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                  <text>Ohio

Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Vanderbilt
·upsets No. 1
Kentucky

\

L

475
Pkk4:
6205
Super Lotto:
3-10-18·19-32·34

·

PageS
'

. TANNER HYSELL

Vol. 43, No. 185, ·
Copyright.! 163

Tanner Hysell celebrated his

Hysell.
A "101 Dalmation Theme" was

.

.

Pinner, including cake and ice
cream, was served to those menlioned and maternal grandparents,
Bill ud Carolyn Biggs, paterna)
Jl'llldparents, Harold and Twila
Hysell. Vinda Biggs, Jamie Biggs,
Don, Debbie and Don Hysell,
Gary, Sandy, Amy and Brittany
HyseU, great-grandparents Nathan
IDd ~ Biggs, and Sharon Biggs

'

- The rihh birthday of Joshua
Pape son of Allen and Carol Pape,
was observed recently with a parry'
A "101 Dalmalions" theme was
carried out with a cake and other
relieshments beinj! served.
Attending were Chelsea Pape,
grandparents, Larry and Phyllis
O'Brien and John and Patty Pape,
his great-grandparents, Bob and
,

Florence Adams.

Reg ..Bun size or lite

U.S. No. 1 New Crop

usset
wh-o le
Eckrich
F . ing Baking .Meat Franks·
Ch cken Pota·toes

Celebrates birthday

'

1 Ill. Pkg.

• •

.

Others attending were Jim
O'Brien, Linda, Dale, Derek, Darin
and Lindsay :reaford. Lisa Pape,
Johnny Pape, Kelly Rizer, Kyle
Wolfe and Jordan Hill.
Sending cards and gifts were
great-grandparents, Nial and Virgirua Salser, Eileen and Herschel
Roush and Rex and Mary O'Brien,
·Jon and Kenda Campbell, AJldrea
Pape and Raymond Adams.

1'0 lb.
Bag

. Limit4 .
Plea$1l, Per
Family

~--------------~
BIG BEAR BIG BEAR PLUS COUPON

Masterblencl
Coffee

Food Club
From Concentrate

Orange
Juice

Lim~

1 ~ ..... Per Fam;ty

Fresh California
Kiwi Fruit

Ctn.

lacIa

'

r

I
I

'

4oz.
Jar

''

17~ ·

'

Cheese, Beef or Sausage

Tropicana Reg. or .Ho1T1es~·le

RoseHo Ravioli

Orange Juice

...:~~:~~~

The earliest Arab civilization
emerged by the end of the oecond
mUennium B.C. in the watered
hiCfllandi of Yemen, ·

"'
Chunk Light Tuna .·

Food Club Oil or Water Pack

Bally Foocl

"

~viUe.

.... r.

. Heinz Strained

All Varletle•
3·8 ••· hx I

12 oz.

Can .

II

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'

ant response~ "not in touch with l().ship U.S. naval fleet in the Per·
reality" and said claims of civilian sian Gulf, told reporters aboard the
casualties were "the same kind or· USS Kitty Hawk.
gibberish we heard from Saddam
The only Iraqi res~nse on
Hullcindlidnatho(Q.uiDW..:.:,••. W81k!tultll;ill;4 •' • .1!11 Ulldlll-·
"This is"a Jlllll
to flljlhts amount of IIDU·airmft fire. .
of rhetoric: that 1 take u indicalions
Brent Scow croft, the While
·that he's not mentally stable," House national security adviser.
· Chelley said.
·
declared that the allies had met
The Americ~n'ets on patrol their objective and J;Siimated tlfey
today wae laldng CIJI1e8 10 ~erify destroyed about half of the eight
iil
damaae~
looking for any missile llatteries they went after.
its misli011, but
signs S
's loyalists would try
"Any further military action
~ilots dealroyed only · to strilce ·
r
will depend heavily on Saddam's
half the miasdes they Wgeled.
Washinpm has made clear it is behavior during this period,''
The air forces of Saudi Arabia, prepared 10 resume air strikes if Scowcroft said.
Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Saddam dQes not stop threatening
The limited scope of Wednes·
Arab Emirates also were involved U.S. air pell'Ois protecting dissident day' raids was intended to show
i.n support ~t~les.
Shiites and Kurds aud defying the allied resolve, not to cripple vital
The Iraqi military claimed it suf- Uruted Natil'f!l!. •
targets all over Iraq as a fleet of
fered only "superficial" damage
Senior Qlilitary officers and aUied warplanes did two yean ago
and that 19 soldiers and civilians pilots involved in the allied mission in the Gull War.
died. Saddam threatened to "turn said their planes faced no resis.State-run Iraqi media said today
the skies of ll'llll into a lAva qainst tance from tile Iraqi air force· or that besides the 19 dead, 15 were
the oppresm!l
surface-to-air missiles.
wounded in the air strike. State
Secretary of Defense Dick
"There Was no activity today of Baghdad newspapers pledged to ·
Cheney brushed off S~'s defi· ant alarming nature at all," Adm, fi~ht "until victory." Saddam's
Phillip J. Coady, commander of the military options are seant, however.

By. FRANK BAJAK.
Associated ~'l-as Writer
. U.S. ·warplanes were back over
soulbcm
··-mna tho

pven

. _J

.. •

"
'

26125oLS'i
Cans .

'

Nabisco Premium

Saltine Cracken
Limit 1 Box Per.
Family, Please

1 lb. Box

line is February S and Stmtb is cur·

' The importance of participating
in the final public 1ieating for
. Pomeroy's downtown revitalization
was stresaed at Wednesday's I'C8U·
lar meeting or the Pomeroy Mer·
chants Association.
The final public l)earlng wW be
Jan. 26 at 7 p.m. • Pomeroy Vll·
!age Hall. At that time, Mike
Stroth, Pomeroy's revitalization
consultant, wjll be on band to
answer any queadons reprding the
application process lor ifant
money from the Ohio Depanment
of Development Appllclllion.dead·

c

64 oz.

fil:alion in health information man~t is to improve the quality
of the nation's health data and to
promote competent HIM practitioners.
'
i\RT candidates had to complete
an associate's degree in medical
record technology, a program
accredited by the Committee on
'Allied Health Education and
Accreditation of the American
Medical Association with
AHIMA's Council on Education.
Koehler is the daughter of
Halold E. Hager, Racine, and Marcia King, Middleport. She is
.-uty employed at the office of
br. H.D. Brown, .DDS, Inc .,
Pomeroy: She graduated in 1une
from Hocking College in Nel-

Allied pilots .accomplish·mission;
U. S. warplanes assess damage _

By JUUE E. DILLON
Sentlnel News Staff

Certified tech
Astocialion (AHIMA).
The pwpose of AHIMA 's certi-

southern Iraq. Tbe headl111e5 read "American, ·
British and French Air Aggression on Southern
lraq."(AP)

.Final hearing on downtown
project to beeheld Jan. 26

For All Automatic
Coffee Makers
11.5 01. Can

R. KAY KOEHLER

R. Kay Koehler, Middleport,
was recently certified as an
Accredited Record Technician
(ART), according to the American
Health Information Management

'

• ••
1 Section, 10 P-ae• 25 cen~e:

•

AMu~medla Inc. New I pol* '

approved
by newly-organized
Meigs Commissioners

IIAIIEIIIOMTIIE--10f1101111

'

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·.....
• ., •
..

Transf~"rs

· c.~=-

TOASTED WHOLE GRAIN OAT CEREAL

Tyson Holly Farms Fresh .

.• -

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Pomeroy-4tlc:ldleport1 Ohio Thursday, January 14, 1993

. •.Jr

pueniS, David and Penny

CloudJ tHtpt.l..w 111-.14·
21M. FrldaJ, clolldJ. Hip Ill
upper JOo.

•
I

fifth birlhday recently with a party
at the home of his paternal grand)lllell~. The patty was given by his

JOSHUAPAPE

Kicker:
7661114

.•

,,

Fifth birthday

canjed (IUL

Pkk3:

.J

rently completing the downtown
business plan for the designated
business districL .
• Joe ClaJt, president of the association, urged all members to
· attend this ftnal hearing. Anyone
may attend the hearins, especially
· business and propeny owners in
the llulinell dillriCI.
F...loa lhcnr date ilet
The dale for the annual (asltion
'show spoasored by the ••soclarioo
was tentali~ly set for April 2 at
Pomeroy Elemallay.
Susan Clark will apin chair the
fashion show commiaee with other
chairmen being: VIcki Ferrell,
'

·Retail $ales up 1.2
·per'cent. in December
WASHINGTON (AP)- Relail
salca jumpeCl1.2 pen:ellt ia Dec:cm' bllr • oocn
lllioYed their belt

. • holiday ,IOISOII in f:lve yean, the
government llid loday ill funller
evidence of ID improYJaa economy.
Theubl81uto
IIIDJI
- ~how·
ever,
dealen
e oyecl 1
b~mp of 3.2 ....It

...

IUW IIDNI ICtllllly
doWD allsbtly when COIIIJIINd to
dlele\'el Otlilel Ill No:lazlllr.
· Th• ovenll
wu 1tlll
boner thlll analyltl had .been
M

me-

.~~~1~~::-e::.-:~

rebouad followlia a jlroloqecl
pedodof s Fldlfl
In other ecoaoml.; newa; ,tlle,
\ ~

aovemmeat 1epoo11111 a d'•:U:t·

prizes; Larry and Wendy Tucker,
refreshments; Jill Johnson and the
Fabric Shop, decorations; Dianna
Lawson and Bank One, tickets; and
Julie DiUon,,advenising, ,
An oraanizalional meeting for
the fashioo show will be held Feb.
4 at noon 11 Clark's Jewelry Store.
· Valeatlne pr-otloa
The next promotion by tile assoCiation wW be a Valentine ule by
participating memliers. A group
advertisement wW run in The Daily
Sentinel on Feb. 5 to promote the
saletorunFeb.6-13. Sales wW be dependent on what
each busineaa owner desires to do.
Oilier mitten

.

President Clark noted the eff~
of business owners who decorated
their 'buildlng facldes with white
lighta, statins the buainesl district
looked very Impressive. He also
thanked Lois "Burt lllld the Christmas carolers as well' as all who
assis.ted in uy way with the Old
Fllhioned Sattuday Night promodOn held In December by the association.
·
·
A membership drive- by the
association will soon be fCtting
underway. Full membenlupt are
a,..n.Ne b' $7.5 IDd includel \lOt·
ins privllAsea ill the association.
Auocilto mt?lllenbipl are avail,

lng increue In the numer of
AmericiDI fWns for unemploymant banellts. Tile Labar Depart·
iileatllid .fa"• claim junpo,t by
52,000 for tbe fiJtal weeJt; Of the
year, tbe bluest 11in In five
mCIIIIha:'
. Tile Labor
tmeat aald
1
fine-limeli.wJka
for343.000
- · lllle 'b ' $3=-=IIIC -bin do
_ _....
nat haYO
YlletoL Aa,one
... week . . . Jill. 2, up haiR I~ bl
thO IIIOCiatlon
1,4100. ,... . . . . Anl- should OJMrt tile Jll"'d"nl at 992·
lya ..W tbe 'ia llorun, while' 40.54 or tile II"'IIUIW, Vkti FerreU,
WorriiOIM .JI!Piiably oventaiOd at 992-5177.
'
WI I I111Iij01ftiW'"11, 'I11e)'llid
•Mil')' Powell, director of tbe
-ldy cbliiiN were NJ~CGII11y
a C::Oaaty Park District, will
difftcalt lei read durinslloll"'y
at tiM noxt mee"na on Feb.
perloda.
1 • llant One In l'olllefO)' II 8:30

DeJ:

ia:

IJR,

'

Robert E. Buck appointed Pomeroy
By BRIAN J. REEb
Attorney ChristOpher Tenogluuo·
Sentinel News Stall'
Two funds transfert . were the board to replAce John Lentes,
approved when the Meigs County who resi11ned after his election as
Commissioners met in regular ses- prosecu ung attorney. Two board
members are appointed by the prosion on Wednesday morning.
A transfer of $12,000 was bate judge, and five by the com-·.
approved to the Meigs County Lit- missioners. Both unexpired terms
ter Control budget from the county expireonDecember31,1994.
share account. The amount repreAt their organizational meeting,
sen~ the county's share of the proheld on Monday, the commissiongram's operational budget. The ers appointed Robert Hartenbach as
program receives grant funds for president of the bo\lrd, and Janet
most of its operation.
Howard as vice president. Mary
The aansfer of $2S,7S9.63 was Hobstetter was named clerlr,lgran~
approved to the children's services administratci.
'
.
fund. The figure is a paymant from
The meeting time for the comthe state for reimbursable chil- missioners will not change. Meetdren's services expenses from . ings are held each Wednesday at 10
Oc10ber through December, 1992.
a.m., and the office hours were set
The board appointed Martella at 8:30 10 4:30, Monday through
Short of Chester to the Meigs Friday. Those hours also apply to
County Board of Mental Retarda· the tuberculosis offJCe and the plat
lion and Developmental DissbW- mapoff'lce.
ties. Shorr replaces SIISie Karr, who
Linda Bentz was appointed
resigned from the boanl.
clerk of the County Court, and BarLast week, Probate Judge

bara Riggs and 'Pat Wolf were
named deputy clerks. Carol Baker,
Gene Chaney, C.Ol Dye and U..
Roush were authorized to accept
bond on bebalf of COunty Court.
BiU Dye was re-appointed coUnty
dog warden, and Hemet Smith ~
Ray Parsons were named coonhouse euslodi•ns.
'
Hobstetter, Hartenbach 111d
Judge Buck were Rlllled to tbe
Public Assistance Euminin cam;
mittee, althouih
lion will be filled by the indi~
. who is eventually appointed Collnty Auditor, to replace tbe l'ate
William R. Wicldine.
.;.
Hobstetter and Thereon Jolmaon
were re-appjlOinted to tile Meigs
County Reponal Planning COlli· .
mission, upon the rec:omJRCRdatlpn
of Executive Directqr Charles
Blakeslee.
.
· Present were Hartenba~b.
Howard, arid Commissioner Manning Roush. · '
·

Hobsteaer'. ...,.._

Old program resurrected by
Meigs "Extenston Depattment
A program which was offered in
Meigs County during the 1970's
geared 10 helping families eat better on a lim1ted budget is being
reintroduced.
Sharon Smith of Langsville has
been employed as the Expanded
Food and Nutrition educator for the
county.
The Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (common·
ly referred to as EFNEP) is a federally funded program which is pan .
of the Ohio State University Extension.
EFNEP was'a program of tbe
Meigs County Extension Office in
the '70's, but was phased out in the
early 1980's, ac~g to Cindy S.
Oliveri County Extension Agent,
Home EconomJcs/CD/Chairman.
Meigs County is one of tllree
counties in a pilot EFNEP program.
It was decided to pilot the program
in a rural area, and Meigs County
was selected as one of the three
counties. This new emphasis is
designed to reach families iJI
Meigs, Vinton, and Athens CounNUTRITION PROGRAM • For famllln wlao 11ft tOoldn1 at
ties.
ways
to eat better aod more outtltlously on a Hmlted hlJd&amp;et, the
An EFNEP educator has been
Melp
Couoty Exteosion Ol!lce bu just tile prognub for you. ·Aa
hired in each county and Mary Jane
Expanded
Food and Nutrition Education Program Is btiDI
Black, Athens County, has been
Here
Mary Jane Black, rural pilot project coordinator,
offered.
hired.as the coordinator f&lt;l' tbe proleft,
and
Sharon
Smith, local educator, look over some of lbe mategram.
.
rials
the1
wiD
be
using in tbe program.
The educators and coordinator will
also work with Deanna Tribe,
South DistricLSpecialist, Home
Economics, and Betty R. Reese, cover topics such as planning and lion program.
EFNEP is a major national outDistrict Director, to adrriiruster the preparing meals, choosing nutrireach
effon or Cooperati~ Exten·
tious
food,
food
storage
and
preserprogram.
.
.
'I
The EFNEP ·program IS avBI - vation, and spending food dollars sion. The JIIOIIniRl is liee of charge
·
· ·
· and available to all residents in the
able to low-income families with wisely.
Those who complete the train- county. Additional infqrmatioa
young children. With the goal of
helping families eat better on a lim- ing will receive a certificate of ,may be obtained from Snilth a die
ited budget, the poocipantS will recognition from "Eating Right is Meigs County Extension Office,
auend a series of 12 lessons ,which Basic", a National Nub'ition Educa- 992-6696.

Four injured in Wednesday wrecks
Four accidents were lnvestilated . where they were treated ·and
Wednesday by the Gallla-Melgs ICleased in good condition. .
Post of the State lfi&amp;hway Patrol
QuaUs was cited for failure to
maintain an assured clear distsncc.
Three injuries were repo~ed Her vehicle sustained moderate
after a two-ear accident oo Ohio 7 damage. Damage to Davidson's
in Salisbury Township liOUIId 4:30 vehiciQ was listed lis light. Both
vehicles were drl ven from the
p.m.
'
According ID!the patrol, Debra ICene.
A. Davidson, 30, of27400 Swe
Route 7, Cheahn. wuiOI!Ibb«Jmd
A Pantzoy youth wu lilltlpOit·
and atopped In t!M roadway to ~ to Veteran~ Memorial Holpital
ma,te 1 left turn Into 1 private Wednelday niaht followinl I CJilo.
drive. A followiaa vthlcle; .dritOD vcbicle accideat on State Ronte
by Mlllule B. Qullll, 18, 30920 143 in SaJilbury Townallio.
McBlblnney Hill, Mlcklleport,
JOibaa D. Dlcteaa, f7, 32.588
faDed to 11011 lllclllnlet die rear Rose Hill Road, Pomeroy, was
Dlvideon's e~r.
transported by Meias County
Davidson and two paaeapn, Bmeracncy Medic_. Senice to
John M. and Cody R,- Dlviclion, VMH wbere be wu trelted ud
aga 12 ud 3, liOib of Cllellln, vi and ill aocxt 00114tinn
Acoarclbcto die report, Dirbla
were transported by tbe ·Mel a•
County Bmwp!IC)' M'n:llcal ser- - Dllhlloimd wlllll be kilt c:oavice to Vatmanl Monotallfllll!'tll trol.ln a left curve and r10 ,oft' the

-

right aide or

tb~

road, thea back

across and off the

left side wheN

the vehicle slluclt 111 em~
and O'oiCUWned in I creek.
.,
DicteDa IOid the ·JIIIIOI 1 nortli:
bound vehicle blinded Jaim wiG!
brisht lights', causins him to ~cite.

cooliOl.
•,
No citation• were iuued. Tile'
vchiclo ....._, model• t
1.
and- towed'- tbe- . ' .
•, '

�•

Thurada~January14,1993

....

