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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, .OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, Fetwuary 4, 1t88

Ohio Lottery

Conservationist lists 10 rules of fish pqnd management
have had a chance to spawn. Under bulletins or agricultural and wildlife
By PATTY DYER, f
normal conditions, they will spawn agencies.
District Couervatlonist
GALLIPOLIS - Despite the cold the second summer after they have
8) Adequate vegetative cover
been
stocked.
should be maintained on the waterand rainy weather this is an excellent
3) Fish the bluegills hard. Take out shed to .prevent turbid, silty water.
time to check the condition of your
9) If muddy water persl!\s for long
pond. How· is it holding us to the at least a dozen bluegills for each
.
recent rains? Ase the spillways func- bass.
periods of following heavy rains, use
4) Don't throw any bluedis back, gypsum or hydrated lime to clear it
tioning properly? Is there brush and
trees growing on the dam that need even little ones.
up. Follow Ohio Pond Management
5)
Never
let
livestock
wade
in
the
removed? Are tbere appropriate safety devices near the pond and clearly pond, nor trample the edges.
6) Do not plant aquatic vegctatinn
visible?
of
any
kind in the pond; it may. lend
The 10 commandments of Fish
to an unbalanced fish population and
Pond Management are as follows:
I) Do not put fish, of any kind, a serious weed controt problem.
7) If a serious weed problem .
into the pond ucept those you get
,
develops,
consult Extension pond
from the hatchery.
2) Do not fish for bass until they

bulletin for recommendations,
I0) Proper fertilization may be a
good management tool if intensive
pond management and production is
desined. It is not a recomme!llled
practice for this area due to the li~t­
ural fertility of our soils and the
accompanying weed problems which
usually result from added fertility.

I

.. Farmers face challenges
, .pARRE, Vt. (A~) - .That even a on aquaculture and exporting goat
. single farm' remams m Vermont
speaks ,volumes about the perseverance of the state's farmers.
These are tough times for farmers,
especially dairy farmers. Yet there
was no hint of that walking through
ihe.Vermont Farm Show in Barre last
week.
.
People were upbeat and the signs
of the resilience of farmers were
everywhere.
There was the llama at the
entrance; the booths hawking meat
from emu, ostrich and rhea as "a red
can live with"; the seminars

genetics .
Dairy is still king, of course, and
Venriont's dairy farmers work long
and hard to carve out a living. But
more and more farmers are finding
ways to supplement dairy or even to
survive without cows1 continuing a
pr&amp;ess that began before there was
even ~ Vermont.
.
The story of farming in Vermont
-and in many other of the nation's
farm· ·States - is one of constant
change. The emu is merely the latest
in a list of products that began with
potash.

•

tllagistrate ·

31 Chrus fru"
32 Johnny34 !lravol, ·at bullfighli

35Snup
38 VIOlin nime '
40 cli)ning
41 Tourisfs need
42 Play boisterously
44 Sketched
45 New: prefl1c
47-AviY
49 Direction indicator
52 Ulce cOllege wa!fs

Ag department
to revise rules

EARNS EXCELLENT RA11NG ·The Gallia Soil and Water ConIII'VBtlon Dlstrlet received en Excellent Service Award rating at
the s3rd Ann1111l Meeting of the Ohio Federation of Solland Water
Coni8Mitlon Districts held Jan. 16-18,1n Columbua. The award
1a a part of the Distinctive Service Goodyear ConaervatiOI'I Award
Profilram. Lawrence Burdall (right) who Ia presently aervlng gas
Supervisor for the Gallla Soli an,:l Water Conservation District,
received the award from Federation President Gary Mast.

54 Peril
56 Help In wrongdoing
so Mnk por1ion
61 Cooks in oil
62 Not at al spicy

WASHINGTON (AP) - Meats
labeled Choice and Select may never be the same. ·
Starting July I , the Agriculture
Department will revise rules for

63 A cosmetic
65 Feel poorly
66 Baby honiea
67 Sandwich spreads
66 Ffexlble lube

,..·-F.arm, business briefs-.., · ~~~;~ofcarcassbeefandslaughter
Continued from D·l

No-till meeting set Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil land Water Conservation District
will sponsor a no-till meeting at the C. H. McKenzie Ag Center
Tuesday, Feb. 6, from 12 noon until 5 p.m.
· Ray Adamski, Knox County Crop Consultant and Bob Hen(\ershot,
area resource conservationist with the natural resources Conservation
service, will be guest speakers.
Those planning to attend have been asked to contact the Gallia
S&amp;WCD office at446-8687.

Tree sale underway
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia Soil and Water ConserVation District tree
sale is in full swing. All products are selling quickly. Colorad'o blue
spnili~ are already sold out.
.
Residents have unul March 22 to place theJ£ orders.
For more information on obtaining an order form residents may call
the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation DistriCt at 446-8687 or stop
by the office at Ill Jackson Pike, Suiic I 569:

: 'From AP, Stiff Reports

69~8C8p

The department's Agricultural
Marketing Service said carcasses 30
to42monthsofage-knownas"B"
maturity·- with small or slighl marbling degrees will be removed from
Choice and Select grades and i~clud­
. ed in the Standard gradiY.
Lon Hatamiya, administrator of
. the marketing service, said the change
is being made at the request of the
National Cattlemen's Association.
"The 'B' maturity carcasses often
vary in palatability, which contributes
significantly to inconsistency of eating quality of beef in the Choice and
Select grades,·· the service said in an
announcement. "Although cattle in
these grades makes up only a small
percentage of the U.S. fed beef sup- ·
ply, their variability can contribute
significantly to overall consumer dissatisfaction with beef."

.

70 One-- million
7101dll~
lniiDJIIIfll(

72 Perforation
. 73 Crude dwafllng

74 Got up
76 WOven fabric
76 .Sdlooner part
79Wise
80 Sharpened

81 Harvest goddess

· Temperatures at the Meigs County Emergency Services office in
,Pomeroy dipped to 7 below Sunday as the area r'emained.in the grip of an
• U'cdc air mass.
·
The l,ow temperature overnight was 2.2 below.
. No cold-related injuries were repoqed.
About 1,160 Ohio Power customers in Sutton Township, including the
4;0mmunitics of Racine, Syracuse and Minersville were left without electricity
]or little more than an hour Sunday morning,.according to Ron McDade, Ohio
1'owcr1Columbus Southern Power manager.
1'1111 outage was due to an overload, McDadnxplained. ,
• In tlddition, CSI' customers in the Forest Run/Nease Settlement area were
:without electticity for a short time early Saturday momi!'g after a ·truck
spreadina salt and cinders knocked down a transmission line.

PIJ!!SENTED CER11FICATE • A 'Certificate of Achievement"
was jmtaented recently to David Mills, president of the Gallla
County Junior Fair Board, for the completion of a succeull,ll1 DIS
flllr. Fred L•.Dalley,left, Ohio Department of Agriculture, made the
presentation to Milia, prealclent of the Gallia County Agrlcultur·
at Society during the 1996 Ohio Fair Managara Convention In
Columbus last month.

.

82 Part of the leg
83 Warsaw native

84 Kettle
85 Sal~ng vessel

88 -deforce
89 Place for a
horsashoa
90 Tweezers·fike

Instrument
94 Adhesive
95 Newt

96 Legal wrong •
97 Private rooms

98 Estuary
99 Cin:fe part
·100 Flighua,&amp; bild

105 Rapid-

. 107 F011118rty, formerly
108 Kind of probe
109 Charged partlclee
110 "Jane-·
111 London's river
113 Musty

114 House made of ice
and snow
1f5 Ve&amp;BIIl for dye
117 FlOp

118 The Beehive Slate
119 Simpleton
Patanl

124 Minus
126 Sheer
128 Prilon ollicer
132 Mil. addr.
.. ; 133Toaild, 134 African plant
. 135 Complete
139-Baba
140 At no time
142 Apportion
144 Nol hollow

145findl
147 Ms. Cara
148 Sc:oundref
149 Govemail .
150 Mountain ~
151 w.. coriceined
152 Tic ,
153 -and llrlfiea
154Wallca UvOugh
.'

water
DOWN
1 Breakfast meat
2Escape

3 FatheJS
4 Untted
5 Spread to dry
6 "Mask" star
7 "Zhivago" name
8 Eye part
9 Makes ready
11) Solar or Dewey
decimal: abbr.

11 Divide
12 Law breakers
13 Hoarfrost
• 14 Friend: Fr.
.,
15 Parill's subway
16 ·--Birdie"
17 Actor Steiger
18 Specialtermlnology
19 •t ·cannot --lie"
20 Snooze
30 Ptvcfous stone
310rdinance
33 Addlllonallhlngs
36 Helen of•
37 Mool
39 Glove size: abbr.
40 Pea soup
.43 Pltl&amp;bwgh player
44 P11811811 away
46C48 Fond du-, Wise.
49 Be in store lor
50 River In Gelmany
51 Take hasy
53 Despicable

54 Thin coin
55 Overact

57-Roulle
58 Rub out
59 Domesticated
61 - up (spoils)

82 Shqpplng center
84 Marina creature:
2wds.

88FioS
67 Connect
68 Mammoth
72 Very small meaaure

.73 Game period

.

Human Resource Investment Council, and serves as the governor's
&lt;;lirector of cabinet.
She oversees the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, the Ohio
DepartmenJ of Agricult~. as well as
the Governor's Office of Appalachia,
the Ohio Coal Development Office,
and the Office of Housing and Com:munity Partnership.
· In addition, she is the primary
iarchitect of Jobs Bill III, the state's
t newest economic stimulus package
ithat especially targets distressed
fl!. i-Gft
:viljftl)Vic&amp;
htrban anci'rural areas. It is the first of
1
ippOialllllllier directoi: or the Goverits kind in Oliio history. ·
'i!!C'sPJilce of Ajlpalachia, where she
Nancy and Jeff, her husband of 25
llWia&amp;M ''tctmomic development,
years, reside in Marietta. There are
fllililinl ·i!'4 pplicy issues for 29
six membel'$ in the immediate Hol~~counties, including ~
lister family: Jonathan and--his wife,
Meip.
Lanie, Jeremy, Justin, Emily and
~ncy Hollister
Working with state agencies to
·Kate.
link needed services to the
The dinner will be held from 5·
Appalachian region, she developed nities and supported local education 8:30p.m. in the high school cafetekeY CCOQOmic development packages and heallh programs.
ria. Tickets are available from RepubAs lieutenant governor, Hollister lican Central Committee·members.
thlll i~ job training opportu-

76 Slam
79 Chimney dirt
82 Furniture Hem

Meat varie1y

84 Juan - de Leon
85 Outpouring
86 Storch or Hagman
87' Entertainment
awaRI ·

88 MofaJS
89 Not give a 90 Engaged In
swordplay
91 Actor Flynn
92

Ube,_.,

instrument
93 Authority: hyph. wd.
96 Throw
97 Twofold
101 Man at bat
.;
I02 lncfl!lelf to believe. ' ' ·
103 Colorful filh
:;:
106 Neighbor of'Cal.
,
107 Righlleu bild
108 Begln:.2 wds.
'•
109 - Stravinsky
&gt;•

V

112,CiassWied Rems

.

&lt;'
.,: .

113 Holy woman: abbr.
114 Acl1861 Lupino
f 16 Mr. Httchcock
118,Westem.lndian
120 PradaiQ!Y blld
121 Crazed
122 Musical drama
123 Relocation
piOfesalonill
f25 Ries high
127 Tribal emblem
129 Ventured
130 Best pari
131 DI'MUCI to the134 Seaweed
136 Stew pot
137 RoW
138 Says further
141 Dir. letters
143 Cut off -'
144 Upperclassmen:
abbr.
1,45 Pen:eived
. 148 Period

Political leaders gauge impact
~~ Riffe, legislator indictments

r}

( :
:;. ;·

COLUMBUS (AP) -

financial Information
8Qught from ·farmers
. WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. ·; 'Agriculture qepa'rtment is aho~t to
' i take the financial temperature of
American fanilers.· ·
·Over the·· next three months,
' ' 20i000of!he nation's 2 million farm- ,
er. and rallchers wjll be ask~d·
dcitailed questions about their operaJ tions by the department's Agricultural Statistics Service.
J ":By,,&amp;J!Ilnding a~ut an ,llour with
, i ~ibnal&lt;intervtewer, producers
, 'flU 'llf! '-itl¥ing an important c:ontri:
Mil!.' IQ thO overall ~If~ of the
' '\1.~. e;rieuliural cOiilmul)ity," the
1 ~ slid ,In ~ ~tement.
j JftfOflltlllon jlii~ in the survey
. will be ·liMcf to develop and Q,djuat
' ·. : J~ proarams;. set ·pro4u\ruon'cost
) .,.,tlmat91. frOIII !Which Pf1W81D sup- .
· · p:iitS arid loans are c~ulqtod. ; asse!ls
. ? ,hOw·acm.: ~h!u)g~s are affecie,d .
~· :ttew progr:ams; and determine""""'" '
·. {~redit and GJ!I!servation I!!PI!'JI!JS ....
'
.
.

t

.

Political

leaden in the state are.already beginning to calculate how the indictments
of three lawmakers will affect this
f-'l's elections.
Democrats, who hope to recapture
die Ohio Senate, can point to two
Senate Republican leade11 who were
fOUnd guilty on Friday of misdemeanOr charges stemming from payments from lobbyists.
. Meanwhile, House Republicans
1n thrilled that none of their members faced eharges. They hope to link
the Democrats to their fonner leader,
reiired speaker Venl Riffe, who was
indicted.but plli!IS to fight the charges
in coun.
Riffe along with the two Republicans - Senile President Stanley
Aronoff &amp;1111 state Sen. Eugene Watts
....,.. were indicted for failing to repon
·1housands of dollars in speaking fees

•

from lobbyists.
~.
who
previously
Aronoff,
"Very clearly, the situation is announced he would not seek anothbipartisan," said Curt Steiner, a for- er term this year, will not be affectmer Republican political consultant ell by the political fallout in an elecand. now chief of staff for the House tion.
Republicans.
But Watts might be in f&lt;ir a fight
The lawmakers were accused of as he seeks another four ,years. He
breaking a law tha~. before 1994, faces a challenge in the Republican
allowed legislators to take the mon- .· primary, and the ethics issue will
ey but forced them to disclose pay- surely surface, said Watts' opponent,
ments over $500 from any single David Michael of Worthington.
source.
"Lawmakers h3ve a duty to live
Instead of reporting payments, by the spirit of the· laws that they
prosecutors said, lobbyists would helped make," Michael said. "When
"pancake" the money, giving law- la)Vmakers break the law, they also
makers several $500 checks that break something much more sacned .
were written by different people but - the public trust."
in reality came from the same place.
Steiner conceded that Watts is
Aronoff, of Cincinnati, pleaded most vulnerable to the ethics attack.
guilty to misdemeanor charges Fri- But he also said the issue will be offday. Watts, of Galloway, pleaded no set by Watts' record in his heavily
contest. Both said the mistakes were Republican district.
unintentional.

to leave
plan be

.r·

Several local businesses are
In a special funcf.rals·
lng project for the Meigs Branch of the American Heart Association. Gary Coleman, above, of Krogera looks over the
"hearts" to be given for a $1 donation, then personalized arid
displayed on the wall at the store.

Campaign pushes
need to embrace
healthier lifestyle
. The annual"Have a Heart:- Save a Heart" campaign is underway
several Me1gs County busmesses under sponsorship of the Meigs
County American Heart Association.
Patrons of participating businesses arc in~ited to purchase a paper
heart, put their name on it, and display it in the store where others can
see that they "have a heart."
February is American Heart Month and the American Heart Assocciation reminds individuals that heart disease is the number one cause
of death in Meigs County.
Proper medical attention, regular exercise, a diet low in fat and cholesterol, as well as no smoking all play key parts in good heart health,
Meigs Division officials advise.
·
Money from the campaign will go into the treasury of the Meigs
Branch.
Last year's funds from the Ohio Affiliate of the American Heart
Association were spent for research, 30 percent: public health education, 23 percent; professional education, I2 percent; community education, 12 percent; fund-raising, 15 percent; and management and general expenses, 8 percent.
10

.

Ohioan
first U.S. casualty of peace mission
.

'

r

are frozen - I hate it," said gas station attendant Louis Carvalho in Newark,
N.J.
"It 's like sitting in the freezer without any clothes on for an hour," said
Steve Parkansky, 25, a bartender in Rhinelander, Wis., which saw temperalures plunge Sunday to 43 below zero.
The lethal Arctic cold that plunged temperatures to recond lows in 13 states
. racked up a fresh round.oftemperature records Sunday.
·
It got down to 5 in Newark, N.J., Sunday, leading the"chairwoman of a
Polar Bear Club in nearby Glen Rock, N.J., to call off an ocean swim.
"Even I'm not that crazy," said Maria Alazarro. "It's too cold to be outside."
It was too cold in Embarass, Minn. _ 56 below _ 10 show your face.
And the minus 11 reading.in a little town in Michigan said it all.
"Hell's frozen over"
· He II , a bou t
.' sa·1·d .,.om
,, Da"·s
,, , who owns a ranc h m
an hour west of DetrOit.

chairs the state and local government
commission, co-chairs the Governor's

_ Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister will be.
. the guest speaker at the Meigs Coun- ·
. ty Republican Party's Lincoln Day
Dinner Saturday, Feb. I0 at Meigs
· High School.
. • Hollister, a descendent ofcine of
·Ohio's fi11t pioneer families, is Ohio's
·first woman lieutenant governor. ·
· •After serving on the Marietta City
.Council, she was 'ele.c;.ted mayor,
where she served from 1984to 1991.
· . As mayor,' she aided ill the cre..ation of a j~nt OhiO/Weilt Vtrginia
Jabor-~apinent couii,Cil, which
·secured ;tuncl!'lJ' fur a new multimilr•CR.·~
· . ~~~·
nw;..'~liiid
. ~~ . ~~· '. .

75 Mil. g1p. on campus
n Whistle sound

83

I

Eastern Hig!l School students missed classes for the lOth lime this win'ter due to a water line break, while other Eastern schools, and Meigs and
Southern Local schools, opened today on a one-hour delay.
Another night of single digit-lows was predicted by the National Weath-.
er Service for tonight, but a warming trend toward the 30s was in sight for
Tuesday.
·
Across the country, it was so cold...
Firefighters in Atlanta set an ice-covened hydrant ablv..e so they could fight
a house fire. High school bands were dropped from a parade in St. Paul,
Minn., so lips wouldn't freeze to brass instruments.
And in Pittsburgh, condensation from factory smokestacks combined with
temperatures of 6 below zero to produce man-made flurries in some parts of
the city. Meteorologists said the snow even showed up in satellite pictures.
"It's so cold we can't even give out the right change because our hands

Hollister will .address Meigs -Have a heart... --. ---. Voinovich
:l incoln Day·di·nner Saturday
tellsfeds·

.

R

.

.

~21

A Genllllt Co. Newtlpaper

.

·
103 Untt of weight
104 Bolger or Walston

30 Seize

35 oenlll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 5, 1996

:Arctic air mass coritinues grip on region

102 Chef

.~Poem

.

. ~-

THIS SALE IS FOR THE BIRDSII

·, ,

....

ECONOMY WILD BIRDSEED
25&amp;8•••• .
50 ll~ •••

•4''·

t.

$

99 ,

In Sarajevo today, an official with
the NATO-led Implementation Force
LAKEVIEW - Donald A. Dugan corrected a previous official statepw up just 60 miles from Dayton, ment that D~gan was killed by a land
wile~ bosnian talks produced the mine. The official, sJ!ellking on con~ accord he died enforcing.
dition of anonymity, $aid Dugan died
Dugan, 38, a Sergeant 1st Oass after he picked up a piece of ammufiom Belle Center, was the first U.S. nition from the side of the road and
IOkliertodic in actio!) sitJ9e the peace it exploded in his hands.
mission began in Bosnia.
.
There was no immediate explana. ThrouJhout the area, friends and tion for the inaccurate first account.
family remembered him as a devot•
DUgan, who was assigned to a unit
lid soldier and a fun and caring per· based in Germany, was pronounced
1011. '
.
dead a~ the 212th mobile Army sur. "He was a super guy,'' said his elt· gical hospital. The Asmy said today
wife, Betty Dugan, 37, of Lakeview, an autopsy sbowec! he died of "extenIII;IOut 10 miles west of Belle Center. sive head injuries." .
"He wu out to serve his couptry and
The autopsy report was limited to
dill's' what he did." Hiah achool the cause of dCJI,th and provided no
..., ced:e.u,the JMirrenl.illed friends information on other injuries, said
~('« clivorciaa in 1983.
Sgt. Michael Ertel, a spokesman at
Dapa waa k,illed Saturday it) . the Armv-run hospiU.I at Landstuhl
IICJitlleni 1~1. He is the ainth · .south of Kaiserslautem.
.piMcC 19kfier to die since NA'ro
Ertel said one word - "explobeta ~Ofi~ 'lo the Balkans' in sion"- was
at the bottom of
Deceml*-.
the report, but . . \!AS no indication
" ..

!

i' l •

\ l·l':!

.$82'·

6

ly JAMES HANNAH .
~-11..11 PiMa Wrltet

..

"
.•.+

'-"'-

.
' '

l'

'

BLACK OIL SUNFLOWER SEEDS
. .
..
$ 79
25ll.lil

'

i'
!•

I

.

upper20t.

.

SUNDAY PU·Z

Disease outbreak ends
WASHINGTON (A~ - The
Agriculture Department has officially declared an end to the 1995 outbreak of
, a bothersome livestock disease.
No cases of the disease,. vesi~ular
stomatitis, had been identified for
more ~~~n 45 days, the department's
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service announced.
The outbreak was discovered'last
May near Las Cruces, N.M. The service conducted 1,162 investigations
for the disease and found 367 infected premises, mostly in the Rio Grand
Valley of New Mexico and in the San
Luis Valley and on the western slope
of Colorado.

Kicker:
525815

·VaL 41, NO. 181
•1 lnlliln, 10 ......

Sheep producers to vote
DENVER (AP)- U.S. sheep producers will vote Feb. 6 on whether to
assess themselves and importers in
order to pay for promotion and
research programs.

ACROSS
1 Stupefy with drink
·6 Cuts, as coupons
11 Getlostl
16 Englishmen, for
short
21 Skirt shape;
hyph. wd.
22 Houcinl or Belafonle
23 - minister
24 Si!lll a certain way
25 Made healthy again
26 Amerindians
27 Boundary
28 0111 ROI118n

5-14-17-41 44 47

c....

tonight, lobetween o lind 1o.
Tuncley sunny, highs In

'· .

Because the · outbreak has been
declared ended, Canada has dropped ·
requirements for special veterinary
inspections ofexported U.S. horses.
The European Union will drop test. ing requirements May 15.
·
The disease, affecting horses, cattle and other livestock, causes blisters
in the mouth and on the hooves and
teats. Animals cap become lame and
refuse food and water when the blisters break.

.

Super Lotto:

..

