<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10037" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10037?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T07:13:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20477">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/937a63786482e16034fb608184308f60.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6fa5ce11878228647cd59d5fee409201</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32090">
                  <text>...

L

.

nmee Sentinel

'Riff' comic

~igni~gv m.~~~s end to Bush SD;~mitry '
~ :!.. :.!~- treatr
~ ~OS
Mosco~ . la.t ~r
:from the.._...
IIY
y~ ·
'elm ter

,

r.cweH

f de . ·
Y.
. -on:"- o spatr 10
Samaha to t!'e hetghts '!f ~uperpower swrurutry..for the ~g of

:r~~ ~ 0= alhegre=n~S:~

made ..
R · -. Plaidc Boris y 1 .
·
usstan
nt ·
• e ~n
grheeted Bus~h
. at Mothscob'!' s
S erernetyevo .
on e. tiler
cold day as a lig snow swtrled.
' The two leaders shoolc hands
. g ·anda
spoke brienYbeliore
. , depanm
. m
mot?rcade w!thout making any
NEW CONGRESSMAN- U.S. Rep.-elect Ted Stricldaad of
: ·Lucasville took bis oat)! or olflce rrom State Rep. Mark Malone at
· ; a special ceremony held Thursday afternoon before a standing
- .room only crowd at tbe Meigs County Courthouse. Strickland took
: -tbe oath of office in Gallipolis on Friday. Strickland's wife,
~ :Frances is also pictured. (T·S photo by Brian J. Reed)

:-Local News in Brief:--.
REACT meeting set Tuesday
POMEROY - Meigs County REACf Inc. meeting will be held
at Guy Hysell' s home on County Road 15, Pomeroy, at 7 p.in;
Tuesday. Membership dues are. payable and new members are welcome.

· :. Deputi~s investigate wreck
•

GALLIPQLIS - A Gallipolis woman was cited by Gallia
County sheriff's deputies for failure to report an accident after a
property o~r reported damage to a fence.
According to the report, Debbie A. McBrayer, 33; 6 White Blvd.,
• Gallipolis, was northbound on Claylick Road when she went off the
right side of the road, over an embankinent and into a fence.
The prvperty owner was not named in the accident repoq .

Gallia, Meigs top state rate
COLUMBUS - Gallia and Meigs counties botb topped the
Ohio compilrable unemployment rate of 6.8 percent for the month
of November, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services announced
Friday.
'
Mei~ County's unemployment rate was 11.7 percent and Gallia
County s was 9.7. The national comparable unemployment rnte was
- seven percen~
'
·
Among 0 ·o·s 88 counties, Ha,l.!!les County had the low of 4.2
percent and lmes County had thl h~f 16.4 percent
·

·Commodity distribution set ,. .....
CHESHIRE -The Gallia-M~igs Community Action Agency
will be distributing green beans, peanut butter, orange juice and
, flour Jan. 12 to persons holding fooil commodity eards.
. Persons picking up commodities for others must bring a signed
• note from that person as well as their commodity card. Panicipants
are aiS() asked to bring a bag or contairter to pick up colllinodities.
In Meigs C&lt;illnty, distribution will be held from 9 a.m. to noon,
· or as long as supplies last, at tbe Meig1 County Fairgrounds, the
· Tuppers Plains Fire S.tation, the Pageville Town Hall and the Racine
Fire Station.
.
In Gallia County, distribution will be held from noon until 2:30
p.m., or as long as supplies last, at the Gallia County Fairgrounds,
Gallco in· Cheshire, Mt Carmel Baptist Church in Bidwell and the
Crown City Fire Station.
. ·

sumnut :w~th Yellsm •. as well as his
251b and. likely last tnp abroad.
'Yeltsm was to honor Bush at a
state dinner at lhe Klemlin 's Hall

G~~ory

'
ASTRO-GRAPH,

New Year's arrests reported
'
·•

,
_
,

.

•
""'

~

REEDSVILLE - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported that deputies arrested two Reedsville area youths on
chargeS of underage consumption after receiving a complaint on
New Year's morning.
·
.
'
The juveniles were released to their parents and were cited to
Meigs County Juvenile Coun. ·
·
Thomas J. Williams, 46, Albany. was arrested early New Year's
Day following an incident in Carpenter in which he allegedly shot
at the Kurt Dailey residence and truck: He was located by depuiies
and charged with drivmg under the mOuence, no valid dnver's
license, no valid registration, Oeeing ari officer, reckless operatiO!i
and resisting arrest.
Dailey refused to file charges for the damage done by lbe shooting. Williams posted bond and was released· pending a hearing in
Meigs County Court.

Stolen weapons' are recovered
'

;

JIOMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Saturday that four of fi ve weapbnnaken in the December bur- glary of the Calvin Mayle residence on Bashan-Keno road have
been recovered by an Ohio State Highway Patrol Drug lnlerdiction
Unit in M~ County. Investigation is continuing. ·

~

•

POMEROY - Units of Meigs County Emergency Services
answered the following calls for assistance:
Thursday - 10:17 p.m., R,utland squad to Price Hollow Road,
Angela White to Holzer Medical center.
.'
Friday - . 1:34 p.m., Pomeroy to Union Avenue; Sarah McDow·
ell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 3:24 a.m., Rutland unit to Dex.ter Road. Delbert Crum !r., treated notlllinsjx&gt;rted; 6:51 am., Middleport unit assisted Mason unit on structure fire; 9:24 a.m., Mid·
dleport unit to Zuspan Hollow Road, Hugh Thompson to Veterans;
10:04 a.m.•.Middleport squad to Forest Run Road, Carrie Grueser to
Veterans; 3:29p.m., Rutland squl!d to Larlcins Street. Dave Davis to
Veterans; 3:43 p.m., Pomeroy units to State Route 7 and Hiland
,Road for auto accident, Middleport and Rlllland units assisted;
tllenda St. Clair, Jewel Curtis, Norma Curtis, James St Clair, and
Ruth Francis to Veterans, Carolyn Johnson refused treatment
Satur&amp;y -· Midnight, ·Pomeroy unit to Mulberry Avenue, Grace
Call to Veterans.

•

Couples file for divorce

•
•
•
•
•

'

EMS. units answer calls

·~

. POMEROY

~

Actions for divorce have been filed· in Meigs

.,• County Common Pleas Court by ~ie Lorie Apperson, Penland,
against Dwight·O. Apperson, Woodbridge, Va.; and by Lori R. Bai~

...
'

ley, Long Bonom, against CJinton J. Bailey. Long Bottom.

": Marriage license issued

•:

•

~

•

t Christmas tree pickup set

_

•;
POMEROY - Pomeroy residents wiU be afforded the· apportu' nlty to dispose of their Christmas trees~with help from the villtige. .
..
Trees may be left .at the c ~b for pickup by village crews on
~ Tuesday, or may be left behind the ·old junior high building anylime.
•
.

See Answer to
ileJog '
88 Hollow cylinder
89 Grafted: heraldry
90 River bank

v-

Things In which you ptacod considerable stock In the put mlghl not be all
that important lcir you In the year ahead.
TheM changing
wll wort&lt; towards your benefit an~ glve you more
gratifying objectl-.
CAI'fiiCORN (Dec. 21 ,_ 111 Subdue .
· urges to gam\ite or IIP801d beyond your,
·means todey. In sttuatlona where you
· fee4 you are lucl&lt;y, you mlghtjuot be kidding youroetl. C8prlcom, treat yoursetf
to a binhday gUt Send 'fl!r Caprieom's
Astro-Gtep~ predictions lor the year
ahead by mlllllng S1.25 Plui a tong, sell· ·
a d d . -; stamped anvelope to AstrO.
Graph, c/o this nowiPII!fr, P.O. Box
91428, C-and, OH 44IDt-3428. Be
sura to state yW!t zodlllc llgn.
.
AQUARIUS (.lin. :liD Fell. 111 P r llmlng Is eoientlal today In the management of a dellcato llluatlon. If you try to
Ioree things ahead 01 - u t e, you
could Jam the 'm8Chlnery. ·
PI8CE8 (Felt. 20
Dlo 201 An 8180clat~ or youro ~ 11 qune artlul at be. lng able' to manlpuloto ot'-- might try
hlf or her wiles on you today. H you are
watchful, this penon Wit have to find
another "patsy."
.
.
ARIES (Marcii21-Aprll11111 your bahk
balance Is a· bi1 out ol whack In thle cycle, It's limo to think pt ways to revloe
your budget. Upon CloM examination,
you should be able to - - · the tat
·
can be trimmed.
TAURUS (April ill llile, 201 Objectives
must be cleai1y deflnad"loday or aloe
you might strlva for targeto that could
later prove to be countarproductlve.
Don't be "illy" about your alms, be

rc

92 Rainfall
94 Neapolitan
folk dance
. 98 Raglan
99 Again
100 Encountered
102 Birds' homes
103 Chicago Whit. 104 2,000 tbs.
105 Mast
106 Extra
108 " - Hard"
109 You and l
110 "This - .Your

ard as( lous) •

24

ry

2

e of -

&lt;,-.

•.

Across

..,

45 Jean-Claude's
friend
4 7 Three-lagged
stand
49 AHectionate
50 Ordinance
· 5 ;'Natural ability
54 Dirt
55 ·eat
56 Sharp ends ·
59 Writing lluld
60 Period or time
62 Ringing
64 Roster ·
.65Sun god
66 Newley ID
67 Recede
69 River In France .
70 Dispatched
7i Small military

aircraft
12
74
76
77

TV's McClanahan
Musical drama
Tiny ·
'""-r-.
Shoshonean
Indians
76 Speck
, 79 Crocodile
members
82 Tallies
· 84 Assistants
85 Paradise
1

•

life' '
111 Strain for
breath
112 Head rests .
114 Limb
116 Kin: abbr.
117 Nullify
119 Melody
120 Fish trap ·
122 Swords
124 Ginger125 C~lng deviCes
126 Joins together
128 A Beatty
129. Speechless
performer
131 " Desire Under

the _ ..
132 Yellow ocher
133 Mother of pearl
135 Watering place
1:i8 Poem
139 Large bir.ds
140 large truck
141 Ocean ·
142 Early mdt n
143 French article
14,4.ChoiceSl
145 Put.oH
.147 Chinese factions
149 Collection or
facts
150 Artist's stand
152 TyPo. style
15-4 Make amends
156 ~;'Its
158 Narrow openings
159 Deep steep
160 Iron
181 Shouls

DOWN
1 Domesticates
'

certain.
GEMINI (IIIJ 21""- 2111 Sometimes II
Is wlae not to mike strong llatomenta
about things that are on your mind. Thla
is one or th_,dav- - . yqu might
make cotnrMnll that you'll Wish you
could retract. .
CANCER (.lllne 21""UIJ 211 Today
friend might come to you ror aome bual. , _ or llnanclal advice. Before tilling
him or her wllat to do, be doubly certain
that you ~now wllat you're talking
about .
.LEO (MJ .._... 211lllilatly you are
rather """"' at mllclng declalona u~cler
- r o , but thla might not 1M! one of
thole days. Don't lot a lon:alullndlvldull coerce you Into IMiclng ...,
. alve Juclgmarno.

.

p· u
· ''z·

'

uzz e on

age

2
3
·
4

Angry
Sn Is its
symbol
That man
5 " The sixth

.

sense": abbr.
6 Feel sorry for

-

sins
7 Newspapef

executiv8s
8 Wire measure ,
9 Negative prefix
10 TV's Koppel
11 Hbrseshoer's
metal block
12 Principal
·· 13 River Island
14 Louise tD
15 Staten or
cOney16 Containers
'
17 In addition 1
18 "Tag" player
19 Hot wine drink
20 Jogs
27 Employ . ·
29 Border on
31 Devoured
• 1 36 ..,- ol contention
37 Chess piece
39 Step
·
40 Fork prong
41 Disturbance
•· 42 " - Submarine"
43 .Lengthy
44 Badger
.,t6 Coroner : abbr.
· 48 Mu~cal
instrument
49 Keen
Misplaced
51 Crown
52 Cancel '
53 Surgical saw
55 lead
·
56 Translixes
57 Commonplace ..
58 Wise persons
61 Encourage
63 "sex, - and

so

videotape"
64 Drags
88 Peter , to Jane
Fonda
70 Guided
t 1 Cindy Crawlord
and Chrllitle .
Brinkley, I.e.
73 Football team
74 S-shaped
moldln!j

81 Seed
8.3 Awey
84 Emmets
87 Shirley89 Goes In
90 - AmeriCa
I
,
91 Worn away
92 Break suddenly
93 Actual
95- Minor
96 Bring down
97 Skating

!

i

..

"
~

'
c

l

~

\,

.~

'

'
tr
,.'
'

.••
'

'

'•

I

•
l
'

&gt;

•
'i •
!

'

t'
t
r
I

!

-

('

153 Behold!

r;(

155 Rooaewtl ID
157 Faroe Islands
whirlwind

I·r:
•••

ICCIRPID (Clot. Ill llau. IIIII II blat

poling ...... Cotltltct ooulcl roaull
. you . . hoping
lor •

~you
are too dlflk:ullto II'- toclay, n oould

=··

: ; : : ; . (llw, D Dlo.l1)
qulc*ly
you•rw
you,

InvOlved

l*i*
wi1Ciln
tom
lrJinlwiiii
to ,.._

a. polite and 811knclldlilgl

~·-

'

'

~~--

•

J'

'

'
I

•

·

h....t-

•

'1

.,

I

'

.

MOSCOW {AP) - From the threat of nuclear war. .
stifling heat of a dirt-Ooor school
" ! think in terms of how the
room in SoJ119!ia to the wintry ele- administration will be looked at, I
gance of.the Klemlin's gilded halls, think it will be predominantl y
President Bush was at hom e because of these successes in wOrld
abroad, relishing the foreign policy affairs, " Bush told a group of
triumphs of his waning presidency. Marines in Somalia at an a banThe hand that on Sunday signed doned Soviet air strip now used to
a treaty with Russia drastically fly in relief supplies to lbe town of
reducing the world 's nuclear Baidoa.
weapons stocks had two days eiuiiIn a rare inood of public reOecer slapped u,s. Marines on the tion, Bush shared with the troops
back for a job well· done in Somalia his plans after leaving office Jan.
and patted tiJe heads of destitute 20 and moving back to Texas. ·
Somali orphaDs.
·
"It will be a whole shift in gears
The president returned to Wash- for me, away from the public life
· ington just before midnight Sunday that I've loved and baclc to thi pri. from his 25th and fmal foreign trip, vate life that I think everybody also
a 19,000-mile j9urney celebrating · enjoys," Bush said.
what Bush sees as highlights of his
His love of the public light was
presidency - using military force much in evidence that New Year's
to aid the needy and lessening the Day a5 Bush visited with Marin~~

in tb.eir foxholes guarding the air
strip , toured an orphana.ge in
Baidoa, chatted with helicopter
maintenance crews and sat on .a
sandbag surrounded by Army
UOOJlS scooping up spaghetti and
meatballs from a·military ration kit
Undeterred b): tbe 100-degree
heat, the clouds of choking red clay
dust stirred up by his heavily
guarded motorcade and the choppy
helicopter rides that Dew him from
· stop to stop, Bush shook hundreds
of hands, posed f~r ·hundreds of ·
photos with tbe uoops, .waved at
hundreds of Somalis chanting
•"Welcome Bush."
He was clearly in his element,
ducking in and out of tents with an
.. at ease" order to the troops
inside, chatting about the ~ifficult .
conditions, the showers, the snakes.

'

Ohio'.s 120th legislature
c9nvenes, faces tough jssues

,.

causes . .
h. · d
s
t ...uj ·
eavy amage Q u ay
..

-----..,...-l ·

...

...---.Local briefs-....;..._,
one-vehicle ·accident on Ohio 681 in Scipio Township Sunday
around 3:45p.m.
· · ·
.
·
·
Brendan E. \{night; 16,•was eastbOund on Ohio 681 when he loSt
cootr61 of his 1991 lsuzu station wagon in a left curve, the GalliaMeigs Post' pf the State Highway Patrol reported. The vehicle went
off the left side of the road, sb'UC")an embankment and ov~rturned
onto tts l(lp. .
·
Knight wu uanspcned by the Meigs County Emerge~y Medical Service to Veterans ·Memorial Hospital for treatment of minor
injuries, the patrol reported.
.
·.,
·
Damage to the veliicle was listed as hcilvy and disabling.

Deject blamed in Sunday wreck

,.(

.

Gerard said Soulsby might have
only worked part·timc for some .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The budget usually is introduced hoi, tobacco and othc;r taxes to help
law enforcement agencies.
eliminate a $250 million deficit
'the !20th Ohio General Assembly in late February or early Marth.
The board respondecl, by telling. was to convene .this afternoon with
"When you have a budget prob- projected for the fiscdl year ending
Gerard that his. request came too tough problems ahead but tern- lem , that's all you can think June 30, .·
late to be reviewed. Gerard then . porarily freed - thanks to a about,'' said Riffe.,
· The billlllso will provide about
·s entleuers to al) three county · ·December tax boost - of urgent
· He and Aronoff worked with. the $900 million in new revenues for
judges,' telling them not to swear problems with the state budget
governor last month to raise alco- . the ne~t two-year fiscal period.
Soulsby i,n for another term.
. Gov, George Voinovich al)d
Soulsby has said.he ~9rked f~J.. .
ls:adep...oLb.o.tn ~ou,tet§~.ljj.ey_._!J'or'l.l~...._n~a·tfire
~
ti.riitasii pollee otUcefiii Pomeroy. expect
wellire, ellucatfon ISSues. .1. l ' '" Uv
'
In Jackson and Morrow coun- and an ove ~haul of the state's
.
·
.
ties, questions revolved around wo{kers' compensation system to
~
renewal of law enforcement certifi- get early attention.
.
I
.
I
The Senate wlis to convene at .
cations within the last three years.
Gregg Kiefer, newly elected 1:30 p.m .. and. the House one-half
HOGSE1T, W.Va. (AP) -A spreading to tile cargo. Ammonium
'
sheriff in Jackson County, says he hour later for swcaring-in cerehas renewed his certification mooies and other routine organiza- towboat caught lire as it pushed nitrate is highly flammable and is
'
eight barges of ammonium nitrate used to make explosives, fertilizers
despile l~yiilg the JaclcsOn Police tional matters.
Department..irH-984: .
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D- up the Ohio River, authorities said. . and laughing gas, according to The
Merck Index.
..
· Kiefer's stil\ement was support- Wheelersburg, indicated that the No Onq was injured.
The boa~ named the Ms. Jane,
Coast Guard investigators were ·
ed by Reid, W. Chave, director of session won't get into full swing
certification and standards for the until later this month after commit- was traveling upriver from ,trying to determine the cause of the .
Ohio Peace Officer Training Coun- tee assignments and other organiza- Paducah, Ky., and had just passed fire, Valley firefighters said.
Assisting Valley at the scene
cil. Chave says he examined tional tasks are completed.
· through the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam
when
the
fire
began
at
5:40
were
the Point Pleasant and Mason
Kiefer's files and found that he had
He said that after today, the
a valid law enforcement. uaining House won' t formally meet again p.m. Sat.urday, said Assistant Chief Volunteer Fire Departments, a team
certificate.
until Jan. 13 .. Senate President Ted Nance of die Valley Volunteer from Shell Chemical . as well as the
Outgoing Sheriff Edgar Hay - Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, has Fire Department
Point , Pleasabt EMS and Valley
.
burn said· he may file a lawsuit · a similar schedule, although the
Firefighters from three Mason ~s .
_challenging Keifer's credentials.
A mobile home was destroyed in
Senate is scheduled to meet again County departments fought the
· When Tom Harden defeated Tuesday.
flames in the towboat's engine a fire early Monday morning in
Sheriff Rex A. Yeagley in MOQ'OW
V.oinovich and the others said room for three hours Saturday West Columbia, according to . a
County, Yeagley. challenged Hard- that although the budget situation before extinguishing it about '10 spokesman for · the
Mason
en's certifications.
Volunteer Fire Department
remains precarious, tax increases p.m .. Nance said. ·
A visiting judge has upheld that took effect today will erase a
"It was a hard fire to tight,'' · The residence ·of Virginia Russell
Hlfden 's law enforcem"t certifi- projected state deficit and alia)!! Nance said. "Not only did we have of Cedar Hollow in West Columbia
cauon, but Prosecutor Howard Hl!il more time for other issues to· be. · to keep putting water on the boat, was estimated a~ a total 'loss,· the ·
says there may be some 'question as discussed.
we also had to continuously keep spokesman said. The alarm came in
.
to whether Harden. is legally sherBut it won ··, be long until pumping water off tbe bol!' a.t ~ a 7:32 a.m. with 25 fi remen and
iff.
three trucks responding to the
Voinovich submits a new two-;year same time to keep 11 from smlcing.
Harden couldn't be reached for budget which must be approve4, by
scene. The cause of the fire is uncomment .Sunday. A message was July I. Depending on what happens
•
The boat stayed afloat but was detennined.
left on an answering. machine at a ·tO the economy, the budget soon heavily damaged, he said.
The New Haven Volunteer Fire
liSting for Tom Harden. ,
.
could re-emerge as the top probFirelighters separllted the barges Department assisted M:ison at the
. RAILING COMPLETED' ·
Wilson of Pomeroy, left, 1\nd •
Despite challenges and com- lem .
from the boat to keep the fire from scene.
•
Doa Frymyer of Shade, right, l!ave tompleted work oa a band·
plaints against the qualification
crafted ralllag for handlc11pped members of the Sacred Heart
rules, the Buckeye State Sheriffs'
.Catholic Church In Pome~oy. Some 70 hours ofcombliled doDated ' Association's executive director,
labor went Into the project, which was completed last fall. Tbe two
Bob Cornwell, says the association
men, wllo·also do custom lroD work for Individuals, are now at
supports the la)Y.
wotk on a railing for tbe parking lot across the Jtreet.
.

Youth cited in accident
A Spericer, W.Va., youth was cited for failure to control after a .

'·

.

Bush, Yel~s1n sign
historic arms treaty
.

-

•,.'

ac-

LIIRA (e.pe. • a.L •) ItaiM or mti'Chandlle 'that
10 bl fDOCI bar·
g~atodey m1g1tt not bl10 .,_. onoe
theY are dOIIIy aorullntiM. T.o INI-on~the ..,. aide, '/011 rllllgliHylng

,·

''

123 oilelll .:.._ ., ' • "'
wlnd"Ynniruments ·
126 "Enemy - ·:
127 " - From the
Mall"
129 Burrowing
animals ,
130 Standard of
perfection
131 River in Germany
132 Morley 134 Tattered cloth
136 Jury Nst
1
l37 Collect .
139 Morays
140 Reject
.144 Wager
145 PlunQe
146 Mullc variety
'147 Pedal digit
146 Timid
r49 Everyone · .
151 Therefore

•

~

'

'

COLUMBUS (AP) - A state
Qualifications of sheriffs hi
law relating to job qualifications Jackson, Morrow and Meigs counhas ~ to cliallen11es of sheriffs in ties have been c!tallenged under the
at least three counues ~ong the 35 new rules.
in Ohio where sheriffs were elected
Paul Geiard, a bailiff for Meigs
in November.
County Common Pleas Coon, lost
New rules that regulate sheriffs' in his bid to oust Sheriff James
- qualifications became effective in Soulsby.
1992: They say sheriffs must have
• Gerard asked the county's elecfive years of full-time law enforce- tions boar.;i to review tbe CJl:@ll-;. .
ment experiei\ce"8fl'd111ilst'1!e"ceiii· - .tilllS of Stlulsby, 'Who had been
fied in law erifom\ment training. · sheriff since Jan. I, 1989.
.
·

~

99 Church part

t 25 HIQ!l·PM~I184l

·'

•

man~vers

101 Garden toot
105 Surfeit
106 Transgrilases
107 Pitcher
·
111 Strong wind
112 Plays on words
113 Omen
115 Thick, !Iuman
hair
1 16 Cincinnati 118 Contest
.
119 Scottish caps . .
• 121 causes ·.

elections contested
:in Meigs, Jackson counties

"'I

'

.

1 Section, 10 Piigoo 25 cent o

. A Multlmodl• lne. Nowapoper

.

·. ~ Sheriff's

up a Situation that af- ·

that you llf'd '/011- don't «It I • to,... todll\&gt; wMro you IIOICI-Igly op.

'

78 Small amount

fectl you. Cowr youl'lllf In dlbllop·

I

.

of.;STA)lt.· II treaty

80 Mental Image

VIRGO (A. .. aa.lapl. Ill ~ ..
with whom you may bl c1o11ty Involved

glaa,

. .

77-r~l

1rnJ1ut.

menta you oou1c1 bl held
c:oUntablo for IIIIOiher'a mlatlkea.

.

'

'

a

today might foul

:·.

-

75 Dart

•

PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, Janua,.Y 4, 1.993

z L·ER·

'··

w-

POMEROY ·- · A marriage license has been is.sued in Meigs
·- County Probate Court to Jack Randall Coleman, 55, Mason, W.Va.,
- 'and Charlotte Amanda Carr, 52, Pomeroy.

Vol. 43, No•.176 .
Copyrighted 1193

L_.-;;z:=========================~===:___;_j
p
I
p
c2

Eye part
26 Ship' s crane
30 Alfghl
32 .Proceed
33 Latin conjunction
34 - apart (reserve)
35 Storage
compartmenl
36 Flying mammals
37- up with
(tolllfate)
, 38 smeh •
40 Choir voiCe
42 Actor Brynner
43 Solitary ·
44 Another 40

...... 1,1111

v·

•

a1

•

· '

Low tonlgbl bt :lOs. Rain.
Tuesday, cloudy, blgb In upper

30s.

.•,

Four
are
hurt
in
Mason
fire
'MASON - Three .people were 'fighters were ..So injured and ltellt-

u·' No
·· A·.

·s..