Commentary

:1:

P~~ge

By The Associated Press
Aceu-Weatbei• forecut for
Temperatures across Ohio this
morning were 20 to 30 degrees
MICH.
colder than they were 24 hours ear&lt;lier in the wake of a: cold front.
e
Some freezing rain and snow made ..
TQiedo 28"
driving difficult in lhe Rorth.
.
. Forecasters said tonight would
· be mosdy cloudy wilh a chance of
snow flurries in die north. The mercury could dip into the -teens.
Continued cloudy and cold was
IND.
the weather picture for Friday with
highs in the'upper 20s to 30s.
··
The record-high temperature for
this date at the ColUmbus weather
•. elcolumbusl32"
station wa~ .70 degrees in 1932
while the record low was 14 below
zero n 1964, Sunset tonight wiD be
at 5:30p.m. and sunrise Friday at
7:51 a.m.
ArouDCithe nation
The jet stream kept pumping in
moist air from the Pacific Ocean
W.VA.
today, worsening an already bad
situation along rain-swollen
streams and rivers in California and
Arizona Snciw fell in the Northeast
and Great~ region.
Rain feU early tOday in pariS of
. Oregon and Northern California,
and the disturbance was expected
to spread showers and mountain
Inc.
snow into the Southwest today.
In the southeastern Arizona
town of Winkleman, residents
watched from high ground 10 see if
South-Ceatni Ohio . .
S•l!lrdar tbroucb Monday:
Saturday, a chailce of flurries. .their homes would be washed away
T~ght, mosdy cloudy. Low in
the mld"20s. Friday, variable Lows 20-25. Highs in the 30s: Fair by the Gila River. About 30 homes
cloudiness. High in the upper 30s.
on,S~y and Monday with lows and businesses were evacuated
Wednesday, bringing the tolal to 70
Extended forecut:
•
in the 20s and highs in lhe 30s.
since the river Started rising last
week. authoriues said. ·

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The Daily Sentinel

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Clinton's $35 million inaugural

lll,Court Street
.Pomei'Of, Obio

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
!heme of Presi4ent-elect Bill Clin.
DEVOTED TO THE INTltRESTS OF THE IIEIGS-MASON AREA
ton's inaugural is "An American
Reunion - New Beginnings,
Renewed Hope." However, the
·celebration - which will be the
most expensive in inaugural histOry
- will be largely closed to the
ROBERT L. ~GE'IT
public and is being funded by the
'·
very lobbyists Clinton cainpatgned
Publisher
· so hard againsL
Congress gives each incoming
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
president
$6 million for the inauguAssistant Publisber/ControUer
General Manager
ration. This does not include $5.5
million given to the District of
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
Columbia for police overtime and
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
other services, or the untold milllddress and telephone number. No unsigned letten wiU be published. Letters
lions spent by the Pentagon
sbould be in good laSte, addressing issues, not penonalities.
through the Armed Forces lnau$tJ·
. ral Committee.
This $6 minion is supposed to
cover everything from building the
elaborale stage on the west front of
)
lhe Capitol, where Clinton will take
the Oath of Office, to the parade
afterward (Congress pays lor the
Dear Editor,
time. One can only imagine the lunch it throws the newly sworn-in
With lhe recent appoinunent by back-room bargaining that must president), to the traditional balls
the Meigs County Commission of have occurred in preparation for on lhe night of the sweating-in.
Rich Jones to the position of this bogus appointment.
Administrative Assistant for the
I find this entire malodorous
Meigs County Department of episode contemptible and ask other
Human Services, it has become concerned Meigs Countians to join
blatandy evident that "business as me in demanding a run disclosure
usual" runs rampant at the upper (current explanations not withechelon of Meigs County Govern- standing) of all events tllat culmiment. (One can only hope this does nated in this taxpayer financed chanot become the resounding theme rade. Being W!Versed in the Law, I
o! thist;y new crop.of commis- cannot speak to (he legality of this
Sloners.
mater, but it most certainly smacks
Ho fortuitous for Mr. Jones, so of being unethical, and 8t the very
soon after being rejected by the least reeks impropriety. Let's
v~ of Meigs County in his latest demand the truth, and not be sur"
bid for re-election to the commis- prised when the politicians retreat
sion, that the vety body from which to the comfort of their usual dishe was removed hands him (on a sembling and obfuscation.
seeminglr silver platter) a conThere is -an old saying: If it
uived po51tion whose salary march- looks like a rat, sounds like a rat,
es or exceeds that of his former feels like a rat, and smells like a
position. (He'll hardly miss a pay rat, it's most likely a rat.
check.) How convenient that his
I smell a rat, and the stench is
selection was made without even a emanating from the third floor of
consideration given to the ''...list of the Meigs County Courthouse.
individuals who had ~ lhe test
. Roger Gilmore
required for the posiuon..." because
34955 Rock Springs Road
·it was "unavailable" at the moment.
Pomeroy, Ohio
How obliging of commission presiP.S. My opinion should in no
dent Roush to vacate the position way be construed as a personal
of president in order to second the attack against Mr. Jones. My
motion.
familiarity wilh him is that of mere
This farce symbolizes county acquaintance. Therefore, I do not
government at its worst, and reeks possess significant data to make a
of favo~i!ism, pseudo-ne.potism, value jud~ment concerning the effisur_r~puuous mane_uvenng and cacy of h1s tenure as commissioner
political back-saatching.
.
or to comment on his qualifications
A few years ago, my good
~lldQS to newly.=elected .com.:.,. (or lack thereof) for lhis fabricated
social services auomey,
friend,
missioner J~t JI?wanl for taking . position.
·
.
and
I
were
having one of our regua stand agamst th1s 111ost transpar·
This is only an ihdictment of the lar Women's
Days. Several times a
ent example of the "Old Boys Net· manner in which the appointment
year,
she
and
I drive to a resort
work" that we've see.n in a long was made.
·
halfway between lhe two cities we
live in an4 spemtthe day shopping,
eating and talking.
We were discussing some psychotherapy
she had recendy start·
While abortion advocates astounding 2.5 million.
ed,
and
she
shook her head. "My
promised le,alization would
Abortion advocates can hardly therapist said
he lhinks I was an
unpl'ove Amcnca's situation with call this a success story.
incest
victim
as
child, lhat I have
re~ard to unwanted children and
Since Justice Harry Blackmon all the classic asymptoms,"
she
child abuse, 20 years later we are of the Supreme Court wrote the
said.
"I
told
him,
'Hey,
if
I
thought.
even worse off in these areas.
Roe.v. Wade decision 30 million
In 1973, when abortion became children have been abused to the there was a chance it had hap·
legal in America, there were an point of death. These innocents pened, I'd tell you. But it didn't
estimated 167,000 ·child abuse paid lhe price for feminists' "free- · happen.' ' '
Now when this friend says
cases. By 1982, that figure had dom of choice".
something
didn't happen, it didn't
rl$en to 929,000 - a 500 percent
Lisa S. Jordan, hawen. She's
the most uncomproincrease in the first 10 years. By
Route 2, Box 667 C Leon,
mlsmgly
honest
person I've ever
1991, the number had jumped to an
WCSI Virginia 25123 met, and she doesn't flinch from
anything. She wasn't one of the
•
incest survivors I'd seen on Phil or
Oprah,
simply blocking out tooI would like to comment on I have learned is that if you don't
horrible
memories.
Commissioner Manning Roush's have it, you don't spend it."
Her
statement
staggered me,
.; IICIICinenL This came straight from
~ow I don't want to hurry Manbecause
a
therapist
had told me
~ the horse's mouth. You' ve heard
ning out of Meigs CQunty, but they
alutost
lhe
same
words
not too long
:: the old saying, via the s~ruinel and could sure use that kind of attitude
before:
"You
have
all
the classic
quote, "For the past 10 years I either in Washington D.C .. or
symptoms
of
an
incest
survivor."
.- have had a good teacher on the Columbus, Ohio.
'
:~ budgeting process. The best lesson
Virgil Walker
.Racine
~

Letters to the editor

·County government at its worst

•'

'

· However, reviewing~ the last rights are worth millions to the invitation events (which carry steep 't_
half-dozen inaugurals, $6 miUion ' Clinton-Gore Inaugural Commit- admission prices), and free "pub- '
lie" events. The Iauer, in tum, are I
only begins to cover the myriad tee.
expenses. The most lavish JRviOUS
Between TV rights and the sale divided into mass events like the ~
of tickets to the galas, balls and ' two-day· "America's Reunion on :
almost ev~g else, the Inaugu· the Mall" - an in-tent and1 out- •
ral Committee believes .it will at door rood, music and.~IS 'cele· ;
least bteak even•.andpossibly run a bration" ..:.. and limited-access l
events like lhe salutes to children
inaugural - George Bush's In small s~trplus. One problem · 1989- cost about $30 million . where to, get working capital to and youth at the Kennedy Ceater.
1
In December, some 400,000 of I
.The Clinton gala was originally stage the events unlil m6ney started
budgeted at $20 million. But inau- rolling in. The answer - obtain Bill Clinton's supporters received ,:
gural spokesman Richard Mintz short-term loans. The source for invitations to attend the inaugural. l:
admits that the budget has been some $18 million in interest-free About 150,000 CQntained in~illi- :
"adjusted upward." It is generally loans - cuporations and lobbyists tions to buy tickets to vanous· •
understood now that the actual cost that all but fell all over themselves events. However, as many as half ~
will exceed the Bush lOla! - per· to ante up the funds for the new the tickets to the by-invitation , )
events went direcdy to insiders.
'
haps by more lllan SS million.
president's committee.
Then
there
was
the
major
snafu
The financing of all this has
While this fund-raising method
raised more then a few eyebrows.
has irked some,. the bil!l!es.t com· of the inaugural: People receiving :
Most inaugurals have one enter- plaints have been registered over the special invitations-~hat,allowed ....
tainment extravaganza. Tile Clinton ticket distribution. Clinton them to buy- tickets to closed events ~"
inaugural will have two: the promised ~e :·m~st accessible:· were given a special phone number ·'
"American Gala" two nights maugurauon 1n hutory. Now 11 in Washington to call. The· calls ·.~
before the swearing in, and the appears .that access wiD actually be were supposed to be made between -~­
"Presidential Gala" on the ni,ht limited to insiders, the party failh- Dec. 28 and 30, and Jan. 2 and 3.. .,
However, because not enough· volbefore. Why two? More television fullind corporate bigwigs.
rights "' sell. Both galas will be
Basically the inaugural is divid• unteers showed up, those phones
shown on network TV, and the ed into two types of events: by- largely went unanswered until Jan.
4, the day after l)le deadline.. .
The result has been many frus- ..;:,.
trated and furious Clinton support- .::&gt;
ers who have found themselves
shut out of any inau~ event.
Many in the general public are j
complaining they too have been . '
shut out of lhe more linlited access •
"publicevepiS." Reportedly, mariy ~:
of lhe tickets to events.like the i;hUdren and youth salutes were never
·made available, going instead to ...
insiders.
.~
There are even complaints about . ·
seating for the inaugural parade. ·;
Anyone can come and stand along
t1!e ·parade route. But much of the,.,
route is covered by some 40,000 ,
bleacher seats. In past inaugurals, : :
half of these seats went to the gen- · ,
era! public on a first-come-rust- "' .
• serve basis. It was only after bitter..,.
complaints from all sides that the. ~
Inaugural Committee made 6,000 ~
seats available, and they were able .'
to do that only by adding extra .,
bleacher sections.
.,
Robert Wagman is 1 syndicat- ~.
ed writer for Newspaper Enter- ',
prise Asloclatlon.
.:

Robert J. Wagman

Hardly a success story

Will miracles never cease?

p

~

.•

Latitude of expression

·-·=

·- Regarding Gayle Price's letter
;: today(January 11,1993).
,: "Latiwde of Expression" says it·
;. aU. Wonderful thought. I love it.
~ , Whether we're old, young, or in
·: ~tween, this is what America is
:;SI!lJPOsed to be. We should be able

·-·-·--·

to say whatever we want to, whenever we feel like it, and stand
behind it with our name, address,
phone number or whatever is necessary.
Phebe Roberts
Racine

Supports shorter deer season

:;: ~ I would like to see our hunting
; iC8SOII closed in January. The rea.-5on being, a lot of our trophy bucks
:~ being shot as does. 1'hci hunter
.:doesn't !mow if he has shot a buck
or' doe, as they lose their antlers
':etirly in January.
.: : · I have spoken with several
)luntcrs who shot bucks, mistaking
:them for does. This has also hap:jlened years before. I feel you
~ld seU more hunting licenses if
would open Sundays for the
•':,'Norking man. Many people don't
•'
·
·

::rou

get a vacation time. The working
·man has one day to hunt. This
could make UP for lhe January season.
Muzzle loading season should
be the last week of December.
Three months is long enough to
hunt deer. We don't need Janitary.
Marlin Wolfe
Racine
P.S. This letter has been sent to
ODNR. I would appreciate your
suppon on this issue.

We'd been di~ng up the bones of
my failed marttase. and the the!a·
pisi had already labeled me'as "codependent". because I'd shown all

'Sarah. Overstreet ·
the "classic symptoms" of that,
too. (After several months of sessions and two pop psycholO$Y
books, "co-deeendency" sull
sounded to me like a person who
took seriously the lessons he or she
had learned m Sunday School, vying to deal with other people who
didn't; but that's another column.)
My therapist's conJecture of
incest became a recumng mental
boxing lnatc~ because of its very
nature: I believed it was preposterous, yet one of the hallmarks of
such abuse is supposed to be its
denial.. Was I sur.e it never happened?· Always I was sure. If nothmg else, havmg planted the possibility in my mind, the therapist
helped me reaf£11111 lhc care I did
reeeive.
Thill issue simmered in my consciousness for several years, but
came .to a full boil when I read a

Will BiD Clinton ~overn as he crates have been fighting for a gensaid he would? Or will he run his eration about what is called ''the
administration in the "Chinese soul of the Democratic Party."
menu" style, just the kind that
At the sub-Cabinet level - lhe
politically destroyed Jimmy Carter
and George Bush? In this week
before the inauguration, the defmi·
tive signals are still unsent. At
issue, mosdy, is tlie White House
staff.
. ,
The federal government can per- fingers and toes- it seems now as
haps best be seen as a huge, almost if lhe focus is on finding "the beSt
mtndless, plodding animal. The people" for given jobs. Again.
president's job is to try to wne the some of the best are moderates and
beast, and make it jump th.rough some are. liberals. And so, if the
hoops of his own choosing. ·
best people stick to their prior conPicking a Cabinet is importan~ victions, some of them may not
the Cabinet secretaries might be prove to be the best at advancing
seen as tlie arms and legs of the the president' a agenda.
great beast. On the Cabinet level
Will Clinton now appoint "a
Clinton has appointed some very · brain" to di=t his new big brute
good people: some moderates and of a government? Ideally, thatceresome liberals. That's necessary to bra! function should come from a
achieve a "big tent" Democratic policy staff at the White :House that
Party. But, alas, liberals and mod- has received the mandate of heaven

Ben Wattenberg

troday in history~---------·---

•
:::
.
By The Allloclated Preu
·:· Today is Thursday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of 1993. There are 351 days
·left in the year.
;. Today's Highlight in History:
·
.
.;t~ yc:ara IIJO, on Jan. 14, 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
•Jlr1lilh Prime Minister Winston Churchill began a wartime conference in
:c.ablanca.
'
:-: On this dale:
:: In 1639, the ftrat constitution of Connecticut ..:... 1cnown as the "Fonda··
.:IICIIIII Onlen" ....,. was adopted at a meeting in Hartford.
·; In 1742, Enalilh asll'Oiiomer Edmond Halley, who observed llle comet,
;tllll noW beln JUs name, died It IJ.e 8S.
.
In .1784, the United Stales ratified the peace treaty with Eltgland that
·~·

ended the Revolutioruwy War.
.
I)\ 1858, French Emperor Napoleon W f'iscapt'-d .. auempt on his life
by Felice Orsini, an Italian palriot who wu illiCT CIOillltOd.
·
In 1892, Holl~ producer Hal Roell- the Clalive fon:c behind
lhe "Our Gang' comedies and the ICIIIIinl ol Stan Laurel and Oliver
Hardy- was born in ElmiJa, N.Y. (He died lasl November 111 age 100.) .
In 1898, lhe Reverend Charles L. DodDon - beiler blown u au.thOI\
Lewis Carroll- died less lllan two \Veeksbefore his 66111 birtiMiay.
In 1914, Ford Motor Company greatly improved ill aucmbly:line
operation by employing a chain to puU each chaAIIIIon1.
. In t9s; NBC's "Today" mow premiered, fllllllrinJ Dive Olll'llWiy
as host, wtth Jack Lescoulie and newscaer Jim Fleming,··
·

Applications for the pilsition of
secondary supervisor, a position
vacated by the resignation of BiD
Bucldey, are being accepted by the
Meigs County Board of Education.
At Tueaday ~t's meeting the
BOIW accepted With regret the resignalion of Bucldey who has been
hired as superintendent by the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
Dohrman Reed of Reedsville
· was appoinle!f io die Board for the
fmt year of the unexpired lam of
. O~is S.mith who res1gned earlier
thiS year. He will be required to run
for the unexpired lam of two years
in November if he is CO(Itinue serving on the Board past this year,
John Riebel, superintendent,
reporte-d. Reed has served on the
Eastern Local School Board.
Jeff Harris \W5 lippointed as the
legislative liaison person. Harcum
Insurance Co. of Columbus
(Nalionwide) was again retained to
provide liability insurance . .
Given bus driver's certificates
were Vonda George and Kimbley
Taylor, Meigs Local, an~ Max Hill.
Jr, Scott Hlll, and Jerry Smith,
Southern Local.

'•'

eoo

. ~

.

·

If Clinton doesn't stick to the ;~~
themes thlliiOI b1m dl!cled, which -~ l
only the IIIIAII DLC team can rnab •·· '
happen, he 100 milht end up wltll a ,. • ;
fortune cookie th!lt will read, : •
"Sorry, this cookie hu no mea- .• :
SIIC."
,. ., .
Ben Wattenb«&amp;, a 1tlllor fel- -~ t
Ipw It the Ameraa EnttrRriH ., )
Institute, Ia author of "The Pint '1 f
Ualver~~I Natloa," publlebll!l b7 ·.&lt;. l
The Free ,..... ud a sJDCikated - _.
writer fq,r NEA.

