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WH

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Ohio Lottery

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Cincinnati
defeats
Marquette

.Mllla.H
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Pick 3:
3-6-2
Plck4:
&amp;-6-3-4

BuckeyeS:
4-11-16-33-36
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VoL 47, NO. 210

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

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Several to
.chOOse .lroml·
Stop by -f or a
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 28, 1997
.

:Area doctor to answer

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· indi~ctment

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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·

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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."
·

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. 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
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&gt;fo the
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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. .
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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

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. ~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

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: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

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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 ·

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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.

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wQ,U14 ~~-~~.:f~ ·~ .
darils and anotrier 21 would
siandards, for particulate matter pollotion. ·,
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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

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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.

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AS.LOWAS:

next week·

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

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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.

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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
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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.
.
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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. .

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·commentary

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F~, FebrUiry 21, 1117

Satunlay, Marda 1 .

The Daily Senti.nel The cas.e of the fallacious felony charge
111 Court lt., Puln•Oj, Ohio
814-112·21111• Fax: 8112-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllhlr
.,

CH~LENE H0EFUCH

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o-r-1 M8neger

MARGARET LEHEW
Contrallw

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Letters. to t.h e editor

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. Weedy shares mistaken views

"As sooa a !hey told me lhe anyone bothered to iMCrYiew Ro dl
_..., I knew it WM for Puerto · -- or conn.cted unioll ofi'JCials for an
'
explanllion. Bul inJICad, lhe w,heeb
Rico," ~told Ill.
The olliceas then lwldculfed Rus- of justice pound on. until a court
sell ("behind my back") and dreve helrinJ lilt month. /Uf« a shon heather dowa no the llllioa house for ing, lhe court dismissed all chqes.
A Llbor Deplnment official we
blioking. Thcle sJie followec! the routi~~e that thousands olhardened crim- conta::ted now professes swprisc thai
inals go throulh every day: ·A "pal- local officials wenl ahead with lhe
dowa," fingerpriQting, a ~ call. prosecution. "In most cases like tliis,
and lhe issuing of her prison blues. people are not arresled." lhe olflcial
Finally, !hey Jed her to a cell, after !Old us. "We had nothing to.do with
supplying her with two pillow cases, lhe arrest. That's something that
a towel and a waslicloth.
would be done by local authorities.
How did this come to pass? In lhe uid ifs something thai swprised
state of Kansas, any "!heft" over lhe IDe."
amount of $1,000 is treBled as a ' Union' officials. however, remain
felony. The L1bor Deplutmeilt offi- · slearncd about lhe incideaL As
cial who invmipted the cue (it was NAGE presidelll Ken Lyons told us:
handed over to' lhe · local district "The Labor Department has to
attorney for prosecution) arrived at unckrstanil thai Geslljlo tactics like
herligmebyaddincupthecostoflhe tbcK won't be tolerlted.'·'
plane tickets for lhe thtcc union offiUNDER 111BOOME - The inexcials who went to Puerto Rico. ·
plicable release . from custody of
Adding insuh to injury, Russell Dany Toussaint, a former top Haiti111
was also 'clwJed with IWO ~i~­ official whO's suspected of partici' .
meanors o- holel and transponation · paling in "exuajudicial killings," is
lltt'I!Ctins attention on Capitol Hill.
· clwJes she bil~ t01he unicift. .
Last mooth, -reported thai TouThe whole lhing could probably
have been avoided, officials DOle, had . ssaint was detained -- aad then
released - by immigration off'~~:ials
when he IO'ived in Miami from
€l•KT--~
Haiti.
' lmmipion officials told us
·
HULME
!hey ~ned Toussaint a1 the qequest
of lhe State Department. But Toussaint was Sprung, they say, after Stale
Departl\lenl officials failed to provide
the necessary infonnation ·to .detain
him . .
.·Since our column first appeared,
IWO House committee Chaif10eD have
wrinen 10 Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright and Attorney
General Janet Reno to complain.
"We arc ••• writing you to express
ow: deep concerns about lhe managemenl of dfe Thussaint cue." lhe '
Jeuer reads, "and the possible manipulation of the lookout lisl in certain
1errnrism cases by senior admini~tra. lion officials."
·
It is signed by Rep. Porter.Goss,
R-Fia., cliainnan of the Intelligence
Committee, . Rep. Benjamin A.
Gilman, R-N.Y., chairman of the
lnlemational Relations Commillee.
anci Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fia.,
chairman of lhe Judiciary Commillee's c.rime subcomntitlee.
Jack Allele.._ IUid Ju Moler ·
11ft wrlten for United Feature

if il was • official 1\W'lioe So they
filed a complaint wid! lhe U.S .
.,.....,Mvl•r
WASHINGI'ON- Lena Russell, Depanmenl of Labor. Shortly nbaea medical records clerk in Topeb: afner, !hey Rligncd from die union.
Kan., may be the only federal
employee in history to be booked bn
felony chi!Jcs for II!Cnding a convention.
1be s1ory of how !his ebullient,
62-year-old woman ended up in
prison blues is arelling example of
whal can happen when govemmenl
For nearly 1wo years, lhe combureaucraU overslep !heir bounds in
enforcing lhe rules.
plain1 bounced ~nd lhe Labor
Russell's uoubles began afler she Department's Office of LabQr Manand 1wo co-workm attended a 1994 · agemenl Slandards. Russell, who
convention in Pueno Rico of lhe 'knew a complain! had been filed
Boston-based National Association of · againsl her, thousht lhe matter had
been dropped. Tbcn.came lhe mornGovemmen1 Employees..
·
Russell is lhe president ofa local . ing of Sept. 18, 1996.
Russell had been a~ wort for a
union chjqller in Topeka, tepresenting
lhe BOO wortei'S who 1oil in 1he local co\lple of hours when VA security
Veterans Affairs hospilal. Under lhe guards showed up to teiiiJer that she
local's bylaws; lhe presidenland her was beinJ arrested. Sure enough,
waiting at lhe from desk were two
Topeka police ofticers and a federal
official functions.
marshal. They were holding a warrann
But some union officials dido 't for her onest - on felony cJwges like Russell. They dido ' I want her for slealing $1 093.85 of lhe union's
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spending union dues to uavel, even money.

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller.

:.:':':ea:i:~·~:c~·~~.!i

conservative courts down Jaws perIn Bob Weedy's latest column, milling collective bi!Jaining, pro"Coons lhe enemy of cullural inlegri- kcting women working in factories,
ty" he laments lhe inlegrity that and children laboring in cQal mines.
lmponant advances in civil rights
' couns no longer operale under .the
were made possible because justices
, principle of judicial restrainL
He slaleS that this has caused rad- 'were willing .io chuck S1are Decisis
ical ill!lividualism and chaos. Mr. out the window. Racist conservative
' Weedy s~s the misl&amp;ken view thai Jegislarurcs would.never luiNe passed
. judicial restrain! provided a monll civil rights legislation. The · 1964
frameworlc. thai proiCCied society. It Civil Rights Act only became law
did indeed proleel one segm'enl o · after lhe longest conservative filibuster in Senate history.
"ociety--the overclass.
Those who cons1antly complain
For many years, il used the principle of judicial resuainl to keep lhe . aboul the excesses of liberalism
movemenl toward equality or nhi: should examine the history of their
: worlcing and minority those oh-so- more own ideology - closely. They
: importanl concepts of self reliance have little historical justifi~tion for
: and judicial restrain!, conservative clainting lhe moral high ground.
Jell'rey Fields,
• legislatures passed laws allowing
Middleport
l railroad companies to praclice mer; ciless extortion against fanners, while

Dear Edinor

'I WANT
1'0 HELV
.THE ~EPIP\
· l=tHl"'
C.LOS:U~E

.

,,.q 'Bad timing' not calculated ·
.

;

•; Dear Sir

Adams.
I have been provided a newspaper
The first lhing I did on February
:;.; copy of a Jencr to lhe cdilor entitled II, 1997, was to call Clerk of Courts
~ 'Bad Timing' writlen by Jacqueline Larry Spencer of Mejgs County and
,_; McLaughlil! which tccenlly appeared asked him to delay service until after
in your paper. In order that Your read- the funeral. Mr. Spencer thanked me
!:;:.ers will not think.badly of Aaron and for my consideralion since he relat- L_-------~~~~--~~~==:_~~~~~~~----_jS~~~hc. .
.. Shirl S
the ·t011 · f
ed that Earl Adams was his uncle, and
!:i.
ey ayre,
owmg acts a5sured me that he wouldtry to stop .
1.; should be relaled.
.
~ . I pre~ 811!1 mailed lhe taw suh the service process. We could have
~ on ~bruary 10. tm, and lhe Sayres. done n~ more! . ,
.
"' were not aware that it was sent. Thai
The bad ummg as YO!' term~d 11
But ni.w, allasl, as lhe story oflhe as prison loomed before Web · of thousands -- perhaps millions -- of
• =:evening .! tead in lhe newspaper of - was D_?l calculated, and my clients By WOllam A. Ru11)er'
. " the deatb of James Adams who 1rec- and I regrel lhe unfortunate Clrcum.The exposure of the alleged mis- Democralic Pany's illegal fund-rais- Hubbell. · Here was a man who · dollars to the Clinlon campaign. and
deeds of President and Mrs. Clinton ing activities unfolds, we arc moving unquestionably knew far more about who~!! former employee, John
q ognized as.- defendanl in a previous stances.
J. B • Vanity, and various members of lhe admin- .inlo subject-mauer thai is posilively lhe Clintons' priv&amp;~e affairs, finlftl:ial ·Huang, first had a gaudy career as a
.~ suil resol~ed in favor of the Sayres.
Attorney at Jaw isuation has recently taken a sharp
and otherwise, 1han it was safe for Democratic fund-rai$U and lhen was
\; I became aware in thatlrial thai Earl
Athens
and-- for lhe Ctinlons --an extreme- ·
any lalkative pi:rson 10 know. Up Iiiii named deputy assislaftt sectewy .of
~ Adams was the falher of James
_
lhen he had always been dependably Cornrncree by Mr. Clintdn.
ly ominous 1um.
" .
What could a prosjlective:jailbinl
.
·close-mouthed; but who .knew what
Hit~rto lhe impaci of lhe succeseasy
10
undcrsland.
And
nowhere
is
he
might
be
persunded
to
reveal
in
like
Web Hubbell do for. the Riadys
sive revelations has been softened by
this
truer
lhan
in
lhe
case
of
Webster
.
retum
for
a
ligbler
senlence,
or
none
that
would be wonll rnonl than a huntheir very complexity. The tangle of
Hubbell,
Hillary
Clinton's
ex-partoer
at
all?
·
dred
grand? Or were they simply payfinancial crimes summed up in the
.
· At jusllhat point occuned anoth- ing him hush money at somebody
word "Whilewater" simply defies in.the Rose Law Firm.
Mr.
Hubbell
was
a
major
crontof
er
of those mysterious events that else's request?
easy explanalion.
1he
Clintons,
and
when
Janel
Reno
seem
to characterize the Clinlon
Mr. Hubbell, when asked to pro,.. By SUS~ PAGE .
. .
.
· True, every once in a while some- ·
was
named
auomey
general
Mr.
administration.
Web
Hubbell·under
duce
documents bearing on 1his ques~ UIJA TOD'AV
.
.
·
thing simple but mysterious happens
"' President Clinlon Wednesday defended as "entirely appropriate" fund- in broad daylight: Mrs. Clinton's Clinlon designated him as deputy investigation. ou1 of- Juslice, !llJd 'tion, told conpessional investigators
~ raising 1aetics that used While House coffees and ovemight visits 10 help legal billing records (which had been attorney general (the second-ranking quile.clearly facing indictment, col- that he is invoking his Fifih Amend. ~ rai~ campaign funds.
.· ·
.
.
subpoenaed many montlis before) job in lhat vital department). quite viclion and jail -- wa5 'sudde!!I.Y ment privilege against self-incrimi:-&gt;
But 42 percenl of those surveyed in a new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup lum .up, inexplicably, on a table in the obviously to keep an e¥e on lhings hired. in his capacity as a privBre nation to avoid producing them. But,
:., Poll said il was wrong for Clinlon 10 invi1e big donors 10 stay in the Lin- White House residential quaners; . for the' Clintons. Unfortunately lawyer, and paid a large sum of moo- as he well knows, that privileac will
·~ coin Bedroom.
.
tom fragments of a suicide nole Hubbell.was soon under investigation ey for his scrvtces. The sum of mon- proteel him aaainsl having to testify,
~
Even so, 53 percent said the issue isn't relevant to Clinlon's ability 10 allegedly wriuen by Vince Foster are on charges ofcheating his clients and . ey has been variously described ' as but not against having to produce
~ servo as president. .
.
.
.
found in his briefcase afler il has been his own law partners back in Lillie $250,000 and simply as "more than documeniS.
:.o . The poll a;f 627.adlllts conducted Wednesday prov1des an early glimpse shaken ~igorously and proved emp- Rock, and was obliged to resign his $100,000." The services he perMr. Clinton insfsns hi: know~ nolhing
about the Jilalief. A lot·.- an enor~ into the political impact of the controversy. . .
·
.
. ty; the FBI Iiles .of 900 Republican post at the Justice Depanment. Even- formed for that fee arc, alibis pqint,
~ . The putilic •was almost evenly divided; 46 pcrcenl to 42 percenl, when
mous lot •• depends ·op Web
.
.
officials are handed over, without · tually he plea-bargail)ed himself into unknown.
'I asked whetlier Clinlon was cooperating or trying to covet up.
But what puts the maraschino Hubbell's"agreeins with him.
explanation, .10 a White House per- a fairly short slrelch in prison, from
But.ther~was agreement on one point By 63 perceniiO 22 percent, those
William "'· R,lllber 1s • Distill·
sonnel director whom nobody can which he was recently moved to a cherry.on the sundae is the identity of
• surveyCd callell his actions lypical of recent presidents. A plurality, 45 per- remember hiring. But the trails quick- "halfway house."
his new client. It was nonc!)ther than plshed Fellow of the Claremoat
: cent said tlleY didn't care about his fund-raising role.
One can imagine what forebod- the Lippo Group: a company o~ned Institute for tile Stu~y nf Statesly grow cold, and we are left trying
.!J ~margin of error is plus or minus 4 percen1age points,.
to answer Sen. Chrislopher Dodd's ings muSt have filled lhe minds of by lhe Riady family. the lndoncisian IIWIIhlp IUid Polltlcal Phllolophy.
: At a new• conference wilh the president of Chile. Clinlon said laws bar· mocking question, "So what?"
Presidenl and Mrs. Clinlon in 1994, billionaires who funneled hundreds
.
J
:• ring fpnd-nisilig in the White House weren'l broken because no money was
• soliciJed on the spot a~d no "price tag" sel for auendance.
'
·:
But he acknowledged il was "clear lo everyone involved" that guests at
l cof!ecs WOIIId be !15ked later for conlribulions.
·
'
., In olher developmenls: ·
:' - Atl~)"Clen'cral Janel Reno said she hadn't received evidence to jus'
.priesl could nol pinpoint the initial
Romagosa wem over. again and ue's eyes were msde of hollow glass
: .tlfy•a spec~ p!Vsccutor. Sui she said she'll rcquesl one if a " very compre- By George R. Plagenz
The fanfare began as the result of occasion, but he said the phenome- this.time "saw ·an abundance of Ou• like a lighl bulb.) '
·'
.i' lntiftsjve" 1i&amp;!Ce Department invesli.gati\)n finds .evidence.: ' .
.
a
pholograph
taken
by
a
priest-editor
non
had
laken
place
"more·lhan
12
id
in
the
slatue's
eyes
and
a
I!Uge
drop
·
Case
.cl.oscd?
Well,
not
entirely.
~
..._Rep: Dill l3ilrton, R-Ind.; cha1rman of a panel probmg 1he fund-ralsin New Orleans. The photo sh6wed limes" before it was photographed by of liquid at lite tip of lhe nose," · Some oflhe'statue's tears were gath~ llll fllror, '*'d former White House aide Mark Middlelon may coo~rate.
liquid in the eyes and on the.tip of the
. At this point, said the priest-edi- ered on a piece of linen and·subinit'
nose of a 4-112-foot statue of the Virtor, "the unbeliever in me said maybe led 10 a chemist who said the subgin Mary, one of 111(0 slatues carved .
this w~ all a hoax. Maybe tile slat- stance ·~was more than just wa1er and
I
a1 1he direclion of Sisler Lucia, lhe Romagosa in New Orleans in July . ue weeps because of a hidden 'supply 'probably the ·Same substance as
.
·Ia.•• survivor of the t~ ,P.Casanl girls 1972.
of water in the. crown sitting on the human tears."
·
•I
who claimed to have seen the Virgin
Breault had broughl ihe statue 10 statue's hell()." He removed the
Now we are reading that in a
Tbt~tMPI'ft•
crown
and
examined
inside
d)C
head.
in
Falima
in
1917.
New
Orlean'
s
10
be
veneraled.
·
Grec;k
Orthodo~ monaslery on the
Tntt••v frii!'t. Feb. 28, lhc 591h day 9f 1997. There are 306 days lefl
,··
While Father Elmo Ro111agosa. \he Romagosa had heard of the "weep- "Dry lis a chip," he said.
Medilenanean island of CypRIS tears
· editor of the New Orleans arch-. ing Virgin'~and asked Breault to call
Romagosa did 'llol, howe-. jump have formed in the eyes of the Viflii\
diocesan newspaper who published him if the s1a1ue should shed lears to the conclusion that the .moisture Mary and Jesus on ·a 400-year-olcl
the piclure, refened only to "liquid" while he was in New Orleans.
was tears. He suggested the jlOssibil- icon. (/&lt;n icon is a religious image
or ''moisture:· in lhe eyes, others
At~: I~ one ,Monday eveniiiJ the ily thai !he phenomenon wast''due to painted on a small wooden penel ancl
lielieved it w~ lears. The picture crc:- phone rang in Romagosa's study, It . the ex!Rme humidity in Ncw,Orleans an object of devotion.)
· '
.,
aled'
a scnsauon.
·,,
was Breault. "The Virgin statue is in the s_.rntner."
Many of lhe pilarims who have
lJ.S. nailroad chartered to carry passengers and fi.:ight,
A science wriler agreecl, "If lhe traveled to lhe monaslery ~prd thii
The sUitue had been brought to wceJ!ing now," he said. Roma1osa
llild io Railroad Coinplll!y. was incorporaled. · .
couhlry from Fatima, a. small grabbed his cllnlera and went to humidity is very hi&amp;h.'' .rile. said, both u a miracle and a sip from God
12 iun aboard the U.S.S. Princeton exploded, killing Sec- this
town
in POrtugal, in ·1947. For lhe . Breault's house.
"some of IIIII wale( vapor in ..lhe 'air tliat a major calamity is impendin1.:
:
Opshilr, Navy Secretary Thomas W. Gilmer and sevnext 2S years il had been tra~eling in
''I saw ' for myself," Wrote will lend to fall alit of lhe air Inti con•
Geolae
11 • *7Ddlcated
talifornia arrived at San Francisco, carrying 1he firsl the cusiody of various priests Romagosa in his newspaper that dense.lf lhe surface is hard, u in lhe writer for Newlpllpel' Eaterprtlli
throughout the United S1a1es and w~k. "that some liquid had gathered case of a slass eye, lhe moisture will Alllidltloa.
·
Canada
to
call
the
attention
of
tend
to
C!llle;ct
in
drops.''
(The
Sialin
the
eye$."
Breauln
inviled
him
to
of ColondO
organized.
••
invellipli"l comminee headed by Ellcs Kefau• Catholics to tlje message of Fa!jma. touch lhe eyes. In 5o doi111, be said,
Tpday's Binhdays: Ac.\01' Charles Dumi~&amp; is 74. Svellana Alliluyeva,·
at least two major crime That message was· ·''to pray af1C) "a droplet of lhe liquid cluna to the
daughler of Josef SUIIin, is 71. Actpr Gavin MacLeod is&amp;&gt;. Actor-director-:
make sacrifices far 1he conversion of lip ofiny littlt'finser."
·
· Russia and fo;w world peace,"
. The following momin. at 6: IS dancerThrnmy Tune is 58. ~to I'IICerMarioAndmti'is 57. Sinpr Joe South:
.
II
wu
while
die
IUiiue
in
lhe
,Romagosa's phOI)e rana . a,~n. is 51'. Actor Frank Bonner is 55. Ex-football player Bu!Jba Smith is ~.2. :
'
)
l)anch
of
a
~'adler
,ro.eph
Breault
that
Bniuln said the Yit'lill had . ~n Actress Mercedes Ruehl is 49. .6,ctress Beflladelte Peten is49, B~~~tkCtbatl '
Miniar 6lof ~lne w• thq( to death in Gen'
player Adriari Daniley' js
.6,ctor JOhn
is 40. · ·
·
'
!lie Virlin firat. bepn to "weep." The j"i:eping ~ilk.'\: 4 o'clock.
.
t

1',:

C

Hush

~oney : · for Hubb~ll?_
. . -~.William A. Rusher

.~ Poll: 42 % say Clinton
.R~ wrong
to
host .donors
•
. .
.

Are tears delivering :a message?
George R. PJagenz

'

'Today in· history
I;. ..

Abel,r

trr:~OIY

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather
••

AcciiW..._- forecast for daytime condioons and high

If Jecll An Jluton

Plq•••

w~

.

.

4t.

.,

ThJ'tutro

. The Dally Sentinel• Page,3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TWo charged with school break-In

.

..

TWo men have been charged in an earlier breaking and entcrinJ of lhe
Carleton School in Syracuse, Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported.
Shannon Petrie, 18, Pomeroy. was arresled and charged with breaking
and enlering, while AnthOny W. Peuy, 25, Bidwell, was charged with
breaking and en1ering and burglary.
One of the suspects. using a key taken from his mother, entered lhe
building and stole a money bag, Soulsby said. They heard a school employee in the building and ned. he added.
They returned later, entering the school a second time, 'and stole a television, VCR and computer, he said. The television and VCR were recovered at Pomeroy residence. The computer has not been recovered.
Pelrie was released on bOnd, while Petty is being held in the Franklin
County Jail after being stopped on a traffic charge.
Charges are pending againstlwo juveniles who reportedly accompaniep lhe pair during the incidents, Soulsby said.
Soulsby said the burglary complaint was filed because lhe building was
occupied during the first entry. Breaking and enlering charges were filed
for the second entry.

Harold R. 'Dick' Jewell

t.ICH.

m

'''

IWold R. •Dick• Jewell, 69, of Pomeroy, died Friday, Feb. 28. I
at
St. Joseph Hospilal,- P..tcrsburg, W.VL
..
He was born July 27, 1927 in Carpenler, son of lhe laiC Clarence P. and
Letha Sleinmetz Jewell. He was a self-employed plumbing contract.or and
served in the U.S. Navy during World Warn. He attended Shade High School.
He is sul"&lt;ived by his wife of 19 years, Belly Ann Vassar Jewell of
Pomeroy; daughlers and sons-in-law, Dilenc and Calvin Tomblin of Norfolk,
Va., Dena and Joseph Shulle of Southgale, Mich., Denise .Jolly of Taylor,
Mich., Oebbie and Wayne Inman of River Rauger, Mich., Dietta and Dan
Cachia, Woodhaven, Mich., and Dqra JOhnston; a son, ~. R. Jewell of LIDcoin Park. Mich.; a brolher. Ronald Jewell of Alhens; a s1s1er, Wilma Htnds
of Hanover; and several grandchildren, great-grandchildren. nieces, nephews
and cousins.
·
He was also preceded in death by sisters, Pearle Kroll and Aldena Welsh.
. Services will be I p.m. Sunday in lhe Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Pomeroy. Friends may call at
lhe funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.

,,

.

