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Page-1o-:The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, JBI)uary.31, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Early 20th century ·Amedcan art~st~ highlighted at literary club
The topic "Early Twentieth- by artisis who bad studied ·there,
Cent ury American Artists" was sbe said. The name derived rrom
presented by Jeanne Bowen at a 11-one or Monet's masterpieces titled
recent meeting of lhe Middleport "Impression Sunrise" wbicb exhib'Literary Club, cbange from tbe iteil certain identiftable effects giv· usual book review rormat of tbe ing it &lt;l,Uite a different lcbaracter
group.
from previous ait procedures.
Sbe fnt gave a brief overview
Mrs. Bowen' s lively cornmenof Impressionism, m art movement tary brougbt out bow Impressionist
popularized in France by tbe works were composed of splotches
famous painter, Claude Mone t. or pure brigbt colors laid !)n the
This style of painting originated in canvas, then blended by a fealher
Europe during the mid-1800's and brush stroke. Tbis produced brilwas eventually brougbt tO America liant intages and background wbich

seemed as ir light were radiating
through tbem, sbe said.
·
Sbe explained that colors were
vivid,gray and back were never
used, md tbat the paintings were
asymmetrical, emphasizing a new
use of perspective . Oftentimes
cropped images were balmced by
an impression of limitless space or
emptiness, sbe said. Nlolher development was the change from heroic
and mythical characters to scenes
of casual daily life. American
Impressionism reached its peak of

BETH WU..LIAMS

IfRI'ITANY WILLIAMS

Brittany, Beth and Cody
Williams, cbildrep of Ricbard and
Barbara Williams of Middleport,
celebrated !heir birtbdays with a
pool party at the Super 8 Motel in
Gallipolis.
Brittany was II on Jan . 18,
Cody.wa~ tbree on Jan . 19, and
Beth will be eight on Feb, 5.
'
Eacb child bad a birthday cake.
Brittany.' s was a Rutland Red
Devil's basketbalt'cake, Beth's wa,o;
a Lion King cake, and Cody bad a
·Power Ranger cake. Winning
prizes Were Kara Musser, Mallory
King, and Madison King.

CODY WU.,LIAMS

ications about the spiritual life md
will also be available to answer
quesiions and share· some of ber
own experiences as a solitary and
mystic.
Ross is the 1995 Tbeologian,in
Residence in lhe diocese from Jan.
II to Feb. 14. According to a
church publication, "(1\tercbange"
she bas been variously described as
a hermit, a mystic, and a person

who ties ber spirituality to action in
the world. Sbe bas said lhat sbe
does not call berself a bermit,
"because it conjures up too many

ron:umtic notions."

Ross is an Anglican solitary,
wbicb means sbe is officially
under the wing of the cburcb
though not attached to a religious
COIIWIUnity.
ijefore ber profession as a solitary, Ross managed a winery, co-

---:_-_---.;...._--~· Reedsville
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wbitcbead
bosted .their annual holiday buffet
at their home. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. BiD Meredith of Beverly;
Roger Meredith, Vincent: Mr. and
Mrs . Wade Myer, Matt, 'Eddie,
Matlhew Ryan and Kaley, Norlh
Canto11; Julie Henscb and daughter,
Lisa, Massillon; Lillian Pick~ns,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. David
Weber, Morgan and · Erin-,
·Reeds"ille.

Pvt Matt Martin of Eustis, Va,
Micbael and Angel Martin, Akron;
and Shannon McComas of Rutland
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weber and
daugblers, visited with Mrs. Shirley
Taylor, D.ayton. during the. bolidays. · . · .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wbitebead
spent lh,e boliday weekend witb
Juli and Walt Henscb and children,
Lisa.and Joi'dan of Massillon. Join-

founded a wi!dlife preservation
trust,. edited books, worked on the
restoration of buildings, and lobbied for en\jronmental issues.
.Last summer sbe lived on a boat
in Alaska to testify in lhe Exxon
Valdez trial on bebalf of the environment aM injured parties. Sinee
1983 sbe has served as guest lecturer on tbe Englisb faculty at
Oxford University, England.
· The purpose of the tlieologan-

Others attending were lhe cbil- .
dren' s sister, Brooke, paternal ·
grandmother, June Williams ,
Brook Bolin, Racbel Garey, Alison ·
Hayes, Renee Bailey, Amy and
.Brittany Hysell, and·Amber Snow·
den.
Sending cards and gifts were .
maternal grandparents, the Rev .
and Mrs. Amos Tillis ·or Columbus;
Sue Tillis of Columbus, Joe and
Faye Tillis of Cincinnati, Becky
Tillis of Gallipolis, Don, Gina,
Julie and Ben Tillis of Rutland, and
Justin, Susan, Mallbew' and
Andrew Sayers or Glouster;

Dave
Grate

Vol. 45, NO. 193

.

Ross, it is reported, is interested
in lhe opportunity. to meet witb
small groups to teacb about or
explore topics related to prayer,
justice, the environment, and ways ·
of living faith in everyday life.

Rutla!ld
Furniture
If

at ·first you don't succeed,
y.o u ' re
running ' about
. average.

•••

One good thing about the
new TV shows - the kids are
doing their homework again.
•• '*'·

• • •

Sonie people wilT believe
anything if it's whispered to
them.

•••

Income tax time is when
millions · of citizens test their
po~er of dedljCtion.

s-mith_M...;..el-issa_an_dB-rm-do-n.

· Holidily guests at lhe bome of
wv
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith were Mr . . Te~~~on,smitha., a~· a;:.~:!:
and Mrs. Jobn Smith and children, Reedsville, Mr. arid Mrs. ·Michael
Melissa and Brandon, Weston, . Smith, Samantba and Adam of
W..Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Smith Heatb, and Mrs. LueiUe Smith.
and Shelby, Mrs. Jodi Bissell and .
M
dM L
B
Darci, all local.
·
r. an
rs. yle alderson
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. · were boliday guests of Mr. and
Melvin Sinith were Mr. and Mrs: Mrs. Jay Long I!Dd Courtney, VinJobo Burns and Jeffery of Logan, ceo~. md Mrs. Denver Weber and
and Elizabeth Duffy, ~oy.
Mark were recent dinner guests of
Holiday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber and
Grant Smilh were Mr. md Mrs. l;blloe, Long Bottom.

7 SHOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, R1tland, OIL

742-2211

Human .se·rvice -workers st.ri.ke begins .in Gallia
Memb~;rs of Communications
Workers of Aoierica Local 4320
coouneoced tbe first day of a wOtt
stoppage against tbe Gallia County
Department of Human Services Ibis
morning iQ its continuing ' contract
dispute with management
Pickets set up outside of lhe
DHS office at861 Thitd Ave.· and
. at tbe Cbild Support and Enforcement Agency office operated by
OHS at 19 Locust St shortly after
6 a.ni.
CWA Local Vice President Jack
'Huber said pickets will not be
maintained on a 24-bour basis at
the DHS sites. Picketers at tbe

Tbird Avenue site marcbed in front

be said.
Clients who bave scheduled
of the building, jeering supervisory
staff and security guards inside the appointments are tirged to contact
office and cbmting "job security the agency to determme if it's necessary for them to come to tbe
- not scab security."
Tbe inain office remains open office. Barnes said.
No new talks in the dispute have
for business and is staffed by
.supervisors, DHS Director Jerry · been scheduled .
"It's a waiting period now,"
Barnes said.
Tbe agency wiD be open during Huber said. "We sincerely regret
its normal operating boors of 8 am. the inconvenience to the people or
until 4:30 p.m., Barnes added. The Gallia County. Secondly, lhe peofood stamp office is open from 9 ple of Gallia County should be outa.m. to 3 p.m., md tbe cbUd sup- raged at the expense of lllring secuport office is also open for regular rity for the office.
operation. Tbe days wben food
"We bave repeatedly ask.¢ for
stamps are issued remain the'\ame, ·security for our members in lhe

t aocFees.Defr.6e:r

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY

FIBERII.ASS RUNNING BOARDS -

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-.

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BRAIIIIIEW '95 POIITIAC ao.v11! SE

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
bruised and hysterical Nicole
Brown Simpson told 'police that a
Nc.w Year's Eve figbt wilh ber busband began soon after he bad sex
· with anolher woman in their bouse,
im officer testified.
Ms. Simpson said her busband
climbed into bed witb ber after
having sex wilh the woman, Detective Jobt\ Edwards recalled Tuesday. Although tbe altercation itself
bad already been widely reported,
Edwards' testimony made the fight
loot even more damaging to Simp-

• Air Cor&lt;!~

• Steel Belted Tires
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• Power Brake! • CLSom Ckth Seal Ava•able
•Allf~ Cas..ne · ~ Wlteelo
• Wei E&lt;&gt;il&gt;tled

·Loaded!

'r

.

EXPLAINING PROGRAM - Paul Ger;
ard, chairman ol the Melp County Community
Corrections Local Plannln1 Board, updated
boolrd -lllben on the 1oc111 community correc·
tlo111 PI'IJII'Illll'• electronically monltOriil hoiilie
· ·. .

arrat'program at the boar_d 's meet11111 TutSday.
The board b01ted Chris Murray, seated-rear,
state coordinator for colillllllnlty non·raldenU.I .
)II'Gil'NIII In tiM Bureau of Commdnlty Servlca,
· who explained the necessity for loatl community
corredlo111 JII'OIIrams. •

Local corrections board
hosts state coordinator
·

By 11M FREEMAN ,
Sentinel news stall'
Members of the Meigs County
Community Corrections Local
Planning Board met Tuesday with
Cbris Murray, state coordinator for
community non-residential programs in the Bureau or Community
ServiCes. who explained the neces- ·
sity for local community correc·tions programs.
The local planning board, consisting of 15 members including
judges, law enforcement officers
and community and government
leaders. met in its fmt meeting of
1995 . The board is scheduled to
meet twice yearly.
The board oversees the Meigs
County Corrections program in the
common pleas court wbicb seeks
alternatives to committing non-

dangerous offenders to state penal
·
institutions.
The ·program receives all its
casb fWtding from a grmt administered by lhe Ohio Department or
Rebabilitalion and Correction. Tbe
board of county ·commissioners and ·
the common pleas court provide inkind assistance by providing office
space, equipment, supplies and
other support.
Program personnel include an
administrator-project director, a
community release officer and a
part-time secretary-data en'try
worker.
•
Board Chairman Paul Gerard,
bailiff for the Meigs CoWtty Common Plea~ Court, explained some
of tbe program's goals.
"We bave to find other options
for j~dges," said Gerard. "We are

~,.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- The Environmental Protectlon .Agency ..yo It will test .only1mrtlons of fish Instead of
wbole fisb for, dioxin at the site of a proposed pulp mill In
Mas!lll County.
Environmentalists criliciZA:d the de&lt;:lslon, saying those lesser
tests IIUIY underest111111te the level of dioxin alnoady In the Ohio
River.
Dioxin Is a byproduct of chlorine-based. pulp bleuchlng process. Researchers bave linked dioxin to birth defects and cancer.
Parso111 &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y ~ was Issued 11
wasle-water dlscbarge permit last summer by the state.
Tbe EPA Region 01 oMce In PhUadelpbia wanted to review
tbe permit and test dioxin levels In tbe river at Apple Grove
after environmentalists .protested the permiL
Gov. Gaston Caperton, a iiilllsupporter, complained to EPA
Administrator Carol Browner, who last week sent Caperton a
letter saying ber omc:e would review the 11111tler.
Vicky Binetti, water permits cblef for EPA Region IU, said
Ibis week tbe a11ency llu decided to test llnly 11s• ,fllleiiJ Instead
of whole lisb because that Is tbe portl!lll people eat.
West VIrginia's dlmdn r"'lulatlons "'!II for sutb tests to usr!
only lisb nuets.
But dioxin concentrates In fatly anl11111l tissue, so testing only
fiUets means that fatty tissue containing most of the dioxin will
be Ignored, said Peter deFur, a dioxin expert with the Environmental Defense Fund In Washington, D.C.

.not probation officers, but we try ...
to malce probation work. better."
One program includes eleclro!licaUy monitored bouse arrest, Gerard said.
"We can monitor them wherever
they are," said Gerard.
"(Electronically moniiored
bouse .arrest) should be a preferred
option for the offender," said Gerard. "They get to stay at bome."
It is also a lot cbeaper than
keeping people in jail - lhe program costs about $6 a day wbicb is
paid by lhe offender or, in cases
wbere the offender is unable to
pay, by the program, i)e exp,Iained.
"It gives us an option, ' Gerard
noted.
Other options include community service, Gerard said.
Continued on page 3
.

• ol-

•

--

'

Rutland Mayo·r Eads~urges
residents to insure water lines

· As giant pbotos or a,bruised Ms. ·
Simpson were projected on a courtroom screen, Edwards told jurors
tbat sbe emerged from busbe'S
.
/
Rutland maintenance crews
wearing only a bra and muddy By GEORG£ ABATE
were called to bebind Henry
sweatpants and collapsed in bis Sentinel Newt! Stalf
arms in tbe darkness, crying, "He's
Rudand residents went without E,b lin's garage .at about 4 p.m.
water
ovemigbt Monday wben a Monday and worked until 9 p.m.,
going to.kiD me I"
service
line broke, viUage oflicials said Dale Hart, village maintenance
- "I said, 'Wbo's going to kill
supervisor.
slaled
Tuesday.
you?" recalled Edwards, wbo was
A service line behind Eblin ' s
. But, Rutland officials warned
a patrol officer responding to the
garage
burst, Hart said. As tbe
plllpCrty owners they could also be
911 call. "Sbe said, '0.1.'
water
and
mud began tn freeze up
"I said, '0.1. who? You mean sock,ed with outrllgeous water costs
that
night,
the
workers gave up.
to repair lhe 40-year-old service
the football player?'
Early
Tuesday
morning, water
"She said, 'Yes, O.J. Simpson lines that run from tbeir bomes to ·
was
·
restored
to
the
entire town
the new main lines.
tbe football player."' ·

~~m'tK-1m500lR&lt;4x4 PICKUP

tomer &lt;;omplaint leuers in person- system the DHS uses.
Employees were informed in a
nel ftles to evaluate employee permemorandum
Monday to perform
formance .
·
"manually,"
their
duties.
.Huber said the union suggested
Barnes defended the action as a
the letters be kept out or the Iiles
way
of shielding both clients and
and rormal worker evaluations
employees.
sbould be conducted.
"AU bargaining unit employees
"Tbe department should have
were
de-activated from the comjmtlhese letters to determine if there 's
er
system
primarily as a safeguard
a problem, but that's apparent! y not
for
clients
and !heir benefits, as
what management wants to use
well
as
for
the
employees' protecthem for," be said.
tion,"
Barnes
said
.
The job action comes ftve days
"There bad already been some
after the last management offer was
rejected, and two days after union incidents or tampering with commembers' identification codes were . puter information, which was in
Continued on page 3
erased from the CRIS-E computer

·Environmentalists
criticize EPA's decision

.

jlrobation. ·

·Loaded' .

past, but we were .told the money
wasn'tlbere," be added.
Tbe union, representing 32 DHS
employees, has worked ·wilhout a
contract since Dec. 3I. The union
rejected management's final offer
last week and voted to strike.
"Negotiations bave been conlial,
but we didn't come close to any
agreement," l!e said. "Several
issues remain on the table, but the
primary issue is job security. If we
can get pa!l tbat one, we cuuld
reacb a swift settlement."
The major slicking point on job .
security, Huber added, centers on
management's desire to keep cos-

::Detective
.
· testifies in
Simpson case

~tern IIIIo liiUIOunced they
wanted to Cl\ll Ronald, Sbipp, a
retired police officer md friend of
'Simpson. Defense. atiomey Carl
Douglas identified Sbipp as tbe
myscerious ..Leo .. in the opening
pages·of a "Raging Heart," a new
• book about lhe Simpson case.
The book says Simpson met
with Leo the day after the murders
;~od revealed baving dreams of
killing Ms. Simpson. Later in the
book. Sbipp is mentioned by name
as a friend wbo counseled tbe
Simpsons in tbe days following
their 1989 figbt
·
- It wasn't clear iftbe judge
would aUow Sbipp' s testimony. In
a private conference at the judge's
bencb, defense attorney Jobnnie
Cocbran objected to portions of
Sbipp's ·proposed testimony and
said be would not question Sbipp
himself because tbe two are
cousins.
.
Tbe ~ was put on bold until
today.
Prosecutors allege that Simpson
killed bis wife in a jealous rage
after years of abuse. Tbey used tbe
1989 beating as a launcbmg pad for
their case.
Tbe fltSt three witnesses were an
operator wbo took her 91' I call and
two officers wbo investigated the
case. Simpson eventually pleaded .
·110 contest and was sentenced to

$17888**
.

...

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cants
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 1, 1995

son.

BRAND NEW CIEVY ASnm EXTENDED CONvERsioN VAN

Low IOnlght tn 30L Partly
cloudy. Thursday, blgb tn mldJOs.

of

persona/s-----....-1-ob-n
w

ing the Wbitebeads at the Henscb
bome were Jean and Sarab Frydman of Columbus and Jane and
Wade Myer, Mat~ Eddie, Matthew
Ryan and Kaley Marie of Norlh
Canton.
Visiting recendy with Mrs. Nell
Wilson were Mr. md Mrs. Robert
Sams.ofWeston, W.Va.
Mrs. Lona Chevalier was a dinocr guest of Mr. and Mrs. Zenith
Chevalier and family at Belpre,
recently.

Page4

Copyrtght1995

What you don't know may not
hurt you, but it will certainly
amuse a lot of people.

iu-residence p_rogram is I!!.J!IQYid.e
opponunities for people, especially
lhe laity, to explore lhe rel,.ationsbips between failh and lhe work
they do from Monday through Sat,
urday,

Pick 3:
540
Pick 4:
7616
Buckeye 5:
5-7-19-21-28

By

Maggie Ross to lead quiet day·at ·Grace Episcopal Church ·
Renowned author and Anglican
Mystic, Maggie Ross, will be leading a quiet day at Grace Episcopal
cburcb m Pomeroy Saturday, from
9 a.m. to rioon.
·
·
As explained by Father David
duPiantier, rector, a quiet day is a
. brief but nourishing lime focusing
on individual and corporate spiritu. a1 development. He said that Ross
will guide
in med. . the congregation
.

All three
Meigs teams
po~t wins

popularity berween 1885 ma 1915. certlmd iQ Boston aqd New York. log wilh tbe !heme, sbe sang "A
Mrs. Bowen demonstrated lhe Resources for .Ibis presentation Picrure No Artist Can Paint' ! by J.
flavor of Impressionism by display- were American Impressionism Fred Heir, "JiJSt Plain · Folks" by
ing five prints or the artists Childe ·written in 1984 by William .
· - Maurice Stonebill{ the amusing
Hassam, Frmk Benson, Edmond Gerdts, Hassam's New York by case of "The Cat Came Back" by
Tarbell md Jobn Si11ger Sargent . Jack Slavin and catalogs from the
Harry S. Miller and "Someone is
These refleet the po'silivc, almost Metropolitan Museum in New Waiting For Me" .with words by
contemplative aspects of life, York. City.
Andrew Sterling and melody by
nature and cityscapes, scenes of
Mrs. Roy· Holter, the bostess 'for Von Tilzer. Audience participation
gardens wilh figures at quiet ease. the occasion; then entertained with was included on the last two songs.
The artists of a group of Impres- a musical program accompanied. at
sionists, "'The Ten" and their sub- lhe piano by Mrs. Chester Erwin.
jects frequently represented tire Mrs. Holter cbose music from the
wealthy class and their works are tum of the century, ballads whicb
.
are songs that tell a story: In keep-

Three Williams children
celebrate birthdays

Ohio Lottery

when the village crews dug away
from lhe lines and found anolher
point where tbe water could be
turned off, Hart said.
Rudand Mayor JoAnn Eads said
residents sbould buy leak insur-

ance.
"We've bad several people with
large leaks. Had they bad msurmce
they wouldn't have bad the
expense," Eads said. "They put in
Continued on page 3

. FIXING RVTLAND'S WATER SYSTEM-. Rutland·VIUage
shut down Its water system overnight Monday due to a service
water line break according to Dale Hart, Rutland m·alntenance
supervisor. Rutland's Dave Davis, In the bole, and Joe Anderson
flnlsb fbillll tbe broken line on the Henry Eblin property early
Tuesday momlng. (Sentinel pholn by George Abate)

-

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Mam1day - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pni
S!ln,day: Noon ~ ' pm

' :The fee increase philosopby is
tbis: no new fees, no new state
fees, and no fees tbat go up by
more than the inflation rate. That's
the framework for decision maJc,
ing," Browning said.at a news conference.·
For example, tbe Division of
Watercraft in the Obio Department
of Natural Resources wants to
inctease~ fees. cbarJ.ed fOI' reaisrering canoes, kayaks, row boats,
inflatable watercraft and five classes
of boats.
es.
. I
Increases vary from S I to $1 S
But fee increases worth $-5.3
million lhat seven state agencies. . depending on lhe type of water·
proposed in lhc. budget are not craft
Brown ins said niO·re 'money
counted In the 'tax category.

