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Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolla,.OH Point Pleasant, WV

1995

· 49ers
win fifth
Super Bowl

Recertification testing scheduled March 2
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - Private Pesticide Applicator Recertification in
Gallia County will be offered three
limes in the coming weeks. Persons
needing recertification may cboose
either a 9 a.m. or 7 p.m. ·session on
Monday, January 30 or a 7 p.m.
session on February 8. All sessions
will be beld at the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Cenrer. A tmining session for new people will be beld on
February 20 at 7 p.m. with testing
scheduled between 3 p.m. and 6.
p.m. on March 2. Call for details '
(446-7007).

be an update oo grazing projects iJI
our area. Many new exctting ideas
are working on fanns in our region.

Preliminary results are in from the
demonstnllion at the research farm
in Ripley, Obio. Stocker steers
razing turnips gained au average
.3 pounds per day during tbe
November-December turnip grazing period. Several farms bave
delayed their winrer feeding period
by 30-60 days throogb Management Intensive Grazing. Mr. Hank
Bartholomew will lead the discussion on February 6.
··
Keeping farm business records
on compu1er will be the topic of a
three day workshop in Circleville.
The Gallia County Cattlemen · The dates are Marcb 2, 9 and 10,
and OSU Extension invite every- · 1995. Mr. Bud Carler,
one 10 attend a meeting at 7 p.m. on
Gallipolis resident and ExtenMonday, February 6. The topic "!ill

'Farm Flashes·

.:

PASSES E~AM • Connie S. Condee or Gallipolis recently
Is now licensed to service
personal property, casualty and auto Insurance In Ohio. The
license is sponsored by the Marvin Boxdorfer Agency, an alrlllate
of the Allstate Insurance Company, located at448 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis. Mrs. Condee, her husband Scott and their two children,
.Levi and Alana, Uve In GaUia County. Presenting Mrs. Condee the
certiftcate Is Mr. Boxdorfer.

' JIUHd the state certification exam and

.-

:tarm program signups ·
.

GALLIPOLIS - On January 25,
1995, tbe signup period was
announced for producers wishing
. to participate in tbe 1995 feed grain
and wheat program. Tbe signup
: will be held from January 31 : April 28, at county offices of
• USUA's Consolidated. Farm Ser- ~ vice Agency. Purchase of crop
: inswance is required for 1995 pro'· gram participation. and deadlines
· for porcbasing -crop insumnce are
: earlier than program signup dead: lines.
_ Tbe projected deficiency pay:: ment rates for 1995 crops are:
· ·· Wbeat $.70/bu and Com - $.40/bu,
. Tbe percentage of advance deficiency pay.ment bas yet to be
· announced . Tbe "set-aside".
·requirements for 1995 are: Wheat
0% and com -7.5%.
·
Producers must purchase at least

- BV BUZ MILLS
GALLIPOLIS • With the sue. cess of tbe Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation Districts no-till drill
prosram over !be last several years,
the Gallia SWCD board of directors bave approved the purchase of
a new 6.5 foot Tye no-till grain
drill. This new driU will replace our
current 6.5 foot Tye no-till drill
wbicb bas planted over 2,400 acres
in tbe past few years. Tbe rental
cost for Ibis new drill will be the
same as in tbe past for tbe old
drill-$4.00 per acre with a $50.00
minimum per usc.
· By pu!Cbasing Ibis new drill tbe
board of directors wanted to continue to make available to the land
owners of Gallia county a· no-till .
11rill that could be used with a trac-tor in tbe 40 to 50 bp. range.
Another plus for Ibis size drill is its

ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY • Winter weather ·
returned to the Obio Valley last
week, mucb to the chagrin of worlc:ing parents wbo bad to fmd caretakers for their school age children.
Farmers and home gardeners can
fmd some comfon, as tbe freezing
and thawing of tbe ground
. improves soil texture for tbe
spring's planting. AlSo, the few ·
insects that break their winrer dormancy early are killed by these
winter cojd snaps.

Extension Corner

~NEW~·

:New no-till drill ordered
ability to be used on smaller
acreages that are somewhat harder .
to get to with larger equipment.
As mentioned, Ibis · new no-till
drill will replace our older driU of
the same size .. Thus tbe Gallia
SWCD will be accepting sealed
bids for our old 6.5 foot Tye drill
after we have placed a legal notice
. of bids being accepjed in our local .
newspaper.
The Gallia SWCD wants to
thank all the land owners (or their
participation in our no-till program.
Witb this purchase we are striving
to increase the acreage used witb
Ibis drill and the dependability of a
new machine to get tbe job done,
and tbe satisfaction of tbe cus- ·
tomer.
Buz Mills Is distrlcl technician
for the Galli• County Soli and
Water Conserv1tion District.

January 31 at tbe Washington
County Extension Office in Marie!·
ta. The program will focus on production of maple syrup by small
bobby producers. Contact Ed Smith
at (614) 7322381 for details or to
register.
Derrell Peel, Extension
Economist, says that price bas
exceeded most expectations witb
both fed and feeder cattle so far in
January . Fed cattle are currently
trading at a firm $74 in the Southem Plains. He expects fed prices to
go bigber by April, but does not
expect a typital seasonal increase.
He does not rule out a brief slump
in the next 30-45 days.
Edward Vollborn Gallla
County's extension agent, agrl·
culture.

Meigs CountY on Febfuary 21st at
the Meigs County Library Pomeroy Branch at 216 W~st
Main, Pomeroy Ohio. Testing will
begin at 3 p.m.. Review of lrl!ining
materials will be beld at the Meigs
County Extension Office located in
the basement of the County Home
located on Mulberry Heights,
PotDCroy on Thursday, February 2
from 3:30- 5:30p.m. and again on
Moqday February 6th from 7:309:30 p.m .. Attendance at review
sessions is not required, but may

Ell

ED

Yo~

The "new" crop insurance program 1s almost
free if you enroll for it! The government
pays the premium. Your cost for
administrative purposes can be as lillie as
$50 per crop. For details contact me today. .

e.

ce1ebration
bash slated
for Saturday

,

'

A year of celebration marking
the I 75th anniversary of the founding of Meigs County will conclude
SabJrday at noon when a li!oe caps~le is burled on the. courthouse
lawn.
The celebration planned by the
175tb Anniversary Committee was
originally scheduled for early January, but was postponed by
inclement weather.
From II a.m. to noon, a reception will be held in tbe Meigs
County Courtroom. At !bat time,
those attending will move outdoors
for the burial of the 3-foot stainless
steel Capsule. .
Picture~ of events during 1994
that commemorated tbe 175tb
anniversary will be included in tbe
capsule. These in.clude photos
taken at the June reception, .where
recognition was given to families
residing In bomes or on farms
occupied by tbeir ancestors 175
years ago·and of residents 95 aud
over wbo were recognized.
Also included will be the Mei~s
County Genealogical Society s
recognition of residents wbosc lineage goes back to anytime before
1880, along with pictures aud prol)'ams over tbe county wbicb Cl!f·
ried out.tbe 175tb anniversary
· tlieme, "Remembering the Past Sbaping tbe Future."
·
Others items to be placed in the
capsule are a commemomtive publication of Tbe Daily Sentinel
wbicb told a story of early Meigs
County, Its early se1tlers, government, industry, educational facilities, cburcbes, and growth patterns;
a calendar, a roster from tbe
schools, a copy of tbe Lions Club
cbarlty newspaper, the coverlet
design, a Meiss County cookie cutler, a commemorative· mug, and a
tape prepared by WMPO Radio.
Saturday's program will include
1reetings from Margarei' Parker,
chairman of the 17 5th anniversary
committee, and county officials.
Special music will be provided by
tbe Meigs County Historical
Singers under the d~tion of Maxine Whitehead and refreshments
· will be·served.
The coiDDiemorative coverlets,
. mugs and publication of The Daily
·
(Continued on Page 3)

• Meet USDA program requirements,
minimum purchase of $50 per crop.
• Coverage Options
• 'Fast Service

e- ."

' 11 amer1can
rtJ aGrlsurance.•nc.
See your professional AmAg Agent
NOW for details.

JIM ALLIE, AGENT
CALL (614) 379-2789

MPCl ts ava1labk 10 all producm rcgjlrdlm of rJcc.
colm. natiOnal ons10. sa. age or dt5abiluy

BUT FIRST ... GO TO

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'

taxes from 1982 tbrougb 1992.
1be council ~d last month tbat state spending grew 93 percent from
1984 tbrougb 1994.
Blackwell intends over tbe next 10, weeks to belp organi1.e statewide
support for the election campaign on bChalf of the amendment. presuming
it makes the ballot.
"Wbat I have learned from my experience in the early 1980s is if you
don't have the foot .soldiers, if you don't have the money, then you're at a
··
competitive disadvantage," be said.
Republican Gov . George Voinovich opposes tbe tbree-liftbs requirement to raise'taxes. ~
·
"He believes in majority rule," Wd Mike Dawson, Voinovich's press
secretary .

.

.

"It's politically difficult to raise taxes now, as it should be," Dawson
said. "This governor cut spending four times before be asked for additional revenue. If Congress gives state and local governments more
responsibilities, you can't tie their bands."

request for trial dela

i

'

7

Boost in personal income
pushes earnings to 6.1%

NOW IN STOCK!

(614) 446·3672

2 Sections, 26 Pages 35 centa .
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
' '
I 1.
1 f ~;' ~·,·
LOS ANGELES - In the burry
up and wail world of tbe O.J. ·
Simpson trial, jurors may be wondering what's bolding up tbe show.
Sequestered now for almost
three weeks, they've seen less· than
a day and a balr of courtroom
· action since being selected.
Today, Superior Court Judge
Lance lki decides whether !bey sec
anything but tbe inside of tbeir
bote! rooms for tbe next 30 days.
Prosecutors asked for tbe delay
to give tbem time to investigate
several witnesses the defense disclosed at the last and very dramatic
OJ. SIMPSON
minute. in openina. statements
papers she filed ·In ·May 1967 io
before the jury.
obtain
a restraining order·.
Meanwhile, CNN reported that
The
couple later reconciled, aud
prosecutors intend tO argue that
Cochran
denied tbe decades-old
blood found under Nicole Brown
allegations
when tbe magazine
Simpson's fmgemails was ber own,
asked
bim
for
COIDDient.
even tbougb a test suggested a mis"1 have never touched ber or bit
match in blond typeS .
' These lllree sisters, from leit, MeUnda, MeliMa and Jennifer Clark, enJoyed an old·fasbioned
ber,
and we are good friends to this
Defense
attorney
J
obnnie
snowball fight Sundlly afternoon u they qlked along Mulberry Avenue In Pomeroy. For the sec:·
day',"
be told the magazine. .
Cochran
Jr.
came·
under
fire
from
ond weekend, another ftve Inches ot snow blllnketed Meigs Cilunty. All schools were closed today.
·
Simpson,
47, bas pleaded innothe
prosecution
(or
referring,
(Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoeftlt:b)
among other witnesses, to Mary cent to charges be murdered bis exAnne Gercbas, who claimed to see wife and ber friend Ronald Goldfour men near the inurder scene, man outside Ms. Simpson's Brent.wood condominium on June 12.
speeding away in a car.
Outraged prosecutors said the
CNN reported over the weekend
defense never shared information tbat prosecution experts will make
about Gercbas or many of the other a strong case tbat a blood enzyme
WASHINGTON (AP)- Amer- percent in the last three months of
surpise witnesses, as required by •under Ms. Simpson's fingernails
icans' personal Income rose 0.8 1994 and grew 4 percent for tbe
state law.
.
and .a blood stain on her tbigb was
percent in December, rebounding year, the best showing in a decade.
. Deputy Di'strict Attorney Chris hers, despite a laboratory test
The Fedeml Reserve is expected
from a rare decline, and helped
Darden later contended tbe wit- Cochran said suggested otherwise.
to
boost interest mtes foo the sevpusb earnings for 1994 up 6.1 pernesses weri: a pack of ''heroin
Cochran told jurors in bis open,
cent for the biggest annual gain in enth time in a year during a twoaddicts, thieves, felons ... and a ing statement that the blood
day meeting beginning Tuesday.
four years.
court-certified pathological liar."
enzyme was type B. and tbat neiThe 1994 income gains compare
The Commerce Department also
A Newiweek report, citing a ther 100 viclims nor Simpson have
reported today tbat spending favorably to inOation, rising more
defense source, saitl Simpson's that kind of blood.
climbed 0.3 percent last month and ~ban twic~ as rapidly as price
lawyers remain divided over
However, CNN reported that
5.7 percent for !be year. The yearly mcreases ~t year.
Cochran's decision to reveal the police found Ms. Simpson's body
Disposable income also climbed
spending increase comp&amp;red to 5.8
new witnesses in bis openins state- · with her band resting in a pool of
percent in 1993 and was the s~Jl!!ll· . 0.8 percent in December,
ment, witb one defense team mem- her own blood, and that prose&lt;uIncome .fell 0.1 percen~ In
est advance since it rose 3.8 perber: calling it "blatantly uoothical." tion experts will argue that tbe •
November, only the second time it
. ·cent iit 1991.
Cochran's image also took a bit. inconsistent lab result occured
.- Analysts said in !)!!vance of the declined last year. Spending was up
Sunday, with tbe Los Angeles because the blood sample had
report that anticipated slower that montb a rev.ised 0.4 percent,
.Times Magazine reporting tbat bis degraded over time, For example,
· spending could be a sign tbe pace down from a 0.6 percent earlier 1-:---II.J!I~--ILia...a.....a-!--I~LI fust wife, Barbara. accused him of an old sample of type AD blood
·
·
of economic growth is easing. estimate.
1
1114
physical abuse in court papers she can appear to be type B blood
Tbe combination of incomes
Given solid income gains, they said
Dec.
'93
Nov.
'94
Dec.
'94
filed
before their 1977 divorce.
because of degradation.
tbe nation's buying mood could and spending meant that Ameri"On
April
29,
1967;
my
husalso told tbe Los Ange- ·
cans' savings rate climbed to 4.8
return later in 1995.
I I 5.89 I . band violently pushed me against les.Cochran
I
I
I
5.52
.
5.84
Timi!S that if tbe blood from Ms.
Consumer spending represents percent in December, from 4.3 perthe wall, ileld me there and grabbed Simpson' s thigh was degraded,
two-thirds of tbe nation's economic cent tbe previous mont11. Tbe savme
by my chin ... He bas slapped samples tested by the prosecution
activity and bas propelled the econ· ings rate was tbe bigbest since
• Income rose to $5.89 trillion in me in tbe past, tore a dress off me !bat seem to place Simpson at tbe
October wben it also was up 4.8 . December and spending was at (and) threatened on numerous
omy's four-year-old recovery.
scene or the crime may have .also
·percent.
Tbe government reported last
$4.75 trillion.
.
occasions to beat ·me up," said the degmded.
week that tbe economy surged 4.5

, ; I

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

ate to mise most taxes, fees, or USCI' cbarges.
.
. Also required: a three·fifths vote in both houses to impose state mandates on local governments if tbe requirements increase costs for local
political subdivisions.
. Now, only a m!ljority vote is needed.
•
Blackwell traces bis involvement in similar issues·ro work as a domestic policy analyst for tbe Heritage Foundation, and a 1983 campaign 10
}'!(Jieal a 90 percent state iiiCOID,C tax increase.
. .
·
.
Voters rejected !be repeal atrernpt. They-also turned.down a compauion
amendment that would have required a three-fifths majority vole of the
Legislature to raise taxes.
.
.
·''We got our clocks cleaned, but the reality .is this is an issue whoSe
time probably bas come because goverome)\t has continued to tax aud
spend, tax and-spend its way to overweight/' Blackwell said last week.
An analysis the Ohio Public Expenditure Council conducted iasl year
sbowed Ohio's state and local taxes increased at twice the rate of federal

It ..~.,

DRIVESi..·
· See Them Now! More Models
Arriving Daily. Extended Cabs
and Regular tabs. Loaded and
Moderately Equipped.

rog.

r--Having fun in the snolll(-----. O.J. case judge eyes

. I

1616 EASTERN AVENUE
Hometown Dealer

I

~NEWf-·

40s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 30, 1995

.
~nniversary

Catastrophic {CAT)

Nationwide Insurance,
386 State Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446·1960
Crop Insurance Serviced By
· Rain and Hail Insurance Service, Inc.

45, NO. 191

·By JOHN CHALFANT
'Associated Press Writer
.
COLUMBUS -Spiraling growth in government spending is not confined to Washington. State Treasure.- J. Kenneth Blackwell said state and
local spending also grew over tbe last 20 years.
· That is wby Blackwell bas joined Republican colleagues Rep. Michael
Fox of HamiltOn and Sen. Gene Watts or Columbus in support of a consti.tulional amen~t to m~e it harder for legislators to raise taxes.
.
"Wben we t;llk about bloated government, we're not just talking about
t,be federal level, we're also talking about the state and local level,"
Blackwell said In an Interview.
: "This is a way to introduce and institutionalize a basic discipline," he
said.
: Fox and Watts are preparing for introduction a resolution tbat would
!)lace !be amendment before voters in the Nov. 7 election.
: Their proposal would require a three-fifths vote in tbe House aud Sen-

Get the Facts about

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU

300657

Low tonight in mid teens.
Tuesday, hlgh In
Light snow,

Treasurer joins move to restrain taxes

Crop hisurance

Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers

2-18-22-32-40-46
Kickfr:

Copyright 1995

R
CE

Super Lotto:

'

assist in your studying the material
needing to be reviewed. Study
material (available at cost) may be.
picked up from tbe extensiOJI office
during nQrmal working hours 8:30
a.m. to 4:30p.m.
Remember that tbe Ohio Fruit
and Vegetable Congress will be
held in Toledo at the SeaGate Convention Hall from Feb. 7 to 9. For
further information COl!tact my
office, 992-6696.
,
Hal Kneen Is the Agricultural
Agent for Meigs County.

D
AS

Pick 3:
823
Pick 4:
8379 .

. PageS

·Gardeners find some comfort during cold weather

Classes and trade shows
Mauy of our farmers are taking
advautage of tbe slower pace of
winter by attending educational
classes and attending tbe multitude
of trade sbows.
Over thiny five Meigs County
farmers attended three hours of
pesticide applicator recertification ·
training this past week. These educational classes update tbe farmers
as to changes in pesticide applic.athe catastrophic level of aop insurtion laws, wbicb pesticides are disance to qualify for farm program
continued,
tbe new pesticides that
benefits on a. crop if insurance is
have
passed
strict environmental
available in their county.
standards,
the
latest diseases and
Tbe maple syrup producers •
Crops requiring insurance for
pests
afflicting
Ohio's farmers and
USDA benefits in Gallia County look forward to the cold nigbts and
.the warm, brigbt days as tbe sap finally, bow to protect themselves,
Rfl;: Com soybeans, and tobacco.
Producers sbould be aware !bat tbe rises from its winrer stomge in tbe their families, employees and
March 15, 1995 deadline for pur- tree's root system into tree's neighbors from continued exposure
chasing crop insurance is well canopy of branches and twigs. to pesticides.
Tbe first of tbree sessions
before the signup deadlines for Soon a jar of first maple syrup
"Pastures
For Profit" sponsored by
nearly all USDA programs affect- ~other Natuie'~ own.sweet sugar)
Meigs
aud
Athens Counties' Naru- ·
ed.
w1ll be on the kitcben table for us
ml
Resources
Conservation Service ··
pancake
lovers,
Producers should contact the
and
tbe
Ohio
State University
For those few procrastinators
Gallia Consolidated farm Service
Extension
was
attended
by 18 local
Agency at 446-8686 for additional like me, take a final look at those
livestock
farmers.
.
information. ~ farmers may call seed/plant catalogs and place your
Farmers
needing
to
become
a
USDA's Crop Insurance Reform orders for those new and different
private
pesticide
applicator
will
Hotline toll fee at 1-800-749- plants we want in the farm or borne
have tbe opportunity to test in
yard .
7774.
Lisa Meadows b Acllng Co'Untr Execullve Director .of tile Gal·
lla Consolldaled Farm Service
Agency.

