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Ohio Lottery

49ers hand
Falcons 3410 defeat

Pick 3:
0.5-8
· Pick 4:
4-4·7·9
Buckeye 5:
18-1 9-23·.30.36

Sport• on Page 4

Val 47, N0.148
01-. Ohio V.lley Publiohlng Compony

Sentinel Newt Staff
Mj:igs County Commissioners
have begun lhe search for a new economic development director after
'.learning that current Economic
.Development . Director
Julia
.,Houdashelt will step down, effective
, Friday.
.
Houdashell, who hilS held the
. post since January 1994, announced
·. her intention to leave the position at
. Monday's commissioners' meeting.
She has accepted a position with
,.Tri-County Community Action in
Athens, where she will be in charge
of economic development for Athens,
Perry and Hocking counties, and will
· begin work there Dec. 9.

:... -·

Cloudy tonight, IOWI In
the 201. Wedn . . d•r.·
mo1tly cloudy, high• n
the30s.

2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo, 35 eenll
A Gannett Co. Newopapo&lt;

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Tueaday, December 3, 1996

.Crow entry clears .path ·
for ruling on a~llegations

Houdashelt .quits post
as :Meigs County's · ·
• development director
. By TOM HUNTER

I

She thanked the commissioners
for the opponunity to work toward
beltering Meigs County, and improving the county's economic and industrial strucrure·. ·
·
"I believe I have moved Meigs
·county forward by intelligently and .
professionally representing our county, as wefl as financially increasing its
well bei'ng," Houdashelt said in her
· three-page leuer of resignation.
Commissioners Janet Howard and
Fred Hoffman personally thanked
Julia Houdeshell
. Houdashelt for her dedication to the
position.' and expressed their appre- be missed," said Howard.
Commissioner-elect
Jeffrey
ciation for her work toward improvThornton also praised Ho~dashclt for
ing the county's economic future.
)'We· truly hate to sec her leave. her work as county economic devciSQll has done a great job and she will
(Contlnued on Page 3)

.

By TOM HUNTER
felony and misdemeanor criminal ndting that O'Brien was a moterial
Sentinel News Stiff
offenses during the course of D. witness in the mojority of the cases
Meigs County Coun Judge Patrick Michael Mullen's arrest and criminal referred to in the atfidavits and thereH. O'Brien .will rule on the validity of investigation in 1994. .
fore he was biased and/or prejudiced.
D. Michael Mullen was found
"Upon review of the affidavit and
criminal misconduct allegations
against Prosecuting Attorney John R. ·guilty of four charges of corrupting motion of Mr. Mullen. the common
Lentes and other officials by a former another with drugs. after providing plea&lt; judge linds that the mere sugPomeroy allorney, after a motion for - drugs to two girls. ages II and 13, at · gcstion that the elected judge of the
his removal from the case has been his Pomeroy residence. He was also county coun may he a material wi'tdenicd.
charged with one coun1 each of ness, unsupported, is insufficient 10
· Meigs Common Pleas Judge Fred · aggravated menacing and contri~ut- establish the existence nf hias, prcjW. Crow Ill denied a motion by D. ing to the delinquency of a minor. · udiceorothcrdisqualifyingintcrcst."
Michael Mullen, asking that a sue- which were later dropped .
Crow said in a journal cn\ry filed last
cessorjudge handle affidavits which
Since his conviction. Mullen has week in Meigs County Coun .
were lilcd Nov. 't by' Mullen and his acted as his own legal counsel. He
"Judge O'Brien •hould he familiar
brother, Brian 0. Mullen. in Meigs has filed several motions for a new with provisions of Canon 3 {C)( I )(a)
County Coun.
trial, stating he has new evidence of the Code of Judicial Conduct and
In the affidavits, the Mullen broth· proving someone else committed the Evidence Rule 605 and should concrs alleged that Lcntcs. Assistant crime. All motions for a new trial · duct himself accordingly if called as
Prosecutor Chris Tcnoglia, former have been denied by the Meigs Com- a witness at trial. Based on the fnrcAssistant.ProsecutorCharles Knight, mon Pleas Coun and the Founh Dis- going, the motion of Mr. Mullen .for
forrncr,prosecutor's investigator Gary . trict Coun of Appeals.
· appointment of a succcss.&gt;r judge is
Wolfe, Mctgs County Shcnffs :· D. Michael Mullen filcd 'a motion not well -taken and the same should
Deputy Danny Leonard, and three for the disqualification of O'Brien, and hereby is denied." Crow stated in
other individuals. committed several '
·
the entry;
.

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·Pomeroy mayor reveals business
developments to village council
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
"Pomefoy iS on the move," Mayor Frank Vaughan said as . he
,i!,lln(lunccd· t~ P~meroy Village ~oun. • cii"Monday nfgbt'\(rltiill~{lllalts' fo'r
.new business development on West
Main Street.
Vaughan reported · that David
Bumgardner, who purchased the old
Twin-City Machine Shop building, is
now in the process of acquiring adjacent
propenics to make way for a
ahooting of Orley Yore Jr., In Syr•
GUILTY PLEA-JoAnn Strausbaugh, right, the Nov.
business
which will employ about 35
ll1tened during a plla hearing In Monday In cuee. Anistlnt Prosecutor Chris Tenoglla Is at
people.
.
·
Meigs County Common PIRB Court, where she right.
The old machine shop building
plu$11 guilty to felonloua asuult charges Jn
was 'recently burned down hy the
Pomeroy Fire Department to timkc
way for the planned expansion.
Acquisition of the Ruby Vaughan
num handgun to shot Vore in the leg. Soulsh~ questioned Strausbaugh house and the Pauley Insurance Co.
. By TOM HUNTER
again after taking statements from building arc moving li&gt;rwu'l!.. accordjust below his knee. •
Sentinel New1 Staff
ing to the mayor.
Initially. Strausbaugh told investi- hoth panics on the incident.
/ A. 49-year-old Syracuse woman
admitted
that
Strausbaugh
linally
Thc need for expanding the sewentered a negotiated guilty plea on gators that Vorc shot himself in the
she
took
the
pistol
and
ammunition
into thal iJrca was discussed
cr·systcm
/ felonious ,assault charges in Meigs leg during the dispute. leaving the '
from
Yore's
locked
gun
cabinet,
conand Vaughan ipdieatcd that the vii·
i County Common Pleas Coun Mon- residence in his Ford pickup truck to
fronted
Yore
outside
of
the
residence
lagc sltould qualify for assistance on
seck
medical
:1ssistancc.
' day after confessing her role in the
and shot him.
.
the
basis of increased employment
Strausbaugh,
who
resided
with
shooting of a Syracuse man.
.
"I
was
only
trying
to
scare
him
.
I
prospects.
Jo Ann Strausbaugh admitted Yore, then went to a ncighhor's home
\
Vaughan said · Ihat Bumgardner
\ shooting Orlc): Yore Jr. at his Third where she contacted police about the didn't mean to shoot him . I never
meant
to
hurt
him,"
said
1m
emotion"cannot release the dcveli&gt;pmcnl
Street residence Nov. 24, after the shooting.
al
Strausbaugh
during
her
plea
hcarplans
at this tjmc," adding that it all
Assistant
Prosecuting
Auorney
.
two ~re involved in a domestic dis"looks
marvelous."
Chris'
Tenaglia
and
Sheriff
James
(Contl~uad
on
Page
3)
pu)c. Str~usbaugh used a .357 Mag-

~yracuse woman pleads to shooting

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) -The
militia commander accused in a plot sives are scheduled to he destroyed
to blow up the Clarksburg FBI cen- by Dec. 9 and he wanted independent
ter told a federal magistrate he wants test.;; performed on them. But he said
to fire his lawyer so he can participate he was powerless to make the motion
.hccausc Looker opposed it.
in his defense ,
Jolyon McCami~. appointed to .
Aoyd Looker liled a motion Monday to. delay proceedings while he represent defendant Imam t.,ewis of
attempts to have, the federal indict-.. Cleveland. then made· the formal
menls against him thrown out. He molion.
said an Arizona man. Paul Andrew
Looker is accusc4, along with the
Mitchell, will assist him.
others with 'militia tics, ih an alleged
plot to hlow up three federal targets,
'
···My life is on the l.inc here,
and I including the FBI center in Clarksinsist and demand that I he allowed burg. The other targets have not been
an active role in my own defense." identified.
Looker said.
Fpur defendants previously pleadLooker, 57. of Stonewood. com· ed innoccn\. Arraigntilcnts for Lewis ilJained that lawyer Stephen Herndon and another defendant from Ohio
did nOI allow him.to participate in the have been delayed pending appeals of
defense and wa d~~ult 10 reach.
their detention orders.
He requeste
no plea be
FBI agents moved in for the
entered at the arraignment pending arrests after ·Looker tried to sell
action by a judge on his motion to copies · of blueprints of the . FBI's
de)ay proceedings.
Criminal Justice Information SerMagistrate lames E. Seibert vice's center in Clarksburg.
.entered an innoc~nl plea on Looker's
Clarksburg fire Lt. James ' R.
behalf. A tentative trial date was set Rogers is accused of providing the
for early January.
·
copies~ Authorities say Rogers made
"I'm not too bright, but a stay photographs of blueprints kept at the
means nothing else proceeds until' fire station.
thel stay is act~ upon. I'm insisting
Two othqr suspects, Jack A.
on that, your honor," Looker said.
Phillips of Fairmont and Edward F.
.. Your insistence is noted, sir,'' Moore of Lavalette, arc accused in a
Seiben replied.
conspiracy to make explosives for
.. The magistrate also heard a sale and for use in militia operations.
defenie molion lo delay destruction
· Lewis; James M. Johnson of
or Uploaives ICizcd by federal a.,nts M~plc Heigqts, Ohio; and Terrell
durin1 t~ 16-mont~ investigation Coon· of Waynesburg, Pa.; arc
thlll'ed to lhe lnell of Looker and six accused of transporting explosives'
Olhert on O&lt;;t. I I.
across 11a1e lines.

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concerned ahout resolving the

problems.
.
Fisher commented on the vomit,
~lood', urine ana excrement on the ' ·..
street. Ill: did Mrs: Bun, who"tiilkcd ·
a~out what peoplc.cnrnule.lo church
on Sunday mornings encounter to gel

there ..
Knight stressed coopcrntion and
said his cljcnts would he willing to
hire an off-duty police ofliccr during.
the late night hours .. He said .that a
trained law enforcement officer with
arrest ;tuthority is prohahly needed.
. CounciJ a[!rccd lo tak.c under con-

sideration either allowing off-duty
p&lt;&gt;licemcn to be hired hy the Sports
B&lt;tr. nr assigning police ·ofriccrs,
there with the bur t&lt;i pay the village.
. While no ollicial acticm was tak- 1
en hy council, it was dcddcd that
Solicitor Chris Tenoglia will he asked
to wnr'k with council on a propoSal (U
Iitke t&lt;&gt; Knight and his clients.
Parkin~ changes
· In olher husincss, the high bid of
$2.190 from Jack Gaston &lt;&gt;f Athens
for the 1947 International fire truck
was accepted. The other two hids ·
were $750 from Harold Johnson of
Middleport, and .$506.51 from the
(Continued on Page 3)

By LAURIE ASSEO ·
AISoclated Press Writer
. WASHINGTON- The Supreme
Coun Monday upheld Ohio's latest
congressional redistricting plan, ending ~ former t.:ongrcssmun 's hid 10
l~ke pulitics . out of the process &lt;If
drawing electoral districts. ·. ·
· The coun· unanimously rejected
arguments hy former Rep. Clarence
Miller and othe&lt; defeated candidates
that the Constitution requires Oh!o 's .
congressional dislricts lo he drawn in
a politically neutral way.
Miller, a Republican, represented
the former lOth Congressional District in southea.,tcrn Ohio from 1966
until he was defeated in 1992.
Ohi&lt;&gt;'s congressicmal delegation
was reduced from 21 to 19 after the
I990 census. and Miller's district wa.'
split four ways. In· 1992, he was pit- ·
ted against Rep. Bob McEwen, to
. whom he lo5t 'in the Republican primary.
·
Miller, several other unsuccessful
Ohio congressional candidates and
the 'late Libertarian Party sued the
state. saying the districts should he
redrawn io a manner that docs not
take politics·into account.
.
Miller could not be reached to
comment Monday. No one answered
a phone listed undet his name in Lanca.•ter. Libertarian l'arty of Ohio
Cllairman Jack Malheney did not
immediately return a phone call to his
home.

0

\

streets after ihey ,leave, he said they

Miller's redistricting
challenge rejected

,:Militia leader ·wants active
role .in his defense
at trial
Herndon said some of the explo-

...

He talked ahout other improvemcnts in town, a new h.ousc under
construction nn Breezy Heights, and
the new Wendy's on East Main which
reportedly ;will open in mid-Decem'1Jet'.. --· ·'~" ·. ,.,'""~ - , ...,
Resolving problem
The problem of Jimmy's Sports
Bar on East Main Street wa.&lt; again
brought before council. with Jim
Engle and his father. the building
owner, Hap Engle. allending with
their auorncy. Charles Knight.
Also au9nding were Sarah Fisher.
who operates the Victnrian Parlor
next door. and a delegation from
Trinity Church consisting of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Burt. Marie Houck and
P.auline ·Mayer.
· On behalf of his clients. Knight
told council. Fisher and the Trinity
Church delegation that he and his
clients' concern is tn "solve the prohlcms without the husincss beingjcopardizctl .
"We want to talk ;thou! the problems." said Knight. who acknowl edged that prohlcms do exist ~nd
culled for working! logcthcr to solve
them.
·
While Knight said that the hur
operator is not rcsponsihlc li&gt;r what
patrons c•f lhc c~tahlishmcnt de) nn the

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Rcpuhlic.:ans and Ucmocrats drew
the districts so that each puny would
lose one scat ____. induding Millcr's and other incumhcnls wouid ·he prnlcctcd, the lawsuit said.' The arrange·
mcnt vwlatcd the Cnnstitulihn 's
rcqutremcnt that the government act
in a neutral manner, the lawsuit
added .
· · · ..
. A three-jud~cral court ruled
for the stale.
. "The Stip~me Coun has made
ahundantly clear that apportionment
is a political pritccss," the three-judge
coun said. adding that legislators arc
allowed tc i draw congressional dis·

tricts in a way that protccl'\ incum-

bents . .
In the appeal acted on Monday,
lawyers for Miller and the others who
sued arsucd that Ohio lawmakers
should be ordered to adopt an impartial pntccdum for drawing congrcs,
sinnal districts.
The appeal also said Ohio's districts could have 'been drawn with
equal populations but that those
adopted in 1990 varied by ·up to nine
people .
The state's lawyers said the lower c&lt;1un properly found lhat rcdiJtricting is a pulitical process and tl1'at
protccting.im:umbcnts is a lcgitimale
factor.
.Today's decision, announced
without any \l(ri.lten opinion, upheld
the three-j4dge court's rulipg. ·
The caM&gt; is Mille{ vs. Ohio, 96471.

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p.

Commentary

Tualday,~r3,1996

•

OHIO Wea th er

'

Tuesdey, December 3, 19M

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•2

Pomeroy mayor reveals

VVednelday,~.4

AecuWeorhe,- forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sen~inel When is it OK to take fund profits? · ·
Want-to~

'Es~fisk/1111.948

111 Court St., P-oy, Cillo
614-992·2156 • Fax: 192·2157

·.!lr
Co.

A Gannett

Newspaper

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl•her
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Gene1111 Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

a winner ~ith your 199~.andover20perceotsofarlhis percentmthelastyearandahalf,and
mutual fund mvestments? Set a goal, year.
if the market goes back even 10 per·
~evelop a sttatcgy ·• and stick wuh
Now that Colarusso's goal is cen1&lt; it would be kind of depressing
ot.
almost met •. his ongmal $3,500 to let that kind of gwn go."
When to take profi!B from your
It worked for Dan Colarusso. 'The
30-year-old mutual fund mvestor
Dian y,./OV/ch
mutual fund mvestmenu is not talked
made his first fund onvestment in
-l:f,j..____
about often. But 1f you listen to the
1992, purchasmg shares of the Van- investment 1s worth nearly $7,000 advice of financoal planners, one of
guard S&amp;P 500 Index Fund.
thanks to a strong bull market and the first thongs they ask their clienu
"When I made thts investment, re10vesting his dovidends •• he finds is: What's your investment goal?
the goal was to double the money, or himself in a dtlemma: Now what?
Once that goal is known a plan can
keep it Invested for five years ••
"I'm tom between whether 1 be created.
'
Then comes the 1\ard pan .. fol whichever came first," says Colarus- should take my profits or not," says
so.
this financial writer who hves 10 New lowing through.
•
Ounnl!lhe lifetime of his i~vest- York City. "This may be a market
"I think ot's good to t~e profits,"
ment, the Vanguard S&amp;P 500 Index top, ot may not be, but I'd hke to take says Lou Altfest an onvestpent
Fund had a total n:tllfll ?f7.4percent some money just so I don't feel like adviser in New Y~rk City. "If you
LR 1992; 989 percent on 1993; 1.1'8 aJerkinsiXmonths.Andlwouldfeel have an investment that has met or
,..,pe:__rc_e_n_t.:.l.;.n_I_99_4_;_3_7_.4_5_:_pe_rc_e..;.n_t_i_n...:..l.:.tk.:.e.:.a:.:je.:.r.:.k:.:h.:.a_vt:.:·•::g.:.m.:.a.:.d~e..::u:pw=ar:.:d:.:o:::f..::5.::0_:e:;:x;:c;:ee;:d;:e:;d;:y::o;:ur:_:•:::x~pec=ta:t:::io::n::s,::in::.a:..::m:ar:·,
-

Letters to the editor
'Thanks for the memories, Bob'
Dear Editor
Thanksgiving Day is now bemg
calle~ the first day of the Chns'tmas

season.
The people of Meigs County wen:
given an awesome present Friday and
Saturday nights at the Meogs Junior
Hogh School as large crowds enjoyed
"Musocal Memones" presented by the
Bog Bend Mmstrel Assocoanon.
Bob Hoeflich, dorector, wrapped
and added glitter to thos package. He
has been dmng thts for over 40 years
and thos was hos finale show. I'm certain he had many m1xed emottons as
he pulled together hts last "really big
show."
Ml( husband and I attended the
performance Saturday noght and as
the people came m the aor was full of
good will and happiness. People
were meebng and gn:eang old friends
and for a whtle wornes and cares
were shelved and the people sat
back and enjoyed.

Jayne Hoeflich Mann was on
hand for the occasion with beautiful
solo numbers and I'm certain her Dad
enjoyed them so much.
I've known Bob and Char~ne
Hoeflich for over 40 years and their
hands have always been in one "poe"
or another.
Bob, we are truly thankful to you
for all of your efforts, for exemplifying good will to your fellow man, and
thank you for always "Being Then:."
Saturday noght Bob was present·
ed plaques from the County Com·
mossioners, the Ohto House of Representatives and the State Senate. I
want to add a pat on the back woth a
"Thanks for the Memories", Bob.
We trust your wife, family,
friends, and fellow Meigs Counuans
.won always he then: for you •. so you
can "keep on smiling."

We have some of the best educators to be found any place. Many
thanks to you and may God ever bless
each of you.
Lon!ne GoiJins
President
Leri-~ey Auxiliary

Time will tell
Dear Ednor,
town courts you se~ that a large perThere was an inten:sti,ng arucle in- cenl&amp;J!e lire from out-of-county.
your paper about the revenues the
Now we have a lot of )Jusonesses
state and municipalottes denve from and orgamzatoons with a lot of dedi·
fines agwnst motorists.
cated peuple who have worked hard
It saod that some towns and cities to refurbish and make Main Street
receive enough for half oftheor year· presentable to attract tounsts to come
ly budgets. The average speedong her and give the economy a shot on
ucket os around $25, but adds up to the arm.
almost three limes !hat amount with
Now let's hope that our cou~t,y
court costs.
osn't like some of the other counlies.
We all know tharwe need to have Now we will see all of their works
law enforcemen~ but do they some- hear fruit.
ti~s get overze.~ous and do not conWell, lime will tell
soder all of their options.
Vl,..U Walker
If you read our county court and
Racine

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Past presidential
lcabinet picks from·
opposing party

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By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON - Dwoght D. Eise11hower made a plumber his symbol
of bopanisanshop, but it didn't last long. John F. Kennedy gave top jobs to
a troo of Republicans who influenced policy for years to come.
j
The only Democrat who got a Cabinet level job in the Reagan adminos·
I tration was the staunchly conservative Jeane Kirkpatrick, who was U.N
ambassador.
"I was born a Democrat, grew up a Democrat, and if Harry Truman were
runnong today. I would vote for hom," she said the day she switched her registrallon to Republican .
"
' With a lot of openmgs m hos second-term Cabinet, President Clinton says
he yearns to find a Republican to jom hiS team.
"I think we ought to try to have a government that can unofy the coun·
try," said Clinton after hos re-election. He pledged to "cast a wode net" and
noted with some regret that he "badly wanted to put a Republican on the
Cabinet" four years ago.
'But qualified, walling Republicans proved hard to find.
The most promment Republican name mentooned as a possoble Clinton
Cabinet choice os Wolham Cohen of Maine, who os leavong hos Senate seat
after thn:e terms. A senior member of the Senate Armed Servoces Comm'ittee, Cohen could replace Wilham Perry as secn:taty of defense
Should Cohen get the job, which he clearly wants, people hkely will ponder the sigmficance of a moment in Bangkok, Thailand, last week. On an
official visit. the presodent was shaking hands after sognong a tax treaty when
he spotted Cohen.
Just a coinctdence. the senator told reporters. He was on a visotto Asoa,
planned long before Clmton was scheduled to go there
Former Gov. Thomas Kean of New Jersey is another Republjcan who
1 makes Clinton's list of potenuals. If senionly is a beneli~ Kean oughtto have
a leg up since be was prormnenUy mentioned four years ago as a possible
.
secretary of education.
When Eisenhower was elected president in 1952, he was the first Republican to win the office since Herbert Hoover in 1928. Eisenhower's rorst Cabiaet - •
lepoblican wich one exception - Secretary of Labor Marlin OullciJI, pscident of the Pl~mbers Union andthe a ~pporter. pf Adlai Steven1
son. EiiiCnhower's Democrallc opponent on
J
eofhon.
Senate Ml!jority Leader Robert A. 18ft, R-Ohio, de~ounced lhe Durkin
appointment. callinJ him "a plrtisan Truman Deptocrat who fought Gen.
BiieahoW«'a election.''
After leu diaD nine months in the job, [)urtin reaigned, sayin1 the White
Houle llafJ' bad broken an agreement to ~end Congress lcsislalion sought
!'&gt;: WlCJt !IJit would - provis~ of the Taft-HIIItley law.

u.,

U.S. ARMY

Thanks~arjorieMiddleport
Walburn,. Divorce

Teachers recognized ·
Dear Edotor.
Woth the November 17-24 deSig·
natoon as National Education Week,
we the members of the Lewis· Man·
ley Auxiliary, Unit 263, Amencan
Legoon, y;ish to pay tribute to all the
dedicated teachers and educalion
staffs in Meigs County

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ITOledo I 36" I

ket that nobody is going to •.~Y 1$
undervalued, take your profiu.
Takmg profi~. however, means
payong capotal ga1ns taxes. Butl.t also
means you're an investment wmner.
In Colarusso's case, he has decocled to take the $3,500 in profits he's
made from his Vanguard S&amp;P 5()!1
Index Fund. buy a computer, a~d
keep the ongmal $3,5~ mvested 10
the fund. That way he II be able to
have hts cake and eat it 1oo.
"I thmk It's prudent to keep the
fund mvestment and then dollar-cost
average int~. ot gOI.ng fo":"ard:" says
Colatusso. So, 11 s not hke I m hquidanng totally I'll still be tnv.ested,
andl'llhavewhatlneedatthospoont
•• aIfnew
. wnter.
youcomputer."
thmk thai a fioancoal

e

very long, even though he earns mon:
than $100,000 a year. In most cases,
California courts consider any marriage under 10 years to be short·term,

Sara Eckel
and alimony is generally awarded for
half the length of the marnage. Los
Angeles divorce attorney Ron Anteau
says that factors such as the age and
health of the SPouse seeking support
may be taken into consideration.
However, he says, "the men: fact that
11 is consodered doesn't put dollars
onto her pocket "
Meanwhile. the reader is devastated. "I gave up my Job and my
future to build OUR future, but now
I'm no longer enutled to that," she
says.
How can other women (and men)
who choose to forgo an individual
paycheck on order care for theor families prevent such a scenario? "There
aren't many ways to protect yourself," says Deborah Chalfie of the
Amencan Assocoatlon of Rettred Persons' Women's Imtoatove. "By taking
ume out of the workforce you are
baSically addong zeros to your earn·
ongs, and that drags down your benefits." Nevertheless, the dovorce

~xpens

I spoke to offered a few pn:·

cautions.
First, keep track of the money.
"More often than not wo)llen do not
make It their business to know where
the money is," says Shorley Kirsten,
president of the Fresno (Calif.)
Alliance for Divorce Reform . And
that, says Korsten, IS theor boggest
mistake \\(omen should keep track of
all assets ·- mutual funds. IRAs, profot-sharing plans and accounts held in
trust for the chtldren -· and momtor
theor growth. Korsten also recom·
mends puttmg half of the accounts in
your own name exclusively. so tbat
your spouse cannot transfer joint
funds onto hos name prior to a separation or divorce
If you are assosting your husband
in his busoness •• as the realler above
was •· be sure that you are on the payroll. Thos will ensure that you are at
least accruong a pension and Socoal
Security benefits.
Work done insode the home is
harder to quantify. However, one can
stipulate before a marnage that nonpaod work done for the famoly ··
cleamng, cooking, raosing choldren •
- woll be compensated m the event of
a d1vorce. The problem, of course, 1s
even allowing yourself to thonk of

There was a time in politics when old days of democracy
Nowadays the tendency os just the
voter fraud was part of the fun. Tammany Hall types would naturalize opposote Both panics acuvely dos·
immigrants nght off the boat 10 courage people from voting. We
exchange for the proper vote; dead
men's names were put on the roles,
lanShoa/es
black people would show up to vote
only to be told they'd voted already, don' t want the wrong people In that
dod they want to make something out booth, for goodness' sake, ot might
of n?
·
• foul up the agenda If you can keep
Goons bored by wiud 'heelers everybody home except the two vot·
would show up at the polhng place ers who feel passionately about your
with a heard, v,ote, go home, shave ossue, then you've got yourself a
off tile beard, come back, vote agam, mandate
go home, shave off mustache and
There's another name for this: tar·
sideburns, go home, shave the head get marketmg. Democracy m the '90s
enttrely. come back, and vote agam. os a lot like telcvisoon Remember
One miuo: four votes •. ah, the good "Murder, She Wrote"?This was a hit

Today in ·history
By The A••oclated Pre..
Today is Tuesday, Dec 3, the 338th day of 1996. There are 28 days left
in tbe year.
Today's Highlight in History .
On Dec. 3, 1967, a team of surgeons m Cape Town, South Africa, head·
ed by Dr. Cl!risllaan Barnard, RCrfonned the first human bean transplant on
Louts Washkansky, who hved 18 day! with the new heart.
'
· On this date:
In 1818, Illinois was admitted as the' 21st state.
In 1828, Andrew Jackson was elected president of the United States.
In 1833,,0berlin College in Ohio -the first truly coeducational school
of hiafler leammg In the United States -opened its doors.
In 1894, author Robert Louis Stevenson doed on Samoa.
In 1925, "Concerto in F," by George Gershwin, had Its world premiere
at New York City's Carnegie Hall, with Gershwm himself at the piano.
In 1947, the Tennessee Williams play "AStreercarNamed Desire" opened
on Broadway.
In 1953, the musical "Kismet" opened on Broadway.
In 1960, the Lerner and Loewe mustcal "Camelot" opened on Broad·
way.
,
In 1964, police arrested some 800 students at the University of Califor·
J nia 11 Berkeley, one day after the students stormed the administtation building and staged a massive sit-in.

