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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, F~ary 20,1997

Trash ·service
topic of Po·meroy
_town meeting

·Ls PKG,.SSPD, AIR, ALUM WHEELS,

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Willies, Rutlllnd; RobYn F - . Pomeroy; Chrll10phw Hlnlng,
SCHOOL WINNERS - · Perliclpatlig In 1111 llliga
SF4111ng S.. =·~night-Iii aehool wlliMI whoWWI Sallabury; Shlune Manuel, Soulhlm Junior High; llln Story,
Pl'lllm.d cerllflcatll.epru II Jill 'I their rnP'Ctlve IChoola In
U.lp Junior
Curt Crouch, Syncu11; 111\d Nield Tucklr,
the cOmpetHion-- from lhllllt, . . . . Centa Crow, Chfttlr; Lltlrt. John ~lat:,r:-nced the word11nd llllludget
Hlllthw Smith, Riverview; Ll Ann llarclnllo of TUpplra ~Ina, _.. aupw:ulittlr"dlnts the 8Chool dlltrlcta, Daryl Well of Ealt·
the champion; Undeay Bolin of Salltn Center, run-..up; Josh ·am l.oc:ll. Bill lucidly Ill Melge Local, and Jim .Liwl'lnce of
Clerk, Eut.m J11nlor High; Emily Story" Bradbury; l~aeg~n Dod- SciUthlm LOCII,
eon. Harrleonvllle; 1nd 1tandlng, K8tle.Alld,·Mlddllport; Slrlh

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ANTI-LOCK BRAKES

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Farmland prese~ation ·
.~upporters see~ backing

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Stark CollDiy dairy and' crop
farmer Bill Baken, 33, said radical
chinges in the federal tax code would
help preserve farmland. Estate and
capital gains taxes, fPe said, often
compel aging farm owners• to sell
chuftb of land.

AKRON (AP)- Farmland baCkers asked a state task force to develop proposals to help maintain the
character of Ohio's rural areas:
. The Ohio Farmland Preservation
.Task Fori:e held a public forum
. Wednesday. About 200 people attend-

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· Chris·.•~~ ~vel111d's eco- state ,
who work' to
notnic develoPment dil'cc:tor, urged major, industiy to Ohio sh011ld give
llie 21-member task force to recom·- farmland similar "star treatment."
mend prosnuns that "favor redevel· .~
opment and maintenance of built
Bot Fred J!tlieridge of the Home
: · communities over development of Buil~rs Association of Greater
: . new commu11 ities."
AlaOn said land-usc ~estrictioos make
• : Euclid Mayor Paul Oyaski said . it increasingly difficult for people to
tile state subsidizes development by . buy llbmes.
favoring 11ew or expanded high~ays
Ro.i Mishler, a Suffield Township
. over existing ones and by offering tax trusiec;, was skeptical of urban offihre~kS, grants and t00 ns to business- cials wllo said saving the cities is one
. of.the'~st ways to preserve farmland.
~ . ~s. The task force must submit rec·
"Xl'ot of this is more about cities
: : 'ommendalions on voluntary methods ··"'ing iO get tt.eir hinds on state mon.
-'
~ ~ ~dJ~~~~~~es to preserve farmland vort88f,
.than ~~v~d~:"~~ .. the

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. CHAMPION SPELLERS - L1 Ann Marcinko, dlughtar of
lllka and Theresa Marcinko end a alxth grader It 1\lppwa Plllna
Eiamentalll' School, II llalgs County's Spelling S.. champion.
RunMMip In thl btl hlld ·Wadnsedly night It EINrn High
Sct!Ool Wll Uncllly Bolin, daughter of Bl'lnt and Camille Bolin
imd allxth grader It Salem c.m.r.Elemantlry School, Both lhl
chllhplon and runner-up Will compile In the annllill 11fia!II-DI•
patch trl-county btl to ~ hlkllt the Huntington Civic Cenler,
March 29. Hire John D. Reibel, •·• Melga County Superlntlndlnt
of Schoola,llft, prll I IllS a tnlflhll' to Marcinko, while Kitty Hazier,

er.
. By JIM FREEMAN
. He said many of his neighbors in
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy village officials IO(Cre· the Lincoln Heights neighborhood
live on government assistance and do
talking trash Wednesday night.
The feasibility.of contracted trash not have trash service. adding that an
service for the village was the topic unbelievable amount of trash is
of town meeting called by Mayor store,&lt;! arqund peoples' homes.
'"I'm going to have roaches this
Frank Vaughan.
..
' The meeting, held in council spring because people aren't gelling
chambers at the P.omeroy Municipal rid of their trash," be said.
"Since Middlepon put in manda·Building, drew little in the way of
attendance. Only the mayor, three tory pickup the Meigs County Health
councilmen, a handful ·Of residents Department has not had any comand representati,ves of .. General plaints about trash," Wehrung said.
Refuse Service of Milton, W.Va., "'We have complaints about trash all
· the time here in Pomeroy."
attended the meeting.
Vaughan said another meeting
Other councilmen attending were
may be held in March.
John Musser and George Wright.
"There's nci rush. We want to study
However, some people who pfothe issue and get a general consensuS' duce little trash or recycle are •
of the people," he said.
opposed to mandatory trash pickup.
The question of trash pickup in the One cri.tic is Mayor Vaughan, w.ho
village arose after Middlepon con- docs not have trash service.
tracted with GRS for refuse service
Another concern, according to
at a reduced rate.
Vaughan, is that contracted, manda- .
In Middlepon, residents must tory·trash service would likely put the .
have trash service which is billed six haulers in Pomeroy out llf. busiwith their' monthly ·water bills. Trash ness,
serv.ice costs $9 a month with senior ·
"Is it wonh putting these people
citizens paying a reduced rate.
out of worlc.?" he asked.
Councilman Larry Wehrun'g said
Pomeroy resident Bob Bunon said
Pomeroy residents contacted him he knows several people who do not
. and wanted to know how Middlepon have trash service because they proresidents pay less for trash hauling. . duce little. trash and woold have a
Trash hauling bills for POmeroy res- 'hard time paying for the 5ervlce, bllt
. idents hover around $11-$12; acconl- he also acknowledges .that some peoinl! to some residents' statementS. .
ple ai:cumulate trash around or inside
"It is easier to offer a cheaper rate of their IJomes, creating health probwhen you have guaranteed customers lems.
·
and a collection sys~.· said GRS
spokeswoman Linda Bondurant.
In r:esponse to Vaughan's question,
GRS has been in business in the he asked if it was fair for the 1,000
tri-state area for about 25 years and or so households in the village to pay
has about 20,000 customers, she higher irash bills to protect local trash
said.
·
, hauling jobs. He suggested that local
Wehrung said he would ~ke to see naulets could reduce their rates. .
trash pickup become mandatory· in , . No local trash haulers were reprethe village because some people do sented Wednesday night. .
not have trash service. ·
Vaughan said he hoped village res- ,
. Wehrung said mandatory trash .idents and trash haulers would attend •
service would make the village clean-. the propo~ed future meeting.
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uec.lSIOn on··waivers
·:.:·ups
· , ets. so.me ad voca,es
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' ~'-' FREEMAN
· requested .tt.t the $S,OOU be re1nstat- within tl)e budget.
Henry Wel~s and John ·lhle.'. ' .
Ml·News Staff
ed 50 a five percent salary increase
Iii response to • comment by
· Dan Sm1th' pres1dcnt of the Meigs
, '• M .• C t Commissioners can be given to the employees.
Hunter about the voluntary decrease County Agncultural Society, ·. met
!ri.e.:es oun Y de 'ed a request
Commission President Janet. in the budget req~sl, Commissi&amp;- with ~ommissioners about the ~ed
, ~fOr
~rnr:::;in ";or the Meiss Howard pointed out that "no raises er Fred Hoffman s~d that a deere~ fOI: tree removal ~the Rock Spnngs
. Co
·~c:ro 0 f Bl llti ·
·
were figured in for 111yone in the would be expected sn1Ce the costs thiS fa1rgrounds. He wd thattolal cost of
•.' :::'ty
·~~nding. in coun house or anywhere due to the year will be considerably less removing.the trees woold
.
. : request to ;or the board of elec- lack' of funds,"
because of the size. o~ the el~ion.
be _about _$3,000 a~ he asked for
· '~ 1997 ~ b leeti !board
When askild about the proposed
However comm1ss1oners wd they some assistance With the expenS!:.
··:lions was
Hy e
on /
salary increues and whether they an: would suppon the boud of electiods ... The board voted Ill give $1,000.
ptcHsidcnl ije~ ,uthntert· the •..,.... mandtlled by the state. Hunter said if additional funding is needed dur· In other business,the commission:
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uon.board mcmben ~ard 01lkey, ·,
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· the revolutionary who helped trans·

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Commissitl.n.ers nix election., fun.· ding re.q,uest .
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t:~;s~di~z~~::d
"eternal glory" to Deng Xiaoping,

~r:e:.he. counlry into an economic

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BEIDNG (AP)- China lowered

NOf ''tJnnroved

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The first test ofDeng's legacy will
laws took effect.
·
unemployment or were designated have a responsibility to give some- he whether his handpicked succes"We''re sitting ~re scared to la~~r- surpl.us ~reas, meaning , the thing back and to panicipatc in your sors, Communist Pany General Secdeath. t~mg to figun; out.how we're ·· skills of the avatlable worker~ do not commumty. .If not. you ·ve m~e a retary Jiang Zcmln and the other,
gl)ing to 1eact now." he sa1d Wedne&lt;- . match the !obs ava1l~ble.
pers~nal chmce and you~ gmng to · younger technocrats installed in the
day.
.
Voinov1~h's dec.1s1on means able- forfeit your food stamps.
t990s, will Y(ithstand the political
. The ~~emptions would have bodied adults between the ages of 18
But some people who supponed maneuvering sure to follow his death.
applied to 20 counties and 12 cities and SO• .who 4o not have children, the waiver argued that there arc not · Deng, 93, died Wednesday evening
that had either 10 percent or higher must spend 10 hours a week working enough jobs or training programs of a lung infection and complications
or in job training to keep their food available for low-s~ille~ workers of Parkinson's diseaSe.
stamps. They also can do 20 hours a before Apnl I, espec1ally m areas of
Lacking ,Deng·s historic stature,
1"1"
month community service.
hii!h .unemployment.
China's new leaders have staked
By The Aiaocllllld PreH
Of the more than 900,000 Ohioans
their own fortunes on a commitment
DENG XIAOPING
Gov. George Voinovich has decid- receiving food stamps. 109,000 fall
"I think it's going to produce aen- to following the reforms Deng initi·
ed nollo 4\?prove a waiver ofthe fed- intQ that category. However, about sis here in the city of Cleveland," said . ated when he rose to power aftertwo
era! foocl!~.tamp rules for the follow· 82,000 of those · au ~xempt under· Claudia Coulton. co-director of the years of struggle following the death China was fiSt asleep. Word spread
ing·areas: 1'
federal rules excusang the d1sabled, Center on Urban Poverty and Social of Mao Tse~tuns in t976.
slowly throughout the Chinese capi·
•
·CITIES
. J)eople dependent on cenain medica- Change lit Case Western Reserve
"Eternal glory to Comrade Deng tal, with many here incrtdulous that
Cantorl: Cleveland, Dayton, East tiohs and those already working.
University. "I don't think we're pre- Xiaoping!" the state-run Xinhua tl)e ailing leader, tong rumored to be
Cleveland.'Li~Ra. Lorain, Mansfield,
Jacqui Scnsky, Voinovich's deputy pared at this time to get these people News Agency proclaimed in an I 1- dead or dying, had finally gone .
Marion,
Sandusky,
Warren, chief of staff. said~ governor is not Jin tos. ~ommunity experience or real . page tribute to liis.long career.
As on any normal day, hundreds
. Yoongstown, and ~sville,
trying to deny anyone food. She sa_id
. Pronouncing his death an 'immca- . of people-. gathered on Tiananmcn
COU~t;S
. letters were sent w1th plenty of notice
But Ms. Sensky said the governor surablc toss." Xinhua's eulogy Square as da'!'n broke to watch solAdams.Ashtabula: Belmont, ~al- . abo~!. the chariges, and the state will and legislative leaders thought it was dectarcdihatChina would "unswerv- dicrs hmst the red, five-starred Chilla, Guernsey, Hamson, Hocking, ' work with ~ounty ageiifes to devel- , bes~ to implement the rules now ingly adttere"to Deng's policies. The nese flag before a giant ponrait of
Huron, Jackson, Jefferson. Melp, op work. .and ~ommunily service instead. of delaying them a y~ar.
government declared a six-day peri- · Mao. It was only when the flag was
Mercer, Memr~, Mm:g~. Noble, opponumttes.
.
. "We've been pushmg this work nd of moornlng.
lowered to half-staff that .the crowd
Ottawa, Pen'y, P1ke. Sc1oto and Vin"We are not cuttmg anyone ·ilff · CPrce philosophy for a number of
News of Dcng'~ death came while sensed something had happened.
ton.
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anything," Ms. Sensky said. "You years in Ohio, .. she said.
Suspenilons upheld by Alexander board

. CLEVELAND (AP) - · Chip
,; Joseph is worried abput how. rion.h,. east Ohio ~heliers an~ · soup knch~ns
, . nre going to pay their grocery bills
· after April t . · .
·
That's ·thi: ilay 27,000 Ohioans
'· wilf iose iheir food stamp benefits
less they find jobs or ·a training
program. Gov. George Voinovich
refused Tuesday to accept a federal
·:: .waiver that would excuse some recip·
:: :ients from new work requirements.
; : .- "The hunger centers we supervise
:· 8te in areas of extreme poveny and
· ; ' high unemplo~menl rates," said
. . JoS~:p~. senior diiCCtorof Emergency
:: and Transitional Scivices for Catholic
, :. Charities in Cleveland. "It, "!OUid
, ; have been great to have at least a year
. : extension 50 we could figure out how
, ; \tiC could absorb the impact."
: , .• Joseph •s group oversees 66. pro.' · ams, mostly serving food to the
~ in eight nonheastern Ohio
, • tpuniiea. He said it costs about 30
; 'cenrs to. serve one IJK'ill, and more
. • t'an 4 million meals were served last
" y:~ar - before new welfare refonn
·.:.;. M
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China's Deng, 93, .dies

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ATHENS(AP)-TheAiexander
Local School 808111 hall Upheld the
suspensions of two football players
accused ofhuiqg fellow athletes during an initiation last fall.
Ntlle Daily, 18, of Athens, and a
juyenile student had appealed their
suspensions. Dail,y was not charged
in coun but viol.-d &amp;~:hoot rules,
Superintendent Bob Bray said .
Wednesday. The othe~.player,'wbose
identity was not releaied, was
c"·....., in J.uvenile cowt with hlzin•.
Travis Hawk, 18, of AthenJ, aid
not appeal his suspension. A judge ·
found him guilty ·Of hiZi!l&amp; and Kn· ·

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tencedhimto.80houtsofcommunity Sc:..Vicc and a $50 fine. Hawk's 30day jail sentence was suspended.
Bray said the district has adopled
a ~ro tolerance policy for hazing.
School officials plan to enforce IIIIi·
hazina rules IIIith increased monitoring of the boys'Jocker 1'00111, he said.
·
·
Two ~nts contendod their sona
w~ sodoini~ in ~ lock• room

sho~ with~ boltles after

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their sons IIJve

Oct&lt;IIM!r. They
suffered from men~ 111p~· tiiiCf .
continued ~i in scliool, ·

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:commentary

Pagel
Thureday, Februaly •• 1117
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111 Court St., Ponwroy, Ohio
114 112-2111S • Fax: 1112-2157

£
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L. WINGETT

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Publl•'*

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CHARLENE HOEFUCH

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. Congress 9·.ettl•ng·.
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public llld political
for e•p ·joe or NATO is .m,,..
ly IIIIOIIt in view of till JX"' •"i" COils
and riab involved, but a two-thirtb
vote in the Senile is by no means 1
slam dunk.
·
A new poll indicate's that 62 percent of American ttdults suppon
extendinJ NATO security suarantees
to Poland, Huncary and the Czech
Republic, and no fewer .fhan 88 senators have voted at least once in favor
of NATO expansion, 52 of them four
times.
Still, opposition is forming among
: both liberals and conservatives, and
1 one expert on Congress and foreign
policy, Jeremy. Rosner of the
' Carnegie Endowment, says that the
Clinton
n all administratiOn
1 "ort to firmn~eds to
o make
gres
a -ou eu•
1
up c n .
sional support.
••lbere's an odd coalition in favor
of expansion; including President '

:,Off tO .a· SlOW Start.

n.

