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                  <text>December 1 1993

Give AFOOD
D
GIFT. CERTIFICATE
This Holida Season.

College
basketball in full swing

Vol. 44, NO. 154

PURE CANE

Seasons (jreetings!

By,GEORGE ABATE
Daily Sentinel Starr
The Meigs County Commission
must pay Ohio $10,925 by the end
of the year, money the state claims
a former Meigs County Commis·
sioner's Clerk allegedly was
improperly paid, according to
information released at Wednesday's commission meeting.
, During 1992, the former commissioner's clerk, was overpaid
$10,925 for her duties as a grants
writer, aceording to an analysis or
an audit by the Ohi~&gt; Department or
Development. Co\lflty commissioners identified the former clerk as

UIS.

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TENDIRBEST

NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)
- The state has committed $68
mill ion to poor school districts and
the Department of Education is
preparing a proposal that would
provide another $120 million, a
state education official said.
At least seven school districts
can use the $68 million, which was
included in'thc 1994-1995 state
budget, said James Van Kcuren.
assistant superintendent for public
adminisiration and finance.
The additional $120 million
could be used to, address emergency building needs in 14 or 15 dis·
tricts . ....
A coalition of school districts is
seclc;ing a court order in Perry
· c&amp;unty''Cominon Pleas Court to
overturn the state's system for
financing public schools.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, was sched·
ulcd to testify loday.
One of the issues during the.trial
has been the subslandard condition
of school buildings in Ohio, panic·
· ularly in poorer school districts.
A 1990 study commissioned by
the Ohio legislature identified $10
billion worth or school building
needs.
Van Keuren testified that he
believes the Legislature is beginning to get the message that Ohio's
impoverished school districts need
help.

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The commissioners said they
wllre uncertain how much money
re.rilained in the annual budget,
which averages about $300,000.
Although commissioners emphasized they would pay the money.
no fonnal action was taken.
"It's going to be tough at the
end of the year," Hoffman added.
"(I've) never seen any documenta·
tion on the actual hours which
Mary worked. She could have done
it in the evenings, weekends or
whatever."
If the commission fails to pay
the money within a month, the state
could postpone the grant money for
this year and hold next year's fund·

ing, Hiler wro1e in the audit
The county gets about $140,000
as a basic amount each year in
Community Development Block
Grant funds, Hoffman said. The
county also could receive more
than the $140,000 through separa1e
projects, he added.
The current commissioners did
not allow this situation, commission president Robert Hartenbach
said.
Thursday morning, Hobstettcr
told The Daily Sentinel in a telephone conversation she had not
been contacted about the auditor's
findings by the commissioners or
the auditor.

$200,000,000

Plain • Self Rising.

Flour

Mary Hobstetter.
The cleric was paid $7 .SI an
hour as cleric while at the same
time she was paid $14 an hour for
writing the grants, which violates
federal wage laws, according to. a
report by Mike Hiler and Lisa PallMcDaniel of the ODD. The two
completed this report as part of an
annual review of the county's handling of state and federal grants,
called Community Development
Block Grants.
The county commission will
apparently reimburse the state by
spending the end-of-year balance in
the county's general fund, commis·
sioner Fred Hoffman said.

5Qt.
Pail

Rep. quits
turnpike
commission
CLEVELAND (AP) - State
Rep. Robert F. Hagan, 1;1Youngstown, has resigned from ille
Ohio Turnpike Commission.
Hagan said he would continue
serving on the •Legislature's tumpike oversight commiuce so he can
pursue questions about an FBI
·investigation into the turnpike's
.award of a $5 million health insut-·
ance poticy.
.
"I have no choice but to
resign," Hagan wrote in a letter
Tuesday to House Speaker Vern
Riffe. "I now believe that service
on both the commission and the ...
oversight commiitce represents a
conOict of in1erest. This was made
obvious when I was advised by
counsel to the commission not to
·discuss the investigation."

PLEADEQ GUILTY - M.ichael Burns,
rront, Patrick Cleland and Jim Hannan walk
rrom the Meigs Counh Jail to the County

Courthouse Wednesday. The three men
pleaded guilty to stealing rrom Pomeroy busi·
nesses during November.

Three admit to Pomeroy B&amp;Es
By GEORGE ABATE
Daily Senlinel Slafl'
Three Pomeroy men admiued
to stealing from Pomeroy busi ·
nesses during November and
were sentenced in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Wednesday afternoon.
Authorities said that they
used tips from local citizens to
nab the three men and that some
other infonnation provided may
help in solving other recent
break-ins.
Michael Burns, 32, and
Pairick Cleland, 21, pleaded
guilty to breaking into
McClure's Restaurant and Super
10, both on East Main Sueet.
Jim Hannan, 2I, pleaded guilty
to assisting with the Super 10
break-in.
'
On Nov. 10, Burns and Cleland stole ·a safe, filled with
about $900 in ·'Cash, from
McClure's Restaurant, Meigs
County Prosecutor John Lcntes
said.
On Nov. 22, the three burglars stole an $800 computer
system, Walkman, batteries,
deodorants, shampoo and
watChes from the Super 10 store
and then tos sed some of t~e
items into the Ohio River, said

Gary Wolfe, special investigator
for the prosecutor.
Area residents' tips about the
break-ins helped solve these
cases, Sheriff James Soulsby
said.
"It's very helpful that the
general public can come forward and not be fearful of retali·
ation," Soulsby said.
The trio, who lived together
in a Second Street home, were
planning brealcins at two more
places, aceording to the sheriff.
No more people are believed to
have helped in the three incidents, he added.
The burglars' conviction will
also help solve other recent
break-ins which have
increased in the last rew months,
Lentes said in a press release.
"In particular, we now have
information which will be
extremely helpful in solving the
breaking and entering at th e
J&amp;R Sports Shop in Pomeroy
earlier this year," Lcntes said.
Common Pleas Judge Fred
Crow II( senlenced Cleland and
Bums to 18 months in prison for
each of the break-ins, to be
served one after the other. But,
Crow dropped the second term
if they commit no more crimes

after their fust 18 months in jail.
Hannan must spend 18
months in prison.
The fines against all three
were dropped, but each must
pay court costs, $500 each for
prosecution costs and restitu·
tion, according to a press release
from Prosecutor Lentcs. The
amount of restitution for items
stolen will be decided later, he
added.
The defendants were not represented by lawyers at their
hearing.
Soulsby said he hopes the
county's village police depart·
mcnts wiII work more close! y
with the sheriff's department
and prosecutor's office on seri·
ous crimes, such as thefts.
"The most difficult part is we
weren't initially involved from
the outset, it wasn't even reported to the sheriff's department,"
said Soulsby.
Wolfe added that for thefts
law enforcement needs to get
the infonnation within two days
to increase the chances of solv·
ing the crimes.
The sheriff's department will
attempt to find some of the ani·
cles that have been lost, Soulsby
added.

Voinovich in favor of financial
support for Portsmouth mall project

5

2/ 3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
s,lale advisory board voted against a
$13,5 million lollll Cor developers
who want to build a inall in southem Ohio.
·
But the Voinovich l.dministra·
lion is backing the loan 10 build the
Portsmouth Towne Center1·which
would be ~bout 100 tnileS south of
Columbus,- The (Toledo) Blade
reported Wednesday. ·
'The newspaper said the ~tate's
Development Finance and Advisory Board opposed the project in
October because it was a risky
investment that could set a bad
prcicedenL
·
The board questioned the job

..
•. I

'

"There's an implication of some
kind of impropriety and I assure
you that thlu tht;re was none on my
part," Hobstetler said.
She said she could not understand why this audit was handled
differently than previous audits.
"Reports on audits are confidential until the parties are allowed to
respond," Hobstetter said. "It
would lead one to think there is an
altemJ?t at some kind of character
assassmation here."
She said she plans to lalk with
the commissioners, adding that her
pay during her 12 years as grants
wriler was never questioned before.
Hobstetter said she had to attend

grants writing.rneetings in the
evening and had to take work home
at nights.
'
This mislalce was not caught in
the past because auditors had only
looked for "red flags," County
Prosecutor John Lentes said at the
meeting. Hiler audited the CDBG
program for the rust time this last
year, he said.
Auditors wiU now monitor the
CDBG budgets during the last five
years, because auditors told untes
if the problem existed this year "he
expected it would for th~ last few
years," Lcntes said.
Lentes said he is uncertain if
Continaed on Pa~e J

Nation spends
nearly $24 billion
in war on drugs

offered to
pQor schools

Sealtest...

CORN KING
BONELESS HAM

Commission owe.s state $10,925 for alleged improper wages

HI I &lt;I'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 2, 1993
'

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Cfhis i~ going to be f10ur easiest
Christmas ever' Picking out Christmas
gifts ccm be rea/1!1 time consuming. Plus
there's still no guarantee that f10u'llget the
right gift for t?1e right person.
'This year joodland is changing all
that. with a whole assortment oftastf1. tasteful gifts f10Ur co-workers. emplo11ees. and clients are
sure to appreciate and enjoy.
'];\,e a succulent ham or a tantalizing turkey. We also
.have beautifully arrangedfruit baskets and ofcourse, you. can never
go wrong with a joodlcmd Holidaf1 (jift Certificate Cfhe11 can be
given in an11 denomination fdOU choose and a;~ sure to be appreciated bfd ever11one.
9ffdOU're looking for something to put some pizzazz into 1:1our
office Christmas party or holidafd get-togethers. we've got just the
thing. 7oodland Part11 'Tra11s. Packed with the freshest cola cuts.
zestiest cheeses. tasty chtcken. succulent shrimp. or a smorgasbord
of veggies and other Deli favorites.'theld're the hit of an11 party.
So. relax an enfold the ho/idafdS. Let us take care of all !:four
gift-giving with the right gift for the right person ... from jood/and.

WILSON
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·creation potential and the fmancing
that puiS the State second in line to
cover losses if the mall fails. Scioto
County also has backed the loan for
the 172,716-square-foot mall being
developed by Portsmouth Zal!la·
gias Limited Partnership of Pitts·
burgh.
'
The board noted the project was
being funded totally with loans,
without private invesbllent.
Under the proposal, a group of
seven southern Ohio banks would
provi~ ~ - ~ million for the p~o·
Ject. Wtth ·the state's loan financmg
the rest.
Vincent Panichi, a board mem·
ber and Gov. George Voinovich 's

accountant and campaign ueasurcr,
said he was against it because
"there is no invesbllent on the part
of the developer and that seems to
be the one key ingredient missing.''

State Development Director
Donald Jakeway said he supports
the project. The Stale Controlling
Board will consider the proposal
Monday. .
House Speaker Vern Riffe,
whose disuict covers the center,
has been lobbying actively for the
Conuollinf Board to approve the
loan. Riffe~ son, Vernal Riffe ID,
heads the Scioto County commission.

••

WASHINGTON (AP) - Gov·
ernment age~cies nationwide spentnearly $24 blih011 to fight lhe war
on drugs in 1991, with most of the
money going to criminal justice
effons, the federal anu-drug office
says.
.
. Nearly four·flfths of the $15.9
b1llton spent by state and local gov~m~ents :-"~ devoted ~ criminal
jUSilet: acuvmes such.as tncarc:uatmunsoners and paymg for police,
says the report sponsored by the
Office of National Drug Control
Pohcy.
That same year, the redcral govemment spent $11 billion !&lt;'.combat ilhctt drugs, wtth $3.2 btUIOn of
tt g1ven to state and local governments, the report said Wednesday.
The $15.9 billion SJ)Cnt by state
and looal governments mcluded the
federal grant money, so the total
fedcral, state and looal government
SIJC~din~ to fight drugs was S23. 7
b1l hon m l991, the most recem
year for wh1ch figures were availabi::Th
de
.
e report monstrates, m no
uncertam tenns, that stale and local
governments_ contmue_ to play a
leadmg role m our nauonal drug
control s1111tegy," federal drug pol·
. d'
L B
.d
~cy !rector ee rown sal on
eleasmg the report at a conference
or state and local drug directors.
The biggest single cost to state
,
and local govern_ments ~as $6.8
b1l_tion for correcnons -:- Jails and
p~1sons. Next was pohce at $4.2
b~lhon, healt!t 11!1~ hospttals at S2.8
b1lhon and JU~c1al and legal serv1ct!s ~t ~1.5 ~ilh~n.
Cn~mal JUStice costs totaled
$12.6 bilhon, or 79 ~rcent of the
~oney spent on anu-drug actiVlues. The other 21 percent was for

rehabilitation and education.
The rigures understated drug
prevention and rehabilitation costs
because the U.S. Census Bureau
which gathered and tabulated the
data, did not include information
from independent school districts
or special district governments,
including those that cover many
hospitals, the repmt said.
The federal anti-drug budgeLhas
hovered near a 70· 30 breakdOwn
for the past four years - 10 percent for criminal justice efforts ind
30 percent ror rehabilitation and
education. Critics have said it
should be closer to 50-50, with a
far greater emphasis on prevention
and treatment
Brown has refused to say what
breakdown he would seck for fiscal
1995, but he wrote in the introduclion to the report that the adminis!ration's drug control program will
focus on reducing the demand for
drugs.
Peter Reuter of the Rand (:
cautioned that anti-drug bud~ci's
depend largely on guesswork, with
agencies managing only a rough
estimate of how much of th eir
workload concerns d . 1 d
rug reate
matters.
"The federal drug budget is a
very questionable document on its
~ " bee
f h bl
ace
ause o sue pro ems, he
sa1d. State and local governments
meanwhile, " are really driven b '
local politics where the demand i~
that the police do something about
drugs.'' Such pressures can also
skew the figures, he said.
The ropon found that state and
local spending rose almost 13 pcrcent from fiscal year 1990 to 1991 ,
but still amounted to only 1.5 pcrcent or their total expenditures.

..---Local briefs--.
Residents may stop boiling water
Residents in five Meigs County townships can stop boiling their
water, officials said Wednesday, after a two-day boil order ended.
The warning ended at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
A water main broke on State Route 248 ncar Long Bouom Saturday, causing the order in Sutton, Lebanon Salisbury, Bedford and
the southern half of Chester townships, said Don Poole, general
manager of the the Tuppefs Plains Chester Water District.
The boil-order was just a precautionary step. Poole added.

Pneumonia shots available Friday
People who need a pneumonia vaccination should stop by the
Mc1gs County Health Department between 9-11 a. m. and 1-3 p.m.
Friday at the health deparunent office on the top noor of the multi·
purpose building on Mulberry Heights.
Only 50 shots are available and will be given on a ftrst-come,
fmt-serve basis for $4, said T.C. Ervin, assistant nursing director.
If a person has had a flu vaccine, then they must wait at least 30
days before getting a pneumonia shot, Ervin said. Additional infor.
mation may be obtained from the health deparnnenl

Police probe accident
Heavy dam'age was irlcuned to a van which had been parked on
the Big BemL Foodland's parking lot Wednesday and apparently
slipped out of gear, drifted across the street and over onto the river
bank.
.
Pomeroy police said that the van belongs to Neil Bonecuuer, 47
of Pomeroy. He was charged with dl1ving without insurance.
'

Food baskets available
Applications for Chrisbllas food baskets are being taken by the
Meigs County Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor Street. The applications arc being taken through Friday, 10 ro noon only, with applications to be made in person at the offiCe.
Continued oa Page 3
)

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Commentary

I

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SEATILE (NEA)- The Pacif-.
ic Rim economic summit did not
exactly tum out as President Clinton.and his top economic and trade
advisers had hoped.
The fifth annual meeting of leaders
of the loosely fonned but economically powerful group 'known as the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation was intended to stress whatlhe
16 member countries have in common, to promote expanded free
11ade within lhe group, and to apply
pressure on Europe to finalize lhe
stalled GATT talks. But what
emerged most clearly from the
meeting was the wide, differences
economically and culturally among
lhe participants.
Bill Chnton has a ftrm vision of
a new world order, and it is built
along the lines of new economic
and trading relationships for the
United States. No longer will lhc
United States first look east across
the Atlantic to Europe. The European Community and the emerging
economies of Eastern Europe will

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION IIJ'e welcome. They should be less than 300 .
words. All letters are subject to editing aod must be signed with n3.D1e,

address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leners
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

A Jog, or just a brisk walk?
By JOHN CUNNIFF
·
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - Beyond lhe big domestic issues of heallh care and
jobs, the common chaUenge to lhe White House and your house is how to
get lhe economy growing again.
An economy lhat does n01 grow cannot provide a higher standard of
living, no matter how hard its members wish. To lhe conttary, its stagnation feeds all kinds of social problems lhat funher subtract from living
standards.
The economy is expanding at lhe moment, no question about it, as
reflected by rising confidence, booming home sales, and inflation and
interest rates so low they seem unreal to veterans of the economic wars of
lhe 1970s and '80s.
Considering such factors, you may expect an outpouring of optimism
from merchants, Wall Street, government officials and olher beneficiaries
of an upbeat point of view. Reality, however, might not support the
dreams.
Much of the forecasting of a sustained and sJrong improvement is spotted with asterisks and small type, lhe kind !hat looks insignificant in corporate reports, government documents and a variety of financial sales literature.
Those asterisks are "ifs," big ones, and they refer to caveats, such as if
interest rates remain low, inflation too, and if foreign economies improve
enough to buy our products and help produce jobs and profits.
Behind lhe. "ifs" are some disturbing realities: incomes growing only
weakly; household, business and government debts; job terminations and
job insecurity; perplexing taXes and regulations; low savings, social problems.
Hardly anyone is unaware of these negatives, nor do they know how
they will imprint lhe future; still, nobody has devised or is likely to devise
an economic process for quickly and painlessly converting one to a positive.
The economy can, however, forget the negatives for brief periods, and
this process is now under way. For a time, perhaps a shon time, the good
economic news is emphasized. The year-end effon to create positive is
under way.
How long will it continue? Is the U.S. economy's limping expansion
about to become a jog, as some economists and media arc predicting? Ask
University of Michigan forecasters.
Become a jog? Not likely, they say, At best, they believe, it might
quicken to a brisk walk into mid- I 994 and then become sluggish again
through the summer of 1995. "We're not in .the camp of the real optimists," they say.
Blame it on lhe "ifs" that won't go away.
Since 1991 lh.ere have been signs of retail sJrcngth, and those signs
have heartened the optimists for a month or two. Then, reality assCC\Cd
itself. People have debts, doubts ancl insecurities; they dared not borrow, to
buy more.
The current quickening of expansion is different from most of lhc others: Credit figures show people arc indeed borrowing heavily- and they
seem to have cut into !heir meager savings too. The savings rate is
extremely low.
Meanwhile, household purchasing power, or real disposable income,
has been growing at only 1.6 percent this year. Companies, seeking to do
more with less, continue to cut payrolls. Insecurity, buried for new,
remains widespread.
In such a scenario, with no taX cuts or big pay raises to look forward
to, and with savings low and credit card debt rising again, you can h;lrdly
cxpectthe American consumer to push the economy into a sa-ong growth
stage. Nor can you expect help from a government ostensibly commitcd
to fiscal resJraint.

Robert]. Wagman
ing standpoint through NAFTA.
Then we win. join wilh lhe economic powerhouses of lhe Pacific Rim
through APEC to fonn the world's
most powerful trading bloc, one
easily able to compete with lhe EC
and any trade restrictions it might
create. However, the Seattle summit showed this vision may need a
little work, and quite a bit of time,
to become a reality.
Even before Clinton sat down
with Chinese president Jiang
Zemin to talk tough - but to no
avail - about human rights violations, China rejected a U.S. auempt
to tum the meeting into a vehicle
for establishing regional free trade.
The Chinese were not the o0Iy
ones who do not want to sec APEC:
expanded much beyond its current

ad-hoc existence. Japan has been
unwilling·to consider transfonning
the group into a mechanism for
Pacific Rim trade negotiations.
Hong Kong, still deeply tied to
Britain, would not mind seeing
increased free trade amon$ Pacific
Rim countries. But it remams completely opposed to the idea of
APEC bocpming a trading bloc in
opposition .to Europe.
..
Those were merely the problems
with the coun11ies that attended.
Malaysia, for one, boycotted t~e
meeting fearing that .the United
States was \l)'ing to dominate the
group.
. There are .SOme very tricky politiCS involved wilh lhis group. That
can be seeq by the fact that this was
not a meeting of 16 "nations."
Rather il was a meeting of 16
"economi ~s"- an attempt to
work around the problem ohhe
three Chinas: lhe People's Republic, Taiwan and' Hon~ Kong.
When the meeung ended the
leaders issued a "joint vision stale- .

'
'
specifically:

I

&lt;,

;_,,

'

~

ment" they
declined to call it a fonnal "com-,
munique," as is usually issuell l
after western economic ·summits - '
(illed with nice sentiments but no
specifics. There was a vow to pro- :
mote "doser economic 'ties" and a ,
declaration that the Pacific ·Rim :
represents " the emergence of a ;
new voice" in world affairs.
•
"We've Agreed that the Asian- :
Pacific region should be a united :
one, not divided," said Clinton. !
"We've agreed that our economic ,
policies should be open , not.
cl6sed." But while Cliitton wanted :
to discuss cooperation at lhe meet- :
ing, many of lhe participants, espe- :
cially from Asia, wanted to discuss •
competition, or as Jiang called it ;
"fierce competition." Quite sim- i
ply, thjs summit ·was about profits . ~
The new world order- at least the •
Pacific Rim version of it - is to :
maximize profits, and if lhat means :
freer trade and reduced barriers ;;
lhen so be il But if profits lie with •
protcetionism, at least in lhe shon :
run, lhen lhe new world order will :
look rather different.
:
On .paper, at least, Clinton and :
the Umted States were lhe hosts for ·
this gathering. When Chinese Pres- ;
ident Jiang Zemin stepped off the ;
plane he was first greeted not by a •
high U.S. government official, but :
by Frank Shrontz, chainnan of the :
Boeing Co. The president that all :
lhe foreign visitors seemed to wan1 :
to see immediately was not Clin- •
ton, but Philip Condit, the president :
of Boeing.
,:
In keeping with the profit ·
motive of lhis summit, many of the •
foreign leaders made the trip out to :
suburban Renton to sit down witll :
Condit to talk about new airplanes: ;
All of them want to buy lhe next •
generation of Boeing passenge~ :
jets, and Boeing is ready to make '
lhe sales.
:
For Boeing, the only politics is •
to beat out the European Airbus :
consortium; if Jiang wants to buy ,
airplanes, lhen human rights sud- '
dcnly becomes something best left
to lhe politicians.
:
Robert Wagman is a syndical-·
ed wriler ror Newspaper Enterprise Association.
'

I

''R-e-s-p-e-c-t,'' Aretha walkout would have sev~rely crip,
Franklin sang in one of lhe most pled lhe airline. Chalk one up for
~pular songs of lhe. 20th century, solidarity. And just what does r-e'find out what it means to me .... " s:p-e-c-t mean to 21',000 £light
Thankfully, tens of thou~ands of
passengers didn'tllave to find out
what the word meant to 21,000
American Airlines flight allendants. The attendants ended their
four-day Strike a COU\'Ie of days auendants, 85 percent Qf whom are
before we would have J11111med air- women?
pons all over lhe country, scream'In an age when labor unions arc
mg at ticket agenis unable to get us. supposed, to have had all the air
onto tile planes· lhat we'd counted sucked out of .them, and more and
on to fly us home to spend Thanks- more com~ame~ are booting full·
giving with our families.
time wor e,rs tn favor of partPresident Clintoo interceded the' timers with l\O'benefits, what made
Monday before t~y Day, allow- tile~ ~sk tlieir jobs, insurance ani!
· ing American Airlines President ' reu~ement plans? Well, first,
Robert L. Crandall a face-saving lhey re P~t~. sc;»re at manage~en~ ·
way to ])ack down. In his post· fo~ paradmg h1gh labor costs as ·
strike Statements, Crandall ~ferred lhe cause of A!tl,erican's $1.2- bil- '
only to his deference to the presi- lion loss over lhe last three years.
dent's wishes. »ut you can bet your There's been nary a, mention of the
lost luggage lhat American AjrUnes company's ',' valu~-pricing: '
pilots wouldn't have joined Ameri- · scheme that cut fares by 5Q percent •
can flight allendaniS in picket lines, and profil$ b)' even 1119re.
.nor would Crandall' have
Ther. tnatn!JI.in that a company
backpedaled from his p~ise that J. 'doe,n t 'how respe~t .for its
"ev~body is hOI coming back to employees when it blames tllem for
work ' after the strike, if there bad management decisions. And
hadn '~ been. a good chance the second, !hey .say American .treats

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:Rain moves in tonight,
;lingers for weekend
By The Associated Press
Showers will linger into early to- lhe Pacific Northwesl
night Olherwise skies will be mostly
At midday, freezing ram was scatCloudy wilh lows in lhe upper 30s. tered in the upper Mississippi Valley,
The front will move to the .Ohio and snow showers were scattered over
~iver by sunrise Friday.
lhe northern Rockies.
, Low pressure will develop
Rain pushed into the northern
plong lhe front and cause a threat of Pacific Coast region, wilh snow at
rain mainly Friday afternoon. The higher elevations.
best chance for rain will be over lhe
A winterstonn warning was posted
southern counties. Highs will be45 Wednesday for lhe Wenatchee, Leavto SO. The rain will linger into the enworth and Chelan area of c'en!ml
weekend.
Washington state, !he National Weather
The record high on lhis date in Service said.
Columbus was 72 in 1982. The
Advisories for winter wealher
record low was I in 1886.
were in effect for norlheaslem WashSunset tonight will be at 5:07 ington .and in higher passes in lhe
~. m. Sunrise Friday will be at 7:36 Cascades.
a.m.
.
Advisories for snow also were
Southern Ohio issued posled for the norlhem mounTonight, mostly cloudy. Show- tains of Oregon.
crs likely early. Low in the upper
And advisories for snow witll
30s. Chance of rain is 60 percent. blowing and drifting snow were in
Friday, mostly cloudy. Rain likely cffectthroughThursdayforlhemounin the afternoon. High anound 50. tainsofnorthernandcentia!Colorado.
Chance of rain is 60 percent.
The heavieSt snowfall during the.
Extended rorecast
six hours lhat'ended 1 p.m. EST was 2
· , Rain likely Saturday. Lows in inchesatKalispeli,Mont.,andMullan,
upper 30s'to low 40s. Highs 45-50. Idaho. There were no reponsofheavy
ChanceofrainonSunday. Lows 35- rainfall, the wealher service said.
40. Highs in mid40s to low 50s.
. Wednesdaymoining'slowforthe
Golder on Monday. Chance or rain Lower 48 was 7 degrees at Houlton,
or snoJ. Lows 25-35. Highs 3540. Maine.
Around the nation
Temperatures around lhe48 states
Mostlylightrainandsnowwere at3 p.m. liST ranged from 22 at Yelscattcred in the Midwest and Rock- lows tone National Park, Wyo.,to 81 at
ies on Wednesday,anda new round ' Fon Myers, Aa., and at Brownsville,
of stonny weather was moving into
Christi and McAllen, Texas.

