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.....-· .

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-

OCTOBER
IS
·uT.H
IFill C..
CHEVY
TRUCK
MONTH
•. 1-1
AT C &amp; 0 MOTORS!
CHECK OUT .T HE SAVINGS
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZEEXTENDED CAB 414

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
Cava roll by
Nets 85·74

~~··

• ..fii.H

Sports on

Pick 3:

282

Pick 4:
6617
Buckeye 5:
5-6-9-11·35

page 4

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain, low In mid 30a.
Saturday, chance of 8nOW,

high In low« 401.

.

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'j ',J

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.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
AppearanC?~ _Package and Morel
AS
·LOW
AS

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1998 CHEVY

'r'-i.l

*.41,N0.141

.'

01117, Ohio 'IIIIey Publllhlng Comp~ny
'

.

.

Retai-l sales fall 0.2 percent in October
!3Y JOHN D. tJ!cCLAIN
A11.oclated Prell Writer
: WASHINGTON- Retail sales fell 0.2 percent in October, the sec·
;Ond straight decline as falling auto sales offset an increase in clothing pur·
-chases spurred by cooler temperatures.
.
: 'The Commerce Department said today that sales totaled a seasonally
;adjusted $213.7 billion, down from $214.1 billi.on in September. But
-excluding the drop in autos, sales were up 0.4 percent.
: Many analysts had expected a 0.3 percent overall gain. Sales in Seplember were revised from an initially reponed 0.3 percent advance to a
il. I percent dip. Prior to September, sales had risen for three months.
: Retail sales account for about one-third of the nation's economic activ;ity, and the recent sluggishness has caused some concern over how robust

S-10

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and lnweased.
. Horae ·Powe~ll
'

AS •$

·LOW
AS

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY S-1 o··t"
EXTENDED CAB
·Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, LS Package,
AM/FM Radio, YJ/L Tires, and M9rell
AS
LOW
AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEAl Eq

998 CHEVY BWER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Lock!ng ·Differential

. *PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

•••m

All PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

*4.ft FII'IIG•
.iUPIOV.IMIC
cwmr ~

OTORS TOYOTA
ST. ALBANS

&amp;LEXUS

·

the holiday shopping season will be. The Christmas season often accounts
for half of a retailer's earnings.
·
There have been few signs of accelerllling inflation, penniuing lhe Federal Reserve to keep interest rates unchanged at a meeting on Wednesday rather than raise them to slow the economy further.
Sales of durable goods sl4mped 0.9 percent after falling 0.8 percent
a month carl ier.
·
Auto dealers saw a 2 percent drop following September's 1.4 percent
decline.
-There was weakness in other durable goods categories as well. Sales
of building materials and hardware were ilown 0. I percent, while pur·
chases of furniture and other home furnishings were nat.
Nondurable goods such as food and fuel managed a 0.2 percent gain

......... ··

-·

on top of a 0.4 percent advance in Scpten1ber.
Department stores rang up a I. I percent incrca.-;c. erasing a 0.4 r&gt;cr·
cent dip a month earlier. CIO!hing store sales increased 0.9 percent. but
failed to wipe out September's I :9 percent drop.
·
Earlier weakness in department store and apparel shop sales had been
attributed to warmer-than-usual temperatures.
Purchases at grocery stores were up 0.3 percent following a 0.7 percent gain a month earlier. Gasoline station sales rose 0.4 percent after a
I .5 percent increase the previous month. Drug store sales advanced 0.7
percent, slower than the I .3 percent gain in September.
Checks at restaurants and bars were off 0.3 percent l'ollowigg a 1.4
percent increase a month earlier.

Athens residents take prop~ne
.
·complaints to supreme court

Two Athens County residents arc
asking the Ohio Supreme Court to
have propane gas suppliers regulated
as public utiljties.
The case stems from a complaint
filed in January against Rutland Bot- ·
tied Gas· Service by two Athtns
County women, according to a
Brown News Service article.
On Jan. 10, Rebecca Haning and
Melvina Stephenson filed a complaint with the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, alleging the com·
ARRIVE SAFELY· United Natlon8 armelnapectorelll'rive at the
pany refused to maintain uninter·
• border town AI·Karameh In Jordan aarly today. A lage group of
rupted service except on unjust arid
: U. N. l!lfNponlln•pectora left f!agl)dld at deym today In protest
·."fill 1n'e exptlalon of Anwlaan ~ otthe lnepiCtlon teams.
unreasonable terms. an&lt;l faile.d to
comply with natural gas company
•( ...-, ' ·;,
_...... "'·" .
standards under Ohi() law and com·
mission regulations.
In their complaint, Haning and
Stephens.on claim that Rutland
refused to maintain uninterrupted
J
gas service except upon unreasonable
ana unjust tcnns and charges.
They alleged Ru1land wrongfully
and unlawfully altered the credit.
payment and minimum delivery
had informed Saddam that a "win· tcnns of the · contract which denied
j!y SUSANNE SCHAFER
.dow" i• which a U-2 flight could take
AP MIIHary Writer
WASHINGTON- With Amcri- place would open "sometime this
.can weapons inspectors out of Iraq weekend." Iraq lias threatened to
prid other · U.N. personnel leaving sliool down planes Oying over its.ter·
loday. an American pilot and his U- ritory.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Dcmocra·
A
Pentagon
source,
speaking
on
2 arc set to fly more reconnaissance
tic lawmakers and civil rights advo·
tnissions to check on Saddam Hus- condition of anonymity. said the cates vow not to make the same miswindow for ttic U-2 llight would take their counterparts in California
• sein 's arsenal
: At the same time. the top U.S. mil· open Sunday.
.did when affinnative action pto·
Prior to that time, the bulk of a grams came under attack.
itary officer in the Persian Gulf
tegion, Gen. Anthony Zinni, contin· . U.N. weapons inspcelion team was
"Just because the numbers look
ued his talks with friendly Arab expected to be out of Iraq. lr'l'j good today docsn 't mean that tomor·
nations there, Pentagon spokesman · ordered all six American inspectors row things can't change," Sen. Jef.
Kenneth Bacon said.
expelled from the country, and by late frey Johnson, D-Cleveland, said
· Asked if Zinni was seeking autho· Thursday the inspectors had driven Thursday.
·
rization to launch air strikes against into neighboring Jordan.
"We're not taking this lightly."
Iraq, Bacon replied, "He's talking to
In response the expulsion, .the
Johnson spoke at a news .confcr·
our frjends in the gulf about the sit· chief U.N. weapons inspector, encc to mount a counterauack against
uation ... telling them what he sees Richard Butler. an Austt'alian, said two Republican lawmakers who have
the stakes to he and getting their the remaining inspectors- regard- propose.d a constitutional a~end·
sense of how they feel about it.··
less of their nationality - would · ment that would end the state's race
"I don't believe that he ·is asking leave today. A skeleton staff would and gender preference programs. ·
ihem for anylhing right now." Bacon stay in Baghdad, he said.
·
The legislation. pending in the
President Clinton called Iraq's Senate and set to be introduced in the
laid Thursday.
While asserting that a diplomatic expulsion order "clearly unaccept· House. was given 'little chance of sue·
solution still was being sought with able and a challcnl!c to the intcma· cess by leaders of either party.
Continued on page 3
!raq, Bacon said the United Nations
"This bill is dead on arrival," pre·
dieted House Minority Leader Ross
Boggs. D-Andover.
Added House Speaker Jo Ann
Davidson: "I w~uld he very surprised
to sec . that resolution .come out of

--

-United States weap.ons
observers o·ut of Iraq
U-2 flights to continue

them the opportunity to purchase the
gas they needed to continue to heat
their homes, bathe and cook at a time
when the weather was very cold and
they were almost or completely out '
of gas.
The two contend Rutland's refusal
to deliver any less than 1501200 galIons of propane, and its demand of
full cash payment in advance of any
propane deliyery breached thC service
contract and was unlawful. Haning
claimed Rutland owed her appro ximately SSO worth of propane gas
which it refused to deliver, and that
Rutland's contract allowed for credit
tenns and promised· to provide the
respective premises with "uninter·
rupted gas service."
As a result, Haning said her and
her two teenage children were
deprived of gas to heat and cook.
Stephenson was allegedly forced to
break up her family and sent her two
small children to a' babysitter's heal·
ed home for six days last December
while she tended· a kerosene heater
and tried to prevent freeze damage in
1

the home.
,
Rutland denied the allegations. In
July, the PUCO dismissed the com·
plaint, saying Ohio's Consup1cr Sales
Practice Act should apply to propane
sales.
"Historically. the business of sup·
plying LP gas to customers has not
been regulated by this commission.
·and we do not believe ... that the state
l~gislature ever intended LP gas scr·
vtce to be I'\!£Uialcd as a puhltc uttl·
ily ~ervice." the PUCO wrote in its
ruling ..
Hantng and Stephenson then
joined~ith four other peoplo who
had filed a similar un.&lt;uct:lllsful com·
plaint against another LP gas com·
pany, Level Propane Co., and
requested a rehearing. They argued
the propane companies arc public
utilities and fall under PUCO juris·
diction.
The PUCO denied the request for
a rehearing, leading to the appeal to
the Supreme Court
"What our basic argument is is
that propane gas suppliers like Rut·.

'

land... should he regulated by the
'Public Utilities Commission ," said
. attorney Robert Romakor or South·
eastern Ohio Legal Services, which is ·
representing Haning, Stephenson and
the others.
According to Rutland Bottled Gas
attorney Joseph Vanity, Rutland is
maintaining its position that it is not
a public utility and should not be reg·
ulatcd by the PUCO. He said Rutl~nd
is not a monoroly like telephone or ·
electric companies, bul rather has to
compete with i&gt;lhcr gas s~ppliers.
He also said the courts and the
PUCO have sided with Rutland in
each step tihhc· prnoess: municipal
coun in Athens, the appeals court, the
PUCO's decision 10 dismiss the com. plaint filed by Huning and Stephen·
son. and the ~.:ommissinn's decision
not to rl!hcar the case.
Accor&lt;lin~

tn the PUCO. Rulland

serves ahout 6.5(X) custnmcrs in 26

Ohio counties. It supplies gas to
ahilUI M percent or the residential
propane energy market in Athens
County.

Lawma_kers ready for fight over affirmative action

. Additional pleas are given
in man's drowning death

AS
LOW
· AS

2 Sectlont, If P~~gH. 35 c A Ganrwll Co. Ne•IIP..,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 14, 1997

Two people pleaded guilty earlier this week on charges stem·
ming from a July 7 incident resulting In the drowning death of a
Pomeroy man.·
MeUnda Stanley, 27, of Pomeroy and Oift'ord ''Boomer" Smith
Jr., 22, of Syrac:use pleaded guUty to similar charges of attempt·
ed tampering with evidence and receiving stolen property,
charges stemminJ from the assault and robbery ofTodd C. Johnson of Pomeroy, a 30-year-okl schoolteacher at Harrisonville Elementary School.
Jason HyseU, 23, of Pomeroy is serving 18 years In prison after
pleadipg guilty to charges of lnvolunllry manslaughter and rob·
hery in the Incident whUe WOlle Kauff, 20, of Pomeroy Is spend·
lng eisht years In prison for felonious assault for his involvement.
Hysell and Kauff brutally beat Johnson al a swlmmlna hole on
Leading Creek near Dexter. Kaulr kicked Johnson Into the water
where he eventuaUy drowned.
Meigs County l'rosec:uting Attorney John R. Lentes said Ibis
moraing that Stanley attempted to push Johnson's pkkup truck
into lhe water to make the inddent resemble an accident. Smith
lied to lawmen ln•estlaatlng the death, saying it was an. ac:cldent,
Lentes added.
The two also had poue~~lon of Johnson's wallet at the scene;,
resulting In the receiving stolen property charges, Lentes said.
Attempted llmperln&amp; with evidence Is a felony of the fourth
degree punishable by 18 months In prison while recelvin1stolen
property Is a Mlh-detret felony punishable by one year in prison.
The plea agreement indkated the prosecuting attorney's office will
- k the maximum penalty allowable. .
Sentendn&amp; has been set for Dec. IS.

•

introduce legislation today !hat would
mirror California's Prorosition 209.
was not discouraged.
Wise noted it took supporters of
Proposition 209 four years to get the
issue before the voters in California.
"If we can't gel this done in 1998.
fine,'' he said. "This issue is not
going to go away."
Proposition 209, upheld by the
U.S. Supreme Court la.•t week. wa.'
the nation's first acmss·thc-hoard
'repeal of programs giving prcfcrcn·
tial treatment, and aflccts hiring,
contracting, college admissions and
scholarships.
Sen. Eugene Watts. R-Galloway,
introduced nearly idcriticallcgislation
Wednesday.
Boggs said all 39 House Democrats were opposed to the idea. They
could also count on the support from
at least two Republicans - Ann
Womer Benjamin pf Aurora and Don
Mottley of West Carrollton - who
attended the news conference. That
seemingly . would block Wise from
winning the 60 votes needed in the
99-mcmber House to place the issue
commltiCC.
But Rep. Michael Wise. the Cha·, before the voters.
,
grin Falls Republican who planned to
Wise pointed out thanupporters

..

would still have the option of col·
lccting signatures of voters if the pro·
posal stalls in the Legislature. Back· ·
crs would need roughly 335,000
valid signatures to win a spot on a
ballot.
Opponents also vowed not IU lake
the issue for granted. blaming apathy
by civil rights groups for Proposition
209 ·s passage.
"We arc not going to sit hock and
let this happen." said Rep. Charlcta
Tavares. D-Columbus.
Wise and Watts say they have
nothing against afTinnativc actiondelined by lhcm as reaching out to
minorities and women to make'them
aWare of oprortunitics in education,

employment and government pro·
jccts.

his quota!&lt;' hascd nn grnup all'ili ation that they wan! to outlaw.
Davidson, Gov. George Voinovich
and Senate President Richard Finan
-all Republicans- all dccl ined to
commcnl directly on the prorosals
from Wise and Watts.
"That's something we're going to
have to study," said Voinovich
srokesmim Mike Dawson . Dawson
added that Voinovich su~gcsted' I8

COMMENTS·
State Rep. Lloyd Lewle (D-Diyton) atllnda I1HI' a plaque honoring Abrahim Lincoln •• he
applauded eommentll by Statll
Sen. Jeff Johnson, (D-Cievelancl) at the Ohio Stateh- In
Columbua.

months ago that the state move from
an amnnativc action program based
on rate and gender to one that targets
socially or economically disadvantaged Ohioans.

Meigs ESC to merge with Athens County
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Sentlnal News Stiff
A resolution of intent to merge
with the Athens County Educational
Service Center was passed by the
Meigs County Educational Service
governing board at its meeting Thursday night
The Athens County board also
passed th_e same intent·to·merge res-

olutton m tis session last night, adjacent county.
according to John Riebel, Meigs
The superintendent said that a spe·
·county superintendcnl of schools.
cial joint board meeting has hccn set
The action was taken by the local for Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. at which time
board to comply with state legislation ' details of a mcr~cr resolution will be
which requires that all education worked out. The resolution iscKpect·
service units serve a minimum of cd to be pa-.cd sometime after the
8,000 students. Meigs County has first of the year, Riebel said, giving
4,200 students, said Riebel. Counties the new hoard time to implement the
by law are required to merge wilh an program by the deadline of July I.

Riche! said that the initial board
will be comrosed of all I0 board
members, live from Meigs and live
from Athens, and that "probably"
there will be offices in both counties,
Current board members, he said,
will continue to serve until their terms
expire and then probably a IO·member board with representatives from
Continued on paRe 3

Eastern High School students return to class today
Eastern Hi~h School students
were back in class this morning
after a vandalism incident forced the
school to close on Thursday.
S~perintendent Deryl Well said
Friday that the Meigs Local School
District provided maintenance work·
ers to assist Eastern staffers in cleaning the building and restoring as

much of the d~age as possibie.
Volunteers from the community
have also been at the school, Well
said, .Ssisting in the cl~anup.
.. Meanwhile, investigators from the
Meigs County Sheriffs office. the
Meigs County Prlisecuting Allor·
ney's office and the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification· and lnvesti·

gation completed their preliminary ing. The cash was stolen from desks
investigation at the site by mid-after- in classrooms as well as from vendnoon yesterday, according to Well .
ing machines, which were vandalInterior windows were broken, ized.
computers damaged and an undis·
Sheriff James M. Soulsby has
closed amount of cash stolen from the · offered aS 1,000 reward for infonnahil!h school in the incident, which is lion leading to the arrest and convicbelieved to have taken 'place some- · tion of the person or persons involved
time after I a.m. on' Thursday mom- in the incident.

r

�-..

Commentary
.

Page2 "

The Daily Sentinel
~G.shd i1t 1948

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
PL-bllaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARu:NEHOEFUCH

Generallllanager

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OHIO We;ttllet
Saturday, NoY. 15

What to watch as Congress adjourns

Aeeuweau.ere forecast for

ByJIICk~

111 CCM1 Stnet, Pomeroy, Ohio
114-992-2156 • Fu 992·2157

n. ..,.,._..,,

or, FAX 10 61~57.

So many bridges,
and so few rivers

locales (all in
the nune of
good
governTbc:re's nolhing like the chance
of
of missing a long-planned vacation ment,
to compel lawmakers to make quick course), we
thought it a
work of the nation's business.
good
time to
As lhe clock wound down on the
first session of the IOSth Congress, see \\'hal lawmembers from both sides of lhe aisle makers . left
were agitatin! for adjournment. on their plates
When it became clear early Monday for next year. Mol'- .,...._
6
morning that President Clinton
••
For
,.. " ' - couldn't get the votes he needed for starters, here's
fast-track trade-negotiating autbori-. what not to expect from our elected
, ty, House Speaker Newt Gingrich, officials: long-term reform of
; R-Ga., quickly called it a year.
Medicare and Social Security. Still
I
It's become fashionable in some smarting from the Medi-scare tactics
Washington circles to decry the lack employed by President Clinton and
. of "big issues:· in the nation's capi- congressional Democrats in last
. lal. Peace, prosperity and a lame- year's campaign, the Republican-led
' ,duck presidency does tend to breed a Congress was loath to go ncar enti·
certain lack of urgency among pub- tlement reform in 1997.
lic officials.
.
And next year, with mid-term
But while members of Congress elections · on the horizon. the
prepare for their annual "fact-find- impending insolvency of Social
ing" missions to far-off foreign Security and Medicare . won't get

lind JM Moller

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - As President Clinton lobbied Congress furiously to
win House passage of fast-track trade legislation, the ranking Qcmocrat on
the Appropriations Committee asked the Republican chairman if he knew
"the number of bridges the administration has given away."
"I don't have sufficient fingers to count," Rep. Bob Livingston of
Louisiana, told Democrat David Obey of Wisconsin.
'Td like them to throw a river in there," joked Rep. Joseph Moakley, D·
Mass., as some lawmakers publicly ridiculed the deal-making president.
No matter how hard he tried, Clinton was unable to pressure, cajole or
coax enough House Democrats into line, leading to a big legislative defeat.
He was made the butt of jokes. And the incident also demonstrated the limits of retail politics.
When the stakes are high, as they were on the fast-track trade bill, there
may be an upper limit on what a president can accomplish through wheeling .
and dealing.
.
While there's no el&lt;idence that Clinton actually offered any new bridges; .
by some accounts he did pledge to extend a highway in California. He also
offered help wilh campaign fund raising and promised special trade protection for Georgia peanut farmers, Florida citrus growers and California wine
produe.ers. ·
He promised tax breaks designed to help homeowners who rent their ·
houses to visitors during furniture shows in Nonh Carolina and Mississippi.
And be offered to back continued price suppon for tobacco growers.
"The president is on full throttle," Sandy Berger, Clinton's national security adviser, observed at one point.
·
·
Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N. Y., suggested irreverently. that debate was
being delayed while the president pondered the future of the Washington
Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. "And what's the new name of. the
Kennedy Center going to be?"
,
Presideills have had fast-track authority- which allows them to negoti·
ate trade accords that Con .~ess can reject but not amend - sin~s. Gerald
Ford in 1973. Clinton had the power, but it lapsed three years ago.
The cornucopia of presidential largesse came just weeks after Clinton
denounced wasteful pork-barrel government spending and extolled the
vinues of the new line-item veto law as an important tool in the battle
against such waste.
Congress even thwaned Clintoll o_n that score. Both houses voted last
week to ovenum his line-item veto of 38 projects in a military construction
spending bill. The line-item law allows the president to kill individual projC~:ts without vetoing the rest of the btll.
.
.
It's not the first time Clmton has offered preSJdentoal favors for votes.
His 1993 deficit-reduction and tax-increase measure won Senate passage
by a single vote. To get that voteche heavily- and successfully- couned
two skeptical Democrats, Sen . .i!ob t&lt;.crrey of Nebraska and former Sen.
Dennis DcConcini of Arizona.
Clinton made Kerrcy chairman of a blue-ribbon commission to look into
additional ways to reduce the deficit And he heaped lavish public praise ori,
DeConcini. Clinton's press secretary at the time, Dec Dee Myers. joked with
rcponcrs that he also offered to rename the Grand Canyon.
"I think io's crazy to talk about Clinton's skill at horse trading when he's
just suffered a devastating legislative defeat," said Thomas Mann. director
of governmental studies at the Brookings Institution. ,
·
Mann said the deal-making prowess of presidents is overstated. anyway.
on big national issues. "The fact is. the president's ability to deliver on such
matters is greatly circumscribed ...
As to Clinton's being the target of new joke&lt;, Mann said: "He's been the
butt of criticism since the day he was inaugurated."
Of course, the final joke may be on the members of Congress who took
Clinton up on one of his offers.
DoCs Clinton feel obliged to pay off on those deals - even though the
legislation ·Was shelved?
·
·
"I am sure lhat any, you know. commitments thai we made. we'll continue to pursue," said presidential spokesman Mike McCurry. "That's just
the honest thing io do, and we' Udo it ..

--

EDITOR'S NOTE -Tom Raum &lt;overs politics and national affairs
for The Associated Press.

Barry's
World

November 14, 1897

Frkllly, NovemiMir 141 111W

•

.

~rtdly,

much attention on Capitol Hili.
Too gutless to tackle the issue
themselves. Congress and Clinton
are likely to punt the Medicare issue
to a commission, thus removing it
from the table in a crucial mid-term
election year.
Of course, the commission won't
have anything tO say until long after
the ballots have been cast next
November. Social Security, Capitol
Hili aides confess, won't even be
addressed unti I 1999 at the earliest.
•• No Congress would be complete without a knock-down battle
over an important treaty. With fasttrack trade legislation out of the picture for the momen~ lawmakers will
focus on ratifying the Comprchen·
sive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty ··
negotiated by the Clinton adminis·
tration and handed over to the Senate last month.
President Clinton refers to the
test · ban treaty as "the longe'st
sought, hardest fought prize. in the

-

history of l!llJIS control."
But Sen:ihad Cochran, R-Miss.,
who chairs one of the Senate subcommittees that must clear the way
for ratification, has already let it be
known that no rubber stamp is forthcoming. Cochran worries that the
administration's proposed "stewardship" program won't be eQough to
keep our nuclear fleet battl~·ready.
" There arc too many variables.
not the least of which is the willingness of future ~ongresses to appropriate the necessary funds to supwn
the program," Cochran told our
associate Aaron K:iJt&gt;.
The $4.2 billion appropriated to
the costly program this year was
$300 million less than the administration asked for.
.• One of the more entenaining
Washington side-shows will tic
watching as the Pc~tagon tries to
implement Defense . secretary
William S. Cohen's plan to revamp
the military's out-dated business
structure. which remains essentially
unchanged since the 1960s.
The Pentagon has hnd its head in
the sand in recent years, carrying on
as if the Cold War had never thawed.
But Cohen, who · announced he
would reform the agency's bloated
hurcaucracy when he took over .in
January, took the lirst step toward
makin~ ~ood on that rromisc when
he unveiled a radoca restructunng
plan last week.
It dldn'ttake long for the skepti~s
to come out on Capitol Hill. Ninetyfour-year-old Sen. Strom Thurmond,
R-S.C., who chairs the Senate's
Armed Services Committee, worri~s
that the plan might "hamper national security." This·is a tired line used
whenever changes in the Pentagon's
business structuo;c are contemplated.
and one that has never made any
sense. A more efficient military can
only bolster national security. .
Thurmond will probably win
allies among a few stubborn generals, who won't like being pushed
around by a defense secretary who's
never had any formal military training. Even so, )lie plan •. expected to ·
save taxpayers about $6 billion a
year - is long overdue.
Then again, so is reform bf Social
Security and Medicare.
'
Jack Anderson and Ju Molte'r
are writen for United Ft11tu110
Syndicate, In&lt;,

as a married al deduction, since the 17 percent
couple filing tax would only be levied on incomes
jointly,
plus above that figure.
$5,300 for each
All this is quite true, but it add&gt;
·or' their two up to what lawyers caU "a distinc-chi ldrcn,
or tion without a difference." Alii ever
$33,800 alto- said was that the Democrats would.
get her. So any in . my pessimistic opinion, have a
family with an field day demagoguing the issue. On
income
less "Meet the Press" recently, President
than that would Clinton told Tim Russert that he had
pay no tax at all. never seen a. truly' revenue-neutral
In addi- flat tax proposal that didn't result in
tion, the Armcy plan includes a increasing taxes on the middle class
"Form 2," which would impose the while lowering them on the wealthy.
same 17 percent tax ,....--------------, Even if this is
on the income
not true, there '
(gross revenue less
Maybe the American arc hound to he
allowable costs) of people are ready to loads of examevery
business. redistribute the tax bur- pies of CEOs
Since many, per- d
1 B I 1 with immense
haps ·most. really · en more arr lJ'·
u
salaries whose
rich people derive not, we fTUlJ be walking taxes will fall
much of their into a buzz saw.
sharply. and·· if
income from a busiwe are to raise
ness rather than a
.the
same
simple salary. proponents of the amount of money •• somebody
account various stool softeners Armey plan argue that their true tax else's arc going to have to rise. Oozincorporated in their proposals. The liability- is not reflected hy the tax ing hatred of "the rich," the DcmocArmey plan, for example. would thcy would pay on "wages, salary, rats will a.•k if you want to volunpermit a family or four (the model and pensions" alone. Also, a small cccr.
we will usc throughout) to deduct clement of progressivity would he
In· a letter to the Weekly Stanfrom their taxahlc income $23,200 reintroduced by the $33,800 person· dard, which recently expressed sim-

fi ·

if

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

ilar reservations ahout the popularity
of a flat tax, Mr. Armey ohjected thul
~he maga1.inc was capitulating ''to
the old left-wing class warfare
man.tra."
.
But we arc not capitulating to il,
Congressman; we arc merely warning nut tux enthusia.&lt;ts nut to undc ...
estimate its power. If the Republican
Party nails the Oat-tax flag to, its
rna.&lt;~ and marchcsofftohattlc, I will
be marching with it ·• not because
it's a Republican 'proposal. hu.t
because I sincerely think it's lilircr,
as well a.&lt; overwhelmingly simpler,
than the current system. But I will be
gloomy about our chanc:cs.
It's true that polls show thdt
Americans arc favorahcy disposed,
in a preliminary way. to major tal
rdorm. But they haven't been suhjected, yet, to the hot hlasts of thlll
old Democratic specialty, the poli•
tid of envy. What will the flat tax
look like when Clinton, Gore and
Gephardt get through with if!
;
Maybe the American people are
ready to redistrihutc the tax hurden
more fairly. But if not, we may he
walking into a huzz •aw.
William Rusher is a syndkatctJ
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
:
Association.

By Geor.ge R. Plagenz

,.

···.:q.;.Ava-.
"I have no reservation for s party of
Americans with the U.N. •

- ··--·-----

ing by their red
primarily reminders of our obligations to the poor at this sea.•on uf the
Whenever disa."cr has struck in kettles in· shopping
year." The bulk of the donations
the last 119 years. the Salvation centers and busi·
ness
districts,
ring·
arrive
in the mail, he said •• many
Army ha.• been there. The army was
ing
their
bells
and
'
coming
perhaps from people whose
even there with tea and biscuits (the
. attention was captured hy lhe ring_ B~itish version of coffee and dough- shaking their taming of some volunteer's bell at the
nuts) for those waiting through the bourines. It's a call
to
give
to
the
Salred kettle and who were thinking of
night to witness the funeral of
vation
Army
's
prothose
whose Christma.• this year
Princess Diana.
gram
of
feeding,
not be a merry one. When
would
Founded by William Booth in
they arrived home, the checkbook
. 1878 in the slums of London's East ' clolhing and provid- Pllgenz
'ing
Christmas
gifts
came
out.
End, the Salvation Army is still there
for
the
unfonunate.
lhat thougi1t warmed my S&lt;&gt;ul.
for people who are down on their
The job comes with cold feet and But not my feet.
luck ·• whether through their own
fault or not. It doesn't matter to these an aching back. I know. I once stood
Not so visible to the public as the
at my post in the kettle corps frl)m l&lt;ettle program is the Solvation
Christian
soldiers
who
march
ever
1
onward to the drumbeat of Christian 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on one of Army's rehabilitation work with
Boston's busy downtown corners on those who arc alcohol-dependent.
service.
The drinker '!"hO enlists in the
Everybody has heard of lhe Sal- a frigid day just be~ore Christmas·.
There were often long lapses army's recovery progra111 gets a free
vation Army and its wor_k among the
poor and needy. The army is a kind between the clinking of coins drop- dormitory bed and meals, to begin
of institutionalized Mother Teresa of ping. I figure my kettle averaged one with. •As his health improves, he
contribution every five minutes. But begins doing menial work around
the world.
It gains its primary visibility with maybe I shouldn't have been the cenier.
Most of the men soon a11: workthe public duri)lg the Christmas sea- depressed over this lackluster
ing at outside jobs, although they
son. From the week before Thanks- response.
The man in charge of the kettle continue to live at the center and
giving to the day before Christmas,
program
told us that "the kettles arc attend classes and nightly evangelisarmy volunteers can be seen stand·

r

.

.

I

ttc mceungs.
•
Mu.&lt;ic plays a big role in the reh;.
bilitalion program. Most of 1~
homeless who wander into the cc~­
tcrs have never played a musical
instrument, hut they soon learn i~
the centers' music classes.
:
Music is good therapy for thC
men in the recovery program, man~
of whom are "loners." In a musictjl
group everybody has to panicipatl:
together. The experience tcachcj;
social i~tegration. .
~
Nobody is made to feel self-co~
seious about his drinking problclll
while he is undergoing rchabilit~
tion.
~
"We're goi~g to have a little syni
copation now," said the army major
leading a music session I attende&lt;I:
"Syncopation is irregular movcmenl
from bar to bar. That means most of
you are highly qualifted."
'
The men got a good laugh out ol.
that.
~
Geor• Plaaenz Is a •yndlcatec(
wrller ror Newspaper Enterprla~
AIIIO&lt;Iotlon,

Golda Marie Krackomberger, 80, Greenville, N.C., formerly of New Jersey and ·Chester, died Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1997, at East Carolina Care in
Greenville.
A homemaker, she was born Jan. 5, 1917, in Minersville, daughter of the
late Guy and Iva Deem Singer. She was a member of the South Bethel New
Testament Church at Long Bottom, the Chester Fire Department Auxiliary
W.VA.
and Chester Daughters of America Council 323:
She is survived by two sons and dall@hters-in-law, William and Phyllis
Krackomberger of Greenville and Eugene and Viola Long of Long Bottom;
a daughter, Mary Dempsey of Chester; a daughter-in-law, Sandra Long of
New Haven. W.Va.; 15 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren; three sis·
ters, Opal Hollon of Chester, Mildred Arnold of Pomeroy and Margaret Bissell of Bashan; many nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Samuel Long; second
husband, William Krackomberger; sons, Elson Long and John Krack·
omberger; a daughter, Iva Pearl Rayburn; one brother and tJv'ee sisters.
Services will be held Monday, 10 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with !'astor Duane Sydenstricker officiating. Burial will follow in
Sutton Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Extended fore&lt;ast
Friends may call Sunday, 2-4 and 7-&lt;J p.m. at the funeral home.
Sunday ... Snow showers likely.
Lows.in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.
Monday and tuesday... Dry and not
as cold. Lows in the 20s. Highs in the
upper 30s to middle 40s.
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Pomeroy, Cybil Barr, Veterans
gency Medical Service recorded five Memorial Hospital;
4:33p.m., Meigs Mine 31, Parkcalls for assistance Thursday. Units
er Run Portal, Jack Stollings, VMH;
responding included:
10:43 p.m ., Broadway Street,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:28 a.m., Yellowbush Road, Middlepon, Tammy .Wright. HMC.
Racine, Edna Neigler, Holzer Med- RACINE
2:57 p,m., Bald Knob-Stiversvillc
Ical Center, Racine squad assisted;
Road,
Glada Davis, VMH.
8:36 a.m., Maples Apartments,

David M. Lambert, 30, 34018 New Lima Road, Rutland , was cited for
assured clear distance by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
following a two-car accident Thursday at the intersection of Union Avenue
and State Route 7.
·
Troopers said Lambert was westbound on Union at I : IS p.m . when he
stopped behind a car driven by Gloria I. Oiler, 44, 31625 SR 325.
Langsville, that was stopped at the intersection .
Oiler began to move onto 7 and stopped, and Lambert, moving behind
her, was unable to stop in time and struck the rear of Oiler's car, according to the report.
Oiler was slightly injured in the accident, troopers said. but was not
treated at the scene. Both cars were slightly damaged.

United States weapons •.•

Continued r!"m page 1
to Iraq's action.
tiona) community." He said he .
Bacon declined to specify the
intended to pursue the matter "in a timing of the U-2 flight or give the
very determined way."
length of the tome frame in which it
The U.N. Security Council voted could take place, except to say that
late Thursday to condemn the expul· the window was longer than the nor·
sion .
mal 48-hour period.
Earlier,
Clinton's
chief
"The mission will he flown in a
spokesman. Mike McCurry. said the way that meets the requirements of
president and Secretary of State the U.N .. of the s(lccial commission.
Madeleine Albright had begun "the And that 's the determining factor for
careful and patient work" of con- how it flies and when it Oics,"
sulting with. allies about responding Bacon said.

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

·.Bailey resigns
Gallia
post
'

County court .cases settled

BOB BAILEY

about the EMS' operation raised
over the past year.
County commissioners have heen
working with the l!lcCoy Group
sin_!:e mid-October in' steps to bring
the service's expenses back into line.
Reductions have been made.in overtime and management, and "strict"
limits were set on purchasing, commissioncr5 said.

Meigs ESC to..

c.ontloued

r~in pal~ I

I

The Daily Sentinel

'

.The benevolent army ·of hope ~

Citation Issued in two-car crash

.Today's weather forecast

~

(USPS 21J.96f)

Publish~,d rvJ,Y aflernhon, Monday throush
Friday, 1 Lt Ci.'ourt $1., Po"ltm)'; Ohio, by the
Ohio V.T~y Ptl~ishinJ Cttmpiay/Gannctt Co.,
Pomtroy, Ohio 45'769, Ph. 992-21j6, Setond
clau postal' paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Mtmbcr: Tht Anoci1tCd Prtu, ~nd the Ohio
Newspaper A.uociation.

. POii'MASTER: Send addrts .. cooections to
The Daily Scnllncl. Ill Court St .. Pomero)l,

1 ' Ohio 4~769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ly Cal'lier or Motor Rolllt
• One Week. .................................................. $2.11»
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' One Year ....................................... :.•••••. $1114.110

' '-·

Boards Association, the Buckeye
Association of School Administrators, the Ohio Association of School
Business Officials, altd the arc'a
media.
The check list includes affirmation
of the Ohio Supreme Coun in favor
of the plaintilfs DcRolph v. State ruling that the current system of school
funding· ip Ohio is uncon,stitutional.
It calls for action to he taken on a
complete systematic overhaul. rites
the limited progress madf so far. and
asks for immcdiaie action on school
funding legislation.
'.'
Other actions by the hoard included:
·· employing Grace Weber as a
substitute teacher for usc on an asneeded oasis:
--adopting student activities policies and procedures for special educational clas.,es operated hy the county ;
--adopting a purpose clause and
activity hudget for the SBH students:
--and issuing a bus driver's ~:cr­
tificate for Kimbley L. PJlulcy for
Meigs County.
:\
·~~

·'

No 1ublctiption by m1il ptrmlued in 1rc1s
whtre home canier aervic:e it; l'flillblt.

, Publisher rcterves tht rip! to adjuat raltS dur·
· in1 the subli:riptioft period. Sublalption rate
c:hanp1 may be implemented by chatiJIRJ liM:
dur11ton of 1he 1ubscription.

