menrorill Drive, Pomero~.

• IColumbusl36· _I ·

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1'$ Midwl, 78, oiMiddir4tM. died Fridly, Feb. 7, 199711 his residence,
after an extended illnw.
·
He is IIUlVived by his wife, Mabel "Ja.clde" Mic:illlel oi Middleport; two
daup.ters and - •-ia-law, Patricia and Dan Arnold. and Paula and Roger
Gaul, all of Pomeroy; two IOfiS and daughters-in-~w. Pete and Teri Michael
of West Columbia, W.Vf:, enll John and Debbie Michael of Port Charlotte,

Aa.

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that the truth about the nuclear testing program has been kept a sccn:t
for so long. The Dcpanmcn1s of
Energy and Defense just beson
declassifying information on these
long-ago tests in recent
and
much of the data is still kqit a sccn:t.
"I can't even talk to my kids about.
this," Broudy . said. "They don't ,
understand. They' vc ~ver been
taught. 11teir schooling never provided information about nuclear testinc. It was erased from·thc te)lthoob.
Never happened! Y1,1unger people
have never heard of it before. They
think that we· n: making this all up,
we 'rc dramatizing it Well. we ·

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Pete Michael

lloiCH.

INO.

William A. Rusher

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Minor Injuries reported In acc_!dsnt . :

AccaWeather" forecist

IToledo I 30" J

You can't win. "
~hat bothers Broudy the most is

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. local News in Bri@f: .

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ATOMIC VETERANS •• For I'll
Broudy and others like her, ~ Cold
W11 still rages.
Broudy is the wido~ of t.t.ine
M~ . Charles Broudy, one of nearly a
million men who participated in the
United States' secret nuclear testina
Jli'Oir&amp;m.
She is convinced that her husband's 1977 death' frum a raR form
of lymphoma was a direct result or
his exposure to nucle11 radiation
during tests conducted durin&amp; ~
1940s and '50s. 11te government, of
course, disagrees.
Fewer tfi8n 500'of those who 1'!1"·
ticipated in \he tests, most of which
took place between 1945 ud 1962,
have been compens_fed by the federal government for injuries or illness
related to radioadive exposure. On a
ctaily basis, Broudy lights the powers
in Washin11ton to change that. ·
As legtslative .director for the
National Association of Atomic: Vet·
erans, she's tcstifoed numerous times
before Congress, relating the stOries
of dead or dyinJ! atomic vetcnuts. She
speaks of the women like ~If who
have lost husbands prematurely, and
of children born with birth defects,
which she claims Ire attributable to
theJr•fathers' radiation exposure.
But, for the most part, her pleas
~ave fallen on deaf ears. "It's a long,
sad story." Broudy told our usociate
lUran Karp. "11tey (members of
Congress) have us coming and going.

The Dally Sentinel• , . . :t

Pomeroy •lllclcPeport, Ohio

OHIO W e::~ ttwt
Saturday, Feb. 8
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lying-- chargjpg, for cxamplc,that it points out; is something else again: black acccptances
1\7 pcn:cnt, in the
Charles Kettering, the longtime would "gut" nondiscriminatory affir- There, the end of preferences "means name of some higher and overriding
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research director of General Motors. mative action programs such a.' out- facing the prospect that the number necessity, then let us at least be clear
~~
While the Republicans raised and spent atJeast $100 million more in the was fond of saying, "A problem well reach and job training. Since Novem- of Afr:ican American students acceptabout what we arc doing: We are
l'
1996 election campaigns, foreign-linked donations lind White Ho\)se entice- stated is a problem hal fosolved ." A
ed into selective institutions would denying 5 percent or the places availmenu to contributors have forced the Democrats into a defensive stance.
rigorously logical friend of mine
drop from 6 or 7 percent to around 2 able in America's institutions of
~.
And that is only beginning, with a high-visibility Senate investigation once objected that this isn't true. And
percent" This, he asserts, would be higher learning to young men and
comipg up t)lis spring_. It will ~ f&lt;Jj:Used on _the Democratic disclosures, maybe, technically, he was right. But her, they have cased their pain by gct- a "disaster for race relations."
women who have every ril!hl to
•' althorgh the Rcpub)j~ans prom1se any campa1gn finance breaches on theu Kellering's underlymg point was ling a liberal federal district judge to
Mr. Glazer therefore asks, "Can them on the basis of their objective
; ~ side will be fair game too.
sound: We could save a lot of time if enjoin its enforcement until the we find a ·way to reconcile some qualifications, but have. the misforwe would first ·state clearly what Supreme Coun can pass on its con- degree of selectivity or preference ... tune to belonging to the white or yel{~
Ropublican Sen. Fred Thompson of Tennessee, chairman of the investi·we
're arguing over.
stitutionality in a year or so. Bult~y with the language and ideals or the low race.
gatin• panel, said calls for refoi1J! can :t gloss ove_r violations of e~isting laws.
.
The California Civil Rights Ini- know very well that even the present Four(ccnth Amendment and the Civ' · "If wi: do that, the reform debate wJII be cast 10 a totally pantsan context
Does that sound like a prescriptioo
•1 and ~sure that once again, campaign finance reform will be killed," Thornp- tiative (Proposition 209 on the ballot Supreme Coun is likely to uphold it il Rig~ts Act of 1964, and with the for racial harmony? Mr. Glaze,;
in California last 'November) is a eventually, and some thoughtful lib. parallel languase of California's acknowledges that a college or post::1 son told the Senate in outlining his plans.
classic
example. The initiative, which erals are seeking a fall-back position. ·Proposition 209, which is modeled on graduate education is today "the
=~
:n1,ompson is a co-sponsor of the bill Clinton endorsed, but on his calOnce such person is Nathan Glaz- . those precedents?" Hq doesn't predominant pathway to well-paying
• , endar, the investigation comes first. He didn't set a schedule for the public passed with 54 percent of the votes
::;: hearings that w.ill put it all on television, but noted that in maj~r investiga- in a state. that ·Mr. Clinton carried cr. Writing in the Jan. 27 issue of the answer the question. he just raises it. and influential jobs." Would you, ir
ii:: tions before, including Watergate, when he was GOP counsei.-Jt took three overwhelmingly, amends the state New Republic, in a space set aside for A "liard question," indeed.
you were the pareni, of a white or
constitutiOn to provadc that "the state "The Hard Questions," Mr. Glazer
BUt that brings us back to Ch11lcs Asian child fully qualified (or £uch an
or four months to prepare for that phase.
.
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Clinton said Congress should act promptly on campaign finance reform. shall not discrimmate against, or notes that CCRI, even if it were Kcllc!'ing's dictum. If only delibCrate education, acquiesce philoSophically
grant preferential treatment to, any · adopted as national policy, wouldn't race preferences can maintain black if be or she wen.&gt; rejected in favor of '
~i "You know and I know that delay will mean the death of reform," he said.
individual or group on the basis of affect black employment drastically admis.•ions to selective edueruimial a less qualified hlack child'/
:t~ "So let's set our own deadline ... July the Founh."
race,
sex, color, cthnicjty, or nation- (since private corporatiOns still could, ins\itutions at 7 percent, and elimi-, · 'fltrlt urgency was lacking until the late-campaign disclosures of Demo- .
No one can preten&lt;t that the
al
origin
in the operation of publiC and many would, discriminate in nating those preferences would result answer to, that q!IC-~tion is easy. But
~ cratic'hrcaches. Clinton had recommended reform legislation in each of his
employment, public Mucallon, or favor of blacks) or change the pictun: in a drop to 2 percent, the 5 percent · at least it's the-right question.
:fj State of the Union messages, but hadn't pressed it.
public contracting."
for preferences in government con- of places newly available would go
~~
~publican critics said ht:'s doing so now to change the subject and to
William A. Rusher Is a Dislla·
Prior to the elccuon. opponents of tracting much (since the Supreme to whites (or perhaps more likely gulshed FeUow . of the Claremoat
~ cove~ Democratic tracks. Not thilt Republicans don't have their own to eovProp 209, lacking any better argu- Coun is already moving against A.•ians) bcucr qualilicd.
~' er, gij(en their fund-raising advantages and the congressional majorities they
Institute for the, Study o1 Slltesments
a~a10st 11, fell back on simple these). But h1gher education, he
And if we choose to maintain noanshl~ ~d tolillca! Phu-pliy.
~~ will ~je campaigning to rene~ next ~e~.
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Uogin,!l reform. includin~ a constJI~tJOna_l ~mendment that .would perrmt
• , ConJ!fCSS to impose campa1gn spendmg ce1hngs, Rep. Dack Gephardt, the
~~ . Hou"ff minority leader, cited 1996 House results.'
"&gt;l
B.f his numbcrs'point to one of the 'obstacles to change.
..~
Gwhardt said that in the 10 closest House el~tions won b~ Republicans,
~ theinnargins totaled only about9,700votes. Republican cand1dates m those
By George R. Plagenz
We read the Bible as if it is a hinhplacc or homeland of famous necessary wa.~ that he be there. At
..., conte~s had fund-raising advantages averagmg .$372,000 over the DemocA parishioner of mine in Boston handy hook of maxims. One day last people. Sometimes on these visits, if sU&lt;:h times, words can break the spell.
Ill,
sa1d.
·
once told me a story about her maid week I was asked hy a woman to tell we usc our imaginations and pretend
A man was telling me recently of
H~ Democrats won those scats, they would control the House.
who knocked on the parlor door one her when: the passage is in the Bible we an: living again in that distant talcing a walk in the park with his
nJ,bt is· not a reform argument that is J!Oing to lure Republicans.
. evening and asked if she could come
time, we can make the past yield up wife. He wanted to be quiet and
secrets that the written n:cord of those n.&gt;Occt on the beauty of it all, but she
in
and
sit
with
Mrs.
Lyman
for
a
r ~fi'OR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice prellclent and columnist
!!.
days never can.
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wa.• chattering ~onstantly. ''Why
t for Auoclllted 1'.-, hal reported on W•hlbaton ,and national pol· while.
"My bunions always feel beuer about long hair being il shame unto a
But we don't have tg go to the don't you just be quiet?" he said
• · lib IIIOI,'e tlllm 30 yean. .
·
when I am with you," she said.
man (I Corinthians 11:14). "I want Holy .Land to rccaptun: this feeling. kindly to his·wife, whom he adores.
Few words passed between the to show it to my son," she said.
As Whiuier said of Jesus, "we meet
"lfy0u don't want me arourld, i'll
two women while they sat together.
Later tha~ day I go~ a call from a him .in lite's throng and press"today. . go home," she said, hun.
Mrs. Lyman went on with her read- man who wanted to locate the Bible And ccnainly "faith ha.~ yet its Olivet · "I don't wantylll!lO so home" he
ing and h~r knining.'Jenny the maid verse where Pa~! says that if a man and love its Galilee." 'fie can find · said. "I want to have you with, me. ·
1y
Asir.ucllted Pms
['
11 yia Friday. Feb. 7, the 38th day of 1997. ~re are 327 days left .in jiist · sat and felt the 'Pain in her doesn't work he shouldn't cat (2 Jesus' sccn:t right when: we an: in But let's just be quiet"
bunions go away.
Thessalonians 3: I0). "These people today's world.
To walk with Jesus and he quiet
~y
.
.
And what as that secret? I have an Could this be lhl sccn:t we should
When
we
are
in
the
company
of
.on
welfare
Clllght
to
read
that,"
said
•
Tollay's Highliaht in History:
.
special people in ourlives we my caller.
·
idea that it was Jesus himself, more lcam this Lenten season? .
I . olfFeb. 7, 1964, The Beatlcs began their first American_tour as they cen,in
J-,h Spear li a .yadbJN
have all felt that way. Our bunions
Similarly, we tend tl,l think it is in than what he said, that won men's
~ llrivlj'd at New Ymt City's John F. Kennedy lntemaMnal Aupon, wl)ere
allegiance. It was his prcscn'!l among writer for New~p1per Eaterprile
~ ~~re, greeted by thousands of screaming fans.
· stop hurting and our anxiety leaves the words of Jesus •• the Sermon on them that healed their wounded A1101:lllllon.
·
us. We feel better just having them the Mount or the Oolden Rule .. that
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this date:
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beans and broken bOdies. All that wa.~
there:
•
we
will
~atch
hisspirit.
t , In 1812, author.CI)arles Dicke~ was born in Ponsmouth, England.
lio~ever, we und~resti- . We are wrong. We will c:omc clos( ~"
' 1904, a tire beJan in ~~l~imore that raged for. about 30 hours and mateMostly,
' hy Dennis
~
~10~
power of SJmple cr to capturing Jesus' spirit if we go
.. Ten years ago: The cn:w ol' the Star.; and Stripes, skippered
i · edmore than J,SOO bualdanJ!S.
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wathout words. Ralph · back in im~nalion 2,000 years to Conner, brought the America's C~p back to the United Statesto 'the cheers
t ' 111 931, aviator Amelia Earhan married publj~ber George P. Putalun in cornp8!1JOnshlp
Waldo
Erne~n
and Hen!'Y, Thoreau . thattitne when be "walked the dusty of abuut 60,000 people in San Qiego. (Star.; and Stripes had defeated Ausf N~Conn.
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~the closest offriendshtpSr but j)RC mads of Galilee with his disciplea or tralian defender Kookaburra Ill.)
,
f 111l~36. President Roosevelt authorized a flag for the office of the vice biographer
of these t\11\) I~11-Cenlu- sat on a hillside suiTOUnded bj ~n
Five years ago: Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin and French President
ry New England men of let~ says fielda and a ,sight of the sea."
Francois Mitterrand signed a.coopcration treaty in Paris. Fonner heavywcipt
World Wll' II, the Germans launcbed.a
the~ often ~med together ~tthout
~selling recalls some words of boxing champion·Mike 'fYson testirJcd at his rape trial in Indianapolis that
-~·,io, Jgly.
.. ho
.
. {o(-•-~'~ IBymg My!J,ing to each otlier 'except the Psalmist "Be stiH and know that hi$ -;cuser, a Miss Black America contestant, had consented to have sex with
•
._ ,1948. (leaenl ,Dwilftl D. Eisen wer res1gned u Anny chic
""'"· for an occasional 'pus ~ ialt. '"
·, am God." '
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:
by General Omar Bradley.
Ours
is
1111 qe when we f~l We . In this season of Lent. pilpims
One
year
ago:
Dutina
a
CentiJ)
Ametica
tour, Pope John Paul II received
•~
111 l9'7~ . . . in Swltzerl.ad won the riJht to vote.
'
h
ave
to
be
talkina
or
be
lllbd
to,
all
from
all
over
11M;
world
Will
ttavelto
a warm welcome in Nic.,..ua, his first visit there since 1983.
the ~ 1181ion of Grenada won intbpende c. ftaat Brillin.
tha
tinae.
Wa.have no --~on (or , the Holy ·Land to "tread where his
~
.. t91U¥ill4blch H. Doll wl. sworn in as ~ finf,_..IICI'ellr)' of tha NIIOrati~ Iii~. ltJt-. ·an:ect, feet .bave trod." There has ~I ways · 'J'oday's Birthdays: Actor Eddie Bracken is 77. Country singer Wilm~ Lee
Cooper is 76. Author Oay 'lllcse is 6$. Blues singer-musiciUI Bart Klng is
·~ 1 ;~ =~t::w~ w~ 10.sit on the U.S. S~ Cdart. Juatic. ed·the·wly we practtcc our,NIIJIOft. · 11een a f811CIII!Ition ihout visiting the 63.
Actor Miguel Ferrer is 43.
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................................................$29.25

26 .....:....................................... ~.$$6.611
52 - ........ ,....................................... $10..72

AmrTech ............................... 59'~
Ashland 011 ..........................4n
ATAT ..................................r ••S8\
Blink OM .....;....... ~················43'~
Bob EVWII .........................;.. 1~

Borg-W•rner .................r.......40',\
Cheinlli.., ........................J.J..1e\
Channing s~ .................. 4'CitY' ttoldlng ..............................31
'Feder~~~ Mojul ...................

any claims for punitive damages on
grounds that plaintiff estimates of
Simpson's net worth weu: based on
future earnings instead of current value. Judge Hiroshi Fujisaki denied the
request
Then, in opening remark~ to
jurors, lead defense lawyer Roben
Baker said the verdict ruined Simpson and now be can make "absolutely nothing" from the sale of his personality and autographs .
"Those days are gone forever,"
Baker said.
The defense estimated Simpson's
net wol1h at minus $9,356,157 when
the jury award is factored in.
Simpson still owes about $1.5 mil1
lion in litigation costs for his two Iraals, plus an additional $1.3 million in
what was listed as just civil costs.
forensic accountant Neill Freeman
testified.
Also, Simpson's custody.battlc lor
the two children cost him more than
$188,000. Baker disclosed.
'The plaintiffs used many of the
same figures to reach their $15.7 million net-wonh figure. with a major
addition: an asset of$24.9 million the amount)11aintiffs said Simpson's
name and likeness is wonh.
A plaintiff cxpen defined this as
the amount of money a person would
pay the49-ycar-old Simpson now for;
the rights to his name and image for
the rest of his life.
The killings, plaintilfs' lawyers
sa1d, only cnhanccd§ impson's wonh.
Freeman said after Simpson was
charged with murder, Simpson m~_c
. close to $1 mlll!~m on h1s book, I
Want to Tell You ·
·

Meigs-,announ.cements

De8dlineelltended
The deadline to have Racine area
veterans names placed on the Racine
Veterans Monument by the planned
Memorial Day dedicatio~ has been
extended to March 15, according to
monument chairman Carroll Cleek.
People wanting their name or the
name of a loved one on \he monument shoufd contact Kelly Eichinger
at the ~cine Home National Banl&lt;.
To date, 161 names arc planned for
the monument
MeellnR canceled
The Eastern local Technology

.
.
,
.
Commtttec meetmg scheduled lor
Tuesday has been canceled due to
parent-teacher conferences.

Minor damage was,incurred to two vehicles in an accident on Old West
Main Street in Pomeroy at 2: 17 p.m. Thursday afternoon.
Pomeroy police reponed thai Nicbole Robie, 25, of Pomeroy, ~start­
ed to.pull out from the stop sign on Old West (road under the bridge) to
enter the traffic Oow on West Main Street, saw traffic approach1ng and
stopped abruptl y.
.
Michael D. Mullen. 45, of Middlepon was behmd her, and staned to
·move his vehicle when Robie pulled up and then stopped again. His vehicle struck the rear or'hcrs when she stopped it abruptly for oncommg traf:
fie. Damage was light to the back bumper oft~ Robie vehicle and the
fronr bumper of the Mullen car.
There w~rc no cilations.

·Racine mayor to check
(Continued froni Page 1)
"It is hoped the residents w1ll
cooperate by mlmg out the form and
dropping it olf at one of the locaIJOns." Hall said.
Surveys and drop-off siu:s arc at
the Racine Home Natmnal Bank
oflicc, the Kountry Kotchcn. Eber's
Citgo, Sun-Fun Penn1.eiil and lhe

the hills lor Jhe month:
• Authorized Streca Commi s.~ion­
cr Glenn Rizer to purL:hasc :oinmc
needed iJcms.

Present were cdundl members
Roben Beegle, John Dudding. Dale
Hart . Henry Lyons and Larry Wolfe,
Hill. Clerk Karen Lyons. Rizer. Fire
Chief John Holman. David and Tina
Racmc' 111ayt1r's oflicc
Ne1~ler and Junior Heater. '
In other business. c.:ounc.:il :
Council recessed until Fch. 17 at
• Approved the minute&lt; uf the regular and spcL:tal meetings as well as 7 p.m. aa 'the municipal huildmg.

January .unemployment
inches up by 1 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - The sense (that it means) sustainahle and
nation's unemployment rate crept up non-inOatJonary growth.··
Areas of strong johs growth in
to S 4 percent in January despite
January
included computer and data
moderate growth in businesses' payprocessing
and engineering and manrolls. panJcularly at temporary help
agement
services.
TrAnsportatmn,
firms .·
·
I
real estate and financial companies
The Labor Department today , added jobs as well.
described the rate increase. from 5.3
percent in December, as essentially
unchanged. Saill, it was the hi$hcst
rate since July. During the last five
months of 19%, the rate shifted
between 5.3 percent and 5.2 percent.
'The increase' in payroll jobs 271 ,000 - wa.' the besl smcc August
and a little stronger than many economists antictpated Bul the Labor
·Dcpanmcnt said it was exaggerated
by the ciTccl of last wi~ter's heavy
snows on statistical adjustments
designed to smooth e&gt;utJhe 1m pact of
seasonal weal her patterns on the job
numbers.