Hospital news

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Area deaths
Andrew VanMatre
Andrew H. VanMatre, 71,
Clifton, W.Va., died Wednesday,
December I, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital. He was a retired
maintenance worker for lhc Foote
Mineral Corporation and a fonner
employee of the West Virginia
Mailable Iron Company in Point
Pleasant. Re was a member of
West Columbia United Melhodist
Church.
In his younger years, he played
fast pitch softball for the Sommerville-Stout Ford Garage in
Point Pleasant and various other
area teams. He won several softball
tournaments and pitched several
no-hit games, including one perfect
game.
· The ,son of lhe late Howard D,
and Julia E. Stcwan VanMaa-e, he
.was born January 14, 1922 in West
Columbia, W.Va.
Survivors include four daughters, Marlene (Dennis) Hutchinson
of Dublin, Judy (Leo) Kennedy of
Tupper Plains, Linda (Grant) New.land of Coolville, and Helen
Mawhirter of Columbus; two
brolhers, David and Wilbur VanMab'e, bolh of West Columbia; six
grandchildren and two great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Manina E. Stanley VanMab'e; one granddaughter, Tammy K.
Kennedy; four brothers, Arnold,
Harvey, Claude and Eddie VanMatre, and two sisters, Deboiah Lewis
and Anna Johnson.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and ·
7 to 9 p.m. Friday at Fogelsong
Funeral Home , Mason, W.Va.,
where services will be held I : 30
p.m. Saturday wilh the Rev. Terry
K. Alvarez officiating. Burial will
be in Graham Cemetery.

..
Tite Daily Seuliael .
iUSf.ti ~tJ·Nil ·

Published every afleraooa, ~.aday lhrDUJh

li'hlay, Ill Court Sl., Po-.y, Obio by llle
Oliio Valley Publ~hJDI Co..,..y/MIIIIIlilodla
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio ~5169, Ph. 99Ht56,
Second el1111 po~tappaldii.Pomaoy,Otdol ·.
~ewtpaper ~llloa,

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Continued rrom Page 1

Deputies probe B&amp;Es
Two breaking and enterings and several other incidents arc under
investigation by the department of Meigs County' Sheriff James
Soulsby.
The sheriff reported lhat someiime between midnight and 8 a.m.
Thursday, Dale Barr's Station at Reedsville was broken into and
some money, candy bars, tobacco, cigarette lights and plug wires
were taken. Entry was made through a side door.
Investigation .is also continuing on a breaking and entering of a
Jratler o~ Ml Ohve Road owned by Don Pullins. Pullins reponed to
the shcnfrs de_panment that Sunday when he arrived at lhe trailer,
he discovered 11 had been entered and a 29 inch J.elevision set was
missing.
Go~don Roach ha~ been charged in Meigs County Coun wilh
receiVIng and possess1on of stolen propeny, according to lhe sheriff.
Soulsby said lhat Roben Beegle, investigator recovered a 19 inch
color television rutd a VCR that had been stolen from lhe Racine
Elementary School during a breaking in lhat occurred in October.
Roach is currently being held in the Meigs County Jail for lhe
Thanksgi"!ng nil!hl breaking and entering of lhe Kountty Kitchen
restaurant m Racme.
Doug Raines, Bald Knobs Road, Long Bottom, reported to the
dcpanment lhat a 16 gauge shotgun and at least 30 cassette tapes
were stolen from his residence.

&lt;6169.
SUBSCIIIM'IOII RA'nS
IJ Cur&amp;.r or Molar Ruute

One Wcei:................................................. .$1.60
Oile Moalh.................................,.•,......... ..$6.95
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lllllly......................................... - 3 ! c....

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oot de~irina 10 pay the ClrTi« m~y
renut in advance direct 1o The Dlily Selll~el .
OD altuw, til 01' 1'liDOith bllll. Creidil WiU be
liyea CIITier NM we&amp;
No IUbteripeklu by mall oennihed in •e•
•Wl*e home Clfriet srrtice ii tnilable.
S.looorlpdooo
louhloM
... ~

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

'26 Wceb.. ,.'1''"'"'~·~·····~·•··"··
1•.$1).16
S2lVelb.,.o:;;:!ti::"'''""t...1..,, ............."",76

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Molpc-.,

I) Woeb ...........................:.................... .S2l.«l
26 ...............................:...,.....$45.&amp;0
~~............ .................... ...... ...$88.-40

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TONIGHI' tHAU 1HUA1.

JURASSIC PARK
SHOW liliES
ltiOH. tHAU lHUAS.

OHE EYENIIG SHOW 7::1111
ADIIIISIOH 12.00

... 11123

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446-4 524

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 23rd

.S29fc5&amp;u,

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR I Dave or Bob
I

992-2156

BAHR GLOTHIERS
.
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THE DAILY SENTINEL

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MIDDLEPORT ·

7

Willi wrealbs of boDy and mislleloe, slocldngs haag lly ·
lbe fire ad sceaes blalllllled with snow, Cllrisbus
·· encompma wllllllll and good clle• as we cherish lbe .·
·. ldealnp we'n shared this pasl year. For as It me•ns ·
saying ..lllllllls" lo you, our many lrllnds, old and new,
wboslldDd sapporl we'D always trer are. Doing
bulnen willa you is oar grealesl pleasure!

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Cbrlstmas
Greeting
Edition
Thursday,

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COLONY TH EAT RE

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded to six caUs for assistance Wednesday.
Units responding included:
9:23 a.m. Pomeroy to Union Avenue for Kathryn Smith who was
Jreated not transported; 9:33 a.m. Middlepon to same residence;
4:48 p.m. Tuppers Plains to State Route 7 for April Holsinger who
was transported 10 Holzer Medical Center; 8:43 p.m: Racine to State
Route 338 for Gary Reese who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 9:01 p.m. Harrisonville fire department to Goosecreek Road for a trailer rue at the residence of Larry Bricldes; 10:46
p.m. Pomeroy and Middleport tire depanments to Butternut Avenue
for a structure fue at lhe residence of Judy Smith, Randy Smilh was
transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital, Rhonda Smilh and Judy
Smith were treated not transported: 10:53 p.m. Middlcpon to Land·
fiU Road for Terry Houser who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

AND BOYS
.·r ., STARTING AT
·'&lt;$,

Howard said.
,
The ODD audit analysis Slated;
"The county clerk is responsible
for mpintaining the rmanciat
ledgers and overseeing the adminisa-ation of the program. Fo~ the
FY '91 CDBG Formula Allocation
Prosram, the clerk mainta.ined
weekly time sheets documenting
lhe number of hours worked and
duties petfonned on CDBG activities. Several times a year, the county clerk is additionally compensated, at a rate of $14 per hour, for
total hours charged to lhe CDBG
program . For the FY '91 Formula
Allocation Program , 'the county
expended $10,925 in payroll costs
that are at!Iibuted to the county
clerk. While adminisJrative costs
are an eligible (:DBG expenditure,
the clerk was paid $7.81 per hour.
Accounting procedures and federal
regulations prohibit an organization
from paying an employee from two
or more separate sources of funds,
at different rates, for lhe same period of time during a work day. An
employee may only be paid 40
hours, pi us approved ovemme, per
work week. Therefore, lhe county
has improperly expended 510,925
in FY '91 CDBG fonnula funds."

EMS responds to six calls

FOR MEN

P,()Sn.tASTER: Send tddreu ebaD&amp;et to 11le
Diily SeDtJael, 111 Cowt St. Pumaoy, Ohkt

criminal or civil charges will be
filed, pending more information
from the Slate and federal aul,litors.
"In lhe short tenn the county has
'to take responsibility. Then we
have to find who is responsible,"
he told the commissioners.
Commissioner Janet Howard
said the commission has contingency money for emergencies.
"In order to comply we'll have
to take responsibiUty. I would hate
to lose any money because th e
county really needs the money ,"

.-----Briefs···----

NtUoDII Advertfllna

Reprenntllln, Braoham Newsplip• SaiN,
133 Third Avenue, New York, New Yort
t0017.

Commission
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· Continued fr!lll! Page 1

Brownsville, Texas, where antllorities captured Willis 15 days after
the shooting.
Also Wednesday, a palhologist
said the bullet that ktlled Mrs.
Willis passed through a wall before
entering her head.
Dr. Edward Proctor Jr. testified
that Mrs. Willis· was shot twice
before dying - once in lhe side
hnd once in lhe head.

Member: Tho Allocllled ......,, ODd 1111 Ohio !

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Stocks

SUMTER, S.C. (AP) - A former Ohio lit3l} bought a pistol and
rented hotel rooms and cars in the
days before he killed his wife.
acollrd.ing to military investigators
testifying at his coun martial.
''There was no doubt he thought
about it before he did it," sajd Specia1 Agent Wayne Arrow.ood of lhe
Air Force's Office of Special
Investigations, lhe military version
oflheFBI.
.
Senior Airman Jeromy Willis,
23, formerly of Ironton, has admitted kiUing his wife atlhc base legal
office Jan. 4 while she talked with
Air Force lawyers about pressing
abuse charges against him.
The coun martial is to determine
whelher lhe murder was premedi tated. If so, he could be sentenced
to death by lelhal injection.
Willis withdrew about $1,500
from a credit union, bought a 9mm
pistol, rented lhree holel rooms and
two rental cars during the week
before Jan. 4, a military investigator and a Myrtle Beach police
detective testified Wednesday.
9mm pistol was bought at a
Beach pawn shop just
the murd~, Arrowood
Willis then went to an
· firing range to test the
Arrowood said.
rented three hotel rooms
in Murrells Inlet, Conway and
Myrtle Beach lhe weekend before
the Monday morning shooting,
Arrowood said.
One of the rental cars was
recovered a day after the shooting
in Murrells Inlet near a h01el where
Willis had rented a room. Another
rental car was found in

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Chris,
Am Ele Power .................. .36 318
tian Buzzard, Darrell Hawthorne,
Ashland
Oil.. ..................... .33 5/8
Helena Daniels, Wendy Long,
AT&amp;T ................................ 54 1/4
Tina Keiser and Lena Carpenter.
Bank
One ........................... 37 718
Monday discharges - Christian
Bob
Evans
................................20
Buzzard, Helena Daniels, Wendy
Channing
Shop
.................. \2 318
Long and Tina Keiser.
Champion
lnd
....................
l5 3/4
Tuesday admissions - none.
City
Holding
.....................
.32
1/2
Tuesday discharges - Rose
Federal
Mogul
...................
26
718
Reynolds, Middlepon; Allen Dill,
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .45 3/4
Pomeroy; Geraldine Spencer,
Lands End ........................ ..41 1/2
Syracuse.
Limited Inc ........................ 21 1(2
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER · Multimedia Inc .................. 36 1/4 ·~ liis Baker
Dec. l discharges-- Megan
Point Bancorp .......... ::.............. 15
Iris R. Baker , 75, 2101 Karr
Simmens, George Harper, Allen . Reliance Electric .................,... .17.
Street,
Syracuse, died today,
Hudson, Delores Ralston, Rhonda
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 1617{ · December 2, 1993, at the OhiO
Glick, Sadie Cordell, Donald
S~oney's Inc ...................... 21 l;t
State University Hospital. ArrangeWoody,, Ashley. Edwards, Sabrina
Sial' Bank.;................. 1........33 l~f . .111ents are being handled by CreStephens and Daniel Darst •.
Wendy Int 1................,....... 16 1/4 .meens Funeral Chapel and are to be
Worthington Ind........ :............. 18
announced Friday.
Stoc'k reports are 1Jhe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
That's not applause you hear; it's
of Gallipolis.
the sound of the recent election 's winners slapping themselves on the back
in cele~ration.

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ShoNers

1

lhcm as if tliey'ic of so little value cases like lh·e ones the attendants :
lhat they Clluld easily be replaced. ;and pilots allege are happening: :
"They J rcil us like we're dispos- employers· treating employees as if •
able, a number.'' 33-year-old atten- lhey are easily replaceable, have :
dant Helen Neuhoff told The New little value and need the same kind :
York Time's. At stake was the · of constant surv.eillance and correc: :
$23,000 ~atary with which she tion they received in nursery.
helps to support herself, her bus- school. In the era of Total Quality
band and two children. "They told Management, when high-dollar
US the reason we Were tosing
consultants have practically•coni\ :
money walt· because we )Vere rude sumed the business wof.td with •
10 passensers," attendant Wendy
cont\cpts of '.'lhe process" and not' :
Cook-Palmer told the Times. lhe wor¥er. heir\g the problem, thi~ :
Cook-Palmer said all American 1s mysufytng. ,Jt takes. so little to :
attendants were forced to attend con·vey t!ie simple sentiment of •
three-b!iur "Commitment to Cour- '. respect. Even tl!e.'upper-manag~~
~y" classes Jast,y~ without·pay. m~t team mos! 111~ of remed1• 1
' She said' they w.e re handed at1o'\ co~ld learn 11 all jn a one- :
Magic Markers and aSked ·to' draw hour se!!"par· , · . ~
.J :
P!Ctures of flig~l attendants being
To fi~ an Cfllployee, 'lnlln him ,
mce··to passengers, "The ·basic wcl,l and 'lfien treat him as if !here.~ :
.issue is the way they're 'treated- were 10 ¥Jet people juit slobber•• :
lhe way all emplo~ees of this oom- in,g ~or his .Joll. doesn't~ sense."' :
pany are treated,' Smokey· Stover It} like nweymg a man Iiiii spend&gt;~ •
of the Allied. Pilots Association . ing.lhC rest of your Hfe teUing hil!i • :
told the Times. "They b'eated us . there '"' aJl sons or other men out ·:
like we ·were in kindergarten," there ~aiti~g II) line, all o{ whom:: :
American flight attendant Linda y~
liaYC if you wanted. . "' ,
Engen said. No one but an Ameri- · ·, ljarab Overstreei Is a syndi; ' :
can Airlines employee -knows tated wr,lter ror . Newsp~ptl'l. • )
exactly what BlJeS on on ~ iob it Enterprlle A$1oclalton. ~
t,; :
!hat com~~Uy, But .we·~ a![ ·seen
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Rep. Mark Malone

Sarah Overstreet

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When a firm underrates,jts workers

'Funny! You don't look like someone who's
read Howard Stern's new book:"

IToledo I 4SO I

the insurapce hemorrhaging. At the :
some of lhe damage to your car, ·motorists (puuing the bite on the same time, we should look into :
wanted It, you.-got it.
How .many of you have been in but they'd lill;ely have to raise your insured motorist.s·walle.t).
' ways to make it ·possible for these :
The legislation 1\11\ proposing folks who will be affected, to pur- •
a ear .accident? Let:s see a show of premiums afterwards;
·hands.
would do the foUowing: PART I If chase "low income insurance." In :
Now, how many of you have
a car accident occurs, and one of short, a "low income insurance ;
lhe drivers doesn't have insurance pool." We can do this wilh lhe cos( '
been in. a car accident, where you
(even if he/she wasn't the responsi- savings found in the reduction of '
were hit by another motorist, but
ble party), th(l person's drivers major payouts. (The reduction will :
the oilier motorist had no car insurance? Let's see· a show of hands
And the other guy? I !tate to say ltcense would. be revoked on the be realized wilh a removal of unin- :
·~ '
now. ·
it, but often times the chances of spot. The car's iicense, plates - . sured motorisiS from lhe road,)
This
"pool"
would
allow
folks
:
Anyone who has been involved collecting from him/her would be taken and held. As for the car, it
with
low
incomes
to
buy
from
the
·
in a ear accident knows how unset- slim.to none.
would be impounded. That's right,
"pool"
to
continue
to
drive,
T~us
;
tling this situation can be. HowevSo, as you sit there scratching the car, lhe plii!es and ·lhe driver's
er, if you are luck enough 10 have your head, you 're probably asking, license would ·all·be held· until !he protecting them, and those of us •
never been in a cilr accident, let me "Hey Mark, why is it that these party could prove they have insur- who ·c urrently carry insurance;
fll?m paying higher and higher pregive you a scenario:
guys can _drive, get into an accident ance coverage.
· An aceidcnt occurs. It involves and still drive away leaving me to
Any person who receives any mtums due to uninsured motorists ,
.,
you (driver I) and anolher motorist pay more and more in insurance?'t I form of public assistance, would accidents.
Certainly
there
will
be
those
, '
(driver 2). When th~ police arrive, know it happens. You know it hap- have to show proof of auto insurwho
will
thtnk
lhis
is
"yet
another
an examination of the scene begins pens. Heck lhe poli'ce know it hap- ancc prior to receiving their assisslap in the face to the poor" while ..
and a police report is made. The pens, but we can't seem to curb the tance.
Heck folks, we've heard it all others will sec lhat lhis is another ~
police officer may lhen ask you all problem, now can we? But docs
sorts of, questions: "Who did what, that mean we shouldn't try?
before, but it's true: driving is a logical step toward providing better
For too long now, it seems lhat a privilege, not a right. And quite stability .for lhe state and it's peo· when, where, etc., oh and by lhe
way, do you have insurance?"
lcgislative"do gOQdcr" altitude has frankly, those of us who are paying ple. Ag~m. we must do something;•
Let's lhen as~ume you were at gotten us nothing but trouble in higher and higher premiums to to turn .the corner on uninsured ·,
fault, and you had insurance cover- certain situations. We're told we keep our insurance so we can legal- motorists, because as it stands ,
age for the damages. The officer could do one lhing or anolher, but ly drive, are really getting sick and we're headed down a one way dead
'
would most likely cite you and we shouldn't do it lhat way or lhls lired .carrying the ball for those end toad lhat leads nowhere.
Should· you have any questions .
your insurance company would way because it may adversely · who! don't fee.! the need to get
probably settle, right?
· affects one portion of lhe public or insurance. The bottom line here regardihg lhis proposal or anything.',
But Jet's say you were not at another. So in doing nothing, we.·.··· folks, is this: If you don't have else that concerns you, please fccr ;
fault. What if the olher guy was at continue to spiral out of conb'ol, 'in~uratice for your car, keep your free to contact me at home at 8943~6oratmyofficeat466-3919. ~
fault, but had no insurance? What and into more problems.
ciir off the road.
If you ld ralher drop me a line, ' ·
would lhe c,hances be of lhe olher
Therefore, we have to act. And
There wiU ·undoubtedly be !hose
please
write: State Representative :
guy reimbursing you for your .car's that's where a new proposed piece who. will say- lhal this is unfair to
Mark
Malone,
77 South High ;
repairs?
of legislation comes in. A bill that someone, ll!on't totally disagree
Well, ·you and I bolh know what would finally put some teelh into a with !his, but I've got to add that Street, Columbus , Ohio 43266- :
would probably happen . Your law !hat's been doing nothing but we have to do something to stop 0603.l'd be glad to hear from you . .;

Berry's World

conditions

•

OK "soull!~astern Ohio, you · insurance eom)lany might pay for ·gumming tiie heck out of uninsured

By The Associated Press
.
Today is Thursday, Dec. 2, the 336th day of 1993. There are 29 days
left iii the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 2, 1942, a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction was dcmonsb'ated for the fltst time. by a group of scientists at lhe University of
Chicago.
On this date:
In 1804, Napoleon was crowned emperor of France at lhe Calhedral of
Notre Dame in Paris.
I~ 1823, President Monroe outlined his doctrine opposing European
expansion into lhe Western Hemisphere.
In 1859, militant abolitionist John Brown was hanged for his raid on
Harper's Ferry lhc previous October.
In 1927, Ford Motor Co. unveiled its Model A automobile, the successor to its Model T.

forecast for

t.l iCH.

Getting tough on uni,nsured motorists

Today in history

,,

Accu-Wealhe~

"

still be impo,nant, but our first look
will be west across lhe Pacific.
As Clinton sees it, North America wiii bec'ome united from a trad·

.,•

Friday, Dec. 3

Mqney,. not politics,.is d..rivin,g f_
orce

Senti~el

OHIO Weather

PaGe 3

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Willis rented rooms,
cars before wife's killing

Weather

Page-2-Thl! Dally Sentlnel1
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ;
Thursday, December 2, 1993 1

.

'

The Daily

Thursday, December 2, 1993

'

·• \ '

)

•

�Thursday, December 2,

1~

q

o

Thursday,·December 2, 1993

ON

BERKLINE.RECLINERS
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6 The. Dally Sentinel .

PomeroY-cMiddlePort, Ohio

Thursday, December 2, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Somalia's rival ·clan leaders to meet face .to face

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP)
- Somalia's rival clan leaders
mainlained confrontational stances
Wednesday as they prepared to
meet face-to-face.
Ali Mahdi Mohamed arrived in
Addis Ababa for the meeting with
Mohamed Farrah Aidid and the
leaders of Somalia's other factions,
a senior Ethiopian official said.
Aidid was planning to show up

Thursday for the gathering beginning later Thursday or Friday, said
Abdul Mejid Hussein, Ethiopia's
minister for external economic
relations. ,
·
Omar Jess, who leads one of
three clan-based militias allied
under Aidid, accused U.N. troops
Wednesday of committing
"unprecedented destruction" and
said they obstructed humanitarian

aid.

concluded the conference Wednesday by reaffirmin• their eoml)liting to prepare for a reconciliation ment to aid Somalia's needieat, bu! ·
meeting, to be held later either in saying the factional fighting musr
Somalia or Ethiopia, Hussein said stop.
at a news conference.
A idid stayed away from the
Hussein led the Ethiopian dele- three-day conference to press for
gation to the just-ended internation- the release of eight of his aides
al conference here on Somalia's · being held in connection with
reconstruction.
auacks that ldlled dozens of U.N.
Relief groups and dol!or nations troops, including ~4 A!Dcricans.
The Somali factions are conven-

His :25-member delegation to the
con{erence also boycoued the
meeting, but has remained in the
Ethiopian capital.
On Monday, Aidid demanded
the United Nations leave peacekeeping in Somalia to a neutral
body of ~malis, donor nations and
Africans. He called on Somalis to
hold a conference in early January
in the Somali capital, Mogadishu.

Meigs girls to begin. season
tonight vs. Nelsonville• York

Ali Mahdi, interviewed
Wednesday from his stronghold in
northern Mogadishu, dismisse~
Aidid's proposal and urged-the
United Nations 10 disband Ajdid's
militia~ even at the cost of Somali
lives.
The international conference
ended wilh a declaration underlin:
ing the need for peace in the Horn
of Africa nation.

NATO MEETING -'Manfred Woerner,
NATO Secretary-General, left, talks witb
Jacques Poos, Luxembourg's foreign minister,
while Niels Helveg P,etersen, Danish foreign min·

ister, second right, talks wilb Secretary or State
Warren Christopher, prior to the NATO foreign
ministers meejing in Brussels Thursday. (AP)

Ame~lcans drive

to meet ·
worl·d .·trade ·ac.cord deadline

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) "Flexibility has to be met with
Hints of comprQmisc were_every- flexibility," he said. ''The ball is in
where Wednesday· as Secretary. of both of our _courts and we are movStale Warren Christopher and fi.S. ing it back and forward."
and European trade negotiators
The goal in Brussels is to setlle
began a drive to beat the Dec. 15 the remaining .differences between
deadline for concluding a world- the United States l!fld the European
wide uade accord.
Economic Community and take the
''There will be no December deal to Geneva as a basis of negoti16th," Christopher said in warning ations for cq.ncluding the 116that negotiations were entering an nation Uruguay Round of global
aU-or-nothing phase.
trade negotiations by the Dec. 15
He called for tradeoffs, deadline.
acknowledging that "none will be
The broade.r negotiations mark
easy,'' and said ''the_y n;'~st· be the most an1bitious attempt to overmade by ~~ f~ ~me:
ha~l the world uading system, but
The mam suckmg pomt con- they have bee'n stalled for nearly
c~ a dispute over French "farm three years bv the bitter farm fight,
subSidies. "'""" ·
. ...,..,, " - ' "' A seiiio'tr'll"de-&lt;fo, Chl'istophS ·
"Efforts are. st!!' needed to insisted there was no "wiggle
reach a comP.rom~se, French Pres- room'' despite a French overture to
ident Francois Mitterrand 5ald after "clarify" last year's Blair House
meeting with Chancellor Helmut accord to slash the volume of EuroKohl of Germany in Bonn. ''We pean subsidized farm exports by 21
are ready to undertake these percent ovu six years.
efforts."
.
Christopher said he was "not
Without agreement by the 151h, pessimistic about the outcome
Christopher said after a meeting based on the conversations I had
with Sir Leon Brittan, the chief today."
Ew-Opean negotiator on the General
And U.S. Trade R~presentative
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, Mic~ey Kantor, before leaving
there could be an outbreak of eco- Wjishington, indicated- Tuesday
nomic warfare, with ''a rash of uni- that the United States might make
lateral actions.''
.. ..
·some .unspecified trade concessions
On the other hand, C.l\rtstopher 10 bring seven years of negotiations
said, an accord would break the to a successful conclusion.
grip of recession, give an immedi"We'd like to make good
ate boost to business co.nfidenc~ progress in the next 72-hours," he
and 'create jobs to lift people' s said. "We believe it's possible."
hop«!S.
He said, "There's flexibility ·on all

sides."