23

"

PbRlLAND - Ponland PTO will hold a special meeting on
Monday at7 p.m. at the school. The elimination of double grades in
the middle of the school year will. be. discussed. All concerned par- .
ents from Portland and Letart are mv1ted to meet at6:30 p.m., prior
to the meeting.
·

Pag~9

.,

scene.

burg
and Pearson,
Mr. ~a son,
.Sheets,
daughMatthew
Wheelers-..
ter, Gallipolis.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - None.
Thursday discharges .__ Brenda ACROSS
Couerill, Calvin Lane, Helen .
1 Tenth part
Edwards and Richard Thornton.
6 Forgive
11 Old vlqllnmaker
Friday admissions - MarCia
16
Blemish
Capehart, Pomeroy, and Albert
21
The
Ram
Eastman, Coolville.
Roman
official
22
Friday discharges -None.

GALLIPOLIS - The non~partisan voters meeting originally
scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday at tbe Disabled American Vete1'3lls
:· building in Kanauga has been postpOned. A new date has not yet
~ been set.
.
.

.Portland PTO slates session . .

Kicker:
075897

·
H. PI a1 news

~~'!'~d

Pick 3:
611
Pic.k 4:
3309
Super .Lotto:

3·8·16-31·3~38

ized the treaty in Geneva 00 Tuesday witb Russian Foreign Minister listed in stable condition 111 Pleas- ed at lhe
Andrei Kozyrev
ant Valley Hospital Saturday fol·
It is undetermined how lhe fue
Bush arrived 'in the Russian cap- lowing an early morning rue New began and no damage esti~ has
ital amid the winter's worst cold Year's Day in Mason.
.· .
· beeti set, although the spokesman
OS 't
snap, where temperatures Saturday - Otho Casto, Shelly Casto and said the strucwre and contents were
plunged to an Overnight low of 20 Lori Casto, all of Mason, are listed a total loss.
Holzer Medical Center
degrees below zero. Ternperatuks' in stable condition after being
The S)Xikcman applauded efforts
. Disc barges Dec. 30: ."
in rilidafterrioon.rose to 3 degrees. · taken to .PVH following the Friday by tile fue depanments and reportJeffrey J bnson, Jamie Lane;
The two were bare-headed in the fue which destroyed their home at ed tfuit two two-story suuctures on
Patrick
, Roier Halstead, cold, but the American spent only 16 Front SL r
_ •
either side of the hose were saved...
Sheila Cars y, Ll!ther Harvey, about a minute or. two on lhe tar·
Also injured. but not admitted, One of the structures is located
Donald Le · , Mrs. Barry Johnson · mac before getting into a Cadillilc was Scott Casto.
witbin one foot of tbe destroyed
According to a spokesman for home. Also saved were three vehiand. daughter; Iva Circle, Christo- · limousine that lKxe U.S. flags.
pher Burt, Jonl Rhodes, Leah Mur·
Police forted about 20 hard·line the Mason Volunteer Fue Depart- cles pii;J'ked outside of the resi·
ray, Acie Sheets, John. Bartels, · protesterS away from the entrance ·Iilent, fireftghters were called to the · dence.
·
·Margaret Houston, Mrs. Donald to the airport: The demonsuators scene at6: 12 a.m. Assisting Mason
A total of 42 fin;fighters were
Forney and daughter; Kenneth carried signs that said in Russian, were the New Haven and Middle- on the scene for apprpximately
J.ohnson. Mrs. William Kindle and "Down with Bush!" and "Russia port. deaents, as well as tbe three hours. Six aucks were at the
son; Mrs. Elbert Adkins and son; is not Somalia!"
New Havill! d Mason Emergency scene·from Miison, two from New
Stephanie Hudson, Dennis 'Miller,
Even tbough the police moved MediCal S
e.
Haven and two from Middleport
Lauren Hudson, Jeremy Mcc:H.ary, then! away from the enuance, they
The spok sman said two fireand Lassie Hall.
'
.-----..,..:;.
· --------..,..' _ _ _._._._ .;.·- - - - - - - - - - , - -- - -,
.
Mts,
Keller,
son , Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.

Ohio Ltittery

strip,starts
today

Yeltsin called START II the:
"documentol'thecentury" and the
" most important achievement in.
relations between our two coun- ·
tries "
B·ush told American soldiers in
Somalia on Friday that the treaty
was' " tbe most historic arms con- ·
. trol agreement ever made."
He noted that it would eliminate
Russia's most fearsome weapon,
the SS-18 missile, each of which ..
· carries 10 wameads.
"On our waldl. that fear will be
red uced ,". he sat'd•
'

woul,d have been visible from
Bush srnoiOrCade.
After .leaving
today, Bush planS to stop m Pans
for a chat with President Francois
Miamand.
•
Mittenand had been considering
~isi~n~ Bush itr Washington, ~ut
this JUSt worlcs out better to discuss issues such as Bosnia. Somalia
and other areas where we're
involved witb the French,',' Bush.
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said in
a statement issued-from Air Force
One en route
· 10Moscow.
·

pu~~~~i.·s ~urtb and fi~ ~~~~~~~~: .

· :' Voters meeting postponed

;,
_

of Facets later Saturday. :roday,
Bush and YeltsiD are to stgn ~e
that •lecbes U.S. and RUSSIIII
l"!!ll·nnge nuclctlr arsenals twothirds over the next10 years.
•
Bush, ar_riving from Somalia
where he viewed· effortS by U.S.
\!OOJ!.9 to feed .a s~theing poPII;Ia·
uon! .was !'luru!ed ~
·R:usstan
capttal wnh h1s w1fe, Barbara,
Chief of Staff JIIIICS A. Baker lli
and Secretary of S!3te Lawrence
Ea,gleburger. ·
lt was a sentimental journey for
Baker• who· as Bush's -·-~
_,..., of
state carried out many of the negotiations tbat led co tbe landmark

••

.

A vehicle defect was listed as the ca~J4C of a OIICI·vehicle wreck
on OhiO 681 in Olivo Towtllhi~ Sunday at'ound 10:35 Lm:
· According to the Oallia-Me.gs Post of the State Hi$,hway ~.
Jmes A. Wa111011,'26, 39672 Silver Ridae Rd., Reedsville, was eutbowld on Ohio 681 and lost control ofllis 1989 Chevrolet 1500 on
wet pavement in a rtpt curve. The truck went off the lefi si~ of the
road, struck a ditcll and overturned onto its top.
·
A chcc:k o( the b'UCk' s brakes s~ the right brake w'as not
workinJ~Iy, the patrol reptXIed.
·
·
No
were reported. Damage to the truCk was unlisted.

wea

:Prtictlces·to resume ·

Followio&amp; 1 CllrisUIIU break, the SO.plus ~mber Big Bend
Commiltity Bind Will tellllllc IChcanlls on Monday at 7 p.m. The
' COIItiDtled 011 Pill' 3

·

Protesters take
plea bargain

EAST LIVERP()()L, Ohio (AP)
- Seventy-five people arrested
dlll'ing a protest at a hazardous. waste incinerator received suspended jail sentences today for trespissing.
They. accepted a plea bargai.n
under which they were given $150
fines and I().day jail sentences. The ·
jail term Wll SIISIIC1Idc(L
•
·
. Each penon
the option to
serve a day. in jail Instead of paying
tbcffiiC.
·
It was n.o t immediately clear
how many of the defendants chose
to go to jail. M11nicipal Judge •
Melissa Byen-EmliiOI'Ii!lg said the
jail could accommodate (ivc men
and two women a1 a Lime.
The qreement wts reached
minutes before a jtlry trial was to
begin. - ~
All " ·people· faced chargCI of
uespuslng for allePtlly cnte'ring
Waste Technoloales Industries
property durinl tbe N(!v. 22
dcmonstrllioll. They facotltQJ to 30
claysln jail and $250 Ia linea.
··
The prolelt capped a week of
dernonSII'IIiona atlhO plant.

nad

.. '

STEDt wEIGH-IN - 'Re auu.t weiJb·ID
for Melp Count7 Pair market
lleld
on Satnida111t the f'alrs-ldl. Memben or the

•een -

UYatock SIIOw ud Silt C011alatee aad Cb,lp
lfauert7, 4-H llftl, cuducted tbe wel1b·la
and tatoollll cl "' steen. A computer P'DI'¥1•
titled !'Dellp Your Steer" will
. be given to eacll
'

'

'

' '

m-Jten,

ile~ed to DSIItt tile

de~.

me•ller. hi

•• ,......................
1111 Weiallt tor the fllr, bead. 011 the lalp llte!Pt .
and welallt and wei1II·ID tlae. Here, a Iller'
OWIIed 117 Lia Halblu cl Cbester Ia Wl!ped
in.
·

.

..

�•
'

Commentary

"

Monday, January 4, 1993.

..

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Heavy~ rains

Pa;e ·· 2 The Dally Sentinel •.
Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio
Monday, January 4, 1993
'

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - By· the time
Caspar Weinberger formally
requested a pardon in a Dec. 18
note to the White House, the case
for the pardon had alre.ady
' achieved criti'\al mass, thanks to
· Independent Prosecutor Lawrence
Walsh. He's been his own worst
enemy.
·
.
•'The one . principal pers.on •
responsible for the pardon was
·Walsh " said one Wemberger inti·
mate. :'Over a pei\x! of time peo- .
pie got tfred of him. He.kept !os~g .
. m coun. He kept gettmg angner.
The pardon bandwagon, which
crept along in the early fail, was 'at
full steam in November thanks to
two .tactical blunders by Walsh: a
second indictment four days before
ithe election, and the disclos~ of
$50,000 mock trials.
The Oct 30 indicunent played
into the hand$ of Republicans who
dismiss the entire six-year ·investi. ·galion as a political prosecution.
The second indictment not only
charged Weinberger .with perjury
for lying about his knowledge \)f
the Iran-Contra scandal, but con- .
tained a nate contradicting claims
, by ]Jush that he was " out of the
loop" in the secret deal that sent
arins to Iran in exchange for American hostages.
·

Ill Couit 8U.t
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THlt ll'fBRUT8 OJ' 11D 111tiG8-Ki\SON AREA

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubliSher
•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They

sbo~ld

be less than 300

words. All letters are subject to editing and must be si&amp;ned with name,
addiess and telepbooe n.umber. No unsigned totten wiD be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addlessing issues, not personalities.

.

·Studies proliferate
Voinovicb. administration
.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS- Gov. Gei&gt;rge Voinovich says his at~mpts to bring
efficient, businesslike management to s~ government will show results
in the second half of his four-year term.
·
· He referred in an interview to a myriad "public-private partnerships"
in which business executives and government officials forJ1!ed commit·
·
tees to stUdy ~lems and recommend solutions.
. "All this 1S not just talk," said Voinovich, perhaps mindful of the frequent lament of an old mentor: fonner four-tenn Gov. James A. Rltodel!·
. Rhodes, who picked Voinovich as his lieutenant govern&lt;!r runnmg
mate and won a third term in 1978, used to say. that toO many m government and the news media ''try to talk problems to death.'' ·
.
vojnovich said that within the next two m~.ths, he p~ to P.U\1 all of
the studies together for ll: ~n to. the public. All of thos stuff is sort of
like a master plan for Ohio, he said.
.
.
.
.
·The governor listed nine sb¥1y groups, mcluding his Operauons Task
Force which is now winding down after making hundreds of nutS-and- ·
bolts recommendations. He said many have been implemenled.
As a result of one recommendation, all of Vomovich's 28 Cabinet
directors - and the govern~ himself - took a course in "total quality
management'' provided by the Xerox Corp. · .
.
The other study groups are:
·
,
·
-Governor's Education Management Council: Studying school funding equity and other issues, including implementation of national education goals.
-Ohio Export Pro,n,JOtion and .'r~l!d&lt;? Council:. S~udying ways to
increase Ohio's compeuuveness and mtuauves that wtll tncrease expons.
~science and Technology Council: Detennining areas in which Ohio
can establish a leadership role; provides a focal point for assessing opportunities related to science-and technology.
·
·
. '-Meatpacking Task F9rce: Identifying method$ by which Ohio's
mealp8Cicing industry can be expanded.
:--Ohio Energy Strategy Interagency Task Force: Has made recommendations for public education concerning energy conservation, tax
credits alternate sources and competition among energy providers.
"-&lt;&gt;hio Business Roundtable: Intended to form a partnership among
state business leaders ttl solve problems that affect Ohio's economic vitality, including workers' compensatimt.
.
.
.
-Ohio Business League: Studymg ways to tmprove the busmess climate for Ohio's minority business enterprises, including export opponuni-

ue:_Farnily ruicJ Childre.n Firs; Initiative: WorlclnJI to foe~ ~-ial itryice
providers on ovetall family needs, rather than specific mdivtduals.
.
Voinovicb also is working for reforms in worice!'S' compensauon,
based on a major study already completed. He also !S working for the
Ohio Board of Regents' "Managing for the Future Taslc Force;" which
he said represents the forst atlelllpt ever to sqeamline management of the
stare's higher education system.

Today in history
-·

•

•

'

'

•

'

By Tbe Associated Press
• Today is Monday, Jan. 4, Jhe founh day of 1993. There are 361 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 4, 1885, Dr. William W. Grant of Davenport, Iowa, perfonned
what's·believed to have been the ftrst appendectomy. The patient was 22year-old Mary Ganside.
On this date:
In 1809, Louis Bniille, inventor of a reading system for the blind, was
born in Coupvray, France.
In \821, the forst native-bern American saint, Elizabeth Anp Seton,
died in Emmitsburg, Md.
·
In 1896, Utah was admitted as the 45th state.
. In 1943, 50 years ago, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin appeared on the
coverofTime as the magazine's 1942 Man of the Year.
In 1948, Britain granted independence to Bunna.
.
In 1951, during the Korean coni\K:t, Nonh Korean and Communist
Chinese forces caprured the city of Seoul.
In 1960, French author Alben Camus died in an automobile accident at
·
age46. ' 1
In 1964, Pope Paul VI began a visit to the Holy Land as he arrived in
Jerusalem.
In 1965, poet T.S. Eliot died in London at age 76.
In 1965, President Lyndon Jo~nson oullined the goals of his "Great
Society" in his State of the.Union·Address.
· .
In 1974, President Nixon refused 10 hand over tape recordings and documents subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee"'

Berry•s World

pl8ce. Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Iter under which Weinberger would . ,
Powell would have been called a5 plead iui!ty !0 one felony count. It
the star wimess. " Benncu would made nose~.
have shown that Powell and WeinWe fuS! reJl()fled last June that
.,
berger shared information, that WJ~lsh . !:i!td offered Weinlierger a
they met 10 times a day. Powell plea-bal1ain deal in which h~ could
.would have ~stified that Wein- to Nicara-ua)," sources close_to .
,
berger was a lierce advocate, but the case said. '
·
.
Even with the catalyst pf the
.
the straightest arrow he knew and
Republicans blamed the second _ someone who would never tie to electioo-ew: indicUD!=DI, it was nee-'
indicunent on snuffmg out Bush's Congress. Powell discovered that essary to provide political air cover
have plead guilty to a mis ~ Weinberger was being kept out of for key senatorS·8itd congressmen. '"
deameanor of withholding infonna· · the loop (oit illegal arms shioments • 'It was really pretty simP,IC, ''
.lion from CongresS in exchange for rally in the po.Us, and point the fm- accOnling to a key StraiCgist. 'First · ·•
testimony implicating others. When ger at lead prosecutor James Bros- of all, who are the Democrats (are) ; ·
Weinberger's lawyers pointed out nahan, who was brought into the wbo are likely to be very support:
that his client would have to admit case in October to replace Craig ive of Weinbergef\ wbo lilced him · wrongdoing, Walsh was quick to Gillen. Brosnahan, a prominent San and really buSied him lilld thought ·
offer that they "could work out the Francisco a110rney, has contributed this was an unfair indictment. Once .
lan~uage. "
·
heavily to Democratic candiates in . you got that you made ~e calls ·
'Walsh never figured that Cap the past, arrived in Washington · and then you ~de some callS to ,
would have the guts liotto plead, or with a panisan baggage that Walsh people who could malce ,some calls
that Bennett would have the guts should have anticipated.
to those people.". ' ,
not to push Cap into blinlcing,"
"When(Weinberger's attorney
"When Foley said he'd do it,
said one Weinberger intimate . Rotien) Benneu lcnoclced Gillen out then ~ou use that to get somebody
"Bennett told Walsh it was a terri- of the case, I think it was a real else,' explained one source. "You ble. error of judgment to go for- blow to Walsh and I think be pan- say the ~aker is willing tQJio it
ward, and if he ,did they would be iclced. I think he said be was get· why 111'!=11 t you."
in nuclear war ... that there will be tine; killed here and went for il
Walsh;s second big mistake Was •
no pleas in this case." Walsh's typ- major leaguer because he lcnew he
spending
more than SSO,QOO ~­
ical retort was, "Don't jlllt yourself couldn't afford to lose the Wein·
payer dollars 10 stage a mcia trial,
in concrete."
berger case....
,
Had Weinberger not been parBrosnahan quickly stunned complete with hin:d actors, confer- ~
doned and stood trial Jan. 5, the Weinllerger's attorneys by offering ence facilities and 38 "jurors" to
for the trial. "Hete is a guy
defense team's playbook was
, in . a·plea bargain agreement in Octo- ·gprepare
etting beaten up by · (Senate
Minority t eadet Bob) Dole in bow
, much 'money he's spending, and
they go out and spend ~ kind of _.
m~ . It also said sometllmg more ·
- 'We will do anything and every- ·
thing to convict1;\leinbUger,'" one •
former federal prosecutor told us. : ,
Mock trials ·are never used by fed- .
era! prosecutors ill criminal cases. •
Since 'the pardon, Walsh has ·
been hurling unsubstantiated . .
charges like so many pipe bombs · .
-accusing Bush of "misconduct" :
and a "cover-up." Talcing .on an ·
.. incumbent U.S president shouldn't
be an aftenhougbt in the 11th hour
of a six-year, $35 million investiga. lion. It's one of the reasons Walsh
is regarded by some as his own
worst enemy.
In the end, just 11!1 Walsh never
suspect¢ that Weinlx:r&amp;e! had J!te
"guts" not to plea bargain, Wem- .
berger never suspected that Bush ·,
had the "guts' : to issue the.pardon.
Jack Anderson and Ptlicbiel · ,
·Binstein are writers ror United • ·.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'

By Jack Anderson

'and
Michael·Binstein

Mark Twain·himself is,censored
There has been a merge~
between the Greater Hartford Communjty College and the Hanford
State Technical College. The committee charged· with suggesting a
name for this new Connecticut
institution of higher learning put
fonh a list of three. One was that of
Mark ,Twain, who lived long and
productively in Hanford where his
large, comfortable home remains
open to visitors.
'
The prospect of Mr. Twain
being so honored greatly displeased
Robert S. Holloway, head of the
Black Student Union at the com·
munity college. The Chronicle of
Higher Education reports that Mr.
Holloway claims that students
should have been consulted about
the name with which they would
hencefonh be associated: and that
some were troubled that Mr.
Twain in the way be wrote about
black~. showed himself to be a
raciSL
Furthermore, said Mr. Hol loway, "when I, think of Mark
· Twain, it sounds like a name for a
little ltids' school."
·
.
Mr: Twain was accustomed to
having his books attacked, but thjs
would be the forst time he himself
would .lie censored as unfit to have.
his name attached to a school.
For a long time, however, siich
an honor would not Jtave even been
imagined by Twain himself. In
1885, a year after "Huckleberry
Finn" was published, the Concord
(Mass.) Public Library - on fastidiously excluding the book. from

.

1'

'

.

'

'

.

. The NWS said the freezing min
· or snow flurries could linger in
eastern Ol)io.on Tuesday. Highs are
expected to be near liormal, in the

WEATHER MAP- The Actu-we8111ei' l'ol ec8st lor tile United
States Tuesilay predicts ram-from -tllem New Ea&amp;imKI to tile
Soutltwest with scattered showen me..U.a over Florldl. Dry,
chilly air .will retum to tile Oltlo ·Va1eJ ud tile Soutbett • Plllns. A
bit.of snow and fttiiTiea wiD ratl ila- tile Dakotlll ud !loliaMIIOCa.
. · Rain and snow wUI fall over Parts f/1 Calllonai!a81111 Nevada. (AP)

.

--;...,..o.;~--Weather--.;...._

'
South-Central
Oltlo
Tonight, rain IW1Iiitg tO freezing
rain. Colder with the lo\v in the low
30s. Chance of precipitation 100
percent. Tuesday,, cloudy with a
chance of driZzle, freezing drizzle. or flurries. High in the upper 30s.
Chance of precipitation 40 percenL

Helen· ~.

E:

The Me' Soil aad Water ConservatiOn ~ I ad* Auxiliary
is &lt;ince apin offaing for sale IRJC
pacicel• and ~ CO\'U plaals.
lhraollh Frlc!ay, Ill Coat
Ollio by ..... Ollio Volley
ltolillll
vmetiea pac:lcels aWleom.-J:.aJttmecHa lac., Pwuwt&amp;J, ableSin~le
this
yeat
include wbite pine,
I•
Oblo 46 ii PI&amp;. 1111-2116. ..... P!'iap poi at P
ay; Olllo.
;
·
2S It 'inp lllr $8; ...
2S
·
seedlings
for
S8:
Col
blue
M~ Tlae A• t tid"-. D
1M
spi'IICl;'"25
48; NorOblo ~ Nolf!olel
sprue~~. 2S
'
SR; MqNe=
'788'
-~
!IOiia, five ileedlinp, S .
New
New111111t 11001,7.
Variety pacltets include tlie
P08TMAIITIR:-- ....... to
backyuel
packet wbicb contains
Th&lt;i Doi3.u.,llullnol, Ill Coat a ..
two
eacll
of
ttluub, led flowPoiiiiii'U)',
....
erinB.ct•i!Q, Redosier dogwood
.~--:..
anll pillk flowailtg " - ' lll' 57: ·
o.. w.k. ...............................
and
lb,e, fntit tree (llletets wbicb
One .....lh......l ...l .. :.......................:.
conllllns 11110 CIIICI! of Melroe apple
One Yi&amp;ar"'"'i~n·..,-·.. ..ao
and lilitpil8 J111P1e Cor $2 I.
I
, Gf9llild cover pllnta available
D!Ul"•••• ~•t•••t•'-llol~...,j.W,,_,., ,,,, ,,,,.,_,. C.la ,
Ibis Y• ~Jude the paebJIIIllh,
-2.........
, - ·..a•=.~~o-.
50 p._ta for Sl!l: llahlc Ivy, 50 .
.,...,
Mfta
planll
for $15; andcrowa 'Vfllli, 72
11oe!1M '"I a an., lla or II
-c..utwm•..-~
plllltllllr
$21.
.........
l.
'
An'/ of
~
I rlltit::.!(
In
I)

so.,.:-...

.

' '

........_

,,d

war

=r.

-:::r'T

dle:ettl

-..-.............
......=-ti..

....

=:,:....

I

.

'

cxdelecl albo

=t•

18 Woob......_ ........................--12l.M

112

O;:iijjk'i'i';jiii'ciiu:tt ,.

,.,. .
II Wtolta,................................~
M Wt nil a-.l.U. t.~.AI.U,,.-.;..-.

• e

I

.

t

t

-~

". '
~

...

"eel .
P"'Pw*llt w11 bo In and road)' for
Mlldl 19. AD ealtCt
"'pil:t liP wiD be
- cat
•

--IIOlilld

.,..,.,.,.~riloo•f"••-r.o
tl••

SWCD

1&amp;.13101 ~
iD !WicilllrmM~oyw
·or by IDiil dl o!leck or . . - ,
ordet to
U1led addrtn. All
Cllderi mllll paid Cor wbea lllb.nlaad. 1'llln II allmitlld supply of

'

• w-...:....tt...·....J .~~ ..•. t.........- ...

,. ·.;

..

::a:t·

--Af:

j

...

berS ·

The ••Dail.J,YSeldiDel
.
•
,,IV~!~...~
"
Publiohed OYery .nor-. M....' y

sense.

,.I.~

.---Local briefs.... ----.
Continued from page 1
' practice will be held in the Meigs High SchOOl band room. Preparations are now being made for a concert in late February or early

March.

Opal Priddy

.

resun

•

Qusb ' .

L

11

'- -

. Eztewled forecllllt:
Wedn II f117 tbrpUp Friday:
Wednesday, fair. ·Lows in the
20s. Highs in mid-30s to low 40s.
Thtnday, chance of rain. Lows in
the mid to upper 30s. Highs in .the
40s. ·Friday, chance of rain or
snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs in
the mid to upper 30s.

::nber

'.

