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Ohio Lottery·

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Buckeyes.
·drop 24-17
bowl tilt

Pick 3: 908
Pick 4: 4774
Cards:
10-H; 7-C;· 6-D;
. A-S

Page4

Low tonight In low 40s.
Friday, chance or rain 70 Per.
•:ent. High In 50s.
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'Vol. 42, No. HiS
·Copyrighted 1992

1Sectlon, 10 Pages 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 2; 1992

Presideflt refuses to yield on
American agriculture subsidies
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) President aush tod'ay ·blamed
Japan's trade'barriers for furthering ·
the U.S. recession, but refused to
give ground on American policies
that hurt Australian farmers, saying
"nob9dy's pure."
Wrapping· up a two-day visit the fust by an American president
since Lyndon Johnson's lrip here in
1964 - Bush also told the Parliament the· United States will honor
in its..,historic security commitment
to the Asia-Pacific region.
The U.S. position will remain
firm, he said, "no matter what
changes may come about in the
defense expenditures in the United
States or in the nature' of the threats
to international peace."
The president acknowledged in
a news conference with Prime Minister Paul Keating that the one one
issue marring otherwise warm relations is that of U.S. agricultural
subsidies, mostly to its wheat farm-·
ers.

But Bush declared anew that he . think that yo~ w_ould say that
will not alter the subsidy policy'il:'c .' wou)d•be. .contnbu~~g to.a lack of
which he contends is aimed not af" ~onomic -growtff, rephed Bush,
Australia but at protecting u.S. who travels next week to Korea
farmers against subsidized Euro- and Japan.
pean competition.
Bush, feted later at a dinner
"While 1 don't like having to hosted by Keating, heads Friday for
use these remedies 1 will safeguard a stop in Melbourne before flying
the interest of American farmers,''
he told the Parliament in the firstever address to the body by a U.S.
president
Bush was asked at the news

~;~~r:J~~~t~i~~r~~~~~~~t~a~

·
Tokyo lower itS'trilde barriers to
permit mere U.S. imports, especially in auto parts and rice.
"No, because nobody 's pure,"
he.said, adding that he had mentioned to Keating some of Australia's protectionist · policies.
"We've never said we're totally
pure," he said. "We are working
for freer and fairer trade. And certainly the Japanese should be working for freer and fairer trade."
He was also asked whether he
agreed with his Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacfier, who said ·
last SUnday that'Japan's !fade policies had conlributed to the nagging
U.S . recession.
The United States has $41 billion
trade deficit with Japan.
his lawsuit speaks for itself.
"Anytime
you have an extraorHe also said in his lawsuit that
the Forbes-Teamor law fum did the dinarily .big trade imbalance, I
bulk of the lobbying for the commission and tliat Public Policy's
role was minimal by comparison.
The turnpike's executive director, Allan V. Johnson, said he
believes·P\!blic Policy Consultants
dill enough work to justify the cost.
He said it was his decision to issue
the check based on the lk*:umentation submitted.
"Although there wasn't a blowby-blow account, I just knew it was
a tremendO'us effort and the
expenses that were involved in this.
It took that much," he said.
Johnson said he checked with
the commission's chairman at the
.Lime, Clarence Rogers, about the
bill before authorizing payment.
Rogers said he did not pay much
attention to it at the time, but was
satisfied that it was in line with the
work performed.

Paper, reports lobbying bill paid
without proof work was done
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Ohio Turnpike Commission paid
$269,603 for lobbying by a politically connected consultant without
proof'that the·wotlc wa'SIIone, a
newspaper reported today.
The Plain Dealer said the paymerit was made based on a onepage biU from Public Policy Consultants, the Col)!us-based lobbying firm run y former state
. Ded.mh~ratic Ch~; .!" an Paul Tipps
an IS partner, •~e•1Clark.
The paper said the payment· for
the bill, which gives no specifics
about the work performed, was
funneled through former Cleveland
Council President George L.
Forbes.
Forbes, a Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Cleveland in 1989, collected $93,000
from the turnpike commission for
his former lfiw firm's role in persuadil)g state lawmakers to keep
the agency intact, tlie paper said.
Tipps, Clark and Forbes could

not be reached for comment.
Messages were ·left Wednesday
night at the consulting fum ljlld at
the homes of Clark and Forbes.
Th~ere was no answer at Forbes'
law ftrm and Tipps has an unlisted
home phone.
The paper said the issue of the
lobbying payment was raised in a
lawsuit over the )&gt;reakup of the law
fum run by Forbes and his ex-partncr, Ricardo B. Teamor.
Teamor charged in a lawsuit that
the bill used to justify the payment
by the turnpike commission might
have been phony.
·
He charged that the bill was
drawn up as part of a scheme to
divert to Forbes some of the money
owed to their former law practice.
The accounts payable were to be
split evenly between Forbes and
Teamor.
Teamor said in the suit that
Forbes has an ownership interesl·in
Public Policy Consultants. Teamor
declined further comment, saying

ed the rifle at his mother's head
threatening to kill her. He also
allegedly pointed a 380 handgun at
his wife, Sally, and threatened to
kill her when she took the keys to
the vehicle.
Roflins is also charged with.
attempted arson after he doused the
trailer with kerosene and threatened
to set it on frre. ·
Bernard Rollins returned to the
residence "approximataly 30 minutes after officers arrived on the
scene.
Also on the scene were Sheriff
James M. Soulsby. Deputy Robert
Beegle, Special Deputy Dana
Aldridge and Wildlife 0 fficer
Keith Wood.
In Q.ther matters of the depart· ·
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SWORN IN • Fred Bofl'llal, Jtealanlna bls
ma,.- of MlddllpOI t, wu lfvo bls
oatil ol office TueadaJ if1eraoo• by Melas
'CoaaiJ Commoa Plea J~ Rick W. Crow, m
!JI tile court room. Hoffmaa 1 eareer :S a village. ,

•lerlll•

0 ne d'ead' 0 ne CTl•u•c.a·
· laifjter R out e 2 WT'°Ck
~

Aman was killed and another listed in critical condition at Pleasant·
Valley Hospital following a two
vehicle accident early Thursday
morning on SR 2, according to a
spokesman for the Mason County .
Sheriff's Department.
Joel R. Jarvis II, 30, of Gassaway, was killed in the 7:25 a.m.
accident. Danny L. Kimble, 21, of
Point Pleasant, is listed in critical
condition at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Jarvis was apparently traveling
north on SR 2 and Jarvis was
traveling south.
Jarvis' 1984 Pontiac as well as
Kimble's 1991 Ford were listed as
total losses.
· Further' details of the accident
are incomplete at this time. .
Assisting at the occident scene

were the sheriff's department, the
Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department and Point Plwant
EMS.
,
A Long Bottom, OH, man was·
cited following a two vehicle accident early Wednesday morning, according to a sheriff's spokesman. Robert D. Hensley, 39, of Long
Bottom, OH, was cited for failure
to maintain control following the
I:30 a.m. accident.
·
Apparently Daniel D. Jeffers, 45,
of Pomeroy, had slowed down in
the southbound lane of SR 62 when
his 1986 ~ Isuzu was struck in the
rear by Hensley's 1989 Ford, which
was also southbound.
Damage to Jeffers' vehicle was
estimated as a total loss. Hensley's
vehicle received $2,000 damage ..
There were no injuries.

Finishing .to~uches-----

Mejgs t;nan jailed.on three charges
Doug Rollins, 29, Old Cherry
Ridge Road, is being held in the
Meigs County Jail on charges of
attempted · aggravated murder,
domestic violence, attempted arson
and aggravated menacing following an incident at his residence.
Rollins, scheduled to appear in
Meigs County Court today, was
taken into custody without incident
at a mobile home on Cherry Ridge
by deputies Jeff Miller, Mark' Boyd
and special deputy Tom Dorst.
According to a. report by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Rollins allegededly fired. a
high powered rifle at his father,
Bernard Rollins, who was running
from the trailer. The report went on
·· to say thatDoug Rollins then point:
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on to Singapore, the second country on his 12-day ·Asia and Australia lrip,
The journey, originally scheduled for late November and early
December, had been postponed for
six weeks.

ment, Rick Stone, who failed to
appear in Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas·for sentencing on
his drug charge, -was taken into
custody Tuesday evening by
Deputies Robert Beegle and Ben
Davidson. Stone had entered a pll:a
to ·the drug charge and was ll!"
appear for sentencit\g on Nov. 8.
On Tuesday afternoon, deputies
took a deer and car accident report
that occurred on Route 7 approximately one mile south of Chester.
According to the report, Gloria C.
Limb, Parkersburg, W.Va., was
traveling south on Route 7 in her
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier an~ struck
one of four deer that r.an into her
path. Moderate damage was listed
to the left front
. of tJie vehic'le.. ,

.

oMdal bqaa Ia 1972 wbea be was elected. to
Middleport Vlllap Coaacl. While Hqlflua wu
iervlaa u ·~· of coalldl Ill 1914. Ma:JOr
JobD terkle died lid Ho(l'mu was appointed to
COIIlplete Zerkle'l term,
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A few weeks ago the purchase of the Central Trust
l banking office in Middleport
by Peoples Banking ~ Trust
· Company was announced.
However, ·the cbange wasn't
· noticeable for many untU New
Year's Day when tbe old C~n-.
tral Trust signs (top photo)
came dowa and the new Peo.ples Bank slgus went up. Rotlie Swart, vice president/busiaess development or Peoplea
Bancorp, a Soutbeastem Oblo
rqlooal ballk' bQ)diag com pi•
ny wltb omces In Marietta,
Athens, Belpre, L()well, NelsonviUe, Caldwell, Chesterhill,
Mc;Coanel•ville, The Plalas,
ancl now r,llddle,.rt, Is }•
tOWD today to lllist locll per·
IOIIDel Ill ChiDIIOvtr proce•
dures. -(Bottom plloto) Em••
Jaee Pauab;'seated left,· wiD
remahi loan ofllc:er/omce
maaaaer, ·ud T.-al Buck, die
opentlolll ofllcer. ne two are
p.lctured wltJa Swart, who
advljes tliat no perso'DDel
cbaaae• are aetlc:lpated. A
mad opealq llld opea bcMue
111pllllaed late' tbla aoatll.
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.:.Commentary
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TD IN'I'ERI:STS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Assoctated Press, Inland Daily Press Assoctalton and
tbe Amencan Newspaper Publisher AssOCJ aiJOn

LElTERS OF OPINION are we lcome. They should be less th an 300
words long All letters are subjeCt to edttmg and must be s1gned w1tb name,
address and relepbone number No unstgned letters wtU be pubhsbed Letters
should be m good taste, addressmg iSsues, not pers onah~es

What Bush risks if he
oversells Asia trade talks
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHfNGTON- The poltucal risk tn Prestdent Bush's travclt ng
trade show IS that he 's oversold it at home with hts talk of breaking open
expon markets to boost Amencan payrolls And today's expectations can
bnng tomorrow' s '!Acklash.
.
There are Democrats wat tm g wnh puntuvc trade lcgtslauon to force
cuts m Japanese automobile sales in the UniJCd Stales, a measure they call
fair and Bush constders unacceptable proJcctiontsm.
To coun ter them, Bush needs to ga m commnments next week to
expand Japanese markets for U.S. goods. Otherwtse, Rep. Rtchard A
Gephardt and his co-sponsors are gm ng to gam headway for lcgtslatwn to
force down the trade deficit wtth Japan or restnct automobile am ports.
They may even find alltes among Bush's traveltng compantons, the 21
busmessmen who arc pan of the Amencan delegauon The top men tn the
troubled Btg Three U S. automobtle manufacturers wtll be on hand dunng
Bush's three-day Tokyo visit to underscore his demand for open markets
Bush srud hts lop pnonty abroad woul d be jObs for Amencans through
expanded cxpons, promising to do everything he can to drive down trade
barners.
" We cannot expect to achaeve co mplete accord," Bush sa1d as he
began the 12-day As1an JOurney on Monday. "Thts trip won't solve all
the trade t ss u~;s th at now concern us, or produce a new export boom
overntght."
That cauuonary message has been muJed, left largely to the U S offi.cials who conducted no-name background bnefmgs on the Bush mtsston
and S&lt;.d he shouldn 't be expected to come back watha settlement tn hand.
', "When people come to the Oval Offtce, they don't wntc comracts on
.the president's desk," one of the officials said. "And when the prestdcnt
rravels abroad .. he doesn 't go tn and try to wntc a contract You don't
produce thatldnd of result.·'
. Bush hasn't promased a deal, an d has avoaded setung specJfic goals
But m speech afJer speech on has postponed and transformed Astan mtsston, he has satd tt ts pan of hts program to stir the sluggish economy and
cut unemployment
, That repcaJCd message deals wtth one problem, the percepuon planted
bJ his critics and grow10g an the polls that Bush spends too much ttme
and attenuon on foreign policy, not enough on domestic matlers. As he
depaned. Bush sa1d " the sharp lines" between the rwo have been erased
by the need for expanded trade to put Amencans to work.
But that message may contribute to another problem by suggesting an
immediacy that will be difficult to deliver.
. The Japanese reportedly are considenng sJeps to reduce thCir $42 6 btl· iian trade sul]llus wtth the United States by mcreasmg purchases of Amer1iu-made automobile parts, and possibl y by rebating pan of the tax
levied on imj)&lt;lrted cars
Measures hke th~MC would gtvc Bush somethmg to take home, but they
11re shon of what he's seeking, and far shan of what Gephardt and comP!l'llY wantlo force by legtslauon.
....
'. Thctr btll would require Japan to reduce tts trade sul]llus wtth the Unit·
ed Stales by 20 percent m each of the next fi ve years, or face sancuons
curbing Japanese automobale sales.
· That formula is unlikely to be enacJed - the prccedem would be dan·
gerous for US exporters who have a $20 bilhon trade surp lus wtth
Europe, Repubhcans say tl would stan a trade war and the WhtJe House
would fig ht it wJth veto warnmgs.
· . Nevertheless, legislation to protect the Amencan automobtlc mdustry
cbuld gam pohucal momentum, especially if the economic slump perstsiS
into the carnprugn season
•
· Bush 's answer is to convmcc the Japanese to open thcu markets, conc~trating on persuasion, notlegJslauon. " I th10k they' ll understand when
this tnp IS over that to the degree there are barners that make thts trade
less than fatr , that they better do something about It," Bush sa1d last
r.eAat suggests an unstated "or else" Ime.
.•: Prestdenual jawboning can prompt Congress to try to.fill m the blank
: That's what happened when Bush uied to iallc down credit card an Jeres!
raJes last fall. The Senate'voJed to compel a.cu~ the stock market plu nged,
a{ld the admtnistrauon had to tallc Congress out of making Bush's wtsh
tnto Jts command.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Wa!Jer R. Mears, vice president and columnist
for The AssociaJed Press, has reponed on Washmgton and national pelttics for more than 25 years.

Berryls World

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WASHINGTON - Freedom of operauon."
expression is havtng a heyday
At issue are long-standing allearound the world. But oil the 200th gatto ns that"t ~e team is run by
anmversary of the Btll of Rtghts, zealoiS whose rum tS to force out of
the Fust Amenpment IS suffenng a busin ess anyone who dts tnbutes
setback at home, all m the name of expltcll maJenal, even tf that mate·
battling pornography.
nal tS tame enough to be proJeCted
A zealous spectal prosecutJOn by the Ftrst Amendment
unit an the Justtce Department can
Jusuce Dcpartment -offictals told
take some of the credit, and the us that th e team as ured of beang
blame. Formed tn 1987 by then- " portrayed as " born-agaan ChnsAttorney Ge neral Edwm Meese, uans swinging axes ," and they
the 13-person Chtld Exploitauon argue that th ey " belt eve very
and Obscenity Una coordtnates strongly an the Flfst Amendment. "
what has become the most aggresBut rhe trac k record doesn ' t
s1ve federal attack on adu lt pornog- always bear that out. The team's
raph y m years Under fanner Attar- strategy ts to prosec ute a maJor
ncy General Rtchard Thornburgh, pornography dtstrtbutor m numerthe umt became a vmual prosecu- ous junsdictiOns st multaneously or
uon machine. Sance 1987, the nurn- m rap td successiOn. The co urts
ber of obscenlly mdtc tments m the allow prevathng commumty stanUntied States has near ly quadru - dards to determme whatts obscene
pled
That means someth ang cons tdered
Whtle the stau sucs arc we i- objectiOnable fn the Btble Bell may
corn ed by most. over the years the be par for the co urse m New
tacttcs used by th e squad have York's Ttmes Square
drawn cnttcJsm from the FBI and
Even tf the department can' t get
even the spec tal attorneys advtstng a convJcUon tn a conscrvatJve jurtSthe team Last month, the Amen- dtcuon, tl can always hope that the
can CIVIl Liberttes UniOn tssued a dt stnbu lo r ts worn dow n by th e
repon callmg fo r the outrtght dts- cost of fighu ng the government tn
bandtng of th e team, wht ch It more than one arena.
called a "consmuuonal ty renegade

, "Actually. I am not 'baldheaded. • I'm 'HAIR
DISADVANTAGED/' "
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A~!. THose. YeaR$ oF ST~i'li~

To GeT WHeRe !
--THe

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ToDaY

o~LV SliPeRPoWeR-~

I MeaN, WH&lt;aT'S THe PoitJT?

Friday, Jan. 3
Aceu-Weather• forecast for

Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein "

IMansfleld I 44o I•

at the time, and I stlll do today, that
. much of the matenalts protected
(by the FJrS t Ame ndm en t) .... I
thmk they (the Jusucc Department
squad) became zealots about thas
area of pornography, and thear reh.
gto us beltcfs ove rstepped good
judgment .. "
The case of Phtl Harvey .shows
how far the team wtll go. Harvey
ow ns PHE Inc , a Nonh Carolina
mail -order ftrm thai se lls adult
vtdcos and magazines. In 1986, the
porn squad began jnvestigati~g
PHE, and demanded that he sillp
scll mg maJenals, mcl udmg " Playboy" and "Joy of Sex," whiCh are
protected by the Ftrst Amendment.
A cou nty dtstnct attorney found
that the matenals d1d not violate
slate obscemty standards, so the
team rook the case to another county and succeeded 1n getung Harvey
put on trJal m 1987. The JUry found
h1m not gud ty after onl y a few
mmutcs So the Jusuce Department ·
dCCidcd to open mvestigatJOns of
PHE tn stratgh t-laced UJah and
Kentucky
Harvey countcrs ued the department and got a temporary mjuncuon from a judge to stop the Justice
Department from mdictm g him in
more than one place.
The Jusu ce Department ts
unb owed A spokes man sa1d the
casp agamst Harvey "ts not over
yet " Harvey has been andtcted in
Salt Lake Ctty and hts f1ght wtth
the government contmucs.
MINI-EDITORIAL- The Pentagon says 11 wtll be years before it
comes up wt th a way to tdenllfy tts
own troops dunng a baule so they
arc not ktlled by fnendly fire. The
ge nt us and the nioncy that have
made !he Amencan war mac hine
such an cfftctent ktll cr have not
come up wtlh a way to 'top killing
mclf by acc ident If the Pentagon
does n't thtnk protccuve systems
are n't a htgher pnorny than new
weapons, !h en 11 should consJdcr
the Im pact that too ma ny fncndly
ftrc tnctdc nts wtll have an future
wars when soldtcrs arc too spooked
by the odds to ftre all those fancy

people In a move that "'.~ dearly
ptt the state's mtddlc class against
the poor, Wtl son 1S propos•n g a
ballot tnJUatlve to be voted on next
year th at wo uld make sweepmg
changes in the state's we lfare program
W'alson's proposed Hllttalt ve
would cut all form s of welfare by
10 percent Jmmedtately. Then, after
stx months, benefits would be cut
an addtttOnal 15 percent for. .famt·
ItfS wnh able-bodied adults These
cu ts wou ld add up 10 sav mgs of
about $600 mtlhon a year.
The tnlltatlve wou ld also make
Structural changes m l)le stale welfare program tha~·\\fiJson sough t,
buJ could not get. from the lcgtsla·
ture Foremost among these ts permanent ehmmatton of annual costof-li ving ancreascs
In addJtaon, 11 would cap AFDC
grants so that un wed mothers who
giv e btrth to addtuonal bab tcs
rccetve no extra aad. It would also
rcqutre unwed mothers to ltvc Wllh
thClf parents m order to rccctve aid.
Funher, it would pay them an extra
S50 per month if they stayed tn
school, but would cut $50 a month
tf they dropped OU L
Courts have repeatedly struck
dow n state restdcncy rcqutrcments
to recetve welfare as uncon stttuttonal rcstrtctwn s on a person's
nght to tra'CI. But po lls have

shown that a majon ty of state rest
dents here wo ul d Itkc lQ sec a
three-year restden cy rcqut~ n t
es tab ltshcd. Smce that wo uld not
stand up to a coun challenge, Wtlson , m ht ~ mtuativc, ts trytng to
make an end run by hmtttng payments to welfare famJ ltcs du nng
thetr ftrs t year tn the state to the
same amount as graniS they would
have recetved tn !he slates from
whtch they have moved
In addJuon, the mtuauve seeks
to give Wtlson swccpmg new powers over the state budget It calls for
cutttn g off of th e salancs and
expenses of members of the lcgts·
lature tf they do not pass a bal anced budget by June 15 of eac h
year, and tl gtv cs the go,e rn or
power to declare a " ft scal emergency" tf a budget is not passed by
July I. Thts would allow the governor 10 vtnually mandaiC a budget.
Wtlson says the tmuauve ISnecessary because the state's welfare
budget as growmg at the rate of 12
percent a year, and, as a resu lt the
deftctt, left unchecked, 11 wtll grow
to $20 btllton annuall y by the year
2000.
That assertion is central to Wilson 's inittattve and 11 tS betn g
sharply challenged. The $20 billton
ftgure comes from a study done by
Wtlson's Department of Ftnance.
Howeve r, another stud y, just
released by the Commiss ion on

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W . VA

Showers T·storms Ra1n

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1968.
Sunset tonight wtll be at 5:16
p.m. Sunnse on Thursday wiU be at
7:53a.m
Around the nation
Rain fell over Fort Worth ,
Texas, this mornmg.as residents of
the· southeast part of the state fled
homes Hooded by the nsmg Brazos
and Trimly nvers.
·
Snow fell in Salt Lake City
today and the temperatures plunged
mto the sangle digits an upstate
New York.
Forecasters called for fair skies
over New England. Low clouds

and drtzzle were expected Jvcr the
Southeast coastlme.
Sunny weather was forecast in
the Southwest ; a strong ocea n
storm was approachmg the Southern Californaa coastline and expect:
ed to arnve by the weekend.
Clouds were expected to cover
much of the Mtdwes t, central
Ro ckaes and Pacaftc Northwest.
More snow was forecast m Nebras·
ka.
Up to 5 mches of snow fell New
Yea r''s Eve tn Nebraska and.
Kan9!1s. Snow also fell over Colorado and Mmncsota. Ram fell

Flumes

Snow

fee

Sunny

Pt Cloudy Cloudy

John Cubbison
John E. Cuboison, 76, of
Coolville, d1ed early Thursday, Jan.
2, 1992, at hts res1dence. Funeral
arrangements wall be announced
later by the White-Blower Funeral
Home in Coolvalle.