~ USDA announces 1995
.~ By LIS.\ MEADOWS

sion Farm Mauagement Specialist
for Obio State University, will be
the instrucJor. This is a class in the
basics of using a computer for
keeping financial records. The class
lasts three days and eacb day builds
upon tbe previous day ' s lessons.
Quicken Windows version software
will be used in the clasS witb IBM compatible computers. The class is
for beginning computer users but ir
· asks that sbJdents be familiar with a
. keyboard. Call the Gallia County
Extension Office for a registration
form or tbe Pickway Extension
Office at (614) 474-7534 to register. This is a very good class! Previous students of this series are
using tbe skills they learned on 'll
daily basis.
.
It is still winter but. a maple
syrup program is beinJ! _plauned for

Ohio Lottery

MAKING HIS POINT - Obi" Gov. Georxe Voinovicb ges·
lured while speakln8 Sunday at a meetlll(l of the National Gover- ·
nors' Association in Washington as (;ov.\ Lincoln Almond· of
Rhode laiand looked on. RepubllcaM Oexed tlleir new muscle in
the -odatlon, Kuttllng a Democratk-leanlng welfare reform proposal in favor of a block grant approach lh•t closely tracks the
House GOP plln. (AP)

cGOP ·g overnors promote welfare proposal .
By JOHN KING
APPolitlcal Writer
WASHINGTON - Asserting
· their new power, Republican governors are pushing a welfare reform
proposal lhat would replace b~ii';"
dreds of federal programs wub
block grants and set aside emergency funds for states bit by disaster or.,
recession.
The GOP proposal is being used
as tbe framework as the National
Oovemors' Association tries to
adopt a consensus welfare policy
and put its stamp on tbe dellbemtions in tbe new Republican
Congress.
•
But It Is unclear wbetber enough
Democratic governors will sign on
to tbe plan for it to win the threefourths support needed to become
NGA policy. 1be sentiment of the
Democrats could be swayed by tbe
views of lbe Clinton administration, which bas voiced reservations
about giving go~emors so mucb
leeway.
·
,
The governors were treated to a
White House dinner Sunday night

and were returning today for a two- states would have broad powers to
hour working session witb Presi- decide eligibility standards, set
dent Clinton likely to be dominated time limits on benefits and set work
by welfare, the balanced budget requirements. IIJow, states have to
amendment and efforts to pass leg- l'PP.!Y for fe\!eJI!!· waivers 19 .imllle1-slarlo'il Jiiakin·f 'll harder for- ment these and other wel(are
Congress to 'impose mandates on experiments.
"Wily .do we have to come to
states without sendins the money.
" . Welfare reform is a lOP priority · Washington to get permission to
of the adminisltation and tbe GOP serve tbe peop)e better aqd more
Congress, and House Republicans effectively?' asked GOP Gov.
already bave promised to substan- Arne Carlson of Minnesota.
tially rewrite their plan to take sugTbe block grants would carry
gestions of Republican governors geneml fedeml guidelines, but just
into account.
bow specifi'-. and strict these
Current law makes welfare an resbictions would be is tbe subject
individual entitlement, mean'ing of considerable debate, within tbe
those eligible are guaranteed feder- GOP {ants as well as between
al benefits, as witb Social Security Democrats and Republicans . Sbaw,
or Medicare. Most Republi_cans for example, said guaranteed beneprefer ehmmatmg .the .mdt.vtdual fits til the poor need to be reconsidenutlement and replacmg u witb ered as Washington tries to balance
bl~.lt g~ts to the states.
tbe budget. Some Senate RepubiiEnbtl~ent Js government on
cans, bow~vcr, have voiced reserauto-pllot, Rep. Clay Shaw, R- vations .about going !bat far.
In the weekend jockeying, tbe
Fla., a key architect of the House
GOP welfare plan saJd Sunday on administration and many DemoCBS' Fact 1~ Narion. •
· cratic governors sought public sup1 ~Under .the bloclt grant approach,
" I

port for their position by arguing
that giving states lO!! much power
might mean that some eliminate tbe
social safety net for poor children.
__ ' 'Ll!!:lieve lh.cn: is a national
interest in making sure that children don'l starve," Vermont Gov .
. Howard Dean. the NGA cbainnan,
said in an interview.
"It's a debate about values,
about bow we take tare of our children," Health and Human Services
SecreiJ!ry Donna Shalala said Sunday on CBS.
·
..
How influen!.ial tbe administration will he in tbc welfare debate
remains to be seen. · While Clinton ·
was a m!ljor national voice in welfare . reform efforts when he was
governor or Arkansas, the new
GOP Congress bas vowed to work ,
from Republican ptaus.
And 1f Clin1on was looking for ·
belp from his friends in tbe governors ' association, the November
elections made things considerably
more difficult: Nineteen governors
were Republicans lasl year, but 30
are now.
! .
[I

�Commentar

Mond,.,,,J11nuary 30, 1995 ,

Pege-2-Ttte Deily Sentinel ~
Pomeroy-Middleport, qhlo

OHIO Weather

Monday, January 3!), 1915

Accountabi.lity is a hot issue in Congress

The Daily Sentinel

'

cracks yet
i\n campaign
finance coalition

WEEKEND?

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

'

0 11111!11&gt;y NEA. Inc.

..

to do with the passionate batted ()[ ties know that a lot of wbite males
welfare in some quaners than anger want to punish "thelil" -and that
they vote io larp numbers tban do
Hodding·Carter Ill the lar8e1S of their rage.
_
The
It
!fare · f led
b
assau on we . IS ue
about fraud and waste.
.~:me or.~ same tnstinCIS ~
Obviously, much of the welfare
. Al!lerica ~ ~I love aff81f
system is a total failure which With prison-buddmg. Punitive .on
.debases iiS recipients. But behind the one hand and counterproductive
·that-failure-is-a11eeper-and-more on Jhe ,l!IJLill., I\Cltheure;us the
underlyms soaal illnesses that are
systematic one involving· millions offered as the justification of both
of people who are not equipped to Their champions speak in t h e reach the fringe of the job market. of consezvative values, but the' ·
ret alone share in its abundance. actuall the
.
us IS
Punishing the poor for being poor, .
expression of raw reacor the dys(unctional for being dys- 11'-;;·10all 11
. . n
· · . ·
functional, wiJJ do nothing to
y, 15 - at:out ~eceu to
resolve !bat dilt'JIIJI18.
off~r ~roced~ral ~lml!'!cks and
"Two years and out" in most of lnstiluti~ reJiggenng 10 place of
its permutations is a feel-good sop hard, cbo1ces ~bout the govern10 people who think that all welfare ment 8 underlymg fiscal ~: A
balanced-budget amendment IS JUSt
recipients are undeserving black another f&lt;Xm of pie-in-the-sky b efolks and their illegitimate cbll- IDd·bye. Aside from the 'fact ~at
dren. (Most reclpieniS, of course, the vast majority of all reputable
are white.) Neither Bill Clinton nor economists think it as wrong-headNewt Gingrich believes his propos- ed as it is dangerous, it is unlike~
als can scratch the surface of the the amendment will ever be ratifted
problem. If the most draconian by enough states to go into effect a
· measures now on ihe agenda were decade from now.
·actually passed, the welfare budgeJ
In the meantime, !bose steps that
would be smaller, but the poverty sbould ·be ·taken to put the nation's
proble10 in all its destructive riSCal bouse i!l onler are swept off
j~IS would be larger. ___
the table by botb parties . The

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The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio4l769.

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Patrol cites area resident

Men.ibtr: The Associllled Press, and the Ohio

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Republican right strains at the ideological gnats like the endowments
for the ans and humanities while
blandly ignoiing .the .fann program
elephant. Democrats believe, correctly, that the Defense Department
budget is still an overfed sacred
cow, but cheer President Clinton's
· promise to preserve the hopelessly
mefficient sysrem of veterans bospilals.
·Simultaneously, both sides of
~e aisle play out the Cowardly
L10n when it comes to the real 800pound gorillas, out-of-control entitlements like Medicare. omcial
Washington, liberal and conserva·
live, knows they must be reined In
to avoid the day of $500 billion a
year budget deficiiS - a day which
conld arrive bef&lt;Xe the millennium.
- but ills an understanding no one
dares utter.
·
It is infinitely more satisfying to
masquerade as crusaden by beating
up on pipsqueaks while interest on
the national debt moves inexorably
toward tbe top of the budgetary
·
beap.
Hodding Carter 111, former
State Department apokesman
and a~rd·wlnnlDR reporter, edJ.
tor and pvhllsher, Ia president of
MalnStreet, a Wublngton, D.C.·
bued television producllon Con.pany.

"FOR PETS ONLY"

Inmate gets life in killing

World

None of this mauers. What mat·
more ters is that politicians of both par-

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

Units respond to six calls

°•

unattractive truth is that anti-black

PIC,.URE YOUR PETAMO G,.HE•••
PE,..VALENTINES!

Weekend fatalities total 8 ·

animals .·have legal rights? ·

and anti-brown prejudice has

Annl"versa·ry bash

Willi'am H. Whitehead

SEQUESTErrtNG
OURSELVES' THIS

Watching· President Cl~nton 1ry
to square the circle of his convoluted convictions the other night, and
· listening 10 Gov. Whitman's
respo~se for the Republicans, was
an ep1ph~ny of s&lt;?rts. After the
prestdent s mtemunable State of
the Union laundry list and !be governor' s tart set of non-negotiable
demands, ·you suddenly understood
there is a lot less 19 our supposedly
''revolutionary" era than meeiS the
· eye · p'
f hal · -•
·
. an o w IS aa~t 1s, a ~patgn to pay ~ff the nation s ~nant ~co~om1c class. Clwed 10
rhetonc about mtddle-class values
and the devolution or political
power is an unseemly rush .to comfon the coinfonable.-ltls almost
obscured by Gingrichian Dim-flam,
but the most immediate benefiCiaries or the "COntract With America" are and are intended to be that
5 percen! of the. ~lation that bas
.
heen ~omg very mcely for quue
somAne~·
ti'al
f
......,r essen
com~1 o
.
the mucb·dlsc~~;ssed .rev~Juuon,
welfare ref01111: 1s a dissu1sed.SC?P
to ractal reactiOfl. Few people ~n
public life talk bo~estly on tbts
subject anymore, as1de from some
mlnorlt.Y·group spokesmen who
have cned wolf so often they are
no longer bccded. But the plain and

prison is over budget

COLUMBUS (AP) - A 1,260- at the site on Wednesday.
Voinovich spokesman, Michael ·
bed prison under construction in
Noble County, intended I~ be 1 Dawson, said early ligures on the :
low-cost alternative to traditional jail's cost- $23 million In bid :
Jaih, bas nearly doubled in cost and documents, later revised 10 $25
million - were merely ·goals that .
Is 1 year behind schedule.
Planned as a $23 million pro- · were tmrealistic.
Dawson pointed out that similar
ject, the Noble Conectional lnsdtutioo bas chewed up more tban prisons in. Marion and Belmont :
counties, proposed for $25 miUioo
$43.2 million.
But according to corrections apiece, wound up costing more.
But at $32.9 million for the Bel- .
d~partmetu records, the Noble
prison wiU become the most expen- mont Correctional Institution and
sive piece of property that coo.x:- $30.4 million' for Marion's North '
Bonnie B. Miller, 87, of Middleport, died Sunday, Jail. 29, 1995 in St. .· lions offiCials bave developed, the Central Correctional lqstitution, .
Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
·
Akron Btacotl Jouma/ reported bolb carne far closer to projections ..
than the Noble prison.
BIXD Jan. 30, 1907 in Cabell County, W.Va. the daughter of the late Sunday.
. Originally scheduled to open .
Freeman and Maggie Lenora qemeans Nelson. Sbe was a member of the
The newspaper said records
late
lasl year, operation is now set
Rutland Church of the NIIZIIICne and was aclerlc at Evelyn's Grocery.
show that state planners knew of
for
the
spring of 1996.
·
Survivors include two sons and daughters-in-law, Robert and Judy unstable rock and soil f&lt;Xmalions at
W. VA.
It
will
employ
350
full-time
·
Miller of Middleport. and Donald and Violet Miller of Glendale, Ariz.; the Noble site long before they
w!Xkers,
ali
alluring
prospect
to
the
.two daughters and sons-in-law, Evelyn and Frank Leach of WeUston, and took over the property in mid-1993, ·
coalition of business and political"
Lois Jean and Thomas Schoonover of ~tland; one daughter, Betty DiU of but went ahead with constructioo.
Pomeroy: one daughter-in-law, Audrey Miller of Springfield; several
Stale officials also bave allowed leaders who envisioned a local•
:
grandcbildren and great-grandcbildren.
the nearby village of Caldwell. to boom
Also surviving are two sisters, Hazel Moore and Gladys Blosser of gel out of couunitments to supply
Grovepon; and several nieces and nephews.
.
. free sewer and water service,
s:my Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
· She was preceded in· death by ber husband, Charles Miller, in 1971; pulling state taxpayers on the·book
two sons, Kenneth and James R. Miller; four brothers, Roy, Lloyd, Lloyd, for millions of doUars more.
C11185""""'W..Ihor. Inc.
Leland and Odas Nelson; and one sister, UUie Smith.
· Gov . George Voinov'icb is to
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Rutland Church of the alteDd a ground breaking ceremony
Nazarene, with the Rev. Samuel Basye Jr. officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. Friends may call Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the
Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
(ConUnued from Pap 1)
.
Stmintl will be on sale.
1966. Sunset tonight wiU be ~15:48
By The Associated Preos
At DOOD, the group will move to
an area near the Civil War monu- ·
Mostly clear skies will allow p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:41
men! on the courthouse lawn for
temperatures to drop into lbe teens a.m.
William H. Whitehead, 69, of Little Hocking, died Saturday, Jan. 28, · the burial ceremony.
Weather forecast:
across Ohio tonight, the National
Tonigbt ... Clearing far south 1995 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va
Plans call for a marker to be
Weather Service said. Some patchy
with
patchy
dense
fog
.
Mostly
clear
Born
Feb.
20,
1925
in
Parlcenburg,
son
of
the
late
William
Whitehead
placed at the site of the time capfog could develop in southeast
elsewhere. Lows generally IS to Sr. and Efflll Whitehead, he worked at BF Goodrich Plant. He was a U.S. sule which will be removed and
Ohio..
Navy veteran of World War II, and a member of the Parkersburg Eagles, opened in 2019 when the county
Southwesterly winds will bring 20.
Tuesday
...
MGStly
sunny
in
the
Moose,
DAY, VFW and the American Legion Post 15.
celebrates iiS bicenteMial.
milder conditions to the state on
morning,
then
increasing
cloudiSurviving
are his son, D. Shawn Whilehead of Little Hocking; daughT!!csday with afternoon temperatures approaching 40 degrees. No ness. Brisk winds north and west. ter. Lalcota Parsons of Ripley, W.Va.; brother, Ernie Whitehead of
Reedsville; two grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
precipitation is seen for Tuesday, Highs around 40.
Extended forecast:
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Franklin Funeral Chapel, wilb
forecasters said.
Wednesday ... A chance of snow . the Rev. John Kilerner officialing. Burial will follow at Sunset Memory
All of Ohio except the northeast
comer had varying degrees of fog showers north ... A chance ()[ rain or Gardens, Parkersburg. Friends may call9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday and until
,
.
this morning. ,Visibility at Findlay snow showers sooth. Morning lows services Tuesday.
Military graveside services will be perfonned by the local.- American
in northwest Ohio was reported.to 25 to 30. Highs in the mid 30s to
Legion.
mid40s.
be one-eigllth of a mile.
Thursday ... A chance of snow
Overilight lows ranged from 10
in pariS of northern Ohio to near 30 flurries nortbeast...Otherwise fair.
Lows in the 20s and bigbs from the
in the southeast
.
· · MeeUng almounced
Hean Church, Pomeroy. Ala-non
The record-high tem)lerature for upper 20s to the upper 30s.
Friday ... fair. Lows 15 to .25. . The Sacred Heart Catholic wiU meet at the same time.
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees in 1916 Highs in the upper 20s to the upper Women's Club will meet at 7:30
.
p.m. on Feb. 14 at the church. The Tnstees lo meet.
while tbe record low was -5 in 30s. .
The Olive Township trustees
program will featore 'coloc analysis
will
meet Friday, at6:30 p.m. at the
and malce-oven.
township building on Joppa Road.
tine, 19, of Green Springs, passen- Eastern boosten set
By The Associated Preos
The Eastern Athletic Boosters Seminar and c:ontat
Two double-fatality accideniS ger in a one-car crash on a San- will meet at the EHS cafeteria at .
The Southeastern Ohio and
lifted Ohio's weekend traffic death dusky County !00'1·
Ho~king
Valley chapters of the
DAYTON -· Tyrone A. Tram- 7:30 p,.m, \V¢nesday.
toll to.eight, ihe State Hiellway :
National Wlld Turkey Federallon
mell, 16, d,Anthony J. Gullalte,
Patrol said today.
.
will bost the ·Ohio State Turkey
Pratllce amceUed
The patrol counted weekend 13, l:&gt;otb er Dayton, passengen in a
Seminar,
calling contest and banThe Big Bend Community Band
traffic deaths from 6 p.m. Friday two-car crash on Ohio 4 in Mont- · practice scheduled for toni~bt bas quet on March 4 and 5. It will he
gomery Couniy.
through Sunday.
beld at the Nelsonville York High
NEW ARK - Alan R. Myers, been can~elled, Toney Dmgess, School in Buchtel. Featured speak. Thedead:
director, announced. The next pracSQNDAY
. 26, of Newat!c. driver in one-car tice will be beld next Monday er will be Rob Keck, premier
turkey caller, and executive vice
GREENVlLLE ·- Ronnie K. · accident on Obio 16 in Licking .night.
·
Kreitzer Jr., 24, of GreenviUe, in a County.
president of the NW1F. lnformaFRIDAY NIGHT
one-car accident on a rural Darke
AA 1o meet
. lion may be obtained by calling !SPRINGFIELD - Christopher
County road.
.
The
Pomeroy
Group
of
AA
will
800-878-9767 .
·
· DELAWARE - Ronald Tyo K. Baker, 16, of Enon, the driver in meet Thursday night at the Sacred
Jr., 32, of Delaware, in an accident a two-car accident on a Clark
•.l
County road. Also killed was
on a Delaware County road..
Charles D. Rigsby, 14, of SpringSATURDAY
field,
a passenger.
FREMONT- Amber L. Notes12:24 p.m. Saturday, State
Units of the Meigs Coun,ty
Route 681, Chastity Mwpby, MariEmergency Medical Service logged
etta Memorial Hospital.
six calls for assistance Saturday
.,
.
RACINE •
and Sunday. Units responding
4:15p.m. Saturday, Antiquity
included:
·
Road,
Bill Arnott, Veterans MemoREEDSVILLE
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - A term that Curry received in 1989
rial
Hospital.
Southern Ohio Conectional Facili- for aggravated robbery and bur)
MIDDLEPORT
I
ly inmate bas received a life sen- glary convictions in Summit Coun9:29 p.or. Saturday, Overbrook
tence for the murder of a fellow ty.
·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Center,
Ethel Guthrie, VMH.
inmate during the Apri11993 riot at
Vitale and Svelte were two of
Saturday admissions- WiUiam
•
12:41
a.m. Sunday, Beech Street
the LucasYi!le prison.
the nine inmates slain during the Amott. Racine.
ApanmeniS,
Ellis
Clonch,
VMH.
Gregory Curry. 30. was convict- 11-day siege at tbe prison. A guard
Saturday discharges - William
.'
11:51 a.m. Sunday, Rutherford
ed of aggr~vated murder and also was killed.
Fla,jsig, P&lt;XDeroy.
Road, structure fire at Oranna
attempted aggravated murder Sat- .
Prosecutors initially bad
Sunday admissionS- none.
Perry's borne. with no ·injuries
urday. He was sentenced to life for charged Curry with the aggravated .
Sunday discharses __, none.
reponed.
'
· .
the murder of Bruce Vitale and an murder of Svette. The charge was . HOLZER MEDICAL ~R
10:55 p.m. Sunday, LifeAight,
additional IS to 25 years for the reduced after it was.1detcrmined
Diich11 rge• J•n. 27 - C~e
Marilyn
Moore, Grant Medical
auempied murder of William thal'another inmate gave Svelte a · Caldwell, Tracy Hall, Makayla
••
SVelte.
fatal blow after Curry bad stopped Curtis, Cory Curtis, Carlos Greao- Center.'
The sentences are to be served . healing him.
ry, Kristen O'Neal, Barbara
coosecutively to the 15-to-50-year ·
Angell, Diane Young, Mrs. Charles
. DOWliNG CHILDS
Smith and son. Alice Mills.
MULLEN MUSSER
Discharges Jan. ~8 - Edna
Please enclose self·
I
Evans.
INSUUNCE
·
I
Discharps Jan. 29 - . Rhonda
addressed stamped
I
I
Taylor, Mrs. Shawn Blanton and
• ·
111 Seco.'lCI St, Pomeroy
A Syrae11se m~ was cited for day on Stale Route 338.
I
"PET'S
NAME"
envelope
to
return
The patrol said Shawn 0. Did- son.
left of center by the Gallia-Meigs
YOUR INDEPENDENT
Owner's Name
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Ricky
dle,
24, was eastbound in Letart
. your photo.
. Post of ,1,11~ ~tate Highway Pal!'ol
following a two-car accident Salur- Township at 3 p.m. when he losl Davis, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
AGENTS SERVING
control, went left and struck a Mark Mussell, daughter, Point
westbound car driven by Dallas V. Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
MEIGS COUNn
Richard Matheny, son, Leon.
The Daily Sentinel Hill, 74, 50638 SR 338, Racine.
SINCE 1168
Damage to Hill's car was mod- W.Va
(USPS 21:1-960)
.(PubiJJhed with pernaslon)
crate and slight to Diddle. s car, the
'
Published every arlernoon, Monda) th~ouafl
patrol said.