" 'By TOM RAUM

Clinton
and Sen.
Helms,
RN.c ..." Rosner
saidJesse
at a recent
briefing, "There are a .lot of scenarios by

~~~~i!:~~~tf..!apart.Ratification

Between ClintC!B and Helms, the
pro-expansion coalition includes for-

mer Sen. Bob Dote, R·Kan., alllivinl former secrecaries of Stille, the
. Republican Plrty u represented by
Its 1996 platform, and Sen&amp;Je foreip

Mor:Jon Kontlrscke
policy experts Cad Levin. 0-Mich.,
and Richard Lugar, R-Ind.
'nte primary arguments in favor of
expansion are that it will secure
peace in Europe, deter a potential
Russian aggressiveness and open the
way, conceivably, to an-alliance that
includes a democratic Russ.ia and its
former satellites.
But another .odd coalition of liberals, conservatives, doves and hawks
-- including the Holise Democratic
leadership, arch-isolationist Pat
Buchanan, Sens. Kay Bail~y Hutchison, R- Texas, and Joe Biden, D-Del.,
former Sen. Sam Nunn, 0-Ga, plus
an assortment or defense intellectuals
-- has formed up to oppose expansiC!B.
·
Grounds for opposition include
cost, possible danger to U.S.-Russian
relations, the problem of countries
left out of the alliance and !he risk
that U.S. troops and nuclear weapons

mipt lave to be uaed.
Por lift, cmr die acllt llliiOIIIhs,
there is aoiJIIto be • epic deblte
about the future of U.S. foceip pol·
icy -· possibly u rivetina u those
over the LeiJUC of NatiC!Bs in 1919
and the U.S. commitment to Europe
in 1948 and 1949. ·
Expansion is on a fast traCk.
NATO win offici~y name the three .
new members at a Madrid summit in
July. They are to fUlly join up In April
1999, NATO's 50th anniversary,
usuming present NATO members
ratify a revision of the 1949 No.rth
Atllllltic Treaty.
The Clinton administration wants
the U.S. to lead the way in ratification, and anticipates a Senate vote in
mid- to late 1998.
'·
To avoid the mistakes that led
President Woodrow Wilson to lose
the League of Nations ratification
fight, administr!ltion officials say
·that Clinton will take a large Senate
delegation with him to the Madrid
summit
The administration also is issuing
· a .report showing that thC economic
coat.of defending three new countries
is low -- less thiiJI $2SO milliC!B a. year

.

Alaoclated P111U Writer
WASHINGTbN- The new Congress, despite the initial talk of cooperation with President Ointon on top priorities," doesn't seem to be in any
~ 111sh to make its impact felt, or do much legislating.
Some of the early harmony has been tainted by increasingly acriniOnious
,. ;nvestigations in both chambers into campaign fund-raising activities. .
At the same time, the Senate is talcing a go-slow aRPJ'(laCh -'-- plodding
: through a proposed constitutional amendment to balance the budget and vot'" ·•ing on various presid~ntial nominations as they arrive.
: In the House, leaders an: still Slnlggling to regain footing after the embar:rassing vote in J1111uary to reprimand Speaker Newt Gingrich.
And there's zuo consensus on the need to overhaul campaign finance
rules.
·
' In the absence of congressional action on this delicate subject, Clinton
:continues to attend Dl;mocratic fund-raisers that would come under some
:of the tight
restrictions he advocates, as he did Tuesday night at a Demo•cratic fund-raiser in New York.
' "It's already mid-February. We've gotten off to a very slow start. We've
• ·.:hardly done 1111ything." said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a third-term Democrat from
:•New York. "We've hardly .been he.re." ·
·
;1 Congress is in the midst of a weeklong Presidents Day recess, the third
ncxtencle4 break it's taken this year.
.
.
The House last week rejected a proposed constitutional amendment to
· i •limit members' terms. Another one, which would balance the budget, has
i:faltered in the House even though supporters appear within striking distance
•jin the Senate. .
.
f. In contrast to its 100-day burst two years ago, the House's output has been
; •sparse: the Gingri&lt;;h and term-limits votes, ·narrow approval of the admin:~istration's request to begin relea5ing $385 million in international family·•. planning.money and a vote to name a new post office in San Antonio after
· • ~:a deceased colleague.
·
:' The snail's-pace deliberations in the Senate on the balanced-budget
• f amendment seemed to vex even Senate Majority LeiPer Th:nt.Lou, R·Miss.,
• :not .exactly a speed demon in moving legislation . .
.. ·[: "There needs to be a limit on how long 1\lis goes on," Loll sljid late 'last
• •week as the Senate prepared for its lates! recess. ; . .
: ~ Clinton did make a symbolism-laden journey to the Capitol last week to
•1meet with congressional leaders.
·
; • They reiterated joint goals of eliminafing the deficit in five years and rat~ 'tied off five other an:as of possible agreement: education, fighting juvenile
• t :Crime, taX cuts, moving people off welfare and into jobs and improving the
• :finances of the District of Columbia.
;. But Republicans ha~ found fault with fllany of Ointon's budget specifics.
:; Loll, along with House Majority Leader.Dick Armey, R-Texas, even wants
; 1o forgo a GOP-written budget in hopes of avoiding Democratic assaults.
·~ Thomas E. Mann, director of governmental studies at the Brookings lnsti·
. ; ution, does not see a hesitancy on the part of Republicans to deal with issues
!'liS much as very well thought-out strategy to have the president go first."
!-~ The pledges by both sides to seek bipartisan solutions are fine; Mann.said,
· •; ;"as tong as you don't read into it love a.~ tenderness. Both sides feel oblig• ed to I!! least keep up the appearances.
·.
·. .
·~ :., Even thopghCiinton has called for action on campaign-finance overhaul
·:·'by July 4, Loll has refused to make it a legislative priority.
· .
j'
The Senate leader suggests that facts need to be gathered first "to find
; out first of all what laws have been violated that are already on the books."
• Sponsors of bipartisan legislation to tighten the rules -Sen. John McCain
: of Arizona and Russ Feingold of Wisconsin- have ·suggested such a ratio; nate is just a stalling tactic. . ·
.
·
:
Meanwhile, investigations into mostly Democratic campaign fund rais; ing are heatilig up in both chambers, leading to more partisan acrimony.
'T The chairman of the House committee investigating campaign fund-rais( ins aciivities, Rep. Dan Burtj)n, R-Ind., issued 25 subpoenas, 20 of them
: over the past weekend, and has suggested there are about SOO pe!&gt;ple his pan; el wants to talk to.
·
.
·
Mtllllwhile, the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, headed by Sen.
• : Fred Thompson. R~ Tenn., agreed last week to issue 52 subpoenas.

,

new

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f

EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum coven politics and national atlain
: for The Anociatecl Press.
.
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Berry's · World

.

AccuWe~

Ward ConnE!rly .is ·a.man who fi,ghts back , "
In California·. during the eleciion
season last year, Ward Connerly led
the California Civil Rights Initil!live
(Proposition 209) to victory. The
attacks on Connerly were ferocious
and personal.
Watching Connerly elicit war
whoops from a mostly conservative
audience in Was~ington, it is apparent why the attacks on him during the
election were so nasty. Connerly is a
black man who is a serious threat to
establishment civil-rights activists.
He fights back, H" reminds us that
there is more than Qne high-minded
side to the race question in America.
He is a strong speaker with conservative Reaganite views on more·

issues than affirmative action, or if
you prefer, preference. He has a biting sense of humor and speaks to a
theme supported by a large majority
of Americans. By the time he ended
his remarks, the testin10nial dinner
audience organized by the Independent Women's Forum (IWF) buzzed
with .the question that counts in
Washington: "What will he run for?"
Connerly is riot happy with the
Rev. .Jesse Jackson, the leading sound
byte on the pro-preference side-- for
both substantive and personal rcasons. Connerly is a member' of the
California )oard of Regents. He
recalled that when he was pushing to
do away with preference in college
admissions. Jackson had come to a

board meeting·. is ked for a praye-r-to
begin th~ session, and then called
Connerly a "house slave" and "a
puppet of the white man."
·
·

Ben Wattenberg
Newt Gingrich was in the auilience ·ar th~ IWF event, along with
Rep. Henry Hyde, Sen. Phil Gramm
and other GOP political figures. Connerly said that h~ approved. of Gingrich's invitation to the Rev. Jackson
to sit with Mrs. Giqgrich during the
State of the Union address ,. long
pause -- if Mrs. Gingrich could
endure being with Jackson for. the
duration of a Clinton speech. He
thought that if Gingrich.had invited
Jackson in the spirit of bipartisanship,
then President Clinton.should invite
Connerly to spend the night in the
Lincoln bedroom -- pause -- and
waive the $100,000 fee.
He took note of the firestorm
caused by the remark of Rep. J.C.
Watts Jr., a fellow black conservative,
who had characterized some putatively unnamed black leaders as
"race-hustling poverty pimps." He
observed that Watts prays with Jackson, and offered some advice: "J.C.,
when you pray with Jesse, don't close
your eyes."
Political Washington loves this
raw meal, particularly after a (ew
drinks. But Connerly spQ)&lt;e s.ub'-

stance as well. He recalled his childConnerly was scalded by oppohood in'kgregated Louisiana·and the nents during the epic fight to overturn
signs in roadside restaurants: "We do preferences. He also has sharp com:
not serve colored." .But Connelly also ments for some expected allies who
remembers the people who helped jumped ship when the seas got rough,
him get ahead as a teen-ager in Bre- saying, well, 209 wasn't ·really
merton, Wash., working downtown in nuanced enough (this. of language
a fabric store after,school. He bless- . that essentially replicaies the words
es the country that let him rise to oftheCivi!RightsActofi964).Con•
affluence as a California business- nerly says that "our political system ·
man.
has more cowards per capita than at
He says there an: times to IOQI( anytime in our history." Maybe. But
forward, ndt back~ard, to go beyond Connerly is a refutation of his own
the poison of racism, slavery and seg- analysis. ·
·
resati~m; and to get on with life. He
Let it be granted that it is a comrejects membership in the "victims plicated and exasperating issue. The
club of America" and says that a bet: tough language will probably cooter America cannot be buill when tinue on both sides. Gingrich spoke,
"our government allocates opportu- enthusiastically endorsing the lannities &lt;In the basis of skin color, gen- guage of a previous speaker who
italiaand the spelling of last names." described the current situation as
This is the race-neutral side ofthe "affirmative · racism.". Gingrich
·civU-rights argument. As, and if, it pledged to pursue 1111 cad to it.
gains further currency, it can shauer
~ntil now the colmblirid point of
the monopoly of the racial. politics view did not have a credible high·
now seen in the Democratic Party.
profile national spokesman. That hurt
Although invited, no Democratic their cause and thenational dialogue.
members of Congress showed up ar Connelly, uniquely, has the talent,
the IWF dinner. Not coincidentally, passion, history atid 'guts to become
the flexible President Clinton has the champion or the second side.
shown no flexibility on affirmative
~n Wattenberg, a senior fellow
action (neither ending, nor mending). at the Amerlc"' Enterprise lnstiCiinton has even taken the bizarre lute, is the author of "Values Matstance that Proposition 209 iSuncon- ter Most." and Is tlte holt ~f the
stitutional, putting the government in weekly public television· P"'lnlll
the incredible.positioq of saying that "Think Tank."
antidiscrimination is against the law.

Tax-free funds·sometimes incur taxes
Wh~n It com~s time to pay Unci~ live are typically exempt from state

••

A: No, butyoo'resupposed to, All ta~es on that portion · of a fund •s:
Sam hos due, don '.t overlook what taxes.
the income you receive from your income earned on U.S. government:
might be owed · on your tax-free
,
Capital gains distributions, that's mutual fund investments, whether scctirities1
ll)unicipal' and government bond the income you receive from a fund that income is tax-exempt income,
A: No. States don't taX income:
funds.
dividend income or capital gains that's earned on direct U.S. govern-:
Tai-free bond funds can play a
needs to be reponca to the ment obligations. ,._ ' .
:
Dian VIJiovich · income,
wonderful role in YO\I[.portfolio ..
IRS on Form 1040.
Each year fund families put ll)on!:
providedyou'reintheappropriatetax when that fund sells any of the taxQ1 Do funds send information to and more effort into malting their·
bracket and understand that this type free bonds in its portfolio at a high- ·the IRS on catiital pins distributions fund statements containins y~-end:
of fund rarely avoids ta~es· altogi:th- er price than was paid for them, or from tax-free funds? ·
· ta~ information easier to reid. But,'
er. Government bond funds also offer whe'l you sell your fund shares for
A : Yes. All long-term ~nd short~
even the most sav~y shareholder can
some ·tax ttdvantages to their share&lt; . more than you originally paid for term capital gains distributions are get confused at'tax time. For speelf.
!oolcJers.
.
· ,
them, are subject to federal taxation reported to the IRS 1111d to you on ic tax guestions about your fund hold- •
Form 1099-DIV.
But tax advantage's aren't to be and often state taxes. ,
ings, your 'fund family, broker or
confused with. no tax 'l:onseqioences.
If you live in a state in which there .
Q: How can I tell how much of the financi~ adviser can be of service.
So, to keep you on the right tax traek. is a state income taX, and you are·in income earned·on a general tax'free For those individual tax ' qu.estiQns,
here are a few. of the most common- a high enough tax bracket to reap the · fund might be exempt from iny it's always best to consult your tax
·
,
ly aaked questtons about tax-free and .rewards of. taX·free in~ting, the type state's income tax?
adviser.
·
. A: T. Rowe Price, like other t~rge
sovemment. bond funds, according to •of tax-free fund that you're likely to
Dlaa \Vjorida II the author ot
T. Rowe Price.
..
pay the least amount of income tax on fund families, sends its fund share- "Straflht Talk About M•hial
~; ~ ex~~Y 11 tax·free about ·is a·state-specifte tax-free municipal · holders a tax letter with the)r year-end Ftmcll" and "Stnlibt Talk AboUt
bond fund with low portfolio · st,atement showing the pert;entase; latilll&amp;a for Your ~ae&amp;IIDt," ;
muntet.,.I .secunttes?
A: The mcome from tax-free secu- turnover.
breakdown of the fund's earamgs by botll or which ..,· palllllbed .,. •
1
riti~s is ~~nerally tax-free, but , the . Q: Will I receive a 1099-DN for state.
MeG
HilL s..tl qll th ... to I
Q: Do I have to pay state income ller Ia
~ttal g11~s usll)llly are nbt. ~ my 'tax-free fund investments?
of thil WW1f18PCi-.
·· oneome that s lllCCived fi'om 1 munte·, · A: Not unless the fund made a
'
' .
'
~
·!IJII bond fund is ~empt, from t.deral · C'Pibll gains distribution during the
Five
years
,
a
gp;
Texaa
billiQIIIim
Ross
1
told
CNN's
"Larry
IGng
:
'·
tn~~e taxes, . and the ,i~eome• · year. . .
. .
·
Live"
he
would
111n
lor
prcsjclent
if
his
name
~placed C!B the ballot in' . :
,, rccetved ~ ~
~ tuuttd
Ql Do fund families report my tax• all SO states.
•
•
by .the state or l!ic8111y tn whic:h rou exempt incoiile to the IRS 7 ··
).

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forecast for

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B.-:...

IToledoI 50" I

Dfharter
••HeruyH A.
89, ofRocbester, Minn., died Sunday, Feb. 16, 1997,
ouse.
.
·
at C
Born Sept. 2~. 1907, in Great Bend, he graduated from Racine High
~I ~d recetved a bachelor of scienee in medicine from West Virginia
~mverstty ~a doctor of medicine degree from the Medical College ofVirgtnoa He recetved a master of science in 1948 from the University of Minn~ and was a member of many professional and medical organizations.
Prior to Wo~ld War U he served in the Army Medical Corps. On Jan. 23,
1933, he ~~irr!ed Dorothy Ann Philson of Racine in Richmond, Va., who
p~ him 10 death on April 6, 1994,
·
.
He n_o~ved to Rochester !A 1936 as a fellow at the Mayo Graduate School
of Medocme. He was appomted a first assistant in otolaryngology and rhinology at .the ~ayo Graduate School of Medicine in 1938 and was appointed to the staff m 1942 as a _consultant in the department of otorhinolaryngology. He later became an tnstructor and professor before retiring in 1974.
Survovors onclude two sons, Robert A. Brown of Duluth, Minn., and Dr.
B111ee P. Brown of Iowa City, Iowa, and by three grandchildren.
. Locat .gravestde services will be conducted at the convenience of the famtly at Greenwood Cemetery, Racine. Cremeens Funeral Home of Racine is
m charge of local Brrllllgements.
Memorial contributions may he.made the Mayo Foundation, Salvation
~or~~~
·.
.
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IND.

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•leotumbusls:zo I

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Sunny Pt.

Cloudy Cloudy

Mary Elberfeld
Mary Elizabeth "~eth" Elbe"!'eld, 85 of Westerville, ~ied Friday, Feb. 14,
1997 at Manor Can: on Westernlte.

Retired from the Columbus Public Schools, she was a member of the
of the Messiah United Methodist in Westerville.
:,. Edu-catl•onal Serv•·ce Center. Church
She was pieceded in death by her husband, J;~Cob, a son, Jacob H., and
-approves gun safety grant a b=~i:!~::!;ghtersandsons-in-law,SaraandDavidDeever and

The deadline for paying taxes for the first half of 1996 has been
e1tended from Friday, Feb. 21. to March 4, Meigs County Treasurer
Howard Frank announced today. Taxes mailed in must be postmarked
on or before March 4.

Woman cited in accident
A Racine woman was. cited following a one-car accident on state
Route 124 near Great Bend Wednesday evening.
Tonya J. Stover, age unrepotted, was westbound in her 1985
Chevrolet and reportedly swerved to miss a deer in the roadway,
••cording to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment report. Her vehicle went off the right side of the road and struck a tree and a· fence
row. sustaining heavy damage.
She was cited on a charge of no valid operator's license.

Handgun reported
A handgun reported stolen from the Seth Hill re sidence on Bald
Knob-Stiversville Road near Ponland Tuesday was recovered Wednesday after it was found lying along the roadway near Hill's driveway,
according to Meigs C9unty Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The sheriffs department is in~estigating to determine how the handgun was removed from the residence.

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer4:20p.m., Rocksprings Rehabiligency Medical Service recorded II tation Center, Ruth McElroy, VMH;
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
8:56 p.m., Liberty Lane, Jack
responding inCluded:
Coleman and Ruth Carr, treated at the
scene.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:48 a.m., Happy Hollow Road, RACINE
Rutland, James Smith, Pleasant Val8:50 p.m., ,Morning Star Road,
ley Hospital, Rutland squad assisted; .Gordie Collins, treated a[ the scene.
I :46 p.m., Overbroo.k Nursing SYRACUSE •
Center, Middleport, Mable Skaggs,
. 7:23 p.m., Bridgeman Street, MinVeterans Memqrial Hospital;
nie Rizer, VMH .
3:27 p.m., Oak Grove Road ,
Racine, Bertha Johnson, VMH,
Racine squad as'sisted;
5:13 p.m., state Route 7 at Middleport, motor-vehicle accident,
Martha Stanley, treated at the scene;
8:24 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Lynn Boston, PVH . .
CHESTERVFD
3:42a.m., East Shade Road, automobile fire, no injuries reported.
POMEROY
2:39p.m., Mulbe'rry Heights, Bet- ·
ty Baronick, VMH;

Riebel nOted that the Ohio School Jo and Robert Ruhl, all of Westerville; a son and daughter-in-law, Ed and
The Meigs County Educational ·
Board
Association's Southeast Barbara Elberfeld of Columbus; a daughter-in-law, Kathy Shamblin of
Service Center approved a fireanns
Region
Spring
Conference will be Marysville; six grandchildren, two great-grandchildren.
.
, safety gr1111t at its regular meeting last
held March 18 at the Ohio UniversiFuneral services were held Monday at the Church of the Messiah Unit.! week.
ty
Inn
in
Athens.
ed
Methodist
with burial in Scotts Creek Cemeiery, Logan. Relatives going
The Eddie Eagle Gun Safety ProJennifer
Sheets
of
Pomeroy,
presfrom
here
for
the
~uneral were Rachel Elbeifeld Downie, Bill Downie, John
. gram sponsored by the National Rifle
ident
of
the
State
Board
of
Education,
and
Joan
Anderson.
· . ·Association. is designed to inqe3$C
·awareness of strategies that will pro- will be the featured speaker.
Also, the county Academic Exce.J:,:,...
• mote firearms safety for school-aged
Jence
Banquet has been scheduled fdr
. .
.
.
: children, said Superintendent John D.
7
p
m
on.
May
6
at
Meigs
High
Robert
Wtlharn
Hussell,
Sr.,
64,
of
Pomt
Pleasant,
W.Va
..
dted
Wednes·Riebel Sr.
Sch;,.,i
day,
February
19,
1997,
at
Holzer
Medical
Center,
Gallipolis.
In personnel matters the board
The· nexi meeting will be held
He was employed at Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant; and had formerly
· employed Jared Spencer as a substi11Ute teacher aide on an as-needed March 1.3 at .7 p.m. on the second worked at the West V!rginia ~alleabte.Iron Company i~ Point Pleasant. He
basis and employed James Hayman floor of the Pomeroy Municipal attended the Evangehcal Cbristoan Umon Church m Pomt Pleasant.
B~m June 16, 1932 in Point Pleasant, he was a son of Andrew J. and
as a substitute teacher on an as-need- . Building.
Present
were
board
President
Jeff
Sylvta
(Love) Hussell, both ofPomt Pleasant. He was preceded m death by
•ed basis.
.
Tl!e board also approved bus dri- Harris Vice-president Robert Barton his wife, Senna M. (Bass) Hussell.
How~d
Caldwell
1.0.
McCoy
and
In-addition
to
his
parents,
he
is
.
a
lso
survived
by two sons and daughters: ver certificates for Eric Diddle and
Jeanette
lbomas,
'
in-law,
Robert
W.
and
Connie
Sue
Hussell
Jr.
and
Harry A. and Dianna Hus' Ben Upton.
sell, all of Pomt Pleasant; three grandchtldren; ·a stsler, Ruth Y. Hussell of
Holzer Medical Center
Point Pleasant; four brothers, Louis A. Hussell Sr., Edward 'Eddie' J. Hus· Feb. 19 Discharges
sell and Warren K. Hussell, all of Point Pleasant, and M. Boone Hussell of
Lounna Goheen; Mrs. Mamie
Prairie Grove, Arkansas.
·
Gerber
and son; Una Brainard,
Service will be held at I p.m. Saturday, February 22, at the Crow[Hus-·
OAPSE to meet
· Church dinner Friday
Dorothy
Earles, Irene Russell and
The Middleport Pentecostal
OAPSE of Southern Local 453 sell Funefat Home, Point Pleasant, with Rev. Dennis Weaver officiating. Bur- · Presley Roush.
·
· Church will have a chicken and noo- will meet at 6:30p.m. tonight at the ial will follow in the Graham Staiion Cemetery, 'New Haven, W. Va.
Veterans Memorial
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Friday from 5 to 9•p.m. ·
. die dinner Friday, II a.m. to I P·ll!· bus garage..
Feb. 19 admissions -- Mildred
.
at the church. It will be a take-out, Tickets on sale
McDaniel, Middleport.
. delivered or eat-in dinner at a cost of
'fickets are ·on sale at Southern
Feb. 19 discharges •• Emory
S4 for chicken and noodles, · green HiBh School for the gir!~ district to!/!; ,
. . •
_
. . • ..
, · .
.
. Gord!!n. Middlepon.
·
.
,
.
beans, cille'shtw,lltlmelilade roll·and' naYnent to be held Monday ilt Ross f .
pie, apple or pumpkin. To order din- . Sootheastern f:ligh School. Tickets
The following land transfers were William E. Kauff; Jennie M. Kauff to
. ners for delivery, residents. may call are $4. Southern will play posted recently in the office of Meigs William E. and Jennie Kauff, Bed992·3824.
Portsmouth, 8 p.m.
·· County Recorder Emmogene Hamil- ford, 3.9179 acres;
JOHN TRAVOLTA IN
.' .
ton: ·
'
Deed, Southern Ohio Coal ComMICHAEL PO
Deed, Robert E. Sr., Mary L., pany to Stephen P. and Marlene A.
ONE EVENI''G SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
RobertA. Jr. and Sue L. Jacks to Oley · Demko, Columbia, 2 acres;
DREW'BARRYMORE
IN
Deed, Harold and June Dewhurst
Auction results from WedneSday's $27; standard, $34-38; utility $29- E. and Sandra K. Herdman, Scipio;
SCREAM"
Deed, Alma A. and Larry Lee . to Penny B. Dewhurst, Rutland, .57
'Gallipolis Producers Livestock Asso- 33; commercial, $22-28; CC - nla;
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
·ciation:
·
Snider. G. Phyllis All1111, Harold and acre;
.
bull~. steady; butchers, $37.42.
Rita
Nutter,
Orange,
19.452
acres;
Deed,
Jeffrey
Connolly to Jeffrey
Total head: 291. . ·
FEEDER CATTLE • $3 higher;.
. Yearling, steers, $58-$65; heif~rs, . Deed, Alma A. and Larry Lee and Bartiara Jean Connolly, Lebanon;
HOGS-I.
Deed, Barbara J., Tony E. and
' Butcher hogs, all weights, $46.50; $50-57; calves- .steers, $65-90; back Snider, G. Phyllis Allan, Harold and
'Sows; N/A; boars, $37.25; Feeder to the-farm babies, $135 and down. Rita Nutter to PaulL. Nutter, Orange, ·Jeanna K. Connolly to Barbara Jean
·
and Jeffrey Connolly. lebanon
pigs, n/a.
·.
S"EEP • Choice, $81. SO; Aged 19.446 acres;
Deed,
Alma
A.
and
Larry
Lee
parcels;
CA1TLE -450; Steers, sready ' slaughter sheep, $22-37.
Deed, William LeR?Y Watson Jr. to
Specia;l feeder and brood ·cow sale ·Snider, G, Phyllis Allan, Harold and
heifers, n/a
1
; choice, nla; Good, nla; Holstein, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 12 noon;. Home Rita Nutter to Harold and Rita Nut- Fred W, Crow III, Sutton parcel;
Deed, Bessie Browley to Burl Put- .
'n!a.
and tack sale, Saturday, March I, II ter, Orang~. 14.450 acres;
Deed,
Alma
A.
and
Larry
Lee
man
Jr., Olive;
COWS •· Demand ·and price a.m.
Snider, G. Phyllis Allap, Harold and
Deed, Bernice M:, Robert Allen
trend, steady to Sl higher; utility,
Rita Nutter to Kenny and Sandy and Cheryl A. Bailey to Robert Allen
Spencer. S acres;
and Michael A. Bailey, Meigs, 20
Deed, Dorothy M., Alan Wayne acres;
.
and Julia E. Sheppard to C. Roger
Deed, Dion W. and Sherry L.
Continued from page I
. of the Meigs County Emergency and Nancy Hubbard, Gary and.Don- Vance to Ronald W. Vance. Olive,
nomic development dir""or an addi- · Medicai .Service;
na Norris, Sutton tracts;
2,902 acres;
. -- Opened a bid from Southeast
tionaltwo weeks;
Deed, Dorothy M., Alan Wayne
Deed, Dion W. and Sherry L.
· . -- Met witb Meigs County Equipment of Gallipolis for a used and Julia E.•Sheppard to Amy Beth Vance to Ronald W. Vance, Olive, 7
Regional Planning Co!llmission Pres- Gradall excavator for $6{&gt;,400, a bid Harrison and Shaun B. Diddle, Sut- .acres;
•
ident John R. Lentes who said · he from Stowe Ttuck and Equipment of ton, 5 acres;
Deed, Gerald and Brenda H,
would give commissioners a list of · Marietta for a new tandem-axle dump
. Deed, David William Fi1.er to Moore to .Roger I. and Wanda !uric
prospec.tive planning commission truck (or $75 ,444, and a bid from the William L. and Dennis L. Faccmyer Mowery, Salisbury, 3.0216 acres;
McLean Company of Columbus for Jr., Bedford parcels;
appointees for approval;
Deed, Christopher A. and Cristina
: -- Opened the single bid by a used chip spreader for $54.500. for
Deed, Levema M. HolTman, Lev- R. Yeauger to Home National Bank,
.Burgess Hearse and Ambulance Sales the county highway department ;
erna ,M. Kauff. Larry Hoffmap, Syracuse lots.
--Tabled accepting bids pending
for $85,532 for a new Jour-wheel-drireview
by EMS and highway depanye.ambulance for the Rutland squad
ment officials.
Present were Howard, Hoffman,
The Daily Sentinel ·Commissioner
Jeff Thornton and
Clerk
Gloria
Kloes.
(USPS 213-HO)

.

R0· bert

w• HUsse11· s r..·

Hospital., news .·

Meigs announcements

Me·•gs land transfers p·o·sted ..

Wednesday's GPLA resul~s

ALL 71Cift8 MUS'P U

PlCUD UP

(11:15 PM . SA'I'UaDAII
EACII PBIIBOII UCIKVBS Ul lt.lldt:a

OP PillA I PIP8I
AMO A KIDIICBT ROVI&amp;I ., . 75 -.ch.
PICK Ul' tot.ta '!'ICJI:RTS 4'!' GALLUOLLI8
DUU.O'&amp; PillA wc:A'!'ID ...,. to

SPRI.U YALLBY Cl..-&amp; OR &amp;Y
(SPIIRG VALLIT Cl .....

:Meigs commission...

~ CHECK THE CWSifiEDS fOR All YOUR.NEED!

Published every o.f1ernoon, Mo'ndny cbrough
Ffidny. Ill Conn St., Pamerqy, Ohio, hy d'le
Ohio, Valle)' Publi!hlng.Company/Oonnen Co ..
POmeroy, OhiQ 4~769. Ph. 992·21!16, Second
chits po~ragc paid at Pomeroy. Qhib.
MHtber. The Associared Pnm, and the Ohio
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Twin·Oaks

LookS Tough, But Inside

II)

'

Tax deadline extended

Dr. Henry A. Brown

MICH.

over die next I 0-15 yean.
The administntion heads into the
ratification debale with 1n unmistaltable upper hand. A poU CondtM'i~ by
the Propam on lnternalional Policy
Attitudes at the University of Maryland found that 67 pm.ent of Amer- .
icans believe that NATO is "~ntial
to the country's secority"al!,d that62
pm.ent favor its expansion, including
60 percent of RepubliClns and 64
percent of Democrats.
illustrating vulnerabilities, though.
the ·poll found that only 46 percent
think that NATO expansion is worth
spell!ling Sl billion a year on top of
a defense budget of $264 billion .
Only.44 percent wanllo make a commitment to use nuclear weapons, if
necessary, to defefl!l new memben
and 62 percent are worried that
NA10 exp1111sion would "treat Russia as a enemy."
This will create 1111 openina for
counter-arguments. Barney Frank,
who WilliS to lettd a movement to
slash till defense budsct to m.lintain
domestic spending, says that he and
House le8ders an: skeptical of adrninistnlion cost figures, which run about
half of the level cited in one RAND
study .00 a seventh of the Congres,
sional Budget Office's estimate.
· "People I ""' to don't see lillY
p-eat .benefit from NATO expllll·
sion," F'tank says. "They also say,
'isn't it the Europeans'turn to defend
themselves1'~"
·
)
Bielen and otl!er Denoocnots wor·
(y that NATO exp1111sion wilt play
into the hands of riaiionalists in Russia. Nunn, rejlresenting opposition in
the Pentagon, has argued that expan•
sion would sap .U.S. ability to defend
other interests around the world.
And some defense intellectuals say
~United States will·end up mired
in border and ethnic conflicts in Eastem Eurppe.
Congress has voted four times in .
· the past three years -- in each case
with 80 pe11=ent support .. to proceed
down a track toward expansion and
make ·token downpaym~nts on the
cost
•
StiU, though, the-big questions of
U.S. commitinentto Europe haven't
been asked. They will be soon, and
the answers may determine the shape
of the world in the 21st century.
(Morton Kondracke II executive editor of Roll CaD, the news·
paper or C•pltol Hut.) .

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

.----Local briefs-.....

F~,Feb.21

·
Senate
support
wavers
on
NATO
expansion
The Dally Sentinel u.s.
...,.m
'EsfiiMJslid in J!J48

Pomeroy • MlcldlepcMt, Ohio

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The Daily. S.entinel

.S ports

In Top 25 college hoopa,

tip, two free throws by Brad Whit·
latch with eighl seconds left sealed
the win for Meigs. Whitlatch led the MaraUders with
18 points, while Daniel Jiannan
added 17 for Meigs.'Tho Marauders
defense was outsianding as the
Vikings failed to put anyone in double figures. Vinton County was led
by Nate Henderson with nine poiniS.
· In the second game at McArthur
the Viking won the game with a large
scoring advantage from the foul
line. Vinton County went to the line
30 times hitting 17 of them, while
Meigs went to the line just five times
hilling three.
Whitlatch once again led Meigs
with 17 points and "!annan added I3. ·

Ryan Caudill led the VIkings with 18
.and Jason Kruger added 12 in the
win.
·
Hannan leads the MaraUders in
scorinsandreboundina. The6-foot2 sophomore is averaging 17 poiniS ·
and game.and is pulling down eiaht
reboun~ per contest. Whitlatch is a
6-foot-1 senior and is scoring 14
points a game and leads the team in
assists and steals.
Starting for Coach Jeff Skinner's
Marauders will he Whitlatch and 6foot Collin Roush at the guards,
Hannan will be in the middle, and
the forwards will he 6-foot-2 junior
Matt Williams and 6-foot-3 senior
Josh Witherell.

Roush hiS the ability to score
from the ouiBide for Meigs, WitHams
plays intense defense and averages
six points and five rebounds a game
andWitherellhucomeonstrongof
late in scoring, he averages eight
points a game.
Coming off the bench for the
Marauders is 5-foot-10 junior Brad
Davenport, 5-foot- 10 senior Robert
Qualls, 6-foot- I sophomore Waylon
McKinney, 6-foot-3 senior Nakuma
Tyree, 6-foot-4 senior Aaron Hockman and 6-focit senior Jason Mullen.
The Vikings are young team ,
they start two sophomores and two
Nniors. The Vikings are led by 6foot-3 sophomore Ryan Caudill and
,
.

a

By The An aalai d Pun
now, rm DOl gW!gtosith111uad 111111 teams Wednesday night, it wu No.
OnJan. 11, Nonh c.rolina- (}. you it'a DOt," Wake l'lntt cOKh 2 Minnesota 60, Ohio State 48; No.
3 in the AUantic c-t ConfcreDCC Dave Odom 18id. "We've JIIOI-IIIy 3 Kentucky 7S, Alabama 61; Texas
for the lint lime ever. Five weeks lit- JOlt a lillie eonftdellce, a l4tJe edse ~7. No. 7 Iowa State 56; No. 14
er, it's a different story.
that we bad. Wo have to. get thai Maryland 76, Oeolgia Tech 68; No.
The 12th-ranked Tar Heols · back, and I think it's possible to do 11 UCLA 82, Southern Calirornia
moved within 2 112 games of first thal.l have a lot of faith in our team." . 60; No.-19 Villanova 65, St.John's
place Wednesday night with a 74-60
· Vi~ Carter -~ 2I of his 54; and No. 21 Colorado 67, Kansas
victory over No. 4 Wake Foreat.
careet-bigb 26 pomts m the first half State 51.
· No. 2 Minnesota liO
"We're on a roll right now," ~d for the Tar Heels, who led.38-18 ~~
' OhloSt.48
North Carolina's Antawn Jamison, halftime. He was 9-for-Hl from the
Bobby Jackson had 15 points to
who had 12 points and tO rebounds. f~eld in the'firsthalfand finished 11lead
the Golden Gophers (23-2, 12'.'1 told you at the beginning of the for-16.
·
1
Big
Ten) to their ciahth straight
"'ason thai once this team gets to
"If WIS just amazing to me,"
victory
and 18th in 19 games. Minwhere we need to get, it's going to Carter said of bis shoOting. "That
he very II!:U)', and you arc kind of' hasa 't liappenl:d to me since I had a nesota extended iiS lead to 3 112
seeing tbat now."
· big game ljke tbat in high school. It games over Purdue with five games
The Tar Heels ( 1R-6, 8-~) moved was like, 'Wow, that's what it felt to play IS the Oophers took for their
first conference championship since
· into a fourth-pi~ tie with Clcmaon, lib.'.'.
·
one 'game hehind Maryland and
AJI,America center Tim Dun~an I982. Damon Stringer scored I7 of
Wake Forest (2D-4, 9-4), who are fillislicd with ·20 points and 17 his 21 points in the first half for the
tied for second behind Duke.
rebounds for the Demon. Deacons. visiting Buckeyes (ID-12, 5-8).
No. 3 Keiatucky 75
· As positive IS things are looking who trailed by 24 points and closed
Alabama 61
for North Carolina, they are going within seven with a furious 23-6 raJ- . ·
Ron
Mercer
had 23 points,
the other way right now for th!: ly. But Jamison scored on a layup
including
two ~ey three-~i~t~rs
, Demon IJeal:ons, who lost conaecu- a¢$hainmol)d Williams hit a threedown
the
stretch, as the VISiting
live games for the first time sinee the pointer as the lead reached double
Wildcats
(25-3,
11-2 Southeastern
middle of the t 994-9~ ieason - a . digits 88ain with 6:24 left.
Conference)
won
despite shooting
span of 15 games- and lost QD the
"They made it interesting,"
just
38
percent.
Brian
Williams bad
road for thefint time this-.
· Smithlllid.'"Yoo knew they would."
18
points
to
lead
the
Cnmson
Tide
· "Our team is a lillie dowJI iialll
lllj,ther JarReS involving ranked

6-foot-1 junior Todd Braden. Also each loss was by an averase of 4.5
helping to lead the Vikings arc 6- poiniS a game.
The winner of Friday's game will
foot-2 junior.Nate Hendt;ndn. Vin- .
advance
to District Tournament play
t9n County is coached by Rick
on Friday, February 28th at Ohio
Brooks.
Vinton County finished their reg- University's Convocation Center
ular sclson with a 12-8 mar~ over- against the winners out · of Chilli·
all and a·9-5 mark in the Ohio Divi- cothe at 8:00p.m.
To
get
to
South
Webster,
take
U.S.
sion of the Tri-Valley Conference.
The Vikinss battled Nelsonville- 3S to just north of Rio Oraitde and
York down to the wire for the Ohio take State Route 279 to Oak Hill.
Tum on State Route 93 south out of
Division championship.
Oak Hill to State Roilte 140, which
Meigs finished with a 5-1 S mark
you ·take to South Webster. The high
o~erall and a 4-10 mark in the'bhio
school is a new building on the right
Division. The record is not indicative
hand side right next to the road.
of their season however. Of the IS
South
Webster is locllled about 12
losses for the Marauders, II of1hem
miles
out
of Oak Hill.
have come by a total ofSO points, s.o .

Cavaliers get 103-84 victory over short-handed :L.a kers.
Cavaliers point guard Terrell Bran- Cleveland went on a 16,-2 run to start turnovers to only one for Cleveland
By JOHN NADEL
· INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) don, who outscored the Lakers 19-15 the fourth quarter. The Lakers were in the final period, and 13 to just five
With Shaquille O'Neal and Robert by himself in the final period.
· still in decent shape, trailing 85-79 for the Ca~alien in the game.
And the Cavaliers outrebounded
Horry in street clothes, the Los
The tempo was, indeed, in Cleve- with four minutes left, but the CavAngeles Lakers were no match for land's favor. The Cavaliers are the aliers went on a I D-0 run to clinch . the Lakers 36-28 .
"This was one of our better
llwe Cleveland Cavaliers in the fourth NBA's lowest-scoring team, averag- their fourth straight victory.
fourth
quarters on both ends," Caving
89
points,
but
they're
also
have
Cleveland
has
beaten
the
Lakers
4uarter.
alien
coach
Mike Fratello said. "We
: Of course, the Cavaliers have allowed the fewest points, giving up four straight times, and has an 8-3
·record in games between the teams held our own, · stuck. our noses in
·Jieen beating up on the Latrers for the an average of 85.
there and made some thing~ happen. .
The Lakers wound up attempting dating back to the 1991-92 season.
f.IISt five years, so Wednesday night's
"We didn't make any shots (in
"We realize they are playing·
103-84 victory was nothing new. . . only 58 shots, their lowest total shJCe
the
fourth
quarter)
and
wedidn
't
set
undermanned.
They were really i.n a
• "We knew that if we executed the franchise moved to California
any stops," Lakers coach Del Harris groov_e when the injuries hit them."
and the tempo was in our favor, we from Minn~apolis in 1960.
The Lakers, who have lost tw~
Los Angeles led 69-66 before said. "It's preuy simple."
!lad a chance to win the game," said
The Cavaliers made II of 19 straight after winning nine of their
shots and all II of their·free throws previous 10 games, . are without
in the fourth quarter, while the Lak- O'Neal and Horry for at least six
ers went just 3-of-13 from the floor. weeks. Both -ire sidelined with
The Lakers committed fi,ve injured left im""s - 0' Neal ~~

•

hurt on Feb. 12 at Minnesota, and
Harry's injury occurred Joist Sunday
against Seattle.
Brandon finished with 30 points;
'JYrone Hill had a season-high ~ ·
points and 12 rebounds, and ~hris
Mills added 19 points forthe 9itilaliers, whose 37 points in the fpurth
quarter equaled their most productive period of the seas~n.
. '.'It was ·great for our team to
come in here and get this victory,"
Brandon said. '"We have a lot of
respect for this team, even with their
two stars out.
"I didn't do much in the first
three quarters. I tried to take intelligent, shots. It was a total ·team
effort."

•

MCKA to sponsor swap
meet slated for Saturday

.Y

S.COTT WOLFE
hntlnel Correspondent
I The Rutland Civic Center, the
Meigs Competition Karting Associ4\ion will sponsor the fir.st-ever Gokart Racer$ Swap Meet and Flea ·
lifarket Saturday
.·
· ~ This is an event that hopes. to
become an annual event.
·
; The event will feature something
. fur everyone from the casual fan to
the serious racer.
Both new and used equipment for
e.lther racing or pleasure from full
blown raeers to outdoor fun kart~
~ill be on display. Several dealers
!lave already signed up for the event
i~cludjng jobbers from Canton,
QJJumbuli, Zanesville, Tiffin and
er cities throughout . Ohio and
est Virginia.
.
Serious enthusiasts can choose
· tw~n new dealer equipment or
d equipment from area· racers. e flea market ype atmosphere

J,.

'torrectlon.
.
· t.Due to a snafu that transposed the

glfls brackets to the boys brackets,
S~uthcrn w1ll not meet Crooksville
i1
' ' the first round of the Division IV
d trict girls' basketball t~umament
o Monday. The Tornadoes will
p y Porstmouth Clay instead.
I Crooksville ( 12-1 0) advances to
tli: district semi-final at Ross-Southc+tern Monday night for a ganie
"1th Lucasville upper-bracket winn(r Leesburg Fairfield ( 12-9). Southem will meet Clay (8-13) in tbe distrfct semifinal at Ross-Southeastern
High School Monday, February 24 at
6 p.m.

•
I

In other NBA action,

"
I

Magi(: give.Adubato first' win

.

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'o \--!Ill.

' .769
NewYorli .............. lll 1• .731
~ ......... ........ ~ 25 .500
Wllhin........ ........ lA 21 .462
--~ ............ u l6 .m
Philodotploi)l ...........t2 39 .2.U
- . ...............:..... 11 .I .212

I

Dei""L................. 38 ll .7.S

Adonia ..................~ 17
a..-........,.......n 21
CLEVELAND ... -29' 2l
lnduL.................;t-4 'n
• Milw ..uo:.. ::........lA ·n
T..- ...:............. .18 ~

·--·-

THAT'S ALMOST SO% OFF THE NEWSTAND PRICE!
TIIAT'S LIKE GETTING SIX WEEKS FREE!

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. Local, National and World News, Sports, Comics
·
and TV Times. All this and morel

1996 ~P qiEROKEE 4X4 - 4 do1or,
automatic, 6 cylinder,
"
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1994
Z-28_. - LT-1,
V8, 6 C~OLET
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~-----------------------------------~------------~YES! Pleae start...,. ••blcrlpdoa tone Dally Sndlitel for 13 weeks r.~ oaly $18.20, ••
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Oblo U.S. girls' sc:oreil

i(eDiucky 7l, Alobiona 61
IIIIO)'Iud 76, Oecqio Todl611
~~~~ ... MiNhtlppl St. 61