By JO~ CHALFANT
Auoclated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS - ·Boaters, brokel'll and some barbers face bigber
licensing fees in the record $33.7
·billion state budget tbat Gov.
George Voinovicll proposed. So do
doctors and nurses.
R. Gregory Browning, director
of the Office of Budset md Management; outlined · the proposed
two-year speodins plm Tuesday .
He said it contained no tax inaeas-

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

••

from boat oWners would translate'
into better services provided to
them.
·
~ .'We. bave been told by tbe
department that, in fact, boat owners wbo care to communicate about
i't say that they want Ibis to bappen," be said.
A watercraft registration fee
increase would raise about
$600,000 a year. It would belp
replace outdated computerizec!.
records to improve ~ney management and informauon services to

brokers; denti.sts who have their X ray macbines inspectell; nursing
home admuustrators; doctors, nurses and olher medical practitioners ;
and o~ner~ of dams.
.
.
Vmnovtcb proposed a $3.1 btlliqn·increase in spending as .part of
a record state bu~get ~at could
grow faste~ th~n mflalloo or the
average Ob10an s persortal mcome.
Browning.,Voinovicb's top budget officer, Sllld. the proposal for the.
two y~ars starting July I reflected
tbe tbud-lowest growtb rate m
boaters.
more than 30 years.
Oiher fee increases would affect
The budget tbat now goes to
barber scbools and barbers wbo legislators recommends a 6.8 perrestore expiJ;d licenses; real estate _cent spending increase in budget

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year 1996 over current levels, and a port staff, 429 new employees for
6.1. percent boost the next year.
expanded meptal bealth services,
InflatiOn was forecast to grow and 336 new employees for other
about 3.5 percent in each or the . prpg1111ils.
next two budget years,. while perVoi.n?vicb proposed spending
sonal mcome of Obtoans was. $3.6 billion on schools 10 the year .
expected to increase 5.4 percent the that starts July I, and $3 .9 billion
fmt.~ear, and 5.1 percent the next.
the next year:
Pnsons, scbools, ~~I fare and
The budget provides more help
colleges all wopld rccetve above- for- the poorest of the state's 612 .
inflation inc~. . I •
local districts, but reduces aid to
Total pnson spendm~ would the 60 most wealthy systems. .
.
reacb almost ~920 m~lhon next
Voinovich is appealing a Perry
year, and for the ftrst ume top Sl . County Gommon Pleas Court rutbiUion in budget year 1997.
ing that declared lhe school fundOverall, tbe budget would ing system inadequate and :
~utborize 1,563 new corrections. inequitable.
employees: SOS guard\, 29~ sup-. ·

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·Commellta

Wedneeclay, Febru.y 1,1995

2-The Dally Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page

Wednesday, February 1, 1995

Rotarian Jennifer Sheets
named to district post .

OHIO Weather
Thursday, Feb. 2

The Daily Sentinel

UNITED NATIONS- At a
time when United Nations offiCials
want to expand their "blue beret"
peacekeeping operations, they're
bound to come up against a Republican Congress in Washington that
wants to turn it into a truly "thin
blue line."
ROBERT L. WINGETT
The new Republican majority
Publisher
bas made tbe National Security
Restoration Act a keystone of Its
controversial "Contract Witb
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
America.'' Under the act, contribuMARGARET LEHEW
. lions to U.N. peacekeeping efforts
General M•nager
Controller
would be withheld until the world
body recognizes lbe "indirect"
expenditures America makes to its
L.I!Tl1'.RS 01' OPINION m welcome. They should be le11 than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
peacekeeping efforts. Republicans
eddreu and t.lepbone number. No unsigne&lt;lletr.n will be published. utlen
argue that ~ "indirect" expenabould be in good lasle, addre55ing issues, not personalities.
ditures -- such as money spent on
the Somalia re~ue operation and
·' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - . . , . . , . Operation Desert Storm- more
·.
than make up for financial short-

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

American support for future missions. This bas alarmed U.N. officials, and sent the Clintoo administration scrambling to maice amends.

should it pass as currently written.
Moreover, they believe Congress
would find it difficult to find
enough voces to ovell'ide.
A high-ranking State Department offiCial at the American misBy Jack Anderson sion here told our associate Dale
Van Alta lbat he believes there is a
and
real constituency for the U.N. in
Michael Binstein
tbe !Jnited States, _somethin~ he
predicts Congress w1U be swprised
_ .•.•... ------- ...., ........ .:.. ... ...;. to.learn••.He-calls lhC&gt;·Republican
According to officials at the attack evidence of an "extraordi·
American delegation here, the nary disl:onn·ect" between
Clinton administration is planning Congress and the American public.
to I~uncb . a full-court press _on
The GOP cballeage comes· at a
Capitol H1ll and across Amenca time when the U.N.'s mission is
agai~st tbe &lt;?OP' s plans to cut ~banging rapidly from peacekeepfundmg. They re more ~ a little mg to peace-enforcing. With more
emb~sed ~Republicans sue- tba!! 80,000 troops currently
ceeded m poshing through a resolu- deployed to 17 missions around the
tion calling f~r a new inspector globe, the total -tab for these advengener~l to aud1t the books a~ the lures i;VIS climbed to more than $3.6
U.N. m exchange for_ ~men~an billion annually, compared to
funds. Now the admm1stral1on roughly $1 billion for all other
bel~e~es it must act quickly and U.N. operations.
the U.N. among conservatives. deciSively to halt any further eroIn earlier days, peacekeeping
Deeply Wl!fY of sending money and . sion of America's standing in the missions tended to be smaller and
men to an organization over whlch world body.
.
less dangerous tban today. The
America bas only nominal control,
Wbne House offic1als are pre- number of U.N. miSSions bas more
. Republicans want to cut funding dict.ing that Clinton will -.:eto the than doubled in recent years. These
and impose greater conditions on Nauonal Secunty Restoratton Act new ~-enforcing missions have

,.:Excerpts from other :~i~~fsi~~':to~~u::i~
. Oh.I 0 new. spapers
.. ' .

._
, .
)
: By The Associated Press
.
· . · Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
: .Akron Beacon Journal, Jan. 30
Tbe U.S. House voted to amend the Constitution. The bill would
require the federal government. by the year 2002 or two years after ratifi.
cation, to spend no more than it makes in revenue in any year. A simple
majority of~ members of the House and the Senate wo.uld also have to ·
approve any bill that increases revenues.
.
It's a big victory for the argument that governments mustliye under l.be
· same budget constraints as families and businesses do.
But it's a long and uncertain route to .passage, ·which is just as well.
.The biD goes next to the Senate, and then it must be ratified by at least 38
· state legislatures to become the 28th Amendment.
It may be a good idea to promote fiscal responsibility, but the balanced
budget and tax-limitation amendment would also lock the govemme111
: into a rigid constitutional framework and make it unresponsive to eco'nomic changes.
Budgeting ... means having the flexibility to take on debts when neces.
: sary·ln order to invest in the long term wbile keeping a tight grip on the
operating budget.
·
Coogress ought to pause long enough to understand bow families and
businesses do it- without clullering the Conslirulion.

•

Tbe Cnlu111bus Dbpa~h, Jan. 29

One of the enduring problems facing education is the absolute resistance of the education establishment to change.
·
· While business and government have been forced to decentralize,
· ·downsize ani! reinvent themselves, many schools seek to teach the same
· way they did 100 years ago. ·
Several proposals are expected to be introduced shortly in the General
. Assembly aimed a.t reiUming decision-making about schools to the local
· community. This legislation cannot be ignored if Ohio is to succeed in
· ·creating a more performance-driven system of schools.
·
. Moving to a more market-driven management and more local .flexibili. . ty bas the potential to improve all Ohio schools.

.....

·• :Kent-Ravenna Record-Courier, Jan.l7
. ::
House Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas, the House's No. 2
. . 'Republican leader. made a remark that is reprehensible,
·
::
While speaking to interviewers about his hook deal, Armey was dis: : cussing recent criticism about accepting money about the deal. Somehow,
be managed to inadvertently speak about Rep. Barney Frank, a Mas.. sacbuS!/us Democrat.
·
:: · "I like peace and quiet," be said; '.'And I don't need to listen to Barney Fag (pause), Barney Frank (emphasis on "Frank") haranguing in my
ear because I made a few ·bucks off a book I worked on.''
He immediately apclogized for making the remark, which he catego.. rized as a slip of the tongue. But the damage bad already been done.
Frank bas openly admiued his homosexuality.
..
. Armey bas perpetuated the idea that one's sexuluity is something to
: laugh at and somehow affects that person's judgment.
Being in such a high position in Congress, this action is as disgusting
••.. as the
term itself.
HamDton Journal-News, Jan. 23
When it comes to a proposed SmithsOnian Institution exhibit ,remembering the two atom bombs dropped on Japan at the close of World War
II, revisionist history is rearing iiS ugly bead.
The exhibi~ scheduled to open in May at the Air and Space Museum in
Washington, would be built around the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber
wbicb flew the A-bomb missions in August 1945 against Hirosbinia and
Nagasaki

l&gt;oliti~al correctness - and the idea that the U.S. was somehow an
immoral aggressor in dropping the bomb - threatens to overturn the reality of war.
·
The fact is that by dropping the atomic bomb on Japan, no U.S. lives
were lost in an invasion - and presumably fewer Japanese died than
mil!bt have bad the United States been forced to assault the mainland.
The truth of the Enola Gay exhibit should be that the United States
took steps to end the most horrible war in the hi~!Qry of man, and succeed·ed. 'F&lt;ir llilil, UJere is no need for any historical spin, or any apology. .

Where public beats private_ _ _ _ _ __
It is a rule of thumb for every

revolutionary movement When the
putsch is launched, seize the television stations.
Hence, the right-wing .crusade to
kill public broadcasting. It bas to
do with ideology' nothing more,
nothing less.
.
.
Ob, I know that is not what they
say. America's new prime minister,
Newt Gingrich, says public broadcasting is an "elitist" toy. The
truth is, the public television audience is mostly middle class.
. The new. chairman of the Senate
Commerce Committee, Larry
Pressler of South Dakota, says be
wants to "privatize" public broadcasting only to save tax money.
The fact is, the federal contribution
to public broadcasting this year is
$285.6 million. Eliminating it from
the budget would pay the interest
' on the national debt for Jess than
three hours. Big savings, Lar.
· Newt 'says be is "frankly
offended" that the Public Broadcasting Service would spend the
taxpayers' money to fund a poll to
assess its own popularity. Well, the
Pentagon spends imtold millions on
· public relalion5 ·efforts designed ta
sell itself to the. nation. What does

Newt have to say about that?
The conservative Washington
Times says it's just a crying shame
to spend public funds to. televise

Joseph Spear
"bloated, bombastic superstars
belting out show tWles." I thought
for a minute there they were complaining about Rush Limbaugh, but
it turned out to be the three tenors
- Carreras, Domingo and Pavarotti - wbo performed in Los Angeles·during last year's World Cup
final .
'
It is all a lot of right-wing flapdoodle. What really bol.bers Newt
and Larry and the Times' editors is
the perception that public broadcasting tilts to the left. It dQeS not,
at least not to any great degree. But
ideologues have this rule, you see.
If you don't spout the doctrine, you
must be the enemy. '
If there were a show on PBS or
National Public Radio featuring old
Huff 'n' Puff Rush, or a weekly
sho~~t called "Newt's World," or
something called "How .to Assem.ble and Maintain Your Backyard
Missile Silo," underwritten by the

National Rifle Association, you
wouldn't be bearing a peep from
these creeps.
But, thank the Lord, the public
broadcasting system bas been
structured to protect it from politics. Funds are approprilited to the
independent Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, and the CPB dis.tributes the federal revenues and
the money it raises from private
and corporate contributors to the
nation's 1,000 poblic televi.sion and
radio stations.
Thanks to the CPB buffer, viewers get quallty children's programs,
superb drama, excellent science,
very' little OJ. Simpson, and the
best damn news programs on the
continent. Find ine something on
commercial television that compares to the MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. Find me something on commercial radio that is remotely as
thorough and informative and interesting as NPR's "Morning Edition" and "All Things. Considered ...
· Where does Bob Dole get this
nonsense that listening to NPR is
!ike. lis~entng _to ·: Rad!o 'DN!;:"?
There are times, I must wnfess,
when commentator Daniel Schorr's

Because they we~ Ioalh .. to ..~ivc: .....3f.llllnd the country where lhey _get
This was based on. tbe notion
Ronald Reagan hiS JUSt due for ihe free room and hoard and medical that Head Start kids gro w up and
1980s economic boom, Democrats coverage, while receiving remedial become more responsible citizens.
refer to the Reagan era as the education and job training.
That they are less likely to depend
" Decade of Greed.''
·
on welfare or to run afoul of the
Now, because they don't want
law. That they are likelier to get
Joseph Perkins
to give Newt Gingrich and tbe
diplomas and well-paid jobs.
. GOP credit for advancing a pblili.
But there is absolutely no docucal agenda with wbicb most AmeriWhl!e the .program may bave mentation to substantiate these
cans agree, the Democrats are try· been fairly s~ccessful m the 1~ • • claims. In fact, the most authoritaing to cast the. Gingrich epoch as m the ~990s 1t bas become a nuser- live evidence on Head Start shows
tl!e ''Age of Meanness.' ' Tbose able fatlure. J.pdeed, a.recent report that Its benefits are sbo(l term at
nasty old Republicans . They're by the Labor De)IU1Illent mspector besl
going to snatcb welf\lfC babies and geperal cl~ed Job Corps dropout
By the time Head Start kids get
put them in orphana~es. They're , rat~s as h1gb as SO percent and 10 third grade, according to a 1985
going to cut grimdma s and grand- !?und that ~nly 12 per~ent of government study, their cogni!!ve
pa's Social Security checks.
g_raduates use.tbe sktlls for sk11ls, motivation and behavior is
They're going to force minorities whicb they were trained,
no better than kids who do not parto return to the back of the bus.
If this were not bad enough, the ticipate in the federal program. .
But these warnings are just a Senate Labor _and Human
Perhaps the most damning
diversionary tactic by Democrats Resources Commmee recently indictment of Head Start comes
wbo fear that their pet liberal pro- b~ard tes~'!DY from former _Job from Yale Psychologist Edward
grams might be targets of Republi- Corps p~t~c1pants ~bo detailed Zigler, one of the program's
can budget cutters.
ramplmt mc1dents of VIOlence, drug founders. He estimates that 40 perIt's high time that' several of abuse and sexual assault at centers cent of the 1,400 Head stiut renters
these programs treated as sacred throughout the counay.
. . . · are bf sub-par quality. That is
cows when Democrats beld power
.,.- Head S~af!-. ThiS $2.8 bdli~ cheating nearly 300,000 kids. ·
, in Congress got the ' ax . They a year program ts yet anotber ~lie
- WIC. The Women, Infants
include:
from the Johnson .era. It prov1des and Cb,ildren supplemental food
- Job Corps. The $1.1 billion a -preschool ed_ucatton, meals and program was the brain child of the
year program came into being· in health_screenmg for poor•. mostly Iate, _great liberal senator from Min1964, as part of Lyndon Johnson's mmonty 3- and 4-year-olds.
nesota, Huben Humphrey.
·
"War on Poverty." Liberals love it . For. much of the past three
Jbe $2.9 billion a year program
because it targets popr, minority ilecades, Head Start supporters provides nutritioll!ll education and
high school dl:opouiS.
have promulgated the myth that food vouchers for low-income
The youngsters are assigned to ''for every dollar, wei invest _today, pregnant women and their infants.
one of 100. or so Job Corps centers we'D save three tomorrow."
The rationale is that, by providing
1

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ALL THIS -

AND NAFTA, TOO.

seen soldiezs sent tri places such as
Somalia and Bosnia, where there is
no peace to keep.
Republicans , complain _that
America bas been saddled w1th a
disproportionate share of the bill
for these newer missions. America
currently pays 25 petcent of the
U.N.'s regular budget. according to
the current formula, but it pays
31.7 percent of all peacekeeping
operations. Under legislation
passed last year, American conttibutions to peacekeeping will be
unilaterally capped at 25 percent
after Oct 1.
Compounding the anger of conservatives and some U.S. diplomats
here is the fact that America is routinely condemned in committee
meetings for noi paying itS dues on
time. The remarks are typicalfy
made in the so,called Fifth Commiuee, which deals with budget
matters. Typically, a representative
of a Nordic country or Japan will
snap to attention and note lbat they
bave paid their contributions, but
som~ "member states" have not.
Sometimes, in violation of U.N.
protocol, the United States is ll!:lU·
ally named in these undiplomatic
denunciations. .
-Perhaps most bothersome for
Republicans, however, is the sense
that Clinton bas been too quick to
cede control over American foreign
policy to U.N. tecbnocrius, citing
Somalia as their prime example.
Diplomats point out lbat this is all
part of a trad11off: The U.N. bas
supported American-led initiatives
such as Operation Desert Storm
with money and manpower. In
return, America is expected to lend
financial support to peacekeeping
missions in Rwanda and elsewhere,
wblcb are less popular with the
Americim public.
In a sense, the looming tug-ofwar between the administration and
congressional Republicans is a
debate over means rather. tban
goals~ American diplomats here say
they also favor immense structural
and financial changes within the
U.N. bureaucracy. Yet their ability
to accomplish these goals, they say,
would be seriously threatened
sboold Republicans succeed in
tampering with the funding 11\ecbanisms. ·
Jack Anderson and Mlcbael
Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

liberalism tailors his logic. And listening to Nina Totenberg report a
story on Clarence Thomas gives
me the urge to defenstr-ate the
radio. But these are minor pains,
given the pleasures NPR brings.
It is ironic, I grant, that the private sector cannot produce a news
product that is as good aS that produced by the public sector, but that
is the truth of the matter. Not even
the company that is dedicated to
news, CNN, does the job as well.
The Republican revolution is a
good thing in many ways: It is time
to take a look at the role of government and redefine it. It is time to
scrape the barnacles off the bureaucracy. It is past lime to balance the
budget; indeed, if we don't, I fear,
we are doomed like a dying star to
coUapse upon ourselves.
But some programs work, and
public broadqlsting is one of them.
We should retain it, and tell the
ideologues to stuff it;.
Joesph Spear IS a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprlae
Association.
(For lnrormatlon on how to
commuulcate electronically with
this columnist and others, contad America OnUne b,y caiUng 1800 827
7
_:_ "_364,_ex-LSJ_··_&gt;_

·Stop proteetfng t~e . sacred cows.__

Berry's World

Accu·W~ forecast

GOP challenging American role in the U.N.

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poor moms with prenatal WIC ben,efits, the government will avert
health-related costs after tbeir
babies are born. WIC supponers
say the 20-year-old program is an
unqualified success. But the most
authoritative study of the program,
published in the American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition, .showed
mixed results at best.
The WIC program aims to raise
birthweights of babies born to "at·
risk" moms. And it tries to get
these moms to refrain from habits
harmful. to their.unborn babies, like
smoking ..
Yet, the study indicated lbat participation in WIC did not increase
birth weightS of babies born to non$mokiilg moms, while blrtbweigbts
did increase for babies born to
smoking moms. For a program lbat
is considered untouchable in Washington, this hardly is an encouraging track record.
.
- 8(a) set,asides. This $4 billion ~ year Small Business Administration program was created by,
Lyndon Johnson in 1968. It
reserves a portion of government
contracts for minority fmns, outside of tbe competitive bidding
process.
•Joseph Perkins Is • columnist
· for The San Diego UniOJi-Trl·
bune.

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•lcolumbusl34•

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W. VA.

ROTARY
YOUTH
EXCHANGE CHAIRMAN Oblo Erie's new outliound
cbalrman ror the Rotary Youth
Exchange Progr•m Is Jennlrer
Sheets of tbe MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club.

Local

Jennifer Sheets, a mt:mber of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
bas been ~r,.!::~d District 6690
outbound c .
fot· the Rotary
Youth Exchange pro·~ ram in the
Ohio Erie.
'
After serving in that capacity ror
a two year term, Sheets will
advance to the chairman of the
Rotary Youth Exchan8e Program
in l.be Obio Erie.
Emphasis of the fmgram is on
offering-educationa and cultural
exchange designed to promote
world understanding. It is adntinistered entirely by Rotary volunteers
around the world, wbilcb makes it
less costly to participale.
The cost to participating students is a $450 administration fee,
plus the air fare, plus spending

briefs~.. . . ._____..

Deputies probe two accidents
;,_____ Weather_...;...._ __

•

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Soulh-Central Ohio
Today ... Becoming mostly
cloudy. A 30 percent chance of a
rain shower during the late morning and afternoon. High ill the mid
_-, 40s. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph
becoming WCSL
Tonigbt...Mostly cloudy. A 40
percent chance of ligbt snow late.
Low in the lpwer 30s. Northwest
winds 5 to 1S mph.
. Thursday... Mostly cloudy with a

30. percent chance of light
SDOW;,,Mainly during the morning.
Colder with a high in the mid 30s.
Extended rorecast
Frlday: .. A chan~e of s~ow.
Lows 15Io 25. Highs m the 30s.
Saturday ... A chance of snow .
Lows 15 to 25. Highs in the 30s.
· Sunday ... A cbance of snow
north .. :A chance of rain or snow
south. Lows 20 to 25. Highs 35 to
45 .

--Area DeathsRuth Bradford
Ruth Bradford, 70, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1995, at ber borne.
Born March 7, 1924, in Racine, daugbu;r of the late Emil Franklin and
Bessie Mae Mosier Johnson, she was a homemaker and member of the
Reorganized Chui'ch ofJesus Cbrist of Later Day Saints.
.
She is survived by her husband, Clarence A. Bradford; two daughters
and sons-in-law, Terry and Leon Jordan of Pataskala and Brenda and Kel
Weller of Stone Mountain, Ga.; four grandchildren and several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
·
She was preceded In death by a brother, Ralpb Johnson.
Services will he 11 am. Saturday at the Reorganized Church of Jesus ·
Christ of Later Day Saints on Portland Road witb the Elder David Mingus
offiCiating. Burial wiU follow in Bald Knob Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday, 7-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle-

port.