IManlfllld 183" I•

•
(

,&gt;
•
•

68•

w~ · Henry

a

County road to close for repairs

Johnsbn

W. Henry Johnson, 16, ofG~Iipolis, died ThUrsday, ~b. 27, 1997 at Holzer Medical Center.
.
He was born Pee. 3, 1910 in Gallipolis, Son of the l111e Douglas and Jessie
Taylor Johnson. He was employed as a laborer at Kaiser Aluminum before
his retirement in 1975. ·
. .
He served in the U.S. Army and was a member of the American Legion
Lnfayetle Posi 27. He was a member of lhe John Gee A.M.E. and the Triedslone Missionary Baptist Church, bOih of Gallipolis.
·
He is survived by a son and daughle.r-in~law, H.D. "Skipper" and Pamela Trustees to meet
Johnson of Middleport; 1hree grandchildren; a sister, Sara Jane Sow of GalRegular monthly meting of Sutton
.
lipolis; and by lhree sislers-in·law.
Township Truslees will he held MonHe was preceded in death by his wife, Beulah Anderson Jolmson; and by day. 7:30 p.m., Syracuse Municipal
a brolher, Douglas Johnson.
Building.
• By The AaociMIId Preu
,
Weather forecaSt:
Private
graveside
services
will
he
held
Mon~y.
atlhe
Ohio
Valley
Mem·
R'ainy and wamier wealher is on · i TonighL.. Rain likely. Lows 50 10
;
ory Gardens, Gallipolis, with 1he Rev. Calvm Mmms offic1atmg. Fnends may Meeting set
~ tap for Ohio on the wee!'end.
.
55, Soulh winds 5 to 10 mph.
'
Temperatures ovem1gh1 tomghl
Saturday...Showers likely. Breezy. call at the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
The Meigs County Board of Revi• will climb from lhe 40s inlo the 50s much wiiJlller with a high in lhe mid
sion will mee1 March 17 al3:30 p.m .
• by daybeak, lhe· National Weather 70s. Chance of rain 70 percent
in lhe office of Nancy Parker Camp~ Service said.
S:ilurday night .. Showers likely.~
hell, auditor, in the Meigs County
Showers 'and thunderstorms will chance oflhl!nderstorms late. Breezy.
Courthouse. The meeling is being
.~ continue across the slate on Satunlay Lows in the mid SOs.
held to comply with Section 5715.09
of
lhe Ohio Revised Code ..
~ with highs in lhe ·mid to upper 60s,
Extended forecasti
Burger King and Wendy's said
CHICAGO (AP) - They' re
1 forecaslers said. Warn) southwesterSunday... Panly cloudy. Highs near · thinking of lowering lhe price of Big lhey don 'I plan to slash prices, but
~ ly wiitds will help push temperatures 60.
Macs, and thai has Wall Street low- they may he forced to do so lo stay Lodge lo meet
Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp; AM
: 10 near-record levels.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows 'near ering lhe price of McStocks. ·
competitive, said analyst Allan
will
meet Tuesday at7:30 p.m. at the
· The precipilation is likely lo 40 and highs in lhe upper SOs.
McDonald's Corp. plans 10 lower Hickok an Piper Jaffray in Mintemple. Work will he in lhe entered
·: remain with us through Sunday, bul . TII!Osday...Panly cloudy. Lows in prices for some of its large sand- neapolis.
_, a cold front moving across lhe· stale {the upper 30s and highs in the mid wiches, inclt~ding the Big Mac, to just
"If 55 cenls ends up being lhe apprentice degree. Refreshments will .
be served.
:~ will usher in cooler and drie{ air . ,60s. ·
. '
55;cents with lhe,purchase of a drink price point lhat sticks, 1hen I can
'
and fries, fra~chisees revealed guarantee you lhe olher fast-feeders Announces session
"
will have an item at 55 cents,"
Wednesday.
Racine Chapter 134, Order of the
Hickok
said. "Otherwise. they will
. The move takes aim ai competitors such as Wendy's lnlemalional · see a lot :of lheir eustmiuors in coin·
EMS
and Burger King, which have been pelitors' parking lots."
Unit~ oflhe Meigs County EmerMcDonald's probably will be takluring customers ·away with cheaper
~
A Pittsburgh man was ciled for Feuy's pickup.
gency
Medical Service recorded eighl
ing
a
loss
on
Big
Macs.
The
cost
of
fare.
·
:~ failure to yield by lhe Gallia-Meigs
Troopers also cited Nalhan E.
calls
for
assistance Thursday. Units
Wall Street braced for a price war the ingredients alone- two all-beef
·'·Post of lhe Slate Highway Patrol in Halfhill, 16, 34066 New Lima Road, thai ·could send profits plunging. patties. special sauce, lettuce, cheese. responding included:
_: a lwo-vehicle accidenl Thursday on Rulland, for failure 10 yield in a two- McDonald's stock fell 75 cenls pickles, onions on a 5esamc s~d bun.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
:• Stale Rou1e 1 at the inlersection with car accident' on CR 3 (New Lima) Thursday morning 10 $44.62-112 a - is ahoul 40 cenls. McDonald's
UO a.m. , State Route 684,
;;; Countj Road 26 (Aaiwoods).
' Thursday in Rulland Township.
share after 'Plunging $2.37:1/2, or hopes to make it up by drawing in Pageville. Ralph S1einme1z; Veterans
~;
'li'oopers said Horace D. Barr, 82l
Ac~ording to the report, Halfhill
about 5 percen1 Wednesday. An ana- more customers and requiring the Memorial Hospilal, Rutland squad
v was eastbound on Flatwoods at 10: IQ was backing from a private driveway
assisted;
Jysl from Janney Montgomery Scott' purchase of a drink and fries.
· a.m. and stopped at lhe stop sign for onto lhe roatl, 1.4 miles norlh of SR also lowered the compJllly's stock
12:25 p.m., Broadway S_trecl.
The Big Mac, inlroduced in 1972,
·~ SR 7. He then pulled onto 1 and 124, at4: 18 p.m. when he pulled inlo . ~commeodaliim to hold from buy. _ normally sells for about $2 . .
Racine, Daisy Sayre, VMH, R~c ine
.
.
.:
\.· ,.. •
.j
;: failed io 15ee a soulhbound pickup 1he j\alh oft southbOufld ca~ ~rive11"" .
squad assisled;
, · truck driven by Terry L. F~tty, 47._~.b~ ~!!!olxni A. Da1lp,y. ~~. ~~~.08,
I :30 p.m., Elmwood Apartments.
~- 2~369.Township Road 33, V.n1on.
Rappy Hollow Roaa. Middleport,
Racine. Opal Cummihs, Pleasant
": Fetty v.:ent left to avoid a collision, :-J!Ad co!hded . . . •
.
Valley Hospital, Racine squad assfst• bul struck Barr's car in the fronl .
Damage to Dalley scar was moded;
: according to the report.
· ' ; era1e ant;! slightlo Halfhill's vehicle .
7:06p.m., Long Bottom, Mildred
·:•: Barr's car was severe)~ damaged l troopers said.
· Hauber, VMH .
•.
. POMEROY
.• and modcrale damage was repoi1ed to ,
7:43p.m., Chi!drcns Home Road,
Sara Boss, VMH.
RACINE
:· ;
(Ecltor'8 nota: A l8wlult ouUinH 11 sory note. , .
•
3:19p.m
..
volunteer fire departOwen A. "Bub'' Nutler, 54, of Reedsville, died Tuesday. february 25•.1997
::; the
of one p11rty ~~g~~lnlt :: . Shelba Jean Wickline, Racine, in
ment and squad to Sellers Ridge
:.• anothar, 11 cloaa nohmbllah guilt - a ~uil filed Feb. 21 agrunst James al Camden-Clark Memorial Hospilal in Parkersburg. West Virginia.
Road,
brush fire on Paul Sellers prop·
·He.was bomAprill7. 1942 in Akron, a son of the lale Hayward and Eunice
• ,; or lnnocanca.)
· . pan·a Wickline, Racine, and 01hers,
crty,
no
injuries reported.
~;
The following lawsuits were filed ' seeks tn have a gas line reinstalled to 1. Nichols Nutter. He was formerly employed by lhe Ames Company and was
.
RUTLAND
' - recently in the Meigs· County Com- "her home (rom a gas well. The line a self•employed·timber.cuuer. He was an avid fisherman, hunter and pool
2:18 p.m., Jacks Road. Roher!
player.
·
·
;, . mon Pleas Coun of Judge
Fred W. "'was
disconnected Feb. 20.
Council, PVH;
·
.
t'Jr
· Surviving are his wife. Susan Ellis Nutter of Reedsville; 1wo sons, William
II :49 p.m., Mounl Union Road,
•• Crow Ill.
h.A.
. Nutter of Tuppers Plains, and Russell Nuuer of Belpre; four daughters, Bren- Wanda Swearingen, Holler Medical
,. . In a su.it filed Tuesday, Glenda'?· !r.'C 1008
da Clegg of Long Bouom, Cynthia Nutter of Belleville, West Virginia, Judy Center.
-~ Holler, Racme, seeks an amount m
Varner of Fairmont, West Virginia, and Ginger Combs of Beach Grove. lnd1·
.. excess of $2S,OOO from Aaron F. ·' l"
·Young, Racine. The suit stems from
The following actions to end mar- ana; two sisters, Lilly Cremeans of Reedsville, and Carolyn Avery of Geor. an accident on Ponland Road on Feb. ~~ge w~re filed recently in the office gia; and II grandsons and live granddaug~ters .
' Bes1des his parents. he was preceded in death by~ brother, Rtch~ Charles
• · 26, 1995.
·
of;t.'Jeigs County Clerk of Courts LarNoller.
: ' In anoth~r suit fi.led Tuesday, t!l" rx 1Spencer.
.
Funeral services will be held Saturday. March I, 1997 al I p.m. in 1he
: Tuppers Platns R~g1onal Sewer D1~- ·"' pissolulions asked -· Tammy D.
White-Blower
Funeral Home in Coolville, wilh W.L. Com!Js officiating.
: : 1rict 'is seekmg an easemenl acqu1s1: P,~d . Middleport, and Kenneth R.
Friends .may call a1 the funeral home Saturday, March I, 1997 from 10
: ~ tion from ,Vernon R. and Marr Lou Reed, Reedsville, .Feb. 26; Kimbedy
a.m.
to I p.m.
: Maxey of 'l'uppe~ Plams for mstal- S .,t&lt;e~s. ·Po!JleroY, and Patrick D.
. • lation of a sewer line.
.
.
KQIIfllS, West Columbia, W.Va., Feb.
: .: O.n Monda~, Cily Loan Fman~IBI 26:1 .
. , .. Semces, Pomeroy, filed su11 agamst ,; pivorces asked- Kelly AuiUmn
: Palnck S. Cleland of Pomeroy. The Scpjt, Racine, from Teddy Scolt.
; "plainliff seeks to recover $3,686.47 Raj!enswood, W.Va.. Feb. 26; Rhon·: . plus inlerest. and costs on a promts- da A. Curtis, Pomeroy, from Arlie E.
~
.
.
Curti~. Oak Hill, Feb. 21.
,ajvorces granled- Jimniy Mor-·
The
Y entme I ·rison and Robin Morrison,- Feb. 21;
'Tin"ll"Marie Grady from Richard Lee
(USPS 11).960)
Grady.
Published every afccmoon, Monday IIVOuJb

.Meigs announcements

·. Record highs'· predicted
Jn region.for ~aturday

.McDonald's price reduction ·
sends its stock downward

;Tr,o opers issue citations
; i·n two separate accidents

~· Civil

actions filed in ·court

11....,.,.,.,

Meigs

Eastern Star, will meet Monday, 7:30
p.m. All officers -to anend for mock
initiation.
Lodge lo meet
Regular meeting of PomeroyRacine Lodge 164, F.&amp; AM will he
held Wednesday. 7:30p.m. at 1he hall.
Arts Fair planned

The Wih011 Civic Associalion is
· sponsoring an Arts and Crafts Fair,
March 15 at the Wilkesville Community Ccnler, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Spaces are available by calling 6695019 for details. Food will be available during the show.

I• •ffer st•rr

,.,.,, late•l

,lln1akl•1 ••••
••• tips, call

992-2156'

runs

Owen A. ·'Bub' Nutter

t• , tO end
marriageS filed .

Dail S

~

Mc.iabtr: The Anociared l'fea~. an&lt;! the Ohio

Stocks .
Am ~le Power ......:.............. )11\

A1hlllnd·Oll ........................... 4;i'l.

Amr rech ...............................i3\

Subscribers not tbirint~to pay lhe c;Wrier ~ay : -'
rtmit in lldvance direct 'o The DoUi ~lael
()II a thM. tlix or 12 mont~ bub. Credit will be
Jlwn ClUTier eoeh week..

K-mart. .. ,.....,...............,..........,.12
Land8'· 'Eftd ...............................28

N~ autMcrlf,tiOfl by ~~ perminelj In ueaa
w11erc home urrier ~eNice it iv4111ble.

Sq. Ft.

Qooclyeer ..............................5':2\

Umittd ............................ ~~....1a'A..

Ohio Villty Bank..................37\l

One V811ey...........;.................38~

FrM Estimates
In-Home Shopping
Mohawk Color Center Dealer

Peopl.....................................28
Prem ~1.·.....:. .......................14;1
Roclcwltll ...............................ll:4

hblisher ~ lhe ript to llldjuQ rwt dur-

inJ tbc aubU-rlpl;ion period. Sublcttpdoa Nit

RNttetl ................................173

...._ ..Ybe 1""'-"" by &lt;~~onatna ""

Sho~- ................ ~ ................. 8~
Star 8811k ...............................:19~
We:ndy'l" ..................... ~.~ ........20'4

olorllioa of doe oublcriptioo.

'

M~R;~li=~~NS

Worthlnglon ...."'"""""'""""'''"'21
(
-·-·~

13 ................................................. S27.l0
26 .. :.............................................. $l).82
s~ WOeU.. " ................., ..........-............ $10.Utl

Stock ..-port• 1r1 the 10:30
1.m. QIIQ1• provldH by A~
of Gllll)fl61Ja.
.

Rot.~ MJipCoonly

.

................................................. $29.11

211w.w................................................. m.~

'~ Wieb ............. :................................. $109.72
""

t SPRJ/11(; VALI.I:Y C: IIIPJIA)
SOON I 'Rn'Uittl 01' 'I'M!

Charmlnll Shopa ..............:... 4~
~":Jdlng .......................... 32'l.

I Mogut ....................... 24'1r
GtntMtt ................................. 80~

I

• SPIIIMC YALJ,f.Y CINEMA 01 AT

Vinyl Floor nle ................49(

'ATaT .......................................40
Bank ,Of1e ..............................44\
B. otJJivana ............................ 13\

SINilLE COP\' PRICE .
Daily ................................... ................. ]Jl CenL'

'.

AT GALLIPOLLII

c~ ...............................1a

One Month................................................$8-70
One Ycar ...........................................~ ... $104.00

13 -

TIC~~S

Borv:;Warnar .........................38\

·

One-... . ...........................................52.00

.

UP YOUR

DOfUNO' &amp; P UU L.OCATIO IIIIT 1'0

v·

'

POSTMA.STIR; Scrfd odd~~ 'corrwiona lo

SUBSCRIP.TION RATBS
81 C1rrin' or Motor Routt

PIC~

Carpet ...~....~ ...... Starting At . Sq. va. .
5699 sq. Yd.
•
·
1
annmgton
1ny
......
M

.'

"""'
' 7'
AH~•••••••••••••••ooouoooooooooooouoooo
1:4

· ·•

A 6• PIRIORAL

PAN PUlA I 11 JTDI I PIPSJ
AND A ("IKliCP. OF MOYI I! 1.15 L\CJI ,

New Sprfllfl Carpet Has Arrived!
.·
.·
. $499 .

Ncw~poper A~~iolion.

'The Daily Scnlintl. Ill Court St.. Pomeroy.
()!,;b 457~.
.

C~R TIFI CATE ~

INGELS CARPET .

. 1

Flidoy. Ill Court St., PoMeroy. 'Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publi~hl"' CoqJQnyJGQ~~neU Co••
l'omoroy. Ohio 4l7~. Ph. 992·21S6. ~ond
clau poitqc pllid Dl ~omeroy, Ohio.

Ct1:5'i Pfll SATUMMYI
PERSON WILL IU~CII:VI' A PIID

.; '

Middleport

175 N. 2nd Ave.

a54 Eaat Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

(814) 992-8218

••
l .

)

"'

•

.

Eagle Ridge Road (Counly Road 32) in Chester Township will be
closed Monday morning so workers can conduct creek bank and road
repair, Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason announced Thursday.
The road will be closed from Bashan Road (CR 28) to State Route 7.
Bashan Road and SR 7 are alternate routes for people using 1he road.
· . The road will be closed for approxiinatcly 30 days or untillhe work
is compleled.
·
·

..

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•

FrtMy, Februlry 21,1111

The Daily Se~till,Sl

SportS

"

In Top 25 cOllege hoops,

In theNBA,

MJ's missed three-pointer
helps Cavs beat Bulls 73-70

Prtay, Feb&gt;'u!ry'21,1117':

I

.

Duke beats Maryland; UC &amp; UCLA.win
By The AAoclaWd ,, 0 II
On the night Duke honored Jeff
Capel and ils other seniors, freshman
, Mike Chappell had the Blue Devils
looking toward the future.
'Capel scored 18 points and No. 7
Duke made senior nisht a success,
beating No. 16 Maryland 81-69
Thursday night:
. ·
Playing his last game at Cameron
IndOor Stadium, Capel assured Quke
(23-6, 12-3) of at least a. tie for the
lop seed in next week s Adanuc
·Coast Conference tournament
Chappell helped topple the Terrapins (20-8, 9-6) with 10 points, all .
in the second half. Duke led 55-54
before Capel hit a three-pointer and
Chappell added fiv~ straight points.
"I think it was inc~ible for a
freshman like Mike to come in and
play that way," Capel said.
,
Almost too well, Chappell adnutted. The freshman did .not intend to
Jraw so much attention on the night
Duke rewarded its seniors,
"I wish I hadn't," he said. "I
think those three guys really
deserved it for all the hard work they
put in over the past four years. This
is their moment :~

In other games, No. 4 stopped
'lbxas-El Paso 68-55, No.9 Cincinnati beat Marquette 80-74,.No, 10
UCLA topped Oregon State 81 -69,
·No. II ·New MeKico defeated
Brigham Young 90•48, No. 14
Xavier downed St. Bonaventure 8359, No. I 5 Arizona topped Washington State 100-86 and No. 20College of Charleston beat Centenary ·

89-71.
Chappell scored only 27 points in
his previous 14 games for Duke,
"I can't really explain what happened iri that half," Chappell said. "I
just kind of lost myself in lhc game.
My teammates found me for some
open looks. I took the shots. They
went down."
r
Keith Booth scored 22 poinls for
Maryland, His two baskets closed the
Terrapins to 65-62 with 5:5 I left. but
he fouled out momentS later.
"We outrebounded Duke and we
did some good things," Maryland
coach Gary ..yilliams said, "But we
have to get 40 minutes of consistency. That is what we .were getting early. I don'.l Sec: us being real consistent right now."
.
No. 4 Utah Ci8
Texas·EI Puo $5
· Keith Van Hom missed 10 of 13
shots, but Utah used a 26-6 surge in
the middle of the game to win at Salt
Lake City.
Van Hom, the career scoring
leader for the Utes, and Andre Miller·
each had 12 points. None ofthe Utah
starters played more than 23 minutes,
Utah (22-3, 14-1 WAC) won its
seventh in a row overall and 14th
straight in the conference. The Utes
.already have clinched lbe WAC
Mountain Division. .
'lbxas-El Paso (12-13, 5-10) had
won lhree in a row.
· No. 9 Cincinnati 80
Marquette 74
Danny Fortson scored 26 points
and Cincinnati held off a·late run by

.host Muquette.
. The Bearcats (24-5, 12-1 Conference USA) led 73-64 be(on: Marqu- scored six straight points. But
Ruben Patterson hit a three-pointer
that kept Cincinnati in control..
Cincinnati started ·a fresh set of
guards - Damon Flint missed the
J&amp;me because of an inj~ right
wrist and Charles Williams was left
81 home for what coach Bobby Husgins called a violation of team policy.
Anthony Pieper scored 23 points
for Marquette (17-8, 8-5) in a loss
that hurt its.NCAA hopes,
No. 10 UCLA 81
Oregon Stllte 69
Toby Bailey sco~ 20 points and
UCLA sent Oregon Slate to its 19th .
· consecutive road loss,
UCLA (18-7, 12-3 Pac-10) won
its sixth in a row overall and ninth
straight against the Beavers, .
The Bruins led by 17 points in the
first half, but Oregon State rallied to
tie it at 54 with 7:19lefl Corey Benjamin scored 26 · points for the
Beavers (7-18, 3- 13).
, No. 11 New Mexico 110
Brigham Youna48
Lamont Long stored 24 points
and led a 1'7 -0 burst to start the second half as New Mexico romped past
host Brigham Young.
The Lohos. (22-5, 11-4 Western ..
Athletic Conference) .led 38-25 at
halftime before breaking open the
game, Long had I0 points in the run
as New Mexico. kept BYU ( 1-24, 015) scoreless for 5 f/2 minutes.

No. 1• XaYierll3
St. Bftawature 59
Defensive a.;e Darnell Williams
sco~ all16 of his pOints in the first
half for host Xavier.
Williams had nine points in a 21 '
5 run, then hid the final basket in a
13-0 run as the Musketeers (21-4,
12-3 Adantic 10) took a 52-23 leail
at halftime.
,
Xavier won its fifth in a row and
finished 13-1 at home. A full-court
press forced St. Bonaventure (13-12,
S-1 0) into 22 turnovers.
No. IS Arizona 100
Wubinatma State 86
Michael Dickerson scored 32
points and host Arizona defeated
Washington State for the 24th
straight time.
Miles Simon added 24 points for
the Wildcais (18-7, 10-5 Pac-10),
Washington State (12-15,.4-11) has
not beaten Arizona since Jan.· 30,
1986.
Arizona led 43-38 before pulling
away behind Dickerson, He made 13
of 22 shots and all four free throws
in matching his career high.
. No. :ZO Charleston 89
Centt!W'J' 71
Stacy Harris sco~ 22 points and
the College of Charleston extended
the nation's loogest winning streak to
20 with a victory over Centenary in
the first round of the Trans America
Athletic Conference tournament,
TAAC player of the year Anthony Johnson had 14 points for ~ host
Cougars (26-2) and Rodney Cenner
and Thaddeus Delaney each scored
13.

By KIN IIIRQIR
CLBVl!LAND (AP) - For once, Michael Jordan

I

'.

·'

.

' '

'

! &lt;'

.• J

.. "'
· LosES CONTROL- Marqu~'a Aaron Hutcllins (~) I~ ~0!)­
trol of the basketball while baing defended by Cincinnati a Rf:!ban
Patterson In the aec:ond haH ~ .f.!lureday night's g11me In Milwaukee, where the Bearcats wo(III0"~4. (AP)
·
. . ,,

''• '

Scoreboard
UC Sl.lnta Blllbara 79, UC Irvine 71

Ba s ketball

(O'f)

UCLA Rl, Qrci(KI St 69
'Utah68, Tc,...·EI·PuoS5
WlllhinJion 72, ArizOna S1. 69
Weber St. 97, Sacramento St:. 66

EASTERN CONFERENCE
. A.ta.nd11 Dblllon
lalll .
.»: L ll:l. lill
14

16 .719

.m

WalltinJI00 ............ 2~f ~I
Newleney ............ l7 - ~8
P!Uiadelphi•.............. 41
Bolton ................... .ll ~

.446
.309

12
17
24'1,

.200

30~

. 2.\~

Sot.lltwm .c ..lerenre.flt'll rou.nd
Georgia S~U1hein 611. E. Tennencc
S1. 48

Col\. of awtcacon 89, Centenlll')' 71

Aa. ln1enu~tiol\lil10. Georain S1.
SE Louisiaaa 61 . Campbell ~S
Samford 60, Stt=~wn ~I

1 .m

14

Allaala~............. .:... l?

.74='

7h

18 .~7;\
II ~
O.lolfe ,. ..... ;,.,,.... J6 22 .621 · 14
CLEVELAND .•.... JI · 24 .SM 17'n

-·-

MifttltliOID .............. 29 27
0111. ...." " '""'''"''''9 3~

20~

SaaAIIMio ........... IJ 42 .1.16
VIIICOU'm ..:......... ..ll 48 . 186

21

l:)m¥er .... ... .......... ..J7

40

.29R

24
~I

Prrdfk Dl&gt;lllon

OMo C...rtAnce N'lllil'nal!!

s.tk- .....................19 16 .• .109
L.A. Lalo&lt;h ...... ,.,. .. l9 17 ·' .696
PortiiDd ....... .......... 29 l8 .S09
L.A. CIIP~*fs ......... 24 29 .4$J

II
14

.446

l.t\·

.sa.cnunento ............ 2..1 :u

Oolden Statt .......... 20 34
Phoenl11 .................. 21 J6

·Tournaments ·
Catrilul b7. Mount Union 6.1.
UDI~Win-Wallace 72. Mm;kinJun.l62

··: '

.no

North Coa!l ConftnncNI'miffMI~
kenyon 6.1, CMe Re5trv.: 4~
Ohin Wa~Scyiln 72. W!llenbet~ ~~

IK',,.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

I'J

J61

TournamentS

Thundoy'socor.. ,

DlwWon I
Canum McKinley W. 'l'ou. Wilwu JO

L.A. l.akc.n 122. WltShiDJtOR 101
CI.I!VELAND 13. Chicaco 70
Cllllrluuc 106. Huuaton 9~
Min.-.a 107, Ottllu 105 (2 011
Utah 118. Toronto 114

Toal&amp;ht'spmes

Col. Brnokhuvcn H Gmv.: City ~2
( \ 1!. lnd!.·pemlett~:e II~. ~wn~k .~~

..

.

Dclruit • 8olloa. 1 p.m.

Oolden Stale al New Jersey. 7:)0

p.m!
San Antoaio 11 Orlando. 7:JO p.m.
L.A. Laker• at Adan111. 7JO p.m.

~·

Milw•be at Indiana. 7:;\0 p.m.
SC.tk a1 Miami. 8 p.m.
S~M:,....rt;t a1 Cbicqo, 8:30p.m.

47

New Yld.al Denwr. 9p.m.
UUil) II! Fonland, 10 r .m.
~lodeiJihio,.

Toronto ac LA. Clippm. '0:3

'
~

' •'s.tuntay's pmeo

'

Geiden St011c ill WalhlnJIOn, 7:JU
t p,m. ·
~

. &amp;o.eon a&amp; CLEVELAND. 7::\0 p.m.
Dulllia Ill Houaaon. M:.\0 p.m.
•

l ·

; s...,....·.,
!

I

Tirf'l City Ot."thcl

-le. ao~,J:lOr.m.