Congress tries to sa·ve
farm lending agency
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress is making what may be its.final
attempt to create a successful secondary market for farm loans.
A bill that has passed the House
and Senate would overhaul the
authority of the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corp., known as Farmer
Mac, wh.ich was created in 1988 to
encourage a stable and competitive
source of borrowing for rural America.
"This leg~on is a final congressional effort to make Fanner
Mac viable," said Sen. Dick Lugar,
R-Ind ., chairman 'of lhe Senate Agriculture Committee. " Legislative
restrictions may have hobbled the
institution until now. If the new
authorities do not prove sufficient, it
will be time to declare Farmer Mac a
failed experiment."
The organization is privately
owned and operated in much the
same fashion as Fannie Mae and Salli!l Mae, which were set up to increase
tlie supply of money available for
honie and education loans, respectively.
Farmer Mac has raised $21 million
in private capital to operate a secondary loan market for agriculture,
but no taxpayer money is irwolved.

286

Pick 4:
. 9552

SpOrts, Page 5

.

NEW SALON OPENS- A new beauty salon, Family Hair Care,
haa been opentd In Reedavllle, corner of Barton Road off S1ate .
Ri:lutli 681 , by Ella Jones. Jones graduated from the Valley Beau·
ty Schoolln Marietta In December, i992 and worked at the Fiesta Salon In Belpre from March 1993 to November, 19,95 at which
time aha quit to prepare for opening of her own salon. Hours are
Tuesday to Friday, 8 a.m.·to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Ttl• '-!lephone number Ia 3711-9809. Here Jones worRs on her first
customer, Tess Frldanatlne.
~·

Pick 3:

t.telgs tops
Buckeyes In
'd oubleOT

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See answer on paqe 85

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whattype of device exploded. """
Members of Dugan's family were\
to view the body later today al the
Landstuhl hospital, and then a decision would be made on when the
remains would be returned to the
United S~ates .
Dugan was one of six brorhers and
sisters. He also leaves behind a wife,
Miriam, who lives in Germany, and
a IS-year-old son, Donald, who lives
with Betty Dugan.
· Dugan had been with the 1st Battalion of the 1st Calvary until he was:
sent to Bosnia in December. He
joined the Asmy in 1978 and became
a career mili!JUY man, serving as a
recruiter and drill sergeant.
Dugan did not talk about joining
the military while growing up, his
brother John Dugan sliid.
"I don't think it was an ultimate
goal or plan, I just think it was hoW
things worlced out,'' he said.
. Usa Dugan, 19, haoftrouble coping
with the news.
- - - ·•

"I don't understand why my
father is dead, because he was supposed to be over there keeping
peace,'' she said. "I would· like Bill
Clinton to explain that to me."
Ms. Dugan, who is pregnant, last
·saw her father in December.
"I told him he was going I() be a
grandfather," she said. "I always ·
thought he would come back."
Friends said Dugan grew up on a
farm here in west-central Ohio. He
also lived in nearby Ridgeway before
joining the Army.
,
High school classmate Kathy
Cahill of Kenton, about I0 miles
northeast of Belle Center, was
shocked bv the news.
"It's a lot different when you
watch il on TV and you know who it
is in the bo~ they're carrying,'' she
said.
Another O,hioan, Joseph Kruzel,
was killed last year in Bosnia along
with two other U.S. diplomats when
their vehicle went off a road on Aug.

Sgt. Donald Dugan
19. Kruzel, a professor at Ohio State
University, was leading a peacekeeping mission.
More than 40 soldiers, including
three Americans, have been injuned
since the deployment began, mostly
in mine accidents.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich has written a
strongly worded letter to President
Clinton in which he complains that·
.Washington bureaucrats are impeding
implementluion of the state's welfare
reform plan.
. Voinoyich, in Washington for tbe
wintermeetlng ofllie N'atioifll Governors' Association, released the contents Sunday and said he would personally deliver the letter to tbe White
House today. .
Questions the U.S. Departmept of
Health and Human Services raised
threaten implementation of the plan,
which was signed into law in August.
Ohio must obtain waivers of federal regulations on several key points.
The program is designed to encourage welfare recipients to work and
take more responsibility for their
.
lives.
The questions deal with seven
·major provisions. including a time
limit that restricts recipients to three
years of benefits in any live-year
period.
Voinovich wrote it is "incredible
to me that a group of Washington '
bureaucrats now sits in judgment
. over a welfare package that Ohio's
elected representatives and advocacy
organizations spent months developing m a spirit of cooperation and consensus."
He said the Clinton administration's promises to speed up the waiv.er process seem not to apply to his
. welfare plan.
"Over the last six months I have
become increasingly frustrated thai
reform rhetoric coming out of your .
administration has not matched concrete actionS," he wrote.
The governors. meeting through
Tuesday, are trying to reach a bipartisan consensus on welfare and Medicaid reform that could provide the
basis to get both issues moving again
in Congress.
A welfare reform bill that Congress passed in December was recent,·
ly vetoed by the president.
Voinovich told reporters that if ·
Clinton had signed the welfare bill, ·
nearly all of the roadblocks federal
bureaucrats are raising .to Ohio's
plan would have been eliminated.
Other key aspects of the plan that ·
federal officials are c&lt;)ncemed about
include sanctions fer participants
who do not show up for job assignments and a proposed program of
drug-abuse assessments and treatment for Medicaid recipients who are ·
pregnant. ·
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Gov. TQmrily Thompson, the GOP chairman of .
the governors ' group, said the Democratic and Republican governors were ·
close to agreement on a welfare
reform plan.
He said the compromise would ·
tum the federal welfare entidement
program in a block grant rua by the •
states w!th some continued federal
oversight.
'
Voinovich on Sunday also itltro. ··
d~ a ~se4 resolution dealina
w1th professional football friachisea ·~
.moving from city to city.
"'

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.PlGe2
Monday, r:ebrUilry Si -1996

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One-ctll' cl'tiSh leaves three injured

•

The Daily Sentinel Arafat asserts he wa-rned Rabin of assassins
' in 1948 .
'BtaDfisfrd

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2158 • Fu: 992·2157

WASHmGTON
Pale;tinian party,''
knowledgeable sources ~y Arafat knew about the B~it Lid operation in
President Yauer Anlfat n:peatedly
-That warning came· Jast October, interpreted this intelligence as a sign advance -- a charge that Raviv denies.
warned late Israeli Prime Minister just a couple of weeks before Rabin that raklical Israelis were willing to
In his conversation with Specter,
Yitzhak Rabin that he was in danger 1"'as gunned down by a radical Israeli assassinate their own prime minister Arafat seemed to connect Beit Lid to
of being assassinated by a fellow Jew.
·to stop the peace process.
Rabin's assassination: "After 21 sotIn a recent one-hour meeting in
11 ·
According to the notes of Arafat's . diers were killed in January, I had evi8C
conversation with Specter, which dence about the leader of the IslamGaza with Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Arlen ~pei:ter, Rwere obtained by our associate Ed ic Jihad and had him arrested and senPa., Arafat recouhted in poignant
Henry, hen:'s how Arafat explained 'tenced to IS ,years for sending two
his attempts to caution Rabin abOut· guys to perforJ11 t~rrqrjsw in Israel.
detail how he tried in vain to prevent
the. murder of his peace partner. The
the possibility of being killed b¥ his Rabin didn 't beheve that Israelis
notes of a source who was present in student. Arafat pulled Rabin aside own countrymen: .
could 'talte actions such as assassinathe room, along with a secret Pales· during the U.N. celebration to warn
"I warned Rabin many times in tion against him."
.
tine Liberation Organization memo, him that PLO intelligence reports the presence of (Jordan's) King HusThen Arafat-added:· "At the U.N.
raise intriguing new questions about . suggested that Israeli and Palestinian . sein and (Egyptian President Hosni) (anniversary) in New York I watned
extremists were joining forces to Mubarak. Rabin said,- 'It can't hap- Rabin again · about Israeli fanatical
the Rabm assassinati.on.
"Arafat kept telling Rabin to stop·the peace process.
pen."'
groups. He didn't believe me."
watch out for the Jewish extremist
The October PLO memo· we' ve
"Anlfat then thickened the plot by
At that point, Arafoit held up a
grou~s," one source wljo attended the ob1ained spells out Arafat's concern. intimating that he had wained Rabin copy of the PLO memo ani! said: "I
meeung told us. "But Rabin k~pt The memo slates that Avishay Raviv, as far back as January 1995, after 21 told Rabin, 'Be careful."'
blowing him off. Rabin didn't think the head of the radical Israeli group yo'!ns~raeli soldiers were slaugh~' ' ,. I. '· '." ,'
a Jew would kill anoth~r Jew."
Eyal, met five limes with leaders of ten:d by a '?"~ing at the Beit Lid b~s
Shortly after Rabin:s deattduviv
A second source on the room Islamic Jihad and Hamas. two radical , stop.lslamrc Johad claomed responsrvoiced support for the assassin, Yigal
added: "Arafat told us about a whole Arab groups at the Palestine Hotel in :bility for the act, but the PLO memo
series of meetings he had with Rabin, Gaza last ye~.
speculates that Israeli . extremists · Amir. "We ad min: this lad for his sinwhere he had warned him about the
What1ranspired at those meetings might have also been involved. The cerity; for standing-' behind his
assassination. One iime was when is ,still unclear, and Arafat intimates memo says Arafat beli~ves there has words," said Raviv. "We do not want
they were at the United Nations · don't know if he t~arned of any spe- been "military cooperation'~ between to denounce this ..... This IIWJ\·Raliin
together for the (50th) annive1sary cific threats to Rabin's . life. But Eyal and Islamic Jihad, and that Eyal is·responsible for the mlmler:b( llundreds of Je\l!s and is another vicuih of
:1
pe• ace/' ·
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Raviv was arrested shortly a~r
the assassination because Jsraeli
police and security officials suspected that he knew in advance of Amir's
plans. He h115 since been releasect
pending further investigation.
Police officials also told ·the court
that Amir was a member of Raviv's
organiz;llion. Amir, meanwhile, has
alleged at hi~ trialthat.~viv tol!l him
.many times that Rabin ''mQSI be
' '·'II
j"
' ..
~ e~
..
All of this infqrmahon . left
Specter's delegation .with more questions than ans,wers . . Was. Rabin's
assassination connected to .Raviv's
~~=~'
meetings with Palestinian extremistS?
Al)d does Anlfat have mQre inf.orm•tion that could shed light on the mys·
t~ry?
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CH~RLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LI!HEW

Gene1111 Maniger

Controller

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A bet on the future
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buslne~s Analyst
NEW YORK- Doomsayers get plenty of coverage by the media, in part
because of their alarming thesis that there is no future in the future, only a
_stunning scenario of serial disasters.
"Why should they be believed?" asks Julian Simon. "They have been
: wrong for 25 years," a time period be .later corrects to thousands of years
during which they have proclaimed the coming of world famines and oth' er calamities.
While doomsayers see terrible events ahead, trends pertaining to mate. rial human welfare improve rather regress. Life expectancy rises, childhood
mortality falls, raw materials become more plentiful rather than scarcer.
Just about every material trend is in that direction, says Prof. Simonproduction has increased and prices have fallen, tbe poor get richer even as
. the rich get richer, literacy has increased, pollution has declined.
Wrong as they are, year after year, says Simon, who teaches at the -University of Maryland, the doomsayers catch the atteption of the public while
serious academic papers that foresee an improving future an: ignored.
"Let them put their money where their mouth is," says Simon, ~ho challenges them to form a team, put up $10,000,.as he has, and match forecasts
on any of several trends, such as life expec1ancy or air and water quality. .
· The betting pool could eventually grow to $100,000, depending on the
number of categories, with all net winnings to go to nonprofit research chosen by the winner. Team Simon vs. Team Doomsayers.
'Til bet my money and my reputation on my forecast that just about any
·trend pertaining to material human welfare will improve rather than get
worse." says Simon.
,
He has had no takers. "They don't want to deal the cards," says Simon,
who is an experie.ncl!d bettor, having won $1 ,oOO from Prof. Paul I;lrlich and
two associates in 199Q.on the prices of cenain raw materials. Erlich's group '
said prices would rise between 1980 and 1990; Simon said 'they would fall.
Later, be challenged Erlich, Lester Brown and other doomsayers to put
their cash and names on the line, but received only one response, a $5,000
bet with Roy C. Ward of Prospect, Ohio, on the world's per-capita cereal
&lt;output. .
·
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; The $10,000 challenge was made this month simultaneously with pub~i~ation jlf
State of Humanity," a collection of S8 essays by .64 dis- .
)iJ1~4~shed. :autl:lo11 1 lllaigly ~ademics, who believe things an: gettiolg bet-

·:'l'h¢

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: Asked if a liet of that size wasn't risky for an academic, Siinon replied
:with the "can't lose" assurance of a gambler who knows the n44s are in his
1avor. He suggested that the chance! _of losing were infinitesimally small.
• Simon, a prolific author of population economics book and many books
:On other subjects, is editor of the "The Slate of Humanity.' . .
: The contents arc likely to l1e reassuring. Among Simon's most impOrtant
'ong-run predictions, "contingent on there being no global war or political
upheaval," are these:
.
: - People will live longer lives; fewer will die young.
: -Families all over the world will have higher incomes and better stanilards of living.
: -The costs of natural resources will be lower.
- The environment will be healthier- the air and water will be cleaner- because as nations continue to get richer. they will increasingly demand
more cleanliness as one of the good things wealth can buy.
Inherent in all he says and writes is another prediction: No matter how
wrong they might be, doomsaycrs will continueto doomsay.

Today in history
By The AI&amp;Ociated Prell
Today in History
; Today is Monday. Feb. S, the 36th day of 1996. Then: an: 330 days left
in the year.•
: Today's Highlight in History:_
• In 1937, President Roosevelt proposed enlarging the U.S. Supreme Court;
i:ritics charged Roosevelt was attempting to "pack" the court with justices
ivho would rule in his favor.
' On this date:
·
: In 163i, the founder of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, and his wife
arrived in. Boston from England.
: In 17~3. Sweden recognized the independence of the United Slates.
• In I881, Phoenix, Ariz., was incorporated.
: In 1887, Giuseppe Verdi's opera "Otello," based on the tragedy by
William Shakespeare, premiered at La Scala.
• In 1917, Congress passed, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto, an
Immigration act severely curtailing the innux of Asians.
: In 1917, ~exico's constitution was adopted.
.
: In 1940, 'Glenn Miller and his orchestra recorded "Tuxedo Junction" for
~CA Victor's Bluebird label.
, In 1958, Gamal Abdel Nasser was formally nominated to become the first
prcsi!lenl of the new United Arab Republic.
: In '1962, French President Charles de Gaulle called for Algeria's inde~!""~nee.
.
.
1 In 1973, services were beta atArhngton Nauonal (,Cemetery for Army Lt.
¢o~ William B. Nolde. the last American soldier killed before the Vietnam
&lt;;ease-'fire.
·
In 1983, fqJ1Der Nazi ·Oestapo official Klaus llarbie, expelled fro\ll
· olivia, was brought to Lyon, Prance, to stand trial. (He.was convicted and
lnencl!d to life in prison:- he died in 1991.)
.·
.
• ':1n !987, the Dow Jones industrial average eJlded the day above the 2,200
lpvei for the first time, closing at 2,201.49.
1 Ten years ago: President Reagan an~ounced he'd directed Surgeon Gen·
dral C. Everett Koop to pn:pare "a major report to ihe American people"
~n the deadly disea&amp;e AJDS.
·
. ; Five years ago: President Bust) announ.ced he was sending Defense Sec:
·retary Dick Cheney, fllld Gen. Coliri L. Powell, chairman of the Joint Chie(s
'qflil!iff. 10 the Gulf War zone to asses~ how the U.S.-led offensive was pro"in•
. .·
:·
·
. , ·
/
- ·
.,
· , 6ne-yiar.ago: White House and contp'easiol.ai ~bllcans ~w 1181: '
tie Ji~s ,over Presijleril C!i~ton's $\.61 trilliiMI blldJti, with Republic~
l.ccuijn;;~linton· i;lf,' :!ilking oi walk"lind ~ ad~ni~u-.ion SI!Yins Clintol!'
wu ~~na the ®ficoL mon: than any prestdent tn htslo.ry.
, ·
Tod&amp;y'•s Birth!lays: Comedian-l!(:tor R,ed Buttons is 77. New Yortc'nmes
Company Chainnan Arthur Ochs Sui~beraer ia 70, The Rev. Andrew M:
· Gl):eleY is 68. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Hank Aaron is 62. A,ctor Stuan bunon
is 59. Financial writer Jane Bryl!ll Quinn is S7. Football Haii;·Of·funer Roger
S,taubllch is S4. Actress Charlotte Rarnpling is SO. Actress Barbara Hershey
is 48.
·
11Jought for :today I "Politics in l'meriea is the J!indingiiCCUiar n:ligion."
- Theodore H. WJiite, Ame.rican political wriu:r (I 9J"S-1986).
,

t

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"I left "If
being
'jJ!Izzled,v
one
attendee.
I had
my way,said
I would
· have asked (Arafat) to sit down for,.~
anqther hour and I would have said,
'What else do you know about this?"'
Jack Ande,son •
Mii:b~el
Blostein are . write_, 1r United
Feature Syndicate, Inc;.,

1.

Why .HUD shoul~ ~ead . .the CQn. ~~it~J.ti_Q.n,:
For several'years, stories had been
appearing in newspapers around the
country about anew specialty of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development -- assaulting_ the__First
Amendment rights of citizens who
objected to the placement in their
neighborhoods of rehabilitation facil ities for drug and alcohol abusers as
well as group homes for the mentally retarded.
HUD, -acting under the anti-discrimination provisions of the Fair
Ho~singAct, charged these objectors
with violating that law with their discriminatory leaflets, public meetings,
newsletters and lawsuits. Agents of
HUD threatened individuals and
members· of protesting associations
with prosecution and formidable
fines. They commandeered their
reports and correspondence as a prelude to actual prosecution.
Embarrassed at last by the insistent
press reports, HUQ issued a set of
guidelirles in September 1994 which
solemnly pledged that "HUD will
fulfill its obligation to enforce the Fair
Housing Act in a manner that fully - and correctly -- protects the rights
of all Amcric~ns to speak freely on
issues of public concern .... HUD recognizes that, for many private citizens, being subject to a federal invesligation can be inherently and .
unavoidably 'chilling "'

Since ihen, llowever, HUD -- hood, ' ':'drug disabled adu)ts" would
under the continued leadership of not be far behind.
Secretary Henry Cisneros-- has been
P~p
· l.e with prejudices are not·
selective in its devotion to its Firsl with t' First Amendment rights: ·
Th
apprehensive resi~ents
dropped their lawsuit eight days after
it was filed when their attorneys diSAmendment guidelines. The heavy covered a Texas statute that excludhand of HUD against protesters has ed group homes from deed restricbeen evident in California, Michigan tions on sales of single-family homes.
and Texas. Some of the cases have
Four years later, the U.S. Justice
been settled but not without consid- Department-- on referral from HUD
e{able legal fees for defendants who .. bas sued the residents who opposed
had been exercising their rights ot the group home but then withdrew
free speech and access to the courts. from combat In an editorial, the Fort
A Texas case -- The United States Wonh Star-Telegram -- 'which had
v. W.J. and Ann Wagner, et al. -- is a supponed the group home-- has now
particularly ominous illustration of attacked IHUD's current pursuit of the
HUD's inability to control its author- resisters for "riding roughshod over
itarian impulses. In 1991, II Fort basic constitutional rights of citizens
Worth residents learned that a couple and trying to punish people for disin the neighborhood planned to sell agreeing~ith its dictates .... Someone
their house to a county agency that at HUD ·needs to read the Constitu·
was going to tum it into a group home tion."
for the mentally retarded. The comThe . majestic U.S. government
plainants charged that this move charges . that the lawsuit filed four
would violate local restrictions. When years ago w.S "frivolous. baseless
they filed suit, a slate judge gave them and discriminatory" and was intend·
a temporary jnjunction against the ed to keep retarded people out of the
sale.
neighboihood. By "filing and mainThey also distributed leaflets taining .that lawsuit, the defendants
which proclaimed the new facility coerced, threatened or interfered"
would be a "disaster both for social with the-owners of the home 'that was
reasons and propeny valu.es." Anoth· 10 be sold to the county.
er leaflet prophesied that once the
The Civil Rights Division of the
relarded came into the neighbor- Justice Department a&lt;!ds that the
-..

Nat HentO"

. First Amendm~nt d~ '"not· sra'~t
immunity to lawsuits that.see~ illegal
objectives and that are impt'llpcrly
motivated. Whi,le thf Justi~.~ DeparJment now concedes that tile leaflets
in .this case are 11~\ltect~ speec.h.,thtrY
can be used at .trial to ind~cats:
improper motives..
.
This makes HUD and the Justice
Department a jx&gt;sse of thought P,Oiiq:
deciding who has sufficiently worthy
motives to file a lawsuit.
Should_ the defendants .: noir
down to eoght .. 1~.• they are likely
to be hit for some $12.000 in actual
damages; together with po5sib!c pUI\l·
tive damages. Their legal fees will be
over $200,000.
One of the defense lawyers, Rid&lt;:
D.ispey, says that a loss for tile defer::
dants will be a powerful deterrent tb'
other homeowners who once thou gilt
they had access to the courts for
relief.
·
:
"Two of my clients," Disney say(,
"are natu'ralized citizens wh+
believed ,that in this. country, thef
would have a right to an opiniol\
They are now afraid."
_
•.
Henry Cisneros and 'Janet · Rent
might send that troubled t'oliple a'!
autographed c.opy of the, Bill of
Rights.
·.. ..
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'
Nat Hentoll' is a na.,lili~ti
reaowned authority orr the ·Firsl
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
nf Rights. '
I

International funds c:an be.attracti-ve!t

After decades of quietly managing national small-company growth fund ..
"We tend to run a conce~trated
money_. one Denver-based no-load The fund, No. 1 among a universe of. ponfolio;'' says Gerding. "Pat1 ofthe
fund family i~ making a name for 12, was up well over 24 percent in n:a5on for that is because it's an interotself tfianks . rn part to the perfor- . 1995, while the average intemalion- national .small cal' fund and consemance of ots rntemational funds.
quently os more drfficult to operate.
Founders Asset Ma~agemenl Inc.,
So, we 'tend -to keep fewer eggs in our
distributor ofthe Founders Funds, has
~
basket and then watch them like
been in the money business since al small-company growth fund crazy."
1938. Today, with II funds in the gained nearly 6 percent, according 10 ' One Of the ·pitfalls sharehOlders
family and $3 billion in assets under Lipper Analytical Services.
face when investing. in · any fund
management, Founders may be a
Michael Gerding is portfolio whose portfolio is made up of foreign
small fund family, but its reputation manger of Passpon, and of the securities is company name recogniis growing.
Founders Worldwide Growth Fund tion.
"They are an interesting fu d (up over 20 percent in 1995), and of
family; still small, but their asse
~
ts-· rand new fund introduced earlier ·
But there are at least two stocks in
have grown slowly and ·steadily over this month, the• founders lnterna- Passport's ponfolio that investors
the last few years. And, a lot of their tiona! Equity Fund.
, might be familiar with: Groisch is a
funds have complied very respectable
Barring any unexpected leap Dutch beer company whOse prOduct
n:cords," said Laura Lallos, associate upward in foreig~ in.terest rates, · is sold in si~nature green glass bot·
editor for Momingstat Mutual Funds. Gerding expects this year to be be\- ties, and ~ki Rossrgnot, the second
Lallos said one thing that sepa- ter than last year in irite(llational mar- largest sko maker on the "'nrld, also
rates Founders from other funit fdm- kets. That's .because .of the po'sitive l'ilanufactures Look bindi,ngs and
ilies ~s its ~~vestment style, particu- economic condi(lons abroad..
Cleveland golf clubs.
•
l~ty rn the 1n~ational arena. "They
"You kind of have all of the things · A com~any nam~ investors probprck comparues stock by' stock .. Not that,belped the I.,I.S. market in 199S ably wont recognrze, but whose
managin&amp;. according io macroeco- ~- falling interest rates, an OK ~onsiness they wit~. is Village .Road
nomics like many international fund ~my and much bef!er corpora[!: earn- Show, an Au~tralran company that'
family manqers do," She said.
ongs .. now starting to happen over- manages movre theaters.
idTh~ style of mwgemeni has seas," he said.
.
"This company grows earnings at
pa 0 " · Last year, Founders Passport
The Passpon Fund has abo.ul 4S ' about ~0 to 2S percent a year,. is
fund was. the top-perforllting inter- s)oclcs in its portfolio.
ex~mely well-run .and has been in

Dian Vu!o. v/ch

I ~.

business for about SO yean~;, Clerdij
illg said. "A lot' of·tllftes when you
, t~ink about movie thliateis 'you thir;o
' ft,MC here and don 'tthink that there
1
are counteJP,IIrls . \)Ye~~-: : ,i
1
White· small-company , growttt •
stoc.ks ~.- no matter where th?se ~bm!l
pantes are l!l!:ated ·.- have hiStorJcaJ.:,
ly been more volatile ,.nveslme"ts
than blue-~hlp S.oeks, hi~ 1\as'~;(l
doown thatihey calt bi:~'riW'ard~
ing investments. Th~ SlllllC volatilitjl
and rewards can he said for intema:.
tiona! investing.
·
;
•
But before .jumping :iirto foreign••
waters, make sure that your own per.Z,
sonal in.'(cstrnept personal,ily js i~ .
sync with the ·investn\enrstyle of the%
·fund family,you'rein~Siiqg ~ith a~
of the portfolio mana~er 11\at you're,;
banking .on. · · ' ·' ' , ·
~

1
,Al!cl!!l , Mptual\li,

· .Dian v*m,h·lio llie •~t¥r

. "Sirai1ht Tal~
Funds" and "Stnijbt 1\dt ~~t~

IND.