'

A Pomeroy w0111an was arrested Tuesday charged with stealing
credit cards on Saturday, according to the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
·
·
Becky Davidson Reed, age unreported, allegedly stole two credit
cards and used them at businesses in the Grand Central Mall near
ParkersbJirg, W.Va., said Prosecuting ~nom~y John_R. Le·ntes: .
Sbe is being held in the Ross County Jail pending a l~eanng 10
Meigs County Court, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Local officials are working in cooperation with Wes11 Virginia
authorities who will investigate the theft of goods and services purchased with the credit cards, Lentes indicated.
Two local minors were also involved in the incident, l..e1ntes said.

Deputies examine incidents

Meigs EMS _logs 4 calls

__

....

Meigs announcements

Mae Belle Cleland, 78, Racine, died Wednesday, Feb. I, 1995, at Games set ror Saturday
day, 7:30p.m. at the ball. A round
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
·
·
.
. Basketball games between Har- and square dance will be held SatA homemaker and Racine ToWirCierk for 20 years, sbe was 1xxJ1 July risonville and Rutland will be beld urday, 8to 11 p.m. at ~be baii. ·The
13, 1916, in Racine, daughter of the late Edward and Ida Hartley Howell.
Saturday at the Harrisonville Smoky Mountain Drifters will
A member of the Rilcine Baptist Church, she was a charter' member of school beginning at 9 am. Special play.
the Racine Firemans Auxiliary and a dispatcher for the fue department fund raisers wlll be a part of the PERl to meet
and emergency squad.
·
day's games.
Meigs . Chapter 74, Public
Survivors include sons and daughters-in-law, ADen and Eleanor CleEmployee Retirees, Inc:. will meet
land of TllrolltO, Ohio, George and Lena Cleland of Ashley, David and VFW AuxUlary to meet
Thursday, at the Seni·or Citizens
Mary Cleland of CoolviUe, Jobn Cleland of Parkersburg, W.Va., Earl and
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 90S~ Center, Mulberry Heigb.ts.
Jean Cleland of DuPont, Ind., Bruce and 'Patty Cleland of West Palm, Ladies Auxiliary will meet '!burs- Pomeroy; Lunch will be served at
Fla., and Carroll and Hedy Cleiand of Ashland, Ky.; 18 grandchildren and
21 great-graDdcbildren.
.,
continued trom pag•1
Other survivors include a sister, Frances Butcher of West Palm, and a
brother, Edward HoweU Jr. of Fleshing. .
· · ··
The board hosted Chris Murray,
nOted; Saying that be will contact
She was preceded in death by ber husband, Walter Cleland; a daughter,
state coordinator for community
township trustees ancl other local
Mary Sloter; sisters, Greta Simpson and Florence McKay, and a brother,
non-residential p,rograms in the · officials to see if they· need workGlenard Howell.
Bureau of Community Services,
ers.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home In
wbo
spoke
on
the
necessity
of
proThe board approved Gerard
Pomeroy with the Rev. Aaron Young officiating. Burial will follow in
grams
like
electronically
monitored
applying
for a $38,000 grant to
Letart Falls Cemetery.
·
bouse
arrest
to
reduce
the
burden
help
fund
program
activities.
Friends may call Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
· on prisons and jails.
Tbe goal this year is to get 30
· "This is the kind of program that people into the program, be said.
Board members present includcommunity corrections is all
ed Iris Payne; Greta Riffle, victims
about," be said.
New sentencing guidelines advocate; Julia Houdlllsbelt-TbornLuther R. White, 87, 801 Independence Ave., Akron, formerly of Gal- . which will make counties responsi- ton, economic development officer;
lia County, died Thursday, Jan. 26, 1995 in the Akron City Hospital.
ble for housing third- and fourth- 'Pomeroy Police Cbief Gerald
Born SepL 7, 1907 in Gallia County, son of tbe late L~lle and Benba
degree felons will further crowd Rought; Commissioner Janet
Howard Tackett; attomey I. earson
HQUCk }VJ!ite, be ~liS f!!tiredfrom Fallf ,Stam,Ping &amp; Webelding C,o.d, ~n"
I~Wjaile'~heg:~Pg.l~":~e progi-ams Cll!w;·Prosecuting
Atiomcr, John
Survivmg are hiS wife, Mary Sunsen Wb1te, whom marne .....,c. 6,
It
Lentes;
Judge
Patrick
0 Brien;
19S2 in Akron; a daughter, Anna (Mike) White of ~n; two sons, Frank
on line ... to handle these people,"
Judge
Fred
W.
Crow
Ill;
Sheriff
(Tara) White of Washingk/n, and John (Patty) Wb1te of Mogadore; mne
be added.
James
M.
Soulsby;
Commissioner
.gralldcbildren; and a sister, Gladys Martin of Mounts, 111.
Gerard spoke on some of the
Fred Hoffman, and Ph iUp McKinHe was also preceded in death by a sister, Irene W~ter.
.
local programs goals.
.
ley,
adult probation oftilcer.
"We want a program that
Graveside services will be conducted at the conv1ence of the fanuly,
with burial in the White Cemetery, Hall'ison Township, Gallia County.
works," said Gerard
. Anan ements are by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
A lot of people don't e.~en
'
g
,
know lbat we have a program, be
DOWNING CtlllDS

Loc;aJ...

Luther R. White

M

.
.
Human
service.~ntlnuedtroinp•g• 1
The Daily Sentmel ·
(USPS 213·960)

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Friday, Ill Cllurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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direct Yiolation of the. security
agreement signed by the employees
before they were given access to
the computer system," he added.
CWA membership in the DHS
bas been in effect for about 10
years . Today's action is the first
sttike since DHS employees joined
the ~nion.
.
.
lronicall;t, _the strike began on
the 1Oth anmversar_y of a labor

milestone in Gallla County. Local
1316 of the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal
Employees, currently represenung
23 employees of the city of Gallipolis, was officially chartered .on
Feb. I, 1985, according to local .
AFSCME spokesman Floyd
· Wright.

MULLIN MUSSER
INSUUN4:E

. The Middle(.Xll:t·Po~eroy Club
1s currently lakin~ apphcan~s for
students who are mterested m participaling in the p~gram . ContactS
are to be made wtth the local club
exchange chairman who is Linda
Brickles.
Last rear Adam Sheets spent 10
months m Italy as one of the l.ocal
outbound students. During that
same lime .period Carlos Gustavo
Alfaro Briceno of Costa !Uca. was
here and attended Me1gs Hlgb
School. While ~ere be lived with
Jim and Jennifer Sbects, Tom and
Linda Brickles, and Doug and
Darla StaaiS.
this year the district bas 18 students who will be outbound in
August. None are from Meigs, but
two are from Athens. ·Sheets
encouraged local participation noting that there is available a promotiona! video on the program whlcb
can be shown.to groups or schools.

these new water lines and that puts the viUage water offiCe.
more pressure on old lines that
The village will not make
goes into their borne."
money off this insurance, she
A water line break, such as the added. All money gathered will go
one at Eblin's home, could occur at toward any leaks that occur during
·
any line in the village, said Sandy · the year. ·
"It bas never made any money.
Smith, village clerlcltreasurer.·
· In the last month, an elderly vii- _ I( a lot of people took II out there
!age couple bad to pay-$361 just would be money for extra re~.~·­
for. tbe water when 30,000 gallons , Smith said. "Usnally it never even
of water leaked from the line, covers what we lose. It usually just
Smith said.
gets used up on leaks."
This couple's water bill would
Residents can get leak insurance
have been limited to the $17 mini- any time during the year, but the
mWII since on average they use less policy begins in March, she added.
than the average monthly requireIn other water-related news,
ment, she said. The self-insured Smith said the village seems to
plan costs $24 a year and covers up have solved the, village leak probto $300 'in water loss throughout lem.
the year.
During the last month, a major
Tbe leak insurance will cover leak beneath Salem Sneet was
more than one break in one year, found and dally usage dropped
under the $300 limit Repair cos.ts from 63,000 gallons a day to
are not included in this insuillnce, 35,700 gallons a day.
Smith added. For details, contact

· Woman arrested on theft chargf~

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department investigated
three incidents reported Tuesday.
.
.
David Grindstaff, Racine, reported Tuesday mommg hiS garage
door bad been tamfM:!ed with. N'othing was reported missing.
Terry Sturgeon, Dutchtown Jc!ill. ~incrs~ille, reported Tuesday
morning that a vehicle bad dr1ven 1010 b1~ yard and :;omeone
entered his garage. Nothing was reported nussmg.
Tim Frazier, Dover, Del., reported a bouse be owns on Wel~­
town Hill, Minersville, was damaged over the weekend. It was d1s.covered Tuesday that someone bad damaged the door, a ceiling fan
and smashed several flower pots containing din on the floor.

mOney needed. The host club provides $50 a montb and the housing
and food is provided by the host
Rotary famUies.
.
As outbound chamnan, Sheets
will be responsible for students in
the district who ~ going out of l.be
country. Her dunes will be coord1nanng and selecting placement of
students.
·
The program is for high school
aged students, grades 10 through.'
12, ages IS to 18, who rank in the
top one-third of their classes .
As a pan of her chairmanship,
Sheets will assist with six weekend
functions during the year for all
students wbo are inbound and outbound. The next one will be held
on Feb. 11 at Geneva Hills for all
the students who wiD be outbound
in August. At that lime the studentS
will be assigned the country where
they will live with Rotary families
and attend school for about II
months.

Rutiand... eontinued rrom p•g•1

No injuries were reported in two accidents investigatetl Tuesday
by depolies of the Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby .
The flfSt accident occurred at8:20 a.m. at Southern Hii!b School,
Soulsby said. Steve Edwards, Racine, was turning into lite parking
lot and struck a parked vehicle. Edwards' 1978 Chevrolet truck ~d
the parlced 1985 Chevrolet sustained moderate damage, accordmg
to the report.
.
The second accident occurred on state Route 338 abou l one nule
weM. of !b£ Ritcl!ie Bri!!S!l. Keyin Mel angh!i!l, Racine; was w~­
bound and slf\lck a deer that~ inlQ_the path of the 1991 Chevrolet
truck, owned by Richards Sand and Gravel. ·

Mae Belle Cleland

Units of the Meigs County
4:16 p.m.,' volunteer fire departEmergency Medical Service logged ·ment and squad to E. Main Street,
·four calls for assistance Tuesday.' auto fire, John Will owner, no
Units responding included:
injuries.
.
MIDDLEPORT
'
' RACINE
12 :45 a.m., Neece Road,
I :48 a.m., Fourth and Elm
Gertrude·Neece, Veterans Memori- streets, Ruth Bradford, dead upon
al Hospital.
.
arrival.
,
POMERQY
Transfer units handled two mns.
· 4 p.m-., Pomeroy .Fire Station,
Ira Vancooney, VMH;
12:15 pm. with the business m~t­
ing to be held at I p.m. Sbenff
James Soulsby will talk on borne
safety and protection. Donation for
lunch. All retirees of villages,
count)' and stare invited to join the
group.
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees
wiD meet Thursday, 6:30pm. at the
Rutland Fire Station Public invited.
'Grange meetings sel
Star Grange 778 and Junior
Grange 878 will meet Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the Grallge ball, located on County Road I near Salem
Center. Potluck refreshments.
Have you ever found yourself ...
- wondering why you have problems in a
relationship?
- feeling misunderstood or unappreciated?
- having trouble making or sustaining
friendships?
-not caring for the person you've become?
YOU ARE NOT ALONE!

The help you need in add~essing these very real
problems llll!Y be found in a special, relationship-based
therapy group now being started _by Holzer Clinic
psychologist Richard Boone, Ph.D. He is available for
consultation about his·gr9up. Membership will be
. limited, so don't delay calling to schedule a free,
personal consultation. All inquiries are treated with
the utmost dignity and confidentiality of the individual.
FREE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTATION IS
AVAILABLE TODETERMINEJF6ROUP THERAPY IS
FOR YOU

Hospital .riews· .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
· Tuesday admissions - R,&lt;ibert
Roush, Letart~ W.Va .; Brenda
Darst, Pomeroy; Ira VanCooney,
Pomeroy
•
Tuesday discharges - Dorothy
ilartenbach, Middleport; Mary
Darst, Middlepon
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
· ]IIIL Jt dwbuga - Kyle Dray,
Alice Gardner, Mrs. Ricky Davls
and son, Mary Brown, Paulene
Smith and Brian Payne.
J•n. Jl blrlhl • Mr. and Mn.
Howard Crawford, a 1011, of Gallipolis Perry, W.Va. and Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Smith, a daughter, of
Pomeroy.

I

j

The Dally sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rick Boone, Ph.D.
Psychologist .

HOLZER CLINIC
Department of Psychology
90 Jackson j'ike
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-5379

�Pomeroy-Middleport• Ohiow

SpOrts

The Daily Sentinel
.

Wednnday,

Page o4
1,1895

er,

dominating tf

as was tbe case in the

old Soutbe1m Valley Atbletlc Cooference. On any given night auy
team can beat any otber team
regardless of record. Miller poved
tbe point Tuesday aud Trimble
gave Soutbem a game rigbt to tbe

wire.
Remini&amp;ocent of Jack Duffy, tbe
original ":Soutbern Soutbpaw,"
1980 all-district player of tbe year,
Mason Fisher, tbe newest version
with tbe same name tag, rose to tbe
· oc'ca'slon Tuesday night. Fisher

tossed in 8-12 f~eld soaJs plus four
free tbrows for a game-blgh 20
points and also grabbed 11
rebounds. Always a IYW!silleot'double figure scorer, FISher bas been a
key factor In Soutbem's sueeess
Ibis season.
Ryan Williams bad anotber
good floor game, but was bcld
below bis average witb 13 points,
seven rebounds aud three steals.
I obn Harmon bad 12 points aud
three steals, while soybomore
I amie Evans bad one o bis best
varsity outings, grabbinf several
key rebounds and netting 1 points,
Trimble was led by Adam
Irwin's 11 points aud Zac:b Miller's
10.
.
The beginning of tbe game gave
tbe lmpressloo lbat It was going to
be one of tbose nigbts. Soutbern
fell behind early aud dipped to a
16-15· tally at tbe end of tbe first
period. Finally, Soutbem came to
life in tbe seconct canto, picking.up
tbe intensity with full court pressure and a more upbeat offensive
tempo. Tbe 22-12 spurt In tbe
frame gave Soutbem a 37-28 balftime advantage.
In tbe tbird frame, sloppy play

MAKING ms WAY to tb lane while encountering defensive
reailtllnee from an unldentlfted NelsonYUie-York player is Melp
guard Benny EwiDL 'Oih01e 14-polnt effort In Tuesday night's Ohio
Dlvillon game at lluchtel helped the Marauden win 57-53. (Dave
Harris photo)

Clinton's pressure may spur
settlement to baseball strike
By BEN WALKER . · .
· WASHINGTON (AP) - The
' call came from Air Force One, and
the point was clear: The Presidenf
wants action.
:Today, only.' two weeks before
· tbe start of spring training, baseball
players aud owners resume talks
for tbe first time in 40 days.
They are meeting at tbe urging
of President Clinton, wbo set a
deadline' of Feb . 6 for making
progress toward setlliug tbe sixmonth strike. Just to make sure tbe
sides are ready to bargain, be bad
·bis point man check in Tuesday
from tbe presidential plaue on a
lligbt to Boston.
"lie says be'·s watching Ibis
closely aud trying to dl:termine if
we can come toge~r wi'!!out.~
using some of bis power, Michigan Rep. John Conyers Jr. said
after talking to deputy White
House counsel Bruce Liodsay.
:At the time Lindsay called,
Cecil Fielder, Alan Trammell aud
Kirlc Gibson .of tbe Dettoit Tisers

happened to be in Conyers' offiCC
on Capitol Hill.

wIll tbe norm for botb I ides 1$ Martin tbree eacb), 25 turnonvers
Soulbem sbuftlcd betweeu a 10.14 aud cisbt fouls. Trimble bad 36
point lead. At tbc cod d tbc frame, ~bounds (Irwin nine, Angle seven)
SHS led S141. ·
14 steals, 23 turnovers and 20
Early In tbe fourtb period, fouls.
.
Soulbem went up by JS po1J1U, but
Soutbem will play Alexauder
two missed Joals aud Increased Friday at Albany.
pressure by Trimble beaan to
Reserve notes: Silutbern won
cbauge tbc tide. Soutberu bad many tbe reserve game 54-28 led by Billy
chances to blow tbc T&lt;10cata away, Sheppard's 14 and eigbt•poiot
but dido'taet 111e job done.
effons by Adam Roush aud Greg
Twice aftl:r Soutbcm bad tided McKinney. S. Snyder bad elgbt for
to be tbc SUR: winner, Trimble CUI Trimble.
tbc lead to niDc points, tbcu Healh
Armbruster busted a lbree pointer
TRIMBLE
wltb 3S seconds left to cut tbe
(16-1~13-18=59)
score to 59-65.
Zack Miller 3·1 ~0·9, Mike
Trimble continued to foul to McClellalld 3-0-0=6, Jopey Wrigbt
keep tbe clock from ruaalng, but 3-0-0=6, Natban Angle 3-0-0=6,
going down ·tbe stretch Williams Adam Irwin S-0-1=11, Heatb Armhit a couple key free tbrows, Flsber txuater 2-1-1=8, Jeremy Funk' 3-0was perfect in tbe clutch at tbc liDe ().(i, Made Pauon 2..()..1•5, Dennis
and 'ryson Buckley drained tbe Osborne 1-0-0=2. Totals: 26·
final cbarity toss for tbe 70-59 2317=5!1
tally.
SCIUtbern bit 20-43 from the
Southern
f.eld for 46.5 percent, 5-13 tbrees
(15-22-14-19=70)
and was 14-27 at tbe IIDe. Trimble
Jeremy Hill 0·2' 2•8. Ryan ·
hit 25-58 for 43 perrent. 2-9 tbrees William•4-l-2=13, Jamie Evaus 4and was 3-7 at tbe line.
1-0=11, Jay McKelvey 1-0-0=2,
Soutbem bad only 26 rebounds Mason Fisher 8~20. Jobn Har(Flsber 11. Williams seven), 13. mon 346=12, Tyson Buckley 0..()..
sleals (Harmon four, Williams and 1=1. Totllls: 20-4-141l7=70

·Alexander broke open a four-

point game with an 18-10 outburst
in the tbird quarter to defeat league

foe Soutbem 59-43 Monday nigbt
in· girls' bigb school basketball
action in RaCine, according to a
rej)on submitted after deadline
. Tuesday.
:The win, combined witb TriJ!Ible's upset of Federal Hocking
Monday, moved Alexander back
ink&gt; a tie with Federal Hocking for
tbe TVC top spot while Eastern
moves into second and Soutbern

.r:vc boys•

·

c~ge standings

Isiuu

Ohio Dlvblon
Dlv. Overall

.

lY L lY L

Belpre ...................... c7. W~llston~···"'"'""'' "6
MEIGS .................. ...4
Vibton County.:......
Nejsooville- YOrlc ......2

:J '

2
4
6
8
8

:
Hocking Division
SOUTHERN ............9 2
Federal Hocking.: .....? 2
Mlllcr........................6 4
Ale~ander .................5 4
EAS'IERN................ 3 6
·T$1ble .....................2 ~

&amp;

9 ~
8 7
5 8
3 12
3 11

10
9
6

5
4
7

5 8
4 9
2 11

FuWeot

Jil

New Yort ............ll
.6fi7
· -....................16 26 .311

.)10

6.S
11.5
19.5

. Mlaml ..................14 21 .333
"''""'"""'Ia .........12 31 .279
ll 29 .21s

20.S
23
22-'

w....,........ . . . .

......... - .......19 l4
26
Derrolt..:............ l4 26

Mllinubo ............. l1

_._._._

.442
.39S
.3.50

........

.

Oblo Athletic Caeronnoo

:rI
UIIIIL .....................33

10

L. fd.

Jil

SUAiltolllo ......... .26

14 .6SO

S.S
·6
13.5
16

MldoQhlo Coarereace

.767

-loo .............. ,..26 IS .634
Doo- ..................19 l3 .4S2

................ .. 34
_ , .................... .29

.390
.231

II .72!1
LA. I.Uin ........... .26 14 ,6jO

3.5
6J

~ .......... .24 II
....,_ ................ .22 19

.S11

9.l

.537
.300
.IS9

II
20.s
71.5

Tuaday'oac:ora
Now York 90, Ooldoa S11tel1
CUtloiU 91, W....,....D II

· Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Atroa Cem.-Haww IS, Akron Buchtel

~U17.P~IIoiOS

Atma Ellet 93, Atraa E&amp;mnort 51 .
Atroa o.fiekl16, Atroo Fireltone- 63

l!wllou16, 1leav•74 ·
Ql1cqo 119, LA. LWn liS
Saa o\IIIODlo !17, s......... 96

a..tl".r~: rlOn:.

Alnl• N. ll, AbvD E. ss
AliDI S4, Un Cadi. &lt;46

Aurora 90, Qe.IDdepe!ldellce 70

·

AuttlaiDWD·Ridl 59", Polond l7
Bodpr 96, BiiiOtllild 11

Local 6.
lko..m..t 66,1'111rmo,. S3
Bea.jamla Loaaa 11, Waynufie.ldBeiYII' Local 72 1 Iucke)"

- • N e w - y 7::J1Lp.m.

WllllblaaJ&lt;outl'hllodelphl• Hop.m.
Pecnoh .. Mluol, 7:30p.m.

Ooldo11Sbla11Ailall10,7:30p.m '
a.EVEI..AN[J IIJ:Dcll.-. 7:30p.m.
EMU~~• MID"

.... I p:m.

Ilea.,. a Utab, 9 p.m.
LA. Laten It Pboebil:, 9 p.m.
Saa AolloDlo 11Pooolud,10 p.m.

