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·p!ISie--:16--The Dally sentinel
'

Monday, December 27, 1993 . ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Ohio Lottery

Chargers
beat
Dolphins

Pick 3:

671
Pick 4:

7660
Buckeye 5:
7·12·29·32·33

Page4

L D""' tonight in the teens.

flurrie s. Wednesday, high In
20s. Three inches ol ~now by

' o\,

HURRY! HUR:RY! HURRY!

Vol. 44 , NO. 172

FIRST-COME-FIRST-SERVED BASIS!

Sale Begins Dec. 27th at 9a.m. Ends Dec. 31st, 2p.m.
LIVE REMOTE 1\iAGic 1 0 1 DEC. 27TH, 3PM·&amp; PM
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-IIMI,tilwllool,aui10,AINFMI18NO
lllpO, rodlllil, -win. dofag.

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powerHOt,_,t-,auiM,AINFMtape, rod! all, bucl&lt;ot ...II. -win. dofag.

Stocl&lt; 1 18470, 4 dao11, lldon, llont- · 4 cyl., air, ouiD., PS, P8, PW, POl,

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POL, tlltwttool, auiM, AINFM 118&lt;00 tope,
1/2 ton, longwldobod, IIUX.fueltani&lt;, oUdlng
raar glau.

Stockt307362, 4 crl.,oir,lllnd. triN., PS,
PB, ~~ - , c:rul .., AINFM • - lllpO,
lldlllil,lhott_l_,_...,.bumpor,
g&amp;uGif, sliding !Vorglau, ftborvluo topper.

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llllk,gougol.

Stock, 18481, 2 doors, flontwheel
..w. .... 4 "'I
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Now•7,249

CONVERSION VAN

~':NL NOW s12,4 49

; 1986ARIES WAGON......................tl649.00 · ;
· 1980 CHEVY PICKUP.,.•••••••••••••••••••*1149.00
.·1978FORDPICKUP........................•154 9.00
..1987 CHEVY CHEVERE••••••••••••••••••••• *549.00
·1987 FORD ESCORT..........................*549 .00
..1986 PONTIAC 1·1 000 ••••••• ~ ••••••••••••.*449.00
.'1985 OlDS CIERI WAGON•••••••••••••••• *349 .00 ''
1975 FORD lTD................................*349 .00
' .,

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4 cyt .. oir, auto., PS, PB. dk - · air, auto., PS, PB, POL, till wheel,
cnJIIe, AINFM 118roo tape, !Varwln. defog . auise, AINFM slarao tape, radiala.

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Stock t 304751,4 doora, Mdan, V·B, air, Stock I 1140441, 4 daora, - · Y-8, olr, '
auto., PS, PB, PW, POL, power 18Bt, tilt vl"'fl roof, aulD., PS, PB, PWW,POt, powet
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'·' :
iMSRP..............'1i395.00 MSRP •••••••••••••• '21412.00 ;!
Stoc:l&lt; I 941121, Y-8, lir, IIJIO., PS, PB,
PW, POl, tit-. cni10, AINFM ,..,..
lllpO, rodlllll, gougeo.

Stock ' 303511' 2 doors, 8 cyl., air,
auto., PS, PB, AMIFM 118180 tape.

NA~~:;AIL

IIAD~·

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:-·

Dlscou nt. •••.•••••••1945.00 •·. •Dlscount. ...........3794.00
,.,.... Acct...........soo.oo •.··
Free Tank Of Fuel
:. Free Tank Of Fuel
+49
+ 49

• ·· YOUI PIICf 5)4,999°0
IIADA IETAIL
I$S50

Stoc:l&lt; t 301602, flont - 1 dri,.., 4cyl., air,
auto., PS PB, tik -·cruise, AINFM .,.
roo tope.

Stock I 18121 , 2 doci.., CX&gt;Upo, 4 C¥f., oir,
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JOUR PRICE 517,667°0 ••.

Stock I 307381, 4 dao11, Mdan, Y-8, air, "CARTIER" Stock I 184201, 4 doora, ...
outo., PS, PB, PW, POl, tilt-Is, crulae, dan, V-8, air, lo!nyl roof, OUIO., PS. PB, PW,
AINFM IIOrOOIIpo, radials, roar win. defog. PDL,-HOt,auiu,AINFM-IIIpO,

radials, wltl18 wall, rear win. dolog.

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IWI~.:AIL

WHY PAY'MORE IN 1 94H?

11

From Mustang To Town Car, Escort To
Cougar, F·Serles To Mark Vlll ••• lt Makes No
Difference What You Order, There Is No
"Extra Charge". Place Your Order At Any
nme And You Pay Only '49 .00 Over Invoice
For The Car Or li'uck Of Your Choice!
APPUCABLE REBATE, IF ANY, AT TIME OF DEUVERY OOES TO CUSTOMER

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Sen. John Glenn broke with President Clinton on the trade treaty
with Mexico bul consistently voted
Clinton's way on almost every
other issue before the Senate in
1993, a new analysis shows.
Only two senators, Democrats
Carol Moseley-Braun of Illinois
and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, voted in accord with the White
House more often than Glenn,
according to an annual analysis by
Congressional Quanerly, an independent weekly publication.
Congressional Quarterly's count
showed that on 89 roll call votes in
which the White House had a siJlted position, Glenn's vote matched
Clinton's stand 97 percent of the
time.
Dodd voted with the president
98 percent of the time and Moseley-Braun, 99 percent. Sens. Joseph
Biden, D-Dcl. and Ted Kennedy,
D-Mass. were tied with Glenn at 97
percent.
Ohio's other senator, Democrat
Howard Metzenbaum, voted in line
with White House wishes 92 percent of the time, the magazine
reported.
Sjlokesman Dan Blair said
· Gl~l.ln: s .positions were often
ali'gfl~d ·with Clinton's in part
because so many of the bills that
moved through Congress during
1993 were revivals of legislation
that passed in years past only to be
vetoed by President Bush.
"There was a boulcneck of legislation that Senator Glenn has supported for a lot of_yearsl." Blair
Continued on Page ;,

Peace talks
enter 2nd day

Stoc:l&lt; • 18032, 2 daorl, oaupo, flont- Slad&lt;l 11221.-. flontwllooldrl ... 4
drive, 6 cyt ., oir, IUIO., PS, P8, POl, tilt cyt., oir, IIJIO., PS, P, PW, POL, tit-·

Russia policy
shaper to be No. 2
at State Department

Analysis:
Glenn top
Clinton
supporter

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

NOW •4,949

IIA'::.:AIL

NOW *5,249

CAIRO, Egypt (AI')- Mideast
peace talks resumed here today
with Israel's foreign minister optimistic about reaching agreement
wilh the PLO but refusing to budge
on security for Jewish settlements.
It's just one of the issues that
have been holding up the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the
Gaza Strip and Jericho in the West
Bank since the Dec. 13 rarget date.
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
said he believed both sides want 10
overcome their differences. But he
said Israel could not compromise
the safety of settlers.
''Otherwise we have full respect
for the Palestinian side," he said
after an hourlong meeting with
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Peres and his delegation then
left to resume talks with a Palestinian team led by Mahmoud
Abbas, a chief adviser 10 PLO chief
Yasser Arafat
Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr
Moussa said he expected the peace
talks to include two or Lhrce more
meetings and could stretch into
Wednesday. He said that without
being "rosy," he believed there
was a chance for agreement.
· "The continuation of negotiations from yesterday to today and
maybe tomorrow will give a
chance for Lhrce or four points to
be reconciled," he told reporters.
Tl\c negotiations that opened
Monday night follow meetings last
week in Paris and Oslo, Nprway.
Israel and the PLO also disagree on
who should control the borders
with Jordan and Egypt and the size
of the Jericho district
Asked about the chances for
success, Peres replied, "The hopes
arc unlimited, but time I cannot
mention."
Peres and Abbas, also known as
Abu Mazcn, began the negotiations
in Cairo last October but have not
headed the delegations since. Both
men also were involved, at least
indirectly, in secret negotiations in
Norway earlier this year that led 10
the rust real breakthrough between
the two sides.
On arrival Monday, Peres
promised "very serious negolia·
lions," bul he had said in an inter·
view earlier with the Israeli daily
Continued on Page-3

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 28, 1993

Copyright1993

SNOW WARS - Jessica Johnsoo shoves
ber young brother Derek into tbe snow after
he decked her with a snowball outside their
Bradbury home Monday anernoon. The two

were visited by cousins, who are home for the
holidays l'rom Huntington, and all said they
were having a great time (Sentinel photo by
George Abate).

Workers continue assault on snow
From staiT, wire reports
As recent ~nowfalls again
blanket the. Tri-County area,
siJlte and county snow removal
workers, along with their village
and township counterparts, are
making their third assault on
snow in almost as many days.
Few accidents were reponed
due to the weather. The GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported several
minor, weather-related accidents
but none with injuries. No
weather-related acctdents were
reported this morning by the
Meigs County Sherifrs Department
Snow prompted the closing
of the Meigs County Courthouse
at 10 a.m. but area schools were
spared due to students already
being home for Christmas
break.
The Meigs County Highway
Department had silt trucks in
action during the Christmas
weekend, Office Manager Dave
Spencer said.
Snow removal during the
weekend was difficult because
there wasn't enough accumula·
tion to throw the snow off the

roads, Spencer said. Workers
were limited to spreading fly
ash 1101Lsalt which, because of
low temperatures, wasn't always
successful, he explained.
"Our people (employees)
sacrifice all the time in weather
like this," he said. "Some of
them were leaving kids at home
on Christmas.•
"Ther have a job to do and
they do tt," Spencer added. "We
are very fortunate to have willing workers fighting (the
snow) ... and sometimes il is a
fight."
"'We have a fine bonch working here," Assistant Superintendent Manning Roush said.
In other areas, the snowstonn
caused traffic and airpon delays
today and prompted Turfway
Park in northern Kentucky 10
cancel its thoroughbred horse
raci ng for the day.
·
The stonn forced delays of
some takeoffs and landings this
morning at CincinnatiNorthem
Kentucky International Airport
in Hebron. Ky. Operations
returned to normal after the
morning rush hour for nights,
airport spokeswoman Judy

Ingram said.
, The airport had two of its
three runways open, with the
third closed because of wind
conditions, she said.
The airport has about 800
daily takeoffs and landings.
The National Weather Service said the storm dumped 4
inches of snow on Georgetown,
about 50 miles southeast of
Cincinnati, and 4 inches in the
Maysville, Ky., area. Cincinnati
had less !ban an inch of snow.
Forecaster Erik Pytlak said
Warren and Clinton counties in
southern Ohio and Switzerland
County, Ind., received 2 inches,
while 3 1/2 inches fell at Dry
Ridge, Ky. There were flurries
a1 Brookville, Ind. and
Batesville, Ind.
Pyllak said he expected the
snow to end by this afternoon.
Temperatures were around 20
degrees, but the wind chill made
it feel like it was zero, he said.
The snow made driving
tricky, but roads were passable
in southern Ohio, said Lt. Ben
Jochnlc, commander of the SLate
Highway Patrol post in Batavia.

Kidnappers' getaway foiled by engine trouble
MOSCOW (AP) - Four kidnappers who swapped a dozen
schoolchildren for $10 million in
cash had to cut their geiJlway short
when the engine of their commandeered helicopter began to stall and
smoke poured in10 the cabin.
The gunmen apparently tossed
out handfuls of $100 bills before
landing and fleeing on foot through

snowy mountains with millions
more stuffed inside heavy duffel
bags.
Police and commandos captured
all four Monday and recov~r~d
most of the ransom money. Withtn
hours. More than $500,000 rs missing.
If convicted, the gunmen could
face the death penalty.

The arrests ended a four· d~y
drama. that bl)gan Thursday wrth
the seizure of the teen-agers at a
school and. saw the krdnappers
force two military p1!ots to take the
helicopter on a zrgzag course
across southern Russia.
The final five hostages were
freed unhanncd. The children were
COntinued on Page 3

Lewis donates $1 ,000 to Middleport .
8 CHARLENE HOEFLICH
y

Sentinel News Starr

"Please use the enclosed donation to my beloved home town as
you and your associates feel best,"
wrote Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis of
Henniker, N.H. to the mayor of
Middleport.
Lewis enclosed a check for
$1,000.
.. A blessed Christmastide 10 you
and all of Middleport. I am exceedingly proud to be a grateful native
son," said Lewis in his letter.
Mayor Dewey Horton said that
the money will be put in the general fund to be used for village operating expenses.
The donation was given by Dr.
Lewis in appreciation to village
officials for honoring his brother,
Art "Pappy" Lewis, a Middleport
High School graduate who excelled
in athletics and went on to an out·
standing coaching career.
A few years ago Middleport Village Council changed the name of
Plum Street to Art Lewis St. The
street nms along Hartinger Par){
and intersects with James Hartinger

NAMED TO HONOR •
Plnm Street was renamed Art
Lewis Street several years ago
to honor tbe Middleport High
School athlete who went on to
excel athletically in college
and coaching. Last week his
brother, the Rev. Edward W.
W. Lewis, made a Christmas
donation to the village In
appreciation of tbe gesture.
Parkway.-another street named ·for
a Middlepon graduate who went on
to excel in the military.
In his letter to the village, Dr.

Lewis told ,of a trip which he, one
of Art l..ewts' son, John, who hves
in Vienna, Va. and his daughter
made to Middleport in order to see
the sign in place. He said that
enroute !bey stopped at Ohio University 10 sec the Hall of Fame and
to sec Lewis' picture in the Roll of
Honor.
Once in Middleport they went to
the old Middleport High School
Building where lhe Lewis' boys
father worked as a janitor to see the
trophies won by his sons Art,
Harold, Ed and Larry. and other
MHS athletes.
In his letter Dr. Lewis recalled
that between 1928 and 1937 MHS
won the Southeastern Ohio league
six or seven times. "Art was the
best, Larry was not too far behind
in ability, Harold had the greatest
heart, and I was the poorest player
of the four Lewis sons," wrote Dr.
Lewis.
"I have such gratitude to the
people of Mid~l~port ...... and evcrlaslmg apprcctatton 10 our parents
who did so much for us with so
very little income," concluded Dr.
Lewis.

WASHINGWN (AP)- Strobe
Talbott, onetime roommate of Pres·
ident Clinton and principal archi·
teet of U.S. policy to siJlunchly
support Russian President Boris
Yeltsin, is to be nominated to the
No. 2 post at the SIJlte Department,
administration officials say.
Talbott's move to deputy secretary of state, which vaults him past
more experienced diplomats, was
to be announced today by Secretary
of State Warren Christopher at a
Los Angeles news conference, the
officials said Monday night.
Talbott brings to the usually
gray, offsiJlge post a flair for promoting U.S. foreign policy and a
sense of how it plays in the news
media that many analysts had
found lacking in the Christopher
era.
The 47-year-old Conner journal·
ist's government career began only
last April when he was named a
roving ambassador specializing on
the fonner Soviet Union.
The administration officials,
speaking on condition they not be
named, said Talbott won out over a
trio of far more experienced diplomats: Assistant Secretary Winston
Lord, an expert on China; 1llomas
Pickering, fanner ambassador to
Israel, Jordan, the United Nations
and India, and now envoy to Russia; and Morton Abramowitz, former SIJlte Department intelligence
chief and an ex-ambassador.
The Russian -speaking former
Time magazine bureau chief and
editor-at-large has ardently championed Yeltsin and his attempts to
convert Russia into a political
democracy with a free-market system. However, he stressed last
week the Clinton administration
would back whoever promoted
refonn in Russia.
He has been helping to prepare
Clinton for a Jan. 12-15 visit to
Moscow that will focus on balanc·
ing economic and political rcfonn
with measures that might ease the
wrenching impact abrupt change
has had on the lives of ordinary
Russians. Talbott has suggested
there should be a "safety net" in
the fonn, perhaps, of a comprehensive social security system.
Talbott, a native of Dayton,
Ohio, is a Yale graduate who met
Clinton as a Rhodes scholar at
Oxford University 25 years ago.
They remained friends as Talbott
moved through a series of lOp jobs
at Time, including diplomatic
reporter, White House correspon·
dent, Washington bureau chief and
editor-at-large.

STROBE TALBOTI'
"While they've been close ever
since, the choice was very much
Christopher's, " said one of the
officials who confrnned the nomination ofTalbott
As deputy secretary of state- a
post subject to Senate confrnnation
- Talbott would be given an even
larger role in helping to shape foreign policy.
Christopher's first deputy .
Clif10n Wharton, resigned amid
reports he was dissatisfied that he
had not been given enough of consequence to do in the job beyond
such administrative tasks such as
evaluating the U.S. aid prosram.
Talbott's faith in Yeltsm 's ultimate success did not seem dampened after opponents of the Russian
leader made strong showings in the
Dec. 12 parliamentary elections.
During his trip next month,
Clinton will visit Russia and
Belarus, but not Ukraine and Kazakhstan, the other two fonner Soviet
republics that inherited nuclear
weapons.
The Clinton administration is
trying to encourage American fmns
to do business in potentially oilrich KazakhsiJln. But Ukraine has
been dragging its feet on dismantling its long-range nuclear missiles. A presidential visit to one and
not the other may have been awk.
ward diplomatically.
Talbott has written five books
and was the translator of the late
Russian
leader
Nikita
Khrushchev 's memoirs, which displeased Khrushchev 's successors
and in at least one instance resulted
in his not being given permission to
visit Russia as a journalist

----Local briefs-routh cited in accident
A Long Bottom youth was cited for failing to yield after she
apparently pulled her 1985 Ford Escort onto East Main Street and
hit another car at 2:32p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy police reported.
Michelle Maynard, 17, had light damage to her car, while James
Spaun Jr .. 60, of Racine, had moderate damage to the rear of his
1979 Pontiac, according to the report.
The accident happened in front of the Rite Aid on Eas t Main
Street.

Deputies probe accidents
No injuries were reponed in two accidents in vestigated recently
by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
An icc-slick intersection was attributed loa one-vehicle accident
at the intersection of SIJlte Route 143 and Wolfe Pen Road in Salisbury Township Sunday around 5 p.m.
James D. Howard, 35, Pomeroy, was northbound on SR 143
when he hit a patch of icc at the intersection, the reponed siJlted.
His 1983 Ford Ranger pickup went orr the left side of the road
before strilcing a post.
In an unrelated incident, light damage was reponed to two Ponland residents' vehicles following a two-vehicle acc ident on
Stiversville Road in Lebanon Township Monday around 8:09p.m.
According to a report, Donald R. Dailey, 32, was southbound in
a 1981 Ford and struck the rear of a Chevrolet driven by James E.
Sellers Jr., 41, that had slowed due 10 road conditions.

Deer/car collision reported
No injuries were reported following a deer/car collision on U.S.
33 in Salisbury Township Monday around 7:15p.m.
Richard E. Sayre, 25, Pomeroy, was ea"bound on U.S. 33 when
he struck a deer that ran in10 the roadway causing light damage to
his 1984 Plymouth Reliant.

Water offices close Thursday, Friday
· The office of the Leading Creek Conservancy District will close
Continued on Page 3
··
•'

�..