And Mike Espy, the U.S. agriculture secretary, said before leaving Washington for Brussels that
"backloading" tl.e farm subsidies
cuts is "something obviously
we've got to look 81."
That approach would soften the
impact of the reduction of subsidies
to French farmers by slowing
implementation of the cuts.
The dispute over French farm
subsidies in the chief obstacle to an
accord designed to promote freer
trade around the world. Some.analysts have suggested such a broad
agr·eenlent would pull
out
French Prime Minister Ed&lt;lUrurd
Balladur on MOI!day said his country could be flexible about its ·
demand_s, Besides tryin~ to hold on
to export subsidies for •ts one million farmers, France )Yaills 10 protect Europe's movie and lelevision
industry from American domi~nce .
.
Engine problems delayed
Espy's flight to Brussels. Consequently, there was no di~u5sion of
farm subsidies in the fusi round of
talks, a senior U.S. official said.
Kantor described his·first ses- ·
sion here with Brittan as "inleresting. ''
- Briuan told reporters, "I'm hoping to make progress on a lot of
fronts, not only on agricultUre."

tia·de deficit up in third quarter
WASHINGTON (I&lt;P) - The
U.S\ men:h8ndise tradie deficit shot
up to $36.3 billion from July
through September, the biggest
qUVterly imbalance in six years.
the goveriunent said today.
The Commerce Department said
tile ~ird-quancr gap was ~P ~.5
perc.ent from tile $34.4 btlhon
dCfte;it from April through June and
the largest since a $39.6 billion
imbalance in the final quarter of
·1987.
Imports reached a new record,
wbile exports decl~
·
It almost certaanly me;mt a
retuin to annual defictts of more
thlMI $100 billion. So far this year,
the im~ totals $99.97 billion:
I( the inldc gap continued at the
paee of the ' ftrSt three quarters, the
dCfiCit would reach $133.3 billion
bY, yeAI''S e!ld. That •would be the
IMgest since the deficit peaked at
S1S9.1i billioil in 1987.
' After peaking in 1987, the merchandise irade deficit fell 10 $73.8
biJlion in 1991 but rose to $96. 1
billion a Y,ciiJ' later. ·
.
Today'• report on merchandise
trade on a balance-of-payments
basil rengcts the trend of tile
IIIOIKhly merchandise trade repcm.
'f1.i9 numllen ue differen1, howev·
er, ·becauae ihoy do not include
siiCb thiNS Is ~~ .sales of
m•w y ~ illd gOld. ~
· Am~ ~ancf.for fQreign
~ pu.-:ed amports up .O.S per-,
cep\ in the third 9uartet, to a recOid
$J.i8.~ billion, while ~xpons fell
u :perc:el!l, 10 Sl11.9 billion. .
Jilt~ bid.lieen l,he a IJ!ajor
soaree of strength ror the ~.s.
CcbiiO!ny iD the wl'y 19901. But
eeoilomic deterioraiiori among

~.lt*jor ~=ae,:; .
~:~~itY 10 purtha&amp;

. u.s .,.,.._
. Ai ."tlie , nme

.

time, nlodeit

'pcnrdl til till U.S. ICOIIDIDY liu
' UlijA\httl AliM!fiCIDI'Itilllty 10 buy

··'

'

j

.I

•.

goOds, foreign as well as domestic,
and thus booste~ the level of
imports.
More than half of the 2 pereent
gain in non-petroleum imlJorts
were consumu g~. which have
risen strongly in recent quarters.
Purchases of foreign industiial supplies and capital goods also
mcreascd. But automotive imports
feU for the first time in six quarters.
America's foreign oil bill fell 12
percent, to $12.6 billion, reflecting
decreases in both prices and volume.
Nonagricultural exports fell I
percent, mostly capital goods as a
sharp decline in civilian. aii-craft
more than offset olher categories.
Automotive exports also fell. the
first decline in seven quarters.
Exports of consumer goods and
ind.ustrial supplies increased.

DON TATE ·CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.~GEO
'

H~- RVEST

._.fl:'oli 1993 CHEVROLET
P"
CAPRICE LS

1994
~ 2DOOR ·

-

1993

· Rec;l, 5 •peed,alr

*9,499
or *189
'

Per Mo.
80 Mtha.

.

~ %1::: ::~~p
.' /
' .
S,aplld, V8,alr and mora.
'

&gt;\*13~895

1994 ~HEY. 510
...: PICKUP

Devilles

,
. As~~ As 520,9'95 '
2-1990 Olds 98's .....................18,99S
1990 ChevfBereHa .................. 16;995
1993 Olds. Achieva ........:........ 112;995:
Only 3,000.miles.
1993 2Dr. (Qvalier R5 ...... ,.....,. 1M99
6-19,3 4Dr. Caval!ers.~ ....:... :;.~~,BBB
~t993:1(0rsjlt0S ....................... 59,688
Cutlass Supreme.-:... 513,995
.

....

.

)

' WE GIVE SENIOR ci-nzus 111% DIScOUNT '

'

~-

.

~!'lured on 7.10 _APR for 10 ~·-

f' ' '

1

•

rJ'.,_ lncl tltll fill not Inc~.

I

, ,All ._~~~tea }0 ,Detlei' "

,

.

.D.ON-TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO·
,.

.

l;fOU~S: Mon.·Frl. 9:~:00

Sat.l:oo:r4:00i"SI.m.
·1:oo-&amp;:Oo
,
'
.

for Browns

he would be lost for the SCIISO!i; and
they had even considered p(l!qng ·
him on injured res_erve, ~~ich
would have made htm mehgtble
unul next season.
.
Now, tt appears he will be back
Jn the lineup within two weelcs, and
possibly by Sunday. The Browns
have hsted h~~ as quesuonable _on
their w_eefl!y IDJury repon. meanmg
there ts a 50 percent chance he
could play.
Coach Bill Belichick said he
would wait until later in lhe week
to make the decision.
"We're going to practice him
and see how it goes," Belichick
'

shld.
.
..Testaverde had the arm m a
slmg for a monlh and only_resumed
throwmg,last week. He sll!ted u~ as
the team s emergency third-strmg
quarterback last weekend but
wouldn't have been able to do
m~.h mor? than hand ?ff. .
I can t say that I ve arred the
ball out deep or t!Jro~ the ball at
100 percent velocuy, he S81d dur·
ing a break Wednesday . "I feel
that I'll be able to play on Sunday.
But again, I haven't,thrown on
back-to,back days. It n be a btg
test for me todar, and seemg how tl
feels tomorrow. '
Signed by Cleveland during the
offseason to back up Bernie Kosar,
Testaverde took over as the starter
when Kosar was benched after five
games. Cleveland won both of Testaverde •s slarts but has lost four in
a row since he got hurt·.
Kosar was cut Nov. 8, one game
afler Testaverde was injured. Todd
Philcox has started the last three
games and will play Sunday if Testaverde cannot

Aaomix at DcttaU. ?:30 p.m.

National Blllltett..JI Allodatloll
At AClante

lnd.iana II U~h.m.
Minnm:ot.l at
St&amp;~ 10:30 p.m.
Frklly'l G1m.
PtvalandatBoMn. 7:30p.m.
~at N~w J~, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at Miami:7:30_p.m.
HOUlton. al Allanta, 7:30p.m.
SU'I Antonio 11 Orlando, I p.m.
Milwaukoc at O.UU, 8:30p.m.
Ctwloa.o 11. Denver, 10:30 p.m.

Br The Aooelatld Prta

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allandc Dlvlllon
New Yad
Orlando

W

L

Pet.

9

2

.8!8

7
8

5
7

.583 2 lfl
.533
3

······ 6
5

1

.462

........

B01tm
w uhin&amp;ton

7
New Jc:ncy ....... ~ 10
Philadclpru1 ....... 4 10
MWni

GB

4

.417 4112
.333
6
.286 6112

Grt4 palrlnp
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Sute·fi·
nal and 1cmifinal paidnp for the 2lnd an·

Central Dh·lllon

Atlanta
........... 10 4 .714 ......... 8 6 .511
2
Charloue
Cbicaso
......... 6 7 .462 3 \fl
Cl...W.d ........ 6 7 .462 3 112
Detroit
........... 5
I
.3&amp;5 4 11'2
Indian•
.......... 5 8
.385 4 In
Milw1ubc
...... 2 12 .143
B
WESTERN CONFERENCE
... ,· 1

-- ~ld1J.. lDiv&amp;llon

n~ Ohio lfil.h School Athletic Auociation ltltc rootlMD townament (aD game~
1t MauWon Paul Brown Tiger Stadiwn
unkalllOtad Olhcrwiac):

DIVISION m
Slllelloall

-1\1:::
Frkb.7

,.. ' (;'o ,

.... w·

L
PeL
HOUI\01'!
......... 14 0 1.000
San Antonio .....• 10 S .667
Utah
............ 9 S .643
Dal,..
......... 6 7 .462
Minneao&amp;a
.....•• 4 8 .333
Oallu
........... 1 13 .071
Pacltk: Dlrillon
Seaale
.........•. 11
1 .917
PhoeniJ;
8 3 .1'¥1
Ponbnd
I 6 .571
.531
Gaida'! State ....... 7
6
LA C1ippeu .. .... 6 7 .462
LAW."' ....... 6 9 .400
SacrunCI\10 .... .. 4 10 .216
Tuesday'• Gamet

4 112
5.

Coliiouc (11·2).1 p;m.
DIVISION n
Slllellnalo

Sat11rday
St. Marys McmMial (13 -0) VI. UniCI'l&lt;own W.0 (ll·l), 3 p.m.

21!1

4
4 112

DIVISION IV

Sbte F1nala

s 112

Saturdly

61,12

f.'MsioNJ
Stale Scmtnnall
Saturd.ly
CincinnMi. Moeller (12·0) vs. Hilliard
(11 -1),1 p.m. atD1ytc:a WekcmeStadi·

'm

• Collttt Buktlhlll Scor•
By The Anoclated Preu

EAST
Rhode lslon&lt;! 79
Cmneeticut II. Yale 64

Parten placed
on injured
reserve list
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Bengals roolcie defensive lineman Ty Parten was just starting to
show promise when' hi~. season
ended with a broken thumb.
Parten had surgery on his left
thumb Moqday nig~t after fractur·
ing it Sunday in th~ Bengal(, 16-10
win over the Los Apgeles Raiders.
He was placed on the injured
reserve list, which means he cannot
return this season. ·
· · '·
Parten only played about 20
snaps this season - roughly one
quarter per game. But the .team
believes he can be a regular con tributor.
·
"Ty's going to Qe a good player," defensive line coach Bob
Karmelowicz said. "He's a full motor ~uy,_ and he was really ·~m­
ing on m htS pass rush get-off.
Parten was th~ . 63rd player chosen in the 1993.NFL draft The former University, of Arizona'star was
the fourth player chosen b~ the
Bet\gals. But while the first lhree
- defensive end John Cqpeland,
tight end Tony McGee and
linebacker Steve Tovar - ,bootimc
starters. Partert•h&amp;.s man)lged qnly
..~,

·' "I wanted to bci playing abigger
part on tllis,team, b,ut it's no Oil~'s
fault but myself," Parten sat d.
"I'm coming along slower than I'd
·

"I'm getting off the ball OK. .
My footwork is· just screwy." he
satd. "I'll step uhder myself, or
something like that. Or I'll step inside peop,l~ when I sf:lould pe
· stcpP,ing outside."
·
• I wanted to come along more
than wliilt 1hive," he said. "Hopefully0 next year, I'll ldck it in.''
•' '' ••

··f •

- 1.

D&gt;~· · ·~

..... ......

•

O~rtmouth 94, Middlebury 62
0..&gt;&lt;01 73, l.dUgh S7
Fairlei&amp;hJ)icldltlott56. R•'8"' 53

Hout\onatNowYOik, 7:30p.m.

Soatlle•t W•Minaton, 7:30p.m.

'

Cuyahop F1lll Wilih JOIUit (11·0)

v1. Ocvdand S1. lgnatius (12·0), II 1.m.
1t Canurt Fawcen St1dium
Statt tlnal: AI Canton rawce~t Stadl·
um Dec:. it all p.m.

Golden Sl.ltc 100, Dtllaa 91
Wednetday'l Gamet
B01wn 120, W11hingwn 113
New Jcnc~ '17, Clcvdand 82
Orlando 114, POI'l.land I 06
San Antonio 92., O!arlctte 88
Indiana 120. U. Cliopen 100
LALaken J24, Dailu91
Minnelota Ill, Sacramcn\0 101
Thul'ld•J'I Cuna

.

..

Venaillco (12- l) vo. Hwoo (ll-2), 8

I

U\ah 103. Denver 92

·

rll'

Friday ·
Libaty Centcr1(11·2) "'· St.cubmvillc

Portland 123, Miuni 109
Atlanta 122, 8ps:tOn 114
Cl...W.d 92. Douvi&lt; ~4
Chic:ago132,PhocniAII3
Hotaton I (Tl, Milwaukee 91

like." ·

~:1-.~': w":'~ (1~ ..~

Slate F1nall

7 Ill
9
13 ·

one "spot" swt.. ·

DAH.Y HOMI-: CC'Ofo-:n SPECIALS
CA ll Ofl COME itJ FOa SPHIAL OF THE DAY
"

. , SJ

Alii Dllftllu I OR FOR
ROYILPILM .
.

'

·

1

:

o~t

ScoreiJoard

BliiZERS

*1

Broccoli with Chnae S!!t,~ce • Hot Buttered Roll
Choice of brink
'

BEREA Ohio (AP) - Winless
in Nove.;.ber, the Cleveland
Browns may get a boost from
Vinny Testaverde on Sunday if all
goes well in practice this week.
· Testaverde worked with the
team Wednesday for the ftrsl time
in five weeks and said he hopes to
play against New Orleans, even
though he does not have all the
strength back in his rehabilitated
shoulder.'
Testaverde separated his right
shoulder Oct. 24 when he was
sandwich'ed between two Piusburgh defenders on a 9-yard scramble The Browns initially thought ,
' ' '

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

BARBECUE CHICKEN DINNER
Mashed Potatoel &amp; (iravy

''

Testaverde working

*18,995

Agricullutal exports were down

$4
"'1 69
ONLY . •.

1993-94 LADY ~ARAUDERS -The 1993-94 .,~ derson, Heather Hudson, Amber Blackwell and
Meigs Marauder girls' basketball team will open
Vanessa Compston. Standing are statistician
its season on Thursday evening at home against
Kevin Lo11an, Cynthia Cotterill, Anne Brown, AliNelsonville-York. Team members include (front
cia Haggy, Kristen Dassylva, Melissa Clirford and
row, L-R) Jaclyn Swartz, Joy O'Brien, Lee Hen·
bead c_oacb Ron Logan.

Sooulo 9l. Pllilodolpbio 10

1991 Olds Bravado ................. 118,900
WAS $23,206
1993 Chev. Astra Yon .............. 114,995
1992 Chev. 510 Blazer. ........... 114,995
1989 Chev. 510 Tahoe PU........ ..S6,99S
-1,94 CHEVROLET
I991 Chev. 510 Pickup..............SS,995
BEREnA
• .J992 Chev.'SIO.Pickup..............19,499
Aut(lmlltlc,alrconc!lf'I.Pi'l!niJ
1991 CHEVYSIO PICKUP ...........17,495
2-1993S10Biozersin5tock ·

SUNDAY, DE'CEMBER 5th ,

'

(lF TRUCK VALUES

OHIO ·

2 percent due to declines in com
and wheal. The drop in corn .was
mostly in shipments to Eastern
Europe, while the drop in wheat
was mostly due to a 6 percent
decline in price.
The biggest deficit continued to
be with Japan. It was $14.7 billion,
up from $14 .2 biUion in the second
quarter.
The deficit with Western Europe
continued to climb, to $4.3 billion
from $3.5 billion in the April-June
period . The United Sta.tes had a
$1.1 billion surplus with Western
European countries in the first
qnancr.
Other deficits included a $7 bil·
lion gap with China and $4.3 bil·
lion imbalances each with Canada
and with the newly industrialized
of Asia -

'

•

"·
I

AIDS ·oay marked by sorr:ow,
determinatien .
.'i noranee

Australians dimmed lights on
lanl)mark buildings today, Princess
Diana had a ticket ·to an AIDS
fund-raising rock concert in London, and in Bangkok nurses sold
yellow roses.
Even in China, where the usual
orticialline is to ignore AIDS as a
foreign problem, the health ministry called a meeting of medical
speci,alists to mark World AIDS
Day.
Governments called for better education and prevention, and individuals mourned loved ones lost to , .
AIDS.
The World Health Organization
estimates 13 million people worldwide are infected with the human
immunodeficiency virus, or HIV,
· -:- Marcbers in a World · Day candlelight
which causes AIDS . It says that
soulb on Flrtb Avenue in New York Wednesday. In
figure may triple within seven
York
City,
more than 58,000 AIDS cases have been reported
years.
si~e -lbe early 1980s. (AP)
Diana's suppon for AIDS caus'
es underlined the high proftle "that
AIDS has long had in Western government has ·clashed .;,ith the recenlly decriminalized.
Roman Catholic hierarchy over
countries.
As elsewhere, underrcponing of
In much of Asia, where many ~DS prevention and Camilli plan- AIDS cases is common in many
experts fear the epidemic could mng, thousands of people ocked parts of Asia.
In conservative, overwhelmingreach explosive proportions, cultur- to Manila's financial district for a
ly Muslim-Indonesia, the hcallh
al taboos have hampered open dis- parade and raUy,
Health Secretary Juan Flavier minister says there are fewer 1han
cussion. But that is beginning to
appeared
wearing a red T-shirt 200 mv carriers - bul other offichange.
Nurses sold roses in the Thai- emblazoned with "Red Alett, Stop cials say the number may be 100
·
times lhat
land capital, where a flourishing Aids."
Characters costumed as a conIn India , the rapid spread of
sex trade has helped spread the
dom !liU! a skeleton capered in the AJDS has slowly overcome a lradivirus, to ~ublicize the risks.
China s Vice Minister of Health crowd, and air force helicopters tional reluctance to talk openly
· about sex. Today, a major Indian
Yin Dalcui was quoted by the offi- dropped red confetti.
In Japan, which has also tended newspaper for the fir,st lime printed
cial Xinhua News A~ency as
to
label
AIDS a foreign problem, a graphic sketch illustrating contelling the medical m~ng, "It is
celebrities
including a popular dom usc.
very important for Chinese to_raise
:ovoman pro wrestler handed out
The WHO and local social
their awareness of AIDS."
mformauon
to
commuters
in
train
ha-ve fanned out in the
groups
It was more than a platitude.
stations.
seedy
slums
of Bombay and CalAccording to a survey in Yunnan
Hong
Kong,
a
British
colony,
cutta,
where
prostitutes and drug
province, one-third of government
began
offering
HIV
tests
in
1985.
addicts
are
most
at risk.
'
workers, dnctors and police did not
Even
so,
prevention
effons
have
Health
experts
warn
that
AIDS
know whether the AIDS virus
been
frustrated
by
.a
reluc'tance,
equid
be
an
economic
cawtrophe
could be trans111i11ed ·by shaking
hands· or having a meal with a espec;ially among older_people, to for India, a nation of 880 million
discuss sex. Traditipnal·tabops al~ people-with a per capita income of
HIV-positive Person.
In
Pil!lippines, where the apply; l!omosexuality was only · only

Pa;e 7 ~

The Dally sentinel

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs girls • basketball coach
Ron Logan welcomes back only
one starter and five letter winners
from last year 's 17-S sectional
champions as the Marauders get set
to open their season at home on
tonight against Nelsonville-York.
Logan, starting his lOth year as
the Lady Marauders' coach. holds a
!55-55 record. Since the Marauders
have joined the Tri-Va.lley
Conference, Logan owns a 122-22
record (85%).
Gone from last year's squad are
st.arters Verna Compston (13.2 pts),
Lori Kelly (9.6pts, 8.9 reb), Katrina
Turner (6.1 pts, 6.1 reb) and Missy
Sisson (8.5 pts). Last year the girls
finished tied with Nelsonyille-Yorli:
in second place in the TVC behind
league champion Belpre.
Returning starter Lee Henderson
leads the letter winners for the
maroon and gold at one guard. The
5-4 senior averaged 2.I pts a game.
The other guard should be 5-4
junior Amber Blackwell (2.6 pts).
At center for Meigs will be 5-6
senior Heather Hudson (1.0 pl)
with Joy O'B.rien and Vanessa
Compston at
forwards. O'Brien
a 5-4 senior averaged just over six
points a game, while Compston a 57 junior, scored just over four
points a game.
Bench play will be provided by
Anne Brown (5"8, soph.), Alicia
Haggy (5-10, soph), Jaclyn Swartz
(5-4 jr), Kristen ·Dassylva (5-8,
soph), Melissa Clifford (5-8, jr) and
Cynthia Cotlerill (5-4, soph).

me

Logan feels that the "Marauder
lack of experience will hurt the
Marauders. "We have been
inconsistent with our ball handling
anct passing, but that wiU get better
· with experience", Logan said. "Our
lack of height will also hurt us, but
I feel that we will be a good
shooting team and we will get
better as the_season goes on".
Logan feels that defending
champiDI! Belpre will be the team
to beat in the Ohio Division of the
TVC with NelsOnville also having a
chance for the title. The teams in
the conference will play a round
robin and a half. They will play all
teams in their division twice
(Nelsonville, Wellston, Belpre,
Vinton County) and all the teams in
the Hocking Division once, that
division includes Southern, Eastern,
Federal Hocking, Miller, Trimble
and Alexander.
Non-conference games will
come from two new opponents.
The Marauders will play the River
Valley Raiders twice, and for the
first time in several years, the
Marauders will meet the Gallia
Academy Blue Angels
Last year's team was in the tille
hunt down to the wire before
finishing in the runner-up spot The
Marauders defeated Rock Hill 67 ·
43 10 win the sectional title before
losill!l to McDermott Northwest in
the dtstrict game 53-48 in overtime.
Logan will be assisted this year
by one of his former players, Kathy
Edwards, who will coach the
reserve team. Tip-off for tonight's
reserve game against Nelsonville·

Yorli: is S:5S.

Meigs girls'
·
199"3·94 schedule

'
Sports brefs .'
BASKETBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Hakeem
Olajuwon, who averaged 25.4
points, 13 .5 rebounds and 4.t
blocks in the Houston Rockets' 14~
0 swt, is the NBA player of the
month. Roclcets coach Rudy Tomjanovich is the coach of the month: '
DENVER (AP) - Holdout
guard Robert Pack signed a threeyear contract with the Denver
Nuggets for a rcJl()l'led $3 million.
Pack averaged ll'l.5 points and 4.4
assists last season.

TURNPIKE FORD OF GALI,IPOLIS
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FEATURING

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.
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..

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·30·o/o -pFF
~iL coNNiEs
.
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o

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........

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"

OpjiOIIe!lt .J
Dec. 2 .................. Nelsonville-Yorli:
Dec. 6 .......................... .81 Southern~
Dec. 8 .........................'.........Eu~
Dec. 9 ...................Federal~~~
Dec. !3 ..........................at WeUStoll\
Dec. 16 ............................... Millet'
Dec. 18 ....................... .River Valley
Jan. 3................................Southern
Jan. 6 .....................................Belpre
Jan. 10.............................81 Trimble
Jan. 13 ..................at Vinton County.
Jan. 17 ...................Gallia Academy·
Jan. 20 ............................. Alexander:
Jan. 24 .............................at Easlem
Jan. 27 ............ .al Nelsonville-York
Jan. 31 ...............................WeUSton
Feb. 7 ...............................11 Belpre
Feb. 9 ..........................at Alexander.
Feb. IO ..................... Vinton Count)"
Feb. 17 .................... at River VaUey;

-

BRING A FRIEND AND SAVE!
Poinsettias, Bulk Candy, Crafts;
Amish Jelly, Candy &amp; Jelly Gifts.

·,~

Date

"I wouldn 1 t say there's no pain,

but I am able to throw with some
velocity," Testaverde said. "I
don't think I'll be 100 percent no
matter what I do. I'd say I'm 80
percent right now.
"!'in really anxious. Watching
this team for the past foupv.sx~.
' ·~losing J!ames that"'t-'feel like ·we
should fiavc won, I'm eager to get
back out there to help tliis team win
in any way l'can." •
'
·
Testaveide said the coaches are
leaving it up to him and the team 's
doctors to determine when he's
ready .
"Bill has told me he didn't want
to put me in a situation that was
going to hurt me further on down
the line. I'm probably putting more
pressure on myself than anybody,''
Testa verde said. "I don 't want to
come back for a week and then
miss the rest of the year, espcciaU y
if there·s still a chance to be in a
playoff game.
" What's worrying the doctors
and Bill is, will I be able to lalce a
hit and not have il affect me, not
swell up or get sore again," Testaverde said. "The true test will
come in the game. I'm not going to
let anybody hit. it until Sunday, at
least not a game-day hit."
.

"
i

1

�Thursday, December 2, 1993

Thursday, December~. 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Et~stern, girls

Ju~t dunk it, Shaquille O' Neal
told htmself, and so he did;
_
. The 7·foot qrtando center
mtssed four of s1x shots before
halftime, then .made seven dunks
. and a layup wtthout a miss in the
second half Wednesday night
helping the Magic defeat the Pon:
lan~,Trail B~rs 114-108.
In the fust half I made my
move~ couple of umes and~ ball
ro~ed m and out, so I knew tl was
g~mg..co be a long rught," O'I"!eal
satd.. In the second half, I Wll!' JUSt
looking fof. the dunk every ume I
touched 11. ,
•
The NBA ~leading scorer, aver~~tng 29.0poJ:'ts, scoredha120foFf hiS
pomts tn e second
. our
of the dunks c~e after lob passes
from Scott Sktles, who had .16
points and a NBA season-h1gh 20
ass~~IS . .
.
,
I still think were really_small
to compete w1th the teams wtth the

1~~-!4 !eason t~!]!§!~!...

EASTERN VARSITY- The Eastern Varsity
•. and reserve squads will kick orr their I993-94
. campaigu tonight with Al(xander. Members of
; the varsity squad are, front, 1-r, Rebecca Evans,
Jessica Karr, Beth Bay, Nicole Nelson, Michell

Murphy, and Tracy White. Back·Jaime Wilson,
Penny Aeiker, Amy Redovian, Melissa Guess,
Tara Congo, PalSy Aeiker, and Jessica Radford.
The team is coached by Scott Wolfe and assistant Paulllrannon.

Enis ·

'lJ::l!~~oc
player
. COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Curtis Enis, who ran for 2,764
yards in 10 games, headlines the
1993 Associated Press Division V
All-Ohio high school football team
announced Wednesday.
Enis, a 6-foot-3, 232-pound
senior lailback and linebacker at
Union City Mississinawa Valley,
was named the offensive player of
the year.
Sharing the defensive hpnors are
Columbus Grove defensive l)ack
Scott Palte and DaiiOn linebacker
Brian Baum.
Selected as coacbes of the year,
based on !he reeommendations of a
s1a1e media panel, were John DiPietro of Crestline, Pete Brunow of
Dola Hardin Northern and Lancaster Fisher Calholic's Jack Hatem.
Enis, who has committed to
attend Penn State, averaged 10.8
yards p~r Cl!fry ~tnd scored 39
touchdowns in 10 games despite
playing two games with a broken
riti. lfe also bad 106"tacltfes in
eight games on defense.
' In one game, he piled up 549
all-purpose yards including 440
rushing yards - and scored seven
IOUChdowns.
· · Patte, a 6-2, 185-pound senior,
had II interCeptions and 5 I tackles
for a Columbus Grove unit that had
four shuiOUIS and only gave up 76
points all season. As a quarterback
on offense, he also passed for 560
yards and ran for 440 in leading
teams 10 an 18-3 record the last two

years.