.

44

Thundoo1'•aam01· ·

a.EVEI..AND .. Detroit, 7:30p.m.

Oolbeii7S
.
Berlla Ceater We.tctD Re.&amp;erve ,47 ,
W-loo41
.
a..Jey 42, Col. Aood•my 35
Blufftoa 63, Cory-bwiOD •1

Briltol56 Middlefield C~lllal :53
BnaiiiWki 75, t.or.in Southview 70
Bucll:eye Trail II, Meadowbrook 13

((JJ')

Clmbridae 77 , B~rDC~ville SS
.Cioll&lt;ld 67, U.llalld 62 ((JJ')
C..y 7:5, Arcadia :54
Ceol«touq 17, N....,k CaUl . 11 .
CID. Eldw 66, Cia. """"'" Maiou 6o1

_ , . 11 OOIIDdo.l p.m.
Utah Ill HoUitOD, 8:30 p.m.
QllcqooiS-o,IO:JOp.m. ,

M~ormen's

(~. Woodwri 79, Day. PoltaloD 57

college scores
Eut
- · Collcoe 14, PilllbiOih 69
Clalolw 19, N_.75
Co.-lcuti2,Miani S7
lllaiD071, Dartmouth 60
New lfan1oohite73, "'""d 6ol
Rider 71, frairld&amp;h Dictialoa 66
Sl l'rucll, N.Y. I7, Yale'J'I

South
AJcua St. 92, Touploo M
Old Domlolou 69, Boot Carolina 66

CloymoD161, Com&gt;Uioa 60 ((JJ')
· Clayloil N-•73, Troy SS
Cle. Calha lie 67,1!1yria Cllh. Sl
Clo. CoiUnwood 61, CJe.. Kennedy 6:5
Cle. Boo&lt; Todo S5, Clo. Eool S4
· C1e. oteavtUe 79, Cle. Welt Tech 64
-Cle. Uncoln·WeC 77, Cle. Ad.lma 60
• Cle. Soulh 64. Cle. Rhodot 50

Cle. Ualvenlty Sc:bool ~; Cluudoa
NDICL 31
ct- Pork 70, Gil too Northmor 40
Col. lleecb=R 74, Col. Mifflin Si
Col. Braailbaveu 62, Col. Centenlal
45
.
Col. But ~. Col. Lladeo·McK.loley

Mkiweot

41

&amp;.-y73,1lrW5S
IWiao 99, Colo!ado 11
l'llrduo16,1Ddlau 66

69

W .Va.47

RidunoDd.Htl. 64, Coluntlia S5
Rldaewood 73,l..,eU· Sclo 59
River View 70 , W. MulliDJ\Im 6&amp;

VII. Cbr. A&lt;od. 19, Cmt·

.

Fairport -

Roe ll: Hill 12. New BoAoa Oleawood

RootJtowu 13, Akron HobiD n
Sbld.yiide $1, Bellaite St. Johu40
' StwerHLi. lOI , GrieldHta. Sl
Sidaey 10, Greenville 74
Southi.Jiatoa 96, Howlllld Cit. S2
Sprina. tatboltc 76, SpriDa. Ncwtbcad·
enS!
Sprirla. Loeal II. M.U.Wo7l
· Sprirla. North 13, Sprlo1- Soulh 6ol
Sprin&amp;~ 76, WI)'DNVille 57
SL Oatnville ~. Mlrti.DJ Fmy 59
SteUbeuville Cath. 51, Toroalo 44

S4, Bunoo B&lt;tbhlrc

Sl:nlbllrl , .., ~

N. 61, Day. ¥1am1 Vol. 19
Tri-VIlley S4, SberidiD 37
Trotwood MadlKlll 76, Plqu.t '56
Twinabwa 61, Beaedk:IJot 64
Uaioal..ocal !2, BridaeP&lt;It 37
Unloatownl.Me 60, LOOiiYille S6
Ual!ed 60, S.U..ville Southern .,:
Upper SciDIO Val. 70, Urto ... 61
V1.11.dalia-Butkt Sl, W. ClftOUIDD. 36
Viaceol Warren 53, C~dwell42
W. Bnmdl 92, Field 90
W. llolmeaS3, Wayroeclale48
W. Uberty Slltm.74 , Rld&amp;emont 46
Wadlworth 11, Btrb«toa74
Wcrea Olampion70, LaBr. 62 ·
Wmrfotd 76, Beallaville 67
Welliniii&lt;&gt;DIO, SpriDa VII. 6S
Welllloa 70, ViDlo11Co. Sl
Weotervllle II. 61, \lppw Arllniii&lt;&gt;D S3
W..WU16, Nauudy 39
Wll!o-11111 66, a.. Luoher'ao E. 62
World llorml 71, ObioJ)oal62
Wanhl .... o Kllbo\RO )7, OTOYO City
68
.
Xealti II, Fairborn 66
You. Oluey 64. Slnllben 51
You. Olrlatlao 67, VICOM)' Olr. 48
You. EM1 156, You. WIIJOI 61
You. Rlyea 72, Caqtbell67
Zai!CI'¥'Uie Rolccranl 58, TRIO or urc
T~.Co1111ty

41

Olnnl 53, NUeo 42
Oraod Rl.,.l1, Onqe 01t. 53
Oraod Val. 71, LedFmollllO
llaml""" ~66, Lopo l!lm s,;
Hnbll4l,
e41
, _ 63, New aoy S1
Jhmloc:t Miller 71, Federal Hoclina

Hillin 66, Ot.Uiioothe ~
- e i i·Loucloa79, Now RleFI 79
Huber Htl. Wa)'le61, CellttiVIlle 56
· JKklo•Milton 61, Lowellville .u
Jetrenoa 57, Alhllklla..,.
Joha Olaoo 60, Philo 46
Ee.~oo17. Willoupby s. 12
Keol: R.ooteYelt 11, R.avc:ana Southeut
60
lidroa 61, Canton Heritq.e 47
ICII1!ond sa, Newbury 36
LmliDi:t 61' MiJjjfii 60
t.u..lew 70. YDIL Uberty 52
LeblD.olii II, Illy. Cil'roU53
Lemon·Monroe U, Trea ton Edee·
wvodll
Uberty Cealflr 71, To!. Waite 60
Uctina Hll. 5.5, OruYille 49
u .. Blllh 17. Allcal!. &lt;46
U1bo11 S1, SellriD~39
I..ilboD B•wr 72, Buckeye Loall64
Lopu 10, O..bire Ri"" V~. S4
Lorahl Cle•vlew 62, Elyria Opeo
Door61
Mld!loa 11, Aabtabula St. Johns 68
Maufield SL Peter' I 60, Col. Ready
40 .

OaU!lll79, S. Wobater 62

Oakwood S&lt;;, Oroeaevlew 55
Oimlled Faill92, StroJ111vl.lle 85 (QT)

Col. Nonhlalld 10, Col. .. S9
Cot. wmw: Rklp 74, c~. Soudl 61 _

Pa\ncnllle Harvey S7, Aahlabula
Edaewood S5
.
Palauvllle Rlvenide 51, Mhtabula

Atland~

N.Y. lllaadm ... l
Pkrida ...... ........ J
TampaBay .... ... 3
Philadelphia .... .. 2
N.Y. Rqcn .... 2
NewJtney .. .... 1
Wuhi aaton .
1

~- ··············
Buffalo ....... ,......
BoaiOn ,.............
Moalrtal ...........
HartlCI"d .... '"' ,.. ,
onawa ..............

1'11.

17

6

20

3
4
4
J
3

6 18 18
S 14 21
4 IS ll
l
6 · II
3 8 1'

0
I
0
I
I

''J 2 00I
0

2J

IS

22
1 IS
6 9

IS

10

3 l 0
2 2 I
I 2 2
0) 2

17

1

6

s 12 12
4 10
9
2 12 2{)

Central PI.,Uk:J.

•

lY L I H fA &amp;!. ·
J)elroiL.,. """'·' 1 I 0 10 2l IJ

l'.uoll

Toronto ............. 3 :2 I
Chicaao ............ 3 3 0

27
7 16
6 20

Dt.tlll................ 2 2 I

5

12

9

WianipeJ .......... I 4· I

3 IS

21

St.Louil ....... .•.. 4 2 0

Pacific
SanJoae ............ 4
Anaheim .....
3
Colpy ....... ,.... , 2
Edmntoo .... .... . 2
Vancouvet .. .
I
Loa Anaele. ... ,.. I

1'la.
l·Oirl\cld Hta. Triully (20) 16~ ........214
2·Cio. Roacr Bacoo 16-0 .................... 171
:1-EIIcll (I) 13·0 ........ ................... ... 16)
4-Copley 14-0 ....... .............. ................ 120
S·A'III l..aU 13·2 .... ........................... 100
6-CIDIOoCerir.. Cath. 13·1 .. ·......... ......... 89

II

IH..t"on
I o
8
3 0 6
2 I 5
4 0 4
3 I
3
4 I
3

15

·,

14 •, ·.
16
::

14
16
IS
15
10
16

10
22
IS
23
ll
22

•,
o•

.,

.,

Tuesday's scores

-.

Quct« S, Pbil•dclphJa 2
New Jmey 2. Buffalo I
Bay 4, Montrea l I
N.Y. illinden ~.Florida I
St. Lwi' 7, Anaheim 2

.Tifll)ll

7-Millmbw-a W. Holna (1) 13-1 ....... 12

1-01-lll!ld W. G""'ia14· 1.............61
9-Bc:rley l+l,,.,.,,,.,,.,,,..,, m...... ..,,,=.51 ··I().U . . ila!h 12·1 ................... ............. lf;

· .-

Tonight's R•m .. ··

·

·.

N.Y. R.aogeta at Pilll;bur&amp;n. 7·JO p.m
Hartford at Ottaw11, 7: JO p.m.
Aailtlti m at Dallu. 1:30 p.m
Detroit a! Calgary, 9:30 p.m.
.
Chlcaao at F..dmonton, 9:30 8 .m.
Ta;onto at Vfi.Pcuuver, 10:3 p.m.

Otl.n ret:.....,. ll ar mare pah.ta1
II (tie).OAWPOUS OALUA ACADE·

MY, W.UW RlverVicw 19. ll·Madiaoa
· 17. !+Dover 15. 15-Ca.nfield 12.

Division Ill

7 17

4 0

WESTERN CONFERENCE

DM•Ionll '

-

2 I

Nc:.-thtlll Dhllktn
Piltlb.,.ah .... .....
0
10

Iraa

:zs

Dl•blun

lY L I U I'A &amp;!.

l'.uoll

Clllh. 20. 16-Cin. Mother or Mercy I .5'.

Cln. ADdenoo !H, Cln. Taft ;M:__
'
··- Cl~ .DOOr Pork S3, &lt;:iii. lurliao llill 37
Cin. IWrilon 60, Cia. Nonhwal SS
Cin. Huahea49, Cia. WaloutHilla38
Cia. Mo:Ni&lt;nolaa71, Cin. Sdou S4
Cl n. ),iercy 60, Cl 11 ~ Mo~nl Notre
Dame S7
·
Cia. Prtpcc~ou S4, Una Sr. 41
Cill.. Read.IIIJ S~ , Cin. FiDDt)'tOWII 38
Cin. Roa« Bacoo ~6. Hamiltoo Badin
17.
Cia. St Uraula 51, Cia. Purcell M.taa
3S
Cin. Taylor S4, M.iemolrt 42
Cia. Ursul\oe 56, Cia. McAuley 49
Cia. Wyaninl 47, Madelra 39
Cle. Catholic6S, Beachwood" 33
Cle. ColliawoJ.d 60, Cle. Keuedy 41
Clc. l!ut To&lt;ll 41, Cle. l!ut ~

Morpn 13, Crt~~~bYIII• 61
Nllloul Trail 74, Arcall.wn 63
Newtoa FallJ 69, Hublwd 64

EASTERN CONFERENCE

OdMn rec*•laa 11 • ,..... pulat.r
11 -Rod;y RIVIIII" MaJaifical. 27. 12 (tie)Eudw Norlh, W'"' Chcatct Utool (I)
21. 14 (Ue)-Cio. Wstern Hilla, Tol. «;eat.

"Chillicothe 34, Hilliard 33

Mlltoa-Unloall. Day. Northridp 64
Monroe. Mich . 81, Tol. Bowlher 75
Moreaci, Mic:b. 61, Bveqreen 58

NHL standings

I·Pickeri.,..D (17) 14-l ................... c.20S
l·YOO. Boaol-(1) IS-0................. .162
3·11oy1Dn Own.·lul . 17-0................... ISI
4-Wooattw 14-0 ............ ....................... 132
' S·B,.•or&lt;:reel&lt; (I) IS ~ ..................o.... ll3
6-Columb111 Brookblvea 15-0 ..............92
7..,Cuto1MeKialey 14-1 ......·............... ;67
I·Barber1oa (I) 1.. 1 ......... .... ... , ......... 41
Lakewood (I)J$-0 ............................. 41
l~Tol. SL Urlu1all · l .......................... 30

Brooklya4S.Eiyria()pca
31
Cardioatoa 41, Crallille 3 (OT)

• Med.laa 2, Akron ctw. 0, (or(eit
Medina lfjJhlaftd 69, Bueil:ye 3S Mdp H , Heltonville-York .53
Mldclltlowa Fonwid;: 1-4, Miamiabura
13
Mlllcnpcrt 47, Uberty Union ol6

Hockey

Dln•lon I

'!Wp. &lt;46
B..,_oa S6, Atroa Keamure 41
B•llbrook SO, O.j.'~oo 4S
Bellewe 611, Shelby 40~

Mc:CoD.&amp;9, FollDrl.aSt. WendcliD 34
Mcdlaolclbura II, Triod 69

OdMn renk"'a ll or rnu... polnD1

J l·fJyeu:eville 19.

How a atllC panel of aport1 wrlten and

Alnoa St.V.Sa.M 71, Alnoo N. lS
A'm nda -C learcreet 10 , llamlltoo

a.... uoloia 3f. Flab«

4.Jacbon Cenltf" (I) 14·0 .....,............. 140

S-EaaiCaorou (I) 15·0....................... Ill
6-0noville 14- 1..... ...... ........................ 100
7-Mc:Dooald 13- 1 .................................11
I·Loraio Cat.h. 14.1................... ,.......... .66
9-Bttl in Jliland 14-3 ....... .......... ...... ...... 14
10-Gat" MH!J Gilmour I }..2 ................ 23

bro.dCIIIen ratea Ohio IUaJl IChool lirll
butctt.SI teasm io lhe fowth weekly rea·
ul ..,.e.oa 1994-95 poll ror The Auoci ·
ated Preu, by Ohio Hiah ·Scbool AthJetic
A11oclatloo divialooa, with woo-lo't
record throu&amp;h lame&amp; of l•n. 19 (fint ·
. pt.ee votee In pucothelct):

l'.uoll

1'la.

1 - Doo~ll• (17) IS~ ..................... 209
2·New RltJ:01 (2) 15·0 ..,...... ,............. 115
).S. Olwlaton SE (I) 15·1 ................ 150

Ohio H.S. girls' poll

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Mly!leld SI, Wltl:llll• ~l
MlyoYille 48, N.., l.eliulll&lt;&gt;• 37

Dl•llloo IV

I&amp;ati.

((JJ')

38

Orr\lille 63, CautoD s. 43

Col. IDdtP.CDdetlte 73, Col . Eutmoor

!52, NOUDt Vcr·

D00&lt;46

Ollrncm 65, Hudlon Wa.tem Reserve -

5I

aww Cllb. 50

Thom~~"Worthiaaton

Odacn rt«ftt.., 11 or • • • polnt11
II (tle)·Lore City Buctt: ye Tnlt ,
ZHetvlll"" W. Muddaaum 15 . 13·
WauMOal l.

Sprin1- Northweatcm •1 . Grlham 32
Sylvuia Southview 61, Hollaad
Sprlaa. !0
Tiffia Colwnbia.ll 46, Mlrioa lllrdiDJ
.lS
Tulcanww Val. 52, Saady Val. 41
'1\111., 31, Aboa Maochater )4
U11DCt Arlia,toD 53, WellcrVille N. Sl
VAhey View SS, Twia ValleyS. JJ
Vlclory 0... 66, Youoptowll Olr. 33
W. a-terl.atola 74, Middlee:owa 43
W. Holtnol 56. Colhocloa 22
WllhlniJI.on C.H. 49 , Bia Wal nut 3~
We.tuvllle S. 54, Dublin 52
WCIItfali .S1, PiUtoa 46
Whedcnbura60 . Mlnford S9
W001tcr66 , MuaLIIoa 47
Worthiaatoa Or. SS, Col. School (CI"
Girla S3
You. Eat 49 , You . Wll,oa40
ZaDMville 62, M•letta •2 ·
Zaaeavllle Roucran' 39, Loaao 29

6S

-s•

IO..WeiiiYUie 13-1 .........•............... ~....... 33

32

&lt;oo;~i..nlde 70, FUrb.W Sl

l'ayea.l2, Tot Emallud 801(11. 4S
F1obw Cllll. S3, B.,. Uoloo 49
Prutllo9S,OifordT-aodl75
frutUII lib. 10, W. :Jdlmo1 6S
l'rooll« 19, Hocolbol Rl ... 69
Oalupollo 49, AlhcDt 41 .
Gnw~y9S, Hewcomntowa 4S

Non-marereace adlon
Ceolnl St 61,Mouut Sl J.... 42
No.. Dame (OII)o) 72, Ob«lio S2

73

w

.... fairfield
. Ulfoo 66, Caul Winchelter

-.eosa.IOO,RIOORANDE76
1

R...S.villell.I3, Aio..-~6

Re¥WR 7d, ao...
60
Rlchmoad Bdl1oa J:J, Oak mea,

NictoolooS5
Pay. Ooriollall73, C.Uale 64
o()ay. Du-. 100, Day. BelmuDI74
Illy. Oltwood 56, Oreeneview 5S
Del•••• Chr . 61 , Mouat Veruoa
Aood. 31
DoWI' 64, Steubeavi.lle S1
Dublia 5ol. Wett«Yille S. SO
E.PIIeatioe61,......,..51
- N . I 91 Ciwdoo 63

Sl

9 .191

Ouldoa s~~~o ..........12 21
LA. Cll- ........... 7 37

Codlnllle 67, Tlllloo 63
Findlay 76, lllalaae 31
Mouat Venoa N~:Ureae 6&lt;4, Urbau

22.5

-

El!ri_a61,c~e.

Jlaldwiii.Wallace 13, 11lnomS7
Capl1al79, Oblo 11onbcn S3
lolowll Ullion 64, 1o1&gt;11 C•ro1160
-liD-73,-.10
0Uorbelo72, Heldd""' 61

Radoe Soulllonl 70, Trimble S9
Raveuwoocl, W . Ya. S6 , 1klpre 52

Orly. Chl!mlntdo..Julierme 62, Cia. Mc-

Oon.-14, Wl-169
Ohio Wtaleyu 10, Wllmlapa69
no,_ Mare94, c - Bible 79

Ohio' women's
college scores

Cu-

woocl56

Noa-coafereiHlO ac:tl011

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Dallal ..................... l6 2!1
- -............. .10 32

65

CedomUe 9S, Tlllbo Sl

l

1
I
JO
Iu

_
-M ...

Ohio men's .
college scores
Mld-oblo eoar.........

.s

l'wTy 51, ~I Val . 41
Porurnoudll73, SymrnroVII. 36

w.