- -,r- - -

show for years, unulthe powers· that·
be decided that II was heong watched
by the wrong demographiC ' old peo·
pie Old people just don't shop
enough to justify commercoal programmmg When they do shop, they
hold up the hne and use too many
coupons They're JUSt not worth the
'
pandenng.
The nauon has become so doverse,
we're nothing more than a vast col·
lection of relahvely small voter blocs.
'Each group votes only when a oarrawly defined issue is at stake: aborlion, pray~r·in-school, flag burning,
gun control, the environment. pOthole
repair, whatever.
So the only people politicians tty
to please are only those people they
are advised are worth the trouble. If
you're pro-choice, say, you won't
even try to go for the pro-hfe vote.
What would he the poont•
And of you're on favor of gun controt, you wouldn't send a mailer to
the NRA. No, you'd produce an ad
(or your advisers would) depicllng
gun-owners as molitia members,
potential mass murderers, or diS·
turhed souls who get a kick of gun·
ning down Bambo's mother. Conversely, if you'~ courtong the progun vote, you show your enemoes as
Nazis (because they want to take your
weapons away), politocally correct
fools who an: pushovers for JBCk·
booted government thugs, or (shud·
der) vegetarians.
BaCk in the '80s, I was once taken to a disco in Manhattan's Lower
East Side. Outside the ompos1na
door, there was a bouncer behind
frayed velvet o;opes who'd been 1iven the power to jud1e who would be
admined. We got in (whew!), to find
a vast dance floor crarmtCd woth hun-

•

-..---- -

• IColumbus 139' I

WVA.

like Colarusso ought to have the
inside scoop when it comes to makIng financial decisions, think again . .
The difficulty, he says, on writinJ
about Wall Street is that he gets too
many opmoons.
"If I were a cop or an actor, I'd
probably get my Money magazine or
Bottom Ltne, and find opomons that
are generally consostent. I get too
much information to be able to
pr~ess it all. So I wind up usong)ust
a con: of thatonformatwn and betng
haunted by the rest of the stuff I think
I should be more cogniZant of but not
really using in my personal mvestment strategoes."
Haunted or not, Colarusso comes
out ahead of the game: He set a goal
and met tl Now all he has to do os set
another goal and see how that one
works out.
Dian Vujovich is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" and "Strai&amp;ht Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement,"
both of which are published by
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
~er in care of this newspaper.

Cloudy tonight in south,
snow possible up north
tonoght wrll be at 5·07 p m. and sunrose Wednesday at 7:37a.m
Weather foreqm:
Tonight,..Snow likely north. An
mch or two of accumulation possoble.
especially over the northeast. Cloudy
central and south. A chance of ram or
snow central early. Lows 25 to 30.
Wednesday . .Mostly cloudy. Scat·
tered snow showers northeast Hoghs
35 to 40
Extended forecast:
Thursday A chance of snow
Lows 25 10'30 Highs on the 30s
Fnday.. A chance ofraon or snow.
Lows 10 the 30s Highs in the 40s
Saturday A chance of snow.
Lows 25 to 30. Highs m the 30s

By The Associated Presa
A hogh pressure system will pump .
cooler air into Ohao tonight and lmgermg moosture could produce I or;!
jnches of snow 10 the north. forecasters saod.
Overmghtlows woll be 25·35.
Mostly cloudy skocs woll prevaol
on Wednesday. Scattered snow show'ers are possoble m northeast Ohoo as
the wonds continue to now off Lake
Eroe
Hoghs woll be in the mid-30s m the
north to the mod-40s m the 5outheast
The record-high oemperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
stauon was 76 degrees in 1982 while
the record low was 0 in 1966 Sunset

Columbus police chief
appeals to commission
for reinstatement to job

such a thing. "When people get mar·
ned, the last thing on theor minds is
divorce," says Karen Wmner, former
mvesllgallve wnter for the New York
Coty Department of Consumer Affaors
and author of "Dovorced Prom Jus·
ucc."·
Most people, myself included,
voew prenupual agreements with suspicoon. It seems cynical and cold to
even consoder that a marroage could
end before ot starts However, in a
country where half of all marriages

By JAMES PRICHARD

Associated Presa Writer

end in diVorce, it's someth1ng to con-

the

38~ycar

polu;c veteran.

The hcarong woll resume Wcdncs·
day. at whoch tame the panel could act
on the request or began hcanog tcsumony The &lt;.:omrnrssron can suspend.
demote or frrc Jackson. or take no
act JOn
Safety Dlrct.:lorThomBs R1cc filed
the l·h.1r,gcs und suspended Jackson.
the lit)' 's tm. t hlack pohcc chu!f. m
connectiOn w1th an ong01ng, invest!ga11on ulallcgcd mtcrlercm;:c m gamhlmg and prostatutoon cases
W1lkmson told the comm1ss1on
thnt the city voolatcd several ordonanccs and commissoon regulauons
an Its mvesug.mon. He also com·
plamed that the caty had not doscloscd
1h witness l1~t or handed over ev1dcncc
"Chocf J,Jckson, as he sits here
today. has not been provided woth the
cvodcncc that supposedly supports the
charges 111cd agaonst hom." he saod.

l

l
i

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ZI3-MO)

Publl*-«1 ~very nf!Cmoon. Monday thraugh
Friday. Ill Court Sl • Pomtroy. Ohio by the
Ohio Vnlle)' hhl•~hmg CompanyiGannett Co ,
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769. Ph. QQl-21 .S6 S«ond
cha~R po~tap.c paid a1 Pomeroy Ohio

A tutal of 938 deer were killed in
Meigs County Monday, the first
day of deer gun season, Keith
Wood, wildlife officer, Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
reported this morning.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................... 41

POSTM~STER2

"-hland 011 ...........................48'1&gt;
AT&amp;T .....................................39},
B•nk On~~ ..............................47'!.
Bob EVIIDI ............................ 13\

Send nddm11 cmetiiOnllo

Ohlo45769

SUBSCRIPTJOH RATES

Oni-· . . . . .

$200
. .. .. . . .S870
..... 1•• $10400

One Month
On~:Yeur

SINGLE COPY PRICE
.... :lS Cenl~t

.'

Dnily.

Su~nbe" not destlrintJ

to

!)')' lhc C'ntnet

Akzo ......................................65~.

Borg-Warner .........................39'1.

Uy Carritr or Motor Routl'

may

rem1t tn actv11nce dnlltl to The Doll)' Stntultl
on a thn:c.t~l~ or 12 molllh lw111 Cm:l11 will be

Jlven corner ~IJCh week.
No ~ublcnpdon by mall pc:rmllt~:d 1n aRas
IJ tlv.aUable

whert ~ canicr tmti~

Ct\ampion ............................. 2Xt.

CIMtrmlng Shop• ...................5).
City Holdlng ....................... ,.. 22~
Flldenll M~u1 ....................... 22'1,
G~~nllllt ................................. 77),

Qoodyur .............................. so~.

K·mtrt ................................... 11\
l.Mda End.............................. 29~.
Limited ..................................18\
Ohio Vlllly Bank ....................35
Orw V1lley ...............................37
Peopln ................................. 27~.
,....,. Flnl ................................. 13

Publiahcr ~rve• 1hr riJhllll ~-~ '*11 duf·
lftl 1hc subacriplion period Submiptlon .._.
chltfljell mD)' br ·~~~~~~~by chanaint lhe

Rockwell .................................63\
AD-8hefl .............................. 1~~~

- o f 1!1&lt;

Bttoney'1 .........""'"""'"'""""''""""8

•""""pdoo.

r-

MAIL SUISCR1r'I10NS

. . .-M. .

13-ka....... .

Melp C&lt;loltll1

.. . · · ...... Sl7!0

26 - b .....
.... .. .. .. ... .. $.13 82
l2-b. '
'
................... $10$36
I~WKU.

c-'1'

.................... S292l

26\\'jl!b .,.
.. .................. $l668
J2 - . :........................... ' . .. $109.12
J

Gun season's
first day In Meigs
yields 938 deer

Mtmbtr: ~ Aawcmted Prea~. und the OhtD
Ntwspnper Al!IOCitiUOn
The Dtuly Scnunel Ill C11ur1 S1 . Ptlmeroy.

",{::=',

The cuy has acted properly.
Redock said He also saod the cuy
plans to provodc Jackson wuh a hst
of witnesses and evidence before
Wednesday's heanng
Jackson, 63, who has been chocf
since 1990, has dcmcd any wrong·
domg. He dcclmcd to speak oo
reporters after the hcanng.
. He has been offthcjob smce Rocc
reassigned hom to work from home
on Oct 10 The reassognment later
was changed, and Jackson ' was
ordered to report to an oflice m ohc
fire departmcno
Instdd. he oook sock leave and
vacatmn time.
Mayor Greg Lashutka announced

Ethel Mae Ebhn BUJh, 80, of Pomeroy Road, Athens. died Monday. De&lt;:.
2, 1996 in O'Bieness Memoroal Hospotal, Athens.
Born on Nov. 9, 1916 at Sumner, she was the daughter of Peter and Lon·
nie Panlow.
Slie is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Jeanette and James liar·
rows; two brothers and sisters-on-law, Edgar and Lena Pullins of Reeds valle,
and Alva and Annie Pan low of Pomeroy; a soster and brother·in·law, Betty
and Robert Jackson of Coolvolle; and three grandchildren and moe grcatgrandcholdren.
Bestdes her parents, she was preceded on death by her first husband,
Charles Eblin Sr, and her second husband, Elmer Bush. a brother, Ami Part·
low, and two stepbrothers, John and Charles Pullins.
Servoces woll'be I p m Thursday on the Ewing Funeral Home Rohen E
Lee wall officoate Burial wall be in the Solver Ridge Cemetery Friends may
call at the funeral home Wednesday fro!" ,7-9 p.m.

Christopher B. Grueser
Chnstopher Bradley Scott Grueser, 2, of Racone, doed Satur~ay, Nov. 30,
1996 at his residence.
.
Born on May 5, 1994 at Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va. he was the son of Rod·
ney A. and Kimberly Conhn Grueser, who survtve along with a brotlier,
Michael Keoth Sullivan Grueser.
Other survivors are maternal grandparents, Terrence and Chnstone Con·
lin Sr., of Pomeroy, and paternal grandparents, Jacob Jr and Melame Holman of Rae one
Servoces woll be I p.m. Wednesday on the Ew10g Funeral Home. The Rev.
Clark Baker woll.officiate and buroal woll be on the Letart Falls Cemetery
Froends may call at the funeral home tonaght (Tuesday) from 7·9.

lt!leigs announcements
Road dosed
Rutland Township Road 170
(Smith Run) os closed unul further
notice for emergency road work
Bazaar announced
The New Haven VFD Auxohary
will have a Christmas bazaar Satur·
day, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the New
Haven City Buolding. Parade to beg on
at I p m
Christmas bazaar set
The annual Christmas bazaar of
the Rac10e United Methodtst Women
will be held Saturday at the church,
9 a m to 3:30pm Crofters may rent
tables for $10 by calling 949·2454,
992-3701 or 949-2881.

St.r 81nk ........ " ......................12
Wancty'• ............................... .21}.

Worthlngton..........................2o•

-·-·-

Stoek ... port• - the 10:30
1.m. quot. provided by Adwat
of Ollllpoll•.

Wednesday Members are encouraged to car pool
Auxiliary tu meet
The Ladocs Auxahary of Post
9053, VFW, wall meet at 7 p m
·
Thursday at the hall
Christmas party set
Annual Chnstmas pany of th~
VFW Post9053 woll be held at6 p m
Sunday Those aucndong are to take
a covered d1 sh
Central Committee
The Meogs County Rcpubhcan
Party Central Commattcc woll meet at
7 p.m Thursday at Carleton School.

Bazaar set
The annual Enterpnse Unued
Garden Club tu meet
The Chester Garden Club woll Methodost Chnstmas ba7-"llr and bake
have its annual Christmas dinner at sale woll be held at the Carpenters
the Oak Room in Athens, 6 30 p m 'Hall 10 Pomeroy Fnday, 8 a m oo
4:30pm

Syracuse· woman pleads

(Continued from P•ge 1)
ong Monday 10 front of Judge Fred W
Crow Ill.
Tenaglia recapped the events lead·
10g to, and surround10g, the shooting
10codcnt dunng the plea hearing
Strausbaugh and Yore began argu·
mg over discrepancies m ·a telephone boll on the afternoon of Satur·
day. Nov 23 They argued bneny and
ordered a poaa for danncr that
evemng.
Later on the even mg. a full-fledged
physocal confrontation occurred
between ohe two. Strausbaugh
allegedly threatened Vpre woth a gun
Jackson 's suspension Fnd.ay. saymg durong the confronoauon, and both
the action will help '"''ore the puh· parties slept tn separate roorns at the
he 's confodencc m the department Yore home that mght. accordong to
·
La.."ihutkaalso annnunl:ct.lthnt three of Tcnogha.
On Sunday mornmg. Yore threatsrx ollit:crs who had hccn rcassrgncd
durmg the mvcstl~altnn will he rem- ened to take the gun Strau~baugh
allegedly hrundtshed agatnst ham the
stated.
In June. R1cc srud he was con- noght be[orc to the shcnffs depart·
ccmcd about Jackson\ handling ol mcnt und file a cromona) rcpon After
askmg Strausbaugh 10 pack her thongs
two mtcmal affa1rs mvcstlgatum s
One Involved the slaymg of ;.1 rctm:-d and leave the rc"dence, Yore lcllohc
pollee s~rgcant who ran .an 11leg.tl home and walked 10 an outhuoldmg
gamhhng operatum and the other 111 get tn has Ford packup oruck and
concerned a prostitutiOn ring
,
leave.
Strausbaugh rctnevcd lhe handgun
Rice has accused Jackson nf laal• mg to mete ouoompanoal doscopllnc on and walked nul ol the h&lt;lmc ooward
the case to Crndr Waller Burns. who the hUIIdmg 'Where Yore was Wearalso ,. bemg mvcsugated

COLUMBUS - The ctty Covil
Servace Commossoon woll comider a
request to drop admmistrative
charges folcd agamst suspended
pollee Choef James Jackson and to
order hos rcmstatemcnt as chief.
Jackson's attorney, Boll Wolkmson,
asked the thrce·membercommossoon _
Monday to dosmoss the five charges
and to order Safety Dorector Thomas
Rocc to rcmstatc Jackson. Wilktnson
saod the chief was unJUstly suspendcd.
But Glenn Rcdock,thc city's chocf
litigator, saod no mostakcs were made
m dtscophnary action taken agamst

sider if you plan to take time off to
raise children.
The point is not to say that all men
woll leave their woves, or that they
will be orresponsible at the time of
..uvorce: As a reader from Las Vegas
pointed out, "There are husbands and
fathers who are not taking advantage
of theor spouse, who are not leaving
them destitute and defimtely not
abandoning theor children." Rather, it
os to say that there aren't many safeguards for women who gove up theor
careers m the ontcrest of theor famohes. And that those who choose do to
so, must keep theor eyes open.
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assodadon.

dreds of people
· Upstairs, there was another vast
room, with another bouncer to keep
out half of those who wanted to get
on. We passed that hipness test as well '
(all nght!) to doscover a final vast
room, through whtch only I in 50
was allowed to pass I was told that
Liza Minelli and Geraldo wen: in
then:, among others. We were dented
entrance, and forced to retire to the
dance floor where we bopped half·
heartedly, knowing that there were
people upstairs more hip than we
could ever hope to he.
.
Well, there's my metaphor nght
there. Today, most voters obey their
onner bouncer and just ~tay home.
Those who do get in find the noor
swarmong with lobbyiSts and special
onten:sts ·•· bog busoness, btg labor,
retored citizens. the gun lobby,
women's rights activists, environmentalists, the Christian right, and,.
Rupert Murdoch, all milhng about to"
the deafening beat.
. The final room os reserved exclu-~
sovely for spin doctors, advisers and
lawyers. Nobody else is allowed in
there. As a matter of fact, the only
way you can even be sure that room
ts occupied is when some advi~er,
tamted by scandal, is thrown out the
door. If yot!'re very lucky, at that
point you'll get to see all the spinnen
emerge briefly. They will lie blithe- ·
ly to the han~-on and ~Ia for a ,
few moments, and then go back to ,
their private little party.
(To receive 1 complimenllry faa '
Shoales newsletter, call 1·800-989- •
DUCK or write Duck's 81'111111, 408
Broad St., Nevada Ory, ~ 95959.) .
l.a Slloal• .. •
writer for New ;.~
AaNdallaL
'

PA

11!0

Dance with the one who bribed you,

----~------------+--------------------~'

•

finds many women vu Inerable

Since my column on women and
divorce ran last month, I have
received many letters from readers '
who have experienced this painful
life change.
A reader from the San Franctsco
Bay area, who asked not to be identified, had a typocal c"'!e. During her
7-112 year marnage, the reader says
she qun her well-paymg job tn the
msurance industry, raosed her step·
son and worked V,:ithout pay as the
office manager on her husband's law
firm. She also managed the couple's
rental property and helped renovate
their home.
She had been lookong forward to
a comfortable retirement with her
husband, but all of that changed the
day he said he wanted to stan dating
again Now, at age 50 and with serious health problems, she faces the
prospect of trying to support herself
without dippmg onto her ~etirement
savongs That is, she's trying to find
an employer who woll bore someone
who IS 15 years away from retirement
and who will surely make heavy use
of the company health plan. In other
words, ot doesn'tlook g'ood
'
But she'll have to find somethong,
smce ot's unhkely that her husband
woll be required to pay alomony for

Ethel Eblin Bush

MICH.

10g rubber workong gloves, she poont·
cd the gun and Yore and threatened
to shoot him. Words were exchanged
between the lwo partie'~: . and Slrausbaugh shot Yore, Tenogha said
"Afler 1mt1nlly havmg a ~mokc­
scrccn thrown at us , I was real
Impressed wtth the shcniTs pcrs1stcnt
work on this case Wuhoulthc assls·
lance ot Sherilf Soulshy and has
department , th1s c.lsc would nol have
been solved," T!.!nog:ha said aflcr the
heanng
"I've been wnrkmg as a prosecutor lnr ~1x years. and Mr. Yore's
wound JS the worst wound that I've
seen on someone who a..:tually hved
How the stafl at Vdtcrans Mcmonal
Hospital kent hom I rom lnsong has leg
bclorc he was translcrred to Grant
Medocal Ccnocr I don't know They
should he commended lor thc1r treatment ol Mr. Yore.' Tenoglf;l added
Yore ts stt\1 recupcratmg Irom the
mc1dent . 11 Grant He 1s expected to
make a lull recovery
Felomous ass.1ult 1s ~ lclony olthc
sc~.:ond degree Stmush.tugh faces .1
poss1hlc sentence pi 2 In X years m
un Oh10 pnson and ,, $15.1Kl0 lane
A scntcncmg hcanng lor Str.tu'haugh has hcen scheduled lor early
J,muary.

(Continued from P•ge 1I
Gallipolis Shrine Club
A first readong was given to several amendments to the street parking
ordinance.
Changes mclude rcstricung street
parking to two hours at a charge of
five cents for 30 manutes, I0 cents for
one hour, and 20 cents for two hours.
with ohe exception of meters on the
streel side of me parkmg lot where
the rate s proposed arc one hour for 10
cents. 2-1/2 hours for 25 cents, and
10 hours for $1
The amendments also set up a
schedule for parkong permats for the
nver sodc of ohc lot&lt;, $50 a year to run
from January through December,
$15 for a quarter, or $5 a month
Further proposed os Ihe doubltng
of the charge for ucket violations.
from $1 to $2 for over parkang, and
$2 to $4 for late paymeno of tickets
Street issues
In other busaness, council
approved the mayor's report of
$3,857. and dascu&gt;Sed street pro~ ·

lems, oncluding holes on Skonner
Lane and Hogh Street. water draonage
on Second Street and Brown Alley.
raw sewage problems on Nyc
Avenue. a dolaptdated house on Nay·
lor's Run and the need ror rcplacong
some stop sogns
The variataon from month to
month in water hill s and the complaints that arc comong on were also
doscussed The mayor saad he would
confer woth the street and water
departments about the problems.
He reported to council ohat the
new water well IS expected to come
onto the sy.em on December, and thao
steps are !ling taken to place workable meters at every house on the val·
lage
·
Counc1l wcnl tnlo exccuuve session 10 d1scuss personnel matters
Attending
were
Vaughan.
Tenogha. and councol members John
Musser, Gcn Walton , Scott Dollon.
Larry Wehrung, George Wright and
Boll Young

Houdashelt quits post
(Continued from Page 1)
opment dorector
'I'm sorry that I wall not have the
opponumty to work with Juha after
I take office m January I can easoly
say that Juha has been the best economoc development dorcotor the
county has ever had." Thornton said.
Shonly ~rtcr assumong the post,
Houda,nell was onstrumental in
efforts ro conv1ncc nauonal retail
chaan Pamada to locale on the former
Fisher's Bog Wheel bualding near
Pomeroy The move kepi 45 jobs and
approxamatcly $30,000 on annual
sales tax revenues tn Mc1gs County
Under Houdashclt's direction,
Meags County was completely classafaed as a Rural Enocrpnse Zone
Th1s lone sets up a s~stcm for
allocatmg tax ahatcmcnts to attract
busmess and help cxtstmg eornpamcs
c&lt;pund. She led the two·ycarcompilatonn of a strategoc plan for Meigs
County. whoch organazed avaolahlc
sJics. demographics, and Information
on avallabJilty of water, sewer and
gas l1nes and prospective businesses.
Houdashelt worked closely with
Slate Rep John Carey, R-Wellston,
on lobbyong ellorts lor passage of
House Balls 440. 442 (Johs Boll III),
whach neated a Rural lndustroal Park
Loan program for the purpose of
assasllng ehgable applicants 10 financmg development of and Improvements tn mdustnal park sites .
A $500.000 grant applocation was
recently completed and submotted ~y
Houdashclt through ihe new Jobs Bill
Ill program. woth Meogs bemg the
lorst county to take advantage of the
new program The grant applicatiOn
os expected to be :approved hy legl~·dativc 'nmmntcc snmctm1c next
week. Houdashcltmdo~ated.
Houdashclt was acuvely tnvolvcd
m the lormal rcorgamzauun ol the
Meigs Counly Communny Improvement Corpurauon. which took a go ant
step tqward hringmg mdustrial
development and JOhs to Meogs
County thos spnng woth the linahzong
ol an agreement to purchase the
counly's top development site at Tuppers Plaans
She has also worked acuvely
toward development of the Great
Bend lndustn.al Sate. wath the recent
comm!lmcnt by 1hc1 Great Bend
lndustnal Ccnlcr CorporatiOn to conslruct a munufncturmg lac:1hty on the
site
Houdashelt slopped short ol commcndmg comnusswncrs tor thc1r
role m unprovmg the county's ceo·
nom1c hcolth expressing her utmost
regret wilh the comm1ss1oncrs' lack

of m1ttat1vc and mtercsl m attractmg
new busmcss development to the
county
"These past three years I believe
I have met w1th ma11y ob ... taclcs
placed in my path by the Board ol
Comm1ss1oners. 11 1s my bcltcf these
obstacles were mcanl In p"tcvcnt me
from being productave Perhar.s the
greatest of these was what I perceove
as a lack of in1tintive and interest
from the commtss10ners . ::..__ lo th e.
pomi ol holding me hack
"Mcogs County os my home .and I
love at However, I have rco1~.:hcd a
pomt where I do not hcheve I can
conltnuc to be dfcctivc hcL:ausc I do
not bclicvC you, a ... cmmmssionch,
arc committed to my pos1tmn ol ceo
nom1c dcvclopm~nt dm!t.:tor."
HoUdashclt ssmd tn the rcsJgth\llon
letter.
In other mallcrs, comnussmncrs
• met w1th mcmhers of the
Chester-Shade Hostoncal Sncaeoy,
who discussed the renovations ,md
restoratoon project at the Chester
Courthouse.
Delmar Baum dascussed the ongo·
ing work to the structure hy Roger
Bossell Construcuon. and saod that
addouonal monocs could possohly he
freed up on the proJCCI hudgco to
replace doors and wondows an ohc
structure
Also addressing the commissonn·
crs ubc.,ut the cnurt,housc rc~mv.lllnns
project were Mary Powell and
Howard Parker
• ' approved necesSary lransfcrs
and appropnatoons for the Mcags
County Hoghway Department and
Meogs County Juvemlc Court
• established and approproatcd
funds for Famoly and Admmostrauvc
Forst CouncoL
• approved weekly holls ol
~293,305.27, consosllng ol 165
entries.
• approved minutes of the Nov 2 ~
meetmg.
.
Prcscnl were commis~ion President Fred Hoffman, Commissaoner
Janet Howard and Clerk Gloria
Klucs.