'·

Area death

Tickets available

Willa M. Jacobs

Tickets for Saturday's game
between Meigs and Huntington
East. may be purchased at the
Meigs High School office. The
tickets are $S each with the school
receiving a ponion of the money
for tickets sojd in advince. The
· Meigs game gets underway at 11
a.m. The tickets can be used for aU
:rht games Saturday, it is report.

Willa M. 'acobs , 80, Mason,
W.Va., died Thursday, Jan . 14,
1993, at Elder Care Nursing Home,
Ripley, W.Va.
Amingements
will
be
announced later by Foglesong
Fun~ HQ!DCf· ,
, .. . . .

Plan OES services
Order of the Eastern Star services for Thelma Arnold Dill. 88 of
Syracuse who died Tuesday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, will be
held at 6:30 tonight {Thursday) at
the Ewing Funeral Home.

Units of Meigs Emergency Ser- an from Veterans to Ohio State
vices answaed the foUowing calls: University; 3:39 p.m., Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY, 9:31 a.m., squad to Pomeroy Nursing and
Pomeroy unit to East Main Street, Rehabilitation Center, Dancll 'CooRicky Laudermilt to Veterans ley to O'Bieneu Memorial Hospi·
Memorial Hospital; 9:SS a.m., tal; 4:2S p.m., MiddlCJ!Or! uni~ to
Pomeroy units to Leading Creek State Route 7, auto accident, DebRoad, electrical fire at Tom bie Davidson to Veterans: 11:32
McCloud residence, no injuries; p.m., Pomeroy station to State
12:05 p.m., Skymed, ~~C!I&amp; Vari· Route 143, auto accident, Josh
Dickens to Veterans: THURS.• DAY; 2:S4 a.m., Syracuse unit to
Bridgeman Slleet, Judy Willift!ls
CLEVELAND (AP) - There to Veterans: 3:47 a.m., Racine units
were no tickets sold naming all six to State Roule 124 for an auto accinumbers selected in Wednesday's dent, Shirley Dugan refused treatSuper Lotto drawing so Saturday's ment; I0 a.m., Rutland station to
jackpot will be $16 million, the State Route 124, auto fire, owner
Ohio Lottery said.
· unlcnown.
Pick 3 Numbers
Rutland Court
4-7-S
(four, seven, five)
The following were fined
Pick 4 Numben
recendy in the court of Rudand
6-2-0-5
· Mayor Ed Martin: Darry Bryan,
(six, two, zero, five)
Rutland, FRA, $200 and costs,
· Super Lotto
expired tags, $75 and costs; James
3-10-18-19-32-34
Bentz, Racine, no operator's
(three, ten, eighteen, nineteen, license, $75 and colts; Rllonda
thirty-two, thirty-four)
Elswick, Beaver, speCding, SS7 and
Kicker
costs; Jackie Large, Jr., Pomeroy,
7-6-6-8-1-4
speedintl, $5 I_ and costs; Starlet
(seven, six, six, eight, one, four) Ray, Wllk~sv1lle, speedmg, $52
and costs; Clinton Landers, Port
Clinton,
speeding, SS4 and costa;
The Daily Sentinel
1 John Wilfard Tillis, Middleport,
~1111-110)
.
speeding, $48 and costs; Lynne
Taylor, Pome~oy ; spe~ing, $49 '
and costs; Juamto L. Ortiz, Colwn·
bus, stbp sign violation, $SO and '
costs; Charles Neocc, Pomeroy, •
speeding, $S2 and costS; MichaCI
Johnson, EwinllbJD, IIICCdini, $4SO
and costs; Micliael Nelson, ltenron,
speeding, $49 and costs; Charles
Smithers, Langsville, speeding, $S I
and costs; Jerry HoOey, Columbus,
POII'I'IfA8TilR:-- . . _ ..
IQieeding, SSt and costa; Carleton
, . Dolly •• 111 c-t St..
0Hio4117811.
Orummer, Rutland, $49 and costs.

Pomeroy Mayor Bruce J. Reed
fined 19 defendants lhis week,
while eight others forfeited bonds.
Fined were: Robert Kennedy,
Rudand, $263 and costs, pubhc
indecency, $313 and costs, desttuction of property; Donna McClanahan, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
assault; Judy Freeman, Pomeroy,
$63 and costs, failure to comply
wilh court order; Jimpty Gral)am,
Pomeroy, $50 and c6sts, assault;
Lawrence Lee, Jr., Shade, $63 and
costs, failure to com.ply; Vincent
Stone, Pomeroy, $375 and costs,
DUI; 90 d!tys license suspension,
three days in jail; Timothy Thomas,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, operating
a vehicle without license plate;
Tanya Blackford, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, stop sign violation; Mary
Kay Blanks, S63 and costs, failure
to comply; Jo Ann Grady, Racine,
$40 and costs , no operator's
license; Mark A. Vargo, Shade,
$375 a~d COSts, one f~.license
suspenSion, three days m J811. DUI.

w-.......-..............................

---......,....
..
- .,_,
·- I a ·- IWb'
.a ..• 'l'loo
II
_ . ......
_...._

I

-

.....

~wQibollwa­

-·--·--·
.:·:::=
No

I

\ 11

b)'

oiooll .....IIIII Ia

•• 2 'Is:.

11 w I
•w

I

---"'"'""!;1M11
· - ·- ..·.. - -

•

·~·~·a
. n;:~'Q""'"ij-·

!

"

......-..-.............
..................~
1-··-·.
..- .. ..
~·· ::-~·~·- ····

·.

'

'·

Stocks

Am Ele Power....................33
Ashland 00....................... .27
AT&amp;T................................. 51 518
Barik Orle.........~ .................51 1/8
Bob Evans .........................20 1/2
Olanning Shop.................. l7 1/8
Oty Holding ......................21
Federal Mol!UI....................t8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................66 7/8
Key Cenwrion ...................21 SIB
Lands End.............,............ 27 1/2
Limited Inc....................... 28 1/2
Multimedia .Inc. ..... ,...........32 3/4
Rax Restaurant. .................J/16

Reliance Elecuic............... .21 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .......:........16 3/4
Shoney's Ine..................:...23 1/2
Star Bank .................:.........35
Wendy Int'l........................ l3.3/8
WorthinglOII Ind ................23 1/2
. Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes proYided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl or GaUipolls.

'

Middleport VFD has 6J calls

The Middleport Fire Department answered ·a total of 61 calls
during the month of December, including 14 fire and rescue calls
and 47 EMS calls, according to Fire Chief Jeff Darst. Vehicles were
driven a total of 964.8 miles.
A total of 761 calls were answered during 1992. The calls
included 114 fueandrescuecalls and 647.EMS calls.
Total mileage for the year was 18,430, by vehicle: squad 11,
10,791.7; squad 14, 1,567.3; engine 12, 1,126.4; engine 13,1,568.4;
ladder 16, 1,129.9; car 15, 1,889.2; brush 18, 357.1 , There were
three calls m·ade to the Village of Cheshire, and four calls to the
Township of Cheshire. Total. rue runs were dQwn one for 1991,
when I 15 calls were made.

f:c_

"

Kevin Roush, Racine, $150 and
costs, no operator's license, $63
and costs, failure to comply; Donnie Freeman, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, failure to comply; David Par·
sons, Pomeroy, $150 and costs, six
months suspension and restitution,
no insurance, $63 and costs, failure
to control; IJarry Butcher ,
Pomeroy, $212 and costs, assault,
$313 and costs, destruction of
'property; Jason Hysell, Pomeroy,
$63 and costs, failure to comply;
Howard Searles,, Pomeroy, s1x
months probation, assault; Ernie
Cross, Pomeroy, six months probation, disorderly ml!Jin~r; Carolyn
McKinney, Pomeroy, six months
probation, disorderly conduct
·
Forfeiting bonds were: Annette
Smeeks, Reedsville, $3 7, speed;
Jerry E. D!ly_, Pomeroy, $50, no
insurance, $60 and license suspension for six months, failure to
yield; Steven Hartenbach,
Pomeroy, $32, improper backing;
Timothy Dill, Charleston, W.Va.,
$80, failure to display valid registration; Clarence M1gbt, Vinton,
$66, speed; H. Michael Adams,
Th\1 Plains, $68, speed; Chris
Becker, Middleport, $62, speed;
DancU Young, Racine, $60, speed.

.•

•

GERALD MATNEY

Matney
indicted by:·
grand jury .:

57 R

Meigs County
announcements

SJAUING FRIDAY

THE MUPPOS'
CHRISTMAS CAROL &amp;

Board to meet

SHOW TIMES:

The Board of Public Affairs will

MATINEES SAT.

meet Monday at 10 a.m. at Star
Mill Park in Racine.

a SUN. 2:00

One E-lng S'- 7:30

AdmiMion $1 .50 • U&amp;-0023

SHOWJ. . AT 9130 ~..

Installation slated
The semi-armual installation of
officers for the Intemational Order ·
of Job's Daughters will be held Friday at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Public invited. Beth Clark
will be the installing officer. Kim
Mattox is the honored queen elect.
· Greta Riffle is the bethel guardian
and Dorsel Thomas is the associate

fRI.·SIT.·SUN.

. '

IOIIN WilliAMS IN

..

ONE EVENING SHOW e :30

bethel guardian.

ADMISSION 11.50 • 44HII23

PHARMACY :~:
TOPICS ".
\

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman has released a breakdown of
receipis from Middleport Mayor's Court for 1992. A total of
$45,976.69 was coUecled.
The breakdown of receipts was as follows: bonds forfeited,
$16,284; fines coUected, $21,633; court costs paid, $5,455; merchant police coUeetion. $1,152; accident reporu, $53; trash hauling
permits, $2S; remodeling permits, $60; carport permits; $20; roof
permits, $100; trailer permits, $80; building permits, $474.69;
demolition permits, $20; siding JlCI!IIiiS, SSO; pos~r permits, SSOO;
porch perm11S, $20; sidewalk perm11S, $10; and miSCellaneous permilS, $40.
.
In 1991,$69,660.93 was coUected.

Police make 79 a"ests

The MiddlepOrt Police Department made 79 arrests during the
monlh of Deceniber. 27S meals were served to prisoners by the resi.di:nt displllcller. Eight accidents were investigate~!.
Cars 20 and 21 were driven a total of 5,tn miles, and 557.1 gal. Ions of gasoline were used. Merchant police collection for the
month was $71. Parking meter collection ~ $200.50. 56 paRing
tickets were written.

BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
II maltera llbiD. a p11tient geta antibiotic.. According to r•aarch et
Laner-day s•nt• Hoapllalln Salt Lake City, the bell time to give p,. ·
ventlve
antibiotic• Ia an hour or.two before aurgery, not aartler 10' ·
'
thlllthe drug lilvella high at the time ollnclaion..
•\

.

...

Guldelinea from·. the Amertcan Academy of Pediatric• recommend
thet all children over 2 follow the aame aort of lower-fill diet reeo mmended lor their parenta.
·
•·

...

Antlhlatell!in .. &amp;Hm to be affective to keep blood veaaela 111 th4.' ·
biiCk of the eye from laeklng - A aymptom of diabetic retlnoplllhi'
that can lud to bllndneaa. Doctor• at Pennaylvanla State''
Unlv.,.lty'a Medical School plan to try the druge againat other pro-"
blema dlebetica.
.

.

Tiny lnterdentel· toothbruahea Wille teated eg1inat dentll flo.. br,
dentlllla Ill Lome Linda Unlveralty In Callfornle. The verdict: the_.,_
er-to-uaa bruahea work blllter bet- toot.h eurfacea, •• long .._
theN Ia enough ap.:e Ill the gum line to allp the bru1h ln. .
...

D.K.'s ·
Farm .Toys

• ••

IIIII rDIY IDDCftO..

Whlll doea ltllll[ denlial recommend lqr dental hygiene? You'll find
.till!.... .
. '
.

SALE
. ALl y., SAlE FAIM TOYS

10% OFF con

-·-a.. --

IT

111011 . . . . eo.t;

Judie P~ W. Crow llllw
flllcl alrieiiJIPOiali.!!t H~y J. .
0D IIIII T. . . M. l'yDI-Drum· \

no ... "·"'·

QDILrrY PRI•-r IIOP

26611LLST.
J:CI0-4:00

WEEKDA.,_

IIIDOLEPORT,OH.

o.ya (lt4) 111 1111
Evenlnga(l14) 742-*120

''
'

• ••

Ap=•;1f:rur James M.
" Souloby . . nametiCarl HyiOII.OO
Beajllliln P. Davldaon, Jr.: u IJIII. clal ~-- The ~abnentl
iaMelp
tyCom,

.

'

A Gallipolis man charged in lhe ·
Oct. 9 shooting death of Olley ·
Angel, Mill Creek Road, Gallipo- ··
lis, was indicted Wednesday on ··.
charges of murder and felonious ·'
assault.
·
The Gallia County Grand Jury ·'
indicted Gerald "Jerry" Matney ·. ·
18, Gallipolis, after hearing testi~- ··
many from 14 witnesses in the Gal.'' ·
lia County COmmon Pleas Court of ·
Judge Joseph L. Cain.
'·
Both
cfiarges
carry
a
firearm
•·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER •
specification. The felonious assault '·
Discharges, Jan. 13 - Mrs . charge stems from the shooting of :
Harty Kuhn and son, Mrs. Sherman Angel's 17-year-old daughter, ·,
Bendey.and twin son and daughter, Paula Angel, who was shot in the · ·
.
Evelyn Duncan, Pauline CamP., hip during the incident. .
Marcia Elliot, Mrs. Kenneth Hill . Matney allegedly shot the ' ·
and .daughter, Gregory Burgess, Angels wilh a .38-caliber aUtomatic
James Staton, Syndra Hudson , handgun during a dispute in the :·
Elisa Lawrence, Verlia Salts, parking lot beside Pizza Hut restau- ·'
Edwin Johnson, Hollis Saunders, rant, Eastern A,venue, Gallipolis. '
Mary Johnson and Charles Leasure.
COLONY THEATRE
Births, Jan. 14- Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Masters, daugliter, Vinton.

·Mayor's receipts outlined

Dlvorcellled ,
Au ilcdon for divorce has been
filed in ~elgs County Common
PIOu Court by Sherry L)'llll :Hoi·
111811, Racine, apinst LoYJI Mooroe
Holman, Racine.

,,

:1:;

Hospital news

Court news

llla'UCOUitllpajllii.

•

Snow fell early IOday in Indianapolis and Minneapolis and SCil!Ued snow was expected ~bere . •
in the regioo. l}p to 10 inches feU •
Wednesday in the u
M;:hi . .
Temperatures
were
cast in the teens and below in the
northern Plains; 20s in the Great
Lakes region and New England;
30s in the rest of the N~ and
the central Plains; 40s in the mid- •
Adantic states, southern Plaiils and
Northwest; and 50s and 60s in the
Southeast and Southwest

John C. Hauser, 44, was northbound on Rutherford Road and lost
contra! of his 1994 Nissan Hardbody pickup truck, the patrol
reported.
The ttuck went off the left side
of the road, struck an embanlanent
Veterans Memorial
and ovenumed.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
· No injuries were reponed. Dam- - Jeffrey Connolly, Racine, and
age to the truck was unlisted.
Anna Frank, Pomeroy.
·
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Betty Momssey, Octa Ward and
Reta LauderrnilL

1 -.,.

IVIIICIJPI10N llATIII
Br'Cual•orllatorao.n.
o...
1.110
0.. ........ __ ,...,.............,... __• .•
ODo 'llftor.................................._ ,,..,.JO
IINOL800PY
I'IUOII .
IJollJ&lt;.........................,;,............-.11 C.to

sulate Tijuana.
Meanwhile, heavy.snow fell
overnight in pans of-thC NortheasL
Dozens of cars slid off the slick
Maine Turnpike, and maiiy people
abandoned their vehicles , state
police said.
Up to 8 inches fell Wednesday
in upstate New York. Snow fell
early today in Pordand, Maine;
Boston; Albany and Buffalo, N.Y.;
and PiiiSburgh:

Pomeroy Court ·news

,---Middleport
activities---.
.
.
--·
.

news

i

,,. II

An ·Albany man was cited for
failure to control after a one-vehicle accident
on Rutherford
Road
in
.
I
.

Lottery numbers

•• •

-•
•&amp;1~.

then turned left into the side of
Gardner's pickup truck.
' The patrol noted there was no
road or driveway for Peckham to
tum onto.
Damage to Gardner's 1990 Ford
F-150 and Peckham's 1984 Ford F1SO was listed as light. No citations ·
were issued.

In the organizational meeting
y.rhich. prec~d the r:~ar meetmg, Bill Quickel was
ted pesident, and Jeff Harris, vice presi~nt, of the Board. Regular meet. mgs were set for the second Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. in the
board office, The salary was set at
$80 a meeting, not to exceed 13
meetin$s. an~ the mileage rate at
,20 cents a mlle. The treasurer was
authorized to pay bills as they
come due.
Atte~ere Quickel, Harris,
Raben B
•Harold Lohse; and
Reed, and Supt. Riebel.