Hodding Carter JJJ

-

__

Helen
McoBde Bush, 85, 6
Opal M. Priddy. 67, Jacks9n
State St., G~'polis, died Friday, Avenue, Point.Pieasant, W.Va.,
Jan. 1, 1993, I St. Elizabeth Hos- died Friday, Jan. I, 1993 at Univerice Unit, 1"-nRw, sity Hospital in Co!UIIIbus.
pital NorJh,
""''u'6
Born Oct. 30, 1925 in Middleton, Ky., fo
· a brief illness.
port, she _..a daughter of the late
S~ Will born Feb: II, 1907, at ' Jacob and Iva Hill Tiarner. She
Portland, '4eigs Cotmty, daughter worked as a lab technician for
of the laic f.ardie E. and Lucy A. R,avenswootl Alpminwit. Sbe was a
Middleswart McDade.
member of the EasJem Sill'.
A graduate of Gallia Academy
l&gt;ft.tdv ·
'11ed b
Ya son
High Scliool, she attended Oliio · Mrs. • ."'""!'~ 15 SUIVl
University and ·received a Certifi· and dalgbtci-111-law, Robert F. and
cate of' Education. She was and Allison Priddy, Peoria, m.; two
employed by local city schools brothers. William T - . Dayton,
until her ·marriage in 1930 to and Raymond Turner, Columbus;
·
Bush J 2nd. LL u s one sister, Dorothy Drenner, GarGeorge E.
• r.,
• · · den Grove, Calif.;. and two grandArmy. For tbe next 35 years, she
accom~ied her husband in vari· children, Erin .and Alexa Priddy,
ous mtlitary assignmepts through- ~~~ will ... Saturday at 11
out the United States- and Europe.
7
She and he~ family were 1ur, ~~il~.;i!:'ft~:;~:
vivors 9,f the: World Wa~. II tery.
.
. .
Japanese •attack on· the ·Hawanalt
Friends may call 81 the funeral
Islands, Dec. 7, 1941. She and her home on Friday from 6-9 p.m.
husband, Major General Gea-ge E.
Bush, returned !,0 Gallipolis upon Caro!Jn Whale!
_
1
~is~t~ a
of Grace · ,:~,~::.~~~;,
United Methodist Church, The Sunday. morning, Jaa. 3, 1993 at
Daughters of the American RevoluM orial H 'tal
lion, and the Thursday Club. ·
Camden Clark em ·
ospt
In addition to her husband, she in Parlcenburg, W.Va
·
.
. Born in l'lrkenburg, she was a
is survived by two ~liters. Jane . daughter of Charles and Grace
Bush Norvell and·Susan Bush, both Frank 'Price. She retired after I"'
· of Columbus: two granddaughters, years as a secretary iii the treasurLucy Norvell and busband, er's office at the Meigs County
Thomas H. Barclay of Covington, . Courthouse. She was a member of
Ky., and Melissa•Norvell Cote and the Fellowship Church · of the
husband, M8lk Cote of Dublin; and Nazaiene in Reedsville.
one great-grandson, (leorse Albeit
Besides her parents. Mrs. WltaNorvell BElay'
·
·
. 1 15
•
• ed b h husband
Services will be held 2 p.m. ey survlv
Y er
"
'
· d Paul Whaley: one son, Kenneth, at .
U
G
Wednfsda~ at
race
note
home: three sisters.- Mrs. Roger
Methodist Church, with the Rev. (Ruth)DillonandMrs.Jamcs(GioJoseph Hefner officiating. Burial ria Jean) Starcher, both of Long
will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Bouom. i s .Chester (Ethel
Friends may call at theetheMcCoy- "Teddy") M
,.Rcedsville; one
Moore Funeral· Home, W
r001t : brother, Ro rt (Penny) Price,
Chapel, Gallipolis, on Tuesday Long Bot
: four ·nephews and
.from 7-? p.m . DAR sm:vices will two nieces. 1
·
be beld at&gt; 6:30p.m. TuesdaY.. ·
Mrs. Whaley was preceded in
In Heu ·of flowers, C:ol!b'lbutions death by a daughter, Susan F~ye
may ·be, 111adc to the Samuel Whale
Bossard Memorial Library. 641
Se~ices will be Tuesday at 2
Second Ave., Gallipolis, 4S63.1.
•p.m. at the Fellowship Cltun:h of
A.~~o
tJ.
the Nazarene in Reedsville with
0 ttrcay 0 ~
' Rev,. Job!\ Dou~las officiati!lg·
·
. ·' '
Bunal woll be m the MI. Obve .
CLEVFl.
(AP)- The one Cemetay in Long Bottom. .
~lcet sold
g all six numbers
Friends may call at White
drawn in
day night's Super Funeral Home in Coolville today
Louo draWing is worth 512 million, from 2-4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
the Ohio ll.oltery aaid.
. .·
·.
The winning ticket was purchased in Hambden •in Geauga
County', the·louery said.
Tree packets available

beginning, and in itself is not suffi· but which pays taXes~ a lower rate • :
·
cient 10 do !"Ore than provide the .. than its counterparts m ~I but o,ne •.
pretext for an inauguraliOIJ week to or .two or .tbe o~her mdustrtal ·
,
surpass all past inaugural extrava- nauona? Or lJ sacrifice supposed to ·,
. a larg~ Q!ICStion mark.
gan:W. Unless we look in the mir· .~&gt; be absorbed' only b&gt;:_ those who .. , .
Thts ts, after all, a democratic ror recognize the enemy and do have been fon:ed by cutumstances
. repitblic. The people get to choose, son\ethini tlbou! what we see, Bill to clrlw the shori straw repeatedly?
'
and the)"get to choose on the basis Clinton ill goiog to fail.
1
of news and opinion that are p!CntiThe unalterable truth is that
lt's the New Year, a time tradi- : . ,
fully available. There i.s rio war for Clinton has been elected pr;esident, btiaobDaly 'lefsymt ~~~oob~satediap
' liperyaedn ' ·
any of us to complam that 'we not dictator. He cannot stgn edicts
do,~'t know" pr "they don't tell to balance the budget or curtail ~derthely, ~bearded
aentlt~iutlteppearing
us abotil the· fundameutal dilerit- health care costs or
pitblic !RIO
s
wrong
mas and choices of our time. Jlav- civility' and civic amity. He must symbol. . of the New Year u , , '·
ing for so loog lcnowingly ~con· rule throu&amp;h legislation and per- · • ~hat 1111U1d. The,people w~
sistendy played the role of co-con- . suade With leldrnhip, 1101 force. In wear tl ~n New Year ,s, E.ve wtll
,
spirators. w!th both~· political ill thinp, ho must depend on the , crumple 11 up and throw ,tl away .in , ~
leadershiP. tn the dcbuement of the good
c:ouraae and Sll'ellllh of the 1110111ina. but they wiD letlllllL ·: ~ .
economy and social infrastructwe, the peoplt. He and Con(pels will They- we- are the New Ye..
it is up to us to participate in their be asking for that support and lookHocldlna Carter Ill, former .,
restoration.
• ,·na·•or 11·gns that 1·111
• '-"-'Rg,
S
D
~ ,_
·
• But ·•'
m
' &amp; to m
. volve lwd
•"
,.. .......,,tate
uep•rttDeDt
',·
u ... ts 10
Take the· economic
situation.
IWIJ'II
. . . . . 1•vOaelman
ch'oices about cosdy alternalives. Which or us is read~ to step for81111 , ••lllller,ll"r!f.:.~;
The easy part w• 10 evict our co- ward and tako a hit? The rich, who
Wlllblllgtaa,
coospiratorS from the White HOUle; . have prospered 10 mlahtil~1.idc:! :!':.~!~ prod~~: ·: :
' though we proved ICSI capable of the past lS years or so? The
. =·
wrhlr lor NewaP;r _ 1 .
doin~ the same thing 10' CJ!npe!S. class, which believes it is overtaxed
...rprlle1 ~latloD..
. .
,Elecung BUI Clinton was Onfy the
"'
~

.:i

By Tbe ANoc:ilted Pras
'The other dead:
Two multiple-death accidents · SUNDAY
cootribuled to a traffoc death toll of
COLUMBUS - Cathi Hazlet,
13 for Ohio over the 72-hour New 43, of Columbus, in a two-car colliYear's '\Veelcend, the State High- sion on Broad Street, east of
way Patrol said. Three men died in · Columbus.
'
·
RAVENNA ·- Sorrina Turner,
an accident Saturday and two in a
smashup on Friday. · ·
14, of Atwater Township; in a twoThe patrol counted fatalities car crash on U.S. 224 in Portage
from 6 p.m. Thursday until mid- County.
CINCINNATI- Nicholas Kist,
night Sunday.
"

--Area deaths-··__

1

:,ct

. The record-high temperature for
this dale at the Columbus weather
station was 61 degrees in 1899
while the record low was 10 below •
· zero in 1879. Sl!llset tonight will be
at 5:20p.m. and suririse Tuesday at
7:54a.m.
·.
Arou~d t~ nation
,
Slcies wen; generallr clear over
California eatly today in the Calf!l
before yet another stonn. Temperatures were unseasonably . warm
a.cross much of the cloud-covered
eastern·UniledStales.
More snow was forecast today
.across Washington, Oregon, Oregon, Idaho and Montana as a low
pressure system off the .coast of
.

Washington state moves slowly . theGulfofMexicoandacoldftont . •.
_southward. Mountain areas will that extended from the UJIPC'S Grear
once again be hit the hardest.
Lak.es ttl the Texas Panhanllle.
The same system was expecled
Late Stmday aflanoon, free:r.in&amp;
to produce possibly heavy rains in rain turned roads treacherous
California by Tuesday,
acrqss eastern New YOlk, Vennont
As much as nine inches of new and western Massachusetts and •
snow fell Sunday in parts of Wash- Connecticut. ·
ingwn state. Snow also fell on the
Highs today wc:re_forecast to.
northern plateau and the northern hover around zero 10 the ~Rocky Mountains. Rain fell along _Plains; in !he teens and 20S m ~
the Pacific Northwest coast
_ centrall'lains; m the 30s and~ Ill
The rain, freezing rain 3l'd snow the Northeast' and southern Plains;
·that made driving bazardo«s across in the 50s and 60s across the
the central United States overt¥ , Southeast, along the G.ulf Coast
weekend reached into the East·on and the Southwest; and m.the 70s
Sunday. The messy conditions and 80s in FI~da and south Texas.
stem from the combination of
.The high temperature for the 1:
moist air. streaming nonhward from nation Sunday was 81 degrees at
Naples, 'Fla.

Ohio highway death toll hits 13-over the holidays

Nat Hento'.ff

'

" Time and Newsweek magazines
have done the inevitable and l'ul
Bill and Hillary Clinton on their
covers as, separately, man and
woman of the year. The prose was
unbearably gushy, the evaluations
. dangerously close to obsequious
·and the prognoftications almost
unreservedly optimistic. In other
words, it's honeymoon as usual at
the news magi!ZIOCS, which aren't
in the business of making the
world's most powerful couple or
·their readers unhappy in the fust
~ys ol anew presidency.
.
But there is a more ftUing cover
story and a more appropriato sym·
bol for the New Y- than the Clin~
10111; for whoie leadenhip I liave
nothing btll hope· and for whose
slcills 1 have nothinJ but admira·
.
Wh a t wou ld spea
. ..
'- most
uon.
direcllr. to the president's and the
nation s probable future would be
better . .mrted by the outline of
a figure labeled, "The Average
Citizen." In. tile middle or the
blank figure's empty face would be

.

20s. .

to having-his school bear the name wrote the book.
of ihe alleged t:acist, M8lk Twain,
In Brooklyn, one afternoon, I
never had a teacher tell him what asked a group of black high school
its shelves - had this to say about · "Huckleberry Finn" ·is all about. students what they thought of the· ··
the book and its writer:
· And why Mait Twain - who at novel and the perennial bettles to
"It is rough, coarse, and inele- 19 wrote of his own "ignorance kick it out 9f school because, it is
gant; dealing with a series of expe- · and intolerance" - created this said, the frequenr use of "nigger"
riences not 'elevating,. the whole · book to show how Huck too had - shows how racist Mr. Twain was.
book being more suited to the grown oitt of the bigotry in which
A young woman shook her
slums than to intelligent, he had been reared, where Twain head, "No, what !learned Was that
respeCtable people.''
also was a bey, · ·
what 'nigger' means depends on
Of all Twain's works, it is
A member of the faculty of the how it's used in the conversation.'' .;
"Huckleberry Fi~n ;" of course,. newly merged Hartford colleges
Another black student, in Texas,
that has been the target, during ;ill might have told.the students, white ()ad been told by her parents not to
these years, of parents who have and black, of a passage in "Huck- read the novel. But sbe was curioften succeeded in banishing the leberry Finn" that is among the ous, and warily, she began. She
novel from school curriculums and most decisive moments in Ameri- intended to\ stop after a couple of '
libraries. Decades ago, the book can literature.
·
chapters, but she couldn't That
outraged ,Southern whiles (all the
Huck and Jim, a runaway slave, word did bot.ber her at first, but •
whites in the book, except Huck, have come to know each .other as then she reali"'! what kind of peaare bigots, husllers or much worse). people, not caricatures. Jim is the pie were sayin$ tL
·, .
In recent years, blacks have been most honest, compassionate adult
In one of hts last words, Twam
infuriated by the abundant use of Huck has ever known. But Huck l!illerly wrote that America had
the word, " niggert in "Huckle- has been brought up to' believe that become "The United States of
berry Finn."
·
any w!tite person who does not . Lyncherdom'.' -another piece of ••
.In "What Johnny Shouldn't return a runaway slaw: will ~ "to lalowledge' lhal was not part of the
Read: Textbook Censorship in everlasting fire." Accordmgly, previous education of the black sruAmerica" (Yale University Press), Huck writes to Jim's owner and dents in Hanford who believe that
Joan Delfattore notes that in this · tells bet where Jim can be folind. naming their new school after
passionately anti-racist book, the He looks at the note, thinks of all ·. M8lk Twain would have demeaned
slave owners are shown as "i~D" that Jim and he have endured the college, and themselves.
•
rant and hypocritical. ... Realisucal- togeJ.her, and Huck tears, up the
A !lBfllC has rutally been agreed . ··.
ly, what should students think such note sayin~ , "All right, then, l'·ll on: Cjlpital ~ommunity· Technical · . ·
people would say? 'Invite the go to hell.'
·
College. That'll teaeh Mr. Twain a ·"
African Americans to cpme ,in from
'Around the country, there are lesson.
the fields.' ... Deleting the slave black youngsters whose ~arents
Nat Hentoff is a nationa)ly •' •
owners' racist comments would, have not .succeeded m ~vmg the renowned authonty on the Ftrst •.
ironically, malce slavery loolc more boolc ban1shed from required read- Amendment and the rest of the Bill
benign than it actually was.'.'
ing lists. But increasingly, ,in those of Rights. •
.
.
It would seem that during his schools, teaebers are being instructNat HeDtoff Is 1 syndicated
secpndary school education, Roben ed on how to give all the kids the writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Holloway, who scornfully objects background of Twain and why he AssociatiOn.
·
-·

What about 'The Average ·Citize.n '?

. " Whscl~ya mean, you 're 'restructuring?' "

of arctic Zr could create a mess
around Obio tonight, forecasters
warned. .
The National Weather Service
says significant urban or small
·stream flooding could occur as a
result of a lot of rain in a shon period of time.
Much colder temperatures latei
tonight could turn the rain into
freezing rain and turn what's
already In tbe ground into ic.e.
Lows by morning may be in the

•

Prosecutor Walsh is bis own .worst enemy

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

•

could trigger flooding

30s.

BytbeANoc:iltedPras,
· Heavy rains followed by a .blast

M

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

a.
'

•

..

.

.

'

.

Music scheduled for~is next perfonnance includes Jolm Philip
Sousa's ''The While Rose", Ernesto Lecuona's "Maliaguena", and
selectiorui from the Broadway hit "Man of LaMancha" .llY Mitch
Leigh.
.
•
· Featured oo the.program is Warren 13arker's medley of popular
hits from the ~Urn of the century to the forties. The clever arrangement is called ''Themes Like Old Times".
.
Band Direetor Bill Hall urges current and prospective new members to attend the Monday rehearsals. He stressed the need for more
French Horns, Tubas, and I.:ow Woodwinds in the band. More
infonnation is available by calling Hall at 992-5975.

20, hometown unavailable, in a
one-car accident on Interstate 74 in
Hamilton County.
SATURDAY
.CINCINNATI Ty M.
Sylvester, 21, of Lancaster; Darryl
Mastilak, 21, of Walton Hills; and
Shaun C. O'Moore, 23, of Cincinnati, in a single-car accident in the
Cincinnati suburb of Madeira.
OXFORD - Shane A. Lainhart
Jr., s·. of Oxlord, passenger in a
pickup true that struck a tree
along Ohio 7 2 in Butler County.
FRIDAY
EAST LIVERPOOL -Richard
B. Hibbs, 19, and Timothy W. Barrett, 21, a passenger, both of East
Liverpool, in a one-car accident on
a Columbiaha County road.

Stocks

EMS units answer calls .·

Units ot Meigs Emergency Services answered the following
calis: SATURDAY • 2:06p.m., Pomeroy to Lincoln Hill, A.R.
Knight to Pleasant.Vailey Hospital; 2:52 p.m., Racine unit, Mark
Proffitt from the station to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 3:31 p.m.,
Middleport squad· to Cedar Bar, Robbie Clonch to Veterans: 5:38
p.m., Tuppers Plains squad to Mt Olive R!)ad, Carolyn Whaley 1.\1
Camden·Clarlc Memorial Hospital; 6:39 p.m., Middleport squad til
State Route 124, Gary Hysell to Pleasant Valley; 9:04 p.m., Grant
Life Flight to helipad, Al.bert Eastman to Grant Medical Cen~r;
SUNDAY - 8:06a.m., Pomeroy squad ttl The Maples, Beue Moms· ·
sey to Veteralls; 10:25 a.m., Ra~ine squad to Rice' Run Road, Mildred White ttl O'Bleness Memorial Hospital; 3:15p.m., Racine unit
to Antiquity, Terry Watson to Veterans: 4: 1'5 p.m., Pomeroy squad
to State Route 681, Brenda Knight ttl Veterans: MONDAY • 2:26
a.m., Racine sqliad to Elm Sueet:,Robert Clark !0 Veterans; 3:08
_ a.m. 1 R~ squad to Stale Route 6rn:;: oseph Young to Holzer
• Medical center: 8:20 am., Pomeroy squad to Bank One, Maryln ·
Wilcox to Veteraits: 8:22 a.m., Rolland unit 10 Price-Strong Road, •
Gilben FitzWater to Holzer.

• SANDUSKY.- Sue A. lenb&gt;
22, of Sandusky, in a OOC&lt;a'
dent on a city street
CELINA ~Justin D. King. 17,•" .
of Celina, when his din bite •
crashed on a Mercer Cotmty road. ;·
LIMA -John Risner. 33, of·
Ada, in a one-vi:hicle accident m
Ohio 81 in Allen County.
THURSDAY NIGHT
COLUMBUS - William S.
Harrington, 48, of Columbus, .a
pedestrian Sl!'UCk by a van on a city ' ·
street
.
•

a;;c;:. :

November construction
spending up 2.1 pereent ~ :
WASHINGTON (AP) - Construction sPending jumped U per- '
cent in November to the highest ,
level in more than two years, llle :;
government said today.
'•

•

Am Ele Power..... :.............. 33
Ashland Oil........................26 1/8
AT&amp;T.:.............................. .51
Bank One. ..........................53 ,3/8
Bob Evans ......................... 21
Charming Shop.................. l7 5/8
City Holding ......................20 l/2
Federal MQKu!..;,,.;............. l6 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................67 7/8
Key Centurion ................... 22 314
Lands End.......................... 28 1/8
Limiled Inc................. ...... 27 1/4
Multimedia Inc' ................ .32 l/4
Rax RestauranL ..................J/16
RelianceElectric ............... .20
Robbins&amp;Myers .............d 7
Shoney's Inc......................23 IP,
Star•Banic .......... :.............:..35 314
Wendy Int'l...............,........ l2 1/2
Wonhingtop Ind................22 314
Stock reporlll are tbe 10·30
a.m. quotes pro'l'ided by Blulll,
Ellis and Loewi of GalllpoUs. ·

Child~n

..

draw

-Meigs .annduncem(!nts-

Tnstees to IDeet
livestock members, parents and
The Cbeslcr Township Trustees advisors. The purpose of the mectwi.U meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ing is to discuss programming for
C~ Town Hall. An organiza- \993. Additional infonnatiim n:l&amp;Y
tional meeting for 1993 will follow. be obtained by calling the Melgs
County Extension fice at 992·. Legion to meet
.
6696.
The Racine Amerjcan Legion '
Post 602 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the'post home.
Veterans Memorial
1loollter meetlag caaceled
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS The Southern Junior High None.
Booster meeting, scheduled for
SATURDAY DISCHARGEStomorrow (Tuesday) has been can- Randy Martin, Genevieve
celed.
·
Dcmoskey, and Alben Eastman.
SUNf&gt;AY ADMISSIONS Bette Morrissey, .Pomeroy; James
Garden Club to meet
The Chester Garden Club will Stacey, Pomeroy; Mary Bonecutmeet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the ter, Pomeroy: and Wilma Weiman,
home of Maida Mora. Guest speak- Cheshire .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
er will be Mary Powell, jlirectQr of
the Meigs Countx Parle District. None.
She will speak on 'Beautiful Coun·
~r:yl Inten:sted guests are welcome. · HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec. 31- WiUiam
Colmer, Rhonda Scoti, Vincent
Davy, Warren Sturgeof\a.Vernon
Weicht Cootrol classes
The Meigs County. Health McNair, ~· Ezra Shl!'ets and
Department will begin a series of daugb.ter, Ki berly Lewis, Linda
six-week classes f~ weigltt control Acree, Lori hite, Mary Schiek,
on Tuesday and ThursdaY at 6:30 Harmon A s, and Barbara Ray. ·
Discharg s, Jan. 1·- [Jetty
p.mThere will be •a choice of nights Gibeaut, Annette Gilliland, Clyde
for the classes, either Tuesday or Sadders, Martha Wilbur, Patricia
Thursday, and classes are free to Long, Earnest l.ahrmer,. Vic Kor•
puz, Joshua Crabtree, Shane· Rose,
Mcip County residents.
Each class will be of two h()UfS Zachary Brown, Olga Stiltner, Jean
duration. AtiCildanCe is required at Kaiser, Eva Leach, Katberien
only one 11110 hour session weekly. Maples, Harry Williams and Mrs.
Classes will include nutrition edu- Mauhew Pearson and son.
Discharges, Jan. ~ - Cbarloue
cation,-sueu..~ent, · ~y
weigh-ins, relaxauon teebntqu~ , Thompson, Melissa Mopre, Octava
recipia, dicJ nxall sheet$. excnase 'Akres, Reaford Ward, Angela
techniques aod other phases of 'Feaford, Robert Brady, ·Mrs. Greweilht COIIDOI.
("- gory Keller and son, Sh~ Rose,
1'bere will be 1 limit as to 1he Wanda Witt and Mrs. Rudy Perry
number of people who .can be and son.
Dlscbaraes, J!ln. 3 -' Joshua
ldmiued 10 each series of classes
wbicb are 10 be held in the confer- Fyffe, Mrs. Dou$las Pierson ·and
ence room or the multi-purpose ilaugbter, Mrs. Wliiiam Beach and
buildillJ, Mulberry Heights;., daughter, Wayne· Russell, Ted
craft, Dave· Bunon, Dolly Hale,
Pomeroy.
Reaidentl should Jeglster as Wanda Kelly, Elsie Delauder and
Robert Ratliff,
'
IOCIIl il poaible due to·class size
Blrtl,
Dec.
31
- Mr. and Mrs.
lilnlt•b•
Tbole wilhin&amp; to repter may Rudy P'erty, son, JacksOn. ·
•call the M$IJI Conftt'/ Health
Blrtb, Ju. 1- ·Mr. IIIJl ~·
Depar1110111 II 992:6626. Upon Willilm Bolch, dau&amp;hler, Coalton.
Blrtiii,Jaa.l- ·Mr. and Mrs.
'eel A~, iJMIIcale 1 pn(mnce of
Tuesday or Thursday evenlna Marc SlUmp, daughter, Kerr, and
' *rn.
· ~
Mt; and Mrs.Riehard Randolph;
daugbla', BidweU.
· Blrtlls; Jan. 3- Mr. and Mrs.
MeetiD&amp; Dedllled
The Meias County Junior Fair Phillip Caldwell, twin son and
Sale and Sliow Committee will daugbla', GalllpoUs; Mr. and Mrs.
. JIIOII.Jan. 12 ll7 p.m. • the MaiJI Thoma Gilliland, datlghter, Jacklligh Sci' t'1l caftllirla The meetini son and Mr. and Mrs. Russell
11 open to all ~lor fair market. Tuclcer,
son,
Jtacine. ·
··
I
,

..
'

•' '

what they see, ·
''

'

Hospital news

... _,
and what they see
~ .,

"

·"

... .,

........

··.:.&gt;

·- •

is a crime.

.. .
.
,, , ..•.

'l

~

l!
'

i

(II

rJl&lt;

•

.•

•

.

-..

.·

.

.

.....

(

..

"

.

~

Help1edraw theif world.
· Call and get free information
on how to protect your children
from drugs and violence
in Your neighbcrtlood.
,• Ca111o800&gt;WE PREVENT

•

\

it .
'

�I

.

'

Sports
'

The Daily Sentinel
·

!

•

.

·

·

then blow iL .
.
New Orleans appeared in command after sCoring'on a 1-yard run
by Craig Heywanl, two field goals
by Mllrten Andersen and a 7-yard
pass from aobby Hellen to Quinn
.' Early.
'"'
,
Then the Eagles' big-play
defense took over.
Cornerback Eric AUen sparked
the comeback with an inten:eption
that set up Roger Ruzek's 40-yard
field goal with a minute left in the
third quarter.
After Barnett's leaping 35-yard
TD reception early in the fourth
period made it 20-17, linebacker
Seth Joyner immMiatelypicked off
another Hebtzt pass and the Eagles
went in for . the go-altead iouch.
down - a 6-yard run by Heath
Sherman.
.
The Eagles increased their lead
to 26-20 when Reggie White
sacked Hebert for a safety, and the
ensuing free kick gave Philadelphia
good field position that Jed to
another fJtld goal.
·
AUen added an insurance touchdown, intercepting at the Saints' 18
and returning it all the way.
" We made the big plays when
we had to. We turned up the heat
andgotitdone,'~ Joyner said
The Saints will feel the heat in
th.e offseason even though they tied
the club record for victories with
12 and made the playoffs for the
fourth time in six Ye311·
"Next year we can.be 12-0, 140; 15.0 11nd people will still say,
'When are the Saints going to win
.the big one?"' cornerback Toi
Cook said. " This will put us a step
back."
The Saints' defense, one of the
NFL's best, was forted to back up
for one of the few times this sea-

son.

.