MAIL stiiSCRtPTIONS
llliWe Melp CNIIJ
13 Weelll ....,.,., .......................................ll7.30
26 Wee:tt .......... ~···-·······""'' """'""""'" '"J.Hl
$Z W.... ............................................... $1115~
Ratti O.W. M.tp Co.. c,

ll \Vcets ........ ............................... ....... 1•• J29.23
Z6 w.... ................................................ l56.611

52 Weekt ............................. ,................. SI09.7l

Stocks

Holzer 1\ledical Center
Discharges Nov. 13 - Jami
Shobe, Laura Craig, Christen Baird,
Delta Phillips. Florence Richards,
Melissa Mullins, Elmer Bums, Dale
Sheets, Lester Taylor, Leslie Adkins.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Mieh~l
Deem, son, Syracuse.
(Published with permissloll)

AmrTech .................................71
Aahland 011 .......................... .4~'1. .
ATIT..................................... 481.
Bank One .............................. 49'1.
Bob Evana ............................ 19'1.
8org·Warner ........................ 49'!.
Champion ................. :.~.: ....... ! n
Charm Shps ............................4'!.
City Holdlng .......................... 40%
Federal Mogul ....................... 44'!.
Gannett .... :........................... 52"1.
Goodye~~r ........:..................... 60'1.
Kmert ••••••.••.• t ....................... 12 "kroger ................................... 33'·
Landa End .......,...., .................35
Lim lied .................................. 23 7.1.
Oek Hill Fln1 .......................... 2D%
OVB .........................................36
One Valley ............................. 38'.1
Peoplel ................................. 43't.
Prem Flnl ............................... 26't.
Rockwell .............. ~ ................ 44'/.
RDISMII ........................ :...... 51'•
Sears ....................................46'1.
Shoney'a ................................ 4'1•

The following cases were settled
recently in the Racine Mayor's Coun
of Mayor Scott Hill.
Fined were: Chester Francis, Long
Bottom, old fines, $150; Steven
James, Pomeroy, speed, $43 costs
only; Amol Dhande, Clinton, Mich.,
speed, $56; Sandra Distelhorst,
Racine, speed, $43 costs only; Tommy Oltman, Long Botto.m, speed,
$58; Sandra N. Svoboda, Lancaster,
speed, $55; Kenneth Surface, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., speed, $54; Michael
A. Riley, Redhouse, W.Va., speed,
$61 ; Charles Wolfe, Racine, speed,
minor misdemeanor. $~~4

Subscribers 1'01 duirinj 10 pay lh~ £"1rrier may
remit in 1dv11nce dirtcl 10 The D1ily Sentinel
on 1 thret, sht Of 12 mo"lh bub. CRdil will be
JIWn £'1rrier each wed:.

at the church at the end of South
Third Avenue. Those planning to
attend should call the church to notify of the number attending, at 9925062.

Am Ele Po-r ...................... 4n..

Racine mayor's court

Divorces asked .• Harold William
The following actions to end marHanson
Jr.. Rutland, from Linda
riage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- Leigh Hanson, Middlcpon, Nov. 10;
Wilbur Leo Ward Sr., Langsville,
ry Spencer.
Dissolutions asked ·· Barbara from Christy Kay Ward, Pomeroy,
Young, Tuppers Plains, and Robert L. Nov. 10.
Divorce ~ranted·· Dorothy Lynn
Young, Reedsville. Nov. 13; Sarah
, Sams, Pomeroy, and Roben Steven Crowe from Rohen Lamar Crowe,
Sams, Hockingpon, Nov. 13; Mary Nov. 10; Robin A Pridemore from
Jane Lawrence and Charles R. Joey R. Pridemore. Nov. I 0. ·
Lawrence. both of Portland, Nov. 10.

..: ................ ,.. .... "' .... • ........ • ... •"' • • • • • • • • • .. ~
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.\ '1"1'[\'1'10\:
.lU:I(~S fOt\l'l .
.\lt'I'IS'I'S .\\ll flt.\l&lt;"l'l•: ns

1

:
,
,
1

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•4
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•' •
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Are you interested in having your handmade
items(s) included in a catalog of products
made in Meigs County?

Akzo

u ....................................

84~

St1r Bank.............................47"1.
Wencty'1 ............................... 20'-

Worthlngton .......................... 2o'!.
'

-·-·-

l_

446-0923

November 19,1 997 at 6:30 p.m.
at the Meigs County Senior Center.

•
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••
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. . . . . . . . . . . .992·5005.
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4

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Pancake/Sausage Breakfast
at Donald's of Pomeroy
(All you can eat)

Saturday, Nove ber 15, 1997
7:30 a 10:00
$3.00 donation.
Benefits to United Fund for Meigs Co.

Stock report• Ire the 10:30
a.m. quote• provtcled by Adveat
of Gelllpolla.

••
••
•
• ••
•

If you are, please attend a meeting that
will be held on

This is an information meeting. There will be no
cost to you to include your item in the catalog.
I
Please bring a brief description and photo
••
of your product (if available).
••
If you cannot attend the meeting, but wish to be
~.[ coi.:oN\,-tREAtFif ' .~
Dinner planned
• included in the catalog, please contact the Meigs
; •• ; .. ; .
. !: •
Faith Chapel of Middlepon will · ::] MORGAN
FREEMAN IN
•
County Chamber of Commerce prior to the
have a free community Thanksgiving
•
KISS THE GIRLS"
I
meeting date at
Dinner on Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Hospital news

'•

Divorces and dissolutions

The following cases were settled .plus costs;.
recently in the Meigs County Court
Bobby l Gayhcan. Dexter, DUI.
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
$850 plus costs, 10 ,days jail susFined were: Paul L. Chadwell, pendcd to three days, one year OL
Mi&lt;ldlcport, $30 plus costs, speed; · suspension, two years probation, jail
Emma I. Wilson, Shade, failure to and $550 suspended upon completion
yield, $20 plus costs; Deidra M. of residential treatment program; driWolf. Marion, speed, $30 plus costs; ving under suspension, $150 plus
Roger D. Barnhart, Pomeroy, costs, 10 days jail suspended to three
improper passing, $20 plus costs; days concurrent, two years probation;
Sandra L. Boling, Pomeroy, failure to ~cat belt, $25 plus costs; failure to
control, $20 plus costs; Gloria J. control, costs only ; hit/skip, $50 plus
Ross, Portland, disorderly conduct, costs; Rickie W. Icenhower, Dexter,
$15 plus costs; Melinda J. Dailey, DUI, $450 plus costs, 10 days jail
Pomeroy, failure to control. $30 plus suspended to three days, 90-day OL
costs; Heather L. Roush, Middleport, suspension, one year probation;
Larry Napper, Rutland, attempt to
scat belt, $25 plus costs; Cynthia R.
Hawkins. Pomeroy, speed, $26 plus take a deer with a gun during closed·
costs; Jason E. Slater, Pomeroy, stop season, $75 plus costs, 10 days jail
sign, $30 plus costs: Peggy S. suspended to two days, one year proCaruthers, Racine, open container. bation,twoyearOhiohunting'liccnsc
$20 plus costs; Seth R. Cremeans, suspension with hunter safety course
Middleport, driving under suspen· required at end of suspension, forfei·
sion, $175 plus costs, six months jail ture of firearm: hunting from a motor· suspended to IOdays. two years pro- vehicle. $75 plus costs. 10 days jail
bation; expired tags , $10 plus costs; suspended to two days concurrent,
Wanda L. Adkins, Racine, driving one year prohation. two year hunting
under the influence, $850 plus costs. license su•penston; James T. Redden.
one year operator's license suspcn- Grove City. resisting arrest. $200 plus
sian. six months jail suspended to 10 costs. 30 days jail suspended to time
days. two years probation: driving · served. one year prohation. $500 for·
under suspension, $200 plus costs, feiturc. three-day residential treatment
six months jail suspended to 10 days program; len of center. $25 plus
concurrent. two years probation; costs: open container. $25 plus costs.
Marvin A Oiler, Middlcpon, DUI.
$1,000 plus costs, six months jail suspended to I0 days. one year OL suspension, two years probation. 90-day
vehicle immobilizatio.n; driving
under suspension. $300 concurrent,
costs, six months jail suspended to I0
days concurrent. two year. probation;
William E. Morgan, Athens, passing
in a ha~ardous zone, $30 suspended
to $10 plus costs; Brian C. Young.
Pomeroy, speed. $30 plus costs: Jeremy C. Hubbard: Pomeroy, speed, $30 ..•• •••.•..... .................

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SINGLE COPY PRICE
.
Daily ................................................... 3:5 Cents

.

.·

been

Golda Krackomberger

-bOth counties will be elected. He said
,that he assumes membership on the
new board will be "equally distrib•utcd."
, The resolution states that it is the
.belief through collaborative effons
and the sharing of resources. the
llxtent and'quality of services can be
increased.
The board also passed a "check
·Jist" resolution provided by the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding endorsing the public
school reform and scbool funding
Temedy proposal, and supporting the
Coalition's plan to urge legislators to
do what the coun asked them to do
'and come up with a funding plan to
provide equitable and adequate edu.:ational funding.
,, . Plans call for the resolution to be
distributed to members of the 122nd
General Assembly, the Ohio School

t•. •

A two-car garage containing a vehicle was gutted during a Tuesday evening fire on Bald Knob-Stiversville Road near Portland.
• Firefighters of the Racine Volunteer Fire Department assisted by
Bashan VFD firefighters responded to the garage owned by Susan
Wallbrown, according to a Racine VFD report.
The origin of the fire was undetermined, but lhe owner of the car
had
working on the vehicle earlier that day, the repon stated .

. Iva Mae Swisher, 89, Middlepon, died Thursday, Nov. 13, 1997, at Overbrook Center, Middleport. Arrangements will be announced later by the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.

'·OVP News Stllff
•· Gallia County Emergency Med·ical Services Director Bob Bailey has
'resigned his post, effective at the end
·:Of the w6rk day today.
' Bail~y submitted a letterofrcsig•nation to the Gallia County Board of
Commissioners at its regular weekly
·meeting on,Thursday. '
· In an emergency action, the eoun"ty entered into agreement with the
"McCoy Group Inc., Grayson, Ky., to
·l&gt;rovide management services for
EMS, to include billing and truck
··maintenance. The contFact is for a
,minimum period of 60 days, and a
''maximum 90 days, at which time the
·contract will be evaluated for possi·
ble further negotiations.
,
., An ?litfit of ~even to nine people
ft'Otn the lifcet&gt;~ OYOufl 'Wi.lt !Ootk (o
reorganize the manager11ent side of
the operation.
"We will maintain our personnel
lll!d continue with our current barg~ni.n!-..nil a'recnlem," said Commossooii •Presodcnt Harold Montgomery.
• The resignation comes on the
heels of a $300,000 department
rleficit last summer. and question~

¥

Garage fire reported

IND~ ·

'By JILL .WILLIAMS

..

--Local briefs-___,

Iva Mae Swisher

Obi a forecast
.. Tonight ...Snow likely nonh. Snow
Iai:cumulating I to 2 inches. Cloudy
:south with a chance of snow. Lows
'around 30 north and 30 to 35.south.
" Saturday.. .Snow likely. Highs in
4he 30s.

.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Jean Frederick, 84, formerly of Chester, died Friday. Nov. 14, 1997, in
Winter Haven, Fla. Arrangements will be announced later by the Middlepott Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.

"

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Jean Frederick

Serious questions about the flat' tax:
By William A . .Rusher
Both Steve Forbes and House
majority leader Dick Armey have
protested that I misrepresented. their
proposal when, in a recent column. I
questioned the political viability of a
nat tax.
I had simply pointed out that a
nat tax of 17 percent (the rate usually proposed) would result in people
with high incomes paying much less
in taxes than they do under the current system, . which taxes progrcs·
sively higher incomes at progrcs·
sivcly higher rates. I added that per·
sonally I thought a flat tax would he
fairer than the present system. But! .
warned that it's far from clear that
American voters as a whole would'
still favor a nat tax over a progressive one. after the Democrat&lt; got
through .arguing that "the rich"
don't really "need" all of the
remaining83 ·percent of their ill-gotten gains.
Forbes and Armcy lir.t complain
that my scenario didn't. take into

.

. --.,- · ,; I

.

•

~

•

�.

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

Page4

1897

Cavs top Nets 85-74 to drop Bulls to fifth
"It's tough loss because it's a
game we had and let get away." ·said
David Robinson. who led .the Spurs
with 27 points and 14 rebounds.
Wizards 91
Timberwolves 88
Rod Strickland scored six of his
21 points in overtime, redeeming
himself for two missed shots in the
end of regulation, as Washington won
its fourth road game.
"We' ve won all our road games
(Washington actually is 4-2 on the
road) and lost all our home games.
Go figure." said Strickland, who
missed a layup with just under 10
seconds remaining in regulation and
a fallaway jumper at the buzzer.
"We've got to solve the home-game
situation.··
Chris Webber added 22 points and•
17 rebounds for Washington, whose
reserves outscored Minnesota's 23-6.
Tom Gugliotta had his worst
shooting night of the season, going 4of-23 from the field with a seasonlow 13 points. The Wolves shot a season-low 37.6 percent from the field.
SuperSonics 95, Pistons 89
Gary Payton just missed a tripledouble with 25 points, nine assists
and nine rebounds and spent much of
the night hounding Grant Hill into 6for-17 shooting and eight turnovers.

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
"A couple guys gave us great
AP Baaketball Writer
efforts. but a couple of people let us
The Chicago Bulls can't catch a down," Calipari said. "That can't
break - even on their night off.
happen when you're struggling to
The Bulls dropped to fifth place in survive ."
the Central Division and a tie for
In other NBA games, the Los
eighth place in the Eastern Confer- Angeles Lakers edged San Antonio
ence when the Cleveland Cavahers 109-100 in overtime, Washington
defeated the injury-depleted New nipped Minnesota 91-88 in overtime,
Jersey Nets 85-74 Thursday night. · Seattle defeated Detroit 95-89, MilThe win moved the Cavs (4-3) a waukee beat the Los Angeles Clipgame above .500 and a half· game pers I 02-94 and Philadelphia edged
ahead of the idle Bulls. Cleveland and Dallas 99-98 .
Chicago will play at the United Cen·
Lakers 109, Spurs 100
ter on Saturday night
Shaquille O' Neal scored 34
' "Nobody like to see a team short- points, and Los Angeles outscored the
handed the way they were. The min- Spurs 22-6 down the stretch. mcludutes build up and they didn't get a ing 13-4 in overtime, to wm at Sar
breather," Cavs coach Mike Fratello Antonio and extend its season-opensaid of the Nets , who were down to ing winning streak to six games.
nine healthy players before losing
"We were more aggressive defenChris Gatling to a sprained right sively in the last half of the fourth
ankle in the third quarter. He'll be out quarter," Lakers coach Del Harris
at least a week.
said. "The guys just totally commttWeslcy Person scored 20 points. ted themselves. Once we got that
including eight during a 10-0 burst to momentum going that was some of
close the third quarter, and center the best defense we' ve played."
Zydrunas Jlgauskas also scored 20.
The Lakers erased a 10-point
The Cavs overcame Sam Cassell's deficit 1n the fourth quarter and tied
32 points and Jayson Williams' the game at 96 with 7.I seconds left
career-high 26 rebounds.
on Nick Van Exel's jumper from just
New Jersey lost its second in a inside the three-point line.
row following four &gt;traight wins to
San Antonio struggled to get off a
open 1hc season.
.good shor in overtime.

"We're 6-2, so we're doing pretty good closing teams out. But we
can do better," Payton said. "Our
focus was keeping (Hill) away from
the basket and out of his comfon
zone.
Vin Baker added 24 points, 12
rebounds and three blocked shots.
Seattle never trailed against the
Pistons, who went 1-3 on their fourgame road trip.
Buek1101, Clippers 94
Glenn Robinson scored 32 points
-his third straight game with 30 or
more -and Ray Allen added 23 for
Milwaukee at Los Angeles.
The Bucks opened a 21-point
lead in the first half behind the solid
shooting of Robinson and Allen,
who combined for 36 of Milwaukee's
first 58 points, then held off th~ Clippers' surge in the fourth quarter.
76en 99, Maveri&lt;k198
At Dallas, Allen Iverson scored 31
points, including a key three-pointer
with I :37 left, aod Philadelphia hand·
ed Dallas its founh consecutive
defeat.
Jerry Stackhouse added 21 points
and connected on a three-pointer with
2:20 remaining to give tbe 76ers the
lead for good. 90-88. Derrick Coleman had 25 points and 14 rebounds
for Philadelphia.

NOT THIS TIMEI -The Cleveland Cllvellera' Shawn Kemp (cen·
ter) linda hla allot blocked from behind by the New Jeraey Nell'
Mlcheel Cage (45)aa the Neta' Jay1011 Wlllllma (far left) and Kindall
Gill, one of Kemp'• former Wlmmetea from their daye In Seaute,
clau In an the forward during thellrat half of Thuredly night'• NBA
g11111ln East Rutherford, N.J., where the Cavellera wan 85--74.. (API

Purdue gets nod to capture Big Ten men's cage title again
led by pre-season conference Player
Michigan lost its coach, Steve
By The Associated Prell
The Xs and Os Gene Keady can of the Year Chad Austin at guard and Fisher, who was fired after an investigation found minor violations in the
handle. He's been doing it for many senior Brad Miller at center.
"I don't know how good we'll be. program. He was replaced by assisyears and quite well, thank you. What
troubles the successful Purdue coach I have a lot of questions about lead- tant Brian Ellerbe on an interim basis.
The Wolverines lost Maurice Tay-three Big Ten titles in the la.&lt;t four ership and chemistry and camalor, who took off for the NBA, but
years - is the new generation of raderie." Keady said.
Defending champion Minnesota · burly center Robert "Tractor" Trayplayers.
"I'm not a coach anymore. I'm a made the Final Four last season but lor, three-point specialist Louis Buldad," Keady said recently as the has lost guard Bobby Jackson and lock and forwards Maceo Baston and
Boilermakers get ready to open center John Thomas. Forward Court- · Jerod Ward all return.
"The hasketball court will be like
another season tonight. "They don't ney ·James, last year·~ leading
want another person telling them rebounder, was suspended after a a church. It's wi1cre we'll go and lind
peace of mind." Traylor said of the
what to do, they don't want to be on domestic altercation.
That leaves Eric Harris and Sam upheaval surrounding Fisher's distime .... "
Somehow Keady has been able to Jacobson as returning double~figurc missal.
get through to his players. And the scorers.
Indiana lost starting guard Neil
Boilermakers ore once again one of
"You can't replace those guys," Reed. who left after a feud with
the favorites in the Big Ten, mainly Harris said. "They ju~t did so much coach Bobby Knight. The Hoosiers
because they return all five starters, for us .~·
do return forward Andrae Pauerson,
center Jason Collier, guard A.J. Guy-

Scoreboard
Tc~s ChrisliOU'I 126, Codifurnia Ali·Siun: 92
T!i!l\al T~i!~:h 70. ArbnS..1i Eapre5~ ~~~
ic~;as·San An1on10 Ill. ~klun.J Air Fur..:!:
BOUie 7~
\lttmom ~ - OinmotWI Cluh 32
W Kenwcky 16. Dm~-Jurn-RV 71
Xavier. Ohio 1S. Alh~csln A1.1ion 62

Basketball

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
1\tlaPtk Otw-..

Iu111

.II'. L ta.

Miami .......................... :... ...... :"i
Nc:w Jcucy .......................... .4
New YlYit. ... ........................!!

2 .11.a

Wnshington ..... ..................... ....
Orllirldu .............. ff"'"'' " " "' ""':\
BtHIItlfl ...........
. ......... 1

4 .:'iOO
4 429
~ .2tl6

Ptula.klphin.. .................... .. .2

!I .2116

2

,t,t,7

~

.62~

Hockey
',
,.; NHL standings
2

EASTERN CONFERENCE

)

lam

CflllniDiw-Won
Atlunr11 ............ : ....... ..., ..........!~. 0 '1.00
MiiWi\Uir.I."C......

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

2

2 667
.l . ~11
4 .lOO

llt..'tf\'111 ..................

6

... 2

~

............. I

6

IndiuM..... :...........

-·-

TtlfUft10....

New h..,sey .
Wu~h1n11ton ..
N.Y. ldt:UtdcrL
N.Y RanJtn .
FloriUa. ..

,714

t.lanrh&gt;IIC ................ ... ............ 4
CLE\IEU\NO .............. ...... ... A
('tri\!IIJII ..... ..........
.. ....4
.. ..... ,]

Phll&gt;kklphtQ .......

.JH

T"mp;~ B~y

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

Bllslun .

Mldwnl Dhlt6oft

»:6

~

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ta.

...l

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.. ................... ..\

,l

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Mil\no:~·~n ......

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Olla'ff;l .........

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10 1.00
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I 1&lt;00
2 7.10

Photnill ..................... .... ....... .4

5\-"Mtlt ...... .................. ..... ....... .b'
Slk.:tallll!ntu ............. ................ 2

~

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l-A. CII~• .............. .......... I

b

14.\

1 000

Ooldc:nSII!W ........................ .0

Thundoy'• ..,.,...
CLEVELAND tl."i. N!:w JcrM:y 7-J
W111hlnr.11)11 IJI. MinncwtaiUI tOTI
Phil~ phin1J9. Dallaf; YM
L.A. l..ukLT• 109. ~nn Anrnnio 100 (0Tl
~.rttk "~- 0.."1rrtll K9
Milwuukcc 102. LA CliJ1111.'B ~

Toalghl'1pmes

f

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L:A. l.Mm ...... ....... .. .......... ...6
PurttiU\&lt;I . .... .. ....
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... II 7 2 24

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CaruiiR:I.
Bufrnlo

IK

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.. !I K 4
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l:"i ...
14 Jt;l
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411

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-·-

20

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~·~·

New JtrW)' aalluffalu. 1 .\11 p m
W:.-.hntJion at Montreal. 1 ;\O I' m
Pinsbutr,h ~ Torunto. 7:10 r .m.
lkUOII ;It .'\1 l.ooi1. K:JO p m.
Culpylilf..&amp;imoolnn, 10- ~pm
Phocnts. at San JOtf. IOJO 1un
OWI;u :v b1 Anp.-lc•. 10..\4.1 1'·111
CuhlflM.itl 01t N 't lhn,_cn. I:WI' rn
Curohnu at Vun.:uuver, ~ p.m
T01.mra Bay a1 Philadelphia. 7 p.m.
()droll ar &lt;.luca,tl, K run
O:aiW ar Anuhe1m. IC 11.111.

Cffllral Oh'Won

»: L I

Ddn11t ...
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U:dl&gt;t5 ....... ,

PhncOill. .... .
Otknl).t' .... .
Turunltl ...

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4 24 nt

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71'211.'
b II .l
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C;Jij!.:~ry ...
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711

... JO _I t-o
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rl 7 .&amp;
~

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10 4

Thursday's scores

~~

Bueblllll
Amtrlrln l..Hpr
(.'HIChGO WHI'fE SOK : Nitnwd Tum
S~ltl.'._..r nmna~cr . \lun Jn~ hu:.1 luum~ ~~·u..:h 111111
Kirk (.'hlllll!liun JllldtiU¥ L'II~ICh l11r l'nl1mry til Ilk"

PCL. l'hri~ Cron 11\0UlOI~l'r nf Wm~tun - Sukm. uf. lht•
C:amlum Lo::1~tit.' and M~1rlt Hal..:y III:Ulti)!Cr t•l Htc~ ·
ory ol' lhc Snulh Athuui~ l.cal!u~· .

llukolboll
N1tklonll BakdhiiH A!1StJC'I11Hon
IJETROIT PISTONS At'IJvul..:d F (.'h ilrlt•l
trBamw•n t'mm !he injur.:tJ liM
NI:W JERSEY NEfS· Pl;~~:~'tl G-l.u~;ttlU~ H:tr·
w; on the mjun:.J lir;! twov:IIL".J F Jac~ H:.~k:y !rum
!lw inJnn.·Lil isr
4

Wnshlni!fOn .l iJull.llu:!
lklmtl .a. Otwwa 1

CLEVELAND Dl C'tlkaJII, lfi:.lOf'.RI.
Utah ut Dalla&amp;. 8: ~ p.m
Min~lliM' SWI Anloniu.ll;~p. m .
Ponll'lnd 111 Golden Sill!\', 10;;\0 p.m.
MilwmuknatVancouvtr.IOp.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Exhlbldotll
A..,.._ 65. 8C Chemolvit j()
AriJOOA 11 .1. Metboumr: 76
Otlfnblina Sl. 101. VASDA Blue 9-4

Lin'
•• n . Tcnna~~e T«h 61
Manrhon0ii66.N 11Hnoia60(on
MiNis."w 111. s~ Eaprc~~ sa
Morebe~c~St92.

a~h71

1'

St. 90, Albacot!-4&gt; 1•

N. Iowa 96, Pella Window•
Qrlaal94. V - USA 88
t)niRDbortJI.,,C-oOil!l

-!he
n.

Outlloo;k AlloSian
MeNeett St. 14
, _ St. BB. Urai.0..11 114
Roopn 89.
Wotld Allll
-.Melli. 9). Slov'*l• 61
T - A.tM 99. Mellooumo 87

'IAIKYOU

•

••

TO THE VOTERS OF SUnON TOWNSHIP,
I DEEPLY APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT
.
IN OUR RECENT ELECnOif."'' ..
·LARRY EBERSIACH
Pd. for by candldllt, 2341 Third St., SyracuM, ott 45771

Prfe•

WE ALSO DO ~lJSTOM
GRINDING 4 MIXING
STOP IN OR CALL
MONDAY· FRIDAY 8:00-5:00
SATURDAY 8:00.12:00

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MULIEIIY AVE.

November 26th
Don't Be Left Out
Call 992·2155
Dave Harris·Ext. 104 or .
Don Riffle Ext. 105

•

POMEROY

992·2115
I

. .,.

. ..

• -r

•'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 14, 1997

Colorado Rockies' Walker gets
National League MVP honors
By AARON J. LOPEZ ·
DENVER (AP)- Well aware of
previous snubs of Colorado sluggers,
Larry Walker finally quashed the
Coors Field bias.
In hitting .366 with 49 homers and
130RBisfortheRockiesthisseason,
Walker did much of his damage outside the mile-high atmosphere and
was rewarded Thursday with the
National League Most Valuable Player award.
"I never really got too excited.''
Walker said of predictions he would
win the award. "I wasn't going to he
let down if it didn't happen. We've
seen what happened in the past with
Dante Bichette and Ellis Burks."
Bichette finished second in the NL
MVP voting two years ago, while
Burks was a distant third in 1996.
Walker had no such trouble, gaining
22 of 28 first-place votes, three seconds and three thirds to outdistance
Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Mike
Piazza and HouslonAstros first baseman Jeff Bagwell.
Walker became the first Canadian
to win the award. He followed a
sweep by Canadian teams in Cy
Young voting, with Montreal's Pedro

Martinez winning the NL award and field fence. A month after the season,
Toronto's Roger Clemens winning Walker slipped while fisl)ing in Vancouver, British Columbu, and needthe AL honor'.
"I've done something good for ed surgery on his right shoulder.
Forget MVP, Walker could have
me personally, and even better, I've
done something good for my coun- been the comeback player of the year.
"Larry Walker just put together a
try," Walker said. "I hope kids can
year
that they could not deny," Rocklook at me and say one day, 'I want
to play as good as Larry Walker did.' ies manager Don Baylor said. "ComHopefully kids look up to ·me and it ing off a shoulder injury, just to do
-will push them to reach for their the things he did was pretty incredible."
goals."
Walker became the first person
Walker prevented voters from
since Hank Aaron to have 400 total
using hitter-friendly Coors Field
crutch, hitting .346 on the road with bases, and he led the NL in homers,
· 29 homer. and 62 RBis- up from slugging percentage (.720), ewaa .142 average with six homers and base hits (99) and on-base percentage
•
13 RBis on the road in his injury- (.452).
shortened 1996 season.
His 143 runs trailed only Hous"I knew I was having a good sca- ton's Craig Biggio, and his RBI total
son as I was going along," Walker was No. 3 in the league. Defensivesaid. "Just day after o;Jay, I shocked ly, he won his third consecutive
at myself with soine things I was Gold Glove in the outfield.
"As far as numbers, the overall
doing. I'd go home at night or to the
hotel room and say, 'I did that again'? season was so much fun, it's tough to
pinpoint one thing," Walker said. "To
I can't believe this. This is fun!"'
Walker's remarkable year was in be in the same sentence with Hank
sharp contrast to 1996, when he Aaron is a great honor lor me. Not so
missed 79 games after breaking his much the numbers themselves. hut
collarbone crashing into the center the names that are involved in some

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

P"'··-....., ,, '*""'" ·""_
...,•.,.,.u .~tt-q
.· PICTURE YOUR CHILD ·
AMONG THE •••

LARRY WALKER

as•

of things 1 did really hit home."
Walker put his name in the MVP
race from the season's lirst week.
when he hit six homers in · a fourgame span and built an average that
didn't drop below .400 for good until
July 19.
"I believe it . started one day in
Montr011l when Larry hit the three
home runs," Baylor sai!l. "He ha!l
such a confident look about him thnt
it continued not only throughout that
entore month of April but lor an entire

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"
-.-

season."

(16 years of age or younger)
Will be published

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
The Carolina Hunicanes are finally starting to live up to their nickname.
Starting with a 1-7-2 record after
they were transplanted from Hartford,
the Hurricanes have suddenly picked
up speed in the NHL.
Thursday night's 4-2 victory at
.Calgary gave the Hurricanes their
third straight victory and a 7-2-1
record in their last 10 games.
"The primary reason is chemistry,
we've got some good line combinations going now," said Keith
Primeau, who scored two goals in
Thursday night'swin. "At the beginning of the season, we had some new
bodies, but now guys ore feeling
comfortable with each other."
Primeau's second goal, at 8:33 of
the third period, was the game-winner. It was Carolina's second powerplay goal of the night and it came
with Sandy McCarthy in the penalty
box for slashing Primeau .
Carolina got spectacular goallending from Sean Burke to protect
I' the one-goal load in the·game's waning moments. It was Burke's second
consecutive start -

and win -

since returning from a layoff after
being charged with assualting his
wife. He finished with 30 SIIVCs.
" I'm not getting too excited. yet,
but! fell good tonight." Burke said.
"It's nice to get a chance to play two
nights in a row."

Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
Detroit 4, Ottawa 2; Colorado 2.
Philadelphia I; Washington 3, Buffalo 2: Toronto 2. Chicago I; St.
Louis 4, Boston 2; Montreal 5,
Phoenix 2; and Los Angeles 6. San
Jose 3.
Red Wings 4, Senators 2
Steve Yzerman hadtwo goals and
an assist to lead Detroit to victory at
Ottawa.
Yzerman opened the scoring,
assisted on his club's second goal and
scored irita an empty net for the
defending Stanley Cup champions.
Darren McCarty and Martin
Lapointe also scored for Detroit.
Igor Kravchuk and Andreas Dackell
scored for Ottawa.
With high-scoring forward Daniel
Alfrcdsson out of the lineup with an
ankle injury, the Senators arc struggling through their first slump of the
season, with four consecutive losses.
The Senators arc 6-2-1 with Alfrcdsson in the lineup and 3-6-2 without
him.
Avalanche 2, Flyen 1
Patrick Roy made 30 saves and
Uwe Krupp scored the winning goal
in the second period as Colorado won
at Philadelphia in a battle between
two divisional leaders.
Krupp's shot through a screen was
sct_up by Mike Ricci midway through
the sccohd period.
Roy won only his second regular
season game in 21 starts (2-11-8)
against the Flyers, whose four-game

By MEL REISNER
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP)- It
took 28 years for Phoenix sports
executive Jerry Colangelo to get
another chance to pick first in an
expansion draft. He had hetter luck
this time .
As former major league star Frank
Robinson, the commissioner of the
Arizona Fall League. flipped 11 comrncmorative Jackie Robinson silver
dollar, Colangelo called heads.
Heads is what Robinson declared,
and the Arizona Diamondbacks got
the choice of picking firs! in the
expansion draft. Instead, they gave
the first and fourth picks to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. opting to choose
second, third and fifth and have the
first choice in each succeedi ng round
of Ihe draft Tuesduy. ·
Each team will draft 35 players
and fill out most of its initial 40-man
roster from other team's leavings or
through trades.
"Drafting two. three, five in the
first five picks gave us much more
flexibility," said Colangelo, the Diamondbacks CEO. "And then proceeding down into the draft in subsequent rounds, we have the llcxibility of making trades before the
selection.
"We did a pretty good shopping
job to see whether that first pick
would bring a major deal, and we'd
already gone past that."
Tampa Bay CEO Vince Naimoli
would have preferred to let the Dia.mondbacks choose first, but said the
No. I choice could he turned to the
Devil Rays' benefit.
"What the first pick allows us to
do is work on a blockbuster trade,"
· Naimoli said.
In 1969, the circumstances were
much different for Colangelo.
As general manager of the
Phoenix Suns, he lost a coin nip to
tile Milwaukee Bucks. who selected
Lew Alcindor with the No. I choice.
He became a Hall of Fame center
now known as Kareen Abdul Jabbar.
The Suns' first pick was Neal
Walk, and they have never had an
elite center.

"The coin did come up heads, and
then the commissioner, Walter
Kennedy, llipped it over on his wrist.
and it was tails," Colangelo said.
This time. Robinson caught the
coin in his left hand. covered it and
then showed the heads side as Colangelo beamed.

J

Tuesday, December 23rd
'
m

Hurricanes beat Flames to stretch win streak

Arizona Diamondbacks
to get .first pick in 1998
baseball expansion draft

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS MONDAY
NOVEMBER 24TH 12 NOON

Quallt~•nd

Sunday'• pllltl

L.A. Clipper~ at AlfoM~. 6 p.m.
New Jepey nt CLEVELAND. 6 p.m.
Houston at Pt\oenia, 8 p.m.
Nilwnuk« 111 Scanlc. 9 p.m.
VQfk."OUYft Dl L.A. Liken. 9:;\0 p.m.

"It's great for the kids alfllliorthe
fans. And let's hocc it, it's going to
make a hell uf a lut uf money,"
O'Neill said.

For More Details

DEER SWEET
BEEF,
HORSE, POULTRY
&amp; PIG FEEDS
CIJ•e• Out .Dur

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Is Coming On Wednesday

Transaction s

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iulll

struggle in the regular scasnn- will
rest with the lirsl-cvcr men's rosl-

Christmas·Kick-Off
.Edition

Saturday'• 11'1~
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Sunday '• !lllrDn

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OrlAndo al Willhtnarnn. 7Jtl p.m
Dtnvltl' ar Mlnml. 7JO p.m.
LA. ("l1pper1 111 Ch:~tkJCI.r. 7..10 p m.

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and Jermaine Tate,l:"l year's secondand third-leading scorers, off the
lcam for rules violnthms. •
Nor1hwcslcrn's hupcs center on
firsHcam cnnfcrcncc center Evan
Eschmcyer.
And the hopes of many teams in
the league - especially the ones that

The Daily Sentinel's

Ona-a at Boston. 1 p m

AtlanlltDMUon

season.
Penn State is glad for the return uf
senior guard Dan Earl. who missed
all last season with a back injury, to
go with Pete Lisicky in tbe l&gt;ackcuurt.
Both Ohio State (Jim O'Brien)
and Northwestern (Kevin O'Neill)
hope new couches c:m mise their
rcspcclivc programs from ncm nr al
the basement.
0' Brien, who c(nn~:s rmm Boswn
College, already has prul&gt;lcms.
Damon Stringer, who averaged 15.1
last season, has a stress fracture in his
back and is out until at least January.
O'Brien kicked Shaun Stoncrnok

Tonlght'•llllmes

Plu)burgb 011 NY R~nllL'n . 7:30p.m
Coloradn :ll New Jcrlle)'. 7:.10 1'-"'
N"' lslarwknarT~tlby. 1 ..l0tJm
Phillldclphla ;u f-lunW. 7 .!'0 1un.
VaR~.·ou~ 011 AnoJII."lm. IOJO f' m

Ill

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Colorlldo 2. PhilaLielphi~ I
St . Louis"· Boston 2
Toronto 2. Chka~tn I
MunJrenl ~ - Pht--=n•• 2
Camlinn 4. C:a ll!:uy 2
lm An~clc8 6. S;m Ju!le .l

ton and swingman Charlie Miller to
go with freshman Luke Recker.
Iowa had hoped for the return of
Jess Settles, who missed all last season with back problems after deciding against going to the NBA. But
Settles is still ailing and the
Hawkeyes have lost star guard Andre
Woolridge. Forward ·Ryan Bowen
and long-distance shooter Kent
McCausland must step up.
Illinois lost Kiwane Ganis but
welcomes back Jerry Hester from
back surgery. Guards Matt Heldman
and Kevin Turner must take up for
the loss of Garris on the perimeter.
The Wisconsin Badgers must do
without forward Sum Okey lor the
first two games. The team's leading
returning scorer was suspended for
breaking team rules. The Badgers
will again rely on defense ; they
forced opponents to shoot under 40
percent last season.
Michigan State point guard
Mateen Cleaves, also hothcred by
back problems, is slimmer and trimmer, .and the S1&gt;artans return center
Antonio Smith, who led the league '"
rebounding with 10.6 per game l:osl

' ..

.

