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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

It's a jungle out there
in the work force
1995. Los Angeles

f omes Syndocate .;~nd
Creato rs 5 ',1no&gt;eate ·

Dear Ann Lllhk rs: I rc&lt;td wi! h
interes t the kllcr from "U nL' lllplny.:d
MBA/I D." I wu rk in a law firm. and
her stury i~ onr.: l' v~ h ~a rd hc forl' .
Man y tim e~ . Thl.' market 1 ~ -..~1 ~l u t­
tcJ with la w~· .: r~ th at tl Ur siJl ,tl l fin n
i s ah lc to htr~..· Jn . L ~..·ai.!.UI..' l.!.raduaiL'~

for a~~oL"i atl' pu .~ tlllHh. . In l ~tL' l. tilL- y
an:: heatin g uur dtlor:-. Lhmn
It Lkfi nitL·I y is an ~..· m p l d!l..'r"'

mark...:t. WL· haw n.:n: tH:J &lt;t br ~l'
numht.:r t l f 1\.':. unh.':o. fro m att Prn l'V\
wh o ar~..· ~tp p l ! tng for par:d l· ~~tl flP'-1 ti o n;-. . Th ~..· t r

they

LIJ\'LT

lett er ...... t a l l' th;H

h ~l \' t.' hL'L'Il II ) 1ng l t l f 11H I

ti ons w 1tiH1U!
to work as

:. u~..· ~..· ~..·s:-.

parak ~ab

and
to

the tl om.
T he :li1 Dfi1 L'Y"

cxrc( tl'd to

\ \L'

a r~

d n hire

and he
If the y d on ' t

mca:-; un· up. t il L· ~· don' t last l !l ll ~.
Rl· plart..' lll l'n t:-. arc :1 dim e ~~ dot t..·n.
One

thin ~ ~ ~ l tl l" \ lii"L' -·

cails.
An n. nt y !:!-r :wdrll (l thcr wdl he IJO
1111 -. , ~L·~ u ·. ~ ~ ~ .... ih linl!S and I practi ,,:all ! ~ fl'\\ up \\ llh Grandma, and we
ltnt..' hn ~.k; t rl y. Aunt Di ow ns the

po, t- · .tpartlllL' Ilt•.:o rnp k· .\ \\ hnt..' Grandma
\\ dling
li\L';... and "he rt:fu, l';., In k·t an y l t fu ~
a foo t 111
gra ndt.·hll drL'II come visit now. We

\\'l lll dil i g ~.· ntl y

~xtrc md y l'lllllrc tl: llt.

ness. As my husinL'SS increased , my
~ i s t L' r and aunt hdp.. : d me out. After
:t n1onth ·or t \ \ 11. ";\ unt Di " noti t..:ed
thl' munl'y l \ \ ;t., nu k tng and dtXi d L' Li tP u p~ n h~r tn\ 11 bu st111::-.s. Th ~ ll
\\ ould h;h 1..: hee n O K. hut ~ h t: :-. 1&amp;1 t..' J IP und n l. " ut my (11"11.: ~· ..... S h ~ ...:a ll~d
Il l )' :-. h:.td) l. " ltt..' nt..; and :-.:ud :-. lw cuuiJ
make the pi L'ct::-. J \\ :1.., 111 : 1~ 111 ~ at a
d1capn pncc . Man y 11f ha pi c ~.:c s
\\'l'rl' copil'.\ or my on gin ;d Jcsigns.
\Vht..·n Il l )' hu-.., rnL·ss partner con!ront n.l t\ unt Dt . . lu: ht:came ve ry
angry. l tri L·d tu rt..';t;..,, n wllh her. hut
11 \'&lt;:as usl' IL' .. ;.. . Shr prnn: ~LlcJ to call
1111..' L' VI..' ry n a 111 c 111 the houk. and
!hcn. :-. hc tri cd I n ; tlta~.: k 1l1L' physi -

l

:1 111

1111t

l!!l i ll~ l dt..'ll&gt;.: tl UI":t L'L' Ill\ dll l d rL'Il lt l

he
Lt \\ )~t. ' r :-. . J p)l-.., ar~l' hil.rd ttl f i nd . tlt t. ·
lh l Ur ... Mt..' J ~, n g and th L· pa) i:-. hu:..).
G o ll.d lut..:k IP "U nc mpl ilVI.'d
MB A/I D ... She' " il l1wcJ 11 . -S ); ~,l ­
PATHI ZF H IN D.C.
DEAR SY MPATH IZER Thc· 1uh
111 &lt;. 1rkct is tough not ,m Jy fnr hranJ ncw lawye r:-. hut for lk dg: lin ~ d,lC tors, c n g. in l'L'I"~ and hu . . ines\ schnnl
ll.raduatcs.
... \\'hen yo u11g people wri t~: anJ a\ k
llll.' how I ll finJ cmrluymc nt. I don' t
kn ow what In tell them . A while
hack. a n:adcr from 1:-. aqu :th. Wa sh ..
wrot e ahout how hard it w ~ t s ll&gt; get
i.l joh. I suggt:s ted that perhaps hi s
HL'g ati VI: att ituJc haJ somethin g tu
du with hi s failure to lanJ sonu:thmg
I cau eht unslmted hell for that one.
I will\ hare the fall out with you next
week .
. M) respun sc to rcuplc wil u an:
dcspcrah: for johs is the same a:-.
Tar;.an 's t..'Dilllllcnt to Jane. " It "!-&gt; :l
j un glc (l UI there." I know of no magic word s to open those doms.
Dear Ann Landers: Last Y''"'· I
haJ a ll ouri ..,hing JncU lluwn hu . . i-

Tfll'

0/Jl/"(/~l'OUS/_r ji llll l_\'

10

992-6614

1996 CHEVY SSERIES PICKUP
tWII OR 96 GMC SONOMA

1996 OLDSMOBILE .
tliVI ACHIEVA

t)'pe. Jtems are printed as space
permit' and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days,
TliESDAY
POMEROY - American l.eg10n
Unit l lJ mcc ttn g Tuc sd:t y. ~ p.m . at
t\m cri t..'i lll Lrg ion lwll.

SATURDAY
DARWIN - Bedford Town ship
trustees cnd -of- y~ ar nll'Cting Saturday. I p.m at tilt' 13cdi'&gt;Hd town hall .

WEDNESDAY
ALFRED _:_ Orange Tow nship
BuarJ ofTru.., tCC\ L" nd-nf-ycar meet ing Wednesday. 7::10 p.m . allmme of
Clerk Patt y Calaway.

PORTLAND - Leh&lt;nwn Township tru slccs meetin g Satu rday. 7
p.m. at the township hall.

or :.m)

THURSDAY
POMER OY - Bi g Bend Girl
Scout Scrvirc Unit I.caJcrs meetin g
Thursday. 7 p.m. in the Trini ty
Chun.:h ha s~.: m c.: nt. /\ II troop coukic
chairm t.: n should attend fo r training.
PAGEVII .I.I' - SupH &gt; Tlllvnship Trustees end -of-year mectin!!
Th ursday, 6:311 p.m. at the Pa ~ev illc
T\) Wnship Buildin ~. Organit_ati onal
meetin g to foil, !\\ .
POM EROY - Meigs County
Lihrary Boan.l of Tru stees mee ting
Thursday. 1 p.m. at the lihrary.
POMEROY - R c~ord . . u'mml ss ion meeting Thursday. c :.lll p.m.
at tile offi ce ll f the Mc1gs Count y
Board of C ommi :-;sio n~.::r s in the
Mei gs Count y Courthouse.

Rcsean;h by molecular biologists inJicmes thai the land mamm;~ most akin to whales is proba·
bly ti1c hippopotamus.

We Give Mature

Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

#3513

*4 cyl.

only.

APR
FOR 48 MONTHS

PW,

$10,995

1996 OLDS.
1995 OLDS CUTLASS
CUTLASS SUPREME
SUPREME

2 Dr., V-6, loaded.
V6, auto,
PW,
WAS $17,995 cassette, low mtles.

NOW$17,399

Reg.Cab,2
2 &amp; 4 Wheel

named

4 Dr., auto ., air, stereo.

PL,

$12,995

1986 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

Drive

4.9%

APR
FOR 48 MONTHS

1995 CHEVY LUMINA
tliv.l

$11 995

t--------+----__;;...~--t

tlE'll

4.9% APR
1996 CHEVY S SERIES
tlEv.l
PICKUP
cruise,

Now$30,799

alum.

$12,495
1995 OLDS
CIERA

1995 BUICK REGAL

All power, V6, keyless
V6, auto., cassette, PW
entry, V-6, much more.
#3338
WAS $21,178 &amp;locks ..

NOW$1 869 NOW$19 332
1996 CHEVY S SERIES
tlEVI
PICKUP
WAS $13,052

. , air, c a s s ette .

Ev.l

"

1996 CHEVY S SERIES
"LIKE A ROCK"
WAS $10,774

NOW$9999

1996 BUICK
CENTURY

V6 , auto. ,
equipped .

cass. ,

$12,495

V-6, auto, AM/FM cas. WAS $18,941

NOW$16,999

1993 GMC SONOMA
PICKUP
5 speed, stereo.

'6
1995 TOYOTA

2 Door, auto., air, stereo.

$6,999 Or
$149 Per Mo.

well

NO MONEY DOWN

tlEv.l

1995 CHEVY
IMPALA SS

1995 BUICK
RIVIERA

Brighl
while,
leather, CD player

loaded, Loaded, burgundy, only
13,000 miles, like new.

WA,S $31 ,901

1lEv.l

1996 BUICK
LESABRE

1990 OLDS
98
Super clean, loaded.

$21,995

NOW$27,995
1995 CHEVY FULL SIZE
tlEv.l 414 PICKUP

One owner.

1994 GEO METRO

WAS $18,923

NOW$12,739

tliv.l

1995 GEO
TRACKER 4X4

WAS $;J3,700

Aslr Us About Smart Lease

lilt,

VB,

V6, loaded.

Light teal, leather.

FOR 48 MONTHS

air,

1992 CHEVY
lf2 TON PICKUP

1995 BUICK
CENTURY

1995 OLDS.
AURORA

1992 OLDS
CUTLASS
SUPREME

1995 CHEVY
·coRSICA

$8,995

Auto., air, stereo, air bag,

V6, Auto., keyless entry. ABS.
#3494
WAS $23,888

1992 OLDS
DELTA 88

1996 CHEVY
CAVALIER

1995 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Loaded, clean.

Our staltsl1cs show lhal mature drivers and home owners have fewer and
less costl y losses I han olht~' age
groups. So 1t's only !au to charge you
less for your insurance . Insure you•
home and car with us and save ever,
more w11h our spectal mullt-policy
discounls.

1995 FORD F150
XLT
Auto ., air, loaded .

to the Unive rsit y

1996 CHEVY
llE'~~
CORSICA
V6, Automatic, more.
WAS $15,330

tlEv.l

1995 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE SE

ABS, 3800 V6, keyless
entry, CD player, more.

1995 BUICK
LESABRE
Loaded, V-6

1990 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME
4 Door, V6 .

WAS $24,569 Hurry!.

$16,995
OGAN c;,,;;;1
~RNER~.::?
nAurance se~,,·

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687
.Auto-Ownen Jruumnce

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and tifle fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Talks resuming to resolve budget crisis
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Their brief holiday break over, co ngress ional leaders and the Clinton admmistralion are slowly reviving tal ks to end a parti al'
government·shutdown and the nation's worst budget crisis.
Congressional and White House aides were meeting today without their
bosses, a gradual start for negotiations that should involve lop lawmakers
and President Clinton on Friday.
The lower-level talks today will do little to alleviale the anxiety of fed eral workers, whose paychecks will Ire smaller this week : of toorisls. whose
plans were changed with the closure of national parks and monuments; and
of travelers who desperately need passports.
Sensitive to criticism lhat.talks are·moving too slowly. White Hou se press

Rio Grande plans
free tuition for top
Buckeye students

secretary Mike McCurry said loday. " It is an urgent situation but the differences ihat exist between the 1wo sides are very deep, very fundamental.
People who have not followed 1h1 s ... think it's all theatrics, but it's not."
He said the presidenl was meeting brieny today with budget director Alice
Rivlin. whose stall is mcctmg with lower-level congressional aides later
today. Clinton's chief of slaff. Leon Panella. is still vacationing in California and won't gel involved in the talks before late Thursday
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Tem,, chainnan of the House Ways and Means Commlllee, also tried IO•Iurn up the pressure. He said Tuesday the Clinton admin islration may be violating the Constitution by juggling the books to permit
federal borrowing wtlhout congressional approval.
When the Senate on Friday left for a hol iday recess that in other years
would have lasted through much of December, the chamber passed legis-

RIO GRANDE (AP) - The Universily of Rio Grande is offering a
tuition-free. four-year education to Ohio's top high school scholars .
Admission Director Mark Abell said he will be notifying about 1.000
Ohio high schools next week that full scholarships are being made available to their valedictorians and salutatorians.
With its.ncw "Ohio First" scholarship program . the small private school
near the southern lip of the state is hoping some of Ohio 's brighte st students
will choose to earn a degree there.
The university is unique in the state because il shares a campus with the
publicly-funded Rio Grande Community College . University st udents get
the first two years of their ed~calion from the community college and the
next two from the u~iversity.
For those paying tuition, thai means $2,500 a year for the first two years,
$6,500 a year for the next two. It averages out to about the least expensive
private-college education in Ohio.
High school seniors who accept Rio Grande 's offer must maintain at least
a 3.0 grade-point average throughout their college careers, Abell said on
Tuesday.
The program is a way for Rio Grande to increase the number of top scholars on campus, and President Barry M. Dorsey said it 's al so a move to make
sure that talented students don 'l miss a chance lo auend college simply
because they can 't afford it.
"The Ohio First scholarship program recognizes Ohio students by removing the obstacle of eostlo make higher education poss ible for academically outstanding students," Dbrsey said. "This is Rio Grande's comm11men1
to ensure lhal all of Ohio's outstanding high school graduates have access
to a four-year college educalion."
Endowment money will pay for the program.
Abell expects no more than 20 applicants for the fall of 1996, the first
year of the program.
II will take awhile for the word to get out, he said. In addition, the small
campus and rural atmosphere of the Appalachian foothills won't appeal to
all students.
"If we get hundreds, I will be ecstatic. I don't think it will happen, but
if it does, great!" Abell said.
"Simply because of our size and location, which are factors in choosing where someone will go to school. we won't be on some people's list.
For others, it's perfect. They just come alive when they sec it."
It should appeal to many parents, he said.
"A recent survey showed cost is one of the top three factors used to determine where a student will go. And if it's not a factor for the student , it 's
definitely a top factor for the parents who are silling there trying to figure
out how to do it financially."
·
There arc no other string anached to the offer, Abell said.
"If the guidance counselor verifies you have that rank at the end or the
first semesler of senior year, you are in," he said.

Merchandise
prices drop
to salvage
slow season

*All prices
include
rebates to
dealer.

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5

$5,995

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
From Fifth Avenue to the nation 's
subur,ban mega-malls, shoppers
found big bargains Tuesday as stores
slashed prices in hopes of salvaging
lhe worst Christmas season in years.
· But while many shoppers hunted
for deals, snapped up marked-down
Christmas decorations and returned
gifts, business was brisk but not
overwhelming.
"I don't sec any difference," said
Mary Ann Bacher as she left Lord &amp;
Taylor in Manhattan. "The only
thing thai seems 10 me 10 be really
on sale is the Christmas-related
merchandise."
For many merchanls, this ' has
been the worst Christmas season
since the 1990-91 recession. A
weakening economy, heavy consumer debt and snowstorTI)s in the
Northeast hurt business for storeowners who depend on Christmas
shopping for half their annual earnings. Stores cut prices dramatically
before Christmas.
Nor does the coming ,year bode
well for merchanls, since shoppers
are expected to remain cautious, and
fierce compelition is expected to dri·
ve ·thousands of ~tores out of busi-

Sta~e

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A stalemate in
federal budgeltalks has for the first
time caused Ohio 10 temporarily dip
into state money to make sure January welfare checks get to ahout
235.()()() families on time.
The Ohio Department of Human
Services said Tuesday that Ohio's
Office of Budget and Management
last week approved usc of $80 mil lion in slate money for benefit payments under the Aid to Dependent
Children and Jobs Opportunity and
Basic Skills programs.
CHRISTMAS RETURNS- Customer,; at a Columbus general
merchandise store waited in line to return or exchange Christmas
gifts Thesday. Shoppers from around the nation looked for bargains
as stores slashed prices. (A P)
Many shoppers had clearly wail·
ed until after Christmas to snap up
even bigger bargains.
"Things go on sale, so there's no
poinl in buying that ahead of time, "
said Adriana Centeno, 19, who was
shopping with her mother at Robinson's-May in Los Angeles. "We
bought some shoes that were normally $70. Today they were $35. "
Although the final tally on sales
won't be known until early January,
the Johnson Redbook Service, an
authoritative industry data provider,
said sales rose only 3.9 percent in
1995 vs. last year. When lhe'2.6 percent annual innation rale is factored

\

•

in, sales barely rose.
Officials at three store chains told
analyst Joseph Ronning that business had rebounded some right
before Christmas but that the final
weekend was not enough to make up
for weak sales earlier in the month.
"The stores have themselves to
blame for some of this by having as
many pre'Christmas sales as they
do." said Ronning, a retail analyst at
Brown Brolhers Harriman . "Those
who wait expect lhey'll probably get
an additional 10 or 20 percent off."
In midtown Manhattan, every
other shop had a huge sign in lhe
window boasting of sales of up to 50
percent off.

Ronald Rhodes, human services
deputy director, said the dcci sion to
use stale money came after the Jan uary-March federal quarterly pay ment was delayed.
ADC checks arc due to recipients
at the first of the month, but the fed eral delay would have meant a postponement in this week's mailing .
"We did not have the federal
.funds. If you're a county director,
that means the cliQnts are going to be
calling you," Rhodes said.
"OBM authorized us to use slate
funds to fill the gap. You're looking
at about $80 million for the month
of January," Rhodes said. " What
· we're looking for is to make sure the
client~ get their checks."
Rhodes said he did not know the
specific budget account from which
the $80 million was taken. State rev-

•

Central
Building
condition
studied

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The condition of the aging Central Buildmg in Middleport was one
of the topics discussed by the Meigs
Local Board of Education, which
mel in regular session Tuesday
night.
Superintendent Bill Buckley
explained that the building has been
examined hy the fire marshal's
office, adding that "it is basically a
mailer of time until it gets red tagged."
The district has limited use of the
building to live classrooms with other parts of the building being closed
off. The basement is used for storage hy the maintenance department,
Buckley added.
He pointed out a number of
faults possessed by the building,
including insufficient wiring, structural defects and asbestos.
The district has the option of
repairing or renovating the building,
adding modular classrooms to the
junior high school or doubling up
rooms in the junior high building.
The Central Building has been
used to house elementary sehoul students, but is now pari of Meigs
Junior High School.
Board President Larry Rupe
instructed Buckley to gel fi gures on
what it would cost to renovate the
building.
Buckley explained thai he wasn 'I
making a call fur action, but rather
updating the board on the condition
of the old building.
"We can't du anything now,"
Buckley said.
Also, the board discussed purchasing of items with money from
its permanent improvements levy.
The board voted to purchase four
copier machines for $15,000 and six
cnuc comes llli.Jinly from the income,
high-volume, high-speed duplicators
sales and other taxes .
for $24,000 with leftover funding to
President Clinton on Friday go towards purchase of social studsigned legiSlation Congress sent him
ies textbooks.
to assure that checks would go to 3.3
In addition, lhc board approved
million veterans and dependents, bidding for six new school buses
and 4.7 million welfare families.
, with live of them to be purchased by
levy funds.
That means Ohm will quickly get
In personnel mailers, the board
its $80 million hack from the feder- employed Cindy Rhonemus as treaal government , perhaps as solm ·as
surer on a lwo-year contract starting
this week.
Jan . I. The board also approved hir"That slate money was our way
ing Christi Collins, Margo Florian
of dc&lt;~ling with the federal stalemate . and Faye Tillis as subsJitute teachThe state's not going to be out $80 ers for the remainder of the school
million," Rhodes said.
year.
But unless a federal agreement is
In other personnel mailers, the
reached , the same kind of hudgel
board accepted the resignation of
juggling could reoccur. .
teacher Robert Ashley, effective at
" We could be facing the same sit- the end of the school year, and notuation in February ," Rhodes said.
ed that teacher John Van Recth is on
Rhodes said Ohiv would recei ve sick leave, pending disability retireits $1 billion annual payment for ment.
food stamps because a federal spendThe board also accepted the resing bill was approved in October. An
ignation of Kristen Junghans as a
estimated I million Ohioans usc learning disabilities teacher at Rutfood stamps .'
land Elementary School, effective
. immediately due to her moving outThe state will receive about 60 of-state .
In' other business, the board:
percent of its Medicaid allocati on,
which the department said should
• Approved leak insurance with
the Leading Creek Conservancy
cover costs into February. Medicaid
is the federal -state health care proDistrict at a cost of $24 per building;
gram for the poor.
• Continued membership in the
Ohio School Board Association for
Rhodes said federal money
1996 at a cost of $2.670;
received for social service programs
• Set Tuesday, Jan. 10 at 7 p.m.
should cover foster care and adoption expenses so long as the federal . at the central office as the date, time
budgel impasse did not persist.
(Continued on Page 3) '

uses its own funding
to fill shortfall in welfare

n~ss.

•

lation to return 2KO.OOO furl oughed workers to their jobs by declarin g them
essential.
Sponsored hy Majority Leader Bah Dole , the measure , if approved hy
the House and signed by President Clinton, would last through Feb. 1. How·
ever, workers would be paid only after money was approvcLl for their salaries.
The measure 's fate was un certain in the House. where UOP freshmen
have promised to continue the partial closure until the White House accepts
a seven-year balanced budget plan to their liking .
The House was scheduled to convene early thiS cvcn1ng for what was
expected lo be only a hricf session .
Despite the budget 1mpassc. there were a few bri ght spot s. I 1m Holley.
spokesman for the Department of Veterans Affatrs. said 3.3 million hcncfil checks went out Friday night, just hours after legislation wa s passed to
authorize the payments. "They should arrive on time. " he said.

New patrol post construction on schedule...

0

The foll ow in g Meigs Count y students we re

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

tliVI

1996 CHEVY FULL SIZE
PICKUPS

Vol. 46, NO. 169
2 Sections, 16 Pages

PL. Auto ., air, tops .

WAS $13,995 cruise, tilt

NOW$1 3,499

4.9%

::--d'J~; ~

air,

URG posts
fall honor roll
of Rio Grande's fall qnartcr dean's
honor li st'
De borah A. Alkire . Po me roy:
Lorri A. Burnem, Langsville: Chri sti
A Collin s, Syracuse: Lisa R. Dorst.
Albany: B.J. F1ellin ge r. Pomeroy:
Cath e rin ~ I. Grosve nor. Pomeroy :
James Hay111an. Long Bott(_Hn : Kim berly D. Janey. Langmll c: Mandy J.
Jones . Lan gs vilie :
, Darin P. Logan. M1ddl c ~ o rt ;
Joseph P. McE lroy Pomeroy: Kim berly A. Mi chae l. Racine: Matthew
W. Mi chael . Racine·: l.ce'a N. l'mlfi(! , Pomeroy . /\ my J)~ Hou.se. Middleport: Kathlee n M Rutherford .
Middl eport : V1ck1 L. Smll h.
Lan gsv ilk : Gv.·yndolyn M. Taggart.
Po m er oy ; Rohcn F. T;tg gart ,
Pomeroy: M&lt;ll) J. Wh an . M~tldlc ­
porl : Steve n M. Wood, Mi ddle port .
To he n &lt;l lllL'd to the It s!. stuJcnt s
m:ust earn a 1.75 grade po int avl' ra~;e on a 4.0 sc;de dunn g th e quarter.

ent1ne

1-800-837-1 094

1991 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

1995 OLDS
ACHIEVA
Auto. ,

Auto., air, stereo.

Cloudy with a chance or nurries tonight, lows in the teens.
Thursday, cloudy. High near 30.

•

THE PlACE TO GO TO SAVE YOU DOUGH!

WAS $13,597

FRIDAY
Columbia
C ARPE NTER Townshir trustees cml-nf-yc;Jr llll'Ctin g Friday. 7 p.m. at the fire stati(lll .
O rg anizalionalm c ~t i n g to f&lt; ,ll nw.

mote sulcs or fund raisers

13-18-21-22-24

Sports on Page 5

308 E. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Th l'

POMLROY - Free eloth111g day
at the Sal vation Arm y. 115 Butternut
A vc ., I 0 a. m. lO noon . All we Icome.

Buckeye 5:

GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON
QUALITY NEW &amp; USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

-Community calendar-The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·

8-5-2-6

Reduction Sale

Aw1 l..tmdl'l".l" · hm1k 11'/. " Nux,r:ers
and /Joo~ ies. " /w.1· n cr.\thillg jimn

poixnanrlr inl'lgllljitl. Se nd a self
addrl'.\".\ t'd. Inn,!!,. lmsine.,·s si:e nn·e'"1'£' wul (/ d1t'd: or !1101/ l'Y ordt't}or
$5.25 ( I hi.\· illl'flllft' J JUH faM e and
handling ) w: Nt~):ge r.v, d o A1111 Lan den . leO. /lo .1 11 562. Cilimxo. Ill.
1&gt;1!1&gt; 1/ -1!51&gt; 2. 1/11 Cmwd11, H ' llli
$625.1

Pick 3:
6-4-8
Pick 4:

t99S After Christmas Inventory

~H"l' ht:~ tnhn1 ke n .