And, ahc dcpantncnl said a good
ponion of the JOh gain ~ H2,000 came at temporary help scrvlccs..Thc ligures calmccJ " 'me mllaaion
Jillcrs on W~ll Streca. where stocks
and bonds rallied . The Dow Jones
Library Board to meet
industrial averaged climbed nearly 77
The Meigs County Library Board points in the lirsl halt' hour e~flrading .
of Trustees will have a special mcel- Yields on 30-year Treasury honqs ICII ·
ing at I p.m. Thursday at the to 6.67 percent from 6.75 pen:cntlatc
Pomeroy Library,
Thursday.
"- ·
·
At the While House, spe&gt;kcsman
M1kc McCurry said, "We' re happy
with the report because it rcllccts
steady. continued growth in the econRohcrt J(•hnson rcs1dcncc. Ptnncroy omy with low rates of 1~1l a tum and
VFD and Rutland squad assisted. no h1gh rules of c mplnym~.:nt. " _
injuries;
Despite January' s mcrca~ m the
6: 14 p.m .. .YFD and squad In Wald
unemployment rutc. 11 rcmamc ncm
nul Slrc..:t and Nnnh Scccmd Avenue.
mntur vehicle accident, Brenda Neut- seven-year lows reached liclt&gt;rc the
lust recession. Last )car'sj&lt;,h grnwth
1.1ing, YMH.
totaled 2.6 amllton, allowing PresiPOMEROY
6:25 p.m .. Y1lluge Manur Apan- . dent Chnwn lo poinl w 10 amllion
mcnts, Middlepon, Shirley Frazier, new johs creuaed dunng l11s forstlerm.
~
Econ omists hchcvc furlhcr
~~~NE
improvement may he hard to ach1cvc
5:46p.m .. Portland Road. Mildre-d this yr,ar. They' re li&gt;&lt;&gt;king lt&gt;r the
· ns.· VM H.
·
unemployment rate to remnm ahout .
Parso
REEDSVILLE
. where it IS or drift slightly hi gher.
11 :45 a.m., VFD and squad an '
"The lahor market is.sollcr m JanStale Route 6KI. motor vehtde acct· uary overall but it 's still very poSJ,tivc
dent. Roger T. Fisher. VMH .
for the economy," said economist of
TUPPERS PLAINS
Allen Sinai of Primark Occasion
8:21p.m.. VFD and squad to Sue- Economics . "lfs welcome in the
cess Road. motnr vchidc accident.
Chrisly Mills, St. 'Joseph's Hospital.
'

EMS units log nine calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service n:corded nine
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
n:spondmg included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:05 a.m .. Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, James
McDonald, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
.
4:30a.m., L1berty Hill, Avanclle
Ba". VMJI, Pomeroy squad a..sistcd.
5:19 p.m .. Murray Hill Road,
Pomeroy, Patty Arnold, Pleasant ValIcy Hospital .
MIDDLEPORT
4:2!1. a.m., volunteer lire dcpanmcnt to Elm Street. structure fire at

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
.
Tl!ursday admissions - James
McDonald, Pomeroy.
'Tj.ursday discharges- none.
Holzer Medlc:al Center
Diseha,..a Feb. 6 - Courtney
Mooney, Kenneth Crossen, Vitginia
Howell.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Arnott, dau1htcr. Pomcmy.
(Published with permialon)

'

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~~ - -l.

ARO A "IDIIGKT M0¥11tl , • • lS ••ch ,
PICI UP t"OUit TICI:ITS AT CALLII'OI.LIS
00111.0'8 PillA LOCIITD 111ft 10
SPIINC YA.LLIT CtM..a 01 AT
( SPill~

VALLeY

Cl·~~

''Your Local Mohawk Color:
Center Dealer"

Carpet

Shell settles

·=··. .-·-·. . . . . . . ".

NUII'f' H P IC."';ID UP
:I !J Pill . SA,IDo\T I
1tACJt Nllsml IICIEVU ( 2) lq IILI C~
oP PlAIA a I'BPS l

I

INGEl'S CARPET

Starting at

,,;-24:•

'

No citations issued in crash

Conferences set
Parcntllcachcr conlcrcn~es in the
Eastern Local School District will be
held Tuesday and Wednesday. 4:30 to
7:30p:m.

(Contlnutd from Pege1)
Pending are two lawsuits filed on
behalf of about 130 residents who
01nrtett ...................,. ••••••••..:.79:4
claim they were injured in the explo-o
QooctyMr ........................... :..53\
sion. The accident forced hundreds of
K-tnart .................."'............ :::10~
residents from their ho)lleS on both
L.lrid8 El1d..........................,••28~
~ides of 1hc river.
·
LJrwlted ooouooouOOo oooooooooooo ; oooouA' 17~
11ic plant pr(lduces Kraton j:&gt;oly·
Oltlo Valley ..........................31
o.. Valley.............................37r mcrs, which are used as performance
Peopl•• .......;..........................Hf ~nhallcers in food jlal:kqing, toys,
Pre1n FIN.............................l 14Y.
sponing goods, :tdhesives and lubriAockwll ................:..............18\ . cants. 11te cbmpany said that human
RD-'IMN ..............................177}.
error and an abnormal chemic•l mix-.
St10M)'J 8ooooouoooo'ouoo oooonnonooHo~
' 7'LII
ture contributed to the explosion,
Star BAnk ..............................~~
The company denied violating
w ftiito11 .........................~2\
~11\
safety requirements. To avoid a coun
'
fight, however, it agreed to pay fines
Stoclt reportl .,. the 10:30
$3 million for S3 safety viototaling
a.m.~
~
Of
OlllfpOIII.provided
, br I,~-lations cited by the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.

..

Minor injuries were reponed following a~ accident II~ Jnter·:
section of Walnut Street and North Second Avenue 1n Middleport Thursday around 6: I0 p.m.
.
,
•
A car driven by Lcndre S. Slack. 63, Middleport, strUCk t~ rear ?f a;
stopped car driven by Terri L. Fife, 36, Pomeroy. fon:1ng F1fe s car mto,
the rear of a stopped car driven by Brenda Neutzling, 41 , Pomeroy, aa:onl-'
ing to a Middleport Police Depanment report.
.
Neutzling was lransported by the Middleport squad of ~he McJgs_Cou~­
ty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memoraal Hospital Jn.
Pomeroy for treatment of minor injuries.
,
Vehicles involved sustained light damage, according to the report. Slack
was cited on a charge of failing to maintain assun:d clear distance.
•

$ 99
sq. yd.
· H

. . I .:

II

J-l; Iii

Now offering FREE
In Home Shopping

. 1H ..

l

'

INGE.l'S CARPET·
181 N.

2nct Ave • • ' 992·7028 .

�•

Frl~

E-.......
" f•··
- - r 7, 1117

I

tSpoJts

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•
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..... .

The Daily ·Sentinel

•

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.

. . ..

•

..

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.....

4·

p
•
wag~

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Frld*y~

In Top 25 college hoops,

F*'-Y 7, 1117 ·

\ By Thduac' I d "-a.
,. Bo1lby ana- ma a perfect
: p1111 far No. 12 Cincilllllli. AIII\Oit
too perfect, u it lUnled out.
· Brannen threw a full~urt
inbounlk paa riJbt to D.nny Fort·
son, who made alieiRakinalayup
with two-teaths of a IC(:Ond left
'Thunday niJht, givina lhc Bearcals ·
~ IWl&gt;"point lead over No. 21 Tulane .
1be 'Jut-second plily worked so
.
..

1

:;@J DAVE HARRIS

!_he

UteS.

•

·· In Asian Honda Classic,

·: woods takes lead
:in second round
By ROBERT HORN ·

· , . by Prime . Mimster · Chuvalit
, . BANGNA, Thailand (AP) - · · Yongchaiyudh, and be asked to help
~ Tiger Woods, hi.; ga~ heating up as
promote the 1998 Asian Games, a
.spectators sought relief from the sti· regional Olympli:-style competition
' Ring conditions, shot a course-record sel for Bangkok.
.;8-under-par 64today io take the sec"This tournament is special
!ond-round lead in the Asian HQIIda because it's in the land of my mothClassic.
er's birth," Woods said Thursday.
"' "I felt o lot better today: I' m over "Thailand has treated us very well.
'ihcjet lag," said Woods, two strokes I don't know why, but I feel like I'm
clear of the field in the Omega Tour home. I hope I will be hack ·soon."
'· ' everit. ''I'm in a good position atthe
The 21 -ycar-old had harcly
!halfway stage, but there are still,two unbuckled his scat belt al'ter a 20- ·
. ·rounds to go."
·
.
hour Righi Tuesday night when tcle" Wood», whose mother Kultida ·is vision crew broadcasting live on four
..,. native Thai, had four 6il'dies on the or the country's five channels burst
front niiiC befot'll.a gallery .of about into the first-class cabin.
,000 fans. While lhc tropical heat
Rig)or· bc;h.ind were poliiicians,
uced thai number to I,000 111 the bureaucrats and business execlllivcs
m, Woods rewarded the remaining falling over each other for a chance
s with a ·a number of dazzling to be photographed with Wooc;Js - .
hots.
'
the best-knllW~ athlete with Thai ori"This is more exciting. than I xins in the world.
JIOI*ld,"' l!llid Porn~htii Pele~ a
The beciic pace felled Woods in
.
year-old hotelier who was attend- . Wednesday's pro-'l_m proc1ice rou~d.
i ~f her first golf tou~t.
.when he quit on the 13th hole,,Citong
·· ~ · Woods, who recerved a reported heat exhaus1ion. jet lag and all the.
f $480.oo0 oppeatancc fee, birdied the attention from his sleepless lirst
JQth,jtill missed birdie putts on Nos. · · night in the fOUntry. ·
'
· 1J and 121 and then Jioled a tricky
Hcnicqv~redwill!. a~inttM:first
· wedp llhot ffO!n, just off the the . round and ·at~ndi!&lt;J .a pr1vatc dmncr
Thursday night, where he wus
~pplauded ·for trying to imitate the
The three-time POA Tour winner il)tricate ~n.d mc)vcments of trudl, elf-=' 1~on the par•S 14th,, 11onal Tha1 dancers.
' ......Ch' ·h ·
Mongkohham ,
~ 1111t cH~ bac . 19 the top or the Ch 1 ~~~~ ~. adviser said 1...;
~ with.ll birdie on No. 16.
ava 1 s s~-- . · • ·
.
Hehilhiathirchhotonthepar-S 17th government cons!ders promoting
wltblli Heetto setup another birdie,
(See WOODS 011'PaP 5)
ai!di:losed with yet another precise
approach for his ninth birdie of the

a

1

\, ~

·

ll'llilina ~3. But he miued the first
and made the second, aftd time ran
out on Tul111e's inbounds pus, aivioa Ciocinnali a 6S-64 viCtOf)'.
" We had a chance to push' it to
overtime, Jerald missOd the shot."
Tulane coach Perry Clark said. " I
told him in the locker room he's won
an awful lot of games for us. He's
goina to .win a lot more."
Honeycutt also missed when he

well dull several CinciJIIWii players
piled up under the basket ia celebration. Problem wu, lhc Baarcats
.were called far a ~hnical foul for
leavinJ the bench.
•"I though~ 'They're tryina to roh
us,"' said Foruon, whq scored 34
points. "Beina (Ill home), you're not
supposed to get that kind of call."
Jerald Honeycutt stepPed up to
take lhc two foul shots with Tulane
1

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Scoreboard

I

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NBA~

l••

.

A-lllwloloo .

12

w....;.................~

2J .468

•••

ee.tniDI"..._
Cl»cao,..........:.. dl 6 .17.1
Doanli.................... lol 12 .7}9
....................... 31 u .674

7
10

I
I

•

.m

16~

Clevdaod ............... 1.1

hodi... ................... l.l
Milw•kw ........ ~ ... ll
T0f01110 .................. 17

.

beat
.

.

s·s--59

~aster·n

E•tam Head Coach

Tied at 57-57 with I :30 left, the
young Eastern Eagles pot up a galant
fight against the 15-4, twelfth-ranked
Wateford Wildcats Thursday night
before howiqg 65-59 in a non-league
varsity girls .basketball contest at
Waterford. In the process, Eastern
held 26.4 ppg, 1,400 point scorer
Laura Goins to just IS points, a season low. Goins had surpassed the
scoring plateau the night before as
the Wildcats cline~ the Pioneer
Valley Conference tttle according to
Coach
Marks,
Two years ago Eastern broke a
liome winning streak of 41 at Waterford, and had their sights set on performing the same upset last night;
breakina 'another home win· sti'Cik
for the Wildcats.
·
In the last six games of the season, Eastern has steadily reduced its
number of turnovers, been more
patient 'in its offense, and taken better shots. Eastern Coach Scott Wolfe
said, "We're not there yet,Jl~i toqight
we· started to "click". ofir girls arc
starting to play together better and
their confidence level has taken a
tremendous.leap forward. Our freshman · guards, Backy Davis and ·
Chasatie Hollon can handle the ball
against anybody. They've just got to
keep believing in themselves."
"Tonight, c;vcry girl picked it up
a notch and contributed. Chasatic
Hollon did a great job on Laura
Goins in the diamond and one. Our
whole team played a goo() defensive
game. Our sophomores and freshmen were beaten by an experienced,
veteran, top ranked ball club tonight.
They de~rvc to be proud. This was
.a good game going into the tollillamcnl."
Eastern's super-heroes. tlie
dyna1nic duo of sophomoi'Cl; Jessita

Don

.

MinRCIOIII .............. 2:\
Oiallas.. :: ....... ~ ........ l6
· · 0eoo.., .:................. 16
Saa'AIMOiio ........... ll
Van..:oum ...............9

U
28
J2
.\4
42

LA. Lolcn ............ U
Saulo ................... .32
Punlaod .._ ...........2J
· L.A. Clippm ......... l9
~0 ............ 21

18

24 .

·'

'.479

..16+

.m .

.129
.6111
.:I'll .
.432
28 ,429

· SO

14 ~

17
18

Ouk Hill77, Lu~;aavillc Val. ~ Old Fort 6.5, Fostoriu SI. Wt Jidclln 57
OIIC'JO 55, Gi~rJ !II

Yuu. (.'h(l•tian

-·,

·

hrmil Normandy~ . FAirview SJ
Pauldina 47, Uf'IIXI' Scioto Val. 36
•
Ptmberville Eastwood 44, M'iiiMy
W.J2
Prttisville -42, N. Ca.n·ttl47
l'umoroy M
, eiJI 50, Wah:uno., W.\111..

••• Por1smouth Clay 46, Fu.nldin Fur·
oocc Gn.'l:n 25

~y 12, Beltn ilk! 26
-~ ~
Celina 66. Kenton 4S·
, -; ·Ctnt.ra tU. Lucas~~
,,
C!•·O:ilcr.un 61 , Cin. 'Aikc• 3.S ~ ci
Cin. Hilb Chr AcOO ~~7. Cl"in. Se~ 1 •

~·

ar Slotu~

Hlll1'26 , .

.

Oa"* 11 Ca•d. 6;~0

42

'

·

·1

'R

: Rocky RivL'f Luthl:r:m W. 60, Ck . 'In·
',, dopcnde=J3
R•••ia 6:\. Anu o4a
.
S. Ctwltttofl SE 7K,·Madison Pl~hli
~· 26
Slmlkuky Pntil•?l, Pon Oinron :t t
Sbak« Fltt. Bro\Wn !12, Luthtrun E.
11 \o.
•
Sheridan SS. Joh~ Glen 46
Speoi;OIVille 68, U ... fl:ny J3
.. Spring VDI. 16. Ye-llow Sprinp.. l6
. SprinJ. COiholic .53, Mibon-Union 3K
Spring. L.ocnl !\:8, Minmd Rid&amp;e %

'..,

Cin. HuJbcs ~6. Cin. Hlnison' :10 ,·
Ci•. LcK:kiMd 40. New Miami 1:\
Cin. Madeira 4:\, Cin. Finncytown :\0
Cin. M cAu~y 4!\:, Cin. Ursulinc 4~
Ciri. Mt. Nortt! Dame .54, On. Mc::n:y
•

Cin. N. Culkje Hilli.o." '~in. Lund·-~
markCbr. 22
Cin. Oak Hil(5 J:'i. Cin. Wt!itcrll Hill s

Spri ac . Northtlll ttrn 40, Spring.
Shawnoc 31
.
Spring . NorthWC5Icrn 60, Kentn•

:4

a .. Pui\:C'II· M"rian 44. Cin. IWJcr
• Ba..:on42
,
9n: ~ildinp. ~7,., N.•l!c"LL.T~yhlf' 6.~
.; On. Sc:1on 67. &lt;.:1n. Sr. Ufill lit ~~
•
Cin. St: lkrnnnl ¥1. U;ttulliu .U
Cilt. Summit $0, ~'i11. ('uUniry O;~y ·2':1

Rid,c4S

·1, ·

Ci11. Walnut Hilb :'i 2, Cin. Nnrthwd t

-,,

c..,.....,..
K4

· 41

Sl&lt;f.O. fo6

~oil. o( ~~ n

90, ~nt . Fbif.la

.

o.tvichon n , Sk:na 64

1

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26
·

•

'

coat am.. 61 . a....p..b 41
Col. Acad.!my ~M. M001fU11ha &lt;.1tr. ~

41

'

NE lt.tl'iiiM 91, St~rhtq

.

Syc~ Muhll,, . ~.

Soncta E. 41

. SylvOIIIia Southvifto 59. R~•wd .~I
Uniontnw• W t! ~7 . Mw dlt1" Pmy

46

f.
Autlill!
- '
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Wnrn:n Hnn1inJS2. V~u. Un:ulin~45
Wutcrrun.! M. R.1.'L'd.~villc 1-:usn:rn 59

Wau54.'t.ID 10, Della 27 · ·
' Wnyncslield Go1hen 57, Bcnjnmln

NW Louit.lana K7 . Sam HoualnA Sl.
67

L..J~n4K

Nicboll1 St. 76, SW T~ Sl ..H
Nonlo CIIIOUOII 90.- St 62 .
SE L.ooilllnu 77, Gcorala Sr. 6K
SW Lo.ilian:i ~. Jack100Yillc K7
• Suuthcm Ml11. til. HotlttOn 64 ~.

E·ssAGE!

,

W. Jtl'fmon ~I . (jnll\fJvi~w 4K ,
W: Uninn 41. Lynch~rJ Clay 40
. WUf1atunt.1ll67, V;ut W~.-rt47
Wllf'llen Chmnpiun SI. Newton Fall!!

s.."*·

-n.cc......-y~R
Middh: Tenn. ~ .1\UIItin f\:11,1. b."

66

•\

.
• Utica :4. O~nii&amp;RJY )K
Vanl~ 4K. H.Win Ntlf1hml J6
·
Van Wer1 Uncnlnvitw 60. DclphoJ
Jdftnoo ~2
Vcn~..-Uik:M!iY. npfl City 46
W. Chcller Lalotn 62. Cin. PriQ!.-..'ttm ·
~I

({YI')
.
Ctll. Bndh..1Vl.'ft 77 , Cl~. fk,"t.-chcrofl

OeOqia T«h 1111, VlrJlolall
· ~~kylll. ~. c...H,.,J .
~)' ~. N .~..a~nllltoru 4'1
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'ft.'\n•·S.·~ftl(lftiu
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Cla_ymoat ~3. St. Clainvi1k 46
Cit, Joh• Manh~l :W. ,Indian Cnxk

.' SoUtl.

,

. ·St, Mary) 6.4i, OI111;WD-01andorf 40 ~­
Sttlw 52, Ra11ennb 37
SUJ~r :H . Fa~t~ -10 ,
, .
S••mh Slalmn Lickina HtM . 55.
lkmt Union "7:
Sunbury 81&amp; Wulnut48. Uckina Vat

Or~!ltJvUII! Lopn l!lm ~II. Circlcvti~ ·

48 .

.

~prtna~o 71. Cin.. Norwood tl9 ,

&lt;u

~

Cin. Wimon Wuudi ..W. Cin.•Muum
ftclil_lhy ~'J
•
•Cia. \VJOm6nJ63. Cin. ~ hrk 29

"

Portsmouth Nmre Dmnc 60. lmnlon
St. JU!i!.!ph -'2
Pr~bll.' Shuwnct 73. ~iddh:ruwn
Madi sonl!li
_ · ·Rayl;upd Buclu=yt 49, fl. l.iv..•tpuoi 2S
R""'krunl Parkway -47 , Ntw BRlmea

lly 42

NCAA Division I
men's scores

'l ••

r

~I.

,8ryAn6l. SwiUitetri 22
'Cadiz .S9f Wellnille4~
Cnnton McKinley 6~. Akron CoVt!n·

'· Sday'l
All-St._,
p.m.

, Bcawr Val. Chr.

·J u~cph

Nurdonla 41, Brush :l6
N. Um11'S. Ronte 71 . MutlwWs ~I
Norwalk Sl. Paul6~ . MOfti'Geville 46

Brook¥ille'39, Day. OnkwutMI29

-

No iam..-ianWii

61

Bellolre St. John '• H . Bi•h'' P'
cW.V11.) Donahue n
~Jibrouk !\:8, Carlilk 44
Bctleron.-~ $). OtotQvn l.l
llcdia Hiland,,, Glraway 43
•
llethei-T11e 60. H&lt;w IU.:hmon.l!IO
Be dey !'il. WahinJtun C.H. ""' {01')
111m• 6.\; ADen R 62
. ' Bolkiu10.Hou!lfun.tal ''
,
Bnioltllold .16, Yuu. Ubeny 41
.

10
14

Yorlt W; sio .......... 84
l..t;.,. 104, - - 100
Ori-119. Bdiloo I fl
1111..,1101, MUw..,k.. 'lO
ao.lolle · ll~. - 1 0 0.
Detroit96. . . . . . 87
Minnaot~ 103. V~· l6 \i.

N!!w Bremtn _!iK, Parkway 47
Nt.!w Rt:i(!.el IW, Fremmu S1.

rQ

49

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Arlinata. 6:\, V ~Burcn !i6
AshlAnd Cre8rview R.~. Plymnuth 24
Ashville Teay5 \lal. 6R, Canal Winchnfft' :\8
.
. '
Athens64. Vi~nl WIU'f'en 40
,:
~on I$S, OIY\IIIOP fAll• 36•.
~~ Beavtf 57; ~1~~ Edi!IM,

·

21
26

.370

MiwniibulJ ~. Dny. Carroll 2ft
Midd)ecown Fenwick 7(). l....ebanon 4&amp;
Milan Elli son 4'1, Sa11du&amp;lr.y S1 .
Mary's 4:'1
Minslt!r .U . S1. Henry JS
Mon1pelicr 61 . Evergreen 3~
Morral RidgeU&lt;~Ic- 72, Mount Gile11d

An:Gdia!il, M~,.&lt;:omb-46

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42

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Mcl&gt;onuld Sl, Lowellville 40
Mi!ehllnin bure 4~ . W. Liberty Solma

Akron Manc."heskr 78. A~m Elms 4.5
Amanda·Citllnrtek 70, Bk&gt;om·C~ r·

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OoldcwStue ..........l7 29
Phonix .................. l1 :\J

tto.k;op3

Ind. 74

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

hdlkot,w.

HO ESWIT'H