The Daily Sentinel

Jeff Shantz scored for the Blackwinning streak came to an end.
Roy blanked the Flyers on four hawks, who dropped their second
power plays and made a glove save decision in three nights to the Maple
on a shot by Eric Lindros late in the Leafs. After a live-game winning
second period . h was the third streak. the Blackhawks arc 0-2-1 in
.straight win for the Avalanche, who their last three.
are unbeaten in six of their last sevThe Maple Leafs arc 4-2-2 in their
en games (4-1-2).
last eight.
Joe Sakic scored Colorado's othToronto goalie Felix Potvin
er goal. Shjon Podein scored for stopped 28 shots. Despite losing,
Chicago goalie Jeff Hackett was
Philadelphia.
sharp in stopping 21 shots.
Capitals 3, Sabres 2
Blues 4, Bruins 2
Olaf Kolzig continued his career
Brett
Hull
scored his I Oth goal and
season, stopping 23 shots as Washadded two assists to lead St. Louis
ington won at Buffalo.
While Kolzig only faced 23 shots, ovcr 'B6ston.
Hull has two goals and five assists
he kept his team in the game early
in
his
last two games after failing to
an!l late in picking up his lOth win of
record a goal or an assist in the prethe season in just his 16th game.
Peter Bondra's goal with 15:32 to vmus stx.
The Blues are 6-4-1 in their last II
play was the game-winner. Adam
games
and have the best home record
Oates fired a pass from the side
in
the
NHL
at 9-2-1. The Bruins are
boards to Bondra, who beat Buffalo
goalie Steve Shields high on the 8-4-2 in their last 14 games and are
winless in their last three .
glove side.
The score was tied 2-2 after two
Buffalo tied the game 2-2 just2:05
periods
as Hall Gill and Ted Donato
earlier on Derek Plante's fourth goal.
scored for the Bruins and Blair
Maple Leafs 2, Blackhawks l
. Igor Korolev and Mats Sundin Atcheynum and Derrcn Turcotte for
scored first-period goals as Toronto the Blues.
won at Chicago.

-ONLY·

(CHILD'S NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name

, Per PicturePrepaid
Please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope to return yout
photo.

Official .
Entry

Marathon beats Ohio State
men 73-51 In exhibition

Form

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Charles Min land had 20 points and was one
of four players on his teum to score in double ligures as Marothnn defeated Ohio State 73-51 in an exhibition game at St. John arena Thursday night.
It was the Buckeyes' final exhibition game of the season. The team hosts
Kent in its regulur-scason opener Wednesday.
Curt Smith scored 14 for Marathon. JohAny McCrimmon hu!l 12 points
and nine rebounds, and Willie Murdaugh added II points .
'
The Buckeyes' leading scorers were Ken Johnson and Michael Redd. with
12 points each. Joson Singleton and Carlos Davis both scored II . Jon San!lersoff led Ohio State in rebounding with nine .
The Buckeyes hit only nine of20 (45 percent) free-throw attempts, including 2 of 8 (2S percent) in the first half:
Marathon led just 25-22. at halftime but, led by six points frum Minlan~ .
outscored Ohio Siate 16-0 to open the second half. The Buckeyes never got
closer than 13 points afterward.
Ohio State limited Marathon to two points during the first nine minutes
of the game, but Marathon scored 10 points during the next 2:45 to tic it :ot
· 12. Mark Meredith had two of his three three-pointers during the stretch and
finished the game with nine points.

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Tom Peden
Country

Mall or bring the entry form:

Mellday • S8tanlay: 9 am • 8 pm

The Daily Sentinel

Slndlly: I Pill • 8 Pill

111 Court St.

. .·

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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kwlii«"*c&amp; :t*rififi•~w.d

�·-·

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t

211 Wt1l SooniiSI.
P.O. ••126
"-"· 011. 45769

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614/992-2136

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By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sparta Wrlt.r ·
Ohio University will be trying·to
forget as lt plays a game to remember.
The Bobc:ats'lopsided 4S·21 loss
at home to Miami of Ohio on Saturday has casl a pall over Salurday"s
game at Marshall for the Mtd-American Conference's East Division title.
Miami was lhe first team wilh a
winning record the Bobcals have
played this season. And lhe RedHawks were never threatened in the
second half.
So in addition to the typical queslions about the matchups with Marshall wide receiver Randy Moss and
the resl of the Thundering Herd, the
Bobcats must also answer lhose who
wonder if they are cut out of cham-

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The last iime a top-ranked Michigan team rolled into Camp Randall
Stadium, lhe Wisconsin Badgers
pulled off a surprise.
Jess Cole passed for two louch·
downs, the Badgers defense held
Michigan to jusl 229 yards and Wis·
consin pulled off a 21-14 shocker in
1981.
Michigan (9-0, 6-0 conference) is ·
wary of the 23rd-ranked Badgers (8·
2, 5- I), who have won the last two
meetings belween lhe Big Ten
schools. Wisconsin still trails the
series 41-10-1.
"This game is a championship
game," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr
said. "'If we win it, we've gained at
least a tie (for the Big Ten champi·
onship). for Wisconkin, if they win
their last two games. lhey're going to

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992·3671

Ohio

By RICHAFID

and Cooling, lne.

ROSENBLATT ·
AP Footbllll Writer
Don'l counl No. 4 OhiQ Slate or
No. 5 Tennessee out of national title
cont~nlion ju~t yet
Entering Saturday's games, the
Buckeyes (9·1) and Volunteers (8· I)
need to keep winning and hopl: for a
few surprises that could put Ohio
State in the Rose Bowl and Tennessee
in the Orange.
'' I think you can go cmzy at this
'ime of year worrying about that
lluiT." BuckeyeHoach John Cooper
said.
Ohio State should have' an easy
lime against Illinois (0-9). bul then
comes the loughie- al No. I Michi·
gan on Nov. 22 with a Rose Bowl
berth hinging on 1he outcome.
Tennessee, led by Pcylon Man·
ning, has clear sailing into lhe SEC
lillc gl!mc on Dec. 6, wilh games
against three teams with losing
records -Arkansas (3·5) on Satur·
day, Kentucky (4-5) and Vanderbill
(3-6).
'"We've been 1hrough two years of
a lol of frustralion to gel ourselves to
this pninl 10 huvc a chance;'·" Vols
coach Phil Fulmer said, referring IQ
Flotida's SEC dominance !he pa.&lt;l
few seasons. "Now we've got u

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See-d A.-e.
Middleport, 011 45160

164 Soulh

"'
1

"'

ti14·9M·5141 .

"

Bruce R. Fisher-Director

1

'

590 Ead M.l,;. St.--t

Poone....,., 011 4SJti9

"'
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"
·""•

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JemH R. Ac:ree, Jr. Dlrec:lor

1

13

THE HARMON NFL FORECAST

..

Sunday and Monday, Nov. 18-17

f

(row's Forni y
Restaurant

(Sunday)
..DALLAS ............. %5
WASHINGTON .... l6
"
1-----~~~~---------iol With two late-game chances to beat the Redskin• last month, the Cowboys offense couldn't score and
228 WEST MAIN
POMEROY
Wheel Horse
Wasbinglon prevailed 21·16. The "Skins have won four of lheir last five against Dallas.
TRACTORS and
DENVER.................. Z4
••KANSASCITY.ZO
•
RIDING MOWERS
The Broncos controlled not only lhe ball bul the Chiefs offense on opening day, holding K.C. 10 241tolal yards
- in a 91-3 win. Denver has more offensive weapons lhan the Chiefs can handle.
'
00INDIANAPOLIS14
GREEN BAY ............ Zl
.
'· .
This game may look like a blowout but will be closer, because the colts pass defense is as solid as the Packers'
slrength,1heir pass offense. G.B. won lheir last ma1chup, in '91, 14-10.
00JACKSONVILLEZ7
TENNESSEE ... - .. 12
Taking a 24-10 halflime lead over lhe Oilers two weeks ago, the Jaguars hung on to win 30-24. This will be the
first game between them in which lhe winning margin will be greater lhan a TO.
MINNFSOTA ........... 29
••DETROIT -·-·-Z4
CHESTER, OHIO
Winners of three of lheif.last four games with lhe Lions, the Vikings needed laic heroics twice in '96to come
away wilh two victories. These two strong offenses should score lots of points.
·
985-3301 Or 985-3330
••N.Y. GIANTS........ll
ARIZONA .....- ..... 13
~--------------1 With Danny Kanell and Tyrone Wheatley in charge, the Giants ground out 426 yards and punished the
Cardinals 27·13 in Week Seven. N.Y. will sweep Arizona for the second time in lhree years.
Rely On U1 For
0 °CHICAG0 ........ 10
N2nd AVE.
N.Y. JETS .................. zo
MIDDLEPORT
Complete
When you're as focused on slaying wilh lhe division leaders as lhe Jels are, lhc easy weeks loom large. ·The lo--"'!'!!1!!'_.., •99•2~-5~6~2·7-~-----l·
110
Bears have won four of their five games against N.Y., most r~ntly 19-7 in '94.
·
Coverage Of
PHILADELPHIA .... 29
••BALTIMORE ... l7
"
When
Comes
See Us For "our
Your Favorite Neither the Eagles nor the Ravens can afford .a loss in this one--which could make it a greal game. The
1998
difference will be Philly's offense, which should stomp Bahimore's anemic defense.
·
1. 1
Sport And
••rmsuuaGu ..... 3o
ciNCINNATI..........s
Graduat1•00 A
t
Led by Jerome Bellis's 34 carries, 135 yards and a key TD,the Steelers put away the Bengals 26-10 four weeks
DDOUDCemen S.
'
"
Team
ago. Pinsburgh badly needs to sweep Cincinnati for the firsltime since '94.
••ST. LOlJIS ............ 31
ATI.ANTA......- ....27
1\vo weeks ago, lhe Rams and Falcons lit up the Georgia Dome, Atlanta winning 34·31 on a !ale Morten
Andersen field goal. In their last three games lhese teams have averaged 67total points.
·
992-2115
••SANDIEGO ......... l3
OAKLAND ..-.-.. 17
While holdin&amp; 1he Raiders to just 13 yards on the ground in October, lhe Chargers got a six-field-goal day oul of
255 Mill St. Middleport
Greg Davis and beat Oakland 25-10. S.D. will stymie Raiders rushers again.
~992-3345

-

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28 the CAROIJNA
........
2l
On. a Monday nighl in Week ••SANFRANCISCO
five, lhe 49ers picked apan
Panthers' highly
regarded
defense, winning ,,34-21.
lhis may be S.f.'s tnost-wanled victory: finally, its firs\ sweep of Carolina.
SEATn..E ............... 26 . 00 NEWORLEANS 13
One of lhe NFL's most productive offenses- believe il or not, the Scahawks'-- goes against one' of the least
produclive-the Sainls'. N.O. beat Seattle 27-24 in '9l,the last time lhey mel.
••TAMPABAY--27
NEWENGLAND.Z4
Here's our Difficult Pick of the Week, a game between learns thai were on fire early and are now luke warm.
T.B. has never beaten N.E. and its offense is srruggling. so our choice is an upset.
'
(Monday)
. 00MIAMI................ l9
BUFFAL0 ............ 14
. On a rainy day In Buffalo two weeks ago, Dan Marino left lhe game early wilh a bad ankle and the Bills won a
bailie of field goals, 9-6. The Dolphins will need to ru11 the ball welllo win.

t---------------ol·
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the Rose Bowl."
Wisconsin is a IS-point underdog
1his Saturday.
Carr isn't sure if his team is lhe
best in the nation, but he said"the
ranking could be a boost.
"Being ranked where we are in
this point in the season creates pres·
sure," Carr said. "'J:m hoping that our
coaches and players break lhrough
and emt!race lhis pressure and use it
to our advantage.
' ·
"'But being ,No. I can ai!O make
you complacent, and it can also give
you a feeling thai you're unbeatable."
Wisconsin doesn't have that problem. When lhc Bndgers beatlo~a last
week, it was Wisconsin's first over a
ranked opponent after six consecutive
defeats.
II also was the Badgers' first vic-

chance and we need to make lhe most
of it."
.
An Omnge Bowl bid could come
Tennessee's way if No. 12 Rorida
beats No. 2 Ronda Stale on Nov. 22.
Mannihg, who threw for 399
yards and four touchdowns in last
week's 44-20 win over Soulhem
Mississippi. is 205 of 337 for 2,500
yards and 23touchdowns this season,
while freshman running back Jamal
Lewis has 789 yards and three touchdowns.
for the Buckcyl!ll, Joe Gcnnnine,
J07 of IS6 for J,494 and 13 touch·
downs, leads the way, along wilh a
defense mnked second in the nation
in poiniS allowed at 11.3. David
Basion is the lop receiver with 64
cnlehes (or 836 yards and II touch&lt;towns.
The big game in the Pac: J0 has
Washinglon (8-J, 5-1) al UCLA (7·
2, 5- I), where lhe lo.'ier remains in
. contention for the Ro.. Bowl, but
would need lois of help in the four·
team race.
If the Huskies win, and lhen heat
Washing1on State on Nov. 22, they
will play in Pasadena on Jan. J.
Washington quarterback Brock
Huard is cxpeclcd lo return afler
missing last week's game- a 31-28
loss to Oregon - with a sprained

East Carolina gets
14-7 victory ov~r UC

992 ..5432

Baum
Lumber

very happy with the way we played."
The winner advances 10 play West ·
DiVJsion champion Toledo on Dec. S
-again at Marshall - in the inaugural MAC Championship Game.
The winner of that advances to the
inaugural ford Motor City Bowl on
Dec. 26 at the Pontiac Silverdome.
Michigan State (5-4), stuck in a
four-game losina skid, would likely
be the opponent if it beats Illinois
next week or Penn Stale lhe week
after that.
Because they're still simmering
over last week's loss to Miami, the
Bobcats haven't been able to truly
savor a rare visit to the spotlightthi,s
late in a season.
"We haven't been in lhis situation
in a long. long time," Grobe said.
"Y"e've got our work cui out for us.

I felt that going into the season lhat
Marshall would be one of lhe most .
talented teams in the conference lhis
year. And after watching 'rhem on
film, it's obvious thai I'm not
wrong.••

While the Ohio-Marshall game
has lhe most riding on i1, most of the
MAC is busy as well: Akron (2-8. 2·
5 MAC East) is at Toledo (8·1, 6-1
West) and Northern Illinois (0- 10,07 Wesl) is al Miami (7-3. 5-2 Easl).
Toledo travels to Central Rorida
next week as a tune-up for lhe MAC
championship game.
. fndependcnt aames Saturday
mclude Eastern Michigan (4-6, 3-5
West)~~ Central Rorida and Western
Michigan (7·3, 6-2 West) al Northeast Louisiana.
Bowling Green (3-8. 3-5 East).

.
'
for 1,376 yards this .eason; that's 75 .
more passes and 1,367 yards more •
1han his brother, Eric, had as a liBhl:
erid at Ohio State .... And another:
aniazing stat: Randy Moss will like·:
Jy be a tirst·team all-American and :
didn't even lead the MAC in recep- ·
lions or receiving yards per game ·
(Kent's Eugene Baker did) .... ~AC ,
basketball coaches screamed bloody ·
murder when Toledo used lo hOIIthe :
poS1-season tournament-the major;
reason why it is now pla)led on a neu-:
lral floor. What about Marshall pos- •
sibly playing on its own field in the :
f001bal1 1i1le game? ... Imagine how :
many points Kent's offense (averag- •
ing 31 points a game) would have •
against Kent's defense (allow.ing 43:
:
a game).
•
•

Ball Stale (5·6, 4-4 West) and Central Michigan (2-9, 1-7 West) have
completed their seasons. Kenl (3-7.
3-S East), playing its final game
under coach Jim Corrigan who was
tired Wednesday, ends ils season next
Saturday at Navy.
MAC fu: The shocker of the
year was not so much Ball State
upsetting 18th-ranked Toledo, but
how lopsided it was. The Cardinals
were II -point underdogs going in,
but came out with a stunning 35-3
victory, knocking lhe Rockets for a
loop and completely oul of the rank.
ings.... Speaking of shockers, how
did Bowling Green, which ended the
year with a five-game losing skid,
beat Miami 28-21 baek on Sept 6....
Amazing Randy Moss S1a1 of the
Week: Randy has cauRhl 76 passes

tory over a Big Ten opponenl with a
winning record dating back to 1995.
Wisconsin had dropped nine straight
games to Big Ten foes wilh winning
records.
·
"'I think a lot of people inJhis state
and around the country sill think
we're a joke," Wisconsin defensive
caplain David Lysek said. "'We've
got two big games left, so hdpefully
we can complete the circle of
respect"
·
After Michigan, the Badgers travel to No. 6 Penn State.
In other games Saturday involving
ranked teams, Wake foresl is al No.
2 Florida Stale; Iowa Slate is at No.
3 Nebraska; Illinois is at No. 4 Ohio
State; No. S Tennessee plays
Arkansas al Little Rock; No. 6 Penn
S1i11e is at No. 19 Purdue; No. 16
Auburn is at No. 7 Georgia; N~ 8

North Carolina is a1 Clemson; No. 13 football played in some "lnaway
Washington is at No. 9 UCLA; and wins," firSt-year Purdue coach Joe
Colorado is at No. I0 Kansas State. Toller said. "But nothing quite a.&lt; dra·
Notre Dame is at No. ll LSU, No. matic as that one last Saturday."
The victory kept !he Boilermakers
12 florida is at South Carolina. Stan·
ford is at No. 14 Washington State, (7-2. 5- I) alive in the conference race
Oregon is at No. IS Arizona Slate, for lhc Rose Bowl, tied with Ohio
No. 1-7 Mississippi Slate is at Alaba- State and Wisconsin. one game .
ma, No. 18 Texas A&amp;M is at Okla· behind Michigan.
homa, No. 21 Syracuse is at PittsPenn Stale, on the.othcr hand, is
burgh, No. 22 Iowa is at Northwest- coming off a 34-8 humiliation at
em, .Texas Tech is at No. 24 Okla- home against Michigan. The Niuany
homa State, and Baylor is at No. 25 Lions (7- I, 4-1) arc a half-game
Missouri .
behind Purdue.
No. 19 Virginia Tech is idle.
"We did not set anv 2oals with
Purdue is coming off an exciling regard to wins and losses. We fell if
win over Michigan. The Boilermak- we could develop a team almosphere
ers !railed by II points with just over here, we would have a chance to pick
two minutes to go. ye1 rail ied to win up a few wins," Tiller said.
22-21. .
The seven victories already "We've had some very exciting with the possibility of at leasl two

•
'l

4

I

By DAVID DROSCHAK
GREENVILLE, N,C. (AP)
Dan Gonzalez will he" sore Friday
morning. The pain will run a hil
deeper for Cincinnati.
Gon1.alez burned lhc Bcarca1s'
blilzing defense lor school records
for completions (37) and auempls
(62) as Easl Carolina conlinued ils
second-half t.umaround, holding off
Cincirinati 14-7 Thursday night for its
fourth slraighl victory.
"The prevalen1 dclcnsivc package
around \he coun1ry is 10 hlilz your
bnlins out and it's whether your wide·
ouls can whip their corners and
whether your quarterback is going lo
stand in lhcre."' said Eas1 Carolina
coach Steve Logan. 1alking ahout his
senior signal-culler.
"'The word courage is loo loose·
ly used bu1 I think that was 1ruly
courageous what he did tonight: He's
a big·time player."
Gonzalez lhrcw for 338 yards
despilc a steady rain and heavy pres·
SUfi' fiom the Cincinnali defense. His
five-yard scoring pass to Marcellus
Harris with 16 seconds left in the
lhird quarter proved to he·the diiTerence.
'"They choose to give up the sec·
ondary and isolale lheir cornerbacks
and try 10 take some hits on the quar·
terback and try to win the ball game
that way," Gonzalez said. "'l'h&lt;ly
brought a lot of heat. They brought
somelimes nine people which is
tough for anybody 10 pick up. We
picked·it up well. It's my job lo lend
this team.
"'We threw lhe ball 62 times.
Shoot, I don'l know lhal I didn't get
hit on a good 40 perccnl of those."'
After starting 1-S, the Pirates (5s. 4-2 Confere- USA) can linisli
wilh a winning record flir 1be fourth
'

straight year with a · victory next
weekend at Nonh Carolina State.
"I lcll the kids all lhe lime thai
1 foolball and adversity exposes characle.r,': Logan said. "'These kids
maybe gol sick and tin:d of being sick
and tired. There husn'l been any dif·
feren1 coaching. I haven't kicked any
lrash cans."
Meanwhile, the Bearcars (7·4, 24) failed to unain lheir second eightwin season in 21 years. Cincinnali
was also hoping for an OUiside shol
at a howl, bul no howl scouts anend- ·
ed Thursday's game.
"I look atlhis year and lhis night
us u missed opportunity·; · said
Cincinnati coach Rick Minier. '"We
have missed · out lhis year on an
oppor1uni1y to go up against a bit of
a down year in lhe league whh age
and malurity. Ne~l year lhe roles may
Lie reversed."
·The touchdown pass came 3: 16
after the Bcarcals had 1aken a 7-6
lead on Landon Smilh's one-yard
plunge.
Easl Carolina's winning drive didn'l come withoul a Jinlc help from lhe
Bearcals. Jason Mammarelli slipped
on his kickoff and dubbed lhe ball,
giving the Pirates greallield position
al their 48. A pass interfen:nce call.
and lhen an offside penally on fourthand-inches at the nine' also aided the
Pira1es.
Gonzalez broke lhe game passing
records of Marcus Crandell. who
· completed 3S passes against Memphis in 1994 and auempted S9 againsl
Syracuse in '95.
With the Pirales leading by seven,
lhe teams traded fumbles deep in
scoring range over the final II :36.
Robert Cooper's miscue was lhe
biggest or the game, lhouth. losing
the ball for lhe BearciU

No.5 Tennessee
ankle. Running back Rashaan She(minus ZS) at Ariulnsas
bee, lhough, is oul wilh a knee
Looks like Peyton is back on tarinjury.
get
for Vols.... TENNESSEE 42- 14.
UCLA, after a week off, is a.&lt;
No. 6 Penn State
heallhy as its been all season.
(minus 6) at No. 19 Purdue
'"I wish I could be a fan in the
Boilermakers looking for lirsl
stunds for lhis one,"' UCLA coach
home
unbeaten season since '79 ....
Boh Toledo said. '"We' n: looking forPENN STATE 28-20.
ward to il."
No.I6Aubum
UCLA dropped iiS first two games
(plus 7) at No. 7 Georgia ·
- by three points to Washinglon
Da.wgs needed fourOTs last year;
Stale and by six 10 Teonesscc - hut
have
i1 ea.,icr !his time .... GEORGIA
has won seven in a row. During thC
streak, Cadc McNown has 14 touch- • 35·21.
· · No. 8 North Carolina
down passes ·and three interceptions.
.. (minus 6) at Clemson
Skip Hicks hils 20 touchdowns and
Tar
Heels ripe hlf upset. especialneeds one more lo set a school sinly
without
Oscar Duvenpnrt.
gle-season record.
CLEMSON 24-21.
The picks:
No. 13 Washington
No. 1 Mlchlpn (minus 15)
(plus
2) at No. 9 UCLA
at No. l3 WIKonsln
Well-rested
Bruins vs. wnunded
Wolverines can slop Ron Dayne
J:luskics. ... UCLA 35-31.
loci.... MICHIGAN 27- 14.
Color11do (plus I0)
Wake Fo...,.a (minus 33)
at
No. I0 Kansas State
at No. 2 florida State
Bun·s
riding J1-0·1 slreuk vs. KLast week Rulgers, lhis week the
Seminoles .... FLORIDA STATES~- Stale .... KANSAS STATE 31-24.
Notre Dame (plus II)
14.
at Np. II LSU
Iowa State (plus 43)
Death
Valley,
an approprialc setat No. 3 Nebr11ska
Trust us, this one won't he close. ling for lhe Irish .... LSU 2K- 14.
No. 12 Floridll (minus 17)
... NEBRASKA59-7.
at South Carolina
Dllnois (plus 39)
Gators'
Pass 'N' Pray ullcnsc
at No. 4 Ohio State
should
handle
wounded Gamecocks.
Let the countdown to Michigan
... FLORIDA 38-l 7.
be2in .... OHIO STATE 45-0.
1

.•

•

•

in lhc regular season and then in a• ·
bowl @ame - a.&lt;Sure Purdue of its:
firs1 winnin~ season since J984.
:
"It's almos11oo &amp;ood 10 be tr:ue, to "
lcll you the truth," Toller said.
UCLA(7·2) and Washin(!lon (7·2) ;
arc in a four-way tic atop lhc Pac-10;
along with No. 14 Washington State•
(8-1) and No. l5 Arizona Slate (7-2).:
All have 5·1 league records.
Washing1on is the only Pac- 10·
!cam in control of ils own destiny. '
The Huskies will play in the Rose ;
Bowl game if lhey licat UCLA, !hen •
Washington Slate in Scaulc nn Nov.:
22.
•
UCLA will go by bealing Wash- .
inglon and Soulhcm California, as
long a."i. Wa'\hingtnn Stale loses nne of

its linaltwo games.

•

much for Pamhcrs' dcl'ensc.
Stantord (plus IS 1/2)
SYRACUSE 35-13.
at No. 14 Wuhlngton Stale
No.lZ Iowa (minuoll Ill)
Ryan Leur shows why he's Hcisat Northwestern
man worthy.... WASHINGTON
Wildcats l•••king to end fl&lt;"" sc&lt;~· :
STATE 44-19.
son
on high n&lt;~c .... NORTHWEST- ;
Oregon
(plus
9
Ill)
0
ERN 2M-24 .
•
at No. IS Arizona State
Texas Tech (plus 6)
Ducks run inln J'uwl climale in
at No. 24 Oklahoma State •
Tempe.... ARIZONA STATE 31-20.
Cnwhnys'
Tnny Lindsay leads
No. 17 Mississippi State
Big 12 in (lassing efficiency. . ... ;
(plus 3) at Alobamo
Bulldogs heat 'Barna in "96 when OKLAHOMA STATE 27-17.
•
Baylor (plus 16)
•
Tide was g&lt;K&gt;&lt;l .... MISSISSIPPI
at
No.
15
Mls.'IOIIri
•
STATE 24·14.
Wh~ll
a
season.
even
Mi·
a
JJ
gels
It)!
No. Ill Texas A&amp; M
go bowling .... MISSOURI }H- 17. :
(minus 14) 11 Oklahoma
Aggies looking I'm S(lo(in Big J2
LAST WEEK: 15·3 (slruighl); \1- '
tille game .... TEXAS A&amp;M 44-14.
7·1 (s(lrC"")
No. 1 I Syraclllie
SEASON: 154,43 (stmighl); 1)') .:
(minus 19) at Pittsllu~h
•
Donovan McNuhh &amp; Co. 11x1 9&lt;~ I (sprc"d)

7BIIKI
To All The Voters &amp;Supporters In
The Nov. 4th Election•
Special Thanks to Ca•,.ltn Workers That
Worked Very lard for • ·

BERNARD D.. GILlEY

Pel. tor by candid-., 310 Alh St., Mlddlapora. ott.

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uNol ""'"'"'· 1111111!1t Rldiolilo&lt;lrulhorilfd "!liMo IM11ff W!Yinq,.... arN.An Oil"""" l~t Mfl bt r~fd.
lao,.... ' - phro, al110111Hr ltMct foe 1Gr9ftneltn.llld dlaovo• lor oil·""' JOUI!1\IIIIy"" .. "' 111111t.AI 111m Itt&lt;""~ 1111 thr iNn ,ou 1011.Mrou .,• ..,ltMcrlltlotr CQI11Pirlilll1 ol,....

llli- .,... 1110111i11Mt1t,,.... &lt;lfri« .,., io1poloallol "' P01J(r1l ,......,..,lor. ! JOU """""" ....., wilhn 110 "'r&lt; ol llllilllior\ to ..adollllO &lt;hltgr bJ Aadoolhl&lt;l. rou ""'' '~'" thr &lt;rffW• pllorlt.
t 50li oft •lfr ll&lt;t&gt;l 1111 wlrdod lilt p1.,. lor 90 , . Offfr ~~~ VIIY llld 1111 rot br- in IIIIo&lt;IIion!. Nrw ....,.. lkilod ~"" C- ..,(, . , _ , rfqlifod. Ollrr 'Hid Ottil' on 10111&gt; &lt;tll1rt IIIK
!OIIIIinO N!lfl, .........
apjy.i»o1lfll1'llianl
d111911111f apjy. Sl.lljr&lt;1 l&lt;tmd\.,.,.. IIIJIIIiidwi11\ .. 01flrr oilrt.lrf 11011101 dllloiL Olirr""" I!/Jf~1

and-.....,,..,

and

•
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••

more against Penn Stute a.nd Indiana:•

OSU, Tennessee need wins to stay in h~nt for national title

WARNER
Healing

clash will hand East Division crown to winner ·~

pionship clo1h.
"'I would lhink that you've 101to
forget about last week's aame 111d go
on and play this week's pme," Marshall coach Bob Ptuett said. '"I'm
sure lhey'll be emotionally rudy to
play. we:ve seen their players a cou-.
pie of times on TV talkins about our
game. even before lllis week. I know
lhey'll be ready to play and Hopeful·
ly our guys will be, too."
Ohio coach Jim Grobe said he
doesn "t want his players to forget.
"I'm not sure that I Willi them to
put it behind them," he Sllid. '"It's a
situation where we did not play tbe
. way we're capable of.... I didn't feel
like we played well in some areas and
I didn't feel like we responded real
well 10 some of the challenges that
Miami put in front of us .... I'm not

By The Alaoclelecl Preu

State Route 7 at Five Pointe

."

The Dally Sentinel• , . 7 .
••
•

Unbeaten &amp;·top-ranked Michigan to face Wisconsin Saturday ·

1

1
1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OU~Marshall
.

TAZ'S MARATHON &amp; .
DRIVE THRU

1

•

I• I

MAC heads Into last week of conference plsy

Footb811 '97
Catch All The
Excitement!

Arthur
-Treachers

--..

Frtday~ ·November 14, 1987

Friday, November 14, 1987

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

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•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
.

'

Daughter's reckless spending hurting parents
ourselves.
We have pleaded with our daughter to pay a little something every
month or to stop buying things on
the card, but she has·refused.
We then demanded that she
return the card. She said that she
would not and that we had a lot of
nerve to ask. I sent her copies of tlie
monthly stalements, but she claimed
she never received them. 'I sent the
last statement by certified mail, and
it was returned, marked "Refused."
I even tried inviting Jennifei over
for dinner so we could discuss the;
situation, but she hung up on me.
Our friends say we are stuck.
What do you say, Ann? We need

for me and one for our daughler,
"Jennircr."

Ann
Landers

Jennifer is a lawyer, but she had
no credit cards of her own because
IM, Los Anp:b Tim~;~
her credil rating is poor. However,
SyndiCIIC 114 Crwon
my wife trusted her anyway.
s -.
Jennifer earned about $120,000
last year and spent money like there
Our Aaa Laaden: My wife was no tomorrow. She used l]er
and I have been retired for nearly 10 credit card, and although she paid
years. We maintain separate bank the bills at first, she claims business
accounts, and our incomes are equal . has fallen off and she can't keep up.
We each cover a share of our living
Although my wife and I have
expenses.
paid our share of the bill, Jennifer
Several years ago, "Clara" man- refuses to pay hers.
aged, without my knowledge or conOur credit limn has been reached
sent, to get a major credit card.
because of Jennifer's charges, and
• She ordered one for herself, one we are now unable to use the card

Sermonette
Tag with the wind

l

I

•

By Bonnie Shively
' A pressure packed day lay ahead.
So many things crowded my mind
that I couldn't concentrate on the
Lord in my prayer time. After struggling, I finally gave all my requests
to the Lor&lt;l and confidently left them
with Him.
·Deciding I needed a bike ride for
energy and clarity of mind before I
started the day, I pulled on my
clothes a0d swiftly strode to the
. bam, backed my bike out, and rode
across the· bumpy yard to the gravel
lane. 'The late autumn wind blew my
hair over my head and my heart
shouted, "Yes! Yes! Yes!" I pedaled
onto the smooth asphalt and into a
strong headwind.
I usually coast this stretch, but
today, I had to pedal hard. Around
the bend, I saw we have new neighbors, They slept in a tent last night,
but soon a house will rise out of the
pasture field once roamed by cattle
and sheep. A new friend "kind of'
greeted me in the next field.
The bicycle must have seemed
weird to the little tan donkey with
long, black-fringed cars. He jumped
back from the fence and curiouslY..,
eyed me. We could have gotten to
know coch other better. except for
the electric fence between us. This
was a favorite place to coats.
~igrating ducks and community

Mallards fed and swam on Gary and
Jerri 's pond.
At my turning-around point. I
noticed Wmston pickong up tree
branches from the sheep's barnyard .
Dressed in their preuy winter wool,
they grazed peacefully. I looked at
the big. old red brick homestead and
wondered, "What's Lois doing. :·
My legs ached as I pedaled up tile
slight grade. That crosswind didn't
· help. Rounding the comer, I was
happy for the tail wind.
Mike and Carol's pumpkins gaily
decorated their yard. I rode past my
lane and around the next "S" curve,
then turned to make one more round
- oh, I forgot the headwind muscles strained as I pedaled harder.
On the way back, I relaxed and
immensely enjoyed the ride. "Here's
my lane. OOPS! I went right past
it!" I rode to the corner and back. I
thought, "It's supposed to rain today,
but I' ve bealen it The sky is blue .
willl puffy white clouds ... "
Sometimes, you have walked
down my road with me, so. I hope
you enjoyed our bike ride today. You
probably caught on- I didn't want
to come in from my ride. I wanted to
play tag with the wind one more
time.
Psalm 147: 18 tells us, "He causes
His wind to blow." Isn't the Lord
goOd'! "My molith will speak the
praise of the Lord; and all flesh will
bless His holy name for ever and
ever." (PSalm 145:21)
Father, my spirit soars on Your
delightful wind. Thank you for a
good time this morning. ridins
-throogh your creation. Now help me
do all the things You have planned
for me today. A111en.
Scriptures: NASB

your help. -- Left Hip llld Dry in
Houston
Our IDab Mltl Dry: Here's the
result of my research: According to
Suzanne Boas, president of Consumer Credit Counseling Scrvil:c of
Greater Atlanta, each person who
opens an account on a joint basis is
equally liable for any chqes.
Failure to pay the balance could
subject you to legal action and affect
your credit rating. Boas recommends sending a certified letter
immediately to your credit card
company. asking to be removed from
the joint account.
Although you will still be liab~
for the charges that have already

FRIDAY
LONG BOTIUM - Faith Full
Gospel Church, 7 p.m. hymn sing
with David and Debbie Daily.
Thanks_giving dinner at 5:30p.m.

By VANESSA WILUAMS SNY· gospel singers Hezekiah Walker,
Daryl Coley and others, he didn't
DER
Gannett News Service
feel quite as confident in his singing.
Rudy Stewart didn't know gospel
"I knew I could do something
comedy existed until he read about different and something just rose up
gospel comedian Jonathan Slocumb. in me and said, 'Just try it.' Between
"I realized that there was somebody when I went through the door and
doing what I'd been doing for onto the stage, I made a decision."
years," says the 27-year-old from
Rice . decided to shelve the
Washington, D.C.
singing and go for the jokes.
From Broderick Rice, who does
Tht; audience responded well,
impressions ·of everyone from and 10 years later, he's still making
singers James Cleveland to Marvin people laugh.
Winans, to Trina Jeffrie, a.k.a. Sister
Slocumb. a native of Atlanta, has
Cantaloupe, who impersonates a been delivering Christian comedy
gossipy church mother, gospel for II years, but he prefers to call it
comedians have them laughing in clean comedy.
the pews.
"For me there's no such thing as
Rice, Sister Cantaloupe and Christian comedy. Sinbad told me
Slocumb are the best-known of the once to never call myself a gospel
bunch, primarily because each has comedian because that will limit
released recordings of their work.
you."
Gospel comedy is a form · of
Slocumb, who will O(IIY admit to
entertainment just like other fotms · being in his 30s, believes there 's a
of comedy,
big difference between his style and
The difference is that it's Christ- Rice's.
ian- or Bible-based. And unlike
"My material doesn't just relate
some other comedy .styles. ihere's a to the church or Bible. I tend to cater
message behind the humor.
mine to whatever audienc~ I'm
"It's bringing good news to !he speaking too."
people of God and breaking down
Slocumb got his first break by
the stereotypes that 'being a Christ- opening up for the gospel jazz group
ian and loving the Lord requires that Take 6. His first recording, "Laugh
you be serious and not enjoy the Yo 'Self To Life," is a tribute to
Lord," says aspiring comedian gospel iutd tile church because that's
Stewart.
where he got his stan.
For the Los Angeles-based Rice, · "I love gospel music and there
31, who has released two CDs will always be some . clement or
("Broderick E. Rice -Alive Alive music in my recordinas," says
Alive" and "The Preacher's Son"), Slocumb, a former choir director.
performing Christian comedy is a
Rice's f~lher wu a preacllcr .and
dream realized.
his mother a Sunday Schoolteacher.
"I always wanted to do comedy, "All I 'knew was church," he says,
but I dido 't know where. I'm a laughing. "Even our mailman was a ,
Christian so I couldn't be cursing preacher."
.
and carrying on," he says.
He saw things that he found
Rice got his stan after being funny - the way some preachers
invited to sing on a musical program tend to talk, their seriousness and
in chutih.
piety.
When he arrived and found him"We want to please God and to
self lined up against the likes of top impress and really let Him know

Rev. Sharon Hausman, Mci@s County United Methodist Cooperative
Parish, to speak. Members to take
canned food donations for parish .

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Junior
High School sports awards banquet.
Sunday, 2 p.m .. Eastern High School
gym.

MIDDLEPORT- Faith Chapel of
Middleport will have a free community Thanksgivmg Dinner 'in Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m. at the church at
the end of South Third Avenue.
Those planning to attend should call
the church to notify of the number
attending. at 992-5062.

