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                  <text>Beatcats
drop cage
contest

Pkk3:
638
Pick 4:
. 9337

Super Lotto:
1-10-19-26-32-45

Page4

Kicker:

120609

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 163

18ectlon,101'-.a · A llulllm • Inc. New p 1111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 22, 1994

~t1814

, I

Economy logs
4% growth rate
By JAMES H. RUBIN
Allod I II d Prua Writer
WASHINGJ'ON - The eooDomy grew at a robust 4 percent aonual
rate in tile lhlrd quartec and is on a pace for its best perf01111811Ce in at least
.six yean.
Despite riaing interest rates intended to slow growtb, the ComDierce
Deptmeot reported today lbat CODSumer spending remains slrong. Per.sona1 spending combined wilb business invesbnent aod govemment outlays to lead tile surge in tbe July-September quartec.
The gross dOOtestic product, which measures ail goods and services
produced In tbe United States, was revised upward from a month-ollt esti·
male of a 3.9 percent rale. The slight increase, atbibutcd largely to mOJC ·
spending by foreign llllvelers bere; was in line wilb analysts' expecta'tions
still, many are wotned lbat tile good times soon may end as interest
rates climb even bigber. .
Wllb both tile Christmas shopping season and tile year drawing to a
dose, ecooomiats predict the foui1b quartec expansion also will be around
a 4 perceut rate.
·
If they are c:onect, tbat means tile economy is on pace 10 at least equal
tile 3.9 percent advance of 1988. Any additional growtb could mean tile
best performance.slnce a 6.2 percent surge in 1984.
. S~leiy, tile Labor Department reponed today lbat the number of
Amencans filing first·time claims for jobless benefits rose by 3,000 last
week to tile bigbcst level in a monlb. The depaJtment said new applicatiourlor unemployment insurance totaled a seasonally adjusted 326,000
during tile week ended Dec. 17, up from 323,000 aweek earlier.
· The tbild quaiu7 lli'Ca:ded lbe Federnl Reserve's sixth boost Ibis· year
(Contlnaed on Page 3)

Christmas is...- - - Dioxin
dispute
Caperton SMiklng
EPA Intervention
for mill permits

A SENSE dF COMMUNITY- eo-nlty celebntloal brtntl n~~ldenb, bodt YCMIIII Md old,
toaether to share tile joy of tile Clariltmu HaiOII. Above, Rllc:IDe raldellll lhtle Bu1 ull Dick
w-Jey prepare RaciDe's model Clarlstmas YlUitp In antldpatlob of Rllc:lne's _ ... CllrltlmM
In tile Park laeld last week.
.

Eastman resigns seat on Eastern school. board

IJ!Is moved to a home o~tside lbe tinue 10 hold property in the ~ool
district anct cannot conunue. as a disbict. He intends to be JRSCDI at
- &lt;M!Ie::At{"r·more tban.fiv.e board member.
. · _: .. -!1!.~-~~ .'l!~til!s wben .c!!!!dldates
'.
eJliiV:''llieEllfern
"I regre,t, not being able. ·ro,ru,o~ll ·for ..... post are selected, be added.
~,1lolril Dt
~ my term, Eastman said. Tb1s A new member should be selected
the rc~igoation of hoard member week: I beam there was some con- at the next board meeting.
ROn EUtnvm
tendon."
.
.
Board President Ray Karr said:
,Serving tbree years of his fli'St
Eastman, who .u mo-:mg to "I hate to hear you're moving
tam; &amp;.alma!l advised the.bo!Kd be._ Hemlock Grove, S8ld be will oon- away."
By GEORGE.ABATE

·s. " wl NeWI Starr

·

•atioo

In other buSiDCss, tiiC board lis·
tened to and took no action on
potential scheduling changes for
neX\yearat tbehi•~ scllool.
EHS Principaf''ciayton Butler
suggested the school chaoge from
an eight-period to a seven-period
day, extending the length of eaeh
class period and eliminating all

study balls. ·
"The advantage would ~ the
teac11ers c:oulclllte a few. mmu-:s
m eacb cla.ss to hei.P wnh tbeu
bomewort. Buller wd.
Also, team teachin~ would be
used for seveniJJ and eogbth grade
classes. Three teachers would conn·
(Contlnaed on Pqe 3)

Remains or pilot surrendered
··as survivor awaits freedom

..........._.

=

9'7Sale
Nerf Mex Force RazorSaast Includes a belt-fed
barrage of 15 suction-cup darts.
It's Nerf to the next powerl
60331

Ages 8 and up

shot down lbe cho_P.per. The~ was
no way for U.S. officials to cxilitirm
lbat, however, without tallcing wiiJJ
Hail.
Richardson told reporters be
was unable to see Hall, but was
able to convey a message of love
from Hail's wife. The North Korc·
colleaaue·
ans
have said Hall is in good condi·
Rep. Bill Richardson, who
tion
but won't be released until
bel~ negotiate the repatriation of
they
complete lbeir investigation
Chref Warrant Officer David Hiie·
mon •s body, predicted today !bill into lbe incident.
"The meetings we held with
Chief Warrant Officer Bqbby Hall
North Korea were tough, were difwill be home by Christmas.
He bad no commibnen~ !bough, ficult,"' Richardson said. "The
arrangement w~ had was the best
lbat would happen. .
Richardson said be bad reached we could get."
Richardson said talks were conan agreement witb North Korea
tinuing
in Panmunjom on delails of
lbat calls for the release of Hall,
who also was aboard the unarmed Hail's rel~e.
On a frosty day with beams of
U.S. Army OH-58C helicopter that
sttayed into North Korean territory sunlight .breaking through the
clouds, Richardson crossed IJJe borlast Satunlay.
·
der
before the casket and shook
"To make the agreement fully
bands
with the 10 U.N. liaison officertifiable and sm:ccssful, Bobby
.
cers
waiting
on the SouiJJ Korean
Hail must return," Ricbardson said
.·at a news conference after leaving side.
They went as a group to the
North Korea. "I think Bobby Hall
North Korean side to inspect IJJe
wiD return ... very soon."
. Earlier today, Richardson coffin . A North Korean honor
:accompanied IJJe rough reddish- guard in green overcoats carried
brown casket carrying Hilemon·s the rectan~ular box to the demarta·
body as the North Koreans banded Uon line.
As U.N. officers saluted, tbe
it over at the border crossing In the
coffm was then carried about 100
truce village oC Panmtinjom.
• North Korea bas said its troops yards by a seven-man U.N. honor
By JU.YEON KIM
Allocllded Plus Writer
PANMUNIOM, Korea- North
Korea relurned tbe body of an
American pilot today, and a U.S.
congressman said the communist
nation will sbortly free his detained

.

20% o'ff

Sale

Choice of gum or ......,....,
bottle. Gum in Game
Sega Game Gear, CD
varieties; or sports bottle.

All In-stock flatware sets
Name brands include Rogers,
Oneida and Invitation in varied
styles • .20% Off Reg. Prices

Gum pkg. size vanes ctepet'KIIng on vartety

Styles may vary by sl0t'8

2/S3Sale

24-pc. "Prime Time" set

Chlnet disposable plates
Choose 15, 10%" compartment
or flat plates; 25, 8'%" luncheon
plates; or 1
platters.

Tumbler set in crystal or misty
blue color. Wrth 8 each: rocks,
cooler and beverage glasses.

CASIO.
'7.9'7Sale
Bonus 2-pc. cake dome
set with 12" footed cake plate,
,12" dome and bonus server;
crystal
Dishwasher safe.

25%off

50-pc. Pop-Top Storable&amp;"

set for aH your storage needs.

. SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov·
iJia (AP) - Two sheDs Slammed
into a small market in Sarajevo's
Old Town today, killing at least
'twQ p~ple and wouodinJ seven .
'Oihen
·

25 containers with lids; micro-

wave, freezer,. dishwasher safe.

Coordinates with,,_

,_
prohibited. taxed, restricted,
coupon is reproduced, gang cut
Consumer pays depOsit ana tiXrtfl.

DO NOT DOUBLE COUPON. UMIT ONE COUPON
PEA PURCHASE. REDEEMABLE ONLV AT KMART.

REDEEM BY MAIUNCI TO:

I

THE BEVEN·UP COMPANY ~
P.O. BOX 87'0133
EL PABO, TX
L7 _
Ball87·0133
......

'2/S5Sale
Choice of I..Bzer Pop
sword or Spin Pop

Explree 121241114

Battery-operated candy;
lights up or spins.

, UNCOLA AND SPOT character are registered

TX 1994. Registered" ' of the HutlliSweet Co.

Kntart advertl•ed nterchandl•• policy

M&amp;rnhandille adVartiBed In thla circular ia &amp;ittWf Sale Priced or at our Everyday Low Price Anytime
and E~otery Time, In aome caeea, ""!offer Spec;lal Buya which lll"e 1111~ k"\ limited qu~Jf~lltlea.

Regular prices may vary in some
stores due to local competition.
Layaway not available In all stores.

-"==;;;;,

01994 K~ CorporaUon

Ou' firm Intention l~t to hav&amp; s~otery advurtl&amp;ed Item In etook on our shelves. It an a~•rtl.-d Item I•
not available for purohll88 Clue to any unfore&amp;&amp;en reaaoo, Kmart wllluue a Rat1 Check on request
foto" the merch8ndlse (one item or reasonable family quftl"ltlty) to be rxrchaaed at the advftl"tiRed
price whenovtlf" 11\lftllable, or wid - II )"OI.J e comparable quality Item e.t e. comparable pl'ice .
Merchandiae Not Available In Kmart Clearance Outlet Stores.

RETURNING REMAINS - North Korc1111 soldiers canied tile
collin amtalning tile body of U.S. Army pilol David Hilemoo, to be
banded over to the U.N. command at Panmunjom today. Hilemon,
of ClarkJvUle, Tenn., died when bls recoDD&amp;iuance heUcopter
strayed ilito Nortll Korean airspace on Dec. 17. Anotller pilot,
Bobby HaU, of BroobvlU., Fla~ II sUit being held by tloe Conun•·
nist nation. (AP)

·

·

.:Shelling shatters Bosnian truce · ·

..2 . 9 ' 7 S a l e·

All In-stock Ceslo sports
wstch6s In styles. Reg. 16.9989.99, Sale 12.74-67.49

~uard in dress uniforms of their
mdividual counbies.
The U.N. flag was draped over
IJJe coffin and tied down as a white
plastic bag carrying Hilemon •s JIOS·
sessions was carried over. After a
minute of silence, a minister said a
brief prayer.
The body taken to a military
hospital at Yongsan U.S. military
base nea,r central Seoul. It was to
be flown later to Travis Air Force
Base near San Francisco for an
autopsy.
The helicopter incident bas
strained 'ties between the United
States and reclusive North Korea
just as IJJey were beginning 10 ease.
"We certainly welcome this
humanirarian move," White House
Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers
said, adding thai the United States
will continue to demand Hall's
release ''in time for the Christmas
holiday."
Defense Secretary William
Perry said evidence indicates lbe
helicopter crossed into North Korea
by mistake.
" I believe the pilot made a mistake, and for many reasons we
regret IJJat mistake, but I do not
believe tbe m'istat.e warranted
shooting down the helicopter," ·
Perry said.

food.
There was no immediate word
on who fired lbe shells, but tbe
market is located just below Mount
I~bevic, which is beld by Bosnian
Serbs.

Pollee cordoned off tile market
and banned pedestrians from wallcing along the city's notorious
"Sniper Alley" as of Friday.
·
At a different tllatket in Sarajevo last
a single .shell

---~·,e~T)hr:e~._a8Wttla1c1 uk~cnawm.ue1 ~o~n~ly~a~d~ay~ wereHo.D:s~pi~tal~om_,_a_·~~s_w_·_d_t_w_o_~
----k~i~ll~e~d~6~9~~~·1Missue
T~bait~at~ta~c~k
an ulti·~llCgociated by
was 10
· go into effect - and two hours
before the-United Nation's top
diplomat 1n Yugoslavia arrived for
talks on Implementing lbe truce.
· "This Is a brutal violation, and
putrageous," said u .N. envoy'
Yasbusbi Alcasbi.
. The shells landed In a market
just bdlind tile btimed-out National
Library and City Hall. Witnesses
- ilid one shell bit a sbop and lbe
other laDded in a parking lot where.
residents c8rn money by selling
jleriQDal belongings.
A few l~rge pools of blood
Could be seen In the fn:sb snow, as
~.~~ SC8Itered clothes and tins or

No paper
·

Monday ,.
The Daijy Stntilltl business ·
office will close at noon Satur·
day. The newspaper._wiiLnot be
published Monday so tbat Its
employees may observe the
Christmas bollilay.
Re1u1ar publication an4 bus!·
nessbouni'C8tlllle ifuesdi5'.

'-----;....----.,.

move
heavy weapoos outside a 12.5-mile
radius or "Sar_ajevo or face
airstrikes.
The Serbs generally complied,
bringing monlbs of relative calm to
lbe besieged Bosnian capital.
Akasbl met today wilb tile Mus.lim-led Bosnian government on
implementing tile ~-fire Cllb'
bad negotiated, and planned to so
later to Serb headquarten in the
nearby village of,Pale,
Despite cease-fire plans, tbe
United Nations command today
reponed violcllt incidents Wednes·
day in four of Bosnia's six U.N. 'I
designated safe areas.
I · ,

•'"·

,~ .

•

, SOUTIIEitN HIGH CHRISTMAS - Tile
Sowtlten llltlll Scltool c1to1r ull lalla
diMI perlorllled tar altolll 1St people o-rw ...
,...Dd, mder lite dlndlon ot minlk: teaclner ,.

-••tal

.. POINT PLEASANT, W.VL Gov. Gastoa Capcrtoo hu askecl
tile bead of tbe U.S. &amp;viloamenlll
Protection Ageocy 10 intervene in a
dispute over a waw poUutioo per.
mit for the Jl'lllll*ld Mason County
pulp mill acaxding ID a report in
Wednesday's Cbarlcstoa Gaztne.
Jill Wilson, a Capenon
spokeswoman, cooflllDed lbat lbe
governor discussed the ma11cr wiih
EPA Adminislrator Carol Browner.
. "I think that In my p-ocess like
Ibis, lbat would be a naiUI'ai," W"tlson told the Gautre. "If you're not
satisfied with a decision tbat is
made at one level, you go to the
next level."
The Caperton administration
opposes a plan by EPA Regional
Adminisuator Peter Kostmayer to
conduct further tests to determine
how mucb dioxin is in lbe Ohio
River before tile mill is built
Dioxin woul!l be emitted by tile
mill's chlorine dioxide bleaching
process. Scientists believe that,
even in tiny concentrations, dioxin
causes cancer, reproductive problema and devei"'IICotai diiordeni.
A fedctal Clem Wau:r Act per·
mit for tile mill, issued by the state

Division of Environmental Protec·
lion under EPA supervision, is cur·

rently on bold while lbe agencies
son out their differences.
CapertDo bas called the environ·
mentalists "extremists," and be
supports tile Panons &amp; Whittemore
Inc. project and IJJe hundreds of
jobs it JrOIIIises. I
"As important as 800 permanent
jobs and 2,000 construction jobs
. are 10 tbe families of West Virginia.
and when we have complied with
the rules and regulations, it is
important lbat tile govcrna use his
power to get a fair solution and try
to create jobs and opponunities for
West Virginians in an environmen·
tally safe way," Wilson qUOied tile
governor.
Stale Division of Environmental
Protection Director David .C.
Calla1han confirmed that be bas
complained to EPA officials in .
Washington about Kostmayer 's
criticisms of the water pollution
permit DEP issued in August
He also said be hoped Caperton
would intervene wilb the Clifton
administtation 10 stop Kosbnayer
from conducting IJJe dioxin tests
and delaying the pennit.
Under Kosunayer"s proposal,
scientisiS would take new fish samples from tile Obio near tile ARlie
Grove mill site and extrapolate
from fish tissues how much dioxin
is in lbe river water. Kostmayer
said his agency would start the fish
sampling, possibly as early as
Wednesday, without DEP agreement.
The Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundation· s (ACT)
lawyers fiJed a request on Monday
asking ICostmayer to schedule
anoiJJer public bearing on EPA"s
objections to tile mill pgliJIIl.

