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Ohio L~ttery

OU tied for
top spot after
89-87 victory

Plck3:
493
Plck4:

4072
Super Lotto:
3-12·15-20-30-40

Sports on Pasle.4

Kicker:
967141

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P•rtly cloudy tonight.
Low In the 40e. Frld•y,
chenc. of ehowen, high
ln80L
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Vol. 47, NO. 201
•ettiW, Olllo Yllley Publahlng c:omp.nr

2S1ct1ona, 12 ,.....,._.
A GanMII Co. New I I •

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Po.~oy-Middleport,
e

Ohio, Thursday, February 27, 1997

to cast decisive
'no' vote
.

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BalanCed ·budget proposal appears doomed

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TORRICCEW

~'Group seeks

FEBRUARY 26.1997

PAGE ,.-wELVE '

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.· independent
-counsel on
.fu:nd-ra,ising

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Deportation .. · - - -

COLUMBUS (AP) - It won't
·Core estimated the $32 million
..:._.__
h
de
·
·
kl
'f
""""' a uge nt m the bac og o could cover the cost of borrowing the
highway construction projects in the extra $1~5 million for new construeOhio Department ofTransportation's · tion over the nexttwo yean. ·
pipeline, but a House committee has
As submiued by Gov. George
managed to squeeze a few more mil- Voinovich earlier this month,
lions out ~'state budget.
. : . ODOT's budget 'fOUI4 have allout .
The Fmance &amp; Appropnabon $300 million for'iiew c~nstructioh in
Com~ittee. ~n Wednesday vot~d the next budget year. enough for
unantmously m favor of the SP bll- · about 24 projects. The budget allotlion, two-:year transportatio~ budg~~ ted $139 million ,for !he .nl!l' ,~
·addiflrabour $1•35 ·mllhon 111 that. :
.
new funding. . .
' The new plan recommends spend. The full ~ou~ IS expected to con- ing $31 5.5 million in the first year,
stder the legtslalion next week. The and $2S2.S million the second on
bill, which also includes money for new projects.
the departments of public s.afety a~d
Transportation Director Jerry ,
development and the Oh10 Public Wray told the committee earlier this
Works Commtss•on, has a total pnce month that the department would
tag of $4.5 billion.
. need $5 billion to $8 billion to com', set."
.
"Our goal was to lind more mon- . plete all the projects local highway
.
"But as we proceed with the very
ey for the majo~ new construction ·officials had proposed.
comprehensive investigation that we
program, and Ithmk we ach1eved that
The commiuee rejected an amend•now have under way, should there be
goal," said Chairman lbm Johnson, mcnt by Rep. Darrell Oplbr, D-Oak
;a baSis for the independent counsel,
R-New Concord.
·
.
Harbor, that would have freed up ·
. f will i'equest it," Reno said.
Rep. Edward Core, R-Rushsylva- · another $157 million for construction
· A fede!al grand jury under the ·
nia, said. the commillec foun~ about in the second year of the budget by
direc;tiQn of a special Justii:e lllsk
KM11whll Stone of Nlb'o, W. Ve., began 1t1
while
shoWn along the bottom. A bull$~2 mtlhon extra for new proJc.;ts by removing the Ohio Highway Patrol
: · l'orce beard testimony Wednesday
IIIIHiw ciHnup effort et the rock allde along
dozer' along the ·hlll sh-s the work ahftd for
ehmmatmg the state tax credn for from the gasoline !all-backed trans: from its fi!SI witnesses.
8R 121n Wnt Columblll, W. Ve., TU1sdly. Phoo
the clelnup c,... Kanewh• Stone wu award- ·
corn-baseji ethanol production, end- portation budget and paying for it
: :· Among .~m wu Rawlein SobertD shows erw wt.... the fill occurred. A
ed the ciHnup. contrect et I cost of $274,200.
ing a program that reimburses hosp,i- . from the state's general Dlllilaing
. : MO, an A.sian-Ammcart trade group ·
powll' poll cen be SHn et the left,
Arltlclpated completion dele Is Merch 18.
.tats for care given to uni115ured·peo- fund.
· "':!;··
: official who has $aid Clinton friend '-""",__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. pie injured in auto accidents and sellThe idea has ~!!len kicked around
' and former DNC Vice Chairman
J:!•
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ing easements along highways for the StDJehouse before, but lawmakers
.: )ohn Huang offered his group
cellulartelephoneandothercommu- -havebeenunabletoagreeonhowto
$45,000 if it would .lallltllcr $250,000 ·
I"I"
.,
nication towtrs.
pay forthe plan.
· ·in political contributions to the
Boster said no one anticipated
COLUMBUS (AP) - A fireDemocratic Party.
.
someone lighting a fuse on a package
fighter
who
was
one
of
the
first
to
. Here in q11estion·and answer fonn
of fireworks in the store, setting off was ruled incompetent to stand trial
.are .solll!l of the legal issues being. respond to a deadly fireworks store a chain-reaction fire . .
andisconfinedtoapsychiatrichosfire i~ Lawrence County last July 3
raisecl about ~QW Dem!J(:rats collect- has'leStified
. . .
.
'
"None fealized that the layout of pita1. .
that legislation is neede!llnoncy,during the 1996 presiden- ed to,prevent similar tragedies. . ·
Carey'sbill
calls
for
changes
such
WASHINGTON
(AP)
--'
Two
!ration was selecting Budit lMgcts for
the building. the shelves, the exits
· · lial campai1n.
·
.
Michael ·Boster, deputy chief of wauld be a hindrance to escape," ·as increasing annual' license fees · .l~gislators examining the Internal political reasons.
it illegal to so'icit donations the Rome Township Fire Department, Boster said.
from $1,500 to $3,500 to pay for Revenue Service say they want m~re
During questioning by Portman, .
fr!Jtft people who have hed been appeal-ed Wednesday before a House
"None ·realized ihe fire suppres- more state lire marshal inspectors at assurances the agency is not using James E. Donelson, acting chief
in~ted to drink co.ffee with the prescommillce hearing a bill to strength ~ sion system overhead. designed to fireworks facilities, and requiring audits to hlll1lSs small businesses or compliance officer for the IRS, said
'idcnt at the White House7 · ·
ethical admonitions medc to IRS
en state laws governing the fireworks provide a .curtain of water. which eight hours of continuing education political enemies.
' d ,,
: A.'1he law bars solicitation or m
Rep. Rob Port111an, R-Ohio, and em.ployecs, as Well as agency rules
would have added minutes to the annually for fireworks retailers.
ustry.
·
, receipt of political donations in a govIt
also
would
require
improveSen.
Bob Keney, D-Neb., talked and ~tructure, make it unlikely the
escape
time,
would
fail
to
operate,
Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston,
•.emment office building such as the
ments
in
fireworks
stores,
such
as
about
those
c~rns after listening to audit process could be used for politallowing
the
rapid
spread
of
fire."
introduced the measure in the wake
:White Hopse. 11iat is a felony pun- of the lire in the Ohio River Fire- , Todd Hall, 24, of Proctorville, was wider .aisles, and mandate sprinkler IRS officials deny the ~udii . proccss ical purposes.
: istuible by prison term of up to five works store in Sc~ttown tha~ left nine accused of setting the fire by lighting systems.
is misused.
He said such an abuse would
: ylars; plus a fine.
·
·
The
legislators
arc
part
of
the
require
a "tremendous amount of
a
fuse
with
a
cigarette.
.
• The White House says no' such deed and II inju~.
National Commission on Restructur- . complicity" among IRS employees,
ing t~e IRS, which met Wednesday who arc instructed to go to the
and is to .make rcc'onlmcndations to agencfs inspector general if they are
· ~ c{lffee klatscbes with big donors in
Congress later this year..
asked to ope~ an audit for political
•the Map Room.
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Orders teni~. orders began to slow, rising efits ro~ by 11,000 last.week, anaSeveral tax-exempt conservative reasons.
~. ~ "Sol~iting contributions bCfore or · to U.S. factories for big-ticket durable . just 0.6 percent the following month. lysis contend that new applications in groups, including the Heritage Foun- . IRS Commissioner Margaret Mili(lfter event&amp; is not a crime, yet, ...said goOds sliot up 3.6 percent in January, · Orders for durable goods are a key the lower 300,000 range indicate con- dation and the National Rifle Asso- ncr Richardson told the panel that the
1tln Baran, a Washin~ton campaisn· .the lirst edvance in three months aitd gauge of the nation's·manufacturing tinued labor market strength.
ciation, have said in recent months audits are based on '"fair, impartial
fipancc lawy'er' . who represents. ' the largest since September.
-se&lt;:~Or. Continued growth'(:ould lead
Applications for unemployment that they were being audited by the and nonpartisan enfim:emcnt," espeRepublicans. "I don'tlhink there is
to increased production and more insurance totaled a seasonally edjust- IRS. Those disclosures have led to cially as it relates to th,exempt orga~h of the major categories
llliything·illegal about hostins a con- shared in the gain, including a dou- jobs.
.
ed 316,000. Analysis had expectCd a allegations that the Clinton adminis- nizations.
tributor. at .the White House," lie . bte-dipt incre~~SC in elec!fonic and
Federal Reserve Chairman Man 4,000 increase.
Bdded. "There is a history of such otheJ\electrical equipment such as cir- Greenspan told'Congress on Wednes.In the durable goods report, transJQCial event&amp; in both partici." What cuit boards and communi~ons gear. day that "our economic prospects are portatio~ orde!S rose 1.2 percent in
lliakes the Clinton flUid-raising techThe.Commeic~. Department said quite ·. fav~rable," . while• inOation January. erasing a 0.9 perCent loss a
ntques different is "the scale· and today orders , totaled a se1159nally · remains in check. .
month .earlier. lncreises in moioi'
magnitude of the effort," B(lnlll said. adju~ted $174.8 billion, up from
He cautioned ~ cenll'lll bank. vehicles and airplanes 1IIC1I'C thait off.· could not rule Ol!l hiallct in~t rateS 1 set dec~s. ln shipbUilding, tanks
·
• .: Documents released this week by $168.8 ~!~Ilion in December.
JACKSON (AP)-ALa~l~me from the Jackson Counly Sheriff's
1.0 ~ !he. ~nomy ~ ovelfleat- . and railr&lt;illd equipment. ·•
The
initial
response
io
tf!e
fi,ures
t~ White HOUMl show thlll Clinton
man was in a Columbus hospital Office.
.
·
1111
and
dnvmg
pnces
hiaher.
Excludinl
lllltSpCINiion.
Olden
wu
mlllitd
01)
Wall
Su,et.
Yields
on
aitd presitjential aide Hlrold Ickes
today
aftor
a
shoolout
with
Jackson
When
confrontod
by
sheriff's
While
mdst
analysts
do
not
expect
were
up
4.4
percent,
the
lint
increase
were intimetely invol~ed ill planning 30-year il)euury bonds were barely any credit tightening at the nex! in four months.
Couhty deputies.
deputies, Swlbb fled to • trailer.
and scheduling coffee ptherinp to chanpdt; this mornin1 from late
meeting
of
Fed
policy-makers
on
.
The
usuelly
volllile
orders··
for
·
Steven
SWIIlb,
42,
WI$
tn
fair
con.
Swabb opened fire on ~ties. who
raise money for tllc Democratic Wec~neacW's level of 6.78 pertent.
. Many !IIIIIIYIII had eltpeCied a March 2.5, many expect a modest ~litary equipment fell23. 7 perteOI, dillon at Gnat Medical Center, hos- fired tc.r cu inlo the trailer, acc:orcJ· National Committee.
increase later in the yea~:.
the ICCOIId aaaipr dedi•. Exclud- pilll spokelwaiMn Comic Stover it\g to the press retea.. Swlbb lholl
Q. Whit·. 11e the restrictions on much siii4Jier 1.4 perecnt edvance in
ing this category, onlers
$ per- said today.
'
came out shooti111 11 deputitl llld
inYitinl political donors to spend the durable aoodJ oriJers after Decem·
A
second
report
loday
also
sug·
.
cent,
the
flr5!
edvance
in
four
D'Mid
..
....
,
ty
1101u
v.hiclem
wu wounded.
•
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Sw.bb
ntlht u pillS • ihe White House? bet's reviNCI 1.8 pen:ent drop. The psted the econoiny continues to
Orders
for
nonmilillry
capital
Ch.illicodle '!Ala A 11~ hi; Authorities said clwps wwe
:. A. Lilr,e coffee ldlbehea, or Olfaer D¢cc~~· decline earlier wa eati- . grow.
.
goods excludine aircraft rose 3.9 ·Jill"' . ral1111t1 ·.,_
jail oa . pendina apiJISt Swlbb, who wiD"- •; .
mated
to
._
1.9
percent
IIIII
fOllowed
.soC:ial eWW. k is notlllepl tO invite
·Although the, Labor Department · cent, reversing two months of dnmten drivina ·end . weapons · ; &amp;elll to j~l after he is relrlllod
iD NQvember. ·
P.olilical dollon for a Wflite HOIIIC a 1.7 ~nt
said
first-time claims for jobleis ben· declines. .
.
· chalps, IJ!;Cordiaa ~ • fll"l Nlillle d!e ltolpfal.
~~~"S.
After j¥mpina 4.5 percent in Scp~ver.
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~~l~~:~~=a~:~i::s":'~:~; ..Orders for

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•Pia•onds
•Sobtaires
efngag...nt Rings .
•14K Gold Chains
· •Watches

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Shoes for: .
Bridesmaids • Proms • Pqeants

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PRIVATE COLLECTION

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JtCQl{lJSitzJ(}f}./J !FIN:f, J'ErWEL!R!Y
111 B•co.'ld AYe. (To,_ Fum. Bldg.)

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legtSi!' lOn

Legislators want proof IRS
• au dI•t powers
··
not ab.USing

a

Continued from page 11
from Hong Kong to live with his new wife, who works as a jewelry
saleswoman in Chinatown. ·
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Each wedding party exited the chapel (o a big round o(,Ailpliwse
from others sitting on the rows·of plastic chairs.
· ··
· ,
.Those magic three minutes left some a chance to stay. in' America
and - maybe - get a green card.
.That was all news to some who got caught in Wednesday's marriqe
mess.
•
"Whoa! Crazy!" said loma Comrie, a cOI'I'CCtions officer wl)o had
no idea what had drawn the hordes that hindered her quest .for a mar-·.

rtS

rt
sunno

· 9·-'s

ue~ con~ldfqtion.

BR!Of .CO' vi&lt;\.Jt.A'I

&amp; • ·Brides • Mothen • Plower Girls -•

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as~~!~~:s·:c~~td:':~~~t~

When your man's.fancy turns to
lave, tum to: ~sket Delight for
all your w~diilg need$. You may
make that perfeet day happen.
CaU or afop in.. for a personal

'~~oppr_. ........

I

· Torricelli 's announcement came
an hOur after the Senate voted down
a substitute version he sponsored that
would have allowed !he federal government to set up a separate capital
budget for long-term investments. It
also would have made it easier to
waive the balanced budget requirement during economic hardship or
national security threats.
His &lt;~Fcision came after days of vote."

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.r:.tre Ou_ lCiaiS
J

. InSummertime~ ry'oung
. !Man~s ·!f,attcy turns% .!.Ove. ·

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ident Clinton announced formation
Tuesday of a commission to study
Torricelli's idea of a federal .capital
budget. The system is used by almost
all states that require balanced-budgel requirements.
· Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the
amendment's chief proponeqt, made ·
a last-minute plea for it. "This is the
only amendment.that has any chance
of passage through the Congress," he
said. "It's the I~ chance to do it, and
it's really comJftg down to this one

tr-.,.

IJ1iey Say

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intact."

hard lobbying from both sides. Pres- ·

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Torricelli said the amendment
before the Senate was flawed and that
he wu decided in this else to leave
"the genius of the founding fathers

. . .;,. . -Cleanup begins------- ·committee finds
more mQney for
.highway projects

• WASHINGTON (AP) .....: Docuj,
_ments detailins President ·Clinton's
tole in planning overnight stays and
' ·coffee ldatsches at the White House
·ire generating new demands for a
-special prosecutor' to investigate
. Pemocratic fund-raising practices,
·· · fusedBut the ~~bn!_~, Wednesdacall
,Y
~re
toe,....,.., .,-usan
s •or
: · Suc:h an investigation. '1'bat is a deci- .
•"slonfortheauorneypneraltom~e.
• ' It should not be a political deci~ion,"
.,,
'Ciinton said.
·
Attorney General .Janet Reno.
whose Justice Deplll'lmet\t already is
looking into fu!ld-raising by the
Democratic Ntitional Committee - ·
i,neluding 'pdssible illegal d?tl~l~~~~·--1
from China - 'said on Capitol
that she had "not rei:eived evidence
that under the law would justify the
llppointment of an independent coun-

1

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WASHINOTON (AP) - Sen. shy ofthe number needed for a two- inclinations."
Bob Tonicetn mnounced his oppo- thirds majority.
•
The balanced budget amendment
Torricelli, who voted for such · also was defeated by a single vote in
sition to the Republican&lt;~ balIIICed budget amendment today, fore- amendments as a Hou5e member, 199S, wben then Sen. Mark Hatfield
- sha;dowing another likely single-vote · told reporters he cannot accept the of Oregon was the only Republi~
defeat for the effort to revise the Con- latest GOP ve~Sion because it would to reject it.
make the gov.ernment's job too diffi- , · This time, all 55 Rep\Jblicans and
slilytion.
ije said be plans to exercise "my cult in coping with military and eco- II of 'the 45 Democrats said they
· bes,judgrnent," even though be vot- nomic emergencies and long-term would vote for the GOP bill, which
. eel for such a measure in the past and investment needs.
.
would requires that outlays and rev- ·
campaigned for a balanced budget
"!.have struggled with this:deci- . enues be in balance after 2002 and
hisi fall.
'
sion more than any that I hav~ ever that a three-fifths majority woold be
The New Jersey Democrat hed made in my life," Torricelli said.
required io make an exception in an'y
He said he 'talked Tuesday wjth year.
~n the last undeclared senator..His
·. "no~· vote would !eave supporters President ·CUntoit, who opposes the
A final vote is ex~ted next
witp only 66 committed votes, one amendment, and "I tohj hit:n my Tuesday.

~Ohio

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't1 MAl Binet

Mlllllport, Ohio

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bi_g tickets_•terns up 3.6 Ofo

Man hospitalized after
.shootout with police .· .

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·Comlf!erltary .

Thuredey,

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n. A~aoclltad PrMa

Thanks to a
long camWith 11101e pile than auts, both peip by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moyni·
the Clinton ac!ministralion and con- han, D-N.Y., a~ academic
I
peaso.J Republiaullesten hope to and political COIIMRIIII is building
111 Court St., P-roy, Ohio
use alut-minute "&lt;;PI fix" to reach lhat the CPI overstates the true infla·
114 112-21S8. Fa: 812-2157
a balanced-budget deal later thi s tion rate and that an tldjustment is in
year, but they are afraid to get the order:
public ready for it.
A Finance Committee-appointed
As a result, they may bring abolll commission headed by former White ·
• · .' .
their worst fear: a barrase of chargrs 'House economic tldviser Michael
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
from liberals !hat the political estab- Boskin reported last December that
lishment decided " in the dead of the overestimate is somewhere
ROBERT L WINGETT
nigbt" to "balance the budget on the between 0.8 percent and 1.6 percent,
Publlahlr
. backs of working people and the with. 1.1 J?:C:fCCnl the recommended
aged," and from conservatives that it fix.
·
·
.
. CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
' imp(Jsed "a secret tax increase."
The budget and political implica·
Contralllr
Q uWII u'P'IIIIr
President Clinton and GOP lead- lions
enormous, Lowerins the
ers ought to be educating the public · CPI by 1.1 percent would reduce the
- Sealillelil 1 1111 - . , 111o
on the merits of adjusting the gov- federal budget deficit by $153 biUion·
emment's Consumer Price Index, over five years, mainly by reducing
.::1)~pwl~t :;:,~,::.."'::a~e':'?.:::::""
,.::;,~
but instead they
leaving the task cost-of-living gains for beneficiaries
;;,., - . , . - - 10: urrn., 111o-. SmtiatL 111 CGcMt St. . to. others, including conservative of entitlement programs, es~ially ,
'
.,. CWo -~~~Ill 11..-.n11.
Blue Dog Democrats in the House · seniors, and limitins iJidexing pro~-----------·-~···--~~-·~~--.... and the Senate Finance Commiuee, tecti&lt;m for taxpayers against "brack·
1
1·A
-.
.whocan'tcommandtheattention that el creep."
.
.
President Clinton's top economic
a president can. ·
The Bl!'e Dogs
scheduled. to advisers have. ·praised the Boskin
- ~ By N. L.aa Cooper, prealdent
introduce a new balanced-budget commission's work. but the president
· An*lcan S. Aaaoclatlon
plan calhng for a 0.8 percent down- failed to include any CPI adjustment
1n the wake of the recent elections, both panics have been talking about ward adjusltJlent in the CPl.
in his 1998 budget and nooff~eilll will
putting differences .Side and begi 0ning wotk on a consensus agenda of pop·
,ular policy. Sounds good in theory, doe~n't it. But focusing on what is pop.ular too often caillead to disturbing consequences.
Once again Congress has forgotten ils duty to the nation and is cc,&gt;n'sid,erins a proposal to amend_the U.S. Constitution to outlaw desecration of the
: American Oag •• the very same amendment it has rejected twice before.
Poli~y decisions today are too often based _
on public opinion polls, with
too little thOught being given to the broad implict of the policies. This amend·
tnenl is a good example -- poDs show _
that a vast majO{ity ofAmericans .want
· to protect the flag, until they
told that the amendment would mark the
· fli'St time the government h8s limited freedom of speech and freedom of
expression. As a veteran, I want to protect the flag. But popular sqpport, or
lack of it, is really irrelevant.
l At the core Of the debate is one simple fact: a flag desecration amend·ment is simply not a national priority, nor should it-he. There have been no
more than three incidents of flag burning over the past five years. Surely
our nation is not so imperiled by three such ins""ces that we must alter opr
... basic system of freedoms and liberties.
.
::I · 11te issue hero is not love of or ~verence f~r the American flag. A'!ler. s icans who oppose the amendment' are not agamst. Old Glory or Amencan
;~ vlllues. I am a veteran, and was proud to serve undor the flag. But I. objeCt
] 110 "proteclina" the flag as an object at.the expense of the freedoms II sym·
~~-bolizes. The proposed amendment would limit one of the most cherished, ·
~ and internationally envied as~ts of our liberty •• our ability to express our
~ frustration and distress with governmen~ through words or symbolic speech,
no.matter how wrong or misguided our views may be. Dissent is as Amer!1 ican as the flag itself.
.
.
~ We do not need this amendment. It has been offered time and again only
:-; because politicians assume that it is the popular thing to do, then defeated
:~ when they realize it is an irresponsible thing to do.
·~ 1be American flag will survive rare eruptions of dramatic protest. 'It will
~ not survive, however,_if the freedoms it protects disappear with a misguidl:j ed constitutional amendment.
·

..2,

II&amp;-!..:

are

a

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are

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· ' · ·splaced pr···orl·t·y·

are

say that the admiaistniion favors it.
Republicus say
it'suptothepresideattotaketheletld
ifa challge is in Otda-, and they _.•t
likely to adjust the CPI in their budget .nisolutions this aprins. either.
Yet both sides anlicipate that when
they (ICt down to hard bargaining on
a final budset reconciliation,J!Ian in
la!C August or early September, they
will "bold hands" on a CPI tldjust·
rnent and then join in selling it to
Congress and the public.
Likely ils not, all hell will break
loose, with House and Senllle Democratic leaden, unions, ihe AARP, and
conservative anti-tax groups
charging that Clinton and the Republicans ate " playillg politics" with tax
rates and .Social Security. · .
Other likely elements of the final
deal ·- means-tested . premium
increases for Medicare and a niduction in capitals&amp;ins 'taxes·· also will
rile liberals while possibly placating
the rigbt.
·
In the .ensping ~onciliation bat·
tie, liberals will try toscare·Republi'
cans who won close races 'in 1996 by
threatening them with ads declaring

some

are

=
LoVE.

h

E

Dear Editor,
aie the Adopt-A-Highway program
I would just like to consratulate for the stretch of road in front of-the
'" the Eastern High Student Council on school.
~ their Jr&lt;ll efforts in t!le·community.
Under the guidance of committed
~
They showed great politeness in leaders such as Adam McDaniel,
J1their efforts to raise food for the less president, and his 'officers, these
~~ fortunllle. Eastern J-ligh Sc~ool is young people can be the one's that
~ be&amp;inning to show great efforts in lead us into the 21st Century.
:;i hclpin1 the area. 11tese students have · Again. thank you for all of the
-&lt;: shown enthusiasm in the communi- support within the community. and
l'ty. The food drive was the most sue- · thanks ·for all of your help.
·
t1cessful in Eastern High School his·
Arch RoH,
r~tory. Also, they are planning to initi- . .
. EHS siudent eonnd advisor

ti

.1

.

~

Social Security benefits llld w.,a. ·
. In fact, a CPI fiX il jlilt the kind
of shlred sacri&amp;e lhlll Demoa-111
and Repu!&gt;licau ou&amp;ht to..- upon
as the way to get 1he bl!dget bllanced.
Clinton and the Republic... ouabt to
make the case starting inunedialely
lhat no acwal "cuts•:· in beaefita. are
involved and that tax in=ues will
be progressive.
. .
Acconlin1 to the Social Security
Administration, a 1.1 percent tldjustment in the CPI would cause the
average retiree to receive a cost-ofliving increase of$ IS per month this - ·
year insteadofthe$23 he or she normally would receive, a "cut" of $8.
But when the AFL-CIO lellified
befono finance 1811 month, it del:t.ml
that Social Security recipients would
be "brutally impl!"ted" by a "cumulative beiiCiit loss" of $2,300 over
five years. The unions also oppose
the CPI fix because wage conlriCts
often are tied to the CPl.
lAbor's most powerful J!Oiit.ical
· ally. House Minority Leader . Diet
~t, J&gt;..Mo;, is ex~ted to lead
the c~ asainst_any budset.deal
that is "politiCally moti.vated" llild to.
WIC a CPIIix •• if the adminillntion ·