RACINE - Racine Village'
Council, recessed session Sunday
evening. 7 p.m. at the municipal
building.

SALEM

CENTER

-

878 annual Thanksgiving super and
fun night. Saturday, 6:30p.m. at the
pang• hall .
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers. noon luncheon,
Sawrday, Trinity Church. Pomeroy.

Military News
. J-tban J, Avla
Jonathan J. Avis has joined the
Onited States Army under the
Delayed Entry Prorram at the U.S.
Itecruiting Stalion iit Athens.
The progrll)l gives young men or·
women the opportunity to delay
enlistment into the Army for up to
one ye.- before reporting to basic
military !raining.
After completion of basic trainina. soldien receive advanced mdividual training in thett career specialty. Avis, a 1996 graduate of
MeiJS High School, will report to
Port Jackson, Columbia, S.C. for
buic !raining in April.
He is the son of Thomas P. and
Judith N. Avis, Coolville.

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

90045

THE PLAINS - Free Small
Business Tax Workshop, sponsored
by Internal Revenue Service, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Wednesday. Register by
calling 1-800-829-1040. For new or
prospective small business owners
and self-employed persons.

something, but in the process we're
thinking 'Oh God!'. He wants us to
have life and enjoy it."
But even with all the laughter, the
bottom line is that it's a Corm of ministering to broken hearts.
"People literally are being
healed," says Ric~.
Dallas-based Jeffric (Sister Cantaloupe) feels the same. "Through
the charac,tc~ I show people themselves," the 35-ycar-old says. "I do
comedy with a message.''
As Sister Cantaloupe, she steps
on many toes when she portrays a
60-year-old busybody church lady.
During a typical skit her character
will visit the hospital - and make
the patient feel wor.ie. In another,
she gossips on the phone- but then
clicks over and prays for someone
on the other line.
·
"I've gbtten a lot of great response,
more so· than negative. I had one
lady tell me that her mother and sister had been living in the same house
and hadn't spoken to each other in
years, but watched the video and
laughed so hard they fell over on
each other. They've been speaking
ever since."
But it's not about people laughing
at people wbo go to church, says Jeffrie. "I never say I'm poking fun of
God's people. I say. there is always
something funny in the church."
Rice mixes impressions and ancc-

dotes throughout his routine.
Stewan. who has been the opening act for Rice. takes a different
approoch.
"I usc events from the Bihle a.&lt;
well as events !hat relate to how I
wa.&lt; raised in the church. I talk a lot
about fasting and praying. You
won't ever hear me talking about the
outlandish cboir director." he says.
Jcffrie. wbo. ha.&lt; won 21 awards
for her work as the wig-and-spectaclc-wearing Sisler Canlaloupc, wa.&lt;
part of singer Kirk Franklin's "Tour
of Life'' this year.
She has recorded one CD and
video ("Go Cantaloupe. Go CantaloUJIC Go!").
She often tailors her perfor'
mance to young people and takes on
issues of teen-age pregnancy and
drug abuse.
Neither Rice nor Jeffric worries
about a shortage of material. "I
don'! have to look. .for it. It looks for
me. I just lind a way to flavor it and
enhance it," says Rice.
It hasn't all been easy sailiog.
though. Tjlerc were days Rice wanted to give up. He recalls times of
performing and not gelling paid or
being given a "love offering" for his
work.
"I felt like, 'thank ynu for the
love, but whcrc's the offenng'!' "
For nnw, he knows this is his purpose.

~~cg}!u?{fis~~Cj~
_
So
~o'll

~

. JH.tttfe 'P~ 'By '1k ~Olliff

C7'fe ~~

~.,

Don't Let the word ANTIQUES scare you off...
did you know that we. have all tht;~ following ...
•Teddy Bears
•Chrlltmlls Ornaments
•Christmas Wreaths
•Dolls
•lndl•n Dolls
•Pictures
•Angel Trte Toppers •Beautiful Glassware
and did you know that over 30·items in our
store sell for under $20.001
"A Creal Pltu:e lo Slop • A Creal Ploce lo Slaop"
We're -y to get 10 - take At. 71o AI. 143 and go 8 miles Into
.HanieorMIIe. Tum righl onto AI. 684 and H's just2 mllea Into
Pagevtlle. We're lhe 11181 piece on lhe right!
OPEN 7 DAYS A W!EK -10 1111 to 7 pm

Watch for our Christmas Open House
.November 28th, 29th &amp; 3oth
o40928 Sl At. 592 - Pagevllle, Ohio 46710
- 1-888-209-8837

I

SUNDAY
CHESTER- Hymn sing, Saturday 7 Jl.m. at the Harvest Outreach
Church, Chester. Fealuring singers.
the "Gabriels" and "Rejoice".

MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Middle
School Boosters, Monday, meeting
at the school, 6:30 p.m. in Room
103. Parents asked to aucnd.

POMEROY- Hymn sing, Sunday, 6 p.m. Hillside Baptist Church,
Music by Hood Family,-Jfumphrey
Family, John and Belinda Dean,
Gary and Joshua Jones, and Sandy
King.

HOLZER MEIGS CLINIC
NEW LOCATION!!!

WEDNESDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT - Feeney Bennell Posl 128, American Legion, 6
p.m. Thanksgiving dinner a( the hall.
All members·and guests invited.

Star

Orange 718 and Star Junior Grange

Water Conservation Dis1rict board
meeting. Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
oflice, Hiland Road, Pomeroy.

MONDAY
I
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Village Council .meeting Monday, .
7:30 p.m. at Middleport 'Village
Hall, special session.

!IATIJRDAY
COOLVILLE - Gospel Harmony Boys, 7 p,m. at the Coolville
United Methodist Church. ~oncen
is free.

National Foundation for Consumer
Credit can help. Call 1-800-3882227 to act the name of a trained
NFCC
counselor
(Internet:
http://www.nfcc.ot'J).
Meanwhile, it seems to me that
Jennifer has anOiher set of problems
in addition to her credit raling. Her
hostility suggests that she is out of
control in areas that have nothing to
do with bad credit.
I fear you have been pulling your
daughter's chestnuts out of the fire

too long. Stop it, and let her take her
lumps.
It's high time she faced the consequence$ of her out-of-line behavior. And please, insist that she get
some psychological help. This
young woman sounds as if she is at
the breaking point.
Gem of the Day: It is far bener
to Jive money to a friead or a rela·
live than to lend it -- and it costs
about the same.

Church pews filled with plenty of fodder for laughs

..;.;__--Com.munity Calendar---The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. 'The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund r~iscrs' of any type. hems arc
.Jirinted as· space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a spccific number or days.

been incuned, you will not be liable
for 1111y .chaqes after the letter is
n=c:eived by your Cledit issuer.
Ir you need assistance to work
out a IIebi repayment plan, the

GALLIPOLIS - Revival Sunday lhrough Nov. 23, White's Road
Church of God of Prophecy near
Holzer Hospital. John Elswick,
Athens evangelist; special music
Nov. 20 by Dan and Faith Hayman
and Many Short.

POMEROY - ·· Guest singer
Chris Adkins. Newport News, Va., at
the Hillside Baptist Church. State
Route 143, Pomeroy, Wednesday, 7
p.m.
-

· POMEROY -

•

88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

(Next to Veterans Memorial·Hospital)

Meigs Soil and

ANNUAL

tURKEY
RUTLAND GUDE SCHOOL
THURSDAY, NOV. 20, 1997
SERVING STARTS 5:00 P.M.
n••••• $s.oo A4"•" o.r,
RUTLAND VOL FIRE DEPT.

Tlckttl Anllable At: Quality Print Shop,
Rutlllnd Dept. Store, Joe's country Market,
HIIHop Grocery, All Vol. Firemen

To Schedule An Appointment
Call

992-0060
or

992-2188 992-6601
H~Clioic...

Here for Your Health, Here for Your Lifetime!

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Local School District announces honor roll

· Pagel

Fridly,N~~ber14,1187
..

'Friday, November 14, 1997

The Meigs Local School District Lantz, Sean Phelps. Celeste Taylor.
Grade 4: Miranda Beha, Rachael
has announced the names of students who made the honor roll for . Gardner, all As: Joshua Slater, Joshua
the first nine-weeks grading period. Spires, William Taylor.
5th Grade: Peggy Duff. all As:
To qualify forth~ honor roll students Miranda
Casteel, Jodi Donohue, Cassie
Bob H'?eflich
must make a grade of B or above in Lee. Carl Noel.
, all their subjects. Achieving that
•
level of academic achievement were Rutland Elementary
the following students:
1st Grade: Clayton Bolin, Lilly
' '
Jacks, ·Josie Klein, Morgan Lentes,
Bradbury Elementary
' .
Justin Little, Joey McDonald, Maria
¥yron Duffield, who along with
Mabel Oliver. originaiJr, from the
4th grade: Samantha C&lt;Jle, Anna Meadows, Jason Morris, Eugene Patterhis wife, the former June Seines, Rutland community, will Iii\ marking Hartenbach and Autum McLaughlin, all son, Valisha Richmond, Tyler Wamsley,
returned to Middleport somewhat her 95th birthday this Sunday. She As; Sarah Davis, Michael Durst, Iamie Briana Willis, Sarah Woodard, all As:
over a year ago, has been named is now residing with her daughter, Ellis, Brittney Jacks, Meghan Leslie, Wyatt Ball, Adrian Bolin. Josh Cleland.
new president of the Middleport Mrs. Virginia Wyatt, and cards will Kayla McCarthy, Eric VanMeter and Olivia Davis, Justin George, Corey Hutton, Jessica Maines, Joseph Satterfield.
'Community Association .
reach her at 3901-1 SR 143, Melia Whan.
5th
grade:
Melissa
Bogess,
Brook
Merissa Snyder, Stephanie St. Clair.
. Myron and June were both reared ?om 0roy.
"
Venoy and Chet Wigal, all As; Emily
2nd Grade : Jacob Barnes, Emily
in Middleport and love being back
Ashley, Ryan Frazier, Lisa Ghee~~, Car- Davis, Katie Doczi, Kori Pnddy, all As:
. I
.
Some of you are pay11tg attent1on rie Michael, Katie Reed, Lucas Roush , Bethany Gtbbs, Brittany Harrison, Ke1th
on home ground after living in various other locations. Both of them to your phone bolls thest days, I'm Anna Sayre, Megan Tibbetts, and Williams, Cassady Willford.
l!fe interested in the community and told and are noticing cllarges for Natasha Wise.
Jrd Grade: Andrea Bartrum, Alisha
Gompson, Bethany King, all As;
are already contributing their abili- some SOrt ·Of service rou didn't
Zachary Burns, Keilah Jacks, Bobbi
Pomeroy Elementary
ties and talents to the town.
know you had agreed to 'take.
Lee,
Timmy Spores, Joshua Taylor, MorCurrently, Myron is embarked on
Getting the charges rilrltoved isn't
Kindergarten: Shannon Barren,
gan
Wolfe.
a project for the association in con- easy but do hang in ther~ 1 • After all, Joyce Billings, Caleb Dav1s, Erin Dunn.
4th Grade: Tyson George, Sarah
junction with the upcoming Christ- it 's your money getung ttpped off. Kristen Eblin, Veronica Grimm, Dawn Jenkins, Vinda Ratcliff. all As;
Stephanie
Hudson,
Holly
Jeffers,
Ryan
mas season.
Many times, it appears, that you regJosh Bolin, Adam Humphreys, Brittany
He os looking for a 25 to 30 foot tster for these services&gt;by\igning up Jeffers, Adam Lavender, Autumn Hysell, Letha Laudermilt, Taryn Lentes,
McDaniel, Shelby Ohlinger, Enn PatterChristmas tree which will be located in one sweepstakes or another. It son,
·
Ryan Van Matre, Meri Van Meter. Maggie Rupe.
5th Grade: Madoson King, all As:
In the "T' area for the season. To go apparently is hidden away in sweep- Ivy Conde, Bruce Yonkers.
along with the tree he is trying to stakes entries.
,
ht Grade: Lacee Arms, Henry Doer- Renee Bailey, Ashley Baylor, Melissa
locate strands of lights and a lighted
Pauline Wolfe brought by a mag- fer, Sarah Hubbard, Doug Jenkins, Rochmond, Sarah Wilkes, all As: Justin
star forthe tree. The lights he would azine article dealing with switching Thomas Klein, Joshua Moms, Aaron Coleman, Adam Snowden.
1
DHILD Pnmary: Mochael Duvall.
like to use are those larger outdoor of your long distance carrier. A Oliphant, Alex Pattersqn, Enn Perkms, Nicholas
McKnight, Anessa Wolfe.
bulbs which were prevalent before switchover without you! knowledge Calee Reeves, Kelsey Sauters, Haley
DH/LD
lnlermedoate: Gary Kauff,
lmni lights came into such populari- is called slammmg. Yo~ might want Sayre, Jesse Seaqmst, Jos1 Van Meter; Michael McDonald.
ty. If you have some of the lights to check w1th GTE o~ just which Deanna Cundiff, Ryan Curt1s, Emily
Fields, Lucreshia Howard, Jessica Jewlaid back at your home and are will- company is handling Y~.~r long dis- ell,
Ricky Laudennilt, Clorissa Pollock, Salem Center Elementary
mg to provide them for the town tree tance calls and how y;ou go about Alisha Quillen. Billy Ramsey, Randal
1st Grade: Michael Bailey, Chelsea
would you please get in touch with locking in the one you 'i"ant.
Reeves, Devan Soulsby, Nathan Tim- Carpenter, Matthew Dunkle, M1chelle
Myron? Ditto for the star and tree if
Eggers, Tommy Nottingham, Apnl
,.
mons.
John and Mildred Lisle Crooks
vou can helP.
2nd Grade: Matthew Billings Kelse:v Oiler, all As; Rebec ca Canterburv.
Myron will be pleased to hear are observing !heir 49th wedding Fife, Lindsay McKinney, Gregory Jonathan Handley, Alyssa Longstreth,
Musser, Cassandra Patterson, Brianna Stacy Macomber.
from you and you can reach hi1" at anniversary today, Nov. 14.
992-4197.
Both John and Mildred grew up Riffle. Amoreue Salser, Kaylyn 2nd Grade: Ryan Barrett, Joshua
Also in conjunction with the sea- in Syracuse and graduated from Spradling, Steven Stewart, Lisa Bumem, Corinna Cross, Donald Neal,
David Day, Chelsea Hicks, All As: Dusty Adkins, Shawn Gayheart.
~on , Myron is working with the
Pomeroy High School:· Since Mil- BlanKenship,
Brittany Jeffers, Bradley Jones, Jesse
3rd Grade&lt; Lauren Elliott, Samantha
Middleport Ministerial Association dred's stroke 'in 1993\' the couple Mowery, Morgan Powell, Jill Reeves, Shontz, all As; Anthony Davis, Cain
in planning a public tree lighting doesn 't get out all tha, much any- Travis Roseberry, Felicia Sec, Jessica McKinney, Raymond Reynolds, James
ceremony to be held on Dec. 6. more. However, they"would both Sheets, Molly Smith,' Megan Still, Cait- Wallace.
There will be a short program love cards and letters lfrom Meigs lyn Thomas.
4th Grade: Kelly Napper, Zachary
3rd Grade: Dakota Arms, Zachary Weber.
according to plans and a candle County friends. The a~ress is I 857
Fifth Grade: Zachary Bush, Randy
lighting ceremony will be held.
Tamarack Circle SoutN, Columbus, Arms, Michael Blaennar, Meghan ClelIncidentally. plans are also being Ohio 43229. · Hope :fou let them land, Kayla Diddle, Evan Dunn, Court- Hart, Aaron lhle, Samantha Pierce, all
made for the annual parade to wel- hear from you. They; too. at this ney Haggy, Mian Hennan, Kenny As; Jeffrey Baughman, Eric Bumem,
Lunsford, Scotty Musser. Ronnie Pow- Josh Johnson, Curtis Varian.
come in the holiday season and that pOint in time are proijably missing ell,
Dakota Smith, Stephen Will, Jerod
will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Meigs County.
Ji
Wyatt,
Christeena Young, Randy Salisbury Elementary
•i
Nov. 23, under the direction of Bob
Collins, Cecilia Gore, Mark Cozart,
Kindergarten: Kelsey Bunon, Angela
Gilmore. Yes, you're right, !hat date
"They" say we are going to have Heather Elam, Kayla Grover, Sarah Jef-• DiGiacomo, Darby Gilmore, Breana
is, indeed, before Thanksgiving but a mild winter. "They'' say we're in fers, Daylon Jenkins, Casey Richardson, Hemsley, T1ana Hickman, Scott
Thanksgiving is later this year and for a cold, bad one. I never know . Britnee Sauters, Tiffany Zornes:
Kennedy, Bobby Kmg, Samantha Kmg,
4th Grade: Wes Ault, Bryce Davis, . Dylan Popeluk, Stephanie Shamblin,
so the season will be welcomed not who "they" are but w~ ·seem to have
only in Middleport but in oth~r a difference of opinion·here . At any Amanda Jeffers, Nathan Jeffers, Jake Cassandrn Smith, and Gabriel Williams.
1st Grade: Ruche! Davis, J.T. Evans,
towns and cities as well before that rate, what you sees is what you gets Kennedy, Josh Kennedy, Chris Moss,
and
we'll
just
have
to
live
with
it.
Brandon
Randolph,
Joel
Swann,
WhitAmanda
Gilkey, J.R. Greene, Brandon
holiday.
..
ney Thoene, Weston Fife, Cody Hysell, Hanmng. Shawn Hawley, Morgan
But do keep smthng. '
loran Shank, Abby Stewart, Jake Venoy, Kennedy, Andrew O'Bryant. Brittany
Pa~tdn, An,thony Shamblin, Caitlin
..
· Swartz, Kerri VanReeth, and Christi
,~
DeMoss, Justm DeMoss, Rosanna DII- Will.
2nd Grade:·Amy Barr, Kyle Boggs,
lard, Justine Dowler, Eddie Fife,_ Ben
V~.
Hatfield, Regan Shuler, Clare Stsson Laura Fields, Heather Graham. Rebecca
I · ·
.
Trevor Depoy, Bmndon Grover, R1cky Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk Legar,
Though, unhappily, tradition -and · . Jeffers, Matt Krawsczyn, Maggie Mold- Trenton McClintock, Joseph Sche1mann,
"Meet the Press: 50 Years of His- respeci for forebears has vanished in en, Mike VanSickle, Iilli Young, lenni · Valerie Scheoppner, Frank Stewart, and
tory in the Making.'' by Rick Ball American culture "M&amp;i:t the Press" Young.
EncWood.
Self-contained: Roy Laudenmih.
and NBC News. (McGraw-Hill; 238 still carries the i;.pri!ll of its first
3rd Grade: Shauna Clark, Andy Gartiost
and
its
i'
n
ventor,j
'
awrence
Spi,
MH:
Gene
Buckley.
Kaue
KJbble,
nes,
Chelsea Manley, Andy McAngus,
pp .• $39.95) '
·.
f
d'
,
d
bl'
h
Ruth
Snyder.
Bradley
Ramsburg, Dru Reed, Jennifer
k
va . Th IS onner e II "" pu IS Smith.
er o{ The American Mercury maga- Harrisionville Elementary
By JOHN OMICINSKI
4th Grade: Ashton Bush, Travis
zine was a fe.isty little "l.an with big
Gannett News Service
CC Class: Malea Jones, M. Matt Butcher, Christopher Fields, Cody
That NBC News would produce a horn-rimmed glasses ~ho looked Slater.
Huddy, Matthew Meadows, Brooke
book to mark 50 years of "Meet the like he had a button under his desk
I sl Grade: Ryan Browning, Elsa O'Bryant, and Chnstopher VanReeth;
Press"- granddaddy of the Sunday that could blow hts guG~ts into thin · Gardner, Mason Metts,Joannah Tindon- grade five, Grant Amold, April Coppick,
talk shows- says a great deal about air if they gave the wrolr'g answers.
gan, all As; Travis Hicks, Clinton Ashley Graham, and R.oss Well.
Often, Spivak's gueill$ looked as Kennedy, Bethany Lee, and Kevin
• the television medium.
On the tube, great discussions comfortable as 1f !hey ~ere geuing Payne.
Middlepqrt Elementary
2nd Grade: Tahsha Beha. Chelsey
and greal ideas vanish in split sec- an IRS review or beinz infonmed
Kinder~arten : Tyler Andrews.
onds into-eth~r. Even while the cred- that their parole was bei'llg revoked. Noel, Carrie Phelps, Brinany Preast. Patience Johnson, Ohv1a Carpenter,
Dame\ Runyon, Kaylene Slater, Hannah Maranda Riggs, Tricoa Smith, Bubby
its are running and before the comTim Russcrt, the ciftrent host, Williams,
all As; Doug Herdman,
mercials for car insurance, hemor- despite his background workmg for Samantha Hivley, Justin Gibbs, and Wills, Kelsey Wolson, Kayla Graham,
Zack Whitlatch, Cayla Taylor, Jennifer
rhoid preparations or wan-removing Democrats, sometimes follows the Janett a Stover.
,
Payne, Cody Smith, Megan Dunfee.
ointments, one can hardly remember Spivak advtce he cites prominently
Jrd Grade: Daniel Bookman, Sarah Ist Grade: Hailey Ebersbach, Shawntay
what one has seen, unless one has in his foreword to the volume:
"Learn everything about your
taken notes.
Insubstantial matters of feeling, guests' positions on the issues like whether a person os clean- and take the other side." 1Qa!'s great
shaven or missed making a good advice for any reporter. 11: ·
And Sen. Daniel P. ~oynihan
knot in his tie, or has too sharp a
shade·of lipstick can ile all that one confides in his rememiiUince that
Craflers catalog to be prepared
remembers about a talk-show guest. Spivak used to serve Bl;'iy Marys
by
Chamber
Somehow, things seem more seri- after his shows. Now aII t ey get is
M. C
·
d fte
eogs . ounty arusts an . era rs
ous and substantial when you write a orange juice, prompting Moynihan
book about them, especially one to beg off wJth excuses t&amp;Dt he was who are mterest~d m hav.mg thetr
3 · .! homemade uems mcluded m a .camwtlh heft, glossy paper and lots of late for 11 .o'clock Mass. T\
"
Meet
the
Press"
started
it
all
· log of products -made. here are mvltpictures. So NBC News has gone
back 10 1947 and has sto(\lthe test ed to attend a meeung to be held
and done it.
·
of
time because it has, by tlnd large, Wednesday at6:30 p.m. at the Metgs. This is a vanity book.
sought
to make news and inform its County Sem?r Ce~ter.
.
There is no attempt to analyze the
The
meetmg
wtll
be
an
mforma.
value or growth of the talk show as vtewers.
··. I
,
d h
ll d'
Other talk shows seeln keyed to uona sessmn an l ose a en ·~g
alloAmerican institution, and tt's too
bad. Someone sorely needs to do spreading an ideological .PJlint of arc mvtted to bnng a bnef descnpsuch a book, to explain how these view especially those papillated .by to on and a photo of theor products.
There wtU be no cost. to any
omnipresent blather-binges fit into a gaggle of reporters sitting around
gabbing
no
obvious
pul'(!qse
with
crafter
or arust to mclude ttems m
10
our electronic culture of short auenno
newsmaker
in
sight
to
st~angle.
the
catalog.
Those who cannot
tlon spans, turning us all into instant
It's
al
so
a
show
that
remembers
auend
the
meeung
may contact the
expef!~ on the troubles along Uzbek'
he
h
1
d
!
r
Me1gs
County
Chamber
of Comistan's Silk Road, the future of !
eart an .
~
·
h
· d
While other TV gabfests have . merce pnor to l e meeung ate.
Ecuador 's land dispute with the
·
h . . II
fi
That number IS ~92-5005 .
Peruvians, or the likelihood of revo: concentrated
l etr mte ectua1 oreD
Club holds annual et·
power on the Northeast corrtd~r and t ~11 Y
g
l~tion in the Hindu Kush.
the Prep;· has ogThet er
.
f
th
D
II
There are some interesting udbits its insoders, " Meet
· d
1 ·
e annua 1 reumon o e o y
d
here: Bob Dole has been on "meet always seeme atme . at peop e to Club was held Saturda at the home
y .11
the Press" 56 tomes, almosttw1ce as Kmosha , Wtsc ., who JUS! got back.
from
church
services
and
who
really
of
Grace
Weber,
Reedsv~
e. ,
many as his nexr ne arest competitor,
.
.
The group of longume· fnends
former Sen. Sam Nunn (29) and for- don t have the umc to keep up £'wuh me
.
d' 0 ons
· F'1ck of c o1urnbus,
hmg because th ey wor 10r a H 1u mg
mer Sen. George Mitchell (27). Rep. everyt
W
If
, . ·
li
r
e 1en o e o1- Long Bottom, and
DICk Gephardt finishes four1h with I•vmg
·~ "
Wb M .
"Meet the Pre.s" has t~ ed to Frances Reed, Grace e er, ax1ne
25.
Interestin gly, the late Hubert keep its Q and A terse and to the Whrtehead and Ruth . Anne B~lderothers wan - son of Reedsvolle,_enJoyed a dmner
Humphrey's 25 keeps him right up po int of the day' while
.
at the Potnl of Vtew Restaurant on
der the seven seas on search of cute par kers burg , an d alt en ded "Th e
there .
The book 's many little swatches ltnes or hot emotions.
.
Sound of Music" at the Actor's
Because the NBC News oters G 'ld
of transcripts from its shows also
UTI h.e women were c h'ldh
make ita mce coffee table book. You have done their
. homework .and laid
1
oo d
can get a little mental nounshmcnt out an attractiVe book that tncludcs friends, attended the Reedsville
and put it down during a long com- . scores, If not hundreds, of vejf1-tl .ll Grade School and Chester High
htghllghts from the shows, thos IS a S h00 1 Th
h h
th
merctal break .
1
(
c
· . roug t e years . ey wen
"Meet the Pte5'" is by far the valuable and ·re adable volume.
separate ways and ratsed thetr
May bc ot s no1 wo rth the ·$40 thetr
best of the talk shows. It always has
f .1.
d· 1
d
Open til Midnight
ri ce ta but hard I ally book is..
amt 1es an tn ater years, resume
been.
Every Night
P
g,
Y
..."'
get-togethers on an annual basts.

.Beat of the Bend ...
•

by

·"ei:ars· bf·, /os~t~eG"'r!i.~k~~~~~;t,~
NBC., Mews·.~bo··asts ·;so,·y
'Meet the Press' wt'th neuJ book

s.Ia•o~

Society
Scrapbook

Games, Nicole Haley, Amber Hockman,
Lian Hoffman. Cara Lawless, Codey
Mannon, Courtney Mayes. Nicholas
Bailey, Ryan Beegle, Nikki Lawson,
Ashley McHenry, Jessica Moght, Seth
Perry, Arid Smith, Nocko Smith, Damin
Wise, Willie Barcus, Caleb Bevan, Chad
Bonnell, Megan Bush, Chelsea Davis,
Jennifer Fife, Laura Gheen, Hannah
Hoffman,' Raven Johnson, Chns Kimes,
Jared McKinney, Zackary Schwab, Ashley Smith, Tess Thomas, Chassody Wills.
2nd Grade: Jacob Bonecutter, Ausun
Dunfee, Kayla Gheen, Natasha Knapp,
Caitlin Leslie, Ashley Ltnleton , Breanna
Mitchell, Trevor Nichols, Doug Noel,
Casey Smith, Lacey Stobart, Alexa
Venoy. Robert Foreman. Joshua Eakins,
Chris Goode, Sarah Hollen, Katie Patterson, Lesley Preece, Tiffany Simpson,
Phillip Sisson. Patti Vtning. Cornelius
English, Holley Geary, Kayla Jacks,
Tyler Lottie, Tela Meloy.
Jrd Grade: Valene Carpenter, Ashley
Cnslip, Sarah Engle, Billy Fmk , Bnttany Hamng, Matt Landers, Terry Ltght,
Chellsie Riggs , Amanda Schartiger,
Alex Sisson, Kelli Brewer, Laura
Eakins, Bmndon Ftsher, Bnuney King,
Danny Mdornson, Amber Ward, Ashley
Ebersbach, Clarissa Davis, Steven Hudson, Erinne Kennedy Eric Littleton,
Chalsie Manley, Christy Miller, Davod
Poole, Whitney Smith, Michelle Weaver,
Cassi Whan , Angela Casci, Alexander I.
Chandler, Cody Davidson Jennofer
Kuhn, Joel Lynch, Kat1e Rodehaver. Jordann Thomas, Dustin Van lnwagcn.
Kasey Winter, Meli ssa Mannon.
Special Education: Patricia Johnso n.
Meigs Middle School
6th Grade: Davod Boyd, Jaclyn Page
Bradbury, Kara Buffington, Nicole Burman, Kevin Butcher,. Kenneth Carsey,
Jaynee Davis, Maegan D9dson, Jason
Drumm, Jenmfer Dunn, Rosanna
Eggers, Jesse Gates, Bruce Glover, Ran·
dall Hudson, Jonathan Larkins, Sarah
Lee, Christina Miller. Bobbi Napper,
Ashley Payne, Enca Poole, Briltan}'\
Powers., Tia Pratt , Amanda Priddy,
Joshua Ray, Henry Rider, Pamela Rupe,
Jessica Smith, Ryan S!obart, Brandi
Thomas, Angela Wilson.
7th Grade: James Appel, Stephanie
Barr, Stephanie Black, Brook Bolin,
Lindsay Bolin, Benjamen Bookman,
Cass1e Bra.un, Dawna Brumfield, Wesley Call, Jassihne Carter, Melinda
Chancey, Ashley Colwell, Loretta Darst,
Kayte Davis, Brittany Denny, Tirzah
Dodson, Casey Dunfee, Joshua Eagle,
Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin, Derrick Fackler, Amanda Fetty, Candoce Fetty, ~she­
ly F1elds, Jennifer Foreman, Joshua
Fowler, Robyn Freeman, Charles
Gilmore, JOn Halar, Kyle Hannan, Jami
Hayes, Meghan Haynes, Courtney
Hicks, Lucille Howerton, Heather
Hysell, Crystal Jacks, Christopher
Jacobs, Brook Johnson, Kelly Johnston,
Jessica Justice, Wolliam Kauff. Mallory
King, Amanda Langdon, Shawna Manley, Anthony Martinez. Valatie McClintic, Christopher McDaniel, William
McMams, Jason Murdock, Jenni Pnddy,
Brandon Ramsburg, Jason Rosier, Jere·
my Roush, Michelle Runyon, Randall
Salyers, Abram Sayre·, Ben See, Brandy
Sea, Alison Smtth, Carla Smith, Jason
Stiers, Emily Story, Casey Tillis, Cory
Van Reeth, Jennifer Walker, Alicia
Werry, Elizabeth Wilfong, Allison
Williamson. Hannan Woolard, Jennifer
Zielinsko.
8th Grade: Carne Abbott, Joeline

Allen, Andrew Baker. Ashley Burdridge,
Bobbie Burson, Erin Bush. Misty Clark,
Delana Eochinger. Amber Ellis, Heather
Felty, Ben Haley, Amber' Haning, Erin
Hartson, Becky Jacks, Jameson Johnson,
Greg King, Darrick Knapp, Ryan Kraut·
ter, John Krawsczyn, Kwynn Leib, John
Lentes, Nickolas McLaughlin, MOllica
Moon, Sara Moon, Tim Moreland,
Joshua Napper, Christopher Neece,
Mindy O' Dell , Krystal Penninston,
Kristy Puckett, Misty Puckett. Melissa
Richmond , Leslie Runyon, Christopher
Rupe, Elizabeth Russell, Mary Schultz,
Jacob Smith, Rebecca Smith, Amber '
Snowden, Shauna White, Mauhew
Williamson, Timer Wilson, John Witherell, Rees Wyant, Tara Wyatt.
Meigs High School
9th Grade: Whitney Ashley, Chasidi
Biggs, Shandi Bobb, Derick Bolin,
Andrew Davis,-1iffany Day, Christopher
Dodson, Jess1e Hoffman, Aaron Lee
Kraulter, Andrea Krawsczyn , Lauretta
Landaker, Carrie Lightfool, Ivana Najdanovic, Christopher Pickens, Gary
Rydcnb~rk , Jef,frey Shank, Brandi
Smith, Brooke Smith, Stephame Wigal,
Connie Willet.
lOth Grade: Meghan Avis, Seth
Baker. Keith Barrett, Orion Barrett,
Steve Beha, Lisa Boas, Amber Blackston, Melanie Blevins, Bethany Boyles,
Stacey Brewer. Beverly Burdette, Ashley Burton, Melissa Davis, Robert Day,
Brant Dixon, Heather Ferrell. Marjorie
Halar. Mochelle Hart, Brawn Herman,
Amber Huddleston, John Kopczmsky.
Joseph ' McCall , Nicholas Michael.
Amanda Miller, Jeremy Rowe, Jennifer
Shnmplin, Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah
Smith , Shannon Smith, 'Joshua Sorden,
Julie Spaun, James Stanley, Wesley
Thoene, Whirney Thomas, Amanda
Upton, Brooke Williams, Michael
Willtamson.
lith Grade: Lacy Banks, Candy Barneu, Kristen Brown, Elizabeth Call,
Melissa Darnell, Tricia Davis, Stoney .
Day, Boyan Gartchev, Jason Harris,
Chasity Hess, Justin Jeffers, Rebecca
Johnson', Jessica Johnson, Kristina
Kennedy, Sarah Larkins, Jennifer
Mankin, Tara Nonnan, Tamra O'Dell,
Alyson Patterson , Stefani Pickens,
Macic Pierce, Nikki Roberts, Franco
Romuno, Rebekah Smith, Melisha'
Swisher, J.eremy Thomson, Bridget
Vaughan, Kasey Williams, S~ari Wrigjll,
Jonalhan Wyatt.
12.lh Grade: V1cki Adams, Carissa
Ash, Rachel Ashley, Wayne Barnhart,
Mick Barr, Stefani Bearhs. Katherine
Beaumire, Mtchelle Bissell, Stephanie
Burton, Joshua Butcher. Seth Carleton,
Carl y Chasteen, Jerica Clark, Jennie
Conklin, Gmger Darst. Jennifer Duncan,
Crystal Eblin, Brandie Elliou, Elizabeth
Farley, Chad Folmer, Emily Fowler,
Cortney Haley, !'Iathan Halfhill, Carrie
Harmon, Jennifer Hayman, James Hudson, Amanda Huegle, Sara Lee, Heidt
Legar. Michael Leifheit, Jill Lemley,
Misty Lyons. Robert Malhotra, Candace
Miller, Jesse Molden, Daniel Peckham,
Annette Pierce. Mi chelle Ramsburg,
Melissa Ramsburg, Melissa ~eeves.
Nickie Runyon, Casey Sanford, Amy
See, Scottie Sellers, Wendy Shnmplln,
Amy Smoth, Sabnna Smith, Moke Smoth,
Mariana Staats, Jonathan Stewan ,
William Tack.elt, Crystal Taylor, Adam
Thomas, Jenmfer Vining. Nancy Whaley, Mehssa Williams, Matthew
Williams, Aaron Woolard. Jessica
Wnght, Michael Wyatt. Sandra Young.

THANKS FOR YOUR VOTE AND
TRUST IN ·THE OLIVE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE ELECTION• .
WILLIAM (BILL) OSBORNE
378·6135

Pd. by ..ndtdllo: 113417 SL Rt.l81, P.O. Box 32, Roedovtlhl, OH 45772

Loo• What's New At Taz's
PHONE CARDS
• $5 cards
Good for 26.min.
• $10 cards
Good for 53 min
• $20 cards
Good for 106 min

~

.

.

J.

··~

I
I

State Route 7
At Five Points

992-7339

•

�Friday, November 14, 1987 .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

hge10 • The Dally Sentinel

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·••
•••

•

___________________:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:~~~~~~~~~~~--------~~-------------- l!
Apostoltc

Col.ary "!I~R~

Worship. !Ot.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesda• Servicn. 7 p.m.
'
~-~or~
M......._.. ~.d'M.in
... ~-

IWrlrcovno _

Putor. Rev. Victor Rouall
•..
~nday 5ebool !1:30 1.m.
W~- II ' ·!"·· 7:30p.m.
Wed
y Sel\'lce • 7:30p.m.

-r;-,;
o

l'lslor: AI HIIUOII
Youth Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 8:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicn • 7 p.m.
K01o Church or C•tilt
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- IO:JO a.m.
Pastor-leffn:y Wallm
Island 3rd Sunday

1.-'llon'dl (Soetbtm)
---··- ::--r·-·Riclmd Oliver

510 Grant St., Middlepon
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday

Ser~ice

-7 p.m.

Flft WID Bapllsl Cbun:b

"0

J

Ash Street, Middlepon
Paster: L.es Hayman
Sunday Service-7:00p.m.
Sunday School· JO a.m.
Wednesda~ Service-7:00p.m.

Rudand flrst Bapllsl Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
· Worship · 10:45. a.m.
Pomeroy Flnl Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

.

Worship -10:30 a.m.