\Vr thin"- what Aunt Di is doing
l !l I IIII' grandmothLT is a di sgrtlCL' . hut
we d o n ' t ~n uw wh:11 to do about it.
I lmpe you print thi s lette r. Do you
h tt VL' i tll ) ' s t.: ~~t..·~ tium, ·.1 - J.F. IN
PHI LADI:I .PHIA
DLAR J.F : /\unt D1 so und s like
.1\\ itdr A..; I!!!" yu ur gr;mdlllillhcr. I S
:-.hL· 11 ! ... tl und minJ ·.1 Art. • yo u and
Hllll ' rhltn g;.. ahll' tu ul ln )' \JUr
!! randm uth.. : r lw u:-. 111 !..! and d&lt;lil v
~~~t~ nt io n '.' 1-lp\\ does~ Grann y fc:l
ahnut h~ m ~ 1\nlatt.'d frnm the rl'st ol
the famil y'! I would need to know the
an swers to t,ht:~e qm· ~ tiun .s in order
to gi\"l' yo u rrac ti l. " til guidance .
I s u ~gcs t that yo u seek the coun se l t&gt; f Slllll C&lt;l nC in authority who
kno w~ Grttndma and mi ght he will in g to help . (iol Hl luck.
Ge m of the l).,y: I fall the world's
economi sts WL'fL' laid end to end,
the y would rlot rl'adJ a e\Jndusion .

Ohio Lottery

Rhodes gets
NFL top
coach honors

DON TATE MOTORS

v:,,

ar~..·

~l't

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

•

�Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Commentary
The Daily Serdinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

: .CHARLENE HOEFLICH
: General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITER S OF OPINION are welcome. They shou ld be bs than 300
• words long. All letters arc subject to ediring and must be signed with name,

.

: address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publiShed. Letters
: should be in good taste. addressing issues. not person&lt;Jiiti cs.

Editorial
comment
.
from around Ohio

Thurslay, Dec. 28
AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and

Exploring 1995's ideas of
The year-in -review television
programs conce ntrate on the events
. of 1995 . And so we see. once again,
Okl ahoma City, _O.J., Rabin, Bosnia.
New t ·s Contract and the government
shutdown. Indeed. that's news . But
what about ideas'' " Ideas have consequences " is the mantra. Thomas
Jefferson and Adam Smith had ideas
that became hard news. So did Adolf
Hitler.
My brilliant yo ung staff of the
public televi sion program "Think
Tank " pi cked the most important
ideas of 1995. The winners were (I )
Shame, (2) Devoluti on. (3 ) Rac ial
Re-thinking and (4) The Anxious
Class. We are already seemg consequences.
Shame had kind of gone out of
·fash ion . It represe nted abso lute values when relali vc values seemed
ascendan t. We "defined deviancy
down. " explained Sen . Pat Moynihan . D-N.Y Thus, what used to be
called " bastardy" and " tllegitimacy " is called "out-of-wedlock bin h."
" non-marital birth '' or "alternative

parenting." Made non-shameful, and
accordingl y subsidized through welfare, illegitimate births increased
from 5 pe rcent of all binhs to 30 per-

Ben Wattenberg
cent m three decades.
Ideas become new s: Republicans
initiated a welfare bill that makes
tlle gittmacy less rewarding , hence
more shameful. President Climon at
first agreed, and now, under liberal
pressure. may be shamefully Uturning .
The cru\ of the welfare plan
in volves the devolution of power
hack to the states . The popularity of
devolution comes from experience.
Many f~d eral soc ial program s (not
all) have becom e expensive , inefficient , penni ssivc, out-of-touch and
counterproductive. Yet their func tions are important. Hence, in the
proposed bill. the federal entitlement
for welfare is ended and state and
local governments are asked to give
it a try. with less money. more disci-

plinc, fewer incentives, more allenlion and more shame.
Alas. shame and devolution have
a racial dimension which has led to
a racial rethinking among both
blacks and whiles. What has happened within l~e hlack commun tty i'
remarkable : simultaneous progress
and regress.
The progress is an undcnold story. Income among blacks has
climbed. black youngsters are as
likely as whites to graduate from
high school , the old days of'legal dt scriminatif"L.are a memory .. Whttes
are prepllred to acknowledge black
equality and success in athlct1cs,
entenainment, the military - and
now, astonishingly -'- politics.
Recall that Colin Powell was beating
Bill Clinton in the polls by IS
points, while in the same polls Bob
Dole was losin g to Clinton .
AI the ,;n ne time there are difficulties. fhe O.J. Simpson trial
showed the deep gulf between black
and white attitudes. There was a marginal decrease in criminality, illegit-

THREADS,

DUDE

EN6USH:

TilE OFFJCIA\.
LANG~

and welfare in the black community, but the levels are terribly
high . Whites felt threatened; affirmative action came onto the national agenda. Dinesh D'Souza's book
"The End of Racism" got into trouble hccau se of tone . not because it
stressed that black problems come
mostly from within the black community. The Million Man March validated that. Its stated theme, if not its
leadership. was sound : black responsibility for black travail.
Finally there is "the anxious
class." It is said that the nch are getLing richer, that the middle class is
taking it in the neck, that the poor arc
sinking. Common villains are the
global economy. imports. the exodus
of manufacturing jobs, corporate restructuring
and
down -sizing.
Allegedly. anxiety reigns. The rich
are indeed getting richer, but there is
solid factual reason to doubt the rest
of the complaint. Still, it is a powerful and scary theme.
·
Liberals say government hasn't
done enough. Conservatives say
government has done too much. The
liberals are winning the rhetorical
war. Even conservatives now cluck
about income stagnation. But the
policy war is being won by conservatives. The growth of government
will be diminished as (and if) the balanced budget and tax cuts occur. The
$500-per-child tax· cut says ihat if
you don 'tlike the way government
is doing it - do it yourself. Keep
some more of your money. Use it to
help send a kid to private school. Use
it to help pay (or day care. Use it to
make it easier for Mom to stay at
home for a while. That's total devolution .
Ideas and consequences. The bad
news is that we need good ideas
because we have serious problems.
The good news is that this society
thinks about its problems and reacts
to what it thinks. Ready. set, go: Stan
the new year of ideas.
(Ben Wallenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the author of a new
book, "Values Matter Most," and
is the host of the weekly public
television program, "Think
Tank.")

1macy

•

extensive and very detailed review of
tht s legi slation ." Clinton rejected it
with an either-or message, saying he
was against frivolous and excessive

Walter R. Mears
lawsuits but concerned for innocent
investors victimized by fraud. His
spokesman then said that much of
the pres ident 's purpose can be
achieved be federal securities supervisors anyhow.
That 's the wavering Clinton the
Republican s . would like to run
against next year, an easier target
than the Democratic defender of
health care programs, educ.ation, the
environment, cops- on-the -street
crime-fighting. and the other issues
cited in his veto messages.
Cl inton's first veto was of an
appropriations bill on June 7, one he
said cut needed funds while preserving congressional pork barrel
projects. It was supplanted by comprumtsc.
Next it was foreign policy, on
Aug . II . of legislation to end U.S.
compliance with the United Nations
arms embargo on Bosnian Muslims.
There 's a pattern 10 the budget
and appropriations vetoes: Make a

point , defend a Democratic priority
and. in the process. perk up the polls.
With his claim to be the defender of
programs people want. need and
have a right to count on - Medicare
in panicular - Clinton has been
gaining approval rating points in the
budget struggle.
His vetoes, in settings to dramatize his message, help make the case.
So sixth-grade science students were
the audience when he rejected a
money bill that would have crimped
environmental spending. Policemen
were witnesses when he disapproved
a measure he said would undo the
program to put more cops on street
patrol.
For one, there was a pen nown in,
the one Lyndon B. Johnson used to
sign Medicare into law in 1965. He
used .it, after a delay for lack of ink.
to reject a GOP budget he said would
make unacceptable cuts in Medicare
and Medicaid .
There was even a show-and-tell
veto of the appropriation to finance
Congress, which Clinton rejected on
grounds that they ought to deal with
the people's business first and take
care of their own budget later. Ironically, the effect of that one was to
detay the $200 million cut Congress

Deborah Mathis

I never imagined myself wonoering how my children were going to
make it.

Ronald F. Stein 'Sr.

Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

By The Associated Press
Another 1-2 inches of snow was
on the ground this morning in all but
the nonhwest quadrant of Ohio.
There, clear skies allowed temperatures to plunge to close to 10
degrees.
A low pressure system was
expected to move to the east of the
state today, bringing an end to the
snow over all of Ohio except the
lakeshore areas in the northeast.
Clouds were expected to build
over Ohio again tonight, producing
some snow flurries, the National
Weather Service said. Drier air will
move in on Thursday, returning
some sunshine to the state, especially in the west and south. Lows
tonight will be in the teens to around
20 in the far south.
Highs on Thursday will range
from the mid-20s in the northeast to
near 30 in the south and west.
The record-high temperature for

The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton ~ .•
Deed, David L. Shumway to
Mary Christine Hurley, Bedford
parcels;
Easement, William E. and Melis- sa M. Morris to OMEGA JV5, Salisbury, 1.688 acres ;
Easement, Gary L. and Ruby
King to OMEGA JV5, Rutland,
.130 acre;
Easement, Dale E. and Patty
Showalter to OMEGAJV5, Chester;
Easement, Joseph and Cora Loftis
to OMEGA JV5. Salisbury;
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian Marlene
Hall to Pomeroy Village;
Affidavit, Walton R. Manley, Sidney C. Roy and Louise V. Roy to
Susan Manley;
Right of way, Clarence E. and
Jessie M. Might to Dublin Energy
Corporation, Salem parcels;
Right of way, Kathleen Caton to
Dubli11 Energy Corporation, Salem;
Certificate, Lillian Katheryn
Pierce to Betty Wiles and Ruth Canter, Pomeroy parcel;
Affidavit, Carl G. Bailey,
deceased, to Dorothy Bailey, Salisbury;
Easement, Roxie L. and
Lawrence W. Rapp to OMEGA JV5.
Salisbury ;
Easement, Albert Dale and Clara
Joy Roush to OMEGA JV5, Salisbury, 3.148 acres;
Easement, Carl and Mary Nottingham to OMEGA JV5, Chester,
3.174 acres;
Easement, Elizabeth Louise

The Daily Sentii,Iel '
(USPS 2D-'JO)

Berry's World

Published e\'ery nfteriiOOn. Moeday through
Fridoy, Ill Collrl St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio Volley Publishing Compm~y/Gannen Co..
Pomero), Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second

clan postage p:Ud at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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sunnr

Pt. Cloud): Clou&lt;iy

Clara L. Milhoan
Clara L. Milho~n. 75, of Long Bottom, died Monday, Dec. 25 , 1995 at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Born Sept. 28, 1920, daughter of the late Anthony Smith and Li llian
Duerr, she was a homemaker.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Elaine and Terry Congo.
Long Bottom; two sons and daughters-in-law, Tony and Pame la Mrlhoan,
and Mikel and Bonnie Milhoan, both of Long Bottom; two stslers, W1lma
Bibbee of Lancaster, and Jean Seidenabel of Pomeroy; brother-in-law,
Edward Schaefer of Pomeroy; six grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews.
.
.
She was preceded in death by her husband. BlameS. M1lhoan: one brother, Phillip Smith; and four sisters, Hilda White, Mildred Dains. Mary Schaefer and Sue Goeglein.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Meigs Memory Gar.
dens, Pomeroy, with the Rev. David Dailey officiating.
No calling hours will be observed. Arrangements are bemg handled by
the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees in 1959
while the record low was 14 below
zero in 1950. Sunset tonight will be
at 5:13p.m. and sunrise Thursday at
7:52a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Snow showers likely
nonheast. Snow may be mixed with
freezing drizzle at times. Cloudy
with a chance of flurries elsewhere.
·
,Lows mostly in the teens.
Thursday ... Cloudy with scattered
snow showers nonheast. Turning
panly sunny west half in the afternoon. Highs from 25 to 30.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Fair. Lows from the
upper teens to lower 20s. Highs from
the upper 20s to lower 30s.
Saturday... A chance of snow
mainly north. Lows 20 to 25. Highs
from 30 to 35.
Sunday ... Dry. Lows near 20.
Highs 25 to 30.

Meigs announcements
Trustees to meet
The Olive Township Board of
Trustees will hold its regular end-ofyear meeting Friday, 6:30p.m. to be
followed by the 1996 organizational meeting.

Meigs land transfers posted

(Deborah Mathis is a columnist
for Tribune Media Services.)

,I

Ice

Drier air may help provide
break in clouds Thursday

had voted for itself, leaving the prior, higher appropriation in effect.
Vetoes are. as George Bush once
observed, the way presidents play
defense. Bush often tried to use them
as a bargaining tool in his negotiations with a Democratic Congress.
seeking concessions or compromises as the price of his signature.
He wound up vetoing 36 bills,
and was overridden on one. A veto
strategy works best when a president
doesn 't want Congress to do much.
It is, as Newt Gingrich observed long
before he became speaker of the
House, a negative tool, "a club, not
a rapter."
The Clinton course has been to
tell Congress what he will and will
not accept, and then to complain that
the Republicans keep sending him
bills they know he won't sign ..They
do, because they are drawing lines,
too, seeking to show him an old-style
Democratic spender, arguing that he
doesn't really care about balancing
the federal budget.
Again , those are arguments for
1996.
(Walter R. Mears, vire presl·
dent and columnist for The Assodated Press, has reported on
Washington and national politics
for more than 30 years.)

curves and necessary detours. fork s
that confuse, paths that lead to thickets and those that wind to the clearing . I cannot make the trip for them.
they must understand . But I can help
chart the route and equip them for
the trek .
But, the multiple tragedies . horrors. losses, and threats of the past
few years were bc~innin~ to take
their toll. I was drained of optimism.
The bright side and silver lining had
become rarer and more elusive.
I was afraid for my children. And
because I was afraid, I was angry.
And because I was angry, I was sad.
How could things have turned so
sour and dangerous? Where in the
world had car-jacking and child
killers and crack babies and junkie
mothers come from?
I grew up at a time when Jim
Crow and Nik.ita Khruschev were at
their most vicious, so fear for the
future was something my parents
knew, if J was oblivious to it.

Ronald Franklin Stein Sr. , 47, West Columbia, W.Va ., died Monday. Dec.
25, 1995 at his residence.
He was a practicing attorney in Mason County for 21 years; the city attorney for New Haven , WVa.; a member of the Mason County and West Virginia SWe Bar associations; and was active in the Mason County Fann
Bureau. He was a 1966 graduate of Wahama High School; a 1970 graduate of Marshall University; and a 1974 graduate of West Virginia University College of Law.
Born April 14, 1948 in Wheeling, W.Va., he was a son of Mary Maynard Stein of Peoria, Ariz., and the late Edwin L. Stein Jr.
In addition to his mother. he is survived by a daughter. Windi L. Stein
of Parkersburg, W.Va.; a son, Ronald F. "R.F." Stein of Point Pleasant. W.Va.:
and a brother, Edwin L. Stein Ill of Houston , Texas.
Private service and burial will be held. There will be no visitation .
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the
Ronald F. Stein Scholarship Fund, in care of the Mason County Bar Association, Michael Shaw, 610 Main St., Point Pleasant , W.Va. 25550.
Arrangements arc under the direction of the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.

W.VA.

Tomorrow: the proper depository of faith
Meanwhile , I'm supposed to
come up with a roadmap to those
ambitions, show the younguns how
to read it, pointing oul the tricky

Marjorie Griffith, 80, of Silver City. N.C.. died Saturday. Dec. 24, 1995
in Silver City.
Arrangements will be announced by the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland.

PA.

IND.

Vetoes define precepts of Clinton candidacy

Sheriff investigates accidents

Marjorie Griffith

MICH.

cons~quence

PHAT

•

Local News in .Brief:

OHIO Weather

Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Akron Beacon .Journal, Dec. 26
Even Newt Gingrich conceded recently that Republicans fumbled plans
to overhaul the nati on's environmental laws. He pledges 1996 wtll be diffe rent .
How will it be different''
The Republican hudgel plan delivers unn ecessary and careless hits to
environmental program s.
To be fair, not all Republican s have followed the pany's course. A brave
group of moderates ... has challenged GOP leaders and even won con~es­
siuns.
Poll s routinely show strong public support forenvironmenlal protection.
The ohJeclive shou ld he 10 hUi ld on the puhhc consensus, lo recogntze
.. . the value of practical ami effective environmental protection. The president should use hts veto to press the argument.
The Cincinnati Enquirer, Dec. 23
A Communist comeback in Russia's parliamentary elections on Dec. 17
docs not bode well for the United States, no matter how "relieved" Washington officials claim to be . The Communist Party and ultranationalists led
hy rabble-rouser Vladimir Zhirinovsky took 33. percent of the vote, and
already party-less Pres1dent Bons Yelsm ts makmg conc1hatory notses to
appease angry voters.
..
.
Ill s small comfon that Zhtnnovsky's nationalists lost ground from the11
shoc kingl y strong showing in the 1993 elections. Sure, the_Russian Duma
is a relatively powerless legislative body, ncedtng a two-th1rds maJOnty to
overnde a Ycltsin veto. But Sunday's election was more than JUSt a pocketbook-protest. It was like a primary for the June pres idential elections.
The U.S. mi sston is not to "save" Yellsin.or 10 "save " Russia. Last SunJ ay's Duma elections are a warning to build ties with refonners beyond
· Yells in and beyond Russia in the other republic s.
Th• (.Tiffin) Advertiser-Tribune, Dec. 21
The Repuhlicans. as promi sed, have put fonh a plan to reduce the budge l by l11nit ing spending tncreases 10 7 percent.
But several Democrats - includtng long-tenn budget hawks such as
Chi ef of Staff Leon Panetta an budget direc . r Alice Rivlin - are describing the limited increases as cuts to inname public opinion and to improve
Pres ident Clinton 's standing in the polls.
A ba lanced budget is the rigbt thing to do. But some Democrats believe
they can exploit the Republicans · deficit reduction program at the ballot box .
WASHINGTON - With his
The Chillicothe Gazette, Dec. 20
Christmastime bag of vetoes, Pre si-It 's the old government pass down .·Got a problem? Toss it on down to
dent Clinton is etching the lines that
the next lowest level. The feds pass their problems down to the state, the · will define his New Year 's campa1gn
slate kicks it on down to the county or city. and it ends up with the govto hold the White House.
ernment with the least resources trying to find a solution.
He said a long time ago that he
In thi s case it 's jails. Ohio is tn a panicular pickle, even though an aggreswasn't elected to produce a pile of
stve slate Jail-building program has been under way. So what does the Legvetoes, but he 's up to I0, and the
ISlature do '' II mandates that county jails will have to take some lower-levstack will grow. He's just put a welel ICiony pri soners into the county jails.
fare overhaul on his veto hit li st, sayThat leaves less-afnuent rural counties scrambling.
ing it was "at oqds with America's
Ohto Rep. Mike Shoemaker, D-Bournevtlle, said the stance of the fed val ues."
eral and state governments to "get tough on crime" looks good, but he and
Th e ones that make his case for
other lawmakers worry whether adequate, long-tenn funding will be avail1996 are on spending priorities and
. ahie for projects that might alleviate some of the overcrowded condition s.
Bosnia policy. Those are central
"The state mandates. then walks away," Shoemaker said. "Thl\ federal
issues as he tries to become the first
government does the sam ~ . thing. We are pan of the problem if we don 't
incumben, Democrat in 32 years to
provtde enough resources .
.
.
. .
win another term.
- He 's right. If the state cannot hou'" the felon s tn Ohto, then the LcgtsThe line was blurred on his veto
lature should be tinding soluttons, not tosstng thts hot potato tnlo the hands
of a bill to limit lawsuits for securiof county sheriffs.
ty fraud, quickly overridden in Congress, which hadn 't done so before.
The White House had seemed
resigned to the two-thirds votes that
overruled the president on that veto,
of a measure Clinton earlier had indicated he would accept.
By The Associated Press
He vetoed it instead, minute s
it would have become law
before
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 27, the 361st day of 1995. There are four
days left in lhe year.
without his signature, lobbied by
Today's Highlight in History:
lawyers and the left. urged to veto by
On Dec. 27, 1831, naturnlist Cbarles Darwin set out on a voyage to lhe polittcal aides. and seeking advice in
PacifiC aboard lhe HMS Beagle. (Darwin' s discoveries during lhe voyage . what his spokesm an called "a very
helped formed the basis of his theories on evolution.)
On this date:
In 1822, scientist Louis Pasteur was born in Dole, France.
In 1892. tbe cornerstone was laid for tbe Catbedral Church of St. John
tbe Divine in New York City.
In 1900. militant prohibitionist Carry Nation carried out her fust public
WASHINGTON - Shortly ago,
smashing of a bar, at tbe Carey Hotel in Wichita, Kan .
worried
that I was beginning to lose
I
In 1927, the musical play "Show Boat," witb music by Jerome Kern
my
mind,
owing to a rueful , angry,
and libretto by Oscar Hammerstein II, opened at tbe Zicgfeld Theater in
afraid, and otherwise down-in-theNew York.
dumps moodiness that I could shake
In 1932, Radio City Music Hall opened in New York.
only brieny or in slumber. ·
off
In 1945. 28 nations signed an agreement creating the World Bank . .
The
world, I thought, was losing
In 1947, the children's television program "Howdy Doody," hosted
its selvage, unraveling at such a rapid
by Bob Smith, made its debut on NBC.
rate and so extremely that, any day,
In 1968, Apollo 8 and its three astronauts made a safe, nighttime
,
splashdown in the Pacific.
I expected the heavens to open up
In 1970, "Hello. Dolly I" closed on Broadway after a run of 2,844 per- and The Voice to say, "Time's up .
fonnances .
That's it. "
In I 979, Soviet forces seized .control of Afghanistan. President
To be hone st about it, it's been a
Hafizullah Amin. who was overthrown and executed, was replaced by
long time since the end of the world
·
Babrak Karmal.
sounded like such a horrible idea to
Ten years ago: Palestinian guerrillas opened fire inside .the Rome and
me. For reasons too involved to
Vienna airpons; a total of 20 people were killed, including five of the
explain here. I have no panicular fear
attackers, who were slain by police and security personnel. American natof death .
uralist Dian Fossey. who bad studied gorillas in the wild, was found
But, the children? Well, that's difhacked to death at a research station in Rwanda
ferent. Quite .
Five years ago: The government reported that orders to manufacturers
They 've been counting on growfor big ticket dtllllble goods plummeted 10.5 percent lhe previounnonth.
ing up. pursuing careers and love
Gcnnady I. Yanayev was approved as the Soviet Union's fust vice presilives, owning houses, having childent on the last day of a stonny, llklay session of the Congress of Peodren.
traveling the globe, and other
ple's Deputies.
·
fantasia yo uth invites.
One year ago: Four Roman Catholic priests - three French and a BelI love it when my children talk
gian - were shot to death in their rectory in Algiers, a day after French
about
this stuff. As their mother, I am
commandos killed four rndicals who had hijacked an Air France jet from
obligated
to encourage their dreams
Algiers to Marseille.
and
the
fine
way they see their
Today's Binbdays: Fonner U.S. Senat!Y James A. McClure, R-ldaho,
futures
,
while
knowing
all manner of
is 7 I. Actor Gerard Depardieu is 47. Actress Tovah Feldshub is 43.
may
intrude
in
the
pursuit of
things
Thought for Today: "Few things are more mischievous to good govthese
fantasies
.
But
Life
is sure to
ernment and w 'domestic tJanquility' than splendid rhetoric that doesn't
teach that lesson.
pay off.'' - Alistair Cooke, British-born journalist and broadcaster.

Today in history

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3..

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Subscriben nol desiring to pay the carrier may
remit in odvance direct Ia The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month bosia. Credit will be
given carrier tt~eh week.
No 11bscriptioa by mail permitted in areas
where horne carrier lei'Yice is 1vail~.

Meigs EMS runs

Smith to OMEGA JV5, Chester,
2.756 acres;
Units of the Meigs County EmerEasement, James E. and Linda E. gency Medical Service recorded 17
Keesee to OMEGA JV5, Rutland, calls for assistance, including five
4.797 acres ;
transfer calls. Units responding
Easement. James E. II and Dlynn included:
R. Keesee to OMEGA JV5. Rutland. MIDDLEPORT
..026 acres;
4:23 a.m., Stonewood ApartDeed, Ragena McGuire to Fami- . ments, Teresa Byer, Holzer Medical
ly Homes Incorporated, Salisbury Center;
·
parcel;
10:52 p.m., Page Street, Betty .
Deed, James and Connie Casey to Oliver, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Larry J. and Rita D. Ball, Rutland
parcel;
.
OLIVETWP.
Right of way, Tony and Jamcc
6: 17 p.m., Number Nine Road,
Osborne to Leading Creek Conser- April Smith, Camden-Clark Memovancy District. Columbi a;
rial Hospital.
Right of way, Ralph and Lois POMEROY
Cundiff to LCCD, Rutland;
8:24 a.m., Cullums Road, Etta
Right of way, James R. and Jen- Cullums, Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
nifer Sheets to LCCD, Meigs;
I :59 p.m. , Rocksprings Rehabil Deed , George and Margaret itation Center. Betty Morrissey,
Buckley to Thomas C. and Berniece VMH.
M. Weis. Olive;
RUTLAND
12:51 a.m., Crouser Road, Daniel
Deed, Helen A. Clevenger,
Shirley V. and Rick R. Hoover to Shane, treated at the scene;
10:06 a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
John Phillip Pickens III. Lebanon.
Center, Freda Han, PVH;
39.302 acres;
10:12 a.m.. Railroad Street,
Easement, Robert and Joan
Snowden to OMEGA JV5. Salis- Angela Edmon, HMC;
1:33 p.m., volunteer fire departbury;
Easement, James P. and Jackeline ment and squad to State Route 124,
Lamben to OMEGAJV5, Salisbury; washer fire at Rebecca Reed resiEasement. Raymond E. and dence. no injuries;
6:57 p.m., Meigs Mine 31 ,
Frances B. Maxson to OMEGA
Robert E. Rankin. HMr;
JV5, Chester;
9:03p.m., SR 124. Steven Smith,
Easement. Facemyer Lumber
Company to OMEGA JV5, Salis- HMC. ·
SYRACUSE
bury;
9:52 a.m. , Lee Circle. Sandra
Easement, Gary Land Sharon K.
Cobb, PVH.
Michael to OMEGA JV5, Chester;
Easement, Richard C. and Ruby
Eblin 'to OMEGA JV5, Salisbury:
Easement, Virgil and Geraldine
(Continued from Page I)
D. Parsons to OMEGA JV5, Salisand location of the I \1\lb orgamzabury.
tional meeting to be followed by a
regular meeting; .
.
.
• Met in executive sessiOn to diScuss personnel matters.
Present were Buckley, RhoneAm Ele Power ..............................40
Akzo .......................................58 1/4
mus, Rupe and board members
Ashland Oil ..................................36
Randy Humphreys, Roger Abbott,
AT&amp;T .....................................643/4
Scott Walton and John Hood.
Bank One ..................:.............37 112
Bob Evans ............................... 17 1/4
Borg-Wamer ......................... .311/4
Champion Ind .............................. 23
Charming Shop ..................... 3 1/16
VETERANS MEMORIAL
City Holdlng ................................. 24
Tuesday admissions- Rayinond
Federal Mogu1 ........................20 314
Cunningham, Syracuse.
Gaonett ...................................60 112
Goodyear T &amp;R ......................44 518 . Tuesday discharges - none .
K-rnart ......................................6 5/8
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
-Lands End .............................. 14-318
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Limited lnc.............................161/4
Brace,
daughter, Thunnan .
Peoples Bancorp..........................23
(Publlsbed
with permission)
Ohio Valley Bank ..................35 112
One Valley .............................311/4
RoctweU ................................51518
Robbins &amp; Myers...................18 liZ
Royal Dutcb/Sbell ................140 liZ
Sbouey's Inc ......................... - .9 518
Star Bank ..............................59 112
All Natural C.H. 2001
Wendy lnt'l ............................lO liZ
·WHh Choomtum Ptcol1111t.
MONEY BACK GUARANTff
·
Worthington lnd ....................18 718

Central Building

Courthouse dosing
Offices in the Meigs County
Courthouse and the Meigs County
Depanment of Human Services will
close Friday at noon . The board of
county commtssioners meeting wtll
be held Friday from 10 a.m . to noon .
New Year's party
A free New Year's Eve party will
be held from 8 p.m. to I a.m. at the
Racine American Legion Hall.
Music by C.J. and the Country Gentlemen. The public is welcome 10
attend the family-oriented event and
no alcohol is allowed. Refreshments
will be provided by the Star Mill
Park Board .

Meigs County sheriff's deputies investigated two auto accidents
.
Tuesday evening, according to Sheriff J~mes M. Soulsby.
The first accident occurred at 5 p.m. on Barringer Ridge Road, JUSt
off State Route 124 in Lebanon Township.
According to repons, Sally Donaldson, Long Bottom , was traveling east on Barringer Ridge Road when she hit her brakes near the
McKelvey residen~e and began sliding on the snow-covered road .
Charles "Gus" Fitch, Portland , was westbound and attempted lo
avoid Donaldson by traveling up an embankment. Damage to both
vehicles was listed as moderate.
The second accident occurred at 6 p.m. on SR 338 at the curve ncar
~.
the William Ritchte Bridge.
James D. Riffie, Syracuse, was westbound when th~m~ load
on his 1991 Western Star semi and trailer shifted and the binding broke.
Three bundles of lumber were dumped onto the roadway. No vehicles werl:{lassing at the time of the accident. The roadway was blocked
for a short lime, until the lumber was removed from the roadway.

Ohio Power outage reported
Appro.&lt;imately 776 Ohio Power cuslurncrs were left without electricity after a tree fell onto an electric line on Pine Grove Road ncar
Syracuse Tuesdav around 7:15p.m.. according to Ohio Power/Columbu s Southern Power Manager Ron McDade.
The outage affected Pine Grove Road, the upper end of Syracuse,
Racine, pans of Lebanon Township around Tanners Run, and areas
·
around Mile Hill and Yellbwbush roads.