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARitA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. l..eUen
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Christmas brought some
Washington lessons to Clinton
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Conespondent
WASHING10N - All President Clinton needed for Chrisonas was a
bounce up in the polls and a reviving economy as a sendoff into 1994.
And look at what he got
Sure, the latest approval mtings are his highest in eight months and his
economic aides are advertising recovery as an administmtion achievement The deficit has dipped and his new budge! anticipateS that it will be
held to a six-year low.
But before he could get those gifts unwrapped, Ctinton was hit with a
new round of allegations about extramarital affairs in Arkansas, more
questions about family investments in a land development linked to a
failed savings and loan, and gaffes in the official family, too, with a
replay of controversy over a Cabinet nominee who didn't pay Social
Security taxes on household help.
. The problems kept coming up when Ctinton and company conducted
year-end interviews and briefings at which they'd wanted to talk abo_ul the
pluses.
"I'm very pleased with the year we had," Clinton said in a holiday
interview.
But not with the persistent problems, nagging headaches that have hit
him before.
Does he feel jinxed at the recurrence, just when things were going

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,
TUeaday, December 28, 1~:

There's hope for Russian democracy ::
emphasis was offered by a team
that only weeks before had
described their handling of Russian
relations as the shining polar star of

n .fNo, not really ...," Clinton said. "Nothing ever goes right forever in
anybody's tife; nothing ever goes wrong forever.''
Particularly in his line of work. The current controversies won'tlast
unless there is more to unfold, and evidence to go with it The improving
economy is an asset Clinton carries into the new year.
"I think the momentum is with the presiden~" said Sen. Sam Nunn of
Georgia, a fellow Democrat but sometimes a skeptic.
But for Clinton's program, "we might still be slipping and sliding
around" economically, his chief of staff, Mack McLarty, said after some
economists questioned whelher the new administration deserves the credit
Earned or not, it goes with the presidency. "If the economy were bad,
who do you think would be blamed?'' Clinton said.
The president's tist of what went right included congressional approval
of his budget, the North American Free Trade Agreemen~ Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg's choice and confnmation to the ~upreme Court and the
fust-step agreement on.Middle East peace.
His low point, the president said, came when 18 Americans were killed
in a street battle in Mogadishu, Somatia, on Oct 3.
What had surprised him about the presidency?
"I think my biggest surprise in a negative sense was that ... coming
here from another place and another way of doing things, there really is a
The media is our time machine,
Washington culture here tha~ on the one hand, needs to be changed, but
but
suddenly, just as we were exiton the other hand, has to be dealt with if you want to get anything done.''
ing
1993, it has jammed -beamThat's one way of putting it
ing
us simultaneously toward fasAt about the same time on Wednesday, Ralph Nader was scolding him
cist
hate-mongers of the past and
for adopting those ways in the deal-making that got NAFTA through
future.
Congress.
. .
.
.
One minute, we are implored by
"President Clinton , when he was campatgmn~ for tilts offtce,
media
film critics to see
promised that he would not conduct business as usualm Washington and
"Schindler's
List," the movie so
that he would change the permanent government," Nader said. "His lobpowerful it will tninspon us back to
bying over NAFTA indicates that he is conducting business as usual.''
But after two Arkansas slate troopers claimed they'd helped to arran~e the horrors of Hider's Holocaust
illicit liaisons for Ctinton as governor, the president's reacuon fit the Ltt- We're told we will more than
tle Rock way of doing thin(ls. not ';he Washington cultw;e. He telephoned merely see - we will feel - how
troopers from his old secunty detail to see what was gomg on. That only it was when anti-Semitism became
heightened the controversy; the White House then had to deny that Clin- a policy and 6 million Jews were
systematically massacred by a
ton had offered jobs or tried to pressure troopers into silence.
, A response that might have been natural for a governor can worsen the nation whose people pretended not
problem for a president. The White House is not only a pulpit, it is an to notice.
The next minute, we are
amplifier.
"One of the things I have learned as presiden~ perhaps one of my most shocked by news from Moscow of
valuable lessons, is at least for the president of the United States, words the strong electoral showing of a
are deeds in a fundamental way," Clinton said, talking about foreign poli- one-time fringe potitician and ultimate demagogue, Vladimir Zhiricy.
novsky, whose Hitlerian ravings
That lesson also is applicable closer to home.
remind us that a hateful past can be
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- a future. Zhirinovsky captured the
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and votes (but hopefully .not hearts or
minds) of so many Russians that
national politics for more than 30 years.
shocked experts from the Kremlin
to the White Housy plunged into
mass recapitulation.
Now even the experts can see
what was clear to lesser tights long
ago: Yeltsin's economic shock
therapy was doomed to produce

Hodding Carter Ill
America's foreign'policy.
(Something else deserves at
least passing note here. This
adminiStration has the interesting
habit of offering up innocents as
human sacrifice in the wake or disaster. When Bosnia, Somalia and
Haiti exploded in their races, the
architects or U.S. foreign policy
fired Deputy Secretary of State
Clifford Wharton, who had nothing
to do with malcing or implementing
policy toward any of the three. No
sooner had Russian policy misfired
than Secretary of Defense Les
Aspin was tossed over the side,
though his connection to Moscow's
misfortunes was tenuous to nonexistent. Eventually, fairness
should lead the president to decide
that if ritual sacrifice is required,
those with real responsibility for
foreign policy should be given the
honor.)
But though its scrambling and
initial denials of the obvious ,were
unseemly, the administration is

weU on itS way to full recovery and
a much improved policy. As outlined by Strobe Talbou, the man
responsible for coordinating U.S.
policy toward Russia, it will add
social welfare to the earlier emphasis on market capitalism and
democracy. In other words, the
people having spoken at the ball01
box, their concerns will be heeded
in Washington as well as in
Moscow.
The administration also seems
to be I005C!Iing the umbilical cord
that connects American policy to
Boris Yeltsin, which Is an overdue
step. Personalizing Russia's future
is not good for its welfare or ours.
II is a lesson · we should have
learned for good with the fall of the
Shah of Iran 15 years ~-To the
degree we ane seen as c
'n or
propping up leaders or o~er
nations, we become hostages to
their behavior and fortune. Our
interests are more fundamental and
long term than the success or failure of any one politician, faction or
party,

There is another wnsequence of
the Russian elections. We have
been reminded that change stilll!as
shallow roots, while Russia's historic tendencies run deep. As Polish Foreign Minister Andrzej Ole-

Berry•s World
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wideSplead discontent before even
modest comfort could be felt by the
public. Enter Zhirinovsky, riding
the wave of Russian rage that the

This is provoked by those who consider themselves part or the Jewish
nation. We don't need provocations
like this"- from his post-election
press conference. · ·
PUT ASTERISK HERE Anti'
Semitism 2 - TV News Needs
Aryan Anchors: "Our voters are
inevitable result of Yeltsin's poli- constandy asking us, saying they're
cy. Zhirinovsky's appeal comes sick and tired of the fact that TV
from waving an iron fist at a people announcers are representatives of a
that historically 'have known only non-Russian nationality. They
that way of governing. And mainly, would very much like to see kind
he tells the people the blame rests Russian faces who talk to them in
with foreign demons - and the good Russian .... (Asked if he was
responsibility for fixing it rests he referring to Jewish television
everywhere but with themselves.
announcers) "If people of a certain
And faster than you can say kind speak to the nation every day
"xenophobia," you get: Zhin- and eve~ hour, this creates antinovsky's List. It is nothing like Semitism ' - ibid.
.
Schindler's Lis~ which meant a job ·
PUT ASTERISK HERE Back to
in Oskar Schindler's armament fac- the Old Empire: Has advocated
tory in lieu or a one-way trip to retaking .the now-independent
Hitler's death factory. "Zhiri- states or the old Soviet Union.
novsky 's List" is the documented
PUT ASTERISK HERE
hates of a demagogue - a stream Beyond the Old Empire - Gerwithout conscience that meanders many: In a mdio interview broadfrom anti-Semitic master-race cast in Hamburg this month, he
moutllings to Russian lebensraum.
said if Gennany (a prime supplier
Gleanings from Zhirinovsky's of aid and investment in Russia)
List:
interferes in Russia's internal
PUT ASTERISK HERE Anti- affairs, he wouldn't hesitate to creSemitism I - Jews Cause Ic "At ate "new Hiroshimas and
a certain stage of development, a Nagasakis ... (or a) Chernobyl in
wave of anti-Semitism arises .... Germany."

Martin Schram

crime bill, it was passed by the
Senate without a hearing and without a word of debate.
Only part of the credit is due the

NatHentoff
NRA . The rrimary mover~ are
members o the Congressional
Sportsmen's Caucus. That group of
rugged outdoorsmen, and a few
women, includes 159 members of
the House and 33 senators. Would
that there were a Preservation of
the Bill or Rights Caucus one-tenth
that size.
The core of this legislation
exempting hunters from the First
Amendment is stunningly too
broad. The ptoposed law - if
agreed to by the House - makes it
unlawful for a person lmowingly to
''obstruct, impede, or otherwise
inteifere with a lawful hunt by an
individual."
'
Hunters are protected from
whatever that language means n01
only on federaJ lands but also
"upon a public or private road,
highway, path, trail, or other nor-

mal route of access to federal
lands." (Those federal lands constihlte a third of the United States,
and 85 percent of them is open to
hunting.)
Lawyers for the Fund for Animals - Katherine Meyer and Eric
Glitzenstein - point out that on its
face, this Senate bill would make
unlawful ''nO! only physical conduct but even pure speech directed
at a hunter or bapper which in any
way 'interferes with' lhat individual's ability to enjoy his or her hunting or trapping experience."
In tbe only federal·appeals court
ruling on a stmiljlr hunters' protection statute, in Connecdcut, the
Second Clicuit .Coun of Appeals
emphasized in 1984 that such laws
" clearly are designed to protect
hunters from conduct - whether
verbal or otherwise - by those
opposed to hun.!J.ng." Since the
statute was not ·viewpoint neutral,
the Connecticut law was struck
down on First Amendment
grounds.
There is a ltighly relevant
Supreme Court 1985 opinion in
another case - Cornelius v.

· Ice

Flurries

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
ltl1993 Accu-Weether. Inc

.Vra Associaled Press G,aphicsNet

:No relief from wintry
.assault until Friday

l

..

I

W.VA

I

..
.'
•

.

. •'

PUT ASTERISK HERE' !
Beyond the Old Empire - Japan: \
"The same goes for the Japanese,"· ,1
Zhirinovsky continued. "The5' :
already experienced Hiroshima and-'
Nagasaki; 50 years have gone b)i,
and maybe they've already forgot:;
ten this. We will create new
Hiroshimas and Nagasakis. I will •
not hesitate to deploy nuclear:
weapons."
PUT ASTERISK HERE East to
Alaska: Has advocated making
Alaska a part of Russia, from :
whence it came.
So it is no wonder that this dem- .
agogue, whose party captured perhaps one-sixth of the legislature, .
has captured five-sixths of the elec•,
lion media aftermath.
. ··
Now Clinton spokesmen from ,
Vice President Gore down sum up
Zhirinovskr with one word :
"Anathema' (to all we stand for)
- it's their daily public reaction. ·
Privately, they are feverishly .
reassessmg whether U.S. policy
and aid should be so unswervingly .
tied to one man: Yeltsin. It's about .·
time. For the new political reality.·:
in Russia is crisis in perpetuity.. .
And, an anathema a day may not be
enough to keep the dictator away. .."'
Martin Schram Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise :
Association.

Hunters take aim at First Amendment
Many hunters betieve they have
the special right to pursue and kill
their prey without any interference
from defenders of animal rights. By
interference, they mean not only
physical disruption but also speech
tntended to persuade hunters to
desist. Such verbal interference is
condemned as harassment and must
be outlawed.
Nebraska, for instance, has a
recent "hunter rights" law, and
Rex Arnack, director of the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission,
has informed a concerned citizen
that the commission "considers
picketing parking lots (when
hunters gather there) as hunter
hamssment." In tbe letter, Arnack
added that "the Clame and Parks
Commission has a cordial ::elationship with the NRA."
The National Rifle Association
heartily ap~roves or the "hunter
harassment ' laws that have been
passed in many states, but now it
has gone after bigger game. The
NRA has helped generate tbe
craftily tided federal Recreational
Hunting, Safety &amp; Preservation AcL
of 1993. Tucked into the huge anti-

MICH

chowski put 1~ "A very large see~
tion of the Russian populatio,rl
appears to think in historical term(
or imperial" or greater Russia." Fot;
nations of Central Europe such J1SO
Poland, that is a chilling thought.'
Having just wrenched themselvCs'
free of Soviet control, they are nqti
anxious to be pulled back within a;
Russian orbit
:•
That gives the persistent request:
by Hungary, Poland and the Czech:
Repubtic for membership in NATO.
fresh urgency and unarguable:
validity , For the moment, the!
American response is inc01Jl0f81.C!li
in its proposal for a new "Pannell-'
ship for Peace ," a transitiom(ll
arrangement for cooperation with-:
out security guarantees. It is an :
attempt to make the Central Eurq- '
pean democracies feel wanted :
without raising the paranoia levelt
in Russia where Yeltsin sees any l
extension of NATO as a direct
threat to Russian security.
:
Such a tentative approach no :
longer makes sense, even on its ;
own terms. NATO should go fur- •
ther than the proposed partnership. ;
At its January I0-11 summit, which •
President Clinton will auend, it :
should offer a timetable for mem- :
bership to those Central European •
countries willing to meet stringent :
terms for entry. These would :
include a functioning democracy !
and a military establishment under :
firm civilian control. Rather than •
being a threat to Russia, a NATO :
whose membership included Cen- :
tral Europe's democ~acies would :
~ a deterrent to those tempted to '
~~ the worst of the old Rus- I
sian foreign policy habits - habits 1
whose victims would inevitably·,
include democracy at home as well •
as its neighbors' independence.
:
Only tools and incurable opti ~ :
mists ever thou~ht that chanJI,e :
would come easily in Russia or the "
other nations of the former commu• l
nist bloc. The elections there earlier !
this month were a healthy reminder l
of the distance ye1 to be tmvelled, :
But they were not a smashup and •
Russia is not at a dead-end. The :
fact that this betief ties at the core ;
of American foreign policy today •
continues to offer hope for Russia's
future.
.1
Hoddlng Carter III, former !
State Department spokesman •
and award-winning reporter, ecli~ :
tor and publisher, Is president of :
MalnStreet, a Washington, D.C.- 1
based. television proouctloil company.
· 1

Russian demagogue's growing list

OV~Rt&gt;oS~V 0~

Wednesday , Dec. 29
Accu·Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and

By The Associated Press
A storm system took aim on around 40.
Southern Ohio today. The National Extended forecast
Weather Service posted a winter
Thursday... Snow likely north·
weather advisory and warned of east. .. A chance of flurries elsewhere.
possibly 3 inches of new snow by Lows 10 10 15 and highs in the 20s.
nightfall.
Friday ... Fair. Lows 20 to 25 and
. Forecasterssaidthesno,wwould highs in the 30s.
taper off tonight, with flurries likely
New yearsday•.. Achance of snow
overtheentirestate.Ovemightagain north and a chance of rain or snow
will range from the single digits in south. Lows in the 20s north to near 30
the north to the teens in the south. south. Highs in the 30s to near 40
Highs on Wednesday will be in the south.
20s.
Around the nation
No relief from the wintry
Frigid weather remained in much
weather is expected before Friday, of the nation today, as early momi~g
the NWS said, when fair skies are temperatures·hung below zero tn B1S·
oxpected and the mercury could marck, N.D., Minneapolis, and Sault
crack the freezing mark. On New Ste. Marie, Mich.
Year's Day, highs could be in the
Sub-zero temperatures were ex40s.
peeled throughout the day in northern
The record-high temperature for Maine. Single digits were expected in
thi s date at the Columbus weather northern New England. with highs
swionwas68degreesin 1984whilc reaching the teens in southern New
the record low was 10 below zero in England, Minnes01a, Michigan and the
l950. Sunset tonight will be at 5:14 Dakotas.
Jl.m. and sunrise Wednesday at7:53
Snow was in the forecast for parts
&amp;.m.
of Minnesota, Maryland, West Vir·
Southern Ohio
ginia, Illinois and Kentucky.
: Tonight.. ;Snow likely. Low
Moreseasonalllle ·wcathe~rctu:ned
near 20. Northeast winds S to I 0 to the Southeast today w•th h1ghs
mph ... Becoming variable. Chance ex~ted in the SOs and 60s. Much of
Flonda was to reach tnto the 70s.
of snow is 70 percent.
Wednesday ...Cloudy with a
The Pacific Northwest should see
chance of snow. High around 30. highsinthe30s,reachingthe40salong
Chance of snow is 50 percent.
the coast. Across the Southwest, highs
Outlook for new years should be in the 50s and 60s, the NactBy ... Chance of rain or snow. Lows tiona! Weather Service said.
ncar 30 and
in the mid 30s to

Kl"dnapplt!llrs
!fl;jl'f •

continued
from
Page
• •• _
_
_.;
; : _1_ _ _

reunited with theii parents in Rostov-on -Don, the southern city
where they were seized.
Two 15-year-old boys, among
tJic last to be released, spent part of
tlieir time. in captivity inside the
explosives-laden helicopter playing
tic-tac-toe.
. The hostage-taking gripped
~ussians' attention. Many Russ1ans
are angry over the rapid mcrease in
crime that has accompanied the
switch from communism to capital·
ism.
President Boris Ycltsin appoint·
cd top officials to oversee the crisis
and employed the military to moni·
tor and track the kidnappers.
. The kidnappers first demapded
safe passage 10 Iran, but police now
believe they wanted only the $10
million in U.S. currency paid by
the Russian government.
· Police reported recovering a bit
more than $9.4 million.
· The kidnappers' ringleader told
in.,estigators they tossed the rest of

The Daily Sentinel
•

NAACP legal Defense and EduC~~- :'
tion Fund - that did not involve 'i
hunting, but bears on this new Sen- 1
all! bill The court said that a statute 1
"cannot be saved that is in faot :
based on the desire to suppress a· ;
particular point of view,"
·•
In addition to the Fund for Ani- :
mals, the Senate's wounding of the· :
First Amendment is opposed, not. :
surprisingly. by the Humane socr..
ety of the United States, the American Society for the Prevention of, :
Crueltr to Animals and the Arneri- · :
can C•vil Liberties Union because ' •
the bill, it says, bans peaceful ;
protest and is "inherendy vague." · ' ~
Moreover, the Senate act is in , I
further deep violation of the First · !
Amendment because it says that · •
news of the intention of an animal ' :
rights or environmental group to ' :
conduct a demonstration could trig- :
ger a court order to stop that \
protest.
·· •
Nat Hentoff is a nationally ; :
renowned authorily on the First , :
Amendment and the rest of the BilL ' :
or Rights.
;1
Nat Hentorr Is a syndicated .J
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

I

Published every a!tcruoon , Monday lhtough

Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley Publiahina Company/Mulllmedia

Inc ., Pomeroy. Ohio 4S169, Ph. 992-ll.S6.
Seco11d cllilll postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Memba': The Associated Praa, aod tht Ohto !
New1paper Aalociation, National AdvertliiDJ
~prtsentatiwe,

Branham Newspaper StiN,

733 Third Avenue, New York, New York
10017.

the cash out in flight over the
rugged Caucasus Mountains about
1.000 miles south of Mo~w .
"They thought the money was
marked and wanted to mislead the
police, so people would pick ~p the
money and be mis~en for ki~ap·
pers," said Andrei !&lt;~koshtn, a
first deputy defense mmtster.
Police Col. Yuri Reshetnik said
the kidnappers also left money
behind in the Mi-8 military heli·
copter.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .37 5/8
Ashland Oil................... ...33 5/8
AT&amp;T ... ................................... 54
Bank One ............................ .39
Bob Evans ..... .. .................21 5/8
Charming Shop ................. 10 5/8
Champion Ind ...... .............. 1R 3/4
City Holding ..................... .32 l/4
Federal Mogul ............ ....... 29 1/2
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. 45 l/4
Lands End .............. ..... ... . 44 3/4
Limited Inc. .. ....... ... .. . ... 16 3/4
Multimedia Inc ................. .33 l/2
Point Bancorp .................... .... .. 15
Reliance Electric............ 17 1/2
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ................ 18 1/4
Shonev' s Inc. .. ................... 24 3/8
Star Bank ............. . . ......... .35
Wendy lnt' l. ...................... l7 1/8
Worthinb'IOn Ind ....... ......... 19 3/4
Stock reports are the 10 :30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
uf Gallipolis.

Vesta Canode, 96, Albany, died
Monday, Dec. Z7, 1993, at the Rus·
sell Nursing Home in Albany.
Born in Dexter, daughter of the
late Wiltiam Vatice and Myrta Hutton Rife, she was a housewife and
attended the Point Rock Nazarene
Chtlrch.
Surviving are two sons, John
William Canode of Hamden and
Marvel Earl Canode of Perrysburg;
three daughters, Neva Baker of
Sydney, Minnie Dixon of Albany
and Shirley Jenkins of Wellsto1); 14
grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren and 35 grear-great-grandchil·
dren.
Also surviving is a sister-in-law,
Grace Hensler or Albany,
She was preceded in death by
her husband, James D. Canode; one
son, James Allen Canod; three
grandsons; two great-gmndchildren
and one great-great-great-grandson:
eight brothers and sistas.
Services will be held Wednesday at I p.m at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany with the
Rev. Olan Harvey officiating. Burl·
a1 will foUow in the Caster Ceme·
tery.
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m.
tonight at the funeral home.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday
Admissions: Argyle Deeter,
Racine; Willis Morris, Racine; Paul
Taylor, Pomeroy; John Metzger,
Middleport; Wanetta Radekin ,
Albany;
.
Robert Moore, Pomeroy.
Discharges: Neva Moore,
Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Dec. 27 dlscbarg~h- Jodie
Moore, l.ecta Long,
erine Gill
and DiJ uan Robinson.
Dec. 27 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Snyder, son, Jackson.

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Yediot
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the Palestini·
ans
would
have that
to make
conces·
sions.
"I very much hope that Arafat
comes down from that tree he's
climbed because I am not bringing
anything new with me," he said.
Neither Abbas nor Peres gave
details about their first meeting
Monday evening, which lasted
more than one hour.
Egypt's Middle East News
Agency quoted Palestinian sources
as saying that the two sides still
disagreed over protection of settlers
and that Israel had rejected PLO
proposals for solving the border
issue. It did not say what the proposals were.
The news agency also quoted
Palestinian sources as saying that
Israel had raised its offer concerning Jericho, saying it was willing to
give up 28 square miles around the
West Bank city.
Earlier, Israel radio reported the
Israelis would offer 20 square
miles. However, both figures
remained far below the 80 square
miles that Arafat has been demandin g.