·EMS units answer. calls

...

slx,&gt;uld get high policy jobs include · ~;
WIii Marshall, Elaine Kamarck "
BiD Galston and Rob Shapiro.
'
There are others who Cl!TTY the.
DLC message. But because their ....
way of thinking is mostly new to
Democrats, their numbers, while \
growing, are stiU few.
)
There is a school of thought that ·: l
• says Clinton is so smart, know!- ::~ ~
edgeable, committed and bard- ) •
working - . that he himself can be 1 :
the brain of the beast.
.
-i :
. It won't work. In the morning a '·~ :
president bas his picture taken with ' J •
a Ml¥ch of Dime$ poster child. In ;: !
the evening be hosts a stale dinner. · : :
Then be's off for a summit confer- -., !
ence in MOscow. In government, . 7 !
when the eat's away, everyone . : :
plays.
i
Jimmy Cartt:r and CleorJte Bush .; l·
used the "Chinese menu" for poll- ";&gt; ~
cy formulatiqn, picking "one from .::, ~
group A," and ·thl'll "one from ,
group B." That soon tra11s1ates into ·~ :
the perception of a "lack of coher- .,., :
ent vilion," which is politically ~ 1

Small streams overflowed their ·
b8nlcs Wednesday in Nonbem Cal- .
ifornia, and some homes were
nooded in Palermo, the National
Wealher Service said.
Washed out roads made it
impossible for many U.S. tourists
to return from Baja California.
"We believe there are at least SOO
U.S ~ citizei!S stranded, perllaps as
many as 1,000," said Peter Sainson, a spokesman fa the U.S. con-

Secondary supervisor sought F 0 ur... Continued from paae 1
by ~eigs County Board
attempted to pass Peckham who Columbia Township around 3 p.m.

review in The New York Times enced this trauma laiei remembCr · .',
recendy. of several pOptllar·boob !X ideo~ .iill as abus.c. ,Tberefore it
dealin' with incest. In an article IS not unlikely that IIKire dwl half · &gt;i'
ti~ed ' Beware the Incest-Survivor of all women are survivors of ,,
Machine," authoi and social psy· childhood sexual' trauma."
,
chologist Carol Tavris points to
I give up. If we believe this, half· ~
several alarming similarities among of _us m_ight as weD just pick a ther· .•
boob about incest survivors. F'mt, ap1st, Sign up for the lifetime plan •
there are the "symptom lists" by and buy said therapist a new house -'!.
which one is supPosed to be able 10 in the suburbs.
tell if one has sUrvived incest. One
Incest does happen and it's hor· ,.
could easily find oneself on the rible, and that's why it is so impor- ' ".
lists if one has led anythin' less tant not to cook the num hers and ::,
than a 100 percent fulf1lled, make it seem more cOmmon than it -',;is. I've heard harrowing accounts ·.,;
assertive and h_appr life.
Then Tavris c1tes research on that left no doubt about their accu- . 'i
the nature of meroory that points to racy, but I don't believe they come ••
a biolop- of constandy re-creative anywhere near lhe statistics some ::~
rehearsmg and encoding of data, of theorists have tried to make us .;
,
brains highly sensitive to sugges- 'believe.
tion and especially hypnosis, a
Those theorists have sold a lot ~
technique widely used by therapists of books, however. If you've -!
to unearth supposed hidden incest bought one of them - and its theomemories . S'lie illustrates with ries - do yourself a favor. Put a ,,.
examples from the biggest seUers bookmark in it and read Carol
in the incest-survivor field, an'd a Tavris' ·" The Mismeasure of ·';
lot of them .reveal' pretty weak Woman" before you read any fur- .:,
stuff. This is my favorite, from ther.
''Secret Survivors:''
Sarah Overstreet is a syndl· .;
"It 'is my experience that fewer cated writer for Newspaper
than half of the women who experi· Enterprise Aslociation.
"

from the president. Such staffers
are the only ones who can make
sure lhat appointees ill the aaencies
are pushing the president's views
to the special inte~. and not vice
versa.
Clinton has an im~t case to
make. He ran as '11. different
Democrat," ·that is, different from
the liberal mindset .of the party. He
said that both parties were "brain
dead" and that there was a "Third
Way," a non-liberal way to "reinvent" govemmenL ·
·
Among Democrats,· the moderate Third Way ideas were mosd)'
generated and promoted by the
Democratic l.eldership Council, an
activist group once chaired by
Clinton.
The big question now is how
will Clinton choose to staff the
domestic policy realm in his White
House. If Clinton wants a government that will reflect his.own professed views. the key staff spotJ
should go to DLCers. As this ia
written, 10 days before inaugwation, there is much doubt The fear
is that DLCets will
up witb a
few COIIIlCllc thank-you jobs in an
adminlltnlion It war with Itself.
Tile Ideal, bigb·ltatme choice
for the top slot woutd be DLC
Prelldent AI From, 'kho now heads
the Clinton domestic policy tranlltion leam. (He hu .Ud he wants to
return to the DLC, but Clinton
lhou1d twilt his atm.). His deputy, .
DI,.C. er. Bruce Reid, also a good
selection, is in the running. OtltU
DLC activists and theorists who

I

Weather

.•

Will Clinton's cookie crum·ble?

I

I

l

Don't conjure up traces of incest
a

I

•

· The Dally sentlnei-Page-3

Temperatures will remainiii cold around Ohio

OHIO Weathc:
Friday, Jan. IS

2-The Dally Sentinel ·-:
• · Po~eroy...:.Uiddleport, Ohio :

Thuraday,.January 14, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

"·""·

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In college hoops,

Sports

.

_

EASTERN (::ONFERENCE
L " "".~.-13 .606

T'!I'
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15 .413
19 ' ,_ 317
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llobaiL--·-·--...

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10
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14
16
17
17
19

basketball scores

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4.5

5.5
6.5
7.5
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62, E. Michip157. C1l"
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-lma a.- 69, Tolodo 61
ltoat 7S: Ccat. 1oldoipa 14
w. lofirbip• 69, Miomi, Obio.52

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•

· WESTERN CONFERENCE

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19 13 .5911
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6
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15
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19

s..-....... .

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Sooalo.....- ...........23
l'aodoad .................21
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IIJ llONAI.D 11UJM

104,aJMIIAND91 .
. 129, aow. Stole 122
Douail I2, Don. 96
S. Aa&amp;oaio 19, Milallalall
--lOI,NewY.a.92

NEW 'fORK. (AP) - Cllris
Sabo uc1 Rob Dibllk me dcals.ma llleO · • Rak.ml
bolbpbi&amp;ailes.
Di11111e, 2-S wid! 2S m1 a
.3.07 ERA, Jill• $9S0J10D .,.- .,
$2.5
s.oo. w11o llil .244
wid! 12 lll..e . _ ...s 43 RBls,
cot a S3SOJIQO Dim 1D $3.1 ailliDL
lnliJl Muzuo or die Bosaoa
Red Soil - llle dlialallii•M••-.
eliptJlc plaJa" w11o qRCd 10 a
MIII'Q1ct Wi
~ !"'•ita wid!
Bostoa u S3so:UuO, die saae
alaryK...aelat
•
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• • ._,. day far wi&amp; • p.
ne TaB R s c 1 ., • SJ
million. two-,ar deal wi.. a.t·
ficllbGiry'hdas, ..m-letF

S.."-iollllfil........ l,30p.m.
Cwloae It llaullaa, 1:30 p.a
.. tJo.lo, 9 ......
LA. LU. . at LA. Clippea, lO::tO
p.m.
lltSOp.m.
.. Purdml, 111'.30-

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Frlday'opmes

Od.soM 8cllat. 7:30p.m.

.

I

aJ!VB1AND atiDdiaoa. I 7:30p.m.
p.m.
n.w.aK
cr·,l~

Oo1Aoa- .. Clicooo. 8:30p.m.
Now Yadt 11 DoDu, (30 p.m.

Mimi II Ato.iz, 9:30p.m.

j.A. Clio!&gt;Ooo. - 1 0 , ....
1'utloadit LA. Lobn, 10,30 p.m.

lntbe~L ...

•

..
'.

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·--

WALES CONFERENCE.
T-

•
•

WLT&amp;GJGA
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ww~ .. _.. 22 11 4
41 116159
N.Y.~ - .. 2111 ' 41 116119
NowJ.Ny ... _ .. 2217 3 1(7 144.1ol0
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Pbi'rhii*b - -··· 16 19 6 31160162

......
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~ ............... :14 14 6
............ 23 17 2
Bulfllo ............... 21 16 6
Hatf...t ............. 12 p 4

•

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•

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48 151146

TOOIIIto .............. 20 17 7 47 14!144
SL Looia _ ........ 17 21 6 40 1!2160
Tampa Bly ····-·· 15 21 2 . 3l14.5173

•
•

-............ 21 16 6

s.,u.. Dl&gt;loloo

Milwllbe. Yl'a.

Rae's llle • h&gt;' I
.
·9:1Saa.-Nanlt.Adalllws.

Ohio higb scbool
girls' basketball .,ICOI'""""ts"'

~RnfiiS

Killa(WJS.)WS.C

• 7:4S p.-.

' Per

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HaatJc.

n. Paaa B · .. y..n... '
·Rqc
I
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CaMni(K:y.)ft.So

all

7
•

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s.n .... .t o.u.:.u. '7:40p.m.
llatlfmd at.Phmon. 9:..0 p.m.
Buffalo at VIPCOUYtt, 10:40"p.m.

1989FORD

ESCORTGT

"""'"""'drive,

2 dacn,
4cyl., 5
Olllnd. Inns., PS, PB, In wheel,
c:n.oioe, AMIFM- """· llllli-

lllo,bucklll- '

=ss1

IIOW

1990UNCOLN
TOWN CAR
4 doaio, ..... V-8, air,-., PS, PB,
~lllindclwl.~--powll'lodil,

till ....... cruM, AMofll · - • •
...... - - tlelag.

•

•• GilliS
IIIIUif 12

WINTER CLEARANCE

c.... 0 -

..

T ....
WLPcLWL
Ball St. ...... _ ........ .2 I .667 11 o4
Miuni .................. .2 I .667
6 3

•

Abai .................. 2 I
BGSU .................. .2 I

'

OIDO ................... 2
W. Mido............... .2
c. Mlcb................. !

"-SL ................. I

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E. Mlcli, ................0

•

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NOW IN .PROGRESS

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4 daan, lront'wt.! d!Mo. 4 cyl.,
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AMIFM atereo lape, radlala,
buoltet - · ..,win. delog.

IIOW

'IIOW

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.,~~ s17,222

PUT-IN-BAY, Ohio (AP)Put-In-Bay High School's basketball team is unique in more ways
than one.
It's the only Ohio team thai has
to charter a boat to most of its away
gan~es, · since the school is located
on one of lhe Lake Erie islands. Its
· coach, . Susan Harrington~ is
believed to be the only woman
.head coach in Ohio boys high
school basketball. And it .probably
has the state's shortest varsity
schedule. Nine games had been
scheduled for this season. but two
had to be canceled because of bad
weather.
.
The school has 11 boys in the
: ninlh through 12th grades and 10 of
. . them play on the team, which is in
: its second year of competitioo.
·
"We know we can't do foot ;· ball," school administrator Kelly
. : Faris said. "Bul if you've got five
· boys, you C!lll play baskciball." ·
The team isn't lacking for sup• port, considering the population
base from which il draws.
•. ·:we had pmbabtr 200 peoJ,&gt;Ie
• . for ''lhe last game,' Faris sa1d.
"There are only 400 on the island.
If Sand~ or Toledo had 50 percent or ·thelf population at·a gan~e,
they'd be iri good shape."
"
When the team &gt;leaves for a Friday nighl gwpe, it doeSII't rerum 10
the island uil.tll Saturday morning
because !here's no way to get to the
island at night in the winter when
: commercial. ferri~ aren't running.
Faris, Hanington and one parent

SABLE

4 clo:ocn., ....... !rant"'-! driw,
... - ·· PS, PB, tiftwl!ell,
AMIFM
wllite ala. .., win. delog..
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I

.... .

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woodowa.~-.~lodtl.

ft "'-!, c:ruiH, AMIFM • lape, ........... win. defog.

1987 FORD F·150

.......
. 30%••
-····.....,
30"

IUIIOCIU,IJICS

W. lotidoip&gt;HAbai

In tbe Big Ten
. ....
c..r.

W L rot. w
lndiona ...........3 0 1.000 14
!1HnaU ............2 0 1;000 9
- . .......2 1 .667 10
MldUpn ....... .2 1 .667 12
OIDOST........2 I .667 9
lowo ................ l 2 .333 12

· T-

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2 .175
4 .692
2 .133
2 .157
3 .750
2 .157

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6 .500
4 .636
6 .455

Transactions

liD &amp;

f

.

6cyt .• -

. . . . . bumper, galgN.

•-tape.

•

•

7

•

..

(X&gt;!A.TC~'IIIHal- to.

. . . . . . . Ph
bo!J,~ •

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

fi .... C...-

I

--

.,

IIOW

HOLZER

CLINIC
PRESENTS

TUESDAY
JAN 19,1993
7:30P.M.
vs.
URBANA UNIVERSITY

GU\OE

55,135

56,958

At Rio's Lyne Center

ADVERriSINO DEADUNE

e.n v.., Mrtt1111111 ••,.•••••• ,., Rite ••,.,......

.The.Daily Sentinel
Phone (614) 992-21SS - Atk Itt P. J. ot D~tlt
•

•

(

free Admission
comPliments of
-Holzer Clinic

IS JANUARY 20, 1991

• PLACE
SHOE
•

HOWARD E. FUNK :
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER!

WASi8,195

IIOW

211 N. IIC&lt;DIIdAWL
(

THE TAX BOOKS, ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1992
COLlECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES, ALSO
FOR DELINQUENT TAXES. .
. . CLOSING DATE IS FEBRUARY 12, 1993
.. TRAILEit"TAX DEADliNE IS .JANUARY.31, 1993
NO EXTENSION WILL BE GUNTED

PL~NN\NG·

\i ·\R "iH ~I 1 l'H \ \(Pl()"'"iHll'
'- \H .·\ T &lt;, !I I R 1 &lt;, -"' · } \', i .._, · . r \ •l' to. ·

• Wllclla*

No. 23 Micbigati State 77
No~ 21 Ohio State 60

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

~. . . . . , RE1\REME~1'

1989 CHEVY C-10
PICKUP '

Ill

,,
'

.

.

Rril•ayor camera for a picture with VINCE AND LARRY- the famous Ohio
Department ofSafety Crash Dummies. Presented at halftime by
AAA ofSouth Central Ollw.
'
FREE GIFTS COMPLIMENTS
OF AAA.
•

'
I

'·

Wlth•J 10''

3TO CHOOSE FR01.1
4dacn,oadln,lronlwl!ell diM,
4 cyl., air, ........ PS, PB, ..,_
W1dowl, power locka, .. "'--,
c:n.oiel, AMIFM
f"8dl.
.... bucltet-.

20" Offl

Offl .

No. 20 Georgetown 74
DePaul45

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

.• PS,P8,AINFMrat10,

...... 112 tan, long wlclt bid,

J .'

lllhlrda)"oaames

!'

4X2

*

,RIO GRANDE
UNIVERSITY
BASKETBALL

Bowlin&amp; a- 69. Talodo 61
K.-7f,C....!ItidUp&gt;74
W. l&amp;hipa 69, Miond, Ohio 52

CIQo .. Jiliami, QUo

Meigs
(14-15-13-13=55)
. Vema Compston 0-0-2=2," Joy
O'Brien 4-0-3=11, Lori Kelly 2-00=4, Katrina Turner 3-0-1=7,
Missy Sisson 4-0-3=11, Lee Henderson 3-0-0=6, Amber Balcl:well
1-0-3=5, Heather Hudson 0-0-3=3,
Vanessa Compston 1-1-1=6.
Totals -18·1·16=55

1992 FORD TAURUS
4 dacn, ....... Irani wheel dri...
S cyl., ... - .. PS, I'll. ~

Rodney

992-2124

/S COM\t\Q.

•

•

B. -aTolodo

chaperone the team.
'!We stay in the Danbury Lakeside gym," Faris said. "The kids
call it !he Danbury"Hilton. we use
wrestling mats and lake OW' sleeP'
ing bags. I guess they have a janitor
in the building all mghr. We usual!Y can tell !hem about when we'll
be there. We just knock on the
door."
Faris said the· value of having
events in which the whole school
and much of the island's· populalion can be involved is tremendous.
"II provides motivation for the
boys as far as classes go, •' she said.
"They must be passing all their WID •
classes 10 play and we check oo a
The win was a cosdy one, as the
weekly basis. If they're not, they Marauders lost the services of
can practice but they can't ptar. So senior playmakcr Vema CompsiOn
they're working very hard,' she in the fi[St period and sophomore
said.
guard Amber Blackwell in the secThe team was started after the .. ond t,alf. Both 111e questionable for
'school district fmished building"a '" lllilight:"' .....,,, ,..... •' ·." ' )
gymnas.ium last year. The gym
Joy O'Brien and Missy Sisson
·seats about '120 people, but with· Ie.d a bala.nc~d Marau~er attack
auxiliary bleachers, about 200 can w1th 11 pom.ts each. Chrissy Taylor
squeeze in, Faris said.
played but did n01 score.
.. ·
Meigs hit 19 of 41 from the
Sp6rts briefs
floor including one of two from
Tennis
long range for 46%. Meigs hit 16
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) _
of 24 froni the line for 67%. Meigs
Top-seeded "Pete Sampras of the culled in 31 rebounds, wilh Hudson
United States defeated Mark
eading the way with six. Meigs
Woodforde of Auslralia 6-4, 6- 3 10 had 19 s!eals, with Turner getting
.
eight
advance 10 the ~uarterfi.nals of the
Freshman Alison Pierson led !he
South Auatrahan Open. In a Laneers with sevennints. Federal
women's second-round match, toll' H k" h" ·
45 f
rom the
seeded Gabriela Sabatini of . oc 10 8 11 SIX 0
.
p
floor (13%) and 31% from the line
Argentmabeat
BltyFendickofthe making only six of 19 from th~
United States 6""'· 4-6, 6- 2· .
line. The Lancers had 22 rebounds

Federal Hocking
(2-4-8-5=19)
Katie Maxwell 0-1-0=3, Erin
Snedden 0-0·1=•1. Alison Pierson
3-0-1=7, Lisa Mahoney 1-0-2=4,
Jenni Kibble 0-0-2=2, Missy Benneu 1,().{);;;~. Totals- S-1·6=19

S6,333

AJga, 62, E. .. , , C1l"
Ball St. 71, 0hio6rf

•

Meigs with their patent defen·
sive pressure jumped out 10 a 9-0
lead just over two and a half minutes m10 the game on a three point
play by Lee Henderson. The
Marauders increased their lead 10
14-2attheendofthefio;tperioo.
The Marauders continued the
.. rout in the second period, Scoring
the first II points in the period.
Meigs outscored the Lancers. 15-4
in the period and was on top.29-6
at the half. Logan played all I 0
playerS on the roster in the fiiSI half
and lhe Marauders placed eight of
the 10 in lhe scoring column.
In I!Ie second period it was more
of the same as Meigs outscored the
~cers ·26-13 10 coast to the easy

the second half. Randolph Childress led lhe Demon Deacons (8-3
0-2) with 19 points, while
R~gers , coming off conaecutive 30-pomt games, was held 10 IS. "•
No. 5 North Carolina 80 ~;
No. 8 Georgia Ttcb 67 • .
George Lynch and Derric,'ic
t:'helps each had 20 points fqr
NQrth Carolina, which put the
game away with an 11 -3 run that
gave it a 66-511ead with 8:241efl:
No. 11 Cincinnati 7l
·
Cleveland State 63
Cincinnati slarled the second
half with a 10-0 run and tile
Vikings got no closer than five the
rest of the way. LaZelle Durden I~
th~ visiting Bearcats with 1;3
pomts.
No. 13 Iowa 84
No. 19 Minnesota 77
;
No. 17 Purdue·76
.
Wisconsin ~
•
.Glenn Robinson scored 3:r
points and grabbed 14 rebounds
the Boilermakers beat Wisconsin 41
home for the 21st consecutive time.