First Suutbtra Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryanr

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service! · 7:00 p.m.
Flnt Baptist Chan:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
61h and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Rldne Flnt Baptlsl
· Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sc:noi&lt;:es ·7:00p.m.
SllfOr Run Bap!lst
'Pastor: Bill Link
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship - 1Ja.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 p.m.
Union Boptlst
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schi&gt;OI-9:~5 a.m.
Evening • 6:3Q p.m.
Wednes&lt;lay Services • 6:30p.m.
M~

lletllltkmBapi!JICbordl
G~at Bend, Roule 124, Ra.;ine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP. - 10:30 a.m. dt 6 p.m.
Wednelday Btble Study - 6:00p.m.
Old Bathtl Flft WIN Baptist Chu"'h

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenlns- 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services • 7:30
Hillside Baptlat Qu,..h
St. Rt.l4~ just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Aau, Sr.
Sundaf School • 10 a.m.
Worsh1p - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services -7 p.m.
Vl&lt;tory Baptlat lodq I d11l
52!1 N. 2nd St. Micldlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship· tOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Foldl Bapllst Cburdl
Railroad St., Mason

Sunday School - 10 •·"!·
Worsh1p - 11 a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ,· 7 p.m.
Forat Rualloptlot
Pastor : Arius R"n
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
ML Morillo Baptlot
Founh 1t. Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craia. Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

""~ Bapllst
Sunday Schuol - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 1.m.
Sunday Eveni., • 6:00 p.m.
Rudud Fnt Will Bapdat
Salem St.
Pas.tor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; -7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:a - 7 p.m.

Beanrallow Ridle Cburdl oiC•rbl
Pastor:Te~
.. , Stewart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedne!day Services . 6:30p.m.
Zloa Chun:b of Chrbt

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roser Watson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Socntl Heon Catllollc CMreh
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
PUior. Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. C&lt;m. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Masa-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mau · 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mlsa • 8:30 o.m.

Church of Cl1r1st
Pt II'DJ Clll.rdi of Qrftt
212 W. Main St.
Paslor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worahip. 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services- 7 p.m.

r-ny Watslde Ckordl ofCbrlsl
33226 Childn:n's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.

Plot Gro" Bible HollotU Church

112 mile off Rt. 32.5 · ,
PUior: Rev. O'Dell MIDley .
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W--•
· · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
~~•P
Wednesday Service. 7,30 p.m.
WOIIeyu Bible Hoi'- Cburcb
15 Purl St., Middleport.
PUior: Rev. John Neville
Children~ service . 10 a.m.
Worship -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
HyltU Rea Holloesa Churdl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4.5 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plaia C.,.rdl orChrltt
Instrumc:nlal
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion . 10 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:15 a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Thursda1 Service - 7:30p.m.

Loorel CUll Flft Mothodlst Church
Pastor: David DeWin
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m. and 6p.m.
Wednelday Service · ?:00 p.m.
Rudold Commualty Cha,...
Putor: Rev. Roy McCan•
I
Sunday School- 9:30 1.m.
Sunday Evening. 7 p.m.
·•
w~nesday Services - 7 p.m.

Bradbury Church orChrllt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday Sch001• 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Rutload Chun:h orChrisl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

J-• Chu
.... or JHW Chrllt
or Lotter Ooy Slllall
Ponland-Raeine Rd.
Bran~h President · Michael Duhl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JO a.m.
Wednes&lt;lay Services - 7:30p.m.

a..

~rp• ....

Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Minister: [)Qug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Hk:kory Hilla Cbordl orCbrllt
Evanplist loseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednt!lday Services- 7 p.m.
Ubtny Chriltbta Cburdl
Dexter
Pastor. Woody Call
Sunday Evening· 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service-6:30p.m.

ThtCbu,...oiJtiUI
Cbrilt of Loller·llor Silo II
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School )0:20-)la.m.
Relief Soc:iety/Priesthoad II :05-12:00 noon
Sacnment Service 9-IO:IS a.m.
Homemaking meeting, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
5I. Jolla Lulbena Cbordl
Pine Grove

Rev. Georse Weirick
Worahip • 9:00 Lm.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

l.onpvllle Cbtistlon Cbun:h
Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service 7:30p.m.

Our S.•loar Lulbena Cburdl
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenawood, W.Va.
Intrim pastors: Rtv: Roberl Hupp
SuNiay School • 10:00 a.m.
Worahip • II a.m.

Hemlock Gro" Ckurch
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- IO:jtj a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

5I. Paul Lutloeraa Church
Comer Sycamore A Second Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick

-.UieCban:lloiCWIII
Paslor: Philip Sturm

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip Service: IO:JO a.m.
Bible Study, - y , 6:30p.m.

Cllnstl&lt;lll Unton

Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Un1ted Methodtst
Graho• Ualted Methodlot
Worship • 9:30a.m. (1st lt. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd .1: 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service ·· 7:30p.m.

Horlford Cbordl ol Christl•

Cbrlttioa Union
·Htnford, W.Va.
PutonJim Hughes
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30 p:m.
• Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Mt. OIIYO Ualted Mtthodhl
Off 124 behind Wilkeaville
PUior: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
lbursdly Servlcu • 7 p.m.

Church of God
ML Moriob Cban:h or God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

Mdp Cooponu.. l'lri•h

Alrrtd

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
·Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 11 ~.m.,. 6: 30 p.m.

Chtl!er
Pastor; Sharon Hausman
Wors6ip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Synta110 Flnl Cburdl or God
Apple and Second Sta.
Pastor: Rev. David Ruwll
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services - 6:30 p.m.
C.ardl of God oiPropbeey
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pas«K: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Joppo
'
Pastor: Dol&gt; Rlndolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Loa&amp; Bottom •
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

-ville
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Firsl Sunday of Month • 7:30 p.m. stl'\l.ice

Congregational
Trlalb Cburdl

W. . .y Services. 7 p.m.
Appe Llll

Tuppen Pial• St. Pool ·
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10 a.m.
Tuelday Services • 7:30 p.m.

.

Pastor: Rtv. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:2!1

Eptscopal
Grace Eplo-1 Ch....
326 E. Main St., Pome...,.
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday SchuoiiO:JO a.m.

Ceotrol Clolltr
Aabttry (Srn&lt;u~&lt;)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
• Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7:30 p.m.

Coffee hour followin1

Eotorpriae
Plstor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9 o.m.

Hol1ness

C..,...

Doo•lle Holl310S7 State Routo 325, l.onpvlle
PuiOf; Dr. J.O. Youna
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· IO:JO a.m.&amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m.

c-

·~·•on.-..
~.~·
..,____,..1 ~· ~

...::~ (MI I! ~~~)

-

: e.,....ye u !ivan
Sunday S&lt;llool · !1:30 l.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Mloemllle

lolut .t Piny Wide

60~ s-..1 Ave. Muon

n3-j()J7
Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.
, ...... Qual
S. 1lti ~ Blllo Cit....,
9233 s. lnl 1., Middleport
Paitor Mlehlel Panalo
· Sun.!l, aervlce, IOo.m.
lb
Y lervlce, 7 p.m.

Em rick
5Pandstor:£~.'!
u If ""'""'1 • 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - IO..m.
Paoli Choilol
Sunday Schoql - 9a.m.
Wor&gt;hip. 10 a.m.

Cllrlatlu Pilla•*' Cnlor
Salem St., Rutland
l'ulor: Raben E. Mauer
Sunda•Schooi
- IOa.m.
'
Worship· 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednclday Service . 7 p.m.

~--

.........,.,
Pastor: Robert E. Robinaon
SundaJ School- 9:15 1.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tueaday • JO a.m.

~

Cllrladu Folloo 1it1D Ch...
Sunday.oervlce, 10:00 a.m::f'OO p.m.
Youlll Fellowlhip Sunday. 7:00p.m.
Wednelday aervlce, 7:00p.m.

Rack """"P

Plstor. K;;'iii.-Rader
Sunday School · 9,15 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip . tO a.m.
Youth Fellowohtp, Sunda• · 6 p.m.
'
Rudaacl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

~-~...:.. ,..~_, c~~

'""" , .. _,... _,..
. Lon&amp; Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday Schuol· 9:30a.m.

Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thursdly Services . 7 p.m.

Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneadar. • 7 p.m.

Friday · fellowsh p setvlo! 7 p.m.

s... Ceater

Pastor: Ron Fietee
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:15 a.m.
SDOWYIIe
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
w--1...
9
~N•IP • a.m.
a-•·a•
DI:Uia I
Pastor. Dewayne
Stutler
Sunday Schooi··IO a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Wednelda• Servlce.o. 10 a.m.
'
Cartntl
Postor: Dewar•• Stutler
Sunday Schoo • 9:30 a.rn.
Wonhip . 10:45 a.m. (2nd 1t. 4th Sun)
Momloa Star
Pator. Dewayne Stutler
Su""'y S&lt;llool- 11 a.m.
Worahip • 10 a.m. .
Sulloa
Pastor; Dewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m. (Ill&amp; 3rd Sun)
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

11to lollnm' ,.......,., Mllllttey
New Ume Rd., Rutland
PUior: Rev. Marpn:t J. Robin...,
Services: Wednelday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Hln11ooflle eo.-o.. c.. ....
-v
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sundaay • 9:30 a.m:
• and 7 p.m.
Wednetday -7 p.m.
.,_.
....,..,_ H - ol Pnyer
(It Burlingham chun:h off Routo 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worahip. 10 a.m.
Wednesday !CTVice • 6:30 p.m.

M-.,.n C-••oltJ a.....
515 Pari 51., Middleport
Pastor: sam Andenon
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evenins. 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Foldl v·u... Tabtrudt
a;'ley Run Rood
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rlwaon
Sunday Eveni"' 7 p.m.
lburaday Service • 7 p.m.

a.....

I

.

Syncuae1411 Bridpman St., Syncu1e
Sunday School.· 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednes&lt;lay Service • 7 p.m.

Riel••
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Hu.l 0.•••111 Cburdl
OffRll24
Pastor: Edoel Hart
Sunday S&lt;llool • 9:30 o.m. .
Wonhlp • IO:JO a.m., 7:30p.m.

Cool•llle Ualted Methodlal Parilb
hslor: Helen Kline
Coolrille Cbun:ll
Main .t Fifth St..
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tueaday Services· 7 p.m.

DJ-•eo.-•tr
CINJdo
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip ·~0:30a.m .• 7 p.m.

lletheiCburdl
Townslt,ip Rd., 46SC
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship ~ 10 a.m.
. Wednelday Services- 10 a.m.
HO.:kl...,..n Churdl
Grand Street
Sunday S..::hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.
Ton:hChu,..h
Ca. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m. .
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Moroe Cltopol C..U
Sunday ochool • 10 a.m.
Worship • II Lm.
Wednolday Service - 7 p.m.
Fai.. ~Chrdl

Sunda;"~l

• 9:30 o.m.
Worship· t0:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
ML 011.. Conuaoolty Cbrdl
Pastor: l.owtence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Noctheut Cl111tr

Rudaod Cborch or God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wontllip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Semnd &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy

Catholtc

R-oiSillroe ·Holl- Cbo,...
Lcadina Cleek Rd., Rutland
PUior: Rev. Dewey Klna '
Sunday achool- 9.30 1.m.
Su~day wor&gt;hip -7 p.m.
Wednelday ptayer mee~ing- 7 p.m.

Sunday SCbool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 1.m.
Tbllllday Services. 6:30p.m.

Middleport Church orlbe Nazoreoe
Pastor: Grcaory A Cundiff
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Uallidl'oiiiiCh,...

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pall •
Putor: Rev. Roj&gt;en E. ~mlth, Sr.
Sunday School' 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • IO:JO a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Seovlce - 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Se~iccs- 7 p.m.

SdvenvUit Word otFoldl
l'lslor: David Dalley
Sunday Sd!ooi9:JO 1.m.,
Evenlna. 7 p.m. ·

~unday School • 9:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

~

• IUold-a ure Cllaft:ll
500)-!. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pator: !.own:""" FIJielrllll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
•
Worship- IO:JO am
Wednesda• Setvlces -7 p m
.,
'
·
' '
Cbon:ll or J - C.rllt,
Apollollc Foldl ·
1/4 mile put Fort Melp .on New Uma Rd.
Putor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wodnelday-7:00 p.m ..
Friday-7:00 p.m.
Clifton Tobtraodt Cbardl
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service. 7 p.m.
Ntw Ure Vldory c..ler
3773 Georpa Cleek Rood, Gallipolia, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m.&amp; 7 p.m .
Wednaday • 7 p.m. lt. You1117 p.m.

,........,._lll)o
Pentecostal

St. Rt. 124, Roclpe
P1stor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenin1· 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m.

Mlddltt&gt;on ....,te&lt;ootal
Third Ave.
Rev. Clirk Baker
School ·
-6 .

Srraaue Flnt Ualted Prtsbyterion
Paotor: Rev. Krlsana Roblnaon
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Hlrri101vllle Pmbyllt'llul Cbun:ll
Worihlp - 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Mlddleparl.....,..lioa
Sunday School • !I a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Advent1s•
SmtltJt.Dey Ad-lilt
MulbtrfJ' Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy l.owinalty
Saturday Servica:
SoiJboth SdlooJ. 2 p.m.
Wonhlp-3p.m.

Utaltal Bnlllnto
Ia c•rtot Cllll,..
Tow Community oil CR 82
Pastor. Roben Sanden
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30·a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wtdneaday Service• - 7:30p.m.
M~"-ott

l!dat Ualted llrtdonatlo ~
2 1/2 milea north of Recdovllle.

on State Routo 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday S&lt;llool - II a.m.
Sunday Worahip - 10:00 o.m. .t 7:00p.m.
Wtdneaday Serviceo • 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Youth Service. 7:30p.m..

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

CarlttoB ............... Clllaft,

Pome..., Chu,... ortbt Nuomoe
PUIOr: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm,Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp. IO:JO a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednelday Servicn • 7 p.m.

KlnP,.ry Rood
Puler: Jeff Smilll
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Worshtp Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday br Wednesday Nip! Service&gt;

Chester Cbun:ll or 1be Nazoreae
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7 p.m.

F-GoopeiMIIIIoo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
PU!Or: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

Rotiud Cburdl ortlse Nazomoe
Pastor: Samuel Buyc
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
, Wedtlelday Services · 7 p.m.

Whlll's Clto...i WllltJu
CoolviAe Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - !1:30 o.m.
Wor&gt;hip- IO:JO 1.m.
We~nelday Service· 7 p.m.

PottloNI F1nt Cbo"'~ or tbt Noumt
Pastor: Mark Mataon
Worship· IO:JO p.m . .
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service.o • 7 p.m.

' F-'rvltW Bible Chi...

Other Churches

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Ho.-1 Oll&amp;t-b Mlalalrlol
474~9 Reibel Rd., Chester
Plllor: Rev. Miry McDaniel
Sunday Setvlces: 10 a.m . .t 6 p.m.

Folllt f-Illip Cl'lllllle,., Qrlot
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

DELINQUENT LAtND TAX NOTICE
The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County
Treasurer of Meigs County, with the taxes, assessments, lntere11t
and penalties charges thereupon agreeable to law, are contained
and described In the following list:

(Nome,
Dtacrlptlon,
Ac,.., Toto! TIX'u, A rnen11 ond P1tnaltlea)
Blclford '!Wp
Melg~ LSD
01-G0572.003, Carr, C
Dougloo 6/or Mtldolyn M,
Stet 1m R 13 5.4118A out
of 84.00A 5.481A, TOll!
121.84
01-111218.000,
Clrtlr
Brooka, Royalty lnt•rtot
Tl1tld Ene'1Jy Corp of WVA
Inc Total $7.01
01-11348-002, E~, Btlh
E. a Belley 1111,
38 T3
A13 NE pan of SE 1/4
16.608A out of 44.341A
15.108A, Toto! $284.65
01-G0510.011,
Eggtre,
Beth E. &amp; BellY Ben, SIC!.
30 T3 T13 W 1!2 or NW 1/4
3.394 A out ot 14.444A
3.384A, Toll! $72.118
01-G02118.000,
Gilkey,
Kermll E a.or Marlho, Diet
26 NE pt of 60A E end Ex.
Mine "''' 2.38A Total
$481.21
01-G0510.011,
Grttne
,WIIIIom E 6/or Chrlltlne A,
Fraction 2 T3N A13W
1.507A out oi91.2A 1.507A
Toto1162.28
01-G0218,001,
Guthrlo
P1trntla K, W JM!rl of SE 1/4
2.387A out ol 48.75A
2.387A, Total $a64.35
01-GO:l26.000,
Klein,
Aundo, Lot Sect. (F-17) E pt
ol 31.94A w ot Rd..71A,
Toto1S221.72
01~7.000,
Klein,
Aundo, Lot Sect. ·22 on N.
oi.71A Tract Wof Ad.. 13A,
Toto! $2.02
01-G0328.000,
Kloln,
Aundo, Lot Sect. -22 off E
olde ol 32A E end ol SE 1/4
.18A, Total $2.311
01-G0283.001, ANd, Aogtr
&amp;Jor Chfltllne, Sect 34 T3
A13 N pan· of NE 1/4 43.5
283A out or 87.0588A
43.5283A, Toll! $258.72
01.00572.000,
Plcka11,
Elollt M., Lot Diet 16, SE
1/4 a 10A E end ol s 112
84.00A EX 5.486A 58.514A,
Total $880.2l
01.0QI81.000,
Swann,
• Konnelh ,11, Lot Stet 13 E
Pan o1 44A SW of SE1!4
7.0SA, Totol$49.80
01.01211.000, ThomJM!on,,
Roy a Wanda, Royalty
lnlereot Triad Ent'1JY Corp
ol WVA Inc., Total $12.77
01-001187.001, Wendling,
John Dovld Jr. &amp;Jor Jullt
ct. 33 · R13 T3
:I~A&lt;At·l· ...;;: i

Lttntnon 1Wp
J!ootem LSD
01-DOOII.OOO,
Buth,
Gregory &amp;Jor Denl.., Stet
27 ""' 8E oor of NW 1/4
12.&amp;0A, Toll! 8378.87
116.00052.000,
Buah,
Gregory ator DttniN, Sect
27 NE JMtrt of NW 1/4 Ex
Cooti43A, Tolll$124.1t
euah,
01.00053.000,
Gr.gory &amp;/or DttniN, Sect
27 1.50A out of 31.211A Gr
8td 50' Wd Sip 1345' L,
150A. Toll! $4.58
01-00011.002,
Horrle,
Robin S Sr 6/or Tr•nnla,
Sect 34 T2 R11 10.857 out of
lt.7851, 10.157A, Tote!
$115.118
· Ltbttnon '!Wp
. Southlm LSD
07.00747.000,
Adklna,
Roger Dole ator Tomaro
Lynn, Stet 25 NW 1/4 ol NW
1/4 40A, Toto! $220.29
07-00148.000, Bumpue,
Bonnlo, Stet. 31 8.25 A of
11.25A SE1!4E of Rd Ex
7.25A 8.25A, Toll! $23.23
07-G0149.000, eumpua,
Bonnla, Sect 31 2.75A out of
SE oldt ol 8A 2.75A, Toto!
$7.50
07.00150.000, Bumpuo,
Bonnie, Sect 31 2.51A out
ol 7.25A 2.58A, Total
$311 .82
OHK11 51.000, Bumpua,
Bonnla, Sect. 31 BE PI ol
NE 1]4 ol SE 1/4 Ex 2.7!lA
5.2611, Total $14.83
07-G0757 .002, Cuto, Nora
II, 150A Lot 1171 Sect 23
T2N R11W 5.00A out of
51.00A S.OOA, Toll! $21.23
07-G0757.003, Cat1o, Nora
M, Seci23110ALo11171 T2
R11 3.127A out of 46.00A
3.127A, Tolll$13.21
07.007!!7 .1104, Cotto, Nora
M., Sect 23 150A Lot 1171
T2 R11 5.944A Out ol
42:873A 5.944A, Toto!
$24.84
07·00344.000,
Cobb,
Ruaooll D 6/or Donna S,
Sect. 30 Out of 7!l:31A In W
If,!, ol N E 1/4 1.40A,. Toll!
$122.35
07-D0837.000,
Davia,
Jom.. Leonord II 6/or
Alberta Diann, Sect 24 Und.
1/2 ol NE 1/4 of SE 1/4 Ex.
11.2BA, .72A, Toll! $34.84 ·
07.01047.000,
Gr1y,
Chltltr E, C/0 Joonne G.
Canflald, Sect. ·24 (Mineralo
Only) 26.51A, Total $20.50
07.01048.000,
Gray,
Cheolor E, C/O Joanne G.
Canlltld, Soct. 24 BE 1/4 of
rot.r $820.48 . _ .
NE 1/413.33A, Tolll$10.02
. Chi-'!Wp
07·00971.002,
Joneo,
Eltltern LSD
Danellt, SICI 20 T3, R11, S
Brewer
or NW 1/4 of SW 1/41 A Out
0 3-00122 ·001 '
'
or 23A 1 A, Total $209.08
Devld Monln 6/or Poult
07·007115.000,
Juotlo,
EIIHn., Frilc 7, T4, R12, 20A
F•m•
M
&amp;;or
Morgortt,
Sect
out ol 48A, Toto! $74.13
22·21 Mid of W Une E SlYly
03.01595.000,
Conroy,
22 .113A ·ex Cool 22.7SA,
Goorge, f1 Lend Owner,
Total $911.14
Working lntertol Georg•
Conroy 11 Lend Owner,
07-D0873.00, Krtdtr, John
W 6/or Mlldrtd A, Stet. 20
Toll! $35.50
Dtllty,
NW Cor. Ex. Mlnerala 10.50
03•00282•001 ,
&amp;Jor
Dtboroh
L
ld
J
A, Tolll 121.83
0
07.01)874.000, Krtder, John
2 T4 R12 Mid on S Une
2.34A OUt ol 77.92A, 2.34A
w 6/ot Mildred A, ~ect. 20
Toll! $171 42
5.oOA, Toll! $21.23
03-D0870• 000 Dill Steven
07.00384.000,
Long,
R. 6/or Joanne, s.d12 Rt2
Dennlo, Sect. 25 NE 1/4 Ex.
Cot! &amp; Oth Mini. 25 A 0111
~(840) 1'3 sW of CR SE 1/4 a
1•1/2A E of SW 1/4 46.18A,
52.17A
25.00A,
Toto!
Total $1 793 23
stoi:7o
07.00385.000,
Long,
03-00Slt.oOo, Dill, Steven
R &amp;lor Joanne, Soct 11
Dtnnlt, Sect. 25 NE 1/4 Ex.
(64o) T3 R12 NE part of
Coal l oth Min. 15.87A of
NE1/4 a W pt ol NE1/4133A,
83.5'2'A 2.41A, Toll! 1117.83
Total $924 58
07-00224.000,
Moore,
03-003911:00.1,
Hauber, v~~~ ~~.Total ~:. Gerald a Koran, Sect. 26 T3
R11 2.38 Out ol 20A 2.38 A,
Dougllt E. 6/or Branda C., Walter J. 111, Sect. 211 FR. 24 Total $121.74
SICI3 T3 R12 3.nA out of E tnd Ex. 14 Vtln Coal81 A,
07-00831-DOO, Nu11ar, Alan,
1U5A 3.7nA, Tolll $44.37 Totti $213.49
C/O
Rick Sollero, Sec!. 23
03-00248.000,
Hlbbord,
05·00835.000
Robb
160A
Lo111188 1Aof N PI of
R011111d A. 6/or Karon S., S3 W
J 111 s.' 28 FR 34'
46.32A Ex. Mini. 1A, Total
(840}T3R12Eptof11ASepl
oiler . ' ct
of NWI/4 W of Rd Ex.25A ~:t:':u:oadwey ·0·25 A, 835.24
07.00223.000,
Phllllpa,
.SOA, Tollll628.84
05·00823.001, Sandero, Benton &amp;/or Rhonda G FKA
03·00249.000, Hibbard, Ronald L 6/or Audrey J,
Ronald A 6/or Kertn S, Sect Sect20 Frac 25 E Part.188A Rhonda G. McGrath, Sect.
3 T3 A12 NHr Center of out of 22.50A .188A, Total 21 IE Part ol 59.42A
17 .1&gt;2A, Toto! $118.911
Sect .SOA, Total $18.55
$1 t3
'·
07-00754.000
Schular,
· _ 73 001
Sh tl
03-00804.000, Hunt, Eerl
Richard i./or Gl111cll Kay,
05-vvv ·
• •· MI'1Jio, J, C/0 Gary Rupe,
St 2 T3 Rt 2 SW1/4 EX 1.5A Bobby L 6/or Rebecca M, Gdn. Sec111·12-13 S 1/2 Ex
SE EX 9 'I'5A NE Cor Ex 70A Sect 17 T9 R15 5.014A out 1/2 Mltlerole 84A, Total
EX 20A S.25A, Total $11.42
s:s·: -71A 5.014A, Total $151.38
'
07-00755.000,
Schuler,
03-00919.000,. Nou!ZIIng, : OS-00852.000 Shtltlno,
Ma'1JII
J.,
C/0
Gary
Rupe.
Wm Richard 6/or Sharon E, Daniel E, Lot 8, Tot1l
Gdn, Sect 11·12·13 Trl E
sect. 29 (840) .40A out of $:126 30
25.50A SE part .40A, Toll!
os-iJoe73.002, Smart, Clint End Ex Mlnerela 39.50A,
Toll! $1,047.77
$759.90
M., Soct17 T9 R15 4.49A out
07·00773.000,
Sellere,
03·00570.00,
Pholln, ol 84.6911A 4.49A, Toto!
Lllrry 6/or Agnet, Sect. 23
Dttnnll Kellh, Stc14 T2 R13 $ 128 25
..
tA out ol SECor ol 51.93A
os-cioto3.000 Stout, Roger (1110-1171) E End Ol W 1/2
Ex Cool 28.11A, Total
ox .SA 1~1 2 .SOA, Total K., Sect. 3 Sw ol Nw 1/4 a
8310.42
$442.51
'
NW of SW 1/4 Ex. lOA W
07·00181.001,
Sellere,
03·01058.'000, ·
Rlebtl, 30A. Totol,$157.92
Robart
&amp;/or
Trio,
Beet
30
Roger I, II, SICI13o12 (840) · QS-00852.000 Trout, D1vld
T2N
A11W
NE
Cor
of
SW
1/4
Sect 12 SE Cor E ol Shtldt A &amp;Jor C~rmo J, Rolling
.0017A Out of 21.25A E•
41A, Total $898.33
Meodowa Subdlvlllon Lot 10
1
A
1.0017
A, Toll I $96.91
03.01059.000,
Rlobtl 111 Sect 23 11 R15 2.2911A
07-001 ~.001 Voncooney,
•/ll)ller I, II, Sect 11 (840) NE Tobtl $651.112
:.1/4 ol NE 1/4 41A, Toto!
05-00708.000 Woodgard, Billy Joe Jr, Sect 24 T2N
R11W 1~1A Out ol3.00 A
.$938.95
.
Carrol 6/or Famle, Lot 1, 1.241A. Toll! $8.112
:: 03-01060.000,
Rltbtl, Total $13.57
Wlloon, Roy
05-00710.000 Woodg•rd, A07.01000.000,
1Rogar I, II, Sect 5 (840) NW
&amp;Jor Nooml E, Seel14-15,
•pn ol NW 1/4 40A, Total corrol ator Femlt, Lot 2, tOOA, Lot 1118, .75A, Toto!
tt711.10
.
Totll$13.57
• 03.01306.000,
Webb,
05-00711.000 Woodg•rd, $1,190... '
~rt'Twp­
'Carolyil S., Sect. 39 (840) In Carrol D 6/or Ftmt, Lot 31
ScMhlmLSD
:SE JMin of Stet..SOA, Toll! Toll! $26.38
01·00457.002,
GrtiY.
'$182.83
05·00712.000 Woodg•rd
;: 03·01342.001,
White, ,Carrol o 6/or Ftml, Lot 32, JoHph W 6/or Polllreon,
Angello K., 1OOA, Lot 247,
o'l'homlt
Eugeno
a1or Toll! $14.30
T1
N, R12W, .41A, Out of
Sect 5, T3. R12, SE'
05·00234.000 Woodg•rd,
!cor. of NW 1/4 4.381A out of CorTDII D &amp;Jor Femlt, Secll .II A, .41A, Tcmtl 148.33
01-110458.002,
Gray,
•15.21A, Total $102.17
Und 112 ol 35A Ex 114 Vttn JoNph
w 6/or P1t11aroon,
~ ,
Ch..ttr 1Wp
COli 3.28A, Tolll $137.12
Angelle K, tOOA, Lot 246,
•
Mtlg• LSD
05-00153.000 Woodgtrd, T1 N, R12W, .OSA Out ol
~· 04-00010.007,
King, Joltllh, 1-20 W Side or N 8.00A, .05A, Toto! $. 71
~motlly J ator Paula A, 1/2, 1olll $10.90
08.01)241.000,
GrHnt
:lleCi 12 (840) T2N R13 Min 05-001114.000 Woodgtrd, Rebt,
Lot 17·23-32 WEnd E
:Pn w 1/2 1.01 A out ol Joup11, 5, Toll! $13.57
of Alex. 1/2A 100A U (247)
'~1711ZA
1.01A, Total
05·00155.000 Woodgtrd, 1071 SF .23A, Toll! ~.83
~j..34
.
1Jo.. p11, I 30'x1 00' E eldt,
Oll-00018.000, Johntlon,
•, 04-000110.002,
Jockl, Toiii$24.De
Chlrltl E Jr &amp;Jor lloborah
:)1-'l!ugene &amp;Jor Donna
05-00152.000 Woodgtrd, c, Lol14, IIO'x1118', Joining
Mnnto Sect12 T2 R13 Mid Joeeph, 7,
Wlntora Ex COil .33A. Total
tbn Wl/2 1.7311A out ol Totol $211.42
14.83
~24.10A. Totll 1422.21

s::.

'Su-.

'nilE FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
CINff- your ,.,......,"'"'"rrt" 01'
,.,. - ,. ,., flf,.

CUSIIFIED SECTION!

•

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
' for everythl~g
•

Inca hurry... TRY
CLASSIFIBDS

-

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and SIHVice AlWays"
Established 1913
'

992·2121

.SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
892·7075
172 NOI1h Second Ave.

Middleport, Oh

•

Catumblo'!Wp
Altnndrll LSQr-..
05.CJ0005.000,
Allmon,
Jockle P a Barblro Sue,
Sect. 21 out of NE Cor. NW
of Rd. Ex. .23A t.nA, Tcmtl
8370.57
05-00870.000,
Boring,
M..-, Ann, Stet 10 501dl0'1 S
of lot 130 In C:.rp tnt•r vi~
loge, TOll! 14.52
05-0001111.000, Brlckll', Un,
27, Toto! $174.24
o5 • oo8 3 4 . o a o ,
Broghamrntr
R11lty
COmJMiny, Sect. 11 NE Cor.
25A, Total 1117.87
05-D0084.000, Coldw•ll,
Bruco, t1 al, Sect. 12 SE of
Sec. 38A, Totol.$111.83
05-00085.000, Coldwell,
Bruce, tl II, Stet. 5 W JMtrt
of Nl/2 of NW 1/4 171, Toll!
SI0-111
OIS-D0088.000, Caldwell,
Bruce, llal, Stet 11 E 1/2 of
NE 1/4 83A, Total $304.83
~-11011, Coe, Robert
C. .6/or Uu L. Sect 23 T9
R15 1.110A out of 18.295A
1.110A, Total$73.08
05-00501.007,
Comer,
Jerry 6/or Karan, Sect. 21
T9 R15 Suun AddHion Lot
57.750A, Toll! 111.71
05-00007.001,
DIIYII,
llonln W•olty 6/or Clrll
Alyntll, Sect 16 T9 R15
1.00A, Tolll24.83
011-001180.000,
Dixon,
Chorleo Mlchatl Jr 6/or
Dtf11N Rene, Secl12 n mid of E llno E of Twp Ad 3
of 16.50 2A. Total $721.17
05-00351 .000
Ho,..ry,
Rodney &amp; Marilyn, Sect
10Wo1E111AWRYFR5Ex
87.01A 4.20A, Tolll$10.80
05-00353.000,
Ho,..ry,
Rodney &amp; Merllyn, Lot 10,
Tollll4.14
05-G0381.000,
Howery,
Rodney a Morylln, Lot 19
2nd Add., Toll! $10.90
05-G0382.000,
Howery,
Rodney 6/or Marilyn, Lot 7,
Toto! $8.79
05·00364.000,
Howery,
~::!~~.f4or Marilyn, Lo19,
05·00385.000
Howery,
Rodney 6/or Marilyn, Lot 17
2nd., Total 14.89
05·00388.000
Howery,
Rodney 6/or llalilyn, Lot 18
2nd.,Add Total $10.90
05-G0352.000
Howery,
Rodney &amp; Marilyn, Sect
10W prt ol E 120A W Ay
Free 4 10.1 OA, Total
12,310.51
.JLII!!fl!l729.000
· Howery,
liOd'ney 6/or Marilyn; Lot a,
Toll! $27.11
05-00401.000 Jeflwro, 1M
Slerllng alai, C/0 Mary
KlthiHn Jordon, See! 6 SE
PT, NE 1/4 ox 7 1/2 A, SE 2.2
lA a 13 't4A 877A New
·
· ·
Survey, Toll I $1.53
05-011473.00, Lovoll, Mary
C, Sect 23 W PI of N 114 Ex.
.54A .085A out ol 128.46A
.085A, Total $5.19
05-00510.000,
llulllnl,
Sllu J &amp; Mary Lou, Sect. 32
NE 1/4 ol SW 1/4 Ex. 30A W
End 10A, Toll! $26.38
05,00511.000
Mulllna,
Slloe J a Mary Lou, Sect.
.15·9 ·32 33.50 A, Total
$88.49
05-00509.000,
Mulllne,
&amp;1111 J, llory Lou, Sect. 32
SW ol NE 1/4 a NE ol SW
1/4, 86 A, Toll! $991.81
05-00147.000 Robb, Wallll'
J.lll, Stet 28, Fr 34 T.9 R.14
S End of E 59.13 A Ex. 114

8

w":':t·

·Wbr~hip-

NANCY PARKER CAMRBELL

1

SOuth llelhol Ntw T - - 1
SilverRid&amp;e
·
Pastor: Raben Tltuber
Sunday Sdlool· 9 a.m..
10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wed
y Service - 7 p:m.

S r - Chu"'h or the Noumoe
Pastor, Roben J. Coen

Putor. Keith Rader

ForatReo
Pastor: Chid Emrk:k

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

Fll Golpel 1 'IW'M•e
33045 Hlltmd Road, Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Eveni"l 7:30p.m.
Tueaday lt. Thursday • 7:30 p.m.

Rted,.lllt Fellowohlp
Chun:b or the Nazoreae
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
·Sunday School-9:30a.m.

...llrt, W.Va. Rl. I
Putor: John Hart
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:00 p.m.
Wednelday Bible Study • 7:00p.m.

Plll&amp;wooda

I

Col.ary Mlo CIMudl
~Pik ~- Rd.
r e, ~. . _, Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 un.
Worship 10:30 1.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 'Service • 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fjiday, November 14. 1997

'' .