:111

a-tone M Minnnom. ~ :.lO p.m.
Allantl• Detroit, 7 p.m.

l'.n•.nillc R115e1.:n.uJ ~s. lakd&lt;~lkl JU

~)

· Cut. Bnlllkhn.vo!n 71. NL'Wlll"k 42

Findlay 6!1. Mam•r~~:ld Sr: .W
Gnl~11n:1 (H., ~Arlington ~
).llJatl 4M. l.ane5viiiC Jtl

-

T-S. AOiaola

... ,_Ill. T..:.Cimd111M

.........

-1011. ~Sr. 16
Cll ....fiWionrio 110', Col Poi,.SLO

~~~Sr627l

.
~

Oci'IIHIM•b!.

~

'

'l'"p':~~k~.

F.Rtio: ...... IIOK ·

t

,

SUMMARY NOTICt: Ulit:J.AS..Ir\ A&lt;.'TJ()N S ..:Tfl.f.M~:NT RKliARIHN(J
Pt;NNZJIIi I'UMPANX Pt'.NNUUI Plltllllf7K I'IIMPA.NY. ANU WID'UI'Iart:tRA!~'f1 .
Tik AU pt'RSUNS Willi SOUl l't'NN I:RAI»; CRUDE llii~.(.'TU 111 llNf. IlK lllllRI. 1•
' THi: o.:F•:NilANTS 'ouRINI; .TH•: pt;RIIlll,.IAN.UARY I, 1081 Til JUNI: .lll, l'!f5
o.:XCLUDII'H; llfF. D~.t'F.NDANTS, Tll'lR MR •• NTS,stJI!IIIliARII:S ANil A...liJATI':~~ •
A hcurinJ,l. hu.'l tw.:al stlhctluktl fur A(Hil :!~. 19")7." j!111:fltl p.m. k.'ul ,limC in Cuurtn•~ ~ ll lhe Un1~ :.
Stutl.'ti o~~.~nhl,tUsc.l\17 Stale Slll.'\.1, F.m:. Pcnllli)'IWa!1J!ftiiMCII . tu CC.W'! sidct ~ ~~ sc~tk:'!"l"'
taimiff11 und dcfcllllunts. f\.'1lnmil ('tHnpany und P&amp;P.fl~.l1il PnKhl4.,~ .c'!"li'II"Y ( P1:n~7,Utl -1 and Jll.'tl •
r'
I. I'W'' " I") The !iCIIkn\l.'ftt nft)\P~ in r;~Tt'rur lhl: fll')'!ncnl ol $14..'\IM:)J..) In lldlktT'II..'ftl runtls
Corporulr\Wl
t ...,
•
·
,...
·
. •
·
. ...., Pc . 'land Wk~.--u At the
and the paymcnt nf up tu $.l~I,(MIO in liCIIIclm'nl Jlllm1. nllltrnttiW'! CIIJ'II:D!IL"' ,"J . nn:tAn .,
· , If
hcllrin , 1m: Cuurt will dell' linhk' Whether to uppn1vc the sc11k:1111:nt all fau, 1\:ll!iUAil!'k· '!lki ~·~c.
the scft'lcmcnt is a proved. the dnim11 or mcmbcl'l! uf the Ch1~" •Jtain.~l ~cnmuul and ~·!en Will ~
dl~mis.Scd with Jft{udic~:. The Ctlt.l11 will als..1 ~o't111~'dcr the apphcai!IW'I uf t:IKJnscl ,rnr pl~mt.tlll unci lhc ••
Clm;s fvr ;m 11 ward nf lllturncy~· fec~Jit.i~llliun caper'!~'!! antluw;11d~ In the NfiR::&gt;M,:nlatlvC P,l.ill~lllf~ , .
11
This NutK.-c i~ unly a "ummury. 11 yuu un: u 'll'llnhi.:r uf 1hc Cl11.~ iiOd IJicJ ~ll m.~1Yc the detailed ,
NoiiCI.' ufCiu:o;s .Achon Seukmcnt hy muil )'CIU m11y ?r'\1~~• '~ .hy ~nlmw. .tn: ·
i.
In rc Penn Grade CrUde Oil L!I\I!,Uimn
·
.

heW'""

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Hl':t't'U:R, RAPI\IIlt:H &amp;. SA-I1T.4 I .. L.P.
P. 0. Bn&gt; 14111 , JJ.
Philllllclphiu. PA IVRI~ - 1470

·

SEA11l.E SUPERSONICS: Ph,&lt;rll·
Detter Schrcmrf oalhe injuretJ li &amp;t

.

f11"&amp;

Philack•lphia ........\6 17'

~

HI 20t. 1:17
New Ji.'rM:)' .... .,t. ~l IK 12 74 16:1 14~
FkM'iW! ............... l9 19 U 13 17.'1 147
N.Y, Rangers.. ... 2K 26 9 6."i 204 176
Tampa8uy ........ 2430 1 ~!i 170 191
Wa.dtin~ton ........ 24 .10 7 .\S 1:17 172
NY. l•landon .... 20 Jl 10 lO IM IR2

Northeut Oh'bien
Buffalt1 ..............~2 2010 74 II~'
PiiiHhuf}!.h ............11 2.~ · ~ 67 217
H,.r..d .. , ...,.,,24211 • 57 174
Muntno:ai ........... ,232YI I Y1 IV!i
()ltllWa .....·.......... 20 2K IJ S3 ' 17J
Hnllltm ............... .21 :o H ~ 17'.1

-·»: ,L I

From:

·,\,'

'l

••

.."•
•

13 WEEKS For qnly
$18.20 ,,.'

~~~

192
ll2
IKJ

2W

THAT'S ALMOST 50% OFF THE NEWSTAND PRICE!
' - THAT~S LIKE G}i;TTING SIX WEEKS FREEl

~

eJ!, lit: !iA

l&gt;alhu ... ...............'tl 22 · 4 110 1% 1~5
Dc~rnii ............... ..'O 19 l l
12 IIJ~ 144

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The Daily Sentinel

)1)9

St.l.tll.lis. ............2.14 l9 K b4 192
PfkJCnlx .............. 2tl 31 4 ,6Q ' IKI
Chita~w.............. 2~ lY 9 !iiJ 166
l'ornnt11............ .. 2;1
2 4M IKI

•

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ll

t

I

WESTERN CONFERENCE
C:mlral Dlvilliull ,

d

Special Of(er

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Idm Alla'W'
!i[ !iA

.

IW
1117 ,
16.\
219

'

'

-

65'-.IW 193

49

1~7

·o.u.6,Ccrianlda2
'IIUIOOU'm &amp;. Phocni• 2

Loa An.JciH 6. Edmon1on ~

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LET THE DAILY SENTINEL BE
YOUR #l .INFORMATION. SOURCf:!
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To take advantage of this special offer, just complete the form below and mail it
· · ·
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tie Pippen had 14 points and 14 rebounds.

· The Bulls. who scored 80 points against the Miami ·

Heat in Decembet, weR ll·for-38.in the first half. Jordan wu 2-for-12, missing a ilriving finger-roll and sev·
cral open jumpers.

The Cavs, who beld high-scorinJ Sealllc to. a season-low 72 on Thesday, held Chicago to a season-low
in lhc first half and led 41 -32.
It was clear the Bulls were in trouble when Rodman
becimc their leading scorer with 10 points on a basket that cut the .Cavaliers' lead to 50-38 with 7:391eft
in the third,
ElsewheR in the NBA, it was Los Angeles 122,
Washington 107; Charlolle 106, Houston 95; Utah 118,
Toronto 114; and Minnesota 107, Dallas 105 in double ovenime.
Lake~ 122, BuUets 107 - . Elden Campbell
, sco~ 38 points and Nick Van Exel added 31 points
and 12 assists as the visiting Lakers beat the Bullets.
avening their first three-g!line losing streak ofthe.sea-

'Son;

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The ~ers, who had lost four of five games,
improved to 3-4 without Shaquille O'Neal, out with a ·
hypereltended lift knee.
;
,
Juwan Howanl's 26 points and 12 Rbounds led the
Bullets.
.
.
Honea 106, Rodldl " - Glen Rice scored 12
of his 24 points in the third quarter, arnl Charlotte beat
HouatOn for lhc first time at The Summit.
lettllr reco; d Mmed the Marauders the division ·'i
OHIO DIVISION CHA~PION - The Meigs
The Hornets came into ilie'pme 0-9 on the Rockcrown.
Sut.d ere (L·R) Steve Rlee Steve Beha, ·1
reaerve buketbell teem; under the dlrec:tion of
tis' home court, but used a 14-0 spurtovera 4:22 span
Clark
Van
Meter and Chuck Murray. Standing are
coach Rick Edwarda, flnlaiMd the 19!11H17 - of the third quarter to go from a 65-63 deficit to a 77Sean
O'Brien,
John Davldaon. Grant Abbott, J. T. l'
son with • 11-9 overall record and 1 1.CJ.&lt;I 1111rk
65 lead with 3:38 left in lhc period.
Humphreya
.
a
nd
Waylon McKinney.
In the TrJ.Vallay Contet:enc:e's Ohio Division. The
.
After thai, the Rockets 80\ no closer .than 98-91 with
4:39 to go as the HorneIll won for the 11th time in ,14
games. Mario Blie·led lhc' Rockel~ widt 23 points, and
Hakeem Olajuwon finished with 22.
.
i
Jilll 118, Ripton 114 - Karl Malone scored 32
points, inch.ting eight straight in the final2:42, 10 help
li
the Jazz beat the visiting Raptors,
Malone finished with a triple-double, the second of
Here is the agenda for the Meigs fifth-grade hoys vs. Bradbury at Harrisonv,ille at 7 p.m.
his CIWCI',JNith 13 rebuunds and 10 assists. But the Jazz
Thursday, March 6: G~tls ' ~
Elementary Basketball Toui1Uilllt:nl, 5:40p.m. Salisbury si~th-grade boys
saw a l'·point fourth-quarter lead nearly disappear,
set to stari Saturday 81 Meigs High vs. Salem Center at7 p.m.; Pomeroy upper-bracket semifinal (pool : ~
with the Raptors closing to. 107-106 with 3:0S left,
SchooL
sixth-grade boys vs, Bradbury at Blackwell, Holley, Rupe, Salem ~
Thai's when M~Jone took control, hitting two free
Center and Folmer) at 5:40 p.m.; ""'!
Saturday: Salem Center vs. Rut- 8:30p.m. ,
throws, 1~ first of his eight consecutive Jazz points.
land-Rupe girls at9 a.m.; BradburyTuesday, March 4: Bradhu!'Y Salem Center fourth-grade boys vs. :
Man:us ,Camby responded with a jump shot from the
Holley girls vs. Salisbury-FoJmer at fo~rth-grade boys vs, Snowden-Sal- Pomeroy-Coleman winner at 7 p.m.; ~
ba$eline to keep the Raptors within one.
·
.·
I 0:20 a.m.; Rutland-Snowden. isbury winner at 5:40 p.m.; girls'lower-bracket semifinal (pool : : ,.
Malone sco~ . from inside with 2:04 remaiQirig, . fourth-grade boys vs. Salisbury at Pomeroy-Blackwell girls vs. Salem Chapman; Clifford, Harrisonville, }
then from outside with 48 seconds and I5 seconds left,
~' ·
11.:40 a.m.; Bradbury-Chapman girls . Centet-Rupe winner at 7 p.m.; Musser and Soulsby) at8:.20 p.m.
the last giving Utah a 115-110 lead. John Stockton and
vs. Salisbury-Clifford at I p.m.; Pomeroy-Soulsby girls vs. ChapSaturday, March 8: Fourth· '
Jeffflomacek hit free throws, and Camby scored once
Pomeroy fourth-grade boys vs. Rut- man-Clifford winner at 8:20p.m.
grade boys' final at 10 a.m.; fifth-. ~
again for the final margin.
·
land-Coleman at2:20 p.m.; RutlandWednesday, March 5: Har- grade hoys' final at II :30 a.m.; t
Walt Williams Jed the Raptors with 32 points,
Musser girls vs. Harrisonville at3:40 risonville sixth-grade hoys vs. Sal- si.xth-grade boys' final at I p.m.; I'~ . ·
1lmllerwolns 107, Maverkkll 105 - At Dallas,
p.m.
~
isbury-Salem Center wmner at 5:40 · girls' final at 2: 30 p.m.
Tom Guglioita's 17-footjumper with 2.6 seconds left
Monday, March ·3: Salisbury p.m.: Pomeroy fifth-grade hoys vs.
in the second overtime gave the limherwolves their
~
victory.
.
The limberwolves, who moved two games over
,500 for the first time in franchise history and R:~atched ­
. 'their single-season victory·record of29, scored the final
sil·points of the game, wbile the Mavs went scoreless
,,~
for the final 2;33.
·
· · Stephon Marbury's eight-foot baseline jumper with
41 seconds left pulled Minnesota into a 105-1 OS tie,
r
Kevin Oamell had 23 pliints, Gusliotta 22 and Marbury 20 as .the limberwolves won their fourth straight
game:

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Meigs Elementary Basketball . ·· ·· ..·Tournament schedule announced

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Red Wings top Pengu·ins 4-1

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Vernon made 29 saves in his first
DETROIT (AP) -Jt~sl seconds
Jagr, the NHL's top goal scoret,
victory
since a 6-5 ovenime win Feb.
af.U:r the Jame start¢. Detroitsoalie : qgravllled a groin injury in the sec8 at Piltsbursh.
··
MikeVemoilsawPitL~burgh'sMario ondperiod and didn't return. Jagr
From left to right are 275-pounder Josh Roberts,
DISTRICT ENTRANTS - Four Melga tMraud"They had a few days off and.we
LemieuK horing in on him w'ith the was hun after colliding with
135-pounder
Adam Tho1111s, 130-pounder Jay
er wreatlers have qualified for this -kend'1
puck.
Detroit's Vladimir K.onstantinov, thciughtthey might be raring to go."
Fisher
and
152-pounder
David Shuler.
Dlvlllon II dlatrlc:t tournament at Steubenville.
But Vernon managed to get a leg Both players spun around after the Vernon said. '"We ·decided we JUst
on Lemieux's shot. and that got the i:onlllct, and Jagr fell to the ice and had to be concerned with ourselves,
and as a result we did a good job at
Red Wings going toward a 4-1 vic- stayed there until play was halted.
tory Thursday night, the PenJuins'
Penguins coach EO Johnston said both ends."
Four Meigs Marauder wrestlers · Roberts was sectional champion in qualify for the state tournament,
he hOped Jagr could return in two . Igor U!fionov had a goal and two
third straight loss.
assists for the Red Wings, 4-0-2 in . are taking part in the Division II dis- the · 275-pound division. Adam wrestlers must place in the top three
"Vernon's save on .the finn shift, weeks. ,
trict wrestling tournament being held Thomas finished second at 135. lay at the district tournament
that was important, ·• said Detroit's',
liut, Jagr said: "I think it's aoing their last six games, Konstantinov,
this weekend at Steubenville.
Fisher finished third at 130. David
Sergei Fedorov, who scored his 24th · to'be longer than that. !,don't knpw, Fedorov and Nicklas Lidstrom also
The
four
qualified
ror
the
districls
Shuler
took fourth at I52.
goal in the.first period. "You don't , M!!)'~ the playoffs, maybe next scored, while Brendan Shanahan by placing in the lop four in the secThe
district meet will be held
had two assists for Detroit Fedorov
know what happens if they score y.car.
tional
tournament
held
last
weekend
today and Saturday al the Jefl'crson
fi " '
:1Jigr leads the NHL with 4S goals and Lidstrom scored power-play
at
WdiTen
·Local
High
School.
Josh
County
Memorial Auditonum. To
lrsi:emieux's shot was just one of : and'is No. 2 overall in scOring in the goals. ,
"Vemie made some key saves
two he had all night, He and Jiilenjale NHL behind Lemieux.
when
he had to, and the power play's
·Jaromir 'Jngr, the NHL's top two
Lemiel!x, with 21 g011ls and. 34
still
going
well," Detroit forward
scorers, were held without a point assists in 23 career games agaJnst
and Pillsburgh lost for the fiJilrth Dettoit, was prac. tical,ly invisible · Darren McCarty said. "We're realaftel Vernon stopped his opening ly confide!'! on the power play right
time in five games.
now."
.
"Our team's been strugglins shot.
,.
Greg
Johnson
sco~
forthe
Pensince the All-Star Game," Lemieux , ·· ··~mink Mario tried to get illo the
said. "That's the way we've been toppartofthe net, but~didn't .g~~ guins, 4-7 in their past II 11ames.
Ken Wregget, winless s1nce I;eb.
playing; we're just not playing good a clean shot and I got a p1ece of 11,
18,
made 35 sav~_s for the, Pcngums.
hockey."
· , Vernon S.id . .

In (Jther NHL action~

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·MacLean_gets s'on ·and goal
_on same day.as Sabres' win

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-Colt""'k, .......... Jit J6 H IW lOY ISO
Edmonton .......... 19 28 7

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Local. Naiional and World News, ~P!Jrls, Co'!lics
and TV Times. All this ~d.:tore!

r.dnt Dlvlskln

~umln~r's.

Jordln Jed the Bulls with 23 points, RodiiiMiied a'

11e1111J11:obi1 with 16 pointaand had 16rebounds, Scot-

Meigs gets four wrestlers in district matfest

PI.MS~ Oil NOTCIINTAL1'111t: CLHRK'!Iln'ICt~
·Dnh:d : r·dwuury 214. 19'11 '
~,11 •

Conll-.1 .......holl AIMdOIIoo
CONNE€TICUT PRIDE: SigBeil C
Jeff Keitt Waived O·F Jerry kcynotdl.

i~

th6 .Jlth pick
ilsl
NBA
draft, p'~y~ his best game of the seasOn, w1th e1ghtof
his 12 points in the fourth quarter.
"He was the X-factor," Bulls coach PhitJackson
said.
. Terrell Brandon had 23 points for the Cavs, Bobby
Phills scored 13 and fon:ed Jordan _into a 7-for-25
shooting performance,

CIVIl, ~~'T''IN r~o,,

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let the Cleveland Cavalien off the hook,
\le fumbled the ball, dribbled to the wing and let the
shot fly. DliftinJ to the' left as the Cleveland crowd
stood and roaR4 and clicked their came~. Jordan
missed a l~lJIIng . threo-poin! . attempl, ,and the
Chie&amp;~o Bulls 11111 to lhc Cavalien for the firsttime in
two years, 73·70 ThUiaday night
.
. "It was a b~ted play and I tried 10 get a Jood feel
for the ball, but couldn't," Jordan said. "lljU5t was an
off night for us. There really is no other explanation
for it."
1he sellout crowd at Gund Arena waited until the
last few seconds to get up and cheer. They have seen
Jordan ruin 100 many of their ~ns to get cocky,
It's as if Jordan holds some son of curse over Cleveland. His caM-hill! 69 points i:ame againsf the Cavs
' in 1990. He and the Bulls knocked .Cleveland out of
the playoffs in 1988, '89, '92, :93 and '.94. ·
· Cleveland ~dn 'I get to face Chicago in the playoffs
in 1995, when His Airness was playing ·baseball.
"It wouldn'thave.beenjustifiableifl hadmBde that
·shot with lhc way that we played,'' said Jord8n. booed
by about half lhc fans during introductions, ·as is the
custom in this town, '
·
The Bulls. seekina to equal last year's 'historic 7210 resular lleiSOn RCOnl. addec!.a buoch of dWiioull
milestones instead. Chicago. wh1ch won 50 of Its first
S6 games last season, dtQPPed to 49-7 and will now .
have to go 23-3 to equal Jut year's record. ·
', .
· A win tonight agaillll Sacramento will give Chicaso a 50-7 record, matching tho 1982-83 Philadelphia
76ers' second-best record with SO victories in NB/'. his- ·
tory. Last year's B11lls ~ain. first
·
Still, Dennis Rodman wasn't all that concerned
about Chicago's first loss since Feb. 5. · · ,
·
"So we lost one. So?" Rodman said. "Now we have
to try to get back on 'liack. I think we have the ability
.:
to do that, don 'I you?"
The Bulls. who started the season with 12 straight
wins, had a seven-game winnins streak snapped.
Jordan's errant three-pointer was Chicago's . 13th
miss in 14 tries from beyond the an:, one of several !Ieason lows induced by the swarmin$, ball-control Cavs.
Cleveland, the teague's top-rated defens1ve team,
held the Bulls to season lows in points anc! field-go•)
shooting, The Bulls made 25 of 76 shots from the field
(.329), eclipsing their previ9us ·season low of .337
against,lndiana in ~ember.
.
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The c&amp;vs won without their lop rebOunder, 'J)rrone
Hill who was out with a sprained ankle. ·
·=we talked. abolit the number of limes this year
against good teams that •. , we don't hang on," ~eve­
land coach Mike Fratello said. "You could feel1n the
huddle how much they wanted to hang on,"
The g8J!IC W!IS a major 'confidence-booster f~r the
Cavs who remained in the seventh playoff spo11n the
Eas~m Conference and snaPPed a six-game losing
stre&amp;k against Chicaso. It was even 'biggc;r for rookie
Vilaly Potapenko, whom Cavs president Wayne Embry
refused to trade to the New Jersey Neill for J1m Jack-

CLAS.'-' A&lt;.,.ION ' ":'

Hockey

Derroir4. ~ll!!lu•P I ,

7~. Sam HINI!ori

v"'

·

G Sl\lbtl D.u!ilovtc on lhe 1njun.-d lbl.

lbul"lllay's'scores

6.'1; SW T.... $1.

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WITt:O COIPORATIONi QUAk.:R STA.Tf. CORP.OilATIUN; .
QUAKU STAn: 011. RHI'ININ&lt;; ClliP.; Pt:NNZOII.
OJMPANY' onrl PI!NNWIL I'IIOOOLT.&lt; CIJMPANY,
·

DALLAS MAVERICKS· Sicnef.l I·
Juon SUJ!il:f 10 ll I 0-w&amp;y ..::on1n11.:1. Placed

Buckeye Cenrnd 71 . Old

Botlon 6, T..nj&gt;a Bay 2
New Jmey 4. BuffalO I .

-T-"
_,,,Ri
ot '3 &lt;on
lluJOio

AHL

)

BulietliaU
·-1-dbonA-'"'""'

tJ I . I.Jlk.'l'ty Benton ~

s.nJ... ,.,.,.,,.,21.1) 7

''

CALGARY FLAMES: AssiJIICd C
Rawil Uatubov to Fort Wayne of the IHL..
FLORIDA PANTHERS: Aui&amp;atd
RW Jasoa Podollan to Car:ollna of tM

' ) •1

SAN FRANCISCO. GIANTS : ·Re~ i~nei.l RHP Willjnm Vafllundinghum,
· LHP Kirtt Ruecer and LHP OtlUJ. Crwt Ul
unc-~ ~,o'flflll'*'ll .
·
·

1M AnJfln ,,.,.ll )l 8 !14 172 210

4
I II •
Nllt.qui- ~1. T.,....Adl-43

J11oP111!i F.

Tl.lby Burlandtual.llle•)'e'oll't.:ontl'lll.1 .

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miniltraror.
.
ATLANTA BRAVES : Apccd tu
Ierma with RHP Paul B)'l'd and OF Jer·
mninc Dye: oa one-year cowia.11.
NEW YORK METS: Siancd RHP

'ltiOI!oovtr ......... 21U2 2 58 201 213
Annhrim ............2~ :10 7 !17 179 187
C~pry ,.,,,.,.,.,,ll )I 7 57 16'1 116

CildaRMIIO. Maaqail&amp;:ttc: 74
l(rwlor, Olliol). ,., - - l 9

~. eo:
~

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Mansnl'ld. Mndi:mn 50. Wap:.11wncta

~~!ora.

df•

Rick Hamilton.

N..-'-

Ouoville !iii, Miller Cily 32
SoolhinJinn ~4 . W:wn.'ft Kennedy 40
Wi ~hnm S7. Clc. hklepa!ndt:ne&amp;! 4l

Illm

Div!Aionl

Dulrro-I,M&lt;oylor0169

..

Sp-in~ s

P..1Liua ~
B":cbvilk 54. O;wficld H111. 4:'i
C;mtun McKinley !II . Yoo. Bt~&lt;mJmu n

Lo Salle M . F - 7 )

.r

Yell,,w

Bcr~a 66.

lteaul•r:l"'" play
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TCMJrna-nts

•tmen's,scores

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c,•darvilk

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~NC~A Division I

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Ohio H.S. girls' scores

CLEVELAND al New Yurk, 7:JO
p.m.
·l'halftiA as.DaiiPa, K p.m.
1
LsA. (lippffl a1 Denr.-tr. lqp.m.
.
rtil•clelpllia 111 Pon~. 10 p.m.

I

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Suullli:'&lt;~SILT\1 .~

1M A...., 11 MtMII, ~ :~p.m.

N~o'W Rdgd
N~o'W Wa.~h .

ilase11a1t

NHL standings

Tiltf' City 71. Day. C..-n1ll M

Sprintt. l';nholic 60! S. (.,h01rl b 1un

. LA. a...ten • lnduma. I p.m.
Ullh at V~n~.:ouvcr. 3 p.m.