Barry Russell
Barry Douglas Russe ll, 31, of
34 Baker St. , Coolville, died Tuesday evenmg, Dec. 31, 199 1, at his
restdence followmg an ex tended
illness.
Born an Parkersburg, W.Va., he
was the son of Howard and Donna
Gtlhan Rus selL He was an avid
outdoorsman, a member of Oh10
Btg Bucks Club since 1976, and a
graduate of Federal Hocking High
School tn 1978
Bestdes hts parents. he IS survived by two brothers and sistersin-law, Sieve and Tina Russell and
Ronnie and Roban Russell, all of
Coolville; two ststers and a brother-an-law, Janeen Millhone of
Charlotte, N. C., and Lon and Mike
t&gt;arnsh of Coolville; paternal
grandmother, Gladys Russell, and
maternal grandmother, Ruby
Gillian , both of Coolville ; five
meces and one nephew, and several
aunts, uncles and cousms.
He was preceded in death by h1s
. grandfathers, Alfred Russell and
Bill Gillian, a great aunt, Emma
Golden, and a cousin, Terry Rus·
seU.
Funeral servtces will be held
Friday at3 p.m. at the White-Blower Funeral Home in Coolville, with
the Rev . Robert Markley official·
ing. Burial will be m the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 3 p.m. today
(Thursday).

Nina Yates
Memorial servtces for Nina
(Annie) Katherine Yates, 64, of
Pomeroy who died on Dec . 27.
1991, will be held Friday at!! a.m.
at the Ewing Funeral Home. The
Rev. Robert Sanders will officiate
and burial wiU be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 9 a.m. to the
time of service.

Florence WeU
Aorence Well, 60, of Pomeroy,
died Wednesday, Jan. I, 1992, at
Hickory Creek Nursing Cenler at
The Plaills.
Bom ·Feb. 15, 1931, in Grouse
Poin~ Mich., she was the daughter
of the late Everett and Freda Gregson Bates. She was a homemaker, a
member of the Rejoicing Life
Chun:h and a member of Pomeroy
ChapJer 186, Order of the Eastern
Star.
- She is survived by her husbaild.
Denver E. Well, Pomeroy, a daughter and son-in-law, Patti and the
Rev . .Philip Gaul, Junction City,
Oregon; a son and daughter-in-law,
Master Sergeant Wayne and Linda
. WeU, San Angelos;'Texas; five sisterS, Frances Baudranlce of Taylor,
Mich., Betty Bates of Leesburg,
Fla., I&gt;prothy Baker of Trenton,
Mich., Juanita Dt&gt;uglas of Rockwood, Mich., and Janet Young of
Montverde; Fla.; two brothers, Bill
BateS of Taylor, Mich.,. and Everetl
Bates of Flatrock, Mich.; four
grandchildren, I ason and Kurtis
Well of San An]!elos, Texas; and
Audra and Jared .Gaul of Junction
Or
"
.
d
City, egon, our·nrcces an 14

A

zam '

•

--

The Racine unu, at 8:48 a.m..
taken to Veterans. Memonal Hospiwent to Mtle Htll Road for Twila
tal
At 5:06 p.m. the Potlleroy unu Clark who was treated but not
went to the Maples Apartment~ for transponed.
At 10:28 a.m. the Tuppers
Leo Story, also taken to Veterans
Judy Kmg was taken from Lm- Plains unll went to Guthrie Road
coln Heaghts to Veterans by a for Ciarenc·e Henderson who was
Pomeroy unit at 5'36 p.m.
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy unit, at 10:51 a.m.
AI 5 45 p m. a Pomeroy umt
wa~ called 10 UniOn Avenue for
went to Mulberry Avenue for Lon
Rtcky Queen who was transported Lee Hall who was taken to Veterto Veterans, and at II :53 p.m. the ans. At I :57 p.m. the unit was
Pomeroy untttook TabtthQ Spencer ca ll ed to Ebe neze r Street for
from Mulberry Avenue to Pleasant Charles Stroth, also taken to VeterValley Hospatal.
ans. and at 7:37 p m. the un11 went
On Wednesday atl2:43 a.m. the to Oak Street for Carl Hendricks
Pomeroy untt went to Pom eroy · who was transported to Holzer.
Cltff Apartments for Wayne Pauley
The Oltve Townshtp Ftrc
who was transported to Pleasa nt Department, at 8.24 p.m., respondValley.
ed to an auto ftre near Long Bot-

Units of the Metg s County
Emergency Med1cal Semce
· responded to 18 calls for assistance
on Tue sda y, Wedn esday and
Thursday mornmg.
On Tu e~ day at 2:38 p.m the
Mtddlepott unit went to South
Thtrd for Frank Sm1th who was

Police probe B&amp;E

--Area deaths--

What Mikhail Gorbachev wanted
Rusher

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

over pa rts of Idaho,
Texas and Flonda.

Okla~oma ,.

Weather
South-Ceotral Ohio
Tomght, penods of rain. Low m
the low 40s. Chance of ram 90 percent. Fnday, rain likely. lligh ncar
50. Chance of rnin•70 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday throsgh Monday:
Chance of rain Saturday. Fair on
Sunday and Monday. Highs in the
40s Saturday and 35-45 Sunday ans
Monday. Lows in the 30s Saturday
and in the 20s Sunday and Monday.

Squads respond to 1.8 ·calls past two days

Swte Fmance, chaired by Democratic State Treasurer Kathleen
Bwwn, predtcts the def1ctt m the
yea. 2000 wtll be less than S6 bil·
!ton . It asserts. that Wtlson's study
tS based on a scncs of false
assum ptiOns.
In unvctlmg hts tn iUauve, Wil·
son satd, " I expect cnuctsm from
some quarters. and I am ready to
answer 1t.''
• He dtd not have to wrut long.
DemocratiC Asse mbl y Leader
W1ll1c Brown srud, " PeJe Wilson is
sccktng to blame the Bush-Wtlson
economic recessiOn on p(Jor famtltcs who compnse less than 5 percent of state expendi tures."
Ptcking up on the same theme,
Caltfornta Democratic Chairman
Phtl Angcltdes called the plan " a
calculated poltcy of scapegoaung."
He srud " Wtlson can 'tattack Pncstdent Bush, so he attacks the v1cums
of the recessiOn.··
However, Wil son's tnitiaJtve
was immcdtatcly supported by
Republicans and conservauvcs who
m the past have supported ba,llot
amu auves to cut taxes
The proposed int ttattvc must
receive 900,000 s1gnaturcs on petitJOns to qualafy for th1s year's ballot. A similar welfare cuttang mea-sure fatled badly in 1983.

B W'f['

I I

Columbus 45°

R0 bert J• Wagman

and ihe world.
parties and poltlical movements
When. in 19S9. the commumst threatened the supremacy of !he
J l
satellttc states of EasJern Europe Communist Party, of whtch Garseized the opportunity presented by bachev was stiUgcneral secretary.
,
the Soviet reforms to btcak free of
It was at this point thai Gor, his ztgzag JeChntque for staymg on
Soviet dominallon, Gorbachev thus bachev began to wobble and vacil- top of an mcrcasm~ly chaotic situa·
had no theoretical basis for denying ·late m a way that ts impossible to tion. In any even~ 11 proved fatal to
their right to do so. InJemally, they reconcile w1th a coherent policy, or Mikhail Gilrbachev: Boris Yeltsin
sou~ht only those freedoms he was
even common sense. He was fatall y emerged as the hero of the failed
trymg to confer on I he Soviet reluctant to put his own leadership August putsCh, and has dictated the'
" Union itsel(; mtemationlllly: thc![ "'to the test of popuLar elecltoo (as d;rcction and pac~ of events ever
political independence was unac- Bons Yeltsin dtd, tnumphantl y), smce.
i
ceptable only if the Cold Wat was and shamefuUy acqu\csced tn maliIt would 'be absurd, then, to
to be pursued, which in Gor- tary measures agamstthe Baltic credit Gorbachcv wtth having cop·
bachev 's mind it wasn't. S&lt;r he sillieS. Meanwhile, the SoV1et com- sciously cngin.eered the extinction
allowed them - perhaps· m some mand economy, furth er we;ikcned of e1ther the Soviet Communist·
cases even encollt'aged them - to by Gorbachev 's ' necessary but Pany or the Soviet Union itself. On'
go their own ways.
insufficient reforms, collapsed tl)e contrary, he resisieil both out-.
In 1990, however, Gorbachev before any market system was co'rnes (preferring reforms) as long
was confronted with certain neces- ready to replace it, and the Soviet as he was able.
.
sary implications of his policies- public inevitably blamed Goo~ut he was determined to end
implications he had apparently bachev for the resulting shortages.
the Cold War, and to set his COUD·
never anticipated, or taken into
Gorbachev has recently begun try's feet on the long lOIII to fnle.
accoont In the·implacable formula- arg~ing that his preference for dOm, and he achieved both otlhMC
tion of the late James Burnham, hard-line'colleagues in the flrst half noble objectiVes. He has eamotl his
"Who says A must say B." Hav- of 1991 wa5 a piece of Machiavel- · Nobel Pejlce Prize, and i hlgh'llld
ing acquiesced in the freedom of !ian strategy (''I wanted to keep affcctiona_te place in the hbtoriW
the East European states, Gor- them nearby"). But it seems likeli- \ memory of the Russian people and
bachev now found himself con- er that it was simply another zag in 'the world.
•
fronted with similar demands by
·
·
·
'
the Baltic n"ions tbat Sralin had
Tho~ght for Todayl "It is the lnlgedy of the world thal no one knows
swallowed in 1940. Domestically, what he doesn't know - and the lesS a man kno"'~' the more sure he is
moreover, a proliferation ofnew that he knows everything."- Joyce Cary', British author (1888-1957) .

al1l

•

Governor seeks large cuts in welfare
SAN FRANCISCO (NEA) Gov Pete Wtlson, frustrated over
ht s tnabtlity to solve Caltfornta 's
growing budget CriSIS, now seems
ready to nsk what amounts to class
warfare to l o~&gt;.cr the loomt ng
dcftCJL
Last year California faced a
deftcll esttmated at S 14.3 btl!ton,
the largest m htstory for any stngle
state That dcftctt was closed wtth a
combmauon of unpreccdenrcd budget cuts coupled wtih a S7 bJ!honplus tax h1ke. But because of the
ltngcnng re cessiOn, tts now looks
like the state's 555 7 btl !ton budget
may be underfunded by as much as
53 bdlton So Wtlson ts desperate
for more places to cut.
Welfare rema tn s one of th e
state 's larges t cxpendt t!ll.CS There
are 2 3 mil liOn Caltforntans rccetv·
mg welfare, 69 percent of them
chJidren. Th1s year the legislature
cut AFDC payments by almost 5
percent, the largest cu t by any state
m htstory. However. Califorma 's
AFDC benefit levels are still .higher
than those m any other state except
Alaska and Hawau . With 12 percent of !he nation 's populatiOn,
Calt forn ta has 26 percent of the
natJOn' s total AFDC cbsts.
Walson demanded the legislature cut welfare even more. But the
Democratic majonty balked. So
now Wilson is gomg directly to the

By The As,sociated'Press
A slow-movmg low pressure
system as to bring precipitation to
Ohio for the rest of the week, forecasters sa1d.
It wtll begm as ram on Thursday
and change to snow late m the day,
the National Weather Service said.
The chance of snow or ratn wtll
continue mto Saturday.
Temperatures waU be mostly m
the 30s.
.
The record high temperature for
thts dale at th e Columbus weather
stauon was 67 degrees an 1952. The
record low was 6 below zero tn

MICH

WC8 JXlllS

•

•

Tile Justice Depanment
acknow ledges that wath pornography, as wtth drugs, i( goes after dtslrtbutors more often th an produc.ers. But the depanment derues that
Its strategy ts to conccntraJe on ftl ·
ang cases m the Btble Belt.
But one of the team's ow n
lawyers warned agamst the mult1
prosecution strategy as far back as
1988 In an mternal memo tha t
year, the lawyer expressed senous
co nce rns about the strategy of
kcc pmg " rh e defense att orn eys
busy and runnm g around the country " He sa1d the tac uc mylled th e
"appearance of an Improper prosecu tori:il motive" that could offend
judges '
Even the FBI has refu sed to
spe nd ltme and mo ney chast ng
some defendants who stand lt ttlc
chance of bemg convtc!Cd. lnsread,
th e FBI targe ts hard -core por n
offe nd ers. accordmg to an age nt
who formerly oversaw th e FBI's
porn stralcgy
That has put the FBI m a "run ntng battle" wll~ the J~ s u cc
Dcpattment's pornography ream,
th e agent srud m a court depositiOn.
" I had very good reason to bcltcvc

Ohio

Rain, snow in forec·ast f9r Ohio

OHIO Weather

Pag&amp;-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mid.(lleport,.Ohio
Thursday, ~anuary 2, 1992

.

To hts eternal credtl, Mikhail
Gorbachev seems to have rcoc hed,
early 10 his leadership of the Soviet
Union, two eruc1al convactions:
(I) that things "could not go on
the way they were goang'' in the
Soviet Unaon - that the system
was ~ndamentally unworkable and
had to be modifi ed in major
respcciS, in the dtrcction of political democracy and a market economy; and,
(2) that, to this .end, tlie Cold
War had to be ended and replaced
by a policy of cooperation wtth the
Free World.
·
It can be argued - successfully,
I think - that these two con victi6ns necessanly impli~d every- thing that lias subsequel)tly
occurred, down to and including
the extirtctlOn of the Soviet Union.
Bu!. humanly enough, Mikhail
~orbachev-refused to ·admit lhis,
even to himself. He he)ieved, or
hoped, that the Soviet Uoion could
be converted to a market economy,
or at least some sort of " market
socialism," by little more than a
process of extensive deregulation.
He visualized himself presiding
.over a much fre~r Soviet Uni~n,
!Jlrosperous and at peace with itself

'
.•

.••••'

..

Anti-pornography squad over.steps its ·boun.ds

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

Thursday, January 2, 1992

A breaking and enten ng at the
Richard Follrod residence on Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, early Tues(Bertie) Demoskey, Maddleport;
day
mommg remams under mvesutwo daughters, Mrs. Ray (Gamet)
gallon
by Pomeroy Potice.
Varian, Mason, W.Va.; Mrs. James
According to a report from
(Barbara) Young, Rutland; ftve
Chief of Police Gerald Rought, the
brothers, Leland Clonch, Pomeroy;
ftrst Hoar of the residence was broRobert Clonch, Middleport; Paul
Clonch, Logan; Clyde Clonch, Bre- ' ken into about 2:30am. as the restman; Wilbert Clonch, Kentucky; dents slept on. the second floor.
Entry was gamed by breaking
six sisters, Jean Goodwin, Moreout
a small window in a door at
head City, N.C.; Audrey Keesee,
the
rear
of the house, reaching in
Columbus; Alta Fish, Rutl~nd;
and
unlocking
the door. A 27-inch
MarJone McComas, Columbus;
color
televtsion
was the only thmg
Kathleen Clonch, Columbus. Maxine Brunty , Calaway, Fla.; ftve removed from th e house, poltce
grandchildren, three great-grand- reported.
A ne1ghbor who saw a strange
children; and several nteces and
car
and somethmg being carried
nephews.
•
from
the house alerted the police
Besrdes her parents, Mrs
By
the
tune offtcers got there, Jhe
Demoskey was preceded an death
perpetrators
had already gone
by her husband, Harold, in 1981 ,
Mr
and
Mrs.
Follrod were still
and a sister, Besste Clouse.
asleep
when
pohce
arnved.
Servaces will be held Fnday at
Chief Rought has aske1f that
10:30 am. at Fasher Funeral Home
anyone
seeing susptctous acuvtty
in Middleport with Rev. James A.
or
strange
vchJcles m a neighborSeddon officiating. Burial will be
ll'Ood
call
police
immediately so
in Riverview Cemetery.
that
poJential
criminal
activity can
Friends may call at the funeral
be
curtailed
or
avened
by
the swtft
home on Thursday from 210 4 p.m.
arrival
of
officers.
and 6 to 8 p.m.
There were no acc 1dents tn
Pomeroy over the New Year holiGertrude Jeffers
day, the chief reported. He said that
Gertrude F. Jeffers, 64, of several c;JrS were stopped but that
Mason, died Tuesday, Dec. 31, in each instance there was a nondrinking designated driver.
1991, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was a manager of the Shamrock
Motel
and
King's
Eleven persons Cited for speedLaundromat.
ing
forfeited bonds wh en th ey
Born ·Nov. 20, 1927 in Burlinfailed
to appear in thas week's court
gham, Ohio, she was a daughter of
of
Pomeroy
Mayor Ri chard Seyler
the late Fred Roush and Anna L.
In
the
group
forfeiting their
EsJep.
bonds
were
Samuel
Morehead,
Surviving are her husband,
David B. Jeffers; a daughJer, Linda Parkersburg, W. Va., $44, speedL. Carson of Clu\rloue, N.C.; ing; Todd Compson, Washmgton.
granddaughJer .and friend, Loretta W. Va., $45 , speedin g; T1moth y
F. Priddy and Brian L. George of Crowe , Vinton, $45, speed ing;
Charlotte; grandson and wife, Kenny Wall, Pomeroy, $45, speedJames R., Jr. and April Priddy of ing; Donald Hunnell, Jr., MtddlcCharlotte; and three great· port, $46, speeding; James RJftlc,
Syracuse, $46, speeding; Betsy
grandchildren.
The service was held today, II Herald, Tuppers Plruns, $48, speeda.m., at the Foglesong Funerel ang; James Counts, Syracuse, $47,
Carla DeMoss,
Home with the Rev . .Lleorge Has- speeding;
Pomeroy,
$50
speeding; Teresa
char officiating. Burial followed in
Tyson-Drummer,
Syracuse, $49,
Sunrise Memorial Gardens.
speeding;
Tracy
Colley,
Ravenswood, W. Va., $47, speedSherman Ford
ing.
Sherman R. Ford, 79, of Mason,
Also forfeiting bonds were Leo
died Tuesday, Dec. 31; 1991, m Gibbs, Letart, W. Va., $63, expired
Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
registratton; Joseph Adams, The
. He was a first locksmasler at the Plains, $63, expired registrauon;
Racine Locks and Dam.
Alfred Roush, Mason, W. Va., $63,
Born Nov. 5, 1912, in Marion, mvahd registration; Templeton
Ky., he was a son of the late Sher- Grueser, Pomeroy, $50, no fmanman G.. and Lillie D. (Hughes) cial responsibllity; Donald Vaugh··
Ford.
an, Pomeroy, $63, 1n1ffic light vioHe was a member of the U.S. lation; John Krawscz yn, Jr. ,
Col]ls of Engineers.
· Pomeroy, $43, expired regtstration;
Survtving are his wife; Ella B. and Leo Gibbs, Letart. W.,..va.,
(Hughes) Ford; a son and daughter· expired regisrration.
in-law, Ronnie G. and Mary V.
Fined were Robert Saltzman ,
Ford, Letart; daqghter, Shirley L. Racine, $52 and costs, spccdang,
Day pf Pickerington, Ohio; three Toby Hysell, Lancaster, $63 and
grandchildren; three sisJers, Dolpha costs, no valid operator·.~ license,
Fritts, Pauline Easley, Ena Arllack, and Jeffrey H. Warner, Vanton, $47
all of Marion, Ky.; and a brother, and costs, speeding.
.
HoUice Ford of Levin worth, Ind.
A graveside service was held
The Dally Sentinel .
today, 2 p.m ., at the Kirkland
(V8P811S.NO)
Memorial Gardens, where burial
followed. Rev. Ben Stevens Rubliahed enry "afternoon., Monday
lh""''h Fricloy, I U Courl Sl., Panm~y,
officia!ed.
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Publishing
Arrangemems were under the Company/Maltl.,.edta (nc., Pomeroy,
direction of the Foglesong Funeral Olrio 4~768, Ph. 1192·21156. Second ell•
poollp Jllld al Pcouoroy, Ohio.
Home.
Member: The Allocilted Prua; Inlan4
.
Dally ....., Aloo&lt;lolton and lho Ohio