�'

'

'

'
''

•· ~'. &lt;
' ,\;_

Commentar

Thuredey, December 22, 1994

.. .,. }
I

Pa~2-The Deily Stntlnil

.-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

OHI O Wea th er

:l..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
thursday, December 22, 1994

coaditiOIII and higb

~ICH.

IToledo 1411" I

The Daily Sentinel
111 Cout Street
l'omelvJ', Ohio

•

tUJMDIA,NC.
ROBERT L. WINGB'I'T
Publltller '

CIIAitLENE BOJi'.i'LICH

GeMnl Maa.pr ·

MARGARET LEIIBW
C.troller

· J,EITERS Ofl OPINION are welcome. They llbould be leu llwl 300
'MIIdl loq. All !etten ... IUbjoc:t ~= IIIII mUll be ll&amp;ned witb 011110,
oddreu IIICI telopboDe aumber. No
letten will be publilbod. I.aum
llbould be iD ..,00 lallb,llldleuiD&amp; Ill-. DOl piiiOIIIIiliel.

President Clinton may help
complete 'Reagan revolution'

,

C111MAocu--or,lnc.

Ch
Eve snow may
be seen in eastern Ohio ·
a.m.
By TIM Associated Press
FOreCaslers 8re holding out hope
for a white Christmas over the eastern third of Ohio. Some wet snow
is possible Salurllay nigbl, Christmas Eve, whUe the rest of the siate
gets rain.
But any snow that accumulates
won't be around long. Tbe National
Westber Service says lhe mUd conditions
continue tbrougb the
weekend, with daytime higbs near
50 degrees.
'
Winter arrived in Ohio 10 tempeilltures·about 10 degrees warmer
than normal. Ovemigllt lows were
m06tly in the 30s.
1be tecord-high temperature f(l'
this date at•'tJre Columbus westber
station was 63 degrees in 1941
while the record low was -17 in
1989. Sunset tonight wiD be at 5:10
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:51

wm

White House attacker
dies in D.C. hospital

Eastman
quits board .

Weather forecut:
Today ... Increasing cloudiness
southeast... Otherwise pa~tly to
mostly sunny. Continued UDSeasonably warm with higbs in the lower
1.
50s.
·
Tonigbt ... Becoming mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 10 upper
30s.
·
Friday ... Mostly 'cloudy. A
chance of rain east third. Higbs in
lhe 40s.

Extended forecast:
Saturday ...A chance of rain or
snow east...Fair west. Lows 30 to
35. Highs from 35 10 40 nortbeasl
and 40 10 45 elsewhere.
Christmas
Day
and
Monday ... Fair . Lows from tbe
upper 20s to mid 30s. Highs in lbe

(Continued from Page 1)
bine 10 teach all the seventh graden
for the morning periods in tl!e cafeteria, and then three teacbers would
reacb all the eighth graders in the
afternoon, Butler said.
"Tbe advantage is, we'd gain
three rooms in the building," be
added. "We need to get away from
our bomework/memnrization type ·
or study. We should be teaching
skiDs and problem·solving more."
This group learning session where teachers could give students
more one-on·one help - would
help break away from simply making students regurgitate facts, be
added.
Also, Buder suggested adopting
occupational work experience for
students who are behind in learning
to brush up on study skills and
teacb more life-related knowledge.
Advanced placement biology.
history and English could also be
added, Butler said.
"The best way to solve the eroding problem with open enrollment
is to offer these types of classes"
that other area schools don' I, he
added.
Karr said he thought Butler's
ideas were interestinR and the
board recommended that the princi·
pal develop potential schedules and
plans.
In other action, tbe board suggested that Butler finalize figures
for acquiring a computer system in
his office.
·
Butler recommended buying an .
IBM computer that could tie into
'E-mail and would be used mostly
to coordinate discipline and allendance letters, and records.
Tbe Meigs County Juvenile
Coun will give lhe scbools $2,000
for discipline, which this money
could go towards the computer,
Buder said.
An IBM personal computer,
computer desk, laser printer and
installation would total $2,562.87,
Butler said after be compared
prices in the area

RON EASTMAN
In olber bosiness, the board:
• will consider placing a 4.8-mill
levy on next November's ballot
tbat would create $1.7 million 10
change the existing bigb scbool
into an elementary building and
build a new high school. Two of
the elementary schools are more
tban 70 years old, white the other
buildings are at least 40 years old.
Karr said.
.
• learned lbe high school septic
system will be cleaned over the
Christmas break, while lbe Cbester
Elementary Scbool' s septic must be
resolved since il does not have a
leach bed, Superintendent Ron
Minard said.
• will spend about $6,000 to
update the scboQI' s policy manual.
The policy guide bas not been
revised since 1984 and tbe district
could be at risk if it were sued and
tbe policy manual was not up-todate, Karr said.
"I know it's expensive but we
need to do i~" Karr said.
• will spend an extra $450 a year
to change the district's five lines to
toucb pbone mode . Installation
could be free, Minard said.
Attending tbe meeting were
president Ray Karr, vice. president
Jim S.mitb and board members
Eastman, Greg Bailey and Mike
Martin. The next regular meeting
date was nol available.

Suspect arrested in bomb
Meigs land transfers posted incident on N.Y. subway
The following land transfers
Affidavit, Freda P. David,
40s.

.

were recorded recently in the offiCe deceased, to Joseph Jr. arid Belva
of Meigs Couoty Recorder Emmo- Jean Schuler, Rutland, I 1/16
gene Hamilton:
acres;
. Right or way, Randall and
Rigbt or way, George v . and
Cindy Browning 10 Tuppen Plains- Claudia L. McClain to TPCWD,
Chester Water District, Oli-ve , Scipio, 32.02 acres;
20.001 aaes;
Deed, Jack W. Carsey to
Rigbt or way, Betty D. Milhoan Howaro B. Mullen, Pom~y lot; .
10~.~~ •'"' .,.••.. Deed, Ja)I,:Jr-. and l..Uiian,Jt4ar-,
Riglitfor'wky; willtam.s:- ~t · teile Hi1110 fohn c. Hlie. Mi(liJieSharon K. Sharp to TPCWD, port part lots;
Orange 11463 acres;
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian MarDeed, Hilda A. and Cecil E._ lene Hall to Penny Preston, Olive
Glass 10 Julia A. Cumberland, Sut- -parcels;
........_,
ton and Chester parcels'
Deed, Britt H. and JQ&lt;Ii L. Dod· .
Deed, Cbarles H. and Sbaron M. son to Jodi L. Dodson. Middleport
Knigbt to Lee Powell, Chester lot;
parcels;
Deed, Jaymar Incorporated .to
Arfidav,it, Wayne Zeigler, Jelm Enterpnses, Chester/Salts·
deceased, to Bonnie J. Bennett, bury/PomeroyJ!i~tiOn parcels;
Scipio 12 5 acres·
Deed, Tnmty Cburcb of
De~d ' Bonni~ J. Bennett 10 Pomeroy, Trinity Congregational
Daniel L. Tbompsoo, Scipio, 12.5 Churcb to Rentals Unlimited,
acres;
Pomeroy;
Affidavit, Clarence R. Sargent,
Affidavit, Cyrenous Hall to
decell$llll, lo Clllfll Mae Sargent, Mary Belle Barnhart;
Rae~ tracts;
Deed, Joseph W. and Tammy D.
Affidavit, Alfred E. Young, Dummiu 19 Harley E. McDonald,
deceased, 10 Lyvonnia E. Young, Middleport.
Salisbury, 3.000 acres;

Divorces, dissolutions filed
The followiog actions to end
marriage were filed recently in lbe
office of Larry Spencer, Meigs
Coumy Clerk of Cotlf!S:
Dissolution asked - Roy L.
Bailey !llld Dorothy I. Bailey, both
of Racine, Dec. 15, .
Divorc·es asked - Coral D.
Sandli11. Syracuse, from Robert
Sandlin, Bethel, Dec. 14; Tracy
Lynn Lawrence, Pomeroy, from
Benjamin Donald Lawrence, Padn·
cab, Ky., Dec. 14; Terry Micbael
Ingram from Patricia L. Ingram,
both of ReedsvUie, Dec. IS; Lynda
Jane Adkins, Portland, from
Michael D. Adkins, Terre Haute,
Ind., Dec. i9; .Eugene 0 . Adkins.

EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom lbl~m bu conred.the Wldte HOUle for

The Aaoc:illted Press slllce 1989 IIDd often report'&amp; on economic ..._,

Letters to the editor

' &lt;1

.

)

.,

Postal dis-service
Dear Editcr.

Wbell I read tbe Jeaer to lbe editor lian Earl YOUDJ it said so wen
· wballllave)bbca tbinking about the
postal semce aiJ!ce our mail has

bcea llenliO Columbus.
I m:eivc my prciCI'iplion drugs
by mall. It toe*"* month and me:
check waa !'oat that has never
turDed up. My ai_. who lives ill .
MiDcnl Wdll. \\'M."iillle4 ,a letter, wlda c:bect eacloted, to Park·
ersbilrJ, w.vyt -loll and they
were gollig .to dancel her inaunlllce.
1bua. two dlecb loll ill Eltfober.

Tbe idea ran into . trouble,
thougb, in early Decembe.r budgetplanning sessions, wbicb merged
with meetings 10 fashion lbemes
forCliniOn's speecbes.
Stepbanopoulos argued tbat a
tuition deduction would ''clutter
up" Clintoo's message.
And Bentsen argued at fust for a
trimmed-down, $9 billion version
of tbe deduction ralber tban the $20

Fifty years aso my stepfather
carried the mall. He rowed a boat
across tbe Ohio River 10 Belleyille
and met the mail train three liiuea a
day. You could mail a letter for
three ceots and the service was
much beeler than today.
Now we get mail onoe a day and
the cost of a stamp will go 10 32

•
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•

1

The Daily Sentinel

~

(USPS 113-960)
Publit hed c~cry afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by tbe
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia
loc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21$6.
Second class poslage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio. .

..
:I

:!~;;~;;:i. ;~~ :;,.

cenll.
. ,.
. The.lid part Is wllat can we do?
If somc'one has
'solution
let us
blOw.
. a.
.
FlliiiCea Reed
Reedsville .

in what he eilled ~
my" of global markets and bigb
technology.·
George
· · Under the proposal, families
congressional
.
earning up to $100,000 per yeat
reportedly fougbtlbe tuition !leduc- will be able to deduct up .to
lion on JI'OIIIII!I that it ~. . _ $10,000 per year in post-iecOoclaty
atteo!loo away from-'lhC •!!Iiddle· educatloli costs, reducing their
cui thlt plnlllli ila'O pro- taXes by up 10 $2,800. . ·
r-Practically every parent wbo has
Had Clinton propoacct,only his sent cbUdren 10 conege - &lt;I' conSSOO per child tax c:rcdit, however, templaled it. wilh dread - prel!umhe would have been open to the ably bas woodered why money .
attack- made 1111yway by Rcpub- . paid out for tuition isn't deductible
Ileana - that be was merely copy- . . wbUe expenses for medical care,
ing !heir ideas.
charity and~ expenaes !lUI.
By the lime Clintoo spoke 10 1be
In one White House meeting
nation Dec. IS, three other middle· latter the election, an aide recalls

· ':!!!,tali

could be paid for, but was most .
interested in protecting the cbil- . : l
aren's tax credit, a version of ."
. wbicb be sponSored as a sena10r. t
key allies in favor of lbe ,
dcclluction were
Director . · •
.
. '(ysoJI,,.;_:L
of Eco- i
nomic Advisers.
'
Tyson and Gene Sperling, a
staff member of the President's :

·1.
t

dedocnon idea 10 Reich, wbo f1nt Bentsen's keY allies in arguing roc
,
~...t It 10 Bentsen·late last vear
· 1 d..ll)g a .prov 1Sion·
· IO·eXpand
• • 't
.1"'.....-.:vf.
· .......... oi,· ·• • ".J•r ·[InC.U:
as.paito a ...---.¥· o~,prt.p..U. 10 "·IRAf'·; • '
... ,. ' .
"; · · ~
help ~n gel better ediicatioli .· biD.OO clearl'f baS ueej,' ~ ' ~· •
and trallllll8.
10 climb lian 38 penlCilt appoval
'
A.t the lime, Bentsen opposed bact IDIO pubBc accllim. He' 1
. tbe Idea as too ~cnalv.c, but 10 repair self-Inflicted Um&amp;ge~
1
Reich assigned an. • Jack Dono- his moral authority. and rc
hue, to work on 11 with T~ aa a leader, but
r.!u11ca . . J
tax policy dllef Leslie Samuels. By send their ltids to
e and hdt7 .. 1.
September; .Bentsen wa~ .JIIore. iilg worker&amp; p~~PJI~are ·tor. lie;.)· ;;, 4 ·
agreeable, and later DepUty 'flea. · c:lrcallliOiiid deinani ···~ .. · · ~" .-w
sury Secre~ary Frank ~ewman lllldenllndlllbi: ~,!:~
became a suJlPIXlCriPf the idea.
lies of the middle clau. ---w

a'

:ll;•

lliio:J · .

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POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
Olllo 45769.
I.

SUBSCRIPTIOI'I RATES
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MAILSUIISCRIPTIONS
Inolok Mtlp C"""IJ

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Marriage licenses
The following couples were
issueid marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Judge Robert Buck:
Eric Alan Harris, 31, Racine,
and Sara Marie Oxley, 29.
. Pomeroy; Robert Eugene Romines
Jr., 22, and Dawn Susanne Toussain~ 21, both of Rutland.

.