TOUI'IIIIIItfDis

layup with II seconds to play save
the visiting Cyclones (18-5, 9-4) a
56-SS lead hefore Jordan scored off
AI Coleman's miss. Gabe Muoneke
led_Texas with 14 points, while
Dedric Willoughby had 16 points for
Iowa State.
No. 14 Maryland 76
Ceo'llia Tech fi8
Keith Booth scored II of his 26
p&lt;lints over the final 10 minutes as

the Terrapins (20-6, 9-4 ACC) pulle4
away late.
,.
No.17 VCLA8l
Soudlen California 60
· Toby Bailey scored 24 points an¢ :
the Bruins {16-7, 11 -3) pulled away'
in the second half to retain sole possession of tint place in the Pac-10. '
UCLA closed .the first half .with an.
11-0 run for .a 29-28 lead and then ·
took control with a 17-4 early in the '
second half.

NBA games •.. &lt;.::::Co:::n:.::ti~::ued::..::fr.:::om::..P:.:a:!:ge:..;4~)- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

' '

Pistons. 100, Bllllets 85
. The Raj&gt;tors made IS or 25 rrom rebounds. Minnesota moved within.
Ai Auburn Hills, Lindsey Hunter three-point range, including '"ven of one 'victory of the .SOO mark while
scored 25 points and Grant Hill had 10 in the third quarter. Dominique improxing to 3-0 against Vancouver ..
24 as Dciroit won its fourth straight. Wilkins and Carl Herrera each this season.
Juwan Howard scored 25 poiniS for scored 17 poiniS for the injured-ridWarriors Ill, Celtics 101
~
the Bullets, who are 2-3 since Bernie dled Spurs, who dressed only eight
At San Jose, Latrell Sprewell ,
.Bickerstaff replaced Jim Lynam as players.
scored 41 Po.iniS and Chris Mullin
coach. Joe Dumars scored five poiniS
had a triple-double as Golden State. ·
Timberwolves 84
as the Pistons opened the second
handed Boston · its eighth straight
Grizzlies 73
quarter with a 9-2 run, taking a lead
loss. Mullin, who has been tbe sub~
Dean O~u. a 30-year-old rookthey would not relinquish.
ie, scored a career-high 25 .points, ject of trade r'uinors, had 19 points,
Ralllors 125, Spurs 91
and Minnesota matched a franchise
10 rebounds and 12 assists. He also
At San Antonio, Damon record with its ninth road win of the
tied Nate Thu~'s dub record by,•
Stoudamaire scored 21 points and season. Garrell, who joined the Tim- ' playing in his 757th regular-season
·the Toronto Raptors made a team- berwolves-iast summer after playing game for Oolden State. Todd Day led. .
record 15 three-pointers to hand the six seasons in Italy, finished 11-for- the Celtics with 27 points.
Spurs their worst loss of the season. 15 from the field and also grabbed 10
·'

66

14

JS
E. Cleveland Shaw 61, Cle.
Collinwood 4\
Marion Hardins ~7. Oalloway West·

· Vonclorbilo86.0...pa80
Vi!Jiaio J5. N. C.Ohl St 46
WilliUII 4; Mary 81, l.mt~ M~ton

.•

land'\4

Mayfield 52, Wlllou&amp;hby S. 48
Mcdina66, N. Royalion.41 ·•
N. Canton· Hoover 62, M11ulllon
WubinatOn41 ·
·
" N&lt;w Phllaolelpl!ia J.1. E. u ...rpool22
Solon 75, Cle. Glenville 44
,
SlOw 70. Kent RooseYclr 40
Tol. Catholic 7:\, iol Waite 22
Tot Sc011 S2, PflrysbutJ 41
Tol. Swt
Tol. Woodward 29 ·
Tol. Whirma.67, Tol. Ro,.ers 43
Wooster 61, Uniontown Lake :l5

Colortdo 67, Kaliuo St rt
1Howtil 74, San J11ooo SL &amp;2

.

Doo"'.
· - 7:30- " "
Mttwaulcee•~-.8:~p.11L

Ohio men's

Frlda:r'•..-

.4~

SanJOK .. :.............. I8 ll
Se:olote ................... I&amp; .23
Po&lt;tland ................ ll 20
A.-clinchfd coafcma Iiiii

. Ohio Coafennce
Cooi1ill 82. 01.....,;n ~1

Hiiam 12, Baldwin-Wal...... 71
JoM Com&gt;l186. Hddelborc Hl
Mou11 Union '10. MUla 65
OIW Noctllem 86, MuskiOJ\Im 79

· Traoayl\'lllio18. C&lt;mrol $1.65

. 9\
. 13

DIY!OO 83, Rhode llllllldll
Xuier 59~ Mu.:hulelll Sl

9
12

Mld-Amerll!llll Conference
DowtiD&amp;'Go:ei75, Mi... 07
Ccn1. Mit.iliJ• 66. Akron ~
Keo1 71. BollS!. 66
.

W...nelday'ucora

Allan!o17, COLIJWB~S IS

Coiorado77. San~ 10

;

l:

i
I

•
I

I

•I
=

!.
;•
I

North c.- Conference

TOIIIPt'opma

Al~y

79, Oberlin 39
Wili~iibl:rte .HS. E..lbum !i\1

Rictnnond • No., Ea,otand, 7 p.m
· C~ll ....laod,lOp.m.
Saii.Jooe"' ScilnJo.•to., .... .

...

''

~

.

·' c.nr.

.J

, ~li~. H6..,W .-!li6S
.
Ohlu bomiaiuaa 74. Noire Oatm:.
(Jhiu66

Ohio H.S, boys' scores

o.t(ll '

~•.. n: ~ W; ~ ~ Wi
Wiscoruin ... .,'.i ~ .64] 1.• 7 .6W,

Punluc .......... 9 5 .6&gt;1)
lllinois ...........H ~ .615
MkhiJOII ....... l ~ ,SI,l
Jowa ............ .,7 ~ .~3
' lndi... ..........7 7 .soo '
,. Midtip Sl. .. 5 .; X .:lK~
OHJOST...... .!i ¥ .•111.1
S!.......... 2 u, .t•l
11 : l•l

21~

Transactions

hdfk Olwilion
Colomdo ............ ~6 14 8 80 198
£dmonton .......... 292j 6 64 189
Calpry .............. 24 29 .7 :'IS- 160
V~\let ......... 26 29 2 ~4 IHS
Anaheim ........... .23 29 6 ~2 166
SanJose .............21 ~I 6 48 Ul
LosAnaelea ....... l9 H 8 46 156

BosebaU
13~

A.merk:an Lucut
ANAHEIM A.NOELS : Si.ncd RHP
Geoff Edscll, RHP Pete Jomckl, RHP
Fousld Mncey, LHP Mau Perisho. C Bret
Hemphill, and INF Chrit Pritchcu to olicyear contracls:
BOSTON RED SOX : Si1ned OF
Adam Hytdu, OF Roy Padilla. LHP
A.4fael Orel11111o and LHP Ron Mahay 10
one-vear coiltructs.

174
174
197
177 . ·
192
20:'i

N.Y. Ranaers I, New Jmey I (lie~

O'Dell's
.T RU-TEST
'

NOW.ATBOTH
rJ OEll L OC /, TION ~

!

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t
•
'•

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!..

Oi\l'&amp;lion IV .
• Ck. l••dtflt!ndtnt.'t 4~ . Cuy:~hugr~ Hts.

••

42
l..t!dgmaont 49. Oran1c Clu. o47
·N. Bnhimorc 60. Tol . Emmanuel
ll;oel.Not'thwood
"'
.S9. Oibsonburg .1:0btrtin S6, O..hon .l!'i
Southi1111on 15. Lordstown 30 ,
Triad bS. CovlnJIOfl 4~
Wam:a Kennedy 60, Leetonia -tO

'•
j

:

PIEiiiuM QUAliTY E-Z

...... Attt Lila Will

9.99oALLON

8rllt Wltite Celllq Palal ·
with non-spatter formula.
cleanup. K 3199t3 F4

FilM. Excell&amp;nt hiding
and scrubbabitity.

Hockey

EZ!'1

k.354 217 ""

l

· EAS'fERN CONFERENCE
,\la.ndc [MyW.

.

I
I
I

~

IM 1!1
~&lt;-:101 167

••
•

'

home?

6.99
Vltllilt""

OAlLON

a hlgh-~lding, waShabl~ . ·
finish . Vf·11 K3531621"4

...,..NI •

.O'DELL

- -•llitfliaao SliM

.

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ftt4 ~• '-

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·
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·.818 EAST MAIN ST.- PQMEROY

t

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.

dPIN MOll F11. H, SAtN

9 !4 . I

12

i.i

3.99 .

~

J.l'llceFIIIIIISII
IIIIV-300 K 207511

towo • OHIO STATE
!: ....
.. ...... .

f

·. ·

L11U Wll PllllliS' ·

'~

Sa..,...r·•..-

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.

i•
••

NUL standings
·

''

.•

,.;........ p_ ·

...., 11

.

••

w........oy•a-..

•7·

BuketbaU
National Jl.ulr.dball AQod ..ion
· NBA :_ Fined Toronto Raptou caach
~II W31ker $7 .~ for VL'fball)' nbusing the referee• and railina to leuve lhe
ooun in a ti~ly manner "following hill
ejeclion from u Feb. 17 grime o.t lhdinM,
'LOS ANGELES LAKERS: Plo"'d F
Robert Horry on 1hc injured lilt .
.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZI;RS: Ac•
1iva1ed C Arvydu Soboais rrom the injured list. Relcued 0 Ruben Nembhanl.WASHINGTON BULLETS : Placed 0
1im l.e•ier on 1he inj\lred list.

'

FloridM.... ............2118 I)
- N.Y:RMpn .....78 24 9.

- - 7 0 , Ml&lt;biJII' S...5M .
1111-10. Of!IOSTA11l411
Wia:oatla 49, Pl:nlp S111e 4$
,

.

~~~

~~~

~lphi•.
J~~~ l ~ ~ ~
Nrtvdmcy ..... ...l917' 11 69 1$1 U4

14 10 JN)
JN , 7 .120
17 ' 7 .7&lt;11
I~ M .(!&gt;7
20 • .714
12 10 .St$
10 t2 &gt;.m
' 14 .!01
1 10 .ll!IJ •

_,.,......1

•

Non-coafennce ploy

,Big on~ staJidln&amp;s
'

..

Adaadc 10

7

y·cliiO.~ rloYoll•poo

.

~4 1~4

CINCINNATI REDS : Sianed INF
Boone to a onc:·year l'Oftlf'al..1.

A~on

58 169 180
46

InK:!.

~donville 61. Akrn11 St.V-SI.M· .'i~
fOTI
.
Luaa.crnn W. ~I , Brooklyn. 24
United Lncal49. E. Pn1estioo 47

college sc:ores
·~

.m

72 179 l!'iO
67 184 IJB
62 182 IM

40

Ohio wom.en's

I~&gt;

.410

:1! L I I'll. !if !iA

Dallu ................. :\4 22 4
Dclroir ................ 28 1911
Sl. Louia ............ 28 26 6
Phoenl1. ... :.......... 2128 4
Chicaao .~ .... ~ ...... 2J 28 8
Toron10 .............. 22 J6 2

ye• Conll"llct.
CHICAGO CUBS: AJreed to terms
wit_h INF Rey Sanchtz on a ane-)'ear can-

[NyiJien Jll
Akron Hobar160, AkrOn Elms 25
Cin. W:yomin1S6, Cin. Madcim41
Cle. C.!llhollc ~I. Mapleton 4~ {(YT)
Coldwa~r 69 1 Colvmb\ls"Qrov~ 42
Garrellsville 80, Stf'CI:t,boru 23
LaBrnt.' .'i.J, Newton Fnlls $1
Un1a Cnth. ~2. Sher111ood Fnirview

~ 75. Ohio \Yaley"' 59

li.l

.462

N.Y. Rnn&amp;m II Hanford, 1 p.m.
N.Y. lslanden IV Buffalo. 7:30p.m.
CaJpy til Oall;w, 8:30p.m.
Colorado at Edmonton. 9:30p.m.