Bameu became the rii'St rec:ei.ver
to get I00 yards against the Saints
this season, gaining 102 on four
catches. And Sherman ran 2•1 times
for 105 yards, five more than New
Orleans usually gives up to an
entire team. .' .:~
The Eagles, who were 11-5 in.
the regular season, also scored IS
more points than any or the Saints •
previous opponents. But that

wasn't entirely the defense's faUlt,
since Philadelphia converted three
interceptions into 17 points and the
Eagles· defense .scored two points
on White's safety.
"I don't know if the Saints'
defense broke dowp." Philadelphia
coach. Rich Kotite said.· "II's-just
that we were able to malce a few
big plays in the
half.
.
"It was a great caneback under
some very difficult cirl;umstanees.
1 think everybody on the team did a
magnificent job of keeping their
. cool, not losing their poise and not
panicking."
· Now it's on to Dallas for a
grudge match with the Cowboys.
The Eag.les dru)&gt;bed ' the visiting
Cowboys 31-7 in a Monday night
game in October, but Dallas got
revenge four weeks later with a 2010 wili at Texas Stadium.
Cunningham was benched at
halftime of that loss: which was
probably the Eagles' low point of
the season.
"We're ready for Dallas,"
Sherman said. "It's a personal
thing. We don't like them and they
don 'tlike us."
Bills 41, Oilers 38, OT
At Buffalo, the Bills staged the
greatest cOmeback in NFL history
when they downed the Oilers.
Houston had increased its lead
to 35-3' 1:41 into the second half
when Bubba McDoweU returned an
interception 58 yards for a ID. But
within a 4 1/2-minute span, Buffalo
scored three touchdowns, two on
passes from Frank Reich to Don

Page 4
•

t

KENTUCKY BEATS INI)IANA ·Indiana's Calbert Cheaney
looks for help as he is pressured by Kentucky's Rodney Dent durin&amp; Kentucky's 81-78 win Sunday in Louisville. (AP photo)
'

'

t\

•

'

Tide crowned national champs
By The Associated Press
Hawaii , Kansas and Walce Forest
For Alabama, a Sugar Bowl vic- into the Top 25 again, wllile posttory meant its . first national season losses dropped Penn State,
champinship since the lale 1970s. . Arizona; Brigham Young and
For Fresno State, a bow I voctory Southern Cal out of the ranldngs.
· meant a berth in the Associated
Fresno State (9-4), unranked
Press college ,football poll for the .throughout 11\e regular season, was
first time.
voted into the final rankings after
Alatiama crushed Miami 34-13 iis 24,7 victory over Southem Cal
in the battle for college football in the Freedom Bowl, whic)l also
supremacy. The Alabama title was helped ~ the far.e of Southern Cal
made official when the AP's Top ~ oach Larry Smith / who later
25 wu relcued on Sattlrday.
resigned under pressure.
But the fi(18115 spots were not'
· Hawaii (11·2), No. 24 earlier
. set until after a second vote, fol - this sea~on , moved up to No. 20
lowinl Norih Carolina' s 21-17 vic- after beating Illinois 27-17 Ia tile
tory over Minissippi State in the Holiday Bowl.
Peach Bowl, whiCh closed out the
Kansas (8-4) climbed LO No. 22
posiiWOII bowl glut. The bottOm · lifter defeating BYl123-20 in the
of the finll poll, with Fresno State Aloha Bowl. The' Jay hawks were
r showint at No~ 24, was released ranked for six straight weeks this
L Sundiy.
.i .
·
. . season before dropping ou.t of the
also
11fted
poll.
.
Bqwl
v1¢tones
1.
.

........

llniM (9-1) dioDDed from second to fourth with'thalloas to
Michigan, and Indiana. (11-2) fell
from third LO ftfth after lhe loss to
Kentucky.«'
· North Carolina (9-1) fell one
place LO sixth following its 18st-sec':

.

•

..

-------

.

,

.

•

.-T.HIS WEE 15.
G ES

....

'

'

..•'
REICH ON! • Buffalo BOis backup quarterback Frank Reich passes for some or his 289
yards during the fourth quarter or Sunday's ·
game agaiDst the Houston OUers at Rich Stadi-

um. Teammate Hill Wolford (69) blocks Houston defensive end Sean·Jones. Buffalo won 41-38
in overtime. (AP)

down, returned a punt 54 yards and

UNL V downed Cal-State Fullerton

'78-65, No. 14 Michigan State beat
East Tennessee State 80-69, No. 15
UCLA beat Houston 87-78, No. 16
Cincinnati crushed. South .Alabama
87-49, Miami upset No. 17
Georgetown 80-69, No. 18 Vanderbi!Bdged Alabama 76-73, No ..20
Arirona got past Rhode Island 8779, No. 22 Massachusetts beat New
Hampshire 75-61, No. 23 Florida
State lost to Aorida 89-86, No. 24
Pittsburgh topped Providence 91·85 and No. 25 Virginia downed
Winthrop 92-68. .
No. 2 Kentuc~y 81, No. 5 Indiana
78
At Louisville, Ky., die Wildcats
'(9-0) converted 16 of 41 3-point
shots to defeat Indiana (11-2).
Jamal Mashburn and l'ravis Ford
had 29 points each, and Rodrick
Rhodes shut down Indiana's Calben Cheaney in the fmal minutes.
No. 3 Michigan 88, Eastern
Michigan 58 ,
The Wolverines showed no ill
effects from their long journey
home from 'the Rainbow Classic in
Honolulu, where they had victories
over three Top 25 teams in three
days. Chris Webber scored 22
points fQr the Wolverines (10-1).
No. 8 Iowa 104, Central Connecticut 58
At Iowa City, Iowa (10-0) used
a 35-5 rull in the first II minutes of
the second half to get an easy victory over Central Connecticut. Acie
Earl scored 25 points and V!II
Barnes led the big second-half run.
No. 9 Purdue 80, Butler 54
At West Lafayette, Ind., unbeat'
en Purdue continued its best s~ in

~

ond loss to Michigan. Seton Hall
(Il-l) and Iowa (10-0) remained
Nos. 7 and 8, while Purdue (9-0)
and Georgia Tech (7 -1) each
moved up four spots to round out
the Top Ten.
Oklahoma, which had· been
15th, started the Second Ten and
was followed by UNL V, Arkansas,
, Michigan State, UCLA, Cincinnati,
Georgetown, Vanderbilt. Connecticut and Arizona.
The fipal five were Syrac11se,
Massachusetts, Aorida State, Pittsburgh and V·ir~inia.
·
·
Three of the four ranked teams
to lose two games last week California, Nebraska and Brigham
Young - . dropped out'the poll.
Syracuse. which fell from 12th to
21st was the other. ·
They were· replaced by Massachuse~ Pittsburgh and Virginia.
Massat:huseus (5·2) was ranked
for the rust three weekS of the season until dropping out after losing
its second !Old game to a rilnlted
te111'Qo The Mlnlllelllen lost at Florida S'fale and Oklabom8:. .

· Pittsburgh (It- I) hadn't been ·
ranked Iince the rllll week of last
- · 1116 Panlhers .beat UCLA
thlJ week and their only loss was in
their Big Eut conference opener at
~IOWR.

.

.

Vusinia·(7-0) is one of three
Atlanic Coast Conference teams
·which bas sone unbeaten, joiJJing
Duke an$! ClemliOII. The Cavaliers •

.

~

GIRLS
J~N.

7- Meigs - Away
JAN. 11 - Waterford - Avtay

.

'
GIRLS
JAN. . 4 - Trimble - Away
JAN. 7 - Southern - Home
JAN. 9 - East.ern - Home

..

THAN S

.•

Co"nty-for Allowlag Me
·to Be Your Co••lssloner
·
.
.for
.. the Past 12 ·Years.
•
.

•

•

DAVID KOILENIZ

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Where America Goes 'lb Relax"

CHESTER

•

~'

255 Mill St.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
.AND RADIO .SHACK

. Middleport, OH.

106 N. 2nd

992·3345

985·3301
. '.

. 992·2635

WILL
YOUR

'.
:•

,·
••' •
'••)
•

CARE OF
NEEDS

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
.
MUSSER INSURA"CE
'

11.1 SECOND AVE .

.. .
.. .

GUlRDRAI~

.Peoples

Bank
•

-.

3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS _

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.

STH STREET

Mason, W. Va. Pt. Pleasaat, . Va. New Havea, W. Va.

CROW'S
FAMILY RUTAURANT .
228 WEST I///I/Q'. ,,2~s432
MAIN ST.
POMEROY KFc."¥!'

'

(614) 992·6451

FISHER FUNEUL HOME
BRUCE FISHER- Owaer/Open~tor

Ohio 45769

683

...•.•.
•
•

·•

•
•

'
i

.

=======~
'/

.. , ..$

14

.

.

For All Your Prescription and Sundry Nceda
·
SeeUs

253

I. Seco••i'

..

'

·-·
..

.

'•···~

..

·shop

.

. MIIDLEPORT
.

N. 2nd AVE.

." -

~rescriptio~

JUST DO IT.

·· STIHC
.....
c:.l&amp;iRI.....
Dtaler
llrtHL .. ...

-. .

..•••

VALLEY LUMBER

P. 0.

..

- ~-

PHONE

SIGN fREOION ·

MW41tport,
o•lo
•

.

•

'

POMEROY

992~2342

•

· y-~

,.~,'

Middleport, Oh.

I

•

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1D-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 1'4-AT MILLER
DEC.-;17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2D-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21.,.AT VI.NTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK .
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB . ·1- AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 9-TRIMBLE
FEB.11-AT EASTERN

When The Time Comes: • .•. See Us
.
'
For Your 1993 Graduation
Announcements.

®~

555 P•rk St.

To tj;~~~ of Mel·gs

Your Tree
Christmas

lUMBER
.BlUM
..
.

• I

.'

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. 8-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
'
DEC, 12-AT 'ATHENS
DEC. 15--AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22~WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS .
JAN. 12-AT VINTON COUNTY
·JAN.15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 16-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. 19-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER'
JAN. 26-NElSONVILLE-YORK
JAN.29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN
FEB. 16-VINTON ·COUNTY

JAN. ·· 5 - Federal Hockin·g - Honte
JAN. 9 - Athens - Home

•

·.

•

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

BOYS

Put One

.,

·MEIGS MARAUDERS

MEIGS MARAUDERS

"

.

NOV. 3D-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21-AT FORT· FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 20-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMqLE
"
.
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

at

JAN. 5 - Easte,n ~ Home
JAN. 9 - Gallipolis - Away

p.m.

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 12-MJLLER
DEC. 18-AT SYMMf;:S VALLEY
DEC. 19-UNIOTO
,
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC . 3D-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS ·
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. OVC
JAN. 22.:.TRIMBL~
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 3D-SOU,TH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12~AT MEIGS ..
FEB.13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 3D-AT TRIMBLE

BOYS

'

NOV. 3D-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
.DEC. 5-UNIOTO - 1:00 p.m .
DEC. 1()-,AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT .FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
DEC. 17-TRIMBLE
JAN . 4-WARREN tOCAL
JAN . 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 9-AT MEIGS- 3:00 p.m.
JAN. ·11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00
JAN. 21 - WATERFORD ·
JAN. 23-MILLER - 1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN.,28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND ?"
FEB. 6-MEIGS - '1:00 p.m.
FEB.15-AT SOUTH POINT

·

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

SOUTHERN· TORNADOES

.
.
55 years. Glenn Robinson scored m the last 7 1/2 mmutes to, defeat
21 points an'cl Matt Pamter·added Houston. Richard Petruska scored
14 as the Boilerma,kers head into~ 22 points and grabbed 12 rebounds
Big Ten play undefeated (9-0). ,
for the Bruins.
No.10 Georgia Tec,b_7g; VMI 52'
No. 16 Cincinnati 87; South
At Atlanta, Georgta Tech (7-1) Alabama49
.
·took advantage of VMI's' 26.6 perAt Cincinnati, Allen Jackson's
cent shooting. Freshman Martice 18 points led five Bearcats in douMoore, . who _was questionable ble figures as Cincinnati battered
because of the flu. scored 17 points South Alabama (5-2), Cincinnati
for the Yellow Jackets.
·
(6-1) forced 27tumovers.
•'
No. 11 Oklahoma 109, Lamar 92
Miami 80, No. 17 Georgetown 69
At Norman, Okla., Terry Evans
At Miami, Georgetown (7-1, land -Angelo Hamilton led a fitS!- 1) sot stung by Miami..Trevor BUFhalf 3-point binge that carried the ton had ' 21 points a~d Steve
Sooners over Lamar. Coach Billy Edwards 19 for the Hurncanes (3Tubbs' team improved to 10-1 at 6, 1-1), who twice held the Hoyas
the expense of _his son Tommy, witho_u! a field goal for more than
,,
who is an assistant at Lamar (5-1), stx mmutes.
and his friend, Cardinals head No. 18 Vanderbilt 76, Alab&amp;IJIB
coach Mike Newell, once an assis- 73
~ r
tant under Tubbs;At Nashville, Tenn., Billy
•
No. 12 UNLV 78, Cal-Fullerton McCaffrey scored 23 points as No.
65 1
24 Vanderbilt held off Alabama.
At Las Vegas, UNLV (6-0) No. 20 Arizona 87, Rhoile Island
stretched college basketball's 79
longest winning mcak to 29
At Tucson. Arizona (5-2) used a
games. The Rebels trailed 41-40 10-2 run in the fmal 2 tn. minutes,
•
early in the second half, but Dexter breaking away from a 77-77 tie.- Ed
Boney, whO had 18 points, hit a 3- Stokes. scored Z4 points and Chris '
Mills 22 for the winners.
.
pointer LO regain the lead.
No. 14 Michigan .St. 80, E. Tenn. Villanova 79, No. 21 Syracuse 61
St. 69
.
.
At S~use, the Orangemen (SAt Johnson City, Tenn., Shawn 2) lost !heor second game in a row
Respert scored 27 points and had at the Carrier Dome and fell to 0-2
•
four steals to lead Michigan State in the Big East. Villanova's Kerry
(8-1) past East Tennessee State . Kittles came off the bench to score
The Spartans (8-1) led 47-24 at II points in a 16-2 second-half
halftime before East Tchnessee (3- spurt. The Wildcats (5-2) have won
3) came back with a 21-6 run to four straight at Syracuse.
.
open the. second half and got within . No. 22 Massachusetts 75, New '·
53-45 :w1th 2:24 lefL
Hampshire 61 ·
No. 15 UCLA 87; Houston 78
At Durham, N.H., Jerome MaJ.
At Los Angeles, UCLA broke loy had 21 points and Mike
open a tight ~arne with an 11-0 run Williams adilrd 19 as the Minutemen (5-2) finished the week 3-0. ·
'Florida 89, No. 23 Florida SL 86
•
At Tallahassee, Fla., Scott Stew- ' '
· ari made a 3-point shot to give
"
~ lead with 3:36 left and
'
Florida
best win was over Alabama.
· California (6-2) lost to James added three free throws in the final
Madison and Cornell at the Seton minute ·to preserve the Gators '
Hall-Meadowlands Invitational . upseL Florida (6-3) survived a 26-7 ••
Nebraska (9-3) followed its loss to Aorida State (8-4) run late in the
and came from behind after
Michigan at the Rainbow wy.h a game
trailing
75-72 wilh 6:06 left.
consolation -round loss to SouthNo.
l4
Pittsburgh 91, Providence
western Louisiana before taking 85
•
.
•
seventh place~with ~ wY, over
At
Pittsburgh,
Chris
McNeal
Fordham , Brigham. Young (8-4)
' t score in the fmt 15 minutes , •
couldn't follow it,s strong second- didn
but finished with 23 points as the
place showing at the Maui Invita- suprlsing Panthers (8-1) evened its
tional as the Cougars losl to Ore- Big East record at 1-1.
gon and Oregon State in the Far No. 25 Vh-pnla 92, Winthrop 61
:;
West Classic.
At Charlou~aville, Va ., CQry . •
The ACC, Big East and Big Ten ' Alexander scored 25 .points and '
each had five ranked teams, with grabbed seven rebounds to lead the
·the Big Ten's all higher than 14th.
Cavaliers(7-0). , .
'

.

GIRLS
JAN. 4 - Warren Local - Home
JAN. 7 - River Valley - Home

ran 38 yanlson a'fake punt to spark

.

;

JAN. 5 - Southern - Away
JAN. 8 - River Valley - Home -.- ~

Chargers 17, Chiefs 0
~
At San Dieg·o , Marion
us
Washington's victory over the scored on a career-best 54-y run
Vikings.
up the·middle with 5:53 left in
Mitchell, who had only 24 third quaner to lead the Chargefs
career regular-season carries, saw over KANSAS City.
action in the backfield only ·
The victory snapped San
because of an ' injury to Ricky Diego' s six-game losing sp-ealc to
Ervins.
·
Kansas City. ·

Beebe and Andre Reed, io begin
the comeback.
The winning points came on
Steve Christie's 32-yard field goal
3 minQtes and 6 seconds into overtime ·
Recbkins 24, Vikings 7
At Minnr,apolis, Brian MitcheU
rushed for f09 yards and a touch -

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
· DEC. 11,..AT TRiMBlE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC.19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC, 22-,AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 8-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH PO)NT
JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERI=ORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

EASTERN EAGLES

BOYS

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SC.HEDULE

•

c- Puke remains top col~ege team
same

Page-5.

..

,.

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP BasketbaU Writer
The week after Christmas
promised to shake up the college
basketball poll, and it did. . ~
Only three teams had the
positions today that they had hist
week, while three teams are gone
from the poll following a week that
saw II ranked teams Jose a total of
J5·games.
.
Duke (8-0) held the No. I spot
for the fifth consecutive poll and
the Blue Devils were one vote shy
of unanimous. 'Fhey received 64
first-place; ·votes and I ,624 points
from the nationwide panel of writ'
ers and bmad('J!ster,s.
·
Kentucky (9-0), whic h got that
other No. I vote, moved from second LO tllird after beating Indiana
81 -78 on su·nday. The Wildcats
were followed by Michigan (10-1),
which moved up three spots (ollowing one of the most impressive
weekS in recent college basketball
history.
Tbc Wolverines 'beat three ,
1ranked teams - Nebraska, Nonh
C.Olina and Kansas- in u many
nights to win the Rainbow C1111ic.
thea returned from Hawaii for an
_, will •s 1 a Midlipn 41

The ~aily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middll[tport, qhlo

,-

·Kentucky outlasts Indiana
five 81-78; Syracuse. beaten'
. For Bobby Knight and Jim Boeheim , it was a bad weekend for
milestbnes.
Not so for,Norm Stewart.
Knight, going for career victory
No. 600, had the misfortune of trying to get it at the expense of No. 2
Kentucky, which defeated the
fourthi:ked ..Hoosiers 81·78 Sunday. .
'
B heim, already turned back
once earlier iii the w\lclc in bis pursuit of victory No. 400, lef! the
court without it again Saturday
night after his 21st-ranked Syracuse squad suffered an embarrasing
79-61loss LO Villanova.
Stewart, meanwhile, won hi s
600lh on $unday in a 99-56 defeat
of North Carolina-Asheville.
"It's really a great privilege
when you're in a position like this.
Those things are meaningful and so .
I guess 600 is a milestone. So it's a
time to ·say, OK, it's a point of sig. nificance and I'm appreciative of
that," Stewart said.
Stewan's record in 32 seasons is
600-294, including 503-252 in 25
seasons at MissOuri. He is the 14th
coach to reach the plateau.
North Carolina 's Dean Smith
leads active coaches with 749 wins,
followed by Don Haskins of TexasEl Paso with 613 and Lefty Driesell
or James Madison with 607.
In other weekend action in the
Top 25, No. 3 Michigan beat Eastern Michigan 88-58, No . 8 Iowa
downed Central Connecticut .10458, No. 9 Purdue· defeated Butler
80-54, No. 10 Georgia Tech topped
VMI 78-52, No. II Oklahoma
defeated Lamar 109-92, No. 12

•

.

&gt;

seeond

liy Tbe Associated Press

.

HIIB SCHOOL·
1112-1113

Monday, January 4, 1993

·

Bills in greatest comeback ever; Eagles win
, NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The
Philallelphia Eagles put their post·
season problems behind them and
set up a ~ubber match with theirmost hated rival. The New Orleans
Saints ac;lded to their playoff woes
with a fourth-quarter flop that left
them .wonderin!l if they aren't
cuised.
.
·· ·
Trailing 20-10 and looking lil&lt;e
a beaten team, the Sgles staged a
remarkable rally Sunday in the
Suj,erdome. They scored 26 points
duting ail 8 1/2-minute span·in the
final period to defeat New Orleans
36-20 for their first playofr win
since their 1980 Super aowl season.
The Eagles snapped a five-game
postseason losing streak and
advanced to the second round in
Dalla$, where they'll play the Cowboys for the third time this season.
The bitter foes split their regular·
season games.
·
. "We've had a reputation of
choking, but we didn '! choke
today," said Philadelphia's Fred
Barnett, who caught tw0 touc~ down passes from Randall Cunningham.
''When we got behind, everybody reached down inside and
came up with something extra. We
just decided we weren't going lC!
lose this game."
The Saints are now 0-4 in the
playoffs and remain the only NFL
team never to ~in a postseason
game. The !Illest loss left comer:
baq~ Vii)Ce Buck searching for an
explanation.
; ' Is it a Louisiana voodoo
c u~?" he said. " It isn't anyone
on this team. To have the lead lil&lt;e
we' did and then Jose, there is no
words for it."
The Houston Oilers were at a
losS for words, too, when the Buffalo Bills overcame a 32-point second-half deficit and edged the Oilers '4 I-38 in overtime in their AFC
baule.
On· Saturday, the Washington
Redskins defeated the Minnesota
Vikings 24-7 and the San Diego
Chargers eliminated the Kansas
City Chiefs 17-0.
'
Many Saints fans were speechless after war.ehing the_ir team build
a 20-7 1ead in the third quarter,

. ..

Monday, January I, 1993

'

•

aw••••"• •

•

�·,

Monday, January 4, 1993

By.The Bend

.•·.

The Daily _Sentinel
•

~The ~rea's.