Am Ele Power ......................33 118
Abo .......................................55 718
Alltlud ou .......................... .33 5111
ATAT ................................. , •.50 l/4
Buk o ...................................ls "4
Bob EYau ............................. .lO l/1
CbatDPtoa lad...................... .lP 112
Clw1nl.liltop ........................6 ~
City HoldiDc ..........................,......34
Fotlenl M. .ut........................IP Ill
Goodyear TaR ..... _....,......... .33 l/1
K-...n ....................................u 114
LudJ Elld .....,............... -............. If
Limited lac. ..!.. ..........................'19
MultltDedla ltic.................... .17 314
Polllt Bancarp ....................... .... 19
Rellaace Electric ....,...................31
Robblnl Myen .......... _,,,,...... l7
Royal Du1Cb .........................106 711

a

Sbone:r'• Inc ........................... U 314
Star Bank ...............................36314
Wendy lnl'l............................14 1/4
Wortblnatoa lnd................... .lO 1{2
-··Stock reporll
..
lbe 10:30 Lf

unemployed computer operator
from Scotch Plains, N.J., was
charged with 45 counts. The bomb
went off in his bands, Police Commissioner William Bra11on said. ·
Leary was under police guard at
Cornell Medical Center, where be
was in critical condition with burns
to his race. knuckles ftD\IIegs. .

E'c'oriorny logs 4°/~ groWth ·
(Continued from Page I)
in sborHerm.interest rates. On Nov. 1;; the Fed raised two key rates
tbree-fourtbs of a percentage poin~ the biggest jump in 13 years.
Tbe central bank, hoping to stifle inflation, is seeking to slow economic growlb !O about 2.5 percent. 1be economy grew at 4.1 percem rate in
the second quarter on lop or 3.1 percent in the firSt three months of 1994.
1be Fed passed up lbe opportunity Tuesday to mise interest rates for a
seventh time Ibis year. The central bank's policy·making Federal Open
Market Commillee ended its last meeting of lbe year by deciding 10 leave
rates unchanged, but analysts said another round of higher rates Is all but
certain early in the new year.
. T~y·. s data also showed that inll~n •. while still under CO)l~l, w~ a
b1t b1gher m the thlfd quarter than p~ated . An mflauon
gauge lied to GDP was revised upward to 3 percent from 2.8 percent. Tbe
same gauge showed inflation at 2.9 percent in lbe second quarter.
The Conunerce Department also reported that after-tax profits of U.S.
corporations rose 2.5 percenl in the th\rd quarter, revised downward from
an earlier 2.8 percent estimate, and i:0mpared lo 7.3 percent the previous
three monlhs.
The department said the economy's annual rate of growth was $52.9
biUion in the third quarter. with consumer spending accounting for half
tbe increase or $26.9 billion. In the second quarter, consumer spending
was up $11.5 billion.
,
Outlays were higber across the board - with Americans buying. more
big-ticket goods such as cars ahd appliance' as well as spending more for
food, fuel and services.

Is Holiday Cutlery Savings
Betty Crocker Cutlery
Gift Set

sg_gg

1

Includes 6 knives,
block and cookbook
335995

Select group of kitchen cutlery 50%

Stocks

Member: The Associated Press', and the Ohio
Newspil)er Aasooiation .

'

Portland. from Joann Adkins, Terre
Haute, Ind.
Dissolutions granted - Gary L.
Carr and S9nya K. Carr, Dec. 16;
William Gregory Peck and Della L.
Peck, Dec. 19; Wanda M. Black·
bum and Nick R. Blackburn, Dec.
19.
'
Divorces granted - Brenda N.
Stites from Steven J. Stites, Dec.
19.

By TOM HAYS
Associated Press Writer •
NEW YORK - A man critically injured by a firebomb that shot
flames through a crowded subway
car was arrested in bis bospital bed
today and charged with attempted
murder and assault.
Edward J. Leary, a 49-year-old

••

quoth prodded by Adnot o
GaWpalll.

15°/o
off
All
In Stock
Case.K11iv.e.L

'

Auessories

•

•.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe ety and that nobody' s inunune."
FBI says a fatal shooting on the
Without saying wb elher the
White House sidewalk began with shooting was appropriate, Myers
the lcnife-wielding victim cbasing a also said the incident ''underscores
U.S. Park Police officer and defy- lbe difficult jobs law enforcement
ing shouted orders to stop.
officers face every day and the difMarcelino Comiel "refused to ficult decisions they must make."
drop the knife and refused to lie on
The FBI account gave no clue
the ground,·' the FBI said in an what had prompted Corniel to go
affidavit that accompanied acbarge after Park Police oHicer Stephen J.
of assault on a federal officer flied O'Neill. It said O'Neill , who knew
Wednesday against Corniel.
the homeless man, had seen him at
Comiel, 33, a homeless man 6:30a.m.. sitting on some bi3!Jkets
wbo had been living' in Lafayette wilb four cups of McDonaJd:s corSquare. the park across Pennsylva· fee.
nia Avenue from the White House,
" O'Neill acknowledged Cornie!
died Wednesday night at George and contmued to malce his rounds
Washington University Hospital. through Lafayette Park;" said lhe
He was sbot once in the abdomen affida vit.
and once in his right leg and under· ~
At about 9 a.m. 0 ' Neill began
wemtwo lengthy surgeries.
walking a foot patrol on the Penn·
While House Press Secretary sylvania Avenue sidewalk directly .
th d · ·
in fron t of the Wbite House and
Dee Dee Myers said e a miDIS- noticed Cornie! running toward
tration was saddened by the death.
She said the incident "underscores him from the park, holding a large •
the nature of violence in our soci· kiiife in his left hand .
~

--Area death-carl A. Martin
Carl A. Martin, 78, Middlepon, died Wednesday, Dec. 21, 1994 at
Holzer Medical Center.
·
Born May 31, 1916 in Meigs Coumy, son of the late Henry A. and
Maud Kemper Martin, be was an electncal repamnan wttb General Electric and tbe railroad. In addition, be was veteran of World Warn, bavmg
served in tbe South Pacific. He attended the Middleport Cburcb of Christ
He is sUrvived by his wife, Lena Wolfe Martin of Middleport; a son
and daugbter-in-law, Larry and Dorothy Martin of Elkbart, Ind.; one
grandson, two stepgranddaughters, one stepgrandson and five great-stepgrandcbildren; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded iii death by an infanl daughter, Anita Linn Martin;
and two brothers, George and Clarence Manin.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·
port, with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel HiU Ceme·
tery, Cheshire. Friends may call atlhe funeral home Friday from 7·9 p.m.

EMS units answer 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
eight calls for assistance Wednesday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
12:45 p.m., Chestnut Street ,
Pete Quick, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
10: 10 a.m., Childrcns Home
Road, Anna Frank;

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions- none.
Wednesday discharges- none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 21 - Scou
Hendersbot, Neal Bonecutter.
Zachary Robens, Antonio Jordan,
William Grueser, Tracy Arrowood,
Mrs. Orvii.HiU and daughter, Mrs.
Randy Baisden and son, Mary
Webster, Lilab Zerkle. Mrs. Troy
Stewart and daughter, Jeffrey
Roush, Belly Hickman.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Run, daugbter, Crown City; Mr.
and Mrs. Troy Stewart. daughter.
New Haven, W.Va.
(Pufsbed with permission)

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
WILLIAM SHATNER,
IN

STAR TREK: GENERATIONS
PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING SUNQAY, QEC, 25

THE

LION KING
OI'IE EVENING SHOW 7:30
44&amp;-0923

7:36 p.m.. squad and volunteer
fire department. furna ce fire at
Ed ward Patterson re sidence on
Brick Strec~ no injuries.
RUTLAND
7:48 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Jessie ,
Jarrell . Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
SYRACUSE
. 10:38 a.m., Maples Aparunents,
Ethel Newman. VMH; ,
3: 20 p.m., Sta te Rout e 124.
motor·v ehi clc accident, Ryan
Allen , Bill y Sheppard , refuse d
trcauncnt;
4:56 p.m., Starcher Road, Edna
Apperson, Pleasant Valley Hospital:
9:1 6 p.m., Elm Str('CI, Cora
Beegle, VMH.

�I

The Daily Sentinel

iSports·

Thuradey, December22,1994

~

Texas :southern tops Minnesota; UC falls

, LONG DRIVES- ClnelnnatJ centerAd Long (left} drives against
· California postman Ryan Jamison during the ftrst half of Wednesday
• night's colleae pme In Clnc:lnnati, where the visiting Golden Bears
: won 89-76. (AP)

time, and ~2 in the game, which
was their third straight loss after
falling to Cincinnati at home and at
California last week.
"We just shot the ball horrible.
You can t beat (anybody) shooting
20% in the fli'SI half," Minnesota
forward Jayson Walton said. "But
we can't feel sorry for ourselves.
The sun's going to come up
tomorow.'

1

Minnesota's only lead of the
night was 10-9, and the Tigers
went on a 20-4 run from there.
Minnesota's last points of the fli'St
half came with 6:30 to play.
The Gophers finished 7-for-37
(19%) from the field in the first
half and 21-for-73 (29%) for the
game.
"It was awful cold out there,"
Haskins said.
Kevin Granger had 29 poiniS to
lead the Tigers, while Townsend
Orr topped the Gophers with II.
In other games involving ranked
teams Wednesday night it was No.
3 Arkansas 97, Florida A&amp;M 57;
Jacksonville 68, No. 8 Florida 67;
and No. 24 California 89, No. 13
Cincinnati 76.
No.3 Arkansas 97
Florida A&amp;M 57
Corliss Williamson was 9-for11 from the field and scored 23
points to lead the Razorbacks (7 -I}
to their seventh straight win. Scotty

Thurman returned to the Arkansas
lineup after missin11 two glUIIes
with an ankle Injury and bad 12
points on 4-for-5 shoolin11 from
three-point range. The visiting Rattlers (2-5) were coming off a 65·
point loss at Memphis two nights
earlier.
Jacksonville 68
No. 8 Florida 67
Kip Stone scored 24 points, nine
in the final fftllr minutes, as the
Dolphins (5-2) ended Florida's 15game home winning streak. The
Gators (5-2) led 60-57 with about
10 minutes left when Stone had his
own 6-0 run to give Jacksonville
the lead for good. Andrew Deeter-

cq had 28 points and 15 rebounds
for Florida, while Dan Cross added
26 points.
No. l4 California 8!J
No. 13 Cincinnati 76
The Golden Bears (6-0), off to
their best start in 27 years, overcame an eight-point deficit in the
second half. A layup by K.J.
Roberts put California ahead to
stay, 64-63 with 8:29 left, and be
added two free throws and a layup
for a 76-66 lead with five minutes
left. Monty Buckley led visiting
California with 22 points and
Roberts added 16. Curtis Bostic
and Danny Fortson led the Bearcats
(7-3) with 18 points each.

"In the NBA,

.

[Free throws give Robinson nod over Shaq
rapping ability and the scoring abil- league at 65%, dragged down by
:By WENDY E. LANE
ity
- AND shoot the free throws. O'Neal's 54%.
: AP Spoi'U Writer
In other games, it was New Jer; Sbaquille O'Neal and Da~id But I'm going to bit 'em one day."
O'Neal, the NBA 's leading sey 117, Detroit 99; Miami 122,
·Robinson, early season favontes
:for league MVP, have been tearing scorer, bad 32 points and 10 Milwaukee 112 in double overtime:
rebounds Wednesday night in the and Indiana 107, Chicago 99.
:up opposing defenses all season.
Magic's
102-91 win over the Los
Nets 117, Plstoru 911
While O'Neal has led the OrlanThanks to Armon Gilliam, New
:do Magic to the best record in the Angeles Clippers. But b_e missed 11
:NBA, the return of Dennis Rodman of 15 free throws and IS 34-for-88 Jersey is surviving without Deirick
Coleman.
:to the Spurs has helped Robinson in his last seven games.
Robinson, who bad 34 points
Gilliam, who took his place in
':spur San Antonio to a five-game
and seven rebounds as the Spurs the starting lineup after the Nets
·winning streak.
The big difference between the beat Denver 111-97, was 16-for-18 forward injured his band, scored a
from the line. He's shooting 79% season-bigb 27 points as the Nets
; two? Free-throw shooting.
beat Detroit.
• Robinson can hit his, O'Neal for the season.
Against the Nuggets, San Anto·
Chris Morris also added a sea•can't
·
: "I'm trying my hardest, but I nio ~it 33 of 36 !ree. throws. The son-high 22 points, Benoit Ben:can't have everything," O'Neal . Mag1c, meanwhile, 1s the worst jamin bad 18 and Kenny Anderson
·said. "I can't have the looks, the free-throw shooting team in the added a season-high 17 assists and

11 poinls as the host Nets won
three in a row for the first time this
season. The last two victories have
been with Coleman sidelined with
a lacerated hand.
Terry Mills had 25 points and
rookie Grant Hill had 23 as the
injury-ravaged Pistons lost for the
eighth time in 11 games. Detrmt,
which already bad Mark West,
Oliver Miller and Lindsey Hunter
sidelined, was without guard Joe
Dumars because of a sore Achilles.
Heat Ul, Bucks Ill (lOT)
Bimbo Coles missed two patential game-winning shot, but made
up for it in the second overtime as
Miami defeated Milwaukee.
(See NBA on PageS)

Basketball

Midwest

NBA standings
AU.IIeDhloloo

~do .. ...............?J ~

Wi
.545

NewYort ............. .12 tO
New r....y......., .. .12 15

iii
6
8.5

.444
8-o .................... IO 14 .417
l'llllldelphlt ............. 8 15 .341
Mlom1 ......................7 15 .318
Wllllllqtoo ..............6 15

9

tO.S
II
11.5

.216

CeatraiDkllloll
llldllllo .................. .15 7 .612
CL.BVI!LANIJ ...... .15 I .6S2
O.lotte ............... .13 10 .S6S
Clllc:qo .................. t 1 12 .478
Allull...................10 14 .4 17
Deln&gt;IL .....................9 13 .409
Mllw..u. ..............7 16 .304

--

.S
2.S
4.S
6
6

l.l

...l!

