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\_

ByTh'e Bend
'

The Daily Sentinel
January 3,1995
Page-1G

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Soclal Security and ·farnily yalues
Manager In
All tbe talk about family values
reminds me that family values is
what Social Security is all about.
The benefits the program provides
10 families is designed to protect
the family against the greatest
tbrei!ts tb its economic wellbeing.
Many people simply don't real- ize that Social Security is as mucb
about the protecli,on of _the Ameri-

. THREE GENERATIONS JOIN CAMEO SOCIETY-. Tbese ·

three membe~ of Meigs Collllty's Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, are charter members
of the new Cameo Society, an .organization with a goal of promot·
ing passage of genealogical lnformatlo'n fram one generation to the
next. They are from the len, Linda Cleland Bohner, with her
daughter, Amy Bohner, and her mother, Anna Circle Cleland.

e

Three . members of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of ihe .American Revolution, are
·charter members of the Cameo
Society, a, new organization geared
to promote understanding and fellowship between generations and 10
encQUJ3ge the passage of genealogical information, family histories
and patriotism to subsequent generations. .
The charter Cameo Society
members froni the local chapter are
MrS. -Ailiia Circle Cfeland, her
daughter, Mrs. Linda Cleland
Bohner and bl!f. great-granddaugh- ter, Aiil.y Bohner.
·
. C'ameo members must" he mem"'hers- onlle lflAR and show current
active-membership in conjunction
with a mother/daughter. .
The National Society of the
Daughters of the American Revolution was founded Oct. II, 1890 for
historic, educational and patriotic
pu'rposes. Any woman is eligible
for membership who is not less
than eighteen years of age, and
who is descended from a man or
woman who, with unfailing loyalty
to the cause of American Independence, served as ·n sailor, or a sol-

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

JoinS membership of
Angus Association

•

Well, did you welcome in the
new year properly? "Properly" bas
a lot of meanings-different
strokes for different folks-so you
b I did ka
pro ab Y 0 Y·
Pomeroy's Carolyn Kom certainly had a new experience to
Angus Associa- beH
ncewl yebar atcUni.versity
.
'th
cii d It
osp1 m o um us. aro yn was
21000
uon,. w•. over ··• . a ve a u
one of four patients confined there
and luruor me~bers, IS_ tb_e I_argest waiting for a heart transplant. She
,
::: ca~l~ reg•stry as~~atlOnr:I;, was taken into the opemting room
·
.
. wor · ts coml'utenz reco
Sunday night and the.Qptmtion was
dier or civil officer in one of the mclude d_et_a•led ~nformahon on performed . Reports on Monday
several Colon!cs O[ States, ,or m.the. _Qv.er 12..DUUton regtsleredAngus._ _ were that Carolyn is getting along
Umll,ld Colomes or States as a rec. ~e Asso~lallan records ances- fine.
ogmzed pablo~ or rendered ~aten- tral mfo~uon ~nd keeps records
Her operation really kept the
al a1d dunng the RevolutiOnary ofproducllon on mdlVldual animals local telephone lines busy as the
War.
for •ts members. These permanent news that her transplant was taking
. Mrs. Cleland, her daughter records help membe~s select and place spread'through the communiLmda and grandda~ghter Amy mate the best _ammals ~n therr _h~rd~' ty. She was on many prayer lists
have docume~ted the•r ances~ to . to produce h•gh quahty, effiCient and the community is certainly
the Revoluuonary War P~tnot, breedmg ~attle wh1ch are then pulling for the well-liked•Carolyn.
~chael Circle who_ se_rv_ed ·~ ~~e record_ed_ With the Amencan ~gus She entered the Columbus hospital
Dunmore County V 1rgm~a Mlln_13 Association. Most of the re!!lstered recently and was to remain there
under the. c_ommand of Cap tam ~Ang~~ l!!'e Jlsed by !lie ll;S. f~ll ,... until ·a·he.i.rt suitable 'for trnlfsplalllJohn Holman. Early C•rcle_ances- and r-.mchers who _rruse h1gh 9ual1ty ing to her was donated. It's amaz~
tors m•grated _fr?m ~e Palatinate _m beef for consurnpuon.
.
ing that one came so soon. Some
Q~111U1Ilo/, amvmg 10 ,l'h•!®clpJ!•a.
- ~
- - ·
- -, - wait for months on end,- confined to
They erst sel!let~n th~ Shenantbe hospital.
.
doah alley_!ll__ 1!8!Dla. Later, ~"- - ~
,_- earolyn- of course will remain
som~ descen~ants came to Ohio,
A candle lighti~g service ':"as a r.'at Universiiy Hospital, under obsermaking the tnp by the well-known feature of the. Christmas serv1ce at '):'i .
d
T
.
Contestoga Wagon trail when tbe
the Alfred United Methodist vauon an tr~;atment. here _s
area was still- wilderness They Church ·
al':"ays 3 chance that her bo&lt;IY w•ll
helped clear the land, buill .homes
Eloi~e Archer and Sarah Cald· :J:S: ~eta~~ ;;:sgou~J~~~:~~~
and provided schools and churches
well were in charge and each' per- .
.
.
o
·
·
·
:
mfecllon.
Mrs. Clel an·d •s
tbe _dau~hter of sol) rece1ved a candle to hghl Mter
Everyone- but everyone-is
the late Otha and Lms C1rcl~ of that they gathered at the table hoping for smooth sailing for her .
Racine. Linda and Amy are the
where a birthday cake for Jesus
·
granddaughter and great-gra ndwith a lighted candle was placed.
H
. opplng back 10 Ch~istmas,
Doris Dillinger read "Christmas
daughter of-the. late &lt;&gt;Fioyd and
Chuck and Daisy Blakeslee of
Neva Cleland, Rutland, aRd the late Prayer", and the group sang "Away Pomeroy traveled to .Rockport,
Otha and Lois Circle.
ina Manger" ,md "Happy Birthday,
Jesus" before cutting the cake Ind.,.to spend the holiday with, their
"
which was furnished.by Mrs. Cald- son-in-law and daughter, Jirri and
W:ell.
.
Jennifer Butcher, and their faniily.
Holiday visits included April Jeff, Julie, Jessica and Joanna. The
. Nely and Jeff Noble bf Fairborn to . group was joined by Patty
Marguerite and Delbert Stearns; . Blakeslee Circle and her son,

.
. •
J0 In
Th ree. generatlon s
.
·
.DA·R am eo SOCiety
·

. can family as it. is jabout 'prorec;ting . dren, widow(er)s or parents of
the el!letly. Fully 40 percent of the retired, deceased, or disabled work42 million people receiving Social ers.
Security benefits are not retired
When a worker's earnings stop
workers; they are t(Je spouses and or are decreased ~ause of retirecbildren of retired workers or are ment, long-tend disability, or
receiving disability benefits or sur- death, Social Security benefits
vivors benefits as the spouses, chil- · re11lace a portion of the. earnings.

Jo~~- ~~rican

'

.

·•·
holiday

Alfred New Notes

Nine Robinson and Clara Follrod
to Janet and Bob Robinsons of Belpre; Sarah Caldwell to Doris an!!
Tlie Golden Rule Sunday meeting in January. The men of the Ben Ewings Of Pomeroy;· Mil(e
.School Class of the Middleport . class will have charge of avalen- Weber of Charleston to Brenda and
Pltst Baptist Church gathered at the tine party for the wives. Visitation Gaty _.Johnsons; Kay aDd Larry ·
home of Manning·and June Kloes was discussed.
Spencer and family of Racine 10
for a holiday dinner party.
A "goodie" auction was held · Doris and Floyd Avis home; Pat,
The Rev. Mark Morrow gave with proceeds going to provide " Bob: Bobby, Matthew and Kevin
grace preceding the pollock dinner. Chrisunas for an adopted family.
Keaton to Imogene and Lester
Attending were Mark and Vicki Keaton; Sharon, Gary, Matt, and
Devotions were given by Mrs .
Kloes who read "Time :for Christ- Morrow. Randall and Carolyn Kim Michael to Poole-Parker fami,.tnas" and"Let Chrisimas Happen to Davis, Lawrence Eblin, John and ly.
\ You"..
·
Marilyn Fultz, Sharon Hawley.
Nina Robinson is a· nDIJUnlci,,g
Mrs. Klocs presided at tbe met- Manning and June Kioes, Glenna · the birth of a great-gmndson,
ing during which time it was decid- Riebel, Marjorie Walburn an.d Douglas. born on Dec. 23 to ""'''~--+---~· ed that the same officers will con- Phyllis Young.
·
·
,, _bie Robinson and Douglas Roach,
tinue for 1995. There will be no
. ',
Williamson, W. Va.

reunion.

Ruth Simpson or Racine had
wrapped up 4-1 years in banking
Saturday wh~n she retired from the

gintalth~

den
, R"
I·e .'.cIass
-.
·
u
.
·
a
·
.
G
.
Observes. ·ch.rl"stmas·
-- ~

·'Vi·chita,w~:~~ :~ !~~~~~r1~n,!

George and Nancy _Collins,
Reedsville, are new members of the
·American Angus Association,
reports -Dick Spader, executive vice
resident of the ·national organi7.aP
tion w.ith headquarters in St. .

~aa~ign~e~oo~~:.;~~i~~~c~t:~d ~~:

P~e4

BenJtts paid to the worker with a
spouse and two or more children
may replace as much as 90 percent
of prior earnings f&lt;!r low income
families. In 1994, the average family henefit'paid to a widow(er) and
two cbildret\ was $1,328; for a disabled worker and spouse with one
or more children, $1,088.1be maximum benefit payable to a widower
and two cbildren of a worker Who
died at age 25 was $2,430; for a
worker who became disabled at age
25 with one child, $2,073.
· Although to qualify for retirement benefits a worker needs to
haveworked at least 1!l-years urider
Social Security, he/she can qualify
for survivors and disability benefits
for hislber family with as lillie as a
11/2 years of work. The amount of
ric eeded d
ds
the
k
wo n
. epen on
wor er's age and increases to 5 out of
. the last10 years for workers 31 and
older.
,
Benefits are paid to spouses,
children, and even dependent parents in..lhe case of dec;tased workers. The benefits are paid on the
earnings record of either worker.
.Since two-worker families are
becoming mrire.and-more common,~
most families now enJ'.oy double
proll,lction.
Divorced spouses and divorced
survi·ving widow(er)s may also

.

DAvin

o.- SURDYKA,

KFC

Means ·More ·Meal

For Your Money.

--,

•

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~-~---'---, RACINE .S-o uliiiii~:::OC~~~~~~~-~-~S~po~~rta;,;.l'\l~u~rl~es;;:;•~-l'ra~ct~ur~es;_:•;~-w~o;~~k~l'\l~u~rt~es~c~,~~-"~-~~:I::IJ:=:;:-·-'-::::-:::=::=:::=:--:-::....:::_... ---------'.,_..,~~
WEDNESDAY
--'-·~ ~~~~l.Ll

'-".'.'l.L==

II

"''"~~v.a l.,-~_,, c.......~l ,~

elievers I:ellowship Minimy.
New Lima Road, Rutland, Wednes- .
day through •Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Rev . Dee .Miller, Nelsopvillc.
speaker; special singing . Public

Society scrapbook
•

.
CHRISTMAS TREATS .
Santa made li visit to the Rut. llw.d Fjrc Department and ~ave _out
treats to 190 children. The proJCCt
was sponsored by the Rutland rue-

men who extended a's~::·~~~c!j~

_ _l

•

'·'

··

MOVING DIRT ...:.. The loll(!·awalted mov"
ing of dirt on the nrst phase of the ltavenswood
Connector Road began recently with Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc.'s relocation of gas lines. Here
workers using heavy equipment move gas lines
In the vldnlty of Meigs Hlp School Tuesday

.

l
. Tfle~ ye~r· 1994 'i·n re\tieW;r
(Se.cond in a series)

'

ilther.;::~~!~~f~~~~::~,~

ille"
.In•60ard
Vaughan to
of zoning
and
reappointed
Leesa
appeals
"j • .
Murphy, Eugene Triplett, Joseph
. inajot thunderstorm rumbled
Struble and Larry Wehrung io the
through the area knocking out elec- zoning bOard.
trical equipment.
..
The board also ad&lt;!pted rules of
June 27 - Pamida store offi·
order and established regular meetcially opened with. a formal ribbon
ing times as '7 p.m. the ·firsl and
cutting, entertainment and refreshthird Monday. nf each month.
·
COMMISSIONER - Meigs County Board of Commlul011ers
ments .. ·
Council approved appropriaJune 28 - Middleport Village . tions of $1,361,428.44 for 199S · . Prestdent Fred Hol'rman, right, W.U omclally swom In u a Me!p
County .Commissioner T~y afternoon by Judge Fred W. Cro'!'
Council began its search for money compared to $1,3-20!j34.~1 for
ill or the Mel~ County Common Pleu Court.
to repair' the ·pool, clo.sed because 1994.
.
. .
of structural problems which

May 27 - · Bengy Rboades,
MAY
Mi(!d(eport,
pled guilty to charges
·May 2 - Jessie Wbite was recof
tbeft
and
gross
sexual imposition
ognized by Veterans Memorial
in
an
incident
May
15 on the Flood
Hospital for nearly 14,000 hours of
volunteer service in the Women's Road just outside romeroy involv·
ing a 42-year,.old ·womim.
Auxiliary;.
May ' 3 - Joe Clark was
. JUNE
· appointed downtown·revitalization "
June 3 - Gene Tripleu was
project coordinator to handle the
.grant monies awarde&lt;ilto Pomeroy, named new exec~tive commiuee
.and Councilman John Musser was chairman of the Meigs County
appointed chairman of tbe Pomeroy Republican Party. · ,
June 5 - Meigs Cout¥y lhreatenthesar;;:;swimrners.
llusiness D.istrict Committee to
:wortc with' Clark in carrying out the observed its 175tb liDfliversary with
a reception in the c(!unroom of tbe
July I Gov. George
The resignation of Tom Roserevitalization.
. May_4....-- More than 42 percent ·Meigs County CoW111oqse. William Voinovich awarded $92,400 in berry as' a member of the·Siluthern
of Meigs voters turned out 1o nomi- Grueser, 97, of near Rock Springs, siate funds
th!l new water line Local Board of Education was
was
the
oldest
attending
and
was
·
projecUn
Rutland
, Scipio and · accepted at Tuesday night's meetnate candidates -'- Fred Hoffllll!!l
(R) and Jack Slavin (D) for com- recognized by the celebration com- Columbia Township.
ing of 1tbe board. at Soutbem High
mittee,
along
witb
WiUiarn
Radford
missioner,·and Nancy Campbell for
. July 4 - Ground was broken. School.
Appllcations·are now being
auditm;;.and to approve a five-mill · who lives on the homestead of the for ·skinner Park. Twenty-three
localed off 'Skinner Lane in taken for Roseberry's seat. He l!l\5
· Meigs Local -permanent improve- Radford family who came here in
ments levy, al)d a one-mill EMS 181.8, one of severn! same family · Pomeroy was donated to tbe Prut. one year remaining' on his term.
landowners dating bai:k 10 the early District and the part was nal!led for Anyone interested in being named
levy.
·
Maj . Benjamin M. Skinner who to the board is asked tO submit an
May 6 -. National Day of years of tbe county. .
June 6 - D-Day remembered settled ber in 18S4.
· application to Supt. James Ray
Prayer was observed on the CoonJuly 4 -Celebrations in Rut- l.awrence by Jan. 13. The vacancy
bouse steps with singing, scripture with at\ anniversary publication by
reading, prayer and patriotic ol;l"ser- Ohio Valley Publishing including · land, ~inc. ilild Mkkllcpon fea- must be filled by Jan. 18 ;_ ~nie
vance.
·
. reflections on tho~ .World War II lured parades, fireworks, games Hill, treasurer, said.
and foods. Rutland's parade-theme ·
J~ (Susie) Grueser was elect'
May 10 - Mark Elliott pleaded years liy local veterans. .·
June 12 ..:.... Meigs Countians carried out tbe 175th.anniversary of ·
·
·
guilty to charges of child endangerment alJd assault. fourth-degree . were given a glimpse of l!te. past
Plains
felonies in connection with the during_Heritage !;lay weekend at
the Meigs Museum. Tbe .uniformed Regional Sewer DisCrict.was given
death of his infant son, Ty.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) May .-1 - Fifty-seven Meigs 91st OVI. Co, B. set up camp and · a $.500,00!l grant from the Ohio That elephant stampede that s~
Gounty a,.:ademic achievers were· conducted memoliaJ services at the Public Worlcs Commission.
with tbe Nov. 8 'eleclion has finally
. recognized .and presented trophies Civil War moniunent on tbe CourtJuly 7- Worlc at the site of the rumbled onto the Capitol grounc!s.
·· at the 10tli annual academic excel- house lawn. Downtown there was roc)\ and land slide at H:obson was
Republicans who won conlrol of
lence banquet held at Me\gs High music, classy cars, a canoe compe- completed at a cost of more than a tlie House for
first time in 22
tition; and duck derby to entenain miUion project. 1be slide occurred years opened a new legislative sesScbool.·
·
..
May 16 - Grand opening was visitors.
in tbe sprins o( 1991 and resulted sian Tuesday with election of a
June
15
-.
Hundreds of resi- in damage 10 several houses weD ftrSt-ever woman speaker.
held for the new Meigs.Motel near
dents turned out to participate in as the higliway.
Pomeroy opened by Frank Herald.
And lhal was juslfor starters.
.
May 17 - Pomeroy Council tbe Ohio River Sweep, a projected
July 10 - Meigs County
Gov. George "Voinovicb takes
put the parking lo~ a populfU' night headed up here by Kenny Wiggins, received $80,000 from tbe state as the oatb of office for a second.term
spot for area youths, off limits from Meigs County Litter Control direc- reimbursement for costs due to Jan- Monday after winnil)g 72 percent
11
to, dawn, and threatened tor.
uary's snow emergency, . EMS Of the vote. Inauguration also is
June 19 - The heat was on ,Di!J;l:l!!f Bob liY«J!!IIIPUn~.
vic~~tors with a_trip Jo juvenHe
scbeduleJ! for O!h.er statewide
·. July:-12-- Miilaleport=voled to ~:- ,
- ~ --r
Wltlrl~tOO:ni9SileiDJJ
May· 18 - Valedictorians were recorded around Meigs Gounty . . W!th~w fro~ the Big ~end Water
.
.. .
pamed at the three high schools, Meigs 1jobless rate began a fall, District.
from 11 .6 to 11.2 for May,
Andrew Daniel Wolf at
12 - , Rutland
WASHINGTON
.

to

Repu~licans

as

.

./ 8 Pieces F._ried Chicken ·

trauma fractu,..,. and recoMtructlve ou'IIOrieo

'
;

me

M_.o~

Trelltlns ..mtety of Joint and muecle dleoiden,
l!noe anll .h!p R)!!~enta. •
·

Appropriations for individual $7,212.77 ($6,212.71). ·
.
funds are, . with 1994 figures lis~
Clerk Kathy Hysell said the viiCouncilman John Musser was in. parenthesis: general fund , lage will carry over $280,.950.79
re:elected president of Pomeroy $529,650 ($526,725); street fund. from1994.
Village Council at Tuesday night's $162,500 ($171,472.74); state
Mike Stroth, consultant for the
combination council meeting and , highway, $5,400 ($6,615.99); , village' s downtown revitalization
cemetery
fund,
.$13,0(10 project, updated council on th~
organizational meeting.
Musser was the only nomipee ($10,767.88); recreation, $2,500 · venture's progress.
.
for the seat and was elected unani- ($5,409.16); federal grant, $21,000
Of the 20 businesses coopemtmously by other council members. . (new fund) ; fire .and fire truck, ing in the program, estimates have
Mayo{ John w. Blljettnar $112,625.32 ($116,509.52); utility, been completed for 19 of them, be
appointetl the entire council as $12,500 ($12,957.72); law enforce- said. In addition, renderings, artis. · "committee of the whole" on vii- ·ment, $2;568.62 (new fund); safety, lie dra:wings of what ~uil~ings. will
lage flnance and insurance commit- $9,500 ($3,800); perm1ss•v.e '!'•· look hke after revltai1Z31ian, ha":C
Jees, lMteaH"ofonlythl'eememti'm-. - SlO,SOOi($11,137 .!II); bmldmg been co119'leted for 17 of thebus•per committee 11!1 was customary. (u~4. $6,500 ($7,191.92)~ water, nesses With two more expected to
In another departure, other tradi-_ $247,873.80 ($318,062.83), sewer, he~ompleted soon, he a~ ..
tiona I committees cmisisting nf ' S154,235.12 ($165,147.65); guarIt mtg~t see~ the proJ~Its not
three members were replaced by ante_e me!Cf, $20,000 ($26,681 .09); movmg qmcldy, he said, but the
. ' (e. ·· bet appointme ts - · -- pollee
pcnSIOJI, ~$:i ,744 ,24- actual grani, WBS-1101 Signed (al· the C"'
sm~p;:"ted _were: Sea~ Dilion, ($~;359.76); cemetery endowment, s~ level) until September." " ·
grievBDCe; BiU Haptoristall, safety; $38,118.57 (same); perpetual care,
' Continued on~ 3 _
~ ·i.t'
. ..... .
Musser,. graliJS IID!!..iiCvelop"'. - , \.l ·r~-•h'"'t 't- John
---~
ment;
I;Mq_ Wehrung, zoning;
. . ..... ~
-·~ ''.~" "r'i,_....,·. Q
-~
&lt;»
..... "
i"·"· ~
Wrigilt&lt; OSHA and com- .
George
.•
munily
relations;
William Young, .
a~rnoon. 'lbe work Is beiDg done ID IICc:ordiuace
ordinance
and
parks
and recreation.
with a plan approve«! b)' .tile Ohio J&gt;epartment
Council
approved
seven paid
of Transportation, said ODOT apokeawoman
villa¥e
employees
holidays
for
. Nancy Yoaehlllll. Plans llave yet to be approved
including New-Year s Day, Memofor electric, telephone, cable and water Une relorial Day, the Fourth of July, Labor
cation, she added.
Day, Thanksgiving, tbe Friday fol'
..
lowing Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Memio~nty'sr~~~~

I

School District hold' organization- ,
al meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
high school.