Break in snowy.weather
predicted for Tuesday

FEEL LIKE

Both parties abandon the majori.t y.

Charles B. Gordon

conditions ~

Bonnie B. Miller

~o

~. h. ould

forecast

-

Charles B. Gordon, 78, of Groveport. died Sunday, Jan. 29, 1995 at the
Bristol House Nursing H&lt;XDe, Columbus.
BIXD Sept 25, 1916 in Cheshire, the son of the late Albert lllld Myrtle
Shuler Gordon, he was a laborer in a refmery.
He is survived by his son, Homer Edward Gordon of Pomeroy; brother, Homer Ross·GOrdon of Georgia; and sister, Anna Romayne Ebersbach
of New Haven, W.Va
Graveside services will be 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Beech Grove
Cemetery in P&lt;XDeroy.
. .
ArrangemeDIS are by the Myers Funeral Home of Groveoort.

WASHINGTON- Sen. Ted cia! liability by supporting the laws after an internal bearing and ' period." For all pracli~ purposes,
Ill Court Street
the Senate bas operated ~ a colStevens, R-Aiaska, was "scream· amendment, or face political iooiestlgation.
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
lection
of separate kingdans. Dole
ing, hollering and cussing" during embarrassment by opposing IL
Congress wants the bragging
Is
using
the model of a big cotparaa closed-door lunch meetrng of
It's a 1J10!&gt;1 point now, because rights witbont the baggage. Repubtion,
where
litigation cosiS can be
Senate Republicans last Wedneslicans made the act a prominent
absorbed
easily,
as opposed to a
day.
part of their "ContraCt Witb AmerBy
Jack
Anderson
small·business
that
bas a life savIt was something be read. not
ica" to give moral support to
ings
on
the
line.
anything he ate.
small-business owners who live
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
and
Dole also noted that his staff is
According to three sources wbo
with the swonl of litigation hangPublisher
currently
exploring expanding a
attended the lu!lcb, Stevens' 10ing o\'er their beads. EmploymentMichael
Blnstein
_
personal
liability
policy he bas to
. •. minute firade .was-triggered by .our
related litigation iS n :yrocketlng·.
·...
protut
himself
against
lawsuits to
Jan. 22 column on the Congres- President Clinton promptly signed Discrimination lawsuits bave
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
sional Accountability Act, which the bill, professing that "most soared by more than 2,200 percent which he may be more vulnerable
MARGARET LEHEW
·removed
decades of conF.ssional Americans are actually surprised over the last two decades and now now thai be's majority leader.
. General Manager
Controller
Stevens refused to return our
exemptions from civil ngbts and when they learn that some of our c&lt;XDprise one-fifth of all civil suits
phone calls about his luncheon
other workplace laws.
most basic laws don ' t apply 10 filed In U.S. COiirtS.
With a copy or the column in Congress and their staffs.··
U!TTERS OP OPINION ue welcome. They should be less thin 300
Senate Majority Leader Roben remarks. In an earlier interview,
bls hand, Stevens read passages
wonlllong. Allletten are subject to «tiline and must be signed wjlb name,
SomethiDf else might surprise Dole. R-Kan., told us in a recent Stevens angrily resjlooded to sugtddreu and lelepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be publi&amp;bed. !.etten
from it to bis colleagues. He was most Amencans: Members of interview that while members may gestions that other senators could,
sbould be in cood tute, IICldlessing i&amp;&amp;ues, not pcnonolities.
angered that we had reported on Congress don't always have to pay not be pulling their pocketbooks on like Dole, acquire liability policies.
another private meeting ·o r GOP for their mistakes.
"He's (Dole) rich enough 10 .
the line, they are putting another
senators 10 which be denounced a
Under tb~ act, which passed asset at risk; their political fCP.Uia· afford It," Stevens said. "I can't :
· draft aineodmeot that would have almost unanimously, some 23,000 lion. Dole said the new law will be afford it. The poop~ VfhO, live off :
made· members of Congress indi- congressional employees will final- ''a great di:tetrent because if some their Senate 10come don't have
vidually liable in cases of personal ly bave the right to slie in federal senator did something and the gov· such .policies, belilive me... They're
misconducL
coon to seek redress for violalioos emment bad ·to pay a big tab, that too expensive." During his eil!bt
The amendment was never actu- of their civil rigbiS. A special fund, would probably be bye-bye whoev- years as the pany's whip, Stevens .
ally offered on the Senate floor, created with taxpayer money, will er it was.••
earned a reputation as a.defender of
mercifully sparing senators of, both be estabUsbed to pay for juilgmeniS
· .
He added: "We~re not a busi- congressional perks.
parties a politically painful choice: against any members of Congress ness. We're employed by the federAs one of the co-authors· of the :.
Either expose themselves to fman- found guilty of violaling wOrkplace al government. We get a salary, Congressional Accouniability .Act, '
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-lowa,
also echoeS Dole's ·Jine that politi- ·
clans would be hit in the priUs. "If :
a senator Is sued, the Senate, as .
If PAUL SOUHRADA
employer, provides the legal (tal.USnclated Press Writer
ent) and the judgment if there is a
: COLUMBUS -. The unlikely coalition of liberal government watchjudgment," said Grassley, wbo ·
dogs and conservatJve business leaders is maintaining a unified front in iiS
believes a "final judgment" would
demand fpr a $1,000 cap on political contributions.
be rendered by the voters against
: Ohioans for Campaign Reform gathered more than 110,000 signatures
the politician.
·
tG force lawmalcers to consider their plan - now one of three being conRep. Chris Shays, R-Coun., has
siCiered.
been the main catalyst for the act
· The group, backed by Cominon Cause/Obio, the Roundtable Freedom
on the House side. He at least ·
Forum and the f&lt;Xces behind Ohio's term limit driv~ in 19Q2, baS tieen
ackriowledges tbe unseemlliless of
cqlled ~y SOllie lawmakers naive, simplistic and a few things that can't be
taxpayers standing behind mem- ·
q~ted tn a newspaper.
.
bers .who are guilty .or egregious :
misco.nduct. but defends the legislation as lbe besi possible. ··
·
: Just don't call them separately.
•'l believe it should conf&lt;Xm to
: "I honestly think we will remain unified throughout the entire Camthe
.way it is in the private sector.
paign," predicted COOUDon Cause ex&amp;utive director Janet Lewis.
In
tbe
private sector your fiusiness :
: "We've worked on this issue so long, I feel we've worked through
.
defends
you and in this case our
ei!Ough of the 'what ifs."'
.. .
employer
defends .. you. Our
· Another reason is that the coalition knows it's got an ace up iis sleeve:
emp1oyer
is
the government....
iC:lawmalcers don't pass something to iiS liking within the next 100 days
So111e
say
a
small-businessman
or so, the group can go out·and get another 100,000 signatures and let the
feels .the pain more directly
voters decide in November.
·
·
because
wben the business defends ·
: Ms. Lewis said she tloesn't know whelber some legislators bave tried
~im
IX ber, essentially they're bav- ,
to;polson relationships among coalition members by promising side deals.
. mgto defend themselves."
But she figures they're wasting their time ifthey do.
Jack Anderson and Mich ..! i
: "What reason would Dave Zanotti bave to pull in that direction after
Blostein
are writers for United .
all we've been through? The lefislature haS more reason to come to ......""' 1
ralhet tban the other way around. '
.
~1!'----:-----------------------------_J Feature Syndicate, Inc. ·
·Zanotti is president of the Roundtable Freedom Forum and Ms
uiwis' pOlitical cover when conservative lawmalcers go on the ~nack.
.
:.LibeJa!s and conservatives o(ten agree on what the problems are, ZanOifl explained.
.
'!Ju'Ougbout tbe counlry ~tly (factory farms). The ~atest num- the tens of thousands into noxious telling you where animal's have •,
·
- m newspapers and on te.levts~on ber of anim~ls are ratsed in the sheds; each bird is allotted no more been raised.
:''Where we disagree most often is bow to solve the problems.•·
- Sheba ~as seen and believed to smallest poss1ble space and at the space than is taken up by a piece of
But the Humane Society of tbe
:This time they've auacked the subject so Darrowly, they've left little be a bero10e. Sheba is a dog - a lowest possible cost to maximize typing paper." .
,
United States _ 2100 L Street
roQm for dissension.
mixture of Rottweile~. chow and
There are still children's books N.W., Washington, DC 20037 _ .
·"We've already gone through the difficult problem of consensus- Labrador- and ~e 1~ a.mother:
Nat
Hentoff
w~icb ponray idyllic farms where has a publication, "'I)e Humane
building," Zanotti said. "We've got a proposal that we're not budging on ~ben she gave birth !O rune pup
aniDlals roam about in the farmyard Consumer and Product' Guide, ••
be&lt;:ause we all agree."
.
p1es, her owner- m Oakland prodiiclivity .andproduciS.
and interact with other 'animals. that locates produciS from animals
·Zanotti noted that the term limit light also was waged by a left-right Park,, Calif. - !WI no use. for. the
"These animals are treated as But, as the Humane Society says, raised, not in factory farms, but in
coRiition, with the Roundtable teamed up with Ohio Citizen Action.
pupplebags.H~ buried2
' tbemt"""~lve m a mere commodities rather than feel- "the traditional storybook farm is places where their lives are not
:"You couldn't gt:,t any farther across the polilical SpeciJ'UDI," be said.
paper
, m a -aoo ~Y grave.
ing creatures who are capable of viriJtally a thing of the past ••
chronically miserable.
·lewis and Couunon Cause, ironically, were on the opposing team that
The owner ~a~ cbained Sbeba suffering and intelligent behavior."
It seemed to me at first that
Of coune, vegetarians will tell
tinie.
·
so she wouldn I mterfere, but ~or
When my children were young, these obscene factory fanns are just · you that the best way 10 avoid
:"Even then, they sail!, 'We'll give you a call wben we get to campaign
hours .she worke.d at her cbatn, my wife and I used to take lbem to another as~ of "progress" that being an 8CCO!DPlice in the brutal
limnce reform,"· Ms. Lewis recaUed.
broke 11, and Cran~if?allydug up the a petting .zoo at Central Park in can't be remedied. Still, one migbt mistreatment of animals is not 10
The third major player in the coalition, Cleveland 'businessman Jobn
pupptes. At fus.t. sa sumved •. ~ut New York.. There were calves, .pigs expect Congress to enact much eat them. It's a sound point, but.
J~wa, said the thought of the coalition breaking up never entered his
!ater they too die;d. The au~~ues and other animals who flourished more effective laws to protect ani- most of us, myself included, don't
mind.
·~ Oalcland. Park, afte~ bes1tatmg, in the open air and in the love of mals from cruelty. But .!!Jere are 00 have that degree of discipline. But
~·1 don't have any reason to go looking over my shoulder," said Jazwa,
f10ally dectded to bn~g cbarges the children. They were not "com- federal statutes manclaung that an1- we can _ if there are eventually
a leader of Ohioans for Tenn Limits.
•
agamst the man who tried to Dlur- modities.'' They were sentient mals be treated humanely on facto- eno gh of .•• _ '
,
'
.
·
bl f
· ·
d
.
u
"" aorce aac1ory aarms
he
&amp;n. Roben Cupp, who bas introduced a campaign fmance plan of bis der.. the.dogs .
..
mgs capa e o rece1vmg an
ry farms or ranches. And state .anti- to become more humane by supOW)!, said be hasn't even talked to the backers of the citizen petition -let
While the dogs were ahve, at returning af(ection.
~lty laws either do not apply to porting their decent COOipetitors.
alone tried to cut a deal .with some of lbem. And even after four years of least 40 people offered to a~Jopt
But, for so many animals, life is aniDlals or exempt them from pros k Sb b 10
·
· d h
eep .e a
m•~ w e.n
them . We, after all, are animal shon, brutish and cruelly confined. teclion
trying. lawmalcers bave been unable to hammer out a deal amonl! themlovers Or most of us are My fami- ••s
.. th H
s ·
yet,· there are some famtly
. mal.
you shop. She IS not a umque antse~es.
·
. !0ld S · yed bo
ows, -- e - umll!!e QCie 1Y
Animals care about tbeir
I
has
. ''You ~ve a debate in the General As,sembly, .with members having
.Y . a
year-o . amo
w
reports, "kept in narrow crates (in farms and ranches where animals young· they can think· aod certaindtfferent 1deas of what should be done, ' the Ltma Republican said.
IS, wtthout reservation, a member
factory farms) are unable to walk are still free to move around and 1 th '
~ 1 · ~
dis
'"l)lere' s a lot of sorting out going on;'' r
of~ family. of
b
abo
aM are prevented from interacting interact with their offspring. The lomi~r~G:r~ern=~ba~
·metlms andoy o·tuskw o care tbut normally with their young.
Humane SocieJy stronsly recom- used to say a society can be judged
am a
. n.
now- as. e
"Newborn dairy calves are mends that you buy only Wiimal by bow it treaiS iiS prisoners. Also
Humane Soc1ety of the Umted taken from their mothers. These produciS that have been humanely b h 1·1 · ·· · a1 8 ....
States bas pomted out- that the calves, who are destined to 15e ra'sed
Of ·
- -lth.. b th
'I Nat
ow treats •ts anun ·
1
-~• ·
f tb 6 bllli
·
course, a oug
ere
Hentoff Is a nationally
•
vmalast "tdl't~'f of~
on an.•- slaughtered for veal, are raised In are reaSonably useful labels in the renowned autllority on tile First
sU . d Sor
ev~!'Y reard !n crates so narrow the calves are stores that teU you about saturated
Amendment and the rest of the
th
. e ~ue tat~s are ra1se m unable even 10 turn around... . fat and cholesterol levels, there are BID of RIKhtS.
mtens1ve-confmemen1 systems Broiler chickens are crowded by generally no identifying notes ·

~Berry•s

--Area Deaths- Report: Noble County·:

Tuesday, Jan. 31

...• MICH.

•
The Dally Set"'tlne.......,~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Straigfr.t- 'l'uc~r &amp; ?{pusfi

1 et S6 each.

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!funeralJlome

Deadline Friday, February 10th at 3 p.m.
.,
Mall or bring the entry form:

Ravenswood, WV- (304) 273-2152
prenaed- Atneed- Postnee4 ·
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTIES
1o JOE ROUSH
· RUSS!:LL STRAIGHT .1

The Daily ·sentinel

I

110 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

-'

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Dally Sentinel

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

Mondey, Jenuery 30, 1995 :

By beating the Chargers 49-26,

GAM.ES
EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Feb. 3 • Miller • Away
Feb. 4· Oak Hill • Home
Feb. 7· Svuthern ·Home
GIRLS
Feb. 2 • Southern · • Away
Feb. 6· Feder~ I Hocking • Away
Feb. 9~ Trimble· Home
•

BOYS
Feb. 3·• Alexander • Away
Feb. 7• Eastern • Away
Feb. 10 • Miller • Home

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16 ....................................... MILLER*
DEC'. 23 ................................. FORT FRYE
DEC. 29 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
DEC. 30 ..... ~ .AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
JAN. 6............................. AT SOUTHERN*
JAN. 10 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 14 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN 17 ........................ VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 20 .....................................TRIMBLE*
JAN. 24 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 27 ......................................... MEIGS*
JAN. 31 ......................... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 3 ..... :............................. AT MILLER*
FEB. 4 ...............................:....... OAK HILL
FEB. 7................................ SOUTHNERN*
FEB. 10; ................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
·FEB. 17 ............ ,.................. AT TRIMBLE*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach- Tony Deem

DEC. 19................................ SOUTHERN*
DEC. 22 ................................ WELLSTON*
JAN. s......... , ......... FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 9 ................... ATVINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 11 ........................................... MEIGS
JAN. 12 ........................... :... AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 1B ............. :................. WATERFORD
. JAN. 19 ................ NELSONVILLE·YORK*
JAN. 23 ...... :... :........................ AT MEIGS*
JAN. 25 ............. ,.................. AT WARREN
JAN. 26 .:............................ ALEXANDER*
JAN. 30 ............. .-......................... MILLER*
FEB. 2 ............................. AT SOUTHERN*
FEB: 6 .............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 9....................................~ ..TRIMBLE*
*-Indicates Tri·Valley games
Coach - Scott Wolfe

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16 .............................. ALEXANI)ER*
DEC. 20 ............... NELSONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 23 ............. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 27 ............................. COAL GROVE
DEC. 30 ............................. CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 6 ..................................... EASTERN*
JAN. 10 ................................... AT MEIGS*
JAN. 13............................
AT MIL~ER*
JAN. 17...................................... BELPRE* ·
JAN. 20 .................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 21 ....................·....... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 27 ................................ WELLSTON*
.JAN. 31 ......................................TRIMBLE*
FEB. 3 ........................... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 7 ................................ AT EASTERN*
FEB. 10 ....................................... MILLER*
FEB. 17 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
*-lndlc~tes Tri-Valley games
· Coach - 1-!owla Caldwell

DEC. 15 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 19 ............................. AT EASTERN*
DEC. 22 .......................................... MEIGS
DEC. 23 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 4 .................... AT SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. S ......................................... MILLER*.
JAN. 9 .................................. AT BELPRE*
JAN. 12 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 19 ....................... SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 21 ...................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 23 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 26 ............................... AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 30 ... :.......................... ALEXANDER*
FEB. 2 :..... :.............................. EASTERN*
FEB. 6 .................................... AT MILLER*
FEB. 9 .................... FEDERAL HOCKING*
*-Indicates Tri-Vailey games
Coach - Jennl Roush

u

GIRLS
Feb. 2 • Eastern • Home
Feb. 6• Miller • Away
Feb. 9· Federal Hocking • Home

••••

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

FEB. 3 .................................. WELLSTON*

FEB. 7........................ POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 10 ................................ AT BELPRE*
FEB. 14 •••••••••••• ."•••..•...•.•••..

u

••••••

WAHAMA

FEB. 17 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Jeff Skinner

''

BOTTLE GAS

Where America Goes 1h Relax ..