WayOO!Ivilk: 57. E. Climun .52
W,cir IW.Vu.J Mlidmma 70. Turtmtu

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W. Alextuwkin Twin Vul. S. U Nl•w-

sr. l.ooi•64. Lolim•12 ·

Tennaste&amp;i 99, 1't~T«h!i9
Tn.·ChauunnoaD 64, Alo.·birmiAJ·
ham l9
•
Troy St. tl.l. a.rrato 74
W. Kcll-,:ky 6¥, Albnlai-SI,· ~~

W. l.alilycllc RifJJCWuUd 47, New·

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Whhchnuse Wayne 4!1. Bowlin J
Gn&gt;cn47
Wilk'llli,d1br S. 66, Mll('lk: Hts. 56
W\Mfslcr 6 • Alli ; U'IC~ ~ !i
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l'!IHL standings

ADVERTISING IN THE

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flllodlay 7'1. c.dan!llle 67
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Cotili.II')' .............. I9U 6
~ AnJCit t ....... l9 _l9 6

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Firii·IUillld leldw Lee !'etten. •
rililllll?iM•I plsyinJ for lhc Unit·
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St. l~~aiM ......... ...262-1 5 ~7 lb7 170
Pt'ocniL ............l~ '26 4 !iO 1-l.l 1M
- (.'bic~n ..............20 27 R 4M IJ'I 146
Toruidu ..............20 .\:\ J •4f ls.t 190;

lldoj~ T.,. 75. UC 1,.;,. 74. 20't;
Ottp 69. WasblnJk• ~9
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l&gt;&lt;jllao ........... _.,...IU 20 4

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UCSooloa.tlon~R.IdohoM

o IIP'·plllierned viiOI' as she followed her son 111011nd the Thai

'

Ila

'

eiid;" ~)Cuhlda ~.who wore

. Arthur Lee scored 26 points for
(18-3, 7-2 WAC). After Lqng's free
throws, SMU ( 12-8, 4-6) was unable · visiting Slanford (13-5. 6.. 4).
No. 20 North Carolina 90 '
to get off a·last shot.
.
Florida St. 62 '
The game marked the return of
New Mexico coach Dave Bliss. to
Antawn Jamison . for onct
Moody Coliseum. He coacll!l(l SMU enjoyed a game against Florida State:
from 1981 -88 and was honored by a getting 15 points and IS rebounds ..,
gathering of his former Mustangs North Carolina won at home.
·
players in pregame ceremonies.
Jamison, an all -Atlantic Coast
Conference performer last season,
Saint Louis 64
No. 11 LoulsvWe 62
averaged 'just nine points and six
.Jeff Harris made a go-ahead layup rebounds in three previous games
with 7.7 5cconds leftand Saint Louis · against the Seminoles. But he led the
won for the first time. in 21 games way in the first half as the Tar Heels
again~t Louisville.
(14-6, 4-5) built a 16-pointlead.
Harris scored 19 points as the Bil·
· James Collins scored 21 points
likens (8-13 , 2-6 Conference USA) for Florida State ( 12-7, J -7).
won on .the road. for the first time
Rice 75; No. 22 Tulsa 58 · ~
since Dec. 9; 1995.
~obby Crawford made a schoolHarris' shot put Saint Louis ahead record eight three-pOinters
63-62. Louisville (18-4, 5-2) had a
last chance, but Alvin Sims lost the
ball, Harris recovered, was fooled
and
one of two free throws.
(Continued from Page 4)
,
Wlscoruln 58
Tiger "importanlli&gt;r society hccuu'"'
No. 13 Michigan 53
Paul Grant scored 19 pOints and, we usually have preuy had nbws. ''
Must Thais urc subsistcm:l! farm-· .
in what may have been the key play;
crs
whose only experience with'golf
knocked' Michigan leading scorer
is
when
their land is expropriated b&gt;
Maurice Taylor out of the game with
huild
courses.
Puhlk courses arc rurc
an accidental elbow.
and
si&gt;
arc
chances
for ordinary rc&lt;&gt;
The 6-foot-9 Taylor was hit with
pic to learn the game .
12:45 left in the first half and left
"Our. government's rco.1ction is
with~ a possible broken nose. Without
.too
much," said Thawcep Thiensai,
his presence, Wisconsin (12-7, S-S
I
8.
whose views echoed Ihose of
Big Ten) outreboundcd the visiting
many Thais interviewed hy The
Wolverines ( 16-6, 6-4) by 37-19.
Associated
Press. "They want to
Grant, from West Bloomfield,
give
honors
to
smncunc who is h:.tsiw
Mich., did not start for the first time
cally
a
li&gt;rcigncr,
while they tio .
in a conference game this' season.
not~ing
to
suppon
.
our local. athBadgers coach Dick Bcqnett said he
letes."
felt Grant wa&lt; too keyed up, and
Maj .
· Gen.
· Charoud
wanted to give him time to settle
Arirachakaran.
secretary
general &lt;if
down.
the
Olympic
Committee
'ofThailand.
Southern California 84
was quoted in The Nation'" sayin~
No. 18 Stanrord 81
Tiger
is no Somluck Kamsing...J
Southern Cal moved into a tic for
boxer
who
won Thailand's first.gold
first place In· the Pacific- !0 behind
medal
in
Athonta.
Stais Boseman 's 23 points.
.. As far as I mn conccrncll. he
Boseman made a t~rec.. pointcr
with 2:08 left that gave the Trojans , (Tiger) is only a half-Thai ,;·
(12-7, 7-3) the lead for good at 78- Charo~c k said or W&lt;Mx.ls, who aCtl\ally' is only one-quaner Thai. " H.~&gt;
77. The victory gave Southern Cal
more wins than it had all or last sea- . takes pan in every tournament as up
American motional and there is little
son, when it went 11-19 and wa&lt; 0positive
. puhlicity Thailand en~
9 in the second half of the conference
derive
out
of it .' Only his mother i•
schedule .
Thai ."

W&amp;TERN CONFERENCE .

EVERY WEEK'. IN THE
TV TIMES

.

· GETS REBOUND- Clnc:lnRIIIi forward Danny FortSon pulls down
• ~nd In the flrat haH of Thursday night's game against Tulane
In Cincinnati, where the host Bearcats won 65-54 in part becauae
of Fort1on'1 34 polnta. (AP)
.·
·

ll L I Ell. !if liA

Northtnt Ol•lllktn
Pill.rihurJh ......... JO IH ~ 6.~
8ulfalu ............... 27 I~ H 61
Hartf1wd .............2124 7 49
Montrcu1 ....... ,.... 19 2710 -'M
Ow~m ................ 20 27 6 46
Otta~a ............. IK n 10 4b

FEATURES-

.

~

Atlani1c IMvWon

J=lurid.1 .............. 2~ l:'i
. N.Y. Run!!LTS .....27 21
Nt..owll'I'Wf ........ 2~ 17
Wa.~hin11.1tm ........ :l 12!1
Tnf1llm8af ........ l'1 26
N.Y. blmkk!n.:.. 11 27

•·

LISTINGS AND

"Ho usually is hapJ.IY to just be in
....JIIiqn dtiriDJ tht earl~ .rounds
• 81111 t:OIDCI Oil stl'llfll to WID at ihe

•.

l'hitkk'fflhht ...... J O 1!i M 611 171 H'l

...'

TV TIMES

.

o

tried to interocpt Brannen's pus.
Instead, Fortsoa calicflt the t.ll all
alone new the faullioe.
" I probably walked - I kllow I
walked," Fortson admitted. "I probably took si x steps and I just threw
it up and hoped it would go,down."
Fortson was playing for the first
time since a one-game suspension
imposed by coach Bob Huagins,
who was tired of players ignoring his
admoniiions.
·
.
" I came out ready to play," Fortson said . "Sitting out a game teach:
es you a lesson. You don't wanf to·do
that again."
Cincinnati (16-4, S-l Conference
USA) ended an 11 -game winning
streak, by Tulane (16-6, 7-1). The
Green Wave led 45-40 with 10:35 to
play, but Fortson scored eight consecutive points as the Bearcats pulled
.even again.
·
Honeycun made a.bad pass with
twQ seconds left, giving the Bearcats
the ball at the far baseline with the
score 63-kll.
Huggins said he thought about
throwing the ball to someone other
than Fortson for the final shot.
"That's what I was going to do
and then I thought, 'How dumb am ·
I? Throw ,it to Danny,'" Huggins
said.
That left it up to Brannen . .
"Coa'h asked, ·Anybody want to
throw it?' I said I would," Brannen
said. "I started to walk ·out there and
I said, 'What was I thinking?' But
with a big receiver like Danny,
you'vejust got to get it to him."
, Brannen did, helped by Honey':"'
cutt's misplay.
"I should have just stayed behind
him," Honeycutt · said. "I took it
upon my.elfto go for the steaL i cost
my team this game."
In other games involving ranked
teams, No ..3 Kentucky beat Western
Carolina 82-SS, No. S Utah trounced
Brigham Young 85-49, No. ·9 New
. Mexico held off Southern Methodist
75-72, Saint Louis suqjrised No. II
Louisvill~ 64-02. Wisc&lt;/asin upended No. 1.3 Michigan 58-53, Southern
Cal stopped No, 18 Stanford 84-81 ,
North Carolina defeated Florida
State 90-62 a~d Rice toppled No. 22
Tulsa 75-58.
No: 3 Keatueky 82
Westera Carolina·55
Scott Padgett scored 23 points
and led an early 19-2 run that sent
Kentucky past Western Carolina.·
The host Wildcats (21-3) bounced
back from Tuesday night's overtime
.loss at South Carolina. taking a 13·
point lead six minutes into 'die game.
Padgett shot 9-for-10 and also had
13 rebounds. Ron Mercer added 18
points for Kentucky.
.
No. S Utah85.
Brigham Youni: 49
Keith Van Horn scored. 19 of his
22 poinis in the first half and Utah
handed Brigham Young its school• .record 13th straight loss.
. The 36-point margin made it the
ri10st lops.idcd game between the ·
schools since Utah won 62-25 in
19.10.
.
Van Horn played only eight minutes in the second .hillf. Michael
Dolcac added 16 points as Utah ( 163, 8-1 Western A.thlolic Con fcrcncc)
won for the 43rd time in its la&lt;t 45
.home games. BYU fell to 1·.18, 0-9.
No. 9 New Mexico 75
SMV?l
. Charles Smith scored 22 points
and Lamont Long · made two foul
shots with 2.6 seconds left as New
Mexico·~toppcd · SMU .
Clayton Shields had 21 points,
including' six · three-pointers, and
Long scored 16 point&gt; for the L,ohos

FASTERNCONFERINCE
.

l:aal

However, .certain deadlines for
submiiislons will be observed.
'lbe deadline for photos and reiat·
eit articles for footlillll and other fall
s~rt1Js .lhe S-IU!Jiay before the
Super Bowl 1 . , ·
The deadline for photos and rclated articles for basketball (summer
bask ball and lated
• 11
et
ie
camps ••
under lhc SUR~met $ports deadli~)
and other winter
;..me last da
fthe NBA fi.
y
•

16

I .E CH ·ovER· l8~500 .

The Gallipolis Daily Tri/&gt;Nnt,
The Daily Sentinel and the Swulay
nmes-Sentin~l value the contribu·
tions their reade.S make to the spons
sections of these papers, and they
will conti"uc to be published. ·

1811

8J~ft0t1 K~. Sr. Mnry ' ~ .

I~ .~ ~ .

. . . . . . Jl
Houston ., ............... 32

hi

Sports deadlines

r

j.

.
Brannon.and Valerie,Karr cpmbined a 31 -27 tally at the half.
II). EHS had 9 steals (Karr 3, Davis
for 41 of the Eastern points. Karr
The 1!9tire third quarter was nip 2. Hollon 2); i5 tur:novcrli, 13 assists
d&lt;&gt;minated the first half with 14' and tuck. Only a Goins steal late in (Wolfe 4, Evans 4, ·Karr 2); and had
points, hitting 6-7 from the field, the third quarter preserved a 49-47 23 fouls.
then when Waterford collapsed on Waterford lead at the buzzer. Eastern
Waterford hit 2J ..56 two's, 3-~
· Karr, Brannon took over the second · patiently worked the Waterford zone, three's, hit 14-33 at the line, and had
half with 16 points and great bah . as Angi Wolfe and Evans made 32 iebounds (Goins 6. Jljihcols 8).
control for the Eagles.
s.ome great passes inside to Brannon WHS had II steals, 12 a&lt;sists (Goins
Raising his brow with a bit of and Karr, while Branno~ als? to,ok 5); 12turnovcrs, and IS fouls.
cpncern, ·Waterford . Coach Don · advantage of the offens1ve lioards.
Eastern nexi plays Thursday at
Marks questioned Wolfe, "Sopho- Wolfe and .Evans each had four Alexander in the Southeast Div. IV
mores, huh? We're going to have to assists, ·w~ilc Becky Davis drillCII a Sectional against 0-16 Port.•rnouth
.
watch out in the future. We were key jumper .to tie the game at one East.
Quarter .bdiJI
lucky to leave tonight with a win. point. ,
Karr was hot the first half. Then we
' wtern twice leJ by two in the Eastern
• 14-13020-1 :Z..S9
couldn't .stop Brannon ihe second · final round and at one poil)l Water- Waterford
19-12-IJI-16=65
half."
fprd led by four, but that was as
Eutem: Becky Davis 14212~,
Karr ended with 20 points and 15 much as the lead swayed until Water- Stephanie Evans 3-1 - 114=10. Val~
rebounds, while Brannon had a . ford went up 64-57 in thq last Karr 9,0..212=20, Jc~sic~t Brannon 8•
game-high 21 points and II minute, hitiing several fl'l)e throws O-sn ..21. Chasatie . Hollon 1-0"
rebou 011$, also doing a llfC8I. job in when EJ{S tried to ·stop the clock. · 0/1=2·, ·Anfii •Wolfti·•-• l•ll•0/2=2~
~.
breaking the Waierford pnoss. . .
Eastern, ~~ded the g&amp;IJie with four Totals: 13-1·1~18=59 , , .,.
. Waterford~ led · 19- 14 after the players.
·
•
. Waterford: Krisli Offcnlli:racr I..'
As a result of EHS fouls Water- 0=2, Je"nifcr Nichols 7-0-3/10=17,
' first quarter paced by a couple big
Stephanie Evans buckets, ·then the ford went to the line nearly twice as Danelle Arnold 1- 1-112=6, Lori Milsecond quarter was highlighted by much as Ea5tem.
ner 2-1-010= 7, Laura Goins 6-1 c:
severalties. 11cd at 25-25 with 54
Eastern hit 24-58 two's, 1-S OJS,.JS, Tiffany Arnold 3-0-2/4=8,
seconds left, Eastern made a couple three's, and was 10-18 at the line Tl'sha Skinner 1-0-8112=10. Totals:·
hasty shots that missed resulting in . with 37 rebounds (Karr IS, Brannon 21-3-14133=65
/

By SCOTT WOLFE

0

· ~···

.

girl~

Cleveland St. 71 . 111.·Cbic8J067

WESTERN CONFERENCE
-...llhWon

•

Waterford

Midwesteria CoiJeclate Canr.

ll

-·-

JEWELL .SHOOTS ..- Mlip guard (:hetyl Jewell (22} takes the
shot In fromt of Wllhltiiiii'I .Stllcy W•vsr during Thursd8y nlghf•
Bend Area encounter It Melga High Scltool, w11«e the Marauders
won 50-34. Jewell flnllllied with 12 polnta. (Sentln1l phOto by Dave
Harril)
·

Mauillon Jocluoa ~8 . c'uu1on
Olcno.k 441 ·
Maumee Val. 74, Tul. Emmonuel
8Dj&gt;l. 31
.
McAtlhdr Vintnn Co. 4ll , Federal

NOJM:onrorence play

19 .lio&lt;
21
2l .500
26 . .447
29 .:ml

~ ................ 29

Ma.ulllon 66, Kcnl ROOJO'I'ell 6~

Wallh 7l, fofaluoe 6J .

22

23
24

3l

Mid-Ohio Confemxe

to

13\\

.239

.......................... 11

~1and 17, Way• ~· 64

2

" ' " ' -·............ 13 3J .28.1
. l'bilodelpllla .......... .l2 J4 .261

I

Gnoat ~ loterealleatate

sa

1. fl:l.

.750
~w YOj'k ............ Jol 14 .708
. Orrt.ndo .............\....24 20 .SC5

:•

Atbatic 10

..

:r..
ft
MiMioi ...................l6

Mil~ j I, LateiMd l9
Mansflcld S1. Peter'• 43, Mansfield
. Clv. 39
Mapleton !10, New London 23
Mll'iil Stei• Marion 59, Fort Reco¥·
cry48
Mwion Elain 64. Spwta Hi&amp;hl:llld l6
Murion HM.Iina ~. MIUitffeld Sr. ~I
Morinn Pleolonl ~I , CardiftJIOn 44
Mllrion _River Val. 67. N. Union 56
Martini Fr:rry ~:z. Union Locul ~I

LaSalle 66. Doy100 lT

.E .\S'IUN CONJ'EUNCE

i

In overtime,

J9

Ohio women's
college scores

I

dly.

.1::~:::-on.•.~.'l'wo-Ci

·

UC and Kentuclt}t win; Louisville loses

t

eigs girls defeat
ahama 50-34

·
Sophomore Trieia Davis led Ill
:,_81nllllel Conupo....-tl
scprers wlth IS poinls, she .... · Meigs outscored Wahafru! 19-4 in joii\C(I in double figures by. Jewell
third period and went on to post with i2. Meigs was 21 of 62 from
,.. .S0.34 victory over Wahama in girls the Roor including 0 for one from
hketball . action before a luge three point range for 34'1&gt;, the
~ior night crowd Thursday evening
Marauders went to the line 18 times,
:Itt lArry R. Morrison Gymnasium. but only managed to hit six for 33'1&gt;..
• Meigs with !.he win is now 12-8 Meiss pulled down 33 reboUnds with
;Go the seuon heading into Section- Meadows grabbing six and Danielle
:t.J Tournament play his Monday at Peckman and Davis grabbing five
:U.C: University of Rio Grande. each, Meigs turned the ball over just
..,Wahama drops to 11-6 on the season. eight times. the Marauders had 13
:.., Meigs jumped out on lop 4-0 on assists with Becky Smith leading 'the
:;buckets by Taryn Doidge and Tricia . way with six and had seven steals
'lO.vis. But the Lady Falcons came with Davis gettina two.
back to take a 5-4 lead on a bucket
Meigs dicl an outstandiltg job on
~by Stacy Weaver off a Lori Bum- defense holding the high scoring
• sarner assist and a three point play junior Bumgarnerio only 13 points.
~ by Bumgarner. · · ·
Lori hit the 1,000 point plateau for
• The Wahama lead was short lived her career earlier this season. Bum- ·
however as the Marauders reeled off gamer was joined in dOuble figures
;,six points in a row and took a 10-5 ·by Stacy Weaver who also scored 13
~ on a Cheryl J~well bucket with points in a good performance. No
~2 : 25 left in the penod.
other statistics were available on
Meigs increased their lead to 12- Wahama.
7 after one period when Carissa Ash
Four seniors closed out their
. scored off a Becky Smith fed along Marauder careers on Thursday, they
~the baseline with one minute left in
were Cheryl Jewell, Taryn Doidge,
''ihe period.
Brandi.Meadows and Ashley Roach
Meigs increased their lead .to 16- who didn't see any action due to a
II on a Brandi Meadows bucket with
knee injury. All four girls were three ·
5:08 left in the first half, but the year letter winn~.
White Falcons baitlcd back to pull to
In the reserve game Meigs
within 19-18 on two Bumgarner free jumped outto a 12-1 lead at the half
throws with 33 seconds left. Davis and coasted to a 35-S victory to end
.put the Marauders up 21-18 when theirseason with an outstanding 17she hit a pair from the line wi!h 12 2 mark under Coacl! Darin Logan.
.seconds left, but Stacy Gillispie Amy Hysell led Meigs with eight
scored with just one seconds left to points, Tiffany Halfbilll!dded seven.
pull Wahama to within 21 -20 head- Jessica Howard led. Wahama with
"ing into the second half.
four.
Meigs came out in the second half
Meigs will open up Division II
' lmd quickly took the White Falcons sectional tournament play on Mon,out of the contest. The Lady Maraud- · day. Feb. 10 at the University of Rio
'ers went on a9-0 run in the first I :49 Grande against Scioto Northwest at
of thC third period to iake a 30~20 6:15p.m. Advance' tickets arc availlead. Meigs took advantage of three able at Meigs High School for $3
straight W&amp;hama turnovers to take each. Meigs will receive 25% or all
the 10 point lead. Cheryl Jewell had • adavnced ticket sales.
four of the Marauders points in the Ouartcr l!!llb
·run.
'.
Wahama
7-13-4-1(1=34
Wahama pulled to within 30-22 Meigs ·
12-9-19- Hl=SO
on a Bumgarner bucket with S:SO
Wahama: Lori Bumgarner 4-0- .
left in the third, but that was as close 5= 13, Tamara Grate 2-0-0=4, Maoas lhc White Falcons would get the ra Clark 1-0-0=2, Stacey Gillispie ., _
rcst~the way. A Carissa Ash buck0-0=2, Stacy Weaver S-0-3=13.
'el with J·:36 left in the penod &amp;ave Totals: 13-0-11=34
, Meigs a 16 point lead heading irito
Melp: 'll:icia Davis 6-(l-3'!015,
the final eight minutes.
·
Tatyn Doiclge 3-0-0=6, Cl1erly Jew- '
