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                  <text>Pomeroy~lddleport,

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

(

Ohio

Tuesday, January 5, 1993

.

Pow,erhouse women ~hange
televisio~s 's fem~le . images.
Jly.LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - They were,
tb'nroadsl.he.lingo of times P~t.· tough

Take that, all you dense souls
bl
the
0 f dale
un;t e. to grasp
concept
rape.
,
Lahti (deliciously and deftly
played by Miss Post) is a "vefy
. Bette Oavis, Joan Crawford, assertive women ·tiving life as she
Rosalind Russell- women with a pleases," said Ms. Bloodworth·
career, an attitude and-meaningful Thorn
slioulder pads. But don.' t loolt'for
Te:.'i~ion, that valiant keeper
thet~ count~rpar!s to~ay at.the ·. of the flame, hasn't forsaken its .
·movtes; tei~VIStQn tS l.hetr domam. . mainstay - . the warm, supportive
"ryte conte~porary small-screen motherly wife (or is that wifelx
verstons are, m many ~. mold· mol.her?)
e,d by women who· have achieved . But 'e~en she tends to be ·less
success in the TV i'ndustry as writ· sweet and more sassY ,li!&lt;e Jill Tay· .
ers and producers.
lor (Patrid~ Richardson) on ABC's
When you see a brash Muwhy "Home Improvement." Or that
Brown, look .f9r a D~ane English. singular roree of nature, Roseanne
Or peer behmd cham-smokmg, Arnold.
·
tough-talking Georgie Ann 411~ of
Ms. English ~ails such types
the new comedy "Hearts Afm:' to "the talk-back wife."
find LindaBI~worth-ThOinason.
"The. days of Donna Reed. Then there s the new CBS those days are numbered " she
, , Western," Dr. ,Quinn, Medicine ·srid. "Women like Kate Hq,b,urn
.Woman, starnn.g .Jane Seymo~r are far more interesting than a charas a ~emale. phy~lCian on a. man s acter who just stays in the lcitchen.
fronuer. Prtme mover behmd the That's not the way most houseSaturday night series is Bet,b Sulli- holds operate anymore."
BELIZ.E MAVANS • University or Central . evidence or a thriving middle class in lbe Mayan
van, the fust woman to smgleha~dOn the other hand, relatively.
Florida anthropologists Drs. Arlen and Diane . civilization, which discounts lbe old theory tbat
edly create at\d serve as execuuve
. ·
,,
.
producer of a prime-time network few "\~rror, say; the . Event~g
tbey became.extinct when tbe peasants rose up ·
Chase, shown Monday, bave.made a historical
drama.
,
Shade cla!l• wtth mom (Martlu
against the privileged. (AP pboto)
discovery amongst Mayan ruins. They round
All of the above have created Hen11er) a htgh-powered prosecutcharacters wh9 are aggre'ssive, mg attorney ~nd dad (Burt
· smart and resilient. Also arrogant Reynolds) an enlightened football
'
and vultlerable, selfiSh and giving.
coach.. ,
.
In other words, real women. ·
·But leis hear 11 for role mQdels.
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)- A paper after 1\e ·was shown pho- office maintains files on 11 Ron
Women with a point of view. And, Role m.odels are exactly what
man who IK:ted as spokesman for a tographs of a man identified as Lee Huff ilnd a Ron Lee.
·
"Through
our
intelligence
net·
sometimos,
women with an agenda. m10onttes clamor for when they
and
taken
at
Klan
rallies
in
1988,
Ku Klux Klan group that erected a
work
...
we.
suspect
they
arc
the
."1 like it when you say no. decry ~~h-a-mmute bliK:k charac·
cross on a downtown Cincinnati 1991 and 1992.
.
Because everyone knows wh.en a . ters. on sttcoms or the few parts
The photos are similar to a 1986 same person," Webb said.
square has a criminal record an(!
According to the Hamilton tele=· guy says n~. he really means yes," avatlable to most other ethntc .
used an alias, a newspaper report· Butler CoWity jail picture of Huff,
phone
dircciory, the telephone Lahti (Markie Post) coos sarcasti· actors! .
the newspaper said.
.
ed.
.,
r
number
at which Lee has been con- cally when her lover (John Ritter) .. Accordmg ,to ftgures from the
The Journal-News said a man
The man who had identified
Screen A~tors llutld, women 10
himself as Rtli· Lee is Ron Lee who identified himself as Lee said tacted is listed under the names refuses to kiss• after a spat
• 1990 recetved up to 46 percent,of
Huff, the Hainilton Journal-News il) a telephone interview last week Ron and Janet Huff.
the roles on TV (although only
County records show that ihe ·
that he was not Ron Lee Huff and
reported SWiday.
about
30 percent or the roles in reaHuff was convicted in 1987 or didn't know anything about the propeny at the address listed with
DAYTON,
Ohio
(1\P)A
man
tw'e
films).
that number was transferred from
possessing marijuana and showing convictions.
By contraSt Hispanics received
.the
Huffs to Darryl D. Huff in whose body was found tn the trunk
The
man
said
he
did
not
know
an obscene movie to a 12-year-old
of
()is
car
Sat.urday
was
killed
3
percent
of all film and TV roles
boy and a 13-year-old boy and girl why the telephone number where 1984, the newspaper said.
Thursday,
the
~roner's
offit;e
said.
in
1991,
while
Asians got 1 pen:ent
Darryl D. Huff told the newspaat his home in Ross rownship, the he has been contacted by reporters
Rai!lh
D.
Gnmes
Jr.,
37,
of
Day~
figures
·less than their rep·
across the nation matches the one per that he qwns the property, but
newspaper said.
ton,
dted
of
multtple
·gunshot
resentation
in
the
U.S. population.
. Lee, who had rece· ¢ messages listed for Huff in Butler County he refused to say if Ron Lee_Huff
wounds,
JIK:k
Joyce,
an
mvesUgator
Ms.
Bloodworth·
Thomason is
or Ron Lee lives there.
·
·
at a telephone number listed for court files.
10
the
Montgomery··County
corounsufPrised
that
television
has been
"I'm not associated with that
"I have .no idea how that could
Hitff, did not return calls seeking
ncr's
office,
said
Monday.
·
man at all. I can't make
kind of
be," the·man said.
comment Monday ..·
Grimes' car was towed off Inter- T
a
statement
about
that,'
Darryl
"Yeah, that's Huff all right,"
David Webb, director of the
·
state
75 early Satur~y because it 1
former Butler County Sheriff Montgomery, Ala., group Klan- Huff said.
was
in
a hazardous position, police
.The Klan erected three crosses
Richard Holzberger told the news· watch, told the newspaper $It his
The Village of Pomeroy will
Sgt,
Larty
Grossnickle said.
..
on Cincinnati's Fountain Square
pick-up
Christmas trees at the
Grimes' father and brother went
between Dec.' 21 and Dec. 30. Ten
curbs
in
the
village o~ Wedncsday
people were aecused of toppling or to the towi!Jg company's lot Satur- only. Trees mar also be dropped
defacing the crosses and charged day night and ltad police open the behind the old Junior high school ·
trunk because they were worried
with disorderly conduct.
about
who hadn't come building in Pomeroy.
The Meigs County Co-operative. accepting the reality of the loss, 2) .
Parish has purchased a video series experiencing and expressing all the
with psychologist Dr. Howard painful feelings, 3) ·putting your life
Clinebell, entitled, "Growing back together, 4) examining your
loss in the context of your faith,
Through Grief."
··
There will be an introduction an.d 5) reaching out to others.
meeting on Sunday at 7 p.m. in the Through loving listening, the one
social room of the Chester United in grief can 1become strong and
vital again. I
Methodist Church.
The meet,ings will be one hour. ·
lrt"these videos, Dr. Clinebell
and his own group;which is grow- with a fellowship time following.
ing through grief of loss of spouse Child care help can be arranged.
through death and divorce, loss of The group will last for about eight
·child and even loss of parents, give weeks after which time it will be
persons in the group an opportWtity determined whether or not to con·
to share their own experiences and tinue.
. Further,information may be ·
find healing.
Dr. Clinebell designates five obtained by calling 985-3530 after
tasks of grief work. They arc: I) 5 p.m. this week.

.

Meigs boys
post wins

more respOnsive than the movie
industry to the changing image of
women.
. ,.
" The features industry is much
more male-dominated. Women in
features are strong in an almost cartoonish way." she said. The serial:
nature of TV also allows time to
bring audie.nces along, graduallY:
intrOducing change.
Women's success in getiing';:
positive images on TV gives mus·
cle to arguments that the medium
won'trealistically depict min'orities'
until' they achi,eve some measure of
behind-the-scenes power.
·
"It's axiomatic •. The more·
power you have, the. louder your ·
voice is heatd," said Gilbert Cates. .
a movie producer and dean of tJt&lt;
UCLA Film Scl!ool.
.·
:;:

anr

d•

ree lSposal Sef

Parish purchases videos

BERLIN (AP) - Two-time fig.
ure skating champion Kalarina Witt
hopes to return to Olyll)pic compe·
titian.
Witt said Monday she is'seeking
.a change in her professional status
that would let her compete in the
!994 Winter Games at Lilleham·
mer, assuming she makes the German team.
" I am the sort of person who
needs a big mountain in front of me
to climb," the 27-year-old skater
said on the ARD television net·
work.
She won Olympic gold medals
in 1984 and 1988 for the former
East Germany. She then gave up
her amate\lf career to appear in professional ice-skating shows.
"The desire to really compete
·again has been there for a long
time," she said.

•

NEW YORK (AP) - Patricia
Highsmith may write dark, psychological tales or murder and intrigue,
but don't call her a mystery writer.
" That implies a puzzle," she
said in an interview in this week's
People magazine. " I just wrilc
what I feel like."
The 71-ycar-old author said the
character of Tom Ripley, the
charming, gentleman-murderer
who has been the center of five of
her novels, came .to her newly 40
years ago when she saw a man
wallcing along 4 beach in Positano,
Italy.
"I wondered why he was therf
alone at 6 a:m.," she said. ''Later I ·
thought of a suiry about a man ·sent
to Positano on a mission, and
maybe he failed."
Beyond that, she said, "the
impulses are subtle an.d completely
buried •.
" I can't explain where the ideas
· come from."
She has published 20 novels,
including "Strangers on a Train,"
which Alfted Hitchcock made into
a movie in 1951, an!l seven shortstory collections. Her most recent
bookis "Ripley Under Water."

1

•

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - .Kathy

Ireland, known for modeling scanty
swimsuits on the pages or Sports
Illustrated magazine, says she
refused a similar wardrobe for a
part.on a television show.
"I felt it was. excessive. It just
wasn ' t necessary." she said in an
interview in this week's TV Guide'
"I don't mind wearing a slcimpy
suit or trashy clothes if it fits the
character, but if it' s inconsistent
with the character, I mind," she
said .
In a future episode of "Down
the Shore," which airs Thursdays
on Fox, Ireland guest stars as a
computer peri pal who discovers
her corresp~ndent has been lying
about his aptlearance.
Instead of a swimsuit, she wears
shorts. "Reasonable shorts," Ireland said.
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP) - Was that Chrissie Hynde,
lead singer of The Pretenders and a
militant vegetarian, in a fast-food
joint on Monday?
It soy was!
Hynde was qne of a dozen animal-rights activists enjoying the
debut of an all-vegetable hamburger at McDonald· s.
"I like it!" she said. But "It
could use more soy."
Hynde, who hadn't.stepped foot
in a MacDonald's for 20 years,
once said the fast-food chain
should be bombed because ''ani·
mals die fotBig Macs."
· ·
The "Groenteburger;" or Ve~­
etable Burger, consists or a motst
pattie of mashecl potatoes, carrots,
peas and onions topped with pick.
les, cottage cheese and chives on a
sesame seed· bun.
It will be available only at
Dutch MacDonald's for now.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Shirley Horn had the top-selling
jazz album of 1992, but that hasn't
changed her feeling~ about the
music industry. .
·
"I have no love for the .busi·
ness," she said. "It's ugly."
While she hates the business.
she loves her music.

RECLINING

LOVE SEAt

OUT OF
TOWN FOR

Tony Grate, a 1992 graduate of
Eastern High School, is. a member
of the freshman class of Mount
Vernon Nazarene College for the.
1992-93 academic year.
Grate, a business administtatioo
major,' is the son of David L. Grate,
Long Bottom, and Mrs. Karen S,'
Wheeler, Gallipolis.
··
Located in central Ohio, Mount
Vernon NliZ81'ene"'ollege is a fouryear liberal arts institution ,
enrolling students in bachelor of
arts and bachelor of science degree
programs. MVNC announces a
freshman class enrollment of 262
and a total.eruollment of 1,127.

RECLINERS

$11811

SOFA
LOVES EAT

12
SELECTED ITEMS
Months
FREE
EVEN LOWER
Financing*
. TIIAl'IJ

availability of low interest loans
were explained at Tuesday night's
final public _hearing on the projeCt.
Approximately 25 persons
including village officials, membus of the Middleport Commuruty
Association, business and buildinA
·

owners, and banking and utility
. officials gathered in the conference
r'?om of People.s Bank T~esday
mght for the .hearing, a requtrement
before the village can make appli- ··
cauon for an Ohto Department of
Qe.velopment grant.
·
,
Feb.:5 is the deadli~e for applying for a grant of up to $400,000 19
aid in the revitalization of the
downl!lwn area; through restoration
of building facade, some rehabilitation, and elimination of slums and
blight
.
At last night's meeting Jean
TrusSell. Middleport's grant specialist, encouraged building owners
to get·in their dollar commitments
. for restoration so that the application process can move forward. She
said that owners must sign agreements about what they will do to
their buildinJIS and how much
money they wtll invest since any
funds from the Ohio Department of
Development must be matched dol;TI:EEirsC-~romiiiii¥io'Nt.. Two
lar for dollar.
Farmer's Jiank, left, and Emma Paugh, ollke
In addition to that match, the
$1,000
. toward the streetscape
manager, Middleport braub, aad Gary, C.
vi)ilige must put in 10 pen:ent, but
ph~se or Middleport's downtown revitalization
Smith; executive .vice president, Peoples Bank,
as earlier·pointed out, that can be in
project were made at Tuesday night's final pub·
present checks to Jean Trussell, Middleport's
the form of other grant monies, inlie hearin11. Here Paul Reed, president o~
grant specialist, second rrom left.
lcind services, pr corporate contri'
butions.
Buckeye
HiUs-Hocking Valley tants, Inc. continues to work with was held on .how to ftll those build~
Trussell said .that the village can Regt~nal Developmen(District. is' the village on the project
ings with businesses or, at least,
expect a decision on the grant updatmg the restoration plan of the
The village has 17 vacant store ·use the windows for organization
application about April l.
downtown section, and that J. fronts (31 1/2 percent or the target- displays to make a better overall
She said that Bijay Gadde of Michael Stroth of SBA Consul- ed business district). A discussion
. '
;
'
(CODti&amp;ued oa Paae 3)

·-

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•.,... •j-·

,,

.• ..,

,~

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-.

.

'

-

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'

.

.

."!'

'

By JULIE E. DILLON

HUTCH
OAK

IIMIO
MAUVE .
FULL

SWIVEL
GLIDER .
RECLINER
UnlESS
SET
s99 99 SET

12
MonthsrFRU

.

ODDS &amp;
EIIDS .

SAVE!!
•
'

grant funds. Pomeroy's revitaliza- · ·filnds. For example, if Pomeroy
· SentiDel NeM Stalf
tioli chairman John Musser also would apply for the total $400,000
,The ftrst ~two public bearings stated that Lisa McDaniel, a repre- available, village government
regarding p mercy's downtown sentative from the Ohio Depart- wouldhavetofund$40,000 toward
,revitalizatjo was held Tuesday ll)ent of Development, who made a the project. Possible ways for the
evening at v'
hall. RCpiesenta· recent visit to the area, felt very village to meet that 10 percent
lives from the Pomeroy Men:hants positive about Pomeroy as well.
match could come from such 1
Association and Pomeroy Village
Stroth also commented on the sources as in-kind funding, which
Council, as well as inUlfCSted com· efforts of the active Pomeroy Mer- Stroth felt was very feasible.
mWiity indivicJuals attended.
chants Assoc.iation.• stating "you
Tile downtown business plan
Mike Stroth of SBA Consul· have a mcn:hahts association envi- must be completed before tlie
tants, and Deanna Figlestahler, who ous of anyone." According to application can be made and Stroth
is assisting Stroth in the process, Stroth, a stron·g and active business . feels this plan will .!Je cOIIlpleted in
discussed the steps to be taken in association is looked upon very seven to I0 days. The plan will
the application process. Strol.h was favorably by the state when apply- ' contain his suggested ideas for the
hired as Pomeroy's revitalization ing for revitaliZation grant money.
designated business district. Stroth
consultant to develop the down·
The Porilcr'oy Men:hants Asso- stated there are 38 businesses in the
. town busineas plan for the desig· ciation has spearheaded this revilal- designated business district. Of
.nated business district. The desig· ization attempt and has 'had com- th_ose 38 businesses, monetary
nated business district runs from plete and full coopcratio~ from commitments froJII at least eight
Lynn Street past Buuemut Avenue Pomeroy ViUBge Council. .
· are needed for·application. Stroth
to include property owned by Dr.
As required by the Ohio Depart· will be in contact with business and
Harold Brown, and from the park- ment of Devclopmen~ the applica- property owners r~garding this
ing lot to Second Street This plan lion for rcvitalizati~ill be sub· matter. These monetary commiti.s a necessary step in the applica- mitted by council. The village has ments help de~ermine how much
iion process. A,Pplication deadline already donated $10,000 to the pro· grant money for which the village
for grant momes from the Ohio jcct for the downtown business may apply.
Department of Development is plan. and according to Pomeroy
. Business .and property owners
February 5. Stroth will continue Mayor Bruce Reed, council is com- attending Tuesday's meeting feel a
with the project throughout its mitted to the project. According to 50 percent match situation .would
entirety.
Figlestahler, the more interest best benefit the designated busineSs
· BRAER ON THE
• Tbe Liberian·
. Stroth feels encouraged that shown by village government the district This means if a business or
registered olltanker Braer lies of the southern
Pomeroy will be looked up favor- more favorably the state' looks at property owner agrees to do - for· tip of the Shetland Islands is seen half sub·
ably by the state in the application the application.
·
example • $10,000 worth of work,
merged as It oozes oil rrom Its ruptured strucprocess because its .dpsignated .
According .to Stroth, village $5,000 would be allotted In grant
business district meets all criteria goverltment must match 10 pet'cent money and the owner would only
necessary to be considered for the of what is applied for in grant
(CODtlnued ~' 3)

. Meigs County Board of Ele~tions

DOUBLE

DRESSER

'11"7711
LAMPS

8:00A.M.

'TIL

OPEN

WEDNESDAY
·
8:00P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY

. WHILE MIP'S AWAY

·.

72

BIG
HOURS

FREE DEUVERY FREE FINANCING
LISTED ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. .
'SUBJECT TO APPROVED CREDIT

.,,..

, ·DAYBED

VISA

DISCOVER

MASTERCARD
.'

By &amp;tlu.N J. REED
. . elections to determine whether
' S~Hl N~M StarT
Soulsby met the ~equirement of
In respollJC to newspaper arti· five years ofl f~ll-ume e~per1ence.
cles concerning the recent Meigs . Jane Frymy~. deputy dtrector of
County sheriff's race, the ¥eigs the ~· S81d the bo!lf!l was not
County Bolrd of.Elections has ~SJIOI!Sibl~ ~o~ _determmtng a canreleased a letter sent to Republican · didate s ebgtbthty • that .the C'!"!·
Sheriff:s Candidate Paul Gerard t:l!'!n Pleas Judge del!l'JD.mes ehgt·
addressmg his claims.
. bthty and carufies eligtbtlity to the
Gerard, a criminal bailiff for the ~d.
.
In a "final attempt" to answer
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coon was unsuccesSful in his race Gerard's questions regarding
·against Sheriff James M. Souls by Soulsby's candidacy 1_t!Je members
in November. .f.tcordin4 to an ani- or the board (Henry wells, f.velyn
cle In Monday's edition of the Clark, John Ihle and Chauman
Columbus DlsptJich, Gerard claims Henry Hunter), .wroie a letter to
that Soulsby is not qualified under Gerard dated Dece.mber 18, and
Ohio law to hold the office he has · advised him that his only reco~
occupied since 1989 •. based on a ' wu a civil suit..
.
.
lack of full-time law enforcement
The letter cues Oh10 Revtsed
experience,
Code Section 3513.05, w~ich in
·. According 10 that article, "Ger- part .states tb~t protests against .a
ard sald.l!oulsby, during a recent candidaie m11st be flied by a qualt·
pretrial hearing, admitted he lied elector wlio is a member of the
.worked pan;time for law cnforee- same political party as the proteSt·
. ment ~gencles before be,coming ed candidate In writing no later
sltcrlff, and Oerard questions than 4 p.m. on the sixty-fourth day
whether Souls by wu ever· a full- before the day or the primary elec·
time police officer." ,
tion. , .
·
· Oerard has asked the board of
."This action," the board's letter
••

tanker

breakup, massive ·oil spill

LERWICK, Shetland Islands
(AP) - Six planes sprayed deter·
says, "was never taken."
gent today trying to disperse oil
The letter also makes referenee
·u· r
to a court case referred to b.Y"er- spt mg rom a tanker being bat·
..,.
tered by high winds and waves on
ard and published news stories the rocky ooast of this wildlife-rich
about the issu.e.
North Sea archipelago.
"The case of Attire vs. Trumhall
The Liberian-registered B,aer,
County Board of Elections is very · loaded with nearly 2S million galmisleading if a person did not Ions of oil, \TaS awash but unbrounderstand the facts of the case. It ken after more than a day of {erawould appear that the Trumball cious pounding on rocks at the
County Board of Elections held the southern tip of the largest or the
h~aring after the primary, which· Shetland Islands.
they ~id. But the candidate whose
The Department of Transport
candtdacy was· protested was an ,said a 4-square-mile slick of oil had
independent candidate arid the fil. oozed from the tanker since near
ing deadline for an independent'
,
. liurtican. e·force winds drove t't
was SWie I, 1992. An independent aground Tuesday after its engine
·candidate .does not appear on tbe ·railed.
.
.
,
· primary election ballot. .Soulsby
Environmentalists reponed an
·was a Democratic candidate for increasing toll of birds and fish
sheriff and. did appear on the smothered by the oil. ·
·
'
Democratic party prtm117. balloL"
Winds had 'calmed somewhat,
. The letter conanues, 'The ques- ' with gusts to 60 mph this morning,
tion still remains what action can compared to readings as high 8.'1 85
be taken aile{ the primary elecdon mph Tuesdly. Wave heights were
if jt is discovered that the candidate 13ct6 feet, according to the coast
lacks !he required qualificadoni. guard in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Since, Mr. Soulsby has been certi·
The Shetlallds govCilling counl .
fied as. the winning candidate and cil sail! containment booms and
(Cpntlnt!ed~Pllae3)
·
other cleanup equipment were .

t.

·I ·
l

ture, ·threatening tbe ·surrouitdlltg IIW'lne envi- .
ronment. Tbe tanke·r survived intact through a :.
night of ferocious pounding. (AP)
'
:

Storm~hreaten

responds to.Gerard's ·challenge

ODDS &amp;
IIID •

2 Sections, 12 Poges 25 cento
A MutUmedls l!lc. Newspoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, January 6, 1993

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Months ·
FREE

BEVERLY, MlTCH U K.IM
HAVE MARKID

In ·tow 401.

PQmeroy begins public .hearings
on downtown·· revitalization

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*33321

BIG
HOURS

Low IOillgbtla upper lQs.
Cloudy. Tbursdoy, cloudy, hlp

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Among freshmen

12

SKIP'S

Vol. 43, No. 178
Copyrighted 1883

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TONY GRATE

WARDROB
AMOIRE

12
Months
FREE
Financing*

·e
~

CHERRY .