Power was restored around 8:45 p.m., according to McD~de .

West Virginia not planning
changes in tourism slogan
By ROCHELLE OLSON
Associated· Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
"West Virginia: Where the West
Begins" will not become the state's
new slogan because no changes arc
planned, said Division of Tourism
Commissioner Jim Lawrence.
The phrase was incorrectly ideotitled in media reports as a possible
new slogan. when it actually is a proposed tag-line for an advertisement,
he said. The tag-line is what an
ar.nouncer says at the end of a commercial.
Doe-Anderson Advenising Inc.
of Louisville, Ky., which holds the

slate tourism contract, came up with
the suggestion.
Residents. some state lawmakers
and the state Tourism Commission
chairman questioned it, but
Lawrence defended it.
"The tag-line ... was designed as
a play on words to differentiate West
Virginia from Virginia. which is a
common mistake by out -of-slate
resi·dents," Lawren ce said.
The state wants to attract visitors
from neighboring states who wanllc
ski, raft and hike .
Bright said he would like to hear
from resident~ who have slogan
suggestions.

Divorces and dissolutions
The following actions to end
marriage were filed recently in the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Couns Larry Spencer:
Dissolution asked - Scott A.
Oberholzer, Albany, and Sharon K.
Oberholzer, Mason, W.Va., Dec. 18 .
Divorces asked - E. Leann
Wolfe, Ewington, from Chad A.
Wolfe, Racine, Dec. 26; Minia R.
Boggess from Gary Lee Boggess .
both of Middleport, Dec. 22; Curtis
Fonnyduval , Jackson. from SonJa
Formyduval. Galloway. Dec . 15.

Dissolution granted - Randy E.
King and Sheila A. King. Dec. 21 ;
Eric L. Stover and Julia F. Stover.
Dec. 22.
Divorce granted - Jenn1fcr J.
Shuler and Denis Ray Shuler. Dec.
15; Gregory A. Robbins and Vicki
A. Robbins, Dec. 15; Roger D.
Shoemaker from Mary A. Shoemaker, Dec. 15; Mary Sue Brauer
from Roger E. Brauer, Dec. 13: Larry V. Dillon II and Tammy L. Dillon ,
Dec. 19.

Party planned
There will be a New Year's Eve
party at the American Legion Annex
in Middleport across from the post
office beginning at 8 p.m. Music by
The Classics. A snack table and party favors will be provided and the
event is free and open to the public.
Sponsored by the American Legion
Post 128.

' ..

LCCD office dosing
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District office will close at noon Friday for end-of-year repons. Emergencies can be handled by calling
742-2597.

M* SIOifiiiGI
'J'OOAY Uln , JAIIU.Ur 1ST . ICI
l:tO,J ; OO 7:HI 9:00

MDNEV TIIIIN .. - ·· ., ...._,. ··-·
9:20 DAILr.

J

Best -Wishes For A Healthy,
Happy Holiday!
from

HOLZER CLINIC

Stocks

Hospital news

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IN 3 DAYS

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Stock reports are the 10:30 .a.m.
quotes provided by Advest o
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FRUTH PHARIIACY

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Here For Your Health, Here For.Your Lifetime!

�J
Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Sports

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

.,

I

Wednesday, December 27, 1995

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS

7Up

'

By MIKE FLAM
Associated Press Writer
•'
Home losses to the Ottawa Senators - the worst team in the NHL
four years running - have inspired
the New York Rangers and Detroit
Red Wings to lengthy successful
streaks at home and shares of the
league's points lead.
Detroit coaGh Scotty Bowman
tied the NHL record for most games
coached as his Red Wings overcame
an early two-goal deficit Tuesday
• night to win their lith straight game
at Joe Louis Arena, 3-2 over St.
Louis.
In New York, the Rangers extended their home unbeaten streak to 17
as two goals each by Pat Verbeek and
., Mark Messier led New York to a 64 victory over the Senators.
Both teams' last loss at home
came against Ottawa, which fell to 726-lthis season. Each team now has
52 points, tied with Florida for the
league lead. Detroit has played 34.
.,' games, Florida 35 and th e Rangers
39.

Dr. Pepper
211ter

Monday thru Sunday

(

8 AM-lO ·PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMn QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30,1995

..

Stokely Squeeze
Catsup
28 oz.

(

·--·

STEAL IN PROGRESS- Indiana guard Hay·
woode Workman (center) steals the ball from the
Chicago Bulls' Scottie Pippen (33) as Bulls guard

Steve Kerr follows the play in the second quarter
of Tuesday night's NBA game in Indianapolis,
where the Pacers won 103-97. (AP)

::Pacers defeat Bulls; Kings,
Nuggets &amp; Pistons ·also win
By The Associated Press
After a month. the Chicago Bulls
finally lust their third game of the
·season .

The lndwna Pacers 103-97 vic'tory at home Tuesday ni ght over tl1e
·Bulls - their first defeat since Nov.
26 at Seanle - set up the last dramatic game of 1995 - Pacers at
'Bull s on Friday night at the United
Center, where Chicago is undefeat. ed this season.
" We can start another (winning
'streak). We 'vc got a couple of days
to practice and get back on tra~k for
Friday," said Michael Jordan, who
'matched his scorin g average of 30
· 'points, but missed 17 of 28 shots.
In other NBA games, Sacramen'to beat San Antonio 11 5-98. Denver
'beat Dullas 114-102. Utah defeated ·
Portland 11 4- 104, Houston got pasl
Vancouver I00-84. Miami edged
New Jersey 96-93, the Los Angeles
Lakers downed Boston 102-9 1,
&gt;'Detroit beat Golden State IQ0-90,
• Atlanta topped the Los Angeles
• Clippers 94-88 and Toronto defeat~d Milwaukee 93-87.
Kings 115, Spurs 98
•
At
Sac ramen to. the second•
longest winning streak in the league
also came to an end.
Walt Williams scored 20 of his 25
• poin ts in the second half. h~ lping
• Sat:ramcnlo snap San Antomo s SIXgame winning streak. Mitch Richmond led all scorers with 31 points
• as the Kings broke an eight-game
los ing streak against San Antonio
• ' dating back to Nov. 12, 1993.
•
Nuggets 114, Mavericks 102
At Denver, the Nuggets extended
Dallas' losing streak to six games as
Du lc Ell is scored a season-high 30
points.
•
" When I hit the first one , I knew
1 was in for a good night. I wanted

.·
:·
.·

..

Basketball

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

lish Roast ••••~:•••

NBA standings

Tonight's t:.,.mes
L.l\ Chp~lcH ,,, Charlotte . 7 lOp m
. Golden State J l W:tdHngton . RI' rn
Milwaukcl' :11 MmucMl!:t.,&amp; 11m

EASTF.RN CONFERENCF.
Atlantic Divisi()n

fum

.11: L 1'&lt;1.

Iii!

7~ I
~DR

7

NL' ""' krS~)'

22 6
i9 7
14 i2
i2 1.1
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NL'w York
Mramr

Bostou
Was tun~tnn

786'

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"19

400

108

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lndrana
CU :VI::lAND
At l;rnta
Charh,ttl'
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Torontu ..

14
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1.1

560

i2 ~ 2 0
500
i4 48i

1.1

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11 14

.9
.. 9

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at .' kallll', 10 p rn

"'iO
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10 .'i
10 '\

46 oz.

) 6()

1.\."i

.l 10

15 5

JOAN OF ARC
KIDNEY BEANS
Lt or Dk.
15.5 oz.

li:LI&amp;Gf!L&amp;

Flo,ul:l

Wa~lungtur1 .

Tampa Ba}'
NY

l~l n nrlen

2~ 8 2 ~2
2.110 6 ~2
21 10 ~ 47
1 61~ J
J)
. 1415 6 .14
141 7 4 .'\2
.. 82 1 b 22

1 2~
81
138 107
LH 90

94 89
103 11 9
88 88
97 IJ4

Midwest Division

ll: L

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Houstun
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Utah
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Pacirt&lt;: Dh'lsion
.... 17
8 .61!0
Scallk .
16 9 .b40
Sacramento :
16 l_l 552
L .A Lakeu II Jl .458
Phoen111.
I I I~ 42J
Poni:UJd .
10 10
~IW
Go lden Stale
. 10 17 ..HO
L.A. Clippers

Tuesday's scores
Toronto 9J, Milw;auk.c:-e 87
Miami 96. New Jersey 9J
A!lanta 94. L.A. Clt ppers 88
Detroit 100. Golden State 90

Indiana IOJ, Olicngo 97
Hous1on 100, V:mcouver 84
Denver 114, Dallus 102
Uulh 114, Ponlond I04

Nort htast Division
...... .. 22 9 .\ 47 166 104
Montreal
... HI I :'\ 2 J8 10:-1 107
Buffalo ........ to6 16 ) J) 106 Ill
Pru ~ bur~h

20

II

Boston

..... 14 14 ~

:n 119 123

Hartt'md
.II I M ~ 27 8!i 107
Onuwn . ......... 7 26 1 IS 83 137

WESTF.RN CONFERENCE
Central Division
I

1
5.5

65
75
8

s
FRISKIES
CAT FOOD

Piushurgh 6, Buffalo ~
W;ashington 4. M o U1re&lt;~1 0
Boston J. N . Y ~ Islandcrs J ( til!)
Octrotl .\,St. Louis 2
N.Y. Rangers 6, Onawa 4
Chicago 5. Dallas J
Colon.do S. San Jost I
Calgary 4, Vancouver 2

Iwn

.11: L I fiL !if .liA

lktroit. .......... 2:'\
Toronto ......... 18
Oli cogo ....... 16
S! Loui~
.. 15

7 2 52 LU 72
I I 6 42 116 99
12 8 40 118 107
16 5 35 9J 97
Wutnr[)Cg . . .15 17 .\ JJ 123 L\0
Dallas..... , ..... ,. 10 15 7 27 88 105

Patine DlvisJon

Colorndo ........... 21 11 5 47
Los Angeles ... 13 14 II 14
Vanmuve:r .... 12 14 9 J.\
Anaheim ....... IJ 21 J 29
Edmonton ....... II 19 6 28
Calf!WJ ......... 9 20 7 2 .~
Snn lose .
g 24 4 20

154
I 12
122
Ill
9.5

107
I IJ
124
125
141

97 l.lO
108 IM

KRAFT
Velveeta
Shells, Orig.
12

4/$1

5.5 oz.

59

ARGO
PEAS

FOLGERS
COFFEE

Transactions
Baseball
Major L.eaaue B~Mhall
ARIZONA · DIAMONDBACKS :
Named Rod Allen minor-league coac h
!lnd Bob Crawrord medin relations manJger. Agreed to terms with lose de Carmen Oniz, catcher: Belvani Martinez and
Arislides Reynoso, second basemen; lose
Lopez. third basemmn ; Gregori Valera.
Ruruel Moscot and Junn Bautista, shortstop5; Andres Nunet, Jhensy Sandoval,
Juan de JS Varps iUid Antonio Guzman,
outfiefders; Edickson Oniz Them, Miguel
Frias Rodriguez. Vladimir Paredes. Francisco Jiminez. Edwi n Trinidad, Miguel
Aq uino. Ca rlos Perez Mena. Jose Lui s
Vnldez and Roberto Mnnzueta, pitchers.

36-39

~

------~~~~-

CAMPBELLS
PORK &amp; BEANS

American Leaaue
BOSTON RED SOX : Signed Chuck
Ricci. pilcher, lo a minor-league comract

NatlonaiiAatur
CHICAGO CUBS : Agreed to terms ,
wiJh Dave t.bgadon. third basem::.n, on a
one-yeill contmct
·
CINCINNATI REDS . Traded David
Wdh, pitcher, to the Baltimort: Orioles
fo r Curti s Goodwin and Trovin Valdel,

OU!fieJders.

GROUND

oz.

11 oz.

4/$1

.

BEEF

,.

•

"
•
,.
'

10 lb.

s

90

•

m

•

~

..

COLORADO ROCKIES : Agr eed to
tenns with Armando Reynoso, pitcher

~

•
~

•"
••
~
~

'I

.. By MEL REISNER
TUCSON. Ariz. (AP)- Texas
·•
:: Tech has the antidote to Air Force's
powerful ground game- great linebacking.
Zach Thomas, the only three-time
captain in Texas Tech history, is the
anchor in the middle. He was the
· second-leading tackler in the South: west Conference this season with
: 131, and he has made 33 112 of his
: 390 career tackles for losses.
And he knows his teammates.
Thomas and weak side linebacker
: Shawn Banks, another senior, have
· played together since they were
: sophomores. In fact, Banks' 41 co~­
. secutive starts (32 as a linebacker) IS
: a record for the Red Raiders.
,
On the strong side, it's Robert
· Johnson, a junior who had four inter&gt;ceptions and three fumble recoveries
:: this season.
The Red Raiders (8-3) will need
·:all the defense they can muster
·against the option attack of Air
Force (8-4) tonight in the Copper
:sow!.
. Each unranked team will get a
·$750,000 in the seven-year-old
:bowl, which is sponsored by Weis::er Lock.
.. The Falcons traditionally rank
::high in NCAA rushing statistics· Beau Morgan thi s year became the
: third Air Force quarterback in II
: seasons to rush for I ,000 yards and
· pass for 1,000 in a season, a feat
accomplished by just five players
· from other schools.
Corey Chandler, a tackle in
· tec:h's 4-3 defense, said the Red
:Raiders have been practicing to stop

•

•w
••

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

\

his sixth career shutout, and host play at Chicago.
Washi ngton broke the game open
Jeff Hackel! made 34 saves to run
with three goals in a 2:21 span of the his personal -best winning streak to
third period.
six games. Tony Amonte scored the
' It was '1-0 before Joe Juneau ! tying goal with 8:21 remaining for
scored with 15:41 remaining. Peter ' the Blackhawks, who are 4-0-1 since
Bondra then got his second goal of Dec. 17.
the game and 19th of the season with
The Stars are 1-8-2 on the road
14:28 left, and Steve Konowalchuk since winning at San Jose on Oct. 28.
beat Jocelyn Thibault 68 seconds latFlames 4, Canucks 2
er.
Calgary defenseman Jamie
Thibault was named NHL player Huscroft . who entered the season
of the week earlier Tuesday.
with two goals in 135 NHL games.
. Blackhawks 5, Stars 3
bounced in a shot from the point at
Dallas remained winle ss against 13: 14 of the third period to break~
Central Division teams this season 2-2 tie in Vancouver.
(0-7-2) after MurrayCravcn deflectHuscroft's goal was his second
ed Eric Daze ·s long shot past Darcy thi s season and came when his high
Wakaluk to break a tie with 3:59 to shot bounced past goalie Kirk
McLean off Canucks center Cliff

i

Ronning.
The Flames won their ninth game
of the season - and seve nth on the
road .
AvalancheS, Sharks I
Colorado, 3-0- 1 in its last four
games and leading the Pacific Divi·
sion by 13 points over Los Angeles,
took a 2-0 lead JUSt I:39 into the
game at San Jose .
Alexei Gusarov scored on a slap
shot from near center ice only 31 seconds into the game. Just 1:08 later,
Scou Youn g scored to make it 2-0.
Colorado moved into a tie with
Philadelphia and Pinsburgh with 47
pomts, fourth-best in the NHL. San
Jose's 8-24-4 record IS second worst
in the league .

Philly's Rhodes gets NFL coaching hon'?rs
that attracted Eagles owner Jeffrey
Lurie to Rhodes when he was shop·
ping for a head coach to replace Rich
Kotite.
Lurie said Rhodes reminded him
of former Dallas Cowboys coach
Jimmy Johnso n for hi s "ability to
relate on a real earthy basis with (his)
players and yet have their respect."
Johnson was Lurie's first choice.
Former Eagles coach Dick Vermeil
was his second. Lurie turned to
Rhodes when both turned him down .
He hasn 't regretted the decision.
"(Rhodes) had all the ingredients
I was looking for ... very intelligent,
obsessed with winning championships, an excellent talent evaluator, a man 's man, a leader," Lurie

said.
Fuller said Rhodes' communi cates his commitment to winning .
" You can see it in his eyes. "
Fuller said. " It' s more than a bunch
of talk. You can look at the man and
see the dedication - he reall y wants
to win."
Capers was the other rookie head
coach who finished high in the bal loting. He moved from defensive
coordinator with Pitt sburgh to
become the fir st coach of the Panthers. They finished 7-9. the most
successful expansion team in NFL
hi story.
Schottenheimer led the Chiefs to
a 13-3 mark in a seaso n when they
were expected to stum ble aft er th e

retirement of Joe Montana.

RAY RHODES

Michigan to bring Texans to face
Texas A&amp;M in Alamo Bowl Thursday
By KELLEY SHANNON
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The
Michigan Wolverines have traveled
1,200 miles to play in the Alamo
Bow l, but for some Texans on the
team it's like coming home for the
holidays.
"In my wildest dreams I never
imagined I was gomg to come home
and play a game in Texas," said nose
tackle William Carr. who played
high school football at Dallas Carte r.
"To know you have a chance to
come back home and play in front of
your family and friends, that 's
always something that you want to
do," he said. ''I'm just happy to be
here ."

The 14th-ranked Wolverines face
No. 19 Te xas A&amp;M on Thursday in

the third annual Alamo Bowl.
Eight Wolverines players arc
from Texas, where Michigan has
made recruitin g inroads. Coac h
Lloyd Carr hopes the Alamo Bowl
adds to his program's presence in the
state.
"Our players and coac hes will get
expos ure they normall y don't get
Every day the player., and coaches in
this state will read about us. Texas
high school football is probably the
best in the country," he said.
Other Wol verines from Texas arc
Mercury Hayes, Josh William s and
Kenneth Jackson, all of Houston;
Steve Frazier of Kmgwuod ; George
Howell of Irving; Jarrett Irons of The
Woodlands; and Daydrion l &lt;rylor of
Longview.

''I'm from Te xas. so I'm excited
to be back home lo play in my last

career college football game," said
Hayes, a senior wide rece iver who
played for Washington High School
in Houston.
William Carr said he was recruit- ..,
ed by Texas A&amp;M but is glad he
chose Mi chigan, with its highly
regarded Big Ten program and lots
of television coverage. Carr said he
didn't worry much about missing hrs
home state.
"Yeah, you're going to get homesick," he said. "But every sc hool
you go to (you might) ."
On Thursday. facin g one of the
teams that recrui ted him . Carr and
his teammates will have to work to
stop the Texas A&amp;M running game.
he said.

Tomorrow.' '

Cleveland Tomorrow is a nonprofit organization that represe nts
the interests of the area's 50 largest
businesses.
Meanwhile, as many as five scp·
aratc groups may be forming pri·
vately to buy a football team for
Cleveland, The Plain Dealer said.
"The reaso n some of the people
haven't surfaced is because they 're
afraid of having their heads chopped
off." said Councilman Earl Turner,
who chairs the council's ad hoc
Sports Facilities Committee. "They
want to see what's going to happen
and where things are going to seule
before making a move or going public."

:.. Texas Tech &amp; Air Force
to meet in Copper Bowl .

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s)49

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TOMATO JUICE

Ouawn at Buffalo, 7:JO rr m.
N.Y. Islanders at New Jersey, 7:3 0
p.m.
Toronto ut Calcary, 9JO p.m
Philadelphia ot Edmonton, 9:)0 p.m.
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 10:)0 p.m

Hockey

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CLEV8LAND (AP) - Several
bu siness leaders have contacted the
city to ask about joining an effort to
buy an NFL franchise, and some
have urged that plans to renovate 64year-old Cleveland Stadium be abandoned in favo r of a new stadium, a
newspaper reported today.
A high-ranking city administrator
not identified told Tlte Plai11 Dealer
that some civic leaders have suggested that a new stadium plan
• could be considered as a contingency
should Mayor Michael R. White's
.. efforts to keep the Cleveland Browns
fail.
·,
Browns majority owner Art Mod:; ell on Nov. 6 made public a deal to
move the Browns to Baltimore in
1996. The city has sued to hold the
team to its Cleveland Stadium lease,
which expires in 1998.
"The immediate and only focus
~ in December and January is in keep~ ing the team, keeping the name and
• keeping the colors." said Kenneth
~ Silliman, the mayor's exec utive
•. assistant for economic development.
As for contacts from business
. leaders, Silliman said no one has
:· · come to him.
'
"I do he ar rumblings, and I do
. •• believe there's considerable discus~ sion out there, but I've not official :: ly received any proposals," he said.
•.
The only team that would play.in
:: a renovated Cleveland Stadium is the
:: Browns, said James M. Biggar,
·. chairman of Glencairn Corp .. former
:; chairman·of the Gateway Economic
:: Development Corp. and a member of
:: a task force that recommended the
·•'• stadium's renovation.
··
Tom Chema, another former
.. Gateway chairman and stadium task
.• force member. was an early dissenter
·• to renovation.
:: • "I presented an option and tried
;; to develop cost scenarios for developing a new facility," Chema said.
"The ultimate conclusion was that
there wasn't enough money to do
that. "
When White 's bwn stadium task
force was considering a new stadium
a few months ago, it discussed
,.

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Tuesday's scores

LA Lakm 102. Bustun 91
I I~. San Ar11unu1IJR

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::..

Heat 96, Nets 93
to take every shot that was available
At Miami, Pat Riley 's team
to me. I put up so me that even I was
surprised wen t in. Once you get in a avoided fallin g to .500 for the first
groove. it 's hard to miss," Ellis said. time thi s season by getting just its
The Muvcricks have lost 17 of 19 second win in nine games - both
games and have the third-worst against New Jersey.
Billy Owens returned from a I0record in the league (7- 18).
Mahmoud Abdui -Rauf added 21 game absence (bruised shoulder)
point s. while Bryant Stith had 17, and scored a career-high 31 poi nts. ·
Jalen Rose had 16 and An tonio Armon Gilliam ~cored a season-high
McDycss had 15 for Denver. Dikem- 29to lead New Jersey, which lost for
bc Mutombo had II poi nts, 18 the sixth time in seven outings.
Lakers 102, Celtics 91
rebounds and five of the Nuggets' II
Eddie
Jones scored six of hts 19
bloc ked shots.
points
in
a game-ending 13-6 run
Jazz 114, Trail Blazers 104
that
secured
the victory for Los
At Salt Lake City, the Jazz also
Angeles
over
Boston.
ex tended Portland's losi ng streak to
It was the Lakers'third consecusix games, the Blazers' longest skid
tive
victory overall and their seventh
m SIX years.
straight
at the Forum, which put
The Blaze rs opted to use single
them
three
games over .500 for the
coverage on Karl Malone, and he
first
time
this
season.
responded wi th 47 points on 2 1-for·
100,
Warriors 90
Pistons
3 1 shooting . He also had eigh1
At
Auburn
Hill
s,
Otis Thorpe had
rebounds, five assiSts and three
26
points
and
II
rebounds
to lead
· steals.
Jeff Hornacek scored 19 points Detroit to its fourth victory in five
and Antoine Carr had 14, including games.
Golden State rookie Joe Smith
10 in the second qu arter when the
Jazz turned a 29-20 deficit into a 53- left the game with 3:58 left in the
third after losing hiS balance on a
42 halftime lead.
rebound and landing hard on his
Rockets 100, Grizzlies 84
At Houston, the defendin2 cham- right hip. Smith did not return, but
pions had a hard time shaking free of the team said he should be ready to
play tonight at Wash ington.
the worst team in the league.
Hawks 94, Clippers 88
Byron Scott's layup with seven
At Atlanta, Steve Smith scored 22
minutes remaining made it 72-69
before consecuti'e baskets by Sam points, Mookic Blayloc k had 13
Cassell and Mark Bryant and poi nts, eight assists and four steals
Eldridge Recasner's three-pointer and Ken Norman added 20 points for
snuffed out the Grizzlies' final threat. the Hawks. who have won lhree of
"We were close," said Eric Mur- four games.
Raptors 93, Bucks 87
dock, who led the Grizzlies with 16
At Hamil ton. Ontario, rookie
points. "We tried to hang tough with
the world champion s. We want to Damon Sto udami re had 21 points
hang in there each ni ght, and any- and II assists for Toronto, which
thing can happen. That's our goal, to matched Milwaukee's victory total.
hang around until the fourth quar- The game, played at Copps Coliseum, drew a sellout crowd of 17,242.
ter. "

,.

Coca Cola
Products

"' Biron from the net in
In other NHL games Tuesday goalie Martin
night, Pitts burgh beat Buffalo 6-3. his NHL debut after one period by
Boston and the New York Islanders scoring four goals on 16 shots.
Islanders 3, Bruins 3
tied 3-3 j Washington beat Montreal
Boston's rally from a three-goal
4-0. Chicago beat Dallas 5-3, Calgary beat Vancouver 4-2 and Col- deficit in the third period was capped
when Bruins defenseman Ray
orado beat San Jose 5- 1.
Bourque picked off an errant clearRangers 6, Senators 4
New York improved to 14-0-3 in ing pass and scored with 3:40
its last 17 games at Madison Square remaining in regulation at New York.
The puck seemed to tick an
Garde n since losing to Onawa on
Islanders player's stick and go
Oct. 22.
The home unbeaten' streak is the through the pads of Tommy Soderlongest current streak in the NHL strom.
The Bruins are 9- 1-4 in their last
and the fifth-longest in franchise his14 games against the Islanders, who
tory. The team record is 24 set in
. have their first three-game unbeaten
1971-72.
streak (1 -0-2) since January.
Penguins 6, Sabres 3
Capitals 4, Canadiens 0
At Piusburgh, ·Mario Lemieux
Jim Carey stopped 20 shots for
and Jaromir Jagr remained tied for
the league's goal-scoring lead as
each scored his 30th as the Penguins
took a 6-1 lead into the third period.
Jagr did gain ground on Lemieux
in the scoring race by adding three By WAYNE WOOLLEY
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
assists to Lemieux 's one, and his 72
his coaching career, Ray
Throughout
points trail only Lemieux's 78.
Rhodes
has
done
whatever it takes to
Pinsburgh forced 18-year-old
make sure his players understand
what he expects of them .
As a San Francisco 49ers defensive bac kfield coach, he once told a
player after a poor performance: "If
I get caught in a foxhole and I ain't
got but two bullets left , believe me,
you're going to get both of them."
potential downtown sites. Suburban
Few players fam iliar with the
city-owned property known as the
coach 's no-nonsense altitude were
Chagrin Highlands has been the
surprised when Rhodes took over an
subject of rumor more recently for
Eagles team that lost its final seve n
stadium development.
games in 1994, and turned it imo a
A plan of the Convention and VisI0-6 playoff team in his first year as
itors Bureau of Greater Cleveland. an NFL head coac h.
would-connect the renovated CleveThey were not surprised Tuesday
land Stadium with a massive expanwhen they learned Rhodes had been
sion of the city 's Convention Center. named the 1995 Coach of the Year.
Architect Rich ard Fleischman
Rhodes. 45, received 24 votes
drew a plan for placing a huge glass from a nationwide panel of sports
banquet hall at the north end of the writers and broadcasters in balloting
mall west of City Hall; raising a mul- by The Associated Press. He edged
ti level retail center over the Shore- Doin Capers of Carolina and Marty
way, RTA's Waterfront Line and an Schottenheimer of Kansas City, who
Amtrak line; incorporating an inter- had 21 apiece.
modal transportation center, and
Some Eagles players said they
providing up to 600,000 square feet had expected Rhodes to win .
of space.
"Some of us have been looking
Fleischman's drawings also pro- for it for the last couple of weeks,"
pose placing a canopy over the sta- receiver Fred Carpenter said. "We
dium, a difference between his plan were trying to go out and play pretand the city' s.
ty hard and get a couple of more vicDavid Nolan, executive director tories under our belt and make it into
of the visitors bureau, said he has the playoffs so he could get that vote
been trying to get the business com- as coach of year."
munity interested in the col'lventior
Veteran defensive end William
center proposal for more than a year. Fuller said Rhodes is simply differPositive feedback . has come only ent than other coac hes he's played
since the Browns announced their for.
departure, he said .
"What you see is what you get
"It's picked up momentum with· with Ray. He's very frank and very
in the last 60 days," Nolan said. up-from." Fuller said. "You don 't
"More people are interested, people find that in a lot of coaches."
like the CEOs from Cleveland
His candor was one ofthe _things

Cleveland businessmen
looking to buy Browns

•'

....

\

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Rangers, ·Red Wings and Penguins among·NHL victors

•'

Products ·&amp;

'

the keep-or-pitch game of Air Force.
" There's a real threat from the
quarterback running," Chandler said.
"Our tack les and ends are getting
used to the option."
Thomas said he welcomes the
chance to atone for what he considers a poor year, even though Tech
almost upset Penn State at State College, Pa., in the season opener, lost
to Baylor by two points, and upset
Texas· A&amp;M 14-7 when Thomas
returned an interception 23 yards for
a touchdown in the final minute.
It's the 48-7· loss to Texas that
Thomas has in mind.
" I want to remember my last
game wit'l a big win," Thomas said .
"I don't ; ust want to play. Before the
bowl ga;nes the last couple of years,
we had really rough practices. This
year w, are pulling things together
and w·Jrking on our game plan and
hav in ·~ a good time."
TIe only knock of NFL scouts on
the {ed Raiders linebackers has
beer the size of Johnson, o,yho is 5fee• -II, and Thomas, 6-0.
!'homas said it was nothing new.
"Coming out pf high school I ·
knew I had to prove I was a good
player," said Thomas, who was 5-11
when he got out of high school in
Pampa, Texas, and decided to follow
his grandfather and his older brother, Bart, to Lubbock.
The only other school that made
an offer was Oklahoma State.
"They all said I was too small. I
wanted to make a difference and
prove them wrong," said Thomas,
now grown an inch and 20 pounds,
to a playing weight of 235.

Best Wishes To All Our
Meigs County
Winter Sports Programs

•Meigs MarauderS
•Eastern Eagles
•Southern.Tornadoes
Rely On Us For
Complete Coverage Of Your
Favorite Sport and Team

THE DAILY SENTINEL

�Wednesday, Dece1111ber 27,. 1996'·.

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 27, '1995

Ptudy
explOres
which
hormones
promote
ovarian
tumors
..

Losing season lays foundation
for Ryan's exit as Cards' coach
By MEL REISNER
.
TEMPE, Ariz. (API - The "wm·
ncr in town " left as a loser.
Anzona Cardinals coach Buddy·
Ryan . whose team wrapped up a
miserable 4-12 season w11h a 37-13
loss 10 the Dallas Cowboys on Monday . night. was tired Tuesday by
owner Bill Bidwill.
Ryan , 61. a brash and abrasive
Korean War veteran who brought a
military ~thH.: tu hi s coaching, was

12-20 in two seasons with the CarJmals . His style - marked by his
clairlllng "You 'vl: got a wmner m

tuwn ," when he arnvcd in 1~94 a li~.:natcd some pl:oplc but endeared

him to most of hi s players.

Larry Centers, whu sel a record
fm llHJ ~ t ~.;atL:hc s hy a running back

( 101 1. , aid he wuuld leave !he team
1f he could and would li ke lo he trad ed.
·-r m a Buddy man , and I didn't
want to see him ~o. ·· said Centers,
· who had 12 catches agai nst the
Cowboys Monday.
" He ·, an honest guy, a guy who
treats players fair. a guy who tells il
tu you like 11 is and no! somebody
·who\ going to sugm-coat things."
· M1ddlc linebacker Enc Hill, who
called the dcfcnstvc signals in Ryan's
:· blitzing "46" defen se, said the issue
· was as much politic s as the Cardl&gt;nals ' seven losses in the las! eight
. games.
·
Bidwill is trymg 10 marshal sup: .port for a $200 mi II ion domed sla: :dium , which wuuld need some pub. ·lie fundin g.
· : " My gu t fcclmg IS thai has a lol
: ·w do with building the new stadium.
: ·I don 'I thmk he Wits gelling much
::support 1\JI· the spc ndmg because of
· :the way people have hcen ndmg
:· Buddy lately," Hill s:ud.
::

offense and defense also led 10
Ryan's demise. Ryan's reputation has
always been as a coach who ,looks at
the offense as a method to give the
defense a breather.
Before Monday night's game,
Hill and an offensive player got into
a flstligh!. No players would discuss
il, or whether il helped Dallas jump
to a 24-0 lead· in !he second quarter.
The meeting Tuesday between
coach and owner was short and bittersweet
"The decision was based on his
record . We made the decision as
quickly as possible so we can begin
10 go forward.
"We shook hands," Bidwill said.
"He'd have liked to have one more
year, 1 believe."
Quarterback Dave Krieg, who
faced the prospect of riding the
bench if Ryan brought in Randall
Cunningham next season, said !he
firing came so quickly after a team