Baum was credited with 20
tai:kles for a loss, five sacks and
143 total tackles for Dalton. He
added five fumble recoveries and
c•""" five othen. He also blocked
a punt for a couchdown and had 27
taekles in another gume.
. The rest of the first-team
linebackers include Lockland's
Bernie McAlister, Donnie Thorn of
Steubenville Catholic, Ryan Abel
of Newark Catholic and Liberty
Center's Keith Kern.
The defensive line boasted St.
Henry •s Eric Delzcith, Nikk Killian
of McComb, Danville's Charlie
Duncan, Dan Eagle of Lowellville
and Jason Risner of Tipp City
Bethel.
In the secondary were Pat Newland of Reedsville Eastern (eight
interCeptions for 212 yards and a
touchdown in returns); Newark
CalhOiic's Jon Kempf (six intereeptions on defense, 24 catches for a
28.1-yard average on offense); Liberty Center's Charlie Bostleman (a
two-way sw with seven interceptions); ahd Palte:
Leipsic's Kevin Brandt, wilh a
40.2-yard average and a big year as
a receiver, is the ftrst-team punter.
.' The offensive epds are Lorain
Clearview's Duane Todd (40 catches for 704 yards and seven TDs);
Heath's Nathan Shaffer (1,023
receiving yards and 10 .acores); and
Jlllte high-hurdle record-holder Eli
Wdnandy of FostOria St WendeHn
for S36 yards and seven

PAT NEWLAND

JARED RIDENOUR

ALL-OHIO GRIDDERS · Eestern's Pat Newland was named
FirSt Team, Division V All-Ohio today by the Associated Press.
The Eagles' Jared Ridenour was named to AP's All-Ohio Second
Team.
games in the nine years before
Brunow came in as coach in 1984,·
he 1 s 72-28 since including this
year's 9-1 mark. DiPietro led
. I'
Crest me to a 9-1 mark, its first
North Central ConferiiiiCe title and
the Junkyard [logs' flfst trip to the
playoffs. And Hatem guidetl .Lan·
caster Fisher Catholic (10-0) 10 its

HAn&lt;h.!.cOoDc.6-S,200,k

Offenalve player of'tht (ear: CurUa Enl~
UrJion Cltr MlllllllnPa Val .
o.raulve ployero ~the roar: Scoll Polio,
ColumbuaGrow;BrlanBaum,DaHon.
Coachtl or the yearl Pete Brunow, Dola
""dlo N«lhorn; John DIPietro, c... u~oo;
Jock"'''"" Lln&lt;UIIr llllotr C01h.

orr.,.., En~~JC.:..,.,, S•ouba&gt;rille

Colh.. 6-3, ISS. Jr.; x..... Huntley, Froman• s.
Joocph, 6· 3, 190, Sr.; J.J. H•!''· Stmburg
r.
__.
........_.
Franklin, ~. 165, Sr.; Brian WIUuoker, F~•
•tnt«l""'••ect retu.u~ tu~1961 8ft(\ ... -·llliftMIIii:~~. lW,Ii'::' ' R z f i i l
firSt league title and playoff Koehl,
Sidney Lohmon, 6·1 , 20S, Sr.; Greg
William&amp;, New Phila. n.canwu C.\b., 6-1.135,
appearance ever.
Sr.; Chod uttr.u, ~.onco.... FW&gt;orCOih., 6-t. 234,

Division V
All-Ohio Team

COWMBIJS, Ohio (AP) -

lllo

1993 As...

dated Pta• Divilion V All-Qhio high ~ehool foot·
ball team, baed en the recommendltiont of 1 Rile
pend d 1p0tta ~and broadcuters :

DC\IISION V
Flral Team
Offen1e: Enda- Duane Todd, Lanin
Clc::aMew, 6-foot-4, 190 ~·· S.cnior; N1than
Shaffer, Heath, 6-0, 160, ft.; Eli Wmnandy, Fom.
rill SL Wcndolin, 6-5, 190, Sr. Linemm - Mike
DeAnJel, Berlin Center Weatem Ruerve, 6-5,
29S. Sr.; Alu Molter, Columbwi Chove. 6-2. 21S.
S!.: '!an ~e191n, Anaonia, 6-4, 215, Sr.; lonu
l.ieninf.. Minaltr, 6-7 l(l, 260. Sr.; Jeremy Qw,.
lher, Libetly Caur, 6-S , 275, Sr. QuartabaW-Mike Orlendo, SI.Cubcnville C.th., 6--2, 185, Sr.;
Gcloff ~Wrftlin,er, Su'lft:lllelk Guaway, 6-1, 16S
lr.; Ru.My RidiudJ. Glauater Trimble. S· l. 136:
Sr. 8~ Fnil, Union City Mi11iNin1w1
Vall, 6-3,232. Sr.; Cuey Bockctt. Howad East
Xnaa, S-11, 230, Sr.; Dcu&amp; Spoek, St. Hcruy, S-8,
172. Sr.; Andre Barkley, Cin. Coun~ O.y. 6·1,
185, Jr.; Ken Keirnt, Del~01 St. John 1, 6-2 21 0
Jr. KU:kcn-Rob lonfll, Newuk C.\b ..
190:
Sr.; O:uia Dalrymple. WCJOdni.eld, .S-7, 165, Sr.
Defa.e: !.inanm-EM Oelzeith, St. Henry,
. 6-0, l82. ,S r.; Nikk Killian, McComb, 6-1, 195,
Sr.; O.UUc Dwan, DanWlc, 6-3, 210, Sr.; Din
EaaJe, Lowdlville. 6-4, 23S, Jr.; Juon Ri1ner
Tipp City Jlethel, 6-4, 210. Sr. Lineback4;n-;Bri:
an Bawn,llah.Oil, 6-2, 181, Sr.; Bernie McAlilter
Cin. Lockland, S·lt, 180, Sr.; Donllie Thorn'
Steubenville Cath., 6-1, 19S, Sr.; Ryan Abel:
Newadt Cath., 6-2, 220, Sr.; Keith Kcm, Uberty
Cenltr, S-10, tiS , Sr. Bac:ki-P1l N«wland,
Reednllle Eu..rn, 5-t, Ut, Sr.; Scott Palte,
Ca1umbul Grove, 6·2, !IS, Sr.; Jan Kempf,
N~walk Ca!h., 6-0, 165, Sr.; Ch~ie Boctlcman1 ,
~tbcrty Center, 6-0, 115, Sr. Puntu-K~evin

fJ.f."'hes

6-o:

Sr.; Jared Ridenour, RMdnllle Eaatern, ti·2,
191, Sr. Quartcrbacb-Brian Wikdtevick, Cin.
!Mkland, 6·2. 113, Sr.· Ovk Greene, Ncwuk
Cnh., 6-2, 180, Jr.; IohJ, Sunekt Cn.iline, 6-4,
170, Sr. 9aW-Ryan Sollman, Sidney Lehman,
S-8, 165, Sr.; Mike Soot, Shadyside, S-10, 180,
Sr.; Tn:nt S~wan, Cen!CrbwJ, S·lO, 170, Sr.; Bu·
ry McGraw, PorllmQldl &amp;d., '6-1, 110, Ir. Kick•-None UMd.
Defen~e: Linemen-Mike Connon, lndepen·
denc;e. 6-3, 246, Sr.; Tob)' Bacon, Columbiana, 61, 238, Sr.; Kenny McGilton, Woodsfield, 5-7,
16S. Sr.; Brim Winden. Uncaatcr Fuhea: Cath., 64, Z20, Sr.; Colin WCflddl, Dolflhoo SL John' ' 66, 250, Sr. Linebtckcn-lbaat Bickel, Ansonia,
6-4, llS, Sr.; Richie Vicencio, Marian C.th., S-9,
160, Sr.; Doua Von Kacnc1, Malian ~t.6-3,
20S, Sr.; Mask Thobe., Mlria Stan Manon Local,
S·ll, 175,Jr.; Mad&lt; Bcia', fremont SL l~h, S·
11, 190, Sr.; Joth McCLelland, Olou11et Tnm.ble.
6-0, 165, Jr. Backi- DuU)' Beam, 1'ipp Clly
Bethel. 6-l, 17S, Jr.; Pu Mercor;Cin. Madcirt., 60, ISS, Sr.; 'Mib ICNrnblao, Conol Winch-. S·
11, 170, Sr.; Ryan Pmo.w, Doli Hardin NOI'Ih.cm,
S-9, 170, Sr.; Bmji Hanwnond, Lorain Clearview,
5·10, 165, Sr.; Tom Wcuscb, Av011', 6-0, 170fSr.
Pun.la'--Iarcn Hemplc:man, )rliU aport. 6-4, 96,

Jr.

Spo&lt;ld Montklo
Mike Bohlant.~ ' MariemMt; Juon Hemmerich, Anaonil; HNUI Francia•.Bodford;. Tmoor
Spea•• Williamtbwj; Ryan Dillon, Cedarville;
Charlie McNier, South Clalrlel&amp;on SE; Bnndon
a.a. Cin. Landmalk Oriaiad; Jeremy Painter,

Bradford; Jamie Ad1in1, Mecbanicaburg; Plul

Powdl, Lockland; Jetemr Ropt~, New Miami;
Tim Shdcr, Bttdford; Juan. HambY.. Cedarville;
Jar Cole. Middletown Ftowjdo
Pu Conroy, Thompaon Ledaemonl; Andy
Sak1ch, Loftin 0• MW: Mall Twna, Kinllnd;
Nick Ellis, ThomP'Oft Lod&amp;•ewttj RM Iu1tiee,
Lorain Cle1rview ; Scott Poc:oa, Avon· Kev in
Koucy, Foilpon Holl&gt;orllaoltns; Don HJi.etllOIII,
Avon; J.eff Ou:~, IndependM.ce; Paul Bozic,
lhorn..O. Led&amp;....,~ Anthony Rizzo, Coyahoa•

Aeiker is a great JIQ$ition player
and hustler. According to the
coach, "she is a better ball player
than what ~~p thinks she is; she
needs 10 play with confidence. She
can do the job."
Aeiker SCQfed in doublc.digits a
couple times last year, coming on
strong the second half of !he season.
'
Also returning is !i()uthpaw forward, Jessica Karr, who avemgcd
over ten points· a game last year
and was AU-District honorable
mention, and All-Dislrict 13 honorable mention.
Wolfe noted, "Jaime. Penny
and Jessica will hold their own:
We need to get some scoring from
our other starters and our bench.
They need to step up and take
charge. Right !\Ow they are tentalive, because we deJ?.IlC!ded on those
three a lot lost year. •
Jtinior Amy Redovian plays the
rjgh! wing, while junior Tara
Congo has had a ·great off-season
and will play the post These girls
ljlld tJ1Cir junior COWllCipiUIS J~i· ca Radford and Melissa Guess
imptOvcd gmllly in the offseason.
Radford will play the wing
while Guess can play the post 0 ;
the wing, although better swted for
the former.
·
·
Eastern has a good young bj;nch
in sophomores Nicole NelSon
Rebecca Evans, and Beth Bay, wh~
are lying in the wake. "These girls
would run through a brick wall to
win,'' added Wolfe. Additionally,
fres.hme~ Patsy Aeiker and Tracy
Wh1te w1ll float between the varsjty and reserve squad. Senior
Michell Murphy, out for the first
time, is leammg !he game and can
help the team withthcr speed once
she·lt.(lnls the system..
'
Eassem strengths are its quickness and team defense.
:
"011!' defense was a little slow
on its feet in a couple of scrimmages, but looked good against
Gallipolis, and much better in the
scrimma_ge. When we get our
Help" asstgnments we can be
tough defensively,'' said the coach.
"Our quickness will eventually
give us a great fast break, and
allow us 10 press. We have two
weaknesses here. We need to get

Hu:.; }erany Bok, Rock)' RivC::r Luthenn We~t ·
DaYC Meyer&amp;, Kirtland; Jeff Galen, Alhtabull sL
John; Charlie Nuu, Lonin Cleaniew: Brk MuuiChak, F1irport Harb« ~;
1oth Bob.,.

Diu, SteubenvilkCalh.; Louie Lol\hetm.ln. Bow·
.... en\Oft ,Conouon ValLi Trwor MU&amp;II', SupatHk
Oar•wa:Y; Brad Wap«, Z.no~rillo R01ectans•

~IU.,~..Ludlen!it. W~
~laao·
RlehniOncl 1111.; :o.nlhony TO!Jlillli, In
dence: '
Qu1y Bngp, Newbury; Jim Timoncre, Ashtabul1
S1. John;
~ck Hammond, Mineral R.id~ BNct Kenma, Colwnbilnl; Junift Galla, McDonald; Doua
Jonea, Dalton; John Tornptin" Mosadoret Ducky
Rager, V'lfiWI MllhDwa, $tune McElhany, Vienna
M1thew1; Kyle Lowe, McDonlld; Kevin Finley,
Columbiana; Eric Neihei.ael, Calumbiant: Steve
Kline, Southin&amp;.ton; Juon Whaley S~brina
McKinley; Anthony Rozzo, McDGn&amp;ld; 'steve frY '
Moaadom; Richard Bundy, McDonald; Mike v.,;
Hom, Mincnl Rida,c; Muk Baia, Sebrina MtK..inle~; Bob Coppoh, ~cUvllle; Aoyd Shaobllonl.
Windham; Juon Geiser, Dlltm;

A·dam K.lein, Susarcreek: Oaraway; Nat
Greene, Wl\crfotd; Iaaon Anaelica, SzeubenyiJ.Ie

Calh.; Scon ()llil, MalYem; Ryan William~, New
Phila. Tuacai'lwu Cath.; A•ron Martin, Zanc~viUo
R01ccnna: Chria HUnt, New Matamoru Frontier.
Tim Iohnaon, New Philll. TUICU&amp;wu C.lh.; Mik~
Watcm, Bowemon Canouon V11l.; Ty Libera·
wrc, Bclbire SL John; Bcnji 0.UJC, S~bclnYille
C1th.; Brian Fdlowa, S~e~.~b«awUie Calh.; Brian
Soou, S&lt;nobo'IJ FARklln; h1011 Edaor, Now Mill·
moru Frontier; Jenmy Cftmer, Waodlficld· Rick
Decker~ Bealbville; Mark Trlcr, S~dYiidot,Jaaon

know w~en and when not 10 make
a pass o;t the break. That area is
improv~·• The other is that we
need to
able to anticipate the
pass on
press. When we do that
we can cough."
.East~rn 1s an av.e raging
~eboundY'g'teanl, but if and wben it
becomes\.more aggressive and gets
~r po,sition, it cin be cough on
!he
.
.
Easte n has several natural
shooters, but overall is average.
"We don' adjust wc11 shooting the
ball. If a ball falls short, Our next
ten shots fall shprt. We're going 10 .
have to learn 10 adjust better, so
that if we miss one, we don't miss
the. secOild and thitd shots· for !he
same reason."
"In 'the 'big leagues and in high
school ball, allto.l)ften you see
people who have beeome successful, fall short of suci:ess later on,
because they've losnrack of what
20t them there. Once one become.~
successful, he has 10 work harder to
stay succ~sful. Work habits and
atutude wil_l ~the key 10 th!s team.
The potenualls there, and tf every
girl pu.ts their .~Cll!' in it, the success will be to, satd Wolfe.
Eastern will run a motion
offense, out of a 1-2-2 or 14 alignment.
It will run basically a man·toman offense and when need arises
several zone variations.
Eastern will be playing in the
newly remodeled gym, which was
done basically through do~a\ions
and a lot of volunteer work fr~m
coachs, boosters, al!d 11arents, wtth
great help from pnnc1pal Charles
Moore.
"We're. trying to build pride
here, and 1f one can't get excited
about ho~ great this place lpoks,
they don t have much emotion. I
hope we can start off with a win in
this inaugu(al game."
Wolfe is assisted by junior high
coach and assistant vatsity coach
Paul Brannon, who volunteers his
ti~ to the varsity ..
Paul Brannon ts a good basketball man and good for the pro·
gram," said Wolfe. "I hope the girls
appreciate the time he puts in. 1
enJOY working with Coach Brannqn, and we work well together."
. Eastern opens tonight with
Alexapder.

!!II'

Caqtbcll, OlowtaTrimble; John hill Pauenon
.Wilfow Woody Symmu Vall.; B.J . Cantrell'
~th Eut; Ctarul Jtialoll ReediYille
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Schmidt, l'ortimouth Notr01lune; Briu
Porttmwth Ell&amp;i Nathan BIJ.r:ard. Fllftklin fW"·

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Knox; Tim Roaeberry, Marion Pleaaant; Erie
Swanton, Lancuta Fubcr Ca\h.; Juon Dollie
Danvllla; looh En&amp;Jaod, MariM P I '
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..• L.iJie4 at rarat-team quarterback
·ue Mib Orlando of Steubenville

•

. .R1ck Fox, subbmg for the
inJured Dee Brown, scored 25
poi~ts and Dino Radja had 22,
lea4ing Boston's reserves 10 victory over Washington, which lost for
the ninth straight time at Boscon
Garden.

MTDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

. Providing the blocking arc:
·Bertin Center Western .Reserve's
·Mike DeAngel (6, !1. 295), ·Alex
Moaser of Colurtlbus Grove (6-2,
~i~. Ansoftia's Tom Rieman (6-4.
l1S). MinSter monster Jonas Lienipg (6· 7 1/2; 260), and Liberty
Center's Jeremy Gunther (6-5,

,.

Celd~ 128, Build&amp; 113

Thia year buy a s;tt thai Ia
where we would .' he without Derek.
CUllOm
made tor Myona on
He has given us another offensive
your 1111. With home ~livery,
line:•
a~ llldlllfor
Edmonton roolrie Jason Amoll
uwlh • bullloWI curlolity.
is gelling a chance to establish himGive
a gill
self on a team devoid of stars. The
center was the seventh choice in
INn-a,._.
this year's draft for a team !hat has
struggled 10 a 5-19-3 marie. That is
Send In the foiDwing caupon,
aiter Arnou scored twice and made
and ga~20% oil the
a dazzling stick save to prevent a
goal as Edmonton defeated the
ll.tllc~ price.
Philadelphia Flyers 3·1.
He has II goals on the season.
Alexei Yashin and Alexandre
Special Holiday offer ends
Daigle, Ottawa' s flfst draft picks in
December 31 , 1993
each of the Senators' first two
drafts, are beginning to justify their
status ai cover boys for the team' s
media guide.
Each scored in the opening peri• • • • •
ry over Ohio Weslyan (2-3) in the od as the Senators took a 3.0 lead
season opener. Bo Dobbs scored 16 on their way to a 6-3 road victory
Gift ID:
pointsforOhioWeslyan .
over the Montreal Canadiens.
~ME-----------------------~~
· --~---------------­
Mau Mittiga scored 17 points as Yashin' s 33 points tie him for the
ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Case Western Reserve beat team lead with Bob Kudelski, and
~~-------------------CllY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ STATE _ _ ZIP---Allegheny 74-67. Miniga hit a Daigle is third 'with 24 points in 24
C 1 1 Y - - - - - - STATE_ZIP ____
jumper with 14:54 left as Case(!- games.
~E-----------------3) took the lead for the ftrst time at.
In other games Wednesday
~E-------------------~
50-49. Allegheny (3-3) regained night, it was Hartford 5, Detroit 3;
12 Months '66.56_
the lead bill Case Western. went Toronto 4, St. Louis 2; and AnaSTART DEliVERY MTE - - - ahead for g~t 6:39 when Brian heim 5, Winnipeg 2.
Arenschield's jumper made it 62- Whalers 5, Red Wings 3
60.
Jeff Reese stopped 21 shots for
David Masciola led Allegheny his fourth straight victory as host
with 20 points.
·
Hartford matched its longest win111 COURT ST. POMEROY, ottO 45711
Also in tile NCAC, Brian Mali- ning streak of the season - three
nowski scored 31 points and led a games .
13-3 run late in the first half as
Denison (2-0) beatP,berlin 105-75.
'·-i$~"~~i!f)i4$1ft~~!ft4P,flt'*~·'*'~'*!!l4''1t'*WIM'~·'It·!!l4!lt:Vi!4-1!j
Dwayne Romine kYII· Oberlilf"with
(~-3) with 18 points:
· '
In another NCAC match up,
Wittenberg beat Earlbam 96-43.
Elsewhere, Shane Kline-Ruminski had 24 points to help Bowling
Green heat Findlay 85-72 before
fouling out He made II of 14 field
goal auempts.
Tyson Moore, 6•of-8 from the
froo-throw line, led !he Oilers (2-2)
with 16 points. Greg Denecker had
12 and David Smith made two of
three 3-pointers to get II points.
'Anthony Stanford and Chris
Richardson scored 12 points apiece
as Akron (I · I) heat Carnegie-Mel- .
Ion (2·4) 67-45. Akrqn led by as
much as 63 -39 with 3:08 left to
play.
Derek Dmgisich led the Tartans
with 14 points and 14 rebounds.
Also in northeastern Ohio, Nate
Reinking scored 26 points and
keyed a 7-1 run just before the
halftime buzzer 10 lead Kent (1-0)
to an 80·57 win over Northern Illinois.
Mike Lipnislcy had 21 points to
lead Northern lliinois·(l -1).
In other games, Wooster topped
Ashland 68-62, Capital beat Tiffin
103 -90, Bluffton edged Ohio
Northern 5546, Rio Grande beat
W.Va. Weslyn 102-95, Mount Vernon Nazarene defeated Wilberforce
109-95, Hiram beat Thiel 84-52
Grove City tOJlpcd Mount Unio~
84-58, Oglethorpe, Ga. beat Ouerbcin 80-77 in ovenirne,.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Katie Smith hit a 17 -foot jumper
with two seconds left and No.l4
Ohio State shut oul fifth-ranked
Vanderbilt over, the last two minutes to defeat the Commodores 8280 Wednesday night.
Vanderbilt (1 -2) took an 80-72
lead whelf Kelly Daugheny hit a
free throw with two minutes
remaining, but did not score again.
. Aiysiah Bond made a 3-poin't
basket with 1:50 left and hit another one with 1:05 remaining 10 pull
the Buckeyes (2-1) to 80-78.
The Commodores took a time
out with 55 secdnds left, and when
they returned to inbound the ball
they took another time out after
seeing tiie Buckeyes defense.
Bond scole the hall from Rhonda
Blades with 38 seconds left and
made a layup to tie the game at80.
Over the last 14 seconds,
Daugherty and Donna Harris each
missed a free throw - both times
at thcfront of a 1-and·l.
· Smith got the ball after Harris'
miss and scored the winning basket. Vanderbilt had taken its last
time out just after Daugherty's
:; c•t"h&lt;llrt~t'
free-throw miss.
. Julie Powell scored 14 of her 23
points to help the Commodores
take a 45-35 halftime lead. Daugherty added 16 and Heidi GlUingham had 12 points and II rebounds
992·314i
._____;;.;:.;;.:.;;::..,...---J
for Vanderbilt.

992·5776

- Anllablela

streak.

Flyers defeat

:. Alex RobeltSOn came back in a
big way.
.. He missed last season with a
~icnee injury , but scored 28 points
:wednesday in his first game back
~to help Daycon to a 99-82 win over
·Northern Kentucky.
Dayton built to a 23-9 lead with
13:26 remaining in the first half.
Northern Kentucky (2-3) couldn't
catch up after that. The closest !he
Norsemen came was 65-50 with
: 17:05 to play. Shaft Stevenson led
: Northern Kentucky with 19 points.
In Cincinnati, No. 23 Cincinnati
. carne up with a 79-70 victOry over
Tennessee State.
The Tigers (0-2) cut a 17-point
deficit to 75-70 ~i~h 45 seconds
·left $s Rico Beasley hit ~,Pl\il: of 3pointers in a JS,J nilt. 'Bill Keilh
·aregor hit ·a pair of free throws and
Dontonio Wingfield bad a fastbreak dunk 10 fmish off the Tigers.
In !he North Coast Conference,
Chris Donovan scored 19 pomiS to

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse

~ro1wn

R~dman grabbed 28 . rebounds
Without scotmg a pomt for the
Spurs.
.
Nets 97, Cavaliers 82
Kenny ~rson had ~9 poincs
and a career-h1gh 18 asststs, and
New Jersey outscored visiting
Cleveland 36-12 in the fourth quartc;r, snapping a four-game losing

,,
HI HI
Hale

i Ne!!~~edllessKe~~~~n~X~~~~v~~

Artltlclal Spraya, vandWnatha
Opan Dally •s, Sunday• 12-s

Collinl, WiDow Wood']ymrnee Vall.;
·
Ian Wobra', Lancurcr Fiahor Cath.; Keith An·

_.......
e.G ·

.
~ Dayton

CUI n.a-Live Wtwll,.
For the Loved aGrave BIMUta "tr

Mc.uoc.

l!JJ

With Its fourth straight road VICtory .
Spun 92, HO!"'fll88l .
Sll!' AnlOillo won IS SIXth consecu~ve game anc! ~anded Charloue tls ~ I~ m seven !)orne
gam~ . Davl~ Rl?blllSOII scored 18
of hts 31 r.u:tts 1!1 the founh JlCfl·
od, Dale lhs h!l 11 of 13 fie~d
goals for 24 pomts and Dennts

impact iii the league.
Buffalo' s Derek Plante, a roolrie
from the University of MinnesotaDuluth, is having a positive effect
for the Sabres in LaFontaine's
absence. The 5-foot-11, 160-pound
center scored all thtee soals in Buffalo's 3-0 viciOry over Tampa Bay
on Wednesday night. ·
"Derek has played awfully
well," Buffalo coach John Muckier
said. "He put himself right in the
picture as far as offense is concerned for rookies. I don't know

By MICHAEL FLAM
Associated Press Writer
, Seventeen days after they went
out on strike, th.e NHL offictals are
back. Yet the league is still not at
.full strength - four of its super·;~tars and marquee names are side•lined.
~· While Mario Lemieux, Eric Lin.dros, Pat LaFontaine and Steve
::Yzerman have missed substantial
:·playing time with serious injuries,
·names like Plante, Arnoll, Yashin
:and Dail(le are starting 10 make an

PolnNitlu "t• l Up
Banted Holly 1\'eM .,.,_
Live Norway Spruc:e
&amp;-7ft •.- '2t"

PaN~~ ~eo JaM· Dwii,Port.m,.m;
East; Nick Bukiewte~;· Portlmoulh Notro Otnno:
Andy Stllmllln, Perumou&amp;h Noae Dame; Tn~

Achilles heel," Portland's Clyde
''You've ot .to kee a bod on
Drexler said. "Tonight's same was him so he ~'t spin o!you an~ go
a classic examr.te. Shaq'jiiSt had a to the basket," Portland coach Rick
field day Until we get somebody Adelman said "What happens is
in the mlddle, it's l!Oing 10 be a you relax and ·he does a great job
long season."
;
with his quickness and his 'urn in
After shooting 58 percent in a ability of going after the
"p g
victory over Miam 1 the night Lakers I%4 Mavericks 9 I ·
be[Qre, Ponland made j st 42 perLos Angeles handed Dallas its
9
cent of its attempts against Orlan- lOth straight loss behind Elden
do. Harvey Grant and Rod Strick- Campbell's 18 points and 16 each
land led Portland with'' l7 points frqm Doug Christie and George
apiece, while Drexler'·managed Lynch.
only 12 after scoring a season-high Timberwolves 111 Kings IOl
33 against Miami.
Sacramento lost'its fifth consec· O'Neal, battling a case of the flu utive game overall and fourth
that's bothered him all season, had straight at home as Doug West
six points at halftime. Yet the scored 23 points and Christian
Magic led 59-49 and were able to Laettner 19 for Minnesota.
use his 13 third-quarter points to Pacers 120, Clippers IOO
regain con~roi afte:r the Blazers
. Reggie Miller scored a seasonpulled wtthm s1x mtdway through h1gh 35 points and Indiana used a
the period.
15-0 second-half run against Los
O'Neal finished 10-for-14 from Angeles to match a club record
the field, including nine dunks, and

NHL officials return to work

. .NOW OPEN roR
CHRI~'I'Mi\&amp; 6Eh&amp;JN

Andy MiUu, Strubura f.1•Dklia; l.yaa Lane'
llal•-i O.m ~..lioli. 'BMlli'IUlo; Bruft
Rool;o;t., Bridl'!iOn; Riili lluUiill" W'oodal'odd·
Brad Dq•, New Mawnoria F~
'
Chrif Crail, Ol.._,cr · Tri;..bl~e· J T
Bukiewic%, Pc!lumOUlh Holte Damo; John·buP,f

Page 9

C?,~~~~l . ~~!~:~~.~ . ~ 114·1 08 Magic victory

open , ,.