Or'

./

Wh 1 R

[~

C
0 e. ~tisserie hie ken
M " ... ,
,

./ Large Gravy
'
. ./ Large-Cole Slaw
-

'.

By JIM FREEMAN
Selltinel news staff

acres

'ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

• 2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo 35 centa
A Multlmedlo Inc. New8p.lf*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 4, 1995

Roseberry resigns -South,ern board post

Announces the Opening of His Medical rractlce In

MIDDLEI'ORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge # 363 will meet at
1;30 p.m. Tuesday m the lodge. All
Masons il)vitcd.
.
.

~

·

Low IOillallt UOWid 5.
Wlncly. Tbundays111111y. HIP Ia
201.

_
P omeroy Council

i

invited.

CHESTER - Eastern AtJilctic
Boosters Will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Eastern High School.

BuckeyeS:
11-30-33-34-35
.

- ·--~-

Tyree Blvd, Jan. 4-8 . Dave C~n ~
field, commissioned evai\gelisl for
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport tbe Church of the Nazarene, will he
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,__ the speaker. Services at 7 p.m.
Meigs County Public Library. Mrs. Wednesday through Sa!urday; SunRichard Owen to review, "One day, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
.
Writer's Beginnings" and other )
selected writings by Eudora Welty .
P6MEROY - The Big Bend·
For roll call members are to give a · Cloggers will resume regular class- •
New Year's Resolution. ,
es at 6 p:m. Wednesday at Pomeroy
Village Hall . AU interested beginRA CINE- Special ·services. ners shoUld attend. For information
TUESDAY
.
CHESTER - Chester Town- . Racine Church of the Nazarene, c&amp;)l Vivian May at 992-7853.
ship .Trustees, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
town hall, for year-end meeting and
organi7.ational session. ·

..

6805

Musser to head

cheon and was presented gifts from
her co-workers and the bank .
You've had a long haul, Ruth, so
do enJOY your rellrement.
~
_ _
_· ·
Mr anu Mrs. JoliiiBaxter who
reside in the Burlingham area are
extending big, big thanks to all of
their friends and neighbors WhO
pitched in to provide patbroom
facilitie~ at their home. Workers qualify for benefits, generally withcame out in droves to help with the out decreasing the benefits of the
project. a real necessity at this time ~~~to~a~e~~~~~;,· ~;l ~8~!~e
due to Mrs. Baxter's illness, and
After two years, the divorced
the Baxters are extremely gmteful.
So, thank you.
spouse may qualify (or retirement
~
__ _ _
_, _
benefits if both she/he and the
Kathy McDaniel of Long .Bot- · worker are age 62 or older, even if
tom and. her mother-in-law, Gloria
the worker does not retire at !bat
McDaniel, Point Plea•an"Wc-Vac;, -'--'1im
= e. - - -·- --have a point of pride in common . . .
· E 1\ h
- - 11
E lacS as two sons w o are
Oops.
ag e ~o~ts.
_
The correct song title for tune
Gl9na s sons, .. Mark of
20
ill Whatsa Name of That. Song
Culpe(J!!r, Va., _and Matt of Bayard, .
.EW. Vas., eacbdauainethd the rank.of contest was "Blues in the Night"
and not "Birth of the Blues'1 as I
ag 1e coul urmg eu scouung
years while growing up in Point 'incorrectly informed you. Those
Pleasant. Kathy's sons. James and
Ad
·
f
· listed in an earlier column did 'have
the title correct, "Birth of the
am, more recent1y, o course,
Blues''·
Somehow I always mix up
. became -Eagle ~couts., .
those
two
songs altho_ugh I'm sure I. ·
Th1s many Eagles m one ram· q01·te n accompl'shment
··
know
both
the tune and the lyrics
1·1.Y •s
1
a
of
both.
Forgive
me?
·
smce, only one percent of bo~s
en_tenng scoutmg actuall~ al!am
this top rank m the org~•zauon.
And this gem from my dear
friend, Ferndora Story:
Kathy attnbutes· heF s'!ns ~uccess
"Age is just ·a number and
to her, husband, ~uke S, lifelong
mterest and parllClpauon 10 the_ . mine's unlisted".
Boy Scout Program.
Do keep smiling.

-------Community calendar· -The Community Calendar is
published as a .f ree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The cale.ndar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
. are printed a.• space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run ' a
speclnc numbe~ of days.

Pick3:
867
Pick 4:

Yol. 45, NO. 170
Capyrlght 1994

--Ill

.,

.Ohio Lottery

Raiders
knock otT
Marauders

( 6 Hot Wings' Pieces
. ./ 4 Biscuits.

GOP

arge asrle"' Btato~s~ . ~.!- 1~arge,BakeifBeans ---

ed board _ presid~nt and J.oseph
Thoren, v1ce pres•dent,,dudng the
organizational part·of the meeting.
Other board members are Marty
Morarity and C. T. Chapman.
'
The third Monday at 7 p.m. in
the high school cafeteria was set as
the regular date for meetings.
Members als(! set their salaries at
. $80 a meeting for.not more than 13
·meetings a year.
.
Membership in the Ohio ·Scbool
Board Association ·was renewed
.ll!ong. witho peJformance · bonds for
the board members_. tbe superinten·

dent, treasurer, and assisiimt trea.surer.
, Bids on two new- busses wen: .
. aceepted, International chassis witb
Thomas bodies. The bid for blldics
was accept¢ from Edwin H. Davis
Co., Danville, and die cbassis from
Stow Equipment Co., Marietta.
Bill Justis was empfoyed as a ·
substitute bus ddver. · .
. Next regular meeiing of the
board was set' for Jan . 23 at the
high school becaqse of the obser. vance of Martin Luther King Day
on Jan. 16.

·

choose woman for. speaker
officeholders whose eJections set
· precedents of their own.
Speaker Jo An~ Davidson, RReynoldsburg, · who commands a
56-43 majority in the. !:louse, said
during opening day ceremonies Jhat
·legislators will not be judged on a
partisan basis, bUI on how they
worlc together to make government
work.
"I hope th
1 two years are
marked by opennes , imess and
spirited debate. One llf
mos.l
important things we can remember
is that partisan politics has its

··n charge

place, but not wlien it stifles the
search for the belt solutions to
Ohio's problems," Davidson said. ·
Davidson said the change in
control of the House marks the start
of a new era in which changing·
public attitudes are the driving
for:ce.
.
''Elected ·officials .. , ate under
more challenge toda~ than the)'
have ever been before. It's because~ "
the American public bas lost some
~f its confidence in its govenunent
and is looking for that to be re·
esJablished,'~ she said.

· -- ----

.~- ----- - ~

~

I

, -

S,

em.
. . River Sweep went on as ·scheduled to give assistance in ~g dQwn a
· · congn:sshmal takeover
-----,~- ·- - · -·~~ ~,~.~~-~ -~·~··--"-'~~...,.;.....-..+
. .-. _,__ .
' ' - ,-= ·
~--~ May 19 - Matthew F. Morris, and was .a~suoo:ss.aulozens of res; - -old~Rutland-Hish-Sdlool-bulldlng;~
. ·----!lbi!Lne...w_Ho_use_ail~ ~enate _GOJ&gt;
='
17, was in critical· condition at idents swarmed·11vet the banks . July _17- Dismantling of oJd leaders vowed today will bring ·
Available only at pa rticipating KFC• restauran ts. lnclud"s,Whiteidar\1: pieces: N~ Coupon Necessary. U~ited time otter.
2907. Jackson
Avenue
Grant
Hospital where he was taken pic~ng up debris.
Cross Mill building in Pomeroy· .Americans less government, lower
.
.
~FC
1995
I
•
by
LifeFlight
11
helicopter
after
June
22A
vacant
house
on
began as the first step in tbe move taJ(esandareformedCongress. · •
·Point Pleasant, West Virginia
crashing into a traffic sign pole on New Street in Paneroy .was gutted of the strucrure 10 Star Mill Park in
"It's a different day," Sen. Bob
Of!lce Houra: 9 a.m. -' p.m.. l'londa)' th!Ough l'rlday
Stale Route 7 near Meigs Hlgb . ·by .a fire, Wilh temperatures above Racine.
·
D!Jie, tbe incomlng , ~enate MajoriSchool.
.
90, tbree firemen were overcome
July 24- Proposal for a Meigs ty Leader, said today just hours
May
22
-.Denny
Fa~myer
of
by
the
beat
and
were
talcellto
Vet·
.
sales
tall boost was made. Colnlliisbefore the newly elected Republiror •ppolntmenta all:
Facemyer Lumber Co:, Inc . of erans Memorial Hospital for treat- siooer Fred Hoftinan said it should can majorities in both .the House
(304) 675-1784.
. Middlepon. was presenied a gover- ment,
.
.be something for the people. to . and the Senate took their Qiltbs of .
.'
.
excellence
in
exporting
award
·
June
23The
polsibility
of
a
decide and If they don't want it offtce.
nor's
.'
•
during a ceremony· in Columbus by regional jail came to the front when then other ways to n:duce expendiGov. Georg!l V. Voinovich.
a pledge was made by the State to tures wiU bave to be found. .
. "A lot of people didn't think it
May 26 - Racine and Letart provide 100 percent funding for the
· July 26 - Middleport OK' s would happen in tbeit'lifetime,"
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
'
COUNTY COURT JUDGE.:.. Judge Pattlck H. O'Brien, ...
Elementary Schools were giYen construction, architectural fees and $1J million '95 budget
Rep, Newt Gingrich said of tbe
The family of professionals
·
·
riKbt. wu sworn In Tueaclay afternoon for llnotber term u Melp
$25,000 by the state in what is land acquisitions.
•
July 29 - Racine Council new Republican House majority
·
at20v...,om.., ..... P....._wv~ (304)11H340
228 W~st Main
County Court judge. Here O'Brieh Is sworn Ia by Jucip Freel
--'-- 1~-+--~ '"'c--· ··~~...:.~~~~~~~~-=-~~=~-~~:::1=~-=~~~~~~";ve~nture capiu!l"for an
June 25 -.Nearly 3500 bouse- appro¥ed· a budset of $218,328, that was poised to elect bim speat.
__
Crow
_!II of ~e1 Melgs Co~ntr Common Pl~~urt.
+.
;::.
~ching pregram;
ho~ were w1thout po~ after~ ~- ~nUnued on~ 3
er.~"~~re very e.xclted.'' .
'

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

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•

I

Wednesday, January 4,1995

;Commenta
The Daily ·~entinel

'
With Russia reverting to imperi- was addicted to sedatives, put the be admits that it
y'eltsin government bas responded
ali~m. it 's time (or the United USSR on an expansionist track that
Advisers to former Soviet Presi- to its rebeUion with unconscionable
Stales to return to doctrines that led to a ruinous war in dent Mi)cbail Gorbachev acknowl- bnttalily.
successfully thwarted imperialism Mgbanistan.
edge that gradual awareness of
In Bosnia, the Russians are sidin the past: containment and a dose
Soviet economic deaepilude led to ing openly wilb Serbii\D aggresMorton Kondracke the ref~rms tbat eventually toppled sion, going so far as to use a U.N.
of Rcaganism.
Containment involves rcjuvenatthe S~v1et em~tre .
Security Council veto to block a
Along·· -tho· way,~bowcvcr, a ·--•""'H.. ·eertamly .nol u.u.~ ..!~~t ... Ju!:l ,.,,,.. to Bosnian Serbs.
i ng NATO by allowing in new
Eas tern European p\embers - · Soviet~inspired worl~ peace moveRoo~!~. ~ea~an caused tbe. "evil ,_, iii"vi~"io}oiii"i&amp;' Wesfs"Piiii: ""· ·
Poland, the Czech Republic, Hun- ment tnduced Prestilent J tmmy empm: to collapse all by himself. nership for Peace, a co-operative
gary and Slovakia- just as soon Caner to abandon the !neutron Cootatnment was U.S. poUcy for military and peacelceeping group,
as they are ready to join.
bomb - even thou&amp;.,h the Soviets · three decades before Reagan was Russia shockingly balked at signReagan ism involves Clinton's were simultaneously preparing to elected. But, when called upon to ing membership papers Dec. 1 in
droppmg hts stance offnendly for- ·, deploy SS-20 missiles capable of be tough, Reagan was.
Brussels. Then Yells in himself
He resisted tbe nuclear freeze delivered a stinging lecture to Presbearancc as the Russ1ans dtsr~pt destroying much of Western
U.S.. pol.icics. Clinton sh~uld start Europe.
.
movement that would !et the St?vi- ident Clinton in .Budapest, charging
making tt clear that theresa pnce
The TV series confirms anew ets keep SS-20s .wbtle d~nymg the United States with precipiiallng
to be paid for crossing the world's that Reagan's 1983 speeches NA_TO cou~tervailing Penbmg and a "cold pca~e" liy proposing
' lone supetpower.
declaring, the. USSR an "evil crutse mtssiles: When 11 was cl~ NATO expansion.
A remmder of the s u~cess. ~f empire" and launching the U.S . the U.S : we!IJIODS ~auld be_butlt,
The administration's tendency
contatnment and Reagamsm Will Strategic Defense Initiative bad a
the Sov1ets IDIDledtately agreed to bas been to treat such behavior
run on PBS begmm_ng I~; 13 -a profound effect on Soviet leaders,
negotiate an amts ~u~tion pact.
with mere disappointment and to
four-pm. senes ~en~p~ _ Messe.n- __ forcipg them td .face the fact that ·__ lJnfo!Wnately, l,[ s lltne for_Rea- explldn that Yeltsin bas 10 ~pease
gers From Moscow m wb1cli for- the communist system could not
gamsm once agam. The Clinton anti-Western ultra-nationalists on
mer top off1ctals of the So~1et keep up with the United Srates ceo- administration has go'!e out of ~ts bis rigbl
Umon explam bow the old regune nomically or teebnologically.
· way ,to co-operate w~th and .al,d
The danger, however, is that
Marshal Vikt!ir Kulikov, former
Russtan prest~ent Bo~s Yelts1_n s U.S. solicitude may encourage
responded to U.S . strength and
i weakness.
.
commander in chief of the Warsaw
government m revertmg to Qld- · ultra-nationalism by implying ttiat
In )he late 1970s, when it looked Pac~ says on camera that SDI was
style trUcule~ce.
.
opposition to u.s. policy has 00
as ,though V~ernam had put .the "a piece of adventurism, an
· 'I_'he R~s.s111!is have been !nter- ·• pnce. This is akin to Clinton's
Unt~d States on the sktds •. ~ar:1ous attempt to mow us down economive~mg ~lllt:IDIY m the affam. of habit of Jetting domestic rivals
So_vtct generals and poh!lcla.ns cally, to force us to spend all our ne1gbbonng mdepen~t republics. "dis" him without penalfy:lri .for,afiUlll that Commun,st Party chtef resources on counter-measures."
Tbe ~way provm~e ofCbecb- eign policy, though, it's dangerous.
Leonid Brezhnev, whom they say Asked if the U.S. policy worked, nya IS Wlthm Russta, but the . In !he Dec. 25 Washington Pos~
Russian expert Dimitri Simes of
tbe Nixon Center for Peace and
Freedom,
who's been an advocate
BeF'oR\!! il'l'llaRacT;ve T\1,
of pro-Yeltsin policy, expressed
ReMeMBeR Ho'vl tie tl$eD To
chilling opinions that Russia is
$iT THeRe foR HOIJI?S
beaded decisively toward autborl- .
tarianism, expansionism and superWiTr\otJi MO'iiNG
nationalism.
MIIS&lt;:l.e?
Simes says that tbe United
States has: to ~e il J:lear that re, .
emergence of empire is incompati-·
ble with U.S . vital interests.
..
,.
The be~t way to do this is for .
Bill Clinton to nc\ as Ronald Reagan_tlid..when faced with the SS-20 _
challenge: Meet it.
~
Clinton should tell Yeltsin that
Poland, · Hungary, ·tbe Czecb
Republic and Slovalcia have woo
their freedom and that NATO will
protect il He should invite Russia
to sign a peace treaty wilb NATO,
but if it prefer!( "cold peace:• QJ . _ _1
hostility, he should make it clear
that Russia will be the loser.
Russia isn't yet an evil empire;
Bill Clinton needs to keep it from
beaiming one:
(Morton Kondracke ts•execu·
8:l$1'eiN '''~
live editor of Roll CaU, the ne~~.~!: . ,.;.a
.ppor &lt;if'Capltol Hill.) -

MARGARET LEHEW
. Olntroller
l.ETI'ERS OF OPINION ano welcome. They should be leso than 300
wordo long. All lelll:rl are oubject to ocliting. and must be signed with name,
od&lt;hoallld telephone number. No unoigned letters will be published. Letten
abould be in good taott, oddmoing issues, oot pcnonalitieo.
.

•
'

Loca_l or national?
By WALTER .R. MEARS
AP Special Corres~dent
WASHINGTON - Celebrating on !be eve of their Republican
Congress, conservatives have concluded that an .old campaign axiom no
longer applies: All politics is not local, one of their lbcmists says; ft' s all
national now..
,.
Perhaps so, allbough when it bits !be pocketbook: level, politics is not
only local, it becomes intensely personal. That's why efforts10 fmd a way
out of the entitlements dilemma, in which Americans get payments by
formula, with unmanageable costs looming in the 21st centW')', have so
far .been futile.
'
The maxim that politics is local was a favorite of !be late Tip O'Neill,
·who as speaker of the Democratic House did battle with Rep. Newt Gingrich a decade ago. Now it is Speaker Gingrich, in a Republican House,
and by conservative appraisal, that new majority proves that local is ou~
-- -.. national i!l_in.
"
, . Ed war~ J . 1f'eulner Jr., president of the Heritage Foundation, in his
· sixth annual 'l!!:count Qf the state·of American conservatism, says politics
... may have been local when liberal politiCians were placating increasingly'
conservative voters wilb pork barrel favors, but the people have wised up.
-. - "Now, as n result-of lbc continued-incursions by the federal govern·
ment into every aspect of our lives - and the fact that talk radio and C: Span have broken th·e mainstream media's code of silence- all politics
·

Ar'"Und the nati'"n

Four accidents blamed

W.VA.

1~.

-------Weather----South•Central Ohio
Today ... Mostly sunny. High in
tbe middle 20s. West winds 10 to
15mpb.
Tonigbt...Clear and cold. LOw
near 5. West winds 5 tQ 10 mph
becoming light toward morning.
Tbursilay ...Sunny with the high
in the middle 20s.
·

.