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• IColumbus l2s• I

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Mobile immunization unit to visit

W. VA. .

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·.NWS predicts wa'rmtng
"trend will begin Tuesday
· ' BY The Alloc-.tlld Prell
·'
·' The National Weather Service
'said Ohioans would have to endure ·
one more bitterly cold nighi befon:
· things 'start to warrir up a bit.
Lows will be around zero again
··tonight befon: southerly winds being
·pumped into the area by an approach'ing high pressttre system start a '
'wanning trend.
.
•· Highs on tuesday, under mosdy
sunny skies, will be 25-3S. Lows ·
"1\resday night witt be in the teens and .
20s, the NWS said.
The record-high temperatrm: for
this ~~ ~ -~~Columbus weather

station was 64 degrees in 1986 while
the record low was 10 below zero in
1918. Sunset tonight will be at 5:55 ·
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:3S a.m. ·
Weather forecast:
. ·
Tonight...Mosdy clear. Lows zero .
to 10 above.
Tuesday... Mosdy sunny and not as ·
cold. Highsypper20stomid30s.
Exte,..ted forecast:
Wednesday .. .Achance of rain or
snow. Highs 35 to 45.
Thursday...A chance of rain. Lows
2S to 35 with highs in the 40s.
Pricfay... Dry. Lows in the 20s with
highs 3S to -~:

:Clinton submits spending
._plan to Congress' scrutiny
.. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton sent Congress today. a
$1.64 trillion budget for I997 that
outlined in minimal detail how he
''would balance the budget while still
providing modest tax relief for the
middle class.
In releasing the plan, Clinton
renewe4 his push for_a negotiated
deal after months of talks. He called
oil Republicait leaders to find common ground and.end the uncertainty
'that has forced two government shutdowns and has left many agencies
:Still operating under stopgap funding
lbat expires March 15.
"I am, very hopeful we can
·achieve a balanced budget this year,"
Clipt;.t said in n:m~ to the Nation·
11./Govemors' ~ssocia~on. "I hope
we. can set asrde partosanship and
-dmsrons, as ~ou often do rn the
NGA, and provrd~ a balllRCld ~udget
plan to the Amencan people tn the
'\tear future."
· · The 20-page outline released
·_ioday was al!"ost idenli~lto the 1~1
bffer that Cbnton put QD the table rn

early January in his now abandoned
· face-to-face budget talks with Reput.:
lican Congn:ssionalleaders.
"The plan I propose cuts hundreds
of programs, continues our efforts to
downsize the government, but it protects Medicare, Medicaid, education
and the environment and cuts taxes
for working families," the pn:sident
said in touting the highlights of his
program to the governors.
But today's budget provided no ·
new details on how he would make .
the cuts to achieve savings.
·- • Shortly after Clinton made his last
offer im Jan. 9, GOP bargainers
broke off the negotiations, saying
they would resume only after Clinton
made a more serious offer with more
specifics. The RepUblicans objected
that Clinton's plan did not make siz- ·
able enough savings in Medicare and .
other fast-growing government ben·
efit programs and contained w cuts
that wen: too small.
·
The administration issued the ·
bare-bones outline to meet a legal ·
requirement that a president provide
Congn:ss with a spending plan for the
..... - --· --·- '11 fiscal year that begins Oct. I by the
Sentinel first Monday in February.

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

The D,aily

(1181'S 213-MO)

l'llblillled evert

oft&lt;moon, MCIIIday

lhrouJII

lftdoy, II t Cooro 51., Pomeroy, Ollio, by die
Ohio Valley Pubtilbi.. ~Co.•
........,., Otiio 4571!9. I'll. m:2U6. Secood
..... ""'""' pold • ........,., Ollio.

--Auoci-..

• a. 1be AIIOCiMed

"

Press. • • Ohio ,

- "' t

1

POSTMA8TIIIb
- Ill
- .Court
.. - 10 .
Tho
Doily S.nrinel,
Sl.. Po.....,.

--

Ollio 43769.

.,~
Ooe - .
................................................$2.00
Ill" M-................................,............... $8.10
· OoeY. .:........................................ ......$104.00
.

SINGLE COPY PIIICII ,

Doily .................................................... J! c..u

Olio--

... llolirill&amp;
10 Tho
..y Doily Sellli..t
.......••
odv...... .,
on • "-· oilO&lt; 12 ....n bolls. a.dll wiD be

~~----No oubocriplion by moll P'!ftlllled Ia . . .

----ilmiloNe.
MAIL 8u.cRIPTIONS

.

.

The mobile immunization clinic of the Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medic.ine will be coming to Meigs County Wednesday.
Free immunizations will he given to all children from birth through
middle school, and free pneumonia shots will be given to adults at two
locations.
From 2-4 p.m., the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department wilt host the
clinic at the municipal building in Syracuse. McDonald's in.Pomeroy
will be the clinic site from S-7 p.m. McDonald's will provide a coupon
for free food items to everyone receiving shots.
In addi lion to required immunizations, the Hepatitis B vaccine series
is also available to all children born after Nov. 22, 1991. The series
consists of three shots over a minimum of six months.
To receive immunizations, parents or guardians must bring their child's
previous shot records.
The clinic is provided by the Ohio University College of Osu:opathic Medicine Childhood Immunization Program's community health
mobile unit, the Ohio Department of Health, the Meigs County Health
Department and McDonald's.
For additional information, n:sidents may call 1-800-844-2654 or contact the local health department.

t

!·

t.ldoMolpC..,

:111-._
.... ._
. . . . . ,..,.c_,

oJ-................................................m .JO
!·..........................$!3.12

J 2 -...............................,............ SI0!.!6

13Weeb........................................ .........S29.25
26 ................................................. $!6.68
! Z -............................................... 110\l.n

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 37
calls for assistance between Friday
and Sunday, including five transfer
calls. Units responding included:
CHESTER VFD
4:22p.m. Friday, Township Road
247, auto fin:, Jack Whiteman, Vel·
erans Memorial Hospilal, Syracuse
squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
2:08 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
. Nursing Center, James Smith, Holz: er Medical Center;
, II :53 p.m. Sonurday, Seventh
! Street, Roben Davis, treated at the
1scene;
r 8:23 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department to Fairlane Drive, rep&lt;&gt;rt
of an attic frre at Robert Southern residence;
4:39 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department to Africa Road, Gallia
County, structure fire at Stephanie
Campbell residence;
10:20 p.m: Sunday, South Third
f Avenue, Virgil Phillips. VMH, pend~ ing transfer to Ohio Slate University
via MedAight helicopter ambulance;
t II :05 p.m. Sunday, Chestnut
t Street, Gary A. Wayland, HMC.
POMEROY
' 10:09 a.m. Friday, Children's
\.Home Road, Ruby Diehl, HMC;
I :29 p.m. Friday, North Second
.Avenue, Joyce Blevins, treated at the
,scene;
I :45 p.m. Friday, Rocksprings

Today's livestock report
'

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 2.00
lower; demand light to moderate on
a moderate supply.
:·
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs: 44.0046,00; a few to 43.50; plants 45.00-

. Wrecks kill SIX
By The Aseoclated Pree1
Six people died in traffrc accidents
across Ohio over the w~kend,
including two in one wn:ck on an
interstate highway, the State Highway
Patrol said today.
The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
lbedead:
, SUNDAY
LANCASTER - Andrew K.
Schneider, 27, of Millersport,. when
his pickup truck left a Fairfield
County road and slammed inlo a tree.
CIRCLEVILLE - Mark A.
Stewart, 22, of Circleville, driver in
a two-car accident on a Pickaway
Count)• road.
SATURDAY
RAVENNA- Steven D. Skaggs,
45, of Cortland, driver in a two-car
acCident on Ohio 82 in Portage
County.
CLEVELAND - Driver Bryant
Clifford, 36, hometown unknown,
and an unidentified man who was a
passenger in the car in a one-car accident on Interstate 90 in Cuyahoga
County.
LISBON - David L. Davis, 4S,
of Lisbon, a driver in a one-car crash
on a Columbiana County road.

Am Ele ' " -.......................43'&gt;
Alczo •••••••••••••••.•••••.••••••••••••.••• 54\
Aahland 011 ...........................37'.o
ATAT ....... :.............................64'.1.
Bank OM ..............................38\

Rehabilitation Center, Robert
Houdashelt, HMC;
10:4S p.m. Friday, Grueser Hoilow, Beverly Hayes, HMC; ,
. I :45 a.m. Saturday, Fisher Street,
William Stivers, VMH;
2:49 a.m. Saturday, Page Street,
James Spencer, VMH ;
2:39 p.m. Sunday, Minersville,
Alex Victory, VMH;
S:54 p.m. Sunday; Bunker Hill
Road , Calder Core, HMC.
RACINE
5:08 a.m. Friday, Oak Grove
Road , Gilbert Hart, dead upon
arrival;
I: 19 p.m. Friday, Bald Kob·
Stiversville Road, Cora Michaels,
VMH;
8:03 p.m. Sunday, Old Portland
Road, John Kauffman, treated at the
scene.
REEDSVILLE
2: II a.m. Friday, Joppa Road,
James W. Eddy, dead upon. arrival,
·Shon Gates, Camden-Clark Memor·ial Hospilal;
\
7:S8 p.m. Friday, State Route
.681, Rick Murphy, St. Joseph's Hos;piial;
: 4:50 p.m. Sunday, SR 124,
I Chester Mundry, St. Joseph's Hospil1a1.
t
RUTLAND
f I:49 a.m. Friday, Race ~trftt.
t' Mary Amsberry, HMC;
'f
5!41 p.m. Friday, volunteer frre
department and squad, motor vehicle
accident on Jacks Road, Patricia
:~
•clark and Jill Bias, HMC;
Veterans Memorial
11:22 p.m. Friday, Hysell Run
I;'riday admissions Cora Road, Alexander May, VMH;
Michael, Portland; Brenda Darst,
12 a.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
Pomeroy; Connie Moyer, Reedsville. department and squad" to SR 124,
Leah chomney ~re a~ the Jeff Lewrs reso Friday discharges . Swatzel, Pomeroy ; Beulah Strauss, dence, no IDJUnes;
.
Middleport.
.
12:22 a.m. Saturday, Mou~t Umon
Saturday admissions - none.
Road, ~larence ?wensby, 0 Bleness
Saturday discharges - none.
Memonal Hospolal.
Sunday admissions - none.
f
SYRACUSE
Sunday discharges - Connie r 8:30 a:m. Saturday, SR 124, Jeff
Moyer, Reedsville; Brenda Darst, rBable resodence, VMH;
.
. Pomeroy
. • I0:05 a.m. Saturday. Rockspnngs
Holzer Medical Center
: Rehabililation Center, Bessie Brooks,
Discharges Feb.l- Gary Jones, , VMH.
Crystal Thomas, Margaret Cromlish. :
TUPPERS PLAINS
Linda Miller, Velda Ohlinger, Harry
2:43 p.m. Saturday, Chester,
: Swaney, Joann Thomas.
· Lucolle Smrlh, VMH;
Birtm - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas · 8:08p.m. Saturday, SR 681 West,
•Masters, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Angela Edman, Camden-Clark
· Kevin Denney, son, Oak Hill.
·Memorial Hospilal.
Discharges Feb. 3 - Tomi Craft, . ABC's SIIUoday momilll! hitlroi&lt;M
Mrs. Kevin Denney and son, Weston
is lbe rll1t completely c:ompurer-pnFife.
craoed animaoed TV oerie~. II is oct io
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Man Has- lbe city of Moinfnme.
seman, son, Gallipolis.
' Dlscbaraes Feb. 4- John Shriver.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs.. Harold
Coughenour, 5on, Gallipolis.
(Published with pennisslon)

l

L~---------------------....1
1

46.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 39.SO44.00.
.
Sows: weak to I .50 lower.
U.S. 1-3, 300-SOO lbs. 28.00.
31.00; S00-6SO lbs. 31.00.3S.OO, a
few to 36.00.
Boars: 25.00-27.00.
Estimated receipts: 40,000.
Ptku from The Producen
lhestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice ·s8 ~00.65.00; select S0.00-60.00.

Announcements

t

Hosp.ital neWS

t

t

COL troiining slated
A COL training class, for the mandated drug and alcohol testing program for drivers of trucks over
26,001 pounds and all safety sensitive
employees, will be held 1\resday at
the Meigs County Highway Department Garage, located on the fairgrounds. The insti'Uctor will be Larry Willis from Corporate Health Specialists. Training will be at 2:30p.m.
· for highway .workers. All township
and village employees are welcome
to participate in the program Supervisor training is set for 6 p.m. For ·.
more information, call at 992-291 I.

Guaranteed Safety &amp;'
High Interest Yields
Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
·
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
All Kinds
Call for lnfonnation:

:orange 'l'nutees meetinc
The Orange Township Board of
Trustees will meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Clerk Patty Calaway.

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-6118-4011 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuities are 'issued by lnsui'IIIICe
· Companies and have substantial
penalties for early withdrawals.

Chapter &amp;o meet
Preceptor Bela Bela Chapter, Beta .
Sigma Phi So10rity, will meet Thursday, for a soup supper, 6 p.m. at the
Episcopal Parish House. John Musser will speak on revitalization.

·Rates of'Tazatlon for 19915
In pursuonce o1 low, I. Howard E. Fr111k, Tr-or o1 Meigs County. Ohio, in comptill1oa with rovill!d Code No. 323.08 of S11te o1 011io,
do
giYO notice of tho R1.. of Toxetion for tho Tox V• of 1995. Ra18S ••~ in dollars ond cants of~Cl one thousond dollars

Bob Ev-. ............................15\
~Warrter ...••..........••.•......21~

C,_,plon 111d..........................17
: . Chemilng Shop....................
'
City ttolcllrtg •••,_,,, ...................25 '

SlllJ8CIJJntON IIA'111S

.2.,_

i

J

I
u

Federa!l Mogul-..................... 18~
GM1Mit ...................................63

!;
•

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u

.••"'•·

Goodyear TAR ......................47'~

K-m.......................... _...........7~
Landi EM ............................. 14,.
Lhnlted lrte............................ 11\

Peopln Bencorp .................. .24
Ohio Valley Bllnk ..................3&amp;'h
One VII~ ............................,31 'h

Rocac-11 ..............................51,_
Robblnl a Myera..................28:t.
Roy1l Dutchllhell ................ 141
~'II11C.............................8

St.r Bltnk .................-~ ..........62\
Wendy lnt'l. ...........................19'4
Worthlngton Ind.................. ~
.

-·--·-

Stock 111porta •r• the 10:$0
a.m. quotW provided by Advelt
of Qalllpolll.

LEBANON

LETART
OLIVE
ORANGE

DO YOU WANT AN OPPORTUNITY TO:

*Retire?
* Lower your Taxes?
* Put Kids or Grandkids thru College?

THEN SEE ME!U .
Karl Kebler m, CPA
614~992-7270

Investment and Tax Consultant
Representative
of HD Vest Financia! Services
.
'
.

·::f.
~w~~~~
ller can . .. . -.w•..,•r•
McGraw ,
.
P.4 ~~~ lo
In
$le
lor .allo , a qliCikal • ·, will ' .
Newspaper Enterprile A~.

Three people were injured in a one-vehicle crash friday on Rudand
Township Road 46 (JICks), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State High·
way Patrol~·
Thmsported, to Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs EMS were driver Walter J. Hagy ll, 27, Apartment3, Beech Street, Middleport. and
his two passenprs, Palrieia L. Clark, 18, IS Swisher Road, Bidwell,
and Jill S. Bias, 16, 1203 '1\rrkey Run Road, Cheshire.
Clark wu treated and released for a strained neck and back, while
Bias was treated for a strained neck and released, an HMC spokesper·
son said. The hospital had no record of treatment for Haggy, the
spokesperson said. •
.
Troopers said Haggy was northbound, one-tenth of a mile north of
County Road 10 (Dexter) at S:36 p.m. when the pickup truck he was
driving went off the right side of the road, and struck a culvert and an
embankment.
.
·The pickup was severely damaged, according to the report. Haggy
was cited for failttre to control, driving under suspension, speeding and
no seatbeiL

• I

nuefSOn
and
Michael Blnsteln

_A Gannett ·Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher

Local News in Brief: · Squads answer 37 calls

I ~;: ~=~ :~ veil III'OIIIIIIent Servicee, Inc •.
S
lllrOugh HD VMIAdllleooy Selflctl,tnc.
BMI., 3od Floor, IMng, ,.__ 7S038
81~

'.,

'-

"

.

fl... ••• ••• which not '-1 peld It 1hl ct.. of lido cotllc:tlon Cll'ry I penalty ottlln l)lrllllnl. T._INIV bo pold lllho offioa
of _the County
or IIY moil. Pltllll bring your lilt •• riCIIIiPt: and it vau rwv IIY moil, bo ...,. to roca• your prQIJOt'ty t1y !bing
dllvictiiiCI_I._swmPid llt1-«&lt;dr rr1d -101111. AIWIYI-intvaur •• reoalpt to • thlt it~oll your proporty. Offioa houri
n 8:30 I!I.M. 10 4:30P.M. Mondly tltr~ Fridlv- CI,..S on Slturdly.
F81kft to - .. lb
de. not ovoid any ponelty, ln-t, or dolrgt incurred for rudo dolly. Ohio RIVilld Codl 323.13.
. CIOilng doW M.-do 4. 111911.

Tr..,,.,.
••-11
...

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,..

-~ -sports

~eigs

Page4
Monday, February 5, 1996

Senllltel CorrMpondent
Bnmt Hanson went six for six
from the foul line 'in the final I :06 of
the second overtime to give Meigs a
pail biting 87-84 victory over Nel. sonville-York in boys' Tri-Valley

:;southern boys notch 78-75
:·victory over Vinton Coun-t y
.: By SCOTT WOLFE
'

• .Sentinel Correspondent
•
Foul shooting has been a nemisis
! :in Southern's quest for success this
,season, however, the safety depano,ment became Southern's best friend
1 • .going down the stretch as the Tornadoes hit 5-6 in the waning minutes
: ,en route to a 78-75 Tri-Valley win
• over Vinton County. Southern raisi es its reconl to 5-10 overall.
. , When Southern has started out
·,well, they have played well through...out the season. Saturday's make-up
win was no exception.
Southern established the early
. ,tempo with a run -and-gun offense
..,that saw John Harmon and Spike
,.Rizer harness the boards with great
· .success. Jamie Evans, Jesse May.,nard, Jay McKelvey and Ryan Norris were the main beneficiaries.
Southern coach Howie Caldwell
:;said, "We came out with some nthu. ~iasm and played very well the first
. 11uarter. We established the tempo
early and John (Harmon) and Spike
tRizer) really hit the boards well. We
lost a little edge when they both got
~
foul trouble in the second period,
ltiut it was a good overall first half."
Southern held a 22- 13 edge at the
~'end ofthe first frame. In the seCond
~ canto, both clubs turned up the
wick, but VC cut into Southern's lead
~ and trailed 43-38 at the half.

i"
If: .
1
'i

~ Michigan

Southern held the edge through
the third period, 60-56, but the fan s
in attendance became anxious as
Vinton County began to stop the
clock by putting the Tornadoes on
the line. Sou(hern managed to hold
the edge and fended off a late Viking
rally.
Jamie Evans hit one of two going
down the stretch, while both ohn
Harmon and Spike Rizer each nailed
. two-for-two to push Southern
onward to victory.
Not many clubs work any harder
than Southern. Coach Howie Caldwell hopes that the gym time has
again started to pay off and spark
another Tornado rally. Southern,
after an 0-4 start, won 4-of"5, but
after a loss.to Eastern fell into a midseason tailspin before Saturday's
win. Another 'key to the win was the
well balanced 'scoring that pr.1ccd six
men in double figures .
Veteran Jesse Maynard led the
way with 16 points, while Ryan Norris canned 7-of-8 free throws en
route to a 14-point effort. Jamie
Evans (3-4 at the line) had 12. Rizcr(3-4)had 13, Harmon(5-6)had II
and Jay McKelvey (3-3) had 10.
Overall, Southern was 28-38 at the
line. Meanwhile, Vinton County was
just 18-32.
The Viking woes nurtured a
'

downs OSU 77-58

i ByCOLUMBUS,
RUSTY MILLER
Ohio (AP) ~

\ Maurice Taylor scored 14 points and
Robert Traylor had 13 - and each
1 hadtwobucketsinalate 13-0runl as. 20th-ranked Michigan ended a
~ three-game slide with a 77-58 victo1 ry over Ohio State Saturday night.
'· · Michigan, embarrassed at home
.JIO-~ by Purdue Wednesday night,
improved to 15-7 overall and 5-4 in
the Big Ten.
Willie Mitchell and Dugan Fife
. each had II for Michigan, which has
won its last seven meetings with the
Buckeyes. Travis Conlan chipped in

j

with nine assists.
Jermaine Tate scored 16 points
and was the only player in double
figures for Ohio State (9-9, 2-7). Tate
hit all seven of his shots from the
field and both free throws. The
freshman center also had a gamehigh eight rebounds.
Three nights after trailing 44-22
at the half, the Wolverines turned
things around in the first 20 minutes.
They scored the first five points on
a Mitchell jumper and a three-pointer by Fife, then owned their own 4422 advantage on two free throws by
Fife with 2:34 left.