C«ntnl DMdon .

Ialll

lcnm wilh rNF Mite Mordoi:lli on a one-

Frlday'sgames

Napoleoll44, Rourord 32
St. Marys 62, Umo B111h ~8
Tallrrodge 1:\, C~twood 47
Vincent W~~Tm 40, Oullipolis ~S
W . Holme147. Coshtxlon 37
Watkini Memorinl 71 . Col. Mirma

. Non-c:onfenace play

w..,..o.,w.n
1-co..,ado.,........:.. l!l 14 .6&gt;11

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Nadonoi'-

ATLAHT,4, BRAVE'"S : Aareed lo

eut41

AllcJhen}1S, Obctti11 58

·· ABL standings

l~ , JBl

12 ~2 164 110
7 47 ·166 204

Miami Tmee .t9, S. Poinl44
Moandore Field 4K. Ravenna South·

Willt~9l.I'MIIIm68

.

Mitwaut.eiiS.AMonio,I:JOp.m.
CLEVELAND at: Phollli~ 9 p.m.
New Yurt • Soonll. 10 P·"'
v.......... t...U.tliR. IO:J&lt;lp.m.

n

tO'n .

North eo. Canterence

a.-~allli-I:JOp.m.

Art.la .. ,;...... :........ l8

67 lB 11\6

II ~s 190 ll:'i
B l2 I&amp;J IBR

MPrlinJ;tOn 5~. LouisVille AquinllJ 53 ·

·

·Deaoii
Midwe.ttra
Colhalatt
158, Cleve'-' S1. 60

Oenvet'. Orlando. 1:30 p.m.
Pan'-I • Ill-. 7!l0 p.m.
I.'A. Cllwm .. Cllltlone, 7:30p.m.
- • " '....... 7:l0p.m.
New .Jene) • Dllrolc, 7:30p.m.
Chi"'"llWIIIi.....,,lp.m.

N.WEiiclanli:........ l~

Philadelphia Ill Ta~ Bay, 7:)0 p.m.·
New Jersey 31 F1orid11., 1::\0 p.m. .
Bostcn 111 Olk:&lt;l.ao. 8:30p.m.
O.tawaat St l.o\111, 8::\0 p.m.
V~ver nt San lott:, 10:30 p.m.
Anaheim at Los Anples. \0:30p.m.

' ll

·college sc:ores

'

.J.18

Monlreat ............ 22 18
Hnnfo•L ......... 2228
Otwwa .. .............2026
Boston ................20 ~I

170 148

Col, Hartley 96, Buekcyc Vall. ~2
Dowr 62, lndiDn Creek :\6
·
lakeview 84, A1hlabula 31
Limn Show~ 54, Oltawa· GII~ndnrf

- · 70, s. \JIIIh 53
t.ICLA
.2. ~ Cal60

New'l'orii• .S - . IO:JO~m. ·

l!MIOnolia "
}!( "
!Ill.
•'COLIJiot84S 'TJf 9 :ffl

'14

-

.._

TQI'CIMO II HooiiiDn. 1:30 p.m.
Bailon Ill Ulih. 9 p.•

y-Riiflmonil ..;........21 ,JI

r..-we11

. .r

ldilllli
"-7:30r.-·
L.A. Ctlppen
11 ·
l'hilode
plllo, 1:~9

•
'

Pinsburgh ......... .3112 ~

10

OlvWDn II
Akron Buc:btcl61 . Louisville 45
lk:IIQire SB, Carrolllon 49
Bia Walnut 47, Mllf)'sville 46
Cle. VA-51 72, W. Geuu10 40
C9l. DeSales 76, HebrQJl Lakewood .

71

T"!!IPt'.l...•

Tonight's pmes

Northnsl Dklskm

B'uffulo.............. 3 0 19 10

•s.

I OJ. L.A. ~ 14
Go-S..IIl.-101 •

p.in.

Edmonioa 6. TorOnto :'i

·C'LEVEJ.,.AND INDIANS : :Si&amp;ncd
R.HP Tmvis Driskill, RHP Mike Gor&amp;.'ll'l,
L.HP Mike tdauhewa •.RHP Teddy Wwrreckct. l.MP _
cuey Wlitlen. INF Damian·
J;u:kson. INF Rrt:hle Suson ontl OF
Bruce A ven to one· )'Cal conlrOCIS.
TEXAS RANGERS: ·A.peed to tmns
with 28 Edwin Diu on a cne-ye&lt;~r cun·
unci.

CloverleDt' Jj, Midpark 3~ ·
Col. Brookhann 64, Col. Eruunoor

. .-n

\14. V

Mi

CLIIVELAJIII)

HDrtford i. ·Phil*lphla2 (tit)
Delroit 4, Calgary; 0

WtlShingiDn ........ 2329 1f 52 lSI 166
N.Y. hlnndcrs .... l9l9 10 48 1~6 171
Tampa Bay ........ 20 29 1 41 l:'iJ 117

Wednesday's ocores

III-I

Barberton 73, Akron Kenmore 23
Oe. Kennedy 43. Cle. Sa&amp;uh 36

-9l.I'Onlllollol
T-W.S.-!12

t

.

FloridaSI.~: A-.st•9

.

w..... .,

HockinJ6~

Di•iolon IY '
Milrord Cent« Fairbnnb 66, E. K~Mn

-81
NbfthC.Oiina7•. Wobfomt60
Otd Dominiol 99, "--ean U. 61
• ' RicM!oad6l,W-l5
Soutbmt Mill. 10, Min. V•lley St

7 .ntl

..

.

•.:................., ,5 .ln t9
. Wed~'IKWtl \

.
~:!!!.•cao .....
_.Jf
_.. ~, "11111

CIJSTOMIR SIGN~TURI----:......,_\_...,......:--'---~-~---'---

Wheelersburg 76.. ft'deml

· , N.c.:'NltlninatcSn 91 , Va. Common-

12
19

:341 '

~2

36

MAC ........

''"ONE_~~~~~~~·~·--~'~------~------------­
j

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' ADDRES!I..,.___,..
NAME--------------~----~-------------------____________..,..........;_ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ __

.,\

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Seonle .................... 36 .15 .~
I
,zs ' .528 91
Sa&lt; '
o......... ,;tl4 29 · .4SJ Ill
L.A. (l!Won ...... ~.21 'n .431
14
Goldllli,~ ., ........ 20 · lQ ·•r,~.· ·~

~

:

·

W;

IAilh 53

I llot!oo C&lt;&gt;ltep S9. Miami 57
Aadda76,,...,.._64

21 ·

.

4ol

South .·

ll•

18 .6Sol
., .491

N. Collcac Hill69. Bethel-Tate 49
Nelsonville- York 6S, S. Websler 59
PikdOn 46.lane Trace 30
Ripley 6.4i, Cin: Doet Park ~9
Steubenville Cath. 63. Martins ftrTJ'

' VilllnOv• 6$·, St. John's~

'

' . . . . . .~... ........1.....28

'

$16 995
··s
.
18f995
. -

1994
CHRYSLER
TOWN &amp; . COUNI1lY • V6,
automatic,
leather, all-power, · t, cruise,
cassette, one-owner, lOcal tra~ ·:...........;~.:.........,...Only
1~4NISSAN PA'IHFINDERSE -V6, ·
automatic, aJl.~wer, tilt,,cruise, casse~;
·factorywarranty
.
. ·

Q&gt;~ 81 '

t•~

-JN.L.A. Laken ............ J7 15 .712

..

'

I~

Middlelown Madison 40, Way ·
nttville :11

Eut

I,

.

39 .21!
v..................... 11 4J :196

17.·995
$12 995! :
·

7'1..

'

. sa. o\.-.... . . .

~

~power, tilt, cruiSe ..................................................... Only ·

.~

l4

NCAA Division I
men's
. sc:ores

~lii-

.................~
111'-.............16
•. Dllt. ..................... J7
Det... ................... J7
.12 '

. . .

.

.47.1

OHIO • t:ear. lllidiipn
Toledo•BowliOJO...

29

16~
21~

.471

Miami 01 w. Michipa

r,~

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Dbl"""'lll
Cin. Readina 62, Gtorttetown .56
Day. Otrillian 79. Oixte 37
Fon Frye 78, Ridpaad 69 (01)
FntnkJon Adeu. 74, Lynchbura Cay

.., 6. MidliPII
Saturday'•olllal Si.

16

11%

Watervil!e: N. 64,1.Anwtet 60
Dlvid.,. II . .,
Cin. McNicholas 60. N. Bend Tay~
46
.
'
· Cin. ReadinJ 62, GeoraeroWn !6 '
Norwood 56, Cin. Turpin 46 .

~- 98, C&lt;tr. Michlpn J5
1. ·KON
7). Boll Sl. 58
1' I Millfli 64, 8owliRJ Qfeen$9
. W. MidliPIII2, ll. Mi&lt;hlpn 77

..

'&amp;T.. . . .. :. . . . ~.Jf

i994 Bl!fCK,LESABRE- V6,automatic,

1995
LT
4X4 ·- 4
automatic, V6, all-power,
.·
.
·teat:Jter seats, very nice ...·....·.... :~ ............. .-.,.... ~···~··~ ....... ~ .....Only

I.

.66"!
.rot

j

2

~016 .88.~

'

'

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Chi"'JO ................. 46

-·5speed, V6;stereo,

.
all-power, tilt, crutse, cassette,
.
one O"WDer, like new ........ ~ ...................... ~ ............... ~ .............0nly

' '

· WFSI'UNCONFERENCE

5·J995
.·
=-~=~·~-:,::::.=::.Only$ 9,995
$14 995
$12 995
~HEVROLET B~
~r. $20 995
J ·

Daily Sentinel

•

r..
»: "
loljonoi ....................40 11

~ 16 ·.:i04
6 !1 .261

.~1 ' W~tiCaday's ~coils

't ,,.,,

'

EASTERN CONnRENC!

$

rear slider,
one owner ........................·..................................... ~~............Only

'

JI!BAs.anctlngs

~~~.~.~-~-~~.~. ~:~}11,995
1994; TOY&lt;YfA C/C 4X4

: · ' .I

'

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~~TAURUS

.m

~!"· 111~ ..... 3 '·1 ; .200.

as new boss .~

$11 995·
$15 995

~

. Atroo ............ s 10

'

.! '

Cr-at SelectiOn o·f ": .
Pre-Owned .Vehieles

13 WEEKS For Only
$18.20

,,.

.,
(

I

=:~:.~=-~~~.~~~~~:. ~~.~:~.~-~~:.~~~ . .:. . .

Th~
'·

'

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From:

.I

'

(14-12, 4-9), who played their third
straiaht game with three players on
suspension and with only only eight
scholarship players on the active roster. ·
Texas 57, No. 7 Iowa St. 56
Dcnni• Jordan's tip-in with 3.3
seconds left gave the Longhorns (158, 9-4 Big 12) a 3-21 rec~rd against
Top ,10 teams in nine seasons under
coach Tom Penders. Kenny Pratt's

Scoreboard

allows racers to inspect the equipment first-hand and deal one-on-one
with the seller/owner. This allows a
.
'
luxury not available to buyers atvar- By The Associated Press
· to bli ,playing against them;" Blazers points, 10 rebounds and four blocks poirits and the Hornets tied .a .club • ·
ious auctions, where purchases are
It was a bittersweet win .for Richie coach PJ. Carlesimo said. "I thought as Atlanta rebounded from its wont record with 14 three-pointers. Antho- . :
often made sight unseen. The set-up . Adubato.
they competed and played with. a lot 1oss of the season. Mookie Blaylock ny Mason and Vlade.Divac each had :
also gives .local racer tlie chance to
had 19 points and Christian Laettner 19 points for Charlotte, which f11ade
The Orlando Magic gave Aduba- of purpose."
sell those .. no-longer-needed parts to a victory in his first game as their
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was added 16 for the Hawks, who lost to 13 of I7 field-goal attempts in the
lying around the garage, or affords a interim coach, beating the Portland Charlotte 123, Phoenix 115; Atlanta Houston 127-98 Monday night. The final quarter to win for the 14th time
racer the opportunity to trade up to Trail Blazers 95-84 Wednesday ioo, Indiana 87; DctrQit 100, Wash- Hawks have wori 21 of their last 22 in 19 games. Rice was II of24 from
belter equipment.
ington 85: Toronto 125, San Antonio home games. Reggie Miller scored the field, including six of eight fJVm
night.
Racing apparel, trick chassis, top
But it wasn't a completely happy 92; Minnesota 84, Vancouver 73; 19 points .for Indiana. but' was only three-point range. Kevin Johnson
racing engine builders, fu~ kart night for Adubato because he got the and Golden State ·JI 2, Boston 101.
5-of-11from the field.
had 25 poiniS and 14 assists for the
accessories, tools, trailers, Jr. Drag- job after his friend Brian Hill was
Hawks 100, Pacers 87
· HoneiS 123, Suns ll5
Suns.
.
stcrs arid various displays will high- fired Tuesday.
Dikembe Mutombo had . 17
At Charlotte, Glen Rice scored 36 '
(See NBA on Page 5)
light the event.
'"As great a victory as it was, it's
Reserved indoor selling spaces a lillie sad for me," said Adubato,
will he available at $15 per space or who coached Hill in high school and
outdoor spaces are available at $7. was an assistant under him for 3 112
General admission to the public is seasons in Orlando. "I'm really hap- ·
$2: Dealers are welcome.
py that the players came out and
Acouple added attractions for the gave me the effort. But still, it's a
event will be the newly acquired tough situation. n
sprint car of Rutland area racer LonHill was dismissed after his playnie Darst. Darst, a fanner karting ers complained about the way he
champion, turned stock ·car dr.i ver handled the team, which was off to
recently entered the world of sprint a 24-25 start. Magic fans showed
c~r racing, tho~ winged warriors
their displeasure with .the firing by
w1th 800 fuelmJected horses under- booing starters Penny Hardaway,
1994 PLYMOUI11 GRAND VOYAGER - V6,
automatic, air, all-power, 7-passenger, tilt, .cruise,.~tte,
the hood of a I,200-pound frame.
Horace Grant, Dennis Scoll ·and
Additionally, in~ified champi~n Nick Anderson during pregame
cassette, local ttade ............................................................Only' .
' . .
Randy Sc1tz 111111 h~ve h~s introductions.
·
AMRAIUMP champ1on~h1p modl"That's all right. We still love the
1997JEEP:WRANGI.ER4X4- 5speedair,
tied stock car chassts on dtsplay. Var· fans," Scott said. "In fact, thanks for
ious other attractions include racing booing us, because it motivated us
~
Only
'
videos and a~tograph sessions.
even more."
.' Concessions foqhe event will be
Hardaway scored seven of his 2 i
provided by D &amp; M pizza of Syra- poiniS in · the last three minutes .for .
cuse. Show umes run from 8 a.m. to Orlando, which put the g11111e away
6 p.m.
with •·13-2 surge after Magic center
For more information please call Rony Selkaly was ejected for argu. &lt;:;huck Clark at 614-992-7717 or ing with 5:24 left.
1991
WAGoN GL -,)'6,
Jason Shain at6J4,949-2864.
automatic, mr, all-power,
·
.
"I don't think it was .a good time
tilt, cruise, local b'ade............................................ ~.:.........Only"
·.

Special Offer·

I

Brandon wound up just 7-of-18
from the field, including 2-of-S from
three-point range. But he made alll4
of his foul shoiS - nine in the foorth
quarter.
Neither team had led by more
than seven points before the Cava.Jiefs took conlmand. Elden Campbell
had 23 points and eight rebounds and
Eddie Jones added 21 points for the
Lakers.
,
"They were able to break us
down on defense," said lakers point
· guard Nick .Van Exel, who-was held
· to nine points and seven rebounds.
"They got a lot of easy shots for
themselves, and everybody was ereating for them."

.

North Carolina upsets No. 4 Wake Forest; Kentucky ·wins

Page4
Thu111day, February 20, 189'7

Meigs to face Vinton County in D-11 sectional .bout Friday
By DAVE HARRIS .
Sentinel Correapondent
1be Meigs Marauders will kick
off their second season on Friday
evenipg when they travel to South
Webster for Division n sectional
toUrnament basketball action against
a familiar opponent, the Vinton
County Vikings.
The two Ohio Division rivals
have met on the hardwood twice this
season with each team taking a win
on their home court. Meigs defeated
the Vikings 46-43 back on Decemher 6th, and the Vikings gained a
measure of revenge on January 28th
by defeating .the Marauders 60-54.
ln the first game at Rock Sprmgs ·
it was a dog fight from the opening

The Deily Sentinel• Pege 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

I

•

882.a74

VINE STREET AT THIRD AVENUE
GALLIPOll8, OH·
.I
.614 446·1~76
MON- FRI7AM • 6:30 I'M; SAT 8 AM·

"

J

.

OP £:1'1 SUNDAY
10 . 4

LUHBER
'

'

;••
I

J

�•

.
11Hndly, February 20, 1997
•
P111 8 • The Dlllly Sanlltul

Pom1roy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

'

~

..•"'•
..•

Osgood,
Muzzatti,
Rictlter
and
Brodeur
higtllight
wins
.

crs, one of the top scoring ieams in
By lOB GREENE
».._,..Welw
theNHL.
Richter lll8de three gte11 saves in
NHL ga.lies normally ue in the
the late going as the Rangen posted
lpOdiJht.
.
"You get more auenlion when their second sttaight tic with the New
you play bad thin when you play Jersey Devils, 1-1.
good and win," Delroit goalie Chris
The only other NHL game
Osgood admitted; "It gets tU:esame. Wednesday night was a shootout,
with Mariusz Czerkawski scoring
sometimes."
Wednesday night, Osgood drew three goals arid adding an assist as
cheers, not jeers. And he wasn't Edmonton wilhstood Toronto's third·
period charge for a 6-S victory.
alone.
Tomas Sandslrom scored two
Hllrtford's Jason Muzzatti, Mike .
Richter of the New York Rangers goals to lead Delroit as the Red
and New .Jersey's Martin.Brodeur- Wings snapped Calgary's siJt·game
unl)eaten streak. Osgood's 13th
J08ltenders all- also sparkled.
O.sood stopped all 28 shots he career shutout gave him a 4-1 record
faced -some of the dazzling vari- in his last five starts after going 1·3·
ety -for his fifth shutout of the sea· J..in his previous five games.
son u the Red Wings blankF the
"I guess I was just doing the same
Calgary Flames 4-0. ·
thing all the time," Osgood said. "I
Muzzatti stopped 23 of 25 shots just wasn't getting the breaks. It's
· in the Whalers' imprt:Ssive2·2 tie on just a.pan of growing up and comthe road against the Philadelphia Fly·

On baseball's spring training scene,

.

ing of age."
Sandllrom has scored four goals,
including three in his las! two pmes.
since the Red Wings oblained him in
a Jan. 27 trade with Pittsbtqb.
"I think every &amp;lillie I feel better
and better," he said. "Every time
after a trade, it takes some time to get
used to your linesmen."
··
Playing in his l,OOOth regular·
season game, Steve Yzerman assist·
ed on .Delroit's first three goals.
including both of Sandstrom's
scores.
Wbalen :Z, Flyen 2
Kevin Dineen scored both of
Hartford's goals. But it was Muz~
zatti's sparkling goaltcnding that let
the Whalets snap a three-game road
losing streak and improve their
record to 2·8·1 in their lui II road
contests.
.
"He made some gOod. saves, no
question," Hartford coach Paul Mau-

rice said of Muu.lli. "Thlt'1 what
we ' - ' qaillll louD lite INt.
wilh bialhoolm. A lot of the IIVCI
were standup &amp;aves. He wun'tlaying on his back picking them out of
the air. He looked confident."
Muzzatti was especially sttonsln
the third period; when the Flyers
failed to ~ore on three power plays.
Raqen 1, Del'lla 1 '
In Bast Rutherford, Richter
stopped 31 shots as the Rangers
remained unbeaten against New Jer- .
sey this season (2-0.2).
"He really rises to the occasion
against us," said Devils captain
Scott Stevens, who was stopped by
Richter on a 3-on-1 break with nine
seconds left in overtime. "He.makes
the big saves."
In four games, Richter has faced
I59 shots by New Jersey and
allowed four goals. Steve Thomas

a

'

Ann
Landers

•

"

Olen 6, l.el6 5
Ill Edmonloll. Mari..Z Czerl&lt;awski t.d throe P. IUid an aasiJt u.
pmel.
Adlm an- ~ his NHJ... Oilen took a 6-1 lead befcn 1111' •
hiah fifth pme-tying ga.l for N- viving Toronto's third-period rally. It
Yort, which exlttlded itJ winless · was Edmonton's first victory in four
•
••
strUk tq _
five aames (0.3·2).
games.
Todd Marchant. Mike Grier 111111;
· Brodeur wasn't tested u much as
Richter, bill he had 22 saves in Dean McAmrnond also scored for'.!
r
stretching his personal unbeaten Edmonton.
Wendel Clark scored twice for. ·
streak to 13 games (!1·0-S). And
while he didn't face any shots in Toronto. Sergei Berezin, Zdene
overtime, he had two 11amo-saving Nedved and Larry Murphy had ~
other goals for the Maple Leafs. •
_saves in the third perioc!. , .
1QC the only one for the Devils on

\\41 tn n 1 •y, his second in • many

TAl DEADLINE EITE

By ANN LANDERS
Ann Landers: I couldn't
~~ist writing to you after reading the
· l~tt~r about children and their messy
~ms. When my third daughter was
tli~ only one left at home, I knew vie
w,ere in for a year of battling. She
"!as. an unbelievable slob. There was
'no need for a closet. All her clothes

:.bear

.

D.

F~lany of you may be eligible for

games with New York last season,
Meyers in an eJthibition game that rules. I have always faithfully
By 11le Auoclatecl Preu
but is worried he won't play every
This time, it's Roberto Alomar's will be worked by umpire John adhered to those rules. •:
Belle, who until now had spent day this season.
ankle that's causing ihe problem, not ' Hirschbeck, whom Alomar spit on
"I think'he wants an e~tension on
las~ September after being ejected
his _entire big league career with
his saliva.
B'altilllore"s second baseman will from a game in Toronto. Cleveland, promised to answer base· his contract," Yankees owner Geo!p ·
miss most of the eJthibition season Hii'schbeck's first regular-season · ball-related questions today. He said Steinbrenner said at Tampa. Fla. "I'd
because of a sprained left ankle. A game with the Oriol.es is scheduled during a deposition that he lost as be very surprised if that isn 'I· it I ·
test. on Alomar's ankle revealed a for "pril 22, when the Chicago much as $40,000 gambling on sports think he wants to he with the team."
other than baseball ..
moderate to severe strain, and the White SoJt are at Camden Yards.
~en: Texas rejected a proAlomar was given a five-day
Yankees: Cecil Fielder. who has posal by catcher Ivan Rodriguez for
Orioles said Wednesday .'the seven-.
· time All-Star could be sidelined up suspension for the spitting incident demanded the Yankees trade him by a $38.75 million, five-year contract
and will sit out the first live games March 15, was a no-show on the with options that cduld pay him $85
to four weeks.
·
·
team's voluntary reporting date. million over 10.years.
"I can't be disappointed. There of the 1997 season.
White Sox: Baseball's other bad Manager Joe Torre said he eJtpected
are worse lhings that happen in
"Unfortunately, we were not able
life," Alomar said at Fort Laud- boy, Alben Belle, reported f~r his · Fielder to report today, when the , to work out a longer tenn deal at this
erdale, Fla. "I'm in good shape, so first camp with the White Sox and Yankees hold their first full squad stage," agent Jeff Moorad said. "So
all !.need is a week or a week and a issued a written statement saying he workout.
we've agreed to let Pudge focus on
"I think he'll be here," Torre said. getting ready for the coming seadidn't gamble on his own sport.
half to get ready to play."
Alomar, who is on crutches, twist"I want to make one thing clear: "I wouldn't he here today if I'm him. son. ''
I
have
never bet on baseball," Belle's He knows all you people are waiting
ed the ankle on a wet floor at home
Rodriguez avoided arbitration by
in Pl!eno Rico, dlen .aggravated it statement said, adding that this for .him."
· agreeing to a $6.65 minion, one-year
·Although the Yankees · set coo tract.
while playing in a charity baskethall would be his last comment oil the
W~nesday as the voluntary report· ·
.subject. .
game a week ago.
Padres: When, ilr if, Rickey Hen"It'll probably be more like.three ·
"I was never asked during the ing date, ba5eball's ·mandatory . derson shows .up for San Diego's
Wl!Cks," Orioles general, manager Pat deposition if I bet on baseball;" Belle reporting date isn't until March I.
first full-squ~ workout today 1\1 PeoAcquired from Detroit last July ria, Ariz .• an already delicate situa·
Gillick said. "He'll get therapy every said at Sarasota, Fla. "Each· year,
day and aggressive treatment."
major league baseball oft"tcials speak ·31, Fielder is due $7.2 million lhis lion figures to meet its sternest test.
Alomar certainly ws&gt;n't be in to all of the major league teams and season, the final year of a five-year
Henderson, the 38-year-old left
uniform on March 17, when the Ori- emphasize that.hetting on baseball is · deal worth $36,187;500. He hit ..260 fielder; enters camp as trade bait
oles j)lay the Boston Red SoJt at Fon'. forbidden by major league baseball's with 13 homers and 37 RBis in 53

· 1996 LINCOLN .
TOWN CAR

ATLANTA (AP)
Teresa
Edwards scored 13 of her 23 points
in the fourth qu~r. including a pair
of free throws with seven seconds
lefno give the Atlanta Glory an 87·
8S win over the Columbus Quest in
the Ameri,can Basketball League
Wednesday.
Stacey Lovelace scored a gamehigh 27 points as the Glory ( 18-22)
ended its inaugural season by beat- .
ing the Eastern Conference champions.
Columbus (31-9) was led by
Tonya Edwards' 17 points. Nikki
McCray added 14, while Katie Smitll
had 13 and Valerie Still had II.
Carla McGhee and Laurie Byrd
each scored 12 points for Atlanta.

"SIGNATURE SERIES"
luto, A/C, Ult, Crulll,
AMn=M Clll, all
equip, IHihar.

:

.

I

.

~

Sports dead!lnes
The deadline for photos and related articles for basketball (summer
basketball and related carnps fall
under the ~ummer sports deajlline)
and other winter spoils is the last day
of the NBA finals.
The deadline for $Ubmissions of
local baseball·
softball-related
photos and related articles, f~:Dm T·
ball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer.sports, is the day
of the last game of the World S~ries. ·

and

·

following items with you to the library:
· .. A copy of your 1995 taJt return, if you have one.
--Social Security numbers for the worker, spouse "and
any children in the household born·before Dec. l, 1996.
· It is helpful to bring the Social Security cards, if avail·
able •.to enS"ure the necessary infonnation is copied correctly onto the taJt return.
.
·-W-2 forms from all 1996 jobs. Workers who' didn't
get W-2s should still come to VITA. Volunteers can
assist in verifying income.
--1099-G form if you received unemployment insurance benefits at any time in 1996.
--1099-INT if you received bank interest in 1996.
Any statements received from a m9rtgage company ·
during 1996.
·
If you haven~ filed a taJt· return in a long time, you
can still g'el the Earned Income Credit. If you were eligible. you can claim the EIC for three years back. Call
the IRS to find out how .(J-8()().829-1040 • the line is ·
often busy, so be patient).
I(you owe back taJtes, the EIC may lower your taJt
bill. ·You may also·he able to work out a payment agreement. In almost.all cases, the Earned Income Credit does
not affect benefits like AFDC, Food Stamps, SSI, Medicaid or liousing.

..