·CALL US
. TODAY!

/ANUAT« 29 '~'\~

c:n.oioe, AMIFM • - """· f"8dl.

\fedlleoday's scores

Saturday's pmes

~~ghlwhentheyhosttheMarawt-

wilh Lisa Mahomey getting five.
In the reserve game Federal
Hocking jumped out to a 16-6lead
at the half and rolled 10 a 30-22 win
over Meigs. Holly Rader led "the
winners with 12. Bobbie Butcher
led Meigs with six, Melissa Clifford-added five, Cynthia Collerill
and.Billie Butcber added four eaeh,
Jaclyn Swartz two and Ann Brown
one.

~.s-PECIAL '~~\\'

1987 MERCURY

IIOW

llaw~IP" MI:M&amp;St.
o.n.
. at Ball St.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs jumped out to a 25-2 lead
and wen! &lt;m 10 post a 55-19 viciOry
over Federal Hocking in girlf
TVC basketball aclion Monday
evening.
The win gives Ron Logan's
Marauders a 9-1 mark ovemll and a
7-1 mark in the TVC. The Maraud·
.er win, coupled with Alexander's
3.9-35 win over previously unbeat· .
ened Belpre, put the Marauders
iniO a first·place tie with the Golden Eagles. Alexander (8-4 overall,
6-2 in the TVC) will put a sevengame winning ·streak on the line

Duke player Billy McCaffrey had
22 _pomts and a school-record 14
8SS1SIS as alllhe Vanderbilt starters
scored in double fi~. The Commodores commmed only 10
tiD'novers and had quite a bit of
success against Kentucky 's press.
The Wildcats were in foul trouble
throughout the game, and that
tumed iniO a 36-for-43 effort from
the foul line for Vanderbilt. .
"I have io congrallliare Vanderbilt,'' Kentucky coacK Rick Pitino
said. "They did a great job tonighL
They outplayed us and they
deserved the victory. They remind·
ed me a lot of our team last year."
Rodrick Rhodes led Kentucky
with 19 points.
No. 14 Vlrglllla 100, Clemson 82
Clemson (9-2, 0-2 ACC) missed
23 of ils fust 24 shots from the
field and !he cavaliers (10-0, 3-0)
led 24-3 with 6:54 left in ·the first
half and 41-16 at halftime.
· Cornel Parker had 20 points to
lead seven CavlilieiS in double fig,
ores. Kevin Hines and Bruce Martin eru;h had 12 points (or Oemson.
No.3 Duke 86, Wake Forest 59
Duke broke from a 33-33 half.
time tie with a 14-0 spurt as part of
a 26-6 run as Bobby HW'Iey scored ·
20 of his season-high 25 points in

~----------------------~~~~~·

In tbeMAC •••

'

Put-In-Bay cagers' boat rides,
head coach make team unique

1989FORD
LT.D. WAGON

WLl START

•wwt•miER QUARTER

Ticb:t illf01 •a ...t odiU
details abou 111c 1Ca1U will be
AT 8.-CIO P.ll.
-11Ce4 lua". SpccialiJOIIP
C0111111 BIIIDIUY
-will becAaed.
· • MIUIY 14
Ticket worauiu c:u be
II CIIIIIOI SCIOOL
obl8iDed by ow liMS T• OcrIN SYRACUSE At 6:00 P.ll.
row. w..a.. Hip So h•., 600 s.
For ..,_il'lfonnldon
Peanstmaia A~ Wd!- on
c.1 M2....2t
4S692, aJ,3114-2162..
.• L..-..::=:-.:.~=;,:_-..1

Calpyatf'r1 · ' ':IL,7i40p.m.
Mir...u II Qicap.l:40 p.m.

·
DRIVING INSIDE - With ·K'enlucky's Junior Braddy on his
: hlp, Vanderbilt aaard Billy McCaiTrey (14) drives inside during
: Wednesd!ly night's Southel!St Conterencl! game in Nl!Shville, Tenn
. : where the CO'mmodores won 101-86 in part behind McCaiTrey'~ ·
::· game-high U points. (AP)
·
.
.
. ,

..U CO. IIIUE QUI

(Midi.)

WalhlDJ'ca 11 N.Y. lllandon, 7:-40

:~

'

AJnwder
• 6 p.m.-

~atQucbec.1:40p.m.

,•

(W.VL)'1111ci&amp;&gt;

,..,"'W'.._
"rip..

P!Dobapllli-.7&gt;40p.m.

•

Burial* East

. • 11 La -

N.Y.)'11Fw' 1
· ·1:30p.a. M
'willc.Jalla
Manlulll (W.VL) '11
• 4:IS JUD.Germu10wa Ac:ade•y{Pa.) ws.

S7 196129
54 .) 71142
49 110173
44 15!162
35 122110
14 124214

Sc. I..tMa 11 0g.wa; 7l40 p.m

'

1roa1Da

• 12:4S p.a.- Willaa Floyd

Ttml2bl'saam.S

I

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.

•••

..,. • • •d • -

W""""""

•'
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• Dlli-

mCDt w· fCUJuc eipt JUics
played b y - as dale • Mci&amp;s
ucl Rxiac So-tkn IIIII as t'ir
away u Loq; hind N.Y. and

Tanno-4, St. Louil3
Ddnd 5, Ttrnpt B1y 3
4, Edmonloo 1

•

~

·=1-1 I p.

•a.., h.Cii•

MoabW17,1lu!ford3
N.Y. Ron.... S, Wuhin-4

,...LooAn.....

c.-a.

uaul·

.

wil.hc, ~~ ,•

\fedaeoday'sooores

,·

Jiants

IIRne
also agreed to a
minor leape contract with out- ·
liddcr Mart
wbo became
a free •cent last month when
Danlit cldn't oft'er a 1993 COOiniCt.
Clm:oa bit .232 last season with
10bomasllld41RBis.
..
Les Lanc:uter, a 30-ycar-old
.hander wbo was 3-4 willn
ERA t.a year with the Delroit
r.-. ap:c4 10 a $350,000 con- .
h:l with lhe SL Louis Cardinals, a
$450,000 cat..
Left-bander Lee Guetterman
apeed 10 • minor lelpe eonlnlet
with the Los ADgeles Dodfers.
Gac:UamaD, 34, wu 1-1 With.
9.s3 ERA wilh the New Ycrt Yanbes ._
•• 111113-4 with a S.82
ERA and two saves for the New
YlllkMels.
Tbc MiJwaublC Brewas deaiJ·
uled rust bueman Franklin
Stula b
'11'1dd,llld CincinIIIIi sold the contract of second
'
. . BiD Dcinn to the Milwaube B--.

~r.....__._~

.I.LcJalld

v ......... ......... u 12 5
. c.1pry .............. 2S 15 4
Loo Anp. ...... 22 16 l
w................. 20 20 4
- " " ' ......... 14 25 7
S111l01e ........... ,. 6 36 2

..

ne
fifdl
......_n.
........... . ....-7•

S7 1921SS
54 117161
... 115154
41 194155
21_.136196
4 31 3 11 100210

-DlTWLT&amp;GFGA
CllieooO-............. :14 16 6 54 152!23
c...;,...... ..._ .. 24 19 3 51 119160

Pil1Sburgb Pinla aftU the
m Redus, wbo made $825.000
in 1992. will get $500,000 a seasan. Tbc 36-year-old bit .256 last
yarJs.with lllreechome nms and 12
RBli
T - also agreed 10 a cne-year
cwt1a:t with pil&amp;:ber Cnig Lefferts
wilb a option for 1994. Leffens
was 13-9 with a 3.69 ERA in 27
SIUIS with the San Diego Padres
list :re-11111 1-3 aDc! 4.09 in five
Sllrtlllfa he was lnldcd 10 Balli·
IIIIR: on Aug. 31.
· Todd Bt,tviuga, wbo became a
free agent Jut month when he
WISD'I offeicd a~~ the
Los Allgeles Dodgers,
10 a
$500,000, one-year
with the
San Frlnci.OO GianiS, a s6so.ooo
cat. 'Bmzjnlel' bit .239 with four
boweas and 39 RBis in 121 games

McDonald'sfDays
Inn Classk slated .
for Saturday

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

r

Meigs girls down Federal
·Hocking 55-~9 to tie for first

by the

.m.,.

Douailat Adoa1o, 7,31)JU'L

•••
•
••

S7,981

Reds give Sabo, Dibble raises;
Doran shipped to Milwaukee

1
3
6.5
7.5

.m

Tonfcbl's pllles

,.

. IIDW

and•lwAs•

6 .793
I .742

10

PROBEGT

llelpiac lhlpe the instilution and
lhe tac:us of ils ..,...,- be lllid.
lbe &lt;**'qW'J bas alwlys Iaten an
illlelea in Rio Grande llld one· of
lhe ft71 it muifesiS ils support is
IIUou&amp;b ill Iong-818Ddinc position
. . . !Mh1rtjc bt&gt;c • •
"TTuoalb its donation to the
lk•
s' Club, Bob EVIIIIS Fanns
bas eusaed lhlt .more quality sludents l1ld athletes can .oblaili an
cdio Minn llld ~ their ~y­
iDI stills at Rio Grande, Dr.
EY8Ds coalinaed. MFor that, the
cmnpm~y deserve our IIJllliCCQI!ion

Norlh Caul eo.r.
-K&lt;.,...S7,C..W-41
·1 4.-45
Obio w...... 12, a..tla 61
W0011erl0..., zh 1

1989FORD

said Dr. Clyde Evan§, Rio

Giaade's Yice IRSidcat for ldmin·
adaJcdc of
diiecur.
"'l11e tJDivasily
Rio Grande
ud Bob Evans Farms have not
om:y .,_ neighhra but ~tneas in

No.. l Kentucky 10i~86

ByTbe Auoclated Press .
· Georgia Tech 67; No. 11 CincinSlart up the who's No. 1 debate. nati 72, Cleveland Slale 63; No. f3
There's no debate .who has the Iowa 84, No. 19 Minnesota 77; No.
. best record.
· 17 Purdue 76, Wisconsin 60; No.
Kentucky. which had assumed 20 Georgetown 74, Defaul 45; and
the top ' spot in the college basket- No: ~3 Michigan State 77, No. Z1
ball j!OII on Monday, losI 10 Van- ·Ohto.state 60.
.
derbtlt 101 -86 Wednesday night,
There were plenty of omens for
leaving No. I up for grabs,
KeniUCky's loss. The last time the
Fourteenth-rimked Virginia beat Wildcats lOOk over No. 1, .January
Clemson 100-82 as Cavaliers 1988, they lost their next· game 10
.extended lhe nation's l(lngest win- Auburn. The last No. I team to
ning strealc 10 IS games. With Ken· visit Vanderbilt's Memorial Coliselucky's il)ss, Virginia is the only um ; North Carolina in" 1988, left
undefealed team in Division I.
with a loss. Kentucky won just
In olher games involving ranked once in its last three visits to
teams Wednesday night, it was: Nashville.
. No. 3 Duke 86, Wake Forest 59;
There were also plenty of reaNo. 5 North Carolina 80, No. 8 sons for Kentucky's loss. Former

'

·
._'hesday•a.,..
..

The

.·

Vanderbilt~tops

.

Bob Evans Farms set
t~ sponsor weekend tilt

Sc••rcboat"d
· . In tbe NBA ••• •

Ohio

I

I•

•

�By The .Bend
..

.

The Daily,Sentin~J.
·l'huraday, Jan11arv 14, 1~ ·

.

!

•.
1

NASA pr8c1ice for the building of
the space stalion beginning in
1996.
No major tasks wen: planned f(l'
today.
The five-member crew's frrsl,
and primary laSk was to eject th\!'
Tracking and Data Relay Salellile.
Shonlyaft«itsrelease,ananached
rocket propelled the 2 1/2-ton sate!lite toward a 22 300-mile-high
orbit.
'
A network of such salellites
allows astronauts to communicate
with Mission Control more than 85
percent of the time. Previously,
contact was possible only when
spaceships were in sight of ground
tracking statiQDs, just 15 percent of
lhe time.
The saJelliiCS also ~ scientific
craft, such as lhe Hubble Space
Telescope, wllhEartb. .
"It's important to America
because it's going lo add to our
capability to have communications
with OUt spaceaaf~ shuttle includ·
ed," deputy sbunlc director Brew·

ster Shaw said.
.
NASA plans to l(eeplhe craft in
reserve until needed. Only two of
lhe four such satelliiCS previously
put into orbit by astronauts are
fully usable.
.
Endeavour's asll'OIIBUIS are also .
JeSting a new $23 million IOilet. It
can accomm.odate much more
wasle than lhe old model -essen·
tial if shuttle flights are to exceed
two weeks - but has been criticized because of its price.
A $14 million X-ray spectrometer, activated Wednesday, continued to collect data. The device,
' operated from the ground by
remote control, explores extremely
ho~ mysterious gases between stars
in lhe Milky Way.
Late in the flight, lhe four-man,
one-woman crew wiU shut down
one of Endeavour's three fuel cells
for 10 hours - a space rrrst. The
fuel cells use hy~en and oxygen
to generate electricity lhat powers
lhe shuttle's electronics.

,!

••
•

'

J

•.

.
'I

I
!
I

.!

••
l

•
I

EMPLOYEE
THE
! MONTH
- Allee Wolfe, Retired
OF

! ~:~:':re=:

:::;

; montll by tbe Metes County
: Council oa A1ing. Sbe bas
• worked •• tbe Seulor Citizeas
Center since 19711. Iultiative, creativity, courtesy and cousidera·
· tioll, and relillbDIIJ were aU eval·
: uated lil makln1 the seleetiou for
' theawud.

I

L~e

Middleton Original Dolls
buys assets of doll firm

BELPRE - Lee Middleton
In ann.ouncing the· purchase
Original Dolls, Inc. has acquired agreement, Lee Taylor Middle10n
the assets of The Middleton. Doll said; "We're thankful to now be
Company in accordance with a able to focus our attention and
U.S. Bankruplcy Court Section 363 resources on the inttoduction of
sale approved by Justice R. Guy new products into new markets.
ColeonDec.l6, 1992.
·, We pledge to continue lhal tradi·
As part of lhe agreement, Lee tion of quality, creativity and allenMiddleton ~ Dolls, Inc. has . tion to detaillhat marks OUt earlier
~ certam liabilities of The
work."
Middleton Doll Company.
Founded in 1978 on Lee Taylor
Middleton's kitchen 18ble, the l)ew
Lee Taylor Middleton, interna- company expects annual sales 10
tional renowned doD anist and co- exceed $4 million in 1993. The
founder of the former company, firm, employing more than 50, is
has been name president and $'lis- hea!lquarten:d in the 37,000 square
tic direciOr of the new film.
foot manufacturing, distribution
The Board of Directors of Lee andn:tail facility in Belpre:.
Middleton Original Dolls include:
Ms. Middleton; James 1. ArmOUt.
executive vice president of lhe new
c~y; Robert G. Riordan, purchasing manager of the company;
and Bando McGlocklin Capital
Co1poration executives George R.
Schonath, chairman and ceo. anil
Robert J. Cera, senior vice president. Bando ~Iocklin is a share·
bolder and secured creditor of lhe
newly formed company.

.,_. Aul.a'Mien: I

woakllitC

'"~
·~ .....
- • t....._
. : M -• - did fiove
·~• '""

~ =llted~ ~L

ANNUNDDS.

father saw die columnllld handed it
to
Our 11011 bad 10 of the 12
symptoins you lillal. ~had been
suffmng from Touretre's .foe fiove
years, an4 my husband and I didn't
have the slighleat idea there was a
name foe his condition urtil we n:ad ·
it in your column. (Our pedialriciln
said that he was "higl! sttung" llld
we should pay
autnlion to
him.)
Because you shared 1his infocmation, our 11011 is now on mcdicarinn.
and his symptoms !lave almost
"'·--'
. .. •""'" a million
.....,..,.,.-- ........
"""'"'
times for the good that you do. We
will beforever'graleful.- SANDRA
WELLER, SAN DmGO,CALIF.
DEAR SANDRA WELLER: It's
nice to m:eive a lelia' such as yours
to balanee the ones that teD me 10
"get lost," "drop dead." oe "go jump
in Lake Michiga!t.• Your letter iS
sure 10 poduce dozens of reqaesas
to repeat lhe sympiOIIIS, 110 here IIIey

me.

•tm, 1M

9

l

Landers
't:;
.,.....-N .

years 810.

TRUCKING

·
' :::
DE•" TOI'£KA: Your~
is not""'
going ID chanJie, 110 it's ·
to you ID came 10 tmns with
rejeCtion and not let it get to~·
You 111111( puomeCOIIIIIelinJ;. I
is 1oog ow:nlile.llqle your
lreallllellt of you hasn't 111111e yoq
·
·
h'Id
Th'
reJect your own c 1 n:n.
1•
biM~eJ• more often d\111 y0u lhinkt
Get going and good luck.
,
Gem of die pay: Get that smut
smile off your fa:e. 1be _.....,.

To place .an ad

Call.9 92-2156

modier'.