favon it •• to bash his 2000 presidential rival, Vice PresidentAl Gore,
For now. the administration,
. instead of chalienging the opposition
an~ citing nearly universal academic,
agreement that the CPI oventates
true inflation by at least 0.4 ~nt
because it fails to fully account for
consumers' tendency to. buy some·
thins cheaper when a prodUct's price
rises, is hiding in the weeds.
The remaining 0.7 percent of pre·
sumed CPI error is more controver·
sial, resulting from difficulty in
assessins the effect of increased
product quality on prices.
. The Blue Dog Democrats have
decided to handle the issue conserv·
atively, recommending a 0.8 percent
adjustment.
1bc lllministration is lfraid dial
any proposal it makes now will be .
hamniered to death over the next six
months, but the Blue Dogs have
· proved that courage ~ys J!Oiitically.
They tecommended a CPllix last
yeai and not one of them got beat in .
last year's elections because of it.
Gore should take note.
·
(Morton Koodndte .I I exeeu-

Today is Thursday, Feb. 27, the 58th day 'o f 1997. There are 307 days
left in the year.
·
·
·~
Today's Highlight in History:
~ 1\ve,nty-five years ago, on Feb. 27. 197+. President Nixon and Chinese
~ Premier Chou En-lai issued the Shanghai Co111munique at the conclusion. of
r Nixon's historic visit to ·China..
.
. ·
On this date:
1n 1801, the District of Columbia '!'as placed under the jurisdiction of
-

-In 1807. poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born in -Portland, Maine.
Jn 1861, in Warsaw, RJJssian troops fired on a crowd protesting Russian
over Poland; five man:hers were killed.
In 1922.the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld the 19th Amendomcntto the Constitution thet guaranteed the right of women to vote. .

Berry's _World

to figure out whether teacher union- properly addressed by gutless politi·
By Ben Wattenberg
AI Shanker, president of the . ization was such a good thing. It was cians and wimpy school boards. But
American Federation of Teachers, good for teachers. And AI was the · he understood that if education did·
died on Feb. 22. He was a most per- president of a national teachers' n't improve,- it woul!l be bnd for'
. suasive man. In the early 1980s he union.
· America and bad for .teachers.
Many labOr leaders .do what they
and I sat down together on a governHe was the principal champio6,of
ment plane. flying to Madrid as U.S. think is best for their members. But the "standards movement," somedelegates to a human rights confer- Shanker · became the pre,emincnt times called the "excellence moveence. I (foolishly) brought up the top- spokesman about American educa- ment," which is based on an ele·
ic of private-school vouchers for tion because he both transcended his mental triad of ideas. There should be
public-school students. I said it made · union role and tried to link it to the
solid c~rriculuJil, laying out what
-some sense. By the time we crossed national interest. He spoke common was to ·be le~. There shOuld be
the ocean I had been spun around like sense to foolishness. Going against tests to see whether students · had
a top. It tOok me a decade to recon- the arain of the education establish· learned the material. And most ~bn·
stitute my thinking.
ment, he condemned the "self- troversially, thcire should be ''conseHe was persuasive because he was esteem" movement, racial · prefer- quences" if students couldn't pass the
knowledgeable. He knew a Jot about ences, teaching machines, Afro-Cen- test; &amp;onsequences such as not being
a lot, and at least a little about most trism, bi-lingualism, whole-l11nguage promoted or sraduated. Shanker Sa\\;
of the rest. He was a wine maven and reading, the new math and whatever that standards wouldn 'I matter if
a stereo audiophile. He was almost a else turned up as the trend du jour'of they didn't mauiir to 'students. .
Ph.D. fn philosophy when he became the ever-.:hanging pedagogical menu
Critics siid Sb_anker had tn)Uble
a math teacher in New York City and --just shon of the ideas then endorsed• delivering his members. But .that is
the leader of a local. reachers' union. by AFT rival. the National.Education the nature of union dernoc~y. State
He was later a national union Association. Above all, Shanker hat· and local union officials have their
leader, admired by neo-conservative ed .the idea of. "social promotion," own ideas and priorities. Shanker was
intellectuals. He was a vigorous which moves children up the ladder the de facto creator of the charter
member of the board of the AFL- of grades even if they haven't learned school;. some AFf state and local
CIO, and was not pleased with the anything.
officials were not happy with the
current direction of the AFL-CIO.
Shanker thought schools should idea. Some schofars maintained that
He was the man who made the be disciplined places dedicated to AI could say wh;ttever he W¥ted,
teachers' unions a power in American learning with well-qualified teachers. and the state and·Iocal. unions would
life, raising salaries for teachers, He wouldn'tlet teachers be the fall do whatever t'lley wanted.
-~
improving work conditions, and dra' guys for a failing educational system.
Perhaps so, but it takes a wwe to
matidllly increasing the political That failure, he believed, was m(\St· change the course of an oCean liner influence ttf teachers. This sent bat- ty due to changing family structure • which is now happening. In., lilY
talions of scholars to their cubbyholes and changing values, which were not event, there are other players in the
game who were influenced · by
l

a

SE£
No '

QU..

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"

Twenty-eight cases were resolved intoxication, $313 plus costs; resist.'Monday in the Pomeroy Mayor's ing arrest, $313 plus costs; public
intoxication. $113 plus costs; George
.'Court of Mayor Frank Vaughan.
Forfeiting bonds we1:0: Virginia Vincent, Rutland, court suspension,
Dean, Pomeroy, failure to yield, S6l: $63 plus costs; failure to comply. $63
.John Savage, Vinton, speed, $71; plus costs plus old fifleS; Richard
;Clyde R. Quillen, Racine, speed, $69; • Long,.'Pomeroy, assault,· $313 plus
. Michelle 'Pooler, Pomeroy, · speed, costs; Richard Laudermilt, Pomeroy,
•$69; Bridget Varney, Portland, failure to comply, S&lt;i3 plus cos~ ;
.assured clear distance, $63; Jill George Capehart, Pomeroy, dis·
:n.een, Long Bottom, speed, $57; charging a fu-earm in the village, $30
;Thmmera Arnold, Gallipolis Feriy, plus costs ; Terry Day, Pomeroy,
, W.Va., , speed, $68; Mandy Boso, underage consumption, $88 plus
costs; Trina Young, Racine, speed.
' Portland, speed, $66. · · ·
·
: Fi"ed were: Jerry Hayman, Syril• $25 plus costs;
Charles Rickard, Clifton, W.Va.,
cuse, driving under financial respon·
traffic
tight violation, $63 plus costs;
' sibility action suspension, $150 plus
. ,,osts; expired tags, $63 plus costs; ~ Crystal Stamper, Mason.- W.Va.,
l Robert Schneider, Mason, W.Va., speed, $47 plus costs; traffic light,
rdrug paraphemaiia, $1000 plus costs; $63 plus costs; Diana Shaw. Adelphi,
, assault, $313 plus costs; posses~ion disorderly conduct, $63 plus costs;
; of drugs, SZSO plus costs; Randy George Payne, LaurelviUe, open conSmith, Pomeroy, traffic light viola· tainer, $88 plus costs; Randy Ander·
•tion, $63 plus costs ; Steven Myers, son, McArthur, obsuucting justice,
' Hartford, W.Va., loitering, $33 plus $83 plus costs; David E. Graham, S.
; cos!$;· Danielle HensJey, Syracuse. Bloomingville, disorderly conduct,
,)oitering, $20 plus costs; Lynda J. . $63 plus costs; disorderly after warn; Fnilcy, Pomeroy. speed, $29 plsu ing, $63 plus costs; Rhonda Neece;
: cosis; .
&lt;\pple Grove, W.Va., speed, $48 plus ·
' Shawq ·King, Pomeroy, public costs.
.•

_;Land transfers posted
•

The following land transfers were em Ohio Coal Company, Columbia,
•recorded recently in· the .office of :i.31 acres;
. Deed, Heath and Diane Hill to
•Meigs'County Recorder Emmogene
:Hamilton:
·
George Brickles, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, Richard A. and Dorothy
Right of way, Albert C. and Mar'jorie B.· Tromm ,to Tuppers j'lains· Hageny to Rose M. and Wade F. Toy·
' Che~ter ·Water District, Bedford, lor, Salem, 2.220 acres;
:Deed, James Hiram Smith. James
-!!.504 •11i:res: .
Right of way, Steven Reitmire to Hi.Smi.th to Burner Land Company,
'Virgil C. and Mary D. King. Bedford; Orange, 107.16 acres;
Deed, ·Racine United Methodist
Deed, Steven Reitmire to Darrin
:s. and Bethany C. Cremeans, Bed- Church to Village of Racine, Racine
lot·~
·
.Jord;
'
.·
Deed,
Ritchie
Coe
to
Steve
C.
- Deed, Rohert Headley to Aoyd
Russell.
Columbia.
1.242
acres.
· :Dean Pullins, Olive;
·. Deed~ Joanne R. Knapp to South·

:Wednesday's GPLA results
~

, .

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•

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The rollowing cases were resolved
Owen A.-"BIIb" Nutter, 54,. Reedsville, died Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1997, at Monday in the Syracuse Mayor's
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Court of Mayor Gemie Connolly.
He was born April 17, 1942 in Akron, a son of th~ late Hayward and . Fined were: Carolyn Neutzling,
Eunice 1. Nichols Nutter:He was formerly employed by Ames CompanY and Middleport, old lines, $41; Allen
was a self-employed timber cutter. He was an avid fisher, ~unter atid pool Pape, Syracuse. stop sigl), costs only;
playet. ·
.
.
.
Mary Evans, Racine, defective
Surviving by his wife, Susan Ellis Nutter of Reedsville; two sons, Wilham · exhaust, costs only; Eugene Adkins
Nutter of Tuppers Plains and Russell Nutter of Belpre; four daughters, Br:en- ,
da Clegg of Long Bottom, Cynthia Nutter or Belleville, Vf.Va.. Judy Vm:ner of Fairmont, W.Va., and Ginger ~ombs of Beach Gro-:e. Ind.; two SIS' The following actions to end mar. ters, Lilly Cremeans of Reedsville ~nd Carolyn Avery of Georg1a; II grand- riage were tiled fCCently in the office
sons and five granddaughters.
.
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts LarServices will be Saturday, I p.ni. at White-Blower Funeral Home m ry Spencer.
Coolville with W.L. Combs' officiating ~
Divorces asked -- Cathy J. Rowe,
friends may call Saturday, \0 a.m. to I p.m.
Ra~ ine, from Jay D. Rowe, Middle·

Jr.. Portland, speed. $52.
Forfeiting bonds were : Jerry
Engnes, Newport, speed, $52; Jason
Arnold, Pomeroy, speed, $54; Ore·
gory Wilte, Bloomingdale. speed,
$55; Ronald Sellads, South Point,
speed. $50; Randy Comstock, Mari·
on, speed, $55 .

Divorces· and dl"ssolutl"ons f"lled.

Meigs County Court ne"'~

pon, Feb. 19: John M. Smith from
1Heather D.. Smith, both of Racine,
Feb. 14.
Dissolution asked -- Brett E.
Friend, Long Bottom, from Robin
Friend, Middlepon, Feb. !9. -

Meigs·announcements

Mareh 6 has been canceled.
The following cases were resolved Middleport. passing bad checks. Christian group to pet1orm
recently in tl!e Meiss County Court costs; Bobbie J. George, Vinl?~·
The Pomeroy United Methodist
of Judge Patrick H.•O'Brien.
DUI, $850 pius costs, 10 days Jail Church will host the Kings Way Ladle set session
Shade River Lodge 457, F&amp;AM,
Fined were: John L. Ridenour, . suspended to three days,_90-?ay OL . Singers, a Christian group from Ohio
will
have a breakfast, Saturday, 8 a.m.
Long Bottom, driving under the suspension, one year probauon, ~atl State University, Sunday at 3 p.m. A
followed
influence, $800 pws costs, 30 days and $550 suspended upon ,completion carry-in dinner will follow the con- . , by preparation for inspccjail suspended to 10 days, one-year_ of residential treatment program;
cert and the public is invited to attend uon .
operator's license suspen~ion, 90Dale E. Stewart, Rutla_nd, no 01..,. the event to. emphasize the Lenten
day vehicle immobilization; William S150 plus costs, five days Jad a~d $75 season.
·
·
M. Carswell, Pomeroy, expired OL., suspended if valid operator's hcense Elvis to visit Harrlsonvill•
Elvis Presley impersonator
$SO plus costs, three days jail sus- , presented w1thm 90 days; Ryan W.
pended; Duncan B.' Mozingo. Rut- Hollon, Racine, S(lee.d, $29 plus George Wagner from Canton will be
land, telepho!ie harassment, costs, 10 costs; Edward E. Sellers, ~1ddieport, at the Scipio Township Fire House in
days jail suspended, two years pro- . assured clear distance, $20 plus costs; · Harrisonville Saturday. 8-11 p.m.
$5 per person, 12 and
bation; Shawn C. · Fitzgerald, Charles L. Spurlock, Coolville, seat Tickets
Coolville, driving under financial . belt. $25 plus costs; Narvei H. Fos- under admitted ftee. ·
responsibility action suspension, ter, Gallipolis, driving under ~u.spen· Boating skills course
. q:,prc
$150 plus costs, six months jail sus- sion, $250 pius costs, 10 daysJad susA free boating skills course sponpended to 7 days, 30-dily vehicle pended to three days, one Y~ pro- sored by the u.s:Coast Guard Au ~­ 10MOHHllvv
immqbilization;
· ,
bation, jail suspended upon compte' iliary will be held starting March 4 at
Clare·nce Weddle, Ponland, disor· tion of resii!Fntial treatment pro- St Paul Lutheran Church in ·
derly conduct, $25 plus costs, gram; Eric P. Jones, Long .Bottom, Pomeroy. Classes run from 7:30 to
restraining order issued ; Jeffrey T. seat belt. $25 plus costs; Carl W. 9:30p.m. and cover 13 topics includPyatt, Mason, W.Va., $)00 plus costs, Moodispaugh, Pomeroy, speed SIS ing equipment, trailering, boat han·
10 days jail suspended to three days, plus costs.dling, ru'cs: weather and radios: For
two years probation; Paula S. Fink,
·
more irifclrmation call Jim Goodrich
.
.
. ·
.
at 949-3301 or Donna Davis at 992s·
'i
. .
6107.

are

k

rt

:Hospital news

·

OVR NEW PHYSICIANS.

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

:.Sirths

Mr. amd Mrs. Tony Waugh,
•daughter, Gallipolis.
.,

.
The Daily Sentinel
.

·

(USPS %13-~)
Published

ber;

afternoon, Manda)' lhrou&amp;ll

Friday. Ill C - Sl.. '-&lt;oy, Ohio, by !he
Ohio Valley Publi~hiaa Coqtany,(}anhtll Co.•,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. l'h. 992·2156. ~ond
Cion po!IIIJP poid II Pomeroy, ObtQ,
· ,

'

Member: The Anocioted ~and the Ohio
Newspapa- Auocilllioo.
..,.,_,M

·

I Send DddreRt eonutionl IO
Seminel. Ill CoUrt Sl., Pomeroy.

SUBSCRIPTiON BATitS .

By C•nitr1or Meter"louie

jlr!e w~......:........................ ,.. ..~....... l l OO
One M- ...........................:...,................ 18-70
One Yoor ............................................... Jlll4.00

SINOUt COPY PRICJI .
Polly ...........,..................,....... .......... :,. 3! Ccnm

' ''" dc!llr!at 10
~
c&lt;Orict may ;
·remit in advpnce dlrtcl to Tht Dall)' Stnrlael
pn a ...._, sb. ot I:t month l:lldi. Qedk will be

poy.,

..... ...,:.......
No

~_-·

'ub~~~:ripda. by

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mall permitted ,in mu

where home ~anier ..vk:e 11•~-~le.

l'ubll..,.. I&lt;JefVOI iho

ri""

10 lllijuil -

dur·

lq the tubtCriplion patod. Sube: lption 11*
.........,. may be lmp......,led by clwllilllllle
~ofdleaubtcri~.

,

1

MAIL IIUIIK:R"'"ONS

· -Mlf!t1l
c.q ' :.... S27.!0..
t3'V...u.............
::.............................
26 -

n-

more

;·

Syracuse court cases settled

Owen A. Nutter

Meigs CIC elects directors

v..-.

t

..

(Today s 1IVestoc repo

•boo!'

( .

°

dard, $34-39; utility $29·33; ·com·
mercia(, $25-29; CC • $18-22;,bulls,
$2 h1gher; butchers, $38-50.
ciation:
" Total head: nla. · •
· FEEDER CATILE • $3 higher;
. HOGS..:.Prices,steady. Butchef Yearling. steers, $58-$80; 1\eifers,
· :Vigs,anweights,S49.SO;sows,s37- $52-60; calves-steers,$76-91 ; back
' 42; boars, nla; l'eeder pip, nla.
- m the. rarm babies, $23 and down.
.·
.
T
Trust~ to met
CATFLE • heifers, nla; choice, !i' SHEEP - Choice, !'&gt;'a: A,ged
Units of the Meigs County Emery:49 p.m., Rockspnngs Rehab~ ILetart Township Trustees will
:; nla; Good, nla; Holstein, n/a. ·
slaushter sheep, .$25-30.
gency Medical Service- logged four tat1on Center. Pomeroy. HBe";1ct
meet Monday, 6 p.m. at the office
COWS . • Demand and price ,, • Horse and tack sllle, Saturday, calls for assistance Wednesday. Units Hawk, Veterans Memonal osp ~ •
building.
·
responding included:
8:27 p.m., Cross Streeth Racme, ,
' tr~~nd,$2 higher; utility,$30-34; ' Stan• March I, II a.m.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
san~ra Mellott. t~eate~ att e scene,
Meetlnc cam:eled
,
7:04 a.(ll., stale Route 7 at Baer Racme squad asSISted.
th Hen. A meeting of the Meigs County
' .
' Rotld, Chester, Tom (llicc, treated at
. 10:56 p.m., RRC.,Doro Y
Republican Committee scheduled for
1
U.S.
2'
3,
230-260
lbs.
43.00.,
the
scene;
dncks,
VMH.
, COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected 48:00; 210-230 lbs: 38.00-43.00.
•·Sows: steady to 1.00 .tower over
. buying points Thursday as provided
'by the U.S. Department of Agricul- 600 lbs.
.
SCREAMR
IU.S. 1·3 300-450 lbs. 40.00·
~ture Marbt News:
ONE
EVENING
SHOW 7:.30
the Meigs County Community March I, 2000.
' ' Barrows and gilts: mostly steady; 44'.00; 450-500 lbs. 43 .00-46.00; lmprove!llcnt Corporation elected its
STARnNG
FRIDAY
Speaker at the meeting was Rep.
CHRIS FA9LEY IN
·demand moderate on a modi:rate S00-650 lbs. 46.50-50.00, few over board of directors at a meeting held John Cl!I'CY (R-Wellston), He di ~­
BEVERLY
HILLS
600
lbs.
51.00.
' movement. ·
this week.
cussed pending legislation as 11
NINJA ,...,.
' Boars: 38.00-39.00.
: U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
Elected were Bruce Fisher, Sue relates to jobs and industrial develONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
,:Estimated receipt ~: 3.5,000.
..points 48.00-45.00, few to SO.SO;
Maison, Grover Salser, Jr., Bob opment.
·
4-*0823
:c
Hog market trend for Thprs· Wingett, and John T. Wolfe •. for .
plants 49.2S-51.00. ·
Reed presided at the meeting held
dayo steady.
·
. terms expiring (\farch I, 1998; Joe ·at the Pomeroy Gun Club..
•
·
Summary of Wednesday's Pro----------------------------------.,
ducers Livestock Association auc- Bolin, Dc.wey Horton; Paul Reed,'
Steve
Story,
and
J"dy
Williams,
for
·Veterans Memorial
tions at Gallipolis and Mt. Vernon:
terms expiring M.arch I, 1999; and
~ Wednesday admissions -· None.
•Hogs: steady to 1.00 higher. ·
Eugene
.Facemyer,· Horace Karr,
: Wednesday discharges -- Cora
,!;lutcher hogs: 48.25-51.50.
Roscoe Mi,ls, John Musser, and Jen!.Beegle. Racine.
Cattle: 1.00 higher.
nifer Sheets, for tetnis ~xpiring
.:Holzer' Medical Center
,\
• Wednesday's discharges • Nellie
:six, Paul May, ·Vinida roe, Noah
Friend, Mrs. Roger Sparks and son;

know:

.

Auction results from Wednesday's

Ethel A. Cozart

$25.000 ~h from Earl Adams or·
Letart Falls. The complaint states thali ·
Mr. Sayre was injureil by Adams i~
a motor-vehicle accident 011 Feb. 20,
1995.
'
City Loan Financial Services Inc.
of Pomeroy seeks $6,248.31 plus
interest and costs from Ralph Cow·
dery, Reedsville, to recover the baJ,
ance of an outstanding promissory
n_ote.
.
City Loan Financial Services Inc.
or Pomeroy seeks $9,554 plus inter·
est and costs from Rick A. Hawley,
Middleport, to recover the balance of
an outstanding promissory note.
Alicia Council, Rutland, seeks
$20,000 pius costs from Stephanie N,
Burton, Middleport. for damages
stemming from an Aug. 10, 1996, ·
motor-vehicle accident in Middl&lt;'
pon.

'MeiQS
• ·EM
' IOQS 4 c·a·lis

By TONY SNOW
dy, c~n you spare a hundred grand?" given money, they got the&gt; royal rassments, the China connectioO:'
Creatora Syndicate
Only later did he realize he might · treatment. After some chitchat, the seems mosi vexil)g. The Clintons;
WASHINGTON -- Even if Con- have signed away his independence. group repaired to 'the White House insisted lhat the Commerce DcpartJ
g~ss_ fearns nothing during its
Consider an actual event at the recording studio, where the v\sitqn ment hire John Huang, a senior offi~
upcomina heari.ngs irito the Lip- Clinton Casino' It took place in · watched the president ,record his cilll with the Lippo Group, an Indone-:,
pogate scandal, the affair already has March 1995. The president wei· )Neekly radio address. and posed for sian-based conglomerate with exten,-'
made the United Sta!fs look like the corned into the Oval Office a half- photos with the commander in chief. sive business interests in China.:
dozen Chinese and Chinese-AmeriThe president decided not ·to let Huang received resular CIAbriefin.:
tackiest nation on eatth.
One thretld runs tiltough the tales can.businessmen, including Johnny' the pictures out, andit'ugood thins. gs on China- and routinely folloY.ocd:
of John Huang's i.itrigues at the Chung·- a colorful operator who had One of the visitors was 'Huang those meetincs by plioning Lippo.or'
Commerce Dcpartrtjent, Bill Clin· donat~d $300,000-to the Democratic Jichun, an employee of,China1' state- _meeting with Chinese officials. Con-:
totl's· endless coffecjs at the White Party. As he greeted his guests, they owned munitions factory --.1~ same • .sressional in'(Cstigators ~ant to
House and the peregqnations of such ·bowed low. Feeling cosmopolitan · .crew ~at last year ;;ent millions. of · 'whether ,lle. handed off top-secret:
·
· •
chll'l()ten as Charlie Trie, Johnny and generous, he returned the gesture. ·doiln worth of. tlleaal . machtne mformatlon.
Chung and Milt Middleton: beg·
The scene must have looked like guns to drualonls in California.
The Washington Post also ~ :
sins. Down-on-the-knees, tears-on- a cutaway photograph of a piston
. This was hardly an unus~al occa- reported that the Cbinesesovomment :
the·clleeks, sham?.Eess, · drooling engine, with the'parts bobbing up and 11_on. Records s~ the president and. itself may have been funnelina mon- :
appeals for fluffy
ntains of cash. down •• except that pistons senerate v1ce president, 1n their quest for the ey into Dcmoqatic Party coffers u 1 ·
. 'I1!e president p , yed an es~ial- heat and liaht ·and they don't wear ·_ dough,
hands 1111 year with yet way of smoothina relations witll 1 :
. 1y uedipifted tolo' in the affair, He . mirthless smiles.
'
· ~~r Ch10ese arms merchant, a president. who iRI992;nvapd Chi- ;
behaved lesslikilll stateSman during
A National Security Council Mtamt·bued druslord, a Lebanese na's human-rights record. ,
·
!lis ~e
bid than a yabl cajoy- memo at the time noted that presi· embc~ler and •••us~ m~.
Clinton allies dismias thele tltinp
ins a bot ni.lht in
With .each · . clential aides Itt the JI'OUP in "not With company ltke 11111, the Whtte u coincidence. They •Y the Jftli·
roll of the dice, with each impoba- kaowlna anythi111 about them except ~ouse shouldn't be se~ng ita jueas dent ananJed co1r- 1Q ""Ill• ·the
ble addition ~tldl.uuk; he became · !hat the)'· were DNC (Democratic hstst~ the Secret Semce. It ousht to sulfocatina isolation of lhe wtite·
Qlllldaul and ...-it;iOJJS. He National Con.mittee) contributors."
submit them to Jntorpol.
HOWIC and hear frOm .avera,e Alllertunlld to comp~ctf flrlnaen: "BIId· · But f1rCC:isely becallse ,~ 'had
·· Yet of all the aqest-li.. embar- icans.
·
•.

......

Friday night. ..Rain likely. Low in
the mid 50s.
~
Saturday... Showers likely. Continued '\'arm. High in the mid 60s.
Sunday and Monday... Partly
cloudy. Low in the mid 30s and high
near 50.

Editor's note: Tile ll1inl C'L a
lawsuit outliMI tile p-;e- fll
one party apleR •• ther. It ....
aot·em.N!do pit or lana . II
Ethel A. Johnson Cozlrt,l9, Racine, died Wednesday, Feb: 26, 1997. at
The followinslawsuits WCJI! filed
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
recently in the Meiss County Com·
A homemaker she wu born Aug. 13, 1907, in Portland, daughter of the mon Pleas Court of Judge Fml W.
late William and 'Mary Bates Ward. She attended Morse Chapel Chun:h in Crow lll
I
·
·
Margaret Capehart, Tavares, Fla..
~~ving is a sister. Elsie Roush of Portland; nine children and .children- · seeks rei.- from a land contract
in-law Clyde Johnson of Portland, Emenon and Leota Johnson of Portland, plus costs 'from Kenneth Ray Searles
Doris Bailey of Racine, Mary and Roy Gillilan of Chester, Belly and Billy and TammyR. Searles, both of Mid·
·
fC
r d AI Job dleport. Capehart alleses the couple
Combs of Cleveland, Carole and Joe Gilblan
anton,. lm ~ rna n- did not abide with the terms ofaland
· son of Dllllu, Teltas. Gary and Marie Johnso~ of Peona, Ariz., and Roger · . contract purchase or propeny owned
and Shirley Johnson of Racine; seven stepehildren and several rueces and by Capehart.
,
nephe"!s; 31 gmndchildRn; 41 great-grandchildren and 12 great-great-grand·
First National Bank of Ohio,
children.
·
Akron, seeks $8,369.32 plus interest
. She was preceded in death 'by three sisters, four brothers and two hus- and costs from Edith A. Clark, Rut·
bands.
·
·
. p ·
land, on an outstanding promissory
Services will be held Saturday, 2 p.m. at Ew_inll ~uneral H~me '"· omeroy
with theRe:;. Seldon Johnson officiating. Bunal .wlllfollow, '" Meigs Mem· no~on and Shirley Sayre of Letart
ory Gardens.
Falls seek an amount in exce5S of
Friends may callf.riday. 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

~ Gallipolis.Producers LivestockAsso-

Shankerism: business, the Consrcss,
state and local politicians, public
opinion and the president of the
United States (who is innuenced by
all of the above).
· President Clinton was a sreat
admirer of AI Shanker and was in fi'eqU.nt contact. In early February, less
than three weeks before Al's death,
Clinton delivered his State of the
Union message. The largest section
of it dealt with education, a 10-point
plan. Much of it was vintage Shanker.
Clinton's .initial·point, spelled out
at far sreater length than the others.
was this: "First, a national crusade
. for education standards ... Every
state should adopt high national standards, and by 1999 every Slate should
test every fourth-grader itl retldins
. and every eighth-grader in. math to
make sure these standards are mtl . ...
The point is not 'to put our children
down. but to lift t1iem up. ...,They can
help us to end social promotion. For
. no child stiouid move from gtae~C·
· schoo_lto junior high, or junior high
•to high school until he or she i
ready."
As a memorial: Why don't w&lt;; call
them the Shanker standards?
.
· ~a Wattenbefl, a senior fellow
at the Amerlc:aa Enterprise laid.;
t.te, II the MIIKK: of "Val- Mat•
ter Molt" and II the bost of tile,
weekly public televllioa prop11111
"Tialak 'llonk.''

'Buddy,- can y9u spare a hundred grand?'

EUndecl foftCIIR

'Pomeroy mayor•s court

The ·Shanker standards_
- _-._: _ __

Great community effort

~!~~!~ history

lhll CPI tldjustmeniJ will "~ut"