&lt;"' The.Heritage Foundation, which began in 1973, had its earlier prime in
the days of Ronald Reagan. Now it i~&gt; riding lbc crest of the Republican
. takeover of Congress, Ute lhink tank' on the right, increasingly influential
. as the source of ideas and rcsearch 'for the.new House ·and Senate majorities.
. "Rmiald Reagan· has been re-elected,"· Feulner says, " not once but
, hundreds of times. American voters sent to Washington and the statchous. .. es and legislatures an mmy of soldiers who will right to fill ish lbc revolu.. lion President Reagan began."
·•
Feulner's got a different platform ·npw, a higher profile than for his
. . earlier assessments of conservatism, which often were discouraged and
.
do~ about yemsc !lush·. Feulner said Bush abandoned the Reagan her. ita~, and paid wtih defeat.
· .
'
.
. ' In a conscrvah ve Washington, success will not be me'!S.Ured by the·
number of bills Congress passes," accordihg -to· Feulner. "That's the old
way .... l'erhaps a hetter measure will be the number of programs
Congress eliminates and the number of bills and amendmentS it repeals. r..
"'!be time has never been better for real conservative change."
Lately. th ere has been much · "Re taiJcrs are aggressively manages to save 66o jobs, it fails to retail trade is picking up,' and since
women have traditionally com..
Still, local versus national politics remain to be sorted out ill action, not
hand ·.wringing over the plight of recruiting college graduates, espe- save450.
Hers
is
one
of
Ule
450.
prised
the majority of ~etail
only in theory. The voices and vehicles to override local roncems with Generation X. Having grown up in cially female grads," says Mary
This
is
what
happened
last
sumemployees,
it's logical to assume
, national iss~es are all in place: Rush Limbaugh and others of his talk
the era of Vietnam, Nixon and . Pat Blankenheim of the NatiQnal
mer
in
Wilkes-Barre.
And
though
that oor former Leslie Fay employshow trade; C-Spmt television of House ami Senate proceedings, with
Whip Inflation Now buttons, they
the datnage could have beeq much ee will bead straight for the local
Republicans saying they plan io broadcast more proceedings Ulan before. • arc now discovering lhat adult life
wQrse, things look bleak for the mall.
·
Retiring Rep. Robert Michel. who had be~n the House Republican Is even worse .Umn they imagined.
· But wait. - she can't do that.
leader from Illinois, recalled driving from l'emia during the campaign, lis· This' generation has been particu-· Association of Working Women, hundreds of women - who com-. tening to radio talk shows he c;allcd venomous, and wondering how any
larly celebrated for ils failures in who says that guidance counselors prised 90 "percent of Leslie Fay's She can't stand behind a counter
and sell perfume. She can'.t stack·
president, of either party, could withstand such an onslaughL
· the job market, and ·indeed these are warning future g~ not to take work force- who lost their jobs.
It's
already
clear
that
their
PreSident Clinton and lhc IJcmocrals couldn't, and lost Congress. troubles arc tangible.
towers of fisherman's sweaters am)
jobs that are below ~ir skill level.
" Now we'veJDadc il preuy much of a national campaign," Micilcl said.
"It's real clear that for lhe '90s, "(The universities) are telling stu- _ chances of finding a comparable pocket T's. Sh'e may not even be
. ''Perfonn, or else. Boy, is the clcctomtc ever volatile, and impatient.· ·
~pic may find ·work hut not work
dents.there are going to be employ- job in northeast Pennsylvania are able to ask customers if they •'want
fries with that." Why? Be'cause
• That worked to Rcpuhlic:m :idvantagc: now it becomes their challenge.
they're happy with," a Univer~ity 65 .out there looking for you to fill slim at best.
..
Majorities buill over lhc y.ears on local issues arc more difficult to top- of Delaware career counselor told jobs. that ~an be filled by people
:'Wilkes-Barre is an area that's she's not overeducated. All the
• pic than those fashioned ' in a national surge; that was the mastery in the The New York Times. The coun- who don't have your educational been in decline for a long time," jeans-folding jobs have been fiUed
·
• : Republican landslide that ended four decades of Ilouse Dcmucmtic rule.
says Susan Cowell or the ILGWU. by jaded cbemistry majors.
selor, Edgar Townsend, was refer- background." ·
Our
fiiepd
at
Leslie
Fay.
then,
is
Clinton said in a year~nd interview that ·RcpublicmJs were spared lhc ring to the fact that while Fortune
Now cut to Wilkes-B'arre, Pa., to "It used to be a major center of
pressures he faced because people saw the GOP as a lJPWCrless minority 500 com'panics like DuPont arc no a very different type of worl1er.
apparel manufacturing, but they've caught in a lurch. She lost·ber good
and expected more of the Democrats. Now, he said , the voters will be longer recruiting college grads,
She is an employee at the Leslie seen tens of thousands of jobs go manufacturing job to under-paid
sweatshop workers. Now, when she
·looking to both sides ro work together and ro produc ·.
. many chain retailers are.
Fay apparel factory . She is female. off-shore."
· And all in a sp&lt;Hiighl that will be even more inr• sc now.
It's easy to see why. Though the tries to. enter the service economy,
_ At the Gap, a rc&lt;-ruiting form for she is middle-aged, and she docsn :t
Clinton said he'd been Iold .thai the most p(1 ar pnliticiaf\S talk a lot a supervisory job seeks a bache- have a cbllege degree. When her· $7.80 avenige wage that the Leslie she may find that that door bas ·
b~t don't do much . " If rou :JCtually do things, you have to risk- what
lor's degree and an "ability to lift · company announces that its c;pera- Fay workers were paid is modest slanuned shu~ ID&lt;J.
Sarah Eckel is a syndicated
.did Mark .Twain say, nul\ody should ever have to watch laws or sausages 50 pounds consistently." The Mall tions will be moved south of the - even low, by American stanbeing made."
.
of America in Bloomington, Minn., · · border, she feels angry, betrayed dards - it's astronmilical when .writer for Newspaper Enterprbe
Actually, the aphorism is widely altrJbulcd to Otto von Bismarck. No set- up a retail "internship" pro- · and, finally, frightened.
compared to lhi: wages commanded Association.
· (For information on how to
matter the author; the lawmaking whec)s arc about to mesh, or grind, with graJ)'I at tlleir on-site campus. And
So with the help of the Jntema- by workers in Guatemala and Honcommunicate electroillcally with
Ainerica watching . · I
.. '
. .
.·
at' ml'ivcisitics across the county, · tional Ladies Garment Workers duras - roughly 40,cents an hour.
Conventional wisdom says tbat this columnist and others, conretailers like Cilldor, Kmart and
Union, she fights like hell to keep
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- J.C. Penney arc husUing the career her job . Months of negotiations displaced factory workers will tad America Online by ca!Ung 1nbt for The Au6ciated l)n:ss, has reported on Washington and
faiis.
ensue. And thou~h the ILGWU enter t.be service sector, albeit at a 800-817-6364, ext 8317.)
substantially lower wage. Since the
national politico ror more than 30 years.

Job woes: The big, bad BA

deaths~­
Eugene ·eyers

w.

Ronald C. Watlcins, 3( Colum·
bus, driving a 1994 Ford Ta1,1rus
owned by Budget Rent·'A·Car, lost
control of lbc car in a curve. sttuck
a ditch and a fence before coming
to rest in another ditch, according
to a sheriffs report .
A passenger, Ryan A. 'Watiins,
12, also of Columbus, was treated
at the scene by the Rutland squad
or llie Meigs Coimly 'Eriiergimcy"
Medical Service.
·
Damage to the car. was listed as
heavv and disabling.
A Middleport man's car sustained ligbt damage in a deer-car
collision Friday around 9:45 p.m.
James R. Ingels, 75, was southbound-On state Route 7 when his
Two minor injuries were report· . 1980 Chevrolet Celebrity ·struck a
ed following a one-car wreck on deer that ran into the roadway.
Aatwoods Road in €htster TownNo injuries were reported.
ship Saturday around 7:10p.m .

The year 1994 in review...
news " policy when Prosecuting
Attomey John R. Lentes said that
under the Ohio Revised Code
announce!! that "their runs, as !bey
are supported by the public iax dolIars, are public record".
Aug. 14. -The I 31st Meigs
County Fair opened. Middleport
qf(i~ia!s begl!!l _ contacting
landowners ncar tbe Ohio River
boa! launch site to discuss land
acquisition for a new parking lot
and facility expansion.
Aug . 15- A public bearing \)n
the Ravenswood connector was
announced to be held in Pomeroy
on Aug. 23.
Aug. 16 - Christopher ·Hamm
of Racine, and Michele Guess of
Tuppers Plains were named the
· 1994 Meigs Junior Fair king and
queen.
.
Aug. 17 -The trailer home of
James. Smith was destroyed by fire
des~ efforts of the Chester and
Bas
tire departments.
.
Aug. 18 - Allison Wood and
Adam Wolfe were selected the
1994 Meigs County Fair Little
Miss and Mister.
Aug. 19- Koolcr King, trained
by Terry Van Rhoden. created a

W. Eugene "Gene" Byers, 52, of Warren, died Monday, Jan. ·2, 1995,
at Wll!'fOO fieperaJ Hospital fi'OIII cancer.
·
·
.
Bani April 28, 1942, in Warren, lbc son of Wilmer and Cora Miller
Byers or Warren, he was a grinder with American Welding for 25 years
and retired in 1991. He was a U.S. Army veteran and member of the
National Guard, 1bc Emmllouel Lutheran c;lturcb, Cortland Moose Lodge
AUGUST
· #1012 and an official with the United Steelworlcers Union 111574.
Aug . 3 - Stephanie Sayre of
He is survived by his parents; daughter, Sheri Lynn Byers of Warren; ' · Racine was recipient of national
sister, Patricia Kay Syers of Warren; a niece and a nephew.
scholarship in recognition of ber
He was preceded in death by, his fust wife, Betty Jarvis Byers; and
work with the Future Farmers or
grandparents, Bart and Mamie Miller and Ray and Aorence Byers.
·.
America
Services will be at 9 p.m. Thursday at the Roberts-Clark Memortal
. Aug. 4 - State legislature
Home. Burial will foUow in lbe LetanFalls Cemetery at 2:30p.m. Friday.
banded out equity funding,
Friends may call between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
$236,000 to Eastern Local School
home.
\
District, and $225,000 to the Meigs
Local School District.
Aug. 10 - Meigs Local Board
Maggie Griffin, 92, 746 State Route 7 Nortb,Jlallipolis, died Tuesday,
of Ed11cation approved a new three
Jan. 3, 1995 at Holzer Medical Center. She and Iter late husband, flarry
year contract with the Meigs Local
Griffin, founded Griffin's Groc~ry in Kanauga. She attended tbe
Teachers Association. The contract
Fairhaven United Methodist Cburclt 10 Kanauga.
•
provided for salary'inereases and {I
Born April 2, 1902 in Lumberton, N.C., she was .tbe daughter of the
new pay step .for teachers with 25
late Lotinie and Mary Holmes Allan.
years experience.
.Aug . 11 - Meigs EMS person·
Survivors include two daughters, Mary Griffin and Margaret {Jack)
Fitu1icum, both or GallipoUs; two sons, Marvin Griffin of Gallipolis and
nel decided they would no longer
.Lewis Griffin of Chesapeake; a niece and nephew, E-.:elyn Morrow o~ release squad runs to The Daily
Sentinel and other media alld pub·
Gallipolis and Johll Mercer of Scare)', Arlt.. who were raised m the bome,
11 grandchildren, 15 great grandchildren and four great-great grandcbil·
lislier Robert Win~ett charged that
dren
.
violates the people s right to know.
site was prealded in death by ber parents; her husband; ~son, .R~y
Au~ . 12.- EMS relents on 'no
, H. Griffin; one infant daughter; two sisters, Bonnie Kennedy and N1zzte
"""1~,........,....,..._......--,:-.or-.-:
Allan· and two brothers, Les Allan and Lee AUan.
·
, Frlends may call 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tb~':5day .at the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel and one hour prior to serv1ces, wbtch w&amp;U be held 2 p.m.
Friday at the Fairhaven Unit¢ Methodist Cbureb with tbe Revs. J:lmest
· Perlcins ·and William E. Curfman officiating. Burial will follow m the
· Reynolds Ceme1ery in Addison.
Grandsons will serve a.• pall bearers.

. G. rl"ff"I n
Magg•e

di~emma

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expected from tbi Obio River Val.ley aaoss New England.
Snow and rain were also fore cast Jor parts of !be' Southwest,
southern and western Colorado,
California and southwest Oregon.
Heavy snow was expected in tbe
Sierras.
Heavy rains were expected In
the central and southern California
valleys.'Dry weather was expected
in the Northwest and Southeast.
The nation's bot spot Tuesday
was Key West, Fla., at 84 ctegrees:
the nation's lowest temperature
was min us- 38 in West Yell ow .
stone, Mont. ,

when the 1987 Chevrolet Blazer
she was driving slid on a patch of
ice, crashed into a ditch and turned
onto its side.
·
Moderate damage was reported
to the vehicle. No injuries or cita·
lions were reported.
.
No injunes were reported in
another ice-caused accident on
Bashan Road in Chester Township
Monday around 11:50·am:
Serena B. Robinson, 24, Racine.
was southbOund~ben her 1986
Ford Tempo bit a patch of ice, slid
off the roadway and bit a phone
bQx, according to a report. The car
sustained moderate damage aitd
was driven from the scene.

Prix

about $10,000 over anticipated
income for 1995.
July 31 - Pomeroy village
received grant of $357,200 from
t.iie Ohio Department or Development l'pr revitalizatio~.

grip

on weather conditions

By JIM FREEMAN ·
Richards was cited for driving
and GEORGE ABATE -...
under suspension, failure to main·
lain control and leaving the scene,
Sentinel News St.ff
Wet and icy roadways in eon- according to reports. ·
junction with !be first winter
In another Clasb, a Long Bottom
weather of the season contributed man's car sustained moderate darn·
10 three-accidents investigated Sun- .... age in an accident on state Route 7
day, Monday and Tuesday by in Chester Township S nday
Meigs County law enforcement.
around 11:25 p.m.
. A Middlepon man lost control
Victor J. Coates, 18 was north·
of his 1977 Pontiac Grand
at boullll when be lost ntrol of his
7:25 p:m. Tuesday swerved to the 1?90 Ford Mus
on !be rain·.
right and bit a parked car into ~1ck roadway, according to a ~er­
another vehicle, according to Mid- iff s report. The car then went mto
dleport Police reports.
a ditch.
.
·
Ronilld R. Richards, 30, Middle·
No injuries or citations were
port, was driving south on North reported.
.
.
Second Aveli.\IP at the intersection
A patch of tee ~as lisle!~ as the
of Walnut Street when his car cause of a one-vebtcle acc1dent on
struck the 1994 Ford Thunderbird Pomeroy Pike in Chester Township
of DOrset Thomas Cheshire and Monday around 4:45 a.m.
According to a report, .Paula A.
the 1991 Cadillac ~f ltobert king,
Middleport. records stated.
Brown, 32, Racme, was westbound

----· Area

Sara Eckel

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Extended forecut
,
.friday ...Dry. Lows in the teens.
Highs in the 30s.
Saturday ... Rain or snow likely.
Lows in lbc 20s. Highs from the
. \ower 30s north to the lower 40s
south ..
Sunday...Snow ending. Lows 20
to 25. Highs 30 to 35.

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By The Asloclaled Press
, tonight. ·
·
ton, N.D., the mercury-plunged to
Frigid conditions will continue
'l'he record-high temperature for miqus-20 degrees.
across Ohio tonight with low tem- 'Ibis dalt at the Columbus weather
Tbe cold air triggered 'snow .
peratures of between zero and 10 Slation was 61 degrees in 1993
squalls along the eastern shores of
degrees, forecasters said. Lows
while the record low was -10 in
the Great Lakes. with the heaviest
1879. Sunset tonight will be 1115:20 snows in southwest lower Micbiearly today were 5-15 degrees.
There will be an abundance 'Of p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:54
ian, northeast Obio, nortJJwest
a.m.
·
Pennsylvania and western New
sunshine on Thursday but the me;rcury still isn't expected to climb
York.
out of tbe 20s, the National Wealb.,
"
Temperatures were expected to
e;r Service said.
Mucb of the nation ranai!led in . reach only into~ t~s and 20s
Lakeshore areas of northeast an Arttic grip today as bitterly cold
today in much of !be Midwest .
·Ohio received up 10 three inches of temperatures stretched from the
Great Lakes region and Obio Valsnow overnight but most of the Rockies to New 'England.
ley.
• heaviest snow remained over Lake
Temperatures in mucb of tbe
·snow squalls were expected to
north central United States dipped , continue to roU off the Great Lakes, •
Erie. Snow sqalls were in the forecast for that area again toi!8y .and. below zero this maniog. In Willis· 1 while areas of liabter snow were

did:

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher · .

is national,'' Feulner writes.

Jan. s

Thunday,
Accu-Wealhel" forecast for

Try
Reagan
ism'
with
·Russiae--

111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio ·

The Dally Sentlnei--Page&lt;-3

B_uckeye state·locked in

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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·~

new speed record in Meigs County
Fair harness racing.
Aug. 21 - Reports showed Fri·
day gate receipts at record high for
single day admission at the Meigs
County Fair. Overall gate receipts
were up $4,500 for the week .
Vaughan's Cardinal purchased the
grand champiQn ~t~r. _ _ _ ~- · '
Aug. 24- Ohio Deparunent of
Transportation annoonced plans for
bidding the first phase of the
Ravenswood connecior by October

Contlnuedlrompage

1

at a bearing held in Pomeroy.
Aug . 26 - Rural Enterprise
Zune agreement geared to lure
industry with tax breaks approved •
by all but une political subdivision.
, Aug. 28 - Meigs commission·
ers decide to throw out the sales tax
(Jike proposal.
..
, ·
_A~g. 30 - Normim Mill iron
was critically injured when a house
he was demolishing fell and
trapped him underneath. ·

Musser'to he'ad•• ·•Continued
from page 1
::
- _-::,.._ _--:---:---:Participating inercbants will · for the cruisers to be cleaned,
bave all winter to talk to contrac- · inside and out, on a weekly basis.
tors clearing the way for construe·
During open discussion, council
lion in the spring, be said.
members commented on the need
"We'll .see fur flying when the
to fix a pothole at the bottom of, ·
weather changes," be commented.
Lincoln HiU and on projects under' Musser commended Stroth for
taken by the street departm~nt
his work on the project.
including a new lane off Sprmg
"The Stroths have put in a Jot of
Avenue.
time and a Jot of effort on this," he
Blaettnar commended the police
said.
department for "one of the finest
"Council does-appreciate what
NewYear'sEveevcr."
you've do~· Blaetblar agreed.
· Two officers were on foot patrol
. Stroth said current plans call for
and had.to m:ike no arrests, be said.
informing the :public monthly on · "I'm extremely pleased," he
the progress made toward revitalsaid. "I saw no loitering on the
st'dewalks."
·
ization . In addition, copies of the
artistic rendo;rings may be posted in
Council also held an executive
the Pomeroy Municipal Building
session to discuss property ncquisifor public viewing.
lions. No action was taken follow In adjjition, council discussed · ing the session.'
·
the fate of the village's two police
In other business, council:
cruisers.
·
- Accepted tbe minutes of !be
·Biaetmar noted one of the c:arS.
Dec. 19 meetiiig;
a front-wheel drive Ford Taurus is
- Appro,ved the mayor's report
in need of transmission work while
ol $3,720;
the other, a Chevrolet ~rice, has
- Set tbe next meeting for 7
high mileage.
p.m. Jan. 23.
Council members discussed the
Present were Blaettnar and
Hysell, councilmen t;&gt;illon, Happossibility of purchasing a used
,state police cars and a new car but tonstall, Musser, Webrung, Wright
made no decisions on the matter.
and Young and Village Adminis- .
Council alJiO discussed~«; need ~~r John Anderso~..__, __ . _ _

M~igs 'and transfers posted

COMMON PLEAS JUDGE- Judge Fred W. Crow"lff,-rlght,
of the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas wu swom In Tues·
day afternoon for bls secoad tenn u · common pleas Judge. Here
Crow Is sworn ·in by G•JII• County Common Pleas Court Judge
joseph Cain.
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__ Right of way, Roger C. and
- Right of way· Pomeroy -Gun
Helen A. Smith to CSP, Chester; . Club to CSP, Salisbury. ·
Right of way, Charles L. Sbain
to CSP, SalisbW')':
Right of way. Robert E. and
· Gladys F. Chaney to CSP, SalisLEGAL NOTICE
bury;

~h~m~c~~!:~i!n" ~be ~w~v!:rlr!! ~kOE!?c!n!)!ueRnar ~~!t~.:. fOW

session was about habeas corpus. 1 · George Patald, wbo appears to ~ Co~gressman D~ln Ed war~~·, DHe bad the appearance of due
was one of only two non-lawyers an intelliKent. honorable man, savs Caltf..; Subcomr.uttee on Ctvil and process, T~xa.s-~tyle. Two trial~.
on lbe panel. The other, sitting.nexl .
.
, FF
Constitutional RigbL•.
Tw~ all-wb1te Junes, the prosecutor
t.o me, was Shabaka Sundiata
Tbe report includes documented havmg used his pe~mptory s.trikes
Waglini a black man He had been .
. ,
.h·
cases during the past 20 years of 48 to send all the potential black Jurors
'
·
m the·secuon .or secondary-sc oo1
·
· years o f appeaIs,
on Flol'ida's death row for 14-1/2
de . N sda "Tb .
people on death
row whose inno- horne. After s1x
years, and bad come within 15 stu ~ts ~n ew. J·th ~reds n~ rencewastinallyprovedbeforethe there was finally an evidentiary ·
hours of being executed, 'having quealsuon m my1. m 1~. at e ea
executioner could get to wmk. That hearing, ~rd.ered by the Texas
.
d
f
d
d
pen
ty
saves
lves.
•
. b1.? But _Coun of Cnrilinal Appeals ·
.
. . This is the cherished myth of means the system warks.' ng
. bee n convrcte o rape, mur er an
1
--- hhecy-. -.: ~~
eterrcnee. Kill the Killtfr· a11d- lb!!Se men-Y&amp;ntllw!&lt;v~m-tbatlJtey -~ r:urt~-~~~~ry:~~yi:;::::=
Wtth the. menu for hts last meal you 'll stop those who would emu· · bad the expenenced belp of some . lei
tt b
'al
about to be presenJCd. the lith Cit:- late h~ in their tracks · Yet as Jim of ,the handful of.appellate lawyers s n wdeasdaalslu sranu f
,
euit Coun of Appeals ·ruled that the
.
.
.111·
'
wb*ave committed their careers perva
aspects o lbe slate s
Ncwsday, · to · ue justice from incompetent capital prosecution." 'Fbere was ·
prosecution bad knowingly permit- ~wyer pomts out
ted false testimony to be introduced- -Texas cxec~tes .~e.Q.Jlle almQ,sl trial wyers· prosecutors .wbo want - also evidence that the prosecudon
.·
monthly and tts cutes arc among
th•
· th ·
bad suppressed evidence in Brand
at trh~l. . Charges were dropped and the.bomicide capitals of the world. to put ano er n~b m etr guns, 1 , f·
d that
•
Wagtim ltved to teJIIhe ABA audi, y k
wb. h d th and lower court JUdges to whom ~¥ s avor, an
some.prosecuellce at lhat habeas corpus session New or . state,
ere t. c
due process is a bare formula, not a .uon .wrtnessCli bad-comnutted permandate.
·
JUry.
.
.
that "capital punishment is not a pen:Uty bas ~ been used _for. .
If someone on death row wbo is
Brandley bad clalmed.mnomoral issue· it is not a religious decades, docs not have a stg~lc tty
is~ue. Capitai punishment is a ,,iit- amon~ ~~. top 25 10 ·the n:tU n .for actually innocent cannol secure one cen~e. For otb~rs on d,eath. row,
ical issue."
bomtcldc. .
.
.
of those pro bono lawyers or h;~S getung a bearmg on a' cla&amp;m of
The November elections underBut durtug 111 " cllmpou.gn, not had a competent lawyer from actual innocence bas beetlme neat·
scored his point. Republican and G~orge ~atakl plcd.ge~ 1 ~) s:tusfy the start, he will soon be a dead ly impossible. As fm Brimdley, be
• Democratic candidates ran as if th~ angnly frustrated maJorlly by man
watted Dine years, five months and
eJtpanding and hastening the death
bnngmg back ~\h:d 1j, ex~~uti~~~~~
· Clarence Brandley disappointed 23 days before all charges were
penalty would solve most ,of the
who ha~ been ex . C Y c P c
the Texas jurors, prosecutors· and drop~.
0 ?5 govsmor, Marto :m•no.
• nation's problems. As for habeas
judges wbo were sure they bad tbe · Tbts year, Clarence Brandley
corpus, imagine, they said, letting a
Belt,cv~ng that ra~nal rco.plc rigbt man. A 16-year-old white girl told the Houston Pose "Every t4ne ·
convicted murderer spend 14 or 1'5
can be .reached by ra tona nrgu : had been ~d and murdered at a you think you want tbe death
years, aj taxpayers' expense, i~ ll · mems, 1 would hope tliat Patakt high school. Suspicion was direCt- penalty, remember that in(ormation
cell, watching television..bllfore be
and, for lhnt matter, Sen .• ~rnn . ed at the school'sjanitnrs. Glarence \n a ~ase could be f~bncated and
gcrs his just deserts . One appeal
Hatch, R·Utab, would !Cad Inno: Brandley was tbe only black that person could. be mnocenL If it
ch·norl fl . h~ enou Kh-;-Ri ~hi. Mr : cence. alld the, Death Pe.nalty ·- among them: "Since-you're tbe-haiJpened lome, ll.could happen to
\Yaglim?
Assessmg the Danger of Mtstaken n,igger," the police told bioi, someone else.