meeting !hal he had few impressions.
"When you're 4-12, something
has 10 be done," sa1d Krieg, who
look Detroit lo !he playoffs in 1994.
"When 1came here, this was a much
bener team. How can you be g.g and
turn around and go 4-12' The players have 10 take some responsibility
as well, but it's very disappointing ."
Fans and players had high expectations for Ryan, who fueled !hem
with his braggadocio when he
arrived in 1994 after serving as
defensive coordinator for the Houston Oilers.
His auitude was a carryover from
five years in Philadelphia, where he
led the Eagles 10 a 43-35-1 record
and three straight playoff berths. But
they los! in the first round each lime,
and fanner owner Nonnan Braman
fired him hours after a 20-6 loss to

The d1sscnsion between lhe

Washington on Jan. 5, 1991.
In Arizona, Ryan broke even his
first year and followed that with his
worst record ever.
Ryan was no! available for commen! Tuesday, but he had said all
season he believed B1dwill would
give him one more year.
The Cardmals have no! had a
winning season since 19M4 or hecn
10 the playoffs in a non-strike year
since 1975.
When Ryan replaced Joe Bugcl.
season-lickel sales douhlcd. Fans
wanted to see what Ryan, mastermind of the tough Chicago Bears
defense !hal helped win the l\IX6
Super Bowl. could do for the Cardi-

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missed six games for beating a former girlfriend, will stan his firs!
game since Sept 9 against Michigan
State.
Coach Tom Osborne said Phillips
had earned !he stan after grading better in two recent scrimmages and the
regular-season fmale against Oklahoma.
Tackle Chris Dishman said the
starting tailback makes no difference
lo !he linemen , who rarely notice
who is carrying the ball. He said !he
line has focused on its own performance, no! off-field problems
"Every offensive line has its
image and we have ours," Dishman
said. "You can'tlive up lo someone
else's image."
The pleasant surprise forOsbome
has been his line's mobility, even
!hough il averages 298 pounds. And
while last year's line gave up six
sacks, this year's "Pipeline" allowed
non~.

"11 was a mali val ion for us lo
come out and keep proving !hal we
were good," said 300-pound sophomore tackle Eric Anderson . "11 started las! spring, when we look every
snap together.
"We started off with a couple of
really good games and we gained
confidence. I think our teammates
gained confidence in us and before
long we had answered all of !he
questions."

There were plenty of questions
for Florida coach Steve Spurrier
about his defensive line after end
Kevin Carter and tackles Ellis Johnson and Henry McMillian were cho·
sen in the firs! six rounds of !he draft.
Defensive end Mark Campbell
was the only returning starter from
a line that had helped the Gators rank
fifth against the run a! 85 yards per
game. 11 is no! nearly as stingy this
year, allowing 130 lo rank 25th.
Injuries haven't helped, with five
players missing various games.
Campbell . had arthroscopic knee
surgery this month, but is expected
to stan against Nebraska with end
Johnie Church and tackles David
Barnard and Ed Chester. Florida
allows 315 yards and 17 points per
game.
"I think they are underrated,"
Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier said of the Gators. "They have
a very aggressive defense, with 10 or
II guys always around the ball. They
can stop a learn when they have lo."
Osborne said he wouldn't guess
how Florida will fare against Nebraska 's option anack.
"They've seen il before, against
Northern Illinois, Kentucky and a little against Arkansas this year,"
Osborne said. " But you can't tell
how they did because some of those
numbers came after Florida's starters
wer~ oul of the game."

waived her preliminary hearing, and
the case will be bound over Ia the
Lake County grand jUI)'.
Gain was selected for five Pro
Bowls hefore retirmg in 1964. He
won the Outland Trophy at the University of Kentucky in 1950 as the
lop lineman in college football.
Police found no signs of a Slruggle when !hey responded 10 a report
of a domestic dispute at the ranch
house !he Gains have shared for 37
years.
The Christmas tree was lighted,
w11h presents slowed beneath, as
officers made their way into the

•

.,;..._____ Sports b r i e f s - - - - •
Hockey
: • NEW YORK (AP) - The
puawa Senators, hoping lo seule a
eontracl dispute with Alexe1 Yashin,
~ere to meet 10day with the center's
i$ent
.
.
•• Pierre!Gau1h1er, h~red last month
ia replatt fired general manager
~pndy Sexton, will speak with
Tashin 's agent, Mark Gandler, at the
t~oston site of the World Junior
€1Jampionships.
: · If an agreement can be re~ched,
yishin, in the third season of a fiveyt!ar $4.2 million comracl, could
pl)y Jan . 3 against Pinsburgh.
·•
Hockey
·: DETROIT (AP)- Detroit coach
~ouy Bo,.man t1ed the NHL record
for games coached with the Red
~ngs' 3-2 victory over St, Louis.
; The game was Bowman's

1 606!h as an NHL coach, lying him
~ilh AI Arbour on the career list
Bowman, already the career leader
in victories, will break !he games
record Friday nigh! a! Dallas.
. Football
CLEVELAND (AP) - The wife
of former Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Bob Gain was charged
with shooting him dudng an argument.
Gain, 66, remained in critical
condition a! MelroHeallh Medical
Center, spokeswoman Sue Kalas
said. Gain was wounded in !he
chest Friday at his suburban Cleveland home.
Mary Gain, 66, was charged with
felonious assault, Timberlake Police
Chief William Hammond.

kitchen . where iiicy saw Gain sealed a! the !able and his wife standing
nearby. Police found a pistol on the
counter and a bulle! hole in Gain's
chest
Authorities are still trying to fig.
ure out why Mary Gain apparently
shot her husband of 44 years shanty before midnight Friday.
All three of her daughters, accom·
panied by other relatives, were in
court Tuesday and said through a
lawyer that they still love and support both their parents.
"We feel this is a family
tragedy," said Tom O'Donnell, one
or Mary Gain's three lawyers. " The
family is upset They are holding up
under the circumstances."
Mary Gain's lawyers said her
heart and other medical problems, as
well as alcohol, were factors in the
shooting. As part of the conditions of
her bond, Mary Gain will be admitled into a 30-day drug and alcohol
abuse progrl!J1l.
Timberlake Police Chief William
Hammond said he has detennined,
from the few comments he has
picked up from light-lipped Gain relatives, thai the shooting stemmed
from a dispute over Christmas' shoP,
ping. Hammond said Bop Gain
apparently had been oul shopping
until laie in the evening and Mary
Gain wanted to know where he had
been.
Hammond said there was no evi·
dence that the 6-foot-3, 250-pound
Gain had threatened or struck his 5fool-2 wife.

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' .

0

Asst. Varieties
1

FOLGER'S COFFEE

34-39 oz.

HARDWORKING LOW PRICES
7 Great De-li Items•••

\

$2,900

11fURSDAY
• POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout Service Unit Leaders meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. in the TriniiY'
Q)urch basement All troop cookie
chairmen should auend for training.

Maroon, shows· excellent care.
Priced Too Cheap!

$4,480

"

.~ TUPPERS

PLAINS- Tuppers
Pl)lins Veterans of Foreign Wars will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the post
home.

1989 TOYOTA COROLLA
Local owner, lady driven, automatic, air conditioning.

NOW

ONE LOW PRIC . . . . . . .

FRESH

Party
Trays

NEW YEAR'S
CABBAGE

•a!!

c

$4,900

LB.

ow.rO.ODLAN D
SPREAD ·

ULTRA

SEALTEST

IVORY
DISH LIQUID

SKIM OR HOMOGENIZED

SEALTEST

MILK

ORANGE JUICE

14.7 oz.

VELVET

POMEROY - Records commission meeting Thursday, 2:30
p.m. atthe office of the 'Meigs County .Board of Commissioners in the
Meigs· County Courthouse.

1986 DODGE OMNI
WAS 51 .495

$976

FRIDAY
CARPENTER Columbia
Township trustees end·of·year meeting Friday, 7 p.m. at the fire station.
Or~anizational meeting to follow.

1986 BUICK

CENTURY LIMITED

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township trustees end-of-year meeting·Friday, 4 p.m. a! the township
office building.
-

$1,700

EAGLE TH

POTATO
CHIPS

RODUCTS

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS
2LITER

c ~S

HALF
GILLON

VELVET SIERIET

gg

1/2 GAllON

GALLON

SEVEN U

, POMEROY~ Free

clothing day
at !he Salvation Army, 115 Buuemul
Ave., IOa.m. to noon. All welcome.

s

c

: PAGEVILLE ..:.... Scipio Town·
ship Trustees end-of-year meeting
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at !he Pageville
Tqwnship Building. Organizational
meeting to follow.

$7,400

Ll.

99

' POMEROY - Meigs County
Library Board of Trustees meeting
Thursday, I p.m. a! the library.

NOW

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

·: ALFRED - Orange Township
B)&gt;ard of Trustees end-of-year meet11\g Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. a! home
of Clerk Pauy Calaway.

1991 DODGE DYNASTY 4 DOOR

$2,992

M

PORK RIBS

•

NOW

,

WEDNESDAY

Automatic, air conditioning.

TT,

, ·\

•

1991 GEO METRO 2 DOOR.

1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE

!\••

WESTERN STYLE

Community Calendar is
~blished as a free service to nonptoflt groups wishing to announce
~Geeting and spec:ial events. The ~endar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
cype. Items are printed as space
penults and cannot be guaranteed
tq run a specific number of days.

1992 FORD ESCORT WAGON

Local 1 owner. Only 75,000 miles.

.,

FRESH BONE·IN

&lt;The

Automatic, air condition. Runs good.

OUR PRICE

.• &lt;;"

'

Hubbard, Pomeroy; Jodi
1Q1boden, Pomeroy; Lcnna Johnson,
Middleport; Thomas Lite(, Long
Bouom; Heather McPhail, Syracuse; Terry Neece, Pomeroy; Rebecc4 Ockerman, Langsville; Stephanie
OJto, Pomeroy; Misli Powell,
~hens; April Priddy, Pomeroy;
Sf.eridan Russell , Rulland; Tyler
Wolfe, Midd lepon.
;' Each student named has achieved .
a~least a 3.3 quarterly grade point
a~rage and has completed 12 or
more credit hours.

1993 PONTIAC TRANS SPORT

NOW

~'

~meroy;
~ Kathryn

7 Passenger, .full of options. White with blue cloth

WAS $5,995

' ',

I

•
·• The following area students were
;:amed to the Hocking College fall
iUarter dean's list:
~ Jeffrey
Arnold, Pomeroy;
\'iealher Buckley, Rutland; Jodi
~illdwell, Racine; Tara Clark,
f!omeroy; Verna Compston, Middleport; Dreama Cremeans, MidJieport; Traci Crow, Pomeroy;
ilebecca Elliot!, Rutland; Tracy Fife,
~iddleport;
Maria
Graham ,

Electric windows, till, cruise, cassette, rear delroster,
V·6 engine ..Slock #199

NOW

HAPPY
NEW YEAR!

College
dean's list
posted

WAS $20,745

we don 't know, " she said. "l!'s not to develop new honnone lreatmenls. ·increased risk of ovarian cancer in, ·
!hal common, and when il occurs, For example, birth control pills, our study," her team wrote .
usually it 's lethal, because i!'s found which are a form of honnone treat·
An outside expen said Helzlin vary late stages."
men!, are being experimentally com- souer' s study is far from conclusive.
Ovarian cancer has killed come· bined with honnones mean! 10 preDr. Hugh R.K. Barber, director of
dian Gilda Radner and actress Sandy - vent breast cancer.
obstetrics and gynecology at Lenox
Dennis.
But researchers are worried thai H1ll Hospital in New York City, said
The researchers were surprised 10 sue~ a combination could also weak- he finds il hard to believe thai lowfind a link between lower le vels of en bones by blocking the produ cll on er gonadotropin le vels are associatgonadotropins and higher rates of of gonadotropins, which are neces- ed with higher ovarian cancer risk.
ovarian cancer, Helzlsouer said. sary for strong bones. And so develOther factors such as diet and
Higher levels of gonadotropins have opers are considering adding andro- alcohol consumption - which are
been theorized 10 increase !he risk of gens.
believed to have an effec1 on the
"The resulting honnonal profile development of some cancers ovarian cancer, directly or indirectamong these women may be similar may have played a role in the dif- ·
ly.
The study may complicate efforts lo !he profile associated with an fercnce s in rates.

~ocking

Only 4600 miles, air cond~ion, cassette, 5 spee,d.
BOOK VALUE $14,400

~Police file assault charge against wife
"-9f former Browns tackle in shooting
:: CLEVELAND (AP) - The wife
~former Cleveland Browns' defen)ive tackle Bob Gain has been was
warged with shooting him dunng an
~gumenl.
: • The condition c~ the 66-year-old
J}ain was updated 10day from criticltl 10 fair a! MelroHealth Medical
L:enler, spokeswoman Sue Kalas
$aid. Gain was wounded in the chest
jate Friday a! his suburban Cleveland
fijlme .
; • HIS w1fe. Mary Gain. 66, was
~argcd Tuesday in Willoughby
~unicipal Court with a single count
ol felonious assault, with a gun speciFication. She pleaded 1nnocen1 ond

WAS $30,235

1995 BUICK CENTURY

:Nebraska &amp; Florida lines toughen
]n preparation for Fiesta Bowl
:- By DAVE ZELIO
: TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Nebras: 'ka's offensive line and Florida's
::defensive front were the big question
·: marks entering the season. That's no
:: longer the case.
The 1wo lines have become rock
, :solid jus! in lime for nexl week's
·:Fiesta Bowl game for !he national
: :.ihampionship. Nebraska center
· ,Aaron Graham was no! surpnsed by
: :!)ow good the Corn huskers' line
:turned au! 10 be.
· · : " I always helieved thai our line
· :~ould be as good or bener in some .
:areas than las! year," Graham said.
' · ~1 think we arc a bcner pass-pro: :tecling unit. You can jus! credit
: :(ecruiting and our program."
·: • Nebraska lost four of five staners
:; from last year's line thai won !he
·~ hool' s third national rushing Iitle in
:(our years at 340 yards per game.
;0utland Trophy winner Zach
·Wiegen. Brendan Stai and Rub Zal:~chka were gone 10 the NFL, as was
:mree-year leucrman Joel Wilks.
&lt; W11h Graham and fovr new
~artcrs this season, No. I Nebraska's
:tunning game averaged 399 yards
:and won another rushing lille. Tail'back Ahman Green sci a school rushrecord for freshmen with I ,086
::lards, but he won '! stan against the
:Gators.
:: Junior Lawrence Phillips, who

stimulate !he production of eggs.
The cancer was also linked 10
higher levels of honnones called
androgens, which stimulate sexual
drive, the researchers said.
Findings are publi s he~ in
Wednesday's issue of The Journal of
!he American Medical Association.
The study 1s the firs! to explore
!he effect of naturally occurring hormones on the likelihood of de veloping ovarian cancer. Helzlsouer said
in a telephone interview. She called
for other studies to replicate the
results.
"With ovanan cancer, there 's a lot

Helzlsouer and her colleagues
tracked more than 20,000 women in
~ CHICAGO (AP)- A new study Washington County, Maryl~nd, for
ljnks relatively high or low levels of 15 years.
e'ertain honnones to ovarian cancer
Thirty-one cases of ovarian canMising questions about using hor: cer developed in women who were
.Pone therapies to lessen the risk of no! laking honnones when they
cjther ills.
began !he study and gave blood sam· "I think we need to really look at ples in 1974.
\!thai is happening with our own horTheir blood was compared with
mones before we jump into trying lo that of 62 similar but cancer-free
l)lanipulate !hem," said the lead women among the sample who also
researcher, Dr. Kathy J. Helzlsouer had no! ~een laking honnones .
Qf Johns Hopkins University School
Ovarian cancer was found io be
&lt;(f Hygiene and Public Health.
associated with lower levels of hor'· The findings don't suggest that mones called gonadotropins, which
oorrently available honnone therapies be withdrawn, only that doctors
proceed cautiously with new ones.

AP Medical Writer

rJals.

Ryan brought in many of his former players who were familiar with
his '46' defense. But he also hired his
twin sons Rex and Rob as coaches in
a move critics called nepotism.
Under Ryan, !he Cardinals'
defense was No.3 in !he league af!cr
the 1994 season, but started 199 5
near the bouom and stayed there.
The offense was punchless as
well, especially inside the oppo·
nents' 20-yard line. Against the
Cowboys, !he offense was unable lo
add 10 its NFL-Iow 20 touchdowns
for the season.
Ryan was out of football for two
years before becoming defensive
coordinator for Houston in 1993.
Even !here, he found a nemesis in
offensive coordina!Or
Kevin
Gilbride, even going so far as lo
throw a punch a! him during !he season finale.
Ryan's NFL coaching career
began in 1968 when he was hired as
a defensive assistant for !he New
York Jets. He also coached with the
Minnesota Vikings before joining !he
Bears in 1978.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

QT.

99 4

IUL

2LITER

- UNIVERSift OF RIO GRANDE vs. URBANA
I P.M. CASH • GROCERIES • SHOPPING SPREE GIVBIWAY

SA11JRDAY
DARWIN- Bedford Township
trustees end-of· y~ meeting Saturday, I p,m. pt the Bedford town hall.
PORTI.AND- Lebanon Town·
ship trustees meeting Saturday, 7
p.m. at the township hall,

•
III IIIID
FOODLAIID

SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship truslees end-of-year meeting
followed by organizational meeting
Saturdjiy; I p.m. in th~ Syrac~ .
Municipal B11ilding.
•· · .
'

'

r

I

I

�Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

&lt;'~

Family
Medicine .

kw dnnJ.. s at our New Year's Eve

P·"'&gt; How many drink&gt; does it take
to maJ..L' a pnson Jrunk, and is il any
dd'k·rL·nt h1r thllse who drink alcohol
rl..'g ul arl y'' I ' m CDn ccrncd ahoullet-

!Jilg 1JUT gue sts drive home .
An ~ wcr ·

It 's a lm ost time to ring

in the new year - an occasion that
Jll &lt;t llY reoplc will celebrate by raisIng a few toasts. While moderate
dnnkin g is a!.: ~.:cpt~Jh l c 1n our society,
dr~ nk1n g to the poin t of getting
drun k is nut. Am.J. when a person is
Jrun k. there \ ahsolutely no excuse
lor try1ng to drive a car.

Statisue&gt; from the Ce nters for
Disc a.sc Control (C DC) show that
ahoul -1 2 percent of the fatal vehicle
acc·idcnt s in tllJS country involve
alcohol, a11d thai ahout 17 ,001}Amcrh.: an ~ hlsl' their !J VL'S in akohol -rclatL'd acudcnts each year.

Other CDC data show thai its also
nut a g110d idea to let a person who
is dru11k walk home. About 1,700
Amcric· ans lose thw lives by "walkIng drunk" eac h year - more than
unc'-third the total number of pedesIri an deaths .
Your ~ un cc rn fur your guests is
adm irahk and arpropriate. Every
acc ident in volving a drunk driver or
pede strian is a needless tragedy.
You can he sure that hundreds of
people wi ll agai n have their holiday
season spoiled this year by excessive
1\cw Year'&gt; Eve drinking.
It takes the average person one to
two hours to eliminate the average
alcoholi c drink, such as an ounce of
di stilled liquor. a boule of beer or a
gla" of wine. Give n this fact, a
good, conservat ive rule of thumb is
that if you have had more than one
drink lor eac h two hours that you
have been al a party, don 't drive.
Abo. re mem ber that inebriation is
ge nerall y brought on quicker if you
drink on an empty stomach .
Regular consumption of alcohol

Beat of the Bend ...

GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON
QUALITY NEW &amp; USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
308 E. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

1996 CHEVY SSERIES PICKUP
"~~ OR 96 GMC SONOMA

We lost another one of our
fa \'oritc entertainers Christmas.
Many of us remember Dean Martin 's de hu t on the American scene
with comic Jerry Lewis in the
1971J"s. After I0 years of success, the
two ob viously agreed to disagree
and hoth went successfully lo other
c::trccrs. Marlin . hesides hi s success
as a crooner. drew ill:claim as a scriow; actor in mov ie roles 1n which he
didn 't smg
Martin spent his boyhood years
1n Stcuhen ville- ycp, in Ohio. His
"drinku1 g" habit , they tell me, was
alw&lt;tys overplayed. I always had the
impr~~s ion the same rang true rur
the late entertainer. Phil Harris.
I dJ&gt;n't '""w if any of your holid ay punt s look you through Ncl ~ on\• ilk

I hor c so and I hope the trip
thwugh was in the evening when the
park in the center of town was lighted . The cll y reall y has some great
holiday Jewrati ons there- a reall y
impress iVe display. Somehow that
surpmcs me.
Lou ise Glue Radford is hack
home afl cr ha ving a very serious
health prohlcm recent ly.
She ended up in Riverside Hospital in Columbus where she underwent major surgery. You really
encour&lt;Jgcd Loui se to get well with
those over 200 cards that you got to
her 1n ahsolutcly no time . She was

In case you have an ounce of
energy left after Chri stmas. let me
ren1ind you that Fceney-Bcnncll
Post 128, American Legion . will be
staging a free New Year 's Eve party Sunday evening at the annex from
8 p.m. to I a.m.
The Classics will be on hand to
provide some smooth music and
there will be snac k tables, soft
drinks, party favors and noise makers provided by the post. No reservations are needed. You just go.
WSAZ televi sion was tn
Pomeroy the other day to do some
"Hometown Hero Award" filming . ·
Honored '" the presentation are
Shannon Spaun and Greg Davis wlio
were involved in sav ing lives on
Thanksgiving when a fire broke out
al the Pomeroy Cliff Apartments.
Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar
reports that the presentation program
wi II be aired at 7 a.m. and again at
6 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 30.
Former Racine area res ident
Avice Frecker is~iving in Columbus
these days and is among the purchasers of The Daily Sentinel's Hol iday Cook Book. Avice sent money
along for two of the books along
with the comment that while she
isn't living here anymore her heart
is still in Meigs County.
You did a good job with the holiday so you deserve just to throw·
another log on the fire and rei a~ for
a bit. But do keep smiling.

•4 cyl.

only.

PL. Auto., air, tops.

1996 OLDS.
1995 OLDS CUTLASS
CUTLASS SUPREME
SUPREME

"u• 1996 CHEVY FULL SIZE

2 Dr., V-6, loaded.
V6. auto, PW,
WAS $17,995 cassette, low miles.

PIC:KUPS

Reg.Ciib,2
2 &amp; 4 Wheel

NOW$17,399

Drive

1995 BUICK
SKYLARK

1995 CHEVY LUMINA
"~~

NOW 5211199

$11 1995

4 or.. auto • air, stereo.

1986 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

AURORA

4.9% APR

V6,1oaded:

Light teal, leather.

WAS $33,700

FOR 48 MONTHS

As• Us AIPout Smart Lease

1996 CHEVY SSERIES
"~~
PICKUP

NOW$30,799

$121495
1995 OLDS
CIERA

1995 BUICK REGAL

All power, V6, keyless
cruise, alum, entry, V-6, much more.
V6, auto., cassette,
WAS$13,597 #3338
WAS $21,178 &amp; locks ..

NOW $1 869 NOW 519 332
WAS $13,052

$121495

cass. .

well

1995 CHEVY
IMPALA 55

white,
loaded, Loaded, burgundy, only
WAS $10,774 Bright
13,000 miles, like new.
leather, CD player.

1995 CHEVY FULL SIZE
. "~~ 414 PICKUP
V-6, auto., AM/FM cas. WAS $18,941

NOW $16,999
1996 CHEVY
CAVALIER

,

1995 TOYOTA
PICKUP

WAS $31,901

98

!lEVI

1996 BUICK
LESABRE

1992 OLDS
CUTLASS
SUPREME
.

5

9 999

I
ROADMASTER

1995 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

VB, rear wheel drive,
Auto., · air, PW,
WAS $12,720 leather, loaded.
#3350
WAS $27,368 cassette. Hurry!

2 Door, auto.. air, bucket seats

3 NOW$

9

s11 99 5

sa,995

1992 OLDS
~88

1995 CHEVY
LUMINA APV

V6, auto , q-uise, PW, air, ABS.
Auto ., ABS, air, well 7 pass., auto., air, VS,
WAS $18,376 equipped.
WAS $14,614 loaded.

1992 CH~VY ASTRO
CONVERSION VAN

Past Councilor's Club of Chester
Council #323 held its Christmas supper at Crow's Restaurant in Pomeroy
and returned to the home of Marcia
Keller for their meeting and Christmas party.
Laura Mac Nice, pres ident,
presided ut the meeting. Thelma
White read from chapter 2, St. Luke.
The Lord's Prayer and Pledge to the
American Flag were given in unison.
Members answered roll call by
telling what they liked about Christmas. Two new members joined the
club, Dol ores Wolfe and Opal
Eichinger.
New officers were elected for the
next six months: Mary Jo Barringer,
president; Goldie Frederick , VICepresident; Jean Frederick, secretary;
Charlotte Grant, treasurer; Erma
€leland, flower committee ; Dolores
Wolfe. sentinel.
· A card was read from Faye
'Kirkhart thanking the club for her
and cards while in the hospital.
: Opal Hollon conducted games
and several members read Christmas
P.«JCffiS. Hostesses Laura Mae Nice
and Marcia Keller served refreshments. A gift exchange was held and
door prizes were won by Pauline
Ridenour, Jo Ann Baum, Mary K.
Holter, lnzy Newell, Opal Eichinger,
Goldie Frederick and Ethel Our.
Also attending were Lora D.amewood, Ella Osborne, lnzy Newell,
Dorothy Myers, Margaret Amburger, Cora Beegle and a visitor, Shirley
Seegle.

Hurry!

(

1995 FORD f'150
XLT
Auto., air, loaded.

ll\VI

1996 CHEVY
CORSICA

1990 OLDS
SUPREME

V6, Automatic, more:
WAS $15,330

Now $14,101

4 Door,

.

Taxes and tttle fee not tnch1ded.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

V6.

$161995

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks .Must Go.

7-UP, DIET 7-UP,

Pound

@@0r1/@[ft] !il0[f)@

®U®@ fJl(J@®

@&amp;J[ft]&amp;J[ft]~~

@fl !Jl@ @@0~

Pound

2-Liter

!::::~~-·--'- J/Sf
Save at least 51¢ on 5

Kroger

Skim Milk
..... canon
save uo to 76¢

Fresh

IJBI

Kroger
Juice

Green Cabbage
Pound

Past Councilor's
Club holds
holiday dinner

Loaded, clean.

~;&amp;;;~~~1-----..£--..;..-1 Loaded, 1 owner.

1996 PONTIAC
"~VI SUNFIRE

..

Tate and Damia Hayman invite
the public to celebrate their marriage
with an open house on Saturday,
December 30, from 2 until 4 p.m. at
the Vernon Church Fellowship Hall,
Letart, wv.
. The couple was married on
November 14 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
·Tate is the son of Mike and Jenny
Hayman of Ft. Wayne, IN and the
grandson of Albert and Hollice
:Thompson of Letart and William and
Lillian Hayman of Racine, Ohto.
Damia is the daughter of Margaret
Ball of Ont~rio~ Canada.

$21 I 99 51----_.:....-

Auto., air, stereo, air bag,
V6, Auto., keyless .entry. ABS.
#3494
WAS $23,888

top that, San Francisco came up with
one built in I 895. The crowd pleaser, however, is a 1934 ope n "boat
car" from Blackpool, England.
The Muni knew it was onto something when it held festivals for the
old streetcars in the 1980s and people elbowed each other to get aboard.
The old cars are frequent! y taken out
and added to the F-line fleet.
"We get standin g loads, even at
midday," said Chip Palmer, who
operates one of the PCCs... At first,
we were kind of overwhelmed."
"The ride takes longer than the
subway. but I don't mind, " said pas·
se ngcr Penny Starns.

RECEPTION SET

Super clean, loaded.

1995 CHM
CORSICA

and silver of Pacific Electric, a to the Castro District Along the way,
Southern California line whose -it passes near several tourist si tes,
demi se inspired the movie "Who :including the new Museum of ModJFramed Roger Rabbi.t ?"
. em An, U.N. Plaza, Moscone CenSan Francisco has a long history ter and the turnaround at Powell and
with the PCCs. The last of about Market where tourists stand m line 10
5,000 cars built for use in Nonh board the cable car to Fi sherman's
America was the city 's car No. Wharf
1040, constructed by the St. Louis
In additiOn to the famed cab le
Car Co. It went into service in 1952. cars and \he new contingent. San
The cars, which run above a . Francisco has the large st operating
modern subway, form the F-Market fleet of historic streetcars in the
run , a 3.5-milc route that is San Fran - nati on. The 29 vintage trams include
cisco's first new line si nce 1928.
a 1928 streetcar from Milan . It aly.
The F line goes from the Trans- one a year older fro m Japan and a
bay Terminal and up Market Street
1922 contribution from Ru&lt;Sia. Tn

CONTEST WINNER
Darla Tucker, Racine, was the
winner of a Middleton Doll in a contest held recently by the Letan Falls
Elementary PTO.
·

1990 OLDS

NOW $27I 99 5 1----......:...---1

"\VI

1996 CHEVY
LUMINA

5 speed, stereo.

NO MONEY DOWN

1995 BUICK
RIVIERA

he transportation in major Cities streetcars . That's what they got across the country. Now, they ram- · cars that were among the sturdiest
ble up and down Market Street, and most reliable transit vehicles
anmher tourist attraction for a city ever made.
Most . cities gradually 'dropped
already renowned for its cable cars.
"This is an additional enticement the trolley cars, though they still
for people to come to San Francis- operate in Boston, Newark and
co," said Phil Adams, genera! man- Toronto.
)he San Francisco fl eet's 17 cars
ager of the city's Municipal Railway,
known as the Muni . ll 's "si mply can each haul 93 riders. They are
painted the livery of cities where
another jewel in the city's crown."
The cars were designed in the PCCs once operated - the green and
1930s at the request of presidents of cream of Philadelphia, the bri ght yelelectric car compan ies in the United low and green of Cincinnati , the yelStates and Canada who wanted s.tan- low and silver of Los Angeles.
dardized, improved, streamlined There's also the distine1ive orange

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH
The students following students
were named students of the month ~t
Rutland Elementary SchoQI for the
, month of December: Tommy Nottingham and TitTany McDonald,
kindergarten A and B class; Dustin
Knapp, first grade; Brittany Hysell,
second grade; Amanda Tobin, 3-S;
Miranda Simpkins, 3-H; Jamitha
Willford, fourth grade ; Allison
Williamson, fifth grade; Melissa
Richmond , sixth grade; Raymond
· Hess, DH·Knapp, and Sheena Morri s, DH-Chaney.

1993 GMC SONOMA
PICKUP

$6,999 Or
$149 Per Mo.

WAS $18,923

1996 CHEVY SSERIES
"LIKE A ROCK"

Now 9999

One owner.

2 Door, auto., air, stereo.

V6, auto.,
equipped.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Society
·scrapbook

1995 GEO
TRACKER 4X4

1994 GEO METRO

NOW ~12,739

5

'h TON PICKUP

1995 BUICK
CENTURY

"£~ 1995 OLDS.

NOW $12

GRAND PRIX

3800 V-6, power seats &amp;
windows, loaded.
Auto., air, stereo, PW &amp;
WAS~~=.~u 1 L
,
I
~------~----p · crUise, li I.
1992 CHEVY

FOR 48 MONTHS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Members of the Middleport Literary Club celebrated Yuletide at
their recent meeting at the home of
Martha Hoover.
Pauline Horton , Pat Holter,
Martha Hoover, Betty Fultz. Phyllis
Hackett and Sister Fidel is formed a
group of singers who presented a
program of Christmas songs with
solos by Pat Holter and Martha
Hoover accompanied by Clarice
Erwin, who also played a piano
arrangement of "Sleigh Ride ."
Jeanne Bowen had arranged a
presentation of "Stubby Pringle's
Christmas" an excerpt from a former
Hallmark Hall of Fame program.
Main parts were read by Sara Daune
Owen and Maxine Gaskill. Later, all
joined in singing the well-k nown
Jingle Bells, White Christmas, Silve r
Bells, Joy to the World, Away in a
Mange r and Silent Night, accompanied by Phylli s Hackett .
Refresh{Tients were served. Mrs.
Joann Robinson was welcomed as a
guest.

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'T'was the Night Before Christmas'
presented for Racine UMW
Small decorated wreaths made by
Lee were used as favors .
Attending were: Alice Wolfe,
Opal Diddle, Grace Furbee, Lois
Bell, Etta Mae Hill , Ruth Steams,
Gladys Shields, Ann Cafe, Stephanie
Hunt, Lucille Cardone, Frances
Roberts, Marilyn Bogard, Margie
West, Karen Walker, Betty Bentley,
Jennifer Walker, Martha Dudding,
Margery Roush, Melissa Harkness,
Chris Hill, Lee Lee and Clara Mae
Sargent.

1995 OLDS
ACHI EVA

Library club
celebrates
holidays