Sentinel Cornspondent
The 1993-94 Eastern High
School girls' basketball team opens
the season with Alexander conight
at the fCCently refurbished Eastern
High School gymnasium.
Last year, Eastern fini$hed 7-14
under first-year head coach Scou
Wolfe.
•
From that team, Eastern lost
5' 11" center Stephanie Otto, who
earned All-State, AU-District, and
first-team All-District 13 honors
with a 14 point scoring avem~e .
Ouo was also the team's leadmg
rebounder.
Last year, Eastern was young,
starting two juniors, a sophomore,
and a freshman. The bench was
entirely sohomore and freshmen
reserves.
. With one year of experience
under their belts, virtually the
whole squad returns, a plus for a
team that has "tremendous potential" according to the coach.
Sixteen girls participated in !he
school's summer camp, and additionally nine attended camp at !he
University of Rio Grande this past
year. That camp was paid for mostly.t~rough the work of the girls
raiSing money a.t the EHS camp.
Eastern, Meigs, and River Valley
also had a summer league in which
the three schools played nine times
throughout the summer.
Wolfe said, "We're still young,
but our skills are so much beuer
than last year. We do a lot of
things right Rij!ht now we need to
utilize those skills more. The girls
try 10 let the offense ·make them a
player, when in actuality the player
has 10 make the offense. We need
to use our one-on-one skills better.
When we do that we'll be successful."
Returning from last year's squad
are Ali- District, All-District 13 ,
senior point guard Jaime Wilson
and senior post woman Penny
Aeiker. Both have been tremendous on-floor leaders in the past.
Great hustle made them good ball
players.
Wilson averaged nearly 12
points a game last year and was
named the team's best defensive
player. Wilson runs the EHS
o,ffense and is the team's floor

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT
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.,

•

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...

'

By
The
Bend
.

.

.

"

Thursday, December 2, 1993
·
Page-10

Girlfriend puts foot downlon lazy daughter
Dear ADD LaDders: This is in
~ponse 10 the widow who said her
current gentleman friend was
wooderful in every way but he was
a big disappointment in the bedroom.
· She said the man was not as
"well-built" as her deceased
husband, and consequently, sex was
lousy.
I would like 10 make a suggestion
that could help not only her but other
couples who have unsal.isfacrory sex
lives. It is entirely possible that
the woman is the one who has
the problem. I suggest that she
talk to her gynecologist about
some "renovation' or surgical
tightening, which is a simple

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"195"3, LOI Angeles
Tlmos Syodleole
Creators Syndicate" ..,

Dear ADa LaDden: I just had a
huge argument with my boyfriend
of seven years. ll's an argument
we've had many times~
'Jim' has a 28-year-old daughter
he still supports. •Alice' lives in a
house he rents, which is also his
offrce. She doesn't pay for anylhing,
procedure.
not even the phone.
Child-bearing can produce
Jim has lived in my home for six
strelehing in the genital area, which years and does not share any of the
makes inten:oursc less pleasurable. expenses. He says he wishes he
A few stitches could do wonders tO could, but he doesn't have the
improve their sex life. -- LARRY money.HehasproRusedmanytimes
IN NEW ORLEANS
10 help me with the mortgage and
DEAR LARRY: Your leuer is one give me something IOward my son's
that could help a great many couples college education, but he cl~~~. he
"recapture some of the pleasure of never has enough after hvrng
their younger years. Thanks for the expenses' 10 contribute even the
opportunity 10 relay Lhe information. smallest amounL

1

''

Jim borrowed Sl.SOO from me wilbout outsi&lt;k help.
I suggest seeing a counselor
early in our relationship and
who
will arbitrate this .troubled
JI!Oillised to pay. it.back as soon as
relaliMShip.
Jim needs 10 hear from
he was able:. So rar, I haven't seen a
dime. ¥canwhilc, I work two jobs a disinteresled party that he is noi:
doing his daughler any favtn by"~
to make ends meeL
allowing.
bet to free-load on him,"
Right or wrong, the Jact !hal he
nor
is
he
being
fair 10 you when he)
supports his grown daughter sticks
continues
10
put
her fii'SL
·
in my craw. Whenever, I mention
Meanwhile, ask yourself thai same'
this, lie goes crazy. Jim says it
doesn't cost him anything 10 let old fllOth-eaten question: Would
Alice live in his office, but 1 - t your life be better with him or
the fact that he is taking · wilhout him? Only you know the
•
n:sponsibiUty for this grDW11 woman answer.
Gem of the Day: Wild horses
and not living up 10 his oblig.UOOs
couldn't drag a secret out or most
10 me. I'm an auraclive, younglooking S2-year-old and beginning · women. Unfortunately, womerf'
10 wonder whether or not investing seldom have llux:h with wild ~~ones.
AllalcoholfNob/~m? Howimlyou ,;
so many years of my life in this man
help
yourself or SOfM(IM you love? · ·
is wise
I do love him, Ann. Do you think "iJcolrolism: Huw to Recogpize It,
·rm a fool? Is he taking OM; for a ride How to Deal With II, How to Con-:.
while I pay the fare? I don't know quer II" will gillt you the aWn" ~
what 10 do. --PATSY IN .NEW Send a self-addressed, lo11g, busi· .,,
ness-size envelope lllld a check or ·:
YORK · ·
DEAR PATSY: Apparendy Jim · money order for $3.65 (this includes ..
. adds a dimenSion 10 your life !hal is posragt lllld luurdling) 10: Mcolro/, ••·
valuable It is ·a1so obvious that c/o Alln /...atukrs, P.0. Box 11562, "•
Alice is~ Lhorn in your sidC. You Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In Con- ·,
wiD never seu1e tbeae differenoea ada, send $4.45.)

·:

.

-

Whoopi Goldberg in hot water over fried chicken recipe

LAMB CHOP· Niara Pop, 3, from Manhatlan's Lower East
Side, gets a surprise squeeze from a Lamb Chop character .during
Macy's 43rd annual Christmas gathering for underprivileged chil·
drep in New York Dec. 1. More than 750 youngsters from around
the city were entertained, visited Santa Claus and selected a
Christmas toy at Macy's nagship Herald Square store.- (AP
Photo/Micbael Albans)

NEW YORK (AP) - Actress "Send a chauffeur to your favorite
Whoopi Goldberg was accused of butcher shop for the chicken,"
ethnic stereotyping in a joke recipe "Watch your nails," and "Have
she contributed to a Connecticut cook prepare rest of meal while
you touch up your makeup."
fund-raising cookbook.
"I don't think it's funny,"
Her "Jewish American Princess
Fried Chicken'' appears in "Cook- Abraham Foxman, national director
ing in Litchfield Hills," a cook- . of the Anti-Defamation League
book sold to benefit the environ- told the Daily News. "It's totally
mentalist Pratt Center. Goldberg
has a house in affluent Litchfield
County in northwestern Connecticut.
Among the recipe's directions:

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of the clerk,
Patty Callaway.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Fo1eign Wars
9053 Ladies Auxiliary will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the post
home. Members should bring
Chrisunas candy. All members are
urged to attend.
, ROCK SPRINGS - The Salisbury Township Trustees will meet .
at the .Rock Springs Township hall
at 7:30p.m. 'Thursday.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
POMEROY - The PERI Group
will meet Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Center, 1 p.m. All members arc urged 10 attend.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA ~II meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. For information on the
group, residents may call 9925763.
POMEROY - There will be a
soup supper Thursday ar the Senior
Citizens Center. Serving will be
from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Bean soup
and corn bread, vegetable soup,
and ice cream are on the menu .

officer at 7:30p.m. Edgar Lewis,
district deputy grand master, will
be the installing officer. All MasiCr
Masons arc invited.
SATURDAY
STIVERSVILLE - Revival services are underway at the
Stiversville World of Faith Church.
POMEROY - Meigs County Dave Carpenter js the evangelist
Republican Executive Committee Services will be held through Sunwill meet Thursday ·at 7 p.m. at the dlty at 7:30 p.m. Pastor Dave Dai- Carpenters Hall, 218 Main Street, ley inviiCs the"piiblic.
Pomeroy.
RACINE : "The annual Christ·
mas bazaar will be held at the
FRIDAY
Racine United Methodist Church
RUTLAND - There will be a Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m. It is
dance at the Rutland American sponsored by the United Methodist
Legion hall from 8 p.m. to mid· Women.
night Friday. Music will be by Pure
CLIFTON, W. VA. · 1'hci New
Country and Then Some. The pubVision
Trio will perform at the
lic is inviteilro attend.
Clifton Tabernacle Church at
LONG BOTTOM -There will Cliftop, W. Va., Saturday at 7 p.m.
be a special preaching and singing The public is invited to the benefit
·
service Friday nigl!t at the Faith ,hymn sing. · ·
Full Gospel Church, Long Bouom.
NEW HAVEN - The New
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub· . Haven Volunteer Fire Department
lie. Fellowship hour will follow.
Auxiliary will have a Christmas
bazaar Saturday at the fire station
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle· from 10 am, until4 p.m.
poit Presbyterian Church will have
LONG BOTIOM , A smorgasa crafl"and bake sale at the Middle·
bord
will be htlld· at the Long Botpon Scars Store Friday and Satiu·
tom
Community
Building Saturday ·
day from 9:30a.m. to 4 p.m..
with serving to begin at 5 p.m.
·'
POMEROY • The Enterprise
RUTLAND • A ~oliday bazaar
United Methodist Church will have will be held by the Rutland EMS at
its annual Christmas bazaar Friday the Rutland Civic Center Saturday
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Car- from 910 5 p.m . To rent tables conpenter's Hall, Main Street, tact Marcia Elliott, 742-2233.
Pomeroy.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange
778 and Star Junior Grange
HARRISONVILLE . - Har878
will
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
risonville Lodge 411, F. and A: M.
at
the
~range hall. The baking conwill meet Friday for a dinne; at
6:30 p.m. followmg by installation test w111 be held and membership
of Frank Epple as district education cenifica1es will be presented.

· Repeat of a SELL OUT I New·supply_fron~ Singer

Mississippi for characters and· inci·
dents in his best work. Kipling
dubbed him the great and God-like
Clemens with the heart of a boy
and the head of a sage, Mrs. Buck
said.
The reviewer described "Tom
' Sawyer" as being at home in the
respected world of his Aunt Polly
as well as the parentless world of
his friend Huck Finn. She related
the story of the boys witnessing a
murder committed by Injun Joe,
rhcir fear, how they ran away to
Jackson's Island, and when realizing that the townspeople.believe
them dead, return in ti!Jie to hear
their funeral eulogies, and eventually give information about the
murder. .
Thirteen members answered roll
call with a memory of a childhood
friend. Light refreshments were
scrv¢ by the hostess.
.

---Alfred news--Imogene and Lester Keaton
spent a week in Washington D.C.
recently. They visited his sister,
Ruby Kingsbury and friends, Helen
and Prescott Walker. They lOured
Washington- churches. ljle Vieuram
Memorial and several government
buildings.
Kay and Larry Spencer visited
her parents, Doris and Aoyd Avis, '
recently ·
·

tbe Princess of Wales , Marilyn
Quayle_,
Ro salynn
Carter,
Kathanne Hepburn and Erma
Rombeek.
, The rest or the men were fonner
President Carter, Pope John Paulll,
No~an Schwankopf, Bob Hope,
Cohn. Pow.ell , Norman Vtnccnt
Peale and Dan Quayle.
•••
DALLAS (AP) - Country
music and com ctiips just seem to
· go together and , sure enough,
Frito-Lay Inc. is going on the road
with Reba McEntire.
Earlier this year, the Plano ,
Texas , snack maker sponsored
singer Billy Ray Cy1us' national
concert tour and featured a new
theme song for its Fritos brand
sung by country music's Mark
Chesnutt.
Fritos sales arc up 5 percent in
cities visited by the Cyrus tour,
Frito-Lay spokeswoman Lynn
Markley &amp;aid Wednesday.
"We learned from that expcri cnce that the country music platfonn works," she said.
Frito-Lay also sponsors the
country music TV program Austin
Clty LimiiS.

Strenuous activity blamed for 60,000 heart attacks annually
BJI DJ\NIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP)- Overdoing ir
can do ypu in .
.
Out-of-s hape people may face
100 times their usual risk of a heart
anack if they suddenly rouse themselves to split wood, lug furniture
or otherwise work up an unaccustamed sweat.
In fact, a major study suggests,
such activity triggers ·about 4 percent of aU bean attacks. That adds
up to about 60,000 in the United
States annually.
The danger is by far the greatest
for those who never exercise, and
regular workouts ease the hazard
considerably. But even those who
exercise five times a week appear
10 double their risk when they do
something strenuous.
The level of exertion. though, is
not especially great. The
researchers say the equivalent of
running up two flights of stairs
~jthout a break is enough 10 rouch

Journal of Medicine. They found:
off a heart attaek.
- Among people who exercise
"Heavy exercise can trigger a
heart attack. But more importantly, less than once a week, strenuous
regular .e-xercise can lower the activily raises the heart attack risk
probability," said Dr. Murray A. 107.times. For those who exercise
Mittleman, principal author of the once or twice a week. the increase
is 19 times higher. The risk goes up
study.
The study was conducted· on nine times for those who exercise
1,228 heart attack survivors at 45 three 10 four times a week and douU.S. hospitals. The reseachers bles for people who work out five
asked Lhe patients what they were or more times weekly.
- 4.4 percent of heart attacks
doing before they .were stricken.
The report is among toe first to occur withm an hour of heavy exerauemptro test an idea many people cise, and the exercise itself probably triggers 3.8 percent of all heart .
already believe.
auacks.
Everyone knows of somebody
who has collaP.sed during lifting,
- ' The kinds of exercise that are
pushing or simrlar strain. However, strenuous enough to !Ouch off heart
heart attacks are common at all attacks include jogging. tennis ,
rimes, even in sleep, and experts swimming, cross-country skiil)g·,
couldn't be sure whether the appar· using a push mower, pruning trees,
ent link with exertion was simply laying bricks and climbing up and
coincidence.
down a ladder.
The answer was based on an
The researchers point out that
analysis by doctors from Dea- even though vigorous exercise
coness Hosp•tal in Boston and pub· hed m
· Thursda y•s New En gIand
Its

increases the cliance of a heart
auad:, the real risk is still low. For
instance, the risk that a nonsmoking 50-year-old man will have a
heart attack during any one-hour
periQd is about I in a million. So
even though a sedentary man's risk
increases 100-fold, it's still only I
in 10,000 if he does something
strenuous during that hour.
A separate study in the journal,
conduciCd in Germany by Dr. Stefan N. Willich and others from the
Free University of Berlin, reached
si milar conclusions. It found that
those who exercised less than four
times a week faced seven times the
usual risk during heated exercise.
Just how exercise might trigger
a heart attack is unclear. Docrors
suspect the strain may fracture a
fatty buildup of plaque in the lining
of a heart artery, leading 10 a blood
clot that plugs off the heart's own
blood supply.

Pfficials crack ctown on . a~ubie-. parking diplomats .

~· NEW YORK (AP) - New
yorkers have complained for years
0{ unequal treatment on the city
s'treets. Now authorities are taking
~lion: Diplomats who want to
l¢ep their license .Plates had better
pay their parking uckets.
~ New York is cracking down on
~.llrking scofflaws in the city's. 71
!):?reign consulates and 166 Untted
~ations missions, The New York
'times reponed today.
: City officials sard Tuesday the
~talC Department will not issue or

••

By PAUL RECER

:

AP Science Writer

~

This ·Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupol'!.
(Photo
Copies Not Accepted),
"i
•.
•
F!llln Your Ad and Mall It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
·
Your Ad Wii(Run For 0118 Week.

arrived! .
"

ONE ITEM - ONE FREE AD PER WEEK
(NOTE: 16WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)
.,

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NAM~--------~
'"~~~.------~~----------------­

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PHONE:----.....;~~-----------------MAIL T O : - - - - - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - )

T'he Daily S_e.ntiilel

THE FAI C SHOP

•..

.· p,QMEROY, OHIO • 992·2284 .
'

"Tom Sawyer" reviewed
at literary meeting

~ulthe orchestra's musicians
decrded not 10 perf(lflll Wednesday
and Th~y because tbtu 3-year
COR!I'a()t expued last weekend. ·
There was no word on whelher
~ concens would be rescheduled.
Trctet holders were offered
refunds.
•••
NEW YORK (AP) - Barbara
Bush not only has been bumped as
first lady, she's been knocked from
the top of a poll of most-admired
women. ·
Mrs. Bush fell behind -Molhcr
Teresa in Good Housekeeping's
annual list of mosr admired men
and women. But she still. finishcd
ahead of her White House replacement. Hillary Rodham Qinton.
On the men's side, Billy Graham finished first for the second
suaight year. President Clinron fmished secopd, up from No. 10 last
year. George Bush, who narrowly
lost the election to Clinton, was
right behind him in lhc magazine's
survey.
More than 10,000 readers voiCd
in the polls published in the magazinc's Jan.uary issue.
Rounding out the lOp 10 women
were .Janet Reno, Oprah Winfrey.

renew diplomatic regist,rations to
any consulate or vehtcle .. ~nh
unpaid tickets from the preyrous
year.
Some dipl~mats'lillve. habitually
i~nored pa.:king restncttons under
drplomauc wmumty.
"We are resiOnng the last remnant of democracy on New York

City streets, the right of our citi·
zens 10 compete evenly with diplomats for legal parking spaces,'·
said Joseph DePiasco, a spokesman
for the city's Department of Transportation.
Among all New York consulates, the worst parking violaiOr
has been the Russian mission .

which averag_ed 13 ticke~ a month
for each of tts hve veh1cles. the
Times said.
.
The Russian consulate and tls
U.N. mission together had ,20,539·
unpatd ltckets on 180 vchtcl~s tn
1992. Based on the a~era~e uckcl
pnce of $39, the Russrans btU for
. last year alone would be $801,121.

•

at
hsk of cancer

Check, VISA, Mastercard Welcome
(Branil new In FACTORY SEALED CARTONS)

'

LOS ANGEU:S .(AP) _ Axl
Th~ younger Mehta, music~l
Rose says Cbazles Manson is a sick · direcror of tfle Israel Pbilharmomc
man bpt as,a songwriter he's not · Orchestra, rakes up the baton for a
too ball.
· - '
. conccn with the American· Youth
· "Look at Your Game Girl" an Syml)bony on Sunday.
uncredited .J3th uack
GurU N'
The elder Mehta has been musi.Roses' l)e,W album "The Spaghetti &lt; cal director and conductor of the
. Incident?'.' has been attribu~ 10 •youth symphony for 29 years. H~
jhe mass murderer and cult leader usually conducts a concert each
by a mutual friend of Manson and month but had to skip Sunday's
the band. ,..
. .
performance in ~ama Barbara on
Law enforcement and vtctrms dOCIOr's orden, hiS spokesman Ron
rightS groups criticized the group . Rieder, said Wednesday.
for using· the song. But Rose said
Mehta, who turned 85 in
Wednesday he fell it deserved an Sepiember, is suffering from laryn·
audience.
gitis.
The orchesua also sends young
"Personally, I liked the lyrics
and tile melody of lhe song, ' he musicians into inner city elemensaid in a statement released through tary schQ91s to play for students,
Geffen Records.
talk about their instruments and
Manson, 59, and three followers inttoduee kids 10 classical music.
were convicted in 1971 of murder•••
ing actress Sharon Tate and six othSAN FRANCISCO (AP) ers. lie is serving a life sentence.
Debra Winger will have to wait to
•••
make her debut with the San FranLOS ANGELES (AP)- Like cisco Symphony.
farher, like son for conductors
The actress was to narrate
Mchli and Zubin Mehta.
"From the Diary of Anne Frank"
In a tribute to his f;~ther, who is under the baron of its.composer and
recovering from a lingering illness, the symphony's music director,
Zubin Mehta this weekend con- Michael Tilson Thomas, the sym·
ducts the youth symphony Mchli phony said.
Mehta founded.

on

JAMES PORTER
.. Air Force Ainnan Basic James
II. Poncr has graduated froni •Air
Force basic training at Kelly Air
Force Base, Texas. Porter is the son
of Nancy Gard and stepson of Mike
Gard of Middlepon.

The Alfred United Methodist
Church held iiS Thanksgiving baskcl dinner at the church on Nov.

compliments Manson's lyrics

~onsmokers

YOUR PRICE WITH AD $189, WITHOUT AD $42t

,.

'Names in the news.Rose

AMBER THOMPSQN .
Navy Hospitalman Recruit
Amber D. Thompson, daughter of.
Teresa K. Blackwood of Rutland
recently completed basic training at
Recruit Training Command, Orlan·
do, Aa.
The 199~ graduate of Marietta
Senior High School joined the .
Navy in January, !993.
·

[4.

•
1ft

Due to overstock, this Singer sewing machine dealer is oHering lor sale to the public
a limited number of new special 1993 heavy duty zigzag and open arm sewing '
machines that are made to last, and sew ori all fabrics: denim, canvas, upholslery,
nylon, stretch, vinyl, silk, EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachmenrs. nE!e~ed lor
buttonholes (any size). It monograms, hems, sews on buttons, satin · st1tches,
overcasts, darns, appliques a total ol 17 stitches. Just set dials and see magic
happen without · old-fashioned cams or p_rogranimers. These Sin~er Heavy Duty
Machines are suitable for home, proless1onal or schoolroom sey.tmg. Twenty-l1ve
year warranty. FREE Lessons included in Sale Price. FR~E Gilt Wrap.

I

11

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.

: The church and community
g-av e a meal for the family and
Chcnds of Clarence Hc!nderson on
Qctobcr22. Many member.; of the
~urch and community attended
Y.isitation and the funeral of Mr.
Henderson.
a well-known Alfred
l)rmcr.

lD

.

This is an appreciation dinner and
donations on Iy will be taken for the
food. The Classics will play with a
free will offering to be taken. The
outside memorial Christmas tree
will be lighted at 5:30 p.m. The
pubUc is invited.

of complaints after selling more
than 3,000 books. "My personal .,
feeling is that it suiiS her humor.'~ ·.
Goldberg, who is black, ardently )
defended her then-boyfriend Ted c
Danson when he was accused of
being racist and tasteless for per- "
fonning a skit in blackface Oct. 8
at Goldberg's FriarsCiub roast.

••

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0

Community calendar
THURSDAY
RACINE - The regular meeting
of Racine Post 602, American
Legion, will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday.

insensitive bcicause it raises all the
ugly anti-Semitic stereotypes."
Goldberg's publicist, Brad
Cararelli, said: "Maybe (the critics) are not aware that Wboopi is ·
Jewish, so she is cenainly not antiSemitic."
Cathy Setterlin of the Prall Center said she received only a couple

I

Eileen Buck reviewed the life of
Mark Twain and ''Tom Sawyer", at
a recent meeting of the Middlepon
Literary Club held at the home of
Bernice Carpenter.
Betsy Parsons presiding at the
meeting introduced Mrs. 8uck who
gave the life story of Twain . She
noted lhat he was born in 1835 at
the time of the sighting of Haley's
Comet, and died 75 years later
when the comet again crossed the
sky. He quit school, became a journeyman printer, started a cocoa
plantation in Brazil, and was a
siCamboat pilot on the Mississippi
River, she added. When river uaffic slowed during the Civil War, he
went to Carson Cily to work in lhc
si lver mines.
About that time he began to
wriiC and after moving to San Francisco published his first story, "The
Celebrated Jumping "Frpg" . He
drew on his boyhood along the

The Dally sentinel Pa{fe

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ln.
.. the service .
-

The Daily Sentinel
..,

.

Thursday, December 2, 1993

T

.

. ...

.

-~

•. 'r

.

'

111 Co.uf1 Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
·
(Offer Expires January 1'5, 1994 ·
·
I

.