Legislators pleased with announcement
respon se I recctvcd !rom ODOT
Director Jerry Wray earlter thts
year when I conveyed to htm the
Importance of thts project," Abel
satd. "At that ttme, the Darector
mdicated that after addrcssmg cnvJronmental conce rn s, the Department would program the project for
destgn."
"While Jl/e applaud the
announcement of the ftrst phase, tl
IS tmportantto ensure that the proJCCl is compleJCd in order to make
the benefits to this area a reality,''
Abel added. "Opcnmg a gateway to
the ·Southern Comdor' has been a
priority for us for some time. We
have been workin g on obtaining
approval for this project m order to
provide a rouJe for goods and servtces that wall boost our re~ion '&lt;
economy."
Long agreed, potntmg out that
"now that we have got th e ball
Three were fmed and another
forfeited a bond m the Monday rolhng on his prOJCCt, 11 as Imporni ght court of Middleport Mayor tant that we keep at moving. A successful endeavor must tnclude the
Fred Hoffman.
complctJOll
of the Cntlfe htghway."
Ftn ed were Jam es D. Jones,
Abel and Long vowed to conunMtddleporl, $15 and costs, speedue
workmg wtth the Admtmstrauon
ing; Danae! L. Hysell, Middlepon.
and
th e Department to fac tlt tate
$10 and costs, invalid regastrauon.
planmng
for compleuon of the proand Bratn L. Branham, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, no muffler, and $25
and costs, contempt of court.
Forfeiting a bond of $60 was
Trustees to meet
Ja mes E. Harris, Middleport.
The Letart Townshtp Trustees
exptred regtstrauon.
wiU meet Monday at 6 p m. at the
office building for an organtzauonal meetmg.
Veterans Memorial
Hymo sing to be held
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS ·
The Faith Full Gospel Chun:h m
Jerry Hayman, Portland.
Long Bonom wall have a hymn
TUESDAY DISCHARGES · sang Friday at7 p.m. featunng local
Mabel Shields and Coleen Bowl· talent. Pastor S'teve Reed mvites
·mg.
the pubhc. Fellowship wiU follow.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Community Center meeting
·None.
The Louridge CoJ11muruty CenWEDNESDA Y DISCHARGES ter will meet tonight (Thursday) at
- ~ Grueser, Richard Hatfield 7 p.m. Everyone 1s welcome .
and Alice Struble.
Dinner planned
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ,_
The Louridge Commuruty CenDiscbarges Dec. 31 - Jason ~ wiU have a smorgasbord dinner
Love, Brenda Russell, Mrs. Terry on Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. The
Vance and son, Brandon Welch
and Alison Woolum.
Discharges Jan. 1 - Christi
Mullins, Frances Stewart and
Judith Wolford.
Birth Jan. I - Mr. and Mrs.
James Jacobs, daughter, Ewmgton.
State Rep. Mary Abel (D·
Athens) and Stale Sen. Jan Mtchael
Long (D-CarclevJUe) satd m a j010t
statement today that they were
pleased wtth the announcemenl by
the Oh10 Department of Tra nsportatiOn that plans for the construcuon of the ftrSt poruon of the
U.S Route 33 to lnJerstate 77 connector has begun.
Whtle expressmg opttm1sm over
what the connector to th e
Ravenswood West Vugmaa bndge
will moan to the economy of the
Southeast Ohio regiOn, both Abel
and Long srud that they hoped that
the Department would follow
through wuh the necessary
resources to fimsh the project.
"[ was happy With the pOStltVC

Middleport Court

Pomeroy Court

A El Po
34
m e wer ..................
Ashland Oil ...................... 30 1/8
AT&amp;T..... ,................. .... ,:.. .38 3/4
nephcwsr
----- B k On
52 1/8
• Besides '::~£arents she was - '"
e ..........................
, p[receded in
'by two lrothcrs,
Bob Evans .......................,25 118
Charles and~.
Charming Shop..................21 1/2
Funeral services will be
City Holding .................... J 6 l/4
I
Federal Mogul................... l4 5/8
b p· h F
-~~~~~ 1s er unera
GoodyearT&amp;R ............:..... 521!8
Key Centurion ...................14 l/2
' End ..... ,..........,.......28 1,,.
JA
Lands
DorotbYDeMOSkey . . UmiJecl Inc........................
29
Dorothy M. Demoskey, 68,
Multimedia Inc ..................23
Mlddf0)101't.41ied Tuesday, Dec. 31, Rax Restaurant ..................1/4
·' 1991, at Veterans Memorial HospiRobbins&amp;:Myers .......:........35
talfollowinganextendedlllness.
Shoney'sinc......................217f8
- Born in Madison County on
StarBank:....... :............ :.....2S
~ept. 6, 1923, she was a dau$bter
Wendy Int'1........................9 518

Hospital

Lottery numbers
Pick 3 Numbers
9-0-8
(nine, zero, eight)
Pick 4 Numbers
4-7-7-4
(four, seven, sev~n, four)

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

Newspaper Altod1tlon., National
Adnrtiaiar Repre11nU:tive, Branham
New1paper Balu, 733 Thi rd Avanue,
NewYOrtt,NowYOrk 100t7.

• I'OSTMA9I'ER: Send oddreu chanp ..
1

Tht Daily S.nUnel, 111

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esllbllahments.

jCCI
ODOT wall anmatc the proJect
by constructtng a 2 1/4 mile section
of htghway from the mterchange of
Routes 33 and 7 an Meigs County
to Fave Pomts. The project ts
ex pected to cost $11 mtlhon and
wtll begm m 1994.

Court news
Divorces, dissolutions sought
A davorcc action has been filed
10 Mcags County Common Pleas
Court by Sharon A. Davis, Middleport, agaanst Jason J. Davis, also of
Middleport.
Actions for dissolution of marnage have been file!l iQ the court
by Damon Stapleton, Pomeroy and
Cheryl Stapleton, Bidwell, and by
Debra Kay Meadows and Mitchell
H. Meadows, both of Middlepon. ·.
Judgment actions filed
Judgment actions have been
fil ed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Star Bank, Ironton,
agaanst
Machael
Luman,
Langsville, tn the amount of
$5,070.59, and Cllizens National
Bank, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
agamst Delmer Grady of Racine in
the amount of $4,904.29.

__.._Meigs arinouncemen~~-

'

Stocks

tom.
At 8 37 .p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to New Street for Duane
Qualls who was taken to Veterans.
The Rutland unit, at 11:50 p.m.
went to County Road I for Edwin
Burnem, also taken to Veterans.
On Thursday, at 7:48a.m. the
Tuppers Plams unit responded to
Locufo l Grove Road for Myrtle
Damewood who was lransportcd to
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital. ~
At 8:06 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to. Route 681 Easl for Wayne
Gilhlan who was taken to Veterans.
Fanally, at9:22 a.m. the Middlepan unit responded to the Pomeroy
Nursing and RehabilJtaUon CenJer
for Charles Hearn who was taken
to VcJerans.

l

)

cost is S5 for adults and $2.50 for
children. The public ts inviJed.
Lodge to meet
The Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 F
and AM will meet Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Lodge Hall.
Southern Board to meet
The Southern Local Board of
Education· will hold an organizational meeting and budget meeting
on Monday al 7:30p.m.
Game schedule
A three-way event wiU be held
Saturday when the Southern Toma.
does take on Gallia Acaden)y Bl~
Devils m Gallipolis, The freshman
game waU begm at5 p.m. followed
by tbe reserve game and varsity
game.

�....

,. 1nuraaay, o~anu11ry 04, lila..:

s-ports

\,

The Daily Sentlllel

By GEORGE ROBINSON

Typically, Johllson, 32, pulled '
ln no .punch~s. He rev~aled that he
~· 1991 brought long-awaited had been mfeeted' wtlh the lethal
triumphs-. and a heroic tragedy. - HIV ,v1rus, an act of candor that
Here's a qwck look back at the top retlected ·htS desrre to JOID the pub:
stories of the year:
he c~mpatgl) to fmd a cure for
BASKETBALL. Magic Johnson AIDS.
.
·
helped to save· me NBA in the late
On the basketball coon m 1991,
1980s. With his charm and skill, some long-time contenders finally
the dynamic 6-foot-9 guard was a got their due: Michael Jordan and
pe¥t spokesman for the revived the Chicago Bulls tore thrOugh lhe
pro league. That's why the totally NBA playoffs, going 15-2 in postunexpected announcement of his season play on .lhe way to the NBA
earl~ retirement from the Los btle. Coach Mike Knyzewski and
Angetes lakers hit so many spans the Duke Blue Devils broke the
fans 80 hard
NCAA tourney jinx, defeating

NEW YORK (NEA) -

Page-4

Notre Dame, Syracuse,
Miami
•
among bowl g.ame winners ..
•

SACK TIME ~s early for Nebraska quarte(back Keitben
ant (10), as Miami Hurricanes Kevin Patrick (grabbing McCan!) and
another defensive teammate move in for the

sack in the first quarter of the Orange Bowl
Wednesday in Miami, Fla. The Hurricanes won
22-0 to win the national championship. (AP)

Miami edges Washington to claim ·
college football's national crown
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Miami won its fourth national
championship in nine seasons
today, edging Washington by four
points in the closest final vote in
the 56-year history of The Associated Press polL
The Hurricanes and lhe Huskies
both finished 12-0 after impressive
:- :· bowl victories on Wednesday, the
· fi!Sl time since the 1973 season that
: : .two major teams have gone unde·
: : 1eated and untied.
·. ·. · Washington , which trailed
:- · Miami by 14 points going into the
; bowls, almost overcame the deficit
after demolishing Michigan in the
.- 'Rose Bowl 34-14. But Miami ,
:.Which blanked Nebraska 22-0 in

the Orange Bowl, barely held on to
win the ballOting by a nationwide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters.
"It's great for th e program,"
· Miami head coach Dennis Erickson
• said. " This football team deserves
to be No. 1. "
The USA Today-CNN coaches
poll will crown its champion later
toda y. Miam i and Washington
were ti ed fo r first in that survey
prior 10 the bow Is.
The Hurricanes ou tpointed the
Huskies 1,472-1,468 in the AP
poll, in c ludin~ a narrow 32 -28
advantage in ftrsl·placc votes. It
was such a close call !hat eight voters made Miami and Washington
co-champs, giving_each school hall

Scoreboard
College bowl scores

JndianL.
.. 12 18
Chuh:mc .............. 11 23

400

13

. 2.5~

17.5

New Year's Day scores
Puch Bowl
At Allantl
E. Cuohna 37, N. Carolina Sta Lt 34
lhdl or t'ame llo'&gt;'l
At Tampa, na.
Sy ru;u&amp;e 24, Oluo St.ltc 17
Cllrus Bowl
AI Orlando, na.
California 37, Clemson I)
Cotton Dowl
AtDII!U
F1orida SLate 10, Teus A &amp; ~1 2

WESTER:-&gt; CONFERE:'\CE
Midw~~ t

w

L

p,L

.. 19 12
.. 16 13
16 13

61)

.552

2

. 12 16
....... ... 12 17
Mmnes01a ...
....4 2l

A29

l.5

.4 14

(,

.!48

ll

Team
L:tah ...

llollston ...
Sa n Amon1n
lkn vcr
D~llu

Golden St.ltc

,. 19
J'llOenU
...... .. 19
llrlrl11nd
19
L A. Wen ...
17
Se.tlle ... .... .... ... .. 15
L A. ChPf&gt;ers
.16

R ~eBowl

At Pandtna, Calif.
Wuhin gl.oll 34, Mu:higan 14
Orange Bowl
AtMI1ml

Sacra mento ..

MUmi 22, Ncbruka 0

Sugu Bowl

~o

AI Honolulu

4p.m
Japan Do.,_, I
AI T!Hiyo

Final AP Top 25
college footliall poll

l. Mi&amp;mi(32) .......... l2..0.0
2. Wuhingwn (21) .. 12-0-0
l PemSt ................. ll -2--0
4. AoridaSt.. ....... .. .l1 ·2·0
5. Alablma ............... ll -1·0
6. Michi&amp;Jil .............. l0-2-0
7. Flolidt..................! 0-2-0
B. Califomia ............. l0-2-0

.•

,•

•'

.

'

'
,•

,•
'

'•'

'•
'•
'·

9. EutCarolinl........ ll·l.O
lO. lowa ................... .IO-J.l
l l. Syracu.se .............. I0-2·0

11 Tew A.t.M ........ I0-2-0
13. NwcDame......... IO.J.O

14. Trnu:uee ..............9·J.O
IS. Ncbmka ...............9-2-l

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERE!I;CE
Patrick Dlwblo n

Team
W l T Pb. GFG .\
Wuhington ........ 26 13 I S3 179134
N.Y. Rangers ..... 2~ 14 I SL 152129
PitubutJ,h .......... 22 13 4 48 186 145
New Jemy ..... 18 14 6
Philtdr.lphia ...... 12 17 7
N.Y. Wanden .... 12 19 6

Adam• Dlrillon
Morruul.. .......... 26 14 2
a.. ~a~ ................ 11 16 5
Hutlord ........... .. 14 II 4
Buffalo ............... 12 19 6
Quebec .. ............ ll 22 5

~

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I

~
~
~
\.oj

N

~

-.
't

'

'.',.
•,

•

39 114 138
32 11 S1 31
J0 1161 3\
2i 124151

Norrll Dh'blon
Tum
W L T Pb. GFGA
Dc:troit.. .............. 23 ll 4 50 152121
St.l..wil ............ 1114 7 41 132121
Chicago.......... :··: U 16 ~ 39 135130
MlnnCIOia .......... 16 16 3 35 11511i
Toronto .............. 10 25 5 25 103149

IS

23
11
21

Smyth-e lNrillon
Vancoover ......... 2211 6 50 139115
WiMiJMI ........... 16 16 I 40 1'2212.1
CalJliY .............. 16 ti S n 142135

~

·-

S4 135 93

,. CAMPBEL L CONFERE!I;CE

13

22

O~Hr- reulvlna vO&amp;Wo ClcorJia-Toeh

,.
'•

42 142113
31 103121
30 138158

1A

70, Vifainia 63,lndiana 48, Ohio St. 31,
Bowlin&amp;~ 'Z1, Bay\Of 5, San Diego
St. S, A1brwn •. lCaiaw St. 3.

'

lll fT\1:1 sc heduled

Friday's games

Old
Pis. Rank
1,472
1
1,46&amp;
2
1,342
6
1,310 . 5
1,216
.i
1,151
4
l '119
3
1,039 14
1,024 12
883'
1
876 16
870
9
848 18
716 10
666
II '
629 1Jl

16. ()klahomo ..............9·:1-0
11. a..q;. ,...............9-:1-0 42.1
IS. 0an11Jrt .... ............9·l-l 410
19. UCLA ....... ............9·3,0 ""
20. Colondo ............... l ·3-1 3!3
21. Tuln ................... IO.l-0 148
22 Sunronl ................ 1-4-0 262
ll. BriaJ!atn YIJW'I&amp; .... 1·3-2 182
2A. N. Catalina St .......9·3-0 109
2S. NrFOIQe ............J0-3-0
lr1

l
4.l
I
11.5

( lm larui at Do1ton, 7:30p.m.
Wuh inglM a1 Ne w Jeney, 7:] 0 p m.
Detroit It Dalla&amp;, 8 p.m .
Chie~go n Milwtubc, 9 p.m.
lndbna at LA. Lakea, IO:JO p.m.

The Top TwCilty Five teams ln the fi.
nail ~ I Auocittcd ~5 rollc11e foot~U
pol.l, With fi.Bl-1l} ICC Yllta in p.armthca;ct;,
aa1on rccnrds and tut.ll lOt.a! points based
on 2S poinu for a !Ust·placc vot! through
one point for a 2Sth-placc vote, and ?feviownnking:

Atcwd

.2.16

I
I

Portland at UL&amp;h, 9:30p.m.
Miami 11 Seattle, 10 p.m.
Denver at Golden Sute, 10:30 p.m
Phila delph i• n Sacram ento , 10 :30
p.m.

\O p.m.

Team

•

'

10
10
12
13
ll
20

.704
.655
.655
5!'6
.536
.5)6

Clm:land at New \'ork, 7:30p.m.
L A. Clippen at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.
Phoeni x at Alla ntt, 7:30p.m.
M1!11mU:ce at M.Uinesllll , II p.m
Detroi t at Ha.mon, 8:30p.m

llula Bo.,_,l

'

'

Tonlght's games

Saturday, Jan. t t

'

ss 2

· Wednesday's games

At New erlutu
Notte Dlmt 39. florida 28

,.
,.

GU

l'arlnc Dlflslon

l' latiBowl

At Tempt, ArilPenn State 42, Tenneuec 1'7

.'

Dl\·l.1lon

Edmon10rt .......... 15 II 6 l6 131149
t.c.An,elel ....... 14 16 7

In the !'!IDA •.•
:AU..lk DI\'Won

WL

11oooo Yoojl .............. ll I
.I9 ° ~0

~

.692
.6S:S

. . . . . ... . .. , M .... . ....

Wednesday's store

., ..

Toa~'!:!.~1111eo ·

.

Winnipcf•l

.!1

.467
6
16 . .-441
6.5
- - ............ 11 -u-- .371
W................... ll II, .379 . I.S
CdiD60 ....................6 23 .'}111 ' 13.S
I

'JNa .. ~ ....... l3

s.s

::.-r...--------.2!4 l•. ...157
'
flJ. •

- .. .........,,~ .. U ll

.500 •

5
ID

Jew I

.SOO .

10

.464

It

• A.......................l3 ll

'

-~

N.Y. llfllmll OUtl,o, &amp;:35 p.m.
hfulnD~Ut It St. Lo.Ut. 1:~ p.tn.
l!dmontaa •l..ol Aftaek-, tO:lS P..tn.

•

· ~------~--------~--~
'

''

mark~d the _regular s~ason; with
Denrus Martinez lhrowmg a perfecfinals.
·
to for Mon~eal; _ Nolan Ryan of
BASEBALL. The long-shot Texas notchmg his seventh career
Wodd Senes to end them a!l no-no at age 44; and lW1lson
matched two of the previOUS years Alvarez of the Ch•cago White Sox
cel!ar dwellers, the Mmnesota hu first at 21, m only hts second
Twms and the Atlanta Braves.
maJor-league stan. Rickey Render. ,It was a seven-game _barnburner, son of Oakland passed Lo~ Brock
w•th f~ur contests dec1ded on lhe on the all-time stolen base list early
last swmg of lhe bat.. Whert the dust in the season.
cleared, the Twins were the world
FOOTBALL. After 24 tries, the ·
champs; Jack M?ms,. who p•tc~ed NFL fmally got a Super Bov.:l for
a 1-0 shutout'"· the 10-mnmg the ages. The New York Gtants
finale, was the Senes MVP.
won, 20-19, in Super Bowl XXV
No-hit mania (there were seven) after Scoll Norwood of Buffalo
hooked a field-goal auempt with
just eight ~onds on the clock.
One that got away from the NFL
was Notre Dame speedster Rocket
Ismail, who signed with the Toronto Argonauts for mega-bucks and
then led them to the CFL's Grey
Cup title.
Ismail also provided one of the
year's most memorable college
grid thrills. Last Jan. I, he returned
a punt91 yards for a touchdown in
lhe Orange. Bowl against Colorado,
only to have the .scoring dash nullificd on a chppmg penalty. As a
result, the Buffaloes won the game,
10-9, and split the national title
with Georgia Tech.
TRACK AND FIELD. The
record that couldo't be broken was.
But the man who was supposed to
break it didn 't. Mike Powell (not
Carl Lewis) leaped 29 feet , 4 1/2
inches at the World Championships
in Japan to break Bob Beamon's
23-year-old mark in the long jump.
Lewis got some consolation from
his world-record 9.86-second perfonnance in the 100-metcr dash.
HOCKEY . In 24 years, th e
NHL Pittsburgh Penguins had done

di (right), after this eight-yard catch during the
Hall of Fame Bowl Wednesday in Tampa, Fla.,
which the Orangemen won 24-I7, (AR)

little rig ht. They even went Evander Holyfield foqhe undispu!bankrupt at one poml. But Pitts- ed title. But Holyfield won a bruisburgh superstar Mario Lemieux, ing 12-roun(\r(ight against .~allant
who had been plagued with ~ack old George_ Foreman to gtve the
troubles m recent years, put 11 all nng year a little luster. .
,
together in 1991. With sterling
HORSE RACING. Sadness m
te~mwork , the Pens defeated the the span of kings; Calument Farms
Minnesota Nonh Stars, four. games went bankrupt; and Bill Shoemaker
to two, to win the NHL title. Fit- was paralyzed in a car accident. On .
tingly, Mari.o was th e playoff the track, Hansel dominated the
MVP.
· Triple ,Crown series with victories
GOLF. The new hero was long- at tbe J&gt;reakness and Belmont But
driving John Daly_. who won th e Strike the Gold :-von the most covPGA Champ!Onshtp. But nobody eted pnze, takmg the Kentucky
dominated the year. ian Baker- Derby by nearly two lenglhs.
Finch won the British Open; ian
AUTO RACING. Dale EarnWoosnam, the Masters, and Payne hardt won his fifth NASCAR driv-.
Stewan, the U.S. Open.
ing title. Ayrton Senna dominated
On the women 's tour, Pat Farll)tl!a One racing again, with ,
Bradley notched her 29th and 30th seven victories on th e Grand Prix
career victories 10 gain entry to the circuit. Rick Mears picked up
Hall of Fame. Meg Mallon another Indy 500, his fourlh since
emerged as one of the LPGA 's 1979.
most promising younger players:
Her three victories included two of
Sports briefs
lhe majors, the Women's Open and
the LPGA Championship.
Tennis
TENNIS. It was Monica's year.
PERTH , Australia (AP)
Seles won three of lhe four maJors Karel Novacek and Helena Sukova
(skippi~g Wimbledon with a con- beat Boris Becker and ailing Steffi
troverStal IDJUry) and the Vttgm•a Graf 6-4, 6-4 to give CzechosloSlims championship, establishing vakia a 2-1 victory over Gennany
herself as the dominant woman in the semifinals of !he Hopman
player.
Cup,
By contrast, the men's tenni s
Grafhad a virus for the first two
tour was chaotic. Boris Becker won days of the event and defaulted
the Australian Open and a bri ef from · her singles match against
stay as No. 1. Jim Courier dcfeall;d Sukova after winning the fttst set
Andre Agassi in lhe French Open. 2-6 and losing the second '1 -6.
Michael Stich surprised at Wimble- Becker beat Novacek 6-2, H (7-1)
don. And Stefan Edberg finally to tie the match.
.
conquered the U.S. Open.
. The Spantsh brother-siSter comBOXING . Chaos once again , bmauon of Em•h~ S~nchez and
reigned in the heavyweight division _;Arantxa Sanchez-V•cano faced the
of prize fighting. A rib injury and Swiss duo of Jakob Hlasek and
rape charges against Mike Tyson Manuela Maleeva-Fragmere today
prevented him from challenging in the other semifmal.

laf11e lllaelt~·N~E..''~'

10UR~~DY,·

TECHNOLOt:Yf-Sf'ORE .

p11 ulllt Cellular PMI:
34 ·
Reg
LesS Coupon - ~

'