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The Raci ne United Methodist
Women held its annual Christmas
dinner and party at ihe Country
Kitchen restaurant Dec. IB.
A ski t ·Twas the Night Before
Chri stmas" was presented by Mari lyn Bogard , Jennifer Walker and
Karen Walker. Lucille Cardone read
a humorous letter
After a gift exchange, secret
prayer partners were revealed. Gifts
from the UMW were presented to
Mel iss a Harkness and Lee Lee.

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so pleased and thinks this is the
greatest community ever-and you
know what? She's absolutely right.
Thanks for your gestures towards
Louise. And, of course, we"re all
pleased that Louise is doing better.

1-800-837-1 094

THE PlACE TO GO TO SAVE YOU DOUGH!

1996 CHEVY SSERIES
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by Bob Hoeflich

Well - you kept tellin' me you
were dream ing of a white Christmas
so apparentl y you ·re dreams are gettin g hcucr all of the time. Christmas
Day "".s .s nowy and cold so you got
your dream . I smcerely hope the
warr rllh you ret.:civcd from family
and i'ne nJs oll.sc l that some of that
cold

By JAMES 0. CLIFFORJ)
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Just
because it's the mid-1990s and
you're in San Francisco, it doesn 't
mean you can't step into Philadelphia in the 1940s. Or Cincinnati in
the 1930s.
All you need do is climb aboard
a streetcar.
Once, these vintage trolleys .:__
know n as Presidents Conference
Committee cars - dominated pub-

Reduction Sale
992-6614

0

San Francisco .becomes heaven for streetcar lovers

t995 After Chri'ltmas Inventory

doesn't change the effect of this
drug; however, the frequent drinker
does develop a sense that he or she
is less impaired by it. Numerous
studies have shown that this is only
a '"sense" of being less influenced by
alcohol. The time required to make
a decision and then react to a driving
situation goes up with each drink,
regardless of how accustomed the
person is to drinking.
If you arc hosting a party at which
alcohol is served, you have a responsibility to your guests. Suggest that
your guests come 111 groups and that
each group se lect a "designated dri ver." Make non-alcoholic beverages
available, preferably served in the
same type of glasses as the alcohol,
for the designated driver and for anyone else who chooses not to co n·
sume alcohoL Guests should not be
persuaded to drink, nor ridiculed if
they choose not to. Snacking should
be encouraged. Co Hee should be
served in the last hour or so of the
party. Although coffee docs not
counteract the alcohol as some people believe, it does offset drowsiness,
and a lengthy pcnod of socializing
over coffee provides guests time to
sober up before heading home.
Most importantly, anybody who
is obviously drunk should not be
allowed to drive under any circumstances and probably shouldn't be
allowed to walk home either.
Instead, insist that this person stay
overnight, go home with somebody
else or take a taxi. This isn'tjust for
the safety of the intoxicated indiyidual and that of other motorists,
but also for your protection. In some
states you may now be held legally
responsible for any injury the intoxicated person causes after leaving
your party drunk.
"Family Medidne" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medidne, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio

/

Wednesday, December 27, 1995

DON TATE MOTORS

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

Qucs llon : I don 't drink alcohol
ve ry oft en, hut I usually do have a

Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

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•

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 21; 1995

Ann
Landers
"1~.Los Angetee
Times Syndate aoc1
Cr11atots Synclicate"

Dear Ann Landers: Havmg been
gu1lty of domestic v1olence for 28 of
nw 3 I years of marnage, I am perplexcd hy tho&lt;e who believe that
hcmg a wtfc battcrer docs not make
uoc ,, potential wife murderer. TV
commentators and legal experts who
expre ss th1s opm10n have no tdea
what domestic VIolence can lead to

Control ts the center of a w1fe bat!crcr's exiStence. When the control of
my spouse became threatened, I

On one occasion when we were
separated, I put a loaded gun m my

pocket wnh the intenuon of killing
my wtfc and myself Only the arrival
of mil1tary pollee at my home prevented me from g01ng through With
1t . I thank God for that. My children
were home. and I can unagme the

devastatmg effect !hat would have
had on the11 lives
Three years ago. I en tered a
court-ordered spouse-abuse program.
The counse lin g was intense and
cffecttvc. I became aware of my controlling personality and how It was
destroymg my fam1ly. !learned that
controlts not love. It is an obsesston
that destroys rclattonsl:itPs.

Today, I recognize 'all my old
methods of control. When they begin
to surface, I nd myself of them
mstantly I' ve grown a lot smce treatment and have found an mner peace_
A crumbling marnage has become
wonderful Although my converSion
came late m my ltfe, perhaps my letter wli I help other w1fe hatterers
My message IS "get help " It's out
there and available. You may feel the
love you have for your spouse will
make up for the pm n you have
caused her. but Without proper therapy and counseling . you v.tll never
make 11. - J M.B , ORLANDO,
FLA.
DEAR ORLANDO It took
cou rage to wrue as you d1d . and I
thank you Your message to wife

Nola has a habit of putting her irevoltmg habit? I want 10 deliver the
beaters to get counseltng is excellent
!message diplomatically because
And now, my advice to women fork m my food and saying, "I just
who are tn physically abustvc rela- -want a little taste." She never asks tf she's a very dear friend. - MARItionships: Get out, and call the · I rrund She JUSt goes ahead and helps ETIA IN MASS.
DEAR MARIETIA: Forget
poltce. Press charges, and flatly herself. If she likes it, she says, "Gee,
about
diplomacy. Tell Nola flat out
refuse to let h1m back in the house that certamly is delicious.! think I'll
until he has begun to get professiOnal have a second taste." And then she to stop putting her fork m your food
help.
reaches over again . While she's at tt , because it's crude and unhHienic,
Most w1fe beaters are al so sub- she spears an ohve. a pickle or a and it spoils your appetite.
Do you have questions about sex,
stance abusers. They need Alcoholics forkful of lett uce. I find this diSbur no one to talk to ? Ann Landers'
Anonym ous or Narcottcs Anony- gusting
Last week, I mv1ted a male friend booklet, "Sex and the Teen -Ager," is
mous. ln s1st they Join up as a condttton of reuntttng.
to jam us for lunch, and Nola ate off frank and 10 the point. Send a self
DearAnn Landers· A dear fne nd hts plate, too Although he didn't say addres•ed, long, business-size enveof long stand1n g, I wtll call her anything. n was obvious to me tha! lope and a check or money order for
"Nola," has lunch with me about he resented 11. It took a lot of self- $3.75 (this Secludes postage and
once a "'eek l enJoy her company a control on my part to keep my handling) to· Teens. clo Ann Lnngreat deal , and I don't want to lose mouth shut I wanted to smack her ders, P 0. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, sttui
her fnend sh1p . but something ts one
bothering me.
How can I get Nola to stop thiS $4 55.)

By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - It's a
typtcal New York street scene: A
kamtkaze cab, ignoring traffic and
pedestnans , swerves across four
lanes to ptck up • Jaywalking fare .
Not so fa st, says Mayor
Rudolph Giuliam, who wants to
ease the chrome congestion on
. c1ty streets and make them a more
genteel place.
· He has proposed a dayttme
. ban on hailing cabs tn the heart of
Manhattan, wtth people mstead
hnmg up poluel y at taxi stands
and dnvcrs queumg up neatly for
passengers
Good luck, Mr. Mayor.
"Thts law cannot work," taxi
dnver ASifChaudray declared on
. Tuesday. " Most people want,
'Rtght here! 'light now!' If you
go 5 fe et further, they get crazy.
,They get mad."
That's nght . satd nder Eric
Jones of Manhattan, who was
.waiting patiently for a cab outs1de
the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
" If I want a cab, I'm just going
to get one." said Jones , 29. "And
.most hkely, he 'll pick me up.
That 's JUSt how it works. People
in New York don't wait in line."
Under G1UI1am 's proposal ,the latest 1n hts "quality of hfe"

•

KAMIKAZE CABS ·A taxi dispatcher directs
customers to a waiting cab at the Port Authority
Bus Terminal in New York Thesday. Seeking a
more genteel behavior from the city's hacks, Maycampaign that has cracked down
on panhandlers and public
drtnkers - tax1 stands would
operate weekdays between 10
a.m. and 4 p.m. from 30th to 60th
streets

Rtdcrs could be dumped up to
I00 feet 'from the11 destmat1ons

or Rudolph Giuliani is proposing establishing
stands like these throughout the city; a sharp con·
trast to a cabs ignoring traffic and pedestrians by
cutting across four lanes to pick up a passenger.

Rebellious cabbies could be fined
up to $55.
In Manhattan . steppmg mto
traffic to had a cab IS a traditiOn
dating to the turn of the century.
It worked tn the days of the horse
and buggy.

"New York wouldn' t feel like
New York tf you couldn't hat! a
cab," satd Altona Ru. 34, who
moved to Manhattan four years
ago. "It 's more than a New York
tradttlon It 's a symbol of Manhattan ."

Composting program presented at garden club
The Rutland Garden Club held its n1trogcn-nch materials.
L1ghtly wet down each layer as
Chn stmas potluck dmner and meetneeded to make it about as mOISt as
mg at the home of Margaret Belle
a damp sponge, green materials may
We he r
Neva N1cholson began the pro- not need any add1tional mm sturc.
gram w ith an aruclc on compostmg · Alternate layers of brown and green
materials. makmg each layer no
wh1ch dcscnbcd how to tum yard
more
than a few inches thtck .
waste mto va luable so1 l booster.
Bury
k1tchen scraps m the bottom
The four clements of composting
or
ccnler
of the ptle where animals
,lfc . brown malcrtals (leaves), green
won't
d1g
lor them . As a fmished
matenal (grass), water and alT.
co
mpost.
plants
wtlllove 1t as a potBro"'n matcnal s mcludc ncwsting
s01l
~ngrcdtent
(after stfttng).
po~pcr. leaves and dry yard ~astc that
mulch
or
sot!
amendment.
prov1dc carbon for the microbes that
D1scuss10n also focused on plants
l n.:att: compost
that
make popular Chnstmas gtfts
Green matcnals such as k1tchcn
such
as the pomsett1a and Chnstmas
. . craps and green yard waste are

cactus. It was also noted that mi stletoe IS a paras1t1c evergreen wtth
white berries. B11ds spread the seeds
when they wtpe the sticky bernes
from their beaks onto tree bark.
Sarah Dawn Jenkins read a Bibheal Chmtmas story and played two
p1ano se lections for devotions.
Donna Jenk1ns played Silent
N1ght for all to Sing.
Creed and collect were repeated
and

th~

treasurer's and secretary's

report rCCCIVCd .
Contnbutlons !01 1995 h"d been
&gt;ent to OAGC pr&lt;&gt;JCC!s. the Vtctor
R1cs Fellowship Fund, Wahk1ena

ProJect, Mohtcan School and the
OAGC FoundatiOn.
PreSident Paulme Atk;ns and
helper had planted the tulip bulbs at
mim park. Margaret Weber had visIted Hubbards' Greenhouse and read
a letter rece1ved from Roberta Wilson, a past preSident now l1vtng in
Kentucky.
Roll call was answered by givtng
a tray favor or handmade corsage for
Eva Robson to deliver to residents of
Rockspnngs Rehabtlitation Center.
Margaret Belle's arrangement
was a basket of fruit and nowers. A
gift exchange closed the meeting.

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-Cummings
ATIENTlON ALL READERS!:
A few months ago we wrote about an
absolutely terrific FR!3E publication
available from the U.S. Office of
Consumer Affairs. The 125-page
"Consumer's Resource Handbook"
provtdes consumers wtth valuable
information on avoiding problems in
the marketplace and correct10g problems once they occur.
As an example, toptcs covered in
the "Buying Smart" section contain
dozens of pages of information on
mail fraud, home financing, rules for
nutrition labeling, car purchasing
and more.
As for consumers who think they
have already been cheated, lied to or
swmdled, the handbook has almost
I 00 pages of information on where
they can turn for assistance. The
newest, updated edition is, as of this
writing, hot off the press. Order your
copy by wnting to "Handbook,"
Pueblo, CO 81005.
The USOCA has also instituted
the first-ever federal consumer information cleannghouse. Called
HELPLINE, this service provides
free 10formation to American consumers on how to address problems
or unfair pract1ces they encounter in
the marketplace.
Consumers who feel they have
been cheated, swindled or conned
can call HELPLINE toll- free at 1800-644-4435 Monday through Friday between IQ_ a.m. and 2 p.m.
EDT. Consumers who call at another time can leave a message that will
be returned by a USOCA staffer as
soon as possible.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Last
year l vtsited a restaurant 10 Pittsburgh called Bobby Rubino 's. The
side dish was a Colossal Onion Ring
Loaf, reasonably priced at $2.50. It
is onions cut up in a sauce and
served 10 a loaf pan. Can you get the
recipe for me? - LEE POTI~.
Ocala, Fla.
DEAR LEE: Unfortunately, the
head of marketing at the Bobby
Rubino Franchising Corp_ sau;t that
because the Colossal Onion Loaf is

Doctor's orders: Get an education
DR.GOTT
PETER
GOTT,M.D.

have lost the will to learn , college
l1as become an expens1ve method of
prolongmg dependency on fam1ly.
I wonder what, if any, educational mot1vat1on cxts ts today among
college youth. In bygone days, an
occastonal adobcent attended college in order to further spectfic
Interests like skun g, golf. water sk••ng' and partymg . W1thin the new
generatton, this appears to be the
norm .

By Peter H- Gott, M.D.
Our cducatton system " m trou hle. I don '1 mean a cyclic npple in
how we educate. I rclcr to real trou·

hie. We arc no! prepanng our sludcnts. We are do1ng them no favors

Although the cost of educatnm
contmuc' to nsc - both for elemcnlary and h1gh schools, as well as
lor cc1llegcs - we may not he getling our money's worth . The problem appears to 1ncludc two Iactors
students' mot1'vat1un and school cur·
ncula.

l know a very lovely young lady
who attends college m New England.
The cost of her tuition . room and
board exceeds $20,000 a year. For
what" The un iverSity IS open about
stx and a half months a year. There
arc few academ ic requ~rements . She,
II ke ot her students, takes a mimmal
number of courses . Her schedule
depends on wh1ch classes requiTe the
least homework .
Trye schedule IS 1mportant for
another reason . In college, some students prefer to avo1d Monday classes because they feel a need to recover from the weekend. Likewise, Friday commit11Je nts are disdamed
because they might interfere with the
weekend revelry. So, the knowledgeable student chooses courses
which are relatively easy and which
meet on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays. Boston is the "place to
be." Therefore, she has picked easy
subjects which enable her to miRitmze her educational responsibilities.
For many students who appear to

'

I can remember tough htgh school
classes which started at 8:30 a.m.
and conttnued unttl 3 p m . and college courses thai met five days a
week, as well as at mght and on Saturday mornmgs. The students dtdn't
object; the faculty d1d not object unttl recently. What ts gmng to happen to the college student who IS
accustomed to working three days a
week, seven months a year'' Does the
real world present a potential problem ''
With respect to curriculum,
schools are now offenng pretty
much what the student wants rather
than required basics. I am not surprised our students cannot understand foreign languages, speak or
wnte English, usc sc tence, or qualify in mathematics. We are so dedi cated to encouragmg students to "do
thc11 own thing" that we forget an
important reality: Only by doing
"OUR" thing can they truly achieve
a reasonable academiC level and
learn what interests they wish to pursue after schooling. It 's no act of
chance that we are graduating uneducated citizens.
When he received Princeton's
highest tribute for distinguished service several years agq, Or. Lewis

Thomas made some mterestmg
remarks, among which were: "The
crucial educational periods arc in the
primary and secondary schools. At
the present ume we are turntng out
h1gh school graduates w1th little or
no underslandmg of chemistry or
physics or b1ology or astronomy and
no cornprehenSion at all of real
mathematics. A small mtnority of
American htgh school students learn
a small amount of calculus, whtle
their Soviet counterparts, it is said,
emerge with two sohd years of calculus. There has never been a time
m human hiStory, I think, when 1t
was known !hat there were so many
unknown thmgs lymg ahead, wattmg
to be found out Students need to be
taught syslcmatlcally, candidly and
in detail about human ignorance.
ThiS IS the most exc itmg and challengin g of all the thmgs to be
learned AI the moment. we arc an
tgnorant spcc 1cs, flummoxed by the
puzzle of who we arc, where we
came from, and what we are for."
If that doesn 't throw down the
gauntlet to the educators, I' vc mtssed
my guess. Is it too much to require
teachers to gtve our young a sound
and fundamental amount of mformatton concernmg arts, sctencc, language, religiOn and humanities upon wh1ch they can build what we
term "educatton"? What has happened to the fun , of lcarn mg'' As a
soctety, can we afford not to tmpart
basic intellectual tools to our school
chtldren? Why do we hesttate to
challenge ALL young minds, to
demand they master skills that will
help them to address Dr. Thomas'
puzzle?
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Mother
defying
the odds
to help
her child

ASK ANNE • NAN

AKRON (AP) - A woman who
last year adopted a little "gnl suffermg from chronic kidney disease will
donate a kidney to · her daughter,
defying astronomical odds of being
a medical match_
Joni Venet and her 7-year-old
daughter, Tannesha, will undergo a
transplant operation on Jan. 9 at
Chtldren's Hosp1tal Medical Center.
"I would say nothing surprises
me anymore," said Robert · Pyke,
transplant coordinator at the hospital. "But I'll also say I've never seen
anything like this happen ... This is
a very rare event"
Tannesha has been treated for
kidney failure since age 3. For three
hours each day, three days per week,
she is on a dialysis machine at Children 's.
The experience always leaves her
feeling upset and grouchy.
"They hook me up to a machine.
Then I start to feel yucky mside,"
she said last week . "I can taste the
medicine and I don't like il. Medi-

what IS called a "signature" recipe,
they were unable to give it out for
publication but (hint, hint) the recipe
calls for colossal western onions,
battered and stacked mto a deep-fry
basket
She then added that even if you
had the exact recipe, you wouldn't
be able to duplicate it in your kitchen
unless you had a commercial-sized
deep-fat lryer. If you long for anoth- _
er bite of the Onion Loaf and don 't
mind taking a little drive down U.S .
75, there is a Bobby Rubino's in
Naples, Fla -Anne's favorite place
for nbs!
FEEDBACK: For those of youwho wrote in looking for a pattern
for a small-size (3-4) little girl's
chec:rleading outfit (we were
STUMPED), we received a letter
from Pat Depew, 135 Dupuis, Bridge
City, TX 77611 -3001. who said that
she had been rnaking these outfits for
her children and the children of her
friends for years and would be happy to send along the pattern she has
created to any reader who requested
it.
We gave her a call and asked if
she would be wtllmg to make her
pauern avatlable to our general reading pubhc and she said she would be
deltghted. Betwee n us we settled on
a price of $4 per pattern (she hand
draws all the pattern pieces!), whtch
mcludes postage_
If you wish to order one of Pal's
cheerleading outfit patterns, write
her at the address above. Please
enclose check, cash or money order.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy ·
Nash-Cummings are co-authors of
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone)
and "Dear Anne and Nan: Two
Prize Problem-Solvers Share
·Their Secrets" (Bantam).

cine

IS

gross."

"It's sort of like if you have the
nu for a day and lose a lot of flutd,"
her mother said. "This is the same
thing, only it's compacted into three
hours."

At home, Ml'l!. Venet and her hus-

way to determine whether his city indeed has Oh10's highest murder rate .
suburb of Struthers to escape the gangs and cnme. Ms. Lewis said she h a~ :
Wellington said 75 percent of the city is as safe as suburban communicustody of her grandchildren and was worried for their safety.
. ·
ties_The other 25 percent suffer from problems mcludmg htgh unemploy "There was none of this crime when l was grow10g up." she satd: ·
ment and school dropout rates, he said.
"You' ve heard of that saytng - betng able to sleep with your doors open
Washington-based urban analyst David Rusk has ranked Youngstown as
- well, that's how we lived.
14th on a list of 24 cities nationwide that are 111 economic trouble based on
Don Curry, a labor market analyst for the Ohto Bureau of Employmenl
a population loss of more than 20 percent; a mmonty populatiOn exceedServices in Youngstown, sa1d the city 's unemployment rate of 13.7 percent
mg 30 percent; and a per-person income less than 70 percent of the suburm 1994 was the highest of any maJor city m the state
ban per capita income.
Ungaro said the only way Youngstown can climb out of tts economic
"In !978, we lost our jobs to Japan and Korea, and there's not too many
depression is to think regwnally. He wants to work with other ctttes and
cities m Amenca that have a population of 100,000 and have lost 35,000
townships help stimulate Youngstown's economy
jobs," satd Patnck J. Ungaro, who has been mayor smce 1984
" If we could ever develop a httle more regional cooperahon, we could
Alice Lewis, 50, a lifelong Youngstown reSident, recently moved to the . start turning things around." Ungaro sa1d. "We're pohttcally divided and
we h.ave to wurk together "

Overnight delivery
rush appears to be
slowing to 2-3 days

MIRACUWUS MATCH- Joni Venet and
her adopted daughter, Tannesha, spent a moment
having fun while Tannesha waits to have one or
her three weekly dialysis treatments at Childrens
band, John, a sales representattve,
dedicate an entire kitchen cabinet to
Tannesha's medication. They also
prepare a special diet for the girl,
who ISn't allowed to eat pickles or
pepperoni, and can't drink more than
16 ounces of fluids each day.
Before Tannesha got a serious
mfection, the Stark County couple
also admimstered pentoneal dialysis
- a process whtch took them two
months to learn.
But for the Venets, who could not
have their own children because
Mrs. Venet had a hysterectomy, it
has all been worth tt.
Tannesha came to join the Venets
while she was a patient at Chi!-

Hospital Medical Center in Akron. Venet, a
speech therapist at the hospital who adopted the
girl two years ago, is donating a kidney to Tannesha for a transplant on Jan. 9. (AP)

dren 's, where Mrs. Vanet, 40, works
as a speech-therapy aide. Like many
chrontcally ill children, Tannesha,
who was living with a foster family
at the time, had fallen behind in several developmental skills. Mrs.
Venet was sent in to help.
" [ fell in love w1th her the first
time I laid eyes on her." she said.
"On the second and third visit, I told
my husband he needed to meet a
very special little girl."
The couple soon learned Tannesha was available for adoption.
She moved in with them by Christmas 1993 and tbe adoption was
final1zed in August 1994.

The transplant operation should
take between three and six hours,
said Dr. Ian Dresner, Tannesha's
physician. It wtll be determmed at
that ttme which of Mrs Venet's twl•
kidneys w11l be gtven to her daughter.
"I would have never thought 10
a m111ion years that this is the way
our life would be," her husband sat d.
" But this was an easy dectsion to
make - a no-brainer. This is the
kmd of thmg that teaches you about
the meaning of life.
"How could we not try to give
Tannesha every opportumty to live
the kind of life she deserves'&gt;"

Court upholds Klan's right to display cross
By SONJA BARISIC
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - A Ku
Klux Klan group has a free-speech right to display a cross on a qowntown SqUare for the holiday season,
a federal appeals court ruled Thesday.
"The city asked the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to stop the
Knight Rtders of the KKK from
erecting the I0-foot wooden cross on
Fountain Square for a fourth year.
Under a lower court's continuing
order, the group already had a city
pennit 10 display the cross for 10
days. The Klan put up the cross on
l)ec. 18.
:. The 6th Circuit rejected the city's
eontent1on that the cross should be
banned under a local ordinance that
allows the city 10 deny a permit for

a display that would communicate
"fighting words."
That includes any symbol, object,
- graffiti or oral statement that injures
a person or group of people, or ts
likely to incite violence -by a listener or observer.
The appeals court said the unattended &lt;;rtfs'$;' ' which bears the
inscription "John 3·16," does not
amount to fighting words.
"John 3:16" refers to a Bible passage: "For God so loved the world
that he gave his only begotten Sao:
that whosoever believeth on him
should not perish but have eternal
_life."
"Given the circumstances of its
display, the message expressed by
the cross- be it one of good or evil
- 1s too vague and general to be
found likely to melle or produce

imminent lawless action in the form
of retaliaoon or breach of the peace,"
Judge Cornelia Kennedy wrote in the
court's opinion.
Kennedy and appeals judges
Pierce Lively and James Ryan satd
they were aware that 24 people
were arrested in 1992 for attempting
to knock down the cross.
" .. The lawless acts of a few are
insufftcient, under these circumstances, to warrant the suppressi(')n ot
nonviOlent expressive conduct as
fighting words," Kennedy wrote.
Each year smce 1992, a -federal
judge has upheld the Klan group's
Fi.rst Amendment right to display the
cross, and the appeals court twice has
affirmed that ruling. The city went to
court Dec. 7 to figh&lt; the ruling again.
Rick Ganulin, an assistant city
sohcttor, said Tuesday he was sur-

pnsed that the appeals court dectded it was tmpossible to attribute a
spec1 ftc message to the cross.
"To me. the startmg pomt for any
First Amendment analySis ts to deterrome what kmd of speec h you're
dealing w1th," Ganulin said. "The
ctty has argued that it's a threat
and/or msult directed at identifiable
groups of people."
He said city leaders would have
to dectde whether to appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
"Th1s ought to be the city's last
attempt to try to restnct free speech
on Fountain Square," said Scott
Greenwood, the Klan group's
lawyer.
"The 6th Circuit's opimon makes
it clear that loathsome as the speech
may be, odious as the group may be,
the speech is still protected," Greenwood satd

By DONNA ROSATO
USA TODAY
The deft very busme&gt;S IS slow mg down
Instead of overnight deft very, more busmesses arc dectdmg two or three
days ts OK
Two- to three-day, or deferred, deft very IS now the fastest-growmg segment in the U.S. package deltvery market, says a study by transportation
consultants Colography Group. The volume ol deferred packages grew 24
percent last year compared wtth 13 percent fnr overmght
Nearly 500,000 packages wtll be deferred shipments this year. up from
185,000 in 1990. About 820,000 ovcrmght packages will be sent thts year
compared with 520,000 in 1990.
"By 200 I, deferred packages should outnumber overnight," predicts Ted
Scherck, a Colography Group analyst
Behind the trend:
• Saving money. It's cheaper for busmesses to use deferred delivery .
FedEx charges $23.50 to send a one-pound package for next day, B a.m.
delivery. The same package costs JUSt $13 lor two-day delivery At UPS, a
5-pound package for next-day, 10:30 a.m. dehvery costs $21 vs $7.50 for
three-day delivery.
"Companies in the '90s are re-evaluating their shtpptng needs. Timeliness is still important to businesses, but getting it there overnight isn't as
urgent," UPS spokesman Mark Dickens says
For urgent mformatwn, companies send documents hy clcctrnn•c m:ul
or fax.
• Just-in-time management. Companies are trymg to reduce costs by kecpmg less mventory on hand and receivmg parts and cqutpmcnt closer to the
ttme needed.
" We're seeing a lot of manufacturers who used to usc a slower scrv1cc
movmg up to two- to three-day delivery," says FedEx's Tom Mamn .
• Technology. UPS and FcdEx both use technology that allows them to
track packages anyw~ere in the system. That helps make two- and threeday delivery more appeahng to customers who want to know when packages will amve
The U.S. Postal Servtce says demand for deferred dehvcry has helped
boost revenue from tts two- to three-day Prionty Mail service to $2 .9 htf:
lion thiS year vs. $1.5 billion m 1990.
FedEx, whtch built tts reputation on overnight service, IS also chasmg
the deferred dehvery market. It IS expected to roll out a deferred frctght service in early '96 Even its slogan - Absolutely, Positively Ovcrmght has been updated. The new one: Absolutely, Positively Anyttme.

·•
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State government lead source of income
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Government
benefits were the second-largest
source of personal income in Ohio in
!994, an independent report showed.
· And when !hose payments are
combined with public payrolls, !he
government was the state's largest
&amp;ource.
· The Ohto Public Expenditure
Counci I satd a comparison or income
5ources showed manufacturing was
t~e largest provider of personal
income last year, providi}lg 19.4 percent of Ohio's $231 billion total.
· Income known as government
transfer payments was secondlargest, at 17.6 percent. 1be payments refer to money people receive
fbr which they do not render current
services. Examples include Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid, unemployment, workers' compensation,
veterans' benefits and food stamps.
· Income from government jobs

It has been reported that the Debit Card from The
Farmers Bank has been seen being used as a
credit card, a check card, even an ATM card...

Da lat Ia llannad.
It is.

Your Bankjn~...
Fa

FarmenBank

-oy. 011 ~769

61ti992·2U6

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2tt--.lllltHI

...... 7
, 0 lo• 110
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61-H161

_____________.....
Memllet F.D.LC.

and government enterprises amounted to $22.6 billion last year. Put government transfer payments and government employment together, and
they provided almost 27 percent of
total personal income.
Donald Berno, council president,
cited Ohio's size as the seventhlargest state as one reason for high
transfer payments . The state also
tends to have an older population
than the rest of the country.
Government as an employer was
the sixth-largest source of earnings
for Ohtoans in !994, behind manufacturing; transfer payments; service
businesses; a combination of dividends, interest and rent; and wholesale- retail trade.
"I can't say definitely it's a dangerously high level but it's such a