.u.••

-...s,..__.
c_s,..,. &gt;tr''

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

enclose a large, self-addres~.
samped enovelope.
·
Dar An 111de'1'1: Whall was
-.--..
S, I was sem•Dy molellted by my .
;.th your wife last ni~
14-year-old brOiher. My mocjler was
What Cllll JOII givt! the Jltlr.W.
present in IIOIIIC vague way, but I who has evqytlrillg? AM i.AIII2r{
bloclred out the CApel~ and was booklet, "Gems, • is ideal for "
IIIMlr able ID diicuas it with her. I
llightstaltd or coffu tabk. "Gems~
kept die qony 10 myself,
• a co·l'·cno·11 ..r •-- LIJNJers' moil
11
A"_
...
_I
...
..._I
"' poems
"' """
.,.,w yean 11&amp;0.• '"""" • - - Y nqutned
/J/111 essays. SeNl ~
,.....,.., why I felt 110 uncombtlble • self-Dddressed, lollg, bu.rilws-sizt
around my brother, I chose ~t ellvt!IOJH!. and a cMck or TM"!1
to fon:e myself to be near htm order for $4.85 (t~is i11cl11def
anymm:. I lhen clecided 1D ~ to postage and llluld1inB) to: Gtmt,
my mother about those horrible c/o AM Landers, P.O. BoJC 115~
earlyyem.Herreplywas, "'h..dull. Chicago,· lll. 60611·0562 . (/11
You should. ha..ve gotWJ ovec It by c---~-. --"'$5.""'.)
now .• Her ~ coocem waa that 1 """"" _,... 01
not upset illy brother with die past · - - - - , - - - - - - ' - - """''"' he's an alcoholic llld may
What's in a name?
are:
·
start 10 drinlc apia. I was sbocbd
Eponyms are words lhat derive their
Signs of restlessiless such as eye ' and hurt. I always fek that my meaning from people. The "Bloody
blinking, head jertiug, nail biting mother was cold .llld unloving. but Mill'JI," a vodka and tomato juice rocktail,
andhwnming;constant,.,..itjonof 1his Iau n:jection was the wont. is named for the nickname of Mary I,
TV cOmmen:ials; throat clearing; 1 grew up with no praise or Queen of England, who was nOtorious for
baiting like i dog; short attention encauqemenl Sheneveracknowl- her persecution of Protestants,
which means to delete
span; foot~~ rapping; e&lt;JPmyachiemnela.Howlhave "Bowdlerize,"
written
matter
that is considered
.. and obsessi
·ove IJ'Bits such mauqed to mate something of indelicate, derives
its meaning from
.. iuonlinale touching oe die need .m-lf a miracle.
Thtimas Bowdler, the British editor of an
,_
to straighten things ap. Some
I'm married now arid live in expurgated edition of Shakespeare.
Tourette sufferers have circles uother city. When we visit
under their eyes from rubbing llld Molber, lbe is always busy With
look Ilk£ lliCCOiliiS.
bait 8JIII(iinlmenls cud games llld · The European Monetary System,
Those who want more infocma· club wort. It is hiXIfW the way she begun in 1979, was designed to.foster
currency stability ' and promote
tion should write to: Tourette leaoves me 11111 my famDy silliJ!&amp;.
Syndrome Associllion. 42-40 Bell
Will I ever aet oVer the IJein? nomic policies to reduce ·
Blvd., Blyside, N.Y. 11361. Plelae.. Please advise me. :_ TOPEKA throughout Europe.

• lloool.. .......,, lor ... poW Ia """"-·

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

..,.. ....
• PriM., ...

r: ::

more

a

• r- Ada: Cl--r ... r .... .., .....- u -r.~o w1111oo

u.,,

I

Call992~2156
MoN.

:
Commnlty Caleudar Items ~
: appear two days before an event
: ud the clay of that eveaL Items
• DJust be received weD iD advance
·j to assure_publication In the calt eudar.

~

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
Sacn:d Heart C&amp;tholic Church at 7
p.m. Call 992·5763 for information.

:
•
:
;
•'

:
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
: Springs Grange will meet Thursday
• at 8 p.m. at the home of Mr. and
; Mrs. William Radford.

:,'' POUCIES
• Ada .......... .O!IOtJ J'MU' ............ ho pnp.id
• - .. - t l o r .... poicllll ........
• FnoAda: Gl__, ... r .............. ts-rdowlllloo

nl03do,.., .. .......

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup·
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a round
and square dance Friday from 811:30 p.m. with music by True
Country Ramblers. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY • The Ohio De)M!!1, ment of Agriculture will be gtving
: ICSIS for new pesticide applicators
~ on Thursday from 3-7 p.m. at the
; Meigs County Extension Office.
' People desinng ~o take the test
: should haove teceived study materi: als from the Meigs County Exlenl sian Service pior to taking the leSL
• Call the extension office at 9926696 for furtha information.

i

1
:
:
:
;

RUTLAND- Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold an
organizalional meeting on
day at 5 p.m. at lhe board office
Comhollow Road.

Thur;r·

!

l

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
' Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
\ Sorority. will meet Thursday. at
: 7:30p.m. at lhe home of Matda

: Mora.

.

•
t

POMEROY - There will be an
f 11vening social at the Senior Citi' zens CeniU in Pomeroy on Thurs·
i day from 5-8 p.m. The Classics
~ ·will be playing olc;l time favorile
' music. A me will offering will be
taken for the musicians. Bring
! snack foods for the refn:shments
• 11ble 10 share during the evening.
: Public inviled. .

I

•

: TIJPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
l Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All
members an: urged 10 allelld.

'I
•:

•

CHESTER • The Shade River
• Lodge No. 453, F&amp;:AM, Chester,
; will meet Thunday at 7:30 p.m.
; Re6a~Mne~a will be served.

·l•

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
: TOWDIIlip Trustees wiD meet Fri:dll)' a 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
· •51110 FoleiUY Building 10 discuss
4993~.

..

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
have fun night Saturday with a
poduck supper at 6:30p.m.

Call614-992·
6637

Gallla Coanl)' Mel&amp;- Counly M-.n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304 ·.

St• Rt. 7

446-G.apollt
S67..a-t.l..
' s88-VIaaoa
245-lloG.....
256-G.;.. ·pw.
64J..Anllla ·Dtoo.

99f...M!ddleport/

319-Wolind

742~Raataod

..,_,0.......

576-Applo Grove

247..Lotut Fah

882-NewHaftl!

949-1......

a9S-Lot..t

937~Batralo

BappyAdo
Ia -riaa
Yard Sol.
o A cl.oiflocl ..•_.'"•••t plocod ill llle G.Wpolil Dolly
Tra.... (....... Cluaiflocl Dioploy, o ..u.- Cal'&lt;! or Lop!
No~) wllloloo oppoarla tho Polat l'louut Rep1or aad

.... DOlly Saaliao!, ........ o... 18,000 ......

- .... ",...tar

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOttmENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On J•nuiiJ a. 11113,ln the
llelg• County Prob8te
Court, c.. No. 27717,, Don
Kenn•lh Gruoser, •auo
Fo,_t Run RMcl, R8CIM,
Ohio .5771 wa llpJIOIRte&lt;l
EXIICUlor of "'e oslllllt ol

Carrie E. Gtue11tr, de·
ceullll, llila of 43121 Forost
Run Rolld, Sulton T-nlihl/:; RIICine, lhlgo County,
Oh ol5771 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probllllt Judgo
IAnll K. Nosaolro.d, Clerk
(1) 1., 21, 21, 311:

- .

.

.. '

I

ARNIES SPORTS
LOUNGE
Presems
The Hottest, Most
Enlertalnlng Female
Review You Have Ever
Seen!!!

,.,

THURS., JAN. 14,

'IIU'Ihrr

'

cardholder ..... us H&amp;-HS

$10.0Q in advance or
$1'2.00 at the door.

N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
JOE

.

,_,If,..,
l'icllrni
Clll•.., , ,.,.,,.,••...

Public Nollce

:?.... ,._

''
PUBUC NOTICE
~ The .......

• Dolby'" Pro· Logic Surround·SQund • Remote Control • Dolby Surround lor
superb home theater • Digital Tuning • MernoJY Presets • VIdeo Dubbing Control
• Buill·ln Equalizer • Two-Year Lim~ed Warranty (Details in store)

.,.........,. Jl...

PARTS

F..-·NEW &amp; USED PARTS fOR
ALl lAKES &amp; MODELS

992·70U or
992·5553
tt lOLL FlEE

•
111 13

CLUB

... . =. . ._..._

KEN'S APJtlliCE
· . SEIYICI

• Eoow .. program ......

•Ont·touch-

• Controtl 4 AN ccwt;poilenta

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and Square dance Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport on Route 124 at lhe Reynolds
Building. Music will be provided
by "Out of the Blue." Ronnie
Wood will be the caller: Everyone
welcome. ,

.........

ltll-11102

CUT
,...12%&lt;'.
..... 14.N wtlht, 143.540.

Allno!Jd, 43·NI

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

•OH., 41111. llotiOe of lillY

OUOFON£ •

• For·d .ktop or wali

•i a

"""

.1

eBACKHOE
•TFIACK
.LOADER
··TRUCKING

D. I. IOSTON
EXCAVATING

NGa.Y COMPARES!
Wrth over 6600 loealioos

FIICiuly Cholll

nationWide, Radio Shack

12Qau..

is #1 in electronics

,

''

l!fme wi11t basement, porches,

MIIEJ!SV1LLE- !inth'
great nvar view.~.' .

-TRAGKHOE WORK
AVAilABlE.
SEPnc SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES lllld
TRAilER SITES,
LANDCL.EAFIHG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAllED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING .
FREE ESnMATES

992·3838

fJI/''n/1

010.

.

RACINE·1112no. ..... ~4bectoomo,blockbulding
With Jllltl &amp; eloc. 1M itf.t&amp;S"x 119+. $21,000
0

'

POMEROY· ~lA! on Main Street nicaoomerlot
.

heavily travaleciiMt MOOO

MOBilE HOME liNW'Lif&gt;'S 14 x 70 Nalllua 3 bedroom,
includes dod&lt;. $T,OcM
HEMLOCKGR~tstfloglookhorne3bedrooma, 100

X 200

lol $27,901f -

RACINE- AanchS&lt;'C'\.~ 3 bedrooms, 1 112 bath, 3.2+

. acres. $25,500

MIDDLEPORT· WM1IIo q1J0 ~ fntme ~loin, with dedi 2
baths, 3 bedroomr, ltWanapa~r. $15,000
Bim'ERNUT ~ tt.UU'• willt 4•badraorna needs 11011M1
lllpaira. $6,000
poMEROY· 2 •&amp;d '1!!'19 with extra lot some ,_plumb'"11· $8,000
RACINE- VacanShAII.llltitieo a111 available. $10.oob
POMEROY- 2 acn i&gt;IGIIII home 6 rooms, 3 biclrooms,
Home in good c!r:illl'li8h!l19,500 ·
·
APPlE GROV~DO
I I floor block home,
B.G. fllmance
.
extra mobile home
hook...,. $25,
'
MIDDLEPORT·Gnonl SIS~ New palnlinlido&amp;
.
"

oul $39,090

MIDDLEPORT· 2 ti10ry ~ D bedrooms, lull base.
Unique leU.re1. $14,000
RACINE- Vacant loiS 50 I

eble. $2,500 eac:h lot

"Helping You To Recover Yolll' lnNslnulllf'
. Church, .Home. Truck, Boat, Auto

CIIPII· Sewer a walar avai~

MIDDLEPORT· Cote 81$0 l.ott 2 bedroomslinlplace,
newly~· $8,500
MIDDLEPORT· Eiegar&amp;OI!.O.Orne on levello~ 2 car
.
I

g-.folS,OOO

MIDDLEPORT Grent 8t III!IIOn 3 bedroomo, lui baoe.

and Office s..tlng

"CarpOI'I, olted, leno8d lot:"$l!li:OOO

UCINE, OHIO
614·742·2996

Ex••••••
Price orWe
Both Lose

3r• LOWIOI 10 SIM YOU 1m11

DEXTtR·CR 10 1.13aa.lliti 111101Y llama home, n -

r,palra llllide, milled wa1P.$'15!dl

0

ROSS RD.
o lIICI'II.
l - ' " " " " ' ' 94 aaaa
of vocant
ground!
$300lpor
•
POMEROY! 2atory .... itPvMWI baM. 3 bea'oorns, 2+
acres, 1 c::ar prage, ~ "*1. $28,800 •
APPROX.3-olrl'4 Oil e1 Prlcad•por-oolctt

:~=\"'"'"~pavad10811.

W-l

POiiEROY· Remodolall "'""' ltlrgo lol,:l-4 beciiDOIM,
'

Owner wanll aold. $1Sf,IOII ..

LONGBOTTOIII·1

!l!JII~IflP.._Fronlllge.

OlmpiiiG .... . $8,000

'

.

E"Oolet4 •
'

=~=,~~'Ge~~Cre11Minor.

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

SI1C)OT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
•
SUNQAYS
12:00 NOON

MIDDLEPORT· ~home 3 bedrooms 2 baths.
Heat pump. $39,500"' - ~ -

SYRACUSE- 197i,~1o,IJorne wlllt added room, 4 loll
with oltlld, garden~~.900

MASON, WY. lcro11 tr.. the Post Office
. W. Spec..llzl!l 11
Tires • 1111••••• •

-.. . c.--

WELCH TOWN HILIS'(JclfDama horne 4100nt&amp;, 2loll.
$24,900
.
.
.

'REEDSVILLE- Be•Wt1(kDOm, 4 bectoom horne comP~Y remadalad. ~

Snodgrass Upholstery

Check our.

MIIERSV1LLE RD."Ci! o~WY.Irame, 3-4 bedrooms, older
horne in need of rapail'.,;!!',~
·

Fully lneured

949·2391er
1·100.137·1460
•• rn •··Trltnmlng
B!trub ond
IA•cw..

'

SUMNER RD.• Nolllta Cl!!lller. t'.485 acm 2 ~ bi·
level counlly horne:'Oa!:kl, ~. calar, $72,900

POOR BOY TIRES

Fwllllllng. W ling,-

MIDDLEPORT· ~I(JIJ!..iJ bectooms, partbase.lllld

gnge. $18,500

Topping, Trimming,
Removal
, R_
__

lEVI II'S
IWIITEIIAIICE
LIMn Mowing,

(614)

. KANAUGA ~ Square dancing
and cloggir!g at lhe DAV building
from 8-11 p.m. Music by Adams
Counl)' Picken. The public is invited.
.

F&amp;l tREE SERVICE

~·
.

POM
. EROY-CondorSI.·~hc!uoeorrentallnvva~
mant Older home wlt!Rl,.,....r&gt;ll. $8,500

POMEROY- BualneC ClloUO. 2 1tory commerdal 1-2

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUIII A
RJTUIE FOI MEIGS c;OUNTY
HELP US IN OUR AJTEMPj TO GET INDUSTRY FOR
.
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 te 6 ACIIES OF RELATIVELY FLAT LAND:
(II Ne ... .._6ft.,.._. ....aiM
(2)W11Uew• 131WW~~«
.
PHOII: ·Ptlfty or a.y Pick1111
231
• ,...,.
TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS

llllclu

m.1100

apll. $27,000

BULLDOZE!!, l!o\CKHOE

l19MI.HIII..
...c....kaotHI
llldllleport, Clltlo

FLATWOODS RD.•28&gt;JllqxWmpanlyWillt4bedroamo,
2112batho,oau1Doed-.lltllpiacll, bayw'•-.CIA,
lui bale.

~~}~,·;~:~M~Utr! o:-ne 3 bedrocms, 1 ballt.

EICAVAnNG

n~P1JIIn9

614-949-2202

ltiVtntll••n"
:;:••nloll'
l
eule-.1111.-.
I. , _ lt., CoiJJJJJbue,

...

PLUMBING

oGMGrtiiT.,u
•VonU...-

.••. I

10 tiV8ilabla W8!1l ,

MIDDLEPORT·Aah ..... ~rfrlmehome3bedtooma,

HOWARD

•R.V.'a

~ol prop a
80IIona Mel of
·draft Hllolle .,. ollll....
· :Final •otlono May be
-=plillll. IR wrlllna. within
ol . . . . . ol ...
_..., Ill lite

124.~.

enclosed rear porch. !l'lr,IIIIO

ALliiAIU
. lrl'\':.rII! Or We

.•100 lb. Cytlndoro

..,.

... ..•

11124/'92/lln

MICIOWAVE OYEI
a•dYCR REPAIR

lew DHier ·
J ••II I las Service

0

CUT..,411%

$100 Payoff
Thia.ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

12·'17·'92

Femtllgas

lheOhlo

BASHAM RD.· 6 roam lillllllt.""" home 3 bedroom I, 11/
2 bath, anclollld patio hlilf'JIIInttcanlral air. I car gar.ge ·
2+ &amp;enll $55,000

RUTLANIJ. Naw Untr1811~ ~ble wide rnadul8r 3 bedrooms. nice level lot. $2&amp;:900
-

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird

AnER ,

CARPENTER

-Uon
~ Aaenav IOIPA) IMt weN.
:Effeodve clatM , of final

RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rulland American
Legion Hall SaiUI'day from 8 p.m.
10 midnighL MIISic will be by Pure
COIJ!llry Band. Public invited.
ATHENS
Old time
square/contta dance, Saturday, 8·
II p.m . Cost is $4 per person.
Dance Factory, Alhens. Lynn Fred·
eri&lt;:k, caller,

EAGLES

742~3305

YOUNG'S

•IEnvlron-tal

BEITIELECTIIIIVI

HIIIRYIN

Sptdllzlnl Ill Custom

RACINE- Yellowbuolt R4;11l1Dn frame 4 boclr):loms, lui ;
base. 2640 IC[.ft. 2 heat pain~.~ 40 garage with 3 bays,
ASKING $165,000
.

REEOSV1LL!'- SR 12f.llll!ll M.'!!Ping liloa with boating
access and nver lr0ntalf&gt;416lll00 eaCh lot

H_,2-lltt

"-•= ••5-4
6.14-·742~213.a ·~=~':.••:ro
, m
7131 91
I"=====··=·~ ~==::;t~
992·2549
. '---~----~~~
~
1~====~====~1

·lire • till Uri CMal't

HALFPRICEI

LIMESTONE, ·
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

9:00PM
304~75·5789

TANDY

WHALEY'S AUTO

POMEROY- Baum Subditiu- lltid&lt;llrame ranch 3 bed- ,
rooms, 26 x 14 garage, Cll':'$11.~
.
·

667·6179

. 1011192

HAULING

CHESTER· Frame hOmo!! beii!"'!))TTI, new vinyl &amp;Icing, •
Eastern SchOol Distriet $f7,1XXT
,

SR884 HARRISONVIU.IK 'f·l'fU.IICIIIIOfvacantground.
$13,500
.
'lfU

614·992·71C4

R"sonable Rates

"' •·

• Dual-powered-solar or
battery
• Includes biltfokl case and

(614) 992·5449

.

985-4473

FlEE ESTIMATES

·MAINTENANCE

0

PH. 614-992-5591

LICENSED lftll BONDED

FANTASIA

CUTBIJ%

R••••li••

EVERY THURSDAY

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE ·.

Delivered.

· appliances. $7,500

camping 11101 boating tli:blts'rilltt lrontago $15,000 Nett.

7·2·2360

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load

•

20- 2+ B08tQIIII!Jder horne, oiled, bam, ,

992-2269

992-5335or
915·2561

LAND a.EARING
• WATER A SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESIT!'S
HAUUNG: Llm.tone,.
Dirt, GrlnHIIIIIICI Coal

~EROY· CR

BILL SLACK

21H.S.C•oi.St• .
POMIROY, OHIO

sEPTIC svmMs

.

Home:

POMEROY· Beech Sl.•,li!IIP!IrMte3bedraom&amp;,8ndtnon
Windows, carport. atorallfl~ Noemenl W.900

..... , _ .... Oltloe

R&amp;C IICIYIDII
11!11 MZIMG

lEBANON TOWNSHIP· ~vile Rd. 25 + '
aaea of v-..t ground. ~ I'Kirflll1lf lila, or building liltI ·
$8,750
'
'
. SR 124 RUTLANI). 1987 Eo~t~~~~l Pwk Mobile
1.10
....,, 17 x 52 garage, 2-15li"~~. ~\liKING $25,000

Stop &amp; COIIIPIN
.