-People in the news-

Pick 3:
579
Pick 4:
4578
BuckeyeS:

17-19-24-27~29

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ,
·
An overview of Middleport's
~~~~~plan for downtown revi·
~as presented, and the
f10anctal commitments
building owners and the

Report: Klan spokesman hid·be.hin'd alias

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Fipal public hearing held on revitalizatio~ pla11

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Body m trunk

0 hio Lottery

Southern, .

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ready to be used once the weather
improved in these sparsely populat-'
ed islands aboUt I00 miles north of
the Scottish mainland.
A spokesman for the Transport
Department said the detergent·
spraying planes were operating out
of Sumburgh Airport about I 1/2
miles from the slick . .
"They take 90 seconds to put

their full load on ·the slick. So they '
are up Wld down just'as quickly as .
is possible," said the spokesman,
who did not give his name.
He said the oil spill was largely :
c~nfiqed to the Bay of Quendale :
but broken patches or oil had scat- •
tered farther east around Sum- ·
burgh, the south tip of Mainland
(Continued on Paae 3) :

.-----L0 C. aJ br·e~s---. . . .·;
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Deer accident reported .

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that on Toes- ·
'de ·
I dJ
day
evening,
dep11ties
took
a
deer
.acet
nt
report.
th past
Avisthe
of'
Coolville was traveling east on Pine Grove Road ujust
church in her 1991 Chevrolet. As she braked for a deer that.wu
standing in the roadwar. another deer jumped from the left into the
driver's side'of her vehicle. Damage was listed as light to mode~.

""an
· "'"alz'sm •;nves,;oated
ft
"o

The Meigs County Sheriff's Departrncnt contipues to investipre
vandalism to the Columbus Southern Power base .radio staliOD
· building on the flood road in Pomeroy: According io the department, some'30 to 35 shots were fm:d into the buililing and door,and
~generator was damaged. ·
Damage was estimated to be between $1,300 and $1,500. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact Colum(Contlalltd 011 Pllae3) ·

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. Commentary
The

D~y

Sentinel

\Yill trade pact bring democracy to Mexico?
By 0/'ack Ande•'Son

.t'Wl"ffOA.NC\

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an
16u:· hael Blnste""
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and were even bad by Mexican
standards, Livas told us.
"Thts was the most blatant
fraud in Mextco smce !985," he
clauned. As usual, the PRI claimed
huge VJctones in fallth.ree _states1an_d
denied charges 0 voung trregu antietocal Mexican elections were
once of'Iittle concern 10 average
h h
Americans, but today
l ey N ave
.
Th
-•
important implicauons. e oou•
American Free Trade Agreement
21
(NAFTA) is hailed as st-century
gold rush. But much of Mexican
society, at least politicaiiy, is su.11
stuck in 19th-century custttm. m
which fraud and corruption are th e
u
•nle
·~ mther than the exception.
. ••• bP
to now, any effort to ratse u.,;d su· jeet of Mexican demClcracy unng

·:E xcerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

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8~ee~~[=ge~~~~~~

This poses an early leSt for President-elect Bill Clinton. wbose
endorsement of NAFrA was belated and half-hearted. ·Clinton will
haye to explain how his new
emphasis on democmcy and human
rights squares with Mexico's
tawdry track record
And if he doesn't have enOUIJh
hot spots 10 worry abOut, Clintbn
may be jiced to address the prob!em soon . .After last November's
mayoral electiofMa
. ns in the quiet bodr-f
der town o
tamoros, a crow o
2,500 gathered in the town square
to protest the PRI victory that the
crowd claimed was fraudulent.
After.vtolence erupted, the crowd
was ·dispersed with tear gas and
rifle-bull blows. Dozens were
arrested.
w'g is the PRI tightening tts
gn'p?. bs·~ers say President Carlos sa110as~is• reacting to a backlash
within his own party over a recent
pattern of accommodation with the
0E~sition. Since Salinas assumed
0 tee 10 1988, four of his party's
governors have agreed to step
down amt' d charles of election
fraud. Prior to 19 °
PRI bad
"' the
not given up a single
state governorship to opponents since it came
to power in 1929.
.
~ather than risk unl!ermining

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Adm•tted,Q'. the ctimate in Congress IS not conduciVe to thrift Newcomers seem to arnve wtlli a proclamation pinned to thetr sleeves: "Get
·ye to the fmance committee. or the appropriations C?R!mittee, ~d make
·sure ye olde consutuents are not forgotten when the pte ts sliced.
Much SQunder advice would go like this: "Get' ye to the land of grants.
subsidies ami entitlements and do something about the federal deficjt
before we aU go down w1th the shtp.''
.
_ The Cincinnati Enquirer, Jan. 4:
Cincinnati had a rough couple of weeks respecung freedom of expresston.'But the city emerged qutle well from an expenence that many predicted would hold 11 up to national embarrassment.
The whole affatr was mcendtary' from the start, a blow-up ready to
happen. The U.S . Knights of _the Ku Klux Kl_an used a court ruling to
obtain a City penmt to erect a display on Fountam Square.
'
The display Utrned out to be a stmple wood~n cross with only a Scnp• !ural reference inscnbed.
It was a qu101essential conuadtcuon: A universal symbol of peace and
love was set up by an organization known for violence and hate.
• Cincinnatians who were asked expressed their abhorrence of the Klan
·~d what 1t represents. Some were ~gry tlmt a c_henshed consbtu~onal
protection can be perverted 1010 a sh1eld for til wtll. Others •were sun ply
saddened that a twisted few stiU can cause hurt by spewmg thetr offenSive
sepamust drivel.
·
But almost all realized that violence and confrontation would solve
nothmg. Blacks and whltes alike ur~ed 'that people ~onc~nuate .on the
mearung of the cross, not on thiS one s sponsors. Cmcmnau kept tts cool
where otller cibes might have exploded.
Freedom of expression is not a 81ft to be taken for granted. It has to be
.re-eamed from time•to time, and ibat isn't always easy.

their political base tn the years
leading up 10 the 1994 presidential
elecuons m Mexico, "the government reUtrned 10 the old system of
fraud," says Ricardo Villa
Escaljra, an unsuccessful PAN
gubeniatorial candidate in the state
of Puebla. By Villa's account, the
old-style fraud techniques that
re~ulted were as crude as a cheap
card trick.
"The carousel system is where

s!v:

Ypfeu!~DY:g:totov:'~

al places several times," he
explained to our associate Dean
Boyd. "Now when you give a person
votes'
· b t10here
(heand
· he 1keeps
·them·
ng
pomts
o h'ts mner
sleeve), it's what we call a taco,
like the taco you eat. That's when
get your vote in and the others
10 at the same Iinne with your hand.
That mulup
· I'tes th e vote a 1ot."
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d
,.,. a emonstraU'on, Villa
. pulied'
h
1
f
ball
out a, uge vo ume o
ots th at
he says is evidence of irregularities
·
· the ·
at 500 votmg precmcts
tn
Clly
era! of the ballots
othf Puebla. On
sev
· deed
ere were 10
more voteS cast
than
re"istered
voters,
' f o ballot-stuffimg. sure-fire
pron
v·i1Ia recenUy presen.....
•• ~ h'IS 500
complaints to the electoral cornmission, but t~ey were all rejected.
Villa illustrated why with an analo:
gy: "Suppose t.J!c electoral com:
mission says, rigbt now iJ is 12
o'clock when it is reaDy 9 o'clock.
You say, 'No, it's nine o'clock.'
They say, 'Let's take a vote.' They
outnumber you. So it' s 12

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When opposition figures like
Ricardo ViDa or Javier Livas try to
press their claims; they say the
government attempts to paint them
as "radicals" and "revolutionaries" who are trying to "destabilize
the country" and scuttle chances
for Jli!SSIIge of the free Jtade 118feement with the United States. Villa
and Livas are hOJ.'C'ful that a Clinton administration matches
tough words on democracy with
deeds.
"We hope dull Clinton will be a
very principled man who will consider the legal, eiectoral and human
rights problems in Mexico, because
a basic political. system based on
freedom is essential for a free trade
&amp;gr\lement." Livas told us.
Jack Anderson aad Michael
BlasteD are writers for United
FeatUre Syndicate, Inc.

its

Ja•v D. Hal'r

;Letters to,the editor
Responds to remark _

misunderst;mdmg as a result of a
Wn·uen argu,ment that I read at the
Jan. 4 PTO meetmg at PorUand.
It was never my 1ntenuon to
state that e11her 1eac~er (at Portland
0r Letart) was mcompctent I do

:Berry's World

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bemg taught by the teachers there
It has . 0 a anner year so . ar
at LetarL
for warners, and the comtng
I was rcadmg an argument that • months promise
h more
h of
d 1the
h same
h :d
was to be presented to the Southern
Amateurs ave a
e om
Loc~School Board to ask that they economy 10 fret about, and the
wait unt1l the 1993-94 school year post-war baby boo'!' and _the
toelimlnatedoublegrades
breakup of the Sovtet Umon.
' At present, our schools are to"" Advanced students of the calling
""
thos who pre~ to che
er
combmed on Jan. 19. I was told by e
. er
w ov
a board member that if we parents the more esotenc concerns that
could present a good enough argu- separate the arust from th_e tyro mentonwhytodelaytheplan,then have b_een pr~s~rte~ wtt~ some
per haps the board would reconsid- exqumte anxtettes .m whtch the
1
1
th both soluuons are every btl as vexabous
cr. was on Y companng at
th
bl
·
schools may not be at the same as T~ f:~ ems.
place 10 lheu studies. I was not
I J'b
~ , bee
ed
putting either teacher ~hat was
s ce 1 ac_y . e111 s
n urg
named down. I used thelf names • on ~d by pn"d:pats, ~68tf~f and
because my daughter •s 10 one pres• endtstl'!' e eon d re
e way
teacher's class at I;'ortland and w•ll 10 avo• /s ase an pre~nancy .
be m the other-teacher's class at But a pro._essor of fd;~htatry 81
Letart (At present, my son shares ~qla. Umv~~f f~0 88I{s
tile same clas~oom at Portland.)
a tenuon .can
u · 1 . I·
10
I was only usmg an example to ter, ~edt~ ~pects of ~~ty
explam my argument for wa!Ung magazl~:s r. or:eo·
~ aw
unullhe new school year.
wrote:
ome. ce 1 ates. w 0 say
Again I do apologize and I am they hav~ no dlfficulty wtth sexual
smcerely sorry for the misunder- suppressiOn nonethel~s~ deve_Iop
standin
symptoms such as trrnabJhty,
g.
insomnia, somatization or clinical
Mary F. Bush depression." 1
10371 McKenz•e Ridge
Is chemically punfied water carRacine cinogemc? Chlorination has been

"we spend a lot of money going
through the process bef9re we ever

get to t~e c~eanup. I have se~n
many St~uallons where· we ~·II
spend etght to 10 years gomg
through the process and two years
to ci1?3D up the problem." He says
tha~ 10 contrast to some European
~~ons that lire ~ng more expe~·t•ously w1th s!mtlar pro~lems,
we do ~ lot of who done n, ~ho
do we fme, who do we penaltze
and ~ho do we extract mo_ney
from. before we ever get tnlo
cleamng up tl!e problem."
As~ of Its program to prevent
a ~~peuuon of the problems, the
mtlltary has an ambttious plan to
reduce the amount of hazardous
waste it generateS. In t!J~ last four
years, Baca says, the mdttary's use
of new processes and the substitu~on of benign prodi!C~ has resulted,
10 a SO ~~cut m tiS hazardous
waste ~- A cut of another 2S
percent ts ~peeled by !995. .
Those ftgures are tmpresstve.
They also demonstrate that once;
the environment is put on the radar,
screen, a great deal of unnecessary
damage can be avoided.
. •
Jay D. Hair has a Ph.D. In the
stud1 of animal life and bas been·
president ottbe Natlollal Wildlife,
Federation since 1981. He ill also
a writer for Newspaper Enter·'
prise Association.

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"I ve g1vcn up on Smart Drmks and am
• re rurmng lo MAR TINIS

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Joseph Spear
because chlorine combines with

A~

~~t;~~~gJa~nc:;a~~oC::i'~ce

Is baking soda an effective
antactd or a bomb in a box? A
Maryland man who drank two marunis and a glass of wine and ate a
bowl ~f homemade chili took a
spoonful of Arm &amp; Hammer baking soda to,. quell ' his indigestion,
and his stomach ruptured. A New
Jersey J·ury denied htm monetary
damages but did assert that baking
soda should carry a warning label.
For Normal People who are
unfarnitiar with the neurotic world
of the Serious Worrier, this is what
· 1 ks I'" F
·ne months out
~f ~e ye';!,:
";tew over stuff
NPs don't even nott'ce. If we
destroy our nuclear weapons, how
wtll we blow up asteroids that are
on a collision path with tile earth?
, Will rising sea _levels wipe out

s:s

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Miami? Who owns Antarctica?
· n (New York
1
How many people will be hun in 1T~na )popu 1ada•~
.
.
. llpovers thts
. betmes
. Canainto stheprovmces
may
vendmg-mach10e
absorbed
United StaleS
year?
b
(W ld Future Soc' )
We ponder these problems from 011 !1 °~. or Ia ·
f •ety. ·
Labor Day tol:hristmas, take a ~x w:i s~~&amp; :::m~
.J!~ ,
week off then worry our way to
pec~OII10 (WFS) s d
Memori~l Day We h•ve ;·ust dye~r I .
I.$3t6u b~nll! o~n ,
·
~
e.au ts may tota
. • ton m ·
kicked off the .,seco,nd part o the ' 1991 (Department of Education) ..
season, and here are a few of the Tbe industrialized world may nm
humdingers we will be cogitating out of landfill
within the next
mcomingmonths:
tOyean(WFSf
Men with low levels of viUifnin
And"' ld c'1as W · still
.
-n;or . s om~.
C may have damaged spenn (Um- preoccupied wtth the questton of •
versity of California, Berkeley). whether history h~ ended, will .
Men whose fathen smoked may have to deal with 1 new conun· ·
also have damaged sperm (Anneri- drum: With lheco~ofcommucan Journal of Bpidemiology). nism and the decline of leftist ~
Mental distress can lead to heart philosophies, wbat will French
disease (New England Journal of tnteUectuals talk about?
Medicine). A low level of vitamin
I'm 110ing to stop at this point
E may contribute 10 bean disease and worry whether the environment
(World Health Orpnization). Short on ;Mars can be niade hospitable for
men are more apt to have heart humans. But before I go, I'd like 10
auacks than taU men- C~peeiaUy suggeat that Ill high-strung Short'
if they 1111oke, eat fatty foods l1ld men whn are readina thcae IVOI'da
don't exercise (Harvard Medical run out1 pick up ibotlle of mulSchool) .
tivitamlns If your daddy smo~&lt;~A
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·.
.
·
_,.,
. Fax mac~mes are dtsp1act!~&amp; grab a dozen oranges, 100.
.
bicycle coune':l in New York 91Y
Joseph Spear Is a I)'Ddkatecl _
(New York Ttme_s). The ~wmg writer ror Nt'Mipaper Eaterprlle
popularity of sushtiS threatemng to • Association.

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Child neglect growing in America

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Stocks

Hospit:U news

Chamber membership to meet

EMS units answer calls

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Weather

Storms...

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Lottery numbers

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Hospital news

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p_revenbng water-borne infections
smce 1908, but now the Environ· A
men Uti Protecnon
gency says we
have been fighting risks with a risk

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Meigs ...

h.
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Le~~t.thl\~~~h~~sa~ofg~:~;rn~ ~~~n~~:~YL=~a~~~E~~ecn~~~r~r~~ 0! ~or~Iers, t IS was a IDe y~~rwworld's~tblucfin·:
Apologizes for misunderstanding

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Briefs...- - - - - - ,

Military cleanup of the environment
fact that as the armed lorces build
down, the budget for environmental cleanup is the fastest-growing
portion of Pentagon expeoditores.
Up about 34 percent this year to a
total of nearly $4 biUton. That's on
top of the S6 billion already spent
and d1e $25 btllion total (very consctvatively speaking) ~ the military thinks will be needed to comolete the job. And wben that w1Ube
r'is hard to say,': Baca acknowledges. "I am wtlling to say by the
year 2000 we'!! have substantially
cleaned 1t all up. If we haven't
cleaned it up, we will have it at
least in a state where we are cleaning it up." '
That assessment doesn't include
the costs to clean up nuclear
weawns facilities, (a multibilbondollar job facing the Department of
Ener~Jr to detoxify foreign mil1tary
s before turning the land
back to host governments, which sil
far is being handled in case-by-case
discussions with the governments
involved.
One thorn in the military's side
is that it has found it can't move
ahead on the JOb as fast as it wants
to. Forty percent of the cleanup
costs arc being eaten up in prolonged studies def10mg the work to
be done an~ in negotiations with
other federal, state and loc'al agenCtes over the application Of regulalions. "In other words," Baca says,

By The Associated Press •
tc Northwest and t,he northern m spnng-like weather earlier in the southern Flonda
Cloudy sides will prevail over Plains, in the 20s in the Great week, ' high temperatures wer&amp;o
The h1gh temperature Tuesday
- Katie Weber, 84, Page Street, Ohio tonight and Thursday. but no Lakes reg10n, in the 30s and 40s in
expected
to
drop
into
the
20s
and
was
84 at Orlando and Sarasot;l,
Middleport, died Tuesday, Jan. 5, precipitation is in the forecast, the the southern Plains and in the 40s
30s.
Highs
in
ihe
60s
were
predictFla.
Penland,
Maine, had a high of
1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospi- National Weather Service S&amp;ld.
and
50s
along
the
East
Coast
from
ed
in
much
of
TeXIlS
and
eastward
59,
two
degrees
warmer than on tlie
"
tal
Tempenuures will drop Into the Boston down to North Carolma. •
to
South
Carolina,
wtth
tempemFourth
of
July
last
year.
·
A housewife, she was born 20s agam tonight. Highs on ThursIn
the
Northeast,
which
basked
turcs
as
high
as
the
80s
expe!:ted
in
Aprill8, 1908 in Nease Settlement day wiD range from the upper 30s
'
to the late Melvin and Mary Rose to the low 40s.
Pauhn. She was a member of the
The record-high temperature for
Heath United Methodtst Church this date at the Columbus weather
and the Evangeline Chapter No. station was 69 degrees in 1946
By DAVID FOSTER
often leave the•r chtldren alone called 911 because a smoke a1ann
172, Order of the Eastern Star,' while the record low was 20 below
Associated' Press Writer
because they can ' t afford or fmd went off accidentally.
Middleport.
,
The case of two young Illinois day care.
zero in 1884. Sunset tonight wtll be
The parents were charged with
She is survi,ved by her husband, at 5:22 p.m. and sunrise Thursday girls left home alone while their
"While the IUinolS case may be child abandonment and cruelty to
James F. Weber, Middleport; a at7:53 a.m.
parents went to Mexico on a n10e- dramatic, it's only in degre~ ,' ' children and freed on $5,000 cash
niece, Zeda Jane Bean, Sylvania;
day Chrisunas vaca6on has drawn Berliner said. "Kids .get left alone bai I each. The children were put in
Around the nation
and a nephew, Marvin Paulin, IndiBitter cold lingered today in the howls of outrage from ~arents more than we'd like to adrrin. A a foster home. Their lawyer, Geranapotis, Ind.
Pacific Northwest and the northern everywhere. But children s advo- large number are essentially raismg ard Kepple, said that when the facts
Besides her parents she was pre- Plains. In the Northeast, seasonably cates aren 'I surprised by the mci- themselves."
were known, the case would "tum
ceded in death by three brothers, cool air rushed 10 where record dent.
Joy Byers, a spokeswoman for out qu1te differently " from pe6Ben, Glen and Ernest Paulin, and a warmth had been.
They call it JUSt one more case the National Committee for Pre- pl,e 's impressions.
·
sister, Alma Neiwoehner.
in
an
epide111ic of child negleet in venuon of Child Abuse, said child
It wasn't the only holiday tale of
lntermtttent ram and snow J?Cf·
Services will be Friday at 2 p.m. ststed
Amenca.
_
neglect "crosses all t~T hoes in
the
southwestern
Unlled
alleged
abandonment or negleet
at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev. Sblles. Heavy min was forecast for
State child-welfare agencies social, econom•c. racia 1 .
-In Austin, Texas, an 8-yearRolland w:*an and Rev. Frank today in parts of central and south- recetved 1.2 mtllion reports of
David and Sharon Schoo lived old boy who authorities said was
Smith offic' , · g. Burial will be in ern
neglect nationwide in 1991, and ~n a comfortable, Tudor-style home abandoned by his father spent two
Cahfornia
and
snow
was
Riverview C etery in Middleport. expected to accumulate in the Sier- investigators substanbated negleet m St. Ch;t!'les, a suburb of Ch1cago. days alone in a motel room before
Friends may call at the funeral m Nevada. Light snow will spread in about 40 percent of them, • The home has a pool, swmgs and a police discovered him on Christhome on Thursday from 2-4 p.m. from
Nevada into western Col- according to the National Commtt- playhouse m the back yard.
mas Day . The father was later
and 7-9 p.m.
tee for Prevention of Child Abuse.
The Schoos were arrested Dec. arrested m Bellmgham, Wash.
omdo.
Reponed cases are "just the up 28 ~n thetr return from Acapulco.
'
The barometer dipped below
-In Rochester, N.H., a motl\Cr
of
the iceberg,' • added Peter Thetr chtldren, ~-year-old ~·cole was charged Sunday wllh endanin
parts
of
the
zero
early
today
Pomer~y
Berliner spokesman for the Ch1l- and 4-year-old D1ana, were discov- germg her three children, ages 3
Dakotas.
(Continued From Page 1)
Htgh tempemUiles were forecast dren's Nllance. an advocacy group ercd at home Dec. 21 after they and under. Police S&amp;ld she left the
be responstble for $5,000.
in the teens and colder m the Pactf- in Seattle.
sleeping children around 9 p.m.
Eligible projects for revttallzaAlcohotic or drug-addicted par• Saturday and was arrested when
Coins reported stolen
tion money include any e·xterior
ents regularly neglect their chi!she returned five hours later.
work'. roof replace~hts, electrical
• dren, he sa1d. Poor working parwiring, heating, or anything to
.ents, especially single parents, from Wilkesville Bank
brmg a building up to cede. Stroth
Meigs announcements
and Figlestahler stressed, however,
Steven G. Hunter, president of
Am Ele Power....................3] 7/8
the Vinton County National Bank,
that revitatization money could not
Dance planned
~land Otl........................25 7/8 I ·
I
be
used
for
remodeling
purposes.
McArthur,
said Tuesday that
There will be a dance ar the RutViolet Smith
AT&amp;T................................. 51 7/8
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R
While completing the business
somettme between midmght and land Amencan Legion HaU SaturBank One...........................52 114 HOLZER MEDICAL CENTE
plan,
Stroth
will
be
"sounding"
all
5:30
a.m. Tuesday the Wilkesville day from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music
Bob Evans ......................... 21 3/8
Violet Sowards Sm1th, 84, Btdthe
buildings
in
the
designated
offtce
of the Vinton County will be provtded by Pure Country '
Discharges, Jan. S - Merty
Charming Shop.................. l8 318
weU, died Monday, Jan. 4, 1992. at
Nauonal
Bank
was burglanzed.
business
district
to
assess
the
needs
Wireman, Orval Fileder, Bniln FerBand. Pubtic invited.
City Holding. ....................20
Holzer Medical Center.
An
attempt
was
made
to
open
of
the
structures
~ set by the state.
guson,
Bonnie
Isaac,
Chloie
Ogd10,
Auxiliary to meet
Federal
MQgul..
....
..............
16
3/8
. Servtces will be held I p.m.
From
there
Stroth
caflfeach
a
close
the
bank's
vault.
A
modest
amount
Conme
Lawson,
Janet
Watson
,
Goodyear
T&amp;R
..................
69
1{2
The
Tuppers
Plains VFW Post
Thursday at the French City Bapttst
cost
range
for
improvements
and
Of
COlDS were determined lO be
Mrs.
Ralph
Thompson
and
daughKey
Centurion
.......
............
22
1{2
9053
Ladies
Auxiliary wtll
No.
Church, with the Rev. John Wood
missing.
repau.s
of
the
bwldings.
Stroth
sbllter,
Mrs.
Thomas
Gtlliland
and
Lands
End
..........................
27
1{2
meet
Thursday
at
7:30 p.m. All
officiating. Burial will be m Caled
his'
dOwntown
busmess
plan
will
Damage
to
the
facility
w'as
modLimited
Inc
.......................
28
318
daughter,
Laura
Westenbarger,
members urged to attend.
vary Cemetery, Rio Grande.
be an entire comprehenSive plan
Donald Hinkle, Bobbte Momson, est. The bank wtll be closed unlil
Mulumedia Inc .................. 32
Dance slaled
Friends may call at the McCoy- which
may
be
used
in
future
cleanup
work
can
be
completed,
Freeman,
Denny
Wtlliams,
Allee
Rax
Restaurant
.........
..
....
.3/16
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post •
Moore Funeral Home. Vinton. on instances when applying for more
Reliance Elcctnc. ..............21 1/8 Carla Stewart, Ashlee Smith, Jason hopefully wtthin a few days.
No. 9053 Ladtes Auxiliary will
Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9, The money.
The FBI and BCI officials have sponsor a round and square dance
Whobrey, Robert Garrow and H.E.
Robb10s&amp;Myers ................ 17
body wtll be taken to the church
Stroth stated another requirebeen
called 10 to investtgate the Friday from 8-11:30 p.m . with
Shoney's Inc.....................22 1/4 Chandler.
one hour prior to servtces on ment set by the Ohio Deparunen t
mcident
Star Bank ...........................35 3/4
Birth, Jan. S - Mr. and Mrs.
music by CJ. and Country GentleThursday.
Development would be_to estabWendy Int'l....................... 12 1{2 Roben Baxter. daughter, Bidwell.
men. Everyone welcome.
. Pallbearers will be gmndsons, of
lish and legtslate a design revtew
Worthington
Ind
................
22
3/4
Friendship day planned
Clarence (Chlp) Kirby, Bruce Kerr, board through which all improve.Stock
reports
are
the
10:30
The
Lad1es Bible Class at the
Gary Kerr, Lee Boston, Davtd ments must be authorized. This
1
(Continued
from
J)
by
Blunt,
a.m.
quotes
provided
Hickory
Htlls Church of Christ is
Belvtlle. Jeremy Belville, and board would consist of members
bus
Southern
Power
or
the
sheritrs
department
Ellis
and
Loewi
of
Gallipolis.
.
hosting
"Fnendship
Day" Tuesday
Darin Smith. Honomry pallbearers from the merchants association,
at
10:30
a.m.
Betty
Miller,
a retired
wtll be Danny Smtth and Dennis vtllage council and someone w1th
teacher
from
the
Ohio
Valley
Smith.
an architectural background.
Christian
College
in
Parkersburg,
The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce regular membership
