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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

•

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,

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

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•·

••

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
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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.
~

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Plans-proceeding
on ·U.S." 35 upgrade project
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Frozen
Assorted Varieties
half galloh carton

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Frozen•Reg. or CrinRI8 Cut
2 pound package
·

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PIIICH Filii ..... ... ......

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

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CIEAMEnE

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

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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.
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Michael was uansponcd by the Pomeroy squad of the Metgs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial-Hospitalwhere he was treated and released.
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No other injuries were reponed. · . • .
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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
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PIPPIIIDGI
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00000000
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32 ounce bottle

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GOOO ONLY AT CARDINAL

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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
I

r:

l~aders

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

.J

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1101' AYM • • • IN MI. 81-11
Fresh
16 ounc~ loaf

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

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1994:

GOP congressional

IEE1

I!OIILY'I
CATSUPLIMIT
.....ONE....FREE
:..............
..PER FAMILY
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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Thursday, January s, 199S

Commentar
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".

EVCI)'

year~

it moments, but

· procbement wilb Soulb Korc8.
and wateb oi'Pride of the Y~s'.'
Eme$10 Zedillo: To swp the free ov~:r and over~ over agam unlit
fall of !lie peso (whicb hurts U.S, . we settle the suikt.
"
1980s as the Decade of Greed. To exports to Mexico). To ~frain from
Hockey owners.. bnckey players:
bashing California residents for To get back to the tce before sports
their unwillin~ness to sub.sidize fans realize that life wilboutllock. Joseph Perkins .
illegal aliens, wben Mexico, itself. ey really ain't so bad.
.
denies government aid to foreign·
.Ricki J7ake, Oprab W~nfrey,
,,
ers (mostly Central American~) Geraldo Rivera, Monte! Wtlhams,
conduce myself more like a first wbo'cross irs border illegally.
Pbil Donahue, Rolanda Watts: To
· lady than a de facto cabinet memMarion Barry: To do 110 f~r give the American viewinl! public
ber.
damage to Washington ; D.C . s ooe mucb-needed wec;k ofstlence .
Newt c;lingrich : To remember badly tarnished image by staying
Jeffrey Kat77nberg, David Clefthat the last two Speakers of the away from the crack pipe and from fen, Steven Sptelherg: To run our .
House, Tom Foley and Jim Wright, women who ani not my wife.
new entertainment company not
were forced out of office.. To vol- . MiChael Fay: To he grateful that only to ma1ce mega-profits, but also ·
· unteer my $4 million book advance I got only four lashes with the cane, to he ~Ially responsibJc:. No ftlms
to the federal treasury. to pay down instead of lbe six I bad coming to or mustc thai explon vtoleqce or
the national debt. To put every me. To do public service announce- prurient sex. · ,
.
plank in the Coptrnct With Ameri· men!S on MTV warning kids about
Alan Greenspan: Tc keep mflaca to a floor vote within the first . the consequences of vandalism.
. tion in check, even if the· Clinton .
100 days of the new Congress, as
Susan Smith: To blame no one administration keeps complaining •
promised.
·but myself for tbe unspeakable . about rising ~ten:st rates. To reit·
.
Kim long II: To let the Ameri- · crime I committed. To spend lbe. e~ my _unfltpchmg support for a
can ltelicopter pilot go and detain rest of my life in prison praying for capt tal gams ~ cut
·
Jimmy ·Carter the next time he vis- God's mercy 00 my soul.
·
Robert Cllron: To donate my
its' Pyongyang. To fool the entire
Baseball owners, baseball play-. sevc:rance pay to Orange County as :
world by initiating a peaceful .rap- ers: To lock ourselves in a room resUiul,lon for some of the $2 btllion I lost by inv~ling (~Ui?lic funds ,,
in higb-risk securities.
Tonya Harding: To he thankful
that I didn't gel sentenced to jail.
To drop Nancy Kerrigan a belated , ,
note of apology. To reimburse the . I
U.S. Olympic Committee for all
the money it spent' to fly me to , ·
Lillebammer, where I dido ' t win a .. :
medal anyway.
Heidi Fleiss: To understand that ., .
ou can gel away with murder in
.A., but ~ you can't get away wi.th
peddling flesb.
Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie
Presley: To have a lasting marriage •
like Billy Joel and Christie Brink- · i
ley, er, Tom Amilld and Roseanne ·'
--am;·er; Rlclranl Gere and Cindy .
Crawford. Oh, forget about II.__ _
OJ. Simpson: To 'fess up.
·'
Joseph Perkins is a columnist . :
for The San Diego Union· Trl- ·.
bune.
·
·
c
(F'q r informatlof\ on how to · .
communicate tleclronlcally wltb .
:
this columnist and ·o thers, con- : :
tact America .OnUne ,by ,~:~~lllng 1~ :.
800-827-6364, ext, 8317.)•
. ·
the welfare· state.

199~ was parucularly e.ventful. . Hillary Rodham Clinton: To
Wbo d have ~gbt, for tns~, · make no more references to the

MARGAllET

that the Rcpubhcans would wm
cootrol of bolb bouses of Coogrcss
in November's midterm elections.
Or that peace W!JUld break out in
both the Middle East and Northern
Ireland. Or that labor unres~ would
cancel both lbe World Senes and
(quite possibly) the Stanley Cup..
There were a lot of famlltar
fares in the news this year.. And a
few fresb faces as well. Smce most
of lbem are probably too busy to
make resolutions for 1995, I'm
only .100 ~y to do it lor them.. .
Btll Clmton: To slop deludmg
myself tbat lbe midterm elections
· were a repudiation of .Washington,
ralber than a referendum on f!\Y
))residency. To recognize tbat
Ameri~ arc preponderantly conservau~e, r-ather than hberal. To
work wtth, ra~ than a~ru~st, ~
new Repubhcan maJOflly 10
Congress .to sbririk the size of government, lower taxes and reform

u:m:w

Caatroller

LETTERS OF OPINION 111 welcome. They lbould be loa 'tbaa 300
wo.W long. All lelia'S 1111 IUbjecl to edilin&amp;llld 1111111 be siped with 1111me,
address and telepbone number. No llllli&amp;oed lett.cn will h publilbod. Leltan
sbould be in good tis•• oddJuling
i a - Dill pmollllitin.
' ·
.

.

'

Friday,Jan.6

LoQking back and looking· ahead·

111 COut lbeet
Pomeloy, Oblo

•
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genonol Manager

Excerpts from ottter
OhiQ newspapers

By The AssD!'Iatod Press
·
Exc~ts of editorials of national and slalewide interest:
·
The (Port CUnlon) News-Herald, Dec. 28 ·
Ohioans want the state to get .lilugb on crime and criminals. And it will
pay the price for such a tougb·miit~ apJI!"O&amp;ch.
Tbe numbers are sobering:
.
.
- The biU to operate Ohio's prisons soon may top $1 bi!Uon annuaDy.
- Last week, the state issued a report showing that spending for prisons had risen at a much higher rate Ibis year thaD spending for education
or for welfare.
The increase is so disproportionate tbalit raises long-term questions
'- about the wisdom of putting so much mooey into a system tb31 bands out
punishment but does little 10 prevent sucb problems from happening in the
first place.
.
There's ~o doubt. that crime rates also have risen· dispropcx:tionately
·
and somethmg must he .done to send a clear message to cnmmals that
-'-.~-'---c'their cond~ won 'I be tolerates. It is dlercfore un-'-dersrimiiltandaiats:b--cle~tha
~t--:m-:ore
-:-~c.--.--{-'~~~-~~·
.money has to he spent iO process ana puniShmi.e ~·
.
But in the long term, the state and its la~n need to ask if the
money is being spent in the right place. Asked in another way, lbe ques·
tion is whether we're spending the money on the wrong end of the problem?
·
The Marlon Star, Dec. "29
,
Two new bullets·have gone off with a bigger bang of pubUciry than if
they' d been tired at point-blank rimge. .
.
·.
Signature Producrs' new bullets, known as Black Rhino and Rb;no. Ammo, were touted by.their maker as being particularly desttuctive wben
they hit a buman being.
.
The bullet was designeil, according to the company, for people louse
in handguns for self-defense.
·
So far. neither bullet is banned under federal law because lbey are
made with plastic, 110t with the usual materials. But that may not lasi for
long. Ever since·the bullets exploded on the scene, so to speak, lawmakers
and police have WOrried that they would fall into the wrong hands, Sen,
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y ., said be would introduce a bill to block
the bullers iffederal regulators didn't Dut before anyone bans anything, someone should test the bullers to
if they do whal their maker says they will do. More than a few experts
have expressed their doubts.
·
.
What do you think? Should.the government step in~ Or should manufacturers poliCe themselves and not create annor-piercing anununilion?

see

.

.

'

Meigs land transfers posted

Hospital news

~-Area ·death-.-

·:
'•

Hurrah for Christmas, New Year's

-----,~~·~~--

-

Meigs announcements

Violet M. Safford

110 •••~· · ~

0

....... -·· ..

Stocks

..

~.

Clarence Colwell

Meigs EMS logs six calls

osenh S!Jlear
· ·

·--·~-·--·.

\

Couples issued marriage licenses

u

--

•

------Weather .- - - - - -

· ~

:

..

'"'

..

An evening at the Curmudgeon's
lmprov
.

•,

•

PomerO'J. to pick un Christmas trees

r

'

•

.

NEED A
MEDIAToR?

...

.

By The Associated Press
over tbe Gulf of Mexico and Aoritonight. Tbe precipitation could Arctic air.
A
winter
storm
watch
was
·in
lllm
to
snow
and
accwnulate
severReno,
Nev.,
picked
up
a~
least
4
da. The northern balf or Aorida bad.
MICH.
effect for extremc southwest Obio
al inches on top of ii:e, f&lt;RC3Siers inches of snow before dawn. and
highs forecast in lbe 50s.
tonight, where a mixture or rain,
said. It won't be as cold tonight, areas around Phoenix bad more
The nation' s hot spot Wednes- ·'
fliezing rain and sleet was expect- · with lows 10-20.
than an inch of rain. Rain and snow
day was Key We st, F la ., at 81
ed ~
.
The rest of the state will gel also fell in Utab; New Mellico and
degrees; the nation's lowest tern·
Meanwhile, lbe National Weathsnow on Friday but accumulations Colorado.
perature was minus; 36 in West
are expected to he ligbt. Highs will · · Hundreds of people were evacu- Yellowst'!ne, Mont.
er Service's squall watch ·for
•
be in tbe 30s.
a ted Wednesday from flool!ed
extreme northeast Ohio expired Ibis
The ~cord-higb temperature for areas in Southern California after
morning a!ter up 10 15 incbes or.
'
this date at the Columbus weather lbe storm dumped as many as s1x
snow was dumped on Cuyahoga,
'
station was 61 degrees in 1946 inches of rain. About three inches
Geauga, Lake and Ashtabula coun.
'I
~
, ues.
while the ·record low was -16 in · was reported around Los Angeles.
Tbe following actions to ·end
Three pe6ple were hospitalized
Skies were clear over most of 1884. Sunsettonigbt will he at 5:20
marriage
were tiled recently in the
p.m. and su.nrise Friday at 7:53 as a result of storm-.related injuries.
Ohio overnigb~ allowing the colda.m.
·
Avalanches piled seven feet of office of Larry Spencer. Meigs
est temperatures of tbe season.
Readings were generally helw~en
snow on Highway IS in San County Clerk of Courts:
Bernardino County. Some cars · Dissolutions asked - Robert A.
zero and 5 degrees.
.
Davis, Belpre , and Kimberly A.
storm
thai
sweptlbrougb
Cal~
were stranded, but there· were no
A
.A low pressure system developDavis, Tuppers Plains, Dec . 22;
ifornia
sbifted
into
lbe
Southwest
reports
of
injuries.
ing over the lower Mississippi ValJennifer
Lynn McKinney and JefElsewhere, an ·Arctic flont that
ley is likely to produce lbe nasty today, while the rest of llie nation .
frey
Ray
McKinney.· both of Midgot
some
relief
from
a
surge
of
_
gripped
much
of
the·
Northeast
was
weather in the Cincinnati area
'
W. VA, .
dleport, Dec.·29. ·
..-...---------;....--....,.....,---------, moving east of New England this
Divorce asked - TereSa Renee
morning. Westerly winds gusting to
Tillis,
Pomeroy, from Michael
r
more tban 30 miles per hour
Allen
Tillis,
Rutland, Dec. 29.
Pomeroy will pick up residents' old Christmas trees on three sepbrought milder air, after a frigid
Dissolutions
granted - Wesley·
arate days at the beginning of next week, aecording to a village oflimorning, into lbe northern Pl_ains
M.
Smith
and
Doreen•
R. Smith,
cia!.
·
·
and tbe Great Lakes.
Zane
Alan
Beegle
and
Dec.
27;
Temperatures in the region were
Residents should place old trees on the curb in tbe following '
Heidi
Sue
Beegle,
Dec~
27;
Shawn
order: ftrst ward, Jan. 9: second ward, Jan. 10; and third ward, Jan.
expected to rise into the 30s , but
II.
the warming could be brief as · D. Gilmore and Connie S. Gibnore,
Dec. 30.
.
Also, the village will he colh;cting amusement and alarm fees
another cold front was likely to
Divorces granted - Rose M .
that are due before tbe end.of this month.
.from SQUib ern Canada
'--...i.
' ""!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, approach
tonight. .
Asher from Jimmy D. Asher, Dec.
27; Jerry Day from Jennifer Day,
Cool air persisted over the
'
in tbe upper 30s .. Ch;Jiice of prccipSouth-Central Ohio
Dec. 28.
Southeast,
where
thick
clouds
hung
Today ... Mostly sunny .with a .itation is 90 percent.
.
'
Extended forecast
high in the mid 20s. Southwest
The following couples received ·Meigs County Probate Court of
. Saturday ... Snow likely·. Highs in
winds 10 to 15 mph.
·
marriage .licenses recently in the Judge Robert Buck: · ·
Tonigbt...lncreasing clouds late. the 30s.
Sunday ... Snow endi_ng._Lows 20
Low 15 io 20. Southwest winds 10
· George Daniel Wed~le, 28, and- ·
The· foffow.iiig land transfers 'deceased, tn Dw:mc Cit,U\, Miilille- to
25.
Highs 30 to 35.
to 15 mph.
Delta Dawn Doerfer, 17, both of were recorded recently in the office port;
Monday ... Parlly cloudy. Lows
Friday...Snow developing in the.
Racine; Troy Lee Gibnore, 25, and
of Meigs County Recorder EmmoDeed, Dwane ·Casto to Middle15to
20. Highs 30 to 35.
. · VETERANS MEMORIAL
afternoon ... Changing1to sleet and
Beverly
Christine
Wyant,
30,
botli
gene
Hamilton:
·
port
Church of Christ, Middleport
Wednesday admissions - Paul
freezing rain and then to rain . High
of
Albany;
Charles
Allison
Decker
Deed,
Donald
W.
and
Mayla
D.
lo1;
·
Houdashelt, Pomeroy; Cora Webb, Jr.', 28, and Debra Elaine Lawson,
Puckell to Lynn D. and Mary ElizDeed, Gnrdon and Jill L. llolter
Middleport
36.
both
of
Syracuse';
·
abetll
S.
Shaw,
Bedford:
In
Lyle
J. Swain , Orange. \569
Wednesday discharges - EveDeed,
Carolyn
E.
Johnson
to
acres:
·
lyn Wofnlfll, Pomeroy
David Wayne Dunlap, 52, ParkRigltl uf wtiy, Bobby ·arid GcralPaul R. 'Johnson, Letart, 4.368
··
·
dine Smallwood 10 Buckeye Rural
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ersburg, W.Va,. and Linda Chris- acres·
-- ... ...
tine Buies, 42, 'J'uppers-Piains;
- oied; Zane' A~- anU He idi S. ·' Electric Goopcralive;,Saiem;
- ~Jareilce·Colwel\.-72, Sba®,Oied WedneSilay, Jan. 4, 1994, at Veter- • Jan.· 4 discharges • Christina Charles Verlin Jacks, 23, and
Beegle to Zane A. Beegle, Suuon,
· Deed, Roger L. ;md Vicki Ann
ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
•
·
100 acre lot·
Howard t&lt;i Richard P. and Nancy
Gregory, Margaret Heffon, Patsy Vanessa Kay Young, 24, both of
· Born Jan:-27, 1922, in Frazier's Bottom. W.Va., son of lbe late Allen
Easemetit, Mary K. and Walter E. Howard, Bedford, .725 acres; .
Campbell. James Harless and Racine; Duane Elliott Boynton, 29,
and Eda Cain Colwell, be was a .t"iltircd machinist from A. C. Miller in
and
Gail
Jean
Taylor;
22,
both
of
Grueser
to Cpiumbia Gas of Ohio,
l)ced. Cam I J. Osborne to F and
'
James Pettit.
Delaware, .Qbio.
.
'
·
Inc., Pomeroy parcel;
C Oshomc humly, Sc1p1o;
P.omeroy.
Printed wltb .permission. ·
He was an Army veteran of World War II, a former member of tbe
Deed, Henry C. Hartman, ct al.
Deed, Ray E. Wellman to
Delaware Veterans of Foreign W'an Post 3297 and a life member of tbe
to Randy 1:.. and Carla S. Kimes,' Andrew R. Eggers, ,Bcdlilfcl;
Disabled American Veterans. He received lbe European· African Middle
Chester, 1.93 acres;
Deed, Ray E. Wellman 10 Ray
Theatre Ribbon, a Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and tbe World War II VicAffidavit, Samuel M. Baker," · E. Wcllm:m, Bedford rarccls;
tory Medal.
.
.
•
.
. Deed, Maigar~t Nunn Ill ThurUnits of the Meigs County fire department to a motor-vehicle deceased, to Edward J. Collins:
He Uved 52 years in Delaware.
·
: ·
··
accident
on
West
Main
Street,
HerDeed,
Richard
B.
and
Sherry
L.
m;m
L. SmiU&gt;. Middleport parcels;.
Emergency Medical Service logged
He is survived by a special friend. florence Sidders of Pomeroy; three
man
Michaels,
,VMH,
Joyce
Ash,
"Payne
to
Roger
B.
and
Debra
M.
'
Deed,
Melvin R. Sr. and Charsix calls for assistance Wednesday .
sons and daugbters-in-law, Patrick Dean and Lois Colwell of Delaware,
Jamie
Ash,
Jeremy
Ash
and
Dar·
.Hill,
Scipio
parcels;
lotte
VanMeter
to Larry and Wen-·
Units responding included:
Clarence Arthur and Barbara Colwell of Ostrander and James Earl ColDeed. Robert and Carolyn clela Tucker, Pomeroy 101;
MIDDlEPORT
. lene See refused treaunenl.
well of Delaware; lbrce daughters and sons-lit-law, Roberta T. Mid David
RUTLAND
Smith to Orrcy · Von!·, S u lion ,'
Aftidavit, Samuel Carr Winters,
8:24 a.m., South Third Av~ue.
DanielS of Delaware, Tonya Sue Lindeman of Pomeroy and Bonnie Lou
5:43 p.m., Meigs Mine 2; Dave .1.1669 acres;
deceased, 10 Anna Jan Kincade and
Gladys Wl!lbum, Veterans Memoand Don Woodland of E. Harwicl!. Mass.; 15 grandchildren and ;J3 greatMcComas, O'Dieness .Momorial
Deed, Robert L. and Judith A. Ca thy
Quirk,
rial Hospital;
.
grandchildren.
,,
Markins to John Swinehart and Lchanon/Sutton/Letart;
3:56 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Hospital. ~
Also surviving arc four brolbers, Jobn and Tb0013S of Delaware, Rus' TUPPERS PLAINS '
Dale Coleman: Rutland parcels,
Deed. Nancy L., Carl M. Jr. ·and
Cen.ter, Cora Webb. VMH:
sell of UpjJer Sandusky and Leland of Urbana; tbree sisters. Ao5sie Skeels
11 :24 a.m., state Route 7, Ethel - 22.72acres; .-.-Wanda F. Findling w· Jon. C.~tlurke
6:54 p.m.:· Page Srreer,-Giadys ·
and ldeUa Fickle of Delawtll1lllll4 Rena Welbettloltof Hunting(llli\IW.Va.
Car$00, ·Camden-Clark ~emorial
Affidavit, Jucly Kay Haggel1y to and Linda K. Grindstaff. Orange.
Parfitt, ·VMH.
He· was ·preceded hi death by his wife, Belly, in 1'974, and bY two
Carson.
Richard·L. Baggerly;
. 11 2.57 acres.
'' POMEROY
brothers, George and Harry.
·
.
rt,
In
addition,
four
transfer
runs
Deed,
Judy
i{ay
1-jaggerty
1o
11:52 a.m .. squad and volunteer
Services will be Friday at I p.m. atlbe Bennett-Brown Funeral Home
were made.
Lucille Haggerty, Middl"epon parin Delaware. Burial will follow ·ili ·Fairview Memorial. Pari! with lbe
cel;
Delawan;,County Veterans Association providing honor guard setlvices.
Deed, Lucilla Haggcnry, c1 al.
Friends may call from 24 and 6-8 p.m., Thursday at the funeral home.
to to Michael and Jennifer Mont·
M!2Dorial contributions may he,made to tbe Cenlral Ohio Lung Associ·
gomcry, Middleport 'parcel;
Dame announced ·.
·at 28471 Bashan Road. For· inforation, 4627 Executive Drive, Columbus OH 43220.
·
Affidavit, Gale Roland Heiney ,
A round and square dance at the. · m~lion call 949-3119.
I
t.Q.
.
to Deanna M.,'and Max H: Long; ·
., •o.uu
•• c••
Tuppers Plains VFW will be held
1:10,9, )1) DAlLY M!'. BATJIUt . l : lO,l:JO IPGI
Affidavit, Myrta J. Casto,
Salurday from 8 to tl p.m. with Eastern sets meeling
STEEr FIG~H~
:lO, 'I : lO QUI.T ..,-, Sit.Tj!DI . 1 :20, l ; l0 !FG1l)
Back Porch Swing Bantl; $5 a cou·
·Eastern Local Board of EducaViolet M. Safford, 70, of Point Pleasant. died Thursday, 'Jan. 5,'
COLONY THEATRE
Ir:OO,'I;1 0DUMB
AND OU.MBER . I
tiGn will hold an organjzational
pie, and $3 single.
DU.l.T JIWI', SA'I'/aN . l:OO,J:10 II'Gi l l
1995, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,
TONIGHT
.meeting at 6:30p.m. Monday in the
DISUOSURE.
Born April19, 1924, in East Liverpool, Ohio, she was a· dau~hter of
WALT DISNEY
'"' nan• ., ._.. .... ,. "' "...
library, followed by the regular
At-bome schooling sel
7:00,9:30 llMLY tfl'I' .IM'/:ut! 1:00,l:10 IRI
Mildred (Hall) Lucas of Point Pleasant and the late Cecii .E. l:.utlis. She
The county's at-home scbooUng meeting at 6:4~ p.m. Thlirsday.
THE LION KING G
liTTLE WOMEN
was also preceded in death by her husband, WilHam C. Safford, who
group will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30 ,.
""
""
""""
1:20,9:20
lliULY
.... . M'I'/11.11. 1 :lO,"l: 20 ji'Q)
died.in 1982.
STARTING FRIOAV
Legion
lo
mee!
tonight
Sbe was a member of the Trinity United Methodist Cburch. 1
SHNTR CLRUSI
ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER ~
American Legion, Racine Post
7:20,9:1!&gt; r»..LY ~~t~~ : SM'tU . I IlO,ll l !:t .I PC)
DA!jNV DEVITO
Surviving, in addi\ion to her·molber, are two sons; Step~en '~· S~­
602, will meet tonight at.6:30 pm.
.IUN&amp;LE IDOl ·
IN
ford of Point pleasan~ Ronald A. Safford ~f Tallabas_see, Aa; two sts·
for a dinner followed by a meeting
ters' Frankie Shinn of Point .Pleasant, Grace
JUNIOR PG-13
Am Ele Power ....................... .33 118 . Folden of Gallipolis:
,. and
a1 7:30_p______
.m.
-· ··
- --.-~~
six~dchildrcn.
•
____ ~
"--- ---. --.-·- - ·
ONE EV!'NING-SHOW7:30 ~
AIW&gt; .. :.:.:.~:=:::-..........5?-112
'
- -semces ·wilfbe ·Satitrday, 11 am., at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
446-0923
Ashland OU .;......................... .34 114
Revival
to start
AT&amp;T .........................:............50 318
-'"' with the Rev. Steven Dorsey offiCiating: Burial will he. in the \grkland
Revival ser9ices will be held
Bank One ................................ l6 Ill
Memorial Gardens.
,
through
Saturday at 7 p.m. each
Bob Evans .................................... .lO
Friends may call at the funeral home Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. In lieu of
night
sat
the Rutland Church of
Champion 1Dd ........................l6 114
llowers, donations may be made to the American Cancer Soc1ety:
God,
State
Route 124, Rutland. Tbe'
Charming
Shop
........................
6
Ill
'
·'I
Rev. Randall Barr, pastor of the
City Holdlng ..... "' ....................l9 114
Federal Mt&gt;gul ....................... .zo.114. Wellston church, will be the speakGoodyear T&amp; R ...................:..34 7/8
er and there will he special singing
.
•, t
K-mart .................................... 13 5/8 each nigh!.
.
Community Bank of Parkers' Editor's note: A lawsuit out·
Lands End .............................. 14 Ill
lines tbe grievapces of ono party burg, W.Va. tiled for foreclosure
Ltmlkd lne............................. l8 1/8 Com~unity Assod~lion to n\eet
.· Ladies Coats by
against another. II does not Dec. 30 against Edward ·R. Rousb,
Mulllmedla lnc.............................l8
The Middleport Community
Racine, and Rebecca J. Rousn;
Point Bancorp .................,............ ! 9
~tablish guilt or Innocence.
. Sherwood of Ohio
Association will meet Tuesday ~~
Reliance Electric ................... .30 5/8
Pomeroy. The company seeks fore5:15p.m at the Peoples Dank, Mid·
Robbins &amp; Myers ................:: .......l7
The following lawsuits were closure and seU of property on Fordlepon
..
·
Royal
Dulch
..........................
l
07
Ill
tiled rece~lly in the Meigs County est Run Road to re~over
Shoney'slnc
.............
:
.....
:
.......
IJ
114
Common Pleas Court of Judge $32,038.36.
·slar Bank .................... :..........36 518
Fred W. Crow III:
Wendy ,lnl'l: .......................... .14 518 Election board to meet
The Meigs County Board of
Worlhlnglo.n lqd ....................J9 314
Home National Bank of Racine.
Elections
will hold its monthly
filed for foreclosure Dec. 29
Siock
reports
are
lhe
10:30
i
.m:
meeting
_
Monday
; 4 p.m. at the
against Dale E. Taylor, Middleport.
The Daily Sentiiiel · Tbe
quotes
provided
by
Advesl
o
P~tit
of
elect.ions
. office ip
board
bank seeks foreclosure and sell
Galllpollo,
.
·
Pomeroy.
&lt;USPS l13-961ll
of property on Wetzgall Street in
Pomeroy
to
recover
$9,898.92.
.
Published every afternoon, Monday throush

