<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9444" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9444?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19878">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/87be7d471502a2eca491b191d1f02260.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8f72d14fe31456810f70d0b9f3c092ad</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30304">
                  <text>Tuesday, January 17, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1G-The Daily Sentinel

'

----Cheerin squad-----~
Study finds fatherhood 'in .
absentia' a global phenomenon ·
By SANDRA SOBIE.RAJ
·
Associated Pre"" Wr1ter
WASBINGTON (AP)
Preschoolers worhl wtde spend on
average less ~ oile wakmg !lour
a day alo ne wit h the1 r fa th ers,
according to an I l - n auo~ study
that suggests tlle lcmmtst tdeal of
men sharin g equ~,IY in child-r~armg 1S sttll mostly a l~t of tal~.
Till; mother remruns .tbe.pnmary
adult m a prcschookr s hfe even
when she works outs1de tlle home •r
and the chtltlts m da~ care, said f;be
repon by the lntema~onal AsSOCJatJOn for the Evaluauon of Educau onal Ac hievement , a pnvate
research orgamzauon. . .
.
. In their survey of the routme~ ol
. 4- ycar-old ch1ldren m the Un~ted
States anti I 0 oth er countnes,
rese archer~ found young ch1ldren
are rarely m the sole care of thetr
fathersregardlcss ofthe culture.
In Hong Kong, for example, the
a~crage waking tim e spent alone
wtth the father Is SI~ mmu.tes a day·
m BelgiUm, 30 mmutes, and the
United States, 42 mmutes.
Amencan mothers-:- about half
of whom hold o~ISILI~ JObs_spend nearly II wakmg hours as
sole superv1sors of thelf pr~school:
ers each day, tbe report smd. German and Nigerian moms average

10 hours p~ r day, ~hile Belgian
mothers, wnh a datl y average of
5: 2 hours. are at the bonom of the ,
hs t.
" U certai~ly i~dicates that the
rhe tonc of equahty and the male
taki ng his share of the responsibility for child-rearing is a lot of talk ·
but ccnainly not .a lot of.action,"
smd Davtd P. Wetkart, prestdent of
the l\11ch1 gan-based H1gh-Scope
Euucn tmnal Research FoundatiOn
ami ru1edllor of the study.
And mos t fathers can hardly
cla1mthetr poor solo performance
"mn1galed hy the hours tbe1r chtldre n spend With both parents
together.
. Factor in Dad's time when-Mom
IS also around, and the average
ranges from just 54 minutes in the
United States to just over three
hours m Thailand.
.A second phase of the s.tudy • .
where researchers observe children
in .the classroom: W!ll !l"alyze what
cllcct the f~tb~r s hmttcd presence
has on a ch1ld s educatiOnal development, Weikan said.
But U.S. educators say tbey
alr~t~dy know theeffect is bad. ·
More kiLls than I ever wo~ld
have expected ·come !o me crymg
because they haven t seen their
fathers for weeks," said Patricia

Filzsinunons, a counselor at Spring
Hill Elementary in the Wa&lt;hington
suburbofMcLean, Va.
And according to sociologists
Sara Mclanahan and Gary Sandefur, those. are the children mo re
likel 10 fail
·
1 y "G · · u w ·th s· 1
Parc~t: wc:!~''tfunf. Mtat Hel;;,.~
Mclanahan and Sand efur write
that children who have lived a an
from one parent during some ~od of childhood are twice as likely
to drop out of high school.
When Mom works and Dad
does ma,st of his parenting •'in
absentia," child-rearing is )argely
left to paid care-givers
·
· . In China and Thai..;nd. the average 4- ear-old s nds more than 55
hour/per weerin some sort of
organizet.l day care program. American and German children res .
lively averaging 27 .8 a~d
hours per week spend the least
amount of lime i~ day care.
The association, a private organization of research institutions in
more than 60 countries, launched
the project in 1987 and surveyed
Belgi um , China, -Finland , Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Nigeria,
Portugal, Spain, Thailant.l and the
United States.

Jason L. I'owell
Air Force Airman Ja."m L. Powell has graduated from tbe pave- ·
ment s maintenance specialist .
course.
· Powell is the son of John ru1d
Debbie Powefl of Syracuse.
He gradu ated in 1993 from
Soutbem High School.

merit .

He grmlumed in 1993 from Fet.l-cml Hocking High School and
joined tl,lc Navy in July 1993.

'

John D. Snyder
Navy Seaman Recruit John D.
Snyder, a 1994 gradu ~te of River
Valley lligh School in Cheshire,
rece,ntly completed ha.1ic training ~t
Great Lakes, Ill.
William M. Breedlove
Air Force . Senior Airman
William M. Breedlove has been
decorated with the Joint Service

''Eric M. Jacks
Navy Seaman Recruit Eric M.
Jacks, son of Dannie and Wanda
Jacks of Pomeroy, recemly com. plcted basic training at Great
Lakes. Ill.
He graduated in 1994 from
Meigs High School :md joined the
Navy in September 1994.

Vol. 45, NO. 183

-

CHAD WISE
Air Foree Airman Chad J. Wise
recently COil)pleted ba.1ic tnlining at .
Lackland Air Force base in San
Antonio, Texas.
Wise is the son of John aod Pam ·
Wise of Racine.
He graduated in 1992 from
Southern High School .

Tuppers Plains awarded $275,000 for · project
1994-95 MARAUDER CHEERLEADERS The followi!ll! girls are leading the cheers for the
Maraudtt athletic teams for the 1994-95 school
year. In the front, from lelt, are Shannon Jenk·
ins, Lori Russell, Whitney Haptonstall, Carrie

Man_ley tallced abo~t · Area
Recogmt1on Day, officers s repons
were given. aod members parlicipate in the ARD penny march.
Shtrley Wolfe_ re~ealed that Jean
Thomas and Lmme Aleshire were
the winners of lhe Christmas tree
contest. Ruth Delong read a suec~ss story from TOPS news magazme.
. Manley had quotes from "Devot10ns ltlr Dieters." A Iunny money
auction was set for thi~ week's

·· At the Jan . 10 mee~ng ~ngela
Sharp was the best loser w1:h Rut
Delong as runner up. Plans were
discussed f&lt;~r a wMe_el:phant ~e.
and articles pcrtammg to weagh~
loss were read from the TOPS
news magazme. Sharp IS the new
weight recorder ":itb Ruby Fowler,.
as he! a.&lt;s.'s~1m.
.
D1ct ups were giVen by members.Thc fruit ba,ket was won by
Nellie Grover and Mary Roush
won the gadget gift .

to select the newest hue for the ·new color preferences of the 1990s,
mix. Don't get too wilt.l, though said Pat D' Amato, spokeswomao
the choices for ' Color No. 7 are for Hackettstown-based M&amp;M
blue, purple and pink. ' ·
• Mars.
Candy-lovers also may vote to
M&amp;M's, introduced in 1940, are
leave the mix as it is: brown, yel- made in different-hued mixes four
low, orange, red, green and tao.
times a year: Christmas, ValenM&amp;M-Mars is considering a tine'.s Day, Halloween and Easter.
seventh color so its candy reflects

Ooc Fees OeMecr

. '

FIBEJGASS RIIIIING BOARDS

·Custom Ck&gt;lh lnteriO&lt;

1-"':-:~~~~:r~~""'~~iccassen~.==~"-

·-

Wcndows
• Power LcO:s
• P~wer Steenng_ _ _• 4 CaQiamCha_lrs _ .

• Alummum
Running Boards
• loaded!·
- .-

-

, ___ 1_ _ __
·-

··5a1e P~~Ce ~ ~c Frn

Tlrtlil BIJyl!f ln::1111~11811 Ouillfted .

S21,988
• A1r Con()lon
·Automatic

• Power WindOW9 • Steel Be~ed Tires

··Rear Detrosler · CustomClotn Met Seats

• AM!FMSteoeo
• PIS, PIB
• Power Door locks • Console

· loaeled' ·
·.w.'fMCassette -'v~

BRAND NEW '95 POIITIAC GIWD AM .

• A.r Condition
• 16 va1ve Power
• Dnveo SOle Ailbag
• 4 Wheel An!&gt;lock Bral&lt;es

• Power Brakes
• Power Doo&lt; locks
• AWfM Stereo
• Rear Decl&lt; Spoile1

IIIIAIIIIEW '95 PONTIAC BIIIIIEVIlE SE
• Power Bral«!s •
, Cruise ContrOl
·p.,." Dooo lois · Delay w.,..s
• CUSIOOI

Clotl1t..•loaded1

I

'94

1·15110

CAB 414 PICI.UP

350 V•l POWER/IILVI!RADD

-,....;.}

· _ , Oooo llidls · Cnioe
·Air CooiiiOil
• Powef Wn;iows
• Altmrun Whliets
• Power Sletrir'Q •AWFM Ca.w:ne • Fuly l.ofld!d

• E•eOOed Cab • Al.lo""ic
• ~ado

• ·h4
·l50 V-6 Powef

~,888

f27,988
No Doe FeM.l:leiwnr

• Air Condition
• Automatic
·Du~ Aibags
• Power Brakes

• Power Sleenng
• Power Door Locks
• AMIFIA Stereo

•Tlh $t""'ng

.. Oeo1Wipers
·Custom Doth lnleriof·
·Loaded'

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4 .
• AIM'IA Stereo
• Power Sleenng
· T~ Steering
• Power Braltes
• Dual Airbags
• PoWer Door l.otl&lt;s • CuS10m Clotl11nterior
.r.,• AnrH.ock Brakes • Power Windows

• Air Condition
•• 31100 V-6 Power

TOU FlfEE 1-IJIJO.Bt2·0411 • 312·2844
344~5941• 422·0156

.

• Tpes, Tag'a, f ltie Fees U lfL ~~ H;:Wed in sale prb..ot new vei'Q lilled ..tlere appliceble. Clr1 ~ed. etedit No1 ~ tor I)'POQraptieal enors

3110 H POWUIII.VEMDO

• Rear Air~eat
• PIS. P/8

· p..., Door Lod&lt;s

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

'

By P:H. FERGUSON
extended for miles through the ceoAssociated Press Writer
ter of the city.
.
KOBE, Japan - Hundreds of
Throughout Kobe, leaking (!as
thousands of people jammed the hissed from ruptured pipes, raismg
main road out of Kobe today, some the threat of explosions.
limping and in bandages as they
The devastation, huqdreds of
picked past collapsed buildings and aftershocks and lack of basic secpiles of rubble that were homes and . vices sent hundreds of thousands of
stores before a catastrophic earth- people fleeing, many to the shelter
quake struck. The death toll neared of family and friends.
2,700.
Makoto Hiroiyama was sending
Thousands who stayed behind ' his wife, motller and child out of
huddled around .campfires and town to stay with relatives.
caught water from broken pipes, ·
"!t's dang~~ous ~er.~, ~and
too terrified to go into their homes. . there s no water, he said. It s no
Many phone lines in the western place for my elderly mother and
port city were still down, and my child." ·
frienos and family struggled to find
The death toll from the quake,
each other. People left notes tacked the worst to strike a Japanese city
lo what was left of their homes, since 1923, climbed to 2,679 by
telling each other where· they had evening, A teacher from Los Ange- ·
taken shelter.
les, 24-year-old Voni Lynn Wong,
. The earthquake early Tuesday was among the victims.
triggered hundreds of fires. and
At least 14,572 people were
many of them burned through the hun. Nearly 900 people were still
day and night By today, the wind- listed as •missing, but hopes faded
whipped f)CCs had burned out
of finding more victims alive in the
White smoke rose froin the rub- rubble. ·
·
ble and blackened debris, which

, Fuly
loaded

SITE PREPARATION- Workers or tbe (,)hio Bridge &lt;;orpo. ration and tbe Meigs County Highway Department are coolioumg
site preparation for a new Basban Road bridge over tbe Shade
River at Keno. The new two-lane bridge will replace an older one-

posed
·
·
Bui Voinovich insisted Tuesday
as-he welcomed federal permission
to proceed with his switch to OhioCare that quality of services for the
poor would not suffer.
·
"Let me make this point very
clear. We inten4 for the quality of
Medicai d services to remain high
or be even improved under this
setup,' •· Voinovich said at a news
conference.
"The HMOs that contract with
the state will have to maintain high
standards of quality or n6Jonger do
business with us," he said.
Voinovich said the state intends
to SurVey recipients to help ensure
that quality service is maintained.
"OhioCare will provide inaivid-

uals with access to ·a family doctor
as well as regular preventive
medicine instead of using more
expensive emergency room services for routine medical treat ment,'.' V.oinovich said . .
.
and ~~an SeCVIces gave the state
permassaon _to transform Med1crud_
from a trndtllonal .system that ~rud
doctors and hosp1tals for serv1ces
they provided into a managed~are
network that wo~ld pay provtders
fixed rates.
Financial details were not available, .but Voinovich said no new
state money was necessary.
Instead, the plan relies on redirecting money the state already
spends on health care, plus an
undetermined jllllOunt of additional
federal money.
Care will continue for more than
!)million Ohioans who already are
Medicaid recipients. Coverage also
will go to at least 375,000__;vorking
. · Continued on page 3 ··

land bridge ~ltlSejl in September after Inspectors round a buckled
crossmember under tbe malo bridge deck. County Engineer
. Robert Eason speculates the $218,000 bridge will be rmisbed sometime in February, depending on tbe weather.
,

stockpiles depleted during the
strike, said National Coal Association spokesman John Grasser in
Washington, D.C.
"·1 guarantee the 1995 numbers
will not be thachigh because the
stockpiles have been re.built."
Grasser said Tuesday. ''I'm not
sure they have been rebuilt to 1994
levels."

duction in the slate 's southern coal
fields rose 14 percent to. 110 mil lion loris. while the northern part of
the state saw a 38 percent increase
to 46 million tons, the agency said.
Pcnnsylvaoia was fourth in pro_duction with ti4 million tons, up 16
percent, the.agency said.
Illinois had the largest increase
in
28.4
he

in -1994
from tiJe 16.million tons produced
the previous week. the agency said .
The U.S. coal indu jtry produced
16.4 million tuns in the same week
last year, the agency said .
For the first week of 1995 ,
Wyoming rank ed fir st among the
27 coal-producing states with 4.7
million tons produced . Wcs! Virginia was second with 2.5

Energy I
·
·
produced, l..p 10 - - s fiOwed .
' n drop s: 2.4.mlllion tons, agency '
tion .
percc;nt from 1993. Kentucky was Arkansas,
Alaska, Iowa, . The _coal associallon wa s to
Production lasLyear was 9 per_--._ second. _with_159 million ton s, up- Kaosas, New Mexico, Oklahom- rcl~asc.-tts-prediCllon for 1995 pro- .
cent hi gher than tbe 945 million
1.6 percent, the federal agency and Tennessee.
d~ ct1on tod~y •. althou gh Grasser
tons in 1993, when the seven- said.
During the week ending Jan. 7.
satd the prediCtiOn would be about
montli United Mine Workers strike
West Virginia's production rose domestic coal production totaled
"a couple of percentage point s"
curtailed production in seven states. 20 percent to 157 million tons. Pro- 17.7 million tons, down 10 percent
hi gher than 1994:
Last year, utilities replac ed

U. S. oil production falls to -40-year low

. WASHINGTON (AP)- For
the ftrst year ever, more. than half
of the oil used m the Umted States
in 1994 came frQm foreign sources.
with tbtal imports for the. year setting a record, a trade association
reJlQrted today,
--·
Nearly 8.9 million barrels ef oil
a day were imported last year, or
50 .4 percent of tot~ I domes.tic
demand while U.S. ml production
fell to a' 40-year low, the American
Petroleum Institute said.
The statistics were expected to
cents nationally 10 $1.1~ in tliC ~~ provide' ammu~ition for those in
' mpnth , the auto club said.
Congress favonqg _tax breaks for ·
The average pncc of all grades domestic oil·producers and for new
of gasoline in West Virgim a was oil, and g~s develo~ment in the
up slightly to $1.332 per gallon, tbe Uni~ StateS, mcluding m con~
auto club said. .
__versaal areas such as the Arcllc
The price of regular self-serve Nau'onal Wildlife Refuge in ·northunleaded in nearby states averaged em Alaska.
$1.039 in Ohio, $1 .073 in KenSen. Frank Murkowslti, R-AJas·
tucky, $1.110 in Virginia, $1.1~9 Ita. ~hairman of the Senate Energy
·in Pc nn sy.lvania and $1 . 188. 10 and Natural Resources Committee,
Maryland, fhe auto club said.
already has prqmised a broad
review of U.S. energy policies,

·Gasoline prices fall
slightly in past month
CHARLESTON, w. Va. (AP)
- The average price of regular
self-serve unleaded gasoline fell a
penny in West Virginia in the past
mon th to $1.195 per gallon, the
· · A
AAA Sou them West V.~rg.ma
uto
Club said.
·
· The price is 6.8 cents tess than
last August, when prices peaked for
the year, the auto club said Tuesday.
The average price of the most
popular grade of gasoline fell 1.9

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Dcmand.for coal at electric utilities sparked record domes.tic pro- .
duction in 1994 as companies
rebounded from a seven-month
coal strike, ao industry spokesman
said.
Production hit 1.03 biiiion tons
last year; topping tbe mark of 1.029
biUfon tons set in 1990,

-Oil imports rose 3.4 percent
including a hard look at the growing imports and w~at should be from 1993, when forei~n oil
accounted for 49.9 percent of U.S.
done to boost domesuc production.
Murkowski has been a strong demand. ·
- Petroleum 's share of the total
advocate of drilling along the
energy
supply continued to decline
coastal strip of the Arctic ~efuge.,
Environmentalists have fiercelY. to just over 40 pet:eent It had been
48.7 percent in 1977. Demand ror
opposed 'it, arguing it ~ould I~ .
ecological damage Ill a pn t~e natural gas continued to grow faster
region thaf.Should be p
ed Ill than oil demaod, largely because or
wider gas availability and more
its natural state.
The API said the ne ly 8.9 mil- electric· utilities turning to natural
lion barrels of oil im . d daily in gas.
-Gasoline deliveries · totaled
1994.eclipsed the previous high for
7.6
million barrels a day in 1994,
imports recorded in 1977 by
about
the same as in 1978, as
109,000 barrels a day . This
greater
highway travel and the
occurred even though Americans
used 800,000 fewer barrels a day growth in the number of vehicles
offset ia:nprovcd fuel efficiency.
last year than in 1977.
"Overall, U.S. (domestic) crude . Gasoline demand increased 1.7 peroil production fell to 6.6 million cent between 1993 and 1994.
- Demand for beirne heatin~ oil
barrels a day, its lowest annual
continued
a four-year dedane,
level since 1954," said the repon
reflecting
the
continuing shift from
by the API, wnich represents the
oil
to
natural
gas and relatively
major oil companies.
warm
weather
in
pans .or the counThe annual review also found:

•

I
i

•

to be spent until the new fiscal year · ened t.o·impllse a system that could
on July I, said Mike Miller, special be more much more expensive,
asststanl for governmental affarrs at Lyons said.
the Ohio Public Works Commis·With the cUrrent funds available
sion.
the project may be sold by the end
"The chances of something of this year and construcuon .could
going wrong are pretty slim," begin, he added . ·By the end of
Miller said.
1996, the project should be comThe district has continued to pleted.
.
seek more funding for thi5 projoot
Before the project can be bid on;--because with more grants the cost the district must finish engineering
of the monthly sewage bill will be plaos for the lagoon and lines and
lower, Lyons said. Each customer then finalize an application with
could pay about $30 a month for the Farmer's Home Administration,
the sewage lines, he said.
he said ..
But, EPA officials have threatContinued on page 3 ·

Gov. Voinovich says Coal production sets -r ecord
Medicaid overhaul
will i.mprove servic~s
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) Medicaid recipienis who now may
sook rreaunem from any doctor or
hospital honoring their cards will
have to join a health maintenance
under

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP

BRAND NEW CHEVY AS1RO EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN

State and local officials chose to
fund this project based on ne~.
abll1ty to fmance, leverage and hiStory of"[lrevious funding, Hindman
said. The project was ranked by
Hindman's offiCe, the county commissioners and then an executive
office.
This most recent funding wil.l
include: .
·
- $200,00!Hn grants;
- $25,00Q in low or no interest
loans: and
- $50,000 for paying off the
loans. .
The money will not be available

. '

M&amp;M is askihg consumers to pick new hue ·
By RA VI NESSMAN
Associated Press Writer
NEW ARK, N.J. (AP) - Just in
case some M&amp;M's melt in your
hand, not in your mouth, the manufacturer at least wapts you to like
the color.
M&amp;M-Mars is asking fans of
tlle candy-coated chocolate .Pieces

$36!J,OOO in a low-interest loan
from a state water development .
office, Lyons srud.
The district hopes to acquire
additional funds through a grant
approved
the county commissioners
spring and an
Appalachian
Council
grant, Lyons
The ABC
will ®fray tile
cost of
lines to the
houses along
and
destruction.of old
systems.
Currently, this
is estil)lated at $2,000 a
he
added.

Earthquake
death toll nears
2,.700 in Japan

rnceun~ .

0

'94 PONTIAC SUIIBIRD lE

"It's definitely approved." Hind.o y GEORGE ABATE
·man
said . ."Th~ o:_mly .thing that
Sentinel News StaiY
could
hold 11 up IS if their f~cmg
The Tuppers Plains Regional
would
not come through."
Sewer District won $275,000 in the
Completion
of this project will
most recent round of state funding,
end
more
than
20
years of building
officials announced early Wednesbaos
imposed
by
the
Ohio EJivironday morning.
mental
Protection
Agency
because
The $2.6 million project finraw
sewage
drains
into
nearby
ished third out.of 33 projects fundcreeks,
~aic,!
Linds!ly
l.YQIJS,
presi:
ed in the I 0-county district in
dent
of
the
sewer
board.
round nine of the Community
The sewer district yreviously
Housing Improvement Program had
acquired a total o $935,000
formerly Issue Two, said Frederick
including
$75,000 for engineering
Hindman, spokesman for Buckeye
in
Issue
Two's round seven,
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
$500
;000
in round eight, and
Development District.

Glaze and Stacie Reed; middle, Chilli Stewart,
Cynthia Sandy and Suzanna· Henderson; lop,
·Melissa Reeves, Tara Grueser, Jenny Ervin,
Teresa Simpson and Carly Chasteen.

~8 688**
NoDotfeet~

• V1s\a Bay Wrndows

Tbursday, doudy. Htgh
in mld-SOs.

Funds for sewer district to be available July 1

$17888*
t
a

Low toni«ht ln mld-40s.

Ci&lt;~udy.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 18, 1995

Copyrlght1995

Nancy Manley and Jeannette
·McDonald are now co-chainnan of
Pomeroy TOPS OH570 Club.
. At a recent meeting Peggy Yin1ng restgned as leader and Manley
accepted her position. McDonald
was then elected co-leader of the
group.
At the Jan . 3 meeting, Bernice
Durst was the KOPS (Keep Off
Pount.ls Sensibly) and Shirley
Wolfe and Jeannette McDonald
Wl!S runner-up. Virginia Dean was
the best loser for December.