large piece of the economy that
we've got to start paying more attentiOn it, the whole role of government
revenues driving the economies,"
Bema said m an mterview.

"Every mayor in the state fears
havmg one large employer. That is
not a good way to have your community live. But in some parts of the
state, government IS the b1ggest
employer," he said.
The Gouncil identified five of the
state's 88 count1es in whtch federal,
state and local government employment accounted tor the largest percentage of total earnings: Athens, 5 l
percent, Green, 34 percent, Portage,
28 percem; and Vinton and Ross, 25
percent each.
County mformat10n was based on
1993, a year behind the statewide
figures.
The county that relied most on
manufacturing as the largest source
of Iota! earnings? Union County, at
68 percent. Service businesses were
highest at 32 percent in Mahoning
County.
A lot of people seem unhappy

with the Internal Revenue Service
That was one of the messages that
rang clear during hcanngs of The
National Commission on Economic
Growth and Tax Reform .
Congressional leaders appomted
the 14-member committee to come
up with recommendation s to make
the federal mcome tax natter, fairer
and simpler.
One of the members was Dean
Kleckner. president of the Amcncan
Farm Bureau Federation. The panel
held a dozen hearings nationally over
three months, mcludmg one in
Cleveland.
Kleckner said 10 an.intervtew last
week there was no disagreement
about the need to change the complex federal tax system.
"When you have the one-page
EZ form that many people fill out,
with 36 pages of instructions to fill
out the one-page EZ form, there's
somethmg wrong," he said.

Bank spared from payout to fortune hunter

"Check" Into ff today!

'01ooo6»

I

YOUNGSTOWN (AP)- Youngstown, once the symbol of Rust Belt
cities hard hit by job losses, has earned another dubious disttnction: Ohio's
highest per capita murder rate.
With 66 homtcides so far this year, the city of91 ,755 h.as the highest rate
m the state, the Akron Beacon Journal reported Tuesday.
Only Cleveland, a city of 492,901 wtth 129 homtcides (one for every
3,800 reSidents), and Columbus. with 635,913 residents and 76 homictdes
(one for every 8,300 residents), have more killings.
Ctty officials in Youngstown cite a vartety of problems for the murder
rate there of about one slaying for every I ,400 people.
Youngstown police Chief Randall Wellington satd Tuesday the causes
of the homtcide rate include domestic violence, drugs and gangs. He said
final 1995 cnme figures provided by cities to !he FBI would' be the only

Free consumer
handbook is a must

New York's mayor tries to curb kamikaze cabbies

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Rust belt city leads state's murder rate

Domestic violence centers around desire for control
developed an mner rage that was
overwhelming.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

f

'"

PITISBURGH (AP)- Ltke the
wildcatters who drilled holes in !he
ground to become rich, thousands of
people are still searching for the fortune that poured from the Spindle!op
oil well near Beaumont, Texas, one
of the first major oil strikes iii the
counuy.
But Allegheny Co11nty Judge
Robert A. Kelly has decided !hat the
search for the multibillion-dollar
fortune doesn 'I lead to f\1ellon Bank
in Piusburgh.
Kelly has ruled lhal Mary Meadows Allen of Nancy, Ky., who claims
an inl~l'tll in alleged trusts of two

.,

'
.
great-uncles,
fatled
to prove that
Mellon "is, or ever was, involved in
any of the fiduciary transactions supported by her claim for relief. "
Allen claims to be an heir of
William and James Meadors, who
were born in Kenrucky more than
l 00 years ago and went 10 Texas,
where they struck it rich.
She charged in August that Mellon refused to administer two trusts,
allegedly carrying escrow accounts
in the names of "Meadors" and
"Medders."

But Ketly, of the Common Pleas
Court Orphans' Court Division, said
/

,,

Friday that Allen failed to prove the
extstence of the so-called trusts or
any trust assets.
He said a records search conducted by Mellon Bank failed to find
any hint of a "W.R. Medders Escrow
Account or a James R Meadors
Account."
Kelly dismissed a citation that
directed Mellon Bank to show cause
why it had no! produced a trust
agreement and administered the
estate.
Steve Dishart. Mellon's director
of corporaie cornmuniealions, said

Tuesday, "The action by the judge in
this case merely confirms Mellon
Bank's position. We hope that this
will put an end to this wasteful l•tigation."

At a hearmg m August, Allen presemed the testimony of another
prospective heir, Ann Helman. of
Rockfield, Ky., who supposedly
received a copy of a check from a
man in the Opryland Hotel in
Nashville, Tenn., in the fall of 1994.
The man was known only as
"Frank."

HIGH-RISE FIRE -A Columbus firelighter dumped a bucket
or water out or a residential high-rise Thesday. It took firefighters
about 30 minutes to contain the two-alarm blaze that started in the
tO-story apartment building after a 72-year-old man lit a cigarette
while wearing his oxygen mask. (AP)

Senior, smoking with mask
for oxygen on, causes fire
COLUMBUS (AP) - Firefight- h1s wheelchair," Ltddle said. "He
ers told a resident of a senior-citizens just needed a little help gettmg it
cent?' about the dangers of smoking hooked back up."
in bed. But about lO minutes later,
Hicks also was warned about the
the man's apartment caught fire dangers of smoking in bed.
after he Iii a cigarette while wearing
Firefighter Fran Cisco said Hicks
an oxygen mask.
had wid him he planned to keep
George Hicks suffered burns on smokmg desp1te hts breathing probhis face and was in critical conditton lems.
at Ohto State University Medtcal
"He said, 'I know I'm going to
Center Tuesda.y night, hospttal d1e, so I'm gomg to keep smoking. -.
spokesman Ken Phillips said.
I'm going to enjoy it wh1le I can,'"
Two Columbus firefighters who Cisco said. "He must have forgot _
work on an emergency medical (the mask was on) when he lit up." .
vehicle had visited Hicks about 10
The fire started about 2:15 p.m. .
minutes before hts room caught fire, on the mth noor of the I0-story . ·
Lt. Joe Liddle said. The 260-unit butldmg 10 the Short North neigh- .
senior citizen center is operated by borhood near the Ohio State campus.
the Columbus Metropolitan Housing The fire was contained about a halfAuthonly.
hour after firefighters m ived at the
"We wen! on a call about an ill scene.
person, but when we got there we
Two other building residents were ·
realized his oxygen tubing became .treated al the scene for smoke inhala- .
unhooked when it wrapped around It ton.

.. '

�·:: Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

.••

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 27, 199$:

j ~erbs ~elay release of held territories
lly AIDA CERKEZ

Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO. Bosma- Herzegov ina - Resisting rule by the Bosnian gov~ rn m ~ n t. Serbs are demanding more time to hand over the Sarajevo districts
they hold and repo rtedly burning houses as they leave .
The Bosni an army today warned that compromi sing wit h the Serbs on
a timctoble for returning their Sarajevo districts wou ld weaken NATO's missum .

Milll ary forces for both sides - the Serbs and Bosman government arc to leave some districts around Sarajevo by la te tonight. NATO offi cers '
havt.' rcportcJ good progress toward meeting that deadl ine.
Frenc h so ldiers we re mov ing in to zones separati ng the two sides. On~
• French soldier was slight ly wounded Tuesday when a li ght annorcd vehi ~ .. de ran over a land mine near Trn uvu. about 12 miks south of Sarajevo.
Maj. Will iam Pijpers, a spokesman for the NATO-led force oversee ing
:m agree ment to end 3-1/2 years of war in Bosma. said Serbs "arc burning·
houses as they go, rather than li ve under federati on rule ."
He said sketchy reports indicated several houses around Sarajevo were
'set abl aze ove rnight.

Sailor paints graphic
picture of alleged rape
NA HA, Okinawa (AP) - A U.S. Navy sailor acc used of' raping a
12-year-old schoolgirl told a Japanese court today th at two U.S.
Marines were willing accomplices Ill the altack.
Under questi oning, Navy Seaman Marcus Gill. 22. of Woodville,
Texas. painted so harrowing a p1cture of the rape that the translator
broke down and wept.
The atl&lt;ld outraged Japan and has sparked debate over whether
the sou thern island of Okinawa should be forced to host more than
half of the 47.000 U.S troops statiOned in the country.
In testimony a day earlie r, the two Marines - Pfc. Rodrico Harp.
21, of Griflin , Ga .. and Pfc. Kendnck Ledet, 20, of Wayc ross, Ga. tri ed to shi ft much olthe blame for the Sept. 4 attack to Gill.
The two Man nes depicted Gill as a violent . thrcmening bully who
intimidated them into grabbing the girl off the stree t and shoving her
into their rental car before she was dri ve n to a remote roadside and
raped.
Ledet and Harp have acknowledged help ing with the abducti on but
deny raping the girl. Gill today detai led the others' role m the attack
and sa id they were unfairl y painting him as the insti gator.
"Everything is pinpointed on me - they want tu take as lillie blame
as poss ible and put it all on me," Gill complained, saying the three
had plann ed the rape together.
"We discussed how we would go about abducting a woman. " he
said , addin g th at Ledet exclaimed "Let's do this 1" as they set off in
the car
The sail or said it was Harp who spotted the girl going into a stationery store. and that Ledet suggested ambushing her when she came
out. Gill also said the two Marines bound the gi rl with tape and pulled
her shorts and underwear down to her ankles.
The sail or said when he himself had fini shed raping the girl Ledet
asked him , '' How was she?'j:J ill said Ledet then made a remark suggest ing that the girl had enJoyed it.
As Gill recounted that exc hange, and described how the girl was
bleeding and unconscious at that point, the translator began weeping.
Tes timony was halted momentarily while she regained her composure.

The Bosnian anny First Corps said houses were burned in Scrb-hcld districts around the Sarajevo airport, southwest of the city.
At a meetin g Tuesday with the NATO commander, U.S. Adm . Le ighton
Smith, at their headquarters in Pale southeast of Sarajevo, Bosnian Serb leaders asked for more time before handing over their diStricts around Sarajevo, which they must do under the agreement signed Dec. 14 in Paris. They
warned Smith that the success of hi s peace mission might hinge on such an
ex tensiOn.
The demands re llcctcd Bos nian Serb unhappiness with the peace agreement negotiated on their behalf hy Se rbian Pres ident Siobodan Mil osc v1c.
Smi th said he made no prtlllllscs hut woul d consider their demand.
Bosni;m army offi cers warned tim if NATO started compromi sin g w1th
the Serbs after only a week of the Western alliance's year-lung peace enforcement mi ss ion, it would soon find itself in the same predicament as the compromised U.N. peacekeeping mi sSion it repl aced.
Momcdo Krajisnik. a senior Bosnian Serb official who met with Smith.
indic ated many of the tens of thousands of people li ving in Serb-held districts of the capital and suburbs may leave rather than submit to rule by the
government of the Muslim-Croat ICdcration .

(lime Stone low Rein)

Bosnian Serb officials appear to be using that threat to 'try to wrest concessions out of the new NATO mission. Although Krajisni k did not specify what might happen if thousands started to flee, Serb anger could cause
some to try to slow down or sabotage the agreement.
" We certainly tried to explain that the key to the implementation of the
ag reement lies in Sarajevo," Krajisnik said. "We should find a good solution for Sarajevo and remove the main obstacle to the agreement.
"We must do something he fore the undes irable consequence occurs."
Krajisnik added .
The peace "grecmcnl spells outdcadlines for the transfer of authority over
Se rh-hcld distric ts" ' SaraJeV&lt;J, hc gmning Jan. 19 and concluding two months
later.
U.N . officials ha ve hinted in the past that the deadline for allowing the
Bosnian army and police into those di stricts could be delayed.
Smith has the authont y to ex tend the deadline until the end of the NATO
mandate ne xt Deccmhcr, hut he did not say. whether he would do so.
"I made no other commitment hut to take their request and try and ensure
thai I have full apprec iation of the problem, and seek counsel," Smith said.

WICKS
HAULING
· (Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992- 3470

'

Poor's 500-stock index gained 2.34
to 6 14.30.
The Nasdaq co mposite index was
2.48 points higher at I ,049.37 while
the American Stoc k Exchange market value Index rose 2.22 to 543.77.
The Amex surpassed another volume mil es tone Tuesd ay. The
exchange broke through the 5 bil lion-share mark for 1995, its first
time above that amount , and fini shed
the day at 5 005 billion shares. Back
in November. the exchange broke its
previous al l-time volume record of
4.5 billi on shares set in 1993.
The stock market has risen m the
final wee k of the year in 32 of the
past 42 years , reports Yale Hirsch's
Stock Traders Almanac . The trend .
dubbed the Santa Clause effec t. continued Tuesday.
" You· ve got steady buying in the

blue chips," said Raben Stovall ,
president of Stovall -Twenty- First
Adv isers in New York. "Institutions
are still buying some of the winners
of 1995 as window trimming to
make their li sts look a little better."
Money managers often want to be
see n has holding favored stocks
when they publ1 sh year-end reports
to their clients.
·
Mary Farrell, investment strategist at PaineWebber Inc. in New
York . saw buying in smaller stocks
as well , but noted the extremely light
volume. " It 's a good cheer rally. The
few peopl e doing any trading seem
to be in a reasonably positi ve state of
mind."
With the Washington budget
negoti ations in recess. the fight
between Democrats and Republicans
over how lo cut the defi cit had little

challenge the HM O hierarchy. " It is
not an uncommon event . (but) usually you' ll find the HMOs give other r easo ns." said Lewe rs.
Hi s comments arc in res ponse ·[o
US Healthcare ·s recent dec ision to
drop from its pl an a Harvard doctor
who publicly accused the HMO of
putting fin ancial consideration s into
the med1ca l dec ision-makin g
process. US Heal thcarc said the doctor was cut for bus1ness reasons.

effect Tuesday. Shifting sentiment
over the budget pushed the market
around last week.
Shares of the regional telephone
companies rose as Congressional
negotiators working on a telecommunications refonn bill made it easier for the Baby Bells to market local
and long distance telephone services
together. Nynex rose I 5/8 to 51 3/4
while Bell Atlantic gained I 1/4 to 66
7/8. Meanwhile AT&amp;:f, which stands
to lose from increased competition,
feU I 3/8 to 64 5/8.
Among Dow industrial stocks, ·
Coca Cola, which fell eight points in
the previous eight trading days. •
rebounded 2 5/8 to 74 5/8. The company last week made disappointing
global sales projections. Drugmaker
Merck &amp; Co. gained I 5/8 to 66 5/8.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.
Card of Thanks
The family of Art
Thomas, husband of
Leslie &amp; son-In law of
Don . &amp; VIvian May
would like to thank
friends &amp; especially
the
Big
Bend
Cloggers for their
support during our
recent lost.
The Family of
Leslie Thomas

patient's advocate," said Lewers.
Patients shouldn 't wonder if the
doctor is " working for me or is the
physic ian working for someone

A grow ing num ber of managed
care organ izat ions have clauses in
th eir contracts barring doc tors from
saying things that might shake a
patient 's confide nce in the health
pl an.
Some doctors say that mean s
they capnot tell a pat ient about treatment s the hea lth pl an rejects as
ex perimental or too expensive.
"The physic1an has to be the

e lse?,.

For Lewers. the soluti on was to
cross out the clause before signing
his HMO contrac t.
But Donald White of the Group
Health Association of America disagreed.

Your

LOST 12-24-95
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·. By TRUDY TYNAN
· Associated Press Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) : When a blizzard of red tape and
: excuses left pedestrians knee-deep in
· snow on Memorial Bridge. Ric hard
: Sorcinelli did what three govern: ments couldn't accomplish: He
. plowed the sidewalk.
As local and state offi cial s quib· bled last week over who was responsible for clearing a month 's snow
from the walkway, Sorcinelli took
; pity on the people who crofs the
; bridge to and from downtown . He
· got on his plow-equipped all-terrain
·
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.
"He took over where we failed ...
· said Patrick Hourihan. chairman of
: West Springtleld's Board of Select: men. "I don't know him. but I would
: l'.ke to shake h'ts h.an d ."
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Sorcinelli , a painting and wallpa·
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• Aw Conc!tion
· Tit Steenng
•Onvels Side Alf Bag •C1uise Cooimt
· 4 Wheel
·Custom Ckl~ Split
Anti-lock Brakes
Bench Sea~
lsave'2947l

•Orivet ~de Ait Bag
· AnH ock Bral&lt;es
·A" Gomltoo

• Automatic Overdrive

· VtS!a Bay Windows
· Power Steer1ng
• Power Brakes

• Power Windows

· Power locks
• Tilt Steering
· Cruise Gonl1~
· AM/FM CasseHe
• 4 Captain Cha~rs

• lndirecl ughting
• P1emium Wood Pig.
• Full Conversion
• Aluminum Running Boards

•loaded!

• Sola/Bed

1

~st Virginia's #I

ChevY, Olds,

Pontiac, Buick, Gao an~·
Cuslom Van Oeoler.

SalE Price

$18,450
•Ai1Condition
· Automatic
• Ou~ Aiillag
• 4 Wheel Ant&gt;lock
Brakes
• Power Steering ·

Save •1s3o

· Powe1Brakes
· Powe1 OoOi locks

• Rear Defogger
· Custom C~th tmelio&lt;

• Power Windows

· Styled Wl'&lt;els
•loOOed!

•AMFM CassaHe
•TiH Steering

1

TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
344-5947.422-0756

StepBumpet
· Aktminum Wheels
• Well Equilped'

lisl- ...... " '. $22,460
()pOOn Pig. Dis&lt;xluti . • 1890
Tom Podoolliml'l .. · !1,640

Saie Price

BRAND NEW '96 BUICK REGAL SEDAN

P~ckage

•CllomeRear

No Doc Fees. Otkvefed'

u~ Price
.. .. 1211280
Tom Pedoo 0"""" .. · $I ,830

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G-20 3/4 TON
CONVERSION VAN

•Deep Tried Glass
•Chrome Appea"""'

$19,950
BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY BLAZER 2DOOR 4x4
· Power Steering • Custom Cloth lnleriOP
· Power Brakes • Rea1 locking
• AM/FM Stereo DiHerennal
• Delay WipeiS
• Well Equipped!
·Console

• 4x4

· Ai1 Gond~on

• 4300 Vortec V·6
Power

•Onver side Airbag
• 4 Wh .. lAnti-lock
Brakes

UP.TO•DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MORElli

BISSELL BUILDERS~ INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

1·900·378·1800
Elt. 3140

614-992-7643

Touch tone phone
required.
Serv·U (614) 645-8434
tV1W1

'

ANTIQUE

STAR GUITAR

AUCTION

$300&amp;up
Lessons on
Plano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
69 N. Locust St.
Cheshlre,Oh.
614-367-0302
Roger Walker

Located at the auction center on Rt. 33 In
Mason W.VA.
FURNITURE
60" Roll top desk raised panels full interior (32
drawers) . Cherry 12 tin Sheraton pie safe. lg curved
glass china cabinet, oak curved glass ch ina w/claw
feet, beautiful 3 pc. parlor suite (carved roses). fancy
oak secretary combo. Wardrobe O.F. carved to max
must. see!!!. oak curved glass secretary (Wing Griffin) ,
9 pc. Walnut D.R. suite, 12 tin pie safe, 16 pane corner
cupboard. barn shape kitchen cupboard, walnul
Queen Ann china cabinet. oak ice box porcelain lined.
fancy oak wardrobe, several oak high boys w/mirrors,
nice oak hotel wash stand, lg . oak Larkin desk
(unusual), Viet. walnut dresser &amp; matching wash
stand. round oak table 44", lg. oak claw foot library
table, spool turned high poster bed, 2 pc. lg. poster
B.A. suitew/carving. tall oak fancy hall seat. Mission
(Life nme) round oak table 5 leaves matching buffet
rope turning O.F., custom Chippendale sofa &amp; chair,
leaded glass front secretary. Viet. Hall Tree,
Chippendale Mah . secretary, jelly cupboard, oak
princess dresser, 2 pc . step back cupboard, viet.
Walnut dresser &amp; others, Viet. marble top wash stand,
fancy Duncan Phyfe sofa, round &amp; square oak tables.
Sheraton 1 drawer night stand, early chest, oak
quarter sawn partners desk, lg. claw &amp; ball table. stack
bookcase, oak wardrobe, viet. love seat. press back
rockers. oak mantel w/fluted columns. 6 mah. Duncan
Phyfe chairs, oak show case, lg. blanket chest, dentist
cabinet w/gas burner, viet. sofa &amp; more.
GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
65 pc. American Fostoria-tumblers-saucers-dinner
plates-bowl-planer-goblets &amp; others, 80 oz. flat bottom
pitcher w/ice lip, rare Nakara Power 30X, Haviland
China, Depression glass, Heisey Relish. Aunt Jemima
Cookie Jar, Jumbo peanut jars 2 w/original lids,
Aladdin lamps, clocks. Indian artifacts early Hammer &amp;
Hatchet, Farmer Bank &amp; Saving 1953 Chevy Money
Bank. cast iron skillets. gray granite. blue swirl granite.
crocks. stone jars, old tools &amp; More.
AUTOMOBILE WILL BE SOLD AT 12:00 NOON
1977 Cadillac-Eidorado-Biarritz, loaded, 2 DR., Black
w/Biack leather interior, 97,000 miles, Garage keptll
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Lg . selection of quality
antique furniture &amp; collectibles. Most are ready for your
home or shop. Partial listing more still com1ng in .
Come &amp; spend the day with us!!
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUaiON CO.

Tuesday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pin

Sunday: Noon - "

' Taxes. Taos. Title Fees edr.t. Rebate irl::luded In sale pnce ol new vtl1iclt ~sltcl where applicable. On apptov&amp;d credit Nol re$p01lsible fQr typograptt~~,;al erriJrs.

CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY

•

'

V121921tfn

MASON, .WV. Res . - 773-5785
BUSINESS: 304·773-5447
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.
Licensed and Bonded in Ohio &amp;,
West Virginia #66
Terms: Cash or Check with Positive Identification
NO EXCEPTIONS!!! Out of State buyers must have a
· current bank letter of credit.

GUITARS

J

~ 6~
~

grateful walkers and drivers have
h
jammed his answering machine wit
messages of thanks and praise. Some
even suggested he run for office .
" He's got my thanks, for sure,"
Sal.d M1'chael Weltz, walk1'ng across
th'e 1.456-f.oot br,·dge 'Tuesday.
Weltz, who works in downtown
Springfield, said the snow-clogged
sidewalks had forced him to abandon
his lunchtime hikes over the fourlane bridge between Springfield and
West Springfield.
" People say you can 't change the
world, but it 's amazing what this has
produced," Sorcinelli said .
Sorc1'nelli . who lives in West
Springfield, said he became increasingly upset at seeing pedestrians
struggle through the drifts or skitter
on the icy edges of the traffic lanes
as Dece mber storm foll
. owed
December storm . The City has
recCI ved more than 26 mches of

snow this month.
II d
When he ca e government
offices to ask why the sidewalks had
not been plowed, everyone pointed
the finger at someone else.
h · f s · fi ld d
T e City 0 pnng le ail town
f w S · f' ld 1 d 't
o est
h 'dprmgThle no
t te ' 'dwasth a
state " ge.
e sa e sat
e
municipalities were responsibl e for
the sidewalks.
d be
d
·
The bridge ha
en un er repair
for the past four year.;. Before the
repair work closed two or more
lanes, the bridge had carried about 20
perc ent of the vehicle traffic into the
city of 160,000 peopl e as well as the
b lk 0 f 1h · ,
lk
u
e City s wa ers.
During the repair project. the
footpaths apparently were ~owed by
the contractors, who needed them
clear for their workers.
But the repairs were finished just
before Thanksgiving, and the snow
became someone else's responsibil1ty Th e questiOn : whose.?

School of Medicine in Worcester,
Mass. , said the study points out a
need for everyone to learn how to
administer CPR.
"You're just giving the victim the
best shot," Paraskos said. " If you
learn how to do it correctly, you're
giving them the best shot possible."
In Gallagher's study, 4.6 percent
of those who were given properly
administered CPR survived to be
sent home eventually from the hospital. Of those given improperly
doric CPR, just 1.4 percent survived.
CPR was judged to have been
done improperly if the breathing and
chest compressions were not administered according to American Heart
Association guidelines.

Siding, PorcllesD eck.&lt;, Home
lmprovenumts,
R emodeling,
Add-On Roofirrg.
S atisfaction
Guaranteed
Bill Doerfer
(61 4 ) 992-297·9 '

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

The

s,

water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron. PH.
Please call Rnir~Soft at 992·4472 or 1-800-606·3313
to set u your free water analysis. 1015ttl'n

Need a Photographer for
JO¥r Special Octasion?
• Weddings/Receptions
• Couples

J .E. DIDDLE OWNER

949·2512

Y

Cheaper Rates

BINGO

GUN .SHOOTS

··

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

SAT., 6:30 P.M.

$20.00/HR

12 Guage
Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building

Reasonable pri ces

Call 992· 7747
after 4 pm during weekdays
(Anyt1me on weekends)

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, IN C.

(Engagemenl PicrJ

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine. Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594·2008 NIGHT

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

9127195 ttn

WATKINS

Laurel Limousine Service

Racine American
Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring ad for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685
1112819511

B . D. CUNS'TIWCTION

Du lribuletl by

11124105/1 mo.

•Reunions
• Anniversaries
• Groups
• Family

Free Estimate•
Qualit y Work

Water
~ Tre~tment
Equ1pment

mo

FREE
Pick-Up discarded
washers, dryers, hot
water tanks, stoves,
furnaces, and any
metal material.
Call 992-4025
between 8 am,- 8 pm
Mon thru Sat.

"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

HARtwELL.

BOUSE

REG. HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30
Frt-Sat. 10-4:30
Closed
Thurs. &amp; Sun.
102 East Main
Pomeroy
992-7696
12123/1 mo

Walar Ceadltlulng
IIIII I Ianiei
Bob Davie
•Softeners •FIItera
oReverae Osmosis
441H1721
9804 St Rt 7So., G&amp;lllpotl~ .
Ad

PRODUCTS

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
Safe &amp; Reliable Night Out on the Town
Owned.
Service wilh
Operated by

(Stock up on your
holiday baking

~.;~;.ry (614) 992•4279 Jot~~~~~~&amp;
33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

0

12/11111

supplies)

614·949·3027

1112919511 mo..pd.

ftllll.

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

One·Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stous
611\-992-6223
, Free Estimates

Umestone &amp; Grave~ :
Septic Systems, . :
Trailer &amp; House Sites~

Insurance Work Welcome

Reasonable Rates

.'--',,-.......~
. •.
--

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

.

Joe N. Sayre

·-

-......~

. ~

LUNCH

over six months and found that 662
By ERIC FIDLEit
the patients were given CPR by a.
of
Associated Press Writer
bystander. He found that tn 357 cas·
CHICAGO (AP) - Bystander.;
who attempted CPR on cardiac- es the CPR wasn't done properly,
arrest victims got it wrong more than and these patients' rate of survival
was one-third that of people gtven
half the time, reducing patients '
.already slim chances of survival, a proper CPR .
The chances of surviving cardiac
:study found .
·
arrest
are generally slim but vary
Improperly .administered cargreatly
depending on such factors as
.diopulmonary resuscitation "does
available
hospitals and the traffic
:not seem to be any better than no
encountered
by ambulances.
·CPR," said Dr. John Gallagher of the
buys
the patient time until
CPR
:Alben Einstein College of Medic.ine
paramedics
can
get there with a
jn New York City.
which
delivers an elecdefibrillator,
: The study was publi shed in
tr.
i
cal
shock
to
restart
the heart.
·Wednesday 's issue ofThe Journal of
Dr.
John
A.
Paraskos,
a professor
:the American Medical Association.
at
the
University
of
Massachusetts,
.: Gallagher looked at 2,071 cases
oof cardiac arrest in New Yof!c City

1Save 12530I

Call
614-949-2512

( No Sunday Calls)

mo.

~ .::;' /;'
- -. · ··
'

SAYRE TRUCKING

'

614-742-2138 ' .
110\\'\IW
E\C.\\ .\TI\1,

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 4Sn1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.

Home Sites, Land ·
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveway$,
Trucking· Limeston&lt;,:
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

For Free estimate call 949·2512

REASONABLE RATES

992-:~a:~a

IIIMin

-

MODERN SANITATION

NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal · Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

' !
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios '
Reasonable
Insurers· Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 99~·
4405
For Free Estimates
I

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

HAPPY

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418

4113195·
-

,~~~,,~

BRAMHIINC.

Wrecker Service

(614) 384·6212
Lump &amp; Stoker

STATE RT. 124
WELLSTON , OHIO

Car/Heavy Trtck

Hours :
7·4 Mon. th ru Sat.
Heat Vouchers Accepted
We Will Deli ver
2 Ton ~linimun1
Call lor Quote

Repair

: Study: Bystanders who attempted
CPR got it wrong half the time

,.

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

'

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

1/2111n

:Somebody had to: Volunteer plows
:bridge sidewalk while pols quibble

lisl Price .
.. . . $11,550
FactOPY Retlale .. ...· $300
OJ1jon Pkg. D"""' . -$761
GMAC 1st Time Buyer

$9,450

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

SATURDAY, DEC. 30, 1995
10:00 A••M.

HMO physicians become bound to plan's 'gag rule'
By DOUG LEVY
USA TODAY
An American Medical Association leader said physicians are ethically bound to ignore so-called "'gag
rules" that limit what doc tors in
managed care plans can tell their
patients.
AMA trustee Ted Lewers said
HMOs often drop doctors who tell
their patients too much about diagnostic or treatment options or whc

Cuetom Building l Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
614 992-2753

YOUNI'S
CUHNTER SERVICE

·,-

Stock market rises, but effect not felt by all
By STEVE SAKSON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Blue ch1p stoc ks
got a boost from traditional year-end
buyi ng Tuesday and the stock market rose. but not everyone got the
benefits of the Santa Claus effect.
Technology shares were mixed.
Retail ers headed downward as sales
ligures from the mostly depressing
Christmas season filtered in.
The Dow Jones industrial average
rose 12.29 points to close at
5.110 26.
Advancing issues outnumbered
decl incrs by about 9 to 8 on the New
York Stoc k Exc hange.
Big Board volume totaled a light
217.04 million shares as of 4 p.m.,
down from Friday's 289.61 million.
The NYSE's composite index
rose I .29 to 327.64. The Standard &amp;

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

(614) 992-6643
23 Cottage Drive
Middleport, Oh. 45760
1VIIH1 mo.

.

END YOUR
LONELINESS NOW!!!
There is someone for
everyone. Whatever
your preference
~~~~===~~ Nationwide or Right Next
;;:
Door. Don't Waste
Another Minute
Call Nowlll
'· "'~~-......