Mayor Reed stressed the imporW.Va., will be guest speaker.
meeting
wtll be held on Tuesday at 12 noon at Pomeroy Nursing
tance for the merc~ants to remain
Wadear Thabet
"Love
Your Neighbor" will be the
(Continued from Page 1)
and Rehabilitation Center. Lunch wtU be available at a cost of $3.
commttted to the project because
topic.
A
luncheon will follow the
1
Wadear N. Thabet, 90, of Pi&gt;int previous projects, in some no lonna! protest was ftled with the
morning
discussion.
Everyone welPleasant, died Sabtrday, January 2, instances, have fallen through Meigs County Board of Elections '
come.
Further
infonnation
may be
Units of~'gs Emergency Servtces answered the following calls
the time frame of SectiOn
1993 at Care Haven Nursing Home. because of a lack of cotpmttrnent. in
obtained
by
calling
667-6973.
for assistan : TUESDAY, 12:34 p.11J., Middleport unit to State
3~13 .05, there is nothing that can
He was a chatter niember of the He ·stated he was very encouraged be
Route 124, S Pickens to Holzer Medical Center; 5:42 p.m., Middone by the Bciard of 'Elections
Point Pleasant Moose Lodge tll731, by the turnout at the first 'public
dleport
squa to State Ropte 124, Geraldine Parsons to Holzer;
concerning this matter. Your -only
Divorce granted 'r
where lie had served as Governor hearing.
10:16 p.m., Racme unit to State Route 338, Melissa Pauley to Vetrecourse
ts
a
civil
action
in
court
of the Lodge frQm 1949-1950. He
The final public hearing on this under Revised Code Chapter
erans Memorial Hospital; WEDNESDAY, 6:02a.m .• Pomeroy
;.vas the ,secretary and manager of mauer will be held Jan. 19 at 7 2733."
An action for divoR:e has been
squad
to Wolfe Pen, Brad Haggy to Veterans.
.
the Lodge for 30 years. He earned p.m. at the auditorium at Pomeroy
gmnted
m Meigs County Cqmmon
Frymycr said Tuesday that the
Pleas Coun lo Lynne Taylor from
'the Pilgrim Degree, the highest de- Vjllage Hall. All business and board had contacted the office of
Roben D. Taylor.
gree of membershtp in the order. property owners m the designated ~cretary of State Bob Taft. and
(Continued rrom Page 1)
bu'smess
dtstrict
are
urged
to
He was a member of Christ Episthat a representative for Taft concopal Church in Point Pleasant; the attend
Water to be otT Thursday
firmed
ibe board's stand that they appearance.
Commitments Needed
'
Minturn Lodge t1119, A.F. &amp;: A.M.
had no authority to quesbon Souls• Agam Trussell reported that the
She agrun stressed that commitand aU Masonic bodies; the Pat
by's eligibihty, as Gerard had Department of Develppment appti- ments on the part of building ownWater m Rutland v1lla~e will be
Wtlson Shrine Club, of which be
off
periodically Thursday so that
requested
them
to
do.
cabon
will
include
a
joint
narmtive
South-Central Ohio
ers ts needed before she can prowas 'past president; the Rotary Club
employees
can check for water
with
Pomeroy
m
the
hope
that
the
Tonight, variable cloudiness,
ceed with the application. The
and the Kiwanis Club.
leaks.
,
uniqueness
of
the
sisJer
cities
on
in the upper 20s. Thursday,
request for state funding can only
Born february 26, 1902 in New Low
the
Ohio
Rtver
will
give
more
supcloudy. High m the low 40s.
match what is committed locally,
York, he was the son of the late mostly
port for funding. Funds, however, she emphasiZed.
(Continued from Page 1)
Extended
forecast:
Nimer Thabet and the lite Jenny
will not be commmgled, Trussell
Friday tllrougb Slind11y:
Ron Carmichael of Columbus
~~land.
Thabet. He was also preceded m
.
said.
Friday,
a'
chance
of
rain
or
Southern
Power met with the group
Jonathan
Wills,
an
environmendeath by hiS ' wife, Janey (Bragg) snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs in
If the grant is awarded, sbe srud to dtscuss penod lighting, what is
tal
expert
in
the
Shetlands,
told
Thabet; four ·sisters and seven low 30s to low 40s. Saturday, a
Bnttsh Broadcasting Corp. ,fhat a that 11 will be a 22-month construe- available and what it will cost if the
brothers.
of rain. Lows in the 30s. film of oil was coating roads and a lion project for facal!t:. improve- village has the company do the
He is survived 'by his son. John chance
ments, other rehabititalion of build· installation. The hghbng would be
Highs in mid-40s to l\)id-50s. Sun,
ftLRDDI"'
N. Thabet of Point Pleasant; one day, a chance of rain or snow . "Slckly sweet" smell -permeated ings, and required demolitions.
1 10. 9 10 MILT ~T/SUM I'IAT 1 10,3 10 G
msUtlled
as
a
pan
of
the
streetscape
the
lower
part
of
Mainland
Island.
brotlrer, John F. "Freddie" Thabet
l!RP OF FRITH
Owner Loans '
10 upper 20s to mid-30s .
work after the building restoration
"We were certamly fmdmg
of Mason; two gmndchtldren and ' Lows
1
ZO
Ill
10
MILl
SAT/!UII JIMT 1 20,3 l D PCll
Paul Reed, president of Farmers is completed.
Highs in mid-30s to mid-40s.
oiled birds •almost faster than you
two great-grandchildren.
TDYS
Paula Thacker of the f&gt;1eigs
could pick'them up," Chns Gom- Bank and Gary C. Sm1th, executive
.
,
"''"
loCI-·
"'
Graveside services will be held
1
10
t
JO
ll'.!LY
SAT/
SUN
MAT·1••510T
10 l 30 PG1J
ersaU of the Royal Soc1ety for the vice presidenl/prestdent, Athens County Chamber of Commerce
R
Fill
&amp;DDI
MEN
at II a.m. on Thursday, January -7
'
Protection of Birds told BBC tele- Divtsion, Peoples Bank, talked advised that her offtce is develop1 00 9 lO OAILl SAT/ SUN ''" 1 OQ ,J 30 R
at the Lone Oak Cemetery in Point
about
loans
to
business
owners
vision.
ing a computenzed listing of availTHE MUPPET tHIISTMRS tAROt
Pleasant wtth the Rev. Ronald
involved in the restoration project.
1 20 ~ I LY YT/ SUM ~TINE[S 2 DO,l •o ll
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
He
said
mjDy
of
the
birds
were
able
buildings
wh1ch
will
be
beneBaird
officiating.
Masonic
Smith S&amp;ld that Peoples will pro- ficial to anyone looking for a locaDISTIN&amp;UISM[I iENrtEMIN
were two tickets sold naming all dead. He aMit sa1d dead fish were
9 30 "' Dim Y. HO MTI!I( £5 R
graveside rites wiD be conducted
vide funds of $10,000 per project at uon m the county
ftve numbers drawn in Tuesday y;ashmg up on the beach.
HOME RtONE 2
by the Miptum Lodge 1119. Burial
night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
1
"Th'Cre were gulls feeding on a fixed rate at prime whatever that
The question of how to get peo1
00
;
20
OA1lt
~h~:.:tr l 20 PG
wiD follow. Servtces are under the each winning ticket is worth the fish as tliey were coming ashore is at the time the loan IS made. ple to shop in MiddleJX?n now or
IODYGiftftD
direction of the , Crow-Russell $100,000, the Ohio Lottery said.
' l llrl Ill .u.ro • rr.o1
and you can see that most of those, Reed pledged a "loan pool pack- after the·reVJtaiiZation ts'completed
1 00 9 JC ilAilr SAT/ SUM IUT 1 00 l JO R
age"
Funeral Home. There will be no
for
both
communities.
Pick 3 Numbers'
as tlley fly overhead, are struned on
was raised by several busmess
CCIII NG SOON I
visitation.
Other loans available such as owners
5-7-9
M£L GJISIJ!j in "rOJtEVER TOI.IIG "
the underbelly,'' Gomersall said.
who
emphasized
the
need
Gin
CUTIFICATES
flOW AVAILAIL £1
(five, seven, nine)
It had been feared that the Bmcr ·Appalachian Oh10 Microloan and for a return on invesunents. Tom
AssiStance Program Dooley of the Mtddleport DepartPick 4 Numbers
would break ~pan during the night, Techmcal
were
discussed.
4-5-7-8
spdhng all its oil along the rugged
ment Store asked for sugllestions
Both of the bankjng msbtutions on
(four, five, seven, eight)
Veterans Memorial Hospital
The Daily Sentinel
how to educate the public about
coast of the main Shetland island.
made $1,000' contributions to the
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS- BuckeyeS
Authorities said it bad at least streetscape pro)CCI during the meet- what is available m the community
(USPS JU-11801
17-19-24-27-29
Kaue Weber, Middleport
two holes, one 10 the bow and one ing. Trussell reported that Bank and ways to get people to check out
Published tY@ry aft.eftloon, Monday
(seventeen. nineteen, twenty- in the stem.
TUE~DAY DISCHARGESthrough Friday, Ill Court Sl, Pomeroy,
One chose not to make a contribu- local stores before going out of
four, twenty-seven, twenty-nine)
Oluo by U!e Oluo V.lley Publiahirw
James Stacy.
town
to
shop.
tion to Middleport's streetscape.
Company!Multunedia Inc:., Pomeroy,
Bob Gtlmore president of the
Ohto 45769, Ph. 992·2166. Second c:laa
the
Holzer
Clinic
had
made
Earlier
PubliC Notice
postap pa1d at Pomeroy, Ofuo
Public Notice
Public Notice
Middleport
Community
AssoctaPublic Notice
a $750 contrtbubon, and Trussell
Member. 'Ibe Auociat.ed Pre.t, and the
announced a pledge from McDon- tion said that is why that group has
LEGAL NOTICE
ollicoo. Chocko oholt be comply 'f'Oth the Minority
All controctoro ond
festivals and other promotions _and
Oh10 New~p~per Auodation, National
SMied propoaala wlll be moda PllVIblo'to the Vllloge Bualn••• Enterprlae (MBE) 8ubcontr•cton involved ald's for street furniture.
Adverti•ing Rep!'Mentative, Bnnham
rocolved .t the olllce of tho of
Stress10g that revitalizabon IS a incentives - to bnng !ICl&gt;Pie mto
Pomeroy,
Ohio. requlremonto tot forth In . with the pro)ocl will, to lht
New•I'"J&gt;&lt;r Sal.., 733 Third Avenue,
MIIJOI', Pomeroy CIJY Holt, Propoulo
New York, New York t 0017.
I
muot bo Section I U.07 of the Ohio extant pr..ticoblo uoo Ohio long-term project and that improve- town so they can see what here.
In a bnef meeting of the Mid320 EMt u.ln It, Pomoroy, oubmlttecl on lhe Propoool Reviaed Code, •nd Rule Producta, m•terlala, ••rv·
ments
wtll
come
one
at
a
time.
POSTMASTER: Send addreu chaft~U to
Ohlo,untl .11:30 o.m. loool Forme oontolned In tho 1U-I-32 of tho Ohio !ceo, ond lobor In tho
Commumty Association,
Trussell emphasized that the possi- dlepott
The pa1ly Sentinel~ Ill Court St.,
limo on Februort 1, tlllll,lor ContriiCt clooumento.
Dooley was elected president w1th
Admlnlotrollvo Ct!de· In port, llllple,taentotlon of their
Pomeroy, OH1o 46769.
furnlohlng oil lobor,
E110h bidcllr Ia required to thlo m101111 llot MY bldder, project. Addltionol, con· bility of a grant for revitaiiZBtion ts other officers to be named at the
BVII8CRIPTION BATE&amp;
• motorlolo ond equipment Nrnloh with Ita propoool, 1 to the oxtont thot It triiCtor compllonao wlfl the a "one time shot where half of the Feb. 2 meeting. Reports were given
By Canter or Motor Ro•te
n-HII)' tO complete the Bid ' Guoroidy ond Controot ouboontrooto work, oholt oquol omptoy111ont op· work can be done for nothing" and
One Week
.... .. ... .. . ......11.60
proJect known •• tho Bond In' occoldonco with owerd eubcontriiCio to olota portun.tty 'requlrlftlonlo of that the goal insofar as lite vacant on activities of the organization
One Mdnlh
... 16.9li
VILLAGE OF POMEROY, Section 153.5• of tho Ohio oorlillecl llnq~ty Buol..oe Ohio Aclnllnlotrotlvo Code buildings are concerned should be over the past year.
One Year..
. ....... :
-- .. 183 20
BINGLE COPY
MAIN STREET WATER Rovloed Code. Bkl Socu~ty Enlerpll- In ., oggr-uota Clloplor 123, the Gov-r'e
"ftx it up, filltt up."
·
PKICJ:
i.JNE REPLACEMENT PRO- lurnlohed In Bond torm,
, George Glen "Barney" Roberis,
85 , Bashan Road, Long Bottom,
died Tuesday, Jan. 5, 1993 at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Born Feb. I, 1907 in Ripley,
W.Va., he was a son of the late
George Washington and Rosa Bell
Riggs Roberts. He was consuu~­
tion laborer. He was a member of
the Baldinb Freedom Gospel
Mtssion Ch reb and the Point
Pleasant
Union.
' Mr. R~be is survived by his
wife of 57 ears, Marie Elliott
Roberts, Long Bottom; a daughter
and son-m-law, Audelle and Norman McCain, Reedsville; a son and
daughter-in-law, Randall and Judy
Roberts, Racine; a sister, Esta
Roberts, Pomeroy; two brot~s.
Huben Roberts, Ashley. and Victor
_Roberts, Birch Tree, 1Mo.; grandchildren, Belinda Parkins. Bruce
Deeter, Beretta Smith, Benitta
Deeter, Todd Roberts, Leslie Hayman and Chad Roberts; and five
great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by four sisters, Mollie Harpold, Lovey Stareher, Lula
Sandy and Faye Powell, and four
brother. Russell, Harley, Pearl and
Sherman Roberts.
Servtces will be Fnday at II
a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home wtth
Rev. Roger Wilford and Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp offictating.
Burial will be in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
6ome on Thursday from 1-4 p.m.
and 7,9p.m.
•

1

o'clock. u

It is with some pnde that
"Sixty to 80 percent ol our
Thomas E. Baca says, "We have problem in the Department of
more people working on ~i- Defense," Baca says, "are fuels
'The (Cleveland) Plain •Dealer, Jan. 3:
,
.
.
than the EPA." Baca IS and solvents; jet fuels, petroleum
The retession 1S teehmcally over. but don t expect any surge of Jllb ronment
the
Pentagon's
deputy asststant
creation m a chromcally slow-growth economy. That's the cautious messecretary
of
defense
the envisage within the latest batch bf economtc slabstics. The recent data suggest ronment. The reason for
more
people
'J
that the Clmton admmtstiauon should proceed with its plan to craft a there are working on the environcareful pro-growth package ~ It must include targeted short-term incentives mentts that the Pentagon has a btg- products and cleaning compounds
for investrneflt and a dectsive long-tenn commiunent to deficit red'!CUon.
envtronmental mess on its such as TCE (trichloroethylene)"
Finally, the recovery has started to look like a self-sustaining expan- ger
hands
any other single msbtu- that have contaminated the ground
sion. Last week's reports on factory orders, JObless drums and the Index , uon 10than
the
country.
or formed plumes slowly reaching
of Leading Indtcators - paced by the consumer expectati~s that have
One
of
the
Cold
War
bills
finaltoward and sometimes polluting
~ared smce Eleeuon Day - all suggest that the economy ts gathenng
ly
coming
due
ts
the
cost
of
selfgroundwater
supp~ies. TCE and
·momentum. Yct there 1s sun no evidence otresurgent JOb creauon.
: The economy may no longer be stalled, but 11 could certamly use a inflicted environmental contamina- benzene concentrabons at a toxtc
'push. The Whtte House and Congress should focus their fiscal efforts- uon. During the decades when mil- dump site at tire Anny's Maryland
preparedness was an overrid- Aberdeen Proving Ground are hun: not on mdiv1dual income-tax cuts that would nsk busting1he budget- 1tary
ing prioflty. the environment was dreds of times beyond safe levels.
; but on an mcentive for private-sector job creation: a targeted, tempor~ barely a blip on the radar screen. Aberdeen stts atop a peninsula jut• tax credit for new busmess mvesunent m cap1tal eqmpment. Along w1th
Defense installations were exempt ting 10to the Chesapeake Bay. It's
: faster-paced federal spendmg for mfrasb'ucture investment, such a pro- from
most envtronmental Iegisla- one of the military's environmental
.llrowth plan 1S the kmd of stimulus ,that m1ght prod JOb .creation and lion. The
military didn't even keep basket cases. There ts so much
.mcomc gams.
records of ho'r 11 disposed of vast phosphorous left over from making
quanu11es of toxins it consumed.
flares there that the Soil can literalTo the mtlitary's credit- and ly bum when it's dug up.
at considera~le public ex~nse The gamut runs from figuring
that's chang10g. At 1,877 defense how much and where potsons were
facd•ues spanning nearly 26 mil- dumped (l)art of the problem at the
lion acres incorporating all 50 Rocky Mountam Arsenal in ColThis 1s m regards to R1ch Jones' fam!ly have been hfelong res1den1S. states, the Pentagon has tdenufied orado), . to gingerly removing
·remark about the hmng of an outDoes Rich Jones not1ce how 11,000 ''situations," as Baca Cll)ls unspen~ordnance (the headache at
of-town auomey for puol!c defend- many residents from Meigs County them, requinng environmental Indtana's Jell'ersori Proving
er.
travel to Athens and other areas for altcnbon. Nearly 100 of those cases Ground), to figunng out how to
I happen to know B1ll Safranek thelf employment each day?
are on the Envuonmental Protec- dispose of stockpiles of chemical
: 1S inarncd to a fonner Me1gs CounShtrlcy Hunncl Miller bon Agency's bst of the most dan- weapons that weren't designed for
June
Hunnel
Her
father
and
·uan,
Racine gerously polluted places in the demilitarization.
•
country.
il's a colossal task. So big 10

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-3

Geor~e

Wednesday, January 6, 1993

knell for long-standing election
fraud south of the border. However, the elections turned out to be a
page from Chicago's corrupt past,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths-- Oh•o forecast cloudy, _dry next few·days
G. Roberts ·
.Katie Weber

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON -Historically
tainted by allegations of election
111 Court Stteet
fraud and voter megularities: local
Pomeroy, Ohio
elecuons in the City of Chicago DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 'I1IE MEIGS-MASON AREA
where the slogan ' 'vote early and
vote often" was born - might not
seem the best cbissroom for a foreign observer to watch democmcy
10 action. _
ROBERT L. WINGETT
But for Javier Livas. a prominent Mexican lawyer affthated with
Publisher
his counfry's conservative opposi- I&gt;ATWHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
uon party, the National Abcti~n
Party (PAN), 1ast Novem er s
,Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager __ Chteago elections featured a degree
of openness he might wish for
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
Mexico.
words. AU letters are subject to edtting and must be s1gned Wlth name.
"! was granted access all over,"
ad~ss ani! telephone number No unSigned letters w1U be pubhsbed letters
he told us. "We visited the board
should be m good taste, addressing tssues, not personaliti~
of commissioners. We had access
to the voting prectncts and talked to'
the election Judges, We could make
comments on how things were
gomg. Everything was total trans. a ng
. ht we do n't
Parency. ... Thi s •s
have in Mexico." Livas pomts out
that the United Nations and Organization of American StaleS (0 AS)
• banned f rom moni-,
observers
· M are
·
lee·
By The Associated Press
·
tonng elUcan e boos.
, Followmg are excerpts from recent edllorials on national tssues m
week aftel: the
ballot
·m Less
Ch tcago,
' than aL'
·
'newspapers across the state.
•vas was bac k 10
.
,
h
I
·
The Cincinnati Post, Jan. 4:
Mextco .or t ree state e ecttons
The new Congress is assembling in Waslfington and it's hard to know that Mexico's ruling party, known
whether to cheer, salute or lock up the silverware. WiD thts be another 10 Spanish by the tnitials PRI, had
· free-spending bunch? Or will sanity prevail? Will the budget deficit rise? pledged would sound the death
Or will lawmakers cut costs for a change?
. It's a new beginning, aU nght And there is no denymlllhat relabons
between Congress and the White House w1ll be less acnmomous, now ·
'that Democmts dominate both. The danger is that the back-slapping and
gemaltty will degenerate 1010 a spending party. wtth taxpayers fooung the

•

.
Wednesday, January 6, 1993

,

JECT, end ot oald thno lind' olulll be looued by o Bqrety
pl101, publicly opened ond Cotapony or Corporation
r...,ololld.
llcenoed In tho • - of Ohio
Tho r,ropoud 110rk to provlclo Hiclo..oty.
lnoluciM Mlllellon Of H20
El!llh Propo_ool 111uot
- foot of I" I'VC Wllllf IIIOin. oonloln .,. hiiJ ottho
' The....,_....am... lor porty or portiH oubmilliiiO
oo..trliotlon of the Project thepropa•.,encl•,..••
II S204,410.00.
I
lnter•ted therein. Eeoh
Copt• of Drllwlngo 11nd blddor muat oubmll
Contreot cloounlellta "'"' ... .. lclonoe of ito .,....,_...
olllllned or ,.,...~.... .t tho on Pt'Oieota of olmller olze
0111ee of 1M ...,..,, V....,
ooinplalty. The - ·
Holt, PoMoror, Ohio. A ......
ln... de ond requlrn thot
._..,.,.~&gt;~1.11' '00 ,_ witt lie required lllo prafiOtbe
lor OHh HI of DfiiWiftgo . . . then M8y II, ....
8nd Contr...t doou111onta
Bl*'-• ere required to
token' from tho obovo

_.......,no

'

dollor Vlhll of no looa then
live p1roont (5%) of tho
prime controct . • Bidder
procurement octlvllloa, to
th extent thot tho
oontroolorpuroh_m __
liolo •cllor oorvlooo, oholl
r•utt In the oword of
procurement oontroota to
ot1t1 cortllled Minority
8uoinooo Entorprl•e• In
llllll'eg.ltldollor•veiuoofna
1- lhon two ,..,_,t (1%)
o1 tho prime oontriiCI. The
bid apeolllootlona provide
further clelollo 0' 1hooo

roqulr_...

Exooutlvo Ordw of 1172,
ond Governor'• Exooutivo . .------------•':.....,...,~~-----,
Order u.e oholllle required.
A ft
Bill ,. m111t CIOiilply will
:&amp;"WAIU&amp;M
:n.
... ~•In•••-""
.~80'&amp;-11!'
Pullll'o lmprovolllont In
AND TJfJI
AG
Melt• County 1nd the
Wlogo of-oy, Ohio oo
J'BOJf CJLt11,1.811'0N, WV
delilnlllned by tho Ohio 1
,
-~
p....,lll\llnt ol lncluotrlol

CO.'...
coo.·.,
CALVARY .,,

WIJ.L U $lNOINO AT TD

Rollttono.·

The Ow- ,...,ed tho
right to wolve ony
lnfo.-uoo or lrregu..,...
onchortJootMyorolbldo.
•
• John A. Andl 11011

~ . . . . . , . . . . . . UA,.AD&amp;"U&amp;' ~llftiDCH
...,...._ • . , . . n~• ""DVR
II!' A•r,
WA V
J!l . .

"'ft&amp;W• f ·AT 7:00r .,..
Vlttooo~.::; L..;.;~.:...
l ...__•_u_•_,_~_.,..
__w._...ac_o_•_•_·__....,.....:i_,

(115, 12, II, 31c

•

Gft •t

Da1ly.

. . • ..

.

.. ............._ 25 Centa

Sublcriben no&amp; dl!lltnnr 10 pq tt. earn.
may nnmt 1n Uvanoe dkect 10 Thil
Daily Seatnael on a thrM, JQ or 12
mon.Lh t.lia. CrecbL will t. ttwen tarrieT
eac:h " ...
No 1111t.cripl10M by llllli.J permitted 1ft
areu where home cattier lel"rice 11
available.
f!l'

w-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
w-.. ...,.. . . . ... .
Ka.U hbnrhtllo•

13
26

52

- ...... c.....,.

w-......... . . . ,. . . . . .. . . . . . 121M
$4-1 ts

184 76
O.tol....l .. eo-.,.
13W-.
.. ......... ... . .. ~
26 Weeka .
' ... ..... . ..
"
52W- .
. ............. . ..... .40

�•

~ports
.
.

.

Wednesday, January s, 1993

.

'

The Daily Sentinel

.

~

"'·

Wednesday, January 6, 1993.
.
Pige-4

By SCOTr WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
: ; Blitzing to an 18-1 first period
•g.n. the Southern Tornadoes .
lifi:ezed to an easy 73-45 lriumph
o¥er cross-county rival Eastern
~sday night in boys' high S(:hool
~etba11 action in Racine.
• -- southenr'had a balanced auack
!hat placed 11 men in the scoring
cohimn and three.in double figures.
Mark Allen and Russell Singleton
~ed the Tornadoes with 14 points
each, while fellow serJior Michael
1;11ans notched 12.
: . Eastern guard Chad Savoy had a
fine individual effon and a gameiiigh 17 points.
.
: Southern .is now 5-2. Eastern
@I to 1-6.
,
·; Southern ·Staned the game with
a ;j)Jitzing, pressing up-beal tempo
tli'at forced numerous Eastern
\iunovers ·and resulted in a 12-0
~outhem lead- Southern, behind the
inSide flash cuts .of Russell SingletOii, who netted six in tile frame,
~4 the outs~ shooting of Mark
A'llen blitze1 forward to an 18-1
lead.
.. Eastern's lone score carne on a
Jeremy Ctine free lhrow at the 4:45
Jl)ark. Southern rolled on to a 22-6
first period lead and placed seven
men in the scoring eolum'n.
·.• Besides Singleton's streak,
1\llen had fl ve, Mason Fisher t)lree
and two each ·by Evans, Grueser,
Riiber and Ryan Williams. ·
.: · Southern had a chance to really
l!Jow the game open in the second
frame, but couldn't shake the feisty
Eagles. Coach Howie Caldwell's
crew continued the upbeat tempo
al)d forced numerous EHS
:: ~ ·

turnovers.
Southern, howeve~ also made
its share of miscues and the two
clubs played near-even lhroughout
the frame. Southern led 37-ta at
the half. Savoy led Ea.stem with II
of the ream's totall8 points.
Despite running numerous people in and out of the game, Southem had a consistent second half.
Trenton Cleland and 'Ry n
Williams executed the fast b
to
per.fection, allowing Southern to
grab numerous lay-ups en route
a 52-32 third period lead.
Both teams were provided with
good effons by yo11nger members
of their bench.
Eastern opted to work the ball
around before ·getting off a shot,
three times getting the back door
lay-up to Martin and Bissell. Over~
all, however, the SHS defense
forced several bad shot selections.
Southern had a big folll1h quarter and rolled to the 73-45 win.
Southern had 37 rebounds led
by Mason Fishc;r with eight and
Singleton with five. Eastern had 28
led by Bissell's six, Kaylor with
four and Reed with four.
Southern hit 27-60 field goals.
3-9 three pointelS and hit 10-13 at
the line for 77 percent Eastern hit
15-35,1-7and 12-30attheline.
Southern had . 13 · steals
(Williams three), 16 tum!)vers,' 13
assists (Williams 6) and ltad 20
fouls. Eastern had 23 turnovers,
eight steals, five assists and 15
fouls. ·
Southern won the reserve game1
47·36 led by Jeremy Hill with 15,
Mike McKelvey with nine, Kevin
Turley nine and Cliss Cleland six.
•

-·-·

Niapn IS, Falrfiold 78
Ohio SL 71 0 hm..SL 68
Richmond 19, MmY 71

Auto racing

\

Lori Hamilton. pumped in 22
points and tl rebounds to lead the
University of Rio Grande Redwomen to a 78-65 victory over
Mid-Ohio Conference opponenl
Walsh TuesdaY. on the Cavaliers'

,.; Daniel D. Qn.renwood ptcaidcnt and chief

.

~ CllcalliYe ciflO«.

•

'

.BuebaU

...
+ 10

n

ono-~ contract.
·• DETROIT TIOERS - Aarced to
r ICIIDI wi&amp;h Tnvil .fryman, shotutop, on •

: -: •

· • ono-yeu c:a'ttrtd..

'' - NEW YORK YANKEES - Namc.d
tliU-l.i.veny vice ~cnt of,player ~e­
"" veloprnmL-111d •co~una: K.CVln_Elf~a
.. coonUnat(l( of KOUUI'IJi and. Eddie Robin: · 10ft

65

Otarleaton Southcm 81, l..eei-McRae

Aa. In\tlr'Qilionll74, Ccvdmd St. 73
Gccq;a SOUihom 66, Ciwlcl SS
&lt;Jeoraia Toch SS, Muylond 75
Kco!Uc:ily 74, o.o.p 59
Md.-E. Shcre67, IhW!wan~ St. SS
Missi11ippi St 110, TCnneasec Tach
N.C.·W'IIminpl7, Camo0ell70
Va. CommC'JnwealdJ. 88 1 l.iberty 75

uaislant cootdina&amp;« of ICOW:inJ.

Mldwest

National Leaau.t
CINCINNATI R~DS - Aareed to
-

BuLloAI, Vllpuail!) 62lloPtul 81, LOyola, Ill. 73
x.ar.u St 79, 'La S.UC .59

term• whb Scou Ruskin, piLc;er, on • ~ .

,. one·)'(IU~tnlet..

•

..

·

HGUSTON ASTROS - Ag&lt;Ud

NobnokaiOO,'S.Iluh Sl
SE Minowil ... OU!and Ci1y 69
St Pt:&amp;ct'l79, Younptown SL 67

lo

tonn1 with Kevin Dan, ~tlit:lder, and .
J01-c Uribe, ahorwop, an Dnc-ycar c:on·
U'loCW. lavited Jack DauJberty, infielder,
\0 l!plinl tnininJ U I ftiiiH'MW pia yet.

SAN DIEGO

Southwest

Baylor 94, ThiN 8S
-9l.TNIIl7

P~-

Apod.
tcmu with Wally 'R.hi.IChiU'II aDd Kany
Ttylcw, pilchm, on ono:_~ eon&amp;nct&amp;.

Teu~ AAM 91. Brown S2

Far West

Basketball
Natlc.al BubtbaJI Auoclltlon
DAJ..LAS MAVERICKS - Ac:Uva\ed
Sean Rooks, cc:atcr, frum lhc injured list.
Waind Waltcr Palmer, otllLU.

FootbaU
National FGOI.balllata.t

CHICAGO BEARS - Fued Mike

Ditt,. QOich, and aa.nounce4 he will