1
•

Pick 3i
398
Pick 4:
0632
Buckeye 5:
9-21-31-33-36

Page4

New chairmen seated at TOPS meeting ·

Achievement Medal.
The medal is awarded for meritorious.service.
Breedlove is the son of John and
Susan Breedlove of Coolville.
He graduated in 1990 from Federal Hocking High School.

Timuthy C. Wright
Navy Seaman Timothy C.
Wright, son of Anita. Wright of
rCoolvillc, hal. been serving off the
coast of Bosnia-Herzegovina in the
amphibious assault ship U.S .S.
Nassau.
There arc 1,600 sailors and
2,000 Marines off the coa st of
Bosnia at tbis time. Wright depan cd for the Adriatic Sea in late October as p:1r1 of a si x-month deploy -

Three Meigs
cage teams·
taste defeat

T.fs

In the service

Ohio Lottery

.

try th at usc oil for heatin g. Since
1990, the dcma n&lt;l ha s dr opped
nearly 20 percent.
-Overall demand for distillate
fuel overall ro se 4.6 percent as
increased demand for diesel Qffset
the decline in ~emand lor heatiiig
oil.
- Demand for kerosene jet fuel
jumped 9.4 percent from 1993,
reflecting greater demand from airtines and conversion of some military aircraft to the fuel.
The API said petroleum has
been losing market share, especially in areas where there are economical .substitutes for such uses as
genetatiqn of electricity or beating.
Meanwhile, refineries operated ,
at 92 .7 percent of capaclly last
,year, up from 91.5 percent in 1993.
At year's end , total inventories or
crude oil and refined products
stood at 1.064 billion barrels ~ 0.4
percent more than at the end of
1993.

..

/

�Commentar

~dnesda~January18,1995

'

u.s. fighting anti-sanctio-ns ·tide in U.N.

The Daily Sentinel .
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

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

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETrnRS OF OPINION OR welcome . They should be lelil than 300
words long. Allletten are subject .to editing and must be"signed with name,
address and telephooe number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The A'S(&lt;ocialed Press
.
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest
Akron Beacon Journal, Jan. 12
Not too long ago, (Gov.) George Voinovich was a lonely voice in
opposition to unfunded mandates.
Now tbe new Republican majorities in Congress are rushing to limit
unfunded mandates. ·
On the substance of the issue, they are right to follow the Voinovich
lead..
The fedS have a knack for overloolcing the country's diversity. Too
often, they:ve imposed one-size-fits-all rules. They've assumed Utat what
rs sensible, say, in Atlanta will be practical in Nome, too. The practice is
not .only silly; it aggravates )I)C3J officials and malces it more difficult to
govem.
.
Some find unfunded mandates so maddening Utat they want to eliminate them altogc.thcr. Voinovicb, to his credi~ doesn't go that far. He recognizes that federal standard s are frequently necessary. Afler all,
Congress must keep in mind Ute 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal
protection of tl1e laws.
. .L/.
Voinovich and others would simply like Congress to think twice4JIIlDI
legislating unfunded mandates.
.
·
Chillicothe Gazette, Jan. II
What you see is what you get, but that might not necessarily be the
case when it comes to the future of public broadcasting.
We're speaking of Congress' plans to dramatically slash funding for
tbe Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
1
The non-profit Corporation for Public Broadcasting is worthwhile.
Here in Ohio it provides nearly a quarter of the funding for the Ohio Uni versity Telecommunications Center.
.
The center provides classroom video programming for schoolchildren.
It also operates a learning network linking the six regional campus communities of Ohio Universityto.
·
·
Congress has a tough job."But ... will cutting funding for public broadcasting benefit tbe American people? We don't tbink so.

UNITED NATIONS - In
closed-door consultations of tbe
15-member Security Council, the
United States is fighting an increas·
ingly lonely baule against lifting
U.N. sanctions imposed against
Iraq in 1990.
Other members. led by France
and Russia, are. anxious to certify
that Saddam Hussein and Iraq are
in full compliance with the conditions of tbe sanctions. That's at
least in part because these countries
stand ready and eager to reap the
barvest of Iraq 's largely idle oil.
fields.
The very prospect of reopening
Iraq is alarming to Ambassador
Rolf Ekeus, no-nonsense Swedish
diplomat who heads the U.N. Special Commission for the Disarmament of Iraq. l~e bas been Saddam's prime nemesis since the end
of the Gu lf War. The commission
has been conducting arms inspections since 1991.
Ekeus concedes th at Iraq has
been quite cooperative in the last

year or so. Saildaui is no longer
lying on the same scale as before,
and he bas stopped blocking
inspectors or permanent cameras in

. By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

re-establish all the weapons programs. They will grow up like
mushrooms.after tbe rain."
Jules Kroll, whose company has
been hired by the Kuwaitis to identify hidden Iraqi assets abroad,
agrees with Ekeus.
''The network and the arrangement that was set up (by Iraq) in
the years prior to the August 1990
invasion of Kuwait still exis ts,"
Kroll recently told a congressional
panel. "Some of tbe players have .
changed, but the strategy is essentially the same. Many of the same
businessmen who were operating in
France, Germany. the United King'dom, Switzerland, Austria and
other countries, are still there.''
Over the past year, businesses
from several countries have slipped
into Baghdad, trying to be-first in
line wben the sanctions are lifted.
Sources wid our associate Dale
Van Atta that the French and the
Russians are first in line because
they bave been Iraq's chief allies in
the secret " informal" cpnsulta-

arms, " warns MiChael Eisenstadt
of the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy . "Iraq would
probably sell its oil at di sco unt
prices in order t(} create pri vileged
.trade ties with key Westem states
and to earve out a niche for its
product in a glutted market."
At least one former Iraq adversary - Iran - apparently isn't
• waiting for sanctions to be lifted.
The U.S. delegation told the Seeurity Council on Dec. 7 .that Washington had "evidence of Iranian
complicity in the smug gling of
Iraqi petroleum throu gh Persian
Gulf ports in violation of U]~ .
Security Council resolutions pro. hibiting such trade.''
One of- t he few remaining
weapons in America's stance
against any lifting of the sanctions
is the unresolved issue of Kuwaiti
prisoners-of-war. Though Saddam
Hussein denies that any prisoners
are still being held , hundreds of
Kuwaitis remain unaccoonted for.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writer$ for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

~

Hollywood assaults American values

The (Dover-New Phlladelpbla) Times Reporter, Jan. 10 ·
Words issued by Newt Gingrich may come back to haunt him.
Just in case Gingrich has forgotten, Common Cause has dug· into the
files to retrieve some of his quotes:
·
"Congress is a broken system. It is increasingly a system of corruption
in which mo~ey politic·s is defeating and drivi11g out citizen politics."
(1990)
.
.
/
"PACs are a grotesque distortion of the popular will." ~1993 )
.
" People waDI a Co ngress with imeg rity . The y want us to be a
Congress with courage. They want us to be a Congress with dignity. They
want to be a ble to look at this building on the Hill once again as the great,
shining example of self-govemment by a free people.' '
Now that the Republicans are in control, Gingrich has opportunity lo
put those statements into practice.

Pomero~i ddleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Accu·WeaW fora:ut

Louisiana and Tew.
By Tbe ABSoclated Press
.
It was calm in the Rockies,
Mild and rainy weather wall
continue across Ohio through where snowstorms dumped m,ore
Soutb·£entral Ohio
' than 8 feet of snow in the moonThwsday, forecasters said.
Today ...Cioudy. High in the mid ·
Lows tonight wiU stay above the tains in the last three days. Two
Mainly south winds 10 mph or
50s.
freezing mad, the National Weath- people escaped injury in Ut$ on less.
er Service said, and highs on Tuesday after an avalance swept
Tonight ..Cloudy. Low 40 to 45.
their car 100 feet down an embanlt·
Thwsday wiU be in the SOs.
Variable
winds less than 10 mph .
· An aperoaching low pressure ment Also in Utah, a man died in a
Thursday
... Cloudy with a 50
system will produced colder tem- storm-related accident wh~ his car
percent chance of rain. High in the
peratures on Friday and into the slid into tbe J?8th of a train.
mid 50s.
In Washmgton today, heavy
weekend and some snow for parts
Extended rorecast
snow was reported al Stampede
of Ohio.
Friday ...Rain ~hanging to snow.
The record-high temperature for Pass and Omalc. There was some
this date at the Columbus weather flooding in eastern Texas and thunstation was 67 degrees in 1929 derstorms in the western·pan of tbe
derstorms, and some areas of flash
while the record low was -17 in state..Sbreveport, La:• reported 1.8
flooding were forecast todAy in
1994. Sunset tonight will be at5:34 inches of rain . Ram and gusty
Texas and the central Gulf Coast
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:SO winds were along the PacifiC CoasL
region. Rain and snow were
a.m.
Some areas of light snow and
expected to keep spreading across
blowing snow were expected today
the Pacific Northwest and into the
across North Dakota and northern
northern Rockies, while beavy
Some beavy snow fell in the Minnesota, along with low temper·
rains and strong winds were forePacific Northwest this morning as atures·and wind-chill readings.
cast along the Washington and Orerains caused some noojling in
More heavy tains, severe thun- · gon coasts.

,,,,,

\,

•lcolumbusl54•

I

Across the nation

W.VA.