L

Ullll .......... ······· ... 17 8
Jlo\lltoD ............ ,....13 I
Do11M .....................12 I
SuADte~nio .. .........12
9
Dellvu ................... 12 10
MlaiiCIOII ............... .l 18

10
10
ll
21

Artanw 97, Aorida A&amp;tM S1

Hou1ton 83, McNeeae St. 76
SWTuas St. 66, Ark.-Little Rock 6S
Sam Hou1ton St. 88, St. Edward's,
Tnas 64
Tena-El Puo 86, Seattle 61

Far West
Boi&amp;e St.70, San Jo&amp;e St. 6lo

Long Beach St. 79, Montaoa69
New Mexieo 76,ldaho S4
Portland 89, Caniaiut71
San FraociKO 120, Mount St. Mary's.
Weber St. 36, Brijham Youog74

r.a. a

.610
.619
.600
.571
.S4S
.217

2
2.S
3
3.l

II

PMlfk Dltbioo
·Phoeall ............... ...l&amp; l .783
S&lt;alllc ................... IS 7 .m
LA. !.aim...... .....14 I .636

- ·...........
· ······ ...
.......12
Porlland
tl
Ooldea SIJIIe ............!
LA. 0il'!"" ···········3

Southwest

Md.9l

WESfERN CONFERENCE

r-

Calirora.ia 89, aNCINNAn 76
O.ytoa 76, FwmaJ16l
lndiana 89,8utler 66
N. lllinoil70, Air Force .49
Ncbruka 101 , NE Dlioolo 6)
Tnu Soothem 71, MioDCaOll j0
W. bliooiiiO, Nonhwe.lem 48
XAVIHR (OHIO) 101, Cal State·
Norlhridll" 6l

z.s

Tournaments
llNOCIUIIt:
C'hunpi0111hlp

New0rlt'Ailli17,NorthCIIta'n 70
llolr4place
Bllldley 79, Wlllllm .t Mary 68

l .l6
10
ll.l

Wedneeday'• scores

TournUieall

MciJGnald'aiDAill a..
Plrolr-.1
Waloh 9S. Humber 77
Weatniuter, Pa. 67. MoUDI Uaioa 59

Clovcrtcaf 59, Ab'On ICeAmonl41
Col. lllftlcy 72, illmlltoa Twp. 33
Col. Reidy 72, Beaver BMtera 31
Colutd&gt;lalO, Cllyahop Hll. 44
Dty. PIUeriOD 72, Day. Colonel While

37

Miami 122, Milwaukee 112 (2 01")
iadiiDI I07, OtiCiiO 99
Sao Alltooio Ill, Denver 97
Orloado 102, LA. Oippm 91

MINE! - Indiana's Rik Smith (left) and Chicago's Ron Harper
fight for possession or the ball during the first quarter of Wednuclay
night's NBA game In Indianapolis, where the Pacers won 10'7·99. A
jump ball was caUed on the play. (AP)

Thunday'o games
CLEVELAND at New York, 7:30p.m.
Pl&gt;ilodclphla at Otarlottc, 7,30 p.m.
Utah a1 Atlanta, 7:30[.m.
Phoenil al HoUlton, p.m.
Dell• 11 SeatJe, 10 p.m.
WllhiD8lDD It Oolden Slate, 10:30

p.m.

Friday's games ·

-·a&lt;a&lt;

•r·m.

Sill AliiOilo,I:JO p.m.
Doawtll l'!»mll, 9 p.m.

tlllloo II Porl118d. I0 p.m.

·

WulllltllOI at L.A. Ctippen, 10,30
p.m.
Satnmooto II LA. Lat«&lt;. tO,]() p.m.

Pilr:eton St. Portsmouth Notre Dame

38

4l

lbvenaa41. Field 17
R.ictlmond Hit. 35, Aurora 30
River View 45, New Lelinaton 33
S. RanF 40, U.bon 36
Sltaw 63, Cle. Ellt Tech 39
Solon 62, Kenston 40
SouthYiew 63, Tol. Bows.her S8
Tol. Noue Dame .S4, Bowlioa Green

Holiday Gift
Subscription Coupon

Tri·Valley 60. May.,llle S7
Twinabura 56. 0ranll" 19
Vall. Frwtle 71, Ptlrn (/

Subscription ordered by:
NAME _________________

Vincent Warren 7S, Ftoa.Uer42
W. Braneh SO, LouiavUle 41
W. Ocaup 68, Wlckll!fc 4S
W. Mukiqum 74, JohD GleD1146
Watkilll Memorial SS, Walaut Ridae

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31

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OeorJla 19. Wialluop S6
11Cboll•ill• 61, Floridl67

Mclq&gt;ltll92, Nidlolll SL 72
T o - Tech 19, Oral Robarllll

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

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67
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'iVOIIIdt&gt;iR II,AullioPely71
W. lolluck)'!ll2, H. KeoluCkY

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Cla . -S3,0o . Fi-~1

Cll. Mlrii..,DI!IO, Roadiq &lt;10
Cit. W,.,...a56,Deet.._kS~
Cle. St. lldwWI5, Cit. Adamo S9
Cle. VA-5170, Cle. SL lpa&lt;luo SS
cte!W.. Tocb 62, Soulh¥ic:w SO
C.L DoSI1co 60, Cd. llartley S7
(Ky.) Holy eroo. 10, c1a.

~Jeg~ SCOres .
Fairleiah DickJMOD 69, Wrial\l St. 67
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New Hampoblte 74, Miami (&lt;JIIo) 71
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w::,~!f:'• 47, Flnlattdl 43
W
57, Bay II
YOIIDj. B - . a 62, CUile1d ~9

__ciQ!!IIi/&gt;1

Major men's

l'llTSBUROH PIRATES: Sipcd Rob
Leary, first bueman, to a minor lr.aJUe
contra't.
SAN DII!GO PADRHS: Anoouoccd
the Ale or the team from Tom Weroer to
John Moores.

Pbilo 41, Crooksville 40
Plckerloaton IOl. Louinille (Ky.)
Butlrt .0

I

fA•- S7, Oa. Taylor 43

year COD1111CL

Painenille Rlventde " · Conneaut 53

ButJcr 13, Cindalllli 56
EVIDivllle 78, Cleveland St. 61 ·
IIIIDO!t SL 75, BowliD&amp; Oreeo 52
X.Yier 76, Mllllli, Ol1lo 13

Cil.

Dave HolliDI , UJird bueman, to a oDe-

Newark 46, Delaware 44

Non-c:onferenc:e oetlon

· 72, Cllyollop
l'olll60
Bellbn&gt;ok62,
UllleMIIIIII
st
Brooke. W.Va. 64. Bucbyt Local st

Nollooal._

PIULADE!.PHIA PHfLUES: Slaacd

ObaliD 52, AYOD 41

MlanNOtallSICIIIIIOIIIo, IO,JOp.m.

Philac;lclphiaat 801toa, 7:30p.m.
M - a t Orludo, 7,30 p.m
q,.toue at Mlami1 7:JO p.m.
A~W~•• Detroit.
lttdtua Cl!ICOF, o p.m.

FoolbaU

Natta..lfOGIW IA.ATI.AHI'A Fo\UDNS: l'lar:ed Cl!uct
Smilh, def'e.ave ead, oa llliured tei«Yf:.
Siped Dullllu Aadaaeol,cfel-1 .. eod.
CINCINNATI BENOALS: Placed
Steve Broua.d, nur.DiAI b~ek, aDd Eric
Moore, orrouive tac:klc, oa hl,)ured re·
1erve. Acquired Derek Ware, tllht eDd,
ofT waiven from the Ariz.ou CardiDIII
and Lamoot HoUinquat.Uaeblcter, orr
waivers from the WuhiDJlOD ~DI.

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McComb.S8, N. Baltlonore 38
Mci&amp;&amp; 31, Alexander 30
Moraan63, Sheridan 40
N. Ol110tcd l7, Flllr¥1cw 43
New RieJtl66, Van Buren 37

81, Denitoa 72

Ohio ILS. boys' scores

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Ohio women's
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contr.ct.
SEATILE MARINERS : Aatecd to
terma wilh Jay Buhncr, outfielcfa, on •
three.-y. colllnW:t. Plleed Brie Anthony,

Vall. 33
Oarflold H~. 59, Chane1 SS
Geneva·64, Ashtabula S3
Gilmour l9, l.ako Calh. 37
Grove Port 41, Col. Wflltlalld 44
Hamiltoo Badin 72, Kttterlaa Alt« 34
Har&lt;tin Northern S3, RldiJ'IIIODI41
Hi&amp;hJand l4, Lorai• A&lt;tm. KID&amp;43
Hilll~rd S2, Laucuter 48
Holy Name •s. Stronpville 46
Jeff moo 91, Paioeavllle Hlney60
Leetonia 62, Lordltown 33
Liberty Benton 71, Ada 44
Logan 110, Chlllicotlle 37
Madiooa Plai111 6l, Ydlow Sprlnp 41
Mlrlinaton til. Akron Sprina. 28
Muon SS. Cin. Ursuline 33
Mwillon lacklon 64, Mauillon ti3 (2

Maloll• 8&amp;, ~ 75

M~a~k:iaaum

CLHVBLAND INDIANS: Siaoed
David L)'llc::h, pitcher, to a miaor !cape

E. Clinton Sl, Milllli Tnoce 46
Elyria W. 44, Clcarview 34
FrankliD Furnace Oreen.64, Symmea

Moolda... Clorbboai T -

NcwJmey lt7 ; Detroit99

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Cle. l.utherao Will ii1,8e.dlwood25

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Transactions

f{fl

r

-_

-Lecture sheds light on owners' payroll tax plan for,·players
The Canadian Press, cltinll

TORONTO (AP) - NID.. play- souroes It did not identify,. ~
ers say a lecture mm an eoonomil:s the leag11e bas offered to 'tW tile

profesaor helped t)!em better understand the owncn' proposed payroU
tax. And they like it even less.
"If they Won't take the tax off
the table, it's a deal-buster. Tliere
won't be a season," St. Louis
Blues forward Brendan Shanahan
~ Wednesday after 240 members
of tbe NHL Players Association
met for an ujldale on negotiations.
"We win never aca:pta tax,"
The tax b1!5 been the primary
sticking point in attempts to end the
lockout, wbich bas wiped out the
first 82 days of the NHL season
and endangers the rest.

tax of( the table. The offer included
other terms costly to the players,
CP reported, b!,itlt ~XJUld be used as
a starting point for DCIIotiationS to
resume.
NHL spokesman Arthur Pincus
denied that the tax has been withdrawn. A fax to the 26 reams, read
to The Associated Press by a management source, said: "The news
report that the NHL bas made a
proposal that does not include a tax
is erroneous. The .last proposal the
league made to the players associalion was Dec. 6."
NHLPA tyesident Mike Gartner

In an attempt to settle the strike,

or the T~fO Maple Leafs said be
has not seen a pro~al from the
lC11fUC that doesn't include a tax.
. '(11) could be tbe rumor mill
going agaiit," be said.
Jerry Hausman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
told the players that the proposed
tax would wort much like a riRid
salary cap that the owners say they
need to control escalating expenses.
"It (Hausman's lecwre) showed
there would be a problem for each
and every guy negotialin11 a contract," Anabeim "Migbty Ducks
defenseman Tom Kurvers said.
Although Stepbane Richer of
the New Jersey .Devils bas said

many players would agree !0 a tax,
those leaving Wednesday's meeting said be is in the minority.
"There's no deal to be made
with a tax. That's what came out of
this meeting,'' Pittsburgh defenseman Larry Murphy said. "They're
not going to get all the concessions
we made and then lay a tax on top
of it. If they withdraw the tax, the
deal wiU be done in a day."
Players were hopeful of reach·
lng agreement by way of another
avenue - the salary arbriuation
issue.
"There is room for negotiation,
whether it is on salary arbitration or
some other issue, that remains to be
seen," said Bruce Driver, player

repreltCntadve of the New JerltCy
Devils. "Butt wo11Jd imagine it
(salary arbitration) iJ the dealmaker. How it can be JellnJCtured,
I don'tlalow. You have to come up
with c:realive ways.''
Lower-level negotiators meeting
last week made progress on the
issues of salary arbitration, free
agency and a rookie salary cap. As
it stands, the union bas given
ground on rookie salaries while
getting more liberalized free agency for the older players, Toronto's
Ken Baumgartner said.
"So there's been concessions,
but there's also been a restructuring," he said. "We wanted to give

.

the general Dlanagers enough tools
to control salaries without having a
ta~ or cap shoved down our
throats.''

Union head Bob Goodenow and
NHL commissioner Gary Beum.m
have not mel since Dec. 6, when
the league made its .last proposal,
and no further talks are scheduled.
Considering the logistics of booting flights on the Christmas weekend, it's unlikely they will get
together until ne~t week.
"I do not have a plan when
negotiations will resume," Goode·
now said. "At the proper point in
time, Gary and I will be in contact It

•

•

Baseball owners ~et salary-cap-or-deal deadline for.Fr1day
up with ways around tbe major but both sides are even disagreeing
stumbling blocks: a payroll tax and on whose tum it is to come up with
revenue sharing.
1
a proposal.
' 'There was nothing that came
"Hopefully they are still workout of that meeting that suggested a ing on something to give us on the
path to a breaktlirough," Fehr said issue that concerns us,'' Atlanta
Wednesday after parties on both Braves president Stan Kasten said.
sides spent the day meeting "We did not get tbat Monday. We
amongst themselves, using media- did not get that Tuesday. We have
tor Bill Usery as a go-between.
not gotten that today."
"We're doing everything we
Fehr said that wasn't true,
can to keep it going," Usery said . claiming the owners just didn't like
late Wednesday, "but it's tough."
the proposals players were making.
"I don't think we've gone back"Tbe notion that they did not
ward," Philadelphia Pbillies co- get a counterpro~ from us this
general partner Dave Mon~Somery week is wrong,' Febr said. "The
said. "We feel we baven't gone owners seem to be reluctant to
forward."
address any of the issues players
How bleak is the ouUook as the have raised." :
clock ticks down?
Eugene Orza, the union's No. 2
Not only are no meetings slated, official, said be thought the own-

ers' attempt to impose a cap was
''inevitable.··

Owners threatened to do just
that when they met last TbiX'Sday in
Chicago, but instead voted 25-3 to
give the ruling executive council
tbe authority to impose one if there
wasn't a deal by Thursday.
"There was ... an absenCe of
drama. Just a lot of posturing,"
said Toronto Blue Jays designated
hitter Paul Molitor, wbo left
Wednesday evening. "It's kind of
ironic. They extend the deadline a
week and take three days to get
here.''

Owners said they were waiting
for players to make a new proposal
on a secondary tax; several management sources said they are willing to compromise on tbe level of a

payroll tax:
offer on a payroU tax.
But before addressing that issue,
"They told us it' s· complicated
Fehr wants owners to rework the and it's lied to Fort Lauderdale and
revenue-sharing agreement tbey revenue sharing," Montgomery
came up with'at Fort Lauderdale, said . ''We say make whatever
Fla., last Jan. 18. The union's · assumptions you want on revenue
economists think the subsidies that sharing and make us a proposal on
deal would produce for small-mar- a secondary tax."
ket franchises would decrease
In New York, the National
teams' incentives to win and lower Labor Relations Board accused
salaries.
baseball owners of bnfair labor
"It's difficult because they say practices and set a March 14 bearFon Lauderdale is sacrosanct," ing before an administrative law
. Febr said.
judge.
It took owners a year to reach
The NLRB made what was tanthe revenue-shliring agreement, and tamount to an indictment, charxiog
management is reluctant to revisit the owners illegally failed to make
the way teams will split their a $7.8 million contribution on Alig.
money.
.
I to the players' bealth and benefit
Montgomery, who joined Kas• plan. Four days before the payment
ten at a late-night news conference, was due, the union set an Au11. 12
said the union should make another slrike date.