CHESTER

985·3301

742·2211

·1 ·800·837·8217

Mli5on, W. Va.
304-773-5514

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
304·675·1121

.114

New York ............. 27 14
B....n .. .-.................16 26

.6l9

New Jmey ....... .... :16 29
Miami .... ............. \.. 14 27
Plliladelphia ........... ll JO
Wuhinato11 ............ 11 21
Cealrlll

CIJ!\II!LAND ....... 26
Charloae ............... l6
Jrkti1Da ................... 24

ll
16
17

Chicaao .................. 21

21

Iu111

·

7
.381 18.l
.356 . 20
.J41

20

.286
.212

2l.S
22

.634
.619
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.500
.429

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5.5
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111

.641

S.S

.463

12.:5

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ll
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utah ... :.................. 32 10
San Antonio ........... 2.5 1-4
• HOUIIOD.................lS IS
Deaver ....... ........... .l9 22
Dallll ........... ....... 16 l4

Minneaota .............. IO 31

.762
.62~

6

PeclfkD....._
PhoeniJ .......... ........ 33 9 .786
S..nle ................... ll II .718
LA. Lak«• ......... 26 ll .667
SJCT~JJtCnlo ............ 24 17 .51:5
Portlllld ................. 22 18 .llO
Golden Srate .......... 12 t1 .308
LA . Cl;ppm ...........7 J6 .163

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19.5
26.l

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L.\. Lak.,.l28, s ..u. Ill (CJII

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New

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AtJanra ................... u 24
Mllwautoe ............. l6 26
o..ro;t ...... ............ 13 26

L£NDEIII

.:JA(K$0N AVE.

II

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SECOND STREET

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Orlando .................. 3S

WESTERN CONFERENCE

3LOCATIONS

"Family Owned and Operated /or 48 Years" .

A.IIMtkDI.woa

Ila

30..S82~2136

106 N. 2ND

We Will Ta•e Care Of All
Your lnsuranee Needs!

MIDDLEPORT,
OH.
.
992·2635
'

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER I.NSURANCE
110 SECOND AYE.
992·2342

POMEROY

228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

IIIIII"

.KFC. ,.

E•l
Bolton Univ. 11. New Hamplhire 7l
Brown 80, Cc.nei16S
Buctntll91, Holy Crou11
Cl.llililll 60, SieDI53
Colple 16, Lafayette 62
·
Fairleiah DickiniOrl 76, Monmuuth ,
N.J. 6l
Fordhw 77, Army 60
Georaetcwa 71, Pilllbursh 60
loaa74, Niapra 61
LdtiiJb Ill, Navy 77
MllllhattaD 62, Fairfield 11
Mlrilt 79, Waper 66
NortheMtern 83, Maine 66
Pt111169, Princeton 50
Purdue 6S , Penn' St. 62
Rider 89, Mount St. Mary' I , Md. 78
St. Booavelllwe 73, Rutaen 69
St. fralx:il, N. y, 13, Rob«! Morris 70
St. Fmlda, Pa. 94, t.ona hlaud Univ.

12

· St Joaeph'• 90, Duquet.r.e 11
St. ~er'a7 1 , Loyola, Md. S6
S-76. Miami Sl
Teltl'le 55, Rhode laiiJid 50 (OT}
VliiUJovaU, Providence 67

Alabarr. 69, TtDnr.&amp;lte 46
.
55, FJa. lmernaUonal S4
Citadc191, W. Carolioa90
Oenwon 60, N. Carolina'St. SS
~bell

Coli. or CharlCIIOD 12. Cent. Florid•

70

12

AOOda 72, Pt1iatLulppi S7
Otuaia St. 81, Mereu 71
1Kbon St. II, Alabama St. 76 (Of)
Jr.cboaville 6S, Tuu·Pan American

Toni2.ht1s g•mes
Selttle at Pbiildtlphia. 7:10p.m.
AUarl.lll Milml, 7:30p.m
RKttmil.ll CLEVELAND, 7 :)0 p.m.
LA. Clippenll Ddroit, '7:30p.m.
MiaaaKJtall Vtlh. 9 p.m.
New Ieney at Pa1Jaod, IOp.m.

60

62 '

Maryli.Dd 74, Duke 72
Md.·B•IIImore County 71 , Winthrop
6l

atlflotte • W•tu•a•oa. I p.m.

-fJ:z.tnte[
555 PARK ST.

VALLEY LUMBER
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

105 MULBERRY AYE.
9M·2121

Home

POMEROY

Saa Antonio 11 Sacramnlo, 10:30

Dealer

IITIHL •.•

FISHER FUNERAL HOME .

KEEP UP ON ALL YOUR
LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
ATHLETICS ,

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

RIDEN~UR
915·3301

'

.

SUPPLY
.

CHESTER~

OHIO

N. 2nd AYE.

MIDDLEPORT

992·5627

N.C . ~

19, bdford 62
N.C.-WIImi•IIOII6S, &amp;It Carollaa 51
NE Loulliau 13, Teua-Su Antoalo

The tor, 2S lean iiiPilll_ Allociated
Puu' col eae baakdbalp!p&gt;ie with f"lnt·
place volel ia pueatheaes , record•
thtoulh Jau. 29, total poiata bii'Cd on 25
polall for a first-plaet Y01e lhrouah ooe
potat ror a 25th-piM:c vote, ud prevlow

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STIHC.
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The 'Daily Sentinel

rutias:

.....

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rl!,j, Ill. .!filii
1.-.- (l3) ..:rs:l
1~33
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2. N-Carollao(IO) .. U&gt;I
3. Kaouo (l) ................. ls-2
4. Coanect!N ............... l,_l
l . Mo&lt;ylllld .................. 16-3
6. Kea""ky .................. 1).!
1. IJCLA ....................... I:I-2

I.

Md.-E. Share 72. Mor1an St. 68
MerJ1)hil14. Ali.·BirmiaahllfTl67
Mill. VAlley St. 19, 0nJJi,lioa 'St.l7
Mumy Sl. 80, AUilia ·Peay 79
N. C.olioa AAT 65, Aorida AIJ.M 59
N.C.-Aahevllle 14, Towton St . 79

· Ollaao•L.A. Laken,IO:JOp.m.

BRUCE FISHER- Owner/Operator
.
992·51

Establish 1913

I ::JO p.m.

1.114
1.121

3
7

I )74

2
I

I )71
1.231
1.2U

.U-• . . ...............16-4 t.tP?

9. MidllpD St.......... ,.. .I0-2 1,141
IO. s,...,... ................. ll-2 1,132
II. Jon St ................... l7·2 1.1126
12. Atlzou ................... ll-4 96!·
13. OeorJ&lt;IDWD ............ 14-l 7ll
14. Woke foreol ............ l2-4 61!
tl. Vlrlllolo ................... llol 611
16 Arillmla51.... ........... 14-l ll6
11: SIOIIIofd. ................. l).3 S27
II. MluwrL ............... I0-3 · 49!
19. Yilluo•a ............... .t~5 462
20. AiabanJI ................. IH !32
21 . o -1 iaTodl ....... d).6 Jll
22. ()rqoa ........ ............ ll-4' 110
23. CINCINNAn....... ,,ll-6 166

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14
16
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17

20

22
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New OrltiDI ~ South Alablllll 82 .
Nld\olll SL 101, M&lt;N- Sl. 79
Nmh C.-oliu 62. wan Pomt 61
· Old Doniaioa 6!5, Rk:tunolld 46
Clrollu 51. 13, Bdhwle.t:ookmu
IO(CJII
·
SW Tc• SL 64, MW Louiaiaoa 63

s.

S~II,Ceolelw179

Sole Clrollaa 60, OecrJil 59
SNb Florid&amp; 10, Va. Cornmoaweallh
71 (CJII
'
ScMIIcn Mill. 79, Tuluc 5'
-en96.AiconStl~

.O;:.fj

SldoOO 90, SE Loulllaoall
Tee..eTedi71,MlddJeTeaa. "
Teu.
72, Ptumm 67
VMI 19.
011 Sl. ll
V - k ,LSUll
VirJiala lll, Gearae W.Oa 91
VltpaiaTodiiOI.l.lbtny70

--

Cllcaeo St. 90. NE IUiaoiJ 76
Doy~oa70, Delawn SL

st 64

las."

Had Dallas and San Francisco
been in Joe Robbie Sladium on
Sunday, wbo could have objected? - - Sports briefs-Not even 'the Chargers afler lhey
Golf
.
were whipped so thoroughly.
KOHALA COAST, Hawaii ·
"We took a bull ·kicking (AP) - Raymond Floyd mi.ssed :
today,•' ·Seau said. •'They came out · three birdie tries as lbe stakes and ·
and certain! y performed well and
the,tension mounted Sunday in lbe :
we did not execute at all. That was Senior Skins Game, lben rolled ill ·
the key. They ran their program an 8-footer at No. 17 to win the :
and lbeir scheme and we dido' 1 run
ric best bole - $290,000 - hi ·
ours. We didn't do anything to stop
skins history.
.·
them ."
Tbe birdie putt came after
· ·The Chargers did get imo the
Arnold Palmer missed from I0 feet ·
end .zooe 'three times, on Natrone· and Jack Nicklaus from 14 feet 1114:
Means' one-yard dive. Andre Cole·
gave Floyd the Senior Skins Iilio ;
man's record-rying 98-yard kickoff for lbe ·second consecutive year. : ·
return and Tony Martin's 3Q.yard
Floyd earned $420,000 iiJO-lhe ·
reception. Bu1 they .never provided
two.cJay co_mpetitiOJI at tbe Mauna .
any evidence lbey belonged on lbe
Lani Reson. a skins record on the) •
field wilb the 49en;. who l&amp;St won
Senior PGA Tour or tbe PGA Tour. :
tbe Super Bowl in 1990 after
Ge01ge Seifert's first season as
coach.
,
Public Notice
"I'm elated 10 be pari of this
The following Information
wbole deal," said Seifert; who has
wee omitted from the Public
the besl winning percentage of any
Notice an the leading
NFl. coacb, yet actually was critiCrHk Caneervency Dl1trlct
cized outside lhe 49en; organiza·
· water line oxton1lon projec1
lion for not being imaginative
publlohed In the December
30,
1994
edition:
enough. "I mean. it's kind of an
Appalachlen
•
Regional
overwhelming situatiop to have
Comml••lan (ARC) Iundt,
won lbe game against Dallas ... that
In addition to Community
was such an emotional win. For
Development Block Grtnt
Ibis team to sl8y focused and play
(CDBG) Iunde, will be u1ed
lbe type of game we did ...''
lo finance lhlo projeet.
Objectlono to the Reloaoe
Seifen dido 't need to finish the ·
,
of
Fundo for thla project will
!bought. This team, chock full .of
be accepted by the St.ote of
stars and put together like a grand
Ohio ' until February 1&lt;4,
jigsaw puzzle, made the ultimate
1995. Objectlono . received
statement on lbe field.
·
after thlo dele will not be
"This team will be remembered
coneldered.
(1) 30
as one of the best teams lhat lias

'

Sunday'siCOre

Tund.,

·w........,

omo sT.11 Northweil~n

60 .

llePiul63. Mooju«le 41
Deooit II, Butt« ll (01')
llnbl3,1odiauSL 77
01.-01._ 17, CleYIIud St 72
lllilloio St. 94, S. IIHaolo 91
lonSLI7.~SL 79
-II.CoallOCII&lt;utl9

Illinois II Iowa
WiiCODiin. Michipn

s......,

Ohio men's
.college scores
·O real Lakn Vlllq Ca.fenftee
6S

Norlh Caul AlhleUr Conl'crrnft
Wooller 41, Wi~aherl oU
Kenvoa 75,' Allea,beny 47

Ohio Wealtyan 13, Cue Raeoe 61
Deailoa 93. E.-lh11Tl79

Ohio Atllletk ConftreMt
Marietta 58, HeidelberJ ~7
Ohio Nortllern 13, Hiram 61
Ottttbeilll741 John Carroii6S
Mouat Union ~9. MUlti~ 53
Baldwln-Wallac.e 71, Ctplll.l 73

Mld.OWU C..tn:enc:e
SbiWncr: St ll Cedarville. ppd.
Findlay 84, Ohio Donli11ieu 67
Mounl VernoR Naurene II, Maloae

n

-~MAC men's standings
o.,....

.!! L &amp;1. .!! L

01110 ........... .... .c.1 I .17l
MiunL ................. 7 ~ .87l
8owlilli·Or•a.........5 · ;, .61S
E. Mlcb........... ......... l 3 .6ll
Toledo ............ .........4 4 .lOO
Boll St.. .... ................4 4 .lOO

16
ll
II
II
10
9

.37~

I

4
,4

S
S
6
1
I

7 9
l II
3 13

l .371
Ke111 .........................2 6 .2SO
C. Mlcii....................O I .000

Wedneoclor'• gamu

C.,.,._.

MW-"-'t• ea.l'erewa
IColll6, £. Miclli,oa 74
OHIO 70. COIL MlciiiiMI 60
M,.,.. 12, Boll St. 73
BowllnJ Orca 97, Abo !I ll
Toledo 76, W. Mlchlpn 71

-.c:.oc-

-

MW.OWO c..r.w•
Malone 17, Mount YerDOa N..-ea.
14
' Shrnee St.-Cedrlllle, ppd.
RJO ORANDE 76, Utbua70
nma 69, Walth 63

L lEL.l!L

MichJJI.II ................. s
Milll.etOta ................ 5
Pe111 St. ""'"""'"'""'
Dllnoll ..................... 4
lad!............. : ..........
..............................3
Wilcolllla ................ !
Notlhw-..: .........0
OHIO ST............. :...o

2
3
'3
3

I D1 14
J&gt;.&gt;rdue ..................... s· 2 .714 t4
.714 11

2
l
I

.6ll " ' 6
.571 12 4
.571 13 6
3 .m 12 1
• .• 29 13 6
4 .429 p 1
1 .000 • 12
1 .000 4 13

ow. A.lw.t.. c..t....

MouDl UDioa 60, M\lliiiJUm 56
OhloNonhon64,Hnm52
Copltal66, lloldwla·Wollaco 51
~a66 .

Joha C11r0U62

N....r• ..,._.....
Ctlttal St. 69, Tnwytnall. H

Suaday'• oetloll
lloToo
OHIO ST. 93.1lflaoio 66

Gnol_c.........

Doymall. Stl.ollll 70

Olt!«&lt; S6._Uoloolo!!la Lake S2
OruYIIIe 57, Now Albuy 29
OreeaeYiew ~.Day. o.twood ll
Htollh 55 , Utica SI
Htlliwcl60, MouDl Venon 50

Hudloo 64, Renn_4:1 .
HulliqtoaSI , Citclevlllt 31

Huroa 51, Pertlu44
1KkiDD c... 31, Fort l...otarNc 34

llarlham·n . Oel&gt;iaoal6
Wltt•berJII. w-.rn

ru.
l!:
Mldlipa SL ............ 6

,I

Gilmour 4S , Bedford 36

c:.or-1!. llll1olll2, Youa,.owa
St. !3

Mail..,. n. Ha-. 59

3

16

16
14
11

4 14
1o

o •

3 l
4 0
3 1

PIIIJblfp ....... S 0 0
Qutbclc.............. 4 0 0
&gt;

Bullolo.............. 3 I I
B01ton .............. 3 1 0

Mo...... ........... 2 I I
n.trord ............ 1 2 2

3
2
1

I

14

9

II

4

10

10 Zl
I 11
7 14
6 I
l II
•4 10

ll
5
I3

Ottawa .............. 0 2 2

·- '

1

-4

I
9

10

14

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Crt~ll'a.l IM.'-

.!! L I U lA

lla

Drttult ............. : 4 l 0
CI\ICOJO ............ 3 l 0
St. L.Oiiii .......... : :J 1 u

I

ll
6 19
6 20

Dalla&amp;......'.......... 2 I I
Toronto ............. · 2 2 I
Wlnnlpe, .......... I 4 I

5 II
5 14
l ll

'

.
'

r.a.II
14
11

1
13 ·
21

Padn~

DlwWen
l I 0
6
Allahelm ...... ..... 3 2 .0
6
Cali"'!' ........ ..... 2 2 I l
Edmonton ......... 2 3 0 4

12
14
ll
13

9
ll
ll
19

Vancouver ........ I 3 I
LD1 Aoaeles ..... 1 4 I

10
16

21
22

SNllo~e ............

.
Wh
\ ile

Elyria W. l7, Cl. . .tew 17
Fairballb lO. Bcojarrlo Lopa 33
Flllrtlon49, Xooia 4l
Falniew 55, Bay 23
fZedenl Hocklna 61. NeiiOD'fi!Je..Yort
&lt;0
•
Fleld 53. KeDI Roolevell Sl
· Fool Fryell. tUieUa 40
Predericklawn 51, Buckeye Central 39
a -.. 73. M...neld sr. l).
Garfield H10. Trtally 103."1••101' Lato
c.... Jl
-

Grt.. IAII• V..,
lty w..l.,... 14. Aahl..d 76 (01')

Ohio w...)'lll61. c- w-.l1

.,......

.

3 .0

12
12

N,...hHollllo-

1
3

Saturday'aiCOI'tl
· Philadelphil 2, 80110111
Delroil S, f..drmDIOD 2
Fluridl 2, Hlrtford I
Moatrea15, New Jeney I

Elyria'41, N. Rldpvme 36

a.. o.r .,..

Miami • BoW liD&amp; OtDCI

a., .......

E..tlakl N. 16 , Aultiulown-Fitch .W

NarUi c... A...
All.....y77, Kuyoa 61

Atroa • W. Michlpa

. Fl&lt;O'ida .............. 2
T....
2
WllhiqtOI ...... I
~ . Y. Raapn .... I
. NewJeney .. ,.... · o

l!dpood li , Cio. St. lot.al4
BdtJOO 49, ou Harbor 41
Elidl90, Day. Duat.. 73

MW11 I _ wOAI...... C."'""
Loyola. Dl. 9l , WriJIUSt.l4 (01')

OIUO ot E. Mlclllpo
Keat at Ball Sl.
Toledo ot CaL Mlddpn

Co\o~el

5
5

32

~

WUmlaJlO• 6&lt;1, Bkdl\on 62

•

Dl)'toll Chr. 47 , Day.

U lA fa.

Phillllelphia .... .. 2 3 I

Oovet 50, Akroa Hobu '44
E C1111to11. 63, Cutoa S. 35
E. Uverpool Chr. 41, Or_.u WorU

A - . oiMIII1Ml C..,.
Defiance 110. Thorntl Min 14

..,...... 94, Ko"""ky 92

c..r.

41

Saturdaly'• octloa

.....

'

boro 3S

·N..,.conftrenu .niort.
Dlfton 10, Delaware Sl. 60
Oberlin 61, Pun St.·Bthread 58

-_

Allaotl•
ru.
.!! J. I
N.Y. lalmden ... 2 2 I

Dalton 71, Tualiw 19
Daovllle 6l , Woilblnll"'• Chr. &lt;0
Day . Olunin~dc - Juhen~e 49. ~prilll·

A -. oiMioloMI Col.....
Blullton 76. Defi- 62

Coppia St. 76, Howard S1
GeorJia Tech It, Florida St . 61
W.U Forut 63, Vanderbilt 51

Dlo-

EASTERN CONFERENCE

CoYinJ!On 61, Miami B. 44
Cllyahop ""· 6), 11awtco ll
· Cllyahop Vol. Chr. l6, l.awe12l

RIO ORANDE·Urbona ppd.
Walth 76, Tiffin 70

Ohio women's
college 5cores

NHL standings

ltODe )9
Col. Rudy S6, Flirfleld Ulioa 29
Colon~l Crawford 49. Ontario 45
.. COpliV l1, Ote&lt;fi 47
· Cy'.!olry ~. RjiJm.. ll

83

i&gt;reuiiOI, Vft"mont18
Hartfwd 70, Dt-law.-e 66

Brwdf'ord 60, Sidaey Lduma 45
8101:IIYIIIel6.l&gt;tna 33
Jlridaeporl 4l. B_.llvllle 37
Bnauwict 62, aov.t.r 46
Buc:bye Local Sl, Monroo-Ceeuai4S
Bqckrye Tnil61, Coahocto1 36
Cadiz 69, Jewett-Scto 39
Caldwell Sl, CoDOaOD VII. 44
Can loa Calh. 71, f.Duilvllle 61
Caalon McKinley 65, Atroa B.cbtel

.
Cord!aal42, Berbhire II
Canolll&lt;ial9, Bdlzoo Local41
Ce111erbu!J; S6, Northridp 41
a....-ln Filii .51, WickJ[ffe 1,1
Cia. Mariemoot 65, Loc:kload .4 l
Cia. McNh:hOiu U, Oolhen .56
Cic. Oak Hill1 ~7. Cia. Setoa 34
CiD. Readla' 39, Cia. Couatry Dly 31
Cia. Urtullne 6S, CovinJIOD (Ky.)
HolyCrou 47
0.. Catholic 62, 0.1Dtl 40
Col. DeS ala 57, Buckeye Val. 41
Col. llattley 61. Col . Eaotmoor 46
Col. lilden-McKinley 41. Marloa
lbnllq3l
Col. Marioa-Fraoklin .&amp;0, Col. Whet·

~cntuck)' Wwleyao 66 , Altllaod

Suaclak! adlon

Coat.