'

FOR OUR CUENTSIN 111121

REEOS&gt;'IL.LE- SR

-coMplete

GENEUL

qlloiiWiog-

-.4BR.»-.rgngoa,....,.1 •
8Rapl.p_.,.-4.111Daq. .. -

.....lllllek

eG•r•.. •

. 992-2259
sHoULDN'T YOU IE LilTED WITH THE REALTOR
WHO om YOU RESULTS!?
THIS I$.A SAIIPL.E OF RESIA.T8 WE 08TAINEO·

VACANT LOT·60 x 106cnNaasL in Pomeroy. Watarn!
electric should ba llVIIitiM.'$ '(,900
·

-IDiluy_ntoo_on~-~~~ ~

'

.........

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION

BINGO

I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thuroday
I :00 p.m. Friday

Suncbly Paper

ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS

0

- 1:()()p.m. Saturday

Wedneodoy Paper
ThWiday Popor .
Friday Paper

HOMEMADE
·- PIES

USED RAILROAD

DAY BllRJRE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuooday Paper

-992·7553

1211411

SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

....

ura

985·4107

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

~7-{;oohllo

PONDI

HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
will meet Saturday at 10 a.m. for
work in the entered apprentice
degree. All master masons weicome.

773-11-·

IUSCIIIllll

7:00P.M•

IOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. .DAY BEFORE

Col 11+8111!·7104lol

••••
•••••
•••

4~· ·

Pomeroy

981 0, '=r

••umnoiE

IILinlf SllfiCI
...... ...., Werk
• US.OOPtrltw

Uullire,

. , . , . . ......lea.......... - .

llldg.

---••••
••••

67 5-l'l. .._Ill

I'Mpoloo,_ _ _ . . . .,IOO ... :
.......... ~ • to ICJIJCt f1f pun~~-.

CHESTER · Annual inspection
of Shade River Lodge will be held
Saturday wilh dinner at 6:30 p.m.
There will be work in the fellow
craft degree. All members bring
two pies.

. SUNDAY
CHESTER • "Growing Through
Grief" ~roup· at Chester United
Melhod1st Church, Sunday at 7
p.m. Call Rev. Sharon Hausman at
985-4312 for information.

io........,

• Prioa of ... for ol ....... lo-.
price of .. • 7 polat llao """ • ..,. .....
• S..IIDolll aot nopo..W. for emon oft.or f1nl dar (chool&lt;
for . . . . flntclay ... . - Ia popor). CoB hofoie2:Gep.M.

"'-

LONG BO'ITOM - Faith Full
Gospel Cllurch in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with Pastor Sieve
Reed. Marvin Clark family will
sing. Public invited. Fellowship
· will follow.

•
;'

•

thru Ftn. 8A.M.-5P.lll. - SAT.B-12
CLosED SuNDAY

; '0

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Cltus(fied page• ctmer the
f•UotWyr teleplwrae e:~:clwn.ge1 ...

• Ada !hal ........ poW Ia
c...lof'l'll.... '

To place an ad

Community calendar

'

'

fw olle&amp;poolloi-. ildouhlO priOe of .. . -

• S..tbMIII""' ...,...W.Ior ...... . - flnt do7 (•hoc•
lor..,... 11m ..J ... .....,. Ill popw). CaD WoN 2:00 P·• ·
.,. aAir p-NLcetiee .. ...b aarnBtkta_
• Ada ...., ...... poW ......_ ...,
c...l ol 'l'llula
Ada
. I• M.oriuo
Yud Sol.
• A de 'n.d. ..,_..
t pt.eed ID 11M c.llpo• IWir
T....._ (...,. CluoifloJI Dlaplar. B - c...l or Lopl
N-)wlllaloo oppooriD 1iot. Polal Ploua.t Lptor uocl
..... Doilr SoetiDol, ............ 18,100 .._

~;· .

Quality ·
Stone Co.

.

•7pollll...,~o..,....d

: ==~~~~~==========~======~====~~~~

••

.

.

Wem-lay Paper
Thuroday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

••t he ....,..a

• Adloa..W. a~~e·eo•IJ yo•r .. r-.

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I:OOp.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunday
I :00 p.m. Friday .

· T....S.y Paper

thru Fu 8A.M.-5r.ir. • SAT.8-12

MoN.

-DAY BEJORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINil
Monday Paper

.

.

DIIYIWIY WOU

S &amp;L

,,

HEARTACHE

Ann

tothaatyou&amp;omtbcbceh 0 ~11Y

woo.

In State or Out
Of State•.

~~

helped couple diagnose their son

IMILL DOIII

Lot HAUUII,
LUMIII,or ·
FllliiD WORK

•

~ ~ By SUSAN IDGHTOWER
;~
~Press Writer
: : ·SPACE CENTER, Houston • ~ndeavour's astronauts accom·
; ;tished the main gQBI of lheir shut·
; lle m~ion six how'_s !lfier lifto~f.
I n:leasipg a $200 million satelltle
that will serve as a swiiChboard
• betMenspacecraftllldEarth.
: '~There she g~sl'' crewm!'l'
; MaOORuncoJr.ssidasdleS81Cllile
• drifled from the c.-go bay Wedncs·
; day aftauoon.
.
: 1be six-day mission is the first
r shutde flight of the YCB!' and lhe
l third voyage for Endeavour,
• NASA's newest sbuttl~
..
! The crew awoke this.mommg to
: the Air F'!JCe song "Off ,'~e Go
l lniO the Wild ~lue Yonder. ~
1 of Endea~ s astronauts are Air
Force ofrlcers: sh!JU!e commander
Jolin Casper, ptlot Donald
1 Me~!""' Susan ~Ims. the
• fliSt U.S .. miliwy W0111811,m spece.
: On Friday,the crew will demon• strate for schoolchildren how
~ windup bathtub toys and other
; objects behave in weighdessness.
And twO astronSuts will like a five' hour spacewalk 111 Sunday 10 give

CHARliE'S .

HIULIIG

:____··------------------------------------------------------~· ~-----------p~---·
\phuttle crew releases satellite Column.about Tourette .syndrome ;j
~

·

New HomH • VInyl Siding
New Glragee• Replacement Windows
Aoo,m Addltlorftt • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614o94t-••· 949·2160

·-·~39
Cit

I••••• Cttlsl

211211211fn

. ll'21:,~lll011_ol _ _

IIIIIDLIPORT· . . . . . . . .·tt!ll,.t I I $11128tllty
hallie, flnold yll'd, lltllltlt ~· " ' · ·

AND

I

�•

Ohio
5I

14,1983

-

•l"l •••••

P~ddleport,

1993

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

HOUIIholcl
GoodI

1111-.- t\1110.

'

The World ~anac -~ Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~teoo.--.~

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D

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AI-

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ALDER

0

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NORTH

2 IR ,.....,.., , _

1·1..11

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• ·1.7 6
• AJ SS
+JH

SOUTH

.6

I+

Pass
Pass , 2+
Pass 5+
Pass Pass

2+
4NT
6+
SOME OF MY OL'
CUSTOMERS ARE
SHOPPIN' OVER IN
. WILLER CREEK,
'0~~ PARSON!!

Nortb

It
!NT

companion

45 Prlnttr'a

IDIIIUre

47 Former .
Aulll•n
ruler (var.)
4g Short or monay (2 wda.J

53 Tomboy

57 Frozen weter

25 WWII araa

58 Take part
(2 well.)
Htfa !Fr.)

27 Twirled

eo

81 llounlaina .
[abbr.)

Brtuil

82 StorlliOUH

83

37 ExClamation

3 Actor

Eloct~llad

Brynner
4 Actor .

particle

Jennlnga
5 lnlu~aUng

DOWN

Oldl•

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North .
l¥esl

13 Crime
"''•iiiUUon
14 Lubrlcala .
15 Sal Into
IIWiaca

load
36 Born

• "7 6

ScMoth

ftllh

44 Curdo'

34 Not oul
35 HainMan

+AQJI04
.KQI04

44

4 Overtct
I - Got a
Secret .
12 Debt paper

31
'32 "
Wlnttr
cryatal

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"'-·
...1_U311
2187, t14
illl UZ-,- .. - ·

42 Film critic
Paulina- \
43 Long alandar

.,.

•Qtt

Pork. -1-erl

of CIA

~ague

II Aclor ..., Ray
21 GrHUna
22 Part of Ill• ""

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11o1!11o

- 41 Fortrunnar

17 LOCUli lrH

EAST
+97 2

In Counii'J

~ROSS

1-

2 Ill P"!!lollr ............ ......

:::..... .. a

--

Ohio

· . appolnlm~nt

. 6 With ..., ...

1 3, Roman

36 Slated

lo
7 Aunt In Splin

R Wernhar-

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +3

I FEEL TH' SAME WAY
WHEN FOLKS ELOPE
AN' GIT HITCHED
SOMEWHARS ELSE!!

What do you do
after the game?
After a bard day at the bridge table,
bow do expert players unwind' Most
bave . drink and talk - yes, you
1uessed it - about bridge. However.
American Eric Rodwell likes
bonky·tonk piano.
·
ladonna enjoys dancing. And
Gabriel Chagas eats. He is a sm••u 1
man, so' you would never guess
much food he can consume - emouglol
for at least two normal people.
Usually, though, · be bas earned
Cbagas is one of the world's besl
ers. He is renowned for de&lt;epti ve
darer-play and defense, but
an excellent technician. He found
winning line on today's deaL
· South's two-club rebid was an artifi·
cial force known as Cbeckback. It
asked for more information. Five
spades showed either three aces or, as
here, two aces and the trump king.
Chaglls was faced witb two,club losers, as well as a problem in the heart
suit. He rejected the chances of finding the doublelon K·Q of clubs or K-Q·
x of diamonds. After winning the
trump lead in hand, Cbagas played a
club lo·dummy's nine, losing to East's
queen. Back came a club.
Declarer won with the ace, drew an·
other round of trumps, cashed the
heart king and led a heart to dummy's ·
ace. Needing four rounds ol bearts to
stand up, Cbagas ne~t linessed bis
heart· 10. When it won and W~l
cwldn't ruff, Chagas discarded dum·
my's last club on the heart queen,
ruffed his club loser in the dummy and
claimed.
·
,
Then he retired for two· smorgas·
borda.

a

PEANUTS
TIIEV DON'T BELIEVE
YOll COliLD 6EI A
PERFECT SCORE ON A
•'TRliE OR FALSE"
-TEST, SNOOP'(.

Rtl-.
LMI:

Choco1811 1
rod COIIor,

R- -

IIU~II:M.

7

•

SO YOU K~OW Wl-lAT
TIIEV WANT YOU TO DO?
TI-IEV WANT 'r'OlJ TO
TAKE AN ESSA'r' TEST..

Ti-l EN

D065 DON'T DO
E55AV TESTS!

I'M 601N6

I-lOME ..

adiiiN

Dutch

lorto -rd, 114-

Ylrd Sale

ALL Yllid -IIUII .. Pilei In
·llol!n
DEADUNE:
tho day
the od 2:00
II lo p.m.
run.

FRANK AND ERNEST

• 2:00 p.m.

llunclly -

Friday; llondoy odltlon • 2:00
p.m. Solurdoy.
·

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

lt,100.10W7W4&amp;7.

Fmanc1al

---·btnl, _ _ ........ _

OpponunJty
PUBLISHING CO.

rtte lfo •S'....!' rtte
MAPONHA ~~eP
.sttow ·~

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Fanl LTD 4dr. C1wn Ylo-

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lolto,=ohopono-,,_
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INOTICE I

OHIO

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IIJoli POD. 1144n-7111 For . . . . . . . . . ..... Cloolll.,di
Haia PTO. ·

BUIIIMIS8

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---ar. . .

IT'$ At.L ArouT fAMit.Y
VAt.ves FO~

lorlpm.

-with poopto you
HOT lo oond money tilro&lt;lgh the
moll6IJorlnt.
,... """ ln-..od
the

D'o Auto Pllll .,..

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WllrUd To Ron!: Lol ,... . - . Golll- Or -

VENDING IIOU'IE: Got Rich
Wa- To llw: llondlng Tlm- Qulcl&lt;?
No Woyllul W. How A
blf, 114 311 ..,,
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Good. ....~. Altord hh. .......
...... . Won1 Llllt,; 1oll00-284

lng ANIL liWII '212

Real Estate

Merchandise
1310 PI•

Ill Fourth

Employment Serv 1ces

Houuholcl

GoodI

sGr'SO:.~
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Help Wlil'lted
'AYOH' AI.L AREAS!IIiloro rour
I lhlrloy

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bWIJ on yow lot. f3t,ee&amp; &amp; up.

11.12
ennlnp.

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.,. 4411121.

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303-414 t213.

42 Mobile Homes

11W4W11L
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loauld liMine '110, -~~~

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP "

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...... Ollroo, ti,IOO,-

76

CAAWUee, HOPPY'

Auto Part• &amp;
ACcea10rle1

TO.AI:\5AAD FURRY

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2 Bodroom llobllo H - ""
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qulrod. No Polo, CoU lfttr 2 P.M.

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THIFARSIDI

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SLOW DRAIIII?

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DIWII CARl AI: ~ Do li

By GARY LARSON

OolllpoiiL
cant•.
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COST: =-~
-·~:2'
dining; Sbdrm....
.. 2
pump,

bothl,
tfctachMI . 2 e~~r
~ 40 ICNI, Sll,500, 114-

55

JorSale

Building

Suppllel

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6 ___.__ _ _ _ _ ___

BERNICE

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION:

"Don't

take free advice. You

got

e•aclly

what

you__ _ _

pay lor 11." - (Golfer) Ken Venturi. .
lAM I
'::~::~' S~\\.cillA~l££trs·
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WOlD

l~lie4

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0 four
JCramblod -d• ·be-

. low to form

f~r

• ·""! .

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words.

TOGENT

I rI I I I I
1

By Jeffrey McQuain

The British PRANG refers to a collision or to heavy bombing. II you don't
rbyme the noun PRANG with GANG,
your pronunciation will bomb.

I

OUR LANGUAGE

W Z V

" ·,·'

·-

RHONE

I

I

AL

~

I UIS IU

I
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c' H E N E W

laplacewher~nolhing-·-··."

t--=-,,~..;,,;.5-=,li6.:..;,:....::.,1-.-i
_

_

_

_

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A friend who had joined a
nudist colony asklid me to
hang a poster in my store. H
read : "Join a nudist camp. It's

1--L.-1'---'--'--'---'

G Comp lete

"'
... ."""'.,,

tfle chuckle qumtecf

by filling in the m ining Word1

you develop from srep No. 3 below.

•

...-'.,...
SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWEII$ .
,_,,
Fracas • Swept • Drill - Ossify - SATISFIED
Two _
men were wailinQ for their wfves to come out of
the lad1es room .. One saghed to lhe other, "A woman
makes up her m1nd and her face several times a day
and IS usually not SATISFIED with either." -

1t_~-=-=--==~~-446-2342
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widen· ore gowrnlng you In the yMt
· Send lor_ c.pr!com'a AllroGroph l&gt;'edlctloo)o loday by moiling
$1 .25 plua a long, Mil-add.-,
otampocl tnvelope to Aatro-qr,ph. c/o
thia nawopaper, P.O. Box t1428,' c - land, 0H 44101-3428. Be llniO 1111•
your zodloo: llgn.

un-

lrltndllilp rolling .

CANCER CJ- 21....,.., 22) Guard
agalniil any lnc:linatlana today to IMI a
bit loo po11eaalve oltliole you love. II
you',. not ewer. ol this impuiM, you
mlghl do~ you lhOuldn't do
wllhoulthlnldng.

LEO I.IUIJ IJ.Autl. 22) People you love

AQUAR1UI (.len. :10.Feb. 11)
are fortunate lo have you lookinG out lor
you',.drown Into- type'ol carnpet· IIMir ln-ltodiiY. You're not llklly 10
ltl'le or ch-.glng -oprneo\1, lhia tOlerate .,.yone wliO triM to t8ke ad·
could IUIIIMIIIO-IO diiY lor you. You'll ....._oraa-.
-alive - t h e gauntlelllcut.
V111G0 (Aug. lll l1p1. Ill Mentally,
PIICII If*, 10 0! 111110) Try to IMI you•,. YWy dl-ln(l today you
-nod today abOut lite flr·I'MChlng . . llile to 1~ upon lhe ldell or
...,. o1 _ .... and not • - tile 0011 11;1a of ottoers. Tilly
IMI of.
illlrltldlllle. The long renge ,..,. bao •
"''dd!d by llil conaJNCIIol:l ..vllloril:
... of...,.r
you'l llllkl.
'
Alllll II' 1111 It-April I Today you ...U(Iepl.ll OotLIIIYcullnandll
prGipiGtt lOok Pf'I!IIY IIOOtlloclay, but .
mlgllt be oonll'onted ~..,.
alplllleil by oulllda lnlluenciae. Ho&gt;•
Pin~ ya~~.-. • ..... to OOtllf
Tlili 1Y!* of lrlll'lde with you'H ... upon l'iMJatltln you'l ....... you , _ Willi you· . . ..... llilri
10 IIIOoi4!11 will llave I llrOng lnlluenca .,.,. ' adjual
,_of_
10 COal. M Nit. II) You wiiiiMI
,_ ¥lriOUi .... of yrNI ... In ... Glr~
. yMrahead. Theatpeelllndlcatlyou'.. TAIJIIUI(.... . . . . , 101 You',. r)Ot men ell aiM todBr In IOIIillllll or endlllllln .... you .._ ....... lilrncl
likely to cliooM ~ who will llllp tile type of 1*1011 wliO IIPPNCialll 'II
In miiiiiDin(l, l"'ttttr thin 1'- w1-.
rllhlr lhM 1"- whO will hi.-.
othlra dlstutb your Ml
CAPIIICOIII (1110. tWan. 111 Auocl- Which II likely to liappan today. Don't you ... 1altgateclto playing - i d ftd..
dll.
atlng wllh trtendl wilt IMI of Importance blow lnl~ out o1 proportion.
IACIITTAIIUI (Ill¥• • CO. Ill " to you today. Try to COflll)lllklnl • • • lllllr 11....... 1111 SomaDtta
wliO n optlmllllc IIICI '-""• r.U. wliO helped you ,_,ay w!R llo ~I· IOII_In.,......_,lli/OUIIevel
than · - wliO cany .... Wllgltl ol ... eel loelly " you do ...,..._ you - to 1 COftt!QIIIIIod ....._.you'd IHIO 101'1,
world on their .....,,••,.. Glt a lumP on IMitl him or her. Altlr all, It lloralltUde out toc141y, I II !live II In .. 11'11111
I
llfw by ur.itw•MIInll the lnlliletloM Mel mlp oelly IIIII keep lite wlilelo.of · tflllflfrw frlim oulllda ~.