Monday, January 4, 1993

Ctoseted gay man lauds those
who:carii express themselves
IICXUiis

Is a niM:tion fO a poup 11

"~

A_nn·
Landers

3
6

''.1·

men drelsecl in drag, man:hing --.~.;...-...:.._ _.;....;.....1
dowu 1 San Fllll:ilco ~ qn:e a
DEAR ONE: I was unpepaed ror
.· year. That amelljunlcnt. if it wcie the bllizard of 1eaen in suppolt of
Yllia (which il is not), wauld juStify the bizrm ~ Keep reading
prejudice qainll the Irish upon . Cor Dlber oputions.
_·
aeemg St. Puric:t'a Pay pllldcrJ in
0.. Au: I have 1 me mge for
kelly-peen jumpluitl, lj)routiDg • dtc py male whO lligDed his !etta'
lllllmro!:b from their folel!ead•llld "Sabotqed in Calgary." Jfe was . .One out of 10 people in this
T·ahlrts dial say, ·~ My · critical of extremists in th~ gay world is gay. It has been lhis•way
Bla'ney Stone.• li they wa.e .10 the community who cft8s up in fright- for centuries . .The best hope for
TV camena.
ful WOIIICII's clothes .and march in · accep~ancc is to show' thuuaights
that we are not very difJ'erent from
' SPEAKER AND FAMILY • Mikt Bartrum,
with bis father, Welclc1n,,IeR, aud Rotary Presl·
'These ~lebnnll .of ethnil: and gay parades.
. . ,
•
lhcm.
This will not be~
t enter, was the guest speaker at Middleportdent Geue RIIP.
•
. . •
;c:ultunl diversity Ire sought out
ltistruelhlllwbcnpcq~lescconly
by
pliUlng
on wigs and flillle -boobs
Pomeroy Rotary Club last week. He is pictured
•
-,
by the media becenae they inake this type of gay, they Ire bouDd ·10
.
·
.
·. .
·,
am~· round ~- They do noc, view Ill gays as bizarre, koOky and
and ~marehiJII il\ hijh heets..and
seqwned e.ening ~owns down the
sueets of-San F
'sco. -- OUT
-...
.· •
., . .
. ·
~ ncw:r WlliD 'lllllllcn's ~othcs, think like he dQes. If you want a
BUT SANE IN nL.
Geql or the Day: Just remembtr an4I
do not clolcted
freQuent gay
image
of gays.iL get
outyou
of ' you are a unique pe!SOII, jUSt like
. .·
u a ~y
gay bars,
man·~t
m different
your cloaet
and paet~t
Un!ll
·
. -· • . .
'
· •
America, I IP~ credit to tbolle :who do, be thankful that the "kooks" 'are e~ryone elae.
&gt;·
•.
. .
.
'· am.[llllling . .aelves on the line in out~ IJecanr they are the ones . Wltar•s · r_lt,e rrut~ a,bQu~ -pQt,_
Mike Banrum was the speaker
Bartrum discussed his experi- ort'ice,s, a we1ght r~?'?'• locker_... thofiahtforgayrights.
·
· whO are taking it on the chin for CQCtWte, LSD, PCP, crack, s~ed
l at the Middlepon-Pomeroy kotary . ences while at Marshall UQiversity. rooms, a· computer ddiung_ room,
The legitimate heroes in my the resi of liS Those "limp-wristod and downers? "Tht LQwdilwn •
Club last week.
. He had a very successful"fQ9tball ~~Tr!;1 ~d o~ellSlve and bQok are tho .pioneer c1r1g queens sitsies." have ·real guis.-. They hive on Dope" has up-to-rht-rliin'ure
:· He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. career while at Marshall and was
il(omrtl/iQil lin drugs. 'SeNt' a lt/fHe said he ~ould like· to return ~ho rioted in Stonewall, _N:Y., ~fer aU bomollexitals the few
Weldon Bartnlm of Hysell Run and selected to the All-American Team
addresstd, long, business-size
.
is /narried to the ·former Jennifer for the 1-AA division. He also dis- to Meigs County to teach and m ,I 9_69 and _reb_el!ed. agam~t rights we ba.e today.
enve,/Qpt
IJIId· a clltck. QF' JIIOMY
cOIICh
football
after
his-graduation.
prejudice
llld
discrimiDaliOn.
Th1s
Just
for
!he
record,
Ann,
1f
you
Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. CIISsed the new football stadium at
'
·
·
·
.
ICKIIlOdllegmelllol'"lunnlicfringe•
aw
me,
you
\vouldn~
gucas
in
a
order
for
$3.65 (rllis incluilts
I;enton Taylor.
Marshall. The facility contains
is not blockinl progress. Ann, it million yeers that I am .: A ~/Qge .tiNJ. hondling) .0: Lo~n.
· . · is promoti~g acceptance and . LESBIAN IN ST. LOUIS ·
· c/o AM IAntkrs, P.O. 'IJ(n '115~2. 1 ,
Ulllbbiding. - ONE OF TIIEM
And now, dear "readers, another Chicago. /11. 60611-0562 . (In
· , . IN__LAWRENCE, KAN.
. inwesting leuer from a Chi~ CIJIIIMia. send $4.45.) · •·
,.
Local School District will be Corporation, announced the plans
By BRIAN J. REED
~·
required to maintain passinj~ grades before Middleport Village Council,
Sentinel News Staff
r'
,.
It
Politics and other world events in math, reading, Enghsli and althoogh the plant will,not be buil~.
A _.,.1, ,
'lJt •
•
were a big part of lhe news in another subject in order the play, in Middlepcin.
.
· · October · ·
?Y):eigs County during the final four based on a September resolution
. The Meigs County C~mmismonths of 1992, as local residents passed by the school .board.
'
CommuDity
CaleDdar Items
RACINE - Regular meeting,
Reclamation
work
was
about
to
sioners
began another step m a plan
POMEROY - Trai!li.t)&amp;,,session
jilmped to lhe aid of hurricane vic11ppear
lwJl..dus
before
1111
eveDt
Racine
Chaprm
No.
·134,
Order
of
·
begin
at
"Pity
Me",
18
months
aftm·
to
cootinuc
courthOWit
renovalions.
for Meigs County Girl Scoit! ;rroop .
iihis. and a tidal wave of political
riietoric washed over lhe electomte. a rock slide left .several' families · This ilm~. - the· !deigs Co!lnty and the driy ot tbt ~veaL .Jtems the Eastern Star, Monday, 7:30 Cookie Chairman will be ~
.
: . ·
September
· homeless. The work, to be funded Rccorder's ·ofrtee was the subJect must·be received weD ill lldvauce p.m. Obligation. Night will be at 7 p.m. at Pomeroy ViUIIj!e
til lll!lure ·publication iu tH Cal- observed. •
·.
This will be the last tt:ainmg ses• Employees at FarmerS Bank and · by the U.S. Office of Surface Min- or an arohitecturil review.,
...
. Southern. Local School·District eudar•. . '
. sion for this year. Chainnen or rep- ,
s'evings Company, in coopemtion . ing, was estimated to cost as much
TUESDAY
-'
re~lati,ves from the troops must
with the Salvation Army, collected as $1.3 million. Land acquisition Superintendent BOb Ord outlined a
MONDAY
POMEROY- Drew Webster attend. '('hose at last Wednes~y·s
wiU be funded.by tl!e Ohio Depart- 5.8 mill 'bond issue on tile Novcm~ tn1ckloads of supplies for vicMIDDLEPORT -January Bible Post No. 39, Tuesday. Dinner at 7 session need not.attend.,lJnit cookber ballot, which ·would augment
tims of Hurricane Andrew, which ment of Transponatton.
ie chairmen are Gertrude Ciisto.and
s:iruck southeastern states in late .. Pleaser's Restallmnt in Pomeroy state nliltching monies in .the con- study at Hope Baptist Churc!t will p.m., meeting at 8 p.m. _.
close&lt;!, leaving 20 unemplo~ed . sii'IICtion of a colisolidatCd elcmen- . be held through Friday, Jail. 8. • ................
·•
"
Pat Thorria.
~ugi!Sl..Bank customers, local resit
t
}'j,.
:t,.4' 'J~f,!l'l
MEROY- Meigs 'County
dblls and organizations contributed The acquisition of lhe business by tary school. as weD as an addition
REEDSVILLE
Olive
TownReact Team Inc., will meet TuesJim Hill or Syracuse, was funded in . at the high school.
·' ;
WEDNEsDAY ' ' .
the items.
"
Ed Johnson, president and farm ship Trustees will meet Monday at day at 7 p.m. at the ~orne of Guy
Robert Harden, Jr. opened a new part through the cOUnty's revolving
PO~OY - MiddlepOrt Liter~
computer store in Minersville loan program, and the closing direciOI' of the Agri-J;Iroadcast Net- 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River S~ Hysell on Country Road 5. Mem- ary Club will meet Wedne.Silay lll2
opened ' questions about the pro- work (ABN) was the guest speaker Forestry B,uilding for the I993 bersllip fees are due. Past and new p.m. at the Meigs: CountY•~ublic
· called Plus Systems. ·
mem~ welcome. ·
Library in Pomeroy. Mrs. Dwight
The Meigs County Commis- gram's future . Hill, meanwhile, at dte Meigs Soil and, Wrar Con- organizatiorial meeting.
Wallace will be hostess and will
sioners adopted a "freedom of · cited the bad economy ·as the iea- servation District's annuli meeting
PAGEVILLE ·Scipio TownPOMEROY - Pomeroy "OES review "Rosa Parks, My'Suiry."
and banquet. held in Rutland. .
,
choice" plan for county employees, son for the failure of the business.
Authorities in Meigs; Jackson,
· Mary ~owell, Director of the ship Trustees will meet Monday ·at Chapter '186 will meet Tuesday at For roll call members .,m tell of
auowing them to select where they
tiuy prescription medications. The and Pike Gounties were trying to Meigs County Parks District, and 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Townhall 7:30 p.m. The insii'Uction commit- someone who has ·taken a difficult
plan was adopted without cost to unmvel a series of events illvolving Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Countv for
.
. . the 1993 organizational meet- tee will' function. Officers were stand.
the county or' the employees.
· Randy Dudding' or Racine and a Extension Agent, unveiled plans mg.
street dresses.
·~ J~r!
"
'·. I
: Pomeroy Village Council Pomeroy youth who had been for the Meigs County Showcase, to
agreed to purchase the old reported missing a-week earlier. A be h~id· in October, 1993. Th~
Pomeroy jumor high school at a mobile home owned by Dudding showcase will promote tourism and
.'
of $35,000. The village agreed on Pine Grove Road had exploded business opporturiiJies in Meigs
..
.t'
' .
· · ·
tP p,ovide acCess to parking to Bob into ;flames, and Dudding was first Co
· ~ Field. The village ~Hill use believed to have jum~ from the
':o~· By~r. Director of Meigs
CHARLESTOWN, Nevis (AP) Alexis, Carol AIt and 'Beverly its Jan·. II edition. "I just want•to
'te.
the buildin~ to house and maintain William S. Ritchie Bndge, He was Em~rgency Services, announced -· Princess Diana wanted to go . Johnson share something more than have fun and talk tononnal~
"I grew "P. with Mike • las ·'
·vlttage yeh1cles.
later arrested in Jackson County, tha! the county's emergency disas- . exploring on dtis Caribbean island, m~ling stardom. · ·
: Elementary athletes in Meigs and charged with grand theft au10 .ter plan was in the final stages.
All three were told .to lose -and Merv Griffiri aitCl 'Dinah
·
but her youug ,sons wanted to catr::h
I'
we(ght
when
they
started
their
-and
I
miss
tluit.'
I'd
love
to
be
;
in
the
theft
of
two
vehicles.
·
A
large
sign
to
be
inslalled
facsome
wavesand
the
sons
won.
·
•
. ,
• The Meigs County Regional ing the Ohio River, welcoming
The royal trio spent the first two, careers and all three eventually suf- the Dinah for the '90s."
Lawrence swted her 1V career
Planning Commission, led by -Pres- boat traffic to Pomeroy, was days Of their vacation at Indian fcred from eating disorders.
·
·Alt.
31,
said
she
was
promised
a
on
CBS,' s "The Carol Burnett '
ident John Lentes, began efforts to unveiled by the Pomeroy Mer- Casde Beach on 'the island's south
trip
to
Rome
for
a
modeling
job
if
Show"
after sending Burn.ett~ a
extend rural water service into chants Association and th·e Big side.
·
she
lost
12
pounds
in
a
monlh.
She
photograph
highlighting th~;ir 1 '
Meigs County's western townshi~. Bend Sternwbecl Associlition. The
Diana planned 10 visit a differfalnted
during
her
ftrSt
Job:
.
·
resemblance.
The show was a~n- ,
George W. "BiU" MiUer of Mid- . sign was painted byUnda Gillilan. ent beach Saturday, jlut Princes
Today,
at
127
pound~
.
''!eat
ceiCd
in
1979
afler
a 12-year rim.
1
rtlepon was convicted on a charge
·Spectators lined ibe Pom'eroy William, 10, and Harry, 8, insisted
everything
in
moderation,"
tile
5.
In
1983,
t:Awrence.
tooli her 1111e 1
or rape in Meigs County Common Levee and parking lot for the Third · og_going again to Indian CasUe for ·
foot-8-inch brunette told People • as the grandm91herly woman with
Pleas Courl The jury found that he Annual Big Bend Stemwheel Festi- itS-Waves, security offteials said.
the razor-sharp toun'e to· NBC -J '
had raped a hoy under the age of val. Enlertainment, conle$ts ,and a
Di Wore an orange bikini and magazine for its Jall. 1I edition.
Johnson,
5-feet,
9-inchs
tall,
with the; show "Mamas Family," ' I
13. At the lillie of his conviction, sternwbccl race highlighted the did nqt speak _to reporters, who .
said
she.
was
bulimic
aod
8norexic
wh1ch aired for nearly two yean. , • .
another rape case inv-olving a three-dayfeSitval.
. 1 ,. • ._ werekeptrt!adistancc.
.
'joining
Overeau:rs
Aqony..
:, '
liefore
The village of Racine began
The princes spent Christmas
young girl was pending against
mous
seven,
years
ago.
Johnson.
~
••••
1
him.
actiOn 10 prohibit men renlal trail- week with their father, J!rince
Amy Rouse of Middleport was ers in the village.
· Charles, while Diana spent the hoi- who once weighed 103 pounds,
Yeo ... ma'am ·
·
crowned Catfish Festival Queen
Robert Davis of Danville was iday with her brother and his rami- today weighs 120.
Wilmeo 'In the Army, Nev-i, Air : . 1 during the Midd)epon Catf'tsh Fes- recognized at the annual Soutitcast- ly. Charles, 41, and Diana, 31, ~p- . ·"In our profession, clothes look
better on a hanger, so you !tave to
Force,l!brlne Corps and Ci!ast Guanf .
tival. Julianne !'luck of Pomeroy · . em Ohio Regiorial Planning Com- arated in'Deccmbtr.
,
ere all fully lnteanted wtlb·llll)e j&gt;lrwas firsttunner up.
mission baiiQuctas Meigs County's
Nevis, population 10,000, is a look like a hanger," said Johnson,
·
lllllilel. ExPusl'"' of military iiOin·,
· former British territory that now is 38: "It will never change."
Bill RizCT of Syracuse retired Man of the 'iear.
Aiellis, 32, said she tried every ·en'• PI'OIJ'IIDI bepn Ia the DeJ111rl- ·
afrm 35. years -in Ohio Valley PubMiddleport residents learned of part of the two-island Aation of SL
menl of Defense In fiecal ydt'; ltls. 1·
Iishing Company's composing 1~ percent increases in their
KillS-Nevis.
·
fad diet and on_~:e didn't eat for four
AI of mid-litO, women made pp w,a '
room.
. .
ani! •sewer rates.• beginning in.
British photographers• said days. Today, the 5-foot-10-inch
Plft"'ll of lh!! armed f~. •
· .
KAYLA'8ACHTEL
Racine
Village
announce!l
that
a
December.
The
inc:re8sc
will
genet•
Dilma
is
scheduled.
to
leave
the
blonde
weighs
138
tJOunds
and
·
·
'
'
I•
$49,900 grant for sll'eet pavmg had ate an increase of $36,000 for island on Tucsda~.
"'
concentrates on e.ating healihy
food.
.
been approved through' the 1992 department ~ lnd caine In
Issue
Two
program.
lif!ht
of
fUtancial
difftc:ulties
in
the
NEW
YORK
(AP)
An
Worlt,
.
Ted Strickland·oflucasville, VIllage. ·
. · · · · . · ' and no play has made Jac:t NicbolN.EW YORK (AP) -· Vicki
: Kayla LaRae Bachtel c~lebrated
the
Democmtic
~andidate.
for
th~
.
Fred
·
_Drennen,
.
30,
.
of
,.son
a
rich
boy.
'
Lawret)CC may look like Carol Bur~ rllSt binhday recently with two
U.S. Congress, s1xth d1str1ct, was ~Y~w.l!!l!l. W.VL, cqleled a plea
~ow' commanding a reported . net~. but "she wants to be Dinali · .
.
~~ first was gfver\ by family the key.no1e spe&amp;!'er at t~e Meigs . of not gitilty to charges in the 1991 $10 million a piCIIR, the 55-year-· Shore.
County
Democrauc
Party
s
Colum-·
murders
of
Jeffrey
L.
Halley
and
old
actor
told
Entenainment
WeekLawrence;
43,
says
she wants to ·
.Od friends at the Ole Liberty
bus
Day
Dinner.
Jeffrey
S.
Halley,
both
of
Gallipoly
that
he
no
longer
needs
a
pay.have normal people on her new
R'Cstairrant. Attending or sending
The Racine United Methodist lis.
.
·
check. ·
syndicallld ta11c show "Vickii"gjfts were her par.ents, Shelly
· Don &amp;lid Mary Battrell were
"Money hasn-'t really been the 1
"If you wau:h other talk shows
Wolfe and Ronald Bachtel, May Church was 'the site of a new A~t
Mayle, Diane, Ronnie, Trina and Basic and"Litemcy EducBJion 'pro- named Meigs County:s Outstand- issuc ,widt me for quite a w~ile," for a week. you begin to feel you're
K)ndi Bachtel, Tina, Tracy and gram under the direction Sue ing Farm Family at the annual be says in the magazine's Jan. 8 the last normal person on eartb,"
SWCD meeting/banquet. ~
issue. "I just do whit Ircct like- Lawrence"¥ l'eoJ!Ie magazine for
· Wendi _Collins, Wendy Clark, John Grace. . ·
Shenff
James
M.
Soulsby
was
U.S•.
Congreuman
Bob
that'saUthllleistoiL" _
•
O~linger, Todil and Sandy Hood,
tr~ating
the
shooting
death
or
.
McBwen
(ll-Hilllboro\
told
the.
Nicliolaoncum:ndy
alllring
~Ward. George Bunch, George
a8d SallY Picn:e, kcidt Petry. Sissy Harold Dean Withrow of Shade as .- MeiJs.OOP ihat their 'l.Caoae is '-in' "A Few Good Men\' add
Bl:ntz; Donna Warnecke, Sandy. a ~omicid~ pending investigation. . riJht, .~'1 what Aiuericllil WMt" It '•HafW\.;... l)u l!pllllt ll\!ldl o{ ~~~
1··
fottulle on Woib by
and
See, Theresa Lambert and Justin WJthrow died at O'Bieneu Memo.- the party's fall rally.
'
rial Hospital. A 13-year old son , Middleport Mayor Preit 'Hoff- 1111* '"K-aurtiiiL
BichiieL
.
Tbo. llll8llne re[IOIU th.. his
: Tile second ~ was ~iven at was believed to have placed a, IJ!In man propoeed a mcctlug cit l~al
home or her great-grandniOtller, on a trUCk bed when the gun d1s- officials regardinaa 19~nt b u - decor biciudes 1 water·
for the Pomeroy/MUOn Bridge. ·
color "with two 'fi'OIIICO widt their
Michael. AII.OIIding or send- charged.
R~ine· ~ Harvest Moon Queen
The marchintl_blnds fran Bast- tonpe.t in each otber'a mouth"
ftl were ·Oloria,'Rogcr and
was Amber;Ohlin.er. S'!t ern and Mciga HJ&amp;h Schools went ucr a toilet aeat with a real ratDennis Michael, Brenda and for
'
· 1'lff111y. Hickel, Tara Wolfe, Carol, was cr'!wned du!mg the v1Uage s to state band competition• In 't lelnate embedded in the Lucite
SIICy and Maahew Theiss~ Oebbie faU fesuvat, held·m la~;t·Seplelllber. Columbua. Meigs received an lid.
Martech, a packagmg manufac- excellent ratlna. Eal.,n asuperior.
A coua., over the commode
Curflllank!~~ie Fischer, liilda
I
''
F~.
y and Don ·Erwin, turer, announced plana 10 open a ' . 111c Melti Local School Bolrd ~ "Dcalii!l! ~" ,
•
· ·
•
·
8UITE'112 VALLEY
Jlam ~d Angi Wolfe and plant in Meigs C~unty in 1993. Bill approved 1 1.76 percent ply rai~'
(C. . .~• l'llt(~~ -.
NEW~ Y~ltK )AP) - _KI.m ~ ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.__.._
fdlrYJWiel.
. M: shall, ~r=dent ~Martech

-·

-u.

MU football standout sp·eaks to
- 1.ddlepo·rt Pomeroy Rotan·.ans .
M

MoM, thru FRI. 8A.M;-Sr.M. - SAT.U-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLIClES
• AU fttlillo tloo oouaty 10•• ad . _ ...t,be prepaid
• fteaiWI dlleo•t (or .... paW la ad'IDH.
• FrM Ado : Gi-wsy sad F..... ado ....-15 word. will be
' ... 3 eLl,. at .. cborp.
.
• PriM el !II fer aU capital letlonlo cloultle price of ! I I • 1 pOiat u.. 1fpO •olr ....a
.

• SPrlnd ..~ _NipoDiildefDr, ...-an aft. lint day (check '
for~ lint day ad", _ lll "poper). C.U loefoN 2:00 p.m •

_Ia ...........'"'.

day- ,.......
.• Ado ...t . . . . be paid ill ......... '''"
Card el TlauM
Happy Adi

Ia M-riua

.

'

Conimu!lity -calendar

.

It;,;:

j ... :"'-

.

..

f e0· ·n le l•n th e newS
· ·

east

•

..

.,ater .

First
. birthday

.Pi.

..

.

.

JOHI

tm

1*"-

I

I

Y....i S.._ 1 plseod Ill liN GoWpolo Doily

also.,,... ......

~-

'

10 :

.. ,,

' '
OAYBER&gt;REPUBUCATION
1:00 p.m: Saturday ,
l:Otlp.m. Mondly

COPY DEADLINE
Mondly Pepw
T~y l'epw .

.Wednelday Paper
1l!unday Paper
Prtday Paper
Sundly Peper

Nulnber I

l5 .

$ .20
$.30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

I \1;\l 'I 1'1'1 I I '
,\ I I \ I , I I II 1,
32- Mobdo H - for Sale

Rates are tOr consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged 'for each day as separate ads.

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

41- Ha. . for Rmt
U- Mot.U. Ho.• for Beat

t

·fo~Jou~ing Jefephone escfaange••,.

.u- r.,.. for a.ld

-44- ApartMeat for R•t

G.We COIUIIY Melp Counay'· Muon;Co., WV
Area.Code 614. Area Code-614 Area COde 304
44Uslll~
S674'L ' Wnt

'

m~ll!'rtt

Pomeroy

'
985-0ooooer

'.

24$-llo c.....
256-G.yaa Dloi.

843-Portlsad
247-Lotart 'F .n.

643-AnWa Dlot.
379-'ll'od.aul

; 949-Roclllo
742-Rulload

34- a..~ Buildiato

IiI \ I \I ,

Clouified'poge• cover the' '
j•

»- F""¥ for Sale

n- r..10 4 Ao....,.
:--:=:--- - : --__, 36- Real Ltata 'll'aaMd

1:00pm. Wedneoday
·too pm. ThUnaay ·
1:00 p.m. PrtdJiy ·
.,

•

Over 1~ Words

$4.00
$6.00 •
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15

Monthly

1:00 p.m. ')'ueoday

sea-VIa....

• A ....if... ad..rti •
'J:riMM (aoept Clssolllod Display, a..u... Card or Lopl
No-) will
Pobot Plouut llep10r sad
... llsilr S..lilosl, ........... ,.... 18,000 ......

~::e~:m~witli ~~~roa::rsc;:~~

1

r

Call 992-2156

.

Meigs County's year in revie~

,

To place an ad ·

Rate

15
15
15

1

r.:

'I•• .,.

Words

DayS

0.. Aan Loden: When· lhlt ·
ual, py plll'!lde takes place in
Franciso' I wiJIII could
be in
'
. .
.· Aiistr.alia ·or on the ·moon. The ,
fll1hcr away the betl(:r.
I am a gay male- who came out
. or the closet two years ago &amp;lid . ,
am struggljllg for accep181lce of
those like me. My message is
simply this:.We are ~- perveru or
child molestm. ~ funcl.an'lenllll
difference between gays ,and
straights is simply that we are
aur.:llld to m~bers of ~ same · •

ANN WIDEIS
•Jm. IMAII&amp;II•
~s1
c.-11" • '':'

The Dally Sentlnei- Pagl!---77

.Marketplaee

page-6

0.. AD I P dn: T1iis lliaer
is for 'SabollaM ill Calgary,'
. who eiJ)I'OIIOd tllillfvbtp lbout
the naput bellavlor or some
-bomolc....... ay~na tboy .danla&amp;ed
the imqe 111111 pyL
It ~ a groa mlaep rea-" ro
..-t tblt oo.iliiy IDWII'tfllomo-

.....

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

45-- Fumlihod

s_r..

2-loM-r
l - A u . _..
4-&lt;;i--y
5-Happy.Y..
6-- Loot ood Fouad

675-PI..PI-

'458-I.on

576-Ap"' c .....
773-11.....
882-N:.,., Bn«a

· II- Help 1Pa.....t
12- Situatio• Waated

:-II{\ It I.'
.

.

lulructioa

16- Radio, TV 4 CB Ropair

17- Miacsl.._...
18- Wooled To Do

.,

· 667-(;oai.W.

77- Aab/ Repair
78- C..plac.Equl-t

14-BIIa~TraiN"'

15- Scboob 4

. Auctioa
9--W..MdiDBuy

'

lor Sale

76- AulD Parto It Ace·-rteol :

13- ........

7-'Loot.iodF..... . 8- r..hlic Sole 4

· 89~art
• 937-B..tralo

Roo..

46R•t
47-W•nledtoR•t
48R••t

Ma&amp;orcj ca.
75- Boob 4 MoiDn

51- Sf&gt;O'IIal Gooda

53-Aotiot54-- Ml.c. Morcboodioo
· 55- lluildl"' Suppll•

C..oraiHsuliDJ ,
MoWle Hoae R.,...,.
Up~oletory

•

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

Public Notice
Public Notice
PUBLiCAllON OF NOTICE opplicltlonwill 'lie hold
TO ALL PERSONS lpter- February 3, t993 at 1:30
oelad in lite
·of 'Milty o ~ clock P.M. 'Pe'r aons
QueUe,
late of knowing ony reason why
lh' applicotiOQ ahoul&lt;!. not
101 New Slrael,

'P Uauc lioncE
In tWenty-&lt;light (28) d~p IllBids will be received unUI or lhe loat publication of
4 P.M. -on Jenuery ·25, 1913 thlo notice which will be
for the fol-lng ~-··~~~ 1publiehed once a week lor
rut nl!lto which haa
111 (6) •~••-lv• weeko.
granted should •ppe•r
doctalod 11caaa
The lliet publlceticln will be Ohio, 4576~, Meiga Cou'nty ba
ond
inform the Court. The
Probale
Courl,
·c
...
No.
by the Villlge of
medo on tha 7th day o!
Court io located w. Second
iorllh the enectmenl of
Jll'luary, 1913, and the 27574. An epplicallon hao Street,
Meigs Counly
128t-82:
twenty-eight {28) deye for been flied aeking to relieve Courthouae,
Pomeroy, Ohio
the
eatate
from
A 12-fool otrlp of Log• enawarlnli will commence
45769.
adminiatration,
aaying
that
~h
1
b
on lhllt doW. In cen of your
StrHI. rl ,...t-o
'RObert E. ·Buck,
-wey, or- fellure to onawor or olltor-. the aleett do nol oxcoMI
dorod on lha aoulh by Lot
'
·
..
Probate Judge
12 o1 Hertlnger Subdivision, wloo reo pond •• required $25,000 end tho· creditors
L1111a K. Neuelrolld, Clerk
will
not
be
prejulliced
-on tile uet by Lot 10 of by the Ohio Rul• ol Civil
(1) 4,11,.18, 31c
Hertlitgar Subdivision, on Procedure, judgm_~nl by -eby. A hearing on. lho
. the wut by Bosworth Streol clelaull will ba rendered ~
.
rlght-ol-w•y •nd on th• •gain•• you lor the rolla! _
•
.,. ~
north by tha remainder ol demanded In title PaUUon. '
f 1ij ft
tho LOl(llfl SL right-of-WilY.
Doled thio 25th day of
All bldll muel be oubmit- Novembw, 111112.
,
. • ·
ted to tho. 'MIIYor'a olflce,
Robart E. Buck,
'
·g"
.(BB·U-· - -~
- ~237 Rece St., Middleport,
Probal!l Judge
Ohio 45780.
·
· Lena K. Noeaalr011d, Clerk
The vlll'!fl'l ~•••rvn the (11) 3D; {12) 7, 14, 21, 28;
,• .
right to occopt or rojeclany (1) 4, &amp;tc
or IH bids and to wlllve ony
r------..:..--..:..----:--..:..::""'-.:-:--:---,
lntormaiiU• 1n bidding.
"
• ·
Frad Hoffmen, MIIYor
vtrrega of r.tddleporl
(12) 14, 21, 28; Jen. 4, 11, 18
ftc

Quality ~
Stone Co.

can614·992·
6637 . .