Morning lows mAinly in the 30..
Highs mid 30s to lower 4Qi.
Salilfday ...Snow likely northeast
with snow slrowers elsehwere.
Lows 15 to 25 . Highs from rhe
~~~~~r 20s. north to the lower 30s
Sunday... Snow showers north east. Dry elsewhere. Lows in the
teens. Highs ZS to 30.

The nation's hotspot Tuesday
was Brownsville , Texas, at 83
degrees; the coolest was Ely, Nev.,
at 8 degrees below zero.
A record warm temperature of
53 degn;es was reported at Bridgeport, Conn., Tuesday, breaking the
old record of 50 degrees set in

1990.

Voinovlch ..•

COntinued from page 1

poor without insurance;
Inc.

---Area deaths-Anita G. ·Birchfield
Anita Grace Bin:hficld, 80, oiHendcrson, died Tuesday, J811. 17, 1995,
· in Pleasant Valley Hollpilll.
.
·Born July 3, 1914, in Columbus, sbe was a daughter of the late
Clarence and .Martha (Pianls) Hall Sbe wu also preceded in dealh by her
husband, Cecil: four brotben, James, Carl, Clarence and Billie Hail; an
infarit sister and two grandchildren.
·
.
·
A member of tbe Penecostal Church, she was a retired employee of
. Pleasant Valley Hospital.
. Survivors include two daughters and sons-in-law, Janet and Philip
- Davis of Gallipolis, Sally and Gerald Meets of Gallirolis Ferry; three
' . sons, Charles H. and ~ Bin:bfield of Gallipolis Ferry, Cecil A. and
. Betty _Birehfteld, Jr. of' Gallipolis Ferry, Kenneth E . ~ Janice Bin:~eld
· of Pomt Pleasant; brotbc:r, Russell Hall of Summcnvtlle, W.Va.; SJstcr;
. Jean Bragg of Ken&amp;ucky; II gnodchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be Friday, 2 p.m.. 81 the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
. the Rev. Robert Hall officiating. Burial will be in the Cooconl ,Cemetery,
.. Henderson.
.
Friends may call at the funeral borne Thursday, 7 to 9 p.m.

Barto L. Durst, Sr.
. BartoL. Durst, Sr., 88, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, Jan. 16. 1995,
at Holzer Medical Center.
··
· He was a retired boilcnnaker ofl.ocal667-Winfaeld, a former employee of the Marietta Manufacnuiug Company in POint Ple&amp;mnt and of the
John Amos Power Plant in Winfilld. A lifelong residenl of Mason Coun·
. ty, he attended the Wesley~~~ Oum:h.
.
. Born Jan. 25, 1906, in Malon County, be was a son or the late Henry
Harrison and Hannab Elizabeth (Stooe) Durst He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Ruth (Love) Durst; son, s.to L. Durst, Jr.; nine brothers, four sisters and one Slep-grancldau81lt.er.
·
· Surviving are a daughter, Palricia Ann Lee of Point Pleasant; son,
Jackie L. Dur3t of S)'!l~Cue; seven grandcbildren, 10 great-grundchildren;.
and one srep-grandchild.
·
Servi~es will be beld _Frida~~~~lr·m., at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home wath tbe Rev. Louis A.
I and Rev. H.W. Durst offiCiating.
. Burial will be in the Suncresa Cemetery, Point PleasanL
.
. Friends may call at the funeral borne Thwsday, from 6 to 9 p.m.

·Marvin Kelly

•Robert McCall

r

'

-----Weather-----

MICH.

I was invited to the premiere nf entirely ' with the filmmaking Tarantino and Stone disagree. They have uplifting messages ; rather
tbe new John Sipgleton nick crowd. The film-reviewing set also say that their pic tures simply than flicks that pander to the baser
"Higher Learning." I decide&lt;l not deserves a rebuke for heaping reflect what is happening in soci- instincts of the unwashed m;L•ses.
to go. Like all too many offerings
unqualified praise on decidedly •ety. They brisile at suggestions that
But, the arr ·1ment goes, when
from Hollywood these days, tbis
their fibns might have a pernicious Hollywood put out •'feel good'·
was a "feel bad" movie. It wa• an
Josenh PerkinS
influence on impressionable young films, wholesom~ films, tbey don ' t
orgiastic two hours of cinematic
~
moviegoers.
sell. And moviemaking is, after all,
bate and violence.
'
b ·
h
I violent films like Oliver Stone' s
But it is disingenuous to suggest a usaness . The MGMs and
Ik
h.
1
How do
now as w en
, 'Natural Born Ka'llers " and tbat Hollywood does not have a Columbias and Universals are in
didn't see the movie ? Because a
tremendous influence on society. the ftlm industry to make money. .
But it' s simply a pulp fiction to
close friend worked on it . And Qu entin Tarantino's "Pulp Fie- When Cbirl&lt; 'Gable stripped off his
even be acknowledges tha~ the film lion."
shirt in " It Happened One Night"
say that "feel good" movies.do not
Yes, maybe Tarantino found an reveali.ng his bare chest, millions of fare well at the box office. The top
be co-produced is dark. And not
- Marvin Kelly, Middleport, died Wedladay, Jan 18, 199S, Bl Veterans
even he is willing to say tbat this artistic new way to show a head American men abandoned their T- grossing film of 1994 was "Forrest
. Memorial Hospital Extended Clre Utiil in Pomeroy. Arrangements will
film ,Ut~t depicts college as a war blown off the bod y of its owner. shirts. Wben E.T. was brought out Gump," with $297 million in ticket
. be announced Thursday by Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon.
zone pining blacks against skin- But are the critics the least bit con- of biding by_Reese's Pir.ces, every sales, follow ed by ''Th e Lion
The (Warren) Tribune Chronicle, Jan. 9
heads against gays will .promote cemed about the effect this scene kid in America had to have the lit- King," with $295 million. None of
Outrage over Texas' execution of Jesse Jacobs ·reached the Vatican. goodwill among moviegoers of dif- might have on the teen-ager s · tie candies.
the bloody, lasc ivious flicks that
The Vatican newspaper L'Osservatorc compared the U.S. Supreme Conrt ferenl races , genders and sexual who've flocked to ~ee the latest
What goes forT-shirts and can- Hollywood loves to make were
to Pontius Pilat~. who permitted Jesus' crucifixion, even though he doubt- orientations. ·
work from this celebrated· young dies must also go for violence and within $100·million•If the se two
ed Christ was guilty of the charges brought against him.
But that's Holl ywood. The pro- director?
·
·
l"IIms.
""
prunence.
.
Given the htcts of the Jacobs' case, the comparison is apt.
· Robert McCall, 70, Albany, died Sunday, Jan. 1S, 1995, at O'Bieness
ducers and directors and actors are
As one Hollywood producer
The irony of this debate is that
There clearly is great demand
Originall y, Jacobs confessed that he was the trigger man in the murder untroubled about the deleterio us lamented to me, "All of the critics Hollywood con siders it sc i r so among the moviegoillg public· for
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
.
of Etta Ann Urdiales. He later recanted, bUI was found guilty and sen- effe cr th eir work ~ay have on were raving (about 'Pulp Fictioo'). enlightened on mailers of social nonviole~tlilms that celebrate old. . Born in Carpenter, son of the late Elza A. and Lorence VanTre
tenced to death.
McCall, he was a wall:b repainnan. ·
·
broader society. They are more Why didn 't I see a word of wam- policy. Most of the film industry fashioned values. This provides a
llut when Jacob's sistcr "was on trial for participating in the crime,
He is survived by a sister-in-law, lklen McCall of Albany, and several
conccmed about their billing on the ing? A 15- or l6-year-old needs to folkS who·a'fe only too happy to put ripe opportunity for stu&lt;Jio execs
prosc~utors used liis rccanL1tion to convict his si,.er, Bobbie Jean Hogan.
nieces and nephews.
movie marquee and their_cut of net be protected from it. lt.can do great socially unrcdeeming materia l and producers and directors and
.
of involun (J)ry manslaughter.
Besides his parents, be was prec:edcd in deatb by his wife, Margaret
profits.
damage to young minds." ·
before the. public think of them- actors who rea lly have a conAI the very leas t, it seems Jacobs should not have been convic ted of a
Lee McCall; a brother, Carlos McCall; a sister, Thelma Steinmetz, and a
Indeed, a growing body of evi- selves as socially conscientious.
science. They can put out sociall y
The idea that the studios might
capital offense, especially when his sister, the actual killer, wa' not.
.
Put Out Wholesome film s rarely l. f dence shows a link between ersatz
stepmother, Je5!!ie Reeves McCall.
•
They are always ge lling redeeming lilms ami make ton s of
Justice demanded a new trial, but Jacobs never got that second chance. · ever, enters the mind ·s of the
violence on·film and tele vision and involved with some liberal cause or money at tbe same time.
Graveside services wiU be beld Friday 81 I P·f!'· _at Alexander Cemetery in Hebbardsville wtth the Rev. Joe Sayre off1CI8lmg.
Joseph Perkins js a columnist
moviemakers. They just want to real-life crime and violence among another. Saving a rain forest. Fight. Friends may call Friday from 11;30-12;30 p;m. at tho Bigony·Jordan
,
sell tickets. If that means gratuitous young offenders. This makc;s Hoi - ing for animal rights. Fti nd raising for Tbe San Diego Unlon-Trisex
and
violenceor
excessive
prolywood
culpabl_e
for
at
leas
~
some
for
Bill
and
Hillary.
hone.
·
Funeral
Home, Albany, and one.hOW' prior to sezvices.
·
1
fanity and scatology, or stoking the 0~ th e 2 Oll~hon or so vrolent
Yet they never stop to consider
(For
to
~
.
emller~! m~ial ~nd sc.XJJ.al t;nmity, . J;r!l1)~s coiiii!IIlled eacll. year m Uns ,, that·they could do"far mooJr~e ~tgoires~·-~Thl~~~:~r!f.rF.~~::~~~~~~!~~~~~r~·,;,·~~~~Cit
~~-:--~t~-:--,~Ji;K1~~;_;~L:::;::;:;&lt;~-;;~-:-:-=--:-:~-;:::;-:;;~-~-,-~~1F~h;jji~rlTh~~sr;otfi;sf,lfC-d~QI
rurrr~-~.like
-. - - - - culi-Jtnteriiiin cu ure;-to r(
and others, conSmgleton and level of v1·olence anU dcpravi·ry· 1·n
.•
ilOes .not reside··
lad America Online by calling lour society, by making movies that . 800-817-6364, exL 8317.) __ _
Robert L. M~, 86, RL ·1, Vinton, died Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1995 in
Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announced by the McCoy-Moore Funcra1 Home,
Vinton.
"-. Welcome to the Sixth Annual ex plains why th e OP co nt est, · a~ ked if she were. up se t by her
Outrageous Personage of the Year designed to honor the most absurd. d1vorce, ·she said, "I'm only upset Pundits also wi shes to announce
·
awards. Before we begin, I have a anile, goofy, inane or preposterous lhatl'm not a widow." The woman these special awards:
-c
The
Obnoxious
Asp
prize
sad announcement to make. ·
Americans 'to strut across the pub- defines crude.
will
be
shared
by
Parson
Pat
1. am deeply distressed to inform
In third place and winner of the Robertson and Rey. Jerry Falwell,
you. that Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind.,
Claymore Rowley, 76, of Ravenswood, W.Va. died Monday, Jan.l6,
Silver Asp is Newt Gingrich. His for the former's groundless ins.inuJoseph Spear
cannot be considered for this year's
. 1995, at his borne.
·
insinuation th at the Democrats ation that sinister forces dispatched
contest because his supremely outBorn on April 2A, 1918, Bl Ravenswood, he Wll;' the son of tbe late
in.direelly drov,c a South Carolina former WhTte House de.puty counrageous act was perpetrated in lie stage in a given year, is some- · mother to murder her two sons was
· Henry Clay and Ullian Ent Rowley. He w~ presadent of the Jackson
sel Vincent Foster," and for th~ lat1995, and we are here to pick the limes referred to a.s lhe ASP
€ounty Banlc from 1967_10 1983, C.llf!ellt chairman of.the board and also
barbarous. His baseless claim thar a- ter's unsubstantiated and decidedly
1994 winner. What Burton did was awards.
.
.
served on tbe State Banking COIIIIIIISSIOII:
fourth of the White House staff
write to the White House and
The last-minute surge of nomi- admitted to previous dru g use was un-Christian suggestions _that PresiHe waS a member ol the Sons of Civd War Veterans, tbe Fust United
de nt Clinton may ha11e been
_ demand !O know, ''as a member of nalions,_for_Jl'bich Lthank_the disMelhodiit Church ii Ra\'fiiSWOOcl, tbe MMqnic I.AJ(Ige,_ Shrine, and ~COl·
worthy
of-Joseph
McCarthy.
involved iniBti'i n·g or-murders.
the new Commilll:e on Government cemipg folks who regularly re ad
· h R1· and was an acc:omJ!_Jiahcxl woodworker.
,
In second place and winner of
- The first-ever Dumb Asp
Reform and Oversight,' ' whether tbese arduou s ly honed words,
.us He is' survived b his wife. Beryl Worthington Rowley, I_Uvenswood,
will go to Sen. Larry Pressler, Rstamps used for First Cat Socks ' inchided former Watergate conspir- the Gold Asp is former Senator
w va · two d:futters anliiOIII·in-law, Elaine and 911~ ShC?Ckey,
Donald
Rie~lc.
D-Micb.
This
flamS.D
.. foF his assertion that pubhc
.mail are paiMor with public funds.
ator G. Gordon Liddy, former
· s'w'ood
Rboda 10d Micbael McCormick, Ctncmnatt; four
R
aven
•
•
........,
udec! • death
television revealed it liberal leanThe U.S. of A. is being crushed House Spealcer Tom Foley, Con- mg hypocnte did favors for S&amp;L
. randchildren and several rueces and ••..,_ws. "" was ~ ID
tycoon
Charles
Keating
but
had
the
ings
when
it
,included
Mario
by $200 ' billion deficits and
gressman Robert Dornan, Senator
g
William falric1c and Mike
Cuomo a former minor leaguer, m
by three broth~. · ld '11 m Thunda~·at the F'lfSI Unired Methodist
national debt of nearly ,S5 trillion, Alan Simps@, ll'arbara Wal.\ers, audacity to upbraid Deputy Trea_ _ Services will be he at L · . ·- - .,_.
and b ia1 'II · die
sury Sec(etary Roger Altman for
- K ' ·B_··~s
....., baseball
___ _ series. Now
th een
and this blockhead wants to inves- lleavis ~nd Butt-head (sorry, no giving
Church
The
Rev.
Dr.
Dan
HoPD
will
.
'"''a~
ur WI m
"less-ihan-tbe-full-truth"
. Pressler says be was trying_to be
tigate Socks' stamps . It is with fictional characters), the entire U.S.
Ra
ve
ns~ood
Cemetery
.
Graveside
sezvtces
wtll
be
conducted
by the
funny. Old lar is a hoot, all nght
extreme pleasure that I dedare Dan Congress (sorry, no groups) and answers to bis questions.
Masons ·
·
·
H
And the Outrageous Personage
- Anoth er new pri ze . th e
Burton the fust 1995 OP nominee.
Joe Spear (sorry. conflict or interFrie~ds may c811 at the Straight, Tucker and Roush Funeral orne
or
the
Year
and
winner
of
the
PlatHorse's Asp, will honor someone
What is il about the se Dans est).
today (Wednesday) from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
.
mum
Asp
is
Sen.
Jesse
Helms
R.
who runs in circles and leaves
from Indiana. anyway?
Without further ado:
N.C. This parody of a pol allo~ed
behind a trail of steaniing patties.
•
On to the business at hand. The
In fifth ·place and winner of the that President Clinton "better have
The
Horse's Asp for 1994 goes to
OP contest is co-sponsored by the Brass Asp is Bill Clinton. Pop~lisrn
~yguard
"
if
he
visited
North
a
Rush
Limbaugh. ·
·
Spear Foundation, which does tbe is one thing, but to· ta11c about the
'
the
personificaCarohna.
Helms
is
you
next
year.
See
judging , and the Association of president's underpants on national
"/ have a theory. I don't 'get it,' because 1
IJon of an OP. A Bron~ cheer to the
Marie Thomas 96 White 08lc Road, liidwell, died Wednesday, Jan.
Sagacious Pundits, wbicb provides television is quite another.
Joseph Spear is a syndlcal~d
state
of
North
Carolina
for
giving
am a MAN. " ·
18 J995atPI-tValleyHospi~in.PointPleasant, W.Vs.
.
the actual awards - handsome
In fourth place and ' winner of h•m to us.
writer for Newspaper Enlerprase
are
undec
the
direc:bon
of
the
McCoy-Moore
Funetal
'Arrangements
statue s ·of tiny snake s. Tbis the Bronze Asp is Roseanne, When
Association.
~be Association of Sagacious
Home and wiU be announced at a lal« date.

·
8. erry .s.. World_

The Daily Sentinei---Page--3

Colder weather forecast for Ohio .Friday

Thunday, Jan. 19

lions of tbe Security Co unci 1.
China is described as "going
along" with them.
China, Russia and Fran e
account for three of tbe five most
.important members of tbe Security
Council - tbe "Penn Five," as
diplomats call them here because
any one of them can veto U:N.
decisions. A fourth member, Great
Britain, still sides with the United
States, though British resolve is
wealcening. Sources here say their
stance is becoming more of a favor
to tbe United States than an independent position .
Trade delegations have visited
Iraq not only from Rus sia and
France, but from Japan , Italy,
Spain, Canada and Brazil, according to our sources. Oil companies
from Germany, Greece and even
Great Britain have been dickering
in Baghdad l)ver oil exploration
and marketing rights.
. · "If the ban on oil exports were
.lifted, Iraq could earn from $12 billion to $15 billion a year in income,
which would enable it to resume .

the
of dual- .
use large-scale
eq uipmentsmuggling
and techn(}logy
'----------------~------- "" --------~--.. needed
to produce nonconventional

~----------,------------------·----_.
.

VWednesday,January18,1985

1

..

People who made Asps of themselves

·claymore Rowley .

..

w

a

Marie Thomas

Under OhioCare, health maintenance organizations would contract
. with the stare to provide the same
sezvices Medicaid offers.
. Medicaid recipients would have
a choice of at least two HMO
plans. In counties without two
HMOs, the current system would
remain in place until the state could
ensure competition.
Managed care would not apply
to th e aged, blind, disabled, or
· long-term care patients, such as
those ·in nursing homes, who represent about 41 percent of the Medicaid budgeL
·
Rep. Otto Beatty, D-Columbus,
said there were many unanswered
questions about cost and Operation
of the program. He said a review of
a similar program in Tennesse~
demonstrated the ldnds of problems
that can arise.
"I went down to Tennessee for
a couple of days: That TennCare,
people came in and just lold all
· ldnds of horror stories," he said.
"Like, you may have &amp;.primary
care physician but that's not helping you at 10:30 or 11 o'clock at
night if your kid falls down the
steps and breaks an arm. They set
up a 1-800 number where you had
to caU ... and get permission before
you go to the emergency room,"
Beauy said in an interview. "Peo. pie cooldn't getthrough."
Federal approval of the
Voinovich proposal will allow
wor~ to begin on changes in law ·
needed for phased-in implementalion starting Jan: I, 1996.
rr===~===:======;t

Senate will move again on
balanced budget amendment
wASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Rer,ublicans are trying to get
the ba anced budget amendment
back on ttack aftl:r being blindsid·
~
-

I

Am Ele Power .....................34 318
Akzo ........- •. - ...- .•••.•,..-.57 718
Ashland OU

------------..33

AT AT ·.......................-~----A9 li:Z
Bank Ooe ...............- -..--.27 318
Bob Evans--~..·---------19 3/4
Chmiplon lnd·------....27114
Charmlna Shop---------·' 118
Clly Hold&amp;na .....- ......--..--..-..30
Federal M!ll[UI--------18 3/8

----.··---.38

Hospital news

Goodyear T&amp;R
1/4
K-mart ..........-----------13 718
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Lands End
·-···..,___
16 1/8
Limited
IDC-·--·--·---..
••••••• _, ______
,18
Tuesday admissions - Lola
Clark, Middleport
Multimedia Inc. -----..........27 518
Point Bancorp
Tuesday dis~harges - Susie
Reliance Electric --·--........30 314
Fischer, Racine
Robbins&amp;: Myers...._ ..__ ....,•••••17
· Holzer Medical Center
Royal Dukll-----............109 til
Discharges Jao. 17
Shoney•s lnr. ·-----...............12318 '
Tiffany Blair, Nettie Marcum,
Star Banlt.....................:...........39
Elva Young, Tabalba Watson, JereWendy lnt'l. ----·-...............161/8
Worthington_,_,_
lnd .................~•..•lO
my Gilbert, Mary Hawkins and
:·
Alexander King.
Stock reporl5 are the 10:30 a.m.
Birth Jan. 17
quotes provided lay Advest or
Mr. and· Mrs Brian Remond,
Galllpoll'l.
son, Pt. Pleasant

···-------19

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
E

POMEROY
...... ,_Mculherr)' Awenue,

Units of the Meigs County
y Medical Service
·
calls for assistance

The dispute clouded Republican
hopes of moving the amendment
toward passage by the end of the
month and overshadowed the ftrSt
success of the 'GOP-led Congress
~ntlnuecllrom page 1 ..:... passage Tuesday of the Congressional Accounlability AcL
The Senate JU!Iiciary Commllllle
Surveyors must define the PIIIIIP
reconvenes today in hopes of hearsites and then a price Will be agreed
ing Democratic proposals and voton and the deed signed, he added.
ing on the constitutional amend"He's named us a price and
we' ve accepted it," Lrons said of ment to require a balanced budget
the 65-acre lagoon sue which is
by 2002.
located west of town off state · Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
wants to change the amendment to
Route 681.
exclude Social Security from future
The lagoon will accommodate 8l
balanced budget calculations, while
least SO percent growth, but the sire
can be added onto since .more land
fellow Democrat Joseph Biden of
Delaware hopes to cm~te a separate
is availal,lle, he added. If a large
budget for road and bridge buildindustrial user decides to move in,
ing.
·
the company could be asked to pay
Tuesday
Sen : Robert C.
On
for the costs of lagoon expansion or
.
Byrd,
D-W.Va.,
used
a Senate rule
build a facility on-site.
to break up the commitree meeting
Earlier concerns over arrowand make his point tbat Republiheads found on the lagoon site have
&lt;; an s are making a mistake
been resolved , he added. Part of the
property will have restricted use.
A public hearing will be set later
The Daily Sentinel
this spring , Lyons said. At that
•
lime, resideniS wiU be asked to sign
(USPS 113·9601
easements for the 20-foot-wide
Publi!ihed e~cry afternoon, Monday throuah
placement of the lines.
Friday. t II Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio. by thr
Ohio Ynll cy Publishing Company/Multimedia
A mess will be created, but conIn c., Pomeroy, Ohio 4~'169, Ph. Q92-2156.
. trnctors must return the. property to
Second cia.\~ pos!n&amp;e paid 111 f'omeroy, Ohio.
· its original stare, he added.
Mtmbtr : The Anocuued Pre5~ . and the Ohio
The sewer district stretches oneNe'w~!p&lt;~per As~ociution .
half mile from the ' in.rersection of
state Routes 681 and 7, serving 200·
t'OSTMA'STIHI; SCnd rttldrCli~ cn~ctinn ~ In
The Dail y Sentinel , Ill Court Sl , Pomeroy,
households. Anyone within 300
Ohi o 4~769.
of this line must hook up .by

11:1 2 a.m., Strongs Run Road,
Beatrice Rhinehart, O ' Bieness
Memorial Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS . .
7:25 a.m., state Route 7, Willie
Jon es: Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital;
8:06 p.m., Arbaugh Additiop,
Vicki Capehart, CCMH.
Transfer units handled five calls.

MIDDLEPORT
10:54 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Lola Clark, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
5:05 p.m., Laurel Street, Ethel
Newman, VMH;
6:51 p.m., Middleport Police
Department, Hunter Cox, Holzer
Medical Center.

ed by a senior Democratic senator's maneuver to stop action on
the amendment in a Senate committee.

P''.•Bins
• ...-...,..-,--------......,_·
upners
.
I"

The Farmer's Home Administration should pay for the fl:l!laiRder of the project through a 40 percent grant and 60 percent loan,
Lyons said.
But, these applications can not
be completed until the lagoon and
four pump station sites are procured, he added. The landowners
and the dislrict have agreed on a
verbal basis on the acquisition of
. the sires.

Sto.cks

load sblft In his 1995 Fre)Jbtllner, tbe trailer
nipped on its side and pulled the lrador over,
according to a Henderson Pollee Department
spokesman, Buerger escaped injury, but the
tractor-trailer was Usted as a totallOfiS after the
11:13 p.m. wreck,

CLEAMNG UP • Worken from the West
Virginia Departmeoi of Highways clean debris
off 'S.R. 1 Tuesday afternoon after .a tractor·
trailer overturned coming off tbe Silver Memc.rial Bridge exit ramp. Tbe seJ~~i driver, Ray·
mond L. Buer11er of Stroud, Oklahoma felt tbe

,__,_, . , .. . ~~()liS

we can get
to do this," Lyons
S INGLE COPY PRICH

Daily .......................................... ......... 3.SCenu
Suh!lcribtn. not desirin&amp; 10 pay dle cnnicr may

remit in advance direc t to The Dally Sentinel
on a three . silt or· t2 month
giYcn carrier each week.

hn.~l~ .

Cre.dit w1 ll bt

No ~ub~cript ion by mu d pl"nniu.:-d in
where home canier $erv!cc I ~ available .

urea~

MAIL SUBSCRII'TIONS

Meigs announ,cements

ln1kle Mtlp County
.. ......... .... .$lJ.92
13 Wecb ,... .......
26 Wecb .......... .... ............................ ..... $41 .06

Worksbop planned
A financial aid workshop will
be held Tuelday at 1 p.m. at Meigs
High School cafeteria. Speakers
will be Dr. John Hill, fmancial aid
director .of the Universit:t of Rio
Grande, and Mclony Oha!Ck, mar·
keting representative, Ohio Student
Loan Services, Banlc One.
The meeting is for seniors in .
high school who are planning to

~2 Wee~~tt''O~~id~ Mt'iP'C~~~-y

attend college and their rarents.
The meeting is open to al Southem, Eastern and Meigs High school
students. ·'
l,egion to meet .
_
.· ._
Racine Post 602, Amencan
Legion, will meet Thursday, 6:30
p.m. dinner followed by 7:30 p.m.
meeting.
·

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE I

-

$Q2.5fj

13 Wccb .............................. ................. S2S.61
26 We&lt;b ................... ........................ $49.66

52 Week$ ...... .... .... ..... ............................. .$%.lq
~

.

Due to Fire Damages We Are
Remodeling At

THE CORNER RESTAURANT

.

~ "Revelations" Bible Seminar
with Chuck Stansberry
. January 23 -January _28, 7:3? p.m. I[lightl[.
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church ·
Middleport, Oliio
Public cordially invited.

In ·Middleport '
We Will Reopen Monday, Jan. 23 at 6 A.M.
While We Are Closed Visit the
Corner Restaurant in Syracuse.
Hours: lilonday·Frlday 7 A.M.·7 P.M.
Saturday &amp; Sunday ~ A.M.·3 P.M.

•

•

. I

•
_, '

.

; -.

.

'

•

• I

--

�Wednesday, January 18,1995

The

Sports

aily Sentinel
Wednesday, January 18,1995

~-13 treys and a 18-211 mght at lhe
hit bolh ends of a bonus and Ver- lme. SHS had 12 steals (Hannon
non Reams scoml on a breakaway four), 14 turnovers and 14 team
at the end of lhe game to account fouls.
for ll!e scoring as Belpre pulled off
So~thern . will . host Federal
tile bag upset. .
.
Hocking Fnday. Belpre plays
Coach Howte Caldwell · p~sed Wellston.
his kids for a fine effort, saymg..
R~rve notesRBe~ll:e ,w::' 44
"We played. v~ry. very hard and 34 ~hmd. Sc,ou o rtS
an
were men!al'y an the game for the BenJ1 Collms 10. '!yson Bucldey
r~ 30 mmutes, 30 secon~- Then led the To~.wt~~6. 1
we JUSt lost our composure.
SOUTHERN
. Sou!hern wa~ led by Ma:son
Ftsher s 2l p01nts and et_ght
(16-1!1-15-17-6 =73)
~~nds: ~ISher ~ !" SUJ!CI: m~ht
Jeremy Hill 1-5 -2;;19, R;yan
despt!C gtvmg up_ s~x mches m stze Williams 5-2-4=20, Ryan Martin 0to StmJ?SOn. Wtlltams added 20, 0-5=5, Mason Fisher 7·0-7=21,
whtle Hill had 19.
.
John Hannon 3-0-2=8. Totals: 16. Belpre was led, by 2~-pomt 7-18/28=73
~ffons .from G~ and S1mpson,
BELPRE .
tn~ludmg_ Garrett s four three.
(15-11-14-27·11=78)
pomters. Sll_llpson ~ 15 ~bOunds. ·
Vernon Reams 1-0-0=2, Kent
Belpre hit 29-51, ~ncluding 8-16
threes, 9-1 S at the lme an~d a Garrett 5-4-1=23, JIISOn Walker 530.22 rebounding edge. B S had 0-3=13 Jon Gerkin 2-2-3=12, Jim
mne steals, 24 turnover~ and _25 Simp~n 8-2-1=23, Zach Klein 1fouls. Southern hit 23-56•. mcluding 0.0=2: Totals: 21-8-9/15=78

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Marauders 1ose..• __&lt;c_on_tin_ued_from--..:Pag::.::e..::4&gt;--..:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
•

Trimble to lhe hne 18 times, the
Tomcats hit 11 and missed the
front end of three one-on-ones in
the half. Meigs on the other hand
went to the 11he only four limes in
the hitting one as the Tomcats were
called six personals.
Meig s came out in the third
period and were able to pull to
within 12 (4 1-29) points on 'a bucket by Travis Abbott wilh 6:29 lefL
After a Trimble turnover Meigs
had a chance to cut into the lead
even more, but the Marauders

Belpre edges Southern ~8-7~ in overtime
By SCO'IT WOLFE
Southern turned lhe ball over two
For three uaners and a half the straight limes, and Jon Gerldn was
Southern T~adoes played their the main benefactor . Southern
'J'hC final £
· · additionally missed three front ends
=~~~~: led to lhe:~:~ of the bOnus as Bellft took advanas Southern squandered a 14-point tage to cut the score to 64-59.
lead with less lhan two minutes left Gerkin hit a three-pointer with 29
in regulation and lost to visiting seconds left to pull the Golden
Belpre 78·73 in overtime during a Eagles to within one at 65-64, but
wi\d Tuesda night of high school Ryan WilJiams appeared to give
basketbaii.J.oo. ·
SHS some breathing room ~hen_he
Belpre raises its record to 6-1 in hit two free throws to ·agam gtve
the Tri-Valley Conf=nce and is in SHS a 67-64 1~. ·
sole possession of the Ohio DiviW1th reflecnons of the Alexansian race and 8-3 overall. Southern der game on the horizon, Southern
drops to 7-5 overall and 6-2 in the fans hoped SHS wouldn't see a
Hocking Division behind Federal deja-~u. ~ut three-point man S~oll
Hocking an 88-80 winner over Gerkin drilled another three tone tt
Wellston.'
67-67.
.
.
· Belpre made up a 14-point
deficit in the fmal 1:48 to send the
Southern had Jl chance for lhe
game into overtime after Southern victory, but Williams' shot rimmed
had enjoyed the lead most of the off, and the game went into overgame
·
·
After one round, Southern led tun~~uthern controlled the tip in
1 16-15 pulling togelher a strong the overtime, but could not conven
second period to lead 35·26 at lhe the first possession. Kent Garrett
half and 50-40 after three rounds.
scored gn a lay-l}p to put ·Bel~re
.
. Southern built upon lhat lead in ahead 69-67, but Mason Fisher ned
the final round, but in the waning the game at69. Jim Simpson drove
.
BOMBS AWAY- F.astern's Mlcall Otto (44) sbooiS ID ·froat of · minutes Belpre pulled out a golden home a follow-up jumper. Then
Vinton County's Brian Hulf during Taesday night's TVC COiitel!t at needle and deflated the hapless after a dry Southern possession,
Eastern HIRb School, where tbe VlldDRS won 65·62. Otto ftnlsbed Tornadoes big time. The Tornadoes Gerkin added a baslcet to give Belwith a game-blgb 23 points. (Scott Wolle photo)
still led 64-50 wilh 1:30 left to play pre a 73-69 edge.
arid 64-55 with 1:04 left in the
With 16 seconds left, Williams
game. No opponent before had ever cut the lead to 73-71, but Garrett
swiped away a lead such as that hit the fust of dxmus for a 74-71
from lh~ Tornadoes from within tally. Fisher hit two free throws
the confmes of Charles W. Hayman going down the home stretch to cut
gymnasium .
Belpre's lead to 74-73 wilh only 13
Belpre hadn't yet .given up. seconds left. Then SHS was forced

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I'! foul. Gcddn went to the line and

d

missed two free throws and came
up with the offensive rebound but
couldn't convert. The Marauders
were able to to pull to within 11
(49-38) with 39 seconds left oo two
Nick Haning free throws, but the
Tomcats increased the lead to S138 when Joey Wright scored with
15 seconds left
Trimble quickly increased the
lead to 20 (58-38) less lhan two
minutes into the final period on a
three-pointer by Zach MiUer and a
pair of free throws each by Heath

Annbruster and Adaqt Irwin to end
any thoughts- the Marauders had of
coming back.
Trimble had a balanced scoring
attack with Dennis Osborne, Miller
and I J . Azbel scoring 10 each: The
Tomcats hit 21 of S8 frOID the floor
for 36%, including five of 10 frOin
long range. Trimble went to the
line 391imes, hitting 22 of them for
57%. Trimble pulled in 54 ·
rebounds with I eremy Funk grabbing 11. Trimble was Clilled for 16
fouls.

· Meigs placed two players in
double figures led by Abbott wilh
12, Pullins added 10 for Meigs.
The Marauders 11rabbed 34
rebounds with Hanmg grabbing
seven and Hendrix six. The
Marauders had two assists and 15
steals with Pullins getting six.
Meigs was called for 30 personal
fouls and had lhree players foul
out.
Meigs will travel to Vinton
County on Friday eveniog, while
Trimble will come soulh to play

Eastern.
Reserve notes: Meigs overcame
a slow start and went on to post a
46-24 victory over Trimble. Chtis
Lamben led the Marauders with T4
points, while teammate Bradley
Whitlatch addelj eight and Robert
Qualls had seven.

-·-·-·TRIMBLE

(19-21-11-18=69)
Dennis Osborne 0.3-1•10, Mike
McClelland l-l-Ooo5, Joey Wright
3-0-3=9, Mark Patton 0-0-2=2,

Zach Miller 2-0-6-10. Heath Armbruster 0-1-2=5, Jeremy Funk 2-0D--4, JJ. Azbel 3-0-4• 10, N1thln
Angle 2-0-1=5, Adam lrwino3-03=9. Totllls: 16-5-l%=69
MEIGS
(13·12-13·13=51)
Travis AbbOtt 5-0·2=12, Gary
Stanley 3-0.0=6, Mark Mills 1-00=2, Jerod Holman 1-0-0.2. Paul
Pullins 3-1-1=10, Benny Ewing 21-0=7, Donald Yost l -O,Oc2,
Adam Hendrix 1-0.2=4, Nick Haning 2-0-2=6. Tota~ : 19-2-7=51

l:ag/esbeaten... ~(c_o_nti_nu_ed_frOin P~~e-4&gt;~------------~------------------~----~--------------------__

•

have given Eastern (2-8 overall) a
chance to tie as Otto would have
had three tries.
Not' to take anythin11 from Vinton County, as the Vildngs hustled
to set themselves up for second and
third shots and really kept up their
defensive intensity. Eastern's
offense mixC(j it up very well most
of the game, but its backside
defense was poor. The Big Ten, let'em-play. physical aspect of the
game favored the Vikings, who
brought back a strong nucleus from
its state, play off football team from
a year ago. ·
.
. ·~
Vmton County was lei! by Bnan
, Radcliff's 16 points and 15-point
.effons from Jeremy Ward and
Dav1d Huff.
Eastern was led by Micah Otto,

who tallied 23 points, including
three three-pointers. Charlie Sissell, who is 41 points away from
reaching the 1,000 point mark in
hi s career had 17. '
Eastern started the game off on
a so ur note when the book, already
prepared for Federal Hocking's
game away on Saturday indicated
the wrong numbers and drew a
technical. Incidentally, VC scored
one point on the two shot technical,
then Doug Williams scored the ftrst
buck et of the game for a 3-0
Viking lead.
Eastern went up 6-3 O!l goals b.Y
Otto · Br.:in Bowen anil Charhe
Bi sse'u.
The lead then changed hands
three times as neither club did
much to stop the others baseline to

baseline fast break offense. Toward
the latter part of the first quarter,
th e physical aspect of the game
came into being. Dave and Brian
Huff did a great job on the bOards,
with Dave capitalizing on a coup.le
follow-ups for a 13-12 VC lead.
Bissell tied it at 13-13, but VC
ran off a 5-2 run .at the end of the
fram e li&gt; lead 18-15.
VC fell to 19-18 on Bissell and
Otto goals, but VC went on a 7.()
run to take a 25-19 lead, its biggest
of the night
'
· Eastern's,offense, uliJizing lhe
inside much more than it did in the
sec&lt;ind half, 'had a good inside-out·
side effort, including some back
door cuts to climb back even wilh
the Vikings.A piSs from Bowen
and a Bexley wealcside cut by Otto

capped the scoring a1 lhe four-secVC led rebOunding 36-3lled by Stevens' four. 'Matt Sowers led the
ond mark, giving EHS a 32-31 Dave Huff's 9 and Brian HuWs · Vikings. with 12. Teammate Nathan
lead.
six, while Bissell led Eastern ~with Henderson had II.
VC led 47-46 in lhe third frame, ' ten and Bowen eight.
then hitting S-8 at the line, inciudEastern had 15 assists (Bissell
VINTON COUNTY
ing 6-6 from Jeremy Ward going 4), 15 turnovers, three blocks, nine
(18-13-16-18=65)
down tbe stretch, Vinton County steals and 14 fouls. VC had four
Brian fluff 2-1 -0=7, Jeremy
held a 57-53 lead with 1:37 remain- assists (Ward 3): eight steals, seven War~ 3-0.9=15, John Murphy 2-0ing. Eastern three limes cut the lead turnovers, one block and 13 fouls.
0=4, Doug Williams 2-0-0=4,
li&gt; two points, but its defense could
Eastern is now 2-8.
Shawn Davis 1-0-0=2, David Huff
not stop the Vikings, who carried
Saturday's Eastern-Federal 7-0-1=15, Cody Walker 1-0-0=2,
the hot hand at the line. Otto cut Hocking game was postponed Brian Radcliff 7·0-2=16. Totals:
the lead to 63-62 wilh 18 seconds because of a power outage. That 25-1-12115=65
remaining, but Ward hit two free game had no1 been rescheduled as
-,.-throws with 10 Seconds left, setting of press lime.
EASTERN .
!!R Ot_to's ill fated shot; the finale .- East~rn will host Trimble Fri·~­
'(15-17; Ft-lf:06Z)'
65-62.
day.
Brian Bowen 2-0;2=6, Ryan
Eastern hit 24-52, 3-7 lhree's
Reserve notes: Eastern won 44- Buckley 1-0-0=2, Jeff Stethem 3-0-.
and was 5-7 at lhe Une. VC hit 26- 39 behind Chris Bailey's 12 points, 0=6, Charlie Bissell 7-0-3=17, Eric ·
51 from the floor, 1-3 trey's and hit Eric Dillard's 10, Daniel Otto's Hill 3-0.0=6, Michael Bameu 1-012-IS at the line.
nine, Steve Durst's five and Cliff 0=2, Micah Ouo 7-3-0=23. Totals:
24-3-S/7=62

-·-·-·-

r Vinton County slips
~ ·. past

Eastern 65.;.62

called nolhing on the play. much
By SCO'IT WOLFE
like they did the rest of lhe very
Sentinel Correspondent
Visiting Vinton County over- physi~al contest
,
Vinton County (3-7 overall &amp; 3i came a one-point halftime deficit
4
in
!he Ohio D1vision) was 11-15
• and went on to down Tri- Valley
from
the line, going 8-8 down the
Conference foe Eastern 65-62
suetch,
while Eastem never shot
Tuesday night
the
entire
second half. The second
• Micah Otto got off a three-point
·
half
foul
ratio
was: Vinfun &lt;;ounty
shot 'fromlhe 'coinerwith two sec5,
Eastern
II
as
EHS never reached
onds left, but two Vildng defenders
the
bonus.
hammered him to lhe floor, while
A foul on the final play could
also deflecting his arm and forcing
(See EA'GLES on Pa1e 5)
the ball to go astray. Both officials

San Antonio ...........21
Denver ................... lB
Oallu ..................... l6
Minnesota ................B

Basketball
.NBA standings

873 SO.THIRD MIDDLEPORT

Trimble posts 69-51
victory over Meigs

AllonlkDI-

Ialll

Newly licensed by
State of Ohio .
Daycare Licensing

drought for Meigs with a Jumper
By DAVE HARRIS
from 15 feeL Meigs cut lhe Tomcat
Sentinel Correspondent
Trimble took advantage of ice, lead to 3S-25 wilh 23 5C!=Onds lef\
.cold shooting from Meigs and a big in the half, but Mike McClelland
scpring advantage from the foul hit a jumper with 10 seconds left to
line to post a 69-5J victory over lhe give the Tomcats a. 40-25 lead at
Marauders in TVC basketball l~e half.
1n the first half the Marauders
action Tuesday evening at
were
whistled for 16 fouls sending
Glouster.
The· Marauders, still mired in a (See MARAUDERS oa Paae S)
shooting slump, hit only 21 of 70
from the floor (30%), including
two of 15 from three-point range.
DOWNING CHILDS
Meigs was just as cold from the
MULLIN MUSSER
line hitting only seven of 20 from
the charity stripe (35%).
INSUUNCI
Both teams hit 21 field goals for
the game, but Trimble outscored
11\ Second St., Pomeroy
the Marauders 22-7 from the foul
YOUR INDEPENDENT
line.
. Meigs -played without the serAGENTS SERVING
vices of leading scorer and
rebounder Cass Cleland for the secMEIGS COUNTY
ond straight game. Cleland is still
SINCE 1868
nursing a serve ankle_injury Suffered in last week's loss to Southem.
Meigs jumped on top early 3-0
on a free throw by Tra-.tis Abbott's
free throw and Gary Stanley's
buckey at the 7:18 mark of the ftrst
period.
The T6mcats clawed back and
took a 5-3 lead with 6:09 left in the
period when Nathan Angle. hit a
jumper in the paint. .But the
Marauders regained the lead 'at 1110 on a basket by Paul Pullins with
2:27 left in the period.
Trimble then took a 14-11 lead .{1
when Adam Irwin hit a bucket with
I: 50 left. Meigs was able to pull to
with in one (14-13) with 1:38 left
. on a Stanley basket off a Ben
Ewing feed. That bucket was the
· last points that the maroon and gold
in over six minutes.
Trimble scored the last six
points of the period including a
three pointer by Zach Miller wilh
10 seconds lefllo take a 19-13 lead
at the end of one period.
•
Trimble came o;mt in

:W L bl.

llll

Orlando .................. lO 7 .Ill
New York ... " ......... 21 U .611
. Ba~tm ....................u 21 .411

Naw lanay ...........15 24 .385

t6

.314
.216

11
19

Miami ....................11 . 24
Alilodolphia .......... IO 2l
w~

J

'

ACCEPTING NEW
STUDENTS .

7.5