Bengals make contract offers. to Blake, Pickens &amp; three others

Scoreboard
Ch~D Fal1a'36. Ola"dol 29
Cin. OU Hilla 56, Cin. Colerain 31
Cll. Tlltpia SS.II&lt;lbei·TIIe S2
a~ Catholic ~7. ElyrlaCalh. 40
cte. illy 10, 81"1111SWict 47

The Dally Sentinel P1g1 ·5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·on the •NHL·Iabor front,

By RICHARD KEIL
WASHINGTON (AP)
Tonlgbt is the deadline owners
have sel for either a deal or an
imposed salary cap, and prospects
pf a settlement are so slim that the
owners and players aren't even
sure they'D meet.
Witb the owners set to ltnpose a
salary cap at 12:01 a.m. Friday,
union leader Donald Fehr said late
Wednesday night that be couldn't
say whether there would be any
negotiating sessions with tbe owners before then.
· "We don't know what's going
to happen," Fehr admitted.
The last meeting was Tuesday
night, when Colorado Rockies
chairman Jerry McMorris spent
three fruiUess hours trying to come ·

~-

•

December 22, 1994

·By JIMMY GOLEN

In Top 25 col/2.e hoops,

By The Associated Press
Texas Southern won its· fourth
consecutive game and Minnesota
lost its third in a row.
Neither fact is much of a shock
except that they played each other
Wednesday night, and the Tigers'
convincing 71-50 victory was at
Williams Arena, the home of the
16th-ranked Golden Gophers.
"It was a big win for US,"
Texas Southern coach Robert
Moreland said. "At the half, we
Irnew that it was possible for us to
win the game. This team bas started to gather a little respect with
their performance so far this season."
The Tigers .(7-2) won at New
Mexico earlier in the year to open
some eyes, and they won tbt
Southwestern Athletic Conferenct
to advance to last season's NCAA
tournament.
"If we play as well as we can
play, it still would be a dogfigh~"
Minnesota coach Clem Haskins
said. "They've got a pretty good
ballclub. They were in postseason
play last year. I think my players
lried - we missed a few shots and
after that we got tense."
Saying Minnesota (6-3) missed
a few shots got Haskins nominated
for understatement of the month.
The Gophers missed 30 in the fli'St
half as they
trailed
29-14 at half.
.

Thu~dly,

CINCINNATI (AP) - The offers Tuesday mean that if the Doug Pelfrey.
Pelfrey needs three field goals in
Cincinnati Bengals have made con- team decides not to match other
uact offers to quarterback Jeff teams' bids for Pickens or Blake, Saturday's season finale against
Blake and wide receiver Carl Pick· the Ben11als would receive a fli'St· Philadelphia to· tie Horst
ens in efforts to keep them from round draft pick as compensation.
Mublmann' s club record of 27 in a
leaving for other reams.
Last year, in the ftrst season of season.
The Bengals on Tuesday made NFL free agency, not one restricted
Bengals general manager Mike
one-year offers of $700,000 to both free agent cban11ed clubs for a com- Brown said this week that former
players. Pickens, who now makes pensatory draft pick.
$400,000, declined comment.
"With what happened in the
, Blake smiled and called it a league last year, we thought it was
starting point, saying be would like appropriate ... II' s pretty clear we
to remain in Cincinnati next year. want these players," said Katie
The former third-stringer for Blackburn, the Bengals' seactaryCincinnati and the New York Jets, treasurer. "I think both of them By NANCY ARMOUR
who took over as the starter at mid- would like to see where it goes for
SOliTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - If
Jieason, now makes the minimum · a contract witb longer terms."
Notre Dame linebacker Justin
Sl62;000.
The Bengals also made undis- Gol!een ba4 to.pick the two games
~·""'"I'll'lovt'to' sta)' 11en!," Blake · closM c:dntract offers to their 'other · he didn't want to miss this season,
faid. "I think I've got something restricted free agents, including Air Force and Southern California
going right berc.''
linebacker Ricardo McDonald and would have been at the top of his
' NFL teams have the right to defensive back Leonard Wheeler, list
inau:h any offer to restricted free_ as well as their two-year exclusive
Air Force was Notre Dame's
. agents. The Bengals' opening . rights players, including kicker fmal home game of the season, and
all of the seniors were recognized.
And the Southern Cal game bas
always been one of Goheen's
favorites because be got his first
start as a freshman against the Trojans.
"You can be a liule more aggresMELBOURNE, Fla. (AP) But injuries don't always come
f Obio State center Juan Portet said sive at tbe snap, come firing out a at opportune times, and the senior
• 'j4.13bama's defense is a combina- little harder. ... At center, you bave was forced to sit out the two games
~ tion of all !he defenses the Buck- to be a little bit more controlled.
after suffering a rotator cuff injury
You bave to majce contact and then against Florida State.
: eyes have faced this year.
.
~ ' "As a football player you like try to move your g~y ."
"To miss the last two games of
Offensive coordinator Joe HolliS my senior season was really bard,"
f cballen11es," Porter said. "This
defmitely will be a challen~.e, but describes Porter as the "quarter· Goheen said. "Those two games,
1•. :it's
back of the line."
one you look forward to.
out of all the games I could have
"We knew Juan was going to be possibly missed, those were the
:.: Obio State plays Alabama Jan. 2
:in the Florida Citrus Bowl in a good. solid player for us, a B!g worst. (The Fiesta Bowl) is really
Ten-caliber performer. But hts important to me.''
~ : Orlando.
l: "They've prided themselves on progress has been a litUe surprising
The Irish will take on No. 4 Col:· defense through the years, and this because ... there is a lot of responsi- orado in tbe Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 2.
;:·season is no exception," ~orteF bility in terms of recognizing
The game is Notre Dame's last
;;said of the sixth-ranked Cnmson defensive fronts and then commu• chance to redeem itself after fmisbi· Tide. "On film, you can see one of nicating the bloc~ing schel!'es to ing a disappointmg 6-4-1. Many
::their priorities is using their front the other linemen, Hollis S3Jd. .
questioned why a team with that
"It took awhile, sometimes kind of record was playing Col::seven or eigbt guys to put pressure
right u~ to the snap in those early orado (10-1) and Heisman Trophy
.. on the ball."
:: Porter bas spent this season games, ' Porter said.
winner Rasbaan Salaam,
"Whereas now I lrnow, some::adjusting to playing center instead
Goheen said the Irish are anx';ofleftguard. Bril¥1 Smith, who bad times even before we go to the line ious to answer their critics.
:&gt;been expected to succeed Jack of scrimmage, because now I know
"(People say) Notre Dame isn't
··Tbrush at center, was diagnosed wbal we're trying to accomplish any good this year, but no one
::ivith a possibly career-ending back with our offense and what the waniS to count that for three of our
·:ailment in spring practice and structure of the team's defense is. four losses, we played without our
·:Porter was persuaded to move over Recognizing defenses became entire backfield," he said. "If that
almost second nature to me by the
!the ball.
&gt; "I realty liked guard,'' the .6- end of the season."
::foot-5, 292-pound Porter sa1d.

starting quarterback David Klingler Thai's what it's all about, is com- season was 1990, when they were
is still in the picture and could petition."
9-7 and lost in the secood rouiJd of
The Bengals (2-13) have II the playoffs.
compete for the starting job next
year. Blake said he has no problem restricted fn:e agents and four unreThe unrestricted free a11ents 011
stricted fn:e agents.
tbe roster are linebacker James
with that
Dave Shula, whose record has Francis, defensive end Alfred
"All I want's a shot- can't ask
for more than that," Blake said. gotten steadily worse in his three Williams, running back Derrick
"It's more than I bad before. seasons as Cincinnati's bead coach, Fenner and safety Femaodus Vinsaid the Bengals need some conti- son.
nuity among players and coaches if
they are to improve.
Williams leads the team with 9
This year, 27 of the 53 players 112 sacks, and the Bengals would
·on the Bengals' roster were new to like to . keep him~ But be. makes
the team.
$866,000 and is expected to as1t: for
happened to any other team .. .
"The longer you can keep guys at least Sl.S million in 1995.
they'd be saying 'What a tough togetber playin11. you're going to
Unrestricted free agents are free
buncb of guys, they went 6-4-1 .' gel better,'' Sbula said.
to sign with any team. Restricted
Bqt it happens !0· Notre Dame and
The Bengals would finish with free agents are free to shq, around,
everyone is saying we stink."
their worst record ever if theY lose but the Bengals can keep them
Goheen said some players lost Saturday to the Philadelphia merely by matching any other
their confidence as the losses began Eagles. The Bengals' last winning team·s offer.
to mount. But the five-week break
between the fmal game at Southern
Cal and the Fiesta Bowl bas
helped, be said. The extra practice
time bas given the team a chance to
work on its problem areas, and it
shut the guy ou~ wrap him up ·also has allowed players to get their By JOHN PACENTI
gift
wrap him."
confidence hack, he said.
MIAMI (AP) - As far as the
Containing
Sanders is important
Colorado may have one of the Miami Dolphins are concerned,
to
stopping
the
Lions, making them
best offenses in the country, but Detroit's Barry Sanders is going to
"one
dimensional,"
as linebacker
Notre Dame is ready, Goheen said. have to wait another year to run Bryan Co~ said.
"It's a great opportunity for all into the record books.
The upcoming Sunday night
Sanders, tbe NFL· s leading
of us to show how we can play
game
means a lot to both teams,
against the best offensive player in rusber, could become only the third
Detroit
(9-6) has yel to clinch a
running hack to reach 2,000 yards
the country,'' Goheen said.
playoff
spot.
Playoff-bound Miami
Salaam isn't the only player during a single season. Yet, to
also
9-6,
is
coming off a disap:
Notre Dame bas to wony about. reach the mark achieved only by
pointing
I
0-6
loss to llldianapolis
Quarterback KordeU Stewart is the Eric Dickerson and O.J. Simpson,
but
yearns
to
win
the AFC East and
team's second-leading rusber, and he 'II have to rush for 169 yards
earn
a
ftrst-round
playoff
bye.
wide receiver Michael Westbrook against the Dolphins in the Lions'
why
Wednesday,
Sanders
That's
averaged 19 yards per catch. The final game of this season -Christ- was on nearly every Miami
playoffensive line is impressive, too, mas night
er's
mind.
Most
agreed
with
coach
"He's not going to get 169
Goheen said.
Don Shula that the Lions' back
"They're tbe reason Rasbaan yards versus the Miami Dolphins." may
best to have played the
Salaam won the Heisman," be ·defensive lineman Tim Bowens gamebe- thethat
is , everyone but
said. "They've opened Mack said Wednesday. "We'll have to Bowens.
truck-size boles for him all year."
The Fiesta Bowl also gives
Goheen another chance to prove
what he can do. Goheen, who was
second in tackles (61) when be was
injured, said be knows some people
have questioned if be is healthy.
•'(I want) to prove to the NFL
scouts that· I'm totally bealthy and
back from my injury," Goheen
said

NO's Goheen says missing
Air Force &amp; USC games hurt

OSU's Porter says Aiabama's
defense blends all he's seen

Dolphins plan to keep Sanders
from reaching 2,000-yard mark

...·;NB'"'A games... -------.--&lt;Continued rrom Page 4&gt;
~==-=::=:..:..:~-:. Coles, who missed shois at !be
:l:tuzzer at the end of regulation and
l!gain in the fli'St overtime, scored
a·oof his 22 points in the second
pvertime. He scored five straight
Jioinis for a 107-105 lead, but a
:three-pointer by Glenn Robmson
.k,ave the Bucks a 108-107 advanJiBe with 2:52 remaining.
·, . Miamiputthegameoutofreach
·ey scoring the next eight poin~. _
· ~ Glen Rice scored 3U pmnts,
•
Kevin Willis bad 29 and a
rebounds.

Chicago's basket. A cut above his
right eye required two stitches.
Spurs 111, Nuggets 'J7
With a win at Denver, San
Antonio won its fifth straight, all
by double-figure margins.
Denver scored only 12 .points in
the final period, getting one basket
in the final6: 16.
Vinny Del Negro added 20
points and Avery Johnson bad 19
for the Spurs, who also got 14
rebounds from Dennis Rodman.
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf came·

bay bad 5 and
bad 21 ~or points.
Magic 101, Clippers 91
Milwaukee, which has lost 13 of Its
O'Neal scored It points in the
Jast 15 games and nine in a row on
fourth quarter as Orlando finished a
lbe road.
. 3-1 road trip by beating the Clip•
Pacers 10'7, BullJ 99
.
' • Rik Smits scored 25 points as pers.
O'Neal
scored
Orlando's
only
Indiana held Chicago under 100
seven points in the ftnt 3:47 of the
(Klints for the ftftb straight game.
• CbicaJO, which bad won eight fourth quarter.
Nick Anderson added 19 points
, itraight m Market Square Arena,
\'as led by B.J, Armstro!lg with a for the Magic, including five time·
Pion-hiP. 27 points. Sc.ottic Pip- pointers, while Horace Grant had
Pen was Sidelined wilb 1tomadl flu. 17 points and 13 rebounds. Lam: Re~pe Miner b8d 18 points, but ond Murray led the Clippers with
JP-1ascit part of the third quarter 18 points.
ifter colliding wilb a camera under

••

,,

'.:1 "" '&gt;'9·• ~ "" "'' 0111 "'

·o-~~c,g

l"""""bii&lt;(!I I'Wiflll!l """ ....,~"' ~~'&gt;&lt;~,..

ot ~ fWII""'f'f'l• ,... dii(IHld upon~
_ .....,......
_ ..,.,.-.b
. IUd'l.l
-:- -

I

From our home to yours, have
a great holiday. Thank you
for your patronage.

ANDERSON'S
106 EAST MAIN

992·3671

''()o; ~o.ot(l(rtQI ~""DII'ti\;ISI"' - ""~.ol ...llwo...,t0 ~~ay&gt;

wmo! UUIYIDif'IQI)..x&gt;o.«J Qroc:lt t'll.rl)ftlof ""' c:wdloli U . . too
• llfW'II .........._,_...,. fWI I""f"f!.l11tf1MlUIIICI 116'. ~
!(l~m.....,..~cr.t&lt;qoo

•

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY, INC.

-I

~
...............

,·

POMEROY, OHIO

Ellyl

_106 Nom:ti SECOND AVENUE • ~~~PORT. OHIO 45760
(614) 992-2635 ·TOLL FREE ~1 ~
Qd -.mi 'LJtr-A·Wip "lttolli!CIItl•lllll -. •
~

IODArSIIOINTEJiESTONDIAIIONDPREFERREDCIIAifCE/

+·~

-=-+ •tf-=-+1!1-=.. +.
fOR CI.W.FIEO8UYtRS

�•

.

By The Bend

by Bob Hoeflich
with the free parking meters in
Pomeroy. It might be a good plan
for the merchants. I hope so. I find
it inconvenient to try to find a place
to park and as I search I often wonder whose vehicles are parked in
the free spaces. I mean, I don't
seem to spy "tbat many" shoppers.
I'm also of the opinion tbat
local merchants sbould unite to
carry out a uniform plan on when
they are going to be open for busl·
ness during tbe evening boors. And
some strolling carolers on side·
walks and other novel attractions
might be a drawing card. Seems
like one needs a score card to fig.
ure it out who's open and who
ain't: But then · again, what do I
know?