•

•'

WASHINGTOI\I (AP) - High·
fbt diets increase Lhc risk of lung
cpnccr , even for ~onsmokers,
&lt;lfCOrding to a Natrona! Cancer
lostituiC study published today..
: An NCI study of nonsmoktng
&gt;\(o men in Missouri found that
tilosc whose dietS had 15 percent or
nlorc saturated fat were about six
tiincs more likely to develop lung
c~nccr than those whose diets had
I 0 percent of less of the fat.
: "We found that as you increase
16c amount of saturated fat, you
i4crcasc the •amount of lung canc ~r," Michael C.R. Alavanja, an
NCI researcher, satd Tuesday.
: A rcpon on the study was publil&gt;hcd in the Journal of the National
CJUlCCr Institute.
.
.
• Earlier studtcs have hnkcd htghfal diets with cancers of the colon,
prostate and breast. High-fat diciS
a!$0 arc thought to increase the risk
o~ heart dtscase.
~ Alavanja said his research camP~ the diets of 429 nonsmoking
....pmcn who had lung cancer ~tth
rhc diets of 1,021 nonsmoking
Wbmcn who did not have lung canck The women all lived in the
s:~mc part of the country, Missouri,
were of about the same age and
rciprcscntcd "a typical American
fl$male population." .
: Alavanja said the slu~yfound
tlflt those·with dteiS contarnrng the
lowest amount of saturated fat and
ttic highest amount of fruits, vcg·
cQbles, beans and peas were the
lCjiStlikcly 10 develop lung cancer.
• Atrhc other end of the scale, 20
pdrccnt of the women in the study
with the highest consumption of fat
at)d diets lowest in fruits, vegela'
bles beans and peas .had about s!x
tithe's more lung cane~. ' '
: For a specific type of lung cancqr adenocarcinoma, Lhere was an
lj:fold difference between those
on lowest fat diets and those on the
highesl:fat dieiS. Adenocarcin'oma
i~a form or lung cancer that is less
o{ICn associated with smoking Lhan
o~r forms of lung cancer.
. .
, "The leading contributors of
dfetary saturated fat were hamburg·
e~. cheeseburgers, and meat I~ ... '
followed by weekly consumpuon
ot cheeses and cheese spreads, hot
d6gs, ice cream and sausages," the
study said.
·
·

,.

ATTENTION!!
1. All new Maytags will be tagged with a sale
price.

2. Free delivery, installation (except built-ins)
and delivery in limited area.

-

RIYKIDS!
SANTA CLAUSE WILL.BE AT THE
FA:RMERS
BANK ON
•
SATUR·DAY, DECEMBER 11th
~BRI G YOUR LIST!

3. All tagged prices include the standard Maytag
warranty.

4. Terms are 90 days same as cash for qualified
buyers. VIsa, Mastercard, and Discover, are also
accepted.

•

'

0

s. Quantities and color selection may be limited
on some models and products. First come-First
served.
6. No dealers or wholesalers-Please!

7.

2

Days December 3rd, 4th
only 8:30a.m. tiD 5:00 p.m.

211 West Second Street
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
614/992·2136

~B
1

.

'.

Route 7
Tuppers .Pialns, OH. 45783
614/667·3161

FIIMlnclng Av•lr.ble,
With

Credit

RUTLAND FURNITURE
7
Showrooms

742·2211 1·100ol37·1217
MAIN STIE!T • RUTlAND, OHIO

11

�..
2-The

. ·"'

December

Wllllll'l 1110
PAI1'1

...-.......

SpeclaHzlng In CUllom
Frame Repair

11&amp; . . . . . . ....

e A ·Big Bear Hug!
·

.

To pl~ce an ad

.

Call 992-2156

We Redoom Ftdon.l Faod Sa.ps · Ouan~ry Rigilll R...,od

-

.-Prlcttl IHectlve lh~u Dece.,.lter 4, 1993 - - - - - .
Government Inspected

· Ill.

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY .

POLICIES
• Ad• ouLiide the county your ad runt mwt be prepaid
• ReeeiYe diacown for ada paid in adnDCe.
• Free Adt: Ci~eaway and Found ada under lS word• will be

Si·rl•in
lone less
Pork Chops

RATES
Words .Rate Over 15 Words
1
IS
$ 4.00
$ .20
3
IS
$ 6.00
S .30
6
15
s 9.00
s .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60 Monthly 15
$1.30/day
5.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads .
Business Card ..... .$17.00/ inch per momlh
Bulletin Board ....$6.00/inch per day

Days

run 3 daya al no ch&amp;fle·
.,,

'·

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.~,

• Price olad for all eapitalletlera ia ~ou.hle price of ad cott
• 7 point line type only uaed
• Selltinel il not re~pon.tible for erron after twit day (check
for erron firtl day ad run• in paper). CaD before 2:00 p.m.
day after pubHution to make correcbon
• Ada lhal •wl be paid in advance are:
,
Card o( Thanlu
Happy Acb
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
.
• A clauiJied adverliaemenl placed in the Tbe Daily Sentinel
(except Claoit...l Dilplay, Buoin ... Card or Lepl
Notice.) will also appear in the Point Pleuant Repter and
the CaUipolia Dally Tribune, reachiq onr ~~,000 home.

...

"-

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1

USDA Choice Beef Bottom

Bo.n less

•

Roast
.

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". ' '

,1..... '

.

Cal.·i·lornia
.N.vel
..

.

tan es .

Fbniil~ Size 40 oz Box

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Cathy's Gifts &amp; Sp~iahy
located at Seyler's House ·
of Treasures.
Open daily for business
Mon. • Sal. 10:00·5:00
Sunday 12:00-4:00

3 Piece Livlrig Room Suite,

Cream in color, excellent
condition; Bedroom Suite,
good condition

Tropicono Pure Premium Orange Juice or

11

!Ei!~&amp;s 14mm·992-697mso~tz

Tr'pica11a

I

The Watering Hole
Fri. and Sat 10 pm till2 am
'Bad Habit' $2.00 cover chg.
Must be 21 and ha.ve I. D.

't I "

Gr.a pelruil
64 •z 1;J oi.c e
Ctn.
..
,s car

·. ¥ayer

card of Thanks .

1

card of Thanks

Our sincere thanks
to everyone who was
so kind during his ill·
ness and death. Dr.
Hunt~ and staff,
.. -.!!".
Veierans Memorial.
'
Public N~lca
Hospital, Horne Heahh
Care and . nursei
A publlf lliopecdan of the
Linda .Rut~ell a'nd
Southern Local School
Dlotri&lt;:fo lell4·11115 budget;
Leanne Clark, and
he1ringi nollce; aubmlu1on
·
Racine
Emergency
1o the County Auditor under
Ohio RevHed Lew 570$.30
Squad, and Fisher
witt be held on Decomber
Funeral Home. We
20, 11113 at the Southern
love you and God
High School . during lhe
rogulor meollng of lho
Bless You All.
School Bolll'd.
· The Family ol
Southern Locll School
Diolrlct Dennie E, Hill,
Garol R. Ball (Shorty)

....

.

..-.. ... 1

We would like lo
·. thank· everyone who
attended and brought
..:::. or aent gilt• to ihe
beby ahower for
-. ~ Hnther Lynn Davlo.

1 lb. Pkg. - Meat

-

· r~;ank·s

TreMurer

••
•

..,.•
,.

"'

"

'·

•
t'

•

UPIO
•

..

'e,
iiltt,

Macaroni &amp; Cheese,
Escollo~ Apple~,
Noodles. Romonott

WITH A.
CLASSIFID
AD ·
.
'
992-2156

:l

,.
'
•' '

-

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl A. James
WilHam C. James
Co-Owners

MOilTG,AGECOIIPAIIY
'DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Flnandng Available

D.A.IOSTOI
EICAVAOIG

,.,

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

1-800-553-3586.

C614)
667·6628

NOVEMBER SPECIAL

CHRISTMAS
· TREES

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n--.....5110
NOR INCO UNI. SKS
1200 ROUNDS·NON-(()RROSIVE ..5130

(BEAT THE BAN)

EVERY THURSDAY

EXCAVATING

EAGLES
CLUB

BUUDOZE~,_!I~CKHOE

IN POMEROY

AVAILABLE.

6:46p.m.
Special Early Bird

$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

. =RillES,

~~=~:
FREE ES'I1MATES

992·3838

ULL Ami 6:00
304-415·7256

Open 9to6
3 cllll-1 klndl:
Scotch, White •
Auolrlan Pin... 5' to 8'.
Harley Haning real·
dance, 351175 Flatwoodo
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Call Ben Cedar at Ce~ar Vacs

;ji'
:;A

31904 Leetli•l

-cnekiHII
Mill._leport, Ollie

11/lcti'l mo. pd.

992-7878

OWNER: JtH WJ.l'"'-

CHRISTMAS TREES

614•992·7144

BRIDRJRD"S

. 4/29/93 ...

FRESH CUI TREES IVIIUIU

OR CUT YOUR OWN

Riggs Tree Farm

992-3470

Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Hoover, Eurelca, Tri-Star,
Regina, &amp;. IDOSI otber brands!

.

n~~~plng

36979 laH R• RDIHI
P011troy, OhiD
GRAVEl. SAND,
liMESTONE. TOP SOIL
l FILL DIRT

FIICtory Choke
12 Glouge Shot
Strictly Enforced

Parts • Service • Bags • Belts

Parte Shipped UPS
Fast • Dep•ndable S.rvlcel

SERVIa

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel

sweeper

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

CHRISTMAS lREES

GENERAL
HAULING

11/121131110.

11/1111 mo, pd.

and lRACIUtUI: WORK

SEPllC BYSlEMs.
HOlE SITES and

-------595

$10.00each

ll.AI'~U OH.

Homegrown.Qirefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine 4' &amp; Up wilh
a greal selection of
larger trees.
Call742·2143 or
742·2979

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eaat 11t
Darwin onto At. 681, go 4 mi. to Milepoet 13. Tum
South on gravel road, 1% mllee to g10ve.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

ChDOHand
cutyourt-.
(.....'MCUI n IDrrott)
311507 Roellopringo Rd.
(•I com• ol US At 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio

Daytona Radlal60 and 70 Series

1112·5702
Carol a O.VId Rlggo
1112W3

Low, wide 60 and 70 • Senes Special RIWIL Dl!ylon
pelfonnance profles.
Truckload SALE Pricas
Two otrong fiberglass belli!'
1\ •
Aggresalve lrwad delllgn
.....
Smoolh riding polyester cord .,.. .-~~W

7n/1roo.

Howlri LWritesel

"~ln•Bo..,.

ROOFING

CHRISTMAS

NEW-REPAIR

TREES

Gulters

Down8pouts

Wholesale
&amp; Retail
.. Retollat

GUtter Clllnlng

949·2168
3-16-113-lln

SHRUI&amp; TREE
TIIMull
'·~ REIIOYIL
.tUGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD

,. •. BILL SlACK
r
992·2289·.

' TIES
USED RAILROAD
12-30-112-tfn
',

J.I.R.
C~NSTIUCnOIJ

Bob Sno•de!!'o tat In
Rutland,~.

Wholeaale $10 at twm,
S12 dellv«ed. Retail lot
will be opan t a.m. lo t
p.m. alartlng Nov. 24111•
r.... 5'tot'. .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room AddiU- •
-GUIIIrWDrk
-Eieclrical and Plumbing
-Rooting

.Jrilorior a Exterior
Plllnllng

(FREE EsllMATEII)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pom«&lt;y, Ohio
.

t-1o-t2-tft1

LU nRE lAIN
33151 PIHGI'tYtRIIII
...... ow. 45771
614·M2·5344
1-100-714-nRE

to win.

915•4473
71W113

We look lorward lo
serving you.

Shoulder Mount.. .... 1155

Come by and register
lor free Battety to be
given away December
24, 111113. No purch..e
required to regiatar and
don' have lo be present

Stop &amp; Cbmpare
FREE ESTIMATES

Book your
lieo now. Meeting
.,. also available.
Call 992·3466 • 992-3818

MOUNTED

e

Remodeling

105 Buaormn Ave. Pomeroy

Come and experione.
elegant Food and :snoos. 1
Something for

DEER HEADS

Call

•Dozer ·~khoe
tOile her oOuq) Truek

l·lofilew Homes

ofi'N...,r••"

Hom Mount................ '22
Squirrel ...................... '55

PIERSON·
BROTHE~S

SPORTING GOODS

675-6755

(304) 882-3336

McLendon

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
'
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

Pondll;

TO·YOUR POCKET.
.

IICAVAIIIG ·
IUU.OODNG

•

Alann Systems .
CloSed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

3141931 mo.

RIGGS

•ADD" DOllARS
''

614-742·2138

GUN SHOOT

;U~,OO,St -

I

'-

._,

Our Business is Security

DAVID ARNOLD
(&amp;f4) 11112-7474
PQMEROY, OHIO

liNGO

NS

"SUBTRACT" THOSE-

"

or CQrn SoufRe
· -12oz.. BOx .

937-Bdolo

667-Cool.tlle

(12) 2, 3 2tc

''

895-Leta..

742-Ra~oad

Pslntlntl
FR~E ESTIMATES

.

'I

r.n.

DilL

643-Arohlo Dloo.
S79-WU..t

. l!y IIPP" only
614-667-PETS

·

. Limit 1 Free Per Customer

••

9115-Ch.oter
843-Porll•ad
247-Leto..
949-Rodae

perao.-l'~jon,
kennel ~jjiips &amp;
youns{~g• tOr Hie.
RottwellM.a ll!l!phenl

'

•f

388-VIatoa
245-lllo Glaode

SllldS.Viee

'

SAYRE TRUCKING

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

675-I'L " - • •
4511-Leoa
576-Apple G...,.e
773-IIMOD
882-New u.vea

Pomeroy

lew enfo~

,.p

-·'

992-Middloport/

AC•
a..1c· ·

Mountal"n

'

446--C.Wpoll•
367-Cbeohloe

TUPPER;

•

'

of large aqu.riuma.

RtiiOIIIbit.RitH
JoeN. Sayre

M111;0n Co., WV

IRI·SIIP 1·9

-~·

.

i •

2$(&gt;..(;_,.••

·--•. Mark_e tplace

72 Count

Melga County

Now 1w beaiAifiA ·~ Spaniel PUK In A!lo
leaturing a 2 II. COII!IIOil Bilek Tequ. l.ayawaya . .
now 1Yaifable for Ch,...,.._ Slife on Dll' enllre llack

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Number I

''

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEAnNG&amp;
COOUNG

tiASSU'IEDS.
GET RESlJLTS • FAST!

GaWa County

. UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
. , _COAL

7131/V1111n

Clauified ptJ&amp;e• cooer the
foUlN!ing telephone e%change1 ...

•The Area's

Roun·d

Ill.

. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I:00 p.m. Saturday
~ 1:00 p.m. Monday
t:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Fridey

COPY
,. DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Frt&lt;lay Paper
Sunday Paper

H2·7,01i., .
H2-IJU
ortoU fill
1-100 141 1070
IAIWII,OIIO

·. IAUUNI :

~

JJ.

DK's
~Farm Toys

body.

ATTHE
.
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Middleport. Ohio
GREAT·SELECTIOH AND
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.

CALL
304·n3-5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

1112-3314 1:30-4 Mon.·Frl.
742-3020 An. 5:00
Hra

koDn

SaL

Uti

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

• Mobile and Doublewlde owners...
UTrll'lllriM.

· Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

.....Ill """'"

992-7878

r=

7f7 1

OIUIII'IDIJfi,

[j

'

I

\

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
IW.EE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No S.lllhry Callsl

21121'921lfn

AMERICAN :GENEUL LIFE -.ntl
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

Accident•Annulty, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky I. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent
lox 119
.hl.le,ort, Ollio 45760
(614) 143·5264

446-9515

CARPET &amp; UPIOUTERY ClWIIIII
1
We give carpet end

upholetery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they dnarvett

l·d··-ry

•It•)

"gellll'lll cteenlng

'odor .,_rnent

WV013372

w. apeclella In:
FIRE A WATER

DAIUGE
RE~TION­

INSURANCE C1 UMS
24Hour

E1111rgency Service

'

I

••

�Thuraday, December
BEATTIE BLVU.TM by Bruce 'Beauie

'

•

2 112 lliL . Daad· ,.,
Homallle. Rural
lepllc,
Eatobllohod
Orlvew!r
1 _"'"' m,
014-251-tlll2, 114-44-.

~

f'
!

'

'

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

K'JT 'N' C aLYL~® by Larry Wright

35 ' Lot.l l Aci'Ngl

1993

BRIDGE

•

.,

...

NEA Cro•sword Puzzle

w...r. .

0

•

ACIIOSI

•

SEYERAL 7· ACIII PARCELS:

liiOW

llotao County, .......
$150/ acr.. Romola, baautttul
lind: ,; "ado.~!""'" .. hllta.
Call lot
map.

Ulnnlng, cutting, -

u.......

miMI' u·••ae. trail "'i!:..": .
m~--==-·=

- · AlhOno,OH.

- · Fono Find Out Now Up
~To .O.to S c - ~r.ado And
WiicJi llonolll 1·--1203 I

41 Houaestor Rent

-··~. -

lion, lul!lllng, 3,200 Sq. Pt. 114-

(I ~~qc HAq/

r.1erchalldls e
2 bodtoom&lt;110rno; lllln SC,
r.t • dip r.qulr.d, no polo, 304o
17!5-1112.

Jut; 12.11 Per Min._ Mutt 81 18
ProcaH Co.I02-154-lll20.

51

Household

Goods ·

..

3pc. llvinaroom euhe, t250. exc.
oond. ~-87!5-2381 !work) l4pm or 304-882-2818 after lpm.

Giveaway
~1' Fomllo

Booglo, 114-256-9359,
'6'14-4411-5490.

NORTH

~-l'.1V6tl 1
~~Q.: lt~j:' j
\. ~~ flAt.!: '
''"4~

c.,.,.

1888 Ford Eocort LX,

//

&amp;GGAR,S(~ ...

$2500, low mil••· 304-675-2440.

VI'RUURNrTURE
614-4Ae-3158 Ot 814-4411-4428
"90 DAY BAllE As CASH
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

AIJD UIJJUST 'Si:XIE.,.,_ 'V-10
HAS HAD AWJT' 1U HE CA'-l
#-.P 1'5 SER!~'r'
(()JSID€~"-G STRII:If..G e'it&lt;~

Pontiac· TranSporl For
Sail. Cl11n WH:h New Front
llr... OWner A Non-Smoker.
Asking $12,000. Coli 614·2451990

,A" ..·•~"

Qlrdln Arch W.W''I $121.00

L.----------r----------1

Sodding ·Twin Man Sat SH, FuU
$911
!IOJ,~hoot
Ouoon
ft41
Drawor
144.1111;
CarSOl;
Bod'o,4 T
Bunk 8ed'1, Pot1er lldl. full
.Lin• 01 Southwootorn
54 Miscellaneous
56 Pets for Sale
Slattl"..l At $20.00; lndtanollany
Merchandise
Shopa o &amp; Sltn Sll~lng At
••.oo.
2 Lacotlono ·Booldo J.uto
-Auction Or 4 Mllea OLI 141. Kenmore Electric Stove a Ken- WMkl
AKC Roglollr.d
Bo1or
Pupo~I"Or6
Old Will
Hold
Open 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. lion -sat. mora Waahlng Mochlno, 114- Chriolmoa, With Dopollt, 81 .._

v....

Pupplts, 112 Chow &amp; Beagle, all
black. 304-17&amp;--1214.

Wontod To Buy: Junlc Cars &amp;
Trucka At Top Price I

Res-

PDppln: Part H.. koy &amp; Lab, tonoblo Cors,I14·38HI54.
Good For Chrl1tm11 Gift. 614- Wontod To Buy: Junk Autoo
448-8180.
With Or Without Moten. Call
Larry Llvlly. l14-388-9303.
Shroddod Papor, Good For
Packing Or a.ddlng AniNII,

Wiint8d To Buy: Ratt Terrier

Either Young Or Puppy. 614·379\lpo\lo Dolly Tribu"!1•825 Third m~8::,;."7'::;-o,:;-o,-::==~=­

Cln Be Picked Up At The Gal•

Avenue, Galllpolla, utt45631.
Slt.rlan Chow PuDDin,

1 Wanted To

2

Buy: S1aRdlng T1m·
ber &amp; Pln1, Good Prien, 6,14-

Moloo, 4 Fomaleo, 814-~8-1275.

388;::..:..:-11106::.:,::-·-::-:-:-:::-::::-:;-';7;;"

To good home, Mountain kar
dog, tin, 3yr.. old. 304oo6754631.

Top PrJcn Paid: All Old U.S.
COin•, Gold Rlng1, Sliver Colds,

Lost &amp; Found
Fem•l•

Fo1.111d:

8e1gle,

With

Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 second Avenue, Galllpolla.

War..d to buy: UHd mobile

Collar, 111'20113, Chln:il•l• Llike
Champion Fann Am, 814-4463253.

homu. 614-446-017!5
WANTED: onglno lot 1988 Font

Found:UcDonald's parking lot,

ASAP.

f11UI1, p..t mlniaturw Colli•,
blOCk brown &amp; whho,

friendly,
114·11112·7H5
4:30pm,M.f.

••rv8-

Fntlv1, 4tp., 1.3 liter, nHdld
caii-'14·D92oo2155, 8:30am·
5:00pm. or 614·992·2428 aher

5:00pm.

Employment Services

UDST gun • COM on Sand Hill
or Ost1tl Road, c111 Gary 30C·
17!5-1510.

11

Help Wanted

&amp;

Loet: In Kyger Aru, Male Bluk
Wh•• Coon Hound, Call 614441.C813, Reward!

Spoors, 304-87!5-1429.

Lael: Malllrlt.h Seller Lilt SHn
In Mill CrMk I Georgu Creek

AVON! All 1rnt. Need extr1
money or want 1 ca,..r, either

Rood

Ar.o,

614-4411-2929

61....,.6-6~8

Daytime;

Eveninge.

No Hunting Of Any Kind, No
Tr•puslna, No MOCorbill•• or

Motor VahlciH Of Anr Kind.
Raymond Smith.

B1bydtw Nteded In My Home

18

Wanted to Do

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrH Remov11, Hedge
Trimming. FrM Esllmltetl 6f4367-7957 After 4p.m.
.
Qanartl Malnten•nee, P1lntlng1

Y1rd Work Windows Wathea
Ci11ned Light Hauling,
Commerlcal, Realdlint111, Sttve:
O~o~ttera

&amp;14-4411-1658.

don'

GaorgH Portablo Sawmill
haul your loge to the mill Just

call 304·675-1957.

MilS Pauta'• Day Care C.nttr
M·F 6 A.M. -6:30 P.M. Quollty
Loving Ctre For All Children
Our 11 G01l. Pari-Timt, Full•
Tlm1J. Flld. AulstiOCI AVIIIIbll.
Call ~r Information Or 'Yialt. Infant /Toddler &amp;14-448-6227. Pr.

School, • Schoolago,
School, 614-446-41224:

B&amp;A

Trl Stall TrH Service- topping,
trimming, trH remov11, tlump
remova[ Free ntlmat•. 114992·2312. It no lntwar, leave

me•••g• on machine.

304-773-5902.

In-door rummage ..... 2304
Mldllon Ave., Thur.-Sit., comic

bookt, wwtema, eporta ctrds,

gun cabinet, ~1•.

Yard Sote-157 Lano SI'J. Hovon. wv, Doc. 4, 8:30-·•, thtla
·

Pomeroy,

21

a

Employment. · M~at· Bo Ablo · To
Lift ·30 lbo. •· lluot Bo Av~llablo

AI Yard Saloll IIUII Bo Paid In
Adnnoo. Doa&lt;llno: 1:OGpm tho
dly before tM •d II .to run,

$undar odlllon- 1:OOpm ffldly,
llondoy
odhlon
10:00Lm.

Saturday.

Good uiod ponto ond lftlrto• _ . whllo unllolmo, ft.OO.
Thurodly, Fildey, Saturday only.
132 Butternut, Pomeroy, rear
blae71"1111.

To Start W•k Monday 1211113.

...,_ltlono Will Bo Flllod
Tftur.day &amp; Friday. Call Aftor 10
A.M. 014-4411-45&amp;3.
FuiHime Blbyattter In My Home

For 13 llonth Old, CPR RoqulndL Hoon Vary In Galllllallo

Arta ~nd R11ponae: Cl.A 2'17

c/o G.itUpolla [!illy Tribuna, 125

Third Avenw, chlllpolll, OH

45831. '

Houooko--

s-

lor oldorlv
ulory. No phcxto colla, 2008
st, Pt. Pleasant.
.'

8

PubliC Sale

Antlqwa and -

lumfturo, no

lem 100 t1rp or loa . . .u, will
buy .PloOo or COf!lploto
hoi•ahold, aiM· wantecf.. old
blcW&lt;IOI. Cll Ooby Martin, 6141112'·1'141.

Nlco mllll lingle bod with
.......
li2-2._ond mat1r- us, 114-

Ook Curved Olaoo China
HouMhOid tumlahing. 112 mi.
.... Ook Tobift, I Chairs,
Jor~cho Ad.' P1. Ploaoont, WV, Cabl
•tc. River Vlllay Ollk Furnllura,
ca11304.f1!·1450.
3893 Ooorgoo Crook Rood, Oa~
=c.:.:..:...:c..:..,;S"W~A"IN:---- llpollo, OH, 114--4310.
AUCTION 1 FURNITURE. 62 Pool Toblo, rog. olza, f75. 1104Olivo SI.,,OaiUpolla. - • Uood 17!5-2H2.
fumlture, ~~'7te ·:Ht•m
a
Wort&lt; booio.l
H.
OU111t --modll calor .TV.
nooilo ropoiNd; 614-MI-2!155
_dlyo.

Rea l Estate

Allr.at811018 - l l l n g

n

lhli new f"'perii~Ubtid ID
t110 F-1 Flllr HouN1g Atl
ol19811 which . . . . . lllogal

to -lao •any p!WiontnCO,
lmlllllon .. - based on race, cdor, reigk)n,
sex lamllal status or nattol'llll
Oflgln, 'I' any Intention to

make anr such p!Wierenco,
lmltat~ or dlsa'tnlnatlon. •
This nowop- wll not
knowingly acoopl

advertlsemerts for real81111e
which illn vtolatlon ol tho
law. OUr readotW are horobr

nt&lt;lfll10d thai alldMIIngo
. D ..... In ltil MDP~p'F
.,.. avdabkt on an equal

llmho Wi~UD oubllcly, nnl 30%
of acfluolod lncotno
wator • a•rb!lgo lncludod. EOH

-•rtc

nlohod, No polo. 304.f'75.13811.
2 · Llrg• Bectroome, z Ftocn,
CA. 1 1-2 Both, 2 P-, ~lo,
1320/Mo, No Palo, LMIIi Pluo
Bocurtty Dopollt " Roqulr.d,
Ooyo 814-4411-3411. Eftnfnga; 1110 P.M. 814-3117-7150.
2 Bodroo.,., Upatoln APir1·
mont, UniUmlohod, No POlo,
DopooH Roqulrwd, 614~11o2111S.