t ' In the fourth period the Maraud- ell S-0-2= 12, Brandi Meadows 2-0·crs had as much as a 18 point lead, 1=5, Carissa ·Ash 3-0-0=6, Tracy
oild the White Falcon~ would get no Coffey 1-0-0=2, Bridget Vaughan 2cl,oser than 14 in the final eight min- 0-0=4. Tcitals: 22-0-6=50

Pometot. Mlddlepcxt, Ohio

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Country

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· 8 pm ' Suaday: I · 8 pm
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o.lty SanUMI

FJtday,

Pomeroy tlllckll'eport, Ohio

'*'*';,

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1-1

Vegetarian co9kbook is the way to go

How F~nland saved its ·2,000·Jewish population from
Nazis · ~
I
,

Jewish refusees were sent from Fin' land to Poland. where they perished.
Ann
In expillion for having allowed such
Landers
a tragedy, some Finns formed a kibbutz in lmcl with the name "Yid
Hashmona," which means "Jn
memory of the eight" ·
·
Over;. 300 Jews fought in die
•IJy ANN LANDERS
Finnish anny in its suuggle against
l:&gt;car Ann Landers: 1 enjoyed the Soviet Union and ogainst ·the
aading . your· column about Den- Germans att.he end of the war. Many
mark and how the country saved its· · of Finland's war heroes, o~cers and
.:Jewish population. However, lillie e_nMted '!len were Jews. Ftnland can
.megtion is made of what happened nghtfully be proud. •• Portland, Ore.
Jn Finland.
Dear Portland: Several readers ·
~ With only 2,000 Jews, the Finns wrote to tell me how Finland saved
)lid not allow a single one. ·to be tiS Jewtsh·populauon. Read on:
'tlarmed while the Germans were in
From Staten Island, N.Y.:
iJ.., counlry. Unfortunately. through Althougfi . Finland was offici~lly
,1 bureaucratic error, eight Austrian
neutral, It allowed the Germans mto

.t

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the country in order to help fight off
the Soviets. In 1942, the Finnish
prime minister let the Gennans
know thai PiMish Jews were citizens with the ~· rishts as any
oilier Finn. Of course, Finland did
not have the same pressures IS a
Nazi-occupied country like Denmark.. Nevertheless, it was the only
European country to save ALL its
Jews.
Finland . also had its own
Schindler-type character. ln 1938,
Algot Niska, known as ail.adventurer and liquor smuggler, was credited ·
with rescuing 150 Jews by making
trips into German-occupi"!l territory
and. supplying Jews with forged
Swedish or Finnish pas5ports and ·
. getting them out or danger. I don't

know if Niaka did this for the money

or out of kindneu, but had he been
caught in Nazi Oertn.ny. he 111011
certainly would have been killed.
Oslo,
Norway:
Deamark
~ to ~ commended for helpang 111 Jewtsh populalion during
World War H. Howeva-, the only
Scandinavi111 eounuy that actually
fought the Germans for the duration
of the war was N~ay. Denmarlc
allowed ~ Germans to enter the •
coun~ Without a fight. Sweden was
offictally neu~. Finland was busy
wtth the Sovtets. In Norway, the
Gennan~ had to fiahl inch by inch
and lost lllousands of lroops: On top
of that. over .I00 escape routes were
set up to help Jews llce into Sweden.
I'm not lookmg for any medals. I

just .....,t to set the record straight.•
• A Lonl(imc Reader
DNr L.T.Il: Thank you and all
the othen who wrote. You've Jiven
us a spl did hiiiOiy lesson. '"Ifie
record" Is a lot straiahter -·and 1 am

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stove

ship Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the be at. the Rutland Civic 'Center for a mote information call Lia TipiO
township garage.
· concert,' 7 p.m. Tuesday. No admis- Holzer Medical Center .Rehab Uni ·
sion charse: free will offering will 446-5070. .
POMEORY •· Big Bend Farm be. taken.
·
and Antiques Club, 7:30p.m. MonPOMEROY
•· Ash ~~;!
day, Meigs High School Libntry.
POMEROY· •• . Meigs County breakfast
and , quiet
Chamber of Commerce luncheon, day. 7:45 a.m. at Trinity
TUESDAY
Tuesday, noon, Carleton . School. tiona! Church. -Everyone
SYRACUSE
··
Meigs
County
Susan ~lliot!, R.N. to talk on VMH Contact Peggy Harris at992· 7569
Board
of
Mental
·Retardation
and
day
treatment progrnm.
. Diane Hawley, 992-2722.
CHESTER ·· Chester CourtDevelopment
Disabilities,
special
house Restoration meeting, Monday
7 p.m. at the firehouse. Anyone meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the Car- wEDNESDAY
leton School.
POMEROY - .Stoke S~rvivors
interested invited to auend. ·· ·
Support Group, Wednesday, I p.m.,
RUTLAND ·· Contemporary Meigs Senior Center. Transportation
MIDDLEPORT·· DAY meeting, •
Christian Music Group "Harvest" to free for Meiss County residents. for
Monday, 6:30 p.m. also Ati~iliary,
DAY hall, Route 7. Refreshments.
MONDAY
CARPENTER •. Free skin test·
ing clinic, 6 to 7 p.m Monday at the
Columbia Township Fire Depart~
ment. Connie Karschnik, R. 'N.,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse to
be there.

~MEROY

·· . Sar.sbury Town- .

I

OHIO

Carolyn's Products "for Enhanced through the J.C. Penney catalog, but
Living catalog, a "large-print tactile no longer. ldeas7
dial overlay," and it sells for 75
STUMPED:
HARDWOOD
ce_nts. It's white plastic with black FLOORING .• Bruce Mitroff of
rused numerals and 111 adhesive Whealon, Ill., has a problem. Water
backing. It fits standard rotary ilamased several of his wood par- event you
phones and is item PRDOI .
quet tiles. The manufacturer stopped . Bruce is stumped, and so are we.
To order, send 75 cents to: &lt;;ar- · makins his llooring . a couple of · Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
olyn's, P.O. Box 14577, Bradenton, years ago, He's looking for H-5 Her- P.O. Box 240, Ibrtland, VT 05048.
FL 34280-4577.
ringblok Hearth 3~. inch x 3 inches Questions of general interest will ·
For our readers, Carolyn won't ~ 9 mches. He wntes, ''Replacmg appear in the column. Due to the
charge postage (normally it's $4.50), the floor would be a CPillplete disas- volume of mail, personal replies
if you send a stamped, self- ter, since the same material is used cannot be provided. .
.
·
addressed, business-size envelope in .two adjoining rooms, with the
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
with your order.
·
h~rringbone· pattern continuing Nash-Cummings are co-authors Of .
STUMPED: REFILLS FOR through a double door connecting "Ask Anne &amp; Nan". (Whetstone)
BEAN-BAG CHAIRS ·· Debbie the rooms. The story is a classic les- and "Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
Rosiak of Nicholson, Pa., is looking son in saving an e~tra box of mater- Problem-Solvers Share Their
for these. They used to be ~vailable tal when the job is finished, in the Secrets" (Bant~). ·
.

;,

dinner, 6:30p.m.; m.ceting 7:30 p:m.

PICTIJRE YOUR ·PET
AMONG 'IB~-· ..
PET VALENTINES!

: POMEROY ·· Final prayer and
•planning meeting, 7 p.in. Thursday,
•Pomeroy Public Library for· Tues:
day's 7 p.m. concert of "Harvest",
contemporary Christian music group

Older a copy of "Clreat Vegetarian change ,!heir bullet-like·consistency.
Cookin1 Under Pressure," by j.oma
The book is chock-full of helpful
, DEAR ~ AND NAN: My Sass (William Morrow and eel, Inc., ,hints, menu suggestions, cooking
~!fe and l_are goms to spend a year 1994);
..
",,
times i~ euy-to-read _charts; and an
•,n I c:abtn In MontaDa. The place has
This dandy book IS much more appendtx that even tncludes malla Ulall gu
and gas refrigera- than a cookbook. The author ·writes order sources of orsanic spices, chili
l,or. We're a Ions way from town, so
about different types of prissure peppers, beans, etc. It's a gem.
11'1 in our be~t interest to use as little cooke~; fiow I? test y~r old ~e to
D~ ANNE AND NAN: We
gas as poSSible. It seems to me a derermme tf 11 s working pro,l"'rly; have a friend tn a rest home, and we
pressure cooker could help us co~- what. you. need to ,make ~ssure try to help her as much liS we can.
Glrve our propane gas. We are bast· cooktng stmple (a umer and flame She ~as one of the older dtal phones,
&lt;tally vegetari1111s, so we'll be bring· tamer, for instance). It tells yo4 how and she's beginning to have.dilt.cult
ini! lots of beans, rice, lentils, etc. to ciln: for your pressure cooker, and seeing the numbers. They used to
My wife isn't enthusiastic about has trouble-shooting idea~.' The make a !lig ring with big numbers
\ISing a pressure. cooker, but I am.. recipes are inventive.
;,
· that fit' on older phones, but we
·y.&gt;here do I begm7 ··A. BAll.EY,
Nan has.tn.'ed several oftheJil and · haven't been able to find one. ·Alnhers~ N.Y.
was only disappointed once. ,JI was JAMES GRIGGS, Redalia, Mo.
DEARA.: Run •• do'n't walk ·· to her fault ·· ~he .used old lentjJs1 and
DEAR _jAMES: The ~izmo
. ~ closest boo~!~; ~nd lluy or all the cooking m the world ~,&lt;?~ldn't you're loo\&lt;ing for ts called, m the ·

~ NA8H-CUMIIIING8

--Community Calendar____..-"_·_______. ·_;....._·~..

:' ;--.------atth-e-Rut-land-ci-vic-ce-nter-.
. ne Commnnity Calendar is
~ublisbed as a free service to non· SATURDAY
•profltgrou~ wishing to announce
STIVERSVU.LE .• Stiversville
. ~ng and spedal events. The Community Church,' Saturday, 7:30
calendar is not designed to pro· p.m. hymn sing . "The Delivered" to
'mote sales or lund raisen of any sing.
type. Items are printed as space
·fei'!Jiit.!l and &lt;annol be g\lllran~
POMEROY •• Return Jonathan
to run a specific number of days. Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
THURSDAY
American Revolution., 10 a.m. Sat·
· POMEROY -· PERI, Thursday urday. Mike Gerlach to speak.
·non at the Senior Citizens .Center. ·
Those planning to have lunch conPOMEROY
Burlingham
tact the center.
Camp, Modern Woodmen, . potluck,
Saturday, 6:30 p.m. Awards to 25
RUTLAND-· Rutland Township and 50 year members.
:Trustees, regular session, Thursday,
·6 p.m. Rutland Fire Station.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonviile Lodge 411, hlli\M, speTUPPERS PLAINS .. The Tup· cial session, Saturday. Inspection
pers Plains VFW, 7 p.m. Thursday at
the hall.
.. RACINE -- ·Post 602, American
_Legion, Business meting, 6:30p.m.
·dinner to follow.
-

· BY ANNE B. ADA• Md

could enliJI*n the parents. No chi
should have to endure bein1 st'i plf
tized whea such ~imple help ts

hand.
Incidentally, after 1111 ICCiden~
had·severe, UIIY bruises on my f
grateful.
and cheat that I covered complele
Dear Ann landm: I 1m writing with makeup. Please tell y- .
about the child with the port-wine ers about this product •· H.~
birthmart. True, the laser treatment Laudemill, Aa. ·
will ·do the job, but it's e~pensive
Dear H.S.: I rarely endorse .
and time-c,onsuming. I'd like to rec- . ucts in my column, but this one c
oinmend Covermuk by Lydia be a godsend: I mentioned it sever
O'Leary. It's a makeup developed · years ago 1111d received many teue
many years qo by.·a , woman who thaokinJ me. . ·
also had a port-wine mark, and it is
avallalile in drugstores and depart·
Sad qu.tlou toAD~~~~
mcnt stOles. It covers the birthmark CratOn S)'D!IIq!R, 5717 W.
completely. All dermatologists must tory.Blvd., Suite 700, l..ol MI. .
be aware of similar products and Calif.~
'

The Dally SeaUnel• Page 7

Pomeroy • lllddlepOrt, Ohio

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:Albright's hidden heritage not unco-mmon .....--CongratulatesBy

MIKE FEINSILBER
more than a dozen membe!'Hlf her
He, too, was raised in denial of and 1,600 showed up," he said.
AaeociMecl P'"l Writer
family were killed a5 Jews during his Jewish birthright When he was
,
· WASHINGTON (AP) - · For the ·Holocaust.
· 15 months old, his parents, Polish .
Radu loanid, director of the
ihose who shared· Secretary of State
She .s~ys she knew nothin~'pf it. Jews, handed him · to a Catholic · 50,000-name "survivors' regisiiy"
Madeleine Albright's experience Her father was a Czech diplfililtat in · nanny . during World War II. She · at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
horn Jewish but raised Cliristian ·the years between the crea~ton of raised him. as a devout Catholic.
Museum, adds this observation
there is no surprise thai. she did not democratic Czechoslovakia .ind the
A bitter custody fight, a kjdnap- drawn .from bis own life: "A child
ask her parents the questions that Nazi occupation. The family ping by his nanny and a re-kidnap-: wants to look up to his father as
might have laid bare her roots.
escaped to exile .in London; and ping by his parents ensued before almost godlike. One does' not ask
• .In such families, they say, the Madeleine was raised a Roman . the reunited family emigrated to questions because one does not want
question of heritage becomes- a CathQ!ic, fairly religious, toig little America.
'to hear how ·his father was humiliat·
taboo subject and the child learns · about her forebears and relati,Yes left
"To tell your children how horri- ed. pushed out of school, t¥-en to
not to ask about it, pemaps not to · behind.
.
ble life is, to say to. them, 'This is forced labor."
think a.bout it.
'
Jacobson says he has difficulty what you have to hear' - a lot of
· · "My experience is \bat when imagining what the conversation pa,cents don 'I want to expose them to
Historian Alan Kraut, who grew
there are these .secrets in families, · would have been like in that educat- that," Foxm011 said.
up in the Bron~ section of New York
very often the mes~age is that there ·. ed household, well aware of?world
To this day, Foxm011 said, "In with Holocaust survivors and their
at1: things not spoken of. People affairs, during World War ~ II and Poland, Jew·s surface who thought children, recalled that the parents
learn to star away1 · ev~n in their own ' later, when the subject of the Holo- they were Catholics all their lives. In often refused to discuss the past
Jllinds," says aulhot Kenneth Jacob- caust arose. .
~.
Poland, Belgium, France, Italy, there "because they thought it was lerri· son. His book, "Embattled Selves,"
"It would be hard to imagtne that are hundreds, if not thousands, who , ble, embarrassing, humiliating and
oxplores ~ Jives of 15 men an.!l they never spoke about w~l hap- suspect they were born Jews but will because they· were asbamed that ·
women "who :~covered, con- peited to the Jews in Eu&amp;pe." never know. Sometitn~ it comes out they survived and so many had not. ..
l!ealea, embraced: 'or .rejected their · Jlleobsoti said. "Maybe one day she ' in deathbed confessions of their
~wishness as a ~ult of Nazi persewill write about this."
adopted parents."
Added author Jacobson: "These ·
cqtion."
"It's a sensitive mauer, v perAfew years ago, Fox man's orga- .things are in some sense universal.
This week; Albright, in her first sonal, very difficult," says
aham nization called a.meeting of "hidden These identity problems are traudays·of adjusting to her new office, Foxman, . national director f the children" -Jewish children raised · matic for Jews persecuted by the
~ad to adjust to her histllf)' as well . . Anti-Defamaiion League;~ · hich in convents .or by ,good-samaritan Nazis, but everyone faces questions
'The Washington·Post, ..jn preparing a combats anti-Semitism.
0
Christian families who concealed of who you are .and where you
·Foxman's . own . life p!lrallels the truth from the Germans and the belong and who other people think
profile, uncovered documents, inter·
viewed relatives and established that Albright's in one major. regard.
children, too. "We expected 300, you.are."

. The Melga ·County UnH of the American Cancer Society
recently hed ae their guest, state trustee VIcki 'Howell
· Williams of Jackson. Williams Is shown here congratulating
· Fermen Moore on hla recent appointment as preaident of the
Meigs Cciunty Board.
·

A9t~rs· _;gain be$fy roles by losing it .or putting· it on
•

._.. 1997 CHEVY CAVAUER

3.9% API Fl•••cl•l f,.r

..

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I

CHEYY 1·10 PICIUP

5 1p11d, llr big, clolh 1111, more.

W.s S11,512

"FOR PETS ONLY"

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lOW

WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN

·

S10,526

1995 C"EV. CORSICA
4 Dr., auto., air, sterecl.

.THE DAILY SENTINEL

s9499

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PER PICTURE
PRE-PAID
"PET'S NAME".
Owner's Name

Hurryl De,dllne
Friday, February 7th 1113
pan.
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Ir----~--------------~-------,
. VALENTINE PETS . ·1
1Pet's Nam•
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IOwner's Name

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IAddre1a

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lcny .

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1~nt EM.IOIId:
lat$8Mch. . .

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pictures
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O.idllne .Frldey, February 7th at 3 p.m.
It

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.., or bli~JQ'the entry form:
·. -.The ~ D~y ,Sen~blel
· · ·

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' no:Court St.

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ugly-duckiing character more lielie~able in "Cirele of Friends." Keanu followed ~ low-fat diet that was heavy on fruits, vegetables and grains and
P!MI Wr1f1r
.
.
Reeves went through grueling training to lone up· for "Little Buddha" light on carbohydrates. '
: . When Robert De Niro packed on the pounds to play boxer Jake JlMoua (thou~h ~~was more than a lillie hefty in l.St year's bo~-office dud, "Chain
After the 'intense slimming-down P.,riod, MacPherson had about two
months
to gain 25-pounds for her "Sirens" role that called for a more wellin ..!'RagiqiJ );liliF' e~iyone thought he had'gone off the' deep end.
Reaction ).
..
. • .
. .:
. .
"?
Tfiat wu takin&amp; Method 'acting to the .e)\treme. they said. Or was it~
· An~ who could forget Lmda Hamilton s btceps m Termmator II . rounded woman.
. lutling . There s no d~ubt those sharply, ~e~ned arms have la~?ihed more . th~ a . "l)asically, it just meant she didn.' t have to work out as hard," says Imbo,
_ _.:Xiql"~Mi!I!!.II&gt;!Q~~bi!J.I!.~,!Jle&lt;!&lt;Jipg 20 poUnd~ here and\!
wfiose advice doosn't come cheap. lie dta(ges'$150 an hour. which he says
Olr 30:JMiun;fS
for
I ~Vte~:·.. and, of course, the accompa- . ~~ep~ ~uris.