· d.the nati"on
A rOUR

am

WINTER
CLEARANCE

Common .Pieas Court news

...•·

Angel Tree project a success
The 1994 .Angel Tree project
. coordinated by the MeigsCounty
Department of Human Services
was again successful in reaching
out to the most needy of our county.
The project served 572 children,
and elderly through the generosity
of sponsors. Organizations apd
individuals purchased and wrapped .
Christmas gifts and brought them
10 the MCDH S Agency staff who
delivered the gifts to households ·

\'~J·

Divorces and
dissolution$

. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome Huflingtons, Michael and Arianna. have a clip .in my. pocket here... "We hel~d elect. the candidates . '
to the Curmudgeon's lmprovisa- he the millionaire who dumped OK. this is bow Cbuck Robb, the Godwantsinoftice."
· '•
tional Slam and Jam Club. You $27,543,680 of his riches into a man who heat Ollie in the Virginia
Wbich makes me wonder. Ollie
throw up lbe ~names and -I'll trnsh - failed attempt to buy a Senate seat, Senate race, desCribed North: "A North was supported by the radical . '
'em. Spontaneous, unrehearsed. I
·
. dOCuiJient-shredding; Constitution- Christian right and be lost. Can we : '·
don't claim to have talent on loan
j
.trnshing, commander-in-chief bash· therefore assume ·that OUver North
from God, but I once touched· Don
.
r ·
ing, Ayatollah-loving, arms-deal- was a celeStial reject?
."
Rickles' sleeve. OK, who's gonna ·
ing, dnig-cond!lfling, Noriega-cpdFraooe? Some sourball out there
start us off?
she the New Age author who flirted dliqg, Swiss-banking, taw-break- wanrs me to. say something sarcas- ::
The lady smoking the politically with the Movement of Spiritual . ing, teuer-fakin'g, self-serving lie about France, an invitation I . •
incprrcct cigar. Yes, ma'am? Cali- Inner Awareness and who guided snake-Oil"salcsman who cannot tell find hard to· resist. You realize
The Ciminnatl Enquire~! Dec. 31
..
. ·
It's hard to imagine Harry "Give 'Em Hell" Truman, JFK of tbe fomia? You want me to say some- . her husband's campaign and wbo lbe difference between the truth you're going to get me in trouble
a lie."
· with the PC cr,owd, don't you? ,
Cuban missile crisis, or George "Desert Storm" Busb waiting 10 days to · thing bad about California~ . Why despises the media .for looking
. I couldn't have said'it any better What tbe bell. Have yo11 heard •
send a diplomat to North Korea after aU.~. Army beUcopter .was downed don't you give me something more unkind)y upon bini. Arianna now
challenging?
wants ·to host a television talk sbciw myself. _
about the latest thing the French •
there. But President Clinton's approach to a nuclear crisis bas.worlted. ·
Never mind, here goes:
.
called ''Beat the Press'' that would
Come on, .challl:nge me. School fear will somehow dilute their ·preWithout a military sbow of force or any Sblils fued, the United States
From the land of fruit :and flakes feature guesrs who were· "victims" prayer? Whew! Scbool prayer. OK, cious culture? The information
has recovered the pilot wbo was held hostage by North Korea for 13 days.
here we go.
.
.
·
· superhighway. Yep, they are worThe good oews is that tbe pilot, Bobby Hall, will he safe and back there comes a new member or' of media attacks.
· wbo ts· famous m· h"•s own
Also from California comes the
· d th e cy berwor ld ts
· gomg
· 1o
eongrcss
home.
·
. Everybody knows wbat we're ne
Once State Deparunent·official Thomas Hubbard arrived, it took only rigbl ~ the erstwhile slraigbl m;m kombucha, a mushroom th&lt;1t is fer· talking about. rigbt? Newt thinks devour 'their language, culture and
three ·days to pry him foose, apparently without concessions. Hubbard for Cher, Rep. Sonny Bono. You mented in tea lo create a tangy we would improve our morals if . i!ldUStry.
cxpress.;d "sincere regret" that the helicopter carrying two chief warrant can, bet your booties there:II he no ~rew that allegedly tures aSthma. public schools began every day
Well, the Iranians banned satel·
thong
bikini
problem
on
Capitol
ciears
u"
p
bad
skin
and
neutralizes
with
a
prayer.
I'm
gonna
steal
a
lite
television. Maybe the French
orficers "accidentally strnyed" 10 miles over the border and crashed in
Hill with Sonny around. He tackled up$el tummies - not to mention line from another.columnist, Roger ougbtto outlaw computers.
.
North Korea on Dec. 17.
Throughout the crisis, Nonb ~orca ~ ~ehaved _like a natioo at war the bare buns. issue as mayor of ' turning gray hair back to its origi- Simon 'of the Baltimore Sun: The · The Curmudgeon's lmprov.
with tlie. United States. M~whtle, dunng the cructal early days, Con- Pabn Springs and now he can share nal color.
. .
,S. Congress begins every day Come,back and see u5 sometime.
~oseph Spear Is a syndlca!ed:
gressman Bill Richardson, D-N.M ., juggled the ticking grenade. Richard- his expertise with all the nation. . F~zzballs,ll'\lles and fungt. Cal- with a prayer. Need 1 say more?
sonhadno formal miss-loti-=-he-just-happened-to-be-haildy- in South ·'-Somehow ,-il~cems -,exquisitely-- l[orm~e.ll!Y.I:.Y.JL _ _ ~
-While-I~m-on-this~ubject,I~ve~raterJcu:J'ie.wspaper_ Enterprlse
appropriate that such stalwart citi·
· Y~ah, the fella m the fr~nl there got another cljp here. This is ·from Association.
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· "Korea.
zens Of Riverside County as Frank that JUst knocked over hts beer. The Natioq magailne, and it quotes
(For Information on how lo •
Two questions:
• ..
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- Why is North Korea acting so straitge? Was the belligerent behavior Sinatra and Spiro Agnew will be Oliver Nonb? You want me to say a Christian Coalition activist in .:nmmunlcate electroniclllly with
caused by a vacuum of leadership in that. unstable, ou~w nation? Or is represented in the nalion's capitar' something nasty about Ollie? I · Coiorado who is waxing ecstatic this columnlsl and others, con•
by Sonny Dono.
think I' II let someone else speak for over the Republican takeover of tbe . tact America OnUne by calling 1·
Nonh Korea hair-trigger jumpy because it has somethil)g to hide?
Also from California come the · me on Ihis cine. I jusl happen to world. This ~uv says, and I quote, . 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
~
·- And why did it take so long for the Clinton adminislr~uion to react? ·
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Letters to the editor

Southwest Oh·io to get socked tonight

OHIO Weather
Aeeu·Wcatlier- forecast

·The Daily· Sentinel ··

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Pege-2-1l1e Deily Sentrnel
Pomeroy-Middlepon, OhJo
Thursday, J•nuary 5, 1995

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throughput the County.
All of the sponsors as well as
the DHS staff demonstrated the .
true spirit of-ChristmaS lbrougb Ibis
project. Their efforts were rewarded by the expressions of apprecia·
tion from. those who were able to
have a merrier Christmas because
of t}lem. We want to wish all a
happy and prosperous New Year.
- .
·
Mary Hobstetler
MCDHS Public Inquiries Asst.

40o/o off

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6~1!y~~:;/i~:b71.~·~;:~:;~;~~:i,t'.?..:U

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Ladies Dresses .
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Today in ~istory

SulnCriben' nol lk,irrng 10 P!JY the cllrriet may
remll in adNance dlm:IIO The ·Daily Sentinel
uno ttuee,m Of' J2·month bui~ . Credil will be
given carrier each w~k.
'

By The Associated Press ·..
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Today is Thursday. Jan. S, the .fiflb day o~ 1995. Tlfere arc 3tiO days
left in tbe year.
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Today's HigbUgbl in Hist«y:
On Jan. S) 896, an Austrian newspaper (Witnu Presst) pubUsbed'lhe
·l"tist public acrount of a discovery by -German physicist Wilhelm. Roent·
gen-a fomt llfnfdiationlhat became known as "X-rays." .
On Ibis dale: . .
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In 1589; Catherine de Medi~ ofFrailce died at age 69.
In 1781, a British naval expedition led by Benedict Arnold burned
Richmond, Va
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No subscri pti0f1

by ~rul permiued in area5
where home c~eJ service is avaHab~.
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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Jrukle Melp Covnty

113 w.,k• ............................... T .......... S23.92
16 Weeks ......................................... ... $41.06

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Lad,ies··Biou-ses
Reduced
· 30o/o

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. Da~ly ..'.................. , .... , .. :.. .................: 3~ Cc11U

---,-.--

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pany Of
Va. She :seeJcs
S7,500 from tbe COII!I!!I!l)'..Jll'SCt!Je
--aJJinsoranreCliilm 011 a motorcycle .
stolen from late husband.

'2 W..kl ..... ................. :......................... $92.56
...,., O.bld• Melp C..my · ·
13 W..ki ..T"T"'"""'"""'""' '·· ..,.......... :........ $25.61
26 W..ki ... J ...............................·............. $49.66.
w..u ..............:..................:............... $96.20

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START WINTER
QUARTER

BEGINNING CLASSES
·ON JANUARY 10
AT 6:00P.M.
· AT CARLETON SCHOOL
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This Weekend, Thru Jan. 7

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IN SYRACUSE

For More ltformotlln
Call992·6839.
.,

BAHR

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992-5627

.C~~OTHIERS

OPEN !!:30 ·5:00

145 N. 2ND

"MON.· SAT.

MIDDLEPORT

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Sports

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The Daily Sentinel
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In college hoops in the Bucksye Stste, -

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Ohio Northern stays
unbeat~n in, OAC; OU wins MAC opener
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• By CHRIS SHERIDAN

AP Sports Writer
Tbil1y games into lbe NBA season, it's easy
to spot the two elite teams. And it's easy to
spot why Orlando and Phoenix bave such ow
s!anding nx:ords·- bolb teams have been virtually unbeatable at bome Ibis season.
T~ings stayed that way Wednesday night
despite gallant efforts by two of lbe also-rans
from lite Eastern Conference.
Orlando paid back its worst loss of the seaso~ by coming back,to defeat the Nets I 13-110
to IIDJB?Ve to 14-0 at home. and the Suns got
past PJ!IIadelpbia 127-122 to move to 15-1 at
home.
.
Around the league, home teams won every
game except the .one at Cleveland, wbere the
Cavaliers bad their 11-game overall winning
streak ended with a 116-85 loss to Seattle. It
was, by far, Clevdand' s most lopsided loss of
the last two seasons.
Other bome-coun minutiae from Wednesday night
y
- Charlotte beat Ponl~d at bome for lbe
first tillle ever, winning 118-106. for its first
in eight tries at Charlotte Coliseum against
the Blazers. It was Charlotte's eighth stJaight
victory at borne overall.
- Indiana stretched i.ts home winning
streak to 10. games by beating Washington 94,
90.
.
In otber games, New York beat Atlanta 8980, Chicago defeated Denver 86-80 and Boston
beat Miami ll7-112 in ovenime.
Magic 113, Nets 110 - At Orlando Arena.
the Magic trailed by II in the third period, tied
it wilb just under four minutes left and beld off
. New Jersey as Anfemee Hardaway and Nick
Anderson combined to hit five of six free
throws in the final 12 seconds.
· Hardaway scored 33 points, Shaquille

By llODD AUBilEY
A MOdakd Pre. Wliter
lt"s C1JOUgh to loelld a sb~ up a
PQiz Be&lt;1r' I spine. . .

points and J olm Carroll (8-4. 5-1) Hunter his 400tb career win and
capilalized on an early 18-0 lUI 10 ex tended the Bobcals' borne win·
.oing 5lrcak 10 14 games.
beat Hir.lm (3-8, (}..5) 78-42.
In Bowling. Green. ShaDe KlincIn a Big Ten opener, IGwane
Going into Wednesday's games, Garru sand 28 points to help lUi· Ruminski bad 22 points 10 belp the
Ohio Northern and Baldwin Wal- nois (1 0- 3) to a 79-10 win over Falcons (7
to an 86-70 defeat of
lace were u~feared in the Obio Ohio State (3- 7) in Champaig n. Western Michigan (5-4). It wa1 !be
Conference . And it looked like Antonio WaiSon scpred 20 points falcons' 14tb straight victory at
bolb 'would lo5e.
for the Buckeyes, while Rickey · home in a streak !bat utends to
But Nick Bct1U bit a lay-~ at . Dudley and Doug Eizlcr each January 1994.
,
the buzzer to give Obio Nortbem scored 13' and Rick Yudt added II.
Brian Tolbert's 14 points helped
(8-3, S-0 OAC) a 67-66 victory
Tbe Mi~Ammcali Conference give Eaitem Michigan (7·2) a 65over Mount Union (4-7, G-5) and opened iu sea!OI! on Wednesday.
62 vic1ory over \aledo (6-3). It fig ·
take lbe conference lead.
Gary Trent was playing with a ores. Easlml Micbigao lias won 10
· In New Concord, Bryiao Burson pulled stomacb muscle, but man- or its last I I games against Toledo.
.cored 2A poinu and Kevin Troyer aged to get 22 points and 15
Akron ' s Tron Jenkins scored 22
23 as Muskingum (6-5, 1·3) rebounds to belp Ohio Univmity poinu and lawreOce Culver bad 17
knocked 001 Baldwin-Wallace (8-3, (IG-3) to a 65-59 victory over Ball 10 belp the Zips (S-4) to a 61 -53
5-1) 80-74.
State (5-4).
win over Central Michigan (3-6).
Brian Bum:ll'~ 3-pclimer put lbe
The victory gave coach Larry
Yellow Jactets wilbin one point at
61.()() wilb 11:30 to play. but the
Muskies scored tbe oe&lt;t seven
beats
points .to ·make it 68.()() with 8:04
CHAMPAIGN. ill. (AP)- lUi· high of 28 pbints and Keene bad a
to go and never were threatened
ooi!' triple threat diminished to a · career.higb or 22. Heste1'. a perime·
again.
.
dynamic duo. but it was still ter player who joins Garris and
Elsewhere in the OAC, Donlae
e00t1gb 10 defeat Ohio State 79,-70.
Keene to form Illinois' triple threat,
Edmondson's 22 points led Heidel·
Wilb teammate Jerry Hester oo is expected 10 be back in the lineup
berg (7-4. 4-1) in a 79-6.5 victory
lbe_be~~ because or a bade injury. Saturday against Northwestern.
over CapitaH6-5, 1-4).
llltnou Richard · Keene and
"Keene and Garris both played
In Mariena. Jau. Hayes bad 22
Kiwane Garris combined for SO weU offensively and I thought !bey
points and I 2 rebounds ' to belp the
Pioneers (6-S. 2-3) deteax Ouerbein points Wednesday as Illinois (1(}.3, played well defensively," said Illi1-i]) staved orr a ~ rally by the nois cooch Lou Henson.
(6-5, 2-3) 65-59.
BUckeyes.
. _
Garr.i.s and Keene shot particu. And further norl!l. JcJf Se~­
Garris finished. witb a season
plankis sco red a game-high 17
(See B..LINI on Page S)

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Illinois

REA TEN TO THE BALL- BaD Statc'a Bonzl
Weill (wearing urker •nll''1ftll) beals O ..lo Unl'l'crafty~• J•fl' Bmll• to tiM .,.. In 11M lint lullf of

Wednesday nlght'J MAC opener

at~~~~

Convoa-

Uon Cenur In Athen.•, whore the Bobcall won 6559. (AP)
.