and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

992·2269

,..;~,

To Spy the Best 8~ys In ·
the Classi(1eds.

Stop &amp; Compare •
FREE ESTIMATES '
985-4473
7f&lt;2/94

Bill Slack

Ext. 4375
$2.99 per min. Must be 18 yiS.

You Don't Have To Look (or

ROBERT BISSELl.
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Shrubs Shaped

"

Don't get st111g by high prices!
Shop rite classified section

.

'

Light Hauling,

Touch-tone Phone Required
SePV.U (619) 645-9434

L_:=:!:?:t~~

factory Choke Only

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

1·900-255-5454

1VIIII1

RACINE
. GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots ·
Sun 1 pm
12 gauge

·-· · -

-

..

-

�f

~ednesday, December 27, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 15

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

30

ALDER

BEATTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Announcements

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

0

Lookmg tor old ptctures taken at

C Claybank' s Speedway Pomeroy, to make copt e s ot, call 614

0

0

0
(J

992-7349
Giveaway

40

1986 Grandville 14X70 2 Bed rooms, Ftreplace, Total Gas Underpmning, . 16k12
Deck.
$11 ,500, 614·367-0429.

0

7 Yea r Old Coci'ler Spantel To
Good Home, Ha s Papers, Ne u -

0

0

Li mtted Oflerl 1996 doublewtde
3br, 2bath, $1799 down , $275i
month Free deltvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nttro
304-755-5885.

0

0

wv

0

tered , 6 14 - 44 6 - 7221 , 6 14 -2 45 -

5660

0

Alaska n Shep hard ma le, l on g
han , whtte, 4m os old, go od w1
chtldren . well tra tned, good home
only 304-675 4650

Year end sale. Save $1,000 on all
new smg le section homes in
stock lncludtng several 1996
models . See at Uountain State
Homes, Pt Pleasant, WIJ 304675-1400.

0

Sola &amp; 2 cnatrs, 614 -446-3654

60

330

Lost and Found

Found - 4 month old female Beagle pu ppy, 33993 Collerrll Ad
area, Pomeroy, Oh., owner cla1m

1'1 27
"Maybe I need to lose

3041
LoSI

2 bo&lt;e s w' :h , '' " heo

992-5698or6
Cha ir S In Che14-742-2793
ster area , call 614

=:!:---------1
Pomeroy1

Ch ild Care Provtder In My Home
2 -3 Days Per Week, For 2 Km:
dergard en Aged Children, Addison Area, 614 -367-7608, Even ~ngs, Or 614-367- 7132 Days

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Al l Yard Sale s Mu st Be Pa1d In
Adva nc e Deadlin e 1 OOpm the
day before the ad 1s to run. Sun day ed1110n- 1 OOpm Fnday, Mon·
day edlllon 10.00a m 5alurday

Cosmetolog is t Needed Gaur anteed Wages . Full And Part Time Help Wanted, 614 -4467267

Mov1ng sale: Ivory, mauve &amp; blue
sofa &amp; love seat , thr ee gla ss/
wood accent ta bles. 2 table
lamps, 9 p1 ece d1nmg room su1 te,
t:&gt;unk beds wl dres ser, humtdtller,
all 1n very good condit1on , ca ll
614-992-3244

OniJe' s to transport cars to &amp;
!rom auctions, ca\16 1-4-992-2806

Wanted To Do

&amp; Acreage

half down, 61&lt;-949-2025.

Blown Insulation. Insurance, Ex pennce, References , Reasonable
Rate s, Call For Free Estimates
614 -245-5755
Chns11an CNA W1tl Care For Elderly In Thetr Non -Smok tng
Home, Days Call 614-446-4525
Do You Need A Helpmg Hand
With Housework, Grocery's
Shoppmg, Etc. Call Magg1e At
61 4--4-46-2155
General Marntenance. Pa1nttng,
Yard Work Wmdcws Washed
Gutters Cleaned l1gh1 Haul mg.
Commertcal, Res1dent1al Steve
61 4-388-0429.
.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mrll JUSI call
314 -675-1957.
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleantng Servtcedusung, mopptng, windows and
more Complete serv1ce or touch·
ups References on request call
Terry at 614 -992 -4232 or
992-4451

614-

Sun Valley Nursery School.
Childcare M-F 6am-5·30pm Ages
2-K, Young School Age During
Summer 3 Days per Week Minimum614-446-3657.
Wtll .do s1tbng w/elderly, evemngs
or mghts at your house or hospi1al. 304-675-7541
Would like To Clean Homes Anytime, 614 446-8124.

Sale

FuU -Tirne ActiVItieS ASSIStant For
Alzhetmer Umt AI Scen1c Htlls
N C Appli catiOn Accepted Thru
12129195., Scene Hills, 31 1 Buckndge Road, Bidwell, Oi 45614.
Home Typ1sts, PC users needed
$45,000 mcome potentral Call 1600-513·4343 Ext B-9368

Rtck Pearson Auction Comp any
full 11me auction eer, comp le te
serv1 ce
L1censed
auct1on
#66.0h1o &amp; Wesl Vtrg1n1a . 304
773-5765 Or 304 -773-544 7

Matur e, ~espon s 1ble Women
Wll h Transpona t1on To Clean
House. Between 5 &amp; 9 PM 6t4 -4-46-0204.

Wanted to Buy

Need 2 Exp erienced Tel ephone
Ta lker s Mu st Have Clear Deep
S peakmg Vo1 cc Pa1d 1st Wee k
614-446-9905

Ant1qu es, collectables, esta tes ,
R1ve rr ne Antt ques, Rus s Moor e.
owner, 614-992-2526
Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks , 198 7 Models Or Newer
Sml!h Butc~ Pontrac 1900 Ea s t ~
ern Avenue, Gat11pol1s

J &amp; D's Auto Parts 8uy mg sal ..,.age 1Jeh1cle s Selling pa ns 304
773-5033
Top Prtces Patd Old U S Co1ns.
SIIIJe f, Gold, Oramond s, Al l Ol d
Collectibles, Paperw e1gh1 s Etc
M T S Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galhpol1s, 614-446-2842

ROOFERS/LABORERS needed '"
Columbu s area . Work available
every day. weather perm11!1ng
We ekend s opt1on al Must have
rel1able lransportauon Travel and
wor k partner a plu s For more In formatiOn call 61 4-529-0303 between 6pm-1Opm

Used furnitur e- an ttque s. one
p1ec e or complete estales, Osby
Marun, 614-992-744 1
Wanled io Bu y L1!11e T1kes Toys,
614-245--5887

Seekmg Reg1stered long term
ca re Nur stng Assistants for long
ter m care fac11 1ty tor part-ltme,
var1able shtll s Po1nt Pleasant
Nurs1ng &amp; Rehabtlilallon Center
State Route 62. Route 1, Box 32e'
Po1nt Plea sant. WV 25550 EOE'
A Glenmark Assoctates Facility

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Help Wanted

St yl1 s1 Wa nted , Full or "Part Trme .
$35,000 IYR INCOME Po1en11a1 Salary, CommiSSIOn, Call Carol At
Readtng Books Toll Free {1) 800614-446 -8922 Fmest Styling Sa896-9778 Ext R-2814 For Oeta1 ls
lon

210

Business

Small, unfurmshed, two bedroom
house With basement near
Racme, no pe ts, $300 plus utilities, 61 4-949-2587
Unfurmshed two bedroom house
mce and clean, deposit required:
no 1n•de pe1s, 614-992-3090.
Wetzgal Street, Pomeroy WID
$350/Mo. Depos11, 513-922-0294. '
420

Mobile Homes

2 Mobtle Homes On McCormick
Road, 2 Bedrooms. 614 -4469669

N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le home rn
M1d&lt;lepor1, Oh , 614-992-5858
N1ce 2 Bedroom Mobrle Home For
Renl, 8 Miles Ou1 Sta le Rou1e
218, Gall1pohs, $210/Mo ..- De postt, References, We Allow Pets!
614 -446-11172, 614-256-6251
All real estate advertiSirYJ 1n
rhls newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whrch makes •t illega l
to advert1se ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
se.11 tamflrat status or national
or1gln, or any Intention to
make any suCh preference,
Rmltatlon or discrimination.•

Two and three bedroom mobile
homes. s1ar11ng at $240-$300.
sewer, water and trash included,
614-992-2167.

Thls newspaper wm not
knoW11ngly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which Is In violation of tne law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwetlmgs
advertised in this newspaper
are avallable on an eQua l
opportunity basis.

7pm

Two bedroom tra1ler for rent, call
614-992-2979 after 6pm
440

320

for sale
Price Buster\ New 14 x70, 2 or
1br Only $995 down, $19&amp;mon1h.
f ree delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes. Nitro WV. 304755 -5865
Save $1 ,ooo. Special reducllon
on new 1906 Commodore 16x80
3bedroom, 2ba tha. Best buy i~
town . mcludes deltvery &amp; set up
Mountain State Homes, Pt Pleasant, 'lfV. 3&gt;4-675-1400.
Spec1al year end radu c!lon
28x60 Brookwood dtaplay, 3bed·
room, 2baths, den wllireplace. 2x6
walls Insulated windows, plush
carpet, oak cabinets . Puce re duc:;ed $4,000. Mountain State
Homes, Pt Pleasant, WV 304 675-1400.
Year end sale. 28x60 Henderson
~bedroom, 2baths, great room
fireplace, plush carpet. Big reduction lor qu tck sale, reduced
$5,000. Moun1a1n Stale Homes, P1
Pleasanl, WV. 304-675-1400.

wi

Do ou "--

?l-l•ff''"''"?

0

1995 Chev Ptck-Up 1500 Senes·
Long Bed V-6, Auto, 4,000 Mtles,:
$14,900. 614-388·9102.
730

Newly redecoraled , m ea clea n
2be&lt;lroom ground floor, wtd hooKup Reference s Depo s1 1 No pets
304-675 51 62
Ntce one bedroom apartment for
rent 1n Pt Pl easant, 614 -99 25858

,,.,,

N1c e two bedroom apartment 1n
F\:lm91'oy 614 -992-5858
On e bedroom fu r nished apa rt -

i-At!/21.1.,

Wfi?I~T

C 1995 by NEA. Inc

Vans

EAST
•AK103

wK 5 2
t A 5 3 2

llo8 5
SOUTH

"9
lflO 7 6
tKQJI0874
11oK 10

&amp; 4-WDs

'78 F-250 Ranger 4x4 . 4 spee{j ~
transmiss ion, 33• BF Goodnctl ,
Mud Terrain !Ires, Delta tool boll '
lor the Ded, '70 Ford Super Ca.h ;
lor parts, $3000 OBO or trade IOf 4
small car or truck of eqlJal valuE~;, 1
614 -742-2050
'·

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

I

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;

LIVESTOCK

!

Apartments

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lcr rent - week or month
Startmg a1 $120tmo. Galha Hotel
6 14-446·9500
Sleepl ng rooms W1th cook tng
Also lra tler space on nver All
hook -ups . Call after 2 ·00 p m ,
304-773-5651 , t..tasqn WV
460

Space for Rent

Tra1ler Space For Rent. OJ Whne
Rd , $100/ Month, Day s 614 -4464111 Evenings 614·446-7157
MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

3pc ltvingroom suite $500. Console lloor model TV, hke new,
$200. 304-6 75-1446
Appliance s
Recond1t1oned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Rehi grators 90 Day Guaranleel
French Ci ty Maytag, 614 -446 7795
Automallc Kelv~nator Otshwasher
2 Years Old, White &amp; Black:
St75, Magtc Chef Etectnc Range,
Not Very Old. White With Black
Front, $145, 614-379- 9061.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa sher s, dry er s, refngerators ,
range s Skaggs Appliances, 76
V1ne Street Call 614 -446- 7398,
1 800 -499-3499
lAYNE'S FURN1TURE
Complete home furn1 sh1ngs.
Hours Mon -Sat, 9-5 614 -446 0322. 3 mtles out Bulavtlle P1ke
Free Delwery

'

PICKENS FURNITURE
New /Used
______3.:..04.·6
.:_75- 1450
Grey Used Sola Wllh A Wall RE clmer, Rocker Reclrner &amp; Lave
Seat61-4-446 -1171
VI"RA FURNITURE
614-4-46-3158
Ouahty Household Furniture And
Appltances. Great Deals On
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WN
And layaway Also Avatlable.
Free Delivery W1tt11n 25 Mtles

1

WI-IAT I DON T UNDERSTAND
IS ~OW VOU CAN FLV
AROUND UP nlERE WITHOUT
BUMPING INTO ANOTJ.IER 61RD..

NO, I REALIZE YOU 1 ~E
NOT

(OMt TO ttiM vJt-10 ...

m

t

l&gt;OCTOtl
Efl.NifS

, •• IS 01'1 A
MAIL.II'IG
L.IST!

UPPATfP

P,OV~#tBS

...

••

BORN LOSER

..

f\( KNOW~ ['fA.

WIT\\OUT OCI~~D

....

LE.~VING TODI\Y I

lD? WI-\1\TEVER
~1\111\ ?'

East

Pass

lllo

3 11o

5.

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

I t
3•
Db I

Straight into the deal today. Against
five diamonds doubled, West Jed the
club queen. Declarer won m hand with
the king and played the diamond king.
Aller winnmg with the ace. how should
East defend'
South, who couldn ' t bid diamonds
naturally on the first round after East's
opening in th e suit, overbid slightly
with five diamonds . However, the club
king looked like a useful card.
East was Jeremy Flint. the former
bridge columnist for The Times in
London . He wrote, "Drowsily, I cashed
the spade king " At that pomt, the de fense was finished Declarer would'\vin
whatever Flint played ne&lt;t lruffing a
spade continualion , of course) , draw
trumps and run dummy's clubs, aided
by the help!ul 2-2 break.
Flint admitted to thinking that if
South had only one club, the contract
was sure to fail. But he didn't consider
how to defend if South had two clubs.
Then , the only chance was to strand d eclarer in the dummy with a heart
switch at trick three. Having no quick
hand entry, declarer couldn' t immediately draw trumps and run the clubs .
He would have to lead a major, but then
. the defenders could take three tricks:
one spade. one heart and one diamond
Traditionally, lop bridge players are
late risers . A game that starts before
two or three in the afternoon is greeted
with dismay. This deal took place at tO
in the morning, and Flint mentioned
that he liked to delude himself that he
would have found the defense latP• in
the day.

Phillip Alder 's book , " Get
Smarter at Bridge," is avmlable,
autographed upon request , (or
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
Hts., NY 11577-{)169.

28
29
31
34

river
35
37
38
40

Bases
Unrelined
Legal matter
Uses a
parachute
41 Newspaper

notice

42 Cost a ballot
43 Celestial
bear
44 Plateau
45 Adored one
46 Emerald Isle
47 Woodwind

Instrument
49 Cui

CELEBRITY CIPHER
c

by

.

Luis Campos

elebrity Cipher cryptograms are crealed from quola110lls b famous
Each lener llllhe cipher stands lor another TJ:R , cJ Pl&lt;ll&gt; le. pasl and present
uuay S U9 0 IJqUB IS C

'T 'B K
StY

HTVDIBKYKH
YKJYKR,

VCW."

T'P

PCATVRI

CYK

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DMTOHYKA.'

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ACBCYYI .

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HY.

VKZVV.

PREdVIOU~ SOLUTION : _"Everybody (1n the NBA) is just a pulled ligamen1 from
me 10enty. - (Detro11 P1s1on coach) Doug Colt1ns.

'::~:~:~' S©\l(\)A-~~tfss
0
letters
the

GAMI

Rearrange
of
four scrombled words below to form four wo,ds

I

PENWHE

iRGYM

I~----..:1~P:......-.1

I

..:,.._...jl .,

r------------~m
•

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~~"'~'
I
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• ••

My fnend came home from
the gym and got on her bath room scale "Alii want in life"

8

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBtf lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

r

III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'ttlURE MY SISTEk! .

CAAE. A&amp;OLIT '1'0\R

Avenue· Droop • Moody - Gently - PRETEND

VIELL-8EING!

Overheard in a book signing line:

STRIKE ABLOW IN THE ~R ON
HIGH PR/CfS. SHOP Tl-£ CLASSFIED$.