' .
•.
- · . , c ·· .
·
,
nyj.ns sc;ven-fig.ur:e salary.
I
. Wh~tHe~ thes~ acts of bod~. morphmg reflect extreme dedtcallon or Jilst is reasonable by personal trainers' standards. ·
Billy Baldwin didn't hesitate to shell out the bucks to prepare for his role
It's n?t enougb .t~ merely play a ch~acter, th~y ~ave. to._LIVE in ~I per- msecunty m one s. ~~ling abtltltes ts an ope.n questton. Whatever t~e moltson!~ skin ... oven tfthat means expandmg or shtmkmg 11 mto unnat 1pro- vatt?"•. no m?untam ts too tall, no dumbbell too h.eavy and no StatrMaster as the romantic lead opposite Sharon Stone in "Sliver." His goal was to look
· portions. · •
""
'·" ··,. .
.
· •
.
~.
too mttmtdal!ng for these stars to matntam-thetr mtlhon-doHar figures . .
more muscular, toned and defined for his revealing love scenes.
"He wanted to look better than Sharon Stone," lmho said. "It's not
,To·achieve 11)\lir physlcaf g&lt;ials, they hire high-priced personal " ners, .
Chns lmbo, a personal tramer· who runs hts own studto m New York,
rise at4 a.n\. for pre-call workouts and heed the advice of nutritioni~. who helped model-~urned-actress .~lie MacPh~on to~e up . ~or..her swt!:'su•l cal- easy."
,
wilhell diem how to do it in a healthy way ... or as healthy as poss~fe.
.endar, then qu•ckly become voluptuous for her role m S1rens.
Some stars shun the personal trainer route, preferring to check into a
.Think ofDemi Moore toning up her already hard-bodied physique to.bare
The lank_y MacPherson wamed to _be t~ned and thin for the pictorial that health sp~. such as the Golden Door and La Costa Resort and Spa north of
San Diego, where actors and regular folks can get whipped into shape in a
it·llll as a nightclub ·dancer in "Striptease." Dennis Quaid practically slarv- had her posmg tn next-to-nothmg swtmsutts.
·
·
.
·
. ing himself into gaunt cowboy. "Wyatt Earp." And the king of pees Sf"'ester
"She was practically naked, so she wanted to look her best:" Imbo said. natural, rugged setting.
Stallone transmogrifying into the antithesis of "Rocky" to play \r(overTo achieve that goal, !mho designed a 10-week workout for her that
Oprah Winfrey checked herself into the Cal-a-Vie resort in Vista, Calif.,
weiJht, J)ttdgy sheriff in'the recently released "Copland."
_ ·
brought l!er into the gym two hours a day, five days a week. To get the sleek several years ago during her infamous yo-yo dieting period.
· :Courtney Love: who play's a dying, .o.IDS-infected Alth.ea Flynt j~ "The look, the former .cover girl performed.weight training that focused on heavy
Ultimately, the spa wasn:twhat finally got Oprah on the right track. The
J!ltop'e vs. Larry Flyn.t," lost 30 pounds in just a few weeks for the 'W e.
' lifting and quick repetitions.
·talk show host learned what Demi, Elle and Sly have known all along - ·
Star and trainer also went for long runs in Central Park, and macpherson that to change your body's shape· takes continuous hard work and lois of
:Minnie Driver, on ihe .other. hand, gained some 30 pounds to m'!fe her
·

mere mec

'

S~veral spring1'rihri· ~aisi~~·~p~~

.'
ket at $5. Residents .may ' ontact, they will be available when needs
jects have been planned by Feeney- Jerry -Rowe, 949-2726; Bl$tdina • arise.
.
Bennett Post 128, American Legion, · Rainer, 949-2666; · or Ron Smith,
Meetings of the legion are held
and the Auxiliary.
.,.
..'
742-2094 to rent a table.
on the second and fourth WednesOn Feb. 14, th~ gr,ou.P, will spon- . Plans were made to have~arity ..days of the month, with the auxiliary
sor a sweetheatt dtnce' at the hall, ho~es at the hall year round.~ahool to meet on .the fourth Wednesday at
and on M~h 7,J fislt fry a'd (lea· . supplies, nonperishable roof·. and 6 p.m. and serve a ·dinner for all
market ~mo '¥JI,'IO i!-!11·· of9 p.m. · supplies for ve1erans hospiqjlf will · memtx;rs and.their families. Charge
Tables ;ue for rent for the flea mar- Qe collected all year long 1~ that for the dinner ts $2 a person.

1996 OLDS

1995 IUICI SIYLARI
.
Auto., air, stereo, more.

.., ' envelope to return
your photo.

~.u

' !' . ... .

.Legion pl.ans fund raising projects

s1 995

'

addreaHd stamped

'

..

va, IUth•r, all powtr•.

$7999 .

Also a special seclon for In Memory,V-'entine Pets.

PI••• enclose self·

~ ...

I·

..

OUR SPECIAL PAGE($)

'

14.U0cllted

2 Dr., euto., elr, buCket~. ·

' '

'

ay ~MANDA COVARRUBIAS

V8,auto.,.alr, can., PW, PL.

..

. $13,99

.

J

1~ CHEV,Y K1'SOO PICKUPV-8, auto., air, tilt, crulu.~ ••:.•• ~ ..............
1994 CHEVY S-10, V-8, ·~· alr,ltereo ...........·................................... $13t5
1993 CHEVY CAVALIER, Auto., PSi PB, air, ltereo ••••;.............,.......... $8496
1991 CHEVY CAVALIER, Auto., PS, PB, alr,,ltereo ....................... ;.~ ... $3995
1995 PONTI,AC FIREBIRD V-6, auto., air, stereo, Ult, cruln..........,;$13,st85.
·1992 FORD THUNDERBIRD; Air, stereo, auto., tilt, crul.e .......~ ......;•• $889$
1994 HYUNDI ELANTAA, 5 tpeed, air, stereo...................................... $7895
1993 LINCOLN TOWN CAR V-8, toad~ .............;.............................. $14,695
1994 CHEVY LUMINA APV, Air, auto., VI, tilt, crul...........~............. ·~ 0,995
1993 CHEV)' ASTRO, Auto., v-e,·alr, stereo, tilt, crulse ...................... $8193
1992 GMC JIMMY V-6, 4X4; alr,ltereo,tllt, cruln......................~•••. "$-10,995
1995 CHEVY S·10 BLAZER 4X4, V_,, PW, PL, air, more•••:..............,$20,. .
1996 CHEVY TAHOE, V-8, air, autO., Pw, tilt,•crulu, 4X4 •.;........,••••·$26,100
1996 CHEVY LUMINA VAN V-6, tilt, t::rulu,atrto,alr .............. ~ ......... $15,918'
1994 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER V8,4X4,auto.", air, loadedl •••••••••••.••••••• $1t,80o
'

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• .j

IIID I FIISI, .

Stop by and 111 ~ of our 11111 consultants
Bankruptcy • Slow Credit
for agreat deal on agrill vehicle: ·
Chuck Raban i . Dana Skeens • Mike Andt(IOn
Brice Tidrick • Ryan Jtffert • Paul P01r

No Credit. We may be •
able to helpI
Alk for Mr.·Barcus.

_
__
-·-not
·-·
DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
All Uud C•rs A Truckt Mult Qp.
Taxes and title fee not included.

,.,.,_.._
..

. All p&amp;ymet 118 Subject to credit approval

OPfr~

SUtiO~Y

IrS wORTH YOUR PRIVEI

l ·S

The prpmise .of our Bridegroom in heaven
.o.votlonel writer

"

Happy ·relatives and friends
greeted one anot!J!lr in \he church
foyer, gave· th~ir gifts to a hostess,
sia~ the,guest boOk, and waited to
be;; seated.
·
· Melodies frOm a five piece brass
~tind filled.the air of the beautifully
decorated worship center.
· The mjnis'"' grtX?m and ~est
man entered, fpl!owed by the nng
beater, and brideSmaids. ·
: Then the awajte,4,m'!m~~~ Cljllle,.
'flte bride ~d. Everyone stood
and tumCIIto adnlire her·beauty. The
quickly stnxle to meet her

sroom

and . they walked . down th~haisle
together. Their blissful faces
expressed · the joy of the nR.ment.
Such happiness.
·,l
Thoughts of this beautifuj J Cene
caus&amp; me to think of heaven. ~ .
. Revelation 21 :2 reads, "I s.lw the
Holy City ...coming ·down .'A't of
heaven from God, preparecj as a
bride beautifully dressed (or her
hu.sband."
. . .,; .
One day, when we have 8Cfiepted
Jesus as·our personal Savior,lfe'will
come to meet us, and we will!i:xperience all the joys as His b~e in
heaven. We will happily greet other
believers, rece'ive any ail&amp; 1 all

awards, but mainly focus our praise
and attention ~­
on Jesus the
Bridegroom.
He will come
to meet : us .
because
our
are
names
already wrillen
in the Book ,of
Life. We will
be at the marriage supper,
and sing a new song with the angels.
Father, thank you for blissful
marital joy now and the promise of
our Bridegroom in heaven. Amen

·
. Paralysis from stroke may be .reversible
&gt; .

· By TIM FRIEND '

.,

· However, one man who wll!par· Over the past 10 years, Frazee
U~A TODA~
.
aly~d on the. left ~ide e~cept
the developed a way to get o~ygenated
· .An expenmental procedure tn abthly to gnp wtth hts hana was blood to the blocked part of the bram ;
wtuch oxygen-rich blo~ is .pumped fully r~overed and back to ,Jil'ork by pumping it through the "back
from a leg artery to the brain of a within two months.
door" - veins that normally carry
stroke victim shows promise as a
A second patient whose 1~1'Deg blood away from the brain. .
way to prevent or reverse long-term was paralyzed recovered witHill. I0
· The procedure, called n~uroper·
paraiY.Si~, researchers said Thursday. mmutes of the .procedure an'i\1Was
fus10n, must be done w1thm seven
."We've only done si~ . patients, playiu~ gqlf a week' later, 9said hours of stroke symptoms.
Blood IS pumped from the
but four have had dramatic improve- Frazee, who presented findmgs at an
ment " said neurosurgeon John Anierican Heart AssociatioJ 1\Jke femoral artery through tubing insert·
~ of the UC.LA Stroke Center conference in Anaheim, Calif.' t . ed through the jugular veins and into
in.Los Angeles.
·
.. 1\bout 500,000 Americans suffer the brain.
: Frazee cautions that the work is · a $troke each year. Of those, 8&lt;fjler"It is · ·an interesting new
preliminary and many more patients cent have clots or blockage~hat approach that justifies further evaluwiU lulve to undefao the procedure interrupt the flow of o~ygen-ciifry- ation," said James Grona, AHA
be'l'ote it can he called l! success.
ing blood to key areas of the brAln.
str~ke meeting
chairman. ·
.

f!n

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--~Nil ...,V&amp;u;v .

VALENTMLO
A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that speci~ someone this
Valentine's Day with a message in

The Daily Sentinel
• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents • Teachers
• Babysitters • Friends
Anyone who would appreciate a thoughtful word from you! All Valentine
Hearts will be published In the February 14th Issue at a cost of only $6.00!
MUST BE PREPAID!

. •--·-·-...----------------------,
•,,~•••
L
.1
·o \
2

Print your message in
lht heart cild ~· along .
with $6.00 to:

The Dally Sentinel
v•ntlne Hearts
.111 eo,rt StrHI
.Pomeroy, OH 45769

·m'-•t

\

words! •

.........
•

.

MUll Be Rtc.ed By Fttb. 7

I

I
I
1
1

�.'

(

•

•

•

Frkhy, ,...,.Y 7, 111t1

Pomaroy • Mldcleport, Ohio

..

•

·Sleep apnea requires ·investigation
.

~

-y

-llitl-- .

:rowan,_ .......
'-:Neil ..........
Sway School · P..JO .....
Wanllip-IO::IOa.m., 7p.m.
w.......,.y Setvica. 1 p.m.

f•postol1c

a.ra .,,_ Cllrtll ~ ICtlt
VIRIIndlaod Ward .
Paatm: JamaMillor
Suntloy School-10::10 i.m.
·
- 7:30p.m. ·

P

• W-Qord!IICIIrlol

H oi m ess

. nbi Otlldren'J 11aa1e Rd.

SUnday School· II Lm.
Wonllip • IO..m., 6 p.m. ·
WcdacodaySa•ica-7p.ll.

M'''

· DM.altH ••IICUrdl

31057 5lale- 325, ....... le
J.D. Y.....
·
Sanda1ocllool·9:30a.m.
s...y-lllip · 10:30 ..... a 7 p.m.
W"""*y ...ycr ..,.ice . 7 p.m.

ta..dl.t.DrW

I;..,.,..Naln

I

S"/901'1111 St., Mid:' 1 •t
SuDyi1CIIool-.9:30a.m.
Wlnllip • 11. a..m. and 7 p.m.
Wednetdly Service • 7 p.m.

j
l
1

1

l

Pulor: l.aHay..... . .

Sunday Smlice • 7::10 p.m.
::!%Sdtooi·IOa.m. ·
W
y Servia:· 7:30p.m:

PaatOr:R..,rW-

..

1-...J

.

'

I'ulor. Seotlln&gt;Wn
Wonllip SerVicO • 9 a.m."
CommiUlion • 10 a.m.
Su.... y School • 10: IS a.m,

East Main 51.
Sunday Sdoool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Rnl Sooolllenoll!f.ll!!
41872 Pomeooy Plb
Paitor: E. Lamu O'Boyant
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wc:dneaday Servica • 7:00p.m.
Firat ....... Clludo
Pulor: Mlrt Morrow
6dund Pal- 51.,!\IIMI pOll
Sunday Sdlool-9:15 a.m.
W.:nhip- J0: U 1.m., 7!00 P·nt
Wc:dneaday Smlice· 7:GO p.m.
-

Stinday Sdtool· 9::10 a.m.
Woahip • 10::10 a.to.

.,..,Orlol
•i•..,

• • •a
0on1er orsc. RL 124 a

Wonblp·IOa.m., 7p.m.
. Wcdacoday Smllca • 7 p.m.

Ubort7 ~CIIudo
.
Deller
Paatm: Woody Call ·

P - : JoeN.Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Even~na • 6:30p.m.
Wedncldoy Smlicea ·6:30p.m.

• -· : •lllo CblatiH era....
s-lay School '· 9::10 a.m.
Wonllip· !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service 7:30.p.t1!-

Racine, Oil ·
, _ : Daniel Bcnline
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m. Suay
Bible Study • 7:00 p.m. Wednellday

ww ........ Chrdt

lllpllltCII1!rdt ..
51. RI.l43jUiloftRt. 7 .
..,...,, Rev. Jo,... R. A&lt;Re, Sr.

s-lay !l&lt;hool • 10 a.m .
. Wonhip. II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneoday Services p.m.

?

\'~dory

Baptllt l..tep! •d•••
...!25 N. 2nd 51. Middleport
PUlor. Jamea E. Keesee
Wlnllip • Ulo.m., 1 p.m.
Wcdneaday
Servia:a. •.7 p.m.
'

, ........... era.,...
· . ROIIooocl 51.; Muon

Sundly School- 10 a.m. ·

Wlnll1p·lla.m.,6p.01.
Wedncldoy Serviccl· 7 p.m.

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

.

Pu1or : Ari,.Huit
Suntloy Schooi - IOa.m.
Worship· II a.m.

ML M- Jlapllat
F_..u, a Main St., Middiepon
Paator. Rev. Ollbcrt CniJ, Jr.
Sunday School • 9::10 a.m.
Worship·. 10:45 l.m.

'

1

....tlqwli, ..pdol

Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:45 a.m:
•·Thundly Seoviceo • 7:30p.m.
p_..,FntW•IIapdat
Selem 51.
,_,Rev. Paul TaylOr
Sunday School· 10 o.m.

.
Evcnh• · 7 p.m.
we.t. =
Serviccl- 7 p.m.

*'

·

.an.olllo Cll.... oiCilrlol
P.-: Philip 51unn •
Sunday School: 9:30a.m. ·
Worship Smlice: 10:30 a.m.
Biblo.Siudy, .Wedneoday, 6::10 p.m.

O.r Se•Jour Lullltru Cbun:b

Chnst1&lt;111 Un 1o n
IWtford era.,.. or Cllrlolla

St. h1l L u -. Cllurc~
.
Comer Syamorc &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. Georac Weirick .
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.

~u­

HIIIIford. W.Va.
Paalbr: Rev. Or.lid McMani1
·Sunday Sehool • II a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m., 7:30p.m:
Wcdneoday Smlicea ·7:30p.m. . ·

CooiYUie Ullltod Metllodlot ~
Pastor: H~k:n Kline
CooiYUie Cb-

. Main A Fiflh St.
Sunday Sehool· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 9 a:m.
Tuesday Sel\'ia:s • 7 p.m.

Gn~am Uallid Melhoclllt
Wo11hip ·9:30a.m. (lsi A 2nd Sun),
7::10 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
'Wedncaday Smlia: • 7:30 p.m.

Church of God
ML M - Clllordl ol God
'

-.!CIIarcb
Township Rd., 468C
Su .... ySe'-1 • 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Wcdncaday Seovices • 10 a.m.

ML Oltre U l l l e d orr 124 behind Wilkavllle
~-: Rev. Rolph Spires
Sunday School • 9::10 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.; 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 1 p.m.

P-: Rev. J - . Sett&lt;rfield
Suay School • 9:45 a.m.
Evenlna-7p.m.
Wedneldly Smllca • 7 p.m.
Rotloood Qordl oi God
P.-: Randy Ban
Su....ySchool· 10 a.m.
W.:.'::if.. II a.m.; 6 . p.m.
W .
y Smllca • 7 p.m.

a

Hock'
B11 CIIIU'dl
Oraod SIJect
Sunday Se'-1· 10 a.m.
Wlnllip-llo.m.
Wedneaday Services · 8 p.m.

Molls Caoperat!Yt hrlcll
Jilort- Cluater
All'rod
Pastor: Sharon Hausman "
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- I Ia.~ .• ~:~ P·rt;l·

s , - Firat Cll...~ oiGOd

Apple and Second Sll.
Pastoo: Rev. David Ruaacll
Sunday Sdlooland Wonhip-10 a:m.
Evening Sei'Yices- 7:30p.m.
Wcdnetday SaY ices· 7:30p.m.

TOI'f~CIIardt

.

Cbtlltr
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9a.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m. .

Pr••••&lt;J

Con g n .!CJ d 11 ona l

P -·: Brian Horkneu
Sunday School-10 a.m.
· Worship • II a.m.

United Method1st

Thursd1y

Service~-

Worship. 10:30 1.m.

RHCIS&gt;ille

Pastor: R~V. Charles M15b

wo ... hip. 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • I0,30·a.m.
UMYF Su....y 6:30p.m.
Firat Sunday of Month • 7:30 p.m. acrvice

Putot: Lawrence......,.,.
SandaY School • 10 .....
Wcdneaclay Se.Vica • 7 p.m.

. '. , 1',.. '..
. ci,.,.. or JOal,a Cllrlol,

1/4 mile paat Fon !ltcip on New Lillla Rd.
PaatOr: Willilm'V.aai Moler
.
w~J;7:00p.m
ly-7:00 p.ni.
Fridof·7:00 p.m. ,
~·

Cllftla Toller-It Cit.,..

·r·

Qifton, W. VI.

.•
s-toy School- 10 ..,.
New Lime Rd., Rurl!nd
Wonlip. 7 p.m.
Putor: Rev. lola!pRII. Robinioo,
Thunday Smlice • 7 p.m.
Services: Wcdneaday, 7:30p.m.
·
.
•
,
, Sunday,2:30~.m. ,:; · ·&lt;r~·,,. ~ ~"""~C.W.. •,
~

r"

·

'

-·•~'u,cra.,..
P.-: Theron DuthaiD
Sundly ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wc:dneaday • 7 p.m.

, Ioiii

I

·

3m

ow:.....,

Ooinpo111, OH

w....-r.· 7 p.m, a Yciurlt 7 p.m. ;

Ji- orrn,er

p

-=-Vanoe
'· !;"*.£.
wanhip • !Oa.m.

I

Mld.._rc-,cra...
S7S Peul 51., Middleport
'"""' Sam AndotiOO .
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evenini • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesclay
~rYit:e • 7:30p.m.
.
.

L

Ml' '....._. t Pr11u I
··
mini Aft.
.
,_,Rev. Claot'llabr
2

, .... Valley T.........lt Cit...
.
Bailey Run Rood
P-.: Rev. Emmcrtliow!On
Sunday Evcnifta 7 p.m.
·. Thursday Savice • 7 p.m. ·

S,ow•Fintu_.....,..... ' ·
, _ , .... ~ llobitQ

.

1411 Briclacman St., Sy!ICIIIC
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
·
Evenini • 6 p.m.
it Wednesday SCrviec -1 p.m.

.

a-··.a: .•.,
• ..

'

P-:EdaeiHan

•, .. Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
,w orship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

.1.. ' !\'

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t

•

·By RICHARD'W:OLF

'

~me children w~re coached to fake

SA T9D!&lt;Y .

.
.
Abou} 135,000 chiklren willldsc
era) dis,abiti\Y b!;nefits this year
under rules issued Thursday by the
Clinton administratil&gt;n.
The guid.C:Iihes, required by IllS!
year's welfare refonn Jaw, also will
·prevent abou,t 45,000 children fr~m
qualifying duriqg the next ftve
yea..S. The reductions will save $4.8
!lillian by 2002.' ..
,
.
Currently; 965,000 low-income
cJlildren re~ei,ve cas!l ,grants av~rag·
,i•g $424 a ntonth .und~ ,the S~pple·
rilental Secu'ri[y Income program.
Congress order:ed tougher eligibility
sta11dards last year after reports that

1

spirit of the legislation ."

News poll'cy

behavioral problems lo receiVe
"crazy checks."
- - Se~eral sludies found_ H,~tlc ·~i.
dence of fraud. But Presrdchl Clrn·
In an, effort lo provide our re&amp;!ler·
· ton decided to drop "those children ship with current news, !he Sunday
with Jhe more mild impairments," Timcs-Senlinel will not accepl wed·
