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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Southern

Pick 3:'
217
Pick 4:
. 9715
Buckeye 5:
3-6-24-26-35

PageS

GIFf TO HOSPITAL • An annual project of
members of Meigs County Granges is to make
· stuffed toys to be 'iven .during the year to chil·
dren who are hospttallzed or visit the emergency
room at Veterans Memlll'lal Hospital. This year
about 50 were presented by Rhonda Dailey, RN,
BSN, director of nurses, third _from left, by Opal

Dyer, project chairman. Stuffed to1s were provided by Star, Hemlock, Rock Sprmgs, Racine,
and Harrisonville Granges. Delivering them to
the hospital were, from the left, Mary Virginia
Easterday, Racine Grange, Barbara Fry, Rock
Springs, (Dailey and Dyer) Dorothy Smith,
Racine, and Rosalie Story, Hemlock.

da Stewart, Alitanda EUis, Lillie Lambert, Lacy
HOI, April Copplck, John Taylor, Michael Stew·
art, Matt Holley, Justin Good.e, Clay Stone,
Erica Haning, Elsa ObUnger, James E. Duncan,
Chris Wolfe, Samantha TUley, Brittany Kina,
Josh Stanley, Shawna Davis, Jessica Howell,
Sheena Ash, Sarah Stobart, Megan Garnes,
Michele Imboden, David Tucker, Melissa
Pauley, Jamie Stover, Amy Stover, Kara Bunln·
gton, Jessi~a Blaettnar, Joshua Hysell, Dusty
Lee, Tasba Green, Jay Green, Matt Wandllog,
Joshua Milard, Adam Doczi, Joey Bush,
Stephanie Hartley, Adam Pine-Pellegrlno, Don·
aid Russell, Jr., Brittany Cremeans, Christopher
Trader, Jon Me Daniel, James 1\.. McDaniel,
Amber Wellman, Lula Webb, Courtni VanMeter, Cheryl Partlow, Shannon Partlow,
Phillip Murdock, and David Tucker.

DEMONSTRATION FOR PARENTS •
Annual parent meeting of the Meigs Local
School District was held recently at the .Salls·
bury Elementary. Parents were given an
overview of the Chapter 1 program and the role
that the director, classroom teacher, Chapter 1
teacher, principal and State Department have to
make the program successful. Attending were
Wendy Halar, director; Paula Chancey, VIcki
Haley, Linda McManus, Janet Hoffman, Bryan
Zirkle, Elizabetlt Story, Teresa Carr, Debbie
Davis, Barb MatheWB Crow, Ron Drexler, Tim
Lawson, Tara Barber, and Judy McCarthy,
teachers. Each school gave a dlrrerent presenta·
lion for tbe pare~tta attending. Studenta participating, pictured here In no particular order,
were William Hanning, Lester Aeiker, Joshua
Althouse, Michael Clark, Justin Warner, Miran·

Vol. 44, NO. 157

a

3,400 bluebird boxes stretching
375 miles along Route 20 across
the agrarian heartland of upstate
New York. "It will be great for the
bluebirds, and for the conservation
movement," he said.
The Eastern Bluebird, with bril·
liant azure-and-russet plumage and
a lilting song, has long been celebrated as a symbol of happiness.
But the birds had vinually disap·
peared from their native range east
of the Rocldes by 1960. New York
state has the bluebird - the state
bird - on its "special concern"
list. a category below threatened or
endangered.
North America's other two
species of bluebird - the Moun. tain Bluebird of the Rocldcs and
the Western Bluebird of the West
Coast - have also declined.
The problem is a shortage of
natural nest sites. Bluebirds like
holes in old trees. Development
took over some of their habitat.
Prolific and aggressive European
starlings and English house spar·
rows, imported in the 19th cenwry,
took over much of the rest of iL
Nest boxes have helped the
Eastern Bluebird rebound. Members of the North 1\.merican Blue·
bird Society reponed 11,000 young
bluebirds fledging from 13,400
boxes nationwide in 1980. In 1992,
70,700 fledged from 47,000 boxes.
Bruce Peterjohn of the U.S. Fish

and Wildlife Service said the num·
ber of Eastern Bluebirds has
increased at an annual rate of about
6 percent over the last 10 years.
Over the same period, the Western
Bluebird declined by 2 percent a
year, and the Mountain Bluebird
mcreased by 2.7 pen:ent annually.
But bluebird restoration doesn't
mean nailing a birdhouse 10 a lree.
The design, placement and maintenance of the box are critical.
The ideal nest box offers protection from the elements and appeals
to bluebirds while keeping out
competing birds and hungry rac·
coons . It also should be easy to
open for observation and cleaning.
The angular wooden box
designed ,by Dick Peterson, a fumi.
tore-maker in Brooklyn Center,
Minn., is getting rave reviews.
"My tests have shown the
Peterson box to be the most frequently used (by bluebirds) of all
box types by a wide margin," said
Kevin Berner, research director of
the North American Bluebird Soci.
ety and an assistant professor of
wildlife studies at the State Univer·
sity of New York at Cobleskill.
Berner i's field-testing variations
on six basic box designs; he moni- .
tors around 140 boxes on campus
and elsewhere in Schoharie County.
The Peterson bpx's slanted roof
also is reputed to keep raccoons

"Poetry and art gives you a way
to express yourself without being
ashamed," said Savage, an inmate
at the Connecticut Correctional
Center at Cheshire. "If I'm going
to· be here I might as weil learn as
much as I can, and I've learned
how 10 open up and express myself
in a lot of ways."
Arts programs have been
expanding at prisons across the
country. They've become a way to
By RENU SEHGAL
build self-esteem among inmates
Associated Press Writer
and to keep them engaged in pro-CHESHIRE, Conn. (AP) t.fichael Savage says prison has ductive acuvities.
As prisons have become more
transformed him from a violent
crowded, .Connecticut prison officriminal into a poet
:He entered prison in 1986 at the cials say arts programs have proven
a relatively inexpensive way to
a~ of 19, and would have been
free now if it hadn't been for the gain the cooperation of inmates,
code he once followed. After being make them less violent and give
sent away for five years for stab· them an outlet other than l1angs.
bing a person in a street fi~ht, he The sale of inmate art plus mmate
stabbed another person m pnson liS welfare funds make up most of the
he was about 10 go home, and got budget.
"As the number of inmates
another five.
·"In jail, you have to always doing considerably more time
have a macho attitude," said Sav- increases, we are being challenged
age, 26, of Waterbury, who admits to create viable treatment programs
10 help inmates to become involved
he was a very violent person.
Today, Savage says he is a· in constructive activities," .said
changed man, and he credits a Doug Kulmacz, director of volun·
poetry class he enrolled in earlier teer services for the Connecticut
Department of Correction.
this year.

EDITOR'S NOTE- There's a
trend in prisons in Connecticut•. '!&gt;
let inmates learn about and paructpate in the arts, as a less violent
outlet than gangs. Arts programs
have been expanding at prisons
across the country. They've
become a way 10 build self-esteem
among inmates and to keep them
engaged in productive activities.

-Community calendar· Community Calendar items Masonic Temple. Officers will be
appear two days before an event installed. Refreshments will be
aticl the day or that event. Items served.
must be received· in advance to
EAST MEIGS · Eastern Athie!·
assure publication In the calenic
Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 8
dar.
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
MONDAY
SYRA.CUSE • The Sutton
MIDDLEPORT • Christmas
Towllllhip Trustees will meet Mon- bazaar and luncheon will be held
day at 7:30p.m. at the Syracuse Tuesday from 11 am. 10 7.p.m. in
Municipal Building.
the basement of' the Heath United
Methodist Church. Pies, candies,
,·, POMEROY· The Meigs Band craft items and more will be for
Boosters will meet Monday at 7 sale. The event is sponsored by
Jt.m. in the high school band room. Eleanor Circle.
All band parents are encouraged 10
a~ the meeting.
SYRACUSE • "Christruas
Around the World• will be present·
• ,MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· ed at Carleton School Tuesday at 7
port Garden Club will have its p.m. The public is invited to attend.
annual Chrisunas dinner, program
alld gift exchange Monday at 6:30
OLIVE TOWNSHIP • The
p,lll. at Seyler's House ofTreasll!llS Olive Township Trustees will meet
ll)fOmeioY·
at 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestry building on Joppa
; LETART · The Lelart Township Road Tuesday.
Ttitstees will' !JICCI Monday at 6
p._rn. at the office building:
WEDNESDAY
;· ·
TUESDAY i
RACINE • The Southern Junior
" MJDDLEPORT • The Middle· High Boosters wil meet Wednes·~n MasOnic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM 'day at 7 p.m. at the school. All par·
wjll meet at 7:30 Tuesday. the ents are urged 10 attend.

at

,,

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.

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,

With arts programs, "We have a
unique opportunity as a stopgap in
these inmates' lives to re-culture
them," Kulmacz said.
In May, a group of prisoners
from the Connecticut Correctional
Center in New Haven painted The
Little Mermaid on the cafeteria
walls of the New Raven's Clinton
Avenue Language Academy, an
elementary magnet school. The
school would not have been able 10
afford it otherwise, said Bonnie
Winchester, a school department ·
spokeswoman.
Connecticut, which has 22 state
prisons, brings in artists from tile
community to teach inmates the
arts - from sculpture 10 painting
and creative writing 10 IDUSIC.
Some form of arts programming
exists in every state, but there has
never been a national survey, says
Kay Wood Bailey. arts administra·
tor for the Delaware Department of
Correction and president of the
International Correctional Arts
Network.
Says Bailey: "The arts are the
Cinderella of corrections. We're
hidden but of great value."
Pedro de Clet. 30, serving a 9
1/2-year sentence for possession of
narcotics at Cheshire, would agree.
"The classes have freed me
mentally and spiritually from the
bonds of this place and what goes
on here," he said. "You're treated
like you're not even human here like we have no minds, hearts or
souls.''
The arts let inmates be people
rather than be turned into "monsters in this university of crime,"
de Clet said.
'·'A lo( of people are here
because they've never been able to
speak from inside. It helps them to
trust.'~ he said. "It bas turned me
armmd. It's a great gift 10 me."

~

CHlCAGO (AP) - David Let·
terman used to be flauered 10 get a
standing ovation at the start of
every show.
•'Then it hit me that these peopic were standing bec,use: Oh,
Dave bas a job,''. Letterman said in
an interview in the January issue of
PlayboY,·
.
.
Don t get hill) wrong - he did
appreciate the honor the first night
the "Late Sbov.: with David Letter·
man" aired on CBS, after he
jumped sh.ip from NBC.
He'd feared, lhou~h. that it was
gomg to be aU downhill from there.
" I fully expected the bottom to

· Continued on page 3

Poll reveals
Ohioans support
health plan

Savinfs Bond Giveaway j

CINCINNATI (1\.P) - Fiftyone percent of Ohioans responding
to a poll said they supported the
concept of universal health cover-

~

age.
But only 10 percent of Ohioans
interviewed for the Ohio Poll
released Monday· said they would
be willing 10 pay $300 or more a
year in lllltes 10 support universal
coverage.
Of those interviewed, 51 percent
said they would be willing to pay
more taxes to provide universal
health coverage for aU Ohioans and
37 percent said they would not
want to pay m~ taxes. One per·
cent had no opinion and 11 percent
declined to say yes or no, saying
their answer would depend on what
was offered.
The University of Cincinnati's
Instil!lte for Policy Research conducted the telephone survey Oct.
22 througlt Nov. 3, interviewing
842 adults selected at random from
around state.
The Cincinnati Post110d the uni·
versity sponsored the poll. The
margin of error is 3.4 percentage
points.
Thirty-seven percent of those
questioned said they \Y()uld not be
willing to pay more taxes to support universal coverage. Six percent said they would be wiiling to
pay less than $100 in additional
taxes: IS. pen:ent said !hey would
pay $100 to $299; 10 percent said
they would pay $300 or more; and
32 percent had no opinion.

t
(2) s100 Savings Bonds
Below and Win

~

*

~~ .
Separate drawings will
'- be held. You must fill in aD blanks · .f.
~
and deposit at
,_·i ~.
Farmers Bank or mail to
~
Farmers Bank,
~
~
Box 626, Pomeroy, Ohio.

f

! :~-----------------lJi
i
t• -~it
_,·-*·
'j

drop out on the second night," he
said. "Then when the ratings didn't
go down, it became like a whole
new universe. It was like, Oh my
God! You me1111 we actually have a
chance of sue~. ))ere. ~d that
has kind of beernhc mood smce.''
·RADNOR; Pa. (1\.P) ..:.. Daryl
Hannah plays a larger-th.~n-life
character in ber latest movte, but
doesn't want he(' own life blown
out OfPI'OJlOrtion.
. "PC(,ple in the p_ublic eye are
made into cartoon characters and it
bas nothjngll) do witll realitf, who
they are at wh3t they feel,' Hannsh said

Addr•o:

I

Dahl oiBirlll:--......,---------- I

1

Pto... Complete All Bl1111ka To Bo Eligible

! . ('FB
"""""-.

'

I

-------------------Your Bank (o'"li(f:...
J Farmers

'

!&gt;

-

~

j

..__,
Member FDIC

,,~

992-2}36
221 WEST SKOND
:~o POMEROt OHIO

985-3385
-·
STATE ROUTE 7
!&gt;
. ·TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

UNTIL
~BRISTMAS
11

"We also greatly appreciate the contribution of Evan
Davis to thecampaign, another example of the supponand.
dedication the community has demonstrated in this cam-:
pll\gn," he added.
•
"The partnership between the public and private sector&amp;
at the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Cominu~
nity College is a winning combination of resources ·fOt;
everyone," Kidd said. "Public education offers thebenefi~
of being accessible 10 all local residents, while the private .
institution offers additional options in education."
:
Barry Dorsey, Ed.D ., president of the University of RiQ
Grande and Rio Grande Community College, told thoso
attending the event, "This campaign will provide funds for
student scholarships and the development of additional
programs that will prepare Rio Grande's students 10 corn•
pete effectively in the workplace."

'

f«.

Happy Holidays t
fDI Oott•e Coupe•

Nowo""per

Pomeroy village
employees granted ~
Christmas bonuses.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Development Director Donald
Jalceway won state controllers'
approval of a $13.5 million loan for
a shopping center that will cover
about five blocks of downtown
Ponsmouth in southern Ohio.
He told the state Controlling
Board on Monday' that the project
will revitalize Portsmouth and
Scioto COunty. Soutl!ern Ohio has
some of the poorest counties in the
state.
The county had an unemploy·
ment rate ol 9.4 pment in October,
the latelt&gt; IDQ!Ith
~hich f~&amp;ures
. ~WCJ:C .available.,
. _ . .. .
Gov. George Voinovich and
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D·
Wheelersburg, said the pt;ojecl will
create more than SOO JObs within

BIRD BOX. Ray BrliiJIII of CobleSkUI, N.Y., checks in on a con·
ventional bluebird box. Tbe box at right, a Peterson box designed
by a Minn~ta..(\ltillture-maker; !'lso is catching on in N.W _York,
where the'bluelllrd•lioDu!aJibn.has increased steadily over tlte jlast
10 years. (AP·P.botolM"ike Groll)

t_i.

Letterman receives standing ovation

l------------~~~~~~~

Portsmouth
project gets
$13.5 million

Formal aris programs in state
prisons began in the 1970s through
President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Great Society program, Project
Culture. The project used a $1 million budget 10 improve and create
programs throughout the country.
Money cutbacks and lack of inter·
est slowly caused the project's
demise.
Several states have extensive
arts programming, bur by far the
most elaborate is in California The
state spent $2.6 million last year
for a full-time artist coordinator at
each of its 26 prison facilities and
at least 350 contractual artists.
California's program, which
began in 1979, received much legislative suppon after the release of
The Brewster Report, a 1983 study
by San Jose State University Pro·
fessor Lawrence G. Brewster on
the program's effect on inmates.
The study found a 75 percent to
81 percent reduction in violence by
inmates who participated in arts ~
programs, and that the inmates
were 40 percent less likely to return
10 prison after their release.
Critics say arts programs coddle
inmates.
Mike Ferrucci, executive assis·
tant to the director of the union representing Connecticut's correction
officers, said there are too many
programs for inmates.
"We're sending the message to
inmates that we're trying to make
life comfortable for them and get·
ling rid of the.punishment factor.
"We don't have the luxury of
space and staff. We don't even
have a stable and secure system .
Today's prison population has
•·,,!&gt;
many gangs and gang members.
The more you allow inmates to
mingle- outside of their cells, you're
allowing the time to do bad
'
things," Ferrucci said.

A Muldmadialnc.

Inc. and Worthington
addition, a contribution
Industries Inc., anhas been received from
nounced their suppon
Evan Davis, chairman
to the university with
"This campaign Will
oftheboardofOakHill
gifts cumulatively
B~~ are very grate·
amounting
to prollide fundS for StU•
$600,000.
dent SChO/aTShipS and
foliO John McConnell,
Bob Evans Farms
founder and chairman
of WorthinglOn Indus·
Inc. pledged $500,000 the Q8Ve/opment Of adtowards the construe· ditional programs...
tries lnc., for its expres·
tion of a new College
workof
thatsuppon
Rio Grande
of Business facility on
sion
for theis
doing in making higher
the Rio Grande cam·
education accessible to
pus, which will house
Ohio's
citizens.
especially
those
in
southern Ohio," Kidd
the Emerson E. Evans Board Room containing the at·
chiv,es of Bob Evans Farms Inc., according 10 Kidd. In continued.

RIO GRANDE· The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Coml!lunity College announced a four-year capital campaign to raise $6.5 million today during a morning
press conference. Jack Kidd, fli'SI vice president of the
university's board of truStees; announced that more than
$3 million ·. or 48 percent of the goal • already has been
pledged or given to the campaign.
Kidd indicated that recent gifts contributed by Dayton
businessman and investor John W. Berry amount to over
$750,000. Berry has given $608,000 and the Loren M.
Berry Foundation bas pledged $150,000 towards tfle establishment of an endowment for the Loren M. Berry
Center of Economic Education. The Center is one of eight
economic education centers in Ohio that provide instruc·
tion 10 high school teachers and students.
TwoColtimboscorpomtecontributon,BobEvansFanns

House sparrows are the worst
enemy of bluebirds, by many
accounts. The sparrows like nest
boxes and commonly peck the
weaker bluebirds to death to talce
over their homes.
·
Steve Gilbertson, a machinist in
Andover, Minn .. designed a nest
box made of PVC (polyvinyl chloride) plastic pipe. The smaU size4 inches•in diameter and 4 1/2
inches deep - makes it unappealing 10 sparrows, he said.
Berner said he has observed
bluebirds but no sparrows in PVC
boxes.

Art programs introduced at prisons

su1111y, b.lgb In lower 5011.

Rio Grande announces '$6.5 million capital campaign

from climbing on top and reaching
in for a snack.
But Mrs. Janetatos said she'll
stick with the classic rectangular
box originated by Thomas Musselman of Quincy, Ill., back in the
1930s.
"Now, if anyone came up with
a box that would keep out house
sparrows, that would be a real
breakthrough," Mrs. Janetatos
said.

Wayne Davis, a researcher at
the University of Kentucky,
designed a box with a narrow slot
across the lOp of lhe front. Davis
found that bluebirds like the slot,
which lets them escape sparrow
attacks. Berner said he's had spar·
rows nesting in slot boxes.

LOw loiiJcbt llt lower JGe,
doudy. Wedttesday partly

1 Section, 10 P - 35 cenhl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 7, 1993

Muldmedlalnc.

In search of the perfect bluebird box
ByMARYESCH
Associated Press Writer
COBLESKILL, N.Y. (1\.P)Every bluebird fancier knows that
if r.ou want bluebirds you should
bwld nest box. The question is:
What kind of box?
A rectangular wooden box has
long been the standard.
However, a v-shaped, slantroofed structure designed by a
Minnesota furniture-maker is swift·
ly winning converts. Another Min·
nesotan is pushing plastic pipe. A
Kentucky researcher recommends
rectangular openings, rather than
round ones . Others advocate a
longer roof-overhang.
"What's the best house? Whenever bluebird people get together,
this is the big toptc. It goes on for
hours," Mary Janetatos, executive
director of. the North American
Bluebird Society in Silver Spring,
Md.,said.
Here in Schoharie County, the
hotbed of bluebird restorallon in
New York state, the leading boxes
are being tested side-by-side.
"We fledge about 2,000 bluebirds a year in this county. a third
of the state total," said Ray Briggs,
president of the New York State
Bluebird Society and a retired dairy
farmer and teacher. He estimates
that tbere are about 5,000 bluebird
boxes in Schoharie County alone.
Briggs has a vision: a trail of

•

·Gold
and maroon cards .will
Issued to academic
achievers at an b~nors assembly to be hMd
Wednesday morniti* at Meigs Hl&amp;h SchooL The
cards are a part of a Meigs High Honor Court
where the school recognizes achievement and

Meigs merchants awards
·acco~pllsh·
ments with merchandise
Rev1ewing
the program bere Is Jennie Dorsey, an involved
teacher left, with students, seated, Sarah Ander·
son, JaSon Miller, aad Jason Witherell, and Erin
Krawsczyn, standlog.

Acade·m ic achievers to be
honored by Meigs merchants
.

Meigs County merchants are
joining Meigs High School in a
program to reward the school's
academic achievers.
The new program is called the
Meigs High Honor Court and is a
part of the Effective Schools Pro·
gram which is funded through a
state rural demonstration program.
In a special assembly tomorrow
morning, students who made all
A's during the P.ast nine weeks
grading period wtll be issued gold
identification cards and stude.nts in
an A·B grade category w!ll be
given maroon cards. The lammated

.

cards note the level of achievement

centage. ?orne will be offering 10
and have a picture of the student.
percent diSCounts to the earner of a
The cards will note the students' gold card and five percent to the
academic achievement and the owner of a maroon card. Others
period for which their cards are will be offering the same discount
valid The cards are renewable at on both the gold and maroon card_s.
the end of each grading period if The placards will ~ ~tsp_layed '"
the students maintain the level of the wmdows of paructpaUng merachievement.
chants.
. . .
The merchants come into the
More par_uctpat!on from merpicture by offering merchandise chants ts bemg soh~lted and any
discounts to the students with the not contacted are mvtted 10 call the
cards. Participating m~rchants are school, 992-115_8, and talk 10 Fenbeing provided with Meigs High ton Taylor, pnnctpal, about the
Honor Court placard§ on wh1ch new program .
they designate the discount per·

Gallia mother, daughter
injured in autq crash
By JAMES LONG
OVP News Staff
A woman and her child were
hospitalized Monday afternoon
after their vehicle slid off State
Route 141 oh Ingalls Hill and
slammed into a tree, authorities
said.
Connie J. Clarke, 37, 76 Debbie ,
Drive, Gallipolis, was listed in stable condition this morning at Holz·
er Medical Center and is being
treated for multiple trauma.
Her dau~ta, Sarah J. Clarke, 4,
was LifcFlighted 10 Childrens Hos·
pital in Columbus where ()fflcials
said she' was in critical condition
and being treated for a head injury.
Officials at the Gallia-Meigs
Post of !he State Highway Patrol
were still unsure this morning as 10
wh&amp;t caused the crash, atthough it
was apparent from the accident
report that ~ and the wet road
could have been factors.
tn a voluntary statement,
· motorist David' E. Wiseman told
the patrol tljat ju.St before complet·
ing a left turn onto S.R. 141 from
Saunders Drive he noticed the
Clarte vehicle moving "Cllt:eeding·
Iy faSl" down the hill, about 250
feet away. He reported that the
driver paSsed him at atiOut 100·feet

Continued on page 3
&lt;\

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
Christmas bonuses for village
employees was a main topic of dis·
cussion at MondaY. night's meeting
of the Pomeroy Village Council.
Mter discussion, council members approved Chrisunas bonuses
totaling $4,650 for village employ·
ees.
Four supervisors and 17 full ·
time employees will receive $200
while two pan-time employees will
receive $.150 each.~ addition, two
new employees and one special
part-time employee will get $50
apiece.
Last year, the village gave
bonuses totaling $5,250.
Employees will receive their
bonuses this week.
John Anderson, village adminis·
trator, explained that the U.S .
Army Corps of Engineers bas fund·
ing available for study and advance
engineering for riverbank development projects to aid recreation and
tourism.
Andetson explained there would
be no fliUIDcial obligation from the
village to have the corps conduct
the study . Council• authorized
Anderson to pursue the matter.
Council also indicated interest
in 1'ursuing a grant for downtown
revttalization.
Mayor Bruce Reed read a leuer
from the Big Bend Sternwheel Fcs·
tival Committee commending the
village for its suppon of the festi·
val. In addition, Reed read a lcner
praising the tum lane at the junction of Lincoln Heights and Butter·
nuCAvenue.
Councilman Larry Wehrung
said he had received several posi·
tive comments on the Christmas
decorations in downtown Pomeroy.
"Pomeroy as a whole looks real ·
ly nice." be said.
Reed mirrored Wchrung's com-

ments: "I have been ~caring gooil
remarks on Pomeroy."
Lon~·time Councilwoman Beuy
Baromck commented that sh~ ·
would not be attendinJ the next
council meeting, effecbvely m~
ing the Monday meeting her lasL :
"It has been a pleasure to serve
with you," she said.
:
"Betty has served the village ror
a long time," Reed said.
•
"Betty has done a real good
job." Webrung commented. "We
are going to miss you."
Reed explainCd tliilthe rme for
parking in handicapped zones
recently went from $5 to $10 and
that the fine for parlcing for more
than two hours on village streets
was doubled 10 $2.
In other matters, council:
- Discussed complaints regarding the village police deparunent
- Approved the highest bid
from Jeffers' Excavating 10 purchase the village's old ladder and
rescue truck for $1,037.
- Approved the minutes of the
Nov. 15 meeting and the mayor's
report of$5,592.
' - Approved resolutions canceling cheeks from the village more
than a year outstanding and trans·
ferring $45,000 into the sl!eet fund
and $21,000 into the,utility fund
from the general fund.
- Approved a contract with
Columbus Southern Power to
maintain the villages 285 sueet
lights for $2,541.15.
- Paid bills.
Present were council members
Betty Baronick, Scott Dillon, Larry
Wehrung, Thomas Werry and Bifl
Young, Mayor Bruce Reed and
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy Hyseil.
Also attending were Village
Administrator John Anderson and
Councilman-elect George Wright.
Not attend ing was Councilman
John Blaettnar.

r--Local briefs-___,
Man pleads to sex charge

A Marietta man pleaded guilty to a charge of gross sexual imposition Monday afternoon.
Ronald Lott. 27, had been having a sexual relationship with a 12·
year-&lt;lid girl from around the middle of September.
.
Gross sco:ual imposition is a felony of the third degree wh1ch carries a maximum penalty of 10 years confmement and a $5,000 fine.
Sentencing is scheduled for toda y in the Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill .

Two sentenced in B&amp;Es
Two 19-year·old Reedsville men were sentenced Monday after
pleading guilty to the recent breaking and enter mg of Tuppers
Plains businesses.
Erick Adams pleaded guilty Monday afternoon to last Wednes·
day's breaking and entering of Bahr' s Ashland Servtce Stabon. Carl
Marcum pleaded guilty 10 the same breaking and entering in addi·
tion to the Nov. 9 brealdng and entering of the Tuppers Plains General Store.
The two wt:le arrested Friday morning by deputies of the Meigs

County Sheriffs Depanmenl
Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III sentenced Adams to 18
months confinement while Marcum was sentenced to two consecutive IS-month terms, the maximum term aUowed by law.
The sentences will be suspended if the two are accepted into the
SEPTA program. In addition, they must pay restitution and $500
costs of prosecution.

$100,000 judgment sought
In a suit ftled last week in the Meigs County Court of Common
Pless, a Clover, S.C., woman is seeking a $100,000 judgment from
a Middlepon woman for injuries allegedly stemming from an
November, 1991, automObile ttCcidenL
Conlinued on page 3

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Tuesday, Decemb8r 7, 1993

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

OHIO Weather

•

America's own Devil's Island are
In 1974, Federal District Judge

111 Coart Street

Pomemr, Ohlo
DZVOTBD TO THE INTBRE81'8 OF THE IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

tigate Alabama's prison system. He serious medical neoils, and other
set forlh the criterion by which he regular appalling abuses.
would evaluate the conditions of
imprisonment:
"Where conditions within a
prison B!e such that the inmateS...
will inevitably and necessarily
Located in tlie most remole corbecome more sociopathic - and
less able to adapt to conventional ner of northern California this
society as the result of their incar- supermaximum prison is the Jewel
ceration than they were prior there- of California's system and has had
to - cruel and unusual punishment admiring visitors from correction
officials in other states and abroad.
is inflicted...
After much lestimony, Johnson (The Senale crime bill provides for
decided that the Eighth Amend- more such high-tech pnsons.) Most
ment had indeed been violated in or the insistent controversy about
Alabama. Recently, in San Francis- P~lican Bay. concerns a prison
co, Chief Judge Thelton Henderson wtthto the pnson - the Security
of the federal Northern District of Housing Unit (the SHU). It has
California has been presiding over I ,200 to I ,500 prisonen at various
a trial to determine whether times who are locted in their ceUs
inmales of Pelican Bay stale prison 22 1/2 hours a day, and never sec
have had their Eighth Amendment direct sunlight or, for the most pan,
other tomaleS. They have to learn
rights demolished.
It is claimed that some inmares to deal with cumulative sensory
are made much worse. and there- deprivation over a period of years.
The story of Pelican Bay fore more dangerous, by what is
America's
Devil's Island- is
done to them in Pelican Bay. And
the class action suit also charges finally getting some national atlen-

NatHentoff

·~NC
ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
Publbber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

unwarranted exc:euive fon:C, delib-

FiaDit Johnson was about to inves- erate indifference 10 the prisoners'

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS Of OPINION are welcome. They should be leas than 300
words. All Jetton are subject to odidng and must be signed with name,
addlesa and telephoDe number. No unaiglled Jetton will bo publisbed. Leuors
abould be in good taste, addtessing issuea, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers·
By The Associated Press
Excetpl! of recent Ohio editorials of nalional and statewide interest:
The Cinduad Enquirer, Dec. 6
This past week's discovery of a gene that causes colon cancer is a stunning achievement by American medical scientists and an apt reminder of
why our hcallh-aue system still wins worldwide respect and awe.
Scientists announced they had identified the flawed gene that causes
about 10 pcrcent of all colon cancer, one of the most common inherited
disorders. The gene is also blamed fm uterine and ovarian cancer.
The discovery, unlike many others, will have almost immediate practical uses. It could lead within a year to the first genetic test to be used on a
· large scale. Docton predict that within a few months to two years, there
will be a simple blood rest to spot people wilh the defective gene so they
can be watched for signs of cancet and treated to prevent early dealh.
While we're in lhe middle of scrutinizing all that's wrong with American medicine, this breakthrough reminds us what's right with it

AFTER HIS 8Roi&lt;EREV ~ETTLEMENT
OF THE AIRLINE STRIKE, H~ HARIHOU6HT
VlCToR!E~ ON NAFTA, THE BUDGET AND
FAMILV LEAVE ...THE PRESIDENT'~

TAKEN UP ANEW SPoRT.

The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Dec. 5
News of Pablo Escobar Gaviria's death initially filled many of us with
seldom-felt elation. But the glee faded quickly enough. Afler aU, his violent death at the hands of police, while long overdue, will probably not
slow the Oow of Colombian cocaine into this country.
Already. as expected, rival drug gangs have stampeded over Escohar:S
remains to rtll the void created by his sudden elintinatioo. The insatiable
lust that the United Stares and many European nalions have develo)lcd for
cocaine wiU not be diminished by the death of one criminal or the dlsmantling of his once-powerful Medellin drug cartel.
Still, that doesn't reduce the sil!nificancc of Escobar's death.
rn the ruture, it is hoped that Colombia. with continued u.s. help. wm
sustain pressure on that nalion's other drug cartels, which wreak no less '.?lf1n~
havoc on the world than did Escobar's. That will be no easy taSk, as there Til~
is no shonage of conupt politicians, policemen and judges willing to look •.,.. ~ ~ ~
the other way for a share of blood money.
But chc:cring when bad things happen to bad people is certainly appropriate in this case. Colombia could not have presented the wmld with a
mere appreciated gift thati Escobar's head.

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there
lreliiments for these kinds
of conditions... but instead, their
behavior is viewed as criminal
behavior to be punished. They get
punished, and they get sicker. They
become more violent and more out
of control."
Sevellll monlhs ago, I was part
report
of a conference on prisons in
Dr. Stuart GlliSSian, a profcssm Sacramento, Calif. Some guards
of psychiatry at-Harvard Medical from Pelican Bay were there along
School, is an expert on lhe effects, with officials of the state .Deptutment of Corrections. In my talk, I
·of isolation and solitary confine!DenL lh,ving interviewed scores of cited Frank Johnson's definition of
mmatcs m the SHU, he told Mike cruel and unusual ponishmerit and
said that my interviews with former
Wallace on "60 Minutes" that
SHU prisoners and visiting doctors
"over a third are psychotic. We're
indicated
that Pelican Bay abuntalking about people who have
dantly
met
that definition.
acute emergent l.'sychiatric needs,
I know, I said, that rehabilitation
who should be to a hospital and
should be seen on an hourly or is hardly mentioned anymore in
conections departments, but do the
ev~ two-hour basis.
' The C8lifornia Deparr,ment of taxpayers know that they are
Corrections tries to create the financing. in Pelican Bay, a system
impression that they're dealing that makes many prisoners more
with the incorrigibles," Dr. Gras- dangerous than when they arrived.
sian continued. "What they're A few months before, for example,
often dealing with is,the wretched an SHU inmate, almost immedialeof the earth. people who are men- . ly on being released, was accus¢
tally retarded, mentally ill... one of of raping and viciously beating a
woman.
the really ttagic parts of this is that
James Gomez, director of California's Department of Corrections,
was at the conference. and he told
me that SHU inmates were there
because they had bealen and sometimes killed inmaleS in other prisoos. Actually, the SHU population
is more varied than that. "But,
even if that's true," I asked him,
"how can you justify inflicting on
any human being the nearly total
. isolation, the absence of any 'communal activities ..,... from work to
participation in religious exercises?"
"It is necessary," Gomez told
me, "to tsolate these people.
Maybe it's better to write off the
prisoners in the SHU in return for
the security of the rest of the prison
population."
.
The federal court suit may delermine whether anyoqe should be
"written off." Or, as Dr. Grassian
puts it. "is it OK to drive people
crazy in an effon to decrease vio- ·
lence in your prison system?" .
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
reuowned authority ou the First
A111endmeut and the rest of the
BiU of Rights.
tio~ . ~thy Slobogin brought light
to tts high-tech dungeons on OIN;
and in August, Lowell Berman produced for "60 Minutes" the most
sharply focused loot yet at an
approach to penology that, io
another countr)'. would merit a
scathing intemauonal human rights

Early date changes el~.etio.n dynamic

LOS ANGELES (NEA) 1992 primary calendar as a gUide,
While no one outside of profes- this would mean that the California
Portsmoutb Dally Times, Dec. 3
sional politics was paying much contest will be six weeks after New
Chil~n who suffer from birth defects or chronic health problems
could be excluded from coverage under President Clinton's reform plan, attention, the California le~slature Hampshire, two weeks after Super
one more piece of evidence that lhe plan is not as "universal'' as lhe voted to conduct an expenment in
the 1996 primary season.
Clintons like to claim.
Rllldall O'DonneU, president and chief executive offteer of Children's
Instead of California holding the
Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., told a health subcommittee of the last of the primaries, it will liave
Senate F'mance Committee that the Clinton bill would limit treaunent to one of the ftrst This might be the
children suffering only from "illness or injury," which may exclude birth most significant change in presi- Tuesda)', one week after Illinois
defects. . .
dential ·
politics in the past and Mtchigan, and two weeks
. Failure to cover expenses fN children born with birth defects fits neat- 40 year~ could well have a before New York.
The significance of the move,
ly wilhin the CliniDIIS' pro-ablxtion philosophy. Increasingly, arguments major effect on who receives the
especially
to Democrats generally,
are made for aborting children who are delected to have birth defects in GOP nomination in 1996 and both
and
to
the
GOP
in 1996, cannot be
the womb. Failure to cover birtlj defects in the health plan will be one Democmtic and GOP nominations
overstated.
in the future.
mere incentive f« p8!'ellts 10 cboOsc abortion.
The lastlhrec Democratic nomiCalifornia is the biggest stale in
The powing notion that unbmn children widl birth defects are better
·nees
have been Jimmy Carter,
off aborted flies in the face of logic and is an insult to the minions of the union, but because it has
Michael
Dukatis and Bill Clin10n.
Americans with disabilities who feel their lives are of equal value in spite always held its presidential primary
What
lhe
three share in common is
near the very end of the primary
of lheir handicaps.
that
they
were·
governors without a
cycle, California voters have had
great
deal
of
name
recognition or
vlfiUally no say in who has been
campaign
funding
when
they startnomirlated by either party.
The (Youuptown) Vindicator, Dec.l
The last time California ed their quests for lhe Democmtic
It's shapmg up to be a long, cold and bloody winter in Bosnia-HetzeDemocrats played a pivotal role in nominauon. But each followed
l~ talks in Geneva between Bosnian Muslims, Serbs and Croats a presidential primary selection what has become lhe Democmtic
aren't going well as international mediators try to end 19 months of death was in 1972, when they the decid- nonn for winning the nomination.
The two rust Democratic coning voleS b Sen. George McGovin the three-sided BaUcsn war.
. Conaiderin'- that the sides continue to talk peace and absent European ern over Sen. Hubert H. Hwnpbrey. rests - the New Hampshire primasupport for military action to aid the Muslims, the only course of action It has been even longer for the Cal- ry and the Iowa caucuses - have
for the United States is to increase humanitarian aid in hopes of lessening ifornia GOP; all the way bact to been the key.
For a candidate with little
the suffering. More than 200,000 people have died so far and more are 1964 when Republicans here put
money
and low name recognition
Barry
Goldwater
over
the
top
in
his
sure to foUow.
in
other
words a govemor from
nip-and-tuck
battle
with
Nelson
The United States can't impose peace alone, but can lead the way to a
Rockefeller.
.
a
state
lite
Georgia
or Arkansas solution by encouragin~ peace talks, enforcing U.N, sanctioos against the
In
1996
the
California
primary
it
is
possible,
almost
literally, 10
· Serbs and aiding civiblills. It's frustrating not to be in a position to do
will
be
moved
from
the
fust
TueapersonaUy
meet
every
Democratic
mere, but such is lhe nature of post-Cold War Europe.
day in June to March 26, Using the voler in New HamPShire if a candi•

Robert]. Wagman

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date s~rlds enough days there.
Both Carter and Clinton did this.
(Dukatls was a ·neighbor from
Massachusetts with high name
recogniti~n already.)
·
In Iowa, with tiS unique caucus
system, a candidate can win by
stgning up the right activists. Get
enougli committed, put together the
right volunteer organization, and
you wit)IWithout spending much
money.
So, in past years, the winners
have come out of New Hampshire
and Iowa with enou~h "bounce"
to start lllising the kind of money
necessary for the rest of the campaign. New Hampshire and Iowa
gave candidates the ability tP generate low cost momentum. But aU
that will chan$e.
'
California ts the nation's largest
and most expensive state in which
10 campaign. Candidares will have
to start early and already have millions in the batik to niake media
buys from San Diego to San Francisco. Not only will the candidale
need millions of dollars on hand,
but he or she must also have reasonllbly high name recognition or else millions more-to develop
that name recognition in the year
before the primary.
The guessing is that it will
become dillicult. if not impossible,
for the relatively unknown candidate to win the nomination. From

It was closing fast on high noon, injury he suffered in the attempted Finally, one ar~ument pierced the
Jan. 21, 1981 -day one of the assassiotation of President Reagan. GOJ:&gt;!s elcphanune hide: November
Reagan Presidency - when The Rec.ently, filibustering Senate election results indicated •that
Republicans were happy to have America's voters were determined
Chicago Kid (aka: Miami Marty «
to crack down on violent crime.
the Long Island Scribbler) dashed
End of filibuster. Nothing like a
into a Washington shoe store,
threat of extinction to get an eleSCJUCCZed into his first pair of genphant's attention.
ume cowboy boots, and moseyed
over to Jim Brady's new office at
But don't be luUed into thinking
the White House.
the Brady Bill and its modest five- that the Repu~?licans got the larger
Next this urban but hardly day waitingrperiod ·for gun pur- message. For m the war on crime,
Ulbane slicker (wllO'd covered four chases declared dead - which is they B!e stiU prisoners of the thinkpresidents for Newsday and The what Americans were first told was ing that helped mate George Bush
Washington Post, and written a Brady's own fate just fD days after what he 1s today. Remember
boot about the bist of lhern, fella I'd propped my ftet.on liis desk. Bush's n:sPonse to the clanior to do
name.:! Jimmy Carter) pulled up a lbaiddilfiy, Jim Brady himself can somethi"C about' assault weapons
chair and plopped his black-booted tell us that the report pf the Brady after a IUIISlic with a Chinese-made
feet atop the new InSB sc=taly's Bill'• death Will every bit as erro- f.K.-47 miSillCred a playgroundful
delt. And having lble that. I asked ~ u that numbing news l1uh of children .in Stockton, Calif.
Bridy:
. about his owi't · ·
,Bush'·• bizlu'rc policy on assault
"Well, Iimbo: can I pass with
Republlcan1, who once weapol!.l that can be used only for
your crowd now?"
. ,delervedly, wae c;alled the pany of cornbet-style massaeres of j)eople:
Turns· out I had it ba~twird. law and order, hav,e been fipllillg Buy AmeriCan. .
Because the real question 'for the law eu!oiiieiuent lfO!IPB-'America's
After a jlrolonged sUtdy, Bush's
docade that followed Has been: cops pleaded f« this simple five- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and .
''WcU, JimbO, c:an you pass· with day wailing perioc! for prospective Fireuins (!anned .the import of a
.yoar crowd now?~'
gun buyen 111 order 10 choet the number of foreign-made weapons,
The. answer, lldly, was always ~ and make sure pw.c~ declarin1: "Th~ semiautomatic
"Nol"
B~y BiU could, not -ilid llQI have felony CORVICliaril., . ·
IISI\llt ri{l~ were deligried and
. pass m!IIW wiih .Brldy's' own reiMOlt reoeutly, fillbllllrJrlai Sen- .'lniended to be particularly suitable
low Re(lublieans. For years, lite Republica"• ippareutly · for.'combat rather that~ sporting
Bmdy's Orand Old J'any fo~ght couldn't .hear the 90 percent of applicatiODJ." .
'
this modest pi'OpoSII; It bears his Ameril:a'J guri ownen tdlinl poll- . . But tbeD Bush refused to blin the
name as a small boW 10 the 111111ive sters that they favored the bill. identii;BI 'gun• t!lat w~ m!'4e in

Martin Schram

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e . . .,.NIA,.IM.

f

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"How ~WHII · Why don't I have my peopls
t*lffJUf~.·

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Inc.

.-----Weather----South-Ctntral Ohio
· Mostly cloudy tonight. Low in
, ·the lower 30s. Southwest winds 5
· to 15 mph. Wednesday, becoming
· partly sunny. High in the lower
. 50s.
Extended forecast
A chance of rain or snow mainly

north Thursday . Otherwise fair.
Lows from the mid-20s to lower
30s. Highs from the upper 30s to
mid-40s. Friday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows around 30 and highs in
the upper 30s to mid-40s. Fair Saturday. Lows 30 to 35 and highs in
the upper 30s to mid40s.

--Area deaths-, ~Jeffe Custer

Walter "Herb" Roush

Jeffe Marcella Ann Cusler, 76,
Walter Heiben "Herb" Roush,
. of Columbus and formerly of Min- 80, Racine, died Monday, Dec. 6,
, ersville, died Monday, Dec. 6, 1993, at Pomeroy Nursing and
. 1993, at her residence.
Rehabilitatioo Center.
· · Arrangements
will
be
Born Aug. 8, 1913, in Apple
· announced later by Ewing Funeral Grove, son of the laiC Walter and
, Home in Pomeroy.
Edna Boston Roush, he was a former Letan Township Trustee, a
, Donna Howarth
farmer, a 25-year employee of the
- · Donna Gorrell Henderson former Provico Milhng and Feed
~ ;Howarth, 51, of Ballground, Ga .. Company in Minersville and a
· fonnerly of Coolville, died Moo- member of the Apple Grove
Hay, Dec. 6, 1993, at the home of Methodist Church.
her mother in Little Hocking afrer
He is survived by a son and
exlended illness.
daughter-in-law, Roger and Christy
' · Born in Frost, daughrer of Elva Roush of Racine, and grandchil'' Martin Gorrell of Little Hocking, dren Kimber! y, Jennifer and Kasey
she was a 1959 graduate of Roush, of the home.
Carthage-Troy High School and
Other survivors include a sister,
attended the Cool Springs Baptist Gladys Shields, and a brolher, RusChwt:h in Georgia and was a secre- seD Roush, both of Racine.
tary for the Arby' s Rc.sraurant.
He was preceded in death by his
She' if'survived by her husband, wife; Mary Slaughter koush; a
.Gerold Howanh of Ballpo!Did; one grandson, Ryan Roger Roush;
!laughter, Barbara Chastain of brothers Lester and Howard Roush,
)asper, Ga.; three sons, Robert and a sis1er, Edith McDade.
Henderson of New Hampshire,
Services will be held Thursday
,James Henderson of Key West, at I p.m. at Ewing Funellll Home
,Fla., and Tony Ball of St Peters- in Pomeroy with the Rev. Ken
l&gt;urg, Fla.: three stepdaughters, Molter officiating. Burial will fol,Pam Howarth and Barbara Tanner, low in Letart Falls Cemetery.
,both of Tennessee, and Deborah
Friends may call Wednesday
· ,Howarth of New Jersey; one step- from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
:son, J.R. Howarth of New Jersey;
four grandchildren; four stepgrandchildren.
., Other survivors include one
·brother, Richard Gorrell of Rome,
Units of the Meigs County
N.Y.; three sis1ers, Karen Walraven Emergency
Medical Services
.Of Coolville, Joyce Mullins of responded to three calls for assis.Albany and Janet Gom:U of Little tance Mooday.
.Hocking.
Units responding included: ·
: . She was preceded in death by a
2:04 p.m. Pomeroy Fire Depan'brother, Enue Gorrell.
ment to Liberty Lane for a chimney
'· · Services wiU be held Thursday fire at the residence of George
~~ II a.m. at the White-Blower
Brictles; 4:43 p.m. Syracuse to
Funeral Home in Coolville with the Karr Road for. Marcia Karr who
.Rev. John Longfellow officiating. was uansponed to Veterans MemoPurial w(ll follow in Torch Ceme- rial Hospital; 7:47 p.m. Pomeroy
tery.
.
to U.S. Route 33 for Debbie
· Friends may call Wednesday Spencer
who was taken to Holzer
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funer- Medical Center.
.al home.

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l'ick J Numbers
. 2-1-7
(two, one, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
9-7-1-5
(nine, seven, one, live)
_ Buckeye 5
3-6-24-26-35
(three, six, twenty-four, twentysix, thirty-five)
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The Daily Sentinel

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Tbe Associated Press
A weak low pressure will slide
east from the Centnll Plains brin~­
log more cloud cover into Ohto
tonighL
The low pressure could briAg
~!&gt;me light snow into northern portiOns late tonight with lingering
flurries in the northeast Wcdnesdl!y
mommg as that low pressure dies
out just to the east of Ohio.
Tonight most temperatures
should cool down into lower 30s to
mid-20s. Slow clearing oo Wednesday, milder air over the area and a
little sunshine should help boost
temperatures into the 40s statewide.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

station was 64 degrees in 1982. The
record low was minus I in 1882.
Sunrise this morning was at 7:40
a.m. Sunset wiU be at 5:06p.m.
Around tbe uatlon
The jet stream brought rain and
clouds to the Pacific Northwest
today, while a cold front sprinkled
snow on parts of New England.
Rain in Ponland, Ore., and Seattle threatened to move down the
West Coast toward San Francisco,
when: it was cloudy this morning.
Windswept $5 were expected
to wash the Northwest coastline
today, with heavy downpours and
Wtnd gusts of Up to 40 mph. The
stonn threarened to bring snow to

3

The following ~ases were driving under suspens.ion, $100
resolved Wednesday m the Me1gs plus costs, thr~ days Jail ~'!SpendC&lt;;&gt;un.ty Coun of Judge Patnck H. ed, 30-day veh~le tmmobihzauon,
0 Bnen.
.
o.ne-year probatiOn; use of unautho.Fmed were. DaleN. Harcourt: nzed )!lares, $15 plus costs; Maf!a
Milford. , seatbelt, $15 l?lus costs, ~ellignno, Pomeroy, no operators
Dan L. Goldsmith, Onent, spot- hcense, $100 plus costs, three days
hgh.ttng, ~150 plus. costs; l.e!'OY E. jail and $50 ~f fine SUSJ!C~dec! upon
Sm!th, Vmto~, failure to d1splay proof of valtd operator s ltcense
valtd reg1strat1on, $20 p~us costs; within 60 days, one year probation;
Rae L. Basham, Coolvtlle, seat
Missy Chapman, Rutland, passbelt, $25 plus .costs; Josep~ W . ing bad checks, $25 plus costs,
Baldwto, Wtlltamsburg, dr1vmg restitution· Christine Buzzard Midunder the infl~e~ce, $500 plus dlepon, n~ operator's license: $100
costs, 10 daxs Jail suspended to plus costs , one year probation,
three ~ys, $250 of nne and three three days jail and $50 fine susdays JBII sl!spen~ed upon comple- pended upon proof of valid operatiOn or res1dentwl treatment pr&lt;_~- tor's license within 60 days; failure
~am school, !80-day operator s to control, S25 plus coSlS; no scat
hcense ~u;;pe'!ston, one.year proba- belt, $25 plus costs; Lawton Temuon; driv~g tn marked lanes, $25 oleton, Pomeroy, DUI, $1,000 plus
plus .costs, no seatbeh; $25 plus costs, one-year jail suspended to 60
costs,
days, three· year OL susrension,
forfeiture of vehicle; driving under
Toby Turner, Ravenswood , suspension, $100 plu s costs, 10
W.Va., assault, $250 plus costs days jail to run concurrent with
suspended, six months jail sus- DUI;
pended to three days with credit for
Michael Packard, Belpre, failure
time served, one-year probation, to control, $30 plus costs; Sherolyn
restraining order issued; Guy W. Butcher, Pomeroy, driving under
Schuler, Pomeroy, resisting arrest, FRA suspension, $100 plus costs,
costs only, six months jail suspend- 30 days jail suspended to three
ed to 33 days, credit for time days suspended upon presentation
served; Kenneth F. Wallbrown, of valid OL within 90 days, oneLong Bottom, speed, $30 plus year probation; speed, $18 plus
costs; Daniel E. Swisher, Cheshire, costs: James R. Pauley, Portland,
failure to obey traffic sign, $20 speed, $30 plus costs; Danny C.
plus costs; Christopher G. Myers, Morrow, Middlepon, possession of
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs;
a loaded weapon going from deer
Sampson HaU, Syracuse, failure huntiQg at time other than 1/2 hour
to stop within assured clear dis- before sunrise to sunset, $25 and
tance, $20 plus costs; Carrie Ann costs; Ronald R. Shulds, Coolville,
Evans, Parkersburg, W.Va .. failure DUI, $1,000 plus costs, 10 days jail
to stop, $20 plus costs; Etta J . suspended to three days, $250 of
Wise, Rutland, seat belt, $25 plus fine and three days jail suspended
costs; Rebecca Durham, Rutland, upon completion of residential
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Amy Jo treaunent program school, 180-day
Huddesto.Q,. Qal,lipoljs FerrY., seat OL suspension, one-year probation.
belt, S2S phis costs; Reva Musser, ordered to Health Recovery SerPomeror., driving under financial vices for counseling; DUI (second
responstbility action suspension, offense), 90-days jail suspended to
$100 plus costs, three days jail, $50 10 days, 180-day OL suspension ,
plus Jail to be suspended if valid $1,000 fine with $250 suspended,
operator's license presented within one year probation, Health Recov30 days; Jack Yates, Pomeroy, lit- ery Services counseling; driving
tering, $100 plus costs, 10 tblys jail under suspension, same as second
suspended upon removal of tires DUI offense, both to be concurrent
within seven days;
with first DUI;
James Carpenter, Racine, failure
McDonald N. Walker, Homingto control, $30 plus costs; Douglas ton, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs:
B. Eblin, frrearms in a motor vehi- Brad G. Roberts, Spring Valley,
cle, $50 plus costs; open container, speed, $30 plus costs; Raj Hal $20 plus costs; Alanna J. Grimm, dankar, Athens, speed, $30 plus
Middlepon, speed , $23 plus costs; costs; James R. Riggs, South Point,
Danny C. Morrow, Mtddleport, speed, $30 plus costs; George A.

Ga//ia...

Meigs
announcements
Zoninr: meeting canceled
The regular meting of the Olive
Township Zoning Comm ission
scheduled for Dec. 7 has been canceled.
DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet Friday at 1;30 p.m.
at the Meigs County Public
Library. The program will fealtlre a
video/story by Ronald Reynolds
and a talk by a Gennan exchange
student attending Meigs High
SchooL

Concert to be held
The Southern Hi$h School choir
will present a Chnstmas concert
Sunday at 3 p.m. at the high school.

r-------------.....;._...:.,._
Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

tor.
together a tape of the entire show
through use of borrowed tapes.

Some nice public entertainment
should be forthcoming in Middlepan on Thursday evening, December 16.
The Middleport Community
As sociation is sponsoring the
appearances or the vocal choirs of
Meigs and Wahama High Schools.
Both groups will present a varied
program of Christmas music with
one group appearing at 6:30 followed by the second at 7. The location? That wiU be in front of Hudnall' s Heating and Plumbing on
North Second Ave. Hopefully. the
weather will cooperate. Stores in
Middlepon will remain open until
8 !hat evening for the convenience
of shoppers.