~~~~~=:._.,..,--~-~~:::_--'-~----_:__=:~
________j .dve
editor
of Roll811.)
Call, t h e E
paper
of Capitol

·~••Letters to .the edi·t or
~ .

NoT

Friday...Partly cloudy...Then cloudy
with a chance of showers late in the
afternoon. High near 150. Chance of
Bin 3j) percent.

•.Soa6rMIIerD Ollio
Today...Showers likcly...Mainly
this morning. Warm and breezy.
High 65 to 70. Southwest wind I0 to
20mph...
' This afternoon. Chance of rain 70
• percent.
: Tonight... Becoming
partly
~ cloudy by early evening. Low in the
· lower and mid 40s .Variable windS
, to 10 mph.

to balanced budget d~al
The Daily Sentinel · 'CPI fix' crucial dec•
CoaJfCialonal
BJ Morton Kondttcl•

Lawsuits filed

Today'-s weather forecast

'·:?S'J._27, •...,_

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The Dally Sentinel• P~~ge 3-

Pomeroy •lllddllport, Ohio

.

.

............. , ..: ..........................$5).1~

.................................,...... ,.. SIOl.SI!

---.....~
1:1 ......
~ .....'1.......................................$29.25
~-. .................,•..,........- .......;•.•••$SUI
~....,,,,...,,,:,;,,..... ,.................... IOP.n

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It Certainly Does Make A Difference ·
· Where You Buy Your Diamonds!
Qlamond pu,._s are difficult! Diamonds
a~ priced baBed on. not only size but also
pLirlty, cut and' color. We at Acquisitions ask
you to · compare our new diamonds with
ar)yone's. You will ... _the difference- Your
Diamond D9llar ' will buy you · more at
·AcqL!Ialtlons: ·We price each dlainond with -a
suggested retail .price and our ·price ~
ce)mpare us . Just once- You will see · the
savlnget ·.

·JUq·uisitions
'

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HOUR$:

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FREE ~1FT WRAPPING
Member Jewelers Boaod ol ,._ .

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Dr. Chhabria, standing, and Dr. Rahman, are the two new physicians who
have joined the staft' at Veterans Memorial H05pital in Pomeroy.
. . Dr. Khawaja A. Rahman (Ra-MO]II) and Dr. Satywan Chhabria (Cha-bree-uh) are
the nevi members of the MediCal Staff at Velerans Memorial Hospital.
- Both received lhelr medical degre'&amp;s In Pakistan. Dr. Chhabria trained in internal
medicine for two years at St Joseph Hospital in Chicago, Ill., and Dr. Rahman served
a one~year internship at Queens Hospital Cenler in New York, an affiliate of the MI.
Sinal Medical Cenler .in New York, before doing a two year residency in Internal
medici"- with ~Western Reserve Care System In Youn_gstown, Ohio. .
.
· Both of our new doctors .are trained in internal medtcine but ·also perform faiT!IIy .
practice services. Th,y are available to walk·inpalienls at their offices in 'the Meigs
Medical Complex, adjacent to Veterans Memorial. The phone number is 992-3632.

VETE~S

Sal. 9-5

Fd.N

FlnancinQ .
Available

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MEMORIAL
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115 EAST MEIIORIAL I;)RIVE
982·2104
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POMEROY

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The Daily Seniin,cl'

Sports

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In the Division IV sectional finals,

Symmes Valley beats Tornadoes

••

Joey Ferpaon pia;ked up lhe slack
•* lldlll
212z4, Joey Fetplon S.Q-214=12. :.
wilh equally hot shootinJ bauds.
. Southern
S-15-14-23=59 'lbtiiiii2U-171ZW1
l
The Symmes Valley Vikings1;,
Solilhem loll lhe handle on a · Symmes Valley IS·I8· 23-2S:81
Soudaen:Adam Roush 3-0-0=6, ' .
brought lhe Southern Tornadoes sea- comeback bid and lhe same· when
S)'IDIDI!II Valley: Jeremy Hoi- Ryan Nortis 2-2-5fl=2l, Jamie ..
s9n to lhe end, closinslhe book on Symmes outraced lhe 'Ibmadoes to '.land 1-0-214=6, Chad Ross 1-0-0=2, Evans 4-0-2/2=10,JesseMaynard I· 1
Southern's -worst season in over a a 23-14 spread in lhe third fnune. RyiiiWils~2~():4,JohnSiwp I· 0-0=2, Joe ,Kirlly 2..().()=4, .Juon ;
That resulted in a 56-33 tally after 0-616=8. Eric S1mpson 0.3-212=11.; Allen 1- 1-00:S, Tyson BUc:kle'y 4quarter ofa ceniury..
The Vikings claimed a 81-S9 win three rounds.
·
·
Hunt 7-3-213=25, Matt Wilson 0-114=9; Tolllls l1·3-&amp;'17o.59
'
to claim the Division IV sectional
SymmeS bepn to substitulll inter- ~!;.!2!:~!!Jo~s~h~!:~;!!,.~~-,:_,;':..,_ _ _~.,.~"'!"'-~J ·
championship and a berth in the dis; miltcntly and Soulhem's cOQI shoot- ·
tric1 dournament at Ohio Univeni- ing-grew even colder. S~ llitjust 3ty 's Convoeation Center on Mondsy, 20 lhree-point attempts to go alpng
March 3 against Franklin Furnace wilh a dismal two-point shot ave'race
Green, lhe winner of the first sec- (15-41) at -this point in the game.
tional .title oflhe night.
Southern ended with a 2148 two.Soulhem's previous low record . poinl ratio.
•·' 1\ J
'
came in 1969-70 followed by two 9The last round was an offensive
10 ~ons lhe following two years shoot-out a5 Symmes emptied its
and winning seasons !hereafter. The bench, but st\11 manaced a 25-23
Tornadoes did, however, run their advant8ge.
.
string to 22 straight sectional finals
Southern ~ad 31 rebounds (Nor·
wilh this year's semi"final win.
ris 7, ii'Uckley ~)to 10 wilh an 8~ 17
Southern was led in scoring by night atlhe line. SHS had 7 steals, ,
senior Ryan Norris, who closed his 18 turnovers, and 19 fouls. SVhit 21career wilh 23 points. Classmate 58, 7-12 thrce'-pointer5 -including 3.Jamie Evans had 10. .
4 Hunt treys, a {7·23 night a1 !he line
Symmes was led by Chris Hunt and 41 rebounds (Campbell?, Hunt
OPEN MON.-FRI. N, SAt 9-5
with a game-high 25 points, Team- · 14, Sharp 7). Symmes had 7 steals,
mate Joey Fe111usbn had 12, and Eric 17 turnovers, and 17 fouls.
· Simpson had II'.
Behind a 13-0 run in lhe first
quaner, lhe Vikings rolled to a 15·5
lead after Southern had taken an early 4-0 lead in the opening minute.
SHS went up 4-0 on a game-open·
ing Jamie evans bucket and then
Jesse Maynard grabbed a steal on the
ensuing·inliounds play and drove it
in for the 4-0 score. tben, Soulhem
~APES,
went ice cold from 1he floor.
Symmes Valley went up 13-4
IJMI1lD TO Ill STOCK mus ;·
when Chris Hunt got hot and hit
eight straight points, including two
three-pointers. Sql!l!ae"i scored its
final point of the frame on a Ryan
Norris free throw, the.second of two
with 45 seconds left.
Both clubs traded buckets much
of the second frame and lhe lead
stoOd at ten much of the time. A Nor·
ris three pointer wilh two minutes
left cut the lead to its narrowest margin since lhe first quarter at 27-20 . .
Southern had a couple of missed
Credit Terms
chances to get closer, but Hunt
~Lay-A-Ways .
dri lied a baseline jumper and John
, Sharp canned a pair of free lhrows
' DEALER
.
for a 33"20 Symmes lead atlhe half.
IMon•.frl. 9-7
Hunt was not only hot, but charismatic ·in putting on a great show for
Sat. 9-5
lhe VikingS. Showing the poise of
original Viking Leif Erikson, Hunt .
displayed a Nordic .twist that ripped ·
... ,. '/ ' '·
new holes in the nets. When Hunt
wasn't hitting, Eric $impson ~nd

By 8COn WOLFE

91

'

8Jt'llnel Con up~

Have

you ·been the ·~ictim _

~~a casualty or theft? ··

SPLITS THE _SEAM - Southern's Jamie Evens (15) 1pllts the
In the derlliiH offllred by two Symmes Valley players while
~ Buckley (46) wetchel during Wednesday night's
IV HCtlonlll fln1ls 11 Aleunder High School, where the
WOn 81-59. (Scott Wolfe photo)
-

lb the MAC,
O·h io ·beats BGSU
·89-87
in overtime
•
to
tie
for
first
place
•
.

. ~ .

•

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• RONVAMPLE
4M0elated Preu Writer
• An overtime lhriller and a home-court advantage win streak created a
tljee.way tie for,first place in lhe Mid-American Conference between Ohio,
BOwling Green and Miami of Ohio with one gime remaining.
; Alllhree are 12-S in league play.
·
: Geno Ford scored 22 points and.hit a three-pointer that tied the score with
:. .
,
(See.1'dAC on Page 5)
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Scoreboard
•

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EPclid 78, Carf~ld Ht1. 68 (an
·. G•lloway Westlaad 64, Col. Eut ~ 2
Holt.nd Spnna. 90, PcrrylbUtJ ~

NBA standings

Hudlon ~3. Green 50

A-DI-

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W•hiiiJIOD............ l5

30

.4.5S

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

...

18
22
24
1.9
Milwa~bz ............. 2."i JO
Toronto .................. 20 JS

-·-

.673
.614
.!136
.473
.• !1;'11
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Tol. Sl. John 's
Nontwiew ~7

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18 ~

23

Houtton ................ J1 19 .661

hnoc~vcr ............. ll ,48

71

14

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Bri~tol ~~ . Kinl11nd ~2
H~ri1a~1: 79. Richnkmd

burg42

Toalpt•a....,..

,

Miiwnbe at lftdiana. 1: ~ p,111.
8eMdc: at Miami. 8 p.m. ·
Saemmento at Chi.:ap, 8~30 p.m.
New Yort • Denver, 9 p.m.
"""'. Panland. 10
PbilalklptU•at Vancouwr,IOp.M. .,. · '
T...... II L.A. Cl'-', I~JO.p.m. •

p. ..

. . Coot
OvenU
Ll .106
fl:l. 11
20 ~· fl:l.714
.! .706 17 8 .680

R Midi.......10 7 ..!18 19 9 .679
ws.,....,..... a 9 "" ll 12 .eoo
W. Mleh ........ B 9 .471 12 I ~ .-110

10 .412 . 9 16
II .l$3 ' 13 12
II .)53 9· 17
ll .13! . 7 II

.l410
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,.146
.280

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Cal. Mldoi(III!I7S,'Koot 6.1

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We honor most third party
prescription plans. Your Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
Kttn &amp; Ron, are here to fill your
prescription n~s.
r--~----------,
. t:OIJPON
I

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1Up .to .$5.H OH any prescription. I
I Limit 1 per Customer per prescription; I

: Swisher &amp; L~se Pharmacy :

·L

Expires 3-15-97 ·
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HUGE SAVINGS (while supplies last)! These same Morgan Silver

"'*'"

Wh'hei\lllt

83.
·
Vall. 81 .

Sliver Doll.,. From the-Fabled eom.tock Lode
Morgan Silver Dollars were mintld from sillier mined
Navada's Comltock Lode 'Big llonlnza" win ''" oJGN!d
In 1873. ' It was the rlchesUHver atrille In U.S. history.
-n..e coin&amp; - . minted fnJm 1878 111111 1~. - the
atiott&amp;d supply ollilver bullon oM out. MlnCinQ ~ In
1921- but onlY lor one~- Then the Albpan 5/Mr 00/lar

Receive
this beautiful
display chest FREE! ·
Wl1h your fourth monthly shipment, you will receive

.Dollars were selling for over $100 each just a lew yearS ago. When you · this 1rM magnificenl custom-deSigned walnut wood,
purchase this special Family _Heirloom CoUection you wiU pay 60% less than velvet lined, 15-coin display Chest. This qualily hinged chest
comes wHh a ci&amp;IP lock closure. It's the perfect way to protect and
we previoi.tsly sold these same coins for.
·
exhillt your ~luable col!eetion.

Elite E~ .