!1-Mlll&lt;nl Rid .. 14-L ..................... .... 36

l'orTytbw16l, BowiiDI 0rtoa 31
5S, t...itville AqW.. &lt;46
llidlnmld DllleS£52. Adeaa 41
Rldaedale 49, N. Uolon 36
Rl_,.S3 , - - • &lt; 4 6
Roaotord40. Moumoe ll
S. CCilt'll 56, Alblu.d en.tview S3
Shaker Hta.. 44, BrturmDI 21
Sborwood falnolew 110. l'aWdllla 42
SPJrfl Hiahlmd 35, Coloael Cnwfwd

-lea 5 9 . - W. Sl

~16.0eava26

Corloy Qaolyjn 60, -'-"'~' 4S
C\J)'Ibop Hta. 71, CJo. l..uttl~na

IUO OIIANDI! IS. - - 5 1. 11

C.OihiCIItrloiOAo ................27 16 .621
CI.I!VI!LAND .......26 16 .619
lodlua ...................24 17 .SIS
Cllkato........,....... .ll 21 .s 12
-

CoL w.. 9l, C o l - - 51
Col. Wlltlood 6S, o..._,o
a . - 61, Cellao 5S
Columhl~aa
61 , Columbian
Cni&lt;Y .... 65
~an... so, CooU..alal39

BolleSt 17, Ca!Po~L061

t tf4
14

. New Ieney .......... 11 l9

seconds left gave tbe Buckeyes a on a Jason Gail bucket. At Ibis out and took It to lhem."
30-27 lead at tbe balf.
point tbe Marauders for tbe second
Meigs will bqst Wellston - tbe
Nelsonville inallascd tbe lead to game in a row got Ice cold at 1be Golden Rockets were 70-51 win34-27 wben Waite hit a bucket at line. Meigs was only able to coo- o~ over Vinton County Tuesday
tbc 6:50 mark of tbe third period. nect on two for five free tbrows night - on Friday. On Saturday
That lead was tbe biggest of tbe aud tbe Buckeyes cut it to a two tbe Marauders will play host to .
nigbt for tbe Buckeyes.
point game wben Tad Steinbrink Alexander in a make-up contesl
At . tbat point . in tbe game scored witb 4.2 seconds lefl
·
·Reu"e notes: Bradley WhitMarauder roacb Jeff Skiaaer upset
But Ewing iced tbe win wben be latch bit four-three pointers en
witb tbe play of his five starters, connected oo two free lhrows witb route to his game-bigb 21 points,
pulled all five and went to bis just 1.7 secoods left to give Meigs wbile teammate Jllakuma Tyree
bench. Malle Mills, Jerod Holman, tbe 57-54 wiD.
.added 11, In leading Meigs'to au
Ray Russell, Adam Hendrix aud
Abboti paced tbe Marauders In exciting S6-S3 win over Net Nick Haning came off tbe bench scoring wltb 18 points . Ewing sooville.
and gave Meigs two and a balf added 14 and Cass Cleland added
Jerc:my Schultz scored 18 for Nquality
minutes
of
play.
11.
Meigs
bit
21
of 33 froiD tbe line ¥ . Teammate Eric Mircbell added
1
Sklmier's wake-up call to the for 64%. No otber Marauder stalls- 16.
·
-•-•-•starters seemed to do tbe trick, as lies were available.
Meigs fougbl back and took a 38Jason Gail led all scorers witb
MEIGS
37 lead beading Into tbe final peri· 20 for tbc Buckeyes, wbile Waite
(17-10.11-19=57)
Od when Gary Stanley drilled a followed Witb 12 and Thrapp bad
Travis AbbOtt 5-0-8=18, Gary
three-pointer from deep on tbe 11. The Buckeyes hit21 of SO from Stanley 1-2-0=8, Ca.ss Cleland 3rigbtwinl!witb27secondsleft
tbctloorilicludiogoneoffourfrom 0-5=11, Paul Pullins 3-0·2-8,
Benny Ewing scored six straigbt tbree point range for 42%. The Benoy Ewing 4-0-6=14. Toti!ls:
points in a span or two minures on Buckeyes went to tbe line 14 times, ....W.:Z.2l=57
four free tbrows and a bucket -to hitting 10 b 71% and N-Y pulled
increase tbe Meigs lead to S0-41 in 27 rebounds, led ,by Gail's 11.
NELSQNVILLE-YORK
witb 3:1lleft in tbe game. Paul ·
"We gutted out a very ugly
. (9-21-7-16=53)
Pullins bit a shon jumper in tbe win," Marauder coach Jelf Skinner
Ryan Wildman 1-0-0=2, Jeremy
paint witb 2:56left to give Meigs a said after tbe game. It was gut Tbrapp 3-1-2=11, Adam Nolan 1·
seemingly safe S2-411ead. But tbe check time In tbe second half and o.Q
..'t, Tad Steinbrink 1-0-1=3,
Buckeyes were not done.
we responded. Our reserves did an Jason Waite 4-04=12, Jason Gail
The Buckeyes cut tbe Meigs outstanding job in tbird period, aud 9-0-2=20,Jason Wickham 1-0-1=3.
lead to 53-50 witb 46 seconds left lbat woke~ starters up tbey came Totals: 20-J-10=53

. I'lL

Tbursday's games
Ottawa at Bolton, 7:30 p.m
Tan.,a. Bay at N.Y. Ranim. 7:30p.m.
Quebec at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. hlanden B\ Philadelphia , 7:30

l ·Shawood Fairview (12) IS-0 .......... 187
2-SuprcreetO•aw•y (3) 16-0 .. .'...... .162
3-SpriiiJ. Kerr.taa Ridp (2) 15 ·0 .... ....156
4-Bl!U'RE (I) 16-D ........................ 118
S·Ainl• S1. V-St Mory (4) 15-1 ...... li S
6-Do yl111lOWD Chippewa 14-0 ..............98
7-VeraailletiS.0 ...................................91

p.m.

•

Moatreal at Florida, 7:30 r .m.
Bu ffalo at WL'ih i n&amp;~on, 7:30 p.m.
San Joae al Dallu, 1: lO p.m.
St. Louia at Winnipeg, 8:30 ~. m.

I·Middl•fi•ldCardloal16·1 ............ .62

Ea.stern defeats Alexander 83-76

By SCOTJr WOLFE
shots dropped tbe Eagles to a 18-10
Playing, its best team ball of tbe deficit. Bissell sat .out much of tbe
season, Easlem (4-9., 3-6) became frame in foul trouble. Jarvis led tbe
tbe team everyone bad boped for Spartans witb six pointS in tbe fU'St
all season long,. defeating division frame.
•
.
foe and delendlns divisioo cbamplEastern picked up tbe defensive
on Alexan11ler 83-76 (5-7, 5-4) In intensity in tbe second frame, often
Albany Tu11Sday nigbt.
catching AlelWider olf guard. The
The win was tbe ~ad "upset" .defensive intensity carried over to
road win for the Eagles, who ·the offense, wbicb was sparked
defeated 20tb-ranked Wellston a early In tbe frame by senior Jeff
couple w•:eks ago. Tbe win Stetbem. Dr. Jekyll was slowly
avenges a 1:eason ~ning loss to starting to emerge, but for bow ·
G
POINT- AlexanderatEasrern.
' long? Nobody knew!
·E astern senior Charlie Bissell
In addition to tbc much-needed
Stetbem reeled off six straight
scored Ids 1,000tb career point win aud m·omentum builder for . aroond a lone Grubb fteld goal, 1be
during tbe Eagles' 83-711 win Eastern a!: it .approaches the score 20.16. Jarvis drilled a tbree
over Alexander Tuesday night. upcoming l:ournamenl, tbe game pointer, wbicb could have been a
Bissell has been with the vanity bighligbted ·lbe fine career of senior stumbling block for tbe Eagles,
Eagleulnce his f'l:eshman year.
-Cbarlie Bissell, who reached tbe bowever, tbc .Eagles focused on tbe
coveted 1,000-point mark in his task at band and remained
career. Bis~ill, reportedly becomes unscatbed. Then came Bissell.
Bisselllocked boms wltb Alex's
post, draining lw.o straight field
tbird.
former- coa1cb !)ennis Eichinger, goals far a 23-20 tally, !ben after
Jamie Andrews paced tbe Spar- wbo scored 1,400 points and more several tips .o n tbe press Jason
tans witb 22 points and grabbed 19 than 1,300 rebounds, another Sbeets came up witb a big sleal and ·
rebounds for Alexander, wbile record at tbc: school.
dipped off to Bi.ssell for ft!!Otber
Misty Maikins netted 16 and Carrie
Bissell led tbe way witb a stun- score
off tbe break. Sbeels, himself,
McLain bad 10. Joana Manuel led ning 28-poi.ht effort, while junior tben dmined
tbe go-ahead basket as
Soutbern witb IS points. Sammi Eric Hill had a career-high 18 Jarvis missed badly aud Buckley
Sisson grallbed eigbt rebouilds.
'points. I eff Stetbem added 14, got tbe rebound. ·
Alexander lilt 22-59. for 37.3% while Ryan Buckley bad his best r:,- Bissen, Stetbem and Hl11 coolin·
and bit.15-2A at tbe line. Tbe Spar- offensive ga.me wltb 10.
ued to spark tbe Eagle offense,
tans outrebounded Soutbem 46-32,
Alexand.er was led by G:bad while tbe EHS defense badly shook
led by Andrews and Markins. Jarvis' 20 mad Travis Rice's 19.
tbe always well-coached Spartan
Sammi Sisson bad eigbt rebounds
Eastern head cdaeb Tony Deem offense. Alex did not sco~ for a
for Soutbern, while Jonna Manuel took a deep sigb of relief, saying,
and Moore eacb added six.
"What a win I I felt Ibis was a total
Alex bad 13 assists (Rolston ,_ team effort.
Now Appearing at The
five), II sleals, 23 wmovers ~ 14
·:we did a nice job rebounding.
fouls. Southern- bad 1~ ass1sts, I tbink tbe key was tbe f!!j;l tbat we
tbree blocks, 19 turnover5 and 22 J'!Ul fu~ cow~ man-to-mao pn:ssure
fouls
tile entire game. We also opened up
Aiexauder woo the reserve our outside ;game and ran the break
game 36-11. Blair led tbe Spartans whenever we could. Our sbootl!!ll
.
.
witb JS, while Cynibia Cald~ell percentage lias beeu JII'C!lY B.~ all
' bad five for Soutbem.
• seasoo, but ·o.ve we OO!y -sbOOUJg 40
Soutbern will go to Wellston some shots a game. We felt we
today and return home Thursday 10 needed to sboot more and we
bost Eastern.
accanplisbcd tbat tonigbt."
-•-•-•It Is always a challenge to see
Alexander (59)
wbicb Eastern ~ will sbow up.
•
Carrie McLain 3.04=10, Jamie · The first qw111er, it I~ tbe feeAndrews 8-0-6=22, Bobbi Jo Davis b1e Mr. Hycle was remcamated .as
().().~2. Colleen Morgan ·1-0-0=2,
~veral ear.!;f turnovers and unWISC
And! Rolston 3-0-1•7. Misty .. . .
~~;, ~-0.2=16. Totllla: 22-0- •
'~

Alexander girls top Southern

- 1 0 5, LSUII
Clrombliao Sl 71, Att.-Piotllulr17
T-~79 . -Modl.60

·--

~ .............Jf

Meigs gets by Nelsonville-York 57~53
By DAVE IEIAIUUS ·
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs placed tbree players in
doubles fi!:ures as tbe Marauden
defeated Ndsonville-Yilrk 57-53 in
Tri"Valley Conference basketball
action Tu!:sday evenlns at Nel·
sonville-Yrort IUgb School.
.
Tbe win1is tbe Marauders tblrd
victory in a, row, and fives Meigs a
4-6 mark in tbe TVC s Obio Division and a S-8 record overall. Nel-'
sonville-York drops to 2-8 in tbe
Obio Divisiion and 3-11 overall.
Botb teams started out slow
trading 1Jaskets for the first five
minutes of tbe ball game. Jeremy
Thrapp' s boucket in tbe paint gave
tbe Buckeyes a 9-8 lead wilh lbree
minutes remaining in tbe period.
But Meigs reeled off 14 points
in a row d•at was capped off on a
tbree-poin•t play by Paul Pullins.
Pullins waiS fouled as be sbot by
Thrapp andl the bucket was counted
due to a J:1.son Gail goal tending
call P,q!Un·s drained tbe free tbrow,
and tbe MalfiiiJders held a 22-9 lead
at tbe 7:27 mark or tbe fU'St balf.
But tbe Buckeyes went on a 15·
2 run and took a 26-24 lead with
2:03 left in tbe half on Jason
Waite's buckeL
Waire' s two free tbrows witb 38

Sootllnreot

NBA standings

Southern hands Trimble 70-591oss
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senlinel C«re!pondent
A 22-12 spurt in tbe second
quarter sparked a 70-59 come·
from-behind Soutbem win, howevtbe·Tomadoes bad to stave df a
devout Tri:mble llllly at tbe finisb.
Soutbem, now 8-2 in tbe division, now moves into a lie for first
place in the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division, as Miller upset
former division leader Federal
Hocking (also 8-2) Tuesday nigbt
at Hemlock. Alexander was
knocked furtber Out d tbe division
title chase 1lfler falling to Eastern.
. Now playing in the Tri-Valley
Conference, one must say "gone
aie tbe day:1 of any one team totally