Drinking sometimes is inclined
to $et more out or hand during the
holiday season so as a reminder of
the dangers involved the Meigs
Chapter of Mothers Against Drunk
Driving will hold their ftrst candlelight vigil on the upper parking lot
in Pomeroy at 7 this Friday
evenmg.
The vigil not only points up the
issue at hand but is in remembrance
of those who have lost loved ones
to alcohol related acCidents. Jerry
and Ellen Rought are co-chairing
the vigil lo be cor.ducted by Pat
Thoma, state representative of the
local chapter. In case of inclement
weather the event will be held in
the auditorium of Pomeroy Village
Hall . The chapter will have hot
chocolate and coffee on hand.
Guest speaker will be Reggie
Robinson and he will stay on the
lot afler the ceremony to provide
entertainm ent. A counselor for
Health Recovery in Athens,
"Rockin' Reggie" also perfonns at
teen dances. Several local singers
and others will also be participating
in the vigil.

And I didn't know that either.
Kay Collums of Hemlock Grove,
one of the nicest Meigs Countians
that you'll meet. is conftoed to her
home as the result of having been
tossed by a horse about three weeks
ago. Kay received a pelvic injury
and confinement will be a total of
some eight weeks. Kay, a member
of the operating room lealll at Veterans Memorial Hospital, is han dling the problem okay, I'm told.
Fonner Middleport High School
teacher, Nan Moore, ha s been
returned to her Middleport home.
Nan fell and underwent surgery for
a hip fracture at Veterans MemoriaL She then remained in the hospital's extended care unit until she
co uld go back home. She's doing
fine. By the way, she's delighted
with the cards and flowers you
sent She received over 160 cards
from former students and other
friends. Thank you. Your suppon
really encourages her recuperation.

Violent crimes across the nation
are reponed on the decline . I don' t
know who compiles these statistics.
Still seems pretty violent to me. So
don 't let lhe repon make you over
confident. It's still a good idea to
play the game defensively. Meantime, do keep smiling.

NOW OPEN FOQ
CHQI6TMA6 6EA&amp;JN

If you did a video of any portion
of the Big Bend Minstrel Association' s Meigs Talenl Showcase on
squad could nm ge11ts jaws or life Nov. 27 would you get in touch
unit to work. EMS Director Bob · with Mrs . Susie Soulsby , 992Bailey said today that it appeared 2377?
A video was being prepared of
there was dirt in the gasoline -his
the
production but about a quarter
squad was able to use its machine
of
the
way through the musical the
after replacing the fueL
video
wenl oul although il
"It was a delay of a few minappeared
to be taking okay on the
utes," he said. "I don 't think it
made a difference in th e overall
outcome of the child."

Stocks

P,ortsmouth

was

--Area briefs... Firefighters probe chimney fire

Nowacslt, Toledo, speed, $30 plus
costs; Judith Glasgow , Athens,
expired registration, $20 plus costs.
Forfeiting bond s were Brian
Lee•.Point Pleasant, W.Va., spotltghung, S290; possession of pans
of deer without certificate of ownership, $100 plus costs; Thomas
Bumgardner, Point Pleasant, same
as above.

Polnaettlu '1• &amp; Up
Berried Holly Trees '17'"
Live Norway Spruce
6-7 fl. - '2P
Cut TrMa-Uve Wl'Htha

continued Jrom page 1

below the crest of the hill .
Wiseman told the patrol he then
watched in his rear view mirror as
the driver hit the brakes, apparently
causing the car to fishtail out or
control before finally going off the
road.
·
Becky Kennedy, 955 S.R. 141
said she heard the crash and went
to the door of her residence where
she was able to see that the car was
AJ!I Ele Power ...................36 112 wrapped almost complelely around
the tree. Kennedy lives across the • ·
•••
Ashland Oil.. ......................32 518
road from the acc1dent site.
Continued I rom page 1
AT&amp;T ................................55 1/4
"All I could think was 'Oh my three. years, m addition to an undeBank One ...........................38 7/8
Godl'," she said. No one in lhe car termmed number of construcuon
Bob Evans.......................... 21 1/2
appeared to be moving.
jobs.
.
Charming Shop ........................ l2
Area residents say it is not
Board members quesuoned
Champion Ind .......................... 16
unusual for cars to end up in the Jakeway and other supponers,;ibout
City Holding ......................32 1/2
ditch on Ingels HiU af1er a rain.
the l?fOJCCI, unusual because a stale
Federal Mogul ...................28 3/8
Officials from the Gallia County adv.1sor.y board recommended
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................45 7/8
Lands End ..........................41 1/8 Emergency Medical Service, along agrunsl ol and the depanment norwith Gallipolis police and the Gal- mally lim!lS loans for such proJects
Limiteulnc. ..................... .. 17 7/8
.
Multimedia Inc..................37 1/2 lipolis Volunteer Fire Deparunent, to $1 mtllion. .
Jakeway srud the adVIsory board
Point Bancorp .......................... 15 worked together to rescue the child,
RelianCe Electric ...................... 17 who was trapped in the back seat of adhered to gu1deltnes .set more than
10 years ago. He sa1d the guodeRobbins&amp;Myers ...................... 16 the car.
The
Point
Pleasant
EMS
was
Imes
mtght need updattng and that
Shoney 's Inc......................22 1/8
called
to
the
scene
afler
the
Gallia
there
have been times when the
Star Bank ................................. 33
state
went
beyond the $1 million
Wendy lnt'l...................... .. l6 1/4
limit.
.
Wonhington Ind ................ t9 1/4 Marriage license Issued
He pointed out that controllers
Stock reports are the 10:30
A marriage license
issued approved an administration request
a.m. quotes provided by Advest Friday to Huben Alvin Eason, 25,
for a $13 million loan for the Gateof Gallipolis.
Pomeroy, and Susan Elizabeth way development project in CleveHouchins, 20, Middlepon.
land, afler the development advisory board recommended that it be
rejected.
Under the plan, the IS-year, 2
.
.
Continued from page 1
percent loan will account for all but
Jennifer W. DavtS alleges she was a passenger in a car struck by
$4.5 million of the costs. The
Lol;a R. Cleland. Cleland was cited in the accident, court docum ents
Scioto County commissioners arc
mdicare.
putting up the rest and assuming all
of the debt. Jakeway said.
Sen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus ,
criticized the project because the
developer, Portsmouth Zamagias
Minor damage was reported following a chimney fire on Liberty
Lane in Pomeroy at 2:04 p;m. Monday .
Limited Pannership of Pittsburgh,
is not required to invest anything.
Seven rtrefi&amp;l\lers with.one lruck and a unit of the Meigs County
Jakewar said the projeCt reflects
En,tergency Medical Servtce responded to the residence of George
financing m which an OJ\io county
Bncldes, Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reported
for the fust time has made a finan~ rue started in the basement around a grate ~t the bottom of
dal commitment on behalf of a
the c.himney and ~ught lOIRe nearby lumber on fire; Zirkle said.
development project
Fll'Cfighlers arnved ancl put out the rlfll, Zlrldc said. D8111age
other than smoke damage was reported as minor.
Onfy Espy voted against the ·
'
proposal, which was approved 6-1.

'

High temperatures were foreCast
today in the 30s and 40s in the
Nonheast, Midwest, Great Lakes,
Ohio River Valley and Nonhwest.
and in the 50s and 60s in the southern tier and much of California.
The nation's high lemperature
Monday was 84 at Hollywood, Fla

the Cascades and Siena Nevadas.
Snow also was falling today in
Ponland, Maine. and snow showers
wete ex pected in other parts of
nonhero New England and in the
Adirondacks of upstate New York.
Clouds were expected to cover
much of th e co untry , from the
Dakotas to New Eng land, across
the Northwest and parts of the Gulf
states. A sunny day was forecast
for the res t of the Southeast and
parts or the Southwest.
On Monday, high winds socked
portions of Alaska, while winter
storm watches wen: in effect today
for pans of Oregon and Washington Stale.

36 finec;l in county court

W.VA .

Lottery
numbers
'

the U.S.A. So America's gun
industry began mass producing(
domestic versions of the AK-47s ~
etc. Now the Senate has approved a•
1993 Crime Bill amendment, spon-!
s&lt;X'ed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-:
Calif., .to ban the manufacture, sale'
and possession of 19 specific semi-:
automatic assault weapons ~\
regardless of where they were;
made.
.~
And the other day, Sarah Brady •
whose political skiDs and personai:
courage have proven a fitting :
match for her husband's, savored '
the victory of the Brady Bill by :
declaring that their work had just :
·bei!W!· Their ne;"t ftght in the war :
on cnme: secunng House passage 1
of the ban on domestic assault •
weapons.
I
The Old Guard of ~ Orand Olil l
Party - Barry Goldwater and :
Ronald Reagan - have spolcen out •
for bannins.these assault weapont. :
But tho GOP's new Vanguard can. I
not yet mus~ the courage to Just 1
say no to their gun lobby benelactors and jojn the new .national 1
order. We need to waae an all· ou• •
all·American war on cril1le; .
-, :
Martla Sebrlllil II a sJDdkated l
l!l'ller lor NeW.papet Eaterprllt
AsiOcfatloa.
'.
.

.-

..

·

EMS responds
to three calls

Wage an aii~Americari war on crime

'

Berry's World

'

now oo the litelr nominees wiD he
established, nauonal political figures.
.
Already GOP insiders are saying that the earlier primary gives a
big boost to a Jack Kemp, who js
well known 10 California Republicans and who will likely hav:e
money in the bank by late 1995 to
spend millions in there. Favorite
son, Gov. Pete Wilson, also should
have a leg up if he can win re-election next year.
The earlier primary will probllbly help the Democratic nominee
overall. Without doubt, after California, New York, Illinois, Michigan and Pennsylvania, the Democratic nominee wiD be known. This
means that the Democrats wUI have
from April on to patch up their differences and unite behind the nominee. This could make for much
more ~rut Democratic Conventions m the future. The 1996 Marcil
primary ballot will also contain
other conrests that are usually on
the June ~allot. including both congressional races and propositions.
This will be a major change. The
new law calls for a one-time-on~
change. But if successful, few
doubt the move to March will not
become permimenL
Robtrt Wagman Is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Eater~
prise Association.

Pit
I •

.,

Page

Warmer temperatures forecast for Ohio

Wednesday, Dec. 8
Accu-Wea~ forecast for daytime conditions

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

For the Loved 0nea

Grave Bllmkets '1r
ArtHiclllt Spreya, v-a
endWrutha

Open Dally ~s. Sundays 12-5

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992·5776

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial

MondayMiddlepon
admi ssions - Carla
McKinney,
Monday discharges - Haro ld
Jewell, Middleport
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dec. 4 discharges - Woodrow
Mollohan, Marvin McHenr y.
George Sheets, Anita Rus sell,
Megan Smith, Eliza Woods and
Gary Eisenogle.
Dec. 4 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Feuslel, son, of Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelley, son
of Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy Nottingham, daughter of
Vinton and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Shepherd, son of Gallipolis.

SPRING VALLEY ClNE~II
446·4524

' . ..

7

l

~==========:
.,

AUTO
H
E
t' .., •, I

'

State Auto ·s already
lOW premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
and home with the State
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

ROGAN ~
uu... ER
lDsuraDce Services
2~4 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

992-6687

.I!J

St•te Auto

lnauraneit c~n!p•nles

,

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The DailJ;l~~,ei

.Sports

:Cowboys get 23-17 win over Eagles
!D cap a club-record rushing performance of 237 yards in a 23-10 vic·
tory over the Eagles.
"It is kind of ironic," Smith
said "Philadelphia IJ:l!s had a lot of
injuries but they still play touj!h.
Before the big run, we kept sayrng
we had to get things roUing and the
play opened lip."
The Cowboys had lost their pre·
vious two games, and Johnson was
relieved to have put the losing
streak to.rest.
"It was satisfying because the
Eagles always play us tough," be
said "It's a big deal to beat !hem
twice in a single year. We haven't
done it in a long time. They've
always had our number."
Johnson said Smith "always
comes up with the big plays when
you need them. That's what makes
a great player.' •
Philadelphia coach Rich Kotite
agreed.

said " He's a great player. We just
have uouble ~topping hun."
And now the playoffs become
that much more difficult for the
Eagles.
"We're going to have to get
some help in lhe !livision to make
the playoffs,'' Kotite said "This is
really disappointing.··
Bubby Brister threw two touch·
down passes to tight end Mark
Bavaro but the Eagles couldn't
muster enough firepower for the
win.
"We didn't pull it off. it was
coulda, shoulda, ·woulda ...didn 't,' ·
Brister said.
Eddie Murray kicked field goals
of 23, 19 and 47 yards and Michael
Irvin caught an 11-yard touchdown
jlass from Troy Aikman in a sputtering Dallas offense..
Dallas wide receiver Michael
Irvin said the Cowboys still have a
lot of work to do.
"We're not in Super Bowl
synch yet," Irvin said. "We can't
get too excited."

.

"Emmitt puts pressure on you
every time he touches the baU," he

Scoreboard
Wake ForM 77, D1vidaon 61
Wmthtop 105, Tenn. Walc:yan 82

-DI-

Midwest

AMDICAN CONRIIIINCE

Team
Mlw...............
Blll!olo .............
N.Y. lola ...........
l•'"••pati•......
Newft&amp;ia~Md. ".

.,.

WL
9 3
I 4
1 S
4 a
l 11

T Pd.
o .750
0 .667
0 .583
o .333
0 .013

Coppin SL 65, Wichiu. Sl64

·-

w..-01o.m............. 1 s o .m m 210
LA.!Wdon..... 1 s o .m 219 22.5
San o;,ao ......... 6 6 0 .soo 208 205
Solalo.... ~ ......... 5 7 0 .417 190217

Union Local SS, Bamenille 52

IU.inod. St. 75, Dayton 62
Kanm 82. Wuhbum 68
MidU
7i,llelroil Mac 60

WaiTCnsvillc S5, Clev. Onngc 44
Wcllivillo . , Stcuboa.villc C1th. 42

~80,MiftluSLS8

w.

NE IllinrU 76, Sacr~meato St. 61

FLORIDA PANlHl!ltS, Aoquizod 0..

Volpuoioo 92.1n~·S..Ih B....J 60

X•vier, Ohio 6S, Hartfccd 56

Allaalk: ~vlllon
Team
W L
N.Y. RanJGII .... 2D 6
AW.delphia ...... 17 II
New le:ttey ....... 15 7
Wuhinpon ...... 11 13
FlOiida .............. 9 14
N.Y. &amp;landers... 9 15
TampiBay ....... 8 _17

A4M 102, Montana St. 95 (2

OlfG.UI·El Puo 76, New Mexico SL 72
Tuln 94, Oral RobcN 74
Air force 82. Navy 70
Colon.do St. 97, Colorado 8S
$. Utah 81, N. Arizlma 73

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
ll:oo..... DI-.

s 7 0 .417 192 23S
4 I 0 .333 238205
Wu!Un,.. ...... 3 9 0 .150 Ill 273

-.a ...........

c ..tnl Ol•llloa

au..,. ...........

s

7

0 .513 201 164

1 l 0 .!13

0....0 .......... ...
0... Boy .... ....
MimetO&amp;I ......_.
TamJ"Bay .......

210189

7 S 0 .SI3 :ZSHII
6 6 0 .500 192217
3 9 0 .2SO 110291

a - ..............

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Aleu:adcr.U, BeaverEulan 33
Alhtlbul8 Ed~ 53, Gcn~· 31
Allltintown-Mcch 66. Wanen Cbampi·
m41
Avan 49, Elyria Cub. 46
Boollo.W.61. Mu1W Fcny ll
Be11ou. SL lohn'o SO, Brid&amp;-' 30
Boudmm 66, A11iance 26

42

s.n L.c 9 3 0
New adeM~..... 7 5 0
..................... s 1 0
LA.
3 9 0

Ramo........

.150 161 284

Monday'sacore

Dllllu23, Phr1

I

NowYcd .~..- ....... 10

Odoodo...................

L

I'd.

..

.714

.S71

6

a -....................9
Mioml ....................s

'

2

1 .l63
• .315

2
4.S

.313
.261

6

.ns

.6 10
NewltDey ...........S II
Pllil I \I 'e_,_ .,.,.,,A 11

.

G8

3~

Fodonl

·~

M-DMIIoo
Taoo
W L I'd.
............... t6 I .941
s.n Aalcnio. .... ,...M12 ' .706
uw. .....................12 l .706
lllmor..........- -.1 1 .533
..............6 ' .AOO
DoJ1M....................1 " .063

4

4
7
9

--

......................14

.
.,

GB

14~

1 .933

~.....- ,...:,... 11
......... :.. - ..........9

3 .786
1 ..!63

2.5
l.S

LA.Lla.__,
_ _ ,7 10
- -----··
1 .412
.S33
L.A. Cifpoa .........6 • .42'1
Sw $' _ ...._ _ ... 11 .267

6I
7..!

..

.

10

-..

(

f ::JOp.m.
au.paP"rl · Ll 'a 7:30p.m.

TOIJllbt'a aames

lloll'*" tlrlttlo, HO p.m.

v.riMd MazvEI..AND, 7:30p.m.
~;;;;;.;;.- ........ 7:'0p.m.
'

L.A.-•a.-...•,30 .....

.'

-oibdoo.I:JO....,..

~ .. - . .,30p.m.

Now Yadl • LA t.oqo,l0:30 P"'lllmor ..
10:30 ......

OoWoo-

•

n

Mil-

A-..-1:301....

•
1'·
•

L.A.~ ..

m , P,fft.
. ,30p.m.

..... ...... _ .,30p.m.

w

t!

-at Uaah. 9 p.m..

...

Major college seores

•

Vancouver at Hudon!.l ::U p.m.
Bullolo II Qao,., 7,35 ~m.
New Jeaey u Montreal, 7:3S p.m.
EAmontort at N.Y. R.anaen, 7:3! p.m.
Wimipoc at ToroniO, 1:3S p.m.
I'll........ II Dollao, 1:35 p.m.
Florida"
AnaoJioi,I0:3S p.m.

s-...
.

CoMu1 Clftlliu tl, .\ld .sw II"'Od-

.... 117
Dllbf7, • •~ 11.111
JlMtc.alllt 1Cz4 5J
-M,-PkDloll
r

l
- ,.12,c.&amp;.C UdO
' "d::!MSL69
.._...,._,._

•

-. v...,.s&lt;:/h,~s..94 N.C. c:tooiOolo If, &gt;1. 6nlioa

Transac tions
Buebal
Nallon~llape

COLORADO ROCKIES' Apocd Ia
Galunaa, fiist bate:
men, on a Cour·you conUICI.
NEW YORK METS: AMounced the

lr.:tml wilh Andta

retitanem d Joe McShane, vioo proaidcnt
Luc:io in the Florida Slate l.ea&amp;Ue.
efrectivo Jan, I, AMounced Rau Ve~;,
dUo, SL Lue:io amcra~ m~n~acr. wUl take

or s..

on aci4W I'IIIIPCI\Iibil u .princ tnininJ

COOIIIinatc. (or 1M Mu.

'

BukelbaU

36

NIUotul 1 11k.... ll Auodatlun
INDIANA PACERS: Si~ed Byron
Scoa, IUlfd, Placed LaSalle ThOibpiUI,
forwUil-ceniCII', on lhe injurr.d lia.

NEW YORK KNICKS: Placed
O.Ulel Smith, fOtward, on Cbo injund
lin. ACiivated Eric An-.on, fiXWard,

_ .... ...,...lia.

Midis,.,

¢;

JIIWI 'd

5

1

...... u.....~~IIOILit
.

·-~~

71

T-ILI41,JIIaU7

-u.-n

Villlllof-~Vl!'!t

. "'

··~"·

'

,.

Willi wreallls of II._ Md adlllllae, llac~p 11•1..,.
tbl fire Md
"lulled wllllaow, Chrllilail .·

8C••
.............................................. :;

SprinJ. Ctlholic 5&amp;, Spring. NW S4

conSl'rintl. Nerlh ~. Northm0n1 S3

.

FoolbaU

· Na-IF_. .......

Tedninueh 51, Huber Hu. Wayne46
Tal. Non D.metiO, ToL Clay 46
ToL SLlhsuli7B, OUawa Hilll36

DETROrT UONS: Phod Don !leo·
r al«.
OJU!EN BAY PACI.ERS : Waind

, ...~... we've a•"d IIIII ,_. yar. Far ......_, ~,
1qbig "lb•nb" to.yaa, oar.m•ny lrleadt,.tld Md Dill, ;_wll..eldDd •n.a we'D ....,. ar.......
llaaln111 willa y. 11., grat.a ptunrer

nina. offenai.-e

TaL W1'41mer81, Toi. Roam27

a•• ·

llmyl ....... !ipl ond.

.

Now Appearing At The. Holiday Inn

··THUNDER .

Wuh all your customers and
'
friends .a. very Merry Christmas
in our Ch~tmas Greetings Edition
.
on .D~(Jember 23rd

.ROID
WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY
DECEMBER 8 • 10 • 11
8 P.M.,· I A.M.
4!11t, Gatllpoiii/Pt. Plea..nt .
~

,j

•

•

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR ~Dave or Bob

1\-

Al(f

..
14
IJ4A
71
Nowtld.-tf,,_AAMSl
• 77 Jtt.O......... II .
N.C.A(J

D_,.mber23'

Lao

Raoellnd, Ky. 41, Pon1. Notre Dame

Siala11,1Ca!f! 66
Appoloolllla SL 15, T _..oeoe Tech

t

Eclltlon
Thursday,

Wednesday's aames

Maaadore S l, Gammville l2
New BOlton 61. SymmCI V&amp;l47
Oat Hill 73, Wellllon 43
Oba1in 54, Qcv. Eut SJ
Paine~ville RiYIII"'ide 45, Aahubula

SUohn34

_;,Galarraga, Rockies agree
fto
$12M, four-year contract
•

Chrlatmas
Greeting

w......_

Middletown Fenwidr; 33, Lby. Carol!

Ellt

n:

20 7$ 92
ll 75 10.5

"""""'SI, v....., C.U.ty 42

--70,1UdorSS
lihodt
......Upjy.
iture 68
_ klaad
_91,
.._k.........
61

n

Anaheim ........... 9 17 2
P.dmcnton ......... 5 20 3

Edmonton atN. Y.lllanclcn, 7:35p.m.
!Wdonl"
7,35 p.m.
CtDcaao at Si.taaia. 1:35 p.m.
T~ Bay 11 ~ 1a., 10:3S p.m.
FloMiat AnaMim, 10:35 p.m.

. . . . .

~11tJ6u

Z7 12 85
21 99 Ill

Co!Juy ot Qucboo, 7:35 p.m.

Wedallday'spmea
'

San JON ............ II 13 S
Loo AnaeJ,. ...... 10 14 2

TAKING AIM- Despite the best blocking effort of Meigs frontliner Melissa Clifford (44), Southern's Jessika Codner takes aim
from tbe right wing duriag MODday Digbt's TVC coatest at South+ era High School, where the Marauder~ won 55-41. (Scott Wolfe
pbolo)

Tueiday's aames

River 59, Sha(lyaide 39

"'
j
••
•
,.
,'

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

,. 1(17 82
21 87 86

Monaoa14, Vancouvrt 3 (0'1)

Sa. Ciainville 13, S~bawi.Uc 51
Salem 56. Minerva 43
Sebrin&amp; 63, Canton Heri~.t&amp;e 21
s. Point. S4, Roell Hill 33
s. Wcbtler 65, PolU. Oar 56

llloh !Ol,NowY""' 96
_..1m. W""'•P"' 96

61
26 102117

Detroit 6, Winnipca 2

Ravr:nrv. 45, Raoutown 41

MODday'o ocores

n so

Monday's smres

MionUobwJ l6. Lobonm 2l

25

21 ll9 99

1 •
V8tiCOUVe. ........ 14 13 0

con

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Onwiollodrey Loop.

CalJit)' 6, Ottawa 1

Gollipclio 79, MaridLo Sl
tlnhom 44, Spdoa. a..... n
~a.... 69, ShW. Hu. 49
Kcacrin.1 Alter 36, Tipp ChJ 26
LaUr~ana !7, Ncwcc:.ncntown so
Loipok 80, Pondln-Dilboo 31
l.ibotty·Bcntm .52, Cocy-R.awu:n 46
J..os.. 70,l.W..7
Mom... 73,/ulnobub 64
MarauW Quo. 5.5, Delaware Oir. 40
Molhewo49, Pymo""""' Vol26
-MeDonaldss.61,AJ.adlo
st &lt;3 on
W'~ndbam 39
Molclowbroce47, Wllftll Local 32
MaJI Sl, Rocine Southern 41

6

Reoolled

Mike Peca. ~ter. l'rom Ottawa or the

·w L T P11. PF PA.

Cola"Y ............. 11

l'nlntior so. n,.... 46

s.s

0....0 ....................! 9 .357
. lndi-.................... .5 10 .333
Mil...._oe .............. .3 13 .111

Smith, dcfeuoaun, from Albany or

Cenlral Dlvllac.

32 104100
31 11 85

Franilill ?um•ce Oracn SO, Coal
Onmo46

l

100

so

42 110 79

Fol\""' 69. caw...u so

3.S

s

..........
NEW IIIRSEY DEVILS' ReeaJ1cd Ia·
............
_.,Lao_
VANCOUVER CANUCKS:

100 95
90
85 75
91 89
93 90
76 99
85133

Dollu ................ 13 tO 6

Fotl lennin SS, Oao.w. S3

CadniDI'f'ilkMI
4 .733
0w1oco .................a 1 .soo
QUa...................7
1 .soo
ClJ!VEI.I.Nl) .........6
9 .400

2
2

Tormto ............. 19 6 4

Doy. CorliJ!o41, Doy.-... 43
Doy.Poaonon'IQ, Doy.lolronon24
l!ullaioN. 107, Clew. Adems 20
E.tiom S7,1ndw. Croat 40

6j

Aduu .................. ll

·.

Col OeStlet 66, Col. Eutmoor 43
Coanca\U S3, Paine~v:i.llc Harvey l4
Coal.incnlal Sl, Kalida 42
Cortland·La.kevlow 65, Warren
KGUIOIIyo!l
Caohoouoo 47.1Hian Vo1.4S (01)
Croolwood 61, Newtoa Folio :ZS

s

3

122 113

Paclnc Dl.ulon

lhrdint 27

·-w.....,.. . . . . .
W

34 91 67
24 79 83
21 66 77
~ !X) 96
18 65 &amp;4

............ 12 9 3
W'lllnipec .......... 11 15 4

ss

EASTERN CONFERENCE

35

a.~oo 10

Clcv. Bu11mont6l, Clev. Centnl
C.lb.
Cev. Gilmour17, CleY. Andrews 18
Clcv. Halhaway Brown 37, FaiJpon

NBA standings

I
4
2

HARTFORD WHALERS : Reeollod
lp Chibim, ....... -Springfield of
lhe Amadeon Hoci:ey Laauo:
MONTREAL CANAJl!ENS' Signed
Mike Koano, rip1 win&amp; to a tJne.:yeu

GFGA
42 106 72

St. Louil ........... l3 8 S
Deaoit. ............. 13 12 2

Cin. Seven Hilb 21, Middletown

ChriRion :14
Cin. S1. Bc:rnaid 64, Batavia 48
Cin. Summit 61, Now Miami 43
Oaymont 62, New Philadelphia 53 (3

on

\'i•17

Baske tb all

T...

r....