49

Saturd•y'• •ctlCHI

Montana II, Id.oo St. 66
Mo11taoa St. 61, Boise St. 51
Olllbona St. 12. Colorado 63
PacifiC 19, New MuK:o St. 86
Pepperdloe 1•. Loyola Mwymounl 6S
(CJII'
S . Ul&amp;h 91, Cal Poly-Sl.O 62
San Die11o 91, SUI FranciKO 15
5anaa Ch•·•IJ, Oonup 74
St. M•y' s, Cal. 16, Portl111d 74 (CYf)
Slanford IS. Soulhena Cllll
Uc ~in~ 62:, ur ~·nta Bart.ra S&amp;
UNLV IO,Selote St. 59
Utah 86, Tent-EI Paso 71
Utah St 13, Nenda S7
Wllhinaton St 7-4, W•hinatoll13
Weber St. 72, E. Walhina,ton S9
Wyomillg 70, Air Force 65

Hockey

81&amp; Walaut6l,llelcley 49

Mtchipn St. • MinDeaotl
Norlbweatera .11 Pwdue
OfDO ST. AI Iowa
WiscoDiin at NccthWftltfn

70

Big Ten men's
standings

A&amp;hlalld 50, NorwayDI 4S
. Alhlabula 47, OeDeYa 31
• Alhlabu. la &amp;tacwood 51, Alhllbula St.
John 24
Awu Lab6S, Almenl34
Beaven:reek 61. Fairmoal 20
Bellevue 39, Norwalt 33
8eme Unioa 45, UetJaa Hit. 30

ladiao• at Purdue

kuona Ill, Orqon Sl. 98
Arizona St. 79, Qrm,og 7§
Brlaham Youn.1ll, New Muico 61
Callromla 100. UCJ..A 93
fte.no St. 71, Colorado Sl. 52
Hawaii 91, San Dieao St 62
Idaho 61. N. Arlzoaa 66
Lona BelCh St 79, Cal SI.-Fullerton

W. Mich .................. )
Atroa ...................... 3

21

This week'• •genda ·

r.w ...

Iua

Akron St.V-St.M 14; Kenmcft 31
AJieD f!. 59, Hardfa Northera 54
Amaa4a-Ciearcreek S5 , Flthu Cath .

St.1oho'a 12, Michlp n 71

Texaa 12, Te111 Tech 61
Tew 0\r!Jtiaa 72, TeUI A&amp;M 11
Teu. Southern II, Prairie V iew 49
W. Kentucky 77, Lanw 61

· St. Joh.n'a 12. Mic:Npa

Akron Ceai.-Hower 51, C11ton
Timkfn 36

Ptltdue 6l. Peaa Sl. 62
· Michipa St. 75, IIUooia 67

71

Keystooe 70, Broobidt SS
Lakewood 60, W. Jeffmoa ]~
L.edaeRilat49, Fairport Hanlin&amp;27
Uberty Cenler M , tot Oulatian 42
l.ickiDI Val . 10; Lolldoo 19
u... Cath.
llalh 7l, Delplm st '"",. •s
u,..
59, v.. ...... J2
l.oraia 34, I.Draln Southview 33
Lania CaUl. 61 , Cle. St. Jo.eph Acad.
43
.
l.ouitvUie Aqulut47, Way..edale 1 I
Lovelud ~2. Derr Pwll: 31
LoWel)ville ·31, Lordltow11ll

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

ladiaaa 90, OHIO ST. 1$

Atk.·UUio Ro&lt;l66 , Artau• Sl. 64
HoUitoa 73, Soulhcm Mtth. 71
North Tu• 16, Sam Houaton St. 62
OtJihon 12, Nebraska 12
Rice 90, Baylor 19
Stephea f . Awd11 II, Tew-Arlinatoo

•

Loui.Jiaaa Tech 63, SW Louitiana S6
Loullville 79,N.C. Charlotte S7

TuNd•y'• pmet
Ho~n.

•.

1arne~ Madi10n 71, WilHam II. M•Y

·Ooldel Stale 11 New fort,7:30 p.m

and Serttiee Alwa~s"

-~~Ewing~.Funeral

it all.
'We knew we were going to
kick their butts. but we couldn ' l
say nothing," said Sanders, wbo
.took about one-lbird lbe money be
could have gouen elsewhere and
signed wilb tbe 49en; to pursue his
rii'St NFl. aown. "They never bad
a chance to beat us. The real Super
,Bowl was l&amp;St week against Dal·

Saturday'• KOI'ft

SW Miuowi St. 6l, N. Iowa 62
St. Loull75, Citldallllli 68
Tulaa 67; O'dJtltol S4
Volp..UOM,Buffolo63
W. llllaolo 100, Troy St 98
Wldllla SL l4, Bradley 47
WI•.-Oteea Bay n, 1..11 Salle 60
WiKOilliD 97 , Northwestern 73
W~ Sl. 76, Wlo.·Mihnukoo 74
XaVIw, Ohib J06, ·N. Illinoia 14
Youq:tiOWD Sl. 74, E. Illlaois12

Davidlon 71, MARSHALL 63

B. Keatucky 92, Tenn.·Mif11n 711
E. Ten.DC:uee .St. 19, Qeoraia Soulhern

Sundayts JCOI'es

Denvw •

se Mtuo..t 66. T..._

Saturday's odlon

v.IIJ!IIt Mn-.auW, l :lO p.m

"Dignit~

nin~

MicDNOta $5, Iowa 54
Wlscouin 97, Northwestern 73

-~-

Soalh

New York 107, 1Jhoelli~ II
ChicaJO 116, Ooldea St.Me 94

99H432

Mo.-Kaull City 77, Cent. Conaetti·
eut St. 69
Notrt Dune 7-4, B011oa Cotleae61

Major men's'
college scores

Y.olill, Cl!lYIOOi!! ~~

San Antonio 103, Denver 11
U~ Ill , New Jeney 94

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

23

s..

Hooatolll4, MiDDelota 93

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JIWELERS
· AND RADIO SHACK

ll

l&lt;M

New Metk:o St. 30, Utah lO, OIGO 21 ,
....,... 28, N.C. Cllortatte 27. Tulllle 24.
· Uloll SL 24, Mlululppl St. 21. Peaa St.
19, Tulia 14, Pena 13, Loulavllle II,
Men"¢1111. Te,._ 10. XAVIER (01110)
10, Dliooia II, Aubunl 6,1Ddiaaa 6,· Clemson 4, WMhinatoD St. 4, Iowa 2, N'ebl'll·
ka 2.
ta Clara 2, Yiralaia Tech 2,
GeorJia I.

Wiitiiijffiii 91, LA. Clippen17 Orludo 107, MilwtukM 103
Ot•lotte I02, AUuta 93
Detroil19, Miami 1.5
ladi111a I 06, Phi~lphJ• lOJ (at)
Sacmnento 17, DaliM 14

Haven, W. Va.

144

· Otkr rKeh-lnt .,~, c.Jirernia 911,
Oklllhoma Sl. 73, Sl. lo&lt;oio 73, Mia....,.
SO, Briallam YOWII 49, W. Kelllucky 32,

NBAstimdings

*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Ron Logan

AND

24. ottllho.J............... IH
2$. Aorida .......... :......... IG-6

Basketball

DEC. 15....................................... MILLER*
DEC. 21 ............................... AL-EXANDER
DEC. 22 ......., .................... AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 29 .......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. S ...... ;................ ~ .. :....... AT BELPRE*
JAN. 9.... ~ .................................. TRIMBLE*
, JAN. 11 ...................... ,........ AT EASTERN
JAN. 12 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
JAN.14 ....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 19......................... AT ALEXANDER*
JAN. 23 ................................... EASTERN*
JAN. 26 ............:... NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 30 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
FEB. 6 .......................... :............. BELPRE*
FEB. 9 ...... :............ AT VINTON COUNTY*

RUTLAND FURNITURE

BAUM LUMBER

log cornerb•ck·turned-recelver
Delon Sanders In the Iouth
quarter of Super Bowl XXIX,
which the 49ers won 49-16. (AP)

can fall apart and panic. We didn•t
panic, but at the same time. we
were not able to adjust"
Just like their AFC brethren
wbo failed to slop an NFC streak
tblll co.uld last another teneration,
. lbe Chargers bad nowhere to tum.
Instead, lbey turned up in all lbe
wrong places as Young bit Rice for
lbree scores, Ricky Wauen; for two
and William Aoyd for one. Wauers
also l!iid a lliiie-yard touchdown
run.
As the points piled up, it
became evident this matcbup was
unfair, just as the oddsmalcers said
it w6ukl be by making San Ftancisco an 18-point favorite .
Seau, the Chargers' only star,
was beinR neutralized by what be
termed "almost a run·and·sboot"
offense . The secondary was a ·
sieve . The Niners were unstpp·
pable.
"We knew we bad 10 come out
and esl8blisb ourselves right from
the slart," said Rice, who bad I0
receptions for 149 yards and touchdowns of 44, 15 and seven yanls.
He now ba$ 51~ yanls fe(;eiving in
Super Bowls on 28 receptions,
seven for touchdowns, 'ail records.
· "We. wanted to. make a sJatement
and let everybody lrnow we have a
.grca1 team and a great organiza·
ll' on. ..
That organization dedicated
itself to retooling the defense
despite lbe constraints of tbe new
salary cap. It added starters Deion
Sanders, Rickey Jactson, Gary
Plummer. rookies Bryant Young
and Lee Woodall, and Ken Norton,
who became tbe only player to win
lbree straight Super Bowls.
Secured for the offense were
center Ban Oates and rookie full·
back William Floyd. Added to an
already strong team, lhose new comers helped tbe Niners end a
frustrating run of three losses in
four NFC title games in lbe '90s.
1\od as recent history shouts at
us, winning lbe NFC means win·

ever been assembled In profession~ :
al football," said center Bart Oates, :
who won lwo Super Bowls with tbC ·
Giants before signing with the ·
ot9ers last year. "Manr. times; ·
teams come together and lbey'rc:
supposed to win i~ but they fa)ter :
and they fail because lbey can:l :
take that pressure. Tbey can 1·
answer the bell when it rings.
··
"This team did. Thai probabl)l
makes il the sweetest of all."
· .

Scoreboard

. 1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16........................... AT WELLSTON*
DEC. 20 ................................. AT MILLER*
DEC. 22 ................. AT POINT PLEASANT
JAN. 3 .............................. RIVER VALLEY
JAN. ·10 ................................ SOUTHERN*
JAN. 13 ...................................... BELPRE*
JAN. 17 ............................... ATTRIMBLE*
JAN. 20 ................. AT VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 24 .............................. ALEXANDER*
JAN. 27 .............................. AT EASTERN*
JAN. 2\I ................................ AT WAHAMA
JAN. 31 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*

BOYS
Feb. 3 • Wellston • Home ·
Feb. 7 • Point ·Pleasant • Home
leb, 10 • Belpre· Away
GIRLS
Feb. 6 • Belpre • Home
Feb•.9· Vinton County ·· Away

~). HotSPri~g··
t &amp; . Pofrabl£ Spas

PREVENTS COMPLETION
- San Diego defensive back
Stanley Richard (l4) prevents
~teve Y ou!lg 's pass from reach·

By BARRY WILNER
MIAMI (AP)- It didn't bave
to be the Cba.:gers who certified
San Francisco's greameSs.ltjust as
easily could bave been tbe Bengals,
wbo contribllled twice to tbe 49ers'
dynasty. Or lbe Broncos, who also
were victimized In tbe drive to five.
Heck, it even COI!Id have been
tbe Bills, for all that it manered.
Regardless of whom the AFC
offered up, the 49ers were going to
c001plete their mission. They were
built to win, to become the first
franchise with five Super Bowl
championships. And there was
nobody in the AFC, loser of II
straight NFL title games, or anywhere else equipped to stop this
runaway express.
"It feels great to win a Super
Bowl, to throw six touchdowns, to
play the best game you ever
played," quarterback Steve Young
said after tearing apart San Diego
in San Francisco's 49-26 romp
Sunday. Young, tbe game's MVP,
not only sboved lbe memory of Joe
Montana into the background. be
practically erased it with his
rerord·breilking sbowing. "It's lbe
kind of performance under the
pressure of the Super Bowl that
you have to feel very good abou~
so I'll always remember Ibis.
"You couldn't ask for moo:::
Even though the 49ers surely
could have delivered more. They
seemed to score at will against an
ovennatcbed defense thai left wide
chunks of tbe field open doWII the
middle. Just I :24 into their first
Super Bowl, the Chargers. fried
covering Jerry Rice with two
safeties and were burned for lbe
quickest touchdown in the game's
history.
.·
They didn't learn, and 3 1/2
minutes later, Ricky Watters did
tbe 5ame thing. Wilb more than 50
minutes remaining, it was over.
"Right off, that bomb burts
you," Cbargen AII·Pro linebacker
Junior Seau said. "Mentally, you

MEIGS MARAUDERS ·

MEIGS MARAUDERS

Relax. With One. of These ·

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SOUTHERN TORNADOES

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

·

49ers capture fifth .Super Bowl crown':.:

EAGLES

THIS WEE

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Page

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Jclf«&lt;IOIS, Paiaa:vllle Hwvey 46
.JobaDwl .I LucM :JI

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Lllda Si , Mm .. Cit y 4!

ICoooloa 10, O"aD&amp;• 23
x.u.n.,Alt• 51 , Day. Canoll3fi

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Su JON 3, o.Jl.l 1
Tampo8ay4. N.Y. biuden I

· aurro1o 2, Otlawa 2 (lle)

Qu-l.N.Y. IIaii... O
Toronto 2, Cal&amp;aty I
Vancoum 3, St. Loui1 I
Lo• An ide~ 4, WinnlpeJ 2
~

SUnday'IICOHI
Pittatn.-p 4, W.ahillf.oD I
Philadelphia 2,,Moatrull (Ua)
ChJC:aiJO 6, (..w Anaeltl 3

-~ ~ Toafalol'o • - •
Aorida 11 Boatoa, 7:j() p.m.

I

at..w• 11N.Y. ItaDJ.. , 7:JO p.m.

Toroa&amp;o a 0.11•. 1:30 p.m.
Dcuoilll Edrt¥&gt;DIOO., 9:30 p.rp.
Clllcqo ..
10:30 p.m.

SaD-·

Tue.le)''lp-

Phi~l•

.. Quebec , 7:XJ p.m.
Bulralo II Now 1...,, 7:30 P·"'
M'f11111a8ay. 7:30 p.nL \.
N.Y. blaadrn 11 florida, 7:10p.m.
ADIIhelm a1 St. Lou II, .1:30 p.m.

-

~ Complete

Medical/Surgical.Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

John A. Wade, M.D•
Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV.
. Cai13M-675-IZ44 for Appt. or Information
Melllber of Aetna PPO A l'etleral M

PPO

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~ga

6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Organizations are encouraged to become rep'payees for alcoholics, addicts
Jiy IIIPetenon

!llldd Secwlty MJ~M~«, AtM..
: Ulldcr a legislative cb~~ge

.vdJid• requires all people recetvtDg

·~Ill Security or SSJ. benefits
: : o f alc~boJism .or drus
.
to be paid through a
re.sentative payee," the Soct~l
':iecurlty ~dministrati~n ~SSA) ts
etlco•tagmg organtzauons to
ll!lcome representative pa~ees. Tbe
;,ilbvisloll will lake effect m March
·l99S fill' individuals currenUy on
di.slbillt} rolls as well as those
. o lleco!!il newly entiUed to ben•e ts .
·
: Nanwly, a family member or
:dose lliend is lhe ftrSI choice to be
,:m indtvidual'~ pay.ee, r_-egardless or
the type or dtsabhng tmpatrmenl.
However, In selecuog payees. for
drug llddicts and/or alcohohcs,
SSA wilt give preference to QUllli-'
fled orpnizati~s. who .are bet.ter
able to deal wtlb lbe dtfficultu:s

"n:p-.

·!

presenled by tbis populatioo.
mission Is .to carry out Income
The law permits the qualified maintenance, social service, or
organization to deduct a fee from beahh care-relaled services, and;
the checks of tbe beneficiaries tbey
- State or local government
serve. Tbe fee is limiled Ill tbc less- agencies witb fiduciary n:sponsibiler of 10 percent of lhe indivi~~s ilies (o~ a d,esi11nee of s~cb an
monthly benefit ·or $50. For mdi- agency tf deemed appropnate by
viduals disabled as tbe result of, SSA).
other impairments, the payment
If yoll are interested in more
can be 10 percent of tbe individu- information about serving as rcpreal 's monthly benefit, or $25, sentative payee, please contact
whicbeyer is less.
Mrs. Sandra Coffm, Social Security
To collect a fee for providing Administration, Representative
representative payee services, the Payment Staff, Room 3-A26 Operorg:,nization must: (I) be receiving ations Building, 6401 Securit)'
payments on behalf of five or more Boulevard, Baltim~. Md. 21235;
beneficiaries and; 2) apply to SSA Telephone: (410) 965-7956; Fax:
to receive payment
(410) 966-9214.
The list of qualified organiza- People age Ql to get beneftt state·
lions that can be seiecled as payees ment
·
bas been expanded to include the
Beginning in February 1995 and
foUowing;
continuing through September
- Community-based, nonprofit
1995, soine nine miliioo people age
social services agencies;
60 or older not currendy receiving
- State or local agencies whose

--~.--Community

calendar
. POMEROY

Social Security benefits will besin
receiving a Personal Earnings and
Benefit Estimate Statement
(PEDES) from Social Security.
Besinninll in October 1995 and
eacb year thereafter, atatetnents
wil1 .be mailed to people who reach
llJlC 60 during the year. Tbe statements are designed to help people
nearing retirement become better
informed about what they can
expect to receive in Social Security
benefits. Tbey provide an estimate

I .

·
Cross

and Jennifer Johnson of Georgia,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Riggs, Logan,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Riggs and family, Columbus; and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Carefoot or Kentucky were
· recent visitors of SteUa Atkins and
Ruby Diehl.

J::elebrates
First Birthday

FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.

Country.Line Dance
And
Aerobic Classes
PVH .
Wellness &amp; Rehab
Center

·

•

SilRTING DEc: 30
12 Gauge Only
Umited: 740 Backbore,
680 Fronl
12128194/ltn

·For Time &amp; Information

limestone
&amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE" TRUCKING

Real Estate General

614·742·2138

r

Public Notice

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a tlioughlful 1110rd, from

'r
I

you!

FOR SALE
1963 Chevrolet CD sed.

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MIDDLEPORT· Bradbury Rd. - 2 story older larm house that
needs some work. 3-4 bedrooms. 1 bath, living room,
kitchen, dining room. Some remodeling work done. Nice
largo silting porch, approximately 5+ acres and tree gas ..
.
.
ASKING $35,000.00

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Umit
20
Words!

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t•
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r
l

Now listed as a competitive
sport in the United States, rodeo is
Spanish for roundup. ·

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RACINE- Nice 1 1/2 story home with 3-4 bedrooms, large
living room, dining room, kitchen wlnook, lamily room, bath.
lots of closet space. Beautiful hardwood floors. newer
windows 1 siding and root. Home has a cellar and a 1 car
garage. ;
ASKING $40,000.00

JUST OFF SA 248- Chester Area- 75+ acres of groond with
a ranch type home, thai features 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, 2
klichans - one·eleclrlc and one gasl Central air, free gas,
satellite dish, pantry, utility area. Lots of cabinet space. extra ·
hook-up for a mobile h9me, 2 car garae. workshop, 1 car
garage, cellar. chicken house, implement shed and storage
buildings. LOTS OF WOODSI
ASKING $120,000.00

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ttl Doc Fe Delr¥eled"

416, Flaclna, OH 45771, and
will be opened at sale time,
but all offe,. will be
conoldered at time of sale.
TERMS: Caoh. Subject to
RIE
taxes for 1995.