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PATRIOTS :

ENGLAND

Siped OT J.R. Conrad.
NEW .YORK JETS: Te:rmin111cd !he
contrUcts Or DT Erik Howard ond LB

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS :
NliDitll 1ieorJf San!ilrp minor leof,ue ad·

Diwilklft IV
An=owtia ~2. Crinnl Slrih:b ;\9
Ayeraville 4~. Ed'-moo ~~
BlufTton 76. Ouawu Hill1 ~~
BriKioi4J. ScbrinJ McKinley 41
Centl!l'bur, 12: Fiilbl;r Cnth. S6
E. CmMun 70. ·Moaadore .\4
Orun..Jvicw SJ, E. Knu11 35
Hopew¢11-Loudon 12. Arlinp,hlft 42
Knlidn. .:\9, M1ariun Local 29
Kirtland 61 . l...eQemunt 40
Uberty C:nt&lt;lr S$. Hicbvilk: 4~
IJ.wain Cnth. 66., Oberlin 49
Min5ter 12. Delphos kfrerron J6
N. RobillSCIR ,Col. Crawfonl 62, Sun·
du~k.y St. Mnry'a 44
New Bren~n ~~ .. Delphos St. Johns

L.nwliiOO 76. Cin. McNichnla, 70
S1 . Purl• Gn1h11m 62. K~mnn Ridge

Middk:IOW\1 Fenwick

SllllllaJ'• .......

NEW

Hockey

NatktUI Merkey ~ql!t
,;
80~'1UN BRUINS: Rt\:al~ P Bob
8ctfll, D ADders Myrvold aad LW DAvid
.' ) I
Puyne from Prcividehce of the AHL. Ar.'P ' sisnaJ.D B.ry.RkfMcrm Pro._lckncc. '

{'in. Ru~LT liac1H1 69. H:unihnn Ru11s

Di"Won IV
.
Oi:Jiin Hiloulll n Stm~bur,_ ~.1

all MiiY!;wUe. 9 p.m. .

I

AkMI N. 66. Akron ~·ll\'i!lltry ~!li
(';uwl Fulton i"nrlhWilJI WI. Cnplcy

811tuvin 72. Cln. lndlun Hills 70
CIK.-.upcake M. Mna ~6
· Ouy. O.istian 69, E. Chnlon :'i.J
l)-o~y. O:lkwll01147, Brt)(l~willr .W
Whcd~.-•nburp 60, Richnwnd l&gt;alc
Southe411ern ~2

r.m.

CIIPal Wi~Whtster 33
Champion 58. Mithlldil'ld

F~ll'l ~9

IHvllion II

Dl"ision Ill

v......,..,, 108.m.

r

•

Nunw:d Will Lewis e-o~sl seoul and Jt.tlnny
. MetKis wuthwesl scout.
·
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : R.:·
11igned TE Dc~k Brown I() a onc-yenr
conlrw.;t.

Ill Pbocni11, H,p.nt.

SteVe ~wisher
o( the An.;icun ~iUCilr.tioi.. -. , . , , r
TORON'J'O BLUE JAYS: Aaf\'J:\1 111
lttnU with OF ~11011 StewW1. C J"liu
Mos!luer•. ,RHP Joe Yfluns and RHP
Kelw1m Escobar 011 ORe-)'Cill' 1.:0Dirw..1a.

Cllldinal ~s
Wlliaseon!ii . Aik:nE. ~4

college scores

PACKER~ : l'nnnoled
John Doney ·111 director of liCI'IUI!na: .

BREWERS: Nnmtd
man&amp;JCI' for Na::'t" Oricons

Uti~;a64.
Wt~rren·

. CD Tim McK)'CI'.
CREEN BAY

p.m.
1
AIWheiiJI al Dl.'troit. 8 p.m.

MILWAUKEE

s . Ranac 47. u.bon 4S

Ohio women's

•
11 11:

.518
..152 '

.as. GU11"C1taville

Mlll'ion EIJin 62. Fllirticld Union 40
· Mintral R1dg.= 66, 'You, UI'IUiinc 4~
Rocky Ri~r Luthemp W. !i3. Cle
C:uhulic :n

MOCINAI,\ OPW. 11-qutterflntla
Ml'luBI Vernon Naweoe 93. Tiflin fiJ
"Wnhh 74. Show~ Sr . ~
Mu.lonr 89. Ohio DollUnicm• M

;Iii

I

011rfickl4~

Tournaments

WESTERN CONfERENCE
MWwntDiYIIIDn
.~
»: L ll:l.
Vtah ..... , .,.,,., ....,.,.-10 ll .727
Houtton ................. 37 20 .649

Huron 69. Ck!ar Fork ~9
KaMal Llakoca 4R, Millbury·l.akt 13

college scores

23'h
29

. J~7

T....., ,.,. ..... ,. .. ,. ...20 36

Doyksrnwn 42. W. Solem Nonhwest·

crn J9

WASHIN01UN RriDSKINS: Sianed·
.QB u,-nald Hoilas; W.R Bnm,non
Kcflnt:dy, Wfl Bnbhy Oliv~ TE Chri~\t;
phcr Stul&amp;kmt. OL-G Mic~l Bmi~te a~
DB.MC'Iwin Cruwfonl.
· :
,

'\' •

National Football L,_...l

ATLANTA FALCONS: Agreed to
tt:nm with 'G Ge:n~ Willinms. Rtl~u~~ed

A••rlnn 1.npe
ANAHEIM ANGELS: A&amp;re:ed 'to
ltrms with RHP Jaaon Dickloa and C
Todd Gre!ne.
•
KANSAS CI1Y ROYALS: ~ lo
terms with lB Jed Hansen, 28 Seralu
Nunel and RHP Brian Bc:'lil. · •

~tiunccTtnuna ~\I

J.euviusbura \.IIBmc

.

Transactions

Culumbia ~3. Black River 44

Ohlo .men's

zt,;

............... ,....:..... 26 29 .47J
Milwaubc .............2.'1 :W .4!'i5

Culdwatcr61,

~7

, FIIO\ball

,

Philatlelf.hio m Hlltlford/ 1:~p. m.
N.Y. Is an~r~ al Wushin~tlon, I) O
ChiC~q!O

41)

nnarvund

.

Sunday's pmes

CI'CIIViC'W !i2
.
Oiagrin Falls 8:\, Cuylho&amp;a Val. Chr.

TI'MI Amtrkll Athldk 'Conl'emtct

27'~

.

Lus Ancele"1uf Vam.:puver, 10;30

r.m:

C.y 48. WoodiiiOR! 3~
Cntalia MarJartlla ~4. Ashland

VMI 87. Furman lW (OT~

CtnlniDh•llian

betroit ................... 41

•
DMsionlll
. Akron Hoban 50, Loudorlvilk 41
Brookf.eld laO, Pymarunin&amp; Val. 39

Toui'Jlllmtnts

1~

.7$0

onlMo,................. 29 2.&lt;

~,. ....... ,. ....... 49

· Miacrvn ;ti!i, Triway 40
Pula~kalu Walkins Memorial 44. Cui.
. De.~les ~6
.
'
S1 . Mary's Memorial 64 .. Hullllnd
Spring. lO
W. Holme• 44, Bellaire 2..
You. Mooney 57, Salem 51

.

UNLV 7~, W1omina 69 (OT)

NBA standings

Miami............ ,. ...... 42
New YarL ...........41

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The Deily senunel• P~~gel

Pomeloy • Middleport, Ohio

By KEN RAPP.OPORT
. AP Hockey Writer

.
It was another goud. night for
Doug Gilmour and D~ve Bllell, and
an even better one for John
MacLean.
While Gilmour and Ellett had
their second strong game as new
members of lhc New ,!ersey Devils,
Maclean had a day to remem~dn
more ways than 011e: His fint child
was hom, irnd then he scored a goal
on a penalty ahot in a 4-1 victory
over Buffalo on Thursday niJhl.
, "It was a pretty .oxcitinJ day,"
Maclean said after the Devils broke
the Sibres' t2-pne unbellen 1iR11t.
had 111c baby (boy) Cll'lier this
morning: Youll.ways hope you can
cet a aoa1 for the bllby. ud it just 10
hopjicaed on my first shift I pi a
~ty ahot. I couldn't belio~ it."
.._.while, Ellen and Ollmour

"we

Bn•' Nrw 1m nrvy

each sc!lfed a soal, continuing tbeir MacLean said. "He gave me a Jiule ·
impressive play since being acquired or' the five hole arid I took it. ..
Ellell scored a power-play goal
from Toronto on Tuosday. Gilmour
I
:31
into the final period to bRak a
had a p i and three assists atJd Ellen
two uai•IJ in Wednesday nisht's 5- 1-1 tie. Bill Ouerin I1IJded anolher
3 victO!)I over the New · York goal I :44 later, and Oilmour added
an empty-nettcr as New Jersey (8-1lsi ancien,
"They ¥ a ~ty Jood hockey . 7) won the bailie of the NHL's two
,
team before we aot here," said , hottest teams.
Dixon Ward sco~ for Buffalo
Ellett, praying in hi• first game .
before lhc Devils" fans .. "But it'~ • {7-f-5), which lost for the first lime
breath of li'Cah air to come into 1 since a 5-1 defeat by Hartford on
1e1m thai hal a chuce 10 win the Jan. 25 .
"No one knew how 10 react."
Stanley·Cup. We're jUit trying to fit
Ward
said. "It's been over a mOnth
in and help out lillY way we can."
Maclean's peaalty ahot came II since we lost. We have to tak~ what
1 :39 of lhc first period when he was we can and learn from the mistakes
hooked with aclear pt~th to Dominik · we made. We can't dwell on this one
tou.•'
Hase~. who leads the NHL in save
· Et~ewhcnl in tho NHL, it wu
pen»~~ttp. He beal the IOIIio with
florida
3, si. Louis 2 in overtime;
" a shot between the pads.
O.Ua
6,
Cokndo 2; ~ 6,1ltln· "ThC only thing I kllow wu I
wasn't Joina to his 11love. aide," JMI Jay 2.

Fill Slzr cemrs111 YaD
•" - Wodowsllocks

• 4 Captains Ch&gt;rs
• Re1r Sola Bod
• Aioolm!ln W1'oe1s

• AM!'M C.sselle

•loaded!

• V-6"·Pil~

•AMft.l Slereo
• Pit COII(jlion
• 4 Wl1eel AnHock Btal&lt;os • Cusi!Xft Clolh lnl.
•Slyl&lt;:d Wheels
• Dual Airbags
• WollEquipped
• """"' !loot l~

• Oliver's Side ~iltlag

, Real AnHod!Brai&lt;es
, Power Sleaing

·~Btakes

Tom Peden

. Country

\lomluy · Sllturdu)': 9 am : 8 pm · Slmt~ly, I IIJllll

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�Friday, ,..,.._, 21, 11t7

Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

"fhe frighterling facts of sexual assault i.n America ....
vilal slllistics from a ~lilble
IOIII'tC. I qm: with your .stessmmt Here are the f~ and fiJURS:
Sexual assault continues 10 rqwesenl the most rapidly growing violent crime in Artlcrica. Over 700,000
women arc sexually usaulted each
year.
Only 20 pen:ent of sexual
assaults asainst women are perpettated by males unknown 10 the victim. The remainder an: committed
by friends, acquaintances, intiJII&amp;IeS
and funily members.
.
Among female rape victims, 6
percent are under ase 18. AI least 20
percent of adult women and 12 percent of adolescent women have
experienced some sort of sexual
abuse or assault during their life-

110111e

Ann ·

landerS

--

Mfda
, _'"'·
_ ....... ..
c..

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Here are
lome facts about sexual assault put
out by the American Mediclll Association. I bope you can find space in
your column to print this letter and
. edueate your vast number of readers.
The problem doesn' t get anywhere
near the &amp;Jtention it deserves. -Chicago
Dear Chicago: Thank you for

times.
cumstanccs.
A survey of 6,1S9 college 1111A survey of 11- to 14-year-olds
dents eerolled It 32 institutioas in found:
the Uaited Sillies revealed the folFifty-one pm:cnt of the boys and
lowing QliRics:
41 percent of the girls said forced
More than one in four collese- sex was acceptable if the boy "spent
age women surveyed bad been the a lot of money" on the girl.
vic~ of rape or attcmpled rape.
Thirty-one pen:cnt of the boys.
Fafty-scven pen:ent . of the · and 32 percent of the Jirls said it
assaults occwred on dates.
. . was acceptable for a man to rape a
Seventy-three percent of the woman if she bad past sexual expeassailants and 55 percent of tile vic- rience.
·
tims bad used ;!lcohol or 1&gt;ther·drugs
Eigbty-seven percent of.boys and
prior to the assault
. 79 percent of girls said sexual
FOrty-two pen:ent of the victims assault was acceptable if the man
told no one.
.
and the woman were married.
In a survey of high ~hool stuSixty-fivepen:cntofthe _borsand
dents, S6 percent of the .gtrls and 76 · 47 percent of the guls wd 11 was
pen:ent of the boys believed forced acceptable for a boy to rape a girl if
sex was acceptable under some cir: they bad been dating for more than

-r

six~

inlciCIM-.:.

Iai a survey of male cOllege students: •
Thirty-five pen:cnt anonymously
admitted that. under certain circumstances, they would commit rape if
they believed they colild get away
with it.
One in 12 admitted to eomminins
acts that met the legal definitions of
rape, and 84 pen:enf of those men
who committed rape did nOt !label it
as rape.
··/ .··f
In another survey of college
males:
FOrty-three percent of collegeased men admitted to using toercive
behavior to have sex; including
ignoring a· woman's protest and
using physical aggression to force

I
Fifteen puUDt a:bwwledcod
they ~ommiucd aapwintance
111pe,
II perce11t .:blowledpd
using
ieal reslraints to fun:e a

woman 10

Sdlool-ua.a.
Wonllip • lOa.&amp;, 6 p.a.
7 S...ioao -7 p.a.

w.-

By ALAN BASH
USATODAY

ve sex.

And now, dear readers, diis is
Ann talking. ·'n)e results of that survey made it clear lome thai we must
do li better job of sex education at
home. We must teach our !:laildren to
respect each other. This· Is the parents' responsibility.

.,_, ..... Cole_. .

· ~y5dlool -'1:30i~

WASHINGTON - Under fin: for the parental guidance ratings, which
~ based ~ly on age rather than content, 1V industry representatives
say they're willing to look at ways to improve the code.
··we have rejected nothing," said Eddie Fritts of the National Association
of Broadcasters. He told a Senate panel Thursday th&amp;J the 2-month-old code
is a .. work in progress.
Even TV industry spokesman Jack Valenti took an unusually conciliatoty tone. Wben reminded of his .December vows to fight changes to the code
in court. he said, '"I have changed my mind."
Eighty peicent of Americans are familim; with the rating system, which
assigns labels such a5 G, Pd and TV-14 to shows. That, accoroing to a USA
10DAY/CNN/Gallup Poll of.I,036 respondents, with a·3-point margi_n of
error.
Of those who had heard of the code and who have children under 18, 52
·percent believe the current system helps them monitor their kids' viewing,
and 44 percent disagree.
.
·
·
The Senate Commerce Committee began debating the ratings Th4rsday
but was split on whether a content-based system would be more usefuL
Two bills are circulating on Capitol Hill that would force networks to
adopt labels detailing a show's level of violence, sex and foul language.
The pressure may soon force a split among 1V leaders, some of whom
·are now quietly talking about pushing ahead with content-specific ratings.·
' Thursdl!y's heari~g began ~ith a video produced by the advocacy group .
· Children Now, ,which showed clips of the coarse language and violence used
in PO-rated programs.
An episode of '.'Friends," for example, had Pheobe singing a song about
· an ex-friend. '"Jingle b7- -- screwed me over. go to hell jingle whore."
In CBS' movie '"Stranger in My Home," a woman shoots a man, who
falls over a balcony, crashes through glass and lands, blood soaked, in a
pool.
.
Putting a PG label on such shows, says Sen. Joseph Liebennan, 0-Conn.,
, was akin to simply '"pulling a sign in front of shark infested wuers that says.
• be careful when swimming." ·
.
.
tt

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. · Family Night MAIIth waa held rKently at Letart Falla Elementary with Ed Bartela preHntlng a
program dnlgned for children and their parents. The program dealt With l•ming math In a fun
way by uaing hands-on actlvitiea and games. Parente - . also updated on the Ohio Proficiency Tat progn1m. In addition, atudenta and their parentS marked 100 ~Y• of IChool this year with
actlvHiea n1nglng from math, language _artl projeCtl and others. Here, parent Melleu Holalnger
wor~ with her ~ughter Amber during Family Night Math.
.

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What happens to a surplus·in· Social, Se,curity funds? '
·DEAR AVALON: We sent your
leiter to our Vennont senator, Patrick
Leahy: What follows is his reply.
- slightly cut due to space constraints.
"The Social Security system
today covers about43 million Americans. Since its start, Social Security
has been run on a 'pay-as-you-go'
basis. In other words, wliat"s called a
'trust fund' is really only an accountUINE B. ADAMS lind
ing mechanism through which pay- .
NAsH-CUMMINGS
roll taxes paid by ioday's workers
UI:IJ\KANNEAND NAN: Occa-· are paid out to today's retirees and
sion~lly there are ite111S in the media · .others.
abo\lt the federal government bor'"Along with other incoming revrowing money from the Sbcial Secu- en11es, Social Security taxes are
rity trust fund to pay other govern- · deposited in the U.S. Treasury and
menl expenses and replacing the invested in federal securities (IOUs)
money with _IOUs. How much has that are earmarked to be payable to
been borrowed to date? When did Social Security funds when they
the J!r&amp;Ciice begin? Will the money mature at a specific maturity date.
be restored to the lenders? -- AVAL- When more Sociill Security taxes
ON:E. SMITH. Dewey, Ariz.
arrive than arc spent. lhe surplus

money doesn 'I sit id!e in the Trea~ury vault but is used to finance
other operations of the government.
'"As with U.S. federal securities
held by individuals. the U.S. govern·menl is duty bound to honor these
IOUs and as long as the trust fund
has a balance, the Treasury Department must continue to issue Social
Security checks.
""The Social Security· Surplus
Fund is a fairly recent development.
In the early 1980s. Congress
changed the program to build up a
surplus to get ready for retirements
from "those who are in the babyboom generation. Today the trust
fund is running a total surplus of
about $550 billion in benefits. This
year, the U.S. Treasury will take in
$386 billion in Social Security and
will pay out $355 billion in benefits.
This $3 i billion tax surplus, com-

__,;;,.,...
~ ----Community
Tile Community Calendar is
pu~ II a free service to DOD•
prt«·..,..,. _wishiac to aiUiounce
-*a 111111 special evenllll. The
~, II not desiped to pro...,. -.Iii cw fund nlsers of any
type,&gt; .1~ are priDted 1111 space
pen!i,ID ... cannot be auaranteed
to r1111 a apecllk number of days.
,.~...
.
rval~.JW~D -- Lebanon Townlhjp&gt;'fruJ!et&amp;, Friday, 7 p.m .• townlhip·!luilding.
. .
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SAT1,lRDAY .
,
Sft¥:~ CENTER-- Star Grange
77S aiKl S'-1' J11rlior Grange 878 will
meot. in filplar session Saturday
Vtith' a ·potluck ~pper at 6:30 p.m.
rotlo\Wed by· • regular meeting at 8
p.m. ·.Homloc:k Orange is to visit.

HA.RRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, will
ineet Saturday, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
RACINE-- Ral:ine Youth League
organizational ~etiilg Saturday. I
p.m. at the kindergarten. All interested people are urged to auend.
SUNDAY
POMEROY -- Hillside Baptist
Church, hymn sing, Sunday. 6 p.m.
POMEROY -- Kings Way
Singers, a Christian group from
Ohio State University, will perfonn
Sunday,_3 P·lll· at .Pomeryr U~i!ed
Methlxltst Church. A carry-an dtnner
will follow the concert.
. ~UTLAND .-- Rutland Youth
League, Sunday, 4 p.m. at Rutland
firehouse.

CI'JESTBR -· Sltade River Lodge

,&lt;457/ JI.t'"1.' l!reakrast, Saturday. 8 MONDAY
'A,m. foll.owcd' by preparation for

inspOi:lion.
~ ' • ·

.
EAST MEIGS - Special board
meetitlg, Monday, S p.m. in the ~igli
school library to approve advertising

I

•

· bined with $38 billion in intereSt
income from ·federal securiiies (the
above mentioned IOUs) will build
up a one-year surplus of Clo!il; to $70
billion, which will be added to the
total surplus from past years.
"Once the baby-boom generation
-- Americans who are now 30, 40
and 50 years old --begins to retire in
2010. the surplus will rapidly begin·
to dwindle and the system's trustees
estimate the trust fund will be
.depleted hy 2030. Although the trust
fund is in no immediate danger,
action will be needed before long to
protect -the Social Security system
for future generations, and Congress
needs to see this as one of its most
solemn obligations." ·
STUMPED: A Vcnnont reader
recently wrote asking if anyone
might know of a place she might
purchase warm snow boots (some-

'

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thing like the Sorel brand. if possible) for hersOn who ,.cars a size-18
(that's right -- 18) shoe. We put the
question in our. Vennont Sunday
newspaper column, hoping that
someone out there could help but so
rae, there has been no response. W~
/gUess our Vennont-New Hampshire
reilders were as STUMPED as we
are.
So we now turn to you, our Dear
Readers across the country, to ask if
someone, anyone, might have a
resource for oversize (to put it mildly) winter boots. ·
Write to ··Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general ·interest will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

!:!"l

LETART
Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m at the
office building.
. MIDDLEPORT -- Friends of 1~
Meigs County Library will meet
Monday, 1 p.m. at tile Middleport
Library.
··
·
CHESTER -- ·The Chester PTO
will nieet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
school. All parents and teachers welcome.
MIDDLEPORT -- Indoor camp
meeting, March 3-8 at 7 p.m. and
March 9 at 6 p.m. at Middleport
Nazarene Church. Song evangelists,
Jan and Cathy, and Jim Davis. Evangelist Bishop Clyde Van'f'alin. Sponsored by Meigs Area Holiness Association.

POMEROY -- CHOICE ·home
educators meeting, Tuesday, 10 a.m.
at the Pomeroy Library conference
room. Take . sack lunch. Contact
Tammy Jones, 992-6743 fw more
infonn'ation.
·

Sunclay School- IO:IS Lm.

.It

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S...y School • IOa.m.
IlL!"-, 7:30p.m.
y SciVIoes- 7:30p.m.
W

!..-::!':&amp; ·

II

, .... ~a.-k

~CIIudlofQrlolla

PuiOr: Rev. Jlmel.R. Acree, S1.

Pulor: Jtov. David Mctdanla

Hallford, W.Va. .

Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Wonbip, 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
wodneiday SciVIca - 7:30p.m.

Church of God

hid, a.c1ot Cllvck
R1ilroMI Sc., Muon
Sunday5chool· 10 a.m.
II Lm., 6 p,m.
Wed
y SciYia:s - 7 p.m.

wo,::",.t-

I

ML Morjall lapllot
fourth 1L Main St. Middle..,
l'aiiOI: Rev. Oilben CniJ, h .
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
. Wonbip • 10:45 Lm.

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Happy Gilmore

r FYIUMY za -s:!Ml.M- I

"'

Sunday
10:30 a.m.
Coffee ...... followlq

•

Hoi mess

...,..Cllllldl of Cllrtot
212 W. Main St.
Puwr: Neil Prolldfool
SundaJ School· 9:30a.m.
Wolllup- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneodoy Scrvicoa - 7 p.m.

Duollo H..._Onlrdl
31857 Slate Rou"' 32.5, Lanpvllc
p . -: Dr. J.D. Youns
Sunday ochool • 9:30a.m.
soo;..wonbip· tQ:30 a.m. IL 7 p.m.
W
llday p!&amp;ye• aervia: -7 p.m.

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TUESDAY

QPfA drapes charter for member
. •n..,dlarltrwl!S

-~~

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Tune To Thel*w. ••

•..
•••

WBGSAM. 1030
.
FMtur~ng

1.1

w

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Flalwooda

PUior: Keilh Rader ·
Suilday School ~ 10 a.m.
Worship- 1t a,m. ·

RAWUNGS-COATS

fiSHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

&amp;HARDWARE
· Homelne Saws

Tum VOIIIWlf'ln today.. ,
a 'haft a checJdnl

.

'l

·,1

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CHAJITIAN TALK AND
POSITIVE COUNTRY MUSIC

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CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for eyerythlng

-

Wednelday 5c1Vic:eo , 7 p.m.
. Pillar: Bill Stires
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Won~hip • 10:30 a.m.', 6 p.m.
Wedneaday SciVioes·-7 p.m.

S..tb Betbel New TestlmtDt

·Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School • 9 a.m,
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

p.....,.yCkurdl.ofllle N.......,e

Paslor: Rev. Thomu McCiuns
Sunday 5cboo1 - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip.- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednoaday Services, 1 p.m.
Cllollor a...... orllle N...,;...
Putor: Rev. llelbon Ollie
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip- II a.m., 6 p,m.
Wodneadiy Services , 1 p.m.

Carktoololenlaomlaallo..I .CIIarc•

Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship Service J0:30a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

a.....,

llllllud
ofllle Nua!UO
Putor: Samuel Basye

Sunday 5cboo1 - 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

FmdomGDopelMiuloll
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. R9ger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
· Worship- 7 p.m.

Portlud Flnl Ckardl i&gt;fllle Nuanao
Putqr: Mark Malaon
Wonhip - I 0:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.

Wblle'l Cbapel Waloyaa
'
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Crow's Family
flestaura'lt

lirogan-Warner
INSURANCE
. SERVICES

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

.2 14E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

·) I ---

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fiii .Dociors' ·

rMl\

Prescriptions

.