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Judges appointed to riot case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Six
common pleas judges have been
appointed to help hear cases that
arise from a Scioto County grand
jury review of the Lucasville prison
riot

Special prosecutors are presenting evidence of crimes that
occurred during the April siege that
left nine innnates and a guard dead
at the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility. Earlier this month, seven
prosecutors were added to the state
team that will try any criminal
cases resulting from !he grand
jury's investigation.
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Jus·
lice Thomas Moyer said Monday
that judges in Scioto County, where
the prison is located, asked for the
extra help. The appointments take
effect Jan. I and will last six

months.
If all the cases are not concluded
by June 30, the judges are authorized to complete any work still
pending.
.
Appointed were: Donald Cox,
retired , Gallia County; Nicholas
Holmes Jr., Ross County; Warren
Lotz, Vinton County; Thomas
Mitchell, retired, Jackson County;
William Stapleton, Brown County;
and William Walton, Lawrence
County.
Mark Piepmeier, a Hamilton
County assistant prosecutor in
charge of all Lucasville cases,
expanded his staff this month by
adding four more prosecutors from
Hamillon County, two from
Franklin County and one from
Clermont County.

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Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medi cal Services
responded to eight calls for assistance between Monday and Tuesday mornings. Units responding included:
·
Monday- 9:I9 a.m. Symcuse to State Route 124 for Ruth Canter who was transported to Holzer Medical Center; 9:58 a.m. Rutland to Meigs Mine 2 for Clarence Williams who was uansported to
HMC; 10:42 a.m. Columbia Towqship First Responders and Rut·
land Squad to Darst Road for Evelyn Smallwood who was trans·
ported to HMC; 11:07 a.m. Columbia Township rlfSt Responders
and Syracuse Squad to Salem School Lot Road for Juanita Radelcin
who was transported to Veterans Memorial l;lospital; 4:47 p.m.
Tuppers Plains First Responders and Squad to State Roue 681 West
for Ferrell Vanoy who was transported to Sl. Joseph's Hospital:
11:43 p.m. Syracuse to Chwch Streel for Jay Holsinger who was
taken to VMH.
Tuesday - 102 a.m. LifeFlight II transported Jay Holsinger
from VMH to Riverside Hospital; 8:23 a.m. Syracuse to Dutchtown
Hill for Hiram Fisher who was transported to VMH.

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,.I!J

CGuntr

EMS responds to eight calls

and much, much more!

POMEROY
992-6687

ll Weeb .............................................. ,$11.1(
26 Weekl ............................ ...... ...............$43.16
llWeou ................................................ .SU.76

Three were fined and six others forfeited bonds in the court of
Middlepon Mayor Dewey Horton Monday night
.
Fined were Christopher B. Savitz, Ironton, failure. to dtspla¥ a
valid registration, $25 and costs; Matthew Huxley, Middleport Jail
disonlerly, sentenced to two days, no cost, and disorderly conduct
after warning $115 and costs.
John A. Harris II, Kansas, disorderly aftcl' warning $115 and
costs and resisting arrest $215 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Roben P. Hatfield, Rutland, Stop sign $60;
Loretta L. Atkins, Rutland, expired registration $60; Roben Scarberry, Pomeroy, disorderly conduct/fighting, $150, and disorderly
manner after warning, $150; Thomas A. Terry, Middleport speed
$52; Christopher E. Neal, Bidwell, speed $56; Shannon L.
Scholderer, Middleport, hit-skip, $250, and failure to control, $60.
A warmnt will be issued for those individua!J who did not appear
in coun or post bond, according to a coun official.

• Hide-A-Beds

2~4 EAST MAIN

•eu

Three fined in Middleport Court

Oo/o Interest

in ldvuco direct to 1be Dally Sentinel

No subJCriptlou by mall permitted In
where home carrier' senice il1vailable.
Malt Subocrlptlolu

The Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Solid Waste Ma!lllgement District Board of Directors will meet Jan. 4 at 2:30p.m. m the
board of directors' meeting room at the district office, 722 E. Tenth
St , Wellston.

$10 month

subteriba'l not dCiirina to pay tho'*"'* may

ou a tluee., ail or 12 month bull. Credit wlU be
&amp;l."~tD c:atrier tJW:h woct.