."Al'l'iNTlON HOME OWNERSIII WE HAVE BUYERS
WAmNG FOR THE "RIGHT PROPERTY" SHOULDN'T
YOU BE LISTED. WITH US?
I
HENRY E. CLELAND........................................... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER..............................................949-2439
SHERRI HART.............. ,, ..,.................... :..............742-2357
HENRY E CLELAND 111 .................. ,.................... 992-6191
. KATHY CLELAND.................... ;........................... 992-6191
I OFFICE........................ :........................,............... 992-2259

lmmedlale

ft _

• Automatic Overdrt"We

· Vista Bay Windows
• PO'Nef Steefing

• Power Brakes
• Ti~ Steer1ng
• Crutse
• AMIFM Cassene
• Power Wmdows
Power Lodes
• 4 Capta•n Chairs
•

1

• Sola/Bed
• Indirect Llghling

• Premturrt Wood Pkg.
• Ful.l Convers1on
• Ftbefglass A4nn1ng Boards
·loaded'
.. 5p:1r1 Palm Sdlerrle ~ill ·

• 4 Captain Chatrs

• Raosed Root
• 350 v.a Power

· Indirect L.rghtmg

· Anto-lodl Btakes

• Rear Ant•·Lock B"rakes
· Power Steenng
• Powe.r Brak.¢5

• SolaJ!led

"

• Automatic Overdli"Ve
• Vista Bay Windows

Hal &amp; Jacket

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS .
COURT, PROBATE DiVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEM.ENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,

·loa~ed'

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$-J8,888

1

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No Doc Fees. OefM!red·

)

·Air CoOOti&lt;l1
• Au1omalic

• Power Windows
• Rear Delroster
• PIS. P/8
• Ml'ft.A Stereo
• Power Ooo&lt; locks · Console

'94 CHEVY 1·15011414 PICKUP

• Steel Betted Tires

· Cu~om C~ih Met Seats
·loaded!
·'""" ,....,..,_

"Sale Proe
lndlld!ls Ponti-.:

."'""""·

lh:ler30~

• Air CoOOibon
• Dual AirbaQ
• Ani-Lock Snires
• AU1omalic

• Powet Brakes
• Pow~ DoorLatts
• PowB Wirmws

• Crwe Contr~
• Delay.W¢s
• CUSIOrn
c~~ lnter;or
• Loaded!

AUTOMA TIC/¥-8 POWEll

·AIA&lt;mllic
• V-8 Power
•A""'"tic

•-

• Powtl' &amp;eeri!JJ •Cn.iae CorWI
•Two T~~t~e Pain~
• Power &amp;akes · Cuslom CloCh Seal Avil•
• AINFM Cassette • Rat, W....
• Wei E• Til

,•
-

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~7,988

A
1

ttl Doc Fees. DfNtred'

• AI Con!ition
• AutomaiiC.

· ~al Airt&gt;ags
•Power&amp;akes

• PO'Nef Steering ·
• Power Ooo&lt; locks

·AMIFt.AStereo
·T~Steeri!'!l

•Delay Wiper\
• Cu~om ClotnlnttriOI'
•Loaded!

•Air Con!ition

· 1'.- SteerinQ ~
. • JaXI V-6 Pow9r ·Power Brakes
• Dual Aolbags
• Poweo Door Locks
• AIIIH.octr Brakes · 1'.- Windows

j

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• AM!Ft.A Stereo ·
• T~ S!eerilg
• Custom Clo~ Interior
•Loaded

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TOU FREE 1·B00-822-IJ411 • 312·2844
3U.5947.• 422·0756

Monday • Saturday: 9 ~m • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

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to said accounts or to

mattare pertaining to the

execution of the trult, not

len thon five dllyo prior to
the date 1e1 for hearing.
Robert lluck
Common Pleao Court,
Probate DiYIIIOn
OHIO
Melg•
County, Ohio
Accounta ond vouchera
of the following named (1) 30
flduclarle• hove been flied
In the Probate Cour~ Melgo
PubliC NotiCe
County, Ohio, for approval
ondleltlernent:
BID FOR SALE OF
ESTATE NO. 21042- Ninth
CARNEGIE LIBRARY
1nd Currenl Accounl of
BUILDING
lurudelle
Anctet:aon,
The
Melga County Public
SucceeiOf, Tru Ilea of the Library Board of TruaiHI
Ttull CreiiUid Undet the Will are ac_captlng blda for th.e
of Herrle Merle Smith, aale of the Carnegie Library
DICIIIId.
Building, located at 200 E.
ESTATE NO. 28429 - Final Second St. Pomeroy, Oh
and Dtoirlbullve Account of 45769.Bido will be accepted
Miry JMn Keller, Executrix until 1:00 p.m., Thuroday,
of the ·EIIete .of Arthur February 23, 1995. Blda may
Delila Heiney, DeceaHd.
be malted or brought to lhe
ESTATE NO. 27468 ·Final Meigs Countv Library, 216
ond Dlatrlbutl¥4t Account of W~ Main Street, Pomeroy,
Noncy
L.
Griffith., Oh 45769. Tho Truoteea
Acfmlnlatratrlx of the Eatate reoerveo tho right to reJect
of Lealie B. Carr, Oec1aud. any end all bldo. Ref. Deed
ESTATE NO. 27675- Final Volume 108, Page 488, Lot
and Dlatrlbutl.ve Account of t148.
Etunar R. Smith, Executrix
of the Eotate of Florence L ~=.:..;-""-------:;;-1
Smllh,Decuoed.
· Unloll exeeptlona ore
·flied thereto, aald occounta
will bl for hearing before
· u1c1 court on the 3rd dlly of
Merch, 1895, at which time
aeld accounta will be
conaldered end continued
from dlly to dlly until flnollv
1M IIOIIEY
diapoeed of.
IN
TilE
CLWIFOI
Any peraon lntereated
AlllllfAT'I NO III.LI
may file wrlnen excoptlo~a

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possession.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tuppara PlolnaCheator Water Dlotrlcl to
roquootlng bldo on hoolth
lnauronce for tho Dlotrlct
omployeoa. The_District will
provide o dote ohott to all

j

• Custom Cloth Interior
· Steel Belted Trres

'94 POITIAC SUNBIID LE

The State Certified
Pawn Shop

BINGO . .
Racine American
Legion Posl 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 ~m
The more pebple
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949·2044

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

"Your Neighborhood Lender"
115 W. 2nd St. - Pomeroy, Ohio .

Tel. (614) 992-5846. · . ·
~.

Charlie's

(Lime Stone Low Rates)

WICKS

Lime Stone

HAULING

Delivery

(Spec:illze In driveway
spreading)

Service

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

De-•

32361
Run Road
Long Bonom, OH. A5743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to'/, Inch.
Call Anvtlme
John Krider
614-843-5192
Harold Petoon
614-843-5285

MORRISON'S ·~ · .·~
HEA'riNG &amp; COOLING.
EPA and RSES Certified

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer

.'

Low Rate Financing Available ·
Call992·7434 for more Information.

11211115

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Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

. BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

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New tiomes • Vinyl Siding New, . :1
G11rage$ • Replacement Windows · ~ .
Room Additions • Roofing

Gutters

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL
FllEE ESTIMATES

g4g·2168

614-992-7643

,.

(No Sunday Calls)

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 IRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Oftlce Houra: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing; VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Docira, Storm
Windowt, Garagu .
FrH Eotlmales

One Stop Complete Auto Body R.....,,;,

PRECISION AUTOMOTIV£
Chuck Stotts
·614-9jl}2'i~,..J~
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
state Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

1/tWttn

10121/Mitfn

'

DAN'S

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

·APPLIANCE
SERVICE

expross our appreciation

to neighbors, friends.
who provided food ,
For All Malor
prayers and nowcrs ~~
Brands
the loss of our Dad •.
Used Appliances
Husband, and son, also.
lntereated
lnaurai1ce
· for Sale
provldtra. Tht mailing to all who visited and
oddroao to 3!1581 lor 30 ca!lcd; and gave us
Call
Road · - Roedovllle. Ohio
inspirational help, for
614·992·5515
45772.
101'11/lln
411 propooalo must be
friend s and family who
clearly marked on the
traveled to attend our
outalde of the envelope
HappyAds
"Hullh
lnouronee needs. To Pastor Crump 5
PrOpo'aal" and returned· to and
family.
. the
tho Dlotrlct'o offlco by 2:00
Birthdield
Funeral
p.m. on Monday, February 6,
1895, at which lima they will Home.
All
the
be opened.
·
Harold Btaekolon, Prnldent pallbearers•and honwary
of tho Boord . pallilcarer.
ali
w ~o . l"~.·.o:"'"'""
Tuppera Plalni- C~iitir offered comfon to our
·J' ' Woter Dlotrlct
(I) 18, 22, 30; JTC
. famil y in any way. God
Bless each and everyone
of
you .
Public Notice
Mother and Dad;
·Dolly and Sylvan,
PUBLIC NOTICE
· The .
education
Wife; Alaviad;
management lnformatlo~
Sons: John &amp; Justin.
lflltm (EMIS) County
Boord Profile for floeol yoor
Daughter. Elizabeth
When you say an
1194 for tho Motgo .county
and
Brothers
&amp;
Sisters
extra prayer,
Boord of of educotlon will
be IYIIIIbltiO tht publiC I I L..--=~~~=
-~==~
Just to get up out of
of January 31 ,. 1i95. Thto 2
In Memory
bed, When you
profile lncludoo dolo on - - - - - - - oludont damographlca, otoff , - - - - - - - - ,
stumble to the
,dtmographlca, tlnanclal
bathroom and try to
reaourcea,
and In Loving Memory
exptndlturea. Anyone may
clear your aching
obtain o copy of .lhlo profile
Of My"H.\Jslband
head, When you
by Inquiring al the Molgo
County Board of Educallon
look into the mirror,
Office located I!! the
And SLarc-111---1
M'unlclpll Building In
Pomoory or by calling 992·
disbelief, Why .lhe
24 Years Ago
.3883.
thought of luming
Carole J. Gllkoy, Troaourer
Jan . 30, 1971.
Mota• County
40, Should cause
Board of Educollon
Sadly
Missed
By
you this much grief.
(11·24, 30;'2TC
Just remember Ihat I
Wife Dorothy _
1 • C8til of Thanks
hive you and that I
always will, And it's
In Memory Of
Many thanh forrea II y not. so bad,
Lucy Chesser
Climbing up that old
the 68 cards and
Who Pa ..ed Away
age hill, Cause as
gift• I received
January 30, 1987
you reach the very
Eight Yean Ago
on my birthday.
top, Just keep one
Quietly In 'The
God bless my
Silence OfThe
thing in mind, You
family arid ·
Night God Took
can lie like your
· woml,erful
Lucy Home .
. sister does,
frien'ds.
Loved And Milloed
And say you're 39.
Your Siller Mury
Josephine Smith
Happy ,Birthday,

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" You Cra•h It. We Fix It"

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"We Loan You Ca$h on Any1hing of Vatu.e" , ..
__! ·6:: 1 mo. l?d.

511Ml4 TFN

'"========

Superior Shirt.

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• Premtum Wood Pllg.
·Aluminum
Runnlnc, Bo!!!dS

• Au Cond1t10n

One year warranty on work performed
Valid on all nationally advertised
brands only
We service most makes &amp; models

1125195

992-7553

FAST!
Ask AbOut Our

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BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP
• Drt'.'er S1de Atr Bag

"We Are Now Open ForBusine.vs''

1015/lmo

Subject to Probate Court
approval. Case No. 28728.
-Right Is reserved to reject
any or all offers.
Ralph Badgetev, . Administrator 1 Card of Thanks
(1) 23,30 2tc
The family of Jack
Public Notice
Cleland would like to

Banners, Vehicle Lellering, Magnetidc
Signs, Menu Boards, Commercial Signs, Warning
&amp; ADA Signage, Logos Designed OR Reproduced,
DOT Numbers

I

•H.W. Haalara
-Microwavea· •Oiapoula

Porter, Jr. Attorney, PO Box

I..et Us Help

j

•Aefrlgeratore •Freezer•

be seen at corner of VIne St.
&amp; SR 338, Racine, OH. Sale

Mcmdlly, Feb. 6, 1995, at the
residence. May be seen by
appointment, 61'4-949-2541 .
Sealed offers may be
aubmltted to Frank W.

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ss,&amp;88**

FIIERiil.ASS RlltiiNG BOARDS

All for only $14.95 plus parts

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. - Fri. - Sat.
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
·Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992·2060

for sal a at 10:00 am on

MIDDLEPORT- Investment property- 2 story brick building
w/2 epartmen~. CurrenUy rented.
ASKING $13,000.00

••

• E•tended Chassis
• Otivor SK!e A1r Bag
• Anti-lock Brakes
• Air Condition

Life • Medicare • Ca ncer • Fire
Heahh • Accident • Annuity •IR A • Mortgage.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

•Foot Reliable Servlco
•Washero • Dryers · Rengeo
•Dishwaohers

' NOTICE .
SALE
Residence of the late
Herschel H. Badgley, situate
on 0.25A., Broadway St.,
Racine (V. 247, p. 531, MC
Deed Roc.) will be offered

YOU Need To
Make
.
. A
STATEMENT

B1W1J NEW CIEVY ASTRO EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN

American General Lif~ &amp; Accident Ins. Co. . •
P.O. Box 189
, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760 '
• 'f
••
614-843·5264

368 W. Main St. RiplyWV. . 304-6144

•Factory Autholiled Parts
&amp; Service
•All Malcea ... 2 Year~

\•

ROCKY R. HUPP

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

Tune-ups
985-3879

Todd Grindstaff Estate. May

Public Notice

3 Announcements

· t Oot Fees ~eo·

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC

AND REMOVAL

MANUEL .RD. - Approximately 1+ acres ol ground. Utilities
available. WOIJid make a nice building site.
ASKING ONLY $3,500.00

The Daily Sentinel
1
Valentine Hearts
: 111 'Court Street.
Pomeroy, OH 4$769
Must Be Received Br Feb.9 .,.
1:
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

$17888**

'S

there at 1:()() pm, Wed. Feb.
•Thonko Meigs I
1, 1995. TERMS: Cash.
SurroundlngAreoo
Subject to Probate Court
(614) 985-3561 or
approval, Case No. 28097.
992-5335 1&gt;1!4/ltn
Right Ia reserved to reJect · 1.:;:::====~
any or all bldo.
r
,,
Sandra Kay Grindstaff,
TREE TRIMMING
Administratrix
(1) 23, 30 2tc

OFFICE 992·2259

..
.
I
.:·····················~········
rrint fOUr mpssage
.
1

in the heart
and mail along ' with $6.00 to:

• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
614 992·2753

IIRVIC£

MUST BE PREPAID!

a

Special offer includes:
1. Clean motor
2. Grease Roller Bearings
3. Clean &amp; check agitator
4. Clean all moving parts
5. Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check Belts ·
7. Check electri&lt;;al system
8. Replace filter bag

Cuttom Sulldln; 1 Rtmodtlln;

KEN'S APPLIANCE

All Valentine Hearls will be published in the February 14th
issue at a cost of only $6.00!

1

Graded Benef~ Whole Life is now ai)ailable. lhe . ,;
· plan ofters coverage of up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions asked on .
the application. Ages 40-80

Vacu•m Cleaner Service Special

10120/0411fn

.
Anyone wlio would appreciate

SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION

HAULING ·

Call675-7222

•Sweethearts
•Moms &amp; Dads
•Grandparents
•Teachers
•Babysitters
•Friends

Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
attended the school of instruction
for District 25, Order of the Eastern
Star, held at Nelsonville.

MARLEE JILL HOFFMAN

UCINE .
GUN CLUB.
GUN SHOOTS

Valentine's Day with a message In
The Daily Sentinel

•

The D1ily Sentinei-Page-7

ca'!f

Remember that special someone this

Eleanor Updegraff of Alabama,
Dan Updegrarf, Jr. of Georgia, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Gilkey of
Columbus, Jean Alkire, Racine,
Virginia Burte, and Helen Pickens
were recent dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Rob!!rt A!ki!!;, .

Marlee Jill Hoffman celebrated
her 1st birthday January 12 with a
llaby Lamb Chop party at the home
~r her parents, David &amp; Kathy
ttQITman, of Middleport.
. 'thos~ attending were her sister,
t.luw; grandparents: Fred and
!'tlltll11e ·Hoffman and Nick and
M Wnght; Jon, Tami, Trevor and
Jllidtul Buck; Beverly and Nathan
ft\ilkpb; Mike and Vicki Hoffman;
Ma1111illg and Nikki Roe; Kim and
IJitvW Duncan; Brenton Barnette
Randy Wright.

of retirement, survivors, and dis- and. show on your federal ~come
abUity beoefits a worker (and fami- taX return s!Joui~ •sree ~Jth
ly) may be eligible for now and in D8IIIC on your Social S'f"i'ty . ·
tbe future.
If you c.boose to cont nue u.sm 8
Repoot new ... me to Social Sec•- your nwden name after Ol.llfl'lll8e,
rlty
.
. yqu won't ha~e to rev.ort ~ nam~
With more and ,more waves cban11e to Social S~unty. ~
using their maiden t!ames in work . er, if a1 some later tmle you
and business, many women are to use another name for wort. you
wondering if lbey should change should change your name on. our .
tbe name on their Social Security · records. If you bavesan1JS'stioots,
cal'!ls when they marry. Here's the contact tbc Athens oc ecun Y
answer. Tbe name you use to work office.(592-4448).

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

Harrisonville news

Mr. and Mrs. David Ray Riggs
and son of CentervUie, Mark Riggs

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1995

-

LIB

.
- Re·d
Ttle Community Calendar is
TUESDAY
Bloodmobile will be at the Meigs
. puhfl••ed as a free service to
POR'fLAND:- Lebanon Town- County Senior Citizens Center,
lton-ptoflt groups wishing to sbtpTrustees wtll meet m regular Wednesday from 1 to 6 p.m. Tbere
altnuellee meeting and special sessto~ Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the . is a shortage or blood supplies,
uenb. The calendar Is not .lownshtp butldmg.
Donna Grate, county chairman
deslll••d to ·promote sales or
advises. Solie urges residents to
WEDNESDAY
donate blood.
. fund raisers of any type. Items
:·are ~ M lpttee permits and
MIDDLEPORT ·- Middleport
Unnlll be 11uaranteed to run a Literal)' Club, 2 p.m. borne of Mrs.
.
THURSDAY
llpedrlc number of days.
Eldred Parsons. Mrs. Dewey HorSYRACUSE - TOPS OH
.lon to review "Ohio Pioneers" Mrs. 1895, "Bring a Friend" night, SyraMONDAY
Ron Reynolds .to review "The cuse Nazarene Church, Thursday, 6
. POMEROY - Meigs County Johnstown Flood".
p.m. Additional information call
Veterans Service Commission
Hill, 949-2763.
Debbie
lneetinR Monday, 7:30 p.m. .at lbe
Veterans Service Office.

RU'It.AND - Rutland Garden
Club, I p.m. Monday, bome of
Marcia Dennison, Rutland.

Monday, January 30,

Monday, January 30,1995

••

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
~.
Job alles.' Camp Sileo • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULIN G
Llmeatone, Sand; Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
licensed &amp; Bonded 20 earo
992- 3954

Parts &amp; Service on Most
Mekeo Recine Mower
Clinic

50%

ott

"In' Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Baro

949·2804

Emergency Pho ne 9H5·J4 18

WHALEY'S ~UTO

PARTS

Kenny's Auto Rental

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
AL~ MM ~ ~ MODELS
•
992-70b OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
Kenny's Auto Center .

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car·rental~
We Ratte C11rs ·and Vansl

7/JI/il TFN

264 Upper RiverRd.
Galli olis, OH. 45631

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

r....