m&amp;ir1 ...couultlnl-

re-

ln theNBA ... ·
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantk: Dlridon ·
W L Pet.

Teun

GB

. 65~

NewYort. ............. .l9 10
New Jersey ........ ::;..11 13

Orlando.................. l3 13
BOiton .................... l4 11
Wuhin&amp;IDn ........•..• IO 20

.567
.SOD

2.5

.4:52

6

Miami ......................9 19

.333
.321

Phllldelphia ............. 8 18

.308

4~

9~
9~

9~

.Sil

4~

I3

.5:16

6

14
15

.Sl7
.413

15

• Indiana ................... 14 16

.467

: Allanll ................... 12 17

.414

6.5

s

9.5

•

W L

.. : Ul&amp;h ................: ...... 20

PeL

GB·

8

.7 14

: San Anwnio ........... l.5 13

.536

• • HoWiton ................ .14 14

.500

6

• Denver .....................7 21
., MinnesoU ................6 20
.. fl4Ul.at ...... .................2 . 24

.250
.231
.f117

13

--·

s

13

17

... •
Padfk Olrialon
' A:aoatil. ......: ........... 22
.115

s

· Sc.atde ....................20

II

. ' ""il4""""""""' 19

9

cn ............ 16
• Ool
State .... :..... 16
• L.A. 'aippea ......... 16
; S.cmnc:rao ............ l2
. · LA.

.714 • 2..5
.1&gt;19
3~

13

14

.552

. 1

.Sl:l

1.5

14 , .533 · 1~
16 .429 IO.S

Tuesday's scores
New Yo« 95,CI..EVEI..AND91
New Jenoy 102. Orlando"
Miami 89, Detroit 83
Bol\on t 07, 0\arloue 103
WalhiniUJn 107, ALlanlllOO
Indiana 114, LA. Clippers 106
LA. Wen 91, Oicaao U

•

Milwtukce 114, MiM~ 100

Potlland I09, Dallu 95 ,
PboeniA 106, Hoooon 184
.~

..

Poiiland 71, M~ St (j]

Son Dios• 112, Onl R&lt;lllau 1S
San PMciaco'l1, Softcrna S1. 67
Sanla Clan 9,, CS Stanialau~ 80 ·
Weber St. 67, Lcwii:-Cluk St. S4

Ohio highs~
boys' bas~et!JJJI poll
COLIJMBIJS, Ohio (AP) - How 1
•t.J~t.e panel or •rona wrhen .and broad·
cuaen ruu Ohio hi&amp;b ·Khool boys bu·
k.W tolllll in \116 ftz.t wea.Jy ftlllllar-

-·by

- p o l l !G&lt;Thc ......,.,....
Ohio Hip. School Athlelie A11oci1tion

di-f"iliona, wilh won-loa rec:ord Woup.
~aeuon ptnel or Jan. 3; fint-pl.Ke
\'GUll in puanbaa:

'

llib 113, San Anlonio 87
Sc.au.lc 116, Golden Su~e 106

Sa.cilmerno 126. Denver 106

• Tonight's games
Indiana at Boston, 7:30p.m.

.,

Thdrsday'• gaines
ALlanll at Milw~uk., 1:30 p.m.

Phoch.ix • DalW,"I ::JO p.m.
Portland at Houatm, 1:30 p.m.
lhah 11 San Anumio, 8:30p.m.
Miami at Golden Sttte, 10:30 p.m.

J'o{ational college
basketball scores
East
HOllOn Collqc 67, v~. 64
Oecqetown 64, $J'%1eu&amp; 60 ,

Mauach111etM 90, Boalanp. 42
Monmouth, NJ. 60, Sl Fnnoil, Po . 52
Mount S1. Mary'•, Md .. 9J; "Lonal•·

!Aftd U. l6

.,

Pll.

l-Can1011 Md(inloy 1-2 ....................... 79
Cin. Calaain (3) 6-0 ..........................79
s.w...... (2) 1·0................................. 7!
6-Tal. Whilmu(l)6-0 .........................71
7-Da)'IGII MeadOwdoJ. (3) 9-0 ..............14
11-l.anU&gt; Admin! Kins (1) 5-0............. .61

OUten nctlvlna 12 or •ore polnll:
12 (tie)-Cdina, Lml Senior 40. 14 (lie)·

Cin. Woodw~. L)'ftdhum Brwh 33. 16Painenille R.ivenide 21. 17-Sww Walsh
Iel\l i\,26. 11-Eut Liverpool23 . 19 MadWo 22. 20-Cahnbuo In·

o.......,.

dependcnoc 20. 21-Allianc:c 19. 22-Weal
OiCIItct Lakou. 17. 23· Cleve. John Hay
14. :zA.Tal. !koll12.

Dlrislon n

Tt•
Pll.
I· WltiW!olt· Yearling (6) 1-0............. 129
2-Bollolanllino(l) 7-0 ...................... Ill ,
J.Willanl (I) 1·0 ................................ 1~
4-Gnadc:ft. lndian Valley 6-0 ................ 11
5-J..w;avillo ())7·0 ............................... 76
6-CJCY. Bmoditllne (2) 8·0 .................. 12
Da)'l&lt;lllllwlbor (4) 7-2... ..................12
1-Tipp Cily Ti.ppaeanoe 6-0 ................. 62
9-Dayto~ CMm.-JuJ. 5·1 ...................... 58
1Q.Cani'..W5-1 .................................... 52
' Olhen rl!ftlvtna 1l or more polnll:
ll ·Wa~aeon (2) 4,. 12-Wuhinac-on Cam
llouae 43. 1.3-New Concord JoM Olenn
37. 14-CltNe. Villa AnJW·SL Je~CJ)h (I)
33. 15·S• Muya Manorial 31. 16-t.ov.:
land-Hunt 29. 17·Bdlewe 21. 11 (Lie)Colwnb\11 Eawnoor, Wanen Cbampior).
21 . 20 (lie~Pad au..., Raoo!anl 19. :IZPORTSMOUTH 14. 23 (tie)·Rncnn•
SoulheuL. UhrictuviU.e Claymom 13. 2,S.
lelviu.burJ Wrae J1

Ne~ Jeney a~ Phi.laddphi.J, 7:30p.m.

OUc;ago al CLEVELAND, 7;30 p.m.
LA. Clip~ at Octn-it; 7:30p.m.
L.A. Laiul at.Minnclota, 8 p.m.

MadJ16I. FaUIGJhDlddnlon 67

•

l ~Cltv. lkiahll (1) 7-0........................ 174
:!-Slow (3) ~-0 .................................... l fTI

Sand~y 7· 1 ...............: ..................... 49

Mldw•l Dtvlalon

,... . Te1m

-90.Quiney 60

9-Homll10111·1 .................................... .50
10:Moaillon Wuhiop (I) 8-1 .......... 49

~ WESTERN CONFERENCE
·

CS NonbridJc 62, Loyola Muymao111

TeMR

13

&lt;:':

53

Dlvloloa I

j•
Ctnlr•l DMaloft
· • Chicago .................. 22 II
.73:3
.,.,.• CLEVEUND ....... I8
.- . Detroit...•............. .. l5
• Chulonc ................ IS
• Mil.waukee ............. l4

Soulb

Alabtma St. 70, flori.dl AAM S1

American ~t•
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - As...d
\mill wilh Ben McDooald, pitcher, on

Tum

Division m

l'tl.
I·B""*"'ld (2) 7-0 .............................96 ·
2-lleidfanl Oloncl (2) 8.() .....................92
~Utica

.

(6-13·13-13:45)
Chad Savoy 7-0-3=17, Charlie
Bissell 3-{).1=7, Robert Reed 1-{).
2=4, Jeremy Cline 1-0·3=5, Wes
Arbaugh 0-0-1=1, Randy Kaylor t-

1-2=7,-Matt Marlin 2..().{):4: Totals
- 15-1-12-=45

6-0-0=12, Andy Grueser 1-0-0=2,
Trenton Cleland 0-1-0=3, Jeremy
Nonhup 0-0·2=2, Roben Reiber 2SOUTHERN
0-1=5, Mason Fisher t-0-4=6,
(22-15-15.21=73)
.
Jamey Smith 2-0-0=4, Russell SinMark Allen 4·0-2=14, Ryan gleton 6-0-2=14, . Tucker Willjams
Williams 4·Q·0=8, Michael Evans · 1-0.1=3. Totals-26-3-12=?3

Court.

--

(2) a.o ............J ...... ....~ ............ ..91

4-Aoh•bulo H .... (2) 7·0 ................. .11
O.)'IGII Oakwood (I) 6-0 ................... SI
6-0nnWie (2) 7-0................................86

7-&lt;:APil (4) S· l ....................................71
11-Galel Mllla Gilm.... (3) 6-0..............,64
9-Boinbridac PainI Voll. (3) 6-0 .........c.l2
lO.Otimantown Valley View 5-0 .........44

o...,...,..,..u ... _.,.....,
11-Columbiana Crutvicw :U. 12·
011!3API!AXI! ctJU. tJ.an.

w_..,

26. 14-BtlWte )4 . lS·Elmote Woodmen
21 . 16 (li1}8l!tJIIE, Alaan Mo-.,
II. II·O...W. 11. 19·Wellnillo 16. 20fredcricitown 15 . 21 (tie)· Peeble•,
S\0\lbeli.Yille Cath. Ccrnnl 14. 23 (tie)OAK HILL, Plymouth U. 25 (de)lhlaYNO Wyn!ant, ~ C.lbolio I~

'

.

. Maintaining a three-point lead at
the half, Rio Grande outboarded its
hosts 29 72.7 an&amp; shot 41.1 percent
(23-56, 4-17 hom the three for 23.6
percent) to stay ahead. llie defense
. was successful ·in holding Walsh's
individual scoring to one player as
Shelly Pilsitz was credited w1th 14
pomts. . ·
•
The Redwomen netted 28 of 39
attempts at the free throw line for
7}.8 percent. The Cavaliers were
·3l8 percent (22:ti5) and had 21 of
their 31 lries from the line for 67.7
percent
Rio Grande (12-3. 1-0 in the

MOC) lravels to Shawnee State on
Saturday, while Walsh (3-9, 0-1)
hosl.ll Ohio DominicanSaturday.
Box score:
WALSH (65) - Colleen
Thompson, 4-0-8; Jodie Tekip, 1-35; Shelly Pilsitz, 4-6·14; Shelly ·
Dunm~er, 3-0-6; Lisa Benya, 0-22; lWi Carney, 1.0-2; Sheri Hubbard, 1-4-6; Kari Bauer, 3-1-7·
Nicole Dotson, 3-2-8. TOTALS
'22-21-65. .
RIO GRANDE (78) - ·Tticia
Collins, 4-1-9; Stephanie Gudorf,
2-1-3-10; Lori Hamilton 6-!0-22·
Stacey Ritter, 1-1-10-)5; Michell~
Crouse, 3-3-9; Kim Sowers, 0-1-1;
Gena Norris, 1-2-0·8· Ginger
Smilh, 2-0-4. TOTALS' 19·4•28·
78.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
38, Walsh 35.

Mercyhurst breaks out to hand
Rio Grande 93-79 ]oss on road
.

•

I

•

HANDS TO REA VEN - Eastena's Randy Kaylor (30) and an
unidentified teammate reach for the ball while keeping Southern's
Rassell Singleton (behind them and leaping) away from It during
Tuesday nlgb_t's game at Southern High Scliool's Charles w, Hay.
man Gymnastum,
where the
Tornadoes won 73-45.
.
.
. .
.

.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
• Meigs jumped out to a 21-14
lead at the end of the frrst period,
and went on 111 post a 78-61 victory
over Federal Hoc~g in Tri-Valley
Conference basketball action Tuesday evening at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
·
The win gives the Marauders ·a
4-4 mark ov~l and a 4-3 record
in the TVC.
eral Hocking drops
to 1-7 overall and is 1-6 in the confereqce.
·
·
·
The win was a costly one for the
Marauders. They lost the services
of guards John Bentley and Eric
·wagner because of injuries. Bentley went down with a sprained
ankl~ early in the second period. It
is unknown how serious his injury
is. Wa~er, who suffered a broken
bone m the lit!le finger of his
shooting hand (right hand), is .
expected to be out at least a month.
Jack Slanley led the Marauders
to the seven point ftrst period lead
with eight points. Brad Bentz
popped in 10 ftrst period points to·
keep the Lancers in the contest.
Trevor·Harrison scored eight
second period points as the
Marauders increased the lead to 4430 at the half. Bentz kept up his hot
shooting with eight in the second ,
period giving him 18 of the
Lancers 30 fli'St half points.
With the injuries to both of the
Marauders starting guards, Federal
Hocking tried to battle back into
the contest. But even without Bentley and Wagner, the Marauders
outscOred the Lancers 34-31 in the
second half to post 'ihe 17 point
win.
Hru:rison picked up the scoring
pace after the loss of his two teammates with 17. second half points.
Bentz added 14 in the half 10 keep
the Lancers in the conieS( But the
Marauders were able to post the
easy victory.
Harrison led the Marauders with
27 points. Trevor was joined in
double figures by Stanley who
scored 16 points and Jay Cremeans
with 10. Wagner added eight
poims, Todd Dill seven, Bentley
five, ,lirad Anderson and Todd Dill
addeil two points each and Chris
Knight one. Aaron Drummer and
Bobby Johnson played for the
Marauders but did not S(:ore.
Meigs hit 31 of 61 from the
floor including three o.f tell from
three JXlint range for 49%. Meigs
cashed in on 13 of 19 from the line
for 68$. Meigs pulled in 38
rebounds with Stanley and Cremell!IS .having ~ood games grabbing 10 l!nd nine respectively.
Meigs turned the ball over 17
times, had seven steals ted by Harrison with .two, The Marauders had
eight assists with Stanley and
Knight getting two each . Meigs
was called for 17 fouls.
·
Bentz took the games scoring
honors leading the Lancers with 32
points. Nathan'Gildcrs. added 11
and Myron Hart 10 fer the Lanccn.
No other statistics were available
on the l.ancels.
·
In the reserve eonlelt Pedenl
Hocking pt)sted a 46-42 win over
the Liale Marluden. Chid Nelson
led the winners with 16 roints,
Travis G~ toot the games scoring honors to lead Meigs with :t7 . .
. . .

.•

Other Marauder scorers' in~luded
Adam Krawsczyn with nine, Heath
Hudson and Jason Hart added five
each. Scou Peterson added three,
Brett Newsome two and Benny
Ewing one.
In other TVC action Tuesday
evening Belpre remained in first
place with a 78-76 -win ·over
Alexander. Miller slipped past
Trimble 70-64 and Wellston
defeated Nelsonville-Yorlc 77-56.
,..

j

' ·.

•

Dill 3-0-1=7, Brad Andersbn t-O0=2, Chris Knight 0-0-1=1, Kyle
Simpson 1-0-0=2. TOTALS - ·
28·3·13=78 ·

MEIGS
(21-P-17-17=78)
Jaclc Stanley 7-0-2=16, Eric
Wagner 0-2•2=8, Jay Cremeans 40-2=10, Trevor Harrison 11·05..27, John Bentley 1-1:0=5, Todd

FEDERAL HOCKING
(14-16-17-14=61)
Brad Bentz 11 -2-4=32, Brian
Bennett 2-2·0=10,1Nathan Gilders
5-0-1=11, Mike Mollohan 2-0-0=4.
Jeff Fury t-0-0=2, Mike Lucas 1·00=2. TOTALS -11-4-5:61
~·

...

.,.

·.. •

University of Rio Gninde senior
co-captains Jeff Brown and Troy
Donaldson each had 20 points and
. dominated the Redmen rebounding
Tuesday, but Rio Grande emerged
with a 93-79 loss to Mercyhurst
College Tuesday at Erie, Pa.
Th~ Lakers narrowly outrebounded the Redmen 44,41 and
connected on more field goal
atte'mpts to edge the visitors in the
game's ciQsing minutes. Rashe
Revie~ alld Kerry Baker each .hit
27 points to lead the Mercyliurst
ganie..LaMont Harris had 12 points
to round.out Rio Grande's individual scoring. .
·
The Redlnen were 43.1 percent
from the field ~31-72, 6·20 from
the three for 30 percent) and had 11
of its 19 tries at the free lhrow line
connect for 57.9 percent The L.aJc.

'•

Vinton County was. idle.
t,ieigs is idle this Friday, the
Marauders wiD host Athens on Satutday. Federal Hocking will host
Miller.

'

!

.

..\.

ers shot 49.4 peri:ent (38-77, 6-18
from the outside for 33.3 percent)
· and was 73 .3 percent at the line
(11'15).
.
.
Mercyhurst improved to 8-3 on
the season, while the Redmen are
12-3. Rio Grande renews Mid-Ohio
Conference action Saturday at
Shawnee State.
Box seore:
MERCYHURST (93) - Rashe
Reviere, 12-1-0-27; Kerry Baker,.
5-5·2-27; Gerry Baule, 7-3-17;
Jamie Houston, 4-1-9; Terry Bush,
2-2-6; JeffFaflik, 2-0-4; Tony Red.ding, 0-3•3. TOTALS 32-6-11-93•
RIO GRANDE (79) -Troy
DOnaldson, 8-4-20; Jeff Brown, 52-4·20; LaMont Harris, 5-2-121;
Man Powell, 1-2-0-8; Walter
• Stephens, 3-1-7; Kyle Schroer, 0-2.0-6; Lyndell Snyder, 3-0-6.
TOTALS 25-6-11-79.

Jacobson wants same success
for Horizon that Chill enjoys

.

Meigs boys post 78-61 vict~ry over Trimble

Ridar 99, St. Francil, NY 61
Rutacn 64, Princ«on 47
StJohn 'a A6, Providm.ce 76
:W•ancr 68, Robm MIJI'ris S9

INTERNATIONAL
MOTOR
. ,. SPORTS ASSOCIATION - Named

RASTERN

TAKING AIM ..... Sc!athern frontman Rusell SlniJeton (42)
leaps before taking the s1tot in front or an unidentirled Easten player en route to a 14-point efl'ort during Tuesday night's iame against
visiting Eastern, which the Tornadoes won 73-45,
·

Scoreboard
: Transactions

Jeff Stethem .had 14 for Eastern,
while Brian Bowen added eight,
Jason Sheets four and Ryan Buckley four.
,
·
Southeni goes to Gallipolis Saturday, while Epstem hostS' River
Valley Friday..

'

Redwomen po$t first MOC win
of s~ason with ~efeat of Walsh

i$outhern records 73-45 victory over v~siting archrival East~rn
:::

f

I

.•• f

MEN'S WINTER
JACKETS

Reduced

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)·
Jacobson said. "That's the. one
The Columbus Horizon continues thing that stuns me. We've got a
to have a hard ti.me drawing fans great facility . I" don't kn9w. I'm
and' the team's president says if · perp,lexed.
.
·
things don't change soon, he's like'I think part of it is that the
ly to ~with represenialives from community doesn't lcnow how
other cities about selling the club.
good the basketball is in the CBA.
Eli Jacobson had said when he It's the second-best b'asketball in
brought the Contineiltal Basketball 'the world after the NBA."
Association team from Charleston,
The team's play over the years
W.Va. to Columbus for the 1989- hasn't helped it draw people. The
1990 season that he would give it Horizon has yet to make the play.
four years to develop a spectator offs in its three·year history and
base. The team has averaged less has stumbled out of the gate this
than 3,000 fans per game in each of season. with a 2-IS record.
its rii'St three years and this season, · · Jacobson is hoping the size of
after seven home games, the aver- the crowds will increase after New
age attendance was.1,215.
' · Year's Day.
· "We're doing everyt~ing we · "December isn't always the
··can do from putting the·JII3llluct on grealest month in the world for tis.
the floor to marlceting, • Jacobson Our best months at the fairgrounds
said just before Ghristmas. '·rr the were always January, February and
people resJ!Ond, then we're on the March after football season and the
way. Buttf the people's choice is holidays." he said.
they don't want 11, you really have
"Assuming we start to win
to seriously consider moving it some ballgiiiiCs, it' II!Ould be much
somewhere else. We won't beat our easier to get a clearer picture on
heads against the wall indefinite· aitendance. I know we have had
ly." '
much better media coverage than in
The team movj:d from· the State other' years."
Fairgrounds Coliseum to ihe n~w
Jacobson won't blame tile
Ohio Center downtown this season, Columbus Chill for drawing away
~ut the atlendanoe figures show the potential fans for ·his team.- even
move hasn't helped the team draw though the East Coast Hockey
people.
League team has sold out the
"Everybody said bring the team 5,700-seat arena at the fairgrounds
downtpwn and we've done that," for all of its dates this season.

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M ~igs 'girls pound Trimble 79-24

LADIES~

grabbing seven. Meigs had 23
By DAVE HARRIS
slcals
led by Blackwell with seven,
Sentinel Correspondent
Verna
Compston six and Missy
Meigs jumped out to a 26-7 lead
at the end o( the first period and Sisson with five.
Chastity Antle led the Lady cats
rolled to a 79-24 win over Trimble
in girls· TVC basketball action with eight and Beth Koons added
seven. Trimble hit nine of 34 for
.
. Mondayevening.
Tlie Marauders are now 6-1 27% and hit five of 10 from the
overall ind in the TVC, while line for SO% . .
Meigs rolled to a 21-8 win the
Trimble is 1-8 and 0-7 in the TVC.
Meigs wiD host Soumem Thursday reserve game; Erica Robie, i\nne
evening and Eastern Saturday after- Brown and Billfe Butcher led
Meigs with four.
noon.
-Meigs roured out to a 43-161!lad
.
Meigs
at the half and increased the lead to
(26·17-19-17=79)
..
~2-18 heading into the final period.
Joy
O'Brien
~-0-2•12,
Amber
Missy Sisson hlid an outstanding .
game for the .Marauders with 18 Balc~well 2-0-2=4, Chrissy Taylor
points, wb.ile Verna Compston 3-0-3=9, Katrina Turner 2-0-I=5.
Heather Hudson 1-0-2=4, Verna
added·l7 and Joy O'Brien bad 12;
Compston
7-{).3=17, Lee Hender· ·
Mei·gs hit 31 of 67 from the
son
~0-0=0,
Lori Kelly 2-0-4=8,
floor for 46%, and hit 17 of 23
.
Missy
Sisson
8-0-2=18, Vanessa
from the line for 74%. Meigs
Compston
1-{).0=2,
Totals - 31pulled in 26 rebounds with Kelly . 0-17:79

DRESSES

~

PRIC

2UCIS
LADIES SWElTERS

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Marietta College's

Trimble
(7-9•2-6=29)
Caldwe.. Closing in
Tammy Leniger 0-1-0.3, Kim
·on 1,000-polnt
Pallo 1·0·0=2. Tonya Trace 0-0. 2=2, Chasty Antle 3-0-2=8, Jenny
Jeff Caldwell, a foniier basket- Shank 1-0-0=2, Beth Koons 3-0, ball star at Eastern and Southern 1=7, TOTALS 8-1-5-~9
High Schools and the son of Jim
apd Sally Caldwell of Racine is just
27 pOints away from hitting the · OOMPD to sponsor
· coveted I ,boo-point mlU'k for his youth yolkyballleague
college career.
Caldwell, a senior point guard
The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District
for the Marietia CoHeac Pioneer.. In Gallipolis will bci SJIOIII«inn a
has .a shot at bittin( the mart bump, set and sptice· volleyball
tonight al Musldnpm College, and lea$ue for girls in~~ 7-12
if not will most ileliniloly hit the begmning Salllrdays
Jan. 16
man: this w•nd In ~home pmo to Feb. 2Hrom 3 10 5 p.m.
Salllrday afternoon aaainlt WJttenThe competition is for athletes
nor currenaly Involved in bigh
has had IJUICS of 34,
IChool ath1etiCa. f:&lt;ir funher infor27 and 29 pl!int.s already lbil ICII·
mation, contact Bmt Bostic at the
son, putting the nwlc within reaeh
park~fice at 614-446-4612, ex"t.
this week• .
256
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weclnelday, January &amp;, 1893

•
.

.•

By The Bend
/

(First of a series of. regular
columns from the Meigs County
Board or Education)
By CHERYL CROSSAN and
' ROBERT HUDAK
Meigs County Psychologisis .
As sc~ool psycholtigisiS for the,
Meigs County Board of Education
we hear numerous parenial concerns. As a way of addressing as
many pareniS as possible, it is our
intention to publish regulal reporu
in this newSJl!lper. The fust article
will address· the topic of hom ework. Specifically, we would like
to discuss why homework is imporiant, how to al'range for it to be
done, and how to motivate the
child who is reluctant to do homework.
Why homework:
· Children attend school just 13
percent of !heir time, leaving pareniS responsible' for the majority of
learning that ultimately talces place.
For example, a recent study
showed that over .one-half of lhe
,difference in siandardized test
scores could be 'directly attributed
'to parent panicipation in school
related activities at home. In addition, througO homework you can
increase school success, independence, and discipline.
How to do it:
Homework should not he a
choice, it should be done every
night. If .a child does not have any
work assigned from school, then he
or she should do self-assigned
work for review. Remember that
organization can be the difference
between passing and failing.
Homework should be done at the
same time every day of lhe week.
· For example, if a child plays a
spon after school on Tuesdays and
Thursdays, then schedule ))ornework for 6 p.m. on those days, and
at 4:30 on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday. Have a designated
work area away from distractions
and use the same place every night.
Also schedule other activities at the
same time each day such as balhs
aild meals. Use an alarm clock for
younger children to aid in concentnltion; or to tell t!lem when to talce
breaks. Allow your child to talce a
break .approximately every ~0 minutes.' Discuss what skiUs your child
is tryin!l. to learn before he or she
begins ·Homework; such as memorization or problem solving. Understanding the skill beins used helps
in m1derstandin·g the reason for
homework.
.
Review your child's homework:
every night after it is completed
because this aids remembering.
Finally, relax in th.e mornings and
send your child to school in a good

--

WEDNESDAY
1 MIDDLEPORT - JaJluary Bible
study at Hope Baptist Cburch will
be held through Friday.
CHESTER - The Chester Gar.. den Club will meet Wednesday at 8
p.m. at the home of Maida Mora.
Guest speaker'will be Mary Powell,
director of the Meigs County Park
District. She will speak on " Beautiful Country." Interested guests are
welcome.
1

Ingels announce
birth of son

We Have
Furnace
Filters,
Furnace Pipe,
Furnace
Cement and
Elbows for
Your Winter
Heating
Needs.

rme

Smith anniversary
celebration slated

Students invited to dance .

PICKENS

HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

..

COUPON

.FREE HEARING TESTS

Workshoppl(lnned

'donated $50,000 to help open a pres~de Feb. 20 over a 40-float
centerforabusedchildren.
extravaganza put toget~er by the
The 'Exc~ange Club-Tina Turner. Krewe of Endymion, Ed Muniz,
Child Abuse Center is expected to . captain of the parade Club, said
open next month in a renovated Tuesday.
win!\ of an old hospital building.
Endymion 's celebrity grand .
The 53 -year-old rock star, a marshals last year were Kenny
native of Nutbush, told of an Rogers and Patri~k Duffy.
·
impoverished childhood and her
ith 1,300 members, it is New
wrenching years with her abusive Orleans' biggest Carnival organizaformer husband, Ike Turner, in her lion.
autobiography " 1, TinaY ·
Her ,hits include " Private
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lucie
Dancer' ' ·and . with Ike .Turner, Salhany, who developed a "Star
"Proud Mary."
Trek" for a new generation and
-expanded the ialk show audience
NEW ORLEANS (AP) wiili" Arsenio Hall, has been nanied
Steven Seagal is gearing up .for president of Fox television, becom.another fearless role: celebrity mg the first woman to head a net·
grand marshal of one of New work.
Orleans' most opulent Mardi Gras
Ms. Salhany, 46, takes over at
Fox
Broadcasting Co. from Jamie
par~~~:\w of such action movies Kellner,
who .resigned on Monday
as " Under Siege," . " Marked for after shepherding the " fourth netDeath" and " Hard to Kill " will work" from iiS beginning in 1986.
. ..

Mel,s/Galla

b_y

Bed(JI$ HEAR NG AID CENTER

I

A financial aid workshop will · I
be held Jan. 18 at 7 p.m. at the I
Meigs High School library for all
Meigs County seniors and parel!ts.
Guest speakers will lie John Hilfof
the University of Rio Grande on
the Financial Aid Form (FAF), and
Melany Greenwood of Bank &lt;;&gt;ne
onstudentgraniSandloans.

FRIDAY, JA1111. 8, 199~9:00.11oon
I• Dr. A.JacbN'Ialles' OHice
110 .............., b!Mm

BELTOIIE HEAliNG AID CElmR

II .

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1312 Eastel'll Av••• (Route 71, hllipolis
614- 446·l744

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13, 1993-9:00 a.m.•4:00 p.m.
.•

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wll H firM ,., 1 LlteuH
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Anyone who has trouble hearing or ooderslanding {DilYWlion ~ inviled to have a1
FREE hearing tell to see f Ihis_prC!blem {On be helllfd. Bring Ibis·toupon with you for
ytlll' FREE HEARING,TEST. a 575.00 value.
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Cliristmas •
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THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

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2 UCKS lADIES' WEAR 40% OFF
MEN~s wistERN SHIRTS 20% OFF

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MILLFIELD - Th~re will be a
round and squlll'e dance Saturday
and Jan. 23 from 8·11 p.m. at the
Rus~eli .Building in Millfield.
Mustc. W!U be provided by Out or
the Blue. John RusseU will be the
caller.PubliC'invited.
'

lllll.41CI

••••rty ..

111 , .... St.
, . . 1. . . . . .,

......

-CIIilf
.ICI1161 ··

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wins in .Nielsen ratings

!?-2:.

rou

..

Small, meat-eating dinosaur may have
been one ~f the first, scjentists say
.

'

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated PreiS Writer
·WASHINGTON - The 225
million-year-old fossil of a meateating dinosaur found in the
foothills of the Andes .may OP:D up

few steps remov~ from lhe comSereno said his U.S.-Argentine
mon ancestor of all dinosaurs.
team discovered the s pe~imen in
"This may be as close as we Oc10ber 1991 d_uring an e~pedition
ever come to that common ances- to Argentina ' s fossil-rich
tor," Sereno said Tuesday at a lschigualasto Valley in .tl)e barren
National Geographic Society news foothills of the Andes Mountains.
conference:announcing his find·
The "dawn stealer" name
ings.
derives from its appearance at lhe
. Named the "Eoraptor,'' or dawn of the dinosaur age and its
"dawn stealer," lhe small carni- small size, which probably forced it .
vore lived 160 million years before td use guile rather than power to
its giant cousin, lhe Tyrannosaurus. take iiS prey.
.
Mich.ael Brett-S.urman, paleon"It would have been a crafty
tologist at the Smithsonian •s . hunter, probably eating small aniNational Museum of Natural Histo- mals and snatching lhe young of
ry, said the fossil of the dinosaur, larger species;" Sereno said. He
which measures just 40 inches described the 25-pound ~tile as a
from its nose to lhe tip of its tail, is "fleer-footed, animal with hollow
. "scientifically priceless."