Tbe Light
To
By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

Minor damage reported
in Pomeroy house fire

Mmor damage was Incurred in a
fore at the Roher! Rohie residence on
Rose Holl about 10 p m Monday
Ac'cord ong to a report I rom
Pomeroy Fore Department Choct
Danny Zarklc. Rohoe had tak~nyloth·
mg oul of a dncr and p~m m a
basket On a ledge above ohe haskct
was an ash tr.ay holding a lighted cagarcuc. The cag,arcnc fell toto ohc basket. sctung the dothong on fire
Ztrklc s.ml the damage was con-

Meigs EMS runs
- Unots of the Mcags County,Emergency Mcdocal Servocc answered sox
calls ror aSSIStance dunng Monday,
includang one transfer calls. Unots
rcspondong oncluded.
TUPPERS PLAINS
5.42 ·p m.. Main Street, Rose
Peterman. So Joseph's Hospital;
10 42 p m. State Route 248, Clara
Conroy, Veterans Memonal Hospital
MIDDLEPORT
6:28 p m., Moll Street, Chris John·
son. treated ao the scene.
POMEROY
10 01 p m, Rose Hill , structure
lire. no anjurics. Units~~ponding
oncluded Pomeroy Fare uepartmcn!.
and Moddleport Fore Department.
Frank Chance ol Tinker-toEver&amp;-to·Chllnce fame began his
big-league career as a catcher

lined to the

c~&gt;thcs 10

the basket

Old Timer: grandfather clock.

** *

Su.tccn
Pomeroy
f1rcmcn
responded wtth two tru!:ks and an

The easiest was lo solve a
problem Is to pick an easy one. ·

emergency unot. and MHidlcport sent
a lrut'k w1th f1ve' men

* * *

Marriages may be made on
haa\Hin,' but the maantenance
work musl be done on earth

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
admn~siOnS- none
Monday doschargcs - John Ord ,
Pomeroy. Bonnac Ranson , Racme.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oe&lt;:. 2 - Heather
Mattox, Mary Boshop, August Keel s.

*

Monday

(Published with

* *

Pedeslrilns: parents whose
teenagers beat them 10 the
garage

* *

*

* *

*

A neurotic is someone who 's stU
worroed he might have looked at
the last eclipse too much

l'ermlssion~)• •: : : : : : : : : : : :

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
AND OWNERSHIP

r '~e . l2

days
,, , of Christmas"
"Holiday Sale
1
Nowin
progress•.•
, ou)y at
' Rutland
~

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT
STORE
Hardware- Groceries - Videos
Fresh Meat
Stop in and see us.
Hou 1s 8

~tur~.
7 SHOWROOMS

l 1 WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture

5 pm MollCL&gt;y·S:JitortL&gt;y
Ph one G14 ·71 ;' 2100
il ll1 ·

Rt. 124, Rutltlnd, Oh.

I

'

'li

742·2211

�•

·sports

TUIIdly, Dec::embet 3, 1996

The Daily Sent~~~
•

West Virginia gets invitation
to play UNC in Gator Bowl

Tu..day, December 3, 1996

Southern and
Eastern see four
get Division VI
~ all-state honors
Southern's Jesse Maynard and
" Iam1e Evans and Eastern's Jeromee
Calaway and Bill FranciS were
• among the 23 southeastern Oh1o
foolball players chosen for vanous
honors on the the 1996 Associated
' Press D1vismn VI aii-Oh10 high
school football team.
Here are the honorees, based on
the recommendations of a state
media panel (with school, he1ght,
we1ght and grade).
Flrstttalll

otrn.e- Ends Eric O'Brien, Cln Sumrrut
Country Day S.foot-10 170 pounds, Seruor: J.uon
Ryba. Cuyahoga Hu • 6 3 190 Sr, Lavor Okwer
• Dayton Jeffenon. 6-:\ 190. Sr • RDndy Hemrrdgarn
St Henr'y.64.190 Sr AricO.nsunan l..tJpslc 61. 170. Sr Unen.:n Joe Hanmss. Sr Henry 6-4

240, Sr. S..on Baylm. Muv:ral R1dgc. 6-2 2SS Sr
, [)Qvut Rcinhonk. Mdrord Cenler FaubankJ 6-2

215.Sr J•mCucboh HowardF.aaKnox 6-l230
Sr. RUSSEL~ ROGERS LANCASTER ASHER
1

CATH. 6-3,240 Sr Quanerbaek Rynn Uhlenhili
St Hchl')' 6-0 190 Sr Backs Chuck Moore

By MAn HARVEY
CHARLESTON, WVa (AP)West Vi'l!Iftla has been mvued to
play in the Gator Bowl ugamst
North Carohna ut Jacksonville , Fla,
Jan I, athletic director Ed Pasulong
sa1d Monday.
"This was the best poss1ble thmg
,; that could have happened to us We
• are elated," Past1long said
•
The Mountaineers w1ll be looking

MOJadorc, 6-1, 205, Sr, J R McCoy, M1lford Cen·
let Faubanb S 9, ISS, Soph, Hl')'lln Widmor
Bndaeport ~ II. 195, Sr Mike Morrow, Norv.oalk

St Paui• .S..IO.I85,Jr Dan Pugh NorwulkSt Paul
S 10, 18, Jr nm Spun Doh on. 5·9. ISS, Sr Kack·
en SteYe B~~rker, Antwerp , 9 170, Sr
Dtlmw- Unemen Chad Huelsn\iUl St Henry ~5 23.5 Sr N1ck Frazee Howard Eilst K110~.
6-1, 190 Sr Ed Philpot Hanul!on New Mtamt S·
7 2."\0 Sr, Dmick M~head Znnc:liv1lle Rosecrans 6.5 215 Sr , TenyTaylor,NorwalkSt Plul.
6-1, 20~ Soph Unebacken Hank Boka Toronlo
6-0 227 Sr Chad Sollman Stndey l.ehmaa 5 9
190 St. Terry Jolhff. Dola Hardin Nonhem 6-1.
22~ Sr Erie Undsey Mogadore 6-2, 21, Sr
NATE HIERONIMUS, WILLOW WOOD
SYMMES VA~~EY. 6 I 220 Sr. ~UKE
THIMMES LANCASTER FISHER..CA'Tli 5 10
19~ Sr Backs Sean Manfredonta lndl!pendc:ncc. 62, 190, Sr , BenJI Zoeller. BllSCom Hopewell
Loudon 6-0 170 Sr TrnVIs Sanders McGuffey
Upper Sctoto Valley 6-2 185 St Pl.lnrer hvor
Moyer. Cresthne 6-1, JM Jr
otrrnsivr playrrottht yur: Ryon Uhlenhakc
!it Henry
Ddtmhr playtn ollht yur: Quid Huelsmnn.
Sl Hen!} Eric Lindsey Mogowbe
Coach of the ytar. Ted Wterzbkkt M1lford
~nter Fatrbanks

JEROIIIEE CALAWAY
Second team

Offmtt - EAd1 Paul Neec:le New~~rk CBth
.5 II . I,_, Jr JllSOn Brnndr B:acom HOpewell
Loudon. , II 180 Sr Unemen Andy Amold Sidney Lehman. f).2 17&lt;4 Sr Man Apple CoYIDtton.
6-1 265. Sr M11rk Neu Muldle1own ~nw1tk 6.5 290 Sr , Dan Kapcar Delphos St John 6-4 2~
Sr, Ben Pore Doln Hardtn Nonhero 6-2. 220, Sr
Quar1erb.:ks Colby S~ Be.allsvtlle 6-2 1-9, Jr
JESSE MAYNARD RACINE SOUTHERN ~ 8
16~ . Sr N1ck KRlmbrink. Le1psrc 6-:\ 20.5 Sr,
Denms Robbms Mogadore 6 I Ill~ Sr B01cb
Ntck Dumel Clft Summll Country Day ~ 10 190
Jr, C:.sc:y Donnldson,S Chnrle5tun Southeastt:rn 6l 190 Sr TFJddPhilhps Malvern ~- K UIO.Jr .Rob
Crossman Dola Hardtn Nonhern ~ II IM Jr
Kn:kers Ntck Konmnan Ctn Summll Countl')' O..y
~·10 190 Sr
Drfrmr -Lane men Kent Cra.mer, Van Buren
6-2 270 Sr Man T!chanrn BMCom Hopewell
Loudon S II 21~ Sr MATT VETTER
PORTSMOUTH NOTRE DAME 6 0 170 Sr
Lu~~ebockt!rs Bnan Gillman Cenk'l'burg 6-2 170
Sr, Durke Byer Cm Country Dny 6-l 220, Sr On
nn Bodor, Bndgepoo 6-0 2:W Sr. Seth Thorn$
Strasburg, S-11, 17.5, Sr. Dill'fl!n Dunkk Jl!weuScto 6-0, 195, Sr , Jasoo Werhng St Htnry, S-1 I
200 Sr, l05h Yost, FLK~ona St Wtndehn S-1 0 2Cr.i

BILL FRANCIS

JAMIE EVANS
Sr Bacb Steve ROiK:h S Olarlcston Suuthe-":o:tern
5· 10, 170, Jr , Brad LampeIa Asht.llbul; St Jotm S..
9 180. Sr Punier Kyle Sba:r Br!ldfunl 6-1 160

lr

Special mendon
H~a~;kett,

Mtlfurd Center Fwrbanks htt:r
Ctntc:rburs,. Sreve Oi~;k. Sui!ur Glove
8nne Uruon M1ke Klockntr, Ncw:lfkCarh MIKE
WRIGHT, LANCASTER F-1SH£R CAlli Kn.n
Bullock, Howard Enst Kno1, Derek Slt!IOITiel~
Howard East Knol.John R~h. SuJUI'Grovc ~:rne
Un1on Joe Duw.:lUI IJanyiiJe Shane C\llfltf How.vd
Wst Kno~. Oav1d R1k:y New Albany, LEAF FtiX
LANCASTER F1SHER CATH, Ouvul CA.ours~
Sugar Grov~ Berne Unum Auron Fauccn. Huward
Enst KOOA. Josh Martm lhnvtll~ Jusoo S1110ll1"1
Mallspon ,
Charhe G1bbons Sh,1dyslde Tyler o,,vu
BcallsYtllc: , Collm Hanlwla;k. Cacli:.. Ch..-1~ YCN.:um
Toronlo, Ton) Po•lua;tl Cadiz Mtkt Pii.'CIII Bmlgt!
pon StOll f&gt;(yton Zant!svtllc RoSc:C:rmu K~nh
Decarrnnadn, New Phil .. Tul\:Wo1W:&amp;5 Cent Cuth
SHAWN MOSSER NEW MATAMORAS FRONTIER J R Mtlier Cadtz Jney Mn111ngly Z:utesvtllc
Ro~rans fJ1c Wyn'lt!r Malwern Ron Raker
Bndgepon Drwrin Young Bcllmrt! St John, Ralkly
Culbertson Cad1z: Sr~ve Haren Znnc5vtlk Ro!l\'trnns SHANE MOSSER NEW MATAMORAS
Josh

Slubi~;ky,

FRONTIER BRYAN OLIVER NEW MATA·
MORAS fRONTIER Juslm Walktr Toron1o Jak~
Marvm Jewdt·~'lo Brad lew1s Shatly~uk
Brocl&gt; Swon~uer. O!:Gralf RIVI!'htik, Rob
Ulmer Cm Summll Country Day M.11t W.ceken
Covtngton, Josh Khn~;elhora Da.oQr,dT RtVt!11ildl!'
Jod Pra.:1e Middletown Fenw1~k N1~k llcilrth
Mul!lletown FenWick Andy M ~&lt;i 1ll Wc51 LtbcnySolcm Ed Phtlpot, Hamilton New Mmm1 Br.ad
Pulfer DeGratl R•vcmdc, Burkt: Dyer Cm Coun
try Day, AiltOn Edward~. Cm Counlry Dty M~Kk
SoyUcr Cuvtn~;lon Dn:w Hcmmgt:r West Ltbi:ny
Salem. Mtkc On Lt:~~.;klund
Cnng Sp:ct:. Cn:sllme U:e A~'"-·nuan Mon
roc:valle. Andy Klll.nuiJ.:r Mmstcr Nt..k Mlll!ll-..'1'
MW'Iil Stt:m Manun l...ol.:al Duug l&gt;crulm~-..,. Green
Wl~h Suuth Ce RTrotl, Jonalhun M~Cvrd Dcliam.\:
Ayerntll~

JA.MIE EVANS, RACINE SOUTHERN,
Sltwt OwtR/1, Willow Woud Symmn V111lley; tirK
Pyles, Franklin Funwrt Gntn, TIMid Gtlllbmd,
PorWnovlh Ha1; Hnath Howdy.ll, Hemlurk
Milltr, AMOS CALLA.HAN. CROWN CITY
SOUTH GALLIA.. Kobb)' Howard , Port.'imoutk
East, Luke lh!nift~ Pvnsmouth Not~ Damr;
BILL FRANCIS. RIU:OSVILLE EI\STt:RN,
Nlrk Altier, Hemlock Millu, Andy Mt'ssu,

JESSE MAYNARD

ATLANTA (AP)- The diVISIOn
mce is tight and the home-field
advhntage 1s still w1thm reach, so the
San Franc1sco 49ers couldn't afford
to shp up agamst a team like the Falcons.
They d1dn't
San Francisco set up an NFC
West showdown agamsl the Caroii·
na Panthers by rollmg over Atlanta
34-10 Monday night, a game thai
proved once . and for all that Steve
Young is fully recovered from
injunes that plagued h1m most of the

"We didn't want to spoil next
week's showdown by havmg a bad
game thiS week," Jones said
Young, who has missed all or
parts of eight games because of two
concussiOns and a lmgenng grom

stram, once agam displayed the ath·
leticasm and fearlessness he's been
known for throughout h1s career.
He wa•n 't afra1d to sprmt from
the pocket when he saw an opcnmg
He wasn 'l 11m1d about suckmg his
head mto a tackler to get a few extra
yards
"I kept telling him , 'Man, why
season.
don't you slide sometimes'!'"
"It sure looks like to me: 11c's bet· W1lham Floyd said "He looked at
ter,•• sa1d tight end Brent Jones, who me like, 'I'm Steve Young ThiS IS
watched Young throw for 254 yards the way I play.' When he gives you
and run for two touchdowns "The that look, you know cverythmg Is
big thmg IS he's movmg w1th confi· going to be OK "
dence. He's not so hesitant. I mean,
You'ng had touchdown ruM of26
he ran for two touchdowns That's and 5 yards m the forst half, threw a
being all the way back m my mmd " sconng pass on the 49ers' first pos·
San Fmncisco ( 10-3) plays the session of the third quaner and then
Panthers (94) next Sunday at3Com spent the rest of the mght on the
Park - a vnal game_not only m bench. H1s final numbers were vm·
terms of the diviSion race, but the tage Young 23·of.30 for 254 yards
49crs' ~opes of earnmg home· ficld passmg and s1x carnes for 43 yards
" The efficiency 1s there, the plays
advan1age throughout the NFC play·
offs. They arc ued w1th Green Bay are startmg to come and I'm healthy,
for the top spot m the conference, hut - wh1ch allows me to play football the
the Packers have the lie-breaker way I want to play football ," he sa1d
Terry Kirby caught Young's
edge hccausc of an early season VIC·
touchdown pass and also became the
tory.
•

The league leadmg Alexander the game At the half Alex led 39·15
Spanans boosted theor record to 3·0
In the second half Eastern slipped
by handing the Eastern Lady Eagles to 59-25 and 86·36.
their worst defeat in five years, an
Eastern shot 12·49 for•24 percent,
86-36tally over the young Eagles m hul2-23 at thejme, and had a meaAlbany Monday n1ght
ger 22 rebounds (Brannon 7, Karr 5,
Eastern is 1· 1 The prev1ous low· Evans 4). Eastern had eight steals, 27
sconng output by an Eastern team turnovers, three ass1sts, and 19 fGUis
had been a 74·39 loss to Frankfon
Alexander hll34·60 for 55 perAdena m the DIVISIOn IV sectwnal cent, had 30 rebounds (Grubb 7,
tournament live years ago when Kmg 6) and was 12·24 at the
Adena went on to the reg•onal finals
Ime Alex had 20 steals (Grubb II ,
Alexande1 placed three g~rls m West6), 19 turnovers, and 22 fouls
double f1gures, led by last year's
Eastern hosts Belpre Thursday
TVC Co·MVP Jom Grubb who had Quarter t9!1J1
25 poiniS, fre shman Kelly West who Eastern
4·11 · 10· 11=3U
knolled 20, and Angela Jewell w1th Alexander
26·13·20· 21=86
15 For Eastern Valenc Karr led w1th
Alexander: Kelly Est 8·1·1 =20,
14 pomts, while Je sSica Brannon led Natalie Boho 1.0.0=2, Jom Grubb 7the team wuh a 13 pomt, seven· 2-5=25, Angela Jewell 6·0-3= I~ .
rebound, four·steal performance Mandy Thompson 0·0· 1=I , Bobbi·
: Brannon was the leadmg rcbounder JO DaviS 2·0·1 =5. JesSica Rob1nson
; from pomt guard
3-1·0=9, Knsty Kmg 3·0=6, Jod1
~
The game was over m the first W1lso.n 1--01=3 Totals: 31-4: penod when Eastern made "nc 12124=86
· turnovers and fed the Alexander
Eastern: Valerie Karr 7·0..0=14,
. offenSive attack w1th assist after Jessica Brannon 2.0.9= 13, Ann W1g·
asSist. Alexander outhustled the gms 0·0..1 =I, Chasallc Hollon 2 0·
, Eagles for four quaners Alex rolled 2=6, Ang• Wolfe 1·0·{}.;2 Totals:
, to a 26·41irst penod lead In all East· 12-0·12123=36
em had 171irsl half turnovers, 27 for

first San Franc1sco player to rush for
more than 100 yards smce Ricky
Watters m 1994 Korby finished with
105 yards on JUSt 12 carnes- an
8.8·yard average
The defense, mcanwh1le, shut
down the Falcons, who finished
With a measly 178 yards. Bobby
Heben was only IO·of·25 for 113
yards and two miercepl!ons, and h1s
backup, Brownmg Nagle, was
sacked tor a salety by Bryant Young.
"The San FranciSCO and Buffalo
defensive lines are by far the best m
the league," Atlanta center Roman
Fonin sa1d "Our guys deserve cred·
it for protectmg the quanerbacks as
well as we d1d tonight."
Ahou1 the only thmg the 49ers
could qUibble w1th on thiS mghl was
theor mabiiny to score more touch·
downs. Four limes m the firs1 half,
they settled for field goals by IeiT
Wilkins, though the last one came as
(See NINEJlS on Page 5)

.Vinton County girls get
47-32 win over .Meigs

TAKEN DOWN - San Francisco tight end Brent Jones (lett)
II taken down by Atlanta daten·
siva back Devin Bush attar
pulling In a pass In the second
half of Monday night's NFC West
battle In Atlanta, whare the 49ers

won 34-10. (AP)
• $

Scoreboard
La.~t

Basketball

a..-2

I.eam
lUd:
1 Kan~~.;L~ (SH) ......, .. ,... :'i-0 117'i9
2 W,lkc I orcst 1121 -4..0 1 7CJ4

NBA standings

1 Uulh (I I
4 CINCINNI\11
, VIllanova
6 Kcmud.y

1 I I 1711

k

7 Mtdn~tan

2 0 I 2tH

7

H lodt.m 1
4 () I lOti
IJ luw.tSI
2.0 I I 7"i
10 l&gt;ukc
1 I I 011
II New M~: J.i~u
"i 0
9~
12
Clc!nl~tlni
.,
••••.•. •••• •• • +l K6Y
I:\ Frcsnu Sl
4 0 K'\7
14 NnnhCamlma
2 I K'\1
l'iAnwn;1
2 1 7"iti
16 Mlhi'ICSI)j;t
'i 0
ft71J
11 UCI..A ,
0. I c.62
IM lc• L\
2-fl
fll 2
Jtl Syr:.~t:u~
l I 4fl2
2U 1Jus1t\U ln]lcf!~
2 0 4111
:!1 lul~.t
2 I 40'i
' 2 I 12 \
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20

EASTERN CONfERENCE

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
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Monday's a·ores

Toni~ht's games
OIIJIUH ,II Allafl1.1 7 \() fl Ill
T1trtllllll rn O.liVffi.AND 7 ~ r m
MIMIII :1C New Y&lt;lrii KI'm
Sacmrt1t!ntO ,11 M1111k'twll.l Hp m.
ChtlUI-0 at M1lwnokt.'\.' II W p m
lfldiana at PnnL·uld 10 p m
·Charlauc t11 LA ChPJl&amp;.'fl 10 ;\fiJI m
Stllltle m L A l..ak~n 10 ~ m •
Oelntt:r • Gohk11 Stat~ 10 p m

Wcdnotday'• ~•mes
New York at New Jetlk.'Y 7 ~ m
1' m

L.A Lakm Ill Utahi iC p m

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Ph1laddphta al Sun An1un111 H ~0

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10 p m

AP Top 25 men's
colfeie poll
Tbt lop 2.~ ~~t•m• 10 ~ AMIIU•.:I•\od

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college poll
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Niners ...

A-DOLLAR-A-DAY!
• HEATS UP TO 500 Sq. Ft.
Put heal right - · you want n

• EFFICIENT

Uses 50% less eleelncity lhan
conventional electnc healers.

• SAFE!

No llames no fumes Will no1
cause fires

• CLEANS THE AIR!

Prim•'71 or

Supplemenl•l Heal

Where You Want

Purlfles the atr year-round

• FURNITURE QUALIIT
cab1net serves as a tunct1onal
end·lable

• EASY TO INSTALL

Plugs 1nlo any t 10V oullet
No spec•al wtnng needed!

HOW DOES IT WORK?

Coole In for a Drln ra IS11llfbl/

(I

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HOW MUCH DOES IT COST/

202 HK

Wr!!tetn IJhi"'on

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Hnt• _, to SH •foft.

At Nalur., A• The Sun. ..
Infrared l1ght energy Is similar to the way lhe sun hears the earth
The Sun Twin uses tttls sale Infrared absorptiOn to elflcJently oonvart electriCal
power intO economiCal zone or area fleat6ng No name, fuel or any form o1
combustion Operates simply on standard 110 \lOll house Ctlrrenl

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9 0 J0H 1~1 loll

Sun I ra~~~.:tsw
C.tmhn.t

ZONE FURNACE

2fa41

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Monday•..,core
Sun hark.:l~u "' tulallu 10

llvtpriolnflly LII!M.
The priCe Is lar lesa than a gas or olllumace, or conventiOnal etedncal hut
There are no mslallat100 cosrs Involved Although the ~ ta ~ to a
window a1r eotlditiOIMtt the significantsaVtnos are In the low Ol*ltiOnltl oott
You can
to reoover the coat In fuel aavhlga in a turpn.ilgty lhort ttme

••peel

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

-,.a....

•

Allanllllf ~w Orlan"' I p m
Baltnnure 111 CINCINNATI. I p m
Ucnvi:llll Gfwn Sa~ I p m

,.