~~~!are~~~u~ll~-!i~·.m~e~s~\uid~en~ts~.~]~otal~ly~~·anid~-~~~,·-~~~Beginning

PS, PB, PW, PDL,

Mit., AMIFM cau.

AM/FMcttll.

KEYLESS ENTRY'
1993·FORD

1993

ESCORT LX
Stlllon Wagon, ., 4
auto, •lr cond; PS,
tilt, CfUIH, AMIFM atarao.

.

meeting for Meigs High School · MONDAY
POMEROY .. Meigs Co11nty
prom, 6 p.m. .Thursday, high school
prOfit gl'!lllpl willblq to IDDOIIDCC library. Junior parents as,ked to Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m Monday at \he Veterans Service
meetbtg and1 special evenu. 1be . attend. '
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy..
w~ndar b not dealped to pro.
mote alea or lund nben olany FRIDAY
RACI~ ·· ·Inspection, Pomeroy TUES~AY
type. Items are-printed as space
RACINE -- Southern Local .
permits and cannot be gu&amp;1'811teed Racine ~ge 164, F&amp;AM, 7:30
p.m. Friday at the hall. Work in fel- School Board, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
to nan • specift!: ·number of days.
lowcraft degree. Members to take Letart ElementarY School.
pies
..
Tii:UJlSDAY
·
.
POMEROY .. Lenten worship
:services, 'Ill~rsday; 7:30 p.m at the
·St. Pauf llithenin Church with th.e
Rev. ltobeft Robinson preaching.
.'Sponsored by Meigs Ministerial
Association.

The Community . Calendar Ia
· poblilhed 1!11 1 free service to non·

•r.

·'.

.

.

POMEROY ,.. Organizational

T~BIRD

v•.

Supercharged
AJC, PS, PB, PW,
Pwr Mtll, Ult, cru111.

'1

• OHIO Co WU WELFARE
• FEDERAL EMPLOYEES • COMPENSRTI ON
•BOILERMAKERS
• CLAIMS PRO
• . ETNR •EMPRESS SCRIPS •P.C,S.
-•UNITED MINE WDRK(ftS
\
• UNITED HERLJH CRRE
•BLACK LUNG i PAID •WU PEIR
• URLUE RH ,
IF I ED • BLUE tRUSS • RND OTHERS

GRAND PJUX .
2 dr. SE,

ve,

cond, .AM/FM

. CHEERLEADING CHAMPION -Tuppers Plains claimed the cheerleadlng title In the Ea1tem Athlat·
lc Booetara elementary tournament. In front are, left, Jessica Boyles and Justine Murphy. In the middle
row ara Erica Lamoni, Nicole Honaker, Kasaandra Lodwick. In the back row are Ashley Boylea, Usa
Smith, Carrie Wiggins and coach.Jenny Co.nklln.
•.

Plants' gas signals: Danger! One of us is sick

••.sTAIIT YOUR ENGINES!!!"

LA·Z·BOY RECLINERS

*-

ZENITH BIG SCREENS
· AND

MUCH MORE!!

MASON
IS OFFERING
MwtH:ed VIdeo
REMARKABlE 52. "Dia. 4A lmOglllg'"
. " '
New 2·Tuner Picture-in-Picture
SAVINGS . · •• 4-Jack
Front Panel, 2 RF, 16-Jack
Jl:ear Audip/Video Jack Panel,
ON EVERY Including S·Video/Satellite Ready

Clll,

1'HRIS REGISTERED PURMACISTS
' SMITs ...... .
· oasEI'iVls ' BiRTHDAY ..,..
o.C.r ·Wablt: ~latty obii!'V!Id
his &amp;2nd blrtl\clay recanUy at hla
hOme with family meinban. A
dlnnar . . . '14!rvad and photograph• tlkan. Whlla Mr.
Wtbat"• •lly acllvltlaa ere llmJt.
ad:ancl hi· II conft."'lad to hie bad
and 'W\IMIChilr for tha moet
Dirt.·he dola enJoy -.lng and
huilng trom ~cia and nelahbora. Hi. ~rase II 48330
~~~~ Ml Chaltar, Ohio.
.

a gas that triggers disease resistance found that tobacco plants infected ·
with tobacco mosaic vinis produce
. in neighboring plants.
"To our knowledge, (this) is the oil of wintergreen, a volatile liquid .
first airborne signal to he shown to that functions as the alrbome signal.
be involved · in communication The same chemical also is produced
between infected and healthy by other plants.
· Heallhy plants that received the
plants," say the researchers,
Vladimir Shulaev, Paul Silverman signal built up their supplies of sali·
, and llya Raskin, in the journal cylic .acid, which is essential to plant
immune function, and increased
Nature.
In the study~ the researchers olher immune system activity.

THE GREEN FLAG HIS DROPPED•••SIGIIILING THE ·
BEGINNING OF ANOTHER UCING SEASON!!!
TIME FOR YOU TO UCE ON .IN TO
MASON
FOR
SPEf::TA£1JLAR
$AVINGS$

auto,

crillll, 111 pwr. equip.

Send queao- toADia Landen,:
Creston Syadkate, 5777 W. Ceo-:
tury Blvd., Suite 70il, Los AD1'le1,:
Calli. !10045

\

WE •FILL PRESCRIPTIONS.'AND DO THE
. ;1LL1NG FOR THE FOLLOWING:

.,

Su.,r Coupe,

Dear G.L.W.: Three cheerS for :
the neatniks and for you. Your chit· :
dren sound like a great group. Be~
proud.

•

"C

.

V6, auto, A/C, tilt, crul•, PS, PB, PW, PDL, leal:"·
loaded.

4 Dr, VI, auto,
CNIII, PS, PB,

In the :big house, their rooms
were upstairs, and their dad's and
mine was downstairs. I never went
· into their rooms without permission.
If I needed something from upstairs,
all the kids rush~'(~ to get it. I scheduled inspection for Saturday morn-

.

Buying that house was a wiae ·
move. They lUIC all neatniks now. - :
'
G.L.W. in Redlands, Calif.

·. '

yo~

--Community calendar

1995 FORD 1EXPLORER 2 DR 4x4

MERCURY
COUGAR
V8, IUtO, A/C, Ult, Crull...

go back to work. I explained I couldn't work all day and come home and
do housework and lapndry, too, so
they would have to pitch in. Not
only did they agree to do the bouse·
work and laundry, lhey offered to do
the dinners as well. I must admit,
some ·evenings we had rather odd
meals, but we ate.

•

ing. It was apparent 1"-t they kaew :
how to clean from the way they kept •
the downstairs, and I must say, they :
did a wonderful job. . ·
'

Since people who are eligible for the EIC eatn low
incomes. it usually dOesn't make sense for them to pay
for 'taJt preparation when there is another choice. This
choice is the Volunteer Income TaJt Assistance. It is a
free, IRS-sponsored program to help low-income work·
ers, including anyone eligible for the EIC, fill out their
taJt forms.
The Volunteer lllcome Tax Assistance (VITA) in our
area is held every Monday evening from 6 p.m. until 8
p.m. 111 the Pomeroy J&gt;ublic Library through April 14. It
is on a first-come, fli'St-served basis. VITA volunteers
· are trained by the IRS to fill out taJt forms and answer
·
questtons,
If you want to receive help from the Volunteer··
Income Tilt As{istance program, y()u need to bring the ·

*w

1995
GRAND

alford. the house would be for me to

By DOUG LEVY
USA TODAY
Plants have a way of .signaling
danger in much the same way as ani·
mals use scents and sounds to warn
others about approaching predators,
'scientists have found.
Researchers at the· AgBiotech
in invcs~nt
1996, you cannot
~c.eivc=&lt;l vc=arl~
!!I.~O~~claim
~talithe
II~ .EIC
~&lt;&gt;rllif,ths,n Center, Rutgers University, · New
yollr ov,erall m~ome was,w1thin the EIC · Brunswick, N.J., discovered that
al)d you were otherwise eligible. Invest' plants infected with a virus give off
I, .
ment income includes: interest, whether tauble or taJt·
Many workers who are eligible for the EIC do not•' eJtempt; dividend income; the net amount of income
feel comfortable filing 'out iheir tal! fonns themselves. from the rental of personal property, such as equipment
But hiring a commercial taJt preparer may cost diem $25 or·vehicles; and net income from capital gains.
~o · $6S. It can cost another $30 to .$60 to get • · "quick .
To see if you an! eligible for the Earned Income Cred·
refund" that comes back' in just a few days.
IRS it, contact the Internal Revenue Service at the 800 nomprocedures affecting the time it takes to issuetrefunds ber given above or drop by the Pomeroy Public Library
may make tjlis.service even more expensive. Piiying for on Monday evenings between 6 and 8 p.m. You may
,taJt preparation takes away .money from a worker's EIC. qualify.

injuries twice put him out of the lineup for' long stre!CIIes, appeared in 95
e~s and hit .211 with .one home
run and f2 RBis. · '
·
Sancher, whOle career•average'is
.264, is competing with Shawon
Dunston for the starting sh,ortstop
spot this spring. He asked for
$1,425,000 in arbitration, and the
CubS attemptCd to cut his salary to
Sl.l million. The setllemenl was
$25,000 above the midpoint.

Glory defeat
Quest 87-1!5

fiFTtf.QR'ADE 1 CHAMPION - The Bell" IE8ton, Stwe Aleunder, ·Doug Pa18011s. l.n ,t ha
Ot•~&amp;e claimed the ftflh-tradllltle I!I tha Eat· •• c0.'111 I row are Guylel . Laduca, Tom Wolfe,
em A~ aa.._IM 1 alet'l*ltarr tournamant.ln ·· Abram Upcllka, Eric Hayt~ Md coach Dirk left·
front ft (L-A) o!uatin Cllna, Kulrt Wile, ~ wick.
·

~oSt:S: to reduce the taJt burden on these workers, to
s}lplllement wages and to make work more attractive
t~in. welfare. .
.· • .
. ; : workers who qualify for the Earned Income' Credit
"""
(""'-) l!'ld file a federaltu tetum can get back some or
lilt Of the•~~raJ income lilt that was taken outof their
paf. during thii yea,r; They may also, get eJttra cash back
f~l]! the, I~ ~e~,enuc S~rvicc. Eveh workers whose
e)lfnmgs ~ small to have prud taxes can get the
~~~. What'{ ilfdre, the EIC reduces any additional taJtes
wetkers m~y owe,
~~ Single or married people who workejl fuii'Jime or
lial! time at some_point in 1996 can qualifyc&lt;for the
Earned Income Credit, depending on thew income:
. ; ; Y,.orkers who were raising one child in their home
antJ.had family income of less than $25,078 inl996 can
. get.an EIC of up to $2,152.
1
. Workers who were raising more thim one ~~jtild in
· . tltei'r home and had family income of less than ~,28,495
1
hi ~996 can get an EIC of up to $3~56. ·
· )Vorkers who wen: not raising children in t~'lf !Jome
liut_were between ages 2S and 64 on Dec. 31, 1'996 and
~income below $9,500 can gel an EIC of up to $323.
,, .Qualifying children include: sons, daughters,
st~pchildren; grandchildren and adopted ~hildren, as
long as they lived with the ·laJtpayer for more than half
.the)'ear. Nieces, nephews, children of a friend'tlr foster
children (an he "qualifying children" if they lived wilh
the :.Upayer all year and were cared for as members of
lhe family.
·
c.
children must he under age !9,.or under

·rc

Wakefield wins salary case against Boston Red Sox
By RONALD BLUM
a 28-year·old · right-hander, led to raise his salary from $235,000 to
$W YORK (AP) - Altnou11h · Boston in wins last season, going 14- $550,000. The Blue Jays argued lhat
BOitotl knuckleballe1 Thn' Wake- 13 with a 5.44. BRAin 32 starts. He he should be awarded $380,000.
'Risley, a .29-year-old right-han·
field WC!n his salary case, baseball . made $450,000.
. .
ownera clinched a winning arbitra·
Owners have won three of four · der. wu 0.1 with a 3.89 ERA in 2S
lion record for the first time in two cases.decided this winter, defeating relief appearances last season. ·
.Sanchez and the Cubs, scheduled .·
yjiii'S when Chicago Cubs infielder Tom Goodwin, Aaron Sele and Dar·
for
a hearing Friday, agreed on a one·
Rey Sanchez sctded.
- r:yl Kjle.
year
contract worth 51,287,500, a
. Wakefield was awarded $2.5 milIn the final arbilralion case among
.
lion Wednesday by arbiirator James- the 80 players who filed last month, raise of $87;500.
Sanchez, 29, started last season as
Duff; rather than the $1.55 million Toronto pitcher Bill Risley asked
off~ by the Red Sox. Wakefield,
arbitrator James Ross on Wednesday the Cubs • regular shortstop~ but

1

Earned fncome

&lt;1~it. It is a special.fal&lt; benefit for w~king people who
eilltR lo:w or moderate incomes. It has several important

'

Glorified in my pig sty,
Reveling in my pis pen,
And reaching out to touch the
mess
That is forever,
For always,
FOI' I!O&lt;Jd, .
All mine.
Dear Ann Landers: 'we raiSed five
kids. Ffom' the time they were little,
they were taught to pick up after
themselves. It was simple arithmetic. There were five of them and
one of me.
When we found a large old house
with a pool, the kids begged' us to
buy it. We had a family meeting and
told them the only way we could

tot tips on taxes

By 'BECKY BAER
;
f.lelga County Extenalon Agent
Family and ·Conaumer Sillencaa/Communlty
·Development .
,;;
, It's that time of year when people are thinkinlfjlbout"
tlllog their income·taJt returns.
.
.
.

HOWARD FRANK ·
·Meigs County Treasurer

.

,

were on the 'Door.
p()em miaht help other parents see
Perhaps the SRuuteSI thing I e.ver this problem in a different light. -·
did was decide that I would spend a Martha Healy, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
warm, woaderful year with my &lt;C\ Dear Martha: Your letter will
youngest child in prepasation · for give hope to mothers of slobs everyempty nesting. (I had been a single where, How nice that your slob is so
parent sincuhe was fS months old.) talented. Here's her poem: A Picture
I decided that an honor student who of a Messy Room by Sarah Healy
I love a mess,
never broke curfew and was an ath·
Jete, a musician and a wonderful
I take comfort in it.
person could have a messy room.
I snuggle in the disarray
I later read a piece she wrote in
And huddle in the chaos. ·
high school•in her creative writing
I pull my blanket,
Warm and fuzzy,
class. I gained a new perspective on
Up to my ears .
how she folt. It made me grateful
that I had made my decision to stop
And grin from ear to ear.
nagging and not escalate a dirty
The room is mine.
room into a power play. Perhaps her ·
I lie surrounded·by upheaval,

Timeout

The deadline f~r P&amp;ylng taxes for the first
half of 1996 has been extended from Fab.
·21 to March 4. Taxes mailed In must be
postmarked on or before M•rch 4.

· l~jured ankle sidelines Alomar forlour week~ ·
.

The wonderful flip side
to
be
being
a
slob
.

•

In theNHL,

The Dally Se1,llnel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SWISHER~ LOHSE

ITEM IN. STOCK!
..

•'

• New Surf's UpTM Favorite +
Channel Selection
.A'New SoundRiteTM Volume Control
• New ICON Trilingual On-Screen
Menu Displays
• Dark Texlured. Maryland Oak or
Royal Oak Color Finish
Hrak·
Remotes
Avalllble $cntttn Slzal

'

~A
"Yeu'N In

.

19". 20". 25". 27''. 32".
35". 48". 52" .

'

THROUGHOUT THE STORE!!

£. MAIN

992·2955

POMEROY, OH.

Ken~ McCullough; R. Ph. ·

•'

.

wn....,.,, Clre.." At.••

MASON FURNITURE CO.

Chlrl11 Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald H8nnlng, R. Ph.
• thni Sit, 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Sunct.j 10:00 1.m. .top 4:00p.m.

_.~·Friendly S.,VIce ;open W•

~

QUAUTY FURNITURE

.
REASONABLE PRIC!S .
"SERVING WEST VIRGINIA tl OHIO FOR OVER 45 YEARS"

'ttl II ·
I

21D $TRill

(304) 773·5192·
•

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Thurlday, February 20,1187

Pom1 Of • Mllldl1port, Ohio

--Society scrapbook. LIGHTING CONTEST
land Conten' Meigs Clillic, MulberWINNERS
ry Heigllts, Pomeroy 011 wooHoliday liJhting coolest wianm days, S 10 6 p.m. beaillllina March s.
have beea IIIIIOWICed by the Rutland
The pnm.y toe .. of the poup

Reedsville

United

~!'OR
IIIDI
,..,.,. Plalno·Choolor
-.Dtllllot
- · lw3011aod .
llu-1&lt;·1, Ohlo411771
lt;s• -.ot IIWo for
tho -..otlon of Wlllr
IIIFIIi :=robin lnta..
... "111··-llullen::
'
"
-.
Platna·Ch•otor
111r
Dloblot
ollloo of lie
lllppera Plolno·Choolor
_ , D . _ , 311111 lor 30
Rood, Roodevlllo, Ohio
411772 Until 3:00 p.111. (local
liMo), April 2, 1117, and
then .t Nld ofllco publ~ly
OI*IICilnd,.... otoucL
.Tho worll covtNcl loy tho
Controct Oocumonte
lncludM tile following:
Cantroct tl-2, WTr8namloolon ~The
0 It I m a t e d
conatructton coot lo
P50,000 •• ol February,
111t7.
TIM BIC!dlng Documents
moy btl .....,...... ot:
liiPPII" Plalno·Chllter
Water Dtatrtct, 3illl1 hr 30
. llooct, IIEodnlllo, OH 411772
. Dodge Reparte, 11115
Dublin Rood, Collnbuo, OH
43211
·
Burgle &amp; Nlplo, Umllad,
4424 Emerton A - ,
,............,., WY 21104
Dod go Roparte, 405
Copltol Stroat, Sullo sot,
~ WY 26301
Coplol al the Bidding
Dacumenta moy bo
purchooed ot: Burgooo &amp;
Nlpte, Limited, 4424
E m • r • on
.A - ,
"•rkoroburg, WV 21104
' upon poymont of $50.oo,·all
·of WhiCh Will btl NfVndod to
tM uneuccoooluiiiiDDEIIS
. upon returning tho
, ~':
. ·=·mptly anct In
,....,.
·, Praopectlvo B.IDDERS
moy edd,.ll lnqulrl.. to:
Bilrgooa • Nlplo, Umllad,
4424 Emerton A - .
Parktraburg, WY 21104,
(3114) 411 toU
Tho Tupporo Plaint•
Cheater Wotar Dletrlcl
IM right to reJoct
ony and all Bide or to
lncreato or docreaae or
o.mlt ony Item or ltema
ondlar ._rd to tho lowoot
and boat BIDDER. Each
propoeot muat contoln tho
lu!l nomo of ovory poraon ar
coinpony lntornlld In tho
•mo. Tho Tuppo;. Plot,..
Cheater Woter. DlaUict
re"rva the right to woiYO
, ony lnformolltt•• or
lrregulorllloo In 1M Bidding'.
' By' order of the 1\lppon1
Plolna-Chootor
W...,

Methodill

Women.
Meeting recently 11 the cllureb
with Ann Lacomb as he 't!s, die
memben voted on the two projects.
ie Mash read the PllrJIOIC of the
UMW and had prayer for the sick in
the community and Delores Fran~
read the 13th chapter of I Cor. and ·
gave a meditation, ~The Magic of
Love."
·

Friendly &lt;brdenen.
will be to ediii*C cbildrea on bow
The best overall decoration to deal with lnFf in lppiOilliMe and
prizes of $25 each l!llint to the resi· e,ffective ways. Concurrently, a Jill'·
dences of the late Margaret Weber, ents' group will be held with emphaBill WilliiJDson, Arthur Musser, and sis on parenting techniques related
Carla Wyau.
to what children will be learning in
Receiving the best doorway dis· . group.
play prizes of $25 each were Bob
The service is funded in part by
Snowden and Nate Wise residences. the Oallia-Iackson-Meigs Board of
Ninety-four · shutin calls were
.Assisting the garden club with Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Men- .reported and cards were signed for
the contest prizes were the Rutland . tal Health Services and is being . several friends. Several . district
American Legion, the Rutland EMS, offered 'to panicipants wjthout llleetinas were announces. Games
and the Rutland Fire Department.
charge. Anyone interested in the were played with prizes going to the
. training is asked to call 992-2192.
winners. Nina Boston won the door
ANGER MANAGEMENT
prize. A Valentine theme was carried
Woodland Centers, Inc. is offerin refreshments served to those
UMWPROJECT
ing a series of four. ~~~er manage·
New candle holders will be pur- nimed and Emma Our«, Pearl
ment groups for Me1gs County chil- chased for the church and toys will Osborne, ~illian Pickens and Nina
dren, six to 12 years of age.
be pro~ided for children at Veterans Boston. Next meeting will' be It the
.· The group will be held at Wood· Memorial
Hospital
by
the church with Susie Mash as hostess.
'

et.,.

s..