.... ,., ....

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

M~oea parting hl1 hair

• L

Thm your clutter ineo ca.h,
&amp;ll it ehe equ ~My...byglwne,
no need eo leaw your_home•
Plqce mur c:la11itjed gd todqy/
15 ', orda or te.•• 3 Mu, .
Q JlqpBn. 15.40 paid in advance•

5·-....----'------

.

32 Mobile Hom..

~

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:11117. -.... both;

SELLER PAYI ALL CLOSIHO

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, _ .... ....,. AN. ....... ,.

our.

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;

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I
II I rI

C&gt;.-.•a»APUINISU!diAIM

Q. Is OURSELF a word' Or should
that always be OURSELVES?
A. The answer depends on whether
you've been crowned. The plural pronoun is OURSELVES, which should
be used reDexively to mirror the sub·j.,.,t las in ".We helped ourselves") .
The singular OURSELF is used only
as a pronoun for royaliy. When a king
uses "We" for himself (or a queen for
herseiO, that royal •we" should be
followed by OURSELF. Queen Victoria, for instance, might have said, "We
are not ourself amused." Most of us ,
though. should avoid OURSELF for
ourselves.

.

...... --~-.

'

1BR
Tro._,
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Rt..,_ Roqulrod. No Polo.
114-446-11142, Or 114-717-&lt;1341.

• ,. 411

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In 11182. Hoe llolcltlna II• I

a.on ~!...!""!'!..._~
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pump.
ronch. OolllpoUo
s o - t-304Walalll - - No WIN P-r llolhl,
NleiecL Brand New, 'IOQ'Y, m-..

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Col

Want to:
PIN aown EXTRA

WITII F{M£ ~'1/NJf/E.. f'lO Oil£
/om.E(.im5 (\
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And CholrO Ulll Or N.•
Wool!; Colloo And End With
lloor8 tlllt '!!; I' T - WHh I

Cloortew 11ub. (IIL7 1), 3BR, 2

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1!'11 UII.U·

3 BR, 2 botho, hcotod
hlo, Pt. Ploooont.

nogotloble.

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bod wlh .......... niGht
otond. IOW- otlor 4pni.
YI'RA FURNITURE AND APPUANCES
I'M, 141 tt21 OR 8111'11 1151

limo wtth · ... You'l lovo the
Compuy. 1.0 1121311
SpooN, 304-f15-1421.

5I

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11

~~

-

~A T o n - · 114-W.nlod To Ron!: IIGior For W.•h•ncl TriD To lolah
lionel, Caiii'IIIIIMI 1101.
Lilt Choir, Col- N-. .,._

1181.

AVON I AI

Phone: All ....

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=. . . .
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rout-.

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�o ·hio Lottery

Meigs
girls
triumph -

Pick 3:

759
Pick 4:

Page4

Cloudy toaJabt. Low ID mid·
l Os. Saturday, cloudy. High Dear

40.

9105

•

•

THIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY.
.
&amp; SUNDAY

Vol. 43, No. 118

Copyrlghled 1113

; ~~~.-~--~---------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. troop reinforcements ar.rive ·in Kuwait ·

By .\S~Gelated Press
" .T~e first batch of. U.S . troop
' rem,C!rcements ~ived today in
• Kuwrut as the Untied States. threat·
: ened 10 launch another f!lid against
• Iraq 1f Saddam Hussem doesn't
· comply with allied demands.
: · U.S. ~fficials, meanwhile,
· would netther confmn nor deny a
' report that one of the allies' bombs
slruck an apartment building during
· Wednesday's U.S. lead-air raid.

)

'.

'

for the raid, in which il claimed at
least two civilians were among 19
dead. But no retaliatOry action had
been taken by this aftemoon, and
Iraq announced it was giving in 10
the West on two issues that had
pushed the crisis 10 military action.
Iraq said Thursday it would let
weapons inspeciOrs fly 10 Baghdad
aboard U.N. planes and stop armsgathering forays in the Kuwaiti
border zone. Both were considered

ended fighting in the Persian Gulf
War.
·
.
Today, the fust contingent of up
to I , I 00 U.S. troops from Fort
Hood, Texas, arrived at Kuwait's
International ailport to beef up the
military presence on the border,
reporters sai4. About 300 special .
force members are 11lready in
Kuwail assisting the Kuwaiti milltary.

The first 350 soldiers from the

~Ira~~q~h~as~v~ow~ed~·~IO~iak~·~e~re~v~en~g~e.:·.~·i~ol~a~ti.on~s~o~f~U~.~N~·;;,6;~~~dt;at~2T:e~xa~S~b~ase~~am~·v~ed~th~i~s!af~le~rn~~

• REGULAR PRICED
APPAREL
•JEWELRY
•WATCHES

I

OFF

and three Air Force C-IOs were fly-

inginabout650otherslaterl0day. Iraq's mov~ment of missiles
iniO zones where allies were protecting dissident Shiites and Kurds,
and Baghdad's dispatch of planes
over a southern " no fly zone"
were other factors that precipitated
tl!e raid.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
said it was "enlirely possible" that
another air sbike would be neces·

OFF

l!y JIM FREEMAN

OVP News Starr
A Gallipolis man indicted
Wednesday by the Gallia County
Grand Jury on charges of murder
and .felonious aSsault pleaded not
guilty 10 the chuges during his .·
arraignment Thursday afternoon in
the Gallia County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain.
Gerald "Jerry" Matney, i 8, is
charged in the Oct. 9, 1992, shooting death of 48-year-old Olley
Angel, of Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis. Angel's daughter, Paula
Angel, was shot in the hip during
the incident.
Matney allegedly shot the
Angels with a .380 semi-auiOlllalic
handgun during a. dispiJte in the

,•

·-COSMETICS
•BATH
•HOME
. DECOR
• HOUSEWARES
•SPORTING
GOODS

works ·with some microfilm of oewepapers In
late 1800's. The library has purchased microfibo oo newspapers dating back to 1851.

Library upgrades historical room
The Meigs County Library has
added a microfilm reader.and print· .
er 10 its Carnegie Historical Room
research equipmeliL
Use of the scanning.equipment
and microflim of newspapers pub, lished in Meigs County trom 1850
to 1970 and census reports are
available for use by the public. The
cost for priniOuts Of m&amp;lerial is 25
cents a page.
Librarian Ruth Powers reports
that the library purchased from the
Ohio Historical Society the complete newspaper collection of. 177
rolls of microfilm. Additional rolls

of newspaper microfilm will be
purchased Ill!.they bec!ome available
from the Oh10 HisiOncal Society.
. The reader is equipped 10 magnify or zoom in on portions pf a
newspapjlr page and allows a
researcher to block an area to be
printed. II can be sel for whatever
speed is desired for scanning pages
and the screen, itself is well lighted
and makes _lhe printed page easy 10
read.
On microfilm are copies of
Meigs County's first newspaper,
the Meigs County Telegraph, a
weekly which was printed from
1851 10 18S9. Otl)er weeklies, all

. Reed a"ested, charged '·
Meigs· County Sheriff James M. Soulsby has reported that
Deputies Manning Mohler and John Spires arrested Roger Reed, 42,
of Gold Ridge Road in Pomeroy Thursday nigh! on a U.S. Army
Deserter complaint. According 10 the pickup form issued by the
Deserter Information Point at Fort BenJ31tlin Harrison, Ind., Reed
was listed ils a deserter from the U.S. Army from November 19,
1968. He is being held in the Meigs Cot~nty Jail pending pick up by
the military police.

No injuries in accident
On Wednesday afternoon, deputies of the Meigs· County Sheriffs bcpartment investigated an aulD accident on Stale Ro~te 7 pear
Dead Man's Curve.
.
Gary L. Hanning of Pomeroy was northbound in his 1978
Oldsmobile on State Route 7, went left df center Ill pass another car,
but did not see a southbound Corvette, driven by Mel Simon, Jr. of

•

Gallipillis.

-

Simon, S7, swerved 10 the right, going off the roadway and over
the embankment to misf'lhe northbound vehicle. No contact
between the vehicles occurred. Hanning was ciled for operating left
of center.
· ' .No injuries were reportq:1. and no damage occurred 10 Hanning's
. vehicle. Light damqe was reported 10 Simon's car. ,

Karnes transpo.rted to Orierrt ·
I

•

I

I

POMEROY

f[;"iit;;ili~•

'

'1

parking lot beside the Pizza Hut
restaurant on Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
'
A110mey William N. Eachus of
Worthing10n entered a plea of not
guilty in Matney's behalf. Mem·
hers of Matney's family were present during the hearing.
Cain appointed Eachus 10 represent Matf\ey. Eachus was earlier
appointed 10 represent Matney by
Probate/Juvenile Judge Thomas
Moul10n.
Matney may he sentenced 10 15
years 10 life and fmed a maximum
of $15,000 if found guilty o.n the
murder charge, Cain said. The felo·
nious assault charge carries a possible penalty of 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 10
15 years confinement and a maximum fine of $7,500.

In addition, Mamey may have 10 ·
serve an additional three years if
found gtlilty because !be incident
involved the use of a firearm, Cain
said.
'
Cain set cash bond a~ .$50,000
. with no 10 percent allowed. MatneJ has been free on a $5,000
bond.
Eachus had asked Cain io con;
tinue 'liond at $50,000 with 10 per:
cent allowed. Matney had bee)!
employed since being out on bond,
Eachus Said.
·
Cain ordered Mamey 10 repof(
10 jail at 3:30p.m. today.
Matney was 17 years old at the
time of the shooting but is being
tried as an adult. A !rial has been
schedul~ for Feb. 25 at 9. a.m.

Voinovich
·says Medicaid taking
.
away school, other state money·
'

NEW MICROFILM REAQER .• The Meigs
&lt;;ouuty Publk Library's neweet equipl!l~nt is a
l!llcrotllm reader and printer. Here Ruth POIII'·
en, ll~rarlan, demo~trates bow the equipment

• FURNITURE• SMALL APPLIANCES
•CAMERAS &amp;
ACCESSORIIES
• CASSETTES &amp; CD'S
• BLANK VIDEO TAPES

41300 LAUREL CLIFF RD.

tion and no.casualty estimate.
Chel'ley said IOday he could not
· confmn that an apanment building
was hit, but did not rule it ouL " It's
always .possible when you drop
weapons like this that you can have
collateral damage."
Cheney discounted Iraqi fibo of
a damaged building, saying that
during the Gulf War, Iraq
"phOnied up" film 10 suggest the
United States was bombing indis-

to murder, assault charges

,.........__.Local briefs---

OFF

"! would hope it would not he
necessary, but there shouldn't be
any mistake on his (Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein's) part," Cheney
said this morning. " We are prepared 10 do il again if we have 10."
The Washington ·Post, quoting
unidentified Air Force sources,
reported in IOday's editions that a
stray 2,000-pound bomb heavily
· damaged an apartment building
near Basra. The newspaper said

Matney p iedds"",;;t

, ' •

•TOYS
•BEDDING
•RUGS
•CRAFTS
-•KITCHEN
•LINENS

A MuiUmedll Inc. Newapapor

'

JANUARY 15~ 1'8 &amp; 17
•

1 Sec:llon, 10 Pogea 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 15,1993

On Thur,lday, Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Trussell transported
Daniel Kames of Shlde 10 Orient Reception Center 10 begin serving
his leiiUIIICII rec:enlly impoeerd by Meigs Counly Common Pleas
1udae Fred w. Crow In.
Xamea wu the .._ ollhree.chargcd mid sentenced for men,
theflllld JllCeivin• atm. property liOm the Scott Nelson home in
Columbia Townah1p.
.
,
· Ho -ICIItenecd 10 II nalha on the tllllft cltqe and two years '
an the 1111011 c:lwJe, 10 bo llr¥ed-c:onaecutively, and five years pro- •
balion on the chlrF oC recoiving 1101en property. FoUowlog the
. ,...."'~~. 111e defend•• hll roar ye111 1o whleb ro pay lhe reatitu'
lion In die IIDOUIII of 519.000 to Neilan, or the house that
- btned In the incldenL ,
Continued on MRe 3

on microfilm at the library, pub' lished in ·the late 1800's were the
Pomerey Crescent, the MosquiiO,
the ·Pomeroy Journal, 1he S1ar
Spangled Banner, the Meigs Coun. ty Press, the Independenl, the Herald Weekly, the Meigs County Herald, the Meigs County Telegraph,
and the Meigs County Times.
,Since 1900 the library has on
microfilm the Tribune-Telegraph,
. the Republican Weekly, the Republican Herald, the Meigs County
Republican, The Leader, The
Democrat. and The Daily Sentinel,
Meigs County's 19th newspaper.

Swisher issues
·statement on '
Jones hiring
Michael Swisher, dirCc!Oi of the
Department of Human Services,
has corrected and clarified several
items periaining to the recent
employment of Richard E. Jones 10
a management position in that
·agency. ·
'
. Swisher said that l,he salary as
he calculates it is $28,516.80.annually, not. as was earlier reponed in
The ~~ Sentinel, "unofficially
calcul
in excess of $35,000 per
year.
The director, making reference
10 a comment in this newspaper
about a list of individuals who had
passed lhe test for the position
·being unavailable,·said that "there
was no such list and there is nq.such list ofpeople who have taken
the test and passed It for Adminisaative Assistant IV and that·is why
the Deparl!llent of Admjnistrativc
Services gave the appointing
authority provisional authorizalion
10 aelec:tiiOIJICOIIC for the .lob." The
appointin1 authOrity is ilie Me{_.
County Board ol County Commllsloners; '
Swisher further said that the
positilln was posted within the
department, and that he "interviewed the candidates wbo
lied
and choae not 10 ~ any"'J the
four. Had one of II*D ~ llllect·
ed, their certification. would not
have carried and it 'lfOU1d have
been a provisional appointment,"

..

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's Medicaid program bas
.grown so much in the ·past decade
that is taking away money for edu·
cation and other vital services,
Gov. George Voinovicb says. '
He referred Thursday 10 statistics ·that showed the health care
program for the poor now is con·
suming 30 percent of the state budget, compared with only 22 perce9t
for education.
"We are going 10 address this
very, very serious problem,"
Voinovich said at a Statehouse
news conference.
He.said that since 1982, Medicaid costs have increased 237.2
percent, cOmpared with 47.9 percent for the federal Consumer Price
Index. The cost rose from $1.16
billion a decade ago 10 $3.9 billion
this year.
.
,
Caseloads grew from 914,000 10
1.4 million .
. Voinovich said the program is
"gobbliitg up state dollars:' at the
expense of education and other ser·
vices and must he curbed.
.He oullined his plans for culling
costs and said nursing home subsi-

dies will be one the chief targets.
Nursing home costs increased
from $462 million 10 $1.7 billion
during the decade and now make
up 43 percent of the Medicaid budgel, Voinovich said.
A temporary law made permanent by lhe Legislature .in Decembei established a nursing home .

reimburs emenl formula and set
limits on state payments. It is
expected to save $100 million a
year, he said.
The administration also plans lo
increase the number of senior cilizens taking pan communjly-based
programs that help them slav at
home. _

Taft: Voters f~d up .
with politics as usual
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans in lhe Legislature,
Secretary of State Bob Taft said Congress and non-judicial
voters who turned out' in record Statewide candidates, and cast I
numbers last November sent a million ballo1s for independent
strong message !hal they won 't presidential,candida~ Ross PeroL
stand for politics as usual.
"That's the 1\ind of frustration
"They're fed up with the kind that accounts for the growing
of partisan gridlock that was occur- · strength of the independent movering in Washing10n. They want the menl in Ohio and across the ·counpublic officials simply 10 address tty," Taft 10ld about 350 people at
their concerns and their problems," the winter conference of the Ohio
Taft said Thursday 8l a meeting of Association of Elections Officials. .
"And cer~Jinly that's olie rea.county election officers.
Volers approved ~rm limits for
·Continued on page 3

Dr. G. A. Kusnir to begin medical
,practi~e in Pomeroy on Monday
Meigs County has a new physi- of nephrology before coming to the
cian.
·
United States in 1989. He was
He is George A. Kusnir, M.D., awarded a nephrolol!r fellowship at
an in~ist and a nephrologist, of the University of Vuginia Health
Roanoke, Va., who will open his Science Center from 1989 10 1991
pffices in Pomeroy ~n Monday, and meantime has continued his
Jan. 18.
·
training in Internal medicine 8l the
His offices will be localell in the Memorial Hospilals in Roanoke
Meigs Medical BuildinJ adjacent and the Veterans Administration
to Veterans Memorial Hospital Medical Center in Salem, Va. Both
wbere Dr. Kusnir will also serve on institutions are affiliated with the
staff.
Uni\ICISity of Virginia.
A native of Argentil!3. Dr. Kus·
Dr. Kusnir has received numernir received his lJledic8l degree 8l .ous honon and recognition during
the National University Buenos his training in internal medicine
Aires School of Meclicine In :1971. and nephrology (diseases dealing
H~ served l!is lolemlhlp and resi- with the kidneys). He hils autholed
dency in lnlm'nal medicine Ill the c. and co-authored several~c:ientific
Argcrich Municipal HOB)ftlai in papers relating to diseases .of the
Buenos Aires being promoted to renal system.
chief raidenllo 1974 and c:ompletDr. Kusnir's wife, Sylvia, a
ing his reiidency In 1975. He native of Argentina and alao a
served u attending ph)'liclan at "'lh~ian. and two ol the ~lc's
that hosDitlli from 1975 10 1980.
chlldren, a son, Juan. 7, and a
Dr. I(UJnir received subiDecialty daughter, Maria, 9, are residilla In
ttaining in critical care at l!l Sal- Roanoke and will remain there
vador Un.ivoraity from 1980 to until the 'end of the current ~c:hool
1981 and received 1 nephroloay year when thiy will join Dr. Kuanir
fellowship 11 the Unlvenlty of in this area. The Kuanira' alao
Buenos Aires Hospital l'roln 1982 have two other d&amp;ughton, Nllalia,
10 1984. He practiced ill the fteld 20, and Marina, 18, both ol whoin

arc allendin~ the University of
Buenos Aires lD Argentina.
•
The telephone numbers for
making an appointment with Meigs ·
County's newest physician are 9927463 and 992-7S79.

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