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Ball St. ....................0

Basketball

W. Midl ... '1''""···"·· .o
C. lotld&gt; ....................o
~i ........................ .D

NBA s.t andings

l
l

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1
1

6
6

.m
.m

oouEKed the raipaioa or Jerry lhuer.
CQmmi.tiiO ila'.

... If.

.!H I .

12

7

CJ..f.VEI..A:NJ) .. .,, lf,
lftdlan• ............... II
Chwk.&lt;k ........ 11
(........................ 16
o\1 ..... ................... 12

.690
10 · Ml
12 .ll&lt;i

1 .~

.ll2
.)11

•
9

I)

19

Dluoi1. .....................9
• M'itw.,u.e ...............9

Toledo • 8111 St.
W. Midlipll• C.
Of OOa!:Miami
Airoa •

-.-

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ri

o....

Ja• AaiOMo .......... 16

·

0111¥. ................. -"

o.ltlf ,,,.,, .. ,,.,._.. I} 13
Miartad.l ...... ,...... .6 21

Ill
_,
2.,
5

.613
.511

SJ

.$01'1
.222

ll

''•Ilk Dh·hok.ft
2l 7 .767
s.ctJo ............ } ..... 2{1 9 .t;IJO
· L.A. L.Uda .......... , IM
9 .6(j7
,O&lt;t..,.Mo ............ Jl 13 .ll6 ·
l'of11oftd ................. 14 14" .l&lt;IO
Oclldeo '"'" .......... 1 11
1- A. Oippcn ......... A 2l

2 .146
) 1(1)
) .1(1)

l S
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2 100
• .692
S .6U

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4 .600

300 '

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MldUpn ~t 71, WiJOO,IlJIII 64
MIDnauta 69, Penn St 67

I
12

Yur'l 19, Allm&gt; Ill
OriMdo 11 ) , New Jm.y I l 0
0tlf1r..U. I I f'ot!IIM I 06

Sundoy, Jon. 8 pmu

*·

Mlchipn • Penn Stale
Ou)fae M110n at OHIO ST.

kattk Jilt. O.J!:VfL.\NO IS ,

II'&lt;Ha411 94, WINiln.tt.JII90
Chk:II.J 16, lJe.nwlf alJ
ftlot'Jif.:1 '17, Ph lladclph~a 121

Ohio women's
college scores

Tonlghl't pmn

MlntWWJtl II PAINnl .-·) : J(J p m.

Mld-Amorlcon Conference

8• A.QWoJo Ill Uta~! , I p.m
l'hnaaJf ffoulfun, l :)) p.m

Atroa II . Ccnl. MichipD 66

Ptiiladclphia 11 L. A. CIJj)pefa. IO .J(J
p.m.. '
'
' )f, ........ lit (k,jdca Stale, I(}.'f) p m
(Jrevnoit • Jar:ral'nlfttu, Hr. Jll p m

Miami , Ohio 10. KetJJ 57
OHIO 74 , Ball St. 61

·

W. Mlchlpn 60, Bowlin I Orun 57

Ohio H.S. girls' scores.

firldar'• pm••

Prlf'l1altd a1 B~ . 1· l0p .m.

Atton lloblll.tl, Abnn Buchtel•l

p.tn.

Mlun1ewAaafOi
, 7;)1'ip.m.
WMil l•lft'fl If AU.-a, 1 'Y1p m.
,_._ YM1r:" (1.P.VP.LA.t.lfJ. 1 "Y&gt; p fn

-

Akrua-St.-V--SU.C 71,-Canton.CMh_,.
Aahtahul1 llarhtw 43, Oencn 30
A•ufl 41 , Kc)'ltont 4:5

A•tlfll..ab 7), Bay.16

Jntftc 111 Clut .atp. I f! tn •
IA11wu 'Ill f~ H• • Y1 p m
M•...,au•u: wt f. A I.ate:" lfr'Yl p m.

B•naville U . Shenandoah 5o
Bcavetercci n. Fairoom J7
Btcc:Uv\llc 13, BrutliWid : 44
Broobkk 62 , Clea'vlcw 27 -

Major men's

'

f.aol

CJt:euuntfyt&gt;ty ·U. Cin. Surmwr

)o4

Cl J , Wtlaut Jlilh )9 , Ci ft )d(&gt;Uft l ~

. ....
• I .

Hoftt Dame "

. a.,.... 6), c.nt&gt;rid.. 4l

'•'2 . 8uct.--n ~2
" Wt.·,
l Prn.iddce 7..

M~l\C

~-flu

1J,

?2, 0.. Adami II

••

Cbl. H~·tJ~ .SI . Pkwlrt Cath. 39
Cui W,.tfttfil(r• '56 , ~ . JA..,-.Ita .VJ

'tf k'M.f;f! ' J 'J2... fMf.W&gt;min.,fft~l

C,atw(.of.ld jl, Q.r.n.svillc ~
~tWe: ~~. ~ Wh M 4fl
t.&gt;ty, hn.erJt,fl fiJ . Jhy. fklrrw.nr Sl
f!Jyrla Sl. N'. IUd~1 llc C'J
Falrvl• Pwt YJ. Atnt,enl SI

S-t•ulh

r.....,

f "h-....,..&amp;'t~t\ ''~in'.UII ~") r ·tt~l 51
(:kff.... •l' 1~ r~t~ lu 71J
•
~MaAA-Mt ) llif~.;.A V!

_..,,,4

Atl:mtw.: 1t1..
\1 (,!
r..-:., 111 fJ , l t'MI&lt;tW'A ~1,'
f-.U.CA'I Sl ll , lk~e·fl53
.
KeftNtky fJ\ , Auhut 11 fA

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FitelandJ 67, Elyr i• W. 22
Oallow1y Watland 66, Chi. Br la,a )J
Oarfield llt1 . T Thtily 10 2, C it .

M..,.tand 80. OelJflla Ttd! fo1
.
MIMiillppl J6 , AIUJ»M 7 1
MlAdlad St. 16, E. K£ntucty 66

Cwollna St. 10, North Cawlina 10
t-/ .C.·Aiheville 11 3, TU&amp;culum 7S
N.C..Oreocnlbao a•. lbd(ord 61
Tenntuee SL 66 •. AUitin Peay 64
, Ceot Conoectieut St..I J
Varijert&gt;i.ll . Alibama 74 (at)

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C.rrAII:lln 76, T•ln- 42
CtmcrwUic 50, Keirain1 Plirmonl ot2
a.a.p..b li'J. IotcDn-I&lt;W ll

CrofiW!I1 t7, 1..,aretJe t )
ll!lt'jUtU. 14, fCbntk l'.t laM 72
tr,ft:f 11. M!w.""'"an (;.

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Cadiz 47, fndilft Cree II: J7
l..oud.,llle 42

Ctntt)ft McKJnley ' j9,

college !kore~~

.

Catholic 46
Gilmour 6\, Cle. Mantmil46

39

. ~ '.

Greenfield 51, Whiteoall: 39
"uber
Wayne 48 , Sprin1. South

"ta.

...
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Soulhwesl
~-

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Marymount

6l

Tuu Quillian SJJ•.-F-akfteld-l l-- .
Tua&amp; Tech 97, Midw£atem St., T"J.U

70

Tua~- EI

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Plio 97, ~oo St. 84

Idaho St. 111, Cal Poly-SLO .55
MontaDII St. 123, O.~o~ St. 64
New Mexico 86, A:ir Forte 12
Wyomina 70, Haw1ii 51

O..nJI
L 1'&lt;1.

r..!!'
Bowlin; Green ....... I

1.

n7

E. Mkh. ................... t

o
0

1
10
6

2 .n1
) .769
l .667

•

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I

l
6

l

.667

01110 ........ :....., ........ 1
Mlami ...................... !
Atroo ................. ,.... l
Toledo .................... 0

0

0

o

...

W.

Warrea
wlrreDiivtllc a,
Uncoln-West 21
Wllerloo 53. Roots.towo 29
Wlckllrrc M, Ora"te 53
·
Wiadfum S6, Woodriclp iQ

MAC men's standings
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ForWeol
Colondo St 80, San Dteao St. 6ot

cohr.

latl'y well f~ the three·(lO,int iine.
2 th
hitting seven of I
ree-pomters.
"We got some good shots and
!bey

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SW Miu.ouri S1. 51, Eas~ Carulina 38

2 .778

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Zaa••tu• R.OHICfUI .sa. Col. Ready

111 ·couRt sT.

Transactions

992-2155

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Au'loraclu
INDY RAONO LEAOUE'

POMEROY, OH.

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North 'Carolina; Ole Miss downs Arkansas

when both lost on the road to Big

tune to Micb1gan and North Carulina 87-84 to Iowa.
"All the sudden N.C. State and
Clemson, for at least one nigb~ are
at the top of lbe league," Nonb
Carolina State ooacb Les Robinson
said. "We've turned it upside
down . The league is going to be
crazy this year."
In other games involving f!IJiked
teams Ol! Wednesday night it was
Mississippi 76, No. 3 ArkanSl\S 71;
No.7 Maryland 80, No. 24 Georgia
Tech 67; No. 8 Kentucky 98,
Auburn 64; No, 14 Michigan State
78, Wisconsin '64; Texas 102, No.
19 Nebraska 74; and No. 22 Iowa
74, No. 21 Indiana 55.
" North·Carollna SL 811
No.1 North Carolina 70
Lakista McCuller malle three
·
a

three-pointers in the fmal 5:04, and
the Wolfpack (8-2) made nine of
. 10 free ibrows in lbe .last 79 seconds fur their first win pver a No. I
team since beating the Tru: Heels on
Feb. 23, 1986.
" We were wanting to show we
can compete in Ibis league again,"
· Robinson said.
· The Wolfpack, who have had
thre.e straight ,losing seasons,
including 19 losses in. each of the
la~l two. took the lead for good at
69-66 .on a three-pointer by
McCuller with 2:19to play.
"I think we won this game
. because we· had a lot of mental
toughness out there.'' said
McCuller, who had 24 points:.
·
'Jerry Stackhouse had 24 points
for the Tar Heels.
Clermon 'ts, No. 11 Duke 70
Clemson (9-0) won in Durl!am

G .• •
11 1IS
I c..ham piOn~
•
h•
a

(Fll) for third.

135: Josh Wiseman (PP) pinned
Kevin Baur (A) for tide; Chris Ver·
non (GA) pinned Brent Smith (M)
' for third.
140: Aaron Wiseman (PP) def.
Chris Maxwell (FH) for title; Justin
.Priest {1) pinned Jerod Cook (M)
for third.
. 145: 9uy Montgomery (1)
· pmned M1ke Cremeans (CH) for
·title; Jason Eads (PP) pinned Joe
Eldridge (SP) foqhird.
lSl: Travis Brown (CH) def. .
Jon Tatterso!l (PP) for t1tle; Kevm
Koons (J) ~mned Bob Magnussen
(GA)for third;. ·
.
. .
160: Dan llieting (J) def. Butch
Oliver(]) for title: Scott Lear (GA)
def. Brent Chapman (SP) for th1rd.
171: Greg Parks (]) de f. ~hannon Staats (M) for IItle; Steve
Thomas (PP) de f. Jeremy Carr (PP)
for th1rd) .
189:' Chris Daltoo (]) de f. James
Adkins (CH) for title; Steve
Staf(&lt;!rd (J) def. Adam Sheets (M)
for th1rd .
liS: Billy Dick (SP) pinned Lee
. Meade (FH) for title; Mac Houser
(J) pinned Tim Switzer (RV) fQr
tl!ird.
.
;,.
Heavywelgll't: .Josh Jones (SP)
pinned Bun Wood (GA's A team)
for title; Joe McC~ne (A) pmned
Allen Enyart (GA s B team) for

lp

!bird.
Point Pleasant's next meet will
run from Friday to Saturday at
Ravenswood, W.Va. River Valley's next meet will be Monday ,
Jan. 9 at b()JJIC against Meigs. GaJ.
lia Academy's next meet will be
'!be Marietta Invitational, scheduled
for Friday. Jan. 13 'a nd Saturday.
Jan. 14.
·

•

..-+

. .

. ·points for Arkansas .
had 18 points ·and 1.1 rebounds for
No. 7 Maryland 80
Auburn ..
No. UG.e orgia Tech 67
.. · No. 14 Michigan St. 78
Joe Smilh ·lracl 15 poi'nis, 14
Wisconsin 64
rebounds and six blocked shots to
The backcourt of Shawn Res pert
lead the Terrapins ( 11 -2) to the win
(29 points ) and Eric Snow (22)
in the ACC opener for both teams . scored 23 of Michigan State's last
Maryland, 9-D at home tliis se[\Son , "'"25 in the gan\Cas the visiting Spar- -.
lost nine of its previous J'O home
tans (8-1) prevailed in· the Big Ten
games against Georgia Tech (8-41 .
opcper. Rcsp_e rt and Snow comMaryland 'finished the first half
bined to hit 12 of 13 free throws
wilb a 12-2 run and started the sec- · down lbc stretch 10 clinch tbe .vicond witb a 17 -6 burst for a 55-38
tory. Rashard Griflitb had 20 points
lead with 15:22 10 go. Travis Best
for the ·Badger~ (6-4), who lost
led the Yellow J ackers with 18
their third straight
points.
Texas IOl
No, 8 Kentucky 98, Auburn 64 •
No. 19 Nebraska 74
Rodrick Rhodes, removed from
Terrence Rencher bad 25 points
the starting lineup after a poor
and became Texas' career steals
showing .in a weekend loss to . leader as !be Longhorns (6-2) beat
Louisville, came off the bench for a
a ranked team for tbc first time
season-high 23 points as the Wild·
s ince a, win over Arkansas in
cats (7-2) cruised in the Soutbca~l-~ March. 1991. Teus staned lbe secem Conference opener. Rhodes. I ·) ond hlM with a 9-2 run for a 58-42
lead and coasted from there . Jaron
Boone had 22 points to lead the
with 21 seconds left gave tbe Louisville, was6-for-15 wiUJthrcc · Cornhuskers (11 -2). who had a.IO4
.
rebounds and four assists against . ~arne winning streak snapped. ' .'
the Razorbacks (1l · )
_71 12 the visitin~ Ti~ers (7-3). Pat Burke
2 10 73
seconds earlier.
\ ..---~-------------------..,
.
.
· The loss snapped an 11 -gamc
winning s.trealc for Arkansas. which
badn •t lost since the season opener
against Massachusetts.
. J obn Jackson had 18 points to
lead the Rebels, wbo snapped a
tbrcc-game losing streak in the
Southeastern Conference opener
for both teams. Alex Dillard had 16
for the flfst time sinee 1984 and lor
just the fourth time in 46 ,games at
Cameron Indoor Stadium. Duke (9 3) won 10 of its previous It ACC
openers.
'
The Blue Devils cut a 12-point
second-half deficit to 60-58 with
3:56 left. but Rayfield Ragland,
wbo led !be Tigers with 16 points.
hit a 16-footer and a three·JIOintcr,
e&lt;tending the lead to seven with
1:49 10 play.
"We haven't even talked about
anylbing otbcr than 'Let's play Ibis
40 minutes like lbere's no tomorrow,"' Clemson coach Riclc
Barnes said after his first ACC
game. "We don't have to save anything. because if we do save something, we're not ~oing to win any
basketball games. ' "
·
Cherokee Parks led the Blue
Devils wilb 19 points.
Mlsslsslppl76

..

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CRoebreeyls~ec-~!sar:.~~~:n~~~dp~~':

JANUARY CLEARANCE
Mens Winter
Jackets

N TATE MOTORS.

1994 YEAR ·END

Mens Suits

Liquidation Sale
·· continues

Reduced

••'

20o/o
..

94 PONTIAC

Mens Dress
·Trousers

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4.dr, auto, air; stereo

Auto, air, stereo, air
bag, 4 dr. cassette

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u .... ,n ..u Down

Hurry/! We have a good selection of 4x4
Pickups, Don't wait til the snow fiJ/Is!

(Results as of Dec. 28)
League .,.... Early Wednesday
Mixed

USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
91 CHEVY CORSICA ..................... :~... :... '5995

" said
.•
I gqt some g~od
49), MeigS
shOts.••
•
s (68-68),
Captain
It was a typical Illinois game struction
(64-72).
Thunder Alley
f!OOd- e{fur.t,_goiHLre bo un din KL
Cats
(55-81),
Court
Street Grill
mediocre shooting. The win
(
49-87)
and
Cbainsaws
&amp; Roses
miuted Illinois' fifth stJaight over
(46-90).
.
the Buckeyes. But it didn't come
Team
.blgb
series - Banks
wilbout a scare as Ohio State (3· 7,
Construction(l947)
0-1} staged late rally before llliTea111 high game - Captain
.nois J!l!!!LC9ntrol f.or ~ood.
D's.(675)
"I think we played about 11S
.
Men
well as we can, except for tbe
,.. Indlvldual.biJih aeries - Larry
shooting," said Henson.
Dugan (587) and . Russ Carson
Illinois shot just 41 percent for
(546)
the game. But Keene and -Garris
lndlvld'ual high g•m• combined to ·hit 15 of 29 field goals
Dugan
(232) and Loren Coleman
and 13 of 15 free throws . They
(202)
were the · only IOini in double figWomen
ures.
Individual
high series - Pat
Ohio· State coach Randy Ayers
Carson
(488)
and
June Mowery
said the 'Buckeyes' ~efe~ s~_ply (484) ,,
•
broke down \ too often , g1v1_ng
Individual high gam~ -f-ar.'
Keene and Garris·good looks atlbe
son (197) and Mowery ( 180)
basket.

Levi Denim
Jackets
Lined &amp; Unlined

·

•

I

92 MAZDA MIATA Convertible .............. '12,995 .
· 15,000 miles Hurryl

90 FORD F150 4X4 P/U ...................... '1 0,995
91 GM~ SONQM~ ., .....,, .. ~ ... ,., ......, ..... ,.._. '5995
88 CADILLAC SEVILLE ... :.................. :.. '7995
88 MERCEDES 190E .............................. '8995

a

DON ~TATE

I
A
I

· BAHR
CLOTHIERS
'

MOTORS, Inc.

OPEN 9:3G-5:00

It'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl·

MON.· SAT.
-

'

I

Mens Sport
Coats &amp; Blazers
Reduced. 20o/a

All Used Cars &amp; Truck1 Mu1t Go.
Taxes and t~le fee not included. All
payments subject lo credit appro.val.

•

..

•:I.,

Reduced 40o/o

",~W~:ej-lli!~~~~~fe~~~

for

•

Fred~o~;;g~:;!'::?~intplay ~6i~t[r~~d~~:i~~t~~~dw!~a:~~~~

lpO

Mason Bowling
League. result~ -

ufini win ...
(Continued from Page 4)

48
S . llliooili 61, Bradle.~ 6S

Point
Pleasant's varsity
wresding' team beat Jackson 194.5160.5 to capture the 15th annual
Gallipolis Rotary Invitationl\1, held
in Gallipolis on Dec. 31, 1994.
.Behind them were Chesaptlake
(117.5), tbe host Blue Devils (83),
Soulb 'Point (79.5), Federal Hocking (79), River Valley (59), Meigs
(55) ;md Athens (41).
Here are the individual finishes
grouped according to weight cl~
and Identified by team (A· Atbeils,
CH-Cbesapeake, FH-Federal
Hocking, GA-Gallia Academy, J.
Jackson, M-Meigs, PP-Point Pleas·
ant, RV-River Valley and SP-Soulb
Point).
·
103: Beau Hill (PP) def. Chad
Polsley (GA) for title; Phillip Cook
(SP) def. Shane Day (CH) for third.
111: Jeremy Bunis (PP) pinne4
Mike Halley (RV) for title; Chris
Barker (A) def. Chris Stiffler (])
for third
119: ·scott Davis (CH) pinned
Johnny Krebs (PP) for title; Matt
Halley (RV) pinned Jake Jackson
(FH) for third.
US: Adam Wilkins (I) pinned
Travis Jones (FH) for title; Cody
Pearson (PP' s A team) pinned K.C.
Clements (PP's B team) for third .
130: Brian Davis (CH) pinned
Ian Smith (PP) for title; Tonny
Thaxton (RV) pinned John Jackson

'·

.