bones .... It was quite a ~tor. •'
He said it "forces us to rcdeljne
Sereno's discovery .1s described
the meat-eating dinosaur group" in the Jan. 7 issue of the British
and gives credence to theories !hat journal Nature and the January
thefust dinosaurs were small, car- issue of National Gco&amp;raJ&gt;Iiic mag•
nivorous, t\vo-lcgged beasiS.
azine.
·

secreis into the origins of the
. species, scientisiS say.
·
The diSCoverer, paleontologist
Paul Sereno pf lhe .University of
Chicago, sai4 lhe dog,sized, two' legged reptile is lhe most primitive
dinosaur ever found, and is just a

.Christmas poetry focus
:of literary club meeting
group review of "Jane Eyre" at the
May 12 meeting. Various questions
to be discussed were presented to
each member.
~bers and three guests,
Rosem~ry ~oper, Sister Fidilis
Bell and Rev. Grace Kee answered
roll Call with an original Christmas
verse. A social time was enjoyed
by the group.

!'Poetry o( Christmas" was presented by .Jeanette Thomas when
the Middleport Literary Club met
recently a1 the home or Phyllis
Haekett.'
. Included· were the following:
·"On the Morning of Christ's Nativ. 'ity", John Milton; "Christmas
• Th;es", Raben Frost; ''The Oxen",
. Thomas Hardy; "Mistletoe", Walter DeLa Mare; "'fl1e Boy who
Laughed at Santa Claus", Ogden
'Nash; "Susie's Leuu from Santa",
;Mark Twain; "A Visit From St
Nicholas", Clement Moore; and
Daffodil",
William
·"The
WMi'wotth. -Abd illclltded in the
prosram were excerpts from
Shakespeare, John Greenleaf Whit~ ier, a Fanny Farmer Christmas
&lt;Dinner menu ; ·and customs of
Chrislmas from iround the world.
Betsy Parsons presided over tile ·
meeting which opened with the
Club Collect. ·Phyllis Hackett
announced !hat the club would do a
'

2 PRICE

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~2•9•0•11~0U._H.•SI-CO•I-D-.
~ _______.
.._DL•IN~
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NOW IN PROGRESS
.
.' .

CHAPMAN
SHO-S
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

January
Ice. Breakers

,-

I

'

•

ATLANTA (AP)- Former
.President Carter will preside over a
.tharity au&lt;;tion in Colorado in spite
.of the state's ,new Jaw a~st gay .
fights, sayin11 it might help oppo- \
neniS of the ~we.
.
,
The auctl(ln at Crested Butte,
Colo., will liighlight a $2,500-aperson celebrity ski Dip Jan. 20-24.
All proceeds will go to Carter's:Atlanta Project, an effon to help
poor people in Atlanta.
Carter noted that the State's ski
resort areas voted heavily against
Colorado's anti-~y referendum.
"I agree wtth the mayor of
Aspen, who said !hat when we had
.racial troubles in the South, people
didn't boycou us, they came and
tri¢ to help. I lltink this will help
'the'people fighting that law," he ·
said.
Among the items to be auc·
tioned is a chess set and case that
Caner made himself. It is his sec•
ond public offering of his wood-.
.working. The ·rirst, a set of four
·chairs made to raise money for the
Carter Center .in Atlanta, went for
$41,000 at Solheby's in New YOrk.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)- It's
' ·been 30 years since ~ debut of a
~io.-ing television riltture series,
. 'Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom," and longtime host Jim
Fowler says a lot has changed.
"We weren ' t sure we could
even sustain enough programs of
: interest for a year tn the very
· begiMing,". said Fowler. He was a
: sidekick to original host Marlin
· l'erkins, and took over when
·ferkins died in 1986.
:• •'Back then we were just beginning to talk about ecology and
:~ystems. I don't think anybody
·J'oresaw in lh011e days how rapidly
· the world was goin!lto change and
.how we'd lllll'l lostng species aild
. ·. habirat " he said.
.
The first show was broadcast
·Jan. 6, 1963; the award· winning
series ended jlroduction in 1991
.tfter 329 qli IIOCiel
.
· "What Jeilly is IIIIIZina is how
'Wild .KinJ.dom' il sucb 1 house:bold word, • Fowler ald.
: He conllnuca his work with
·wildlife as a corrupondont for
'NBC's "Today" show aiul as
eucutive lllrect'« d the newly ~:(eo
~~f Omaha's 'WUdlife

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Amy Fisher movie

. LOS ANGEL!'l'S (AP) W:oman," both, !he TV ,movie IOd
By MARK EVJE
he ~d. 'I'm Santa Claus." '
ABt's telling of the " Long Island the series premiere. CBS had a 13.2
Associated Press Writer
Mrs. Be!lven saw a man's head
!--...~- Lolita" story,s tarring Drew Barry- rating, ABC a 13.0 and. NBC a
- OCEJ\NSIDE, Cilif. - so·how and.lipPCr torso behind Christmas
more, proved the most popular of . 10. 1.
·
does Santa Claus get down those stoc~tng~ still hanging from the
the three network versions.
Each ratings point represents
·
chimneys? Frank Morales tried it' mantle and called p6lice.
· "The Amy Fisher Story," -93 J,000homes.
and got stuck - upside down, his
Officers surnmoiled firefighters,
broadcast Sunday opposite CBS '
In thenetwork news ·ratings,
head and hands dangling inside the , who bad to chip away part of the
· version, was the lhird bighest·rated ABC won wil)l an '11.3. CBS had a
fueplace ofa stranger's house.
inside of the fireplace to free
show on television last week, !he 10.8andNB(J a 9.7.
"It was hilarious," said. home· Morales.
. ·
·
A.C. Nielsen Co. said Tuesday.
Here are lhe top 10 shows, their
owner Margie Beavers, 56. " If it
" Instead of thanking them·,
•s •·Amy Fisher: My network and rating:. " 60 Minutes,"
N
B
C
hadn't bee11 so hilarious I would (Morales) became uncoop'eia,live·
Story," which got a jlunp on lhe CBS, 27.3·, " Murder, She W""'•"
'"""
haye. been scared out of my wi.·ts."
and combative," said polic~Sgt. •
competition by airing nt;c. 28, tied CBS, ,~0.5 ; ' 'The Amy Fi~her
Morales landed at the bottom of Reggie Grigsby. ~. •He had to be
for fourth place with ABC' s Story (ABC Su.~d.ay ~tght
the chimney, where ,his waist subdued and talcen into custody.'·'
' 'Monday Nigh! Football.' ' CBS ' Movte), A.~· !9.5; Ktny FISher:
became wedged, with a loud thump
"It wasn't f\lllny until !he police ·
"Casualties of Love: The 'Long ' My ~tor~ (NBC M~n~y Ntght
andbeganholleringforhelp,awak- got here, !hen it was real funny.''
IslandLolira' Story," wasNo. 11.
~ovtes ), NB&lt;;: 19,1, Mo~~ay
ening Mrs. Beavers and her 62- Mrs. Beavers said.
.
All three .hovies told the story N1~ht Football: ABC, 19;!; Dr.
y~-old husband, Larry, shortly
"I think ill the police officers
of the Long Island teen-ager who Qum_n, Med.'cme Woman. )CBS
after 2 a.m. Monday. They thought who were here rook a picture of it
shot lhe wife of her alleged lover Spec1al Movie), CBS, 18.2, Sugar
· •it was someot)C at their front door.
home with them.· They all said it
Joey Bunafuoco.
' B.owl ," ABC:, 18 .2; "Home
"I JaJI into die living room and was the funniest thing they had
· . In lhe overall ratings, CB~ won !!Dproveme~~·
ABC , .
was going 10 the doo~ when I real- ever seen."
wuh help from " 60 Minutes," the . 1 R_oseanne: . ABC, 16 .~: Dr.
.ized (the voice) wasn't coming
Morales, 42, was talcen to Tri'most-watched of the week, and Qumn, Medtcme Woman, CBS,
from the doOr," Mrs. Beavers said. City Medical Center fiX' a checkup
STOCKING STUFFER - This is an Oceanside, CaUf., Pblice from "Dr. Quinn, Medicine 15.9.
"I yelled, 'Where are you? Are and then jailed in lieu of $7,000 Department photo of alleged buralar Frank Morales, 42, stuck .bi:the
in m~ ltQuse?' He said he v.;as .bail for .investigation of'resisting chimney ·a t an Oceanside residence where be was arrested early
m my chimney, al'ftl then I satd, arrestand second-llegree burglary.
Monday mornin11. He was booked in the Vista, Calif., jail on charges
'What are you doing in. there?' and
·
. or burglary and resistina arrest. (AP Photo)

People in the news

Coli Toll Free 1·800-634-5265 for an lmJIIediale Appointmenl

Babybomto
jailed woman

FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - A
baby has been born to parents now
in the Hancoi;k County jail on murder charges; authorities said ....,
Brenda Dougherty, 20, gave
birth to a boy on Friday at Blan·
chard Valley Hospital .
1
She and her husbantl, John
Dougheny, 19, bolh of Napoleon,
are c~arged with aggravated murder and aggravated robbery in the
slaying of Rose Marohn. If convicted, they could be sentenced to
dealh.
John Dougherty' s brother,
Mark, 22·, of Napoleon, faces simi· THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Metgs 'lar chargell. He also could be senRACINE - The Racine Ameri- County 'pomona Grange will meet tenced to .death if convicted of
can Legion Post 602 will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock shootinjl Ms. Marohn, an assistant
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post Springs Grange HaU. Rock Springs supervtsor al Basal Cleaning 8t.
home.
G.range will be the host.
Maintenance.
•
Mrs . Dougherty ha's been
POMEROY - The F:O.E. Ladies
SATURDAY
returned lil the jail, while lhe baby,
Auxiliary NO . 2 I 71 will meet
BURLINGHAM - The Blirling- who i~ healthy, remains at the hasThursday at 7:30 p.m. A potluck bam MQdem. Woodmen of America . pital.
.
dinner will be he!• at 7 p.m. There will hold a soup supper (oyster, .
Henry County Judge Ken RohrS
will be a ~uest ~ake r on "The bea11 and vegetable) on Saturday at was expected to sign ~n order
Aging Eye.'
·
. 6:30 p.m. at lhe Modem Woodman • granting Mrs. Dougheny's parents,
hall. Tho se attending bring . a Esperanza ·and Emanuel -Durart of
MIDDLEPORT - 'Fhe Meigs dessert or salad. Officers will be Deshler, temporary custody of the
'unior High Academic Boosters elected. Everyone welcome. .
child. ·
·
. ·
wiU meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the .
cafeteria at the junior high .
LOITRJDGE • Country Music·
Ntght at the Lottridge .Commurtity
LOTIRIDGE • The Lottridge Center will be Saturday from 7
Community .Center Association p.m. to midnight. All bands are
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m . welcome. Refreshments will be
Everyone welcome.
available. Everyone welcome.

.

Wdl be

1

1

AB~'s

'

L anders

POMEROY • There will be a
Sugar Run School meeting ·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the
Meigs County Chamber of Com- group of.AA .wiU meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart (,:atholic
merce Office in Pomero.y.
Church. Call 992-5763 for infor. RACINE - Organizational meet- mation .
in g for Southern Local School
FRlDAY
Board, Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
high school.
·
..
·

..

Page--6

Ann

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that eveni. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

Wednesday, January 6, 1993

Oelr AD I •t+n: Think you
I aJ&amp;o Wll!ted to correct a swefiX' CIICOUIIIin8 railers toret*IIPIIu
ment you made a few weeks ago.
that lialhol COIIIUI!tplion by colleF
Ybu said you've been writing your
mood. This will facilitate learning·
·students is a serious dueat to tbe
column
for 37 years. It must ·be at
better than any amount of cramnation's healt!l llld safety. Theae .
least
41
years because I wrote to
ming !hat can be done at that time.
.m the YOUIII people who will be
you in 1952.
How to motivate your child:
running our IXIIDe)' in a few )'CIIll,
Thanks, Ann, for letting me in· •
Do your own homework (paying
and we eaa't alford to !011e them.
form
you that evell though most of
bins, grocery list, letters, while
Your reply 10 "A Fonner Pany
your advice is wry helpful"you are
your child is working. Keefing in
Animal" cited !IOIIIe aJarining facts
not always righL •• S.C., EUREKA .
mind what developments stage
about eoUeae drinkins. You pointed
SPRINGS, ARK.
.
'
your child is in wiU assist in learnout that the total amount college · a.t our institutions of hiah&amp;r
ing. From ages .birlh to four years
DEAR
ARK.:
I
started
writing
studeniS in the United StileS spend learning lOll in their communities.
· o~ge children learn best through
on
booze is $5.5 billion a year. What .. VIVIAN L. SMITH, M.S.\v ., !his column on Oct. 16, 19".
touch. From four to seven they are
does that huge nount of money ACTING DIRBCTOR, CENTER That was 37 years ago. The "Ann
in lhe "magic" stage, and have a
who answered your leu«
. buy? WeU, here are some starlling FOR SUBSTANC~ ABUSE Landen"
rich fantasy life. So let your child's
was
Rulh
Crowley,
who died in late
. · figures:
PREVEN'ijON
stuffed ahimal ri:ad with you, or for
Augustofl955. YOID'•pologies are .
One study found that alcohol
DEAR"'VIVIAN SMITH: While . ~epced.
· you. At this srage, playing is very
.
.
tmportant work. •
consumption is one of. the major many readers will be shocked I Forget lo save some of your · ·
NICHOLAS TODD INGELS
reasons for absenteeism among. by these stttistics, they are riot
From seven to 1I children enter
favorite A1111 La11tkrs coiiUMS?
li cbncrete stage, and at this time
college students. That same study surprising to me.
. love to learn !isiS of things) ly age
, showed that 25 .percent of student
My mail is an unerring indicator "Nuggets a11d lHJozlts" is tlie ,
J2; they have usually passed. to a
deaths are IIS90Cialed wilh alcohol. of what is happening in our society. IIIISW~r. Selld a se/f-addnsstd,lollg,.
former style of learning and things
Also, alcohol is iJtvolved in 90 I have been aware fer several yean biiSineSS•sUt tiiW/opt lllid a c/tttk • '
become very black and white. The
percent of campus rapes. Aecording that alcoholism among ·16- to 28- or mo~tey ordtr for-$5 (litis illcllldts •
York and s·ally (Radford)
child sees cause and effect relation·
·to the 1991 College Alcohol Sur- year-olds is-a serious public health postJJge IJIId lttJN1li11g) to: Nuggets,
c/o ANt Ltuttkrs, P.O: Boz 11562,
ships, but they can be faulty. For Ingels , New Haven ,. W.Va., vey, 70 percent of administrators problem.
example, if lhe child swdies laying announce the birlh of their son, . said alcohol is a mllior contriburor
Chicago,
,'l/1 . 606/J -0562. (/11
While some preach moderation,
down one night, then gets a 100· Nicholas Todd Ingels on Oct 28 at
CIJNida, se114 $6.)
. to campus violence and is a facror . I'm for total abstinence. Those who
percent on a spelling test, they may Holzer Medical Center. ·
;J'he infant weighed seven in 40 percent of academic problems. don't touch the stuff won't have 10 .
lhink laying down works. wonders.
Regarding our hopes. for tomor- worry about how much is 100 much
Help your child explore cause and pounds and one ounce and ·20 and
one-half
inches
long:
row:
Nlore than 7 percent of litis or when 10 call it quits; .
effect Help your child un'derstand
Maooal
grandparents
are
year's
freslunan class -- more than
Dear Ann Landers: Forty:OOe
the_goal ?f the particular home·
Nancy
Radford,
Rollin
and
"120,000
studeniS
-will
drop
out
years
ago, I wrote to you when ·
work assi gnment. For example,
Pomeroy.
·
because of drii\king. Between I was considering marrying my
why should they .do math subtnlc. Paternal grandparents are 240,000 IOd 360,000 of our current husband. You 1.were against the
tion homework? Not only to go to
coUege, but so they can understand. George and Mary Ingels, New 12 million college students wJil maniage because he didn't have the
time and money and survive in a Haven , W.Va. Paternal great- · eventually die of alcohol-related edqcational background I had. You . ·
Virginia causes.
grandmother · is
grocery store.
·
warned me that it would never work.
Somerville,
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va. .
How much homework:
With t~e help of Surgeon
WeD, I wanted to teU you that we
Although th·e amount of
General An!Qnia R. Novello, the were married in 1952 and celelnted
assigned homework varies, -one
U.S. Center for Substance Abuse our 40th amiversary last July. We •
authority stated that as a general
Prevention has developed "Put on have three
children and wiD
rule for second and lhird graders,
the
Brakes,
•
·
an
edi!Citional
and
soon
have
our
eighth
grandchild. I
you should expect one-half to one
infomwionil
.
campaign
·
desigDed
believed
ill
my
husband
bec111se he
hour. In fourth, fifth and sixth
·tb help adm~, facitlty llld was hard-.working, sincere and
grade you can expec! one to two
studenlll create safer, healthier llld t0181ly bUStwonhy. He has nem- lei
Glenn
and
Sara
Smith
of
Nor·
hours nightly. Sevenlh and eighth
more challenging environments. me down.
mal,
Ill.,
former
Meigs
County
resiwill probably have one and onedents,
will
observe
their
501h
wedhalf to two and one half hours a
ding anniversary Sunday, Jan. 10.
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith, who now ·
..
Ninth lhrough 121h graders will
live·
at I402 E. College Ave., Apt.
·
·
probably have a minimum of two
1
19-J;,
Normal,
Ill.,
6176l,lived
in
Meigs
County
high
school
stuPat
Sinift.
HOcking
College stohours. Remember 'homework p
·
deniS
are
invited
.to
attend
a
dance
den
IS
are
also
ipvited
to
auend.f
oiTleroy until eight years a11o at
assignments are not written in
Invited are students rom
' stone, so talk to your child. s teach- whtch ume they mov~ to Illinois to be held at the Hocking College
to
be
near
their
daughter,
Donna
Recreation
Center
on
Saturday,
Alexander,
A!hens, Bern Union, .
er if they are working much more Evans, and herfamily. ·
'
Jan.
30,
.under
sponsorship
of
lhe
Chillicothe,
Crooksville, Eastern, ·
or less than litis ~very night :
Smith worked for many years at honor society, Phi Theta Kappa, Federal Hoelting, Gallia, Lancaster,
Additional information about the Davis Ice Plant. He was was · and the Drafting and Design Honor Logan • Meigs, Miller, Morgan,
·
NelsonviUe-York, New Lexington,
homework is available at your local known in this area as "Smitty". Club.
Mrs.
Smith
is
the
former
Sara
BurThe
dance,
entitled
"Dedicated
Vinton
County, Racine Soulhern,
public library. Two books. you
.
det\e
arid
she
spent
many
.years
to
You"
is
a
fund
raising
event
for
Sheridan
Tri-County JVS , and
should look for are "Hassle-Free
babysitting
ehil!lren.
the
two
clubs
and
an
opportunity
Trimble
high
schools. Additional 1
Homework". by Cecil and Faith
They
are·
,
the
parents
of
three
for
high
school
seniors
to
familiarinformation
may
be o~tain~ from
Clark, and "Homework Without
children,
Duane
Smith,
West
Jefize
themselves
wilh
Hoelting
ColJaney
Boullear
or
Net! Hmton at
Tears" by Lee Canter.
ferson;
Jan
Jones,
Newark,
and
lege.
Admission
representatives·
J:ioclcing.CoUege.
' )!r
· /
Finally, we would like to invite
·
·
-,..·--· -::- .-·--·-·-·--·---~-· ..
you to write us concerning any Donna Evans, BIOQ!llington, Ill., will be available io answer ques: ·
lions.
other- school related topic you wish and have three grandchildren.
A small celebration is planned
Preceding the dance from 8 p.m.
to know more about.
in
obs'ervance
of
Mr
..
:Uid
Mrs
:
to
midnight will be a social hour
Write to Cheryl Crossan and
golt\en
wedding
anniverfor
seniors only from 7 to 8 p.m.
Smith's
Robert Hudak, Meigs County
Acqu,ailltances
here
are
invitAdmission
is $2 in advance, $3 at
sary.
Board of Education, P. 0 . Box 684,
ed
-d
card
·
the
door.
The
event is non-alcoPomeroy, Ohio45769.
10 sen .
s to the couple.
holic and the disc jockey will be
given In
Cou11ies

-----Names in the news
WASHINGTON (AP) -It took
a new.prcsideney to bring about a
Aeetwood Mac reunion.
The rock group will be iunong a
host of big' name petformers at the
invitation-only PresidentiallnauguraJ Gala on Jan. 19, the night
before Bill Clinton talces office.
Others scheduled ' to appear
include Elton John, Arctha
Franldin and Barbra Slreisand.
Clinton,.his wife, Hillary, Vice
President-elect AI Gore and his
wife, Tipper, are expected to attend
the gala at the Capital Center in
Landover, Md.
.
"Don't Stop (Thinking About
Tomorrow)," a Fleetwood Mac hit
in the 1970s, was played at hundreds of Clinton rallies nationwide
and became the unofficial ·anUI(im
f9r the campaign.
. RIPLEY, Tenn. (AP) ·- Tina
Turner, who grew up near thi s
. western . Tennessee town , has

Ciaus
wider than chimney

AlcohoLa senQUS~tmeat~ie-students~

Homework an imp.Qttant
.part bf student's life &lt;- .. · ·

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--7 ·

Would~be ·Santa

The Daily · Sentin~l
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

------

.

64 oz.

Btl.

Over 100
Money

Prices
Thru
Saturday, January 9, 1 993

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

•Quantity Rights Reserved · •No Sal~s To Dealers
•

..

- ·--

•

..

�'

- .

The Dally Senti

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ZEST
SOAP

(

•The Area's Nu•nber 1
•

'

Marketplace

I

3 PAl,
5 OZ. lARS

STORE HOURS
Mo~tday

$ ·69

thru Sunday ·

8 AM·lO PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
WE RESERVE
RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES. fOOD SUN., JAN. 3.THRU JAN. 9, 1993

Days
6

To place an
MoN; tbru Fa•.

COCOA

•

· .

.

Leg.· Quarters...................LB.
...

'.

.

39(
..

POLICIES

•

''

4

SLICED.
PEACHES

· .

.

.

29 OZ. CAN

. .

4

·Chuck ·Steak. . . . . . . . .la.
COUNTRY STYL~

.

.

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Spare R1bs.....................La.

Bacon·.......................12 oz. PAK
HORMEL .
•
Ham Patt1es~. . .12 oz. CAN

B~i~~na. . . :. . . . -·---······'-IJ. s1·

S·129
..

I

99(
$ 39
1

CORN
MUFF.IN MIX

Call"'J675-4340
e5et. 230
~" .•
"
to register:

8

''

¥.1;!_•

DEW FRESH SPREAD 3 LB.

MARGARINE __!!&amp;_.

3 $1
·Corn, Peas. . . .
·
3
$1
.. Chicken Broth...14.s oz.
.
STOKE!Y GREE~ BEANS .

..

uNs ·. ·

no •••

SWEET SUE

.

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.

r--·HUPIN - , r - · CIIPIN
1· · ":~#~J.~~s: 1!1 CLOROX

: _ COFFEE

:: · BLEACH

79(·

~~OZ.::

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89 (

Pizza Pot Pies_
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MORTON ~-5•1 0 Z~
0.

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:: . CATSUP · UPAPER TO ELSt.

n.. 59( .t

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GAL• . :: . .
28.0Z.
ROLL
I Only AI Powell'•. su.,.,Yei~MtIIij:lood Only AI Powell'• ·Super Y•lu
· ..IIIBood Only At Powell'• Super V.lllllI~
·
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Offer:'!. ~o:-'tt!: ~:.a

=
·

Good Jon. 31hru Jon. •· 11931

lOiter Good J•n. 3 thru J"1·t,c1tll31101fer GoOd Jotl.llhni Jon. t, 11111
Umll 1 Per Cuetomor

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Goft~

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'

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I
~(I)~~~ be "''Cte ~January •. 1893 MdJ&amp;nuliry 31 , 1113.
I
Porions of euPI ,__. rtCiiPI not lhOMnQ dati Mel pur~ pra Will not bit
31
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· from 2 or mort 12 ~· or.t or mar. 24-Can e~an.
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• .., MAIL TO: P - hlllil-in Aebatt
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•
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1 -~--,...---'------ ....... - - - 1
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11Dr ..... -.., ,,.. . ~n~~. ..._..,_ ....... t~m~s:
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ooun~e~ or: aao.. ....., MIN."-·.,..._ LMwrenc~. "'*"·
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CNftiNI , _ DfiT IIIPit. QQTTA HAVIIT.ITOCK ~. W Gem'A tMW: fiUNT't' TO pA)ny"'

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c.-oJ Houliat
MoWle Ho- Repair
Up~ tory

HOMEMADE
PIES

OHIO . VALLEY
. PLUMBING .&amp;
HEATING, INC.

·ORIEl NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS

992·2036

Aaa•' · 'UaM ·

,r,.. . . ._ .

B•c•icii Md Plumbing

Iii•a &amp;lerior
_.Aa.....

~MATES)
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215.

(FREE

232 2•11 St.,
Pomeror
Check with Ul lor
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.

12·1·2 ...

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
'49·2391 or
1·100·137·1460
· UwnMowing,
FertiHzing. Weeding, .,d:
Seeding.
Shrub ond Tr" Tri(llming
&amp; ~*!~oval
RHidtnt..l a COmlnerdll

'-oy,Oitlo

~10..92-.dn

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
AU.IIIIDWOOD
SeasoHII
$40.00 a load
Deliweretl.

lew Dealer

'

•100 lb. Cylinders
~R.V:s

•G• Grill TMka
Healers

·VenRt. 124, bciH

(614) H2-5449

6

1V3119211fn

tiiiJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

.. PATRICK BLOSSER ust

SIZED UMESTONE

PH. (304) 863-8895, 428·7245
or 428-2514

FOR SALE

Call614-992·

• 6637

St.lt. 7

c••••ire, OH • .

GAilY'S
GEIEUl
IUIITEIAICE
.· 742·3305
Ami
7:00P.M.
12-17·'92

OFFICE 992·2886

J&amp;LINSULAnON

BINGO

•V'IIIYI Sidi"g
tRipiiiCement
Wi....,w
-Roofing

EY.ER¥ THURSDAY:

olnsulation

IN POMEROY

J. .SIEESlE

992·2772or
. 539 . , . Piece

•;•••••rt. o•io

·~tt-'tfll

PliMIING
04~.~

;JJ~
Ht04IH:II..
CreHR...

· Wl"•••rl, Clitia

614-tt!-71..

EAGLES
CLUB

-

6:4Sp.m.
Specilll Early Bird

$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

•

11t;14f92!Hi.

STAnGl CRAFTS
614-992·2549
HOLIDAY HQURS
Mon•.sat. 1D-8 p.m. .
Sun. 1-5 p.m.
Handmade Gift. For
Everyone, and GreaJ
Gifl ld~u. .

205 North Second Ave.
Mlddl1port, OH ,
RUTLAND- A split level home with an open raised
hallwoy, hu beauliful oak railings. Has 3 bedrooms, a
large balh, utilitY room and loaded ·kitchen wilh cabinels.
Hal a 2 car garage, ·aluminut11 oidlng and 1.8 BCI81 and
home lor $45,000 or .5 ilcnt811d home tor
$42,000

FAIRVIEW SUBDMSION- Ciew Rd. · Large 1.5 acre IDI
with Barringtan doubl&amp; wide, sitting on a tun basement
Home has 3-4 bedrooms, dining roOm, lamlly room, an
inground pool, back deck.
·
·
$51,000

992-2259

baoto-••·

NICHOL-'S RD. · Style._ wifl 3
2
balhs. heal pump, decking, aboV8 lf1IUIId ~ priilacy fencing, 2 outbuildings •. modow1,1 lilo I I
on 1.053 acres. $42.000.
·

· JIOMEROY·Union Avenue· Large rocims ond a beauliful
stairway come wilh lhls home. It aloa'has.l--4. bedrooms,
FANG furnaoe and 1 112 batho.
$17,100

.RACINE· Very nice 2 tiDIJ brick . _ 3 lladoCJII!III.
Z fireplaces. oen_lrlll lir, sa 181iad pard!, goad Ia I 1.
very well kepi home. $49,900

HYSELL RUN ROAD. II a kitchen wilh loll ol cabinets ia
what you nHd, ltlls home ielor
llllll 3 bedrooms, a
large kitchen, and a large living room. Comu wllh 3/4
..... ond • polio.
. .
$2t,tcH) .

IIIDOLEPoRT· llniwnell St. 1 lloor- . _ - 3

you.

well
old bali&lt;lll, egg basket fancy
'
,·
ironakilel,,smoker,ehadaw
..ry ..,uoUII 4 drllwer (noh. nJC!I'd cebifWlt 78 records,

.

loiDno )Ira end..-.
.AVCI'IOJf COJIIDVCDD II'

liCK PIIIIIIIUC'i'lll CD.
773·5785

POMeROY· BMch Street- You need 10 -lhio "-'111111
brick home. Has 3 bedrooms. farge living room, lull
baHmont, and one car g.rage.
·
. "',100

1 ftoor frame llome wilh 2 _ _,
N.G.F.A. full baoemenl wilh ulilily end . . . .. •...!..!.,
opplances, cable hook-up on povad _, ___
$19,1100

DO'ITil! TURNER, Brokw........................lll-al

IF"fHIS IS YOUR YEAR TO BUY 011 SEU. GIVE US A
CALL fiRST I a El AND' REALTY. INC. I.
.