Limited Numbllr Of
Complete Collections Available For
Immediate Delivery
.· f!le. Silwr Mint can assemble only a limlled number
of com~te collec1ions lor Immediate delivery at lhis time.
Enjoy all15 coins in lhe custom walnut display chesl now.
- rellr«J - - 76 , _ . . . ,
AI The Silver Mini, each coin Is hand·salectad to
Sarclly and Beauty
aSsure quality. Wilh each f'8"ing day, thesa .Morgan Dollara
llllion'a harlla(lll.
.
In 1918 more tlfan· haH of-alllhe Ml!fllan Sllvor
become lrcreasingly more diflicull 10 obtain in Brilliant
NtJ orh•r American coin has b••n mors
. Llmllttd Quantity
Dolfarw were mellad by the U. S. GovemiTIIIil.l Thill grat IHII/Iu.~stlcolfY ~. more chorl6harl, more ralked
Unoioeulaled
con&lt;filion. Order immediately lo guallllllae lhe .
Raapond Within 10 Days
lr!lgedy removed a mojOflly of thil Colnl.lnlm Ill coltec!tn
IMiila&lt;blllly
ol
yoyr coHecllqn.
·
marl!ai, lllld Clealad the inlrtrlllc llllua of your cotlacltou. llboul- , _ -··~ /hill the Motgan SINo! .QiJIJar.
Morgan Silver Dollars are scarce. YQu cannoi
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eacauae of the ecarctty of these coins you muat order.
, COOV8fllent Monthly Shlpmanta
produca mora. Once the quantity of BU Morgon Silver · LucHo copauta and accompanied ·by a numborad
lmmldlately.
.
M a Si!Wr Mint c:ol1edor you wi1 -.8 ono Mo1gan Ooiiars i~ .In the hands of_lndlvldual collectors, nwill be C1r1111cMe ~ -..nllolly II only $31.15 piUI $3.0S P.H
Sllvtr Dollat each ftlOIIIh for 15 rnonlha to be chirgad to , onpossilile to dupNcale lhjll offer. Remember, almost all (lolol $43.00). Ptaaoa do nol be dlaapp 0tnlod. Tlla
· · Brilliant Unclrculllted Colnt,
your CladM card without disruption In the buldln~ of your coins were minted between 1878 and 1904. Most are com,..._ cotlacllon Ia av!"labla 1t $515.00 lni;ludln11
The coin&amp; r'ou • recatve lnlm Thl liMr Mint . _ IIHIUNd cotilctlon. 'lbu may cancel at any ""'· for iny · ·over 100 years old. I
·
"" ('IOU SAVE MQ.OOJ. caM In your.- toclly.
. Because of -thel• beauiy and history, Mo~g~n Silver
Free Cheet and a-Numbered
Dollars are In demand by collectors .,..,__You will no1
· Certificate of AuthenHclly
· only trN~Uro lhls collection: you wiN be creating a family
.
helrtoorn The Morgah ·Dollar was ·the flivorne coin ollhe
Wllh your 4th monlhly shlpmenl you will rece&lt;vo a
Old We~t gambling housoa and through tile turn of lhe · fraoo •75 value
wood, vetvet lined, display Chest. 'lbu
century ayrnbQIIzad Arne~ growth and I&gt;!Pli"Sion. h Ia ·WIR also receive • numbered Certfficale or Aulhanliclry from
constda&lt;ed, by mony, to' be lhe strongest aymbol of The Silver- Mint Ltd.,- which guarantees thll each pain IS a
Amerlca"o growl~ and dolarmlnatlon and a token of o~r · genuine BriNiani_Uncirculated U. S. Mofgfln SilVer Dolar.

a1

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Marlon Plu111.ru 72. Anianda·

c""""'•'~
MOmol ·~ 64, H&lt;Oib S6

Supr~retk (Jarawuy ~~. W . Mu•k·
lftJ.Uin ·;\4

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"*"""

-ut

~ bMn in clrQdltlon. They ... ... • of
I II'
(BU) ooine. They . _ been hidden fNIIII In lhitr original
begl- untouched 1!1\Ce lhl dtly lily-- llnldc. .,. $Mr
1A1n1 Ml Glllli led ilr )ICIIM' t '*&lt;tlorl 15 8U Mrltpan

.

DI-IV ·
t · ODftyiUe ~. Ntwat. c.dl. :t\

,MIKool c.- ~b 49. TtWfi

SllliW~- .. In&amp;.lnt~OGIIJIWi.
,
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collep IICOI1!II

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,
Rl ; Oild wlfl*t Ill di)Und)'OUI1511! oolri. -hih
from thl! •~tralnaly 108rct Ce.rs_on City Mint w c ·
accounted lor only II% of .. ~ Dolllla .,., atrud&lt;.
'ltiUr IIIYttr t.lnt-Ccllediool . . -&amp;:ina
mtjor mlnllntJ yMII. and lncUie Cllinl fnlm . . . Ill ... 5

Noa-caafemace

.......

mtm lllalltn.!f* .,_ coilll .. ~. a..) .... CIIOO,
. PIAlolrl I; ¥, NIW O!IMnllnd C... City.

2••• _ , ..................

1

. , ......., and Ulmoll• Corne To Lite

At._,_,.....,lllni,Lid.wllflpUrclllllyout' • • ltllnalal I I . &gt;
c:a.n Cllr
Dofllr, lor-~~~~ prtoe~MrMiol •to ,_

Mo...,..._

.,.. a IINid , . IIIIi .dUll 'chM'IIIIId IIi .... ~ .

IIIII

,J

!

'

.,

•

,_l'fll.&lt;ed M • ..... gilt.

. •

CALL TOLL FREE:

To insure your prlzad coin produced only 2% ol the Morgan
collection la.complet,, you will SIMir Dolla~J. They c~lly &amp;ell.
.-!ve ~ coin from the C.,.an 'for up to $200.00. To auure
C~ Mint.
availability, you muat Order wflhln
The ~ar!on City Mint tO cay..

·••••nlilllllht

Mlo:IL·t;-t- 58

Mljor Creclt Card Holders

.

Extr'-mely Sca~e B~IUant Uncirculated Carson City Morgan
Silver Dollar foduded in Your Collection

'

Coina.From AilS U.S; Minta

Ohio mea's

.._.,.II.

•

.

,

Tills began Am•rlca'l low •ffalr wllh II•• tllver dollar.
George T. Morgan dUIQNCI theM llllltp1iflcenl
which ·
becaml Charla~ by Americans In tile Wild West ~ l1e

Cio. ~IIJ~I . Verl0llllcl28

.

'

purdlaHI of lher biAIIon lo malta Morgan SiMr Dobra.

Cio. Wy1.1mina 41 , Srrina: Nonh-

·

\'f'

•

'

'In 1878 s-lot' Shelman ar1d Rap8s-lfwl Richard
Bland p_ushed an act through Congress mandoirlng

lna43
Vi"'-tnl WII'Rn 60. Miami Tr11:c .l7

-

\f

Sliver Don.... .tnlcl,l from 4,2.5 g...lna
.900 flnuilver by the u.s. Mint . ·

• OIYWOn II
On:cnr.eld McClain ~~ . New L.c-.inp.·

42

.

:.,

~K. William~ ·

Ufe2.1

'C,.. A.b'oP ,,

OW.•.,..:H' P'e

,.

Dhillon Ill
BUmeaYIIk ~6.1Dd,uft Vnll. 4&lt;1
Cu1i10wn Miumi E. ~). Wuynenillc

Cloio, .......... .l2 l .706 17 8 .68(1

C..

Htr;.

DlvW. ·I
. EusUuko N. ~7. tiul:litJ 44
~cr. 41 , Rcyookbburg )7
Mily11eld )II. E. Clcvci.'Ukl Shnw l4

MAC standlnp

I. r::

.

· Tournaments

.

'.

•

· The Morgan Silver Dollar .is the
most famous American coin ever
·minted. ThiS breathtaking
collection·combines beauty~
history and searcity.

I

.Ohio U.S. girls' .scores .

Saa Anconlo a1 Ortudo. 7:30.p.m.
LA. Lakm al Atlanta. 7:l0 p.m.

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

'

Rncilll' Soulhml ~9

Deua111 80111on, f p.fl).
.
Golden Slale al N'illw Jtrjc.)'. 1:30
p.m.
.
. . .

T - .......... 6
....._ ...: ........6
Ceoo. Midi... ,4

,,

(

'

·

Mowryuown
Pm~moorh ctny 7~
Willow Wood

Frlday's - ·

Koot ..............7

I

leda;emont70. Mopdore 56
Ll'csburg Fairfield 63, Glenwood ~3 ·
.McDonald St. LordNOWIII ~7.

JrtinnNOia'at Dallas. 8:~ p.m.
qu.tolle 11 H...-, ~ : 30p,,._

•

Old, Never-Circulated,
u. s..M~rgan Sllver Pollars

Franklin Furmu:e Green 7~ .
Rc:cdavilk Eoutem s~
Frontier Sot. Bcull tville 48
Kidron CenrnU Olr. 71, LuiMran E.
~9
.

l...lakas 111 Wuhin~on. 7;30 p.m.
Chn::ap at Cllvelaed. ?:30 p.m.

Mlomi ..........l2

'

Cin.. Seven Hllb 72, Cia. Orlstinn 3K
· Fon Lorumie tal Sidrtey L.ehnwn SJ

•

Quality Prescription
Service
••
•
.at Contpet•t•v• Pr1ces. ·

•.

Calllotl

Millllelolll: 108, 5Ift Anllollo 89
AIIM!a 79, Mllw•kee 72
L.A . ~ 83, V......vcr 80t
l'hOcnix Ill . Plillllililpllla 104 .
New Yod '16, l'an'"'!d 9! 10'0

rl!
IOSU .......... 12

;n.s

Rocky River ~~lheran W. 7K. Avon

Cin. Hills l'br. t\.:atJ.

·

.,,BOIIZI \WJII~ ~ 26 for~~ SlaiO (15:'12. 8-9) and hid a ~high
. 10 ~· and eight &amp;SJistJ.
,
·
·
· Bltewt.'e in conference play Wednesday, Nile Huffman scind 24 points ·
to lcid Ceatnl Mkbi8111 to a.7.5-63 vietory over Keal
. '
"Our s c:8IDe bla:k llld ~with ...."li!id CciJtral COIICb Leonard
Drak~, "~ played ilefenae and we cOinpeted with lhem for 4() minutes."
. Kent (9cJ6, 7-10) led the first seven minutes of lhe game, but Centnl
(7·11, +t3) tied lhe geme 16-16 on a three-pointer by Walter Green. with '
R"8 NOT·QOJNQ THIREI- AI Ealla 11'1 steQ Dum (41) WitCh·
12:~ mnainiOJ in the half.
.
. ' ·
• ftom • dllt8ia, Onln's J - Bllnlaanahlp (32) aaama to Ill
Craia dlenn then made a three,.pointer wilh aa aaaist by Ed Norvell to
~ In the d~acllon he WMtld the biN to go, but he Is ICIUIIpilsh Kent ahold 19-161 but Charles Macon and Huffman followed with
Iy
at the .ncl olen unauc:aaand lholoblocklng lltlmlpt of • lhol by
layup!! 'ID giv_e ihe 'aaipj,eW.S a 20-19 Jeait wilh II :46.to 80· ·
·
an
utoldlull_lied &amp;gle dwlllf Wednll day nigtlt'a ·o~v~a~on IV He&gt;
.. Ccnlri!l slayed ahelll tl!e rest of the w~y. cndias wilh a 40,.30 halftime
..._.
ftn~ls at Allundlr High School. a- won 7~ (Scolt
~- ·
'
.
Wolfe
photo)
' "i1oul llOllb'le bad us off balance all gaR!Il!" said Kent COIICh Gary Waters.
"We C:.,.,ldll't~ the' right group in there 11M! whole. first half." .
The Golden Flashes we~e never able to retake lhe I~ in lhe sCrond half,
IIIOftCIIO ALL- OliO CUIJCNl'FI
While Central led by IS m111y as j 4 points wilh I:09 remaining.
_ Mac:on added 19 points. and Green sco~ 12 for lhe Chippewas. Scott
.AT&amp;T Communications of Ohio, Inc. hereby gives notke lhat it &amp;led ·
Effertz led Kent wilh 15 points.
.. ,
the foUowing tariff chfllres with the Public Utilities Commission of
. In rpail~!i. Micb., Ea!r1 Boykins seared 17 points and Easiem Michl·
Ohio. Effective February 21,.1997, AT&amp;T increased the price lor lhe '
Jl811 made its free tlm&gt;Ws down lhe stretch IS lhe J!8gles ended a five-garpe
·Non-PIC Service CJw-ge from $0.80 to $1.30. This charge applies to calls
lOsing strealc by beating Akron 76-75.
.
placed from residential lines lhat are not presubscribed to an interexBoykins scored 11 points in lhe second half. Torrey Mills added 13 points',
ehange carrier. ·In addition, AT&amp;T wiD implement a transfer service fee
Jaanes Head scored II and Derrick-Dial hid 10 for lhe Eagles.
of $0.55. applicable when customers request a transfer to the AT&amp;T
Chris Hahn brought the Zips to within folar, 68-64, on a pair of free throws
Network from a Local Exchange ComJ)II1ly Network. For niore inform• .
wilh 2:1910 play, but Eastern held on bYJ liiUins ·four of five free throws
tlon; please caD your. A.T&amp;T Service RePresentative at I 800 222.()300.
'down lhe stretch.
·
.&gt;Hahn scored 18 for Aleron, Adam B --and Oeorge Phillips added 14
eaeh. ·
· · .,
· .
po
' ·

l.ectnni:\ .11

=~~:=:elM
lodiaol.92. Seoltle 78

score

mons

n. Wauseon 44

.,

en-

cfeficit Wednesday to. detell Bo',VIing Gree!! 89-87 in overtime.
1 ·Ed Sears scored 18 points, il)cluding six in ,overtime, and Curtis Sim17 for Ohio; Antonio Daniels hill 26, Jay Lamnagil 17, Anthony
$1a1:ey 14 and DeM• Moore 13 for lhe Falcons (20-8).
·
: Daniels missed a chance .to aivc Bowlias Green lhe victory when hjs
jpmper from lhe right wing bouiiCCd out wilh five ~ left hefcn over·
tjmc.
.
• "Aillonio made a JI'Cil decllion and WI: JOI a' peatlhol, it was a good
1Qot. it j111t dldn 't go in," Aid BowliDI Oreell ·coech Jim Lamup.
.
I In 011fotd. Devin Pavia IICO!ed Zl jloi.. and MMed i . bite spurt that
hel~ Miaini of Ohio puii'Jway to"a 83-72 viclary o¥er Ball SCale.
.
' Mi..U (17-8, 12-SMAC)alrady buclinehe6abotnealmeforlhefirst
==~~nee tournament. ft wu lhe Redlkins' 181h c:oniCCUiive

Berti• Center Westerrt Rl!tcrve 43.

19

'6)::

i4.6seconds left In reguletion'u Ohio (17-8 ovcnll) .-.!lied from a 17-point

OlviliM IV
Anna 76. W. Ubt:ny S:~k.'lll47

1s'b

~uevayEiili&amp;~rlrWI
Oltohit 1· 2, buto-aiuldallllt
Eulcmllllldeamildcontctickat thelinundhld29,..,.,...mds(B
•
down to play p'Cil JMR.Co.man, chance. Otto stole the ball with 4.4 lbeend o(1he !bird frame wjih a Dil- field 8 Blanbntltip 7 Stidlwn
helpdef-. G.~ started the fnme seconds left and drove the ftoor to lard-Otto sparbd 10-4 run that GHS'*s llllak~-4): · "
wilh a 6-2 ruo,lhen BMia'D, Ied by seen at the buzzer and aive Eutem pulled the lilly cloler at ~2.
auisu(Stidbam 4). i3~':,
Dillard, cut the lead to 30-12.
some momentum aoiaa into the
biiUed Eutem Clrly in the J7fouls.
Eutan lapsed with two unipl hllf. G.~ led. but Balan wubeck tbirdfnme,tbeulowly pulled away
Green was led by 1erod Darnell'•
turnilvcn and ... uatimclv miu as inlhegameat37-29.
behindaweiJ..balaacediiiUICk.Eut· 21,Stidham's 201J1(1Biantensbi 's
Ry111 PoweU. Brumfield IIIII o.men
em mmoven proved to be killers at 19.
·
p
each hid follow-up jumpen to acain
Eas1e111's first half success ended this streleh in lhe pmct PHS called o,,m tllllla
double lhe !COle 36-18 .. Josh Casto with the second qwirter buuer. . time with 3:491eftand the
68- Green
24-13-19-19= 75 •
c:8IDe to life in wpportof his l'lllks,
Green went on a 12-4 run to start tbe . 49. The effort to 'l!lke one Jut run · Eastern
8-21-13-12=5SJ
hilling he fii'Stjumper of ... 11-1 East· second half, Iakins a 49-33 lead. ended in a 75-5S finale.
Eutera: Eric Dillard 14-0.:l
em lun that eut the lead to 26-37. GRen doubled up on Dillard and
Euttm(l0.12)was 1-12onthree 617=34, Rickie Hollon 0-1- 112=4 ~
Eutem's defeJUe was bard-pressed Easlel'll was repelled from the hole, pointen, 21-47 on two-pointers, hit Josh Casto 3-0-114=7, Daniel Otto 3:.;
against lhe pasainalanes as Dillard taking away the drive whi&lt;:h was its 10.18 at the line and had 20 · 0.2/4=8, Corey Yonker 1..().(YI=2 ;
had, two coast-to-co~St steals and
bread-and-butter of lhe first half.
rebounds (Cuto 5, Otto 6). five Tllfllls: 21·1·1Cll18=55
:~
twisling dri-;es, ~non a foul under
Be5ides Dillard, Otto and Casto. stea!J (Otto 3), nine turnovers, five
Greea: Tim Brumfaeld 3-0lhe Green basket at lhe 13.8 mark . Eastern wasn't getting mueh offense . usistllllld 16 fouls. .
· lfl• 7. Jason Bennett J..O..&lt;V1=6, Eric : .
Otto was fouled.
outofitsremaininglineup.
Eastern was led by Dillard'a34 Bennett 1-0-0=2, J1150n Blanken·
·
-·
points.
.
mip 6-1-4/4=19, Lafe Stidham 6-1 ·
Green hit 3-8 three-pointers, was ..5/6=20, Jerod Darnell 9-1-0=21 .
28-52 ftom lhe field, was 10-18 at Tocall: .l8-3-10118:75

~:OWn a·CoUeedon·oftOO·Year

Oi~Won Ill

II

(Contin..,dftom,.)

.

Beachwood Sl Huwktn 4S
Berkshirt n.ClaDJrin Falls 41
Oberlin 10. Cuyuhop Vall. CIV. 54

w.._..C:"'a

Toronto 111 Ulllh, 9 p.M.

~H

Youn11. Mooney 74, Canlield 59

. I

•. ·

il6

. Rocky River 76, Keystpne 6.~
Rossfonl ~. SwtVtlon 49
W. Ocaup 86, Cllnoeaul64

s.cr..-11o Ill, : '· 10!5

L~.

=AC·games· ...

l'lonnttNornoandy71 ,Flrolouwk53

30'&gt;.

OoldmState ..........20 .w .rn
Phoelii ... :..............21 l6 ' .161

.a.- (

.

Oregon ('Jay

26'1:

hdftcDIS...Ie ................... 39 .16 .'109
L.A. Lakm .. ..., .. ., 38 17 .691
Pnrilond ................. 1.9 :Ill .:JIJ'J
L.A. Clippen ......... 24 29 .4S3
. SacramtMo ............ ~ .ll .+'6

Jt .__

Lima BAih 67, Van Wttl ~9

19i
23 11J I

.186

Sylvania

.

:l:!

1

'8

3.

A-.mio ........... ll 41 .236

ALL CD'S &amp;

eip poillll in the ltlelk • a.rolled to I 12-llead. t'orcil&amp; BHS
. Dllpde I 34-poiat ellen by Brie COIICh 'nJa)' I:Jela Ill c:.ll time out.
Di~s•
Mu Eqlesdl~
B t n hid poor shoe 101ec1ion
1 ,. "
'!".~the en-!""'; lllldilllllaluiBiy noolli •hebCIM'da~
:- ~ 111; Di~-~ 1«111 • an olfeMlve .a.clt lhlt- two •
·~
····IY nlaht at balls-'ttowvdlhe-. P .t~rn
~·x • Hip Scbool.
~eted somewhat • the penods
13-8&gt; f - S)'IIIIIICJ VII· ead tn ..uthcr IU Green run. but ·
, ley (1~-l~), the wiluler of Wodaea- trailed 24-'8.
4ay mpu IIC'IId pme. S)'lllllle&amp;
PHS CQI S...O Dunt W1S shut
Vllley defeated Soatbem 81-59.
down com~Jy, but w~ ~ 1
_In the fUll...,_, the. .~ aoodde!-!lejQboao.ndlii_Wde.
bli~ _Eutem ~8 behind an
Playing like tboroi&gt;Jhbredl mlhe
t~ocave ~aat~Jreak!nai'IUIIplle ~ first~, C!nen !llllled the second
prid outsade llbootiaas spite. While ~ J!"" u hot. But ~ S.foot-10
liD~ ,IIUmbled. Green !OCkelt!d. Eric !?illarcl took the !Ju!l by lhe
eut of the ~· The streak anclllded horn• ~ mu..!JIIndled his way Ill
o ~-poanten &amp;!lei two long al4-potnt,second~.
. ·
o-pmnten ~ Juon. BillikenDt1~s lrdership and 21 fi~·
Pand Lafe Sbdbam. Slidbam had half potnts seemed to .rub off on his

lyiCOTTWOLPI!
I 6~ Corrup DMUM

Cle. Benedlt.1ine H2. Cn:stwood 38
Elida 70~ Limu. Shawnee 61
'Ollr'fiehl Hta. Trinity 6:1. Ravenna
Oirnrd 45, Slrudwrs44

II ~

Mlnnt1011 .............:28 2.7 ·.!109
llalll!'········· ..... ....... l9 l4 JSI
0en'¥CI' ................... 17 40 .298

30% OFF :.

.~

Franklin Furnace Green tallies 75-55 victory over Eastern .-

. Dhltion II
O.:wdon NO-Cl 7~ . Ashtabula 52

24 'l9

.722

41

5~ .

ONE WEEK
ONLY

,....,_, rt, 1117 .

In Dlvl•lon IV Hetlonal final tJCtlon,

Tol. S1an 47, Maumee 40
Tro)' 69, Fllirbom :U
Wllmn H~~rdina: 68, MadiiO&amp;.W
Wmervillc N. 65. Qro\'qXKI Sl
Zttne1ville 1&lt;1, E..Liverpool 55

WESTERN CONFERENCE
M-IIlYI..II'. L ta. Iii
Ullh " .. ,.................. 39

s.-..

Sllaker H1a; 90, Clc. East Tech 71
Stow 62, WlldsWOI1h 32
Tol. Calholic 68, Tol. Woodwwd 411

. I
12
15

OetiQit ....................