The weather, of course, bas beco
fantastic. If you don't think so just
reflect on last year a bit. Things are
much better, so far, and each day
brings us a bit closer to spring. I'm
still in utter amazement at all of tbe
decorated homes Ibis year. Seems
to me this is the most ever and
they're beautiful. They really give
us a lift don't tbey?!
Incidentally, the Christmas pro·
Young Sam Cowan, a Meigs
gram on tbe parking Jot stage Moo· High School student, is presenting
day evening was great and a good the Middleport Baptist Church
start if, indeed. it is to become Ira· Choir, known as the First Baptist
dilional.
Singers, in a candlelight program at
The night air was a bit nippy but 7 Saturday nigbt at the churchnot all that bad. George Wright, and you're invited to the annual
Pomeroy councilman, bad placed candlelight service.
white lights all around the roof
"Let All Heaven and Nature
edge and the supports of the stage Sing" is tbe theme of the program
and it looked great. George says with soloists to include Donna
that he' ll build a big bon fare for Grinstead, Kelley Grueser, Sharon
next year's program.
Hawley, Ryan Cowan, and of
I have only admiration for tbe course, talented Sam. Mark and
performers who turned out to will· Vicky MOII'Ow will be featured on
ingly give their talent. The Big a duet. Mark is ·pastor of tbe
Bend Cloggers-all costumed in church. And, by the way, there will
red and white-an instrumental be a service at lbat cburcb Sunday
group from Meigs High School, morning but no evening service.
and a vocal group of both bigb
Sam wbo directs the choir norschool and junior high school stu· mally presents a pleasant, inspira·
dents of the Meigs District made up tional progrnm and I always try to
the performing groups for tbe fast· be on bapd. Hopefully, I'll ma1ce it
moving program. Old reliable, Jim in 1994.
Soulsby, was on band to do a com·
mendable job as master of cereI was going to send you a
monies.
.
Christmas card but somel!ow never
Yep-it was a good start for an got around to it. Let's just say my
evening that could be developed intentions were good but that
into a very special event as lime doesn 't count since we do know
marches on-and it does.
that the infamous road is paved
· with good intentions don't we?
Franldv. I'm still having trouble You keep smilinl(.

-Poet's Cornerru always will remember you, and

You Kissed Me

.
You ltissed me! My bead drooped
to':" on your. breast
· . Vfttb a feelmg of shelter and infl·
mte rest.
Vfbile tbe holy emotions my
tongue dared not speak.
Aasbed up as in flame, from my
heart to my cheek;
Your arms bdd me fast; obI your
arms were so bold Heart beat qainst bear in their pas·
sionate fold.
YOlir glances seemed drawing my
soul through mine eyes,

~ ~~:~~s the mist from the
Your lips clung to mine till I
prayed in my bliss
They might never unclasp from the
rapturous kiss.
You kissed me! My bean, my
breath and my will
In delirious joy for a moment stood
still.
.
Life bad for me then no tempta·
lions, no charms,
No visions of rapture outside of
your arms;
And were I Ibis instant an angel
possessed
Of tbe peace and the joy tllat
belong to the blest,
I would tear from my forebead its
beautiful crown,
To nesde once more in that haven
ofrestYour lips upon mine, my bead on
yolirbreasL

the
special things we have done.
1 won't forget you even though I
. should.
Sonietimes in my bead 1 could s1ill
see pictures
of you, 1 should let you fade away
but that wouldn't
be me. 1 thought I bad a bold of
~omeone special that
cared back. 1 won't forget you.
Teresa Hill Miller
Letart Falls

The Special One

,.

You just don't know bow mucb I
care for you.
1 get so emotional when I can't be
around you.
If you only knew, I never felt so
happy and so alive.
I'm so glad that we bad met and
don't ever have to say goodbye.
You're a very special and caring
human being.
.
Your love and kindness means so
mucb to me and
bas so mucb meaning. You're spe·
cia! and don'tever forget it.
Teresa Hill Miller
' Letart Falls

'Late at nigbt I close my eyes and
think
of things tbe way they could of

beC::Ia.

I

I

;

&lt;'

And :Wbeil I lOok bade It's llelltZ to
lost

tJian love.

'

Alfred
news notes
By Nellie Parter
Nina Robinson is announcing
lbe birth of a great-grandson, Justin
Michael smith, son of Bill and Julie
Smitb of Kansas. The Smiths visit·
ed Mrs. Robinson recently. Her
other visitors included Shari, Larry,
Emily, and Mindy Shears, Mariet·
ta. Rose and Bill Follrod, Athens,
Margaret and Careton Follrod,
Pomeroy; Osie Mae and Clair Poll·
rod, and Alan Watson, all local.
Martha, Joe aud Will ·Poole
attended a sheep sale and Christmas dinner sponsored by the West
Virgini~ Sheep Producers Association at Jackson C- mty Fairgrounds
in West Virginia.
Garner Griffi is recovering
from cataract suri&gt;. ry at Pomeroy
Nursing and Rebabilitalicin Center.
Nellie Parker visited Samuel
and Cora Michael at Stiversville
recently. She also attended the
Coolville cboir CbrisbDas presenta·
tion at the Coolville school ·in
wbicb her grand-nephew Matthew.
Michael was a featured single.

Don't' miss Friday Night
Top Entertainers from
Columbus, Ohio
9:00 til1 :00 a.m.

you
until tbey niake sense.
Wben something good bappeos.
You.were the fii'St person I told
. so I can share my happiness.
Wben I don't know what to do in a
situation, I ask you opinions,
and weigh it heavily with them.
Wbea I am lonely, I call you,
Because I never ~eel alone with
you.
.
Teresa Hill Miller
LetanFalls

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

TREE TRIMMING

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

U•Haullng,

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Call949-2734

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

AND REMOVAL

Reidy Nov. 23

Shrubs Shapptd
and Removed

$10&amp; Up
Open 10 em • 9pm

............. Lot

Mla.Jobl.

1.1. 124
hH11ti,OW.

1111 ....
992-2269

614-742·1051

Laser Karaoke
with "Two Bits"

• · ,.._Homes~ VInyl Siding New
.Garage• e Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing .

814-992-4447

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '"

. FREE ESTIMATES

WHALEY'S AUlJ)
PARTS

6i4-992'7643

Speclllllzlngln Cualom

F,__.,

(No Sunday C.lls)

lEI l -PAID FOR
All lAKE.~ IO,DE..

112·'··~~

011

ltep et•pltte A•t•

Chuck Slottl

Insurance Work Welcome .
Stele Rt. 33
O.Win,Ohlo

•NewHoiMI
Uon to tbe $3,000 spent for the toys, tbe p-oup
donated Items to residents of Serenity House, a
shelter for ab115ed and battered women and cbD·
drcn, donated $100 and canned food to Meigs
County Cooperative Parish, and $1,000 to the
Middleport "Save the Poor• Fund. Here Nancy
Swartz and Jo Frye nnlsh bagging the toys, all
of which were purchased locally.

_ _ Community calendar_ __
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and spedal
events. The calendar Is not
designed to pro111ote sales or
fundralsers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
spectnc number of days.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT~ Live nativity
scene at the Hope Baptist Church
on Grant Street in Middleport,
Thursday and Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
each evening.
·
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post home.

RliTLAND - Christmas pro·
gram at the Rose of Sharon Holiness Cburcb, 7 p.m. Thursday. Pastor Dewey King invites the public.
FRIDAY
LONG BOtTOM - Christmas
proglliDl, 7 p.m. Friday at the Long
Bottom Methodist Church.
SUNDAY
SYMCUSE - Cliristmas Day
Sunday school, Asbury United
Methodist Church, 8:45 am.; worship service 10 a.m. at Forest Run
Church.
REEDSVILLE - Christmas
Eve service, Reedsville United
Methodist Cburcb, "Evergreen and
Candlelight", 6 p.m.

4

SWAP SHOP

.

Onemlleo"'

143 trom At. 7

forketiR••
Sporta•an's Cl•lt

'

's'
I

Tues. • Wid. • Fri. • Sat. •

M•11le Loadlag

G•• Slaoot
Frldtly,
he. 6a30

'
•'

TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization (RACO),
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Star
Mill Park. New officers to be elect·
ed:

Military news

'DIVE'S .

' Glvllway'

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Notlct 11 hereby given
thll on Seturdey, Dtcembtr
'24th, 18114 et 10:00 1.m., 1
public nle will bt htld et
211 Weal llleln Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Ftrmera Benk perking lot
to 1111 for ctth tha lollowtllfi
cotlllellt·
ttta OI.DS CUTLASS

'·

Eugene Jeffers
Army Sgt. First Class Eugene
Jeffers, son of Dorlene Jeffers of
Syracuse. bas been dei:orated witb
the Army Commendation Medal
for outstanding service.
A forward support battalion fllSt
sergeant, Jeffers graduated in 1982
froiD Southern Local High School
and earned an associate degree in
1990 from Pierce Community Col·
lege in Washington.

IIGIS
CHRISTMAS TREES

HAILING

Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'H cut it lor you)

Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

Riggs Tree Farm

1-6
• Cl'llfteman Toole
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Mlac.
Buy-Sell-Trade

39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at corner of US Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

992·2080 101!11

nl.n!IM

Public Notice

PubBc Notice
_..;;;;;;,;;;;;..;,;;;;;.;;;:,:.-.._
S U p R E Ill E
S N I collateret prior to eete.
1G3WH14T2PD373301
Further, The Fermtn Benk
The Fermer• Benk and end Sevlngl Compeny
s tvlnga Compeny, ,..,rv•• the right to 11)1ct
Pomeroy, Ohto, renrv~a tht any or all bldl eubmltted.
right to bid at this ltlt, and
Further, tha ebove
to withdraw the ebova cotlllertl will bt told tn the

1~'_

.......1......
Joel...,. .

SAYRE tRUCKING
614-742·2131

..........

2

lnMimOry

In Loving
Memory of my
husband,
LEWIS J. SMITH,
who passed
away 16 years
ago, December

Pubic Notice
condition It 11 tn with no
exp11111d or Implied
Wlrrantlu given.
For mort Information
contact Jell Gilkey, It 112·
21341.
(12) 21, 22, 23; 3TC

to •• of Ul
can·say,
The grief 11 ettn wHhln
our hearll
We cld not have the
Nor tlla thoughts of
uylng goodbye,
For you were gone
before we.- H
And God knows wtly~
We lool! beck. tenderDill alone the path
you had
I bless the years we
had with you
And leave the 1'111 to

God.
And when I am sad

and lonely
And everything goes

wrong,

OPEN UNTIL 11:00 PM
FRIDAY NIGHT!l

• •
'

expenses
were paid. proceeds from·the 1!194 Melp Coun·
ty Talent Sltowcue staged MiddlepOrt,· Nov.
lS and l6, totaled $4,651.34. The amoant wu
equally divided between tlae show's 1ponsors,
tbe Melp Division of the American Heart Aaoclatlon, and the Middleport Artll Conndl, each

Register for FREE Gifts • Given Away 8:00 • 11:00 Fri. Evening
e Diamond Bracelet e Gold Herring Bone Chain

In

(Drawing at 11:00 Friday evening· Register from 8:00p.m. -11:00 p.m.
eed not be
to .....~ •

HOURS
Thursday until B:OO p.m.
Friday 9:00am ·11:00 p.m.
8:30 am • 4:30

R~ail

!f/9{'£ J'EWtEL!J?Y'
TWO LOCATIONS:
·· 151 SECOND AVE., GAWPOUS
91 MILL ST., MID,DL,E:POF~T

446-2842
992-6250

Member Jewelers .

Board of Trade '

director of the talent showcue with tbe dtecks
for their respedlve organlzatlou are Sandy
Iannarelll, center, pre~ldent of the local Heart
Auoclatlon, and Mary Wise, preeldent of tlae ·
Arts CouncU.

Warner, a soQ, Jay, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz and grandsons
Bernie and Mau.
At the close of tbe program.

poinsettia decmltions were award·
ed to various individuals by Presi·
dent Jon Perrin. The next meeting
will beheld Jan. 9.
·

dl~dren~ grandcbildren, spous·
es and parents were invited. The
program opened with an invocation
by Rev: Dawn Spalding and Christ·
mas carols were sung under tbe
leadership of Hal Kneen and
pianis~. Jobn A. Anderson. Tbe
ladies of the cburcb served a bam
dinner.
Auending were Mr. and Mrs. '
Jim Mourning and grandson, Cbad
Dailey; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs,
a SQD, Jason. and grandsons Dustin
and Devin Riggs; Mr. and Mrs.
Jobn Rice; Mr: and Mrs. Gene
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vaugh·

Just Received:
- Nice selection of 1/2 carat and 1 carat diamonds
.. Sp~cial
Friday and
!

..9LCQ'll IS1~109\[$

I

recelvlni SZ,JlS.ti7. PictUred with Bob Boellk:h,

Santa featured guest at Rotary dinner
Santa Claus (Ed Durst) was the
featured guest at Monday night's
Christmas dinner and party of tbe
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
· at Heath Methodist Cburcb in Mid·

Free Gift Wrapping
Free Parking

.,..,

1

·.,

grandchildren Richard, Jacob and
Elizabeth Well and Cassie and
Ashley Vaughan; Hal Kneen;
. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newell;
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Parsons; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Beegle; M,r. and Mrs.
Joe Young; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Blackwood; Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Owen, daughter-in-law Jeannie
Oivcn and gran""'ildren Jonathan,
Mlcbael and Rebecca Owen;
Dawn Spalding; Walter Heinz;
YOUNG ROTARIAN- Jr-. a.e Pwrta,,..... Jilt,.....
Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Anderson; Mr. Rotarian,
•1\IOY• a vt.Jt
Sllllla Cia• (Ed o.nt) atM.....,,,
and Mrs. Jon Penin and his mother, .
Rotary
Ch~
dllmer
•
party. S)le II die da.pter or Mr.
1
" ·Mrs. 'Gay "Perrln. and dl)ugbter,
and
Mrs.
Jon
Perrin.
·
·
Emma Rose; Mr·. and Mrs. Jeff

rro..a,

I

Kenny's Auto Rental .

StOp I Com
FREE ESTliiATES

lenny's Is the p..ce to·come
w~ellli yow need a car rental.
Ire ••• Carl ••"

taSo4G'I
Howard J.. Wrllelel
· ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIIATES

.,
...
.............
......
Cd

614-992·5515
1crltAio

I s•m to h•r you
wllllper
Ch•r up and cerry
on
And I love you so
much.
Deeply lovlld and
eadly mliMCI by your
wife, Ruth Smith,
your children and
grendchlldren.

71 Autos for Sale

90Y. . . Wave
Rsaer II w/trriM
13,000
90 fonl n.tlerllirhl
IS .....__'2,725
87 Alll'lll.egelll, Ml
1
. . . . ._".-" 3,225
871enatC_,..,
~-""" 1),425
85 Totota MR·Z, tlil
..........."_12,325
14 Porsdte 944, LR.
Qlr, .....__$4,500
79 PorsGI 928 928
S4W-$J3,000
68W390, 4

••··Fri.
t:e0to5:00

IFC
51010 51124

..iu

~

949-2S11
949·2600

lEn IECEPnOI

For the best In satellite
sales and servlct CGDIIct
Bry811of
Best Reception. .
·We have even better
and quicker service.
·Over 10 yrs
experience
• ServiCe on all system
·typeS.
· Best prices all ar~nd
the area.
892·2903 or 882-6320

V•••l

Kenny'S A&amp;D cent.r
264.Upper River Rd.
Gallipolll, OH 45631

1-800-488-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971 '

CHRISTMAS TREES •

BUDFORD'S

•

FIHI CUT TilES AVAILABLE
01 CUT YOUR OWII

Craft Shop
Located on Cheny Ridge: From Rt. 33, tum East
Sat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd, 1 112 miles to tree 1arm.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 1O:oo am Ul dart&lt; Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24
Wa
rides Fri. Sat. Sun.