~~~~~~~RICK PEARSON

_a._w..,,._•c:w--

IAIIDY BUTCHIR..-"••- ...........,___IIJ.II71

Ti!ACY BRINAGEA------

HENR'I' E. CLEWm..-~~·--~-~-~

JEAN TRUBifEll.-----OFFK::E..•••- - - - -

JERRY IPRADUNCL................ -.~1114)111 1411

,OFFICL-·----H........._, .... ,,,,,_,..,..Ift.l••

\.

IWONAILI UlU

992·7553
OL

BISSELL &amp; IUUE
CONSTRUCTION .

...•••ll•li•g
,....
.
elowHHIOI

-co..,loto

·

Stolt &amp; COIIIItDN

FlEE ESniiii'ES .

915·4473
667·6179
2+92·1hi

•' '

12·9-92
•'

·DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED ·

MAPLEWOOD

~

IRENDA J!ffi!RI............................."-'12 3011 .
DARUNI! 8T!WART...........- .............,•..IIIIIII

-

992·3470

«--

'POIIEROY·

••d LIMEnOIIE

IEUYEO SERVKE
S•all lo_. Work
us.oo , ... low

SIZED LIMESlONE
$9.50 Ton

WELLS RUN RD . .smatler lreme . _ - - i n lfle
counlry lhot moy be good hunting homo. $7,500·

$20,000

DIIVEWAY lrORI :

36970 Ball R11 Road
Ponroy, Ollio

bectrooms, balh, full baoemanl, one . . garage,
appllancao, F.A.N.G. heal. allic spKe added
inouladon. ASKING 22,000

POIIEROY PIKE· ChosiOr- A one IIDry home wilh ,_
siding, _ , root, n - r double ~window. _ ,
wiring lind plumbW!g. H• 5 rooms, 2 ~ns and one
- gar~ge an l!fppniXimllllliy 112 acn ol graund. '

,lUll DOZEI
WOil.
•

WICK'S 'HAULING
SERVICE

NEW USTING- Porlland· 2 lolo ., 2 SIDIJ
home closola river. Mar mall8 nioe -•ljlio~g lilo. $5.000

lllddl-n• A ~mmercial comer building wilh appro•.
2,800 oquaro felll, could. be 2 stores ar one large store .
Hu one bath 811d close to trae city ~ng. $37,000

CHARLIE'S .

10/11!12

DOLlEY

LAI(E
RACINE,OH.
949-2734

111111M1::11:
•MI
I
--

3

12-1·'112-1

f

(

--..5-............

.. so~o

.tMo~anr

sa-s,......c..-

ss-•

CAIPEJITEI SERVICE

.fi!J.
fetrellgas .

Six houses full of furniture, collectables,
glassware, ·miscellaneous hems. Plus regular
consignments.
TERMS: Cash or Check.
Building is completely fulll

~iaow~'ipicl~
· ~ure~oig~ned~by~E~mes~l
Albony.Land,
old pictures
Hulling
Prinr &amp; 'Flowering
Time', 'Hudoon
Bay"

~

..

Auto llepoir
C..piooc Eqooi_.

YOUNG'S .

12!!111 mo. pd.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

A_,..,...

46-S,...""'"-'
47- . _..... "-•

1211411. mo. j&gt;d.

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

Seod.tF...m-

T......,fors.te
v.. a 4 'IVD'.
Mo•reyclee

.

•

WuladtoBuy
Li-tock
Boy a Graio

4 1 - . _ ... . . .
4&amp;-lloloilo u- .......
0'-F.... f.rit.t
tt-~·f~a.·
ts-Foniolooda-.

985·4107
.RACINE GUN .
. CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

i\

OLD' ST. MARY'S PIKE, PARKERSBURG, WV.

1

MASON, WY

35-LMaaA.. •

-Jio!M.Sopploo

.