~en team~; J:?uke 113-108 in over-

R0 t ary I

llllnotJ II N~hwllltem
lawa Ill Midllpn StaU
Minnaob M P\Mdue
WJJC(lotln ac Indiau

Booloo 117, lol laml113 (0'1')

1

Point Pleasant WinS .
at
t•
nvl a
IOna

••
•••

Solurdoy'• P'J'a

ll.l

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'

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5 ......

llliooit79. Offl[} ST. 10
luw• 1• . IDdiau 5S

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Wod...tar'• ICdra

~,..._,a

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WodJiotday's ICOI'Ofl

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.m

..a.atlauc.at~, 7 ,Y/

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0 il
lllloolo .................... 1 0 10
Mia~................ !
0 10
Michl ... ..... - ......... 1 0 1
..
Northw~Nt«n ....... -0
0
Pun St. .. .,,..,,,,,. .....0 I .1
Pw&amp;le ....................O I 9
lldiUI ................... ,.O 1 I
W~f!f~~ -----·-~·-,---- .fl
I -6
OIDOfi ............. 0 I 3

Phl~mia ...... .'..........

o

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............................... 1

MW••Dh'W.

'
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l! I. l! I. lll.

Arena. Reggie Miller sCored I 7 of his 20 points

in the frrst half for llldlana, wbicb led by as ·
many as 20 before Washington rallied in the
lead.
fmal quarter.
·
'
"One call different (lbe violation on ColeIndiana, which starts a five-game road trip
man) and we probably win tbe game," Kenn,¥
Friday. does not have another home game until
Anderson said. "They pl~y tou~b at home,
Jan . 14. The Bullets. led by Juwan Howard's
·- they're comfortable bere and lbat s the way 11
19 points and 11 rebounds, losl their fiftb
· should be."
straight.
'
Suns. ll7, Sixors lll - At America West
. Hornets 118, Trail Blazers 106 - At
Arena, Cl)arles Barkley bad 14-of his 35 points
Charlotte Coliseum, Scott Burrell mad!: four of
and si• of his 14 rebounds in the' final period.
Charlotte's six three-pointers in the third quarDan Majerle bad 21 points,' while Elliot Perry
'ter when the Hornets pulled away.
.
had 21 points and 14 assist~. .
.
The Hornets finished lQ-for-19 from three·
It was Phoenix's first game at barrie since
point range and are 41 -for-81 in their last four
losing to the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday games. Burrell bas made 16 of 21 three-point
a defeat that snapped !be Suns' franchiseattempts in that span.
record, 25-game home winning streak.
Knlcks 89, Hawks 80 - At Madison
Willie Bunoo and Barros scored 28 each for
Square Garden, Hawks coacb Lenny Wilkens
tle Sixen;, who dropped their thin! straight and
remained tied with Red Auerbach for most
eighth of their last 10. "This game Ylas !be · career victories by an NBA coacb (938).
story or lbe season." -Barros said. "We bad' a
Patrick Ewing bad 21 points and II
three-point lead with I :30 to go, and we don't
rebounds and Derek Harper scored 20 points.
get it done.''
Mookie Blaylock bad 17 poin.ts and Ken NorSuperSonics 116, Cavaliers 85 - At Ound
man 15 for Atlanta.
Arena. Gary Payton was 14-for-14 from the
Bulls 86, Nuggets 80- At the United Cenfield, scoring on 10 layups, two short jumpers,
ter, B.J. Armstrong scored the game's fmal six
a dunk and a three-pointer.
points, including the tiebreaking jumper with
"Everything was just wide open for me,"
I :46 to play after the Bulls blew a 21-point
Payton said. "I wasn't even thinking about not
lead.
"I told him I wanted to get him the ball, 10
missing a shot.
put the giune in his hands and let him c&lt;introl
Payton finished with 32 points, six assists,
i~" said Scottie Pippen, wbo scored 21 points.
fivo rebounds and tWO steals. Detlef Schrempf
"He carne ibrough big for us."
added 20 points, six rebounds, six assists an&lt;!
Celtlcs 117, Heat Ill (OT)- At Boston
two steals.
·
Garden,
David Wesley's three-pointer with 15
Cleveland badn' t lost since Dec. 7., and not
seconds
left
in ovenime put Boston ahead for
by niore than 17 points in Mike Fratello's two
good after Miami scored the first seven points
seasons as coach. "This was not a reflection of
GOES FOR LAYUP- Seattle guard Gary Payton (:W) drives for
of the e•tia period.
. tbe layup over Cleveland's Chris Mills (lert) during Wednesday
bow we ~d been playing , but that is wbat
Dominique Wilkins led Boston with 31 ·
Seatde can do to a team,' ' be said. .
night's NBA game in Cleveland, where the SuperSonics won 116-85
points. Glen Rice had 37 for the Heat.
In part because of Payton's 31-polnt clinic. (AP)

ups~ts

N.C. State
By The Associated Press
Top-ranked' Norlb Carolina and.
No, ll Duke are closer in basketball history than eveq !be 10 or'so
miles that actually separate the
Tol)acco Road campuses.
So. when the schools with three
national championships in !be last
four years both lost Wednesday
night, it was only natural to think
that hadn't happened in awhile. It
bad been just over five years, to be
e&lt;act.
"
The Tar' Heels' fi~e-week run at
No. 1 apparently came to an end
with an 80-70 loss•at North Carolina State, while Duke went down at
home by a 75-70 margin to unbeaten Clemson in lbe Atlantic Coast .
Conference openers ror all four
teams.
The last time both schools lost
on !be same dav was Dec. 9, 1989,
· ·

Ji.ll.

standings

WP.BTERN CONFERENCE

!t
1179

.

'

.'

10.5
Mktip11 !L ......... I

9
W
14

l

N................ . . _...ioo
CHlCAGO BULLS : Acli•ated Luc
LoDaley , ualer. rrom th&amp; injured li1t.
P\awl l.ury ICr)'dowlak, (otward, PD

..

M~ipD

C..t

~

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e.Mk:hlpD

I.ua

li:'.
. . .. . ~
Jlout1ofl ................ .l9

-.

Big Ten men's

10

.321

llubll&gt;aU

8owllna Orw• • ICe.._

.J

ll .)))
19

ao.n.

c.... lotid!il!'!.l3
a;:,;;;
16, w. !'fidoipa i o "

Soturday'• PI-

. ,.
16

f)

Nollooai'PIULADELPHIA PHILLJES: Re~pd
Lorn0.00 · loluuly
Podret, Md ~Wberta. Mite Rru ad Jotm
Vuton:h, COKta. 1o CJDe.jaw coau.:t~ .

PKen M ;'illlltets ~ - At Market Square

O'Neal bad 25 and Anderson tiM 20. Denick
Coleman led New Jersey wilb 19 [Xiints, but be
was called for traveling with 13 seconds to
play when the Nets had a chance to take the

In Top 25 college hoops,

' I

Mi.IIN 75, K.tat 13
0100 6l, 8•11 St. 59

ll.l
Il.l

~ ¥: .210
c, •.,.,O+rw..

'

'

.

E. Mld&gt;ip 6l. Toledo 62·

IJ.l

17 _.14
20 .]94
19 .)4l
.121

.... ll
.. ll
. HI

J~et Loaa cu.cu-

BuoboU

Wod....biy'•.......,.
A&gt;m• 61
Bowui1

Named

uve dttcctm .

·w·

O.SU 79-70

Scoreboard

.

Sonics make Cavs only host~ to lose

Page 4

'

The Dally Sentinei-Page--5

Pomerdy-Middleport, Ohio

In the latest NBA action,

Thurwdlly, J.,u.y 5,1995

•

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Thursday, January 5, 1995

•

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-=

I'
I

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145 N. 2ND

tI

MIDDLEPORT

I

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�•

Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursdiy, January

•

s; 1995

•

Thursday, January 5, 1995

The other woman holds trump cards in losing marriage
Ann

,__...

LanderS

.,. , Loa~

c.-.-·

Dear Allll Lallden: I am 'several
~ olcb dum my hiWiand. "I¥le"
aiKI I have been manicd 1S years.
Unfortunately, I cannot have
children.
Lyle now has decided he wants 1
family. I told him, "Pine, we can
adopt.· He said, "No. I want my

own."

· Behind my back, he h~s ~n
seeing a young woman. He ts gtvmg

her money·and buying he.-c:~pensive
DEAR DESPERATE: 1am afraid,
clotlponaregularbasis.This is not clear, that your maniage is ovet The
just gossip. I've seen the . ~ipts. O.W. (Other Woman) has all the
When I askcd4'le to Stop seemg her, trump cards. Lyle says marriage
he said he can't because the sexual counselors are too expensive, but he
allraCtion is too strong. He now says is giving the O.W. money and
he wants.her to carry his child. This buying her expensive clothes? If he
morning, he told me he is seriously hu lalked to her about "carrying his
consideringdivm:e. He~tosee . child," you can bet they've tallced
a marriage counselor because "they about marriage.
are lOQ expensive."
,
CaU a lawyer, and get Utis skunk
I am devastated and hate to think out of your life. He's smelling up the
about life without this man. I told him neighborhood.
our marriage doesn't stand a chance
Dear Ann Landers: One of the
as long as be keeps seeing this biggest mistakes a widow or 8
woman. Lyle says· he still loves me widower can make when a spause
but we have grown apan. I need your dies 'is 10 sell the house.
help, Ann. I'm sick at heart and··
It's usually the grown children whO
DESPERATE IN CALIFORNIA
urge their parent to sell. The kids

Blind people's eyes
may serve purpose
in regulating .sleep .
By DANIEL Q. I(ANEY
A·P Sdence Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Even when
people are tolally blind, th~ eyes
may serve a pwpose.
· A study today concludes that
llgbt entering the brnin tbmugb tbe
eyes helps regulate some blind people's sleeping patterns; even
though they cannot see it.
.·
: The discovery may open up
important clues about bow the
tiram keeps time in everyone, blind
&lt;lr not. It also raises questions
about the coJilmon practice of
~eJiloving blind people's eyes for
cosJiletic reasons.
Insomnia is a major problem for
Jllany blind people, who often
e]tperience somellting like jet lag,
nodding off during the day and
tossing and turning at night.
1
: 1be reason for this seems clear:
The brain needs exposure to sunlight to keep its imernal clock running on a 24-hour sehedule. Olherwjse, it falls behind about a half
!tour each day.
,
· A fortunate minority of blind
people, however, sleep easily at the
. appropriate time. Now scientists
Utink they know why: Their brains
can ·see light. even when their eyes
cannot.
_
The research, conducted by ~- ·
Charles A. Cze.isler and others
from Brigham and Wome.W Hospital in Boston, was published· in
today' s issue of Ute New England
Journal of.Medicine.
•·

mean well, but they are mistaken. It
DEAR RUTH: Excellent advice.
sounds g~ at first-- .a nice little Thnnks for the wisdom.
aJ13!1!'1~t m • . new netghborhood,
Dear Ann Landers: I am ,a single
whtch 1s cons1dered safer (!)r an mollter w1Ut two children . I ve been
elderly perso~ alone. .
buying my clothes at a thrift shop for
People vtStt f~ a w~tle, but _then quite some time because living
they get busy wtth lltetr own h~es. expenses strain my budget to lhe limit
and Mom or Dad end up al~ne m a and 1 can't afford to buy anything
strange place willt new n~tgh~s. new.
The htgh pomt of Ute day. IS taking
1work in a small offiCe, and people
out the garbage or walkmg to an · notice when a co-worker wears
empty matlbox.
.
something they have 1101 seen before.
Ann, plea~ tell the seniors i~ they What sltquld my reply be when I am
mus1 sell lhetr homes, to rent tn' the asked, "Is that new?" I bate to lie, but
same area if possible. The quality of I don't feel Utat I need to advertise
life is much better when you know the •fact Utat I buy my clothes In a
your neighbors, the store clerks; the thrift store'. Please tell me how to
pharmacist and the guys at the respond.-- SECONDHAND ROSE
hardware store. -- RUTH IN Jl!, Y.
DEAR ROSE: That's a rude thing

~-----Qui/tin

.histo

-~

-

DR.GOTT

PETER.
GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: My mom
· b~s· be~n on the edge· for a long
time. She never wants to face problems and always complains we
smother her. Her father was an
alcoholic and gave her a hard time
when she was young. Is there 'a Jirik
between his behavior and bers?
. DEAR READER: Could be .
Children of alcoholics .often have
. to fend &lt;for Uternselves while growing up . In many important ways,

Cut
Maplewood Lake
Racine, OH

9:30-1:30
DANCE AND SING
ALONG WITH VIDEO
KARAOKE AT
THE WATERING
HOLE.

~
,.

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6'

..-!Jt',~-·' )

, THE ANNIVERSARY @UR.T - As a part
of the observance of the I 75th anniversary or
Meigs County, a quilt is being made showing an
appllqued county replica in blue in the center
from which extends white rays to a border bearing the township names. The names of residents

-

are being embroidered In red In tbe rays leading
to their respective townships. Residents paid $5
to have their names included on the quilt which;
once completed, will hang in the Meigs County
Museum. ~osalie Story designed the quilt and is
·plctur~ here as she embroiders a

name.

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MIDDLEPORT - Free round
and square dance l'eaturing C.J. and
the Country Gentlemen at oldLegion Building Friday, 8-11 p.m.
All welcoJile. · SATURDAY
SALI':M CENTER
Star
Grange #778 regular Jlleeting Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at Ute grange hall
. on County Road I. Members urged
to attend. Potluck· to follow meeting.

•
l ntro dUCing
ne W Ca r.s
has gone
Ho //Ywoo d
·

!!s!:~!~~ ~~!~~Iter

-

1994· We look
1995· j6 'fOU

to

Wee·kend Specials

I(OU

January 6-7

httfle

/2ohse

Weekend - guusJs- of-:-Mrc-and-and"Mrs:-Ooug B1sbop were Mf.
Mrs. Bob Mahr were f ranCIS Foley and Mrs. Glenn Kennedy and famiaod Btll Foley, Colu~bus, and a ty, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Bisbop, Mr.
f~end lrom Ensland,- and Gary and Mrs. Kenny Davis and s·o n,
Foley of S~~~· .
Mrs. Golda Hari. ,bJternoon callers
Mrs. Vtrgtnla Gtbso~ was tbe were Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Coen of
_ . gue~t o_( her son, _Aill!Jl Gib!iQn .and Albany, ,
famtly m ColumbUs, for Chnsunas.
Mrs. Eva Mae Christian had as
. . Mr. ~ M~. Bob Alki~ spent her Christmas Day .dimier guests
~ ho_hday wtth Ray Alk1r_e and her. children and{grandchildren,
Bob G1bson m Columbus.
Lois Christian and son Devin
: Mrs. Faye Steinmentz were Hamilton of NasbviUe, Te~n . ; .Mr.
, guest Utis past week of her motl)er, and Mrs. James Harmon and Chrisline, John and Ronald, Pdnland;
Eima Berevik in North Dakota.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Day Mr. and Mrs. Michael Grueser and
Gilkey, Columbus an~r . and Meron of Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Mit. ~ob
attended ~ 50th Robert Snowden and Becky and
weddmg ann1versary ceiC bon of Melissa of. Rutland and Woodrow
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton Gilkey, Harmon of Mudford Road, HarAJbany.
rison ville.
· Christmas dinner- guests of Mr.

'

·•

_:

Ladies Western

&amp;
'fOU'l health ..

Chuck,

We ate heu

Harrisonville-news-·-

$9.99

Swlshe?. &amp;

hesitate to ask

N1·::::::;::::::=:::::===
1

I

.!_--- - - -·-- -~ -- - - ;,; - - -·ili l ~-

SECOND.

MIDDLEPORT

~

..;,

';

.

'"

'

•

•
~

•

EMPLOYEE o•' THE
MONTH - :Vicki Jeffers,
LPN-ph, hll" been· selected "'
Pleasant Valley Nursing C,a re
Center's "Employee of the
Month". Jeffers is pictured
between Sharon Skid more,
RN., Director of Nursing at
the NCC and Ann Nelson,
R.'N., assistant director of
nursing, bas been at NCC for
five years. She resides in ·
Mason with her husband,
Carl, who Is employed' at
Sporn Power Plant, and their
two children.

••'
•

~

I_
I
I

I

•

2

by projecting its image on ~ video
screen.

25% ofT

290 N.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

(Specltlze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,

STARliN$ DEC. 30
12 Gauge Only
Umlted: 740
Backbore, 680 front

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

PubliC Notice

PUbliC Notice

PUBUC NOnCE
-The Vjllaga of Middleport
may be applying far the FY
' 94 Ohio Small Cllleo
Community Dovelopmonl
Black Grant (CDBG)
Downtown Revitalization
Competitive Progrom fundi
through
tho ;, Ohio
Department
of
Development.
A public hearing will be
held Monday, Jonuary 9,
1995 at 7:30 p.m. In the
council chambera loc@lod at
. 237 Race Street, Middleport,
Ohio, tor the purpooo of
dlocuoolng the genorol

~ll.!l_ Rrogrom ond tho

provlalont 9f the FY '$4,

'

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

•NewHom11
-Garages
.COmplete
Remodeling ,
•
Stop &amp; Compel'8
FREE ESTIMATES

Charlie's
Lim tone
Delivery
Service
992·7553

WICKS
HAULING

· 6:30P.M.

1 prices all around

the area.
1192-2903 or 992:6320

(Lime Stone Low Rates)

Kenny's Is the place to co••
w~en you need a car rental.
We llare Cars and Van1l

ROBERT BISSELL
COI(STRUCJION

ra:s.

Oat Step

Insurance Work Welcome
.......,"!\~

C&amp;J

State Rt. 33

FURNITURE

Darwin, Ohio

Just below Hobson
on State Route 7
New &amp; Used

YOUNG'S
amount -of varfouolunai'- CARPENTER SERVICE
available.
-RoOm Addition•
All lntoreotod poroono are oNew Gltrageo
lnvllod to ollend to moko
PI mbl
IUQQOitlono on varlauo -Electrical &amp; u
ng
ocllvllloo which moy be -Roofing
undertaken by the vlllogo oJnterlor &amp; Eltterlor
under thlo program.
Painting alao concrete
Written comment• will be work
accepted until 7:30 p.m.,
(FREE ESnMATES)
Jenu•!Y 9, 111115 and moy be
mottod to Moyor Dowty
V.lf. YOUNG Ill
Horton, 237 Race Stroot,
· 1112~215
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
- . - Pomeroy, Ohio

Home Repair Also

EXCAVATING
DOZER &amp; BACKHOE
SERVICE

_WIIDOW IYiftlll.
• cuatomllade
• Solid vinyl

Not you. your home!
Will create a new
look lor any room
u s ing your
c o llectables and
treasures.
Brmg new warmth
inlo your hom e s lor
the Holida ys .

•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Pome~.oj', Ohio

· 992-4119 AI Tromm Owler 1--800.291-5600

',,

TREE TRIMMING
.AND REMOVAL
Llgllt

·

"Look for the Red iuKl White Awning" ·

Hauling,

Shrubs Shapped

BINGO

SERVICE

II I ! I o• n . pd

. · · ·ti2·5SU OR
TOLL FREE 1·111·141·1071
DARWIN, OHIO

Racine American
Legion Post 602
Now having Bl~go
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people
playing th&amp;blgger
the pay-off.
Save ad lor 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

•Factory Aut!Jorlzed ParUJ
&amp; Service
•All M1kea -42 Years
•Fiat ReJ,IebiB Service ·
•Weahera' • Or'yei's • Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers
•Diahwaahere

•H. W. Healers
-Microwavea•Disposala

•Thankl Meig1 I

~"

Surrounding Areas

(614) 985-3561 or

and Removed

992-5335

Mls. Jobs.

7131111 TFN

Bill Sla~k

992·2269

'

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROORNG

NOW OPEN

NEW·REPAIR
Gutters

.. J&amp;D FLEA
MARKET

Downspouts . )
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

IN A STAT~ OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical R«!palr

.. ·

(Lamps Welcome)
· Home Repair Also

NEW &amp; USED

992-5251

ITEMS

John

992•7162

•

Doug

.

'

11117/ltn

7t1 South Third

949-2168

~lddleport

Hours: 10:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Daijy

5fiMN TFN

,,......
' DO'S .
ap•••CB
r...,...