Basketball

•

Scoreboard
_.,

~~~~r:~.~::v~~rf:/i::.:

•1
••••
:
LOSE: 10 LBS••
i'

•...•••••.
•

Holiday Inn...

Alex hit 18-48,.9-13 tbrees, bad
23 rebounds (Ri~e seven), .tbree
sleals, one assist, 15 turnovers, one
blodc and 23 fouls. .
·
Eastern will go to Hemlock to
face Miller Friday.
Rese"e. notes: Alex won 41-39
in a game lbat went .rigbt down to
·tbe wire. David Gutbrie and Chad
Moore led tbe winners witb l3 aud
10 respeclively. Eric Dillard aud
Chris Bailey each bad 12 for Eastem. Teammate Daniel Otto bad 10.
EASTERN
(10.24-25-l4=83)
Brian Bowen 3-0-2=8, Ryan
Buckley 3-0-4=10, Jeff Stetbem 7()..(1=14, Jason Sheets 1·0-1=3, Eric
Hill 6..().6=18, Charlie Bissell 130-2•28, Micah Otto J-0-0=2.
Totals· J4.0.151l2=83
' ALEXANDER

.

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St. Rt7N.
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Jonoa Mauuel 5-1-2=15, Jess •• .
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Raveoswood 57, Belpre 52

four minute sttetcb in tbe second
frame, as Thomas Haskill finally
bit a field goal at tbe 2:38 mark. tbe
score 28-25 Eastern.
·
At tbe 2:30 mart Bissell GOilected bis 1,000 point witb a sbort
jumper for tbe paint. Eastern built
its lead to 34-25, tben Jarvis bit a
pair of free tbrows for a 34-27
tally. Hasldll bit a baseliDe jumper
aud Eastern bad tbe ball witb 4Q
secQnds. Going for. tbe last sbot,
Eastern went and massed, perhaps
prematurely ils Grubb missed a
sbot at tbe buzzer ror AleXander.
In tbe secood ~· Eastern led
by as mucb as 19 pomts and led 5944 after lbree rounds. Buckley !lOt
a couple key spin rolls off IW:Isnng
lay-~ps, wblle Hill and B1ssell
renuuned bot outside. Bowen and
Buckley mixed tbiDgs up offensively for' Eastem witb good ball baudliOg and kept Alexander at bay. ·
Bisseilaoo Bowen fouled out in
tbe·rourtb round, and EHS made a
couple clock-stopping fouls. Th¥
kept tbe fans on tbe edge or tbeir
seats until tbe finisb.
Eastern bit 34-56 for 60.1%,
was ().4 from tbree-point range and
15-22 at tbe line. Eastern bad 33
~bounds led by Bissell's II and
Hill's nine, having 11 steals (Buckley tbrce), 14 assists (Bowen,
Buckley lbree each), 11 turnovers,
one block and 2A fouls.

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.
Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Wednesday, February 1, 1995

Wednesday,.Febi'\J8I'Y 1, 1995

The Dally Sentinel--Page 7

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Reader blasts the _
once noble profession of medicine
I am a nurse who is sick and tired
of all the ambulance-chasing jokes
about lawyers. I have seen far more
greedy, self-serving behavior f~om
ph ysicians, particularly surgeons,
who order unnecessary tests and
thezapy, frequently at facilities they
own. Many even perform unneeded
Dear Ann Landers: You recently surgeries on unsuspecting patients.
blasted lhe "once noble profession of Yet you never comment on the •new
law" for having sunk 10 a new low, low" that the medical profession has
Has it occurred to you that for every sunk 10, although it is every bit as bad
money-grubbing plainti[ attorney, · as what has go ne on in the legal
there is also an at10mey on the other profession.
.
side, trying to prevent such ludicrous
Well, I feel better after gelli ng this
jury awards as the one described in off my _chest, even though I'm sure
yourcolumn?These !Ire lbe atiOmeys you will not print my leu.er since you
who are fighting hard to ·keep our obviously have a prejudice against
insurance premiums down.
lawyers and a very special liking for

Ann
Landers

A Cardinal • Affiliated Supermarket

doctors . .. WIFE OF AN
HO NORABLE LAWYER IN
GREENSBURG, PA.
DEAR WIFE: I plea(! not guilty to
favo ring doctors over lawyers. In
fact. most of the criticism I ~ct is the
other way around.
The truth is. there arc good and bad
lawyers as well as good and bad
doctors, but the bad ones get more
publicity because negative news
makes more interesling copy.
Dear Ann Landers: I am
responding 10 lhe woman who signed
herself "Beam Me Up Anywhere,
Scottie." She was fed up with the
male population in her country. I take
it she's from the United Slatcs.
lli~e in Canada and our males rank

right up there, or should I say, right a brain.
enough, and sometimes they wear
down there, with yours. You told
I treat men with considerat ion and work clothes instead of pinstripe
Scottie, "There's got to be somebody decency. Whm I get in return is ver\m]_ suits. Get the pict~? I hope so.
somewhere for a woman who has abuse, ignorance, rudeness and just
Gem of the Day : Advice to the
your terrific sense of humor."
plain disgusting behavior.- SINGLE Brand -new Bride : If you think
Excuse me'! What planet are you IN ONTARIO
marriage is a 50-50 proposition, you
don't
know the half of it.
from? Men dpn't want a woman with
DEAR SINGLE IN ONTARIO:
Whtn planning a w~dding. who
a terrific sense of humot They want No one will ever convince me that
a bed mate. a doormat, a mother, a the majority of men in either the pays for whnt? Who srands wM~?
silent panncr, " maid, a cook and a United Slates or Canada prefer addle- 'Tht Ann I.Andtrs Guitkfor Brides"
becr-bottl c-picker·upper.
brained, Cfllpty-headed women who has all tht answers. s~nd a self·
I have been separated [rom my will pick up their beer bottles and addressed, long, busintss-siu
husband [or [().years. I haven't met serve as doormats.
enve/ope and a CMC lc or monty ordtr
,
even one man who was interested in
There has always been a shonage for $3.75 (this inclutks postage and
me, except for sex . I'm 36, have an of desirable males on every continent, handling) to : Brides, c/o A1111
excellent joh, own my own car and and it lakes some hunting to find lAnders, P.O. Box 1/561, Chicago,
am a single mother. And yes, I have them. The good men are out there. Ill. 60611-0562 . (In Canada. send
a terr ifi c se nse of humor. The Trust me. But' ofiCD they are not tall $4 .55 .)
problem is I'm independent and have enough or thin enough or rich

Two PVH _employees
earn certification

Beat of the Bend ...

'

by Bob Hoeflich

'

Connie Davi s, R.T. , (R) West Virginia Society of Radiolog·
(ROMS), director of Radiology ic Technologists, ~erican Reg Services an!l Gina Jordan, R.T. (R) istry of Radiologic Technologists
(ROMS), Multi-Modality Technol- a.nd West Virginia Diagnostic
Happy birthday to the Rev. travelin~ on the Delta Queen, the _ogist of Radiology Services, suc- Ultrasound Society. Davis and her
Lawrence Gluesencamp wbo today Mississippi Queen and the brand cessfully completed the Ultrasound husband Tim reside in Mason with
·marked bis 84th birtbday. Cards new, American Queen. Only one Obstetrics and Gynecology exam their tw o children Eric, 7, and
:WUI reach him at 30871 Barringer problem , the photo although pic• given by the American Registry of Haley, 4.
•
Road, Portland, Obio 45770 and I turesque is outdated since it does Diagnos~ Medical Sonagraphers:
Jordan, a graduate of St. Mary's
know he'll be glad to hear from inchide the Meigs Inn among the . The ARDMS Is an Independent, School of X-ray and Marshall Uniyou.
buildings aild that bas been gone a non-pr(&gt;fit organization that was versity with an Associate of
· Ditto for A. R. Knight, retired good many years.
incorporated in 1975, for the sole Applied SCience degree, bas·
area businessman, wbo will be 92
purpose of administering certifica- worked at PVH for four years. Her
oo Feb. 13. His addre~ is Lincoln
tion· examinations in diagnostic professional memberships include
Hill Road, Pomeroy.
Jim Sundquist, postmaster at medical sonography , dia gnostic_ tbe West Virginia Society of Radi·
Beverly. Ohio, and postmaster at cardiac sonography, and vascular ologic Technologists, American
Pomeroy when the Elvis stamp was technology to candidates who meet Registry of Radiologic TechnoloGood news for Pomeroy's Carissued. bas come up with a clever e~gibility requirements.
.
gists, - ~erican Society of Radioolyn Knrn wbo underwent a bean idea in the promotion of tbe 29
Davis received her associate or logic Technologists and West Virtransplant several weeks ago at New Year stamp which was issued applied science degree fmm Park, · ginia Diagnostic Ultrasound Soci·
University Hospital in Columbus. by the postal service on Dec. 31, . ersburg Community College and ety. Jordan resides in Point PleasCarolyn is well enough tbat she bas 1994. It was outdated the next day bas been associated with PVH for ant with her husband John, wbo
been moved iniO apartment living when the price of a first-class 13 years. She is a member of the works al Gavin.
near tbe hospital. The compleJt is stamp went up 10 32 cents.
called Unverferth House and the
Jim bas taken the quickly out· address is 410 King Ave., Apart· dated stamp and made a set featur· mentA., Columbus, Ohio43210.
ing an enlarged image containing a
single stamp canceled _pn Dec_.~ 31,
REEDSVll.LE UMW
Sbei13 Harris presided at Ill;!
1994 by the Beverly Post Office.
meeting
during which time it was
Tbe
Reedsville
United
When is a flower beil a flower The set available for $10 through
announced
that Founder's Day will
Methodist Women met recently at
bed? When it's in a bed.
·
the Beverly Post Office is expected · the borne qf Mrs. Nancy Buckley: be observed on April 27 at the
Using old beds in flower gar- to become a collector's item.
Sportsman·in Athens.
Mrs. Enul\a Durst opened the met·
dens is growing in popularity. The
You can call the post office at ing with a reading entitled "lbree
The annual "hearts and bands"
·· flowers are flanted witbi!'l tbe 614-984-4263 for information or
project of tbc chapter will be
Gifts,
and
Mrs
.
Grace
Weber
inside area o the bed frame and send a self-addressed label wilb
observed at tbe next meeting to be
make for a picturesque setting $10 to the U.S. Postal Service, 204 presided al lbe business meeting hosted by Barb Black. Members
during wbicb time 43 sbulin calls
through the summer months.
Fifth St., Beverly, Ohio 45715.
were reported and cards were were reminded to take a wrapped
Sucb a flower bed . that of Lola
gift for the exchange.
signed for several.
Toban of Pomeroy-is one of four
A donation of $25 was made 10
Window repair at the church
: colored photos featured in the preThose of you needing a contact was discussed and plans were made the Sorority's endowment fund.
·: miere issue of "Birds and Blooms", in reference to lbe Feb. 4 cancer for a church dinner. It was noted Members voted on proposals to be
-a magazine published bi-monthly benefit for Russell Holsinger, that the pecan sales were success- added to lbe list of grants (o lbe
in Gre~ndale~ Wisconsin . Tbe Chester, you can get in touch with ful. A game was played with prizes fund. Officers' reports were given.
~agazme ~?mts out that such Daphne Young, 985-4381 ; Sharon being awarded 10 the winners.
Games were enjoyed and
~werJ!eds J118ke,really colorful :.-i Swain, 985-3487, ,or VIrgil
refre4hments
served by the group
Refreshments were servea to
quUts In the summer and only !lave Holsinger, 378-6253. The benefit
foUqwing the meeting.
to. made up ~nee a year. Tbe will include. an auction, live music those named an4 Mrs. Susie Mash,
FRIENDSHIP CLASS
. Gilmo,res on Hiland Road have bad and food and will be beld from 6 to · Mrs. Gladys Thomas, Mrs. Frances
Tbe
Friendship Class of the
such a fi~?wer bed for several years. - t'O .p .m. at tbe Coolville Lions ' Reed, Mrs. Diane Jones, Miss Ann Clifton United Methodist Church
. Buckley, Mrs. Pearl Osborn, and
It was mce lbat Mrs. Toban was Club
·
Mrs. Lillian Pickens. Mrs. Weber gathered recently at tbe cburcb for
able to bring Pomeroy a little pu""
·
.
licity.
.
was awarded the door prize. Next . a potluck dinner and meeting.
Grace
was
given
by
Isabelle
meeting will be with Mrs. Thomas.
Brown . Jessica Justis and Alice
Here are a couple of nice lines
Gardner
bad devotions.
And speaking of Pomeroy and from Femdora:
SORORITY ASSISTANCE
Plans
were made for a chili din·
"A bug delights. and warms.
publicity. A color shot of the Main
Plans
to
assist
at
the
Feb.
I
visit
rier
on
Jan.
30 at tbe church annex.
St., business section is a feature in andcbarms,
of
the
American
Red
Cross
Blood·
·
The
group
enjoyed games.
"It must be why God gave us
the 75-page 1995 brochure of The
mobile were made when Xi Attending were Bill and Isabelle
anns."
.
Delta Queen Steamboat Co. The
Gamina Mu Chapcer of Beta Sigma Brown, Dallas and Betty Cadle,
And do keep smiling.
brochure tells you everything you
Phi Sorority met recently at tbe Joyce Carson, Kenny Neigle n
wanted. to know about vacation
Bradbury Church of Christ
Alice Gardner, and Jessica Justis.

CERTIFICATION . Con. . Davl.o, R.T., (R) (RDMS), director
of Radioi"'!Y Servh:es at PVfJ and GIIUI Jordan, R.T. (R) (RDMS),
Multi-ModaUty Tec:bnologlst 11r ~acllology Services, earned certlftcatlon ln Ultrasound Obstetrics and Gynet ology by the American
Registry of Dlagnostlt Medical Sonograpbers. Davis and J ordan
are pictured above with one of the ultrasound ml!chlnes used to
monitor development during preg1111ncies and diagnose problems
of the female reproductive system.

PICTURE YOUR PET

-Society scrapbook-

CENTER CUT
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lb.

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-------Community calendar-----

U.S. GOV'T. INSP.

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LIMIT 2 WITH COUPON INSIDE

Tbe Community Calendar l.o Lillitary Club, 2 p.m. borne of Mrs.
published as a free service to Eldred Parsons. Mrs. Dewey Hornon-profit groupo wbhlng to 101110 review "Ohio Pioneers'' Mrs.
announce meeting and special Ron Reynolds to review "Tbe
events. The calendar II not Johnstown Flood".
designed to promote ules or
POMEROY - · Red Cross
fund nlsers of any type. Items
are printed u space permits and Bloodlilobile will be at the Meigs
cannot be guaranteed to run a County Senior Citizens Center. ·
Wednesday from I to 6 p.m. There
speclfte number of days.
,WEDNESDAY
is a shortage of blood supplies,
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepurt Donna Grate, county chairman

advises. Sbe urges residents to
donate blood.

•

Thursday. 7 p.m. at MHS cafeteria.
Open 10 all Meigs County seniors
and their parents.

AMO G THE •••
PET VALE

"FOR PETS ONLY"
Will BE PUBLISHED MONDAY,:
FEBRUARY 13'" IN

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID

OSU dean's list posted _·_.· .

rSHURFINE
VIEGETABLES

SHURF NE.
APPLE JUICE

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Rebate expiration dates vary
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"Gifts Of The Spirit"

PUlSE AND
WORSHIP
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5TH

I
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_____________ __ _.J

I...Amount Enclosed:
1 at $8

Who Will Be Preaching An Anointed Message

:

1o~~er 's Name ------------- 1
--~Addres
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-~~~f:.~~an~ :A~!~~.~~American flome
Anriversary and
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celebrating with a
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Please enclose self·
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This Silver Key can
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•

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

THURSDAY
RACINE - ~erican Legion
SYRACUSE - TOPS OH
1895, "Bring a Friend'' nigh~ Syra- Post 602; dinner, 6:30p.m. fol cuse Nazarene Cburcb, Thursday, 6 lowed by meeting at 7:30p.m.
p.m. Additional information call
HARRISONVILLE - HarDebbie Hill; 949-2763.
·
risonviUe Lodge 411 , 7:30p.m Sal·
POMEROY - Meigs High · urday. at the Masonic Lodge. Worlc
s chool finan cial aid workshop in lbe E. A. degree. Refreshments.

The following area students ~nny Aeiker of Pomeroy; David
were named to the Ohio University Ibl e, Jamey Holter, Julie Hill,
Dean's Ust for fall quarter.
Michelle Winebrenner, Ryan
To be named to lbe list, a stu· . Adams and Trevor Petrel of
dent must have earned a grade Racine; Mark Murphy and Terry
· point average of 3.3 or better on a Kaylor of Reedsville; Andrew
scale of 4.0 for lbe' quarter and Field s, Kimberly Newman ,
have earned 16 hours, IZ of wbicb Michelle McCoy and Robyn Stout
of Syracuse and Lisa Day of Tup·
were taken for a letter grade. ·
Named were Lorre Osborne and pers Plains.
.
Tbc follow ing students were
Suzanne Clay of Chester; Amy
· Morgan, CbrisiOpber Day, Jennifer candidates for bal!helor of science
Stephan and Michael Barreird of degrees as of fall quaner Jennifer
Coolville ; Frank Blake, Maurisa Buck, Pomeroy; ;,ean Dodson, and
Nelson, Robby Wyatt and Stacey Pomeroy ; Sheryl Rose, Racine .
Duncan of Middleport; Bruce Mako10 Okano. Shade, was a canMaier, Courtney Midkiff, Heather didate for a mas te r of science
Hudson, Leigh Redovian and degree.

ES!

eac:li.

' · •

for

· ·

pictures

...._

Deadline Friday, February 1Oth at 3
Mall or bring the entry for~:

p.m.

(

The Daily Sentinel

6:00P.M.

·-

SENIOR CITIZENS BUILDING-POMEROY
•

110 Court. St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•

I

�Page

8

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 1,1

AD'IYI liD 1181 POI£Y· Each of these adYer1!sed Items IS reqt.jred Ill be ildY a'tilable for sale In
each Kroger~ eu:ept as 5Ptdf1ealy noted In tills ad. If we do M out of an adwrtfs«t ltlm, we
wl Offer ¥011 VllUI' choice Of acomoaraiJie 112m, When available, re11ecang t11e same savings or a
l1inchedt Wt'ich 'fill entitle 'fll\lllliiUI'ChaSe the advertised ltl!m at the adverlised pr1Ge 'fii!Nn 30
days. Only one vendor coupon Wll be acupted per ltan ptrdlaled.

COPYRIGHI' 111M • THE KR0C1ER CO. ITEMS ANO PAICEI 0000 IUNOAY,
JI&gt;NUAIIY 21, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEJIIIIWIY .. 11111N POMEROY.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHI' TO UllrT OUAII'ITTIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALEAI.

U.S. CRACE A, WAMPLER/LONGACRE
•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garage~
•Complete
Rernodelh1g
Stop &amp; Compare .
FREE ESTIMATES

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ROCK &amp; ROLL NIGHT, .
TONIGHT .
SPECIAL ON DRAFT BEER
NO COVER CHARGE ·

Card ot Thanks

CALIFORNIA TANS ·
34110 Sugar Run Rd.

Long Bottom, OH. 45763

· 1SSessions s1 500
All Lotions %Oft
949·2823

INSIDE
FLEA MARKET
Every Sal. &amp; Sun.
Starting Feb.
202 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
8:00 am. to 4:00 p.m.
Dealers Welcome
$7.50 a day or
$10.00 for two.

Bapn
18th
~irthda)f

Dann)JR.!

STATEMENT

semt·

·...

aam
· pound

Lowfat
Gallon

Name

'

m

..

~· '

'IN THE

DEU DEPT.'

~

'•,

•,

'
'
'

'

12-ct.

Apanment
tor Rent

. ~-wATERS EDGE APARTMENTS

Gallon

12-&lt;:&gt;z.

Ruffles
Potato Chips

· Basic monthly Rent $269.00.

6-&lt;&gt;z.

Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, A/C. on ·site laundry,

99

Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

~-614-992-6419 TOO 1·80D-75D-075h
.
Equal Housing Opportunity
')

'

•

• Craftsman Tools
.•Toys
• Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992·2060

Long Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
• up to •r. Inch.
Call Anytime
John Krider
614-843-5192
Harold Person
614-843·5285

fREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

, I

'1!1

&amp;Service
•All Malcae -42 Y11r1
ofnt Rallable Service

.w..t..,.- Dryer• . A oRatrfgaroto,. of,....,.

-Diehwllhe,..
•H .W. Heatera

-Microwoveo oJllllfiOUio
•Tt..nko Malga &amp;
Surrounding Arw11

(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 1fll4/ltn

"We Are Now Open For Business"

The State Certified
Pawn Shpp

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

Tel. (614)

992-584~

"We Loan You Ca$h on Anything of Value"
. 1-6 :o: 1 mo. pd.

Light Hauling,

Parts &amp; Service on Moa1
Makes Raclna Mower
'Clinic

Shrubs Shaped

. ROCKY R. HUPP

50% off

Misc. Jobs.

and Removed

J J CLASSIC GIFT
BASKETS
Custom Designed Gift
Baskets For All Occasions
Hysell Ru n Rd. Pomeroy
992·2927 992-5914

Mobile Welding
Dl~sel injector SV C
injector Pump SV'C
Tune-ups
985·3879

ESTATE
AUCTION

ofoc1ory Au1hortzed Pllrla

· Graded Benefit Whole life is now abailable. The
plan offers coverage of up to $1 0,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
·the application. Ages 40-80

Bill Slack
. 992·2269

"In Stock"

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ID'IIPIIUIIICI
IDIICI

1120111

Oregon Chain Saw Baro1
949-2804

I•

I

American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
614·843-5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

Health • Accident • Annuit • IRA • Mortgage

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speciali~ing in Custom
. Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992·7013 OR
9g2.5553 OR •
TOLL FREE 1·800·646·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
71S 1!91 TFN

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. .
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
. (No Sunday Calls)
211219Min

Vacuum Clea1111r Service Special
Special offer includes:
&lt;
1. Clean motor
2. Grease Roller Bearings
3. Glean &amp; check agitator
4. Clean all moving parts
5. Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check Belts
7. Check electrical system
·s. Replace filter bag

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1995
10:00 A.M.

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

MR. VACI',JUM CLEANER

We Hare Cars and Vansl

368 W. Main St.

Real

Riply WV.

E~rtate

304-6144

MORRISON'S
·HEATING 8 COOLING
EPA and RSES Certified

Your au.thorlzed
'mer/can Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Avai.lable
Call992-7434 for more Information.
11251115

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repelr
OFFICE

'192-2259

MIDDLEPORT- Bradbury R&lt;l.- · 2 story older tarm house that
needs some work. 3-4 t1edroo'ms, ·1 bath, Jiving room,

kitchen, dining room. Sorne remod eling work done. Nice
large sitting·porch. appro~irnately ' S+ ac.res and free gas.

·

ASKING $35,000.00·

MANUEL RD. · Approximately 1+ acres of ground. Utilities
available. Would make a ni.ce building site.
•
ASKING ONLY $3,5oo.oo
RACINE· Nice 1 112 storf home with 3·4 bedrooms, large
tiv1ng room, dining room, l&lt;~tchen ~/nook, family room, bath,
tots of ctqset space Borautlful- hardwood~ffoors, newer
windows, siding and root. Home has a cellar and a t car
gamga.
.
ASKING $40,000.00
MIDDLEPORT· ln,estment proper!¥· 2 stmy brick building
w/2 apartments. Currently 1ented.
ASKING $13,000.00 .

l

tA1 · 116

ATTENTION HOME 0\NNERSIII WE HAVE BUYERS'
WAITING FOR THE "RIClHT PROPERTY" SHOULDN'T
YOU BE UISTED WITH US?
HENRY E. CLELAND............................:.............. 992-6191
TRACY BAINAGER ..............................................949-2439
SHEARI H~AT...... ........... ...... ............................... .742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111.................., ..................... 992-6191
KATHY CLELAND .......................................110....... 992-6191
OFFICE ........................... ...................:................. 992·2259

EXECUTRIX: MARTHA VENNARI
PROBATE NO. ~8773
.
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
Not raaponalblt lor accldenta or to• ol property
Llc:lnlldand Bonded In Ohio, Kentucky,
&amp; Well Vlrglnl• 166 ·

'

Kenny's Auto Center . · 1·B00·486· Jo~u 1
264 Upper River Rd .
Bus. (614) 446·9971
OH . 45631

General

J,UST OFF SR 2411- Che~l:e• Area· 75+ acres of ground with
a ranch type home, that fe••tures 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, 2
kitchens - one electric and one gaol Central ali, free gas,
'satellite dish, pantry, uHIIty area. Lots of cabinet space, extra
hook-up for a mobile hom&lt;t, 2 car garae, work shop, t car
garage , cellar, chicken ho'use, Implement shed and storage
buildings. LOTS OF WOCtDSI
ASKING $120,000.00

MASON, WV
n3-5447
773·5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
APPRENTICE AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS

Kenny's Auto Rental

One year warranty on work performed
Valid on all nationally advertised
brands only
We seniice m:&gt;st makes &amp; models

-

LUNCH

MODERN SANrrATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned I portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly I monthly rental rates.
Job lites • Camp Sites • Family Reunlona &amp; Partlu
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand; Gn~vel and Coal .
WE HAVE A· 1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

All for only :$14.95 plus parts

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Furniture, Tools, Middletown Doll,
Royal Vienna Doll, Chain Saw,
· Too Many Items to List!
LIVE MUSIC &amp; FOOD
AUCTIONEER; JIM ALLOWAY
44

REGULAR OR WITH-PULP FROZEN

Kroger
PreshMade
Glazed Donuts· orange Juice
.

.~ .

NOUmlt, '
NOCOUIIOn ·
ReQuired At
This Prtcel

Olr Yellow 'Bonls Buy' tag ndlcates
that an Item Is on sale at aspecial reta1
fOr aselected time period.
YCU wll find these tags throoghout the stcre!

... . .

.

1-6

Senior, Disabled,· Handicapped,.

FOR
RUSSELL HOLSINGEi,
CHESTER, OHIO
COOLVILLE LIONS CLUB
6:00 P.M.·l 0:00 P.M.

k

One mile out .
143 fi'Qm AI. 7
Tues. • Wed.• Fri. • Sat.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

SATURDAY, FEB. 4, 1995

a·a

..' ·

-

BENEFIT AUCTION

lroger2% .

32361 Dewlt!a Run·A08d

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

Now avallble FmHA One BR apts.

Public Sale
&amp; A\lctlon

Limit Three

Fresh
Head Each
Lettuce

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

Syracuse, Ohio

Superior Shirt,
Hat &amp; Jacket

'

cra•h It- We Fix. It "

10111/l.ln

FURNITURE