~~~

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

211 .235

:10.5 _

c..tral DtYiilon .
CU!VELAND .......23 12 ~7
Clwlooe ................2l 13 .629
I
lndiona ..................-20 15 ,571
3
ChiCIJO......... " ....... JI )8 .SQO
5.S
Allullo ..................16 :Ill .444 ' 7.5
Milwiiikea ............ .l2 23 .343
tl
DoauiL..................II 2l .333
II
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldww1Dl•ldon

~. . . . . . . . . Ji .~ ~
Houatoo .................22 12

llll

.647

.636

3.5

18

.SOO

I

17

.485

I.S

71

.229

17.5

P.clnc Dlvilion
~ocnix ..................211
a .na
Scaulc ....................l!i 9 .735
LA, l...akcn ............22. II .667
S~enmc:nto ............20 15
.S71
Ponland ................. 11 16 .529

OatOa. ~ ............. 11 23
LA. Oippen .......... .5 31

Now Yodl: at HW~U~n, I p.m.
Wuhinaton at Milwaukee., 1:30 p.m.
PnocnU at Portland, lOp.m.

l
.(j.

.324
.139

9
16
23

Tuesday's scores

Tonight' games

Ohio men's
college. scores

Candiu• 72, Fairfldd S1
COiiietl94. BWTolo 92 (2
Manhaaan 76. Sl Pcter'a SS
90, t.. s.u. 71
Rutaeiw 91, St. Pmncill, NY 50
s-. Hall 6 6 . - CoUep l8
SL l&lt;Oapll'• 71. o....t 73
S~cuao 91, St.John 'al7

on-

Orlando 109, Olarloue 98
PhoeniJ: 129, Denver 113
sUule 115,12l.EVEI.AND91
Stcramf.!nta 95, Portland II

.,

B.O&amp;tan.at Miami, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio at Oluloue, 7 :30p.m.
~phi a ~~Atlanta,

p.m.

Newut fl. Mowu Vemon 30
Newbury S~,_&amp;:m ~

Yale 60, Hoi"an S4

South

Oblo Atbledc Coarerence

Citadcl71' Oeo..P, Southern 59

Boldwin· W.U.aa 72.lohn Curoll 69
c. itat n,llinm 43
H.fdcl~ 10, Ollio Nonham 66
Mtunt Uruon SB, Maridla 39

Gaarm Tcd167. Wua p...., 65

LSU-,4, Alabam• 61
·
.
Memphi•l1, Southern Mia. 7t

~66.MuokinpDll

Mid-Ohio Conrerence

Doy&lt;on 73, Nauc Doma 63

Vcnaill~~e; 10, Miami E. ~

Wadaworth 39, Omille 34

·

·. Warren Kaut.~y S3, ~ 36
Watkin• Memoria166, Col. bldapondcnce 50

.

W1uacon 48, Sl.t)'k-. 31
.
W~avWe S :S~ ReynoldibwJA2
Xau. Ou-. 41, an. Bapti.112A
Youna. ctuil1ian 64, S. Ridac Acad.

Ott.twa Hilla S2., N. Baltinum 16
Oaawa-Olandcrf 50. Findlly 40
Paint Val11, Riclunond Dale SE ~
Patridl.: Henry 61, Condncntll 43
Pw\awilleChr. 46,Howland0u. 17
P)'manmin&amp; Val. 12,lWtland .S
Richmond Hu. 54, Shaker Hta. Brown

... Youna. R.oymlO, v...., . £... oo
Transactions

20
., Riverdale 46, Buci.e)'C Cc:nual4S
Rocky River Lulhcran W . 44, Elyria

Open Dooo26

••
••

S. Ccntn.l55, Collina Wedmn Rc.crve
•

S. O!.atlCI&amp;On SE 57, Sprin&amp;. Shawnoc

CLASSES HELD ON T,UES. &amp; THUR.

CALL 614-992-3200/3824

.

.

OV~R

18,500

HOMES WITH

· POINT -BLANK JUMPER - · Meigs postmaa :rravis Abbott (center) shoots a jumper from point-blank r!IDie after gettiDI{ above three
Trimble players durlag Tuesday aigbt's TVC game ID Glouster,
where the Tomcats won 69·51 despite Abbott's team-high 12 poiDIS.
(Dave Harris photo)

\

TVC boys' cage standings

~ . . . . .. . . . . .J

ellston ................... 5
Vinton County ......... .3
Nelsonville-York ......2
MEIGS ................, .... 1

7

3
3
2

Hocking Divlsioo
Federal Hocking .......5 ·0 7
SOUTHERN ............6 , 2 7
Alexander .................4 2 4

TuesdaY's scores
Belpre 78, SOUTHERN 73
Federal Hocking 88, Wellston 80
Alexander SO, Nelsonville-York ·
41
'
Vinton County 65, EASlERN 62
2
Trimble 69, MEIGS 51
5
Zanesville Rosecrans 84, Miller
6 60

Now Appearing At The Holiday Inn.•. .
From Portsmouth, Ohio

REPLACE YOUR
OLD WORN
·our FAUCET
~WITH A NEW
ONE FROM

•Lavatory
•Tub

..Nt.d 2 Weekends .. Friday &amp; Saturday

PICKENS

a.m.

l.L~• &amp;
rt- 0."'".

HARDWARE

lis/Point Pleas(lll/

'~ - ~~N\.

St. Rt. 7 North

IIRAtli R C1EVY ASTIJ EXTENDED CONVERSIOh Vlft
• E.:tended OlasSis
• Driver S1de Au Bag
• Anti·Locl&lt; Brakes

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583
Gallipolis

'

• Rear Anti-lock Brakes
• Power Steering
.,: Power Brakes.

·Sofa/Bed

."Power Brakes
• T1ll Steering

•

I

I

~ed'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP

FIBEJIIIASS RIII•IG BOARDS ·
I

--·

• Custom Ctoth lntenor
• Steel Belled Tires

-

• 4 Capta1n Chairs

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
·FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

IIIAIIIIIW '95 POIITIAC ..VW SE

'94 POIITIAC SU1181RP LE
• A&lt; Conl:il&lt;n
• Automat&lt;:
• PIS. P/B ·

· • Powef Windows • Steel Boned Tires
• AeaJ DeroSier • Cuslom C~lh Buckel Seals
• AMIFM Stereo ·loaded'

• Power DoOf loeb · Coo sole

·ww czsene ~

'94 CHEVY K·1500 EXlUDED CAB 414 PICKUP

·cruse Coolrof

• Air Condllion
va.,Powef ·
. Slle A.t&gt;ag
Am&gt;Locl&lt; Brakes

·Delay Wipers
•CusiOm
"""""
• Cioll11
Loado&lt;fl

~

•

''

CALL NOW....
GALLIPOLIS

446-2342
'

I

~· PLEASAN~,

•Loaded!

·l50 V~ Power · Powef Br•es

• Air Condition
•3800V-6Power

·Dual '

• Power SfHiinll
•Power Brakes
• Power Door locl&lt;s

·Power

1•

• AM.fM Sleoeo
• Tl SfHring
• Custom Clo1111n1Bfll&lt;
•loaded!

·

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAII4x4
·&amp;""ado

311¥.. POWU/II.VEUDII
Ai&lt;•AWFM Cwelto • Fully

• 4!4

• floor

• 350 V-8 Power
• Au1omatic

• PIS, Pltl
·HI.
• -Door~

WV

.. 675-13:33

TDU FREE t-BIJO.B2Z-tUt7 • 312·2844
344·5941. 422·11758

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

• Delay 'Mpers
• Custom Qoth lnlenor
•loaded!

--w- .. . . ,_

V·l PDWEII/IllVERADO

· £•tended Clb • AL.IOI'Niie
• Powtf Doot" Loeb • CrUISe
·SO....m
·AoCordlioo
••~~
• Powe1 Steeri'Q
Cmene • Fuly L.Oidedl

·IIMIIIW '95IID I fS'IIIE

•Kitchen Sink

Playing Everthing From
.
Rock To Country/ _
9 p.m. -1

No Doc Feet

quarter taking a . 3
lead with 4:16 left when Jody
Wright hit one of two free throws.
Ewing finally ended .the scoring

~·-~F I;;; I-NT~·-~··I-·DELTA o: ~.
.

$8,688·**

YOUR MESS·AGE!