~r:r

199"*

117-1006

By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer
LA NDOVER, Md . (AP)
Quite by design, the Washington
Capitals' specialty teams have been
outstanding this season. Now, head
coach Terry Murray would ·like 10
see some improvement in his
team 's perfor mance at even
strength .
The Capitals' power play went
4-for-4 Wednesday and the penal·
ty-killing unit added a shonhanded
goal in an 8-5 victory over the New
York Islanders. Washington is the
Miami, which also won national NHL's top-ranked team with th e
titles in 1983, 1987 and 1989, is extra man and No. 4 in penalty·
only the fifth school to capture four killing - which is precisely why
or more AP championships. Notre the Capitals are in first place in the
Dame leads wilh eight, followed by Patrick Division.
Oklahoma with six, Alabama with
"We put a lot of emphasis on
five and Minnesota with four.
special teams. Whenever you see
The Hurricanes also are the first game like this, when you have so
team ever to finish in the Top 3 for many opportunities both ways, you
six straight years.
have to be good at it," Murray
Miami and Washington both said.
made a strong case for No. I on
Washington's Nick Kyprcos had
New Year's Day . The Hurricanes two goals for the fttst time in his
handed Nebraska its first shutout career and Mike Ridley scored
si nce 1973 and Washington man- twU;c.after New York cut a four·
handled a M1chigan team that had goill dei!cit to 6-5 with three goals
won e1ght strrught games.
in a span of 2:49 of the final peri·
The Hurric an es and Hu ski es od. Derek King had a hat trick, but
played two of the same opponents it · wasn't enough to lift the
this year. Arizo na lost to Washing- Islanders out of the Patrick Divi·
ton 54-0 and was bea ten by Miami sion basement
SHIRT-SLEEVE TACKLE- Florida State defensive back Ter36-9. The other common foe was
"We're cenainly facing adversi· rell Buckley (right) puts a shi,rt-sleeve tackle on Texas A&amp;M wide ~__....
Nebraska, which lost to Washing- ty," New York coach AI Arbour receiver Brian Mitchell during the second quarter of the Cotton
ton 36-2 1 early in the season.
said. "We're struggling and the
Wednesday at Dallas, Texas. The Seminoles beat the host
Penn Swte ( 11 -2) fin ished third confidence level isn't very high ... Bowl
Aggies 10-2, (AP)
in the final poll after routing Ten- The least little things happen and
nessee 4 2-17 in the Fiesta Bowl. the guys are pulling their heads , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Rounding out the Top 10 were down. That's \he worst thing that
Florida SLate (11 -2), Alabama (I I· you can possibly do."
.LEGAL NOTICE
1), Michigan (10-2), Florida (10-2),
Pierre Turgeon had two goals
California (10-2 ), East Carolina and three assists for the Islanders,
(I t:'t) and Iowa (10-1· 1).
while King's founh career hat trick The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled l9Cal public hearings in
Case No. 9t -418-EL·AIR. In the Maner of the Application of Columbus
Syracuse was lith, followed by - the second this season Southern
Power Company !Of Authority to Amend lis filed Tariffs to Increase
Texas A&amp;M , Nqtre Dame, Ten - extended his scoring string to four
nessee , Nebraska, Oklahoma, straight games. But the Islanders, the Rates and Charges for ~clric Service. The hearings are scheduled for the
Georgia , Clem son, UCLA, Col · who are without four injured purpose of providing an fr PPOrtunity to Interested members of the public to
orado, Tul sa, Sta~ford , BYU , defensemen , have. given up 41 testify in this proceeding . The local hearings will be held on Thursday, January
North Carolina State and Air Force. goals in their last last seven games. 16, 1992, at 1:30 p.m., at the offices of the CommissiQn, Hearing Room 11-A,
180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio. 43266-0573, also on Thursday,
January 16, 1992, at s·:oo p.m., at the City Hall Council Chambers, 789 High
Street, Worthington , Ohio 43085 , and on Tuesday, February 4, 1992, at 6:00
p.m., at City Hall Council Chambers, 8 East Washington Street, Athens, OhiO
45701'

TANDY

•,

--:

the proper level of Zimmer operation and maintenance expense;

the determination of the aP,propria.te rale of retum to be alowed;

f)

the appropriate revenue distri!Jutio'n a~ng the various cusiomtii'Qiasses:

.

'

~.

g) . the level .of the. working_capital comPQnent of the company'S' rati

.

'

.

.

this play, as Washington defensive back Walter
Balley11eft) intercepts a pass intended for

Michigan wide receiver Desmond Howard in the
Rose .Bowl Wednesday at Pasadena, Calif.,
which the No, 2 Huskies won 34-14. (AP)

1

• SO-Column Carriage

A'2S-3502

35985

Save $140

113-ma Reg . 4119.95
Low At $15 Per Month. •

I •

~

the treatment of expenses and lost revenues associated with demand sidf
management activities and;
whether any. rate increase authorized in this case sltoukl, be phased-in.
.
'
Further information may be obtained by conlacting the Pubic Utltles Comm!s-'
Sion ·mOhio, 180 EaSt Broad ~at, Cpiumbus, Ohio~. ,. , 1
I)

1,

Luke Fisher with 1:32 to play won· downs of 50 and 60 yards and hi 1
it. Fisher had 12 catches for 144 Qadry Ismail with a 57-yarder that
yards and All-America linebacker set up a field goal.
Robert Jones had 16 tackles, a
Shelby Hill had th e 50-yard
blocked extra point, a fumble score, then Antonio Johnson
· recovery and an interception.
stroaked behind the defense to grab
"Everyone knew what lhey had the 60-yarder with 7:05 remaining
to do deep l)own," said Blake, who to break a 17-17 tie, Graves, who
during lhe season won three other also had Alhree-yard TO run, threw
. ~ames with fourth-quaner heroics.
. .'N.C. State didn't put that. much
pressure on me and I had ume to
throw."
The Pirates (11-1) ended their
best season with an 11-game win,. ning streak after an opening 38-31
• loss to Imnois. The olfpaclc (9-3)
had a chance to tie, but Damon
· . Hannum's 49-yard_ field goal
, · aaempl went wide on !he fmal play
• of the game.
Citrus Bowl
Calirornla 37, Clemson 13
At Orlando, Aa;, a i7-point frrst
quarter sent California on its. way
to the rout and its ftrst 10-win season since .1949. Clemson had won
its last five bowl games.
·
The Golden Bears (10-2) went
76 yards for a touchdown on their
f1111 drive and keJ~t rolling as !hey
won a New Year s Day game for
• the first time since 1938. Brian
Treggs had a 72-yard punt return
for a touchdown as part of his 108
yards in punt runbacks in the ftrst
period. Doug Brien kicked three
field J.oab.
. ,
,;, M•~ Pawla:wski, nil!lled m9st
valuable player in the game, com~
: pleted 21 of'32· passes for 2:10
yards for California and Russell
I White ran for 103 rards, about
' twice what Clemson s top 7ranked
run defense had ltllowed per g~~~~~el
·
Hall of FJDle Bowl
Syracuse 24, Oblo St. 17
·
· At Tamptl, Fla., Syracuse used
1 • ' die lena pass toflilUD the Buckeyes. •
-~' Marvin Gravei thr.ew Jyr touchI

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80-WaH Car Speakers Car CasseHe Player
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the reasonableness of the company's decisiOn to participate in the con·•
version of the Zimmer generating station from nuclear un~ to a coa~.
fired unit;
the appropriate valuation of the Zimmer plant;

"-g. Stl)lfllt "'"'' 1199.to

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N.Y. Wanda:~ tt .Butt&amp;lo. 7:3Sp.m.
Toi"MIO &amp;I Detroit, 7:35p.m.
t
Vanco11ver tt Wuhlna1.0n, 7:35p.m.
Philadc.l~ ·a~ San J01e, IO:l.S p.m.

'

FANCY STEPPIN' - Ohio State wide
receiver Joey Galloway (7) does some fancy
steps around, through and past tbe Syracuse
derense, especially past Orangeman John Lusar-

UNLV, 79-77, in lhe semis ~d clis·
patchmg Kansas, 17-65, tn the

W •l~ Co-upe~ 1'G lti, l i.Gn

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. The Dally Sentlnei-Page---6

Lo• .ll "~ Pt• Month •

' Friday's aames

Ctt~&amp;ral DI¥WMI

.....~..-... If 14

l

27-yarder with 2:40 left
Texas A&amp;M (10-2) lost a fum .
bleat the one had a pass intercept·
ed.and anoth~r dropped ih the end
zone and had a field goal wiped
tb' a penalty
·
ou Y
Fiesia Bowl
·· Penn St 42 Tennessee 17
· At Tem ~ Ariz ~· Penn State 's
28 _ int o~b~l ;-.;'a 3:59 stretch
of {hc second half turned the game
around. The Nillany Lions (11-2)
d'd 't haVe to drive more lhan 35
y~~ for any of the four scores.
Tony Sacca threw four touchd
passes
while 0 J
J'bn ffie's 39 .'yard punt retu'r~
cd u b k Tyoka Jackson' s
an 1me a&lt;; er
s~ck and fu~bl~ r~~v;:r :ar~~
l C scar(~~) pr
•
unt~rs :f ·
. d'sbel'ef
h Edveltynbodythwaslhe'"cro'wd be'htondn
l c SI e 1 e, WI .
,
us, tt was .~b solute mayhem,
Sacca srud. If you were watchmg
the game at home and had gone to
the bathroom ~~u would have
m1ssed the game.
Sacca threw TD passes of three
yards to Chtp LaBa~ca and 13
yards 10 Kyle Brady, Rtchte. ADderson scored on ~wo-~ard dtve, and
Regg! e Gtvens ptcked ;Andy
Kelly s fumble oot of the w and
returned tt23 ~ards for a score.
~each Bowl
E. Carolina 37, N.C. State~
At. Atlanta, East Caroh~a staged
a thr~lhng comeback wuh three
TDs tn less than s•x mmutes. Jeff
Blake, who threw for 378 yards
and four touchdowns, ran. for a
score and passed for two m the
fourth quarter. His 22-yard pass to
(See BOWLS on Page 5)

WuhlnaiGIII, N.Y. b""""' l

,GI

......... H,..,.,,.,... .. I. ]6

N '

Washington
beats N.Y.
Islanders
8·5
...

·. h
d did •1
I had a ~eer 01~ t, an we n
wm, so II s hard.
. Wtllie Jackson also had a career
mght wllh etght catches for 148
yardsandatouchdown.
" It's gomg to be hard to know
you're gomg to be remembered for
a game like thiS rather for wmn!ng
10 games 10 a. season, somethmg
no ot,~er Flonda team has ever
done, he srud.
.
In other· games Wednesday, II
was Aorida St. 10, Texas A&amp;M
tn the Colton Bowl, Penn St. 4 :
Tennessee 17 10 the Ftesta Bowl,
East Carolina 37, North Carohna
State 34 in the Peach Bowl; Cah·
fomia 37, Clemson 13m the Cttrus
Bowl; and Syracuse 24, Ohio St. 17
in the Hall of Fame BowL
Cotton Bowl
.1 Florida St. 10, Texas A&amp;M 2
At Dallas, in one of the ughcsl
of postseason games, the teams
produced a record -tying 13
turnovers. The Aggies lost eight of
them and got their only points on a
rainy day when C¥CY Weldon was
sacked m lhe end zone by hneback·
er Quentin Coryatt for a safetr. .
But Weldon also scored h•s. fust
touchdown smce 1988 by faking a
draw and runnmg around nght epd
untouched from the f~ur. He also
was mterceptcd four umes, but the
Seminoles' defense, ranked lOth 10
the nation, recovered six fumbles.
"The defense and offcnStve hnc
carried me toda y and I almost
broke their backs," Weldon said.
"B ut it was a great win. It won't
make u~ for having that championship rmg on ourfinger."
Florida State (11·2) missed two
field goals. but Gcny Thomas hit a

SaniGH ............. I 21. 3 \9 9811J

EASTERN CONFERENCE

', T..

l5 132145

of a fi rst-place vote.
Teams get 25 points for a first·
place vote, 24 for second and so
on, down to one point for 25th
place.
~ Previou sly, th e closes t final
margin was Alabama's 16-point
win over Ohio State in 1961, when
the national championship was
dctcnnined before the bowls. Since
the AP started its pennanent post·
season poll in 1968, the smallest
final margin had been 20 points,
when BYU edged Washington in
19&amp;4.
The Huskies came up just shan
agai n this year despite posting their
first perfect record in 76 years.
"I'm not su rpri sed because
Miami was ahead in the last (w rit·
crs) poll," Washington head coach
Don James said. '' Hopefully, we'll
do be ~er in the coaches polL "

By BARRY WI~NER
AP Sports Wr1!er
Even before it fell apan in the
Sugar Bowl, the Florida Gators
knew they weren't headed for a
national championship. _
With Washington . routing
Michigan 34-14 in the Rose Bowl,
then Miami blanking Nebraska 220 in the Orange Bowl, the two
teams ahead of Flonda d1d not
cooperate. So lhe SEC-champton
Gators had.lo~t their title aspira!tons by the time Jerome BelliS
scored lhree touchdowns lor a 3928 victory by Notre Dame.
"This is probably the worst
defeat I've had since I've been
playing football," Aorida quaner·
bade Shane Matthews said. ' ' I still
think that we're a better team ·than
they arc, but we didn't show it, and
they beat us. "
Matthews threw for 370 yards.
but the Gators got just two TDs.
And thCir defense couldn't handle
Bettis, who scored his TDs in a
span of 2:44 late in the game.
"My )obis IQ get it into the end
zone," Matthews said. "We had to
seule for field goals, and you can't
win doing !hat."
Arden Czyzkewski sci a Sugar
Bowl record for most field goals in
a game, going 5-for-5.
"We lost, and it's tough to deal
with," Czyzkewski said. "If I'd
missed five field goals in a game
-and we won- I'd be satisfied.

1

Johnson's "retireme~t among year's top sports ·stories _

f Magic

Thursday, January 2, 1992

t'ameray-Mta~tepart Ohla

• Big SlfcH Woofer m.n,,

for a career-high 309 yards.
• Syracuse (10-2) concluded the
season with a six-game winning
streak; while Ohio State (8-4) fin ished with consecutive losses. The
Buckeyes had tied the game when
Steve Tovar blocked Pat O'Neill's
punt at the. Syracuse 15 and Tito
Paul recovered in lhe end zone,

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~·Aeq111res MJWawvauoniiM j111mmom seMCe comm11ment ·Mih RadiO Shittk celular phone canler fprice'without
acJivaiiOn-11-1006. s.t99 95 ~\1 - 10 20 S399 95) Activallon reQuirement oou no u~tv wnere proi\Jbnec~ b~ slate.
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.

ThursdfY, January2; 1992

/

The Dail~e~tinel
By
The
Bend
&lt;--....:....:...____________________________
.,

Thursday, January 2, 1992
Page-6

.

;. :.Study: adequate anesthesia for
; ~: -newborns in surgery saves lives
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Usi'ng deep
anesthesia to protect newborns
from pain dunng surgery appears to
dramatically improve their chance ·
of surviving, and doctors should
drop the common practice of minimizing the use of anesthetics for
their tiniest patients, a new study
concludcs.
Researchers found thatthe.su:ess
of surgi cal pain , eve n if young
~ patients arc unconscious, seems to
~Significantly increase the hazards
,.._ of operations.
,. Traditionally, doctors have used
;: anesthesia and pain killers sparinglyon babies. They feared that these
~: substances were dangerous because
• • they would suppress th e Infants '
~ : blood pressure. ·
~:
Infants once rou tinely under,; went surgery without any anes thet&lt;&gt; : ics at all. Many doctors believed
~· babies did not feel pain in the same

f.

way adults do.
Expert.s now realize that .infant.s
do suffer pain. And since the early
1980s, synthetic medical narcotics
have been available to provide deep
anesthesia safely for infants, even
babies a few days old.
But because of lingering fears of
harm , many doctors continue to
anesthetize babies only lightly during surge ry. While the babies are
unconscious, their bodies feel pain
and react to it.
The new study. publish ed in
Th,Irsday 's New England Journal
of Medicine, sugges ts that with holding complete pain relief is dangerous because the stress of pain
appears to make operations even
riskier.
The study , conducted on newhorns undergoing heart operations.
was performed by Drs. Sunny
Anand of Massachusetts -General
Hospital and Paul R. Hickey of
Children's Hospiwl. both in

Boston .. The doctors compared
standard light anesthesia with deep
anesthesia that protected babies
from pain during surgery and kept
them unconscious for a day afterward.
To the doctors· surprise, the 30
babies receiving deep anesthesia
recovered much better. All of them
survived, while four of the 15
babies gelling standard light anesthesia died after surgery.
The do ctors found that the
babies getting light anesthesia produced high levels of stress hormones. They were more prone to
infections, their blood made unnecessary clots and acid buill up in
their muscle.
The researchers theorize that the
hormo.ncs. while use ful in brief
bursts' when people need them to
cope w-ith danger, are unhealthy
when high amounts arc dumped out
for days at a time.

f ----:-------:------=--~----

~

Community calendar

~ ~~~~~~==============~==~~~~~==~======================~

""'
....

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

f...

'r!
~

...
~

,.
1

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No . 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post home.
.0: Officers will be installed .

~

t:

"·
...,.,

PAGEVILLE . The Sctpio
*
; · Town ship Tru stees will mee t
· ·~ J hursday to conduct an 6rga m~a tional meeting for 1992.
CHESTER . The Chester Township Trustees will hold an orpnt·
zational mecun~ on Thursda,· at
7:30 p.m. at the 10~, hall
·

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--..

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~'(Q'll'StU.T1 Tr ust:~!~~· 'ol"llJ iJ~ 'J .: ;._:

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•

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ca n Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . at the post
home.
POMEROY · The Trinity
Ch urch Youth Gro ups vfi ll meet
Thursday at 5 p.m.

RUTLAND · There will be a
round and sq uare dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Music will be provided by Country
Kin Band. Ray Fitch will be the
caller. The public is invited.

RU TLAND · The Rutland
POINT PLEASANT · The LibTown ship Tru stees wi ll hold a erty Mountaineers will perform
reorga nization al and regular Saturday at the Senior Citizens
monthl y mcetmg on Thursday at Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Sta ·
tion. The public is invite d to ancnd .
SALEM CENTER · The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
FRIDAY
mee t in regular session on Saturday
ROCK SPRINGS · The Meigs at 7:30p.m. at the grange hall ncar
County Pomona Grange will meet Salem Center. The baking con test
'Fridav at the Rock Springs Grange will be held and Third Degree will
Hall ill 7:30 p.m. Star Grange will be exemplified in fuiJ form . All
ser,.·r refreshments.
members and candidates are urged
to attend. A potluck supper will
SATURDAY
follow the meeting.
li,E \DERSON · The Ga lli a
'T~11rers Western Square Dance
SUNDAY
Cub • tll hold a dance Saturday
CHESTER · The lzaak Walton
l cJm 8 to I I p.m. at the Henderson
Club wil l hold a mu zzle loader
Commu nity Center in Henderso n, shoot at the clubhouse ncar Chester
\ '.\'a. Keith Rippcto wi ll be the on Sunday at I p.m. Open sights ··
~alle ':.lhe dance is open to al l onl y and pri zes tncludc lur.kcy,
w~ste~ty le sq uare dancers.
bacon and cash.
•

known as the "Motor City Mad:
m ~n " for his deafening brand of
rock 'n' roll and boisterous stage
antics shot three of the deer used in
Tuesday's recipe and paid for the ,
meat to be professionally pro·
cessed.
Nugent , who ~ c hits include
" Weekend Warriors" and " Cat
Scratch Fever," said venison donations were a way for hunters to
help the needy.
· "This sends a message to th e
sporting community in this state
that we all need to give," he said.

•''

~,

•

i

. ..

.
~

I

~

'

'

.. .

.

...

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) Afghanistan has become ,fhe
world's leading prodUcer of opium,
providing an unexpected windfall
for th e warlords arme·d and
~-.by.,weo w,es,t .iP. their war
~P.lli'Sl"tll'e coinmu'iust-style gov-

enui!.el)t. .

to the. f~rst aparunenl with a spiral
staircase and created a real bedroom with a canopied, lace-cov'lfed
bed.
" It' s so satisfying to feel as
though I have a home!" she said.