.

Public Notice

Public Notice

•

I

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
lllpporo Plolno-Chootor
W..,DI_
311111 Bor 30 Rood
llooclo,., Ohio 45772 ·
S.PIIr.to ""'"" Bide lor
tho eonotrucUon ol
• SECOND IN CHEEI'ILEAbiNG ·The Belpre Orange claimed HCOnd pi- cha ....dlng In the ll!altern Starog• lmprowmonto WIH
Athllllc a-ters elementary touma111111t.ln front ara, left, BrooM SheppMd, lAalle ,Radcliff and Caaay be rocelvod by the TuPJIMI
Plolno-Cheottr W...,
COle; In beck are, left, Mary Roblnaon, Kr1at11111·Watklna and Tarynne SMira.
·
Dlotrlct ot the olllco "' tho
Tupporo Plolno-ch. .tor
W.tor Dlltllct, 31561 Bor 30
·Rood, Roodovlllo, Ohto
41172 until 2:110 p.m. (local
.
tlmo); April 2, 181'7, ond
'.
for jlistribution. Diseussion was held Ilion It llld office publicly
· "What Gift Can I Bring" was the the program closed with prayer:
oncl ,..., oloucl.
theme of. the pledge service presentLee Lee, President, led the busi- concerning the mother-dauahter
TIM wo"! eovorod by the
• ed by Marilyn Bogard at the January ness meeting whicll opened with banquet which will be held May 10. Cantroct Documonte
agreed to serve the Alpha tnctud" tho fol-ng:
meeting of the Racine United repeating the Lord's Prayer i.n uni- It
Controct t5-3, W...,
Methodist Women.
son. She also led the leader-groUp in Delta Kappa dinner April IS. School
of
Mission,
Athens
District
EnrichStarogo
lmprovemonle:
. The progratll focused on given reading the Litany on Purpose.
Canelructlon of IOO,OOGChris Hill gave the secretary's ment Day, Spring Retreat were 'dis· gollon olovolod otoot woter
abilities and talents which are
tonk lo~lher with
unique to the individual. Though our report, and thank you. notes were cussed. The hat and mitten fund was
tho nocoooary opportolnlng
Jlifts an: many and diverse, we ~~re read from the Meigs County Human taken.
all of equal value and importance to Services for the angel 'tree gifts,
Refreshments were served by wi!'i; 0
. e 111 m 1 t 1 d
God, said the leader, who noted that Cooperative Parish, Good Works, · Martha Dudding and Karen Walker. canotrucllan coot 10
$450,000 •• al February,
: by dedicl!ling gifts to God, United RACO, and Lee Lee. Etta Mae Hill Get well cards were signed.
Attending were M~gie West, 111t7.
Methodist Women carry out. God's gave die treasurer's repor(due in the
Melissa Harkness, Chris Hill, Etta
Tho Bidding Documonlo
purpilses in their daily activities and absence of Clara Maei S!U]!enl.
~.,. • ...,.lnedat
The ~up voted to pay for five Mae Hill, Gladys Shields, Marilyn - • ··
through their Pledge to Missions.
After some discussion a chart of receivers .for the new reeently Bogard, Alice Wolf, Lois Bell,
the "Gifts of the Spirit" was given to installed sound system and to make Margery Roush, Martha Dudding,
el!Ch member to fill out Scripture a mone.tary donation to an area Karen Walker, and Lee Lee.
was read from Cor. 12. Lois Bell and needy family. Seventeen blankets
The next meeting will be Monda)
Chris Hill were the two readers. have been completed and will he at 7:30p.m. at the church.
Pledge cards were distributed and sent to Columbus Conference Office

w...,

. Pledge service held by Racine
. .UMW
.

o,......

was

...,,.0•

. ! R_~I) · IS HERE
.

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.,.• "You Have ·The

TO SERVE YOU
MEIGS. COUNTY!!
Rig~t

To .Choose"

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•

"If you or a ·loved one are in the hospital and need
HO.ME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT ()R HOME .OXYGEN
~hen you return. home •.. .YOU or a family memb'er
-should CHO.O SE .YOUR PROVIDER!!
·' Hospital employees such as nurses, discharge ,
op lannen or even respiratory therapists SHOULD show
·you a list of Homecare Providers.
- If · they show you a list for Home ·Oxygen
Companies.~.MAKE YOUR OWN DECISION!!
~ Choose Prescription· Oxygen ••• The ONLY" locally
_pwned company in the Tri County Area ·Specializing in
oxygen
service.
..'home
,
.,
.

PtlESOUPTION. OXYGEN ~G..! IN~.
"The Little

With The· Big Seroice ''

Public Notice
Tupporo Plolnt-Choator oword oulloontroctor• Ia ·with IM ;rwolllng wogo
,Wiler Dlahtet, 311111 a. 30 otote cortlflod lllnorlty rotoa
on
Pullllo
ROIId, All da rill, OH 41772
-l!luol- Enttrprl... In an lmprav•••nto In MeiDl
Dodge Roparta, l1115 oggrlltllll clollor,..... ol no County, ONe u doll,..._
Dublin Rood, Columbuo, OH .... Ilion llw ...11%1 loy tho OhiO Doporlnl!lnt "'
o~ . IM prtrno eontroct. -....atllllolo,..
43215 '
'
Proapectln 'IDDEIII
lllirgoa • Nlplo, Limited, BIDDER procurement
4424 Emeraon A - . ...-.., to tile -... that may tdd,.ll lnqul!lle ·to:
the controetor purohe. .e Burv•a ·I Nlplo, Umlted,
Parflonburi,WY21104
Dodge Roporte, 405 material and/or ·aorvlool, 4424 ' Emoraon - . . . ,
Capitol St,..t, Sullo sot, . - • ..eun In tile -rd of Porll•roburg, WY 21104,
procli,.mont controcto to (3114) 4to to41
• ·
Charlooton, WY 213111
The Tuppora . Plotno•
Coploo ol tho Bidding ototo cortlflod · Minority
Do.cumenta may be Ent11prlo•• In ., ........ Ch,ator Wotor -Diotrlct
pureh11od
Burv••• a clollor voluo ol not lou ihlin ,...rvot tM right to ~Joel
Nlple, Limited, 4424 two p~roont (2%) of the ony ond -oil Bide . 11r ta
Inc,.•" or dacrouo or
Emerton
-A - . prlmo co11b11:L
All · cantroctoro ond omit ony Item or ltomo
Perkoreburg, WV 21104
upon poymont o1 -.oo, ott eubcontraotore Involved and/or -•rd to the 1ow11t
ol Which Wll btl refunded 10 with tho proJect wll, io the ond 'beet BIDDER. Eaoh
IM uneueenalul IIIDDEIIS e - proctlcollle- Ohio propolll muot contain tile
lllotorlata, lul,_ofOVMy,.,_or
upon returning toe· pFaducte,
documente promptly ond In oorvlceo, ond llbor In tho COIIIpot!Y lnt...oted In tho
good condition.
lmplomontetlan af their - · TIM lllppora Pfalnl.
· Controctor Chootor Wotor Dlotrl~t
BIDOEIIS - ............ to pro)oct.
comply with lha Minority comptlonc. with tile oquol _t,.,.. the right to wolvo
Buelnoto EntorpriM (JIBE) · employment opportunity . ony tnfarmolltleo or
roqul,.monto "-' forth In roqulrem•nto ol Ohio '--uladtlotln tile......,_
of,.,.~
s.ctlon 1S4.07 of tho Ohio Adinlnlltratl\11 Code
llevlaod Code, and Rule C.......,123, tile Gov•nor'e Plolno• C.hutor W...,
114·1·32 of tht Ohio · Executlvo Order ol 1972, lltotrtct.
Admlnlatrotlvo Code. In ond Gcivemor'e Executive TIM 20th dly of Februuy,_
·
part, thla meone thot any Order 14·1 oholl be 111t7
BIDDER, to tho txtant that II . ,ulrtd ·
(2) 20, 27 (31 e 3TC
IDDERS . muat comply
.oubcantrocto worll, oholl
Public Notice

•=

"'i;"Ont.r

The-'! IOOIIMIIIy .... rat•o

DOOI!IIIonto
III~==~
.,.fDiaWII•:

Contract H·1 Wlllr
TrUtlllont
.. lorit
tmpro,.•ento:
Wlllr
Tr•otMont
Plant
lmprovo111onto Include
lltulkllng e•-•elon
_....
-r-""•
WtUl
po
n .... Md
oxehen. . ooftoMrll, ond
lahul ry. 1111 l&amp;lllllon of
Dilling building tneludlt
pumping and chomloel lecllltlu.
Site
lmprcwomentolncl,.llftne
otarogo tonk, red water
lilt.,. onc1 "ptlc 1-ltleo.
tho worll m.iy .,. bid n o
- • al ony comblnotlon ol
the following:
Contract 115-t • Complete
Plant. .
Controct 115-1A • Complete
Plant, l.oH Eltctrlcal
Conlloottl-111· Eleclrlcoll
The
• a t1 m I t e d
conatructlon coel for
Controet tl-1 lo $1,170,000
11 al F~, 111t7.
Tho Bidding Dacumonta
rnoy btl oxamlnoct .t: ·
TupPIIr• Plltne-Chtller
Wotor Dlatrtct, 311111 Bar 30
Rood, R-vlllo, OH 411772
Dodge lloporto, 11115
Dublin Rood, Cotumbuo, OH
43215
.
eurgoo • Nlplo, Limited,
4424 Em ora on Awnuo,
POI'IIoraburv,WY21104 ·
Dodge . Roporlo, 401
Copltol Stroot, Sullo 1108,
Chorlo.-, wv 25301
Coplol ol tfle Bidding
Documonto . m.oy llo
purchooed ot: Burgett •
Nlplo, Llmlt•d, 4424
Em 1 roo n · Avonuo,
Porbraburg, wv 21104
upon poymlnt ol 1100.00,
oil al whiCh will be ,.lunclod
to the .' uneuccualul
BIDDERS upcfn returning
the documents promptly
ond In good conctHion. ·
BIDOERS a,. required to
comply with tho Minority
ButiMII Ente;prtae (MilE)
requl,.monto "t forth til
s.ctlon 1114.07 otthe Ohio
llovlood Code, ond Rule
164·1·32 of tha Ohio
Admlnlatratlvo Cado. In
port, thlo maono thot ony
BIDDER, to the extant thot n
oubcontrecta work, eholl .
oword ,...bco)ttroctare ta
atato eertllle!l Mlriortty ·
Bualnne.Entel'pl'leoe tn on
clollor volue o1 no
flw pere,nt (5%)
tho prlmo controct.
ODEll procurement
to the - n t th•t
contractor purch1111
motorial ond/or aorvlceo,
oholl reeult In tho.oward ol
procurement controcle to
ototo cortlflod lllnollty
Entorprllll In an eggrogote
doflarvoluool'notlonthan
twa percent ' (2%) of tht
prime controct.
All contro'c tore ond

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
on
Pullllo
lmprov. .onto In Molp
c-y,
Ollloll 'UtiiiiiU,,
11y.,. 0111o Dtp81t n1 ol.
~' I loll II I¥ PI
Proopoouvo atDDIRa
..., s1tn
tr'oo to:
aur1s • a 1111p1e, U••••·
•••4 I M orton N
• IIIII
.._
J;
, WY H104,
,_., . - . - ·1
The Tupp•ra PlolneChottor Wotor Dlllrlct
,..., _ tho right to r8)oct
oily and 111 lltda .or to
lncreoeo or deerea11 Of'
omit ony Hem or ttomo
ond/or . . .rd to tho . _ .
ond beet BIDDER. Eoch
propo•l mutt - I n t11o
lui,_ of overy........, or
compony tntwletod In th•
· -· Tha n.,_,. PJa1M.
Chao tor Wotor Dlt!rtct
,...rvoo tho right to wotv.
ony lnformalltloa or
lnagulortu.o 111 t11o llldd~ ...
By order al tllo Tupper.
Plolno·Chutor W...,
Dlotrlct.
TM 20th doy al Februory,
111t7
·
(ll) 20, 7:1 (3) 1 3TC ·

In'

!:!.,.........,.

II01'ICa 10 c:orrtNC tOllS

It .. - ,.... 1111 for ...
Pa•s...,. R04IIo Till abt
~
will be

p,.,...

,...... llr

the

•••a•

Ca..ev CIIIIJIIIUiant,., ..
tllolr ofllao ot tho
C11 t r m, Paollt""¥, 0111o
41l'W ulltlt tO:tl 1.111.,
111N11 to, 1187 onrl then .t

AI_-,. 1 _,_ ,,, ~- ,_

.

Authorlzad AGA DtatributOr
~elcllng Supplies • lnduslrial Ga8es • Machine Shop
SeMc:ee • Steel Salea &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• • Alumlnum/Stalnii!SS • TooLDresslng • Ornamental
St~ • StaiF11, Railings, Patlo Furniture, Fireplace
Items, (&gt;tanter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!
. "No Job Too urge or Too Small"
We will work within your budget

om: 1

:~o:,..:·':i,. a:.:~

h 1 1 .~,.,
Ploutde two Independent
operating rodto control
.=:tl•rvJ,';!
Aoqutaltlon
ayetom

:::;r!i a

~!J. o;:,u).:..-::

t

.Ph. 773-9173

.

FAX 773-6861

l'

I
I

Shop the

GIUESER'S
GARAGE

fflvMM trffNII.M

Body work, car, truck
.. truck painting,
minor mechanical •'
repair.
•
Tune-upa,.QII Change,
Wax,.Bllfftng
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
7~2-21135, Alk for Kip