. Drawings for the 1996 boys sec' ·tional basketball tournaments were
' :held at various locations in southern
:Ohio Sunday.
Coach Howie Caldweil's Southern
Tornados, (5- I0) playing in the Division 4 upper bracket at the University of Rio Grande, will battle Symmes
Valley {5-8) in an opening round
game on Thursday, Feb. 22, at5 p.m.
Winner of that game will battle top.seeded Portsmouth East ( 10-4) on
Wednesday, Feb. 28, at6:15 p.m. with
the winner taking on the Lucasville
Valley lower bracket winner in the
district tournament at the Convocation Center in Athens on Wednesday,
March 6, at 8: 15 p.m.
Coach Tony Deem's Eastem
Eagles (8-7), second-seeded in the·
Rio sectional, drew Iron10n St. Joe (58), and will play on Feb. 22, at 8:30·
p.m. Winner of that game will battle
No. 3 seeded Green (5-8) or Miller

•

'

Basketball
NBAstandinp

"· ~22?.

OLD HOME AREA

,.
'

15

6 .714

Minncaola ..... 3
Illinois ........... )
OHIO ST... .... 2

5
6
1
8

.375
.H3
.222
. Ill

II 9 . !'i~
14 1 .661
9 9 .SOO
6 12 ..l33

4

WiiCODiin SJ. IIHnoia ~
Pans.... 9l,lowa 87 OT
Michipli 77, OHIO STATE S8
Pottduo S6, Midoi1111 StOIC 51

10
13
14.5
IS.S

Tenn.-Mutia 71 , Tesuasee St . 67
TcnnesiClC Tech 11 Munay S1 .. ppd ..
w£aM
Tcnn.-Chananooaa at E. Tennessee

So..ppd.. \'Mt tiO. Woft'twd66

T-.y
Indiana oar Minnesota

16
16
II
19.5
24
28

$}}99

1-800-44-CELL

Travis Abbott.
Ryan Martin found Hanson
underneath and the senior was fouled
as he went for the lay-up. The foul
was the fifth of the game on Jeromy
Schultz, who left the game with 21
points. Once again !lrent was perfect
on hit two free throws giving the
Marauders 85-84 lead with 24 seconds left.
Nelsonville missed three shots in
the last 12 seconds and a Marauder
foul was called with two seconds left
sending Shaun Six to the line . Six·
missed both foul shots and Hanson
came up with a big rebound and was
fouled. With one second left Brent
iced the game by hitting both to give
Meigs their second close win of the
year over the Buckeyes. Back on
December 15th the Marauders
defeated the Buckeyes 66-65 on a
lhree point play by Paul Pullins with
1.5 se&lt;:onds left.
Meigs jumped out to an early 137 lead on a three pointer by Pullins
with 4:17 left. Schultz and Eric
Mitchell both hit three pointers
wrapped around a bucket by Pullins
to make it a 15-1 3 Meigs lead with
2:57 left.
Cass Cleland's lay-up off a Donald Yost assist increased the Meigs
lead to 19-15 with I :06 left. Pullins
made it a 21-1 S Meigs lead afterthe
first period on a three point play with
three seconds Ieft.

3'

Meigs took a 37-291ead witli
seconds left in the half 011 a whell&gt;
Pullins drilled another three. 'l'hrlpp
hit one of two free throws with 21
seconds left to cut the Meigs lead to
37-30 heading into the locker 1'00111
at the half.
~elsonville chiP,PCd away at the·
Metgs lead and pulled to 45-44 with
2:50 left on a bucket by Six. Nick
Han ing and Schultz traded three
pointers making it a 48-47 Meigs
lead with I: 12 left. Haning increased
the Meigs lead to 50-47 with a bucket with 49 seconds left. But Six cut
it back to a one point game (50-49)
wi.!h 34·seconds left.
Pullins hit the first of two free
throws with five seconds left to give
Meigs a 51 -49lead. Pullins missed
the second free throw but Travis
Abbolt snuck in the lane for the pul
back to increase the Meigs lead to
53-49 at the end of the quarter.
Meigs increased the lead to 64-53
on buckets by Abbott and Haning,
both off of Martin feeds. But the
Buckeyes refused to roll over and
play dead cutting the Meigs lead to
73-70 on a bucket by Schultz with
I :48 left.
Meigs had a golden opportunity
with I :36 left on a Nelsonville foul
and a technical, but the Marauders
missed the front end of a one-one
(See MARAUDERS 011 p.7)

W..tno.day

Utllh ....................... JO 15

.667

17
26

.638
.422

I
II

Dattu.................... IS 28
Miai1CIOia .............. l2 :U
Vueouva ............. 10 3~

.3&lt;19
.279
.222

14
11
20

Va.*Cornmoawealtb a,, Old Dominion76(0TI
Virainia 64, flpridl Sr. 59
William&amp; M.y 81, RidlmoDd 64

-

,.. ,
......,

2~

444

L.A.CH ...... ......... l6 2Y

.Jl6

Golden Srate .......... 20

I

.I

'

.

69 S. Market St.
Logan,OH

17

MAC standings
I
3
4
&lt;I

K&lt;tll .............5
Toledo .........5
BGSU ........... l
OHIO .......... .S
Cent. Mich .... 2
Akron ............o

S .300

S
S
S
8
10

!lOO
.100
.600
.600

San Diego St 103. Hawaii 94
Snn Francisco 7J. S1.

con

UC Sanra Barbara tl~ . Clll St· Fullerton 72
UCLA 69. 0r&lt;1on St. 60
Utah 74, New Muioo :'i R
Utah St. 72. Nt!"Vada62

Far West

Arizona 96, Wast-linglon St. 78
Arizon:l S1. 88 , Washinglon 79
Boise St. 7l.ldlhoSc. Sl
Brigham Younj 82, Tnns· EI Paso 71
Cal Puly-SLO 79, $;K.-ramcnto St 63
Colorndo St. 91 , Air Foo.:e 89 !2 OTJ
Fresno St. 74. Wyoming 70
Gonzaga 1R. Perroerdine 66
Long Benet-. St. 69, UC Irv ine

lOTi
Loyola Mnrymounr 70, Pnnlnnd 62

Momana 71. E. Wm;hington 70
MontiiM Sl. 78. Idaho 70
New Me•ico St. 14, Smn Jo!te St.

n

Oresoo99, SoutllemC41 78

S. Utah 94, UC Santn Cruz 37
San
74, Santa Clnm 6.1

6~

Nary'•· Cal. 67

Sunday'saclion

•

Eool .
BOlton Univ. 611, Towson S1. 56 ..
Canitius 76, lona S4
Ddawnrc: 60. Noohcastern

~CJ

J)rellel n . Moine ~2
Duqunne 87, Fotdham 75
Loyola. Md. 70, Sc. Peter's r;o
M.anhattan 14. Niaaaru. 53
New Hampshire 77, Hofstra 6!'i
Syra.:u~ 81. Al-.n. 61

2
9
4
8

.819
.500
.718
.5l6
1 .611

.300 12 9 .571
.300 10 8 '.5l6

.300

.200
.000

tO ~ I .476
:\ IJ .278

:\ 15 .161

W. Michipn 73, Cct1t Mk:tlipn 61

w

STARBURST
JELLYBEANS

a oz.

Wednesday's pmes

Prices Effective February 5 thru 10, 1996.

~

~f&lt;Hetfirl~

&amp;II St. nl Akron
Cent Micl'liJUft 1M Bowling Grem
E. Micl'liJOlO ut W. Micni&amp;il.n
Kent at OHIO
Miami al Toledo

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Drfroit n1 New York. 7:)() p.m.

Sn&amp;:mmento ac Miumi, 7::10 p.m.
Dalln~

Saturday's adlon

at Minnaorn, H p.m.

l!oot

Utuh nr Vancou"Y«. 10 p.m.
Goldet! State at L.A. Clipr~n . 10:.\0

Army 91,l.dlilh 7~

.....

Duston ColkJC 84. West Virsiniil 6 ~

8uckne1112. Navy 60
Buffalo 6,. W. Illinois ~3
Colaatr IOI . SienaM

S011 AntoNo a1 ~totte, 7:30p.m.
Boston ot CLEVELAND. 7:30p.m.
Cbic:ago at Phoeni•. ~p . m.
DaUOUI at Milwaukee. IIJO p.m.

Geo~Jttown 10, Nor~ O:une ~3

La Sulle 96, St. Bono\'Cnlure 79
l.afaytne 92. Holy Crou RS
M...-ist RO.: Fairtiek169 (OT)
Monn10t1th. N.J. 70. Ridtr 66
Mount St. Mary'•· Md. 99, Long Is·
lud Univ. 71

APTop1S
women's poll
Tbe Top H teams in Thr Anodaled
Press· w&lt;,unen 's ..:ollea~ baaketbltill poll.
willt firsl·pluce vote ~ i• parentheses .
n:conla throuJh Fdt. " · 101al poinfa lwed
on 2~ poinls ((M'" n fiDI-plliCe vOle throush
one roinl for a 2!\lh-place voce and lall
Wl~k ' s r.mkina:

....

1. Gcorcia (39) ............ IK-2
2. Louis! una Tech ........ 19-1
l Conn«licul .............. 20.:4
4. S1anford ................. 16-2
5. lowa ......................... l9-1
6. Tcnn.s~ (1) ........... 17-4
7. TciUU Tedl ..... .-......1. 17-2
8. Wi~eonsin ................ 18·2
9. Virt-inia .............•..•... l«t---4
10. Old Oominion ........ l~l
JI . V~ill .............. l~

12. Penn Sl .... ..,............ l7 - ~

I

Rlo2
822
820
770
669

6
)
"
10

Ak.Tm St 17. Miu . Valley S1. 74
American Univ. 89. East Carolina 73
Bdt.Jne-Cookman 60, Florida AAM

6)11
614
~~8

~-14

22. Aubum .................,. l ~~

J07

16

2ol8
166

21
19
2.&lt;
2l

112
96
ol6

H . Purdue ................... .'f .\·9

2•. Notre ~&gt;nnw ........... 14-~

9

II
1
IJ
IS
12
14
IK
20
17

45

.........
OIK:aao St 111 Troy St.. Pf'd •

Big 'len standlnp

s

. Wtclllpo .......

.667
~ .667
4 .~

60Z. - 6.4 OZ.
OR COMPlETE TOOTHBRUSH

RELIEF 100

COUNT

"ebttt Limit S2 .50

199

DRAL-8
ADVANTAGE
TOCmiBRUSH

1~

'•
'

PHARMAC Y

Prescription Plans

ne

Otownll

tJ I .619

11
"

CREST TOOTHPASTE

•Acce~Most

LSUI.

~

.479

TABLETI

GELCAPS
GELTAB5:
CAPlETS OR
EKTENDED

• Personal Counseling
• Competitive Prices

Paul IJ . Gcoqe W:uhin&amp;IOn 12, Teus
AAM II. So•thern Mclh. 7, Teua 4,
OHIO ST. ~. VillanO:YG 3, 'WuhiDifOII St.
:t , Ken1 2, Grnmblina Sl. I, Huwaii I.

J:::tSt
.......J ·~ "' ft
..................7 1 ,.,.,. 17

"AA" · I PACK OR 9 VOLT · 2 PACK

TYLENOL

weather

{:outal Curoliu71 , Winthmf' 6:i
CoU. of C'hlrlnlon 6:l. Stttson SO
C&lt;wi• St. 91 . r.t ...... St. 68
Da•idooo 98, W. Carollull5
Otelaware St 87, N. Carolina AA:T 1M
Dookc 83. ClctNoo 53
Fla. l-iooool68, Somftwd6.l
Aorida Allaftm 91 , JacklonviUe Sl.

Coklradu Sl. 14, Miuiuippi St:. 14. De-

. ...._ .........:6
. . 51 ...6

160Z. CREAM

DURACELL BATTERIES PEPCID
·o· OR ·c· . • PACK
AC

Cent. Florido 79, C...... ll5A
Centenary 11 Gcoraia St., ppd.,

01•u rH-rlwl. . Yatn: Arkoasas 40.
Northweatern .18. Middl~ Tenn. 32. SW
Mi1100ri Sl. 31 , Soulhcnl htlu. 28. Moolana 27. North Carolir~~ 13, Kauu l9.

Cool.

EUCERIN

799

South

.2

F. A~11in .. 16-2

16 OZ. LOTION

tnn69

2
..

667

EUCERIN

I

Penn 74. Coklmbio ~
Pri~ttton 57, Cornell 5-4
Provi~ 79. Rulps 611
Sl. Francis, h. 94. Fllirldgtl Diclr.in-

9911

478
oWl
41S
:tS1
355

l.l . Alaboroo ................. IK-4
14. t&gt;utc&lt; .................... lll-.
~~ - N. CruoliM St ....... l5-!'i
16. Oregnn Sl. .............. l4-t
17. Miuiui(lpi ............. l~-5
18. Clcmson ................. I5-J
19. Cokwado ................ ICJ-6
20. Floridto .................. 16-S
21. Oklahoma St .......... 1~

66

945
910

s

_. ... . __..
................
.. .

N.C.-Gn:cnaboro at Md .- B;dtimorc
C0111nty. pfld., wettlher
NE lliiDOis 8t Cent Conneccicut St.

Sl. '*rh'• 73. OAylon 60
ViiiMOva RR. Pind•ursh 5~
Virsinia Tech 12. Rhode lsl:md 66
lOTI
Wapiti' 100, St. Fmncis. NY 70

l!.:L:l &amp;l!all

-

Origllul
._

~ ~

Connccttcut 71 , St John 's63
Onnmouth 66, Vole -t9
GtorJc Wasllinglon 6-4. Temp~ 47

L.A. l...okers at ~nvcr, 9 p.m.
Hou11on at ~Dille , 10 p.n1.

"

'

Drown 73. Hanard 10 (2 OT)

Sacrnnrtato Ill Orlltftdo. 7:.l 0 p.m.

'•

16
9
14
tO
II

Miami 16. OHIO 61

Tuesday's pmta

•

Ark.-Unlc Rock 84, Arkansas St 6:l
Arkallsu 81, Soolt-1 Carolina 69
Jacluon St. 80, TeLlS Southern 17
Qkllhomo 104, Miuouri 68
lli;lahoma St. 96, Colorado 1:\
SWTuas S1. 61, Sam Houston St . ~7
TelW 80, Hous1on 63
"
Ten~ AAM 62, Soothcm Mett-1. 58
Tuat Tcdl19, Rice S1
Texu·Arlington 70. North Texas 67
Tclllls-Pan Ameri can 58 , SW
Louisian.a 42

Slepben

7 ~.

·o.-m•

5'

Pnrtlnnd IW Toronto, 7 r .m.

••

conr.

Saturday's smres

Tonlaht'sgames

'•
••

.

E Mich.........9
w. Mien........1
Miuni ............6
Ball St...........6

Sunday's scores

\[_

59 ·
· N. lowa87, Indiana Sc. i2
SE Mls191ri 76, Morehead St. 74
SW Mitsouri S1. 77, S. lllinoia 6S
Wia.-Vfeen Bay 60, Wright St. 53

Teus-Sila Anconio
F.Allsrin 71

ltY L f&amp;l. W L bl.

Ball St. 88, Toledo 68
E MichiJan 62. Atmn
Kent 59, Bowline Green 58

Indiana 90, New Ytwt 8~ ·
• Drlando 122. San Antonio 109
Phoeni11. 12~. W:uhinpon II~ &lt;on
1\tlanta 106. Cborlotte 104
Oe••"er 1o~. O.:aao 99
LA t..k&lt;n 110. Uooh IOJ
Golden State 96, New Ieney 92

..~
.'
'

13

Saturday's smnJI

l~

POMEROY

Minnesoca • Noctttwealen
OHlO STATE ot Wisconsin

Ponland 96. l'toilodclploio 8l
Boston I00. Mi:ami 99
S:.:ramento 94. Detroit 8~
CLEVELAND Ill , Milwaukee 88
Minnesota IM. D-o1llns 96
Sealtle 104, Hou110n IOJ (On
Tomntn 119. l.A. Clippen II J (OTI

119 Main St.
New Lexington, OH
200 2nd St.
Pomeroy,OH

11.5
12.,

·

Stac Up

Midoipn 11 l'lrioe
Micbipn ~llle atlftn State

Ira
7
1

Ill. 72, N. lllinQiJ 68

....

ta

.6'"

~ola,

Mo.-Kansu City 69, Ymm&amp;atown St.

Iowa at Northweuem
OHIO STATE ar Michiaan Stille
P\lrdue at Wisconsin

'

Hou11on ................. ~
Deaver ................... 19

2 ~ . S~q~hcn

11 00 E. State St.
Athens,OH

14

Padfko INvWan
Seattle .................... 33 12 .733
Sacramcnto ............ 24 17 .s&amp;.'i
L.A. t..Wn ............ 26 t• .m
Ponltlnd ................ 22 24 .&lt;178
Phoenht .................. 20 24 ·"''

I

-~-----·--

Coun House and Athens play each
other on Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. on the OU~
boards.
Winner of the Meigs-River ValleySouth Point games will play the winner of the Greenfield, New Lexington
and Northwest games at OU on Friday, March I, at8:15 p.m.
In Division I play, Chillicothe
will banle Marietta on Feb. 23 at 17
p.m. in the Athens High School gym.
Logan will face Miami Trace on Feb.
24 ast 7 p.m. at AHS. The winners ·
clash on March l with the sectional
winner advancing to the district to
battle the East District winner.
At Chillicothe, No. 2 seeded
Greenfield will play the winner or the
New Lexington-Northwest game on
Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. Top seeded Hillsbory drew a first round bye. Vinton
County- Warren willl clash at 7 p.m.
on Feb. 24 at OUC in Chillicothe.

s.... _

B111ler 65, Wi•.-Milwaukee 4~
Crciahlon 68. Wict-lila St. ~
Detroit 103, Clevelud St. 74
Drake 65, Ev1n1villc 61
E. llliOOII 61 , Oral Robau 58
Iowa So. 7S, Ncbnoska 6.&lt;

This week '• slate

~

.5S6
.Sl6
.!ill
.477
.372
.219

cr

...

Indiana §J~ . Nonhwesrern 61

.911 ·
.67&lt;4
IO.S

I~

SE LouioioNo 78. Mcrm 62
St. louis M Wake Fores1. ccd., welllh·

SuadliJ'oscore

lo4

W L f&amp;l.

Slln Anronio ........... 29

!

71TiiiD [f4-iiiillij II

992-5432

22 -~
26 .43'
27 .400
28 J78
J6 .182

Cenr...a ObW..

Ira

SUPERSIZE HOME AREA

II

ILY RESTAUUNT

228·WEST MAIN

.7t7

Mw..t IM..-W.

1.

.

.444

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I ............. -.......
.I .........,.. _... ...,. I """'*'.....,...............
1
I
I ~.:=
. ...,.~
i(ifC.Y I_..
Jai;.T I .=:.- K1C
.

game will battle fourth-seeded South
Point (9-6) on Satunlay, Feb. 24, at
6:30 p.m. Winner of that game will
advance to the OU Convocation Center, and play the Chillicothe No. I
winner.
Ironton (9-4) was top-seeded in the
South Webster tourney. 1be Tigers
will take on unsecded Portsmouth (313) at 6:30p.m. on Friday, Feb. 23 .
Winner of that game will advance to
OU and play the Chillicothe No. 3
winner.
Rock Hill (8-5 ), third-seeded, will
meet Jackson (10-5) on Saturday,
Feb. 24, at8: 15 p.m. Winner of that
.game will advance to OU and play
the winner of Chillicothe No. 2.
Jackson .was seeded fifth.
Winner of the Gallipolis-Fairland
game will advance to OU and play
either Washington C. H. or Athens
from the Chillicothe No. 4 sectional
on Saturday, March 2, at 8:45 p.m.

Illinois a1 Penn Sllle

TIIIJ'C!ilp(C~OA

-------

tJ
16

Allantm ................... 2.1 20
CLEVELAND ..... t&lt; 20
Dctroit .................... 22 21
Cbor-................ 21 2l
MilwMObo ............. l6 27
Toronto ................. .l3 J2

ovn~Yen

&amp;!f/liJTiiD

4

11Mtiana ................... 31

I
I
PlotTu
I
PluTa
I
-Tu
l•lC.tO...r'otrllptSirlps,. I •Cbokeofthlckm
~
~··~-Pot.. I •l..ti.W..I w
....... POial... I Erlra
16-dOo;;oool-«
l
r•
with Crny
I • II
'
I •JIIdkklul
COlt SIIW
I ~-.-.--.-.
I ..
• Modi- Dlhok
• I llladt
l•w..thloiDrllok

ta

.6."111

Olit~~o..................41

--

·

~

S .619

lowa ..............4

Satanay'• ICOrel

W L ld.

Orlalodo .. ............ n
New Yor£.............. 18
Wuhinaton ............ 22
Miami ....................20
NcwJeney ............ l8
Botron... ................ .l7
Plriladelphlo ............. 8

1 -------~r-------,---Chunky
1 Colonel's Crispy 1
16 Piece
1 · Chicken
1 Strips"' Combo 1
Bucket
1 Pot Pie Combo 1
1

1

WiiCOI&amp;Iin .....5 4 .5S6"' B

NorthM~~en~. l

Atlondc I l l -

Ira

KFC

SJ99
d;

(6-10) who face each other in a 6:45
p.m. game at Rio on Feb. 22. The Rio
lower bracket winner will battle the
Valley upper bracllet winner in the
district tourney at OU on March ·6.
starting at 6:30 p.m.
Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis
Blue Devils (5-I 0), playing in the bottom bracket, were seeded eighth out
of nine teams in the Division 2 South
Webster sectional, and will battle second-seeded Fairland (9-4) at 8:15
p.m. on Friday, Feb. 23 .
Coach Carl Wolfe's River Valley
Raiders (6-9), playing in the top
bracket, were ranked seventh, and
will meet Coach Jeff Skinner's Meigs
Marauders (I 0-6) on Tuesday, Feb.
20, at 7 p.m. in an opening round
game at South Webster, located
between Oak Hill and Portsmouth off
SR 140. Meigs was seeded sixth in
the tournament.
· Winner of the Meigs-River Valley

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.

$399

deficit when Hanson hit his first two
free lhrows to cut the Nelsonville
lead to 84-83. Ryan Wildman missed
a free throw for the Buckeyes with
44 seconds left and the Marauders
Nick Haning made a beautiful save
on the rebound getting the ball to

Scoreboard

loa

~bolce.M.eal

Meigs had a chance to win the
game at the end of first overtime
when Paul Pullins penetrated for a
lay-up with four seconds left but the
ball refused to fall and the game
went into the second overtime.
Meigs was staring at a 84-81

.:Southern faces Symmes Valley, Eastern battles Irish in openers

Chicken LoverS

Colonel's"'

Conference basketball action Saturday evening at Meigs High School.
1be Buckeyes forced the over·
time periods when Jeremy Thrapp
nailed an off balance three pointer
from the top of the key with two seconds remaining in regulation.