•

1

I

08-00011.000, Johnllon,
Chlrlee E Jr ator Deborah
C, Lol14 112 ol50'x100' sw
End SW of R!Vtr .1OA, Toll!
f1.&amp;0
01-D0020.000, Johnoton,
Chlrlee E Jr &amp;lor Dtbonth
C, Lot 14 (34) 2/3 of 50' X
110' 8 of MIH Ex Coel .20A,
Total $244.01
08-D0801.001 , Plll'ca, Roy
L &amp;lor Shoron B, Stet 5 R12,
Tt, .267A, Out of 8.50A,
Toto1S18.88
01-00394.000, Rlchordo,
Dttnnla, Lot 34 on River Btl
Horpold a Wolfe, Tatol
$158.38
08-110436.000, Rllllt, Dolo
&amp;Jor Lutz, Porn, Stet 8 (too222) W End Pn of 42.15A,
on N Line t .SOA, Toto!
$331.50
08-00515.000, Roulh, AllY
Junior 6/or Elizabeth MN,
Sect. 11·2 (1110-1211) W PI
21.50A SW Cor. Ex. Coal
.SOA, Tcmtl $84.59

11-cioooB.ooo. ArmprltiW,
Kathryn 1!, C/0 Donn!•
FIC!der, Stet 12 BE JMtn
13A, Total 117.22
11-oooto.ooo, Armprlettor,
Kathryn E, C/0 Donnlo
F-,Stct 12N P1tnofE
1!2 of SE 1/4, 25A, Total
.110.03
11.01277.001, Birchfield,
Rollttn L 6/or Ttrea K, Lot
Soct. 3S, W 1/2 of NE 1/4,
.883A, Out of45.43A, .1183A,
Total $78.52
11-DOOI4.000,
Brogan,
John W. JR, Boct 35 E JMtrl
ot NW 1!4, 1OOA, Toto!
$185.74
11-00208,001,
luckily,
Tom E, Sect. 35, T&amp;, A14,
4.829A, Out ol 80.00A,
4.821A, Total $33.47
11·00402.001, Hubbard,
Carol, Sect. 18, Te, A14 ,
1.0315A, out ol 128.75A,
1.0315A, Toll! $482.46
11-00501.000,
Hyaoll,
Rogor 6/or EdHh J , Lol SE
DIHKNS03.000,
Saraon, · Cor oi28.50A, Pel T.6, R.14,
lllkt L. Stet. 4-5 .19A of .75A ol 28.50A, .75A, Total
MAE PI ofW 1/2 End .19A, $303.51
Toll! $12.03
11-D05119.000, Kaun, Paul
08-00804.000,
S1raon, M &amp;/or Debbie S, Soct. 1~. T.
Mike L. Stet. 4-5 (231 ~ Noar SN, R. 14W, SE Cor 1.088A
SW Corner .31 A, Toll! ol 43.1 07A, 1.088A, Total
$513.32
$89.115
11.01177.001, Kauff, Paul
OIIVI TwpM 6/or Debblt S, Sect 12
Eitelem LSD
mid ol E 112 N ol Cr lol 6
09.00103.000, Barringer, 1.103A, Total $123.59
Ellzabtth, Sect. 8 S PI of
11.00877.000,
McGuire
21 .18A, W pi ol B 1/2, John &amp;/or Kathy D, R. 14,
10.51A, Ex. 3.40A, 7.11A, T4, Sect. 20 N Con. PI ol
Totol$41.46
Froc. 25, 1.6B1A, Total
09-00104 .000, Borrlnger, $142.59
Ellzobtth, Stet. 99 PI
11·01593.000, Maadowo,
21.18A, W PI of S 1/2 .SA, Richard &amp;tor Linda, C/0
Out Pel 118 5.00A Ex 1.50A, Thelma Meadowo, Stet 3
3.40A, Total $72.05
NE CorE pon ol NE 1/4 Coal
09-00105.000, Barringer, Only 30.00A, Toto! $22.80 .
Ellzabtlh, Sect. 9 Port of
11·01594.000, Moodowo,
21.t8A, W Pan of 91/2, Richard 6/or Undo, Sect 4
5.65A, Toll! $33.12
SE Corner Coal Only 7.50A,
09-001105.1104,
Bloke, .Total $5.54
Charltl J 6/or lrono M,
11·01156.000,
Stet. 23, T4, A11, BW Cor loloodlapaugh, Robon W Sr
4.618A, out ol 12.4115A, ator Julia A, Sect 1 SE of
4.811A, Toll! $3061T1
Gardnar, .42Ac, Total $82.52
09-00148.000, Blokt, Ricky
11·00755.000,
Morrlo.
1M 6/or Serah J, Soct. 4-10 Wllllom H ator Gayle E, Lot
In E 1/4 or S Una SW of AD. Stet -33, E Side ol 43.64A
19.28A, Toll! $312.75
SW ol NW 1/4, 8.84A, Total
()9.00358.000, Buc:h1n1n, $224.72
Gregory E, SKI. 38, 1A Out
11-00266.000, Nye, Elby,
of 98.28A, Out ol SE Cor of
F.12,
T.6, R. 14, E Side
Sect. 1A, Toll! 1458.211
Public Rd. NW Cor,1 .2673A,
OII-D0284.000,
Colllnt,
Keith 6/or Mo~orle, Lot 9 Total 838.10
11·00057.000, Pereono.
MCD. a TOR. Add, Tolal
Larry
W 6/or Cynlhla D,
$318.82
SectS
.4820SA
out of 1.05A,
011-01479.002,
Colllno,
.48209A,
Tolll
$573.84
Kolth 6/or Marjorie, Soct38,
11·00824.000,
Payton,
T3, .R11, 2.8271A, Out ol
Wayne
6/or
Kathleen,
Sect.
7.9992 A, 2.8271A, Total 15 Mid on N Llna 15.75A,
$38.58
836.79
oe-ot528.000,
Collin•, Toll!
Payton,
11·00825.000,
Keith A, Lot 8 MCD. a TOR. Wayne ator KelhiHn,
Soct.
Add, Total $150.40
15-21
NW
Pan
18A,
Toto!
09-00118.000, Cowdery,
$80.75
Jeffrey J 6/or Tammy D.,
Peyton,
11-00826.000,
Lot 21-29o30 IICD. a TOR Wayne 6/or KelhiNn, Stet
Add. W 113. TOIII $217.00
14-15 NE Ex: 3A, NE 1/4,
Dalloy, 21.17A,
09-00348.000,
Toll! $61.19
Loonord E. Jr, SICI. 33 W1 /2
Peyton,
11-G0827.000,
ol SE 100A, Ell 7.00A, 18 Wayne 6/or KathiNn, Sect.
.OOA, Totti S1115.77
21, Btl. Rd a E Llno o1 Fr.
OB-00348.001,
Dailey, t.soA, Total sn .2s
Ltonard E &amp;Jor Jennl, Sect
11-D08S0.001, Priddy, Gary
33, FR 32, T4W, R11W, 7A L &amp;Jar Aroka R. Sect 2, 1'6,
out of 25A, 7.GOA, Total R14, Mid N 1/2 2.472A out of
$25.58
39.40A,
2.472A, Total
09-00228.000,
Davia, $1 ,217.80,
Jam•• Leonard II a Aelerta
11-00576.000, Shoemaker,
D, Stcl12, SOA, Lott20, T3,
A, Ell!, Lot Sect 27·
Hlzel
R11W, .8051A, Toll! $2115.10 28, S part
of Frac 34 a N PI
09-00228.005,
Heneley, of Frac 241.70A, Total $7.43
Chrlltl D, 30A, Lot120, A11,
11·01111.000,
Swick,
T3, 1.00A, out ol 44.3t88A, Robert M, Elll, Lot Sect 19,
Total $73.29
SW Corner 80A, Total
OII-D2034.000,
Rlggo, $517.25
Steve &amp; Buchord Glodya,
11·01188.000,
Ward,
Royalty lntoreat Energy WUbur 6/or ChrltiiY, Frac 24,
SNrch
lnoorporotad T.BN, R. 14W, 1.00A ol 6.52
Cowdery Unit 12 Lond Ac, 1.00Ac, Total $82.90
owner, Total $25.49
11·01257.001,
Word,
OII-D2042.000,
Rlgga, Wilbur 6/or Chlraty, Sec127,
Bteve/Buch~rd
Glodye, F24, T6, R14W, .BOA, out of
Royalty lnttreot Energy 5.52A, .80A, Totti $27.28
Search
lncarporatod
11.01192.000,
Worner,
Cowdery Unit 13, Ltnd
Richard N, Ell!, C/0 Eather
Owner, Tole! $13.40
Warner, Sect 10 S ol Mid W
Roush, of Ad 3A, Toll! $107.92
09.01210.000,
11.01193.000,
Warner,
Donald Jeffrey 6/or Merlo,
Sect. 24, E 1/2 ol SW 1/4, Ex Richard N, Ell!, C/0 Esther
20A, NW .75A oi9A NW Cor Warner, Sect 8 NE Corner
4A, Totti $28.94
9A, .75A, Tolll $43.16
11.01196.000,
Werner,
De-D1180.000, Sondero,
MlchHI 6/or Ahondo, Stet . Richard N, Etal, C/0 Eathor
28, N End ol 41A, E 1/2 Ex. Warner, Sect 9 Part of
7.7!l1A, Ex 7.848A, 5.028A, t'.25A, W end of. 62.37A,
.55A,Totol $8.27
TOIII $1,183.08
11·01197.000,
Wlrntr,
011.0118.1.000, Sanders,
MlchHI Allen &amp;/or Rhonda Richard N. Eta!, C/0, Etlher
Faye, S•cl. 21, T.4, A. 11, Warner, Sect 14·9, SW pan
Elccopl Mlnarolo 7.881A•. ol NE 30A S ol Rd .. 16A,
Total $2.48
Total $58.67
11-00735.000, Williamson,
09-01432.000,
Semeleberger, Connlt K, Donna L. c/o Donna Fink,
Sect. 32 In NW Port of W ol Lot 9 FA -4 T-6N A·14W
Clolr·Mor Eatoteo 1.4964A,
S 1/21.10A, Total $708.84
Toll! $1 ,081 .36
Oronge'TWpEutomLSD
Rutland Vlllago
10·00381.000,
Melgo LSD
Heck,Mlchoel
A
6/or
12.00144.000, Code, Henry
S1111nno, Lot Sect. -33 Und ator Annotte, FR 7 .51 ofthe
ol 78.!15A Mid on .E line SE 1ide of 12.20A .51A,
57.71A, Toll! $1,173.58
Toll! $45.23
1D-110411.000, Mlllhone,
12-D0047.000, Ktnnecly,
Vomon ator Htlan, Lot SE Billy Joe, Stet 8 (840) SE
Cor Ex. 4.24A, 2.88A, Oul ol cor NW 1/4 o1Nc18 Ex .51 A
7.10A, 1.83A, Total $669.114
10.18A, Total $96.57
10-00573.000, Roblnoon,
12-00201 .000, Mo11man,
R. Rex a Wilma, Lot Sect. Suoon, Soot ·8 32' Nxt to
24, SW Pon of75.67A at lor Prllbyttrlon PI of · .SOA
KS ol Rd . .41A, Total .20A, Tolll $38.37
$194.08
12~00202.000, Moaaman,
10-00514.000,
AUIIIII, Suoan, Sect 8 Eaot of Rood
Eddie Jr,. Lol Stet. 10 Mid. out ol .SOA .15A, Toto!
on N une 2.50A, Toto! $7.54 $2117.50
tD-00585.000,
Ruaull,
t2-D0307 .000, Storlo, Paul
Eddie Jr, Lot Stet 10 S port R.. Stet. 8(840) N PI .75A E
ol E 1/4 Ex. 1.47A, Ex. 54, ol Rd. to Cr .40A, TOTAL
42.89A, Tolll $180.n
$553.118
ID-00379.000,
Ruotoll,
12.01)308.000, Seorlo, Poul
John R 6/or &amp;rondo 8, Lot R, Sect. B (840) E ol rd to Cr
Sect. 5 2A of 10.46A pn 01 Hottl Lot Ex .40A N pt .35A,
45.31A 2A, Toll! $51t.79
Total $44.79,
10-0011114.000, Thomu,
12-D0320.001, Smllh, Don
John R, Royolty lnltreot Rogor ator Sandra .Kay,
Cor! E. Smith Patro Inc. Stet 8 TIN R14W .13A out
Dorothy Thomoa, Land ol .84A .13A, Toll! $3.21
Owner, Total $3.84
12-D0422.000, Smith, Don
10-00145.000, Wlgglna, Roger 6/or Bondro Kay,
Phillip W &amp;/or Dtboroh G, Sect. I (840) E of rd. adj.
Lot 17, Hickory Acreo Kano. FIMI a U Co. .31A,
SUbdlvW 1211'x464' E 100' N Toto! $123.12
538', Toto! $500.01
Soltm'!Wp
ID-00148.000, Wlgglno,
Mtlga LSD
Phillip W 6/or Dttboroh G,
13-G0850.000,
Athby,
Lot Hickory Aorta Subdlv Hermon 6/or Dttrlona, Sect
W. 114' S 40 7' E 100' N 484' 18 7.851A New Survey, toto!
Lot II, Tcmtl 160.1II
$117.79
Rutlond Twp13-D0037.000,
Borrell,
Mtlg~LID
Gerold F. Sr tl ol, C/0
11-oriOOI.OOO, Armprltltlr, nmothy Berro11, Sec 19 SE
Kathryn E, C/0 Dtnnla of NW 1/4 of 58.75A Ex 114
Fockler, Sect. 12 NE Comer Vtln Coal 1.17A, Toto!
137A. Tot81S1.173.07
118.34

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11
Add. 25' x 4o' on N IIIII,
1:s-oaite.ooo,
Berrttl, Only' 40.00A, TOIII S2UI
Qarald P Sr II II, C/O
14-01203.000, MIIICir, olohn Toto! $4.24
111-00071.000,
.....
Timothy Barrett, hct 14 -5 E ator Lori A, Stc I .lOA of
Avonoll,
Lot
too-301,
1100
(3) Longetroth Add, Totol 5.32A 8 pr1 of Fr 2 .lOA.
301-UOA 8 of157·151-11111*28.38
Total S4911-118
150 D Add. t.SOA, Tcmtl
14-00335.000, Plckollo,
13-D0404.000,
Cindy, Sec1 13 ·26 (840) In
Undo, LotiO, T""'IS11.28
$8.04
16-00075.000,
•••••
13-00183.000, Duff, Melvin SE 1/4 on Union Ave U3A.
Roy tiel, Beet 15 -1 ·12 S &amp; Toto! 1470.32
Av-1, Lot 157 H a D Add,
E ol NE 1/4 102.84A, Toll!
14-01173.000, Province,
Totol'16.89
$1,023.4$
Loll J, Sec 34 (1 110-330) on
18-0111177.000,
•••••
13-D0818.000,
Harold, n line 100A lot U2A, TOll!
Av-11llot158 H &amp; D Add.
LMonn, St13 NE pn ol SE $311.10
oliO 26'&gt;&lt;40' joining S tilde,
1/4 Ex 5.30 Ex 14 Voln Cool
14.01214.000,
Reultr, Tolll $12.03
SO.ItA, Toll!, $355.34
11-01478.000,
Boyer,
Wllloca Jan, Secl 30 und
13-00868.000,
Herold, 2/3 a 1/3 of 140A SW 112 ex JotnN R, C/O Roger Rooch,
LHonn , Stet 7 NW 1/4 ol 20A NW Ex .25A IX 54.50A lot427, Toll! $331.55
sw 1/4 Ex t4 Vein Coal 40A, · 58.8$, Toll! $281.11
18-D111811.000,
Collo,
Tolltl $321 .70
14·01255.000,
Roblo, Donlld E &amp;Jor Peggy S, lol
13·00321.000,
Jacko, Robart Eugtnt, SEct 8 (840) 258 on E line of Pork Sl.
Gll'old G &amp;lor Joann L. Mid In 15 S of Wllllamoon .288A, .lOA, Tolltl S144.38
on N line .t•cepl mlnoralo Totll $2,1 85.95
18-00275.000,
Colon,
.55A, Total $78.02
.14.01256.000,
"obit, Mlchlol 6/or Marjorlo, Lot
13-00322.000,
Jack1, Robart Eugond, Stet 8 (840) 11 Noytoro Run, Toll!
Gerold G ator Joonn L, S ol In 15 S of wllllomoon 412A, $104.94
Dlxono on Golllpolla Ad Tolll $181.82
11-00278.000,
COlon,
except mlnarolo .25A, total
Michael ator llorjor!o, Lot
14-110473.000,
B~
$11t.04
282-18 SEcor oltorm .75A,
Chorllo 6/or lltbtcca,
13-003i1 .000, Lllmbtrt, 8 (840) W of Cltlond lA IX Tololl4.24
Robin I a Sandra C, Sect cool .79A, Tollll6.83
16-00141.000, Colllno, nna ·
13 (840) T.13 R.15 SW ol
Lot
157 Dobnoy Add, Tolll
14-110472.000,
Smith,
Oren Dtvll 11.18A .5218A, Chorlla atar Atbeccl, Sect $18.92
Total $250.15
16-00142.000,
Colllnt,
8 (840) In 14 NW ol Cloro E
13.Q0402.000,
Leeter, Dow IX COil •79A, TOIII
nna, Lot 156 Dobney Add,
Eorneol H, Secl 34 Mid ·o n E
Tolll $97.46
$275.59
'
line 50A, Total $845.83
16·00787 .000,
Dl•on,
14..01142.000,
Swann;
13-G0420.000, McDonald, Kenneth M, Stet 18 (840) E JudHh D a Andaroon, Joen
David E Sr, SICI18 SW of N 1/2 ol 88A E and of N 1/2
E, c/a Joon Anderoon, Lot
200A ex 14 vein coal 2.110A, 3.00A, Tota1121.1e
489 50'x50' NW cor., Total
Total $883.50
$892.89
14.01143.000,
Swann,
13-G0207.000, McDonald, Kenntlh M, /Beet 18 (840)
15.01)334.000,
Durham,
Dovld E Sr, Soct 12 S~ neor mid ol s pr1 or N 1/211ll Frtda, Lol237 Strip llll'wlde
14 Vtln COil 24.07A, Tolll 43.54A 2.81A, Toto! $9.04
back oflot252, Total 11.51
$118.95
16-00335.000,
Durhom,
14.02343.000,
Swann ,
t3-0020B.OIJ1, McDonald, K•nntlh M, Soct 18 T2N
Frida, Lot 252 E 30', Toll!
David E Sr, Sect 11 TSH R13W N of Cr 119 W of SA
$490.84
R15W 43.28A out ol45.28 A 33 1.17 A, T""'l 11.44
11-00575.000, Emeraon,
43.2BA, Toll! $2111.19
Eva
Mat,
.Form•rly
14-00185.000, Ulbrich, Jon
Stoeeker, Evo llee, lot 491
13.00555.000,
Peyton, B ator Ua A, Stet 24 (840)
Richard A ot al C/o Jane NW ol SE 1!4 48.255AC, . 40' on Peacock St 1DO',
Totoll43.22
Bart, Sect 11 E of NE 1/4 Ex Toto! $323.011
16-00382.000, Frltdom
34A NE IX t4 Vlln coal
Middleport Vlllege
.
Road
Foundation, Inc. an
9.05A, Total 83911.51
·
Malgo LSD
.
Ohio
Corp.,
Lot 203, Toll!
13·00556.000,
P•yton
15-00012.000,
Acree,
Richard A t1 ol c/o Jane Dovld A a Linda, Lot 7 $58.71
11-02320.000, Freedom
Bare, Socl5 on Wline ol NE Goeglaln Subdlvlllon 11 0' x
Road Foundation Inc on
1/4 ox 14 vein coal 4.84A, 100', Total S114.82
Total $24.115
15-00235.000,
Buth, Ohio Corp, Lot 111!1 Burnap
13·00557.000,
Peyton, Robort E, Lot 43 38' W ond, Add Sub 43 58' on Butttmut
s~ toll! $231.27
Richard A el al, c/o Jane Total $188.13
16.00534.000,
· Flahtr,
Baro, Sac1 11 SW par1 NE
15-01813.000,
Buah
Theodore,
lot
46
D. Add.
1/4 9.05A SW ax 14 voln Robert E. Lot 1211 P Joneo
coai40.16A, Total $240.2!
Add S1/2 ol 42', Total Sub. 2 u . Trl.6' on NE tide,
Toll! $279.99
13.00507.000, Watroba, $204.51
Frozlar,
Mlchollo, Sect 1710A out ol
Buoh, · 16-1101111.000,
15-01114.000,
mid E aide ot 40A ex. 14 Robart· E. Lot 117 6" X 90' Timothy 6/or C:.rollne, Lot
vain coal 1OA, Total $36.75
NW JM!rl P Jonn 3rd Add, 258 Sub 91 112 91 314 &amp;A,
Total $2111 .46
13-00508.000, Wotroba, Tolll $1.89
18-00692.000,
Frazier,
Mlchella, Sect. 16 1.38A ol E
15-G025t .000,
Coato,
aide of t'SA Ex 14 vein cool Lucille, AKA C:.llo Mary L, nmothy &amp;/or C:.rollne, Lot
.
1.3BA, Tolal $1.7.98
Lot 185 Boawonh Add, 258 SW cor .so .60A, Toll!
$5.03
.
13.00340.001,
Wella, Toto! $62.75
11-01518.00,
Groena,
William F. Jr 6/or Bridgett S,
15.01382.000,
Cox,
Sacllon 25 TB A15 E1/2 ol . Chrlotophw M 6/or P1tnny Emeot L &amp;Jor Dorothy C. lot
the NW 1/4 of NW 1/4 2.31A L, Lot 11 Probal Add., Total 33 D Add. Total $420.4$
111-D1527.000,
Honing,
out ol 20.50A 2.31A, Total $557.67.
$128.98
.
15-0t 383.000
Co•, Donno 0, lot 505 1.25A,
Chrlotoplter M 6/or Ponny Totol$418.28
Sollebury 1Wp
11-00582.000,
. Hart,
L, Lot 9 Probtl Add., Total
Melge LSD
Rodney &amp;/or Catherine, Lot
14·00338.000,
Arno11, 161.115
15-110473.001,
Davia, 549 s JMirl &amp;A Tract .,.n of
Pameli A, Sl 30 (840) und
lot 107 1/2 .959AC, ~11
Marlin
W,
20'x50'
NW
corner
2/3 &amp; 1/3 oi140A SW 112 Ex
sn3.21
part
of
lot
911,
lOIII
$12.52
20A NW l 40A .993A, Toto!
16-00693.000,
Hlcka,
15-01!134.000,
Davit,
$43.87
William
Scoll
6/or
Suzttte
14-D0846.000,
Altho!, Martin W, Alley 15'x100'
vacatld alley W of Lot 911 Jano, Lot 308 1S' E olde LT
Jam11 E 6/or - · Sect. btlw"n Iota 98 a 99, Toll! 308 25' W olde, Total
15, (262) In NE pan of Free.
$557.38
5 Ex. 1.41A ' 2.59A, Toto! $21.93
16-1101194.000,
Hlcko
15-00741.000,
Frolr,
Anne
$943.88
Armo, •o., Lot447, Boowortlt Add .. William Scott 6/or Suzt111
14·00792.000,.
Jono, Lot 309 25' W aldt
Roneld D 6/or Branda S, Total $138.45
Toll!
$34.04
15-00523.000,
Haggerty,
Beet. 34 (640) S part of
16·00695.000,
Hloko,
123.83A S &amp; E pon 40A, Richerd &amp;/or Judy, Lot 424
William
Scott
6/or
Suztne
Pom.,
Toll!
$241
.33
Toll! $173.20
16-00584.(100, Hoggorty, Jono; Lot 310 15' E aide
14.01095.001 ,
Arma,
Ronald D 6/or Brenda S, Richerd L 6/or Judy, Lot Total $20.33
16-01842.000, JonH, Mike,
Soct 34 T2 R13 SE pan of 425 Pom .. Toll! $61.22
15-00917.000, Johnaon, ol al, Lot 120 ex 2 1/2' on E
SE 1/4 39.1 95.1. out of
64.95A 38.1951,
Toto! David G &amp;/or Tommy E, Lot aida, tolol $32.97
16-01843.000, Jontt, Mike
131 Palmer'o 2nd Add, Toll!
$300.16
at .al, lot 121 Dobney Add
14·01096.000,
Armo, $879.50
15-110835.000,
Hunnell, Loi121, ,Totall413.09
Ronold D 6/or Brenda S, Trt
11-01374.000
Ltmlty
out of NW cor of prlglnel Don 6/or NopJM!r, Beverly,
Kendell
II
6/or
Amanda
D,
Lot103
Palmtr'l11todd
26'
49A .843A (new ourvey),
Lot265,
Totol$114.118
s
oide,
Total
$130.14
TOIII $7.13
16·00352.000,
Mollory,
1~3 .000, ~auff, Clara,
14-00232.000, Cook, G W
Lot
100
1308
IX
1
A
oil
N
Jeannlo,
Lot
84
ex
112 A w
c/o Mra Grace Bon, Sect 34
Total
$253.83
.
t.12A,
Toll!
$5.78
(IOD-329) center of 100A lat
Mattox,
16-01774.000,
15·00594.000,
Leach,
329 Ex 2.80A .80A, Toll!
William ator Melody, Lot Clarence Junior ator Shoon
$1 .62
14·00255.000,
Dally, 459 Pom. S 1/2 ol N 1/2 Y, Lot 39, Total $337.97
16.01841.000,
Millo,
Jamaa Jr 6/or Bonn!•. Soct SO'xt oo·, Total$284.09
15-01537.000,
Lasch,
Shormon
W.,
lol
133
to
140
32 (840) In N part E ol Rd IX
William &amp;/or Melody, Lot Inc. D. Add., Toll! 5167.43
Coal 8.50A, Tolol $9110.87
16.01850.000,
Millo,
14-00256.000,
Dolly, (482) Pom 482 s 112 ol N 1/2
Shermon
W,
Lot
149
30' S
50X100,
Totol$19.88
Jamea Jr &amp;tor Bonnie, Sect
15--00089.000,
Ltwla, olde, Toll! $3.32
33 (840) Mid of S lln1 of SE
11-01851.000
MUio,
1/4 ol SW 1/4 .SOA, T""'l Peggy, Lot (47) Sheffield 47·
Sherman
W,
Lot
150,
T&amp;al
1/2,
Toll!
$21.08
S
14.43
15-oooeo.ooo,
Ltwll,
15.21
14.01427.000 Fry. nmothy
16.01852.000,
Millo,
D. 6/or Tammy J, Die 38 Peggy, Lot (33) Sheffield 33·
Sherman W, Lot 151, Toll!
UA ol 21.877A 1.1A, Toll! S 1/2, Total $18.04
15·00510.000, $5.21
$165.10
16.01853.000,
Millo,
14.01428.001, Fry, nmolhy Montgomtry, Mlchoel 6/or
D 6/or Tommy J, Sect 100 Jennifer, Lot 18, Total Sherman W, Lot 152, Total
$5.21
'
Lot3151 .6BA out oi20.76A $274.28
18.01854.000
Millo,
15-D0028.000,
Rouah,
1.6BA, Total $5.23
Sh~rm~n
W,
Lot
153,
Toll!
Rodney
R
&amp;Jar
Bonnie,
Lot
14·00519.000. Guinther,
Julia, C/0 George Mengol, (345) Boowonh odd oil of lot $5.21
18-D1855.000
111111,
Sec! 6 (840) NE .,.n ol ex 345 a pan ollot 344 Lowll'
Sherm.n
w,
Lot
1114,
Toll!
Pomeroy,
Toll!
$356.24
SA E 4.8BA, Total $34.19
15-110492.000,
TyrN, $3.32
14-01582.000,
Howley,
16-00745.000,
N•al,
Rlck E &amp;/or Dawn G, Secl24 LJtnny, lot 329 Lower Pom,
Mlcheol L, Lot 1110-1224 SUb
(1 00)· NE cor ol 3.30A 158 Totoll43.03
15-110494.000,
Tyree, 568 1!2 Total $738.97
Penny Sury .51A, TOIII
18-D1277.000, Odonnell,
LJtnny,
Lot
326
Lower
Pom,
$7.22
William F, Lot 680, Toto!
14.01583.000,
Hawley, Total $30.88
Rick E. 6/or Down G, Soct
15-00M&amp;.OOO, Wlllloma, 165.11
18.01088.000, Newland,
34-35 (100) near mid nearS Olano L, N 1/2 of lot 16
Grant A 1111, Lot2 7!1'1 O" w
33'xl5', Toll! $408.24
lint .50, Total $320.82
15.00987.000, Wlnnlnga, aide ol Spring St., Toto!
14-00652.000, 1 Hoover,
$218.34
Steven Ray, Sact. 26 (840) Groce &amp;Jor Miller, Undo, o/o
16.01516.000,
Sc~ulor,
noar SW cor. N~ 1/4 ex .04A Undo Mlller, lol 5I Bahan Margie
J
,
c/o
Gory
Rupe,
N 6.891A, Tolll$115.80
Add, Total$~112
Gdn.
lot
I
olrlp
off
W
lldl
15-01407.000 Zirkle, Goll,
14·00847.001, Hubbatrd,
Plentz
Add,
1""'1
$171.1111
C/O
Goll
Zirkle
McAbtt,
lot
Jerry A &amp;Jor Kathryn J , SICI
16.01.517.000,
Schuler,
23 T2 R13 12A out of 100A 440 Pomeroy, Total $425.42
Mergle
J,
c/O
Gary
Aupe.
15-01408.000 Zirkle, Goll,
12.00A. Toll! S731.54
Gdn.
lat
8
Plontz
Addu
10'
14.01266.000, lmbodon, C/O Golf Zirkle llcAblt, Lot
oil
W
aide,
Toto!
$23.11
Patricia 6 Rouah Morvin 441 Pomeroy 15'x125', Total
16-00574.000, Stoeek•r,
Leonord, Sec1 32 (840) N of $15.58
Eva . Mo•, Lol 405, Toto!
S 150A ol N 2908 ox cool
Parnoory Vlllogo
$17.03
1A, Toll! $333.82
Molgo LSD
11.01111.000,
Taylor,
14-00701 .000, Imboden,
11-D003t.OOO, Arnott, John
Vlctorlo J, Sect 30 (100) 138 L C/O . Roger a Temmy Vtlma L, lot432 ex 75'1100'
P•nny Surv .43A, Toto! Arnold, lot 452 Sub. 3 1!2 ol W end, Toll! $255.23
18.01720.000,
Taylor,
8311 .07
40'x110', TOIII $1153.02
Velma L. Lot 432 5'x100' w
14-D0822.000, King, Denny
111-00032.000, Amott, John
&amp;/or Cynthlo, IICI. 25 (840) L, C/O Roger a Temmy end, Toto! 11.82
11-01730.000, T•mplaton,
SW cor at 16.12A N"r mid Arnold, Lot482 Sub 11/2 • 2
LJt-n
E a 11t1ty J, Lot 3
W 1/2 1.04A, Total $542.26
112. Total $132.43
139
Sub
3 w end •• ttrtp
14-00823.000, King, Donny
11-00057.000, Bornhert, ·
&amp;/or Cynthia, SKI 25 (840) William 6/or Brlndo S, Lot beck, Toll! 1St .58
11-01293.000, Thorntl,
150'x170' • ol Allan Gilkey
514 ••· to• tlrlp fronllgl a Dtllro L. c/0 llobro Jenklno,
1.04A IX 168A .294A, Total
going bock to Obrien Lot, Lot 480, lOIII $25.03
$4.05
Toto!
$1,218.50
Moah,
14.01180.000,
18-00448.000,
Young,
te-00787.000, Bornhert,
Su11n J1n1, Die 8 (640) In Wlllllm A a Brandl, Lot 11- Rlchll'd M 6/or Uncle, Lot
W 1/2 ol NW 1/4 SE ol Willie 282 .TOA lilt. 5' otrtp N tilde a 282 N a E ol Cermon'o Sub
Hill Avo .7SA, Toto! $898.90
email Trl .70A, Total 8372.46 .35A, Tatol $750.58
14-ootao.OOO,
Mayea,
Sclplo'Twp
1I-D0072.000,
Booe,
nmothy A, Sect 22 (262)
Mllgo LSb
Avlnell, Lol159 H a 0 Add,
F.23 R13 NE Cor of SOA Toto! $20.71
17-G0387.000, Bomhttrt,
.IIA, Toto! $67:94
...... G atw Annie R, Lot
111-00073.000,
Bill,
14.02307.000, Meodowo, Avtnoll, Lot 110 HaD Add., so 82.5'xte5' a Lot :11
Rlchord 6/or Lindo, c/o • Toll! $2.37
82.5'x165'E end 1.5825A
Thelma Mttldowa, Stet 33
18-00074.000,
Ball, Toto! $358.112
18401 NW 1/4 of NE 1!4 cool
Avonoll, Lot JMtrt 111 H a D Continued On Page 12

a..-.

�.. ...

Page 12 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy •llldd-.port, Ohio

Terry Nichols witness
exposes flaws to jurors
By SANDY SHORE
Associated Press Writer

" lt had a ''elY dnmatic effect on (the
juroTS)."

Replaying much of the testimony
DENVER - Michael Fortier
implicated Terry Nichols in the Okla- · he gi\-e at McVeigh's trial , Fortier
homa City bombing. Then the pros- told JUrors over two days that
ecution's star witness admiucd he McVeigh began planning the bomb·
lied, used drugs and committed a bur- ing after about 80 people died when
federal agents raided the Branch
glary with Timothy McVeigh.
By the end of Fortier's second day Davidian compound .ncar Waco.
on the stand, legal analysts said, his Te•as. on April 19, 1993.
He said McVeigh told him Nichols
character flaws had been clearly
was helping with the plan, that
exposed to jurors.
At one point, defense attorney Nichols stole e.plosives for use in the
Michael Tigar had Fortier demon- bomb and that Nichols robbed an
strate how to inhale methampheta- Arkansas gun &lt;)ealer to finance the
mine powder through a straw, which plot.
On Wednesday. he changed a critFortier said he did regularly. As
ical
portion of his account. He said
Fortier acted out the drug usc. Tigar
plugged his nose and let out a snort. McVeigh told him "they were plan·
"Like that?" Tigar asked. Fortter ning on bombing a building," but
Fortier didn't know who "they"
concurred.
Defense attorneys hope to under- were. During McVeigh's trial , Fortimine the credibility of Fortier, a for- er said McVeigh "told me that hemer Army acquaintance of both him and Terry - were thinking of
Nichols and McVeigh. He testified at blowing up a building."
both trials that he was aware of a
Although he spent a lot of time
bombing plot involving the men with McVeigh from 1993 to early
months before the April 1995 blast 1995, Fortier said he only saw
that ki lied 168 people and injured Nichols si• times, including one vishundreds of others.
it where Nichols and McVeigh
Testimony was scheduled to showed off a batch of e.plosives.
resume today.
Fortier conceded that he never
Nichols, 42. could face the death heard McVeigh say in Nichols ' prespenalty if convicted of murder and ence that the two were going to bomb
.conspiracy charges in the bombing. a building. He denied helping in the
McVeigh, 29. has appealed his con- plot.
.
viction and death sentence following
Answering 1igar's rapid-fire quesa trial on identical charges.
tions. Fortier admitted that McVeigh
Fortier testified that McVeigh and gave him some ammonium nitrate
Nichols appeared to have disagree- fertilizer and left explosives in his
ments as the date for the bombing home; that he tried to get a storage
drew near.
shed in a false name; that he handled
In March 1995, "Tim told me that guns he thought were stolen; that he
Terry no longer wanted to help him thought about forming a militia a~d
mix the bomb," Fortier said. He kept anti·govemment lilerature in his
added that McVeigh told him. " Ter- home .
ry would have to help him because he
Fortier then answered equally
was in it so far."
brisk questwns from prosecutor
But it was Tigar's cross-examina- Qeoffrey Mearns: Fortier said he nevtion that drew praise from analysts. er purchased ammonium nitrate; nevThe defense attorney played tapes of er stole c•plosivcs; never robbed a
telephone conversations in which gun dealer and never obtained plasFortier said he wanted to sell his sto- tic barrels for usc in constructing a
ry, and got the witness to admit he bomb.
and McVeigh used drugs to "get
Fortier has pleaded guilty to four
"
f
felony counts, including failure to
goo y.
. .
Fortier "came off as bemg more report the plot and lying to the FBI.
confused and manipulative than he and face s up to 23 years in prison. He
did during McVeigh's trial," said testified at the trials as part of a plea
Andrew Cohen, a Denver attorney. arrangement with prosecutors.