ForAI•Ior

lalthlrewtll, .

CHRISTMAS
SALE!

CROSS PENS

we think of you

each day.

MIDDLEPORT· GALLIPOLIS

SEIKO- PULSAR
WATCHES

Remodeling

111-TFN

There Is noUtlng we

!Jl.cquisitions !fine Jewefry ·.

oGafiiiM
oComplete

949-2168

You m•nt so much

614-H2·S223

Free Estimates

I08EIT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
BIKERS TOY PROJECT - For the ninth
year, the Meigs County Bikers have provided
toys for numerous cbUdren. This year more than
$3,000 WIIS spent to buy two toys for each of tbe
358 underprivileged children. The recipients
were screened and the toys distributed by members of Blliers Club Tuuday and Wednesday at
the Meigs County Health Deparbnent. In addl·

•••f Repair

•PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

-TFN

W.O.T.M.

And

• From Mfg. Suggested

IISSELL RIUEIS, IIIC.

Tree Trimming and
Removal· Yard Care
Free Estimates

' ·-fi2-15U•oi
TOLL FREE 1..11 1411171
DARI.,OHIO

A real fun party night. Your
night to sing.
Moose Members &amp;

Will/ Ever Learn?

When

. I Won't Forget You

Winners in tbe Rudand Friendly
Gardeners Christmas decorating
contest bave been announced by
member Kimberly Willford.
The winners. listed fllSt, second,
and third respectively, were Nate
Wise, Robert Snowden and Keith
Kennedy, doorway; Danny Tillis
and Joan May, religious display;
and Eric Priddy, David Hysell and
Ray Willford, non-religious exhibit.
About $180 was donated for the
contest by Rolland Furniture Store,
Rolland Department Store, 'Rutland
Mine Supply, Bank One of Rut·
land, Rutland Fire Department,
Rutland Squad, Hill Oil Co. of
Athens. Kroger's, Pizza Dan's,
Hysell's Used Cars, Birchfield
Funeral Home and Snowden's Tree
Farm.

...

I

You think I'd learn by now, to keep
.·'
You kissed me! My soul in a bliss from falling some bow.
I feel like I'm out of hope and
sodiv~
.
·
Reeled and swooned like' a drunk· ' dreams, I never thought that
my
love
would
ever
end
so
soon
it
ard wbcll fpolisb with wine, ·
.
And I thought 'twere delicious to seems.
All
I
want
is
a
man to love me and
die here. it death
Would but come wbile my lips never let me down, but I
guess I'll never find blm and be
were yet moist witb your breath;
unhappy and live; witb a frown. ·
While my arms clasped me round
Teresa Hill Mil.er
in that blissful embrace.
LetanFil.ls
Wbile your eyes melt in mine could ·
e' ea death e'er efface Ob, tbc&amp;e are tb,: questions I ask
day and !llgbt:
Must my lips taste no more such
e~~~ dcligbt? ·
you wisb that
breast
'\\
And .. you were here, would you
• ltiss me qain7
.
Teresa Hill Miller
Letart Falls

Thursday, December 22, 1894
Page-&amp;

Rutland
decorating
contest results
announced

Beat of_the Bend.·..
If you' re going to get everything
wrapped up for the holiday it'~
high time you did. I sometimes
wonder if most of us ever get it all
together at this time of the year.
Seems like there ' s ~!ways one
more tbing to do-and then some.
Ob well, we can only do our best
and bope we have another shot at it
next year.

The Daily Sentinel:

,

O&amp;E ELE~'IBI~
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251
992-7162
Doug
John
nn7A1tl

BINGO
Racine AmMtcan
Legion Poet 102

Now having Bingo
every Sundey Night

Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save 1e1 tor 1 free card.
1149-2038 or 1149-2044

DI'IIPPioiiiCI
IIRICI
ofoctory Autllorlacl P -

6Senlce

oW-·

&lt;AUiitlllll-42\'eln
ofutllelllbloDfyM8 • Rongn
oAelilgantora - ·

.-----------------------------~ .

O&amp;E ELECTRIC

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
. Home Repair Also
,
992-5251
992·7162
John
·~
Doug

Gah.......

ott.w.- .

•ic•
oaav.e aotap tt~••
•lhlnb
~~o~gaa

SlnowldlngA.(614)~1or ·

ll2-6335

1211-

IIOWO,III
J&amp;D FLEA

MARKEl
IIW&amp;USED
ITEMS
. 711 South Third
Mldclleport
ttourw: 10:00 A.M.

•oDEll SllrrAftOI
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks eleanlld &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, Wftldy &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job IIIII • Camp Sites • Fallly Reunions 6 Parties
NO IV OFFERING GEN ERAL HAUl!

Llmntone, Sand, Grevel end C01l
\'i F HA '! E A- 1 TOP :,OIL FOR SALE

U

Md a Bonded 20

992
fr&gt;

,,

395~

r1r) Pf·,~nrtlfi,

'J18

,.

t•liiii•iLLi;n;r~wii11ii1•inii•ii1n,;s;a,;.iii1i1 ,..

P.M.

Willi'S
CIIIISUIIS

111D
RUTlAND,OH
H()l'riegrown-Careluly
Sheantd SCOtch &amp;
·While Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a gtelllliiCiicn of
Jatgern..

·

replece•ent
. windows
• Fr" Ettl•etu
• 1200 Installed
Call For betalll

.
•.

Call742-2143 «

'

(

.

�..
. ..
.~

December

1994 '

!fEA Crossword Puzzle
•

ACFI()I8

: 1 lnand

PHILLIP

ALDER

ll-.!2-N

•AI09652
•K 4 3

•9

. •A J 4

EAsT
u 87
.a 5

48 Sp«elor Rllll

4 3

•J 75
•KQS

10987632

SOUTH
•K Q •AQJI0972

·-

• 8 6 4 2

llllw

• '!'Ira
40 Go by
.
41 E~142 Stlnjlng , _
.. Of .tlit .. AciNU...

. PQtlldlnt
• Not .. 811
12 8ounda
13 AcoOnl
14 !dl1h llldllunUr
41 Plellbh
15 CocldellaMCII
(2.,.,)
te BMr mug
a F-'lc .
17 Two WORII of

53 Conglnblly
dl1m1y
·
lolnld
18 R1bblt
114 i'unc1U111
19 nme period
(2 well.)
20 Tidlnga
55 M1rlne bini
24 81Hballer
541 ConfuHCI .
Nolan (2 well.)
21 Home-run king
27 Atty.'e deg.
DOWN
30 Dillpltch boot
32-w
33 Hurricane

center

3-4 Pretond (2
wda.)
35 Sixth ..n..
(abbr.)

38lland-

_· -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

West

North . East
All pass

4 NT 6 •
Opening lead:

Just do it.
But then what?

you
my client's sentence In
haH? AI !he stuff he shoplifted was.SO% off!"
flll dllC IJI

By Phillip Alder

.Business
Opponunlty
IHOIICEl

OliO YALLIY PUIUSHNI CO.

~

'""''··thll . ,do_ltull- .ah poopll""'
"""
NOl' 1D Mild IIIOI1If ttWiiiiiil!ihl
.... untl ;.,.. _ln..........
tho_..

All real estate adve~ng In
this newspaper Is &amp;lblect to
lho Fedellll Fair Housing J.rj.

ot 19681Mllch makean Illegal
10 advertise 'any preterenc:e,
nmltalfoo or df&amp;cl1mlnall0n ,
based on race, cotor, reUglon,

aex fllmlllalaillu or nattonal
ollgln, or allY lntentloo to
make any SIJdl prellranco,
limitation or discrimination.•

...
... hold ....
!!!ONfti, VI Ill[ iiii. Ill
==~ ttL
WY, _.. 104471-MN,

- MYLATfST

:;

· INVENTION··
T~t

1&gt;161TAL
SUNI&gt;IAt,f
I
I I

• VIcinity
~··

r....::;.;;;~
.

ALLY.... IIIIelluoi.Pololln
Adw•DIADUNI: 2:CIO p..,;
tho diJ llelln tho od IIID

l!undiJ ....... • 2:00

• , _,

11111.

pJIL

I I I II I I

I

Y001W.. WU.eatfOO:.E ro"'

1

-*il:AA Til£.~ Off 1'1£

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

I took a day to go sightseeing while U...--~+-4in Albuquerque for the World Bridge
Championships. After driving fourand-a-half miles down a dirt -road to
see the tent rocks &lt;rock formations
formed by volcanic activity; they look
like tepees with mushrooms on top), 1
returned to the main highway and noticed a sign requesting one to "Watch
for Water." Fair enough, but what waa
I supposed to do if! saw some? .
CELEBRITY CIPHER
In bridge, it is sometimes the same.
by Luis campos
Your partner signals with a six and
Ceeebrity ~ ~.,.. crwted from~ by 11m0u1 peopte. putlnd P"'MM''I
you cannot teJI whether it is high or
ea.., n ttw Cipher ltandltor another. Todl(l Cilf: u. - B
low. But usually if partner does something weird &lt;assuming you trust his
'UYMC
IYSLYKCHII .
PHJ
YLCFIItt •
bridge ability!) , it will be apparent
what he has in mind. Certainly
NYOH
XFSH
KF
TYLN
BFFX
JFIIZ
Santanu Ghose, from India, knew exactly what was required of him on toFOHII
KF
JRXH
Y
MYSBH
PFII
day's deal.
After South had opened four hearts,
KF
IFSB . ' - LNYIItHK
LNYTGIRS .
West, Jaggy Shivdasani, bid four no·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To me the theater is like standing on top ol the
trump to show.. a minor two-suiter.
lllO\Jntain and shouting your confession." - Raul Julia.
North brushed this aside with his
0 11»4 by NEA. k'c.
22
jump to six hearts.
Now it was Jaggy's turn to lead.
Presumably North wasn't looking at
· two losers in either minor. This meant
that he had to have the club ace and a
singleton diamond. If so, there was
only one chance to defeat the contract. Jaggy led the diamond lhref.
Santanu, more out of habit than anything_else, put up his jack. And it won
low fC! form four - •·
the trick! Now all becaine clear. Jaggy
had to have a void and wanted a ruff.
KOPHOU
Santanu returned a spade and that
was that: one down.
Jaggy, no shy Rower he, had risked
looking foolish but had 'ended up the
hero. After the opponents had left, he
no doubt smiled unashamedly.
2

·="'=""'~

I
I

LOSER

~ ...... - 2:CIO

8

??

C 1994NEA

::

5

;1~1~:~1A;1~~ ~

;1

RE GG0

I'

Last summer three of my

I I~ I I I . ~ ~=~ ~::t-~~is~u:~
.v
I
I
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:::

fri~nds got married. At one

showers,

~·s

no wonder every-

L I ERD
h--1-~.;_y....,.;;.....,~
one gets - - - - - •. •

5
-.1..
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L

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1112lilho.Now14124Adclllon. Ill..- on · 1 1lf

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Poeltl'"' II Dr. Aarw. Lo~I!J OH.
L._nl...._lol
Lllflry; 111111 be ,. v... of
Now-lloolmon14xN,ZJiod.
Aao. ...... O..leo ~­
lfillf..NIII.... I..._ and - , Tollll l!iohta. """"""'"
l)lnl. II'!Odr To lnlo On
--12Hra.Wk.llnl- CorMr
Lol Pull . 1Mw i11o1111e
..... EOi. C l l l - Court. "'-114 4. . . . . 114READ.

Unbend· World- Elope • Limpid· PROBLEM
It is true that the bestthings in life are free . Buttheway
our govemment wot1ts lhey want to fix lhat 'PROAl FM '

Fcrm Surr·f,,o,
&amp; LI'ICO&gt;I0Ch

cao·.,.,.

81~age

-nn . .

81 flml EcJ.IIpment

.

,....,.,.. 01 Ooitlpollli .....
H1r1na. AI lblfto,. AiiPIY In ..... Now_,..,.,_ .............
1011 . . . _ :H A8k'Filr......, ""' ....... lllocb, 1 ,...
............ ~ erid •
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_ , . FRU 1o1 N111. Only
111211
ond tiM por 18
toDo
Clll~

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

rtlld~ '

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wAul Ir'l..a-

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•

Graph. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
4465, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10163. Be sure to.
state Y.,ur zodiaC sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fib. 11) It might
seem like everything you do today·helps
others more Jhan yoMrl!!ll, Con!litions
ciould suddQrjJy change, however, making
the pnmary benallclary.

CANCER (June 21.Juty 22) Your compassiOn and genefOiltY might be in short
supply today. It
seem pointless lor
you to assist others H Hlsn1 to ybur ultimate benefit.
LEO (July 23-Aug. UJ Being cognizant
ol all the lactohl artt,ctlng your llnancial
security willle&amp;d you to cllllcover effective
methods of shoring up your poslliln.

may·

ones w"o~are·tha leaat·
of ~ everything on yOU(.agenda today .
your gestures. Bite the biJIIet today and not be leaslble. However. this is no
keep trying, 11toug11.
e•cuse to call it quits prematurely.
Friday, Dec. 23, 1994
ARIES (llnh 21-Aprll 11) Strive to be UIIRA (Sept. :r.Mkt. 23) Do not expect
P10gr8811va ~ or enterpril88 could 1induStrious .today, but dori1 bill·oil more ot~rs to ~eact enthusiutlcalfy to Ideas
·
· than you cen chew. EndelliHIB oul8kla you re obviouBty doubtful abOut yoursell.
prova .qulta, lucky lor you In the .year
_.....,. __ ....... ~
. l Promoie only the things you firmly
-..
l"~bof'ate with Individuals who yourareaola.,...._.....,..,_llleyou.
·=j';.&amp;andamllillou8
TAURUI•(April20-118y 20) Take extra · " believe in today.
;PRI~_RN (Dec. J2·Jen. 11) meaaure1 today to protect
. your prized SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NDY. 221 An Involve-~
mana personally should poasessions from loss or thelt. 11 you , ment with a friend miglt get oil to a rough
41rikout:loryou'roday Conversely H.ieave valuables In your car, make sure :atart today, but don1 get ~- 11
nih.. · ~....&gt;t
. dt ·
ad ' you've locked Ill the doonl and'ihl J.I:\Iflll wtll work out well 1I you both malntalrr
-"""",. ~lne too eply 1nvo1v 1n G!IIINI '&lt;'eY 21 . , _ 20) HMnonY ~ poeitive' attitudeS.
·•
1
11018' ~~ariM- thehomllrontwllb61mpota"'llomeln· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2$-0ac. 21) Your
, ~ 1"'rl" onidilie by ' lit the
tain todly w·~ II atubb'o.nfy!'JII! . lueoc:iatet might be leta perceptive than
•..,__ • .Sendwlt · ~~ aplt _.....,_ upon having ~ way. Try not to be you tollay In financial millers. RaiV on
~-lor 1-~r "'""""r
""~
...,.........,, .. .•L~
your own assessments
liona"today by mailing $t .25 to Aatro- the"' • ...-'""""'.
,
41IIIINEWSPAPEREtoin:RPRJ~EMSN.