,.,

~~~l- ·_.- .'- - - •' 1·~~-...:..-+--~ ---~--.;:.

(

-· - ,

·'-

'

11

W. Jcffenon 43, H4mi1Lm Twp. )4

PRE-KINDERGARTEN
CLASS 12:15-3 PM

REACH

}.f

UniotD 60, ZAne Trace Al
VaUey View 45, Middla~DWD tdadil,an

Vi"""Y 0... 50, Eria (Pl.) adhel

School f2

Qhi!l women's
college scores

Vcrmoru 64, Duunoulh 61

40

Ncnralk St. P.uJ 40. Monroaville 31
Oak Hill!!, MWord4l
Onn&amp;e Otr. 43,-Sha.lr.e:r Haa. Andrcwa

M!d,O blo Conrerence
CodarvWa 116, Fmdlly 83
Sbawnoc St. 71, Ohio Dunin.icl.n 61

Midwest
. Thursday's games

Milford 42, Cin. Glen &amp;te 29
MinoiOr 59, Anna 39
N. Unlon 50, Continp 37
New London S4, Mapleton 33
New Aillldal.phi,t 63, E. Uverpoat34
New lli..,.t •~ ,llopewdl Loudon 39

Far West

ld1ho 17, Sacrvnen1.o St. 72

fumy 19. Haly c .... 12

36

24

Colorado97, Tcau-San Aluftitl60 .

East

Tal . N~ Dt.rrte .57, Canti.nal Suiu:ft

M.iddle'field Cardinal Sl, Orand Val .

SW Teua St. 64, 3. UW. 62

college scores

7.5

Sonduay SL Mo.,. 70. Old For! 52
Sidney 49, Tipp City 40
Spencerville .59, PadLway 5I
SprinJboiO l1,'Franklla 50

Wabh 88, Mounl Vernon NauraJC 61

Rice66 , Tcau AAM 62
•\

Major men's

Findlay 83, Ceduville S4
M1looc: 59, Urbina Sl
Tll!'ut 7~ RIO GRANDE 52

Southwest

Golden State u Sacramonto, 10:30
p.m .

San Antonio Hh, Bolton 92

3

- ·... ~~linoU' 59
Muq"""'S4

StJallle at Minnclob.,l p.m..

7:30_p.m.
Utah II Detroit, 7 :30p.m.
· L.A. Lakoa at lnclian1, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at OUc:aao,l:30 p.m.
Odando at DULu, 1:30 ~·
a.EVEI...AND at LA. L:lippn, 10:30

, I

3 YR. 0~ CLASS
9 AM TO .11 :45'

12

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 ~m

LOidedl

�(

Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 18, 1995

Wednesd!ly, January 18, 1995

n
Landers

Dear Ann Landets: You have
printed seveml columns about the
imparLance of unplugging kitchen
appliances when not in use. l am
enclosing an article that appeared in
the International Association of
Electrical Inspectors News. It is
gripping restimony for unplugging
bathroom applilnlces as well.
Please print this article in your
column so that parents may learn
from it. My hean goes out to the

they said they planned to eat 816:30.
I was reluctant to accqM. because our
youngest child, a toddler, goes to bed quite early and I didn't think it would
be wise to keep him up that late. We
agreed to be there at 3 p.m. and have
dinner earlier.
Wben we arrived, the husbands and
children went 10 the pool, and the
wife told her husband to be back at
5:30 to stan up the. grill, I began to
feel uneasy when she brought out
three medium-sized steaks to feed
four adults and three children.
When she used an alcoholic
beverage to marinate the steaks, I told
her to please leave the alcohol oil'
mine because I'm pregnant. That's
when I found out she was only .
planning to prepare dinner for three.

When the meat was done, she
allowed me to share my steak with ·
my children . However, there weren't
enough vegetables or potatoes to go
around. I asked if there were any
more, and she said, "No, but you can
take some of!'everyone else's plares.•
I was appalled. By the time we
actually sat down, it was 7 pm. My
kids were hungry and cranky, and so
was I. That small amount of steak was
au we had.
These people are my husband's
relatives, and I didn't want to stan
anything. My husband wasn't aware
of what was going on, and I didn't
want to go into iLAs soon as "dinner"
was over, we left. There is no way
we can duclc fwure dinner invitations,
which I dread. Any advice for next

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

•

Unplugging household appliances may save young lives
momer of the children involved in hair dryer that _was' plugged in .
this lrllgic accidcnL -- THOMAS W. The dryer was apparently then
SCHMID, EXECUTIVE DIREC- dropped into the lllb.
TOR, INDEPENDENT ELECTRI"The mother returned to find the
CAL CONTRACtORS, FLORIDA youngsters unconscious and the dryer
DEAR THOMAS SCHMID: noating beside them. The children
Thank you for what could be were tal&lt;:en 10 the hospital, where the
lifesaving information for my gid was pronounced dead. The boy
millions of readers . Here's the article. was haspitalized in critical
Bless you for sending it on.
condition."
"A4-year-{)ld girl was electrocuted
And now, dear readers, one mQre
and her 3-year-old brother critically word from AM: It takeS only a second
injured when one of them dropped a for a bean-breaking lragedy 10 occut
plugged-in hair dryer ilno the tub Please keep your elecuical appliances
with them.
_unplugged and out of the reach of
"The county sheriff's deputy said young children.
the children were in the tub when
Dear Ami Landers: My family
. their mother left them for a moment, was invited to a relative's house to
aitd one child apparently got out go swimming and have dinnet Wben
of the tub and returned with a our relatives issued the invitation,

\

'

'

time? -· DUMBFOUNDED, NO
STATE PLEASE
DEAR D.F.: Yes. Eat at home
before you go OVCI' ther'e.
Gem of the Day: It is no
compliment to be told, "Your mind
·is like a blotter. You soak up
everything." Remember, blouers get
it all backward.

Drugs are everywhere. They'~
u1sy to get, easy to use and even
easier to get ltboud 011. If .)1011 haole
qru:stions about drugs, )'OK n.eedA1111
l..antkrs' booklet, '7he /..QwdiJwn 011
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
bKSin.ess-size envelope IJIId a check
or money order for $3.75 (this
includes postage IJIId handling) to:

· A Cardinal - Affiliated Supermarket

/..Qwdown, cloAIInLarukrs,P.O.Box

/J562, Chicago;IU. 6061/-()562. (In
Canada, send $455.) .

Teaford talks on Civil .War to local Sons of Union Veterans camp

Kevin Teafonl or Cf(]w City
was speaker at the recent meeting
of Brooks- Gtant Camp 7, Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War
held at the Hope Baptisr Church
annex in Middlepon.
.
Commander Keith Ashl ey of
.Rock springs introduced--the speak•
er who di$Cussed the Confederate
cavalry raid into Meigs County by
G. Albert Gallatin Jenkins of
Calicll County.
·
He said that about 150 troops
crossed the Ohio River from
Ravenswood in 1863, proceeded to
Racine where a .citizen was killed,
and then crossed the river back into
Mason County. This raid caused .

Meigs County's·preparation which
resulted in the failure of Morgan's
Raid the following year.
Jerry Devol of Devola showed
several recently purchased Civil
War books including on e on the
Baulc of Cloyds' Mountain in
West Virginia_The battle involved
troops from Washington, Meigs
and Gallia Counties. David Mills of
Reedsville displayed an original
Civil War bayonet recently recovered.
1
During the meeting attended by
20- members and seven guests, the
Cfunp voted to lake membership in
the G.A.R. Museum of Philadelphia, Pa., the only .museum dedicat-

ed entirely to the Union soldiers of
the Civil War. It -also voted to
obtain membership in Johnson's
Island Historical Society of Sandusky County. The group is working to save the Civil War prison
loqted there during the war.
The remaining slate of ofticers
was filled.
Terrence Cummings of Spencer,
W.Va. was elected junior vice
comm ander and Robert Mills of
Baum Addition, Dale Colburn of
Pomeroy, and Alan Holter.of Five
Point~ were. elected to camr coun-

cil.
.
The camp is planning to panici
pate in 'the celebration of G
William T. Sherman's"I 75th ·
day on Feb. II . Noli . o the
event will be mailed to members.
Darin Logan oLMiddleport has
su bmitted his application for the
scholarship given by the National
Organization. Ano~1er application
may be submitted.
A discussion of Memorial Day
activities was held and it was noted
that the camp bas been invited to
participate in the observance atlbe

Burlingham Cemetery. The camp
will submit a request for funds to
the county veterans' service offi,
cer.
_
Commander Ashley and
Michael Trowbridge wiU be attending the midwinter meeting of the
Ohio Department S.U.V. in Columbus. Tbis will be the planing meeting for hosting the national
encampment in Columbus later this
year.
A resolution was passed by the
camp to ask the Ohio Department
to officially a@pt juniors for

camps. If passed, bpys from ag~s 8
to 14 would be allowed to JOID
Camps on a permanent basis if they
can prove direct or collateral ancestry to a Union soldier.
·

Drennan Goldsberry was reported in a hospital in Columbus and
members signed a card for him.
Com01ander Ashley announced
the next meting for March 10. Featured speaker will be Big . Gen .
Gordon R. Bury, retired head of the
Sons of Veterans Reserve.

:--..;.,..--.-...;.._---,
Ohio University
College of Osteopathi c Medici ne

Family
·Medicine

TROPICANA.
PURE PREMIUM

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

of Family Medicine
QuestiQp; Our winler hasn't
been 100 bad so far, but I anticipate
we'll get some snow soon. Each
year I bear about people dying of
bean attacks while shoveling snow.
I am generally healthy, but I also
ba\\e a strong family history of
· bean disease. Am I ill any danger
from s)mveling snow?
Answer: There are many things
which increase your risk of having
a bean attack, a condition called a
myocardial infarction (Ml) in medi cal terms. Unfortunately, there is
"'-lJo jiOmpletely accurate way of prediCting who l}vill have a heart
attack, but personal and family .
medical history give us some clues.
Since you have. blood relatives with
heart trouble , your chances of
developing similar problems are
increased. High blood press ure,
smoking, obesity, diabetes and high
cbolesterol levels also raise the
risk, but I don't know if any of
these factors apply to you.
Shoveling snow is vigorous
physical work. especially if the
·snow is heavy and wet. If you are
accustomed to doing vigorous
physical work , then shoveling
snow is probably not excessively
dangerous for you . But,
you must exercise .&amp;ood judgment.
Dress warmly, not JUS! lor the thermometer reading but for the wind
chill as well. Shovel at a slow or
moderate pace so that you don't
place a great stress on your hean.
When you are feeling- a little tired,
·go inside and rest instead of forcing
yourself to finish shoveling. The
rest of.the snow will still be there
when you arc rested and ready to
shovel again. _
.
.
An Ml call occur during strenuous physical cxcnion -:-- like shov·snow -

because the

hJ~arl ,

heart, this temporary narrowing
may be .. enough to cause injury or ·
perma nen t damage to the heart
muscle.
Question: Are there any other dangers I
should worry about?
Answer: Yes, I can think of at
least two _ First, there's frostbite,
whi ch causes dama~e to skin and
underlying tissue_ It affects the
pans of the body that have become
very cold, typically the fingers,
toes, cars or the tip of the nose. In
mild cases, the frostbitten tissue
turns red .and becomes painful
when it is re-warmed. If the .frostbite is more severe, the diunaged
parts may be painless but have
bum-like blisters. In extreme circumstances, the tissue may actually
die.
Second, a condition called
"hypothermia" - a potentially life
threatening decrease in body temperature - is also common in cold
weather. Norrnally,.when your temperature falls below 98.6 degrees
the body responds by shi vering.
This extra muscle activity produces
·more heat and increases the tern- .
perature of the internal organs.
When you are cold, your body also
•slightl y re duces th e amount or
blood U1a1 is pumped to the arms
and legs. This likewi se acts to
warm the vital intenial organs.
Usually these normal body reactions are enough.to koep the person
alive until he or she can get to a
warmer environment. However, if
the body's temperature continues to
drop, the person will become less
active ____:_ both physically and mentally. In the most severe cases of
hypothermia, the cooling C&lt;Jntinues
until death.
.
·
If
use good judgment, you
not have
of theSe prob-

hard. If an area of the engage in
outdoor activities
heart
is unable to receive in' cold weather. In addition to the
adequate nourishment from the "common sense" guitlelines I mencoronary artery which suppli es it tioned earlier, it's a good idea not
with oxygen-rich blood. the muscle to smoke tobac~ or drink alcohol
will be damaged or perhaps even before or during your outside work
die. This dan)age is a heart attack.
because of their detrimental effeCt
The cold weather that accompa- on circulation _
.
nies snow poses other hcalth,risks.
"Family. Medicine" is a weekly
Cold temperatures can produce a column. To submit questions,
temporary narrowing in the coro- write to John C. Wolr, D.O .,
nary arteries . If you have a coro- Ohio University College or Osteonary anery Umt is just barely large 1pathic Medicine, Grosvenor· Hall,
enough to supply the needs of your Athens, Ohio 457l!l.

,_

·

WINTER
WIPER BLADES

by Phoenrx Industries, Inc.

. .&gt;-·

30QUAUIYOIECKS

- ·- --UMIT ONE One C0l4)0n Per Farntty
Gooa On I~ ol C QI'dinal ~ar\lels.

4

aOVEJrwlNEWCllMI'IM'NIS ASWWAS
a OOMPUI1i1l SIMI1!SI'ID

each

CARDINAL
-BACON
SLICED
16 OUNCE
PACKAGE

(f712PP)

AIRFU.TERS

ftlln•)(i
YOUR CHOICE

Most popular applications.

GLASS TREATMENT

2/$5

oo.

MAPLE OR
WHITE ICED
6 CT. PACKAGE

OR GRAPE JAM
32 OUNCE JAR

OR ANTI-FOG

(tAN: AF52: AF132: AF184; AF73e; A.F773, AF115).

-- '
l'f!Rf'ECT CIRCLE'

TNEifUTD

--=-•IIIIlS{

NEW WATER PUMPS

4999_ .._ _

•

[ 1~·200•U28·2074)

r.J
.
00000000
••• Addttional Purchase ' 1.79

6S MON'Jlf BAITERY

(-zut.1ee-: 2221-tnJ: 228-1718; 228-11181 ;
228-2029; 228·2031 ; 221·2225: ut-2221)

5999

3-r"

SPARKPUJGS

(t2412•F·&amp;5 : 2~R~s. 55182-85. se-es: 1onins-n 74-1!51 1

AFTER 25c MAIL-IN REBATE
SALE PRICE 1.04

NON-RFStsroR

79¢

wll:h exchenge.
'Up to 700 CA. '"Up to 550 CCA.

......

WI.
_.

U.S. #1 ·1 0 ROund bag

IDAH'O
P!,TATOES

,,oo

•

For most applications.

699

Flexible 8 foot. 8 gage, tangle free. 111&lt;01 121
Hl--• --n

=- ,.. ,,,,,,
.
gage ..............

f~t,-8-...~:":':-

1•1..0101 )

•

999
"

BOTTOM
ROUND ROASr

I

DESIRAE CUNDIFF

119 -wEST SECOND ST.
992-2·139
Prrcrs qoocJ at H'c~c P pdr:rc1pe1!rr1q f1.uts Plus Julosturcs
Ouant:ty R,gtt ls Rcscrv.~rJ Rarr1 C:'ecks Ava il able

12 12-ounce cans

COKE

19

Services not' available at all locations.
·--

•

..

CINNAMON
ROLLS

URFRESH
BREAD

00

99¢

j2....35001 , 24· 35002. 24·30503)

2~$4

----LIMIT TWO One~ Per F,.-11~y

Good Only (II Card.rol ~OOr.el:s

99

6
99
• (.30-16, 30.18~ ............................................... 5
PARTS PLUS SPARK
PLUG GAP TOOL •

Cowec:tii 19 Rod NIJts. Valve Stem
Seals, Valve lliles or lilers, Vf!Ne
l.OO&lt;s, Aocker lvm Nu1s, Dowel Pros,
Vf!Ne l.illn, 01 ~. Mel Gaskets

OIL FILTERS

...1

I
...1I

:

Rubbtr cover preventa tnow a let bulld- uP;.Hoau·D!!)y)
riveted steel reelata twisting 6 bending. 112.,-16, 29-16
49
• (129-20) ..........................................................

AeminJ!adured v4h AI New
PSbls, Pistln Ri'1gs. Frt18Ze 1'\Jgs.
Main Beamgs, Cam Beamgs, Rod
Beamgs. rrmg Colr'4JOI1811lS.

TRUST.

·

2'100

I
I I=OR.
L

CHILLED•ORANGE JUICE
OR GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
ASS'T. VAR.•64 OZ. CTit

. . OF HARD TO FIND PAKrS

QUALITY ENGINES!
$699
a

I box
L

·
.

1· SHURFRESH I
1 LAR«j!: EGGS I

BOOSTER CABLE

Cundiff
.-c.,_,____ rates
birthday
Desime Rachellc Cundiff celebrated bcr first binhday, Dec. 19,
witfl il party a t_McDon.ald's of .
Pomeroy, ·
·
Attending were ·her mother, Joy
Cundiff grandmother, Paulette
· Cundiff, 'her aunts, (ulgie Cundiff,
April Cundiff, Sus•e. Bryant, and
other friends and faiiilly members;
Brandon SbuU, Corey Mayes, Ashley Mayes, Leigha Bryant, Ryan
and Issac Lee, Kyra Cu~iff. Lola
Whittington, Michelle Wbttungton•.
Barbie Whi.uington, and Carea Jef·
fers . Gifts were presented to the
honored guest.

Parts· s
autos tore

24 oz .

000000001

Fresh
dozen

309

00

PRICES GOOD JANUARY 1-31, 1995

.rV QUAiliY PARTS
.rV LOW PRICES
tV OVflOOGHf DEIJVERY

1t;

$1 ~!coupo~

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF BONELESS

~--- -~ ~ ,- ~.J (~ ~~
~-

~

G:.l -'

II

•

'
•

'I

.I

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

18,1995

Ohio

Meig.s Lions· club .hosts _circus
The Pomeroy·Middlepon Lions ,
Club will sponsor the Cole Indoor
Circus with two shows at 2 p.m.
and 4:30p.m. March 5 at the Meigs
High School gym.
The circus will feature clo~
· magicians, unicyclists, balanc!Og;
~
juggling, baboons, birds, dogs and
monkeys.
This circus helps fund the Lions
Club's annual activities. A portion
of each ticket salc:,goes toward suppa nin g local efforts, said Jeff
Warner, director of the local chapter.
. The local Lions Club furnishes
eye glasses 10 the needy, installed
electricity at the David Diles Park,
placed flags across the county at
th e seven national holidays each
year. replaced the Pomeroy parlcing
1m's bandstand, and sponsored the
Carleton School Olympics.
"All of the money we earn goes
to people in the county," Warner
said, adding people don't have 10
go to Gallipolis or Athens for~~""
ity entertainment.
For more details conlact any of
the officers, president, Roger
Williams; vice president, Bruce
Teaford; secretary/lreasurer, Rev.
William Middleswarth; lion tamer,
Kenneth Uu; and directors, Gary
Snouffer and Jeff Warner. For
information, call992-4512.
Advance tickets will cost $6,
while at the door the tickets will be
cost $7.
If someone buys tickets , they
can donate them to other groups,
. such as the Meigs County Senior
Citizens or Garleton School.
·

RCCOLA
PRODUaS

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

YOIII'S
CAIPIITII SIIYICE

CARNATION :

MIX
. 10 ENV.

lenges facing the swine industry.
Participants will rotate to demon·
stration topics that address industty
issues and then· they can see the
remaining exhibits or attend other
activities at the Congress.
Registraiion is $2 per person.
All participants will receive a fold·
er containing information related to
the demonslration topics and free
admission to the trade show floor.
Only . pre-registrations will be

.
.
99(
Beef •••••••••••••••••••••

'

.
''

GROUND

accepted and are limited to jhe fust
400 who apply by Jan. 27.
For more information, youth
may contact the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992-6696 or
call Jodi Black at614-292-6791. ·
l'he Ohio Swine Youth Chal·
lenge is a cooperative effon of The
Ohio Pork Producers Council, Ohio
State University Extension and Tbe
Ohio State University Animal Science Department.

LB.

PRINGLES

Public NOtice

6-7.5 oz.

·singing operied the meeting which
was followed by reading of "The
Purpose" . Hazel Ball, treasurer,
read tluutk you notes from those to
whom tlte group had contributed in
December.
Pandora Collins gave a repon
on cards sent, and Peggy Crane had
the prayer requests· prayer. A discussion was held on praise received
for the prompt prayer line of the
.community. . ·

c-

Assignments for monthly devotions, program and refreshments
will be given out at the next meet' ing.
Dorothy Jeffers had the devotions and Thelma Jeffers handled
the program .which included a
Bible quiz.
Next meeting will be held Feb.
14 at I p.m. at the church. Refreshments were servetl· to the 14 members attending following prayer by
. Mrs. Jeffers.
. ~

•

•

HUNTS
SNACK PACK

PTO to them.
The purchase of new basketball
shorts and !·shirts wa' discussed .
Candy bar sales will be held start,
ing Jan. 23 and continuing through
February.· A commiuee to collect.
"!oney and also to bag candy was
dtscussed .
Right to Read Week was
announced for March 6 thorough
17 using the theme "Reading
Around the World." The basketball
banquet was tentatively set for

March 18.
It was noted that new officers
will be elected in April and a com·
miuee will be appointed at the next
meeting to com&lt;: up with nominations.
It was reported that the children
will be attending the play "Cinderella" in Parkersburg in the
s·pring. McBucks for McDonald's
and sales receipts from Fruth's
Pharmacy are still be collecied.
Next meeting will be F~h. 7.ar 7
p.m. at the school.

BORDEN

DEAN'S LIST
Darrielle Scott, senior at Marshall University where she is complering her bachelor of science in
special education and elementary .
~ducatton, was on the dean's list
tor the past grading period . She
e•mt
· average of3 .g.
·• c·d .a gradc pomt

Feb. 5. The group will meet at the
annex at 9:30a.m. and then march
to the church for the 10 a.m. ser·
vice. The post will conduct a 15
minute program during the service.

• .

.

·

$

!' -·-!'-"!.!'A.

"'!' -·- ·-·- !' -·-

.:

MAXWELL HOUSE MASTERBLEND

:!

COFFEE
34.5

"

~
,~.

_$ ,99

oz.

IN THE SERVICE
Bradley C. Bentz ·

computer. was
on the
s municatinns-computer systems
list. She had a 4. grade point aver- operations specialist course in
age for the past semester.• ·
B'l · M'
I OX!,
ISS .
-Danielle and Luciana are daughBemz is the son of Charles and
ters of Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Diana Bentz of Coolville.
Scou of Cheshire.
He gradualetl in 1993 from FedFOUR
CH
I'L
al
k. H.tg h S choo 1.
.
A AINS SUNDAY
er, c•1OC'mg
·Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, will observe
Nick Price, one of the stars of
Four Chaplains Sunday iu the Mid· the PGA Tour, wa' bom in Durban,