Waste board to meet

SlO Down

Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

7

'

~~~~;;~;-;·;·;;~·;·~·;·;;;;~·~-~·:·;·~-;-~·~·;·;~~~~~~
:i;

Stale Auto's already
kNi premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
·and home with the Stii'te
Auto Companies.

PRICE

Dally...................................... ,.. _

continued from Page 1

issues: culling funds for the ballis·
tic missile defense program and
passing the North American Free
Tmde Agreement.
Among Ohio's House delega·
tion, Clinton's position matched
most often the votes of Democratic ·
Reps . Tom Sawyer and Louis
Stokes. Both voted with the White
House on 88 percent of the I 02
House votes in the CQ analysis ..
At the other end of the spec·
trum, the Ohio lawmakers most at
odds with the president this year
were Republican Reps . John
Kasich.an~ John Boehner.
.
~1ch s .vote matched the pres•dent s pos1llort only 33 percent of
t·~l'"s
the time. Boehner voted Clinton's
r~
g ll· • •• way 34 percent of the time, CQ
COntinued from Page 1
said.

SINGLE COPY

,

Howlrd A. Price, 79, of Point
died Sandly, Decanbcr
26, 1993, 81 biJ home.
He wu a relired employee of the
Foote Mineral Plant in New Haven
and a former employee of the
Marieaa ManufacDtring Company
in Point Pleasant. He wu a member or the Cltrist EtliKotla1 Chun:h
in Point Pleasanl atid a Senior Warcten; a former city council member,
a judge for the Mason County Fair
Scholarship and a member of the
Mason County Fair Board.
Born October 2, 1914 in Dar·
lington, MD, he was a son of the
late John and Martha (Amoss)
Price. In addition to his parents he
was preceded in destb by his first
wife, Jane (Durfee) Price; two
brothers and a sister.
He is survived by his wife, Mar·
garet (Somerville) Price; two sons,
John Howard Price of Sunnyvale,
CA and David C. Price of Huntington; two step-sons, Richard L.
Johnson of Morgantown, and
Joseph W. Johnson of Columbus;
two sisters, Alice Huff of Lexington, KY and Esther Ward of
Joppa, MD; three grandsons, David
and Mark Price ol Sunnyvale, CA
and Brian Price of Huntington;
several nieces, nephews and special
friends.
Service will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday, December 29, at the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant with Rev. Gilben
Watkins officiating. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
near Point Pleasant
VISiting hours will be beld at the
funeral home on Tuesday from 6-8
p.m.
In lieu of Bowen, the family requests that contributions be made
to the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Health Foundation at 2520 Valley
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550.

PltaS~~~t,

said. " The majority of these things
he had a position on for many years
regardless of who was in the White
House."
Blair noted that some of the bills
Clinton supported were Glenn initiatives such as elevating the Envi·
ronmental Protection Agency 10
cabinet level and overhauling the
law governing political activity of
government employees.
"It's a lot easier working on
these things when people on both
sides of Pennsylvania Avenue are
from the same party," he said.
He also pointed out that Glenn
fought Chnton on two major
,
·

POSTMASTBR: Send addrela chanaea to The
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.. 1\&gt;meroy. Ohio ,
-45769.

Cootlllued from Pll!e 1
at noon Thursday for year-end inventory , accor&lt;Ung to a
spokeswoman at the offiCe. In observance of New Year's Day, the
offices wiD be closed Friday. In the event of a water emergency,
customers may call 742-2597.

Howard Price

Vesta Canode

..

·gh?

fR~O, \-\1\\}~

-___,--Area deaths-- .------Briefs...- - - - ,

·~

Two weeks ago, the Russian
elecunte behaved almost exactly
the way people do in most
advanced democraciea. In tbe midst
or hard times and widespread disillusionment, they voted in large
numbers for the most vociferous
opponents of the status quo. But
while the results generated an icy
blast of reality that touched nerves
and scrambled policy from Warsaw
to Washington, they were a wakeup call rather than a calamity.
Initially, the problem was that
almost everyone on this side was
caught unawares. The extraoi'dinary showin' of the crypto-fascists
led by Vladtmir Zhirinovsky was
totallr unexpected. The depth of
RuSSian disillusionment with a
refonn process that translated into
bare market shelves and rampant
corruption was discounted by
earnest believers in shock therapy
economics. American policy
toward Russia on the eve of the
national elections was personalized
to a fault, with all our eggs in the
Boris Yeltsin baskel.
Later, listening to some of the
post-election commentary by Ctinton administmtion spokesmen, it
was not easy to remember how
badly they had misjudged the probable outcome. The shift in public

The Dally Sentinel~

Pomel'oy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Dally Sentlne ~

.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 28, 1993

•I

'

�Tuesday, December 28, 1993

,Sports

The Daily

Se~t~el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Tuesday, December 28, 1~
. Page 4

Chargers beat Dolphins 45-20 to extend Miami losing streak
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - While
celebrating their 45 -20 win over
Miami, the San Diego Chargers
wondered why lltey didn' t play lhat
well in llteir previous 14 games.
Stan Humphries threw three
touchdown passes, including a 41yard " Hail Mary" to Anthony
Miller, and rookie Natrone Means
had a 65-yard run among his lhree
touchdowns as the Chargers kept
Miami's playoff hopes on hold by
handing lite Dolphins llteir fourth
straight loss Monday night
" I hate to see it come to an end,
but we had our chances and we
didn't take advantage of litem,"
Humphries said about the Chargcrs' frustrating season, which will
end with no playoff appearance for
the IOth time in II seasons.
But the Chargers did avenge a
31 ·0 loss at Miami in last season' s
divi s ional playoffs, in which
Humphries threw four interceptions.
" This is not as sweet as if we
would have won last year," said
Humphries, who completed 19 of
29 passes for 248 yards and no
interceptions.
Safety Darren Carrington had •
two of the Chargers' three interceptions of Scott Mitchell, and he, too,
wondered about lite blown chances.
" It does feel good for us to
come back and play like this,"

CarringtOn said.
Last year the Chargers were
AFC West champs. Monday's victory merely put litem at 7-8, and
they have to win at Tampa Bay
Sunday to finish 81.500.
The Dolphins (9-6) can still
clinch a wild-card berlh willt a win
at New England next week. They
can get into lite playoffs even willt
a loss to the Patriots, but would
need help from several other teams.
" We hate to go to Foxboro and
that cold weather," tight end Keillt
Jackson said. "That's why we
wamed to win here."
"It' s just a continuation of
what's been happenin'- to us, "
coach Don Shula said. • They had
three interceptions and capital ized."
Mitchell, who was 24 of 40 for
260 yards and one touchdown, said
he's mystified by the Dolphins'
collapse.
"Things were going their way,"
he said.
Mitchell's lhree interceptionscornerback Donald Frank had lite
ollter - led to 17 points for San
Diego.
In a night of big plays, Means
provided lite first one on his 65yard run for a 17-f/lead early in lite
second quarter. He paused for just
a moment as lite line opened a huge
hole in the middle,llten outraced a
horde of Dolphins to the end zone.

"It's amazing what you can do
with II guys chasing you," said
Means, who rushed 18 times for a
career-high 118 yards. He also had
scoring runs of one and two yards.
Miami pulled to 17-13 when
Keillt Byars scored lite first of his
two touchdowns, on a one-yard

increasing the lead to 38-13.
Miller finished with seven
catches for 110

Miami's Pete Stoyanovich
kicked field goals of 31 and 50
yards, and San I&gt;iego's John Car-

EAGLES

ney had one of 32 yards. Byars also ·
caught a 13-yard touchdown pass
frQm MilclleU.
•

•
'

..

run.

Carrington's second interception
led to San Diego's next big play.
Facinj! second-and-tO from the
Miami 41 with five seconds left,
Humphries threw it up for grabs in
the end zone. The ball bounced off
safety Chris Green and into
Miller'shandsfora24-13lead.
Humphries hit Ronnie Harmon
for a 21-yard score three plays into
the second half.
Humphries then had his third
touchdown pass in a span of 8:40
when he found Miller on a 14·
yarder willt 6:20 left in the quarter,

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
JAN. 7 - Southern • Home
JAN. 11· Wellston· Home
Jan. 14· Federal Hocking· Home

GET OFF ME - S.m Diego
wide receiver Anthony Miller
(83) fights for ;yardage while
fighting orr Miami derenslve back
Vestee Jackson arter catchin~ a
Stan Humphries pass dur1ng
Monday night's AFC bailie in
San Diego, where the Chargers
won 45·20 in part because or
Miller's two touchdowns gained
on a seven-caleb, 110-yard effort.
(AP)

GIRLS
·JAN. 3 • Wellston • Away
JAN. 6· Federal Hocking· Away
JAN. 10· Vinton County· Home.

-·. .

AMERIC~ CONFERENCE
EulemDiwlalon

Team
W L
11 -Buffalo .......... 11 4
Miami ............... 9 6
N.Y. lot~ ........... 8 7
Jndi..tpalit...... 4 It
Now EnaJ.and.... 4 II

T
0
0
0
0
0

Pd. PF PA
.733 299 232:
.600 321311
.21J7 20S 259

0 .733 344231
0 .533 292272
0 .467 29S 291
0 .:100 174299

w• ..,. IMwl.a.
•'

.·

x-Kanau Cily ... 10 S 0 .667 294267
y-Dcnvor .......... 9 6 0 .600 343 251

LA . Raider~ ..... 9 6 0 .600 273296
s.. o;qo ......... 1 • o .467 290m
Seattle. .............. 6 9 0 .400 256.210

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Seatlle ... ~ ............... 20
Phoenii: .....•....•....... 2D

3
5

.870
.800

POitland .................16
Golden State .......... 14
t..A. Cllppen ......... ll
t..A. Ltlcen .............9

11

.S93
.560
.440

o

.Z40

Adanllc DIY1&amp;1011

......... W L Tl'b. GF GA
N.Y. Rtnsen .... 25 8 3
53 IJS 90
New Jcncy ....... 20 12 4
Philtdelphlt ...... 19 17 2

44 126 103

40 138 139

w,.run..,.. ...... t617

34 t1st10
33 tlA ll4

2
N.Y. w..den .. IS 15 3
Flarida .............. 14 1.5 5

33 94 98
2A 90121

TampaBay ....... 1072 4

N....-1 Dlvltloo
PiLIIbwJh ......... ll10 7 43
Botlon ..... - ....... 1111 1
41
Bu.tfalo ............. 1717 ]
37
MonLII&gt;Il.. ......... lS 14 6
36
Qucbcc ............. 1416
33
lbnfonl ............ ll 19 ]
29
Ou.awa .............. 8 "r1 ]
19

s

132123
11110:5
12310S

ltO 101
1:!4122
102121
ItO Ill

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Centnl DlvWon

......... W L Tl'b
Toranto ......... .... 21 II 6
Stl.ouia .......... . l912 S
DaUaa.. ............. 18 13 1
Detroit .............. 20 IJ 1
Oi~aao ............ 18 12 4
Winnipca .......... 13 20 5

7

10
13
15

42 IS3120
40 109 92
31 1271SS

57
54

Iezser

p.m.

Wednesday's games
S.cramemo a WuhinJ'On. 7:30p.m.
ALlmll II Odtnclo, 7o30 p.m.
Now Jersey II OW:aJO,I:30 p.m
Bo.too It lhah, 9 p.m.
Saalo • LA. LU.. .. I0:30 p.m.
C1ipptn It Portland, 10:30 p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll

pointa (or • finn-place 'IOic throuah me
point for a lSih·plaoc voce. and previout
nnkinp c

5
0
2
2

43140123
31 117114
21 127 141
28 96116

6
5

21

166

103

2511 2 133

""' S• 41. LSU 32, XAVIER, 0100 31,

iftaham 27, Maryland 25, Penn IS, Stanrord lS, Va. Commonwealth IS, Okla homa 13, New Melico St. l2, 1owa St. 9,

Monday's scores
Ptilladelphia 2, Buffalo 0
Bmoa S, Ottawa 3

O~la

0\l.CIJO .5, Toron10 l
DclroiL 6, Dtllu 0

1. VlrJinll t.

Tonleht's comes

l'tli1t4ek&gt;hitiLPitllburlll, B' p.m.
Ttmpt llty" Quebec, H5 p.m.

Major college scores

Anaheim at N.Y. Jalmdcta,. 7:1j p.m.
llardonlat New Jersey, 7:3S p.m.

florida aL w..hinpwl.. 7:35 p.m.
C.I.Jary al San JOIC, 10:35 p.m.

Vancouver at Loa AnaeJe~ , I O:lS p.m.

Wednesday's games
Aorida at Hanlord,7:35 p.m.
N.Y. b1onden 1L Quebec, Hl p.m.
N.Y. Rtn.... " SL. Lauio, BS p.m.
Tororno "O.U., 1:35 p.m.
O.iu&amp;O II Winnipct:,l:l5 p.m.
Monlrell II~. 9:35p.m.

•'

:::
,.
,;-

-!:

•
·:

"".

Bas ketball
NBA standincn

Rqular-se1110n action
Eut

PiLIIburlll 76, Coppin SL. 70
Seton flill74, Waaner 62
Sou Ill
.Jackton St. 79, M.-nphil St. 74
Mumy St. 119, Pikovillo 74

MldDa)1Gn 111, Can. Connec:tic:ut St. 60
W. Mlcltipn II, M-d SL S9
Wilt.~ BIJ tn. Cllkap:t St. S3
Wbccnin 10, Slatlford 73

Allondc-

W L
New Yodt .............. 17 6
Odtndo.................. u u
Mltmi .................. 11 ll
8 -.........._ ...... ll 16
New~ ......... to 1l
Jl]oiltdelploil._.........9 16
w......-~-

. . .. l
w ..

.rn

3.5

.S2l
.407

S
I

.400
.360

1

11 .301

9

tOJ

Celina 49, O.ahann1 48

~s

•..
I

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Hem For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mall HTo Us or Drop H Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

•

.•
•
.•
.•
..
.
...
'

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~~

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND UDIO SHACK
106 N. 2ND

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·2635

Mt,..W. 63. :Z.,...uJo43

742·2211

1-800-837-8217

We Will Talle Care Of All
Your Insurance Needs!
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLERN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
II 0 SECOND AVE •
992·2342

~

-LENDEO

3LOCATIONS

"Family Owned and Operated for 48 Years "

915·3301

CHESTER

Bank

BOTTLE GAS

BAUM LUMBER·

Peoples

AND

Where America Goes 1b RelaX'·

t

Clc.Collinwood 56. Co. E. Tcch41
Col. Roady 64, Uct
. ins HlL 46

POMEROY

SECOND STREET
Mason, W. Va.

JACKSONAVl

5TH STREET
New Haven, W. Va.

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
304-675·1121

304-773-SS 14

304-882·2136

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

!/11//Q

KFc:v.-

992·5432

Mdlontld 41, OUud '11

MdCimo)o, T1. 7!, Elyrit 65

0oop1 SbildL41, Tal. Wailo 21
Du.i:wa-Ollndorf .57, flolptc 33
Panna Vall . Pora• 63, Panna Holy

Name47
PiclulinJIOn 82, Mtztmt, 0... l8
Ravenna Southe1• 68, NcW1on F.U.
27
Richmond Dale~ SE 67, Lucuville~
Vol!. 39
ltidunand Ht1. 40, Rep.a 26
Stlan 46, w. llnad&gt; 39
Shonondehowa, N.Y. 74, Zane~vi.llo
R.......,46
Soulltinaloo&gt; 4.!, Nil• 37
SL. Mujt
:17
Tol Scou57, Col Bri~&amp;~41
W. 0.... 62,-50
W.l.lboriy Salono 46, 1Ada"""'"42
W-nleN. 63,Pumti'Nlt25
Yama. Boudm.ul 69, Waner~ O.anpl"' 40

ss.-

"Di,nit~

Transaction s
BukeiiNIU

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

C...LipiCiottl•

5&lt;.19, Maotaltl SL 71

W-SL93,CSNortllridp71
ICAC Holldl7 P•tlwal
Flnl ...nd
Oooqlt Todt S7, T•plo Sl

SL ltihn'tll, Pwt.IJit Dicldnoal59

Naii...:IB•._..I AllodMioa
ORlANDO MAOIC: Activated Aa·
tl!anr C..t, lonnnl, rnn tl!o inju...J
lilt.

FootbaU
Nallonll Fool.balla...au•
CIIICAOO 8BARS: Rolo"'d Prod

8..0,-•.

-- - -- - - -----~-

•
•
•

ONE ITEM -ONE FREE AD PER WEEK
(NOTE: 15 WOAD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, lliiS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

'•
'•

••
•'
•

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PAIK ST.

1
;

1

PMONE:----------------------------------------

992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

TO:--- --------------------------

Your Local

STIHJ:.

:'••

The Daily Sentinel

'

'I

••

'
•••

(Offer Expires January 15, 1994
··,-..---

POMEROY

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
915·3301

CHESTER, OHIO

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

BRUCE FISHEl- Owner/O,.rator
MIDDLEPORT
992·5141

Eslahlish 1913

Prescription
Shop

!il

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

.•

111 Court .Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

I 05 MULBERRY AVE.
992·2121

Dealer

.riHL •. •

•••

and Serviee Alwa~s"

E g Funeral Home

{lihflliE1}

•

NAME=-------------------------------------------

MAIL

;~~~, ~·~------------------------------------------------------------J
... ·---· --·-- - - ...
~--- - -~------ - -- -- -· --- --· · ·~ -

Put One Under Your·Tree This
Christ111as
S' A Ho~.wi .

·.••

Cin. Lakota S7, Cin. Spm01e 43
C1n. Oak Hilli9S, Cin. Wintoo. Woods

DEC. 13 ............................ AT WELLSTON
DEC. 16................................... AT MILLER
DEC. 18............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 3....................................SOUTHERN
JAN.&amp; ......................................... BELPRE
JAN. 10 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
JAN.13 ................... ATVINTON COUNTY
JAN. 17 ................................ GALLIPOUS
JAN. 20 ................................ALEXAND~R
JAN. 24 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 27 ............ AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 3 1.................................WELLSTON
FEB. 7....................................AT BELPRE
FEB. 9 ............................ AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 17....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
Coach - Ron Logan

'

•.
.,••

lbntia&amp; 3t

Toui'IIUienl action
-

•

Funklin H1..1. 6!i, Jonathan Alder .54
• Hillulp 89, MornpcUcr 26
Indian l.&amp;lcc S6, Renton Ridac 47
l•y County 34, Fort Recovery 33
Leetonia 54, S. Range 43
Lincoinvicw !56, Padcway 54 (&lt;Yl)
Louilville Aquinu 47, Alliance 27
M,.diton 40, CJear Fodt 30
Mtrian 1.cctt 40, SL. IIeauy 33
Ma11illon WuhinJlon 53, Warren

8-60, Stcmnatta SL 5I
Gl

'•.

(OT)

,.,w...

Pet.
.739

'

Port Jennings 80, Wayne Trace 46
Pranl:lin Co., Tenn . 65, Entlakc S9

SouUiwtll

...

•

.

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 14 ............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 17 ................................. WELLSTON
DEC. 21 ........................................ MILLER
JAN. 4 ............................ AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 8 ....................................... WAHAMA
JAN. 11 ............................ AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 14.................................. AT BELPRE
JAN. 18 ...................................... TRIMBLE
JAN. 21 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 28..................................... EASTERN
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1 ................... NELSONVILLE·YORK
FEB. 4.............................. AT WELLSTON
FEB. 8 ................... AT POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 11 ........................................ BELPRE
FEB. 1S.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 18................... ATVINTON COUNTY
FEB. 19................................ AT WAHAMA
Coach- Jeff Skinner

.••

Col. We~tland 78, Col. Mifflin 41
Covinglan 44, Bndford 41
Cuy al1 o ga Vall. Chr. S9, Akron
Garfield 41
Danville 6S, El~ 60
r:1irlicld S8, Middlelown%
Field 64, Akron Kenmore 39
Findlay 64, Lim• StJawnee 52

Tau~l7, ~ama75

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tram

..

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

GIRLS
JAN. 3 • Southern • Home
JAN. 6· Belpre· Home

2S

7, VUJanon 7, Ooora,ctown S,

Florida 4, WEST VIRGINIA 4, Karuu
St. 3, Miuiuippi St. 3, Tulu 2, Baylor I,
Montana I, St. Louit 1, trr-Challlr1CIOgl

Mm.tftlll $, St. laJil 2
l4!mcmton 6, W.innipq 0

Fn.nklin

Buckeye Trail64, Philo 30

19
II
lA
25

Other• rectlvln' voltl: Vanderbilt
92, California 70, Miuoori 42. Wuhina-

Mari~

Ctldwcll S8, Newoommtown 48
Canton GlenOak S3, Haru:ville. S.C.

23

90 116

Clc. Brnodictinc 81,

Girls' action

17

20
21
22

Cin. We~tcm Hills 61, Cin. Colerain

Austintown·Fttch 70, Hubbard 29
H uck e:~ Local48, E. Uvcrpoo14S

\Y.l.

14
16

MEIGS MARAUDERS

e IS

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 13 ............................... ALEXANDER
DEC. 16................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 20 .................................... EASTERN
DEC. 30...............................WATERFORD
JAN. 3....................................... AT MEIGS
JAN. &amp;..................................... AT MILL.ER
JAN. 10 ....................................... BELPRE
JAN. 13 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15 ....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 22 ..........................AT WATERFORD
JAN. 24 .................................. WELLSTON
JAN. 27 ...................................... TRIMBLE
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 31 .......................... AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 3 ................................. AT EASTERN
FEB. 7........................................... MILLER
FEB. 10............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING
Coach- Jenny Roush

MEIGS

BOYS
JAN. 4 • Alexander • Away
JAN. 8· Wahama· Home

Sebring McKinley 49, Colwnbia 2:8
St. Marys 55. New Dmnen 32
Tol. St. Joh111 66, Loyol1, Calif. 63
Woosw 66, Sandusky S9

The top 2S teanu in Tho Auocitted
collcac buketball poll, wil.b tintplace vo~e• in parcntho1e1, record•
lhn:r.IJh Dec. 26, total point.a baed m 25

703
650
566
319
361
329
280
252
201

•

oon 49

~~

Loll
Ptt. Week
I. Arkanua (46) ............ 7-0 1,573
1
l.NonhC•rolina(ll ) ... 9-1 1.511
2
1 Oulco(3) .................... 6- 0 1,461
J
4. Tc:npJc(3) ................. 4-0 1,400
4
S. Krntuclty ...................1· 1 1,314
S
6. K..... ..................... ll -1 1,268
6
1. Mkhia•n ................... 6-t 1.153
7
8. UCLA (1) .................. 60 1,123
9
9. Ma..chUICUI ........... 7-I l,llS
II
IO. Purdue ...................... 9-0 975
10
li . Louisville ................. 5-l 9115
II
ll.Arizona ..................... &amp;-1 873
13
13. 1ndiana ...................... S·2 195
12
I... Connecticut .............. 7·0 77'J
15

Cin. Northwcat 71, Cin. Roger Bacon

''

Clo. St. Jp.atius 74, Kc111 ROOieVdt 61
Col. Hartley 74, Louisville Trinity 64
Cont.inan.al71 , Lima Perry S3
CoventrY Cath., Ky. 57, bay. Chamin~dc-Ju.li.cnne 31
Day, Oakwood 70, Ihy. Quillian 53
Ouqutane. Pa. 61 , Col. DcSala 52
Fairlicld, Alt . ll, Beachwood 57
Fatha Helias, Mo. 60, Col. Ready Si
lakewood St. Ed warda 6 1, To I.
CalhoUc 47
Liberty Bt:nton 64, Cory·Raw•on 42
Maui.llon Jacklon 72, Avon l..alce 59
Miller City 58, Ottovi lle 57