Arnott added Iwo c.1ch Tcrella
Waldecker had lour lnr Fcdral and
Lmdsey Han 1hrce
Sou1hern gamed ns h•ggcst dvan·
tagc m the second hall when 11
outscored the hosts 27· 18 Southern
edged closer Ln vH;Iory 1n 1hc th1rd
tr,unc, J6 25, 1hcn hhlzcd Federal
14·R gmng down the stretch to wm
50·33
Turley ended the mght m a tic tor
g.1me h1gh honol'l\ With Proffitt who
.1lso nmhccd 17 pomts Turley scored
a douhlc-double by abo .1ddmg 12
rebounds K1m Sayre added mnc.
Jenny Fnend three, Conny Horst
two, and Enca Arnou two Carne
Russelly led Federal With 14 pmnls,
Lindsey Hart had seven, Tcrella
Waderkcr SIX, Dchh1e Buck lour. and
Jcss1ca Mahurncy two
(Continued from Page 4)
Southern h1t 22·57 for 4J percent.
'
wh1le
hillmg 1·9 treys, and a 5· 12
the clock was running out
mght
at
1he hne. Fedcr.ll hn I 5·35
San Francist.:o scored on Jls first •
two's
lor
33 3 percent a~d was J.M.11
seven possessiOns, leadmg 25·3 al
the half and then addmg to the mar· the hne
SHS had J6 rebounds (Turley 12.
gm' on Young 's IO·yijrd 1ouchdown
Sayre
6. Fncnd 6) 10 claun the h.u .
pass to Kirby w1th 9 30 left m the
tic
olthc
hoards 31&gt;· 19 Federal w.IS
third quaner. AI that po1n1. 1he 49ers
led
hy
Buck's
seven
had outgamcd Allama 405 yanls 10
SHS had I3 steals (Turley 4 C
86.
Caldwell
J, Prolhtt 3): 10 assiSts
"The defense really didn't play
(Turley
'
1
).
16 turnovers. In louis
that bad, but they were on 1hc l1cld
and
live
blocks
(Turley two) Feder·
too long," Falcons rcce1vcr Tcrance
al
had
five
steals.
nme assiSts 21
Mathis said "The otfen•c was
turnovers, 16 louis andtwo blo.:ks
awful We d1dn't ae&lt;omplish any·
Southern dropped the reserve
thmg."
game
2K· 24 SuSie Bond had O&lt;lvcn
Atlanta (2·11) didn't reach lhc
und
Amanda
Castle live for FeJerul
end zone unt1l Nagle connected wllh
Stacy
Lyons
paced
Sou!hcrn With 17
Mathis on a seven·yard pass w11h
and K1m lhle had live
2:33 left in the game, set op hy
Quarter llltll:i
Devin Bush's blocked punt. MathiS
Southern
14·9· 13-14=50
unleashed a night's wonh of frustra·
Federal
Hockmg
6·9·1 O·K=33
lion by fllnginathe ball Into the sec·
Southern:
Renee
Turley ti·O·
ond dock.
1/4=17, Kim Sayre 3-1-010=9, Bn·
He didn't have to wony about h1t·
anne
Proffitt 8·0-1/3= 17. Jenny
tina 111ybody. There were about
0·0·314=3, Conny Hor.11 1.0·
Fncnd
25,000 empty seat1 in the Oeorg•a
0/1=2.
Enca Arnotr h0-010=2.
'Dome to beain with, and nearly
Totals 2l•l•S/lloo50
eveeyone wu J0f1C when the FalCons
Federal Hocklq: Carrie Russell
finally scorod a touchdown.
7-0.00=14,
Lmdsey Hart3-0-ll2=7,
"A-lot beep said. Nothina else
Terella
Wadcrkcr
).0 01().6, Debbie
aeedl to be said," M•this lamented.
Butk 1·0.214=4, Iqssica Mahorney ,
"We're 2-11 now. We played
1-0.010=2. Totals 15.0.318-33 .
,awful."
Southern's gorl' haskclhalltcam
rai&lt;ed 1ts record to 2·0 overall by
defeating league foe Federal Hock·
mg 50..33. m a Tn · Valley Conler·
cncc 1 Hockmg D1v1s1on game n.l
Stewart on Nov 25
Southern JUmped 1n1o an early
lead as defendmg TVC Co·MVP
Renee Turley hltcd her cluh In a I 4·
6 advanlugc hy pumpmg 1n mnc lirsl
per1od pmnts. Kun Sayre .1ddcd
lhrcc pomts m the frame, wh1lc
senior Bnannc Proflill added 1wo
Both cluhs played even m 1hc sec·
ond round as Southern held a 23·15
advantage at the hall Turley had lour
mthc frame, wh1le Proflitt and Enca

That Cost No More to Run Than A Coffee Maker...

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
lam

Auto racin~
INDIANAI'OI IS MO I OR Sl'll IJ
WI\'( Nnmcd ldlrcy ltdsk u~ CJ.~t,;liiiV~
Vlt:t: prcst•lclll nl .1dnun1slr.111un mllnJ!ol.'f
IIIICUIS W1Jh 111ll)tlilolltlsc!llt'K ~t: UIIVe Vlt.'l:
Jllemk:n1 n lm.trklllll~ tllil ~tit:~ W l ur
It s Bn~=ohllln vKt: Jlle~ltlcn1 and J:encr tl
~uuuscl l.t.~l Mdll VIle jlfi.: SIIk: nl .nuJ e~
nUI1Ve dtrt:thn t~l tho; Indy lt,lo.;lll }!
l.c.l~tM.: md I red N.1t11111 v1cc pl'l: sltlcnl ul
o,:! lrjklflllt: o.; oii11111UI Ul•I1 HIII~

An Affordable, Safe, Efficient ~

NFL standings

Mc1gs dropped a Tn·Valley Oh10
DIVISIOn girls basketball game to
Vmton County 47.32 recently The
Marauders arc now ().2, while Vm·
ton County IS 1- 1
Vmton County took a 15·8 first
penod lead then edged to a 23· 19
halftime score Oul'iConng Mc1gs II ·
4 m the thord frame, VC waltzed to
a 34-23 lead and on to the wm.
Vmt()D Couoly was led by
Heather Hayes wnh 18 pomls. wh1lc
Julie Orloosk1 added ill Meigs was
led by Tracy Colley 's 12 pomts
Meigs hll 15·39 for 3R percenl,
had 21 rebound s (Cofley 8, Tnm
Dav1&gt; 4), 18 turnovers , lour asSisls
all by Smilh, 14 steals, and was 6·11
althe line
,
VC hlll9·54frnm the field and
was 6·13 at the hnc
\ Me1gs won the reserve game 42·
28, 1ed by Jcnmfer ShnmpiUl w1th 21

'
pomts, while Tangy Lauderm11t
added seven, Bethany Boyles tour,
Amy HY.sell four, and two each from
Ashley Rupe, Manssa Whaley, and
. Jess1ca Johnson VC was led by
Beth Hayes wuh seven. and six each
from Jenkms and Robson
Quarter llltll:i
Me1gs
8·11·4·9=32
Vmton County
15·8· 1I · 13=47
Meigs: Carissa Ash 3·0·010=6,
Taryn Doidge 3·0-1=7, Cheryl Jewell 1-0·0/0=2, Tn c1a DaviS 0· 1=1,
Ashley Roach 1·0.0/0=2, Tracy Cof·
fey 4·0·4= 12, Tonya M1ller 1·0- 010=2, Totals: 1~11=32
Vinton County: Juhe Orloowsk1
2·2·0= 10, Heather Vance' 0·0·2=2.
Heather Hayes 7-04= 18, LIZ Zmn I·
1·0=5, JennyZmn4·0-010=8,Mcgan
Goodlin 2-0..010=4. Totals: 16·3·
6/13=47

, Southern girls defeat
Federal Hocking 50-33

Transactions

HEATING SYSTEM

Football

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

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C'uruk!dtu u M SW h .u~ St -I'J
Curndl !JIJ H tvnlnrd ~~}

......,

1 021

N~

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Y

(,

llkl l ujl 2 ~ I ~ ~~~~~ Ill 11~ h.),..l\:likJ

Tntllnlil 100 Ht1USit111 KY
Dalla.\ IOH Orlando 10:'. (OTI
Utah 107 Charlouc Y7

CU.VELAND £&amp;t Orl:utdo 7.
Dal!u at Mmml 1 ~ m
Atlalllll .11 Oermtl 1 p m

J
4

Cnlur.ldu Sl 2 llhmus I lmh.111 1 I
hrt~kAI 1

for theor first bowl w1n since 1984
No 24 West Vngm1a (8·3)
appeared to be locked mto the Lib·
erty Bowl Dec . 27 at MemphiS,
Tenn, given to the fourth pick from
the B1g East
M1am1' s 38-31 victory over Syra·
cuse Saturday JUmbled the confer·
ence's bowl picture
Suddenly, mstead of headmg to
the F1esta or Orange bewls as the B1g

- Alexander girls hand
Eastern 86-36 setback

Porhmouth E•11t; A•rM Oatoit. Pvrtnnoulh
Not~
D•mt;
JEROMEE
CALAWAY.
REEDSVILLE El\!t'TERN:
Zul.:k Sl:hmWr Cnlumhial\11 Man Mdindc 0 11
ltlll Em Ntdlol:.~ J,K:k!lt:ln Mllllllt Ad:un lmlln'l
D llttm S..:ou Smtdo.:r b:kson Mdtna 8e11 D ufd
I..A.!\.'IOIUt\ 0...'01'J!,etkndly Lo~IIVII~ Ja.wnGn.•¥1e
M•m•r.1l R1dl!C Aaron ~ndcr}UISI Mo~adon: J,u&gt;tlll
Marlm Mnp.:uJure Phil Rydo..'f ll.lhlln rJ
KilDitiW~ky MdJOft,lld Brad Fll.'ft Md.)unald
Mall w.1y1 Scbrtn}! ~kKtnl!!y Br.K! Mumuw. 0.11ton, Oulll Perry l:nwcllvllll! Scan Tmt\pkm~
Mll!(oldilft!, M1kc Mano.:tl'itl l....et.'IOnlll OramJcn M.lllt
O,tlh)ll Sballt" Mc,II.I.J U.'t'tllnt.l
Ju 111 CeJJ'Il!lkH Ull'nln Cu1h Dnn V.1"rck
Cuyaho~a Ht ~ Bn~n 8tdwdl Ashtotbula St J,.tan
Steve Pulu.~ku lndt.'fiCno.lcflCI.• St!!W Spr"lliMOo Cuy,,
hngu Hts Drmn Mmn1llo lndc:pcrnlent.:e, Tum
JtiiiC~ TIIUmp!'on Lc tl~cmum Zach Warner Lur:un
Cu th Jusltn Yale~ N~w&amp;ury Ben Sl:ularn R1~h
mund Ht~ S'-'an Smuh Lunua C.llh O:tv~
C 11.meS1." RH:hmorw.J Hu Mtk!! Kmdcr Thc.KIIflstm
U..-dp.cmont Tim Hawk~ U)f;un C,11h Rob Turn
a K1rtlalkl kremy S1lvts 'frurpwt f'larhnr Man
P.L~tron Umun C.llh SII.'~'C Ndh~sc THnmpsnn
Lcdt.~nlOtlt. Inn 011 Tho!W)son Lcd,!!l!nJOnt P J
Tnm:s Lor,un Ca1h

Niners defeat Falcons 34~10
By PAUL NEWBERRY

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a.

East's outright champion, the 22ndranked Orangemen ended up m a ne
for first With No. 19 M1am1 and No
11 Vorgm1a Tech Vugmia Tech ( 10.
I) got the alhance benh through bet·
ter poll ratmgs than the other two
Syracuse was an unlikely p1ck as
the B•g East representative m the
Gator because Nonh Carohna beat
the Orangeme}l m the regular season
and howls rarely ha•e rematches
And Carquest Bowl off•cml~
feared Syracuse fans wouldn't attend
en masse because of the devastating
blow of a lasl·game loss wuh so
much at stake
Thai left Wes1 Vorgmia and Miami to v1e for the Gator and the D~c
27 Carquest, at M1am1's Joe Robb1e
Stad1um. En(er West VIrginia's f4ns,
who tradlllonally attend howls m
large numbers That was aA'actor m
today's decos1on, Pastilong said.
" This 1s a tremendous compii·
ment to the people who follow our
athletic .teams," Pastiiong sa•d

qu~:a:~;: ~~~~~~~:~~~~d~~~q~:S;
cxecu11ve director Bnan FlaJOies
sa1d
Pasulong sa1d the Mountameers
probably would recc1ve from I5,000
to 20,000 t1ckets for the Gator Bowl
game.
The Gator pays $1.5 m1lhon,
while the Carquest and Liberty pay
$1 3 1mlhon ap1ece

Robinson

to stay
at USC
LOS ANGELES (AP) - John
Robmson will remam the football
coach at Southern Cahfom•a
The deciSion Monday by the
school's president and athlcuc dm:c·
lor came two days after the TroJans'
lirst v1ctory over Notre Dame smcc
1982.
"I am happy to tell you that John
w•ll contmuc as our football coach,"
athletic dorcctor M1kc Garrett sa1d
" .. I strongly believe John Robmson
IS the nght man to lead the USC foothall program I'm very e&lt;cJtcd about
th1s decisiOn, about our VIctory over
Notre Dame an~ about our prospects
for ncxl season "
Rob1~son wus d9gged by ru[1]11rs
thai he would be tired during a lrou·
bled season that c~dcd wuh a 6·6
record but mcludcd a 27·20 ovcrt1mc
v1ctoi-y over Notre Dame on Saturday.
There also had been statemenls
from USC thai the un!Vemty always
watts unlll the end of u season to

evaluate a coach Howcvcr••Garrcu
smd that alter consultauon wnh un•·
vers•ty otliclals he was mtenl on
kecpmg Robmson
Rohmson said he was "hllterly
dur~appoimcd'' ahnutthc season
•·1 tuke full responSibility lor
those results." he sUid "Second I
am gratelul lor the opportun1ty 10
contmuc w1th this program. We have
the talent to restore our team 10 a
h1gh standard "
USC preSident Steven Sample
smd he supports Garrell 's dct:tston
100 percent, and noted a greatly
Improved graduation rate of Trojan
loolhall players - 75 perccnl m
1996 compared With ,, nat10nal aver·
age ol 56 pcrccnl
" John Rohmson' s overall reL:ord
durmg the II years he has served as
head couch 111 USC IS remarkable,"
Sample sa1d

Marshall
men defeat
Jacksonville
State 68-54
JACKSONVILLE, Ala (APIJohn Brannen scored 27 pomls and
S1dncy Coles added 16 to lead Mar·
shall to a 6H·54 wm over Jack ·
spnvollc Slate
· Lcad1n~ 37· 23 al halftime, Mar·
sh,lll (3·0) stayed ahe.1d of a rallymg
ll•clmmvlllc Stale (0·3) !Q the sec&lt;&gt;nd
b,, ll Monday mghl The Gamecocks
m,maged 1o L:ut the m:ugm to 57.47
w1th &lt;~hout live m~nutt.:s left, when
fir.mncn loulcd Rus1y Brand and
Bran~ s,mk a lrce lhrow But Jack
sunv1llc State never got any c.:lnscr
Marshall Ira lied bnelly m the early gmng hut went n~cad to slay, 8· 7,
on Carl King's JUmper wnh 15.14
left m the hall
Marshall led 17· 23 at hallume
and held Jacksonville Stole to JUst 7
or 24 shooting '" the first half.
JacksonVIlle State managed only
35 percent ficld·goal shout1flg, com·
pared 11!47 pcrcent tor Marshall. and
was ouu~houndcd 4f·34.
Marshall had little luck frotn ).
poinl range where the Thulldcnng
Herd made JUSt S of 19 attempts.
Brand led the Gamecocks wnh 17
pomls and II rebounds, ond Kenny
Sorenson had 16.
·
•
I

According to Baye,

New HBO movie
tells compell_ing
tale of 'The Goat'
By BETTY
WI,.STON BAYE
The Loulaville
Courier-Journal
The new HBO movie "Rebound·
The Legend of Earl 'The Goat '
Manigault " runs I hour, 51 m1nules
and 14 seconds
I d1dn 't cry until the last live mm·
u1es when the real Earl Monigauh
showed up on the screen.
I gasped
h's been years sonce I've lmd eyes
on Earl Manigauh, and the decades
haven't been kind to h1m Goal , as
the movie attests, has been all the
way to hell and back
I ached to look past 1he ravaged
face on the screen, to hnd somewhere, the hoy I knew at BenJamin
Franklin H1gh School. the hoy every·
one smd was dcsuncd to play pro
basketball
••
I needed to talk 10 somehody
from home. somebody who would·
n' t diSmiSN my tears as 1fthey were
nothmg more than whal's expected
from a woman m lull matunty
It was past m1dmght I d1alcd the
212 area code, and then the number
of my best lnend from h1gh school
Fran's hushand answered From 800
m1les away. I heard the Sigh and
cdgmcss m Vmccnt's tone At this
stage m hie, calls m the m1ddlc of the
mght often aren ' t good
"I JUSt need w 1alk," l ,qu•ckly
cxplamcd
And the three of us talked lor the
next hour and a h.1ll .1hnut Goat and
hiS Iall mtu 1he abyss ol cnme and
drugs We also t.1lked ,,h&lt;&gt;ul God's
grace and about lhe playground on
Manhattan's upper West S•dc and the
basketball tuurnamcnt thai each hear
Gnat's name
Fran and Vmt:ent t~aw Mnmg.wlt
recently. Fran's rca(:':tiOn w.1s sam11.1r

HAL MUMME

Kentucky ·
hires
Mumme
as football
coach
LEXINGTON, Ky (AP)- Hall
Mumme, tho football coach at Val·
dosta State of DIVISion II who has
built a reputation for reviVIng struggling programs, was hired as coach
of Kentucky Monday.
Mumme recc•ved a tour·ycar
contract and was mtroduced by athletic director C M Newton at a news
conference.
"We believe we can succeed
here," Mumme sa1d
Mumme, m a step up 10 D1v1sion
I·A, fills the• vacancy left hy the fir·
mg of B1ll Curry on Oct 21.
"I see coach Mumme a• someone
who will put the fun m Kentucky
football," Newton sa1d · ~Fun comes
m wmnmg
and he 1s a proven wm·
,
ncr
Mumme, whowas40· 17· 1 m five
years at Valdosta S1a1c, began lhe
news conference hy talkmg Ken·
lucky's cxccllcnl loothulllae~lllles
He sa•d lakmg lhc JOh w,&gt;s an
easy deciSIOn when Newton ollcred
11 to h1m d(mng u telephone call
Tuesday mght
"Alter I dropped the telephone
•nd p1cked 11 up, It took about c1ght
seconds," Mumme sa1d
Curry was fired when the Wild·
cats were 1-6, bu1 they ended 1hc
season 4· 7 overall, 3·5 1n the South·
eastern Conference He lim shed hiS
sevcn·ycar Kcnlut:ky career wtth u
26 52 record

tu mmc

Meigs H.S to host
matfest Saturday
Mc1gs H1gh School w1ll host the
The Mctgs Wann· up Tournament, a
round-robtn Ohmp1~..: pools tourna~
mcnt, Saturday at I0 30 a m at
Me1gs H1gh School
The aflmr w1ll feature two pools.
pools A and B wnh 1hc placer P&lt;~&gt;l
A matched wllh the placers of p&lt;~&gt;l
B for the final round We1gh· m
' hcgms at 8to 9 am. AdmiSSion IS $3
tor adults and $2 lor students
ConcessiOns w1ll be open alter
wctgiHns Fnr f urthcr mformatmn,
call wrestling coach J1m Sheets at
(home) 614-742·2972 or (sch&lt;K&gt;Il
992· 2 151 Other questions may be
directed to athletic dorcctor ll.•ck
Edwards al992·6 174

Goat\ lorgollen .1 lot ahoul the
old days at Franklin, she sa1d He
didn't remember smgmg m !he' chorus, lor c"amplc But when the t:Un·
versa lion turned to some or Ihe guys
he played hall wllh. 1hc light m
Goat's eyes snapped on
I'm glad HBO made a movie
about Earl M,m,gault There's JU.'t no
plcasmg everyone, ol course I won·
dcr why Ihey d1dn '1 shoot ex1eroors
of the real BenJamm Franklin High'&gt;
The hu1ld•ng IS st1ll there on I 16th
Street hclwccn Pleas.mt and the Ea.'t
R1vcr Dnvc And our s~..:hool ~olors
weren' t or,mgc and hctgc, hut hurgundy and ur~mge Anll s(JnlC ol the
musll: used ~klleast tn th~ rcvecwcr\
copy of lhe film. hadn ' 1 even been
created m the curly I%0s when Ihe
mov1c takes plat:c Butlhnsc arc p•ddhng thmgs
E)lrl Mamgaull, IllS orue, IS,, II•·
mg legend
Matter ol lacl, he w.&gt;s a legend
back when Karecm 's name was sull
Lew. when Mag1c w.1s little E.orvm,
and when M1chael Jordan hadn l
hecn h&lt;&gt;rn
The Earl M.1n1~auh who shows

up at the end of the mov1c IS a
stranger to me
I remember him 10 the school's
cafetena clownmg with the other
basketball
players at
the1r
"reserved" lablc Oh yes, Goat and
the boys talked ' much stuff" They
also d1d much hoastmg ahoul 1hcor
athletic prowess, and theor prowess
wnh the lad1cs
or course, some ol the boys at the
lablc were exaggerallng
Bu1 Goal earned hos hragg1 ng
nghts. and m turn gave everybody a1
Frankhn brnggmg r1ghls, too
Man1gauh, who IS shorl hy
t&lt;xlay 's standards, may as well have
been 7 feet tall When he went up iur
the basket, he was an eagle
When Goal played. lhcrc was
pandcmomum m the bleachers
' Go Goal' Go Goal' Whoosh '
Two pmnls Two pomls'" We 'd be
huggmg , slappmg hve. and hcapmg
vcrh1Ugc on any of th!.! hapb~s oppvSitmn's lans unlortunatc enough to
he seated m our vH.:Imty
The Goat was good enough m
h1gh school to play m the NBA
But 1t wasn 't to he Some now suy
that Earl Manigault IS the hcst ha~·
kethall player never to mak e 11 &lt;nlu
the pros.
Still, Mamg;IUh wus tm&gt; g&lt;••d lor
h1story to tgnorc, thus the mov1c
Vmccnt sa1e.t mov1es arc made .1hnut
people like the Gnat because they 'rc
magmliccnl athletes But the reallly
as he , Fran and I knnw very well. 1s
that 1hc tnnurous turns E.orl M.ml·
gault's file l&lt;Mik .1re duphcalcd thou
!&lt;.'Unds ol t1mcs m clly ncJghh&lt;lrhcltJds
hkc the one we grew up tn
We know th.1t there arc m.my
hnys ~md gtrh; wnh tr~mcndous n.tt·
ural talents and awcsom~ pntcntMI
who never ems.." I he nvcr mlt~ the ht!!
umc hccausc they l,1d. stmng 4JI1111·
uonul suppnrt, or the sohd t.:Ju!,.;,l·
t1qn.tl found.ttlon th,tt ~.m t:Ul ry .t
person along when 1~(:1 nn longc1 .trc
sw1U, when hands can Iunger e.ISily
p.1hn ~1 h~tll , when eyes can' t sec the
haskel , the goal nr the net, and when
h&lt;&gt;d1es ren11nd thcor occupants th.u
lhc games ol our youth c.m no longer
be played
h's lruc Earl Manigault never
made ll lnln 1he NBA But drugs,
alcohol, diSca~e. poverty .md, t&gt;l
~oursc, V1ctnam k•'fll many. m.my
others Irom gm1d old Ben Frunkhn
Htgh from hcL:ommg m hie wh.H
they had the raw p&lt;llcnl"ll to he
The Gnat u1 least has survived
H~ 's not a JUnkie anymore, and he
devotes h1mscll to ku.ls He's trymg
10 he lor youngsocrs what Mr Ruck·
er at the playground tried to be lm~
hun when Gmlt was u lulentcd. huil!
hard· headcd, troubled h(&gt;y You •ve
JUSt got to tlchcvc that some ol 1
Gnat's charges Will walk thr&lt;'lugh!
doors he ne ver got l&lt;l go through
• It you thmk abnut 11 hkc Ihat , yuu:
haw to conclude thm thnsc who:
marveled at the Goat wcrcn 't wrong•
.1hout h1m after all
:

r;
HoHo·
Ho1e·
•

IE'

This year buy a gift that IS
custom made for anyone on
your list. Whh home delivery,
a subscription ia ideal for
those wilh a buiij·in curiosity.
GIVe a gift that comes more
than once a year.

ono
DO

•

- - - - - ·Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon - • • • ~

0111 to:
NAME

ADDRESS
CITY

ADDRESS
STATE _ _ ZIP

PHONE

------ r --·---

CrTY

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PHONE

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;
•
:
'

Send in the following coupon ,
and $83 20 and get 20% off
the subscripllon price
Spacial Holiday oiler ends
December 31, 1996

&amp;ubacrlpllon anlotod by:
NAME

,

ST., POMEROY,

q

�•
TUIIday,~bef3,

Tu11dly, December 3, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

lators. and the lvys had to struggle by
on Social Security.
"Did you ever try living on $20 a
week to eat for two people?," asked
Mrs. Ivy.
.
Keating, 72. sat stoically through
Monday's hearing on his ~ue~t f?r
a new trial, even when Pfaelzcr said
crisply, "All right. the motion's granted." Later, though, he grinned broadly and embraced well-wishers.
Kealing's son, Charles Keating 01,
who was convicted of fraud and racketeering by the same jury in 1993.
was to Jearn tnday whether his conviction also would be overturned.
Prosecutor Sharon McCaslin said

Ann
Landers
199!,

Keating "absolutely" will be remed.
though Keating's lawyer Stephen C.
Neal predicted the government will
first appeal Pfaelzer's ruling.
Told of McCaslin's comment,
Keating ;..plied: "Did she say that?
Good luck to her." He referred other
quc•tions to Neal. saying, ' You'll
have to talk to my attorney, man. He's
done prclly good for .me so far."
Before lhe ruling Monday, Pfaelzcr heard Neal recap evidence from a
secret hearing that at least three
juroo and alternates discussed .the
prior conviction in the JUry room. At
least one juror overheard that conversation

TiM~

ALL
• Charlo KHtlng Jr., right, fanner Uncoln Sav·
• lnge heed, 111111n •• he and hla attorney Steve ~~. left, hold a
• neWe conference outakle the Feder81 CourthouH In lol.Ange. lea Mu.lday. KNtlng'e t.deral freud and rK~ng conviction
_ . thrown out by a judge Yftlefday. (AP)

Dear Ann Landers: I'm not sure I
agree with your lldvicc to lhe sixthgrader who ovcrlleard her mother
talking on the phone and rightfully
concluded that she was having an
affair. You told her not to tell her
father.
I know people get angry with the
messenger when the news is bad, but
that should nol be a factor in this

·Marshall Loeb named
.~ditor of Columbia
Journa·lism Review
NEW YORK (AP)- The newly· newspapers through the Universal
named editor of the Columbia Jour- Press Syndicate. Pending discussions
· nalism Review hopes to have the with CBS, he will also continue his
journal. often referred to as the indus- "Your Dollars" daily broadcast on
try's conscience. make the media the CBS Radio Network.
more relevant and useful than ever.
Loeb was managing editor of ForMarshall. Loeb, fonner managing tunc from 1986 to 1994, and manag• editor of Fonune and Money maga· · ing editor of Money from 1980 to
' zincs,saidhcalsowillworkto"raise 1984. Between 1956 and 1980 he
· the esteem in which journalists are held various editing and writing posi. held by the publk:"
· tions at Time magazin~ ..
·Loeb succeeds Suzanne Braun
His latest book, Marshall Loeb's
L:evinc. who has resigned the month- Lifetime . Financial Strategies, was
Jy journal after eight years. The published in January by Linle, Brown
change, announced by Joan Konner, &amp; Co.
dean of the COlumbia University
Among Loeb's goals at CJR is to
·Graduate School of Journalism and !lelp print and broadcast journalism
•publisher of CJR, is effective Jan. I. compete wilh the Internet by making
• In a telephone interview Monday. it "more urgent, more relevant and
Loeb, 67. said the job offer "came useful !han ever before."
··totally unexpected, out of the blue."
The journal will continue to play
• - He said he was pleased to be a role in protecting journalists in
'named "editor of the magazine that areas of the wprld where "!hey are
is the preeminent critic and champi- under assault" from political forces,
. on and even consci~nee of journal· he said.
ism."
The CJR was started by the jourLoeb currently writes a personal nalism school in 1961 as a wrilten
finance column for Fortune, a Time watchdog of lhe profession. AI!hough
lgc. publication, that is carried on lhe its paid circulation is Sf'!lall at 30,000,
CompuServe online service. He said - it is w_idely seen as a powerful force
he will resign Jhat columnist position. in journalism.
He intends to· continue writing a
Walter Cronkite has clilled it the
"Your Money'' column syndicated to industry's "conscience: ·

•·

Hours Effective Dec. ·16

.Mon•Sat a.m.-8 p.m:
Sunday p.m. to p.m.