1988 011 full In) ': u V-t, Enlno 11'11, ·II, HP Wood :l:~
' 500 Coli Allor I P.ll. 'I
1857. •. '
AAA. ;· BoiOOftod F~,
Dollv- ,And Stockod P.U.
Load hO, lll4-Zello87M.
Alghonio lot ulo, 2023 Jolloroon
a.., Pt•.PI~nt.
.
- . c t ,OJiorto corda, ·comic
- · · 111g •locllon
tama, .cun ...not. Thlo onlyi30W7fl-8!JI 2. ·
Com~• !Tandy 100o RL.X Hard
Drivo Wfth Color VOA llonllor

Zbclrm. ap\1., tote! electric, ··a~

Uka1 A~
ter
P. M. 1500,}~11115
·

RlverbenCI Place,
wv.
304-8112-3121.

New Havan,

.

~~

I'M ONLY GOIN'
TO TH' FENCE!!

Warra~ On 13 Modtlt 89 Nl ...

1 br. ipt.. Pt. Pllle1nt, lur·

1-lE'(, C!4UCK, HOW A80UT
A FOOTBALL 6AME TOMORROW?

'I'OU. KNOW, A REGULAR
STRAI611T All CAD, DOWN IN TJ.lE
DtRT, IN 'fOUR FACE, ROCK 'EM,
SOCK 'EM, AN't'Til1N6
600D

OLD F'AS~ION eP FOOTeAU.

15 THE LIBRAR't'

TOMORROW?

1

7'8,000 mlln, blua book value

•hot•

FRANK AND ERNEST

-P _.

Apl:, .='='"...,;
wv. EOH -2~1
n&amp;ahecl 011 111:
Lauorlind

nt

1

a.ippllal It

CondJ.

I ;;:::;;::=:':::::---;;~--;=

Coli

Stlc~er

Loailor M.M.!'.i, 240 lntomallonal
'
Motorcycles
'With Plow ,..,500; 1020 John 74
Dooro ...150, f14.28H522.
1190 Hon._ CR 250 A, 814·992·
Ford Troctor Good Shot&gt;O, 3202 lftll 5pm.
Slcldo Bor - r • I Ft.
Blodo, $:1,100, 114-4411-7787.
76 Auto Pans &amp;
Hydnoullo oii,IO gal ft25. Sldora
Accessories
Equlpmon1.o.. 1loi&gt;doroon, WV.
304-8'1!-l'li&lt;l or 1-IIIO.m.3917.
5 Lug Aluminum Turbo WhHia,
11 Inch In Olamattr, 11 Inch
WJdo; Will FH Oonoral llotora,
Livestock
1125. 114-371-2728.
2 Yoor Otd Cow WHh Colt 614- Budoet lj'rlced Tranaml11lone,
418-3184.
Uwd &amp; rwbullt, 111 typet, stan..
01 '!!.i..awnor &amp;14·245-5877,
3 Hollora And 2 StHro, 114·317· lng
IM-3'18-...-...
.

==~ 3 ~-':~l~Z:..IU:.

Now· gao tanko, ono lon truck
Brad Holotoln Htlt.n, 304-882· whMiaJ rodlatoroi 1'- mota,
2854.
Ole. D a R Auto, Rlpioy, WV. 304Calllo · · Houllng:
Anytl.,., ~12·3133 01' 1~1132g, '
Anywhoro. PLA Hllloboro. Ohio,
Evory Mondor. Chuck Wllllamo, '79
campers&amp;
~~
Trucking, 614-245Motor Homes
1113 fully '!"ll...,ntllriod 21ft .
.64 , Hay &amp; Grain
camper, AC, exc. cond. 304~7515114.
.
811 Round Balta Hay, Orchard
Onooo I Clo..r, flnt Cutting,

~·

I.-vall~-·

No-··

•
I

45

MORTY MEEKLE-AND WINTHROP
'5CXXER
BALL I €iOI' R:lR MY

'fQJ KNOW THAT

BIRTHQA.Y~

0100111 and Su~~ ShDP Pal
Grooming. All
o, 'llytH.
Julio Wobb. Cal 814, 416 02:11.
2,,.".; Bo"l'!!." grt hol1 .~-!"
q...,_um, .,... Bl0, ~~·

1Ht Flrattlrd 400 Big Block,
~~Good; Runo Oroatl oFactory lnlori'f.lu":'th Eltra
Yolor, $3,800.,8
2730.

27!52

~

7'1 ,~os lor Sale

MY FAT UNC!..E
HUSO 5ATQ&gt;J IT
YEBTERQoi..Y.

I

1m 01111 II, 4d,.,

.

BASEMENT·
WATERPROOFING

ROBOTMAN
OK . OK . I&lt;E~e 'S ~

Ci\1£1&lt; IPE/1
A6RO\IP Of 30 · SOMETHING
MOSCDV ll'tS ALL LIW&lt;6 IN
ON\: ,.._l'f&gt;..RTMWT.. SORT OF
A RUSSl f&gt;..N "DOONtsBURV" ·

I'MtJOtN6

f&lt;JI;l ~~
C~~TOON

CLASS ...

.

UnconclhiOf\81 IHIIIrne guaran-

tH. Loc1l referanc:11 fumllhed.
Call 1-800.267.Q511 Or 114-237·
0418 Qolioro•)YotorpniOIIng. E.
tobllohod 1175.

Homoo; Addlllono, Foundollono,
Rooting, Kltchono 181tho. lnaurwd,

0516.

rrM Eltlntlt.

114-317-

ASTRO·GRAPH

Davlo s-Ing llochlno And

Vacuum CIMner tt.palr, . Fr•

Plck·Up And Dollvory, OO&lt;&gt;&lt;gn
Crook llolid, 814-.o:!M.

B)l:RNICE
·BEDE OSOL

for your Astra-Graph predictions today by

-:- ment
. problems

mailong $1.25 and a long. ·&gt;ell-addressed.

1GEMINI

of

you may 1ncur

,

(May 21·June 20) Ins tead of

stamped envelope to Astro· Graph, c/o thi s doing wha t needs do1ng tOday, you m1ght
newspaper. P.O.· Box 4465. New York, N. conceive e la borat e rationa lr zations
Y. 10163. Be sure to state ' your zod iac i desig·ned to tool yourse lf and others as to
sign
why something isn't done.

CAPRICORN

(Dec .

22·Jan ,

19) , CANCER (June 21-July 22) Yo u are on a
cycle where your eam1ng capacrty cou!d be

OcCasionally we can get a better. deal
doihg business with strangers rather than
with friends. Th1s might be true where you

increased, Conversely, if you're looking tor
a tree ride or someth ing for notl1ing. your

are concerned today.
chances could be extremely slim .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) II tnere is.~n ' LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Preten ses and
rmportant ,decision that must be ~~,~~ ··'bravado aren 't apt to work today if you
today. don't let surrogales do your tnonlciilil don't f•el deeply confident about what
lor you . They could lack your-abilittto • you'r' doing. Believe in yourself first and
judge allemalives .
·
the rest will taka care of itsell.
PISCES (Ftb. 20·March 20) Guard VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sopt. 22) Today you

I

Plumbing

Heating

Friday, Dec. 3. 1993

&amp;

Furnished

. -,

Ropma

84

Aoomo for lant • "'lk 01' ntQnth.
~flllf Olf120/mo, Oollla Hotel.

Electrl~l &amp;.·
Refrigeration

A"'ldonilal qr C9Mmorclal
wtnng, .now IOIVfCI or -Ira.
Ill- UoOowocl oiOCI~dan.
RldOnour Eloctrlcal, W'fOOO:Ipll,
30W7!5-178f,

I!IMP!ng . _ wtth . cooking.

!"!!' 1noll. - . All , _..pa.
...., IRw 2:00" p.m., 1104-7»-'
0

15U1, 11uonwv.

:

I.

ElefiiiCW 1n a.c~pMr

'0

KDIL ' M

I J

G

--.,,

'

'

~:i-'

'•

, .

1

•

.,.

MZBBHMM

VHJDGt

·I K

t

VHXHJVM

against in~linatlons today to operate at
extremes. You might take things tor granted and QOI careless, or else you could feel

Some ol your associates which have
proven to ~e ~nproducli ve m.ighl be weed• someth l ~g is loo dlttlcult .a"d not even
.
~.
ed out in me year ahead. in their place, you ahempt'IL
could be lucl&lt;y in linding lnends Who offer ARIES (~a rch 21·Ap~l 19) Do not push
everything they lac_ked .
your advice and opiniOns on others today,
SAGITTARIUS , (Nov . 23-Dec . 21) especially if it os of a finan cia l nat~re .
Sometimes your .intuitive perceptions are There'!j a possibiUty you ml~ht be wrong _in
r;ghl on target , ~~~ thiS m1gHt no t be lhe ways that COti\d be costly.
.c ase today. D.on 't pursue hunches and ', TAURUS (April 20-May-20) You may find
ignOre·togical aSsessments. Get a jump on ·yourself in an arrangement today where
tole ~Y understanding the influences which . your eas,iesl out Is to agree to do some·
are governing you In th~ year ahead. Send !hing that Is opposed to your better judg·

mig~t e~perience emot~al swings that run

from reasonable ,optimi,am to severe self·
doubts. To operate effectively. put your
thinking
In the middle.
LIIRA (Sepl. 23-0c:!. 23) When il comes
to 'shopping, today might not be one of your
better days. There'S a chance you may be
either too extravagant or pay niore lor
things than they:r&amp;actualr ..,.,.,,
..
SCORI!IO (Oc1. 24-Nov 221 ,Ambotoo,us
1 ,easily lultilltd
objectives might not be as
, todSy as you first envision. If you want to
be.an acnlaver, be prepared to exert a viii'
orous second effon .

""'""who"'

•
0

C F H

BSLXIHO

J
a

XYSBHMM

','

DJNIINHV

'

,·

LOPDJW

DC. '

(VDYHBCIY)

OYJIIV

·-

WIDLBFHY.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The pr....,res I feel are strictly 18114mP&lt;&gt;Md. ·.·.
about juit lryfng to be bettor .a t ""at I do." - St...., SOO.bergh. . , ,

...

"

TUT DAILY
PUULII

f:l -·

--

----I
II I I I

2
1

DRIGI

I

··-

l

•

Ofour
Reorrongt letters of
Krombled worda
HILECC

I

L YN 0

N

7

~,,-,1.--.,1-.,15:--..-~ ~

I
.

~11!liU".I III.Ut

...,.tor INidler. r.,.,... cM: ~~~ K.

.

.

.

.

••
'"

~

keys lo no avail. My elder sister, who is the family philosopher lried to lighten up the situation by telling us that, "nothing
is ever really lost, its where it

I
If-_;,..,...:..,;,6;.....;:;.1..:..:.'TI:.:...,"T"_. ~e~~~p-1;,; -the-.~c11vckle
B U 0 E NN

L -L.-L.-.L.-.L.-..1...-J

$
•

quoted

by ftlltng in the min1ny words
you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I I I

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
•

•

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Helium · Adage • Lousy · Sleazy- AHEAD of YOU
The old lady who lived on my block was known for her
good deeds. She had a motto that more people should
live by. It went: ' Once in a whtle let the person in line
behind you go AHEAD of YOU "

r-~~~--~----------~~~~~~
CHECK OUT

Home
IRJprovements

CELEBRITY
Irani..... CIPHER
t.mo... ~. ~ and~.

Celebrity~ cr,ptogriiM ... creltld

•

'M'

TODAV'S HISTORY: On this day in
1942, Enrico Fermi's team of scientists produced the first controlled,
sell-sustaining nuclear chain reaction
at the University of Chicago.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Georges
Seural (1859·18911, painter; Adolph
Green (19 15·1 , playwright-lyricist, is
78; Alexander Haig 0924·1, U.S. poiiti·
cian , is 69; Julie Harris (1925· ), actress, is 68; Edwin Meese Ill 0931 ·),
former U.S . attorney general, is 62;
Tracy Austin U962·), tennis player, is
31.

Curtil Home tmplov.mtnts. No
, Job Too Big Or S.,-.all, YNra Ex··
V-8, 350. til pertenc. · On Older I'Newer

- r . now Ollr1or batloly,
wltorpump, $400 OBO, 514-1111211171

I, I I I I

,.

WELL, I'TSA
FR.IS6EE
NOW.

THIS COh\tC

Transportatton
' I

1

Services
81

.

Today is the 336th
day of lil93 arul the
72rul day offall.

c":""

Hay, oquor. baloor $1.50 a up.
Salurdly only plciiUp. 304-t7!53MO• .

••

Dec. 2, 1993

nte.

614-446-7787.

•¥ • -

DATE B-OOK

New, , $24,100,

Aoklng: $11,., 814-441-GIM.

·OM-24Jo20:tl

1..-vtlloaaago It
liM Rod. .n 14il711, 3lt*m;, lncludoo oltlrtlna. 111apa, ltloHa,
5rr. waMnty, -homiOW... -.
ounonco, ond 1. r- of floto lot
- · Ill lot only ft711mo., cllt 1·
- 4 2 8 , oO/IIDr lllko.
zbr. 2, INIIh mobil homo 3 112
acrao, CA, 2 •• g.ongo, ~aclho,
Oh1 to a~lot•, priCt
r.auood. -·21141.

persuaded South lbat biJ partner's Yllues were outllde spades. So be took a
llbot at the alam.
Dtmully's spade boaon were a ellaappointment to declarer. For a moment or two, South thougbt he bad two
unavoidable miDor..ult 1-.-s. Thea
be ipotte4.a poaallllllty.
Instead of takln&amp; a premature ellaSouth carefully ruffed the opelling spade lead iD biJ bud IUid drew
trumps. Then, plldDI Welt wltb the
dlamolld ace from the aucUoo, Soutb
led a low dlamood from biJ bud.
1 How could Welt def81d? U be
ducked, dummy'1 q11ee0 woWd will the
trick IUid South two dllmood ~
would dllappear oa the A·K of spades;
wbereu If Welt waa With the ace, declarer would later"dllcard dummy's
cJubbw•lllld!'
,..._
Tile play Ia called Mortoa'a Fork af.
ter the cardiDal wlio wu Beary VII's
Cbancell'll' of the Erhequer IUid wu
atllled at mract111c 1121. Whetber a
oobleman wu being prodlpl or provl·
dent, he clearly bad m..;o to &amp;he to
the klltg.
·-

1913 5-10 Chovy Blozor LT, Rod
1811-, 24K Mlloo, Loodod With

3li• ·

-lot•.

+Q

... Aldlr,
llwllodUJ,..,.,
- flldlrlr
..,.,.,.,
tieallo
l'tJJJJp
a a s-.,...
711ey- ,. _
_ , ,..,....,.....,_,

63

pilcoo: ....~~\ll:.ta' ~!!"·
Tr- ~~~~ ,your own or
ltrlw 111w, ,,.."'
- - • · wa cut, 1-8~. aootch CN' white
ond
·~ ·~'173oi83S plno, 112, avallablo 11121, 27, 2t,
•••ntngo: ,
1213, 4, s Ollly, 114412·5885.
Eloctrtc IDiuy !clOd arlndor, 5S
Building .
uood - · f20, 1~-3071
mom'-balqn1Gam.
..,..
Supplies
Earty ;..,.ricon.oi'luch and chair,
oak .tJim, llkfrlg I'IJO,'
Block, brick, plpu, wl.,..
1 114-1112· .._,
3001
Unllla, ell!. Cloudt WI.,.
Fondor, Al14rlcan 81ondlrcl t-. Rio"Orondo, OH Call 014245.ft21.
..
S1ro1, Brow~lng Upland Spoclal,
20 Gauge ovti.U~ Both Ao 56
Pets lOr Sale
Now,411Will
PorA1 Wltolooalt,
"14
121.2Ill
Dove
Worfl·, 114- "~..;:-:-~~~-:-;~"-::=-::
•245-061U~w6:ta. , .
1 Gold Shlhofzu, Fomalo, $100•, 1