DAVE, '$
SWAP SHOP

IERVICI

One mile ou•
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.• Wad. ·.Fri . • Sat.
Hi
• Craftsman .Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.

th~~~~~lly

windows

Phone 247-2206

ALL IIAKEJ l IIO.DELS
tU-711~.,08

·

repiiCinil'ent
• Fra.a Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

FACE LIFT!

WHALEY'S AUTO ,
PARTS
Spaelallzlng In Cuatom
Frama Repair
NEW a USED PARTS FOR

Doug ·

John

12/23/1 mo.

· Bradlor
' Quality and
:
Temperament
SpeciaNzlng In Pall-colon
for lhaw and companiona.
Stud Mrvlco &amp; puppies, ·
young adub lor Mit.
. 487&amp;0 IIIIo Hill Rd.
Racln•, Oh
1114-848-2487

992-7162

992-5251

Septic Tanks
Leaeh Beds lnslallad
Basements, Footers
Mobile Homa Sel-ups
Land Clearing
Road Building
Free Estimates .
1 (614) 985-4495

·AMBERWOOD
Cocker KENNE~
Spaniels ·
·

Question: Se veral monllts ago give you some.
of the range of
my cousin started compL'lining Utat variations possible, 1'.11 give you a
her legs and body felt really weak small dose of statistics: After Ute
and that she fatigued quite 'quickly. first sytllptoms appear, 90 percent
She now says she's tired all the of MS sufferers experience a
: time and cannot gel enough rest. remission. Some 20 percent have
This illness hils also caused slurred only twp or three. episodes of
speech and twisted her mouth. At relapse and remission and 'are Uten
lirst we thougbt she had a stroke or free of symptoms. The remaining
Bell's Palsy. She went to a family maJority continue the cycle of
doctor and then a specialist who relapse and remission. but after five
diagnosed her condition a~ multiple years or more of this "on again, off
sclerosis. lbat brings · up my ques- again" pattern, Utcre is a 60 percent
lion: How many different types of chance that the disease will become
multipl e sclerosis arc there, and are. progressive ll'lthout further remisall of them life lltrcalening?
sions.
An swer : Multiple sclerosis,
There is also a very uncommon
· commonly referred to simply by type of MS Utat is progressive from
Ute initials "MS," is a disease of Ute its onset and often resull~ in deallt.
brain. In MS one or more areas of willtin.a few years. For Ute inajorithe brain ar""""'llnaged in a way that ty of Utose willt Ute disease, howinterferes willl UIC nonnal function ever, life expectancy is barely
.(&gt;f th e br a in cells . Di sease in · affected at all. Even when longevirc_g!ons that comrol niovemcnl of ty isn't signilicanUy 'altered'by MS,
the mouth c au s e your C\IUSllt ' s ·· Ute quality of life usually is. Twentwistccl mouth ;md garbled speech. ty years after tlie onset of the disDamage in other areas can cause case, 50 percent will have signifiweakn ess, co nfu sio n, and other cant disability. Half of the.~e individuals will be able 10
symptoms.
We don't ye t understand the· walk willtout Ute aid of a cane or
exact nature of the damage thatl\j:S •crutch, while Ute oUter hftlf are less
causes, but we do know that this· fortunate .
·
illness is ihc number one disabling
Question: What is Ute lrealJ!lenl
·illness of youitg atlulls . About forMS? Answer: A relatively new
300,000 ~oplc in the United States rrl'e dicat.i on, beta interferon, can
have this di sease, anti the majority help those with the "relapsingof them arc Caucasi;m. Female suf· remitling" variety of MS. This
fcrers also outnu1nhcr males by 2 to medication reduces Ute frequency •
1. This illness has a so·ong tendcn - and severity of attacks. Prednisone
· famiTIcs ..F'llr mstanq;,
·
· 11 y ·f
cy lO run m
can also be helpful , csp~~ta
•
MS strikes one out ol every 1.000 started early in an attack . fhere are
~rsons in th e general population, oUter medications that arc also of
1·
but if your mother, father or sib mg some benefit for the uncommon
has hat! the di sease, )'our chances progressive MS. Unfortunately,
arc 3 5 ou f o.f I ,000. Even more none of Utese therapies are successslliking, if an identical twin ha~ Ute ful for all patients, and hone can
illness , you ha vc ·a 50 percent cure the disease . Medical
chance o f ge ttin g il - 500 out of a researchers are still working lQwa{d
1 000
' What we refer 1&lt;1 "·' "types" of
Medicine" b a weekly
multiple sc le ro sis arc probably column. To submll quesllons,
rcalfy no more than .a tac it recogni· write 't o joh!l C. Wolf, D.O.,

Resident and Small Electrical Repair

J~Y'S

i11!J12trn

John C Wolf, D.O.
Associate·Professor
· of Family Medicine

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
· - - IN -P&lt;8_TATE OrSI'tOCK. - .
(Lamps Welcome)

. VIllage of Middleport
(1) 5, &amp;; 2TC

Family
Medicine

ELE~TRI~

O&amp;E

Ne.w 2 piece living
room sets 1300 ..00

~

. Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Aute 8e4y Rep11r

Chuck'Stotta
614·992..&amp;223
Free Estimates

992· 7soa

Dewey Hortoni Mayor

Ct11p~ete

1·800-486·1590
Bus. (614) 446·9971

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

915-4473

For 111. . .Lt.
..,,

lr••••

UM.lpplia•c•
· for Sale
C•ll .

614-992·551$
'Cll'' ""

Buy-Sell·Trade
992·2060'"'"' mo

introlluccd' it s rae
==-=~~~·~Ut~e~c[om~pefu~
· ~~io~n. ~·~~~=·~li~o~~~~:~r;~'h~e'.~vi~ar~ic~·tfy~o;fiJ~w!"~Y.~·;s~:'f"~•~r~;bocJ~-~~o~:h~io~U~n~i~ve~lrs~i~t;:~C~o~lle!g~e~·o~r~o;;s~te~o-~====~~~~~~~~~
- --~

1 Sale
Tai,Ie
Lee-LeYi
Jeans
.
...
... of
-· -- Ladies
. .... - · - - · - · 1 (MQstly Colors)

•

........

fil'

-

Kenny's luto Rental j

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

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

. New Homes, Vl·n yl. Siding New
,

Garage&amp; • Replacement Windows
~c-::-._~~~

r_..__....;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::...____.,

EAPARTMENTS
-

AJ!dre

l

1

-$11.99

I
.. - - -

1

Sizes 8 1/2 -3 20%-ofT1 Rack Qf Chic Jel!ms;&amp;-(:a

~ · ·swisher &amp; Lohse -Pharm·acy :
Expires 1-31-95

Harley Boots

Children's Western Boots ·

per Customer per prescription 1

1 ,

presented it s new m!~iva~~
Wcdnesdaybybavmgone Jump
into an onstagc pond, splashing
reporters willt water. ('lbe minivan
was attaclilld to a crane by unseen
1
.zcireths.
w e) ~ow~a~~g~;! ~~~~~P~~g :

20% .ofT

Up to $5.00 off anY- presctip~tio~n'----:"---.-:

• Limit

panics Utat help automakcrs unveil
new models. "It's show business."
At the North American lntemational Auto Show, Chrysler Corp.

Men's '='ight Weight Flannel Shirts

questioM a6out 'fOU?. .

.

DETROIT · (AP). - Forget
unvciling a new car model widt a
tug on a white sheet. Today's auto
shows, complete with jumping
minivans, exploding video ·screens
. and talking robots , arc glitzy
·exiravagam.as full of Hollywood
hype.
.
·
The term fo.r it is business Uteatc~.'There's a lot ·more pizzazz
.
being introduced lo ·grab attention,
to grab headlines," said Kirk RedShowtech
Prcsenncr, president
tation
Systems,ofone
of several
com-

- .. Society scrapbookCORRECTION
.
Jerry and Linda Jacks of Rutland are grandparents of Odessa
Ann-Marie Jacks, daughter of
Chuck Jacks and Vanessa Young,
boUt of Racine. Their names were
incorrcclly given in the birth
announcement.
.
LAST DANCE
· Royal Oak Dance Club will
hgld a final dance at Royal Oak
Park Jan . 14 from 7 to II p.m .
George Hall wi II provide the
music.
The dance is being financed by
the remaining funds plus $10 per
couple cover charge. Any money
left over after expenses will be
for a door prize drawing

In Memory

In Loving Memory of
my lather
MAHLON "Doc''
EBLEN
who passed away
· Jan. 5, 1994
It's been a year since
you left your home to
go with God and walk
the go)den streets of
his home. I can not
see your smiling face,
your hands I can not
touch but God will
give my message to .
the one I love and
miss so much. Gone
from this earth but
living in . my heart
forever.
I love you Dad
Sadly missed by your
daughter
Pebble

(

.
.
they skip childhood, because they 0 ver Ute lives ~f ollters.
confrontation.
Tb one .degree ·or another, we all
are forced to deal witJt (and take
Consequently, many of your · To a,large extent, all of us wan..t--.. j_Ome from. dysfunctional families.
care of) parents who are not only mother's character faults· may well to "fix" things and be helpful, \ uut children of ~coholics seem to
difficult but, at limes, totally stem from her alcoholic fallter. She even if our intervention is not
suffer dtsproportionately, and the
dependent.
could probably be helped by coun- . always welcoJile. (Look at doctors
reasons are clear. ·
Thus, children of alcoholic par- seling or by attending Adult Chit- and nurses, who are the priJile
Get_your mother's physician-no .
HARRISONVlLLE - Harents usually learn quite easily that dren of Alcoholics (ACOA) meet- example of this.) Furlltermt:lre, we
your stdc and then, when neces- risonvi.Jie Lodge 411 meeting SatUtey cannot depend on the adults . ings, support groups modeled alter all exhibit the natural tendency to
sary, present a rational and united unlay, 7:30p.m. at the Masonic
around them; they have to t«?IY the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anony- w;mt to take over our parents' lives
front to help your motlier acknowl- temple. Refreshments. All Masons
solely on themselves. This percep- mous.
as Utose we love grow older and
edge her PJOblems and accept the welcome.
·
tion frequently leads to maladapFor your part, you'll probably more feeble. These attitudes are a
help sh~ Deel)s.
·
• tive behavior later on: a need to get more mileage by backing off. normal pan of human compassion.
· To giye.you more information, I
· POMEROY- FOE Aerie 2171
rescue othets, denial when address- Involve yourself in your mother's But Utere must be limits, or else our
am sendmg you a free copy of my District 4 meting, Saturday, 5:30
ing problems, at;td a refusal to problems only whe~ she asks you . efforts will degenerate into power
Health Report "Help II : p.m.
accept help when it is needed. ·
to or if she wantonly ignores situa- · struggles. Instead of being. useful,
Mentai!Substance Abuse.' .Other
MONDAY
• For the adult child of an aJ,co- lions that co11ld cause her real . we end up trying to d0111inate.
readers who would hke a copy
holic, necessary assistance may be harm, s~ch as failing 10 recognize
This Issue is particularly imporsbould send $2 plus a long, selfPOMEROY - Pomeroy resiperceived as interference. genuine obvious healllt problems.
tant to aduft children of alcoholics,
addressed, stamped envelope to .dents, should place old Christmas
concern as smolltering, true affecIn addition, although your moth- who have difficulty defining the
P.O. Box 2433, New. York, NY trees ~n lhree days in Ute ~allowing
tion as a weakness: This childhood er may not heed your advice, she boundaries between giving (or
10163. Be sure 10 mention the utle. order. ftrst ~ard, J~n. 9, second
vulnerability, so cleverly concealed may be inclined to 'follow her doc; accepting) bona tide assistance and
Copyrlgb t 111114 NEWSPA'-. :V_ard, Jan. 10, and _Uttrd ward, Jan.
for survival, may cause such adults tor's suggestions . 'llterefore, 1 rec- being domineering (or losing
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.~
.
to demand control - over their omrnend that you discuss her atti - supremacy). Usually, these issues
(For information on how to ·
own lives and, more importantly, tudes and behavior .witlt him, enlist are exaggemted within Ute family.
communicate electronically with
KYGER · - . Women Alive,
him as an ally, and auempllo assist
Obviously, I am not aware 9f
this columnist and others, con- · Monday, 7 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
your molltcr through medical inter- . your mother's relation to her fallter.
toct
Online by calling 1- Club House. Devotional speaker, a
vention, rather than adversarial I'm sp'eaking here: in generalities.·
83)7.)
craft, and refreshments to be a
r
salad bar.
to reorganize the club. Members
are invited to attend with a guest
for Ute final get-togetlter.
qha~ks ~o?. ~ou?. - pat?.o~a~e du?.l1t~
· CHRISTIAN CLOWNS
The Porterfield Christian clowns
are coming to the Reedsville Eden
~o'utJa?.d
se?.tli~1
Church .
. The 18 clowns make up a group
i~
IWt?.
t:l~'f
which has spent hours tackling Ute
•books of the ~ible that can easily
Htedicatio~s,
be acted out and understood. Joan
Beardmore has directed the group
t.
for Ute last seven years.
do~'t
~ou?.
Pastor Robert Markley invites
~nd
Utose lltal are interested in a night
~haimacists,
Xe~
of "clowning around" whe~~: the
experience is educatiO.nal, to come
~on.
~o'l
to the Eden United Brethren
Church on Route 124 at 7 p.m.
'

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2131

F&amp;A Tree Servke

liST HCEPnOII
For tbe best in satellite
· sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
-We have even b&amp;ner
and quicker service.
·Over 10 yrs
experience
. Service o~ all system

121211M/Hn

Full-time • Part -time
Free Informational Meeting
Sat. Jan. 7 7:30pm
Lowe Hotel · 4th &amp;_Main
(beside Post Office)
Pt. Pleasant
No obligations
No pressu1e
Limited seating
·
Call to reserve your seat
(614) 441-1746 anytime

. ALFRED - Orange Townsbip
trustees will meet Thursday, 7:30
p.m., organizational meeting, borne
· of Cleik Patty Callaway~

" /•

Jot II. Sayre

Call949·2734

RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees organizational meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. at Ute Rutland
Fire Station followed by regular
Jlleeting.

~

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

St. At. 124 ·

Tbe Community Calendar is
. publisbtid as a free service :0 nooprofi,l groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or. fund raisers of any type. ,
Items are printed as space pennits
and cannot. be guaranteed to tun a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, ThiJrsday, 7 p.m. Sacred
Heart Catholic eburcb. AI Anon to meet at same time.

How alco(lolism affects cfJildhood up to adult years.
.

An alcohol J'fl}blem? How Ctlll ,au
~/p yoru_self_ or_someoM you loW~?
Alcohollsn:t. How to Recognize It,
How to. De_al ~llh It, How to Conquer It will 11Vfl yo11 IM ~J~LnVer!.
&amp;nda self~trmd.long,buslllt!ss- ·
me envelope and a. c'!tck or.I/IOMy
order for $3.65 lthu Ulcludes f'OSI·
age and handllllg) to: Alcohol, clo
AM i..mukrs, P.O. Bo:c 11562, Chicago; Ill. 60611.()562.

RACINE - Special services,
Racine Church of the Nazarene,
Tyree Blvd. Jan. 4-8. Dave Canfield, commissioned evangelist for
Ute Church of the N azorene, wiU be
the speaker. Services at 7 p.m.
thmugh Saturday; Sunday. 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.
FRIDAY
HEMLOCK GROVE - Meigs
County Pomona Grange, 7:30 Friday at Hemlock Grange hall. Hemlock Grange hosting.

Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

Cundiff's
Custom

Commu~Jity

for

HAULING

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

calendar

It suggests .that two distinct
routes sbutUe information from Ute
outside world into the brain.
One pathway, which transmits
visual images, fails to work in
·• those who liTe totally blind. But
another avenue may survive. In
ways Utat are still unclear, it carries
in the message Utat Ute sun is shining.
The existence of such dual paUlways bas been shown in e;~~:peri­
menlal mice but, until now, not in .
people.
An editorial in Ute journal said ·
Czeisler's work "convincingly
demonstrates that the conclusions
.drawn from sllldies in animals bold
hlimans as well."
1be blind who sleep well "have
, vision withoui sigtu:' wrote Dr.
Robert Y. Moore of Ute University
· of Pittsburgh.
More Ulan I million Americans
are considered blind, and about 10
percent of them cannot see light.
Czeisler estimates that perhaps
one-lltird of these tolally blind people sleep normally because their
brains perceive light. ·
The body's internal clock is '
housed in a .part of the blain called
Ute hypothalamus. which conveys
information about light to the
pineal gland, another part of the
brain Utat makes a sleep-inducing
cbemical called melatonin.
Without accurate information
about day and night, Ute gland produces melatonin at the wiong time.

~

to ask.
,
I see. no need togJ~ananswer to
evCI)'_cl!!d who quesu~ you.
,
~ew or secondhand. us nobody s
~smess. S1Jilply say, ~ you.
1m pleucd that~ like IL .
.
Gem of the Day. Opportumty still
lcnocks, bu~ too many JlCOP,Ie are~
busywatchmgTVtheydont'-1~

. .L . , . - ---t(No-Suflllay Calls)

'

Accepting Applicatlc;ms for one
and two bedroom apartments
Rents based on income
•

Range from

$0·506 .

Handicap Accessible Units
Management and Laundry on site.
'

614·949-2012 TDD .1·800-7'50•(1750

~ Equai Hou~ing Opportu
' t

.MODEll SANITATION

'I

.,
':'

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic llnkl cleaned &amp; portable toilets renled,Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
. Job 1ltel' Camp Sites • Family Reunlonsl Para,s
NOW OFFERING GE N ERAL HAULI

Llmeslone, Send, Gravel and Coai
W E HAVE A- 1 TOP SO IL FOR SALE

20

.

~92- 3 954
f"nl r&gt;r wPn c y Pl1olw 'lWI-3 418

'

,,

",

�.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

5,1995
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

47 Folk olnger

' ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

!'.. '11ou nce111 en t s

BEATTIE BLVD.® hy Druce H~attie

41 Houses tor Rent

-------0...
Cit~ .

·~

li

• .~ 6 l
tB J
+7 5

;,~-:;.,

~

............ ¥

"

--

~

HfALTH PJl,iJ
HouN For Ront: Phone: 114 441 2411.

Giveaway

-·

lo-

....
, _ .tar
- - -line
rnartl.al,
. . bM.htd

11

Help Wanted

VENDING:

Won'

001

1110 .Fonf Probe LX.
1111.
'

1-&lt;· ff
t.A P,.,ct"1

Will1014...,.-

In lho .-.y.
...... goilloge ond ....
eluded. Juol 10 mlnutoo 1n1m
Alhona,, llonlng o1 Q40o
300/rno~ ooblo onllololo, 114-

AKC
Reg!Cooloar &amp;pionlol Pupploo, Top
Ouoflly,

....a·

ond utliNioo, 1 , . _ - .

-

,.o..

or

............. 114-1112-3712.

Er,!"hgollc _-lad wlf llortor

w,.

mo-IIIWit

.

poiOIIIIol

-bo--od.ooon-

-ol"fut
oldllofoocl• ,ct.~lverY
lutoWitdg

=~~~·

3 044
711-58511

l..acal Mec:Ucat EquiPIMf'IC Coma
PMr .._ lftiiMdllte ODenlng
For. Tho ...._.. FuJI.Timi
P.Pwlooltidoolono•:

S.C...tary

M:c&gt;Maper. , 'Service Technldln lVIII Dltftr To O.UV.r
And loi.IJp Oxygen And -~

Yard Sale

-ool

!cop -

Gallipolis

-'--"=-VIclnh.:!,y_
· __
ALL YMII SoiM MUll I I Pold In
Ad..,_, DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bo""" lho od • ID ovn.
Sunday odlllon - 2:00 p.m.
Fotdoy. llondoy odlllon - 2:00
p.m. SIIu. .y.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Pold: All Old

........ Alnao,-Colno,
Cl9ld Colin&amp; U.T.S. Coin Shop,
111

'-'d~GoAipollo.

-.eo•

Wonlod To Buy Uud -

·~·

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

Rick Pooooon Auction Company
tull limo ouot..._, c:omp~~~o
auction
-..
UciiMM
Me,OIIio l WOOl Ylrglnloo, 304-

TIW785.

u.s.

Good Ccoomlunlcotlon
Equljlmoril
In Plllooot
Noodod.
&amp;CIIIonl
- . . On Tho Job Trolnlna.
Bind Roo~,_ To: CLA U7, cTo
GolllpoUo Dolly TrlbuM, 821
Thllll Avonuo, Gollpollo, OH
41131.
.