. Acquisitions -g.ine '}ewel'll( .

aa:~~Wdl,.lifi:truta:itla:jjrlia• ..

Four nabbed in
counterfeiting
ring at Columbia
University

ramo

I ·--~

f!le

_v_

of

lpiCC

would

•

same shift as their husbands to real ize how lucky they are. I wish I were·
in. their shoes. Just sign me -- Work·
ing It Out in Michigan
Dear Michigan: Congratulations.
on " working it out " ., but I worry
about a woman who has been aver·;
aging four hours of sleep a night for
12 years. And that's only part of it.
Marriages need nourishment If'
you are walk ing out the door when.
your husband walks in and you barely see your older kids, that second;
paycheck may not be worth it. I say;
take another look, lady.
Send questions to Ann Landers; ·
Cftators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen•
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

AHA urges remembrances
for heart disease and stroke
.victims during holidays

The holiday season can be espe- gathering, include low-fat dishes.
cially hard on the survivors of heart The American Heart Association
disease and stroke, not to mention publishes several cookbooks featurBy JOHN JOHNSTON
the strain on their loved ones.
ing hundreds of delicious, heartCincinnati Enquirer
Wilh !hat the American Heart healthy recipes. Check with your
Association urges re sidents o( local bookstore or library. Remem "Feeling Good at the Holidays"
Meigs Couniy to remember the spe- ber that friends and loved ones who
is lhe theme of the Christmas Seals
cial
stresses on these.members of lhe have lost close friends anq family to
Kids' Drawing Contest
community.
catdiovascular disease may also he
The grand prize winner will feel'
Within seconds, a heart auack, watchi~g their qiets .
pl"'ltY good. Not only "'ill the child
stroke or diagnosis of a heart-related
• Offer to sit with a home-bound
receive a multimedia computer ahd
.iiJness can c)lange a family forever," heart or.stroke survivor so mat care- ' ·
color inkjet printer, but IUs or her
sOlid Dr. Wilma ,Mansfield, Meigs taker can finish shopping, auend
drawing will become the · 1997
County American Heart Association religious services or enjoy holiday .
Christmas Seal, which is mailed to
·president.
get-togethers with friends .
·
30 million U.S, homes.
• Wh~never it snows this winter.
"More than likely you know at
least one person suffering from a offer to shovel the driveway and
Electronic sketch pads will be
cardiovascular
ailment or caring for walk of a neighbor who recently sufawarded to the 53 first-prize wina
survivor
of
cardiovascular
disease. fered a heart auac~ or stroke. Physiners.
Heart disease and stroke are so cal exertion in cold weather increasChildren ages 6 to 15 are eligible.
prevalent in every community, es 1/Ie chance of a repeat auack.
The drawing must be on an 8-by-11including our own, that it is in our
• If a friend or loved one has lost
inch unlined sheet of white paper.
best personal interest to lend a kind someone to heart disease or stroke,
Use markers, crayons or colored
hand to these folks. The favor could consider sending a ·memorial gift to :
A recognition &lt;llriner was IM!ld recently at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center w'th approxl·
pencils.
·
·
mately
1-2!i
peraonaiattandlng
to
honor
caregivers.
:
.
.
·
·
very w~ll be returned to you or a , the Ametican Heart Association in
.
aides,
hom,
delivered
meal
drivers,
mental
health
staff
and
asc.
o
rt
drivers
employed
by
·
In-home
loved one someday."
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the .name of the deceased during Jhe ·
Entries are due by March 31,
The American Heart Assocrauon hobday season. CaJI I-!WU-AHA· ,
. the Meigs County Council on Aging Inc. were honored.
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1997.
In-home aides presented certificates and an angel pin were left to right, front, Mary Morton, Jeri
recommends lhe following for mak- USAt for more information.
.
For every entry recei vOd, the TriFaulkner and Bonnla Searls; second row, April Hud8011, Marie Harris, Sandie Carnahan, Penny
ing the holidays a little happier for a .
•. If you know ~omeone who ts '
arninic Parerits Club, the contest
Klein, Elizabeth Stewart and Darlene Newell; third row, Carol Folmer, Cindy Thomas, Mindy Say·
&lt;:VD patient and his or her caretak- ;particularly stressed or depressed .
sponsor, will donate $1 to lhe Amermour, Mell88a Morrlil, Rose Barnhouse and Patricia Hlndy. In-home aides not pictured Included
about !heir cardiovascular condition
er:
ican Lung Association to help kids · · Tina Butcher, Margaret Johnson, Karen Phalln, Mary Kirby and Gaorglnla Llpecomb.
• Offer to put up and take down or the health of a loved one, suggest
wilh breathing problems.
Also honored wete 'Dan Follrod, Mike Gilmore, Art Conant and Frank Imboden, home delivered
that he or she contact the American ·
outdoor holiday decorations;
aloniJ
with
mental
health
steff,
Kathy
Arnott,
Peggy
Stevena
and
Cathy
Elliott
and
meal
drivers,
Heart
Association for the name of a
• Offer to trim me tree and men
For more information alid an
,
escort
driver,
Mary"Fo!mer.
take it down at the end of the season; support group. The AHA is affiliated.
entry f~. call your local chapter of
• Share baked goods wilh the with Mended Hearts, a support
the American Lung Association.
caretaker so that lhe family does not group for heart : disease survivors
feel pressured to do as much tradi- and their families, as well as Stroke
Connection, a national network ·of
tional holiday baking;
• Visit· shut-ins if· they cannot stroke clubs open to stroke patients
. Motorists now have a toll-free telephone number.they can call to get road
Other mfomJatiO~ .mcluded wtll by tYpe _of constructiOn, length . .
and !heir loved ones. Allhough the
· f
·
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structiOn zone, condii!ons which are affectmg traffic, dates and Urnes of auend religious services or a social emotional support offered through
10 0
they once enjoyed;
~~~.::,~· Warren H. Davies, superintendent of the Ohio sialt! Highway known or antidpated traffic slo":down_s. Only interstate, U.S. and stale function
• If you are invitingsomeone who these groups is imponant year
Patrol announced· today the implementation of a new toll -free telephone routes will be mcluded, w_Ith conSiderauon given to maJor events, such as · once experienced a heart auack, around, ·anxieties Qften run higher
nlllhber which motorists can call to get information on roads. 1&lt;
county faits, concerts, festivals, etc.
stroke or heart surgery to a holiday during the holidays.
The number can be used to provide both road and weather iilformation
.lhrough April I, and construction information between April I and Nov. 14.
. The toll-free telephone number is J-888-20H-ROAD (1 -888-264-7623)
and is now fully operational.
·
·
Sentinel
. The toll-free number will use a voice-mailbox concept. Information will
.
·be, provided to callers by specific county, interstate or city. Road ·a.11d weathClassified•
'er Information will include fot:ecasted weather, conditions of th~ joads, and
992-2156
.any road closures due to the conditions. Road construction information will
·'include only construction zones which will del.ay or adversely a(£ect traffic
..
for two (2) or more days.
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It's our 92nd

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crash

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Birthday Party!

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Historical Society plans ·holiday events

Join us for a

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Cf1QI~TMAC&gt;

GQEETING EDITION
Tuesd.ay, December 24th
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With Wl't"RfhN of h••lly nnd ln1Nt14"t4w. Nt4wkhl~'l hu••• lty
' ..... lire and ~n~ blank..ed with Nnow. ChriNlmnN
•n~mpaM..,. wnrmfh and 11•"1111 eh....r aN Wf! ~heriNh die
·hi4"HNinll!i we'v• Nhaftd fhiN paHf yenr. t'or UN If lllftlnN
N;l,,'lnJ( "fha~lul~ fo you. nur many lrl•nc~H. old nnd new,
wlmNt&gt; kh1d Nupporf. w•"ll nlwayN fl't"D!IIIIr.•. lhtln•
. hll!lllnt'fillll with y•tiu 1!11 our •r.•afeHt plenHIII't"! .·

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Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas'
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th

flood in.
plans to help b.uild an iincrnational
.Pressurized space suits would space station beginning late next
keep everybody safe. but there are year. Engineers still don'! know what
only three on board for the five shut- caused the hatch to become stuck.
tle members.
·
•
"If we got into !hat very remote
~@Y
possibility, then we would work very
Friday
hard to get that hatch opened and
very hard to get it scaled back." astroNEW YORK (AP)- A CalifOi':--'-IJ
naut Tamara Jernigan. one of two • nia judge could iulc as early as Fridesignated spacewalkers. said.
day on OJ. Simpson's quest to get his
Should the hatch refuse to seal · two children back from his ex-in- ·
with the spacewalkers in the airlock laws. the Daily News reported today.
chamber, NASA is considering
And the paper. quoting unnamed
whether the suited astronauts could sources from both sides·. said that
use· bungee cords to strap them- Simpson will s~cced in gettini cusselves into the airlock and return to tody of Sydney, II , and Justin, 8.
Earth that way.
"Things are looking good for
Coming back !hat way would be Simpson. " the. News. quoted an
risky to say the least.
unnamed source as say~na.
Since Nicole Brown Simpson and
Commander Kenneth Cockrell
said Monday night he 'and his crew Ronald Goldman were killed June 17,
I 994, Simpson gave Louis and
aren't dwelling on the possible conJuditha Bl'jlwn temporary custody of
sequences.
" llhink we've cot a clear picture the children.
Simpson left his kids wilh the
of tbe very remote pouibilities of
Browns after his acquiual on murder
uylhinJ JOins WIOIIg." he llid.
NASA wanted to conduct two .charges in October 199S, but sued for
ltl'"Walb u pra::tkle f1llll for ill full cuStody earlier this year. .

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE or BOB
992-2156

_Decision
come

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
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A candlelight walking tour of the chants will follow the musical per- workshop on Wednesday at 6 p.m.
All material will be supplied with
.village, a 'performance of the trinity formancc. ·
There
will
be
a
stop
ai
Hartwell
costs
ranging from $1 to $10. Reserbell choir, and caroling have been
included in this year's annual Christ- Hoose to warm up and enjoy light vations for the workshop may also
mas observance of the Meigs Coun- refreshments . 'The group will next he made by calling 992-38\0.
meer at the Meigs County Museum
The holiday candleJight dinner
ty Historical Society.
on
Butternut
Avenue
for
singing
will
be served at the Museum Friday
Those interested in participating
Christmas
songs,
looking
at
special
at
6:30
p.m. Reservations will he
are asked to meet at the museum on
Dec.113 and leave from there at6:50 exhibits and museum renovations, accepted through Thursday. Cost of
'
.
the dinner is $I 0 a person.
p.m. on the walking tour arriving at and refreshments.
.
To
·
assist
in
planning
the
event,
Breakfast with Santa is also being
Trinity Chureh at 7: 10 p.m, for .the
reservations
lire
to
be
mad~·
by
call··
planned,
according to · Margaret
bell choir · performance. A stroll
'
Parker, Historical Society president.
lhrough down)own Pomeroy to view ing 992-38\0.
Other holiday events at the Muse- for Dec. 14. Detatls of that event
the holiday decorations and revitalization effort of the Pomeroy mer- urn will include a Christmas angel will be announced later.

oo.. it-yourself recipe fo~ a·ld
:fashioned citron jam · .,.
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
· NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
... DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Back
in lhe 1940s and '50s my grandfa•
!her grew citron, and my grandmoth-. er would make citron jam. Would
agyon~ hav~ lhe recipe for it or
:know somewhere I can find citron?
Or perhaps someone makes it so I
can send for it. I' ve asked all over
and no one seems to know anything
about it. -- MERRY, Ishpeming,
Mich.
·
DEAR MERRY: You don't say
. where ·your grandfather lived. If it
was in Michigan, he must have had
· ·a houte with lots of room and a
.soulhern cxposun&gt;. ,•
. , Olherwise, we doubt he picked
,llis own citron for .the jam_his wife
made. The ·"fl~" citron tree is
also krlown as ' 'BUddha's Hand"
8od i~ usually grown as an omamental in southern zones that .-. IIJlllropriate for Jrowi"'..cin-u, fruit Its
pulp contains Jltdi \If no juice and
the pilh is VI!!\' thick pll'd white.
To make t1Ie jan\ (probably a kind
of marmalade), your grandmolher
skinned the fnJit, scraped off the
pilh, sliced the rind in strips and
boiled it along with other citrus

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fruits in a sugar syrup. These days.
you can buy candied citron, particularly around holidays, aS it is widely
. used in fr~itcakes and cookies for
l;loliday baking. , .
This citron has been cubed and
sometimes the peel has been dried
and treated with preservatives; it
would not be appropriate for use in a
marmalade-type jam. At ledst we
don't think it would. (Re ader~. let us
linow.)
A friend of Anne 'and Nan 's has a
veritable citrus grove in hi~ southfacing glass-enclosed patio in Vermo11t By midwinter he has lemons,
limes, oranges and tangelos to give
away. We're sure he co11ld grow citron as well. So can you .
. .l ·
This coming spring your nursery
or garden center can order you a citron tree from the Monrovia Nursery·
CO., 18331 E. Foothill Blvd., Asuza,
CA 91720 or call Monro~i~ at I800-999-9321 for the distributor
nearest you.
·
Plant it in a 6-gallon pot, .Ji ve it
.outside all summer, bring it ii\'comc
fall, and place in a south-facifia win. dow. You should be able to )ilrvest
in January 1999. Please not,,Monrovia Nursery Co. is wholesale only.
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honored----

of work. Since I also have a 3-yearold at home, going back to bed is out
of the question. I barely sec my
older kids, and my husband and I
have no social life at all.
My friends think I'm lucky
because I get to stay home all day.
They don 't know the half of it. My•
mornings are like 'their evenings
after a hard day of work. I am too
tired to drink my c off~e. let alone
find the energy to clean the house
properly . I have no time for myself,
and neither does my husband. As
soon as he walks in the door from
work, I walk out.
l'm not complaining, Ann . We've
manage4 !his routine for 12 years .
and know e.xactly how to do it. I just
want those women who .work the

~atrol irnp.l~m~~D,§." tol, ~fr~~~-;r?~.d Jnfor~ation . servi~f:n-

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~ASA looking at options in case of emergency
: SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- The jammed hatch that has kept
space shuttle COlumbia's astronauts
indoors could create big problems ir
u emergency spacewalk is needed
prior to landing.
No emergency spacewalk has ever
been needed in tl)e I 5 years of shutde hiSIOI)'. But •ihatch has never got·
ten atuck before either.
•· One niahtmlre scenario being disconed is what to llo if the carg~ b~y
doors for some reason refute to close
on tandinJ day. scheduled for Friday.·
Since tbe five crew members like' Jy_ could not survive tbe fiery plunge
dJrouJh tbe atmosphere wilh the
docfl open,,IIOIIICOIIC would have 10
open tbe IIUCk lwch, even if it
- t delaoyiiiJ it, to shut the doors
bylllad.
.
lu widl.U IJIIICCW..U. UlrOnlUII
_ . • lirlodt dwnber wilh one
bifl:b openinJ to the cabin and the
Cllllilr 10 die C11J0 bay and ~ · If
lbfy oouJt1 llql M8l tile SpKO-Iide
lllldl •
apeainJ il. the ..,_;
WJ1bn al!dd notre-en!« the cabin,

enough on kids who learn a parent is
cheating. They should not be conscripted to "help."
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
works a 9-to-5 shift. and I work
from 6 p.m. until 2:30a.m. We have
done this for years because with
three kids, it helps save the cost of
child care. Our friends assume we
are Jiving the Life of Riley. 1Vfay I
till them in, please?
I average four hours of sleep a
night. My husband comes home
after an eight-hour day of work, has
dinner wilh the kids , helps wilh their
homework, takes· care of baths and
reads them stories at b&lt;.dtime. I
wake up, get the kids off to school,
·clean the house, do the laundry, start
dinner and prepare for another night

.

Family of four found
LONG POND, Pa. lAP) - For
hours. hundreds of rescuers trudged
through mountains•. gullies, woods
and swamplands searching for a family of four whose plane had run out
of gas and crashed somewhere in the
Poconos.
Pouring rain and freezing temperatures made an aerial search impossible. so rescuers had to scour the
area grid by grid.
· By 4 a.m. Sunday, the. fog wa' so
thick !hat searchers couldn 'I sec a few
feet in front of them. They'd been so
close. in fact, the family had heard
them and shouted for help in vain.
The search was called oiT for the
11ight as hopes dimmed.
Six hours later, ahout 16 hours
lifter the crash, lhe rescuers found the
Milford, N.J .. family alive.
"It was just absolute euphoria
among the searchers," said Harry
Jtobidoox, emergency services dircc·
!Or for Monroe County. "You suw a
lot of hard and grown firemen with

a lot of stress, not to mention the
~guilt that followed. If that s i~th ­
grader hopes to have any kind of
relationship with her father in the
future, she must be honest with him.
-- Still Regretting It at 24
"
Dear Regretting: I disagree. Children should not be put in the middle
of these family tragedies. It Wft!'
wrong of your father to blame you
for not telling him about your moth"l's deception. ll'.s time you stopped
ktcking yourself.
That sixth-grader should confront
her mother and tell her she is aware
'bf the affl!ir. The girl should Jet her
mother know she will not VOLUNTEER !his information to her falher,
but should he question her, she will
not lie to protect Mom. It's tough

·vour holiday
~~Caregivers
artwork could
~
.be the next
Christmas Seal

Open Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
Saturdays 9
p.m ..
Sunday p.m. to p.m.

NEW YORK (AP) - Four men
· were 'nabbed in a counterfeiting ring
that used a Columbia University color copier to spit out bogus $20s, lhe
Secret Service said.
'
· Three Columbia students and one
olher man had copied or passqd
$80,000 in the phony bills, 'and
authorities say they were preparing to
pass at least $75',000 more in bogus
bills.
·
Brian Gimleu, director of the
Secret Service New York office, said
Monday the phony money was passable.
"Businesses were accepting !hem.
They were gOod enough for that," he
told The New York' Times.
''I'd have to say, in my opinion,
that they were fair copies. " the agent
told the paper. "They spent some
time in preparation to make t~cse."
The Daily News reports today.
based on a federal criminal ,comtears on !heir checks."
plaint: the ring wa.• born last sprin~
Gary and Marie Knapp and their when Clifford Evans, 23. of Manchildren, 5-ycar-old Annie and 2· hallan. a Columbia student on leave.
year-old lsa, remained hospitalized visited Edward Olulenu, 25. who wa.&lt;
. Monday in stable condition at the working in the university print shop
P01:ono Medical Center. The family and had him run off some twenties.
declined to speak with reponcrs.
The Secret Service hcgun spoiling
The family had been on their way the money in May at a Park Avenue
hom.e from visiting relatives in Ma"- South har.
·
achusctts for Thanksgiving. Around
The fcdCral indictment said Evans
5:30p.m. Saturday, Knapp, a veter- recruited Keith Blackwell, 25. and
an pilot, called the tower at the Derek Warren, 23. of Bruuklyn. to
Lehigh Valley International Airport, sell the hills.
ahout 30 miles awar:
.
Sccrcl Service ICt:hnicians anaHe said his Cherokee An: her was lyzed the Cqlumhia cash. and .traced
low on fuel and was directed to a its roots to the printing oflicc in the
ncarhy airport, hut he couldn't make basement of the university's Journalit through lhe fog, wind and rain.
ism School.
Trees. sheared on both wings and
In August, according to the News.
the landing gear as the plane crushed Secret Service agents found a man
to the ground. sma,hing into a foot- passing some of the faux'ca.•h and he
thick oak tree that mangled the pro- agreed to cooperate.
peller and engine and· shattered the
Blackwell was arrested November
frunt windshield.
- 25 allegedly selling $1 ,060 in bills for
·Knapp activated an emergency $300. and the other three were arrestbeacon
. ed in the following days·.

aft~r . plane

instance, When a child is placed in
this kind, of situation, she has an
obligation to tell her father, especially since he is the one wbo stands to
be hurt the most. Confronting lhe
mother would probably result in
denial.
Three years ago, my mother
ma&lt;le my brother and me promise
not to tell our father she was .leaving
him. For four months, I lived in that
house and never said a word to my
father about it He never got over lhe
feeling of betrayal when he carne
home, found the house stripped of
everything and then learned that my
brother and .1 had know n 'for several
weeks that Mom was going to leave
him .
Keeping that secret pu t me under

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lr•F .1!¥JP:,Ilf.n ·'*'!":~!¥"'-: ~·F :l!¥..,:1!ijl;; :1!¥41 ,,,~
Chnstmas Hours

Anttlft

By ANN LANDERS

morning. Others likely to take the lhe plaintiffs have used effectively liS nesses as criminalist Dennis Fung
stand this week arc Simpson's ex- diiiJiage control for such earlier wit- and e~-Detective~ Philip Vannaner.
lawyer and now-estranged friend
Robert Kardashian, business lawyer
and friend Leroy "Skip" Taft, former
girlfriend Paula Barbieri and several
Simpson golfing partners.
·
If the judge limits cross-examination- as he has done in the pastthe plaintiffs say they should be done
a.m~-6
with !heir case by Jate'this week or
1
5
·early next week, having called some
70 witnesses in a.linle more than a
month.
.
· Plaintiffs are also likely to limit
9
the testimony of Cowlings and
dozens of others so as to avoid
1
5
lengthy cross-examinations by Simpson's lawyers. · .
Lawyers can cross-examine a witness only on information brought out
114-112-8250a
during direct examination - a rule ~ 91 MHI SbNt, Middleport, OH

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S)'lldkllc IIMI ~

1110n S}'hdicMe.. ~

Plaintiffs h~pe to complete Simp-on case this· week ·
SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP).PlaintiiTs in the O.J. Simpson wrongful·dcath trial hope to complete their
case this week. ~alling witnesses
close to the defendant -· from AI
Cowlings to golfing buddies - for
brief appearances only.
The plaintiffs arc mining Simpson's former - and current- innercircles for witnesses who in I0 or 15
minutes on the stand can contradict
specific statements Simpson made
during-his two-and-a-half days of testimony. '
The jury returns from its Thanks· ·
giving break today. The jury recessed
last week after hearing . Si!llpson,
under questioning by plaintiffs'
lawyers, deny that he stabbed his exwife Nicole .Brown Simpson and
Ronald Goldman.
Cowlings. Simpson's friend since
boyhood and the driver during the
slo\\!-spced Bronco chase, was
expected to testify as early as this

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Chil~ren shouldn't be go~between in marital problems

Federal judge throwS out
Keating fraud conviction .
By E. SCOTT RECKARD
investors who lost their life savings
AP Buel- ~
on junk bonds purchased at Lincoln
LOS ANGELES- Charles Kcat- Savings and Loan and had thought he
ing Jr., a central tigule in the IJIOSI had been cQnvicted offraud once and
notorious savings and loan debacle'of for all.
the 1980s, has won a new federal tri"Terrible. I ~011'1 kriow how they
a1 because jurors h!!d learned of his can reverse the cJwtes like they are
prior fraud convictionl in state court. doing, " said Evangeline Ivy, 7S, of
U.S. District Judge Mariana Glendale, Calif., upon learning of the
Pfaelzer on Monday set aside Keat- decision.
ins's fe4eral conviction, calling
Mrs. Ivy and her husband had
knowledge of the state conviction plaooed to pay off their mOrtgage in
prejudicial. The ruling means Kcat- - June 1989 when bonds bought from