N. Olnu4ed61 , LoraiD South~iew !13 ·
N. Rofll)lon Sl, Pirma.$-4

, . .'IB.Doy.

12

?oft.&gt;

.:100

ow..,..... .Caotnllln. . . . . .4941 146 .11'.74!111
Allufa ................... 37
Chlrlotte ·········-····· )~
~ ............... ~
lndiMA ................... 26

I~

16~
24~
27~

New Ioney ............ 11 38 .309
PhiW=Ipllia ........... l4 41 .255
• -

45

Iii

, Mianli ....................42. 14 .1~
.,. New York •... ., ........41 16 ,119

.

l.ooain Adm. KiDJ 66. AaNJcn162
Lyndhutll Bnatb S4. Rivcnide ~2
Mauillon Perry 55, Uniontown Luke

·EASTERN CONFERENCE
1.-

·

618 EAST MAlN ST~- POMEROY

llad1e lllaeli

Canlon ObiOak 49, AUiancc 46

Ba s k etba ll

.

.

~.

'

,. .
_

•

1-800..390-7711
24 Hours a day-7 Days a Week
'IOOidlr by maN stnd your VIII, MaaltrCMI, Di1ccMr 01'
Amertcan EI!Prell number ond ellplratlon to:
,.Mint, Ltd., 41-885 Boaldwalk, s• 11o.
P'llrn Deotrt, Cft 92211 .

TaE, SILvER
MINT,,
T ,
.

~T11LI9f7

LTD. .

••
I

'

J

�~. February 27, 1887

Pomef'oy •lllddiJport, Ohio

Silence b comes prison for molestation victims

Time out for .tips on successful interior decoration
!itJJitKYBMR

••••11
C«uuty l!atinala n ~
P Jtr IIIII Cana.._. lcl-

....

·anaaa' CalftMunlty Denlap

Are you ·confuaed abou\, how to
deaip ud beauty in
'YOUI' home ill aider tO achieve a

·

.itowtpoille

comfortable and llltiactive setting?
·You may Wlllt 10 follow these sim. 'pie guidelines kDowo u the ele·men.ts and principles of design to
'obtaift the results you desi~.
, ·One element of desip is color.
•The ruune of the color is ·its "hue."
;Blue, red and yellow ~~ethe priiii8JY
!hues from which all of the other cc!Iors are made. The secondary hues
are produced when equal amounts of
:two primary colors are combined.
:n.ese include green (from blue and
:yellow), orange (from yellow and
·.ltd) and violet (from red and blue).
;-reruary colors are developed when
:equal measures of a primary and the
·neighboring secondary color are
:6Iended. Examples ol tertiary colors
:ire
red-violet; red-«ange, yellow,
'
.

yeUow-p-eea, blue-~RCn
ud blue-Yiolel.
The value oldie color Jelen to
bow dirk or liJht 1he color u. If
white is edded, it is CIIJed • lint; if
black is edded, it is tDown u a
lhade. Intenaity, alludes to the
brightness or the dullnels of color.
.High intensities ~~elhose colon that
·are very bright; they stand out more
than low intensities.
· Color can c:reate certain moods.
Blues, greens and pwples are known
as thC "cool" colors. They tend to
give a distant tone to the room and
m&amp;ke objects look farther away.
"WIII11l" colors (reds, oranges and
yellows) cause items to appear closer and larger. They give ·a restful
atmosphere.
The amount of light in a room
can affect the color. S1rong light or
sunshine can m&amp;ke intense colors
appear even brighter. Artificial light
will alter colors. Each color is also
affected by the colors surrounding it
Use color schemes or harmonies.
A monochromatic color scheme 'is
.
OI'IRIO.

~ il tbt Mal prillciplll d
site. F'me lines · genen~e a dalaty bul also acconlilll 10 color, vallle,
clesip.
All objects in 1he room
feeling, but heavy linea ,live the . iatn'i~ - llllltln. The Anilln
impression d
- - - should also be 1he should IUIJIIOrllbc domiaul - ol
Whl:a Iinel11e put tcjUdiCt,they riJht piopcwtioll ud ICalc for 1he illtereal ia 1he room. 11lil illmow!l
pl8a - two or tine colors that .-e develop shapes OJ f011111. The sbtpef roora uc1 the pen0111 IIIias the •lhe focal
~ide each other on the · color in the room should iadiclle the func.
roora • 1101 toO bil OC IIOC too tmall. . point.
wbeel. All example could be red,,red lion olthe object. Consider bow you
Bai!I!IN! caa be e!lher r-ai oi Eacepl fOJ
orange and orange. Diffem\1 lints will combine shapes to get a pleu- informal. Formal or I)'IIIDICtrical very larp
and shades of these three colors ina effect.
·
balance occun whea objects are rooms. one
would be used to produce a harmoTexture rden to the surf\Q qual· identical 011 each side of the center. focal point
nious design.
ity of the room aad its accessories. Thi• presents 111 orderly appeiawe. is suffacient.
Complementary colors (those Smooth or rough textures cre11e dif· Informal or •ymmelrical bal111ee · It might be
opposite' each other on the color ferent feelings. Texrure can affect will 1101 have lhi•p·eqll.ll oil each "a fireplace.
wheel) are often assembled for dra- color. A shiny smooth surface side ol the center. This makca the entertain'·
malic effects. The bright, warm col- reflects light so that the color setting seem active and interestills. ment center,
Rhythm deals with ·movement It curio cabi- ·
ors will probably need 10 be used in .appean clear and bright. Rough sursmaller amounts, however, than the .faces, though, absorb light, makina makes your eye so from one area to net or whe~ver the ey!l. is drawn.
cool colors. Small. areas of red work the color appear duller and darker.
the next. Rhythm lillY be ctealed by Everything in the room should lead
well with peen for an example of . · . In order to coml!ine 'color, line, repeating a color, line or ·texture to ud suppon lhis fearure. If there
the complementary color scheme.
form and texture for a desirable around the room. Gradllions sudl as are too many focal points within a
Another element of design is line. impression, the principles of de5ign stair-step designs, ud radiations roora, it can become confusins and .
Lines in the room make the eye flow will need to be used. These include . from a central object like rays froll! annoying.
When pultins all ol these elefrom one object to the next. Vertical proportion and scale, balance, the sun are also examples of rhythm.
lines add height ana give a more for- rhythm and emphasis. .
Transitional lines can cause the eye ments and principles of design
mal appearan~; horizontal lines add
Proportion and scale so hand in to move, as well. M&amp;ke sure there together, striye for unity with. variawidth 3!ld suggest relaxation.Diago- hand. They refer to the relationship are variations in the rhythm so that ·uon. Your 1oal is to have a room that
nal lines seem to create action, of the objects in the room and how the same movement does not Cause is beautiful, as well as functional. ·
whereas, curved lines' do the oppo- they go rogether, not only size-wise; too much monotony.
.

where oae color is uud, but varialiou of iatlelllilies and values are
iacotpocaled to keep it from bee ami&amp;iiiiOIIOIOOOUS. Jut analOJOUI color

hopefully. the courage to report the
boy.
'I
Ann
Wbea ·I wu 4 years old, my
Landers
mother became the guardian of her
11-year-old nephew. He moved into
l.ol ,......
"'-,,....
.. c.
our
home, ud when he was about
11111'11 $)wlcue.
15, he began molesting me. I was 7
at the lime, He said terrible things
would h!lppen 10 me if I told anyone.
By ANN LANDERS
I
was ali'aid and kept quiet until I
· · Dear Ann Landers: "Grieving
was
10. ~n. I told my mother. She
Mom's" letter brought back some
nightmarish memories that have ordered•me not to say anything and .
taken me a lifetime to understand: promised to talk to him. She never
She wrote that her young daugliter did. He went on molesting me until I
had been molested by a teen-age was l!Z, Suddenly, I fell strong
nc;ighbor boy 'while the girl was vis' enough~ stand"p for myself and
iting her grandparents. The grand- . leii him; "No more." He never bothparents wanted to forget about the ered me.after that.
When•my own daughter reached
whole thing. Perhaps my letter will
7,
I
realized how vulnerable she was
jive her another perspective and,
and what il. terrible experience I had

"'*'"''·

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MONDAY
'pablillbed M a f!'ee Mnice to DOD·
POMEROY -- Meigs County
EAST MEIGS -- Special bollld
'jirollt IJ'OIIP" wllhiDito aDIIOilllce . Churches of Christ Women's Fel- 111eeting, Monday, 5 p.m. in the high
)lleetbl• ud .,edal neat.. The Iowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the school library to approve advertising
Pomeroy Church of Ghrist. Brad- of bids for new · construelion and
~r ill aot deliped to projlpote
or fuad rallen ql aay bury Church will have devotions. renovation.
. ;.~· lleml are. printed • spaee Jennifer Grover Hicks will be the
CHESTER -- Tlie Chester PTO
-,ermlts aad eannot beparaateed speaker.
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
to naa a spedfle aumber of days.
school. All parents and teachers weiPOMEROY ·•• Alzhcimers and
. Related Disorders Support GrOup, come.
THuRSDAY .
, .:~ POMEROY -- Ewings Chapter, ·Thursday, I to 2:30 p.m. at the
MIDDLi;PORT .. Indoor camp
Meigs Senior Citizens Center. Barb
~~ of the American Revolution,
meeting,
March 3-8 at 7 p.m. arid
}l'hursday, with Paul Reed to give a Nakanishi, dietitian will spe&amp;k on
,;$11de pmentation on the. history of "Nutrition and Your Heart."
Meigs County.
. . ...
.. ._
FRIDAY
.
'
PORil.AND
-Lebanon
Town· "'" POMEROY -- Meiss County
·, Library Board meeting. Thursday, . ship Thlstees, Friday, 7 p.m., township building.
4i30 p.m. at Pomeroy Library.
:.. POMEROY -- 1997 Big Bend
vlPwns and Country Expo reorgani· ~onal meelins. 7:30 p~m. Thurs"~Y II the senior fair board offiCCi,
'lock Springs Fairgrounds. All interNted citizens welcome to allend.

.

,.

-:~

TIJPPERS PLAINS •• Tuppers

SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
778 and Star Junior Grange 878 will
meet in regular session Saturday
with a poduck supper at 6:30 p.m.
followed by a regular meeting at 8
p.m. Hemlock Grange is to·visit All
members urged to allend.
·

c.arpef...............Starting At · 4
• ton
· ·v·1ny1...... s·6"
Mann1ng
Vinyl Floor Dle.....;..........49c

· ··.Plains VFW, Post 9053, Thursday, "
HARRISONVILLE
. Har7:30p.m.
..
risonville Lodge 4 II, F&amp;AM. will
·: RACINE -- Special service, Ml . meet Saturday, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
·Olive Community Church, Wednes- Re,freshments.
day, 7,pJn .. Eyanselist David Corwell; (spcabr!
. ·
· · RA(:INE .. Racine.Youth League .
organizational meeting Saturday, I
·POMEROY •
Community p.m. at the kindergarten. All interest~::;; services sponsored by the ed people are urgedJo attend.
11o1
C~lnly Ministerial Associa:..
"

• POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta'Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, Thursday, .6:30 for salad supper
at the 11om!: o Clarice Krautter.
, $DSVILLE-- Riverview Gar: den Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. Hick,6ry liill• Chun:h of .Christ. Take .finger 1oods. fruit for fruit b,askets.
Auction' will be held.
·

POMEROY -- · Kings Way
Singers, a. (:hris.tian group from
Ohio State University, will perfoqn
Sunday, 3 p.m. at Pomeroy United
Methodist ()lurch. A carry-in dinner ·
will follow the concert. The public is
invited. ·

..... Estl•t••
·ln·Ho•• Shopping

1995 FORD ·
MUSTANG GT

1995 FORD
EXPLORER 2.D~

Sq. Yd.

S~1rt package, V8, auio,
PS, PB, PW, Pi¥-,

Sq. Yd.

aeat, till, crulae,

j

AMJFMau.
Sq. Ft.

VI, llapcl, A/C,

'It,

'

' The Women's Auxiliary at Vetera(ls Memorial Hospital will be
awlllding two $1,000 scholarships
this spring to residents wishing to
study in health-related fields.
· Abbie Stratton, ·auxiliary president, reports that applications for the
scholarshil's are now available at the
auxiliary slalion in ·the lobby of the
hospital. Deadline for filing the
completed applications is 4 p.m. on
April I.
'
.

PS, PB, PW, PDL,
1111, AM/FM c.au.,

•-entry.

'

LOW MILES

.

175 N. 2nd Ave.

'

Middleport

1995 DODGE.
DAKOTA

1995
CARAVAN ·

'

=Prescription

auto. air CORd, AM/F.M

PB, tilt, crul.., local

tllicle

cyl, 5 apcl, air cond,
AM/FM · caaa, alum ·
wiMIIII, aport pkg.

ONLY 5,000 MI.

19.94 FORD ·'
T·BIRD .~I

.

·Roush birth
:announced

Pwr eMt,

.,n;

.

.ONLY 30,000

Bob and Kim Roush of Racine

annoo~ the birth ol a son, Tanner

·JIICob Roush. born Ju 30 at the
HOlzer Medical Center. The irifani
wei&amp;Mil icven pounds. fiye ounces.
• Mltenlal grandp~~ents are Ralph
and 1'1111 Calven of Pomeroy. and
~. ~ . peat-graildparents are .
I:.eatei
and Lilliu Stewlrl of Mason,
.

VI, auto, air concl, AMJFM
c.u, tl~. cruiM, PS,, PB,

~

~ts.

.

..;:..News. policy;.... _
I

"

tll!i., . .

111'1 Hlllll dlnilted afler the 60-

.-

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'•

_.lne wiD appur cbiqthe _
~ ~ 'J1Ie p.ily Sua!iaal and·the ·
•Daily 'MJinj,

iM ~·- Odl:l' news

.wa ... .
~/ ...... .60 claJ' or ·
~....,

..

We conaider It a privilege to service MEIGS County Oxygen patientS ...: and since
Home Oxygen is all we do, you can.alwa)i be sure tht~t if you have a need '"
WE WILL BE THERE FOR YOU 24 HOURS A DAY! I
RANDYMARNHOUT
FAMILY AND STAfF

-'JIM

'

· -lh • effort to provi~ - reader·
~ wilh _ . t ,_., the Sunday
1'Siil._ Senliacl wi!IIIOI accept weddjiap' .a. 60 days ~ the date of .

1993 FORD
RANGER 4X2.

·SEDAN DEVILJE

· Nlllwt and Carolyn Roush of
s7racuie. ~ the patef.lllll · a~­
call.lll!f Elmer and Martha Burna of
Middleport 11e the paternal great-.

'

'

uu.-

WitJa n.. • .,._...,

c.n;pa~

.

'

PW, PDL, Pwr 1111,

ieatlllr.

).

'

BxO:! PRt:SCRIPTION OxYGEN .INC.

I

0

•

~-7a67
:210 E.llllri 8b aet

(

"

Ponti 'Of, OhiO

· After
HourtNIMko.end8
11800-384-G115
.
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Locallr owMd .. Operlated
., .rllnd.r llllrrt."tout
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&gt;

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•, •

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Homl814 tte-2183

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~IAAyt;tme

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news--'-

Cheshire, recently reported for duty .
DANIEL R. MIDKIFF
Marine Master Sgt. Daniel R. aboard the USNS Spica, homeported
Midkiff, son of Billy R. and Bernice in Oakland, Calif.
A 1996 graduate of Meigs High
Midkiff. of Langsville, recently
received the Marine Corps Oood School in Pomeroy, l:lunrer joined
Conduct Medal.
· the Navy in Augusl, 1995.
He is currentlx assigned with
Marine
Medium . Helicopter
MELISSA D. SMITH
Squadron 263, 2nd,Marine Aircraft
Marine Private Melissa D. Smith,
. Wing, Marine Corps Air Station daughret ofZenobia M. and v.)Hiam
New Riv.er, Jacksonville, N.C.
L: Smith of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
He joined 1he Marine Corps in · recently reP.,rted for duty with'
January, 1973.
Inspector and Instructor Staff, 4th
.
.Combat Engineer Battalion, 4th
DAVE C. ADAMS
· Marine Division, Lynchburg, Va.
Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class
The 1995 ·graduate ·of Ohio ValDave C. Adams, son of Steven B. · ley Christian School of Gallipolis
and Deborah .Anthony l)f Reedsville joined .the Marine Corps in May,
recently received the Saf~y Eagle I996.
Eye Awllld while assigned with Sea
Control Squadron 41, Naval Air StaDANIEL A. CLOSE
tion North Island, San Diego, Calif.
Army Private. Daniel A. Close
He was reeognized for his superi- has graduated from the watercraft
or performance ·of duty. He consis- operator course at Fort Eustis, Newtently performed his duties in an port News, Va.
exemplary and highly professional
The course provided instruction
manner.
in the areas ofmarine deck duties,
Adams, a 1989 graduate .of East- basic piloting, communications,
ern High School, joined the Navy in emergency and lifesaving proceJul~, 1990.
dures, vessel operations and firefighting.
He is the son of Leland R. and
ROBERT E. SINNETI
Carol
L. Close of Coolville.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert I;. Sinnell, son of Robert· E... Sinnett of ·
Coolville and Sandra M. Sinnett of
PAULS. SEARLS
Albany, was promoted to his. present
Army Private Paul S. Searls, son
rank while serving with Headquar- of Paul R. Searls of Rudand and
ters and Headquarters Squadron, Jacldyn B. Beckner of Bolt, .W.Va.,
Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma, has entered basic military training at
· Ariz.
F ort Jac kson, S.C.
· A 1995 graduate of Tri-County
During the eight weeks training,
High School of Nelsonville; Sinnett he .will receive instruction iii drill
joined lhe Marine Corps in October, · and ceremonies, weapons, ·map
1995.
reading. tactics, military courtesy,
military .justice, first aid, Army history and traditions, and special trainMONTY A. HUNTER
Navy Se11111an Apprentice Monty ing in human relations.
He is a 1996 graduate of Meigs
A. Hunter, son of Judith K. Hunlet
of Middleport and Roy R. Hunter of High School, Pomeroy.

marked

STOREWIDE

Twin Size
Sets

Full Size
Sofa SleeP.,r
JONATHAN SMITH

.-

Currently M.I. Inc. provides
cleaning services to
county and· state highway garages
and roadside rest stops and contracts
with more than 30 area businesses
for cleaning services speciali~ing in
floor care. Production contracts
include work for 'the Ohio River
Bear Compcny in Middleport and
companies in Athens and Columbus.
commer~ial

'

Perdue Four
Drawer Chests

Two-Way
. Recliners

$239

Zenith 25" Dia
Tabl~ MOdel

15 Cu. Ft.
Refrigerator

sa49•

$469~ 9

Full/Queen Undercounter Zenith 25" Dia
Dishwasher Console-Remote
Waterbeds ·

3 pc. Coffee
&amp; End Tables

$119" . *ii9" *23999 .$459"
Twin/Full

Glider
Rockers

Bed Frame

Zenith 2T' Dia

· Heavy Duty
Wash!'lr

'

. Futon
With Mattress

i -Only Zenith
Range
. Vent Hoods 52" dia BitJ s~

$169" $199"

*1799.,.

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Th~n. e-12; 111. e-2

'Sltle En_~ MMch 8th

'

108 North tnancl Aft;

.

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·'

99 $579"
$399
*19"·
·5 pc Trussell
Dinette

'

Zenith
Gas or Electric
Ranges . 20" dia Remote
99
99

$299

· $399"

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Margaret Bailey has been
re,ll!med to her Pomeroy home af~er
having undergone major surgery on
a leg at University Hospital in
Columbus.
· Margaret underwent heart byPl!SS surgery at the Columbus hospital in 1991 and the leg, of course,
Jonathan l}'ler Smith, son of lisa
was a part of that qperalion. She had and Junior Smil~, recently celebratbeen having difficulty walking on it . ed h1s second brnhday at the home
and so the surgery. Doctors didn\ · of his grandparents, Teri and Everett
look too favOrably upon the opera- Schuler.
lion's succes} but Margaret, back ·
A Sesame Street theme was carhome after six days, says she's doing . ried out at the party.
well.
Ailending besides his parents·and
giandparents were Chad Schuler,
Marlene Moodispaugh, Kimberly
'
The mail sometimes brings such and Seth Johnson, Connie Davis,
pleasant things.
'
Kendra Cleland, Icyle and Bub
Yesterday, included in our mail · Herdman. also grandparents, and
·
was. on~ of those perky notes from Sandy and Steve Clay.
Sending gifts were Pike and
beloved.Ferndora Story. She spends
a lot of time writing these perker Georgia Smith, Jeff Smith and Mark
·
uppers to send to friends to encour- Davis.
age them to hang .in there--and like
Femdora, they're always Iig~ and
(Jumi&gt;rous.
.
·
, By the way, Femdora did mention that her brother, Norman Schaefer of Pomeroy, is also a Leap Year
tlaby so as the calendar goes he's
~ow I 8 and one-quarter years old.
!lho says you can't stay- young forNew officers were elected when
over?
Meigs'/ Industries, Inc., · (M.I. Inc.)
•
Bollld of Trustees met recendy.
.
Elecred ,were John Custer, presi: Steve Boso is improving from a
dent;
Jill Johnson, , vice president;
head injury received in an auto acci. dent last month but still has a long and Leo Vaughan, secretaryltreasur: -&amp;ay to go. You might went to send ~r. Teqns are for one year for the
Steve a note or cllld of encourage- voluntary board of a non-profit cor.
; men!. His acldress is Room 3 I43. poralidtt.·
M~bers
at
large
are
Sharlee ,
Dodd Hall, . Ohio State University
Evans' and James R. Acree Jr. In
: ~ospitals, Columbus, Ohio 432 Io,
other
annual business the trustees, in
•
•
a joint me~ting with the Meigs
: Thanks to you .readers who con· . County Board of Mental Retardation
~led me with the address of Betty
and De.velopniental Disabilities,
(MCBMRIDD) renewed the con- .
....ro and Cub Allensworth.
; . Betty Gladwell, 1\ofiry O'Brien, uacr fot services to Meigs County
.Dorothy Jenkins, all of Meigs Coun- adults ud Carleton School Transity, and' Pat Allensworth of Mason, tional Class students who have
W. Va., were all good enough to pass developmenial disabilities.
along the address which went to 'T,
.
;... Riley of Middleport. Riley is . The mission of M.l. Inc., accordclearing out some stuff and had ing to officials, is to offer employsome photos of Cub taken long ago ment and' work skill training opporwhich he wanted 10 send to Cub who !unities to people with disabilities.
will no doubt be pleased. ·
M.I. Inc'. also works with the
MRIDD' 'Adult Services Center in
the suppOI'I of Services in ·the com· ·
• We're wrapping up February and munity and '$1 home. M.I. Inc. conthe first dAy of sprin1 is March 20. tracts· with various. businesses to
With that thouaht in mind. do ya . carry out.Jhit mission.
tflink ya can keep smiling?