' The United Nations estimates
that Afghanistan produced 2,000
tons of opium in 1991, surpassing
Burma as the· world leader in culti·
vation.
Narcotics experts say the U.N.
figure is too low because some of
the major producing areas are inaccessible.
They predict a 50 percent
increase in opium production next
year unless a peace settlement is
reached soon to end 13 years of
fighting and install a government
that caii check the rapid spread of

BUFFALO, N.Y . (AP) - The
Tonight Show Orchestra led by
Doc Severinscn will play on even
after the court jester and bandleader leaves the late-night show when
Johnny Carson retires in May.
The band is hitting the road for
a tour in June, after releasing the
albums "Once More ... with FeelNEW YORK (AP) - After liv- ing," and "Merry Christm as from
ing in the ~arne apartment for near- Doc Sevcrinscn and tne Tomght
ly 25 years, femini st Gloria S~ow Orchestra" this fall on BufSteinem says she's finally makmg falo-based Amherst Records.
But how long the' Tonight Show
her house a home.
"I had lived in the apartment for Orchestra will stay together once it
at least fpur or five years before I leaves the show is an unknown found ouni!C oven dido 't work," wh ic h was another reason for
Steinem, 57, tQid "Vanity Fair" 'in recordwg, Severinsen said in a telc- ·
A fanm management and records an interview in its January 1992 phone interview from Los Angeles.
keeping course will be Gffered at issue. " I don't know why it took
"I decided I wanted the regular
Southern Local High School Voca- me so long to rcalhe you peed to album to be called 'Once
tional Agricultural Room begin- have a home. I guess I thought it More ... with Feeling' because ...
ning Jan. 9 at 7 p.m. The weekly was just something other people that's us," he said. "We' re going
class sessions were scheduled to had."
to do it once more, and always with
begin before the holidays, but were
Since 1967, Steincm had lived feeling ."
canceled because of illness.
in and worked out of a two-room
The course is structured to assist apartment with a loft bed in a Man" In an ek ctron yea r there IS
present full -time or part-time fanm · hattan brownstone. Her busy career
crs, or individuals planning to do as a journali st, Ms. magazi ne 's grave dange r that opening up th e
agricultural or forestry production.
f6"under and femini st activist left budge t agreeme nt would launch a
Som.e of the topics to be taught her little time to attcnp ·to domestic countcrprodur..:t ivc b1dding war on
include tax structures and ways of matters.
tax cuts and do great harm to the
saving taxes, depreciation of assets,
na
lio n 's
l o n g- run
growth
But with a $700,000 advance for
inventory, balance sheets and a her forthcoming book, ' 'Revolution prospects ," said Sc h ul l !.~. who
new section on agricultural laws from Within : A Book of Self· served ,t ~ c h lllf!D i!n ol the Coum:d
affecting farmers.
Es tee m, " she bou ght a second of Econom ic Atlvrscrs in the C11ter
The $65 tuition covers all costs. apartment in the building, joined it 8dm 1n1stration .
The Ohio Commercial Farm
Account Book is used as the tex t
and is included in the tuition .
m~eting
The course is oi'fered through
the Adult Education Cen ter, TriA combination Advent Bible them in church work, and greater
County Vocational SchooL For fur- Study and Presbyterian Women 's e,quality in all areas of their li ves .
ther information, please call 1-800- Cirtlc meeting was held recently at
A note of thanks from the Metgs
637-6508.
the Middleport Presbyterian Ministerial Association was read
Church.
thanking the Circle for their contri·
The Advent Stu"dy on "The Gift bution , and it was reponed that the
of Love" was conducted by Rev. ,canned good s collected by th e
Kri s Trcintong and concluded a church had been taken to the Food
three week series.
Pantry to be distributed at Christ·
The Circle heard a report on the mas. Thts collel\_tion will coq,tinue
recent church tour and decided on the first Sunday of each month
The Middleport Child Conser· upon study books on Discipleship at the church.
Rev. Trcintong closed the meet·
vation League held its annual to be used in 1992.
Lennie Haptonstall read "A Plea ing with a responsive reading und
Christmas dmner and party at the
for Partnersh,p" as the Least Coin ·prayer.
home of Helen Blackston.
Meetings in 1992 will contmue
collection
was taken . Thi s was a
The Mother's Prayer and Pledge
to
be at 7:30 p.m . on th e fo urth
plea
from
women
of
the
Pacific
of Allegiance opened the brief
Tuesday
of th e month .
business meeting. Devotions, "A Islands for greater opportunities for
Prayer for December" and "In the
Christmas Ru sh," were given by
Nancy Monris.
A Christmas message was
Winners in the Stocking Contest the museum were the tabletop trees
received from the Ohio Conscrva· conducted at the Meigs County donated by the Middleport Garden
lion League State Board .
Muse um l' uring the month of Clut . the Rutland Friendly Garden
An omannent exchange was held December were announced recent- Club, and the Wildwood .Garden
and decorated gifts were judged. Iy.
Club. These trees were auctioned to ·
Winners were Nancy Broderick,
All stockings were handcrafted . benefit the museum 's programs .
most unusual; Linda Broderick , by the contestant. Winning both the
Visitors to the museum on Hermost original; Ann Colburn, pretti· patchwork and novelty category itage Sunday could-watch demonest. Gifts were exc han ged and was Joyce Gtlhlan of Chester; Mer- strations of counted cross stitch
secret sisters were drawn for the rilce -Bryant of Long Bottom won • embroidery by Kathy Reed, dried
new year.
in the crochet category; Debbie flower crafts by Laurie Reed and
The group then played "Jingle, McGuire of Rutland entered the crocheted snowflakes by Elizabeth
Jingle," a game that has been winning cross-stitch stocking; and Davis.
played since 1965. It was created in the fabric division . Sue Hayman,
A{lf.[ tourin g the museum dceo- '
by the group's honorary" mother; Long Bottom, was th e pnze wm- , rated-for the season, and viewing
'Eloise White. Food, clothing and ncr.
th e display s of Santa Clauses,
Joys were gathered for a needy . All contestant s won a poll~d Angels, and Snowdomcs, visitors
family. ·
·poinsettia donated by Hubbard s enjgyed refreshments of cookies
The January meeti ng will be Greenhouse of Syracuse.
and mulled cider.
held at the Rock Springs Church.
Other features of the month at

cultivation through Afghanistan
and the.already volatile region. ·
·" The estimates that we're seeing now are very conservative,"
said Chris Conrad, head of the
U.N.'s Drug Control Program in
Afghanistan . "New (opium producing) areas are opening up every
year."
·
New fields have blossomed
across the border in the newly independent Central Asian republics,
which are desperate for hard currency. Diplomats from the former
Soviet"stales say poppy fields
beg~ to surface there during the ,
Sovtet occupauon of Afghanistan.
Even though Soviet soldiers
. fought the Afghan guerrillas in the
field, men from ·both sides often
joined forces to smuggle out
hashish, opium and heroin.
Neighboring Pakistan, where

C~aSsi 1.e

Class offered

POli C!l:. S
"Ad~ Ollhtdv Me• \.I ~. Gall1a or

Ma ~o n

courrtl eo; •nu sl bt!

Days
J

MCCLholds
annual dinner

fullotvill!{ 11•/1'/'ht;lll'

t•xriHIIIgt'L .

Gallt;l County
AreaCode614

Me•g~ Count~

AruCode614

Mason Co . WV
ArnCode304

446
367
J88

99:1

615

Pt Pleasant .

458

ltron

516
713
B82
895
937

Mason
New Haven
letout

Gallipolis
Che1hr1e
Vinton

"245 Rio Grande
256 Guv;~~n D•sl
64'3 Arabia D111
379 Walnut

Middleport
Pometoy

9B5

Chesler

843

Portland
letan Falls

•Complete

247
949

742
667

R1cina
Rutland
Coohulle

Stop ' Compare
frH Estimates

INDEPENDENT
· CAIPIT CliANEIS&gt;
and nLE FLDOI CAIE
•Reasonable flate•
•Quality. Work ·'

Call 614-992·6637

iJ85-4473
667-6179

St. Fit. 7
Cheshll'll, OH.112111n

5-31-'90 ""

Real Estate General

21
22
23

B~rtlllo

I

FIRST TIME - Four-month-old Elizabeth
Tieuamthalaray receives her first measles,
mumps, and rubella inoculation from nurse
Susa n Trapp Campbell as her mother,
Am phone, assists Tuesday at a clinic in Columt ·

''
I

'

bus. The youngster received her first shot while
Gov. Voinovich was announcing a $1.3 million
program for seventh grade inoculations in
another room at the clinic. (AP)

Wa Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalra, Inalder,
Heat Pumps, Futrna.caa:, 1
Air Condltlonara ·

...... c......

lt. I, lutland, OH.

B1700SR 124

742-2451

L""t' Battmn, Ollla

.

and 'Bob Venoy enjoyed thoroughly
having their daughter and son-inlaw, Robyn and Terry Wayland, as .
their guests for lite holiday. !;loth
by Bob Hoeflich
Robyn and Terry are teaehcrs in the
·MilriOirSch~Is. The)nurl'ied here
: ~·.
on vacation on- Dec. 21 and will
return their respective classrooms
: ..: . Well , you and I did make it Katherine had as)lcd for teddy in Marion on Monday.
• bears: from the community tor the
I ran into Jackd' Matson
just
:, th rough the holt.da y season, d'd
1 nt
h
·'- we? Not only Christmas, Qut New 3.5 residents of the fa cility for before Christmas an e comment- ·
Year's as well. Notice that 1 didn 't Chrisunas. The response was over- ed that this is his fuslli~ to spend
whelming and Katherine writes: .
t;hristmas in Meigs Courity in over
1 ,. say that we "sailed" through the
: season. 1don't know about you but
"We .at Vettrans Memorial SNF 30 ~ears: He normally spends the
: , , . personally, 1 feel that my sailing express our appreciation and grati- hobday with a sister, Maxine, and
th
h thi
h bee
th'
tude to all of you for making this her family. However, Maxine and
_ ; :" , of':;,uegpast ngs as
orne a mg Christmas a uuty' wanm and loving the group w~ heading for PennBy lhe way, this holiday sea10n seasqn for out residents.
sylvania on a skiing aip this Oui~"" J did have the opportunity for a
"On Christmas morning•35 resi· mas and Jack didn't want lO par· ·short visit with an old friend of dents awoke to love and a soft, take. So he came,here lO ~the
yo urs and mine , Olive Weber. wanil, Ieddy bear. Tile loneliness holiday with anollter sister, Addie '
Olive has been a resident of the and sadness of being away from Buck, and her family. Now com;--· Cedar Grove Personal~ Center loved ones on Chtistn'las morning ing back 10 Meigs.fOJ: the fust ti.me
' ~in the Parkersburg, W.Va., area for quickly faded with the light .of in over. 30 y~s IS reai!Y ·forn,mg
I n ille past year and a half. . Although · smilin$ faces here al Veterans · home for Chnstrnas. Jacl: restdes
1
on a walker, Olive continues to be Memonal.
in German Village, Columbus, and
active apd;frcquently goes to
"Heatlfeltlhanb to go lhe com· · his home is often included in those
, : another health facility closeby 10 munity of Pomeroy and surround- walking tours featured in German
:
p~ piano for progtams. I'm sure ing area tor their plal'ticipatlon in Village.
·
·
hearmg
·
out 11uffed animal drive.
Now we can bbrace
I
.01!Ve •WOU ld apptCCI~te
k ourselves
j' for
l from you. The center•s address is ·:Truly the 1pirit Qf ChriJirn&amp;s. the big move . ac to rea •ly1!
Box '146 A, Routes, and the Park· live1 in the heartt of its people. down come all of the decorations
ersburg zip is 26101. · ,
Thank You."
·
and lishts and lhe search to fmd a
~
And- a nice thank you note
1 hope you htld a loved one, or · place to store them for another
1
from Kalhe.rine Varcalle, Activity two or three around to share the year. Are we up io thai? S~ .we·
: .- Dim:: till' in the Skilled Care Facib.
wilh you. Tile 1Ct11011 dot$ are-and look y.ou 're evep Sllllling
ty at Veterans Memorial Hospital.. brinR lit alia m1te cloltl. Loraine, • at lhe ~ought.

SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES

• '----...1.----------

SERTAPEDIC SAVOY PLUS

l

$11900

8:30 am-4:00 pm

,.
'

SERTA PERFEO SLEEPER
· 20 YEAR WARRANTY

$49·9°~

$599°
.

QUEEN SET

FULL SET

0

•'
••
'~

•'

Owner

Or Call

Sp11lallllnt In
C,sto111 Fr- lepair
NEW &amp; USED PAI'IS
FOI AU MAlES &amp;
MODnS

FREE DILIVBRY
UD

OF OLD

-----

...
..,..,""'Stefa/".

IERSON'S

DOWITOWI ~OMIROY

.61

~

•'

,.
•J

· -aut~~~rworll

. ··
-E~ . ond '.lumblng .
• -lloft- woot
..,Rao"tl.\g _ •

"i'
;
.' «

lRACY IFIJtAIER.................,_._...._._...!.;141 ltH .
.lEAN TR\IIf8ELL...........:.:: •••• ,...... _ .....,••_,_.........
. JO tiLL••••:................~.~···········-····· .......- .......
OFFICE... ~ ••..;....:.~•••••~....~......~ •.:..-.............. ttl..allt

t•

'

·"

in

Home lntpro~menh
82 Plumbtng &amp; Huhnu

83
84

Mu"callnslrurnents

85

58
!i9

frUits &amp; Veg tl't•bles
For Sale or Trar1 e

86

E Kcil'tlatmg
Electucll S. Relugtlf&lt;! Uon
Gt!RI!fll Ha&lt;~llny
Mobllt1 Home Repillf

87 Uphul51tH't

"

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

Call
·
614-992-5528 or
385-8227

12·11-1 mo.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
-Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only
.
9-6-tfn

SHIUI &amp; TREE ·
· liiM ,and

IEMOVAL
•LIGHTHAULI NG
•FIREWOOD ·
BIU SLACK · .
992-2269

...

r

USED RAILROAD TIES

'

--···- --- ·-

6:30P.M.

.

614·949·2058

It...... a.e•·

Daly

11·lti1-pd.

.

~.28

Sltlctly

----. ·'

'

(

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

io 0 0 o o o 0 o

o o o o o I

BENNE.TT'S

I

0

I

0

0

0

''MASTIC®·....---J T~ NATION'S hNEST

-c.---..-

·oU-to_......

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

o o o

'MOIIUHOII

~:::.·

.

11-:zt.t mo.

·N-1'11(111.. pololllll

;

c.Jlf..

· •

«_ ..... _

lui.. 0. kffMI ldleel. M elf lt. 141

"141 ......,4 ..... ,1-H411..7:1-Jt~~
. i

foo.

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

'-t~~~-torw-ct.at., . · IIMU

POMEROY

Last markdown
on shots

before dosing
store.

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt
I0:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

1211211 rna.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
.•
HAULING:
Lime1tone, Dirt.
Gravel and Coal
Ucen1ed and Bonded

PH . 614·992-6691

9·1 1· 1 mo. pd .

Teafard
Ca~•try Clah

OVEN ·IEPAII
MLIIADS .

lriRt H IROr Wa

PlckU,.

KIN'S APPLIANa
SEIYICE
992-5335 or
. 915·3561

Acresi p,_ Pest Oftlkll
1171.loceottl

POMIIOY,

USII APPUAIIaS . .
tD DAY WAIUIIn

WASIIJIS:..S 100 .,
NYIS-S" ., .. -

Jr. Galf Stts
Gra,litt&amp; .

.
-EUTOIS-$110.,

Metal
Cttsl• Flltllg

fiiEt?IS-$ 1U ., .·
•c10 tMJtS-S7t .,

a.

lap, 111111

,.....

Cov•s, tic.

Pnftsslattal

614-985·3961

IUIG?S-o..a...-$11~ If

KEN'S APPUANCE
SIRYKE

"2-SUS • tiS.JS61
Acron ,,... '-' Ofllca

BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

949~2206 .
11114111 1 ma.

JIL.LDR
0

949·2734

Basltall
•••••• .
EYUY
SAT. NIGHT .

Lost Laved 0111~.

CONDITIONIIS • tEAT PUM'S tilll
Fllt~IACES FOR MOlLE- &amp;DOUI.EWD HOMES

LIKE

uaN£,011.

Scotch Pi111. ·

il-14-'90 l1n
--

WUPPING

CUT11NG,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

1

'

and

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

HILL'S DEER·

RICIN~

Order Now for Your

,_,,Ohio

DEER CUniNG

cuniNG

$20.00eadi

V. C. YOUNG Ill • ·
992·62lS · i
I

71311"11 tin

.

Newly Re-done

FilE DEPT: . ',

Polnllnt

(FREE ElnMATEII

- .tL: _. ~..-------------~---'~--------------....;;;;

•

Servtces

Homllllllde wHh
Long Lasting Groen

- lm.lar 6 bwiof

.

..;_ HA~PY NEW YEAR(

'
..
tiENR"f E. CLELAfl)._, ...... ,....- ........................112...111

7S
76
77
78

57

111111-pd.

.
THIS II THE YEAR TO BUY THAT NEW HOME! WHY

WArT ANY LONGER? ,GET OUT'OF THE OLD AND
INTO THE NEW...WE CAN HELP YOU OO«»THl GIVE
Ill A CALU IF YOU WANT TO lillY OR liEIJ....YOU
GOT THE RIGHT ONEI

74

51 Household Goods
52 · Sporting .G oods
53 Antrque1
54 MISC Metchand1se
· 55 Butlding Supphes
56 Pets tor Sate

YOUNG'S

OITOUPIR
I·IOD·141-0D7D
DAIW• · DIIO

IN THIS NEW LiSTING YOU CAN MOYE UP Wl'fH
STYLE - POMEROY - ~ story frame home w/lull
. buamin~ 3 bedrcorna, 2Y. b«ltll, 2+ aeras wlltl a garden
aiWI, 1 oar garage with workshop, shed, petlo, built·in
booklhelval, firoplace, cen.tral air. ASKING $31,800.
COME TAKE ALOOK!
'

1..&amp;14-667·6474 .

'

1

73

Furnished Rooms
,Space t01 Rent
Wanted to Rent
Equ•pment tor Rent
For lease

79

GRAVE
SERVICE · BLANKETS
. CARPENTER
~"oom AcldttkNq
..
•

992-7013.
or 992-5553 .

HAVE YOU RESOLVED TO GET AWAY FROM.IT ALL?
-How about a ~tUe houee that would make a great cabin
or iluntitig lodge. Located in Antiqui ~ cloll8 to me river.
ONLY $5,900 wry ba81c.

&amp;Operator

Pam~roy,

mo. pd.

. · WHALEY'S
· AUTO PADS

lntorlor Palndng,
FrwEall1111&gt;t•
30 yNra experience.
four llllera ol
rocommendollon. Honest
ond dopendoble.
( I - P I ,. . . . .,
lplll.,)
call Ed Battin
collect at

614-9f2•6820

742·3020 Evuings
12·2·~1·1

ID'fl
PAIIftiG

EMILEE MERINAR

614·992·3394

IN THE NEW YEAR WITH JlflS NEW
Grant $Inlet in Middleport. 2 story tramo home situated
on-2 tots, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, lull basement. carport
fireplace aleo a 2 stall horse shed wlattal:hod toed &amp; tack
room. Fenced lot. ASKING $34,900. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! COME SEE!

,·

Tl.

Apartment 101 Rent

•

Autos tor Sal It
Tute:lu lor Sale
Y11ns &amp; 4 WO 's
MotOtcyclm
Builts &amp; Moton tor Silltr
Auto Parh S. Acc:auor•os
Auto Repom
Campmg Eqmpmt!nt
C&lt;i!I1Pet5 &amp; Motor Hont~

Merchand ise

Call61.4-992-6528 or
385-8227

'
Camplttt
Groaming
far All'irlttls ..

HOURS:

\

~IL

h

seam

Qualty Prial Shop

'

139900 QUEEN

46
47
48
49

11

Fa1ms for Runt

MAPLEWOOD

blllh hoUII
wlliuement and
carport, free g11.

GROOM'
ROOM

Displayed at The

'16900fULL
lA. PC.

45

Seed &amp; Ferllltler

Transport alIon
A~ut

Only $75 per mo.

Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

DK's FARM TOYS
byERTL

WELCOME TO 18112... THIS IS FOR YOUI Abeautiful
modem 2 story eontamporary home with 4 bedrooms, 2{)
baths, firvplace, bay window, pine walls, bastmont on 3Y.
acros. ASKING $109,900.

42
43
44

614~949·2202

Slllllng at $235 per mo.

538 Bryan Place
Mlddlop&lt;&gt;rt, Ohlo

THIS COULD BE THE YEAR TO START YOUR OWN
BUSliiESSI -In this small building wim an even smaller
price! Located on Msin St. in Pomeroy. Showroom With
plenty of storage sp11C8. Rooms upotairs wid1 great vlew
of o riverl ASKING $15,000.
'

I;QDilfl
Houses lor Rent
M obile Mom es l llr

JUST OFF RT. -33

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·lnaulatfon

WATER&amp;

Twin
Ia. Pc.

'6!!

'25 Cat &amp; Wraii!IICI
s5 Extra ID ~

11/20/ho.

·INSULATION

PONDS .
SEPTic SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

saaoo

of the Bend ....

61 Farm Equ1pmunt
62 Wo1nted to Duv
63 livestock
64 Hi1Y S. Gr•in

nice homesites
available for up to
80' homes.

RACINEi OHIO

J&amp;L

EXCAVATING
BUUDOZING '

SERTA PREMIER COMFORT
SJoaoo fULL
lA..PC.

Homn lor Sale
Mobtlt!' Home• lor Stll~
F~rms for Sal~
B'usiness Bulld•ngs
Lo1s &amp; Acrnge
Real Eslate Wiflted

"Helping You To
)~ecooer Your
Investment"

"-••••

3~ 14: '91-tfn

Even famous Serta Perfect Sleepe~
models are on sale for this special event.
This sale is limited to stock on hand, so
hurry in for the best selection.

'

36

Busines s Opportumt~
Money to loo1n
Protcss.o~al Servtces

SNODGUSS
UPHOLSTERY

C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration

•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry .
Time '
•High Gloaa on Til,e
Floor Finish
' . MtllliWIS, Ow""

Save on Every
Serta Model in Our
Huge Inventory!

~

Suppl tes
&amp; L1veslock

Business Services

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Remodeling

35

AppteG•ove

Quality
Stone Co.

•Ganfges

32
33
31

11 HelD Wantod
12 Situatton Wan led
1 3 lnsuran ce
14 Businen Traimng
15 Schoo~.s &amp; lnslruclron
16 Radtc .' TV &amp; CB Rep;m
17 MtScel rant=aus
18 W,lnhtd Tu Ou

1l/141tfn

..
•

.

1/11•

1'1/l'l'r

~JAY MAR

.,.ew Hqmes

,,

Employment
Servt ces

Ad ~

Siilcs

DAY BE FOR£ PUBLICATION
11 0 0 A M SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM JUESD4Y
2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 .00 PM THURSDAV
2 IJO PM . FRIDAY

BISSEU &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

.OS I day

$) . 30 /. day

Farm

Real Eslale

2 In Memor~
3 Annoucements
4 G•veaw~
5 Hippy Ads
6 lost omd Found
1 Yatd S•le !pa•d m advau ccl
8 Pubh c Sale &amp; Auction

.42
.60

$1J .OO .

t:/n .~ .~ i.fit•IIJIIIP,I '.~

lhe Dildy Sw1t111.:! (t•
Coud .111d h.'9al noh cesl
w1ll &lt;~lsu ••PIJ~d' m ll•e PI Plcilsoul Re!tlSit'r a rutlhe Gall!
pnh ~ 0.11!y Tf!h1i!I IJ. w ,u:h!l\9 OVIJI 1 8 .000 hOittt.~

SUNOA Y PAP En

Read
the .....
Classtneds!