THURSDAY, JAN. 7- 5:00 P.M.
BLOSSER'S AUCTION HOUSE

lloor lamp wilh
· &amp; McCoy, fancy Morris
, lady's desk, round oak table, Slogged oak table, oal
J kilclten wpboard w/rall, oak &amp; Viet. dl8saers, small buckel
cupboard, 4 Bentwood oak chairs, 8 old half arTOWback
• ·"""" bottom chairs, sectional bookcase. early chllfT)' chest
turned legs, calc medicine cabinet, ash drapleal table,
J :~·::~~~rockers, oak back bar. unusual comer honging
1,
1nighlsland. old plankchil(, del). sarver,
nice squ&amp;l8 butcher block wllumed legs, custom chllfT)' slep
back cupboard. walnut child's aadle, wooden SIOfO ribbon
case, i:afWld·lootslool, Morris recliner chair, twin beds, 3 pc.
BaiHtt bedroom suite, 2 matching ollin glass windows,
gingerbread style wood manda dock. nice 1930's Loraine
while paroelain black gas range, wicker flower basket dome
lop, Fos!Oria "American' 30 pieces round pedestal cake_plate,
vueo. bowfo, tumblers, ste111med goblell, 112 gal. flal p111:her,
11 fooled tumblers. Hayiland (Blue Garland) 8 place selling
ptuo oarving pieces, 0"'! Mercer blue &amp;while pitcher and 4
mugs with mother inscnbed, Homer Laughon Ylrg1nlo ~
.......,.., soup tooireen. platao. creamer &amp; sugar, Pil!llelo,
oarving bowls, Horner Laughin Harlequin ipprox. 38 pieces
Inc:. ice Up jug, large ieleclion ·ol nice glasowwe etct&gt;OO
stamwal8., Fenlon, Imperial candlewick. Depression "'""''· •
variouo pott..,s. "Spade" china vase. 'Royal Bayreuth" vaoa,
Nippon, Wall ware, Blue Granite, 21amps, 1 with r e ..,..,., 1960's dol (in orig. box). Mi. signs 'Kool, Viceroy,
Vlluo Chewing Tobacco, NallY Snuff, &amp; Square Snuff',
rooo101r ~·lite' vane, old wagon Radio Ayen Texaco truck
box OUidt ~water fountain cement, 2 beautiful hook

LUNCH

BgjW;,.

-

16-lloolo.TYACBa.,.;.

A.c-.

PUBLIC AUCTION

dowtail lop, cherry
Viet. meal and flour
1930's carved hi-boy, tall
calchoU
early pie safe wilh pin whoel tins, beautiful spiMing
::~1;. early walnutJietwall cupboard, fancy Bombay calc
stand and other wash stands, 1930's, slant froniSOCIIIoak serp. hi·boY and olher hi·boys,.efaw foot oak side
and olher side boards, outstanding 9. piece dinining
suita
, 6 rose back needlepoint choirs, break front
&amp; serwr, carved mah. loveseat, mall:hing
rocker &amp; straight chair, several malt

l

.... ror.s.te

~r

M- , . .

... -

L'.,...,.;;,.

sato a

I

'

D-.5

double wheel

:..--~--------~----------~--~ I

576-Applo

u- for Solo

-:r...-........ ...

11-IWpY.-

4--Ci~-r

al original, 2 lamps

TO GET $5 BACK

21 1

, r ... CIIPIN - , r • etiPIN -.,
II . sa:~:~~%u II
BRAWNEYW
.1

79(

(

1

4

MAIL-IN REBATE OFFER ,

(
.
TV Dinners____69 ·
.

99

--------

Public Sale
. &amp; Auction

jelly cupboard orig. Red'
box on legs dovelailed &amp;
, calc ice box, Viet

to Rlrt;x::

$

98s-a...ter

LOCATED AT THE YOIITH CENTER ON CAMDEN
avcu11c IN POINT PLEASANT WY. WATCH FOR SIGNS

l POUND BOX

Buy 2 or l'nOit 12 peckt011 or mort 24 P41dtw (caNt) Of Pepli, DiM Ptl)l,i, c.n.,.. FrH Pepal,
Cafltifte Fr. . Ole! Per*. Moun~ Dew or Oitt Mountain Dew. To fett!Ye. rebate of up to ss.oo'.
you mutt tutmit:
•

BANQUET PEPP., COMBO, ·
. SAUSAGE~ 6 OZ.

3118-VIatoo

'•

~AMII

J and I lit:s S.rwice

10:00 A.M.

ZESTA
.
.
SALTINES

$189 _

·~·

SATURDAY,
·JANUARY 9, 1993

'

79(

....

LARGE ANTIQUE
AUCTION

$1

5

2"/o Mil.,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

458 Leon

8

8.5 OZ. BOX .

.

Room

I ,

JIFFY

0

3S-lloloilo

GET BES1JD'8 • .I'AS'J'!

BILL SLACK . .
992·2269

Dollinstai rs Conference

BROUGHTON'S

,, I I I I ' It II

I: I \ I \I '

The family of
RUSSELL M. CLINE
Wish to express our
sincere appreciation
and heartfelt thanks
to our friends and
neighbors, Veterans
Memorial Hospital
and nurses, also Dr.
Hunter, and anyone
who helped o\lt In
word or prayer and
ror lunch and
SHRUB &amp; TREE
_ kindness at the
TRIM ·and
Syracuse Nazarene
Church, the •
REMOVAL
emergency squad
•LIGHT HAULING
and all who sent
cards, food, moraey,
•FIREWOOD
flowers or helped
any way. My prayer
will always~ for
you afld may God
Bless you all.
USED RAILROAD TIES
Mrs. Leona J : Clln,ll .._ _..;.._1;.;;2·..;.l0.;.92;.;.;;·lfl;;.t
and
. '

Big Kids &amp; Baby
Program for Children
Becoming Big Brothers
&amp; Sisters
Tues., Jan. 12, 6:30P.M.
Pleasant Valley Hospital

'•

$129

Onions. . .~.....................3 La. BAG

67$-Pl. Ploua..

Po....O)'

'

9:00.5:00.

4LB. BAG

YELLOW

992-IQddlo,..l'll

3674&gt; ure

843-Pordood
247-Utut FoL
A3-AnWo Dlot.
ou~•·••
379-'11'"'-'
• 742-Ltloool .
667-4:oolrlk

THE ADDED TOUCH

PIN.To ·
BEANS

.

BALLARD'S

.446-Golli......

245-Rio Groodo
25~•• D1ot.

Welcomes Jana Baker. Mandy
Eblin, and Merri Amsbary. Phone
992·5766. Walk·i.ns welcome.
Evening appoinln\,Snts available.
Hoyrs: Mon .-Fri. 9:00·8:00, Sat.

PEAl

49

$ 179

I \1:\1 'I 1'1'111,

GaDia Cpanty Melp C!lllllty M - Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area 'Code 304

(

.

$.20
$.30
$A2
SilO
$.05/day

p.., for Solo
M•icallJUtnu.uu
FndtooolV. .IIIbloo
For Sale or Trade

,------1 36- Lo1Eoooalo1Julod .

Cltu.ified pa.se• cooer rAe
fo"-ins telephone elfchonBe•...

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE ,
PUBLICATION

.l

99( 99
Frankies....~............... 12 oz. ·

-,

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

,

SUPERIOR .

BONELESS

Over IS Words .

Rates aJe for consecutiw runs, btukai up ct.ys wiB be
clwged for eadt day as ~ads.

I

• .U. oa11We the eoqaty yoar ad nau ll!•t he ,...paid ' ·
• ltcei.Ye ditcout for .d. paid ill adft.lli:e.
• F.. Ado• Ci--y •ad Fooaad ado ....W 15 wrdo wW t..
na 3 claJiol DO do...
• Price clod f.. aU ..pihlle- io do.t.le prioo of od - •
• 1 polDlliao trPo ooly ......
• S..lioNI io 001 I)IOJ&gt;Oooible for eftOn allor fin\ day (cloock
for ...... fontclay od"""' io poper). C.Ut..fordlOOp.•.
day U... pu.ltrlieatioa &amp;o ..Ue correotioa
·• Ad. that•ud. he ,.kl ill ad"aacean:
Card cl Tbuoluo
HoppJ ....
lo M•oriaa
Yud ·sa~oo
• A d001ifiod odrortiouo•t ploeod io t1oo Colipolio D.ily
Tril&gt;o01 ( - Cluoillod Dioplay, B•iDeoo Card.., Lepl
No-) willoloo lfpoor ia tloo Poiool Plouoat ..... I« ud
the D.i1y Seoliael, noc~ o..,. 18,000 1oo-

LIBBY'S

$399

T·Bone Steak.............LB• .·

CLOSED SUNDA.Y

I

·RICH CHOCOLATE
ONLY
10 CT. 801

a......-sr.M. :-s..,T.B-i2

.

.
10
Monthly

DAY BER&gt;RE PUBUCATION
I:00 p.Jll. Sol!orday
' l:OOp.m. Monday
l:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wodnooday
100 p.m. lhutoday
1:00 p.m. Pridoy

COPY DEADLINI!
Monday Poper
Tuesday Paper
W...,_.y Piper
lhunday Paper
Frlclay Paper
Sunday Paper

can 992-2156

CARNATION

CHICKEN

15
15
15
15
15

1
3

.

99

Words , Rate

. I

.

.

•

�•

•
Sentinel
Announcement';

•

•

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Bealt(e

31 Homes for Sale

•

.. i

3 Al'lnouncements

-In

botho,
Cloollow
_
lull.
_
(111.7
_
8), _MA;

Gwolll You -0.. ~ H
COI ·Uo
Olllollt Unlll1allln."~DH
lxt. 1141 • • Pw
11\1111 .. ,. , ... Unlollr Co.
~.Qio0115.

KIT 'N' CtRLYlE® by Larry Wrlioht

Apertment

=Ill.

'

Livestock

63

for Rent

,'

6, 1993

BRIDGE

7 mondl old Appe'DDII~~
llorM 001, :10«7&amp;-4221 ,allor
I:OOPII.

- - - 3- IR
RsiiiVICII
lftll
requk'H.IM141~1.

ACROSS

will ap.n Wild.

J~

PHILLIP
ALDER

lui .....
•• 1111 ......

. NORTH
+Q43 2
.JIOIB
• 10 8
+KQ3

aid . . Ia llaagla, 30W'I$-

32 Mobile HOmes
for Sail

~- -TV, 114-112-lMT.

~-

aid

ldlt- -

WEST

•s

~19.

l·•tl

8 -

·

50 Lind of the
free (abbr.)

In

Cl~clnnatl

52 Burden

53 Tear apart
54 Aeagan'a son

+A
.76%.
IQJ76S43

1

+AK
+t01875

+J6

56 Hebrew
me11ure
57 Buahr clump
58 Son of Noah

15 Actreu-

18 Fruit
20 FrH from .
frlud

DOWN
1 It'• off to
work--

22 Vahlclt

23 Waahinglon

2 River In

24 Whiz

3 Zol1 heroine

bill

Belgium

27 Ch••o•
3.1 Grain
32 Zodiac llgn •
33 Stuffy

SOUTH
+K96 S
•AKQ3
192
+A42

meeaure
8 Put on solid ·

&lt;4 Shade Of
dlftartnet
5 Turn to thow
a different

Pa,r out
40 '!II addrtU
37

aound
19 Long Jltn,ll•r

food

' lith

9 Actor-

MacLichtan
10 Ewes' males
11 Atltnllon-

IUrfiCI

6 Drlveral org.

41 Encoral

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Merchand1se

55 Papa'• wlla

1• Young hlwk

Row linda
16 Llrgatub
17 Charity

EAST

+Jto 11

~: t&gt;0118aagla,lwlla.

:

41 Emerald tile

5 Blockhead

err

4 . ;, Gfveeway

w.

drink
45- Jan••

12 Brothar of
Jacob
13
otlhl~

~:-~--r-

7 NauHcJI

gelllng

-·

21 Voko- · •

Dawn

24

: ·

··oddeu •

· 25 ot1m polo
26 Turn the . .•
Pill (abbr.)

Well

Household

54 Miscellaneous

Pass
Pass

56 .Pets tor Sale

Merchandise

Transportation
Adonbla atrWclabla AnGora
nbblla, ohamplan blaod 1m,
304-171-4410 ••• 4:30 Pll.

....,_ 314 lriftanr s .. nlol,

AKC Dalmatlon Putlplao, 1om
'1211112 4 llalaa, And 4 Femalotl,.
114-381o1121.

304475+111.

PJPPiOO, l.o!'ll

Halr.To Good

- . lllaad lnad, 114-446-

33 Farms tor Sale
...... CauniJ,

114-liZ-.

,..,.

Building In

C•p·bh of ....... , . , -

l'lllichiM oat .,... c;!lpabla ol
nadlng blue pMII. Top par l

ALL Yanl lain lluat le Paid In

DEADUNE: 2:110 p.m.

lha day ....... 1ha ad .. 10 ""'·
Sunday adlilon • 2:00 . p.m.
FridaY. _ , . eollton • 2:00

.p.m. Satur.-y.

PubliC Sale

IMurance. Send

ful time aYCtlonNr, comptece
auctiOn
-..
llcenead
III&amp;,Ohlo l W•t VIrginia, 304-

773-5715.

to P.O.

_,
.......... -·
=
Equal Opporiurill}' Employer.

FNO eight- job preparation
abooll nontrad~lonal

14

waltnaa, ..._
Famlty Alllurant, Muon, WV.
304-7?W321.
, _ -lonwfth minimal

.... ,p.m.

1..000

Business
· Training

IIUmDina

and

.

~Ia,

-

w.W7e~rtc •J~~IIable,

a rul

buy II 12500; 114-1112·2112.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

18 Wanted to Do
Doar l land clearing. ucavat•
lng ,....., waldl"", tnii:klng loao
or lumber on ftatHd al110 wlll
hlut equ:lpn•IL 1:00 Ull 1:00
3044:17-3411.

-v.

CIMNd, 11441

1111 Branco XLT, tow

Rentals

Ha.. ... bad patlant,
lady pntwrad, but an Ia watciiiii14-MIIo22ll.

Colne, Gald Ringo BU.. Colne,
Gald Colna. II.T.S. Coin lhcop,
151 -.ct Avenuo, Clalllpo!IL

lllo.a Paula'o Day Coro Can!or 1
llooll Waot 01 HIIC On Jockoon
Plu 11-F I A.ll. 4:30 P.ll. H
QuaiHy And Exparlo- Ia Tho
t1 Concem For Your Child'•

AMERICAN GENEUL LIF. and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE
COMPANY
'
.

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.~.U. • Agent
Box 189

Cart. Call Uo Few A~oft. Infant
/Toddlan 114o4404227. p,_
ch: :Is a ISchool Agt IM-4481224.
'

FURNITURE AND
CRAFTS
wo Hava erano And cran Supo
41 HOUS8S tor Rent
pllaa, Alao Will CUllom Doolgn
2 IR CIIUI._hll AD. Yaur Slllrta. Wo Bur And Sill
Good Uaod FumlurO. Come Baa
t115.1!onf~l·~·
AI 2231 Stile
qulrad. I
15 « 114-441- Uo
441-1422.
· Route 141, 1141243
Taaii:.;,:.::A
-for
. tp11 lank,
.:2::Hau:_aa_a_ln_O._I_IIp-!),'---Ra-loo-'nc--,.1 CJODD USED APPLIANCES uta:
- - . lliiulallon, .....
- . Oopaaft Raqul
Coli A~ w..-~
1ar I P.ll. 114-446-1622.
~:::'iri;..,, t,f,~~
1· Whra,m n.t ...., ~·
.uol..r, pa.,p.n, lie., I
Laraa 2 ....,, llh· • I00-411N4111.
3111.
llalil, Pt. Pit. 3 ..,. b a d - King - -· 2 d,_r
2 full blllt., llita.., dln'"a. pedi1bl. Ia. h1aiGa.,d wfth
family, living, laundry - . m i r r o r . - ~ per month, , . . . , _ ..
55
Building

' "''-'· ,.

-··ad.

dapOall
•• 22111
Aval~ •rty Dec114
Imber.

Rio Orondo, 3 IR, t-1J2 IN!lh,

=:. tum'=

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comptote h«na

~£'~

~llo Ad.

Dall

•ry.
llollohan Caopato

114-4411-~.

1112 CorPAI $10. 1112 VInyl

MI.DO Bola on oaopat In lloclc
$5.00/upl
0

PJC!(E~_t;,'/_!I_I!,ITURE

Block, briotl,

-ce=

Financtal
21

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding .
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions,• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139

- . Untala, ate.
- . Rio Oranda, OH CoH 114-

:;2454121.::::=-----tor S81e.
56
PetS

~=.;...::~~,;::~=-=-

::

,

... old -Ia

:=.;;.
••

...,.

~:-a=~~~~T:i!

One

Jll-· trllltr
c"- lo
a.lllpolla
...cl

downilown

for Rent

Chi- ..

Remington

·WJng...-

54 Mlscellaneoua,
Merchandise

ln-ltplad

11164

ca. _.... no. SSIOO•

lllddlaport, Ohio, How 11-.ln lop ahapo. :104475lutnlohad 1 100m apt, utiiMia =241::::-'-7.=:::-----:c--:=:--,.
Inc-it~' lo JOt requh..t, is:' Zon~h TY with
304412
r~mote control a cable rMdr,
Eftla!ICY apt 1200 Ohio It, - · oond., _ . . fino, 1200:
UIN.~Id, $140. month, 304- uoad CllbaOn ,.rrtgorllor, 14

• - o.-tunlly: loOIIad

on J - A~ Pt. PM. "Known

a Big Doddv'a , with Of without

eqwl.,....... llniehed ....,rnenc,
lot olu101!1111
by ap~ntrMnt, 8omel wlla Aully,

ft.-

.,., .

30447!1-31130 «175-34:11 •.

cu.n., PG; 114-141-20\0.

-·

cofor- with ..... print·
.-, $2.800. 11t 111

Real Estate

una or 446-

G4rdane; ..ld SUO. will Mil

.... "'· Fl., .11 . . . lot, 2d
walla, 2 oomplalo bllha, dlnll1g
f'IIOM, NYina roam, lbdrm., ...U.:
lully oaopatad, 2,...
chle, eleCtric hMt1 ~~ IIOVI,
rafrtgentor, .._...,.., Homo
Nan 11an11, - . OH . . _ .
2210.
'

In_.,

FuunWwd, I Roome 6 a.th,
Cloon, No Palo A o - 1o

oa.,- RequtiW'ill14~1o1118.

_
--·-·-

............. ......
......
...
.........
........................... _
--In
tt•.

Clnoci9Ua
roont

4 b, - . , 3 1u11

TV room, MW oarpot,-.......
- ·Clw-r
-·
nloo
~·
Dllva, ,

'

Fumlahad EHiclancy, tt7l/ilo. Dlnnar 1111114471-2243
Utmu. Ava,
Paid,O.lllpolla,
· - lath
107
Becond
I~
4411.Mor7P.II.

31 Homes for Sale

n,

1111

vw

I

DOMINION 'DV~, . t..Atll&gt;.
SfA AND A". AND ~16~T AwAY Tt'ttY
.1\:JII.-T Tt1~ El&gt;StL. Tt'lf TITANIC AI'll&gt;
Tt4E 't41NPfNilJ,G.'.

y

atotton~

Fox modal

wagon, vary aood cond.,
au mll-oe. lf4.446.7311.

aac.t:

:.r.

i!

1t8i

Olda Cutlaaa Colala 8
~ 4, AT, AC, PSIPB, .0
Ill, cnolaa, I I - - a ,V

53.:1110 1!111oa. M,too. 11+441- '
~

awteaft•l:oo.
12-:10 T - · Good U.C.
- H.D. Pump, n Fl. I'!&lt;!!,
Wfth Tin Full CoD With A"""
Good
Condlllanl
lll-7111.
...._ ttO,OOO
.,.
~.

..._r:

-...

~··-

1tlll . ~·.Coo

~·.-- AKtRI

(

111 ,,. ..!)

.......~. ,
Tau o.., ·

tyja

mllae.
poymanta . SOMII2-28M.

com picllar 1 ,.., *'4111111Z

.;;72~
. ,.;Tru;.:,;c:::k::.s.::.for:.:.:S:;ale::...,._ ,

63
Livestock
.:1180.:...--....::A:.:;:IIol;,:rnt~l:;ma;,:_ra_;---

Xll-p.l7,8111. llay -731'\

....,.1':1• Fantutlc

M14A Sornll
.1N7 AQHA Sciirall

••m

aHion. 114-

.,

~

.... Rl Con!lar. ...."'
Sun roof~...... air. v.r,.

......
lla- flllliUOOII hay nH 1ft 24,1100

PTO dlllion I bOr. - . ,
, , . . _ 7ft Dyne
lalinca- Now- n

!

14~ · (;A\If T~EM

..

-

1111 Dodao 1 ton ...... bad, :

r

e.-. ..........auu•Aaa

'OJ WERE RI(,MT,

lllci.AUIII5 510E-

. 114- '

•

OUR LANGUACE

IW.Itaw&gt;~/

Chavrolll, Ford, Dodge. plc:kop ;'
~~or tong. No IUal. ·i
.
I
73 Vans,&amp; 4 WD's

ltf!lfld!E

By Jeffrey McQaain

PECULATE
("PEK-yuh-late")
steals or embezzles: "Tbe teller tried
. to peculate bank depositS.· You don't
have to speculate on this verb's spell·
ing: SPECULATE ends
w1th
PECULATE.

1m Ford 314 ton, 4 WD, m1n1 '•
cond., Coil aftor I p.no., 114-4411- '

;01=9;·=-=--~--·- .;
1171 Ford Bronoo, ,...tr rebull !
4M angtne,

aut«n~~tc,

na.a100, 114-112-eiOI.

varr ,

- Food-··

CA~H?l!

•

·•

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

Yon.
Elclllant Convanlon
condftton.
I Q I did $1D,IQO, 114 118 1050.
·

74

Motorcycles ·

1M2 Kawaaakl CSR·210, bolt
drlvon billa, 2,400 lletual
cond,
"""' llu nNII
11411.

...UO:l:".f

76

I

HERE IO"TO.JR 0'.\IN

~L.~IL.Y
HCIIC05COf'E ~~...

Q. What's the matter with ,"The au·

'~ 1.&amp;1!!JOK HOO

R• a 351.1 .BE eo .JOL.A52.

thor is in the process of writing a nov,
el"'' 1 was told it should be rewritten.
A. Try to avoid unnecessary word'ing like IN THE PROCESS OF. Taken
from bureaucratic jargon, this type of
pbrase adds nothing to the meaning of
the sen\ence. Drop these extra words
from yOur sentence, and you're left
with "The author is writing a novel."
which conveys the same idea. Che&lt;:k·
ing your prose for needlesS words is an
important step in the writing process.

• A E•ee e&amp;D•25 FOR
'--.a..RGJWN • a z a.&amp;"'OiF(""XIClEIC' RINEi:-•

H lXX eu&gt;TREe .R :R lf'lt'JP.

1

Auto Parts &amp;

Accessories

.

Th~

I

your clutter int~ ctuh~
S,dl it the eqay Ulay... br, ghone, ·
no ne~d to leave your home.'
.Place your clusified ad todgy!
.15 word. or leu, 3 dqp,
3gpvers, 15.40 paid in advanc~.

Services
81

, Home

•

•

''
complicated of

1----~----~------2.
_ _ _ _ _....;;:;,__ _ __

z-

lYing. 1 ...
•Pirtmenta 11 Y111H1

II...._,""""
Col114-112411t.
EOH.
.._ .....,. 1 111 droom .,. fU1:oo ldnl~llllldtfiO;-­
IIcllie ......
ZI04a~
Of IOIIurnlahotl. llepOell 2111,Npmor
tar ......

1a11.

..........,ww:...

li::".-

3. _________________

AITRO·GRAPH .

4·--.------;...;'''-.- - - - -

5.
_ __,.._ _~;__--6 ________________

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

7. __________________

!lDfnllllltr ., _ -

'hom0,1inlla-town,-

-..a
44~-~ft~- · No - · CA. 114-

CLRSSfiD RDS

_,..Y .,..It,

One t it OOIA ~..
IZ2IIMo. lnaluda1 utili-. 1100
no ,...; aMtl24211.

•

8, _ _ _ _;.,.,.,;._ _...;,._;...__
10~----~;__~~

-n...

am I

tti.~li.atl 11-A(tlrll,., v..... ..

12------~-~--------

typeal- wl\0 lln't ........ - . . .
more a.n one end1•01 1M n

13~---~-~--14_ _ _ _;__~~----

· .1M. 7, 1 •

ly. Howa..,,l,...llloilooptiDdoll ...

~

YOlK poObllma In 1111 , _ lllled mtgln
be M to IICIIIIVI opportunltlll rd111110111 I $
lrlllln lao law option&amp;. It 1IJIII be up to ~141 .,lain II M. Oon1 1*1 a
yauto..,......- one CINfUIIy J!1 ltorytoOIIIIrs..,...yauU.Itll,... don'l - · . _ on 1111 1111 It II ;-1 WI I upon 1aa1a.
(lllr .,.,_ . . A llloillllllllp
Nl (llao. ........ 11) It miQIIt aoulcl be pllaed In j I dJ llllllr I
. be ...... t o - I firm ltlnd t.... ~ lhlrl II t a o - WC4!1 1 ' IIIII I IIIII
Tiled aii!JinD 10 Ill II tlllngl to II,._. 1111nga. Thil OOUIII Ill
pia. Thil Gould tum OUIIO ,be lhlteut .JIIU, U - II
'!fil."!":!'ed.