New officers. seated
at Meigs Industries

auto. air CORd, AM/FM
~~ tut,. cruiN, PS, PB;

W,Ya.

.,.
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.' · · . COUNTING COOkiES - Girl Scout cookie chairman Shirley Cogar; lett, waa given an aaellt •
hom Alllon Stteetman, a.unlor SC:DI,It, In counting the ca111 of cooklee dellvared Witdneeday
.nemoan. Melga County ecoute eold 16,288 boxee to area realdenlll end will be out delivering
them within the next few dayi. Selling tha moat cooklea waa Brld~ Johnaon of Cadette Troop
1208, Middleport Again thle yur more boxea of thin mlntl were ordered than any other kind.

..
S~cond · birthday

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crui111.

Mohawk Color Center Dealer

RUTI..AND -- Rutland Youth
League, Sunday, 4 p.m. at Rudand
firehouse. ·
·· ·

Cookies _ ______, --Military

• There was
a response to the
announcement that free cholesterol
le~ling will be carried 'out at ll1e
Meigs County Health Department
mi Man:h4. .
·
: Monday momins wliS the first
lime that residentS who · w~re interesied in paJ'\1-aipaling could phqne in
for an appoiniJIICnt and in 37 mi.n- ·
utes, 70 pe~ had called in. Actu•
aUy the nuinber iri that short lime
·SI!Bn was too great for the hours of
the testing, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., so
sOme had to be put on the back burnet I understand another such program will be carried out within the
next few '111onlhs.
·' Staff memberS' of the home health
departments of Veterans Memorial
HOspital, Holzer Medical Center and:
the Oak Hill Helilth·Center will be ·
doing the testing with health department personnel .and RSVP participants helping out· with the paper
work.

TUESDAY
POMEROY -- CHOI~E home
educators meeting, Tuesday, 10 a.m.
at the Pomeroy Library conference
room. Take sack lunch. Contact
Tammy Jones, 992-6743 for more
. inflll'lllation. ·

New Sprf,., Caf'JHII Bas
.
.
$ 99

~
. __ Counting

~OEFLICH

INGELS CARPET

SATURD.AY

lawn mower please return it? I have
A11 the chieken you cu ell!. This
another chance to lend it out.
is the same delicious chicken we
my mother bow furious I was that Ore.
·
"'
Found: Parakeet. I own a cat. have been serving for the put five
years.
she had done nothing to protect me.
Dear Donna: ·Please try to devel· Hurry! Phone 555-4487.
For Sale: Four-poster bed, liS
She did not respond. Before she op a relationship with those adult · New mufflers installed free. Or.
died, ho~ever. she confidc41hat she women and see if they will confide do it yowself and save up to 30 per· years old, with springs. Perfect for
antique lover.
was helpless because her father had in you, Hopefully, they will open up cent.
What a treat is in store for those
Ann, these ads are the best rememolested her and she was unable to and Jhen seek professional help. In
talk about the subject. It stirred up the meantime, you should consider · who dine here. It's impossible to dy· i know for beating the blues. It's
too many bad memories. I under- professional help for yourself if you prepare a palatab.le meal for the impossible not lo laugh after reading
just a few. -- Barry in Oxnard, Calif.
st~od and forgave her.
.
haven't wrcady. Molesters should price we ask.
If any piece proves defective, it . Dear Barry: Real-life humor is
I want · mothers everywhere to nev~ be protected by silence. The
know that ignoring a problem of this truth must be !old so recovery can will be replaced with one of equal the best No one can make up anything funnier. Thanks for some good
nature only m&amp;kes it worse. Your begin. I·
quality.
Needed: Bartender, over 24, non- laugh$ today.
child n~ds to know there is someDear Arin l-anders: Some of those
one who is going to take her side, no zany classified ads you printed drinker, able to work staggered ·
Send questions to Ann Landen,
matter who gets embarrassed in the ·.. recently carne from a book called hours.
Cftlltors
Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell- ·
process.
"Classified Humor," published in
Wanted : Boo""eeper, to keep two
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loo Anlela,
My molester has two adult 1970. Here are some more classics sets of boo)&lt;s.
.
At this price, these 'IV sets won '1 Calif. 90045
daughters who ~xhibit classic symp- from that book:
toms of sexual abuse. Even now, at
Will the party who borrowed my last long!

By BOB

March 9 at 6 p.m. at Middleport
Nazareno; Church. Song evangelists,
Jan and Cat!Jy, and Jim Davis. Evangelist Bishop Clyde VanValin. Spon·
sored by Meigs Area Holiness Asso·
ciation.

-+s

~. I stiii feel unable to do anythins
about him. -- Donna in Portland.

been through at her age. My anaer

reached the boilina point, and I told

l ..•

·Beat
of the
Bend
•

,-: ------·..Community calendar--..___:._'"c The Community c.Jendar is

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FIJRNITUIIi.
r;.. JEWELRY, INC.
·
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�The Dally SeaUMI• Pllge I

Pomeroy •llddleport, Ohio
p~ •lllddllpo11,

'Thur*ley. ,..,.., 'ZI, 1117

Ohio

Pulllc Nalaa

,_..tlotn

Pulllc Naill

·.n .-- ••~~'~~~llr ....

Centreot Dei!JIIIIInll
In t1 . . . - ··~
Cotttraot 11·1 Wlllllf
'll'•••••nt
Plant
t,.row-11\e:
Wlllllf
11'eatmant
Plant
llllprOYamalltl hteiiHII
IHIIIllllla ..,.. ,,.. w1111
Company,
,.DIIIIJ'OY&gt; Olllo, raaarvee
... lliiM to bid ...... . . .
- t o withdraw lha llloW
ilollaterel prior to 1111.
Furtllt:r, The F.......,. • ~nd Saving a Company
_ , . . llle .rtght to .Njecl
~ or all bldleubm!UH.
; Furlhlr, the above
aalllai'l:l wllll:t: aold tn a.
llonctltton It I• In, w1t11 no
exprua or Implied

•

HER

~liMn.
1 l'or further, lnlonnatlon,

-t.ltfryat112o7430.
J2121, 27, ae; 3TC

.

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· 13 =·Jeriny'Friehd ............................ s-e

•

14- Kim lhle ••••.•......•...... ~ .......,. ........ s-2
20- Renee Turley ............................ s-9
23 - ·Kim Sayre •••••••.•••••••.....•....•....... ~
24 - Erica Arnott •.••••.•.......•........_
...•.. 5-4.
32- Brlanne Proffltt ........:.........;...... s-7
~ - .AshU Davl~ .•.•..... ,..•••..•.. ~ .•..•••. s-7

YEAR
Freshman
Junior
Junior
Junior
Freshman
Sinlor
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Sophomore

o\DVERTlSEMENT fOR
.•
liDS
;lllppera . Plalnt·Chetter

~~~{l::'IIOid

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

,._IJIMII't.cz::e" Ollie
~~.

r,...

Df'r:ta
c:AaiiO•• cv ..
In , . . . _ .. Ill ordar
•ol . . . . . . . ,, .. _lrl . .
l:llcwe w IIIIo. action, I wilt
oller tor 1111 at
IUCIIOII II tilt: front
of
till CowthD ... In ,__,.,,
Ollto, tn thti abov. named
county, on Friday, lhe .tth
day of Apr!~ ttt7, et 10:00
a.m. ... following dllcriiH:d
,.., - · lltUited In tilt:
l/lllage of Pan:aroy, County

IIIII

Ill I
IF' II naf
•I 1111 llutldlng lnoludel
,.,...... ........ """
hcllltlea .
Site
ll::proftmenta Include brine
atorega tank, red water
flit.,. 111111 MPtlc ·facNHiea •.
tile .-"' n:ay lit: bid • •
to181 of .,:r combination. of
a. toiiDWing:
Contract 115-t • Complete

·

.

-~-•!•Ohio 48_
_ . . , . , ...
H&amp;
, . .,.,.,. •alld Bide for
conalructlon of W...,
torage lmprov-:na will
~~~~ by tile 'lllppen:
)'ltlna-Ch,eter W...,
Dlalrlct. II lhl ollloe of lhl
era Pltlne·Che•t•r
Dlalrlcl, _ , lar 30
• Raadevllle, Ohio
111772 until 2:00 p.11. (looll
ilme), April 2, Itt?, and
pll•n et llkl ollloe pullllcly
pponed and rud aloud.
• The work cowr.d by lhe
t:ontraal
Do'c umanll
lnctudn lhl following:
~ - Contract 11•2, W...,
,,,.nemllllon llllna·
·
• Th•
U II m • II d
l:onetructton ooet . Ia
~50,000 ae of February,
~liTh/·1 ltd
. dt- Docume·~

'

G..._lt ..........

Ia':!""

.........-·-"'Ohio:

l'lent.
'Cot:lnOI 111-IA·· Complete
Plant, ..... EioDirlcel

Thl W11t o...lhtrd (t/3)

Contract 15:11 • EIKiriCII
The
uttmated
oonalruotton coat for
Contract 111-1 II $1,170,000

.... .........,1.ei7.
.
1:11• lidding ,Docum-

Public Notice

HEIGHT
. "0.- PLAYER
.10 - Stacy Lyons ••••••••••••·•••••....•.•••.•. 5-6
11 -Cynthia Caldwell ............... ~ ... ~ •• s-5 ·
12...: Conny Horst.......................~ ..••. s-9

IXCIMinge IOft-ra,

t n l nga

\

~r~a.c-arctAI­

-...............

IIIMI

-.=.... .

..... I I tALl Of RIAL
UTin

IIIIJ lit: _ .... at:
'IIIDpell Platn•·Cheeter
....t Dlltrlct. 11&amp;11 .., 30
llol:l, RMdaoillle, OH 41"172
Dod\1 Reportt, 1175
Dubll!l oad, Cc:l::mt:ua, OH
43215
1
• Nlplt: u ltld
urge•
' m
'-

ol Lot No. One Hundred
1Winty Flva (125) end tilt:
Eeet one-lhlrd (113) ot Lot
No. One . Hundred TwentY
Four (124), end l:t:lng tn •R
tlllraty .J h,.. and -third
(33-1/3) f•t on Second
itraet; being 1111 aam•
pramleu convey•. d by
Eclwen:l DeralliCh and wile
to Charlea Eberebaoh. 'H
nuatee, by deld dated
January tO, 1t31, and
raoorded In Volume 142,
filii 510, at thl Record of..
Deed• of Mallfl County, .
Dl:to. .
.
A1110, tilt: ~t lhlnle (2131 of Lot fi!c;. OM
Hundnd '!Wenty.four (t24)
o1 Mid- Vlltege af Pomeroy,
l:t:lng lhlllyrlhree and o...
third (33-113)- on lecoilll
StrHt of llld Vlllege w::l
extending •I that wkllh

Business Services

. . . . . . . . I ' MtD
111711° . . . . ..111111
I, a ,,r....._ _ _ _;,;..;~---..-------..
....,.,.,..
. . . . aUf/

IJI1. . . . . . . ....

.

. . . ...... " As 1 . . .
tilt: eforeeeloil 'lt......
1 .....................
mlirllecl . . lid For Pole
lern Project, Ylllege of
lyrrAltefttlon ., blddera "
c.olleclto tile uqu.,.,.nla
tilt: llfOiecl It •ubfect to
tha
Fedlral
Labor
stanclarda Prow..lone anct
Davii·Becon
v1r t o'ua

~utramenll

Equlll

provfelonL

w...,
ln 8 uranc1

and Vllrloua
Opportunity
.r

Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
A""'S
FREE ESTIM "''"'

~.
~-~~.;..;_..;.._~...;.;;;;.;.~-..
(".:.lit·=·-;~·
r

IOIERT BISSELL
COISTIUcnOH

·NewHomea
•Garagaa

re11rva ~· right to WIIY8

any lnlot'lllllltlll or reJect
any or Ill bldl.
.
Janice ZWIIIng
Ct.k-T_...,..
(2) 13, 20, 27 3TC I

211

=

HEAD COACH: JENNI ROUSH
ASSisTANT COACHES: JOHN MANUEL AND ALAN CRISP

t~J-;::e.,.

Drh.-y Llmutoue

. .,..._.1147.
· • Month .....
... 1

GOOD LUCK IN THE DISTRICT
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
AGAINST CROOKSVILLE
.

-complete
· Remodeling

. Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESnMATEES

Notice

985 4473

Ava-.

Qu1dlty Furniture
1·100-200-4005
614 667•7ill .
TUPPIIS PUliS

949·2330

Sire.,

7-

llo
ll'lrl Gem:on Slwplwd, ,81+t
~-

...__ 304-273GOIIII-

Aulhorlzed AGA Olstribulor

\ Welding SupPtles • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Siainlesa • TooL Dressing • Ornamental
Slept; • Stai~ •.Rallings, Pallo Fumllure. Fireplace
Items, ~anler Hangers. Trelliaes &amp; lots of other stulftl

"No Job Too urge or Too Small"

.

We will work wllhln your budQel,

Ph. 773-9173

FAX 773-5861

wv

Valley Lu111ber &amp; Supply Ingels
. furniture lind Jewelry
.

992·6611

The Shoe Place and Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORt, 01.·

MIDDUPORI, 01•. 992·2635

Ewing Funeral Ho•e

MIDDLEPORt, 01. 992·2121
.

985·3301

n

r·

.

Downlng·Chllds·Mullen·Musser

992·3785

POMEROY, 01.

Quality Print Shop

I~Jsurance .
OH.

992·2342

.

.

MIDDUPOIT, 01. _992·2556

Fisher Funeral Ho111e
tt2-1144
.
'

'MIDDUPOIT, OH.

'. '

992·2104
.

'.

.

'

POMfiOY,OI:

·IUYWD,OI.

992·6491

.Far111ers Bank

. 11 :30AM·??.

· R~denour . TV &amp; Applla11ce
Clllmi,OI.• ...

na

--

WAYNE'S PLACE. Middleport
Tonlght "Ladles Night
Fri.: OJ Brady
Sat. Night Only
"BLITZKRIEG"
ROCK·

..

I

TRANSPORTAnON

WICKS
HAULING

1:

-

.POIUIOY -rM . . . 101 Ull•tu'"IS PlAIU
992-2136
tll-3161

'

H.O.M.M. .

Soli,
Dirt
614-992-3470

---

-

..DDLIPOIT, 01.

915·3307

leetllnylype
of Cleanlilg
Done?

------

----

Fruth Phar;•acy

Swisher·&amp; Lohse Phar111acy
992·2955

------

I .

.~

· · ·, POMEROY, 01~

,_lY Fill Itt

DUMP

Birchfield Funeral Ho•e

Veterans Memorial. Hospital

Sayre Truckilg Co.

TRUCKING

POMEROY, 01.

POMEROY, .01. ·. 742·2333

GARAGE

R. L.HOLLON

Crow's Fa111ily ~estaurant

Adolph's.Dairy Volley

UCIIltiOW

.

POMEIOY, 01.

·992·24.32

BIULIIII

••led

'

K&amp;C Jewelers

Attorney William Safranek

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

CIESIEI, 01.

~92·6687

f

.........

Brogan Warner Insurance

POMEROY, 01.

Bc:t-

1

Bau• Lu111ber

.

- -304-e75-3463.
To Good Homo: 11 112v.r JE
Dog. Golden Ao:r-r I
CoMie lllx, Sho:., Tog::, 81~

+·.

IIID ·
FUIIWIIET Frklay,.Marc• 7

MIDDUPOIT,·01.

992·6121

To Cituaaw; To A Good Homt:
'MrOidf«::ooe.Full -

1&amp;+

\

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees

UCIIIE, 01.

-

•career "Health

~

•

Wagner Hardware

Roal••"" -

I

s;ant;l

To R:m. 814:115 S!!l2
FrH Fat Hauling AWll Side

I

pu_,_

sao.•.

.

P.M~

AT 7

·

min.
Psychic
reading for
"Money

.
E

FRIDAY, ·FEBRIJARY .28th
ROSS :SOUTHEASTERN ·. HIGH SCHOOL
..

-

111114-e71i-1111.
o111 5pr1-

614) 992i!~-- =~...:..~ ,
(
____....;;.;.::.;=:..~ - Puppleo:
a.l, Cal- .

.-

c1o11.r,;.;.

..

.

v..r

Spayed,

Septic Syatem1
llllfallecl

•

'

GIIJIIUUII"