1 Card ot Thanks

.30

)

ct,r;sr fu~l atlvtlllt~c • n t.~ll plo\:ml111
Ct.'PI
cliissrhud rh \ plo~y . -Bu s ult.':lS

TUE SD AY PAPER
WEDNFSDAY PAPER
THUR SD AY PAPER
tHIUAY PAPER

a'

41

"A

COPY DEADLIN E
MONDAY PAPER

traffickin~. They insist they don't tha~. WaShington and Islamabad in
condone 1t but argue they're help- fact compounded the problem by
less to stop iL .
encouraging the mujah~deen to
The Kabul government, too. delve into the trade lo pay for lhi:ir
says it is helpless to stop lhe flow war.
""
since the major producing areas are
With the withdrawal of Soviet
out of it.s control.
soldiers in February 1989 just
During the mujahedeen 's memory, the United States has
decade-long fight against Soviet · been accused of merely paying lip
occupiers; the West turned a blind service to try to tackle what could
eye 10 lhe guerrillas' involvement be an impossible task.
with dru~s. Some observers argued

9 Wanted to Buv

d;ry alit!! pubhCaiiOU to make COIICCtltJH

Middleport groups hold

.

'

Ann oun cem enls

Ovur 16 Words
.
.20

$4 .00
$600
$9 .00

Rat~s one lor con.e Whvetuns. br olt.enu pdifY,J WIIIbe chargfMI
lor each day oil$ .J§P..!I'ol!le ads

pu~

S 50 d1scount tor ac1~ pa1d 1n ;utviln tc
• free alls
Gtve,away &lt;m.d.found ads under 15 wortls w•U be
nm J d&lt;r;"S at no thilgc
"P11 cc ot ad tot all cap•t al teu~ rs !S doublt!·pl! ce ol at! co st
• 7 ~mu l l tmc type- only ur.ed
·sun11111~ IS not r~;~ ~ po!l~tbl ~;~ for ctrorso~her l•r~l di~W (Check
tm errors fir st day ad run s 0 1 ~;tapt!t ) Corll befor e 2 00 p 111

Y t~rd

................-_,...,

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Rate

15
15
15
15
15

6
10
Monthly

·Accc iVI ~

l11 Mcrt1m1ar11

Words

1

pa•d

• Ads tha t must b(! pa•d 1n a11vance m•:
C011d ollhi!!lk-;
H&lt;tppy

,

RATES

· TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-215b
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until ·NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED. SUNDAY

•·'

''

'

much of the opium is processed
Most of the poppies that prointo heroin, then sent across Iran to duce the sticky opium resin are
Europe and the United States, is grown in southern Helmand, eastnow called "the new Colombia."
ern Nangarhar and northeastern
Opium and hashish have always Badakshan provinces. The
been pan of the Afghan life .
provinces are con trolled by the
The availability of the drugs mujahedcen, or Islamic holy war·
made Afghanistan a popular stop riors, who received billions of dolon the so-called "hippie trail" lars in weapons and supplies to
from San Francisco to Nepal in the fight successive pro-communist
late 1960s and early 1970s. In governments that seized power in
Kabul's Christian cemetery; there . 1978.
are dozens of unmarked graves ·of
Western
diplomats
in
youths who died of overdoses.
Afghanistan and Pakistan say the
Most Afghans don't condone fundamentalist resistance parties
the use or expono_f o/U~s ..
are largely responsible for most of
"Of course, thiS tsn t nght But the opium production, but they say
neither is poverty, hunger. war or all groups have- become players in
destruction," said Mohammed Sac- the international drug trafficking
war, whose lirass shop also has for marlcet.
sale the chillums and hookahs (pots
Leaders of the seven major parand water pipes) used to smoke ties based in Pakistan acknowledge
marijuana andhashish.
some comman4ers are ·involved in

•

Stocking contest winners named

.. -.-

The Dally Sentlnei-:-Pag!-7 .,

..·Afghanistan becomes world's leading. producer · of opium .

People in the news
DETROIT (AP)- Rock star
Ted Nugent doled out venison to
the homeless in a soup kitchen,
regaling them with tales about the
deer he hunted.himself with,a bow
and arrows.
'
"I kill it, you grill it," th e 43year-old Nugent joked Tuesday at a
Salvation Army center, where he
ladled out200pounds of deer meat
to the needy. The 'venison was
donated by Nugent and other
hunters to lhe Michigan Sporl!imen
Against Hunger program.
"Anybody hungry? Come on,"
Nugent said as he filled plastic
bowls with a concoction he called
venison noodles. "You got it, man.
Good eating to you. Happy New
Year!"
.
The pony-tailed musician

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

01111

. Hl-1771 .

882:6855

•.

1111 511 . .. pd.

�'

.

.'

..

•

•

,

'

' '

Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce:Jieattle

41 Houses for Rent ·

Announcements
Moot Aroo Slngloo By Cllolce
Npt Chonce. Write; Sinaloo, P.O. ·
Box 1043, GtUiflolll, Cltilo 458:11. .

Hou... lor r.nt- one In Mid-

. dMiport, 2 In Pamtroy, eall 8i4·

1112·2403

.

25. 304-675-5301.

7340.

1

6 mo old malt dog, ptrt Collie
and RoUweiltr, wftiout mite,

a

1

9 cute little puppltt! 6 ma in, 3

ftmole. 814-256.e348.

Chow puppy: white, tpprox. 9
wka. 614-4464t56.

Fret 12 wk. old mlxtd bfttd

Old uprlghl plena, cell 614·992·
5778 or 992'3673

1:00 (J). (I)

IIJ .....

1 BR apa.nnnt &amp; 2 BA trailer.

2 bdrm mobllt homt for rent,
1pprox. 3 mlln from Pomlfoy &amp;
MlddlepcNt, total electric, 1114·

He did give me a cold once ..."

d

D Up CioN

INTO OVERTIME?

7

Yard Sale

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.,

.,

· ~:---=-::::::-:==
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
' full tlmt aucUonter, complete
·: auction Nrvlet . lletnstd Ohio,
:. Wnt VIrginia, 304-nl-578.5.

:9

Wanted to Buy .
,...-..,.....,__,,....,.....:,..,,.....

:: Wanlad to buy, Standing timber,
.. Bob Williams a Sons 614·992-

, 5449.

:: Top Prices Pa id: All Old U.S.
•, Coins, Gold Rings, Sllvar Coins,
' Gold Coms. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
.' 151 Second Avenue, Ga llipolis.

AVON • All orooa, Call Marilyn

Houn: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Suncloy 1:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
614·992-2528.

Situation
Wanted •

Would Llkt 1 A- Place Ta Live
Clost To Town , Wllh Roomate
To Wash Clotho, Fh1 Dlnntr, In
Rtturn Will Pay Rent. 614-4463658 It No Answtr Please Call
Back.

,.·'

14

Business
Training

tbr Apartmtn1, C.rptll(lg, Furn,
Kitchen, Wat., And Tra''sll Paid.
Located · in Bulavlt!• Pika. 614·

446-11568.
2 apta. In Mlddloport, 1 apt . In

Pomerqv, call 614·992·2403

2 bdrm •pt. 211 Spring Ava,
Pomeroy.

2 bdrm In Pomeroy, all utlllll11
tumlthtd, $300 per month, 614·

"1-2528
abr Aportmonl, Localod, 4611-112
Faurth Avenue, Gallipolis.

Stovt, Refrigerator, Water Furnlthtcl. $244/ma. $100 Otposit.

814-446-3870.

2BR,
bath,
kltthen ...Newly
ramodeltd. Nice area, big yard.
$325/mo., $325 dtp. Days 614·
446-1157, Eve . 614-894-4501.

3 roam and tt.th In Mlddltport,
fully Clrptttd and furnished ,
$225 plus tltctrlc and dtposlt,

614·1112·5011

.

Livestock

Will hlulllvoalock. 1'14-446·1114.

Transportation

MerChandise
Big 4SR, 2 both, D1kol1 droam
hamt buln tor you S21,H5. 114·

71

AU1os lor Sale

886·7'311. Dl1p11y model now
open.

1987 Nlssan Stntra, Asking

Ron 't TV Service, specializing
In Zenith ~ lso servicing most
othlr brands. Hau11 calls, also
" me appliance repairs. WV

$1,8011. 114-441.07.11.

304-575-2318 Ohio 814-446~2-B4 .

1980 Toyo1a Tercel, 5 Speed, Air
Conditioning, Sharp! Somaone
To Takt Over Payments. 6J4-

Room additions, tiding, raollng,
vinyl replacement windows,
carpenlr~ b~ AI Tromm, 614-142·

258·1313.
•~
1990 GMC Short Bad 12,900

C.B. ban radio. Cobra 2000. 1).
104 t,llka Docy Malan PBL II

Mlln, 44.3-V-&amp;1 59pd., Loadad

$10,100; Romlnglo~ 11-48 18 GA.

Ant. l NCtlont. Tower Co-ax
1K1r111. Exc. cand. MOo. Cill
btlwten ia.m. 6 10 p.m. 114-

Full Choke, Automttlc, 5 Sho1,

2!56·1443.
Diet No Morel LoN Unwanted

$225. 11~-4411-7.157.
.
For Solt: 11114 Fard Tempo GL,
$1~15. 114-367.0274.

Pounds And lnchls. Eat Yaur
Regular MHII. Tab Naturll
Herb
AetUHI OU.r1n.

Auto Clntor, 5th and
Vlond 91, Pt. Pll. 30~-675-1985 .

c,-r::;;

lood. 6

Wt buy Mil or lrade. Jim

Cochn~

II.

84
1917 Harlzon Automat1e With

1985 Dodatr half ton plekup,

Btfore1p.m.

Wlugh, 614-446.JI&amp;4e.

Etttncltncy apt In Pt. Pltallnt ,
nlet ntlghborhood, Hud aceeplld, 614·1192-5858

Solid Oak Curvod Glou China

Gracloue living. 1 and 2 btd· .
room apanments al Village
Manor
1nd
Rlvtrsldt
Apar1menta In Middleport From

Sam Somtrvlnt'l Army Surplut.
Camllauge clothing, Clirhtrta 10
,-rc•nl ~ dlacount, lunlor cam·
llaug... regul11 ~- New
houri after Chrtltmaa. Frt., Sat.,
SUn. Noon • lpm. other cloya
hourt ctll 304·273-5655 (until

&lt;Ill 304-675·195l

Loving motht,t . wUI babysit In
my home day/night, tlourly/
wHkly, any agl; ret1rencas,

614-992-7289

Mlu Paula's Day Care Ctntar.
Sail, affordablt, ehlldcart. M·F $196. Coli &amp;14·1112·776l EOH.
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agn 21h-10.
Btfore, al1tr achool. Drop-Ins
Wtlcomt. 614-446·8224. Ntw In·
flnl Toddler Cart, 614-445-6227.u

Financial

In Middleport, Ohio. 1 and 2

!Mdroom turnlthed apt, tomt
with utiiHitt paid, reference and

d•paslt r.qulrtd, 304·88'2·2566.
- m 2 • 3 btdroom •Pifl·

mant In Mlddlaport, 2-bllha,

Wllhtr/drytr hook·UPic equip-

21

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Did
ltchlna.
htfertncii/Dapot.l1
requlrtd.
Phont
114·985--4448
aftar
8:00pm.
Ntw Haven, one btdroom apt,
dtpotlt and refartnct required,

't.ovf

-

yov,

\II e

fl/O~!H!fN

i11J eWheel
ol Fortune Q
Family Feud

1-IGHtJ/

Ill Be a Star Stereo.
aCrollllll
7:35 Cll MBA Balktlblll Phoenix
• Suns al AUanta Hawtis ll:f - I:GO (J)
11J Couy Show While
at a corporate reception ·
Theo Is offered a h!gh·paylng
poSition. Stereo. C
(J) MOVIE: B111t Olillhoml
12:001
(I) (J)
1'101 .• Coni A
dead body appears then
disappears from a houu that
Is being sold. Stereo. C
Cll IliaCi 1 -FCifllll(
(II Wondefwollta F111111y
MOVIe Stereo. C
all 1121e Top~" po11ce
officer follows a suap(cloua
f!Uin to a parking lot: ~reo.
l!lle Tht
Homer
wants Aandera' store to tall,
and his wleh comes lrue. (R)
Stereo. 0

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

e

Atsldontlal or
commercial
wlrlng, new sarvlce or repairs.
Mastar Uctnsad altctrlcian.
Ridenour Elec1rlcal, 304-875·

1766.

87

e

Upholstery

Mowrey's Upholltarlng llrvlclng trl county area 26 years. The
btll In furniture upholsttrlng.
Call 304-675·4154 for frtt IS·

;;:..:.:.:·- -- -- - - - . tlmatos.

Otllvarod And 911Ckad, Don

11m..-.

Cabinets, Round Oak Tab111.

814-446-4311.

Chrlolmaaj (Othor doyo 3-tpm)

AU Chrlatma• ex:changn In by
Januaiy I, 1DI2. lntulattd
Dacron ctrnoftougt cO'Itrlllt.

$30.00.
Slolr Sll- $80. Exorcl11 bike

$35. Both exc 'cand, 304..7$4134.

Woddlng gown: tiZI •1oc 11llri
I lOCI. GoOd cond. l14-36f•71i15.

Want to:

Ill Munllr Bile Wrote

EEKANDMEEK

PIN down EXTRA

San
t e.SE i Stereo.
Ill

ao Thora
. MywacO;
"
1:30 (J) e 11J Di"-1 WOIId

UNL~SS 'r!X/1&lt;£
Ill[. GVf lHE.Y
f:V\111£ rr ON

CA8H?H

Dwayne chaua Ron from
the apartment when he
~·t pay his renl. Slereo.

iiJ. ONxlll'a Cll11 Otis'

......

worst nightmare comes true
when he hurts his beck.
Stereo. 0
Ill Arneibn Muaic Shop
Stereo.
0 You Alked lot I~ Again
1:00 (J)
11J Chlert Norm ,and
Cliff use their own methods
~build .confidence. Stereo.

55

Building
Supplies
NOT to ltnd monty througn tht Nlct 2 BA, 4·112 mi. from Gaimall until yau hsve lnvestfgatld Upolll. Stove &amp; rtlrlg. No pelt.
Block, brick, -•r plpoo, win·
$235/mo. &amp;14-4411-8038.
tha oN•Ing.
· llnllla, ate ..Claudl Win·
All Typo Loonalondlro Spoellll· Camplatly 'Furnlehad mobile .,.,., Rio Orondo, OH Coli 814lze In Credit Probltmt. Ttll Ua hom1, 1 milt below lawn, avtr· ~45-812t
looking river. No Pl1~ , CA. 614Your Nttdt. 803-2n.1641.
4~6.03ll.
56 Pets for Sale
recomrntnds that you do butl·
n111 whh peo·p11 you know1and

marvestA Bar~~n...
Reap The Rewards...
When You Turn To

Doublt Widt Wit~ 1 Acrt Li nd,

Now that the weather has ceoled
dm, why oot heat thlap up a •11
by deari13 your di!HII, attic: or
baselleot ·or time uawutc( ltcma
aad aclvcrtiliq them fw lllc Ill
the clauifleclar
ADd, yeu ca put that cma
\*II to~- by dleckl..
the Cluslll~ let ltalpfi&amp;e
aala, ftca lllll'lldl ad .......
In your acdl of the wuu.

One
and
two
b1droom
apartmtnta tor rent 304-'752953 or 175-4100.

On• Bedroom Apartment tn
Point Pltaunt, WV. Fumlthtd,
V1ry Cl11n And Nlct. No P11 s.

e

:i:G~roo~m~and~'=su~=~~~d:':l~~":t=Pol~

DID'VQJGO

Grooming. All
ylta.
lomo Pol Food DMitr. JuliO
Webb. Coll814-448.o231.
AKC Chocollfo Lobndor Pup-

roCAse.te's

NOW I

WHOWAelHE:
L..IFEQFTHE
PAI&lt;TY'?

YES.

PARTY:f

W(J) e The Extrlllle Edge

Ory sledding down mountain
roads at 70 mph; NIY)'
SEALs training uerclses;
leaping off buildings wlth
111rachut11. 11 :00) S1ereo. Q
CD Mp~etyl CampiOn
lnveatlgatea a HCOnd death
In the family. IPI 2 ol 2) C
(II Mylllelyl Campion flriife a
web ollamlly lntriglle. IPI t

cx:lN'T FEEl.. SO

ev.D~NOT'

$TnN61NVITED.

piH, Bta.utllul1 I W11k1 Old,

GalllpoUa Farry, 3 Bodroomo 2 · .:.304_;-6.;.;75.;.;·1.,;.3.;.;86_.- - -- - Shots And Wormed. Atady To
BIIha, Elaetrle, Central Air, Be Plaeedllt4-44H111.
l37,000: 304-67S-7217.
45
Furnished
AKC Pooctlt puppiH, loyo •
Rooms .
tiny toyt, mlnla1uN Schnauzer,
32 Mobile Homes
1m;12x10 Skyline, 2·bdrm, ••·

./'

446-2342
675-133'3
992-2!56

31 Homes for Sale

for Sale

The Classfieds,
Ml The Bouncy Is Yours!

Te put the Clallftedl t• wwk fer ,..,
calleur 14-Yiien, Mee4ay-rrltlay It

Real Estate

304-682·2566.

ctllent cand, ntw carpet, un·
dtrplnnlng Included, mutt ....

$4500, 81~·lll2·2233 ony11mo

1i74 Hot11 ftark, 12x70, 1112
bllht, compltttl)' remadtltdl
$10,500. lnvntmtn1 will Itt

$7,100. 304·773-5140.
:1m Clairmont 1417'0, 3 bad·

Rooms ror rent· Wllk or month. mate, sllvtr, CoolVIlle 814-167Sttrtlng at 1120/mo. Gallla Holt!. 3404.
61~·44.~·9580.

AKC Seolllah Tomer pupploo,

SIHplng roOms wllh caaklng.
Alto trailer epact. All hook·upa.
Can after 2:00 p.m., 304·7'Tl·

non

5651, Mooon WV.

't'tfY aman,
hNhh guar~~nlM, now taldno
thtddlng,

depoafta. 814-514-41n Alhtno

D111gonwynd Cldery PM'tlan,

Merchand;se

SlomtM end Hlmollyan ldnono.
fl14.446o3644 oftar 7 p.m.
F1oh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Point Pt...nl, 304-17J..20151,

51

lull line Troplcol ,~d 111rda,
11 .
amallanlmtlt tnd 1
Goods
Rlf Tarrlor pupploo, lnoldo or
304-1182·2341.
al.ltltdl doa,
partr1ll an
County
Appliance
Inc.
Good
11tl BrtiZiwood 14170 3br, 514· ulod applloneH, T.V. oota. Open premit.., 11.f.tll-1071 01 11444H126.
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon.-911. &amp;14· 513-442illt1VO mtlllgO
44&amp;·119!_1 • 127 3rd. Avt. Gtl•
llpolll, ""
.
F,!tlll Suppltr",

rooms, 1 bath, wlundarpennlng
and front porch, ill heat,
central air, mu11 move, S8,500.

Household .

ot2)~

1iu·n your dllt.ler into (:ash,
Sell it the easy way~ •• by phone,
IW neefl to lef1ve your home.
J•lace you•· classified ad today!
_15 wortl8 m· less, 3 days,
3 pape•·s,$6.00

WHAT'S THAT

CONTRAPTION
ON LUKEY'S
M\)LE?

I

IT'S ONE
OF THEM
NEW-FANGLED

DON'T BE
SICH

A

IGNORAMUS,
MAW!! .

2 l11troom HouN, Depotil And

R e - "-'!ul...,. No Pitt.

........ 114-311.ff71.
. '
S tR In llotcorvllto. Rat.

ao.,.-, ...

11182.

.

Ratrlalrlfor: -..... cond., $100,

·~l.....,

· RENT20WN

•-lilt

114-441-:1111

: :. .:. .i!==~
.

'll'ra

Wsol!.l111111 IIIII

llooltlr,

Oottllllololl.41 WIOII, 4 ~

n.a - ; - • ...
-hlt:i~
lncllltni

Choil,

Olnolle Wfth 111ni11 '

"'"' .............. ,,11!t*J
......,
ltO.M

WNII.OIIIN:

. _ II ~~- Till lp.m, •

-

011 .._, an

ln-.ry.

.... 141,

~

e

leVelly HNII, 10210
Brandon and Brenda have to
adjuSt to their cousin's
dlsabllltv. (Rl Stereo. C
Ill MOVIE: The ~Our
(R)I2:00)
·
Ia ....,... """Stereo.
D Colllgl lalklllbll
Purdue at North C.rollna (L)
~.any King u..1
0 Flitter Dowling Myet.riea
Father Dowling belriend8 a
woman held tf0!1IV8 by her
!emily. Stereci. Q
.
• .30 I]). 11J Wlnal Jot IS
asked to bt a 'but man by a
classmate he dollln't
remember. IR) Stereo. Q
10:00 (J)
IIJ L.A. Law McKenzie
Is troubled by the
court·IPJ2Pinted receiver. (R)
I!])

,,

l.J.II

'

+K·J6 S2

PHILLIP

WEST

EAST

•a

.132
.Q 10 9 6

+to

+Q974

.QJ1091

ALDER

•to 9

tKJI54

SOUTH
.K76
.K74 2
tAQ3
+A85

Tip me
the black spot

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Sooth

By Phillip Alder
Shakespeare wrote, "Qut damned
spot!' That Is poor advice for a bridge
player. Often the sll'ccess of a contract
will depend upon a critical spot-cai'd.
More often, though, it depends on the
elliciency with which the player uses
spot-cards he bas been dealt.
COver the East-West cards and plan
the play m three no-trump, West lead·
mg the spade queen. The tccsm has
been rung; can you see the crtltcal
spot-ca~ and the way to employ tl to
the full. .
Wben t~e dummy was tabled, declarer counted sev~n top tricks. Even
ll be I~ a ~lub trtclt, he would sttll
liDJJb With nme. He ducked i!tt ·~·
ing lea4, won the spade contmuatton,
led a club to his ace and played a sec·
ond club, West ·discarding a diamond.
This was.an unfortunate development,
but not necessaril fatal South ducked
~ · ·
the club to East. ck came a spade,
and declarer . gave up a~otber club
tnck. East SWitched to a dtamond. Dedarer bad to finesse. but when West

Soa..