Social Security Comm\~sioner dings after 60 days from lhe date of
· ~hirler Chater said. such as. allen- . the. even!.
tron d1sorder&gt; and learnrng drs~b1h·
Weddings submitted after Jhe 60ties. .
day deadline will appear during the
"Kids who an: going to be kick~d week in The Daily Sentinel and the
· off lhe rolls are sull severely d1s· GallipoHs Daily Tribune .
ablcd," said M~y Ford of 'ftc Arc,
. All club meetings and other news
a group !hat lObbies on behalf of the articles in the society seclion .rimst
mentally retarded. But ·Sen. Rrck be submitted within 60 days of ·
Santoru'!', R-Pa., a trilic .?r .the pro· occurrence.
gram, sard Chnton acled_ wUhtn the

212 E. Main Slreel
892·3785 Pomet'Oy

992-51.41
284 South 2nd

·

.
. Brogan-Werner .
INSURANCE
SERVICES
2t4E. Mltln
IIICZ-5130 Pomeroy

.

992-5535

112M71 MO.

At 2 l.ocltlona
Rutland, Oh.
. 814-742-211118
Racine, Oh.
814-tll4t-2202

7/22111n

BINGO
·•RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602
EVERY SUNDAY .

.Authorized AGA Oislributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Macl)ine Shop
Services'• Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
, . • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumilure, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Tralllses &amp; lots of other stu1111
"No Job Too Lsl'ge or Too Small"
We will wo.rk w~hln your budget.
Ph. n3-9173
•
FAX n3-5861
108 Pomeroy Street
Muon, WV
.. . ...... .
~

GARAGE .

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

Pomeroy

SNOW
REMOVAL

· YOUNG'S
CARPENnl SERVIa

•Parking Lots

•Etc.
Call Anytime

949·3327
591·1197

9112-6215

Pomeroy, Ohlo
1.....

FW ... lint •rs II tH

Sentinel Classifieds

To place u lid, call
992·2156

I Got There Just
Before You But,
At Last, You're
There, Too.
Even Though I
Got There Firat
Guess Who I Fifty
- Edward Durst~
Gt;Jtcha!

'.

M - Ctutpel era....

$2/Single, $3/Double
American Legion Post 128
·
Middleport

BINGO

Valentine Penn Special

POST 467

an..llle Fe•w I \'
Cll.,.. oldie Nua,....
Paato" Mark A. Dupler
Sunday Sc'-1 • 9:30a.m ..
Worship • .10:4,5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 pJI\.

Sunda~l- 9:30a.m.

Feb. 10·14, All Penns $35

Wlnllip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesclay 7:30p.m.

(excluding special perms)

ML OIIYe C
11111 Cllordl
, . _, l.awJence Bualt
Sunday 5&lt;'-1 • 9:30a.m,
Ewnina. 7 p.m.
Wednedlly Service · 7 p.m.
Ulllod , .... Cloordl
Rt7m-yBy·Paas

If you are a Gallla or Meigs.County resident attending vocational
training'or col• or plan lo attend Spring Quarter and need financial
assisla~ce- please read this ''information. Gallia-Meigs Community
Agency has a limHed amount of JTPA classroom training funds
ayailable. These funds can assist wHh tuition, lextbooks, and certaih
·other. CQSts.
If you are one or more
of the following:
. .
t
.

..

' ,i1l

Classifieds. ·

c;row•• F.mtly Rutau,....
~ Kenlur:lry Frlfld ~llrl"l

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

.

'

...~ HOepiUI
115 E. Memorllll Of. Plllileroy

9112·2104

a·

SWISHER • LOHSE·
w.PHARMACY
F• DoctOII· ..
P•iiUiptiu;•

.PuniMOf

.

'

.

'

'

'

Or you can have a Preapplication mailed to you 11y calling 614-367· ·
7342 ext. 11A or614-992-6629
ext.
,
'
.. 11A,
.

'II

Submission of a Preapplication does hot guarantee enrollmenl or

flildlng.

EQUIPMENT FOR

2·BAY CAR WASH.

(304) 675-6325
(daytime)

~

GMCAA Central
Office
GMCAAr JTPA Office GMCAA JTPA Offioe
,.
,
0010 North State ~oute 7 859 Th_1td Avenue 33105 H!land Road
Cheshire
Gallipolis
Pomeroy

.

·FOR SALE

Includes 2 vacuums.
Call Lon

YOI:! are encouraged to apply. You.can obtain an Preapplication at:

992·5432 ·'

•---

Mason, WV
n3-5352
Gift Certilicales Available

(Southern Pride brand).

&gt;j

228 W. Main St, Pomeroy

SHEAR DESIGNS

Used 6 monlhs. Like new.

adisplaced hon:temaker
a dislocated worker (laid off)w. long tenn unemployed
an older work~tr (55 or older)

Decke • Garages . '.::

Free Estl,.tes
614-742·3411

-·-;::,

-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

•

Personals

·~

Genlleman Seeking Companion.
ship Mom Nice female For Talks;
W_alkl &amp; Friend&amp;hip. Send Re - ~
pl..s To : CLA 309, tlo Gallipolis

Daily Tribune, 825 Th~rd Avenue,
Galipoll, 0+145631 .
'

GUYS AND GALS
WAITING TO UEET&gt;OU
INVOURAREA

'

1'- 900-443-5780

EXT: 1818
$2.99 PER MIN.

Mill ;llll'lwlfl!o""'
. s...y Sdlool- y ....
' Wanldp •· 10 uo•

··~ Falllt~

VInyl Siding • Roofs .:

Happy Ad

JIM

Sunday ldtool · 10 a.m.
· Wonblp • II a.m.
Wednellday Seovice • 7 p.m.

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling
::;
Kitchen Cabinets ,;::

1Ntlo'l71- pd. _":'

ofloom AddlliOM
•NewGanog-..
•Electrical &amp; PlUMbing
•Raollng
·
ofntarlor &amp; Exterior
PainUng
Also Concnote Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

:!:.it;:.J\::J .,~rlveways

H1111

Centfrllfien

(6 14) 992-6G77

RaclH Flnl Cllirdt of,.. Naaa,....
Su~y

Sun11t

Any Cor
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
~ Discounts &lt;
Computer Quotes ·:

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

everyone

l'elney·BenMII Paat 121
Amerlc:M I.Aglon " MIII81JMI, Mkldllp lilt
Yertrfono.SI.GO, a· 'hlllll
Clll AUU ~

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

HAULING

C.rdafThlilka

111
'
F~EI MillO
Frl. .v, . . . . . 7 .
•'
I 0 IM•9 , .

ALL OHIO

WICKS

G•m• Sterta 8::4$
Poy out 11 acconllng to
number of pllye,..
Under new 1111negemenL
Pubic Wolcome

'

1110/lln .__....;.,;::.=;;.,;_____,
742·2094
l---....-......;.;.;;;.-.
_

(UmaSton•
LowR-.n)

Doora Open 4:30

~-\Oll FISt lfr.

GRUESER'S
Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck painting,
minor mechanical
repair.
Tune-ups, -011 Change,
W Bufft
ax,
ng
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Atk lor Kip

U~OLSIERY

the
tremendous
kind11881 and
support they've
given.during these
difficult days.
Phillip (Joe) Boyles

992·2753

ANNOUNCEMENTS

'
You Don 'r Have To Loofc Fat ·
To Spy the Besl Buys In the

· Middleport

-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
. ESTIMATEES
.985 4473

Pubilc Nolk:e

low income

FISHER
· FUNERAL HOME

.........r·
SIODIUSS'

•New Homes

Wlnllip~llo.m.

~

RAWLJNGS,COATS

TRQCKING

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

I

•Remodeling
-Garages
•Decks

R. L.

Sunday School.• )0 a.m.

llaolll.,orlltl•·•l'l..,.. ... era..
Wcnbip-9Lm.
Sunday School· 9:-t$ o.m.
.

. lluciCm•uM)rCil.,..
Offill. 124

t35;·000'·children will lose disability benefits
•

SI.'Rt. 124. Racine
Pal!or: William - y Sdtool-10 .....
· EvenlrltJ!:'·
Wedncldoy
· -7p.m.

y aervico. 6::10 p.m.

s,_,._

·

1

Putor:lin-.
Suntloy Smllca • ,·JO a.m. a 7 p.m.

(at Burlinaham dturdt otr Rouro 33)
W

.

~other gospel play is . o~ lhe
honzon from playwnghl Dav1d E.
Talbert ("He' Say... She Say... But
What Does God Say". and "lawd
Have Mercy"). "A l'ool And ~·
Money" starring gospel recordrng
artist La~hun P~~e, ~len~ Jones and
· Cheryl Pepsn Riley IS . on lour
now, with stops schedul~ m Hous·
ton, Newark, N.J., and Chr~ag_o..
New releases: That dy~uc srngmg .
duo Angelo and Veronrca are back
with a new CD, "Not -Enough" on
· the ~enson label. Tal:~ 6 makes a
specral appeara~ce. Incidentally, lhe
Do~e Award w~nners .are cxpectmg
the••·first chrld m Apnl. Also c~pecl
, new releases from. Gary Ohver;
~sday's Child, Pam Thurn and
East. Grover !-"vy's m~m rock·
power pop proJect, called wrestlmg
angels," will be released Mar_ch 11
from . Myrrh Records. Michael
Card's "Unveiled Hope" ~leases
March ~I. based on the Book of
Revelat1on.

oNo Job Too Small
•Any and A~l of Your
Home Repair N~s
oCall Today: for Your
Free Estimates

Nazarene

Mlddllporr Cb1rcb ora.. Naaaniie
Putot: Gregory A. Cundiff
Suay School • 9'.30 a.m.
Wlnlllp • 10:30 a.m•• 6:30p.m.
Wcd'*"!ay Servia:s . 7 p.m.

LMa llollom ·
Sund•y School ·· 9:30 a.m.

~IAChrdl
SOD Jil. 2nd Ave., Middleport

.. .

~ HomM

SWEETHEART DANCE
February 14; 9 pm-1 am

School • 9:30 a.m.
Wlnlllp·I0:30a.m .. 6p.m.
· Wedncaday Smlic:cs · 7 p.m.

Joppo

~.

·eo. Rd. 63
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m.

Putor: &amp;ou Ra~e

Pa5lor: Bob Randolplt
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10'30 a.m.

r.or:

The mQSl difficult part was trying
not to laugh because "they,'re sb
CeCe on lhe move: If you thought crazy," she says. Still she adl!lits 10
CeC~ Winans was busy last · year, being a little nervous a1 first.. ·
juS\ wait lill you see what's on her
"The more I did it, the more at
plate this year. Aside from her eighth home !felt with it."
··· .
Qrammy nomination for "Count On
As if !he ministry of minister and
Me" wilh pal Whimey Houston, her best-selling author T.D. Jakes could
recent sJage debut with lhe musical get any more popular, Jakes'
''Born To Sing" and her finl solo "Woman, ·Thou Art Loosed! .-;:
album, "Alone In His Presence," Songs of Healing and Restoration
she's diving into acting. Look for will be released later this month in
lier on Fox's "Living Single" video and recorded fonnats. ·
(Thursday, Feb. 20, 8:30 p.in. ESl)..
Searching for a CD that '~aplures
11ris is her second sitcom · appear- all the best of gospel? Check out
.l!ncc. She 1~ an epis&lt;l!lc of "Mar· . "Wow 1997: The Year's .' ~0 Top
tin"two yeats ago.
Chrislian Artists and Songs'1.,(No. 2
· Acting is just another extension · . on Contemporary .Christian ' chart).
. of her ministry, says Winans. Like .its ' predecessor (' 'WOW
::.Everything I do is' an extension of . 1996"), this is a double C()..casset~e
my ministry. &gt;That's going to s.tand package featuring 30 of the year s
no matter whai. As long as· I'm not most popular Christian artists and
doing things thai aren't contradiclo- ·songs. This year's cqllection
ry to what I believe in, it's a good incl!ldes songs by de Talk, Michael
thing .." .·
. W. Smilh, ~rk Franklin arid The
How'd she fare against the Family, Anornted and Steveq Curt1s
comics on "Living Single?"
Chapman.

G11nnett Newa Service

"11.., Nm.Ownmldp" ·

O,enllleC-Idy CIMirdt
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wlnltip. 10::10 a.m., 7 p.m.

.

7 p.m.

Sdttiit. Wonletfllda
David Dailey
s.-y School9:30 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.

no BclltYen• , _ . . . M!o1t1r7

•

:

.C a!Yuy ..... Cll1!rdt

.

-

lnlrim poston: Rev. Raben Hupp
Su....y School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship -; 1 J a.m.

· Seovice: Fr141aY, 7 p.m.

Lona lloltont

•,

By VANESSA WILLIAMS SNYDER

l'clmerclf Pike, Co. Rd.
Putor: Rev. BladtSunday School· 9::10 a.m.
Wlnllip !O:JG a.m., 7:JG p.m.
w-~ Service. 7:30p.m . .

. . _: Steve Reed
s.-y School • 9:30a.m.
'\Vonhip ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
·
Wednesclay-7p.m.
Friday • fellowlllip aeovice 7 p.m.

EuiLatart
P-: Brian Horkneaa
Suay School-10 a.m.
· W":j. 9 a.m.
y : 7p.m.
,Wed
.

Walnut and H~nry Sts., RIVt:..~ood, W.Va.

'

Ckr&lt;k oiGod ol
OJ. Whil&lt;Rd. offSLRtl60
Puloo: PJ. Oapman
Su....y Sehool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
WcdneMIIIy Servlca • 7 p.m.

Su....y School· 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m.
. 1'1!~~ ~ovjocs • ~:~ !'•m· ..

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Qkbns

FIIIIIFoii.GoofoiCil....

MCII'IIIqSCor

CeCe ,Winans takes .an acting t.urn

FaJIU'alua Ill C-l'tlra.tat .

Sunday soovice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Y~ Fellowallip Su....y, 7:00p.m.
Wcdnellday acrvice, 7:30p.m.

SaHoD

George Weirick
Wlnllip • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m..

Lewt, W.Va. Rt I
. Paalor: Jolin Hut
Sunday School. 9::10 a.m.
Wlnltip ·7:00p.m. ·
. w....,....y Bible Sllldy. 7:00p.m. •

11'1•• 1\ CitRev. Clyde llendetiOO

Putor. Kenneth Baker ·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Wlnllip -10:45 a.m. (lsi A 3ni,Sun)

R~v.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Radnc

Pulor: Kenneth Baker

Pine Gro11e

........ _CIIwdt

B~ Cllrlolloa

Cai'1MI
PulOr: Kenneth Baker

•

Coolville Rorl
ra-: Rev. Plllilip Ridenour
-Y School ·9:30a.m.
• Wlnlllp-l0:30a;m.
Wedneldly SeJVice • 7 p.m.

Solem 51., Rutland
l'ulor. Roben E. Muaacr
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Worship · II :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Seovice ·1 p.m.

Wednesday Servic::el· 10 1.m2

Sacnmen1 Service 9-IO:U a.m.

St. J,.a Lxllteru Cb.,..b

BetlllodlG.,.eCb....
P-: Gene Zopp
Sunday "''-1· 10::!0 a.m •.

w..... ClliPII w....,...

cra-rc•• 11pc-r

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
.
Worship ·1J a.m.

Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
WotShip • 10:45 a.m. (2nd A 4th Sun)

Luthc r&lt;Jn

llaniiiO.b dlMII 1w
Old Amcricu Le&amp;itJn Hall,
Fourth Street, Mickllepon, OH

PutotMichacl .......
S.....y Jervico, 10 a.m.
Thuncky ~er~ic:e, 7 p.m.

Bel..ay

'

· CllriaC of un.r,Day Selxll
St. Rt.l60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
• Sunday SdtooiiO::ZO.llo.m.
•
Relief Society/Priollhood 11:05-12:00 noon

Homemakina -•inlo 111 Thun. • 7 p.m.

Wlnlllp-7p.m.

riltl9230.....
()pea ...... era....
S. bini Sr., Middleport ·

.. s.,,,.Uie

.

Goopal .......

I.

Otllc1 Cllurcll es

.

· Sunday Sc~ool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.

no Cllarc~ of J-.

su....y Evenina •.6::10 p.m.
Th,_.,.y Service • 6::10 p.m.

·ae•k•e• ......

· ~J.E¥Caina · 7p.m . ·
W
y Seovicca. 7 p.m.

!~

n

' Bald Knob, ... OJ. Rd. 31

320 E. Main Sl., Pomeroy
~y t,tunicipot Buildintltldilorium)
·· ·
r.-:limCadaer
.Wlnlllpaeovica: Suay; 10a.•.A6p.m.'

P.-: Ron Fierce
sua, S&lt;hool· 9:15a.m.
Wlnltip • IO:IS a.m.

I

PillD&lt;: Rev. Roaer WIUrOid
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.

no~llot!C•IIr

.

1

~Jo"k= ·

,

Wonbip- 10:30 a.m.

SaletoCn..t

C

Sundai School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Smlice !0:30a.m.
No Soolday or Wcdrieaday NIJhl Scrvica

Smlice lime: Sunday 6:00p.m.

a.-c--,CJo....

Portlanci-.Rac:inc Rd.
Bilndt Prcaiclenl.· Michael Duhl
Su....y Sehool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 Lm:
Wednellday Set¥ices : 7:30 p.m.

..

m .soJ7

--

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
IIISUUTION

y - - 7_p.m.

c.ti&amp;MI"'

l'o!licroy
Pastoo: Roben E. Robinson
Su .... y School • 9: IS a.m.

Suaday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thunday ilcovica 1 7 p.m..

. 11-zolllled CkOI'&lt;~ of J-• Chrtlt
or u - Dlly Salalli

W

603 Second Ave. Malon

-~
P..
or: Keith Rader
Sunday SchOol· 9:1S Lm.
'
· Wonhtp • IO Lm. ·
.
Youth Fellowab~p.. Sunday. 6 p,m.

Latter-Day Si!ints

"::::'"~:~
' $uncloy Scbool • 9 .....

!'IlL u.... Boptii&amp;

0-

Rd.

Soolday Sdtool· 9 a.m.

-~-:"t·IOa.no., 7p.m.

"-LIIIc'Flill~l Otun:lt"
."-'loltn a Pauy Wade

....... Cllaptl
Suay School· 9 Lm.
Wonhip . 10 a.m.

. Putor: Rev. Roy McCarty
sua, Sehooi • 9:30a.m.

- . . . . SJwnbl!to
Yaulll Miaillci:'IW .• ' jet
Sunday School- 9::10 a.m.
Woallip·S:GOLm.,IO::IOa.m., 7:00p.m.
W - y Smllca • 7:00p.m.

Putor: Bill.Unlc
· Suay.SdloQI-IOa.m.
.
Wlnllip··lla.!"., 7:30p.m.
Wedncldoy Serv..... 7:30p.m . .

28601 51. Rt. 7, Middlepon
SuDy Sdaool • 10 all!l.
Evc:njnJ· 7:30.p.m.
Thunday Smlica • 7:30

Pallo&lt;: Peter Tremblay
Suay Sehool· 9:30 •·Ill·
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. aDd 7 p.m.
Wedncldoy Service· 7:00p.m.

.... d Clludo ofCiortol
l'ulor. Euaene E. Underwood
Sanday School- 9::10 .....
Worship· 10::10 a.JD., 7 p.m.

511••• ••• lapllat

Old~-

u - CUir Fret Mlllllodlst Cll1rdl

·

Paator: Rev. Muy Mdlonicl
Sunday Serviccl: 10 a.m. a 6 p.m.

Bible Sltldy Tueaday • 10 a.m.

Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.rn:
Wo11~ip ·10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

, . _, Jab Cuploy

p....,, Rev. Lawn~ T. Holey .
YOUJh Pu10r: Aaron Youna
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wc:dneaday Servia:a. 7:00. p.m.

Putor. Otarloa Neville
Sunday Sehpol· 9 a.m.
Wlnllip·IOa.m.

..""'

su...

2

lillMtnUio

Putor: Robert Manl~y ·

~c.-orc.rw·

Flnllapllal

llcaill (M~J'

Putor: Vema&amp;ayc Sullivan
Stmday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Won~ip. 10:30 a.m,

B)'ld Ra HolliMaa era....

R...,
, _ , tiQballlaober

SoMIII..._.MtwTau••••

• ....... Putor:MartiiiCll- . , . " ' .Wonbiti!:I:IO p.m.
• 6p.m . .
. ~
W
· y Smlicea • 1 p.m.

. sio....ySdtool -IOa.m.
WotShip • 9 a.m.
·
Thunday Services · 6::10 p.m.

75 Peao1 51., Middleport.
,_,Rev. John Neville
O.ihkcn's serVice· 10 a.m.
Worship • 7:30p.m.
·
. WcdneMIIIy Seovice • 7:30 p.m.

Ttoppen ..... Clltoi'CIIofQiilt

'

Rollo!od Cllll!4 of
, _, Samuel Blayc
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30a.m.
Wlnllip • 10::10 a.m.• 6::10 p.m.
1Wedileeday Saoicea • 7 p.m.

F-Ru ·

•

Eftllina7:30p.lll.
Tueldoy a Tlundoy • 7::10 p.m. •

rile"-

flatPastor: Keith Ridco
Sunday Sehool • I0 a.m.
WotShip. II a.m.

u.....,

,.. .........
...___,,..·n

Oeletr&lt;."lttuaei ... Ner ...
P -: Rev. Habert Ooale
Sunday Sdlool. 9:30a.m.
'!'.."""~ II a.m., 6 p.m.
W
yServicea-7p.m.

·

Sunday Se'-1 · 10 a.m.
WotShip·9a.m.

w....,_._~CIIordl

Wednilday SoMoeo. 7 p.m.

Putor: Paul Sli....,

· PISlor: Kejlh R.Xr

11M G....e llble
era....
· 112 mile off Rt 325
P -: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Stmday SehQol- 9:30a.m.
Wlnllip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdrieaday Smlice · 7:30p.m.

SandaY School • 9::10 un.
Wonhip ·10::10 a.m., 7:00p.m.

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

~

Pl5t0r: Charles Neville

I

w.....,.

330411 HilmiiiDod, - y
l'aatm: Roy'HIIIIIU
SUndoJ School • 10 Ltn.

· lly PITIR 11· OOTT, ·M.D.
. prmat uollia (the llr:t of o~yaen
' DR. OO'I'T
PBAll DR. GOTJ': In a columll diM •lad~ to die complicalieils of .
aboua steep 11p11e1. Y9U auacllecl .· sleep...-.IUChas heln flilure). l
,,.,,
0111Uitllion wid! an ____,_ · ...-: with your IIMeiMIIt lbllsuch
PE1ER
~t apecilllilt. This is incomcL pori- fhould be reftwod 10 asleep
'
,Smc:e thele doc101s .do ~fJCIIY. an clinic • a major btlspilll;
GO'M', M.D.
New
Homes
•
VInyl Siding New
operation . is what !hey invariably
However, 'u a p.rimary-care
• '
·Garages • Replacement Windows
~nd. A more s~iUible Qlllion, physician, .I hav to start 'somewhere