Ncahanock, P1. 70, Yoong. Ca!vuy65
Oltford Tal a w~nda 70, Milford 62
Rocklboro Person. N.C. 7], Col.
Whiteh all 59
Sa ginaw, Mic h. 59, Trotwood-Madi-

DcuaitatAilanu, 7:30p.m.
Owioa.c at a..EVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Denver at O.Uu, 1:30 p.m.
HOUitan 11 Seattle, tO p.m.
PhUadalpllia ll Golden Stile, 10:30

II. CINONNATI .......... 8-2
19. Sync:uoe ................... 7·l
20. Ok1thomt s............. 7·2
2!. 0 , Wuhillp ......... S-1
22. DliMit ...................... 62
23. BGII-. CoUeao ......... 7·2
24. 1&gt;1..........................62
25. W. Kenwdly ............ l-2

10

Bellbrook 74, Brookville 61

Ph...U.lll,8.....,102
t..A. Cippen 96, Ploiltdclphit 86

17. Wilconain ................. 6-0

•

SO, Dluft'ton 38

Bellevue 81, Clyde 68
Canton McKinley 71, Elyri1 65
Cin. Mount Hul\hy 67, Cin. Winton

OJUO ST. 30, Florida St. 28 , Ala .-Bitm-

rl'

Arling&amp;on

62

43 117117
43 129123

Patlfk Dlvlllon

;:

62

Andrew Jackson 64, Cuyahoga Falls

Woodo S5

15. Ooorp Toch ............ 7·1
16. .................... 7·2

••

Boys' action

6

WuhinJUln96, Milwaukee 87
ULtb 97, Mim-. 93

GF GA
48 ll1106

•r

Ohio H.S. scores

0\utaa. 109,1loboiL 94

T~am

~

,.OR

DEC. 14 ........................ VJNTON COUNTY
DEC. 17.......................... AT ALEXANDER
DEC. 18 .................................... AT UNICO
DEC. 21 ........... AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 28 ............................. CHESAPEAKE
DEC. 30........................AT COAL GROVE
JAN. 7 ....................................... EASTERN
JAN. 11 ........................................... MEIGS
JAN. 14......................................... MILLER
JAN. 18 .................................. AT BELPRE
JAN. 21 ..............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 28 ............................ AT WELLSTON
FEB. 1 .................................. AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. 8....................................... EASTERN
FEB. 11 ................................... AT MILLER
FEB. 18 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19 ................................ GALLIPOLIS
Coach - Howle Caldwell

GIRLS
DEC. 30 • Waterford • Home
JAN. 3· Meigs· Home

•
•••

round

I

L:A·

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:r~·

Flnl

•

•

Ocorge Washington 87, Coutal Car·
olina 68
New Orlcans79, South~ 72

New
u New V'odt, 7:30p.m.
San An\aruo 11 Miuni. 7:30p.m.

Mooda•'sscore

-·

Samford 78, William &amp; Muy 67
Suau Bowl Tournament

TooJebt's eomes

Stn Diop.S, Ml'.nu 70

...

F1ut round
Oonu.ga 84, New Hamp.hlrc 74

Orlando 122, Sacnmcnto 110

y-clinchod pltyofl bcnh

Ctlaory ............. 1913
VlnCOUYer ........ l916
l.oiAnlcloo ..... 13 20
Anaheim ........... 13 22
SUI Ja~c ............ 11 20
EdtnML&lt;III ......... l023

.m

•

Shootoul Spokane

Monday's stores

.600 261272
.533 263 281
.467 228 210
.333 220344

W•ten DMdoll
l ·Stn FnnciJco !0 5 0 .667 439 251
New~..... 7 I 0 .467 297 330
Atlanta .............. 6 9 0 .400 D) lS8
LA. Rama ........ 4 11 0 .'JfJ7 201 361
1-dinc:Md di'lia:im~ tide

14
11

Saaamcno ..............6 19

.71&gt;7 221331

y·Doooil........... 9 6 0
Minnmu ......... I 7 0
0\ietao ............ 1 8 o
TIITipaBay ....... S 10 0

It

5'

DEC. 13........................................ MILLER
DEC. 20............................AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 23 ......................... AT WATERFORD
JAN. 3.............................. AT WELLSTON
JAN. &amp;................ AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
JAN.12 ................................ ATWARREN
JAN. 13 ...................................... TRIMBLE
JAN. 19 ...............................WATERFORD
JAN. 20 ............ AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 24 .......................................... MEIGS
JAN. :t7 .......................... AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 31 ................................... AT MILLER
. FEB. 2........................................ WARREN
FEB. 3.................................... SOUTHERN
FEB. 7..................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB.10 ................................ ATTRIMBLE
COICh - Scott Wolfe

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

BOYS
DEC. 28· Chesapeake • Hoq~e
DEC. 30 • Coal Grove • Away

First round
Evanavillc 81, Clcmsoo 80
Hawaii 85, Army 69

PaciOc Dl.t•lon

Central Divlllon
y-Orcm 81)' ..... 9 6 0 .600 320 252

•

li .S

MJdwltl Dh•..Jon
TMm
WLPtLGB
Hou.ton .................23 3 .815
Ullh ....................... 19 8 .704
4.S
SanMtanio ........... l6 II .S93
7J
O..v. ................... ll 13 .480 lO.S
MinaClld.l ...•..•.....•..• 8 19 ,296 15.5
DaUaa ...................... .2 23 .010 20.5

y-N.Y. Gi.anta ... II 4 0 .731 t7S 189
Ph.iladc.lphia ...... 7 I D .&lt;167 256281
Aloeni• ............ 6 9 0 .400 299259

411

.5
3
6.S
7.5
9.S

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Eutera DI¥1Jioll
TC!Im
W L T PeL PF PA
y·Dtllto ............ ll 4 0 .733 360216

w,.run..,.. ......

Far W•t Claulc
Flnl round
O..jiOn 75. - . , , 72
Oregon SL n, N.C.·Wilminaton
Hoo.ler Claule
F1rst round
Indiana 81 , Tcus Oui.Jtian 65
W. Kentucky 59, Princeton 45
Rainbow Claa;lc

.533 270223
.7/&gt;7 179 348

Centr•l Dl•lllon

.11-HOUSlon ......... 11 4
Pi........ ........ 8 7
CLEVI!IMm.. 7 8
CNONNATI .. 3 12

Clftlrll Dhillon
Allanu ................... l7 7 .701
0DcaJO.................. l7 I .610
O&gt;ukiac ................ l5 1t .m
Cl..llVEUND ....... lt 14 .4&gt;10
lndlont ................... IO IS .&lt;00
Dcuoil...................... 8 17 .320
Milwa"*:flc ............... 7 20 .2S9

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DE&lt;;. 14 ....................................... BELPRE
DEC. 17 ...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 21 ...............................WATERFORD
JAN. 7..........••••••••...•••••.••••••... SOU1'HERN
JAN. 11 .................................. WELLSTON
JAN.14 ................... FEDERALHOCKING
JAN. 15 ................................ AT OAK HILL
JAN. 18................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 21 ................................ ATtRIMBLE .
JAN. 25 ................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 28 ..................................... AT MEIGS
FEB. 1.................................. ALEXANDER
FEB. 4........................................... MILLER
FEB, 8 .............................. AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 11 .............. AT F£DERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18 ......................................TRIMBLE
FEB. 19..........................ATWATERFORD
Coach -Tony Deem

SDU,.B

RN TORNADOES

Scoreboard

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

MIDDLEPORT

N. 21111 AYE.
992-5627

....
'

For All Your Prescription and Sundry
Needs - See Us!
253 N. SECOND

.

992·6669

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

'

�Page

Tuesday, December 28, 1f93

6

In college hoops,

.

Geo:rgla Tech hands Temple
first loss; No. 13 Indiana win$

ANYBODY OPEN? - Wltb Texas Christian's Myron Gordon on bis back, Indiana's
Damon Bailey (21) f~gbts to keep control or the
ball while looking ror an open teammate to pass

to during the second balr or Monday night's
Hoosier Classic rlrst-round contest in Indianapolis, where tbe Hoosiers won 81·65 in part
because or Bailey's 24 points. (AP)

·In theNBA,

Suns' 118-102 win over Celtics
:extends Boston losing streak
By The Associated Press
For one brief quaner, the Boston Celtics were the
: championship team of recent years.
·
It didn't last.
, The Celtics made their first nine shots and led
: Phoenix 24-10 just 4:30 into the game, then finished
• the quarter with a 39-31 advantage after 19-for-24
: shooting. But Boston scored just 36 points in the next
: two periods, including 13 in the third, and lost to the
• Suns 118-102 Monday nighL
'
"We regrouped," said Dan Majerle, who scored
20 of his 27 points in the first half to keep the Suns in
the game. "I guess that's why they give you 48 min·
: Utes in basketball."
• Dee Brown scored 14 of his 21 points in the ftrSt
: quarter for the Celtics, who shot 38 percent the last
: three quarters after hitting 79 percent in the filllt.
: The loss was the sixth straight overall and the
• eighth in a row on the road for Boston, while
: Phoenix improved to 13·1 at home, best in the NBA.
; "We had a great start, but when we substituted,
; we couldn't sustain it," Boston coach Chris Ford
: said.
Oliver Miller scored nine of his 17 points in a
: I :36 span late in the game, stifling a rally by Boston,
: which was outscored 29-13 in the third quarter.
A.C. Green finished with 25 points, and Kevin
Johnson had 23 points and 14 assists for the Suns,
who went into the fourth quaner with a 91-75 lead.
The Celtics got as close as 100-91 with 6:10 left, but
Miller's flurry sealed the ouleome.
"Our defense self-destructed in the second half,''
Boston's Robert Parish said. "Our defense went
south. We weren't able to conlllin Kevin Johnson. He
created a lot of havoc on our defensive end"
Biown scored only seven more points after his 14·
point first quaner as Phoenix coach Paul Westphal
put Johnson on Brown.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was Orlando 122, Sacramento 110; Charlotte 109, Detroit 94; Washington
96, Milwaukee 87; Utah 97, Minnesota 93; and the
Los Angeles Clippelll96, Philadelphia 86.
Clippers 96, 7~ers 86 - Los Angeles beat visit·
ing Philadelphia for only the fourth time in 19 meetings as Danny Manning had 21 points and a season-

high 15 rebounds and Loy Vaught finished with 19
points and tied a career high with 21 rebounds.
The score was tied 73· 73 after three quarters
before the 76ers missed seven of their first eight
shots in the fourth period, allowing the Clippers to
score eight straight points for an 81-751ead with 9:16
remaining.
Jazz 97, Timberwolves 93 -Utah won its
eighth straight home game and handed Minnesota its
sixth consecutive loss behind Karl Malone's 34
points and a 174 fourth-quarter run.
The game was tied 74-74 with 8:34 to play, but
the Jazz held the Timberwol ves to just one field goal
in the next 6:27, laking a 91-78 lead with 2:07 left.
David Benoit, who had scored just 13 points in the
four previous games he played this season, led the
17-6 run with five points.
Hornets 109, Pistons 94- Charlotte extended its
homecoun winning streak to six as Larry Johnson
had 29 points, 20 rebounds and II assists and Alonzo
Mourning scored 30 points 'against Detroit.
It was Johnson's ftrSt triple-double of the season
and the third in his NBA career. Johnson was 13-for·
18 from the field as handed the Pistons their fourth
straight loss.
Terry Mills led Detroit with 26 points, while Joe
Dumars and Olden Polynice each scored 22.
Bullets 96, Bucks 87 - Washington won for the
third time in 14 road games and handed Milwaukee
its ninth loss in II home outings.
Rex Chapman scored seven of his 23 points in the
final 3:48, Don MacLean scored 28 points and Tom
Gugliotta 21 for the Bullets, who won for just the
second time in 14 games.
Lee Mayberry scored 15 points for the Bucks,
who turned a 6649 deficit into a 74-72 lead with a
25-6 run in the third quaner.
Magic 122, Kings 110- Orlando dropped Sacramento's road record to 1-11 as Shaquille O'Neal had
32 points and 17 rebounds and reserve Dennis Scott
scored 16 of his 20 points in the final nine minutes.
Scott hit four three-pointers down the stretch,
breaking open a close game against the Kings, who
got 40 points from MilCh Ricpmond but still lost for
the 19th time in 25 games.

In the NHL,

Carbonneau's offensive actions
spur Canadiens to beat Blues
By Tbe Associated Press
Quiet Guy Carbonneau gave his
defending Stanley Cup champion
Montreal Canadien teammates
what he hopes will wm out to be a
wakeup call with an uncharacteristic offensive flourish against the St.
Louis Blues.
Carbonneau, known mostly for
his defensive prowess, scored the
second three-goal game of his
career Monday night, duplicating a
feat he last perfonned in 1983, his
rookie year.
.
This one helped the dcfendmg
Stanley Cup champions come out
of their season-long malaise, at
least momentarily, with a 5·2 victo·
'ry that ended the Blues' five-game
.winning streak.
· " It's been a long time," said
Carbonneau, who came into the

game with just six goals and 13
points this season. "The team has
been struggling for goals since the
stan of the season, and if I can contribure that way, it's fine."
The Canadiens have struggled to
a 15-14-6 record and are fourth in
the Northeast Division. But they're
4.0-2 in their last six games against
the Blues and handed St. Louis
only its third loss at home.
All of Carbonneau'.s goals came
on rebound shots. He completed
the hat trick with 27.4 seconds to
go on a weak shot that slipped
under Curtis Joseph's glove.
Benoit Brunet assisred on four
goals, including all of Carbon·
neau' s. Oleg Petrov and Eric Des·
jardins also scored for the Canadi·
ens, while Ron Sutter and Craig
Janney scored for the Blues.
In other NHL games Monday
Philadelphia shut out Buffalo
night,
PBL results
2-0, Boston topped Ottawa 5-3,
(Results as of Dec. 15)
Chicago beat Toronto 5·2, Detroit
League -Early Wednesday blanked Dallas 6-0 and Edmonton
~ixed
· defeated Winnipeg 6-0.
:. Team standings (latest points,
ieuson points) - Banks ConstrucFlyers 2, Sabres 0
tion (77-59), Hackett's Roofing
Tommy Soderstrom stopped 30
(69-67), No. 2 (63-65), F.O.E. shots and recorded his second
~171 (69-67), Pinsplitters (63-73)
shutout of the season as the Flyers
and Tony's Carryout (61-75).
blanked the Sabres.
~ Team blab series- Hackett's
Mark Recchi and Eric Lindros
Roofing (1876)
scored the Ayer goals.
: Team blgb game- Hackett's
. Bruins S, Senators 3
Roofing (652)
Boston scored three power-play
Womea
goals in the second period, two by
; Indivlduallll&amp;ll series - June Ray Bourque, in defeating Ottawa.
~owery (529) .and Dottie Will
Ottawa took a 2-0 lead in the
first period on goals by Troy Mal·
4
~ ~~dividttillll&amp;b pme- Mow- Jette and Dave McLiwain, but it
fir/ (189 and 181)
was aU Boston after thaL
,
Men
The Bruins' other power-play
' Individual bieb series -'- John goal was by Cam Neely, with Steve
"iyrec (486) and Scott McKinney Heinz and Bryan Smolinski scoring
while even strength. Dave
(480)
.
' Individual hllb game - Dany Archibald added the final Ottawa
Will (176) and T)1ee (173)
goal.

Red Wings~. Stars 0
Sergei Fedor(lv had two goals
and two assists and Sreve Yzerman
made a successful return to the ice
as the streaking Red Wings beat the
Stars.
Yzerman, who had missed 26
games while recuperating from a
herniated disc, celebrated his return
with a shorthanded goal that helped
Detroit to its eighth victory in its
last nine games.
Blackhawks S, Maple Leafs 2
Defenseman Chris Chelios,
named a starter on the NHL's
Western Conference All-Star squad
earlier in the day, scored two goals
and added an assist to pace Chicago past Toronto.
Frantisek Kucera, Brian Noonan
and Rich Sutter also connected for
the Hawks, who posted their eighth
consecutive win at Chicago Stadi·
um.
Guy Larose and Rob Pearson
scored the Leafs' goals, both in the
last 5:41 of the third period.
Oilers 6, Jets 0
Shayne Corson scored twice and
BiD Ranford turned aside 24 shots
for his filllt shutout of the season as
Edmonton whacked Winnipeg.
Colllon, who now has 18 goals
on the season, scored 1:26 into the
game when he slipped the puck
between the legs of Jets goalrender
Bob Essensa.
Tbe rugged 27-year-old left·
winger's second goal came latc in
the second period. Corson, who
also had two assists, skated in from
the right comer and ripped a shot
between the legs of Stephane Beauregard, 'who had replaced Essensa
early in the stanza.
Randall Cunningham of the
Philadel~ Eagles is the all-time
er for quarterbacks.
rushing

By The Associated Press
Temple has steadily risen up the
college basketball rankin~s this
season on the strength of VICtories
over Kansas, Alabama-Birming·
ham and Cincinnati.
Georgia Tech has been stuck
between Nos. 13 and 18 because of
its weak schedule foUowing a sea·
son-opening loss to Michigan.
Those roles may reverse 900n.
No. 4 Temple was handed its
f~rst defeat of the season Monday
night, losing 57-51 to the 15th·
ranked Yellow Jackets at New
York in the first round of the
ECAC Holiday Festival. Neither
team looked sharp aftcr a week of
inactivity, but Tech still outshot
Temple 43 percent to 27 percent.
"We can play better. Temple
can play better," Georgia Tech
coach Bobby Cremins said .
"We're happy to win. Both teams
started out tentatively because of
the respoct we had for each other."
The Yellow Jackets (8·1) took
6:24 to get their ftrSt points of the
game, but Temple ,(4·1) didn't lake
advantage, sconng just six points in
that span while missing 11 of 14
shots.
Travis Best had 19 points for
Georgia Tech, including seven of
its last nine. The Owls missed their
final four shots.

·

•

"We 'II go back to the ways of stcr sank a three-pointer t&lt;i•put
winning some of the ugly ones," Wisconsin ahead to stay with I :03
Temple coach John Chaney said. · remaining.
"We've had good shooting nights
this year. There were nights even
Webster also hit two free throws
the bad sho~ went in. We just have with 21 seconds left to StreiCh the
to go back and find a way to win lead to five points. He finished
those ugly games again, and we with 17, and Michael Finley led the
will. Trust me, we will."
BadgCill (7-0) with 21. Andy Pop.Georgia Tech will play St. pink led the Cardinal (6-1) with a
John's in the tournament champi- career-high 22 points.
onship game on Wednesday.
No. 11 George Washington 87
In other games, No. 13 Indiana
Coastal Carolina 68
beat Texas Christian 81-65, No. 17
At New Orleans, Kwame Evans
Wisconsin beat Stanford 80-73 , scored 24 points and the Colonials
No. 21 Georl!e Washington beat (6·1) used their superior size,
Coastal Carotina 87-68 and No. 25 strength and speed to win their ftfth
Western Kentucky beat Princeton straight.
5949.
Evans and 7-foot-1 cenrer Yinka
No. 13 Indiana 81
Dare keyed a 14·1 b~ that gave
Texas Christian 65
George Washington a 42-31 lead at
At Indianapolis, Damon Bailey halftime, and Coastal (4·2) never
scored 24 points to lead the got closer thim nine points after the
Hoosiers, moving past Ted Kitchel break.
'
and Uwe Blab into 14th place on
No. 2S Western Kentucky 59
Indiana's all-time scoring list with
Princeton 49
I,359 points.
At Indianapolis, the Hilltoppers
The Homed Frogs finished with had to contend with Princeton's
29 fouls compared to Indiana's II. slow-down offense. They did so by
Alan HendelllOri and Todd Lin· dominating on defense.
deman each had 13 points and 12
Western Kentucky (4·2) scored
rebounds for the Hoosiers (6-2). 23 points off turnovers and 14 on
Kurt Thomas scored 38 for TCU offensive rebounds. The Hilltop(2-5).
pers (5-5) also held the Tigers to 22
No. 17 Wisconsin 80, Stanrord 73 percent shooting in the ftrSt half~ 38
At Madison, Wis., Tracy Web· percent overall.

1

~

l

I"'VFana

.
!

ATTifE
GIWJTY PIINT SHOP

,

Invitational, was followed by
Kansas (11·1), a winner over Furman and Indiana, and Michigan (61), which beat Central Michigan.
UCLA, an impressive winner at
Houston, and Massachusetts (7-1),
which had the week off, switched
Nos. 8 and 9. The Bruins (6-0)
again had one-fmt place vote. Purdue (9.0) closed the Top 10 for the
second straight week.
Louisville was again No, II and
was followed in the Top 20 by Arizona, Indiana, Connecticut, Georgia Tech, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Cincinnati, Syracuse and Oklahoma State.
Arizona and Indiana switched
places after losses to ranked teams.
The Wildcats were bearen by Kentucky on a tip-in at the buzzer in
the championship game of the

Maui Invitational, while Indiana
lost in overtime at Kansas.
The last five were George
Washington, Illinois, Boston College, Marquette and Western Kentucky, which carne into the Top 25
last week. The Hilltoppers held the
last spot in the rankings after losing
at Louisville in ovenime.
Illinois, which fell three spots to
22nd, splits its games last week,
beating Jackson State and losing to
Missouri 108-107 in triple overtime.
Boston College dropped from
18th to 23rd afler falling from the
ranks of the undefeated with losses
at Maui to Arizona in the semifinals and then Ohio State in the conslolation game. The Eagles had
reached 7-0 with an opening-round
victory over Division II Chaminade.

coached, including ·Louisville's last
postseason game, a 1991 victory
against Alabama in the Fiesta
Bowl.
Schneltenberger downplaycd a
walkout by 18 of his players from
Saturday's practice to protest reimbursements for travel costs. PlayCill
were upset that their travel costs
after the game wouldn't be repaid
until the spring.
Schnellenberger later spoke to
the players and welcomed them
back to the team.
"I think our morale is very
good," Schnellenberger said. "I
want you to understand that the
episode we had several days ago
was not nearly as major as it was
made out to be in some quaners.' '
Louisville, ranked as high as
13th this season, moved back into
the rankings with a 28.() Thanksgiving Day victory at Tulsa. In that
game, senior quarterback Jeff
Brohm broke his right index fmger
when he was pushed out of bounds
into a cement wall ,
Brohm, who broke the finger in
five places, didn't begin throwing
the ball at practice until last week.
Schneltenberger said he won't
name a starter until just before
kickoff.
Michigan Stare, which finished
the regular season with its first
winning record in three ye811l, lost
its last two games to Penn State
and Wisconsin.
Against Penn Stare, the Spanans
led 37-17 late in the third, but lost
38-37.
The Spartans were successful
this season with a versatile running
auack and accurate passing.
"We're going to have to be
effective both running and passing," said Brohm, who set school

NFL's .downtrodden 5-0
on season's coldest Sunday