4pc. Poster Hard Roell Maple BR Sune. 01
KHchen Cabinet, Good Early Lg. Walnut Knoc
Down Wardrobe w/Dovetail Top, Princes
Dresser, Washstand , Library Table, Mahogan
Desk &amp; Chair, Tables, 5pc. Wood Dlnet Set,
Roper Frost Free Refrigerator same as new,
2pc. LR SuHe, Cherry Coffee Table, ZenHh·Colo
TV like new, Rocker, Fancy Radio Cabinet, Twin
Bed, Iron Bed, Metal Cabinet.
GLASSWARE &amp; STONEWARE
Pink, Green &amp; Clear Depression Glass, Etc
Stemware, C.S. Prussian Plate &amp; Dish, Punc
Bowl, and Other'Giassware, Pr. Hullart Candle
Holders, A.P. Donagho Parkersburg WV Jar.
"YEARBOOKS"
-·
1926-27·29·30-34-35-36-37 -38-39-41 ·42-43-44·
45-46-47·48·49 &amp; 50 Pomeroy Annuals, 1955·
58-62-65-66 &amp; 67 Rutlarid Annuals , .1968-69 &amp;
70 Marauders Annuals, 1941. Class Ring, 1971
to 1989 Complete Set of Commencemen
Programs lrom Meigs High School,
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.
Small Kitchen Appliances, Brass·Candle Sticks,
Lg. Wall Mirror, Quilts, Tableclothes, DQIIies
Linens, Hooked ~ugs, Pictures, Lamps, Germa
Patches, Nazi Patches, Hijler .Youth, Mountai
Troopss &amp; eic., Ceramic Tree, Few Books, 0
Records.' Mink Hat, Fur, Old Sheet Music,
t Coming Coffee Pot, Costume Jewelry, Re
·Circle Coffee Bank, Set of Flatware, Handmad
Wooden Baskets, Table, Hobby H()rse, Child'
Swing, Ouin Rack, and WoOden. Pedal Tractor
TOOLS
~
- 6" Craftsman Sander, 10" 318 Benctl Drill Press
10' Alborsaw, WoOd Lathe.

FAST!
Ask About Our

Please
Wi2-Uters
ithAcfdJtlOiial
Purchase.

"'''"

w.v._

Banners, Vehicle Lettering, Magnetidc
Signs, Menu Boards, Commercial Signs, Warning
&amp; ADA Signag~. Logos Designed OR Reproduced,
DOT Numbe'rs

8

.. You

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

111Wth\

B.IJ.AU'I'O
PAINftll

For All Malor
Bra11ds
Used lppllance11l
for Salt
Call .
614·992·5515

In · Mason
.)'he estate . of Ma
Elizabeth Chapman has been move
from 322 Condor St., Pomeroy, Ohio t
the Auction Center In Mason, WV and the
following will be sold.

Let IJs Help

ssrc

2·llter

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior.&amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy, Ohio

5116194 TFN

-

Dill'S
APPLIAJICE,
.SERVICE

Located on Rt. 33 at the Auction Cente

?

. . Diet ec;:OOKEC!Asst;
RIO Star
Red Grapefruit Coea Cola Ciaor ~·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

992-6215

Howard L Wrltesei
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
•
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

8

Do YOU Need To_"'ake A

PREMIUM TEXAS

•Add~ions

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

VALENTINE SPECIAL
Dinner For 2
Baked Chlcken-$12.95.·
6 oz. Rlbeye $14.95

of Hlffelt 's Carpet Mill Outlet
Phone II will
·

•

SAYRE TRUCKING

304-n3-5612

Lowell C. Shinn Trtctor i1 movini·
Our new Mkiress will be
4359 Sta1C Rt. 160 North.
We Will be the third buildlna nonh

CAFFEINE FREE DIET CO

Reaso11altle Ratts
Joe N. Sayre

MAGGIE'S CROCKPOT
Clifton, w. Ve,-

NOTICE

.
. BER\.ANO GAP WHOLE SMOKED
l13·17·\.B. AVG.) c~MaoneleSS

'(Speclllze In drlvewa:v
epraadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, ·
Top Soli, Fill Qlrt
614-992-3470

614·742·2138

Cuotom Building l Romodollng
• New Homes

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
Office Houra: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl I Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lntulatton, Storm
Dooril, Storm
Wlndowe, Garages.
FrM Eatlmat..

1CV5.'Tmo

3 Announcement•

..

Umestone
&amp; Gravel

. SMITH'S
CONSTRUaiON

J&amp;L INSULATION

WICKS
HAULING

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

M•At

The family of Jack
Cleland would like
to express our
appreciatiQn
to
neighbors, friends,
who provided food,
prayers and flowers at
the loss of' our Dad,
Husband , and son ,
also, to all who visited
and called; and gave us
inspirational help, for
friends and family Who
traYJ:ied to attend our
needs . To Pastor
Crump and family, the
Birchfield Fu·neral
Home . All the
pallbearers and honary
pallbearer, all who
offered comfort to our
family in any way.
God Bless each and
everyone of you .
Mother and Dad;
. Dolly and.Sylvan,
Wife; Alana;
Sons; John &amp; Justin,
Daughter, Elizabeth
and·Brothers &amp; Sisters

HAULING

985-4473

Cnae Tan Wftfa
1

(Limo Stont low Ratea)

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
.
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
StateR!. 33
Darwin, Ohio
10121/MI'tfn

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Cuttom Made
•Solid vinyl
repluement
wlndewt
•Free Ettlmatet
• $200 ·Installed -Call for Detallt · •
•vtSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 ~ourt Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look·for the Red and While Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800.291-5600
.f

�February 1, 1995

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEVOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Pu zzle
ACROSS
I Mra. Nl xgn
4 English berd
8 Flol-bottomed

PHILLIP
ALDER

•
BE:A IT IE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie .

Announcements

31;

3 Announcements

·=~~~
4·1 Houses for Rem

dt-.

-

2tlf',, IMcfllon Ave., ,.,.... w:e I

Available AI :

NqUIIW_!IJ• • utllltiM. 304-475-......

114-44e-4724

LN veU~

or

Giveaway

Fr-, lf-.A~
... ..._, Pt.. T!Hh

1 Blac:k Hlmalapn 11• Cat, 1
Sleek &amp; Whha Cot F-ro, 114441·1856.

*'-··Do~No
In
Ho:mt. t1+:111 0302.- ,-.

led-. .

Do,-

2 Eight Wookl Old LAb Mlxod
PU pplas, Bl~ck, 614-381-87'11.

Sb1r. houH In oounby, $300hno.,
l!liOidopolll,
- - ...
quiNd. 304-475-4433.

4 puppies. 2 malt, 2 female, to
304-e~

8Nu11tul C..t1 To Glveew•y, To
Oood Hom1, 814-371-2~

Lost &amp; Found

Found : Soyo Cool, Vlolnhy: AJ.

davllle SchooJ, Found 1114i11,

C.U To Identity, 814·317-o:l311.

Found : M1l1 Beagle So4 YHI'I:

Old, Rt. 35, F1lrground1, 814388-11387.
I..Dit-ln Rutland ,,.., mliel
Boxer, It round, ptNH call 114'i112·2045, reward.

qWe're staying a month to get even with you for
bragging about how w~rm it is here in Florida."

11

Help Wanted

!Aot:

Young Malo Atnodole
Black&amp;: Tan, llob TaUIICI, AroL'ind
Tycoon Lake, $50 R-.rdl 1514245-9152.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

I Hovo 01 Ono lloilablo
Groundu.tnt--H
You
Hovo lo Trwc:k

Don'

Now Raopened on our regullr StrMt, "f3iomtroy, on 45781.
nlghlal
Aue11ono
ovory Position avallaiM lmmedletely.
Thuroday·Frldoy, 7pm, Ut. Aho
~ton. At. 2-33 "'Croelf'Oida", MalUM Babpltt• In Home,
Ron Prleo, 8111 Moore,
F10111 1:110 .-4:~ Ylarylo':8:

gr-.

plu1lota moral Ed Fruler 130. .

.9

Wanled IO Buy

~~5/~:00.ner.:i:Ortly-·:~p ~:!!·

.. wage,

Fmanci al

~::..,..,A!.":""-~

S.uwne..a

·

Coli

Wanted To Buy: B•gl• Puppy.
Qt4-446-4477.

c.,.

Clarn L:111 Modtl
Or
Trucks, 1987 Model• Qo· Newer,
Smith Buick Pontlee 1800
E1111m Avonuo, Golllpollo.

Real Estate

etoelu..........

Don~ Ju'* hi

Worldng

Soli Uo Yow Nonllljor I$.;Lacea.

T.V.'o,

Color

...... . .: : -

J A D'o Auto Ports ond Solngo,
buying -kl,lunk ouloo '
truekl. Alae, poilo
304- ovofbroolt c.ntor lo ...
773-!1343 or 77:J.5033.
c:opllna o,I&gt;PIIcoHono fw CHA'o
lnd· IJINo. Anyone 1-od
llmbor W.nlod, And .,._ como In IIIII pick up on
Clear Cutting Available. FrH On IQIIIIlcollon or contiOI Sholll
Sl'• Elllmol•. 20 y_,. Ex· PICkono, DON ot 114-!112-1472
porlonco, 114-367ollllll,
114- 1or .-lnlomoltlon. E.O.E.

lor-·

317-1054.

or

Lorry

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject to
1 he Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to odvertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion.
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
· llmitatl.on or discrimination.•

-- -... -

Top Prlcoo Paid: AD Old U.S.
Cclnx, Gold Rlna'!, Sl- Cclno,
Qotd Colna. M.T.~. Coin Shop, Truek Drtvor NMdod, COL R..
qulrod. Full-limo,
Driving
151 Socond Avonuo, Oolllpotlo.

Local

Wa,.od To Buy . Uood .Mabile
Homo, Collll4-441'017&amp;.

Employment Services

RRIIWIOP'"DnntNII To: CLA 8o1 341, c/o

Gaiii~N~~II Dilly Trlbunt1 825
Third Av•u.. Gallpolla, OH
45031.

111m Uno
lllook lond ...... SilO; . - . .
1011•
.

-----In

~.......·~- 53
IIIII

Antlqula
Anllq-,

IUJ «Ill. -

walor ,..,,...., illllto - • "'• 1124 E. II-. on Ill. ~J
IU!mo., lult iO mlnll• . P I .... Noun: lii.T.W. 10.101
Athonl, li4-tll2' 2117.
.... to 1:00
1:00
!oi:OOp.m.
••

.t':.r.._,

=~~

IICUrtl)'

=...:""~...:::
whMII, motor &amp; ptlnt
No =r;,r
lhlrp, $3600.

Job,

~,.

wllor,

llllboto

T~ROW

T14AT

1
BUT MA'&lt;BE 1LL
'&lt;ou'LL LIE AWAKE AT
1
ASK M'1'SELF
NIGHT. AND '&lt;0U LL ASK
''W
~'( DIDN ' T
YOURSELF OVERAND OVER,
'IOU
DO IP .
''lAM&lt; DID I DO IT' ..

SNOWBALL

AT ME.YOU 6LOCKI4EAD, AND
'&lt;OU'LL REGRET IT FOR TI4E
REST OF YOUR LIFE ~

~

-

BECAU SE SHE'D
PROBABL'( TU R~
AROUN D AND

'1'0l! WERE
LUCK'{ !
1

ME INTO
A 5N0W6AN K ~
KI CK

...,..

-··- - .. ~~:J '---,----'

three and dec la r er call s for dummy";
queen. With whic h ca rd d o you sognal
from 9-7-6-2 '!
.
One school plays that wh en you can·
not bea t dummy ·s card , you sign a l
count. Pres umabl y th ey w ould con ·
tribu te the seven . But then what would
they play from J . 7·6· 2? Presumably the

w.......

USED

·~~.
32 Mobile Homes

......

F11322,Dollvery.
3out - · · Ad.

1 end 2 bedroom apt~rtrnenta,
lu1 nloHod and unlumlohod,
H ocurhy dliposl1 -.qulred, no
pill, 614-992-2218.

PICKENS FURNITURE

BIG NATE

Fuml•h.od EHiclanoy All Utllhl•
Plaid, Downotolra f185/llo. 1111 Wooh.,,_Dryor, Color T.V., C1
Sitcond Avenue, Gllllpolla, 814- R1dlo, Mlcrowava, Allfrigerltor,
4'16-31145.
614-256-1238.

441..110.

"IOK., $41,000, Clolllloollo Fwor,
3 okf MructuM, off •In roea
114rnl. 30Wl'S.~7.

ComnllfCial rtwr-lrant oor,.,
lot, MlddllpOrl Oh out of ftoocl

...., 111 utlliil• lot 2 mobl..
- . 118,000. 304-IINIII.

RON

PWMKKVN
. NVTLNVN

C Z M

F XM CLOF
W· M

s v

R

YL N

.F R E V ·p . '

HMXYJVX ,

K U R G L 0 F

ROWMOLM

SRONVXRP .

PREVIOUS SOlUTI ON: "' A laoatoc 1s a man wh o doos wh at he lh1 nks lhe Lord ·
would do if" only
He knew the,facts of th e Case." - F1nley P. Dun ne .
- .._..._

__

.

T~~:~;~y S@R~~-Ltt~S"

WOlD
GAlli

Ecfited l:ty CLAY lit. POLLAN
Aeor rongt ltffers of
0 four
JCrombled word,

the

be-

low to form four words

rO S TW EB

I'

0

I"

YN
',

I .-

F R E

Newlywed s have 1t easy
these days,!' th e older woman
told her friend. ·:All they have

I:~rd_o_i~ _e~t_a_t ~oms

or go oul

' ~.7,..-:;.1::-8:.:...,,.:_
. .,,-. .:.:. ,,.:......,..,-!

O

L.-.1.._..1.-..I.~..J.'--..1.._ J

by foll.ng •n the !"llnong wo • d~
o;ou dev~lop fr om step No 3 be low

Complete the chuckle quoled

•

WE
ww..

....... .............
__ .,.. __

Rolrlglrll- AN
·Rlcancltloned
And~

A n d - - f100 And Up,
Will Dollver. -H441.

Army,.........,
by
I :OGpm l'r14un. Jr.Olllco,
tomft- IJ::
Som 8o11111ollll'8
Blliclyvllo -

........

..... ,.., A 1o11on r tor,uoo, 1M • • •••·

1 -nor, 1811 Bulclc Skylork,

__

_

w- Cleoo. u.. - t100
"1 1ti_ UU,_IM-~Mii 55

driYilo, .,..,. bBO; 1 - Chivy
Calllirllyl __....... _... 1500

I4WI2I.

446~2342

56

eon-

lmprov-ms

.992~2156

z .......
ala'

Puc•••.....

-.~10.

-.·1200a.....
a

In-·---·=
Ailn'o TV

body

1111 C.ltbrllr E~n 'pmrt ...
lion
. .gon,
......
lllillmleoi-~IIUIO., olr,

new tlrn and
family, $2250, 114-

,

s.m.,· _...

-~ bnondl. ":~·
-mooaa.wv
.

82

PlUmbing&amp;

· Heatln_g

IPOtt or

t-2l7ll or
.

AI(C

Thursqay. Feb. 2. 1995
Frie nds who don't measure up I o your
·
standards might drop from your ·tnner ctr·
·
h0
1
cle in the Y"be
ar dahead. h~sceloswer pass
-~~ 11
~~ loOUAAIUS (Jon. 2o-Feb. l9) The secret
'
~. be 1 annAal 10 the
to success lvuaV WI11
o ........
.
h
Th e~r con science s
·
10
so nc.enty o. ~ ersi 1 ke advantage ol
1
1
won . permit .:~ec~iv~ them. Trymg to
11
you you don k
nee? Th e Astro·
patch uMp a bro ekn roamna help. uou underG raph atchmaer c
'
stand what to do 10 make the relalionsh!P

9

.

AICC PooiMW ................ 2

1471, nlghtl

BERNICE .
BEDE OSOL

a-

114-8411-2045.

n

ASTRO-GRAPH,

1184 Buick A-1 2 DoorS::~· tobllaliell'1m.
v.., Now Tlroo, &amp;houot,
,
CAC
Oo....r
Homo
Will Kopt. 11,ns, 114-2o50tt.
Malnt-- lind Uobllo Homo
11114 Colobrlty otatlon wogon, 4 Rlpllr. For
101-1 col
oyl., 4 · - lranomloolon, 114- ::;CioOI:,:=.•:_:I~14::-~.=:=,_ _ __
11411-28711 or 114-11411-2045.
.
.

1184 Tampo, na,~a rune
Jf:l•
rougn,
. 304.21111• .

Peta for Sale

r-,

Home

1NO Oldo Cutleoo 8upromo 2 81
Door, Futuro Clualo, Mint
dillon, Don' .MI• . Thle Onol ___::.:;~;-;;'
...:.::;:;,___
Phone Allor 5:00 P.ll. 114-446BASEMENT ·
3111 Bolo Sounclorl.
WloTERPROOFING

Suppllea
....... Cloiodo"
Oil
. Col -

flOR!:N ~E

I-11614T\N GAL£.1

Serv1ces

010; · - Cliovy Colobrlly,
NRI grtl1, ti2QO 080; alii~
tl2-4f11 tvenlnga.

Building

r~ll, lorltlt, L!inl*o lora, 1110 - . . . . .

WIN ! 1'll PlAY

4dr., 71,000ml. ocxno IMOinl poot.
MH• South 01 Qollpolle AI JUC&gt;lng, 12400 OMO. 30448NII1.
tlon
AI.NUIIBER:
1 • Aln 4~:ia':.er'
!NO BMII!,.!:!Iah mlleo..t....Mil lind PHONE
.

Local,........,_
or

Wolghl

OK~ OK~)OIJ

Soulhwoll Plck.Up Porto lledl,
Cabo, lloolo, F - r i A Moro.
loloo, 414 Drive Train Ports. a

1812 Tr1n1 Am, $1,100, 1185 £a.. u.._hlonol 111o11mo ;.....,..
lwi1lohod.
0011, 11,000, c:aU blftnen 1 I I IN.
Coli 1-100-211IM-2Ppm, 81-t.MI-2510.
0411 Wlllwprooftng. IEIO-

675:1333

DK,

. PMEVMOV

.

STRIKE BLOW IN THE WAR ON
;' HIGH PRICES. SHOP TH£ CLASSIFIED$.
..
-

MO. IIIDWIWNI.
-Frw~ PI.N
u.r To'ICII"o
For ..,.
1111.111; JAB
Teat.nalaaJ. m Rt. 110, ca.

Sot~p. 304-1'55-6511·

LP

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

-···~

LIMITED OFFERI , _ 14117V 23br., $51111 DOWN, No Poymonto
ollor Syro. FrM Dolivory •

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

MI,ICH L E.S5 Goof'f WEAR·
lNG. A CWWW MADE our
OF "'LVt11NUM fOIL. .

Trackor Pro 11 Boat
UoOcl Very una. 35 HP Uoreury
With Ellru Aiiklng: $4,100, 114-

Houra Mon. • Sol. H - · H;
D!:!~"t Forgot OUr AEI'O. s.c,
·

nlng. Aoody To llcm Into On
Poln!lng
lnl-111orlor, Corioor Lot Pori! LAno Uobllo
d!JWoll,
light
.. _ r Coun. Phone 114 UIIIOI, Itt.
.
work,"'""ll jaM, IIQhl hlullna. . 441-7787.

R T WMX

KXMSASUG

e

oa- .
St. ·

.

o·

PRINT NUMBERED
1
. ~ lETTERS IN "SQUARES

I'ERfEtT HL fEEL

·-

-~ ....d.--

R

I

Oullhy Hoo uhcU Fu-lngo
And Applle-. M a l l - - .
1111.00;
f14t.OO;
Living A 12111.00; lodroomo
St.
•
1271.00;
Rolrlgoratcn • Rongoo •
Wollieraillryora

sa,ooo,

by Luis Campos
Celebnty C'R!!llt i:l)'Piograms '" a crutvo hom quoiallons bV l amous PfiODit' , Pllsl 111'\d tlresont
Each ~11e r 1n the Copher ~l a nds lor anot her 700ar's r:I~.Jt~ H HQUHIS F

G R

.,.g

: ~~;...........~~;;;;~
II

50 A ctress Turver
52 Short j"ackel
Corn lly
· ·
Thailand "•
·
old ·name
56 Insinuate
58 Negative

CELEBRITY CIPHER

D A A MM

LAYNE'S
Complalo fumiiii....._iii!lr.
..
Houra: llou Sol, 11-1. 114-4fll.

lion.

ending
46 Tattered cl o th
48 Face part
49 Pa rll y fused
glass

=+1-1--l 59 word
Perform

I.. I

Appll-78

Lilli

'

~

114-448-71111, 1·

1880 EdgMeood, 14x'J'O. 3 btcf..
room, t 112 bllh, , _ oorpot,
central •lr, partt, JumiMed,

mo -

TIE ENTIRE. OfFtC£ ~ TO

.,.--i--if---1

blackbird
Canle
Moralist
Gi ve up
The caam a
Finnish city
A g1.
40 The sell
43 St ar c luster
44 Comparati ve

29
31
32
33
36
38

wilh a high spol ·card : if you don "I. di s·
courage. Her e, you drop lhe two . When
you might have a useful honor . the atli·
tude si gnal should be reta in ed as the
top pribrily .

1100-4-...FURNITURE
Vlna

for Sale

New 1it5 14170, Inch-. akJn~
lng, o11p1, bkx:kl, 1 yoor
tiomlownolll IMuranct, arid •
noontl)o FREE lal ronl. Only
11111 11M por mo.
Call!-NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 leftl

~

f--+4- -t

.,.,...+-+-

28 European

APPUANCES

for Rent

-Fumlahod Apartment, 1 Bod·
ra om, 607 Second .VMUI, Otl·
lla&gt;ollo, $295/Mo. Utllhln Paid,
114-44!-4.416 Ahor 7.1,1!,._ - ·

continue the heart attack.
So. jf you have the jack. enco urage

BORN LOSER

s..;;-.
.
.
.
.
.
_
St-...,

GOOD

SE :AUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BLIDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESCTATES, 531 Jaoklon Plkl
trcom 1222 tt $285. Wolk to • ' • movlu. Coli 814-446-21586.

tor.
Fo!mol · Dlnlna ·
~nlollod a - n t With Fomlly
Room, Aec. Aoomin LMJndl r
A - With Drive
GorogO.
F- :o..:.- In-Or-·-' P.!!l!l With
Eilr~gof~Diiii- . Cor oa~o With ~t.
20 Frun rooo ~- ~,.
1
·
''
'
-UIIIul LAnd-ping, - . ,

'\

O.E. Hoovy Duly Wuhor A
Oryor1_W_ GIMI f2DO !Balh,
814-2-111011.

S.utllul Homo ~
Ohio Riv•. Uppor - · S ..0:
- · S 112· 811111, FomiiY
- _ Eol~n Kllohon. With

=:'.J:•

..,,....
r---,t:.;;,r,\ &amp;. OOT SICK ~yl

All Brick HomoS I d -•w,ICT,
DR, Ll!, 1 112 Bltho, Ful :~o•J;r:.
11

114-3t1-121l

~livid In; 1J04.716.71tt.

.I'M-II2-3lle.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

No...uo.d
No appllancN, HcN•1rhold fu,...
nlohl~ 112 mi. Jlll'loho Rd. PL
AMMnl, WY, coli 304-175-1450,
2bdrm. apia.~ 1alol olocl~c, op. 114 4461148.
pll1nces . himlahad, laundry
·
SWAIN
rotlm tacllllln eloaa to echool·
In town. Appl{catlon• available loUCTION A FUAIITURE. 12
• Uood
11: Vlllogo Groon Apia .
or Olivo St., Oolllpollo. rurnltur., Mit.,., w...em a
eo II 014-992·3711. EOH.
W o r k - e . I - H.
2br., 2nd 1100(, kllchon fur·
VI'AA l'llfi'NITUA£
nlohod. wuhor/dryor hook""l!o
4 MIIM·Oul AI. 141
1)·r. loon, no polo. 304-1175-13151

3 Bedrooml, 2 lalhl, HMt
Pump, Qa Fvm1oe. 1 Aani,
QoraGo. Addleon - . 112,1100,

However . t he Jack is 1he critical ca nt
Its importance is apparent from the full
deal. Alter winning th e fo r st trick. de·
d ar er will take a di amond fi nesse. II
loses. l eav i ng South a ! rock short as
· lon g a s W est doesn ·t pl ay an oth er
heart. But on a dilferent layout. i f East
has th e heart j ack, it might be vi tal t o

~~-It 001Mitlol•, mUit

.

Apanmem

n-+-+-~

seven too.

11182 Chivy von, I ovl.. PB, PB,
autc;HMtlc, IM-Ia411M.
•
111111 Chovy Full 111M 4x4 Air,
AIIIFM Cn r 11111. Toppt_rj tltoh,
1 Owner, 5 8111111. 1001&lt; IIIIH,
~ WoM Cor..r For, Vory
i;J;:ndllbll, 11,000, ..........,._

lorr-+ 4- -i

--1--+- +--t

si ve di sas te r that is pos sible if you
haven 't disl'-usscd Higm.ilin g agree ments wit h your pa rt ner.
You ar e defending against three no·
trump . ' Yo~ r pa rtner lead s the heart

61 Fann Equipment

...

1-+--!- + -i

lead: • 3·

M os t of the lime. i1 is lu cky we are all
d ifler enl Si r E dward Appl eton , wh o
won l he 1947 Nobel Prize in physics lor
his work in stu dyin g t he i onospher e.
said. ··t do not mind w hat language an
Ope ra is sung in so long a~. it is a language I don t underst and ."" l'in not fo nd
of opera becau.&lt;e it i s usua lly sun g in a
language I don·t unde rstand .
In brid ge. it os no good m aking a bod
o r defensi ve pl ay if yo ur pa rt ner
doesn·t un derstan d y our l anguage -

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Nlc~·• 2 Bedroom 14a10
+ l ':l~tetric I Water, Between

Uri turnlshed, Very .Nice, 14x7D, 2
B•,:lrooms,
Bullt·ln
Sttrwo,
B.u lh·ln
Mlo!VWovo1
W.lk
M &gt;Und StOYI In Khcnon, Qor.
don .Tub And Shower 8111,_811•
111111 On Privllo 1.111, I 11IIM
Frun Gohloollo On SA 211,
$3110/Mo. Hucl Wolcomo, 11444111-71100.
.

3 NT

The language
of communication

PEAI\LllTS

~

Farm Supplies
&amp; L• vestock

W,;!·21D7.

Trullor Ftr Ront, 614·2111-15lll.

Pass

1.-r+-4--1--4

By Phillip Ald e r

.

clw•ded. Ju.t 10 minute• from
Atlltnl, ltlrtl"" •• $240300/mo., cable available, eM-

knowllngiy accept
adv6nisements for real estate
which is in violallon ol the law.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

I NT

llolhlr
wliloul
ctwa
• •- Allie·· Al:a
,...
a

lo _ . . .

11 Diminish
·17 Bachelors' ·
degs.
7 - ol T1des
19 - de France
8 Cry
23 Paving
9 Director
material
Joel. 10 - - even keel 25 Mao - -tun11 .
26 Notch
.
~..,.....,'"'""'"'r-1 27 Ce ll It - -

5 Numbers pro
6 Rowin1;J tools

East
All pa ss

the mes sage you are trying to trans mit.

-

ln-

lind -

North

Today·s deal features the sor1 of defen ·

-

.... - -. .11.

Wes t

Open ·

TODAY THEY
· RERUN GOSSIP
HIGHLIGHTS
OF TH' WEEK

- · 1148122114 2 Tar• 1M er.m llachlne, 1 "
IIAJfPV
JACK TABUCKS. a .... Doll CUo, s Door - . nulrlllouii.- For dogo and
F - , Old Dlot.o,

Goods

South

.....

9lort

Merchandise

Household

Now 111111 Rodman 14114, 2 lodll!!!!no TQ!ol Eloclolc, ~!P

Your Key to Great Buys

Now Portsl Good Rumina eon..
dhlon, 12,1110, 614-441-1025.
1882 Chevy S-10, VI, 350, now

2111&amp;

Mc•bllt homM In the cDUntry-

"""'.............

•

WHEN'S YORE
AUNT
LOWEEZ.Y
'COMIN' - ...
HOME ??

tong, .... 20 tlllllon hltlh. •• - .
a.1art.. wlfh tanka, d14-tl2- 1f78 OUC Plok.Up, 4x4, Mony

cfttpoalt. 3(M..

P.~•l: 614-448-2515.

• • 1215C!••'!"

CLASSIFIEDS ...

1178 Chevy 314 tan, 350, 4 bar-

,.,, 11200. 304..7H....

--OnP-1
Pllp1n •11. tnt IW II M.

54 Mlacellai'IIOU8

.111110 Clayton 1411C1112 Aero
2 BR, 1 Both, CA, C'-o
Coiling, 2 Dooluo, F - Yonl,
To G.ollootle,
114 us 1833.

e.,_

BARNEY

Puu~

nickname

Vulnerabl e : North -South
D ealer : Sout h

ii.•e::;J!o!~..r.~

- - ....... -211 .....
1on, ono10 . . . - . - ao glllon

18113 Sunohlno 14x7l 3 lod·
roomoL 2 lotho, Laundry R-,
lx20 IMOk, lx12 lullllng, On
RontoJ • ..... 1111,100, •· 17811.

304-a~. -..~1111,

I' A J 5
oA J 8 2
llo Q 5 4

1111, -13,000
311, ·4 liftBBL.

unfumlahed traiWr, aJI
ole ctrlc, In country, 1271/Jno.

This newspaper wHI not

c._

7515.

SOUT H
• K 7 2

11177 Ford n.vy holt-=~

lal fw ....... -

18500,
.... ·
_
111.
pon:h lind
.......
-_
- .....

Wanted to Do

Peta for Sale

56

81&lt;8 Rlllo Wlh -

46 Space for Ram

~hlon,

18

• 7 5
llo A K 10

3bt -.

=·

nn.

52 Sponlng Gooda

P.I1Lo

4

Dlolow11horlond , _ Compoo. EpH.

Wa,.ocl To· Blq: Junk Autoe
With Or Without llolora. Coli
Llvoly. 114 381

11111 QUC Aotro, 231 Dolrell, t
SDood, And 2 Spood Alii, 114411.0282.
.

Nk., ·a bedrtcmo, Ialli• y;l"l ~
Po.n:h St, Kanouga, OH 6
11113.
.

$21,000. 304-fi2·2783.

F...._~~
-. -..
Dry
... IEIG.
12:11.

-

SIMplna _ , cooldna.
AIM lril. . .,_. on rfnr• .GI

5I

10 &lt;:DfoXiFES510JPrl...

2b1,., tralltr, Htndtrwon, moetly
fur nlahed, waa.h tr/dryer. 30(..
77::1-5248 anytlmo. ·

2 atory gar.ge, · _ , . N.w
Hoven Supormorkot, boltont
floor cornptM•)' ~•d. 2
bop: (Iron! boy 40'x21', !Mr
boy 32'123'), 100'140' lal,

2521. Wo buy Hlllu.

8

Bob
Me Cormlcli Rood FCH" Ront, 1144411-9169.

31 Homes for Sale

Ruoo lloort, ownor. ,,._.

72 Trucks for Sale · ·

21&gt;1· Mobllo Homo On

4411

Rlvwlno -~Antlq-.

.. . -.

.,.,..., -

EAST

.. Q J 8 5
1' 9 7 6 2

. ftf'R)('-J)ME"IV-n

Wontod to buy- '81 or - r
c:.prtco ~.... mUll bo .
Brouthemt or LS, V.a, loaded, 4
- . 614-1112-3802.

Merchandise

2
Bedroom Mobile Home
INOT1CEI
~'50/Mo.
$250
Dopolh,
OHIO YloLLEY PUBLISHING CO. Al!fvencn. 614-317..(1632.
-.nmonJo thai you do - .
2
Bodroom Uobllo Homo,
. . . wllh poopll ~"" - . lind R•fwem:n. o.,o.H, No Pte ..
NOT to ...a -..y 1"'-h lho
moll until you -lgolod . IMI-448-1104.
tho oltwlng.
Vandlna: _ , 011 Rich Qulc:to.
Will Gol A81~Prlcod lo SoiL!
353

pltonll, old lempo old . tttor.

ntOI!IIIIrl, old

--r

Roomolarront · - o r Clolllollolol.

-

'AF RRMA'TIII'- ltCIO.l "

-

~:7:3'

Mobile -

IV'VJT 1t&gt; eRIO::.

"-lOy

llM-f1l.

~~':"A.:Jv~

-n..l &lt;u

,211, 1lltl

~.~.
~-~~­
,
_ Oklo
t2;liN.
, ... Chevy Dlooil .lruck $1,1H.
11115 Chivy Conllor . _ CL
"~"· 1887 ~ Cillllltly
f1,2tf. 1111 Ford
v..
f!,tM. Sca11fo Uoed car., -

· FumlshiCf
Rooms

45

1HIIi 1t\f

'CW()(f?Ats MilE
WE Mlu:JR11Y, •.

Hnon, WY. 304-112-3712.

for Rem

Decorated llorwnrw, -u , ....
. lumHift.

blltwMn

-4:2 MObile Homes

Business
Opponunlty

21

IJ4..H2~2441

IJ.tm·SJpm.

...-:=:":if':. d::

bookkMplng. Poy negotiable
upon ekllla andlor up~~rlenct.
Soncl raoumo to: Olllce s...loo
and Supply, 112 WMI lhln

RcL oil Crab CrMk Rd. 304-a24-

s,...

.::.~
lng nconl ond bo

,.,..,., llockl"t - . d ....
Auctions
every
Thurld•y· lngl eleonlng, light dollvorloo1
frlday. 7pm, MI. Alto A•cllon, tali ng ,t..fPhonl orct.,. ena

,.111:, located on Hone .Cruk

bedrvom homo In
UH, both and 112, 1111
ht~, panlllly c~ed, luu
....._.... , - a n d oulbulld-

one part..tlme per'80n. M~at
know how to d..l whh the
~ubiJc, work under pNaurw, t.

to moko
full lime •uetlon11r, complete ciOIIvooloo. moth lldllo 111&lt;1
1Uctlon
11rvlc:e.
Uc;enad ontco lkiRI hllplul. bo
166,0hlo &amp; Wool Vlrglnll, 304- oblo lo ,_n:h . . , - . fw
773-5785.
-lnlomlollon.
Ex·
Au cllonHr Ccl. Olear E. Click, - - M · - a n d IJPing
holp,... Dulleo lnoludo, bUt ... .
Licon•• t 754-94 &amp; Bondod,
nol llmhod to: nhlna on ....
304-895-3430.

c:0111tructlon In lalu of

compl.tt

Thrw

I

l.oc:al HomJCMier SliM PM~.
,....,. mUll
hove - - '
knowlodgo In .........ry. Pluml&gt;illg, - - , hordWar'o, . .
llifil!lng II1Q . . . . . Send
r..ume to: n.. Dllty s.ntlnet,
P.O. Box 73-BL. Pomeroy, Ohio
4571111.

_,..ruc11on,

27D.

Lady -..a1o Nvo-ln w/o~
lady, roforwnoM Nqulrod.

l.ocol Tul Sorvlco Hlrlng
Dlspalchara
And
Drlvlf"'.
Ortvtra Mua1 .Be 25 And Older,
Sunday odhlon • 2:00 ; p.m. 614
446 8341.
'
Frlcloy. Monday odhlon • 2:00
p.nl . Saturday.
. ~lng lor ono ~ll-llmo and

Rl. 2-33 "Crosaro1da", Ron
Price, But Moor•.~. groctrlta,
p/ua Iota morel Ed l"ruler 930.

........71-1157.

lUll

llonolho, C.H Mr. IMnord, 614-

Aavonce. DEADLINE: 2:110 p.m.

Rick Pearson Auction ComPany,

to lho mol

441~823.

locel bual.r.a now hiring
quolltlod ollltnmont loohnlolan1
roloronco
NqUINd.
Sono
raoumo: Box R-11 c/o Pl.
PI-nt Roglalor, iOo lloln 91,
Pt. P-nt,-wY 25180.

pluo

$400

_ ,....,,1--om.

P - Sowmll, don'

Goorgoo
houl yow -

u-

fumlollodJ

po•tly

Emplo:wma•t Record, Dan"l Celli
Thlo lio lo Full limo Jab With

the day befor11 the .t le to run.

Public Sale .
&amp; Auction

·~~
~
~~~--~~-­
LAlli' 3 bed- form houH,