·:Boys 1996 tournament drawings held Sunday

Southern springboard to victory.
Caudill added 17 for VC, while Nice
added 12 and Murphy had II.
Southern hit t9-51 twos and was
4-10 on threes. SHS had 39 rebounds
(Harmon I 0, Rizer I 0), 17 steals
(Maynard 6), 22 turnovers and 27
fouls.'
VC hit 26-44 twos, 3-13 threes,
had 29 rebounds (Brandon 9) and
was I 8-32 at the line. VC had 10
steals (Nice 10); 12 turnoverS and 26
fouls.
' Reserve notes: Southern won the
reserve game 55-46 led by Billy
Sheppard with 15 and Greg McKinney with 10. Jason Krueger and G.
Ward each had ten for Vinton County.
The future: Southern goes to
Alexander for a league game Tuesday, then goes to Eastern Friday and
Nelsonville-York Saturday.
Quarter t2tllb
Southern ................ 22-21-17-18=78
Vinton County......l9-13-25-18=75
SOUTHERN- Adam Roush I0=2,Ryan Norris 2-1-7/8=14, Jamie
Evans 3-1-3/4= 12, Jesse Maynard 31-711 h=l6, Spike Rizer 5-0-3/4=13,
Jay McKelvey 2- 1-3/3=10, John
Harmon 3-5/6= II. Tyson Buckley 00/2=2 Totals: J9-4·l8138=78
VINTON COUNTY - Gabe
Wade 1-0-212=4, Bryan Huff 2-01/6=5, John Murphy 5-0-1/2=11.
Jeremy Ward 2-0-214=6, Todd.Jirandon 1-2-212=9, Ron Caudill 5-07/9=17, Casey Nice 3-1-317=12,
Matt Bethc15-0-0IO= 10. Totals: 263=18132=75

Our home rate service area is now three
'
times bigger. That means big savings.
CellularONE customers can make calls
from the Indiana border to Western
Pennsylvania and from Lake Erie
beyond the Ohio River at · our lowest
rates. Roaming charges are virtually
eliminated. We've reduced our rates for
cellular calls along the key travel corridors throughout Ohio, West Virginia,
and Western Pennsylvania A Supersize
home rate area means better service in
more places at lower prices.

Good At Participating
· KF~ Restaurants

boys tally 87-84 win over Nelsonville-York in OT

By DAY! HARRIS

.

The Dilly Sentinel• ' • t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

_Monday, February 5, 1996

9 .S71

7

.~

,.,

..

�'

Monday, February 5, 1916

Pomeroy
• Middleport,
Ohio
.
·- . . .
.
'.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

FEBRUARY MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER
•

.

•

•••

.•

• .

Macaroni and Cheese
Cre11.11111d Tomatoes
Green Beans
lluUin
Pear Halves

. Baked Steak
llashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Buttered .Peas
Bread
Peach Slices

!
I•

•1-

12
. Ieiner
Sauerkraut
llashed Potatoes
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

14
Vegetable Beef Soup
Pi11111nto Cheese
Sandwich
Crackers .
Peachy Creamy
Pudding

20

21
Scalloped ~ickan
Sweet Potatoes
Broccoli witb
Bread
Apricots

Johnny lluzetti
Tossed Salad
Grapes
Cookie

Turkey and Dressing
Roll
Sweet Potatoes
Gre._n Beans
Banaaas and
Oranaes

Baked Porkette
Mashed Potatoes
with Gn vy
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Prunes

'•'

Chicken Pillet
loped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bread
Pineapple Cbunka

13
Spaghetti witb
lleat Sa.u ca
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
llandarln Oranges
in Gelatin

Liver • Onions
llaehad Potatoes
Peas and Carrots
Brea.d
Creamy Fruit Sal~d

CLOSED
HOLIDAY

•'';,.
'•

\VEDNESDAY

TUESDAY.

MONDAY

J&amp;liNSULAliON

Oven Baked Fish
Oven Roast Potatoes
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Tropical llixed Frui

..

FRIDAY

THURSDAY·

11171111\'AN PLACE
,MIJOI.&amp;ORT

&amp;.;112
Houra: Mon.......
1:00 &amp;111.-3:10 p.m.
VInyl Alum. 8kllng,

om..
a

Navy Beans and Bam
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Apple ~lices with
Raisins
'
Cookie

VInyl Riplr.emenl,

OVen Ba~ed Chicken
Maabed Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Pear Halves

Meatloaf
ParsUed BOiled'

22

23

Sloppy Joe on Bun
Baked Beans
Skin on Potato
ledges
Boney Bee Ambrosia ·

SPill&amp;SOn

c........., ....

Buttered Corn
Bread
Applesauce
.

Dai's Water Rlfl.l.1
Nnlllaverl, wv

Thanks to

everyone who had a
part in m~ng our
60th anniversary
special. 0u( ·
children, daughterin-law, any relatives,
and friendS in
sending gifts, cards
and etc; and Mt
Hennon Church for
use of Fellowship
Hall.
John &amp; Henrietta

\

Salisbury Steajt
Scalloped Potatoes
Lima Beans
Bread
Pea.rs in Lime
Gelatin

Beef and Noodles
Cole Slaw '
Bl'8ad
Fruit Cocktail
in Gelatin
Cake - Site

111-

Pot~t,toes

HILD!burger
Broccoli - HDII
Broccoli Soup-Site
Bun
Cinnamon Bot
Peach S.u•~"~

REAL

nME

l

.

304812~

.

WIIHT'LOSS
PIOIUII

'
Plck.Up dlacal'dlcl
WBihara, ~hot

I'WIIIterlllnka,ltcWes,
fumacel, lncllllll'ly

,.,.~

Call 992 4025
betWeen 8

~

CIDITYIALI
Help Burned Out Vlc:llma
SOCIII $1.75 per pair

...... liO Cenlll Poet.g.
..... ~~Ordlrto
lclll120, Gnlblll, ~ 72431

am-a pm

•

By SCOn WOLFE
Sentinel Correepo;1Cient
(Editor's note: This PIDt was
pl'l'v~y reported last Wednelday, hoWe~, a computer snafu
l011t the oflclnal story. 'fltt Dally
Stntintllll!greb the error.) •
Tile Southern girls' varsity bas·
kelball team slonned to 16-3 first
period le~. th~n streaked on to a 6646 ·Tri / Valley Conference Hocki~g
Division .win,Ove~ Nelsonville· York
Wedqesday .light.
' Soutlitni was led by 20-point
cfforU from Renee Turley and Jonna Manuel, while Becky Moore had
1'0 .
:. Heather Cagg led N-Y with II
points. ,,.,,•. .,. ·
• ... .
~ Beliirw/ReneeThrley'seightpoinl
f.irst quarter Soolhem blilzed loa 16~ advanlage. Turley canned two dri- ·
yers and was 4-6 at the line, while
Manuel and Moore each added four.
·-

.

Mary Rinehart, a
RSVP
voluntaer, enjoys painting
et~ramlca at the center. She
haa mad'
girt. for her
famlJY arid .trlel,da.

•

:
1:

•
:
:
;

There Ia alway• a crowd for "Nutrltlim Bingo". Bingo I• played •• usual, but prlzea ara
nutrltloua food Item•. Patients from Holzer Rehab came to play along With the Melga
County aenlora.
·

a

once a month
Melga .
Center. She
dorietlon'a for lunch
nionay from aaiae Of crena and ceramic Items. On the ~~
behind Dorothy . are heirta from the American Hprt
AaaocllltiOn that are.available it the center for a Clonatloj'l,~
$1.00. All proc:eeda g6 to·.the American Heart Aa~litlon.
For more--Information, ca11992-2161.
.

·~Fe·bruary Activities.· ·
·
·
and Nellie
help . .rve tha meala
! The Meigs County Council on Heart Association month.
· · are provided on a dally balla at the llelg'a Senior
"ging, Inc., is open Monday
Wednesday, Feb. 14 • The
Center. Come join ua for a hot nutritious meal. Don't forget
Jhrough Friday from 8:00 to Stroke Survivors Support Group
to renrve your mael by 9 a.m. tha day you wl1h to eat Call
4:30. Regularly scheduled meets from 1 to 2:30, ~ilh . Lia .992-2161 to do ao.
_attivlties are quilting, sewing, Tipton, Holzer Rehab1htat1on,
:cards, games, pool. weekly coordinator.
;actJvilies are Chorus Practice on . Thursday, Feb. 1 5 - The
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic
1·T uesday at 12:45, Knitting
bircle on Wednesday from 10.to will be held from 9:30 to 11:00.
Thursday•. Feb. 15 - A program , The Gallla-Meigs Community season of up to $175.00 to
, ~ 2. and Ceramics . Class on
!fhursday from 9:3.0 to noon. concerning Consumer Fraud Action .Agency is announcing restore or continue home
Cost fpr the Ceram1cs Class IS and Elder Abuse will be that the Emergency HEAP heating service. To be eligible
$1 .25 plus the cost of presented at 11:00 by John program ·for the 1996 heating for the program, both income
reenware. Physical FJtness Is Lentes Prosecuting Attorney, season will continue through guidelines and emergency
eld
on
J'u.esdays and and Sheriff Jim Soulsby.
·
March 15, 1996.
, requirements must be lnet. The
Friday, Feb. 16 ·The Arthritis
Emergency HEAP
was tolal gross hOUSI!hold income
. hursd!lYS ~t 11:1.5 to keep
1Jarti9ipants "fit an_d. limber".
Support Group meets from created to provide financial must be at or below 1 50% of the
! A representatiVe from the 10:30 to noon .
assistance to low income federally established poverty
('thens Social Security Office
Wednesday; Feb. 21 - The households that are threatened guidelines.
will be at the Center on . Alzheimer's Support Group will with disconnection of. their
Home visits to assist any
Wednesdays. February 14 and meet from 1 to 3 p.m . Lenora heating source, have already disabled or homebound person
I!B. from 10 to 11 ~.m.
.
Leifheit. R.N._. will lead the had service disconnected, or needing Emergency HEAP
, ~ Darla Hawtey will be assisting program d1scusslo.n on have less than a ten (10) day assistance can be arranged by
•enlors with fllmg tax returns on Validation Therapy m the supply of bulk fuel.
contacting Community Action
Wednesday, Thu~sday, and everyday caregiving and routine
Emergency HEAP allows a HEAP staff at 992·6629 or Darla
for an alzheimer patient.
. one-time payment per heating Hawtey at 992-2161 .
1friday through AprU 12. Please
Th4rsd11y, · Feb. 22 - the
call Darla, 992·2161, to make
.• .• ··· - • .roc.· .... . .. ,.. - - ·
-: '" ___:::t.' ..... .
J.n appQintment or for further Athens Daiiy B~trn will be
ilfOI'I!lation.
viewing quilts and judging
I The "Over so· Exercise·CJass workmanship and appearance
'Ill. resume VVe.-1nesday, Feb. for the •contemporary quilt. show
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO ALL
. 21
on ' Mordays
and . to be :· held · this summer,
~Et(IO~ 'ciTIZENS
'f\'ednesdays . at - 3 :30 p.m. follOwing l.u nch:
~rough April3. New .members
Thursday, Feb. 29 - The
Watche.a • Diamonds • Jewelry .
~re welcoine to this cl.a ss . for monthly birthday party will be
Cameru ~ Photo Finishing.• Old Photos Cbpled
~ending
and stretchmg held. Seniors having birthdays
'
~ '
ljxerclses and low Impact · in thermonth will be recognized.
Gall~lls,
aerobics for cardiovascul~tr
•'

EAP
Emergency H
program
to continue
. . through March ·15

1r quilting Ia your thing, come to the Sanlor Center ancl Join
In the fun with the other ladlea. Quilting Ia available dally
along with Scrabble, carda (UNO), pool playing, aewlng and
vllltatlon.

WE HONOR

OtP
~~etleler.t

~

212 EAST MAIN ST.
992-3785

'

GOLDENBUCKEYECAAOS

~

~-

TAWNEY JEWE'.LERS &amp; STUDIO

422 2nd Ava. 446·1615 ·

~lng.

Ohio

'

• ThUrsday, Feb. 8 · Susan
District Director,
.. Arlherlca'n Heart ASsociation, wil.l
at 11 :oo fpr Natiomil
.n.orli' i1n

t

~

~

.

'

HOME."Serv'ing
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
Southern Ohio for over.17 years"
·
Lift Chairs

Mastectomy &amp;upplies

···'· Everything Cervical Pillows
. for the Tens Units Supplies
pat1e0
• t. Knee, Ankle Braces
Supplies
at
Suppon Hosiery
·Hom
' e First.Aid
Su(lPiies
Dressings

Wheelc;hai!l·
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools

.

Traction Equipment

&amp;

.Grab Bars

Back Supports

.-'"'JI'\

cominQde Chairs

Walking AidS •
~ . Diapers 1ft qt~ .
Qstomy Supplies
DiabeticSupplies ·

........ 3012
$2.99/mln. 18+

--

sun1nav

liNGO
R•I••A•erh••

~ lH:E

'

.

•

loll I l L''
1-SIIIi--l-l;; ~~llf1

.

-

'

underground

eotnet .

aeu saoo;oo an11

utilities &amp; lighting
B~cket, Digger

Picture Frame, M.ats

Truck Servlcn

Accessories.

&amp;

wk. Pay accOrding to
the number ol..,._,
Keep ad lor FREE Ctlrd

Service Pole
$2.50 per ft. ·

1-614-378-9801

Will.

seven steals, eight assists, 26
turnovers, and 28 fouls.
· R-rve notes: Southern dropped
· the reserve game 28-35. N-Y leaders
were Tiff Critchfield with 14 and
Amanda Dal!on with eight. Kim
Sayre and Jenny Roush led Southern _
with I0 and eight respeclively . N·
Y plays ai Vinton Counly 10night.
Ouarter ll!llli
Nelsonville-York.. ...3·15-1 0-16=46
Southem ................. l6-12-16-22=66
Nelsonville-York - Sarah Ogg
2-3/6=7; Monica Johnson 1-0=2,
Heather Cagg 3-511 0= II, Amie
Adams 4- Ill =9, Steph ..Shafer 33/4=9, Mindy McClelland 1·0=2,
.Amanda Hall 1- 10=5, Ali Shafer 01/3:1. Tor.ls15~1-131l4=46 •
Southern - Becky Moore S012=10, Cynthia Caldwell 1·112=3,
Bea Lisle 1-215=4. Renee Turley 68/1 5=20, Jonna Manuel 9·216=20,
KimSayre 0·1·0=3, Brianne Proffit!
2-214=6. Totals l4-1-15/34c66

MI.LENRI
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE

HOllE

New At Iq..slleetronfu

ladle lllaeli Dealer

a.

Openings for
Chrlatlan
atmo'Phert for
elderly care In a
non-1moklng home. '

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

.UIDERSIOOII
UYIII
COIVERSAJIOI
OlE~ ON· 011

1·900 414-2101
Ext.~74
$3.99 per min.
Mull Be 18 Yri.

_
992 2825

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

614-992-3200

PROCALLCO.

~·--;-.;. :;==~~~ ·· -;:;.;:;;,;,;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;.~'-~~ .._..802=-95;.;4.;.7420~-...

MDDDI SIII!A!IDI

MINI STORAGE

..882·29Q&amp;
•

ttl....... _

. Umeetone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Live girls 1-t0-1

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

conversations

992-3954 or 985-3418 .

......,........ ,...........
Opening Feb. 1st

(602) 954-7420

271 North 2nd Aile.
Mlclclleport, OH. 45760

ROIERI IISSELL
CONSTRUCnOII

AKC Reg. Puppies, Klttan1, Blrda &amp; More
EXperienced Groomera • Flna"clng Avallabla

•NewHomea
•Garages

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

•Complete
Remottellng
Stop I Compare

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

(614) 992-6244

UCINE .
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
JUN. I PM
12 Ga•g•
Factory CUke Oily
. . . . ·- -· ·-·.
R. ~HOLLON
.

J.D. Drilling Co•pany

FREE ESTIMATES

P.O. Box 587

_985-4473
7

Racine, Oh. 45771
Jamal E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hna.
We dig baaements, put In aaptlc
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free eatlmate call949-2512

RDftlll
Kick Boxing
Training
AI Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness

~NAI".IADI

-

,,
......
.
.~

Children I Aduft
Claaaea

"')

Water

.

C811992-3967

Equlp•ant

lrl/1-

Du1ribu1ed by

TII·RAR WIRI SJSRMS, INC.

NEFF REMODEUNG ·
SERVICE

The wal8f treatment IXIIIlpany COidlally lnYiles you 10
l*flcipala In a liM, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WLl. TEST THE FOLLOWING:

HouNRepelrl

TDS; lllnenl Hnn.a,

RH!Odellng

..._ al IMoSo/1111112-4472

KltchenlBeth

PH.

RoOIII Mdlllona
Skllnt, RoolhiJI, PatiOe
fteeeoneiJII

OIESTER STORAGE

Cell w.,... Hell

One Unit Now

lneu~• ·lxp•leiM*I

-

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
1Unnes1:one • Grawl
Dirt• Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

lraYo•leadr
For Love?

Crill lowiiU
1·90G-255·2700
lrt. 9402

$2.99 per min.
Muetbe18yn.
Touch IDna phone
·required.

.........

1 Ox28 , S65 per mo.

Beet end Hog
Bus (304) 882-2756
Res ..(304) 882-3328

812-3961

Waet Columbia wv.

Available

ForfrM~

TRUCKING

s.rv-u 61H45-84M '

RIIIIOCiellnt

112-4405

HAULING

' ...
"Sup,.U..o for all yoW' pel need."

$3.99/min.
Procell Co.

forDetalll

. WICKS

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Something from the
honey•s·

1-900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+

I!

(UmeStoneLowRatea)

POMEROY, OHIO
Tl'llh Removal -Commercial or Rllldlntlal
Septic Tankl Cleaned &amp; Porlllble Tollltl Rentacl.
Dally, -ldy &amp; monthly rantll ratn.

Cow . ............
-

onds lefl. SchuiiZ missed a shot for final six points from the line 10 give
the Buckeyes 011 the other end and Meigs lhe win.
Pullins led all scorers wit!t 24
Allbott grabbed the rebound with 30
seconds left and was fouled. Travis points, he was joined in double figsank one of two free throws to give ures by Hnning with 17, Abboll with
15 and Hanson with 12. Meigs hit 33
Meigs a 7/)-77 advanlage, but Six
of
54 from the noor for a red hot
scored in lhe p.lint with 22 seconds
61
%
including six of 10 from lhree
leflto tie the score at 79.
pbint range. The Marauders went to
Meigs worked for the last shot
the line 30 times nailing IS for SO% .
and Pullins drove the lane and lay it
Meigs had 23 rebounds Jed by
off the glass with four seconds left,
the shollaid on the rim for a second Cleland with eight and Abbott added
five . Meigs turned the ball over 12
or two and then fell off forcing the
limes, had 18 assists led by Yost wilh
second overtime.
six and Martin wilh five and had
Thrapp scored lhe first three
lhree steals with Pullins geuing two.
points of the second extra period gi~·
Schultz led four Buckeyes in
ing the Buckeyes a 82-791ead with1:S71eft..But Meigs came back with double figures with 21, Thrapp
Abbott scoring off a Yost assist to cui added 20, Six 18 and Eric Mitchell
the Nelsonville lead 10 82-81 wilh · II . Tile Buckeyes hit 33 of 69 from
lhe noor,for 47%, including eighl of
left. '
17 from three point range. N· Y went
ric Milchell scored to give the
to the line 18 times connecling on
8 ckeyes an 84·81 · lead with I :34
left, but Hanson scored the games :eight for 44%. Nelsonville pulled
down 36 rebounds le!l by Mitchell
with I0 and Thrapp with eighl, the
.Buckeyes had 10 steals led by
Mitchell with five and turned the ball
over hine limes.
"We ha4 several opportunities to
put them away but couldn't,"
Mar11uder coach Jeff Skinner said .
after the game. We had good balance
on offense tonight and made some
big free throws going down fhe
stretch in overtime.
{ .·
Reserve notes: Meigs won the
reserve game for the clean sweep
with a 38-23 win. Daniel Hannan
was lhe only player in double figures
with 22, Derrick Dix·on led the
Buckeyes with seven.
11le tutun: Meigs ( 10-6 overall
&amp; 8-4 in the Ohio Division) will
travel lo Wellston Tuesday. Nelsonville· York (6-9 overall &amp; 3-6 in
the Ohio Di~ision) will host Belpre
Tuesday.

.'

CONSTRUCTION CO.
OVerhead &amp; •

Clhe ~tame

R••$1Q.ooaach

YOUNG'S

CARPEitiU.SERVICI
·IIAditttlon•
..

IALIUF
IAYIOI
SALE. ·

;:::r=~umblnQ

•Roorn11

·•ltlrlor &amp; Exterior

.

Pall*'•
Allo eonc:r.t. WOrt!
II'RU EITIMATIII
. v.c. YOt!NG • .

Clll

H2•2156

,.,

"''

NewAJKing

liMn ..... 4:30 ....

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

'

Calls)

A-( UTILITY

IOUID .

L ··SHOP·PE ..

(4114) 1112·5535
614 1112-2753

614-992-7643

Touch lOne pliant"'*"
Sem-U 619 6t5 8t34

Luclly

Southern's defense was tolally
dominant in the frame. Southern
cooled dOwn to a 12 point tally in lhe
second round, led by Manuel's four
and three each from Turley and Bri·
anne Proffitt.
Nelsonville-York exploded for
IS led by Shafer's eight as the gap
closed to 28-18.
.
Turley and Manuel dominated ·
third quarter play as SHS ri)Se to a
44-28 advantage before putting the
guests away in the finale with a 22- ,
16 offset.
Southern was 24·61 for 39 per-'
cent, and 1·6 on lhrees, with a IS-34 .
night al the li"". SHS gmbbed 39
reboupds(Manue112, MooreS); 20
steals -(Manuel _.5, Turley .S); '12
assists (Lisle ,3. Turley 3); 14
turnovers, 21 fouls, ar.d two blocks
(two).
•
N-Y hit IS-4S for 33 percent, I·
4 treys and was 13-24 at the line. The
guesl~ bad 28 rebounds (Adams 8);

FREE ESTIMATES

,JIIew Hom•• • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacemint Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENnAL
FREE ESTIMATES

C1ll .
1a90N56-2600

e

•Rooting
•Palnllng

. St. .....,, wv

101 Pomlroy

lolitlr At•lll

Nursing

.1. f:Ctaing·,;p~·,;,.;..Dli
. ..'tr' .

l'l'oMna Trtmlx titre

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Marauders win. ~C~n-tin_ued_f_ro_m_p.s_&gt;_ _...,;,__ _ _ _ _ __
:roul sli01 al)d Pullins bit one of the
ltwo shots for the technical.
: · With the Marauders working the
'Eock Sch~ltz came' up with a steal
nd lay-up with 52 secOnds left to cut
e maroon and gold lead to 74-72.
Anolher Marauder turnover gave
~elso~vil,le a chance but Thrapp
issed a three with 38 second. s left
nd · Haning pulled down the
bound. Haning was fouled with 13
r.conds left and made one of IW? to
f've
· a 75-721ead:
, But
despite good defentive
by Meigs, drained an
three from the top of the
wilh jusl f~r t(cks left on the
· lo force the fitst extra session.
Martin gave Meigs a 78-75 lead
seconds into lhe first o~ertime
a t!u'ee pointer from the right
Schultz cui it to 78-77 with a
at the 3:28 mark.
· worked time of the clock,
turned the ball over with 40 sec-

... ,..,.