I !hint, is lo refer patients wid! sleep whcll confronted wilh a patiept who
Room Additions • Roofing
apnea to a sleep specialist. ..
gives a hislory of rec:wring cessation
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
I have ~ad sleep apnea for seven of breathing during sleep.
. ,years, I do not drink and am only ·
Fint,lmustdealwilhtheissueof shouldhaveanEN'fevaluation,and ·
FREE ESTIMATES
slightly overweight. My sleep spe· alcohol, which .. in many cases .. mfvicw is shared by most autl)ori·
614-992·7643
ties. In my experience, responsible
cialist warned against unnecessary disrupts breathing during sleep.
surgery because, in his opinion, it is
Second, · I have to address a otolaryngologists will not advise 1\-~·:
: ~·_J~~~~~~~--..,!;=
plmost never effective .-· except for . weight pro,blem, if one exists, . surgeJY unless !here is a. clear-cull:
. snoring.
,
because obesity is a recognized indication.
'
DEAR READER:.Your-objection cause of slcocp apnea .Md must be
I did not slate (or intend to imply)
HO~LON
l,o my ans\Ver slems, I ~lieve1 from correcled wid! non-surgiclil' tech- . that ENT surgery js the preferred
d difference of O'pinii&gt;t~ ,rtganlirir tho niques, sucll as aggressive weight treannerit for sleep apnea. but 1 think
approach to a relatively common reduction.
.
..
that an ENT consult is mandatory.
I53711RYWLACE
affliction. .'
Third, I !Tillst ·consider that the Of course, blain S\!'m sleep apnea is ·
MIDDLEPORT
DUMP TRUCK
• Sleep apne.a is really a syndrome patient's sym11tom may ~ sec- not within !he purview of sucli spe·
82•2772
wid! many different causes, ranging ondary to airway obstruclion from . cialists.
· ' . e:GO •.m.-3:30 p.m.
SERVICE
fro.m upper-airway obstruc:tion and fact0n such as a flaccid palale, naSal
To give you more inforl)lation, I eRI!IIac••••t Windows
Umestone • Gravel
overweight to a failure of the part of polyps or blockage of the upper Ira· am sending you a copy of my Heald! : -a.ld ,......__5
Dirt• Sand
llie brain stem that controls breath- chea. ln Ibis instance, ! need !IJe ser· Report "Sleep/Wake Disorders." · ·
- .....
ing. ll is this ·lasl cause that you are vices of an otolaryngologist. ~&gt;
Other readers who would like a copy , ~-~~ &amp;
985 4422
defining as. ~Jeep. ap11ea. . 1
Once the patient · haf'·'been should send $2 plus' a 'long, self· · ' n-s .
Chester; Ohio
You are correct tlw this disorder assessed for these physical abnor- addressed, stamped env.elope 1o P.O. ..... &amp;•lltlaas
10120100o11n
does not respond lo surgery. It is malities and no obvious explanation Box 2017, Murray Hill Station, New
diagnosed in a sleep laboratory and is forthcolliing, referral to a ~leep Jab · York, NY 10156. Be sure to mention
trealed whti a C-PAP breaihing is the final step. 1 believe that · the title.
.
IOIEIT IISSELL
machine, a device 'that forces fresh patients who stop breathing during
Cos!yright 1997 NEWSPAPER
air inlo the breaihing ·passages, to sleep, with or whhout snoring, ENTERPRISEASSN.
COIISTIUCTIOII

BISSELL IUILDEU, INC~

- , . .....
......
, .........
.30 .... Sr.
IO:JOa.a, 1 ,...
·w . 1 ..,. Sorvico • 7 p.a.

ra-:Rcv. Thomaa·Mca,..
Stmday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wlnllip-IO::IOa.m. and6p:m.
W - y Smllca,- 7 p,m. .

Ea.......

lt.eof ..... H_Cil_
l.adina C...t Rd., Rutland
Paalor: Rev. Dewey King'
SuDy - - 9:30a.m.
·
Suoday wanhip.1 p.m.
Wednesday ...yer meetina· 7 p.m.

. za. Clltoi'CIIof Clortol
Pomeroy, llarriaonYHie Rd. (RI.IC)

Rodudflnt Bapdat era....
Sunday School· 9::10 a.m.
Wonhip . I0:45a.m.

PI ELl ., Q.-dllltM N........

ViclO&lt; R,..ll
Sunday Sdtool 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 11 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wadneaday Setvla: · 7:30p.m.

Pulor: Jock Colqnm
SUnday School -9::10 a.m.
Wonhip -10::10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneodtty Smllca • 6::10 p.m.

Alb SIJ&lt;et, Middleport ·

Cellini Ooatar
AIIMory ( S y - )
l'ulor. ChOrla Neville
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
·
Worahip- II a.m. ·
· WOdnesday ServiC.. • 7:30p.m.

~Rev.

......,_ IIMtt Cllwdtofa.tat

,_ w•llapdot era....

s-, Sdlool • 9-.30 ....
Wonhip·ID-.JOa.m., 6p.m.
w-.ySa•ica-7p.m.

~~I:"R'!:pel

K.. C...O IICiortol
Wonbip • 9::10 a.m.
Sunday School • 10::10 a.m:
Pulor-klflql Wallace
"· lat'... 3n1Sullday

-

Sdlool · 9 .....
Worship·lOa.m.
~y Smllca • 7::10 p.m.

,_,Dr.

PaatOr:AIH..Vo.a. Mioiller. Bill Prlzior
Sun:lay School· 9::10 a.m.
Wonbip-8:1S,III-.30UD., 7 .....
Wedneoday SaY~ · 7 p.m.

•I .

IJu •sa.rc.e~•N

,_, -..,H~=--•

v a • -'Cllrtll
21~W. . . . SL

•

The Dally Sentinel • , . •

Ohio

Em'pire .
Furniture
'·

and

Appliance
Gallipolis, Ohio

LOVERS

=

MON.&amp;WED.
6:30P.M.
STAR BURST

$1,300.00 .

sso;oo or

,.,_

!lore

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

•·

MUST BE t8YRS
SERV·U· (619)645·8434

..

MEET NEW P~OPLE' TH.E FUN
WAY~ODAV.

.

•

1·900·443-5780 ExL1818

S2.99 per min. Mus! be 18 yrs.

=-~~~·U~(6_t~9)~M~5·-~-~~·--- ·
Singles I Tired 01 Bl ind Oates? :
Call t -900 -443-5780 ht. 2692.
$2.99 IUin. 18 Yrs Setii ·U 619 · •
64S-8434.

J

Giveaway

40

-:::::=::~=::--,-...::..,..~ •
112 Eskimo Spttz Small O(]gs, 3 ~
Mates &amp; 3 Females, 5 W&amp;eks

Old, 614·446 ·4629.
2 Adull Fema le Cats To GIVOa · ~
'

•. way 614·446-239 3 Al!or"3 P.M.

,AdOrable Chow Puppies·, Mix In

Color, 4 Mates, 2 Fema les , 5
Weeks Old, To Good Home. 6141 · ,
446·8530 Aher 2:30P.M.
Adorable Puppies Needin g Good :

Home. 614-446· 3703.
·call n(]W 10 schedule yo ur Tup· •
· J)erware Pany. Earn free pro . .,
ducts . Stars &amp; Stripes 1 ·800 ·

484·1782S.C. 2779
I Free Please Gtve To Good Home:
P"regnant Momma Cat She Has
No Home, 614 -4461 7103.
Free puppies. 112 Dalmallan .

30H75·172e .
· Full bloQded lemale to• tctner,
smart, 10 good home Wtlh k.!OS. 1
112 yrs., 614· 742·31.?4.

German ShepherdiColho pupa ro
gooo home, 6 weeks Old, wormod.
814·843-5421 '
Mixed breed oul1ude dog, hrar.
thOIS, box and cham tncluded .
one yr. old, 614 -992·2818.

Spade Female Husk~ Houscbfo ken Hu sk1 Collte Femnle To-

BAG SALE ·
THRIFT.SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT '
FRIDAY &amp; ,

SATURDAY·
MOiNING
. FIIRUARY 1&amp;.I '
Wtlcr••llrk
'
..:Nr.alo.lrtl

Givoowoy, 814·245-9557.

60 Lost and Found
LOST: 1·31·i7 1yr old lema!•

Beli~le, MtPiintic trea, mu11r ·
bfatk &amp; white. Chil ds pel ~ 30•·

875-ttlMI.

.

Lost: Billick &amp; While long HCIIir~
Male Cal last Seen: BrenMtOO&lt;t
Drive, et.c-.ue-4103.

Sllll lost male black cit nei,
Union Avenue, small whtte IDOl
on.-. 814·1M12·571i.

Yard Sale

TO

GallipoliS

&amp;.VIcinity
Mrs. • .., Dnls .
ALL Yord Salas "-~~~ ~ P11~ II\

- ~··

(lllmblra ol '!I'C'II
for over 20 · ~
'

'··

•

, r'IM!\041. OEADl!I'E : 2.:00 p.m ..,.
tho·day bolare 1110 l!jl I' to run . .'"
Sunt(ay odlriOn • 2:0jl All'•F - :
Monday '011111on • tO:OO •. m, 1111- ,

.

.....,.

.

~

I

�,

•

Fr_tdlly,
. ~ 7, 1W1

Pomeroy • Mldclieport, Ohio

10 •The D.uy Sentinel

-

Frtdly, ~ 7, 1887

I

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge ~1

N:IA Cro••word Puzzle •

-• =
..

41~ ·

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Ce$'e

•o c.....-.,
w. OMit 001.

4--..-

44 ......

~.

-·--

:;g:r·~·~··

12"--tM
, ....... 54
piece
1 4 - - - - 51~

. Yard $ale

•.:===Po==-===.,===:1
,
•

•• ....,_,
Mlddtepon

:::"

&amp; VIcinity

I •

.

• All Yard Sfll•t Mutl Be Patd In
Advan~t . Otldllnt : 1:OOpm the
day beloft the ad 11 to run, Sun der I Monday ~tdthon - L OOpm

Fridor-

110

Help Wantld

Send resume

Public Sale

•'

Auc'lion, 1 112 miles, Rt 2, South
RIYenswood . Thursday &amp; Friday,
Feb. 8·7, .7JNTI, Howard Beasley

: ..71!•

Strett, P?meroy, OhiO 45189.

A.JJ-

HOME TYPISTS,
PC users n&amp;aded . $45,000 Income potential. Call l -800 -St34343 Ext B-9368.

Lemley's Auctton Se(vtce, Uslt&amp;
· Lemley, Auctioneer. Housel'lOJd,
Ellltt, farm Sales. Call 61 • ·446·
8241, 61AJ-l88-lil443.
'

cOnatructlon. (3031 759·
31110~nsso.

230

ProfessiOnaL

Services
HARTS MASONARV · Block,
brldl &amp; 110~ work, 3D years ea.perllne•. ,..IOf'lltM r•r... 304185-3511 o'-' 8:00pn, no job to

-liriiBIG.

~1208

b• ..mtnt water -

,rootlng. •II b•aemtnl repairs
dont. free eatlmattl, Jifetime
ouerant. .. tOVrt an Job exp,r'ara.30oH75-2141l.

to EVIry Saturday night e:oopm. 202
Stc:ond A\lenue, Middleport·
Ohio.Tools, toys, nousehald, etc .
Not re1pons•ble lor accidents.
Terms ol sale· cash.
AuetJonNr· Jim Rltdy Auc·

Need ·Employetl Familiar Wi th
Windo~n For ShOrt I Long Term
Assignments. In GallipoHa Area.
Mu11 Have Data Entry &amp; "SWitchboard E-xperience, Must Be Will·
ing To Drive To Hun·l lngtan Far
Appoinlmenl. Call Today, 614·
~46 - 4511 . Kelly Temporary Serv•ces

Rick .Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auc11oneer. complete
auct•on
serv•ce.
licensed
188,0nio &amp; West V•rginia, 30-4773-5785 9' 304·713-5447 . .

Overb100k Center nas !)OSitiOn
open lor lull 11me 3-n pm AN Su·
wanted to Buy
perv•sor. 2· vears tono·term care
Absolule Top Dollar : AU U.S. Sil · . ellperienco. preferred . VentilatOr
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets, &amp;llper~enee a plus. Stop b)' to fill
Diamonds, Ant•que Jewelry, Gold out apphcat•on or lna•l resume to
Rlng1, Pre-1SJ30 U.S. Currency, 333 Page Sir HI. Midclepor I, 0H
45760.
;
~lerling, Etc . Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second
POSITION AVAILABLE FOR
Aven~. GalhgoliS, 614·446·28-42.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Dl·
Anuques, lurn11ure, glass, china. t:tECTOR
com&amp;, toys, lamps, guns. toots.
Moiaa Coun1J 11 ac:coptlng appl~
es1ates : also appraisals. Osby
cartona until february 11 from
Marun. 61C-992-74111
person• qualitied to be ill Economic O..llopment Oirtellr. The
Clean Late Model Cars Or
IUCC"Iful lppficlnl for thll poiJ.
Trucks, 1990 ~od&amp;ls -Of Newer.
·Smith Bu1ck Pon118C, 1900 Easr- lion mus1 bt able 10 ~P and
admlnitter tht ptani rtqulred to
em -'vtnue. Galipolis
promote economic and CCMM'Iuni·
Wanted io buy - furniture, baby
l! d..alopment within 1ht county.
items, call 614 ·992-3725, Ponwr· locare . and propertY apply for
o~ Thnll Shop, 220 East Main
thO II funding sources thai· will
hicllitate Implementation al theN
Street.
•
capable of administer·
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying aal·
funding 11 mty be ob·
vaga vehicles. Selhng pans. 304·
-llble lor loclllng
.
'
773-503;!.
,_ buotnoo..e. olld lncluolry wllf-

.gp

ing Ia
1118 county and ifl-.
suring that they rec.We whaiiYef
assistance Is required to de· so,
provide &amp;Kiating businesses with
any assistance required 10 either
&amp;lpal'ld thetf operat19ns 01 1n1ure
their continued vlablflt~. Thl1 person will tepresent the county i"
matt&amp;fl related to economic IMvelapment•l appropriate mMI·
ingt and conferenctt locally •nd
111111 ll'ltt
ate• a1
educatiOn and oxportence rotated
to economic dtveiOPJ'ft&amp;nt In wour
resumt. along with tht tllary
which you would tequiro 10 accapt
this potltion. Mutl be either a
residenr at Mttgt County or be
willing to - . midenl Soncl
reaume to tht atttnlian of the
Me•gs County Comm11ttonert al
thi&amp; addreu : Court Houae, tOO
Eaar Seca'nd Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 457118.

W•nled To Buy Ull.ed Mobile
Homes. Call : '614 ·1146·0175 Or
304-137S.59€l5
Wanled To Buy •S'l18' 2· Man
" Banutm~ Boal fair Pr.ced, 61C ·
446-285&amp;.
Buymg : Anuque Furm!ure · Col ·
leclables. Records, Cutlts, &amp; Old
Advertiaino Items, 1!114-448·7812.

Pte••

., me

Wanttd To BUy : Lillie Tykes
l&lt;ilchtn Set, Workshop, Play houst. posslblo Any Othet linle
Tyke Ta,.. Pl•ase Call 614·245·

!1887. .
Wht:tted To Buy : We Buy Junk
Cafl 814 -446·7278, Or 61-4· 388-

11062.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Pasral Jabs 3 Poaitions Avail-

able, No Experiilnce Nac:assafy.
For lnlormatian, Call 1· 818·784·
Help Wented

.Benk Aepo'a! Only 3 left,
owiler linanc1ng ava1labte. Wi1h
apprcwad credit. 304 · 7~5- 711)1

AINII-~In

thlt·- · N1J«t1o
h F - Fol&lt; Houllng Ad

-tlon
..,,.,Nial_·...-

111 · 1---~llllgll

10-"onypre!Mnee. '

lfmllllllon"'

Areas I Shirley

~Br!l , ~4-675· 1429 .

-

on - · COla&lt;. rotlglon,

origln. or ony lnt0f111onl0
make 01111 ouch ...-nco.

UtttltiUOt• or dllcttmlnatlon."
Tl1la - - . . , not
knowingly oocopl

advarll118menll fer real Olllte
whiCh loin viOiotlon of 1ht
low. Our ... hlrot1y
lnlormed thot .. - .

Ropresenlat'•ves
r}uedMt. F.arn money lor Christ·
mas bifiJ at hOme/fll work 1-800·
902 63~ or 30-1 ·882 26C5. lnd

n..,

ASSISTANT MANAGER/ SR.
CUS~ER SERVICE REPRE·
SENTATIVE

thlt -

advir1ioed In
are lMil1ablo on an equot

A locai Consumer Fmanc•al
Servtcts ollice ol a tonune 500
complrjY hal an •mmedi.a le ca -

180

reer appriUfliiY ~

Apartme!ltS
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furOith8d 1-nd unfurnished, socumy
dej)osit requ ire;d . no pets . 614 1102-2218.

~--

Sate
1 t05· $th Sl. 1n New Haven, lot
170x200, needs repairtd. Sell as
il •13,000. Call even•ngs 304 ·
8112-3358 ohol Spm.
3 bedroom hDUit '" M1ddlepon

lotiiii,CII B14-~2-301t.

8-42 Mill Streel, Mlddl._
owner wanting ro move,
$29.500 to

4.
House•IDr sale
1102-5087.

1n

Rutland , SU-

Six rooma and. bath, 2 112 ac,at,
big red ba,r_n, 1 112 miles on New
Lime Rd. 814-7•2·275_7
Somorvi11e ReallY 21 2-sm St.
·we Are In Naect 01 L1S11ngs~
Please g1ve us a call or stop bv
our OffiCI II interested tn selling
your property. Thank You! 304·
875·3030 (Offictl 304-875 -3431
(Jton C.olo. A!ll"ll ·

Two 1 Qttdroam •partmtnll lor
tale with ltoragt building. Will
pn land c:ontract, 614·902 -

••II
58158.
320

Mobile Homes
tor Sate

.sa..

630
1

Vans

410 Houses lor Rent ·

Uiddleporr, 1bf' furnished .apt 0.pas•t &amp; references . 30C-882-

2568.
2 Bedroom Hous~ 1 112 Miles
From Gallipolis On SA 688 Cen tral Air, Deposit &amp; References
Reqwed, $325/Mo.. S250 Depot·
II, 614-446-3413.
.

1 Moderr1 1
614·446-0390.

Apanmem,

Newly rentavated 2br, all .tecttic,
appliances furnished, on site
m•nagemenl, l•undry facility,
HUD voucher~ acceptedlEHO.
Oid Ath Village 81h &amp; GeorQO St
Ntw Haven. WV 304·882·3718 .
N1ce 2 Bedroom Furnished,
Kitchen, All Eloc:tuc, Near Spring
Valley No Pets, Water &amp; Garba~
Pa1d, S3551Mo., Plus Deposu,
Pius References.. 614-446-6157.
One bedroom apartment. lur·
n11hed, extra ·n1ce &amp; clean . No
pets. Phone 304-675-1388.

One bedrOom apartment
Pteesant. 614-992·5858.

in Pl.

Twin R•vers Tower, now accepling
applicalions for 1br. HUD substdlzed apl. for elderly and handica:pj)Od. EOH 304-675-8&amp;19.

Wanted To Do

t-lr. GeesE:! $100 ;

1

..... 10 .... ,..,. dirtc:dy telaled

510

·tW,;;IJ
' I. · - " " -·

W0 ~
~ I CO(npltlilive ulary and
lve bonofilo package.
rwerd retuma 10: Th•
net, P.O. Box 729·40,
0Na467e9.
I

...,.

INF!DN
EO£

·eett,a, · r ~ed •n a'ur

home.
Seriou · colla only. 304-4175·

1--'•'

·-

8alol'ti IIOf notcled. oh'r aohoal,
if! ,., me or youra. 30.•·175·

.,,e~

'

4!\'u~:wd~;li~;~!f~~~·

•..,... ...

wi..

u-a·Noerled .
k
- ' houra. UOk 10 I.&amp;Oktyt I·

,

All
in
Itt
1-5yrJ"arranty.
home·
owne) s mturahce
i In full •
Plus il tou call now, yo1o1r Cholet
of free &amp;kirling or 8mt. free I ·
rem 0 park al. yout ~:hoict.
•pplic•tlon refused!! PhDne in
your fr" apptiCIIian fDt pre--..
prov11 I" 101·473·8813, 11 no onIWtf• ._.. name and number an
nwc:nint~

.

I

seta

GoOc!a

2
ol Qoll Clu~ liGhl hand,
1 aett150 other Mi $100. 304.~,

25 Muak:oll

cf~W8cter

25-

27rt.::~H

--

30Church

Plla

31-clty

Openfllllead: • J

32 Slangy

:sr - m l o f l l

.39 LKk

45U.-1111y
411 - Clwlliy .
47 Qpp. ollltldo

48 Filllle ·•
48 Bullell (II.)

........

51~ol

those incfedlble pbatoa ' "-rt-t' ,ltlien'by lhe Hubble Spice 'l'eJeKqpe "'
of th" alx·lriUion·mHe--biJh 111 and ,
dlilt ,~? Wide, new IWI are IJe.
lq foniled. And we are aeeinc bow It ·
was 7,000 years ago beeauae that's
l,low l q i t bu tabn the light to reach

. ,, Did )'1111 -

b++-

HOME

I

l;vt ~ o~&lt;e OF ~ ~
/ YIA~S. II.IT ' X ;,II~

-DEPT.

IrE"'

Ill.

CA~J.If'/6

l

51-57F-Uy
member,

lim.... _

'

DO YOU THI~I( r ~?~W:
61i'LJWI~ /¥\Y 1{~1!. ~ ~ £'
CcuD COMB IT

,

I ,L X

Uecl,!::'a~.ite.trlct.pniblem, Wum·

declarer. places Weal with the
IP8d!l ace lwblcll Ia almast certain giv·

.

.,_.,Ciplow..,..
···----..
- -........
- - .....
- -.... -. r.....,_E
-· ..-

L,Z

North's' three hearts was a limit
.raile; showbig a!Miut 11 IUJIIIOl'l J!Ointa

ing

.~Ell!. /¥\Y OI'LV/

by Lule eampo.

w8

for hearts with leastfour trUmps.
South, devaluing the lpade tlnJI, let-

"

CELEBArtY CIPHER

lem lqotln&amp; only at the Norlh·South
bandl, see If )'1111 can find the solution
. by ltudylng aD 52 eanla.

at

,'I

~

.

require careful tbougbt --~·What
• yoJUI'piUIIn rvur hearts alter
Wilt leldl the dub jlct? Wbeft )'IIU'WI
speat aome time &amp;nalyzlng the prab-

~t..o.rl-r.

~

'5 3 , _....... .
or-~+--1 .5I Psyche P8'1•

At tbe bridge talile, you feel that
JOIII' pat~~e~ are aborter than they reJtlly are, and tbat u opponent'• play ia
slowe!' thalllt ia. HCiili!Ver, aome deala

J'f T'tiF 11!'1-J.

'

52 S8llly tiOCY·

·.._._._...I._

ITWSBI ·

T 11

N P T I

EVTGLRC

AS

PTFLIIC .

T

A I L .z :c B .

PNHLB.'

ATZ

JITILX .

LW
P 8 W8 N Z .

DNIFJ •
W8 TW' J
WS B
0 T U ·F
R L U S N V J N II ,

rnlghl

ve been compooed by God.

PREV~SOL~ON: "'The Magic Flute' is "'!' only opera in existence that
altly

-Neville Cardus.

eli Weal's bid, the paucity of poiaiA

miaalng and the lick of a lpadeleadl.
W'm lhe li!'lt lriet, lhw tnllnpl, cub
tile other two dub wlnDen, and play a
low spade froiD botb banda. I'I'DNbly,

~p·

.,,,·=a~~~:"=
'

.

GRearrongo

le""'war•
of,

·-

four te:rambled
low to· form fciur wordt.

eo c

r-1
·

Iars. 61&gt;1 -446·a.603.

1996 Du1chman 181t lOaded,
$12,000. 304·175-5522. " '

lruc~s.

DDall,

4-wheelel's, motor homes, furniture, etocltonics. com~uters ' "·
by FBI, !RS, DEA. Ava il ;~ble your
aH~a now. Call t-800-513 ·4343
lxt 5-9368
Cr.,dlt Problt:ms7 Gauranfeect F•·
nanc•no. 100V.. Down. P11ymen1s
As Low As feo Per Month."No
Turn Downs! Call Ruth 614 · ~46 -

s

; ltonlt

810 "

, BA~j£1,1ENT
WAT.(RI'ROOFING
Uncondirtonal tifet1n1a pu•uam