Wtsl

Nor..

tNT

Pass

3 NT

Eul
AU pass

Opening lead: • Q
':
produced the lung, the contr act fi ••
lsbed two down.
~
Unlucky, yes, but South overlooked.
the potential power of the club eighl
He should win the lint trick In hanG:
· since be mlpt require dummy's spadoi
ace as an entry. Then declarer should
lead a club to dummy's king.
'
· If no critical spot appean, declar4r
plays for a 11-2 club split. And ll ~
discards 011 the second round of clutil.
declarer puts up the ace and Ieath
back toward dumm • · k
·
.
ys JBC •.
•
However, , tf the dub nute or to
drops from .West at trick two, Soulh
continues With a low club from dur(l·
my, intending to cover East's card.
This salety·play ensures four cltjb
tricks and the contract.
Cl- weu ._li
..n1uiuz-•- .
~

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
Antwor lo Prevloua Puule

ACROSS

37 Tricky
39 Gives food to
1 Jekyll'a
40 Aircra«oman
opposite
Aatronaul'o
s·Syringe (al.) 41 larry
9 Soap
42 lnoect peats
Ingredient
45 lllumlnaled
12 Dlatlnctlve air 46 Sign ot the
13 Rara zodiac
14 Organ lor
49 Unit ol
hearing
'
Illumination
15 Grimiest
50 Chrlotlin dl"
17-- carte
nomination
IB Scottloh cap
53 Yala atuclent
19 Bitter vetch
54 Buckle
20 Drive
55 Own
22 56 Guldo'o high
lll11rabit1
nole
23 Voodoo cult
57 Fencing
deity
I WOrd
24 Hit ball to
58 Raw mlnerala
ouHield
27 Typo ol horse
DOWN
31 Flrat-rate
fR wde.l
1 Verb follow·
32 Tillie d ing "thou"
33 Grauy U.ld
2 Arizona city
34 52, Roman
3 Rhythmic
35 Embracaa
lnebumtnl
36 Hurried
4 Coneume

5 Brlotlaa
6- St.
Laurtnf
7 Gr11k lollaro
8 Tiny opanlng
&amp;Jump
10 Harv11d't
rlul
11 Ralatlng to a

a

AIIIAtil If

e

1 ...__ __ _ __
2.~----­

_ ________...;...._______ 6year iMad. Send lor CaprlcOm'a AltroGraph Jndlctions · today by mailing
·
$1.25 piUs a · long, ltll..addreaaod.
11amped IIMIIoPe to flllro-Grapll, clo
thla r)eiUpap«, P.O. Bol 81421, ~
f
lind, OH,4410 1-3428. Be 111re to 11ate
your'zodlac ilgn.
·· :.
BERNie£ ·
AQlWitul (.lilt. »Feet..11) You'll be
BEDEOSOL W1y good at -tdng out,IICHoul compllcatlona today - II you"lllell to your

ASTRO.QRAPH

9·---~--

J(I _

_ _ __

.'J.-....---- -:---- 11.- - " - - - 4· -----~ 12 . _ _ _ ___:_

41 Housel for Rem

2lii' Vinton An1,
llolw•- And Dtpoah • R..

Equipment

111 Alii Chalmln Tnc·
tor, $5.150; 0.'14 AC With Loodor,
12,110,1).11 AC Wfth Plow. Cu~
llvlfor, oraln Drill, 12.150; 114:!M-6522.
• '

Renlals

11t ... 4171. ..
lllor HomO, Moor Golllpollo And
Otl'pa Ill City lohoole. 114-441·
1117. .

~arm

·

LUV U

r~.w·S.I.

&amp; l1v~stock

61

.A 8 3
• 762

ment Tonight

7:05 Cll Addama Family
7:30(J)G 11J Jeopnyl C •
(J) Now H C.ri Be toki
(I) Enle!!!lmnent Tonight
Ste~,.Q
·
Mail'led...With ChlldNII

WHAT

.
/&gt;fJNf V'IITI-f

you'vf

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

814-4411-3888

And Otpooll. 814·446.0338. Call

Wanted to Do

Mlddlapon f)OO. 61§·992-7511
BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN'TS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Joekaon Pika
from $112/mo. Walk to ohop &amp;
moviot . Clll 614-4~6·2568. EOH.

.

Galllpall!i, Otlio

New walnut waterbtd $900; 4
poatlr, 6 dnwen, originally
h200. 614-448-3608, IHve mn•

1121e E

- ·~~~H

BltiDGE

c
~e, nre N...

0 The Walton•

Carter's F»tumbing
Fourth and Pint ·

Gaorgas Portable Sawmill, don 't
haul your logs to the mill just

18

Apt. lor rani 1175, house for rent

$100 Pomeroy. Apt. lor rent

82

c-..

I!:.·~ Aftllr

Stele at Ohio State ILl

~

•- t

_,.,

a Monert~ne

Will build pallo covers, docks,
ac:r11ntd roome, put up vinyl
siding or trailer eklrtlng. 614·

245.JI152.

. (J)ec.

'· l

Vulcan-H81Jo-.Fatai--Knotty-THANK YOU
Advice granny gives to new brides, 'If you want to be
remembered lor life, forget 10 write a THANK YOU note. •

Cll (!) M~/LIIInr ·
NewaHciur

Stereo.

446-G2114.

·- -

SCIAM-LETS ANSWIIS

IIJMKG
0
D Callelie llellilllblll Penn

l

Davis
Sew·Vac
Service,
Gtorg11 Cr11k Rd. Parts,· supplltt, pickup, and dtllvary. 614·

$10, 614-1141-220fafter 4pm

aage.

•1 -

IIIIIIIII,
-

~ I Drum ol J~annll

.

•

!

I'

yov develop from l!ep No. 3 lieiow.

(I) lnllde Edition C

·

2328. CALL COLLECT

Far aalt· womena )lint, dreu
pants I sklrt~tw alz.e I &amp; up. Alto
1 rtollntr chllr,.aood condition,

Complttlr Fumlshed Smtll
Houu, $250/ma. Plus Ulllhltt ,

Reglsltrat lon 190·05-12748.

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
-

1:35 Cll AnCiy Orillltlt
7:00 11jG IIJ WhMI ol Fortune

)967 Chivy Novo: high mlltage,
nNda repair. Good trant porla·
llan car. $1,500. For mort intor·
m•tlan Call 614-446-2342, Ask
lor "Paul.

Will Babysit In My Hom1. Rod·
ney Area. References Available.
Call 614-245·5887.

Nowi i!Soulheatttm
Business Collage, Spring Valley
Plaza. Call Today, 614-446-436711

R1121e CBS

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARE S

ONewZorroQ

Wtu. 1ll-'f'f1 ,.,y f'AVORifE.
' PICfUIIE!

AU1os for Sale

Partablt llghled chsngNblt Itt- Air, $1.1.700; 1159 Edlll 11,000 lulo. AMII'M lllrtO. $3500. 614·
lor olgn rog. $3111. Special 12119. MIIH, 01,200. 114-256·1270.
-::
446
:=·7104
: -.= =-:-:-::-:-..,---=c::
Free rttttrlldlllvtry. Pl11tlc Itt·
1986
Ford F·250, Y·8, 4x4, 47,000
ters $31.50 box. AAA 91gne, 1· 1967 Mozdo RX·7 lwhlla wllh Mlttt, Call After 5P.m. 614·446·
800-533-3453 anytime. Qfter tX· blue Interior) Turbo ehargod 4473.
plru Jan. 4.
rotary angina. Air, I opiod,
AMII'Miateroo c&amp;IHftl. "''" 76
DuNn tlze sofa tiHplr, dlfi'Oiter,
Auto Parts &amp;
power wlndawa,
flow.rM nylon velour, very moan roaf, rur window lo~o~vert
Accessories
good eondlllon, moka otfor 1· lnd front lnd ...,., Incl-.
814-1112·7350
0nt owner. Exe.llont condition. 22 tl. lon?otruck btd. Drutlctlly
52,000 mlloo. Gong• kapl. roclu ··• r quick salt 614 446
Soooonod Aohl Oak And Hick· $12,000.
TrodH nogolfablo. Coli
.,_.
·
• •
ory Flrowood, o55 Plck·Up Lood &amp;14-441·1108onor
3356
5:00p.m.

Retrain

You'll Come Up Aces With
The C/assl(leds

63

Mlsc,lla~us

54

12

8

D SporlaCenter

WMver 304482·2645.

Hamlllon!Midcllalown
Road,
Hamilton, QH- , 45011, AnN:
Reg ional Manager.

Cll Wild Arnerlcl Ster . Q
lqu.oN One TV Stereo.

Newl Q
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iiJ Scoobr Doo
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An11ques

WBSII~ funny, H will! In PQ0r

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(I) (I) e ABC Newl

53

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T I R B E T 1· taste,andtornorrowl m··-- r.
I
Complete lh• chuckle quotod
I 17-L.1•-'"·I -'"·I ....J.L......J
by filling In the miulng -da
1.-L.

1:30 (J)

Bur or 1111. Alverlni Antiques,
1124 E. Main Strttt, Pomeroy.

Nuclaar Medicine Ttdmolagla~
Full·Time 01y Poslllan, ARA 1
Or NMTCB Aeglt ttrld Or
Eligible Prim• Nuclear Medldne.
S.P:E.C.T. Experience O.lsrld,
MEDIA SALES
Television Advtrtlalng Salts YHrs Of Ex:perlanca Cauld
Rep Nttded For Th• Gal· Subtltltue For Registered A•
llpoii&amp;!Polnl Pltannl Artl. qulrement, Cont1cf Personnel,
We're Seeking A Candidate Who At Pla..ant Vsl~e1 Hospital. 304POI IIIHI ~nthuelllm And 575-4340, AA!Eot;;.
Wllllngnese Ta Work Hard.
.Ataletantt!Homt
Salet Experience, Cald Calling Nursing
HeaHh Aldt, Home Maker• wanSkillo, Strong Cloalng Skllla ted.
VariOUI houri IYailabll.
Prtferrtd. Draw ICommlulon T011 wagot paid. 304·n6-8421.
!Car /Allowance /Bentllts. Send
Rtsume tn Confidence To: 2120

, - - - - - - - - - -- -- - ,·

1:05 Cll lle...ty Hlllblllln

eaii614.JIII2·51158
Nlc1 3Br Moblla lolomt,
Ralaranee
And Otpooll
R•
qulrad. Vlnlon,5JH.
614.:11111·9243

11 • Help Wanted

313.

,

~tereo. Q

2·bdrm trailer In Aaclnt artt,

44

Toll Fr&gt;t, 1-800-467·5566, E1&lt;1.

I• j '1~ i 1 ~~
1

0 Rln 1]n Tin, K·9 Cop

.

ALL Yard Salas Must Be Paid In
• Advanct. DEAOI.INE: 2:00 p.m. AVON I All Arooa I Shl~oy
• the day before tht ad Is lo run. Spoor&gt;, 31)4.6'1S-142il.
· Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Easy Work! · Excellent Payl At·
' Frldlly. Monday tdltlon • 2:00 11mblt Product• At Home. Call

.: p.m. Saturday.

.

a WOIId Todar

-;:--,--o.,s_,.....,.o_u_n=,Fomola Beagle Loll Wlldlllo I'"----------r---------~.
McCIIntoch .(rea. Reward! Call
9 A.M. To 10 P.M.
Collect. 304-429-1276.
Employment Services 11 Help Wanted

Found· A ring In front of Francis
Florist
the
day
before
Christmas, 614-992-6298

=·

IF IT'S A TIE, DO WE 60

814·387·7802.

''The boss Isn't a total cheapskate.

all '

a;;;=:~ Stereo.

WELL, C~UCK . HAVE 'f'OU'DECIDED?
W~O DO VO\J LIKE SEST, MARCIE OR ME?

tU-4233
a bod"""", untumlallod,,12X60,
· 112 mite plaat· HoiJOr Mtdlcal
Canter, S20G. mo rat &amp; dep rt·
qulrod, 114;448-4311 or 304-675·
.

(J).

•

(J) VIdeo Poftr
~ lqu.oN One TV Stereo.

Services

2 BR mabUe home, $200Jmo.

Par1 Border Collie, 5 mos. old,
shat1, very SWHt , 614-992-5486

THU.; JAN. 2
EVENING

800·273-11585.

TIIAT lAlLY
PIULII

'

81~-441-1115 .

2330.

puppltt. 6144884 0'11.

.I

Ntw g11 tanks, body parte, one
ton truck whMII, radlalars,
floor matt tic. D &amp; A A\do,
Rlplay, wY. 304·372-3933 or 1·

ulllllloa plua dopoall, 304·175·
2535.

To Good Homt Only. 614-4411-

"""'" Nl: (£1'

2263. .

•

Television
.View,ing
.

· srua rot ......u: . .

Budgal 'rranamlaalono,Uud &amp;
nbuln, all~lng al I ; Auto
Porta. 614·24S.58n. 1~·3'19- .

size wa1er ~J ·a ~rawer
ttltl, mlnow nudboard,

im
n

1 btitroom tralltr, pay own

6 Kltttnl Angof'll, 5 W'Nka Old,

L I&amp; F

00~, ~ ~,'11£

&amp;

for Rent

2 pupt, male. 3 monthl old, blk
&amp; whitt, trainable, 304.e'ts..3445.

6

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®
by Larry. Wright
.

Household

42 Mobne Homes

Giveaway

304-675-7530.

5I

GoOd$

3

4

. 1992

Ohio

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a problem to
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ha.. an opportUnity today to help a
lrland who ..... your-.all1ance. Khl' - you allow will . . . . you Of tlltl
pal"aiUpport In tlleluhlnl.
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PI'OOI IIIII, you ·rniiJIII beCOmt a bit '
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period ol tiiM """' you'l lie ll**lntl d o - .... iiiiOihln talking, The
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992-2156

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Pltge+-10-The Dally Sentinel

. Tbe year in review.:.
'

.

MAY
The contract for engineering
~ervices on the $127,000 Pearl
Street reconstruction project was
awarded by Mid&lt;llepon Village
Council to Triplett Engineering of
Pomeroy.
The Southern Local Board of
Education moved to discontinue
the noon kindergarten routes since
kindergarten pupils attend school
all day.
The State Controlling Board
released $50,000 for redevelopment of the existing boat ramp on
the Ohio River at Middleport
,_. Forty-three seniors at Eastern
High School received their diplomas. Andrea Cleland was class
valedictorian and Leigh Ann Redovian was tlass salutatorian. Charles ·Knight was reappointed
as Meigs County Public Defender
through mid-1992 by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
A loan of $175,000, used for
operational· expenses of the Eastern
Local School District. was secured
by the board from Farmers Bank.
Theodore T. Reed Jr., 66,
prominent Meigs County banker,
died unexpectedly on Sunday, May
26, !991 at Ripley•, N.Y. ·
Nearly 350 Pomeroy. High
School alumni and guests gathered
in the Meigs High School cafeteria
for the annual banquet and dance of
the Pomeroy Alumni Association.
The 1991 Middleport Alumni

alu1nni attending.
were awarded to
Maurisa Dawn Nelson, Darcie
Mafullla Wolfe, Joseph Paul Smith,
Philip Don Swisher, Mark Walter
Crooks and Heather Pullin.
Nearly 400 people attended the
1991 Racine Southern Alumni
Banquet at Southern High School.
Two stolen vehicles were recovered and three runaways were
taken into custody in Racine.
The senior class at Meigs High
School - 139 students - received
their diplomas. Tri-valedictorians
were Kristen Ayne Slawter, Aaron
Bradford Sheets and Jennifer Laurie Taylor.
Sixtx-seven Southern High
School seniors received their diplomas in combined baccalaureate and
commencement exercises in the
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium .
Jennifer Smith was valedictorian
and Jarrod Cin:le was salutatorian.
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Rerardation and Development Disabilities announced the
resignation of the program's superintendent, Lee Wedemeyer who
held the position since January
1958.
An allegation that a Meigs
Junior High School teacher physically abused a disabled student was
made by the student's parent at a
regular meeting ?f the Meigs Local ..
BOaid of Educatton.
·
'
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy was the scene of an
"explosion" on Tuesday afternoon
when the annual tri-county simulated disaster was held.
The Meigs County Board of
Education voted to continue the
safety belt edu~abon,center. .
William J. Joey Re1trmre, 23,
Old Chester Road, Pomeroy, died
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
fro,m an apparent self-111flicted gun
shot W?und to. the abdomen.
Me1gs Jumor High School students were recogmzed ~or academ1c excellence at the fust annual
awards banquet. .
.
Middleport VIllage Council
took the fust step toward mandatory trash p•ck:up.
More than 200 guests attended
open house at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Fifty-nine of Meigs County's
highest ranking students were hon-.
ored at the seventh annual Academic Excellence Banquet held at
Meigs High School.
Letart Falls native Ben Grimm
wa~ honored by the Ohio Valley
Baseball Association for his lifetime achievements in the game of
baseball.
Ground was broken for the $1.2
million expansion of the facilities
housing the Meigs County Depanment of Human Services in Middleport
.
After three tries at the ballot
box, the three-year four miD oper.ating levr of the Southern Local
School D1strict passed by a vote of
655 to 496. The Meigs Local
School District's five mill continuing levy for general operating
expenses went down to defeat by a
vote of more than two 10 one, 1,116
to472.
A rock slide lhat occurred just ..
below Hpbson on State Route 7
near the Meigs-Gallia County bor·
der caused the evaA:uation of 26
'people in 10 households. It is speculated that the slide occurred as a
' result of an ~quake in Illinois.
It\ additillll to the rock slides that
dum~'ltlnrof-bouldets from
nearby cliffs, coun_tless cracks in
~ and on the road devel·
· A celcliration of the first
annivetsary of the Options for
Elders J10111111 wu obla ~ at tbe
Meial CountY SenloJ Cilizenl Center. \lelp ~ty is 0110 of nine
SoadltatetD Ohio counties
in'IGI~ In tbe Opd0111 for Elden
pilot.,.aject.
(

r

•

'

Pomeroy--M-Iddleport,.Ohlo
County Museum during Heritage
Weekend. The theme 'was "Traveling Through Time in Meigs County."

Activities sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association in
conjunCtion with Heritage Weekend brought many people to town
to' watch the parade and see the
crafts,. Civil War camp and entertainment
JUNE
The first step of construction
Rutland's $2.2 million waste was taken on a river access prOJect
water collection and sewage treat- ncar Forked Run State Park.
ment system got un&lt;lerway. TAM
Holly Williams, daughter of
Construction of Westerville was Allen and Marilyn Williams, was
awarded the $1,605,761 contract crowned the first Heritage Queen
for installing all of the lines and of Pomeroy during Heritage WeekMack Industries, Valley City, was end.
given the $330,811.50 contract for
Paul Klocs was appointed interconstruction of the waste water im president and chairman of the
treaunent plant .
board of Farmers Bank and SavNineteen teenage boys and girls ings Company. ·
with their n counselors stayed
Tina Morgan, Chillicothe, was
overnight at the Pomeroy United named .ne~ branch mana ger of
Methodist Church. They were on a, BenefiCial Fmance m Pomeroy.
300 mile bike trip.
Documents pledging the local
Arraignment proceedings were ' share of funds for work at the Midheld before Meigs County Com- dleport sewage lagoons .were exemon Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III cuted by the U.S. Army Corps of
for !9 defendants, all arrested on Engineers and Middleport Mayor
drug charges.
Fred Hoffman during a meeting of
Southern High School sen10rs the Meigs County Commissioners.
outscored those in ~th Meigs and
Meigs County's three local
Eastern High Schools "m the Ohio school districts qualified for partieNinth Grade Proficiency Tests ipationin the Appalachian Aeeess
according to. the Ohio Department and Success Project, funded by the
of Education.
·
Ohio BOaid of Regents.
The Ohio University Communi Diplomas were awarded to 42
versity Band presented a concert in seniors during combined baccalauPomeroy. It was the sixth consecu- reate and commencement exercises
Live year the band performed. The at Eastern High School. Leigh Ann
concert was sponsored by Bank Redovian was Salutatorian and
Andrea Cleland was Valedictorian.
Ath ens, N..
A
to secure funding for
Bruce 'Fisher, Middleport, pur·sitt development from the chilsed the Middlepon Deparunent
of Development Store from its long-tim e owners,
were taken by Middlepon Village Lionel and Mary Lou Boggs.
Council.
Work began on a majo r conJULY
struction project that will completeJy renovate the Pomeroy offices of
About 40 Middleport merchants
Farmers Bank and Savings Compa- and professionals joined village
ny.
officials at Middleport village hall
A debate between the Meigs to hear about plans and funding
Local Teachers Association and the options for the revitalization of the
Meigs Local Board of Education downtown area.
on medical co-insurance payments
An application for 50 vouchers
resulted in an action being filed in fo r housing assistance to low Meigs County Com mon Pleas income Meigs County families was
Court.
filed with the Department of HousThe first steps were taken in an ing and Urban Development by the
attempt to get rural water service Meigs Metropolitan Housing
into the Pageville area of Scipio Authority.
Township.
Salary increases of up to 10 perEleanor Thomas, director of the cent have been given to teachers
Meigs County Senior Center, was and other certified personnel workhonored for 18 years of service and ing in the Southern Local School
presented a resolution of recogni- District by the Southern .Board of
tion from the Qhio Senate at a Education.
Regional Advisory Council on
Construction was started on the
Aging meeting.
new 1,300 square foot Racine
The Ohid Board of Regents Optometric Clinic under the pracawarded $50,000 to the University tice of Dr. Melanie Weese.
of Rio Grande to suppon a collabeA Burmese python, measuring
rarive effon between University of over 13 and one-half feet, was disRio Grande and Meigs County covered along Route 7 by Meigs
Schools based oit-~ e, Community County Department of Litter Con Education Model. ·
trol Workers Tim Davidson and
Tons of trash and debris as well Martin Woodard, both of Pomeroy.
as several hundred bags of garbage
Robert Byer, Director for the
were collected along 57 miles of Meigs Emergency Management
the Ohio River.
Agency, related to a group'.of Pity
Robert E. Byer, Syracuse , Me residents and state officials his
Administrator of the Meigs County efforts and his frustration with lack
Emergency Medical Services, was of help from the state during public
elected president of the Ohio Asso- meeting.
ciation of Emergency Medical Ser·
A budget of $291,908.17 for
vices when the statewide organiza- 1992 was approved by Racine Viltion met for its annual education lage Council following a public
conference in Columbus.
hearing.
Hallie D. Stollings, 76, Chester,
L.
Stewart,
Susan
died from injuries he suffered in a :Williamstown, W.Va., was hired as
two-car accident on Route 7 and 35 the new executive director for the
in Kanauga.
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenA $1,016,400 cost proposal for ter.
the Leading Creek Recreation Park
Pomeroy Village Council di sdevelopment in the area of the Page cussed possible funding of litter
Street marina was presented to control programs within the village
Middleport Village Council by as John Anderson, village adminisMayor Fred Hoffman. · ··
trator, presented information to
More than 300 visitors enjoyed council members regarding grants
a variety of exhibits and demon· available to Ohio municipalities
strations of yesteryear skills as well from the Ohio Department of Natuas entertainment at the Meigs ral Resources.
·
John M. Causey of Reedsville
was transported to Orient Correctional Institute .to begin serving a
!lenience on reduced charges of
voluntary manslaughter.