Chclhin liv.- V.&amp;. 5S, Alhcns 44

.'ISO 353204

.583 237 2A6
.411 2AS 113

~.

smallest with 64.
The season lasted from Nov. 29
to Dec. 4.
Wildlife division spokesman
I ohn Wisse said nearly 500,000
people hunted last week and that
there were 14 accidents, one of
which killed a man in Putnam
County. He said there were 12
accidents and no dealhs reported
last year.
The deer kill, which included an
opening day count of 37,873, nearly match~d the division's predic·
tion of 105,000. The department
said hunters had good ·weather and
an abundant deer population.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Buckeye Trai161, lbyland Bucker~
Centerbuii..S4, New&amp;lk C.th. 38

w..-DI-

T
2

Norlheut Dt vlllon
Piwlbwgh ......... 13 7 7
33
13
6 32
Montroll... ........ 13 10 4
30
Bulfolo.............. 12 13 2 U
Quoboc.............. 10 12 4 2A
Hartfotd .......... _ 8 16 2
18
Daawa .............. 6 18 3
IS

Dalla ............... I 4 0 .lGl lS7 186

l'hila&lt;l&lt;lpiU.. ....

off Smith, dd'CN«&lt;WW. from Cbo E4mon·
ton on.. fc. 1994 third· Md .U.th,round
dnA c:blllka

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Southwest
T~aa

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hunters killed a record 104t,134
deer during the six-day season for
huniing deer with firearms, the
state division of wildlife said Mon·
day.
Gallia County had 3,444 com·
pared with 2,817 in 1992. Meigs
County had 2,741, lh« same as last
year.
The preliminary figure represents an increase of 7,884 deer, or
8.1 percent, from the previou's
record of 96,250, set in 1992.
Muskingum County had the
largest deer kill, with 3,60 I deer
officiaUy tagged and checked in lhe
county. Cuyahoga County had lhe

-

SE -..ni:ZS, ColooaoSL 9S
SW Toxu. St. 55, Mo.·Kanau City 54
St. LmiJ 78, Cmi.ahtM 71

Far West

Tom
W L T PeL PF PA
N.Y. &lt;Mu ...... 9 3 0 .7S022SU2

DALLAS STARS: Aaai&amp;n~ Troy
lhmble., JOllie. \0 Kahm 17QO tl the In·
..........-I llocUy l.oqu~ .
EDMONTON OILERS : Acquired
Fftldrii. Olauactn, dolcnte.man, and a
1994 acwaalh-rcund dzU\.choioo fniD lho
Winrlipctletl £«a 1994 third·sound draft

33

1\~~VU\:

992:-2156

•
'

·.

,.

reaches 600 plate appearances.
'"With this signing, we think
we've made anolher step forward
in tryin~ to b.uild a competitive
ballclub, ' Rockies general manag·
er Bob Gebhard said, "Consillering
lhe outstanding year Andres had in
'93, we're very pleased to have
him back."
Galarraga, 32, who joined 1he
Rockies as a free agent last year at
a salary of $600,000, led the majors
with a .370 average. He had 22
homers and 98 RBis despite miss·
ing 41 games because of hamstring
and knee injuries.
.
He was so indispensable to the
team that lhe Rockies went 4-13
during his fust stint on the disabled
list and lost 13 straight games the
second time he was sidelined.
'"When you sign a player to a
four-year conuact, he means an
awful lot 10 your ballclub," manag·
er Don Baylor said. "He's an ideal
fourth -place hitter for us and an
integral part of lhis team .''
dalarraga insisted all along he
wanted to return ·to the Rockies,
and he was excited about the addi·
tions of Burks and Johnson.
''When I heard about Burks and
HoJo, I !hough~ 'Wow,that's good
company,"' Galarraga said.

·:eastern reserve boys beaten
4ly Federal Hocking, Wellston
v'

• Visiting Eastern dropped two
~ames to start the season in the
boys' reserve "Tip-off Classic" at
federal Hocking High School Sat-urday and Monday.
: Eastern dropped last night's
;game 10 Federal Hocking 59-43 .
.:t"ied at 14-14 in the first frame,
:Federal edged to .a 31-261uilftime
Jead.
• Federal· added to its lead in the
)bird frame 10 lead 43-3S,then held
~n for the 59-43 win.
!, In the past week, Eastern has
:~lad several players out with the flu
end has not yet gained its full
~ndurance.

By SCOTf WOLFE I
Selltlllel Correspoadeat
Visiting Meigs unreeled I Siring
of 12 unanswered points to overeome a 2,5-23 Southern lead in lhe
lhird quarter before claiming a 5541 win Monday during girls' high ·
school basketball action at Southem's Charles W. Hayman gymnasium. •
Late in . the second quarter,
Meigs guard Lee Henderson hit the
floor hard and was assisted from
the floor wilh a possible fractured
arm. X-rays later showed Hender·
son to have a badly bruised elbow.
Meigs (2..0) was led by the great
overall floor game of Joy O'Brien,
who notched 20 points on the
night. Amber Blackwell followed
wilh II.
For Soulhem (0-2), Aimee Mills
led wilh 15 markers.
The game was a great game as
far as lhe score went. At times play
became a little sloppy as a result of
the intense defense and good husde
by both clubs.
Overall, lhe game was tied eight
times in the fust half and saw five
lead changes.
Southern coach lenni (Couch)
Roush, a former star and one of
Ron Logan's students, had her
troops up and weU prepared for her
mentor's club.
Aimee Mills and Meigs' Joy
O'Brien exchanf.ed buckets to start
lhe game, lhe 0 Brien gave the visitors a 3-2 lead on a free throw.
Jonna Manuel gave SHS a 4-3 lead,
then Lee Henderson added two free
throws for another lead change.
The game went on much in the
same fashion w_ilh various delays
for numerous fol!ls. Sammi Sisson
gave SUS a 9-8 lead at the 1:34
mark when she sank one of two
free lhrows.
Bea Lisle, who had an excellent
overall game and great fust half,
gave Soulhem an 11-10 lead at the
end of the flfSt quarter, when she
connected on a bonus situation at
the line. Both clubs reached the
bonus in lhe first quarter.
Amber Blackwell hit two free
throws to stan the second round,
regaining the lead for her club.
Mills missed a bonus attempt, but
one possession the Soulhem swing
guard drilled a long jumper to
again give SHS a 13-12lead.
A pair of O'Brien free lhrows
brought about another lead cJJange,
lhen Manuel hit a short jumper to
put Soutljern back on top. The
changed hands again as Meigs'
Comp'l:t'on: ilnd' a bank shot by
Southern's Bea Lisle, and two
Amber Ohlinger free throws gave
Southern a 19-16 lead, its biggest
ofthenighL
Ohlinger's attempts came as a
result of a technical foul called on a
Meigs' player. Southern had a

chance to go ahead by five, but had
the baU stolen.
.
Southern went on !D lead 21-18
with I :01 left, but missed a pair of
free throws and had a turnover in
the last minute, allowing a free
throw from Alicia Hagg to tie the
score at 21·21 at lhe half.
Heather Hudson sJarted out the
second half with a bucket back
door to give Meigs a 23-21 lead.
Renee Turley stole the ball for
Soulhem and gain tied the score,
23-23 . A fuU court baseball pass
from Turley to Brianne Proffitt
underneath gave SHS a 25·23 lead,
Southern's last of tile night.
After a few words of encouragement from Coach Ron Logan,
Meigs began a 6-7 shooting spree
from the field. That 12-0 run on
Southern broke the Tornadoes
backs, as Southern became prema·
turely desperate in its shot selectian
and fell to a 35-25 deficit.
Only a Proffitt field ~oat inter·
rupted lhe sUeak in wh1ch Meigs
went on to a 39-27 lead. The third
frame ended 41 -29.
Aimee Mills had six straight
points for Southern to begin the
fourth round, but the closest South·
ern could come was 35-45 with
5:45 left in the game . Meigs'
biggest lead was 55-37 late in the
game.
The final ended 55-41 as SHS
made a final comeback bid in the
closing minutes.
Meigs hit 18-48 from the field
(two pointers), was 1-4 on lhrees
and was 1&amp;-27 at lhe line. Meigs
had 35 rebounds. led by Compston's nine and O'Brien's eight II
had 22 turnovers, 13 steals, 12
assists (Cotterill and Blackwell
four each) and 27 fouls.
Soulhem hit 14-49 and was 9-22
at the line . Southern had 26
rebounds, led by Jessika Codner's
eight and Sammi Sisson's six. The
Tornadoes bad 19 turnovers, 10
steals and 26 fouls.
There was no reserve game.
Meigs
(10-11-20·11=55)
Lee Henderson 0-0·2=2 , Joy
O'Brien 7-0.{)=20, Healher Hudson
1-0·0=2, Amber Blackwell 2-14=11, Vanessa Compston 3-0-2=8,
Anne Brown 0-0·1=1, Melissa
Clifford I.Q-0=2, Cynlhia Cotterill
1-0-0=2, Kristen Dassylva 3·0·0=6,
Alicia Haggy 0-0·1=1. Totals: 181-(16-27)=55
Southern
(11·10-7-13=41)
Amber Ohlinger 1-0-2=4,
Aimee Mills 6-1-0=15, Jonna
Manuel 3·0·1=7, Brianne Proffitt
2·0·0=4, Bea Lisle 1·0-4=6,
Sammi Sisson 0-0-3=3, Renee Turley 1.0-0=2. Totals: 14-1-9/22::41

Our special page(s)

"For Children Only"
( 16 years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24th
in the
The Daily Sentinel

-ONLY-

$looo
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Per Picture Prepaid

Plt8M tnciON Mtl-ecldretMd,
1tlmped envelop~~ to rMum your

,._

I
I

I
iI

Official Entry
Form

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man Chris Bailey had 9, Eric
d six, Kyle Ord four, Daniel
Otto two. Jeff Rankin two and Clifford Stevens one.
~ Jeremy .Roush led Federal with

ST. RT. 7 ~ORTH

'

By JOHN MOSSMAN
~ DENVER (AP) - The Big Cat
. is a fat cat.
, Andres Galarraga, who hit .370
•for the Colorado Rockies to
~ become the first player on an
; expansion team ever to win a bat·
.. ling title, signed a guaranteed $12
:million, ·four-year contract that
; could increase to $16.4 million
• with perfonnance bonuses.
: Galarraga, nicknamed lhe "Big
' Cat" because df his slick fielding
:at first base, agreed 10 the deal wilh
: the Rockies on Monday after a
' seven-hour negotiating session pre: vious day.
: He will join free-agent signees
• Ellis Burks and Howard Johnson
~ and projected holdovers Dante
• Bichetle and Charlie Hayes, who
: last season hit .310 and .305,
:·respectively, to give lhe Rockies
jwhat appears to be a good offen·
• sive lineup in their SI;COIId season.
: The conttact guarantees Galarra:•ga salaries of $3.85 million in each
~ of the fust two seasons and $2.15
~ million in each of the last two. His
&gt;pay in 1996 and 1997 would
· mcrease 10 $4.15 million if he bats
. ·at least 500 times in lhe previous
· years.
;; Gatarraga also can earn an addi·
~ tiona! $100,000 per year if he

f Jason Sheets led EHS wilh 19,

•

GALLIPOLIS

'

•

Meigs deer kill total 2,741

LCIIJUCI. AnnOUI!.ced Myls O'O!nnor, de.
fcmc:man, bu re.kinod m. team.

Vanlue 38, Hardin Nordwn 37
Warren Ou. 48, E11t Liverpool Chr.

&lt;on

ttu.u Clty ...... 9 3 0 .750 23.1 186

'

Vol39

H. l.lichipn 102, Wia.-Milwaukec 94

Cootnl.,._
H...... .......... I 4 0 .667W197
......... 7 s 0 .513 241210
CIJM!UNl).. 6 6 0 .500 219231
CINaNNA11 .. I II 0 .013 136 272

•

ANAHl!lM M!OHTY D(!CKS' Ao·
aipod O.vid WWiama, dcfCIUeman, to
San J&gt;icao of the lnl0m8tional Hockey

Tulemwu Cent. C1lh. 54, Conoaon

BuLla 74, DePauw S4

PF PA
241205
2:16 177
206179
163 210
140240

Ndloaal Haob7 '-"&lt;

dol.36

HANDS TO HEAVEN - Several Meiga and Southern players
reach to the heaveRS for the ball after 1 missed sbot during Monday
aigbt's TVC game in Raciae, wbere the Marauders won 55-41 to
stay wheaten. (Scott Wolfe photo)

GRABBING A CHEEK isn't the best way to bring .,.,_ft
Philadelphia runniDJ back Herschel Walker (right), as Dallas
defeasive back Tommte Agee finds out in the tlr!it quarter of Moo·
day night's NFC East match up in Irving, Texas, where the Cowboys
pulled out a 23-17 victDI'y. (AP)
·

Hockey

Triw•y 5.5, Smithville 53
Trotwood MadiJca 64, Day. Meldow·

5

,.,,, . ..,, ,,,.,, 41 :·," ,' .t•·•·,.,_
,,.~
Meigs girls defeat P*
.· PICTURE YOUR CHILD . ..
Southern 55-41
AMONG THE •..

.--=-------------~------------------------~--~

feU to 5-7.
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
•'Nolhing is going to be easy the
IRVING. Texas (AP) ·- With
; four games to go in the season, the next four games," said owner Jerry
• Dallas Cowboys don't loot like the Jones. "We JO to Minnesota, play
· Super Bowl machine of a year ago. at home agamst Washington then
.
But as long as they have a go to New York twice."
The Cow~ys and the Giants
healthy Emmitt Smith, the Cow·
meet
on Jan. 2 m lhe Meadowlands
boys still have a shot.
for
wh~t
cou_ld be the NFC East
Smith's 57-yard run in the
fourth period, reminiscent of a 62- champ1onsh1p . Dallas beat the
: yard backbreaker against Pbiladel- Giants.31-9 earlie~ in the year.
Smtih, who gamed 172 yards on
: phia earlier this year, carried Dallas
23
carries, broke loose for S7 yards
• to a hard-earned 23· 17 victory over
to
the
Eagles 16. Five plays later
• the Eagles on Monday night
fuUb3c:k
Daryl Johns!Dn scored.!he
, . "Every game is goin~ 10 be like
· this the rest of the way, ' said DaJ. clinchmg touchdown on a two-yard
: las coach Jimmy Johnson. "We run with 9:16 to play.
"It was the right play at the
: aren't going 10 blow someone out.
right
time,'' Smith said. "They had
; We are just a good football team.
· And we're going to have to scratch me in check. unti! th!l big run. We
· and fight the rest of the way. This were struggling btg-tune.
is a tough league. No one is going
"Mark McMillian caught me
· to blow someone out by 40 from behind. I !~!ought! was going
points."
to score. It was like the road runner
The defending champions running up alongside t!Je coyote.''
moved a game behind the New
On Halloween, Smtih scored on
York Giants in the NFC East wilh a 62-yard run in the fourth period
-:· an 8-4 record while Philadelphia

~·

The Dilly sentinel

14. Teammatell Adam Miu:heU and
Jerrod Bennett each had eight Neil
Nelson,Chuck Weekly, Richie
McFee and Dave Thompson each
had six, and Sam Sechian -had
three. Chad Jordon had two.
Eastern coach Chris Stout said,
"The team jpst has 10 leatl) to play
hard for all four quarters. We're
not yel 100 percent, but we've got
to be able to give it aU we have lor
aU fo;:!Juarters. We played a good
ftrs't
, ~ut let our intensity slip
in the end. •
.
Eastern dropped a 52·38 .roundone game Saturday to WeUstOO.
.
Sheets led with IS, Dillanl,,had
nine lilld Bailey seven. Long had
15 for Wetlston, Fox had II and
Riepenhoff had eighL
·
Sastem goes IQ Alexander for a
6:30 teseM game Friday. The varsity game follows.
\

....

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~

Deadline: Friday, Dec. J,7 at 3 P.M.
Mail or bring the entry form to:

The Daily Sentinel

�'

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel'.
Tuesday, December7, 1993 :

..· · ----------·----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~P~a~ge~~

'Bright' dau hter hooked up with loser ;.

Dar Au '•Men: Our IJrisbt,
lltrllcdve, 30-ycar-old, collegcM•:nt-d dlughler bas wasted die
Jf11J1 of bcr life eilbe:r going
with, ayiDg to pt over or piling
blct IDgclber with a bum named
"BIId. •
.
"Janice" met Bud in a bll'. His
wife &amp;Ot tired of his philandering
aad kicked him out. He and a
100111-tben JDOYCd iniO tbe IIIIIDC
building where Janice lived.
Before long, Bud decided 1D dit.cll
die IOOIDmlle and move in with

•u

Janice.

Bud- emotioaaDy abusive. He

bad aa Uplosive Iemper and drove

away all ber old friends. Wben

THE WINNER • A one carat diamond tennis bracelet was
awarded in a dniwiDg by Ingels Furniture and Jewelry, Inc. in a
holiday promotion. The winner, Joyce Hollon of Racine, right, wail
presented the bracelet by Diana Ingels. No purchase was necessary
to participate.

..,.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1!193, Loo Aoioleo
nm.. S)llldletolo
Cruton S)11dlcate'' " .

tbc funeral with him and ended
up spending tbe night. Now
Janice is on die East Coast. and Bud
is "visiling" her. We II'C sure he is
planning 10 stay indefinitely and
enjoy tbe free room and board.
Bud owns nothing of value, drives
an old pickup, wor1a off and on and
will be paying child oupport for die
IICllt 10 years. He bis a long bislory
ol alcohol abulic. My qncsdoo II Ibis:
Should we condoue to n:maio
lilent. or should we try · to walcc

Janice up? - HER DISAI'fOINmD
PARENTS
DEAR PARENTS: Your bright,
auractive, 30-ycar-old, college·
educated daughter has a twin
1011tewhere in Arizona. Her aery
appears below. The advice for my

coffee. H='albc Jetter.
Dear Ann ·Landers: Six months
ago, my younger sislu, "Jennie,•
moved to Arizona wben her
employer relocated tbere. The
problem is lhaJ she took her joblcls
bo~end along witb htr.
Mike" has been living with
Jennie for two years and hasn't
contnbuted a dime. Our family is
appalled at htr lack of lielf-mpcct.
I've pleaded with Jennie to buy die
bwn a dckct, pacJc his things and
send him home. Sbe says, "It '1/011'1
wolk. Evay Dn1e I tell him Ill leave,
he criea. I just don't have the heart
10 kick him out.
Mite rectJ!tly found his fifth job
since moving out there. In Jennie's
last leuer, she wrote, "Mike hasn't
received a paycheck in four weeks
because he forgets to send in his
time care!." This sounds ID me tike
the old excuse "My dog ate my
bomCwork.• We doubt that he bas a
job.
Is there any hope for this

ldalionship? I resent tbe way mY:
lilfa' is being used. What do )'011;
lbink about this? - SLOW BURN•
INWESTVA.
;
DEAR W.VA. AND DISAP-:
POINTED PARENTS: WOIIICII whol
allow men to sponge off lbelil ~~
almost always insecure llld afraid;
co be alone. They know they .~!
bein&amp; used but are willing to buy~
companionship.
,
My advice is to say nothing. It's·:
tMir problem. When Jennie and ~
Janice get sick of carrying the lolld, :
dley will dump those guys. Ending
a relationship is strictly a
Do-lt· yourself project.
Gem of die Day: There are things
in Ibis life lhat are a lot bigger than
money. BiDs, for elUimple.

Ann Landers' latest booklet,
cuul Doories," has ever'f'
tlrbtg from till oiUTageoiiS/y /UIIIIJ
to the poigiiiJillly insightful. Seltd a
self-6/Jdressed, long, businesNize
envtlo~ cuul a check or money order for $.5 (this includes poslllgt lllld
handling) ro: Nwggets, c/o AM lmi·
ders, P.O. Box l/S62, Chicago. Ill.

.

•

CompDed by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
: Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
• Susan L. Roush, James R.
! Roush, R/W, to National Gas &amp; Oil
: Corp. Sutton.
,
• Richard L. Butcher, Sandra K.
: Butcher, R/W, 10 National Gas &amp;
; Oil Corp. Sutton.
.
Kennelh D. Cooke, Trustee, Lot,
: to Denzil Fletcher Prater, Jr. ,
• Pomeroy Vill.
:
Arnold Anderson, Brenda Kay
: Anderson, parcel, 10 Arnold Ander, son, Brenda Kay Anderson, Letart.
; Harold E. Person, parcels, to
: Harold A. Persons, Lebanon.
Harold A. Person, parcels, to
: Barnes Ray Phelps, Lebanon.
; · Kenneth E. Riggs, eta!, J utith A.
• Riggs elal, Gordon T. Goble, eta!,
~ - Janet Gobel, eta!, parcel, to
:John W. Randolph, Bobbie Lou
:~.

.•

Randolph, SyracuSe.
Robert J. aka , Robert Jacob
Hawk, dec'd, affid, to Lela D.
Hawk, Porn. Viii.
Lela D. Hawk, 5.09 A, to Robert
Eugene Hawk, Porn. ViU.
Betty Holter, 80 A, S. 26, T-3,
R-12, to Ge01ge Holter, Meigs.
Dorothy E. Sedgwick, I 1/2 A..
to Elsie G. Otiver, james E. Otiver,
Mary Otiver, Orange.
Gertrude Blanche Edwards ,
0.817 A, to Lori L. Thomas, Salis·
bury.
James Arnold Anderson by
Admin ., lots, to Roger B. Hill,
Debm M. Hill, Letart.
Paul D. Cardone, Janice I. Cardone, R/W, to national Gas &amp; Oil
Corp, Sutton.
Terence W. Grueser, parcels, to
Aloysuia A. Grueser, Jr., Satisbury.
Mildred Maynard, Donald May-

nard, Dorothy Kewill , Joseph
Kewill, Mary Jane Tatbott, Sylvia
A. Donahoe, Clifford Donahoe,
John Nicinsky, Jr., Velma R.
Nicinsky, Ruby Reiber, Randall
Reiber, parcels, to John Nicinsky,
Jr., Velma R. Nicinsky, Rutland.
Patticia Glueseneamp, parcels,
to Barbara J. Connolly, Tony E.
Connolly, Lebanon.
John E. Anderson, Juda I. Ancrson, 0.466 A., 10 Charles McKown,
Elizabeth mcKown, Letart.
Alan Giglio, 14.45A, S. 36, T6N, R-14W, to John W. Gaus ,
Delores J. Gaus, Rutland.
Mary R. Porter, ll'acts, to Frank
W. Porter, Sutton/Letart.
George Buckley, margaret
Buckley, Pt. Lot, T·3N, R-11 W,IO
Thomas E. Weis , Berniece M.
Weis, Olive.
Oley E. Herdman, Jr., Sandra K.

Mason, W. Va. held riies for the
late Garol Ball at the Letart Falls
Cemetery on Nov. 17. There were
12 legionnaires and 29 VFW members atlhe service.

invited to attend : Music will be
provided by Georl(e Hall.

=
i.--------- Meigs happenings _ __
~HOWER HEI.D

· A layette shower was held at lhe
Meigs County Library recently
)lonoring Heather Lynn Davis.
• Hosting the shower were Mrs .
bavis' mother, Dottie Scarberry,
Roberta Davis, and Sharon Mattox
were assisted in decorating by
~aron Hindy and Sandy MatiOx.
'fink and blue stteamers, balloons,
,.., umbrella and bells were featured
Jn the decorations.
::RITES PERFORMED

who

:

The Racine American Legion
Post 602 and Stewart Johnslln Post
.·of lhe Veterans of Foreign Wars of
'"

~ Dead

DANCE SET
The annual holiday dinnerdance of the Meigs County Golf
Club will be held Sunday at the
Middlepon American Legion hall.
Reservations for the dinner are 10
be made immediately by calling
Bob Freed, 992-2044. Cost is $25 a
couple or $13 for singles. Cost for
the dance only is $10 and no reservation is necessary. The public is

GUESTS VISn;
Thanksgiving Day guests of
Bertha Bing of Bailey Run Road
were Terry, Sharon, Misty, Travis,
and Jared Sayre; Vernon Darleen
and Tony Bing; Vernon, Shelly.
Curtis and Lauren Bing; Duane,
Diane, Jeremiah and Jacob Bing;
Metissa and Amanda Anderson, all
of Gallipotis; Jeff McElroy of Rio
Grande; Bill, Kay, Joe and Jessica
McElroy and Danny Rees,
Pomeroy; Eric and Janice Bower,
Tom, David and Chrisropher Hudson, Chillicothe.

Herdman, .80 A, to Harle y
Hoschar, Porn. Vii.
Thomas A. Arnott, Carol A .
Arnott, R/W, 10 Donald L. Bennett,
Marjorie S. Bennett, Otivc.
Donald L. Bennett, Marjorie S:
Bennett, 3 A, S. 30, T-4, R-11 , to
Robert R. Bennett, Barbara L. Bennett, Olive.
Southern Ohio Coal Co .,
parcels, 10 Albert H. Sauer, Lucille
M. Sauer, Salem.
JamesF.PoweU, DebmK. Pow:
ell, r/w, to Tuppers Plains·Chester
Water Dist., Olive.
Charles B. Hal s in~er, R/W , to
T. P. Chester Water DISt., Olive.
Burke &amp; Herbert Bank &amp; Trust,
Etc. R/W, to T.P. Chester Water
·
Dist., Letart.
Harold Brewer, Ruby Brewer,
tracts, to Barbara Fitzpatrick ,
Stephen Fitzpatrick, Long BotiOm ,
Olive.
Barbara Fitzpatrick, Elbert Fitzpatrick, Sharon Fitzpatrick, Robert
Fitzpauick, par~els , to Barbara
Fitzpatrick, Stephen Fitzpauick,
Olive.
Wiltiam S. Cole, affid, Omnge.
H. A. Cole, Oneita M. Cole, 1
A, to Jack B. Rood , Victoria S.

Rood, Omnge.
Jack ll. Rood , I A, to ViciOria
S. Rood, Omnge.
George Buckley, Margaret
Buckley,,Lots 120 &amp; 121, to Lowell D. Chevalier, Bonnie Sue
Chevatier, Olive.

6061 UJ562. (Ill CtJiltllla, ~ltd $6.)

Fmnk W. Porter, Jr, 50 l/2 A.,
to mary R. Porter, Sutron.
Hervert D. Coler, dec'd, cert., to
Carolyn Y. Christophcr,Meigs.
Dale E . Hart, Kathryn Hart,
0.500 A, 'F-2N, R·12 W, to Edison
C. Brace, Mable Bmcc, Sutton. ·

.