(Cl"SSI'I!II'I!-D u·s
8-uta 10.
I

'SAVE STEPS!
Shop the ·

11 -

fwst!

· !f:"f~~~WWA

.;

Pallllonw

LOUIE R. CONDE; alii.,
,·
p 4*.dllnle
' c.. No. 27,210
Doolilll1a, .... :147
NOllCI BY i'UII£IcA11011

care. ;r ..

-.-n; lhll Unlalown Hllia,

· Neat of Kin, Davie••·

1,

1

,

IOV8.•f •

L..• - · Adntlrtlaln...a,
ChadM eonct.. 'dd . . . .

r•

Unknown; Pob•l Conde,
Acldrala Unknown; tho
Unllnwrl Hlln, Hat of Kin.
Adntlnielnlon,

EaaoUIMa .... Aeal!lflO or
n - cen-. All=•
Unknolni; Ollie Conde,
Actdr111 Unknown; the
Unllnoo!m ~ Hat oiKin,
Dawiaeaa, L..Oite•, Ad•lftlllralora, E-ulora ond
Aaoltn• of Ollie Conde,
Actdraaeaa Unknown; Edword Conde, .-...Unknown; the Unknown
Haira, Next of Kin, ·DavIe-, L•••••, Aclminj.

atratora, E.xeautora 1nd

Aeeltn• of Edwerd Conde,
Adilr..e• Unknown; ladle
Gerrle~n Con~•· Ad*-

Unkllown: the Unknown
Hllre, Nut ol Xln, Devl••••· L•t•'•"· Aclmlnletretore, Executor• end
A = of la!f(o Garrleon
C
.tho Unknown Heire,
Noat of Kin, Davlea•,

CARPENTER SERVICE

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER

DEliVERY SERVICE

S•all Dozer Work
$25.00 Pel' Haur

(FREE

V.C. YOUNG

REASONAilE IAlU

992-6215

992·7553

p_,J, Ohio ·

POMEROY, OIL
11-13-'92-1 mo.

11

HOMEMADE
PIES

KEVIN'S LAWN .
MAINTENANCE ~ . '·
! o'

I

949-2391 or

1·100.837·146~ ·· ;
Lawn Mowing: 11 ,
F11rlllizi ng, We&lt;!dong, : 1 ·
· and Se&lt;!dlng.
c 1,
Shrub and Tree .., :
Trimming &amp; Removal 1
Rteldentlal 1: Commerel1l
Fr. . EltlmMH
' ~~ .

FIREWOOD FOR SAL£.
6-26-'12-&lt;l!'

RACINE GUN

CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
. 12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

1211411 ;,., pd.

12191'1 mo. pel.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB .
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon .
Factory choke 12
only

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
.ULLDOZING

' PONDS
SI:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAN 0 CLEARit. G
WATER &amp; SEWER :
LINES .
·•
BASEMENTS &amp; :;
HOME SITES
'
HAULING: Limestone, .
Dirt, Gravel and Coal ·
LICENSED and BONOEO

614·99H591
1

992·2259· ...

NEW USTING- Portland- 2 loll with an older 2 story
home clooelo river. May make nice eampin~ 'lile .' $5,000

DEER CUT

· DAVIDSON'S

NCHOLAS RD. - Ranch SIYI• hol1'8 wilh ·3 bodfOO!Os, 2,
ballio. heat pump, dackinli. above ground pool wolh
·privacY fencing', ~ - outbuildings, modem kilchOf) .s~allld
on 1'.053 acres. ~2,000.
·
·
' ·'

AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

PLUMBING

.

Eaaouton ll'ld Mlitn• of

Katie Gtlth, Dalnu ed, •d

.,. Un.._n Hllra, Nul of
Kin, DevleHI, Lavotaae,
Ad•lnlell•tora, Exaoutora
and A••ltn• of Auguat

.

'

RACINE- Very nioa 2 story brick home Willt 3 bedlooms, .
2 llrepiiCeo, oanlral air, screened porch . good localion.

Con*, Deo••Nl

,,

very wei kepi home. $49,900

·.

. LAKE

•.

RACINE,

MiDblEPORt- Bro!'lnall St. 1 flodr frame home •illlt ~3
bil'droorri~ blilh, lull basement, one car · garage,
appJial\cas, F.A.N:G. heal. allic space lind added
in&amp;LUiion. ASKING 22,000
·
· .r •
•
WEUs RUN lfD. -Smllller frame home wllh ahed.ID lhi
counlly 11ta1 may boi good hunting cabin or .•~*-

*Building MalntenancJ
· *Walding .
·cOmpUt er R8p8lr.
·*Data Processor
,
Class Starts January 4th!
·

'

home. $7,600 :

The Adult Education
Center
·
Tri·County Vocational SchoQI
'

,

'

POMEROY· 1 floor frame home whh 2 bed"'cirtla,
N.G:F.A. lui baoement with ullliiY and IJiraiJI. lncludlla.
eppiloncea, cable hook-up ,on iP8V~ olr"t. ASKING
$111.000 .
. .
.
.
.
•.
'
'
'
F THI!IIlS YOUR YEAR TO BUY OR SEl~ GIVE US A
CALL FlRITI.CLI!LAND REALTY, INC. I ., ., ' _, : ·
I

1

·

l

! '

•

.o

'

•

~)

, ••

~

HENRY E. CLEI.AND.........................:....IIW1 81 , .
TRACY 8RINAGER...._............... -.........M..2UI .
~EA!i· TPU81E!.L.... -..................... ,._,,,M..~ '·
OFFICE,.....,_,••••••••;.. ................................,2-2211
...

...

."

I

OH.

n~~~~ng

IIIWMII

. '

.

~

.

. 31904 Leatll•t

949-2734
12·1·'92-1

..

1•800•637•6508
to--...
.
.
.
.
.
_
___________
.
;
.
__
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
l
,,,

· YOUNG'S

~H.

Leget.n; Adntlnlelrl!loh,

hor;"J.:f'!ed

.' .

ORDER 'NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
. 985·4107

laao-. and .Aaligne of

You ••

Rt. 124, Radae

WORK

Qaar God,. pl8ase
taka th)a me.,.aga . ·
To our loved one up
above; .
Tall him. how much
wa miss him·
And _give him all our

'+tiwiM Unknown; Char·
lao Condo, AddriU Un-

uill_la_be.....

•Ventleaa Heltera

DRIVEWAY WORI
end ~IME$TONE

your weary eyes .
And _took' you In ·His

lllltore, E1aoutora entl
.U.Itne of Dill'le Con!le,

.,., IIIII • dlotrU...Uan of

•Gas Grill Tamk8

111241'92/lln

fled your share. ,
He tenderly closed

a.-, Lepte•, Adlllifti--

enu~~et~
t• th• aal8ta •'
Katie Qlllh, O..Oeed. In

•100 lb. Cylindero
•R.v;a

And ,

To: Diana Caada, Laot
........ laiU•ora, llerylantl, Currant Ad*=
Unlulown: the Unknown
Haire, Next of Kin, Davi-

..nalit~ol:!':'!~
"::!"'.:':.~
kin end pa11one

New Dealer
J and T Gas Service

FREE card.
Uc;, No. 005042 '

1 Year~go

Kllle.Qulh, D1anrld

Yotl ire h•eby noUfled
lhlll you " - boon n....cl
o•ndsllla In • lagol ecllon
en titled Paul 11. Reed,
'A clmlnllll- WWA of the
Eeteta ·of Ketla Guth,
DaoaiiOd, ve. ' Loulee P.
Condo, alii. TN• aollon IIIIa
""" ••Ja.acl ea.. No.
27,220 IIMI li penclngln lh•
co.... on ,.,..,. court of
Mole, county, Ohio,
Protoete Dlvlelon, Court
::;:· Po••;o,, · Ohio

EAGLES CLUB

·Thiss• adooo1!:'l•"
for I

i" iN MEMORY '
In Memory of·
ARDrtH BARTON
WhO pa118411;1 away

PROlATE COOAr

OF IIEIGI COUNTY, OHIO
PAUl. II. REED.

o..l•••·

-Fen-ellgas
~

EVERY THURSDAY
6:45 , ....

I•

It THE

12-17-'92-1

BINGO
IN POMEROY

2 · . In Memory

PubliC Notice

-

Middleport, Ohio

Special Early Bird

' I

742·3305 :,
AFTER
7:00P.M•

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
539 llryan Place

. 12131192/tln

Ads

.

GARRY'S
GEIIERAL

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
-Insulation

HARDWOOD
.Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
'
(614t 992·5449

SIZED LIMESTONE
.. FOR SAlt'
St. Rt; 7
Cheshire, OH.

at

INSULATION

FIR '
FOR SALE

TROLLEY
$1AnON.CRAFIS
. 614·992-2549

OHIO VALLEY

PLUMBING &amp;
·HEAnNG~ INC.
232 2'nd St.,

HOLIDAY HOURS
'
'
Mon. -sat. 1!1;-8 p.m.
Sun~ 1-S·p.m.
Hondm~de j;lflo For
Every one, !UKi Gl'&lt;lal

Po•roy
992·2036
Check With us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12-1-2

Gin Idellll •.

.

.,

•UGHT
•FIREWOOD

BIU SLACK . ~
992-2269
USED RAIUIOAD TIES

I

1

�•

,.
·•

P.g1 8 · The Dally Sen,lnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

An no u11 cem cnt s

HeJI Estate
0

3 Annoui~Cements

0

•

0

llcDonlol Cuol.... 1111-ng
· · - -. J o n . l , 1 dlt ftiW lftllftiDIRIIIIIIII, 304-773-

•

0

•

tt33or~43U.

0

•.

1181 Sq. Ft., · .11 tier• tot. 211
...... z comptoto bolho, - .
, _ ., living n&gt;om. Sbdrm., -

'

0

71 Autoa tor Sele

31 Homes tor Sale

0

0

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wricht

Apartment
tor Rent

44

0

•

Monday, January 4, 1193.';it

1n
··
~2 por.
-. r i1Uitr
c hoot,
~J olovo,

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

I

,..,._,..or,-~ ~ Homi
tto~ ·r--,
OH. , _ , .

-..,

2210.

4 BR houH, _ , hoopitll, Iorge
lot. Move In cond. PGK
f:n
wMh dood, $42,100. IM-37t2111•
.

,NORTH

.+5

•u
tQ8613

.....

EAST

•J us·
+10762

pr~Uon

SOUTH
+A9 .1
.AQ3

·,

'

.

~

BARNEY
6/JCIIWHAT

FETCHIN' A
NEW YOUNG-UN,

MISS NOSEY!!

GLORY BE If
WHAT IS IT?

Noiilod.

Natur~~l,

Brand

Now,

tOOllo

303-4111-621S.

. ,Hous.ehold
Goods

d,.....

. PEANUTS.

Automotlc woohe&lt;o 171 to • •
.... -lrlc
75 to , .

.,...........,__..-...-"-_....__ _, r--------.,
"Will :you miss
''w.hy ?". She' ·
me wh,i le I'm gone?" Said."Wherie are
he asked.
YOU goinq ?"

~ t:: .:~...!.W.:.T.

oleo llock now •nd uood !It.
olllnco ~""i,.~ bort
• • -of
•
UNCI
' oor,.r

1

:

Aond ond St., Kono"ogo.
3bdrrn.,
15K12.
tumllhod, 114-441-lil71.
cen11111 air, Ufrtlng, will fiMncl,
seoo down, $1311' mon., f)HD. VI'IIA FUANtTUAE AND AP' PUAHCES
2187, 614-38&amp;-822l

occo:r:Od

•'..

1182 Vall

!'

: gon Ma.·Cfll 1Jo

!'
,.,.

1Kip.m., ...........

114-441-4421 OR 114-4411-3!11

.-:----'-.;._------.
"Don't youyemem·
ber?''
"
he S(jlid . "I'm going
an expedition, 0 nCl
['II
be ·qone ....or
.twenty-five years''

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

It!-oodJ~trl=

"

$2118· Howo: llondoy,.• Sotl!rdoy
M; 1olow Sliver Brtdgo Pilzl
or 4 Mlloo Out 141 On Uncotn
Plko.

FUANFrUAE AND
CRAFTS
. .
Wo Havo cnono And enn Sup41 Houses tor Rent
olllo, Aloo Will Cuotorn Doolgn
Z BR Houso. Chlllicotho AD. 'tour Shlrta. Wa luy And Sill
Uood Fumftu,.. Como S.
118S.Mony:if4~· l Rotor. ,.. Good
qulrod. It
. 15 or 114-441- Ua A.t 2231J State Route M11 6144411-1422. .
.
1243

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

..

· New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Rer.lacement Windows
Room Addlt ons • Roofing

42 Mobile Homes

FREE ESTIMA.TES

. or 915·3839

(No St~n.ay Calls)

2112192./tln

AME leAN GENEUL LIFE and .
ACCIDENT ·. INSUUNCE ·coMPANY ~.;-;v~i'XJ:I·. "
18

Life • Medicare .• Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA. Mortgage
0

Appll Qron orao. 3()4.131'2123.

0

Dour 1 land clearing, ere~vat1
-• woldln t kl I
ng w~-.
g, rue ng ogo
Dr lumber on flatbed also wlll
hlui oqulpmont. 8:00 till 5:00
wookcllyo 304437-3411.

MiddltpOFf·, 011 i 0 45 760

(614) 84. 3" 5264. 12·11 ! 92- · mo.
.1

C.ELLU LA R

wanted to Do

CliO
th.ar ham• Qalllpotll Ferry &amp;

BOX 189

.

-436711

Certltted nunlng aAI.tanl will.
lor • oil wHh oklorly In

R0( kY R HUpp, D CU ' ° Agen 1
0

E&amp;R TREE liER¥1CE . Topping,
Trlllillllng, Troo Romovol, Hldgo
T • = · Froo ••tlmotool 11436·~· •n 4 ..... ·
"'- ~ or p.m.
.

~rroof~:'ro~i:.m~rudi:~

e

call
75-1857.
u.ndyman Odd J 0 ~ lnd
~
• Mi
-·
oor
IOutd'''lion-uo
Er•
~'1'· $4_.00 p., Hour. 114-245-

•~

AUI~onzt&lt;l .....-..

. . . . . ..... . ... .. .......... • •• •• ••••
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

.~

a::
·-2.':4:.
"WJ::

6

PlkO 11-F I A.M. 4:30 P.M. H
0U11tty And Experte..C. le The
· , ) II Ccincom For y - Chikl'l
~ care. c.n u. For A Vlah. ln~

required.

3G452 SA

t, Tupper• Plaino, OH,

WI(K'S
HAULING SERVICE

,_.,,Olio

36970 Ill Rft Rolli

HOLIDAY SPECIAl!
$CJ.SO ATo•

· SIZED LIMESTONE
Dtllvwi4 16 Ttttt 1111 I

111

992·3470

~lock Woot 01 HMO On J1clooon

1185-4391 'Or sg1-5ooo

i:.

1

~= ~~~:";11t;

8224 .

.

Wanled to do: home Of oHiee

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes

•Gar11e1
•Complete

Call afl• 2:00.
Rtt.rencee lvaU•bae. 114-441-

Clelnlng,

6790.

Wll .c.a,. tor eldli1y In my home,
114-113-11158.
.
Wll do baloytilni"tt In my homo:
Choohiro oroo. ~Kpor. &amp; - ·
114,317o0227.

Remodeling

Ftnanetal

Stop &amp; Compare

F•n ESTIAU'JES

. 985·4473
661·6179

12-t-t2· 1 mo

2-7·92-lfo .•

21

Business

OpponunHy
INOTICEI

L---...;,-..;_.;,:_:;;;,; OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
racommonilo thot you do lluoJ.
--...-------~---------1 nooo
wfth peopll you know1 ond
NOT to oond noonoy llvougn lho

r-mn looliJitl ItS

moM until you hon lnvootlgitld

...J:,Z..:,MAIC top o:::.Jm:MOIOIIIIOII
"
~·

. AH/R
·. 71- U~JUIT

no,

1/lfl " " " ' •

·

:;";:'!

Por Month Locol
Snock illodo AO&lt;IIo Muot Sol, 1•
100'22til401. "
Vondlng A -. Aoc-ptoof

_j~=••:u:ll=n•=!IH=U~I:::u:""'::Vh:~•:•:::"":":::n::::w':'/11111.="'"':':.,.,:...: :·"":'lli_ _j =-~~":S,::=.' cu~ ln. .

t
UtUftr traitor 4"' a tilt bod, ldoiil

tor riding mower ' $450. 1811

-.-MI54.

Hondo dirt blko, noodo liltlo
SUO. 407 Loculi Sl, IJor&gt;.

-

55

dopooH, no poll, 304.a75-6112.
Fumlohod "/:;· • IR. •zeo,

~
tl;
4th, Clollipollo:
111 118 11afler7 p.m.
,
utiiHto.

21idrrn. opto., totol oloclrlc, oppill-• turnl-. llunclry
, _ looiiHto. o - to ochool
In town. ~lono ovolloblo
ot : Vllllgo ~Oiiilii Allto. 148 or
'C OII-·mt EOH.

=

Inc~

cut to 1111. Kon,... dryor $71.
30
11octrtc ,.,. prtco
1 "
rodocod to m. li..
,.lrlgll'ltorw, price rwducecl. All
oold with ~•rontoo. ~:"I.A'
=':,~: ~:1: 1

It-

54 Miscellaneous

oiiL ·-1111.

13~-

.,...... 1:00. ...
• -·
. -

Petst'orS&amp;Je ••..

56
;:..,,...:..,;:::.:..:.:.:..,;:;;:.:.;.
·~
11 wk old moll Chihuohua I
Oachahunct mill pupplee, t2l.
304-175--7732.

fli....

Graam ond SuPIIIY 8hap I'll
Graamlno. All
oiYioL
lima Pet Food Dllllr. ..,..
Wobb. Cd 114-411o0231.
AKC Dolmotlon
1om
.- 4 llato.• Anclt Fti
121·
-• · •
11131111ZI.

Pv-

ohorp. 304-171-2407.

~·

'

nw

. . .,

1
-

-.,.

Electl1cal a

.._trig--Jon

.........

a a

JE:Hl~~E£~

aiW'

Rlll. . .lll

•

Ridenour m
304.a7J.17,11.

, leal, ww 1a,..•.:

28
.
29

Opening lead: + K

.....-1-o-+-+---1
-+--1--1--1

'I:-'

27 Ftmlll

32
•33
36
37

itudent .
.. .
Time ..,. - . · hall
Mongrel
•
Accounting
agcy •
Pretenllouo ':, •
hoiliH
1P2, Ao1111n
Auto co.

&lt;·

Conaecrlltd •· ·
oil

'·""'

38 Foolloh talk , . ,
o10 Animal

encloiUfll ·
. u;urence J. Peter once said, "
41 -radio
economist is an expert whow
prEill!dicted I
43 con...
.
tomorrow why tne things he
quontty
••
Ye!flerday didnl happen
.,,...,.• 1 '....-l44 Two wordo ol •.
Well, at the bridge table, P'
.,
under..
are ·usually able to anticipate
oltndlng
45 Ofdewn
will happen t~lnorrow (the QeXt
46 Portion ot
•·
tricks) .,. it is part of the art of
" medicine
ning at the game.
47 Reverenc•
'1'/lke today's deal as an example ..
48 AciranZldora
·•·····
would you bave planned the play !
in live diamonds, West leading the
...-+--1---1· 40 Hockey ara•t .
Bobbyspade king'
.
50 Frtnch
North's btd of three spades was Mi••non
.,
nor-Suit Stayman, which is often · L...L~~....
played in conjun~tion with transfer
...
bids. Ho~mer, it is unusual to employ·
the convention with only lour highcard points. But note that here three
"'
no-trump is hopeless·alter the spade' I
SOAVOXEICL
SPWOEOYOXE
king lead. Regardless, South showed
.•.' .
. amazin_g restraint in passing over live
•
.
.
I
GPI~FXEN
AICPPC
0 I:
diamoods.
xw
· II you·take the trump suit in isola·
SXZEOOFF.
· lion, it is normal to lead low toward
CKIG,
KIKIFFL
th' queen on the first round. Here,
SPBACOJYOXE
though, that line of play contains a bid·
EX V
D I .I
'
aen risk. If East can win the trick with.
,.
the diamond ace and switch to a heart,
CPIFFL.'
VOAOIPF
OPEYO .EP .
'
you will go down if the heart finesse
REVIOUS SOLlJTION : ·" The first ·Step in .any kind. of recovery lo being
fails and you I~ another trump trick. :ble to laugh at the horror of it 'all." - Tom Arnold.
There is.a virtually guaranteed line
of play. Alter winning with the spade
• TltAT DAILY d, fill
·"
ace, ruff a spade in tbe dummy. Then
PUULII iJ~
....
.
Ecli.. cl lty -~ ·:....:::_
lead a trump and make the strangel!)Okinl play of finessing your 10. West
Roar range letters of
is welcome to win with the jack II he
"'• '
"four scramb led words
has it, because he cannot attack low to fo rm four simple
bearts.• After drivinll ooit the trump
ace, you can discard your heart losers
G0 T ES 0
•
ott dummy's club suit. With the given
2
layout, you even collect an overtrick.
•I I
1 I I I
Always treat each suit within the
·,coaten of the deal as a. wbole.

~ ... .....,,ua

lmHIMG. VI&gt;J.JNU

•

CA&amp;M?I!.

MY MeW. RANOIER

. '

IT WITH THECAl&lt;
YESTERDAY.

•

mz

I-MONDAY

olzoo: 2 mlllo out 141. " 8/ooomoker. 114-4.-.

Pu- Poioco Pol - .
~·
--.
' ...... In Q.C.
Mur»&gt;ov Co. OilUpo
-.l~o0404.

a.·:u.._.

1

Pure brod Dobormon -ploi,
304-t711-G21oftir,I:OOPII.

F~till SuppiP",

&amp; L IVI·stock

213D JD dto.ol "T.;D-.:·JD
hoy b1no I I; lidO .Ill
dllool . . . . ~..nclng .....
obll. 114-ZII 1122
.
Ml~

r.'l

•~n

._,.... ••

typo PTO dil- I lilir. ~

7ft .- r Dvnil
..,._ dtt..... liloo .,
com~, raw. lOt til 11ft

Forgueon

63

7

~~~-Old=

-colt,
1:00
Pll.

...,~

~-

•

PRINT NUMBERED lETIERS IN

'THESE SQU ...RES
•

UNSCRAMIItf A!OVE tEllERS
TO GET ANSWER

I: I I I I I

••'

. . .••

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
ot · ll
· Aciual- Grove - Bevel - Partly - BETTER '
As a hobby 1go to craft shows and antique shops to
find old samplers. One of my favorite sayings sai.~ , "You
·can Jet bad times ma~e you bttter or BETIER.
f'

f) 1992 TV Llsli2Q Int.

JANUARY

Fl Worttl . TX

,l.
Thrn'your cluuer into cah;
Sd·it the equ~«~y... by phone,
~ need ·to leove your honuJ.
Place xour cltulitied ad Cqdqy/
15 word. or leu, 3 .ooxa, ·
3 gqper1, $5.40 paid in oifvanee,

•.
•,

••'
'
•••

41

!

'

'•
l

~

•.

. :• ~

...•
''

(.

21~------------~----~
•. __________________
_
~~~-·'

3 . __________..;_.:..''-'.--~---

ASTRO·ORAPH

4.__,.~--_;.__,:..:..__ _.,....,.

5---------~----------~·~·~
t '·
7. _________________~
'6~~----------------~·
1_

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

10'~~--~---------~

11~~------~-·-12~----~----~-~
·'~---

13~----~~----------

14~--------------

15 ___~~=~------

;
I

9._.__...:.,______:;;··...;-~...:;,_.....:J:;;..:.........

Mercha~lse

..

'

B. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _·.,.,.

Uvlltilek

I

'

Q. My boss writes about how things
f re becoming "more equal." Is that
expression right?
A.·l'jo, it isn't. You'll see and hear
"more equal," but it is' still a mistake.
EQUAL tlike PREQNANTI is an ab·
solute; two things are either equal or
not equal, and MORE should not be
used to qualify the adjective. If you
must use a phrase to suggest that
equality is being approached or
neared, try to use more precise ~~lord­
ing, all in the expression "more nearly
equaJ."

n...
--:...- h o - '-'·
_. ••
- ~.. -

Joe-

EVVER

• One sense of LATITUDE Is "free·
·dam, lack of restriction.• To find a
rhym,e for the noun LATITUDE, you'll
need the.right attitud~.

~T"ITIOII...

.200.

et•-•

I

By Jeffrey McQuain

tbo, uoo. -.ae~tt.
AKC Mlnllture , _ , 1 mo1o,
will H ,..dr Jan 13. S. •
onytlmo,
304-17t-2444.
CFA Rog~orod Slo- ldlton.
Piooooi loovo mo-. -.t711-

DroJIDIIWJ'id Clltory: CFA Perollno 1
Kll- 1144414844 AllOr 7:00p.m.
.
Floh Tonk, 2413
Avo.

AUa

'

:,T,._'( c.LlAAENr
WlTM TH€

..

··=·

.,I

OtJR
LANG-UAGE
.

~EWS!Qt.lbTO

• '

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

"'

AT~R~TIIAT

~-........... U~ IF If ellcbtollft. ..

AKc ..,.... " .. Plnohor,. ,,,..,
blk I ion, tiny win bo up to IIIZ

_53=--·~A,;:nt;;,;:lqt::u;.:e:.:s:.,..,__ 61 Fann Equipment

-.o:

Pass

_Ali pass

0

·: ;. ~

tteating'

=:.::ifi!'i!iot-eoa

s 84

lllock, brick, _ . , olpoo, wlnUowt, 11nte1a, etc. Claude Wintoro, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114245-8121.