ing, accused of financial sophistry American Continental Corp.. Lincoln
!hat cost investors millions, is now Savings's parent, matured.' Instead,
again presumed innocent
American Continental tiled ·hankThe ruling stunned elderly ruptcy, Lincoln was seized by rcgu-

1996

•• 1 •.

SPECIAL ONE DAY

Celebration
OJ Generations

ASK ANNE • NAN

December 4th,

~996

at our

STUMPED; Catheran Barclay of
Bell Buckle, Tenn., writes: " Ahyone
know how to get the wires out of an
old electric blanket? These old blankets are ~o much softer than the new
(nonelectric) ones. I have two that
need stripping. " We'd love to know.
Both Anne and Nan have old electric ·
blankets stored away our attics,
awaiting the millennium, and we
agree with Catheran that' !hey are
softer, and even without electricity,
warmer than many of the non-wool
blankets you can buy today.
.STUMPED: Remember the sock
holders, those little plastic di~ks
about the size of a half-dollar with
the center cut in the shape Of a star,
that used to be available just a~t
everywhere? When you sorted your
laundry, you put the tops or toes of
1he matched pair of socks through
the star-shaped opening, and the
Sock Ghost was unable to spirit
away· one of the pair. We can't fin a
these terrific little gizmos any more
and neither can many of our readers.
Any suggestions on a source?

Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains
locations.
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* Cake and Punch

'* Register to Win... ..
-A I75th Meigs County Anniversary Coverlet
· A first Editiqn Book of Meigs County Ilistory

So come in...it's sure to be an historical occasion.

Your Bank#n~···
Fs

Farmers
Bank
&amp;
Company
Sevin~

21 1 Wtts1 Second St reet
P.O. 8o•026

Member F. OJ.C.

Pomet"ov. OH 4'!J7tli
6l • IW2-2136

42120 S1ate Route 7

P.O. 8c»c Jl9
Tupper$ Pk::ina. OH 45783
61 1l (()67·3 10 I

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Pige 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Breeders urge.parents to consider
carefully before adoption of Dalmatians
By ANITA MANNING
house the kids have learned the dogs
USA TODAY
a."e energetic."
They also get big. "If you love to
Parents, don't do it.
Your children have seen the stars have a dog in Yc:&gt;ur lap and can tolerof" 101 Dalmatians," which opened ate a 60-pound dog," she said,
Wednesday. And now they want a "they'll be in hog heaven."
dolled little Pongo or Perdy of their
Dalmatians demand a lot of allenvery own.
.
lion. said breeder Sharon Boyd of
Resist, said Christina Jackson, ·. Rosenberg, Texas. "They require ·
rescue coordinator for the Dalmatian almost constant people contact."
Club of Amtrica, who fears she,will
Don '!think you ·can just put them
wind. up having to find homes for outside. "Stick him in the back yard
those puppies in just a few months. and he's bored to tears," Boyd said.
·"From my experience in rescue, I A bored Dalmatian is a menace, she
can draw a picture," she said. "You warns.
!)ave a parent with a toddler or two,
"He gets destructive. He digs
ages 3 or 4, and they want a Dalma· holes to China, digs up the cable TV.
; tian because they ' re cute...
He eats the shrubs. He eats the
"Th.is parent probably works," screens off the windows.' He barks
Jackson said, "which means when until the neighbors call the police,
they gel hol!le. they barely have time then he barks some more."
· for a 3-year-old. So now, guess
Reputable breeders, she said, do a
wha\7 They have another one. Rais- whole lot of pre-adoption counsel·
ing a growing Dalmatian is like hav- ing before selling a Dalmatian. If
. ing another toddler...
. that's not done. "the dog will come
~ Each time 'the animated version back. People will call and say
of the Disney movie has been you've sold me ·a maniac."
released, · Dalmatian breeders say,
Some "backyard breeders" there has been a run on puppies dog owners who are not professionfollowed, in about six months, by an al breeders - are getting ready for
overflow of Dalmatians dropped off the expected puppy craze by pulling
at dog pounds and shellers. The cur- male and female Dalmatians togeth·
rent film, with live puppies. will pre- er without considering health ,
sent even more temptation, they say. behavior or other factors important
As .adorable and appealing as to the breed, said Forrest Johnson of
· they are .as puppies, said · bre~cr . Davenport, Iowa, a dog show judge
· Karen Darling of Bear, DeL. Dalma- · and Dalmatian breeder for nearly 30
· lians are more than a handful to · years.
. own. "They're nonnally very good
"I do not approve of it. " he said.
1 with children, but they can be such
"I do not ~pprove of just indiscrimi.-·
encrg.ct'ic dogs, liulc kids gel bqwled nate brced1ng ofthc.Dalmatian , peri·

·oo."

over."

Darling has children ages 6 and
The only good reason to mate
I I. "The 6-year-old has been around . Dalmatians, he said. is "lo try to
Dalmatians since age 2. But in my make heucr Dalmatian' puppies, and

by that I mean temperament should problems. About 25 percent are deaf
be of paramount importance, in one ear, and 12 percent are deaf in
because children are involved."
both. "Most responsible breeders, if
The breed was originally used to they have a deaf puppy, will have it
guard horse-drawn carriages, "so put to sleep at the age of 6 weeks,"
naturally the ones selected were the Darling said. This may seem cruel,
ones that would guard and be cross , she said, but it prevents possible
and bite. and chase," he said. ''My greater cruelty.. " Dais are hard to
goal is to breed a preuy Dalmatian train, even if they hear," she said.
that is sound moving and is friendly. · "A deaf dog can be asleep, and if a
I do not approve of pumping out child comes up and pats it and Star·
puppies just to meet the demand &lt;1f des it: it can snap right at the child's
people that may be impulse buyers. face level. Or, if they get loose, you
·Impulse buyers are going to cause can't call them back, and they can't
puppies to end up in the pound,"
hear a car coming."
That's exactly what Roger Caras,
Other health problems common
president of the American Society 10 the breed include urinary tract
for the Prevention of Cruelty 10 Ani· problems and skin allergies.
mals, is afraid of. "About six to
"We want parents to be ·aware in
eight months from now, the shellers advance, to understand that adding a
in this country will'be killing tens of puppy to a family is adding another
thousands of teen:age Dalmatians," member to the family," said Leslie
he said, "because when the dog eats Sinclair of lhl' Humane Society of
your kid there's a tendency to turn it the United Stales. "It's a commit·
in to a shelter. This is a biting breed. ' ment that ' can last 15 to 20 years .
Dalmatians lend to bite,"
They can be wondetful pels, but
He said "puppy mills," or breed- they take a lot of work."
ing faims that, produce large numAnimal behaviorist Suzanne
bers of tillers, have been "gearing Hens of Denver warns would-be
up for some time to get the maxi: puppy buyers to be realistic.
mum number of Dalmatian puppies
into pel stores in time for Christ·'People need 10 be prepared to
mas.''
make this animal a part .of their
Unscrupulous puppy fanners. arc lives, " she said. "They're not going
not concerned about the integrity of to retrieve the newspaper and turn
the breed br what happens to them on the coffee maker. (As puppies)
after money ·- $500 or more - · they're going to be nipping at the
changes hands. Caras said. "Can kids, destructively chewing things,
you imagine, with a difficult breed peeing and pooping.
Ia begin with. and you get puppy
mill puppies• Puppy mills can tum
"If people arc not ·prepared for
any breed into a genetic nightmare. that," she said. "don't get a dog. Get
The potential is appalling."
a pel rock and paint black spots on
Even the hest breeding practices it.,.
can produce Dalmatians with health

Is drug for eye disease linked to
.

.

.

By PETER H. GOTT, ¥-D.
bEAR DR. GOIT: About five
years agp I was given prednisone for
an incurable eye disease called
uveitis that caused almost total loss
of sight Over the years, the dosage
has been reduced, and my· doctor
decided the disease was in rcmission. I began a slow withdrawal
from the drug. Since then, I've experienced horrible joint pain, and noth·
ing I lake relieves the ·symptoms.
BloOd tests show no evidence of
arthritis in my system.
.
DEAR REAbER: Certain fotrns
'of chronic arthritis' can also affect
. the eyes. If, for example, the uveitis
is treated with prednisone (a
siCroid). the joints may remain painless because inflammation all overthe body is suppressed by the drug ..
!once a person reduces the dose of
] predniSone (or d"conllnues the
medicine), the joint pain may reappear in spades.
Despite your normal blood tests.
J'il hel th~t you have some type of

underlying arthritis, .sueh as lupus or
rheumatoid arthritis. Raise this issue
with your family physician, who
should be able to sort things out or
refer you to a rheumatologist for further assistance. ·
· Prednisone is a wonderful drug.
It probably saved your vision. However. it causes troublesome side
effects, such as diabetes, hypertension, cataracts and osteoporosis.
Therefore. you don't want to usc it
unless you really nl:cd it. AI this
point, you should focus on the ca~se
of your arthritis.
To give you more information. I
am sending you a copy of my Health
Repon " Understanding Ostcoarthritis." Other readers who would like a
eopy .should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed. stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 2017. Murray Hill Station.
New York, NY 10156. Be sure 10
mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTI: I have always
suffered from cold sores. but the last
few years. l~e sores arc on the inside

of my mouth. They get so painful
that it is difficult to cat and talk. I
have brought this to. the allention of
my family doctor and dentist. My
doctor prescribed Zovirax. I have
gollen no relief from it, and it doesn't seem to quicl&lt;en the healing
process. Someone suggested I take
lysine. Would that help?
DEAR READER: Recurring
ulcerations in the mouth and on the
lips arc usually caused by the herpes
virus, which can successfully he
treated with prescription anti-viral
drugs. such as Zovirax. However, in
some cases. the cause is unknown.
A few years ago, there was,a ·flurry of interest in using lysine pills. an

•

RACINE ·· Racine Chapter 134
OES installation of officers. Monday. 7:30p.m. Refreshments.

J

ROCK . SPRINGS .. Salishury
Township Trustees meeting Mon·
day. 6 p.m. at the township garage.

\

I

POMEROY .. Meigs High
School Band Boosters meeting
Monday. 7 p.m. in the band room. ·
RACINE -- .~acine Village Council regular ~essi~n Monday. 7 p.m. at
Star Mill Park·.

MIDDLEPORT .. ·Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM installation of
officers Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. 50 and
25 year · awards to lie presented.
Master Masons invited.
ALFRED .. Orange Township
Trustees meeting Tuesday. 7:30p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osie Foil rod.
CHESTER .. Chester Co~ncil
J2J . Daughters of America. Tu~s­
day. 7 p.m. at hall . Quarterly hirlh·
day .to he ohserved. New officers to
he nominated.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport
Literary Cluh meeting Wednesday. 2
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Dewey
Horton . Mrs. Evercu Hayes will
review "Undaunted Courage" by
. Stephen E. Ambrose.
POMEROY .. "A Seasolf of
Love" will be presented by Sue
Matheny. director; and the Coolville
Community Choir at . the St . Paul
Lutheran Church Wednesday at 7:30 .
p.m.

jpints?
PETER
GO'IT, M.D.

calendar-----___,.-~

Methudi&lt;t Church. Thursday. 7 p.m.;
Sue Matheney. director.
FRIDAY
ATHENS .. Fourth quarter.
Regional Advisory Council. Area
Agency on aging. Friday. II a.m ..
Athens City Rccrcatinn Center. 733
E. Stale Street. Athens.

Drivers, Ho...
Owners And
Mobile ·Home
Owners Special· ·
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and tess costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge you less for your·
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even ·more
with our special multi-policy
discounts.

'

~ch0t1l .

Monday, December 23rd
•
In

Attorney William Safranek

( 16 years of age or younger)

Will ~e published

Agncultur~•l Society for llJ97 were

.

•lt.:ctcc.J alla .. t week', mcdm
~.
.
They arc Dan Smnh. prcs1uen1:
Dan Smith. vice preSident: Addalou
Lewis. treasurer; and Dchhic Wat·

...

The Daily Sentinel

!'ion. sc..,:rctary.

.

PREREGISTRATION SET
S!udents who wnul&lt;l like lC&gt; pre·
rcgi'slcr l«w winter q~anc~ c.:Ja~M:~ ut
the University nf R1n Grande and
Rio Gr~ndc Community Collc~c
may do •o until Thursday, Dec. 19.

register for winter quarter classes

Prepaid

arc asked to sign up at the open registration planned fur ~an. 2. The
npcn registration period will he held
frum I p.m. until 6 p.m. on Jan. 2 in
the atrium nf the John W. Berry Fine
and Performing Arts Center.
Students with questions may contact biane Clark in the records officer m Rio Grande, 614-245-7209,

FRIDAY, DEC.16, AT 3 P.M.

PROFIT I LOss
• STA1EIIEHT
1~/85 THROUGH 11/3111111
IIEIGS CO. FAIR
CATEGORY DESCRIP110N

1+7210••••_ ................ 45.00 '
1.J.T310ol..llgll Sarvlcaa....
............,_ •• ,._,,_,_".10JSO

..}.

1-2-7330-Velt!I'*J
.

1-.2·~.....

.............;..,_,_,.. 15,111
1·2·7350-Ride

1·1-IZ»&gt;HIICIII Pe-...
............................ 37,313.24

50

'

'.

1·1·131D-ConCIIIlona...... ·
.. ;.......................... 24,277.00

1·1·13IG-IIulldlng s,-...

1·1·1~ lllln21.40

·t·1·1MO 8p11d F...........

.,
c
0

if

--e

...

~pd.'

........................_, 1,8511.00

........................... uoooo

R. L. HOLLON
·TRUCKING

871.00

DUMP TRUCK
SI;RVICE

1-2·71311-AM..u.lng

·--

-

-'

-·

;:I '

&lt;Jl
P..Q)
"0 00

0"'

.

..... t:

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ae:
I

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&gt;.

o..c:

-u

0

_go .

-."',

t:

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o.u
.D .....

1111ntentince ........... 1,000.00
2•1·2140-siltke Reclng......
·
·
21-• 00

a:·;·:z150:':i~'~j'or ·~elr

.2

Q)

"'
... "'..

. &lt;A

"0

c: '

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_, ............................. 112.25
1· A ""1A_ftlrecl01'8

-..........................
1-H130-Grounde

c;

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&lt;Jl

"0
"0

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

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c:

......................331.51
1+t14Admln iExplnNe

:::1
0

_,.._.,,_,a_o_oooooooo111.10
1......1~111oe lolppllol...

E

&lt;

.....................--.00

. 1•1·14tO•Iuppllll a
IIIII dill 'Giht •••- ...- ..11.04
1+711NoDirtolly._..,_

Deadhne: Friday, Dec. I6 at 3,p~a

.,.,.~-·---·-7,111.44

ask for Rick

·s.-IY ollfC

·

111 Court St.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

.·bdlll .... _ _

•'

Ute Home Car BusinellS

n.

•
•
'

.

2·2·1410·Suppllea I
llllt.tllla ..............- .... 210.00
2-2-711~ .. 1,000.00
Za2•7220-fll08

FuUy814-'117-44111
80M00-3040

All Yard Saltl Must Bt Paid In
Advenct. Otadllne: 1:OOpm the
• before the ad It to run. Sunday &amp; Monday edition- 1:OOpm
Friday.

SI'IM Ul'

80

Public Sale

AIIIIICAI

and Auction

IS IUSI

Rick Pearaon Auction Company.
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service . Licensed

LIMIAUH
GOOD FOR IllS

te.O,Ohio &amp; West Virgin ia, 304 · ·
1
713-5785 Or 304·77l-5447.

COUIITm

90 . Wanted to Buy

1 (900) 37(1 83111
Ext.·1851
$2.99/mln. llual Ill 18+
Touch-tonePhPROCALLCO.

Ablolut1 Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofseta,

602 114-7420

Diamond,, ,Anti(lue Jewelry, Gold
Alngt, Prt·, i30 U. S. Currency,
Sftfllng, EIC. Acquisitions Jewelry
•1M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

Clean l8.te Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pon tiac, 1900 East·
ern AventJe, Gathpolis.

CR 30, RICino, Ohio

J &amp; O't Auto Pan s. Buy1ng sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304·

AWf1.te, Galllpofis, 814-448·2842.

MomlngSW RCIJ

713-5033.

oRoplng •Wreathe
•swaga .
·
-Grave Blanketa
•Artificial Polntattla

Small dozer, diesel. 6·way blaCe,
814·1192-8035.

' rap doll&amp;r· antiques, furniture,
01111, china, clocks, gold , sliver,
COins, WIIIChes, estates, old stone
jars, old blue &amp; while dishes, old
waad boxea, milk Dollies, Meigs

•s.oo ..,

·--

949-2115

Counrr Advertisement, Osbv

Martin, 114·992· 7441 .

Wanted To Buy : Little Tyke!
Kllchtn Set, Wotkshop, Plarhoult, Poulble Any Other Uule
Tyke Toyt, Pleaae Call 814-245-

11117.
W•ntld To Buy: We Buy Auto'a
Al'r/ Concltlon. 614-388·9062, Or
........At.Rt

Weekends

w ..~

,

Help Wanted

110

• ATIN: Poinl Pleasant' Poatal

Poliliona. Perfnanent lull time for
cltt'kiiOrllrl. Full Banelils . for
•~11m, application and salary tnlo
call : (830)908 · 2350En3B70 .
tlon&gt;lpm.

•01111 IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

Riggs Christmas Trees

at IVYDALE
ANGELS
. ' LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES .
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS;
UVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
. POINSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
·
2 Mllu ·North of Silver Bridge on SA 7
10·41M-F; 1-6 Sundoy
Phone 44&amp;-4530

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
~..

,NewHomea
'•Garagaa
·Complete
Remodeling
$top &amp; Compttli
FREE
ESTIMATEES .

985 4473

30&lt;1-875-1429.

Babyailt8f needed Slarting Ja~
111. 2 or 3 csaya a week, must be
1 non·amoktr, relurencas re-

qulntd. Col 304-875--.
t

CIRCLE MEl
Ger A Head Start On Chrlatmaa.
Appll' Today, Start Tomorrow.
$1!40 ·$325 Weokly. Call Uaa Toll

Fr• ~11188-&lt;32: 7378.

DAVIS ·
CONTRAOING
oOeckl
•VInyl Siding
olnsured .
FrwEtllri,.IN

.992-6711
CHRISIIW IIIII
15·110

.......
"'Wed

1/2 ...

992·6071

CLINIC~l

·

SUPERVISOR

tar Mental Haahh
health care proheallh and svbatance abuae services, seeks a
Hcented psycholOgist or lhera·
pill to provide cilnltal supervision fO Mason Counrr. WV , pro~
grams and to provjde clinical .
urvleea to adullt and children in ......, .
oulpl1iet~t ttnlng or With contraclual ·aget~ci41t. Requires Master's
deQrH in psychology, counsel-

Ing. or social WOJk plus two years
experience and professional li·
cense or license eligibility. Excellent benefits. Submil resume
lncl~ing talary requllltiTiflrtls 10.

' PRESTERA CENTER

Human Reaourcesl

Mason CountY Supervisor

P.O. Box 11089
Huntington. wv 25705
EOEIAA
Campueer Usere Needed : Work
awn tlours. l20k to SSOkiYr 1-

100·348· 7• 86 " 508.

Authorized AGA Distributor
; Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servi!;es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
·,Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dreving • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, RaiHngs, Pallo FumHure, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuflll

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Campuler Ultra Needed . Wofk .

Own Houre. 20K To ISOK; 1Yr. 1.
100 3&lt;8 7186 ~ 1113.

"No Job Too Large or: Too Small"
We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-!!173
FAX 77~1
1~
Skeft
WV

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Year&amp; Experience •

Moooouoo
, .00

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

.......

................................. 510.00

2-2-7250-Tr-*
....nlenai'IOI ........ua 1.-o.ao

2·2·7210-0thor

roc•

5 ladles "T:o Sell Avon,

..,.,.......,,,.,.,,,,,.,.,,aoo?loOO

24-71ZO N&amp;UUI p·pw Ada •

..........................- ..... 110.00

1·1·7130•Bfdg. I lite
Rlllollra .......................lll.70
2-2-77»LLHHffty

.

lnillflnce

. ..
1,

I'Nllllum,

-.oo

·-

. GRUESER'S'
.'

. ·~··
lollY~ ... truc:k

'

• truck pakCing,
1111nor mecillnlcll

-.oo

1...11 A

LondaclpoStock
(Ptantllfler Cln1....,..)
Spruce and White Ptne
Slit.
BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sll.'a I Sun.'a tiU Chllllmll
S1. RL 325, O.nvllll, Oh.
Ph. 7424148 or 182·7285

Call 614·949·2600

1D,IIt.lt
1+7111 . . . . . Gille_.. .

·The .Daily Sentinel

Hlecllon olbllutllully
ahMred tr- up to 1411.
PrlcH $111-120. Coil lor
whollllll prlcM.

2·2·1420-Grilundt llolnt·

1+71............... 1,121.80 Rllllaane -···--····.....
1+71a.llllpholle..,71 · 1·2·t310·Junlor l'alr
1+71• I wu-11.011 t~ut~~~~ .................-.1,111.10
l·l·IIIO·Junlor
1+1 ,_.II T, . _ , _..

Mall or bring the entry form:

....., lntp&amp;CtloM
S.nloc: ~lttan .,.._,..

Open
Evenings and

Chrlalmas Trees
We hive on tnrceltent

Remodeling
Cuatorn Design
"We treat your home like
our home'

1 2 IIOtFII'Inoter Out .......
............................ ~. 21,000.00
1·2·1730-Refunct or

Suppllea ......:.· ··-····..· • · •

~

0

_.3,-.•

Ope..tton Fund ...... a,ooo.oo

12I2M 1 mo.})d

NeW Home

Premium . . - ...
1-2~ Junior Fotr

IIIIIC •

949-2734

Resldenllal
Commetdal

1·2·1320-Junfor . l'olr

.1·2·1710·0ther

Skin·Cut·Wrap

We specialize in:

Premiums, Troph ..15,180.21

explf'IIH ................,a.OI7.81

.

Maplewood
Lake

S
C41nstrudlon ~
"'"'~
Co.
'F.Il

1•2-t110·Stnlor ·Felr
Judgea .................... 1,105.00
1·2·tl20·8inlor Folr

I.W,rovement .......... :1.200.00

, ..:oooooooooooooooooo-ooooo 2;750,0Q

.,.
·"'- .,."' - .,..
"'
·c."'
c

C op,llal

1 2 1DJO.Grounde
~ ........... 7,511.51
1 2 tota Other SllliiM ....

"0

t:l

P~ ...................tt24.11

D41Po1ttl................- .. 172.50

·

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepor1
&amp; VIcinity

(614) 667-:14831

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

at

. ~~Ollr4-~

.·

,.,............................. 500.00

. 3·1·221G-County Senior
Fllr MoneY................. IOO.OD
1·1·2230-County Jr Fair

Tollllncoml.....250;4111.31
I!J;anaet
1+41110 lltiiW'Y Salery.

c.

c:

............................. 11,000.00,

14-IIMO-IIIIINit

E&gt;qMMe ..................... 100.00

2·1~

Monday edition · 10 :00 a.m. Satutdly.

lervloe

'======~ ...• =·==C=a~ro:l:a:nd=D:av:id=R=ig:gs=== .. :.o:."cl11ng
oNew Conltrucllon

1.z.101D-Prlnolpoi/N-...

Aellnllu-nt......2,tl0.00

2•1·2240

z"'
."'
.,c.:

....

1·2·7HO-Copltol Outtoy·

.............................. 5,000.00 . 1'rOphlea Etc. .......... 4,241.74
2·1-21104enerat
1-2-t21D-C.- . Judgeo ..
. Op....aone .............. 3,411.80
.................................. 122.00
2·1·21:.Tnlck
1~

E

;:I

Q) ·

!·1.-othor
Supp..4,354.10
1·13300-SollofNolee....;.

u-~

.,

...

·"'C'

Q)o
;&gt;

• .........'!''''"'""'"'"'4,240.00

~

Q)

Q)

u

...............- ............ 1,470.01

c:

~€ "

..,,lion ·

Clllnlng .
RolncoPe, Suw..,. I Full
LIM of Accuea IlL

..

Pick up dlec:aidecl •
appllll-. blltte.ioll,
lllln!f-.o&amp;
motor blockl.
814-992-4025 8 arn-e

1'2·7140-~apltol Outlay.
Equtpntent -ooooooooooooOo424.00
1·2·71110-Copltel Outley•

Eltctrlcai .................... 411.M ·

1·1-3140-P-.........

.c

(,)

South of
Tuppers
Plains on St.
Rt.7

Deer Cut

98m·5pm

Sunday 1 pm • 5 pm
7ru eoff« &amp;Coo~

...

................................... 111.01

.............................. 3,,.e1.00

1·1-3130 Spon-hlpo.....

c.

2Y. Miles

lruintJ Christmas ",Sbrso•

Sprays ............. $18.95
OPEN DAILY

Chester, Ohio .

1-2-7t3llllotorlr.htclu ...

attt.·.........._ .....~....... 201.1Ct

::!

0

....

ofUV Rays

Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree-for you so
no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.
RIGGS TREE FARM
39507 Rocksprings Road (at comer of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702

Monume~t

985-4422

.............................. ,3,447.10

1·1·1--toNge Rerul...
"""'00
""'Y'''"''''''"''"""""' 1. - .
1·1·1~ Clrt - . . . .

-·u- ·--"' ..
·--

&lt;Jl

-

-""''
·--

"0

.....

rJJ

•-••ooooooooooooooooooooooooo3J113.11'

:::1

~

"C
Q)

1·1·1850-Stall Rent............

&lt;A

rJ)

&lt;Jl .

I-1·1831W1entei-Calpp

0....

1·2·7120-llotor v-.e

Repllr........................... 142.23
1·2·7130·Bidg l Site.
Repalra••••. ~ .............4,314.11
. 1•2·7'7»Uiblllty'

Poinsettia
Baskets .$7.95-$17.95
Christmas
Cactus... $1.75 or 21$3
Cui Trees ~ ........ $8-$18
Small Holly Trees $2.50
Wreaths .... $4.95-$9.95
·Grave .
Blankets .......... $19.95
Cemetery .
Vases................. $9.95

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

•................._ ........ 3,14113
' 1-2·711o-Repll,...