~

Agriculture agent speaks
i at Wildwood garden club
'

!.. Meigs County Agriculture
, gent Hal Kneen was guest speakr when the Wildwood Garden
l ub met at the Morning Star·
;(Jturch with Dorothy Smith serv~ng as hostess.
11 Kneen showed slides of various
ljioisonous plants found in homes,
~;ardens, fields, and forest. Some
tlants, he said, are toxic only if a
;tortion of the plant is eaten, the
:~· seeds, sap, leaves or stiilks.
~~r plants are poisonous in all
~ons, he explained.
~x~nal poisoning may be
t· upon the degree ·o f eonil'act and internal poisoning may
!depend on· the amount of poison
!substaiiCC consumed in relation to

~

1the weight of the penon.
; To conclude the program he
!Showed several specimens of ,Plants
land shrubs and indicated 111'eu poiS(liiOUS parts. ~ost P!Mts put off a
toxin while ma1urmg '? expel

insets and predators, Kn'een said.
Kneen displayed a large potnsettia noting it is the number one )lOtted plant grown in the Unued
States and each year between 40 to
50 million plants are SQid. The
poinsettias is the most widely test·
ed consumer \)lant due 10 lhe mylh
that it is potsonous. However,
, Kneen said, that studies show a
large amount would have to be
ingested before it is harmful and it
is not an edible plant anyway.
For devotions Mrs. Smith read
"Thank God for Little Things" and
had pmyer. Roll call was answered
by telling about a memorable
Thanksgiving. For the arrangement
of the monlh, Dorothy Smith used
dried camphor, money plant, and
evergreen m a basket. Members are
to Jake a $5 gift exchange to the
holiday dinner party. Refreshments
were served. Doris Grueser won
the door prize.

£1RR'I.ERS N·E-DED
IN

I!OMERQ~

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

POLICIES

going. any
there.

• • •
People who say 'Nothing is
impossible" don't have
teenagers.
It's better to ask some of the
questions than to know all the
answers.

• • •

Our New York friend solved his
parking problem. He bought a
parked car.
• • •
Our country has the highest
standard ol living the world.
ToQ bad none of us ~.an afford
it.

•••

FOR THE HIGHEST
STANDARD OF QUALITY
AND SERVICE, COME TO
RUTLAND FURNITURE.
WE PRIDE OURSELVES
ON SERVICE .
AFTER THE SALE.

•••

7 SHOWIOOMS

. .INFORMATION

II. 124, lutJoM,- ~

·)

'

Shop 'TrwllatTrleft

c_ •..,.,... n.. ...,r
II WAIEHOUSIS

Rutf;nd Furniture
742·2211

,.......

HAUliNG

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL

· TREES

EICAYAnNG ·

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBQUi

DK's·
rvFarmToys

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thur.;day Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

c.u

Words

I
3
6
10

IS
IS
IS
IS
IS

Rate

:.

c....

$
$
$
$

.20
.30
.42
.60

•

•

Monthly
$1.30/day
$.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 momth
Bulletin.Board.....$6.00/inch per day

CLA.SSD'IEDS
~ET

Public Notice

Public Notice

RESULTS ·FAST!

ROGER W. GORANSON,
ATTORNEY
TO THE DEFENDANTS,
DAVID A. FERRY, JANE DOE
(ACTUAL
N A II E
UNKNOWN), PRESENT
SPOUSE OF DAVID A.
FERRY,
AND
THE
UNKNOWN CREDITORS
SPOUSES, .EXECUTORs'
EXECUTRICES, ·
'
ADMINISTRATORS, HEIRS
AT lAW, NEXT OF KIN
DBnSEES,LEGATEES OR
AISIGNI AND THEIR
CREDnORI, EXECUTORS
EXECUTRICES,
'
ADMINISTRATORS, HEIRS
AT · LAW NEXT OF KIN
LEGATEES, DEVISEES
AND/OR ASSIGNS, IF AN~
OF DAVID A. FERRi
WH()SE LAST I&lt;NOWN
PLACE OF RI!SlDENCE
AND POST OF~CE
ADDRESS WAS 32878
ROSE HILL
ROAD,
f'9MEROY, OHIO, 4178~
BUT WHOSE PRES EN 1
REIID.ENCEI
ARE
UNKNOWN A.I'ID CANNOT
WITH
REASONABLE

DILIGENCE
BE
ASCERTAINED:
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
COMMON PLEAS COURT
COURT HOUSE ·
POMEROY, OHIO
THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY, N.A.,
• PLAI!InFF,
DAVID A. FERRY, ET.AL.,
Cauoe No.13.CV•224
NOnCE BY PUBUCAOON
DEFENDANTS.
PtalniiH haa brouahlthlo
octlon nomina you ••
dofandonto In the l.~v•
nomad Qourt by flllna Ito
Complaint on the 3rd day of
September, 1893. The object
of the Comptolnl Ia lo
forecloae tho equity of
redemption under o
mortgligo ogolnot tho
following doocr1b•d root ·
... .tale: j

' Tho .following doocrlbod
real eatale . 1ltuata In the

County of Molg~. Stole of
Ohio and Townlhlp of
S.llobury, end bou~eit and
deocrlbed oofolowo:
PARCEL 1: One hotl acre

Public Notice

Public Notice

of land In the Vltloge of the ptaco of beginning,
Enlorprloe, It being o tot out lnconllon being to c)ftl~:;~
of the land formerly one half acre lot •• fc
conveyed by the Aohworth Commencing ot o otoko
helra, aa-ld real eatate

daocrlbod •• lollowa: A part
ot tho northMotlntctlon of
the ·northweot ·troctlon ot
Section .No. 8,' In Townohlp
2, Range 13, ond bounded
and deacrlbed •• followa:

Beginning 11 the northooot
corner of tho northwoot
qua'-'er of eald aectlom

thenco oouth 40 .rodo
northeaat earner of .

the northweat corner

Codor
thence
along Cedor
Street; l,h ence

Mitt Street
hun•lre.t
ten feet: lhe1nco
Front Stroot
Road; thence
Front Stroot 01
to the plaoo" of
Cheumeto
acre, more or tell.