Local references furmshed,,
lallliohed 1975. Call (8141 4
0870 Or 1-800·2B7-Cl57e. Rog 's
WBtltl'pOOIWig.
Appliance Par} s fJ!,nd $erv•ce: h
Name Brands' OVer 25 YearS E
perlenCe All Work GuqrRnlee
french City May1ag. 614 ·4"
7795 •
.

cac

Oenoral Hom~· MHI
_ltnenCt· Pl.nllt'IQ, 'v1nyl Sldtn ,
carpentry, dOOfS1 WindOWS. bnlh .
mobile hOme reoa~r and ino'rc . F ;
tr,.· esttmate call Chet. 614 -09

15323. ':' .

DRYWALl

Hlf18; 11rnsh. ..,;aw
Ceilings·teJtured, pla•ror rapa 11-Call Tom 304-87$~4.1--·l 20 -¥&amp;art

experianc.e.

840

•, 1

Eteclrlcal

.;id ,

Relrlgeretlqn

1786.

Gtoomtng SptCIAtl· anV SIZt
AnaiQiandS, only StO: eat canals.
only $,0, na•l t iiQPiflgS, 110.
baii'!S, $1(); llt-.1 d1PP1ng, $10; condiPOntng or 011 troatmems. 110,
'Hftlf Cltpt.~~fli1 Of SCISSOr CUIS. .
COfl¥tl9te IOiltl groom1ng~ all
llbrMJ1S3Q.gg Citll for an appo~ntmen~ IOCW!y SPeciAl t81tS tor
10ng ll:tftn cart~.

fna•lk•yoo. C11t·•~·

EIIP&lt;Iet 2128'9'7
'
'
.

Relidetlt~l

'

or como...,,,.,; ~·qrig;

198~ Chovy ·S-10, V8. 1u1o. 3114· ctnsed alectric'ian. Ru:~enDur
. Elecuiclf. wvooo3oe, 30• ·175·
675·5379.

814-992·4514
I'M A GRANQIIAII
h'uboy·

'

1988 Chevy 81oz01 S·IO 4x• 2.8,
V-6. Autom•lic, High ·Mil••o•.
Contact: HarDkl Geo~ 8t~441~
5345 8:30 A.M. lii5:0Q P.M.

R11identi1l Or Carnmerc•al Wir. ·
ine, New Slrv•ce Or ~tpthrs. Lt·
Glftsed Eteculci1n: Werst'l Eltc~
lrlc &amp;U -44&amp;-9850, tlol!ipohf!ol

1987 S· 10 Extended Cob, ou·
tamatic, PS, PB, air, bed cover
lf1d Nner, 13200. 814-1182.:1212.

Ohio.

. 1 N8 Chovroltt SilororodD Truck
Loodad, Excolltnl Candlllo~. •
WD. 13,000 Ml1ea, II ....... , ; .

-.suP.II.

·

Forq F1!1() •wd. 5opd. ltl'7

Pick&amp;, 112ton.
11!1-304·,5111·2578.

liN Tom·
'

IFRIDAY

lmpfe!liements

NtW Mt'VICI Of, f~rri. Malt8f' l•·

01"1

,c uc o quoted

Valley ·Annex- Prowl· TOusle, ONE WE
not so smart college cutie !Q another:· "Marriage
: becomes two ma's seard)ing for ONE WE."
·

SEflVICES

1975 Chevy 1 Tan Wrocktr -With
Wheel U~814-25&amp;-11314.

MlddltpOrJ,

I•

One

RSESCERTIFjEO DEALEn
LAWRENCE EN:rf'nPAISf S
Heat Pumps, Air Cond•l••n•nQ, If
You Don'l CaH Us w&lt;r lldlh tole!
Free Esumateu, 1-800·:?91 0098.
614-446-&amp;308/ WV 0028-tS '
.

CMSI{S ""'''
27t N. Second Avenue

ompole

ICIAM.UTS ANSWDS

1063 FOrd one IDn ftatbed, V-8, 4
speed, faok1 and runt ODOd ~
1975-; twck camper with furnace,
slave •nd tefrlgera:IOr, $350: 114247,4292.
.

temalo-

V

'

AKC S1borren ~lu$Mf Pups, Per leCI Valenuni.ll .ltmtted Reg1stra·
h~n ~ISO : Full Rcgu!Hr $250. 6J4·
446-8827.

lllc:i.

·

.

s-

720 Trucks ,for Sale

Hounds-1 yr

all have one thing in common,

1991 Z·24. lh(oe Low Mlltage
10 Pick-Up's. All " Are Pnced Be·
low, NAOA Loan Value Cook Mo-

Spaniel, Fenv11es. 6; 4·446-9742.

Baneu

_67

.

n:

lP

,,
) ·

•
•
••

.

,

My husband says there are
all kinds of credit cards but they ·

~.,:E=-::GI:-~·.,.E-,V-R,,;..0_1,__,1 :v,run -, --inhto -h- -k-,.
,

Pets lor Sale

S!mo ole{ male. 3011 ·418-2586.

.

by ftll1ng 1n the missing words
L-.1.-...L.-.1.........1..-.I.:.....J. you de-...e)op
from step NQ. 3 below.

1993' 0odge Shadow ES. 4 Cyllll·
der, Au1o. AH Moru• 57 ,000
Miles. Askmg $4:750 ORQ. file Side B., Side Rufngere\Dr Brown, 256 6340. 614 -256-61467.
~Ieavy Duly G.r . Wrrshe•. Heavy 1995 Eaglil Summit, AC, AMt~W ·
Duly Kenma•Q Ory&lt;:r 614·-379 - Cassene. 5 Spoed , '$13.000 G•
~ 110 AFTER 6 P.M. ·.\
IOBO Cal lauor 5 P.M. 61•·441·sr~oe Ill tt10ill! ol; lili i~JI.' Wllh hOOd 0231
nfiavv olomunt for cnnmno. new
switch. and wrnng, lind ealra ele- Auto loans: Au1o Dealer Will Ar·
mont. 304 ·615·3?.60. ·
range F1nancmg Even II You
Ht~ve Been Turned Down Before.
STORAGE TANKS 3 ,000 Gallon Loans Available For No Credit,
Upnghr. Ron Evarr.J En1erpria.,a. Bad Cr&amp;dn And Bant~ruplcy BuyJackson. otlo, 1 ·800·~1-9518. ·..ers. Call Diane 614-448·8172.

Building

....
'

Truck W•!h l iQhl!l. $60, 614-446 ·
6605.
ROYAL JELLY With S•beriari
G .mseng
apsutes. 120. Call
614·446-6306. 1-800-29t- 0098.
Salel Doll Co ll ec(.lon Madame
Ale•anders . G,o -Ha1rs Black
DollS , Many· More ii ~SO For 1 Or
S45\1Morel'nun61j_367_7409.

'

L-..L.--J..-.L....&amp;;--1«

Roll Oar F·o, r ~ II S•ze PICk· UP

WI

Sponlng

24 On - ol (loi)

· B,- PMIUp AJar

I

welgllt

18 Tllat 1hfng'a

22 Dlltllnt planet

.Birth in slow motion

•'

........unltl

20 Comtrt'M
Ll1hr

D0 I T l
1--r-,-....:--,.---4 ...' .

Adull PofficmniRn &amp; Adu!l Cocker

....c---....

n

23-

the king. And If West jkeletl to lead a
spade, declarer diBCarda a diamond
TO BE SUR· aUT IN • from one band and rufrl In tbe otber.
RCUHOEI&gt; 6Y C.L~E
J1EDIOCRI1Y! ~x.
South Joles jWtt two spades ud one
11---''' --.,
I M lTV.
cflamoad.
'

1·900·499-3499. '

mattren. Ce~tr cohen Curio. ,
Bedroom auite. Pl..rer and con·
crete IIams. Country Furnl111re
304-875 -8820.' Rt 2 N Pt Pltu·

alllce
• 01 birth
I Phoenix or

KNOW WHAT Plt!DEI&gt;,
IT'!&gt; LIII.E ' E)(,41&lt;TLY

GOOD OSEI&gt; APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, rerrige~•tors,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vine Street, Call 614 -44&amp; -7G98,

SGfa c'katr. 1210. Bun~ beds

·tnallll(ebbr.l 8 -

Clllcego
ID-em

w...

1.

...

Grain

Fo• Sale 1985 Audi 5000 43,000
Miles On Motor .&amp; Trans. , New
A Cr 00111 SpOJJ 1•(:: Gruurnir1g Pow&amp;r Steering Dump, F'utl Dis·
ruat unng lly dro !la1 !1 Don lribvror. T1m•ng Belt Tune Up And
Sheets. '37:1 GL'orges Croek Rd . New Pa1nt Lots loveslod Wlll
,G14·446·0231
Sncml•ce $2,300 , F~rm 614 ·441 1975. 614-44fi -879S.
AKC Chow Ct1ow lor Siud SerVtCe
814·4-¥l·QS4 'f
Upton Use.a CJttS Itt. 62 &lt;1 M1les
AKC Regulnr Black' Co ckar Span- Soulh ot LEto'n, WV. fman c•ng
iel Pup Also AKQ RegiStered Ava.table 304 -458- U)69.

Mai~CarJIIII814-448: 7444

:=z

7 Thou holding

..... ...
••

'.•. '..

SHOll IS,
PARSON 11

Aem~ngton 870 Wlngmaatet 18
gauge, 1239; Poulan chainsaw
16", like new, St15 : Savage 222.
1160; 30-30 Winchester model
94, .$139 ; new 230 piece Crahs·
,man toot seil, $159 : Alv.nrez flat
rap gullar, $99 50 Guns , roots.
toys, Dave' s Swap Snop, lour
mtlc~ nonh ol Poml!'/-Oy on R1 7,
614-99?' 414tl

560

r Si.lt on Cafp61 lrems in Slack.

... -ltl-

1 er.b'a plncw

~~
31'-.g .....
4 Punloh
.
5 Popeye'a friend
OIM-

Vulneralile: Both
Deller: South

HE

Young Nan·

289 U ~

Uicrowtve. dallble kilchen amk,
oven. txhautt . tlnllight, alove,
~
benc:h, trampoline, rowing
3114-1175-7110.
'

'

., i

Relr•gera1ors, Stav~ s. Washers
Anti Dryers. All Reconditianed
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Wijl Deliver. 614-669-8441 .

Household

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Rang11, Refrlgra'!ors, 9Q Day Guarantee!
French Ciry May tag, 81 4 ~ 446 ·
7195.

•-AJ•'•

......
• v.. ..rs:,
-~
~~

•
.-;:::::-:=.--.,....,=..-:=.,
the queeD to aeore u decluer's loth
'DO
NOr !lUll&lt;- tridt no matter Wbicll opponent boldl

Block , br1c~ . sewe r p1pe•. W1nd·
ows. lintels. I.'IC Cltl ucle Winters,
R10 0!1\fiO u . 0 1-1 Clll l fl!C ·I'45 ·
5121

· Go_ods

'-lng

DOWN

2t Ac1or Celhoun
33 Ally.'adlg. •

After Willi ,Win~ with the ace, be II
endplayed. A diamond awlteb ailows

SuppUes

MERCHANDISE

Orglri for

• A Q 2

'

106Qi · GMC .__. pickup. Iran
hor ... V-8, $800, 814-0G2-7133.

;:~ ::ycl81 .

=. _. .

13~ '
~

• "iu

. ~ the 8pl!le ldJil.

550

college deairabte,

,-._iiiit- '

4-WDI

......

• J 10.
• I 7 I 5

• KZ
• Q' J 10 ••

Gr8CIOUt livu"'Q. 1 ilnd 2 bedroom
apllt'tments ait Village Manor and
Ri~erside Apartments in Mlddl•
poft.· Ftam 1232-$355 . Call 614992-5064. EqUal Housing Oppor·
tur.lles.
·

... w i l l - .

D WI.L POWEll! LOSE
......... 30 DAY MONfi.Y IIIICiJ( QliARANTEEI-IIIIUfll.
~··· Aecomm.ndad. 11•·44 1•

K. l 7 I
• J •••
t

LivestOCk .

CARS FOR $1001

,;p 10

&amp;

Saile

work -.,petitnet' m aalts
finence 11COnlll'fM' finance inQtJstrr- ~~,..-H)~ or cuatomer tervM:e. Slfi~ co. .nicllion skit! I .
Abittty ' tratn, an,d mat~att · alltf
olld llii larilJ with PC·hke hlrd~are esaenti~l. Muar

· ~,.,

Bulk Milk Tank Sunnt Or Mueller
4 To 500 G&lt;1llons In Good,Cond•·
t10n. 614 -96!i-1921:! ·

Hay

· H - ~·· ·~14r1oma or equivalent ,...

,...._.,

::.62:.:;0::::.:;:W::.::a:.:.nt:::.e.::.d-to_B
__u_y_·l730

s

• 4

t"l~draullc

::.:.:..::..::..::..::::.c.L .___

~ ..., ..-

'_: .

610 Farm Equipment

• z

s,.,,.

-488 ¥O'"PU\8f With .Color Monttor

8' Saletllte Oiah Wilh CBS AnUtn·
na And Star TJ&amp;k 400 Receiver 2
1/2 Vrt. Old And C1n Be Up
Graded For Full V•ew Askmg
$350 Phone B14·C41 · 1113 ,Mandly
rdly 5 -10 P.M.

AI a m1~ber of the branch
commiqed IO · I!IRIII and serrvic.e
t~ ~leG 1ndivfdual 11 respon·
••bit ,tor. sell•nQ real eslate and
penonPI loans, ~nsuranct pro c:tuct•. ~ak•no cred tl decis1ons
w1ttnn ~;ntc:t• .t authonty, recam ·
mendl~r·alu!I'Ons 10 delinquent
accoun s. 181VtC1ng account ~a- .
aulllln[ ltlt oranch manager tn
tt•Stc 1 ullfletS .aevelopma-nt ,
branch , dmmlsuauan and train·
lng.
'

qulrt4;.• iom•

'

• J. t '7

~-

81 011-nled
' 12 ~·· . _

21 P8rt .. tt&amp;tEs

Eu&amp;

Weill ,
•AQIII5 ,

:::

, , DMirH
110.
21 Shortgrvwlh

25

• K 4 3

rtetoanOIWilooto On 1131n. T....
Cuatom B•ck Dumper, But
Shield. Haodllah• And ro""E'l •
Covet• Slfnr &amp; White. N •
Truck $8,500 Or Will Trado 1Pt
C'ar Or Luxe,Y Cor 01
Eoual VIlle, 614-44H875, 8(•·
448-8795
-

111oter. $40: 814·992·784 1
$850, 080, J14·46 · 3644, 814 448'9555 Eveningt.

2. bedroom apar,nlent. Pomeroy,
S170 per month, StOO deposir, na
pets, 614·667·3083 aher 5pm .

,,

9110 Ford F-150 4•• 1.1 UW•V,
8 Motor, AuiiO Trans, Chrome Dl·

Oil St ?. SCl- 5~ pa il. _) 993 GMC 1500 S•rill, maJty
Sidett Equipment , 'Henderson , eauas. like new, c•ll bltwee'!
.WV. 30•·875-742l ,
6pm·11pm. 304-875-5724.
I

• piect living raom su•te, green ..

$125: couch, $20; larve coat

1 Bedroom Unlurn1shed Aparl·
mem, No Pets, St951Mo., $100
Depogit , Includes Water, Need
References, 614-446..·~1 7

&amp; IJ\I~TQCK

'• 4 I
•AK785
• 5 43

l

Wanttd-- someone ra pl•y me Ot·
gan or piano at U'le Firll Baptiat
Church , Pomeroy, Ohio. Sal•r:y
neaotioblo. cal814-892-7484.

•

440

Instruments

' " ' D4H Cot $54000, 1985 215
One 12 Stnng.Guicar Locat t3a.ooo; 1ia8 4U cat l1tu Fidde,
a l126, V.G.C. With Cast. 81.ol·
IZ3,0oo: 1889 215 Cot S50.01l0;
1171 Chevy DumR, Ttu'k 14,000; 388·P18t Art)!t1me
1171 OMC $&amp;,500': 1060 GMC
Fuel Tru.ck 12.500:' 3 Office Tr•il·
FARM SUPPLIES
111: On&lt; 48 Inch Pun Type Roner
$3,300; Mise'. Sleet Beams 12Ft.
Long To 57 Ft. lang . I!IU -843·
2918 Aher 4 P.M.: 1!114-843-1016,
814-&amp;13-2300

01-ef·fl

O&lt;Jl ol GA. N - boon In Mit, ,_
rult. Atlllng 13,500. 304-171$4AO. '
'
;

Musical

i:~~:.O'!: FO.:, ~!~

Retail ..-ry Sa1eo Part And FIM
Time Positions. MiddltDOrt Loca·
11an, Apply In Person: Acquiliitians Fine Jewelry, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 91. Uilt Streel,
Middleport. No .Phone Calls
' Pieate.

AOit •f-,von

.•

fl'Obilv horne. 8l 4-"' 48·9!i6Q.

570

o

Ra1 Ras1auranrl Now Hiring All
Shilts, Experienced Preferred, Not
Necessary, Flexible Hours Poasl~le, Shif1 Supetviaor, Apply AI
1549 Eastern Aoonuo. Galpoil.

5955.

-F-or-ren-t:~2-bod--,0-0-m-un-.f-ut_n_ll_h_o_d .l

=-'

11
piiOC
17 Hlllucore

'~~~~~--.:_
_ _, 111111 Fotd Ranger EXT coiL XLf
'
i&gt;ka . 2 .8 V·S 5opd otd, ttucll It

"Y Ooftl $50. 6, "·'56·1399
2 Bedroom A~anmenl. No Pets,
cs:..'.;.•..,..:...48:..·;;;20:..7.;2·: . . . . - - - - - - l Baby bed. stroller, swing, Car
1985 F - 1~SO 4x4 AOO CN118, .,.,
640
&amp;
....... 334-675-.548.
140,0001&lt; $3;500, S I 4 - 2 Bedroom .apt, In Gatllpolla F•·
'
Round batH of hay lor ule, 8t4ry,WV. 334-675-2548.
BAHAMA CRUISE1 5 daySI 4 . 742·3182 ...,;ng..
West Ripley Hamea . New 28x48
Sectional '34,9(]0, looters. deliv- 2 B&amp;droom Brick Tawnhauttl _mghrs, Underbooked! Must Selll
Across From Cinema Thealtr S29&amp;1Couplt. limrled Tickets .
ery...aet, air. 304·372·3400.
TRANSPORTATION
1991 ChSvy· AatfO Ext. Mini Van
With Washer &amp; Dryer Haok·Up. (90011135-9999 e&gt;t 85119.
ea,sao
Miles,
Cuetomlzed
Slove, Refrlgtr•tor Furnlahld,
340 Business and
$10,500 Exo11!11 Condlllan, '""'
Waltr, SeWer. Trash Included, Boats By . Redwmg, Chippewa ,
Buildings
6,,61C -446-4041 . r
Aulos lor Sale
S2951Mo., Nci Pets, Deposita Re· RackJ, Tony lama. Guaranteed 11
qulred,
For
AppMcatiana
CaD
8t4Lowest
Prices
AI
st}oe
Cafe.
GalGatng bus • n~!'IS lor sell - Second
' 79 Chevy Malibu , n•ce sha'pe, 1991 'Dodge Caravari'LE. graat
.• '
.
Suee1 AI 33 nt Mps0t1. 304· 7·73· 448 -0008, 814· 4·8-0857, 814- ~poli•
need 10 sell ~ mm.idiatelv. $1300 cond~. ldaded,.hlgh ""'-·' NA~
441 · tl!l18.
.
•
5651
boo~ ·v.lue $7,500, ' ••"~t .
Cancrele &amp; Plastic Sep11c Tanks, OBO. 814· 742·35o!l..
$6,200, make ofler. 11•·441 ·
2 Bedroom Unfurnlthed Ouple1 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
·
R1. 588. Carpeted Throughout. Evans Enterprises, Jackson: OR 1970 Dodge D•ptomat. 28 mpg, 0135.
runs-great . 11500 OBO. 814 -992·
1 112 Acrt Lo!s Cora Mill
FUlly EquipJMd Kitchen, Central 1-800-537-9528.
7133.
·
1992 Ford 555-C 414 Bock~•
Heal &amp; A:lr Conditioning, Anachod
614 · 2455708
3000 Hours Clttn, Undlr. w•;
•·
Garage, MU&amp;t
Seat 814·0!&amp;41· Couc:h a love· sea1 1or sale, goOd 1984 Cadillac
ranty, $27,000 Firm, Ron Evafs
5 lots (100x25Q) . ( 150 · 325) 2802.
candi1ion, 1100. 614 ·992· 7689 arRuns Good, Clean IC_, te101hoor I' Enterpnses, Jackson. 1·800-S3f$8,500. Call ·304-675-5106 alttr
terSpm . .
614
4pm kir •nlormat1on.
2bdrm apll,, ro•l efeculc, ap:
1,..::::::::::..=:::-::=::...-.,.----I .Piiances furnished, laundr~ roam Eaily 70's Rowe Juke Boxes SBOO
Brun•rt.and
lacllltles, dose to ~haol in tCMn. A Piece, 814 -643 -2916 Alte, 4 1985 Mercury Grt.nd Uarquts,
t14-775-1173
Applications available at: Village ,P.,..
.Mc..·:..'6':1'4c..-6&lt;1....:..3·':10:.1.8:_ _ _ __
Amomatic, 302, V-8, Aemanulac· 1991 Yamaha 350 Waffiar
Green Apts. 149 or c:.ll 0 14-902· Farm Ra1sed Freezer t}eel-or Sale lured Engine Has Only 30,000 mg 4 Wheeler With Many N
Galli• Co.: Galhpohs, 2 Miles Out 3711 - EOH.
Miles, Full Power. Aluminum Paris And Extra•s Will Sail f
St .1Cl Par lb. Call614 -256-t240
Neighborhood Rei. , 10
Wheels, Sharp Car 12,500; 1985 Tlsde For Utilit~ "Whftler, 11 •
. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Fot Sale: Cui Slab FitewoOd S20 Oodge Aires SW, Automauc, 2.2 367 -0342.
$17,000 Or 22 Acres W11h
· .
BUDGET PRICES AT JAC~SON
$25,900 Ju51 011 S.R.
~
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive Pick· Up Load, Hershberger's 4 Cylinder, Runs Great, Good
F11endly R1dge_ , ,g
Work Car, $1 ,500; HP5 Chevy t1 1996 Kawasakt 220 Bayou, ltJ'
!rom S2e0 lo 11334. walk to ahap Slwmil St Rt 283 Wosl 01 141 .
Sr8 .000 Qn1v S2,000 Down
2 Ton PU: 3 Speed, 350 \1-8 4 alii or llade. 81_...e92_.532.
•
$21 1 45 Ma Or 8 .. Acres I moviel. Call 614·4"8·2581. Grubb's Piano - luni.ng &amp; repairs. BBL.:. Full S1ze Bed W•rh ·Tool Boa.
Probtem&amp;? Need Turied? Coli the · 4 New lites, New Gas Tank, 750 Boats &amp; Motors
$7,500. Teelis Run Rd., - Three, · Equ~l HouSing OpportJnity, .
10 Acre PArcels, · $10 ,000 +. Don't Let This One Slip Byll Small piano Or. 614·446·4525
Workahaulic, $800 , 614-4418:
for
Cnamb&amp;rs R&lt;l. Ltlst Onet Very
7215.
One Bedroom With ldts Of ExJET
Nice- 11 . Acres - Reduced
tra s. Washer, Dryer, Stove, Frig
AERATION MOTORS
$11,5001
Included . We Pay Water And Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In
Ver~
Clean. No Call Ron E'r.Wls, 1-MCI-537-9528
Call Today For Free M8ps &amp; Garoage.
Smokers, No Peta. $300 Deposit,
Owner Financing Info. Take 10'4 $350/MO., 614-446·2205, 014·
on Listed Prices On Cash Pur- 446·9585.
chases!
Elliciene~. New ' paint, carpet,
Several S-~~ere parcels
etc . Retertnces. Deposit. No
remoce, oeaut1ful land ; U&amp;rgs pelt. 304-675-5182.
Coun~. Sc1piO 'Townsh1p. SA 692
i1ui1 ott SR 1431 Owi'!CI linanc'"g. Furnished 3 Rooms I Bath, No
$1500 p~r n ~ 1 C Cn ll lor good Pets, Reterence And Deposit Re-map. 614 -593-81j45
qwed. 614-446·151i.

90t6 Ex•. 1015.

•oancers· Soulhlork Inn Call after epn-, Wed 1hru Sal :}QC-675-

Two ,bedraom, all electr~c ; two
IT01es O&lt;Jt of Rudand on New lima
Rd ., 6U-742·2803 or 61C·742·
2421 .
.

New ~lh 14•70

Sl77 down, $172/mo.
lnclu...,petivery &amp; Set
WetnrArpley Homes
304-372·3400.

I... •

- Solid.
Manl11a
0111' S
E
&lt;
It ~cellenl Condll1on. 120.0
81 4-440-eSOS.

2 Bedroom lrailer lor ren1, S2e01
mo + deposit Gallipolis Ferry
area. 304-815-755.2.

Very niC8 Hl85 1ii1C70 Wltti -2
baths. Large •sian&lt;:!' kitchen w•th
palio doot. Call 8t4-385-H21 ask
lot Mike.

WI/ 25550.

lion Senllce.
lie. I bonded by state of Oho.
8114-949-2t92. Consignment welcome.

Must sell· 1997 14a10 thrH bed·
rDDm, IOCIUdeS 6 marnhs FREE lot
tent ont~ 1165.57 pe.- monlh with
11105 - . .. Call 1·800-837-3238.

N•ce 1967 0RkWOCJd 14x76 Three
Be&lt;lrooms, Tw'O 8a1tvoon1s. Heat
Pump Equ •pp&amp;d , Located· On
Renta l Lot At Tycoon lake.
Phon&amp; 614·245·9479.

Medical BlUing Clark. Full-t1me.
complete benefit plan, electronic
billing experience and/or collec- ·
~Or'! UJipet"iance A+ . Saillry commensurate wfaxpetltnce. Send
rosume to Bot G-1, %Pt PI Reg•star, 200 Main St .. Pt Plea1an1

PUBliC AUCTION

AVON I All

'Solaa or

Ut~inotron't

. •

110

Bldg Bual-• Notn. Co. oword·
lng d..letlhip tn open marlctt.

Ill Time lktyettl E,l Finonc:1ng 1
Or 3 Bedrooms , 'free Qeltvery l
StiUP' Paymen,s Aroun'd I20Cl /
Mo.. No Payments Till Ua~ 10971
Trade -fns Welcome. Call The
Credil une, t-800-251 -5070 ..

oy, Alln : Cl erk , 32D East Matn

Growing, Heatmg Air
Gallipohs Is Sttking
anced Serv1ce Man.
sume To: 726 Third Avenue. Gal·
!ipolis, OH 4~3 1 .

and Auction

Latoo PfOftt po-al lfam Stool

10 V ~lagt. nf Pqrner-

plicatlons accepted un1il job' are
lilled. EOE

. 80

Opportunity

Euy Worll l Excellent Pay! AI·
semble Products at Hom•. Call
Ton F•e e • -B00-467·5588 EXT.
2 70
' '
f ull ttme Tu Admm tstrator and
ful l ttme Water C lerk posittons .

420 Mobile HomH
for ReAl

Bullnell

210

.FEBRUARY 7·1

�....

.Afllla.ot
. Sill 1-5

AS·LOWAS:·

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'

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.,. , *'.

r

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