446-2342
9)2-2156
615-1333

r:=·

.. =
-••

In '!!:

I

••

111e-

r, •inlpol1afd:,.......loday.
donloaiCIW ron!e
with
. . _ - ·,. I 5 ljj. The lrump ClrCis
-,.,
inhil
.....
_ . ._... ...._., oould lla
0

LEO,,.., II! •• •

You'ra not likely

_yau_

l9lingL •

r-. za•''' •

WIOO
~­
iCOI
:Jiil" WW JOU Wid to t:.
IF CCII~
.,.... Mid . . . . . llul ...,. . . . .

- • ·u

tllllalllbe--in-

•n r-...
· - a- - tiD,...,...

... ___
-·=·-......
=.;;
r::::r-:-:.':.
=lllr ..... I'.
porllon, beeaoiN K Ia jult

11.__..__ _______________;,

c•-c-~WoorDJ•,........,

to•'i1i

Box 91428, ~ . OH 44101-3tl21. to be -.y 1111 IJoce toctar -ing unAGUAIIUS (.IM.. ,._ . , 0&amp;.-,. - - n.e·s a g o o d respon~bNit- tnal demand ......,. 1
_ _ _ b)' ...
conditions
allanllon lhould not be lgncaed toctar. ,... . . . · - -

'*

9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

Graph Ma1chmaklr can help ,...lo und-and whaiiO do,I O - lhenolallonlhip worll . Mill S2 plus a tong, Ill·
ldd.-. ltamped ........... to
Matchmaker, cto 11111 ,..,,_ _ P.O.

Postponing ,.,.... - - COUld """"
pound
your problema.
PltCII (,._ ao "
8)
ila
poulbillty alrilnd mlgl1l '1. II +ot I'I1U
today b)' notlndudlng,.,.. til • - invol-t. Don't lhil 0U1 a l -

15 ________________~--

·Read the Best Seier
Read the

your&lt;-- T..,-.g tci

palch up a broken romaonoe? The Ailro-

Comotary lot Kirtlland _ . . .
f3GO. I14-:IIIot:nl.

2,100 aq

FRANK AND ERNEST

Peugaot.;.::;:: oun
root, loW;;
304-871-4111. WI

'12

PatiiiiOf. Moura: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm.. to 1:00. p.m., Sundar 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-1112-2521.

' INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUIUIHINO CO.
NCOtnmlnda thlll JOU do buai-with_.. YOU k -1 and
NOT 10 Mn!l- through the

balho, largo

1Nf. Morcwy Cougar, tOadad,
onty ~,ooo mtlaa, 11100, 11411124....

bad•.

2112192/tfn

············· · · ···········••!•••••••

mu.-:

llonii2,100,114~HI2tl.

1N7
mlluge, IIC

gaiiga 30" lui ..., ~ ... - ·
llllrrOI, 1225; Rarnlnaton
modlll 10, 31" lull, t.clory
choke,
atao match
good guna,
amllll
boro lo 1200;
big boro

Bla ..,..,.lv. 41", SI,IOO. - ·

~OTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

rr. MI\AM .

TI-lE &gt;!ALL FOR A
DRINK OF WATER ..

modol10'a , - 21'a: 114'-112·
311VZ. _ _ _ _
· _...,._
a•* ..... ,_..;..
'"
I.
dapOall, no pota,
47U1I2.
53
Antiques
Fumlahad Aot: 2 BA, 1210, ::o~----::--::A::-I,:..w:-~.-'!"-::
••l q
utiiHiaa-. 101 41h, Qalllpotla.
or
.
...,
114 441 441hnar 7 .
1 E. llaln - . on AI. '124.

2

1110 S•IIII•J Cdsl

ELLLtl~~

Farm Suppltcs
&amp; ltvestock

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA,

Business
Opportunity

mall .u,.ll you hava
...............

0065 ME WORTH

MAAM? M'&lt; D06
WANTS TO 60 OUT IN

' CMn:oat Orar Palnl,
All/Fill Radio. Excollant Cond~

wln. Wln-

Hou ohald ~.._hlng. 112 mL :1044'1$-7712,

Eu......,

~~:-----',---,.-;_

Middleport, Ohio 45760
1614)

'

Will do babJallllng

ettt.hlre area. Exper. I rwtw.
~~

,.

1N7 Dodoo Clwger, AT, PS, PI,

Supplies

--~~~~ mix pupplae, 121.
•
114-4411-11142,0rl14-l97-4345.
Jorrlcllo Rd. Pt. P I - , WV, and . . _ ~
1BR Trailer, D-n
a can 304-175-1410.
:::.:,:
.tii',;
~~42,~u::"~~·· A.II.Fuml-.-,.-d,an- Woblo.Coi114441WL
~tngo. 2 adult AKC nA:£~ 12 X to tralleri Poii&amp;CPJ' .....
tlaa: I I
--~ 1 lamala,
Range • ralrla. 1125. .. rod. whlta. $100 - · ~~
ion
"1175.114
441
DDOI.
·
·
•.
.
14110 2 i, 1 mila ~h ot
on St. Rt.7. No pota,
SWAIN ,
......... CII . IM~M-eOII.
AUCTION lo FURNITURE. 12
a Uaod
2 IR ..nlally fum'ad, clblo Oliva 91, Oatlpotla. ...- . Baautllul- ....... tumn.... haalara, Waotarn •
~· llopaolt I Aolora,_ Worllboo4o. 114o446-315t.
R-lrOd Foatar'o lloblla TV s.•: eon.oa. oaiDr t.w. wu
PaiiL~1102
$150, Sola 115: RCA oolor Lv.
2bdrm., lurnl-, good locao wao SIS .,. to 150. -liar
lion, cond., 31111. above lola: GE haavy dUIJ wu $1!0
Ravon, RU3, 1210 with cut to SM. Kon-. dryer 175.
....... 304-112-2411.
30 Inch _ . . . - · ,....
,.._tol75.~11
Fumlahad, 2 or 3bdrm., lor rant
1n eountrr llablla Park. _ ...,,
dryer, alr,}:all mon., 114-112· Applla,_, 71 'IIIMI 9t. I
2117, 114 01W22J!
7311 or 1..aoo 411 3111.
,!F..-y,
!oJI!Ie304-e75-1331
for nnt O.IUpotla 52 Sporting Goods
or 81$-4071.

arocarr. 114-446-nSI.
44
Apartment
·

mr homo:

:·

-

a-·

11450/mo. oa.,- raqulncl. 114- F
441o42Z! daya, 4oiHm ......
-

Wan!Od to clo: h«na or ofllca
olaantng. can ••• 2:00.
,..,.,.....,.. avaUabte. I ........
1710.
Wlll-caro-585111or..........
_,, In m•.
' h«na,

In

·~

.

COUNTRY

...,...._,2312.

Top Prtc. Paid: All Old U.S.

H you bought and enjoyed "The Best
of Roberi Gray, Book One," you are
sure to want Book Two ($5.50, Tbe
Bridge World, 39 West 94th Street,
New York, NY 10Cl2f&gt;.7121).
·
Gray, who lives in Scotland, wrote
many ex!"llent · articles for· The
Bridge World magazine. The material
i$ advanced, but the text is lucid and
entertaining.
.'
Today's deal comes from the chapter entitl!!d "The Ace of S~es Worn·
an." Against four hearts,
t cashed
his top diam011ds, showing a doubleton
in ~ process. (Ace from A·K, when
not doubleton, is tradlti011al in Britain.) Then West switched ta the club
10. How should South plan the play•
The one-heart opening is standard in
Britain, where four-card majOrs and
the weak no-trump reign supreme.
The two-spade rebid was auressive.
Declarer won the club switch in
hand and drew trumps. Havinf placed
East with the spade ·ace, South
pl.tnned to lead a low spade through
East and duck a Spade on the way
back, hoping to bring down the ace.
But just in case the ace was singleton;
deelarer deeided to eliminate the
clubs first. Then, when in with the
spade ace, East would bave to concede
a fatal ruff-and-discard.
Everything looked promising for a
Southerly victory, but on the tblrd
I'OWid of clubs, East discarded the
spade ace. Now declarer couldn't
avoid two spade loaers: 011e down.
Declarer was guilty of not counting.
Once East followed to three hearts
and two clubs, 12 of her cards were
known. Declarer had to assume the
13th was the spade ace, and should
bave led the suit after ·the second
I'OWid of clubs.

good cane~. 114-245 5:111.

l::t t!.."":..

1443.

''

1111 ParlelenM Pont lac, 4 door, l
......... oondltlon, lutomatlc,
air, cruloo, 114-IIIW112.

WAonTnotoForlalaOnAddlaon Plu no;:,_...,... Land

11R
Tnllar,
Do-N l
n~--...,,
_ _ B-·1
....,.. rod. ~
No Plla.

Handrman, Oriel Jolla, Indoor
JOutdOor Mltctlltnta 11 Er·
ronda. M.OD Par Hour. 114-245-

810. '

34 ActrHJ .. •
Blylhe -'· '

35 Mall contir :
. ··

36 Dieter's
diiHrl

3 7 - - flow
36 12. Roman
39 Old 'TIIIIo· ·
menl boq)&lt; :

'

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

•

•

1113 Cho¥Y Covallar, 2 MW •
..... ' - battery, aiL .. lla!'J •
.-ty - . , hiGh m l -. 1200
n.... cant~e~ Mary .. 114-241!1444.
1113 Chrvller Fifth Avenue, 4dr.,
· .........
cond.,
Olldon,
wt eunroof,
311 ··~·
v.._ ~
l'iiOO,I~I.
·

=.. --,.._lin,

_,Y woman.

ftOwtna Wille In louiMaltem
Ohio. 'IOod and -.y
....,..._... t•: PO lu 721C,
- . , . Ol1lo 41711.

. . . . . .14-

..,._at:";i

- · 114-256-1317

Full-6nl llftpiOiiiMtl tor weittndw,
Ill** CI d In

_.......

Good

=~·· -'~·

. .

wiring and dtywlll, inlulalod.

.........ton ,
Organlzlllon
llkllla, P....tual Ancf Abla To
Work AI Pa~ 01 A Taam AeQU!nd; Exponauca Woflclng
Willi Parooc• Wfth _ . .
Allardation And Davolopmontal
DlaabiOO. P - . lalary:
II.OD /Hr, To Stort. land
R.ume To c.clla Babr, P.O.
lox 1104, Jlckeon, OH 45140;
DoaciiiM Few Applicolnlo: 118111:1.

Ex..-

... _

Rick Pal_, Auction Componr,

l'leiHM

lox 410, Point P-...., WY
25610.

..,. dutiM lor

&amp;Auction

~

~

RobiMIIa,~.

,
Job Shop_ ... I I d ..........
llual machl,.. 1-.

&amp; VIcinity

8

John

1d llachlnllta

G~lllpolls

Ad..,..,

lloma Wfth

ElcleriJ llln -

lluna Aid C.... ..., - .

Ex..,.. a

Yard Sale

7

::3.:oflcl Ex«ettant Part , .
PIOducll AI lloma. Col
Toll Fna, 1~, Ext.
313.

UI,DIICI,

4

.......

~Dhia,

Business
Buildings

34

LOST mala Blue . Tick Coon

GOT,lEB?

w..k. 113M. .,

5

30 Hebrew ltller

magician
from Scotland

1Na Volluowagon olalla. Coli '· a~ : '
lerl p.m!, e~u.
,~
1113 Comaro V.., T·T- ':
11,200 -~v:- Honda HaWII.·•

AuNt farm l o r - houM, bam
but- !0 In

and oul

howld, 1 montha old, 5 mila
oru, 304ol'l5-1331.

~_,_Noadallod)o

daFr~nce

28 Marlh

abbr.

HOW MANY
YOUNG•UNS
HAVE YOU

1171 Cllavy Nova Wfth.Sunroof, ;
I ' Cylinder Automatic. Runt ,

28-

Eul
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: +K

·1NI Cnown VlctoriL ~ I '
ru .. fOOd. t\500. IU 148 8188. ~ ~

JN7.

Galdon l'emala Pup.
Nal-ng ~ «ID. "Kaala"
"-'&lt;1114'31H417

....----.." ,...;.,;,;;;;:._--.:7
BARNEY __...;.__.::,_...,

---.--.....,...._
'
71 Autos rOr Sale , :
I'M-311J-2778,

-

0

42 New Ytar'a

1 Comedl_
ll1 Ed

.

eu.e...

IJcOMW

nnch. Golllpallo 8c-= , _
7JI.ftSI.

44

·wednesday,

~

.

hi . . . .JIIU lliiiD

1

lodtly, - · •

rt. .' . .~
. - _ ,..._inI
I w far
.
. _..._

IDa..-, MH

5

.

42

Architect Saarinen

43 Fterco
44 Don1t1

48 Ark butldar

47 Reapondti
to call •

48 Eve's male
51 C•n•IJYtt~m
In northern .
Mlchlgon- •

'
" '

' '

'X .

UG

MTC'B

NCROTEG .

XC

0 TWX G .I

MNVPGY

X

•.

NMNR

' ,•

MXSK

LVNCJG

N

CNER

0

FNCG

UNJP.'

ZTCYN .

"

• ·•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I've always liked heroes that have had some son ·
of weakness or problem~ to overcome." - Clint Eastwood .

'=~~:~'

S©'\\.""lA-&amp;t.trs·

WOlD
IAMD

Eilltecl lty CLAY I. POlLAN

Rearrange ·ltntrs of
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tcrombled words

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low to fortn fou r simple words .

VAWREE

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H E R M. Y

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TEDPH

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,.--1-N-S_U_N_O_....,,

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The guy was lwo hours late
for his ·date. He knocked on
her door and found her in a
nightshirt "I'm two hours late,"
~: ~~,C:\~ifl'led, "and you're still

I I I 1 18 0

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Complete the chuckle quoted
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.....J.L-.J.L-.J.-.L
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~Y filling in rh e missing words
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you de~elop from slep No. 3 below:

_ m.· PRINT

NUMBERED
~ LEITERS IN SQUARES

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.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
M~nial .: Noose · Bliss Nin~ty • INSOMNIA
"Why do you think you 're qualified to be a night watchman?" the employment agent asked lhe fellow. "Sim·
pie," !he guy laughed, "I have INSOMNIA."
·
5

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2-The

Sentinel

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aves

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IS

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•••.. h for-

With RED TAG· VALUES
From FOODLAND .

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onlV,&amp;on
thelhllv••
Foodllnd. .
· You'll notlcethesaviingl:r'

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS
IUDE "A" SPLIT

Jolft Us For

FOODLAND

HICKEN BREAST

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NITE

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Ulilv. of Rio v.s. ·
Findlay College

Thurs., Jan. 14, 7:30 PM
FREE CASH AND GROCERY
GIVEAWAY.
Tickets Avadible at Eastman's

VELVET
FROZEN

LB.
'

·yoGURt

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

GALLON

BUY ONE, GET ONE

CHUCK
ROAST

FREE
SEALTEST ·

SKIM
MILK

89
GAL
64 OZ. REG. or HOIIESTYLE
PREMIUM

TROPICANA
ORANGE

MAIL-IN REBATE OFFER
or more 2-4 padls (c.aniot Ptpll, Diet Peps1, Catreltlt Fr" PepSI,
Carre•ne Free O.et Peps,, Mountain Cew or Oi&amp;t Mountain Dew To recetY e a rebate otup to $!.00,
you must submd
Buy 2 or more 12 Picks or I

Peps·i
Products

accepted

Cher:k

•

Specialln·Store

Price.................5.89
Less Mail-In
Rebate ........~ ...-1 .00
FINAL COST

REBATE

nn

UPC a~mbOis from 2 or more 12 piCka or 1 or more 24·can cases

31
btl!tl

lor

UPC• ant·

010 (21 12-pac.ks
02 El {4) 12·Q&amp;ckS
03 0 (6)12 packs
04 0 (B) 12 Petitt
05 0 (101 12-patkS

24 Pack

AFTER

Th•s Ot.g•nat completed ma~- 1n rebate fOrm. and
Ong1n11 dated casn reg•ster rectllpt(s) with purcN!se pnce(s) C•tcled .
Purchai{(S) must ba made btrwftn January o4, 1993 iJIMd Jan~o~ary 31, 1993.

Po11•ons ol cash reg•sler rect~pt not Show•ng date aoO purchll l pnce ""'" not be
,

MAIL TO·

•

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•

$1
$2
$3

060
070
060
090
100

..

$5

(1 ) 24·PJCkS
(2) 24-p.c:ks
(3) 24-peckt
(4) 24·1)1Ckli
(5) 24-pecka

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11

... .
$2
13

$5

Young Amera. MN 55551 ·8300

Addr&amp;ss - - - - - - - - - ---"-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Apt No .

Slate

------~

Z•p - ' - - - -

FRESH

REQUESTS MUST BE POSTMARI&lt;EO BV FEB_EIUAFIY 6, I tall .
PepaoCoJa •• not reapon~ lor 1111 1011 or rYIItdirttrtcl mall Pltut nota adclltionalttrma
•
· No ptlolocot)jtt or mtchanical repJoductiont of thia rab.lt form or Clll'l rteelpta wll be accapltd
· Oller good onl,- '"the Otno eot~~llta at SCiOto Pik1 Adlll'lt Roaa, Jlclltofl. Uwttnee. A1Mnt.
HOCIII"O Vlri!On. Meigl, Glllia llld Mor9111: lnclllll Ktf11ucky eo~lift ol· Boyd. C.,_,, 01eenup,

CINNAMON

PERSHING
DONUTS

and Ltw11 ""-t &gt;~Okl wl'leN prGhibi!M
011~ lti'Med to 15 00 per lamily OIIGCif'HI LJmH till r~u•t per tn'lelopt
·. RtQuttlll llbnilltcl by dubt. gro...pa 01 orgtn+latiatla 'lriiii'IOI bt honof..:l actlnoiii!IGI)Itl or r•url'llt!l
· E~HS ol P~Coll ComP~t~y lind itiDclllln •• iJ'IeliOibll for WI ott..
.

BOUNTY
TOWELS

· PluM IIOw IS-a ..... 10 ~ wour
,

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~

PEPSI. PEPSI COLA. DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN OEW. DIET MOUNTAIN DEW CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI
C.U:FEINE FREE DIET PEPSI. GOTIA HAVE IT. iTQCI( UP!. lAd G011'A HAVE PLENTY TO PARTY
trldemalll1 ol P'PAiCo. lnc

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ROLLS
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I Limit 2 with coupon ad,,$10 or mora additional purchase. I
GoOd thru 119/93.

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···········~·············
We RIIIIW the Right to Limit quentltiea • Prictl Effectiva !hru s.... J1n. e, 1H3 • USDA Food &amp;tampa 1nd Wlc Coupone Aeoepted • Not Raeponelble for Typogr~~phlcel or PlctDrlll E::.
rro~ra:~.~-!...Y._.!Jrl_
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beneficiaries·is
On January I , 1993, lbe
Govemmenl · will expand a
progJ'llll) lhal helps·people eligible
for Medicare wbo have limiled
income and few resources NY for
's ome of their Medicare-related
expenses," says Carol IrwinCarter, Social Securily manager in
Gallipolis, Obio. "Wilh · I he
inauguralion of the 'specified
I ow· in c'ome
Medicare
beneficiary' (SLMD ) program,
lhe Slale will pay Medicare's Part
D mohlhly premium for people
whose income is slightly more
lhan the nalional poverly level."

~~~~::.miwnis·SJ 6 .60per

.

"~''--~------------------------~----~·~·----· C~ty

help ·for Medicare
available~

nol more than 120 percent in
1995."
The programs differ in lwo
feaiUres Olher lhan u~eome:
*for SLMDs, Slates are required
lo pay only lhe full Pari B
"!onlhly premium. (Under lhe
QM ~ program, Stales also pay
the premium for Part A and other
.out-of-pocket medical expenses
such as deduclibles ' and CO·
paymcnls.) and
'
*cligibilily may be rclroactive'
for 3 calendar. monlhs (bul not

lnMeigs .
C
· ounty

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· earlier !han January I 1993)
• under the SLMD
p;ogram.
(Under the QMD program there is
no relroactivily.)
"Only your Stale can decide if
you're eligible for help from
eilher the QMD or SLMB
program," Mrs. Irwin-Carter said.
"So, if your income is low and
you're a Medicare beneficiary,
conlacl your State Medicare
office or local social service
agency 10 apply."

Meigs kitchen staff
•
lS ,presented awards

ror·

Pepsi Ma•l·m Rebate

PO.Box 8300

s4~9

M~re

.

Daisy. Evans 0 or the Cora Women'• S&lt;&gt;&lt;lety of Christian
Workers, presenls o ~be~k ror $100 to Ethel Robinson, Board
Member or the GaUia County Coui)Cil on Aging, ror the lfome
Delivered Meals Program.
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A similar program is already in ._.;
place for peopte whose income is
a1 or below lhe national poveny
level. Acconling 10 Mrs. Irwin- · The Meigs County Senior area Nutrition Trainina Meeting
Carter, ~n.der !hal. program, called Nutrilion Program kiu:hen slaff held in Nelsonv!Ue in November
the qujihfled Medicare beneficiary were presel)ted awards for com· for all Nulrition Programs in PSA
Do you care for a loved one iii feelings of 'helplessness: · The
(QMB) program, lhe S~ate not pleting a sanitation and safety 8, Area Agency on Aging, wliich
only pays lhe Pan B premmm, bul training course "Food Safety Is covers eight counties, including lbe borne? Tasks which conslitule · caregiver oflen bas. feelings of
also Medicare's Part A premium No Myslety" duringl992.
caring include bal.bing, dressing, inadequacy and anger due 10
Meigs County.
and any deduclibles and coThe awards were given a1 an
cooking, cleaning, giving having his/her life style disrujlled.
insurance charges.
medicalion, handling finances, Eve~i !hough you may love the
"To qualify for tbe ' QMB
running errands and/or giving person you are caring for
program in 1992," said Mrs.
emotional suppon. If you answer STRESS lakes illi loll.
Irwin-Carter. "an individual's
yes 10 any of J.be above duties,
A caregiver needs ' lci se1 aside
annual income cannol exceed
lben you are a caregiver.
some lime for bislher self. Don ' I
$6,810; for a couple lhe limil is
There are many reasons why try 10 do everything alone. SEEK
$9.190." Annual changes in lhe
individuals provide in-home care. HELP. Enlisl lhe aid of family or
Federal pov~rty levels generally
These may include wanting 10 fnends by asking them 10 "lake
are announced In February and
have your loved one at iiome wilh over" for a few bours each week.
lhe income limits for 1993 will be
, you, institutionalized care is 100 If no infonilal support is available
(lublished alth4t time.
expensive, no available facilily in call !he Meigs Counly Council on
'"Th qualify for Medicare ParJ,B
which IQ place a loved one, Aging, Inc . (MCCoi\) for
premium help under lhe SLMB
feelings .of gnill if they were assistance wilh in-home respite
program in 1993 and 1994, an
placed in a nursing facilily, or lhe care.
individual musl be eligible for lhe
fear lhal no one can care for your
The MCCoA also offers ' area
QM D program in all areas excep1
family membl:r lhe way you do.
caregivers I he opporlunily 10
for income," Mn. Irwin ..Carter
' . Caregiring can be emmionally. . panicipale in a monlbly support
as well as physically, exhausling group and/or !raining session.
said. "The beneficiary's income
fa tile pldllre art C,.alda McMI..... Rc&amp;bl ltd l)lotitllw
for bolh lhe caregiver and lhe PLEASE ca11992-2161 if you are
can be sligblly more !ban lhe
recipienl of care. For the care in1cres1ed in eilhct of lhcse
·Federal poveny level - but nol, PSA I, VlrJbda Klddl:r, Ra.. Aml Selen lad.a - H8wll,
kltellea atarr of tile Mel&amp;• Co. .ty Nalrltloa Prot!ram, aad · recipicnl. emotional see-sawing is .. servtce~.
.
more lhan 110 percent of Lbe
Clady ,.,.., ~ A&amp;eaey oa Acln&amp; Dlredor. PS1- .':·,. • · · . .• ·•0 rlen. .present. due . 10. his/ber.. , . . .(Cootinued on Pae~ ~).
annual limit in 1993w
1994
and:&lt;
.
.
•

TO GET $5
t1
2)

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fl~\;

"Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
in Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties."

. _
___..___

CAREGIVERS

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