wanted to Do

18

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

8

Fonj F150,11r, - ·
Cllovy Cull... -

lng 1pplicatlon• lor 1br. HOD
oubeld.- opl. fw oldertv lind

1011

/-X)JJ

$7.=-

Twin Rlv•ra Tower now accept·

Co tt.go lor IWII In Pl. Plolllnl,

Now homo

757~.

l.o81 ; Brown D1chahund, Bar·
ntn• Rd., anaweN to ""Aowcty•,
child"• pot . 304.e75-1715.

v..

Cuta..
Se ~:~r•ne
Oklo euu..
Colli

hindi«! I J
1179.

t Q I 0 9 ·6 3

• J 7 6

*'·- ·

mont In Mlddl_.,, coli 114-9112·
5304 or 81~3011.

3
2 Sicily 13110tlo. 71 Aubbonl
11, GalliPoie: 114 ttl ot•.

old, ma.,, Hut ky, to oood

country home. 304-675-552{

7

~.

EEK &amp; MEEK

1182 Grond Prl~~- S7,3111. IIIIa
Touruo OL.
111141 Fonl
-up F150, !.;415. IM lulcli
Century
or,3111. 111:1 Oldo

Ona bedroom turnlshed apart·

VInton, Largol.lll,- Drjor,

11&gt; A 4 3
I' Q 4

1182 PonU.o Flroblnl, Condhlon, .._ llllolflo, loftor I
P.M. 114-441-7843,
·

Ntee 2·br oi)IIL~ POmeroy A
Middleport, !14-.--NII.

-.1¥01

1 2 -. ......
Fo . 111. 304-ns-111134.
3 Btdroorn Moine In

'

EOH.

ply

2to~L ~ wll HUD ~~

Coli For lnlonnatlon On Qnlor.
lilg nem•i;;:~For BUlin..
unttl- .
Ff'M
Broch u,• Av.llable.

6

Qrodouo' living. 1 lind 2 loed,_, oport- II VI'Manor
and
Rtvenlilt
Aportmonto In Middle-'- From
1232-$35&amp; • CAll IMta 5151.

FOld Flnla. Otcd Condition, $1,850, 114-44Wio!.
1110 Zdr. FOld Sedln , _ . ,
il2,000ml., $33011. 304415-1231.

Anawer to Prevlour

53 Type of
whlakey
57 Large ape
a aeries
60 Roman 12
16 Popular
61 Chinese
v acation area
(comb . 1orm)
18 - Aralat
62 tress
20 N.ahoor sheep 63 Scottish lor
21 Compaaa pt .
Jo hn
22 Illumi nated
64 Coup d" Vll -24. .:ra • . houro.. .... 65..Qne oppa,ed..
26
e.g .
66 Sum (abbr.)
30
welfare
org .
DOWN
34 Freshwat er fish
1 Implore
35 Prel. lor cycle
2 Swedish
36 - Johnny !
· singing group
37 Transporl
3 Tw ~ohoo
39 Born .
· 4 Church room
41 Mental

2

Chov. ~-.
Corio, .....
· runogooc~.

boll
12 BaNbellatll
13 On - - w llh
(equal)
14 Eugene
O"Neltra
doughier
15 Flrot throe ol

7t Autatl for Stile

for Rent

Rentals

TME PAMPERED CIIEF
1h1 Kitchen S1o,. That Coft'IM
To Your Door." LoC.I Con.unant

vtry good home only.
2547 tvtnlngl.

KIT 'N ' CARL YI.FA by Larry Wrtpt

Apaltll'lllll

,..,_,Co, wv. -..,..an.

Ph41 rml.~y.

1 ~ r.

wamacs

44

+1- · 111C1oc. - . lllaiGII co. or b4 aaa MMon I

Roduco· Bum Ott Fot While You
SIMp Tako Opol T- • lnd E·
Vap bturelle. AYIIFn.th

4

In

Real Estate

component•
42 loctor
Moclachlon
43 Women·a
dreuln9 gown
45 Before (pret.)
47 Gravel ridge
48 Football org.
51 Lincoln's

~

lanciL

1111 LX Muotona, 1.0, 78.000
IIDifllnfl oondttlon,
114-»
3M2.
.

mlllia,

-.... . - .oao,

.

and use your t1me construct •vely to enJOY
a sense of accom plishmen t b ~ lhe end of
th e day Stay away lrom ttme wasters
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Sho)" some
emo t1on today and de mon str ate your
feelings 9bout a person who IS very .SP-.e.·
c tal to yo u . Keepmg ever yth tng tn stde
would be a tremendous waste.
LIBRA (Sept. 2l·Oct. 23) Give l am oly
maners top pnority today . You can m ake
amends lor you r lack of ass1sta nce tn a
recent devek&gt;pment
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Your sk1lls
as a promoter Wi ll be excepUonal 'today,
espec ially ·if you are espo using a cause in
wh1c h you tru ly behave. S'incerily wins

work . Ma1l $2 to Matct1maker. P.O. Box
4465, New York , NY 10 163
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) T ry l o
u fl derst and your fri ends ' mot1ves and
re qu 1rements t oda y . ~ Kn o w t n g wh·at
prompts thet r behavtor w 111 str engthen
your relattonshtps
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll19) Your abilities
as a manager will be tmpr essive today.
Follow your \nsttncts as to .when to be
firm and when to be yi elding.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) You might
have extra aces up your sleeve today,
such as intuition , logic and your unique
Perspectl\le : Success is indicated when
uou
use all three.
,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Maneuvering
the affa 1rs or your assoc1a1es is one ot

SAGITTARIUS jNov . 23 -Dec. 21)
Personal gain IS indicated today. Othe'rs

your besl a ssets today : uccesslul p!O·
cedu res w111 be very obvtous to you.
•
··
)
CANCER (June 21-Ju1y 2 2 Al1houg h
· you are usually uneomlonable when olh ·
ers make 1mportarlt decis1ons for you . tl
would be wise to let your mate can th e
shots today.
·
·
·
)
.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22 Work dol1gen11y

, won .t hand you lh1ngs on a s1lver plaue.r,
• but 1f you rea lly want somethmg , y ou II
1
·
, know how to ge1ol.
CAPRICORN jDec. 22-Jan. 19) You are
blessed with a personality that others l tnd
appeali ng . Today your strength s .w111 be
quite evident and ma ke you even more ot
d
·
a sian out

s

supporters.

.

.

.

''

'

DAY

Induct"- Heron ·Lousy· Zipper - LOUDER
My brother is a chronic complainer. but insisls that he
doesn't want t o bother anyone. Dad says he suffers in
silence LOUDER than anyone

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 1, 1995

-Daily Special In Our B~kery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3f$1.00 plain

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

I •

2 LITER

STORE HOURS
MOJdoy thru Sunday
8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.·
POMEROY, OH.

(

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD ~AN. 29 THRU FEB. 4, 1995.

7UPOR
DR. PEPPER

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

15 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED . .·

PRINGLES

$149

.

Pork Chops ••••••••••~~ •••

6-7.5

oz

c

$ 59·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roasts ••••••••• ~~ 1·
KITCHEN PRIDE SL~CED · · . . . . $ 39
3·
Baco.n
.·

••••'••·········. ······· $
6lb.box

'
8
Chicken .................... ~
$2 49

PIC OF THE

(

.,

..

LB.

BUCKEJ BEEF

·

KAHN'S HICKORY GROV~ ~~NELESS

6
9
Hams ••••••••••••••••••••••••

CHATHAM
29.
.DOG FOOD
.

.

1

Cubed Steak•••••••~·····~·
GOLDEN DELIGHT FROZEN .
· $ 119
Turkey Breast ••••••••••~~·.
.

..· .

We1ners ......~.............
•

'

lb

'

.

.

'

·

$ ]99
.Potatoes •••••••••••••~5~~-~~a
_·
RUSSETT

· ,

-· ......

-

-

VALLEY BELL •

,

2% Mdk ••••••••••••••G:~•••

. I

· SU~NY DELIGHT . .

coupon net cost ·4Boz

. I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

, ~ : CARNATION HOT COCQ!_ .

·M•

- ·

.· . ~

10 env.

-

$~1 09

. .

$ ·189
ft ft (

C1trus Punch •••••••~:.~z~... 7 7 ·
TOMSTONE FROZEN
·
2 .S399
·P1zza .................

.

:~"! !'."! !'."!couPo~.!"-"!

~

9(
~
-

·· ·

•

. •:

II
I I
I
I 1I
1
1:
I 1

•

.

!'_"! ~~ ;r'! !'.'! !'_'!couPo~ !'.'! !".'! ~~ ~~

39 OZ

..

I

I

$699 .:: ::

79C

I

::::
I

I
I
II I I 4 ROLL
:I
II II
II
. II
I
II
Good Only AI Powell'a Super Valu
1
I I ·Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
1
1
Offer Good Jan. 28 lhru Feb. 4,1995
1l 1
Offer Good Jan. 29 thru Feb. 4,1995
1I
U'!!ll_1 !!rS:~"!!'!'·- ____ ~I I : ____ _u_m~t! ~·~ c_:u_!l~! _____ 1I
' .
•

· ·

"'-.'

/..

.

.

~

.

.

...

.

.

.

-

.--:---------------,
"Dedicated to enriching and
irnprovin~; the life of Senior Citizens
in Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties."

I

·

.

Fr1es
•••••••••••••••
'!! -·-'!! -·-JouPo'N.!"-'!! -·-'!! :;-'!. !'_"!
•

.

21b

-~~

MUELLERS OF
NOODLES
aoz.

!'_"!

I
I I
II
:
.
.
'
I 1
Good Onlf At Powell's Super Valu
1 1 Offer Good Jan. 29 lhru Feb. 4,11195
I 1_____ Yonll3_P_go:_C.I'tJQII\!II___ __

.

'

s119

~~u~~;-'!

PURE SWEET
::
i:I :i BLENDED SUGAR · ::
I

II
I
II
II
1
11
~I

I

99C

\

••

1
•
I 4 LB.
.
II
I
I
I 1
Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
1 1 Offer Good Jan. 29 thru Feb. 4, 1995
I 1___ r__ ~!!''! 1_ ~•! £u~'!!"!•! ;, ___

.-. -.-. -. .......... ............... .. ......... ...........
,

!'_"! ~~ .

:: : i

3/$1. :~ :
,

FOR THE ·
Vol. 6, Number 11

An Ohio Valley Publishing Company Publication

FEBRUARY, 1995

14.75 oz..

2

51

CHEF BOYARDE
'

2 CHEESE

PIZZAS

NEW BOARD OFFICERS- The new oiToeers for the Senior Center Board of Trustees are John
Taylor, Jim Craft, Joe Stiles, Lola Mae Suiter and Gary Bane. These officers and all the Board
Members donate a great amount of time and talent for the Center. It is because of all the dedicated
effort by these ·people that the Center continues to grow and progress.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary checking Blood ~'rasure at
Point Pleasant Center: left to right: Edna Mattox, Grace
Sommerville, Marly Rhodes and Belly Lee.

-$1.99 • 55C COUPON ON lOX

12 IN.

. ORA IDA FROZEN

·:: MAXWELL HOUSE · i: : i
CHARMIN
:: :i
~:I
.ADC COFFEE
.i: 1I i . TOILET TISSUE . ;: I•:
I

.

. Fr~nch

: IX ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·

'\'

.FR. AM.
SPAGHETTI
O'S

.

75¢

'

LB. BOX.

.

WOE~~S0~1.84!flinus

'

' ' '

ZESTA
CRACKERS

c
.

'

lOR\ CITIZE
'

$139

.

'

'

~r Cunents · FOR THE

SE

20 LB.

• .

KAHN'S

.

'

:~

280Z.

GROUND
BEEF . 10# .

11
I
II
II
•

.._!!
I1

Retired and Senior Volunteers traveled recently to 'Pprtland Elementary, School to "Gobble Up
Some Good Books" for the students. Readers included l·r Rosalie Story, Joan Corder, Leafy .
Chasteen, Dorothy Downie, GI_adys Cummins, Josephine Smith and Grella Sutd~.

. As a special tRat Josephine Smith made home churned butter

for the children. They were delighted with the sample~ they

received on crackers.

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