IWEDNESDAY
ROBOTMAN

are romantically
perfecl for you . Mail $2 .75 to Malchmaker, clo this newspaper, P 0 . Box
1758, Murray Hill Slation, New York, NY
10156.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'

~~~y, ~: 28.

1995 •.

~

you
and your counlerpart aren'l in complete
accord D1scuss differences m detarl
belore mak1ng a move.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your sensors ean

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Today you
mighl gel involved in an arrangemen1
which may took like a bargain, bul in fact
conlains many hidden COSis.
PISCES (Feb. 20•March 20) When
socializing wilh friends lodsy, let go and
enjoy yourself. However, do nol spend or
eat too mticlt.

usually perceive the moods and needs of
olhers Today . however ,,these annbules
may nol tunc110n as well . and you may
make some bad 1udgmenls
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Make sure to
get receipts or guaranlees 1f you have Ia
do bus1ness loday with an unfam1har person or firm . Do not lake verbal commii-

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) If you locus
your anenllon on a pracllcal objective,
you could be lucky today. Conversely, if
mind drifts Joward frivolous targets,
your luck may run out

menls for granted.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. ·23) Things should
work . oul as you hope if you proceed
a long your present course ol aclion . If
you make fasl :m•nule changes, problems

'four
• •, .

201

Yoor
1n the

. _ TAURUS (April 20-May
Success will
not elude you today Wyou sustilln a posi·
year'aheecl. une~ succnset' · live anHude. Do nollet negaWB lhoughls
could tum out 1o be the moe1' aubslantial. . sneak in and eradicate your sefl·confi·

could develop.
•
•
SCORPIO lOci. 24· Nov. 22) People
work1ng for Y?u loday must be handfed
w1th k1d gloves. II you get too busy or

CA_PRICOAN (Dec. 2t.J n. 111) Your dence.
1
leaderlltlp QU811118S today mlgltl no1 be ol GEMINI (Mev 21-June 20) In order to
tho calller !hal Inspires dedicated follow- make your presence len lodily. you might
ers. Keep tltla.ln
before'deinandfn!l. .try. to pit one friend against anolher.

demanding, the Quality of what they produce could suffer.
SA\11TTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Finanaal conditions m1ght be a mixed bag for

Untorlunately, lhls will not produce a
illslrable end resull
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A partner-

you today. You will have the potenlial to
add lo your resources . Howevar, try not
lo spend e&lt;travaganllv.

peraoi,8J lnl9t8lls may be advanced

CALL BRIAN AT 614-256-6391
IF NO ANSWER, LEAVE A
MESSAGE.

won

Edited by CLAY •. POLlAN - - - - - - -

e

WHAT PO '(OU !'lEAN,
WHAT!&gt; IT TO 1'\E 7

351m, AUTOMATIC BEDLINER
TOOL
BOX,
,ALUM INUM
WHEELS, GOOD CONDITION .

Rf

__,.H~O,....:L:...,.:.T....:E:;r..:A~-11 knows--- to·--!"
5 I
I 16
I _ C) Comple1e
1he chuckle quoted
•
_
•
_
•
b-.,. f1ll1ng in ttle mis.s1ng words
1
L.......L-..L-.L......L-..L......J you develop from step No. 3 below.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprrght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Ohto, 1-800-537-9528

"" 1981 FORD F-150""

KA K

J

1-·

BIG NATE

720 TruckS tor sale

Bunuet

Tardy
Has bills
Ascend
Egyptian

,
... - - - - - - - - . she sighed , "is a scale thai
2 Chevrolet 5 Inch Railey Wheels
$175; 1 Se1 01 Small Block Chel!)o.
-400 C. I Cylinder Heads $100 ,..-r
614·441 -1053.
• ~

cail

ISWIG;ng~,';;;er;&amp;se"Fa~130~4-~6~7;.5-~4546;;~-~

North

,.

S1g ler Fuel 0 1! Stove, Forced Atr
Fan. S75. 614 ·379- 2720 AFTER
6 P.M.

Was her &amp; Dryer Match1ng Set,
Kenmore $95 Eac ~ .; Wh trlpool
Washer $125 Cu1 To $95 · G E
1 bedroom apartment in Middle- Washer $150 Cut To $125
port, avat labl e D~:~cember 1, all Whtrlpool Washer $95; Kenmore
utlllltes paid , $250 pe r month, Dryer Heavy Duty $95 , May tag
$100 deposit, Bam to Spm 614- Wa sher L1ke New $250, Kenmore
Washer Like New Heavy Duty
992·7806.
Pr1ce Reduc ed To $205, Electrtc
2bdrm. apts., total elecmc, ap- Range 30 Inch Wh1te $95, Refrtg pll~nces lurntshed, laundry room erator Adm~rat Almond ltke New
factht1es, close to school rn town $350, Stde By Side Refrrgerator
Applications ava ilable at: VIllage Wh1te , N1ce, $350, G E AelngeraGreen Apts 149 or call 614-092- tor 19 Cu. Ft Green $150 . All Of
pupp1es ,
These Are Fully Guarante ed!
3711 EOH.
Skaggs Appliances , 76 V1ne
2bed.room, all electric, carpeted, Streel. Galltpolis. 614 -446-7398,
Registered Chmese Sharpet
app l1ances, furnished water &amp; 1-800-499-3499
1 wormed and l1rst shots
trash paid, on-aite ma~agemant,
Jex celllenl bloodltne, 6 14- 949 ~
close to stores and schools. Lau- 520
Sporting
reland Apartments, 6th &amp; George
Goods
St., New Haven. 304· 882·3716 or
TTD-TTY- 1·800·982-8771 . Equal Full set women' s goH clubs, tour AKC Reg1stered Dalmatian pupPISS, 5 left, shots &amp; wormed
Oppor1Uni1)' Hoosing.
model, $1 25 304-675-6986.
$125ea. 304-773-9122
35 WEST - 2 BR BRICK TOWN ·
Antiques
AKC Regtstered Pug Female 2
HOUSES · t261 Jackson Pike- 530
Years Old , Very Gentle Hou se
Across From Cinema. $205/Mo
Dep. For Rental Applicatlons
Anllque VICtOrian vanity Wllh che - Tra1ned , Very Healtllf, $300, 614614-446-0957 _ 61 4•4416 _0006 _ va l mirrOr, exc ell ent condJt 1on
441 -1667
614-441·1618 Or Write : P.O. Box mlJs t see, $275, call ev enrngs '
994, Galhpoli&amp;, OH 4563t .
614-949 -29 57
, AKC Yellow lab Pups. Ready For
Chnstmas, $300, 614-256--6336,
456 1/2 Second Ave 2 BR AC Buy or sell. RIYertne Antiqu es
After 6 P:M
ar:&gt;phances. $400. month. Utiiities 11 24 E Ma~n Street, on At 124:
patd. $200 deposit References. Pomeroy HolJrS M T W 10 00 CFA Reg1stered H1malyan Kltlens
8 m to 6'00 p.m , Sunday 1.00 to
614-446-2129
Will Be Ready For Chnstmas
600p.m 614 -992-2526
Ready Nowl 614-446 -1104
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 540 MISCellaneous
For sa le, one female mtn 1ature
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Col11e, ready 10 go, $150 . 614 Merchandise
ESTATES, 52 Woa1wood Dnve
742-2050.
lrom $226 to $291 . Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es. Call 614-446 -2568
12x12 Outbulldrng, Well Burl! 3
pupp~es - tiny toy, males,
Poodle
Equal Houslflg Opportunity
Months Old, 1800 , Troy Btll Ttller
1
AKC, champ1on bloodline, shots
Beech St., Mlddlepor1, .2br lu-r- 13 Months Old $400, 614 -446- and wormed, 814-667-3404,
645 7, Aft er 5 P.M . Work 5 14 _
mshed apt. , utilities pa1d , dep &amp; 446-9372
SFA Registered Himalayan Kilrei. 304-882-2566
Is 1 15 Ft Stock Tra1ler H11tsboro After tens,1200 OBO 614-441-0782
Coumry Side Apanment. Large'·1 5 P.M 6t4-446-2163
570
Musical
Bedroom, $290/Mo Deposit 513922-0294.
'
1986 Ford Taurus, fully loaded,
Instruments
V6, $1,200 1984 Pontiac Fiero
Ex1ra N1ce 2 BR. All Elec , Furn
pw, 4cyl, 4spd, runs great $1 ,000, Alvarez acouslic gui1ar. Dove
Kll., Close To Sprtng Valley Area' GE almond stove &amp; refrigerator. Eddi1, like nrN&lt;. $350.00 614-446No Pe1S, $340/Mo. ; D. D , Ret' 304-6 75-4496.
6591
614-~t57, Alter 5PM
Baby b&amp;d , stroller, dreSSing table , Fender Squire Strat &amp; Fender
F urms h ed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Sidekick Amp Gopd Condition
614-446-DOJO.
•
Downstairs, Utilities Furnished
Clean, No Pets. Reference De~
&amp; Plasttc Sept 1c Tanks
posit Required, 614-446-1519:
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ro~ New Epiphone electronic guitar
275 watt amp. w/4 12 inch epeak:
Furnished Apartmen~ 3 Rooms &amp; Evans Enterpnses, Jackson OH .... $650.00 614-446-G591.
Bath, All Utilities Paid, Downstairs 1-8){)-537-9528.
Peavey 8 channel PA system. w/
$250/Month, 919 Second Ave . Electnc Range 30 Inches $50
614-446-3945.
614-448-11251
• fp-2 apeakers. $795.00. 614-4466591.

STUPID .•

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

o

Sctw.&lt;tnn S~erra 18 Speed All Terrain Bicycle, Excellent Condtllon,
614-446 -0070

West

24 Small rodent
25 Gravel
ridges
26 Greatly
27 Film director

By Phillip Alder

'

1983 Cutlass Brougham, all electnc, V8, good shape, S1500 304675-1446.

Instrument
20 Rowing tools
22 Indefinite
amount
23 "King David's

Bridge
in the morning

1982 Ford F150 4x4, 300 6 cyl , 4:
speed, new clutch, very soltd•
drtve train, body soltd, chrom~•
mags, $2500 OBO, 614-991- ~
30Hl
, ~

Hay

Santas ChriStmas Trees. State
Route 850 Between Rt 35 and
Rodney, We Will Cui. 614 -245·
5595.

11 Auld Ling 19 Slrlnged

l e ad : "'

'

450

South

Pass

CHUNK IT
BACK TO ME II

eep frame, body and dr1ve 1

- - - - - - - - - - , 1984 Ford F-150, Very N1ce, 614 -~
388-9811
'.
Electnc Wheelchaus / Scooters, New /Used. Scoo ter /Wheelchau 61 0 Farm Equipment
1985 Ford Ranger. 4x4, 6 cyl , Sf
l•fls, Stairway Elevators, Li ft 12x55 trailer frame, tongue, axles speed, rollbar , bedltner, $2100, ;
Chatrs, Bowman's Homecare, and t1re s. $275 OBO, 614-992 - 614 -949-2249
614-446-7283.
3016.
1976 Jeep CJ 7. V-8, $1200 614 - '
F~rewood $25 Truck l oad, You
•
A1hs Chalmers 190XT 2WD 95HP 446-6956.
Haul, 614-388-9643 Alter 5 P.M .
turbo diesel w1th AC519 end
1989 Chevy 4x4 P1ck -Up V-8
Ftrewood $40 Ptck-Up Load 614 - loader, oo· bucke~ separate bale Auto . $6 ,500 , 1991 Ford 4x4 '
spear
4665
hours,
90%
rubbe
r
388-9265
on t 8 4x34 ttres, excellent condt- PICk- Up 6 Cylinder, 4 Spe ed.'
$6,500 ; 1989 Ford 4x4 Ptck -Up '.
Grear Chnstmas Gtfls Boots By tton, $6900, tractor only, $6500,
$5,700
. 1985 GMC H1 Sterra Ote- 1
614-698-6228.
Redw1ng, Chippewa, Tony lama
sal 4x4 , Ntce B&amp;O Auto Sales '
Guaranteed lowest Prrces At
'
Massey Ferguson 180 Tractor, 614-446-6865.
Shle Cole
$5,950; Massey Ferguson 175
H1-Eifeciency l.P. Or Natural Gas $5,800: Massey Ferguson 135 1990 Chevy Van G-20, loaded, ;
crestltner. 88,000m1 , $7,600 304 - ,·
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU 1- D1esel $5,495; Ferguson T020
600 -287-6308. 6t4-446 -6308 , Wllh Bush Hog &amp; Blade, $2,650, 675-2835
Duct Systems And A1r ConditiOn - 614 -286--6522
1990 Dodge Ham Van B-250
ers. Free Estimates.
Nearly new { t 69 hours) Raycc 12 .000 M1l es, $6 ,000 , Can Be
lntertherm &amp; M1ller Mobile Home AG 1635AI SA 41 hp atr coo led Seen At Gall1pol1s Datly Trtbune '
Fu rnaces. Gas, Oi l &amp; Electric In De utz dtesel stump cutler , two 825 Thtrd Av enue. Galltpol1 ~ :·
Stock. large Otstnbuter Buy 0lJt sets of teeth, used one year to OhiO,
of New Mob1le Home Furnaces . clear !arm frelds . cost effective
Bank Financtng Available, Call over hinng a dozer for such work. 1993 'Ciie-;y Silverado 112 Toll
Bennens Mobile Home HTG &amp; MSAP $14,600, yours lor $11,500, 4x4 Long Bed, 350, Automatic,
44,000 Miles. Excellent Condition '
CLG At 614-446-9416 or 1-800- 614-698-6228
$17,500, 614-379-9381.
.872-5967.
640
&amp; Grain
67 Plymouth Grand Voyager :
JET
Ground ear co rn. your sacks. Auto, Air, V6, Excel Cond . ~
AERAT1DN MOTORS
$4,500.00 6 14-461 -0777
'.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebwlt In Stock 304-675-24&lt;3.
Call Ron Evans. 1-800·537-9528
Hay for sale, 1st &amp; 2nd cuttmgs, 740
Motorcycles
square bale s, $1 25-$1 SO, call
(
1995 Yamaha 400 Kodiak 4x4 4- '
John Deere 110 A1d1ng Law n 614-992-5533.
wheeler. 500mt. $4,300. 304-675- '
Mower, Quarter Horse; Mossburg
Square bales $1 50 -$2 00 Round 3624
~
12 Ga. Shot Gun, 514-367-0219.
bales $15 .00oa Saturday only
750 Boats &amp; Motors
Queen Srze Water Bed With piCk-up 304-675-3960.
Drawers $300; Single 3/4 Wa
for Sale
,
terbed With Drawers $150, Bunk
TRANSPORTATION
;;:;:::--;:::-;:--::~,...,....-Beds $200: Pmg Pong TaDie
1999 201 Pro Xl, '20' Strutoa ~
$125; 3 Wheeler $300 , Avantl
bass boat, 200 XPHP, 614 -667 - i
Dorm Refrtgerator $100, 614-446- 71
7347 or 614-949-2879.
Autos for sale
9618.
'89 Thunderb1rd SC, two door, 3.8 Must Se ll · 1989 24 F1. Arnva'
V-6, eltle model turbo, PS, Speed &amp; Sk1 Boat, 454 Bravo Mo·.,
AC, 5 spo ed, power seats tor, Wnh Bravo 1 Outdnve. Power
locks, ·Great Car: $6500 Rack &amp; Pen1on Steenng, Thnr.
neg . 614 -992- 7478 or 614-949- Transom E,;haust, Tandem Trail - ·•
er, W1th Brakes. Too Many Extras f
regul ar Army 2879
To Ltst 1$15,000 OBO, 614-441 - ~
Sandy1J 1tle Pos t
1975, 614·256·6369
'95
Butck
Regal
Cu
stom
.
V-6
au304tomattc , ail power, smoky
55. Jumor SIZ OS EX
amethyst, 10,500 mtles, wtll sel l or 760
Auto Parts &amp;
1tems to be 1n by Decem·
can take over payments, make
Accessories
. 1995.
offer on pr1ce, 614-985-3362.

lime being)
B Trinket
9 Cry of pain
10 God of love

grandfather

1977 Jeep CJ7, V-8 , dual e•
haust, alloy wheels, $2300 ; 19~

CJ 5 J

Anawer to Previous Puule

Vulnerable . East-West
Dealer: East

1-----------T"----------~ make
trarn kept
in dty, parts available k:lr:
II complete . 614-742-1913

men\ m Middleport. 614 .30
or 614 -9Q2 -5304 or 446_ 91_ 1
614 99 2
2178.
Twm A1vers Tower. now acceptmg
apphcattons for 1br HUD sub s1d·
tzed apt for elderly and handl ·
capped EOH 304 -675-6679

t6
lloA 9 7 6 4 3 2

1992 Ford F- 150 XC 6 Cylinder.:'
AIC Bedline r, Good Cond ition ,
52, 500 Miles $10,000, 614 · 44 \ :.
1417.
.. ·~

C:JIF-1'&gt;TMA':o

Grac1ous hving. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmen ts at Vrffage Manor and
Rtversld e Apartments m Mtddf epon From $232-$355 . Call 614 992-5064. Equal Hous1ng Oppor tuntbes

,,
J

1987 Mazda p1ckup, 4cyl, Sspd,
stlver exlertor, maroon Interior.
ntce clean work truck Sell or
1rade 304-675-3324

you SuppoSE

""fi'

PM

1. and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
mshed and unlurn1shed, security
deposit requtred, no pets, 614 992-2218.

Mobile Homes

~o

Furn1shed Efftctency $22 5/ Mo
UttltUes Patd, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Gall1po li s 614 446 -441 6 Al ter 7

Furn1shed Efficiency, 607 Second,
GallipOliS, Share Bath, $185/Utihttes Paid 614 -446 -4416 After

Three bedroom home rn country.
Wh1tes Hill Rd., Rutland, one bath,
1n-ground pool, 614-992-5067

IT'S

&gt;o6G'1. \N'HE:Io?.G""

for Rent

Ntne room house- four bedrooms
newly remodeled, kitchen an d
batn, new carpeting, Iaroe corner
lot , $28,000, 614 -002-6173 or
614-992-2015 alter 5pm.

.Now is the time for g-r-r-r-eat
buys.in the dos~ifieds

a

Mitchell Road Area, Gall1pcli s,
$310/Mo. Water, Septic, Trash
Paid, Deposn /References. 614 643-2916 Mer&lt; P.M.

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes
For Penmes On $1 Delinquent
Tax. Repo's, REO's Your Area
Toll Freo (1) 800-898 -9778 Ext.
H·2B 14 For Current Listings.

•

Small Unfurnished , Bedroom
House Near K-Marl A~r Conditioned, Gu Heat, 'Microwave,
New Paint, &amp; Carpet, Upstairs
Storage Available, $325/Mo. +
Gas Electric, Call Be1Ween 8 10
P.M Or Belore 9 AM 614·4461822

Investment Property In Gallipolis,
Owner May Be Able To Help Wllh
Some _Ftnancmg, Call 61 4-707.
4345 After 6 P.M.

2 Bedroom Bnck Home In Galhpolts, Includes Garage, Central
A1r, LA , Kitchen And Bath, 614 446·8578.

you save with the c/assifieds

Houses lor ren t 1n Reedsvrlle,
Syracuse, Mtddleport and Rulland
areas Contact Do ttie Turner Really, 614-992-2886.

2bedroom moblle home. Depostt
&amp; references requtred . No pets.
$250/mo. Water &amp; sewer pa1d.
304-675-6984

o Homes for Sale

no ru st, $3,000 304 -576-2919 or
HI00-392-3844.

-=-:-.:...:..:.:..::::::____ _ _ '

3b&amp;droom, n1ce locahon, low utilities. DepOSit &amp; references reQUired. S4001mo l:l-4-675-1090

1NOTICEI
OH10 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bUSInes s w1th people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mar t unttl you have mvest1gated
theoffenng

REAL ESTATE

1980 Ford XLT 4x4 , auto, 302 ,

new U1c.hehn radials, runs goon:·

{f C.oVfi!.'7G

41 0 Houses for Rent

2 Bedrooms Wall To Watt Carpet,
Natural Gas Furnace. Very Nice,
614 44&amp;-2003, 614-446-1409

Opportunhy

31

You'll build a big nest egg when

RENTALS

for Rent

Part-T1me R:N Needed Call 1-800506-8773.
REPO BUILDINGS
Factory Has 2 All Steel Ouanset
S tyle Bu1ld1ng s For Immediate
Sell , (I) 40K60 Never Erected
Wtlllake Balance CM&lt;ed. Call Bill
1·800-581 -5843

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beaultlul 2ac lots, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., X14-576-2336

FINANCIAL

313.

Mt Alto Au ct1on w1shes everyo ne
a very Merry Christmas &amp; Happy
New Yearll See you Feb 1996

110

180

Easy Wo r kl Exce lt enl Payl Assemble Product s at Home Call
Tol l F'ee 1·800 · 467 -5566 EXT.

and Auction

90

350 Lots

acres,
aerator, near
r~~~~~~==~=l-==========~ Ftve
Racme.$16,000 can finance w11h

111

Public

a few pounds. The klds

are using my c lothes to dress the snowman'"

Help Wanted
LoSI 3 yr old lema1e Ronwe11 e, 110
has on choker and nea collar. Ru:
tlandvlclmty, 61-4 -742-1410
$40.000 IVA INCOME Potential
Home Typ1 s1s IPC Users Toll
lost Between Han erv 111e &amp; Galli
Free ( 1) 600 -898 -9778 Ex t Tpo li s. R1g1d P1pe Mach10 e A1g1d 2814 For LtsUngs
P1pc Cutter Rewar d l 614 446
2233
Accepting apph cabons !or Registered long term care Nursmg Aslo st· Golden Retre1ver Puppy 8 Sistant cl ass now through De Weeks Old, l1 tle Kyger Area An · cembe r 28th Class to begm
swers To Peggy Comac1 Rhonda January am and endmg February
l~n ch , 614 367-014 2
13th Po1nt Pleasant Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitahon Center, t.1ar)One ElLost Tree1ng Wal ker Dog Black l rot\ , Stat e Route 62. Route 1.
Headed &amp; Back, Male, Neutered. Po1n1 Ple asant, WV 25550 . A
V1c1n1ty Vtnton, 6t 4-388-8536
Glenmark Assoc1ates Factlity
EDE
70
Yard Sale
AGENT AVON SALES
II
Earn $8 -$15 tHr At Work -Home
G a po s
Benei i1S' DI SCoun1s l Fle XI ble
&amp; VIcinity
Hours ' No 1oven1ory Requ~red.
1-600-742-4738
All Yard Sal es Mus t Be Pat d In
Advance DEADLIN E 2 00 p m
AVON I All Area s I Shirley
· the day oefore the ad rs to run
Spears, 304-675 1429
Sunday ed1t1on - 2 00 p m Fnday
Monday ed1t1on 10 oo am Sat· AVON EARN $$$ at home -at
work All area s 304-882-2645 1urday
600-992·6356. 1NDIREP
'

80

5acre Ohio River bouom block
Duild1ng for houselapanments,
40x60 steel bUIIdtng, indoor horse
ridmg, shop for semi , 116acre
paved. Can lease 20 more acres.
Above 1937 flood . 70,000cu.ft.
storage 10m1tes S of Pt Pleasant
on R12. 304-576-2894.

0

l ost 12-24-95, one year old ,
black &amp; tan Doberman , Rutl a nd
area, REWARD. phone 614 -742

Farms for Sale

1978 Ford ptckup, V8. auto.
cond , $1,400 304-675-2074

Apartment. 920 Fouflh
Bedroom, $285/ Mo
Avenue, Galhpotts,
6 Aller 7 PM

39 Rubller lree
40 Fulplane
1 Polar explorer 41 Seed
5 1.111 mo.
44 StuHler
8 Side loaues
48 •oenn 11 p1eyer
12 C up ld
BJorn13 Edgar Allan 49 Skirt part
14 Breezy
50 Dog In Garfield
15 0Hic1al records 51 _ _
16 Total
Wonderful LHe
17 Once - a lime 52 Sixth sanae
18 Roped .
(abbr.)
20 Overwe1ghl
53 Oliver's
2 1 King request
22 Aclor Mineo
5 4 Rip
23 Egg-shaped
55 Existed
26 Oark cherry
56 Winter vehicle
30 Aulumn pear
31 Alcoholic
DOWN
liquors
1 Idol
32 Labor org.
2 Non-profit org.
33 Guido's high
3 Deterlorales
nole
4 Exlrame
34 Pleasant
5 Unnerve
35 Chew
6 Noisy
36 Fakir
7 Pro - (for the
38- are red

J1l!ltd

lhal olhar~ de)' things you won't. , Know
where 10 look for
you'lt'find
il. The Aslro- Graph Malchm8ker l~tant-

romaOOe and

,,

"A

book can be

a

considered
lrue success when people who haven't
read it PRETEND lhey have "

DECEMBER 27 I

�Wednesday, December 27, 199~

Pom~roy • Middleport, .O hio

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Ohio Lottery

Texas Tech
beats Air
Force 55-41

Super Lotto:
4-7-11-12-38-45
Kicker:
1-0-2-1-6-2
Pick 3:
6-5-8
Pick4:
4-7-3-2

Sports, Page 4

Clear to partly cloudy
tonight, lows in the teens.
Friday, sunny. Highs In the
30s .

•

ent1ne
Vol. 46, NO. 170
1 Section, 10 Pages

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

.,

FIRST - COME - FIRST -SERVED BASIS!
NO DEALERS PLEASE!

SAlE ENDS DEC. 30TH, 5P.M.

1995 FORD WINDSTAR LX
V-6, auto, front &amp; rear NC, PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr seat; tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass: lotttiH .

1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
V-6 , auto, air cond, PS, PB, PW, POL,
Pwr seat, leather, Clean- Low miles.

GXE

1995 NISSAN

ti~.

cruise, AM/FM cass,

1994 MERCURY VILLAGER
auto, air cond, PS, PB, PW,
Pwr seat: tilt, cruise, AM/FM

1
6 cyl, auto, air cond, !itt, cruise,
AM/FM cass, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
P. seat, dual air bags.

LOADED

5

12,649

auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, 4 Dr, LE, V-6, auto, air cond,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, PDL, AM/FM stereo, tilt, cruise, PS,
PW, PDL, More.
Loaded. NADARetail $20,750

ONLY

5

17,5

LUMINA

10,9

Only 26,000 Mies S

1994 EAGLE TALON

Dr, V·6, auto, air cond, AM/FM 4 cyl, 5 spd, air cond, AM/FM
till, cruise, PS, PB, PW, cass, tilt. cruise, PS, .. PB, PW,
Much More ..
PDL.

Drive a Relatively New Vehicle for Less than you ever
thought poss_
ible with the Ford Red Carpet Lease.
Here are afew examples:
5

13,949

VEHICLE PRICE
(Cap~alized

Cost)

GUARANTEED

9,04f'

FUTURE VALUE
(Lease end residual value)

You

PAY ON

(Lease Depreciation)

4,900**

5

5

13,9 49

VEHICLE PRICE
(Capitalized Cost)

GUARANTEED
FUTURE VALUE

8,739*

(Lease end residual value)

You

PAVON

(Lease Depreciation

5

5,210**

(Capitalized Cost)

LOADED

GUARANTEED
FUTURE VALUE

)3,9

5

1991 LINCOLN JOWN CAR

(Lease end residual value)

1991 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

Auto, climate control, PS, 4 dr, LX, V-8, auto, air cond,
PW, PDL, Pwr seat, titt, AM/FM cass, tilt, cruise, PS, PB.
PW, PDL, Pwr seat.
• c n11se. AM/FM cass.

XTRA NICE

)4,9

S

1991 FORD THUNDERBIRD
. auto . air cond, AM/FM cass,
, cruise, PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr
seal.

MOON ROOF

5,437*

8,9

5

1991 OLDS CUTLASS
Dr, V-6, auto, air cond, AM/FM
tilt, cruise. PS, PB, PW,

5

7,9 49

You

PAVON

5

S,S12**

5

15,9

12

SJ9,9

Conversion van, 6 cyl, auto,
V-6, auto, air cond, PS, PB,
cond, PS, PB, PW, PDL, tilt, cruiseiPW, PDL, Pwr seat. titt, cruise,
AM/FM cass.
cass

KEYLESS

SJ 9 49

96 FORD
RANGER
Supercab XLT, 4 cyl,
5 spd, air cond,
cruise, PS. PB,
AM/FM cass, More.

95 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE
4 cyl, auto, A/C, crui
AM/FM cass, PS, PB
PW, POL, Much More

1996 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB
4 cyl, 5 sP,d, air cond, AM/FM cass, cruise, PS, PB, bedliner,
lsli,~ing back glass. ONLY 2,500 Mles.

510,949

VEHICLE PRICE

wagon, V-8, auto, front &amp;
NC, PS, PB, PW, POL, ti~.
l~noisR, AM/FM cass.

1994 FORD 1150

"The Plan"

1994 CHRYSLER LEBARON

1995 FORD E·350

93 FORD
TAURUS
V-6, auto, NC. titt,
cruise, PS, PB, PW.
PDL, Pwr seat, AM/FM
cass, more.

• Lease End Residual Value (Purchase Option Price) is based on 15,000
miles per year for 2 years.
., Plus Taxes, Lease Charges, State Taxes &amp; License Due at Lease
Inception.

OVER 40, FORD, LINCOLN, MERCURY
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
ELIGIBLE IN STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM

1995 FORD F150 412
auto, !llr cond, PS, PB, tilt,
..,.,,~ ... AM/FM cass, long bed.

514,9

1995 FORD F150 414
cyl, auto, air cond, PS, PB,
cass.

IA~AIFM

5

16,7

1995 FORD F150 412
6 cyl, auto, air eond, AM/FM
tiH, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
, bedliner.
·

5

15,4

1992 FORD F150 412
auto, air cond, AM/FM cass,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, PDL, long
Low miles.

5 spd, air cond, AM/FM
PS, PB, tilt, cruise.

5

8,9 49

Emergency
unds shore
up Bailey Run
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Workers this month completed a
project to reinforce flood-damaged
Bailey Run Road in Salisbury Township.
Work on the $100,000 project
was funded through the Emergency
Watershed Protection Program
administered through the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District and
the Natural Resources Conservation
Service.
Many sections of Bai Icy Run
were undermined during the Mother's Day flood and seven sites along
the road were chosen for repair by
the NRCS .
• The objective of the program,
Meigs County SWCD Director Mike
Duhl explained, is to "assist in
relieving imminent hazards to life
and property from nood and products of erosion created by natural
disasters that cause sudden impairment of a watershed."
After the flood, Duhl said he contacted county Emergency Services
· Director Robert Byer to sec what
assistance could be offered.

Eventually, three projects were
identified for funding through the
EWP program.'
Approximately $200.000 was
committed for projects on Rutland ·
Township Road 175, a bridge project
on Baer Road in Chester Township
and Bailey Run Road .
The program has the .stipulation
that SWCD could repair or restore
the roads up to the condition they
were in prior to damage that
occurred, Duhl explained.
Upon completion of the Bailey
Run Road project, 516 feet ·of
Gabion basket was installed and over
100 feet of rock rip-rap places along
the seven-site area to prevent furtheF
damage to the road.
Gabion baskets contain rock are
made of fencing material. They offer
structural support while allowing
drainage. In this project the baskets,
usually made of galvanized chainlink fencing, were coated with
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) due to the
high acid content of the stream running alongside the road, Duhl said.
The project required the cooperation of manv people and several

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. · said Republicans propos~d a $240
George Voinovich has urged Ohio billion tax cut over seven years.
Of the total, $170 billion was for
Republicans in Congress to stand
a
$500
per child tax credit for famfinn behind a GOP plan to balance
ilies
with
incomes up to $110,000
the federal budget in seven years.
annually.
Also
included: a cut in the
But he remains opposed to most of
capital
gains
tax
worth $35 billion.
a planned tax cui.
The
balance
of
the cut representVoinovich joined six Republican
ed
a
host
of
other
tax changes
members of Ohio's congressional
delegation on Wednesday to deliver including an adoption credit and
an enthusiastic endorsement of a expansion of Individual Retirement
GOP budget that would give states Accounts.
Voinovich said the tax cut was no
more power over welfare programs.
longer an issue since Democrats
Voinovich and congressional
have proposed a reduction of their
Republicans divided over the merits
own.
of a $240 billion tax cut the GOP
"The president has said he is for
proposed.
a reduction in taxes. The RepubliVoinovich said he did not suppon
cahs say they are for .a reduction in
a general tax cut because it might
taxes. So this is something that's
send the wrong signal to the public
going to have to be on the table and
about the critical nature of balancing
negotialed," Voinovich said.
the federal budget.
Oh1o Democratic Pany Chairman
"The only tax cut that I am realDavid Leland said there was a sigly in favor of is the job creation capnificant difference in the concept of
ital gains cut," he said.
the tax cuts the two parties proposed.
U.S. Rep. John Bochner, R-Ohio,

Ry TOM HUNTER .
Sentinel News Stall
Filing deadlines for ~..:ounty o rli~..:c

candidates and iS&gt;ucs arc quickly
ncming. due to the adjustment in the

COMPLETED PROJECT - Workers this
month completed an Emergency Watershed Protection project on Bailey Run Road in Salisbury
Township administered through the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District and the Natural Resources Conservation Service. The project
governmental agencies indudin1'
Salisbuly Township Trustees
Durst, Butch Brinker and Bernard
Gilkey ; their clerk, Richard Bailey ;township employee Robert
Roberts; the D.V. Weber Construction Co.; the Meigs County H1ghway
Department, which provided the
township with a truck for hauling

Ed

repaired the road which was damaged in nooding
earlier this year. Mike Duhl, above, Meigs SWCD
director, c.amined the completed project, which
consisted here of PVC-coated Gabian ba.&lt;kets and
stone rip-rap. (Sentinel pholo)

spoil; the Meigs SWCD and the
NRCS.
"All these agencies and people
cooperated
together,"
Duhl
explained. "The result? Bailey Run
has become a showcase for cooperative efforts and erosion control

along roadways and streams."
"All should be proud of their
efforts," he said.

An area legtslator feels efforts to
increase Ohio's speed limit from the
current 55 mph should be approved
in a "fair and safe" manner now that
the stales have the power lo decide
traveling speed.
State Rep. John A. Carey Jr. said
federal legislation signed by Presi-

dent Clinton that became effective
Dec. 8 "will strengthen the nation 's
transportation systom and provide
jobs and economic opportunities for
many Ohioans.
"At the state level, the Ohio General Assembly should act responsibly
and pass laws that are fair and safe,"

sc heduled spring primary election
hy Ohio Secretary of State Bob Taft.
The primary election will be
held March 19 instead of the first
Tuesday after the first Monday iO
May.
The det:isior1

llJ

make the ~.:hang£

will allow Ohio to be included io
"S uper Tuesday," during primary
elecllons held 10 preSidential year..
In 1997. Ohio's primary will return
to
it's normal May date .
:
I':IVI ng of the rcp;u rcd road wi ll •
The
filing
deadline
for
candidate~
he done thi s sprmg throu gh a puhlic
seeking county offices is Jan . 19 a1
worb }! r &lt;ll11.
4 p.m., according to Rita Smith,
The Mc1gs SWC' D and the NRC'S
director
of the Me1gs County Board
also •uJministl'r the Rural Ahan of
Elections.
Lionct.i Min e Pro gram , Resource
Early filings have concentrated
Conservation and Development pro-

jects and \:Onscrvation operations
projects to assist local landowners in

planning farnlS .

on the offices of county commis-

siOner and sheriff. with competition
being staged against im:umhcnt s in

those offices.
Incumbent Democrat Sheriff
James M. Soulshy announced Nov.

H thai he will sec k a lhird term as

sheriff in 19%. So ul shy, who has
been shenff since 19HH. hcgan his
law enforcement career with the

Pomeroy Police Department m
1960.
Soulsby will face ono of two contenders, who wdl face each other for
the Rcruhlican nomma"tion in the

March pnmary.
On Nov. 16. Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald E. Rought announced
he will seck the Republican nomi nation fur shenff. Rought has hcen
with the Pomeroy department since
I'IX1 and was appointed Pomeroy's
chief in 1985.
Last week, Michael R. Canan
announced that he is also seeking the
Republi can nomination for sheriff.
Ca nan, 43, served on the Columbus Police Department from 1973 to
I'N I, where he was ;an instructor for
the Co lumbus Police Academy and
worked c1ght years With the depart BUDGET CONSEQUENCES - Gov. George
Voinovich showed a pie chart to fellow Republicans Wednesday while discussing the federal budget. The governor gathered six Republican mem-

bers of Congress l'rom Ohio to talk about the
Buckeye State's role in the current budget stalemate and the consequences of an approved budget. (AP)

Carey calls for responsibility in setting speed limit
Carey, R-Wellston , added. "Until
then . be sure and obey the current
speed limits."
Carey said two bills have been
introduced in the Ohio House
addressing speed limits. The first ,
sponsored by Rep. Ron Hood. RCanfield, increases the maximum for

trucks to 65 mph for trucks on rural
intcrstales.
Another bill , sponsored by Rep .
Mike Fox, R-lndi an Springs, call s
for a uniform speed limit of 65 mph .
Both bill s arc pendmg m the
House Transportation and Public
Safety Committee, on which Carey

serves .

"I am intere sted in allowing the

ment 's narcotic\ hur(:au. He has Lllso
served as an in vestigator for former

prosecuting allorncy Steve Story,
:mtl as an investigator for the Meigs
County Department nf Human Services.
In the race for county commissioner, each rmt y is rc rrcsc ntcd hy
a contender

1n

the race for the seat

of current Democratic Commis-

Department of High tay Safety rai se

siu m;r Janct Howard .

the speed l1mit to the hi ghway design
standard ,'' Carey satd . "If a state
route has a 'design standard or 60
mph. the speed limit should be 60
(Continued on Page 3)

Ernest "Ike" Spencer, Racine,
announced Nov. 15 that he will seck
the Republican nomination to run

(Continued on Page 3)

Budget talks fail to hit substantive issues

,.,,

'

Deadline
for filing
primary
petitions
nearing

Voinovich endorses
balanced ·budget fight

~time ." said the official, speaking on
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
Staff members from Congress
WASHINGTON- White House and the Clinton administration's
and congressional negotiators arc Office of Management and Budget,
inching closer lo new talks on resolv- meanwhile, met to work out a scheding the federal budget impasse, but ule for budget talks for the rest of the
the prospect of serious progress week.
seems to be at least a day away.
"It's very much a process disMore than 280,000 federal work- cussion rather than a substantive disers remained off the job Wednesday. cussion," a White House official
So did most of the people charged , said. "The practical reality is that I
with getting the budget disagreemenl would not expect a real substantive
senled.
discussion to take place before the
Capitol Hill and White House staffs get together again sometime
staff were making arrangements for tomorrow."
talks, but President Clinton:• House
If all goes well at the staff level,
Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate a meeting would be set up Friday
Majority Leader Bob Dole were not between Clinton and congressional
expected to get together until Friday. leaders, Sen. Robert C. Smith, RAn administration official was not N.H., said.
optimistic about the chance of
Clinton, Dole and Gingrith met
enough progress being made to get last Friday but without reaching an
all federal employees back on the job agreement to end the shutdown. The
by the opening of business next House and Setlate then passed, and
week.
Clinton signed, bills to keep benefit
"It's n9t impossible, but hard. checks flowing for veterans, welfare
There are a lot of issues to be recipients under the Aid to Families
addressed and there 's not much with Dependent Children. and foster

(

35 cents
AGannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 28, 1995

care and adoption services, plus
money to keep services in the District of Columbia functioning.
The panial govemmenl shutdown
stems from disagreement over how
to balance the federal budget by
2002. Republicans are seeking consid~rably larger savings from
Medicare, Medicaid and welfare and
larger tax cuts than Clinton wants.
Meanwhile, 760,000 federal
workers in unfunded agencies,
including the 280,000 on furlough,
will receive only partial paychecks.
Many national parks and museums
ar:e closed.
Rep. Constance Morella. R-Md.,
whose suburban Washington district
is home to thousands of government
employees, prepared legislation that
would declare all federal workers
condition of anonymity.
Dole, R-Kan ., gave this week's
efforts a mere "50-50 shot" at
resolving budget differences to
reopen the government, partially
shuttered since Dec. 16.
"Hopefully, by Saturday, we'll

have a framework - or we 'll know
we can't put it together." Dole told ·
a Cedar Rapids. Iowa, town mee ting
while campmgnmg fo r 1he GOP
nomination for president.
Clinton met bnell y w11h budget
director Alice Rivl ir. on Wednesday,
but his chief of staff, Leon Panetta,
remained on vacation. Neither house
of Congress conducted any business
Wednesday.
essential and reiUrn them to their
jobs.
A similar measure was approved
by the Senate last week. There was
no indication that the House would
consider it; GOP House freshman
have opposed ending the government partial shutdown until .a longtenn budget deal is negotiated.
Meanwhile a group of 46 House
Democrats challenged a group of
corporate executives who ran a
newspaper ad last week asking that
budget negotiators "have everything
on the table " 10 say how they would
balance the bud~et.

OPEN AGAIN- Visitors to the National Gallery of Art viewed
the painting " View of Delft" by Johannes Vermeer Wednesday in
Washington. The exhibit, which had been closed with the government
shutdowl), was reopened with the aid of private funds. Most other
government-funded museums remained closed. (AP)

••

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