••pr

n

1td IIHIIt be

pooto~.
qulrod, •

,;t-kto -

Nollonol

Cllotoa

-

·a._

ooclllng ot~ ~­

- .104-f71.300L. .

r- •
a• color

TV, $75; 300 Mtl

31 HORiel fOr Sale

Altlnllon Uobllo • Dou-ldo
ttomecser.,. We C.ny A Comploto Slocll 01 rnto~homl
l2SEER Pumpo And FUI"
And Uobllo Homo Fur·
, _ Pallo WMh Flnonol..
AV8IIablo Coli ...,_., Uoblloo

Uonor
ApootiiiWito

$2324315 •

EOH.
-21od-.28olho, --·~~·14I27Mio. 12?11 Oopoell, Pluo 44H411 Os f·
UtiiHioo, No Plio Avon-. Uo Tho E..... Uobllo
V15185 114-311 1010.
·
Wol Fumoco Thol U..
No Elootrlolty. wv 010212.
Uodom 2 . • A .Gongo Apt.
CA/Hoot, Loc:olod - . ...... brdroom aun., Nke

Company

Anoooll"" Modota For A

Wide v.rtotr 01 .,.,ld •
~-.. GrNI Oi&gt;Po!lunfty
To Eom Extro "-ii. PINoO
Bond A Plo:turo Wllh CoWir Loilor To T_..... lloponiiiWit, P.O.
Box !181, Chootwlon, WV 25322..

no plio. 130011no. llopooit. 514- . . . 114-112-1104.
448-2300
'
Nl.. 1 Bod,_, ....._ In
City, Furnlehed, .ab.iMo. Ole a
Wolor Polcl, No Plio. e-.
2100

1 lodroom Apoot.-, In Rio
Orondo, All UIUHioo Pold,
S2UIIIo. 114 - ....
Twin RIVWI T - . - ocoopl·
log oplllloOII.. /cii lbr. HUD
ouboldfud opl. tar oldorly ond
hlndlooppod. EOH :IIIU7J.
lltlll.

::.v :-....:.. .:-:::=
Plm, 131 SA 110,

011.

.

Gol~pollo,

Pl......e. 304-171-2013.
Four PoW8 Pll . ar-ning- 5

5 ..,.,-.

oil -

lalzlng In Cocker Sponlolo,
00 oft lfrll ..... In .... 114-17111:
Full B - ~~- -

35,__

view of Kanawhl Rtver, 2ilc.
wtlh - ·
land. Somerville Aoany, :JOW7J. St-"'a h-aalo..,.,..
· lrillorCoM
- aftoron2:00
- ·p.m.;
IDI
:1030 or Joon Collo 171-:14:11.

__........ ..

~. ·u.eonwv.

.......

46 · space for Rent ·
0011 ...,.

._..,a,, ....

anct
ovolloblo,

wolor lnohidlcl, -

111/mo,, ..... 10 rntn.... froft'i
Atllono,1~17.

112-.

1188 Cloylon Trollor. 2 Bod,_,
1 11.1 lotho. 14x24 Room
AddNion. Sltullod on I 112
At- Lolo~ OH. Exoallonl

Comploto King Wiolootlod Dk
Wood, Sill Or-r Pod. itMr.
Sonti-Wo.. - e r • Pocldod

Aloo Uol. Pod,
114-4*-2044
Or···
114-24Htl71
I
A.U. ·10 P.U.

.

CondNion,

i:il.o -

liiSEvonlngo,

.

Merchandise

514-247-

~~

.. ,,
'

.

GUC Truc:t, A~er , S P.U:::
'•

1171 Fonl 1 lon lruoll. ..... ,., ,,
wtutlllly bod, It!Ill, 114-112· :•
:1481 oftor I fill!·
,.
1182 ~ Rom 110.1..~ Cvlln- '

' _,

der, Aula 1'ruw. II,.,.. IIIIa;
Vory,Ciooon, Runo 12,B00
__...

114-3J1-21101.
,,
1i82 S.10 plci up. v.., 2.8 ....... ~
LWI, $1,5QO. 30447J.1118t.
'•
11183 Food Rongor, 2.S llro - ~~
1lM"'.e~
ooncl, 12,000. ~
'
1i80 Food
1-.1388. •

....

73

•m Chovy c.20 wooto

Troller $110, 114-

Fur-

Goods

Wanted to Do

-· M--

.

....-

=~=· Clyde

c

owon,

;;501
:::-:=l:::lll
:;:··~·:-:----''---=-:-:=;::-1 Wlnlod: _ , lol, 112. 1o ono

446-2342
...
992-2156
.

Yonl Work W I -

...... honllop oaocl, uiUI~ 114w- ll2-4253.

Polnl!..
ng.·,

·--1.
Pool---···•-lUll
Gunoro Clooonod l,lghl Houllng,
Com~!!,

Roaldoinllol, Sloovi:

Go goo

So-l,_don,

ooii.,..7J.Itl7.

'

675-.1333

. .. 114-441-1111 ... 1 -

s.n1o. v11~wy, Applo
boaUIItul 2lio. lalo,

•

C:OO..onl. · Aolleo
llniiV*. lrlt:Aoay...~.. tllllt·
lng. ~13&amp;1, ..... 11111, c..b
CNolt lid., OolllpoUo Fony.

PrOS. 1 'af\111 TrM Stmce, T•
pl!'l I Trllllfl!lng, TotminlriG. Slump lleoilon~ F - Ea-

24 Hr.
-. lllniiOol
vice IM 311
tltl,
1~7010.

Rentals
41 Houaea tor Rent

Solo Wllh

Ull~

"'

N&gt;ID .lU:'lT f\OW
DO '(00 E.Xff.C.T
TO ,DOTH,_.\?

YOU KN 0 W WE.

'"I

Doi'H f\"-VE. Nl'f
00\(.£~

it.\

oc P\TTIC. I

Poo-.

(GWABZEE)

. NSDEA ,

l~lto~ ~y CI.AT I , 'OUAN _.;__._ _ __

0 four
A•orran"' ltl«tn of
Krambll'd words

,.,.

be·
low to form four simple wolds

and spades tn win

these 10 tricks : three side -sui t aces .
two diamond ruffs in the dummv II he
second wilh dumm y ·s heart "ac e &gt;.
three s pade. ruffs on hand and I he K-Q
of hearts .
I partn ered Jane occasi onally and
played as her lt•ammale often . She al·

--r-v..;:.I..,::0!-j.:-R,::.u.-::
· E:............r

· 11·

_II LPI

I

IGERD ·S

most never mudc a mistake . She was
a lso an c xrc ll c nt rricnd . Trips to
J..nndonjust won 't be the same .

I~,'_

Nl E IE" Cl F Is
.

.

.

.

._

_H-rE_L;;:,-;V--rA__,~~ :j~~t_s~~~~~ diet. The days will seem
6

,___,_,-.1..--'--.J.I-.J.I-...1

44f.4178.

•

"LUT iOIJ' YOlJ"~E OONG
OAAW MEAN C~RIOON ~
Of 1'\IC'&gt; GODFREY'

1 ··~

y.e__.;

PS, Ffonl

e

'IOURE G()oo.IG TO t!REAK
' !i:JUR NEW 'tEARS RE~O ·

11113 -ury ~ OS
Auloonollo Air_~

PL,

"If there·aren't enough hours in
the day for you," my friend told me.

r I 1 I ·I ·I' ,

u.nr

11M Dodgo Rom Filly Aoplo '/'
4WD, - . I:ID, 1* •1·
1414241.
';:

N G B I

'=~:~~~, CO©i-.&lt;lllA-"t.ttts· ::::
----....::.-=

__,.s

:

IJZGB

,

1171 Joop

11183 a- 8-10 · - 4li4:-

oz

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ·· The beSI di 51nfeclant lor a messy 10p1c tS sunlight.
and 11"s co medy's 10b to be·tha1 sun11ght .' -- Bill Maher •
·

.~:

441-1301, 1-80Q..21U30f.

F S E A

' E ..
A G E E Z

IYBEAZI;l

i

Von 0r

I)

•

·

Whoii·

,..

G)

Complete tho chuckle quored
bv flll,ng in the milling words
v.o u develop from step No. 3 b•low .

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBlE l!IIERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

SCIAM-UTS ANSWERS
Ninety - Query - Scour - Fossil- QUESTIONS The speaker at a local CQIIege tqld .ttte seniors that
they wouldn't know all the answers. Laughing .he also
told them they_
wouldn't get all the QUESTIONS
either!
·- .......
.

•

'
STRIKE A BLOW IN THE 'M'R ON
HIGH l'llicES. SHoP :n-£ CLASSIFIED~. ,

64

Hay &amp; Grain

~

,.~

.

.

SqUOR - - Ho~ ~ol And
2rNI Cwtlng,
Never
Will,
12,110
A Bolo, 114-448-1012.

3CM.f'IW443 oftor.4pm.

;

.

1

•

Scauoro bolw. lt.2S to 12.00 por
oolllng v1c1eo . bolo, olfolfo, aov.r, orohord

Jcliionn'o YldOo, Uld- grooo. 3CIU7f.3110.

.

Scauor• ot hor, lkll cui·
tlng, . . - oulllng, olfolfo.
Jolin .., Hoolar Rlcoi, 114-ISJI.
3217 or 1114,.74!181.

Transpor1at1on

11:1

Home

ASTRP-GRAPE!

--

- - · 114-NN441.

18

"'

o·c

I.

And l)ryllra. AN Recancltlonlld
And Goilronl- ltDO And Up,

Aoo T- SIMco. Complllo lloo
ooro, 20rN. ..,., a lhou...t, 1roo

DO'-!N.

Y ' A R

DZ. BPHSE

VZWHOI'OQ

oar z

N H Z E 0 ' A.

LGOHSE

E S

HL ·

Chud! . "WII-

odull NFL APEX 11-r
.,_,
M•dl=~lt
_,
- . 00111 ...
•• 30 .,
1:
loo
,
modlum,
SIO; 114-112
•

Refriaentcn. llw-, WuMr8

T~

di a mon~ s

XBHE" XZWA

" A· K Z

IIoomo, 114..24HOitl.

~--,,...-.:......-_;._ __,_
"oIOUnd ~· coon, JCM
·
k
MC 0.

•""!,

WE.

U....locll HoullnO, Anytlmo.
An,.Prod,_ Hll,_
Evooy Uondoy, eol1 Tot-

- · EloqJotc F . . _ 1'14441-1301. l-.u7.f3GI 8omo
Good Uwcf T........IW Allolloblo.
eou For- Eol'-•

, 114-1112-34tl.
·'
()ol( lablo M4 oholoW, IR -.r
I&gt;Nko; 2 'llucld4id _ , _ 2
11orm - , lxllft olumn
owning, ook I pop11r
codot -lumbar, 271gol luol 011
lonll, lrUek tool bOx, onllquo
pump org~n, 304-l'll-t004.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Floo llerkol Von; lflil Chovy •
WI""- Von, I
114- '

PD, PW,

While York Boer For Sljlle. 11.42514ftS.
,

a..

\.J~Ol

"

~Civyolor;;;;_::;;::F;::Ift::h:;;A::""::_·-=30:::4::112:;::lll=::ll ~,

Llll J.nhral CIMn Up Your 'Heat·

lng • . Coollntl Prvbl .... -

time ~

·:

2'13-42111.

'

ruHed

·•

11on,

C..ok Tnodllng,

Slcrogo
1250; Doybod, ps,
114-387'.-.
.

r=

Household

'I

lntomotlilli 101 dlooool ........
Olive 1110 diooolllroclor. AC no
1111 com pllnler. Holland

lntomotlonol 751 _ , - ·
U,INIO; I N Fonl Polnl.
Tlrw, llodo, · • Buolt Hoa.
$2.185; Yanmar 1500 DIMII "1
Pclnl Hitch, 12,415; "114-211-

.

Hli:lt, 1

Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

76

Undom~.'!'J

buying •

y.._ .,

Allor I P.ll. 114 3M NIO.

King

-

Cond-..

bc&lt;t t echnic a l

cas h.ed the di amond ace and cross·

lllt ~TifiC.IN.. TREE THI:, YEJ•R,
1-Jf\'( DOf.lT \olE f..U.l/E.
!;r.\'~·· HIE. Llc.H'\5 01•\ 7

poinlmont, 114-2!81544.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

'

vBr!JTU5.Tor... T-100
Auloonollo Air
Ft. Bod Wftti Unor, -

10

Jam· won West' s s pade exit with
dummy·s ace. ruffed a s pade in homd .

JJORN .LOSER

G.uoronload Solloloction, Sol:onol loll Frloncl. Loa""
lln··g• · H I C.ft'l Get Ta
- . . : Colt AnJIIme F« o\po

tQIIi, After 1 P.M.' .~
IM 3111110.
.-

Com ...... Ill...... 1 - 1 -.

...._, LP. -. MoL

.

ltM

Pas!oi
Pass -1 •
Ail pa s~
Opening lead: .. K

played low . 10 trick' appeared mak·
ablr Yii:J f"i\e trump:-.. three ~ c~ s and
two mino r· suit rUffs 1n t.hc dummy
-However. West swih:h cd iJnnoyingly to
the heart jack.
Playin g lht&lt; t'oln"pltcaled dt•al.
somehow Jane s l'n scd th e po sition .
She won trick t'.l.·o in he r hand. ca s hed
the elub ace '!Od contonucd with t he
club 10. Alth ough Ea st hadn't echoed
in clubs to show her doubleton . when
West covered with th e club jack. de·
darer discarded a diamond from the
dummy . This paid great dividends
when East di scarde d a lso and West
couldn'tlead a second t ru mp.

' ~RAN K &amp; ERNEST

11 10nal Pill OI'OOMina. All

Shlhl-111 pupplw. 114-112-44111.

pootleo

11 Ellcll
12- Leona
15 Ono of tho
Goboro

P&amp;ss

uti()l') .
1\gain st four hearH . Wes t Jed the
l'll,.ib_klng:.l!n•. three. two, r\S Ea~t had

..

Trucks for Sale

Drive, 7 P.

IIU PS1 Conlp&lt;a•, R PrlniM, .,..._ And Dell

IF YOLI'RE SO
WORRIED MOUT Ti4E
FLO WE~5. 60 BACK
AND 6ET TKEM ..

S&gt;lE
KEPT T&gt;JE
FLOWERS ..

.6LA55E5.

-.

-.. _.,..

'mt

6522.

-

5I

1114 Oroncl Prill SE

OUR fEACKER
15 TALLER
AND WEARS

Loodod,:•'

.

m. hoJbl... o11aooo1 cono1. 304-

-------h. sa.--

Two ~~~M&lt;IIIM
~··· 2 (1both' 2lor
tulr2 Slootll1ol St201mo. Golllo Hclol.
oquiDOd
-illoooJ, onachod gorge, 2 car 11t t .1510.
-~~~· l llol -•1 gorago,

1171 14xlll Clolrrnonl, 3br.

~

'

2A

:1 ,.

High on my lis t is Jane Priday. from
E ngla nd . who died s udd e nlv las t
October at th e age of .iR
Ja ne - who was ~lr s . Juan at the
lime- won the World \\'omen's Team
Olympiad titl e in 196l and the World
Women's Pairs gold medal in 1966 .
Todav 's dea l. from the 19Gl
_Olympi"ad ; s huw s .L.Jne pic~ing her
way through a mine fi e ld of bad distrib·

...... - · • , .... Old,
Room To Run 110, 114-

Furnished
1 ROOntll .

32 . Mobile Homes.
for Sale"

.'

~~~~-~11.

eventa

Don't underrate.
technique

c. .~...

door, 114-1112-3802.

AKC Yo- Lob~, Wonnod,
&amp; Flrll ' ShOio
, 1*13!18 ....,.. I
. Or Anor 1:30

II Fl. 357-0131.

"'l:i:-11118.
i&gt;onwor .a

rtolor

--.

MC lhllliii_Pli'fhi,Twkll old,
,....... .. 4 - . . . . 1 72
molo,Wil-od,-·
=~..., 11Jo -·~1m

61 Farm Equipment

Nice 2 .,
Ulddlopool, II

.,...,..,

voll. 12D_'!..toto, -

$5,100,

2•

' Pass

Who are th e'

"\::4. N4lt
-..or.........
I
fi448'Jio0211.

114-245.f073 After 5 P.ll.

room

-'111411.

·orlUttl;•

Outer

~

wom en brid ge pla ye rs of'" all

AMIFII Rodlo, WMh Slo- CFA roglelorod malo Hlrnolioron
R-.IIIio,_, Wood Colllowt; Soli Polnllolnon, - " ' " " ' on~r 1t10.
movtn. C.ll 814 • • 25M. - . . !ltlllonory lloyolo, 82S.

EOH:

U:•

.

Ac-loo o(!HIIoio, IJ!!.lj 2 Pa111kHia, Rata. LanblrU,
..... . . . . cablnlllti ..,.,...: Coolultlolo, lie. Floh Tonk &amp; Pol
Stlop, 2413 Jookoon Ave. Polnl
"""'-. 120; 114-112:&amp;251.

BUDGET PRICES AT JAC~
ESTATE!, 538 ......... Pika
from 12,.. to12U. Wol~ to -

l

a-

- . 11 bond -llzor, 4000 P.U.

FumltMd •pe111ne1it, 1. Bed- IDolfvlna_,NI.ZIIouoo
ODOm, 107 Socond AVWIUI, Qol. oloro - - .-· p~~yer.
.
llpollo, S2HIIIo. uurnloo Pold 30447f1.1801.
114 441 U11After7P.II.
• Alplno Col 81oroo CD Ployw. 2
Fumlahod Apoot_,. - . ~klood Fooaoto ........... AJ.
BolhL $115.1110., Ullllllw Polol, plno Amplltlir, Alplna Cor
701 •ouilll AVWIUI ClollipoUo. A*M. SSI2 Kicker Box, ~
TV; Ford .. GT, LoBro And
814 441 4111After7R.II• .
f.ol!lgltt CoVWI IM 411 2221
IEAiinFUL APAATUEiflll AT No COlo Aftor 10 P.M. P -

~~~~======~

.

SAVINGS•••

-

are a~.~ailable on an equal
opportunily basis ..

...

Ml~llaneous

Mlrchancllse

Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this neYf'spciper

·- o~o~MITE

'.

54

2goo _ _ __ 2

This newspaPer wit! not
knowlingly accepl
advenis8ments for real estate
which is in violation of the taw.
Our readers are he.reby

ana

Aoolllblo, 114-371-2721.

Apartment
torRent

2bdrm. iopll., , .... -lrlc, ..,..
pllonteo tumlohod, launcloy.
room fooiiNioe.- lo odlocil
In IQWR. AI&gt;Dir..ilono ovolllblo
ol: VIIApiO. iMt 11r
caiiiiM-4182-3711. EOH.

onlr $1,800 Neg. no -

lndiln
4 Tolelo
5 Moving vehicle
&amp; Baaeball

Bv Phillip Alder ·

::
F - 1om 1112 • 1/111/H, Tollo 7.000 ....... t14-44M783..
~L~. Cion R - , W.ntM to bur· "II or ,...r,'
CluOI... ..... bo•'
~~.,:u~~':o Copoloo
Broughanw or LS. ¥-l,loedld;-,4::

Plolno, 1200 por - h , dopooll

Dol- . - , 11ow

HooNhJ, Prtnlo Kfi!I!IOI1

Champion
_ , , . , 2 un- To

"""- bedroom lrollor,., oonlln
sr-.~~Troller tar ron1 In ru_.

44

t

I'

ump;
Hlulm.rll • 1 if''
r.rollor
wnl.. - · -~~

112-2111.

. All real estate.advenlsing in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 Which m~akesJt Illegal
to advenlse "any prllfetence,
limitation or discrimination
"based.on rac.e, Color, re ligion,
seK familial sta tus or national
· origin, or any Intention to
make iiny such preference,
.limitation ordi.scrimlnatlan.·

1•

dry oump~ •lioO Neg, .,. ·
:1511 Wol "ump ongloie • ~ ·
lronomltlolon ltO,aoo, . .....,.;.

Uobllo -

RcJ I EstJtc

' ',

,_.lli::ll6o,:=-:I;:.::~:.::..:;::•:.:A~a.=,;4;:P::::··IoL
::,_''
::
"
1111:11 COmooo ~·
late model llock c., oomplltl:;
mlnua qln1 1nl• ' , 5 •,

Cloor- - . 51

1712.

IT'S TOO BRIISHT
IN HERE FER M'1' NAP!!
DRAW THii:t.t
CURTAINS ! ! .

iiitiii:;

1 ,.
:l •
:l XT

1tlt Pllt..-h .._r, 112.000''

199-1 by NEol. lrot

1 Large IUb
2 Gravel ridge
3 Southwestern

Vuln erable: Both
Dealer: South
Soul h
1\"rs) '&gt;orlh East

1110 Suboru l.DJOioo 4 Oooi •:
Stith! Damage To F - ~.
Fronl whHI dolve. 12,100, 114-.'
44S.fll2.
,I

2 Tror- an
114--258 ··~. ·~2br. unfUrnlah.l w/n:PIIIdo,
1l2ml. put HIIC, on AI. H
..tot.._ • ...,... roqul...t:
30W'IWJ30.