Woodin bulik bede with maltraoo. $100.114-24W31t. , .

luy « ooU. A-no Antlquoo,
1124 E. Moln
on At. 124
- o y.
II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to 1:00 p.011.; Sundiy 1:00
to 1:00 p.oo. ltwtl2·21:11.
Zbdnn. dupjn •~l1"clno,
.
rmorobly rio 11011, ...., moro., FumMon:
-lng
ond
ptuo IIIIIMloo, 1 - 1 U3t.
rapol,. wo._ll!ICiollu In chun:h
~· olio • .,, buy; calll14-tt13-

•.a-

tiS Covlllor, ~ uuo.
_:S::u::!p~p::ll:es::__~ Soon
1'001, ~~~-....ond !lit. Vory

_...:.__

·~

tm .......,., Coolpr, - .
01111 ~- milll, INOQ, eM- Certified. Anlduaw, Cueswura:"-...
01c1o c:.otlooo c.~o
Coupe, quod 4, AT, N;, PVI,
tltt, cru~-. ......, oaiiMtte,

Building

48

:

1HII'ord Eoo.:M-., PS,. PI,
ookli)ll MOO.
Hilt.
"

I

a

Plum~lng

12

~~r~·- m~'o ~:=!-.~· ~'.mU..: lmlll
~~"',,,!~~···!:=
animals and •
.

aR
" nlewn •w· ;:::orlo:;.:b:::oc=:to.=l1~4~••:.:•..:31:.:111:::·:...__
g.-y.IM-441-11
. •
TV Soil: eor-. color t.v. woo
•-·n 2 bldraoom trallor loollld ""so •·•· -·- oo1or t.v.
-Mld# r :,!\ Oh•, dip &amp; ret ,.. wu
•• • JDS
- cut
•-;to"MO.
W..t.r
quar.d.lv.- 182 3217.
Sale: GE heavy duty wa I'IIG

rheperfect Christmos Gilt for that hard to buy for person on your list. Hovo. voco- lor ·~ r.tiont, 44
·-·
Apanment
6 Counly IOCol
LIMITED
lldr praforr~Lbut Iii I WI~
for Rent
1
aMvtca ,..,
coma, call 01..-..t-~.
Sorviooo Rotoo
TIME ONLY ~ .Ml10 Poull'o Poy c... Contor 1 2 ,. boclroom optr rat... nco,

S 995 .
~
ca

ss.oolupt
=~PI~c;K=EN'""s-=FU"'A"'N=JTU"'R""E:---

2bdmo., tWniohld, locition,
cond., fml. abo¥1
HtwAJnd .
...
--.
1250 wfth Houoohokl lumlshl-. ti::l mi.
-· 304-11
...
Jorrtcho Ad. Pt. Pioooont, WV,
3 Bodr"'::ic~orgo. ytird, cHy coli ~711-MISO.
Khool d
71 P~ten St.,
Ko~•.l-·lil, l3.
0-n
Iilli
Wlllrbod,
·--..- ·
hNdboonl, 1, podded oldo roilo,
2 IR,
yord.l mi. nollh 1 yr., $160. 114-446-3413.
At. 218.
mo. $150 dopooH. R 1 F -• · Wotor lncludod.l14-211-t337:
. S. u....u~.
, -·ontiq .... Houooloold lumlolilngo.
2
Fumiohld, or 3bdrrn., tor rant ::M:::•oo=n,c.:W'l:.i·:.:·304-:::,:.,773-53:,::.=41:::.._ _
irl Coutill y Ml&gt;bllo Porli. W.ohorl
. SW"'N
dryer, olr,)2311 noon., 114-112·
2117,114 •11122l
·
. AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
anod

&lt;•

...

17 Exlaia
11 A ltller
22 A..y - ·.
24 For lntlaloca . ;, :
25 Soulhwaol·
ern lndl1n1 ~""
26 Actor · ..
. Lugolll
·,.

...

,,

=

~..::r....'!:.".::.: :.l\1'."'=. $48.00
=.~~~~"':~.
•':.::~
Porli. 114-441-110:1
on co- 1n otocil

1
'

rrorn $1U5 por
month. Ono yoor
..rvk:e
og-mont

rang•. ~•gga; Appliencee I'll
Vlno St-, Coil 114-441·73M, 1·
800-llt-3481.
.
HNV)' duty K..mare dryar, eliC
cond, •'*Yihlng - · 304175-1514.
Kl"ll oia' wotorbod, 2 - r
podootll, Ia. hoodboord wtt~
mirror. ~..__

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
tor Rent
Compillll homo lumlohlnao.
Houra: lloMIII, t-5. I I~
·1BR
Trallor,
Dopooft
1 0322,3 mlloo out Bullvllio Rd.
Reference AequlrH. N~ Pete. Frw Dllllv•ry.
114-446-1!142, Orl~m-4MI.
Moving m..t Ncrlnc, q...n
1 BR Tn~ller,
Da~tt
a tiD .olld alk wat•bld, book
~•fer~nce At_qulrw~. No Pets. caM hNdbolrd, fUll tlotlt-.,
114-446·11142, Or614-N7-4341.
lno ilion 2 yro old, $575: now
will 1111 1271. Shown by opo
2 bedrooms S25D. por monlh polntmont 114-24U111.
14
S150. aecurhy dlpo.tt, truh
Business
pokl, opplleottOnt tokon no llotchlng
oofa
I
choir.
Training
pots, 3tJ.4-'?S.3000 11111:oo PM.
Upltoiol..,, ••· cond. IIIIo
114-44a.att7,
Rllraln
-IIISouthoollom 2 BA portlllly furn'od, cobio colora.
ovonlngo. $100.
Buoln111 Coliop, sr:~i V1111y ovo-. 8-Hul rlvor view In

614-949·2101 • 949·2160

0

APPUANCES

Wuhora~.drytirl, rotrltJ!Ilot~

.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

'

USED

higher
7 lrith poet
a Took ott
thlpl
g Boollin kiwi
10- Lanclera
11 Perctl of land

.....

COUNTRY

GOOD

oddrtll80

6 Goltlng

..

•a•,

Latgo . 2 ll)oiy, comer lith I
Moiil, Pt. PH. 3 Iorge bid--,
2 lull baths. kitchen, dining,
llmlly, living, llundrll ,_,.,
M50. per month, rallirencn •
deposit required, 1'14-4*-2208.
Avollobio Nrly Docombar.
Latgo houso, 123 Fourth il.vo.,
Ootnpollo. $275 mo:~ uillllioo
I dopooH. lt4 441 ti024.

E"'l

'

1.......1-+-+-

''['m SOrry," She
sa'd "1 quec I
I · .
=&gt;S
wasn't listening."

Entortoh..,.nt Conter'a $141 Or
$5.52 Wook; . -...Jvoo Stortlng $21.15; Aoctlnoro tiH[.Soto
And ·Chotro $215 Or 010.113
WMk; Coltoo And End With
Dooit 111111 ~ 5' Toblo With 8

~:':~.

2 Cut

3Bor....,m
4 Put on !lllild
lood
5 Apr. 15

,.-....

l.r+-

Merchandt se

Tho Qolllo CooCnt
ASC!8 offloo
1o occoptlng •
lono tar •
t1411d roportor.
tomporory lntennlttant DC»hion requlrM
knawlldgo ol tormlng practlooo,
abiiHr to work on ahort notice,
ond obllitY to moot Dhyolciil
domondo ouch • wolklnglong 33 Farms for Sale
dllt-. Knowloolao ol ASCS Rural farm tor 11le- ~ •m
progromo 1o dooTroblo. Apo and out building• · 50 ..,.. ln
pliciotlono· oro baing
Molgo Counor, · Ol.io, m ,ooo,
lhrouatl JoriUIIY II, 1113 lho 114·992·3gQ6,
.
ASCS"OIIIco In tho C.H.IIcKoo\zlo Aa-unol Contor. Phono 34
BUSiness
111 4411 1811. Gr.- of. lhl8
poohlon will bo -rrnlnod by
Buildings
·
-· ot bo
opplicont.
Cono
dklll•
will
conoldorad
Building In Longovlill, now
without dilcrimlnotlon lor ony wiring and drywll, l~ ..tM,
ncH'itMrll , . . _ auch u
waterJelectric tVIIIIblll, 1 . real
r~ce,cok&gt;r, r.llglan,Hx,natlonal
·buy at $2500; 814-1112-21112.
orlaln,
poiRic..
marltiil
at;alua,mental or pttya~ hlndk:lp,
or n.mbarahlp or
noMttmhllrshlp
tn · 1ny
Rentals
omoloYoo orgonl&gt;aUon.

Imogene -

By PbUIIp Alder

100% Guarani .... Cd

No Ellporloncol $500 To poo
WllkiY /Potonllol Procoalng
FHA llortgogo Aolu-. OWn
Houra. 1-f50t'141-0S03 Ell.213.
24 Houra.

1 Actra11

.Predicting ·
. .. _future

Noodld: 50 Poop1e To ~
Woolaht Now. No Will Power

Help wanted

41 Muttlcll noto
42 Former
Runion
ruler (var.j
44 Plartt tlrmly
47 Sorry WDrdl
51 Sound at
• Halloween
52 Metal olrind"
53 Prtnctly .l tlllen lamlly ·
54- Va114Ja
· 55 Corn aplkoa
56 Pintail duck
57 CompanpL

30

WAS YQo DOIN'
OVER AT TH'
B"ARLOW '
HOUSE?

Employment Serv1ces

Pass

creatlono

40 Graek ltllor

DOWN

31 Forward ·
32 aoverlgt
container
33 Uncouth
Pti'IOn
34 -Puo
35 J. - f1oover

.Vulnerable: Both
' Dealer: South

4t

a.......

30 BeiiU-

+AKJ

'

31

20 GH;toolh

tKI072

Wool
Pass

El-

potltlono

+54

Soul~

Rulalanrlvor
Unit
lroquola
lncllaft
TIIIOO lltm
Stlanllllt ltero

23 Smtar
27 WhHI

tAH

2NT

a
12
13
.
14
15

·

11 Att.cker
18 OfboH
20 - - Wonderful Ule
21 A~lent City
22 Cricket

+QI0982

.,.,

1 La. tlma
4 Sintwir

37 AFL· 38 Youth org.

olen. 5, 1M
•

'"·

'i

'"'-

"(:•

!

.

In tile year ahaad don't quit If th4 objec11- you're olrivlng tor aran'l acnlaV&lt;Id
· on your Initial tty. Ad-allY'' a clo8r..:IO&lt; • buMclar · ind you , will eventually

ltAOOMd. .

~

CAI'IIICORH (Dac. 22-. 111 In order
to· ltOUH the aplrll of cooperatiOn In
· ~companions t&lt;l!lly, you must first
set the .,._ example. H you're oetf-

,,

.

-vlng , don't be.surprised It Ihey are as yourself. to be strong. I he other guy will
well. Know where to look for romance perceive you as such.
and you 'll lind it. The Astra-Graph, · CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don 't be·
Matchmaker instantly reveals which have In an unbecoming manner toward
· signs are romantically perfect for you . someone today just l)acause you think
l\llall $2 plus a long, oett-addrassed. he or she mightlreal yo~ similarly. Prestamped envetgpe to Matchmaker. c/o · judging people could get yOU in trouble:
this newspaper, P.O . Box 91428, Cleve- LEO (JIIIJ 23-Aug. 221 Pertormanc41!
land, OH 44 101·3428.
not appearance. Is w11a1 will Impress
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-feb. 11) If it is your. your peers today. Convorseiy, It you are
·tot to provide otners with Instructions ali show and no go , you won't have
today. be certain tttey are explicit and muctt ol T&amp; tan club.
· detali8d . It ,O..r commands are fuuy , VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A conniving
undesirable end results are likely.
antagonist might try to embarrass you
PI8CEI (Feb. 20-March .:10) ~llhough in tront ot mutual triends today. Taka
you are, likely to be In a gregarious, so- tl)e target away tram thiS Individual by
elable mood today• you IIIII might not · not responding to wnat he or she !lllyS. ·
· lel!l comtortable around certiln groups. UIIIIA (lept. 23-0ct. D) Upon occaBe
very
selective
, regordltig slon we..., bluff I!Ur way througtt sit.,.: ·
companions.
tiona 'to our advontage. but. untortuARII!8 (Merclt 21-Aprll 111 There Ia a nataly, this mlghl not be one ot lho141
poHlbillty todoy thlt you might use dayo. Be _.l'ad to baclc up your poll·
po:or judgment In a car- matter that lion with ttiCII.
.
~
call tor bokfAfll and lmlglnitlon. ICOIII'IO (Oat. ":14-Nov. 221 Sincerity
Don't be impuliilva; be tiloughttul and a contti'IICIIve purpoM today
deliberate. .
&lt; ·
w1111e evllllon otter. . no baneftta. Say
TAUIIUI (Aprti20-MIIJ :10111 you have wttat you maen anctmaen w1111 you oay
to deal with an Individual Who lo ruda • or,ltyou' can'tdolhlo, uynotbing:
and petty today, don't respond to hlo or IAGITTAIIIUI (Ito¥.
Dec. lfl Be ·
hlr lntr.cllona In a, like manner. It wtll careful in jolnl-uraotodoy, oopacillmakl you look aa bad as thl offender.
ly - • - . II money l n -. The
OIMINt (...,. 21-.l~na :10) In bualn- ·oddo moy not bellltad In your tayor "'!d
dellif1ea1odoy, atrlve to bargaln, lrom caralelan- could be COIIIy. ·
strengtH , not irfsecurlty. If you bell.e ve

.••.' ..

n

'

r

'

.

'

• •

~

'

"I \

.

. '•

! ••
'

.·

\1

,

,..

�&lt;t- -

-

..

•

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Social Security
I

.

Meigs.Councy.. ~ _,;_(c..;_on_lla_uec~_,...;___P....;aae=.....;;~&gt;....;.·.;...·_.....__ ___;...._ __..;.._ _,:..;.·.

.

More help for Medicare benefi~iaries

o

On January I, 1993, the Govemmentwillex~aplogram that
helps people eligible for Medicare
who have limited income and. few
resources pay for some of their
Me4ic. arecrelated expenses,"·says
Ed Peterson, Social Security man~r in Athens. ''With the inaugura· lion or the 'specified low-income
~edicare b~ericiary' (SLMB)
program, the State will pay Medicare's Part B onthly premium for
· people whose income is slightly
more t~
· ·the national poverty
level."
e Part B premium is
$36.60
month in 1993.
A s ilar program is already in
·place for people whose income 1s at
or below lhl' national poverty level.
According to Mr. Peterson, u!ider
that program, called the qual1fied
·Medicare benefic1ary (QMB) program, the State not only pays the
Part B premium, but also Medi•

for non-certified employees.
. ment plani was up and running at a · Methodisi Copperative Parish .
· •·
· November
cost $1.2 miU1011. Amassed user made l;:hrisunas happier fqr 250;
Meigs County "went Democrat- . fees and ~t f1,111ds were ljSctl for families with donated food comcare's f.art A premium and a~
The programs differ in two fea- ic" on Electiqn Day." Among those . c;onsttucuon.
· . moditfes. .
:
deducubles and coipsurance turesotherthanincome:
who carHed Meigs:County were
In lhe wake of financial prob'Donald L. Lindeman of RacillC
charges..
.
• (or SLMBs, . States are · Presiden_t-el.ect Bill Clinto~ and ,· lems. the villtige of Middleport' was sentenc;ed to 20 years to life iJ)'
"To qualify' for the QM!l pro- required.to pay only the full Pan B Congressman-elect Ted Strickl,and. . 1 placed a (reeze on benefits and prison for the murder of Howard._
gram in 1m." said Peterson, "an monthly premium . .(Under the Local candidates claiming victory J w~ges for village emP,l~:
· Law~ of Long Bottom. LiJide.,
individual's annual income can not QMB program, States als6 pay the were Democrat ~anet Howard, who . After-school suspensiOI!S. for · man entered into a plea bargai
~xc.e~d $6,810; for a couple the "premium for Part A and other out· d~f~ted lo~g-ume County Com- . ~lementary $tudents w~e dtscon- agreemen~ the day his trial before al .
limtt 15 $9,190." Annual changes in of-pocket medical expenses·such aS mm10ner Richard !i· Jones; Demo- unued.after .the suspenSIOIIs;served· three-judge panel w~~Stb begin. . ·
the Ffderal poverty levels generally · deducliblesand co-payments.) and
crat Joljn R. ~ntes, who unseated . at Me1gs H1gh-School, b\:Ciime an
The Meigs County CommtSare announced in February and the
• eligibility may be retroacr.lve Prosecutin$ .Attorney Steven L. issue at a Meigs Local board meet- . sioners threatened to c:ance1 a conincome limits for 1993 will be pub- for 3 calendar months (liut.nol ear- Story; Shenff JamesM. Soulsby. ing.
tract with the Ohio Public Defend-·
lished at !hal time.
.
lier than January I, 1993) under the also a .Democrat; Republican Trea- .. The Public Utilities Commis: er's Commission. after the com"·
','To qualify for MediCllle Pan B SLMB program. (Uoder the QMB SU!f' Howard E. Frank; aild Roben . sipn of Ohio !IPPrQVed AEP's plan . miss.ion failed to seek in)J!II from':
premium help under. the SLMB progral!l there is no retroactivity.)
Harten bach· elected to.·a second · to tnstall scrubbers at the General the board about the replacement of
program in 1993 and 1994, an.indi"Only your Swe cah decide if . comniis$ionJr•s seaL Elected to the · James M. Ga,Yin planL The scrub-· Charles H. Knight. Willia!Q''
vidual must be eligible for the you're eligible for help from either .Ohio House of Repnisentlltives was ber proposal IS seen as a chance to Safranek of Athens received tho
QMB program in all areas except the QMB or SJ,.MB program," Mark Malone, aM ri:-elected to the save mining jobs at the Southern ap~intinent 10 fill Knight is con!
for, income," Mr. Peterson said. Peterson said. "So; if you're · u.S . .Senate. representing Ohio. Ohio Co11l ·Company's . Meigs tractual term, which ends June 30;
"The beneficiary's income can be income is low and you're a Medi- · was Deinocrat John Glenn.
· · Mines.
. ,
·.
1993, although at · least. ·~hne;
slightly more than the Federal care beneficiary, contact your State
Fol.lowing a ·close race, the
County offactals discussed the Pomeroy attorneys exllfCSStl!l mterc•
poverty level-·but not more than Medicare office or local Jiuman Meigs County aoard of Mental possibilil)' of coasttuctin$ a misde-. eSI in the position. ·
;:
110 percent of the annual limit in Services ~gency to apply."
. . Retardation and Developmental . mean ant jail facility m tf!eigs · One of Safranelc's(II'St cases atl!
1993 and 1994 and not more than
Submitted by Ed· Peterson, Disabilities' 1.8 mill continuing Coun!)'. using available state gtant . Public Derender was thafof J~p'-t
120 percent in !995." · ·
.Social Security Manager, Athens· levy request was approved on the monies.
.
E. Kanawalsky, 44, of Reedsville,.
'· ·
seventh try. The Meigs County
Linda Harman, 38, was arrested who was charged on December 19
Health Department levy and the and charg¢ with murder. following : with the shooting death of hi$
Eastern Local School District ' s the shooting deilth of her husband. . neighbor, Bernard Dyle Bar,. ,
1
•
· I
I 1
•·
•
·
·
· ·
'levy request were also successful in · Michael, at theidGngsbury hom~.
Kanawalsky was ch~rged w!gl
passtng . . T~e, Southe~n Local
~nal~ I:· Lmde"!an of.Racme· aggravated murder !lnd atternp~
School,Dtsmc.tsbontltss~e •. a~d . wal~hlsnghttoaJ'!fYirial,opt- murder. The second - charge
.·
1
the .Me1gs Local .ScbCK?I D1str1~t s mg mstead to ~ve hts case med involv¢ shots allegedly fired liy
lev~ request fall~. as did o~rallng before a three-JU!!fe panel. The · · Kanawlllsky at Jaw enforcement
'o·n Earth' ; by
h' ll h I'
. · levtes 10 the vtllages of utland case was setfor m on December officials who arrived on the scelie .
the evoluti·on of li'e
"
c 1 · t e c tmate, destroy food and Middleport.
.
· 21.
. .
.
'after the shooting was rep(med. •·
causing mass extinctions.'
·
plants and ktH. the dmosaur.s and
_An attempt to obtam extended . .
l)ecegll1«:t ·
.
William Buckley of Pomeroy
The radar pictures show Too· . most ~er ~ICS.
,_,. area telephone servtce between the
· John Lentes, 'Me1~s County:s was hired to rep!# James carpen!
tatis comprises two big chunks of
· Anzona s Meteo~ Crater and 992 exchan~e and the telephone ProsecutOr-elect, appom~ Pubhc. ter as.Superintendont of the Meigs
. rock, P!Obably held in ·Conlitct by scores of other holes m the ground exchanges· m Mason and N~w Def~nder Charles H. Kn,tght ·and Local School Pistrict. He will
gravity, he said. One chunk has ari . show Earth has been w.hack.ed H_a~en, w.y~ .. began. West Vu- Asststal)t P.P. : Chnstopher assume the duties in June. A forf
average widtlr of about 2.5' 'miles; repeatedly over the eons, JUSt like gtn1a off1C1als had . alrea.~Y. Tenogha ~s , hts ass1s!-3Dt p~~- . mer Eastern High School princip81•
the other is about 1.6 miles wide, the·moon and other planets. An approved th!l request. arid a senes tors for h1s temi, whtch begms m· he was employed by the Meig~.
he said.
t~co'!l1~g asterotd bl~w ~p over of h~ngs ~as ~xpected to beg!n ·January: . . · · ..
. County '80l!l'd of Education at tit&lt;
Scientists had thought Toutalis S1ben.11 m 1908, ~temng ~early. a un~.~~ the dt~tt&lt;m of the Publu;
J~son · R1ggs, Ree.dsvtlle, was time of his anpointment to th~
WJIS only' 1 mile to 2 miles wide thousand square.miles of umnhabu.- Utilt~es Com~~sston.~f Ohio.
dented sh.ock probat1on by Come superintendent's position.
. ; •.
until they took pictures as. it ed forest.
. . .
. . , William'?· · Billy LeMaster~· mon Pleas .court Jud11e F~ed W.
The Meigs. County Commi s~
whizzed within 2.2 million miles of
Last y~. a NASA repon e~u- 26, ~f Ractl!e• was arrest~d m Crow 10. Riggs .pled BW!tY. m 1990 sioners announced a $515,000
Eanh - a close call in asuonomi- . mated a 1-m-10,000. chance dunvg Flonda for h1s alleged role m the to cbarges. relating to his mvolve- waler line
lacement pro· t 10
cal terms- on Dec. 8.
.
; 'our l~fetime" that an ~steroid . murd~rs of a Gallia County man ment in the death of Vicllir .WiD of bC funded
the Issue Twrc~m•
"It's the most irregularly · m~asu"!ng a~ lea!!t one-thud of a and h1s son, Jeffrey L. f4Jiey .and Canal Wi.nc~ester, who v.:as, suuck mittee, which will, allow the Vil·
sllajled object we've_yet seen in the mile w1de. w111.?•! E~. destroy J~ffrey S. Halley, both of Galltpo- by a p1ckup m Chester.W11l s body · !age of Rutland to replace all exist-'
solar system,'' Ostro said. He food crops and posstbly end ctvt- hs.
.
was removed from. the scene of the ing ,;-liter lines The Issue Two
described the asteroid as ••two Jization as we know it."
Horace .Karr of Pomeroy aQd accident and found two days !titer fundtwUI be au&amp;inen~ by' a Colli
· highly irre~tJlar, cratered, battered,
If an asteroid wider than 3 m(lcll Gar.y "Denny" Evahs of Racine ov.er a banll: at west Shad~: His munity DeveloJI!Ilent Block Grant
jagged .objec.ts" that. have been c~ll1ded wtth Earth, "ev~n the sur. were elected as new members :of attorney •.m response, ftle~ a in the amount'of $S.1,300 approved
smacked repeatedly by other aster- vtval of the human spectes woul(l the Board of Prrectors of the Metgs mouon asking. Crow to reconsulor by the commissioners
..
aids.
be at risk,'' ·the repon said.
Countr"Chamber of Commerce,.
the 'decision, ci.ting errors in .
·
Ostro and his colleag11es
Toutatis is "among the 50
.Me1gs.Co.unty Chamber Dtrec- Crow'sentry.
.
· . . .
,bounced radar waves of( Toutalis largest Earth-approaching &amp;Steroids . tor Paula Thacker ·outlmed a defic1t · Syracuse.Mayor James Pape lllid
Old Gloty's start
.•
using a 230,foot-wide·antetma dish that we estimate to exist," Ostro in the operating bu.dget of the coun- Councilmen James"Hill and Jack . Although it wa:s never officially
at a National Aeronautics and said. An asteroid or comet the size ty di!velopment office, and · Williams told. the. county ciJmmis- adopted by the Continental Congress.
Space Amninistration. tracking sta- of Toutatis probably hits Earth approached the Meigs County sioners that lite London Pool would many historians consider the first Oag
lion in California's Mojave Desen. once every 10 million to 30 million Commissioners for addition~! fund~ not OJ'ICn fat the 1993 season with- of the United States to have been the
The radar echoes ·were captured'by years, the repon said
in g. No· action . was taken by the out $15,000 from th~ county.
· :--~tJrand Union I sometimes called Great
a 112-foOt-wide antenna.
·. board. At the same meeting, the
The county commissioners Union! Oag. This was a modification of
· In 1991, the Jupiter-bound
Payment proble.nis
commissioners' imposed a spendin£ decided against seelcin- siate ~t the British Meteor nag, wllich had the
Galilee spacecraft became the first . or the 5.7 million women awarded · freeze on all ~hases over $100.
· funds for the ~onstrucbon of a m1s.- red cross of St. G\'Orge. and lhe while
to visit an asteroid, takiilg close-up child support. 5 million were supposed
Controversy erupted .over 'lht; demeanant Jatl m the county, but cross of ~I. Andrew combined in the
photograplls of Gaspra, located in to re·ceive payment in 1989. Of the Meigs Cou'nty Litter Comrol pledged to .;levelop a plan· for con- · blue canton. For ttti!'Gran'd Union Oag,
the main belt. · .
·· women due payments. about half i-e-_ office's removal of political signs. ·structilin ofa fUn-service jail; using . six horizontal stripes were imposed oh
Scientists increasingly believe a ceived t~e full amount they were due.. Oepanment Director Kenny Wig- available s~ grant monies.
..
the red field, dividing it into t3 alter6- to 9-mile-wide asteroid walloped The average amount of child support gins maintaitied that no grant funds
. The M.eigs County. Bikers pro- nate red"and while stripes.
~exico's Yucatan Peninsula 65
~eceived in-'989' was $2.995, and the
were being us~d specifically for vided toys for children in 300
·
.
.
million years ago, kicking up· . aggregate amount received in t989 · sign removal, .
needy families during the ChristFranklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd. presl·
enough dust to darken the skies, was $ll ..~ billion. 69 percent' of the
~orneroy's new sewag!l treatmas season, apd' the United dent of the United States, was born
$t6.3 blihon due.
·
·
·
near Hyde Park, ·N.Y., Jan. 30, t882 ..