dleport Presbyterian Churcb on South Africa.
'

----Community calendar--._ __;,__
The Community Calendar is Burnout, Arc You a Victim?"
Spring~ United Metho&lt;list Church.
published as a free service to
Guest speaker John Gooldin Will
non·profil groups wishing to
RUTLAND - Leading Creek speak on organ donations . All
announce meeting and special Conservancy Dislrict,.organization- interested people are welcome to
events. The .-ale11dar is .not a~ meclingd (1,m. W.coJncsday at attend.
designed to promote sales or oflice.
fund raisers of. any type. Items
RACINE - The Home Nationare printed as space permits ond
· SYRACUSE - Third Wednes- al Bank is sponsoring a workshop
cannot be guaranteed to run a day Homemakers' Club meeting 10 · at Southcm High School Thursday
specific number of days.
a.m. Wctlncsday at the Syracuse at 7 p.m in the cafeteria. Stinner
and Associates from Portsmouth
Municipal Building. Roll call WEDNESDAY.
Old Wive's Tales. Potluck at noon. will present inforl!!ation about
MIDDLEPORT ·- Middleport All homeJitakers Invited.- · ·. ·
financial aiel for college, bow to
Literary Club, WedneSday, at the
complete the application for FederMeigs County Public Library ,
al Smdent Aid form, altd to answer
THURSDAY
Pomeroy, at. 2 p.m. Mrs . David
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport questions parents may have about
Bowen will present a prog·rarn on · will hold the first of three strategic financing college. Parents and stuearly. 20th Century American planning meetings at 6 p.m. 'Thurs- dents are encouraged to attend.
artists. Mrs. Roy Holter, bostess, day at Overbrook Nursing Center.
will present a ~u s ical prO!lfl!lll.
Public is invited to discuss the
SATURDAY
future.
SALEM CENTER -'- Star
POMEROY - . Alzheimer and
Grange 778 and ·star Junior Grange
Related Disorders Support Group,
ROCK SPRINGS - Middle· 878 ,. Saturday, 6:30p.m. at the
I to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Meigs port Child Conservation League grange hall at Salem Center. All
Senior Center. Topic, "Caregiver meeting Thursday, 7 p.m at Rock members and friends are invited.
I

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

CHATHA.M

DOG FOOD
•

•

1 11
11

,'

Jll

·.
'

~·Jil·Jili'A•A~~-•••"'!'AI'A~Jil·~
•
. '
COUPON · .
.
:1
11
1
1:
I
I

CHARMIN ULTRA

::

~

TOMATO
JUICE
460Z.

:

TOILET TISSUE

::

$249

::

·:: 12 ROLL PK
II

.

I

It1
Good Only-At·Pawell'o ._.. u .. ~~------lj~-1,
Offer Good lhru Jonu1ry , 1995
II_----~----- _i;!"llt_1p!!~U!12f!!e!---------- -II
f t • ••

COUPON
··· ····················~
GOOD
FOR
II.~~.A!!IA.AI'•••••~Jil·Jil·~·~
I'
,
· COUPON . ·
.
:1
,: .
TIDE ·
'
STRIPLE
::
DETERGENT
~
COUPONS.
.I:1 ' 42 USE
$699
: :1 I
GOOD
1: 9S OZ.
I
,1
It
_
.
11
Good Only AI Powoll'o Super Volu
.
JAN. 19, 20, 21
1,
•
Oflor Good thru J1nu1ry 21, 1995
·
1

1

I•__

-~

__ - .- ____ I:JI!!It1f'•!~U-It,!)T•! ________

o1

~_-'I

•••••••••••••••••••••••

-

'

"
I

•

'

'

STARTING DEC. 30
12 Gaug, Only
Umltttl: 740 Backbore,

614-992-3470

680.Fr!lllf

949-2168

WICKS
HAULING

Hysell Run Rd .... Pomeroy

A~'t

It Nifty,
Today Dad's 60!

PubliC Notice
projocto which ore
propoMd to bo locoted ln •
bou lloodpllln.
Thlo prol•ct will Involve
lnlloltotlon of 11,100 LF ol
PVC to llltend through
portlont of Bedford ond
Sollobury Townohlpo. The
· woterllne will extend eouth
from lholntoructlon otT H
ond CR 11 In Bedford
Townohlp olong T n to CR
Ul In Sollobury Townohlp.
The . wotorllne then

· If th!lt ', not
enoUIJh to

celebrate
He retiring too,
ain't that tp"Bat!
W'lth aU our love,
Mom,Kuu&amp;
Grandkid&amp;
Public JJotlce
Townohlp olong CR to
through Scipio Townthlp
untH It roochoo CR 17. At CR
17 It will bronch ott Into two
dlnoctlon1: On1 line exltndt
eaolwlrd along CR 17, TR
177 ond TR 143 ending ol
Harrloonvtlte; tho other lint
contlnu11 oouthword llong
CR 10 then 1oulheaotword
elong CR 7 ond CR 10
ondlng Ill the lnteraoctlon o•
CR eo 1nd CR 4. Theoo
waterline• will oroao 100.
yur lloodplalno by
eroutng- otnom
Leodlng Creek, Mud Fork,
ond UIUI LHdlng CrMk.
There ore no proctlcoblo
olternotlvo routeo tor tho
watorllneo.
Thooo
watorllneo muot oxtond, to
the houlehotdo they

-=

11rvln,.. 1nd the etre•m

lleda aN too axtenolve In
longth to circumvent In ony
practtcll monnor. Becauoo
oil Wollrlln.. will be pllced
underground and llllod ovor,
lloodwotoro will not bt
dtoplaclll.
For ·more detollod
lnlorm.llon concomtng thlo
proloct, the Environmental
Review
"Record
moy bo
conoultod
weekdoyo
~
d
1 00
--=~m~
p.m. (exeepl holtdllyo) 11 the
Mot go
c au n 1y
Commlulonoro Olllce. .
Dtroct ony quoatlono or
commento to Rick Hindman
11 (11~) 37~·11438 or moll
commento to Rtck Hlndm111,
Buckeye HHio • HVRDD, At.
1, Box 2990, llarlelto, Ohio
457110.
(1) 11, 11; :rrc

PUBUC NOnCE
L• • dIn II
Cr • • k
Ctin1orvancy Dl1trlct h11
opplled lor ond been
owordod 8 gront to ooolot In
funding 8 project which
Involve• conotrucllng 1
waterline In llelga County,
Ohio. Thlt proltct extondo
woler .. rvlco to 11
PU:IIIc Notice
houoeholdo th111ro In nlltd
of •••• drinking water.
PUBLIC NO"fiCE
Portion• ol thll project oro
TUpptro Plolno·Chootor
P!OPDOtd to bo locetod In Wotor Dlolrlcl hll opplled
100·ye,8 r floodplolnt. tor •nd been •wlrdtd 1
Federal reguliilliini fiqUiri
to olllll tn funding a

9!!nl!l!l!tlln l!r9 ~!,.gjj91!1

oxtendlng 1111 1nd Will
olong CR 11. Thill
wllerlln" will crooo a 100.·
yoor lloodploln by c.Ooolng
Klngobury CrMk.
There ore no proctlcoblo
olternotlve routoo lor tho
woterllnu,
Theu
wotorllne• are exltnelono ol
an exltllng network ol
wolorllneo ond muot extond
to lht houltholdt they
"rvlce. Klngobury Crook lo
too oxtonolvo· In length to
cl~umvt_nt In
l!ffttl~oL
1111nner. BICIU.. Ill

'"Y

For the best in satellite
sales and service contact
· Bryan of
·
Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
- Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types .
- Best prices all around
the area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

Umestone
&amp;·Gravel

Custom D•signtd Gljl
BluktiJ FOI' AU Occasions

992-2927 992·5914

BEn RECEPTION

HAULING
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
_ 1~

KD'I.APPioiAICI
I BUICE

1
__.;.P.;:u;;:b.;:ll.;;,c..;.N:.;;ot.;...;.ce.;;...._
-

ofactory Authorized Porta

Wlltrllneo will bo. plocod
underground ond llllod ovtr,
lloodwotero will not be
dloploced.
For mor1 . dtt1lled
lntorm.ollon concerning thlo
project, the Environmental
Review Record moy be
conoulted .w.. kdoyo
between 9:00 a.m. 1nd ~:30
p.m. (except holldoyo) etlhe
M• I g o
c o u n 1y
Commtulonero Olllce.
Dlroct any qu ..tlonl or
comment• to Rick Hlndmon
ot (61~) 37~·11431 or moll
commentolo Rick Hlndmon,
Buckeye Hlllt-HVRDD, Rl. 1,
Box 2110, Morletto, Ohio
!157§0,
(1) 11,11; ZTC

• Service

•AU Moho o42 Yeara
oflot Rolloblo service

•Wa.hare ~ Dryara • Rlngea

'llllrii!Jrllall 'frHzero
-oilhwaahera

I

p!OpoUd to
baoo -plain.
Thlt prolect wilt Involve
lnotollollon ol 17,100 LF of
PVC to ' txtond through
Columbia, Scipio, ond
Rutl1nd Townohlpo. The
woterllno will ••tend
oouthnotword Irani
Corpenter In Columblo

·

•H.W. HAtera
-MicrOWIWI •Dilj)DUII

•Thanks Melgo &amp;

Surrounding Areas

(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 1211Wn

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
•
Insurance Work Welcome
Stats Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

DIN'S
IPPLIAICI
SERVICE

"We Are Now Open For Business"

The State Certified
Pawn Shop

For All Malor
Brands
Used Appllanc•s
for Sale
Call

"Your Neighborhood Lender"
JIS W. 2nd St.- P~ineroy, Ohio

614·992·5515

"We Loan You Ca$h on Anything of Value"

Tel. (614) 992-5846
1-th;•1 mo. pd

10/11ftfn

BINGO ·
Racine American
Legion Post 602
Now having .Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45pm
Doors &lt;1PQn 4:30_p1ll
The more people .
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949·2038 or 949-2044

C&amp;J
FURNITURE
Just below Hobson
on 'state Route 7

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

. 992-7508
New 2 piece living
room sets $300.00

ESTATE ·
AUCTION:

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable tolleto rented,
Dally, weekly lo monthly rentalretes.
Job ljtH • Camp SHH • Family Reunions i Parllet
NOW 11FFERING GENERAL HAULING

Limestone, Send, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· 1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Ll

ad&amp;B dd 20

'

992-3954

JAY'S EXCAVATING
DOZER&amp;
BACKHOE .SERVICE
Septic Tanks
Leach Beds Installed
Basements, Footers
Mobile Home Set-ups .
Land Clearing
Road Building '
Free Estimates
1{614) 985-4495
12123'1 mo.

Charlie's
Lime Stone

SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1995
10:00 A.M.

Delivery
Service

Located on Rt. 33 at the Auctlori Center In Mason
w: V. due to lack of parking, the estate of Margaret
M. Sl..on haa been moved from Point Pleasant
W. V. to the Auction Center In Mason W. V.

992-7553

We Hare Cars and Vans/
Kenny's Auto Center
1.800-486·1590
264Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446·9971
Galli oils, OH: 45631
''"""

O&amp;E ELECTRIC
Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tuna-ups

985-3879

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

TREE TRIMMING

Porto &amp; service on Most
Makoo Recine Mowar
Clinic

Shrubs Shaped

50% off

Misc. Jobs.

AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
and Removed

Bill Slac~ ..

"In Stock"
Oregon Chain Saw Baro

. 992·2269

949•2804
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
-

15
APPRENTICE AUCtiONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS
thol are In
lilt
·
#A-116
drinking wlller. A porllon ol
EXECUTOR·. CHARL-ES STOVER
thlo proJoct lo propoelll to
be locotod In o 100·Ytlr LUNCH .
MASON, WV
773·5765
lloodplotn.
Federol
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH J.D.
rog"ulotlono roqul!'8 thlt tho
Not r"ponolbte lor accld~nto or loll ol property
public be glvon on
Llconollland bonded In Ohio, Kentucky &amp;
opportunity to commoont on
Weot VIrginia t66
1 ny toderolly funded L;.._ _ _ _ _,;__ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _ _..J

985·4473- "
DAVE'S

SWAP SHOP
One mile out
1431rom At. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. ·Sat.
1-6

• Craftsman Toots
•Toys
. •Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade .
992·2060 1015/lmo

Olive o'it may reduce risk of breast cancer

By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Associllted Press Writer
· WASHINGTON (AP)- Olive
•
oil, believed to be good for the
heart, also· may reduce the risk .of
, _ . breastcancer,researcfierssay.
,

44

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

Custom Building I Remodeling
• New Homes
•Additions
• New G&lt;1fages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992,5.535 .
614 992·2753
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USEQ PARTS FOR

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

. 992-7013 OR
g92-55530R

Doug

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Addit_ions e Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
{No Sunday Calls) •
21 1.2f9~fn

QUALITY WINDOW.
•Cullom ·Made
·•Solid "lnyl
replacement

-iiiiiii

WhtdOWI ·

•frtt Etthnattt -•$200 lnualled
Cell for Details
'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI TI'OIIm, Owner 1·8110-291-5600

TOLL FREE 1·800·848-0070

DARWIN, OHIO
1131191 TFN

AP!Irtment
lor Rent

Now availble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJC on ·site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT Up SPECIAL
614·992·6419 TDD 1·8IJ0.·7501-07!50

l

992·7162

........

· John

SMITH'S
CONSTRUaiON

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse, Ohio

~

11, 11n

~enny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

,992·5251

5 pc. Foster Waterfall B.A. Suite, 3 pc. Basset B. A.
Suite, 3 pc. Bookcase B.A. Suite, maple chest, hand
made child's chest, mahogany dinet set. 2 pc. knotty
pine hulch, oak tamp table, cupboard base, desk,
fancy oak press back rocker, large press back chair,
maple rocker, hickory rocker, trunk, onyx smoker,
carved walnut jewelry box, 30" Gibson electric range,
G.E. Refrigerator, Westinghouse freezer, _Speed
Queen washer, 6 pc. set of Homer Laughlin dishes,
blue ridge plates, Flo blue sugar &amp; creamer, Norilakl
china, jewel tea, German bowls, hand paintsd· vases,
Bavaria German pc., Carnival glass, Fenton,
Deppression syrup pitcher Vi/pewter lid, old Hen
Candy container, pilcher 6&lt; bowl, Hull art, portrall
plaies, butter pals, Blue jars, flower pots, crocks, oil
lamps, Handy G. D. min.·oi_l lamp, art deco mirrors,
1 ·
·t
b n 1 'ct
&amp;I
reverse pa ntrng pre ure, eau 1u pr ures rames,
picture of former Huffman Diner, wicker baskets,
thimble collection, · old horse door stop , ship cloc kd,
spooner, quilts, dollies, 1rnens, rugs, po1s, pans, o1
books, curtains, material, Christmas decorations ,
weed eater, fjlw ·hand tools, quality jewelry, 10K, l4K
gold rings, 14K Diamond Ring, old jewelry pins,. &amp;
Hamllin, Elgin, Bulova, Hetbros, Winthrop watches,
two ea~y dolls, Plus much more !I!
E AG
A · D 't M'
AUCTIONEERS NOT :
real uctron, on
ISS
TillS Oneil

....

MODliN SANrrATION

EmetgP.ncy PhonP 9B5-311fl

New &amp; Used.
8

Oat Stop Ctmplete Aute 8tdy Rep1lr

511~TFN

12128/841lfn

cancer risk in opposi~ directions." even protect you ·from coronary
He said the findings provide artery disease, because we know
"an explanation for the paradox that olive oil and vegetables and
that Mediterranean women con- fruits are_good for coronary dis·
sumc plenty of fats, and yet they case, whieh is more of a killer than
have only 50 or 60 percent of the · breast cancer:· ·
~,~-~:2Ai~teai;f:m~~~~~g-~~::~;:::;;--~':'~s~k
of br~ast cancer, compared
A number of studies, including
· other-women,,''-!•---~--the- new..one,-show-that..Ncgetables
diagnosed with breast cancer
Animal tests previqusly have and fruits protect from various
an additional 1,548 cancer-free· found that olive oil, alone among types of cancer.
women whose age and area of n:si· fat types, helps protect against
'"Rather than feeling hopeless
dcnce paralleled those of the breast cancer. Tnchof"'ulos said against these cancers, at least we
women with the disease, All were his study gives ' additional do know vegetables and fruits .. .
in Greece, where olive oil is widely · momeinuin" to those findings.
and vegetables prepared in olive oil
used in cooking.
'l'richopoulqs said olive oil is may actually provide an easy an~
·'
The researchers ·found that better for the body partly because it rather pleasant way of reducing
~ : women who .consumed olive oil is less easily OJI,idized than polyun- risk," Trichopoulos said.
~ · more than once a day had a 25 per- saturated fats and contain's plenty
According to the study, vegcent lower risk of cancer when of antioxidant vitamins and other etable consumRtion statistically
compared with women who ate components, including Vitamin E.
reduced breast capce• risk by 12
olive oil less frequently.
"We don't know whether this · percent and fruits by 8 percent.
··
" Our work shows an associa- factor or another. as yet-unidenti·
Breast cancer is a major and ris: tion between consumption of~ type lied factor, is essential,'' he said
ing problem around the world and
· · :of fat and reduced risk of breJJsl· . Trichopoulos, a professor of epi· parucularly in this counlry, where
,
cancer," said Dr. Dimitrios Tri· demiology, was asked whether one in 10 women can· expect to
': chopoulos of the Harvard Sch,ool of eschewin~ margarine and turning develop the disease late in 'life.
:. Public Health. !'These findings to olive oil could be recommended
"There are very few things a
; · · · Suggest that the t)'JJC of fat source on the basis that it can't hurt.
woman can actually do 10 reduce
· · · one consumes may tnlluence .breast
Not only that, h~ said, "it could . hl;r risk," he said.

L

~

I

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
,.,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Howard L. Wrtteael
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts ·
(Iutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.

· • opportunity to common! on
1 wotorllne In
RICK AUCTION
PEARSON
AUCTION
~;'· •~--~lh~•~t~th~e~p~u~bl~lc~j"~a~lv~e~~nf~·:~n·H~~~~w~~h~lc;~h~;tn~v~oi;lvE•f!'coNDUCTED
BY CO
ony lodo~ol
funded
·1111• 1--~_;:;_.~ -AUGTION~E'E'R;:Ricln2EAI'ISON.. ·•.

:: ·___,_,_ S
1

.1-2/$ 1

to homeownera who will

Public Notice .

I' • • • • • "'!'.Ill • -•- •-Ill • -"1
COUPON ·
.
11

,
1:1:
1:1
OZ.
8
1
1
11
Good
Only
At
Powell'•
Super
Vatu
1
1
1
1,
Offer Good thru Janu1ry 21, 1995
'1
1
1 1_________________________________
Llnill2 per cuatomer
11
• • • • " • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

~

door to the Litter Control
Olllce, to receive ond ftll out
1 Controctor'o Stllement ot
&amp;uollllcaiiOnl. Phone
hmber 614·112·2733.
Contact per10n, · Joon
Truooell,
Gront
Admlntotrator. When thto
1orm lo roturned It ohould
by •ccompanllll by proof ot
lllblllty lnouranco and
worhr'o compentotlon. A
llotlng at quolllled
contractor• will be provided

requ .. t
bldo
lor
rehobllltotlon work from
than llo1od. Offlco houro ·
ore jrom 1:00 1.m. • 5:00
::· • ' 'f'.m., Mondoy lhru Frldoy.
(1) 16, 18, 20; 3TC

,''

11
'I
1

Union Ave, Pomeroy, next

•
...

•••••••••••••••••••••••
II. • _Ill · -"!. •-"!. •

Improvement

Pr9gram tor tho Vllloge ot
Racine which tnvolvoa the
rohabtlltollon
ol
eubatlndard houelng,
.
ohould como Into the llolgo
• • • · &amp;ounty Ann'" •• 31350

20 LB.

11
11
Good Only AI Powell's Super Vatu
,
~
1
Ollar
Good
thru
January
21.
1995
•
1
1 1_--- ________ I,J'!!II,..1.,P!,I'J1U_I\!IJ!!8! __________ -'I1

l

' I

Houalng

::

189

·2°/o
Mdk
•••••••••••
a~... . ,
~
A~ CoUPO-N.
"-~·

PUBLIC NOnCE
NOnCE -TO
CONTRACTORS
Ouolllled oontr•otora
lntareotad In bidding on
lobe tor the llelge County
Ohio Doportmont of
Development Communlly

.:
·•
::
·•
.,

4PACK

JUD!or

I

.,•

J J ClASSIC GIFT
BASKETS

lnMimory

DANIEL PAUL
TALBOTt, SR.
In Loving Memory
on hie 53rd
Birthday.
Dear Dad,
It has only been a
tihorC trm&amp;" alnci
you've been gone
and we ere sad and
questions still re·
main.
Your birthday has
come, and a candle
will burn to show
our love and to let
ua say we hope you
are at peace and
have a very Happy
Birthday.
Love &amp; Miss Youl
Mom, Dad,
Children, Slatara
and Friends.

.

RAINBOW
:._~~~~~600~4~5~-~T~he~dc~·a~d~li~n~e~U~lf~a~p;p~l'stua
at ~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~.ar, ..... Ait Forc.e Airman
I'
i~ca~-~~:~Lfuc~t;an~a~~~~~-~~~-~i~f If-DRINKS:: -

I

2

..'

- MAGIG AND MYSTERY BY THE JOHNSON CO.

(Lime Stone Low Altn)

1/2/lln

'

II

d'&lt;nts should send a note stating ·
their name, address, city, state, zip
. I
d
•
Code •· ap proxtma
e gra c pomt
average, and year of graduation.
·A total of $150 ,000 Will be
awarded
150hasetl
students
with the
· selection to
he in"
on academic
performance,o involvement in
ex1racurricular ac1ivitics and some
consideration for financial ncetl.

For As little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

HOT COCOA :

• Room Addlllons
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Your Message
Be Seen Here!

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JAN. 21, 1995

- - -_. -__;·Society scrapbook---- ·•:
SCHOLARSHIP DEADLINE
High school students with a
grade point average of B or better
may apply for $1,000 college
scholarships from the Educational
Communications Scholarship
Fouml&lt;lliun; 721 N. McKinley· Rd..
P.O. llox 4012 , Lake Forest, Ill.,

''

c

Fund raising discussed at Syracuse PTO
School improvement projects
and fund raising were discussed
. when · the Syracuse PTO met
recently at the school.
Sharon Hall p"resided at the
meeting during which time the purchase and installation of playground equipment was discussed.
Providing special assistance with
that project were ·Gene and Sherry
·Hartis, George and Jeannie ton·
nolly, Harry Leflle and Jay Hall.
Thank you notes will he sent by the

•'
'
'

Parish scholarshiR:-receives funding
A donation was made to the
Meigs County Cooperative Parish
Scholarship l'und when the Rock
Springs Unitetl Metbo&lt;list Women
mer recently at the church .
Rita Radford, -president, con ·
ducted the meeting during which
lime the g~up also decided to get
involved in the reading program,
the prayer calen~1r, and making tllC
ABC qurlls tor ~tck bahtes.
Prayer. scnpture, and hymn:

•

2UTER

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
J AM·IO PM

Youth pork _challenge planned·
. Young people lOOking for more
than lraditional 4-H and FFA swine
projects are invited to the 1995
Ohio Swine Youth Challenge. It's
Friday, Feb. 10, at the O!lio Pork
Congress in the Dayton Convention
. Center in Dayton, the Meigs County ExtensiOn Office advises.
The Youth ~hallenge begins at
10 a.m. and provides two hours of
hands-on experience on the chal-

The Daily Sentinel-Page--&amp;

Vacuu11 Clianer Service Special
Special offer inCludes:
1. Clean motor
2. Grease Roller Bearings
~, Glean &amp; eheek-agitator 4. Clean all moving' parts

..

5. Clean !!&lt; check filter system
6. Check Belts
·