Nat H,entOJJ

SHOO~I!)G
GALLE~

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Uni'is of tbe . Meigs County
· Einergency Medical Service )ogged
nine calls for assistance Tuesday.
'· Units respondiilg included: ·
POMEROY
12:12 a.m., State Route 124,
Baiber borne rekindle.
..
. 1:14 p.m., U.S. R~ute 33,, Ed
·JGng Veterans Memonal Hospital.
1:,35 p.m ., Brown's Trailer
Court, auto fire Betty Caruso,
owner.
4:33 ~.m., Court Stree~ Francis
scholl. Tm,':;ERs PL{\INs

Court, auto fare no injuries.
· 9:16a.m:: Sand Hill ROad, Sherrie Bobb, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
3:39p.m., 671 South Third
Avenue, .V aug ban's home false

atarm.

6:17 p.m., Middleport Police .
Department, Brian Hayes, who was .
treated and not transported.

Hospital news

' 10:25 a.m., State Rou1e 681, VETERANS MEMORIAL
Vera Kramer, Camden-Clark
admissions - Edward
Memorial Hosp1'tal .
KinTuesday·
Pomero
•
SYRACUSE
Y
1:31 p.m ., Brown's Trailer - ydischarges.=- ~ooe-

:&amp;e:!

Subscribers noc de1iringto pay lhe cunier may
remil in ndvMcc: din::ct 10 The ·· Sentinel
on a three, si~ or 12 momh basi~ .
given cruric:r eoch week.

CI'C•ij&lt;.,~lbe · l

The Commission ·has sellhis maner
for hearrng commencing January 17,
1995. at 10:00 a.m, at' the otfrces ol
the Commission. 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus , Ohio 43215.
Further information may be obtained
by conlacling thP. i'ublic Utilities
Commission r; 01]1o.

No 'subscripti on by mail permiUed· in ur~as
whm= homr currier sen-icc i1 avai lable. "'

MAlL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMklt Mr:lp County
13 W«U ... ...................... ........ ..... $23 92
26 Weeks .. ......... :................................. $47.06
52 Weeks ............ •·· ................. .. ... .. $92.56
a.ta Outaklt Melp County
13 - k l ........... ., ............................... $2S.61
26 - k l ...... .... ..:.. ......... ........................ $49.66

.52 Woeb.................. .........

.. ........ $96.20
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Sports

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The

.n·ail~· . ·s entinel

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Because of River Valley's 72-53 win,

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
be an 8.{) run for lhe Raiders that,
The Raiders, whose qJJJOilldlis·
OVPStalrWrlter .
comb ined with lb~ir IO ·for~20 tic defense forced a number of
Pumped up by double-digit field -goal shooting m the openmg turnovers and set 11p many fast·
By G. Spencer Osborne
offense from juolors Broce Ward act, comp~sed the, foundation of break points, also Pl!t the clamps
and Greg James as well as from tbe gues ts 13-pmnt lead at the 011 juniors Travia A'bbott and Cass
senior Doug Lloyd, River Valley's period's conctusio~.
·
Cleland. The pair, wbo com~ioed
Raiders returned 10 .500 cou!luy
The M~u~rs 5-for-12 field· for 34 points in tbe Marauders 7~
· • How 'bout those buzzer-beal- Not only have IIley never beaten Tuesday nlgbt with a 72-53 win goal sbooungm lhe second q~arter 71 win over River· Valley an
ers?
lhe Chieftains at L-HMS in their over tbe Meigs Manuiders at Meigs and the Raiders' 3-for-12 effon·ln December, combined for 10 this
1
Tuesday night' s River Valley- three meetings since the facility Higb School's Larry R. Morrison that time helped the hosts cui tbe time.
lead lo eight m lhe last 2:30 of lhe
_ _
Meigs boys' game featured (wo opened early in 1992, but they Gymnasiwn
pu~bed
tbc
ball
up
the
period.
But
the
Raiders,
apparently
Friday's
agellda
will have River
"We
such shots.
haven't had a road victory agllinst
· Tile first came when Meigs' the Chieftains since.their 6S·S4 win court better,M said Uoyd, wbo from laking !"e n tor Mike Jen~i~~· Valley finisbing it5 four·stop road
Donald Yost drove the lane from at Logan High School (In Jan. 26, bis small forward position drew adv1ce ( Keep the ball .movmg ), tour Friday night at Logan against
plenty of attention from 1be scored th e last four pomts. of the GarY SwinellaJ:t's Chieftains, ~bile
the lefl wing and got bis layup to 1989.
Meigs (2-5) will cross tbe Obio to
fall as tbe third-quartec hozzer went
In these days and times , the Marauders but fot 17 points any- pen~ and led by 12 at halfume.
River Valley also played s~e- play Wabama.
· ·
off. That basket, coming 23 sec· Cbieflains carried a 7-1 record into \Yay from 8-for- 8 fiekl-gcial shoot·
ing.
lhing that amounted I~ tag·lel!JII ·
-•-•- • onds after Jcammate Adam Hen- lasl week's Logan Holiday lovita·
But Ward . lhe 6·fOOt·3 power scoring. James, who fimsbed wnb
RIVER VAILEY .
drix' S free tbrows, finisl!ed trim- tional, bUt they came OUI of it with
(ZO.JO.l8-U:7Z)
ming wbat bad bfllln a 19-point a win against Nelsonville-York forward who doubled as lbe 14 points coming frem 7· for-15
Raiders'
center
when
classmate
field-goal
shooting,
got
eight
of
the
Ward
7-0-4n=18, Lloyd 7-1River Valley lead to a IS-point sandWiched betweeo losses to Mil·
Larry
Hunt
found
him!ICif
saddled
Raiders'
20
first
-quarter
points.
010=17,
James
7.0.010=14, Gillham
ford and Cincinnati Ursuline.
margin.
.
wilb
two
fouls
in
lbe
contest's
fust
After
a
qUieter.
~ond
quarter
that
1-2-0A&gt;=S,
Fluot
2-0.()A}.o4, Stitt ().
· 'Il!!;.._wt came..wben Ri1(el' Val-.
Taylor expects to-run a threesix
liilni!Ies.quieilybul
surely
gof's
iiw
no
Raider
g~f
m~re
than
one
03/4
..
3,
Boothe.
1· 0·0/0=2,
·le y's Rodney P~Uit, wbo Jllas on guard offense featuring seniors .
bis
game-high
18
points,
which
basket,
Ward
(SIX
pomts),
class·
Browning
1-0.·0/0•2.
Peuit 1-0the court for barely .one minute, Shelly Coot and Tara Rulberford
Call\e mostly from 7-for-10 field- ma te Jamie Graham ((iv~) and 0/0=2, Stout l·O·.Q/0=2. Totals:
sank a 10-foot in-the-lane jumper and 5qlhomore Renee Rutter in tbe
goal sbooting lbat was gleaned -Lloyd (four) look cbarfe 10 the l8158-3/J0·711J:7ithat went in.
the final buzzer backcourt as well as sophomore
frolll a mix of sticlcbacks and fast· third. Then it was Uoyd .s lum to
Total FG- 31-68 (45.6%)
went off 1o add the rmisbing !OUch forward Jera Bclllen (17 JIIS}gamc)
brealc lay ups.
take charge in lhe founb, wben be
R.ehouncb - 30 (Lloyd 11)
to tbe Raiders ' 19-point victory.
and senior center Milissa Daltim.
The Raiders (4-4) were only bad eight of lhe Raiders' final 24
Blocked Hots- 2 (by Hunt &amp;
• He got his fust.
Tbe ADgels - they are likely to
, ,
.
Ward)
River Valley junior John start senior Brandi Muon (11 .5 behind twice, and lliose times came points.
the
game's
rust
four
minures.
"We
always
come
on
strong
in
in
· Browniri)l, seeing action for th~ . pts.fgame)_!l_poi!ll guard.! junior
After j]!nior &amp;l!ard Paul Pullins the fourth q~arter," poyd said, of _
·• second ·ume- thts season, got lils Wbtlney HastweJI (11':2 jiUJgame)
got
the first of his team-bigh 14 bis:clu~. wh1cb scon:d all but~!Jne
first points of the Sea5!lll in Tues- at shooting guard, senior Meghan
points
- · be got them mainly from . pomts 10 the pamt after halft1me 1
day night's 12·53 win over Meigs.
Kolcun and junior Mindy Pope
5-for-11 field-goal shooting - on and shot 18 for 36 from lhe·(reid in
Browning ' s bucket, a layup, (team-hfgb 19.2 piS./game) as forcrune with 22 seconds left in the wards and senior Misty Coleman at an in-the-lane jumper that pul that lime to band Jeff Skinner's
center- are a bit fasler on defense Meigs ahead 3·2, Hunt's stickback Marauders their fifth straight setcontest.
• The longest streak ended lhere. and .run the fast break more effec- wilh 3:56left started what was to back.
Logan-Hoclting Middle School lively than they have last year,
is the next destination of Gallia wbicb bas been a significant factor
Academy' s varsity girls' team, in their winning by an ave13ge of
which will put iiS 9-0 record on tbe 38.2 point5 per con!esl
line Thursday nlsht at that site
Will that make tbe ADgcls over- ·
against Ralph Taylor's Logan coofident? P'abapL But lben again,
Chieflains.
Logan is the only Southeastern
Renee Barnes' Blile ADgels won Obio Alhledc Leap team on lhcir
their rmt 17 games wt ,year ~ set scbedule that they haven't seen, so
a school record before droppmg a maybe the Angels will take Logan
7 3-44 decisiooin that new fac;illty as lbe 8-3 crew lbat it is ratber than
to lhe Cooper-Hampshire-Krall-led making it out to be a shell, of what
Cbieflains.
.
it was in tbe Smith.Cooper-Hamp- ·
But that isn't !be only reason \be shire-Kraft era.
·
Angels want to beat Logan tbe~. •
1

from the hardwood ...

as

Aukta -14 (Jams 6)
Steals- 14 (lames, Lloyd &amp;
Want 3 ea¢) ·
Turnovers- 6
.Fouls - 17
•
-,.MEIGS
(7·11·15-lb=SJ)
•
.
Pullins 3-2-21$=14; SWlley 1-1314=8, Abbott 3.{)-Q!U=6, Ewing 20~ 1/2:-5, Hendrix 0.0-518=5, Cleland 2.()..0/()=4, Russell 2·0-G'0=4,
Yost 2 -0-012=4, Holman 0-1 · 010=3. Totals: J 5/35-4/Jf.
lJilJ=Sl
Tolld FG- 19/51 (37.3%)
Rebouncb- 27 (Pullins 8)
Blocked shots- not kept
Assists- 5 (Ewing 3)
Steals~ 7 (Cleland 2)
Turnovers-19
Fouls- 9
·

Reserve contest - River Val·
·
· .
Iey'48, Meigs 43
Scoring leaders - River Vl\1·
ley: Richard Stephens (27) and
Morgan Sullivan (11). Meigs: Brad
Wbitlach (11) and Josh Witherell
(10)

li L £11.

Orlondo .......... .. ......23

New York ......... :.... IS
Newlmey ............ l3
8a~toa .................... l1
Allladelphia ..... ...... IO

Miomi ~... ..................9.._

1

II .!
11 ..5
12.5

iL... l:!L .. ll

~- WOihlnJIOn ..............7 20 .2S9

. Cenlnl Dh'. . .
CI£\IELAND ....... 20 I .71•
IDdiua ....--:: .......... .-:-;·H 10 .630 ·
12 .S71

.S36
Aduta ................... l2 II .400
Detrolt. .....................9 II .333
Milwaukee .............. ~ . 19 .321

9
IO.S
.U

Ollrlotte ...... .:. ........ lfi

oucaeo.................. u 11

.Aia.-Birmlnaflam

(301')

s

r...

Mldw•IDi•Wo.

l i L £11.

Gl

SaoAntonio........... l6 10 .6JS

2.~

U1oh ........ &lt;. ......... .... 20
llolatoa .............. 19

9 ··690
9 ..679

Phoeai1 - ................ 22

7

.7S9

13

.SI9

II
25

.3S7
.Ill

9 .679
9 lJ/,1
13 .S36

college sco'res

Kea"yoa 76, Cue Watern Raerve :SS

un,-Aiabam~

BaJdwia·WaiiKO 13, Mlllkinaum 13
Copltol 74,1kldelberJ ..
lolm COITOI176, llinm 51

51. 95

·Marietta.fiil , Ollcrbein 6·1 ·
MOunt Unioa 12, Ohio Northern 52

•

Mld..Qhlo Coaference
FindlaJ 116, Urb111a 4S

'

Noa-cOnfereftce action
Deniaon 15, Lake Erie 3S

' Louitville 81 ~_qe~J~d St .60
Ohio Wa:leyu 6~ . Thornu-More 67
Younptown St. 11, NE tlllnoil5S

Ohio H.S. boys' SCOI'eli
S7

4.

S.S
I)
•

2..S
3
6.S
1
II .S
II

Aim Hall

SE 77

DePiulll,DIIDOiiSL62
B.llliDOii6S, Mo.-KansasCityS7
EVIIIIVIIIe 93, New HarnplhiJe 60

Alllaoce64,Salem61
.
. Amelia74. Watcm8rQwnSI
81dacr 48, Maplewood •s

01 .·01~69, OlppiaSt. S6

. B~~avia 77, Cin. l.Aodn.k: Sl
Beav_er ~Pn, R~rmand Edison 6S
Bedford 8 , anna
8eUahe79, Toroaco61

low• St . " · Loyola. NO 44

Soulhweol

""u11n
......aa
Phoeai1IOI ,•Sacramen10
100

OkllhoDiln, Ba)'lor61

HOU5ton i

1\&amp;1n U. N.lowli :n

911

'11 R

AUo:war!:.a~i;$:,yVaJ. 4 a

IW.•I06, B. TC~~MUeeSI. 73
Micbip.D71 , Plrdue61
N. lllhtoia 69, Te011euec Tedl S3
' NEIIIinoliSI,VtJU.aptowaSI.49
No&lt;reO.me 19. Lcltilh 65
SE Mis&amp;ouri 90, Oakland Oty76
"'Vai,.,.UO II, W. IIHaoia 70
Wichita Sl. 7S, KanaM St. :Sl
Wri"IY
.,.. St. 7,, Min. Valley~St. 6S

Sea!.Ue 12 1, Wuhioaton 107
~· d 103 ... ,. 91

41

~ Youa1 64, UCih S1
Col St·f\allortoo 14, lie lnioe 61

Tonight's &amp;ames

Oo-7$, ldlbo55

No- 51, Soo- Sl 56

"wood! go 61, ClJ ~52
Soo Dloei&gt; 12, Yolo 59

,

~

6'

.Cia._ Moeller...:12....Cia•.,&amp;.ceii~Mariaq

· Fwdhorn 72, llowllot 64 '

1\lorth CGul Alhlelk P.ar.
!5· x..,.. n
Mld.()hlo Coarenaee
C«loniJJo 17, RIO ORAND£ 14
FladloJ 101, '-19

c....-....

.
. '

Mou11 Venoo N-.e 19, Sblnee

, Major men's
~6t, MotW65
Co~tT1, Vll tuova62

'

college scores

p.m.Mitwa&amp;Ue M Goldell Stlle. .IO:J0 p.m. •
Detroit II:S~alo. l0:30!'1. m.

SLIO

•

'

Oblo llomiol. . 96, Tilllo 74

· Nr.-.,..eeactloa

r...,.....

Bhafllao 6:1,-42

71

/""'

Ohio men's

MiDMIOI.Iat Miami, 7:30p.m
SaD Antonio 11 Ullh, I p.m.,
o.JI• Ill Houlto a, 1:30 p.m;
Pl&gt;llodelphlo ot L.A. Clippers, 10,30

Eul

~~.

-

NEIIlJq Sl,
St. 4ll
OllioW-79, - 7 1
Wrialll St. 7•.1dlu. Volley St 6S

l'

·

CJe. Collinwood 79, Lorain Southview

Cle. Herltap 69.C1DtooHeritaie 67
Clyde 62, Fottoria so
Col. 51. Ch•l• 'll, U&lt;tiDJ Hla. 43
Col.
,63,
Hllllllllld Sl
Coviqtoa S-4, Fruklia-Moaioe 41
Cuyohop Volley Clv. 79, Wiadhom

w.._,

Saa fte · co 93.1rawa II
UC - 1 1 - 7 5 , - loiWco St
W-St94, S. lllohl5

Thu....y'sgamu

college scores

· 53

.

Bloomfield 73, ViCtory Clr. •41
BucteyeTraii7•• Cadil41
Cllldwell 50, Bom..villo 45 (01)
Coal Wiochater $2, W. Jerrer.on 46
Ceredo-KeooYa, W.Va. 9l,Jroaton 74
Chqria fall• :sa, Wicklirfe 44
Olcapeato
SO,Val.
Coal72,
OroYe
31 S3
Cbahlre
Rlv~
Meip
C G
f.l 71 C' AJke 71
ln . len le ' m.
-• S3 • Cin. Moumn Heallhy
Cip. Hu.,,e~

; ;"""''~L- ---;--;-----='.. JW·Wtii·l- - - - - - : - - · 54 cia. a.~ &gt;nlt.-99, u.rt.Oa S2

Miami II BOitoa, 7:30p.m.
Alluta llt'N.w Yrwk, 7;10 p.m.
New Jeney It Orlaodo, 7:30p.m
FulludorCJ.rloOe,7,lOp.m.
Seaa1t 11 a..BVEUND. 7:30p.m.
....;..., · WllfliDilOI alftetialla; 100p.m..
Draver ar Chiaea. 1:30 p.m.
Philadelphia a1 Phoeai:c, 9 p.m.

·•

North CGul Alhlelk: Conr.

:::a~.~t!'St. 6l

• Tuesday's scorea:
New Jmey 114, Indiana 103

i~-"-'-='1--:-::=·iii

'

Ohio women's

Mlilwal

P•lfk DhitkJn
Seatde .................... l9
I...A.~ ...... ...... II
S~tnrntDio ............ IS
Portlaod ................. l4
Ooht.a Sllto ......... 10
L.A. Ql ppen ... ........4

.Riitm:an 70, Bl.:li: River 63

11olrdpl... .
Lab Erie 7ol, Monlnal·AIIdertoo 70

101115

.S

J)eaver .......... ......... l~ ~ ~ .Sl6
DaiiM ............... ...... I J 13 .SOO
Mi"DeMU ................§ 21 .222

Touraameols

n-........... a.k

0..-Jdloo 71, Emory 46
fVmu 79, Jura Mldi~ao 72 1
Jacboaville61 , Sieu S7
UU10, Aorido66
Md.-E. Shore 7J,,DeJawiR St ~ r
M....,m• 96, I!Ow!oo 77
MlalulppiSt. 71 , Soulll Carolina 56
Richmond S7, DciiWwe S3
111'·M.. in 66,-MkllleTeiia. 64
· V1. ConvnoaweaiUJ 101, G«qe Ma.