Equlpment ..................:78.24

lneui'IIICe................ 5,841.00
1·2·71170-Roni-Equlpmenl.

·

E"""'&amp;w...,Mi~~ews

1-2·7410-0111or PurchMed

•••••••• ;..................... 4,G:II.OO

.....................~ ••.••.• 3,.710.00

•

................. ~.............. 8'71.00
1-2-74~- Sydln ....

1·1·1-.othor - ... t.oo
1·1·111111W1ulldlng Rent......

...................................10.00

0
0

0

.,... .cu
"0
. .c
gp "'...c;
· t:)

Q)

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&gt;.

"0

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.._,

u

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....0

,-,

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~

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1·1·171o-utl1--... 201.77
1·1·1710-01hw UtRitlle .....
................................... 10.30
1·1·11120-llemberahlp
Ftte.........................2,471.oo
1-1·111»Contnt , .........

·-1

MIKE BING

:

' ............................ 10,CIIO.OO Rlldlo 1 TV...........~.....m.oo
1-2·7140-Pmtlng F -.....
1·1·1580·0ther Ren

R-pta ....:................ 3113...

•

........................._ ... 4,.0.00

1-2·711M,gll Ada...71.41
s,_ ... ·~~~~~::=1~1.~50
................................. 110.00 1 1-2-7120 Newopaptl' Ade ..

t:

Highest "R Value"
Blocks 99.5'l'o

Now open for Christmas
SIIIISOn
6 1fZ' Poinsettias
(6 oololll) $3-$5

949""57 .

1·1·134CioGIOUild

••

~ Fli piiCt

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

·• · Off Forest Run

l.,j

. • ·~·-..-~~ ................ 17,731..

··-~

I
.

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

1 31801 ,tUnberger Rd.

t,.;1n·i2i..·0!74 40•Ciunlng I
01 8er .......... 3,&amp;41.A
1-2·7-Trull Heutlng .....
Aclmlaalon 11cktt8 •.:............
1·1·1230-General

·_,

All V.rd Sat .. Mull Bt P•1d In
ACIYIIne•. DEADLINE : Z:CO o.m.
the day berore the ad 11 to run.
Sundlj' .
2:00 o.m. Fnday.

SERVIC~S

0:0"''" .................. _ ••,-240.00

"0

THE LATEST •• REPLICEMEIIT WIIIDOW
TECHIIOLOIY
"HEAT MIRROR" patelllecl syst•.

Any Scotch or White Pine· S15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekencls
Rt. 33to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherty
Ridge Rd., 1 t/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
· Dally 10 am til Dark
Nov. ~h thiu Dec. 24th

Setv-U

..._

Official
Entry
Form

..9t:

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051
OPEN NOV. ~10 TO 9:00

CUt Your Own
Freeh Cut!Uve

(619)~ ·

lncorneiEiqlenM

e·;;

992-8687
Auto-OICnerl ln•urance

BUDFORD'S

CJ:!:~~
I FWMCe
24 Hour A-wine

BOB SNOWDEN~S LOT

CONNOLLY'S

&amp; Vlcln~

CMPLOYMENT

HURRY, DEADLINE

&gt;.~ ·

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

CHRISTMAS TREES

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

6 p.m.
. Public Notice

...e

lit

C&amp;ll for Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate
614-992-4119
1·800-291·5600
110 Court Sl
Pomeroy, Qhlo

Public NOIIee

~

$10 &amp; Up

j

QUALITY 1
·· WINDOW
SYSTEMS

1-900·990·9330
Ext.1553

Friday, Dec. 6

Please enclose se~·addressecl,
stamped envelope to return your
photo.

0

~

Wreaths - Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

by•

DATELINE
The Girls of
your di'eams-

Forked Run
Sportsman
Club
·Gun Shoot

Per Pictur&amp;

··-....

CHRISTMAS TREES

j

Gllllpolls

Afplll•dif••

30 ,Announcemenw

...

$Iooo

p..{/J

OOAN ~
RNER~

.

Offered Exluslvely

11JIIMI1ma.

.

C·
t:

~~
-DIATEIHITAU.A110NI.

'I.AIIG&amp; INVENTORY FOR

N

Athens, Ohio

(614) 592·5025

I

-ONLY-

M••HetdiWps.
'ON
1HE tiPOT
~
..-to
QUAUI'IID

Attomey At Law

'

Q)

Preregistration fonns will be accept·
cd until noon on Dec. 19.
After that date, students wishing
. to

·

equ~...-,

-

-----------------------------------.
BANKRUPTCY. can relieve a deb)Or of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep ·exempr property for their personal use.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
hou5ehold goods.
For lnfonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

.c

MIR BOARI&gt;
Otlkcrs ol the Meigs County

r

"For Children Only"

·e... ·=c

-Society scrapbook-

Ill Cnltl•••rs . .

1:---------..--..-_,;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;,:;;..,1 l..::::n~,..~~rlo~

Our special page(s)

&lt;Jl
&lt;Jl

THURSDAY
. POMEROY .. PERS-PERI meet·

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

Natlonalllre Recycling Center
1..S00:.273-3385 .

.....

p/\(;EVIIJ .E .. Scipio Tnwnship
Tru,tcc' mcctinl,! Tuc ~duy. (l:30 p.m.
at P:tl!cvi pc Towh H ~1ll.
'

St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Pllllne, Ohio
614 9115 3813 or 614-e67-41414
Plastic Culvert • Dual wall and Regular 11' lhru 38"
4• S&amp;D· perf.· solid pipe
4' &amp; 6' Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
•1,• &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. Ripe
t '/,'lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
•t.- &amp; 1' 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' roHs thru 1,000' rollS)
'/.. U.L approved Conduit
11' Graveless Leach pipe
Gaa pipe 1"1hru Z' ·fittings· Regulators· Risers
Fullaaaonment or P. v.c. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; water fittings
Full Une or Clstem, Sepllc &amp; Water storage tanka

made from the sidewalls of scrap tires,
manufactured In 4 feet lengths with IDs of 13, 14
or 15" and an average OD of 22".
·(Larger slz&amp;a slso available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, Impervious to
attacks from saH pr other mlnetals, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear foot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:
.

- 0
c:~
0 .

Refreshments.

I&amp;W PLAStiCS AID SUPPLY

CULVERT DRAINS

0

TUESDAY
POMEROY ·· Pomeroy Chapter
1X6 I)ES annual in, tallatinn TucsEAST MEIGS ..
Eastern
day. 7:30 p.nl. . at the Shade Ri ver Student Council open · house
Ma,nnic Ln&lt;lgc Hall . Chesler.
· Wednesday. 7 to 9 p.m. at the h1gh

'

lla-IGn.

Cover your moaqulto Infested drains
wffll JUIIMtlld-#ndnlructlble

REEDSVILLE ·· The Coolville
Community Choir will present its

Mature

.

LOST: leb, lw- I wt.1o
EntHih !IMler, Plain Valley Rd.
AEWAAOI :!O•·HS.3333 or :!04·

We can help you, and you can ,_,,.
MllfftlnnJIHJt.
.

(,)
·-

We

.

-·

PICTU-RE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •••

·-

annUal Christ rna.~ cantata. · ''Season
of Love" at the Reedsville United

-

80 L011 and Found

ing. noon ,Thursda~ at the Senior ,SATURDAY
Citizens Cenrcr, Reservations hy 9
STIVERSVILLE .. Stivers Word
a.m.
nf Faith Church. hymn sing. Saturday, 7:30p.m . ·
'
RACINE ·.- , Racine Post 602.
American Legion. 6:30 p.m. business meeting followed hy dinner.

•

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

· too lillie too late, for example. ·

To begin with, you should have a
virus culture of one of the blisters or
ulcers when it first appears: Your
physician can order the test. Then,
depending on the result of the culture. the doctor c~n prescribe appropriate therapy. such as Famvir,
another
anli·viral drug. The mediamino acid necessary for protein
cine
(in
pill
form) will usually ahof\
metabolism. 1o cure 'cold sores.
BecauSe it really wasn 't cffcL:tivc. an anack of sores if it is rake~ early
this fad.has been largely abandoned. enough (at the first sign of inlcction). Ask your family physician to ·
You 11robably have a herpes supervise and coordinate your t!Jcrainfcction. There arc several rCasoris py.
why the Zovirax may not have . Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
helped you: perhaps you were given ENTERPRISE ASSN.

_ _·____,_·- -com.munity
The Community Calendar is
published as a rree service to non·
profit groups wishing lo announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is•not designed to promote sales or rund raisers or any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a spedfic number of days.
MONDAY
CARPENTER
Columhia
J, , .;nship Trustees regular ·meeting
Monday. 7 p.m.. at the fire station.

pa~nful

Tuesday, December 3, 1996

rtpllr.

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

1\!riHIPI, 011 Change,
I
I

Wu, lulling
Lang lt., Autllnd, 011•
74N911, Alii for Kip

Hi-2.116 . .
..,

"·'

"'"""

/

'

•

�. .. .... 10. The Deily Sentinel

t....-y, December 3, 1896

T..edly; oec.mber 3, 1HI

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Mlddlepon, Ohio

"" Al..UYOOP

..

IlliDGE

ALDER

·=·=-' -

,......,_, .....
·E:F
~

Sponlng
Goods

4oe.e1 n. 614·256-6251.

Ciino. 61 4·4-18·7300.

New John ONre Hay Equlpt'l'l«''t

Steel Cul'ler ta 7 Fl. Oia. 15 F t
112 Tick SIN S800 Each Or
For 12,500 l&amp;l Recycling,

For 38 Montha. PurchiN A New
5000 Sarles 40 To 73 HP John
Deere Tractar At The Same nm.
And Get 0% For 38 t.tontha Or
3.9¥. For 60 Months. C•r-

814-44e-7300.

Wltn Side
AM Htat·
614-24 5·
Ventlest gas hea'ters , kero serte
neatert &amp; WOOd SIOYIS iM SIOCk.
Siders Equipment 304·675· 7421.
Whirlpoo l distlwastler,

I~ &amp;

new,

$12'5, 304-675-5733,
te9e Rej:lline BNX Bike, all
Chrome '175 call anytime 814· ' White &amp; blue sofa, fair cond, ca ll
441.0021
.~., 4pm, 304-e75-5289. ,
·

shop, other Little Tyke toys. baby
bed, c:hangin·g table, stroller,

-

· ~ 304-875-4548.

TANATHOME
•
buy DIRECT and SAYEI

814·258·1332.

7 Gun cabinel, wild cherry.
Craftsman chain saw. HI• bar.

304·578-41112,

8oDII 8~ Redwlng , Chippewa,
'Aacky, Tony Lama. Guar~nreed
lowe11 Pflces. At Shoe Cafe, Gat·
ipotil
Check out our new G fl Oepr. at
Paints Plus. ~Patty's olt' Cake
decorating supplies, Candles,
"Chocolate Candy M,811s, Molds,
Bulk Chrittmu C.llndr. Radio
Flyer Wagon$, Pockel Knives,
BHrt and More. (WE alao have

Gu"" CliPI ft&gt;r Ctrilllnaa UghII)

F!IINT PLUS HARDWARE
304·875-4084,

Concreut &amp; Pla.stie Septic Tanas.
· 300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

l.et)().537-8528, '
Dinette Sal '14 Chairs, Nancy Lo·
paz Gall Clubs, And Bag 614 -

Commefc!aVHo.roe uriits from ·
$19~ .

Low monthly payments

'

FREE color catalog.

CallTODAY 1·000-842·1305.
8150.

Building
Supplies

550

BloeM, brick, Sewet pipes, windOWl, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814·245-

5121.

560

Pets for sale.

3 Male, Sh•lties (Miniature Col·
lies) 7 wks . lull blooded, no pal)ela, vet che cked, 1 s1 shots,
$100ea. 304 ·675-2207.

A Gro~m Shop -Pet Grooming.
Hydro Bath. Don

Featuring

, Sneeri. 373 Georges Cleek Rd .
81~231 ,

Adorable Boston Terrlw Puppiea,
Jttst In Time For Chtistmasl Now
T8king Dtpoalt, 814-388·9325 0t
614-388-9413.
.
AKC Registered Basse~ Puppies,

.$12Sao. 304-895-3878.
AKC Reglsltfed Cnlnese Snarpei
pupt, lots of wrlnkJea •. firsl shots

ll1d WOrmed, 614-11&lt;&amp;-2126.

turanc., Bidwell, Ohio. 114-388-

- . 61.-387-7010.
Will llabylil In My Home, Doyo:

-.. ... pen

-Of w,.. .- ,,.

tllonl 10 Ctwll.- . ohop. llondly
thnt Friday- day or night shih,

llolllnlor· doya oril, Col JooMII,

814-1112·71157,

5858. .

morelnlo call 304·882-3748 or

304-773-11858.

St&lt;~ine

$27,500

roomt, Total Electric, All Major
Applla"'es INcluding Cerwal Air,
SlUing On .33 Al:ta lal In A Ouiet
NeighPorhood (Green Township)
With 3 Outbuildings, Shade &amp;

Business
Opportunity

Will Consider Land Coruract,
814-256-&amp;e!IU.
1D89 "12ll80 trailer, been remo.'
deled, 2 bedroom, 1 bath . For

rented lot, electric: cookstove,

14500, 614·892·4171 afler Spm,

IK11'1C£1
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING CO.

recommend&amp; that you do lx.lli·
nftl with piople you know, and
NOT 10 oend money lhrough lho

..,.M vndl ~ou have Investigated
. . ofllring.

Furnished

Rooms .

G1ubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repa1ra.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tlie

piano Or. 614-44&amp;4525

JET'

PinoT1801.

1i80 12.w65 Liberty, total eteclrlc,
two bedroom, underpinning,

21 o

The NeW Farmers Tobacco Ware·

no uso. Ripley. Onto. Will 1011 3

,days a week. 1·888·844·4365 or
ca ll Ed ison Mayea 304·675·
1858. .

Pvestock

630

Nubin buck 18moa. old, gentle,
good breeder. $100. 304 -5764109.

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Ground ear corn. 304·875·2443
after 4 ;OOpm.

1082 14X711 llot&gt;lo -.e, 3 Bed·
n&gt;011t0, Nood1 lloved, Located AI
KIK Mobile Pork, $18.500, 814·

AERATION MOTORS

1 Bedroom Newly Decorated, FUrni sh ed , Located In Kanauga
$200 Per Mon1n 10eposh And
Ut1 ~ti es , 614·445· 7406.
14x70 All elecltic, 2bedraom, 2
batl"l, lurnished, located in Meigs.
No inside pets, references re quired, $200 deposi t, S325Jmo.

TRANSPORTATION

:710 Autos for Sale

good, bodv rough; both seeoo

11970 Cad illac Convertible, WI
:Owners Manuel , PrDject Car.
: Ver,y Restorable, Oriveable, Top

IWorks Besr. Needs Cover. Have

$4,695: 1989 S·1Q Blazer S5,595;

1993 J&amp;ep Grand Cherokee Lim·
iled, 4x.tl, low Mileage, E~ecellent
Cpndilion, 614·446·4160 Alter 6

P.M.

1979 Jeep CJ-5, good cond. 30•·
895-3021 oiler Spm.

4x.(, $5895

'

New-1997 14 Wid•1 balh, $7081
down, IJ1501mo, with appro'led

credit Celt 1·800-891-&amp;777.

BIG NATE
W~Y

HAVE

MAN'(

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

t!PE~

GODFREY

T6 GIVE 50
TE~TS ~

JUST

THI~ ONCE, COUI.IlN'T

TE~T'
C.OULDN 'T SHE -

5HE SKIP THE

.:t fi,ST

·-

5~

~-

8 EIU.,ac.l

33Ho-.on.m

7. lira. Nixon

34 Cry of i 11omb

I Roy•ltur

f
~

I
t

then

1

(

!
'

.
'

)

'
)

·,
'

'

;

,,,
J

'

J

0 :='."".:-,.::-_;, :::

'',

lIII

.,•

I

AKC Re gistered Gtden Retriever
Pu_ps , 5 Weeks 1st Shots &amp;
Wormea $225 , 814-446 · 6651,
6t4·446-2899.

I I

T 1 J 0 N 1:~,
.

...
RE

Old timer to another: 'Young
people aren't worse than we
were. They have more and dif·
ferent ways to make themselves lOok lik!l·- • • ·.' .

s=-'-lr'il-1 G Con;plt~e
1ht ehuc:klo qualtd
filling in 1ht miA1"9 -.11
1

by

.you develop from Slef) No. 3 below.

rrrrr1
111111

PRINf.l•j!JMIEIEO lETTfiS IN
THESE SQYARES

r
I

'{

-I

n

'·'

"

,,

-·•
.,
&lt;'

!.'

'""

ICIAM.UTS ANSWUS

Orchid • Truck • Impel- Though • TOO MUCH
'I wish I were 20 years younger; my husband said
while rubbing his sore neck. I think that neck pain can
be caused by looking back -.:oo MUcH.

.ITUESDAY

614·448-8680.

SERVICES

I

' 1Dlil3 Ford Eacort GT 5 Speed

Sunrool, AC, $4 ,800 , 6U·44&amp;:

81 0

'

Home
Improvements

3180.

,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

A WIREAAIREP

Unconditional liletime gulllrantet.
local references lurnished . El·
tabl ished 1975. Call (614) 448·
0870 Or 1·800-287-0576. Rogers

FO)( TERRIER

COULD IIAVE
CIIEERED

Waterproofing.

!liM

UP..

/

.__ _ vi~

Appliance Paris And Service: AU
Name Brands Over 25; Years Ex·
pe rlenee All Work Guaranteed,
French C1tr .Mayt ag, 1314· 446 ·
7795.

General Home Main·
tenence - Painllng,_vinyl sidlnQ ,

C&amp;C

AST:RO·ORAPH

carpentry, doors, Wlndowl, baths

mobi)e hqme repair ana more. FeWfree aatima1e call Chll, 614·902·
8323,

stand wltal to ·do ro·make the relationship
wortc . Mall $2.75 to Malchmaker, clo lhls
newspaper; P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill
•
Station,.New Yortc, NY 10158.
BERNICE
CAPRICORN (Oeo. U.Jori. 18) You will
BEDEOSOL ac~leve your objec1ives today, piovided
you don't make things more difficun for
you!80H than they need lo be.
- - - - - - - - - - AQUARIUS (J"". 20-Fob. 18) Friendohlp
Is !"1¥118 veluable than delertnlning who Is

DRVWAU
Hang, linith, repair.
Ceilings textured, platter repair.
Call Tom 30~ - 675; 4186, 20 )lftrl

Ron~t TV Sei'Yice•. speclaliZing In
Zemth a l,ao servicing most other
brandt. House calls, 1·800· 7D7 -

DD15. WV 304-576-2398.

Professional

~SES CERTIFIED DEALER

130 Butavllo Pike,
Old Milk C1n1,

You Don'.' Cotl Ut We Both Loia l

Hand and Electric
Carll or
Goad~uchea,

Free Elt1mates, 1•800· 201 -00N
814~46-8308,

W\''002945,

'

Rea ldenti.al Ql' comrntt"clal wiring,

otleYel;
Jat1, Houra

naw III'VIce or repa irs. Msater u.

censtd electrltlln . Ridenour
JE1ectrica1, WVOO(I308, 30•·075··

2 Bedroom r -... In St&gt;rlng
V&amp;ltly 12115/Mo., L11¥t llta·

117ae,

-. 614-446~875.

RtaiHnliol Of Commerc lol Wlr·
lng, New Sttvtce Or R""ill. LJ.
otnHd E!telrlelan. Wtlon EIIC·
~'14 · ~41-1850, GonlpoHo.

2 llednlom,, Belh, Living Room,
Sl&lt;lionol Home 60x24 3 BA 2 Kilehon. Olnlna ~"· All Eloclrlc,
Belh. 2 LR"I. On Ronlod lol, Carpor\ 1425/llo., Dti&gt;OIII, 61•·
Ptlano:814-4411·3647,
2•5·5053.

I .

'·
9

·.

LA~NCEENTER~SES
Heat Pumps, Air Conditioning u

~I

3G - - erma
31 Slcoloton pert
32 Building unit

- · ...... '
OOWN

,6 · IJNSCIIAMII.f
AIIOYE tETTEIS
TO GET ANSWII
.•

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

'

book

M,....,._

In Great Britain, Batsford, a wellknown .chess pubUsher, has turned its
hand to bridge booka. Most have been
worthwhile, but the manuscripts
should lfave passed under the gaze of
a better proofreader.
I'll be reviewing these books In al·.
phabetical order by author' s name . L.....l....,j._.L.._
TO tliM .I
AF~tArP
The first is, coincidentally, my favorite:
"The Hidden Side of Bridge" by David
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Bird and the late Terence Reese
1'401N
ANSIN~It IT
Iii
1$19.50, postpaid, from The Bridge
by Lull Climpo41
Celebrity C ~r crypiOQf*N!.,.. ci"Nled !rom quolatial'll bV fMnOYI peoptl . JIR ancl pr..Y(orld.
39
West
94th
Street,
New
York,
IT ((IN'S
El&lt;tl lttler in lhl ~ ltendf for MOIWr. Toall)'• c:W: S equalS C
NY 10025·7124&gt;. Originally published in
1988, thii!' book contains deals where
Ott NOT.
' I XW
YMVG I
IVHNWCP
KMV
H
Ihe "normal " play is wrong, and you
have to find the unusual move. So, the
J II W I
deals are advanced, but Interesting,
L G.
I M
AW
HCRLVWC
.
and 'the text is lively.
IXVMFNX
In this deal from the book, you are in
AWL E H
ALGFECWVGIMMC
four· spades doubled. West cashes the
~ · heart king before switching to a trump.
8 W H.E
SMStW 'HF .
r
What ia your line and which is dum·
'DO 01£ TO OTf\~ OCFOI!e
my's "hidden" asset?
THEY DOOM~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The average football fan is a college graduate with
Yes, West's initial double is strange.
an'eighth
grade education."- Andy Roonev.
TO YOO I "
'
Experts call it "flexible," but never to
bid one's six-card major is weird.
Having two red-suit losers, the de·
clarer. Italian Dano de Falco, had to
· - loy CIA' I. I'OI&amp;NI ....;;..._ _ __
avoid losing two club tricks . As you
probably spotted. rather than rely on
West's having both the ace and queen
lp 10 form four - •·
of diamonds, de Falco called on the
power of dummy's diamond eight.
A B R rH
After drawing trumps, de Falco
played a diamond to dummy's king
1 1
and returned a low diamond. East
.-----.,....-----, couldn't alford to win with his queen,
'
pecause
declarer would rulf down
S MC U
West's ace. Bul' when West won with
the diamond aee, what cbuld he lead?
Whichever suit he selected. de Falco
would receive his lOth trick.

AKC Registered female white Si·
berian• .-,usky, 1 112 years old,
very good natured, $75, 614·9923085 evenings.

2111),

y

By Pbllllp Alder

-Rooms for rent • week or month.
Starting at S1201mo. Galila Hotef.·

Tabl•,

form

211 Old Toohlmonl

•

MERCHANDISE

Depollt. 81 . . . . . ..

c- rM~~w

23 -nlng to

-..r.--

113 Patek down
54 F«n tlllurw
55 ...,...
· Vltlloy-

L.-.L.-.L....JL-..IL-..11......1

1304)675-677•.

1 Bedroom Apilrlmtnt, Acroll

22

·

ant. Ove.- 5,000 •quare fHI IIVI.il·
able. Four thousa,nd (4,0001
aquare leer of warehouu a~c:•
available. $erloua Inquires e~ll

From Uniwt~IY Of Rio Granda,
$2115/llo., All UUIIHII Pold, Ptua

c- I•

F AL0
t:~--,,r-.,1....;~1

Reta JIIcommercial apace, pt"lme
loc:attOn. Will femodel to suit ten-

'

I

wofdiHaly
21 Wrong (pre!.)

,..1

utili·

992·2218.

11

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

304-875-4874, '

1 and 2 bedtaom apartmlf"'tl, lw·
nishld and untutnllhed, IICUritr
deposit required, no Pill. &amp;t•·

•·

R

.

$1.600. 614·367· 7775 Allor 10.

760

111e

OCCIIPIInt

.....
·'=~=· S@~4tllA-~~flis• ....

1987 Honda XR80R looks Good,
Runs Good, $750, OBO 814· 4"66651 .

614-448· j02~

n.m?

111a
.

.I p I I I

Att You .lnt1r111ed In A REAL
..., . Ba•od Butinou? Tnlt Ia
'I'M On• You'.. Bean Looking
For. For'frM Book Call •10·470·

II 0 1 - Honwl, Nhro,

BY THE GCX.DEN i'U!£!

Motorcycles

e~~:per~e.

wv. 3()4.7111-51115,

~~

080,

740

Pan

1,11 pus

AKC Registered Chow Chow
Puppiea. With 30 Generation
Pedigree, 6 Weeks 01 Age, Par·
ants On Premises. 111 Shots &amp;
Wormed, Asking $225, Price Negotiable, 614·441·0662.

W.A-N-T-E·D

~TIIAIII'ICIAL" - I n
eiiCk, doubtwldes, mov• In
,.., no prrnen~ for 10 dare. ·

THE BORN LOSER
YOOt-lb fo'II&lt;N, YOU :51'\cxx..D
fo.J..'r-11'."6 UVE YOUR. Uff:

E•st

·I

weNT
. . TO AN~vlt, Ttl~ Pt'ION~.
.I

.

~

1998 Jeep Cherokee Spot! 414
Auto, Cruise. Tilt, ·A.t , 7,500

Chair, t .g.
Welcoming

•

t«Mtl20-t712.

H' Al [STATE

.

Not1b
4..

I

WtiETtl~,

1984 GMC Jimm'ie 4M4, V-6,

Wheeler 93CA 80 New Motor &amp;
Trans. All Plastic New Seat, Back
Tire And BeahnQs, Sacrallce

VINOINO: You'll Wan! II, We
Goo kl - · Hot, Easy, Piofilablo.

.... oriOIIIG. W¥«!1206

/

West
Dbl
DbI.·

From chess
to bridge

.t-It'S viONPfltfUL/

97,000 milt&amp;, good CO!ld, $3,500.
304-875-7577.

1975 Buick Electro Ltd. 92.000
n,iles, 455 engine, reslorable.
$500. 210 4th St 304·875-5733. .

IIJ, 01111~ TX 1072) 991-8239.

r•aonable reNs. 304·

'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

For Sale Or Trade : For 'A 4

fn Qlllllpolie Area . Low '"VIIl·
ment For lnlcumaUon Call t.lrl.
·• Goomnel Candy Compa·

- • u ofw 1:00pm. no job 10

' FRANK &amp; EARNEST ·

B&amp;O. Auto Sales, Hwy. 160 N. 4
MHos N. 01 Ho~er, GoJUpolta, 61··
448.eB65.

_91:-:8-:1-:A:"nyti-:-m-:-e-:.=:----:-~--l

28edroom trailer, lurnished,
washer &amp; dryer, ale, '250/mo +
utililias deposit &amp; references.

HRION WANTED, To OWN
And Opera!• Rolli! Concfy ShoP

HARTS MASONAAY • Block,
triCk 1 etone work, 30 ,.,. •x·

tHAT'S ITft

1g99 Ford Excel 314 Ton PU
t•,495; 1993 Ford F·150 PU
S5.V05; 1991 Ford Aero Star \lan

1987 Cl1ev S.·10 PU $1 ,695: 1988
Chev Silverado PU $3,,95; 1989 ·
Ford Ranger 4X4 PU 14,295; 111811
ClleY Scousdalo 314 Ton $5,495,

44 Dlop

48 Olive gonuo
4UI•uno SOHow-

Opening lead: • K

1994 Ford Ranger PU $4,.006; .

1993 Ya,maha' 100 MotorcyCle,
$800; F~e Oil Sigler Stove S10p,

'Or Tradt, S50D OBO, 614·388·

SPEI~D

A
.SCHOOL· N ISHT AN'
TH' NIGHT

Drive, 86,000 Milts, S3,o00 0110.'
614·258-1233. '
·, .
1D95 Chev. 5· 10 PU S5,a05;

R -G!ass And Boot Full 500 Cu.
Lin. Turbo. No Storage, Must Sl;)ll

1400-408 1818tn20t8.

Servlcel

JAMEY CAN'T

34,000 Milos, $12,500 OBO; 1~1 ,
Ford Ranger Srandard 2 Whttl ,

'92 ford Taurus. 4 door, white, air,
tilt, cruise , 73,000 miles: '84 89

oao:e•4-985-336~

Soutb
36
Pass

1894 Full Size Dodge Truck, 2
Wheel Drive, 318, Auto, loaded,

446-2281 ,

FREEIIONEY

\

: BARNEY ·

319·2967.

Calf'i ~war•. private gran11,
1011n1. inHilon• avaUable. Source

()nip

199'2 lauzu trUck , 4c lw.• 5sP,.,
71,000 miles, nice, $4,450, 614·
892·2594 Iller 6pm ,

can Ron Evan•. 1·800·537·9528.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, No
Pets, $225/Mo., Includes Wat er,
$100 Deposit, References, 814·
446·3617.

Good .._ion, Tired Of Working
Fot -~~ElM? Be Your Own
e14-3117.()612 Fot Dolols.

'*'*"••

•

1988 S-10 Blazer $4,59.5; 1088
Toyo ta · 4x4 PU $3 ,395 : 1985
Toyota 4 -Runner $3,995: 1998
Ford B ~onco II $3 ,995 ; 1988
Dodgt 0·50 PU Auto $2,595:

U..o.rd-

TlmluK

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

New RHuilt Motor, Auto, Asking

e

6 J 10 B 8

8oulll
• Q 10 9 • 5 4 3
• 10
• 10 I
• QI 7

•'

13;100 Or Besl Offer &amp;14· 379 ·
2174, L.save Menage. •

Miles, $17.500. 614-379:-272tl .

ToyOta. .. wo, 69,000 miles, runs

t A 6 Z
• A 54

@,
I(EAf.l ..

• 7 2
• 842
• Q 7 53

Ropolred, New &amp; Rebu&lt;t In SIOck.

304·773·5165. '

Finest Styling Salon 11 'Seeking
PlrWierthip ... n, Opportunitiel

130

· ~--~--~----

"Last Chance - AIIalla Hay Rolls - 1986 Chevy Full Size Convera1on
Ont,,.M,,.gs,n Farm Rt35 304-937· Van, Whi te and Nav)' E•cellent
Condition! law Mileage, 61•·446·
7928.
Round Bales Of Mixed Hay For
Sale, Stored lntdie $18 /Bale
614·245·5506.
.

••AKJ97
• 5

OIJt ~ 10 ElVD CAW\PAIOU
fi/JAAJC£ \JICtATI()IJ'S
_.-4-..1

40
41 ........,

PwlnN1n

20Aclaaut

Eut

5291.

Mobile Homo 2 0&lt; 3 Sed·

moro info. Cot1304-&amp;7S.!5043. .

fINANCIAL

,

Wn&amp;

111
....':

hnk'o) oy.
18 Type of gllndo 52 I think,

AKC reolatered Dalmatian puppies, ready for Christmas, shots,
~~~ checked. S2DOea. 304 -773·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