Want:
AtJIJOUtJCfl.ll 1.1

005

r

Personals

'
I
I

'
or ncoocl the following· . 108 ~roy StrHt
Muon, WV
'
.
'7!10/tln
crllerlo end eddltlanal ' ·
orttarlo 1 . , _ , on plono,
1 toOeii7711111.1NI ••·
drawlnge,
ond
IIIIGS'
$2.11
por
"'1awr-.·"
S.V.Uo(B1t au eat)
epoolflootlona provided tn
HDme lmprDvements
lht BID Paollot onrl on lllo
th
DATES!
with tho Pomeroy Vllogo
3351 Heppy Hollow Road
~··
Admlnlatralor • 1111 olfloo
Middleport, Ohio 45760
II 320 E. Min Str•ot,
New Homes, AddHions, 1· ROQ.05p-0550 fxt ?MII2.~
Pon•or. Ohio 41711.
Per Mlnule. Mull Be ·18 Y~,
Siding, Pole Barns,
(614) 367-0266
S4ltiMJ (G1 11184~.
'$.!i
Tho work to be
Decka, Painting,
und•r thte
Give Yaur~elf Th• Spartl EciMt
1-800-950-3359
Garages, Porches.
ohall conatat ol
Sport1 En,...llllnmonl Unel 1~:
otertlng up
Call Us For A Free
Public Notice
858·5800 Ext 5245. U.lltiMtn.1
•
Top
•
Trill'!
•
Removal
·
equipment
Mutt Be 18 Serv·U 01W4ri,
Estimate
~Wat.
;_.:0
o c-pl.to
. SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL neco ..ory
• Stump Grinding
614-742-3090
contrOl •J'!""' to f\lncllon
ESTATE
20 Y10.
- Ins. Owne&lt; Ronnie Jones
GUYS AND GALS
614-742-3324
as SpooiiiiG heNII! ond u
In the Coull al Cammon
W~ITING 10 MEET 'IOU
. 614-742-3076 _,
Piooa o,f Melgo County, OhiO ohown on tM drowlngo.
IH'IOUR~
Tho manuloaturor 'oholl
1-1100 443 5710
J-•R. s...a,.tot
.. "
lurnloh ond lnotoll o
EXT: 1818
Pllln$2.1111 PER MIH.
completely
lntogl'llltd ...ld
vo.
MUST BE 18VRS.
atolo rodla tolem•try i
G. Bruc. Tilford, otol
SERY-U- (819)84~
oyatern.
.
It
oholl
.,.
tho
~
·
CAsENO.toCY041
HEYOUYSI
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
~·· ta aupply
.
a
•New Homes
In purou•- to an order reeponolblllty
L~~lfiu
at•lo dlroclld to me In tllo ovot•m thot wilt Into,..• '
·Garages • Replacement Windows
•Garages
CALL NOW!
above lnlltlecl ll:tlon, I Will oaaetootorlly with oxtattng
HIOQ.17f.IZI2, .
1' f;..
'
•Complete
equipment
ond
any
Room
Additions
•
Roofing
offer lor •••• ot publle
EJt
IQIZ
~ ··l
'
ouetlon • lhtlront door of equipment lhot moy be '
Remodeling
$3.1111 P8r Mlnlila Mull Be 18 Yre.
COMMERCIAL
and
RESIDENTIAL
the Courthouooln PCIIIItt'Oy, eupptlod 1oy athoro aa pan i' S4ltiMJ (819) 84~.
' Stop &amp; Compare
Tho :
Ohio, In tho obove Mmod ol thto oontraot.
. ...I
FREE ESTIMATES
LIVE PSYCHICS!
FREE
county, on Frldoy, IM 4th complet• .ayat1111 ahlll bo I
'
Tl:LL'IOUR
day o1 April, 111t7, ot 10:00 eupplled, lnatalled ond I
ESTIMATEES
614-992M7643
FUTVREI
I
warrontod
by
t11o
taloftllll
r
o.m. the loltowtng dllcrlbad
1-BOO-?ft7·88BB Ext 2721 $3.98
985-4473
&lt;·
roal ootott, lltuotod In tM oyotom monufaeiurer to .
,. (No Sunday Calls)
Par Min. Mull Be 18 Yro. Seni·U
211rmmn
7/22/lfn
Vlllogo ol Pilmoroy, County lneure 1 · tingle 1aurco of
(619) 645-8434.
..
.
.
..........biHty.
ollhlgt_and 8toto of Ohio:
'l
MEET LOCAL 81'10! E1 ,
Tho Weal one-third (1131
TIM ollhlt proj..:t
Call Nowl 1-900·"'43·5780 Ext.covera
o
Aodlo
Telamotry
ol Lot' No. One Hundrod
4190, $2.99 / Min . 18+ Ser~-u: ·
TWenty Flva (1251 and 1110 Contf'C!I oytlom to Include
819-845-843t.
'
~ .;,
tow•r
level
relftotee,
Eaat one-third (1/3) ol Lot
Need more energy naw? W&amp;nt ID
No. One Hund,.d Twanty booot•r pump llatlon
look and feet great? 1-800-732-.
Four (124), oncl being In oH remotol, well fletd pump
03111 forlreobook.Doj&gt;\PG1 .
..
lhlrety th,.. and on•thtrd •lilian ,.mot•• ond. PDU
-New Homes
-No Job Too Small
Honest, Dependable '.
(33·113) foot on Second monitor. Till IUCCIIoful
. PLEASE BE liNE
1 .,
Street; being tho · oame blcldor -II IUpply olllhop
1-900-825-7970 Ext 3818, $2.1111·
•Remodeling
•Any and All of Your
and
Trustworthy
ladies
prto·r
to
Per Min. Must Be 18 Yra. Serv-U;'.
premia.. conveyed by drowtngo
ready to clean your · 819·84~.
-Garages
Home-Repair Needs
.
.,;.
Ed-rd Ebtlroboch oncl wKo lnolollotlan, oil popor -~~~
home or business. .
to Chorln Eboreboeh, al ond fool necooeery to
•Decks
&lt;Call Today for Your
Stngleal Tired Of Blind Datel·~,'
Truotoe, by deed doted obtoln a llconoo tor the
Reaaonable Rates
Call 1-900-. .3·5760 Ext. 289~:
Free
Estimates
Jonuory 18, tl31, ond - · oil equipment
.$2.99 /Uin. 18 Yra Serv-U 619. 992-6342 (Diane)
recorded In .Volume 142, ,...ulrod by tho echedulo,
645-8434.
. '
'992-5535
992-2753
poge 510, ol tho Record ol · oil wiring ~d onolllory
I
or
992·
7275
(Brenda)
SPOR1ll FUNI
Doeda (!I · llelgo County, equipment, hordwore, , .,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,. ..,:::lmR~=:.,:1,::mo.~:;,~
POINT
SPREADSII
loltwort,
ertd
"
·
""""'·
Ohio.
HOROSCOPES!
, ·•
.
Alto, tM ~two- oppurtononcoa nndod for·
FINANCE', SOAPS!
.
prop•r
lnatollotlon
and
'OiotrlcL
thlrde (213) al Lot No. One
H•0, M.M,
1-900-528-5§00 Ext 2888 $2.119 '
(UmeStone· TIM lOth day ol Fobruory
Hundred Twonty.four (124) operetton o1 oqulpmant.
Per Minule. Mual Be 11 Yl~. ·
Tho oyotom epootfled
LowRates)
H
Set¥-ll (619) 84~.
. o
, 1187
of "'d Vllllgt al Pomeroy,
horoln
•holl btl tho product
121·20,27 (3)1 3TC
btllng thirty·- ond • U IMIUllm SERVICE 30 Announcements . -.;
,
. lc Notice
third (33.113) !tot an Socond ol 1 m1111uloctum Who can
Transportation IO&lt;
Publ
Stroot of oold VIllage and demoMtrett • -llvo (I)
Individuals using ·
To llle per8Gn thai IDol! hand"""'~
AOVIRTISEMENT FOR
oxtendlnll at thot width yoora ol oettoloctory
DUMP
TRUCK
wheelchalr8. Medicaid &amp;
money and lmporlanl popooo1 181"'
fXPIIrloi)OI In furnl,hlng
· Medicare accepted.
week from Frazter's on Story'•"- .
od•tno~J~IIInt compol'llblo
SERVICE
Doctor's VIsits,
RurJ Rd .- please ret~rn, we are~
to
(85·,·
under doclo(a care and need the\
radio t•tomotry ~lorna tor
1111 Ohio
·-~
Umestone,
hospital visits, etc.
money for lila hospiiBI bill. All Will ~
Umestone • G.r 1vel
. 3tlll18or30t:foed
producto,
moterlole,
EXCEPTINQ,howo ... r,IM water end · waltowater
lnetollottone.
Approved
Phone
&amp;14-992-3053
;.be=:.;lo=:.;rg~Min=----.;_-~
"rvlcoe, and Iabar In the right of woy ocroaa the ·
" II ·~ •M Ohl0 ·~
Gravel, Sand,
Dirt• Salld
' llw,.,.,
_.,&amp;
. ol their Southweat tight on.d ono· Manufocturor: 1.MioraFI!IX &amp;14-992-3053
40
Gl
~
'
Pager 1-1100-982;2327
veaway
•
•: tMSoporoto
""'"
Blda
lor
third
(1-113)
fHt
of
"'d
Lot
Comlll.
Inc.,
Overlond
Park,
985
4422
Top
Soil,
Fill
Dirt
conetructlon of .Wolof.
Controctar
Pin 2849
I Year Old FoJ1181o Blacll Pol Be~t
' Tr • • I m • n t
P lo n t
wltb tho oclual No. One Hundred. Twanty KS. 2.Approvod Equot.
Chaster, Ohio
All other oyatoma will
:b'1Btl71 mo.
ledPlg,614-441-0113.
'
~
614-992--3470
! tmpravom•nta will bo
opportunity Four (124) on Second S ' reeoiYOd by tho Tuppera
• of Ohio .and oldondlng at thot wldlll requlro an eloctrlcot and
r
. 2yr old black Cocker Spaniel. '1.
; Plolno-Chootar
Wotor
otrotlve . Cado ol otgld ond -.third 1•113) dlmoniiOnll tllllnllbillnd •
304-895-3723.
~
llot
ol
comporoble
Public Notice
' Dlotrlet .t the olfl~ ol lht
123, the Gowmor•a 1H1 • clloto- Of olghty-ftvo
Adorable Puppies Needing Good l
: lllp'pora Plotns·Chnler
Order of 1172, (t5) IHI taword Front (Jilin) lnstollotlane fourloon (14)
Home, 814-446-37'03.
"
W. • Wotor Dlltllet, 311181 lllir 30
Gavamar'o Exocutlw Stroot ol oeld Vlltoge of prior to tht bid and obtain Davla·Bacan
~
lnaurence
: Road, Roodavlllo, Ohio ·I'Or&lt;~er 84·9 tho II be '-troy, II -rved In tllo wriHon opjlrowl !rom tho " varla.uo
Free ~rewood, cur and aeaaoned, l
Driveway
Limestone
eontultlng
(Triplett
,...ul....,.nto,
vortoua
oquol
••772 ··-•t 2 oo
(I · 1
deod of Mory E. Stolnbouor
1'00 pid&lt; up, 614-992-ol212.
.. ~
5:17 BRYAN PLACE
p.lll. aca
t o · Ch or III
:• -limo), ~'"
Engineering Service,, apporlunlty prllvlolono, and
April :2,- 1H7,
ond
muoi comply M• I or
COmplete Ho1,1se
,
.
MIDDLEPORT
Grey and White 2 Year Old Male :• '
ot •ld olflct publicly
prevailing woge Ebtlreboch, Truatll, dotod Mtchonlc Stroot, Pomeroy, tho requirement tor 1
Car. Has been Oeclawed, Nu- :"
•, liMn.....,
and
Trailer
Site
11112·2772
nc1 d lloud
·
December 21, 1137, ond Ohio 4117&amp;81 to bid. Thollot payment bond and
tared, has had all shots. Give to ~ ·
' opot- 1
roa
•
recorded In Volume 142, •~all Include nemu ond ,.rtonnenca bond for 100%, · 8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Work, Bulldozing,
Good Home, Very Good House :.. ·
po~ 578, allht Reeorde of phano one numbtl,., a l - ol tho contract price.
:
BLVD.®
Pot 814-4-48-4929 .
·'
•RettlaCement Windows
Backhoe, Trackhoe.
Doodt ol Molgo County, Owner ond Con1utt1ng
No bidder may withdraw
:
=-~--~~~----r
Garages .
Septic Systems
Puppie1 lo Good Home, Part lab 1'
•
Ohio.
·
Engineer far proJect• of hla bid within thirty (30)
and German Shepherd Variety. 7 ~
:
ALSO, the right and almllor olze ond eomploxlty. doyo oflar the octuol uto of •SioraDoors&amp;
Installed
Weel&lt;s01d614-441l-21)ge
"'
privilege to connect with T~e eonaulllnD engineer tho oponlng th-f. Metgo
(614)
992·3838
::Ra
b
:
bi:-:
.
1
C&amp;
::g
e-and-:-:Ra-:bbi.11-ID--G-oo-d
t
tho
..
_r
on
Lato
Numbtlr
111111 .,.tile 101o Judgo" to · County ·Cammloalonera
2111/1 mo.
. Ninety Th,.. (93) ond Ono whoth•r tho oltornoto · ,. ••, . tM right to wolve : ..... AlltltJau
•••
HomeCall614-38&amp;e267
. ~
Hundred Twenty Four (14)) oqulprnont It coneldtrod on ony lntormolltlll or to ,.Joel
Shltzultertier mjx pupplea, 614- ~
Ia IM Ohio Rlvor, ond rro. epprovod aquol. Approvol any or oll·bfda.
•••
992-5240.
,.
Public
Notice
Ute
Of
laid
IIWor,
lhl
on
oltomoto
oyotom
by
(ll)
20,
24,
ze
3TC
ol
••
.
~
.
grant..., their a,c~, tho ongtnoer will 1101 rollevo ,
SIX pupp1es, 6 weeks. old, 3-4 II
•
hotra ond ooolgno, koop tht olternalo oyotom o f l · - - - - - - - - - - VIllage of Syracuse
3111
months
old,
614-985-3884
·morhreaervea the right to waive
1
AND
' ings or 8Y8J1ings.
oold .._r open ot Ill times otrlct adherence to the"
Public Notice
:
any lnfarmalltln or reject
•
to tho Ohio River f,.o of apoclllcotlon•. Tho control
FlEA MARKEr
any or all bide.
'
coot .to tho oold Miry E. oyetom lind ll'o componenll
PUBLIC BID
T~ar down 12xt6fl. room wtBIL ~
•••
Janice
Zwilling
wtndow. R'erriove for material. ..
Stelnbouer Mtlar•. her helre thoU comply with oil
ADVERnSEMENT
Friday,
March
7
304-675-3992.
. ~
lndotalgna•.
oppllcoblo ,...ulremtnta ol
Sealed .bide will be (2) 13, 20, 27 Clerk-Treasurer
3TC
.
••
the
oomo
premltoa
llolng
tho
·!allowing:
Eleclrlcol
received
by
the
Vllloge
of
10
AM·9
PM
To A Good Home 1 112 Year Old ~
•• '
convoyed by Mary E. Code (nollanol ond Locol), Syracuse, 2581 Third Sl.,
Feeney-eenneH Post 128
Golden Retriever, Has Sefn '"' ·
Stelnboure IIIJor to Chorloa UL Compllonce, NEMA P.O. Box 266, Syracuee,
Spayed And Ha~ · Had · Sholll ;
·. In Memory
••
American Legion Annex
Ebtl...,ach, TruatM loy dtl!l Compliance,
Comes With Now Dog Houltl ~~o
IEEE
Ohio
45779;
at
lis
olllca
Mill
Street,
Middleport
••
814-388-0571.
.
s
dated ond rteordod •• Compliance,
EIA untll12 noon an Thu,.day,
Vendors·$5.00, 8' Tables
.
. a
••
lbove ... lorth.
In Meinory
Compllonco; and FCC Morch 6, 19117, and ·then
Call Russ Mozengo
.60 Lost and Found . ~ :
. llottronQO Dood: Volume Compliance.
•
o,.nect lind rud aloud, for
ELE
0
742·2094
•
240, pogo 151, Molga
Plono, SpoclflcaUana, ond furnlahlng all labor,
AN
R
A
.
Found: Se1 Of Keys , Viclnily: l.all ~ •
~ -.:
County Deed RtconiL
· Chance, Corner Of Fourth And ~
bid forme moy bo "curod male,rlale an~ equipment
WERRY
Pine, 614-«6-1500.
E
Bolng tho oame real ot tho olllct ol llolga neceoaary to complole the
August ·29, 1916·
ootota doacrlbod In .datd County Cammloolanore. A conatructlon within alxty
Found : Two Puppies On Bul"k:Nwt !:i
!rom Ohio Valley Lounclry, dlpoalt at 0 dotla,. will .,. (60) days ol the contract
February 20, 1992
lane One Tan One Black Pah ~
Easy Pay Auto Lab.
Inc., to G. Br- TNiard ol required for eoch Itt of algnlng, _.her ponniHing,
614 -44 6- 3888, 814-441- ~
record In Volume 314, pege pltnl and l ...alllcotlano. of a 2411. l( 36 ft.. Pole Bom
Jls tfie SUTI Sets eacfi
::«:n-:W
_ i_llG-::i_
__
-.:,Y:-AIIIr_;2;.;DII)'=L~
' ~
INSURANCE
203, Deed 'Rocorde al Illig• The full omount will be Building on vllloge owned
iav a 1ltW menwru is
Mining·
Story's
Run
Rd.
Sholt
~
County; Ohio. ·
rtturnod wllhln thirty (30) property.
£!.... rre. _ {o ·;~
Any Car
,
l'lalred,
neu·tered
male
tabby
cl$.
·~
Porco! No. 1H'I235~ 000'
""'' ottor ,.celpt o·btde.
Plane and ,,.clflcaltoM
tru:re;. -~rwse il nous
gray with bla ck stripes and light ,;
Any Driver
Prapertt Addroae: 211
Eoch bid mutt bo can be abtolned at the
memories Wl1{ never
cream around eyea. Reward, 11f ~ ·
Eoet Second Stroot, accomPIInllll by tlthoro bid Syracuse
DUI &amp; SR-22
Municipal
{e wa 6 t
W
31l7-tl395.
~ ~
Po!Mnly, ~lo 457et.
bond In an omount of 1110% Building or from . Mayor
a a o.g, u 91Y} .
&gt;
Discounts
&lt;
PROPERTY APPRAJSED of the bid omount with ·a George .0. Connolly 11
70
Yard SBII!
5troi1Jler eacfi iaiJ.
1 ~
AT l200tlil.llll AND CANNOT . eurtty aatlllactory to the $25.00 per oat, which
Computer Quotes '
(Joilias !J!rfen us tlie
lforoeald llolgo County moMy will be refunded to
fw
-:;+
rc.:
Gllllpolls
(614) 992-6677
~~~.:g: ~~
Commloelon•r• or by tho unsucca11ful lllddore
nor
wa"'!ng
&amp; Vlclnlly
•
APPRAISID VALUE.
certified check, oaehlora upon tho rolurn ol the
tfris earth, 6ut as
Pomeroy
•
YEIIMS 01' BALE: ·
ALL Yard Salol Mull Be Paid 1~
chock, or leHer ol oredlt complato o.t no mart then
time
_
~es
6
we
ned
Tha
IUOOOUIUJ
Advan&lt;o. DEADLINE : 2:00 p. ~
upon • ootvont btlnll In tho ton (1 0) diYI oltor thl bid .
~·"'"
tM day Mfore the ad 11 to ru~
purciiMor, 11 toan •• hie omaunt Iii not ton thon oponlng date. Ch~~:k11oholl .
t~ ·
er
-·-:J·
Su,_)' ~ilion - 2:00 p.m. F~
bid lo oeeepted, oholl be 10% of tho bid amount In ba melle poyoblo to tho
YOUNG'S
~ :His ca{[ comes
Monday eGillon - 10:00 a.m. Sajl
roqulred to. dopotlt on tM lavar of the lf9rould Meta• VIllage ~UM,
.
CARPENTER SERVICE urday. .
~
day of ..... In eaoh or by
SaturJay, Feb. 22 at
Commlaolonero.
Each
lo rwqulrtd to
In, 'We INt!J not want
oflaorn
Addltlona
cortlflad ohoall poyeblo 1o ltd
ahell be furnleh with Ito propo.. t, •
to answer it, 6ut
Pomeroy,
oNIW Oarogaa
t!&gt;o ::Nrlff, 10% of the
by Proof· of Iotter ol creciH In on omount
flllve
fiat{
.
time
to
Middleport
•Electrical
a
Plumbing
lmoun of tueh IOOopttd
the olflotal or ol 1110% oltjte bid omount
&amp; VIcinity c
9 p.m.·?
bid but · n na ovonl Iota
the bond.
. with eurety aotlatactory to
prepare ou_rsefj for •Roofing
otnllrlar
•
Extorter
then 11,000.00. TIM llilanOo
eoaled and the olor.. old Vltloge ol
tlitit .most unoortant
All Vlird Salol Muot Be Pafd In
of the purchatt price 111111 Mlrkad 01 aid lot: Pomeroy Syr.CiiH.
P1lntlng
.
. .r
n•l
1: f-Advance. Doadllno: 1:OOpm lho
bo dUI ...d PIYibto to.tho
A1ao Concreto Work
dey beloro 1too eG 11 ID run, Su!&gt;lyatem
Bille ehatl btl 111led end
a~IJ· H't can. -ve
Shorlll Within 30 dajo ll'om ::=~~~Telemetry
day &amp; Monday tdlllon- 1:00pm•
and mailed or :marked •• Bid For Palo
tliiJse
.
m
onorii.s·
for
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Frldey.
.
the lloto of oonllniilltloil of
B1rn Projeot, Vlltoge· ol
fiamilv ani -.;.iufs
V.C. YOUNQ Ill
111o. TIM purch- ahalt
County lyroe-.
;~
;·lnoldo rummage Mit, Tllurtdl
992-e215
btl rwqulrocl ta poy ln..,..t
AIIentlon· of bldllero 11 -imf as uou fiirut f..+t
Frldar,
Salurd~ !:: Sh
1
Pomeroy,
Ohio
on •ld unpaid INII- ot
Duties Include:
"-roY, Ohio ·oo1'-"
.... ta th• rwqu I,.monto
UWM: ,
..1.,~,..-::f.~
_
,...,,.,_,....,
Fourfi " - · II .1
Ott
111% Pll• onnum lroill tho
th.t tho PI'OIIollo IUbjoct to
.~
Tire &amp; Parts Changing
uto of oonflrmllllon of the
80
Public Salt
of bld~ora It the
Podorol
Lob or
wim US.
OUr. time
·
lifo
to
...
dolt
of
paYIItlnl
all
ol
tho
Stondarda
Provlolona
ond
s/iorttnS,
litre
on
lnd
AuctiDn
2 Years Experience Prafarred
ol tho llaleneo unlo11 tM
oontalnod In Oi v lt•hO on
WION,
rt/i,
·
·
llelanoo ahell bo mo~o
parll011lsrt, varloua ·
11\0Uronoe
til
. flit must
CALLLON .
. wlthlll eight (I) uye lronl
Pick up dltclrclod
Podoral Labor . ·r.qulrornonto and vorlaua
p_are
tliat
tfNj dolt "' .....
lppll•-..........
jltllndll,rdo Provletona onil :::.:,.L 0 p port unItY
7wmti:pmiTifj
in
tfre
'
JAMU M.IOUI,Uv,
No bidder moy withdrew
S~. r~.r., mwcu;
n.L~---1:
rnatar biG altl
hla bid within olxty (80)
•tlfiiWJfllrllloll- .
afllr 1M aotuldote Of
. . .~
1(1) :10, 7:1 p)l m:
· \tho OlltrllnJ' t...,..,, The ' 1-~----"'-"'

,:~n"l?i'~'
.,l)lotJict~c:'h'~.;.r

"*'·-

r-::

a=:= :;:

,.

...

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:

.ROBERJ BISSELL
CONSJRUCJION

..
~

h

.

Need Any Type
of Cleaning
Done?

"11,., NIW Ownership"

.

R. L.HOLLON

TRANSPORT'&amp;'JION

TRUCKiNG

WICKS .
HAULING

~~~~!t.\t'~~

·-

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

eno•-

~:::::::::::::::!·
HOWARD

~

EXCAVATING CO.

• •lilt!

' Wlalowi

,.t.\tlY FISH Ill,.

•
'

..

.

ALL OHIO

fi

'1'::

0.

we

The Watering Hole

.

.

li.~:v;E ·

A CHQICE"

OXYGEN Jk lzbt.
'

~ 210

·e. llaJn Sb aat

Po.neroy, OfJJo

.. After Houre/
WMk-4nd8

1100-314. 0115
Home 114 ••• 21113
.

C..AmiiiM

'

'

'

HELP WANTED
.TIRE MECHANIC

1

.7:..

fqr

(304) &amp;75-6325

POOR
. BOY TIRES ·

~~

pre-

om!t

.,....I

((

....,, ,..

�PomerVy •llkldleport, Ohio
.....

1be Dally Sentinel• ~ 11

.

-'.....

--- ~ - ·

.

N•A Croaword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
..

=. . . .

..

ACROitS
• Ollllla.......,
1 QowL houlltll 41

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

4=:..-. ....

44 ... -

·~•...

12..... 41=..
• llwllllllll ..........._
~

=::!:':OJ&amp;.

14
15 ~

Needed 10 l.odlea To Sell Avon.
Cal61......._

polidon o Denial AaliablnL E•parltnct proftrrtd bul nol r•
quirwd. - - roqulrod. llal!
to Dtntal Alliatanf. P.O.
s.
123, 11-.,.n. 011457110.

Ell:. Aoqulllllona
COin Shop, tit

~~81~2llol2.

2 Bailnlom Cn Aou• 141,
GotratJo I Storap; USOIIIo.,

,-..,_ lutnilure, glau, chi"'
colna, tor•. lampa, gun~, ~It,
e1tatn; alao appral1ala, Otby Taking Appllcalfona At. Oorn- Thrae Bedroom Brick In Tara
' -*',8144112-7..,1.
lno'a Pizza In lht Gaillpolla and Bubdhrlolon. Two Ful Ctramic
-.. ...... c. Gonot. $72,0110,
CINn Lalt Model Cart Or llk!dfaport- ... '
114417-7414.
Trudca~ 18acl'llodela Or N-r.
Smldl aulck Ponlillc, 11100 Eall- __ .....,:_ _ _ _ _ __
WtH llult , . _ on McNeil A...

~

..•·

lllxtd AIWMII, NO A Pick Up.
t100 Pat Dump Trucll Load o.
llvlfy Available. ~•:.ll,nL llmot
IJionj IIIII Gl8valll
. 711.

Now accertlna rnumH far. the

-CUi lnln . . . . . .

"'-Dapo11.11-

01-

.

("

170 Mllcellaneoua ·

&amp; D'l Auto Par11. Buvlng sal- .....,..:;.._...;,._...,...._...,....,..,....

-~Stlllngpar~~.
30477UOS3.

Coforo,
1144711-2720
lUI.
.
.. Af'TilR I

L8tve

Slzt, Grwal For ChRII. .
Excellent Condlllon Ona Oiintr.

-IIIlO ...... 81~7812.

Wanltd To Buy: We Buv Junk

Cera 814-448·7278, Or 114-388·
10112.

.4!-. A KQ 8
• 54 3
+ ·A 4 '
• A Q 86

Ill
175-7112$tim. ot Ctll904~75'

for Salt

. . Pul Cll1 the

I- .

58=nlngto
........ .

' 11llolv1ldorI 17 AcMnturoua
dMcf
11 Pined
211 Payolla .......
23~

24 Short-

I l l -.....
111 Futuno . . . .
....
62 I geJitl

...•

OOWN

.

.
2801111M -.-. · 1 Tvlllofdence
31 Actnu Luplno 2 Tibled'3 Singer Ed32- · -page
4 Prtntar'e
34 .etoee lightly
35 La1at .
.
37 Rabbit tall • • 5 Here (Fr.)
39 Sault- Marie 6 Deflllld

--

•

en

of
7 =~~ 11 Took
•
.........
the 'biHa
for
·
13Ca.,...
t 11oet co1Jo4U181 19 Jack,.'• 2M
10 Contlonplfl*
-121 Pair
---....!""""'f!r"l'l'l""'

Houao
-.

Piom Drau: Tool !Gold Long
Btldtd, HIGh Naak, Open llaok,

fDr ront 1 1 - 30U75-

r

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: SoQtb

320 Mobile Hamel

CoM: 114-384-2840 01'81..2323

• 9 8 7. 2

• J 10 g

8otdh

-~ ...... bt, 1 112 " " '

4815.

wfl IIIII Wtdz«.

_Bwlna: Andque .tjumilura • Col·
iac:iii&gt;TH, - - Quiill; ' Old

Pt.

•s
•&amp;8162

• .) 9 • 3
. i; K Q ' J 10
: . 13 .
• K 7 5

an--·c-·-o.a--

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

• 10 1 4 %
• A •
t K ,Q J 10 S
• 4 sa ..
Eut

.

11~1-loleil.

Nodll

Dbi.

5+

AokFOf~-

Pass

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areal I ShirltV
~304-e75-1428.

Able Avon Reprtllt1tadvtl
n..dtd. Earn monev for Chrlll·
mu bils at hamlllat work. 1..JOO..
Qg2-8358 or 304-182-2845, Ind.
Rap.
~--:---:--:---:-.--1
Babfolnor needed In our home.
111. AI_IO 'artl. llu" have own
transportation. Hours vary. 304-ID5-3011 Alit f o r - .
Babrolllar Needed In Cheshire
Aroa, 2 Chlldrana, 4 Year• I 1
Yoar llondav -Friday Call 814·
367-1080 Allor 3:30 P.lol
.

1

Otorgea Por~t SawmlH, -don't
haUl vour logt 10 1111 mil jUII call
304-e75-tll57.
Prole.- Trtt SaMet, Slimp
RtmDYal, Froe Eodmateli fnsura-. Bldwtll, Ohio. 814-388111148,114-387-1010.
\'IOnt 10 Taloa cora o1 Eldtr!J Flor·
eon. 2.t Hour C•r•. In Private
, _ 81-1-011110

14xl5 Canlral Air &amp; Hoai 13001
llo. Pfua UdlldH, $21111 Dtpoli~
Good l.ocalion In Kanauga. 114441-4107.

WOndnG To Btbflh In lly Hoin.

2 Btdraom loca*' on Broad Run

,

,.Pus

. ArChfbllcl

3D Secluded

.viiJIIy .
f1thl with
. niordl

Pass

33

Appllntl0 no Are Avallablo In
Tilt Parllo And Rocrootlon Of·
nce. l11 ...oncl AVIIIUt, FOr
lioN ln:lorNtlon PlUM COli..
-!lei 114-~1·1022. Doadllno

Raund balia, mixed hay, under '-.,-,-"'""'-_._ _.....,_
....~ --1104-1182-2077. ' , .

rA E RCHMJD ISE.

Rd In New Hoven, $210 per
month .dtP!&gt;oit &amp; udiiUea. 304· ( S:iQ-'ji;;;i~kf-m&amp;U1.
(510

ROUND BALES 1500 ·1700 lba. I i_iiii~~*-ijpsiiijj';iii(j;~
t30.00 Each Calll14-4t11-8777 1:
E~ Co!il8t4482-6508.

own houro. UOk 10 $50klyr 1·
1100348-718811501.
Customer Service Rer)reaenta-... lnlllilaenl. Motlvalld, Caraor

Orioll*' POr,q,.. Sought for Full·'

time Position, In Fut Pace 01·
fico. ExceiiOflt Organlzalional
SkUll Paimerad With Excollant
Communlcallpn Skllla a Mutt.

ComPullr K..,.ledge Preforablo.

-·

hoi" Required. Send Reaume to:
PO flo•. 8P8, Galllpoll~. Ohio

&lt;~
~

·1

bonnel '

I

CELEBRITY.CiPHER

LUll Campoe
. ~ ...,""'-.,_.,c....,..........,.,..by___
.., ___
.

Each liilteiln the cipher ...... for.,...,., 1ilrdlyll et..: z

I)CXX

I

aflor 8: p.m.

repair and uphol1tery. $uparlor
!!'ark. Buy and Still A Country
Ctafllman. 304-743-1100.

.

•

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i·f

!5.(03,

HARTS MASONARY • Block, 3TIIilora for alio. 304-e75-1078.
brick &amp; atone work. 30 r-ra experlenca, rea10nlble ratel. 304- Jn'Synauoe, 12x10, 2 -.n. 1
895-3591 aher e:oapm, no job 10 112 bath, wll- 111frigoKa"', Jlfld,
ale, 814-992-4571 or 114-84311!11111 oriG BIG. WY-0212111
5182.
HAVE ADVERTISING NEEDS?
Slg-lno. 304.aB2-310Z
Slgnolllano. . .
Vtlilcto Gropfllat! .
_..,...,.. Ltlltm
.oicolllllagnollco

SINSX·f

H.V

G WI C J

GWJNFKW

- 1
.

ford F150 4o4'Xf,T, -

G WI C J

NB

swcxcs

'

~1

1915 T"'ata Tacoma. .tx.t. 21.000 \
...... I14,DOO. 304-4175-1103.
-

11188 Chryller 800 Convirllllfo' 2
Door, PS, PB, PT, After 5 PM
tDOO 814a-1111
• .
cy \

IAZFJI

EFVG

WIHJ

BI IG

HV

...' ..

CG
CAVGIHZ

o.

..

LJHCAV . '

. YNFVH .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'd make a wondellul Lady
of pfalform shoe&amp; or somelhlng." --,- l!'!tta Midlar.

...

...
Macbeth.
· ·

I'U wear a pail
:

·: ':
.~i'

1

I .
I

."&lt;..

:

1

-.

'

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I

----··-,.. ..

Furniture rtflniahlng, rel10rltion,

·"'"

!' ·:~

. 57 Fodorl ar ·-

XNAK
11188 Chivy 4x4 long btd, alandatd, am/lm e1111ette, PS. PB,
S7211!1 nrm. 814-ID2-2a.
11113 Jeep Gl8nd
Lro,
E~J:cellent condlllari, Low Mll•o

'

aunt

Chevr 4x4 Good Work
High lllltogo, Aoklng
11...-744-

c,_

also teach chOrcUng I transpot·
lng, If lnlerellod call814·~92- .

Senorita..

'E H P P

·services

Glvo plano lnaono In "'I' home,

4tiTaJ-

-flda

Professional

Com'puter Uaera Needed. Work

'

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Gratu- '
Opontlwl '
Mormon Slate ...,\

I RA N SPOR1 ATION

....... 1.

.