Rldl

uorowy """""'· minor::

11H Oklo Cui- S u - . :f.l ''·
~ VI, 12,0110 mllw, UQ. '•
. 30rl-e?l--'rl:n.
.
•

2·R.----In
................ 114 2MIIIlll

Qulcll.
Qolto• h
CUh
. . . ,Will
Poloo
l l·
1-.

1157

DOWN

40 Metol strend
7 Oblocti of
41 Cerpot
devollon
44 Ardon!
B Singer ·46 Sunday opoech
Short
(abbr.)
to Afternoon

• KQ 953
• A Q ; l
&amp; ,\ 10 :!

a,

2 BoQ.ooome, S - · S. 218,
Gom::.-o.. $200/llcL
Pluo
' =1337. - . 114-25M7II,

................ Honloo Forrno,
811124, -~ Ohio,
1-.elt:t, oolc lor Jorr.

t'

$1425 114-MI-2SI1 ........... ., ,.
114-MII-2144 tlpm I
"

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

of

N7.

..

AM~ ' '

ment

29 Korean city

SOLTH '•'

able. 150,000 ........ PI; PI, PWJ :~
AC, 1·-- lapo,
doniiat.
OUI-fc;
,.'

Small 2 ~adroom rumw..d
homo. ltOO dopooll. 3QU7J.
8512.

over who gets custody of a vanlly license plate."

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

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

aM-.185 uu .,.., epm.

. .h _ . . , . , . . - ond
NOr
IIICnOJihrough ...
moll unlll ""' hoWl -Tgolod
lho oflorlng.

'It' s !he first d1vorce I know of where they've argued

p

In P........,, equlppocl kMchonO.

INC711CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUIUIHINQ CO.
fW
IWMnda thll you do .....
-

..

• K IU 2
•K Q J !18 l

59 Time - - holl
60 Accomplish- .

31 Delayed
35 Jewloh proytr
Uncanny

•I 08i2
-oJ 9 6 5
+ 6 :1

•J

'TOI..J Mf..FW 1i1 £
f3AL.AA.l(f.D ~O'i )(T

1157 ChO..- C o - 4 ::
Cyllndor, I Spood, t.C, ~
Exoollonl Ccnclllon, .,_,
B..koo, 12.500 Flml, . - .·:

•

-ll'tly,l~.
on. ondtllroo---

Buslneaa
Opportunhy

21

7 ·Nooth,

lMge 3 b t oom tlrm MuM.
poolly . 11410 ......

TriiMio PhOI"'I!!IIhor Anllololo
for WI ddl..... I Ott. Ewnta
Col Kowln 1-.111111 After s
p.IOI.

Financ1al

7

.. Q l 3

lOll

58 So•~·

Novello
27 Tr1nagrt11td ·

EAST
o1 K J 9

WEST

1Hf. I.Je,ED RJR A •

... ...,

..... - " " - . ON8

4

IT tXfS f'WAY I.IJITI-1

fiX) . A BALMJ:::tD
DIET I&gt;MENDMWT

To.._

John

10 . . . ......

53 SleeplngIICkMnlly
57 Havlog rich

18 Serb, o.g.
' 19 Alcoholic
beverage
22 StHp olopo
~4 .Wild lhHp
25 Aclor -

'&gt;ORTH
.. A t087 5 2

3 Announcemem.

4e Allude (Ia)
51 Writer

IIOh

I,...

KIT 'N' CARL YI.E® by Larry Wright

8url-

1 V In RSVP
5 Blenk'
9 Sh-d
12 - AuDio ··
t3 Poured
14 Chonl
16 DrHolng lor

.
~end fm your Astr 6-Graph pred•CIIons

.

exposures
1oday. by mailing $1.25 10 Aslro ·Grapf(_j· Cl!iNCER (June 21-July 22f A" wmmng
c/o thiS newspaper. P.O. Boll 446_5, New alti tude 1s ess ential for victory IOd ay
, Yo rk. NY 10163 Be sure to state your E stabt•sh•ng the r'1gl1t menfahty w1t1 g•ve
you an edge over
comper1110n

-- •·

-·.
-- -- -.....

~~.~con-

::..'7b.~--

Golllpollo.-.

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12

011.....

l*d

Woltllloilla. 111 dJ 1111•
, VI'IIA FUIIHINRE
4 Ulloa Oul AI. 14t .
1141. . . .

~ Hoi• ohOid Fumloltlngo
AnoiAppllolncoo. Uoll- hlo.
.... 00; - 1141.00;

Living .._St.---:~:~~~
......
• •
•
00;
Aolllga- •
llongoo •
WI-~ ·

,

-

lion. ·hi. M Wod. N;
Forgll Our REPO. J

55 . . Building
· Supplies
Blodo, brloll. ol- win- · lln4olo, .... Clouda Win· - Rio Orondo, OH Col 1'142411-8121.

Situations which have already ge nerated
reasonable returns wil l produce further
gains in the year ahead . tn the comu:~g
. months. the harvest could be pa1rtlcularly
lar,ger.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ·r h\s can
be a grahlying day . The good you've
dooe tor oth ers may come back t ''you m
many told - not necessarily through the .
individuals you've helped. Get a .J ump ~n
lite by under standing the •nt l/ uences
wfiJch gove rn you in the ye~ r ahead.

'

••

'.

t

I

....

-,

•

'

I

...

..

..

.

'

�Pomero~iddleport,

Page 1o-The Deily Sentinel
'

Ohio.

9

•

Mavericks
defeated by
.Houston

1·994: Meigs· County news in review
Conllnuld from pege1

Jolin carey.

liall ia.IICICIIRd fortbe dcliJD p11ue
oi!K Dal po11io11 oCU.S. 33-IDIICr·
ltate 77 COIIIICC!IW aeareat to tbe

Nov. 6 - Investigators ended
the sean:b or tbe Rose farm. unrovcrUI8 about two handfuls or polal·
tlal evideDce dming an inveatip·
lion to determine if infant bodies
were buried oo die proptrty,.
Nov. 8 - Vollerl approved bodl
Soulbem and EasterD sc~l dis·
uicts levies. lncumbe.!)t Nf~igs
County Commissioner J;'red noff·
maD woo tbe ooly cooteslicd county
oft"ICC. Regiooallrsislators eJecta!
iDclude: John A. CMey, 94th Ohio
House District; Jan Micbael Loog,
17tb Senate District; and Frank
Qemean&lt;, Sixth U.S. Coopessiooal District.
·
Nov. 'II - David Persons was
found guilty of felony tbcft and
fcloay tlccing cbargcs relalcd to a
Marcb incident in wbicb be led
authorities oai a 100-mile per oo,...

~-wood bridge.

Oct. 4 - More lban 100 resi·
dents mmplli!!trl about DI:W power
liDes beta 1m a RecdsYille bydroeJec;tric plailt to a RutlaDd substa·

lioa.
Oct. 5 - Rudllld Higb Sdlool
danolilion bep..
Oct. I - Pomeroy boats its
Slallwbeclcr Festival.

•1•'

Oct. 11 - Middleport

un~

Plains Sewer District; and pave tbe levels of production. Also,

lbc lmponance of developing tbc
countz witb state Rep. candidate

. OC'I'OBEil
Oct. 2 - Men tiiiD $1.3 mil·

a

acw plaa to inc:teak enfon:ement
IIMDII 1u IIDdlmls.
Oct. 17 - Tbe annual Meigs
County Sbowcase is bdd.
Oct. 21 -Two Meigs County
men - orisinally cbarged wilh
auravatcd npe; asgravated tid·
ntppinalllllaiAlbay or as~
WcJao. ill May -· pleaded .uilty to
fcloat~:::U ol ob&amp;trucUDg justk:e.
· 1 were iunotby "Bo"
WUiil of Syracuse and Dave Sis·

cbase.

. '
Nov. 14 - Wcrlt beJius oo the

Pmleloy Downtown Revitalizalioa
Project. Also, dlret West Vifaiaia
. man oll'llnlllld.
men were .-ted oo cbarges relaiOct. 25 - Middleport resciod!l ed to a poaching incident.
tbc proposed landlord ordinance
Nov. IS - Pomeroy s Danny
allet a dozen landlords complain Zirlde pleaded innoceDlto attempt·
about tbc fees that would. be ed murder and felonious assault
'PIP"""'
charges in the 1989 poisoning of
Oct. 26 - Soutbem Local Gary Snouffer.
· · .
Scbooll Superin~nt .Bob Ord
Nov. 16 -The Meias C~ly
auountes bis re11,nauon after Cbamjlel' of COIIIIIICitC nonunated
·IIIOIC .,_ 20 yars m tbe district. new' members to its boanl of direcPolllcmy Cl!u!!Cil~lc!cnt Jilhn ~ un . _ _ _ __
· Muuer-namcdMCIIICounty's
Nov. 17- Both Meigs and
Peuoo oldie Y-.
· Gallia County sites are listed as
Oc:t .. 27 - Danny Zirkle and }lotential locations for a new
s.ab Snouffer, botb of l'ommly, regional jail. Also, about 100' Bil
were indlcWI by a Ma;iss County Bend residents auended a Public
.,.a jury ill die poisciniDg of Gary Utilities Commission of Obio
Snouffer, Mn. Soouffer's ex-bus- meeting that would drop die long. '-'d.
distance charge between Mason
Oct. 30 -The Meigs Commis- and Pomeroy excbanges.
Nov. 18- Pomeroy's Sarah
sion bired Obio Bridge Corp. to
rebuild tbc. bridge over IK Sbade Snouffer pleaded innocen~ to
Rivet-Keno.
auemptcdmurder and felomous
NOVEMBER
- assault cbargcs lardle 1989 poisoo·
. Nov. 2.:- Racine lays 1,87Sfeet ing or ber busband, Gary Snouffer.
Nov. 20 -The new Keno
ofnewsidewalk.
Nov. 5 - Meigs and state Bridge Jets top Meiss priorily for
audlorlllcs spend~ of IK ~- ~tc capital fund&amp; b&gt;: the commlsend scarcbing bcbmd tbe Racane IIOIIeiS. Also noted m descending
Harold Rose Sr., ,_., for the order were: Meigs Coonty Roads
muins of infants. Nancy Hollistet 28 and 32 repaving; pave: brick side
- (JUo lieutenant governor- vis· streets off Middlepmt's North SecIts Meigs County and empb•siud ood A venue; develop tbc Tnppus

rarm

the
Meigs commissioners may Jli!OIIe a
state grant for a one-county jail
facility.
Dec'. 13 - The Mei1s Coaoly
Sheriffs Department will need
about $29,000 w finish tbc year' a .
payroll due to Ienglhy investip·
lions that ri;quircd overtime. Also,
Middleport officials
they
should end with a surplus while
being audited by the state. Additionally, Middleport Councilman
Paul Gerard stepped down after
seven years on the board.
. . Dec. 14- R~dand ~ olllcials state the vaUage will end Ia
· the black.
Dec. 16 - Meigs Counay oft!.
cials announced tbis year it will
end in the black after uansrerrina
funds to cover a sbortrall.
Dec .. 20 - Authorities exbume
the remains of an ·infant thatip!B··
ently died from crib death in 1984.
The remains of Lisa ·Rose, two.month-old daughter of Mary and
Harold Rose, were disinterred in
connection with an,inveatiplioo of
tbe Rose family. Also, former
Meigs County Deputy a.y Wolfe
of Racine pleaded no contest to
misdemeanon:bargcs o( mei!IJ:inf.
cerated.
..
Dec. 21 - Tbe U.S. 33 "••aecDec. 4 - The Meigs County tor's first phase between Rock ~
Emergency Medical Services were Springs and Five Points sells for
awardeci a state honor f&lt;I rescuing $12.3 million, readying for cona Meigs High School student from . struction in the spring.
a wrecked automobile earlier in the
Dec . 22 - Ron Eastman, a
fCBf.
_
..:.....member .nf tbe Eas.tern local
Dec. 6 -. ~iddleport Commu- school's, resign~d ~ince be will
oily Assocaal!on's 'rpm Dooley moveoutoftbedislrict.
steps down after two years as presideni pointing to attracting new
Dec. 25- Meigs County's varbusinesses and holding special ious road crews state they are ready
events as key group achievements. ·for winter snow.
·
Also, Pomeroy may lease a new
Dec. 27 - Jack Crisp water weD on Syracuse property to founder of tbe Leading Creek Coohelp resolve water problems.
servancy ~strict - is onlcled to
Dec. 7 - Middleport could seek eitber be incai'ceratcd in tbc Meip.
another two fll!!nds or revitalization County Jail or undergo treaa-nt
grant funding during 1995.
· - · for belirt problems by visiting MorDec. 8 . Regional jail officials ~ ga!J ·County Judge Dan. Favr~. ·
indicate the proposed four-county Cnsp m~ also pay for his doclor 1
regional jail could be lower than fees, die Judge
originally cstimaled.
· .
. Dec. 28 - Meags County put
Dec. 9 - · A $30 mUlion-a-ycar \he. final touches ~n its 175tb
sales company opens a wholesale · ~aye_rsary observauon '11Y prqlll·
warehouse in Portland.
mg a ume capsule.
Dec. 11 - Meigs Mine 31
Dec: 30- Eight~·five bousc~gins producing coal from a new holds .m the Page valle get new
Iongwall panel, readying for record water lmes.

Noble-Summit Road in Salisbury
and Rutland townships.
Nov. 22- David M . PeJSons is
senlellCed to more than three years
on felony fleeing and theft cbargcs.
Nov. 23 ~Dennis J. Ellis, or
Vinton, was sentenced IS yean to
life wbea be pleaded guilty to tbe
sbolgun slaying or his wife, Deborab K. EUis.
Nov . 28 - Hunting season
opens with record kills in Meigs
County and Ohio taken throughout
the week-long sbotaun season.
Nov. ~9- Middleport invests .
in a computer system to help
stteamline the vUlage fmances.
DECEMBER
Dec. 1 - Gallia County beat
out sites in Meigs and Jackson
counties for the location of tbe
regional jail. Also, Jack Crisp fonner director of the Leading
· Creek Cooservancy Dislrict - will
have to begin his 18-montH prison
sentence soon following a visiting
judge's order.
.
Dec. 2 - David M. Persons
began his five-year jail sentence
foUowing a second trial on charges
be escaped from a Veterans Memorial Hospital window while incar-

amounce

ade!cd.

ad aoo1 o( tbe prosecution's case:

n:aull• of DNA tests on blood
fouad at !be crime scene and in
sm.-·s Fml Bronco.
·
· 1be risky IICtlc saves Simpaoo 1
bllf-miiUou dollars or more and

bave loll coosldenble weigbt over
die.~ if be UDdenloocl be ID IVCIIIC for IIIPCal.
" ~!C full con(~ncc in my

loliaif

lawyers, Simpson .replied.

Silllpaon is charged with murdering bis ex-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and ber friend Ronald
· - ool~ outside Ms. Simpson's
omdomiDIIDD 011 June 12.
Wltb no murder weapon or
known eyewi!DCSscs, tbc proseculioa's case rests largely oo scienlif.

1c evidence.
his clouhle-~ trial 0t110
Simpson's legal team, featuring
die r.t triiCk. Opening stalmc!!ts, die Datioo's most prominent cbal·
wllicll alUid bave. ~ u 1lle u
lengers or genetit evidefiCC, bad
Min:b, •Y beJill by the end . piiJIIICII to argue before the judge
otdlis Dlllltb.
lbat the DNA tests sbouldn't be
· B• IK move also dc:uicl Simp- used as evidence because tbey
ICI! a plWldalluue for appeal if aren't generally accepted by tbe
be is coovicted: He ~uld ~ be ICientifi&lt;: &lt;miJII!IDilj.
:
able ., que dial gCI!Ctic cvideDI:e
Now tbe defeusc will now tate
- hitjlii4Jiill71dmilled.
· its DNA battle straight to die jury.
"It - a very JDiay decision It will que that tbe findings can't
dial
cxperienQed trim· be trusted because of sloppy police
. IIIII
lawyer would Illite," Wildt in ptbcrinJ and lestiag blond
pa11ta

:%:'1y

••arcr

~$= ~~·'rn,~-·

.

a~ aDa~~~~~r!bt:iJ!I~e~::~ -·ed." lt's a great~assistance to our- ·

iJCvelopmCDts dUriDg
IDI from 'A' to 'B' to 'C,' wltirlwiad bcarinJ Wednesdiy, die
'fti paiuslllliaJitto 'll.'"
lint court actloa since:. a boliday
· · Superior Cuurt JudJe lJtDilc m lJrl:lk bepn Dec. 16: . .
. · ·
· utc4 Sialpsciu, wbo l)ipearc4to ·... .,....l'o said the 12 j~ and 12

'

,:.·,c·..,,,· .. --·_. _·,·.

ney Marcia C
. lark. "We now lmow
all. tbe evidence is going to come
in:'
. .·

nny:. $tamp.:op.erat].ln;cl.er. 'way at posfoffices .~ •.

· -~

AJ...EXANl)RlA; VL (AP) -II Courier service in West. Oranae,
· - - a oliO f"IJI) SIIJiip opera · .NJ. "l beaad aoour(lbic llllnUC);

.

- ·

case," said Deputy District Allor· '.

11rops found.ncar the slashed and
stabbed bodies. Blood also was
found in Simpson· s Brol!co, on the
.driveway QC his estate, and in lhe

Ai Alexandria!s Rose Hill postal

here for." · ·
1 R b t

· ita:tioa ibe·line snaked back and

N y

b 1·

e.*.=:~·~
~.:.;::
itj::;:::~~.
~~in
!C:::~p~=~=!y~
:~
::o~~~:n~;::=~~~~
. . - aeccssity- ~
dou~ lines falling the post .offlce · out stamp vending machine. · en were willing to put an estn 29•"Dppl. · .

Tueldly wu the first bu•'neu
day for post offices siacc tbc price
of mailing a letter weDI up to. 32
. cents. In places it looked lite
·eva ,one n11iled new sumps • tbc

parkinl ·lot. "I ba!e never seen

sudl .~ jasaid~'uphoatbcre, ~~=J•

mas,

·

of tbem

is out
·
You can t ' 3-cent Slaps anywhere downtown,'' said Jolm B••
ber, manager of the Aon Street
postal station in Harii'Oid, Coon.
"We're seDiaJtban 85 fast as
we can s.U them,'' said POliti!»-

-time:

"You couldll't even pt in tbc
door. Tiley MK out 10 the IIRCt."
llld Don McGraw •anclina in line
• tbc main poll office ill New.t,
NJ.

sewue

Rmm.t bll
·
''The ,wbolefind -

·

"I didn't realize everyone else . ter Ricl!anl Enlinlll:f In CbadcsiOn.

W.Va. His offkefour~~= 3cents....,. ill
-·
y.

-iiiCSIIdlydle-!litul'ion,"

llid McGraw, who operates a

cent stamp on a letter nlbcr tiiiD ·
wait.
•'The most annoying tbinJ ia
that tbe vending macbines are not
working," Jeqy aart, a coosul·
tant, said as be stood in line at
w:e:·
gton'li 20th Slniet s•Mjm.
lines were ont tbc door ill! ·
Wb · , W.Va. By midday, tbc
facility bad sold IIIOfti lbaa 7S,OOO
stamps and sent tbc poetm••ter. to
Pittsburgh an bour away for
103.000J!IORI.

"Beat tbc Rusb: G stamps 32
cents,'' urged a siga in Washington's 19th Street postal station as
customen waited to dO their buyin&amp;.
·
Moya King said there bad been
an uproar wben a man bad gone to
tbc front and told a clerk' that b~
just wanled 3-cent stamps.
"That's die reason we've been
standing in line for aia,.bour," King
said. "It's ;pnazing tluit ~Y migbt
not realize that's what we're all

.;;-....,.~
;.;..;.·--'·..._
. .....
- --~ Meig~land~transfelspost~CI-· ---~-0

Tbe following land uanlfers
~ -dcd aeCendy ill the oflkc
, fil ~.f:::" Rtlcoldct F~
..
Dco!LPieemyer Fomt PloducU
io Robert S, and Rutb E. Sblin,
Lean. 20 ..-;
.

Brickles to Marvin E: and Bonnie
H. Aldlouse, Scipio, .337 acres;

deceased. 10 Ilonna Fil£b and Freda 1.888 acres;
Bays, Lebanoo, one acre; ·
.
Deed, Patrick D. and A_my E.

Deed, Edison and Bernice J.
to AI ~nd M,arjorie E .
TRimm. Mlddlq!ort lot;
Deed. Raymood E. and l'nl1ce$
Bernita MUSODto Paul E. Masson,

.

Qat~:r

Deed, Freda li~to Donna

Fitcb. Lebanon. one

Wood to· state of Ohio, Cheater,

.124 acres; '
'Deed, Patrick D. and Aucby E.