Unabomber trial jury selection
focuses on capital punishment
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - With
jury selection zipping along, there are
hints that Theodore Kaczynski 's
attorneys may offer liule opposition
to the mountain of proseculion evidence· in the Unabomber trial.
"If the prosecution puts on evidence and the defense puts on nothing. wouldn't that sway you toward
a guilty verdict?" defense attorney
Quin Denvir asked one prospective
juror Thursday.
The man said he felt the defense
should be required to "rebut" government evid~nce. He also said he
believes Kacz)·nski is the Unabomber
· and would probably vote for the
death penalty.
Jury questioning during the trial's
first two days has focused almost
exclusively on capital punishment,
which would not be a trial issue
unless Kaczynski is convicted. Legal
experts say all the talk about a death
sentence could mean the defense has
abandoned hope of winning an
acquittal.
Instead, the defense will probably
try to convince jurors that Kaczyns-

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

ki is, "crazy as a loon," said Don
Heller, a former U.S. attorney who is
following the case.
Kaczynski's auorneys want to
offer a mental defect defense. a
request still being reviewed by U.S.
District Judge Garland Bun-ell Jr. If
tlie approach is allowed, defense
attorneys could argue against a conviction - and also lay the groundwork for arguing against a death sentence should the trial reach a penalty phase.
If the defense planned to dispute
the prosecution's evidence, Heller
said, questions this week would have
been different- for ••ample, jurors
would be asked how they viewed the
credibility of law enforcement officials and the FBI laboratory.
"The way the case is going. it
seems to me that the defense is try. ing to get a plea bargain and the govemment won't do it," Heller said.
The trial "will be one long plea of
guilty."
It could also be shorter than attorneys first thought.
Lead prosecutor Raben Cleary
said the government is shortening its

presentation from 10 weeks to six
weeks. Jurf selection, which began
Wednesday, might last three weeks
instead of a month.
1lle trial was in recess today,
scheduled to reconvene on Monday.
On Thursday, Kaczynski, a former
college mathematics professor. sat
calmly us a prospective juror dissolved in tears over the prospect of
putting him to death.
"! could not put a man to death.
I'm sorry," said the woman as she
began to sob. A court clerk brought
her a box of tissues.
"Are your feelings so strong that
you could not sign a verdict of death
no matter what the circumstances'/"
· Burrell asked.
The woman dabbed at her eyes
and choked out the words: "I could
not sign something that would result
in a person's death."
Prosecutors moved to e.cuse her
and the defense agreed:
Of 24 candidates questioned so
far, 10 have been excused for reasons
ranging from the hardship of jury service to their voracious appetite for
TV news. The panel of 12 jurors and

'

80

•

ATTENTION VENDORS: tn4oor

By JIM DRINKARD
year," he said . "But in the end !think
Associated Press Writer
virtually every member will tell you.
WASHINGTON - Congress it has been a very successful year for
adjourned for the year, weary after a House Rcpubl.icans."
bruising partisan session that ranged
Even though Congress passed a
from the highs of a budget deal and budget-balancing deal and a $152 hilta• cut to a lackluster finish that left lion, ftvc-ycar ta• cut this year, law major issues, from foreign policy to . 'makers left a plateful of issues to
trade, uncompleted.
tackle when they reconvene in Janu"I would give this Congress a B ary.
for achievement. a D for behavior
Those include trade negotiating
and the overall assessment of incom- authority for President Clinton. which
plete," said Senate Minority Leader failed despite heavy lobbying in the
Tom Daschle, D-S.D., as lawmakers waning days of the session ; $3.5 bilheaded home after Thursday's final lion in new borrowing authority for
session.
the International Monetary Fund.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- needed to help stabilit.e Asian curGa., claimed success, alluding only rency markets; and nearly $1 hill ion
generally to an abonivc coup attempt in delinquent U.S. dues payments to
against him last summer by some of the United Nations.
his top Iicutcnants.
"We ... made some mistakes and
had to learn some things during the

The Iauer two issues fell hy the
wayside in a late-session dispute
over family planning aid to groups
dealing with abortions overseas.
which ended with each side blamin~
the other for the failure of the muchneeded foreign policy provisions.
Gingrich, in a letter to Clinton,
charged the president gave "domestic political considerations higher
priority than national security concerns." Rep. David Obey, D-Wis ..
shot hack that Republicans had been
"cynical and counterproductive" in
insisting· on anti-abortion provisions.
The White House complained that
Rcpuhlicans blocked the U.N. money just as the Clinton administration
was trying to round up world support
for a looming showdown with Iraq

Riek

$776.711

17.-.001, Lowe, Ray E
L, Lot E o1
Lola 18 &amp; 19 MIU Lot .32SA
18-01013.002,
Aoee,
oul of .SOA .325A, Tol8l Relph, Stet 2 T3 R12
$10.71
2.8ti33A out of 1.9717A
17.(10308.000, Lowe, Rty E 2 te33A, Total $30.34
u • ...,...,., L, Lot (11)
1li-01Ge4.000,
Roae,
.11A, Total $271.94
Ralph, HC 12·2 1840) S Bel
17~10.000, Lowe, Rty E
of S5.15eA NW pt of SW 1/4
n a Mltpm 1.. Lot (I) .oe •• chur &amp;cem 1.498A, Tolll
AC, Total $14.35
.
$15.711
17.00MU02, B....rtngen,
1ll-01 014.001, Float, Ralph
- · Stet 33 17N R14W E &amp;r, Stet 2, T3N, R12·11,
.4221A out of 140.00A 1.114A out Of2.81A 1.114A,
.4221A, Total $8.77
Tohtl$37UO
17-otrTse.ooo, s-rtnaen.
18-01384.001,
Unruh,
Wtndl, Stet. 33 S&amp;W part Bonnie A &amp; C1rn1han,
o1 NW1/4 &amp; S of WP o1 NE Sandra R, Sect 1, T2, R13,
1/4 1A out 142A 1A, Totoi Lot 11223 .421A ou1 ot
$4114.12
3.15eA .421 A, Total $282.19
17.0Q884.000, Willie, RhM
111-011011.000, Weaton,
J, Stet 33 (140) Nl/2 of WltMam R &amp;/or Ora Jo, Stc e
SE1/4 63A, Tolll $660.13
·23 R.12 R.2 SW prt1.282A
17-00I!eti.OOO, WIHla, RhM o14 A 1.otiZA, Total $17.etl
J, Stet 27 (212) w ptt1 o1
RIICine VIllage
SW MAZA EX 5A 42.112A,
llouthom LSD
Tolal$688.711
1t-000111.000,
Ball,
Buttonl'wp
TlmoUiy L &amp;/01 Brendlt L,
llouthom LSD
Sect 18 lOt 5 .!105A out o1
11-00177.001,
AIIIH, .73A .!I05A, Total $99.77
JtmH K AKA,._ t&lt;.lth,
1a.ooti51.000, Corpemar,
Soc! I T2 R12 W1/2 of 110A S.,......r, tw. Add. Tot•t
lot 2.00A out of 60.54A $413.04
2.00A, Total$122.72
1a.ootl52.000, Ctrpenler,
11-00101.00,
MlohHI ap I - · PI oiiOt 13 W Add,
~~~. Sect 31
3N R12 Total $31.14
1t-000113.000, Cerpamor,
1.34A, Totall111-013eti.IIOO,
Cello, 1.,....,.,, 4W. Add. Total
Donald E &amp;/or PIIHY S, $34.84
1t-00084.000, Corpenter,
Sect 13 ·2 on W line I o1
lp111011,
PI of lot I W Add,
Plrl&lt;er .40A, Tot.! IU7
·S33.etl
1.-3.001, o.vta, Jill Toto!
&amp;/or llrlnciJJ, 1OM lOt 211 1tMICII77.000,
T3N R12W 1.81A out o1 lptt- .. Cheryl, II! pt lOt
n 1 ••101.ee· a 1oo.oe
t2.00A 1.8M, Tote! $43.43
"
- I I W - Add. Toll!
1.-3.002, a.m. Jill
&amp;/01 - . Stct 31 100A
1f.00213.DOO, P1nereon1
Lot 211 T3 R12 4_.A out ol
.
. _ &amp;/or Trecy, A3A NW
1U1A4.31A. loiiii474.M
of
II Wolle .43A, Totti
11-110332.000,
Oum, 122.71
Robert A, llol. 100A lot11-00254.1100, P1tteraon,
IE 1!x.14A to Bt.lty. 5.77A,
...,_
1/01 Tracy, N of al!
Total.15.94
Wollto
.23A.
Total S3et!M
·11-00333.1100,
Ourll, 1~.1100.
ICUICinec,
Rolllrt A, teet. 10CIA lot 210
&amp;/01 Norma, 0/0 ....,
8le1. 30 ex. 27A to ly. lly. '"'""
P...., 21111211' out of .tMA
IIA, Total 8310.80
etrfp 31X21e' .otA, TOIIII
11-00331.000.
Ourat, 11.74
I t - A. 8le1. 17 2.tiOA, 1~.1100, ICUICinec,
Totall.71
11-00331.1100
Ourat, frank &amp;/01 Norma, C/O Irian
teet. 1e "
.f) ..
Robert A, leal N Trt. on w .......
.23A. Toto! $30.11
line .21 A, Total2.71
11-00017.000, lculelnec,
1ta30.110-1,lfYMIJ,JIII, fl'llll1 &amp;/or Norml,ll/o lktlln ·
81ct201'11 1tT31i1211Plgtllect. 18 (1401 NW - ·
1.31A Out Of 40A 1.31A, of.17A
821111218 .o3A, T~l
Tota1.1etl.31
11.74
11-00707.000, JohntJon, 1~.1100. ICUICinec,

n 1 lhrvarll

'

Jimmie W &amp;/or Blttncla J,
Stet 11 153 &amp; 8 1.QOA Ex
•50A .50A Tol8l $249.23
1H08o3.000,
McCoy,
Blrry W II &amp;lor Debo"'h L,
Stet 3 T2 R12 1tiOA lot
11210 22A out of 32A ax 2A
IX .03S8A 19.8862A, Tol81
$61.74
.
18-00103.001,
McCoy,
Blrry W II &amp;/or Debo"'h L,
HCt 3 160A tot 1210 T2
R12W 3.2SA Ex 1.S118A
1.7382A. Toto! $6(1.98
18-00103.D02,
McCoy,
Btrry W II &amp;/Or Dtbollh L,
Stet 3 T2 R12 SW cor of
22A 1.5118A o1 3.25A &amp;
0.388A of 20A 1.5458A,
Tolll $32.28
1ll-01211 .000,
McCoy,
Blrry w ll &amp;/or Olborah L,
Stet 3 part of 37.17A E 112
o1 W 112 tx coal ex 1.25A ex
1.0108A, Totol $21.50

Fl'lnk &amp;/or Norma, c/o Brian
Plgel, Stet. 18 (140) E or
Croae Lot 14.5x112.x113•
5x112' .25A, Tolltll74.82
111-000511.000, Scuktnec,
Frenk &amp;/or Norm1 C/0 Brion
P~gel, Stet. 16 (140) S of S
Wollo E of Pom. Rd..01 A,
TOlal$1.74
·18-00080.000, Scuka"'c,
F"'nll &amp;lor Norma, C/o Brian
P1g1t, sect. 18 (140)
Joining Mtry Blnkt Lot 18
&amp; 2Rd Strip .40A, Totti
$514.31

19-00077.000,
Tllllt,
Wltuam D 1/or Mo,rlty, Joy
K. Stet 16 T 2 R12 Cleltnd'o
Sub 11 Lot ,, 0 50x170.30 •
50x1tl8.70, Total $80.18
18·00078.000,
Tlllla,
Wllll1m D1/or Morartly, Joy
'K, Stet 11 T2 R12 Clelancl't
Sub 11 tot 112 50x163.11150x174.53, Tol8i $70.31

that the whole oftuch HV•
erat treott, Iota Of' pertt of

SynocuM Vltloge
Southern LSD

Iota, will 1M certllitd lor
lorocloouro by the county
Allclltor purouant to taw, or
forfeited, to the State,
unleH 1hl ............
menta, and .,.naltlea are

2().00220.000, DonohUI,
77 35' W end,
T018l $60.02
21).00178.000,
Durot,
R - .A, 211 1DOA IE IX
14A to Sl Ry 1.0601A out of
1.1515A .0814A, Tolll$7.18
21).00180.004,
Durot,
Robert A, 1OOA Lot 210
2.4826A out of 2.174aA
2.4826A, Tolltl $18.34
Oavld L, Lot

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

742-2076
1 mo.

110 Court St.

·
WV#023477

~xp.

BANKRUPtCY

Pick up discarded
appllancea, blttarltl,
many metala &amp;
motor bloelta.

Chapter 7

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,

614·992-4025 8 ....

SMALL
WANT ADS

.

Attorney At Law

fJ\CK
A811 PlKHI

~AnA.

614-592•5025

RADIATOR REPAIR
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy ~ Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • ng • Aluminum .Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
992-5583

Public Notice

•Room AddiUonl
•New Garagel
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
PalnUng
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992--8215
Ohio

(Ume StoneLowRatH)

WICKS
HAULING.
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Irene 8111 1 decellld,

312 GIFTS

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

614·992·3470
Tltlngt•tllllmt' In lit

WANT ADS

,.

~

.

'II Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds
Looking for a Pet?
Shop
the

HF..KMAN® by Jim Unger

CUISSIFIEDS

52 WEEKS

(

-x

Cl-mede ... your al

FOR ONlY
saa.40

home •hoppi11J eMler.
Find p-eal buy• on pell,
pel accouorieo, and
1er•lee1.
CaD for complete delalls
on placing
ads 10 Stll for you.

O'DELL
'LUMBER
FRIENDLY, PERSONAL
SERVICE
FREE DELIVERY

634 MAIN

ST.
POMEROY

tl.w
II!'

{740) 992-5500
,.,.

•'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

KICK-N-COUNTRY
KARAOKE
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY EAGLES
Members and Guest Invited

•

l

by

••'
•

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'•t
•

'.

"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"
PL!AIE BEND A Gti'T SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1 YEAR FOR ONLY
. . .40 (PIIyment JnciUdad).
8UBII:CRI'TION GIFT FOR:

'•

.

•

~

'"

CRY------------------------------~------------8TATE

8P.M.

-."':1
~

ZIP

All Come Have Fun Ill

HAPPY

BIBfHDAY
DADf
W•LowYou,

(IP•m

;r•

I

RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Large 16" Deluxe $12.99
Large 16' Three Item $9.99

SAT., NOV. 15
KARAOKE by Angie
COURT ST. GRILL

~

I.

FORKED
RUN
'
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY FRIDAY
NIGHT UNTIL
SPRING
1 P.M;-

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$1,200.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PEl GAME

BEECH GROVE ·
ROAD

Peraonals

Clean

~ate

Model Cars Or

Trucks, 19;() Modell Or Newer,

Smith 81Jic:k Pontiac, 1i00 East·
em Avtrl.Je, GaUipolil.

J &amp; O't Auto Parts. Buying sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts . 304-

DATELINE

ICl0-285·1111 EXT. I740
On~ 12 99 Por Minu10
· Mull Be t8 Years Old.
Sefv·U 619-645-843-4.

773-5003.

Wan ted To Bu~ : Holida)l Barbie's
1988, 1990, 1913. 1994, 614 ·
245-5887.

LETS

BE

FRIENDS
S2.99 Per Mm. 1-900-289-1245,
E1L 9191, Muat Be 18 Yrt.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

MEET YOUR COMPANION I 1 •
900-285-9119, Ex1. 7055, $2.99
Per Min . Must Be" 18 Vrl. Serv·IJ
o•H&lt;5-84:J.o.
110 Help Wanted
LET A PSYCHIC ANSWER
YOUR QUESTIONS! 1-800·329I All Areas l Shirler
1189, E111. 5407, S3.SI9 Per Min. l ~~::_:30~._~6~7~5-~14~29~.- - Must Be 18 Vrs, Serv·U 819·645- 18434 .
FRUSTAATEOI!l Need Someone

814-742-3090
814-742-3324
614-742-3078

To Talk

To?

Call

Now

For

Someone Who'll Understand Ill 1·
900-772-3889, Exl. 6403. $3.99
Pei Mm. Must Be 18 Yrs. Serv-U

I~:.::~~~~-:-18 ·S20 1Hr. No Door To

cash\ •Bonuses· 1·

619-645-8434 .

BRAMHI MINING

SPORTS
RESULTS
SPREAOSIII 1-900·285·9413,
Ext 3207, $2.99 Pet Min. MuS! 8&amp;
18 Vrs. Serv·U 619-645-843.4 .

STATE ROUTE 124

Approxlmetely 1.4 mllee e11t of Route 32.

ROMANCE ·STATE OF
lliE ARr .

614-384-6212

LUMP AND STOKE.R COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILAB~E

Carpenters with

e~perience

1n

suspended ceilings, metal stud, '

doors and Interior trim. Sand re·
sume Clo The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729·5~. Pomeroy, Ohio ,
45769.

Feel A. Lllllt Awkward, Shv, Or

Maybe Uncomlortable Ia As"ing
Someone FOf A Dale7 Then Get
With The Progmml

H011rt:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00p.m. Monday thru Friday

Compu
Uteri Needed. Work
Own Hn .. S2DK To $SDK /Yr. 1·
800-348-7186 X1173.

HEIRLOOM CONNECTION

40

Heirloom Quality Custom Furniture
• Complete Kltehens
• Kltehen Cabinet Refaclng
* i\.ntlque Reproductions
Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
614-9924106
Still

lelHf.

, fL

-Easy Bank FinancingFurnaces S2SOO a mOnth
Heat Pumps Installed 53800 • month
Free Ell/mates
(Payments based on approved credit)

IIAING I COOLING
Serving Soulh811S1ern OH &amp; WV
614-445-1411
1·801H72-5117 . 1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipols, OH

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching .
Umaatona &amp; Gravel
Septic Syetama
Trailer &amp; Hou" Sltea
RHIORibll Rlllll

Joe N. Sayre

ROBED IISSELL
COIISTiUCTIOII
•N.ewHomea
•Garages
•complete

Remodeling
. StQp &amp; Compare
FREE

ESTlMATEES
985-4473

BLECftiC
RACINE, OH.
614-949-3060

John Williams,
Owner

Licensed
Electrician
FrH E•llm•llla
24 hr. emergency
aervlce.

MY PLACE
Handcrafted Wood
Projects

Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4198

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

r..r.--111111 . ..
,._ "llf~ ......

-EPA Clftilicltion
•2 Yllfl Experience
114-446-4140
-275-2111

Yellowlwhile cat. Gray kitten.
304·675·5590.

"' KIUen·s Liller Trained, Good
Mouser's, Indoor, or Outdoor Dependable And Flt)lible CNA's
~~) 256-@780 Leave aMes- Needed For In Home Care. Call
Adrianne Of Angi A1 1-800·48 t •
1334.
Free Klt1ens To Good Home, 614388-9100, Of Leave Message.
DeiBC•va • Private
Nstigatot, Trainees
Free - Beagle pups , 614-949Good Wages 614-823{)533.

2985.

HEAVY EOIJlPIIENT
llAINTENAHCE

Mate Pup, 8 Monrhs Old, 81acll &amp;
White, Very Prell)', Very Tame,
814-379-2111 ,

I

Part lab Pup 4 Monlhs Old Very
Frie~dl~ In Need 01 A Good
Horl\e, 814·U6-3897.

Puppies, Black Lab, Cross Black

Sh-a. 61H45·9055.

Puppies, ready to go. 304·882 ·

3970
Puppies : Miud Breen 8 Weeks

Old, Pil Bu ll &amp; Cnow. 814·256,259.

Sh: week old Miniature Doberman
puppies, IWO mates, two females,
614·949-2842.

To good home, t'MJ year otd male
labrador, neutered, good with
kids, 614-949 -3403.

To good nome- one rear old male

We Are A Surface Coal M1nlng •
0pet'ator With Uine Si1es In Vln.

10n, Jackson And Gallia Counlies •
In Southeas1 Otlio.
We Are Seeking E11penenud

Heavy Equipment Maintenance
PersonneL We Would Prefer
Someone Who Has Service Ve·
hic:le Ancl Tools. E •perience
Should Be In Repairing, Welding , •
And Troublestocring.
We Ofter Compeititive Pa,. And A ,
Good Benefits Package. Including
401(k).

Make Applicalion At Our Main
Office AI 38701 S.R., Hamden,
Ohio, Mon~ Thru FFM:tay, 8 AJ11I.
To &amp;:30 P.M.: OR Submit Your Rt·
sume To : Sands Hill Coal Co.,
P.O. Bo• 650, Hamden, O~io ·
-4563-4 . No Telephone Cans
Pktase.

yellow Lab. good W!lh kids. 614·

We Are An Equal Opportunity
Employer. 411 Qualified Applicanls
Will rece ive Consideration For
Washer. Call afler flpm . 304-882Employment Without Regard To
2969.
Race. ~r. Religion, Nalional Or·
igin, Ancestry Or Se•.
60 Lost and Found
985-3411 ,

Lost: Black and White Kiuen, In Home Health Agency H1ring
The Vicinity of Big Bear in Gallt- CNA'a And HHA'a Starling At
polis, late Sunday (61-4) 448- $fl.09 Pat' Hr. Full·Time And PartTime Potitlona A,11allable. Send
0M7
Resume To : Health Manaoement
LOST : Tri-color male Beagle in Nuraing Ser11ices, Inc . P.O. Bn
area ol Rayburn Rd. oil Sandhill, 1165, Gallipolis, OH 45631 , Or
Stop By Our Offict, AI 782 Sec·
REWARD! 304·675-ao40.

. 70

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

CORPORAL
TRUCKING

..Qualilicalions•Profeuiorlll Demenor

Pi-

Registered mtn 1 Lop ear rabbil.
61042-3115.

MabUe Rome Furnaces
and leal

DAVIO WHITE SERVICES
Full-T'tme HVAC lnslallalion

3mo old lemale Beagle mi• pup -

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AdditiOns • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Giveaway

1 Yellow Killen, 614-446-3732.

Free Estimates
Orders for Christmas

Sunday Calls)

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT
SLUG MATCH
EVERY SUNDAY
UNTIL DEER
SEASON 1P.M.

retimahing, cuatom ord.,a, 014 ·

NllOOUS?
TO MEET SOMEONE?
TIRED OF THAT OLD IWI
SCENE? THEN CALL THE

3351 H1ppy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 4571tJ
New Homea, Addltlona,
Rooting, Siding;
Pole Barna,
Decl!a, Painting
Call Us For A Free Esllmats

614-992-.7643

BINGO

\

.

ADDRESS------------------------------------------~--

"

992-9200

.
''

~E--------------------------------------------

005

Home Improvements

WELLSTON, 'JHIO

Antique&amp;- no ~~ too la'ge Of 100
•mall. Alto ealattl, appra lllll,

992-6578.

KINGS'

250 Condor slreet .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A DivisiOn on· Nk*ills Metal, INc.
614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-n3-5861

Pomero~,

IN THE PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MAnER OF
THE ESTATE OF
AVANELL IRENE BASS,
DECEASED .
CASE:29118
NOTICE OF PUBUCATION
OF ADMISSION OF WILL TO
PROBATE AND
APPOINTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATOR
To 111 r.reon• lntereeltd
In the alate of Avllllll
Meiga County Probate
Court, Ca11 29118.
You are hereby notified
that the decedent died on
Febru1ry 24, 1997, and that
tht dtctdent'o will wao
admitted to probate on Mey
29, 1997, by the Probtle o1
Metgo County, Ohio. You
muet bring 1n action to
contaot the validity of tht
Will wHhln lour monthl alter
the Executor tllu en
1tlldnlt otatlng the
Executor h.. given tht1
nottco.
ChrtttopiMr E. Tanoglla
Robert E. Buck, Judge
(11) 14, 21, 28,3 tc

·Big Bend fabrication,
MachiH:&amp; Welding Shop

Ruu Moore owner, eu -012 2526.

ANNOUN CEMENT S

1113197 1 mo pd

Complete Macblae Shop Service Fabrlaation
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies; lud~ Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday • 8:00a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Salllrday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

Antiques, top prices paid, River ·
ine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,

CLASSIREDSI

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Cheater, ·ohio

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

SE

WITH THE

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

20 Yrs.

A.biOIUI8 Top Dollar : AU U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coln1, Prooflltt,
Diamonds, A.nflque Jewelrw-, Gold
Rings, Prt·H~30 U.S. Currency,
Slerling, EIC. Aequilitionl Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A'lff'Ue. GanipoNa, 814-448-2842.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479
CLEAN

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

GravelLimestoneSand- Dirt
614-992·3220

8' Regulation pool table wftlate
lop. X&gt;•-773-9567.

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

Wanted to Buy

90

"- ·

Ohio

TRUCKING

Deed. Henry C. and Rae Ann to American General Finance. MidLevine to Russc.ll E. and Mary M. dleport parcel;
Williams. Scipio parcels;
·
Dct::c.J. Laurence YCaugcr to GorDeed. Harry S. Yarhrough to Rus- don K. 1\!)lshary. Salishury ;
sell B. and Juanita F. Combs, Rutland
Deed, Lcnna M. Chase, Frances
village, I.K acres;
M. and Rnhert E. Jnhnsnn, Louis R.
Deed. Maxine and Patricia Price and Virginia A. C&lt;,nncr. Joan Lorenc
to Patricia Jordan, Lehanon;
and George Nance to Marrianna
Deed. Don E. and Barhara F. Whitlock. Bedford:
Mullen to Kimhcrly S. Domian,
Deed. Charles T. and Linda K.
Middleport;
Schoeppner tn JcffWcstcnharscr and
Deed , Rankin Ray and Irena Pick- Ginger Schmalcnhcrg, Bedli&gt;rd, · .
ens to Rankin Ray Pickens Family, 3.4325 acres.

Compenr.

181,0hio &amp; W"t Virg1nia, 30··
773-5785 Ot 304·773-50-17.

360° Communications

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Nancy Porkor Campbell
AudHor of Mtllll
Counly, Ohio
(11) 14, 21 2TC

a vow of alienee:'

"FA&lt;:TORY
DIRE&lt;:T
PRil:ES''
Quality Window Systems

S&amp;L

paid.

"Boy! You aura know how to break

CELLULAR PHONES

30 AMOuncemants

'"'

•

"Build Your Dream"

&amp; Regular
Deer SHSOI

lSI,,

c.,...,.,,

•

Opel Now &amp; Will B1
Open Durlag The Bow

over U.N. weapons inspections.
Other unfinished business included the proposed overhaul of campaign finance laws, which House
GOP. leaders promised to consider
early ne&lt;t year. Much of this year's
session was dominated hy congressional hearings highlighting ahuscs of
the current system.
Most of the linal day w:t&lt; taken up
with finishing the la.'t essential husincss for the year: the tlnal three or 13
spending hills needed to n.Jf'l the government. which came a rull six weeks
after the new liscal year started.
Those hills provided $855 million
in federal aid to the District of
Columhi a. $13 hill inn for foreign aid
and $32 hillion to run the depart·
mcnts of Commerce. State and Justic c.

fll,ar10n Auction

full tim• IUCtlon..r, comp.. tt
aucuon
Nrvu;•. Licenltd

26 YEARS IN BUSINESS

S.R. 325,
Langsville OH

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE.DAILY SENTINEL

And nollclll hereby given

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

OILER'S .
DEER SHOP

six ,alternates will be chosen from a
final pool of at least 64.
Kaczynski, 55, was arrested in
April 1996 at his remote Montana
cabin. He faces a 10-count federal
indictment in four bombings that
killed two. Sacramento men and left
two professors disabled. He also
faces trial in a fatal New Jersey
bombing.
In all, the 16 Unabomber attacks
between 1978 and 1995 killed three
people and injured 29. Earlier reports
put the number of injured at 23, but
the govcmmcnr now counts. six crew
mcmhcrs who sutrcred smoke inhalation on a 1979 American Airlines
flight targeted by the Unabombei.
Kaczynski. who confers and
shares smiles occasionally with his
lawyers, showed no reaction when
the juror wept. or when ·another
woman told about her son working in
a huilding that received a bomb
threat ahout the time of the
Unabomber's attacks. She became so
emotional that she stumhlcd over her
words.
" I want to serve so had," she said.
"But I've got to get hold of these .
emotions.··

De~d. Frank M. and Pamela S. Stuckey to Nancy Prater. Sutton · Middlcport!Pomcrny parcels:
--------------------------------------------~
Colwell
to Southern Ohio Coal Com- parcGis;
Deed, Gerald M. and Tuny Mohler
Continued From Pege 11

17.00740.000,
BOIIIJI,
MlchHt D &amp;lor Sharon K.
Stet. ·15 NE of Pqevtlle
.4011A, Total$15.31
17.00741.1100,
Bogga,
Ml~ D &amp;/or 8hl1ron K.
Soc!. ·15 NE of Pqevtllt
3.3488A, Total $325.00
17.00178.1100, Cotterill,
st.,.., o &amp;/or Barbara c,
Lot (10), Total $541.115
17.00178.000, Cotterill,
s - o 11or Barbara c.,
Lot (i), Totoi $6.55
17.00180.000, Cottarlll,
S-n 0 &amp;/or ...,., C,lot
HCt ·16 (140) NE of NW 114
Ex 18, A E 5A, Total 174.14
17-oootiO.OOO,
Danttlt,
Motcolm w11 al, Stc 30 SW
Cor ex 4. 19A S 14A74A of.
t18.631A 14.474A, To18l

Clpoll

Ev.&lt;yclar. SlOtt noun ;.s. c tord't FMI Marktl, Henderson,
wv. 304-f'l$-5404.

Meigs County land transfers posted

pany, Salem;
Deed, Ritchie A. and Rhonda J.
20-00172.000,
Fryar,
Minter V Jr &amp;/or J&lt;athllll'l M Coc to John and Kristy Farley.
, 14 Bullington Add., Tolltl Columbia, .8428 acre;
$22CI.I1
Easement, Richard and Patricia
20-00170.000,
Fryar,
Manzcy
to GTE North Incorporated,
Minter VJr 1/0f' Kathleen M,
12 Bulllng1on Add., Total Scipio;
·
$61.trf
Deed, Anna M. Brown, deceased,
20-00171.000,
Fryar,
to
Christopher
R. Stout, Syracuse;
Minter VJr &amp;/or Kathleen M,
Deed,
James
E. and Krista M.
13 Buffington Add., Total
$58.35
White to William R. and Saundra S.
21).00384.000,
Knapp, Stuckey, Sutton;
Celli Peart, 291 75' on w
Deed, Wi II iam R. and Saundra S.
ond 1A Running N &amp; B
.22IA, Tol81 $383A7
2tHI0443.000, Sheppard,
Robert T &amp;/or Anl111 K, 298
.251A, TotJil $733.40
211-00807.000,
Thelta,
Pamela M et al, Loi1G0-298
SW of Collage Rd .14A,
To18l $1,060.12

AuctiOn

end Flee Mal't!lt·

51&gt;oU tS.OO Ou- t:l.DD

Congress quits for year, leaving major issues for 1998

DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE

..

Friday, November 14, 1997 •
•;

.

By RICHARD COLE
Associated Preas Writer

_....

&amp; VIcinity
61.1.
Yonl S.loo
loPaldln
_ Mu•
_

ond Avenue, Gallipolis. OH, To
Pick Up An AppUcalion. In Ga!Ha
Count)' No Phone Calls Please, In •
Moil~• Countr can 614·992-7900, ·

EOE.

Mason CO P\Jblie Schools
Aegillet'ed Nurst (RN)· Full-time

in· the Maaon -Wahama area .
Muat be Hctnsed in the State of
QfAQL!Nf: :2:00p.M.
WV. approved Medicaid Providee. hperience in TracheosJO· •
""' day beloto "'" lid
11 to run. Sunday
my and ostomy care, contracted
edition • 2:00 p.m.
aervictt. Plealt l.nd or fllx re· ·
Frt.tar. Mondor lldHion
sum• b~ Tueaclay November
• 10:00 Lm. SI1Uiday.
18th lo: Carol Milltr, Dl,..clar of ·
Special Proaramt, 307 1111 Sl, 1'1
Big Yard Sale : Willow Vllley Mia·
Plelllnl WV 25550. 30•·&amp;75·
sion, 2780 Ewingron Road, ViniOn.
•!&gt;Ill .... 21 ., lu X&gt;•-e l'S-122e.
a14·388·8033 Cau For Directkms.
Winttr Clotnlng, Coata, Taya,
HoulthOid lrema, Kitchen ltema,
Loll 01 Miac. Items, Rain /Shin,
In Cue 01 Ram Salt WIU Be In·
side Camp Dining Han, 11114th, One Fuii·Timl Ai-M~ Ona Part·
Time Reailllnd Nuru Palhkml ;
1511\
Open In The Mtdh!:al /Surgical
tloperl\ 6 il AI Olio Hll Cammunl- •
Movim~ Sale , Wuher, Dryer,
Lawn Mower, Ulac. Furniture. 1y IHdl ..i Cenllf. The Oualllltd
MuchMoro(&amp;1•l~178
Candidate Will PtO¥tde Nur"ng
Co,. Olrtcdr To Pollenll 01 All
Saturday. Nov. 14U1 , 10 A.M. ·5 Ageo. £octo Clndlcla!O Mutt Ia A.
P.M. Vinton F~o~ll Gospel Church, Gr1du1~1 From An Acc:recllttd
Corntr Ma1n &amp; Halcomb Strett, School Of Nurt\ng An4 cu.....,
Vin10n, Ohio.
Roglaltrta Wl1h Tho Ohio Sta10 ;
Boara or Nural"1J. Export.,.. 1n
Modtcal /Surgical ~nment tJ
Preferred. PIHII Apply In Per· .,
Middleport
""' Or Sind - .... lb: Ollk Hit •
&amp; Vlclnhy
Community Medical C•nter, At·
tention : Brenda McKenzie, SSO

Pomeroy,

AU Yard S•ln Mu•l le Pllld In
Advance. DNcUine : , :OOpm tht
day bltott tht ad 11 to ""'•
SundJ~ &amp; Mond•r tdtllon·
1:GOpm Frtcter.

'

-Chartone -

EO£

.... Oak HUt, Olllo

�•

•

•

November 14, 1917
.,.
~~~~~~~~~--~------~--~--~------:~:m:•:~~·=M=~::~:::~~:Oh::~~~~::::::::::::::n.:::o:•:'':S:•:nd:~::·:':·:~:1:5·~·
~F~.
......

aamo1:

ALLEY OOP

aer•••
... 11=····
• I'Oolllllop

PHILLIP

ALDER
540 Miscellaneous
Merchancllse ·•
Single Plrenl Progftm. Why Ren1
When You Can OWn. Special Fl·

e ..y Work! E11cellent Payh'-s·
sembte Products At Home. Call

nancang Available. 304·7J&amp;-7285.

ToiiJ:rot 1·800·487·5586 E•t
121""
Oak Hill, Ohio Blltd Trucking
Compony II Sllki1g EJperlenced
OTR Semi· Tractor ffraillf Driwera. Euefltnl Pay &amp; lnturanct
P?±aar caM 1514-d82.ee1S.

All real estate advenlsing rn
this newspaper Is subject to
·ltle Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color. religion.
sex familial sra1us or national
cw;gln, or any Intention to
make any svct'l preferenCe,
limitation or discrimination.·

PIHainr Val~y Hospilll han lm·
medloiO oponinos lor ICCU nurs·
••· Recent acute care experl·
enee desirable. Evening/Night
lhifla. Send re1ume to PariOMitl
11 Pleuan1 Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Drive, Pt. Pleasanr,

This newspaper will no1
koowlng~ accept
adver11Hments for real es1ate
which Is in violation ot the
taw. Our readers are hereby

WV. 25550. AAIEOE.
AN'9111.00 ·121.00 HR.
ChooH Your Own Hours Privar.
Out)' Ancl Supplemental. Staftinsr,
Immediate Work Available In
Gellia, Ualgs, And Ross Countie•. Vent Experience Or ACLS
PreHed But Not Required.
LOCAL WTEAYIEWS~
Tuea., Now. 18th, 1 -8 P.M. Or
Wed., Nov. 1911&gt;, 8 A.l.t. ·II A.M.
Holiday Inn, Stall Rout&amp; 7, Galli·
poll~

InfOrmed that all dWellings
advertlsec. in this n~~wspaper

are available on an equal
oppor1unlty basis. •

I,.,"'!!••••••"!'f
31 0 Homes for Sale

OH.
WESTERN MEDICAL
SERVICES

pair , asking $4,000, 614-g92·
2034.

Westwood Home ShoW Uaed &amp;

Repo Sale As Liule As $500.00
Down Ancl $150/Uo., Free Oeliv·
ory, 1-100·25 1·50711.

Westwood Home Sh.ow-Uaed &amp;

Repo Solei AI Llule AI fSOO/
Down SI 50 Per Month. Fraa De·
livery. 1-1100·251·50711.

330 Farms for Sale
NEW liN FARMS

QAWA COUNTY
Newer Haute W /Pool + 50 Acr·
ea Barna, MeadDw1, Pond,

$225,000
SCIOTO COO~

Wood /Stone Home ... 18 Ac:res

No Petal Foater'a Mobile Home
Park, 81 .... 1.0181.

2 Bedfoom Tr~~ller Wlter &amp; Tr11h
Paid, NO PETS, Near Po•ltr,
61•·3118-1100.
2 Trailers For Rent: 1 -2 Bedroom
$275/Mo.; t -3 Bedroom Bath ·112
1300/Ma., D•poaira. 814·4"8·

aa.•.

920 Fourth Avenue, 2 B•droom
Trailer, Water Paid $300/Mo.,

814·"1.05.13.
Three

bedroom moblta

home,

·=·
c:

814·867-3ol87.

Extra lanc:l Available, 1-800-213-

NEW HOME under construclion,
nearly complete&lt;j, 1,344 sq. "It, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, utility room,
front I)Orch, baCX deck, large lawn.
Pag~ 1lle, near Albany, $93,000.
Ohio DreamHome Builders, 1·
888·699·904 1. e14-698-040 1.
Three bedroom house In Syra·

pl'onon-.

cuse, basement, garage, new

180 wanted To Do

windows, deck. and all remodeled
inside, 61.4·7•2·1345. 61o1·992·
6116.

Ra~ne.