By DAVE GOLDBERG
So while the playoff picture
On the coldest day of the NFL cleared, the race for the No. 1 pick
season, some of the NFL's most in the draft was.going in .reversepersislelltlosers came up winners.
the BengllJs ~ull have 11, but the
Sunday, in fact, was the da)' of Colts are commg on.
the downtrodden for the Cardinal,
"I'm' dis,11usted at the way it
Patriots Bengals, Bucs and Sea- turned out, linebacker Duane
hawks, ~ho began the day 19-51 Bickeg of the Colts said after the
and rmished 24-51.
Patriots beat Indianapolis 38-0.
While other lellllls were making "They're 4-'11, too, ·but headed in
playoff plans, tl!e leB!JIS that are OUt the righ~ direction. W~'re ,4-1 ~'but
of 1t were showmg SignS of making beaded m the Wll!"g ~bon • .
more noise next year than they
Also headed m the nght direchave in awhile.
lion?
.
"Too 'bad the season is coming
-The Cardinal~. now 6-9 aftei
to an end. We're on a roll right beatingtheGianu 'l?-6.
The game meant nothing to
now,'' said Cart ·Pickens of the
Bengals (3-12); who won for the New York, which already has its
third time. in their last five games , playoff spot and meets Dallas in a
with 121-17 win over Atlanta.
winner-take-all game

8:00 pm until! 2:~ am
Champegne-Hors-D'Oeuvres
Party FaVO(S·DJ Music
$12.00 single $17.00 Couple

!
!
i

!

right to reject a~y ~nd or ail
bids. Speclfte~~tlono may lie
The ~of lllddleport oblalned at the·office of the
will ba applying lor tha FY Melg• Counly Emergency
'113 Ohio ..,.II Clll• Com- Medical Services, P.O. Box
munity Ditvelopm•l Blooti 748, Mulberry Helghtl,
Gr1nt (C08G) \ Downtown Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
Aevllllllullon Competlllve t&gt;hone'(614) ~2-6617 .
Progr., lunda throulih the (12) 28, (1) 4; 2TC
Ohio Dep•tment of Devel·
Clp!MIIt.

A public hearing will ba
held Mond1y, Jenuory 10,
I Dll3. 11 7.: 30 P.M. In the
council chomben loc1led II
237 Aoce SlrMI, Mldlloport,
Ohio, lor the purpoaa of
dlacll*•lng the general
provt"on1 of the FY 11H13
CDBG program and the
amount of vorloua fundi

ovlllla!&gt;le.

.
-

·

.
.
:
;
1

,

Publlp Notice

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Kathleen w. Wallace, et 81,
Plalntlf!l
vi
CASE NO. 93 CV 315
Andrew Moore,
deceased, alai, '
Delendan1o,

III!TAL TOYI.'
lat.

WHALEY'S AUTO

Grate

af
Rutland
Furniture
Employer. "What can you do?"
Appliclont: "Nothing"
Employer: "'Good. Then we won't

have to wasta tima bl8oking you ln."

•••

1

NEW i. USED PAIIlS FOR

devisees, of John Moore

992-7013.992-5553 ..
TOU Fl£11·10().141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7/31/91flfn

CHRISTMAS
TREES
$10.00 each ·

·RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

State
of 25,
Ohio
and 7,being
In
., .•_.··.....
.
Section
Town
North,
,J,
Range 14 Weal of the Ohio
Company's Purcha1e and
being described aalollowo:
Beginning at an Iron rod
(rHk Road
West about 940 loot from
the Soulheaot Corner
Section 25, bid point of
boglnn!ng being at the
Southaeot Corner of June
· 4/29/93111
Johnaon'a 30 acre parcel as ~--"'·~--..~
.. .;;
. •.;.;p:..........!
described In Melga County
Deed Recorda : Volume 26~ , _ _ _ _ _ _ __....,
Page 725, said point of
beginning also being on
·
Scipio-Rutland Township
line; thence Well 2538.20
feet along a fence on the
South line of said Section
25 and Scipio Township lo
an Iron rod at the point
where the Eaat line of Earl
Teaford"a 98.3 acres aa
Reasonable Rates
described In Meigs County
JDit N. Sayre
Deed Recordt: YoliJme ·227,
Page 077 t.n1ero•cts th,e
.
Sou'th line of Secllon 25 and
Scipio · Townahlp; thence
614-742-2138
tConllnued on Page 10)
3141931 mo.

31904 l.eadi11

llitltlleport, 0•1o

614•992•71,44

LIMESTONE;
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL
SAYRE TRUCKING

11' . Help W~tnted

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS
DEES

Show u~ cattte wUh a aense of

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

•••

.
1. Must want make excellent money
unlh1"tited income potenti811
~. Must want a perman~nt job with
an aggressive organization.
3. Must desi~e advancement.
4. Open Floor-Sell Both.New and
Pre-owned. ·
5. ~iu~ have professional attitude and
,appearance.
6. 'Must be willing to leam and
follow instructions.

to

Tho bathtub was invented in 1845
and tho phone in 1875. Had you
lived In 1845,you could have soaked
in the tub lor thirty years without tho
phone ringing once.
'
Do wa noad a two·WMk vacation to
recover from so weeks of wort&lt; ,.. or
50 weeks of worM. to recover hom a
two·weok vacation?.

..

•••
Visit Rutland Furniture
now to take advantage of
huge storewide aavlngs
during our yur-end Cleltance Sill• now In pro,
gressl.
• ••

...,no. .... ,.._

IF·YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO
' ,. ' .

..

c:-......... n.. ......
11 WARIHOUSfS ''

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, Ro!W Ill

742·2211

'

I

GALLIPOUS DAILY TRIBUME
I\IOX CLA 302 • 825 THIRD AVE.
;, ; .: QALUPOUSr ·OHIO 45631

..

Our Business is Security

675-6755

Alarm Systems

1·9
IWUIY
TUPPERS PLAINS
B•lc obedience,
illw enforcement,

Wholeeale
&amp; rletlil

..,A...UIIt

Gutters
Downspouta
Gutter CINnlng
Painting

FREE ESTIMAnS

949·2168
3-11-113-lfn

penaon81 protection,
kennel •rvlce, pupe &amp;
young dog• for ule.
Rottwetler &amp; Shtpherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

JIMISILIIM

LANIU. OH.

Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call742·2143 or
. 742·2979

CONSIIUCIION
oNewHornM

IGeraaea
.COmplete
RemodiUna
Stop &amp; Co~re ·
FREE ESTIMATES

'Uo447S .

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl A. James

(304). 882-3336

WilHam C. James

Co-Owners

p.m. lllrtlng Nov. 24111.
T - ... s·tow.
CaH

•DOXERS
•BACKHOE
• TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628

IUOLD'S
PLUMIIIG, ·

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

HUniG&amp;

COOUIG

EVERY
SATURDAY

QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOI,D

6:30P.M.
FIICIOryChoke

(614) 992-7474

12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

POMEROY, OHIO

111111'1 mo.

IllGO
EVERY THURSDAY

912BfTFN

.GENEUL

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.

J......
CONSTRUCnOI
oOozer •Backhoe
o()itcher o()ump Truck
Land Cleerlng, Pond.,
Water Lin•, Septlca
Llcen1e &amp; Bonded

Charlie Hlltfleld,
Operator
742-2903

EICIYIIIIG

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: LIIMIItone,

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
. New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

HAULING

(No S.ntlay Calls)

21121921tfn

Lim,stone

Dirt

Special Earty Bird
S100 PayoH
Thll ad good for 1

Gravel

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

992-7878

1

7nl1roo.

NOVDIBER SPECIAL

sweeper

• Service a Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Elecirolux,
Hoover, Eureka, lii.Star,
Regina, &amp;: most other brands!

Parte Shipped UPS
Faal• Dependable Service!

(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n"..........5180
NORINCO UNI. SKS •• " ......"'"'"....... sqs
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE .. 5130
CALL AFTER 6:00
304-415·7256

11112183 1 MO.

Dirt, Gnwel 811d C:O.I
Uoenud•dBonrt t

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
273-4098
Dog Kennels I o· X 10' X 6' $225.95
Mite Ute Starting at $59.99
Applegate Round Bell Fences &amp; Gates
Horse Tat:k &amp; Saddles
Wild Bird Seed
White Sah Block 50 lbs. $4.25
Trace Mineral Block SO lbs. $5.00
Mulh More At Lowest Prkes in Meigs (ou•ty

CHAPMAN FEED STORE

Pl. 614·992·5591

St. Rt. 124

WICK'S HAULING
SERVIQ
36970 Ball Run Road

Pomeroy, ~lo
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTON£,. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470

OWNII: .loH WI«..._
51101'9

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•

·Gutter Work
·Eieetrlcal and
Plumbing

Rutland OH

FINANCING AVAILABLE
1.f00.553-3586

FURNACES

IIIERICIN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

~
, ..
.-

.\

Ac:eldent • Annuity, IRA• Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Age11t
Box 119
Mi••••,.,., O.io 45760
(614) 143·5264

5/14193/lfn

lnollllecl compte,. wtlh
nnanclng ..atlobla.

r 111 v...

Lite • Medicare • Cancer • Flra • Health •

\

"

Gaa

Fum.,•

S25.00 mo.

call lEMMEn'S

Oil F-:.;;;;;,..
$36.00 - .

MOBILE HOME

HEIOIG liD COOLING

Galllpoll8, Oh.

446-8416 or Toll Fr• l-800-li72.SI67

-Roofing

-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting ·
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. Young Ill
892~15

446-9515
WPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLWIIN&amp;

Pomeroy,

IOI~RT IISSELL

Security Cameras

Bob Snowden'• lolln
Aulland, Oh.
Wholetale $10 lit farm,
$12 dallY.-.d. Retail lot
wiU ba open I a.m. lo I

HAULING

computers and report their errors.

7 SHOWROOMS

CHRISTMAS
TREES

AU lUllS &amp; IIODILS

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

humor, and we'll show \IOU laughing
o1o&lt;k.

SPORTING GOODS

NEW-REPAIR

Speclallzlng·ln Custom
Frame Repair

.992-3838

lfs called Unifink.

Sheet 6 Caot Ilium. 22e
Locabod Comer Rt 7 &amp; 143
Phona1H12-5114

ROOFING

PARTS

EXUVATING

By
Dave

PIERSON
BROTHERS

· Hown LWntesel

Porches,
Patios,
Sjdewalks
992-7878

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, will
accepl aealed blda until 10
a.m. on January 12, 1994.
Bids .will be or.ened and
read at 10:30, or one (1)
1a94 one ton cab and
ch•••l•, to be uaed _In lhe
labrl.catlon
of
an
ambulance. Bids will be
acceplld as lotlowa:
One (1) 1994 cab and
cha••J• according to
ambulance manufacluring
·specl~llona with no trade·
ln. Ea(;h bid muat Include a
bid · bond of live percent
(5%) of lhe total bid payable
to the Melgo County
Commlaaionera. All bida
mual be In a aealed
envelope, clearly marked
"Bid For EMS Cob •nil
Chusl~". The Malg1 County
Commlaolonero reserve lhe

Red. :ru
var-ao.

C...:Mt

112_... 1:»4 MOn.-Fri.
742-3020 All8r 5:00

PUBLIC NOTICE
The eighteen member
Gaiiii"Jackaon-Malgo Board
of Alpohol, Drug Addiction
Tho.mas J. Moore,
and lllantal Health Servlcea deceaaed Unknown helra,
Ia appointed by the Dlreclor legatees, davlaeea, of
of the Ohio Department ol Thoma• J. Moore
Manu!
Health
(4
Mary Moore Hunler,
appoliuees), the Dlreclor of . deceaaed lfnknown heir•,
the Ohio Department of legatee•, devlaeea, of Mary
Alcohol and Drug Addiction Moore,Hunter
1n1 mo.
Services (4 appolnteea) and
Martha Moore, deceaaed
the Coun1y Commfoaloners Unknown helra, legateea,
In Galfla, Jackson and devlaMa, of Martha Moore
Mel go
Cou nile a ( 10
Elloabet.~
Moore,
appoint-). Currently there dece11ed Unknown helro,
Is a vacancy to be fllled by legiteea, deviaaea. of
the
Malga
County Elisabeth Moore
Commiaalanera.
Ellen Moore, deceased
BU~t~CICHOE
Individuate Interested In Unknown helra, legaleeo,
and~.._ .WORK
being '¥'noldered lor· lhll devisees,.of Ellen Moor.,. ,p;
AVAJI.ABI:E.
.
appolntm~"' Cl!n do ·10 by · You ' are ·hereby nO.IIflld
·IEPllC IIY81EM8,
HOlE SITES and .
requesting an apptlcallon thll y_ou each have been
from:
nomad llllfendant In a legal
lRAILER SITE~
I.ANDCLEAAI
Galfla· Jackaon- Malga action entitled Kathleen' W.
DRIVEWAYSINSt
0
Board ol Alcohol, Drug Wallaoe, et al v1. Andrew
UMESTONE-TJIUCKJNQ
Addiction and illental HMIIII Moore, at al, and haa bMn
FREE ESTIMATES
Services, 414 Second a10lgned caae no. 21251
and
Is
pending
In
the
Court
Avenue, P.O. Box 514,
Galllpolla, Ohio 45831, ol Common Piau of Meigs
County, Ohio, 45789.
Phone: 814-448-3022
Tho object of the
The Board Ia atrlvlng to
maintain a balanced complaint is to quiet the
repraaantatlon
of Iiiio of PlalnUH In real estate "J-"__ .....,_ _ _ _ _'1
cornmu.nlty members and situate In Scipio Township,
AW
would Welcome minority or Melga County, Ohio and
described as followa:
r.mai• .,..flcanla.
Situated lri Scipio
.
..,
Decembitr 24, 27 .. 28, 1993
Township, Meigs County,
. l!~~!Jl~ng

PubliC Notice

~11111 ...................... '55

12 cu. 52t ..., l,b.

v.,.-rvOF puAUTY

Andrew Moore, deceaeed
Open 9 to 6
UnknC?wn Helra, legateajo,
devl•••· o! Andrew lloofe
3 dtfltrllll klnda:
Scotch, White&amp;
G.e !'ige W. Moore,
deceased Unknown Helra,
AualrfW'I Plnea, 5' to 8'.
legetaea; devlteeo, of
Hllrley Himlngreel·
George W. Moore
dance, 3&amp;D75 Flalwooda
James Moore, deceaaed
Unknown Heirs, leglleaa,
Ad., Pom-y, Ohio
11 w;;;,1;,;-~·P&lt;L;,:;,~
devisees, of James Moore
'----,;,;'1;,;,
Diovld Moore, · decea~d
Unknown helro, leg.at~••.•
davl1ee1, of David Moore
John Moore, decaaaad
.Unknown helra, legaten,
Mitchell Moore, decMajld
Unknown helra, legateft,
devisees. ot
Mitchell

Cour1houee, Second Street,

on other

Public Notice

ln~:~~~:~on~:: ~~TICE OF PUBUCATIQtl

auggaetlona on varloua
acUvlllao which
be
uncla....,ken by the villlagto ·l
undarlhlaprogram.
Wrilten cammMta. wiU be
accepted unlll 7:30 p.m.,
January 10, 1llll3, and may
be mailed to Mayor D-•Y
Horton, 237 Ra~a Street,
lldcii'Port. Ohio 45760.
·Dewey Horton, lllayor
1
Village of Mlclclaport
(12) 28 lie

Shl:dder t.blll ......'155
Hom Moln................ '22

Now has beautW!II ~ocker Spaniel Puppiel. Alto
a 2 ft. common Black Tequ. L.yawaya we
now
for Chritobt•. Sale on our entire llock
of large
new ~ema.

Closed Circuit TV

·, PUBLIC NOTICE
OFFICe OF nE MAYOR

LEGAL NOTICE
The Malga County
Commlaalonera,
clo

nothing but chock

CUiflnl.,.....

CllltowrlfW
• 1 Cu. u. ..., Ill.

~lie Notice

·

'
records this season with 2,626 "
passing yards and 20 touchdowns.
"They're going to dare you to ·
come at them on defense. I think if ·
we jump out to an early lead and ;
get on them quick, hopefully things
will flow the rest of the game."
Michigan State's three tailbacks .
- Duane Goulbourne, Craig '
Thomas and Steve Holman combined for 2,114 rushing yards. ·
Senior quarterback Jim Miller com- :
pleted 65 percent of his passes for
2,076 yards and nine touchdown
passes.

There's a computer that doaa

WeekDay•

8-3 Sat. Sun.

GREAT IELECTIOH AND

t-noon

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

7,dlye a
CIQI.c~ Holidays

II •111• part, Olllo

Hra

i

'
·

Michigan State, No. 25 Louisville
to tangle in tonight's Liberty Bowl
By DAVID KLIGMAN
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Defense has saved Michigan State
in the J,lasl. Coach George Perles
hopes 11 won't collapse tonight
when the Spartans play No. 25
Louisville in the Liberty Bowl.
"(Our) objective is to keep an
offense that's as porent as theirs,
off the field,'' Perles said Monday.
"But that's been our problem. We
haven't done a good job at thaL"
A loss for Michigan Stare (6-5)
against Louisville (8·3) means an
average season. A victory would
give the Spartans their first win•
ning season since 1990. ESPN will
televise the game, which kicks off
at 8 p.m. EST.
Perles said his biggest objective
has been getting his team ready to
play. The Spartans traveled to
Tokyo to play Wisconsin on Dec. 5
and have been in Memphis a week
prer,aring for Louisville.
'If there is a chance of getting
stale, we're challenging that," Perlcs said.
Louisville is also back in the
postseason after back·to-back subpar seasons.
Louisville coach Howard
Schnellenberger hasn't had to
stress to his team the importance of
playing Michigan Stare.
"We've tried to have some success in the Big Ten," Schnellen·
berj!er said. ''This is a great opportunuy for our team. "For the University of Louisville to go to a
bowl game in itself is big stuff.''
Louisville, which will be playing Michigan State for the first
time, is 0-5-1 against Big Ten
teams.
Schnellenberger, in his ninth
season with the Cardinals, has won
all three bowl games he has

Jimmy's New Year's Eve Party

:
,

Top seven in AP college poll stay
put; UCLA, UMass switch places
By JIM O'CONNELL
The top seven teams in the
Associated Press college basketball
poD remained the same, with No. I
Arkansas' lead over North Carolina
droppin~~t a bit.
The
rbacks (7·0), who were
extended to ovenime at Tulsa in
their only game, were on top of 46
ballots, four less than last week:
and received I ,573 points from the
national media panel Monday.
The Tar Heels (9·1), who won at
Pittsburgh in their only game, had
II first-place votes and 1,511
points, 43 more than Duke (6-0),
which was taken to the final minutes at Iowa.
The Blue Devils received three
ftrSt·place votes as did No. 4 Temple (4-0), which was idle. Kentucky (7-1), which won the Maui

n&amp;..... DK's

•l

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
• LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

USED RAILROAD TIES
•

HENDERSON AND MASON STORE
WILL BE CLOSING DEC. 25TH
THROUGH JAN. 2, 1994
FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
Very Merry Christmas and A Very.
Happy New Year- God Bless!

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAU ·

We give celpel•nd
uphollltery the
"SPECIAL CARE"

cleaning

trllllll'*lt

20yemof
sattafied

WV013372

We apec..lla In:
FIRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS

24Hour
Emergency Service

Barry, OwnerfTlm Faulk, Manager
CartHied lechnlclana on evary lob.

12-30·92-TFN
'•

�TUesday, becember 281

•

1993

Pomaroy-Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA CI'OUWOI'd Puzzle

-=:-)

ACIIOII
T

Announcements

51

Goods

Gl~sl

Tolk To Thom

Now! 1-0n-1 24 Hourw A Day! 1·
900-2811-9155 Ext 1181413;!11 Por

Min. Must Bo 18 Yrs. Procoll Co.
(602} N4-ll120,

4

for Rent

7 Month Old Utter Tralnad,
O.CI8Wed, Blaek /White, Cat 614245-9154.

14xt0 2 Br, 1 mill South of

trained.

2 bod-m trolloril ref &amp; dop, Rt.
62 N. Locuot R on right, no
...... 304.fi15.107&amp;.

and

ktttens

Eurokl, on St. Rl.7. No polo,

l'e........ C'II .

3rnonths old. 614-44&amp;-3n1

TrMS For FrM Wood, You Cut

INI.

Two dogs- 4 mo. old female par1

Brinany Spaniel ; female

1:14--251-1081.

3br. trailer, $27Sfmo. 304-875--

and You Haul tiM -388-8472.

Mobil Home, country living, Jim

pal1

Hill Ad,
$225/mo.,

Bugle ; 614-992-6208.

woshor/dryw, AC,
dopoolt otlllonol

LDsl &amp; Found

wJgood reference. 3CM-67S-192&amp;.

Lost . Young Female Beagle In
Area 01 Ken-Harrisburg And
Rodney Pike . Reward!!! 614-245--

Two bedroom mobi.. homea tor
rant, 1110 ape~~ tor rent ltlrt·
lng at $85/mo., 1114-tt12-2167.

6

"I can't enjoy coming to the ballet unless I tape
what 1:m missing on the Home Shopp1ng Channel."

9107.

In Racine,

Lost : parson thai found brown
wallet, Pt. Pleasant area, please
return wall11 &amp; papers. Collect
Reward!

Help Wanted

18

44

Apanmem
for Rem
2 Bod-.. Apirtmont, L,acolod: .
466 112 , _ Avonuo $23Mio.

Wanted to Do

~CTI~ITV DIRECTOR

G4t0fgn Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill ju..
dlvklu11 needed to coordinate Clll 304·675-1957.
the actlvhfll program tor our
&amp; T L1wn Service, lawn,
100 bad nursing center. A
bachelor's degrH In racrN• landscaDing, stump removal,
Uonal therapy or two YHfl and leat craanup. 304-773-5902
racent experience In a paUent or HIG0-531-1440.
aellvlties program in a hulth
care Sitting piwferred. ExceUenl
Financial
wrtlten and CN'II communication
akllla euentlal. Thlt position of·
ters 1 compelltl¥41 salary, unl·
que blnefll program, and ~
Business
ponunily fDr care•r growth. For 21
prompt, confidential con~kl.,...
Opponunlty
tlon. IIINH forward ....urne to:
Bill Slu, Pomoroy Nurwl!'ll &amp;
Aeh1b. Center, 36759 RockEnergeUc 1nd enthusiastic In·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Voud Sales Must Be Paid In
Adwance . DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
1he day before lhfl ad Is to run.

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday .dillon • 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auc:tion•r, complel•
1uction
service.
Ucensad
166,0hio &amp; Wr.~l VIrginia, 304-

m -57BS.

9

•

'

'

I

11184 Fonl FIIIO 119,000 Mlln.
ExcotiOnt CondHion $3,500 614387-7113.

springs Rd.,
457&amp;9.EOE.

1866

At aG.OO; IMiane Many

Shapoa &amp; Slz"'l llllnlna At
$3.00. 2 l.ocltlonO' •hllde Jioulo
Auction Or 4 Millo Oul 141.
Open t A.M. To I P.M. Mon -Sot . .
0000 USED · APRI.IAHCES
'"""""·
SkaflliO
Allfl!lln&lt;ft, nl
VIne Str01t,
Cill 614-446·73911,
1· •
800-41lt-34H.
Layna cedar chest w/padded
top 5 months old. 814-4~7081

- ·----- -- - - - · - - - - -

f1SO - . Rofrigoiilor, Wotor

54 Miscellaneous

Fumlohod, o14-44f.3170.

57
'

Alto, ·saxophone. Good ConcU·

lion UOO 114-3117-7112.,

1988 Ford Bronco II XLT $1,500,

t100 r,~'t-272··
t~

'

Motorcycles
19117 Hondo 70, 4 Whoolor, 1143e7.Q632.

614-448-4~ .

76

~

Gener11 Maintenance, Painting,
Guners Cleaned Ught Hauling,

Help Wanted

Commertcal, Residlntlal , Steve:

614-44&amp;-1656.

AVON ! All Arua ! Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.

AVON! All arNa. Need extra
money or want 1 Clrllr, ttlher
way~all Mlr:llyn. 304-882-2645

or 1..oo-tt2-6356.

Wanled· someone to brush hoQ
, -small IGI In Rae Ine, 614·94~
2940 aher 5:30pm.
y

Mits P1ula's Day Care C.nttr
M·F 6 A.M. ·S:30 P.M. CuoiHy

1

81

tent 11odcler 114-446-6227. p,..
Sc~.
Schomage,
B&amp;A

School, 614-448-822{.

Read the Best·Seller

Two

bedrdom

apar1mtnt

·

Cond~lo!l.

procloto.

C,..lk Road, BM-t4&amp;-021M.

Ron's TV S.ervlce, •p.c:lallzlng
In Zlnlth alao MrYk:lng moat
other bnnda. House calla, also

siding or trailer skirting. 614·
245·9152.

82

Cutiao Slorra
4 . Door -

Brougham
-"! Wipc~oowo, ·PD, t11,ooo
Mlloo, Shoirp I Cloon, $3,000

In

CUll, 1114-44WGIJ.

1118 Comoro V-8 ~o, PW, PS,
PB, .o.a. P - Hotch, AC.
~.ooo lllfoi. CIOonl $4,100. 114-

...4485

AKC Chlhuohuo puppjoo; 'S:!Oi!,

' ij

•

•

Moblll homo

wH~

"Acct.

Amarlcan
e Rlvar nymph
7 - Wieder·

1 Cftlld'a toy

20 Clllcl
22 Ell out
23F_II.._ •·'
24 lrtttlll
25 Alllnlll • 21 llmllci!J
27=11ld

now, nus, 111-~ ..ttll.

Eut
All -

28 Culllvllor
2V Clrcullr tent
31 Cltnlblne
3811elb0d

311 Non-proftt TV
ll 1 Rlvar In
Alalka
42MMttlln
nymph
•••
ll3 Chorgeolor

..

-

ttt.fA~N

.

Tb PLAy

THf

f'£EcT~IC

.

1
1

"'

•••

0

• e

I

BORN LOSER
111f:Y SA'{, TO £AA. 15

!

Mt&gt; 10 FORfoiiJ~

HUIN\t.l ...

DIVIOC ,..

I~

o;::....,-_.,

•

!
~

•

Dec. 28, 1993
~' mu r.Jinnt

I,
1

~

Today is the 362nd