WESTERN CONFERENC:i!

trolled lbe boafils (51 rebounds to
1he visitors' 39), lhe shooting from

.

p·neu

Sarona~

~o~e:an ~e~· e~~&amp;
snappe~

bu~

0

.

Annual
Percentage
Yield

Washing·~

~ca!Uc
M3ft'i~lionis

.
7~0

Annual
Percentage
Yield ·

.

..

Minimufn Deposi t:. $500.00

Minimum Deposit:

These COs are aulomatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
A.P.Y. is available as of the dale of this issue, but is subject lo change.

s.,...

·DIIItoD107, MOJodoro59
Day . Chrl1tiaa 10 , S. Charlnlon
SouU....tem56
Day. Northridle 63, Bradford J9
De&lt;Jrarr lbvcnlde 61 , Beajamin LoIID41
.
Della69, SW&amp;DioD61
Dovm 61, Caymoat 36 ·
E. Caatoa 79. Fairk1171
El"oiO, M - Rlwt VIII. 71 (01')
Er1e (Pa.) McDowell 60, Campbell
Memorial Sl
Fairbub 74, 't'ayacsfaeld-Oothen 6ot
Faltlalld 6,, Roc:k Hlll63 · .
fla&amp;mtw Pwt67, Broollya '52
Fa'yeae 66, EWI'peen -'9
fo11Dtt1 SL Weodelitl S4, Arcadia 4-4
friDkljq f\araooe Oreea S:S, Luca~ville
Valley49
• Froatitr 77, lleoi~Ville $.4
fll. frJe 9$, Mo,... C.otral 67
Gabuln. 13, Orow City S2

River ~2. P&gt;.dea City, W.VL 49
River View -49, W. Holmea 47
R01166, WUmiapm 41
Ro11ford 70, Oatoa S9
s. Poilll'l, Minford 71
. • Sandulky 61 , Loniollill 53
Sardloio Eo.tcm $1, Ad.,. 47
Shaclyllde 71, McMechen (W.V1.)
Donlhue70
Smithville S5, Caaa1 PuhoaNW S4
' Soloa 71, Cbar4oa 44
- Southoro Luoai 7S, CDIIOUoa·VIII. 66
Southi~qn 10; LIBr. 63
Sprlna Val. 74, Tree of Lire 69
Sc. Clairnille n , Meadowbrook 72

I, Youna:. Ursuline .51, J'i'
Huber Hts. Wayne 71, Oreenon .54
Indian Creek 67, Raylfmd Buc::ke~e .53
· Jacbon66,.Polnt Pleasant, W.V1. -43
Johnstown .52, New Albany SJ ·
Kalidl 83, Spencerville .52
Kent RoCIIeYelt 57, Mu:sillon Waslna·
ton44
KlnpiSO, Lillie Miami .53
~Dl!!~MDD"nV6..Milford Sl _
.. ,......- toa...85. Aleunder 67
Lorain Sr. 61, N. Ridgeville 37
Lordstown S9 , Unilcd. Local 32
louJsvUie S3, C111t01 Tlmkt:n Sl
Lulherall W . 41, Ro&lt;:ty RIV« 46
Malvern ISS, Stnlblq 59
Maranatha Chr. 7.5, New Hope 32
Mar!OD..-dina4S, Waterville N. -43
&lt; M..Hu~ton 46, Waterloo 40
· M110a 62, Sprinabm'o 59

(01')

.

-

St. H""J 13, Wopokoaeta 71
Steubenville Cllh. II, Ullioa Local !j;g
Streeuboro 67, Raveuia64

To I. St. FtaocU 71; Fremoat R.ou 49
TaLSt. Joha'190, To180Wiber ,:6
Tol. St_. 63, BedfjJnl, Micll. 61 (01)
Trentoa Ed1cwoqd 12, Middletown

McComb 67 , N. Baltirmre 41

McOould 7S, Olnonl 69
Mentor 74, Euclid 61
.
• MiddletoWn Feawick 76, Catlille :56
· Minerva 90. F"teld 17
·
Mopdore Cbr. 73, Akron Cbr. 37
N. Coneae ltill66, CiD. SeveaHllll 4:5
New BOitoa 91, Symme:a Val. 71

Trilld 1'1 , lndiQ lAo ll .
Trlw•y 52, W. Salem Nonhwe~ten Sl.

(01')

.

Nilu 63, OaireUniUe 56-

n.

Notdollia
Cbaoel 69
Oroaa• S7, KcDitoo Sl
Plrl:enburJ, W.VL 10, Moridlo 66
Ptormo lib. Holy N... $7, 81\1111 S2
PickerillJIOD 79, I&gt;wblla 71
Piktt.oa 67, IUbla 63
•
,
Port&amp;mouth Notre Dame 61 , lroatoa
St.l01eph Sl
Rldaewood 69, LokeiODd 43
Rip fey 73, FelicitY 61 .

S2

1

10

="l

Wlllo-Hm Chr. 56, Howlalld Chr. 48
Woosrcr 61 , M'a~~illon ·Jackson S8
Xenia .50, Day. Chamiaade-Julienne
.

1

•

Youn1. Chaneli15,'1Ddian River 78 ·
Youna.: Eut 7 , E. Pale.une 62
You~.
Moo
. ney69,8rootfield29
:zon.
sa,Mllllll r...,. o
Z.
· le , Colhocton J3
. Zaa . R......., 66, Pilhir Cath.
&lt;40

JOWNINI_CHIIDS
.· MULlEN MUSSER
'INSUUNCE
•

111 ~ Sl, P0111110y

M.Uson69

Tr01wood-M&amp;4isoa 83, Day. Meadow·
daleiiO
TuKantwM Calh. 72, NewCCJmmtOW'Q
.
ru....wu Ylll. $$, 1\lllow S2

47

Spdrling goods manufacturers
cater more to female athletes .

CLEVELAND (AP) - With- ·· reduced the r;ridteter of bas~~!~
women •s athletics becoming more balls to 28 ~ bmcb~ !&gt;rth~omballs
popular manufacturers of sports games, an · c. sm
for women
equfpm'enl are designing more for men. The Idea .w~
bands
prodticts especially for females.
who usually have sm er
• ·
"We tried 10 get out s001e prod- more eaSily handle the ball. .
~IS thai women could use," said
Store s now carry spec Ia 11
. y
~an Ha"kett, a Wilson Sporting. designed gotr and softball equip·
Goods salesman for team spons. mt!nt for wo~en. .
k
ith a
1
10
" Women recognized they were
"We are
lh~ ~~a~d ";cou
·
de to meet their needs, glove for wome .,
m~d 'We're going to buy Smith, directo! of mar~eting for
.I.
'
Rawlings Sporung Goods.
1 ,., ey
"About 10 years

ENCOUNTERS RESISTANCE - Meip IJIUird Gary Stanley (10)
encounters reSistance l'rom River Valley's Doug Lloyd (center) and
Bruce Wvd (left) o.n bls drive Into the lane duri111 Tuesclay nlaht's
game at the Lany R. Morrison GymnllSium, where the .Marauders
.. lost their Ofth straight game. Stal'!ley ftnls!Jed with eight points. (Dave
.Harris photo)

HEADED TO THE BASELINE - Meigs guard Benny Ewlna
Oeft) drlva ai'Oilnd River Valley's ..Jetr Stitt on his way to the bueline.
In ..e aecond IIalf ol Tuesday night's contest at Melp Hlah School,
where the R8Jden won 7Z·53. Ewing ftnlsbed wllb ftve points. (Dave
Harm plloto)

.Ohio Athtedc-eon:rereaee _....

South

2.,
4

Cedarville ge~s 87-:-84
win over Rio Grande

men's ~tball team n:cord!:d tiS . Cedarville
SO%.
seamd stratght loss TuCS;daY wileD(
"I was really pleased wilh the
it fell 87·84. to &lt;;edar':IIIe (1~-~ effort we gave on tbe glass,"
said
.
overall 3-1 m M1d-Ob10 Confer- L b
'
tbe Redm 's
aw om
.
.
encc play) to move.
en
. The lead changed bands numerreoonl to 1().3 and 2-1.
ous tmies in the second half, but
. Tbe game was sponsore~ by Cedarville was on top by three with
Lumber Co. of C!alhpolls..
30 seconds remaining. Rio Grande
Rio Grande fell bebmd early ~n bad three attempts to tie lbe game,
'the game, giv!ng up 23 pomts 10 but couldn.' t get lhe ball to fall .
the rmt five nunutes, b.ut made two
"We gave ourselves a chance to
runs that started off w1th dunks by
·
tbat' s all you can ask for in
Rick Konicki and Brett Coreno. .
:~ftuation like tba~" Lawhorn said.
The Redmen ~k a one-pomt
The Redmen are at home Thurs·
lead with 9;35 left 11! tbe calmfust ~ 'day at 7:30 p.m. against Obi.o
but Cedarville remamed
an
. . .. .
.
.
loOk afoOt point lead (43-39) at the · n o ; m ' t any breaks in our
hal!.
'.
, tak lead and league 'this year. Every night you
You JUSt can tre ea .
need to be ready to play, and
bope t~e ot~er, ~~.am quus,bandd Thursday is no exception," ·
Cedarville didn t. Redmen ea
L b remarked
.
. ...-'=..
coaclf JoiOILawhom saijl.
aw om _._.:_.,.....:::::
The Yellow Jackets turned to
RIO GRANDE (M) _ Coreno
tlieif'lleltl:b. when t~ey needed. a 11 _1_0=25; Barnes 0·0-1=1; Morsparklale m the fust .balf•. and . an O-l-2=5 ; Step~tens 5-0-0=10;
Nathan Huffma~ provided 1 ~ by ~owen 2-4-0=16; Konicki 7· 0·
scoring. ~ game htgb of 24d pob10~j· ' 6=20· L. Caudilll -1·2=7. Totals:
Cedarvtlle was al~o le . Y .
• .7=84
68
Seabm and Jason Qumn, both wllh
CEDARVILLE
(87) · 18
· .
d bad bal · Ced scor- Bradley 3-5 -0=21; Woolley I-ORio Gran e
.an
0=2~ Polack 2-0·D--4; Seabra 6-1 ing, w1th Coreno l~a'!ing tbe wayd 3_ 18 . QuiM 8-0.2=18. Totals: :ZS.
with 25 while Komclti bad 20 an
8
Man Powell neiJed 16. Waller
"7Halrtime score: Cedarville 43,
Stephens 3dded 10.
, .
.
Even tbduRh tbe hosts con - Rio Grande 39

'.

Towtoa SUI, Noward 64
w....,n, Robert Morril69

IS

of Gallipolis, the sponsor of the Redmon's home 1ame against
CedarviDe Tuesday nlgbL
·

wau:b~e:3~ ~e~~~d

..37

Oeor1e WalbiDJIOn II, Americn
Uni•. 63
·
Oeorptowa JS, Pittlburah 46
ld--~~ 9S, W"' \iiiJlojo 6S
Moa"""IJJ, N.J. 76, St. Fr.,.ll, I'll. 61
, Mouat St. Mary'1, Md. 19, Fllrlel&amp;h
Di(kJUO• 69
Novy 86; William ol M"Y 16
North-. 70, Hol11ro 61
Prioc:etoa 79, Rutpa70
Sl Pfter'1 66, N. C1101iaa A4:T .S2
Syr~CUM II , Bolloa Colleae 72
Terr.,le 70, St. Booaveliure 57

Iii

6 .793
12 .5S6
19-.. .406
17 ~393
II "'.3!7

Rio Grande men's buketball boss John

fe
Jo hn
16
to 103·94 will! 3:23 remammg. .
~ 01 \l~S , A ~f' ~~~ Crotty' 14} son, wbo hat! a sore should er.:
Jim Jackson scored 27 pom iS
toe . ton
'
· . d F It on . added 14 points and 16 asSIStS.
:
and Roy Tarpley added 20 ~ints AntomeiOCarr l 3 an
e
Reggie Miller scored ~. season· :
and 12 rebo~nds for the Mavenc~~ Spence~eb
. high 37 points for U1e v1 s1Ung Pac·:
Pacers tO)
114• n
.Tbe VISiting Rocket5 were _w1
everyone
ers.
•
1
out starting forward Oils Tliorpe
tbe.
Ne; Jerse_r ~ot ~ ¥ was well
SuperSonics Ul, Bullet• 107
who has a strained shoulder. for
back om 101~es. an . 11 • in
Long -mngc shooting hy Dcllcf
fifth "straigblgame.
worth !be
-Scbrcmpf and
Marciul ion· ·
Jazz UJ, Rucki 91
· scored a season lg
K
is helped Scatlle'l pull away 10 11s ·
Utah defeated "1ilwaukee fo r Dem ck
in
11111 straigh t victory over
the seventh straight ume.
.
Anderson a 18 II
~ •
ton.
:
GleM Robinson led the vtsili1_1g -relutn as. the NelS
a ow:
Gary Payton led
wilh 24 , '
Bucks with 24 points,
coDIDilt· game losmg streak by beating lndl·
points. Schrempf and
ted nine t~rnov ers . Vm Baker ana.
b 'ssed siX games each scored 18 at USAH f'rena.
·
0
added
14 pomts.
R
had 17
.~ !C:::;.~edo ldt band, bad .20
Cheaney scored 23 for lbc
For Ul!lh. Bryon usse 11
WI

z

TOLEDO, {)hio (A:P) - Tole- Classic.
do' s Scoop Williams was1selected
Renken, a sophomore forward,
the Mid-American Conference averaged 20.3 points and 12.3
player of lbe week in men's basket- rebounds. for the Chippewas in
ball and Central Micbigan's Tracy three games last wt;ek. The
Renken and Mimi. Olson of Toledo Granger, _Ind., nati~ also I'!'Corde&lt;!
were selected tbe MAC's women's... six steals, Lllree assists and qne
basketball players of the week.
block.
.
.
Williams, a senior forward, · Olson, a nahv~ of Cbtcago,
averaged 16 points and 8 :~ · av~raged 26.5 potdts and 10.5
rebounds as the Rocket5 defeated rebound~ to lead the RockeiS ~
Cal Stale·Sacrame.nto 74·64· and defeat Ntagara 93-74, ·and \)elmit
Indianapolis 65-57. The Rockets. 94-87. T.h e sophomore forward
.lost to St . Bonaventure in tbe shot 55 .8 percent from the floor
championship game of Uie MVP and recorded four blodcs and tbrec
steals.

Ita

SPONSORS GAME -

La'lftom (rlPt) personally thanks Robbie Jenkins of O'DeU Lumber

s~ :in~:Z':iof Rio Gran~e ~; th!:e·r::rt r:~~ d4~~t ~ao~~

'

All•tlcDl....._

YT~:

If-

•

. By WJ!;NDY E. LANE
AP Basketb.JI Writer
.
With consistent play and balanced scoring, the Utah Jazz ~
" the Houston Rockets are wagmg
the NBA's tightest divisional bat·
11
e.Utab held on to its half-game
d over Houston will! a 123-91
over Milwaukee, wbile the
R kets beat Dallas 110.98 Tuesdaoc . b(
. .
Jazz bad eight players in
double figures, including Jeff Hornacek with 18 P&lt;?ints, in winning
for the ninth time m lOth games.
- ,-,It's about winn ing now, not
about who gets tbe shots," said
forward Karl Malone, who scored ·
14 and had a team · II igb seven
assists.
The Rocket5 are content to let
Hakeem Olajuwon get the shots,
although Robert Horry and Sam
Cassell scored 18 polnls apiece.
Against tbe Mavericks, Olajuwoo
bad 41 points, 13 rebounds an~ five
biQCks.
.
.
..
" Hake em is just amazang ,
Rockets coach Rudy J omjanovich
said. "It's got t6 fru strate people. ·
We go 10 him so much . It's not a
real tough coaching decision to gel
the ball to bim."
·
In other games, il was New Jer·
sey 114, Indiana 103; Seattle 121,
Washington 107; Portland 103,
Atlanla 98; Phoenix 108, Sacra·
menlo 100; Denver 108, Minnesota
99 in double overtime ; tbe Lo s
Angeles Lakers 105, Detroit 96;
and San ADtonio 91, Golden Stale
86.
.
Rockets llO; Maverlcks 98
Olajuwon scored 18 '?f his
team's 25 fourth-quarter pOints IO
hold off a Dalla&lt;; rally . .
Tbe Mavericks trailed by as
many as 20 points late in tbe game,
but Dallas answered with a 17·2
.run. Qlajuwon scored lbe next six
· poiitts to push Houston's advantage

~~~ory

By CRAIG KERNS

MAC honors UT's Williams
and Olson &amp; CMU's Renken

-

lead over Rockets
points andl5reboun~.andAtidcrJazz retain ha ~me . . 1
In the NBA,

Wed~IYt January 4, 1995

·

Meigs absorbs fifth straight set_,ack

TALES

NBA ,standings

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

.

Twilllb..1 68. w. o_. 49
W. Clf1"0lltOD 76,·0 rcelville,.
W . Uberty·SIIIem 79, Mecllooiaboq

YOUR INDEPiNDENI ·
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGSCOum·
SINCE 1868

'

•'

'

W . MuWqum 7S, SbeaUdoM 66
· W""iqtoo CH 12. Hll~boro 76
We!Jton (W.Va.)Madonoa S7, Bellaire
St John'• 41
·
.
Welllfi Ue 19, Oat Olen, W.VL 49
Willian.bura 70, fayetteville :5I
'

'

Thomas P: Price, ·M.D!- DABOG,
FACOG, FACS
relocation
of his office from the Holzer·Ciiriic to
tlie Medical Plaza; 936 State R~ ·160,
Gallipolis, Ohio after Januarj ~ l
He will be assoGiated there with ·9rs.
Abels
and Valiee. He . will
. ' Subbiah
.
continue his hospital practice at ·the.
Holzer Hospital. Me4ical Plaza offers
·laboratory, X-ray, ·' and A.C.R.
accredited and FDA ' approv.ed
maminography. Appoin,tments can be ·
made by
{6)4) 446-9620.

Is Your House
Ready for
Winter?
We
pipes, window
kits, heattapes ~
and weather
stripping.

..•

25 Month
Peoples Value CD

o·

OAPv ·
..

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'

PJCKENS
HARDWARE

111 COURT ST•.

MASON, V. VA.
304·773·5513

-

.c
~

-

&gt; ..

POMEROY, OH.

992-2155

)

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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stop to smell the roses proves good advice for reader

- - - - , • IJid bonUJeS, bui 1 was exhausted,
overweight, depwtd and spending
Ann
· Over Stf,OOO a yearonlherap)t ·
One day, I heard a phrase that
Landers
·ehanseclmy life: "Fear will nothann
you,butdlefe.oCfaiiW"ewill."That
made me think seriously about
quiDing my job. finally, I did
Dear Au L..den: This is in
I am now making less than half of
· n:spoD~eto"BumtOut," wboworlled whatlusecttomake,butlfccllikea
killerboun,ne\Wsaw blsfamilyand · dilfcn:nt person. I put in 40 hours a
· was hanginson by Ilia fiqernalls. weckandnevertakc work hOme, my
. I was in die same boat, puUing in weekends are mine to do with IL'I I
· 60~1 week, taking work_hon!c, please, and I am becoming re. b~gdaysoll'llldnepecuncmy acquainledwithmywifeandfamil)t
. · famdy -- ~lfor$SS,OOOaywlhad Iamnolongcrintherlpybecausc~
~ed wtth die same Fonune SOO . depression has left me.
'-Jon!JliiiY for over 18 years'. It wu die
only job rd ever had, and I was lfiaid
to quit. I had received many awards

Ohio

Wednesday, January 41 1995

Dear Ann Landen: I have been anydling aboutller finances. She says
dating "Lola" for four yean. I have the money sl!e and her r~n~ husband
been married twice. My second wife madeiOgetheralld what she inherited
commiued suicide after a long illnea. , from her father is Mrs and wlia1ever
Lola has been married once,llld her sbeandl wouldmaketogeiherwould
husbandalsocommiuedsuicide.Our be ours.
.
mutual grief ft&gt;Jged a bond between
I say when you marry, you become
us.
.
equal partners. Everything should be
Lola seems_to have quite a lot of put in one pot and divided evenly;
money -- antceh~meandcatShc What do you say, Ann? ;·
inheriredmostoflh•sfrom herfadtet NEB~KA READER
•
I don't have much in the w_ay of
DEAR NEBRASKA: I say you~
worldlygoodsbecauseofmyd•vorce a couple brictc,sshortofaload.Whaf
and my second wife's ill~ss. . ( makesyoulhin!tyoullhouldsbarcSO.
~haveadad. ToooflellbiglllOIICy
Lolatalksabo~tusgetUngmamed; • SO .in Lola'sasseu? .
isn't worth w!lat you have to do to but· she doesn t want to tell me
If you and Lola decide 10 IIUIIT)\
get iL

Schuman, French

Slalelman,

~;,

Daily Special In Our Bakery ·
1o am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
" Hot Dogs 21s1 .00 with sauce 3/'1 .00 plain

•

whllcver she lladbefon die lllllTiage
belongs to her. The ame aoes for you
and your III8CII. Mclnwhilc, you two
should sit down with a financiil .
adviser if )'01,1 decide to tie die 1mot.
Your marriage will stand a better
chance if there is a clear
undcntandilll aboln money maucrs
bcf~~~e you bccomo Ml: and Mrs.
Gem of the Day (Credit Robert

.It was a biB adjustment, and there
are times I miss the big bucks, bull
know this W8lJ die ritht decision for ·
me. Ann, tell your readers lhal "stop
and IIIICU die roaes• may be justa
cliche, but I now know what those
roses smell like, and it's heaven. -SOMEWHERE IN OlllO
DEAR omo: What you did took
alremendousamountofcourage..I11
bet your wife was behind you 100
percent and stie doesn't mind living
onalocless. She now has a husband
· wiloi&amp; healthier and happie~at\d die

The Daily

MEULLER'S
THIN OR REG•
SPAGHETTI
16 oz.

STORE HOURS

Molllay ta S11day

s

8AM-10PM
.298 SECOND' ST.
_POMEROY, OH.

18116-

1963): "When I was I youns man, I
vowed never to marry until I fDUDd
die ideal woman. Well, I found her.
but unfOflllnlllely, &amp;he was waiting for
~ perfect man. •

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD JAN. 1 THRU JAN. 7, 1995.

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS ·

Legion
passes
.resolution

12 PK. 12 OZ. CA.:N~S~_._

brew WebSter Post 39, Amcri· .
meeting recently at the
hall in Pomeroy, passed a resolli·
lion addressing their concerns
regarding the downin1 of ID Army
helicopter in North Korea and the
real commitment of the govern·
ment of Nlllth Korea in an effort 10
secure a nuclear arms treaty.
: In the resolution daled Dec. 20
palli;d for the government 1o make
.every effort to secure the release of
l.be pilot and for "more positive
measured position in regards 10
·pursuing a nuclear treaty with
Nortb:Korea".
It went on to state that "every.one should be reminded that the
tactics of delaying strategy was
employed by the North ·Korean
government during the Korean Wat ·
- in the past and bas. provtn :to be ·
detrimental to our eountry and the
policies ·was have pursuejl in the
. 'jnlerest of peace. It would be lo tbc
best interest of world peace if we
move to a position of unflinching
in strength while bargaining with
North Korea".
The resolution is signed by
Charles Kitchen, posf commander; •
and JoSeph Struble, adjutant.
):an Legion,

CHICKEN -.

·

.

Leg Quarters ••••••-••~~ ••~
FAMILY PAK ASSORTED .

49(.

WESSON
VEGETABLE
OIL

·

$ 59

LB.

Pork Chops .............. .1.

- H~LL-SHIRE FARMS - -- -- --

PRORK aun STEAKS oR ·

. . --

SJ. 19

~

$ ]19

· oast •••••••••~••••!~...... .
.

.

COUNTRY S~LE

·

·s169

lb

s~~k,d Sausage!'··--··
ECKRICH SLICED

~ .

.

480Z.

$

na ••••••••••••••~••••• ·

_

-SUNSHINI
·.
DOG FOOD
.

139

·

Pork R1bs·..................'4r·

. .,

. OSCAR MAYER HAM, TURKEY OR

Bologna F_u~ Packs .~3•0!~

ODESSA JACKS

KITCHEN PRIDE SLICED

.- Young birth
announced

'.

.·

$ ]59
·

$3 5.9

·Ba n••••••••:.~!:......~... ·
Eve,,~

Chuck Jacks and Vanessa
Young, both of Racine, announce
the birth of their first daughter,
Odessa Ann-Marie Jacks.
. I
She was born on Dec. 7 at ~
Holzer Medical Cen1er, weighed
six pound, three ounces, aod was
19 ioches .long; Her grandparents
are Glenn a!ld Matie You11g of
Racine, len)o and Linda Jackson of
Rutland, and Patty lmbJ!!kiLQL
Pomeroy. ·

r. :·

1

""~Ore Is

~ Have Se~

BROTH
140Z.

G

.uarantiJed
ect,onsAt

,

$

•••

- zES-TA·~.

· St&gt;ciety
scrapbook .
'

w~~PS best loser ·~as Be~ice
Durst. Fruit baskets wen: won by
Durst and Dean, with the .gadget
Sifts being won by 'f.rina Faulk and
Loretta Thomas. .
The group participated in· the_
ARD penny marcb, beard about
coming events from Nancy Manley, co-leader, and enjoyed group
singing.
: Dean gave gr11ce berore the
«;:hrisbllas dinner served at the Dec.
~mectlng.
.

'.

.

•

•f'

'

.. .

.

SJ49

~eanut-=Butter- ••~a.-;••-.••••._- . _

$26JJ-

·Toilet nssue ~........~::.... .

_

'

..·

CHARMIN

. • Free Delive,.Y &amp;_Set-Up • .Flexible Credit • Over 600 _Sto~s Coast to Coast.
s Easy Ways To Pay;
• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
Card • In-Store Credit

~

40&amp;' Main Street
Point Pleasant ,

F U R N I' T U R E

• " - I I savingln oil oor ragular prices .
and do IIIII apply 10 pmtous purchuee.

. ..

I

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I
'

JIFF

'

•

, .. .

• . ·. .

.

.

2o/o Mdk ••••••••••••••~~~..

·coast Coast ••• Br

Jl8I'IY was
- )leld ~ndy by the HOERCbuildersCiass at the Middleport Church of
Christ.
.

Al.ll2tdiiiiJ were AI Hamon and
daughterS,
and Erin, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Frazier and children,
Ryan and Brittany, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene McOaniel, Mr. and Mrs.
, Glenn Evans and grandd!lUgbter,
Katie, Dorothy J'toacb, Rosanna
Manley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank lhle,
children, Jodi and Josh, Mr. and .
Mrs. Willard Boyer, Lester Bower.•
Loreua Tiemeyer, Dorothy Baker,
ponnie Smith, lessa Mae Brannon,
Flo Grueser, Thelma Boyer, Mr.
· and Mrs, Clay Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Bailey, Mildred Long, Mr.
and Mrs. Flliie Cole, Clarice Elwin,
and Elsie King.

•

SUNNY DELIGHT ·

1- - - -~TbiHIIInuai-Christmas

..'

BORDEN

We're

' · BOMEBUB.DERS

•

CRACKERS

4
$1
Grapefruit: ••.•••••~.....
·
PINK

'

' TOPS ·
Virginia Dean and Jean Tb001as
were lbe. top losers at meeting of
TOPS 011570 beld the past two

fcii,IW.slilill area..

CAMPBEtlS
CHICKEN

•

.

..

.

·

..

Citrus Punch •••••••::.a:...

I

99(

$ ]89

·

99·(
'

TV . . ~Dinner ••••••• :~l.~....

MINUTE MAID FR9ZEN _ ~ _ : . .

Orang.e Juice ••••1:~.......

(

ROLL

89(
.,!l_i!

'

GROUND
BEEF

,!1_1! ,!l_l!couP'orl-1! !1.1! :~ ;ri! !'_i! !!'_i!couP'oN!!'_"!. !!'_i! ·~ ~,.I! -·-I!-·-'!c"OuP'oN!I'_I! -·-1! ":'I :-~"!!I-"! !I."! ~o~~~:-o! ~~
:: UnLE RAINBOW;: : · JIFFY COR·N. : :
DOMINO · } :: MAXWELL HOUSE j:
:: . FRUIT DRINKS .::: MUFFIN MIX ::
· SUG4R
:: :~STER BLEND COFFEE::
:-~1!

: - 12/sl·-::: ~ c-· s-;sl ::
1

8 OZ.

I I •
I.

•

I 1
11

.

.

.

,4

Oood Only AI Powell'a Su!liAfllu

11
I I
11 ·I
1

1
I I
1l 1
11 ·

8.5 oz.

1

.I
II I
II .
1 I
11 1
. 11
I

.

.

&lt;lood Only AI P•t•a Supor Villu
OlltrGoodJon.1 lhtu ,.,.,7,1111
LlnlnSPerC- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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

Ofler-GooCIJIIII. 1 lhrUJon. 7,1181
Cuat.-..:·~·· _,.,_. ·"''- - ... - - - - .... - - ...

I

5LS.

s1 39 .
.

:: :: 34.5 oz.
II

1

.

s6'9 · :.
.

101

$

.1 ·
1

I I I
11 I I
.
.
11
•I
I
.•
II
1 I 1
&lt;lood Only AI POMII'a $upe~~ Yllu · I
• I 1 1 . Offer Good J.,., llhru Jan. 7,11M ··I ·
11
1
Um111 PorCuotomer
•a

1 lhru Jan. 7,IIM
... ...... •

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

I - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. - - - - - - -

. I

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~ ·.-

.BOUNTY
PAPER
TOWELS

-

MORTON FROZEN

LB. BOX

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�•
Page ' 8 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesd~y, January

Pomeroy-Mictdleport, Ohio

ADVEITSED rT£M POliCY· Each of these advertised Items 1s requred to be readllv available for sale in ·
each Kroger Store, except as spedflcaUv noted In this ad. If.we do r111 out of an adVertised Item, we
will offer 'IOU your choice of a comparable Item. when available, reflecting the 5~me savings or a
ralnche&lt;:k which wll endtte you to purehm'the a&lt;Mrtlsed Item at the advertised price, within50
days. OnlY one vendor caupon will be accepted per Item purehased.

4, 1995

COPVIIIOHT 11M • TME KROGER CO.jiTEIIS AHO PRICES 0000 -DAY,
SATURDAY, JANUARY 1, 1HS IN OALUPOUI a
POMEROY.
.

.JANUARY 1, THROUGH

WE AESERV£ THE RIGHT TO UIIIT OUAHTm£$, NONE

S01J! TO DEALEIIL

•

HAULING

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

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

•

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW,
-··

I

.

'

.·

TU
'

sl

(4~7~LB. AVGb.)

.

614·742·2131

F&amp;A Tree Servite

BINGO

Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
Free Estimates
' 614-992-4447

Racine At1lerlcen
Legion Post 602
Now haYing Bingo
. every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45pm
DoorS open 4:30pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Seve eel for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949·2044

24-Pack, 12-0z. ·cans ·

·pound

(Limt Stone low Ratu)

GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.
STUTIIG DEC. 30

HAULING

GaJ'

12
Only
Uml : 740 .

·-

Backbore, 680 Front

614-992-3470
.

Ferlll . .ictr

Tues. ·Wed. • Fri. • Set.
1-6 . '
• Crlflllman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade

Usedlpphaces ·
for Sale '
C1ll

, ' ' " ,,,

Onemlleout

992-2060 10/r;l mo.

JAY'S EXCAVATING.
DOZER &amp; BACKHOE
SERVICE
Septic Tanka
Leach Beda lnatallad
Basements, Fool111'11
Mobile Home Sat-upa
Land Clea~lng
Road Building
Freo Eatlmatea
1 (614) 985-4495
1!21Dft

oEiactrlc•l Ia Plumbing
ofloollng
olnlerlor Ia Exterior
Painting •lao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.«;;. YOUNG 111
892-6216
Po11111roy, Ohio
•

.U."S. NO.1

.... ... .

10-Lb. Bag

lor thow end companlona.
Stud aervice &amp; puppleo,

WE HAVE A I TOP SOI L FOR SALE

______
young..a.lttloroalo.
48760 Milt H111 Rd.
Rtclne,Oh
1114-1411..2487

Wt0'121fn

_.

L1

eoci&amp;B ded 20 earaex
992·3954
~

ROOFING

mPr cwncy PhoniC qwr ) ll ll

TOLL FREE 1-lot-IU·DI7D
DARWIN, OHIO

992-5251
John

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
r

. 992-7162

C&amp;J ·
FURNITURE

Court Houaa, Main Straat
Just below Hobson
McArthur, Ohio 45651, ond
tho Galli• County Recorder,
nn Stole Doute
7_
Gollla eounty eourt HDult;- ----""' -" n
Locuot Stroot, Golllpolla,
New &amp;·Used
Ohio 45831 lor public
vlawlng.Wrltton commonta
or requeata lor an lnlormol
•
conference may ba aont to
New 2·piece living
the Dlvlalon ot Raclomallon,
1855 · Founteln Squore
room sets 1300.00
Court, Building H-3,
Columbua, Ohio 43224
within thirty doya ol tho loat
dolo of publlcotloh of thll · -~--------.
notice.
TREE TRIMMING
(t2) 21, 28; (1) 4, t1; 4TC -

992 7508

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
'

•New HoiiMII

.

--~--

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling I
. SlOp a Compare

FREE ESTIMATES
915-4473
'::=~=;:::::':fDJ;::"'~

I"

MARKET

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack

111 south Third
Middleport
Hours: 10:00 A.M.
, lo 4:00 P.M. Dally

992·2269

Better
RoofHl ,:

LICCn 5e d

SID ING

&amp; Bond ed

&amp;

~

SHINGLES

MARCUM'S ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
Solid V1nyl Replacement W1ndow s
:.PECIALIZIN G IN BUILT UP A ND RUBBER ROOF INC

VINTON. OHIO 45586
.

MIKE MARCUM

PHONE

Free Esl1 motes

1·800·377·4477

16141 245 .0437

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

II OW OPfll

J&amp;D FLEA

Doug

Uf11Mn

949-2168
&amp;'IMM TFN

rho

•

FREE ESTIMATES

7131111 TFN

rr

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SFibCK.

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Clean1ng
Painting

' ·..u.ssu OR

liln

•,

Howard '-· Writesel

LI.SJl\t Hauling,
ShrubS ShappeCI
and Removed

Cenuine
GroundChu

Llrnestona, Satnd, Gravel end Coal

Sp«:l1llzlng ln Cuttom
Fra11111 Repair
NEW l UJSd~ARTS FOR

~

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULI

In Poll-colore

Sptclaizh&gt;g

112·ht.i,..O@

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

·Round White
Potatoes

•
•

·.

Temperament .

ALL IIAKE,~~ ,IIODEIAI

Public Notice

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned .&amp; portable tfiilleta rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental retea. · ·
Job sHea ' Camp Sltet ' F1111lly Reunions • Ptrtlea

Cocker~~~!~
·
Bred

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

mo.

MODIRN IANIYA,..~N

·AMBERWOOQ
for
Quality and

AND REMOVAL
Limit One case
With $10.00
Additional
Purchase.
. ·.

. ...~
· .....-...~~~~· .

oNewGIIrlgoe

143 from m. 1

·

,.

Best Reception.

·We have even beHer
and quicker service.
• Over to yrs
experience
_.
• Service on all system
types.
. ·
• Best prices all jlround
the area.
992-2803 or 882-6320

Delivery .
Service ·
992·7553

CaU 949-2734

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENTER SERVICE .
ofloom Mdltlona

For the best in satellite
salet and service' contact
Bryan or

Lime Stone

MaplewoOd Lake.
St. Rt. ~24
Racine, OH

'.

IER IECEPIIOII

Charlie's .

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

(Sf!IICIIIze ln driveway
apreadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand.,
. Top Soli. Fill Dirt

DD'I
·uPLIAICI
.IDIICI

.,....

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

WICKS

DAVE'S
·swAP SHOP

,, 1

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. 8ft!l5t

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SAYRE TRUCKING

PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Cool
614-992·5515
Company, P. 0. Box 490,
Athena, Ohio 45701 h..
~11bmltted
• ·. rtntwel
eppllcetlon for coal mint
Permit D-G463 to tho Ohio
KBII'IIPPioiUC£
FACE LIFT!
. Dtpertment of Noturel
IDIIC£
Not you . your home'
Rooourc.. , Dlvlolon of
Roclomotlon. Tho pormlt
ofoc:tory Authorizod Parte
Will crcil t e &lt;1 new
a Service
uert lrt locettd In VInton
•All-• o42 YHrs
look for ~ny room
County, ·
W llktavlllt
ofl8t Reliable Service
usinCJ your
Towioahlp, SICIIona 3, t 5, 2t
•W•-• . Dr;en • Range•
col lectables and
and 22, Townahlp 8N, Range
of!elrigeratora •Fniezera.
11W end 17W, Fractlona 24,
.Piohwaahers
treelsures.
30 and 311, Townahlp 8N,
•H.W. Heaiora
Bring new w;nmth
Rongo 111W; Malga County,
-Microwa- •Diapoula
inlo your homes fo1
Salam Townohlp, Soct111n•
•Thonka Melga a
25, 211, 30 and 32, Townohlp
A the Holidays .
7N ond 8N, Renge 15W; on
Surrounding reoa
561
614
tho property ol ~touthorn
{ ) 9&amp;5-3 or
Phone 247-2206
33_5_. •'2;1.;.,..,.,
99_2_-5_
Ohio Coel Company; wtth . , _ _ _
......
·
underground worklnga In
VInton Vounty, Wllkoavlllo
- Townahlp, Sectlona-1, 2, 2E,
- POIIIIC Notice
PUbliC Notice
3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 15 and 16;
Froctlona ~4, 30, ond 36;
Townahlp IN, Rongo 16w Tho lppllcant hll obtained completed under tho cool
and t&amp;W· Melga County · a roed permit to mlna within mining permit laauod
Selem To~ahiPI Section~ 100 leot ol the rlght-of-woy purauont to thla permit. Tho
~ r3- 11 25 21 30 31 32 33 - of Solem- To-ahlp Roa_d - ronowol - oppllcatlon- wlll • 7 • t 3 • 19 333, tfloctlve November I, . allow Southam Ohio. Coal
1 nd 34.• Fra cit ona
• • · 1187· Wllkoovlllt Townahlp Company to continua tho
and 25; Townohlp IN, R011d 4 oftoctlvo December mining operotlono on D·
• Renge
t5W, Golllo
County, · 12' ttra·' on FStott Route 0413 for up to flvo- yoora ·
Huntington
Townahlp,
Section 1 Townahl IN 124, tfloctlvo abruory 28, poll tho expiration dote of
R
;, Th P
' 1974, which will remain In Aprtll; 11185.
.
enge 15 26· ·113 0 permit tfloct until cool mining ond
Tho application Ia on lila
contel.na 3 · ocroa and roclomatlon operotlono oro 'II the olflcoa ol tho Molgo
ol,;.locllod on7tho1 2~ulgo ond complatod under tho coel . County Recorder, Molgo
. lkoavlllo · 1 Mlnutt, mining ond roclemotlon County Court HGuae,
U.S.G.S. Ouonronglo Mept, operotlono are completed Second Strati, Pomeroy,
approximately 2.5 mlloa under the coal mining end Ohio 45769 VInton County
weat of WHkoovllle, Ohio. reclomotlon oporatlono ere Racordar, VInton County

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· Public Notice •

GRADE A,

._

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