43Aclrfta
Wlnoll!l- .
48 Tllwlllt

........... Pool..._,

230

Play .$8fely ~n· a slam

47 smty ogcy;

INOI"ICEI
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
IIOITLED WILL POWERI LO$E
. !'P Ia 30 poundl, 30 .DAY liON· recommends that you do bual·
EY BACK GUARANTEE! Nalllll, ne11 ,with people .rou know, and
NOT to eend monev lhrouah 1111
Docmr R-mmendtd. 114·441· mall
until w-ou have lnv81tfgatecl
' 11112,- oamploa.
1111 _oflarlng.
ClyoiGollpalfa
Small Doll &amp; Grocery, 814-441·
3310.
.
• Llflltluanla

...Wiele•._

. phfloeophy
41

420 Mobile Homlll
for Rent

Business
_Opportunity

210

31 f,OOICI
38CIIf-

By Pbllllp Aldej&gt;.

FI N ANCI A L

.' .'

Goorilll -' .
lnr+-+-+-1 '1:1
211 Balkelbell'a

EUI

....

.Reforencea Upon Raqueo~ 814258-&amp;IID.

""

25 MltfnM guy?
211 In quick . .
ll.tCcMelan .

'

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....'

22U..Iillraw
24 Glouy fMIIIC

· Oliening lead: • K
U.1PL0Y f.1EN T
SERVICES

"'

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i
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.
I·
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.
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',.,
-..
...
.. ;

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Uetal roaring, DW'tratocked, In·

'

aele. Save 3D% while

laaL Manr colora. 20rr
Call RC Roofing 904-

.I

' 3

Elorn 11,000 Weakly SlUffing En. velopal AI Hoine. SIAn Now. No
E•parlinco. F'rea Suppllea, tnlo.
No Oblgalio 0• Sen~ LSASE To:
ACE, Dept 1a51, i!ol6137, Dlamqnd &amp;or. CA 81165.

E1parlenctd fo,ahlero, wa11ero &amp;
waltr....a wanted. Send reauma
10: Boo C:l-20 C/O Point Plouanl
R8aioler 200 lolaln SL PL PIOII·
aniW\12550 •

F,.,._

,,.'.
:"

· AHf..... C•rpentera. Ulnlmum
Of 1 Yllrt Ej:perlence. Truck I

Hand Jooil lflaleroncao A MuaL
Appllc•llonl lora Available AI
toiOI e.atom file,, Galtil&gt;ollo. OH.
liOn ·Fri. I A.M. To 5 P.M. (114)
441-4114.

-TYPII'fi.

·.

All real esta1e ad'lertlsing In
this newspaper Is sub)ect to
'the Federal Fair Housing Ace
of ~968 which makes it lnegal
to actventse "any preference,
IIIQilalion or dt6crlmlnation
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or aily lnterwJon to
make ~ny · such preference,
limitation or ctiscrlmlnallon.~

which Ia

opf)OIIUI1Ity basis.

.

.

.

New Bank Rapo'a Onir 3 Loll,
304-7311-7285.

ANSWER

In violation of lht

Hoattoltl N"dtd For Homo

"'"""·

PI!INI NUMBERED ·
lEITERS IN SQUARES

Informed lhal aN dwetlnga
are~ on an equal

- . If 'lllu Would f.llce To Earn

Btnlt, 420 Jlllrd Allenue, GaiHpo1.. Qhlo 45831: Equal OppotiUnlly

HOI'nOI 304-312-3400.

taw. Our l1l8darl ""' ·hereby.

adVtrlilk In ~~~~ newspaper

man Retourcea, Ohkl Valley

New 14x70, 3br, 2bath. Reg
uo.aoo · Soli $11.1100. Free dtllverr I aeiUp. Well Rlpltf

This newspaper will not
k.-ngtr accept
advertisements for real estate

PC uotPI natdtd. S45,000 In- .
oomt potond .. .- Call 1·800·513od43ExLB-ae.

Loll Of Frat .......lry PIUI Have
A Fun Filled j;venlng Call114·
882al7. -·
· lm~all Fuii·Time Polidon fOI'
A CueiOdlon flouookeapor, R•
IUmt To Phllli,.Arm1110ng, HU•

.

I ,·,

E.P..·

FuiJ.Tima
Daslgnet.
enctd 1 Rtfljrencoo. Slt1d Ro·
oumt To: CLA &lt;401, ri/0 GaBipoJia
Dai~:!~"'· 825 Tlllrd A..nuo,
Gal
OH15631 .
.
Hair SIJiilt Wanltd Renl Your
own !llllforl. Or 111118 ''a To $16
An Hqur, Call Carol King, 114·
.
'
' 448-8i22.
HELP 'fiANTED o Exparlanoad

.'

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REAl ES TATE

1 112"Story Houao With 3. Bad·
,...,.. 1
oncf 32 Acrea Aou,. 7 Soudl 114-258-1878

bo.,,

2 Houae In New Hoven, Wl2br &amp;·
baa•mentl, Q~Od IOCitiOn on
Mpaia1ola., f2:j,ooo lar •
or
will ,ooll ooparaloly. 304-112·

.

UNSCR~BlE

.

Assail· Guilt • Blond - Entomb - ABSENT
To get something done a.c;ommittee should have only .
three members and two of them should be ABSENT:

2 Or 4 Bedroom Unfurnlahad

Aparunenll, Carpelad, New Applianc81, ShOMir, S.lh, Ce'nb'al

Air, Naw Gao Furnace Wilh Or
/Orrer HoakUpo. CioN To School' Shopping
Ell:. In Gallpoi' Dapoolt I Ailor· 2ND
Going Oul of Bull·
encee Raq~llld, for An Appolm· naiL
~ &amp;14-888-7174.
&amp;Olio Od Every Thing. &lt;40.5 Soc·
Without W.aher

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS Iii
BUDGET PRICES AT -JACKSON ·
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood Drive
from S280 10 t334. Walk D lhop
a ·movloa. Coli 114·448·2518.
~ Housing OppotiUnlly.

ond

JNo. GollipoliL

Boola fly , RadWing, Chlpp-.
Racky, Tonv Lama. Guarontotd
. . _ Prlcao AI Cafo, Gal·
lpah.

·--304-8112-2588.

&amp; Plulio Septic Tanka,
Emclencr. New paint, ' e~~rpet: 300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ran
tla. RllferenCitl. DepoaiL No Evon• Enlltprf..,. Jaallaan, OH
1-100-537-4112&amp;
ptiL 304-011-1112.
Eacutlvto ,..,.,_,,_, btdroomprlvale, cen~al air I heaL Mod·

ern-convenient downiDwn. 304·
175-57311.
.

lllill,lcll

lnllr'Umentl

FAfH,, ~) 1 'PPL1f
S I i 'v f ~~ 1(' ( &gt;

-hlit houN. 3 mlleo

"""' - . ·IIDiflnt·Acfllaubcllvlo

..,...

570 .

I

2 Or 3 Bedroom Hou••· Ntwfr
Romodoltd, Hoot Pump, AIIM ' 1;;;;;;;.-;.
. Gtound Pool ~ !)oc!&lt;. Larae ....n.
I AI:NOIOraul'd, 81&lt;h'lfii-D1. ,

24"148"

FOR

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIU

Caloric 30•·altctrlc range, aellHooch Sl. lllddloporl. 2111 fur· clnnlng oven, vorr ~ cond~
nlohtd ap~ uUiillll paid. dopolil lion; cafl14-742-2t87 -llpm.

310 ttomestOrSale

~

•

olon, blgJo~ 2br1 , .., 2 blllfto.
ifHka, cannl afr, axt2.' O!lt
bulldlno. Ekcalltllt p~ct. 304·
'

10 Quno,

Hornornoda R&amp;ii BuQOY. chronlt
- .• .., ...,, 1011 (jf ",ooo, call lfllr ~. a.t 4-HZ.
2470. ' .
.
'
. lmporlld Hondmtdt Clpra for
Stlo. 422 llooolnd """"!'· CJaiiiJ.
paffa. '

•'

., ' .

' JET
HiiWlOIIIIOIUAS -'

(~

.''",

.....
_,',..
·~ '

'~' "

�•

•

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
·defeats
.South Florida

Pick 3:
2-3-9
Pick 4:
1-5-1-6
BuckeyeS:
2-23-25-27-36

sPotuonPege4

'

lloatly cloudy tonight

wllh • • • • Of thundlratorm llbly. ~-so.

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Vol.41,110• •
01117, Ohio VelleJ Pubhhlng Compeny

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2 s.ctlono,12 ....... 3 5 - .
" Gennett Co. -..,..,., '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 21, 1997

'

'

l'n dustrial park
riets ssoo·,ooo
.in state funding

LS PKG., AWM. WHEELS, AM/FM CASS.,,'AIR,
5SPD, POWER SmRING; ANTI-LOCK B~ ·~
. AS

LOW
AS:

' The Meigs Coonty Community Improvement Corporation today was .
awarded a $SOO,O(l() Urban and Rutallnitiative Grant from the Ohio Department of bevelopnlent.
.
, Lt. Gov. Nan.cy P. Hollister I1Uide the announcement at I p.m. at the Roy41 Oak Reson near Pomeroy. She was joined in the ann&lt;iuncemenl by State
·aep.Jcihn A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, CIC ll'iemben an~ local offiCials.
, The grant will be applied IOwan! the cost of consti'IICtion lind enaineering of a public l'olld, a wa~r main and a wasiewatcr system in the Tuppers
Plains Industrial Park. The $940,000 project will ~vide for the first CIC
industrial site in Meigs County. Release of the grant 1imc1s is pending approval
.,by the State Controllina Board. ·
.
·
• "I IIIli very pleased that the Meigs County CJC chose to utilize the Urban
and Rural Initiative· Fund program in their economic development efforts,"
Hollister announced in a press release earlier Jhis morning.
"The development of this industrial plll'k will serve to promote conlinlled
., economic growth in Meigs County and the southeastern comer of the state
well into the 21st century," ~he added.
· The Urban and Rural Initiative Fund is one of four le&amp;islative COIIIpOI!Cnts
of Jobs Bill III, the state's newest economic development stimulus pecbce
·that specifically targets Ohio's distres~ urban and rural communities;.she
explained.
.
.
Hollister is considered the chief architect of Jobs Bill Ill.
More information on today's annountement will be appear in the Sund8y
Times·Sentinel.
·

Sen. Glenn

It's .official:
Glenn won't
·run in 1998
NEW CONCORD (AP) -

Jo!m
·the astronaut wh~ gave the
:U.S. space program a much-n~ed
. boost .by orlliling the flart!l 3S years
ago, will not seek a.fifdl term in the
· U,S. Senate.
.
The 7S-ye8r-old Democrat told ari ,
audience at his alma mater, Musk;
: ingum College, that age was his only
reason for retiring.
·
"If today's politics IJICk civility,
my reaction is not to run away, but to
wort harder until we make it beuer,"
Glenn said Thursday.
. MASON, W.Va.- A MilSOn doc- . District coun to strip Wesanoreland
"But for all the advances in sci- tor hu been jndicied by a federal pf2.7acmbeownsinMasollCounence and medicine that 1 have su~r. , miid J1li'1 hi rhArleSt&lt;in.·on cha.Ws ·
ilh ciCc&amp; of trust . . . 111ore •
· ""--'.· ·· ..I.e.. ~~ '"-'·!·~·,. o!ii.' t- 'm'. de~ . ;~~l~ ·~._if •-....- ~~liM ·•
• ·· ' · .,_._:.efta DHil..--.o-~~~ ~"l/ .,... ra~·• -~ CWs ~ wr-. :o ,. L'f~]ftiyt'Pfi~ "'·· h .....
~ ""'
. ..
Gl~nn,

AS
LOW
AS:

Area physi~ian faces
37-count ·indictment
u;-

G"n Po.·m·erov .

CONSTRUCTION- The Racine v.t.ntna Monument II axpected to be com-

ial'

'"1:p~"l
sJ ·_,.~w· ::~:,~~.!twaa~~~
iadi~
.·"' ~~~:~!b~::: ·.
U pr · ~.
mary~ :_ at his office.
. ·
·
U.S. Dnlg Enforcement Administra-

l

·

7'

- Westmm:eland,
~~ 3rc:.!~~::~~~~:
:l:'u~;~~~:d.!'::g~~
41.
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.

· ·un.·ty-WI•de· landThebilledindictment
said WestmoreA raid was conducted on the
co
Medicaid for services that Westinoreland office June 23, 1995.
.. slated. ~ •. were
not performed. He
alleged- . Westmoreland claimed at tha£· lime
levy
ly prescri~Jt:danddisre!'seddrugsiO agents he!d ·&amp;U~ on
patie~ts, as
.
·
·
· support pauents' lddicuons.
well as his family, who was 1n .the
Accordinc
the indictment, Westmoreland home. adjoining
for May ',6.
Westmoreland illegally prescribed office. ·
.

V6, ·sSPD, ALUM. WHEELS, AIR,
L5 PKG, AM/FM CASS. . ~ .

~

primary will be . ,drugs in ~r for his wife ~o profit
held in Pomeroy 10 nomin.ate .candi- from her ~smcss, Our Family Phar:
da!eSforseatsolivillag~council,and macy, which. waslocatedoncbe~
. a county-wide special election will , 'property as the Westmoreland Pam•take place to decide an addition~ tax ljy Care Center.
· ·
levy for the Carleton School and · ' The indictment does not list .tbe
Meigs Industries on May 6.
~.ount of money Westmoreland !s
Middleport, however; will not e,st1mated to have rece1ved from his
have a primary due to the lack of can- acts.
didates.
.
• ' '\, Westmorel~d is ~ha_rgec! in sev·
As of the 4 p.m. deadline Thun- .~ ~ount~ wit~ '!istnbutmg preday five Republican candidates bad scnp11on drugs w1thin 1,000 feet of a
filed for the four scats to be filled on S!'~~l. His_ office, as . we~I ~ ll!s
PomeroyVillageCouncil.
Wlfesformerpharmacybuddmg,IS
. Filing were Oeorge L. Wright, lOcated next door to Wahama High
William A. Young and John.F. Mu~s- SfhCJ&lt;!I.
cr. incumbents, and Kyle S!ark . ;;, Prosecutors for u.s. Altomey
Woods and Frederick Werry Jr. The · Rebecca Betts have asked the U.S. ·

· A Republiput

AS
LOW
AS:

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V6,5SPo;Ai.UMl
.LS PKG, AM/FM

t

oLarrynlyDeW.mehocruranlgt,owfihleOwWasl.lli~:uQmn~hent
.,. ,
fall ballot.
·
lnMiddle)l(lrt,theonlytwofiling.
petitions were Sandra K Iannarelli
and Rae A. Gwiazdowsky, both
Republican incumbents. The other
two council members whose terms
expire this year, .Mick Childs and
John Neville, did not file.
.
In the special · eh:ctioil to ll!ke
place in all 28 precincts, voters ~ill
·vote on an additionaltax·of 1.8 mills
for a continuing period of time f&lt;lr
maintenance, capital cons'!Uclion and
·operation ofllte Carleton School and
Meigs lndustri~s workshop for persons with mental retarda,lion and
developmental disabilities. . .
The .validity of the pellllons filed
will be checked by the "deigs Coun·
ty Board of Elections at' a meeting on
Tuesday.

Au!hotities took patient chartS.
narcoucs records sheets, prov1ders,
papen .and a computer, Westmoreland Slid.
Westmoreland has drawn much
support from the Mason County area
~ince. the raid, with candlelight v.ig1ls .bemg beld and many leiters bemg
wntten to the local newspaper. West·
more!~ has bee" well known for
contnbuUng to youth efforts, such as
the livestock sale at the Mason Counly Fair, drug ~sistance program,
.y,outh baseball league, as well as
beinll a panner in educa!ion with ·a
local elementa,ry.school.
.
Westmoreland was unavailable
for comment on tbe charges.

G
' alll"a· a.utho'rHI"e·s se'ek' II" nk.
.
•
between
house fire; bodieS
.
.

· "'MERCERVILLE - A custody • recently involved in a domestic issue.
baule took an !'Crie tum for a Ouyan
The mother of the child, Theresa
Township family on Thursday.
. Sheets, 32, had filed a domestic vio· The Guyan TOwnship Volunteer lence report against Montgomery
· Fi~pepanment was dispa\Ched to with the Gallia County . Sheriff's
thetes1dence of Roger Montgomery, Depanment on Sunday at noon. .
364Johns Creek Road, Crown City,
_The n:port read. "live-in boyfriend
at LS2 p.m.·to find tbe home (ully pulled a knife on her and, pushed a
cnJI.alfed in flames.
.
1\nife to.llcr stomach and brandished
Fjre· units located two deceased a rifle and stated he was going to kill
persons inside .the residence, a small her and her kids."
child and what was apparently a
1he Gallia Common Pleas Court
male.
· Jllveoile Division des!S!'ated Sheets
T!Je · Gallia Cou.nty ·Sheriff's as the legal custodian of the minor
Department has disclosed tllot a child, Tiffany Montgomery. on Tueshandgun 'was located near the adult day.
body. .Deputies believe that the ram·Montgomery was c~ in Galily re*iding at this location was ·
(Cantlnued on Page 3)

arb di

the

working to have the SlnK:tme Jeady
foraMemoriaiDaydedicationceremony.
·.
Work began last fall on tbe
monument, adjacent to the Racine
A~can Legion-Post 602, across
from stai Mill Park.
10 date, much of the work on
the monument bas been completed
with volunteer labor and donated
supplies.
leffen Excavating of Raci~
prepared the site and a 30:.1:!y-30foot concrete slab was poured with
concrete donated by Valley Brook
Concrete of Lakin, W.Va.

the

••

•

vete/fans·monument looks
toward Memorial Day dedicatio.n·
Vi 1 t

his

1

p

Raci~u~e:m;Mo::rn:! •ate

4lso

I!' ·

alll~o.ydldlclltlon. Thel1n.tcturellbelngbulhllrgelythrough~
mh·~e!•.· ~ ~. :,v~!~ B. rook -~c. rete'. .·La..kin, w_.va., .pciured the·. _
--~---c:..
-- -,.--.
- , ._
.
~... .
..,_ ·~~·~ ,..1..• .r~:.,
.,"'~.. ~
. .·

George Donovan of Syracuse ans Memorial.FuJJd, Racine .Home
finished the slab, which will hold National Bank, in care of Kelly
the stone markers bearing the .Eichinger, P.O. Box 68, Third
name, rank, branch of service and Street, Racine, O.bio'45771.
dates or service of area veterans.
• Names must be submitted ·by
. The Village of Racine supplied . March 15 to have them put on the
· ·some equipment, while the Amermonument by Memorial Day, said
ican Legion Post provided the project treasurer Tom Wol(e.
land.
Names can still be put on after that
Eventually, the monument will deadline; they just won't be put on
feature park benches and plans arc until after Memorial pay, he
being made for local garden clubs added.
to assist with landscaping.
·
"You do not have to a member
For $100, people can have a of a veteran's organization to have
veteran's name, rank, branch of ser- your name on the monument,'' he
vice and dates of service placed on said. "You just have to be
. a veter-.
the monument. Checks should be an."
.made payable to the Racine Vetcr·

Tiras h wa·t er b I•tl s ·now coming
•
• · e ·.·re.s.•~ d.ent s
m0 nth. y. f . r.RacIn
.

'

~·

.

.

o·

Racine residents are now getting
th\lir trash and water bills monthly
instead of quanerly, it was explained
atMondaynight'smeetingofRacine
.Village Council.
With the installation o,f . water
meters, the bills are now being sent
out monthly, it was noted.
, The trash bills will be adjusted at
the end of the quarter io handle any.
extra ga5 the residents had·during the
qu'!flCr.
Council advise&lt;fresidents to look
attbeir water bills to see how much ·
water they are using .because water
bills at this time are based on the old
monthly rate and not on· the amount
of water being used.
.
. Curbside recyclinJ is free, it was
el(plained.
Lee Layne, a member &lt;&gt;f the
Board of Public Affain, said there
· have been incidents of residents tam-.

pering with the new water meters.
1995, in which the trailer broke off a
In the future, charges will be Hied utility pole, a handrail on steps and
against anyone twnpcring. with the street ·signs, and kept on going.
meters. Only walcrdcpanmcnl'pcrThe vehicle was stopped at the
sonnel are allowed to open the Ritchie Bridge and the driver cited to
mcten, it was explained.
county court. The .freight company, ·
Paul Evans, Greenwood Ro~d, Norih Star from Michigaa, has
approached counc1l about purchasmg ignored all communications on .
the plot of land on wh1ch h1s tra1lcr .repairing the damage.
is located.
.
·.
~
· Firefighter David Neigler report·
· Mayor Scott H•!l •a•d council ed the Insurance Service Office
would-,havc to check to find out Jhe would be in later this month to sur·
size of the area and 1L' value, as. well • vey .the . fire department and water
as check to make sure thc.re IS no system for the insurance .rating. At
restriction on the deed hm1tmg the present time, rates for insurance arc
property to cemetery use only.
on a Class 7 rating.
Hill said the money could be put
· In addition, the. fire dcpanmeiu
into the endowment fund to help pay will host the county firefighters for·a
for the mowing.
.
· fighting brush fires class on March 6.
Council asked Clerk Karen Lyons
It was reported that Ruth Snod·
to sen&lt;l a letter to.the Oh10 Bureau of grass made an inquiry about the
Motor Vehicles about a semi-tractor burned trailer silting ne~t to her resand trailer accident in November
(Continued on Page 3)

Natur~ of~· FFA instructioll, .activity grows beyond agriculture.
(l!dltor'l nola: Tille - " nwkl
thl 88111 anniYerllrY of Nlllonll
FFA WM1t. Owr 400,000 I'PA IIMIIIblr8 eoro11 thl 1'11111011 IIICI 21,000 'In Ohio will Clllt.illl I'FA
w.IL)

' By PHIJP A. HAMM .
8H8 ltud1nt CorrMPOhcllnt
.
The FPA IIU c~pd over the
yean in some aspects. but not in others.
Pete Thoren of Racine:, a ·fot:mer
. filA J11Cmber, and c'urrelll Southern
c

High School FFA advisol! Aaron wanted to become farmers later iri
Sayre ot Letart Falls discussed SOlD!' life, said Thoren. EaCh student~
.of the c;llanges they witneSsed in their a project that each dealt with direct.. ·
. ly and every011e soon learned to keep
yean in Jhe FPA.
In the late 1940s and early 19S0s, .records of their· costs and cxpendithe Raclhe FPA was still fairly young, tW'CS that would help them in tbeir
Thoren ' explained. The proarams fanning careers.
were mO.tly agriculture-based in
"KecpillJ records tauJbt us about
keeping IVith FFA's mission: provid- what we had pown and whllt the cost
ina America's youna farmers a plaoe were, • he said.
to learn more· ibout agriculture.
Contests 11 that time were few;
. All .that belonaed to the FPA'had parliarnontary proc'edute, ,the runcome fro!il farms in the .arel, and all· ning of a businca~~~CCting, and pub- '
.

'

.

lie speakins1"C~ available but such
contest as soil judging, forestry and
envirothons came later with the idea
of conservation.
1
The FFA biiS challJed sirJCe the 40
yean that Pete was a member.
In today's·FPA. i slana mottO is,
. "Were not just sow, eows and plows
.an)'IIIOR. we're an orpnization about

subjects that are taught to tciday's FPA
students.
In addition, penonal development
is a major key to the FFA today.
Leadership, cooperation, and probICm-solving are intepaled into the
classes 10 provide its students skills
they will need in the 21st century.
When Sl)'re sllrted •hinJ aari·
culture
at SoUibem High School iii
much 11101e." .
.
AaJic:ullunl i$ not just abotu fatm· 1916. there were only lbput 30 stuing~nymore, it's about conservation, dents in the proanm. .
"The previous yean before there
workiiiJ Yti\11
technoiOIY and, other
.

.

•

•

&amp; •

.

had been a new teacher every year Of ,
two, and the interest .wasn't there •
bec.ause or that," he said.
. .·
The FPA has ; improved patly,
Sayre explained. .
"From 1931 to 1980, there were
only I0 or less state FPA dearee&amp; in
the Racine chapter," he said.
• . State FPA depees .,. aJYetl to ·
those members that comprlae the top , ;
IWO ~at in the stale.
'·
':
"Prom 1990 to preMM, we have
(Continued on ..... I)
• •

..

'

.

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