;

- Deed, Raymond Sr. and Elizabeth Lobo to Matthew J. H~yes, Wood to state of Obio, Cbester,
3.549 acres;
Paneroy parcels;
.
.
Deed, Patrick D. and Aucby E.
Deed,
Otillia
Romine
to
Dcect JCeaaelb and Betty L. · Cbcaler. ,.663 acres;
Kathryn
'II.
Lambert.
et
al.,
Rutland
,Wood
to state of Obio, c•es!fr
Deed. Leta Hall to Leta Good- •
Yoiilil. Ona "Y and Pilip Willeparceis;
I
.
parcels;
_
, breoner to Tbomaa Anderson, win, Bcdfonl, 1.174 acres;
Easemen•, Fenton J. and Jeannie . . Affidavit, Henry L. Moore,
Deed, Marcia M. Terry to
, . , lol;
~. WIUI• Rl~bard and. Rebecca Jean Terry; Middlep&gt;n L. Taylor to Jeffrey 0 . and Teresa deceased', to Lois Moore, Racine
lots· ·
·
'L: Patterson. Rutland;
··
.
'
p ca E. f' !lh'4o Slie ADD ... J*llola;
'
Easement,
Patrick
D
.
and
·
Deed,
Ricbard
D.
and
Stella
Righi
of
way,
Rolland
L. and
Hllllm W. J;:t ,. Jr. 10 ~ M.
h . ... JJ 71 L. PIPIIIIIO Middle- BlessiJtg to. f..ow!:U D. and Bonnie Audrey E. Wood to stale ·of Ohio, 'Marilyn Sue Halley to CoiUII!bus
Southern Power, Chester;
Sue Cbcvalicr, Salisbury. 1.4 acres; Chester, .021 acres;
lui;
.
Deed,
Rusty
D.
and
Margarea
Right of.•way, Deborab and
Deed,
Ray
IIIII
Juanita
Lambert
pad
Dceil, 11-ic D. AlliDan to
Lynn
Bookman
to
slate
of
Ohio,
·
Micbael
P. Wolfe to CSP, Cbester;
to
Lila
l)edrard,
Rita
R.
Dec:tanl
DIWJ ·c. _. JuBa B. fila, Syra·
Right of way, Leland ad, Ma-·
Mullins, Tamela M. Haney, Rut- Salisbury, Ul6 acres;
.
cg~e; .27~acn:: .
L
. Easement. Ronald G. and Loret- garet Pukcr to CSP, Chester;
.
Deed, ~)' A. and CllldoCIC · 1111'! pM'CCis;
Cenificate, Delben R. Ours, ta McDade to state of Ohio, Olive,

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'IUDAMTM. 11....
Vol. 45, NO. 172

1 Section , 10 Pagooo 3S cents

Pomerc:iy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 6, 1995

Copyrlghl1994

A

Mul!lmedle
inc. Newop1per
.
.

-•

Voinovich leads charge againSt mandates

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
,M,IIIIO,

•. = ..... ,

NC, ... CIUlee, ...... . .

By ~THERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Obio Gov. George Voinovicb warned Congress
that a balanced budget amendment may face difficulties if the unfunded
mandates but gets watered down en route to passage.
"
Voinovicb helped put together a coalition of state and local government leaders that had a hand in writing the anti·mandate bill. introduced
this week as Sl,lhe farst Senate biD of !he new session.
The bill is on a fast ~rack in both the House and Senate, and awo Scna1e
. cOJiUninees beida joint ~ng Thursday to speed its progress.
In his testimony to the committees as spokesman fortbe Natio~al Gov' elllQfS Assoc·iation, Voinovicb warned lhe senators that the elected offi·cials who implement federal mandates expect them to protect the package:
''Enactment of S I, without weakening amendments, is the single most
important step Con)Uess can take to begin restoring the balance in federal,

Grand jury declines
to indict deputies
Murder suspect, doctor face charges

1992 FORD
ESCORT GT
oyL, • llpll., A/C, ......

....... _

--4··-- Ill
·n,

state and looil relations," be said.
"I can assure you that what you do with Ibis legislation will have a
major impact on our support of a balanced budget amendmenl, which we
expect you to pass."
.
AI a news conference later, Voinovich said lhe governors need to be
assured tbat tbeir budgets wouldn' t be harmed by efforts to balance lhe
federal budget.
.
.
,
. "I wouldn't support it without that" guarantee, Voinovach S3!d. " I Ill
very serious."
Any change to the Constitution bas to be ratified by the !cgislatures in
lhree-fourtbs or the states. A balanced budget amcndmem as expected to,
have a better chance of congressional passage this year lhan in lhe past. so
lhe threat of statehouse foot-dragging could be potent. .
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M ., tried to rea~sure Yoinovich and otber
govemmem leaders. He said if state budget·protecbng language wa' nol

be included in the body of a balanced budget amcndmcn~ it would instead
be ad.vanced in a sepataiC bilL
·
.
.
Voinovich has been lhc governor.;' lead ncgolialor on the mandates
issue, working wilh lhc U.S. Conlercncc ol Mayors, Nauonal League of
Cities. National Associalion ot Coun11es, Nattonal Conference o~ Slate
· Legislatures, and other groups during U&gt;e draflin~ of the mandates ball.
He was one of four Ohaoans who ":'ere prommently featured Thursday
when U1e Senate Goverrunental Affairs and 8,1/.d&amp;CI conwullees JO!Dtly
.
..
considered tljgJcgislation.
State Rep. fane Campbell, D-Clevcland, was there to speak for all state
Jegisla!ures, U.S. Rer. Rob Portman, R·OhiO, was !here on behalf of the
. House sponsors, and Sen. John Glenn. D·Ohio. was there as lop Democrat
on one of the commillees dealing with the legislation and as longtime •.
advocale of inandaiC relief.

a

Workin to cut down on waste
Device enhances
recycling effort ·~
in Meigs County

From AP, Staff Reports
.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A Mason County .gmnd jury declined
to charge two deputies in tbe case of a handcuffed teenager who was shot
By JIM FREEM~N .
to death as be tried to drive off in their cruiser, Prosecutor Damon Morgan
Sentinel News Stall
said.
·
Manley's Recycling Center
in Middleport will now be able
The grand jurors returned no indictments Wednesday after bearing evi.
deuce from a state police illvestigation into the death of Jeremy Halley,
to process recyclable items more
17, Gallipolis.
·
quickly - tbanks in part to a
Depulies John McCoy and Linden Miller arrested Halley on Nov. 12
$30,000 grant through the Galfor allegedly driving off willmut paying for $12 .88 in gasoline from a
Iia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
.
Waste District.
•
convenience 'store, aulllorities said.
Halley ·was sitting in the back seat or the cruiser, his hands cuffed
The center recently purbehind him, when he managed to bring his arms forward and climb oul
cbased ca new $50,000 baler tbat
into the front seat, then try to drive off, authorities said.
will speed the processing ·of
Both officen fll'Cd at tbe car, with tbree of McCoy's shots hitting Hal·
materials through lhe recycling
ley, police said. McCoy told investigators be believed Halley intended to
center.
.
run over MUier.
The $30,000 graht was comI
McCoy and Miller were suspended without pay pending complelion of
bined with $20,000 from the
tbe einvesligatioo. They could return to work soon; a sberUf'! deparl!l\J:Ill
recycling center to purchase the
spokeslllan said.
·
large, ll·foot-tall baler. accordWhite faces three charges
ing to Roger Manley, owner and
In otber action, the grand jury indicted a Gallipolis man on three
operator of the recycling center.
charges. The man, Johnny White, is facing an aggravated murder charge
Lance Wilson, director'of the
in Gallia County,
·
·
GJMV Solid Waste District,
White was indicted for malicious assault, burglary and attempted
presemed Manley with a grant
aggravated robbery, Morgan said.
certificate ·;rtrursday afternoon
White allegedly shot his coushi. Donald White, in the 'face Dec. 2 at a
and walched as the machine's
Henderson tavern and tben attempled to rob tbc Marcus Rice residence in
baling capabilities were demon· NEW BALER - Manley's J{ecycUns Center 1D Middleport recently purchased a new, $50,000
Southside at gunpoint:
,
.
strated.
baler wllh assistance from a $30,000 grant secured through the Gallla-Jackson-Meigs-VIntnn
Donald While survived the sbo01ing; Johnny White reportedly fled the
Items are placed il} a hopper
Solid Waste District: Above, owner-operator Roger Manley demonstrates the new machine's
residence after Rice family members heat him during th.e robbery anempl
and then lransported· into the
capabilities to District Director Lance Wilson.
·
•
.
,
The events occurred atter Johnny White allegedly shot and killed his
crushing chambcP via a large
wife, Bonnie:L. White, at their Chalham Avenue residence in Gallipolis.
conveyer belt. The crushed
"Providing a grant for this
tbe fulure for a number of romI he district is working closely
White, who pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, is in the Gallia
materials are I han bound and
baler is o.ne example that both
munities in the district ;" he
will&gt; recyclers witbin the district
County Jail in lieu of a $200,000 cash bond. His murder trial h!IS been set
~nloaded from lhe olher end of
Manley's Recycling Center and
added.
area. he said.
·
for Feb. 20.
the baler, an Excel Model EX60
the solid waste districl arc
Copley said the district is
The approved solid waste
Physician handed Indictment .
·built in St. Charles, Minn.
preparing for the fulure: 10 recy·l
working to achieve the goal out·
plan provides for a granting proThe grand jury also indicted a Point Pleasant doctor on two coums of
Items such . as newspapers,
cle a higher volume of maleri lined by the state of Ohio - 10
gram from tbe district to public
childconcealmcm.
·
magazines, computer pap'er,
al." he said.
reduce the amoum of solid
and private entities involved in
Dr. Bakshy Chhibbcr, 43, allegedly [ook his two daughlers to Greece
cans and plastics will be pro. "To reach these higher vol ·
waste cmering landfills by at
rccycling ·and which have the
in ·August during a court orde!'ed. visilalion and later to New Delhi, India,
cessed by the new baler •. said
umc goals, curbside recycling
least 25 percent .
·
mosl capal,lility to assist in
and is refusing to return .
..
·
·
disarict spokesman Scott Cop·
programs will be, de yeloped in
· In slriving to auain !his goal.
meeting I he waste reduction
The doctor is in the process of divorcing his wife, Bhaira,vi Chhibber
ley.
~ .. ~ --~- . __
·~-\. _ -- ~
- goal; hc note!!:---·
:
~ (.Continued on !!age 3)
~ •
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- c.... - )~..;.;...;.;;;;;=;;;.,.-;;...;;..,.__ _ _ _ _ _.....;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.- - - - " ' - - - - -.- - - - - - " " '.

Gingrich app~ars m~re flexibl~ f
_after _'positive' _talk::,with Clinton .
oftbt:~ontract's

:Syrc.-cuse .C ouncil .
.names ptesident··

said, "Iw.antt~·startbyg~ttingyou

~yKATHRYN. CROW

.s .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Qn . 'adoption
IObills
.
$3 ,750.24; guaranty meier,
·c
the sccon'd
day
of
the
new
by
mid-April.
think
beyond
the
nonn."
c
2,o° 17 .05 : ·cemc 1cry,...,
•oo, ,21 .
10
H
S
k N
'
Senline1 orresptmdenl ·. ·•
"l'tp going to do my best to
"Maybe we can' t do it, b\!1 I'll
Ka!hryn Crow was re -elecled
A 1995 Ford four-wheel, three•
ongrcss, ouse pea er. ewt
(hngrach offered coopcrauon to make good thing·s happen for 1ell you,·any signal we can send ao
president of Syracuse Village
;011 pickup truck with a snow plow ·.
De~ocrats ~?thd..chkalblengcddlawh
. • America. I do not want to sec a !he poorest Americans that says,
Council at Thursday's council and
was purchased by the village and
to
m
eyon
I c series of partisan baules.·· the pres·were
going
into
a
21sl"century
..
.
·
·
·
tl
for $22,800. The
rna ers
1e water bo•&lt;d
" ·
'd · tb Re bl '
organazabona1 meetmg.
~·
nonn n~o~sa enng ed P~f t· ident said.
and so·are you' ... begins to change
Mayor James Pape named the
village sold the old dump truck foi
can agen . o tax .cuts an we are
The speaker. for his part,-·sig · the game," lie said.
same commiuee members as last , $3,000, which will be applied to
refonn.
naled some flexibilily, saying the
He called for a "creative and ...
year, with !be exception of -Donald !he deb~ Crow said.
After. what be cal}~d "a very, contract was . "open 10 improve - cooperative" bipartisan c.ffortto
Shaffer, who re signed. Three
Addilionally, a $5,000 tempotransform Medicare, the federal
months ~go, Ernie Sisson was
rary appropriations for the water
very posCI'ttave meehebngWhwithHPresi- mcnt."
dent . hmton art t T
ate ouse,
"We don ' t think we wrote in health insurance program for the
appoinlcd to fill Shaffer's vatancy.
dcparunent and $10,000 for the Yil·
· G mgnc testa aed hursday after- stone. We think we had in Scptem· elderly. from "a large . clunky,
. .Also , the following were
!age. ,
appoinlcd chainnen .10 the threeLarry Lavender rCJlnrted the
noon before the tax-writing House ber some good ideas. BUI that was inefficient govemmenl sys1em" to
Ways and Means Committee , five months ago . The world "a market-drivep system."
o·
' ·
member committees: street, ..,all
cond !lions
on Dra' dgeman s treet
whicfi will be responsible for draf[. chan~es,',' he said. .
·
. · He als9 suggesled the earned
NEWT GiNGRICH
Roush ; finance, Kathryn Crow ; ne&lt;:d 10 be repaired because it.• shp·
ing lhe most important clements of
Gm~~tch wssed out a grab bag mcome t~lt credit. a program for
ordinance, Dennis Wolfe; safety . pin g. Council has tried for lhree
~e,CJOP ' s "Contract With Amcri- of addauonaladeas, rangmg from a !he working poor. be n;struc!u~d
. .
. '
, fire and emergency, Eber Pickens
years w resolve the problem, bul
fundamental .overhaul of Medacare to more s!ron~ly favor .marned
less ~~le. , . . .
.
Jr...;~planning:.and dC·V C IOp!ll !!_Ot~
, -.eoul!l~g~! no r:!;SflO!lS\t'Jln U&gt;e"&lt;.:O~!t:=:-:-Gingrich used his appearance as · .to a tax .
Jl.eliLJ10?LPI:OPIC........eoupj!: 8~0ver-smgle-p.eople::eufi:: - -6ingncb s l£stamony came.ajtea:;--- Ernie Si ss on:. recreation, ·Larry and slcps needed for correcl!~n .
wJme~s - rare lor a speaker b~y lapi&lt;Jif'MifiJ!illefs. ,
rently, at offers c~edats of up to
he, Senate MaJoraty Leader Bob Lavender: London Pool. Dill . Ebcr Pi cken s was askc.d to fmd
10 launch the maralllon of hearings
He acknowlc;clged tbe !apt~p· tax $2:528 to people watb two or m.ore
Dole, R-Kan ., and other. congres- Roush: new s media, Katbryn · some aliswers on this problem . .
leading up to lhe anticipated House credumav be a nutty adea but children and up to $306 for chaldswnal leaders met Wltb Clinton.
Crow: health and sanitalion, Lrury_
MinersvilLe re s idenas serve!!
Lavender; buililing inspection ,
waler by the vfilagc arc concerned
Dennis Wolfe ; live sto ck ,' E bcr
about lhc sup(lly oh watcr di!C; .to a
'
house trailer being )ocalcd on top
Pickens Jr.
of a waler line . 'llie mayor sajd tbe
A Is(! , I. C:: arson Crow w:as
named village solicilor.
situation will be resolved .
WASHINGTON (AP) - The creating new jobs. But it was likely 'initially reported. The revised fig- and services.
Pape
reported
Syracuse
will
n01
If somelhing would happen ,
nation's jobless rate edged down- to be unwelcome on Wall Street, ure was the highest since October.
Dur lhe report shOwed little sign
cos 1s would prohibitive 10 get
ward in December to the lowest whetc investors have been con- 1987, when 550,000 new jobs were of inflation . The average hourly win the location of the park di stricl.
level in more than Jour years, cerned that the rate of economic created.
w:lge rose 3 cents. ·about in line according to Meigs County Com- under !he !railer and correct tbe
problem, Papc added .
demonstrating that job creation growth could fuel inOation and
Robust job growth in 1994 was with · what most economi s t~ were ml•sioncr Fred .Hoffman. The park
district
office
will
be
in
lhc
Iili
er
Signs need to be replaced, saitl
remai~s relatively bealtby despiie
lower t¥ value of their holdings.
one of the reasons · tbe Federal expecting. In November, tbe aver·
control
building,
which
is
already
Village
Mar shal Tim Gillilan .
six interest rate increases last year.
The Labor Department reported Reserve pusbed up short-term age hourly rate declined 2 cenls .
The Labor Department said j also that the nation's nonfaim .pay- interest rates six times by a total of Wage increases remained relatively r~nted by the county and th ey .Gillilan was commended for doing
today thai the December rate was rolls grew by an estimated 256,000 2.5 percentage points. While infla- low aU year.
.would save money by, sharing the a great job. He was hired within the ·
.
5.4 percent, down from Hi percent in J:!ecember. That news normally tion has remained low, economists
las t two monlhs.
The, Labor Department said 3.5 building, Papc said.
in November and ,the lowes! level , might calm investors since most say the rate of job growlb shows niimon new jobs were created in all
Th e ending balance for funds
A mayor's report .sbowed
since July 1990. ,
economists were predi~ng a bigb- . !he demand for'l~bor is. strong of 1994, an average of more than included : general , $21,732 .24 ; receipts of $989 for December. For
The news was good for the er number.' But tbe November rate enough to pusb up labor c.om, 290,000 per monlh ami a 10-year st•eet cons.truction , S 12, 304 .49; lhe 9eilr, reccirts wer!! $10,731.
Wbite House, which bas been tout- was revised sharply upward to resulting in bigbcr prices for goods high.
highway, . $8,466 .20 ; . fare ,
The police report .for December
.
ing President Clinton's SUC9(:SS in 488,000 from the sizable 350,000
$4,51l7.(l9;
water,
$1.326.49:
pool
,
(Continued on Page 3)
•

_-Natiorraljob/t!]SS
rtJte
declin_
e
.best
in
.4
years
.

t

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I

Pick 3:
6-7-9
Pick 4:
0-6·7·1 '
Buckeye 5:
4-6-9-22-30

liM

1994 NISSAN
KING CAB
...... M, ...... llr gp¢,

.

alternates would be sequestered, bathroom and master bedroom of
probably starting next Wednesday. his mansion, according to police
'The defense, which bad previously reports and court teStimony..
~ die move, said the poten·
In court papers. tbc prosecution
liii barm from publiciay- inelud- sa,y~ DNA' tests· bave already
ing what it called inaccurate and matdw! Simpson's blood to b!opcl
unfair repc;lrts - required sequcs- ai the crime scene. Numerous
tnlion.
blood samples have been analyzed
- Simpson's farst wife, Mar- al'labs in two states.
qucritc Simpson Tbanas, fought a
Simpson's llltorDeys bad flied a
subpoena from the prosecutiop. Her . lengthy motion that auacked cvay
lawyer said tbe subpoena was aspect of the 'DNA teats. But before
improperly served and she bad lbe Christmas break, !bey be&amp;aa
notbing to add to the case. The \ showing signs of backpedlli•J. It
prosecution said sbe was trying to asked tbe judge to bold tbe admis·
avoid the subpoena. Ito set a bear- . sibility hearing piecemeal durin&amp;
ing for Jan. ll.
the trial - .witb tbc jury present
Two important bearings are to some or the time - to save time
be~ next week. One will eaplore and money. Tbe judge ·rejei:ted the
endence of domestic violence in request.
. · .
Simpson's second mairiage; the . On Wednesday, tbe defense .
other concerns the histay o( Detecwithdrew its motion for 1 pft:lrial
live Mark Fubrman, wbo found a
DNA admissibility bearing, citing
bloody glove behind Simpson •s
lhe cost and length of tbe IJe:arin&amp;.
mayoo. The defense bas suggest· . Defen~ lawyen refused to~ ·
ed Fubrmlln is a racist who planted . · ment ·outsade court on tbe shift m
die evidence to frame Simpson.
strategy. but prosecuun wte elll·

•

Page4

Simpson defense drops DNA admissibility fight
LOS ANGELEs (AP) - After
mouodDJ Yirtually every lesal
attKt ponible, O.J. Simpson' 1
1e1.al_ Dream Team hal finllly
pttlllldapmdl.
.~
Slalplon'a lawyers IDDOUaeed
Wedncaday that they woo' I try 10
aep IK jwy from seeiD&amp; die beart_

Ohio Lottery

'I

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..

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