Pomeroy

992-2955

'-6

·

Veterans
M!Jmorlal
Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2259

Clean out your ba•ement or
attic with the help of tM

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

You don't have to look fsr'·
to spy the b{1st buys in the
classifiedsJ

ES1ablislied 1913

992-2121

172 North Second A.,..

· Dignity and Service Always•

eoa EAST MAIN

TIME
Ci,EANING?

SNOUFFER
FIRE II SAFETY
SALES II SERVICE

EWING FUNJERAL HOME

P.J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804W.Main
992-~18 Pomeroy

Filii Goopol UJIIII..._
33045 ·Hiland Road, Pome10y
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m .
Evening 7:30p.m.
TueSday II; Thursday-7:30p.m.

S-CIIarcllolllleNuorno

. Pallor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 10 a.m.
· · Worship : 9 a.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

dr~

for Mae thedeathofCiariceAIIen,amember Eichinger, Thelma ·White, 'Mary
~Nk·when .Che~tet Council 323, since 1938 was also noted. Esther liolter, Helen Wolf ·and Marcia
,Det~ of Amenca.•met recently Smith ·iead "The Golden Rules for Keller.
it ibe hall.
, .
Easier Living" Helen Wolf and·
J!itl\er Smidt; councilor openeo;l · Doris Grueser were installed to their
lhe -'inl "ldt· pledaea, prayer, new offices.
acriptere lllldsm,iil1 orlhe National
Refreshments were served by
An-.. PI...a were tniiCIO for a soup Jean Wclah and Joann and Bob
,.,., for. JMrnben ll th'ti next Ritchie to Doris Orucser, Inzy
. . . . .. by ibe good or the order Ne~elh Gold~ ~k, Chltloue
~·
.·
Grant, Oplll Hollon, Mary Blninaer.
'A t.!l Wll Rll!l fl'oln lhe J,icl'cek Kalbryn Bauin, Brma-, Cleland,
fl~
· ' l Mr11 COra liCe- ,. J!VOAIIt Grant, Bldler Sllillh, o.Joril
-.,
1 ~ Nloi, . .. Wolfe, Ell•ebetb ~ op.l ,.

\

33226 Oildren's Home Rd.

Church announcements
sponsored by th~se area
merchant&amp;•.

}'.

Putor: Charles Ne!jilte
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Ellie~

Church of Chnst

l'ouwiDJ WHUI+ C.III'Ck ofCI!rlot
1

r

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Orange
Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m at Clerk Osie Follrod's home.

,

c...,...ctuater

......,.,.(syn.-1

l!dn Ulllted llnlkrn .. Cllrllt
2 l/2.mites nonb of lltedaville
on s- Route 124
Paator: 'Rey. Robert Markley
Sundal School - II Lnl.
,
Sunday Wonb1p- 10:00 a.m. .t 7:00p.m.
Wcdnosday SciVioes -7:30p.m:
Wednelday Yoolb Service· 7:30p.m.

Ualted Fahll Cllurcll
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pw
PUior: Rev. R - E. Smith, S..
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednellday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
·
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
FUll Sunday of Moot~ - 7:30p.m. aoiVia:

, _ , Robon Sandon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · ·IMO Lm., 7:30p.m.
.Wednelday Servlca -7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

. Worship- 10:4J.-a.m ., 7 p.m.

,

.. CIIrtala.....

T~IM Comnumil)' oft CR 82

ML Olive C-uJ!j Cllan:ll
Pislor: Lawrence Bush

RHdlvlllt Fello"lbJP
a......,arllleN...,....
l'aslor: Mark A. Dupler

a.mWe
Paslor: Rev. Charlea Muh

CatholiC

..

.

.

Putor: J\Taandolph
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.

Tllppen PloiDI SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hau'sm:an
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m.
Tuaday SeiViC&lt;!I - 7:30p.m.

U111tccl Brcthrell
Mt.IIL
u........

Follll ~I CIIIU'dl
LonsBonom
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
· Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdiy 7:30p.m.

Pulor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sullllay School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday SciVicea - 7 p.m.

Loaa-..

Co ng rcgational

s.aM Rtut C-CIIudl
161 Mulbony Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Puto~: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:45-S:ISp.m.; M- 5:Jo p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mus - 9:30a.m.
Dailey M.,. · 8:30a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30 a.m. .
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Mlddleporl Cllurcll af Ill• Nuanoe

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.

OJ. White Rd. off St Rt 160
PIIIOI: PJ. Olapman ,
Sunday School- lo a.m.
Wollllip - II a.m.
.
t, Wedneaday Servioes -7 p.m.

lllallaadFneWIJiapllot
.
Salim SL
p...,: Jtov.PauiTaykw
Sunday SciiOol- 10 a.m:
Evcnina • 7 p.m.
Wednelday .Sc.. ioes -7 p.m.

Dya\'lllo Commaolly a....b

Pul«: Suoll Rooe
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
.Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. ·
Wednelday Servia:• - 7 p:m.

· Wonhip • 9a.m.
Sunday School • to a.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.

J

Sevcnttl ·Dily Advc11tr , t

Mono Cbapd CIIU&lt;b
Sunday ochool· 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wedneoday SeiVia: • 7 p.m.

Cllollor
Putor. Sharon Hauaman

Qwdl otGod oiPauplaetJ

Mdqall)' Blptial
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
'Ibunday Scrvic:oa : 7:30p.m.

OnndSin:CI

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- !!a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

NortlluatCiul&lt;r
Allred
Putor: Sharon Ha-.nan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worohip • II Lm., 6:30p.m.

Sy....,.. Flnl than:b of God
Apple and Second SIS.
Putot: Rev. David Ruoaell
· Sunday School...t Wollllip- !trl.m.
.
Evenins Sc1Vices- 7:30p.m.
Wednellday Services - 7:30p.m. ·

'MM p &amp;Piabtla.._
Sunday 5cboo1 - 9 a.m.
. Wonbip • 10 LIB.

OffRt. 124
:Pastor: lldael Hart
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.

Molp CoopenUn hrlall

Radaad a.- or God
Pulor: Randy Barr
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
~::'::f.- !I a.m., 6 p.m. .
W
f SciViC:Oo - 7jJ.m. ·

Fon:at Ru lapllol
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday 5cbool- IQa.m. ·
Wonhip -II a.m.

•

· ML-ChrcllofGool
Ric:ine
P-: Jtov. lama Sanelf~eld
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m. ·
Evening - 7 p,m.
Wednesday Scrvioes - 7 p.m ..

a._

llurlaoa..................
· Wollllip • ~ Lm.
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.

Huel c .....alllty Cllarcb

H~.CII-

···7075

011

'

•
,,

I•

... ._

..

P -: Jtov. ~Robl111011
.
Sunday School • tO LID.
Wonbip - II a.m.

S-Miaoloe
Hll Btidgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service· 7 p.m.

.......a.......

,_,

s,._..FintU.ttec~r.,.,

Sunday Eveniria 7 p.m. · .

· TOWIIIbip Rd., 461C
Sunday School· 9 .......
Wollllip • 10 "m.
, .
Wednoaday Servia:&amp; : 10 Lm. ·

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
P•tor: Rev. Ralph Spi101
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wolllllp - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thllltday Scrvioes - 7 p.m.

!fl1il'irdAn.
Platz

..

·
Pastor: Rev. Oarlt BUcr
Sunday School· 10 Lm.
Evcnina - 6 p.m.
S...ioao-7:00

Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Tul:sday ServiCeS - 7 p.m.

ML Olin Ulllb!d Mo......

Mlclcl'

Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

Wolllli~·9a.m.

.

Pentec ostal
Patecollal A.w .....,.
St Rt 124, Racine
PU101: William Hobac:lt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Even in&amp;-,7 p.m.
Wodneaday Scrvioes - 1 p.11.

Faltll Valley Tllberucle Clludl
.
Bailey Run Road

'
Cootrlllo
Ulllled M.-.. hrllll .
Paslol: Helen Kliae
·
CoohiJJe Cllvdl •
Main 1L Fift~ St
Sunday School - 10 Lm.

GnUia Ullllod MatW11t
Woq!lip - 9:30 a.m. (111 IL :lad Sun),
'1:30 p.m. (3nlit 41b Sun)
W - y Service-7:30p.m.

CIIJialtul u...

,

575 Pearl St, Middleport
Pastor: Sam AndeBOII
Sunday Schooi!O a.m.
~venin&amp;- 7,:30 p.m.
. Wcdneaday SeiVic:e- 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Briln Harkntu
Sunday School . 10 Lm.
Worship- II a.m:

Un1ted Methodtst

Chnst1an Un ion

VlctorJ laplloll..._..._,

MAaolz,a:oo.M

'

St.Pai.JLo........ CIIon:ll .
Comer SyCIIIIOIO .t Second 51., Pomeroy
ttov. Oeorae Weirick
Sunday Scl)ool · 9:45 Lm.
Wonbip • II a.m.

R I tWe Chrcll ofClrlat
P - . Philip Shinn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonbip SciVic:e: 10:30 a.m.
Biblo Study, Wednosday, 6:30p.m.

51. Rl. 143'jlllloffRc. 7

..
Mi Holland's
Opus

.

Pulor:Oene~

New Lime Rd., RUIItnd
PISIOr: .Rev. Marpn:l J. Robi1110n
SciVices: W.,....oday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Now Ule VlctorJ Cnllr
3m 0eorl" Cmk Road, Oallipolia. OH
Pulor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Scrvioes -10 o.m. II; 7'p.m.
Wednoaday- 7 p.m. IL Youlh 7 p.m.

Mlddloport Coaaalllllly Clllll&lt;h

-

Otrr Sariollr ~...... a.....

Sunday odlool - 10::!0 a.m. •
Worship -9:30a.m., 7 p.liJ.

'f!lllltday Scrvia:l - 7:30 .

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School ·- !1:30 a.m:
Wonbip- 10:45 a.m. (Ill II; 3rd Sun)

Eoat Lolorl
Pastor: Brian Hartneu
Sunday Schoot ·-10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wedneaday -7 p.m.

WaiiM ...t Heary Sll.• Ravenawood, W.Va.
Jnlrim puton: Rev. Robert Hupp ·
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Wonbip - II a.m.

HomlackGI'DftCII-

Evening· 7:30p.m.

'&lt;

· POMEROY -- Beginning Inter- .
net Users meeting Monday, 6:-30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Bring
questions and suggestions for topics
you wouJd like to discuss . .

Sd&gt;ool- 9-.30 a.m.
Wonh1p -10;30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday 5c1Vic:e7:30 p.m.

ne Boii&lt;Ytn' Jlollowablp Mllllalry

Cllon:k af J - Ckrlot,
ApolllnUcFollll
1/4 mile put Fon Meip oa New Lima Rd.
Paator: William Van Meter
•
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wcdnosday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00 p.m.
CIU'toll T11J:a ucle c..rc.
Oiflon, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7 p.m.
Thllltday Servia: - 7 p.m.

Fallll Filii ~I Clum:k
Longllollom
Pastor: Steve Reed...
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 9:30a.m. and ·7 p.m.
· Wedneoday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowsb•p service 1 p.m.

F.adllme u- ol Pnyer
(II Bwlin&amp;lwn church off Route 33)
PISIOr: Robert Vance
Sunday wonhip - I 0 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30 p.m.

S.Hoa

Pine Grove

He- ·

Cbrllllaa FollowYip Cllllftk
Rov. Oyde
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Youlb Followship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

Haniloavlle Commually Chrcb
Pastor: Theron Durbain
Sunday • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

MorolqSIIr
Pucor:·Kennolb Baker
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a,m.
Th.n....y Services -7:30p.m.

Jtov. Oe&lt;qe W~iriek
wo..hip- 9:00a.m. .
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

S~y

.
\

Sunday School-tO a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
W...,_y Sc1Yica ·10 Lm.
. Cumol
Pastor: Kenneth Babr
·.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
·
W011hip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd IL 4lh Sun) ..

St. Job Lltllona Cllorrll

,.,, •We a.mdlaCHrcll

·-

lloCIIuy
Plllor. KeiUIOib Baker

Lutheran

Sunday Evenina - 6:30p.m.
Thundoy Servia: - 6:30 p.m.

52.5 N. 2nd Sl. Miildlepon
P -: Jamea .E. K Worlhip • IO..m., 7 p.m.
Wedoclday SciVioes -7 p.m.

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Wollllip-9a.m..

Preoklelll- - · Duhl
Sunday School • 9!30 ~.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Servia:• - 7:30 p.m.

Deller

Sundaf School- 10 a.m. ·
Wonlup - lla.m., 6 p.m. ·
W...,_y 5c1Vioes -7 p.m:

~

-

r-: Woody Call

'

Wollllip - 10;15 Lm.

Portland-IIKino Rd.

a....

-

Salem C..llr
l'lllol: Roo Fie1t0
Sunday 5cbool- !1:15a~m.

TlloCI!Irdl ofJCIIrllt e6~Uar-118y Saliala
St Rt160,446-6247 or446-74116
Suaday School10:21).11 Lm.
Relief Society/Priealbood 11:05·12:00 noon
Sacnmonl Servia: 9-10:15 Lm.
Homemaking meecina. 111 Thun. -7 p.m.

r-: Bil~

Old-FneWWialldiiCI!udl
28601 St. Rt 7, Middtepon
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Thllltday Scrvioea -7 p.m.

lllcbr71Dllo Clnrdlof Cllrlot

UlJoa1) Cllrlalloa

· - ; Daniel Berdine
Wonbip - 9:30 Lm. Sunday
Bible Study - 7:00p.m. Wednelday

Wonhip ·10:30 1.m.