·

O

.

·

·

.

By LEE SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
PASADENA, Calif. - When ;1.
big asteroid passed by Earth last
month, NASA scientists took. what
are described as far more, detailed
radar images of that kind of rock
than have ever been taken before.
And the images of (!Steroid Toutatis today are teaching scientists
new things about the kind of object
!hal may have killed the dinosaurs
and eventually might make humans
extinct.
The images are "1 00 times
more detailed than any previous
picture of a near'Eanh asteroid,"
astronomer Steven Ostro. of the
space 'agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said $unday.
Asteroids are big' chunks of rock
in space. Most are located in a belt
between Mars· and Jupiter, but
near-Ear.th asteroids have orbits
.that bring them close to Eanh.
"Every once in a while they
collide with our planet," Ostro
said. "They. have played a role in

Video magic
ressurrects Elvis
for birthday bash
By WOODY BAIRD
Associlted ~ess Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Elvis
lives! Or rather, the master tape
from · a !973 concert survives.
which is enough to allow him to
perform this week with the Memphis Symphony.
·
Whether he really passed away
in 1977 or is touring Midwestern
fast-food restaurants, Elvis Presley
wiU wiggle again in his hometown
. as J);lrt of a three-day celebration of
his 58th b~y Friday. .
The hoop" tncludes the release
of an Elvis poslage stamp. The 29cent commemorative stamp goes
on sale at 12:01' a.m. Friday at
Graceland, the Icing's former residence. Nationwide sales begin' at

noon.

1

.

•

•

ot

•

· Pick 3:
.542
Pick 4:

Page4

.

.'ai

Vol. 43, No. 177
Copyrighted 1183

Vote en~ds . in tie;.Reed to name council president
I

! •
{

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
.
Pomeroy May~r Bruce Ref?d
will ·name lhe prestdent of the village council following a tie vote by _
council at their regular meeting on
Monday nighL
The council held its organizational meeting and came to a tie
vote when selecting its president.
Current President j..arry Wehrung
was nominated by Council member ·
Betty Baronick, and John. Blaetln!"'
was nominated by Councilman Bill
Young. Voting was done by ~t
ballot, with three members voting
for Blaettnar and three· for

Wehrung. Reed, who is required to
break tie votes, will determine the
matter at council's next regular
meeting.
Reed re-appointed Danny Zirkle
for another year as fire chief. He
will announce committee appointments at the next meetin~.
.
Bill Qui~kel of Davts-QUtckel
Insurance of Pomeroy attended the
meeting to discuss last week's
action accepting a bid from the
Wiseman Agency of Gallipolis for
Blue Cross/Blue Shield health
insitrance.
Quickel contends that his agency could have provided the same ·

policy (and had submitted a bid for were commended by Reed for their .
A resolution was approved
Young reported that a sidewallc
that policy) and, said last night that efforts during -the past year.
which established temporary was needed near the intersection or
he feels a local agency should be
It was noted !hal no delinquent appropriations for the new year, Spring Avenue and Main SueeL He
given preference over an agency income taxes exis.t within the vil- which will allow the village to also suggested· the installation of a
from out of town. The policy which lage, and that over $10,000 in make payroll payments in the fol- drop box for utility and parking
was approved th~ough the Wise- delinquent taxes were colleC\ed lowing departments: police ; ticket payments. Baronick comman Agency was unchanged from through Deem's efforts in 1992. mayor/administration; cleric/trea- plained or a propeny on Lasley
the 1992 policy. Qui~kcl said that Rought was credited for assisting surer; special revenue fund. and Street that needed cleaning.
council's contention that the Davis• in the collection of $69,000 in enterprise (water).
The Mayor's Report of fines
Quickel bid was not approved due . unpaid fines. Those not complying
Council approved the expendi- collected fQr December was
to a policy re-write fee was not with payment plans on old fmes are ture of up to $700 for the repair of approved in the amount of
valid in that the policy was no.t now subject to license revocation a gas tank on a village fire truck:
$7,877.50.
rewritten, and therefore, the fee did and/or jail sentences, Reed said.
Reed issued a reminder th.a t
Present were: Reed, B;aronick,
Rought reponed that $754 in old · Chrisunas trees will be picked up Blaettnar. Young and Wehrung;
not apply.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry fines have been ,collected since·Fri- from curbsides on Tuesday. and Councilmen Scott Dillon and
Rought and TaJt Administrator day. Meter collections for the year that they may also be dropped off Thomas Werry; and Clerk Kathy
Teresa Deem were present. and totaled $27,082.50.
• behind the junior high building no Hysell.
.
•
later than Tllesday for pickup.

•, I

SALE

DININ·G·.ROO.

TABLES, C.HAIRS, HUTCHES, , SIDEBOARDS, D.RY ·.SINKS, CUPBOARDS; PIE SAFES ·
AND CORNER CA~INETS.- HUGE 'SEL.ECTION!!
·· .
. (THIS IS.,ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING.)

Reg. $499.00 ·

· ·

~

· .

TRESTLE• TABLE,
REG. $839.00

4 CHAIRS .......: ......................SALE ·...,99
.s

·

WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP)
- A man who confessed to the
grisly sex slayings of three boys
and warned he woutd kill again
was executed on the gallows early
today in the 113tion's first hanging
since 1965..
·
Westley Allan Dodd, 31, was
pronounced dead at 12:09 a.m.,
four minutes after the hooded
inmate droiiJ)ed through a trap door
and fell the
length of his 1-foo,t.
1-inchrope.
.
Given the option of hanging or
lethal injection, Dodd had asked for
hanging because, he said, he hung
the body of one of his victirris ·and.
wanted the same treannenL He had
dropped all appeals and asked to be
allowed to die, warning, "I willldll
and rape a~ain and enjoy every
minute of it. •
.
.
·
· Late Monday. the srate Supremc
Court cleared the way for the execution when it issued a one-sentence ruling rejecting a bid' by 26
Washington residents to halt the
hanging as cruel and unusual punishmenL The vote was 7-1.
It was Washington state's first
exec~tion since 1963.
The last hangings in the United
States
were in 1965 in Kansas,
SOPERINTENDI!NT SWORN IN • New
Couaty Interim Superintendent ol Sc:hools Michael
· Wbalen swon Jato olllce Monday evenln1 lly Muon County Clerk Diaiul Cromley, shown above. when four murderet:S were put io
Whalen bepti dutiel today, repladna Grant Sheppard, whose reslguadon became elrectlve Jan. 4. Whalen death. Among-then, were Richard
wiD hold the posltloa uDder Sheppard's coatract until June 30, wben either board members wBI negotiate Eugene Hickock and Perry Edward
Smith, the subjects of Truman
a new coall'llc:t wltb Wbalen, or hire a new superlatendent. (OVP photo by Mindy Kear.ns.)
.
Capote's book "In Cold Blood ....
"I was once asked by somebody, I don't remember who, if
there was any war sex offenders
By JOHN K. WILEY
D.eath penalty opponents had and clinical way the state put to could be stopped, ' Dodd said in
Associated Press Writer .
gone to coun Monday to argue that death ch.ild killer We~tley Allan · his final statement. "I said no. I
. WALLA WALLA, Wash.-· I hanging is barbarous, cruel and ·Dodd today surprised me.
was wrong.
expected it to be gruesome.
unusual punishment But the quick
At 12:02 a.m .. a screen in front
''I was wrong when I said there
of a second-floor window in the was no hope. no peace. There is
death chamber was raisell and the hope. There is peace. I found both
31-year-old Dodd s~e his final in the Lord, Jesus Christ. Look 10
words, a hard-to-hear m~e of a the Lord and you will fiod peace."
last-minute religious convers1on.
Mter Dodd dropped through the
When Dodd finished, at 12:04 . trap door, there was little movea.m .. the screen was dropped and ment other than the gentle swingthe silhouettes of two nangmen ing ,of the body before a curtain
could be seen. One placed the was drawn across a window
A former Mason County bank 12 years Is. data processing super- black hood over Dodd's shoulders.
employee pleaded guilty in federal visor, until a merger occurred in The other chewed gum as he placed ·
the noose ·around Dodd's neck and
court to embezzling $12.500 ·in· a 1991.
.
it snug behind his left ear.
check . diversion scheme last year,
In a related case, the guilty plea made
At
a.m., the chamber's
while the guilty plea of another was of Patricia Ann Clark of Gallipolis, stillness12:05
Vehicle damage was. light to
was broken by the crack of moderate
there were no injuries
refused by the judge.
· Ohio, also a former Peoples Bank the trapdoor
springing o~en~ in three but
·Sharron Y. Smith of Gallipolis · employee, was refused by Judge Dodd's bound b(ldy
accidents
and
dropped mto. Monday investigated Sunday
by
Pomeroy
Ferry, a former worker at the Haden. ·
in a lower window.
..·
Peoples Bank of Point Pleji.Wit,
Clark is ctuu,ged with em~z­ sight
.
There was no violent movement Police
At 12:26 p.m. on Sunday, police
faces up to 30 years in prison and a zlin~ $3,516 from the bank m a or noticeable twitching. I watched
$1 millioo fine when she iS smten- sim1lar checlt diversion scheme.
an accident on Lincoln
Dodd's hands, which were slightly investigated
Heights.
Mary E. Bentz, Pomeroy,
ced Marcil 22 in U.S. Disuict
The Daily Mail said Haden crossed ·in front of his groin.
. was ·traveling west .on Lincoln
Court.
stated he would not accept Clark's
Corrections Deparunent offi- Heights
when a car .driven by Jerry
Smith admitted Monday she cOn·· plea after the woman appeared to cials had said earlier that if .th~y
. tinuously sent her ,penona1 checks be uncertain about her involvemerlt . prepared correctly for. the nations E. Day, Pomeroy, pulled from a
through the ,federal Reserve Sys- and 1:! Intent 10 embezzle in. the first hanging since 1965,the 7-foot, parking space into- the path of the
tern instead oT deducting them from
check diversion.
1-incli drop would snap. Dodd's Belitz vehicle.
her accounL
Joe Ellison, president of Peoples neck with very little suffenng.
The~ was moderate damage to
tile
passenger side anc! front quaner .
Chief U.S. District Judge Charles Bank of Point Pleasant. which .has
Ai 12:06 a.m., Prison SuperinHaden n allowed Smith to reniain branches in both Mason and New tendent Tana-W oriJI closed the panel of the Bentz vehicle, and
light da01age to the driyer's side
fn:e on a $10.000 unsecured bone{. ·Haven, tOday assured residents that blinds on'the lower chamber.
and
front quarter panel of the Day
AccOflling to the Charleston Daily their money is safe in the bank.
Corrections
Department
Mail, fede!al prosecuton said
"It ~ important to note that this spo!&gt;esman Veltry Johnson picked ear.
Day· was cited for no insurance
Smith embezzled $36.500 and has was uncovered by our ow!l internal up a white telephone and
agreed to make re.titution far !hal, audit staJT and not by federal bank announced that a doctor had sef the and failure to yield the right of
way.
· amount under a plea agreement te$Uiaton or by an outside audit," time of death·at 12:09 a.m.
.
At 7:04 a.m. Monday, .the
with authorities.
•
said Ellison. "It was discovered
Tears welled up in the eyes of
, Smith apparently told the judge early and all the pwper authorities Darrell Lee, the fawyer who had parked truck of'Richard Buzzard,
she wrote checks on .her personal were notified immediately. It is also helped Dodd cut through a,Ppeals 32, Racine, drifted from the Beacon Station lot where it was perked
III:COUnt and when lhoee cl!ecks important to note that Our CUS · so ihe execu'tion could go qwcldy.
Chester Road striking the
were ~ to the bank, she, tomers' IICCOIIIIII were not affected
Jewell Cornell. the mother of ontci
side and back dopr area of
driver's
would send the checks 10 the by thiJ transaCtion."
.
one of the boys Dodd tilled, patted
Federal Reserve System rather than
The bank presi4ont also · ap- Lee on the back. Clair Neer, father acar belng~ven by Bot)nie WalkdedUCting the chec:ks froll) her
C.~ttdcld the professioltalism of the of Dodd's two other victims, shook 'er, 55, RK'
moderate ,damage to
There
counL She kept the checkl circulat's empiOf!* 1M aMiu them Lee's hand. Both parents quickly
the
Walker
vehicle
but no visible
ing in the btlnkina ayltem and her with the suc:cesa of the bank. He left
chamber'
. .
damage
to
Buzzard's
truck which
III:COUllt wu not clcbi!Cd.
added the llnancial institution just
~
when
It
hit
the
guard railSmith, who nn for assessor in . COJDpleted its mOSt bssful year
ing.
Buzzltrd
was
.
not
cited ·
EDITOR'S
NOTE
AP
the May primary Oleclion on the in Its 27-year history.
.
atthoush
K.
Wiley
he
repcnedly
hid
leCt
the
Corre1ponileat
Jolin
Rtpublican 1ickct, worlted in the
EW1011Isaid the !ICherne wu dis·
motor
running
when
he
left
the·
wu
one
of
12
repotten
wllo
wit·
ptoof cq. bnent of the blnk. She covered · in June, with both
·
·
wu formerly employed with employees being discharged June 5. aeued tbe exee•tloo of Westley vehicle !llfked.
Allan
.
D
odd
•
At
!2:,
1
0
P·':"·
Monday
on
West
Central 'l)'ust,ror 18 years. the -

run

Maon

SOFASI LOVES·EATS ~nd CHAIRS

~:;.T:=.~AR TABLE.4CHA1Rs ........;..........sALE ,669

PEDESTAL TABLE, 4 CHAIRS ........................... SALE

319 ·

Reg. $1,049.00 .
·
s
. FARM TABLE, 6 CHAIRS .., ................................. SALE 839
Reg. $1,499.00
.
,
DOUBLE PEO. TABLE, 6 CHAIRS ................ SALE
,

~~:~~9.~PBOARD ............................... :..,..... SALE '179·
R~. $429.00

,

,

,

PIE SAFE ............ :.............................................. SALE

339

·(Listed Are Only· A.Few Of T
_he Ma.ny vtag Room Suites O• saie.) .
u_

Reg. $819.00 Country Pial~
. . .·.
,. . . .
.· . ·
'
. . . ~
SOFA WIWING CHAIR .................................~ .. ,.......... ,..........,.... ;....... Sale .u
Reg. $1 ;029.00 C9ntemporary ·· .
· . .· ' ,
· .·
I .s
SROFA$7&amp;49COHOABJRE.R..K
...U
...N
...E
...............,........,~ ........... ~ ...............:... ~ ............ Sa e 829
. . .
. eg.
•
·
·. · · · , ·
· .
·.
· ··
s 99
RECUNING SOFA •. .'...............................................~ •.•...•.•.••............••... Sale 5

59

1 199

.

.~:'J'e~cf:Rog .................:.:...........:....... ~ ........·.......SALE '259.

'899

RSeOgF.A$1&amp;,13C
. 8H.ooA
· IRCRA':MASTER FLORAL . . .. . . . .. . . . .
Sale
.
.-. .............................................................
Reg. $ 1•029·00
.
·
·
·s81
Reg. $689.00 ~RAFT.MASTER ·C()UNTRV· . ·. ·
. · .·
·
s
-::.sQ~UA~R!!!E;_.!:P~ED~-~~:!.!4~CH~A~l!;!R~S::.;
.. ·::;···;.:;"·;.:;
.. ·:;::"':;::"·::.·~SA~L~E~~2..-{ SOFA &amp; CHAIR ...........................~ .........................;........................... Sale 559
Reg. $2,569.00 BERKLINE
.. · • · ·.. · . ..
• · .· , ggg
(
....'?I RECUNING· SECTIONAL .~ ....:.••.•.•....• ~.• ~ •• ~ ...................~·········· ..····Sa Iii 1 ,
.
TOWNE SQUARE ·
............• Reg. $809.00 ROWE ·
. ·
· . .. · . . . . . .
·
. ,
SOFA, Blue Floral ...................,•..•••••.•...•........•.... ~ .•:~······················-~·-··Sale . 49,
Reg. $1,219.00 CRAFrMASTER BEIGE , . .
·
.
·
SOFA I&amp; CHAIR ..~ ...... ~ .. ~ ...,..................4.:•. ;.~ ..... ~1. ·································· Sale '979
Reg. $829.00 BENCHCRAFT .. ·. · . ,
.
. ·..·
.
.
'&amp;&amp;g
OAK &amp; ALDER
'

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

.

.· GLIDER · .
'ROCKERS

•BEAUTIFU~

DURABU FRAMES

, Starting At 6nly

$1·· 99

6

SOFA. l CHAIR •...........•••.....•.·•..••,. ...••....•..••..•·..-.................................. S•le .
Reg. s~9s.oo
.·. .
·· &lt;
. · ·
.
· , ._ .
QUEEN ·sLEEPER 'SOFA .................:...•.
~ •.• ,.••••. Sale 559
. -.~ •.• ;._............................
''

-=·

the

STORE

·mEE
.DELIVERY

Moi.clay 9:30·8:00.

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30~5:00

Formt;r Peoples Bank
employee pleads guilty
to embez~lemerit charge

•

'

v

•

.t

between witnesses and the death
chamber.
.
Death penally foes had held
prayer meetings, vigils and demonstrations across the Stl)te ill the ·
hours before the execution. Priwn
officials arreSted five death penalty
Opponents after they climbed a
snowy embankment near a ·guard
tower. They were in jail early
today.
About 150 people in favor of
Dodd's deatli gathered outside the
prison and cheered his hanging.
Some set off firecrackers and
sparklet:S.
·
Dodd pleaded guilty to the 1989
murders of three boys in the Vancouver area and was sentenced to
death in 1990. The crimes were so
grisly that some of the jurors who
sentenced him sought psychiatric
help afterward.
·
Dodd admitted he Stabbed IO
WEsTLEY DODD
death brothers William 'Neer, 10,
the state to confine sex offenders
and .Cole Neer, 11. in a park and
indefinitely until they are deemed
strangled '4-year-old Lee Iseli the
following month.
. cured.
Dodd said he abducted lseh
from a Portland. Ore .• school playground and took him to his ap;lrt~f
ment, where he molested and tortured the boy and finally killed him
the next morning. Dodd hung the
corpse in. a closet before dumping
The first or two public bearthe nude body jn a lake.
·Once described by a pn~secutor ings regarding Pomeroy's revi;
as "predatory and unconaoUable," talization proe•s will be held
Dodd had been arrested several tonigbt (T~esd11y) at 7 in tile
times for child molesting by his a'!ditorium at Pomeroy Village
mid-20s. For years, his pllltem was Hall. All business and property
to m!)lest, get caught, confes_s. owners in tbe busiaess .dlstrlct of
serve a little time and undergo a Itt- Pomeroy, as well as the generll)
public are encouraged to attelld.·
tic counseling.
Mike Stroth of SBA ConsulUntil the youngsters' slayings,
tants,
.Pomeroy•s revitalization
he never served, more than 10
consultant,
will mttend the meet·
months in prison.
ing
to
answer
any questions
Two earlier cases involving
known sex offenders, a 1988 mur- regarding tb'e application pr.o~
der and a 1989 mutilation, coupled cess.
Tbe second public hearing will
with the Dodd murders sputTed the
Legislature to pass a ~ackage of be Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. at tbe IIUditolaws aimed at habitual offenders. rlum at Pomeroy Villa~e Hall.
The centerpiece is a law permitting

First two public
hearings tonight

No one hurt in three Pomer~y accidents

/

"'

•

Wasbrington killer executed by hanging

Witness: Dodd hanging was quick, clinical

•

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 c:ento
A MuHimedla Inc. llewsplfMII'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tueeday, Janu.,.Y 5,1993

[,1

lnderson's •HAPPY NEW YEAR .SALE

~

•

•

•.
'

~ toDtgbt m·upper 2411.
Clolllly. Wedlltlday, cloudy,
blab Ia low 4GB. .

3959

'

•

. .

Saturday's concert uses the
same kind of technological wizardry that allows Humphrey Bogan
to sell soft drinks on TV wtth Paula
Abdul, and Natalie Cole and ·Hank
Williams Jr. to sing duets with their ·
long-dead fathers.
As Elvis, on a · large video
screen, croons "Amelllcan Trilogy" from his 1973 Hawaiian concert, the Memphis orchestra will .
play and his former backup singer~
will take their accustomed roles.
"We've gotten the~master voeal ,
track from RCA so we could have
just Elvis' voice, and we've eliminated all· the music and the backgro~nd _singers, " said Todd Morgan, a Graceland spokesman. "The
orchestr-a will play live and the
singels will sing live backup. Elvis
will sing l~d."
~
. A rock 'n' .roll show Thursday
evening and speeches by Posunaster General Marvin Run yon and
Mayor W.W . Herenton will precede the sllimp's release.
Fans picking up stamps at
Graeeland can have them canceled'
at the center's small post offiCe or
the half-dozen mobile postal stations being brought in for th'e
affair.
For the first-day sales, Graceland has 35,000 stamps attached to
special covers saying "I was
there." They'll go for $5 each and
can be bought only at Graceland.
Also on Friday, buses will take .
. fans from Graceland to Presley's
. · birthpll!ce. in nearby Tupelo, ~ ..
w they can have stamps canceled
there. .
·
•
(lraceland, where ·Presley died
Aug. 16, 1917, draws fllOre than
650.000 visitors a year.
•
Elvis fans have lobbied for the
~p for years, and ihe Posial Service held a· nationwi~ election last
summer to ~!ect lts ai't worlc. Vte
fans went for a 1950s portrait of
Presley.
· Robin Minard, a Postal Service ;
spokeswoman; says. 300 million .·
stamps have been printed and a
· second issue of 200 million is
planned..

.Ohio Lottery

.Duke gets
.·scare before
88-84 victory

·
•
.
·
"d.
b
Radar P·zctu re·.s provl e . est
·l ·ok yet at near E arth. a·stero.z"d

,
.

·.•

Mondiiy, January 4, 19~

Pomeroy-Middlepo.rt, Ohio

.

•

•
•

-

Main Street. police investigated an car. Humphrey was not cited.
accident involving Heather There was moderate damage to the' '
Mitchell, 19, of Middleport, and rea( and passenger rear quarter
Lewis Humphrer. Jr ., 33, or pan,el of the Mitchell vehicle~ and
Pomeroy. The Much ell car was · light front end damage to the
·
struck in the rear by the Humphrey Humphrey ~-

'First Baby of 1993' contest
underway in ;Meigs ·County
The search for Meigs County's
"First Ba"by or 1993" is underway.
Residents of Meigs Cdunty who
have become the parents of a new
baby this year are invited to apply
for the title and gifts,contributed by
18 area merchants.
.
According to tile rules the parents must submit to The Daily Sentinel before noon· on Jan. 15 either
a copy of the birth certifieate or a
signed statement.from the attending
physician giving the date and exact
time of the ·birth. _
While it is. unlikely that two
babies would be born at the same
time on the same date, in that event
the .winner will l!e.named by· the
con~t committee.
Once a wi1111C2' has been named.
the parents have until Jan. 31 to
claim the prizes from the contribut·
ing merchants.
. ·
· '
. The prizes for the F'IISl Baby of
1993 include an ice cream cake
from Dairy Queen, a box of newborn Ultra Pam~ from
Foodland.
.
-'

a $25 gift certificate from Vaugh~
an's Cardinal; a $20 gift certifteate
from Powells; a $1 S gift certificate
from The Shoe Place; a baby
arrangement from the romeroy
Flower Shop; a $10 gift certificate
from Buttons and Bows.
A baby cup from Clark's Jewelry Sto.re, a three piece feei!er set
from K&amp;C Jewelers, a $10 gift ceitificate from Swisher and Lohse, a
$5 gift certificate from the Fabric
. Shop, a $5 gift certificate ·and 10
.percent discount on all prescriptions until sia years of age rrom
The PrtlStl iption Shop; a free meal
to the pmnts from Crow's 'Family .
Restatll'IIDL
A $10 saving account from the :
Home National Bank, Racine; a ·
$20 gift ~ertlftcate from Fruth's :
Pharmacy, a $10 gift cenificate ·
from the Middleport Department
Store, a Bible from Mill Street .
Books, and a ·$1 0 gift certifiCate . .
from hoplts Bank, Mitldlcpljt. •
•
';
•

•

.

I i

",,
~--~~------------~----~.--~--------------~~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="332">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9626">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32092">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32091">
              <text>January 4, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="13">
      <name>bush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="382">
      <name>mcdade</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1141">
      <name>priddy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="921">
      <name>whaley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