7. Check electrical system
8. Replace. filter bag · •

/

All for o~ly $14.9&amp; ph.is, parts
One year warranty on worf( perfonned
Valid on all nationally advertised
brands only
We service most makes &amp; models

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
I

Equal Housing Opportunity

,

~68 W. M~ln St. Rlply WV. 304-6144

·'

•

�.••.
,.,.

Wednesday, January 18, 1995

Wednesday, January 18, 1995

r

ALLEYOOP

4rt,

Pomeroy-M

•

~

The Daily Sentinei-Pag&amp;-11

Ohio

NEA Crossword Pqzzle

BRIDGE

AN'!OHE UNLUCKV
ENOUGH TO 8E
c.t.PTUIUO r!N TM!M

s,..•..

IS FORCED INTO A
LIFf" OF 5£2\I'ITUOE!

,.

CIA
Jewelry
40 Konneloound
5 l ....- ongriTy 41 F•l - ' '
11 Hebltuote
43 Fro11
13 Smoothly
41 Selll'ch lor
14 Pertelnlng lo
lood
lcrm
41 Commercial
15 Capable
ohlp
of being
52 Babylonian
hero
cetogorlzed
16 Cl llfornla'a
54 Olzzlneu
neighbor
55 cattle breecl
18 lmpude~ (ol.) 56 Moglclan'a
l 9 Chlm lcal aufll•
word
20 Wager
57 Relax
22 Actor Brynne r
24 Dloturbance
' DOWN
26 AHirmativel
1 Sleep otoge
2t Chapa down
2 - - the
31 lnhabltlnll
ground lloor
33 Rope
3 . Unclothed
35-Wrlter4 HorahRogers St.
soundlng ·
John a
36 Are ya1.1 a man s Chap
6 Clicult
- - mouse?

!"

BEA 11"JE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

3 Announcements

&amp;li· .._
.-

Red...ce· Buin Ott Fll While You

Sloop ~10 Opol Toblolo and E•

3 Badroom , _ For
Ront , fO Tho VItiligo Of Rio

-

,._rnwcy.

Real Estate

11Hp. Taka OPAL, anllabla

Fruth Pharmacy, lllddlopo&lt;t,
THE PAM PERED CHEF

10 Seta Of Old Wood Fraune

3013.

Drop In a1ec:1rlc 1'11"01, working
condhlon . 304-675--1504.

1366.

Full

Bl~d

to advertise ~any pref"rence,

At~

9

Wanted to Buy

Help.wanted

11

lop Prien Pold: All Old U.S.
Co lne, Gold Ring!.! Silver_Coin•,

151 S.COOd Avenua, Galllpolla.

44

11

Speera, 304-875-1421.

6

AVON to buy ar aall, Marilyn, ln-dtper'ldent rtp. 304-882· 2145 or

Found: 1 large Femele Doa,
Yellow Or Tan In Color, Well
Trained, Rn1mbln Irish Setter

Or Lab, Vicinity : Rt. 141, 614-441·
1903 . .

Found: f1mate Dobtrman mix

dog, _,prox. 451bl, wearing
purpll mesh collar, 28th &amp; Un·
c.otn vlclntty. 304-875-6110.

Found: Mail Brown 6 Whitt

B•aglt, 614-388-8449.
Lost. In Vinton ArN. BraWn and
Whne Male Beagle. Child's Pt1,
Crying Constantly Fot Dog. 614·
388-9f71 or 814~8-9354. .
. lost: Child's Ptl, Short B.. g11
With Black Collar, Centerpoint

Road, Name: Barney, 814-245-

2bdrm. apt.., talal .a.ctrlc, .,..

plllncM

Shl~oy

304-815-3430.

Auctions
every
ThursdayFriday, 7pm, Mt. Alta Auction;
AI. 2.33 "Croaroads'", Ron

Prk:o, Bill Moon . gr_.oo,
pluo loll morol Ed ~rulor 830.

9

Wanted to Buy·

CIHn Lito Modal Coro Or
Trucka, 1987 Modoto Or - .
Smhh Buick Pontloc 1i00

t-80CI-!MI2-8351.
Accountant, lmmadlata Full-time
Po.ltlon tor Motivlted, s.tt-ttar·

E.alltwn Avenue, Oalllpolle.

lumlohad,

FER

· Building
Supplies

By Phillip Alder

1:00

callll144t2-37t1. EOH.
2br. 1]11, $375/lno. lnctudH au
uUIMioo, oil - Nlrl!l!pr:';;• gu
,.~,
ca,.-t,
&amp;

WHEN I WR I TE ~ PAP.ER , I
TR'i TO S~ OW Tf.I E TEAG ~ E R
THAT 5~ E I-lA S SOMEHOW
ENRICHE D M'1 EX: PER IEN CE,.

acw::..av:=e:
304-171-

POSTALJOBS .
Btort $11.41ihr.1 lor uoni oncf
"'"'· ool! :111-'IHlng. Accounting Doaroo ot 1·3 IQIIIIk:otion
Y11re Aelatad Work '"'Experl~ne~ HOI ext WV141, llm-lpm,
Should Include ComputerlzNI SUn-FH.
Accounting Proc.dures. R•ply Rooloro No.lod: llult Bo Ellto: Gallipolis DellyTrlbwli,'C~ po~oncod,
In
-laJ
341, 825 Third Avo., Golllpotlo, Sltlnglo Roofing, IM-441 4114,
OH 4!5631.
Smoll Local Firm Sooldng Full

AmbHiou. people needed tor
counter help", cook1 1 men.ge,..

from $222 1o $285. W.alk to ehop

• movtoo. c.11 114-4441-2588.
EOH.

3 IR A Fromo Homo, 1i2

-

--~.----ion Call:

........1124

3br. houoo, 308 lth 81., Heven1o~acll ,.., oent..- of

town;

..zr7l.

Time IOn Call ca..nlng "T.ahnlclans. Mu.t
D1p1ndlble,

Elloollont Candhlon In
a.
Rooponliblo, Commlttad, Wll~ Rio Grande - · . lmmodloto
lng To a. Trolr10\l. Send - - · Land Controct To
RMIIIM To sees P.O. lor 138, Ouallllod 8uyot 114-114HJM.

wfeome collea• ana extensive
experience. JCM..343.1187.

AVON SELLS ITSELF

nv.

Kerr, &lt;»145143.

NHd C1111h tar Wlnt•r Bill•?
Avt~rage $8-S'II 11 Work · Home.
Torrhory Opelonal. lndep. Rep. 1·

bed

00111 . . . . locatacll

J::..::=

delivery lndultry helpful, 31)4..
675-5858 far appolntm•nt

mow..

Boot tho Spring Ruahl Gat rour

trim~ I

eervlclcl
now 11 Sldaro Equljlmont c..,.,

Full·tlmo Exporllncod Roc:optlonlot. Muh~llna Phone, Appt.
Schodlllng, O..Mho-Countor
Peymont Colloctlon. Strang Qr..
aanlutlonol Sldlto, wfth Altonnon ta Dlt•U. Metur., Mollvatld,
With Good Communk:otlon

pony. 304-675-11421.

El_,.ry wttt tutor
lludonto groclo 1.. In llllgo
Councy .,.., nnr., catll~
6734. .

.

New 1995 14x70, lncludn skin·
lng, ltepe, blocks, 1 yar
homeowner• lnaurance, and 6
lnontha FREE lot rent. Only

SAVE:

All

Dtopioy

llodalo

342, 321 Tlllril

~.

Cottl!lll .

na

Ughlo, ............_

-

Now Lorge 1br. apa~mont 1 air
haotlng, lumllhld ldtcnon,
$250/rrio., rwqulrM. 304-

~

171-3100, 1:0114:00pon .. 875-IICKI • • • Spnt.

Nice 2 br ·~~ Pomeroy I
llldd'-'1, .14- -1818.

WRI TE WHEI-l

I KNOW "

YOU'RE TALKING ?

-r

s hot at t he s lam .
West led the club king . South won
wi lh th e ace a nd cas h ed hi s t o p.
tru mps. learning th at he hild a loser
there. Now South 's only chance Was to

'iO,ODOml., Ai.IJFiol co-o, olr,

14500. 304-f15-21Mt.

.. F.RANK &amp; ERNEST

1993 Ford Exptotor Eddie
Edition, Attor I P.M. 114-44611442.

·:v

'I

aoat. 1v R.l Wlna ct'pr na

.

To -4'a llogoMo,"H.H. Brawn

".

-f.M-441
........ an
Pltcoo, .Tho
Shoe Cata,

,_.._
. . . . -.Mao
a;t••
~n, l_lrthrno, Foot

=
,..

~OFR!BY IT~

&amp;rn "15 Ml t&lt;UT(~
51~ [ v-ci.~()!i:crnEI:&gt;IJ

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1ves1ock

Bau Tracker Pro 16 811• Boat·
U - Vory LIUio 35 HP Mon:ury

.61 Farm Equipment
46 Space for Rent
llobllo homo ior - In
country. gorblgo. and
water rnciUdN, cable available.
S85/mo., Juat 10 mlnW• tram
Athlnl, IM-182-2117.

Merchandise

51

Household
· Goods

1'15-1400.
WINTER DISCOUNT SALE: All

Display Models Reduced • Big

For-: Tondr D11P 240 Color

-

.Control

·-Roo.......

tOBO MF Tractor 81 HP, Ellcollont
Condhlon, te,IOO, 614-371-2427.

ttao, Toohnlco .._. 64

All Ulw -,114-441-1118.
Ole wudaM• ..h wu~cun.r
biMie. tiOOi 4.0 hoc
a••r
_,... IIIIo~ - - Oond~

Round ' and

Inc. Golllpotlo, Ohio 114-44S:

Sautrt

B1le1

'

20a-..,

1340.

Soul-

!&gt;ENDING A
1'-ER:IRTER TO
M't' C.HEEZ.

304-882-2016 aftor 12:30.
Wanted To Buy: Standing

bor, 614-371-2758.

-

2br., Madison Ave., r.t.rence &amp;
. dtpoaH r-qulred, you pay

nm.

THE

~·-

utllltloo. 3114-875-2535:

·.

Tutor: 111 Grode TIIN Adul. Ell-

-...od,

c,rtltlod

j j u - . IUblocU,
Skllle. SAT. RwNiw

bo-

T-.
_,

'IS

liM.~.

WTN

Avail-

Now c • .,.. I R0!9f. Locotoo
Oalll~~ City Umh•, No P•e,
UIO/IIo. .+ bopoot~ For Ap-

010.-

.

Avo.

ISA
WANT AD

21

3br., 2 tt.th, centql h..tlng

Business
OpponunHy

,
" - -- - - - -...,..

Homa ·
Improvements

ASTRO-GRAPH
4

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

,

INOilCEl

you=
.

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

and

tho
ad

~'Your

a

no plio . 304-875-1SN.
3br., khct.nl LR, DR, 2 bath,
gorogo.~, pot o, foncod
yard,
camP ....,~oy, 614-446-11812 dayo
or 614-1141~46 otter 5pm.
3 B.trOom•, O•rage, 1 Bath,

3"aportmonto
lol holot
roomo,
' " - - ....
building
hu .
-

lor

rrtOII;_.ttiiiJ,ODO, Will

84

family
A-.
Slovo
I
Flofttgorotot, OH Hoot, $500/llo.
PIU. Utltltloo, I o.-11,
LAGrooda Blvd. ar- kreo
S..bdlvlolon, Qolllpollo, 114-21111323.

-11tMhoB ·

·' CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Allhough

,... 'lllunclorl&gt;lrd LX. ..,_, moon roof, CD ,._.
11,000 mlloo, otll unc1or ..,!
roniJ, $12,100, 111-182-3481 attor

~·

tlally lumlohod, contoct John
Alee, BM-187-3201:

.-

Your ambt tions h~ve !3 good cha nCe of
being _fulfilled in the year ahead . provided
you duel ully select you r objeC tives. Do
· not wasle tt me on unreachable goals.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

.

.

Houu for rlnlln Pom•roy,

'Birthday

thu rsday . Ja n. t 9. t995

LR, Kllchen. Laiundry Aoom,

446-31504.

W

I

Vinton Avonuo, Cloillpotlo, 114-

lpon,

.

-

-·

MatChmaker P .O Box 4465 , New York , · tmpulsc to overre~ct when ? th ers
express DP.POStng vtewpotnt s. today . Keep

NY.HJ.163

A0 4 ARIUS (J a n . 20-Feb. 19) Today you
mtght h ave an unusuall y low resis tance

i'" mtnd tha t everyone ts ~nt1tled to t1ts/ner
opmton s

.

10 make ftnan.cta l comm t~menls qn your
behall co uld prove unwtse today You
d
nee
.
P. ISCES (F e b . 20 -M ar c h 20) Avp td a mtghl end up paytng for the tr m tslakes
senoU s argument wtth your m a te by . VIRGO (Aug . 23· Sept . 22) You Wtll
work With
· back 1ng all from volattle. tssues Ieday If become _fru stra ted today tf
you sl ronaly d 1sagrec about a partlcutar an tndtvtdual wh o does n t appr ec tate
IOptc . stee-r clear of 1t
_
teamwork . If you s.ee th ese signals. 1t
pressure you ihtO buytng lhtnQ s you den'!

Flv1 Roome And Bath. t350/Uo.
For Ulo ot ,,..... Ohio Rlvor . PIP.- O.poeh, Vur'e l.itaM, 42
~anthod-, 23

CAN CE R (June 21-July 22) Subdue the

~lo-salespeop le Do nol allow anyone lo.lLfO.(J.uly 2~~1\IJ.g, 2~Lfntrus!Ing.Qlh~rs

$110. ~

cooling, 1350/ino. oluo dopooh,

OHTO VALT&amp;Y PUITJIHING CO.
ncarNMndl thll rou do buaJ..
1101'10-........ ,...ho.. -

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

•

Services

Fmanc 1al

. - - poopto

Classifieds

~71-if,1301.
l:;:;;;:i~221fl-:::~~:~i~~~

-r

Raoldontlal

or

corn._lol
or _.,.,

wiring, nw UCIOIOd
Rldanaolr Eiactrtcol, WY-.
304-871-1711.
.

-rlclon.

'::~:t;~'

S@ \\.4\llA- ~ r.. ~s·

141104 loy ClAY I. POLLAN - -- - -- -

Rearrange l•"•n of
0 four
tcrombltd words
low

I

WDID
lAIII

th•
be-

to form four .words

C A GE U H

I

.C J J Y U

l

1-.--l
.-I--r:l3---r-~ ·
\

Comple1e the chudl .. quoled

.
by lrlhng 1n the mrsstng words
.L..-J you develop from step No. 3 below

JANUARY 18

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

3br. houH tor rent, 2211 Uncoln

s z y J RDFEM T HN
(MZTHOZ)
PREVIOU S SIJLUTION : "I could gel od (o f prison) on Tuesday a nd beal
George Foreman on Wednes day." - Mike Tyson:

- . -------r-:::::~=

1871 Btm:roh camolng trolllr,
fully oqulppad, 2211., t2DDO. 304118241187.

81

C X .

Rashly · Visor · Sylph • Deploy - HIS SHOES
A new colleague had a very boastful nature. 1overheard
one assoCiate multer, "The bigger a man 's head gets the
easier it is to fill HIS SHOEs,·:
'

=~~"=."::
a:

l:ottpno
Jr. ....n
menu "..uilted oauuillli

pNclltlona ~ 114-f41·1111, 114-

446-1429.

MJ l&gt;oUn, uc.

rotll. 304'-1714111.

3 BM:Iroams, Full BaMm~

~---.Wwl••
Mel ~ AI Rutudllloned
NowiUMd
And ........_
$100 And Up,
No oppllo--. Hco hid fur.
nllhlng. 112 ml Jontcho Rd. Pl. Wll Dlhar. tt4 •• 1441.
PIMMnt, WV, cal :J04.878.1410, Romlngton
· · 1100
814 448 .....
Aut-Io 12 Clo. 2 . .~
With s ChoUo
M1J, lot IE I A.ll. ;f P.ll.
PICKENS RIRNTTURE

A T -H

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

..i1.:z.::..~:r•

2br. houH tor r.m In Hartford.

D. 0 D J

T

WRITE i'OOUT

tlon
...NUMBER:
7 •
I'HOHE

41 Houses for Rent

,
'

L D

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LEIIE!S
TO GET ANSWER

Plck.Up Plllto loda, ·
Dooro, , _ , . 1 MAllo, South
4x4 Dol
.. Train - · ~
Mil•
Of Qolllpotlo,.. Juo&gt;

Rentals

HE

VLVNTJU

NE&gt;I51'1\PER 15

cabo,

1184 Celebrity lt11kN'I wagon, 4
cyt., 4 ~ lranemileloii, 114Ht-2871 or 114-1141-2045.
tt84 Cutiao iillfTI Otdomobllo,
LAYNE'S RIRNITURE
loot &amp; ·nn, en.1aa, AIIIFII Caooano. InCompilto homo ~ ....._, ~ Hourw: lion Sit, t-1. ,........_ · tM8 OPAL t.olilola ond E· terior end EKttrlor Good.
cllut Ill AniiMie FNII llllaago 17,00. Aolllng $1500 1140322, 3 mltoo out lulovltlo Rd. ~
Pfier~Mey.
FrwDollvwry.
446~373

West could ruff in a nd cash t he. cl ub

TH ' A

XDZA E J

P"N T NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

WHAT. Ml'.

_, ................

t-. '"··-

RTODV .

•
.
•
.
L--....L-..1-......JL--....l.-

I/.OSA THE L.CXAL

$3.00

8-10
1111-48114.

DODZ

rL.
I
I~--,--,,r~:g-r,--T,-T-;

BIG NATE

au. ln. Chw. malor, roller

Souore Boloo Ha.Y, tt.50 114-379- rockoro,
414 - .
21~9 11:30 A.M. To 11 :DO P.ll.
-~~ HEt lanhion, $13110, &amp;141141-11871 0&lt;114-141-2045.
.
per
Square boloo. 11.21 to
tlon, $400: · - -·
twiMa:lt Atwood Few Sale. bale, alfllhl, clover, orchard B - Pricad T..,_,lolliono,
11t 4~1 M27.
91011. 304-1175-311110.
Uoocl I rol&gt;oln, oil Typoo, otort·
Llmott ·G at F--. 4 Ton, 1 Square bolos ol mind hoy, call lng ot ..., -114-379-2831.
Bumera. Whh Ducllwork, Prkiecl G14-247-22B1 day, 814-24?-2781 JohMORI Tl'oiUIMIInlcn And
To Iotti I atter7~.
s.mc.. Uud And Robutl
~
Tranomlooiono. Aloo, Cuh And · .
Slraw, $2.215 per bale. 304-811·
~~ TronomloolonO, 1 Living ...~,•.!)oUoh. 1Wo 1825.

Transportal1on

MWE

G)

2e35
•

discard both of his cl ub losers before

qu~~nhe ha d so few dia monds. South

RYNTDAH

"__JI,__..L
· I·_·_·l'_L~ =
_ . _ .
_

301 V8 Pontiac '!'!Gino. 3.8 VG
Cha¥. onglno. $176io. 304-51&amp;-

Slored II\ Dry.l14-:!45-11480.

uu - Cnoftman
121noh
lond
ltoof&gt;ltll
"""
··
Sow,-

Saving• • Fnmch Chy Homee

Hay &amp; Grain

c

The class clown had come up
with a very ingenious science
project.Theteachersighed,"Well,
r-::-c:---c:-::-:-:--:-:---, even'il fool can be right every now
T R u E N li
and then just by -- .... "
.

.

Auto 'Pans &amp;
Accessories

1&amp;

.

,_,-.,Er-N"TO~Hr;-Y-r-;1 ~'

Wllh Extraa, Aaldng: $4,500, &amp;14446~910.

Ear:h IeMar rn lhe c rpher ! lands lor another roaay·s clue F equals B

HWD

I
J!:~===~~~~~!::~~~~.I:._:vJ:..:_.:_J_:_.:_'_:~:..:__:.~~J~,...::__:"..:.~_::-•_J

• BORN LOSER
,,
·. I·U\1-.T~ K££Ptf\G MY fW,.f

'Jit2-3513.

•

by Luis Campos ' ·

Celatnty Cipher cryptograms are crealed !rom quo tatrons·by tamous people, -past and preMtll

RTBD

SIGN i
A !

iHf' GuTTtfl CO: gECAu5t

-~·

Furnished
Rooms

CELEBRITY CIPHER
' T ' L

a ttac ked that suit fir st. Howeve r. West
r ufle d t he thi rd round and cashed a
- ---....P
~
club t r ick: one down.
f&gt;~OPP~~.
Tt-l~
"Wow, how unlu cky can on e be:" ex ·
~E
A~
claimed Sout h. "We have only fi ve d ia
· monds and they brea k 6·2...
NAM~ ·l&gt;ROPPE~ Nl&gt; f'~OM i.,8
"True ... sa id No rth . "But s uppose
West doesn t ruff the lh ird di amo nd.
11 1
A
~•
EAV'-"'DoQppeWhat do you do the n""
r
A
"r pl ay on hearts. or cou rse, .. repl ied
1 South sarcastica lly.
• "And you need West to have at least
three hearts to make the contrae.t. So
you s hould pl ay h·c arts befor e d ia ·
vf\E..':i W/&gt;.JT\t-16 AA
mn nds. And when West t urns up Wit h
CJ.\Ef!) f&gt;.. BIG 1.'&lt;..\.1 "'"""
four.
you ta ke tha i discard first. Then
I~ Ufi(I€.1-¥:.Y...
SOMW~e: TO acoE.R
il doesn't malter th a t West has on ly
~E. OTI-\EK fW..F
two d iamond s. Whe n he ruffs in. yo u
have no club loser left ."
~

A

"

Playo
lni1Nrnontol
Elt·
KOyboonl,oollont Concltlonl $100, 114-37927211 AFrlR I P.ll.

.I LOST MY t.A~T TH~~~ JOB~ gECAU~t
~ryo
\
(l..uM$1Ntf$ . .I GOT f'II~El&gt;
;;:i
F~OM ~~~~ OPT ICAt.. SuPPLY . co. ~
.,EC.AU5t .I WAS AN EY~ · , ~

fflOM
C.O. 8tCAV I vJ

Motorcycles

For .... or ,,.._ •rtv eo·.
chopped out Hartoy wlih 750
lour corb Hondo onglno. 114-'

45

I

have opene d tw.o no-tr ump . too k a

M

.....
tonn.,aor...............
1031.

~OW CAN

WHAT DO

of th ree s p ade s. South . wh o m igh l

T
Doublo
-.., STM,
W!Jito.Toltll,
Call '""'
-.-·
aotlllrl Klchtn .,., ......
. . . Clbinll ........ 1111

In lllddlooort. F 1232•$355 . Col 614-mo585t.
£0H. ·

Aoa~"*lto

Call1-800-837-3238.

Reduced For Quick B•J•·WJnttr

Ave., Clolllpotlo, OH 4!Ttl31.

Groclouo living. 1 ond z bodroom ·~rt!HIU It Vll&amp;lae
Manor
and
filv...a.

S920 down and $194 per mo.

Sale Now In Prog....., Mountain
Sttte Hom•, 3411 Jlckson
Ave., Pt. Plutam, W.VA. 304-

8111111. Ro~z.to: o.•po11o DollY

qutrad. 1..14-41H804.

t

We h~ve all seen magicians who of·
fer a deck of cards to a "victim.". T he
person takes a card, any card. At the
end nf l he Irick The magicia n w ill
name the card. There are many. varia boils on this theme. •
At the bridge ta ble , il may be u mat·
ler or deciding not whi ch card to pick.
but which suit .to piek. So metimes this
happens in t he bidding and sometimes
in the play. Today ·s deal is an exa mple
or the latter

1114 Toyola 4 WD, Aftor 4 p.m.
814 448 11887
1 - Ford Bronco U XLT. 2wt..l . drive auto.·. IPPfOL

p - Wlh FTnanolng
Fumlohad Aportmont, Ull-. Paid, 1 BednMMW. ~,... Avallolllo Colt -illt'o -.ct Avanuo, OiiiUIIOIII, No Homo -lng I CoolinG AI 114Plio, Ellcouont CondHion, 114- 411 ,.,. er r-..-n.an 44641123.
U. Tho Emplro Homo ........ That u..o
Nk:oly Fumlohad Aporlmont, No liloctJiclty. WY 010212.
1br, next to Ubra~, puking,

.c .nt..l·he•t. •I~ _...tennc:e . ......

THEN

,

After Nort h had made a limit ra ise

Atllndoa 11obUe • DN'I ' ldl
Hom.w .... w. c.nr A c....
ptoto ltocll 01 -~­
l2SEER
Hoot_
PumpoHomofurAnd Fur__

measures

Take a..suit,
any suit'

PEANUTS

rwqulrwd.

McEntlre

g Cloth

Openi ng lead: • K

SNUFFY
AN' HI S
DOG!!

laundry

BEAUTFUL APARTNENTS AT
BUDDET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jaclcoon Pllw

ter. Reeponslbae tor Account•
Paya!MJ,
Genlt'll
Ledg•,
Payroll, •nd Financial Report·

Trlbuno,

I'M LOOKIN'

olckup, runo I
. . . .. 304-11-..

room locllhloo . - to -

,.,_ence
27lt.

Tho O.Uipotlo Polk:o Doport- In Hawon, lull olD . - , Iorge ldtchtn and living
mont
To
~lng
'Ap.
room, hoit -p wlh con1J'OT
Lost : Small Black &amp; White Ooa 800-742-4738.
Male lost In Quail Cr. .k, Rcxf.. Avon Wente Individuate lnta,... ~~~
~ooo 10 ohwch oncf •oclo
1 . . . . . . . . to ..lciat..
,.y A.r .., RaWll~l 614-~45-8003. tad In Eamlng $II -$14 n-tr. No o.-.tor. c.ndw-1• Muet a.
Door To DoOr. ;...aoo.e2"M40 High School -~~~~- Or $23,000, 304-882·2t42 or 304Equivalent And lluot Bo .AI 882-2891, urlou• lnqulrl• only.
.7
Yard Sale
lnd. IRep.
Lout 18 Yooro Old. Work Wllllle .
Baby Sfttlf in my horna Avaltobto On All TNM Sltlfto.
Cholhh. Aftor Noon Shift . 614- Succ-M Candlclo1H WIN 32 MObile Homes
Work From I To 24 Houno Per
367-7206
for Sale
WHI&lt;.Ro_Or _ _
Gallipolis
Bartender !Wahr11sa Wanted, WTII Bo .-...pead UntM' Janurary t4x10 Skyline, 2br., 2 botho, un&amp; VIcinity
Call GM-446-4756.
27, 1iM, And ~ Be &amp;em To: dorJ&gt;Innlng, gao hoat,. front l
Chief Dl Polloo, Gioltlpollo Polloo Nc"k porcll. Homtetead Auhy,
ALL Yard Satea Must 81 Paid In Cotmot.,.oglst Needed Gauf'ln-.
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p .m. leed W.g•, P1ld V'ae~~tlone, Dopt., 1118 s-,.t Avo., Ool- Broker. ~75-5140.
llpolll, OH 4!Ttl31. The Cloilpollo
the day btfort the ad Is to run. 6t4-446-7267.
14172
·
Uanalon,
two
bedroom;
Pottco Dot&gt;!- II An Equol oppor.
Sunday edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
two full bathe, heat pump, exceltunny Ernp~oy«.
.
DUKE CLEANERS
Friday. Mondey adh&amp;on • 2:00
lent condition, B14-tl2-1572 af• • GALLIPOUS •
,
p .m. Saturdlly.
Wllntod- oomociho to work . .h ter 5pm.
Perwon Wanted. Experlenc:. lho
otdo&lt;ty, &amp;M-182-1023.
Helpful, But Not Nec. . .ry.
1867 mobile home, 12d0, 2br.
Apply In Poroon Thursday, Wontad: F"~Time Hair atytlot 117'1 mobile home, 12d0, 2br.
8
Public Sale
F~doy, Saturday, t P.ll. -3 P.ll.
With ctlonlot At Whloporo Halr 304..!'111-2719.
&amp; Auction
Eaey Wortll Excellent Pay! M- Sak&gt;n On Sllate Route 110, atop
Oakwood, Uko 2 BR. 2
Hmbl• Products At Home. Call By For An Application Or Call t2
Botho, $16,800. 814-~tBO
Rick Pearson Auction Company, Toll Froo, 1-8011-467-65111, Ext. 114-446-1331.
Mon-Fr1.5PM. Sat •..Sun. anytlm1
full time auctlonHr, complete 3t3.
.. uctlon · service.
UcenHd
18 Wanted to Do
New 1i85 Redman 141ll4, 2 B..t·
166,0hlo &amp; Wnt Vlrglnle, 304· ·DDIIINO'S-Enofl]otlc motlvotad
room, Totol Ehoctrtc, Underpin773-5785.
ult etart..- wh"h ma1111g~~ment Act Trte SIRioe. CompW• tr• ning. R•dy To Move Into On
potenlill muat be 11rviC11 Cl,.., 20yr8. IXp . • ln.ufWd, frM Camar Lot Park Lan• Mobile
Aucliollllf Col •. Otclr E. Click, oriented, communications ekllla ntlmatn. 614-441·1101 or 1-100Court • .Phone 814-446.fi06, 614Llconu I 75H4 &amp; Boodad, • muet, knowledge of flit food 508-8887.
446·n87.

5424.

.,.

..

BARNEY

pliO, 114-ttZ-2218.

I:OD

8 Slnger -

Vulne r abl e: Neither
Dealer: SQuth
Sout h
West North East
1• ·
Pass 3 •
Pass
6A
Pass Pas s · Pass

~n

11U Ford Ringer 11,100, Good
oood. 304-17Wi811.

55 ·

7 Nouticol cry

4 A 5 4

rd N - Work $175. 114-

1 hdroam, New Su,-r .Moe.
Near Holzer, •25tlllo. Plue ,
Antiquo
UUifti!O..._ Dopollt Roqulrod, 114- 53
446-2-.
loy 01 . . .. TU&gt;.Ino Antlq-,
!~. _
2 . BR. Air, Gu Hoot 1124 E. lllllrlltfMir on Rt. 124,
0&lt;101-h.
Dopolit
and " " ' -· Houn: M.'tW. 1D:DO
P.'1q_SUndar
Rotor- 114-14S.2ttl Allor ..... to
5p.m.
.
lo 1:00 p.m. IM 'llrol.¥11.

• K3

114-

258-1434.

1119
loolw

+ J98754
1 10632

SOUTH
• A K 9 8 4
• A Q 7

•

$780: 11180 Ford Thun-

Apanment
for Rent

110
e9 2

.. 10863
+ I0 6
•K Q J 9

&gt;

~, '=:a.

Puppy: Bugla &amp; Hound Mix,
Good For Hunting &amp; Pelt, 814·
37'9·263911 A.M. ·l1 P.M.

Lost &amp; Found

~814 .