John M. Stridor formerly
bough! of Tltomu Golden;
Chenoa wool ond wootorly
along .oold north and 1C..i,nty
northwoot line to the Atheno
the '
Rood ; thence otong tho
Townehlp
of
~~~=:~:,r~and
:
1\lhona Road In a bounded end •
ae ,
northeutorty direction to tollowo: 9.ne lot twenty nvo
1
tho wool llno of tho
faotln
wlath
edJolnlng
o
tot
~
norlh.ent. quortor of the
to McKinney Arnold
weoc quorter of oald doodod
l!r., or C. A. M. Amold a;;d
oeollon; lhence north on doted Mey 3, 1870, oald
11ld weot Uno Co tho north twenty ftvo '"' being on lha 1•
. . . .. .
line of uld froctlon ; thence
•
out on oaltl north llno to
Continued on r , 7
11

IIIEIICAN GENEUL LIFE
ACCIDENT INSUUICE COMPANY
Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

o•1o

'949·2168

HAULING
SERVICE

IIIIIICE

992·3470

Over 15 Words

$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00
$13.00

~.

JAMES

RATES
Days

FURNACES3

BENNER'S MOillE HOME

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

•••

AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
'

• Recti.. dilcou.nl for ad. paid in advaDCe.
• Fne Ad.: Cinaway and Found adl uDder 15 wordt will be
run 3 da)'l al DO cha11e.
• Prlee of ad for all capiralletten it double price o( ad c01t
• 7 point liM type only uted
• SeaUnel il nol retpouible fo r erron d t.cr fiJ'al day (checl5.
lor erron
day ad rune in paper).
before 2:00p.m.
day afLIIr publk:alioa lo make correc tion
• Ad. that mull' be pakl in advance are:
Card of Thanka
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yard Saii'JI
• A elaullied adverliHment placed in the Tho Daily S-entin el
(except Clauif..d Di.tplay, Bu•ineu Card or Legal
Nolicee} will alto appea~r in the Point Pltaunt Regieter and
the GaUipol.. Daily Tribune, reac hing over 18,000 home~

raru.

r"•rl will'get you

POOR BOYS TIRES

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES

• Ad. ou.,ide the county your ad run1 mull be prepUd

If you don't know where )'OU're

GUN SHOOT

J.A.R.

Call 992-2156
Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture

ARNOlD'S
PW.IIG,
HUnll&amp;
COOJIIG

CONCRETE
WORK

To place an ad ·

By

The following deeorlbed
foro.,.r bo b.orrod fro,M
pr_l_ tltulltod 111 tho
......
- and· TDWIIohljl of Olivo, County
and lor.or
CHRISTMAS
forther
which of llolga and .... of Ohio:
Baing In 70 ...... lot No.
plalndll
entitled.
TREES
Youare
10ana_. tao, fl'r110Uon 21, Oliva
4464515
the
within Townehlp, llolgo County,
$10.00~~c:h
altar Ohio, •-monolng ot tho
CUPIT &amp; IP,IOUTIIY
ot.thle norlhwoot corner of • 70
Open9to6
will be Aero Lot No. 120; thonoo
I
s different ldndl:
wok
oouth
along
tho
wntam
QUALITY WORK
BOB'S MARKET &amp;
Scofch, White &amp;
W.glvt~end
bounclory 11M of lot No. 120
Auotrf.,
PI
nee,
&amp;
'
to
I'.
Wup IC I•H• In:
to tho point whore tho
&amp;GOOD RATES
upllolttii!Y ttw
GREENHOUSE
Herloy Haning Nlllweewn bounclory line of 70
FIRE&amp;WATER
DAVID
ARNOLD
"SPECIAl.
~·
Mason, W. Va. &amp;
Aero 1.41 No. t20 ln-la
denca, Hl71 Fllllwooda
DAMAGE
theV
~.mmll
(114)112·7474
your failure to the Btato Road No. 241;
GallipOlis, Oh. Locations
Rd., Pom-y, Ohio
RESTORA'TJON.,
POMEROY, OHIO
ell•)
oouth and
anawer or otherwl•• thorioo
ttnW1 mo. pd.
Will Be Closing Tuesday,
' ll2llltl
INSURANCE CUll.
roopond 11 permitted by tho Southoaotorly along tho
'fine
Ohio Ruleo of Civil center of Blala Route No.
24Hour
cltllnlng
Dec. 7th at 4 P.M. for an
Proooduro within tho limo 248 to 1 point whore oold
Emergency
Servl!:e
olloled, Judgment by defoult State Rciu.to No. t41
Employee Christmas
will be rendered agalnll you lntorooota tho Forked Run
RACINE
Dinner.
for the filial domonded In Rood; then .. northooot.rly
tho ComptalnL
Sony lor any inconvenience
and north along tho center
FIRE DEpt,
Lllrry E. Sponcer of Jho Forked Run Rood to a
this may cause.
Clork of Courta point whoro oald Forked
EVERY
Molga County Run Rood lntarooola tho
Common Plou Court north boundary line of lllkl
-c. A '1"1
'RD AV
Counlloull 70 Aero Lot No. 120 to tho
~"' 1 "
"''
Pomoroy, Ohio place of beginning. Bald
6:30 P.M.
_ _,P.:;u.:.bl.:.
lc.:.N.:;ot:..:.:lce:.:..._ 1111 2,1,Je,23,30; (12(7; erc parcel llee In Jho norlh-1
F
Ch o.,
1
comer of 70 Acre Lot No.
8Ciory o...
Daytona Radial 60 ancl70 SerJea
~-.... ,
feet to Cho place of
120.
12 Gauge Shot
e111 alae ot oald hall ocro, beginning .
Public Notice
REFERENCE DEED:
Strictly Enforced
• Low, wide eo and 10 • s.nea
lonnorlv oold to thtoold C.
OEED . REFERENCE :
NOTICE OF SALE
Volume
324,
Pago
81,
llolgo
11/ICIII .mo.
A. M. Arnold and running Volume 280, Page 1081;
porforrnMCI proflee.
Dood Rooordl.
I ~=::;;;~j;
through from Cedar StrMI Volumo 273, Pogo 423, and
1e'::.~1 :::t ~'r'.:! County
•
T..,
•lron9~~~:&gt;e~V•• boltl'
The above clooorlbed roll 11
0641
to
the
north
llno
of
ukl
hoH
Vol.
u
mo
Poaa
·
.
•or:d
:=::;~
•Aggrllllve
trucl cfee9l
ootata
lo
ldendflad
In
tho
ocro lot oolcl and deeded to
•••
•
PINI Court of
• Smooth rldng.polyoator COld
the nld McKinney Arnold MeiJilo County Dll 1
County, Ohio, In Jho rocordo of tha 11111111
·acADEMY
9
R_,de.
of Tho H01111 N..OMI County Auditor by Parcel
body.
rPARCEL 3: Alae tho
EXCEPTING the following Bank, Plaintiff, ogoinot Kilty No. - 7 f .
T\JPPERS
PLAINS
dooc:rlbed real Illata which M
1 o.r.nct Ia
oatato wao
toll.,..lng pt- or lot of waa conveyed to. Foroll L
yoro, It .a ·•
., • Bald real
Balle obedience,
at $2,200.00.
tond ollUita In tho not port Gangwer end Bond. Y L. upon • Judgmonct lhorNaln appr.ed
lllw enforcement,
Tarma of Salo: Caoh
of the northwest quanor of Ga
h ""nd ltd ....._ rendered, being a11 o.
pareonal
prowctlon,
1
Tho roal -~~cannot be
s-ton .. a, Town 2, Rona•
ngwtr, ua....
....., 112-CV-212 In aald Court, t
kltvtel
H!VIct,
pupa &amp;
,
by
deed
rocorded
In
Volume
wlll
oftor
for
.
.
ta,
at
the
aold
lor
lenthl!'
-.tllrclo
13' oI tho Ohl o Company • 293, Pe- 65, .......... Coun"' I
young doga lor ule.
.- • .. ronl door o f th e Court of tho opprolood ¥81~&amp;
Puroha 1net bo •-• d
CALL
II
"""' RICO~".
Ho uao In Pom oroy, Ohio, on
· un...u
10 tt on
.,._
•Jom• M. Seulaby
Ro-ler I lhaphord
d
lb
d
304-773-5533
eacr • ••
owe:
Situate In Sallobury tho 4th cloy of Jan, 11M, II
Shwlfl of llolgo County,
Blud Service
Beginning 11 tho northeoot TownohlJ!I Molgo County, 10:00 o'clock Lm. the
Ohio
Open 6 Day'a A Week
By appt. only
~~norf of 10
a thdabll a~~·11101d1 Stall of uhlo and being fn !ollowlna lends end
-•to oro
Y ,,,.
Sootlon 8, Town 2 North,
614-$17-PETS
John M. Scrtdor to lha utd Rengo 13 Weot of tho Ohio
C. A. 11. Arnold; thonco Comp.ny'o Purchoae end
north 57' okaot 10 rods ond being doacrlbed ao lollowo:
1 1 to a oloko ; Beginning
22 112 In
11 on Iron rod ·
thence aouth 35• eaat 6 South 57• 00' 00" Weet
SHRUI &amp; TREE
redo and 13llnka to a otake; 304.32 feet from on Iron rod .
thence aouth 41' woot 11
·
1
·MobHe and Doublewlde ownen1...
roda and 2 112 llnka to a ollhe
moot ,Point o
otoko; thence north 35• . Harold Blockatone a 5.35
Wholeaale
LANiD.OH.
REMOYIL
weal 8 roda ond 1 link aorao, aa doocrlbod In
&amp;
Retail
Homegrown.Carefully
• Melga County Deed
ll,IGHT HAULING
upRebtll.t
:"C:tnlng one hall of one Rocorda: Volume 232 , Jllgo
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Bob lnowdtn't lot In
RalltlORiblt.Rattl
PARCEL 4 . Aloo tho 539; thence South 57' 00'
ofiREWOQD
WhRt
Pine 4' &amp; Up with
Rutl.,d, Oh.
•
'
00"
Woat
70.88
feet
llong
Jo&amp; .N. Sayre·
followlng dooorlbod land Blockolono'o Southeeot tine
a great selection of
Wboleoal• $10 It fwtn,
BILLSLA~K
al!uata ot Entorprlaa In 10 1 point In State Route 33,
larger treee.
$12 dellvl10d. Rolalllof
~
Sollobury Townohlp, Melga puilngan kon rod ot40.88 ·
992-2269
w1U be opon I Lm. to I
Call742·2143 or
Count)', Ohio, oncl boundf4 fHI for roforonoo: thonoo
p.m. owtlng Nov. 24th.
614-742-2138
USED RAILROAD TIES
742·2979
•• fol!owa: Commonclng ~~
'33' 00' oo• Eaot
T,_••S'to r.
3141931 mo.
the north oomor of a lot on 1!10.00 f•t olong uld Stall
Call814-742-3051,_
Ill• Athono Road oontolnlng Route 33 to· 0 point on tho
aa.~­
one hall ocro heroloforo North olde of Codor Str•t,
t2&amp;.DO-.
-DOZERS
oold to C. A. M. Amotd by r.•ulng out of Porool 4 and
IIS$ELL
oBACKHOE
Call
John M. Scrtder and wllo, nto Porool1 of VolUme 273, .
aold dMd of oolo bolng Page 423, 11 rocontod In Jho
COIIRRUCTION
• •T~K LOADER
HEADIG AID COOLIIG
rocordod ·In Vol. 38, Pogo Molga County Do"d
loNiew
Homes
Glllllpola,
Oh.
44M411 or Toll Frw 1.-.n-t..r
•TRUCKING
-&amp;29, .530 of tho Reoordo of Roaordo; thence North 57'
Do.edo In Mala• County, oo•00" Eoll 70.88 IHJ atona
D.A.· BOSTON I~
ChOOH8nd
OhiO, ond to aald deed the North aide of uld Cedar
rolarenco Ia hereby modo;
cutyourt,.._
1nd .
thence ·In 1 northeut Street to an Iron rod,
Remodeling
dlrocllon otong tho line of r::·~~~ ~:,!:.!~h~=
(614)
Stop &amp; Comp~~re
Riggs Tree Farm)
the Atheno Road 35 loot to I North 33' 00' 00" Weet
llalre; lhonco In an outerly 1eo 00 feet 10 tho point of
FREE ESTIMATES
667·6621
Aooltaprlnol Rd.
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
dlrootlon parottot With the b •
{II eomor of Ul •RL 43) ·
4-ti-83-lfn
north•ut line of 1 lot
aglnntng, pooalng out_of
915·4473
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·
Pomoroy, Ohto
owMd tormorty bY, tho ooitd uld Porcot 1 ond Into uld
712'1193
c. A. lot. Arno d obovo Porco! . 4 of Volume 273,
1112-5702
rot.nod to and lloo paraltol' Pogo 423 II 125 fool for
Carol a Devlcllllggo
wl!h IM north••• llno of reference, contolnlng q.oe
11/ZWII
. HawriL Wrftesel
lox 119
ono ot~er tot or adJoining acree out of aald Plfool 4 of
~
on tho .... oldli o• 10 ld n 1 Volume 273, Pogo 423 and
'
ro 0.20 acree out ofuld Paroot
Middleport, Olllo 45760
.dooorlbod tot and oleo 1 of Volume 273 Pogo 423
J'l~~~ lng
:r.rollol with tho north•at for 0 total of o'.ze ocroo,
(614) 143·5264
"~···
.
., ne of 1 third tot owned by riioro or leoa ucepdng oil
Gutta,..
AT THE
~he Grantee odJolnlng and logol 111 emo;,ll and rlghla
Downspouts
QUAlnY PRINT SHOP
.~
,~•ylng Jo tho oaat of tho ofwoy."
Gutter Cleaning
Mldrl1part, Ohio
~nd deacrlbed tot above, Ttto bearlngo In tho obovo
31904 Le•dl•g
GREAT IELECTION AND
olho dlalonco of three doacrl~:n ora blood on
P•lntJnt
II:toad
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
:~hunciNd •oventy ftvo feet to tho Ro nee Deed: Volume
MORTCA.GECOIIPA.NY
FREE ESnMATES
Porches,
Middleport,
METAL TOY&amp;.
,,. otake; !honea In • 273 Pogo 423 Molga
,)outhweotorty direction and eoU:.ty Deed RICX&gt;~o
1112-3314 1:»4 Mon.-FrL
614·992·7144
·Patios,
flllranot with the Uno of the
Tho obove deocripllon
742-3020 Allor 5:00
tftt
:l'thena Rood, lho dlollnce prepared by l!obert H.
:1-16-113-tln
Hre t-noon 9at IIH
Sidewalks
of thirty flve fMllo the 1111 Eeoon Regtatarod surveyor
)lorner of the lhlrd lot Ohio Rs. flo s-G6546 May
.· 992·7878
owned formerly by tha 1984 ' ' '
'
'
WHALEY'S AUTO
7f1t
prontor, C. A. II . Arnold
o.".d Referonoo: Volume
PAllS
~bove referred to; thence In 292, Pogo· 307 and Votumo
Specializing In Custom
.1 weatorty direction otong 293 Page 95 Uetgo County
Financing Available
CONSIRUCIION
36970 laD Rt111 Road
the tlno of the three loto Do~ Recordo. And for 1
Frame Repair
1-8()()..553-3586
•Dozer •Backhoe
obove ducrlbod three Judgment
upon
a
Pamtroy, Ohio
. . &amp; . . . PIIIIfOI '
Bill
GO
hundred ond oeventy flvo promluory note held by
•Ditcher •Dump Truck
GRAVEL, SAND,
IUUIII&amp;IIOIIU
EVERY THURSDAY
plalntlll aa oxocuced by
tt2~701J or
LIMESTONf,. TOP SOIL
.2
In te1emory
David A. Forry. Tho ret tal
Land Clearing, Ponda,
AJ.IRM
EAGLES
H2-55U
domondod to o Judgment
&amp;
FILL
DIRT
Water Llnae, Septlca
CLUB
ogalnot tho delondont,
or lOlL fill
Our Business is Security
Llcen
..
&amp;
Bonded
Dovld A. Forry, In tho
IN POMEROY
...00.141·0070
In Loving Memory Of
Cherlle
Hetlleld,
omount of Thirteen
Alarm Systems
6:45p.m.
IAIWIII. 01110
OWNll:
Joff
WI«
.....
SHERMAN ROBERTS
Thauoand Sb Hundrod
Operator
Special Ea~y Bird
Closed Circuit TV
Security C81ner.as ,l
Nlnety·two and 781100
who pallid away
742-2903
$100 Payoff
Dollar•
($13,812.78),
with
Dec. 7,1182
Tltia ad good lor 1
New Haven W. V. 25265
lnlereet th•eon at the rate
Another yiar hll como of 8.125% per annum from
FREE card.
Jonuory 1, 1813, until paid,
. ond gono
Uc. No. 0051~2
Cheryl A. James
ptuo tater-; Judgmont for
Since lhl ono wo tovod
(304) 882-3336
(BEAT THE BAN)
tltlo coat 0 , coata for
WilHam C. James
woo catted oway.
protecting lhe real eatata
Tho pain growo dnper
.Co-Owners
and for courl coata; thai
with each Pilling day.
Plumbing
oald morlgogo may be
forectooed oncl tho oalcl rool
Sodly mloeed by will,
oolite daocrlbed heroin !II
Extarlor
Dorothy, Children and
oold
at
,
Shorlft'a
S.to
hlndng
Grandchildren, tho procoodo of oold uto
(FREE ESTIMATEO) .
opptled for poymonl of
CALL AmR 6:00
V.C, YOUNG Ill ,
pla!nllffa ctolm; IUrthor tho!
dofondonto, Jono Doe
304-U5·7256
992-6215
(Actual Noma Unknown),
FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
1tn:IIN I MO.
Limestone
Pomeroy,
Ohio
In Memory Of
l&gt;roaent Spouoe of David A.
..
"Mo-ta-tfn
OR CUT YOUI OWII
Forry, tho u·nkllown
Dirt
LEONARD
Credltorl, 8DOUIII 1
LIMITED BALLED TREES
BASS
Exooutoro, Admltifalr!'tora,
Gravel
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eaot 11
Holro at Lllw, Hilt• of Kin,
December 7, 1991
#'tlll"tl~ onto Rl681, go 4 mi. to Mllepotl13. Turn
Devloooa, Logot111 or
992·7878
Bag~•
One or the other mutt
South on g,.val rolld, 1'h mllea to gro.,.,
Aaolgne ond thllr ~lion,
7f7/1mo.ll
ltavt,
Exooutoro, Exooutrlooa,
WATCH
FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK
Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Admlnlotratoro, Haire 11
One or the other mutt
HooVCI', E!ITeka, Tri-S lar,
Low, Next of Kin,
ttaty.
Regina, &amp; most other brancisl
Devlo-, a""'or Aaolgno, II
One or the other
ony,
.of
David
A. Ferry, ond
grieve,
Parte Shipped UPS
l&amp;L niE
the . Trooouror of liolga
That. 11 forever tht
CoWIJy, Ohio, be roqulrod to
3385ll'lttt Clme IIIII
Fut• O.pandllblt Strvlcel
New Homes • VInyl Siding
way.
onawer aettlng forllt .their
•
...,
Oltle
45771
ololma or ln11101ta In tho
That II the vow that
Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs New Garages • Replacement Windows

SAYRE TRUCKING

Roth geb, Emily Heighlen , and
Scott, lleverly and Taylor Smith.

End' signs too unpleasant? ......---------.

"As a nation, we are becoming
:: . LONGMONT, Colo. (AP) too sensilive to everything. People
;~ Signs wlirning of dead end streets
apparently are too macabre for take off on the darndest things,"
·some people, so the City Council Wilson said. "They take good old
·voted 10 replace them with less sen· Anglo-Saxon words lhat do the job
well, and we get terribly encum:sitive panels reading "no outlet.''
• That's $Oing a little bit too far, . bered trying to get around them.
:say counctlmen Fred Wilson and
"Why, it's hard 10 believe that
:Totn McCoy, the dissenters in last no other city in the United States
•week's 4-2 vote to change the has come to grips wilh these dan'ISlgRS.
gerous dead·end signs."

•Wit ••- ....... Kony, or ..........~ t.:wtt

•••tam

Third Birthday Celebrated
Lian Marissa Hoffman celebrated
her third birthday recently at the
hom e of her parents, David and
Kathy Hoffman, of Middleport. A
Barney and Baby Bop theme was
carried out.
Those attending were her
grandparents, Fred and Pauline
Hoffman and Nick and Ruth
Wright, Jon, Tami, Trevor and
Jordan Buck, Kim Duncan, Brenton
Barnette, Beverly and Nathan
Rothgeb, Mike and Vicki Hoffman,
Nikki Wright, and Brenda, AJ and
Markia Wright.
Those sending gifts but unable to
atlcnd were her great-grandmother,
Ellen Smith, Mark Wright, David
Duncan, Randy Wright, Todd

Public Nollce

IRI·STAIE 1·9

HN~~ggets

Meigs land transfers announced

: ~ ...

..

Janice gave Bud die brusboff two
JfiiJI ago, her modler and I were
relieved. We al!ICiuded that she bad
riJIIIIy realized Ibis jeD: bad no
in&amp;ention of providing a decent life
for her.
Last winrer, Jlllice was llallsfemd
to die East CoasL A month before
she left, Bud's motbcr died, and
Janice went to die funcnl. She and
Bud saw eacb other 111ere and swtcd
up bot and heavy again. She left

next toillllponclm• IIIIo applies 10
you. I hope both of tbe8o flea.bnlined
femlles wiU wake up llld smell tbe

Public Notice

NOVDOJD SPECIAL

GENEUL

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............s180
NORINCO UNI. SKS ........,_............ 595
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE .. s130

HAULING

CHRISTMAS TREES

BUDFORD'S

• Service •

Belts

Lea•-·

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

w• aworn,

Faithful 'Ill daath do
' Ul part.
;Braving what had to
be borne
Hiding the ache In the
heart!
One, hcnnv.r adotwd,
Flrtt muat ba aummoned IWII)',
Thllt Ia tht will of the
Lord
One or tho othar mutt
Ita)':

- ~·nd

milled 10 much,
YDUr wtfa,Ora

5

614.,2-5344

Ada
Ho.ppy 50th
Golden
Anniver•o.ry
Mom&amp;Dad
(Grace &amp;
Ju.gger)!
From lhe

Family

Room Additions • Roofing

I-I00-714·nRE

DEER HEADS
' MOUNTED
Shoulder Motllt ......'155
Hom Moult................ '22

Squinel ...................... '55

PIERSON
BROTHERS

SPORTING GOODS
675-6755

e

Comt by and ragiller
for fret Batlery to be
given away Oedembtr
24, 1993. No purdlau
requlrad to rogletar and
don' have be p~eaent
to·wln.

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

COMMERCIAL and .RESIDENTIAL
JW,EE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
(No S.IIHJ Colltl

ROUDAY SPECIAL

$9

75

AroN SIZED liMES10NE
. 10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER ·

l.l.s "TWID
Now hu beautHul Cocker Spaniel Puppies. Also
featuring • 2 ft. common · Black Tequ. l.ayawaya are
now avallllble for Chrletmu. Sale on our antl~e "'~"- '
of large
·
new aemo.

117

�. Pag~ · 8 Tile Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle(:iort, Ohio

· ~::
T~:;~:;;:~::~::------~--~~~==~~~~:_----~~~~~;::;:::::;--2~~;~~.D~*~~:m:~~7t•~
BEA'ITIEBLVD."' by Bruce Beattie
KIT ' N'CARLYLE® byLury •W1flht
' '

3 Announcement•

32 Mobile Ho!nes
lor Sale

Avlolllnlma.intalnyOUt"-::0•
I i ;- I nnta
untli
• 'Ifill, ...

.eu tea am.

·Houeeholcl

-m.

w...,.

- - oldnnlna. -~~
:r~~ lloor. Aloci molting

•.eutN'Mf
.

..,

800-IS7..S238, •Ill for Mlkt,

~na.

. CNWfonh Grcicety, HenderwDn

:wv. :IOU1!-8404.

2 112 Acno MIL. Do,.. For

• B'l(ll Ago U -lum Build
, Doil- lo Utoe SF (21-2111
' HorMIIt And Mlture For Fun,

114-258-81112, 114-4411-1134.
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Utlgo Count.), Solom l'wp.
18501 ocre. Romoto; booutltul

AOiftlnce

And

Posslbl•

Giveaway

Boddfr1g ·Twin Mon Sot$111, Full
Drowwr ~ $44.11; Cor lod'o
Bynk Bod'o, Poetor Bodo. Full
land; woods, plttU111 and hlllt. Llno Dl 80ulh,..Oiom Voooo
Call for 8QOCf map. t-814-513- Siorll"'! AI $20.00; lnciMIOIIII)1
Shopo • &amp; Slul ata~Jna Al
1545, A,thana,OH.
ts.ao. 2 Locotlono ·Booltlo Auto
Aucl!on Or 4 Mlloo Oil 141.
Optn I A.M. To I P.U. Mon -Sot.
Rentals
For ..... 30" ao• rongo 17&amp;,
1144112-3607.
•

2 gny klttono, 814-80~2315 .
"You think you're tired of Christmas!
3 Smoll Soh Wotor Floh, &amp;14-446I work here all year long!"
2
41 Houses for Rent
8SI5.
,.., old ~ack mat. Lib. to a I
. good homo, to hove room to 9
Wanted to Buy
11 Help wanted
2 B~roomo Convonlonl To
room. 014-446-7554 olllr 9:pm
.~":"'":-:"'~..:;....:;..~.!...~. 1 ~,;_...:;..:.:.;::....;.:..::;~,:;...-- ' .Shopping $2115/llo. Rolarenco 1
Wonlld
to buy: uood mobllo ShlPP1ng &amp; R- 1v1ng. Clork, DopOih Roqulrocl, 114-441-21157.
5 lamolo pupplos, motlly Gorman Shtparlf. •om• Collie. 304- hom•. 81 ~
COL -UctnH Pl'llftrrR. Apply In 2br. houM, New Haven. 304-372·
811W017 or 886-3013.
""'"""
At:
Bu~llt 0114..H;:::5·-===-=--=--:-.,-,--.,(Go
:•!llpo:3011o.) Uondoy -Frldoy, ,;
Cocker Spaniel, Trained Squirrel
T _..
Nice 3BA Ranch !tfYit lie,

t:=;:;:~~==:r.:::=======i

~. Mutt AI.Urt Good
&amp;1~31'9-2684.

Home,

11

Fomoto ngor Kltton To Good
.. Home, 614~6-41118.

Pupplu: Pan Huskey &amp; Lab,
RHdy To Giveaway! All Havt
Blue Eyn, Good For Chriatmu
Shrtdd.d Paper, Good For
P1cklng Or Bedding An/mala,
C1n B4ii Picked Up AI The Galllpollt Dally Tribunt 1 .825 Third
Avtnut, Galllpollt, Ot1 45631.
·To Good Homt, Very Frl•ndly

Kltton, Bn&gt;Wn I Whllo, Spodt &amp;

O.Ciawtd, 514-448-0946.

Lost &amp; Found
Found: Ntw Haven, Copper·
nOMd 811glt, hh by ctr, ~II to

ldornlfy. 304-aa2-3495.

Found: Smlill Chlfl(lll Puru AI
P•rtc Nttr GDC Call-a DHcrlbt,
814-446-8417.
Lost: In Kyger Area, Malt Black
I Whitt Coon Hound, Call 814-448-4893, Atwardl

7

Yard Sale

wiLDTUS, Word Perr.roflcltnl
and Harverd Graphica. Must
IXCIIItnl typing &amp;
eel
P9llllh

offJee orgtnlzatlon tkllrt. SU.ry

commensuraee
wtaxpertence.
P t - forward nsumo &amp; oalory
history to the Pt. PltiHnl

Aegllfar, P.O. Box A-29, 200
Mafn St., Pt. Plauant, WV
25550. EOE.
Amtrica,. Home Clre Is CurNntly Accepting Rnurnes For
The Poelton of Branch Manager
For Our Jackson, Ohio OHk:e.

Wo Stok A B.S.N. or R.N. With
At lNit 3 Years Home Health

Experience. Managemtnt Experience A Plut. Excellenl
Salary And Benefits Package.
Send A11ume To linda Davlt:,
AmariCIFII Home C.rt, 304 East
Main Str118t, Clrc ..vllle, OH

Gallipolis

2940 after 5:30pm.

Wanted:
Babya/tler
With
Flnlblt Houf'l, To Babyllt In My
Horne, 814-258-1481 After e P.M.

18

Wanted to Do

=:-:==:--:.;,::,.,.;,,.:,;....,._

EIR TREE SERvtCE. Topping,
Trimming, Trw~ Removal, H~ge

Tl1mmlng. FrH Esllma1111 8f4367·7951""Afltr 4p.m.
Gentral Maintenance, Pafntlng 1
Yard Work Window• Wathea

Gut1er11 Clotnld Light Houllng,
Commertcal, Resldantlal, Sttve:
614-4441-1158.
Gtargn Portable Sawmill, dan't
haul yow logs to the mill Ju ..
calf 304-aTS-1~57.
Have ¥aelncy for ladln for pertonal Cll'll, bed patlants prtftr·
red or llml-lnvalld, 614-140.

43113 or Coli 1-'00-285-11098
&amp; VIcinity
And Alk For Linda Davit. E.O.E.
3014.
ALL Ytrd Soloollust 8o Pold In AN OHIO OIL CO. otto.. High
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Income, Plus C1ah Bonuset, Ml11 Pau1a•1 Day Car~~ Center
the day betorw lht 1d 11 to run. Benafltt To Mature Person In U-F 6 A.U. &lt;5:30 P.M. Ouollly
Sunday Millon - 2:&lt;10 p.m. Gallla Arta. R~•rdlta ot Ex· loving. C.rt For
Chlldrtn
F~doy. Mondoy odhlon - 2:00
perlance, Wrh• K.L. Rud, Our 11 OoiL Part·Tlme, FUll·
p.m. s..u... y.
ALUBCO, Box 426, Dayton, Ohio TlmeL Fed. A11ittanc1 Avallablt..
Call t-Or lntonnauon Or YltH, InRl. 160 In VInton. Tuq,.WICI., 0. 45401.
font ITodclt&lt; 814-441-'227. Pn?I New Cur1aln1, Btdalothlng, Baby.ltter nHded Long Botlom School,
· Schootogo,
B&amp;A
F ohlng Lureo, Toyo, Lolo Mort. arN. Plttll 8an~ namt, num- School, 514·448-'224:
Mo8t Item• New..
ber, er:Ptrlenct and raftrenc11
to: 633V7 S.R. 124, LongBottom, Will Bobyolt In Uy Homo, Flm
Avonuo~ Golllp611o, CPR Con.
8
Public Sale
Ohio.
Full Or ~•n-nmo, 114-441'0168.
(,&amp; Auction
lobyoltttr noodod: 2nd shift,
' .
r.f. rwq., ~II 814-99.2·75.\18, leave
Rick ~rwon Auction Company, m...age for Anglt.
Fmanctal
full time auctlon•r, complete
auctton
ttrrict.
Ucenltd Domlno'o PIZ21 of Pt. Ploaoont
IM,Ohio I WNI VIrginia, 304- It now titling application•.
21
773-57811.
Business
Full 111111 managing cosmetOIql.t, Mlddltporf ,,.a, Hnd
Opportunity
9 Wanted to Buy
nOWIIO 1o: P.O. Bok 72118,
INOTICE!
30' to 31' afflce trailer or 35' to - . . , , Ohio 4117118.
OHIO VAW!Y PUBLISHING CO,
recommondo thai rou do bullu·
mollll """'"· -~~~
Cloonlna. Will Do n-orlot,donol
wflh poop1o rou k.- ond
loonlng
&amp;
Oltlco,
lumh...._ ~1554.
Ro,hf•IOotrncooiCto Anlllble, Dllltn- NOT to oll\d monor 11v0Uiil.iho
mall uniU rou hove ln-fptod
dablo,l -~ 814-38J1.1821.
lho otlorJni.
lm-1 D!&gt;onlngo Avolloblo
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Few C.rtlflttl Nu- Aldto. ComPIIklwl W- Dtflarontol Wllh Now eon,m..Jot- Home Unitt,
Expeolouco, Sign On Bonuo 1n1m sm.oo, Lompo, Loliona,
Avol.-, Eq,.l ~unly Ace au err-. monlhiJ' INIYinlnte
low oo SUI.OO, coli !odor FREE
1anl
NEW Color Cololag, 1-109 412- - ·"Diroctor
· Contlc101 ThoNurotng,
- · t117.
.
P I - Core Co-. 11'11

•u

":!!

:=w:r

:.~~~:"lpatlo, Ofl1o

J &amp; -D'• -...o Pa111 1nd S.lv~g~,
altD buying Junk care a trucb.
301-773'5343.

Junll Aulo'o To Buy WIU Plck.Up
Appllancet, Any Olhtr Mttalt

F-, 814-446-l1121 Bolon g P.ll.
Wanllldi To Buy: Junk c.,. 1

Truc:ka At Top Prlce &amp; R...

toroblo Core, 814-311-H54.
Wanted To Buy; Junk Autos
With Or Without Motora. Call

Lorry Uvlly. 814-388-9303.
Wlnlecl To Buy: Ratl Ttrrltr

Either Younvor lluppy. 614-37S-

:ma.

Wonlod To Buy: Stondlng nrn&amp; Pint, Good Prtcoi, 114-

bor

311-tiCII.

Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
~nl, Oo6d Atnal.lllwr Coins,
Oold Coins. IIT.S. Coin S!lop,
151 S.COnd Avenue, Oalllpolle.
WANTED: onglno lor' 1111 Food
Fatlv•, 4ap., 1.3 lher, needed

ASAP, c.ll 814-992-2155, 1:30am5:1)9pm. or 114-992-2428 afltr

5:00j&gt;rp.

.lOIN A W1NNfNQ TEAM
..
"",...A 1.-M In Tho Anonclol
10 Aroo, 8o1na A llombor

Real Estate

1-----...;..___

01 Our Conoumor Ffnonco room 31 Homes lor Sale
Utano Having A Qood Ptoco To
Start. m VOu S.it-Motlvalld.
Auortlwo And Enloy Dooling
Wl1h Pooplo? A Ploooont Por·
oonalhy And Good Phont Sklllo
AN A Mutt. RnpantlbllhiH I""'
1a tllnlnllftiOIII. 304-&amp;7&gt;
elude ktlvlll,. Rttotod To 4br.,
4142
orl0+a71-"30711.
Credit,
Slloa,
Account
Managemtnl And Accounting. In Galllpoilo: 3 Bodroomo, 1
For Jmmedlatt Contldlrallon Both
Whh Extro Room
Conlaet: Guy Morrow AI 614- And lliih, .llr, Low 80'1, 814-4484411-2208.
5321,
.
EQUAL .
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER MIFIH
NON·SMOKING AND DRUG
FREE ENVIRONMENT

e.r-

MAJOR TELEPHONE CO. Now
Hiring. Ttchnlcl•ns, lnltalltrt,
Accounl Service RtprtHn-

Dolly SontlnoJ, PO BOX n9H

Pomeroy-, Ohio 4576V.

'

Atl--...-..aln
tiWI ••

l"'"' .illiilliOd lo

tho F - Flfr Houllng/&lt;f?.

al t G 6 8 - - llttgot

1 o - "onypoolttltiOO,

Read the Best Seller

lrnbllon 01 dloctlnltllfiOn
baled on r.c::., oolor, rwlglon,
MX
or MIIIDnll
origin."' lilY ~to

,.........u.

mo~o~onr....,

.,..,.• ..,,

lmlladon or c:lllc:ftnNUon.•

Th1o nowap-wtl nol
1Cnowtngly liooopl

otMiiiiMmlnlatorNif-

-·ln-allho
Jaw. O u r - . . ,....,
Informed ...... dl Jlllngt
adltlf'Uiedln Uil .... rw~•
... OV-OIIInoqual
oppoilunlfy-

32 Moblle'Hornea
for' Sille
11177 3 lodr"""' Uolllio ~ •
614-245-1815 Evonlngo, tc.SOO
Finn.

Read the

GtASSIAED RDS
'•

42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

mobile home,
Minersville .,..~ r.ftrwnett &amp;

2

bedroom

dopook roqulrwa, 514-992-e777
aher 5pm.

2 Btdroom Trallw, S2251Mo.

Pluo utllllloo, And O.poan, 514441'4110.
2 bedroom lrollor1nf &amp; dtp, AI.

62 N. Locuat Ra on right, na
polo.304~l075.

3 Btdrooma In Porttr Am,
$23fllllo. Dopoah1 _ You Poy
utllllloo,l14-35&amp;.81..,,
Fumlahtd n1ry cl•n 2 BR.
Waterltrath .-ldi In Porttr arwa,
UOO.oo month. Doposlt. 614388-aDOO
Mobile home for rtnt. 12 x 65
:Jbr. $225 ~r month plut
utnn~oo. CoiiJ514f 388-9708

1Wo bedroom mobiJ. homn tor
IWnt. alto IPICH for l'llnl stlr1·
lng ot 1151mo.• 8144112-2167. .

NiwAJ•IId

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Galllpotlo. N-&amp; Utod
.~
we.t.rn &amp;
lu mhurt, h _,,,.,
Wolit hoo1o. 114-441-315g,

53

Antiques

Buy or aell; Rlv•rf• AntiC~UII,
1124 E. Main StiHt, on Rt. 124,

Pomeroy. Hou.-.: M.T.W. 10:00
1.m. ta 6:00 p.m., Sundar 1:00
to 5:00 p.m. 614-11112·25211.
Will ' Bur Dno Mom Or Eoaotoo.
Dove~a Ntst Antlaun, 336

Fridoy V:30-8.

121 Cole S.r.tt, Middleport, uppor opartmo..'ll. 1150/mo. pluo
utllltiH, 114-w-.::-7511.
2 Btdroom Apartment, Located:
466 112 Fourth Annue, Gal·

54 MiscellaneOus
Merchandise
1983

Dod"'

Colt, runs, $250;

w.tdl~ gown, VIII, 1111 7, $50;
MW COI1m1n Pmldentllnl Evcon furnace, motor, blower, S!Oi

loo, $1,200,. · fM·371-

--+8512

..,.,.,.

1181 Br--.1 Uobflo ~·
3 Bodrooino, Oordon Tub, .llreodr l!.o!:IJp, Coil 114 241 M22
Aftt&lt;l P.ll.

71111"- '"'

anllqUI~niW
. ,., II d
• Wilt buy

houoohotd turn

;:~":':.~-~'!""wv. ~
Rcokoy Pol.;;;n:"aai771-p41,

Som Somorvlflo'o Anny ........
olnOIIIcoco t~lubv lllainoldlcar!_~
·- •A
_,,.
liZ. Junior ldcll 4 ID '•en
XXXL. Conipetl11wo ..... ,,._
Sot-sun. ~ OlhOr tlor. .
arid houro. IFI
n_,.,. 0
orongo laDkota. 30"'_,""
. ·••
.......,,~
Soon oxorchoo bfko, s:zQ. 11411112.a127.
i
·
Soon romoto conlrot joop, 125,
814-1'12-23117.
Soooonod Fin Wood, teo,
deli'*'rtd In Pt. P..._nt .,...,
*-'7W07S.

"""'=

Solo • Cho~:.~-- 2 Lampo,
1 SW-r.
Condition, 814245-9193.
lomo oldtr 1oblo!1 f15 -h;
oholr11, $1; 114-1112.;ul7.
lloorto Cord CoflooUon "" Olio.
304.a&amp;2·253V ottor lpm. •

56

tQIU
.KJIOI
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

ky. Ford TK motor 300 .1715.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE: tt$5 Buick Umho1f . Edhlon,
Roc-nlzod lloto I Elloc11vo
By good&amp; ·ohopoilll1400. 411roo 15"1i2
UB~Co
"
••
,..,. For •llorinory rog2. 2 mu onow, $10. 304-8
Agolnoa
Hook,1 Round
1-lno
To...-1n Dogo
Colo. m:
Avolloblo o-r-e At: J.D. North Wonlod: '14 ond Coprico
Producod 114-448-1933.
Clooolco, Bro~homo qr LS1 4
d-, v.a; loo
. ,olw high
PeklngMI' MaiM. AMdY For mlltaSJI, 114-742·
.
Chrlltmaal$200, 814-448-47tt
Yur-End Solo! 111113 ~ f'ttmoldh
Pum Poloco Pot Shop. Acclolm 12,000 Ulloo I.8,7V!J;
LoCO!Ocl tn G.C. MurphY Co. Go~ 1193 Plymouth Acetoin!, ..,ooo
llpollo. Now opon. 6i4-441-G404. $8,V50; Romolndor D1 Foet!Jry
Worronty
n -~~
av Nlo·- t o r pupo, oxc. podlgreo, oon
240SXOn
Loodod,
Sf,000,_1884
~nto on premloao, 1300. 304- f'onl Rongor, 6\000 Mlloo,
l'S-4III5.
!~,11115. 61(-448-7770, 814-448Schnauzer puppl... mlnlaiUfWI, uw3 After 5 P.M.
AKC. chompiOn bloodllnos,
Ctr:"~.:~~. wormod, 72 Trucks lor Sale
'84 Ford 250 olckup, 4 opood,
1Wo Cocko1lllo lor - · emoo. $1300, 614·1112·23o6.
otd, booutllul, hnhhY.~ond tod,
$30"" ooch bird. 61(·1'12·.,.,.,., 1187 GUC 1 Ton Dutt Whool,
,....
SIIOO, 614-448-0711.
1W5 4WD Chov. 350 outo.. Jolr
51
Musical
cond., 11B50. 304-871-2457.

1

BARNEY
.,

PAW II MY BUTTER
AN' EGG MONEY AIN'T
UNDER THAR !!

1112 Non1o 111110 Jrdor. ~
llpKJouo Roorno Wllh Cothoitrol Coli- Tll~houl. Tllreo
Bodroom, "Two Bolli. Huao Gotdon Tl/b In ......... Bot~. Ovor
1200 llq, Fl. l.att Dl ·~
.Hoo All Tho blroo. .__ In
.._ 11t111 Ono Yoor. l i i Condlllon, 111111 loo To ,....
-loll.
Col ~
I.Mve lloooogo If No An-.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
~..,-..;...:!.;;;:::;;:
':A
ppl-luot ott R1. 149, ono milo
_,h of Coiptnlor. Rod ond
Goklon Dolckiuo opploo. Opoo
SI1Urtloyo onlr.

_ _,_

15 IT 5TlLL RAIII1N6

AM I BLEEDING?

Novlk

::00."'1:,

ENTEiPkliE's

ot•-

=::

'.!:.. •·

:::&lt;.-:

:=;::·:-:::-.-:---=--

I

•m·

n•

or,.,.,,._

Singer -

·-·un

57 NltM of

·--

IIUII.)
58 Pod

• I • W

URWVDXIXSYD

YD K E

8

H BID

VDKFRD
TZR

IHTaEF

XZD

N D H H .

When in a sage stage, Bacon realizes that East must have both minor·
• suit aces for bls opening bid. The cor11 ·' L
reel plan Is to lock West's IODB spades
tMPPY ttlf'PO t40Pf'ING e : out of the &amp;ame. Anti that Is tloDe by
l ____.....;;;.!!~~:_..;....;.._..;.....;.....:..;;:;.:.:;.:.;..:....:.;.:~,.:..;.;.._...;...:....__.....;.....;__.;__;..;..__-' sacrificing a spade trick. Bacon ducks
the lint trick. West wins the second
trick with the spade queen and leads a
...
third
round to declarer's ace, but now
,.
.JlY..&gt;T
&amp;oa:£.
TiaE'~~
the contract is safe. South just plays
Tf\t~5EUI~
tiE: e.oo:.HT
011 each minor suit in turn, coming to
Dille safe tricks.
~51Gl·
NolO "' l.lTTl£
It doesn't matter how slowly you
_ PERV~
Bl.f:lo.lER!
start a race as long as you cross the
-'flOUT~
flnlsbiDg line flnt. A3k your local hare
and tortoise if you doubt it.
~€.WOOPAA'6

I

PIAZXDK

KDFVRQLF
KDBHHE

I

XR
TIOX

XR
TIO . '
FCFIO
HCUUI .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "No p i - will say anylhlng of - . g 1111• a
match. n'a an unwrfllen law." - John McEnroe.

winners: one down .

WOlD
tAM I

!

I
I

t-.

fORSI()W ...

DATE BOOK

-

Dec. 7, 1993
Today is the 34Jst
day of 1993 and lite

r-------------~

FCQOUR'

FOLLOWED BY'
GR'L..IM6L!Ne
HQI..-\e:CM-1-JERS

AReA .. .

WITH SHOv'EL.S.

AND NON, THE

WEATHER
•

J

J

-ROBOTMAN

prediclions lor the year ahead by mailing GEMINI (May 21-June ZO) Someone who

ASTRO·GRAPH

$1 .25 and a long . selt · addressed knows how to ma ke a good presentation

stamped , enve lope to Aatro-Graph , clo might offer some suggestions today that
th is newspaper . P .O . Box 4465 , New sound nifty , yet are impractical. Don't be

..
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

••

•.

$=.,
w~needliy ,

77th clay of fall.

Dec. I, 11183 ·

In lhe year ahead lhere are strong indica· tions you might develop several new con' dulls lor generating income. Wha l makes
• il so admirable is lhal each may be your
. own creation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) You are
still in alavorable cycle lor the lullillmen1
ol your hopes and e • pec1alione . The
· secret 1o ypur success lies In your abilily
10 translate into practicallly lhat tor which
you're wishing. Sagittarius !real yourseH to
a birthday glh. SOrtd lor your Aslro-Graph

York. N.Y. 10163. Be sure to slate your
zodiac sign. ·
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan . t9)
Conditions ·are presently developing in a
manner that could enable you to fulfill a

secret ambition you \•e bee n harboring .
Give it priority today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Regard lite
philosophically loday and don 'l anlicipale
negative' results before you've given

lahan in .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You m1gnt Joel
like an underachiever today il you don'l
push yourself to your outer boundaries. Be
productive and industrious, but don't take
on mora than you can manage .
LED (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you m1ght
visualize yoursell in the instruclor's role.
only 1o diocover the person you're aftempllng to teach actually knows more about the

things a chance to work out. A positive subjac::t than you do. Be a student, not a
atUtude enhances possibilities for sue- snob.

cess .
PISCES (Fob. 20-llorch 20) Sometimes
il's unwise to make changtl or adjust·
menla In plans which are already in
progress. Today, howevar. you mighl be
able lo Improve your lol by doing so.
ARIES (Mirch 2t·Aprll 18) II you heve IO
make a choice loday baaween expenmen1ing with new methods or procedures or
stic king wllh lradillonal ones Ihal have
proventhemlllveS, hangontolhola11er.
TAURUS (April 20-Uor 20) 8e alan lor a
shift in oondllk&gt;nsloday where your woil&lt; or
career is concerned . If you're caught olf
guard you might miss a window ol oppor!U·
nity thai will have a briel exlslence .

VIRGO (Alii. 23-Sepl. 22) Possibilities tor
persona/Jilin 1oo1&lt; rather slrong loday, provlded you have a solid game plan and
aren'l depending too Aheavily on chance to
flQ In the bai8 spo1S.
UBIIA (8lpt. 23-0cl. 23) You might be a
bil more darlng than your contemporaries
today and lhis is okay . .provide you use
good judgment and shift out impulses that
are 100 erratic.
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24·Nov.
22)
· OjJportunili8s ol a financial nalura may be
avallabls to ·you loday, bul not necesaartly
10 your conlemporarias. I! you're participoling In something privileged. keep il to
yoursell.

""

'

1/W;

%~

~-:; ~'«
'
$;"; ..,]&gt;!"

)

"""'

~'•

" ' " '"

«

'

"'""

, .

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1941, Japanese carrier-based planes
made a surprise attack on the U.S.
fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Mary Stuart
0542· 1587) , Queen ol Scots; Willa
Cather 0873-1947) , writer; Joyce Cary
(1888-1957), wriler; Louis Prima 09121978), ·musician: Eli Wallach 0915 ·),
actor, is 78; Johnny Bench 0947-), baseball great. is 46·

!TUESDAY

1

'

...

Mr:III~IIDIIi!l

MORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP

Bo•

.,-

AdShort jackets

41 Dl¥0111'1
51 Bl,llcllltlbo
53 One oppoaad
541--

Dime,

,!.

()pp. ol max.

J48 Allow - p i

brightest, me11nest of
mankind:
Or ravish'd with the whistling of a

r--

MORS ANIMAL GRAMMAR

Dlo_.,,

P:u.·

41
43
45
47

shin 'd,
The wisest,

ISN'T Tl115 GREAT, C~UCK? GOOD
OLD ~A5!-liONED, DOWN IN Tile
DIRT FOOTBALL. !

··-

38 Elec:lllllod

39Actr- -

IMne!

11811 9-10 2.5.5ood Q,OOOml., .
$3D~:'"' cond., lor lntonnolion
TS-fi4V.

Pe:

0U::

nacoleot

II parts allure thee, think bow Bacon

1988 Chivy pickup, Bllvorldo,
Eood cond, 211011 ol • .,,..,
,000 mlloo, bluo voluo
,4V5. L. L; Smith, . VOS
Mottmon Clralo, 304~-3222.

.;;i!ll

1 Capital of
Ukrain• •
Z Non-prolll

Alexander Pope obviously didn't
have much time for Bacon or Crom·
well. He wrote:

Trodolor Cor. 114-~2.
1185 DodJII :114 Tlin Plok-Up,
Autom1111;, U,700,.f14-21U30D.
1188 Chovrotaa C.10 sl'ia v.a
automoltc, AC, PS, .Pi, ii,ooo
l'niiH, aar.ge kept, MSOO, 114112-2171.
- .

G
,
ood

DOWN

8 Scol140
lllakaollco
10 Jol t! GIYIUP
tl Pro- (lor
till time
bolng)
21 52, Roman
23 Fllh ogeo
25 Cope Konnodr roc~••
26 Rotlltrrlilt
27 lluelclan AI

32 Rodelitl
35 RICIIum

=
58

org.

3 -·Saints
(Mormono)
4 ComedianPhlllpo
5 Gralullloo
6 Zodiac algn
7 Shorloloap

28 Alvor In
France
30 Bhlpbolrdlng
plaHornt
31 Nortn c.roll-

Well, if Bacon was the wisest, he
would solve today's deal successfully;
but in bls mean season, he would fall.
West. luckily not havinl a heart, led
bls fourth-hipest spade. How should
South plan the play?
Bacon, when ln mean season, sees
two spade tricks and wins East's spade
king with the ace. Then he leads a club.
East grabs the ace and returns the
spade seven, West being careful to
duck the trick to dummy's 10. South
may take eipt tricks: two spades,
three hearts (Including the flnesae) and
three clubs . But when he leads a diamond, East wins with the ace and returns bis last spade to West's three

Bu~ Cllrtnot Good Condition
1100 14-3~Z72I.
'
Spinel Conoalo plono. Wohlod
~blo ponl to mokt low
~~~::s.Soo locolly.

item•

83 Olllca table
64 Roleted

By Pbllllp Alder

I'

no' anawer

!NT

1 _J,ooko
=~~n~st:;:..ru:;m;:;:•,;;;nt:;:s:....,,_ GDDd,
11178 Chivy
Rune Bt;:~
:MI 4x4
tt.Sou,
Or

-Pol .::...:......:..:::!.,::...:::.:::.:.__

or'

Pus

YOlclftO

61 Grallld, In
h111ldry
62 Cla"lll40

of that ilk

-·=

'"a

INT

See Cromwell, damn'd to everlasting

Pli&gt;no

·r.;,.:..t-:-;o;;. ::;'

N.....

v....