Three bedroom. balh, wilh 3 vac·
ant lots, 2 are level, ex,ellent
building poremial, $40,000 080;
hous.e diVIded 1n1o two apartments, fental potential, live in one

Don't Let The High Prices 01
Strv~lno. Keep You Snowe&lt;r Un·
dtr Call E &amp; U And We Will Get
You RHdy Far The Season, With ond renl olher, $20,000 080,
A Price That Will Be Pleasen. bolll in VH~ge ol Middlepor~ 61 ..
114·441·1238 Free Estimates, 992·2290.
EM Certified.
Will Cons1der land Contract .With
Furnltul8 repair, refinish and resPayment, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Dation. 1110 cus10m ordtrs. Ohio 1~i~];;.~'~
- 8~A~;cres, Super Nice !
Valley R~tiniahing Shop, Larry
School 0 1s trict,

IE

lltlfl Co.: Damlllo, Nice Rolling

Tra,ta; 17 Atrea $18,000 Or g
Acres 117,000, County Water.
Dieaville. Why Pay lot Rtnt? 5
Acr&amp;s 11,000 - $1 ,000 Down
$1281Mo., Paid In 5 Yeara. Near
Tuppers Plalnl, Belt 5 Acres
Home Sltea On KHbaugh ·FOil·.
rod Rd. $14,000 Ea ; Tosrather
Cash Price $24,5001
G•lll• Co.: Gallipolis, Neighbor·
hood Rd., 10 Acres Several level
Sires t19,000, Or 22 Acres With
Pond NOW $24,000. Friendly
Aidg&amp; 10 Acres SU,OOO, 8.5 Acres 17.500 Or 18 Acres 118,000,
County Water. Teens Run, last
One! tO Acres $10,000,

Apartments
for Rant

~~~~'-~-:---~·I
Traullr lot for rent, relerencaa rl·

Old Jars

510

Housthold

Goods
Applitnc.. ;

Recandllioned

W.shtrt, Dryers, Ranon, Refri·

ture including bedrooms, lampa,
prints and mirrors, very goad

1 8&amp;draom All Utilities Included

S3151Mo., Oepoall RO(iulred, .,.
Eaat College StrHt Ria Gl'lndt,

H!a&amp;-840.0521.
I br Du~e,, I ·2br 11p1, .....,I lbr
apts, soma utilities Included,

Ouaan Walerbed Wilh Mirror
Headboard $75; Super Slnsrla
Wawbed With Mirror Headboard
&amp; Orawera 175; Country
Rocker $10; Exerciaa Bike
Or1111r With Mirror ISO, 114•
38&amp;-807e.

~ur!:J~';.:~..~~~ed

and

I~=..::.7:-;:~:;.;::=:::;___
A l 8 Fumllurt

Your Area Dealer For John
FOR $100 1Trucks, boats,
Daart Skid s- Loadl&lt;l. From CARS
4-wheelers, motor hornet, furni-

61•·888-3531.

~~.U~":,
Furniture.

304-713-5341.

1980 CJ.S Jeep
S0.-615·2677.

Holaleln Baby Catwes For Slle,

Windsor HO, good shape, loll af

SI..:JI6..852•.

Polly'o A Uotd FumH,.
We ,_ hiMt Army SUrptuolll
2101 Jellerlon Ave.
Open g:3) ' 5:00 lion-Sot
S0.-675-SOfA (71132)

BARNEY
MISS PRUNELLY-- I GOT
SOME -~OOD NEWS AN'

SOME

dard Bteod Paclno Mort, Sound
ond Drivel Good On The Road. Upton Used Cara Ar. e2-3 Miles
Don Holohbtr!l«
Soutt) of Leon, WV. Financing
11583 State Route 141
Available. 304-458-1068.
Palriol, ONo 45658

and bridle, has been used ror
barrel and pleasure riding, crlll
814·9~i·HOO or 30 .. · 773 -5005
-5pm

640

2 bedrDOm aparunerwln Pomerqy,
urllltles paid, no pelt, 014·992·
5858. .

•o• V-8, $3,SOO.

1980 Ford F-100 Pick-up, 351
now pana. t2,000 080. 304·7735054.

Hay &amp; Grain

RIVERSIDE WHOLESALE
&amp;1 ..258-8181

Singer Overlock machine, new,
never used, instruction video and

bookie!, $150 OBO; Amigo matal
detector, two heads, works good,
$60; 810-7•2·2502.

Sporting

520

BE AUliFUL APARTIIEKTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wesl-od Drive
lrom $260 1o $334. W&amp;lk to shop

1-30-08 Bah Action Wincheallr
Madel 70 wiSiin; and Scope

Oownataifl Apartment, 4 Rooms,
Water Paid, NO PETS, Cit Cedar

5710.

.Goods

Chinese M-14 SA: Eagle AA·15:
614-376-7814.

s...... Blol-3118-1100.

GOLF CLUBS:

Taylor Made Tommy ·Armour Etc.
Effic:ienc:y On Eutern Avenue, Or Custom Built Clubt, Indian
Waahet I Orver, Ulilitiea Paid, Crllk Goll. 814·24S.S747.
$400, 814-4ol8-2515.

530

NEWS?

l

Sofa &amp; chair with matching side
chair, like n&amp;w. $275. 304-773·

$375; 1·870 12 Gauge Remin(IIOn
Wlngma11er wfDHrllugger Barrel
&amp; movies. Call 614·4.,.8·2568 . $375 (30.)675-8138
Equal Hauling Opporamlly.

WON'T ee COMIN'
TO SCHOOL TODAY

AN' WHAT'S
TH'IAD

.e·~- ... ~Tw,o.:o~is ,..,~

Bunk Bed a Comp. $225, Sola &amp;
4 Counlll Pine Tibia,
Chairs $235; 7 Pc.
CO&lt;Iar BR $799; Oak Curio Ca~
$150: Ponory, Mexican Blan~OII,
lndoons, E1&lt;.

Apartments For Rent On First
Averue, 61,..446·8221.

SMITH!

UH•• JUGHAID

Mill)

.----,

Antiques

41 teruiln 41Longu-

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10 1111.-cl
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22 Complotlllw
aulllx
22 ILip
24 II I : ,.

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11 Horal'a . . .
11 hallft -.nd
117 . . _ . • Nola-;wOIIl org.

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11 Qr.wlr1dgll •• .

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Opening lead: • K

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Who are the
top four?

311Dry,•wlnl
41 COli and ...

· By Phillip Alder

CtwiM'

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : •People w~o make music _logelher cannot
enemies, at least while the~ leal&amp;. - Paul Hindemith.

.

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IlLII
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Roorronge le,.u of tho
0 four
ICfOmblod -d• boo

OLAF I-lAVE 1(01! E't'ER
SEEN A CO't'OTE?

MICKEl( MOUSE

1989 Cavalier Aulo, 79.000 Miles.
$2,295: 1990 .Grand Am 5 Speed,
NAOA S3,775 Our Price; $1,995,
Cook Molars, et·4·446-0103.

INOTICEI
Di1coun1 Mobllt Home Parta &amp;
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Accessorle&amp;, Vinyl Skirting

,__ng.

Beau1w Tannlnsr Salon Wi1h
EquiPmtrll. 1Wo Working Girls 1
Good Clinltle. Grea1 location,
Good~. ll ..ol-48-0214.

'

..- '

OHGER

.'

I
I, I I I 1·

.'

LACFO

·"

~· ··

"•..

"

1-I.,;U;..:.;.M.:E,:Sr-·.;0-J, ~~,·

Granny always told us to be

·1• 1 1'. 1 _

ingt, Doors, Windowa, PtumtMng
Supplies, Water Heaters, Furnac.
II, liberglasa Stepa, Call eu.
"48-9418 Bennetrs Supply. 13SI1
Scnoot Rd, Gallipolis,

S999 Down

Set-Up, &amp; Ta11·

3 btclroom house, 1500/mo. De·
poait 304.fl75-1371 .

750 Boats &amp; Motors

for Sale

1988 Ranger 373V I B' 12 -24V
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evlnrude

8 -1 ft. Com~ltto lhe &lt;~u-&lt;lt QVOtod
. V by filling in the missin~ words
L...I-.I.....J'-..1.-L-..1 you dtYtlop from ••P No. 3 below.

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE FOR
.. NSWER

I'

•· t l'

"''

.
"'
••

""

11111111

NOVEMBER14I

IH1 DOdge Dynasty 3.3 liler,V·
B, Auto, 87,000 Milas, Loaded,

f2 .• 50. 080, 814·256-11181.

3 bedroom. $400/mQ. Deposi t

ve:

304-875-4678 leave mes11ge.

1991 Thunderbird, 3.1
ttd.
aunrool, n•w Michelin radials,
price reduced. 304-875-5598.

lA Rewnla Erclting New Ways

1992 Cht\ly lumina, 3.1 Multlport
tilt, cruiae, amlfm
uereo cassette, automatic, 4
door, new tires. extra clean in and

To Eatb 50·100K A Year Fast! 24
Hr.IIOG- -513-31185.

v..e qne, air,
ou~ 139115,

ft.

814·992-682•.

1992 Otds Delre 88, " Doors,

Loaded, $6,900, 614.fl82-7S12:

Professional
Services

Home
Improvements
BASEII£NT

WATERPROOFINO
Unconditional lilelime guarantH.
Local references furnished. Es-

lablished 1975. Call (814) ••8·
0870 Or 1·800·287.057G. Aa;ern

WaiOrprOOfing.

,,
II

. I'

•
HF f\1 tSTAfE

310

I
.:.,:;1
-T-1
=-11'
:
'
I

..

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Facial • Press • Quota • Panama • SEA is CALM
Our new boss seemed very confident in her abilities.
A colleague remarked that, •Anyone can handle the helm
if the SEA is CALM.'

1990 Olds Cullau Supreme, Oullloord, $8,800, 61H92·2770.
Loadi&lt;l, Standard, Loailler Soots,
·
CD, 69K, E~eellenl Condition 760 Auto Parts &amp;
SMoo. 6, ""'.a-m2
Accessorlss

$20'U~5, Anchora SS.OO, Awn-

fAMoUS IIILLIONAIRE·IIAK ·

230

~ .

SCIAM LETS ANSWEIS

Business
Oppol'!unlty

rec:ommenda that you do bull·
neal with people yau know, ·ancl
NOT ~ Nnd money through the
matt until you have invtstiuated

.... .
.....

.,,.

I

FINANCIAL

210

-..
..
.•.

J-.,..:1'~1

AND l-IE WAS WEARIN6

·.:

,.

..

low to form four aimp.lt WOt'dl.

I

'

• ••

be ;;;

wary of those people who
~::;·~-::;~·;:.·=.~, seem to know too much, espe·
r
cially if it is .... ···-.
TYJSUL

PEANUTS

..

··-·, .

• Jttutrlton

you

1238.

213-836S.

NEWS tl

I'M ALL
EAIS, MIZ

WMI North
Pus ••
P... 3•
Pass • ·•
Pass 5 •
Pass Pasa

.U-1111-

:11 KingIt Pluud
• Alrllna lnlo

Snmcnnc, after seeing yesterday's
column, wondered who the four best·
ever players arc. My vote goes (in ·
ll·if
ulphahctical order) to Giorgio Bel· ·
ladnnna, Pietro Forquet, Benito
Garnzzo and Bob Hamman. The first
three were the: mainstays of the leg·
cndary Italian Blue Team. Hamman,
from Dallas, is now the top-ranked
player.
.
IS"N'i .,. ,ABOUi
This deal, in which aggressive
bidding had pushed Hamman into six
TIME
iRIMMEP clubs, gives a good idea of the stan·
dard of his declarer play. ·
After West leads the spade king,
11"f0S'f' (il.AGii?Jit$'?
many declarers would take the club
finesse at trick two, shrugging their
...
shoulders while writing minus 200
into their scorecards. Hamman did
much hctter. Immediately, he: cashed
~HE BORN LOSE.~R=_,
the
heart ace-king, discarding a spade
P"l'r-\ ~ (,I.M) IT~
- ~o.J w~ XlW..
from lhe dummy. Next, he ruffed the
0/U., t'"' ~T
100r...Y, \oJIL~ ?'
hearuhreein the dummy, simultane·
fWI&gt;'( 1 ~~!
ously establishing his .I 0.
West, who had passed as dealer,
had shown up with the king-queen of
'
spades and ·queen-jack of hearts. It
looked as though East held both
.i
minor-suit kings. Playing on this
i.t
assumption, Hal)lman cashed dummy's diamond ace and continued
i
L_~=-----~~~·L__u~~~----~ with the diamond queen, ruffing
away East's king. Now came the
heart 10, which West had to ruff to
stop dummy's last spade fr&lt;!IR disapNIGIE, I ... UtC NEVER
pearing. After ovenuffing in the
llEALL"( T0U&gt; 'IOU
dummy,
Hamman threw a spade on
YESTE~Y HOW
the
diamond
jack; then he ruffed a
1'\UCH I UKE "fo.JR
PAINTIN&lt;&gt; . .
diamond. Finally, declarer played a
club to dummy's ace and discarded
his last spade on the established diamond five while East · impo!cnlly
n~ffed with his trump wlnner.

central location wUh·ln wal11.1n;
c:llttance of Poat Oftlce ,&amp; Foa· Relrig8f'ator, Washer, Dryer, Color
dland, reasonable rent &amp; law de· T.V., VCR $50 ·Each, 814·258·

poait 311.-675-2053.

tKIOI2
• KI

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

Stack Tennessee Walker Gelding For llie· 1988 Cutla11 Calais,
Eight Veara Old, Sound and a quad •· bad head golkot or hlld,
Oaod Riding Horae; One Stan· $350, 814-241-2gal.

720 Tl'ucks for Sale

6 I 7
998542

•QJ973

VIckie, 61....a-21197.

horse mara, aorrtl color, aacldle

Eut

• 9

Soulb

-

14 .,_,
11 Acltor

11 Aot ...

3
9 A 1C 10 3

ctpttd Stirling Friday At 4 P.U. Credit Problema? We Can Help.
Hauling Available, All Consign· Easy Bank Financing For Uaacl
mentl Welcome. 614·502-2322, Veh1cles, No Turn Downs, Call

Five year old AOHA. Quarter

lluon,WV

·--34118.

es, Meadows. Hilla, Wooda Roacl
Fronlage S25.000 lola Alto
Available In Jackson, Ross, Pike,
Athans, Scioto Counties . land
Contracts. 3% Cuh Discount
Anthony Land Co., Lid ., 1·800·

41 o Houses for Rent

and Much More.

(11·)-10

con&lt;IIIOn,814-885-311117.

HUNT THE
SPECIAL 01' THE WEEK
In Meigs County, lot 18, 20 Acr·

RENTALS

OIH.I-o607.

3 I To I I HP In SIOCk. 7.5% Fhoed ture, electronlct, computer~ etc.
Rate Avaitable With John O.ere
IIARY K COSMETICS·Pall)' Lea, . Credit Approval. Carmichael's br FBI, IRS, DEA. Available rour
Mary I( Beauty Consultant. 30"· Farm &amp; Lawn, Glll""lla, OH 81•· arta now. Call 1·100·513·4343
E~. 5·9368 .
1575--2848.
•.S·W2, 1-800·59o4·1111.
1980 ·1 990 Carl For $100111
!.Iovino Sale From 10 am 10 5 pm 630
Livestock
So~ad And Sold
Saturday November 15. Located
Locallr This Month.
11 7• Mill Creek Rd, Galllpolla: Athens liwtstack Sales : Spelcal
Tructc.s, ~114'1, Etc.
Oak Enltrtalnment Center, lon· Fall F"der Call Sale: Saturday,
1-1!00·522·2730, X31101.
gerbt.lrgar Ba•Qia, Cats Meows. Nowember 15th, 1 P.M. Cat~e Ac·

I ancl 2 bedroom apertnlnta, fur· GOOD USED APPLIANCES
nlshed and unfurnished, securtty Washers, dr~en, relrigiratort,
deposit required, no pets, 151~· rangeo. Skagga Applloncao, 71
VIM Slrlll, Coli 814··41·7398,
992·2218.

Call For Free Maps • Owner Fl·
nancing lnlo. Ta'"' 10% 011 LIIIO&lt;I
Ptiees On Casn Plnthaltll

Wooded Building Lots. Some Ra-&amp;triction, Located Rear SL At 850,
Leu Than 1, YIIe From 4 lane,
Call Allor 5 P.M. 81ol-441-0541..

875-1015.

814-385-4367.

80 Day Guarantee!
Two miles outside ol Rutland on ;raton,
French City Maytag, 1"·""8·
Cremeens Rei., IWO t.choom, total 77V5.
·~tr~. 81 .. 742·28C3.
AuorteG misc. household turni·

440

Like new 8fother word proc~aaor
w/sepat'lltt monitor. $100. 8#4·

Mobile home site ••liable between Athen1 and Pomeroy, call

..... Bl •·992·5851.

8385.

S0.-875-1858.

We.t
•KQJ52
• Q J.
• 7 6 4
.. 4 2
lloath
• A 4

.41~··
olw'al

..

+ . A Q J 53
6 A 10 B 5

~g

Aid 111 to Pu;rla • llillllll

.......... oil

17 Gulclo'lhlgh

• 7

••.ooo,

e,4·992·28171Y1f11ngo.

r.1ERCHANDISE

mills, ikt,_, 61H•2-1800.

lawn. Vent frH gaa heaters, PfO· 8 So11y Is For Sale: ~~~Com·
pane &amp; natural gaa, on ule now. aro T·Topa, PW, PO, Mual Set
Sldefa Equlpment304~75-742t .
To Ma... OIIor. 81•...a-aa«.
Gordono,
0. N~ .• Bl4· N
317·7884.
·
ft Farm•r• Union Tobacco A Need A Car? No Credll, Bad
Warehouse Ripley, OH. Ia re· CrHit Bankruprcy, We Can Help
JET
ceiYin; tobacco now. 1st Sale ReEstablish Credit, Mutt Malee
AERATION MOTORS
Nov. 24111 1887. CoiiiOIIIraa 1· $150 Weekly Take Home, Down
Ropolred, Now &amp; Rolouln In Slodl. 8111·B••·•3BS Ilk lor Orville Parmenu Aa Low At set. To ·
Cd Ron Evan' 1~537·8528.
Whllten or calt Edlaon Maye• at OuaHiy For Thlt Bank Financing,

large business apace tor rent or
lease, great IIOrtlront ancl windows, wheelchair acce11lble, 204
North Secohd Avenue, Middleport. Contact Chrlaty, 814·G92·
'514 days, leave me11age or

no

I ::~:::::~~~~~~~
Hydraulic oil-lowest price In

11-14-t'l

10 9 I

Hue Deed, Crept With Plate At
Hope Mausoleum, In Memorl1t

460 Space tor Rant

qulred. 300-875-10711.

Two bedroom trailer far rent in

Home in coun1ry with 38 acres,
only 1 years old, ~ 1t h two bed·
rooms, livmg room. kitchen bath,
utility room, storage building, wirh
cellar, one car garage. located
on Ba1iey Run Road, 81h house on
lett. Reduced $65,000 firm, call
614-384-2097 or 614·949·2838.

- . , , Naed Tunod? en "'"
pin) Dr. 814-~-4525

hook-upo. Call aller 2:00p.m.,
304·n3·5651, Maoon wv.

Space For Rant,

Trailer In Tuppers Plains, $200
,.r month plus depoall &amp; uliltift,

Four bedroom hou1e, one bath, $20,000, ., 4-245-9033.
living room, kitchtn, utility room,
dining room, unattached single
BAUNERLANP
car garage, near Pomeroy on At.
114-775ot113
33; mtd Menties, 614-376-7814.

852-3826 Leave information &amp;

Phitllpo,\81 ~-'192-85711.

nlahed, $200 Dtpool~ S2751Mo.,
Ovenooklno Beoutilu~ ONa River,

Barns, l'and, - · s•••.9oo

Acreage for Sale: BlackiDp Road
Frontage Green Twp. Gallipolis
City Schools, Price Starting AI

WANTED : Reliable e11parienced
green house worker. Call 304-

'up,.......&amp;-1311 .

2 Bedroom Trailer Partially Fur·

Raclrw, 614-1182-5030.

Valley Btook Concrete &amp; Supply,
Inc. lain need al a Bookkeeper,
receptionist 11 our Robertaburg,
WV planL Thit ia a part·time po·
slbon to start, full·time aa netd·
ad. Responsibilities include: ac·
caunt1 payable, accounts re·
ceivabla, typing, filing, customer
eanlact and scheduling. Comput·
er praliciency needed in word
proce•ling snd spreadsheet. Ell·
parltnce pralel'1'ed, but not nee·
eaury-looklng lor good positive
anituclt and personality. Will
train the right indiYidual to join
our growing company, ApP*icants
ma,- apply in l)efson at our Stale
Route 82, Roberllburg, WV (UalanJPutnam Co. line) location
lrom 9:00a.m.-4:00p.m. the week
ol 11117197. No Phone Calls
Pleall.

Qrubb'a Plano- tuning &amp; repelra.

Slaepin~ rooms with cooking .
Also 1r11ltr 1pace on river. All

suoo

a.6·83118.

ralerer.:ft twllabla, 2 years old

no pets. 304-GJS.-«178.

Trailer for sale with lot on Condor· 2 Bedfoom Trailer 12'115' Elec:lrk:
Street in Pomeroy, 2 bedroom, toOn One Acre Ronred Lo~
tal elecrrlc, trailer needs some re- Rt2PlPieOaanU14,.._1757.

Call Marie For Api)Ointmeot, 614·

Babrllllln(lln my ,...,. In

2 Bedroom uoller f2751dopooll,

S275tmo. Rtftrencll required,

1CIQ8 Plymoulh Neon, red with
grar Interior, twa door, 15,000

:~

.,.. _

12 . . . .

10ft'""· ...

~

1WWI...t
IC', . .

11c-.l
Ellf! IJ.Xtnl money lor Chtistmaa,
81&lt;-9-0G-90011.

~

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

Holl'lll for Sale

$2001Mo., Include• Waler, 1100

Dopolil, 5 Mlloo 1111 .. 0. Sreto
Roult 218, 81•·258·878~. a••·
258· 1337.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobllt hotMa
t2B0·$300, ltwer, water and
nth includod, 114-tti2-2187.
2 Bedroom mobile hame, lurnialled or unrurnlahed, depoalt,

2

ulllllltl plr!lolly ,..ld, 304-6758512.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, 81"·
-~9 .

maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156.
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your ingratiating manner will win
. you the respect_ of your. pe~rs !odar.
You will take ume to hsten lo the1r
problems and help resolve them.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
' Avoid wasting your time and efforts
• • • • • • • • • · on insignificant projects 1oday. Your
attitude and skills arc at a peak, so
Saturday, Nov. 1.5, 1997
don't think small .
In the year ahead, it is likel~ !hal
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
you'll do better in joint endeavors Today you could be fonunatc ~t
1han you would In solo involvements. things that have sliaht elements of
Deltl'llline 1111 1 ror yourself and work chance. However, this doean't give
In 11'011 where the odds arc favonlble. you license to bet on a pic-in-the-sky.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Oivc
SCORPIO (Ool, 2Hiov. 22)
Cmfully awdy any Investment pro- · priority to matters that are financ.ialIJC*)s brottJhl to )'au today, espe- ly significanl today. Lady Luck rruaht
olally tholll thai 1n1 ~!tiding !Uson· be in the' mood to help you close them
IIIla ro11m11 ~ ht11t 1 chance for out to your Satisfaction.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) VenIJ'OWih. Kt!ow Whert to look for
tures you. porsonally direct have
10f1W1C0 . 1!111_ 1DII'IJ lind it, The
Mtro-Onph "'llllhmakcr instandy · strong probabilities for suc:ccss today.
...mb wbiQh alp•llll' romantically Do not abdiCIIe YDID' poll or Jet the
~for you. Mill $2.7.5 to Match·
controiS'Siip throu-" your fingers.
TAURUS (April 20-May . 20)

Financial prospects look encoui-agina
today, but if you reap gain 1, it may be
due more to the efforts o ·associales
than your contributions.
GEMINI (May 21-J,me 20) If
anl';onc has the whercwit1alto make
the11 liopes reali!ies !odi,f, it'~ you.
Be the dreamer who us.•s practical
procedures to isolate yout objectives.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) This
could be one of those days where the
harder you work, the luckier you get.
Establish meaningful goals and pur·
sue them with vigor and intelligence.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do nol
play a loner's role today if you're
involved in somethina with great
potential benefits. Share your cxpectQtions with deserving 'friends.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22) You
could be in for a pleuant surprise
· today rcaarding your career. A sitUa·
lion thai had a dismal slirt might like
1 turn for the better; be l'elldy.
LIBRA (Sejil. 23-0ct. 23) I)Q not
make hasty judgments reaarding critical matters today. When you take
time to study the facts, you'll act
wisely and derive desirable results.

•
I

•

�Along the R1ver

..
.....

OCTOBE.R IS
.
-.fi.H
--~
..
:III.H
IAN
CHEVY· TRUCK -MONTH· -• .....
ltlllc.al
AT C &amp; ~ 0 MOTORS!
CHECK OUT THE SAVINGs·
1'998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB 414
'MI·'

.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance~ Package and Morel

AS
LOW

AS

1998CHEvY

S-)10

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and lticreased Horse Powerll

A$
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEAl ER

1998 CIIEVY s~·l 0

EXTENDED CAB
Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheels, LS Packag~,
AM/FM RadiCV, 1W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
LOW
••

t

•

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

998 CHEVY BLAZE
4 WHEEL DRIVE

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

••n••

AU PRICES JNCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OA
UCENSE FEES.

By JIM. FREEMAN
Tlm11 Sentinel Steff
LANGSVILLE- Anglers along Leading Creek in Meigs County repo.rt
that fishing on the stream is beuer lhan ever. according lo a Southern Ohto
Coal Company representative.
The report by Dave Wright. SOCCo supervisor of environment and land,
comes after a directive by the Ohio Environmental Protection Asency to the
coal company ordering it to develop by January a plan to clean up the creek
anc! one of its tributaries.
ln,.l.993, SOCCo pumped about I billion gallons of acidic water into the
cteek'!s 'from a coal mine that flooded on July II, 1993. The wau:r wiped out
aquatic life in the streams, prompting an outcry from environmental interests. The company agreed to pay S2.5 million in fines and civil penalties to
be used in restoration.
.
.
Wright spent several days recently interviewing anglers ~~ ni.ne points
along Leading Creek from Parker Run near Dexter to 1he Ohto Rtver.
Fishenncn· report catching while bass. suckers, sauger, rreshwater drum, .
largemouth and smallmouth bass, bluegill, Clllp and several species of cal-

News Watch
Environmental
officials await
results of tests.

ST. ALBANS
RT. 80 MacCORKLE
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM
OPal I A.M. TO 8 RM.

&amp; LEXUS

Vol. 32, No . 40

than before the 1993 mine pumping for two reasons: the mine is pullins more
treated water into the stream. allowing a year-round flow. and the big floods .
over the past three years or so have scoured the sediment out of the stream.
Don Neal of Lang~ville told Wright that regulators should listen to the
people who use the stream.
"The creek is full of fish," he said.
Claire Might, who lives along the creek ncar Middleport, said the problem with the stream now isn't what SOCCo put into it in 1993, but the sill
in lhe streams.
"We should wort on the sill problem if we want to improve the stream."
he said. "Every time it floods it moves the sand from one place to another.
There might be a water hole here this year, and the winter/spring Ooods moves
sill into the hole next year."
He said he has found clams at several Leading Creek locations, but added
that the sand covers them from on_c year to the next.
Local residents blame the silt problem on erosion from surface mines abandoned in the 1940s and 1950s.
(Continued on A2)

A Times-Sentinel exclusive
fish, alsO lots of turtles, pickerel, crappie, hybrid striped bass and even a
mu•kie or two, accordins to Wright's repon.
Most of lhe people Wright interviewed said the fishing is just' as good, or
bener than ever. He said the company has stocked mussels in the creek, but
no fish.
Rick Miller of Dayton said he makes several trips each year to the Leading Creek/Parker Run area.
"ll's real simple, the fishin! is bener here than anywhere ... around Dayton," Iii: reported. "Fishing is as good today as it's ever been."
Miller said on one trip 10 Parker Run he caught 15 bass all measuring ISinches-long or so, and on another occasion he caught -30 bluegill, mosl of
which were 8-10 inches in length. saying they were the largest he has caught
anywhere.
· Glen Crisp of Langsville told Wright he feels the stream is beuer today

HMC looks to finish
ambulatory surgery
ur-it by e·nd of 1998

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
By JENNIFER RICHTER
-Environmental officials in three
Tiiiiii-Sentlnel Steff
stales say it will be next spring
GALLIPOLIS -An $11 million Ambulatory Surgery Unit project is
before they learn what a testing
expected to begin this week at HolzerMedical Center after a Friday groundprogram will reveal about pollution
breaking ceremony.
risks in the area.
Community members: administration. staff and foundation represenlatives
The executive steering commitgathered for the brief ceremony that will kick off the year-long project
tee of the Tri-State Geographic IniCharles I. Adkins Jr., president and chief executive officer of HMC, opened
tiative mel with the public for the · the ceremony by welcoming all the guests. Adkins said thallhe new addi·
first time in 18 months Thursday
tion lo the hospital facility will include offices, patient care areas and a basenight for a briefing on the pro~s
ment that will he filled with materials, management and support staff.
of the multimillion-dollar effort.
"It's a ~ pleasure to gel this project ofT the ground and ·gel il started,"
Members said It would be at
sllid Adkins. "Thiont it~ ~'!ins to be atlS'1JI1nl Hkeit around.' · -least next spring before they know
Adkins added that the $11 million project will be futuristic. ~ntaining
the results of the initiative's first
the latest technological advances and newest staff ll'ainint available.
phase: cvalyating the air quality in
"This projec\is work.ilig for the beltennent oflhe"people in the area," said
the Catlettsbura·Kenova reaion.
_.
Adkins.
The data will come in pan from
.: One '?f the major driving forces behind this project, Dr. John Viall, said
2,500 air samples collected during
he is happy that the prqje&lt;;t is finally getting staned after a three-year push
one year of monitoring at seven
by himself and a core gf9Up'Of comminee members.
locations in the "Kenova cluster"
"Things like this happen very rarely." said Viall. "I feel honored to at least
at a cost of S1.28 million. A conbe playing a role in it This facility will serve our patients and the needs of
tracto~ is currently in the process of
our community."
.
fonnulaling a risk assessment
"You need lo build on what you already have," said Viall. "I believe this
repon from those samples.
·will he an absolutely beautiful structure to not only look at, bul wort in."
Wlii:re possible, the initiative
Three years ago. a comminec of doctors, nurses, staff and ho$pital adminwill try to identify which of the 42
istrators besan meeting 9n a monthly basis to decide cxac'tly what they want·industries in the study area produce
ed from the proposed project
·
the risk-causing chemicals.
After gelling together to discuss ideas. the committee began 10 meet week- ·
The initiative is a cooperative
ly staning in February of this year. Currently. all the pre-construction is comeffon of Kentucky, West Virginia
plete. including an access road and site evaluation.
.and Ohio environmental agencies, . President of Holzer C:linic, Dr. Craig Strafford. explained that this prothe three U.S. EPA regions ·in
ject is happening because e~crynnc ha' worked as a team, meaning Togethwhich they arc located, and local· er Everyone Accomplishes Something.
govemmenlal and environmental
He added thai Holzer \s concerned with three main aspects of health care,
agencies.
cost, quality and access and that with lhis new ambulatory unitlhesc aspects
The study area includes Boyd
can be mel like never hcf.pre.
1,.and Greenup counties in KenThc final speaker. Phil Bowman. chairman of the Holzer Hospital Fountucky. Wayne and Cabell counties
daiion. said. "We have all looked forward lo this day. This will be a signifin West Virginia, and Scioto and
icant compte x."
Lawrence counties in Ohio.

\

......

'

..

.. • ... ,-

1

PROJECT KICKS OFF - Charlea I. _Adklna Jr., president end
cht.f executive otllcar of Holzer Medical Canter, eddre11ed the
community and hospltelateff at Friday's groundbreaklng for the
$11 million ambulltory surgery unit at HMC. The unit is achedulld for 1 December 1998 opening•
Bowman added that it was fiuing that the groundhreaking be happening
during the 25 year anniversary of HMC's Jackson Pike location.
"Togelher with the clinic, we will never stop moving forward;· said Bow-

man.
This project is scheduled for completion in Dccem'hcr 199R. Those in
. charge of the project arc architectural finn Design Group Inc., Hcapy Engi·
nccring and.Stockmeislcr Enlerprises Inc .. will be in charge of construction.
The project manager is Paul Green.

•

Good Morning
Today'a Cltim ~
17 Sections· 1

liCk Andenop
BobWccdv
Mike Loomtl
SamWU.On
JimSands
;.;"'-.1

AND

Gal lipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· November 16 , 1997

EPA, coal ·compan_
y differ on creek evaluation

. __ _;;;Ohio;;;
-

MOTORS TOYOTA

Details on
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Columns

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l'lol&gt;lldlln Co.

6th District nomination hopeful
says he's offering an alternative
"'

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme•Santinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Mike Azinger
knows there arc conservatives such as
himself seeking the Republican nomination for the Sixth Congressional
District next year, but says he's an
alternative to the apparent front-runners.
"We're finding that wherever we
go, there i_s support out there for such
an allemalivc," Azingcr said during
a recent slop in Gallipolis. "'llterc is
broad suppon for the candida!cs, but
not deep support."
Azingcr is one of four in tl\c GOP
who have announced they arc in the
running for the nomination to oppose
incumbent Rep. Ted Strickland. 0Lucasville.
•.
Fonner Rep. Frank Cremean·s of
Gallipolis announced his candidacy'
. last summer, as did Lt. Gov. ".~ancy
Hollister, the ex-Marieua mayor.

Azingcr·s announcement of his bid
was soon followed by the entry of
Tom Sharpe of Belpre. a faculty
member at Washington Stale Community College.
Azinger, ·a Parkersburg. W.Va.,
native. now resides in Marieua and
said he entered the race because the
national issues thai have become pan
of the Sixth District's concerns "arc
a real interest of mine.
"I want to he pan of the national
· dialogue, to stand up for what I
believe in and have an influence on
the country," said Azinger. 32, who
has-qxnted the Azinger-Fiuro Insurance Agency in Vienna, W.Va., for
the past five years.
The bigger issues Azinger feels
affect people in the 14-county Sixth
Dislricl are taxes and education.
"I strongly support flat lax, but
be happy with a national sales
tax," he said. "The most important

ra

a

' thing in education is parental involve·
menl and local. instead of federal.
control of education, lo allow deci·
sions to be made on the local level,
not because of a mandate."
The problem of name recognition
is one Azinger and his brother Dave.
who serves as his campaign manager, compensates for with furious
grassroots stumping throughout the
district. ·
"Our intention is to meellhc people," the candidate said.
"The kind of campaign we' re
going to run is ~ol a top-down, money machine campaign," Dave
Azinger noted. "We will raise money and·do some advenising. but you
won 't see that until the end of the
campaign. because we t!on 't want 10
forget about the people."
Mike Azinger said that while Cremeans is known for his conservative
stance, and Hollister is perceived as

Mike Azlnger
moderate. he feels the overall political sentiment in the district is conservative "and they arc seeking
another candidate."
That's a bill A&gt;.ingcr believes he
can fill, as evidenced by a campaign
card in which he introduces himself
as "the one to beat Ted Strickland:'

Official
count will
·determine
outcome
of 1 race
By BRIAN J. REED
Times·Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY -A township truslcc
race will be closely watched when the
Meigs. County Board ·or Elections
conducts its Official count on Tuesday.
.
That official count will include the
hallots cast at the Meigs County
Board of Elections by rcgislcn:d voter.; who moved into Meigs County
after the deadline fur changes in voter status.
According to Jane Frymyer,
Deputy Din.'ctnr of the Meigs County Board of Elections. M9 of these
··provisional ballots"' will he counted
&lt;in -Tuesday along with the official
count of all ballots cast in the gcnc~­
al election. Absentee ballots were
counted on -election night.
Provisional ballots aro ca't during
the absentee voting period. 35 days
prior to lhc clcclion. They arc u.&lt;cd hy
pcople .who have moved into a new
precinct, either from one Meigs
County precinct to an01hcr, or into
Meigs County from another county in
.Ohio where they wen: previously registered to vote. All but I 0 of these
provisional ballots were cast at
polling places. The remaining 10
were cast at the board of elections
office.
Frymycr said that the ball01s are
held until lhe official count so that
board staff can verify residence. The
I board of cleclioos sends non-forIwardable verification cards to those ·
·casting the provisional balloiS, and ·
coofinn prior registration with boards '
of elections in other countic.~.
_
In Bedford Township. only one:
vote separates two candidates, David··
Bricklcs and Virgil King from a scat,
on tbe board of trustees. Rohcn •
Hawk wa.~ the top 'VOle geucr in the :
township, with 227 V&lt;"cs. Bncklcs is :
lhe apparent winner of the second '
scat on the board, with 149 votes.
However, King received 148 votes,
with nine valid provisional ballots yet
lo be counted in Bedford Township.
A founh candidale, Jack R. Wells,
received 133 votes.
If the official count results in a difference of one or two votes between
Brickles and King, an automatic
recount will he held, and the dale and
time for that recount will be determined at the official count on Tuesday.
Frymycr said that an automatic
recount is held any lime lhe difference belwcen a declared winner and
(Continued on A2)

Tax credit prograllJ aimed at.reducing cost of higher education ..
By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannatt Newt SlrYIGe
WASHINGTON --A rnew federal aid prosnun taking effect Jan. I
could shave $1,500 off tuition -for
many students auending Marshall
University.
The Hope SCholarship, enacted as
plrl of the balanced budset bill
passed in August, pro~tdes financtal

aid in the fonn of w. credits . •
Eligible w.payers receive a credit equal to 100 percent of the first
$1,~ of tuition and fees and 50 percent of the second $1,000. That
would cut the $2, 184tuitiori for some
Marshall students to $684.
Jack Toney. Marshall's director of
financial aid, said about 55 perant of
the 13,000 students enrolled at lite

Huntington C\llllpus receive some . the first two years of college and to · are eligible for this tax credit, " Kar- sludenls in the next five years and a
form of student financial aid.
le! said. "It's a real benefil, but a lot total of 5.8 millioo students 1ICI'OSS the
fees paid after Dec. 31.
This year, Marshall students
nation .
Tuition fees at Marshall are nor- of parents don't realize this yet."
received about $36 million in aid mally due in mid-December, but
The tax credit is phased out for
Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va., said
from stale, federal, private and Herbert Karlel, vice prc5ident of two-income
families
earning U.S. Department of Education statiswork/study prosrams.
finance at Marshall. said the univer- $80,000-$100.000 annually and sin - tics sh&lt;)w that West Virginia ranks
"This is going to help our middle- sity will ~eept payments after Dec. gle-income lllxpayers in the $40,000- 45th among all slates in the percentand upper-income rarnilies. and that's 31.
$50.000 ran2e.
age of stu~nts graduatin1 from high
good news." Toney said.
In West Virginia, the Hope tax · school and going to colleJ!e.
"We want to make absolutely cerThe program applies to students in tain that our students and their parents credit is expected to benefit 35.000
.(Contlnuad on A2)

r

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