• .$200_hletalltd

Call.for Detallt

BASKETS

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'

Cuslum Derigned Gift·

110 Court St.; Pomeroy, Ohio
•
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

Baskets For All lkca.rions
Hysell Run Rd . Pometoy

.

Bus. (614) 446-9971

•Cuttom Made
•Solid vinyl
replaoernent
llllndowt
•Fret E1timat11

J J CLASSIC GIFT

992·2927

_
_
_
1 800 486 1590

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

• Room Add~ions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
·
.
Also Concrete Work
. (FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG ill
992·6215
Pomeroy: Ohio

. ·5914

.• C&amp;J

992-4119 AI Tromnt, Owner 1·800·291-5600
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
.
I
•New Homes
• Garagee
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

FURNITURE
Just below Hobson
"on Stale Route 7
•.

New~ Used .

992-7508
New 2·piece living
room sets $300.00

'

985·4473

•
•

'IIH11n

·.

1..-vtM~.

Col . For lnformodlon On

ftomoh,","',\"'

lng
0. For
,_ .
unhlot.
· Brochuno -..allo!M.

..

�•
Page

8

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, JMuuy 30, 1895

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

Answer to Prevloua Puule

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT ' N' CARLYL~ by Larry Wright

Homes
1 BJICk Hlmaltyan Male Cat, 1

tor sale

Bt.ck • Whtle Cit F.male, 814-

-~.w~~
:r..
..

441-11$1.

PI,

2 to. . la Gorman Shopord I
Cclllo poJpploo. , ........ ,
blackbown. 304-n~3017 Of
304-495-3013.

'

Lab
, Ta Good Koma, ,l14448·18 .
.

Aul-lc,

I

roo

1*2Se-62SI.

'

•J 10 9 8

I

I

Plyn:o~ ' Fury, V-1: '
a..omMio, LooM tnc1 Rune___,
· Prlcod To Ioiii 114-141' 1

....

qutrloopm.
only, coli
.....

112 Chow 112 GoiRehtevar, 7 ~~or'iha Old, 814-441·

Dog

1183 Attar~ P.M.

•A Q 3
•A 9 3
tA Q 9
•to 9 8 2

I

.,.,..Jon.

.

,

.
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South West North . East

a..., - 4 Door Sodan.
lii,JIIO - · Good
l!o'
A'.d \I- ~ .,....,...·11!.,.1
. It
~

Furnished
Rooms '

• 8 5 2

SOUTH

·-·ml

1T

.1 Soulhwellem
Indian•
2 Haul
3 "'- ·bllay
4 Shade of
diHarence
5 OIIICIII
proclamation
6 Buddlea
7 Nahoor sheep

•Q 8 52
•A K J

11M Chivy Covallor AS, lhon 10,0DQ. mho, Jn.

Adorable
B..gleiWire-HIINd
Tellier pupplea. 10wka okl, to
good homo. 3~~3388.

•1 6 4

•J 7 6 4
e76 4 3

1111

~,..

DOWN

EAST

1

Old, 514-441-0505.

8wka. old, mal• kitten.
7693.

•K 10
o K J 10
•Q 7 5 ~ 3

S1100, 11114 Chawrolil .· I
carto. v.a Al.l-tc, ,a~oo tr.;)
Run. CJOod P50 111 t•l 112 01".., 1 .

~n~ (11( Hellt&gt;tli.,.
I:'W~.

3 8.-glt· Hound• Full Blooded, .
Two :l Yoall Old; &lt;&gt;no 1 Yoor ·

•K 52

..

=~~'$u·
CruJoo. Till.

1 1"1111411.. "'~~

2 Pus• 112 U.b, 112 Chow; 1 1

No Ruot,

~

BARNEY

I NT

WHAR'S
MY LUCKY
4-LEAF
CLOVER?

Pass

3 NT

21 Waller"s
burden
10 Close securely 23 Untidy shlte
24 Apportion
11 Singer Seeger
25 Hebrew lyre
19 Archlleci 26 Golf mounds
Saerlnen
27 French tother ·
28 Experimental
rooms ,
29 Formerly,
formerly
.
·30 1944 Invasion ·
.-.-+---j- -1
date
33 Ancient
w riting
36 Three·.handed
card game
38 So be II!
4, co·n celve
43 In the

8 Affirmed
9 Slippery

All pass

lead: •J

UH-·TATER
SWIILLERED tT,
PAW

Select
the right card

preceding
'

. Found: Black ~ppy, Nonh AVON to buy ot Hll, MarilYn. InPoint School INa. 304-«S75..C217 dependent rep. 304-882-*8 Or
allot 5pm.

1.-.m-6358.
.:...:.:..:~=:___ _ _

Lost . BMgiH, Between VInton

Mai!U•no"""
Elemlntary and M!. Tlbot Rd.· Equlpmonl
Black/Tan Female, BlaclciWhlle Mechanic: L.ocal Firm N llo&lt;hanlc
To
Male. Blua Collare 81+388·1oot. Exparloncod
Partrom Full Range or Ropa~
Lost : Mote Boaglo, Gill Ridge I /Malntenenct Functlolw On
Long Hollow. 304-675-571i.
Yohlclao And Aolalod Equlpo

Yard

7

SkJIIa
Preferred. Some Data Entry,
Phone Work, And Dtvk:e TMI·
lng lnvolttted. Knowltcklll 01
011, Dietel Small E~lne 1.

Sale

Glllllpolls
&amp; VIcinity
Mon .Sol, 8:00 ·12:00 at 148
Third Avo. Golllpollo. 8oy'1 11..

8-10,
etc..

~m•

Org~~nlzatlon~~l

menl..

Bab.r IIams: Toys

Hydraulic Syotomo Aoqul,..t.
CDL Roqulrld. E1cell0nt Wage
/Benefit
PtcUge Anllabr..
Bond Rooumo To: -ha'!.~o
P.O. Box 200,JIIo Granilo,

. 488111-4200, Eut.

Expa'*-&lt;1, mature baloylltlor
w•nled tor &amp;mo. old lnt.nl, pirt·
limo
dayololft
holn, Pt.

Friday. Monday eciHion .. 2:00

qulrod. 3Q4..875.3841.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rick Peal'lon AUcllon Company,

full tlmt auc11onHr, complete
1uctJon
••rvlct.
UcenMd
I&amp;&amp;,Ohlo I WHI VIrginia, 304113-5185.
AuctloMor Col. Olear E. Cllclr,
Ll..,.. I 754-114 &amp; Bonded,
304-495-3430.

Wanted to Buy

9

Late -

Smith

Bulok

lnalallallon IServlco Tochnlclan
For Alorm Syot- And Solollho
T.V. Syotltllo.. F'!&lt;&gt;groollvo 1 Ex·
pandlng ~I Cilmpoony 10 In
NMd or Rolllblo, - ·
Deponclllllo lndlvlduoll To lnNew And EJ.
otall And llllng cuot-ro. Export-In
Elocfnonlca Or u. Voftago
Wiring II Holplul AI eo.-ny
Will Train Oualltlod C.ndlda!n.
Alllabla Tranopor1atlon Ia A
Ptut. Pay Scale BaiMI On Ex-

perience And Pwt0rm•nce or
Dullao.

R..pond

A·t.

clo

cara

Or

llpollo Dolly T~buno, 825 Third
A-uo, Golllpollt, OH 4563t

Know 1bt A...autant Bu.fnNII
lnoldo I Out? .._king For Ex·

1800

E..tern Av•nut, Gallipolis.
Qecorlled l'loneware, Wlll1 ....
phonw, old lompo old lhor·

m..,..,.,
old clocks, antiquo
tumhurt. Rlvtrlnl AnUq...._

RUU Moort, ownw. 114-012·
2521. WI buy eltltH.
Don1 Junk ll Sell Us Your NonWorking . MaJor Applloncn,
Color T.Y.'o,
Ro-cn,
F_ _ .
YCR'o,

w-.

Dry-. Etc. 1,._256-1238.
J I D'o Auto l'llrta and SIIY.,
buying -kiJunk autoo l
trucloj. Aloo, pailo lor lila. 304-

113-S343 « 113-5033.
Tlmhor Wonted, Soloct And
CIMr.Cunlna Available. FrM On
Site E1tlm1ln. 20 YMre Ex·
pertence, 614-367·7'088, Or 114387-7054.
Old buHont, coltUIM Jewelry,
old lighters, Iron •klltlit, s*:·
turt•, Slar We,., glan, china,

tumhurt, tool• or comptete •
ttiH, O.by Martin, 114-0I2-'N41.
Wanted To Buy: Btbv Crib, Fair
Condition, 814-448.e571.

JIM1k AuiOi
Moten. Call

or Approodmaloly $40,000 To
Roqulrad. Sond i.Jitoor
Of nltra.t, CLA 348, c!o Gal·
llpollo Golly Tribuno1.1125 Third
Avonuo, Golllpollo, 0" 45631.

S!Oiaoo

~I Tul Sorvlca Now Hldng
Dlopalchero, And
Drlvoro.
Drivora llutl Bo 25 And Older,
614 446 8341.

Looking for 001 full-lime and
Of"'e

Uuat

pan-lime person.

know how to dNI whh IM
publiC, work under pre•aure, be
hoMtt depend1ble 1nd reiJ..
oblo. Muot aloo have good driv·
Ina record and ba able to make
deliveries. Good math tklllt and
office akllla helpful. Mul'l be
able to r....rch product• tor
cUIJtomwlnforma1ion.
Ex·
DOrlonce •• cuhler and typing
helpful. DutiH Include, biit oro
not limited to: welting on cuetomtra, .tocldng 1helv11, d ...tlng, cloanlng, light dollvorleo,
ta~ng telephone order~ tnd
l&gt;ooflkaoplng. Pay nogotloblo

upon llkllla •ndlor expetilnce.
Send rwauma to: Office Service

and SUpply,

112 Will Main

StrNt,

Pomeroy, Oh 45761.
Potiitlon tvailabillmiMdlately.
Matu,.. Babysitter Our Horn.~ 3
Wookdayo, 8 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. 1

Small Child, Raterencn A.

36

Pt.

PIMMnl R'Giattr, 200 Main St ..

Pt. P~ea~ent;wv 25550.
~I Honoecontor Soloo Pooltton- muet have ·g •nerll
know1Mig1 In OllrpMtry, plu.,._
lng, ••rlcl.l, MrdWare, ....
llmollng ond oaloo. Sind
rHUmo to: Tho Dolly Sonllnol,
P.O. aox
p....,,.,y, Ohio

n•aL,

41llt. .

Tcr. CLA 344, c/o Gotllpollo Detty
Trlbuno, 1121 Third Annuo, Galllpollo, OH 45831.

a

Jackeon Co., WV. 304-&amp;1B-2011.

pany. 304-4)'5.11121.

.

DWP 30 Tond)r

5IOl

--A. . --'

Womed To Buy Uood llobllo
Homt, C.ll 614""46-0175.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

11

MANAGER TRAINEES
84 lumbar ~mpany, the faslnt

growing nallcmal lumber chain
hae carMr opportunltln lodly.
Advancement it rapid and all
promotion• 1r1 tram wtthln.
Firat yur umlngs av•rage 1822,00G.
Bentfitt
Include

hoaphallzotlon, proiM oharing
end much mor-.. If you 1~oy 1
combination of ut1a and

phyllc:al work, had compMIId

FOR

THESE

c..hlere, Par1·nme.
Lliwn I Garden SIIH,
nma.

Ptrt

Truck Driver, Full·Tim~.
Sa._ Perton, Fuii·Timt

For Applic1llon, Phone: 114-4462002 Between 8 A.M. ·12 P.M.
Ask For linda.

Ovtrbrook Center Ia now acceptlng appllcotlono tor CNA'o
•nd LPN'•· Anyone lnttrntld
pf•ll• come In end plc:k ~P an
appllcaUon or contact ShiNI

high echool (some college
preferred} then you maw qualify.
No knowledge of building

Ptc:Hnt, DON at 114-182-MT.l"
for more.lntormttlon. E.O.E.

rnal.tall neceeary-we'll
Muel .be ,. willing lo

POSTAL POSITIONS· $12.26/hr.
plut benttha. Cll'riert, cleric'
10rt1r1 and malnttnance }oba.

t•~rei~

catt.lmmedlate ()penlnga • Act
Soo:

Nowl
Arnold,

Jim

·

T..~7

- JanUIIry l11r,. hm-2pm.

ol: 84 lumbot Company, on. ,

G•lllpoll• Ferry, WV. 304-1754584. An

Equal

Employtr MIF DV

Opportunity

,.,.,. eol-

·

For exam Into &amp; application coli
71J8.264-1600 ext . 1H5. Allo
open evenlngt. •

lnl«&lt;orroiiOflor,

3br. houle'ln country, $300/mo.,
$150/..._h, .......... ...
qulrod. Jo4.t71.4433.

8.

C:~ rent In

5

Pt-. ·Pie. .nt,

;·AYONSELUIITSELf

Neod Colli lot Winter BUht?

County.-2:
Proloiollonll TrW Sorvlco, Topping A T~-lng, Tlfftlo
mlng, SCum~ Rtmovtl; y:,.. &amp;.
tlmalool 24 Hr. Emorgency Soro
Ylc• 114318 llt3, 11441'7-7010.

School.

o!fn:

"'-" ..::e

Chlldcaroii-F.8om-6:.......

For Rent Or For Sole: In
L.ocallon,

3

Bodo

8-1104,114 448 3157.

277.1.

Th,.. . bedroom home In
Syrac:UM, bath and 112, Gil
hlal, partially c~od, lull
.... garage lliol oulbulld·
lng, 1300tncludoo
-rlly_dapolllj
f32I/IM.
, ona
. .•..., 114-112-2441 "i&gt;boliicw.;
...
;;;n
1-IJpno.

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Financial

2 Bod--. I llllol, Rl. ~-·J
Oalllpotlo,
R50/llo,,
SOCurttr 1ne1.- Wator, 1142Se-671V, 814o-1337.

Business

2 Tnollot~ On Cloy Chopol Road,
IM-25e-6408,f14.ase-.711.

~'":~~=·~ ~4::'
11173• .

Opponunhy

IN!JTlCEI
OHIO VALL£Y PUBLISHING CO. llobllo Homo 2 Bod._ Furrocommandto thai yau do buofo nlahocl, 1120 F-h, OoiUpollll,
, _ with paoplo you k . -1 ond
• Eloctrlc " a..; ....
NOT lo und ......,. through lha $221/Mo
441-t411 Aftor 7 P.M.
moll until yau ha" lnVIIIIgalod
thoollorlng.

.,.......11144.

~~::.::;..:t~J:.~~

1!'11

To Bo Trained. ' Bond
R_,mo To SCCS P.O. Bo1 •••

·-rflot•

EICf*l-

Wonted, Hourly llato Pluo Good
114 44111228.

lllrlng ~
Tochnlclano. "EXCELLENT" Pay
With Elparionce And Cerllflca.
tlon. ApplY AI: 243 Third
Annuo, Gafllpollo. 1-4114.
~·o Pl121 In Pomonoy lo
, _ hiring d~v.... AYotOgo 11
par hour, 6,._Vi2·2124.
l Excollanl p...o ,...
Comfort Air -

.

-

Noootoot,

aonuol

111qulrod. Fuii·Tirrwo, 1..oco1 Drlv!na
Truck Driv•

And

Soma

CDL

s.na

B-lho
Rooponu To: Ct.A 8ol.345 cJ
Gal:f'll• Doll~ T~buno
~31. Avonuo, OalllpottO, 0H

'a:

~ limo vtnago
ornployoe 0 _ . In · varfoiio
••• Coli 11
daDorlmanto
-Rae..Stioio(.
- 'Proclucta AI HomO.
'VIIIoge Hill,••2fT
Tall FrM, 1~117-651111, E&gt;1. Mlddlopoit, Ohio, s..,.!pni
313.
wookdayo.

ea:.t.:work

I '

•

groot

toot

110110, · .........

~. 111111 OBO; Clll 114o

-

COUNTRY FURNITURE

73

·-

s.•o T-. v.eil a,1 ,,
I
:

vans &amp; 4 WD'f "'

1UtCIIIWic,114-112·2td. '
1Ht Chivy Full Slzoo 4x4 Air,
AIIIFll
T-.r, Hhcllio~

, ow-,cu-.

s SPIIII. 111011. Mt~ao,

Yory Well . Corod

=·ndlbls, 11,000,
SIYiilll Uood VCR'I . Fcor Ioiii
" ' - $111.111 To $111.H; JIB

m Re.

Techll Glop,
Hpollo.

110, Glf..

1111 Ford~=~yl,llopd.,

sa....

~oo~oo

on111111
IIIlo, · - 311:1.

haflot

llroond.

.

•

Waniod-

.,

NO, WE WEREN'T
~EQUIRED TO

WI-I AT?! 't'Oll MEAN

READ A BOOK
THIS MONTH ..

WHEN 1 DIDN 'T
J.IAVE TO?!!

I READ A BOOK

or&gt;el. ar•Y:
2754 -liprn.

bluo ono1

au.ltly HCN•ahald 'F uml8hlnp
And AppllancM. Monro• Solo •

window.

I CAN TAKE?

"'v

wro-

DI~'i'!

5Uf'ER~

Autos for Sale

TWPMHFPP.'

II
a"uar
onl

llon.

•

Solei Wlntor

ar

I•

1&lt;.

''"·"~" oM
T
00\let"

111AT Dlll1

PUUIU

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housi ng Act

of 1968 which makes it illegal
to at~venise "any pr6ference ,

llmitalion or discrimination
based on race , color, religion,
sex tamiBal status or nallo nal
origin, or any intention to
make any suctl preference,

Bedroomt,

BuJII-In

-44

· Apanment
for Rent

limitation or discrimination.· .

1 and 2 bedroom opar1"*11o,

This newspapet will not
knowlingly accept
advertisement&amp; IOf' real estate

-urhy dapoolt roqulrod, no
pllt, 8,..1192-2218.

tumlahld

whi ch Is In violation ol lhe law.

Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opponunlty basts.

31 Homes for Sale
2 oi9&lt;J garage, Hovan Suponnorllot, I~ compllltety remadtlad. 2
boyo: (hnt boy 40'121', - ·

t2'x231.._ 1110'x40'

121,000. 30t llla'-2'713.

unfumt.hed,

1 Bodroo011 Above " - • ·
Convonlonl '
To
HoiUr,
Economlc11 Gu Heet, 125tJMo.
Dopooh Roqulrod, 514-14f.2157.

Z Bodovomt, 50 Grape '".:~

Clelllpolla,

12501110·

· 101
Floor, No "··· .,....
446.01144,
81WIIII-171111.

21odrm. opll., lolol - · . . , .
111111..- tum-, 1ounctry
""""
lacllftloo,
to
In 1.....
All!lllcallono
..........
ot: VII- ·o,- Apti. to1 or
cellll14ft2.3711. EOH.

Real Eslate

boy

and

lot,

3 Bod,_, a llllhtl, Hoot
Pump, Goo Fumooo, 1 Aonl,
Add- Ar.., te:~,aoo,

a.-.
8-..7287.

Brick Hom. 3 111ao1rocotM. KT,

a-:

DR, LV, 1112 Botho, Ful
mont, 2 Car Ganoclo • .-v,IIOO, 81
Doonoe Dr.814-141'11M.

Gllllpollll F....,, 4br, CA. lortcll
IroN, nloo IOcollon. 304.a1llo

2br., 2nd floor, kltchan furnlllhod, wo-ldryor h:;k up,
· 1yr. 1o-. no polo. 304-4~
Apao:tonont tor ront In -roy,
$175/rno.; ho-. In New .,..ven,
$125/mo.; 814olltl2·7511, . .
BEAUTIFUL APAIITMEtml Ill
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 1131 Jocklon Pika
trom S222to 120. Wdt 10.....,
I mo¥tH. CIN 11144..of4144.11.:211t.
. .l.

EOH.
Modem 1 Btlioom Aptrtment,

11. 4 •• 0310.

the

ClAY R. POlLAN_,.;__ _ _ __

·.

be·

low 10 form four words

SIRLEH

I I' f I I
2

DA P 0 T

I. I. I.•

.