Fr,ancis

.

-t-

0111

Well

lOCI I

52551cod56 Huvonlr Cltr
58 GIIP
51 An uploolvt
60 SlciHan

Opening lead: • 4

r14\12'?'=

teo1

Soelb

movll

SQ Low-ealorll

33 Antolonl
34 lrrillltd
38- - carle
37 llonk '1 IIIII
38 No man-Island.

SOUTH

~:'ilt~~":a~~~~

Pets for Sale

lla~u lnto

llllllor
I Tlc· - ·toe
12 Muallm prarorllodor
13 Country of
Alia
14 Frolllr brow
15 Opp. of ondo
18 ...... ltrbl
17 Clllld
18 Large tub
1e 1110 - lung
20 Bordltl'a cow
22 llloro
24 Hindu
g1rment
28 Purity of
color

21 - counter

•us

1V112 Dodgo Bho- 2 0oon
Auto lAC 16,000 Ul~ M 200'

Sllhl 044 chain HW, 11' bar,
114-112.&amp;510.
111110 9-10 4eyt. whho, A.R.E.
llpollo Upotolro, $245/Mo. $150
1350. soe cor rsmpo fill. :104Farm Suppltes
rima, bedllner, b.dcover, llaht
675-8182.
I
Otpotlt, Stove, Refrigerator, 20 channel Baai'Cit Kinner.
COVera, etc:.. $!1500. 304-811Wollr Fumlohod, 614-441-3570.
&amp; I. 1vestock
2235 aftor lpm.
1•• like new, 1'75, ThrM pJaca living room aulta.
2 Large 8-.:troome, 2 Floora,
crNm, IXcel*'l oondHJon: w.;.
18tl GEO Traclctr 4WD, auume
CA. 1 112 801~ ~ Pooto, Potlo, 351 C.ramle Moldt, Kiln, Pour- room 1utta. good oondlllonj 114payment•. 304-88$-3201 or ns.
$320/Mo. No Nit, I.NH PIUI lng Toblo, Blip Miiohlno llony lt:!.am.
3551.
Socurhv DIDooH Roq .. rod, Seasonal hemt, $7,000 V.lut, Twin ala wood captalftt bed
2 '71 1135 -!J-Forg. .n wl(h 1181 GUC Slorro 2500 Aoklng
Daya li4-4414481. Evanlnga; a. 13 000
• • 1'14-448-4 658 ·
drawwa1nct 411he&amp;Yn: wllh
10 P.U. 114-367'1850.
0111, 105 HP, 1300 b!&gt;uro, 1-*=7.=100-";'-::114-441::---..;.;_,.0;;,731::--.=-,,--.7 Pleco Living A...., Suitt, l'"'lnd ... oprlngo, 1!10, 114- .,0,000;
.1114, 1112-3034.
·
·I ;
2lldrnL lplo.,'i•.a -lrfc, IP- $150; Wood . With· · - - 11114711..
•
1
1112 ChoV. S-10 P.U. A"o
l'i / ,(
PQancet tumlahld, laundry Flowered Cuthlonl, 114.-., Unlden UST
. . . . . ·2 montlni ..-dd,..
814f:4~~-~;..!'l2"::t
1100
room lacllltl11 ctou ta IIChool
~var wllh 10" dM,: 1101 ~ 327
In town, A~ltlon• available 1510.
1987 Chov 9-tO BJuor. t4 885;
II: VIllage 'GfMn Aptl, 14g ar. 8 pc. Norltake China Set, Plymouth VIP, 4 door, 40,400 454 lm.-lonot Tlilctor Wllh Two 111BB Toyoto P.U. Auto; Hlali
'-tndary Sorloo
boo onglnol mlloo• -..mo 22 Loadw $1,050; 240 lntamet1onal 1 Mlln, Runa Good 12,HIIi 1011
col1514-992-371t. EOH.
;;-..:.,, 114-11112.atla2. novor
n month loooo· 1i1Dt BUW;N IS, With Plow 12,500; 4020 John Dodge VIola S.W. · 1187 Chov. s2br. all electric, appllanc11 turDoort 81,150, 114-21111-8622.
tO P.U., A..'!i iiiai·Toroli P.U.
••condition;.
low
nllhed, on tHe m1nagamant. AAA,
S.atonlld FlriiWOOd, •
mlt•gai 114-ta..em. , r
\
.
11,615; .11110 l.ihov. P.U.'Y-81Ago
Lauart1nd A~a., New Haven O.llverad And 8t1cktd P.U.
C.oo 1210 dloool. lroctor, Now Runo Grell fl.tH· (1188 Chov
utllMy trotlor, i'd~. · $200. Hotlond g&gt;lntlor mlur, WV. EOH 304-882-3716
' Lood SIO,I14-28M7M.
Ho~ 4X4 1 Ton PU $5,3H; Chov
tO;o®ib hitch; lifo FIIID, $75. land
711. hi)' bind, John Deere Van $2,495· ·tvae Chev S-10
3 Fumllhld Aoomt &amp; Bath Attontlon: ,.,.....lly lloo molftot Fll&gt;oraloooloppar lor 8-1~ $250.
1240 4 row plonlo&gt;, AC no till Bluf!i 1i1114 Clltv. S-10 B-r.
OownataiN, Clea'!r. No P1t11 , deale,.. mite. llll'nl •II for $100 304-0,WIIS.
plontor, Krouoa 1211. troctor 1981 &lt;Ohov. 314 P.U. !!171&amp;; UD
Rlference And uaposlt R• 614-ID2-7B42. 870 Poo~, Ul~ ==~::===,.,.._--.,.­ dl
.., oM good cond. 304-m- Aulo Soloa, Hwy. 1ou N., 114dlepon, Ohio.
WATER LINE SPECIAL:~ Inch
qulrld, 614-448-1519.
448.a855.
..
200 Pit flUS; 1 Inch lOG PSI 4215.
Fuin)llhlld, 3 Roomt &amp; Bath. Brown coat, Imitation fur, 1lz1 h3:~i Ron Evant Enttr'Df'IHe, !IJdro.. lo oti,IID gol S1a5. Sldoro
Va
..
Vory Cloon, Wolor &amp; Trosh Pold, modlum, ~:J.nhy, llko now, .taoQon, Ohio, t-100-131-01211.
EqulpmontL Hond...ou, wv. 73
ns &amp; .. WD's
55
I14-311B-81100.
' 8t4-9411.
WATER STORAGE TANKS 304-475-l'l:n or 1-llOO.zTI-3917.
1185 full elu Bronco XLT, 381
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Ch~otmoo Treoo, 7' or 8', $10 &amp; Above And . _ Ground FDA
·
Clov: *'lllno,
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON $15. 304~75·1484.
Approood For Pcloblo Wilt&lt;, 63
.U vestock
amlfrnlcna.,tt.. alum!rawn turEST~ 538 .taokoon Plko Chriotmso T-o, Slnlo'o Elvo~ Ron Evono En1arprii0Jo Jock- .;..:;_ __;;:.:.=:::.:;:;;.._ _ bln whHia, n•w tlrlt, runt
fnlm
/mo. Wolti to shop &amp;
greo~ 114-141-2010.
.
&amp; •moll tnoo&gt;. ••
h
:oon::"',.;;Oh.;;lo,~1~-~-ID;;:_'t5.:::..
::·_ _ Cottle
Any1lmo,
movloo. Coii614-446-2SH. EOH. have 1•·~
Anywhoro.Houttna:
PLA Allloboro
Ohio,
Building
Evory Mondor. Clluok Wllllomo, 1t88 Nluon 4x4 P1thfinder,
B-h 91. Mlddloport, Oh 1 I ~..~· North on HI. 2. 55
Ttlpto
. Crook Trucking, 814-245- lo.od~1 _o•c. cond., $11000. 304·
2br. turnlohod opto., utllltloo
8111-3.....
Coiorocl
lllovlolon, toblo rnodot • . ~:::-:=S_up:.;p:..l_le_s.,...._,_
- ·
pold, dop. I rot. 304.atl2-2566.
S40,
11,4-T42-23W.
"'
Block, brtclt, - • ...,.., wln- llolololn Bull Co~ No Sundoy 76
•
Flm
Hotror· Apo~monto, 1
Aulo Parts B.
Commodoro
14
compua"
30
dolft,
lln1tto, ole. Cloudo Wln- Collo,ll14-31f1.8524.
Second Avenue, Galllpoll•. 814- dloc llllod wlgomos &amp; bciotco, ton, Rio
Orohdo,
OH
Coli
114Accessories
441·1800 Senior, Dlaablld, 1 fiOO. Whl~poot Hot Spo, llko ;24:_;1;..-512=t:...._ _ _ _ __
Roglolt&lt;~
Llniouoln-brotl
1
Handlco~ 1 &amp; 2 Bodn&gt;Om
COWII,
brod
holtore
yoorllng
Uld
4 Chivy 4WD1 lug roiiO, whHio,
Unho. Rtnlo Boood On Adlutf~ now, $30. Sot ""ddlng lingo t c
2 yr. old IKIIIo, 114~98-2755:
bollllly rlngo • Ctnlll'o, rool niH
lncomo. fliHA Suboldlzocf. HUD opprelood for 1100-150 will Nit 56 Pets tor Sale
cond., $25D firm. ~1564.•
64 Hay &amp; Grain
~lflcoloo Accoplod. 114-441· tor $75, olzo 5. :!OW'Ii-3184.
1IOOI Equot H-lng Oppor. CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS Groom
ohdAU8uPoiY
5 Lug Aluminum Turbi! 'Whoolo,
G""'ml~
btoido, lllyloo. 1
1H
tunhn.
n. lnqh
1!~ Gallon, $325; New JET aai June Wltib. C&amp;1111111t Wit.
a", 1qu11rw a. ..., $1.50 &amp; up. 15 ln&lt;h . In
Soturtloy Oldy plcoup. 30W7&gt; Wldo, Will Fl1 Gonorot MOiorp,
Oraclau1 living. 1 and 2 bad- (,._ S1r1d Flhor Roqulrod)
1121. 814-379-2728.
'
·
·
room .,.nmema at Village $1,415; Ron Evono EnttipriHo 3 mole AKC ~orOd Garman :tiiiG.
woe chockod,
Manor
1nd
Rlv1r1lat Jiickoon, Ofllo HI00-537-9528. ' Shlphord pu
BuP~q~
TroniniluJOni.,
.. I 1112-21a
Apo~monlo In u~r:;r.rt. From Dirt Dovll uJH!gh1, oovor ..,. flrOI Uooif I nbulh, on typn..OIIIC·
Tt anspo rtat ion
$202. Coll-2
. EOH.
lng II '!!;_ownor 114-245-SB'I!l
·packtd, coot 811V,ID, Mil tor AKC ClllhuahUI pupploo, $200,
114-m......
. ,
N.W 1 Bedroom · NNr Holz.r $1~1 call momlnp before 1 r.m.IM, 3 lnllt1, rMdy for
10:.u,
114-11112-3071.
Cllrittmu,
110
mlnfmum
$24!1/Mo. Allorenco &amp; Dopook
New gu lankl:, one ton lruck
dopoolt wiH hold, oDDIOVod 71 Autos lor Sale
Roqulrod, -8-21157.
whtola, ndlotoro, • n.,;; milo
Eloctrto 1ypowrfttr, $30, 114-11112- ho- only. 30U'IW7IIg elllt
tpm..
·
l!,!..lflcl k COntury, t415; 70 otc. D., RAu:a:lf&gt;loy, WV. 3()4! ·
Now 2 Bod,_, Apallmtnl, 814- 5282.
~-3133 ... ,
:m;tlh.
446.0310.
. .
Fl~: All ,HIIodwwdo 8pttl I;';;-;;;-;:;:;:;::-::-=--::-:- ~ on, - • wark,l400;
DtfiV~
$40 , Plok-Up Loiod. AKC Ooldtn R-re RMtly .:z::,;;::;.-.::;;;:;2·,_...,.._ __
Nice 2 ., I
aportmont
114-211-1318 E..,lngo.
;r:~ ~~ 71• lholo 1m Fon1 LTD, noOcro tronomloScrvtce s
In llldd-"; 814-11112.a&amp;58.
F
'
'
olon &amp; bottory, 1250. 11'11 U•r·
ltaalolll'od
Gotdon • ~ Couatr, nn aood, $400.
OnO a - m Apaotmont For Rour
14 a•,~ tlreo1 75-R-14 ond 71). AKC
.
, ft50, , 111 304.071-a(:Jil bol&lt;lrelpm.
81
·
Rant In Ala Granda, 1321 Par: • , wto.; • llbll lompo, Rotlfovor~
Bhoa,, w
~ ... - Or tiiiD B ~ •• ;..
Home ·
Uonfll. Wl1loh lnc1utloo utlthloo, SSioo., 114·11:!·2&amp;211.
Will notd For C.."':t"~o Wl1h
. u- -rto... $400, 814·
1150 Dopooll, Phono: 114-24&amp;.
Gaootlno po"!orod onow-~&gt;towor t50 o.:r,r, ....••~-··· Bot• 211·1424.
lmpr:ovemeots
1012.
S511, 114-84~2101. .
'
·....---I :;;;:~;:..:.:..-=---1 10.
·lia C.moro Z2B, now 350 ..,.
BASEIIEHT
One
bedroom
•Pif1mante
WATERPROOFING
1225/mo. lncludoo utllhloo, $toO HordWood far 1111, 140.oo o AKC "-'otoiod Amorfcon gino, now rlmt • 11'", $3500.
.ecwlty depoett, no pet•: 614- lood dtflvtiod. ••11:114-4~ Cocker ·~nlol PuPI!!oo 111111 ~*:=":.::71-a=:.;:Mf::::.·--=-=-:--:,..-- Uncondf11oniil lllotlmo g...,.,..
11112..1218.
H -· uprlgftl ._,.r, good Docbd, .Dow Clowo ~ 11a Chov. CoiObrltY Fronl IH. Loco! relarencoo filmlohoil
condklon, ntodo !NIP. 115 114- Born: 10111193 RooCrr· To oci ~ 1lrtie. Por1oc1 c:fondl1lon, Coil 1-100-217.oa75 Or 114-:m:
Sm11 1 Bedroom Tralltf, 11112-31171
. lui' Wlt1 1lotd TIN .... 114-24&amp;-11840
mtfJioaore
~1w.01'~· .,._
1180/Mo. Ulltltll!• Fumlthecf, IO:OOOm. momlngo ' ~ 1
Chltllmoo Wiao Dopoott . .• . .
•
~ld 1V1
. . , .
114-441-11106.
4 Ploco
Bu
. Mo $12S· ~~ .-.... Avollltilo. 1\4-m.. 111:1 JIA Pooo Cor Cor'o Totolod Cu~lo Homo lmpro.....,\ao_ No
Stonewood Apsrtmenta, Mld- Til'" 0111CI
, _ QHt.,j
310 lloior, 'llr!o! RMr End Job Too I~ SmoH, Yooro Ex·
'1(11110n, Ohio to,. - acooptlng &amp; O.ok Cholro, , .
.
~~~
~
:.k\'~~
Po~o S1,?'00, I::"Actdhlono~~=
ojlpiiCIUont , ond
rontlng
1pertment• for lht eldwty aniil Llkl
ouot1o- Bloodtlno. iiOIJ, 114-"W5-14111. : 1N4~1ufolt lkyMwl, 4 Door, Rootl~ KfiDhono lllatho. lnhondl_.t,
114·192·3055. whh doloc
fur, lrirnmld
•w~ Pu... •
, ~:dod,="•
Condklonl f14- Ofll.
ourod, '" Eotlmo"'•·
EOH.
·
hood lnd cufla,l&lt;lot!Q,
114-11112. ~
~ u~
..,..
··v f14-31l'o
711'1.
W - . 1200, IIU 41 1713, ::
· ;:i..,.::.,:::--:..,.-~,-.,-- 'Povlt. ...
And
45
Furnlahed
Llk
twl IJ bo
C.IIAftt&lt; 5 P.ll.
I 1114 Chovr.olot 9-10 plch up,
V..uum Cloonor ......~ Pno
o now, n o • d apl'lod, AKC R lol
tong ~.
PB, now ptln1, Plck-llai And~Dol
- ""'ii!,.
Rooms
3 Dl- •ot ot ohoolt, o11 bluo, hao 1oaN~..£ho'!~Pu~ :!..otJ.&lt;!II&lt;I lllltl, v.a, 1ow .,1111, CiHk Rood
~ 111
,....-.,.....--~-- 1;;St;.:s·,;-614;:;.-1112.:..:.:.·~255;:3:;.-::,..--,,...
114---, ~·• ·a:30 - · t14-m.e7! 1.
l;'::;:-:;:;::;:·~i==-;;::,·
lloOma " " - • WOH or month. llono Droto Slteko, Bluor Wllh
1V84 Ford 1
••so
Ron'o TV ServiP,., ........lltna
~:~Ill tf $120/mo. Gollla Hotll. V"' Sukt Bhlrto &amp; -lora AKC Rtlllol- Dol-Jon pup- I?I-HII.
ornpo, .. : 304" In Zonhh oloo oorvlc!l!l mool
8
8580.
All . ~or Sid; W.lnU1 To~
plot, S211D. -7-2127.
olhor brendo. Houoo ~. 81ooptr111 whh cooking. EIOclrto rr-tltr Utlil· ·11o11 •we R _, 11 rod ~
1114 Ponlloo 1000 LE, Y-4, outo., 304
oomt opolfo~" WV
Aloo lrollor opoco. All hook-u7Yt· ~ II._. $20; lcyclo =~ ..!!- ~· -~~f.:llj
PB, -or oooto,
-fll-2111...,.; 8~2484.
Cloonor ....
••• Coli
-n
·
U _... or ,.. . lar trucli of • 'Sopi 10 ~an•Pu- ,...........
Coli • ft or 2:00 p.m., 304·
B1·
.!...m:1DII
untl
r1o120,
I""~
14
.5851, 11ooon wv.
'~" 1 · P.ll.1114-245-917t.
1714.
·" '"· ~- ~·-~n~lllo!!·~1~
~·~·~~~-~·-- eo. RoN EVANS
Uounlatn llko, R-~r PlfOO·
- ChovOtto, ·f1.000.i__1V83 J.. klon, 0H 1-IOO,I:rl.ellll. '
46 Space for Rent
~\:"'a%':"~ ~'1:.~ ~c;.._~l14-~.r Colobrllyfl.ooa,eM-141-ym. Will ...,11d potlo - · &lt;!ock•
~Ill opoco, p~m• ..,_ Brohtl.-ll,__....,,.llltl c
·
o.no 11, -nod r - . Pul up vi~
10"!W. Poll)l Plootonl Jocotlon. P.U.
,
~f'P.'?!:'IK~~to pupa, 150. •
B~IIain,C1l P8, PI, PW, Powor =1szor. tool it( tlilrtii)O. I
81
lliln oro• II 30'o11; Wlpottnllol
~
. oto, 111111 Control, Powor 1 ;:,;~.;::.------lor addllonol • - Good Now 20" I · lpOOd llountoln flloh - - • ·~· •••
Locltt, E1o. AII/AI Slt&lt;oo Coo- 1:
...IIIIth
....__
biDnto m
t 1c 114-141...... -·· -ki!MI Ave. oono. Looclldl · 0no Owner 82
Plumblllg &amp;
1
to"kx,.'R.., ':: ~: 59111 or'll4:iia~1;. II.
'::':"'".:,.!0~'~.:: lloUahl NtW Cor, HoOd To Bolli
Pltotonl Rogfa!or, 200 Moln St.. Now- Hot Wtt• HOiillr, $100, Young
Paro-o, .. tM.tD. t:llot..~lonl Lool&lt;o '-;:::::=:~H~eat~l;;.n;.g~,.....,,_
b:~':;..~:"O:
45 &amp; n Gollon, 114-24&amp;.$152 At- =..-:·~
tc.~. I._4. -.:'zti::':'-:A;..n;..o•;..;•;;;''~
::'..:./!::.M::.~_00_·_1_t4-448--- 1lnOiollotlon
F,..mon'o HOlling And ~lin;.
...., J*Oon, lddi'IIO I phono
P.U.
.
And Sin! lee. R8Eli
numtil:r, lo attaw · lor In lm- :::,..,~.--. . 1ruc=k-,.--:cko-,1:::.0 -.--.11 FuHtoodld 1711m••• kltt- 1111 ~h SUncl~nce, a..n Clrtlfltd. Rllldtntlal, Commtr-~•• Dln¥U COVH,
• .,_
·-~-- w·-·"
L
~;~1••
1188 01tlo Cololo lnt l:•~lo~l•..;1t;;:4-2~111-::,1::1;.:1t:.,·- - - ,._
.... reaponM.
.
~
bMI, with
""5, ,.,·.... "-•..
-~ ,.
LlttorTrolnid, f14-317·770t.
...815; 1118 Eogo
,1 ··-7111
(7 .Wantld to Rent
.:..;:;~-~PromJor
,515; 1187 Ply. B4
Electrical &amp; ·
Nti11orido For Chltllmoo Com- HAPPY JACK TRIVERIIICIDE: I10rtZOj1 $1,8V5; 1118V Nl-n
R
~~~~~
lo ,.,._ 3
~room COnltoM
Dtoeo. Byatom lnoludoo Tlirbo llaocogr~eolzodnlorootolorl ~ortlvo::'lby Sonlro 13,411; IDill Acuro In· ;;;::;:;::;.:e:;:lr:.:l:;g~e:.:ret:,::lo::.n:_..,...
••·~- n - n .~--.. --~·
2· · •og. · ""'Conlrotoro.
•.,
tt11rs; tll7 Ponl. ,or. Am s~; R
~- prtyaj;' :;n;;;g;1';4: Powor Po\t.
11-F- And 111 1-lnl ogolnol ~ ,...nd, 1110 Ply. Acclolm hi!!'i.~I!M Hldtnllol or commorolol
tt:l4t28, If
~- G•rHI llnttruotlonl, c....,•IIIJtaa• Jn doll a cata. Olde FlrtnU
1HD ~· wlrtng,
Mrvlca
loavo m-a- on mochlnt.
And Rock • - -·
Av.ltoblo o-t-c II ~&amp;Q Food I Hwyl.onoor ~Qs; 8&amp;0 Auto Solto, Uootor Uconood tloct~clon .
•·
Bu~ f14-11112-2114
1•• e•• ......
Alclonour Eloctrieal, wv~·
'
•
• - ·• ~~s.
304.a7S-1788.
--.

iiW

.... 2

.7854

~~~~~~~~?;;:r.§;;;;;;;:;~~:8~1193
,14-~37V-~~27lli211~.~~
~~~·~·
UorciiiY T· 4 ~1. 5

Uvt5a_,
now·s::.,-

!

.QIOI574
+A!

1112 Dodao .Corovon 8E AIAo
~aofj Ulloo, fl1,200, 114-

•• u:p,

ll'lldt

EAST
.KH

.AJS

. : ."·

446-81'1e:, Mon -Sat., 1:30--5,

Apartment
lor Rent

~

,, • 7

Fow Poattr Wlltr Bod King
11102.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ·~ MIICellaneous
Wll•heraL. drye,., re~etatcq
Men:hanc:tl18
.. ngH. """DIIO Applloncn 111----~...;.:~-Vlno St-1 _!:oll 814-446-7311 1· I
800-49V-34n.
'
Nlntondo - · ~un 1 1=
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
t50.
~lllt .,....._. t1I50
'
· Coblntl
•
Complllt homo turnlot\Jngo. · a rttt • · ---~
uun
Hour.: Mon-Sot, 11-8. 614-4441- :~~- dooro, 171. 304.a110322, 3 mllH out Bulovlllo Rd.
F- Dollvory.
Ook Curved Gloot Clllna
Molloh•n Furn"uro C~ ~nett Oak Ttbfee, a Chalrt
"""- Fumhuro,•
$5.50 Yd &amp; VInyl n$4.49, 61 48-' Et•· Rf - "•• II ~k
11144.
=r~.~~~
GolNow FlborQloto Showero Now
Flborglon ~howero &amp; Tub Ntw Q,._ tl- moilol DOlor 'N
3 Pc. Showoro, 614-245-51•2
·• At- · -·'red·
••• ..:.~
d•.,... , 1••
~--...,.
lor I P.M.
. '2=:::,--:,--,.,-----PICKENS FuRNITURE
RIS Furnllure. Wo IKir, alllond
Houoohotd lumlohtng. 1~ mi.
:;r~~~i4~. Ple...nt, wv,

WEST
.QVH3

v

1981 Plymouth Acclolm 4 DAuto 1~,000 Millo, $5 :Z00:
5te-m.
.
•

C&gt;

Size, New Httttr $175, 114-441·

Steon~ Avenue, O.Ulpolla, 614-

44

2728.'