SUPEANICEI

Will do hOUit cleaning and sar
with elct.,ly. Oayuma hours, for

Video Camera
and carrying case
I 304·675·5108 any·

Two 1 bedroom apartments for
tala wilh storage building. Will
sell on land CO(Itract, 614·99.2·

IU·.t41· 7135, Evenings: 814·

&lt;MI.CJII7.
Will do blbyolnlng In "" homo,

Husqvarna mqdel 51 chain u.w
on sate $339 th is month · only.
free can &amp; tree chain &amp; free
gloves. Sider• Equipment 30-t -

A5K K,11-m:s CJ.:L&lt;.J

11

$250, 614-446.0229.

t

Removal, ·FrH Estinu~teal ln-

1078 Chevy Slep-aida 4x4 , 350

AKC Registered .C hocolate lab ·
Pupa, Readr December 5th, 1st
Shots Wormed, Vet Checked,

~terior and Ex18rior finiShes carpenrry, fireplace rltfinilhing, ad·
dieiona, porches, decks, have

• 304-571-23111.
Prolooolanol Troe SeMca, Sbnnp

good ootod. 304-2n&lt;l215.

7 Year Old Mare, Well Broke,

9085.

OHices ar tiiorn.a 10 dean. hon..t. reliable, excellent referenc-

Gehl grlnd8r mixer, John Onre
grain drfll. 12Pt.tflnaporl diD.
Owatonna hay blne. International
808 Farm AI diaeal tractor, all

Bay, $850, 614-4-46·6323.

ABA Registered American Bull
Dog, 15 Weeks Old 614 -388-

.3Q4-87S-11157.

3420.

WOOd For Sale : $35 A Load, Will

._.,d Bound, 614·592·1625,

Georges Portable Sawmill, ·don't
haul your k)gl 10 the mill just call

Farmall Cub with cultlvatol'l and
side dresser&amp;; alto IWD green. house gas furnaces ; ~114 · 948 -

IF ldXJ

,.

720 1\'ucks for Sale

1P78 QMC 4X4 4" Lilt, 35- Ttres,

Deliver, 614·388 ·8010, 614-388-

ABA regislarad American bulldog
puppy, tamale, first shots &amp;
warmed, like "Chance" In movie,

441! -2978.

re!Ofent:... 304-675-1013.

EEK .t MEEK

742-3102.

594-1 111.

YN 304-875-7.21 ,
Wolff Tanning. hde.

bui·

Wan11d 10
17 or ntWe r Cl·
price Cle.slic, must be 4 door, V·
I , loeded, Brougham Of LS, 61•·

IU10. :J04.e75-7310.

S1dera Equipment, Henderson,

•336.

Rt. 82-3 Miles
South ol Leon , WY.. Financing
Avalfebll. 304·458·1089.

mlehael"l Farm &amp; Lawn Goltlpoll,
Onlo ou-446-2412 Of •·OOO·

WHITE"&amp; METAL DETECTORS 675-7421.
Ron Allison , 1210 Second Avenue , Gallipol is, ·Ohio 61 4-4'6· Hydraulic Oil $.12.50-Sgal paiL

4 Pc. Living Room Su ite , like
New, Nice Chrittmas (2iifll $195,
811. Ai r H'ockey table, great
lhape, $115. 30..al5-3878.

wldown
· 304-&amp;7!&gt;.:12oe.
•
810 SAVINOSI 011. Flnoncing On
lnrernational tflctor

Stetl Beams : Mite . Sizes And
Length s . 10e Per Lb. l&amp;L Racy-

• 0 - Ctltll, LIW. Tyke work·

Upto~ UMd Cars

Sea rs Refrlger• tor , 11.00, 614·

6 A K J
• Q 6 3
• KJ a4
• K 3 2

• Trlecl

I Tltln

13
14
. 15
16

N

-"'-"""""

ACROSS

12

-~

'

NEA Cro11word Punle

PHILLIP

, HOME COMPUTER USERS
•NEEDED. $45,000 lncom1 po.
ltenllol. 1·800·513·4343 Ext. B·
il3ea Coli Fot De!al•
'

The O.lly SentiMI• Page 11

•

·· ~-

~.:.

righlnot
or savor
WfOngthe
lri aviCtory
petly Wargument
You
will
you losa your
friend In the prooeA. ·
PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20) Vou will
heve to ba rTIOf&amp; prudent and count your
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1996
, pennill more carefully today if you hope
Even though your material gains ·mighl , 10 make do wlltl the retOurces you have
not be llaggerlng In,1hl year ahead, they at your dl,oposal.
llhould ba conslalent. Prosperily Is lndl· ARIES (lllrch 21-Aprll 18) One·lo-one
caled In the tong run.
relalionlhlpe _could be your most dilllcuh
IAGITTAIIIUS (Nov . 23·0.0. 21) A IIH loday. If you foltlo, be cordial and
friend whoso company you normally ltlelful, you will lmlile problema.
enjoy migh1 be lempere!Mnlll and dlffl· TAURUI fAprll zo.Miy 20) Tht longer
,cuiiiO pleua lodly. Do not lei hie baNtV· you Itt llingl go loday, 1hl herder I 'WIII'
lor •11•~t your relatlonahlp . Trying 10 be to calch up l•lor. Thill will not be a
pMcll up • brllllell - ? The AII10- good dly 10 Itt unpiNiflnl IUkl control
,G.lrlalchmlktr CliO help you under· your IOindll.
'

GEMINI (!by 21.,juno 20) Even though
you'll ba in a gregarious mood today, you
might feel deflated il you 1llrend a ga1her·
ing which is full of people you don't llke.
CANCER (June 21.,july 22) Try lo keep
career or other weighty problems ~ way
from the dlhner table tonight If they
become topics of conversation. It could
dampen 1he mood,
u:q (July 23·Aug. 22) You mlghl begin
to doubt your judgment today Wyou dllcuos something you believe In strongly
with a friend whose oullook is negative

' and dlomal
VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 221 Oo not put
yourself in an awl&lt;ward position tOday by
requesting a favor 'from a poraon you
declined to help on a previous occuion.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) There II
always more then one side to an 'illue. ff
you keep IIIia in mind todly, you will have
lhtt ability lo appreciala your rna'-'' point
of view.
.
ICOAPIO (Oot. 24·Nov. 22) Hen
thOUgh you wll be lndultrtoul loday, you
might m.U addllloM.&gt; WOik tor youiiOII
by ualng 1he wrong ·toole or melhodo.

•

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.'
I'

·,.;

'· ~

·DECEMBER 3 I ~
.

�Ohio Lottery

Raiders
defeat
Marauders

••
...•

Pick 3:

403
Pick 4:

3099
Buckeye 5:
7-8-23~27-33

Sports on Page 4
'"

Jclear tonight, lows In
the 20a. Thursday, light
rain, highs In the 40s.

: ~--------~==~~~======~========~----~--~~==~~_J

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a1

_______________
_
;Losses expected to exceed $2 million ·
fire destroys Fruth warehouse
"'

; Vol. 47, NO. 150

·... .:----------------___;
.
018118, Ohio v..r., Publlthlng C0111p1ny

. 2 secttono, 16 Pageo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 4, 1996

': By MINDY KEARNS,
fire began.
stated exacl damages are unknown at
:;.OVP News Staff
.
At !he scene Jastnight,Joan Fruth this time, and will probably take sev"'
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. · A said they saw the fire near the ceil- eral days to detennine .
. ::. gigantic fire swept through the Fruth ing in a back corner of the building.
Mrs. Fruth said the company had
~· Pharmacy warehouse, located on They used five fire extinguishers try- _ just received two "containers" of 22
't S.R. 62 near Point Pleasant TUesday ing to put out the flames themselves skids each of items from the Orient.
;:. night, causing destruelion to the · before the lights weni out and Mike The company makes two trips year"' facility and losses expected to exCI'ed · urged !hem to gel oul. Babs Fruth, .ly to Hong Kong for tift items. They
:. $2 million. 1
Jack's wife, said this morning by the had just been unloaded Tuesday.
·
•
Firefighters were called to the 'time the three made it to the door,
Jim Kessinger, who hauls items
·~ 30,000 square (ol)t warehouse· at flames were all around them. "It was for Fruth's four days a week in trac::;_ approximately 6:45 p.m. The· facili- a miracle they did get out," she slat- tor-trailers, had two trucks sitting.at
~~ ty also houses the 7,500 square foot ed.
·
·
the warehouse bays full of items to be
:;: corporate office, which is expected to
Fire departments from Point delivered to stores. Mrs. Fruth said
: be salvaged due to the quick efforts Pleasant, Mason, Valley, New Haven, Kessinger moved the trucks from the
·~ of several fire depanments, according Flatrock, Middleport, Ohio and
fire scene to his warehouse. where the
~ to Don Pullin, Fruth Pharmacy pres- Pomeroy, Ohio were on the scene. items will be checked for smoke
:: ident and chief operating officer.
The Leon depanment came to Point damage today.
;;
Firemen and Fruth officials were Pleasant to cover any other emerShe ctedits the fast action of her
:. able to remove the company's main gencies that might have taken place, children in using the fire e&lt;tinguish%; computer system. They were retriev- · wh.ile the Ohio River Road depan- . ers and then calling 911 in saving tbe
"' ing the items, including various com- ment stood by to .cover Valley.
front section of the building. Classes
:! puters and flies in the downstairs
Wood said the departments were were given at the warehouse on how
;;; offices, as late as ' II p.in.
pulling water from the city water tci use the extinguishers. she added.
~ · Point Pleasant Fireman Jimmy plant, which is located near Pamp ·
Mrs. Fruth said the computers that
:_&lt; Wood said the fire began on th~ east Conley. Fire trucks · shuttled water were saved were taken to the nearby
:;i end of the building, and once firemen from the plant and placed it in three national guard armory. where they
;: arrived and saw the warehouse ·1,800-gallon to 2,()()().gallon "dump will remain until plans are made to
:: engulfed in .flames, they set up a . tanks" . that firefighters could draw relocate. She said the company has
- "defensive line" to try and keep the from.
already been offered warehouse
: fire from' claiming lhe corpQCate
The fire burned steadily for sev- space.
.
:;: offices, which were located in the eral hours. The warehouse contained
A lot of work will be done out of
:::: front of the bqilding.
several propane tanks, used tp oper· the Poin~ Pleasant store for the time
~.
He said it was imponan1 to .both ate the forklifts, as well as kerosene, being, Mrs. Fruth said. She $tat~'(! the
:;, the insurance company and the phar- insecticides, hairsprays and other · company must find a place for their
11!3CY ow~i:~ that the eq~ipi_Rent was flammable containers. The comer of merchandise, however, as shipments
,.... saved., · .. ·
the building that was most bumed are rece.ived daily~, ..,... ~
·.
- ' Jack Fruth serves as chaim1an and conlllined papet,ptoducts.
Mrs. Fruth also assured that the '
t "chief executive officer of the pharAbout 30 people are employed at employees will not lase their jobs
; macy chain. Thr~e of his grown chi I- the warehouse, Mrs. Fruth said this because of the .fire. "They will con: dren, Carol, M•k~ and Joan, were mommg. Her husband was already tinue to work." she said, "just·someworking at the wareh.ouse when the_ on the scene shonly after 8 a.m. She
Continued oa page 3
.

AGannett Co. Ne-P"per

:1

·.•
FIGHTING FIRE ~Firefighters from Mason
and Gallla countlee combat the fire that struck
the Fruth'• Pharmacy warehou.. and corporate

!

...

offices on W.Va. 62 north of Point Pleaserit
Tuesday. Damage estimates are expected to
reach Into millions of dollars.

~

-

On firm's 92nd anniversary

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
branch offic~ opens .in Gallipolis

GRAND OPENING ~ The Fanners Bank &amp;
· · Savings 'Co. branch office at 164 Upper River
· Road, Qalllpolls, was officially dedicated this
morning In a ribbon cutting ceremony. Prepar·
lng to cut the ribbon In front are, from left,
Sheila G. Wood, aaalatant branch manager and
l~n officer; Paul M. Reed, preaklent; directors
Douglas Little and Ben Ewi 0 g, Paul E. Kliles,
the chief executive officer, directors Ferman
Moore, Tom Reed a 0d Caraon Crow, and Jim
Cochran, the branch manager. Visible In the

back from left are Larry DICicco (partially hidden) and Bob Kre!'flllr, repra. .ntlng P.W. Campbell, who handled the building's design and
construction management, Ralph. and Mary
Young of Welsh f:lectrlc, U.S. Rep. Frank A.
Cremeans, R.V. "Buddy" Graham, executive
director of the Gallla ·County Community
Improvement Corporation, CIC Praaldent T~m ·
Wlaeman, Gallla Cou11ty Chamber of Commerce President Gary Roach, and local busl- ·
ne8sman and entrepreneur Bob Evan•.

Fund
. established
help.fire..victims.

Shaffer
declared

·,

· An account to receive donations·
the Rodney Orucser Family has
established at the Home NationBank in Racine.
·
The funds. according to a spokes~·omlm for the family, said that the
will go toward the funeral .
:~:=~s of 2-year old Christopher
who died in the Saturday
fire at the familfs trailer
and toward treatment expens-

~

SENDING SANTA A LIST
OF ~EFEI&lt;ENCES WHO WILL
CONFIIC:M HOW 6000
I'VE BE!fN ALL YEA~.

Dec. 4
· 21 •hopping

..

•

.,

daya to Chrlatmae
I

•

cs for 3-ycar-old Michael, a patient at
Cabeii-Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Kimberly Grueser, mother of the
children, received multiple !accra·
'tion~ when she jumped to safety from
a window at the rear of the trailer.
The father was not at home when the
fire stoned.
The spokeswoman. who asked
not to be identified, said that housing
has been provided for the family, rem
free for three months. that utilities are
being taken care of.' and that large
appliances and furniture, as well as
clothing and other person~! effects
have been given.
She said !hat the family still needs
small appliances, lamps and linens ·
and that they can be left at the
Bowhuntcrs' Paradise in Pomeroy.
· Checks and money orders are to
be made l'ayable to the Rodney
Grueser Family Contribution
Account and mailed to P. 0 . Box
~656, Racine, Ohio 4Sn 1. She asked
that cash not be sent and said !hat
. n!ceipts will be sent out to contributon.

·Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. of
Pomeroy cut the ribbbn on its Gal- ·
ti"polis branch office this· rt)oming,
marking a "monumental occasion" in
the bank's history, President Paul M.
'Reed said.
The ceremony, attended by officials and citizens from Gallia and
Meigs counties. took place on Farmers Bank's 92nd anniversary, Reed
said.
Over the years, the bank has
weathered the demands of technological changes. ~ccd told the crowd
attending the ceremony, hut it "hasn't J'orgoUcn good old-fashioned customer service.''
. During the ceremony. Reed introduced Paul E. Klocs, the hank's
chief cxc.,:utivc officer. and recognitions were given to Roger Hysell , the
bank 's executive vice prcsidcnlcashicr. und john Karschnik. executive vice president for operations,
Also introduced were members of

•

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The event was also attended by
numerous representati ves of Gallia
County's business community and
local government. including City
Manager Matthew Copplcr. City
· Commissioner Bill Davis, R.V. "Bud-"
dy" Graham, executive director of the
Gallia County Community .Improve-

company, F::lrmcrs Bancsharcs Inc.

mcnt Corporation , CIC President

Officials· also extended recognilion tn the hank's Community Reinves!mcnt Advisory Board, chaired hy

Tom Wiseman and Chamber of Commerce President Gary Roach.
.Today's ribhon culling was part of

Moore, and consisting of Tom Reed, · a week of grand opening ceremonies.

Phil Harrison. Bruce Fisher, Roy RCfrcshments will he served · daily
Holter; Cheryl Lemley. John Musser and more than 300 prizes will he
and ScoU Barnitl..
·
awarded to customers who bring in
The Gallipolis office, located .it ·cards recently mailed to a&lt;ea rcsi164 Upper River ~oad, was designed dents.
·
'
by P.W. Campbell, Pit(shurgh, Pa,
A Gallia c;,unty Heritage Landwhich managed the construction with mark Throw, or coverlet, will be
the . usc ol' local tnodcspcoplc. awarded in a daily contest, and an
explained Robert J. Kremer, the RCA PahnCorder will he the grand
finn 's vice prcsidcnl. who aucndcd prize in a contest set for noon on Satthe ceremony with another company urday. Individuals need not he present
representative , Larry DeCicco.
Continued on page 3

....--Development continues-__,

~hometown
.

.

herlj)' _ .
Saturday will be "Donald
Shaffer Day" in Racine.
Mayor
Jeff
Thornton
announced today that-Racine has
declared Donald Shaffer a "home

tOwn hero."
Shaffer entered. the bumin!!
trai l~r home of Rodney lind Kimberly Grueser last Saturday
motning and brought out 3-yearold Michael Grucser, who
remains critical but stable in the
bum unit at the Cabeil-Huntington Hospital in Huntington,
W.Va.
A parade will be held at I
p.m. to honor Shaffer. Residents
are invited 10 join the fire trucks
and emergency vehicles· which ·
will move lhroush town and then
go to Star Mill Park where a
plaque will be pn!senled to the
man credited with saving
Michael's life.

The parking IQI 11 blacktopped, the found•
tlon lain, and the sign reede "Wendy'•- CornIng Soon." The new bullnaeslatha third to be
located on the alte of the former MGM Land- ·

1
I

the bank's hoard of directors who
were in ancndance - I. Carson
Crow. Ben Ewing, Doug ·Little, Fermah Moore and Tom Reed. Not present were Thereon Johnson , Paul
. Eich, Richard Foil rod and. Bruce
Reed. Tom Reed and Bruce Reed arc
·also directors of the hank's holding

.~

•

'•

mark owned by Davld Bumgardner. Dollar Gen-

eral waa the flrat to build. Fisher Funeral Homa,
naarlng completion, Ia on tha eeat and of the
lot, 111d Wendy'• will be located In the center.

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