ROBO.T.MAN ---' ~ ·- -"··'··--'-·- ··-· .. ·- ..

"Justkeeponethinginmind,"
the boss told his son. "You
don't get some!hing for noth·
ing, you just havel)'t gotten

~
_

~-~~""s_H..,,rL_E.,.,-E.....,,~:--'f'l~~ Q.~~~~~~"

lhe chuck le quooed
by ltllmg tn lh e mtsstng words
L-..J.-.J........I_.J..._L-..J you deve lop· rrom 'tep No 3 below.
•

•

•

.

•

.

•

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES ·

___
~ ... -

. -

-

-·

·•

• -

·-··

.' .....
.. ,. ·-·.-:-····-

,.~. '"''"""'~---'. '"' .............. '!;·.

\IE'/ .. 1 Gal' W "'W I!U!;\N~S~
~"ROS !lACK FROM Till: ~INTER!

Merchandise
t.kC Pit . Min ......._ Z

Tappan

311"

whiiiL ,_, -

olactrlc

.......... saso

t~m.

3401.

range,
only two

,,..M..

......, aoo • • • .:loWla114711, nlglllo I -nda.

AKC
fl!gtotCooker
Spanlell FOr ..,. Mull• a

Pupfotoa, lf4.S7W72I.

iCC)

8118 owning. 100 I 200iomp
- • lloxio. a otuddod tlroo.

Se rv1ces

8 1 7 - -.ta• Cnftanen

=-·

bandoaw~ ~nyl oldlng a , _
Both - r. Htltlloltlior. 1ta11.

Pol . . . 304475-

Aduft ..,.... ~da com. - , $31 orblii.llolel-.

4""""'
110. lodpono,
0-r
:...:::
, 121.
1o

.

a. Atghon, 1120. 30W75o

•- .,_.._ camout•-

-·."•

--

....
Shlrla, Jeokoto, Pont'!, - · ·

llony Olhor ftaonol "-""'"

~~·Tope
p'W~! u,.:~
~"!"""·
..12 ........•
_,.,._
- - ··
Birch (1011 loga, Z7" - · ......
lllnt condition, oliO, 1144112-2841.
By Rod Wing .C h i -40 To -40 Dog- li.H. Bn1om
Guarantlod LiNal Pttc-, Thol
ShotC.... ~M-4" na,

~~hot~ 'i"~ V:;.'==

1331 lilliaN I A.M. Or Aftor a:;10

Fllh
·lor - ono
two
....
ton, ono
10 a111an,
2D:11
~
tong, ... :Iii blah. .. ....
..... . . . 1anluo~ ...._
2011.

Full lluo Hoolor pupe,
hal hod8wkl.
ftrwl -aid,
· .. boaUIIM
~.
$100,
onarlclngoo. 304-4711.a. .
o - n · Shephard
Pupo,
FuUbrod, llftl lkonoo, Wormed,
loth
On P-1-. No
l'llparo,$111, 814 311 111&lt;11.

p..,..

- · Pujlo, Born 12117114, 135

P•rt Ul Collection. 114-311 12:11.
Concrolo lo Plootto Slplto

Tankl. - Tltno a,ooo GoRan Enne ~ntti'PIIeH. ..- .

Mt;

- 1 X.folen, Wof.
Yeti"!, Olhorol Will loll All 0r

So--

pui!IIIH, mtntat-,

llloadl"-.
aoau.t,
..... ......, · wonned,
IIIII

~~OH~1~-.~~m&amp;28~~··~·~~,-~
tDr ...._

I •

1711-1401.

Each,l~2131.
Malo halt 8oo1on Bull Torrlor,
halt - - · pup, lwko.
: . tlltunll wiUI ....._
lgUINI.~

Comic

Hopo (CCI

P.M.

...utltul 1 - . old Roalllerld
molo Slbortan Hullty, 1711. 304-

otMimplon

BERNICE '
'---BEI&gt;E OSOL

_...lllna

11M T::::r;', n:s,oor:a. nona
~. . rough, .
-

-.
In ·-· TY otao
•utOioog moil
othlr ......... ~,.
-7D01111, WY
Wlllr;

·1 - C.lebrltr Euro l11ar1 ..._

82

Plumbing 6

\.

,

lion
· - · . . ..,.....
M'llflnla.IIH~,
elr,
He&amp;Urtg
:)
,_
ur.
ono1 -rr. or
lamiiY, 112250, . _ _ , . or ,...._,.•• ~.,... Ca :It;.~,.
5,..Mto2045.

!not- And llorvtoo. EPA·•
Certlfltd. R11l.ndal, Conamer·

111111 Ford T·llnl 11ortoo Coupe, olooL lf4.216.111~
- . taoko I IUIII NO., , _

ltr.. $23110, - · ·

84

~

. Tuesday, Jan. 31 , 1995

Your social schedule will probably be

busier than usual in the ye~r ahead.
Atso. this ~ear could pro11e rather roman·

·--~.

Ca a'v. ., 114-117-S404.

Oklo • Aoral. 1lro,
......
10M. - · .,.. 1144111

Ranch Styli Hom., 3 Bod=

•

.

.

Gather · Giant - D!Unk - Riddle - KIND of DIRT
The mom fretted aboutheryDung daughterplaying in the
yard. An older mom consoled her. "Kids can grow up in
almost any KINO of DIRT."
.

&lt;1014.

FA, i.Jiundry A_,., Ran
Kllchan, Will '-latH. Nleo
Yord, • •,1110, 114..a-S.

J DT F J B

SCitAM·LETS ANSWERS

Bur

Ml~llaneoua

Stereo.

Bulft..,
Mlcrowon1
W.lk
Around Slovo In Kllcnon, Qar.
dori Tub And Showor Stllt,.!'l·
ling On Prl¥111:1 tot, • ....
From 01111- On SA . 211,
$300/llo. llud Wolcoma, ,,._

J L E )

S@\\c{l1v\-c!&amp;t.trs· ::::

O four
Rearrange letters of
· ICrombled words

• h•

. Unftwnlohod, Yory Nlco, 14x70, 2

JWBYOFPP

'

~y

hoO

7150.

54

L

(O . L.

- - - - - - - llllood

_____

- A I M ' - :IOXIO 50x7S,
100X100, Coli . 1:tai 110

Traitor For Aont, fi4-256.a8111.

MP

. BVMP,

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET
... _ _,ANSWER

oorMl "

In

1

LOO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "A poam Is a little model ol consciousness. It's how
someone sees the world made in language .· - David St. John .

e

""j"'
/vt.

~O'If" • S

an

-

DC

G.DWHX . ·

.

4in 1.11

Hoonllon.• Sat.... - · t-5;
Don' forp1 Dur REPO. Se-

tow-r

CDDBTLOO

TWB

1

•

Supplies

PMSF

XOLEDWJ

B VF

L B

ODDRP

'FZFJGTOSG

.

75 Boals 6 Motors
for Sale

Building

Stoll ..... Far
s.~a .LJoillod

by Luis Campos

Transport atto n
71

..

c.lebrity Cipher cryptogr~ m• are cr.altd 1mm ~allons by 'amoo10 peop4e, pas1 a nd pre !lent
Eactl lefttl ll'llhe cipher 11.00. for another. Todfly's clue E equals M

•-=s-=
. L-:7"lJ-:-:M-::P,...--,...,, ~

. BJG NATE

55

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

loW 1\'E:Y f&gt;.::¥ID
f\11&lt;\ Wfi£.F£ fiE
W&gt;6GOU~ ...

gray cerpll, 1171111oth, 114-M•

Vldoo camoro, YHS, 0ooc1 eon-

15 ~ERE ANI'T~IN6

,.

...... Mvlng , _ llllflo,

c1ar11 1o1uo

MARCIE, WHAT
I 601N6 TO DO?

AuTUMN Of

Jeo-.,Ohlco,1~. .
~

YOU MI:AN I
READ IT FOR.
NOTJ.l iNG?!

After a straightforward auction to
three no·trump, West led the spade
jack. Declarer. with only eight winners,
had 10 attack clubs to establish his
ninlh trick. So he won the firsl trick in
hand with lhe queen and ran· the club
10 to East's jack.
East, seeing from the point·counl
thai there was no future in spades ,
switched to the heart two. South played
low from hand and West's jack forced
dummy's king. Now came a second
..;t,.;RA~N..,K~&amp;;.·;;;E;.RN:;.;.;;E;;;S..;T_ _""':'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,t club. After winning with the king, East
,returned the heart queen. But it was to
no avail. South conceded another club
..,... Tf'IINk OF Tt-IIS AS
trick and claimed the balance.
"Pity you didn 't have lhe heart nine,
Tf'l~
partner," said East. "Or I hat you dido 'I
YOlJ!t &amp;.IF~···· .
find a heart lead."
Answering the comments in reverse
ANI&gt; A~L YOlJ~
order, West replied, "True, but leading
BOl&gt;Y PARTS A,~
from my spade.sequence is normal.
However, I didn't need the heart nine
l'f~Al&gt;ING
for us to defeat this contract."
·
•
SOlJTI'f.
West paused for a moment, but East
• •
still didn 'I see il.
•• • •
' '
"You must switch to the hJ,art queen
at trick three," explained Wesl. "That
holds declarer to two heart winners,
BORN LOSER
and we get five tricks before he can
cash nine."
·
eiWTlb TimW'!'I£..
1-\E'D ~Y,
Even though this play is in few books,
•rM. C,OIN6 ID I don't think Voltaire was right when he
JF1'£. W.lSlll£
claimed thai "the multitude of books is
p Cf 111£
making us ignorant.''

STORAOE TAIIUI 3•000 Upright, Ron EYIRI EnllrDrloH.

dltlonl 13110, 114 441 1330.

0 1 - • $141.00;
Uvlng R_, Sl. • $2ti.OO;Jiodooorno· lit.
13Jo.OO;
~- • IIMpo •.
w.-.!Drpra

I

1M2 Chavy - . • orl., PS, PS,

-oil.

1111.00;

V2 ton 21,000

M,uuu actuol mlloo, ·13180 or

. 0.YNE'I FURNITURE
Compillo tum'-"'ngo.
Houra:
t-1. ~11332, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd•.
F- Delivery.
·

VI'RA FURNITURE
4 llllol Out Rl. 141

a

1~

.-.
ll'lf- .....laloto, 114-843..
&amp;410.

I00-4fi.3481.

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 112
Olivo 91., Cleltlpollt. ' Uood
lumftwo, - . . . . Wootom I
Worlc l!oofo. 114-44f.315V.

~

.., !..'..'!,. atolli tnt.r~or, PS ono1

USED APPUANCES
Wa.._ clryoro, relrlp&lt;alrangoa. ~ Apptlonceo, 71
Vlno st..ol,-eiii 814-44f.73H, 1·

IU UIIUI.

t

o_....r..

• • Chivy

GOOD

wv, Cll 3Q4.875..1450,

OIIC,

137,0011,

T -. .... up. •Zpc. Uvl,
AQ0111 SliMe, 12811 up. T - ,
Chalra, f14t up. Curio. 4 &amp; I
Drowor Chool.._ $4U5 up. Sml
Rl. z Nolth, .... Ploooanl. -

Pleuant,

.

O.Y.W., 22' dU-In bod with
llveolock raclui, ~,000 mlloo,
llnglll lllf!.._cloMI, a a a ._.,,
llfllng _Oj'U_,_fl!ll!r__ -

c.dar 81 d :wn SUII.. $711.
Moll,... Sol, ' " up. :lpc:. CloE

NowNood
No oppllo-, Hoio•hold turnlohlng. 112 mi. Joorlcho Rd. Pt.

t

11114 Ford F-1110 Vory Cloon••1
=-~t ."'ltoe, lluollellt.'

•
- VInyl In Stocli. - Coorpato,

PICI(ENS FURNITURE

l

11114 Dodge &amp;to- C:U. runt

~-~
,_
080;
fl83 OM
tan- Chivy~50
~WD, RIM
11:1-4111 .-lngo.

Vondlng: Won1 Got Rich Quick.
Will Got A Sl~ncomo.
Prlcad to Sol. 1
353.

Property l111pector- lnaurtnce

A-lfll $8-$15 at Work -Hom.,
Territory Optlonal. lndap. Rep. 1- 1·K;:;"':;:;'::•OH:::0:::
4564~3::._:--c-.
-1112~.
.
1~
8or1ondor IWaltrau
CIIIIM-4411-4151.

Ywy
lrkiS..

117M120.

,.,., locllted on . HorN CI'Mk
Rd. oft Crab CrMk Rd. 31J4.524o

'·

Looking For Eklorly p.,_,
·Who Noodi Cuo1odlol C.rw. In
Homo EnvlroniMnl. North GoUla

building knowlodgo halplul wiU
tra.ln, part Urne, Drlet r.Um,.
llerll rno.,...lon, P.o. aox 381•
Woot Salorn, Ohio 402874311, '

Ambitious paoplo nMdad lor
counter help, coolla1 monagon
ono o l i - n Smoll L.ocot Firm SookJng Fun
nparlonc.. 3114-34.3.5187.
nmo 10n can Cloonlng "locft.
-

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

f:ort-. -~ o.ntte,
!!of. Toonn.
- a
z· 81dd-.

,.II«

NOW HIRING
POSITIONS:

114 LUMBER

C.IY• For Sa.., Slmmlntll •
Hontord.Cron, 814-245-5585.

------::------1

qull'ld. 61"·367-0404.

MIIUfl, Rtaponalbla GAHS
Student CJA Or SRI To Tutor
Eighth Grader
School (1 o2
Hra.) Throo DaYI Pit WOilli. WMI
Provide Tranoportatlcln Home.
$4.00 MR. If lntelftiMI PINM
Send t...Htr Of lnterH1 CLA 347,
cJo G•ltlpoll• O.Uy Tribune, 825
Third Avonuo, Galllpotlo, OH
45631.

Livestock

par

lw-t
ca.,.....r
worl&lt;,omall jobO, llahl hauling, • New homo u.- -ruction
304-811-3130, 304.1'71-1110, .,._ complllo oonatrucllon In lolu ol

21

I

63

11111111-barn tor Ioiii
-ura, toeotod on -Jc!l
Goo F.._ Tructo Cob. lftort. Ad. ott Cn11 CraM Rd.,
bldTruokT-. P......-.a ISDDhr.~. 304-424-2773.
·
'ronklln Cioinaul• - wAiooiL

- . 1 hth, Dlrilng A_,.,
Lorge Living - . o.r.g.,

~m=..,:v.
lmum 114-4
7.

F,..,.

41 Houses for Rent

Gotllpollo

Nura~ _

led

PEANUTS

U,4111, 114-~1122. '

/Box Sprlflll LIU Hlw,11t 3U INO.

Rentals

-

Sun Yolloy

stu

Full

388-4335.

Gonoral Molntonanco, l'lllntlna,
Yard Work Wlndowo WuhOil ·
Gullora ctoanld Ughl Houllng,
Com~ Rolldintlol, st...:
114-446-111&lt;
.

1585.

._-Ina' c:..o..

ClrDOI a Y1nrt In - k $1.00 Yd
2br.1 .11ooon. wtl HUD qualltv, 6 Op 10 Patto. . 01 Kllohan
121wmo. otuo ~. IYIIIablti Corflll In S1oolo. OVer 31. Pol·

Boat tho SDI'Ing Ruohl Got yaur
trimmere • mowwe e,I!IIYlcld
now .. Sldaro Equl-1 c -

Painting

John .31120 Lo. Hotn
P,-; 135 I I - FII(IIUIOI1
14,180· !&lt;!r:ot 410 $4,150;
Allf4.
t481t110rf~Aa van..; 1100 3 Point Hh~

--rd, --

trt&amp;W PI-=- ot P~ With
S.•ae a W•ter Hook-up, 8*

Equipment

- Coli .
Wllh
FloiOIIOint
Avelloblo
.oillll'o
llol&gt;lli

Ue Thol EmpiN - Eloctrlctly.
Fumuo
Tllol· u...
No
WY 01021a.

Nlc. Chrlatlan Couple Would
Like To Rent Or Buy U.nd Con-

Fo. 11L 3114-113-5934.

drywaN,

Goods

+I· 100oc. farm, localod In
Maeon Co. or between Muon

2br.,= roqulrod, yau
d
1111 loL304-175-U3S.

18 · Wanted to Do

Houaehold

51

45 Mends
(socks)
46 Encounter
47 C'oncernlng
(2 wds.)
48 Emperor
49 Companion ,
old style
SO Israeli folk
dance
51 Pilcher
52 Radiation
meaSures
55 Merriment

All the elementary - and some of
the more advanced - bridge textbooks
list the "righl" card to lead from nonnal
holdings. Perhaps it is top of touching
honors , or fourlh ·highest from your
longest and strongest However, occa·
sional deals come along that make it
necessary to throw the textbook out the

Attention lloblle I Doubls•klc

--...._.,...__

month

By Phillip Alder

I kxn ow;.,. We C.ny A Cant-

pi@
12SEER
- - ...01
.-...And Fur- ~ann

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanlod: Dlnklg Rooin 841vl-. Export- In Sllft!oila
MoNI Planning Holplul. SUpao

WHh

Truckl, 1987 Modtll Or Newer, .pertenceCI Pllrtner. lnvntment
Pontiac,

resume: Box

R..ume To: CLA 348, c/o QaJ..

Wanted To Buy: Boaglo Puppy,
1!114 ueun

Cloon

Pl. . .nt .,.., ,..,.nc.. .....

Job

~L-~-~~~ now hiring
qualllod alllgniiMinl lochnl~
,......,_
roqulrod •

c.........r - . A ~~~
·u.. ""'_
100 Soot Dlnng - . RIIPOIMI

ALL Yord Sileo lluol Bo Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tt11 day befoN the ad ll to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

p.m. Saturdlly.

Merchandtse

FJ!In Suppltes
&amp; Lt':estock

lie tor unattached Aquarians.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 19) II Will ba
imperative today to extend as much con·
stde~ation and tolerance to ~our mate
today as you do lo other peOple. Know
where to 1oo1&lt; tor romance and you'll lind
il . The Aslro·Graph Matchmaker Instantly
reveals which signs ~re romanlically per·
ffcl tor you. Mail $2 to Malchmaker. do

lhls newspaper. P.O. Bo• 4465 , New
York. NY 10163. ,
P~U Fob. 20·Mo'rch 20) You wil l
probably qp vary generous to those not
making any demands today , but you
might turn down those wh o do have
requests. Ask..)'ourself why.
ARIES "(March 21·Aprll 18) You might"
try using some high·pressure tactics 10
gel lriends to do as you wis h today .
ThoS&lt;l who comply willlesenl you.
TAURUS (April 20·11oy 20) You will
have a highly productive day ~ you gallo
call all the shols. However. it others enter
the picture. the quality ol your pertor ·
mance might deteriorate.
•
GEMINI (May 21.Juno 20) Avoid playing
favorites wilh co -workers toda~ . You
could alienate a P.Qienlially valuable ally
through lhoughde~iMerence.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Only

assume additional financ ial obligations
today ~ you can handle them comlort·
ably. H you can't. they could become very
weighty later."
LEO (July 23·Aug, 22) II you are not
carelul today, you might lei some people

get away -with too much wh1le

~aall ng

too

harshly with those who deserve your

compassion.

.

VIRGO CAug. 23-Sepl. 22) Follow your
inclinalion to show kindness lo others

today, but resist the urge to attach strings
to your good deeds .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0ct. 23) Even 'though
you'll feel sociable today. being around
giddy friends could dampen your spirits .
Seek companions with more substance

and less volume.

SCORPIO (Oci. 24:-Nov. 22) You will be
able to gel what you want today . bul
unfortunately. you might not know exactly
what to pursue .. You might attain something you'Nlater reject.
.
SAGinAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) Vbu
mi{jhl lack tailh in your good ideas today.
A lorcetul critic could convince you lo
abandon or change them it you don "l
guard against~ . ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1U)
Endeavors you personally control should
.I urn oul promably today , but it you must
comply with olh,ers' wishtis. it could end
up being COSily IO.all .
.

..

I
I'

''

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