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Uinestone
&amp;Gravel

UCINE
GUN CWB

•·

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

Room Additions b• Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '
FlU:E ESTlMATES

614·992t7643

·..

(No Sunday Calls)

Kenny's AutorRental

Real ES1ate General

Kenny's Is the.place to co•e
when you need a car rental•
We have Cart aad V•••l

"

Pound

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Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
Gellipolia, OH 45631 .

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the recent parent meeling held at Salisbury Ele·
mentary School.
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Meigs Local recently held its . Matbev.o:s Crov.o: from Salisbury. . ney Rife , Gary Kauff, William
aJUlUal Cbapter I J&gt;arent meeting at.
Jam1e Elhs, Ashley Engle, Hess and teacher~ Linda M~Manus,
Satisbury Elementary.
Steven Major, Mau Melley; Megan and Paula Chan,cy from Rutland.. · ·
. The program included OJ .brief Mayers, Tyler French, Charissa
. Jeffrey Baughma'~· . Cimrtney ;
overview of the Chapter I program Stanley, Johh. Roush,Mehs sa Parsons and tel)chcrs Juba Vaughan
· · hy, the director, Wendy Halar, and a Bogges, Hollie Dugon, Claj Sto~. and Shiiley VanMc1cr from Salem .· ·
program or display from' each of Robert Stone,. Brandon Bell, Ju~bn Center.
the participating schools in Meigs Bell, Chet Wtgal, Tr3vts Cund1ff, , Kim Riucrbcck, Chandra Moon
Local.
and teachers Liz Story, Teresa Carr' and teachers Ron Drexler, Tim
Students and Chapter I teachers and Roger Birch from Middlepon; Lawson and CbcryiHallcy from
attending and participating were Cheryl Partlow, Kelly. Ann Free, Meigs Junior High.
Richard Ham ilion and teacl!er
·James Duncan, Lester Aeilrer, Fel· man, Trevor Depoy, Bnuany Crea·
·11
isha Stumbo, · Sbeena Asli, mens; Briuany Buckner, Kelli Tat.. V.IC lei Haley from Hamsonvl
e.
· Siepbanie Snider, Matthew Wan- terson, Adam P!nes, Crystal PrideNancy Whaley and teac hers
dling Christopher. Trader Angel more, Clare Stsson and teacher Judy McCarthy and Tara Barber
C~ings, Scou ·Hysell, B~andon Bryan Zii1de from Pomeroy; Joann , from Meigs High.
Chapler I teachers Janet Hoff, .
Randolp)l, Derik Randolph, Evan Denney, Gregory Lee, Zach Faulk,
Easunan, Amber Wiii,Aiisha Bar· Counni VanMetcr, Melmda c;hap· .man and Rebec ea Triplctl were
ney, Amanda Kessell, Darin Hom man, Dave llubb~. Heath Nelson, attending an Primary-Elementary
and tcachers Ed Bartels and Barb Sarah Eskew, Japid Eskew, Court· Conference in Columbus.
~

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U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF

.... '·

:

Porterhouse or
·
$"99. country Club
Kroger
T·Bone
steak
••••••••••••••••••
;
••
Lti.
.
,
orange Juice ASSORTED VARIHIES
Ice cream
1/2-Gallon
Stokely's
vegetables ...................
"IN THE DAIRY DEPARTMENT"

ASSORTED VARIETIES

~

_,...._.., . ·· ~-~ ~

~··-····-~

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DEL~PASTRY SHOPPES

.

Fresh~Made

_: _ ·· ~·.
.~$JI99
Glazed Donuts ••••••• ;~ ••~;••~.;:.~ 12~. -1 ---\.-,:_c . . .;.,___.~~--~
KROGER

.

FROZEN

Top Bread

Kroger
·Orange Juice

20-0z.

12-oz.

Wlllte Round

ASSORTED VARIETIES

er--

·----·- ASSORTED Fl:-AVOR9-

Snapple

MIIIC'

16-0z.

Gallon

89
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0•• Stt~ Ctllt~ttt Aute Bt.f Rt~elr

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--------Communl•ty c'a'lenda··r --------

PRECISION IUTOMOTIVE..

chu"~ Stotts .

., 2_. . ..
9
22 59
·
.· .

·

'· . ·.O.FF.IC,E.•.,

..

Free

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614-992~6223
Estimates ·· ··

· lnsuranceWor~ Yiel{ome

7' •

1':::~~~~-::":-:"-~-.~~--~-......j

POMEROY· Crew Ad.· Approximately 1. 78 + acres of va&lt;;ant
ground. Possible building sl1e. Utllllles available.
ASKING $7,500.00 MAKE AN OFFERII

MIDDLEPORT· Localed on S. 5th Stree1· This 1 '112 story
lrame home features 3 bedrooms, family room, living room.
kitchen wilh an office area. Utillly area buiH In book shelves,
ceiling fans, central air, N.G.F.A. heat, cemanl walks, privacy
lancing, full basement. Cu1e place ... Lols of room! New
furnace 6 year warranly. ASKING $29,000. UVE HERE AND.
YOU CAN WALK ANY WHERE IN TOWN TO DO YOUR
SHOPPING!
POMEROY· Located on SR 7· This nice 2 story frame home
on approx. 1 acre features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, newer carpet,
newer furnace. knotty pine paneling In kitchen, single &amp;dble.
hung windows, hardwOOd &amp;·carpel flooring, B.G. heat. C&amp;S
elec.
and TPC
waler.
ASKING
128,000.
AFFORDABLE
RING
IN 1995
WITH THIS
NICEPRICED
HOME,
FOR YOU ANO YOUR ~OiiElY I'AMILY... ·
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·
. . ·
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'
_, · , Tlte-Communtly__calend•l' Is se.lccted-writiilgs by Eudora-Welty•.~..,.-"m"'c"'
c·,_,
tin"""'.. ~--~c....,.~---1
-.- ...:.. published as~a free sn.,lee ·to - For-roll call members are to give o
--- · --··
. ·- . . .• - RACI!liE- Letart Ad·. -this nlce..19.75_Crestwood Modular is
·
non ~ proflt groups wishing to
New Year's Resolution.
ALFRED - Orange Township
24x50 wllh a 9xt8 added room, sifting on 1.56+ acre of nice
announce meellnl! and s~clel
trustees' will meet Thursday, 7:30
laying ground. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, newer shingle
7&lt;
•= . .,
r.oof. panol.-e:arpet, 2 caLgaraga, lY...aolllnoa•.atorm .doors,
events. The calendar s not
RACIN.E - Special
services, P,.m., organu.atton"' meeting, Home
windows &amp; screens, central air, large front porch, and this
designed to promote sales or Racine . Church of the Nazarene, !Jf Clerk Patty Callaway.
house comes wilh Its very own GRAPE HARBOUR Ill nas an
_ fund relsers of any .type. ltelll$ ~Tyrec.. BlY.dJan . A-S - Dave Can-- FRIDAY · . ~ - - oulbullding, and cas el~ctrlc &amp;-Tuppers Plains water. l'hia Is
ere printed u space permits and ru:ld, commissioned evangelist for
HEMLOCK GROVE _ Meigs
a cozy place.
ASKING PRICE $48,900.
cannot be guaranteed to run • lbe Church of the Nazarene, wiU be County Pomona Grange, 7·.30 p 0·•
LONG BOTIOM· Post Office Ad. · This nice 1 floor frame ·
spedftc number of days.
the speaker· S ervices at 7 p.m. day at Hemlock Grange hall. Hem·
home fealures 2 bedrooms, 1 balh, beaulijul river frontage I
Wl)dnesday through Saturday; Sun· lock Grange hosting.
Carpeting lhroughou1, range &amp; hood, TV antenna, full
WEDNESDAY
dliy,I0:30a.m. and6P,.m.
·
·
· ·
basement with gara¥e and t/2 bath ·, 'f.A.B.G.).heat,
I
'
. SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Revival, Tbe
Monogahella elec. and PC water.
ASKING S5o,OOO
Believers Fellowship· Ministry,
POMEROY -The Big Bend
SALEM CENTER
Star
ATIENTION HOME OWNERSIII- WE HAVE BUYERS
New Lima Road, Rutland, Wednes· Cloggers will resume regular class- Grange #778 regular meeting Sat- .
WAITING FOR THE "RIGHT PROPJ;RTY", SHOULDN'T
day through Saturday. 7:30 p.m. es at6 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy urday, 7:30 p.m. anhe grange hall .
YOU BE USTEO WITH US? THIS ''NEW YE4R" t!MI5 IS
Rev . Dee Miller, Nelsonville, Village HaD , All interested begin- on CouniY· Road L Members urged
BRINGING IN NEW BUYERS BUTERS TO OUT AREA,
· speaker; special singing. Public ners should atlend. F!1' information 10 attend. ·Potluck to follow meet·
LIST WitH US AND WE "WILL" SEU FOR "YOU"III ,
invilejl.
call Vivian May at992· 7853.
· ing.
"HAPPY NEW YEAR1"
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HENRY E. CLELAND............................. ~............. 992-6191
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport .
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE - HarTRACY BRINAGER........................................... ~.. 949-2439
Literary 'Ciub, 2 p.D.· Wednesday,
SHERRI HART.................... :.............. ,.. ,.............. ,742·2357
RU1LAND - Rutland Town- . rison ville Lodge 411 meeting Sat·
· HENRY E. CLElAND 111.........................:............ 992-6191
Meigs CotmW Public Ubrary. Mrs .. ship Tt11stees 'organizational meet, urday, 7:30 p.m.' al th e Masonic
·KATHY CLELAND................................................ 992-61Q1
Richard Cfvien 10 review, "One ing Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Rulland. teJDple. Refreshments. All Masons
OFFICE-.........................~ ... :•.................................. 912-2259- ·
·
·Writer's lleJiinoinR( and ..otbei Fire Station followed by reg ular welcome.
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s Local Chapter
one parents meet ·
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1·~86-1590

8111. (814) 446·9971 _

State Rt. ~
Darwin, Ohio ·

O&amp;E

ELE~TR·JC

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
•
(LaJ11ps Welcome)
.
· Home J:!epalr Also
9~2-5251 .

. • ILmWIIDiiW

.• Cuetom Ill de .
~

• Solid vinyl
replacement
Wl~dOWI

,
• Fri.t htlmalfl
• $200 lnatllltd
C1ll For betalla
.
*VIS" OUfl SHOWROO"•
. 110 Court-St.POf11!1'£'Y, Ohio -·
~.
"Look lor. the {led·filil White Awnlnl''

992-4.19 Aln- Ow* l·ao.291·S6t0
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Wednesday, January 4, 1995

Wednesday, January 4, 1995.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy--'Middl$1)0rt, Ohio

ALL&amp;YOOP

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

)

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BRIDGE

.

NEA Crosswo·rd Puzzle

ACROSS

PjHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Anno uncements
3

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Ann~nc:ements

0

lor l n oboul domop lo 1817 Clio¥.
Colobrlly .. """" , llylor
$50

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Glwg

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Caa:,:t"'I.OVIng
J T~ Ha"Homo,
Kl1tono1.J"~.
Angon&gt;

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Clneondlhroo--nhouow
In Pomorvy, oqulppeclldl-..,

1d1-,

"Hallway through the avalanche movie I was walch·
lng, snow slid oft lhe roof and knocked this over."

t------.:...-;..,---------1

- -· nqull8d,
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42 , Mobile Homes

21 : - - - - - - - -

Business

\Y:IntiCIIO

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

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1 - 1 3 , ... lor Jolt.
OWn~- 1- - '

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Alherio, olorllng 11 1240,
:MIOJma1 . .bll anllllble, IM11124111.

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lool· Iorge
blvwn oldor malo Lob d o g , - - !ar &amp; llga, on Leoillna CNM Rd.
nur Rutlond, 114-l'tt-1100 alllr JID'a--ond-~
5pm.

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QuiA Wll Qo4 I lloodycCUh
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Rt• ., Norttt, .,....,..~

~bodroomlrollorlorroNin.
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Goods

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Apartment

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'(f5, M~AM .. WE'VE Ml SSED
'(QUAT SC~OOL : .WE 1HOLI6HTI
MA'IBE 'I'Oli'I/E BEEN SICK .. WE

72 ...._,_,__lor Sale
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1m 1n101n111ano1 1hlcll aoo • •'

Cf.lECK Tt&lt;E

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MARCIE ..

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TI&lt;E FLOWE

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WE &gt;lAVE
fj.iE WRON6 .
HOUSE!

ADDRESS
AGAIN ,

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Antiques .

PEANIJTS

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U N E B V L F S . ' W V• B B · A M F J G .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I wish the government would put a ta,.; on pranos lor

the incompetent." ~ Dame Edith Sitwell .
¢) 1995 by I'IIEA ,

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ORearrange

leriers of tke
lour scrambled words below to form four simple words .

ENNYIT

RUQYE

autographed up on request, for

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\ol!&lt;lO Sf'1LLED WATER IIY
" THE WI~!Xl'.l ' I SLIPPeD
A~D AL1"05T FELL I

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PR INT NUMBfRED I
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'

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_ _Bran_r:h ·_Topaz : Limbo - lje_ward- HOLD the CROP .
' Wfi,de travelmg one spring I. stopped al a-s mall rural

..,..,'

1;:::===---J _. , STRIKE A
. THE WAR ON .
·· HIGH PRIC.ES. SHOPTHf:ClASSF~QS.

•

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store. I overheard a farmer tell the clerk, "I don't ihrow
-.-~eC'r::-~~e~e~J~~.ket~: !he¥ m~y_ be just the right size to
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fiD, PW, PL. Pl. •
Drfwo, 7 feM · illllo u.r I P.ll. ,
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Auto Parts &amp;

Acc:elsortea
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LETTERS

',,'

-~Fonl
u Rift.
liLT, ' '
I7,10D;-1WI
F6iil
gorXLTM,JOO,I-.
'
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_ .,.., . : ·

,....

S K D V X

U U H

M

Phillip Ald'e r 'S Mw book, "Ge t

Dodga 111111 , , I':."'"..; 'I~

:ou.-.. -·

Pelt

A~

P. V U V ~ R. J XeS M E _!&gt; ......B K G

,W J U S ·

Smarter at Bridge." is available,

Window Van, I P a - , IM4414:101,1--.

REAL

.-- ...

..

1177

-

2 llelh, porch .... - . .

' SF J

f}

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73 . Vans &amp; 4 WD'a

fTASSIFIEDS

-

by Luis Campos

.

Cerenru y Crpher c ryptogram s aro crc.110d llorn qunl,lf •l'n(. tr ~ lilmnu•." Pfl•)Jllo p .1 ~ 1 .rnt1 prn•wnl
E&lt;~ch ~ellm rn lhil ,ctplmr srands 1()1 anollllCI Torl:l (.~ r /rm N N/vills U

H ell, &gt;•

- . - . 12,411; . , . . .

-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
\

'

'*'·· ..........
:.:,, ..
.
11M · r.,... r-100 v... __;
..... ... -~···.

'flllclor,
Palnl, Fl..... Willi UM&lt;

~:\!!~·-~ ~

~-

Thomas Gray , the l8th -ce nlury
·English poet wrote, ''The paths of glory
lead bullo the grave." Rather depress-.
' in g, but i n bhdge, when you are on
open ing lead , you are planning thai
I hat grave will be dug for the contract
On. lead against three no-trump, 'it is
nonnal to slart with the fourth-highest
from your longe st and slrongesL
However, today's deal highlights one
time when a different approach wrtl
yield better dividends.
· After &amp;mth opened with a slrong notrump and West overcalled two hearts.
North· lliil -three 'diamonds. Is this ffii'cing, invitational or a sign-off? A very
good question! Do you and your partner
agree' Unless you use th e Lebensohl
convention &lt;which, following an overcall ,-employs-an artificial two no-lrump
' to increase the possibilities!, you can·
not do more than select one interprelalion . I suppose I would opt for invita·
tiona!. With a game-force, you just have
to jump to lhree no-tMJmp or cue-bid
and hope it all works out
At the table, West led his fourth -highcsl heart. Declarer called for dummy's
jack and. when it held the trick, 'p layed
on clubs. The defense was dead
- Holding three aces, Wesl should
have led lhe heart ace. If the dummy
, has. say, three hearts, Wesrwill continue with a low hea rt, playing for declarer
to hold king-doubleton . Here, though.
West will lead the queen nllrick lwo,
pinning dummy's jack and hoping de·
darer doesn't have the 10. As you can
see, thi s allack kills lhe contmct
"

.
eo.... ,..... ' :'

1ltll Fonl F-110
. ..........
mi.... - -

--.

~ I N Fonl -

m:-+--+-f---1 ·

.

-AC
.no
I
711.~ollfllllldoond,­ bed

•• _, .......... -

Pass
Pass

$14 ,95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
f.lts .. NY JJ 577-0 169.

lllluaf mlloo,.... '
cloth .......... - . $311110, 1M- '

81. Fann Equlpi'Jiant

Jt
Pass

By Phillip Alder

wll=~ ~~i'
• ~-,...., IOIIGt
llliiiJOGio. -..,i
.R ii.,.,_.,.
-

-

2•
Pass

Lead declarer into
the valley of death

!I

onlr ~ ..._ noi- 41ilull '

M. 1!00.1or :..11

PelaforSala

. •.oo;

ELVINEY

?II

:.,::~

, "' ,....::...,.,,

association
11 Anger•
16 aueslion
20 Elecfricol
units
22 Caltleman
23 Most ill boding
24 Prophet
25 Leaky
•
26 Snick and 27 Brlslle
30 Asslslanl
31 Residue
32 Architect Saarinen
37 War god
39 Cancel oul
45 Units ot
matter
46 Longing .•, .
47 Wild hog
48 Celcsllal bear
49 Grate
·. 51 Western
defense O{g:
52 Willow
·
53 Barber'5 cali
56 Brown kiwi
57 Possessive :
pronoun
58 U.S. soldier$

8 Hubbubs
9 Eugene
O'Nellts
daughter
10 Political

,Opening lead:??

KNOWS IT BUT

- - - . _,.,...
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...
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.........
........-.....,a:.
·

-

Supplies

YrRAFURNITURE
4111
141
.... Oullll. ·
lla-Jm.
, __ ~-- ,...

FIVE

•

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3 NT

SHH II NOBODY

YOU GAINED

:; ~ ... ., ..-.. ., . .,,

Building

Tu- =-·
=:,_..,,,v.:z.•·:::o.o::
. ,,._ =· -c::....... .

,...luPllme Lol, ""

'lely Nice
BllhtoL. PaniiJ,

........
lolo -

-

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Answer to Prevtoua Puulo

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
South
Wesl North East

•

'
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=
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.
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&amp; VIcinity

PubiiCSele
&amp; Auction

•8

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eK5
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1110 lubuu ~ 4 o- •
llltlhi~ToFI'DIII_••

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f::~

Gallipolis

8
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EAST

•K 8 2

M4;t11-:.•

·

1-112 Ton

~~c~va-. DEAOUNE: 2:0D p.m.
.... do~ ~lorolho od .. Ill lUll.
Sundoy odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. llondor • 2:00

WEST
•A 4 2
• AQ9653

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4 3

SOUTH

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Yanl Sale

Yard--.

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ALL

HU~~

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Opportunity
OliO VALLEY PUIUIHINQ CO.

Found :. AI Olllo .,..., Pelr 01 U . . Dr. School
Ann.
Found:
biiiCtl
...,
_,
doclo-, Third • - . , vk:lniiJ, IM-M-.

7

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Lost &amp; Found

apaCI, . . . . . . ,...,.

1HE. fiRST

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:1817
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porfly
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Npolr. 30W'IW711. .

lool~l lb~~cl! • wllfto ....
col, YDOI HG, F - AWl - ,
"Ningo", 114-112-4215..

For llonl: -

Phono: IM-44414411.

.

,. ·small mlxod brood male dog.
hod oil aholo, good _..hlldooii.
304-e7&amp;-1139.

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-.orw"

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Good Home0n1J,I1Wfl-1011.
Old ..... 1V, -

11o :

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Mite RotrwliUer, 3 YHra Oldi

~s R£UUTK»JS,

ALL

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:....11100. . . _ _ . ·
1817 ~ cn.lo&lt; 4 '
~ -ii.ri '
~ Conellllo!n, Hill 1lrM, I

wtoth.,. c~og~;I'M-II:I-7M4.
Adorobll lAb llllxod ............ 5
Fam~_'!i.! 11-, IINciY To Ool

.

.DID .t,a; MM£ AfJ&lt; U!JJ

•7 5

Olclo, f1310. 1tl7 a.., .. '

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1·4-95

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6 WMI&lt; Old PuDIIIoiO. AIM,
Houao Colo To GOod \lomoo,
114-441-1411

6

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1NI ro,iola 111112, , _

Rentals

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814-:RNH"n1.

VI,:.

~'"'o.te;:::.:r

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Ad., Lion.

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deblo ·othor lhoil
Peek.

-Ollie-

0

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44 Worldly
47 Explode
1 Everything
50 Former Soviet
4 Public 1t8hlcloo
teecler
I Japon••• oath 54 Anglo-S11on
12 Field
mOMy
13 Concerning
55 c ..ole
14 -Town
59 Beul ol ·
15 Singer
burden
Lucl•no 60 Repeated
. 17 CompoiO pl.
deolgn foolure
18 nc
61 Actor Rlnar
19 Hlghwoya
62 Knock
21- Jewloh prayer 63 Impudent
25 Forerunner
64 Grain
ol CIA
28 Eye pari
DOWN
29 Prod~~ecl
t High
33 Individual
mountains
34 Dumb one
2 Jump
35 Father
3 Volcanic
36 Graek lenar
oulp~l
38 Artecy'o kin
40 German article 4 Female lavem
· employee
41 ·Period olllme
5
Numero -42 Brother of
6 Gel
Jacob
7 Noun oufflx
43 The seH

.

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w. lw Coni. ""' Cclolllllool ;
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-ornciU41od,---.
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Serv1ces

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Home

r.1erchancl1Se

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IABEIEHT
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Col
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w...._~~ng. &amp;.
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Ron't 1V leo oloo, F lq%fm
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82