1.1

~ lllllialt I
·~·
-Ill
lor
.......
c., . . . • llilliillw. ...

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SCJIAM.UTS ANSWIIS

.

- · oldrtlng, - , 2 choo, l - up lr&gt;-

a-,MCIOO.-TI'MIII.

I' I' I' I'

6 UNSCIAMII.E
AIOVE lETTERS
TO Gn .t.NSW£1
1111111

--=·-..ar:c:.

&amp;:~... 1 r .'1\u
u. ....Clllllt,
.,

the chuckle quoted
by filling tn the milling words
you develop Irom step No. 3 below.

PRINT NI,!MIEHD UTTERS IN

THESE $9UAIES

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

O Complete

y!:

�..

.. ...

· ~· ··· ·

. ...

..

'

Thursday; December 22, 1994

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Page-1G-The Dailv Sentinel

.

J.

ma
Ohio Lottery

Owners
•
Impose
salary cap

MACY
Point Pleasant, WV
Huntington, WV
Gallipolis, OH
Wellston, OH

Milton, WV
Middleport, OH
Nitro, WV
Proctorville, OH

Athens,OH
Hurricane, WV
Winfield, WV
Charleston, WV

Belpr~.OH

Waverly,OH
Mineral Wells, WV
Spencer, WV

Pick 3:
S35
Pick 4:
5477
Buckeye 5:
6-15-18-25-29

Page 5

NOW THRU CHRISTMAS EVE

Low,lolllcbtln mld~,part­

ly cloady. S.twday, doudy.
High ln40s.

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 164
•Copyright 1994

2 Seellona, 32 ,.._ 311-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday,· December 23, 1994

A Muttlmeclll Inc. New ; t 1P

Study:
prisons
got
lion's
share
of
spending
.
:E.
11•f
2
~~All

· Our· fJotnJ•Iete Stock

Uleo And Great Wraps

tmas Gift Wrap

·Plush Animals

25° 0 0FF

-·~~

For Gift
~~ .
'i
vmg.I

-

Includes Tags, Seals, Ribbons and Bows

25o/0 OFF
llxeept Sale Items

Artieieial
Flowers.

tees Iii the

'i

31/a ;-al. fJans .Of
Gourmet Popcorn

Our fJomplete Stock

:All Lamps.

25° 0 0FF

54.99 ·~

*Fenton *Lotus *Michelotti

All AIDeriean Greetin~rs .
Christmas Merchandise ·
' Partr Supplies
•Christ•••
•Christllas Gift Wrap
•Boxed Chril!ltmai!J Card111
•Gifts J..d Ornament111

)

~~~CRmNiS. l/2 Priee

All Boxed

American Greetings Single Cards No! Included

l/2 or l/2.Plli()E .

~25°

Our Complete Stock
.

••

Our Complete Stock
Billfolds, Uosmeti~
Ba;s And Other
Leather Goods

Grand Award
~-Uhristmas fJards

MenS Ties
·112 Price

OFF

Our Uomplete Stoek
TIMEX~ Watehes

'r

'

24••
36 ...

'

6.59

In terms of dollars instead of percentages, spending for prisons was

~e~ured in millions while amounts for education and welfare were in

2•••
36ax

33 113%0FF

:No paper

:Monday
The Daily Stnrintl business
office will close at noon Satur·
, day. The newspaper will not be
1 • .published Monday so that its
: employees may observe tbi:
' Christmas holiday.
.
~ular publil:ation and busi·
L...ness bours resume Tuesday.
,

IbiD :

Christmas is.. --___, Homeless people sue park cops
in wake of White House s~ooting
WASHINGTON (AP) -Three
homeless people wbo live across
tbe street from tbe Wbite House are
suing tbc U.S. Park Police for
harassment that they say includes
being abused, kicked and poked
wilb nightsticks.
·
Tbe Jaws1,1it filed Tbursday
came after Park Police killed
another homeless m.an from tbat
same park wbo cbarged at an offi·
cer witb a knife and was gunned
down on tbe sidewalk on the Penn·
sylvania Avenue side of tbe jlresi·
dential mansion.
•
The lawsuit· alleges that
Marcelino Cornie!, 33, who was
sbot Tuesday mornin_g afte~ be
chased U.S. Park Pollee off1cer
Stephen J. O'Neill with a knife,
bad been kicked and prodded by
O'Neill a few hours earlier.
Cornie) was sbot by another
park policeman, identified today by
Lt. Kent Bowen as Jeff Leon
Capps. Cornie! died Wednesday
night after undergoing surgery
twice.
The incident was highly publi·
cized because or its locale, the fact

new

Rcpublll)llf-ltd .
House of RepRSCDtatives. ·
Rl:p\Jblicans who will bold a 56·
43 m~Orlty wbCIJ: the .House ron·
venes Jan. 3·s&amp;id'Tbursday they
plan a 25'percent cut in lbe number
of committees to save an estimated ~
$350,000 a year.
.
They also released a committee
lineup that finds representatives
from New Concord, Columbus, ·
Milford and other communities
beading panels tbat some
Democrats from Cleveland bave
guided.
Republicans chose Rep. Tom
Jobnson of New Concord to chair
the Finance and Appropriations
Committee, wbicb bandies the stale
budget and other spending bills.
Johnson, wbo bas been ranking
minority member, will succeed
Rep. Pauick Sweeney, D-Cieveland, wbo last month was chosen
minority leader.
. Cblp !'&lt;fcConviUe, a House GOP
spokesman, said the changes reflect
areas of Republican strength.
"We've attempted to make sure
there was a good geographic bal:ince 301ong the rommittee leaders
tbat were appoinled," McConville
said. "Not to mention lbe fact tbat
we've tried to plug in the people
wbo have the right experience in
tbe right como\ ittee slots.''
Although Democrat·ricb Cleveland would itself provide no GOP
committee cbair, Rep. Ed Kasputis
of Westlalce, a Cleveland suburb,
was appointed chairman of tbe
Judiciary 'lind Criminal Justic~
Committee.
. Rep. Mike Wise of Broadview
Heights, also in Cuyahoga County,
was tapped to bead the Colleges
and Universities Subcommitlee of
die House Education Committee.
. In addition to Sweeney. other
Democrats from Cleveland who
iiave beaded committees include
Reps. Vermel Whalen, Troy Lee
James, and Ronald Silster. Demo·
cratic Reps. Rocco Colonna of
Broo'k Park and Ronald Mottl of
Parma, both Cuyahoga County.
also c!Wr committees.
Speaker-elect Jo Ann Davidson
of Reynoldsburg said Republicans
will recommend trimming.from 27
. 20 tbe number of standing com- .

years .

A_ooun~il report sbow~ Stale govemmem spending grew fascer
billions.
bolb mflauon and personalmoome over lbe last I 0 years .
But Donald Bemo, council president, said corrections spending may
It said lbe stale spent $15.1 billion in stale tax receipts, lottery profits l
crack lbe $1 biUion barrier in the next budget year starting July I:
and federal money during the 1994 budget year. That was an inaease of :
"That's going to be lbe one they say will bave a huge increase in the $7.3 biUion, or93 percent, over the amount spent in 1984.
budget in Jwmary," Bemo said Thursday.
"This covers state and federal spending. Our app-oacb is wbetber it's
"It wouldn't surprise me if we go over $1 biUion for prisons wilb lbe federal money or stale money, it's still tax money," Bemo said.
kind of increases lbey 're talking about,'' be said.
During the same decade, total personal income rose an estimated 66
Gov. George Voinovich expects to send a proposed two-year budget to percent, wbile inflation was about 43 percent.
the printers Jan. 15 before its introduction in tbe Legislature.
"The conclusion we draw is tbat this next budget's going to be bigb
Spokesman Mike Dawson said prisons will eat up 35 percent of new risk ... in terms that we can't keep this trend up for ever. We're going to
revenue growth in the next spending plan.
have to do some cutting or have a tax increase," Bemo said.
·
State Budget Director Gregory Browning said planners expect .tax • The council is a nonprofit tax and economic research organization
receipts will increase about $650 million in eacb of tbe next two budget whose members include businesses and schools.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Cleve·

AGreat Christmas Gift Or Familf Snaek

I

0

··iand seems out and rural Ohio in, at
leut ·So far .as eontrol of commit·

l/2 PBIUE

(

~I

1

. By JOliN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS- Slate government spending for prisons grew more on
a percentage basis over the last decade tban for schools, colleges or wei·
fare, a report from a private tax study group showed.
. . Tbe Obio Public Expenditure Council said the state spent $800 million
. on rebabilitation and corrections in the 1994 budget year, wbicb ended
June 30. That was an increase of $556 miUion, or 228 pen:ent, ove!' the
:last 10 years.
.
•
Stale spending for pimary and secondary education soored a 68 pet·
cent increase over the decade; higher education, 78 percent; and public
· welfare, 135 percenL

Committee
leadership
gets rural
emphasis

All ()hristmas

~s%

.· xpenul
ures .grew
.

that it was captured on videolape
and because it was one of a string
of violent episodes near or directed
at !be Wbite House.
In the pauper's suit filed in U.S.
Disuict Court, two women and a
man wbo frequent Lafayette Park
allege a paucm of harassment by
O'Neill and another park police·
man named only as "Keness."
Tbe officers regularly accused
tbe homeless wbo sleep in the park
of violating a no-camping regulalion, lbe complaint said.
· "It bas been the custom of officers O'Neill and Keness to acoompany their threats with Icicles. prod&lt;J!ng with ni~htst.icks, and banging
s1gns w11b mghtsucks even when
there is no question that those
attending are not camping," the
complaint added.
It alleged "political or religious
animosily" and said O'Neill's
"abuse of aulbority ... which pre·
ceded the shooting of Marcelino
Comiel. is a graphic demonstration
of tbe result of abuse of legal
authority."
Tbey asked the court to order

tbat neither of tbe two men be
assigned to Lafayeue Park. At a
news conference beld later in lbe
park with the White House as a
backdrop, tbe lbree men wbo flied
the suit asked for a complete inves·
ligation of tbe sbooting.
"We feel we are not being lreat·
ed as buman beings," said Warren
Gaskins .
" They have laken out their frus.
tration on us," added Robin Patton,
alluding to the much -publicized
recent security breaches at tbe
While House.
"My countty sent me to Viet·
oam, killing people," said Gregory
Parker, "but I wouldn't gun a man
down in cold blood."
Meanwhile, in Las Vegas the
. attorney for Comicl's famity'said
in an interview tbat "I haven't
beard one person say it was justi- ,
fied."
Tbe att~ey, Milton Grimes
represenled Klldney King in
er videotaped Incident involving
police. He met in Las Vegas witb
Barbara and Samuel Cornie!, the ·
parents of tbe dead man.

anotb:

CHRIST REMEMBERED - Area churches remind us
Christmas revels In the comlag of Jesus as humanity's savior.
Whether In song, prayer, or through donations to the needy,
area churches demonstrate the true spirit of Christmas. Last
Saturday night, Rutland hosted a singing Christmas tree choir
. and a live nativity scene. Above, the baby JC!IWI Is watched over
by the virgin Mary, portrayed by Shannon Enright of Rutland,
and Joseph, played by Morgan Vanlaman of Rutland. The
Christmas story still touches chords In young and ,old today.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Beating suspect's case
submitted to grand jury
Sentinel News Starr
A Pomeroy man cbarged with
felonious assault in tbe alleged
beating of a I 3-month:-ald baby girl
last weekend now faces possible
indictment by a Meigs County
grand jury.
Timothy. T. Thomas, 37, 242
Condor St .. appeared Thursday
morning before Judge Pauick H.
O'Brien of the Meigs County Court
for a preliminary bearing. O'Brien
tben bound the case over for grand
jury oonsideration.
,
Thomas is accused of ~~~-!!
tbe child after it woke up •

Capt. Jim Stacy of lbe Pomeroy
Police Departmen~ who took photos of the cbild following the inci·
dent. Stacy said Thomas admitled
to striking tbe cbild.
In addition to ,testimony, photographs of tbe baby following the
alleged beating were presented.
Tbey show tbe rear or a small
cbild, red and covered with welts
and bruises from the lower back to
its knees.
Thomas, represented by attorney
Willi3Dl Safranek, remains in the
Meigs County Jail in lieu of
$75,000 bond. Felonious assault is

by the
· Department
after tbe
mothel lOOk ber to
a hospital
treatment, assisla!lt
Prosecutor Chris Tenaglia said.
O'Brien beard testimony from

~Myfeel~g1~/.:Sibesearethe

DOLLS D1STRffiVTED - Fumers Bank
employees Linda Mayer, left, -and Joann
Williams distributed beautifully costluned dOlls
to 33 female resldeilu of tbe skilled n•rll111
at Veterans Memorial Hospital tbb

by a

Charges
.
mo~nt in aneged .arson
starr '

saddest cases we have," said
Tenoglia. "Nothing breaks your
bean
more tban tbat•" •
.
t

Army al•ds ··n gun search

Law enforcement officials have , glars wbo cula'ed tbe ~t tblougb
expanded their search for guns a lide door and, OIKle mside, pried
~len~=~~~tbe ~tbt· : : ; : :..'!:r~~~.orage room

o

•

•u.,......

some belp from tbe U.S. Army.
Ten CBies of soft drinks were
According ID Sheriff James M. aboS sroleu, accuding to are~
Soulsby, nine M-1903 bolt-action ,
ou~~.1_said tbe sbenff's
rifles were stolen on June S by bur(...........,ued oa hae 3)

tile bank's dress-a-doll contest. Mayer and
Wiliams pnaent.d male "'sldents of the hospital fadllty wltll boxes of candy on bebalt of the
INink. Recelvh• a doll berefrom ,Williams is
resident Etllel Elder.

t'

Sentloel News
Two brothers bave been ""•~ed
~5
and charges are pending against
a
third person in relation tO a SUS•
peeled arson f1re on Sept 5.
•
William J. Rousb, 46, New
Haven, W.Va., and Russell M.
Roush, 32, Middleport, bave each
b~en charged with aggravated
arson and insurance fnud.
The State Fire Marsbal's office
received information that a Sepi. s
trailer fire on Salser Road near
Racine may bad been arson. Meigs

~

'

County Prosecuting Attorney Jobn
Ironically. tbc mos t serious
R. Lentes said. 'lbrougb undercov· accusations to arise from the inves- ·
er worll:, authorities were able to ligation are unrelated to tbe alleged
(lndouttbllitwasanm,beadded. arson, Lences said.
_Ru~~ Rousb is alleaed to have
"Evidence turned up by happen·
pald William Roush $1,000 to bum stance that (Russell Roush) bad
the trailer, Lentes said. A claim been molesting a 7-year-old girl,"
was then submi~ to 10 iDsunmce be ·said . He is expected to be
c&lt;mpany that plid $12,000 to Rus- charged with f11PC, a crime 111M car·
sell Rousb, be said.
ries a uwlim- 1 IQ' .otlUie !II
Charges are also pending )lrilal. ilc lllded.
.
against a tbird subject in tile matter,
Botb .., beiDa ileld ill lib
lpltes said.
of $125,000 1iOild ea.
.

,..,

l

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