,.,.

EYIRY SUIDAY

.

•li!BW Garage•
•RIII1Cidellng
•Sieling

co.

Oxt\jlll Acetylene
'Helium Ill aiDa Mldlcll Oradl 0.

Letlo• ,.., 602

~

•Addition•

.m-

••.., ••

. st;}J~thern girls ·hand N-Y 66-46 loss

•li!BWHomea

· · Mlctllna Sllop

for Details.

: Tid Hatfield and Don Maurer are volunteers with the Retired
: and Senior Volunteer Program. Tad helps regularly with the
• Red Croaa Bloodmobile and Dqn haa helped with many
! dlflerent Krtenlnga. VOlunteer work Ia not juat for women. H
: you are Jntereatad In learning more about the R$VP
progra1m, call 992-2161 . and apeak with Allee Wolfe or Diana

: CU..IuNng IRr I I 1U

Alllmlnulill8ta

Call 992-3967

Bailey

I

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

Salaa A Fllnloatlon • R 1.... YfJIIIng

87 Mill St.,
Middleport

metal~

s.TII'S
COIUTitUCTIOI

WlldJnt Bl"ll11 ·~ 0..•811111

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness

Mon. thru Sat. .

FretEitlrMIM

· $7.00 PER DAY.

l

'

Windows, Blown
IIIIUiatlon, Stann
Doora, Sto.nn
Wlndowa, Ganlgel.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF

...

·'

h

614-949·2512

•

Polnanlr. Ohio

•'

.

••••••

'

'

�•
'r

:. :.

~ 8 • The Dally Sentlilel

~y,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

the Deny Sentinel • Pllge 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

febrwlyS, 1896

NEA' CrOIIJWOrd Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

·-··=
:.e~:~..
=:o
,._ 42=--

ALDER

...
..
'.
. -..
-

. '~
· .•
"

37 lltlryland

41

BEA1TIE BLVD.It by Bruce Battle

AWJ OUt JCE t,l UH&gt;

12150 &amp; 121B5, Undarplnnlna, Country Side Apo~rtmanto, Nice 2
Porch. SliM, Ralrtaenitor $3.000, lltdroomo, AC. W/0, · Sow13,5CIO No C.lo Aiier 7 P.M. Bl4· er Gorabgo tn~ludtd. $350/Mo.
.:.3•= 08.:.:11e
.:.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Dopolit Required. 51W22-02Gol.
1

Reduc» .... and fall . . Qo..
1!eoe T-• ond E·\lopdiunlic.
Avol- Fnnh Phonnocy, Mid.

cllpart

1981 Smoker, Vert Good Condi·

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment.

dos, ~aklng $4000 e 14-387-

Reference a, Deposit, S3501Mo.,

· , • Fonunea will be made new MLM
: , j stop smoking, 11. bollnk:al, -

7448.

814-448-8235 814-4411.()517.

1972 Norrla Mobile Homo. Bl4·

Furnlahtd 2 Rooma &amp; Ba1h.'
Oownltaira, Utilities Furnished, .

~-0527.

1974 K - 12xBO, 2 llad&lt;oom,
Range, Re~~lllr, Cerlral - lng &amp; .Air Conditioning, lncludta
Storage Shed I Deck, Asktna
18500 OBO 614-256-1443 Bat-

GIVeaway

~ Uale, 1 Female Border Collie

Pup., 814-25H284. '

--10pm

2 Whi10 P'uppies, 1 Female, 1
Mali, Mo1her: Huaky, Falhor:?
81 .....1..o508.

GraciCJul living. 1 and. 2 bedroom
apanmenta at Village Manor and

terBpm ~75- 1 183.

110

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

I'll•.

19D4 Redmond 14&lt;70, ·
lboth, l14,000firm. e•c. cond. Al-

5588.

•r..,.a. 304· 755-

N"" Bank Ropoa. Only 4 left. Sdli
In . .monty. 304!755-7191 .

Price Buaterl New 1•:r70, 2 or

311r. Only $D05 down, 1186/manlh.
Free delivery &amp; selup. Only at

OakWood Homet, Nitro WV. 004755-5885.

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
130 Acres More/leU, Paslurl wt
Pond, Hunter·a . Paradiaa, 1'0
Miles West of Cheshire on 554

814·367-74411.
83 AcrH C011nty Water &amp; ElecOic On
Groat Hunting &amp;
Recreation! 814 ·2~1412 , 61•·

"'-'Y·

251-18«.

Acraaga For Sale: 1 lilies From
Holzer, 795 Clark Chapel Road .
Foner, Ohio.
Farm For Sale, 78 Acres, &amp;U·
251-8494.
Fl¥8 acrtl,
aerator, near
Raclne,$18,000 can finance with

half-.. 814-040-2025.

S'Cenic Vallev. Apple Grove.
beaulllul 2ac lots, public water,

Clyde llowonJr., 30.. 578-2336.
WANTED TO BUY: 100 acroa or
more. Uuat be remOte, ridge•top
land wltl'l good acce11, Iota of

ratd lronlage, woodl, poature and

....... Call81 ..5113-11645.
R[ N TA L S

410 Houae8 for Rent .

· :~. · •1

No Pots, Dopo01t &amp; Releroncoa,

$250111o.614-888-7 1 0~

nice one bedroom apartmonl in
l'o"'""'Y, 51 ..ao2-5858.
Nice two bodroom opartrnenl In
Racine,. no pets, 1275/me. piul
dopoll~ Bl .. 992-7843.
Now Taking leaaea For 1 Or 2
Bedroom Apartmente, 614-3881100
·
One bedroom furn ished apart·
mont In Middleport. BU-448. 30~1., 614-""2-5304 or 81•-~2•
••

ma.

-

Small One Bedroom , Excallanl
Condition, Counoa_Sening. Wuhor. Dryer. Stove kigata1Dr, Non
Smoker~ $300 Oepoait S350/M0.
Appllcaoiono AI 1743 Centonor~
Road, Gollipoii' 614-4411-2205.
.SlOnewood Apartment• now accopling lippllcatlona lor aportmants, Ill electric, lOr elderly and
disability. FMHA aubaidiHd, bosic rent $2ti0 per monlh, EOH.
814-992-3055.
Twin Rivers-·· now accal::~
applications lor 1bf. HUD au I ized apt. for elderly and l'landi capped,. EOH 304-87~19.

450

furnished
~ooms

Circle Motel. Gallipolis, OH 814446·2501 or BU-3BNl8 l2. Ellacienc~ Rooms. Cable, Air, Phone,
MICI_.. &amp;Aoingara1Dr.

Steeping rooms with cooking.
614-4411-13513 Raltrencea Re- . Also trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
qut&lt;M.
·
30..713-15061, Muon wv.

210

Business

no lnoido

po•. 814-992-3080.

Very nita home in Pomeroy

rent, 814-992-5858.

460 Space tor Rent
Beauty salon located on Union

tor Avenue tor rant, I150Jmo .. Con-

Wetzgal Street, Pomeroy, WI D,
$350/Mo. Deposit, 513-922-0294.

1884 Ford
F-150,
·mii&lt;tl,
10 take
overlow
paymef1t&amp;
eacellent Condition, e 4·1d·
J~;;;;;~;;;;:t;;;;~;;;~;;~ onSom110ne

!~~~S:Ikir, awl~.

. tact Dottle Turner Really office,
61 ..992-2BIIe.

Boola 8y Redwtni. Chip-a,
Tony lama. Guaro"n - Lowasl
Pricea AI Shot C.lt;Gollpolll.
Chtopl25" Sharp T.V. 2YHr Old
Dishwasher, Whlta,Etactrlc Cook
s..... 81 ..3 - 1.
Concrelt &amp; Plastic Sopdc Tonka,
300 Thru 2,000 Galiano ·Ron
Evana Enterprlaes, Jackaon, 0f1 ·
1-800-537-8528.

Will"'- 814 25IBBS5.
• ~....

Couch, ~ove-. llblas &amp; ,.,.._;
8 pc. dining •oonl •~Ita; bunk
bods &amp; dnoeHrs; ptclUrH: curtolna: knickknacks; lllpparwaro;
. conning aupplles: nlghl stand:
vloUn; YlfJ good condition, Bl411112-8244.
Duo To Ramodellna. Kllchtn
Cabinets &amp; Sink For Soia 8144411 em.
Electric Whaelchtlre /Bcootere,
Now IIJatd, Bcootar /Wheolchair
Lifts, Stairway Elftatore, Lift

tor Rent
12x85 With 8xH~ Etpando, 2

'eec:~rooms, 2 Baths, Newly Car pared, AC, Excellent Condition,
Private lot In Chesl'lire, Afler 5

Commercial building lor r1111 in
center ol _ , town .,.. llidcloporl, 2500 sq. It. coil B14-0922458.
r.1 ERCri A NDIS E

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Porter

2424,114 148 4504.

Relrlgoralor&amp;, Slovll, W.lherl
And Dryers, All Racondltlonod
And Gauronleedl 1100 And Up,
Wil Del¥•. 114 Ill 1141.

Buk:twring. Now
Open lor beef or hog. Coli lor
appt 004-112-2751 Buo. or 8823328Raa.

Roach's Custom

P.ll. 614-387-7871 .

510

Houaehold ·

•
Gooda
Area. $235/Monlh, Utilities Un'
paid, Dapooit and .Roleronces RoSago Genlllo, ton gomos. Mon·Appliances :
Reconditioned icor and lhrH cont,..llors, 1220.
q!Ortd 814-388-8182.
washita. Dryers, Rangel, Rafri81~D02·71&lt;41.