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

___,_

Plumbing &amp;

Thursday, Jan . 5, '1995

for the sake of many .
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) You will be
able to 'iQgeniously remold the vaQue, trail
ideas ol olhers today . Mutual benelits

readily from bplh of thes~ resources
LIBRA (Sapl . ,23-0ct. 23) Your luck •s
likely to focus on material c.o nce rn s·
IOd~y . Your opportunities will be due , on

There are s tron~ tndiCations th at your
sell-interests wili· b8 powertul in the year
h d· lh' d es nol necessa•ily mean
~o~~ij ~ 5sel~sh. As you progress, you'll .
carry those worthy of reward with yoU.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22"Jan. 19)
Gonce IUall dhanging a plan you 've
been c~id:ring Wilt create the desired
rt"ant thing is not to co m~
off t Th .
9 lm:als Trying patch up ~
p ec:
10
b"";:'se YOUII
; The Asdo-Graph
8
.;~c:;a~~~~:nc h~!P you to underst~nd

can be garnere.d . ~
·
.
TAURUS (April 20·May ~). G_andOI IS
essenfial today in your one-lo ·one relallons~ips. Do not pull your punches, but
there s no reason to present your com:
ments un&gt;1ndly.
,
GEMINL(·May 21·June 20.) t,Jse yo~.r
orga.mza fiQMtl abili ties construci !VBiy,
today. Develop a clear system for.dealtng
with a situation confusing to e\lerybody.
CANCER (Ju,ne 21 -July 22) Today will
be fun if Y9U ilre willing to 'devote so~e

Pi3r l . to the· etforts of Oth ~rs on your
.behalL
,
_SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 2:1.) Eliminate
thde worpd "~~n't" lro~ /ou.r .voCabulary
to ay . . ost ttv~ 1~1nk1ng. w1ll prove su~ ·
cesslul1l you g1ve 11 hall a chance.
.SAGinARIUS (l!lov. 23-0.C. 21) Open
y~ur heart _!_'!d your .~rse when dealing
w1th tho~e _less fortunate than 'yourself
today . G1ving generously creates good
feelings in you and lhe recipient
_
&lt;t l!m NEWSPAJ'ER ENT.:Ju&gt;JU_
SEASSN

~· · "Ycftlr
'
cn:i thd

1

'

Building

----.·-·
...

Supplies

AUCTION I FURNmiR£. Ill
Olllpolle. liMed

----~-

-u f,

....
'~ today.
~'""Use~·.,.
~' .asset
•• """'""''""'
•.ooto9ay.
-~~
""'"
situation
lhis valuable
wi!l go wei! for you
You can
draw

, ay

...

"""=

,.

'•

- 1- -

I

and-J&gt;'(m&amp;--it-you -hrst- &amp;el a good-example

today. Be a good listener aod step out
front early .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·l!,pt 22) Endeavor.s

-

LAYNE'S FURHmJRI! ·
Comp.... holM
ttourl: lion ..., .... •
f!S22,_I nlllu ou1 l u l l - Rd.

Olive ..

ach 1evementSWIII mrsobslanllal today ifyou do somethinQ that oth~rs benfafit from

Iruly en1oy.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22') Your family member~woll be more receptive to your ideas

as much as you {:to .
P.ISCES"(Fob. 20-Mereh 20) You pos-

,

SWAIN

·-what-.to. ,d,.o to m.ake
Mail $2 to Matchmaker: P.O . Bo&lt; 4465.New Ymk , NY 10163.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fab., 19) Your

'

'

r·

'·· -

•
9111CCI

'

-

•

•

�·,

Page-12-lhe Deily Sentinel

Pol'l)eroy-MiddlepOrt, Oh!o

•

•

Wednesday, JllnuJry _4, 1995

'

AI l=amllv lllllilled Gild

_llperllftld 5UIJermarllH
IJest ol ser11lee,
Gild Priee, ta tile
·. 1Jeo111e olllur eommu11itv

.

Ohio Lottery

OUwins
conference
opener

•

•

,

Pick 3:

756

1943
· Super Lotto:
16-15-28-42-43-44

..

Low IDDiabl aroulld 15.
Cloudy. Frlcloy - , olat ud
rain. Hiab Ill upper 301.
,

Kicker:
530710

·'

•

•·

••

At The Co•ne• of .

A C.rdiMI • Alflllatld

SUNNY

Pick 4:

Gen.·Ha.elnge• PkWy.
and·· Pea,. ••· •Middlepo.e

5u!Mn'nlrbl

'

Vol. 45, NO. 171
Copyright 1994

1 Section, 10 Pagn 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 5, 1995
•

·Post:office·s report r~cord sales··.
By GEORGE ABATE
stamps on sale since Dec. ·tO. ll's
Sentinel News starr
like waiting until the day before
Ami posbnasters bave one sug- Christmas to, go shopping."
gestlooto residents.
On an ave.-age day, Middleport
Relax.
·
sells about $400 in stamps. Vester·
Tbis week, the county' s post
day sales exploded t&lt;! $2,148, he
offices have bad record sales in
added.
postage due to the Jan . 1 rate ·
"People need to understand lhat
increase 10 32 cents.
we don' t get more help when it gets
Middleport bas no 3-cent stamps . busy," Butcher said. " If people
and onty-about-1;000 1-&lt;:e~~l stamps
don't want to wastc~ a. lrip you can
remained this morning. said Rick
call abead of time to see if w.e have
Butcher village postmaster.
any left." ·,
Bw:ber _who bas been a post·
The county's sbortage of stamps
master for 7 years and in the postal
was caused by a nwnber of factors,
service for more tban ' 15 years ..:: Butcher and Pomeroy Postmaster
said be's never seen anylbing lite
Cbarlie,.Grim said
this week.
-i'f'ln1\Jot ·accusing anybody, but
"11 overwhelmed us Tuesday, pec_t~~le a_re ~verbuying rigb~ now,"
but the rate increase bas never Grim sa1d. Stay calm. We II lake
occum:d allbe ~ginning of year," care of your letters."
Butcher silid. "We've bad-these
The Pomeroy office had one of
--- ~
""
··
·
·
- --

its busiest days yesrerday - selling
5,000 3-cenl stamps in _lhree llotln .
and 3,000 l ' cenl stamps in OJie
day, Grim said. ·
Middleport placed a requisition
more ~ a week ago and should
have recetved extra stamps lastf'n·.
day . It still hasn ' t arrived - but
should by 10monow, Butcher said.
Adding 10 the demand across the .
country, the poslal board of governors pressed to respond faster th~
ever before, be added. Also , thts
rate cbange coincided wilb lbe holi·
~~;&amp;ys and the mailing o~ ~al secunly checks Ill the begummg of the
month.
.
"Within a week things should
. calm down a bi~" be added.
Other op11ons remam for frus trated consl!fllers inc!uding:
.
- vendmg machmes lbat sell a

32-cent and ~-cent stamps.
- machtnes also sell $3 .20
packs of 10 stampll,;
.
- the -mam desk wtll stamp
env~yope s.
. '
Ye~tcrday was buster lban anr,
day we ve had ..by . 60_ percent ,
B~! cbe r sa1d . Wttbm a week
th.tngs should be back .•o no~al.
unless we get hu by a blizzard.
By Fnday or al lates_t Monday
both Pom eroy and. Mtddlepon
should· be resupplied Wllh the
smaller-~alue st,a mps - but all
post offtces have extra 32-cent
stam,.ra:.
ba
. _.
any peop1e. ve complameu
about ~;he postal mcrease; but transport.a tton, labor and other costs
continue to nse.
"W~ 're mandated by !~w that
we cant make any money, Qutcb·
er·satd.
~

,

Plans-proceeding
on ·U.S." 35 upgrade project
.

'

'

Frozen
Assorted Varieties
half galloh carton

. 00000000

IIIY•GII•

.nLm IUPIIME
ICE CIIIM ................ ..
LIMIT ONE FREE ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
GOOO ONLY At CARDINAL SUPERMARKETS.

Frozen•Reg. or CrinRI8 Cut
2 pound package
·

OIEIDI
PIIICH Filii ..... ... ......

. 32Elbow_
Macaroni ,or Reg. or Thin
ounce
package
·
1

·I

E•

CIEAMEnE

,.

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

.J

PREPARING SITE- Workers from tile Oltlo Briilge Corporation are c:urrentJy preparing a site for a new Bashan Road
bridge oYer the Shade River at Keno to replare an aging one-lane
structure closed in September after Inspectors found a buckled
c.._ ·.membel- under the main bridge deck; Workers are shown
,here constructing an .ab'u tment Wednesday afternoon liS part of
the $118,000 project which may be completed near the end ol the
month.
'

IIY OlE Gil OlE

lEE

--Local briefs---w
.. Rep. Carey begins first teFm- ~,._ .

.·

· "'sfire 'R()li&amp;enbitlve Jolin-careHR:wellston) began bis first

term in lbe Ohio House of Representatives today .as lbe 121st Gen·
eral ·Assembly convened ·to swear in members and begin business
for the 1995-96 tenn.
·
. Carey is former mayor of Wellston in Jackson Counly. He is one
of 13 new Republican members taking their seats in Columbus
today. The House GOP now bas a majorily wilb a total of 56 members.
.
'
"The 941b District needs suong leadership. The people ill Ga16a,
Jackson, Meigs and Lawrence counties are ready to help make economic developmelll a realily. I'm ready to work to make that happen," be said.
· ,
Constituents who need to contact Carey can write to him at 77 S.
High Street, Columbus OH 43266-0603 or call him 'at 614~4663919.

Dinner
·
7.25 ounce package

1CIEAMEnE -.1MAC. I CHEESE ........ .. ..

IUY OlE GB OlE

lEE

L

Man injured in wreck
. A Pomeroy man was trcated for minor injuries following a twovehicle accident at the junction of West Main Street and the
Pomeroy.Mason Bridge underpass Wednesday around II :30 a .m.
Herman Michael, 76, was stopped on the underpass watching
traffic coming down the bridge.ramp. when his car was-struck from
behind by a pickup truck driven by Darlene See, 34. Pomeroy,
acc~ihg 10 a Pomeroy Police report.
·'
·
.
Michael was uansponcd by the Pomeroy squad of the Metgs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial-Hospitalwhere he was treated and released.
.
·
No other injuries were reponed. · . • .
.
·
Damage to the rear of Mfchael's 1986 Ford slallon wagon was
··' listed as moderare while damage to the front of See's 1~4- Cbcvro­
let truck was listed as light, according to the repon.
No ~ilations were issued .

103

Frozen•Assorted Varieties
17 ounce package

flre-Priced·'1.4~'
Co;nplete or BU,ttermilk
.~2 ()unce ~ck~ge --~-

00000000

I
I MIS. BU'-IWOIIH'S

M•GIIa.

PIPPIIIDGI
..... Clll .. ........ ,..... ...
•'
LIMIT ONE FREE ONE COUPON PEfl FAMILY ·

E

PANCAKE 111." ....... :....

L

GOOO ONLY AT CARDINAL SUPERMARKETS.

00000000
•
32 ounce bottle

IIY 011"' OlE

IUYOIE

lEE

GOOO ONLY AT CARDINAL

I

Meig~r CoiJ_nty

· SEPTEMBER
·
emtereenactorsreaeated the Bailie
Sept. 2 - The Meigs County of Buffmgton Island.
Library Board of Trustet:s delays
Sept. 13 - David- Persons was
decision ·on building the Racine arrested in Alabama after CljCllping
bnmch due to overinflated bids.
Sept. 4 - The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners resolves
wrangling between the Common
Pleas Court and t&gt;eparlment of from West Virginia officials from a
Human Services over payment or cornfield a week ~fore ,
.
'._court cOSISJor child support ca&lt;;es. _ Sep.!,_~_.,. Mtddk:pod_'itU8&amp;e...
.
Sept 6 _ Meigs officials con· Council decided totigl!ten enforcetinued 10 look at the confession of ment of its b~lldiJIB pennit process.
Racine's Menafee Blevins. Blevins·
S ~pt: 16 - The Jean Mary, an
~ told authorilies_he~poisone.d..Mjd,_ ~?: foot sternw~eeler valued at
dleport's Gary Snouffer and !herr · lilore ~ $2.3 mtlhon, sank m lhe
recanied his story. .... ,
Ohm River.
Sept. 7 - Rutland .!lfficials
Sept. I~ - The Jean. Mary,
·found ~eone to raze lbe old Rut· wedged ag31nSf the_Mason, W.Va.,
land Hii!b Sehool for free: lbe ObiO bank of the Oh1o RIVe:" IS held unlll
Operating Engineers Apprentice . ·salvage '7CWS from Pittsburgh, .Pa.,
program, ·
retr1eve 11. The stemwheeler was
Sept 12 - Union and Confed· sunk by a p•ece of metal reba~

news in review

located off the Pomeroy levee,
selected for· the 1994 individual
authorities stated. Also, Middlcpon
achievement award by the state his-.
holds its annual river festival.
torical society.
·
· Sept 18 - '1 be Meigs County · Sept. 23 - Special deputy and·
Rural Enrerprise Zone is mtifled by
former prosecuto( s investigator
the board of commis.•ioners, await· Gary J. Wolfe was indicted on :
ing final approval by state officials. . felony and misdemeanor charges
Also, officials stated lbe three-year by a Meigs Counly grand jury. He
Belleville Hydroelectric Plant pro- was accused of allegedly pointing a.
ject remains on - tar~et ~or 1997 handgun al his former wife and
completion. The proJecl ts sci for _ .another man,__ -~·~ __ .
sale Jan. 12.
·
Sept.. 25 - The Meigs County
Sept I '.I - Middleport's Jackie Hi.shway Depanmenl closed the '
Lee Smith, 19-· wbo Starved hlnv ., Basbali Road bridge after inspecself so he could squeeze lbrongb ~- .. tors _d~covered .~broken crossfood slot and estapecHrom ·thC·jllil mem6er underneath the bridge
in Mason County, W.Va~
was deck. ·
'
.
arrested after he cross,t,;rttie
Sept. 26 - Gov . George
Pomeroy-Mason bridge .
· · · Voinovich toured s.o uthca•t Oliio.
Sept. 22 _ Margaret Parker, At a regional planning meeting, lbc:
president of lbc Meigs County His· governor pledged nis commitment
torical· Society and director of the to develop lbe Rnure 33 ·connector.
Meig s County Museum . was
, Contln~ on page10

.

F'nal
.In a serl es
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visitwith Clinton

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
frantic ftrSt day of floor votes and
revelry behind lbem, Republicans
dominating Congress are out to
show President Clinton and
Democrats t,bey are serious about
lheirques( toresbapegovemmerit
Leaders of both parties planned
to meet wilb Clinton at the White
House today, a day after a jubilant
GOP assumed control of lbe House .
and Sen~ for the ftrSt tinM:: in 40
But even before visiting lbe

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Fresh
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ITILIII
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LIMIT ONE FREE ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
GQCXl ONLY AT CARDINAL SUPERMARKETS.

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1994:

GOP congressional

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CATSUPLIMIT
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ONE

By MINDY KEARNS,
· County Clerk, Mayor of Point and impacts to wildlife habitat.
Holloway Street righi:.Of-w~y that'
OVP Correspondent
· Pleasant; and Region 11 Planning
All of the alternatives under contains several graves dating back
apd Development Council in Hunl- consideration affect a n'umber of to the Revolutionary War.
The environmental as'sessmenl
of lbe proposal to relocate approxi·
ington.
residences: Altetnare ~ involves 39 . The location design study for
mately two miles ofU .S. 35 in
Three alternate locations are homes and 40 mobile homes; Alter· Ibis project began in 1992. Funding ,
Mason Counly as a four· lane f&amp;~;ili·
beiag considered for the. project, nate 2A displaces 28 homes and 30 for the study and lbe current en vi- .
ty with partially controlled access
wtth Alternate 2A being preferred. mobile homes ; and Alternate 3 ronmental study bas been made
is complete and available for
According to the assessment. Alter· involves 23 homes and 36 mobile available through a combil!ation of
·review in a number of places, nate 2A impacts the least number bom~:~s . The majority of these dis-· federal and state funds. The lnterc .
according to a legal notice pub- of residences, businesses, produc. placements occur in the town of modal Surface Transportation Effi.
lisbedrecently in the Point Pleasant live farmland, and wetlands, and Henderson.
'
ciency Acl (ISTEA)·of 1991 identibas only minor impacts -on noise
Alternates I and 3 also affect tied this design project as a HighRegi.sler.
The project would relocate a andcomnumily cohesion. ·
several businesses. These business- way Demonstration Project and as
Although Alternate. ! costs the es ~~!ude ~e former Coast Gu3;fi1 sucb as eligible for funding .
portion of U.S. 35, upgrading the
~ to, four lanes, from lbe Silver least to construe~ this alternative is
fac•h~es, cny .offtees, .commerc~
Those ~isbing to obtain person,
Memonal Bridge interchange to the · J!OI n:cc;&gt;mmeoded due to its resi~ . drn:lmtg facthUes, a bargp rcpau at cop1e~ of th~ BS!J!88t;l!Qn~,,l~
·
coaSt,~ SltlliOn \11 HeiidciSbii;u-•clauial tlld busilf&amp;' dl~lltcd!itlllls';''- faaHty, ll"bMdwarct!llore, conve~ .. wrineli ~""'r ~~ ~ nu~; ...
approximalcly twq milueasl ·
disruption to commlDiity coliesion, Dl~'!ce atore: Store supply, ~ lie bearin~ may do so by wrtlliil 10.~ · ·
Copies of t~e assessment are Impacts to productive f;lrmlands cltmc and prod
. UCCo&amp;lalld.
:
.
~mmiss•C?Der, West Virginia Oivi- .
available for reV1ew a1 the offtee of and floodplain encroachments.
.
Alternate.. I reqmres retocauon s1on of Htgbways, Capitol Com·
lbe Division of Highways, Division ·
Alternate 3 is not recollllll(inded of Henderson~ s Town _Hall; while plex Building 5, 1900 Kanawha
of Culture~ History, and Seae-- due to its high construction costs, Al~rnare 3 would requii'C_th~ relo- Boulevanl Eas~ Charleston, W.Va
tarv of State m Charleston; Mason substantial stream involvement
cat1on of a cemetery wtlhm the 25305-0430 on or' before Jan. 31
.
• •
1995. .
,

ADDRESSES OPENING SESSION ~ House Speaker Newt
Gln1rkh or Georgia addresses tbe opening session of the 104th
Congress Wednesday In the House Chamber on Capitol Hill, In
Walhll'lgton, D. C. Glagrlt• was onlclally voted In as House
Speaker Wednesdq, defeating House Minority Leader Richard
Gepbardt of Missouri,
·
. 228-lOZ. (Af)
,

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that includcd .tax and welfare cuts,
Gearan ·said Clinton's. agenda . Congress :
an anti-crime package and a. bal· . could be summed up in two wOrds:
''After everything the liberals
anced budget amendment.
"the middle class."
! aid about the 'Contracl With
."We were hiredto do a job, and
Tbe Senate debated a plan by Am e rica,' it turns out th at the
we have to start' today to prove Sens. Tom Harkin. D-lowa, and American people and .about twowe'll do i~" he told bis colleagues, Joseph Lieberman, 0 -C onn ., to thirds of Democrats like latge parts
minutes after a rousing greeting weaken the use of filib·usters, of it," Gingrich boasted Wednes- ·
from fellow Republicans chanting, wbicb are delays used by oumum- day night at a $25-a -tickel GOP
''Newt, Newt, Newt. •• Their gruel- bered senators tp kill legislation. · fund·raiser at a downtown bole!.
ing opening· day, which usually is The chamber seemed ready to
Outgunned Democrats could do .
brief and c.;remonial, began at defeat the proposal today and to little but complain that the GOP
nPOn and lasted just under 14 112 begin considering a bill that would reforms either did not go far
b'o
for lbe.fust.time_apJity-worker-pm--eoough-Or- v.iolaled the -Ccm s ltilu-c-~-:-i~~aiffif.:ToPi~~FJifns 1'rom -:-- In the-thalr·at 111e closing gavel; · rection, civtl rigbls and olber laws tion . 'lbe-requirement-fon three:
chambers made their inten- . Gingricb lbanli:ed members on bolb · to CongJJ:SS:
•
· fifths vote to raise•income tax ra~
clear.
sides of the aisle. "It bas been not
The Mouse ~publican program
was attacked as unconstitulional ,
-lfi~~~~~~~~~~~~if- -:ly lbc longcsLand mosLw.o[h...Jias embodiod in the oonv's cam· but carried, 279-152, with unanimanlike opening session, but one p&lt;tign -season "Contrac't With
IIII&gt;US 001' support.
•
:-:·Bob Dole. R·
spending slashes, lower
and
of the most productive sessions, I America.' ' Gingri~ helped design
"Some of them are good lbing, .
~an end to lllws-~t impo&amp;e eilviroo· ·-dtink, for any single-day In House Urat~paclca~e or-JIO!llilllf ·jjteages,
nr do, ·b1Jt they-llltn't·: rea lly-going e
history," be said.
and it is credll.ed with helping thC
to change peoples' lives. This -isn't
mental and other costly require·
ments on states and local governClinton spent most of Wednes- ·GOP caplilre the House laslfall.
why they were elected ," said
ments witbOUt the money to pay for ·day still on boliday in Arkansas ,
The. new speaker planried to res- Minority Whip David Bonior, 0 lbem.
·
where a school was dedicated in his tify on the conlract toda1 before the
Mich.
,
.
''Reining in our government
name . White· House spokesman HouS!l Ways and Means Commit·
And as the Republi~an majoriJ
will be my mandate, and I hope it
'Mark Gearan said Clinton shared ree, which oversees taxes, welfare
ties began to assen themSelves -,
will 'I!C lbe purpose and principal
many of the Republicans' goals, Jlll(l other social programs.
-230.204 with one indcJN:nden.t in
accomplishment of tbe 104th
including welfare reform, political
Wasting 6ttle time, Republica'ns .lbe House and 53-47 in the Senate
C«!Dgress," Dole ~d. shortly al~
reforms, endlnft f~eral mandates fulfilled their fusl contract pledge
- Democrats began tryinjpo grow
lawmakers ticked off .their year's
on lbe states and grvmg the pres•· and eastly rammed lbrougb a slew . accustomed 10 ·their new minority .
business Wednesday. ..
· . •
dent !he line-Hem veto.
of cbang~s .in House procedures.
status.
..
o
In an emotional House, Rep.
· Buf be said that if Republican These inQuded Ierro limits for the
' " You are .now my sjleaker, and'·
Newt Gingrich, R..Qa., capped· his
tax cut protfosals increase the speaker and commitree chairmen, a
may the grcat .d'ebates l!cgin ,' ' .
rise f!liD a neUieSome backbencher
deficit ~if tbe GOP tries to go requirement for lhi'ee·ftfths majori·
Minority Leader Richard Gepbardt. ~
to Hllusc speaker and renewed his
back o · . ems included in last tics for. approving income tax rate
0-Mo .• s'a id as be baqdcd th e-·
party's promise that the GOP
·year's cri
and education bills; inaeases, and dleirown version of 1 speaker's gavello Gingrich. Tht·
would stage votes on an agenda
"tpen we wiU engage on !haL' :
the billlhat' apjl!ie s all laws to · assembled Repuli6cans roared.

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