~CIIriof.J.-CIIrllt
~~~- lleJ Salall

Evanaelisl Joaeph B. Hooti•
Sunday Sd&gt;ool· 9a.m.
Wonl&gt;ip ·10 Lm., 1 p.m .
Wednelday 5c1Vic:eo - 7~&gt;;m.

_.....
.......
Racine, Oil

llo-

Sunday School • 10 a.m .
Worship - I t :15a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Sunday School - 9-.30 Lm.

Bn 'F d Cll_... otbnal
-~ 01!n0r of 51. Rl ..124 .t llladbwy Rd.
!If
_Miniaer: Doua Shamblin
, ' · Yoolh Miniater: filii Amboi&amp;Cr
Sunday School - 9:30 LID. .
Wollllip- 8:00a.m., 10:30 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Sc1Vioes - 7:00p.m.

a.-

ltoJoklol Lite
• SOON. 2nd Ave., Mlddleporl
Putor: Lawrence Foteman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wcdnosday Scrvia:l- 7 p.m.

a.-FollotrUipC..IIr
Salem St, Rutland
Putor: Robon E. MIIIOCr

Sunday School- 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Yooxh Fellowlb1p, Sunday· 6 p.m. .

Latter-Oily Samts

''

ML Ulloll BIPIIIt
· Putor : Joe N. Sayre
s.....y School-9:45 a.m.
. EV.nins- 6:30p.m.
W - y SciYioeo ·6:30p.m.

-~

Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Stt..rnllo Wonl otrllllll
Pallor: Dovid Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Eve~m, • 7 p.m.

, .... Cllapd ()pnl Bible Clludl
923 S. 'lbinl St, Mlddlepon
Pulo&lt; Michael Pansi&lt;J
Sunday .ervice, 10 a.m.
ThWiday service, 7 p.m.

Pulor: KeJib Rader

Sunday School - '1:30 Lm.
Suaday Eveaina -7 p.m.
W - y Servioao -7p.m.

Cai•Ol]' Bible a.Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
l'aslor: lltv. Blackwood
Sunday SdJool- 9:30 a....
Worship 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday S&lt;rvi&lt;e- 7:30 p.a

(Pqmeioy Municipal Buildins audilofium)
·
P.-: Jim Codne•
Wonhip servicos: S~y. tO a.m, IL 6 p.m.

Sunday SdJool- !1:15 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m:
Bible Study Tuaday -10 Lm.

Chrcll
,_,Rev.Roy IFy
McCarty

Foldore•• klper-larQotol
PUIOr: Rev. Franklin Dlckena
Servia:: Friday, 7 plln.

111&lt; C.lebnlloa C..llr
· 320 E. Maill St., Pome10y

•
I'OJ
Pulor: R&lt;Jben. E. Rollinson

R-C

S...y !moot -9:30a.m.

su-a._...

•

CHrdl ota..W

RIMI 'CIIudloiQitol
· Plllor. £illene B. Underwood

.

Rodlat fJnt laptlat
PaW: Jtov. Lawrence T. Haley
YoWl~ Pulor: Aaron Young
·S...y Scllool- 9-.30 a.m.
W~p-10:40LII., 7:00p.m.
W...,_y Sc1Yica- 7:00p.m.

.....

)

l'ulor: like OIJ&gt;Iey

W~hip-10:30a.ID.

Wonbip • i0;45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wc,dnerday SciYic:eo - 7:00p.m.
. fJnt llopllal Clludl
, _ , Mart Morrow
ljlh and Pal me:• St, ,Middlepon
Sunday School·· 9:15a.m.
Wonbip- 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p:m.
Wednaday Sc1Yice- 7:00p.m.

..·

I

S\llldly School-9:30a.m.

~s:"..!:!:a..r.!''

Information on the school counseling pro8!'1111 was given by Vivian
Radabaugh, Vinton County Schools
assistant administrator at the recent
meeting of Alpha Omicron Chapter, ,
Delta Kappa' Gamma. held at the ·
McArthur Melbodist Church.
Radabaugh said ihat each stUdeni
is counseled on schedules, and that
parents and teachers are invited 'to
be on intervention teams and help
with studies. Included in the new
program are fewer study halls, an
hour at noon for lunch and speeial
activities, double periods· for teach- ·
ing reading and writing together.
special education students partici'
paling in regular classes, counseling
on domestic violence, organizational
skills, and studies on social ano;l
emotional p~oblems. , .
Judy Fetherolf had the invocatiOn
before the dinner served by women
of the host church. Gay Perrin read
her poem, ..The House with No One
In II. .. Tables ·were decorated in a
Valentine motif with favors being
valentine pincushions. Members
shared household hints in a "getting
to know you .. segment. ·
............ ~··'"•·'
During the business meeting
Carol Eberts read a thank you letter
from Frances Graham, stati: editor.
Cards w~f!: signed for '~)vii• Childs,
Dorothy Woodlird and Eleanor Essman. It was voted to return Esther
Mac Cassill to the active memher;
list.
Nominations for new membC111
w~re read. February birthdays wen:
recognized, and those who have
·been members lor I 0 \o 19 years
were n:cogni7.cd and each one was .
presenied a carnation.
•
Members frqm Meigs County ·.·. .
.. allending were Fern. Grimm, Gay !.~
Perrin, Marjorie Fcuy and Nellie ·,
Parker.
. N~xl meeting will be a joint
.meetmg at the Umverstly of i Rto
Grande Student Annex, March · 8, ·'
noon. Beta Alpha Chapter will he
the host unit

POMEROY-- Free boating skills
course, ·sponsored by U. S. Coast
Guard Auxiliary. stltrting Tuesday,
7:30 to 9:30 p:m.

""t . Commuaion- 10 a.m.

Puklr. E. l.anw O'Bryan1
s...day Scbool- 9:30 a.m.

fll28·1Ml2 .

POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

Wonhip Service .. 9 a.m.

Sunday Scbool - '1:30 a.m.
Wonblp -10:45 Lm.
..
., flnlllapllat
, _ , Paul Slinoon
l!oot Main St.
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m.

~ Lit• Cftllr
'Futl.:()oopol OlurdJ"
Paaccxa John 1L PaUy Wado
603 Seoond Ave. Muon
n3-50t1
SciVi&lt;e time: Sunday 6:00 p:m.

J

Pad Cllapol
. Sunday Sdlool · 9 Lm.
. Wollllip • 10 Lm.

H,..U_Ho.,.Q......
'*-«: Roben Manley
Sunday School - '1:30 Lm.
W-ip • 10:45 ~.m., 7 p.m.
Thlllldly Servia: - 7:30p.m.
. Laanl ClllrFne MotJ. II I Clludl
- =·Peter Tremblay
Sunday 5cbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip -111-.JO LIB.... 7 p.m.
W - y Servia: -1:00 p.m.

...._.1'111111 Qudl olctarlal
It
, _, Suol Brown

.._ nna lllpllot a.-

calendar---,;._-

of · bids for new ~&lt;instruction and
renovation.

,_,RoprWa""" ·
S...y School - 9-.JO a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
• • Wednelday Scrvlciea -7 p.m..

. Lelln,W.VLittl
r -: Jolllllfoll
Sunday Scllool- 9-.30 LIL
Wonbip -7:00 p.m,
W - y Bible Study - 7:00 P·•·

,_,lltv. Mary M&lt;Doniel
SuDday Servlca: 10 Lm. 4 6 p.m.

Pallor: Charles Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 Lm. •

.,_,r:

r-roy, Hatriooovale Rd. (RL143)

-Slrw.M~OH

MIMin•

W..,..llllltQI% rCII.....,
75 Peul Sl., MlddleporL
Jtov. lolln Neville
Cltildtto'r aervioe'- 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 7:30 p,m,
Wednaday Servia: - 7:30p.m.

Zloa Qudl ofa..taa

FneWIIa.ciotCI!udl
· Alb - . Middlepon
P -: Leo Hay111111
Sunday S...ia: -7:30 p.m.
School- IO..m.
.W
y SciYioe-7:30 p.m.

0

.

·--a..dl

BwoutOub: '.......,..
Olcl American LA: • Holt,

" - ' (~f¥8 portl
Pator: Vcmapyc Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 Lm.

I

I

Wonb•p- 10:30 a.m., 6-.30 p.m.
Wedoclday Servioes- 6:30p.m.

St., Middlepon
Suqday acbool- 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip • II Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wedoclday SciYia: -7 p.m.

_ _ ,.

PlaoGrwe-H
a..ra
1/2 •lleoftltl. 3lS
, _ , Jtov. O'DeU Manley
Suaday School· 9-.JO LID.
. Wonllip • 10:30 LID., 7:30p.m.
W......,y Servia:, 7:30p.m.

-llldpChrdlofQotol

SeDd q I 'M- to .\Jill Landen,
Crellton Syndicate, 5777 W. CentUry Blvd., Suite 700, 1M Anples,
Calif. 90045

,

Wonblp . !O:JCi aa.
W - y Service -7pa.

Ott1cr C tlU rctws

S...y Schooi-10Lm.
Wonbip • 9 Lm.
Tbunday Servioes ·6:30p.m.

Cllarcll
l..aldiaaOeetRd..Jtov. DeMy Klaa
.
Suaday ........ 'I::!OLJII.
_ , . ......... -7 p.m.
W-yJlftyer__,_7p.m.
-

Ke. Qood, Cllrtal
Wonbip • 9-.30 L...
Sunclay Sdlool- t0:30 a.m . .
r--JcffiCf Wallace
Ill .... :lid Sunday

sorority
hears about
school
counseli,ng

.

~,.

Youlh Miaialer. Bill Frazier
S...y Sdlool- 9-.JOa.m.
Wonllip- 8:15,111-.JII....., 7 p.m.
Wednelclay Servioao -7 p.m.

TV ratings may get ..------Family Affair-----...... Teachers'
some fine tuning

.........

r rt a.rG ela.tlt

..

p_, CJarlea Novillc

-=Rev. Viclors.aiday Sdloal '1:30 LOI.
Wonbip • 111.8, 7:30p.m.
Wedaeaday Savico -7:30 p.a~.

-AI-

M' i"

_,_

~:":!.fl.

'.

�•.

,. •.. The.,..,
UMW discusses social jssues

Friday, February 28, 1997.

Frldey, ,...._, 21, 1117'

Pomeroy• ·~ 9hlo

Sentinel

Public NoUcli

•

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

.... "' .... Ohio........,"

1st

Toddlers to Tassels will host the
event.

The traveling prize was won by.
Ann Colburn and the hostess gift
was won by Frank Broderick.
· Guests auending were Ann Colbum, Harold Blackston, Frank
Public Notice
Public Notice
Broderick, Jeff Darst, Megan Dyer
and Ken Harris.
NOTICe 01' PUIUC ' ....... - - Qlorla KloM,
Becky Baer of the Meigs County
Clerk, prior 10 lleroh 10,
HEARING ·
Extension office will do a demonThe llelge County 1HT 11 114-H2·2- In
stration at the March meeting.
Commt.. ton•re will hold older 10 eneure thlt ,our
will
. be
lbe Ural of two . public n11d1
h18rtna• 11 the 1111111 ao00n1modlled. Till illlgl
County Commle1tonere County Courthou.. II
Olllol, CourthOUII, hlndll _$pld lCCIII"II.
.P - r .·Ohlo onllllnlhiO,
'Wllltwn - - .......
1HT
II
2:00
p.m.
for
the
until 1:00 I·"'·•
The annual Handmade Holiday ant High School and the Mason · craftsmen and local ci~ic organiza. pui'poee of provldl"g th..
10, 1117,11111 ..., ...
Treasures Spring Edition- Craft County Extension Homemakers lions.
public lnform1t1on 1nd IOIIIIeciiO tile llelgl c-,.
· Show will be held March 8 al the organi~ation . lri. 1987~ the GFWCExhibitor space lias been sold recelvln~ oommtnll 11 to Comml .. lonere, lletg1
Courthou .. ,
Point Pleasant National Guard Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club out each time · weeks before the the lVI teblllly ot trent County
PomerOy, 01110 41711. .
fundi
fro111
the
Ohio
An;nory on US Roure 62 north' in joined as a co-sponsor. In the fall of event and this year is no exception. Deplrtmtnt Of O.V.Jopllllnl ·
. .tenet Howard, Prnld•nt
Point Pleasant.
1992 the Wahama High School At the show there will be handmade FY 1H7 Smel Clllu CDIIQ .
..... Countr
CCMMIIItiDMn
' This show will be open free of Home Economics Classes became dolls, dried flowe&lt;S, ·wood crafts, Wlter end Senlhlry Sewer
charge from 10 a.m. _lo 6 p.m. that involved and are sponsors again this ceramics, rugs and a variety of gift Progrem trent fundi for (2121; lTC
Melfi• County.
.
Jay.
year.
giving ideas along with special
Public Notice
Tht CDIG Wiler and
The craft show was initiated in
The sponsors expect to have spring holiday items for sale. Con· Senlttry llwer Pr:1ram
the fall of 1985 by the Home Eco- ~pproximately 83 booths of hand- cessions ·will be offered by the · provide• lundlng to OCIII REQUEST FOR PfiOP08AI.
govarnmanta to provldt Notice lo lltuowlneue
. nomics Department of Point Pleas·. made crafts and food from area ~ason County Homemakers.
wettr lnd aenlllry - r ·~en dart:
llrYICII It prlmerlly I n _ . . _ with -uon.
realdtnllel ereaa and to 307.81 of lhl Ohio RIVIHcl
beneftt It ...., *»% 1- to Code, ..11111 bide witt be
I
moderete
Income recohied by 1111 ·1oard of
llelge
County
hoUIIholcll.
Clllllnt are enoouraged Commt .. tonere, Court
to attend lhll mHitng on Houaa, Pomeroy, Ohio ··
llerch 10, Itt? to make 45718, until t:OO 1.m. on
euarc"'.:e 1nd to provkll onday tOih, Itt?. .The
pub lc Input on vartoue blda will then ·Ill openld
actlvltl•• which mey be end reed lloud It ~:DO p.m.
on u-.y, 101h,_II9T for
... In thlt program. tile
folo ut.1g puroWI:
H e plrtlolpent .will nHd
IUXIIIIry .tldl (lnlerpretlt, . FUIIHIIHING OF VARIOUS .
bralllld or ttped meterl1l, GRADISOFBrrUM~
MATERIALS THAT MAY IE
•••letlv•J!I•tantnJ . device, REQUIRED
IV THE MEIGS
other) d to • lAbility,

Craft show scheduled for March

,...---~The

='f:

Winning Bagr--___,

• ,.

•
'

'
Public Notice

Public Notice

COUN'IY HICIHWAY
DIIWI1l!ENT

Horizon Felr
"'New
Progr1111 grant Iunde lor

llcl ~lillY ...

pick
U!' II lhl llelgl
County, lnigln•tr't Office or
thl Olf"l o~ the llelge

Houal~

MeljiCou

•

The CD::r New Horizon
F1lr . Hou•ln~ progrem
provldel fund ng to local
. C~IItla,_a.
governmenh
to
1111
Of lllelga County 1Hirmellvety further fllr
Comnwletla..-. may ICCept houelng In 1ddlllon lo
.... . . _ lllcl, Of·- t h e 1ollvllt• unclertaken with
belt bid lor the Intended Formule Iunde.
Cl~n1 .Ire _
eneou11ged
f~PrpciM, .............
rtght 10
lnd/or retect 10 lltlnd thll m..llng on
•llf or 1M 1 end/or lily MitCh 10, 1197 to llllkl
pert ....,., ..... wll ....... IUl~nl 1111d 10 provide
I untreGI to IIIII lllllder pu lc Input on v1rtoue
wiiiGtl 18 In thl bett lnllrelt ICIMtlll Wh)Ch lilly be
unclerllltom ln.lhll P"+•n.
:.:::.:{!=:~
II 1 J*llclpent will . loercl of Melge County IUXIIJiry aida (Interpreter,
Cetuwu lltlon~~a
brtlllld or ttped materiel,
12111, 21 rrc
IMIIIIve llattnlnJ devlet,
other) due to 1 lAbility,
,..... Glorlt Klole,
PUbHc Notice
Clerll, prior to March 10, '·
1197 II 814-lt2·2185 In
NOTICE OF PUIUC
order to enture lhot your
HEAliNG
will
be
The Meta• ·· County fttldl
Commtoelonara ·wm hold .accommodllld. Tht lillY:
.the flret · ol two public County · Courthou•• 1
h.e ertnga ~~ the llelgt hlndiOIIpped aCGIIIIbllt. .
Wtlllen comllllnll will Ill
County Climmllllonera
Office, · Co!lrthouee, aooeplld until I :00 p.m.,
P-oy, Ohio DIIIIIWOII 10, lllreh 10, 1197, and may 111
IH7 11 1:15 p.m. for the 1011lled 10 the llelge County
purpoM of providing tho Commleelonero, llelge
publlo lnformetlon 1nd County Courthouu,
.-Ivins commtnta II to Pomeooy, Ohio 4576t.
JIMI Howard, Pretldtnt
"" •••from
tebllltythe
of '""'
·Iunde,
Ohio
, Metga County.
Commllolonera
oap.tment ot Dlvetopmtnt
FY 1187 1101111 C:ltlel CDIIQ (2) 24, 2il (3) 5 3TC
- ·-····-

.

• • • • •••
•

March 9·
March 15-

The baking cont.St on lemonade
.cookies will be judged at the March
meeting. Ha,zelton ha~ the closing
prayer.
·

.March 22·

Pa11eroy,

March 23·

Your 'sins shall be as white as snow

March 29March 30.

F!tlUAEI

J.AM-?Oz·eeee fn '"" $3.99

Per Min. Mutt Be 18 Yra. Sarv-U
(619) 6&lt;15-&amp;G0.

SPORTS FUN!
POINT SP!IEADSII
HOROSCOPES!
FIIANCI,IIQAPSI

,

Wantad To Buy Used Mobiltt •
Homes. Call : 614·446..0175 Or

304-675-5965.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Cal'l, e1..:
«6-1800.
Wanted To Buy : We Bur Junk
Car1 1514·441· 7278, Or 114· . . .
9062.

f

EM PLOYMENT

SERVICES

You Can Find Your Special
Someone Nowiii1·80CH78·4780 110 HelpWant~
E1L 4125 $2.99 POl Min. Mull Bo
18 Yra Old Sorv·U ~019) US· AVON I All Artll t Shlrle,·
1434.

Spears, 304-1175-14211.

40
2 Black

Chaw,

Giveaway
Female Pupple1,

112

112 Glrmfln Shepherd,

814-448·1947.

'

Able Avon RepreMnlatlvea
needed. Earn man., fDr Chrlat·

:;.:~•!t::::~~~. ~:.
Rep.

•

••

AR!IORISTWANTED

ARE 'IOU WANTING 10 RE·

,•

LOC/irE? Wt wo lc»&gt;dng lor on

7 Ytor Old Springer Spaniol, oJ&lt;pOIIoncod Fo!8mal&gt;a-lor
Spayed, Roglotorod N- Room . -111od.OUIIIII'T-C..
To Run. 814-245-5382.
SoMoo. Good '1'£01'1.£"- .'
and up.D-data undlrttn:~ng at .
~KC Registered Cacllier S~nlel
· ArlloricuiMeaMuiLMaiRiolnlide Or Outlide For Uore lnforsunw To: Mki OtVa TrM S~rv~Ca• 1;
matiorfiC~Il 814-~3149.

FrH For tl.a'ullng Away Side By

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

Free Puppies : 7 Weeks Old. Catlie /Part German Shephard , 614·

Wltllce Maker 61+3J'i-8278.

1100-

f&lt;Ne." ........... Ohio

43131r Phane11..t.-al7·5408.

t.

AVON Saln $8 -$15 /Hr. No

Door To Door. ""Bonuaea• Fun 1
Eaayl 1·800·827·4840 lndiSIII
flop.

·

l l a t e i - - C o.,

-3703.

To Good Homo: 1 &amp; 112 Year Old
Dog, ·Golden Relrlaver I Borde&lt;
CoUll MIK, Sholl, Tags, 814-388·

niJit be

18 ,_,a Of' older, ffw to .•
IIBVtll, 814-266·2950 11-4:30 M.f, '

· balore March 710 ljlpiy.

··-

11824.

income.

60 Lost and Found

or 1· E

Black lab wlpurple collar, ft)ale.
REWARD! Trafllc Circle area .

304-117H358 or 304-675-2151 . ·

'

Found: Madium ' Size Black Part

Chow, S14-387-71ZI.

LOST: 6 1/2yr

.
.•

old, .Miniature

'
I
;

Schnauzer., Salt/pepper,' mostly
Gray/black aame white. Last

l&amp;tn Sat. 2·1·97 Name Otto Jo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

I

seph-REWARDI304-417S.22t 5.
LOST: Gold Neck Chain, 1ome·
whore near Foodland. REWAROI

.

Clly ol Oolllpolll

• SWimming Poolllo""IIOf

304-1175-3227.

'LHOguarda

Young Golden Retreiver found
Forest Run Rd area, S14-0G2·

.'

'

3012.

. Yard Sele

70

o..aes

Gslllpolls ·
I VIcinity

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

'*·

•

ATV s, Spas, 4-Wheelers
1

'

Drag Cars from Kanawha Va,ley Dragway

••

..•
•

'

-·cruise In "**

.

WANDA

BINGO

'
'

I

'
'i
I

f

•

••
•

'

dlepor~ lorll)Orly C&amp;K

~Dad"... Ill lqw ,_

HAM IS

Louks, Syracuse. ·

•

ROAD

WICKS
HAULING

ao

'

"

'

r

Ma1ket.

Public Sele
and Auction
CONSIONMENT
AUCTION

Wanted: All T~pe. · Of Farm Ma·
chlnery, Tractors, Lawn &amp; Gardan, Construction Equipment &amp;

Tools. To Consign

Call By March

•••

HELP WANTED

MenMI:&gt;monearn~..ttJr

asaembling ciJQ.I it t;llllrdtleltc·
trorlc QJil'lf)Onents at hama. Ex· ·
perience Uf1MC8ssary, will'aln.

lrTYnediate opM.ngs yout local
area. Call 1·520·680·'7891 EXT.
01094

.

-'1

1

,.

MerChandise, ~~-------------- '1

.

·'
15th . To Ba Us!ed - E TYPISTS,
In Advertisement . Stale Route PC Ultra nttded. 145,000 In· : • ·
775
Route 141, Wilgus , OhiO. come potenii•l. Call1 · 100-513- . n
Saturday April Sth, 1987. Bull.,· 4343 Elll
Auction Service. 61•·643·0 281,
Ho••••••• NeadH. For Home 1
614-4143-29011.

a.

na

a.v-..

·

Showa. I 'lbu Would L... To Elm

Auction I Flea Market Merc:han·
dlse, For Sale Br The Skid . B14·

t

Loll 01 FrM Jewelry Plue H- 1
AFun Filled' Evening Call 1!4-

,,•

2Sa-1210.

Ou11&gt;0t1tm Thoroololl · Part·Timo •'
And Fun. Tlmo Pooldono A••ll· ' ··
oblo To Pro.ldo Oulpllllent .._
tal Health Ser'vlcea Tl 'Adultt ,, ..

And lOr Children. Mull ~ Ll· ·J;
PUBLIC ~CTION
- . 1 ~Of Ucenou,. Eiglble. 1&amp;,
Evory Solur&lt;loy night O:OOpm. 202 Poychology A11l111n~ COunHior ""
SecOnd Avanue, Middleport· Trolnoo, LPC, LSW, LISW 0 ••~
Ohlo.Tools, toy1, hounhold, etc. LPCC) In CounNIIng lootot1 ,
Not r11ponalblt for accldonta. Work Or PM:olo~ in Ollie. ,,;
Tormo r! .,. ctllt
Pr••noe
To a~ • n 1 ·.n
Wllh
Pr
..
louo
E•PtrltNe
IU "I
- · -tloft
- .........
.lmAMIIyUC.I ~ (¥ 11a1i ol ONo.

.....

--a... ·'
..

~

SI4--21112,Conoig1mon1""" . eomo~Pllll!M.,.
~~ And .., llti •. ~
•~r ' ~-N l!lnoJ RIIJj- .

,...,oon lolcllon eo...,..,
full d1111 aucdonHr, cornpllll
Rick

1-

euctlon

Pomlroy, Ohio . •

-.Ohio I

-t

MrYtoo. · Ltoonoool

=

To Sherrr GorMn. HuMUt "'- ..,.
IOUt'lla .......,., Wll •• lll ,._ ,fj,

..... Inc., tote ...

.

......

Clalllpoii~Oiilo
....'7:
j
114-4-4"
• EOEIAA &amp;..... J ''

Y11aiola. 304- • •

Jlj,

77H7110r304-~7.

'

.

'.

I

.

Inside rard sale· March 1, 3, 4.
One mile up Silver Ridge Rd. J ';:~~~~-:---- - •
acrOSS from Eas1ern High School, 17
SR 7 between Chester and TupW4NTED •· Experitnc" .
pers Plains. 1985 Ford van, chest Aooloro,, Carpenters. Minimum ;
freezer, dryer, refrigerator, table Of .5 Years Experience. Truck. 1 '
and chairs; large filing tlbinet, Hand Tools /References A Must ~
couch, vety old book, dishes, so App licatio ns Are Available At
rorth. 2s· color TV with remote, 1403 Eaatern Ava., Gallipolis, OH.
new ratcMIIOCkel set. $1.00/box Mon -Fri, 8 A.M. To 5 P.M . (81-4, :
fu ll,lllJch mort. 614·985--4256.
4.46-4514.
"

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

...

.;j•'

Inside yard . sale- Frida~. Feb.
28th, 12:00-4:00: Saturday, March
1st. 10:00· 4:00 : Monday, March
3rd, 10:00.4 :00 on the -T" in Mid-

.POST 467

BEECH GROVE

•

J I D' s Auto Parti. .Buylng 111.1
vage vehiclea. Selling pariS. 3Q4!. 1
7n.5033.
, 1

So!1HJ (118) MH434.

Side Upright Freezer Refrigenuor

,...

'•

·'

fit 288B $2 . ~
Per Minute. Muat Be 18 Yrs.

•·r ---......___________..;..__..,

..

1

Clean Lalt . Model Cart Or

'·9QQ-5?0-5em

STAR BURST ·
$1500.00
$50e00orll0fl

•

Trucks, U~90 Modtlt Or N. . .r.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1000 Eatt·
om -..e. GaMipolil.

'TELL YOUR

r.:

The New No. 12 Stock Car Belonging·to Rusty Wallace.
Radio 101.5 Live from.1:00 pm,. • 4:00 pm

FOR PAUL

Gdl""' 01145831.

UVE PSYCHICS!

•.ooo

Meigs County .Kart Association •

• DONATIONS WILL ~E

Mllflln, 014-8112·7441 .

CALLNOWI
'·!"P-17'-tap2.
EJt pl2
$3.99 Per Mirollt· Mull Bo 18 Yro.
So!1HJ (819) IMH434.

=

Big Bend Mea Goldwlng ~asoe: (Chapter E3) with coffee
break and donuts..
·

Stihl Chain Saw Carvings

Ftmlio ""' Tallo,
Walks I Friendship. Send Rt·
pilot To: CLA 308. c/o Golllpolll
Dllty Tribune, 825 Thlr&lt;l Avonue,

...\tll FISH 1ft.

Radio 101.5 Live from 1o:oo a.m~' • 1:00 p.m. with three (3) ·
hours of Special Gas Prices

.

-ng

MilquM, fulnhuro, gtuo, chi'!'!&gt;
col"'·
lampt, ouna, ••••••
C-nton· lltlt . .roya,
: II~ IPPI'ai.Ult, Otbr;

HIYOUYII
LOHELY?
LNEOIALSII

...,,., ...

-. ~114-4*:11142. "

Yrt.

--·

Schedule of E,vents

Recreational Fair· Boats,

Gen.._,
ol'lp From -

·

Done?

(Sind,ay)

Ann Lambert held a quiz on presidents. Celebrating birthdays in February were Margaret Haning and
Louise Radford. A group sang_"Let
Me Call You Sweetheart" and every
sang "Cruising Down the River."

U.S. Cu.,_,

El&lt;. ~~- _ ,
II.T.. Coin Shop, 151 SoQond

Need Any Type
of Cleaning

8:0Ct' A.M. ·12:00 A.M

Reponed ill were Bernice Hawk,
Roy Holter, Clarence Story. Eva
Robson, Eona Clark and Belva
Willard
The literary p~gram consisted·.
of readings on Jove and Valenline's ·
Day by Linda Schoeparer, Barbara
Fry; Ethel Brandt, with a skit by
Muriel Bradford and Vada Hazelton .
Bob Reed read "No Wonder" and
Bill Radford, "Bonus and Water
Logged."

12.1t

Truddlg Co.

tna..-.

'

,• •Sat)

A ftCent rheeting of Hemlock
Orange ·2049 was preceded by a
soup ·supper.
··
·
Rosalie Story, master, conducted
the meeting which opened with the
pledge ·11\(1 songs, "Be a Booster·:
and "AniFrica, the Beauliful ."
Highlights of lhe National
Gran11e conventipn were given aiKI·a
· wp.rkshop ID b. be held On March 22
was announced with reservations to
~jmade· ~y March IS.

Pr~1830

Silr

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

6:00 A.M. • 12:00 A.M.

Grange plans baking·contest

Rim,

Ditmondo. Mdquo - , . Qald

:: ,

ot the o:::~c

And Gold Col,., Prooi-

VO&lt;'

.

992·7339

He~lock

.........
•.,.,..

1
Ablllllull Top Dol•: All' U.S. iii

AHorney William Safranek

:::C

St. Rt. 7 North

March 8·

Notlalto Aaphalt c : -

SIO. w..ted tb lur

pl o• e an'od (ull9?2 2156

Ji'

GRAND OPEN-ING

March 1

............ iotld:
radio tal1111etry
It oiMII be the

Business Services '·

GRUESER'S
GARAGE.

TAZ'S MARATHO

In obearvance of 4-H week, Feb. 23-March 1, a grocery big decorating conteat waa atl~ for
abtth gradlra. Jenlfer Chadwell of Riverview waa the winner In the Eattlrn Loc_
al School· Dis·
trlct. Hant·Sharon Smith, wllo judged the eritrlll, admire• the wlnnlng big which featured the
4-H C~ outlined with green yarn and colorful dlalgns on the educatlonet, nutritional, and
con..vrion atpletl of the youth program.

Public Notice

H11e11 bldo wilt 111
with •llllnt
by "" loartl of
enol eny
Aulhorized AGA Distributor
111111
Ctunty
th81 owey be
Lit~- a orne~
~Welding SupplieS • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Commlttlonere, Court
otherl M pan
Septic Systllll•
Hou11, Pomeroy, Ohio
conlreol. Tho
Services • Sleel Sales &amp; FabrlcaHor, • R&amp;~air Welding
48711, -until 1:00 e.m. on comptett ,oylle., 1h1ll be
Tnlll• • .
! . • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool. Dressing • Ornamental
llondey IOih, 1•1. The eupplled, lnel1ll1d ond
H®MSitle
St., • Stal111, Railings, Patio Furnilure, Fireplace
bldt will then bl opened we"•ntecl by the 11lemetry
Items, Planter Hangers, Tfellises &amp; lots of olher sluHII
R-onllble R*•
lnd rMd aloud It 3:30p.m. ayttem manuf1c1urer to
on llond1y, 10th, 1•7 for
1 1lnglo oource of
JoeN. Sayre
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
111e fol-ng purchltt:
reoponalbltlty.
·
We will worl&lt; within your budget.
FURNISHING OF VARIOUS · Tht ecope ollhl1 project
Sayre
QIIADIS 01' ASPHALT
covoro 1 Rodlo Telemetry
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
614-742·2138
CONCRETE 111AT MAY IE COntrol oy111m to Include
108 Pomtroy Street
Mason, WV
REQUIREDIYTHEIIIIGI towor . levol rtmotee,
...
COUNTYHIOHWAY
boolllf pump 11111o.n
•
DEPARTIIINT •
DEPARTMENT
remo111, well lleld pump
.,.ld II!IOI!Ioltlonl lillY Ill lid ::rcllleallonl moy be 1lltlon remotee· end PDU
piOitecl' up ·at the llelge plckl UJ! al the llotge monitor. 'The eucceeaful
c-r Engt-·• Ollie• or County EngiiiHr'~ Ollie• or bidder !lhtll oupply oil 8hop
tho Office of the llelga the Office of,... llelgl drowtnga
prior· to·
County Commllll-ra.
County Commllitlo...,.,
ln11111111on, all p1per work
'Tht lolld of lllfgl County Thlloofd of Mila• County ond fell neceo.1ery to
Commlellonere mey accept CommiMiono,. lillY accept obteln • llcen11 lor the
(6 14) 367 -0266
thlloWIII bid, or HIICIIht 11M toweet bid, or Hltclthl owner, ell oqulpme~l
~111. bid for the Intended b11l bljl lor th•· tntondtcl required by the echedule,
1-800-950 -3359
pUrpoll, tnd tlllfVII tilt purpott, lnd J't.. tvlt the Ill wiring 1nd anCIIIIry
rtght·IO IICICI!IIIncl/or retect rtght to IICICipfto.d/or N)lct 1qulpment, herdwero,
• Top • Trim • Removal
any or elt bldt •ndlor eny 1ny or oil bldl rend/or eny • o f t w • r • ,
1nd
• Stump Grinding
pen thereof and wlllaweld a plltllhtreolllld 1wl• awe!d a appun1nanctt nHdod for
contrect to .lhll bidder ,contrect to th1t bldtlor proper tnelllllllon enCI
20 Yra.
• Ina. Ownar: Ronrlle Jones
iohtch It In lho beollnt- which. II In thli'DII tnllrell operellon ol equlpllilnt. .
of IIIIa• County.
~I Mllge CouniJ';
The oyatam •peclfled
.~lorhl K'-1, c:teo1c
Qlorll KJ- Clelk
· herein 111111 be lhe 'product
lot,rd of llelge County loerd ol llllfO• County ol • manufectuNr who.e•n
,Commllllonere
·eommiHIDIIWr ·
d~monllllll II 1t11t llvl (5)
BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
(2121, 21 2TC ' ''
y11r1 of lllloloctory
(2) 21,21 2TC
financial obligations and arrange . a fair
'"
experience In lurnlehlng
and lnttalllng comp1r1ble
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
'
nolto tlllmetry aya111011 lor
Body
work,
car,
truck
P!-ibllc ij.otlce ·
keep
"exempt" property lor their personal use.
wlter end w.. tewiltor
a truck plllnllng,
lnttllltllone. Approllld
Tl'lis may include a car, a house, clothes, and
lllnUIICIUtlt: 1.IIJ.crO•
NOTICe
PUIUC
minor mechanical
· Public ~ce
H , INQ .
household gOods.
Comm. lne., OVerland P•rlc,
rep~ Jr.
The 111 .. 1 County KS. 2.Approvld Equel.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy conJacJ:
PUBUC NOTICE
Tune-upe, .Qt Chlnge,
Commlaelo~ll" will hold
All other •yellml will
NOnCE 11 hereby given lhl llrtl Of , IWO pllbltc require an electrlcel end
Wax,,Buffing
thlt on llturdey, llwch 1, hterlng• 11t. .th• llalga dlminllon•l eubmllltllnd •
Long
St, Rutland, Oh.
Attorney At Law
1197 It 10:00 e.m., II public · County CqJIImle.lonere 1111 or compor1bla
742·2935, Aik lor Kip
-.11 wiU be '"ld II 211 WHt Office, · Q,ourlhoutl, . lnotlllallono fourtHn 114)
(614) 592-5025
· Athens, Ohio
Second street,- Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Ohio on March 3, prior to tho bid and o~aln
'711011111
2/2Hi7 1 mD.
Ohio, lo eell lor caeh the t•7 at 1:011' p.m. for tho written 1pproval lrom the
following colltlrel:
· purp011 of providing lhl con1uHing englnnr (Triplett
!til Dodge Shedow public ·lnf,orm•llon end Engineering Slrvlclt, _II
recllvlng QRmmentl •• to lltchenlc Street, Pom1r0y;
113C8t8K1JII310111
ROBERT. BISSELL
Th1 Form1t1 lank tnd the evell•blllty of grant Ohio 4570) to bid. Tho 1111
CONSTRUCTION
S1vlngo
Compeny, Iunde lrom tho Ohio thall lnctud• n1m11 .1nd
Pom,roy, Ohio, r•••rv•• Dlpllrtme~Uf Devtlopment plione one numbere, Of both ·
New
.Home~ • VInyl Siding New
•New Homes
lht rtght to bid 81 thla oate, FY , .., 1, Comm.unlty Owner and Conaulllng
•Garages
·Garages • Replac~ment Windows
and 10 withdraw the above Houelng :.,Improvement Engineer lor protect• of
oolltltrll prior to salo.
almllar alz1 and pomplexlly.
•Complete
.Room Additions • Roofing
further, The it1t111tr1 Blllk ";r:"';':~ram (CHIP) The conaultlng 1nglnaer
Remodeling
,tnd · Sevlngt Compeny provldoe, funding : lor ,tb• ahtll bllho eoll judge •• to
COMMERCIAL
and
RESIDENTIAL
lmproviiJMint
•d
provlalon
.
tiiii'VII tho right to reject
whether tho allornete
Stop &amp; Compare
lilY or IU ~kit lUbin-. . ol offord.,ll' houolng for . equipment It cilnatdorod •n
FREE
ESTIMATES
FREE
Furtlilr, the 1bov1 tow~ end lllOdlrlll Income epprovad 1quel. Approval
.· ESTIMATEES .
.
colletli'lll will Ill aold In the peraona. '•
of 1n oltorn111 1y1tem by
614-992·7643
·~ourlflld lhe·•nglnHr wlll not relieve
condition II le In, with ·no
985~4473
m11tlng on the ollernott eyetem of
expre.. or Implied
(No
7/22/lfn
to make alrlcl adhoronc1 to th111 .
Wlrtlntltt gtvon.
to
provide
For funher Information,
1peclllctllono. 'The control
v1rloua 1ysllm 1ncl lt't components
conttc1 Jerry 11192·7&lt;130.
be ah•ll comply_ with all
(21 21, 27, 21; 3TC
1ppltcablo requlr...,lnll of
the lollowtng: Eloetrlc•l
Coclo· (nlllonel aft!l L~:~~· 1
Driveway LimestQne
537 BRYAN PLACE'
UL Compliance, N
Public Notice
Compllaneo ,
E
MIDDLEPORT.
Complete House
DUMP TRUCK
Compliance,
EIA
192·2772
and Trailer Site
Compll1nc1 , end . FCC
PUiuO NOTICE,
SERVICE
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
Till VU .... ol Middleport
3,
CompiiMICI.
Work, Bulldozing,
order to . Plene, Speclllclllone, and I•Re. .tllelll Willlows
wllhel to receive lfllld ., ,
U111e~ne ; Olllvel · • Backhoa, .Ttackhoe.
bhjl Jilr.jHOtRIIIIIZitlOn enoure lhlt your neodl will bid lormt m1y be oocured
. ' blrt'
~I billa ehlll be b1 occommodaled. The 1t tht olll'ce of. llalg•
Septic Systems
. • Sand ' ·
tiCII¥141. · In, and bid · •llalgt C,.nty CourlhOUII County Comlilllllonlra. A •5101'111 Doors &amp;
98!1 4422
Installed ·
~p~olflulloilo end a lltl of I• handlcoppldacce••lble.
ctepo11t Of 0 doll11re will Ito
~
Chester, Ohio
(614) 992·3838
coVW811 1mployH1 rilly be
Wrllten-commentt will • required ror 01ch aol of
211.111 mo.
obttlnad .from the VHioJge accepted until 1:00 p.m., · plane and epeelllcetlonl. •R... Aikltlols
Olflcll,loealld81 m ,._ Moreh 3, 11t7, and mey bo The lull omounl will be
Slriii,,Middloporl, Ohio. AI IOIIIIId lo 11M llelgo County returned wllhln thirty 130)
KIIIGS'
propo11l1 muel be Commltlinero, Melt• _days after receipt o blda. .
FREE 3 min.
H0111e Improvements
eubm- by 2:00p.m.
County • Courthoutl,
E•ch bid mutt be
111roh 30,1H7.
Pomeroy,
411711. ·
3351 Happy Hollow Road
Psychic
The lneu11nee Compeny
Jlnll 'word, Pretldent accompanied by olthor • bid
Middleport,
Ohio
45750
·
'
,_
C
nty
bond
In
an
amount
of
11!0%
reading for
muilt Ill llc1n11d to do
· 11'"'" ou
of the bid emounl wllh 1
New Homes, Additions,
Honest, Dependable
Commlatlonera . ourety tttlof•etory 10 thl
buelneae In tho Stole of
Siding, Pole Barns,
*Love *Money
Ohio end eholl htve 1n A. (2) II, 25, 21 3TC
and Trustworthy ladles
11. retina of A+ or betllr.
lfOtltlld ll1lg1 County
Decko, Painting,
•career *Health
. ready to clean your
The ltiiUIIIICI Agent muet
Pu
. bhll. Notice
Comlillltlonaro . or by
Garages, Porches.
t
bo
llconeed
to
do
'·"'
certified
check,
ceahtora
1 10
home or buslnesa.
Call Us For AFree
18+
tiiooln••• In tha Slate ol
chtcli, or letter ol credit
NO'l'ICE TO.CONTRACTORS upon 1 tolvent bank In the ·
Reasonable Rates
Estimate
1·800-992·4170
· Ohio.
·
lleled pripoull for the 1lftiOUnt of not 1111 than
614-742-3090
992-6342
(Diane)
, visa/me
: Tht VAIIflt of lllddleac:i:pootopnt I Pomeroy ~diD Tottnltlryl 1O% of. the bid amount In
614-742-3324 .
~III'VItlht right to
Sylllllll llfOjiCI will bo' IIYor ol lhe tforettld llolga
or 992·7275 (Brenda)
1·900·567-3727
614-742-3076,...
or reject any and
recalvod by tho llelgt County Commtaoton,re.
cjuot•llono or to requeol County C:ollillillalonera, 11 lid Bond• ehell be
fulura bid q..-Jont el HI their olllf'i 11 I hi 1ccomp1nled by Proof of
Happy Ad
cOocflllon.
CounhoUH; Pomeroy, Ohio AUthority of the offlctet or
•,tony bidder wlehlng to 407111 unlit IO:OO o.m., "'"' olgnlng tho bond.
H.O.M.M.
"HAPPY BIRTltDAY
l)ibmlllftltnlll quoiiiiDIII llorch 10, 1187 end then II
lid• lhtl! be •••tid lnd
'
AND
,CHARUE"
to IlioN whlcl! ere -...c111ec1 1·,00 p.m. 11 . 111d office m1rlced •• Bid for Po111troy See111• like no! long· ago
TRANSPORTATION
FLEA IIARIET
may do. IO with full openod end rnd aloud .for Radio Telemetry Syetem . you were seven. TOIJay
Ill IM8UlEm SEIVICE
•plenllton of th1 optlona. llltlollowlng:
Project and m1llod or you turn eleven. We love
Transportation for
Friday; Marc• 7
l!ollclll muet heve •
Provide IWO~nda....,..lnt clellvorldto:
Individuals using
nt- rett for tl 1H11 operetlng r . lo ,...,_
II • 1 • ·
c ou nty
you.
'Grandma Ruth,
control
10AM·9
PM
wheelchairs. Medicaid &amp;
monlhe.
Grandpa Larry
IPECIFICATIONS:
loope . lor a Suptrvltory
Medicare accepted.
Felney-Binnell Poll 121
"':ISO tndlvld IIUOift flint"' Contro·l . tDd
Dell
Ohio
Doctor's visits,
American
Legion
Annex
.,
· ue • ..,...,.... , •., Acquloltlon'' ayelem
hospital
visits, etc.
1111
Sl.-t,
Middleport
A
N
~WUNCEr.1
EN
T
S
Clllndlr ysar deductible
(SCADA) and one Portable
of blddore Ia
~.00,
B'Teblea
Phone
614-992·3053
lb'2o% _,.Y to
i)111 Unit (PDU) th•t meot ·
to all of I hi
Cllll RUII llozengo
Fax 614-992-3053
12,ooa,ooo per peraon or exceod tho foltowln~· Jroqulrennen,to contained In
lhttme
IIIIXImumt
It
1
d
ddl
1
bid
••ckal,
p1nlcularly
·
Pager
1-110().982-2327
742·2094
1
an I I one
co-p1y Doetora Offici cr •r
,...
Itt •No dlductlble)
crllorl1 1 ehown on pllnt,
tho Federal L11&gt;or
Pin 2849
'
drawings, .'~. and
Provlalonaand
21111'17 1 mo.
In
Memory
• tncludee: X-rey.e, Leb apeclflcallone provided In Davta-Bacon
W1gt1,
Work, and Dllgnoallc thti BID Peckel and on ftle nrloue
lnourance
'fll•llnit
with the Pomoroy VNllfll
v•rlouo tqUIIl
In Loving Memory of
(Ume StoneMaternity
1ny other Aclmlnl1tretor .11 hie office ·
and
Low Rates) ·
11 320 E.. · lien Street,
for 1
11..,_.
$7.00 pt11crlptlon cold Ito Pomeroy, Ohio 411,_.,
bond and
llo Ultd It·llhiJ'IIIIIO'I)
· The work ' lo · b1
bond for 1011%
GUINTHER
P1yellrlt S3oo for aoch and aocompll•hed under lhll
conltlei prlct.
who passed away
every accident (no aectlon eh1ll con1lot ol
bldde; moy withdraw
cllductlblo)
.
lurnlehlnt end ~rtlna up
bid within thirty 130)
10 years ago today,
WeltneM Pldl..o: $200 Jilt cit tlla varloul "'lillpmenl days Iller the ICiual dlle ol
Feb. 28, 1987.
yser per lneured for RouiiM nece~alry lot a complete lh• o~lng thereol. ~elgt
Limestone,
Phyalcele, Gynecologlcll control arotem to li~ncllon County Co1!'1ml11loner•
· You are gone but
Gravel, Sand,
1nd Pep Ttltlng, W•ll CIN tt epecllled herein end •• ree•rv• the right to waive
not forgotten. ·
1nd Child tmmunluttone ehown on the drawing I. lllf lnlor1011lllle1 or lo reltcl
.Top Soli, Fill Dirt
~ cllductllln)
The manulaclurl( lhlll any or all bldt.
Sadly missed
T-.Ufe tnaurence &amp;15,000 turnleh 1nd tntllell • (2) 20, 24,21 3TC
by the Family.
614·992·3470
JtoM Hetfth Cere, Hoeplce
John and .Amy Rice
Cere, end Convaleacent
of Streetsboro arc anA NNOUNCH.1E NTS
Fecllly
nouncing the birth of
Spinal llanlpullllono and
AiiJ- .
their fir st child,
llllonth Rete GUIIIIniH
Pick up dlocardtd
Meghun
Danccn, horn
lltlllll·ln Preacrlptlona, H
tppllenc.., baltorlea,
December 17, 1996.
dey eupply • 15.00
manymetttaa
12121. 21:
13r2:
3TC
infant. born at
.
.
motor blocke.
Meridin Hillcrest Hos1114-8112-4025 a am-I
In MemorY'
1 in Mayfield
t:feights, Ohio, w.lis
"HENRY
YOUNG'S
weighed 7 lbs. 4 oz. and
, CARPENTER"
CARPENTER
SERVICE
was 20 inches in length .
•R~
Addlllonl
• Bom: Dec. 211, 1113,
Maternal grandparoNiw Glrlgea
• Diad U.Ch 1, 1M
ents are Jim and Sharon
&lt;EIIctriCIIA Plumbing
! "Ded", tomorrow, II a
oflooflng
Louks
of
Long
Botlom
Racine American Legion Post
,year alnoe you left ut.
olntlrlor a Exterior
and patemal grandpar602 Wllt'be havlrig a Steak
"Dad" wa Ill riUi you
Pilntlng
are John C. and
, mon every day,
Dinner wtttt all the trimmings
Alia Cone,... Work
Anna Rice of Reedslt'llollll ii4M without
Sunilay, March 2,
(FAEI! ESTIMATES)
youlwl.
ville. Maternal greatV.C. YOUNG Ill
1i;30 AM·??.
You- 1 wondttful
112-6215
grandmother is Elma

Collo.· lllllll bide IIIII be
nuhed "' the lolnl of
111111
County
COIIIIIIIeelonera, Ceurt
MoUlt, Pomeroy, Ohio
41781, ...ut 1:00 •·•· on
llonclly lOth, IH7. Tilt
bltll '!'!" lhon Ill opened.
and rMd lloud It 3:11 p.lli.
11ft Monclly, loth, 1197 for
tlit lalla utng ,..,._,
FURNISHING OF ALL KINDS
AND SIZES OF
AGOREOATE 111AT IIAY II
IIEQUiREDIY'tHEIIEIGS
CQUNTYHIQHWAY

CCL celebrates Hu~band's Night
; Husbands' Night was observed at
A thank you note was received
I( recent potluck dinner held by _the • from Corky Kitchen for inviting his
lyl1ddleport q11a ConservatiOn or . her grandchildren to a special
tl.eague at the Rock Spnngs Umted children's programs. A donation was
Methodist Church.
made to \he OhiO Child ConservaHarold Blackston gave the bless- tion League Scholarship Fund. Plans
ing preceding the dinner with !\illy .. were made to serve the bloodmobile
Darst leading in the pledge and on April 16.
Mothers' Prayer.
The South Central District con' For · roll call members answered ference of Ohio Child Conservation
with whether they sew b41t0ns on League will be held at Rodney Unittheir husband shirts.
ed Methodist Church on April 18.

Public Notice

.QUUTI'OR~
Jlotloe to .,..... IIICIUDT J'OII PIIOPOIAI.

•

~:

Mll'lhl Poole preserued the prognll'l "Jolin Wesley · m.U comforters for the needy.
tnc1 Worb of Mercy. Then and Now,· when Alfred Unit·
Program raoun:eJ ~:hlimlan, Sinh Caldwell took
ed Melhoclisl Women mel recently a1 the ~:hun:h.
reports of mm~bers 1996 reading piOifllll which are due
The worship ~:enler featured an open Bible, a water by Mln:h I . President Nellie PDer aave a report from
pi1eher, bread, towel and candle. All of lhe members "Beacon of the Hills" on coming events in 1997. Alfred
joined in reading and discussion on social issues of John shcphenkss for 1997 is Evelyn Deem. Mrs. Parker had
Wesley's day, social jusli~:e, education, poverty, and the prayer l:alendar and chose Judy Malheny, de~eoness
health, which continue today, and lhe role of Christians in ev111gelism and church development a1 McDowell
Mission, Gary. W.Va.
~ith prayer and work.
: Martha Ellioll had prayer to open the meeting. · (:harlotte VanMeter was hostess and served sandFritndship calls for the last two months were 2S, it was wiches, bugles, and cookies during a social hour to those
~poned. and members shared thank you Jeuers from
named and Osie Follrod and Floren~:e Spen~:er.
·
Shelia Miller of Henderson Settlement, Emerson Dou.
.
glas family, June Steams, · Janet Evans, · and Norma
Next meeting will be at the church March 2&amp; with
Fleisher, a missionary. II was voted to send a gift of Mrs. Spencer as program leader and Nine Robinson as
ihoney for comfort materials to Knouy Ladies who hostess.

The Daily Sentinel• Page I :

\

.

.

�,...10 • The Dilly 81 llhlel

Seuti•el•
JIRA Cro..word Puzzle
1?

ALDER

I .

....

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•

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I I
, 7 11
pa '7

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-.., Si!lddet
E-ltnOodCui·
OooroiOr 8t 4-112·
741111 Aftor8:SI P.II:Ook HI.

Soulll .

O...braak C - In lliddl-~
Ohio 11 now accepting oppllcollonl lor STNA'o. Far mart lnlor. - , ... 814-11112-1472.

,_

......
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•••••
........

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.

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fill*'•

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DI'olllefiiOI

t K 10 5
• J 10 • 2
Eu&amp;
• J. 3 .
• K QI I 7
9 A 1D 9
9KI 532
• J. 7 ' f
• • 32
• $ ,3
•K

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118ody01 . . . 17P

Nor'tll

Local Trucking Company Hoo
Opening Far Dlopatcller NHd
E p1 A ad lrt lNI FWd. Ctl 1 ~

I

47!r' I

,.,_
nt

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.,n~ ....
.......

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IICRDII

PHJIJ,IP

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10 Looll-

111011 I

::r.:.a
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11c

•1
11 2,..__
-~~~~~~· .

. •b•tance

31 Call - - day
31 Did tee

1711U11finopklt .

--.........

21 =arc· '
23TanuuWr

24 Bu '. •

rr Sate_.,.

25 Frull_,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

,.

• Sllind
3D IIDUIIIaelln\

Weot N11111a EU&amp; .
36

VARMINTS II

PLAY CARDS

11

Pua

Paia

Pass

56

Allpau

Opening lead: a K

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31

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01111 ...
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u='••
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41 Chll••n
50-part
51 Larwe

Wbicb are your favorite. ads? My ·
vote goa to·lbose for Foeter's beer - ~.;.,+-+--1--1--4--+­
lbey are 10 fllnny. Did you see lbe one

in which the fellow comes upon 1
loc:lled door? He head-butts it and the
door falla into the room. Tllen we get
the voice-over: "Australian for lacksmith."
.
Today's deal is easy if you think of
·Jhe key piece of iaformation. How
Would you pllln the play in five J')ubs
after West bas led the spade king?
South'• lbree-dub bid in lbe balancing poaition shows some 14-IS points
and a.&amp;OIId six-ant or longer euil It is
called an intermedi8te jump overcalL
Perhaps Nor1h should haW. headed for
't hree no-trump, but at the time be
Z-2&amp;
made an qgressive leap to five clubs.
Aller winning the fint trick with
·dummy's 'spade ace, declarer ran the
• club jaclt to West's king. Even though
West tried to cash the spade queen,
!\OW COli€ TI\P..T
declarer couldn't avoid losing IW\)
Ol-E 1!1 N.WP..Y5
beart tricb: one clown.
·
.
YOU?
"Why did you jump to five clubs with
. only eigh~ points?" asked South.
. "it was pushy, I agree. But you

-on - ·

Call TOdAY Far FrH Mopl I
Owner Financing Info. Taka tOll
Off Uoled..l'ricol On Caoh Pur-

.._, .
Ni~e

SolellyOonir:
Brick Home. 3 Bedroom•.

-

• Haii 'LarDo Uvlng Room •

Dining Room Baumenl Cenlral
Air, Goo Hao1 Corpart 1 s -

Room, fence In Back V.rd,· L.oielledln Sunil! Drive, In Gall/po-

lio.

St500 par ocro. Coli far good
mop, IU 5113 e&amp;45.

450

Fwnllhecl

Tht'tl
YearaDrMna
llcenaed
Driving
· Gaad
-' ·
And 1870 121180, IWO bldu•orr-. rafrigExperltnce Required. Salarr: .,...,,, WI 11ovt, IWO r•r otd fur
15.50'/Hr, To Sllrt llacallan /Sick naco, WID, NC, 14000. 014-848Benefitl. Tr11inng P10:oidad. Send 2175ar.._.rntii8Qe.
4

Rooumo To: P.O. BoK 004, Jock·
ATTN : Caclllo.

~

1802 14x70 Moi&gt;Ho Ha""' On U

~E~~~~~~~~~=-~=7--1 574-25311.
Acrol, Porchu, $15,900,513fo Do

1884 14K70 Skylina I Acttl, 2
Bid""'""' 2 Dtlllo. Appllanco1 1
Any odd jobo, palnllng, gullttl Furnllura Included, Dock, Graol
claonad. 014-245-581lt or 304- Condillon, Now Sol-Up, 1 Milt
875-7112.
F10m RV.S. Paymonl LUI Than
::.::..:.:.:.::.------- 1Rtnt, Mull Soli -lnaH32.500.
Goorgaa Portable Sowmlll, don'l 814-307-74111,814 448-31182.
houl iogl 10 lw mil lull call
~1857.
tiiUfi ClayiDn 14x5e, 2br, 1 boll!,
like new cond. Call 30 .. -875·Homa typill· documtnll, 1pread 3000. •

ahHII. reaume, tltm

paper~,

ltoakkttping, ...,acrlplfon. R.l a-

1898 Mansion Villa 14x70 3 Btd·

aonabla rates, call Connie au- roomo. 1 Both, Bay Window, CA.
81~t .
882-«144. .
Profoliiarlll Tr• Sorvita, s ..mp
Removal. Frtt Eatlmat.. l lnauranca, - 1 . Ohio. 014-3118141,114-307·7010.

Now-1997 14 Wldt·t bolh, $8981
down, J139/ma, with approved
aedl. Cal1-800-111-en7,

t1111714x80 Glomour Boll!, $1 'lltl
Wahdna To 8tby1il In My Homo Mo., Free Dtlivet'y And Stl Up,
Coll304-738-72i5.
~forancal Upon Rtquell, 814·
2111-41111.
1007 18180 3 bedroom, 2: bath,
$1,3251-., $218/ma, hoe oklrlf lrJANCIAL
lng, 111iilh opproved credit 1-800'
~~~-----------· 1 :19~·~~~
77~7____________
210
Bullnell
1811 doublowidel1445 down,
•228/mo.- Free delivery &amp; aobip.
Opportunity
t-80CH111t-em.
!NOTICE!
.
OHIO \MUEY PUBLISHING CO. 11l87·14x80 W/Giomour bolh.
•t781n~~: FrM dttli'lory l 101-&lt;~P.
recommendt lh •• ,au d0 bu 1 I• onl" al Olik Wood Hom11, Nitfa
""'will paGflle you know, and
•
NOT to lhrouah lho WV. 304-755- 5885 .
mol until you ln¥811fgaled 111 Timo ..,_, E-Z Flftlool-.
. . ........_
·
2or3~nnd~ill0iti:­
L.argt Profit - -·From SIMI Freo 101-up &amp; dolivt!yl T llfdl .......... Notn. Ca. Award· -.no. NOII'Ioymonl .. Mill .
1,.llatlerohfll In Open Morkol 111117.
Slilel Or Con111UC1ktri. 303-758- tat T1m1 Buyoral E·Z Fl..,.lng 2
32110
Or 3 8edroom1, FrH Dtllvtryl
SoiUp Pa1n1onta Ar.ollnd SZOOI
ltMII Dtll
814·440·
No .......... TiR ..., 1111171
3310.
11 "WelcOme. Call lh•
.
1-t00-251-5070.
.