tl7'7 Ford TrtJCk WMh

sport-._

Help Wanted

AVON t All A.... I

==

ot

t and 2 badraom
fumilhed and untumt.Mcl,
HCurHy dtDOilt rwqulrecl, no

Employmenl Services

Long Grey Malar;•~ 2 Years
Old, Nauter.d,
Uouu r,
6 t4-388-1711.

t:H0-

otortlng

H:I-7.

Baaun Hound,. 5

Yoora Old, 6l4-367.0466.

Oumpe GoOd,
446,3703.

3001!!"'_,. cobto ovallabto, 114-

are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

Wo Buy Coro. Any Condllion
6t4-446-PART ot 614-3811-9062.

In tho countrr-

watlf', §lrblgl Md Included. JuM 10 m&amp;nutH from

Ttlls newspaper will not
knowllngly accept
advertisement&amp; for real astale
which Is in violation ot lha law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper

Gold Coins. II.T..,. Coin Shop,

Parenti Small Ooga, 614·446·

llobllo -

Origtn, or any lntenuon to
make any such preference,
Umltadon or discrimination:

Sheperd &amp; Collie puppl11,
famala. 304-89S- 3017 or 895-

614 ... 46-9499, 614-446-6180.

I Q 52

PIJJA"Y'

"'

1m GIIC ·1 m Ton Dump
Truck, Single Axle, Runo I

2br., Sanclotl Rcl1JDU711.»34.

sex·famlllal status or natlonal

German

·free To. Good Hoi'TMI: 5 Pups,

All real estate advertising In
lhls newspaper 1$ subject to
the Federal Fair Houslng Act
of t 968 wtlk:l1 makes n !legal
limitation or dlscr1mlnallon
based on race, colOr, religion,

Windows, 614...48-4680.

frM Puppln, Part Chow ILib,

WEST

opodal, - . l l4-tlt:!-2e53.

Giveaway

Soado, Oootn't Got Along Woll
Whh Children, 614-319-240!1.

W.ntad to buy· •• or - r
cap&lt;loo Clulico, . be
Brouaha,... or Ll, v..a.~oMec~, 4
do«; I14-'Jit2-310Z. i

1m Ford F250 DictcuD, camper

Broehwra Avallabla.

Female RoUwe llt r HouH Pet,

AA.P !.

5UP~D

72 'Oucks for sale

Call For Information On Ordtr·
tng Hams, Ptr1 1M Or FOI' Bull•
" "'
Opport unttl.s. . FrM

part

MH.K

Chy 114-258 8501.

115,S091.

'1'hl Kllchen StDN That Cornea
To Your Doa:r." Local Conat.tltant
Available At:
614...t46-4724
Luva ~.. ...p .

bNutltwl

•

NORTH
1·18·95
aJ 7 6 3
• K .I 54
oA Q2
.. s 7
EAST

·" r=------,....,

-nlohod14•10
llollilo fur.
3 BR, Ext100 1310+t180
DOpolil, Ro-..., 211 Crown

14r70 thf'M bldi'OOIIII, Ill
oloc:trlc, lumnlohool1 Comp Conloy 1271. ,.. -.tn, dopoolt I .
utliftloo, hu woodbumor. -

REDUCE· burn olt tot while you

2

EEK &amp;

Orondo,
• 211111.
-Roqulrod,Dopooft
Avallobto
114:m-mo AFTER I P.M.

Yap blurMie. Avallabll Fnah

4

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry_Wrlght

42 Mobile Homo
for Rent

Anawer to Prwiout PuDte

~~Forerun-of

1 A~lcle ol

PHILLIP
ALDER

"'
,...

Announcements

37 Bums

ACROSS

you might w ant to level a few fie ry comments at an an noy tn g person today. i1
· would be better to leave your tre un eKpressed Trying I a pat Ch up a broken
ro rharice? The Astra-Graph Matchmaker
·• can help you to understand whal to do IO
make the relat tonSh!p work . Matl $2 to

you

ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Yo u mig hl

woula be beslto go ol alone .

have to contend wtth addthonal dtfhcUit!eS
Ieday. These problems wtll be the resuli
of other pe opl e·s meptne ss or tnterference.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) A bad altll ude
at ~ark today could make d tsl asteful
asstgnments even hard~r . Do not let your
bad mood get in the way of your goals.

.

TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) An acqua in-

SCORPIO IOcT. 24·Nov . 22) lnslead ol

lan ce _o f your s mtght have a btte today
making lite a game today , you mtght take
that's as bad as tH s/her bark . Try not to . everything a shade too seriously. If you
do arl'yth tng to fu rth er ani agonize this : start looki~g fo.r. problems, you'll certain ly
indtvtdual.
fi nd them .

GEM INI (May 21-June 20) Do not be . SAGTTTARIUS (Nov . 23-.0ec. 21) Oo nol
ove r ly. as.Serttve to day a l home or a t .
work . If you Start bosstn g others arou nd.
you cou ld crea l c a na s ty problem for.
yoursett .

permtt o~t si de r~ .. esp~cta ll y t!l ·_
l aws . to
becom e, tnvolved tn your domes he affcitrs
today . Thetr input could truly muddy the
waters .

I.

�'

..l
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 18, 1995

ADVBTIED ll'EM ~·Each Of these advertised Items Is J'eQ\ired to be readilY aqlable f« sale In
each Kroger Stm, except as specff1cally noted in thlnd. If we do 1111 out of an advertised 112m we
wiD offer you your choice of a co111Jl1111* Item, when available, reflect!~ the same ~ngsor a'
ralncheck wi'lch wtl entitle vou to purchase the advertised ItEm at the advert!sed price Ytfth!n 30
daY$. Only one vendor coupon wDI.be accepted per !tan piJ'Chased.
.

COPYRIGHT ltM • TilE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
JNIUNf'l11, THROUGH SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 11M IN POMEROY.

Ohio Lottery

College
basketball

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT OUANTmES. NONE ·IOI.D TO DEALERS.

Pick 3:

636
Pick 4:

r.esults

6353
Super Lotto:
9-14-32-40-43-44
Kicker:
698743

PageS

Low.tonlghtln mld-30.. Rain.
Friday, rain . High In upper 30s.

•

a1

I
Vol. 45, NO. 184
· Copyrlght1995

Your Total Value Food Store.

..
1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 cenlll
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 19, 1995

House·Republicans propose·\Ne.lfai'e chang.es ·

GRAIN FED BEEF (1Q-14-LB. AVG.)

· COLUMBUS, Obio (AP)- If · same period of time, and, as you
lbe welfare system is not totally !glow, we've bad some good ecobrOken, Rep. Joan Lawrence said, it .. 11omic times in that 25 years,"
· is at least very seriously damaged. · Lawrence saitlat a news· conferAnd that's why she believes an ence.
overhaul is needed to break a cycle
She said spending for the Aid to
of dependency.
Dependent Children program alone
Lawrence, R-Galena, Rep. Sill bad grown450percent.
Thompson, R-Delpbos, and otber
· "That does not include alllbe
House Republicans ouUined a pro- types of programs we have put in
posal Wednesday to limit benefits place over lbese years to try to help
to two years.
·
. get people off welfare," Lawrence
"The populatl6n in tliis state t said.
bas grown less than 2 percent in the
She said one-third of birlbs in
hist 25 years. The (welfare) rolls lbe state occur to women on ADC.
"It is tiine, we think, for tts to
have grown 175 percent in that

lake .lbis sys1em and wring it oul,
and coine up wilb some new solulions," La~nce s:ud.
-slie ·sam the idea was not to
save money, but t~ belp : par~nts
take bold of tbeir hve~, fmd J~bs
and become self·sufflcoent wolb
some government help along tbe
way.
.
'.'But .at so'!'e _point we will be
say mg. Th1s IS_ •.t. You have ~~~
our help, n~w It s up to you,

Lltwrence said.

.

.

.

She and Thompson saJd paren_ts
who want cash benefits under Aid
to Dependent Children fust sbo~ld

have to sign a contraCI wilh the the · cba'nge s without fcdeial
state.
.
approval. They offered lhe propos-.
. The agreement v:ould requore a! in anticipation ()fa congressional
parems to stay off11lcg~l drugs, decision~ give states more !1exi- ·
lake_ pan m JOb trammg, al_'d obtarn bility with welfare.
fanuly pl.~nmg mfonnauon .. sub" Welfare hasn't worked as it
JOCt to religoous obJections.
was intended to work, " Thompson
. In return, the state would pro- said.
vode cash assostance for a maxo "We've essentially rrappe&lt;tpeomiDD of two years, provode educa- plc in poverty. Rather than a safety
too~. and JOb traonong, and cash neL we've created a web of entan~sostancc to mamed parents, even · glements lbat just don 't allow pea. m lbe absc~cc of a prevoous w~rk ple to get out and be productive
record. .
and self-sufficienL" he said.
.
Repubhc:u1s acknowledged that
A representative of the Cathohc
the state could not make most of Conference of Ohio agre ed
•

Four more Meigs
projects get
-SCIP funding

USDA

•
By GEORGE ABATE
bard to get what they get,'' Simcox
Sentinel News Staff
Said. "You have some good people
· Four Meigs County projects will down lbere who rea! Iy fight for it.
.I
get state grants through lbe ninth . All those people really push bani," ·
•
round of the State Capital ImproveSpecific figures on how much
ment Program, officials said today. mooey tbe otber projects wiD get is-·ln lbe 10-county district only 33 not cenain, but lbe projecL\ wiD be
projects were funded tbrougb SCIP funded, Simcox said.
- formerly lsstte :rwo, said FredThe original applicatio s for
erick Hindman, spokesman for each project asked for $173,1 for
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley the Keno bridge, $375,090 for
Regional Development Disirict.
county paving, and $2 I ,131 for
DANNY ZIRKLE and I. CARSON CROW
Yesterday, the office announced Middleport paving.
lbe Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Middleport paving was ranked
District will gain $275,000. This 33rd. just making the lisL Hindman
$2.6 J:Ilillion project ranked lbird in · said.
lbereglnn, Hindman said.
· hr the unlikely event, only
· Other projects funded during eoough money was available for 31
· Ibis round include:
projects, Middleport would be
-replacing the Keno bridge on · funded in the next round, be added.
Pleas, attorney I. Carson Crow
County Road 28, closed since last · The new Keno Bridge is set for By JIM FREEMAN
OVP
news
staff
representing
Zirkle, questioned th~
September when inspectors found a completion by the end of February.
Attorneys
representing
defenappropriateness
of using attorney
buckled crossmember;
State and local officials· choose
dants
in
the
Gary
Snouffer
poisonJohl'
Lovell,
who
represents Mr.
- resurfacing 17 miles of projects based on need, ablllty to
ing
case
Wednesday
asked
visiting
Snouffer in olber related matters,
Meigs County roads 28 and 32 finance, leverage and bjstory of
Eagle Ridge Road·and a ponioo of. previous funding, Hindman said. . Vinton County Judge Warren J. _ atuLQb[p Bureau of Criminal
Basban Road; and
The l?rojects were ranked by Hind- Lotz to dismiss grand jury indict- In.vestigation agent John Perry a~
_. witnesses m the grand jury that
- paving brick side -streets off man s office . a county board ments against lbeir clients.
Danny
Zirkle
and
Sarah
Snoufindicted the pair.
Middleport's · North Second including county commissioners
fer,
botb
of
Pomeroy,
were
indicted
·:Lovell represents Gary SnoufAvenue; .
and then a regional board.
by
a
Meigs
County
grand
jury
on
fer
10 at least three different cases
The money will be available on
Boyer Simcox, community
·
Oct.
19
on
charges
of
attempted
.
against
the interest of my client,"
development director for Buckeye July I, said Mike Miiler, special
murder
and
felonious
assault.
Crow said. "No one would want to
Hills, commended the 'county on . assist;lllt for governmental affairs at·
The two are accused of poison- be indicted on the tesliniony of an
these gran! winners.
the Ohio Public Works Commising Mrs. Snouffer' s ex.-busband, alleged victim's civil attorney."
"Meigs County is a smaller sian.
Gary,
during the autumn of 1989 . . Lovell represents Gary Snouf(er
county and they bave to try really
with arsenic, a heavy metal that an a covil case against Mrs. Snouf'
accumulates in the body until a fer and Zirkle and is defending him
Ieiba! dose is reached. ,
in a Federal Court case brought
In addition, defense attorneys about by Mrs . Snouffer and Zirkle
are. seeking transcripts of grand alleging an illegal wiretap, Crow
jury testimony.
srud. He added that Lovell is also
In a pretrial bearing in the contesting a bankruptcy case conPOINT PLEAS~. W.Va. - Mason County Prosecuting Attar- Meigs County Court of Common
A Gallipolis man accused of murney Damon Morgan said.

CHOICE

employment was the answer to ·
welfare dependency, but he said lbe i
. GOP proposal contained I)O fOC!!S
on job creation as &lt;;lid versions in
- ~Yious years.
'· "We want to make sure lbat the
s 1e can fulftll its end of lbe contntc~ · tbat it can in fact provide jobs
if they're going to require panicipants to do tbaL" said Jim Tobin,
associate director of the department
.of social concerns.
"We have always questioned the two-year time limit.·: Tobin
said.

• J.··

Defense couns£!1 in poisoning case
seeks dismissal of indictments

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW,

INDIAN RIVER, JUMBO

Dlet .Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

Red

Grapefruit

2-Liter·

Buy .one Get one

Gallipo(is man .faces
Mason arrest warrant \.

12-Pack 12-oz. cans .......... $3.29

Rome

BUY ONE
c:Et oNE

Spices .............. t.tseoz.

FREEl oreos ...........~......

FAT FREE

BUY ONE
C:ETONE

VIRGINIA CROWN

,.·~HiDr~

Paper TowelsSingle Roll

NABISCO

Premium

Apples...............·~.....JREEI Saltines·..........;... -~Hz.
KROGER
•
BUY ONE
C:ETONE
Chef (DFTIIUAME VARiml
Nabisco

·Buy One·Get One · Kroger

·
._ Topped Rolls •••••••.1401.

FREEl

FROZEN FAIIM RK:H VE&lt;ETMI.ES Qa MOZZARELLA . BUY ONE
c:Et 0 • 11

BUY ONE
GETONE

Potatoes
10.Lb. Bag

BUY ONE
GET ONE

NABISCO

ChiiSAhOJ

cookies ............ 1u.1eoz.
'IN THE OEU PASTRY SHOPPE' FOCACCIA

Joi::Y w;br~' fu~l e~s:~e~P~~:~

JREEI . :- " .
BUY ONE Idaho

100z.

FREE!

Buy one Get one

•

BUY ONE
GET ONE

cheese
Italian
..
Sticks ..............~..~ uz.oz. FREEl .Flat Bread ....;•••••~ 1Hz. FREEl

Kroger
Tomato soup
10.75-oz.

J

SELECTED VARIETIES

5.3·10-Qz.

99

t~~doi? a~2~~ ~~:n~a;~r'~

.,
-~wedne,Sday m··_ illlswef charges or '·charge _of aggrnvated:murder. ·WASHING.TO
.. N. (_AP)_-=. Ttred
___ ml!liJ;lo.uuuaull.. burglary aml_ . ... Wb_jlC was tn dieted by
_ the _Q_f Democrats .YIU1Q1tc sea ldmgsj) f
attempted aggravated robbery,
Continued on page 3
Sptaker Newt Gingrich's book
deal, a group of House Republicans
came to the chamber ready to
defend their leader.
.
Their plan Wednesday went
awry when one of lbeirown uied to
gag the critics . Suddenly, .the
. Republicans were addressi ng two
iss ues: th e book deal that began
wilb a $4.5 million advance, and
.
th e nght
of Democrats to criticize
th peale · ·
11
es
er 1ns1dc the · ouse chamber.
Neither issue - nor the acrimo. lb
.
ny at temporarily died down after
two hau·r~ of sho uting - will go
anytune soon.
-~~~~:;~~;J session turned into
in an instant
whe·n
" " '"""" " '"
ROu.n
"' .....er,
:~~~~~;':.~ri~th~e frrst Democratto auack ·
He demanded
lhe words of
Rep. Carrie Meek, 0-Fla. , be
stricken from the official record
because House t:niC$ did not pennit
.

DOUBLE ROLL

4-Roll

I

GATHERS BELONGINGS· lyako Okubo, 82, retrte.. s her
belonglnas from her devastated bome In Ashlye City, Japan
Thursday. Her home was destroyed In Tuesday's earthquake. (AP)

•

.

.
. personill attacks on the s)ie3ker.
· the Hperception of
··-' Mcek saod
impropriecy-; not 10 men tion the
potential conflict of interest ... cannot be ignored.H
Gingrich made his deal with
HarperCollins, a publisher owned
by media magnate Rupert Murdoch, who is seeking congressional
support for a TV station ownership
dispute before lbe Federal Communications Commission . Gingrich
· and Murdoch met Nov. 28 before·
the book deal •.vas concluded,
admi tting they discussed the ownership issue brieflv .
"
'
Murdoch said he was unaware
of lhe book, deal and Gingrich said
he didn't '·now Murdoch owned
HarperCollins . After an initial
n_roar o..-Y.l1!
ro;ng'irlL_govo
u.p rh.•~
"
'-'-'"'
~
advance and agreed to lake royalties based on book sales.
Walker, on a party line vote, had
Meek's remarks slricken from the
record , but hc on
· f unate
.. d
De mocrats
.
·' This is not the Reichstag ••
.
. •

"'

·
· . .
.
,
Rep. John Ding· ell. D-Mich .. said·. --·-~s .. .... '" ' '
· • their-original-lines.
everal Republicans"Tbe
did get
io
. fe[erring to.lbc Gennan parliament .use
olher'
under lbe Third Reich. "'Ibis is the
"d
.
''
51 e ··· ts trying every tactic lbey
house o.f the people. H
De
·
can 10 stop the 'Co ntrac t With
corum broke down. Members America,"' said Republican Wb"lp
. sho~ted at each other .tJu:ough com- Tom DeLay of Texas.
.
_,.
peton,g m1cropboncs . rho ugh ·II
Rep. Vic Fazio, O-Calif., told
wasn t lbe foght, they expected . a reporters ou tside the chamber
group of Walke
rt
th
•
'•
red · b ck r s sul?po ers ga · "The gag rule is a travesty
e m. a . of hun, hke a football They ' ve been wounded . The 'rti
''
ateam_ wrth tts coach_ - and glared findin g tllc boo.k deal h"•s legs.J
t the De
•· de
~
.
IJI,ocrauc so , ·
When a Republican came off,,__
Rep Barnev F k D M
""'
. . ,· ,
.' ~.an • • ass.. · lloor to defend Gingrich' s position,
saod o_t_sbeoomm.g_ more and tnore Fazio move d toward the GOP
•
.''
~nn. ossobl~ t~,cnuco,z.e th. c(Bntish) me__mbcr and engaged in a debate
royal famt ly but 1
d1
'
. .
. ... c. ss .an ess . wtih cmw,ts of rcponers around.
•
pennrssoble to cnt1cozc the speaker
Wal kt• r for bi s part
.d b
of lbe House."
·
hadn . , n!.anncd h. • &amp;at . e
Re 1 h L" d l'k o· ·
,.
Is move~ m
p.
o
n
m
cr.
'
e
mgnch
ad
vance.
adding
that
he bad nt
'
a Georgoa Republocan , saod the been on the ' floor wben
ongmal
pion
wa'
tn
1
d
·-.-.~--+...C:...
•
.
""'-;L' . ~ sunp Y respon ....-.-.seathing-auacks-were-~•"• ,,_ on kmd each time a ~cmocrat made two weelcs.
""""' ""'
. a speech attackmg Gmgnch .
Asked what was
. . .
" We' re nl)l going to let him be said " You
talk pemusslblc, be
beat up," he said, admitting it . book deals. canYou cangnenterallcrl't ~bo~
·
wasn · t m
the original plan to be a wav' that persooalo"zeso tbe ISsue
·~tze ..m
defending an attempt to silence lbe
Two Dem
Is b
·
. Dcinocrat•.
·
ocra w o overheard
that remark laughed.
.
.
'

,

Japan's earthquake death toll tops 4,000

'

99
'

.

-

sealtest2% Healthy Choice
Kleenex
Lowfat Milk
E·ntrees
Bath Tissue
Oallon

Demo·crats crt·t.·c.·ze Ho· u·se speaker

t~n~~~CC~u~~trest
warrant
th~~~~~fn~~!~~~~~~~cn~t~fn:
5

·
GEN~INE U.S;N01·1·· ..

ceming Zirkle.
from grand jury testimony."
"It's ou trageous," be added.
· "Hearsay is allowed at a grand
Crow labeled his client as a vic- jury," he added.
. tim of "selective prosecution" and a
In addition, Lotz allowed a
"personal vendetta.~'
mouon
for continuance postponing
Attorney Charles KnighL reprea
Ina!
on
the malter until June 5 at 9
sentong Sarah Snouffer, said. the a.m.
case bijs been presented to three
. Crow and Knight also requeSted
grand juries, two of which failed to
discovery_
, or access to records and
indict the pair.
.
evodcnce m the cao;c .
"! don't .know if witnesses at
Lutz sai~ he will consider the
earlier grand juries testified differ- . other
case cited by K:nig.ht before
entl y to cause an indkUncnt to be
making
a decision concerning lbe
issued this time," be said.
grand jury. ..
Knight also cited a recent Ohio
Mr. Snouffer and family mem. ~ase involving multiple gra nd
bers were present for lbe bearing
Juries where an iildicUnent was disbut were asked to leave the;, courtmissed.
room at the req ues1 of defense
Special prosecuting attorney K. attorneys.
Robert Toy disagreed.
·
The 'much-publicized case bas
"Tbe grand j ur y is simply a · been published in area and national
charging institution," he said. "The pubhcauons and aired on national
mere fact ihat someone has an tete vision .
interest does not preclude them

•

KOB E, Jap,an (AP) - The
dealb toll from the catastrophic .
earthquake in western .Japan has
swpassed 4,000, mwng tbe quake·
tbe deadliest natural disaster in '
Japan in more than 70 years.
Police said lbe death ~o.ll as of
late today stood at 4,015, with 587
people still missing nearly three
days after lbe qliaiCe.
·
The figure surpassed the official

govenunent-tally of 3,769 who died
in the I 948 quake in Fukui. The
-1923 quake in Tokyo and lbe surroundi ng Kanto plain killed more
than 100,000.
In Kobe, exhausted rescue crews
worked aro und the clock, using
picks, shovels, crowbars and bare
bands to move tons of debris in
search of survivors.
I

I

More lb:ut 2i,600 people were
More than 29,000 buildin a
injured in Tuesday's quake, which were
destroyed or heavily A.!
struck one of lbe country's most aged.
........
technologically advanced cities .
Altbougb few of the mini
Two days after the quake, about were
ex)lected to be found all ng
275,000 people were li ving in 984
60-year:old
woman was Pulled~a '
temporary sbelters.
• tually unharmed today from th •
Many of them Oed homes that wrecbge of a four-story llf*tmeuc
survived tbe quake. The people
were afraid aftershocks would butldong where sbe bad bee~
.trapped under rubble ft:r 46 "--- .
destroy lbeir dwellings.

-rn·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="370">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9742">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30306">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30305">
              <text>January 18, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1820">
      <name>birchfield</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="563">
      <name>durst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="55">
      <name>kelly</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2246">
      <name>mccall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3972">
      <name>metz</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="589">
      <name>rowley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