'

Charles .SnodgraSs, 65, retired
from lhe the Ohio Valley i'ublishing Company after 40 years of service in the printing industry.
Plans forgC{I ahead on the first
phase of a $1.2 million sewage system expansion project witbin the
Village of Pomeroy.
Only phase-out funding for the
Options for Elders program was
included in the two-year budget
passed by the Ohio General
Assembly.
• The Pomeroy Merchants-Association voted to proceed with a
-downtown revitalization project
with a possible total package ·worth
of $550,000.
Two utility poles were clipped
off, a fence surrounding the
Pomeroy Elementary School was ·
knocked down and a swing set
inside the fence damaged when
struck by a vehicle traveling south
on Mulberry Avenue.
Two months after the rock slide
at Pity Me, most residents were
. still living in rental propeny awaiting news from the state as to what
caused the slide and what would
happen to their properties.
Pri•cipals from the Eastern
Local High School and tHe Syracuse Elementary School in the
Southern Local School District participated in the Ohio OepaiUllent of
Education's Tenth Annual Ohio
Academy of School Improvement
Strategies held in Columbus.
A proposed budget of
$1,664,160 for village operations in
1992 was ad'opted by Middleport
Village Council.
Nearly $1 million in grant
money was received for four major
projects within the Village of Middleport
·
Repaving of several streets by
the Shelly Company was carried
out in the Village of Racine.
Glcnn Crisp, Langsville, and
Charles Gard, 61, Gallipolis were
injured when the plane they were
flying crashed in a wooded area on
Gard's farm near Leading Creek
Road, about one-half mile from
Middleport.
Patriotic salutes, a parade and a
gigantic fireworks display combined to make a memorable "For
God and Country" Fourth of July

Thursday, ~anuary 2, 199~ '

Livestock Sa;le. The bank pur;·
chased 35 animals.
· • .
Application for $1.9 million In
grants and low interest loans from
the FarmeR~ Home Administration
for construction or.a sewage treat"
ment system iri Tuppers Plains wa$
made by the Tuppers Plains Sewer
Steering Committee;
·
Law enf(X'CCIIlent officers seized
over 3,000 marijuana plants in a
continuinguadication effort. .
An open en.rollment policy
allowing students of contiguous .
school districts a choice of the
school they attend was adopted by
the Meigs Local Board of Educa-'
tion. A compatible policy was also ;
adopted by the Southern Local
School District.
· Southetn Ohio Coal Company's
AUGUST
Meigs Division announced lhe lay- ·
off of 197 employees from its
A gas rate increase was pro- underground mining complex in
posed by the National Gas and Oil Meigs and Vinton Counties.
·
Corvoration that services Rutland,
Finishing touches to the new :
Racme and Syracuse.
intersection of Route 33 at Nye : .
Millie Midkiff was named chair- Avenue and Route 124 were added. '
man of the !991 Meigs, County
Kimberly Johnson and Tim
Turkeywalk of the American Heart Cogar were selected the 1991
Association.
Meigs County Little Miss and Mis•. Several Rutland Township resi- ter at the Meigs County Fair.
dents aired their grievances before
A contract with the Depaitment
Meigs County Commissioners of Human Services to operate the
regarfling the new sewage system Adult Basic Education Jobs Proin Rt)Jand.
gram was approved and the staff of .
Details of Pomeroy 's zoning the ABE program re-employed at a :
ordinance were reviewed by the meeting of . the Meigs County ·
Zoning Planning Commissipn. ·
BOaid of Education.
•
Adept Construction Corponltion
Customers of the Pomeroy
Water Depanment in the Enterprise of Vienna was awarded the
area were encouraged to boil their $50,938 bid for renovation of
water for a period of 48 hours.
offices in the Meigs County CourtA contract for reconstruction hQu~ by lhe Meigs County Com - ,
work of Pearl Street.between Lau- missioners:
.
rei Street and General Hartinger
An increased price for school .
Parkway was awarded to CJ. Con- cafeteria meals was set, a work- ·
tracting and Trucking of GaUipolis book payment policy set and head :
by Middleport Village CounciL
teachers and athletic coaches hired ·,
The wife of Meigs County Sher- in preparation for the opening of :
iff James Souls by, Susie, and his schools in the Meigs Local District.
daughter, Cindy Fields, were erectMembers of the Meigs County
ited with assisting in the capture of · Chamber of Commerce were urged
two fugitives from Central Ohio.
to contaCt state and federal officials
Johnanna D. Shuler, 45, Racine , in an effort to maintain the lOth
died in an early morning traffic u.s. Congressional District.
accident on Route 338 in Letart
The Meigs County Commis Falls.
sioners reviewed a letter from the
Home National Bank was the Ohio Public Defender's Office
largest single buyer of livestock at regarding future funding.
the 1991 Meigs County Junior Fair

-ohio _State;
OU post
cage wins

,ce!ebration in Middlepon as former
Mtddlepon resident, Gen. James.
J:ll!llnger, Colorado Springs, parttc1pa.ted.
.
·
MicheUe.Fnen~ and Brent R~se
we.re.qowned Me~gs County J un1or
Fatt Queen and King a~ the Rutland
Fourth of July ce(ebrauon.
Hundreds. of people turned out
for .Fourth of July festivities in
Racme.
.
Plans for pavmg at Beech Grove
Cemete11: were fiuaiiZtld at a. reguJar m~eung of Pomeroy V11lage
Council.
. Th~ Eastern Local School-Distnct IS r_anked fust among. I I 5
schools m Appalach1an Oh10 m
studen!S who proceed on to higher
educabon.

Due To Tremendous esp

cent. High in mid-50s.

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S'OREWID-E·SAVIIGS
LARGES,. DISCOUN'S
OF'IEYEAR!

Vol. 42, No. 169

Crow·to head
Syracuse Council

SWORN IN - New Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed was given his
oath or orrice by Meigs County Court Judge Patrick O'Brien
Thursday morning. Reed has served on Pomeroy ViUage touncil
for tbe past 10 years. New Council members, Scott DU!on and John
Blaettoar, will be given their oaths of office al Monday night's
m~eting of Council.
/
.

still flat on its back."
Most troubling to economists
was a report· from.lh.e -National
Association of Purchasing Managers showing that its monthly
index of industrial activity fell a
sharper-than-expected•3.6 percentage points last month to 46.5 percent.
It marked the third strai~ht
monthly decline and the first ume
the index has dipped below 50 percent since last June. Any reading
below 50 percent is considered a
sign of recession for the nation 's
manufacturers.
Meanwhile , a survey of top
bu sine ss executives sa id they
believed the economy would
remain stagnant through the first
three months of the new year with
only one in five companies expecting higher sales during the period
and 31 percent forecasting further
job cutbacks for their firms.
The American Business Conference , composed of 100 of the

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Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman stated today ibat a public hear-

&gt; ing will be held at .11 A.M. on Tuesday, January 7, at the Law

:. 'Library on the top floor of the Meigs County Courthouse.
The hearing was requested by the village in objection to the
transfer of liquor permits from Jon Kloes, DBA Middleport Lunch
Room, to Harley E. McDonald and Randolph Fraley Jr., DBA BOais
Nest, in the former Friendly Tavern building.
.
The hearing is being conducted by' the Ohio Department of
. ' Liquor Control and testimony rcrovidCd atthis hearin~ will be used

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::;: transfer
in~=~~~:=:1nnte~:'cist~~~~:n~::~ionsonthis
are urged to attend this hearing. ' ' .

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, ~: Deer-vehicle WTI!Ckprobed
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A Rutland man's:pickup received Ug~t dl\mage in a deer-vehicle
· , ' .accident early Thursday evening in Rutllind Township. ·
. , •• According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slate
PatrO1• MichaeJ L· Lambert• 39 ~was 00rthbound on Co ~nway
"
. ;; •ty oad 3 (New Lima Road) when a deer ran onto the road and
· --··'- h' 1988 F""" F 150 ·,_,_ •
-: .:· ""'Th:d!er.w&amp;Stdtlect·and~~tothedriver. ' . .
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·RUTLAND
FURNITURE
STAll ROUTE 124 .
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Hi~

RUTLAND, OH.
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By I\. ATIE CROW
for the salltry increase. It will now .
Sentinel Cor~pondent
be up to the. Board of Public
Kathryn (Katie) Crow was Affaus to grant the increase.
named president of Syracuse Vii- ' Moore's present salary is 54,800 a
!age Council and I. Carson Crow year, with the increase bringing the
was hired as village solicitor when •. amount to $6,500 a year.
Council met in regular session
At this point, Jack Williams,
Thursday night.
councilman, stated that he did not
Council discussed the vacancy belie.ve in Council "!aking snap
on Council created by the election deciSions. W1Utams S31d he felt all
of Jim Papc as mayor. He had been matters bro~ght before Counc\1
serving as a member of Council should be g1v~n a great deal of
and there are two years left on his thou$ht. to wh1ch Council agreed.
tenn as a councilman. It was decid- ,Wili!Wils also reported that a new
ed that Council will meet on four drawer legal filing cabinet
Wednesday, Jan. !5,at8:30p.m. to withlockwouldcost$149.
appoint a new member to fill that
Councilman Bill Roush fElported
vacancy.
that he is the newly elected fire
Meeting with Council was Gor- chief..of the Syracuse Fire Departdon Winebrenner member of ihe ment. He informed Council that a
Syracuse BOaid of,Public Affairs in new lock has been placed on the
FILES PETITION - Ed f!urst, Middleport, filell his petition
regard to increasing the salary of storage room door. Council disfor the Republican candidate for Meigs County Treasurer on
Bob Moore an employee of the' cussed at lengtli the preparation
Thursday at the Meigs County Board of Elections. Pictured with
Board. Moore takes care of the needed to get the village dump
Durst as he files is Deputy Director for the Board of Elections, Rita
water system and has been doing truck in operation in the event of
Smith.
the work of two men since tbe res- snow. Roush was authorized to see
ignation of Bob Smith, Winebren- . that the vehicle is made operational
ner fe110rled. Winebrenner request- by placing the spreader on the truck..
•
ed an mcrease for Moore of $1,700 and securing a driver.
annually. Moore is a licensed mainBesides tllose named others at
tenance supervisor. Winebrenner the meeting were were Kenny
indicated
that if the raise is not Buckley and Dennis Wolfe, Mayor
fastest growing mid-size companies Department said that construction
granted,
the
village could lose the Jim Pape, Clerk-Treasurer Janice
in the country, said its latest survey spending, which had posted four
·services
of
Moore.
Lawson, aod Eber Pickens, former
found optimism among its mem- consecutive monthly gains for the
Council
approved
the
request
mayor.
bers down sharply from three first time in five years, suffered a
months ago.
setback in NoveUtber, dropping 0.8
"lf'l 99! was a year of declining percent to a seasonally adjusted
consumer confidence, 1992 is annual rate of $406.3 biUion.
beginning as a yc,ar of deteriorating
The weakness was blarhed on a
business confidence," said ABC sharp 3.6 percent fall in spending
for non-residential projects with
Pres) idcthnt Bllfi)'RO$~.~d. Th
n o er economiC news urs- work on office buildings and hotels
day, the Labor Department reported recording the biggest declines. ResEdward W. Durst, Noble Sum- States Army ; receiving an honorthat 438,000 Americans filed new idential spending was down 0.1
mit
Road, Middlepon, has filed a ab1e discharge in the spring of
claims for unemployment benefits percent as an increase in singlepetition
candidacy for the 1968.
for the week ending Dec. 21, a family building was not enough to Republicanofnomination.
for Meigs
He is currently serving as Salisdecline of 29,000 from the previous offset further weakness in the County Treasurer.
bury Township Trustce.to whiclj he
week.
apaitment sector.
Durst, a life-long resident of
elected in November 1989 for
While that represented the SI:CAnalysts blamed pan of the con- Meigs County, has served in the awas
four-year tenn.
.
ond straight weekly decline in the struction decline on unusually banlcing industry for the past 21
Durst has been a member of the
number of new jobless claims, ana- severe weather in the Midwest, but and one-half· years.
American Legion Feeney-Bennett
lysts said the weekly total still said they were still concerned
He began his banking careef Post No. 128 of Middleport for the
remains at recession levels and because the government sector with the Citizens National Bank of past 24 years. He is also a member
would likely go higher in coming showed no gains for the month , .Middleport, then later Central Trust .Jlf the Bradford Church of Otrist
weeks' given the number of large possibly indicating that constrained where he served as a loan. officer
He is a partner in the Mill Street
American companies who have state and local budgets will curtail and vice-president. In December Book Store, and also owns and
announced plans for new layoffs.
. spending in what had been one of 1986 he was employed by The operates Ed's Greenhouses with his
In another report, the Commerce · the few sources of strength.
Farmers Bank and Savings Compa- wife, Ruth.
ny in Pomeroy and is currently
Durst resides at 31340 Noble
· serving as a loan officer.
Summit Road in Middleport with
Durst is a 1965 graduate of his wife, Ruth, and their two sons,
Pomeroy High School and he Tim and Jim . •
served two years in the United
or will have, as much influence in cohesion and power." •
-Half of all people age 85 or
determining the course of hum an
older
need assistance with such
events." .
basic needs as eating,. bathing and
• The report said:
-Preserving the solvency or the dressing . Baby boomers will
Social Security system may be encounter this problem regarding
"one of the first major tests of the their own parents. Later, they will
The oatil of office was adminisIn a J gular meeting whi!;h f:J.
baby boom generation's political face the need for themselves.
tered to Jeffrey C. Harris, oewly lowed, the board heard financial
elected board member, and Oris reports and authorized payment of
Smith, re-elected· for another term, bills . The purchase of liability
at the organizational meeting of the insurance f~om J;larcuril Insurance
Meigs County Board of Elducauon Agency/Nauonwide Insurance was
held Thursday night in the board· approved, as was membership in
offices.
the Ohio Coalition for Equity and
Srli'ith was elected president of Adequacy of School Funding.
·· The Board agreed to write letElizabeth Schaad, regional rep- technology will be' beneficial in the Board, and· Bill Quicttil was
named
vice
president.
Regular
ters
of s.upport J~r the Me!gs
resentati ve, Governor: s Regional · total understanding of the needs of
monlhly
meetings
were
set
for
the
Metropolitan
Housmg Authority,
Economic Development Office, today 's industries. Her managerial
second
Tuesday
of
each
mo~th,
an~
the
Me~gs
C~unty Council ~f
today announced that Lynn M. skills, along with her motivation
starting
in
February.
~
meetmgs
Ag!ng,
Inp.
m
thell'
effort to obwn
Crow, Middleport, has been named and enthusiasm, wiU assure an effiAdministrative Assistant for ciently operated office," Schaad will be held at 7 p.m. at the board Children s Trust Fund money. A
office. The salary of Board mem- . resolution was , P~~sed in support
Region II, serving Meigs, Athens, said.
·
Hocking, ~. Morgan, !'foble,
The goal of the regional office is bers was set at $80 a month with ·for the CARE Pin,JCCt.
, Appropriations we~ · modified
Percy and Washmgton CounlleS.
to boost economic development travel at 15 cents per mile.
A
resolution
was
passed
in
to
allow .funds for reurement for
CrowisarecentgraduateofThe throughout thes.tate·whiie'strenglhaccordance
with
the
provisions
of
•
school
board members. .
University of Rio Grande, with an , ening public and private partnerSection
3313.18
of
the
Ohio
.
Supt.
John D. RI.ebel, Sr. ,
associate degree in upplied science ships witli the business community.
Revised
Code
that
the
board
disreported
on
progress m the new •
in industrial safety.
. . . . .. The-office provides outreac~ assisAmong ~~r res~nsiblllties m lance to la&lt;;al units of government, pense wilh the adoption of resolu- progmms to be carried out i~ Meigs
tions authorizin~ the payment of County ~ugh a coo~bve Jlf!'the. new PoSitton wtll be coordinat- business leaders elected officials
ing conferences and informatio!)al chambers of commerce and eco: warrlints, or debits, or claims, the gram with the Umvers1ty of Rto .
salary of the su?.lrintendent, teach- Gra~de. H4: al~o .announ~ed. a
semin.ars as well as serving· as nomic developmentorgMizations.
ers,
or the employees for which meeting of P~rs 1!1 Educauon to
execuuve secretary and office manThe Region 11 office is. located
provisions
are made in the annual ·be held at Metgs H1gh School on
a~~· ·
,
.
· .
at One Counhouse Lane, Marietta,
apj&gt;ropriations.
Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Lynn s knowledge m lrttlustrial and the telephone· number is 3735150.

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slowing further; new layoffs seen

:p ublzc earing set January 7

nrst.Came - nrst Serve

742·2211 •

1 Sec)lon, 14 PagH 25 con II
A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 3, 1992

Copyrlghtecl1992

Durst files petition for
county treasurer's post

Smith to head Meigs board

Lynn Crow appointed to
regional development office

r!----- Ln&lt;:ca
u• · J bri·ef:s--...;..-...,
·
.

•RECLINERS •DINING ROOM SUITES ··
•LIVING ROOM SUITES • BEDROOM SUITES

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The of retiring baby boomers "while
needs of the baby boom generation meeting the social, economic and
threaten to engulf the nation's political needs of today? " they
health care and retirement systems said.
Baby boomers are Americans
as the size of the elder population
soars over the next 40 years, a pri- born from 1946 to 1964, so by
vate study said today.
2030, the oldest surviving boomer
The nnmber of Americans 65 will be 84 and lhe youngest 65.
and older will hit 65 million by the
By 2030· there will be more
year 2030, compared with 30 mil- Americans over the age of 65 than
lion senior citizens today , the Pop- under"'th~ age of 18, according to
u)ation Reference Bureau said in a demograpbeis' estimates.
That reduces the number of
repon, "The Baby Boom -Entering Midlife."
younger working people available
Baby boomers in the next 20 . to support tbe growing number of
years "will set the agenda for the retirees.
Baby boomers are trying to
nation's publlc policy choices in
"provide
for their children , assist
education, work-family policies,
retirement programs and health their aging parents and plan for
care," said the report's authors, their own futures," the authors
said.
.
Leon Bouvier and Carol De Vita.
"Given their size, perhaps no
The key question wiD be "how
other generation in history has had,
· do we invest in America's future"

I'URE'S

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Health care, retirement crun'ch seen looming

90'/a OF RUTLAND

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Low tonigh1around 40.
Saturday, chance or rain 60 per·

Pages 4-5

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
closely watched barometer of U.S.
industry plunged back into recession territory in December and onethird of top business executives
said in a separate survey that they
were .preparing for more layoffs in
tile new year.
While new claims for jobless
benefits eased a bit in mid-December, the government said that construction spending took a tum for
the worse after four months of
improvement.
And early returns indicated that
the nation's retailers had a disappointing Christmas.
Analysts said Thursday 's reports
were further evidence of a deeply
troubled economy that is unlikely
to show any life until spring.
. . "We ended 1991 on -a very
weak note with virtually everything
in a declining mode," said Bruce
Steinberg, an economist with Merrill Lynch in New York. "The new
year is beginning with the economy

Has Been Extended
TWO ~ MORE DAYS!
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3rd &amp;
SATURDAY,JANUARY 4th
Special Sale Hours: Open ·9 a.m.·7 p.m.

Pick 3: 010
Pick 4: 79ss
Cards:
2-H; 7-C; 7-D;

5-S -

Fa~tories

1

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I

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RU,LAND FURNI7URE
COMPA 'S
END OF THE YEAR
CLEARANCE

Ohio Lottery

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t .
y on est' ..

B b'.

ere ants to ,sponsQr'_ 'trst .a

•
The first baby to be bor.n in office before noon Jan. 11. In the . $10 gift cenific'ate from Buttons 'from Mill Street Boots.
1992 .to Mei~s County parents will . event of a tie, t!Je lifts wiD be dis- and Bows, three ~xes of Newborn
A 52~ gift c.ertificate from .
be the recip1ent of gifts from 17 ttibuted ~~ the'disctedon ofthe con- Pampers from Swisher-Lohse Phar- • Vaughan s, Card1.nal, a · ~b~ eup .
Bend area merchants.
test'COiilmiuee; All prizes. must be macy.
·
· · ',
from Clark s Jewelry Store, a free .
According 10 the rules, the win- claimed by Jan. 31 , ·
·
A $10 savings acco~nt from , meal to the ~arenti of the baby
nlng baby must be llotn tO ~ts
The 'prizcs indild'e a $15 gift P~oples. Bank, Middlepon, a SIO from Craw's FI!Dily Reslluran~ a ·
who are legal residimts of Me~
· s ctztificate from The Shoe Place, a g1ft certificate from the Food 'Shop, lhree ptece feeder set from K .t C
· of b'
$5 .,.
.nrt,certifilcate and 10 pe.rcent a free ice.c-·m
'
Je ...,.,_.,
-•... a.$c~ gift~,.,
ounty and the exact ume
·- _cake from Datry
..... _ __ from
must be specified ·in a written state- off on all fftfru'inti0111 until age six Queen, a box of Newborn Pamper the. Fabric Shop, 11111 i $10 savirra
mentfrom.theattendi!tgphysician. by the~ Shop, a diaper Diapers from FOOdlaQd, a $10 gift · account from the Home Na~
That information !DUSt be bag with $10 of 1'(0-selected mer- certificate from tht MiddiCJ,IQrt Bank.
brought to The•Daily S,entinel cbandise· from Fnnh,Pharm~cy, _a Department Store, a first Btble

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