day of 1993 and the
eighth day of winler.

MORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP
DID "'CU HEAl&lt;"TT-\ATOUR
PRINCIPAL. QUIT...

,)

AND JOINED11-IE0120.le .
/&gt;6 A WIL.D-AHIMAL TAMEIOl'.!

MA.1&lt;E 01= THAT
WHA.T YOW WIL.I....

30U75-1786.

'

ll,
!

!

.'

....•'

'

(

An-. ,

..

'

'' \

'

~

.!

BtFQR~; ~01)

_

61:€.11&lt;1

.

I thoughll would be lhe only
person holding a certain view at
ourtown meeting. I learned, however, that one person with cour-

_ .

I
I' G

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

I

A W K ELy

1I I
7

agecancreatea------ --

L -1.......1..-l..-l.._J.,__,J_

8

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Complere _the chudi_e quoted
by hlitn9 •n the mtwng word5

you dewelop from step No. 3 below.

II

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
V FOR ANSWER
.

.A

I · I I I ·I I I I

SCRAM-t.m ANSWERS
Impale - Eject· Block - Betray- JACKPOT
'That guy was considered a crack pot because he was .
a little eccentric.' one cutie told her friend . 'Now he's
considered intelligent since he hit the JACKPOT!'
,
....... ,. . .
~-

!TUESDAY

ROBOTMAN
•

--- -

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1895, the Lumiere brothers gave the
first commercial showing of a movie.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Woodrow
Wilson (1856·19~4), U.S. president;
Earl "Fatha" Hines (1905·1983), mu·
sician; Lew Ayres (1908·), actor, is 85;
Terry Sawchuck (1929·1970) , hockey
great; Maggie Smith (1934·), actress,
is 59; Edgar Winter lt94f;.), musician,
is 47; Denzel Washington 11954·) ,
actor, is 39.

I

wiring, new Hrv11;a or repairs.
M1111r Ucen..d electrician.
Ridenour Electrical, WV000306,

to:

rI I tI .
I;,~
I rI r
T 0 RET

I

commercial

I

~

••'
I

Froeman's Heating And Cooling.
lnllallatlon And Service. RSES
Certified. Aeaidantial, Commerclal. 614--256--1611.

or

1"1

....'

•
I

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

RMldlinlill

&lt;ll

... ....

' ,. ~

~

DECEMBER 28 I

~EA\-1. \oiOW ~ES

'1\I~SE.

T~ IS

PEN \'lOili&lt;?
DO '10\J PUSH
T\11S 'THING &lt;&gt;R

CLI!IIC~L 11(11\L~, YOU

h\VST
\\NOW Tt1~ RISKS ' YOU W..Y
SUFf~R UISO!lltl{1'ATION I
VISUAL IMPAIRh\~NT .. ·

00 ~()\) TVIISi IT?

Merchandise

lot, 2 oddod

roontl, 3 Mdroom1, 2 t.ths,
garage and front · dilek. Asking
$15,000 owner retocallng 1nd

CLRSSIFIED RDS

will accepl ruaonable otter.
Contllct C~land Realty, Inc. at

614-H2·225t.

-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 acre and 15 rodl In L8on. Will
trodo for lot or 0110. 304-175-

4211.

.

'

Rentals

"SUBTRACT" THOSE·UUNGS
GATIIBUNGQUSt

lDD",DOllARS
TO YOII POCKR
WITH A
CLASSIAED AD

41 ·Houle&amp;
2 lodroorn

t9r Rem

Puppioao Poodlol, toys, btiiGk
and lf)flcot; olio Soh~
mlnlalur., •H and
,
AKC chlmplo{l, bloodllnl, 14·
117·3404.

.

'

'Puppy

Pofoco Pot ,_ Shop.
Locil1od ln'O.C. MUI'DIIv ~.oo. 011·
llpoill, - Open. 814-141-0404.
Roglotorod Chi.... Shlr-Pol
pupe, 2 maiM, 2

tem~tll,

·•

Joll~:le.

814-

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Call OIU' o/fi&lt;:e for paid ill acl\IIGIIfla NJJeo/

• •

q'oor

304-CTHM.

'Birthday

control

....,,

woukl make 1 ·Nee Chrlatrmi• .
gift, $28, 614-'1112·2397.
llllophord /Rot- Pupo For
So!o, $25 Eooh: Vol ChookOd"

w-

tot And Wormed, o
Did, t14-441.arr An .. a
P.M. '

Two hill
bl- Cofllo - ·
mala •nd one flfnall

t75M.; one moiO Jock Ruoood
tornor puppy, 1250; IM-1112·

mailing $1 .25 and a long, sell-addressed, no claim.
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph , c/o thiS CANCER (June 21-July 22) Both deliber·
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465 , New York, ately and accidentally you may do things
N.Y. 10163. Be sure to state your zodiac today that puts you 1n a position where
sign.

you'll oppose the will of the majority. This

AOUARIUS (Jon . 20-Feb. t9) Treat
th ings that pertain to your health and well
being sensibly today. II there is something
you know you ehouldn't eal or drink : don't.
PISCES (Feb. 20.Morch 20) You're not a
ve ry good politic ian today, especially

could tum out to be an unproduC1ive course
of action.

where your social involvements are con c.e rned . It you try to play one triend

AKC Rog. A-liar pUpil, oxc.

one

..

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sdl it ihe ea!y way... by phone,
no need to lea~e yo"r home.
Place yoUr ~ltiu!tied ad today!
·i 5 U,or;d.' or less, 3 'dqp,
3 paper«,$6.00

tlodiorM, pllroros on prom-.

Sears remote

...

x...-

AKC Cockar Spaniel, Maltlse,

Chow ~uppln, shclo, wormed.
Clller ID boi, 14 memwy, brand 304..75-5460. '

N•111
S NT

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

,

•

1990 POIIIfoc TronS~ For
Solo. Cfoon With HOw Front
OWnot A Non-Smokor. ·
dlpooH will hold, -ro•od Tlroa.
Aoklrig $12,000. Coli 114-245- .
homw only. 304.S75o6751 after 9099.
5pm.. ·
1 femaln, 2 m11e1, ,..~y tor
Chrlttmas. . PO • minimum

Any Dog

\

84
Electrical &amp;
. . Retrlger!IIIOn

.

I

Wl-lAT KIND
OF D06ARE
YOUTALKIN6
ASOUT?

~

oomo appllonco repairs. WV i
304-6lli-23N Ohio '114-446-2454 . )

Covoflor, Tfpl 10 2
- l •uto., AC, nfco cor, StiiOO,
IIWI!2-7M3.
'Oklo

Magnificent of
A11 Creatures.

Most

·I'

Dawl1 Sewing Mechlne And
Yacu"'" CluMr Repair, Fr•
Ptail·Up And Dollvorf, Ooorgoo

tla~

11111

The Dog -That

)

'Muot SOl To At&gt;Coli _ 6t4·247-2032

18$4 Aod. .n 14x"J:O, -m .. fn.
cludoo oklnl'lfl~ otopo, bfoekl,
5yr. warranty, 10IMOWM_, . In·
•~rtnce, and 1 rur of fr• lot
rene, ill tor only S1717mo., call1·
BQ0.837--3238, aall for Mike.

..5 ~"'"
..........

DOWN

-

..

',

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

CA~H?H

LIIVI -MgO II No

glle181
10 Tobllllllt
11 Look..! II

,,

'44 Old - - . o.L
Many bridge writers Uke to demon·
Instrument
strate tbeir knowledge b)JY;~:S~::::t
ll5 Eueing on the unusual. This S.
O'Neill••
no useful purpose. Brilllin's
daughtar
48 Humber
er, Tony Forrester, ~:~~~:!,
his new book, 'Secrets of
47 ~1:'" ol
publllhed by Faber &amp; Faber
48 Evllulte
The Bridp World. H West 94th :s~:; 11-4-4-1-llQ Holl-proftt
New York, NY 1002S-7124), be •
org.
ooly about ewryday situatiOIII, _of~!-11
51 Short liMp
ing excellent practical advice for im·
proving your same. But be warned
about two lblnp. The bidding Ia slant·
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
ed toward Acol, tbe British system,
,_,., ........ OG"')II'"IC'"PIW.;;;i
. . . Cl'-.cl lnlm quallttON by,.,_,. . . . . poMI tnd ~­
EIGft lltllr In tM ClphlrlltMdl fat Mtlttw. Tcdly"• .a.:
P.
and a good editor would have made a
dllference.
' G F L
P V S W M
P T W W
J L
D
Forrester slres!lelt that false-card·
ing Ia not advisable unless' it is a text·
Y C A F
EDMMLI
X W D A L
book situation to live ao opponent a
losing option, or unless you don't mind
PTGFVCQ
KLMLITAV
lf partner Ia confused. Take today's
'
deal. How would you plan the play ln
'•
KLWWTUT'E
TYDIITUDGTVU
three n&lt;&gt;-trump on a heart lead, lf you
knew wbetber tbe bearls were break·
EVXFTD
WVILU.
ing H or 5-S?
When West led tbe heart two, South
PREVIOUS SO~umON: "I om not the type ot " ' - IMI reoponda 10
a lot of thinking." - Andre Aguol.
naturaUy Illumed tbey were breaking
'"'
4-4, So, alter winning tbe heart jack,
Soutb innocently played a diamond.
TIIAT DAILY C, ti'Q
West won immediately and led • sec·
\:1~ ..,,... ky
_PUZZLII
_ _ _..;__;;
ond heart. But when West won biB sec... .
ond dlammd trick, be cubed not two
Reorrano• leners of the
but three heart tricks: one dowll.
four KrOmbled words beU declarer bad suspected a S-3
low to form four words.
heart split, be would have played on
clubs, hoping to get nine trickl by way
of four spades, two hearts and three
LIJEtiG
clubs. Witb tbe actual layout. be would
have coUectetl an overtrick.
lt was sale for West to false-card on
the opening lead, becat11e be lulew
()HJAR
from the point-count that his partner
was not going to take an active part in
...
tbe defense.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

IN down EXTRA
LOio

8AclotAI-

HI'Yicl

.I

m:s ,.

Will buled Patio COVel'l, decks,
scrHned rooms, put up vinyl

torgo 101 w/ohodO ,,... uno Pomeroy, coif 614-H2-5858.
91., How Ha-. RoduCOd ptfco, Upotolre Apt 821 112 Socond
S2t,&amp;OO non·nogotlobll. 114- 1"!1 2 BR, Rolorence. 614-446e92-3564.
2t..
HouN ly OWnors: 52t Fourth Upotolrw
opt.,
rscontly
Avonuo, 3 lod,_,•,.:VInyf, remodolod, corpot pa~IY lur· 54 Miscellaneous
· . lse
l!choof, Ct!ntrol tt1111lng, nlshod, cabio,.utllh(oo polil, ..,11
Me. 'rchand
Oort~~• Willi Apartmont, ltol- k
448'1471, 114 441 0315, 114-441- lf'l, ..,50/mo, 304-e711-161,1.
·
26'1nch Gl~l 3oD. Huffy
81190
Bicycla. f100 114-367·7:123
·
45
Furnished
32 Mobile HO!'IeS
' Rooms
' tor Sale
Roome for rent • - k or month.
___,,_...;;.,...;,.;..,-.,.,.,..,...,..'I
Stoning 111120/mo. Gallo Hotai.
111 111f.IIIO.

Sltlrft

3 Calllomill

By PIIUUp Alder

0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Es·

e92-2216.

Loving Care For All Children · 3 or 4br., nice large outbuilding,

our •1 GOI.I . Pan.nme, Full·
Time,~. Fed. Attisllnc• Available.
Call ror Information Or VlsH . In·

,.

~~bi:~~:NS't'..fe~~?;~~~

$22fllmo.
lncludoo no
utllltloo,
-ut~y "-"•
polo; $tOO'
114-

EOH.

......

2 ActO.-

32~

r

tabllohod tt75.

'

Priced! 114-381 ott&amp; Anytime.

wilda•
20 Curtain Iabrie:
21 OrMkletter
22F-VP

Opening.lead: • Z

g11 lanQ, one ton truck

197$ Doifgo Stoilon Wagon,
~ ~14-2'45-5152 Anor e P.M. ·
·18$4 • Chon
. • Chovono, · oleyl., Jac:lcson, OH 1-800·537-95~.
&lt;il'l!i· 304o6JW457., •

apartments,

FUN??

TATER HASN'T
STOPPED
HAVIN' FUN!!

UncondltiQnal ptetime guarantH. Loc11 raferenc• furnished.
Cilll HIOQ,287.05nl Or 614·237·

71· Autos for 5ale
.

1 lodroorn Troller For Solo, Corpot &amp; Fumlohod, Cheaply

t1111111f1Cturtr
112 ..... potato
53 ... ....
114 WHd ox
1111 And olllert
llbllr.)
IHIIJne ot
alllcltet
57 Awllt
Htu.nent
!HI Ocean

..

~··

Stonewood Aportmonto, llld·
dlopon, Ohio lo now ICCipting
ollfi!ICI11ono
ond
rontlnil
opanmonto tor tho lkforfy ona
hlndlcoppod,
B14-e92·3055.

10 IIIMd

Advice, practical
not esoteric

Se rv1ces

.
.
'
Transportation

31 Homes for Sale

DID YOU AN' TATER

Auto Parts &amp;

3~·3~ or 1

1, 1~: 304 ..'1&amp;-3910.

advertlaemorU for roof-

Void Work Windows Wuhod

11

ne-

'llleot
PUB
'12-14 polnta

whooiio1 rodlotoro, tloor mots,
ole. D • R Au:a:IPtort::· 304-

Chrfotinu Spocial! 10% oft 111
hoy. IIIUot bo olcUd up by Jon.

wtl nol
llllowlngly ICCift

S..lll
I NT'

BARNEY

114-m-2935.

64 ~Hay &amp; Grain

Wanted to buy : lunk motors, $5
a piece, 614-843-5255.

I

•lOtH

Accessar~es

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Wllh Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Lively. 614·388-9303.

-~:::::::::~~~

+817

PEANUTS

Budget Prlcld Tl'llnamluLona,
UMd &amp; rebuln, all typee, stan·
lng at $61; owner 614-245-5677,

63 _ Livestock

Free, 614-4~6-i'lt:l:B Before 9 P.M.

Employment Services

.AKfl

for 5ale
19116 Pontoon, 24', 65HP, $3850,
614·H2·3M

304-273-4215.

bedroom

•u

75 BOa!s &amp; Motors

61 ~arm Equipment
For&lt;! tN Troctor, Gnglnol Condl·

One

,,.,....,

23 TrPt ot boat
21NewTMtellllllt book
30- Kippur
31ond... · ·
33 -ltld me
34- Tin Tin

SOOTH

74

-

FJrm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Junk Auto's To Buy Will Pick-Up
Appliances, Any Other Metals

,..,ral*'

--

48~

11 Suppbelng

- Ouarle

•1n

.KJI

HAVE FUN
WHILE I WAS
GONE, P.AW?

614-441-0731.

Bu~pt..arlnet Good Condition,

Hoilond 7ft. Hoy Blndb!;r no-till
Com , Plantar, John
• 240
Com Planter, Krauae 12ft.
Tranapor1 Disc., 111 good cond.

.,. • ...,.. on WI equll

•10u
+en

+A 1[5

1988 btrq_ Conversion V1n
W/GIIdlltot' Coftverslon Pkg.,
prlco nogotloble. 304..7li-tl721.

New HOlland Grinder/Mixer, New

Trimming, TrM Rlmoval, Hedge
Trimming. FrH Eatim1te•! 614367·7951"Attar 4p.m.

.10 4

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

Musical
Instruments ·'

Merchandise

104-773--5343.

5:00pm.

43 Toolllctunlng lid

111111rk

-..aot

BAST
.7132

.KIIU

304-875-71169.

N.w Flbera..11· Showtra, New
Fibarglaaa "!;howt~rt &amp; Tub, New
3 Pc. Shawart, 614·245·5152 Afler 6 P.M.

J &amp; D's Aulo Parts and Salvage,
also buying junk cars &amp; tn.tc~s .

5:00pm. or 614·992-2428 ahar

WI!IIT

A8klna

.. Condition,

dellre

18 Allcltnt

+QJU14

.AQI

\993 Sltvaradol 5 yr 60,000 mite
warranty. Utat me warr1nty on
paint. flt,SOO. P..chlllod Juno.

0322, 3 mUu out Butavllla Ad.
FrH Delivery.

Ford $2,750.114-2111-6522..
Low "'"'ng on Huoqvomo chain
saw• &amp; acceeeoriH. Before you
buy o..-re oiM, coli uol.304·
67li-JII:h or 1.-277-3917.

.::18:.......:W:.:.:a:.:nt:.:ed:::..t:.:o:..D::..::o_ _
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

•• Hoadt•

LAVNE'S RJRNITURE

O.Corated stoneware, wall lele·
phones, old lamps, old ther·
momatars, old clocks, antique
lurnlture. Riverine Antiques.
Russ Moore, owner. 614·992·
2526. We buy estates.

Fostlva, 4sp., 1.3 lltw, neadod
ASAP, call 614·992·2155, 8:30am·

141111ah

3t IIIIIIOr

17ZIP-

Vulnerable: Neltber
Dealer: Soutb

John Delre ' •
Tractor,
$6,550; 3000 Fonj $3,950; 600

WANTED : engine tor 1988 Ford

401tt....

(2wda.)

•Qn

EEK&amp;MEEK

Doyo: IM-24ll-151111f,
Evonlngo: BM-245-5H2.
1990 Ford Rongor, 4 Cyllndilr, 5
Spood, $4,200, &amp;14-441-ar.n.

W11herw, dryen, .1retrlaeratora,

HrdFaoH,so· got $125. Siders
Equ_i 'ioi2t Hooldoioon, WV.
~ 75'
. or 1-IC!0-27l· 3t17.

wfokfllsln-oltha
taw. OUr roodlra orol'olrot&gt;y
lnfonnod thai all ,,wolllrlgl,
edvei'Uied In lhla

pickup, Sllvorodo,

Rongor WhMo 'Whh
Bluo Interior.&amp;. 5 SpMd, VoJ,' AC,
Tilt Whool, ~,;ruiN Control, 'Ex·
oet{enl
$2,8110,

.......

.QJI

1Ht Ford

lion,

This

NOiml

'

388-t:JOS.

wanted to Buy

Top Prien Paid: All Old ti.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Secand Avenue, Gllllpolls.

~':J

'

11iU Ford llongor 50,000 Millo,
E:r:cel..,. COndftlon, $5,000. .114-.

Pomoroy, OH

W1nled To Buy: Standing Tim·
ber 6 Pine, Good Prien, 614388.g906.

~=•ola
IOtltiCI

ll'olle'a-

12 Madlcll
111111•

COft1paec:

,

aood
, 21tot1 of axtNe.
11,000 mi._, blue book value
..,4115. L. L SmHh, Moumlft Circle, '304-e75-3222.

'

Boddlng ·Twin Molt Bot $111, Full
Set sot CluMn t14l Sot; 4
Drawor i!hMi t44.111; car Bod's
Bunk Bod's, P&lt;!olor · Full
Llnl Of Southwoolom v...s
S4artl~

1 o..r ....

4 - caledl

1a 110111ar ot
ollcOII

Complete home tu(hls~l~l:·
Hourt: Mon-Sat , 9-5. 11

11

Yard Sale

7

PHILLIP
ALDER

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Toblo W/4 CNiro:
Fon Bock · ROCking Choir $118:
Gordin Arch W.f'S ~.00

42 Mobile Homes

Giveaway

cal•

''
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by L8n'y Wrtpt
'

VI'RA FURNITURE
614·448-31118 Or 814-44&amp;.4428
'90 ~y SAMEAS CASH
OR RENT-2.0WH (NO qEPOSIT)

3 Announcements
Glrle! Glrlol

Household

111------1

1.:1 •.- - - - - - - - - 11.-- ;,_--l .
1 ...._ _ _ _---.:1 ' V:·'.
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1 ......._ _ _ _
1 ......._ _ _......_._.

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2050.

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Wednelldly, Dec. 29, 11113
In the year ahead there are strong indica·
tiona you will play some type of leadership
role, either in an endeavor you personally
create or one you manage for others. II
could be an excillng experienc~ .
CAPRICORN (Ole. 22·Jan. 19) Do ing
things on your own and functioning onde·
pendently are

against another, the results could bS dis ·
astrous.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 18) If you are

unable to achieve your objectives today ,
and thare is a atrong chance this may be
so, it looks like you will !ry to place the
blame on others. Thl&amp; tactic won't prove
helpful,
TAURUS (April :zo-Maly 20) This is one ot
tt.&gt;se deys when you might hear only that
which you want tO hear. Unfortunately, !his
means you could read negative meanings
Into lho remarks ot others whore no ill will

two of your stronger traits , was intended.

but today you might carry these inclina· GEMINI (Mity 21-June 20) 11 your commer·
lions to eKtrames and could arouse ani-. f..ial dealings today are loo toosely struc·
mos~y In others. Capricorn, troal yourself tured, there 's a chance someone with

to a birthday. gift . Send for your Astro· whom you'll be Involved might harbor an
Graph predictions tor the year ahead by Interest In something 10 wl1ich he/she has

'

~EO (July 23-Aug. 22) It you do not pace
yourself properly today you might be

likened to a runner who charges out of the

starting blocks only to exhaust him/hersell
betore reaching the linish line.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) Instead of being
proud ol the fact that others admire some·
one 4you're very lond ot , it could make you
rather jeaoos and possessive today.
~IBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In order lo be
succe,sful today you 'll need the support
and cooperation of certain key people. Be
careful you don't behave in a manner that

might alienate them from y011r purpose.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) You're a
quick study whose bright, absorbent mind
usually grasp ideas and concepts instant-

ly. Today, however, you might pretend to
understand things you really don't.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) In most
situations today yqu'll conduct your aHair ·
eHectlvely, but in business or money mat·
tors you might be too impulsive or care·
less for your own good.
•'

••

'

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Society
scrapbook

Cavs

CLASS SET
Individuals who want to know
more about managing sheep herds
should attend a speech by Roger
Hi~h, the shepherd at Ohio Slato .
Uruversity's sheep facilities. High
will update lhe listeners ~ the !atest in health and producuon concerns.
Sheep producers and 4-H Club
Members are invited 10 the meeting
at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 24 at the Ohio
State University Extension, 17
Standpipe Road, Jackson, according 10 the release.
BEES MEET
The Busy Bee Class of Middlepon First Baptist Church enjoyed a
Chri stmas brunch and gift
exchange at the church recently.
Elizabeth Slavin had a reading.
Attending were Mary Brewer,
Rosemary Lyons, Dorothy Evans,
Ruth Ebersbach, Lillian Demoskey,
Belly Denny, Freda Edwards, Elizabeth Slaven, Elizabeth Slaven,
Elizabeth Searles, Gwinnie White,
and guests, the Rev. James Seddon,
and Sarah Fowler.

• •
WID ID

TUESDAY
dricks, Penny Aeiker, and Melissa Dempsey;
second row; Jessica Chevalier, Jessica Radford,
Jessica Karr, and Connie Pooler, and back row,
Ryan Buckley, Charlie Bissell, David Tondas,
and Randy Kaylor.

RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
at the Ponderosa in Ripley Tuesday. Those going are to meet at
Star Mill Park at 6:15.
CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will meet in the [eat·
end meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday (Dec.
28) at the Chester Town Hall.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio

Page6

EASTERN NHS SENIOR MEMBERS·Tbese
students conducted the tapping ceremonies for
the National Honor Society induction at Eastern
High School last week. Pictured are, l·r, Andy

Wolf, Tyson Rose, Jaime Wilson, Michelle Murphy, Kathy Bernard, and Charlene Dailey. The
advisor is Mrs. Sheryl Roush.

CREATIVE WRITING WINNERS - One or the ongoing projeds tbrouah Pomeroy Elementary's Partners In Education program with Bank One and Clark's Jewelry Is a creative writing
contest. Stndents In November wrote about what they are thankful
for. Winners w~e selected by the teachers, Pictured here with Des
Jeffers or Bank One are Tod Daniels, a sixth grader, first place
winner, and Jennl Anne Young, a first grader, who received an
honorable mention. An overall winner wiU be selected at the end of
the year and his or her name will be engraved on a plaque to hang
In the school's trophy case.

Vol . 44, NO. t73
Copyright 1993

Easter High honor students inducted
The 1993-94 Eastern High
School National Honor Society
induction ceremony, under the
direction of Mrs . Sheryl Roush ,
was held last Wednesday in the
high school gymnasium.
Faculty member, Michael Douglas gave the invocation, while the
Eastern High School concen band
gave a prelude and performed
throughout the formal induction
ceremony.
Senior Jaime Wilson, president
of the EHS Chapter, gave the welcoming address, while sergeant-ofanns, Andrew Wolf, led the Pledge
of Allegiance to the flag.
Charlene Dailey, hislorian of the
NHS, gave a hisiOry and explana-

Township trustees will meet at 630
p.m. Wednesday at lbe town hall.

Township trustees will meet at 7
p.m. at the township building.

CHESTER - The Chester Fire
ORANGE TOWNSHIP - The
Department will have a special Orange Township trustees will
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Chester frre house.
home of Clerk Patty Calloway. The
organizational meeting will be
THURSDAY
held on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
RUTLAND - The Board of home of the clerk.
Leadin~ Creek Conservancy District wtll meet at 5 p .m. in its
LETART- The Letart Townoffice.
ship trustees will meet Friday at
10:30 a.m. for the end of year and
PORTLAND - The Lebanon organizational meeting.

Public Notice

Public Notice

(Continued from Page 7)
North 874.90 feet along the
East line of Earl Teatord·s
said 98.3 acres to an Iron
rod along an old road;
thence North 73 degrees 30'
00" East 80t .33 feet along
the South line ol Earl
Teaford's said 98.3 acres
and along said old road to
an Iron rod; thence South
76 degrees 48' 35" East
162.60 feet along the South
tine of Earl Teaford'o oold

38" Weal 587.59 feet along
the E. . t line of Eorl
Teaford'• oald 98.3 ocrea
and along the aald old rood
to an Iron rod; thence North
t degree tt1' 54" West
9t0. 78 feet along tho East
line of Earl Teaford's oald
98.3 acret and along the
said old road and along
Township Road 178 to a
point In the centerline of
said Township Road 178,
aald point being at the
Northeall Corner of Earl
Teaford'• oald 98.3 acraa,
aald point being on the
South Uno of Eort Worner'a