Raoma lot ,.,. • :or monfl.
-•ng o1 St20mlo. Qolio - -

Servlc:W

ma1285.
2 llodntam1.

t

·

Bam. lluot Soli

3Trolllflfotoolt.~71-1D70.

!IUS.

-wv.

odds?"

I

8

t

Budi!Jat Pric:a TranamluiO~I
Slarang II SIIII.OO and Up. Ulld

'

Rebull~ All Typo1, 0wr 10,
Tranarnlnlonl, Accoll Trtnaftr
CaMs 1 Rear Ends, tS14·2451

!illn

a••

Houl8hold ·
Goods

I

N._lank•. 1 to'n tru4
. . , _ &amp; rallotura. D a R

0

.

··-

Auld!

1875 Kountr'y Air Tr•MI Trailer:

Nice 2br, -~ aaroaa. ,.,.

015-5102.

1878 Blazon 2•'Ft With Awning 1
$3,100; 1SI7e Coachman 21'Fr:~

720

Two bedroom houae, carpeted
and elton. no lnaldt palo. dopooll

rllqlllrtd. ~ 14-802-30110.

ll'uckl,.. Salt

'93 Ford plckul!;, Iorge tapper.
camptr packagW, ht.avy duty

420 Mobile HOmes
for Rent

wheals ·and tires, like new,

r

.

•• 3.500, 814-g&amp;¥0'.2. 014-99281111.

2 I 3 bedroom mobile" homes

.

t875 ChO¥y C85 ·Dump Tru~k.
12,000 Fr11r11 23,1110 RHr, 13 FL
x8 ln. Bad, &lt;&amp;27, 5 &amp; ~ Spaacl, Air
Chit.., &amp; Air - · Qaqd COn~IUon, Alklng 1!1.500, 114-25e·
111101.

.

• : .,

.
Ctmpar
For -Stlt 't

'

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;.

~i

810

1812 Chovy io'41on, VI, aulo.
12,000. Plaaae c:all between 5·
llpm 304-075-111110.
.
'

11182 Ford f.-150 Xl 8cyt. wl
...,drlvo, 11,000 mlltl. WIIOf&gt;P"
pa, pb, nawl lnttrJor, ruqntno
boardo, ca. much mort. t3.150.

--33J't.J

·''

t814 Ford Ranaod•lck-Up, SDndard Shift. Law lliltl On Rtlotlll

~
foi Rtnt

Compfalt 101 Golden Ram Golf
rant Clubl w/bog. ltfl handed. US.
IOma ' 314-4111-2181.
or 304·

~

and 2 bt!dioom IPI..,_Itl. A.lr·

-•Hr
dope Ill roqulrad, no pall, 11 4·

nllhed and unlurnllhad,

.

Englna, Good Condlllon. AIIUng
t .

$1,100, t14-3JIUII38. "

liponlng
· Goods

AQHA 11111/0n, IWO ~rl old; '"'

Smoll hockey I bolktlball
aporia card colfocdon. 304-8752413.

1IMIII.ClwvY.: = K AuiDmallc:,

Nico S2,250;
conu.. Fund. oroan broko; tan S3,200, IINill
F-1100 dump lrUCk; 114-143-5178. ' : 191lt Bronco 4X4, $1,050; tao&amp; F·
160 v-a Autolnlltic, $2,750; 614·
Uldl Spoiled """" a .... 8rako 4 3881101.
\'tor Old Mort lluio, Kid Broke,
814-11111.