1ft

••02
.KU2
tKJ71
•Qss

.

Mf:: Splrk Auto. •c v •,

._.,room

t .. lv-. ()ptrltol'll. No Er:·
,-rtenc::e Nicenary Far lntorm.. ton Call 1..21a..73a..-.715 Ed
F555 g A.M. 4 P.M. 7 Dayt.
-

...__ .. _
. _ d: plrt time halp for busy
tar: oHke. Send resume cJo The

e•rara-.
$425.00 month. call Col•
11CI104-568·1823,

Trucking Compony In Otk Hill,

OhJo 11 Seeking Exptrlene;e
Saml Tractor /Trailer DriVIra,
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Vacancy For School Nurse, Gal·
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Progrtsslve comptny tMklng lla County Schooll, School
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PERTUE

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Caughl in a white lie, granny
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PRINT NUM BE RED tEll ERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tE llER S
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Laxity - Prowl · Knock · Fathom ~ INTO the POOL
'There's water in the carburetor," the wife told her
husband. "You don't even know what a carburelor is," lhe
husband sighed . "Well ." she answered . "I know t drove
the car INTO lhe POOL"

DECEMBER 7l

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

TUesday, oecember7, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Nova' marks 20th
anniversary of science
thrills· and ·heartbreak

Don Ameche,
dead at 85

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) musicals and dinner theater. His
Don Ameche, versatile leading second film .career began in 1983
man of 1930s and '40s films whose with " Trading Places, " starring
comeback in the 1980s climaxed Eddie Murphy and Dan Aylcroyd.
with an Oscar as supporting ac10r
Two years later, he appeared in
in "Cocoon," has died, a funeral the fantasy "Cocoon," in which he
home said. He was 85.
played one of a group of Florida
Ameche died Monday, said retirees who discover a fountain of
Alona Jordan , operator for an youth crealed by extralerrestrials.
answering service for Messinger
Ameche's on-screen ebullience
Mortuary in Scottsdale. She quoted contrasted with his personal modfuneral home owner Paul esty. When he received an AcadeMessinger as saying Ameche died my Award at the age of 79 in 1986,
at6p.m.
he remarked: " For all you memAlready a radio star, Ameche bers of lhe academy, this esleemed
made a smooth transition to ftlms, gentleman (the Oscar) says that
beginning with "Sins of Man" in you have given me your recogni1936. During 12 years at 20th Cen- tion . You've given to me your
tury Fox, he appeared in musicals, love; I hope that I have earned your
comedies and biographical dramas. respect ..
most notably " The Story of
· He was born Dominic Felix
Alexander Graham Bell. ' '
Amici in Kenosha, Wis., on May
When his film career faded in 31, 1908, to an Italian immigrant
1948, Ameche busied himself on falher and an Irish-German mother.
Broadway in "Silk Sloekings" and In school his name was shortened
"Can Can" and later in touring to Don and his family name was

DONAMECHE
Americanized.
Ameche was a star athlete and
drama club member at Columbia
College in Dubuque , Iowa. He
wanted to be a lawyer, but at the
University of Wisconsin his passion for acting grew. His future
was set when !he leading man in a
local s1oek company was hun in a
car accident. The young Ameche
repl.aced him.

By ANNE STUART
Grant, tti show's executive ediior ' 'This' is not the science you had in
Associated Press Writer
since 1986. "We appeal to people ninth grade. This is intereSting."'
Early on, "Nova" producers
BOSTON (AP) - Bill Cosby who have eclectic tasles - they're
sums up public television 's interested in anything from animals realized variety was the lcey to
viewership, and the show's broad"Nova" th1s way: "It's action, to astronomy.''
adventure, mystery and miracle,
The explosive growth of cable spectrum approach is evident in
real ~le at the moment of dis- television has prompted some ·'Great Moments from Nova.''
There are segments on bombs,
covery.'
changes il) lhe show.
That's as good a description as
"Wheh 'Nova' started, lhe aver- butterflies and the·Bermuda Trianany for the acclaimed science age big-city TV viewer had five or gle, volcanoes, hunicanes and torseries, which brought cutting-edge six channels," Grant said, and only nadoes; dinosaurs, beached whales
research and leehnology out of the lhe most ex()Cnsive televisions had and polar bears, and eclipses, spelaboratory and into the home. I! remote controls for channel-flip- cial effects and space travel.
The producers also use the spealso fits "Great Mom11nts from ping.
Nova,'' lhe 90-minute special host. Today, with 50 or 60 channels cial to update a popular program
ed by Cosby that airs tooight to and ubiquitous remotes, "Nova" from· the past. Viewers learn thai'
mark the program's 20th anniver- still focuses on a single topic but Washoe, a baby chimpanzee who
sary.
has made a conscious effon to pick learned to communicate through
"Great Moments from Nova" up the pace and use more com- sign language in the 197ps, is alive
and well- and still learning.
offers a rapid-fire sampling from pelling imafes and graphics.
"Nova' continues to struggle
the 400 documentaries that have
At 20, "Nova" is itself ancient ·
in television terms. But producers
aired since the show's debut in against anolher threat, however promise to continue breaking new
1974.
one harder to combat.
"There is a son of fear of sci- ground with the series. which also
Over the years, "Nova" has
consislently examined new topics ence. There is a perception that '1 has spun off into a magazine, eduand turned over old,ones, looking can't understand it, it's too hard,"' cational malerials and other science
for fresh b~hs, characters, Grant said. Or worse: "The word programming.
science is somehow synonymous
angles and controVerlies.
"I lhink rou could say," Grant
said, .."we re just hitting our
"What we try and do is tell with 'boring"' he said.
"What we keep trying to say is, sbide.
interesting stories," said William

By RON FOURNIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Celebrating her first Christmas at lhe
White House, Hillary Rodham
Clinton unveiled her holiday decorations Monday: a cozy display of
crafts, trees and "funky and down
to earlh'' ornaments.
Standing in the Blue Room
beneath an 18 1/2-foot Fraser fir
crammed with handmade dolls,
balls and bulbs, Mrs. Clinton pointed to two ornaments depicting
Socks, the family cat, as an angel.
"There's even a president wilh
a halo,'' she said. laughing.
"Some are quite elegant and
Cjllher magnificent. Some are funky
and down to earth," the first lady
said. "They run lhe whole gamut.''
Socks' image was not limited to
the Chrisunas trees. The "House of
Socks" is o traditional gingerbread
house, a ,yard-hi~ depjctio,n of the
White House featuring at least 20
miniatures of the "forst cat.''
Mrs. Clinton said her office
asked 70 of the nation's top craft
artists to make pieces for the White

•

them are students imd do the job to earns some
extra money. The lesson took place in Berlios'
technological university night, Dec. l. (AP
Photo/Axel KuU)

House's permanent display. The
crafts are scattered throughout the
building.
Hundreds of olher artists were
asked to create an ornament, with
angels as lhe general .lheme. Their
work produced 7,500 ornaments to
decorate lhe 22 Christmas trees at
lhe White House.
"In looking for a theme that
would tie together what we cared
about and the kind of fun we wanted to have at Christmas, it seemed
to us that highlighting American
crafts would be a way to really
show what's best about America
and also have a beautiful Christmas," Mrs. CliniOn told reporters.
Her office also unveiled the official While House Christmas card. It
features a poruait of the president
and first lady, basking in a gold
light in the State Dining Room.
Their 13-year-old daughter,
Chelsea, is not pictured because hec
parents want to keep her olot of the
spotlight, aides said.
Mrs. Clinton said she still must
deal wilh 150,000 holiday visi10rs
and some personal chores . She

helped Chelsea and a friend deco·
rate Christmas cookies recently.
Letting out a sigh, she said·,
"The big question mark for us is
how are we going to go Christmas
shoi!Ping? That we haven't worked

out'

Her husband said he usually
stashes a few gifts away well
before Christmas, but he did little
of that this .year. "The circumstances in my life have changed,"
the president said.
· ·
The forsllady said her husband
is hard to buy for because he
"always says he doesn't need anything or want anylhing.''
The West Wing decorations
include a Menorah, lhe first time
one has been displayed in the
White House, according to Mrs.
Clinton.
The air was thick with lhc scent
of pine during a lOur for reporters. ·
A basketball-sized piece of mistletoe hung iio·the·foyer.
Holiday wrealhs hung in each of
the huge hallway windows leading
to lhe East Foyer. One of lhe ornaments on an East Foyer tree fea tured the president.

Athens Honda's

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before liD event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in tbe calen·
dar.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND - The PTO at Rutland will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
lhe school.
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department commitlee will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Bedford town
hall. All Bedford residents are
encouraged to attend.
POMEROY - The FOE Auxiliary 2171 will meet at 7:30- P·'!'·
Tuesday. Members are to take
donations for baskets for lhe needy.
New members will be initiated.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM
will meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the
Masonic Temple. Officers will be
installed . Refreshments will be
served.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Booslers will meet Tuesday at 8
p.m. in the high school cafeleria.

MIDDLEPORT - Christma~
bazaar and luncheon will be held
Tuesday from II a.m. to 7 p.m. in
the basement of lhe Heath United
Methodist Church. Pies, candies,
craft items and more will be for
sale. The event is sponsored by
Eleanor Circle.
SYRACUSE - "Christmas
Around lhe World"
be presented at Carleton School Tuesday at 7
p.m. The public is invited to auend.

will

OLIVE TOWNSHIP - The
Olive Township Truslees will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestry building on Joppa
Road Tuesday.

High Booslers will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at lhe school. All parents are urged 10 auend.
THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday at lhe haU. Stale delegates wiD report. Members are to
take non-perishable food items and
there will be a while elephant sale.
· REEDSVILLE - "From Heaven· s Throne", a Christmas cantata
will be presented by the Coolville
Community Choir Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Reedsville United
Methodist Church. The public is
invited to attend.

CHESTER • Chesler Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at Chester Town Hall.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
special session on Thursday at 6
p.m. at the Rutland fire station.
CHESTER • Chester Council State Issue 2 application for funds
323, Daughlers of America, will . will he discussed.
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. The charter
will be draped in memory of Leda
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Mae Kraeuter and Betty Roush. }leta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Quarterly birthdays will be Sorority, will hold its annual
observed and potluck refreshments Christmas dinner pany at lhe home
served. Members are asked 10 wear of Donna Jones, Thursday at 6:30
white.
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The Soulhem Junior

ets submiaed that week.
The first week winners were
Marcia llarrctt for Dairy Queen,
Sarah Jobnson for Mi!Ue's Restaurant; Betty Morton for Ingels Carpet; Ruby. Coughenour for Fruth
Pharmacy; Joshua Price for Dan's,
Larry Pictens for Valley Lumber,
Linda Lewis for Mill Street Books,
Tam.my Lyons for Trolley Station
Crafts, Jenny Chapman for Vaughan's Cardinal.
Lora Dodrill for Locker

506

Pick 4:

7751

Buckeye 5:
11-20-28-3-3-34

PageS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Post 9053 of the '-:eterans of
Foreign Wars will meet Thursday
at 7:30p.m. at lhe post home.

2500
1400

4DoorDemo
4

Vol. 44, NO. 158
MuiUrnedia Inc.

Low tonJahtln lmrer 3411,
clear. Tbunday portly suny,
high lD mid 50s.

WASHINGTON {AP) - The
productivity of American workers
shot up at a 4.3 percent annual ra1e
from July through Seplember, the
fust advance in six months and the
biggest in more than six years, the
government said today.
The Labor Department said the
revised seasonally adjusted
increase in nonfarm productivity defmed as output per hours Wotked
- was the largest since it jumped a
similar 4.3 percent in the second
Quarter of 1987.
It was the first increaSe since a
4.2 percent jump in lhe fmal three
months of 1992 and was even
stronger than the department's initia13.9 pen:ent estimate last monlh.
Increased productivity is essential for any increase in Americans'
standards of living and to make
U.S. products more competitive in
world markets.
Productivity fell 1.8 percent in
the forst quarter of 1993 and 0.4
percent in the second, the first
declines since it fell 0.7 percent at
an annualmte during the JanuaryMarch period of 1991..
The drops bad lllised questions
about. whether earlier improvements were pan of a trend. Productivity had risen for seven consecutive quarters beginning in the
April-June period of 1991.
Many analysts attributed the
declines during the first half of
1993 to slow economic growth and
said an i~ving. Cl;l)nomy during
the Jlily-Sep\Cin~ QU•r would
result in inC:reaseil productivity. ·
Plliioting to co!]lorate':downsizing an.d other structural changes,
these analysts contend there lire
fundamental changes under way to
improve long-rerm efficiency.
But others maintain that earlier
improvements merely reflected
business reluctance to hire new
employees during the· economic
downtum, preferring to work !heir
current labor force longer and harder to meet slowing demand. ·
They contend that once the
economy is baclc on trac1c, companies will resume hiring and thus
diminish their work force productivity.
, Productivity growth averaged
ress !han: I percent at an annual rale
during the 1970s and 1980s, down
sharply from an average annual ra1e
of 2.5 percent during the prior two
decades. But it rose 3.2 percent in
1992. .
Output increased 4.4 percent
from July through Seplember, up
from the 4 percent advance three
months earlier.
At the same time, total hours
worked rose 0.1 percent, compared
with 4.4 percent in the second quarter.
Productivity helps boost living
standards by curbing inflation,
since continuing gains tend to keep
labor costs down. That also makes
U.S. exports more alllllCtive.
Unit .labor costs, which represent about two-thirds of lhe cost of
a product, fell 0.6 perceqt in the
lhird quarter, the rorst decline since
a 2.2 percent drop in the second
quarler of 1987. Costs rose 2.3 percent in the second quaner.
Total business productivity,
including farming, was up 3.6 percent, after remaining unchanged
three monlhs earlier.

500

219LShoe Place; Margaret Amberg:
cr for Bahr Clothier; Ju!li Colvan
for MUI End Fabrics, Ruby Brewer
for Ingels Electronics, Kadthryn
Johnson for Johnson's Variety,
Edna Ferguson for Middleport
Department Store, Amy Wagner
for Ingels Furniture, Betty Denny
for Big Bend Health .and Fjtness,
Jean Roseberry for Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry, Nancy Calc for
Farmers Bank, lind Pam Hoffman
for Sears.

-~~

AMulllmodlo Inc. Newo.,.per

Four people killed~ ·
..
21 are wounded
by crazed gunman·.

•
~

0

BOOKMOBILE EXPANDS SERVICE.
. Handicapped individuals, senior citizens unable
to get out and abput, and caregivers will be
offered borne debvery of books from Meigs
County's Dream Machine after the first or the
year. Plans call for the bookmobile to make
home visits twice a month. An orange and black
card with the message "Bookmobile Please

Stop" will be provided to aD those who qualify
and request it from tbe Meigs County Public
Library. Here Danny Will, bookmobile driver,
displays one of the signs which when displayed
in a window will alert him to stop by and pick
up or deliver library books. (Photo by Charlene
Hoeflich]

Study reveals--U. S. education
top-h~avy with support staff
Riley poinled out that the study
By CAROLE FELDMAN
did
have "some very good thinf!S"
.u'.Edueation Writer
to
say
allout American education.
·WA~HUojGTO~ .,: Amqric110
For•
example.
the Unitell StaleS baS
schools employ r~wer ldli!liers !han
a
muc.h
higher
gradiJ3li01. '8te than
they do suppon staff such, as guidance counselors, bus drivers ·and ' most EuroPean eounbies b id more
cafeteria workers, according to an women receiving university
international study out today that degrees.
illustrales yet another shortcoming
"The quality of the education
lhese
students receive clearly pays
in U.S. education.
Even though it is lhe world's top off in terms of jobs and higher
spender on education, lhe United earnings," the education chief said.
Stales has a smaller proportion of
But like several previous comteachers in the work force than parisons, the OECD study gave
most other industrialized nations, American students a mixed repon
said a reJ?!lrt by the Paris-based card in competition with students
Organization for Economic Coop- in olher industrialit.ed nations.
eration and Development
In math and science, 13-yearCalling the study "a timely olds in the United States scored
reminder about lhe cntical need for significantly lower than students in
comprehensive school reform," most other countries. But in readEducation Secretary Richard Riley ing, American 14-year-olds outpersaid it suggests a need for "shifting formed their peers in all countries
resoun:es going to school adminis- except Finland, France, Sweden,
tration into lhe classroom and into New Zealand, Switzerland and Icethe professional development of land.
teachers so they win be able to
"We can teach kids to read,"
teach tougher content in all sub- said Education Undersecretary
jects.''
Marshall Smith . "If we put the
"This repon conforms the press- same kind of effon in scitnce and
ing need for world-class standards math, also history and other acafor excellence in education and demic subjects, we can be successiUustrales why the. American habit ful across the board.''
of being comfortable with just
On the question of resources
bc.ing average comes up shon in allocated 10 education, the study
the new global economic environ- found that in 1991, 2.6 percent of
ment,'' Riley said in stalemenL
American workers were leachers,

a

compared wilh an average of 3. I
percent for the "typical &lt;?ECD
country." The OECD cons1sts of
24 nations.
Among the major industrialized
countries, only Japan, Germany
and the United Kingdom had fewer
teachers ·proponionately than the
United Stales. Belgium, at 5.3 percent, topped the list.
Meanwhile, the United States
had the highest percentage - 2.9
- of its work force in non-teaching education jobs, lhe repon said.
Japan and the Netherlands had the
lowest, reporting less !han I percent each. The non-leaching jobs
include administrators, guidance
counselors, nurses, bus drivers,
cafeteria workers, coaches and custodians.
Smith said the difference
reflects the fact that education in
the United States is controlled by
local jurisdictions, not the federal
government, as well as services
like special education.
"American society says these
are important functions and they
are added to the education budget," said Albert Tuijnman, the
OECD official responsible for education statistics.
In other countries, he said, lhese
types of services are not considered
educational spending and are provided outside lhe school.

Union, coal firms reach agreement
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Two weeks after the United
Mine Workers and some of the
nation's biggest coal companies
agreed on lhe basics of a new contract, the details are finally on
paper and ready for a vole by the
striking miners.
If ratified next week, lhe agreement, announced Tuesday, would
end a sometimes violent, sevenmonlh walkout by 17,500 miners in
seven states.
"lt's been a long strike and the
fat lady's singing, that's all I can
say,'' said Russell Stilwell, a strike
coordinator in Boonville, Ind.
Coal companies, mediators and
union leaders refused to give
details of the proposed, five-year
contract
But UMW President Richard
Trumka said the unio't achieved
"better wages and pens1ons while
protecting our health care and our.
working conditions" and "drew
the line against double-breasting"
-the pr~ctice of closing union

mines and selling up non-union "But if it's oot a good agreement,
subsidiaries.
it's not going to pass. We stayed
Former Labor Secretary William out this long for a good agreement,
1. Usery, appointed in September 10 and !hat's what we want"
mediate the talks, said an underThomas F. Hoffman, spokesman
standing on most issues was for the coal companies, said he
reached more !han two weeks ago. expected the ratification to g9
The extra time was needed to put it smoothly. "We plan to return to a
in writing.
normal workinj! siruation as quickThe union took down its picket ly as JX:ISSible,' he said from Upper
lines on Nov. 23 as part of an St. Clair, Pa.
agreement that the companies
Most coal companies entered
would rehire strikers fored for pick- the strike wilh ml\jor sloekpiles and
et line misconduct. But the miners have maintained some production
wiU Slay off lhe job until the agree- using supervisors.
meilt is ratified.
The strike began May I 0 and
"We'll be better able to tell you eventually involved miners in Illihow we feel afrer we get a look at nois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio,
!he proposal," said Wayne Thomp- P~n~srlvania, West Virginia and
son, a local UMW president in Vorgm1a
Waverly, Ky. "It's mce to have a
The union had sought assurtentative agreement, though. It will ances that it would have job rights
feel good 10 get back to work, if we at new mines opened by their
really do get back to work."
employers afiu existing mines are
"We've been on a strike for played out. Without such security,
seven months and our people are UMW members were "mining
hurting," said Roger liorton, a themselves out of a job," Trumlca
miner in Logan County, W.Va. said.

Former U. S: Sen. Robert Taft dies
CHRISTMAS

2 Sedona, 14 Pogoo 35

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 8, 1993

Third quarter
productivity
up 4.3 percent

Winners of holiday giveaway ~nnounced
Winners in the second week of
the holiday give-away by the Middleport Community Association
have been announced. The IOia1 to
be given away this season is $1,400
with ihe program to continue
through Dec. 24.
CustOmers may register in _lhe
.pll!licipating stores. To be eligible
shj)J)PCI'S must fill out new stubs
each week with one of the 20 merchants because prizes will be
awarded based on only those tick-

Pick 3:

.

Christmas at the White House:
Cozy displays. 'funky' ornaments

SINGING SANTA • Father Christmas plays
an accordion and sings with about 500 colleagues and 60 an,els during the last class or
instructions for theor work on St. Nicholas' Day
and Christmas Day and Christmas Eve. All of

Ohio Lottery

Cavs
defeat
Portland

CINCINNATI (AP)- Roben
Taft Jr., a former U.S. senator and
representative whose family has .
beef! at the cenler of national politics more than ~n!IJCY, liis,died of
a brain hemorrloaae. Ho was 76.
Tatt died Tuesday at Jewish

Hosnital
•rlbe words 'Taft' and ' blic
service' arc synonymous, .!l"said
Sen. Bob Dole, R.-K.an. "Bob Taft
carried on .the Taft tanul tradition
with great inrelligence J.d integrity.
II

.,

Taft, a Republican, was the
grandson of William Howard Taft,
president from 1909-1913 and
chief/ustice of the United States.
from 921-1930. His father, Roben
A. Taft, known as "Mr. RepubliContlnuect on page 3

GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP)Passengers ran screaming for the
exits as a stone-faced man wielding
an automatic pistol walked down
the aisle of a packed rush-hour
commuter train, shooting at random and pausing only to reload.
By the time the train pulled in10
the Long Island town of Garden
City on Tuesday evening, four passengers were dead, their bodies
slumped across seats and against
the windows, and 21 were hun,
four critically.
Three passengers tackled the
gunman as the Long Island Rail
Road train pulled iniO the station.
"Right now, there doesn't seem
to he anylhing as far as a motive,"
said Officer Andrew DeSimone, ;1
spokesman for lhe Nassau County
police. "It seems like a random
shooting.' '
Authorities refused to release
the suspect's name, saying only
that he was a New York qty resi-

dent who probably boarded tlie
train at New Yorlt's Perno Station.
Eighty to 90 passengers in ·tlJe
third car were secure in their seat&amp;
as the train arrived at Merilloll' .
Avenue station, 18 miles from the·
New York City. It wos then that the.
gunman opened fire without a.
word, passengers said.
"After the second look, I
ducked down in my seat, for real;:
knowing this man was going to kill
people indiscriminately... said
Pelel'SC!I, 48, of Garden City.
i
Passengers said the man flrect'
repeatedly, then reloaded and fored
again.
:
As the train pulled iniO the Sla"
lion, Petersen worked bis way 10
the vestibule, where passenger$
normally wait to get off. He and
several others were hoping tci
escape when lhe doors opened, but
the gunman fored several shots at
the wailing passengers.
·

eart:

'

Alleged a·s sailant \
pleads not guilty .
A Gallipolis man Tuesday
pleaded not guilty to two counts of
attempted murder in the shooting
of a Cheshire woman.
Chrilltopber L. Rathburn, 21 ,
1140 1/2 Second Ave., was jailed
in Gallia County Monday evening
afler being extradited to Ohio from
Cabell County . He was arrested
Friday afternoon by campus police
at Marshall University in Hunting10n, where he is a student.
Rathburn allegedly shot Sandra
Scott, 43, Roush Lane, early Friday
morning. Officials at Holzer Medical Center reported that she was
discharged Sunday.
Arraigned Tuesday morning, the
alleged assailant could face up to
25 years and $10,000 in fines on
each count of attempted murder, an

aggravated felony of the firs1
degree.
··
Gallia County Sheriff James D.
Taylor said today that his investigators have not located the gun
used in lhe shooting.
'"We feel we've identified the
vehicle that was used and we
should be able 10 match it to tire
tracks and we feel we have at least
one pair of shoes !hat we can match
up to prints at the scene," he said.
Rathburn is believed to have
been hiding in the shadows near the
Cheshire home's garage when
Scott and a man returned froni
Huntington around I a.m. Friday.
He allegedly fired at the two as
they entered the house, pursued
them inside and shot Scott in the
hand and neck before fleeing.

Grand jury tours prison
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) Members of a grand jury investigating a deadly riot at lhe Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility toured
the maximum-security prison.
Nine jurors and five alternates
also on Tuesday watched television
reports of lhe riot at the Lucasville
prison. They also heard from prosecutors and the State Highway
Patrol, which has led lhe investigation of the case.
Lynn Grimshaw, Scioto County
prosecutor, said inmates indicled
by the grand jury could get additiona! sentences if found guilty .
"Homicides and assaults on
employees will be our forst priority," Grimshaw said. "But we can't
prosecute everyone for every thing.' .
Nine inmates and one guard
were killed during the I 1-dav

uprising, which ended April2I. ·
Findings of the investigation
will be given to the parole board.
"Some may be punished more
quickly through lhe parole board,"
Grimshaw said.
The jury will probably meet for
several monlhs and could periodically release indictments, said Sgt.
John Born, a patrol spokesman.
Ohio public defenders have
challenged the Scioto County grand
jury.
The motion is intended to assure·
that the inmates will be guaranteed'
a fair hearing, said Dale A. Baicb,
the state's assistant public defender.
·'Grand jurors could have a relliti ve or friend who works at the
prison, which means such a bias or
prejudice could exist," Baich said. '

Local briefs--...

Deputies probe B&amp;E, theft

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department investigated
one breaking and entering and one theft recently.
Frank Lowd, Tuppers Plains, reponed Monday that a house he
owns was enlered sometime between SepL 2 and Nov. 4. Entry was
possibly made through a rear door.
Brenda Clegg, Long Bottom, reponed Monday that her great
dane, which was chained to her porch, was missing .

Accident investigated
A Reedsville woman's car sustained moderate damage following
a one-car accident on Stale Route 248 near lhc junction of Success
Road Tuesday afternoon.
According to a repon from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Smith was ·
eastbound when her 1988 Ford dropped off the right side of the .
roadway and went in10 a ditch.
Smith refused treatment from the Tuppers Plains squad of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. She was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by a private vehicle for a check up
said Soulsby.
,'

Man arrested on assault charge
An Albany man was arrested Tuesday by Athens police on
Meigs Couoty charges of assault, Sheriff James M. Soulsby repon- .

~

'

Charles A. Ellioa was brought to Meigs County and released on
bond.

-.

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