10e
strMt'
.
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ~-""---.:.l7/22/lln=::::..
-60 · Lost ancl Found
---+.':
"'
ESTATE
In a. Court of CommCin ·
Bl:u:ll Lab w/purplo collar,
;~~;,c:,n ~nue,
..... af ...... County, Ol:lo
REWAADI Traffic Circle oro
FRI:E
3
Dodge Reporte, 405
304-e7~or304-e7&amp;.2151 .
...,_ R. llarretl, 11 .11
Capitol .SirHI, Suite 5Gt, .
Plllntllle
Found: llodlum Slzo Block
Cl:lliMtl!l• WY 211301
•
cna..81..sll7-7123.
.
Copt• of the Bidding
· G. lruoe Teelord, et al
Gallipolis,
Ohio
45831
Documenla · may be
. Dlfandlnla
. LOST: 8 1/:!yl old, lllnlo1urJ:
*Love
purohliMd at: Burgan •
CASE NO. 98 CV 048
Sch::auur, SaiU-. mo~·
oroy/blaclt oom• w1111o. La •
(614) 367-0266
Nlplt, Limited, 4424
In
to an ..,...,
.Emeraon
Sal. 2·11-07 """"' 0111: •
af uta dlractld to metn thl
oop~H£WAADI :104-e~ S.
1-800-950-3359
Parkereburg, WV ztl04 -~~~ Fro~(llatn)
above 111111t11c1 llllllon, l will .
upon pey'"""' ol 1100.00, to a dl ... nce of alghly.flve offer lor •••• at J:,'::llc
LOST: Gold Mock Choln, ... , ..
1-800-992-4170· where
• To.,:• Trim • Removal
aH of whlelll wll lit: mundld (15) - .
auction at lhllront
of
near Faodlllnd. REWARIIJ. ..
lo ·the unauooe. . ful
EXCEPTING, howeoilr; lhl tile c:aurtho:.e In Po:••ot,
vlsalme
304-e7~.
•
Stump
Grinding
BIDDERS · upon reiurntng right of w•t aoroaa the Ohio, In lha above nwnld
1-900-567-3727
Young Golden Ratrelvar lou ,.
20 Yrl. Exp. • Ina. oWnor: Acinnle Jones
the document• promptly Southwaet eight and one-, · county, on Ffldly, the 41h
Foraat
Run Rd are•. 81&lt;~~aa ;
Fret!
E•timate;
·
·and In gllod condfllon. · · . lhlrd (1-113)·- ofuld Lot day of April, 1tt7, II 10:00
$3.89mln.
2
BIDDERS
requlml to No. Ona Hundred Twenly e.m.lhl followh;g du :Ibid.
comply wllh .the Minority Four (124) on Soco.'1d Stnet rur Mllll, attultld In thl ·
:
Yard Sale
luelnell EnterpriM (IIBE) and -ndtng at thai wlcllh Vllllga of P -••· County
BANKRUPTCY
can
relieve
·a
debtor
of
requirement• aet forth In of light 111111-..,t:lrd (1-1131 olllelgland- of Ol:lo:
' GaiUpolll
' -'
Thl WHI .......lrd (113)
financial obligations and arrange a fair
··•
m• Section t14.07 oflhl Ohio - a dlllance ofllghty-ftw
Ravleed Code, tnd Rul• (15)- - r d Front (llaln) ol Lot No. One Hundred
may lit: examlrild et:
&amp; VIcinity ,
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
' 'lllppera Plalna·Cheater 184· 1·32 or the Ohio Stre.t of aald VIllage· ot ,..,.nty FIVII (125) and tile
;w..., Dlltrlct, 31111 ler 3D Admlnletratlvt Code. In Po::...., aa I'Mii'rld In tile Eeet o ...lhlrd (1/3) of Lot
keep •exempr property for their personal use.
!(toad, RE8davllll:, 0H 41772 pert, lhla -•n• that any deld of Mary E. Stelnl:t:uer No. One Hundred 1Wantt
This may iilclude a car, a house, clothes, and
; Dodge Raporla, 1171 IlDDEII, to a. exllnl thai It Major
to
Charlu ·Four (124~ and l:t:lngln aft
household goods. .
.
«&lt;ubin Road, Cotumbua, OH eubcontracta work, ahall El:t:rlbt:ch, Trull•, dated thlraty lhr• end one-tl:lnl
)UZtl
·- award eubcontractore to Decembt:r 21, Ul37, and (33·t/3) ltet on Second
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
, Burge• • Nlple, Umlted, atltl cartllled Minority racorded -In Volume 142, StrHt; .being the aame
"'424 Emeraon Avenue, luaiMM Enter......,, In an pega 571, of lhl ~·of praml•e• ccinvayed by
J'll'kmblltg, WV 211104
aggraglla
of no De•d• of Motga County. Edward Elilnbllch and wile
·Attorney At Law
•. Dodge · Report•, 401 in• t~ five percent (5'11.) · Ol:lo;
to Charlea Eberabach, 11
~ipltol Street, Si:ltl .lOt, ot the ' prl~l contract.
(614) 592·5025 .
ALSO, ' the right and Truat••• by dHd dated
. Athens, .Ohio
o.;l!lrl.-. WV 21301
BIDDER procurement privilege to connect with · January 10, 1138, end.
a'JIIITt-.
I Coplet ol the Bidding ectlvtttea, to a. e~ttent thai tile - r on Lola Nu:nl:t:r recorded In Volume 142,
))ocumante mliy be the coni!'ICtof purchaae• Ninety ThrH (13) Wid One page 510, ol the Raoord of
urcha•d at: Burg••• a mtterlal and/ilr aervlcea, Hundred 'TWenty Four (141) DHdl ol Malga County,
liNGS'
Ipte, Limited, 4424 ahaR IUult tn a.· award ol to the Olllo River, and frH Ol:lo.
m• r• o n
Avenue, ·procurement .cOntract&amp; to u11 of ailtd aewer, the
Atao, tile Southwlll tw""
Ho:lll.,.va•ells
1porkeraburg, WY 2$104 atate certified Minority gran,..., their e::cc•eora, lhlrdl (~nLot No. One
3351
Happy Hollow ROIId
. ~ P'Jmenl of
all EnlefpriMtln an 111"111• .helra and aaalgne, keep Hundred
ty.four (124)
Umeatone 1: Gt11Vel
Body --". car, truck
Middleport,
Ohio 45760
'01 whlc~ wUI lit: Nlundld 1o dolllr V81ue of nat lhln ...d - - et all""'" of uld Vlllege of P_.,y,
Septic Systems
Naw Homes, AddHions,
• truck palnUng,
)he ·u nauccea.lul BIDDERS two percenl (2'11.) of the to the Ohio River !rae of ·bt:lng lhlrit..Jhi'M and 41pon returning the IHfn!ecwrtn:cl.
Trailer&amp;
Siding, Pole lems,
i:Oet to the 11ld Mery E. lhlrd (33-113)- on IIIOOI'd
mlnar IIIKitlnlcal ,'
(llocun:ante promplly llllllln
All contraclore ·and SlllnbaiHir Major, her hllra SlrHt of Hid llllllga and ·
o.Cb, Painting,
House
Sit111
rt~FN~~r.
'
igood condiUon.
·
tubconlrectora · Involved and aMigna.
extending at lha~ width
Garagee,
Porchll.
Tune-upe,()ll
Chilnge,
·Reasonable RllfN
Prpepecttva BIDDERS with the project wlll, .to the
lelng the un:e ,..,miMI tow~rd Front (l:lalnl Stnet
Call Us For ·AFree
ay addrtiae lnqutrt•• to: extant pl'lctlcable u• Ohio conveyed by Mery E. 10 1 dlatance of elghly.flve
Will, Bulllng
JoaN. Sayre
Estknale
, urgu,a • Nlpll. Umltld, producta,
materlall, Slllnbt:ure Malor to Chart" (85) fell.
Long
St., RuU1nd, 011.
424 Emerean Avenue, aervtc11, t~nd labor In the Ebt:rl-, TrualM by deld
. 814-742-3080
EXCEPTif!G, howaver,lhl
742·2935, Alk for Kip
ii'arkor•llurg, WV 2i104, Implementation of . their dated •nd recorded ' ae right of way _acroae the
614-742-3324
614-742-21!!,.,. ..
~~ 181 lltt
·
prolect.
Contraclor abovt Mt lorlh.
· Southwell light and o...
814-742-:0078
,. The Tupper• Plalna· co:hpllanC.-wlth-1111 equal
Retefeilce Deed: Volume lhlrd (8-1131- of uld Lot
:Chutar Water Dlllrlct employme11 t opportunity 240, page 818, l:lelge No. One Hundred . T'Mnty
:JeMrv•• lhe rlghl to reJect raqutramenta of Ohio County"Oeld R - - .
Four (t24) on Sacond Stnet
•ny and ttl lllda or to Admlnlatretl.. Code
Being the ••m• real and -ding et thai width
1noreoa• or deer•••• or Chlptar 123, ilie Governor'• ..tat• deacrlbed In deed of eight and onlrlhlrd (8flmll any Item. or llema Executive Order of ttn, lrom Ohio Valley Laundry, 1/3) !tel a . dletence ot
and/« award to thl '-•1 enct Governor'• Ex.Cutlve Inc.. to G. lruca Teaford ot elghty·llva (85) IMt -.rd
MllllllllftllftiCI
):nd bill ·BIDDER. Each Order 14·i ahall be raoord In Volume 314, pega Front (llllnl StrHt of atld
TrlllljiOi lltlon lor
.
fii'Opoeal· muet contain lhl required.
·
203. DMd R_,.,, of l:lelgl Village of .Pomeroy, ••Individual• ualng
Honest, Dependeble
BIDDERS mual comply County, Ohio.
Jullnan:a ol ewi'Y ,.,.... Of
Public sale
· .1.
r•erved In the dHCI of
80
wt:eelchl:lrl:·
-~•
~ompany lntereated In the with the prevailing wage
and Trultworthy llldlel
Parcel No. 1e.o22354 0!10 ' lllry E. Stalnbauer Mejor to
l:ledlcln: accepted.
and Auction
pamo. The Tuppara Plain•
p b 1·1·
Proparlt Addraea: 2t.l Charla Ebw'abach, TruaiH,
r&amp;ady to clean your .
10 111·9 , .
Doctor'e vtalll,
on
u
c Eaat Second Street, dated December 28, ,1137,
J;:heeter Water Dlatrlct ralu
hciepll.illvleiii,IIC.
,.a•rv•• the right to walva lmpronmanta· In Melga .
i'HM)' BIIIMII POll 128
home or bulinllll. .
Ohio 457...
and recorded In VoluPhono
S14-082·3053
Amarkien Llglon Anrttx
liony lnlormallllaa or County, Dlito • determined P011141roy,
Rtta10nsble Rst11
APPRAISED 142, pege 576, of the
-uW:rltlea In lhe lidding. by the Ohio O.,artmlnl of ATPROPE"TV
Mill
......
lllddtaporl
FIX
814-1192·3053
UOOOO.OO AND CANNOT Raoorde ol DHdl of l:lelge
•.••
lndilllrlll Rlllllonl.
992-6342 (DIIM) ·
V.ndcn $11.00, 8' 'nlblel
Pager 1-800-982-2327
· • l'f order of lha Tu~ Prolplcllva BIDDERS . BE SOLD FOR LESS THAll County, Ohio.
CeiRIIMIIoango
Pln 214g
ALSO, tha rlghl and
t'lalne·Chutar . W...., may addreaa tnqulrlea to:. TWO· THIRDS OF THE
or. 992·7275 (Brenil.)
.
" biatrtct.
:rt1M7' ....
APPRAISED
VALUE.
privilege
to
connect
with
742-2094
The 20th day of. Flbruary lurglll l Nlpje, Limited,
TERI:IS
OF
SALE:
lha
•
r
on
Lola
Number
;1• 7
.
4424 Emereon Avenue,
The
euccnaful Ninety ThrM (13) and One
Parkereburg, WV 21104, pun:
'"" 20, 27 (3ll 3TC ·
Public Notice •
.....
r,
11 eoon 11 hla Hundred ,..,.nty Four (141)
~-·
(304) 4811 8541
(LlrneSton.
.
bid
te
aceepted,
ahall
lit:
·to
lhe
Ohio
Rlvar,
end
lru
The
Tupper•
Plain•·
Low Rstel)
'
.Public Notlce
Ch ..ter Water Dlltrlct reqi:lrld to depoalt on the uae of 1eld eewer, the
APPRAISED'VALUE.
day
or
••1•,
In
caah
or
'by
grant••·
their
IUCCHOora,
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
reMrvea the right to rlltct
TERMS OF SALE:
537 BRYAN PLACE
liDS
any and all llda or to cerlllled check peyable to helra and eaalgne, keep
succeeaful
The
the·
Sheriff,
10'11.
or
the
u
l
d
open
11
allllnH:Ii
MIDDLEPORT .
purchller,
Iii
100n
"
hla
- ·
PI 1 Ch atar lncrnae or deer•..• or amount ·of auch accepted to the Ohio River fr• of
bid Ia accepted, ahall be
;:;:::~~~l ~·· 1
omit 1ny Item or llama
992·27'72
required to depoalt on the
38581 Ber 30 Rold
anjllor award to II!• loweat bid but In no event tee• coat to the aeld Mary E.
a:oo
a.m.-3:30 p.m.
lhan
tt
,OOO
00
The
l:t:tance
Steinbauer
1:1110r,
her
halra
,fleldavllle, Dl:lo-~
l~d . beat IIIDDER. Each
:tay of eale, In caah or by
.
•Replace•nt Willlows
oi:rlllled check payable to
· , Separate
Bide lor pro,OMI muat conleln ., he of lht p""'ha• prlc.o ·ehall tnd ...lgna.
LimestOne,
be
due
and
papblt:
to
the
Being
the
aame
premlua
the
ShariH,
10'11.
of
the
··the conetructlon of Weter full ne:ne at every peraon or
•
..
llikl
Gngis
;
Gravel, Sand,
amount of auch accepted
•treatment· · Plant' company lnteiUied In tho , Sheriff within 30 daye from convey. ad .by Mery E.
•St... o.ors&amp;
. in ·11
Ill ba 111111. The Tuppwa Plalnl· tha dale ot conrlrmetlon of Stelnboure llljor to Char'"
'I
bid but In no event laaa
Top
Fill
• mpro.. en
w
Chaeter Water Dlatrlcl eale. The purchaaar ahlll El:t:rlbllch, TruaiM by dMd
than $1,000.00. The balanoe
Wltllows
: lfCatved by the Tupper.
be
requlrad
to
pay
lnteraet
detad
and
recorded
••
of the purchaM price ahlll
•Piolna-Chuter
Water ,...rv.. the right to walw
•R. . AMitlols
lit: due and peyabte to the
' DiatrtQI' at 1111 office ol'tl:e any lntormalltlu or on aald unpaid balance at eboVI HI forth.
10'!1.
par
annum
from
the
Reference
DMd:
Volume
Sherlll within 30 clap from
:Tul&gt;pera Plalna.Chhtar lrrqularttiH In 11:0 lidding.
the date ot conflnnatlon of
; Walor Dlatrlct, 31111 Bar 30
By order of lha Tuppera data of conllrmetlan of the 240, page 859, Melga
aale. The pun:haoer .ohall
Road, Re,davllle, Ohio Plalne·Cheiter Weter aala to tile date ol payment Cou.nty DMd RIICorda.
of the btiWICI unloaa the
Being the eama raal
be requlrld to piiJ lntereat
;,45772 until 2:00 p.m. (local Dlllrk:L
MHJOU tlCE f.1E IH S
on aeld unpeld balance at
ttm•l, April 2, 1•7. and The 2oth day of February, bolanc• ahall be made ·eatate deacrlbt:d l'n d•d
wllhln elg\11 (I) dep trom from Ohio Valley Laundry,
10'!1. per annum lrom the
lhan at Hid otnce ·publlcly 1117
lhl date of.....
Inc., 111 G. Bruce TNiord of
dale of conllrmetlon of the
(2) 20, 'n PIS 3TC
opened anct reed eloud.
JAMES 1:1. SOULSBY, record In Volume 314, pege
aalt: to lhe dale ol payment
TRUCK
Mtlga County Sl:ellff , 203, DMd ReCorda of Melga
ol the bt:lance unless the
' .
WARREN F. SHEETS, County, Ohio.
balance ahall be mode
:!,II! 11111111 11111111111 1111111111 11 1111111111111111 ! 1111 111111 !::
SERVICE
Attorney lor Plelnl!lfe.
Plroel No. 16-IJ22354o000
wllhln eight (8) daye from
(2120, 27 (3) 1 3TC
Property Addrne:' 21 S·
ti:edateOIMie.
Umeatone • Gravel
217 Second Street,
JAMES M. SOULSBY,
Dirt • sand
Pomeroy, .DI:Io 45769.
PubliC Notice
Me~ Cou~SI:erlll
PROPERTY APPRAISED
WA liEN F. EETS,
985 4422
OAtnt
AT $20000.00 AND CANNOT
Anorneyfor Plalntllla
EM PLOYt·.1[NT
1:
PUBUC BID
GUli•OALS
BE
SOLD
FOR
LESS
THAN
Chester,
Ohio
(2)
24,
27
(3)
8
3TC
-SERVICES
ADVERTISEMENT
· IIDIIANCII
I
TWO· THIRDS OF TI!E
1 WM•MM f!t 2088 $2.99
Billed bide will be
.•
-- received by the VIllage -ol
Pwr llllnute. MYII 8t 11 Vra.
S..U (111) 11S 1131
-- SY'I'ICUII, 2581 Third St., BEAITIE-BLVD,® by Bruce Bealtle
110
P.O.
Box
281,
Syrtcuoe,
45779, at 111 offlca
-- Ohio
Pick up dl--.1
until 12 noon on Thureday,'
-:;
BULLETI N BOARD DEAD LI NE :
:: l:larch 8, t 997, and lhH
lppllsncla.batlorlle,
- openad and reed aloud, l!lr
mli'l)' 111111811 "
:; 2:00 PM DAY BEF ORE PUBLICATION ! :: .. f~rnlahlng
all labor,
-motor bloclal.
material• and equipment
-·
1114-9112-4025
8 .....
neceaaary to oomptete lhe
Racine American·Legion Post
oonetrucllon wllhln alxty
(80) deye of' the contraot
602 will be having a Steak
lilgnlng, -!:er pennltllng,
,Dinner wllh all the trimmings .
YOUNG'S
of a 24 II. x38 II. Pcill Barn
· ' Sunday. March 2,
Building on vitiate. -nee~ CAIPEIRER SERYICI

e

.

(111)

Oltl

-------'1 ... . .-...-.-------------.J
#te.U&amp; !faa&amp; .
Go--·,. -··""'"'
. (NoSundayCalls)

.

'

...... -...1....
&amp;r. 41• eue""' .... :.!'"
.....u

HOWARD
OCAYATHIG (0. •
Colnpl t Houlft
8lld T...uer S1t1i
Wotk, .................

PIIMP I

'lllu COft Fllllll -

-·-..,
Bee~. Tliidd-.

614-992•7643

· No blddw !MY withdraw
his bid within llllty (80)
daylllfter .....- . . dal:l of .
the openlngt.......,f. Thl
VIllage · of Syr.cuee·

Public

BUILDERS,'INC!

New Homes• VInyl Siding New ·
· -Ganges • Replecem'"' Windows

lrtiD-

G01

992 2 156
1 1
"'' ·"' """'(" ''
.

.I

" P C:and epeclllaatlon• ·
oan be obtained 11 thl
Byracu..
Municipal
Building or tram Mayor
George G. Connolly at
an.oo par aat, which
money will ba l'lfundld to. ·
thl uneucc..aful blddal'l
upon the return of the
compllta HI no more ttu:n
lin (tO) dar• lifter lhe bkl
opening date. Chlclal ahan
lit: made payable to tha

•'
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·r·

•lh lli!DII Phftlng ·

..... ?

eflucl"•• Ex'*'«·
••tara

PHtllng
o\lao CoiiCtilll Work
(f'RII! EITif!IATIS)

-

V,C. YOUNG II

IDGII

Pomwl)y, Ohio
.

�Ohio

NKA Crouword Pu••l•
PHJI.r:tp

ALDER

•=.,. . .
• u ••

ACWOII

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UH
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:

11 . . . . 11
llllw

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14......
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11 Clttlon"a wop A .,_
,. ,..,.....
114

a

A 10 S
.. 4 s

a

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CUl MIYLIOO ADC6SS IS .. .
- ~AtU:~IS .. .
~ FI'IX. UA.oteER IS...

.....
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;

QJ I 7
11754
Eaal
• •• 15
• 10 5
• 10. 5 s
a Kt I

'M AFtERLIFE PS'l'(HIC

~~ WM~I.!a ...
~ OOIJA ea\RD

&lt;OJ'lPCr J.UA~ l~ ...

Soulll·
• Q J 2
• A 7 &amp;2
t AK

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1111111

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_,._
17 . . lt!Wvt
.......
11....

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&amp;?No-·-(Fr.)

21 ~......

·=-·)

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2llloalt (lla)
30 IIMd

5 c.ndy llaYor

lnatrutMnt

I Vlc:tory tymblll

711111tnangry

~=

8

itu'-··

2NT

&amp;NT

A Q J 10

=--' ::
~- - l

COl ....... '-

27TV_....

North
4NTI

(211de.)

. _.......

31 AciDr

~,.f.

••

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M-'.,..,._ '""

- . . - · ·1!&gt; !'11

41 UqJy
. ; ;.
4S Tiny Qpenlna ~~

44Dectoritl~
wood ·

46 Drlwe off

48F.-

sot:
1.....

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33 Alrlcen IMd ....
34
.;-.;;
38 -&amp; -011- ,.,;I

PosSible comment,
Impossible play

..t

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31 OYoi/11 'f••'•P

Pus

agcy.

,

2.~

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Opening lead: • K

./ IF .l

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11 ,, ...,, 1 .t!t
atrlfl .
"'"
21 11:a111n ••ner"~
2301111e . . . .
25 1'lnnle • I •..,._
21 Allbr. tor • ~'S

Vulnenble: Both
Dealer: South
Routh

I 81 elan

10Direa11W .

....~
.,;,

,.;.

~
Henri Amlel, the Swila philosopher
.~.x
II
and poet,, wrote, "Doing easily what,
lllanl
...
otbera lind difflcuil Is talent; doing lmr+-+--.ll52 1'1111 bacl1 to .••
(al.)
:..-;:
whal is impoaaible for talent ia L~.L.....L....JiSlilllgh
=
geniua.• .
.
c.d
At the bridge table, most plays are
tiAl&gt;
poasible for talented bridgeur~, but a
few verge on the impoaslble.
GOUl-D
t~AT
"
Thla deal was played in Auatr.lia,
t4~re
~
•
wbere wrlttea biddinl is uaed. Instead
&gt;
ANl&gt; Pl-AY IT
. of calling out your bids, you write
""
them on a pad in the middle of the
'R 8 I D
YNCP.'liP
JYII!
KI
'
I AGIC
1'4
..
"
table. This bas several advantages,
but here North bad an a~ident. He
.l'M, NOT
~
YATKI
IUZIDUAWN.
meant to aign oft In three no-trump, of
~OMff
~
coune, but wrote •tNT" instead of
·';~
"3NT" and didn 'I notice until it was
.
,,
..,.,
too late to chapge. Soutlr,who had
'
'YSWWPII
Z
T
I
K
Y
H
I
Y
H
F
P
-~
shown 20-2Z pointa, liked his hand.
'
•
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· ,.
North put down his dummy with
ITIIHOYP
RSYYJIJPU.'IYHIDI
..
U
"!:
,.. .
•
·
, · profuse apologies. But South, r.ther
.....
· nlf. l(f.YS TO ~ 5C.JCCa)FlJL than reproacll. put his mind to win- · YAAFP.
.
.
.
~(=;
fl~H?.Ip.[£ ~
nlngl2 trlcb. Aller wimiiDg the lint
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: , wish llcMw -a. to tall Y'JII ' -·eony 1-. 1 - f.~
. .
I!'..: ,
Irick with the heart ace, South immeyaung. 1 made terrible and flllllaketl.' - Heidi Allll.
· •
.;.¥. ·
Wf\ITC. L.l"""' ·.
, diately played bis low spade and fl.,
'
~ "sr~C':&gt;
neaaed dllliun(a 10. When it held, be
!&gt;TOI-\N:.H I
took a club llneaae, unblocked his dialh.:J
...q
.._...::__
._
mond honors, ran the spade queen,
r
J-:r
played a spade to dummy's ace,
,q.;
cashed tbe queen-jack of diamonds,
•W
repeated the club fineise, and claimed
~
,.-~-··"
.rw
, When Weal followed low. His 12 tricks
low 10 '""" lour - •·
were thrlle spades, one heart, four diamonds and lour clubs.
D E w.B E B
' .•,..
. "WOw! That was lucky," said Nortft.
"Sorry, partner," commented Weal.
. ,
•If I play tbe spade kin1 -;- a .
Merrlmacl Coup - at Irick two, we de,;.Q .
feat the COIItract by several tricks."
_,.;:..B,.:U:,...::..R.;:..L
"You are a talented player,• observed Eu~ • but no one il that big a
genlua.•
·

ONf Of Tt40St,
TAP£
iI
StiQw. .x

"'*tlf

1

·

·-

··~..

.....

• Cr·port. 17, 12D h9fu~a.

·-...

•• Morctu!Ur lnbganll ..- .
wtlh drive .., lrollw, fOOd lhlpe. •

1400 ,1t41M3141

Fiber-Ina ben boat with ·
n.ny ...... tsiOO. ,,._ 1
814-7-.
•

FUR Blaodld ALIItrallan PuppM,
I - Old, M Sholl, 114-4&lt;117424. . .

Pup!lr:'

Ful Btaadsd Collie
~ ...... 150.81 ........

==:u.~:p

etno1or 1.a1!1oR11. 4 *• I!OP.JII, lant Condllionl 181

tu,..,, lthc.i(:.tljdiw,

=

1

•

,1'113 Af.

•r::r:..bl:r'

ll

814-441.0710.

Poodlt pupplto· dny toy, AkC,
CooNIIIo, 814«7-3o!04.

Purple Ribbon UKC R'!:~~rtd
TrMlna WoiMr l'u!llllet.,
111
7118 Champlon1fllp Bloodllnoo

.,.......... 211.

Now-

Rabblll Pad!Vf'otd Mlnllopl lnd
WhjiiO t10 .... popon. Cai81~1U213....,.,...

Mulle81

lnlltlimentl

Hyllnder

ntW tirt8, CIUllO; IM...r -11,

.

-814-441-Gitlt

_::E~~ ·.

~=c. ::r:I=u=N=E~,
I r .: ;,'

I

.11'LL SET 'fOU'p SA'(

SOMElliiN6 REALI.'( WORTII~ILE ..

cellar and aulbulldlnga,_114· 742-

2157.

24n.

rage, aaveral outbiuildlnga, on
blacktop road, a1king t47,500,
814-742-3212.

Mlddl-~

farm hoUit, free 810. 241124 01•

All real estate advertiSing In
11111 newspaper Is s®ject to
·the ·Federal Fair Housing N;t

of 11188 whieli makes •Illegal

10 advenlse ~any preference,
linllaUOn or discrimination
baled on race, color, railgiOn,

.0. f-llalul or.-

orlgln. 0&lt; any lntontlon to
make any suclt po-a.
11m11a11on or - i o n."

340 Business and
BUildings

4111181 014-

PRINT NUM8ERfD lfTTfRS
IN THfSE SQU~RES
,
uNSCRAMBLe t Em _•s ro

GH ANSWER

1
•

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--o~;;;;;-......_71
810
ttorne
.y ,I

c S

.....!:'

.,,.,.v•-·-·,.,...-- q&gt;\,,oI
~

.

.

u.:mo.
•• 414,
RllnQIII' - f2.250;
1118 11.850: 1815 F-

Nil Qrtndtr

polL""""' 304-875-131111.

Farmall 101
, t(a!"aplll;t dlac.

304-273-4215. .
Plow and dlac.lar FarmaiiiOO,
1125; Allll Chalmero B tllctor,
runa good. tiiOO: LN&lt; 10- for
Ford Rano•r. 1125: 814-247-

........... CiH Aptmttnll. locarod
at 245 Union Avenue, Po-.y Ia

211111.

--·

. .

on, bHroom' IPfrtmentl. Con··
lacl managamontat tho. olllct
Mandar through Frllla1. lam·
.

lttl, lttO, , . . 510

ACHA -iOn, llrO ,_,.old, In-' 1012 Nlnaoi Pick-Up I.,.....,
- - FUfld, II'_, llrollt: 1171 AMtFM Sporty, t3.300 014-448·
I'-«JJdutnprudt;ll-5118.

.i!C

....