Solano Gold 21 . Tanning Bed
Hay&amp; Grain
. With Buill In AMIFM CaiiOIIO 840
Player, Sp1111ara In Hoadrtll,
Pulh Bulion. Au- Bad. Wolf 75 Large round bales af 1ra11
Bulbi, And I Now Roploc-nl ~S15tt. Duno Form 304-875530
Bulbi, H,OOO Now For St,IIOO,
114-24-1111114.
Buy or Hll. Riverine Anticluea.
Hay for Ilia, cla.Or mix a ;till.
1I 24 E, Mtln Slrttl, on RL 124, STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon t2 per aquart balaa, IHI -085Pamoroy. Haura : M.T.W. tO:Oo Uprfgh~ Ran EYIInl EnltrpriHI, 3347. .
o.m. 1a e:oo p.m.. Sunctor 1:oo 1a Jockaon. Ohio. 1-1100·531-1521.
a :DO p.m. 814·112-2121, Ru11
L -:· 311111b. Tobacco AI .401
To10 Whaol 11or1t Anach-a-matic 11.114-245-53112. '
riding IMI!'n mc~~Wer, Rohler engino, t2181pd•.tt,IIOO Exctlltnl

---

C&amp;C

Gtnoral

Homo Moln..;'

lenence-. Painting, vlnrl aiding.

carpanlry, - · · .;.-._ .......
mobllt homo repair and mort For

~ .......... Cll! !1~~,··4-882·
r• ·io
·pV. ·' ,
1
1
'

6323.

A8TR0-0RAPB

.

}.fp

•. Building .
Sujlplli

1, 11117

...,.__

lllock. br.... lOW!' ·pi,..., ......
.... -~W'"Rio ·
Grande,
OH Call ni-241•

.
~14·

- I n ~ mincllhal H II t4ua1Y obvl:
-to"'*-· Be pa11111t will\ q,IMllor!t.
CAPRICORN (0.o. IJ•Jan.-11) An

eo.-·- .

~·~ (.U.21..1ufyll)
rau ~ 011 iiMMII '" your
- - ~ lrnliglntlton upon -

-·'*"·

WIMIINtiQ ....., gljf1d llldly I you clldicall ,aultllf. P.ut 0.,.. .. ""' lap r#ywr
l, llat ..:Trylng to patoh. ·Up • . broken
·-lOt? The Al1iO-Orlph MaUitt. . .

K;. Alii.·

I

•

0111111 (lllr·JNiiM 10) TOday you · ~ARJUI(t!lev.JNiec.21)00nol
may . _ ao'ml qualml ~ an impoJ- llllllk thet becaute ..,.,.hfng 11 cryatal

~yoU have wllh .. olderYldull could _.. out adval~ageauoty lor
1wo ........... dlllfnll .... anyll1lng t1ont IOCIIy IIIII could ,bt P!Pflllble lor you today. Thla .,.._ 1111 ~~~~he
you , _.pN&gt;iolilly
PIICII
(Pell. I,Oollareh. IO) Sl!lall ,you, ,not 011"- In w111o11 you muet ante 'orl!ll alonl pannm
up.
'
,
o\9&amp;!AJIIUi j.-.. 18 1'111. 11) PiiAIIIIIoiQ
OpP,Ortunlllu can ba axpatl4ed ·lnlo
lltlliil. 1n fli:l.

4i4

5121.

'

-.ldlaivora

'II Clttwy Carofco, arnllm Mdlo,

olr, 'NSO. •14-742·2715 or

a

tlllt ,jlaclalon you have 19 maklt .
DMgard
•
wyour judgtnerilll baMd
Thera Ia a atrong llktHhOOd thAI joint
.011
prwioulll~:
ulfula..,....ICt.
w1 be ·IIi ccmfi.tl in'-the year

'11 caclllc Fleet acd, I1IW • •
goad -lion, StiOO, 814-882-

1042•114-8824118.

'

VIRGO (Aug. 23 lopL 22) po notat\ticipate dOro..tic problerao today where
nona exlll . '11 you pertlat in expocllng
trouble. H will eventually march ill lock
iiep wifh you.
'' · . -- .
U8RA (Sapl. 23-0cl. 23) Be good llo·
iener IOday, becauH yeu'l hove the llbill·
1y lo lake ~ ol lhe lcleu of olhefl
· and mold them lnlo aomelhlng that c11n

yoUr.........,

Di4Ch WMch Trtnchor

- lull
apflnlol',
--.til
• -·
....
. . .-.
• • 114-7413:112. .
..
.

' .
can htlp 'yo\. tind8raland whol lo do to

.

l'lRY;.iAh~

-311oH75-2111.

Ultd 2200

.

D

mlke lhe relaiiDiiahip wOO&lt;. Mill $2.75to
,---...,.;--.:.-.-..... , Matchmakei. c/o lhil nawapapar, P.O.
Box 1'158, _Mur,.v Hill S181ion, Now York,
.
•NV
10151.
'
.
ARIII (Marcil 21-Aprll 11) ~oclal
!3ERNICE
Involve,.,..,. COUld taka "'! more ..,,..
BEDEOSOL cane• today lhan you axpacta!l .
Sltuatlonil could bt f1llllall&lt;l !Of ,lllf¥·
lhlng of a ..,..,.,... . ·
'
..,.. your ~•.lalaala. ·
TAURUI(AprUDIIIIIIIIAIIimpor1Mlt ' iCORPIO '(Oct. 24•Nov. 21) Today ·
COIM*ciAI 11MIHYOf mighl ...,.- con- 'could-'&lt; lhe IJ!Iglnnlng of a parcaptibll
luling ..ty In lhe clay. Once the dull Ill· ahlft In IIMnCiallrendl. Thll tavorobfa
Oeo. hOwever, you'll bt able to ..-. flo Change cOuld help qulc:ldy to elrertgthln
INt _., ,
•
'
poalillin. .
.

~l ;;f ' ,
..... llnllh, MPI!i'--·.
. . ·' ••
C.ilfngl IOXIUrtd, ...1... ltfllir,
CoN TOO) 304-8~S'41... 20 yoora
•"'f liilliCII.

Y KZ B

WOEWUO
Z 0 O 'J Z

ZBKWM)I

SKJLT .

UEEV

PSOLW . '

.I

JLVM ·T I

1

ZSKWMA

'

ZBOCO

JLFBIIT.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Wiiat we play is life: - louil-oug.
~ music II llka audible wallpapor .• - AfiSialr Cooke.

·I

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'::~~~' S@\\4{\\\-l&amp;~~s· ::
\

HIIH loy CV.Y a. POllAN ,...;:___ _ __
ORoorrongo loiters of lho

I

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four IC&lt;Qmblt&lt;i -d• bo-

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occur.

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I

15 I&amp; 1

' ll's a fact of life." Granny
.
.
.
.
said. " that many people set .a
....-'-------------.. good example only when oth.
N U J E K T
ers are - - - · - - - -."

vov

FOR

quoted

Complete tke chuckle
b.Y fill•ng in the missing words
de¥elop trom step No. 3 below. ,

PRINT NUMBERED,
lETTERS IN SQUARES

~~~~fRMBlE

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~

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Mall•rd 20'
$2,500 Coli 014-441-4015""" s:

P.M.

E880F

J E F' O

JKPS

UEEV

.. Webbed - Ruble_· Uncle - Vainly · BELIEVE
_
j
Flatt~ry .. rs somethmg you can ·enjoy," my Mom al- .
,. · ; .
ways sa1d, but you don't have to BELIEVE it. ·
· ·•·• · •

Rd. Gollipolll, Ohio 45131 814- •
·-

z'·

XEKFZOUD

:

SCRAM-UT$ ANSWERS

awnino. ntce. 111Ut ' ~cCarm11Ck i
.

0 J

..8

Air ·I Awning 13,200; 1178 Wll- o
dtrntll 25'FL Wllh Air $2,800; j
18110 ..-~w~ng t7 Fl S3.1111willl,

448-1511

z0

8

Sf) I END Ul'·
SITTIN6 ON TilE
PORCH WITH
A DQ6 ..

•·

.

·

'JLVMTI

1L_.l.[_.l..-.1.-.l.-.J........J.

! ·

32', Fihh WhHI campar, fun;•
oquiptlld Including olr, 140001
0110. Ot4-~- 4:30pm. 1

- a.dopool~ No PtDI304-

.

f--,-l~T~=7.:.,.1.:.....,1_;_.,1.,.e--l

l

Campers ·a
Motor Hoqles

...

54 'Wattl unit ' I
Ill Ard)IIIIDflll

I8

Rlplay, W\1. 304-372-3833 or 1j
800-213-83211. •
.
1

790

......

13 .. I 1. 1•

0

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I
'

153-112

r.....:....-:-,.......,.,......,,.....,..--.,
j j I I

t888 MOdel 2.1L ·FWD Engl'"l
$450, 81.......a511.

~

52 &amp;mil

"Bec:allle of lbe bidding and opening
low to form lour -ds.
~ UWeal had liolb the -and killll" __;_:
of hearts, he would surely have led
AL UCA N
one. And if East has a top heart, West
1
1!11111 have the club lliag. Remember,
12 .
East paued his partner's opening
bid."
.
Never forget what clidn't happen. II
r-,r.S.._.:;.S...;I:.,.:;W:...:.;I:I~
is sometimes as revealing as what did

t88D GM t25 FWD Tran1mlti,
'

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Walhora, Dryora, Ronan. RthlClaat 10 Sholl Plonl. 304·578· gratar~, 80 Day OuarantHI
Fronch Cfly Maytag, 014·440·
2142.
1785.
312 Wezgal3 -mo. Pamoray Araa, t3501Mo.• Dopo1h Ro!Jiirtd. 513-514-25:11.

llto. 814-448-2ilfl7.

•.

·•

.....75, 01~18.

3 Bedroom, Ri. 2 Applegrove.

"""'"'· 4 AcrH Wtth 1881 llo- 11112-:1211.
b•l• Homf On Raccoon Road,
Can~ocllng To Raccoon CrHk,
1 Badroom Ntor Holaor E111ra
Afllr 5:30 81&lt; 441 1515.
Nice..Clu HHt. II I !Moe, • Ufll-

•J:;--··
,.,-.,.

Auto Plrll a

iaea
2.0 Lllar K &lt;:rt"'IIZ,H...,:
N5 814-44fHIIi11. . . .
~

ees

510

king. Why should I play againtil the

•

•

~~~·~A~C~C~III~D~~~J~I~,~-~ :

haak-upo. Coli oflor 2:00 p.m..
304-77MIIS1,

2BR. nowly romodtlad In Htn·
dtnoh, 1300/mo. Depaoli a rof·
_
_304-075-ID12aftarlpm.
Mallllt homo ~- far ron~ up
10 tell80'a.
par ""'""" wo11r.
3 bodloom hoult In P,omoray, aawtr and truh Included, 814·
rani S300 par monlh. dapo1i1 of 11111!·2117.
t300 raqulrad, no pa11, 1·014·
802-ZIIt dtyL
r.1ERCHMWISE
3 Btcloaarn Hauooln....,.ltJL CA I H•t Now Corpol t 112
Balho. SI0¥0. RtftlgtraiOr, Dllhwaaher Furnished, 1375/Mo., I
Dtpoai~ 314-4175-7873.

~~:.,ma:!~uc:,~.;:..tha,

you've noticed Weal had the singleton

t

760

partial booam~ gllfago S2751
ma«&lt;lf))OIL314-e7-t2.

e.-·
a ar-r.

Pl4111lloMI

Un-!
belmdlltPricn.e14-441~1 ' •
•
34 Foot HouH Boat. 104·773-:

Rooms

2323 Jeffer10n Ava. 28edroom,

· WANTID: Pari·Timt Pa11110n 320 Mobile Homes
- - At A Community G1auo
· for Salt
Homo For -~ Wllh MRIDD
In QlllctoiiL HauM: 11 PJI. • 1:30
81111 Down • SIH A.M .. 1'11; 10:30 P.M. · 1:30 A.M.,
~':1,.L
~:.=
Frl; 7 P.M. Sol • 8 A.M. Sun; 2 • .,....,
- r WooloiJ Sllff MM*to: Or AI t0x50 Mobile Homo. tbr, olrttdy
OllierwiH Schadulad. High in Inlier potk. IOI·UP J2.050. Call
Schaal Dagrtt, Vllld Drlvtr'l 1.1- 311oH75-3853ar304-eJ5.2144.

'

Sloping roomt with cooking.
Al10 U.lter apace on river. All

410 Houlllfoi'Rent

...

18D&amp; Slralos 215 PRO/XL/DC •
Bau a... f 75 HP EWndluda U..'
Now llany Emu, Mull Sao,

114 4418510

RE•HAl S

I

11183 s-.y 21 FL Cuddy CoftOt,'-?
391 110 E-rlltlng GOHI ExCaf. "
. llniCondltianl ot4-44'11-17e:1Af·~
IW7P.M.
. 1

-llam11... 5 Acrw, 011 SL Fk
1110 On Korr Road, 01~118.
beautiful land; Melga

"""'Y IXIrU, S3500. 01 • .

742-2544 ar8t4-7o&amp;2-35(111.

financing wJth down paymanL
314-4115-4112.
.

·----

w1J

1813 Flborklng b111 boat
!railer,

-onCrab~Raad.Ownor

Counlr, Scipio - p . SR 0112
Clu• of SR U3). Oonir ~

.

will!
$4500,e1
.. 0863Gta goad .....,_
~·

Lal 3.55 IICIOI M or L wllh caumy

flmGtl,

lnquiM 814-448-2573.

·•

'Ill ""'. .'1, IT, 120 ~
. .
•• Uercruiler ini:ID.tdt' ~

1 ..

o. .......
hI kll

'

The key to the deal
.
.
BJ Pllllllp Alder

•

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37~

ID
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t A Qt
•AQt878
I

LIO 1.1u1J aa'aua Jl) Ybur olgiinlza· lltuiiiiOnflaryoullldl!y ·nprl&lt;llclladon
IIOtlli ablly II your r11011 grlatelt- · ttamworlb- eapecially If the all lea you
today. 11 can. be Ullllal&lt;llliclally llf lor llleef.,.lonO llllldii!Qfrilndt. .
~ . mallllal~-

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..... ....'7'

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Ceaderwlelp
-WVI~h a "lslon

Hoo (Jr fact'~.r;:;::=:1~H1: so.

111111/j
'h-~i
lfl
'-:I
..............,_,at, ';...
,_.....,.....

l'llllt: r '

•' F«miffld CHi ,_,. C1

IChi.M:'

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Rqott '¥ 'UIIIotflr

liN' ..... '
W.lllfilllt 111c11i1J 0t

..,.llrol~-

r "'td an Pill 11 •

. .1'1*

•

~rlflt ..utttd to'

t»tla• elty ~

Low: 50s
Detail• on

pageA2

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 2, 1997

Ho·use·committee ·studies ·/oca.ting .
veterans home in southern Ohio

Se
.t o
1lloose -~~oml ·
Stop by for a
drive
follayl

•

I

\

'

By JILL WILLIAMS
Tlmn-Sintlll_el Staff .

GALLIPOLIS - Local sup-·
porters of locating a veteran's
home in Gallia County traveled to Columbus Thursday
to testify before the Veterans' Care Commiuee.
The committee, a result of House Bill· 581, was
formed in I994 to conduct a study of the feasibility of
locati~g a _ve~rui's hoiJH! in the· southef!!, !lllf _of Ohio.
The b1ll was mtroduc~ by State )lepresentauve Johlr
Carey, R-Wellston.
·
,
. ·
.House Bill 581 requires the.l:om,Jiiuee, made up of
II ·members of the Ohio legislature, tO prepare and submit a repon and r~etommendations to the govempr, the
eresident of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of

Representatives prior \0
30.
The current home
Sandusky is 209 miles
and 4-1/2 houFS from Gallia County: · .
•
Data- as of Feb~~ 1996 -mdtcates that ?f the
S33 ve!efl!IIS housed:m San~usky, only t3 are restdeJ!t&amp; ,·
fromsouth,o,f F~m County. Galha County ~as a vet~ran popul~tion ~f3,260 -. 128,370 veterans hve wtth,
m ~. 100 rmle rad1us ofthe county:
.
I have _ .~en 'Yorkmg on trymg to get a veterans
h~e here m Galha County for over three Y~· lllld I
believe that we !'l'e on the top of the hst of possible Sites,

. primarily because
we . led the way,"
Gallia County Veterans Service Officer Steve · Swords testified before the

co~::j:· furthe.r testified his office
can provide lransportation for area veterans, having carried 700 veterans to
their VA appointments in Chillicothe,
Dayton, Cincinnati, Columbus lind
Huntington in 1996..
·
Harold Montgomery representing
the Gallia County Board of Commissioners testified that
while locally there is a high rate of unemployment, the

Vol. 32, No.3
workforce is highly skilled 'In
medical, nursing and geriatric .
care professions that cou14
meet staffing needs of a care
facility.
"We f~el it is extremely
important for our veteranr'
golden years to be as comfortable and enjoyable as pos~.
· ble," saill Montgomery. "These
veterans have' given so much
of their young lives to protect ·
the. freedom we erijoy today,
and we should ·repay them." · .
Swords has several petitious
circulating lhroughout the COUDty - · inducling the · Yeteran's
· Service Office - for·people ~
sign in support of the home. · ·: .
Two possible sites being
offered to house the project are
near the Gallipolis Developmental Center and adjaccAt
to Holzer Medical Center.

ess!
March .r oars .in with hea.v y rain;
Flash ·floods spread across area
Tim• Sentinel Rep!)~'~~
.
· GALLIPOLIS/POMEROY- Spring, in the form of unusually .balmy temperatures, has sprung- with a leak of major
proportions.
· tleavy overnight r~infall in. Gallia aild Meigs counties.
flooded roads, prompted evacuauons and kept emergency personnel continually on the go as it continued to fall throughout
, !lll\u'li.AYi with a 90 percent clianc.e of more rain forecust for
Su114ayc
''
.
·
;lf:QII$1\Iiiti!)h•l Yo'¢!1\fJ.Cf.~~cy~ "!l!ilaJll\Sh' !1~. w,awtrltad
. beenluued fo~. Solliheas~in Oliio .through saturday. ·
In Oallia County, rising c~ek and stream-water in low-lying
areas prompted the evacuations of two families on Slate Route
14!' three milef south of Cadmus. emergency officials confirmed;
The Gallia EMS rescue staff, assisted by
the sheriff's department and the Greenfield
Township Volunteer Fire Department, used ·
a boat t9 transport the families to higher
SIGN OF THE TIME - tt..vy, raln-flllld•Hill looni.cf
ground shortly after the emergency was
ovw
the road cloHCI •Ian poalad by the Ohio ~
reported before 10 a.m.
of
Tnln8pOIUtlon
Sl'lll Routll50 ~'''" U.S, 311
$98S,OOO
Shortly after I p.m. Saturday, the EMS Bldw"l •• rl8lng lit
walll'l mact. 80mll ~~tm~,. county Md
was dispatched to.Lew Southers Road near 1-n•hlp roacla lmpassab...Saturday•.·
$1.1 million for
· ·
.,;
'..
road, apd ·a private
Crown City, where ·a female. motorist was
slranded. in her vehicle after it was swept . ty highway system wa8 closed due io'flooding. Wells Ii.un, Llf'
' $75S,OQO, accofding
off the roa4 by rushing waters.·She was res- tie Bullskin and Swan Cre~k roads, all in the i:ounty't··southel'il
of the Ohio State
•-~''''"~· "'~ cued nearly 45 minutes hiler.
end, were· initially reported closed in the morning. but .more
Extension Economic
Most
state
routes
in
GaiJin
County
were
roads were added to the list as the day progresSed. :
·.
Devell'ipment Office in Jackson.·
affected by Oash flooding. while SR 233 near
County Highway Department staff were mbnitorint: the situ: - Funding was made' pqssible by
GaUia was blocked by mudslides. Mud rush- ation throughout the day, Smith said, but so many roads w~
the cooperation of a number' of
ing off high embankmeniS also made some .. Oooded or about to be covered that the department was runnill.
Iileal : and &amp;tate agencie,, Lanier
county
and township roads impassable.
out of high water signs.
· ,
said. ' They include the Ohio ·
1
Drivers contended with high water at the
Two county system bridges had been damaged and madil.
Department .of Development, the
. intersecli~n of Jackson Pike and SR 160,
impassable by Satur,
state Environmental Protection
forcing some to use the middle turn lane to
day afternoon, Smitli.
Agency, the stale Capital
pass tht:~Jugh. Water also covered the counsaid. They were on
Improvement Fund, the city of
ty's junior fairgrounds.
Peniel Road in Green:
Wellston and .Jac~son County
In Meigs County, high water by Saturfield Township a~~ll
Commissioners.
day. morning had closed SR ! 43 near the
King Road in Ohio.·
State deveiopment officials and
'intersection
with
SR
7,
SR
124
at
Rutland
Township.
A third spa!i'
Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston,
and SR 681 at the six-mile marker about a
th~ught damliged C!.Q
areJo· be on 'hand for Monday's
mile from Sm~wville, said Brett Jones, act· Roc!click Road ill
announcement to ·present a check
ing superintendent of the Meigs Ohio
Guyin Township will
for $298,000 to the county comDepartment
of
Transportation
garage.
.
being j:hecked, Smitlr
missioners, which represents. the
Jones
said
high
water
signs
were
up
on
added.
final piece in the furldjng link to
U.S. 33 at Burlingham. The road was
The flooding creal·.
get the project going.
expected to be closed by noon Saturday.
·ed problems for em;
Galli a state routes closed Saturday mom- gency crews responding to calls for help.
.
.
Good Morning
ing· included SR 850 south of Bidwell, sec"It definitely .puiS a crimp in trying to get to some areas,"
tions of 218, 554 w~st of 7 at ·Cheshire, Gallia EMS Station Chief Craig Register said. "When our
according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the squads have gone out they've had to take alternate routes 1Q gd
State Highway Patrol. High water crept over • around the water, and that's added another IS to 30 minutes IIi
portions of 233 and 7)5 later in the day.
getting to the scene." .
.
,,
Numerous county and township roads in
Gallia's situation was monitored throughout the day by.
,
.
Meigs were also reported closed. Among . counly's Local· Emergency Management Agency, a consortiuiil
Wfi,T AND WILD - A Galla County aMrlff'a cruiMr drtv.. through high the flooded roads were Laurel Cliff, Hysell of public, emergency and Jaw enforcement officials. bffici~
SIIUrd:'r., top, II one ola nlllllber of ~rgency whlcl.. :-&amp;:ndlng to Run. Willow Creek, Dead Man's Curve, expected to remain at their base in the cOurthouse !IS the~ ·
calli lor hllp n thl wake of.fluh lloodlng throughout thl county m heavy CR 5 in the Noble-Summitt area and Owl of rain continued.
.
.
.
'. :
ov.rnlght 1'111111. S - didn't allow thl high Wlllr to lnllrrupt their routine II
•
·
Th
1
· d
·•
one drlver.llllvlgltH the tlooclllt thllneer-llon of Jacbon Pika and Stille l:lollow_east of Tuppers. Plwns.
.
.
e palm remm .ed people planning to travel .out of ~
Routl110, lbow. AfiMh.tloocl witCh for thllrH w•tocontlnue through Sat·
_Galha County Engmeer Glenn Srmth county that updated road conditions throughout Ohio could~
urday.
.
.
.
esumated tllat 50 to 75 percent of the coun- DCf'essed by calligg t-888-264-7623.
~.';

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Hi h students _to ·participate in live video conference~
'

IIY CHARLENE HOE;FLICH
TIIIMI s1 nttnel Slllf ·
REEDSVILLE - Eastern· High
Schliolis one of 104 high schools in
Ohio to be selected to participate in
a live video conference Thursday
with Secretary of Siate Bob Taft.
Taft will lead Ohio First Vole
· Live, a siatewide broadcast on vot;
ing and citizenship, from the Ohio
Senate Cham.,ers in Columbus
beginning at 1 p.m.
It will be ·cUrried b)' Ohio's 12
.public television station~.
.
1 During the one-hour .progrlil",
Taft will conduct a classroom .d1s.

'

.

""

'

cussion with a st~dio, audience of
Columbus area high school sen.iors.
•Seniors at Eastern High School
will be among those in more than a

·.
·In addition to the schools partici- cast their balloiS. He said that Ohio count,'' he added.
~•
paiing in the live ~roadcast, other First Vote Live is an innovative proTaft's office reporlll that since tile:
high schools have signed up to host gram that aims to revelle that down- inception 9f the Ohio First Vote~:
their own First VOte Classes.
ward trend in voting among young gram in I99 I, more than 174.0011'.
Meigs High School in Meigs and . people and to encourage student par- high school seniors have ieaister«J.
River Valley and Buckeye Hills ticipation in the political process.
to vo~.
.
-~
Career Center in Galli a County are
The program, explained Taft,
"With concerted efforts on Olt
arnilng ~ schools planning to tape provides an avenue to educate parts. we can help Ohi9'1 youth djj:
the live progmm for laier use in First through a disi:ussion of the impor- ·cover the importance of their VOle i!l'
Vote classes, according to Taft's tance of voting as well as an oppor- another powerful weapon · ·, ~f
' office.
·
·
tunity to register in the classroom:
change," Taft said.
' ,,
"We must find ways to encourage
"During the Jive broadcast, stuLet's all work to help new vo~ ·
form.
our y&lt;iung people to get out and dents will learn about young people understand the riahts and ~· ·
This is the second year .Taft has vote,"· said Taft who noted that in ~~~:ross the country who. despite cyn- bilities of votina aqd eJK:911rai(
hosted a live video. conference !IS I9961ess than 30 percent ofeligible .icism, are committed 10 malting .a them to get lnyolved," Taft eoncJ.M'I;
part of the bhi'1 First Vote progrwn. voters under 25 went to the polls to difference and making their vote ed.
·
'
.
· ,· ~; ·
~

hundred
'high
schools across the
state watching the
live broadcast and
then using a toll-free
number to tall their
questions in durinj
the viewing time. ·
The program will
conclude with students completing a
voter registration

~

•

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