POSITION AVAILABlE

Leading Southern "Ohlo HVAC

~~~~~~~~=:I
0

Contracto, Hal A Position For A

~11

Shootmetal
Appllcant
MustShop
HaveForeman.
Sheetmetal
Layout And Fabrication Experi·

10 people who need to lole
weight &amp; make money. to try new

- k Walt Wllh Others, Et~;.
E•ceiient P11Y

AIIINI -le advar111lng In
this iiiWlpt~p&amp;r II fJUbtiCI to ,
tho Federal Fa&lt; Houal~ Act
oi10BB which makes Hl!egal
to advertiSe 'any pralerance,
ionltallon or dlsc~mlnalon
baaed on race, color, religion,
... lllmllilllll1alu8 or notioool
origin, or 1111'1 1nten11on to
make any lOCh pralenHlOII,

ence. Job Coordination Skill,

p" t•nled w•ight·lon produ~t.
31}4-173-5083 24/valdoy. .

GoodBanefill

$1 000 Weekly Processing Mail
· Free Info. Send Sell-Addressed
S\&amp;mpad Envelope; Expreu
Doptl31, 100 Eaai.Wh1Jos10ne
"Blvd .. SUite ,148-345, Codar Port&lt;
TX 78813.
'

Join Our Growing Team Today

.OOIK
E•tras

~~

And BaAL-.
send Reaume To:
SHEETMETAL POSITION
Box687
Jockoon, OH 45840

$20D-15DD weeki~. Assemble
product&amp;. No ulllnQ. P,aid direct
Fully· guorantaed. No experience
• necea~ .-y. 7 days. •o7-87t;-2022
"" 0505H04.
' :,!'{T!II:t::=~=Pct:;,..
-:.,:-qc-:-)- . -I
' Poatiol Poaitlons . .,rmanent lull9 iln,t fOr cleiklaor1er4. Full Ben.
·m~' For ·~·~· •Pp,iiGali~n ·
· ..,., ,lilltl ,0111. 708 284-1831i .
' 31170 Joii11D !j&gt;m. 1

111 dillllilltloa. Mus1 baa rtglalertld rurM or liclrMd ptaCik:aJ
;.,,.. currently 1 - in tho ·
. . . o!Ohlo.•Prolor•ld qoaJAcoliono: ~In public heohh

, AVOij t All Areaa I Shlrtey
SpN-o. 304-875·1429.

chitonn and adulll will~

=."Pieua--..

1

~

•1

··-

.AGENT: AVON SELLS ITSELF
NaOd CASH For l'fintor Billa?
E"!" 1111 :f 15 /llr. A1 Work -Homo
-

"1-800-742-47311-

..

-llonordlocrlmlnallon.•

TNs - p a r will nol
-V;ICCepl
-lorrul-te
wt11chllln Ylolllion ollhe law.

The Meigs Counly Board ol Man-

1a1 Ratardltion &amp; ~
Oiiabllitiaa (Cwiell&gt;n School/

OUr &lt;Udell ... herai&gt;V

lnlormed thot all-ngo

Maigalftlirlllrle&amp;) aaokaa subIU\11• Health Slrvlotl Coordlna-

adYaftliaclln tNa ne.cpapor
ara available on an &amp;qiMI
opportunity bolla.

~':.;~= ~~=­

310 Homes for Sale

-1

diaabilltloa. Send,.......
ill' FabruoiY 8. 1118110:

2 -"""' 1 bolh 11o1ne on 2.Jo11

in s,.racu'ae, 2.. 1t30 1.5 atory

s- ~ EIOCI/tiw 01,...,

&amp;!loP bulldina. 122.500. call Bu1Ch

' Mllga Counlr Boerd of
Rollo dlikM I and llMfopman1li

Dillli._,.
.
1310 carloltln Snot'
' P.O. Bod07
Ollio45779

IIi¥;.,,.....,,,

nli!I-IDThoAddlciToucll.
Cel614-11112-8244 lor grooniug

~ppainlmii•L

110 F.-m Equipment
11115 Moasey Fergu~n Tractor,
V.rr Good Cond
. ldon, Runa Ex~BI ..742-2457.
e3o · LIVIIIoc:k
12 Wltk old plga f'r Hit, 135,
BI&lt;I-8G-2017or014-Q4g 2808.
Hay Bough1 And Sold, Horaa And
Dairy Ouaii!V. By The Simi Loadl.
Gormoro-.. DH !13--2822.

640 . Hay &amp; Grein
Hoy, Square Balas, 11 .50 814·
44-424.

"' ..D02-311D4.
3 B~;oom .Ranch, Ga1 H•itt,

Largo Dock, Foncad Backyard,
GMn School Bl«41-111511.

II'OUrJd - · 2 bedroom,
aCon4o,
balhl. comr*IOIY lurnlalted. In
Pan Chartoho, 1'1 ., li4-tf6-

•7.

0

2 A.,.a, 3 Bad-

Eat-In •KHchtll,

lj
,I

~OW COME TI-IE'r' 1RE NOT
PLA't'IN6 CI-IRISTMA5
CAR01.5 ANI(MORE?

....

I MISS 'fi.IAT STUPID
DRUMMER 6()1(..

:..

.f . ,.
·..:

!

Bike Around, ' l2100 Firm 614245-01107 Allor Spot

W~ ~VIt-1(:,

A.

,·-

,..
IT ~oor IT 1-1~ JUST

....:---~ ~~~ /&gt;..T
THE: OFFIC£ 'rn1:,
~lt-l&amp; .. .

·
1DDS Polaria Magnum 425 414,
~mila&amp;, garage kept 304175-

,._:&gt;IN~

K~€.!

21Da.27 Actor

f-!-+'-+-+:......t

. Rlcllaid280Nne
.30 O....lllol

.._

31 A~xan

-ma ·

35
35 Of aocll
flunchd
40 Fabric

m111tn

The club ace was cubed to check
for a singleton queen, then a heart
ruffed to try to bring down the ace.
Finally, South ran her trumpa. ·
Wben everyone wu down to three
eardl, dummy had the diamond aeven
and ldng-jaclr. of clubs. Weal held the
diamond 1o and two club1. Declarer
' was left with two dubl and • spade.
On Uoe 1ut trump, West bad to dlacafd 1 club. so;· dummy's diamond
aeven could be thrown. Fin•lly,
Margie led a club. Unfortuaately, the
queen didn't appear from West. Yet
knowing that West'a laat card was a
diamond, there wu no point in taking
the club llnene. Margie called for the
club king and Eut'a queen came tum·
blingdown.
That wu a perfectly executed lhowupaqueeze.

SO=""g51 Honld

52 Dummy

54f-

55 Ri11a' nymph
58 LAiou"'
5I Section

ot org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll C.mpoa
Celebrily CipherCI=MII ftCMIIIct trom ql
liofW by famoul peopil, put andpr....c
Eadl
lnlledllhlr . . . . frofanathlr. T«My'ulta: X eq&amp;MP

110.11

'HNHYAUSVA

ZJ

~

DI

CFH

VHGCF .
EZVWH

(USODJW

I DHV

D' N H

CTDBH

lGYYA

CFHA'II

cs

L A,ll H I K . '

BFOLXDSJ)

LZFGLLGV

QID .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "No one gossips aboul other people's IMICIIII virtues."
- Bertrand Ruaaell.

I

IP

G0 CI L

I I

1~

1:.:.. .
I'
1
I_ 1
• • _ _

1980 Fleotwaod Brougham Ctdl~
lac, \lory Otpondllllt, Littll Body·
Damage. 1350 OBO, Bu -•4118805.

750 .Bolda "

Overheard in line at bank:
•
"No matter where you go, you
r-------.,,_fi_n~ _~h~t inflation - - - lhere

1883 201 Pro XL. 2o· s~ra1oa
bass boat, 200 XPHP, 614·1B77347orBI&lt;t-11411-2879:
'

1
•

760 · Auto Plrta &amp;

8

1981 Camero Grey, 305 V-8, AIOl
Of Now Pilrta. Sacrafice $1,200
Fir111 814-21111-41716.
1988 Chryaler L•Baron $750,
1984 Dod_g e Aries $700, Auto ~

moles. 4 Dooro, Good Wort&lt; Cars
B1«41-1033 L - Measoga.
1U8 Firebird 350 Eng ina, Au IOmauc. With Ovfll Drive, Good
Condlllon, Aiklng $2500 61425NI28.

I

Motors:'
fcirS.Ie
I

.

7

Acc:eiiOI'Ies \
Budget Transmi&amp;llo~ Uaod

:tie:

81-.z45-5877

•

e4o

:::,:11-

,now-

.,

S NI BA
5

IN AI
•

RI y Tl TIa

•

.

~

_

G Complete

1ho chuckle quoted

bv filling in the missing words

you develop from lllep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

IJ ~l!E:SE

buill, All Typea, Acceaalblei Tolt
Over 10.000 Tranemias'IDn. ·

....

134

I

&amp;~houn

25c:one-

liltS lCR 80R dirt bike, 11:1001 Ol·
coilent condition; 1g88 Foultrax
250, 11300, good condition, i14742-211117.

1----..,......:.-..,..,_-

\

iplrlt

cond, ss;oooactuat mllaa . 304175-1714.
.

7

Color:

Baa&amp;
Pale
Allpue

Weal could beat dummy'a seven.

IDG1 Honda CR 50G. Eacallalll'i "' ~
Condi1lon, 1'W&amp;, EJ&lt;n !:IJMI."l!l•"

Su!f•

wadllln:f.

'•

I

I I I ITH~RE I l I I I I
SCIAM 1.11$ ANSWIIS

Tht Treosurt You
Sovl"fl You'll find In rile ..
Clc111l(led Scctloll.

IMONDAY

Wlnd!Ma.*F

5

Nonll
4 NT
7•

~~

1---

lmpresaed by the declarer-play of
Margie Eggleston. She,... pla.YJng in
a game at Jolln'a lrsland. Vero Beac:h,
Fla., where I teach during the faD.
After Margie opened with three
apade8, ber hueband, Tom, ueed
Blackwood. Six hE:erts ahowed one ICI!.
and a' void in hearts, just what the
northeily doctor ordered.
Seven IP8des appears to have three
ehan~a: the ac:e of hearts •ppearing
In one or two rounds, the diamonds 3-3
cir the club finesse. But M1111ie found
a fourth possibility.
After winning trick one with dummy's diamond queen, Margie called
for a IGw heart, teallng Eul However,
believing the bidding, he played low.
Declarer ruffed, drew trumpa ending
In the dummy and caahed dummy's
remaining top diamonda, levnlng that

Motorcycles

Faaleai~Uifa~

Weal
Pa&amp;l
Pa&amp;l

·~-

2 Important.

Today's deal is much more difficult
than my normal. However, I wu very

94 Ford F-1 50 4&amp;4 XLT. loaded.
16,200 mile&amp;, ••celienl co~on,
alking 117,200 514-367-0
or
814-84a-:!4111alllo Bpm.

Exrra 2·Sttokeoll,

llmll
34Appr38 "-tor a . . 3 Singer Homo

-

11 Ballow
1t Guordlen

43 Solllt (fl!ax)
45 B1111ttt1Ne
47 Pie nut
48 Dulclt
chaale

••

$18,200: 614-387-«111 I.

1887 Yamaha IOO.Four
fll
Shaft Drl... Elecutc Stal't E
lan1 Condl1ion, 11,1110, OBO,ll..
4411-1151, 114 UBOI21. .

., 3 2
•s 4 2

8 - coooolalllleoa

• Flblr

1oY...,

By Pbllllp "lder

•

Transmission , Air, Tilt, Cr ise,

no

33 Solemn

5-ng
IIIIIWIII

32 Tlllo (lp.)

....t.4...

,

4 Reel

DOWN

Tough deal,
great play

--

ac, took&amp; &amp; runs good. $3,500.
31U-882-3652. '
1884 JHp Grand Wiigonea(, ac.
n- tiraa, new tune up, • 3,.500 _
•
:304-:=:7:..:13-::.:51:.:88.::.__ _ _ __
11185 Topota 4x4; 4 cyl. 5 •P."d·
chrome wheals, cuaetto, looka/
·~·"" 81 .,_247-4-2
"'"" ......
,......, ..,.....,,
~ ·
ID8B Ford Lorein C.onveraion
.
Von, Aulomatic, PW, PO, Raiatd
Roof, 1111t·387-75M..
F
A
15995
. 18Bg ord anger 4&gt;4
:
111811 Niaaan King Cab ••4; 11188
Toyota 4•4 12995: J888 lauzu
Trooper 4x4: 19110 Ford 3/4 Ton
4&gt;•: 1985 s-10 Btozat 4x4 $2395;
1•••
Dodge 31•lon 2 wd · 8&amp;0
Aula Slits. Highway 180. 614::;44::6.:B::IIII::S.::.__ _ _ _ __
1DDO Dodgo Ram Van B-250,
72.ooo Milas. 15,000, can Be
SHn At: Gallipolis Daily Tribuna,
825 Third Avonue, Galllpolia
:OIIio:=:·_ _ __:._ _ __
1982 ChOY~ Aalro, all wheal
drlvt, extended &amp; LT pack,ge.
30H75- 3121 ·
I
Chevy
S·.IO
,
Standard
414
1985

1lu"'**.llm-7pm, fttdilrand
.,..
SUnday by
oppok-•L ClroorNng. poi lUI&gt;
pita. AKC pupplta, ki.tiiN.Iinll,
laod and ll'lldl,_, ~lid

:\Fell· . ....... --..

nulllnp. _.,.,.~­

-

·-;;;;.,llonolow·~

---·

20~

SOUTH
•A Q J 10 t 7 I

Opening lead: • J

1

2 bedroom, 2 mlea out New Lima grators, eo Day Guaranttel
Rtl, RUtland S250/mo. plus ualitias. French City Ma,tog, 814-445- Small couc:ll, 11110. B14-9DZ.7352.
1705.
goa haa~ ., .. 742-2803
Sofa With 3 Tabitl, Olnono, • ·
1087 4dr Chovrolot Capri&amp;, 4.3 Cl
2 Bedrooms Furni&amp;hed, Newly Coun~y Furniture. 304-4175-6820. Choirs, Chest ol er-a, llraw1'll.
Engine .. Runs .Like A Top, No
Carpaitd. AC, Clay Chapol Road. R1 2 N, 8miloa, P1 Pioaaant, WV.
Fumllure. Bit 1411 3040.
Rusl, Good Second ·c ar 12000
$250/Mo. $250 Deposit , Refar - Tuell-5119-8. SUn 11-5.
.
Slokw-Matic SIDra. Good ~­ OliO 614-441-0310.
en::es, 61•·256-8718.
G. E. Washer Heavy Duty 175; lion. Col Allor Bpm B14-361-D525.
.
1087 C.vallaf Z-24, Z.l LillO, Fi- . _ _ _.;__ __;.;__:;...,;
2bedroom, toral electnc, no pets, Wesonghouu Dr~ar 175: Whirl1 child. $2751mo: •ncludes (fBih pool Wo&amp;har $95: Konrnrn Dryer STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon barglaaa Hoool. 'Runa Good, Good
Mlillga. Good Tiraa, 11,800, 8J4- .
pi~kup. $200 deposit New 1995 175; Whirlpool Rofrigeromr Fro11 Uj&gt;rlght, Ron Evans EnterP&lt;i-.
448-3789 Alter 5.
2btdroom. no patt. 1 child, 13501 Free, White $125; Refrlgera1air - · Ollio, 1-800-537-0528.
mo. $300 doposlt. 304-875-6277 Harnsl Gold Frost Fre~ $1.25; 'ThrH Yll&lt; old lift c:lllir, Hke ,_, 1888 Clifty Cornaro. 305 ong1ne.
BASE MElfi'
Electric Range 30 Inch White
altar 5prn
304-lle2-3301 before 3prn or ahOf
WATERPROOFI'IG i .
Waa $125 Cut To IUS: Eieclric '1250, Bl&lt;~-8~2-7863.
7pm.
Uncondllionol liltUme ·g uara,.H.
3 Bedroom. $300 Monlh, c ...... n- Range 30 Inch Advacoto. Green
Local
reterenc:" furniShed. tau
lantly Located, Dapoait 614-446- Was 1150 Cut To 1125: Marllg
Two 1988 ChiYr Cavallera (~14) 44•·0870 Or (014) ~77841 .
.
Waaher $205: Mo1Chlng Or~er
12,000 Each; Two 1Deo Ch.. r 0418 Rogars w,toiProoHng. OEa1205 1 Year Warranty; Portable
c-~n 13,1500 Each; one 1084
llblilhodiD75.
.
3 Batlroom, NHr NGHS Oil 180, Woshar IUS; Skogg&amp; Appllancoa,
Ford Cargo Van II,Dg5; One
S1ove, Retrtgerato~. Water, Traal'l 78 Vine Street, Gallipolis, 814·
18H
Ford
15
Pooungor
Van
Paid, $250/lto. , 1-'lua Deposit, 4411-73115. 1-«Xl-4111-3499.
Video Store, Restocking, Over ts,&amp;oo; Al: E'llnt Aontol Cainw, Appliance Por11 ~ .larvlca All
814,1118-0BIIe,
1SID ~·-n livonuo, Gallipolis, Nama 8rands CMi M :V.. · xGOOD USED APPLIANCES 8DD Vldeo'a For S.lt, Oldlu 6141411115112
'parioncl Ali Work ~non1 d,
Mobile Home For Rant, 614-446- • Washers, drrera, refrigeorarbra, CIIUICI Some NaWr ~­
~2.000. 114-317-oBIZ:
French cttr .,.,.ill'lf·l~" • 80785.
rangea. Sk&amp;llfl Appliances. 7B
111111 F - Foma Good·Con..
':: . ,._ ._
Vine S~Ml, Call 614·448-7388, Wooden Kllcilen Table · &amp; 4 dilil&gt;n, POL, P8, Elacttlc Mlnvro, ~s. , . .· _
Trailer For Rant On Georges 1 -1100-4~.
·cac Gonerat Homo
tnChoirs, Good Condition, $150, SSilPIEngino. Bit 41118108.
Creak. 614-448-l219.
••nence· Pajnting, vin,l ai g,
B14·370-27a.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1111 Ptymouito ;. boor, Grand
Two and lhree bedroom mobile Complete home furnishings.
·· an&amp; .
Fury Loodad, 11,11115; 18H LTD carpentry,
Building
ITIIblla - -repak
homes, starting at $240· $300, Houta: Mon · Sat, 9·5. 614·448 - 550
Small V-!1 t850;' 1873 Ford Plcii- :;;:,oadinabl coil Che~ B1.. 2sewer, water and trash included. 0322, 3 mllea out Buiovlllt Pika
Up Shorlllad ,302 Standard
614-1112-2167.
Fraa Dettva-~.
Blocio, brick, aowar~ea. wind- H,OOO, Miltl, 11,175, BIH4B.
DRI'WALL
ows. ttntlll, etc. Cl
Wlntart, I151.
PICKENS FJRIITURE
Haria. lirioh, ...... .
Rio
Grande,
OH
Call
61.4-241·
440 Apanmenta
-IIJaed
Ctllfnga bl11111~•.plaller iapalr.
5121 .
.
304-4175-1450
1881 RociiM Ciiiiio~s-·.-.: .. Call Torn. 304-67~1""" 20 yaors
torRent
now In 'II. Wlloraod, btal ol .....w.. : ... ~l'~.JJ ...
Amman• Side By Side Relnoara- 560
1 and 2 bedroom apor1man11, klr- lor,
~
Color T.V., Washer, Dryer,
niahtd and unfurnished, HCurlly 614-255-1238. . 1 Oroo.
ptdalo,rolllno
lull colt,
on HIOO
board
• G"'om Shop "'1ft !'Piirn.
_._
.depoall required, no pe11, 814luring H~dro Bath. J~ile tllll. neg: Coil Scott iiVolla, B14-114t1112-2218.
VI'RA FURNITURE
C.l Bl 4 4411 0291. .
2879, ~14·148-2045 or Bl 4-1112·
.,..
814-443151
1 bedroom apartment in Wkktl•
Oua61y
HouFumilure
And
12
Puppies,
Hail~~·· Half Rooftllg and' autliro- wnmtrclll
par~ available December 1. all
utllillas paid, 1250 par monlh,
AptlllancOa. Gttll Dtoll on
Ba.,'!.!tt. ".~~.. •'' Ont-1IH- 1112 JMP Wrangler 33,000 Ac· and rallldlnMii, llinor fapaira. 35
C.ah And Corryl RENT-2-0WN
....., ~·-...,
lUll lllllao, l110 - · 1 - DoD yaaro axparl•nct. BiB 'ROOf·
1100 deposit lim to !5pm Bl ..
Andu.r-Atliolorailalllo.
Color.
Co• IIOOO,Dayl Bl4-441·0117 lNG, Blt.H2-2364 or 1-IOO-IhIIZ.780B.
Frao DlliYory Within 2511iltt.
AKC ~ Sl*litl pupa, ,._ Ewii*IQI 31J4.e75-3181.
·
3H3.
2 Rooms. Furrn~~o~~ Elllt:lancy, AI . 530 • Antiques
Feb. I lor Vllao!driO'a Oor. bu" I 1112 Tlunus OL Loaded, New Tri-Sato SIMr &amp; Drain CIHnlng,
UIIUIItl Paid, Downslolrs, DID
-.SOU75-17R
11r1o, 77,000 llllao, 17,100, ., .. . Rtsl~entlo,l &amp; indualllol, High
s-od AYirlUt, GoiNpoNa, 1116/ ·Buy or sell. Riverine Anllques, ·~c ~~-........., Pu~C;,:•~ l.~44W11_;;;.;
. ::..:_1;;.._ _.;.........._...;,_ Paftl Wlllr Jot AYIIIIblt, T.V.
Mo.l14-448-31145.
1124 E. Moln SWMI, on ·Rl. 124, --•a Vi4.0 tn•paclkln 4voNollle,
Wormtci,Oow,Ciows
2bdrm. 1p11., 10111 alaclrlc, ap- . n.
~m•r•F· Hours: IITW
· · · 1000
• :
Tolll
DOcked. 114-.--r: nd, I_......._......_E~4""
_. . . _ ~.,,., 4 ~i'S-7857.
,&lt;1
'
lurriahtd laundry room a.m. Ill B:OO p.m., SUnctoy I .00 .,1.::::.::::=::.:.:.;:::::;;;=~- Dot&gt;,, AuiO, Alr, Till, ••HUe,
000
1
EleetriCII .._
· - !" lct.ot tn '"""· ,e:ooprii.Bt4-9D2·252B. .
AKC Gorman 8heph8r41 pupo. l!~~-~~~r""~or!_!ll~~:!lill~ng~i111!!;J!'0..,...•__•·
Refrlgll'ltlon
INIIabill II: Vltlaga ' 540 Mlicelllntoua
•.304::::.
--1::.75-6:..:::.121.:.::...- - - - .
or. Clll 114:1112·.. .· , .
u...-l'llnd'"'•
•·
1114 For41 Eacorl Fronl WhHI
_,,.
·AKC Rqlslared, Shll1! Qualtty Drivt, 5 Spttd, AIIIFM Rodlo,
RSESCERTFEO DEA!.ER&gt;~ . LAWI'IENCE ENTERPRISE~!,~'
llalo Cocker C , P : , (il~1~1~,!100~.,1~1~1~t~·~•!!l~7._ __
Heel Pumpa, Air Condition I~;. \r
4 prom drao- a n d - · ~.:::c-~ a Ton~
lA..,· l.oanL Daolar wM
. 'lbu Don' Oilll ua Wa Bam 1.01o1·
1 summer
drou, slzei ~ 01 ~ . 1131 .,. ...,.
_.,
, • .,
,.. ....... _ntr,outoe..
n frH l:sti. .too. 1-100-201-DOif,
Ill· - - ·
• ~-·~ .
·kon.1210, 114-170-27a
tu;.;;...._. el-r•. u.ten au ue nae. W'(~
,;. •
A)IP.Io lie co,..ler, Eattnded I:::.::..:=:.:.:.:..;:;..:...:;;;::;.....__ E.,.....,. Uttd Cart. 304 4..
Ar' 1 ' olill or couuw:oi:iat ~•
.Ill&lt;,
. -~
, , lWo
DiskII Ori.ao,
At(c a.-iiii.;
......- .;;ll'whlte,lili;•;;;;;.
; ;;;;o;;;;;j:r;;;
o r . . , . . -._..
W~llr
Printer, Monl·
SOli- .210;
AKC ' Cocker
lponteta
Wllro. EIICelient Condition, 114- *'*. •1110:,. ~ .,....,_ 8onl Financing o-n.1d Will canatd alacll'lclon. RldanQI;r
2!111!118
:'"':~;l'S.:::________
..
'limum Down or Trade-In, Clll EIICirlc:ol, WV0003De, 304-811:::!!
~1144482117
1711&amp;.

AI-

EI.1Pl OY I.1UH
SERVIC ES

3123.

11173 Pontiac Calallna, good

Carat. Call For Price, 81 ..·441·

420 Moble Homes

Pahl for Sale

Cholro, Bowman's Homacore, Round Bails Ol Hay, Wat &amp;
81
4-448-1213.
Sloradln Bam, 8IH45-5117.
Fraazor For Sale 15 Cu. Ft 4 Second Cutting Orchard Grall,
-Oid.18110.511 liB 8817.
Nwer We~ t2.25 Par Bola, Bl4HI-EIItciancy LP. Or Nall111i Goo •• '0!3.
DZ.. Furnocoa 100,000 BTU I·
IOD-201-D08B, 114·44B-B301,
TRAt JS PORTATIOrJ
Duel Systams And Air Condlllonera. fNit Eltiml• J' •
---,;_--~---1
tntor1harm &amp; MUiaf lloblla HOmo ?10 AldOl for Sell
Furnace&amp;. Goal Oil &amp; E*"lc In
SlDCk. Largo 0 11lillllter Buy Out 'IIThundofbiNI, 3.1iillt, V-B auol Now Mobile-Homo Fur-ea. lomllic, PS, P8, PW. -··
Bank Financing Available, Call POL, CIUIH, air, nlct car, 11800.
1
Bonnett&amp; Mobile Homo HTG &amp; 8 4--387-0323.
CLG At 814·448·1141B or 1-1100- '1111 Thundtfblrd sc. two doo•. 3.8
872-511117.
titro, V-8, elite model 1Uibo. PS.
PB. AC, 5 speed , power IIIII
JET
and locka, · areat Car: tasoo
AERATION MOTORS
nag., 814-092-7471 or BU-949Aapoirecl, &amp; Rebult In 2ti79.
Coil Ron I!Yana, 1-1100-537-11521.
Ledlea Diamond Solillire Ring In
14K Yellow Gold /6 Prong, .B2

BARNEY

1

• Plo
~-~ C
L
14
wa, rv•-• lttlt oad·

::: ~~. ~~.::."':u:.:af:~

.-·

""

~~~~~~~~=:=J
a. .•wo
~~~~~. Bl4-361-1714.
7 30 "•&amp;nS "'
. S
""--'-Fani"PoiSlDro 1884 ChoVy s- 1o Btozer. V6 aulll,

Nice three bedroom apartment,

2 Bedrooms, Tolal ElectriC, Small
Yard, Leaae, Sec. Dep., No Pllts,

FIN A NCIAL

......:....-

580

Boalll
J•
8•

..

441
::.:.=:.::..--''-~

540 MllcelllneoUI
Merchlndllt

.. 4

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

18114 Ci1oVY Silwri!IO. tael green,
linted window1, am.fm cauette,
pa. pb. u-, taw miiM.ge. Must 11e
op-lllol 113,500. 614-44810753.
:B:=:___.,.,.._ _ _ __

s_....,. ..

....

ll4i-2927.

•

58f1Mia
80 .._..,.. org.
20 Senior cltlan 11 ftaldcl
22Aatar- u--lnapolce
83 fomllr manbat
24
Tlllw
aufllx
115 Snow fiiiCI
28 ~ - · Ill Me-tuna

•Q7

. • 101883

'

l .

· f'&gt;

~~~~~~~~

= = ·- - - -

•AJ18743 ,

·· -"

48,000 mi01, $18,000, call 614:

tomolic,
.-oen..Wllh All, $11,000, 614:

N. 3!!1, Middlaporl 2btdroom, lurnl1h1d: Deposit -&amp; refetencea.
30 82 2588
:..:.4-8:=::•
Nice
1 Bedroom
In Kanauga,
Carpeted,
Appliances
Included,

.s 3 2

•Qta2
•J 10 9 8

.

~tin

2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom Rooms tor rent - week or month.
Trailer In Gallipolis, 81 ..4-48-11849 .S1arling at.l120/mo. 'Galio Hollli.
·For lnlormotion. ·
814 448.e580.
·

Unturnlal'led two bedroom house,
nice and clean, deposil required,

"--•·

cruiM, lilt, amllm ·tuHtte equaJ·
izer. toWing package, bedliner,

,, ..

AIJI!'~Ri.

. ...

, , t• •

Uodern 1 Bedroom ·Apartment,

814·448-0390.

-room.

paymenta aher

Sportlldt, 4.3 V·l , au1o, air,

{I

WEIIT

~ D()ij'T

. ...-

1Qg4 Ch.. y E•tendtd Cab 4x4

Riverside Aportments In Mlddt•
porl. From 1232-1355 . Call 614992·5054. Equel Houalng Oppor-

Now 14180, 2 or
only
make 2 poymen11m mova ln. No

'I

41
= · d forth
53~
57 "--"" bird

lfiCY·

~

HAVE. tl.c;£PlCIT

18G2 Chrry 4wd, 112 Ton. Shari
Whoal Base, Tilt, Cruiat, Air
. 112,750 51-.379-2248.

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bolh,
Clean, No
Reterence &amp; DopoeioRtquil8d614-448-1518.

1878 14•70 Schultz llannchester
With 12«28 Factor~ Add-On
Roorn011H6 8034.

HEY,

~75-3174.

Clean, No Pela, Reterenca, DopolitRaquirtd, 51._...1519.

Furnished Elficiancy All Utilhioo
Paid, Share Bath, 1146/llo., 919
Sac:ond Avenue, GaWipoii&amp;. 614...e-31145.
.

18
17
18

, EEK &amp;: MEEK

~.

Brokls. Fair Drive Tir&lt;~l. Various
Other- Parts! e14-3'18-212B.
1884 Chevy S-10, 4cyl , 4spd ,
rune oac .. good body, $1 ,800 .

bon , Har-.d Floors, 2 Expan- · Acroaa From Park, AC, No 1'1111,

, ' . recommended. 100% ouaran-.
. •• 1-800-1170-5087.

·- 1:'i:··

1984 362 MOclei 1'110111111 350 Big

Cam Cummins E~ine, New
Steering Tlras &amp; Wheals. 80%

;; ; 30 Announeemenl8

. 40

12 How - you?
44 Conlc:rlt*a
13 IIIUIIDUI
48 111M agent
dlmoc. .illlon 41 Jacldll'• 2nd

•

enjoy
bridge or Scrabble.

you . Trying to
_ , . - - -- - - - - - - - romance? The

Allro-G~

can help you underatand What to do to
make the relatlonllllp - "· tMR $2.75 to

·- -

ASTRO-ORAPH
'

....:,_ _ _ _..:.,._ _ Matchmaker, c/o thla newspaper, P.O.
Bo• 1758, Munay HI Station, New Yorio,
NY 10166.
PISCES (FelL lP"-M Ch 20) It you holr8
BERNICE
an lrnpoNnl !laue lo reeolve with a ctoae
trlend, lhll will be a goocl day to diiCI•3
BEDEOSOL the mallei In dald. All ol the Mlolidoa c.n
be tronecl OUI.
'
ARII!S (Morell 21·Aprll 11) A new
oppotlunlty for lncrwaoing your •mtngs
might droalop for you 11 lhli time. H mey
-~·
""-·not INII&lt;a y0u llcll, but" w11 ._,. aome
;:~ ;:
.....,.,..good.~ prollilllllllla. · "
~,-;,
~ , TAURUS (AptiiMiar 20) You "" now
' ,
.
·
1In a cycle In Whlcll ~r lntlueol:e OYir
·
•·
yoUr .-ra rnlghl ~ lnlanle.
- 'I T...._,, Feb. tl, IItie
·
What you .11u and lila axampl• uou
, 'f. l I :i
.
.
·
'' ·
~'
.F-iiibll d!lngll could be lh iiiCn for, llilllblllll, wll hiYII a
- -~ •lri'lliH.., .toea~~ II\ Nlllfd·10 your 01!11• (Mar 21-Juna 201 A ••ani
fltilllCial .llluliton. '{he dDM•IIfllrd trwnd IIIIPfle!t flllljllbe In ~ IOdly W!illll an
rniglll become UIOCiate'a candid remartca mek1 you
'.tlli ..,.,.. .phi.
·
.
rMllze ""' ac:tuattr. lhll 1*10!1.lhlnlca
.ttQW~IIIUI (Jail. • ,._ 11) Do. nat be highly Of~·,
~ 1n11t a ~ IOdly by ... ....._ Of • C'oNCift ..,._.,....,.,II) Sodii·II:W:....._ 3u11 beciiiM
not 111ft of • - 1. rather then pllyalcel
. ,. .tor-~··
could~ liiCIII • . , . . . today·

Ito-------

big.,._._.:

:pow .,.......,ooed
..,.

.

I

_...,...doll
-" _.,,work ,.,.

'

••

LI!O (July 23·Aug. 22) The squeaky

Wheel wt1 get the Oil today, so don't bt

m~to ipeak up and defend your intereata , eapaclally those ot 1 tlnanclal
nature ..
VIRGO (Aug. 23•Sept. 22) Today you
will be judged by lhe compauy ~ kllp,
so companions who can eilhence
your 1m11gt ralhar lhan lhoM wiiCI COUld
delrllcl trom 1.
LI8RA (s.pc_ 23--0ct. 23) SomeOI .. who .
app1'8f1181H ~r quaiHiae and Chat-.
may te" you something In confidence
t&lt;MMy thet he or lhe would not din to Ill

anyoneelle.

.

ICORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Tod1y,
mutua!IV benellcill COIICIPII may N1U11
lrom 1 convai'SIHon you'll hOYa with a
lrlei1d who
nO! limit hll or her 11itk1ng 10 lilcltiot .. coo-.

doll

__,._

SAGITTARIUS (NoW. I:D-III-IDDI~a.:121111 8rijtol
ldlu partalnlng IG your aaplrllIlona •hould be aCted upon promptly
· What ~ ptNoetve w11 be ~
lila.

•

e.4l RICCI Rll (Dac. 2Wan. 1f) A 1e11on
...,,. trom a painful. pill mlol I w11
nat be "'IIII I~ IOday, -~hough you
.- b e pao1laly ~d- .. dD 10.

,

Etcher - Antic· Croak- Harbor· CHARACtER

You should admire a genius. envy the rich , fear the pow.
erful, but always revere the person with CHARACTER.

FEBRUARY sl

�•
~·

Monday, F-.u.y 5, 1 -

.Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.) ;:Meeting to·honor
:·Valentine q~:~een
. PI- for honorinl Mqie Blab,
clllpte(s Vllentine queen, and A. R.
Xnlpt, envoy, on his binhday were
made when Xi 01111111111 Mu chapcer,
'Beta Sicma Phi Sorority, met rccent·ly 11 the Bt'lldbury Cbun:h of Christ
. · Blake will be honoml at Tuesday's
night meeting II which time the
jroup will also enjoy "crazy binso"
. 'lfith each member to take two
.Wi'apped items to be given as prizes.
'A card shower was planned for
Kniaht who will observe his binbday
of Feb. 12. A cooftie 1ray and balloons
:will be taken . to him and members
'were asked to send cards.
· Kay Loaan conducted the meeting
·with the publication of two Beta Sig·
.ma Phi cookbooks being discussed,
and ,arrangements being made to
-serve the canteen at the Red Cross

•.