J"'I

~'..1!

....=

.~

E•· \!•

.~

DtMI)Ct All Work GuiNihlad,

4182.

- -,.,..lild ......

;ih(.il
· ~MI

... tl

:4: ,,~

=~~!,fl '
I W-.

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c

an;t
.....
.....
,i·tl

...

.•

f'or

~.. · - · call Cho~ 814-102, ~

8323.

·ttJ

...
,ihl•

.
·BERNfCE. .
BEDEOSOL
..

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.i~

--

'

.

840 EIICII 11:11 .NI
R~IOI'I

•·

t.llllt ~ I'Onir GNtn'Broko 4 1tt5 Ford· ~·~50 tllclb,t8,000 ·
'llaar OkiMar81iult, Kid 8raU, ~t.!,II•IIJio
l· o!IUII ltll; 804•

11...-1118.

1

'

'

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Fillich Clly Moytag, 814·448· . '
J'
' /_ :
150 11-a Alltomatic, U,1so; 81~ 7715.. .IJ
CIC General HolM Main.' :
ttf1tnCt· Painting, vinyl llldlng..
mrpentry, -,_..., wiuflil at. .._

EKCollant Condltlon at
Whatl Horao lawn tractor 12/0 Price~ T':~~~~~ EICaPfOd. COok
--tG00.-75-2181.
.._..
. 103' . ' . .
1130
Llvtltoek
1812 Filrd F, l&amp;o &amp;tpd, 41,000
milt a, amllm1 po, pb, ••· Jmlnl
2 Adult -born aaddlta. brand cond, black. 11,2110. 804'1.75- .304-e75-&amp;IMO.
2111.

now accepting applk:ation• far

•

I

Haa.nd 471, 7 FL Hayblne, 1187 Ford Ranger XLT V.e AulD, ·
.
Good Slol.... t3.200 OBO 014- 12.000 114-3111-2$27.
Appllonco Porta And StM.O: AI
-118S-7P.M.
1ae8 ClltYV S-Ib' 22f( Au~dc, Ntmollttorido a- 2&amp; 'IMrl

One bedroom apartmtnt, fur·
nlahed. extra nice I cltan. No

...
".~~

'

--3318. · :

,

~(I

poph

. •' t

111112 Ford F-150 lU. flcyt, auiD WI
ovtnlrl... ~.000 ...... - pi, ·pb, . now l~ttrlo/, · running
~~.ca. nM~ch more: 13.150.

"'

..
.l.h
,

.......

1 Modern 1 -..m Aporlllllnt,

e•• ue 0380.

!pn.

i)

bv lolling in liMo miSSing wa&lt;ds
~ No. 3 below.

: )'

SEf1VICES

Golllfl butlnaaa lof HI~ Stcond
8trHt. Rl. 113 In ....... 304-773111&amp;1.

you doYolop lrom

'-~I . -~~p;~:~· the chuckle qvOied

. I

lbr lurnlllltad apt De·
po1lt &amp; rtftrtncoo. 304-882·

2586.

yo~

lir:ilorrnl"' · 1

Laroy.ttt Mall: 2 Rooml And llalh
No Khchtn, S20t11Mo., All UdPIId, llopolit Requlrod, 114-448·

Mini farm, 32 aer.,, 1 112 atOry

"Flattery .is something

~6
•

.~;--...

..

....

can
my don't
Mom have
always·
said, enjoy,"
~ but you
to

1..

Wurfltztf Spinet _Plano Ea..tlont
Condition. •uo: Bu11n Sola
Bod illlutiful $4&amp;0: Old FUhion
School Dook •75; a.e. Rafrlaora·
!Dr *75, MIIPt Sludy O.ok f45;
&amp;flm'IAnllquel,.l14 441 4347.

150 ac:re farm, 1 1f2 11Dry remodeled hou1e, new garage, new

.

-riN,.:r_:,.F.v.:.._.;:.IL..:..A:,...Iv:....-1
-l.-~.L--1.
. _.1._-.I.. ..:...I.

l

....

I
~=-=-=~·=-=~

..

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...

....

I

.r. I I r t .

-;

tl00,014-742illll·
34 FOC!t Houoo Boa~ 804-773- ::
Auto Leana: Auto Deal• WI• h- 11815.
'
1anga Flnanclllfl• .Even II You
~
Haw a-t Turned 11oM! lletatL 7110 ' Auto Peril &amp;
Loana Avallabla~for No Cradl~
MC8110i1tl · ·:
Bod Crodlt And ~,.,upiOJ Bur111
-.CaiDianaet..-..t~
· ~udgtl Prlca Tranemloalona, ,·.,
·
51at1n0 at HII.OO and up. Ulod I ,
CARS FOR t1001 Truclta, boall, Rtbull~ All Ty,.a, 0Vtf 10,000 ' 1
4--ltra. motor homot. lilrnl· Tronamlaalona, Acctll Tranlftr :
~~~~~~":"'..':,\:!:.~ Cotta I Rear Enda, 814-245- 1
•:;n.:...,._,;_______ •''
aroa now. alI 1·100-513· 343 .:
Ellt. s-l3il8
Now 'gat bonk. a. 1 ton 1ruck f~
Cradlt P,bltma? G a - Fl· whoolo I radlatora. 0 &amp;•R Auto,
nanclng, 10'!1. Dl!wnl Paymenta Rlploy, WV. :1114·372-31113 or 1·
AI Low AI etaO Par Month. No 100-21:H3211.
,
l
TUrn Downol CaltRulh 814-,...._ 790
21117. \
·~r

fARI.1 SUPPliES
&amp; liVESTOCK

::·

I

• '
., 7 P.M. ·
..
114
742
aulD, cruloe, HI~ H&amp;O.
" ' 1885 Sbatol 215 PROtXUOC J
121110' .
But Bool175 HP E'llndNde LIM ·
tat
1111 Clryoltr - . pw. po. 4 .._. e-a, Mu• Soo. un- ·

Golden Rtlrltvtr Pupo. FuiiBioodtd, born N... 211. t75.00
Paronlt on Premlott. 614·14a11DD. L.-.Y.nge
Pall Pluo, Sllvor Brldgo Plaza.

570

M

.

"

.,,

•

�.::
...
WH

•..,

'

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"\

Ohio Lottery

.

Cincinnati
defeats
Marquette

.Mllla.H
.

•

Pick 3:
3-6-2
Plck4:
&amp;-6-3-4

BuckeyeS:
4-11-16-33-36
.

.

•

r·

....'..

•

a1.

••..

en1ne

..,

VoL 47, NO. 210

etlll', Ohio v.llly Puiii!Ming eon..,.ny

',/-.,.

•

Several to
.chOOse .lroml·
Stop by -f or a
'

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 28, 1997
.

:Area doctor to answer

I':.

· indi~ctment

' '

.

'; j

.

'

MASON, W.Va. -AMason doctor wilrappear in federal court next
'week, acoonling to·Dena Eder oftbe
U.S. Attorney's office. .
Dr. Danny R. Westmoreland in
scbeduled to appear iri U.S. Federal
Court in Huntington at 3 ·p.m.
Wedlaesday, March S to answer 37
chtqes that have been lodged against
,him, Eder said.
A fedCJ'BI grandjury handed 4own
the indictment on Feb. 20. '
.
According to the indictment,
·Westmoreland billed Medicaid for
services that were not perfonned. He
.also allegedly prescribed drugs and

fest ·d rive·

todayI

'

..•

•

'

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(

.

'
'

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.•
••
i•
~

••
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•

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,'
.

.

The lawmakers also expressed
concern that EPA's proposal isn't
based on strong scientific evidence.
"EPA's own scientific advisory
committee is divided on whether
these standards will provide any
health benc(its, but they will cost
money, jobs' and affect future economic development iri Ohio," Strickland said Thursday.
.
"We oliJht to be concerned about
public bealth but not .l)ase it on sci·
cnce that is at best questionable. and .
at worst, not valid."
·

,,'

. WASHINGTON (AP) - A,Deri·
cans are giving President Clinton ~
thumlis up for job . pcrfonnance
despite getting an earful on 'Cihical
problems a new poll suggesls.
In the 'Pew Research Center sur"Yey, 60 percent approved of the way
·Clinton ,is handling his job, a record .
in Pew polls and up 8 point from one
taken the week before his secondtenn ina11guration.
·. ,
.
Thtrty·two percent dtsapproved,
,also .up one point. .
. ,
• The high mar~ came desptte a
'd~beat of negauve news ajlout the
~st~ntle~l'ed to Whitewater, cam·
PIIIBII financmg.and Paul~ Jones.
"The Amencan pubhc has no
nerveendings," sa1dAndrew Kohut.

•
•

•
'
•
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'
'••

,,

.. •

•

andl
:.
&gt;fo the
I
'
about'its proposed rules in an inter,.
··
AeP· Strickland
· pal memo mllde available this week
·clean the air but a lot to threaten jobs by the House Commerce Committee.
in my pan of Ohio," siri~ki!Uid. a
OMB told EPAofficia!s that the
Democrat, wrote in a letter Wednes- proposed air rules were based.-on
'
day to EPA administrator Carol inadequate research and "did not fulBrowner.
ly confonn" to administration
By LAURAN NI!ERGAARD
"Coming on the heels of the requiremenls.
AIIOCiettcl Prell Writer .
.
expensive udjusllllenls required under · On Thursday, Voinovich and a
WASHINGTON. Jr ybu are in your mid-20s '"d want to buy cigathe Clean Air Act some Sixth District bipartisan deleJalion from Ohio's
rettes today, be prepared: Sales clerl&lt;s are supposed to demand some ID.
.businesses ·and ~ommunity leaders Legislature met on Capitol Hill with
Food and Drug Administration regulations that went into effect todity
are worried about tbe billions of dol- Strickland and other tnembers of
required retailers to card ali customers younger than 27 to thwart maturelius that this new pl-opolial will cost." Ohio's c~~ssional dcilegation to . looking youths under the legal-smoking age of 18. Failure to comply could
. Ney, a Republican, said the pro- urge .them to oppose EPA's rules.
co5t store'owners $250.
~rules "have got to be stopped." '
"These additional regulations .
Retailers predicted longer·lines as·they cbecked IDs for .customers who · "Both the '\ balanced-budpt · I
"They will have severe econom· ·mean a major economic loss for
amendment defeaf and tbe clitlliiC !
buy tobacco 26 million times a day in convenience stores alone. 1\vo tobac·
iC impact for Ohio " he said.
Ohio," Yoinovich said. "We
here . co-friendly states- Virginia and Nonh Carolina- at lirst said they would
argue that if a final (budget-balutc-' j
~· In a separate l~ner, Sens. John in a united front to show how critical
ing) bill gets up there, you will pt
not enforce the new ruies, and then said they wouid.
dlenn, a Democrat. and Mike this is for our state."
some
broad suppon," said Robert •
Besides federal inspectors, stores also had this to worry about: TobacReischauer,
a former CongressiDIIII !
DeWine, a Republican, also urgoo
Voinovich said Ohio businesses
co foes were sending teen-agers undercover to catch lawbreaking clerl&lt;s.
Browner to reconsider the proposed have spent more than $5 billion on air
Budget
Office
director who now
"It's really time to stan taking seriously as a nation the sale of tobacslindards.
·
pollution controls since 1972.
analyzes the budget for the Brookinp
co products to young people," said.FDA Commissioner David Kessler,
Institution.
I'·
· who was retiring from his post ,after ushering in the new ndes today at a
White House ceremony.
.
·
. ·
The Senate conti.nued debati111 the
President Clinton sc~uled the event to focus public auention on.the
amendment Thursday, a day after
·regulations. The Dem~J!:ptic .National Com'1'illee plann~d to use the
Sen. Robert Torricelli; 0-NJ, soundannouncement to try to turn some of the media heat about campaign fundraising on the Republicans.
. edits likely death-knell by sayiliJ he
. The DNC was preparing an analysis detailing the ncarly .$6 million . would vote against. it. Barriill unexfew survey director. "They over· Republican congressional leadership
pected I ith-hour switches, lhlt
GOP campaign committees accepted from tobacco 1intercsts for the 1996
would make the final vote 66-34 for '
wbelmingly told us all they hear while offering a clouded view of the
campaign. The Democrats, however, also accepted $1 million from tobacit
- one shy of the two-thirds major- ·
about Bill Clinton is scandal," but ·GOP agenda.
.
co companies.
ity
needed for constitutional amendliked his work anyway.
Pony-four percent approved and
Even though states already prohibit tobacco sales to anyone under I 8,
ments.
, 42 percent disapproved of the job
minors purchase $I .6 billion in tobacco annually. Seventy-live percent ol'
1b¢ survey came amid continuing GOP leaders were doing, a marginal
teen-~ge ~mokers say they have never been carded.
.
The vote is expected Tuesday. The
revelations about Democratic money· gain from last month,that marked a
Indiana officials, for example, discovered Last summer that41 percent
amendment would require a bal.r aisi'l but bef!Jre the release of doc- IUI'I_IU?Und from a year a~o when a
of st~s in tbe state were selling to minors. ·
.
anced budget in 2002, but leave deciunieits showing Clinton's direct maJonty gave the Republicans poor
· The FDA is contracting with states to send undercover teens to catch
sions
about how to achieve it to I.Winte~t in offerill8 big donors White marks.
lawbreakers. But.the agency still has not picked the 10 slates that will share
makcrs,
who have been deadlocltctl ·
the first' $4 million
HQUSF access.
. At the same time, respondents
. in enforcement funds - meaning feder'l) stings will
over the question for nearly two
· In~ USA TO&lt;!a~·CNN-Gallup poll .. favored Democratic positions on
not happen for at least a month. .
.·
,
.
. ··
done pfter that d1sclosute, 42 percent Medicare, the environment and aborSo tobacco foes are amassing thousands of volunt.eers to repon sus- decades.
said Clinton was wrong to.invi~ large .lion, and expressed little .faith :be
pected lawbreakers to an FDA hot line .
Clinton told a business groilp it ·.
contri!Jutors to star in the Linco!n country.will g~ta balanced budget in
"It's going to take an army of citizens," said John Banzhaf of Action
was "a good thing" that the cllftlli.; ' ·
Bed~m. Even so, 53 percent sa1d five years, as both parties want.
on Smoking and Health, which was sending teens to test the new l~w in
tutional
amendment will IOIC 11ut •
the issiw~as irrelevant io his char·
Right now, Clinton's "zeroing in
Washington and northern Virginia.stores today.
.
called
for
completion of a pact by
acter l!"d JOb.,
,
Dn education and his. policy iniBut FDA's own inspectors could target states thai do not perfonn their
Thanksgiving,
saying, "This btn,n
. Th~ survey found contJRued . tiatives are iisht on in tenns of the
own enforcement.
·
is
well
within
reach."
Improvement m the· perceptton of public's agenda," Kohut said. .

.Buying cigarettes today?
Better hav:e your ID handy

are

.

. ~roger's c·losing of warehouse jolts officials Tentative agreement
Dave Osborne, president of number of employees will be offered
said about two ,weeks ago the com·
at
O(J
.
may
avert
strike
pany ·hl:d assured him the Roanoke !&lt;roger's Mid-Atlantic region, said comparable jobs at o!her company
.retail COIIIpetition from offices, but it did not say how many.
.: CHARLESTON, W.Va. - State exp11nsl on would not affect

.
.
:By JENNIFER BUNDY
·~eoelaad Pr8u Writer

incre~ed

and city · officials had no inkling Charleston workers.
. kropr.(.:o. was considering closing
''I think it was handled vety poor·
·i 250-cillployce warehouse and dis· Iy," he said. "We were given no
!ribution ~nter here.
options .whatsoever. The decision
And they were told not to bother had alreldy been made."
offcrinl the company incentives to
Underwood said be had con1acted
stay.
another c~pany Thursday that was
• "I don't think we had a chance to . considcrina adding more jobs in t1ie
do lllytbiiJ to preVc:nt i!IJH!pening," nortbern West Viqinia than Kroger
Oov. Cecil Underwood said Thursday wC?Uid eliminate. He declined to elab·
ifter the Clllllpany announced it was orate. ,
1ft0vina the
to Roanoke,
"We'~ Joina to be in that kind of
· ya., by mid-May. · .
bJilancin• .act more often than we
, Molton, who was clearly angty, ;want .to "1'r" UnderwOod said. ·

operations

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Supponas of a balanced-budget COIISiitutiOI!al amendment say ~y wiiiiiiC
ils likely defeat to pressun: I'Rsidellt
ClintDI! and l•wmakers to strike a
deal for eliminating defiCils by 2002.
That strategy could wort&lt; beciiiiC
Clinton and some legiJiators ~~
fought the amendlllelit by insisUnJ
that all that is needed to balance the
budget is the political courqe to
make tough choices on cutting spend. ing.
·
Members of Congress who used
that argument to oppose the amend. ment yet want to vote "yes" this year
. for fiscal restraint may need to suppan a budget-bai!IJICing package •
"It's really going to put the burden on them," Rep. Charles Sren, holm, 0-Texas. ii sponsor · of the
a111endmen~ sail! Thursday. "The
pressure is on them to be vety supportive of an honest budget a1tempt."
"This probably enh~IICCs !he
political need for opponct ::-ticipie consbuctively i~ _1· inJ
the bud~" said freshman Sen. Gordon .Smith, R-On: .. anotber amendmen( suJ&gt;Poner.
·
The amendment was designed to
pressure l•wmokers to eliminate fed·
era! deficits. Some supponers said i:s
all,but-:ccnain rejection would mike
.. it--ierlarelintorf'of.11WtnakeQ to
claim tbey, want a \l!ldgct~llg
deal but walk away from any plldcage that does not reflect their own
. priorities.
"This allows all the nasty characterizations that weni on in 1995 and
1996," said Sen. Spencer Abraham,
R·Mich .. referring to those ·years'
budget wars between Clinton and
· Republicans.
But with leaders of both sides including Clinton himself'- saying
they want an agreement this y-•
others think the amendment's deftlt
will do little damage .

D.esp,te·et~ical is.sues, ·Clinton
rid_
es h~gh i~n center:'~ survey ·

,,

•

The doctor is also charged in sev·
era! counls with distributing pre'
sc,ription drugs within 1,000 feet of a
~hool. His office, as well as .his
~,~~lre·j fonner phannacy building, is
~,~ext door to Wahama High School.
•. Prosecutors for U.S. Attorney
l«becca Betts have asked the U.S.
District Court to strip Westmoreland

of 2. 7~~:Ms he owns in Mason County with deeds of trust totaling more
than $309,000.
.
· The indictmcnls stemmed from an
investigation curled out by !he U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration,
the state Medicaid Fraud Unit, the
U.S. Postal Service and the Ohio ·
Medical Fraud Control Unit.
In a raid on his office on June 23,
1995, authorities took patient charts,
narcotics records. sheels, provider$,
papers and a computer, according to
Westmoreland. The doctor claimed
that during the raid agents held guns
on his patients, as well as his fiunily.

'

wQ,U14 ~~-~~.:f~ ·~ .
darils and anotrier 21 would
siandards, for particulate matter pollotion. ·,
·'
Under.cumntEPAMes,onlyfour
.counties m Ohio exceed the federal
ozone standards and two tbe particu·
'late standard.
. The Ohio En~ironmental Protec·
uon Agency_esttmates that the proposed federal ozone standard would
cost Ohioans more than ~760 million
annually and that the pantculate stan·
-dard wo~ld cost more than $2 billion
annually.
Ohio's Department of Dev~lopment esttmates th~t 97(),000 JObs,
. 17,500 manufactunng.plants, and 58
new road co~struction projects val·
ued at $2.3 btlhon could be affected
by ~proposed rules.
. ._
J am troubled by the posstbtllly
that these standards would do little to

.."•

'

·'

.

~.,,.. i i~~~·~me:;a~n~~~

•'&lt;

'

dispensed drugs to support patienls'
addictions. The indictment also says
th~t Westmoreland illegally pre·
sclibed drugs in order for his wife to
profit from her business, Our Fami. ,ly Pbannacy.

Down, but
not dead
Balanced budget
amendment's likely
defeat may prompt
deal to cut deficits

.

.By PAMELA BROGAN
·Gllrinett News Service ·
. WASHINGTON - A bipartisan
· group of Ohio off~eials, including 1'
.Marietta-area ~- Ted Stickland 1
and Bob Ney, and Gov. George
_Voinovich, are t.aking aim at JI!OPO~ I
.u.s. Environmental Protection
.Agency air regulations. ,
·
·
· Under EfA's proposai; Washing-'_' '
·ton CQiiaty would not meet federal
standards for ozone. Noble County , .
.would .not meet federal particulate'.
standards.

.•

AS.LOWAS:

next week·

:B.ipart.isan effort takes aim
;at. clean air amendments

..

••

.

-

2Stctlao-.12,....,._
I..GMMIICo. fl&amp; I I I

...

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•

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~......__....._--

:r - - - -..........

'1~1

'

Iow-&lt;:ost, nonunion ~rators led the
"The Charleston operation is
company to reduce distribution cosls. increasingly outmoded. Changes
The distribution or produce,
llroughi about ·by new logistics techCery. dairy and other perishable items . nologies and chanJing distribution
will. be consolidated in Kroaer's patterns' have reduced or eliminated
waieh&lt;iule in Roanoke, Va., wi!Kh is the need for many services provided
ceillered in tbe company 's Mid· here," Osborne said .
Adantil: territory.
The territory includes, mblt of
Cincinnati-based Kroger has
West Viqinia, southern and central ."5,000 employees in the state and an
Virginia, north central North Caroli- · annual payroll in West Virginia of
na and pariS of Ohio, Tennessee and about $70 million. It haS 51 stores in
Kentucky.
.
West .Virainia and plans up to .10
The company' Sl!id a substantial , mlli,'C be~~ I999,tbe company said.

aro-

ATHENS (AP) - Negotiators for Ohio University and a Ullicin representing cafeteria and maintenance workers reiiChed teiltative . , _ . .·
on a new ·contract early today, possibly averting a strike set for s.....,.
Details of the pact with Locall699 of the American Fedetcion ofSilla,
County and Municipal Employees union were not available immedil'l
~

.

'

A meeting to vote on ratification of the agreement was sc:h.1:lulo for 6
p.m. S8lwday. Local 1699 President Charlie Adkins Mid he would NO&gt;
ommend the contract be approvod.
.
· '
1eny Coniy, assistant director of personnel and. employee teladoM •
Ohio University, said. "The plllies worked loRJ and hard lo l'tlldl •
IIJI'CCIIICRI that is fair to both sides. We think we ratc:hecl thlt pill."
A striki by the 600 union memben would have shiat doWII
IIIII
UJCd by an averaac of 7,000 students daily. .

c11.m.

•·

"I

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