3 Fumlahod R- ' Bath
Dow IWtor.,
I
No f~•.
t- - -... __.,_,
Roloronoo And uopoen ' RoLand II Availab~ • 110, ~1'11 mil qulnd, 114-441·1511.
.
On A Joining Farm Thai Hao ~
Aoklng Prieo 01 ft04,15q0. Fumlohod, 3 R-• I Both.
Loc:atoid Nor Rio O.Ondo. Call Vory fjlloln, Wator I Trooh Pold,
Bill Cannell At Donn• Summer• $300.00 114 38~ B100.
Roalty At (614) 314.f258.
BEAUTIFUL· APARTMENTs AT
Old Ho..o WitH 1 Aero, Along BUDGET, PRICES AT JACKSON
Rlvor 3 lllloo F...,. Gatllpotlti, ESTA~ 538 Jockoon Plko
lmo • -lk
11.!:. 7, $15,000, 614-4411-1243, 114- from
"" to :."E'&amp;jl
3~4'18 .
movloo. Call 014-440-2611. E ·
B-h
SCr.ol, llldd'-1, Ohl9. :==::!t~c!..,~
32 Mobile Homes
One. badroom lllinlaltoil apt, 7031.
·
utlllllloll paid, a-u I ==::.._~..,....:~-::t;~=
tor Sale
nflroncoa. 304-8112-1&amp;11.
Fl-ood
lallr, 138~: •
- •--•
19611 Schultz 12xtl0 One OWnor, Flm · Holur
Aa.nmonto, Truck, ...,..
'!"""• 114••
•
Exoallonl ·Condlllanl llual Sacond
A....,.,
Gallipallo.
&amp;14F
l
.
-onod,
~~~~-.
To Afl;',llto, Prtcod To Salll 441·1800 ·Santor, Dlolbtod, I f30 pickup-· IW14!foHll.
114-4
4.
.
Handicapped 1 • 2 Bodroom ·
unno. Ronto Baaid t~uatod Arwood: All llwdw d1 Spill
1r73ForrootParll,12d52Bod- lnoomo.
FIIHA luba
, HUO Dltlv- MG Pick-lip Load:
""""· W/8 TcMil EIOCtllo, Carilllcotoo -ptod. 514-441· 114-2511-1311 EI(Mingo.
.lncludld.
Rango, -P0.&lt;\,"!1
~ontl
. 1l"l~/ 1BOOI Equal Houolng Oppol· For lalo: .....,. · • ·dryar,
814..ZDD4~ .d1
tunit H.
·
11134. . • '
=·-=""'":::::·:.::·~·.::11=·-r-~·";;;;23;;::::;;;;;­
1!114 Klf1lwood With Lol, 3 Bod- ,Oraclouo living. 1 .and 2 bod· Fow
~':.:
'/0.
1om
roomo, Excollont ' Condition, ~ aport- 11 Vlllogo R 14 •••~
lllnoi
ond
Al..,.ldo
'
•
"""'!!:L
pa,
N.wly R1111011Med, .14-38&amp;-1118.
Aporlmonto ln,llldditpon. From WOO:, IM-...-2121. ·
,
1991 141711 Sunohlno llobllo f202. Call t14 ...2-1818. EOH
Gaooflrie
Homo, 2 Bodroomo; '1 314 letha. Now 2 Bod100111 Aportmont, 014· hO, 114-141oa108.. ' . .
2 Ceiling Fene, c..-rat Air, ·'
'
~ · H~A-Iod, . lllcollont
Hoat Pump • f""'!t_.• ..~ak , 441-G380.
Dock, Mull Soli, ·-Ina.
COn4illlonl ·t210 Or Taloe Gun In
Ho...,,
2br. lllrnlo'=
Roducod To fti,OGO, I*J!I: -dlpooft
I nil...,_,
• On Trodi; t M - . '
24'18.
2511.
•
oroo/1 Chrttt.,.. 0111 ;;; Your
1H1 Broozowood llobUa Homt, Nlco 2-3 bodiOOIII apartment In
3 Bodroorno, Gordon Tub, AI- lllddloport, 114.11f12.UI8.
IWodY SOI.Up, Call 114-245 M:tl
AHorl P.M.
One
bedroom aparlmenll, .
1112 Trallor. """" 122-. lnotudoo utu•~oo~, e~oo
ppoc- "11110
- ·WIIh,-"'!IJ ~~~. no polo; 014rat c;oJMnll! Thl!l"8hout. Thno Ja ..2;l18. ·o '
Bodroom, Ttlo· Bolli. Hlitlt Clalo ltiH-ood Aportmonto, IIJd.
-1200 Tub
· 01
ht~.
O..r
now -,.ling
!kl· InFl.Lola
...
. . dltport, Ohl9 It and
· ,.tiling
Hu All, Tho ~ U¥od 1r1 ,appMc,llono
LMt Than Ono· Y-. Enollanl aportmomo tor tho - l y ona
114-11112·30115.
Condftlon, IIUII To AD- handloa~,
I!OH.
,
I'

BORN LOSER

S upplt es
Ltvestock

4&amp;4 ·1-lonal Tnctor With

~al••ll

=

ATTITUl&gt;~.

~17::;

Tires,

:::==·=·

~':tcn~~=~:ttr''• C.ran

"WtMtS C:.t-11£..1?" .. IT'S SO/lT
/
o'f Lite~ Betf .rnw
y.IITI'I AN

FMrn

pllancao lllmlahod; la~ndry
=-"=·,:·,;,·::""'.-=·=:::room laciiMioll, to ..hoof CONCRETE IIPETIC . TANKS,
In town. Application• avollablo 1 ooo Gallon, h25: Ill"! JET. Bot
al: YIHago . Oreon Apto. M9 or (No Bond , , FIHor , _l!oqulrod)
coli 114-ltz-371 1.JjOH.
· $1,4g5: Ron lv~EIMIDritao,
'
· &lt;
Jockoon,0No,1
·~

2br. all olactrlc, 'appllailcn fur·

S'il&gt;j" Ctiltl
~~l. ·.
....-\-In f3

/OPTS

4 Cu11Jv1tor

••Pau

we become more ezperieaeed, we like
to bid llama. We feelaiUI'Ie of adreaalln tllroup the velDs, u If we were
going over Nlapra F~ iD a barrel.
North's two-tpade cw-bld shond
at least a Umlt raile iD bearll. Eut
traded 01\ the vulaerablllty for biJ
raile to four IJ)Idea. ROWlml', the bid

&amp;14-446-mO, 614-446-

$1,4!15. L. L Smllh, 905
AKC,. champion bloodllnH, Mooomo_n CI&lt;Cio, 304-t7!5-3222.
gr.t coM1,
&amp; wormed, 19111 8·10. Tohoo l.oadod, ILWB,
CooiVIII•, 614-867-3~.
AC, 4.3 Engln~1 17,500, 614-4411o
0f37 Aft• 5 P.11. ·

61 Farm Equ111ment

France

3 Downpour

coatrooted by biJ Allllt Apth.a. But u

••

PEANUTS

Schnauzer puppl11- mlnl11urat,

r

1 -!levant
2 River In

Whell we start to play bridge, we
fear slam C!llllracts. U we ,et to the
aiJ. or sevea-level, we quiver like the
aapen - or like Bertie Woolter wbeD

2413 J•ckaon Ave. 0963 ...., 5 P.M.
Polnl Ptoooant, 304-87!5-2013.
1~11. t•nk Ht-upe, .$11.99.
'Young
P•l'lkllla,
$14.98. 72 Trucks lor Sale
Hamtilora, · tz.99 &amp; S.U8.
1985 Dodgo 3/4 Ton Pick-Up,
Evorydoy low prlooo.
Automi!flc, t2,700, 614·2H.f309.
Oulnoa Plgo, ·long • ahort 18J7 Dodgo,' 1 ton, duol-ls,
holr.dh7wko old, $1foo. 304·773- 12h list, 380 onglno. 304-8955211 a or llpm.
3441.
Puppy i&gt;oiOCo Pot Shop. ==:::-::;-:;::::--=-::::7'
L.oCatod In o.c. Murph¥ Co. Gol· JIM Cltovy pickup\ Sllvorodo,
llpollo. Now opon. 814-44Hl404. good cond, 2/IQtt of extl'll,

t:.

DOWN

By Pllilllp Alder

App)oo- luat oH Rt. 143, ono milo
OOI!Ih ot Carpol)tor. .Rod and 1980 Chivy Blazer Ax4, $1100.
, - n Dol- appfao. Opon 304-87U4t&amp; or'l7!5-3263.

liD·-.. .;. . ._.,

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

OpeoiDa lead:

FIX MY SUPPER
AFORE YOU GO
TRAIPSIN' OFF

C:.i,BI:rJ, r•~~r ~~9 ~

-,.only.,

c,.,.....

53 Foolwtar
54 Sm111
children
55 Eleclrleal
unll
58 Speck

Do you enjoy
bidding slams?

Flah T1nk,

.~Jtllincll~

handlelpl*l, very_, lqcoma

G-i""'a'

·GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

"'

llm•

411 School org.
50 Sacrad lmqe
51- potter
52 Hindu

Eool

0

0

JHANA

1992 Dodg1 Caravan SE. Auto
lAC 38,000 Mllu, $11,200, 614·

Splnoi Conoalo Plano. Wontod
NtpOnsJble ,_rty lG mak•. law ,
tnOitthly JIIIYmonto. Sao locally.
Calli 1-800427-3348. .

0

OF CASH
BEITER

ELVINEY 15 TAKIN' ME
TO A MOVIE
TODAY!!

~81;.:4:::·3'11--7272=26:-.====7-:~

r.::.l R:n::doc:\~OOOM1~~
$2;915.

Paaa

BARNEY

Bundy Cta~itOt ·Oood
.
Condition,
$100 81Wlt-2728. .

.

'*

A

N~

u

gorago kopt, tots ot o1tras,
$16,000. 304-t75-77'10.
19-•• PIYmouth Accl 1 1m 4 Door,
AutCl lAC I 32' 000 Milts I f5 ' 200'

~1h4~~upo For Solo $75,

hteffec:U..

48 Onct- I

0

Musical
. ·lnstrull'lehts

SSOO.oo month. Dopoolt. f14·
388-1000
53
Anllques
Two bedroom mobil• homn for
rwnt, 1110 epaeae tor rent ltlrt• Buy or 1111. Rlvorlho' Ah11q-._
1124 E, llliln IIIM!i, 011 At. 12~
lng 01 $85/mo.,l14-112·2187.
Pom'roy. Hours: oo.T.W. 10:w
un. to 1:00 p.m., Sijftd~J 1 :00
to 8:00 p,m. 114-192·282t. · ·
Apanment
Will Buy .Ono Hom 0t Eototoo.
'tor Rent
Dovo'a , .Antlo- 338
.A••nuo, Galllpotia, 6141 bdrm.
lpilrtrnent, ___Slwlng Bocorid
446-4778,
lion
.SOt., 8:30-5,
. Avanue, Pome·roy. tl7&amp;'mo., Friday 1:®-t.
tiDOidlp., no' pete, 814-187-3083
.'
oft'!' 5pm.
.
54 Miscellaneous
1br. apt. fir ,lldoriy, dleablod, •

Noodtd: port.thno holp tor buoy
tu olflca. Sond noumo Clo Tho 31 Homes lor Sale
DallY Sontlnot, PO BOX l21H, MAJOR PRICE AEOU&lt;;TION • 4
Poritoroy, Ohio 457H.
Bodroom, 2 1-2 Bath Homo On 4
AcrH mil. Now $120,500, Mare

Wanted to Buy

=

Poggy, 132 Butt11nut,
Pome~, Ohio, rur biNment.
3
I:00- : • Dec. 1• 2• 3 only.
oak truck racka, flo amall
btd, whh canvae cover, Ml,
l14-lt2..,..l.

721·'=:-:=-::-::c-=::::c:oc~=1911 Olde Sllhau1111, 8,000ml.,

AKC
Shetland
SholpdO;,
"Sh1ltle",
born Oct.I 30,
Doc
Dacmd'v•
· n, will hold t II
• 24.,
worm-a,
d1wclawa removed.
304-6TS.%109.

Furnished rwry clun 2 SA.
W1t1rflrath pild; In Porter area,

m•n, ~rd ~ p&amp;ua elftllrt

-------~--I

2 bldroom trollorilrol• dop, Rt:
62 N. Lacuo1 R on right, no
poto. 304-175-1018.
2br. mobil hom1, quiet country
n , 7ml. out Sandhill Rd.,
de
required, no peta,
/mo. 304-895-3483.

Fr.o Dollvory.
Mgllohln Furniture C.I'J)II
S5.50 Vel &amp; VInyl $4.49, 614-448!"
11144.
·
New Fl::lau Showtra, Nftf
F3 1~Pc811,!!_ h~ 2~JU.!':."~
· -oro, vi~ ~·~ ~·
tor 5 P.M.
PICKENS RIRNRVRE
HowAiaod

Vulnerable: North...SOuth
Dealer: South

19111 Oodao Splrh Auto lAC V-8,
59,000 lllloo, $1,200, 514-379-

1812 Dodgo Shodow 2 Doot-o,
Auto lAC 11,000 IIIIH, f6,200,
_61_4o...;371-....:..'ZT...,-26_._,_ _-:--:-Womld: '84 and nowor Caprict
1111
:;':,•,1
!"lioago, 614·'llt2·380 .
Yoar-End Solo: 1993 Pl•mouth
Acclaim 12,000 lllln ~f 8 ,700 ;
1993 Plymouth Acclaim 44,000
,..a 950 ; Ra mai-r 01 Factory
.,.,,

$225Jmo. 304-t75-1926.

Business

And Reftrtncll Required, 614446-8924 4-7 P.M.

Posltloi'i~vailabfe ,For Full-Time

Mldcllepon
Vk!lnlly

Ohio River, K1n1up, Fosler's
Moblla Horne Park, tr1~1802.
.
2 bedittom mobile home,
MlnaraYIIII lre1, reftrencn 1
dopooH roqulm, 114-912-tm
oftor 5pm.
2 Bedroom on SA 218 $225,
Rot.roncn ond DopooH Roqulr.d Aftor 6 p.m. 014-4411-1990.

0322, 3 m/111 aul BuiiYIIIe Rd. $1.00 lnd up, winttr ciNrance.

+A7132

~371-2=:":72:-1-::.==::-:;:::::-:;-;:;=:-

AKC
~!9lotorod
Gormon
Shophord Puppy, 814-4411-33114.
AKC Shonift (lllnlaturo Colllo)
For Sola, 1 WHka, 814417-4212.

•Kes

country,
waaherldryer aleo, ref. required,

~lon; IYP't:tG. phon• aldlla,
aHa &amp; organlzatlonallkllla re-

Wlllrbld wlheadboard &amp;. 1111n
ah... l, whHI daybed. tlbll IIW,
Chrlt:tm11 cndt1 &amp;. Iota tnore.

Sao

:OC•

448-41tl3.

·~
•nu

+JIOI

.AKQJ3

Fumlshed treHer In

inlnlatratlve 'Secrwt1ry. Fuft·lliril

Courso, Doc. 1-f. KI!1114IU

~~.:~drO~~':'lo~lt!l:~~

3 Bedroom, TOial Electric, &amp;14·

U.F Northup Aru, Experience

qulr.d. Appllcatlono • r.oumoo
due by Tue. Dec. 7. ContiCt
Gregory K. Stophono 1 .~!· 1 Box
~~ Pl. PIHsant, "" 25510
Euo:.
Eaty Work! Exce111nt Peyl Aaoomblo Producto At Homo. Cal
Tall Fr.o; 1-800-417-UM, Ext.
313.
Full tlmo manoglng coomllolglot, llldd'-! ana, Hnd
raaurM to: P.O. Box 7218,
-.,oy, Ohio 4157ell.
FULL·TIIIE
Local •Compony Ha Sovoral

dnron, ftOO, 814·11112-343t
M9untaln Blka, Rogular P~co
1428 Boat ottor. 1 BIIX BicYclo
Dirt Blko $27!5, 8.ioi otto' loth
Brand - 1 514.4 411-1147 AHor 5
P.M.
lluny Riding Lawn Mowor, 10
HP, 30 Inch Cut 2 112 Yoan Old,
14&gt;0, 114-448-2391.
Now tr'!%ular •-...
~ria,
mon• 1 11_.- 5 to . 110
uHd wortc penta ~~ 1hlrt1,

3117·11131.

Financial

tal ii&gt;iOit&lt;iiii.V:

GaNge Sill: At. 33, brick hOUH
•crotl from Alv.,.lda God

3112·
14x60 2 Br, 1 milo South of Couch • choir, $125. good cond,
Eurob, on Sf. Rt.7. No palo, 304-t75-3118.
,...,.ncoo.114-2!IHOH.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
14170 mobllo hOmo lot ..mit:' Waohara•. drren. ntttgor11013
llpolla Fony, unfurnloho,!IL..., • ,.._, Hogge Apptla!ICO!. "'
month UOO. o!opooll, """"'7!5- Ylno St-,S:•II 514-448·13.., 1·
83311.
B00-4111-34w.
19111 14170 llobllo Homo For
LAYNE'S FURNiTuRE
Rom, Baolc Wo1orlnctudod, eau Comploto homo lllmlah~o.
Afler ,I P.M. IM 311 CHi.
Houn: Mon-Sat, ~. 114 6-

tor Rent

With

children, momlngt
beginning January

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; v'ICinlly

af . . , . . . ., cl'lftl. .

way-call Marllrn. 304-8112·2645
or 1-4100.992-6356.

Babyolltor

BobyoiHor ~-· 3 ochool ago
a:oo-.12:00
2nd, mult ..
h1v1 reftrencH, 114-992-3271.
Care Haven ol Point PI. . . N
1111dng an experelneed Ad·

Yard Sale

7

AVON I All i\reaa I Shirley

Wantod:

Flexlbl1 Hololf"', To Babph In My
Homa, 814-256-148"1 After8 P.M.

446 533
"" ·
M1ytag waeher, v41ry good con-

Contemporary etyla aofl lnd
love 111t, new condition, S220i
mlcrowovo o..n, $35; 814-11112·

~.,

SOlTI'II

'{

19!11 Cougar XR l loodod, olr
GBL sound with CD plaror, ABS
braku, IS14-669-5ot83.

'-"&amp;•"-""f
• 1fN 01 N£A, Inc

...

TAKE

9099.

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Tablo W
.14 Chalra;
Fan Back Rockl~ ~ir $58i

...

I!.AIT

!M A VICTIM OF ·A (JW£L

44

21 Plaything
22Short ......
23 Nobllriten
26 llora COV•
lltd Willi Vlfo
vely planlt
3D -1~tndly
31- Walk
32 To and33 111111
fllttntr
34 Senllor
Robert 35 Information
38 River mouth

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15 Aconlln•nt
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49

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-

�Page 16-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, December 2,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ senators

urge warning. labels on violent video

By JOHN DIAMOND
ASIIOCiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
•. wave of anger over violence on
: t&lt;&gt;levision is spreading into the
video arcades as two senators seek
warning labels to keep violent
gam.es such as "Mortal Kombat"
and "Night Trap" away from children.
A screaming sorority sister is

beset by bloodsucking attackers. A industry to clean up its act oi face
"Violent video games may
fight ends with the removal of the government-ordered labeling become the cabbage patch dolls of
helld and spine of the loser.
the 1993 holiday season. But cabrequirements.
These are among the images
Flanked by Bob Keeshan, bage patch dolls never oozed blood
spilling from the hOitest new video known as TV:S Captain Kangaroo, and kids weren 'I raught to rip off
games, available to kids of all ages and other children's advocales at a their head$," Lieberman said.
at arcades and video rental stores ·news conference. Lieberman said
Officials of Sega .of America
nationwide, Sen. Joseph Ueber- that while these and similar video Inc ., one of the nation 's largest
man, D-Conn., said Wednesday.
games are proleCted as free speech, video game distributors, said they
Lieberman and Sen. Herbert they are too violent to be played by agree violent t~ames shOUld be kept
Kohl, D-Wis., want the video game children.
away from ch11dren. But Sega Vice

•

.Navy putting hundreds of women on carriers
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Navy plans to put hundreds of
female sailors on ailcraft carriers in
1994 in the flfst major deployment
of women on combat vessels. Navy
.Secretary John Dalton said
' Wednesday.
Dalton, in an interview with
·defense writers, said plans call for
putting 400 to 500 women on several of the huge warships over the
coming year.
Legislation lifting the ban on
women serving aboard combat vessels was signed Tuesday by President Clin10n.

Dalton said efforts are being
made in the post-Tailhook era to
help sailors adjust to the influx of
women.
"We have been in the process
of over a long period of tiine working through this issue and dealing
with it in an effective and professional way and we 'II continue that
into the future as women go aboard
combat vessels," Dalton said.
He noted that it was the Navy
lhat proposed opening combat jobs
to women.
"In '94, you'll see women serv-

ing aboard aircraft carriers. The
plan is to have 400 to 500 women
aboard three ailcraft carriers by the
end of '94," he said. "We will
benefit from the experience that
we've already had about how to
implement that, and learning from
the lessons of the past in tenns of
what we've already done."
Navy officials said the USS
Dwight D. Eisenhower will take on
several hundred women in June,
followed by the USS Abraham Lincoln in September and the USS
John C. Stennis in December.
Women will also be assigned to

serve on destroyers and dock landing ships. vessels that also are
expected to be involved in combaL
Dalton did not specify numbers for
those deployments.
Dalton, asked about the new
policy toward homosexuals in the
military, said the subject never
arose during visits to the fleet over
the past several months.
"I must have talked to 3,000
(to) 4,000 sailors, and the issue just
never came up. The service personnel think the ~licy makes sense
and will work, • Dalton said.
•

Scrooge performance by Mickey Rooney canceled
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The
traveling stage version of "A
Chrisunas Carol" starring Miclcey
Rooney as Scrooge has been canceled because of financial problems
with the show's producer.
The 73-year-old actor was to
perform in the five shows this
· weekend at the Masonic Auditorium in this northwest Ohio city.
: About 1,500 tickets had been
sold for the shows, said Penny
Marks, manager ol the auditorium.

Ticket holders may obtain refunds
where they bought the tickets. she
said.
The show's Los Angeles-based
producer, Kevin Von Feldt, is in
default with Actors Equity union
after failing to make payroll during
rehCl1tsals last year, union officials
said Wednesday.
Until Von Feldt settles the
$8,000 debt, he is barred from
using union members, including

Rooney. in any stage production,
said Belle Dailey of the union's
Los Angeles office.
"We regret canceling the show
and we very much regret upsetting
individuals that would have
enjoyed .the show had it happened,•• said Mike Scott, local promoter. "But at the same time we're
upset at losing almost $10,000 in
deposits, advertising costs and
phone calls. The customers are all

guaranteed refunds. ••
The play also bas been canceled
in Cleveland, wh6re eight performances were scheduled Dec. 1419, according to Ken Silliman,
chief assistant director of law for
the city of Cleveland.
Von Feldt had announced in
October that his show would open
in Los Angeles and travel to Toledo, Cleveland, Indianapolis and St.
Paul, Minn., with other cities to be
added later.

President Bill White said, "The martial-arts warriors pounding
adult market today want' some- away at each other amid much
thing more tha(i just playing Pac spattering of blood. The game
· instructs a player to "finish" a
Man.''
'
dqwned opponent·The choices for
APJ!8tently, they're getting iL
Lteberman· ·showed reporters murder include 'ripping the heart
segments of Mortal Kombat and out of the victim or removing, in
!'light Trap, both of which are dis· one blow, the victim's head and
spinal column.
tributed by ~ega.
Mortal ·IKombat features two

Roll wl was taken; ana everyone presented a copy.. of their
"Most Treasured Holiday
Recipe" to be in the yearbook.
Devotions "A Thanksgiving
Day Prayer" was given by Linda
Broderick.
A needy fa.mily will be
helped agam this year by the
League with gifts and food to
be delivered before Christmas.
A "friendship shin" was prepared by the members for Kelly
Snider, a member who moved
away.
The annual Christmas
potluck dinner will be held on
Dec. 16. There will be a secret
sister gift exchange, and secret
sisters will be revealed: Also an
ornament exchange will be held.
The hostess gift was won by
Tammie Mash. and Helen
Blackston won the traveling
prize.
.
Refreshments were served by
Linda Broderick and Kiuy
DarsL

iiiijipii

.

MANY SAVINGS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION
PRICES ON MOST OF THE ITEMS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE ARE GOOD THROUGH DEC. 24, 1993

Delivery Available On All Items Throughout Dec. 24, 1993

Grate. Gif't Ideas Fro••J M.ason FtJrnit•JI}e Co••J

SAil PRICE

record

Pick 4:
7968

Buckeye 5:
16-23-28-29-34

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 155

Low tonlgbt In upper 40s,
raiD. Saturday raiD, blgh In~-

Colombian
drug king
killed in raid
MEDELLIN, Colombia (AP)The death of Publo Escobar, ruler
of a global cocaine empire blamed
for bombings and assassinations
that killed hundreds of people, bas
given Colombians hope that an age
of~rhasended.
·
Tipped off by a traced phone
call, police and soldiers raided the
drug lord's two-story hideout on
Thursday. They shot and killed the
portly. bearded Escobar and his
bodyguard as they tried to escape
over the roof.
"Colombia's worst nightmare
has been slain," President Cesar
Gaviria declared.
The death of the 44-year-old
leader of the Medellin drug cartel
was not expected to seriously cut
into the flow of cocaine from
Colombia to the United States and
other countries. But for many
Colombians, it was a sign of hope.
Escobar was accused of ordering the assassinations of presiden·
tial candidates, judges, journalists
and police. Hundreds of ordinary
Colombians died in bombings of
shopping centers; neighborhoods,
and a passenger airplane.
"It's the triumph of law over
crime.:· Andres Pastrana, a presidenti~l c~ida!e, said Thursday.
"Now the countrY can begin to live
more peacefully."
"As a Christian his death does
not make me happy, but now I feel
more.'llt easer!: Said Ocm. -Miguel
Miza, who escaped t,hree aasassination attempts by the Medellin
'
c..... , .
Authorities tracked Escobar
down through a phone wl he made
to a radio sration Monday to compi$ about his family's treatment
by the Gennan government, army
commander Gen. Heman Guzman
said. Escobar's wife and two chil·
dren had been refused asylum by
Gennany earlier in the week.
Escobar had apparently been
living at the Medellin hideout for
several weeks, .authorities said.
On Thursday, at least 200 members of an elite f()Jte that had hunted Escobar since his escape from
prison in July 1992 cordoned off
blocks around the hideout, then
stormed .ln, investig~tors at the
scene said.

2 Section, 12 Paget 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 3, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

Middleport Christmas parad

A Multimedia Inc. New•paper

Coolville mayor,
council continue
fight over medical
, waste incinerator
By GEORGE ABATE
Dally Sentinel Staff
The war over whether an infectious medical waste incinemtor will
be built in Coolville continued
Wednesday night at the village's
regular council meeting as about60
pecple packed into the village fire
department.
The boule lines - which
fanned in April for and against the
company - could be clearly seen,
especially between the council and
the mayor, Howard Russell. The
mayor has continued to back the
company, while the council has
fought against it
The village council approved
the final reading of an ordinance
that would penalize "nuisance"
makers, but the mayor vetoed the
council's action.
Council then agreed - by a Sto-1 margin - to try to override
the mayor's veto. The override vote
will occur jlt 7:30 p.m. Dec. II at
the village fire hall.
Thursday afternoon, Russell told
-The Daily Sentinel he asked for the
I 0-day wait so he could prepare.
"That would give me time to
stop this ordinance because. there
are laws that will stop 'it," Russell
.aai4,J'They'll· have""' .proye these
(ordinances) dow'h the road."
Russell added that he believes

..•..

1994 CALENDARS NOW AVAILABLE .

REG. 5229.95

992

'

Wieble "Flip" )'.{uehlhoff,
exchange. Sbldent at Meigs High
School from Munich, Gennany.
was guest speaker at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Child
Conservation League held at
Rock Springs United Church.
In her tlllc the exchange studen\ said that the average family
in Munich, Germany is two children and two adults. There are
three diviSions in schools, college prep/ vocational and elemenrary. she said. She com-·
mented that caule do not graze
as they do here, they are usually
kept in barns.
The speaker said she enjoys
Meigs County and Meigs High
School. ~he is residing with
Bill and Louise Radford on
Rock Springs Road.
The League presented a gift
to Wiebllce,for speaking at the
meetin$.
President Kitty Darst opened
the meeting with pledge to the
flag and the ·Mother's Prayer.

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,

Crash victim
not treated
An Albany was was injured in
an accident Thursday evening on
County Road I in Columbia township but refused treabnent, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State .Highway Putrol reported.
Joseph A. Moran, 23, 5785 Rosseuer Road, suslained minor visible
injuries according to the Patrol. He
was also cited for failure to yield.
Moran was northbound on C.R.
I when he turned left into the path
of Rebecca S. Canter, 33, 29626
State Route 143. A}bany, who was
southbound. Canter struck Moran
in the right side and bOih units continued on and went off the west
side of the roadway, striking an
embanlcment
Both vehicles sustained moderate. disabling damage and were
to~ed from the scene.

$1 ~39.95

CHRISTMAS

Hundreds of p~ople lined the
streets or Middleport Thursday
nigbt for the annual Christmas
parll'de highlighted by the
arrival of Santa on a sleigb.
A Hghted sculpture or a wav·
ing snowman was featured on
the Overbrook Center noat and
riding on the noat were residents and employees or the
nursing home.
Kyle Edwards, son or Mr.
and Mrs. John Edwards,
Chester, was one or several
hundred children to visit with
Santa at Peoples · Bank. The
bank took p1ctures or each
child and served refreshments
and the Middleport rourtb
graders sang Christmas carols.
The parade '!"BS led by Mid·
dleport police and a color
guard consisting or Ieglonnilires
from both tbe Middleport and
Pomeroy American Legion
Pos.ts. Several queens, scouts,
and cheerleaders were In the
parade, along with commercial
noats and emergency and fire
equipment.
·
The Middleport·Community
Association sponsored the
parade and open house'

Syracuse Council OKs first
reading for gas rate hike

'

.&amp; .

Nation's jobless rate
drops to 6.4 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment mte fell 10
6.4 percent in November, the
biggest one-month improvement in
a decade and the most dramatic signal yet that the nation's economy is
gaining momentum.
•
The jobless rate was 6.8 percent
in October and most analysts had
expected that today's Labor
Department report would show little change in the November figure.
However. a solid gain of
· 105,000 jobs in service industries
sucit as health ocare, finance and
real eslate and the second straight
monthly improvement in the belea- .
guered manufacturing sector
helped to drive down the jobless
rate to its lowest level in nearly
three years.
'
The 0.4 percenta~e improvement was the largest Since a similar
change in October 1983; when the
country was pulling out of the
worst recession since World War
II.
The healthy employlnent gains
and the drop in the unemp!oyment

the nuisance ordinance is too
broad. especially since the village
bas a nuisance ordinance.
The ordinance would punish
individuals or companies thai cause
a nuisance to members of the community - including smoke, odors,
fumes. dust, noise and waste water,
Russell said.
This rule could be the fourth
guideline council has passed to
penalize the incinemtion company
if it moves in, council member
Rich Gillian said. The other ordinances: prohibit infectious medical
waste incinerators within 2,000 feet
of residences and community
buildings; let the village fine companies that violate clean air laws;
and allow the village to charge $5
per ton of waste burned.
The nuisance ordinance allows ·
citizen enforcement and sets a fine
that can not exceed $1,000, or six
months in jail.
These ordinances were designed
as roadblocks to frusuate the company. said Karen Thorne, a
spokeswoman for the group against
the incinerator. The group is Cl1Ued
Concerned Citizens of the
Coolville Area.
"We're just trying 10 protect this
tq~,.'' Thome said. "It boils down
to a question of democracy. Should
Continued on page 3

rate was the most emphatic sign
this year that the nation's economy
is picking up steam.
In other positive economic
news, the Commerce Department
reported that the government's
chief economic forecasting gauge
jumped O.S percent in October. It
was the third consecutive increase
and analysts said it was a harbinger
of continued growth in the new
year.
•
Robert G. Dederick, chief
economist with Northern Trust Co.
of Chicago said the good gain in
the leading index showed broad
based growth in the economy and
that coupled with the surprisingly
strong employment gains in
November was evidence that the
economy is fmally mounting a sustained !!:COvery. .
"Whit it tells us Is the expansion has become self•susraining

By Katie Crow
Sentinel Correspondent
An ordinance providing for an
increase in gas rates in Syracuse
was given a ftrst reading at Thursday night •s meeting of Syracuse
Village Council.
However, it was explained that
even after the increase the rates
will be less than before National
Gas and Oil Corp. purchased the
system. Two more readings will be
requited before the ordinance can
be adopted and the increase go irlto
effect.
Speaking 10 Council on the need
for an increase was John Denison,
vice president/secretary of National
Oil, who explained that the first
year the increase will be $2.4 7 or
3. 74 percent per I0,000 cubic feet
of gas.
The second year $2.10 per
10,000 or 3.06 percent and the third
year $1.99 per 10,000 or 2.82 percent.
The average family uses about
10,000 cubic feet per month, Denison said.
Present rates for 10,000 cubic
feet of gas is $66.09 per month.
Under the new rate for the same
amount of gas the first year would
cost the consumer $68.56; the second year. $70.66; and third year,
$72.65.

Denison stated, "Our company
takes the position of askin$ only
what we need 10 operate th1s sysLem ...
The company has put a lot of
money in10 this system and the customers will be paying less with the
proposed increase then they were
paymg 10 years ago, Denison said.
Rates for Syracuse are combined with customers in Newark
and Heath, Caldwell, Racine, Rutland and other areas - allowing
lower rates for the village.
If the council does not accept
the increase the gas company
would have the altemative to rile
with the Public Utilities Commission. In this case rates would.
undoubtedly be higher than proposed.
Dennis Wolfe. employee of the
gas companl. stated the company
upgrading o the system in the village is almost completed. Wolfe
inlroduced Bob Crum wbo replaces
Malcolm Parks as superintendent
of the gas company. Parks retired
earlier this YCllf.
Bob Wingett, grants administrator for the village, noted the gas
company bas done a good job and
said he does not view the rates
excessive as being excess. Council
agreed with Win~ett

Woman shot
Continued on page 3
early today . Two men confess to B&amp;Es
in Cheshire
By GEORGE ABATE
Adams stole about $50 in cash.

A Cheshire woman was shot
early this moming by an alleged
gunman waiting in the shadows
near her residence, the Gallia
County Sheriffs Office reported.
The assailam was still at large as
of press time today, according 10
deputies.
Sandra Scott of Roush Lane was
in stable condition this morning,
officials at Holzer Medical Center
reJ)Ofted. Authorities were not sure
o( her age, but estimated that she
was in her late 40s or early 50s.
Around I a.m .. the alleged ~un­
man fired several shots both mto
and near the victim's house,
according 10 Chief Deputy Dennis
R. Salisbury. Scott was struck by
one of the bullets, which hit her left
hand and the left side of her neck.
The sheriff's office reported that
andis~g~ghtheecon~
it is taking statements and collect·
my,'.' he -said. "I think we had a ing evidence in the ongoing invesvigorous month in what is a moder- tigation. Deputies have reportedly
ate expansion."
questioned several subjects regarding the shooting.

Sentinel Staff Writer
watches. oil filters and baucry
Two Reedsville men confessed cables. totaling about $300, from
to a string of break-ins in the Tup- Dale Barr's Service Station, Soulspers Plains area early Friday morn- by added.
ing. according to Meigs County
The break-ins were solved
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
because of tips from area citizens.
Erick Adams and Carl Marcum. who gave the the license plate
both 19, were arrested Friday number of a suspicious car they
morning and are expected· to enter seen near the Bellville Loclcs and
pleas soon, Soulsby saj,d. The men. Dams recently, he said.
A sheriffs deputy tracked down
who lived to$ether, could be sentenced 10 a mmimurn of 18 months Adams at his home and brought
him in for questioning , when
in prison and $3,500 in fines.
On Nov. 2, the two entered the Adams implicated Marcum, SoulsTuppers Plains Elementary School by said.
"It was an excellent job by the
but did not steal or break anything,
Soulsby said. The pair removed the deputy. The b&amp;e's once again were
solved from citizen input," he
putty from a window to get in.
On Nov. 9. Marcum broke into added . .
The department was able to capthe TupperS Plains General Store
and stole about $1,400 in goods. ture finger prints from the Tuppers
including: $-1.200 in money bags. Plains General S10re break-in, but
some watches, a knife and cartons shouldn't have to process them,
of cigarettes, Soulsby said.
Soulsby said.
"It's to I,beir advantage that they
The sheriff added that his
department' hoped to recover the had been discovered at this point In
money bags soon.
their life. It might help them tum
On Dec. l, both Marcum and things around," he aMrA

•

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