Bloodmobile. The deadline for apply·
ina for a scholarship was noted. and
a mectina with the Meigs County Fair .
BOird regarding sale of the premium
list was discussed.
A report was given on Jim Adams,
hu$band of a former member, who ·
recently underwent a liver transplant
at University Hospital. The need of
the·church for supplies was noted and
it was voted to make a $25 contribu·
tion. Other contributi.ons made by the
chapter were $25 to the breast cancer
fund, and $2S to the Disaster Relief
Fund.
.
Proirams at January meeting
included Debbie Miller showing pic·
. tures and describing life in London,
Pvt. William S. Hall, a 1995 grad-.
and Charlotte Hanning on Beta Sig- .
uate
of Meigs High School recently
ma Phi attributes.
graduated from basic training and
advanced to individual training at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo.
He was a member of the Alpha
35th Engineering Battalion, First
Brigade; Third Platoon. His training
·
c
CHESTER •• Chester PTO mem· onsisted of demolitions, combat
bers ate invited to1 attend an open vehicle operations, and land mine
I
forum of the Eastern Local School warfare.
He
is
the
son
of
Joseph
C.
Hail,
Sr
BOird at the Chester Elementary
and
Leta
Goodwin,
both
of
Pomeroy
School Monday, 6:30 p.m. A short
His nexi assignment will be in Ger·
PTO meeting will follow.
many.
TUI!;SDAY .
POMEROY •• Pomeroy Elementary PTO will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
at the $Chool gym. All interested parents are urgtd .to attend.

JjshCd as a free service to non·profit
,groups wishing to announce meeting
:and special eventS. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales 1lr fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
.S space pennits and·cannot.be guaranteed to run a specific number of
4ays.
·

r.tONDAY
, LETAI.U FAllS ·· The Letan
Falls Elementary School PTO will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. Parents and
teachers are asked to attend.
CARPENTER·· Columbia Town'ship Trustees will meet Monday, 7
p.m at. the fire station.

•

Canada. .

'

·Hoffa, fighting to regain control of
CAROL STEWART
the corruption-plagued Teamsters
union, disappeared July 30, 1975 .
from the parking lot of the reslltllrant. i
where he reportedly had gone to meet I
·
a mob boss.
At the time, Machus said, his
father feared the publicity would
Laura and Greg Stewart of
give the restaurant a bad reputation. Langsville, announce the birth of a
Over the years, however, it may have daughter, Carol Ann. Jan. 12 at Holz·
turned out to be just the opposite, er Medical Center.
assuring the restaurant lasting name
The infant was 21 inche~ long and
recognilion and a footno~ in history. weighed seven pounds, 10 ounces.
·
Carol Ann has two sisters. Amorette
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) and Cindi, and a brother, Jon.
Dreyfus fund founder and philan·
Maternal grandparents are Ken
tluopisl Jack Dreyfus Jr. has proposed and Carol McCullough, Pomeroy,
a land swap that could turn the and paternal grandparents are Mack
largest private estate at Lake Tahoe and Bea Stewart, Middleport. Mater·
into a publie park. .
nat great-grandmothers are Mildred
Dreyfus, who owns the estate, Fultz, Pomeroy, and Clara Criswell,
signed an agreement with the Amer• Middleport; and paternal greai-grandican Land Conservancy to' put the parents are Evelyn Murray .and
plan in motion.
Lawrence Stewart, both of Middle·
The deal hinges on. the federal port.
Bureau of Land Man~ge111ent's williogness 1o trade to the conservancy
1
d.
public land in the rapidly growing Las
ICers 9 9C 9
Vegas area that could in tum be .sold
New officers were elected at the
to developers.
.
· 1
·
f th
Sale proceeds ·would be used to · recent organizahona meetmg o e
· Leading Creek Conservancy District.
pay Dreyfus. Ownership of hIS
·
secluded 140-acre estate would go 10
They are J.1Fenton Tay1or, preslthe U.S. Forest Service.
dent; Charles Barrett, Jr., v1ce pres•·
The estate con!llins 8 three-story,, · dent; and· Ro~rt Snowden, board
medieval-style French chateau _ • m~mber. Meeungs were set for the
known a5 the "Thunderbird Lodge" th1rd Thursday of each month at 5
p.m.

Vol. 46, NO. 188
2 Sectlona, 22 ,....

.,.,

URG seeking members for choral group
Residents from Oallia, Jacksqp, 7 to 9 p.m. at the univmity's Fine ·
Mason, Meigs and Vinton Counties and Perfonning Arts Center. . •
are invited to participate in the UniIn the past, n~crous I'CSide_n~
versity of Rio Grande's Master- from the five counbes have partic1·
'll!'orks Cborale.
~
· pated in .the Mas~orks. Chorale.
' Dr. Merv Murdock, associate The Chorale combmes voJCes from .
professor of music at Rio Grande, • the Rio Grande student body, s~
says anyone interested in joining the and faculty as well u commuruty
Masterworks Chorale this year is members.
.
·
.
invited to come to the first rehearsal
-Murdock says that the spring proscheduled for Monday Feb. 5, from gram will feature chQI'IIseS from

Gilbert and Sullivan u ~11 u a
B~way medley. The 1pnn1 COD•
cert 1s scheduled for May.
: M~ock encounps thole who
Will JOin the chorale 10 pun:bue
the1r own set of music at the
~ on ~onday. .
. .
. ~~~nts 1n~ m partici~·
IDJ. m this year 1 Chorale at diB Uruversity may call 2&lt;4~740.5,for mon
information.

Stewart birth
announced .

Qff'

.

'

·II fUW -OMIIII COlt' I I ? ~ lnsunnce gaps IIlii
could IIIII til .. .IIIII ....... lola..
. '

' .... lllotltAiiiD
···-~~~~·Lilt
•llulintu.
flllllc:illl
.,._ • DIIIDIII].I•
Perlonll Umbrella
Lilbilly,
.......... CIMIIJIII. . .
· . C1!I ... ·WI'~. hllp yau gel thlliett pouible
lllilli*'t . . . ._paulDI ·coat.
I

..en

. 111t )4acbu Red fox IICfVecl its
lui ·dl"'*' fO the pulllic Slllllrday
Md call '!I iia final privlle .
brunch 011 Sunday. ~
.
Robelt J. Machus l,lid Sat.: .
Urday .... he - Ullllblc 10 RIIC"!' hil '

........
·'

'·

.,

.

,

I

"

..... "-·~ ... 111ngMIIglcG...yahi1eel

,., ,;· . OOWNING GHILDS MUUEN

.o.wr

Wll

OR

$600 CASH BACK
SELEO '96 MODELS
CHOOSE FROM
.
. THE FOLLOWING:'
•TRACER
• MYSTIQUE
•SABLE
· • COUGAR
• GRAND MARQUIS• VILLAGER

•AEROSTAR
•WINDSTAR
• RANGER
• CLUB
WAGON
'

I

.-....t
opened ln
Mill hll•' fllher, lflll'il 0. '

Eastern Local School officials
have approved a resolution of intent
.entering into a working agreement
. with the Meigs County Library Board
for a branch library in the district's
proposed $8.75 million school build·
jng project.
,
Th~ resolution for the letter of
. intent, previously announced by the
'library board, was made official during Monday's regular meeting of the
Eastern Local School Board at
· Chester Elementary School.
· What does the resolution mean for
" residents of the district? Location of
4,000 square-foot branch library in
the new K-8 central school, to be
· built adjacent to Eastern High School.
The facility would afford stuCients and adultS full access to
research information via computer on
tile World Wide Web and the Internet,·
·as well as elimination of the need to
· travel out of the county to local universities in order to access research
· materials.
JOINT WORKING AGREEMENT -:i- The Eastern Local School .
'The library would be located on
Dlatrlct approved .a lett8r af lmanl lo.ft!tet' Into en 1g1-..! for
lhe fronl comer of the new building,
services and space wllh the Melga Jounty Library Board. Seen
with a public entrance located on tbe
above are Krlstl Eblin, dlrectot'af.ttlnslon IMYICH for the Meigs
· library to eliminate lr&amp;ffic from enter·
County Public Library, and Eaa,tMI Local School Board President
ing the main entrance to the school,
Jim Smith,~
I,•cl : .;. , " \ ~' ! I \;;i
ac&lt;:O_r~ing to · Chester Principal
Ricl\ird Roberts, - - The library woul.d be staffed by a
The renovaled high school will galion between secondary and eleschool hbranan dunng school hours. also have an expanded library at mentary students, Roberts added.
and a hbranan employed by the._ .which sludents can access materials
Another benefit of the library the
tibrary hoard during public hours in from ·the branch library via comput· district and county residenls will be
the days and,evenings, Roberts said. er, thus presei'ving comple1e segre(Continued on Page 3)

Pomeroy's elected olf~tials viewed
plans for the proposed riverfront
amphitheater at Monday night's meet·
ing of village council.
Mike Stroth of SBA Consultants
Inc., Jackson. consultant for the village's Downtown Revitalization project, presented plans for the 163-footlong struclure, which will be built as
part of the revitalization program.
The amphitheater will include
seating, a walking/stage area. removable railing and tie-downs large
~nough for large river boats, according to the plans. It will eMtend more
than 17 feel out into the river.
Also included will be stage and
walkway lighting and electrical
hookups for boa1s, Stroth said.
. "(The amphitheater) will be·a real
. Stllf in this area," Slroth speculated.
"It will get a lot of use."
The amphitheater will join the
promenade, currently under construction, as improvements to the
. Pomeroy parking lot. Work on the
promenade has been halted due to
cold weather with .construction slat·
ed to resume as soon as the weather

· By KATHERINE RIZZO

BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHJP,
Mk;h. CAP),_. The JeltaUi'anl where
; . lormec r~ten president Jimmy
· Hoffa wu WI
baa cloHd ita .

n.

Commission, backers debate funding source
By JIM FREEMAN
for the commission seat currently
Sentinel News Staff
occupied by Howard.
' Tourism - or more precisely,
who should pick up the tab for its
Other members of the tourism del·
promotion - was the subject of a egation included Middleport busi ·
meeting betw~n the Meigs County nessman Tom Dooley; the Rev. Dawn
Tourism Committee and county com- Spaldtng of St. Paul -Luth eran
missioners Monday afternoon.
Church, Pomeroy; Pomeroy busi·
For the final six months of 1995, ness woman Annie Chapman; Syra·
commissioners provided $8,300 for cuse resident Dorothy Sayre; the
tourism, with the money coming pri· Rev. Roland Wildman of the.Trinity
marily from the sale of confiscated Church, Pomeroy ; and Sue Maison ,
guns.
chairman of the finance committee of
This year, the board allocated the Meigs County Chamber of Com$5,000 for tourism for the entire year, merce .
plus an additional $2,500 for other
Also .present was Prosecutin g
tourism-related activities.
Attorney John R. Lentes, represent·
.() However, the tourism committee ing the commissioners.
\(had requested $17,000 for the year. In
"If people think tourism helps
:addition, the group would like to businesses and the economy, there
make the joh oftourism·director into ought to be some way of funding it
. a full-time position.
other than by the county commisGroup members said county com, sion," Hoffman said.
missioners should bankroll the pro·
"You need to try to be self-fundmotion of tourism, while Commis- ed," Howard agreed.
sion President Fred Hoffman conMaison countered: "Meigs Countended it should be subsidized by ty businesses don't have the resources
those businesses who stand the most of those in other counties."
Williams pointed out some
· to gain from it.
Hoffman agreed thai tour_jmjL ~ :omplishments of the tourism
important to the county, hJ\ llfl!ll'ed rice on behalf of Tourism Director
· · notth ssJone
~pons bT
that f!lndmg'IS
I Illy
lrin Johnson, who was not present
of the coun1y co
iling •. ~· '.
•the meeling. Those accomplish·
· "wtiat yo ' ourism sh~ld ~ffm~n nnts included work to promote the
asked, "is t
payers in the cou P~.? fg Bend Sternwheel Festival and
for by the -~~~ded f".OSI of the nty · otter local events.
Hoffm
~-~mm · . ques.
Promoting tourism is good busi~ .~ ~
-,_,;.~~·~rs ..Jl'Ss, said Chapman.
·
Janet How'iiid and"'Robert Harten"Tourism is a cheap and easy way
bach. both of whom are seeking re- to build up the tax base," she said:
election this year.
"People are putting their hme, monTwo of the tourism committee ey and effort into tourism for nothing
members present. Judy Williams and in return."
Patty Pickens, are seeking the nomi "We want to work together," said
nation on the Republican ticket to run Williams. "We should not be on

..,. . .

.

opposite sides of the field "
Hartenbac h and Howard sai d th ey
would be willing to reconsider
increasing the •amoun t of financial
ass istance for tou rism and said they
would res pond next Monday.
The group is reques ting an additional $11 ,000, plus what has al ready
been commitl ed by the county commi SS ioners .

Supportmg touri sm in principle is
not enough, according to Dooley. "If
you're going to support it, it has to be
financial."
Afterwards. com missioners met
with Economic Development birector Julia Houdashelt who updated the
board on work to score local access
to the Internet.
The newly appointed Internet
Gateway Committee met with one
potential access prov ider, who posed
the following questions to local computer users:
. • Do you have at least a 144
, modem and 386-40 computer?
· • Do you have thi s in office, at
· home, or 'both 0
• Which Internet p ro v~der are you
· presently using?
• What is your phone exchange?
• What is your age?
• Would you be willing to pay at
:least SIO.for five hours of time per
·month?
i • Do you use lhe Internet for busi·
lness, hobbies, education or busiJness?

·

·

Houdashelt said local residents
.can contact her at 992-5005 wilh this
information .
In other business, commissioners:
• Accepted a bid to lease a 1996
Chevrolet Blazer for Emergency
(Continued on Page 3)

breaks.
. Stroth indicated the project could
be completed · by the end of July,
meaning it could be in use by the
annual Big Bend Stemwheel Festival
slated for Oct. 3-5.
The amphitheater and promenade
will be terrific asset to lhe sternwheel
festival, said Big Bend Sternwheel
Association President Jim Davis of
Minersville.
In addition, Slroth said he expects
about 25 downtown businesses to
participate in the business renovation
portion of the program _ aboul 50
percent of the buildings in the targel
area.
Stroth commended the pride and
enthusiasm of local merchants.
Total grant funds for 1he downtown project amount to $530,950
with $362,200 coming from other
sources. The total of all funds is
$893,150 - including matching
funds from local business oWners.
In open discussion, Council President John Musser said the village has
S1,400 ·put aside i'or three signs
marking the downtown district.
Councilwoman Geri Walton asked
why parking meters were not

removed from the parking lot prior to
the Jan. 22 flood.
Mayor Frank Vaughan responded
that the river may have came up ioo
fast to allow removal of the meters.
Councilman Scott Dillon remarked
that village workers should have taken the initiative to remove the park·
ing m'eters.
Ironically, council may now have
to pay to repair the meters cleaned
while many in the village would like
to them abolished.
Other tol'ics discussed during
·open d1scuss1on were dramageprob" terns, the handrail on Lincoln Hdl and
junked. cars and homes.
Clerk Kathy Hysell reported the
following balances for the month of
January: gcn~ral, $77,799: safety,
$1.817.64: street, $ 13.083.06; state
highway,
$12,542.18;
·fire,
$18,837.87: cemetery, $14,060.92;
water,
(-$1,205.27);
sewer,
$43,459.88;
guaranty
meter,
$18,308.87; utility, $12,869.98; tire
truck, no balance; perpetual care,
$7,245.64; cemetery endowment,
$38.118.57;
police · pension,
$1,035.75; building fund, $1,150.50;
· (Continued on Page 3)

AMPHITHEATER PLANS - Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultanta Inc. of Jackson, standing,
presented plans lor the proposed riverfront
amphitheater at Monday nlghrs meeting or the

Pomeroy VIllage Council, as council members
and other village officials examined the plans.
Stroth said the amphitheater may be complet·
•ed by July 31, In time for Meigs County's Big
· Bend Stern wheel Festival Oct. 3·5.

Cremeans SI}Dt targets Piketon job loss fears

.

~~ by

Who pays for tourism?

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff

Sentinel Newa Staff

ORDERED UNI1S . _IEUIYIISTOCICAIGIIIICIA1 149 '
NO. EXTRA. CHARGE
.OI-tUEIIIY FOil, UICOll, . . . . .~ "
.
. YM SPICIFU.ll 10 11111 Clllltl.

1

.:Eastern
.
gives nod
to library
operation

By JIM FREEMAN .

FIXED RATE
FINANCING

·.ESCORT

35 cenb
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Consultant predicts July opening
for Pomeroy amphitheater project

APR

•PROBE
• CONTOUR
• T'!BIRD
•TAURUS

~re wu no telephone listing for
Piia1111 in l:.ol Angeles, and a publiciJI wiih Milli Vanilli's record cornJ!Iiny, Arista, did not return a phone
cill Sunday.

......

Cloudy, lows In 20s.
Wednesday cloudy, highs
In upper 30s, possible
rain.

Pom,roy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 6, 1996

.i

t

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rob
Pilatus, half of the defunct pop duo
Milli Vanilli, was held for investigation of making terrorist threats after
allegedly trying to bre8k into a car
and a house, police said.
.
: A witness saw the 31-year-old
Pilllus trying to break into a car in
Hollywood on Sunday and.alertod the
~ner, who approached Pilatus, said
Officer Eduardo Funes.
Pilatus .ran to a nearby house and
attempted to force his way in, Funes
said. He made several "obscene and
bbisterou.s" threats, Funes said, and
threatened to kill residents of the
house. A stru~tlde ensued, during
\vhich one of the residents hit Pilatus
in the head with a bat. Pilatus was
· treated at a hospital and released.
. · He was being held on SISQ,OOO
lilit..
.
• · Pilatus and bandmate Fabrice """\
P.,orvan were stripped of their "best \
hew anisl" Orammy Award in 1990
· followina revolations that they hadn't
·
.. sung' note on the best-selling "Girl,
'\',oU Know It'S True" album.

doori. .

Buckeye 5:
5-10-15-20-29

.a

'''I •

.

6630

...

in the news

:- OCALA, Fla. (AP)- F. Lee Bai·
ley is defending another famous
client: himself.
' . Bailey, a member of the high-pow'ered team of lawyers that defended
0.1 Simpson during the former footballstar'smurdci'trial,wasfoundin
contempt of court Saturday and
ordered to tum over S21 million in
stock ~ claims is payment from a
former client.
Dalley will try to comply with u.s:District Judge ~urice Paul's order to
bring the stocks lo court by Feb. 29,
his lawyer said Sunday.
If he doesn't meet the deadline, he
will go to jail for six months, Paul
said.
AI issue is ownership of 602,000
shares of stock that Bailey claims
were given to him by the government
to offset his fees and expenses in representing reputed drug baron Claude '
Duboc. '
Duboc is awaiting sentencing after
pleading guilty to heine pan of a conspiracy to import tons of hashish and
marijuana into the United States an!l

Pick 3:
790
Pick 4:

•

POMEROY •• Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary meeting Tuesday,
. . PAGEVn.LE ·· Scipio Township 7:30p.m. Potluck, 7 p.m.
Trustees, 6:30 Monday at the WEDNESDAY
Pageville township hall.
RACINE -- Southern Local Build.
ing Committee meeting Wednesday,
.. SYRACUSE ·· Sutton Township 5 p.m. at the high school. All district
wstees will meet Monday. 7:30p.m. residents welcome.
·syracuse municipal building.
/.
'

~Name·s

·College
basketball
roundup
•

Pvt. William Han ··
completes basic

MIODLEPORT •• Middleport .
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
at temple.

Ohio Lottery

Sports, Page 5

·Community calendar
· . 'fhe Community Calendar is pub-

.

• I

.

.

. MU$SER INSURANCE

., 1118 I J'ld 81.

.

.

· f'onllroy

:· .

If !n&amp;su C&amp; $&amp;•

'

·'

•.

· Aaaocllttld Prt111- Writer
WASHINGTON - Rep. Frank
Cremeans, who won his congressional seat by the slimmest of margins, began running a fe-clection
commercial Monday thai was downright a1omic.
·
· The subject was atomic energy,
and Cremeans' approach to the subjecl made his Democratic opponent
. go ballistic.
"People in southern Ohio need
their jobs protected and we need 1\CW
jOb opponunities. We don'~ need
more broken promises or slick
speec~ by Bill Qinton, and we su~
don't need 10 import any Russian ura- ·
nium," CiaMans, R-Ohio, says in
the commercial.
.'
. A uranium pessing plant is the
largest employer in Cremeans' dis- •
trict. 1'he' plant's future baa been the I
subject of much debate . in recent

years, as nuclear power plan1s worldwide have bought more of their fuelgrade uranium from European factories .
Cremeans' 'Campaign commercial
did double duty, tapping into those
local fears while blasting Clinton for
agreeing to buy Russia's weaponsgrade uranium for eventual use in
power plants.
The intent is to keep bomb-grade
uranium out of the hands of terrorists
- a possibility raised by the unsta·
ble conditions in the former Soviet
U~ion - while helping to stabilize
the economy of the former adversaty.
Nolan Hancock, legislative director of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers, which representS waters at
the Portsmouth gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Piketon, Ohio, said the union
is worried that Russian uranium will
ultimately mean less of a need for
American-Processed uranium.

•

•,

'

The union.'s positi~lf the said Monday. "It's all rhetoric."
U.S. has to·bring in Russian uranium,
Stnckland, a Democrat, sa1d that
then ·:Let's feed it into the market in if he were still in Congress, he would
such a way that the market doesn't be encouraging more U.S. a.;quisition
get disrupted" by the influx, Hancock of the RusSian bomb matenal; .seeksaid.
ing guarantees that final processmg of
Cremeans' commercial does not the material would be done at the
mention'the pace of moving that ura- Piketon plant; and working for g~ar­
nium to market or the prices to be antees lhat the Russ1an uramum
charged for the Russian uranium. Bui would enter the U.S. market. slowly
he expanded on his thoughts in a en~~gh !o protect Amencan Jobs.
newspaper column in which he com- . I think Congress~~n Crem~ans
plained aboul "Allowing .Russian IS taking a cheap shot, swd Stnck·workers to sell their product al prices land, v.:ho .' ' trymg ~~~ to. regam ~
below the cost of production, under- 6th I?•slf!CI "at. . I thm.k he ~s
cutting our prices and putting Amer- speaking •n:espons1bly, I thmk he 1$
ican jobs a1 risk."
grossly miSinformed.
All of thai makes the man Crc· "I don't know i'fhe bas the capa- .
means defealed 5 t' percent-49 per- bility to understand an issue of this
cent, former Rep. Ted Strickland, just . complexity."
see red.
: Cremeans' chief of staff, Barry
"He may be doing what's smart Benhett, said in response to those
politically, bul it's a pathetic way to .fighting words: "He wasn't so dumb
represent ihe district," Strickland ;when he beat Ted Strickland."

TUBERCULO$IS TESnNG - P!hlga County Tu~lei'Ct~lotlll
NurH Connie Ksrschnlk conducted a skin testing clinic tor ·,
amployws of Veteran• M•mortal Hospital Monday aflamoon.
Tnt.d hare Is amptoyaa Julia Will. Night skin tasting clinics are .
held around IIIII county for the conveniance of resklllnls Md tt. . '
next one win bll allhe Columbia Township Fire Daptn biiWII..,...'
day, Feb. 12 from 6-7 p.m. All individuals who are In food ...,
vies are required to oblaln YMf'ly skin 1ssta, Karachnlk said.

....

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