240 acrea at deacrlbed In
Melg 1
County
Deed
Recorda : Volume 225, Paga
985; thence oouth 89
degreeo 09' 33" Eaot
1206.48 feet along a fence
on the South Uno of Earl
Warner'• said 240 acres to
an Iron rod at the Northeaot
Corner of William Howard'o

~6 acreo as described In

answer the complaint within
twenty etght (28) dayo alter
the last publication of this
notice which will be
putillshed once each week
for alx successive weeks.
The last publication will ~
made on January 18, 1994,
and the twenty eight (28)
days lor answer will.
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or olherwis_,
respond as required by ttle
Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure, judgment by
default will be renderejj
~galnot you lor the relief.
demanded In the complaint
Dated: December 9, 1993 •

Melgo
County
Deed
Recordo: Volume 248, Page
005; thence SoUI!h 0 degree
08' 00" East 2678 .4t feet
o)ong a fence to the point of
~eglnnlng, paoalng Iron
rode at 1940 foot and 2040
feet and the centerline of
sold Townahlp Rood 178 at
feet for reference ;

containing 104.75 acres,
more or leas, excepting all
legal Easements and Rights
alWay.
The bearings In the above
description are bated on
the Reference Deed: Volume
27B; Pages
and 878. ·
·· Tho real eatate described
In the complaint and
described above Ia the
aome real aatale deacrtbod
In Dead Book 293, Pogo
·407, Melga County Deed
Recorda.
You are required to

an

Larry SpencW,.
Clerk of Couris
Meigs County Commoh

PleasCouk

Marlene Harrison, Depuly~
(12) 14, 2t' 28;
(1) 4, 11, 18; 6TC

HEAP still
available

.~

'.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
" 1993, Loo AIJceiQ

Ttm.. s,.,.ucate
Crealon Syndicate" ·'

De3r Ann Landers: Being a
fellow American who is concerned
about justice, I would like 10 bring
something to your attention.
I teaeh conversational English in
South Korea and -read your column
faithfully in the Korea Herald. I
would like 10 infonn you !hilt the
Korea Herald is offering clasSes in
English and using your column as a
teaching aid. I am enclosing an ad
from that paper so you can see what
!mean.
I hope you are receiving proper
compensation, Ann. Copyright laws
are almost non-existent in Asia, and
I don't want you 10 get ripped off.
Your column performs a valuable
service, and I want to make sure
you are treatod fair! y. -- YOUR
FRIEND IN SEOUL, SOUTH
KOREA
DEAR FRIEND: Thanks for
wanting to watch out for me.
Actually, I am pleased that some
Koreans are learning English by
reading my column in the Korea
Herald The same, incidentally, is
true in Tokyo, Mexico City, Hdng

Kong, Caracas and several other
cities.
Over the years, many immigrants
from Europe have !Old me that their
teachers in night school used my
columns in this way because I wri&amp;c
in simple language and the letters
"teU a story" they can follow. I do
not objeciiO this in the least In fact,
I'm delighted.
Dear Ann Landers: With all the
talk about safe sex, I believe no sex
is the way 10 go.
If no one had sex, the human race
would become extinct in about 100
yeara. The eanh could then begin ·
regenerating itself from all the
horrendotts damage we have done
10 the cnvironmenL Perhaps in '
another 6S million years, the nex1
intelligent life fonn on the planet
would make a movie about US. They
could call it "Jurassic Park If.• -SANRAMON,CALIF.
DEAR RAMON: Interesting idea
Maybe they could get George Bums
10 play the lead.
Gem of the Day: High heels were
inventod by a woman who was
always kissed on lbe forehead.

Is that Ann Lallders column. you
clipped years (lgo yellow with age?
For a copy of her most frequently
req~~esled poems and essays, send a
self-addressed, long, businps-size
envelope and a check or money order for $4.1J5 (this inc/JUks postage
and han41illg) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611.()562. (In Canada. send
$5.87.)

HEAP

4 Days Only

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OPEN TUES., WED., THURS.
8 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
FRIDAY 8 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.

2 Sections, t6 P - 35 ..nta
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Rutland Village
·:~ will end year in

~ black

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr

..

.......,........... -,.r......1..
~-=t t:

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#'- . .

FIGHTING THE SNOW - Snow removal
workers across the county were kept busy Tues·
day competing against Mother Nature in an
effort to keep roads and highways clean or Ice
and snow. Here, Kenny Guinther of Racine uses

.

'

'

a loader to straighten out a stockpile of cinders
and salt during a lull in truck loading Tuesday
morning at the Meigs County Highway Department (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

G~~~~J.~!oVAP~ n~n~~!~J!ye ~9edCFTh!~axTu!i1!~or
An inmate negotiator who helped
end a prison riot was among five
prisoners indicted in the kidnap pinll of a guard during the 11-day
upnsing.
. -0'1~ other guard and nine
inmates -were' lcill~ in April at the
maximum-security Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville,
60 miles south of Columbus.
A Scioto County grand jury
indicted the five inmates on two
counts each of kidnapping guard
Michael Hensley, 36, one of eight
guards held hostage throughout the
siege.
The indictments - th e first
since a special prosecutor began

Monday but were sealed until
Tuesday so the inmates could
receive ~!es, au~orities said.
The md1cted mma&amp;cs mcluded
Carlos Sanders, 30, of Cuyahoga
County, who was one of three prisoners ·who worked out 21 condition~ with stale n~gotiltors that
ended the uprising. Sanders is serving 10 10 25 years for aggravated
robbery.
Also indicted were Darnell
Alexander, 36, of Cuyahoga onty; Th
Blaclcmon 4, of
Mahoning Coun ,
on Wells,
40, of Trumbull County; and Roger
Snodgrass. 33, of Hamilton County.

kid-

napping is 15 10 25 years.
Blackmon also was indicted on
on~ count.of aggra~ated arson,
wh1ch carnes a poss1ble sentence
of 15 1o 25 years, and one count of
felonious assault, which carries a
possible 12- to 15-year term .
Blackmon is accused of trying to
bum Hensley.
Arraignment of all five is scbeduled Jan. 5 in Scio10 County before
Common Pleas Judge Everett Bur·

He
id he was looking
forward tot day when all of
those indicted in
·ot are
sccuted.

URG rep discusses consolidation
B LEIGH ANN REDOVJAN
Y Sentinel Ne s Staff
w
A representative from the Uni versity of Rio Grande introduced
the possibility of combining four to
six counties under one economic
development direc10r at a meeting
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday morning.
Jerry Gust, assistant to the president and director of the Loren M.
Berry Center for Economic Development at the University of Rio
Grande, said the primary economic
development goal should be to
make the current businesses in the
county grow, instead of trying to
bring new businesses into the coun-

must take care of our own." •
~eetmg place, and ~~ would proGust also said that companies v1de office space w1th telephone
now look at regions not individual ~rvtce and posstbly some secretarcounties.
1al assistance.
Gust said the ftrst step for cham"I am not here to tell you what
ber members might be to talk to to do," Gust said. "But. you don't
Bill Snyder of Lancaster, a retiree want to htre an appre?,hce, somefrom the depanment of economic one 10 learn on the JOb.
development at Columbus and
Chamber members said th ey
Southern Power Company.
would be in contact with Bill SoyAccording to Gust, Snyder is der•. ev~n though they arc currently
familiar with the Meigs, Gallipolis, revte~tn~ apphcauons wrth t~e
Vinton , Jackson and surrounding commrsstOners. for an economtc
areas and would make a solid development dtrector for Me1gs
applicant, if a regional position County.
hambe
would open up.
Gust also urged c . r mem·
Gust said the University of Rio ber~ to attend a meeung of the
Grande would provide some fund - Regro~a! Econ~mtc Developr,n~nt
ing for a regional development pro- Assocrauo~ to drscuss the posstbilt·
gram , although it was not intended ty of a .regronal dtreclor With rep!'¢·
to be a Jure.
sentatrves from Mason, Galha,
According to Gust, the universi· Jackson, Vmton, Metgs and Jackty could also be used as a regional son W·Va.

Outdoor slayer moved to Lucasville prison

TO $1,000

Thursday, high In 205.

.!1

.•

Emergency HEAP for the 199394 application period is into its second month and goes on through
AprilS.
The federally funded program
offers heating assistance once on
an emer.sency basis for eligible
households whose heat related utilities are disconnectecl, threatened
with disconnect, or bulk fuel supply is less than I 0 days.
Tbe regular
program also
offers heating assistance once per
heating season to low income
households with defraying the high
cost of home heating.
The application deadline for
regular
is March 25 leaving
approximately three months to ty.
"Why waste time trying 10 bring
apply. The income guidelines for
in
a boat maker or a General
both programs is the same.
Motors,"
Gust said. "First, we
However, regular HEAP
requires the previous 12-month
income while the past three months
income is acceptable for emergency HEAP. The 12 month period or
LUCASVILLE, Ohio {AP) ferred about 80 miles Tuesday for 165 years.
three month period for the income The man who pleaded guilty to from the Warren Correctional InstiRelatives of the victims had
test is determined from date of killing five outdoorsmen in Ohio tution near Lebanon 10 the South- urged authorities to. send Dil!on !O
application making it possible for says he is worried other inmales are em Ohio Correctional Facility at the Lu casville prt son, whtch ts
some with decreased income dur- plolling against him as he begins Lucasville.
maximum security . Dillon, a foring these periods to qualify later in serving time at the state's IOughest
DiUon
pleaded
guilty
July
12
10
mer Canton city worker, had want·
the program. 1
five counts of aggravated murder ed 10 serve time in a prison closer
prison.
Examples of these types situaThomas Lee Dillon was trans- and was sentenced 10 life in prison to his family in Stark County in
tions could occttr from layoff,
northt~ISt Ohio.
strike, retirement, disability or
death of a spouse or a household
member.
Applications for both programs
can be made at the Gallia·Mcigs
Community Action Agency,
Cheshire office, Monday through
Thursday, 9:30 10 noon, and I to
3:30 p.m., the Gallia County out·
reach office at 863 Porter Road,
Poner, and the Meigs County outrepch office, 39350 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy. They accept applications
Monday through Friday 9 to noon
a11d I to 3:30p.m.. No applications
are taken at the Cheshire office on
Friday. ·Additional information
regarding these programs may be
obtained by calling the Cheshire
CCA office at 367-7341 or 9926(!29, the Gallia County outreach
office, at 388-8232, or the Meigs
County outreach office at 992·
5605. The toll free number for regular
inquiries is 1-800-282ALMOST COMPLETED - Wheeler and Cle- A spokesman fill' ~ compuy •ld Monday tllat
0880 or for the hearing impaired
venger
or Louisa, Ky. expect to have the new only SOIDe Interior work remllins to be complet·
with the telecommunications
Exxon
gas
station and convenience store on ed. He also uld tb1t several persons have
device for the deaf TDD 1-800West
Main_
Street
in!'omeroy in operation soon. expressed Interest In leiiSin&amp; the station.
686-1557.

HEAP

Wonian attends ex-husband's wedding
Dear Ann Landers: I divorced
my ftrst husband 14 years ago. Our
son was only a year old at the time.
I have since remarried. My former
husband, "Phil," has been living with
"Penny," a very nice woman. for the
last six years. We all get along and
have no problem in regard 10 our
son or anything else.
Last wedrend, Phil married Penny.
My son was in the wedding pany.
Both my husband and I were invited.
My husband refused to go and said
he couldn't understand how anyone
could attend the wedding of a
former spouse. I !Old him if the bride
didn't have a problem with it, why
should I? It means a lot 10 my son
that his dad and I get along. We've
made a big effort 1o keep things
peaceful.
Well, I went 10 Phil's wedding
without my husband and bad a good
time. Since then, he has made
several snide remarks. Is it so
unusual for divorced people 10 get
along? He thinks it's weird. My
husband reads your column every
day, Ann. Please print this letter, and
help us put this issue 10 rest. -HARASSED IN SACRAMENTO
DEAR SAC: I applaud your
ability to maintain a civilized
relationship with your former
spouse. It speaks weU for you both
and is beneficiaiiO your son.
Your husband obviously feels
thrcaiCned. I suggest that you shore
up his insecuritY with an extra
doUop ofT.L.C. and show him. this
column. It might help.

Three Reedsville men pleaded
guilty Monday in the Meigs Coun·
ty Court of Common Pleas to
charges of grand theft stemming
from the shooting, theft and
butchering of a black angus heifer
Thursday night.
Bill Nelson , 39, Brian Keith
Harris, 29, and his 30-r,ear-old
brother, Larry "Pee Wee ' Harris,
pleaded guilty 10 the bill of information prepared by Prosecuting
AtiOrney John Lentes.
. ·Due to a prior conviction, Nel·
son was sentenced 10 18 months in
a state correctional facility while
the Harris brothers were released
pending a pre-sentence investigation. Sentencing for the Harris
brothers has been set for Feb. 14.
According to a report from
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, officials received a repon
·late Friday afternoon that the
heifer, belonging 10 James Rucker
of Reedsville, had been killed, gutted and stolen from a pasture along
Little Forest Road near Hudson
Valley Road in Olive Township.
Don Barringer of Number Nine
Road told deputies that he discov·
cred the head and entrails of the
heifer while feeding Rucker's cattle
along Liule Forest Road, Soulsby
illid.
· :Upon arrival of Deputy Roben
Beegle at· the scene. several resi·
d.onts furnished descriptions of two
vehicles seen in the area while
another identified one of the
drivers, Soulsby said. Another rcsi·
dent reported that he and another
Continued on Page·a

Emergency

lion of the ceremony, while Tyson
Rice challenged the students 10
Rose, vice-president, introduced excel, to be eager to learn. and to
the speaker, Mr. David Rice.
ask questions.
Rice urged students 10 do "the
Charlene Dailey with Marilyn
best that they can ... beginning Kibble accompanying on the piano,
now."
had a solo. Senior members of the
The speaker also told the stu- society, Andy Wolf, Tyson Rose,
dents in attendance to get all that Jaime Wilson, Michelle Murphy,
they can out of school, because it Kathy Bernard, and Charlene Daidoes indeed prepare them for the ley conducled the formal tapping
future. Rice donned different cos- ceremony for induction into the
tumes to help express his points NHS.
and said, ''I'm sure you've all been
New inductees were Marilyn
told before, 'It just doesn't get any Kibble, Shelly Hendricks, Penny
better than this'! We'll that's prob- Aeiker, Melissa Dempsey, Jessica
ably one of the biggest lies you 'II Chevalier, Jessica Radford, Jessica
ever hear. It does get better, there Karr, Connie Pooler, Ryan Buckis a future out there, if....if you're ley, Charlie Bissen, David Tondas,
prepared ."
and Randy Kaylor.

Low tonight around 10.

40 percent r hanc:e orsnow.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 29, 1993

Three
plead in
heifer theft

Public Notice

thence South 86 degrees
25' 59" Eaot 244.47 feet
along the South line of Earl
Teaford's said 98.3 acres
and along the said old road
to an Iron rod; thence North
59 degrees 02' 00" Eaot
298.26 feet olong the South
line of Earl Teaford'o aald
98.3 acr.eo and along the
said old road to an Iron rod:
thence North 7 degree 511'

Buckeye 5:
2-14-16-28-30

Public Notice

98.3 acres and along the
sald old road to an Iron rod;

Pick 3:
325
Pick 4:
0846

overtime

Community calendar
NEW INDUCTEES-These young men and
women were induded into the Eastern Chapter
of the National Honor Society during last week's
ceremony at Eastern High School. Pictured left
to right, they are Marilyn Kibble, SbeUy Hen-

Ohio Lottery

HEAP

Rutland village wiU end 1993 in
the black -just barely in the
black, viUage officials reporL
The village's $36,000 general
fund will have been depleted to
about $200 when offices close Friday, said Sandy Smith, viUagc trea·
surer·clerlc.
Current and in-coming council
members praised the village's
attempts to manage the budget,
despire a two-mill levy's defeat in
November. For 1994, Rutland will
have only two mills 10 operate on
- compared 10 most other villages
which have at least four times as
many, Smith said.
"Saying we're going to have a
tight year is an understatement."
Smith said . "There are no more
places to tighten our belts .... We'll
be lucky to keep our heads above
water.
"We'll just maintain and have 10
go without We would love 1o tum
the street ligl)ts back on and patch
the potholes," Smith said.
Village residents just don't
understand the bills and how many
funds are always set so spending
can not occur in other areas, she
said.
The largest bills now - panicularly the loan debts for the sewer
proJect - are fixed and will take
years to pay off, Smith said.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency demanded that the
village insiBII a new sewer system
and the village was given a grant
by the stale.
Dcspile grumbling from townspeople, the village was lu cky
because the new sewers would
have cost $2.5 million instead of
$1.5 minion if it had not received a
state grant, Smith said. The additional costs would have been
placed on the village resident's
propeny taxes, she added.
"You have 10 look 10 the fulore
and for the future of lour kids,"
Smith said. "You can t build out
here without a sewer."
The village will be straddled ·
with debt payments from the multimillion dollar projects well into the
next century, Smith said. Thi s will
resoict all spending, she added.
Annual sources of general fund
income include:
% $15,000 in fines collected by the
village's pan-time police officer.
% $8,400 local government suppon
split from the county.
% $2,922.93 generated by the twomill levy.

barely
Annual expenses from the gen·
eral fund include:
% $15,000 for salaries. No raises
for village employees since 1990.
% $5,000 for viUage liability insur·
ance.
% $3,600 for street lights.
% $3,500 for utilities, including
gas, electric and phone.
% SI ,600 spent in I 993 on workmen's compensation claims.
Village officials bad the follow·
ing to say about 1993 and the coming year.
Mayor Ed Martin
The viUage mayor, who has not
worked as mayor since the smnmer
because of a batUc with cancer,
said he believes the new year will
pick up as the local economy and
jobs increase, Martin said
"I think we'll come out of it
OK," Martin said of the village
which only has two mills on which ·
10 operate. "When you don't have
much money 1o operate on it's bard
10 stay out of the red.~
Martin said he plans on returning 10 the first council meeting of
the new year, Jan. 11. He said be
hopes to work at least two days
during the week and will slowly
return to working five days a week.
"I think we'U have it bcttcr·once
people get used to the idea of a
sewer system and water lines. We
had spent a lot of water on lealcs,"
Martin added.
D,ick Fetty
The vi IIage should grow - in
population and businesses - once
the water line and sewer projects
arc complete, Felly said
"The sooner everybody stops
co mplaining about the high-tcch
system and starts praising it the
more people will move in and the
costs will then be shared," Fetty
said. "I think the money has been
spent in the best possible way . 1
don't see how we can cut any thing."
During the new year, Fetty said
he'd like to see a new water tank
on the hill , street paving and side
walks.
JoAnn Eads
During the new year, Eads said
she hopes the village will continue
to str.Ughten up.
"I'm sick of people calling me
to tell me about their driveways ~
Eads said. "I'm hoping we 'II do
better with all the new members
in."

Finishing construction, paving
streets - despite the lack of money
- and tearing the old school down
arc all projects she'd like 10 have
COntinued on Page 3

--Local briefs-Man trapped by fallen wires
A ReedsviUe man escaped injury after be was trapped in his car
by faUen elecoical wires following a ontXar accident at the intersection of State Route 7 and Sumner Road in Chester Township
Tuesday around 4:35 p.m.
According to a repon from the Meigs County Sheriffs Depan:
mcnt, Mickey W. Goode, Silver Ridge Road, was nonhbound and
lost control of his 1978 Mercury as he turned off 0010 snow-covered
Sumner Road. His car slid off the right side of the road, striking and
breaking off a Columbus Southern Power Company Pole. The wires
landed on the car, the repon said.
The Chester Fire Department responded to the scene. A power
company employee removed the wires allowing Goode 10 exit the
vehicle.
Damage was listed as heavy .

Man cited after wreck
A Parkersburg, W.Va.. man was cited for failure to contrOl after
a tw&lt;H:ar wreck on State Route 7 Tuesday around 5 p.m.
According to a repon from the Meigs County Sheriff s Dcpanment, Richard H. Shirley was northbound when he lost contrOl of
his 1978 Ford Painnont which went left of center striking a southbound 1987 Nissan driven by Joy Hysell, Middlepon.
No inJuries were reponed although heav y damage was listed 1o
both vehtclcs.

Reedsville three-wheeler stolen
A Reedsville man's three-wheeler was absconded with between
11 p.m. Monday and 7 a.m. Tuesday from his garage on Slate Route
681 according to Sheriffs Department repons.
J~mes Brannon said someone s10le his 1986 250 Big Red threewheeler by rolling the vehicle from his garage down his driveway
and on10 a truck. Brannon said he did not hear any noises.
The investigation continues, according to the report.

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