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                  <text>Obio·Lottery

Tornadoes
blank Coal
Grove 78-Si

Pick 3:
4·5·3
Pick 4:
6-8·8·9
Buckeye 5:
4-9-16-25-34

PaceS

Low loeJ&amp;Iat Ia llllol zt.,
cloudy. Thunday, partlJ18UJ.
HIP ID40o.

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 11111
Copyright 1184

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 28, 1994

2 Sectlono, 14 Pegee 3 5 A Multimedia Inc: New I~ II*'

Anti-crime push spells more prison spending
8y JOHN CHALFANT
.
Alaoclated Pnss Writer
· COLUMBUS - Taxpayers take note: ~e bill is coming due for a
decade-old policy of longer prison sentences for criminals.
Spending for prisons soon may reacb $1 billion a year, with no end in
sight
: In fact, Gov. George Voinovicb and bis Republican colleagues wbo
talce control of tbe House 'next week bave already identified action on a
new anti-crime bill as among tbeir top priorities.
One proposal: require lhat prison sentences be served in !heir entirety.
Voinovicb won election Nov. 8 to a new four-year tenn. Republicans
Win control tbe House for tbe rust time in 22 years in me legislative sesMoo tbat opens.)an. 3.
.
Reginald Wilkinson, director of tbe Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
. IYan
· 0 bin tban
.00 Correctioo, said imprisonment is used more extensive
jn comparable slates.
"I ibink it's a trend that's going to continue," Wilkinson said in an

.

.

10 ~~ew 'fue;idaY·

.
.
. .
We certainly ough~ to use pnsons to pumsb those wbo COIIliii_II VI~
lent offenses and chrome repeat offenders .. B~.t 1 ~ latow lhat pnson IS
not gom_g to solve tbe aune problem 10 ~· II«: saJd.
.
Wilkinson wants a.balance ~tween ~g pnsons tougher for v1olent
offenders and altemauves to pnson fm: nonva~lent offenders.
. In 19'!4, wben the S"!!e began f~ng senous offenders to spend mo';C
tame behind barS, tbe_pnson population was 18.479 and lhe department s
budget was $163 million.
. ..
. .
N.ow there are 4~.514 ~tes. and tbe budget as $799 millton.
~~na! figiJ!CS sun. are be~g developed for lhe new slate b~dget lhat
Vomovicb wtll submtt to legaslaton to.cover tbe two yean starting July 1,
1995.
"The
real'tI Y 0 f 1't 15
· w
·~at. we' ~ 8olng to b~ve a budget ·~
· to
.
wat •s go~g
be ba~ger.~ tbe ~nt baenmum, and it will come close to $1 billion a
year, Willcinson saJd.

175th observation wrapping up
Time capsule
burial to note
end of Meigs' ·
anniversary ·

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.WITIIIIUJII.IIOM,l:,

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel NeWI Slalf
The culmination of lhe obser·
vance of tbe 175m anniversary
of !be founding of Meigs County will be noon on Jan. 7 wilh
me burial of a time capsule on
tbe COUI1house lawn. ·
A public reception will be
held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. lbat
day in tbe Meigs CotiDty Common llreu courltotili\ to mark
tbe conclusion of a year of
activities commemorating the
aamiversary.
_.
According .to plans of tbe ·
Meigs County Commissioners.
the Meijls Pioneer and Histori·
cal Society and tbe 17Sth
Anniversary Committee, the
capsule will be opened in 2019,
when lhe county observes its
bicentennial.
What will be placed in lhe
all-steel, tluee·fool bigb capsule
will be decided next week when
tbe anniversary committee
meets at tbe Meigs County
Museum.
Tentative plans call for materials per.taining to education,
including a roster of students,
photographs and newspaper sto·
ries on major news events dur·
ing the year, letters and docu-

ByCHR~OPHERBURNS

Assoelated Press Writer
: PARIS - The slain hijackers of
an Air Frana: jetliner failed in tbeir
plot to turn tbe plane into a flying
bomb, but struck a blow at the
·Algerian government by shutting,
down transportation links with
France.
. France is Algeria's main suppli- ·
er of goods and supplies crucial '
technical suppon for the belea-

LEFTOVERS!
\

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TIME CAPSULE - 'tlds three-foot stainless steel time apsule wiD be lllliid wltb Items perlalnilll! to the celebration of the
17Sth annlverillry of Melp County, 1819-1994, and buried on
the courtboue,lawn at noon on Jan. 7. Mlll'garet Parker, histor·
leal society pl'isldent and cbalman of tbe AMI~ersary Com·
mlttee, looks oftr some Items wbkb may be placed In tbe capsule.

ments from county officials. the
·special c0111111emorative publica·
tion of Tbe Daily Sentinel, a
tape of reflections made by
WMPO Radio, and pictures of
events held in obsetvance of the
anniversary, to be placed in tbe
capsule.

.

Margaret Parker, president of
lite historical society and chairman of the anniversary committee, is now in the process of col·
lecting snow and Hood pictures,
and photographs taken of events
over the county lhat used lhe
!heme "Remembering lhe Past

- Shaping tbe Future."
Anyone with pictures wbicb
can be loaned to the musemn for
reprints are asked to contact
Parker at 992-3810. The !heme
was carried out in several activi·
ties, including Hoats for tbe July
4 parades, Heritage Weekend
programs, and Showcase. In
addition, snow and flood pictures showing wealher condi. tions during the anniversary
year are needed. Prints will be
returned once copies have been
made for tbe lime capsule.
A marker will be pi~ atop
the capsule at some future date,
Parker said.
At tbe Jan. 7 reception, commemorative coverlets and mugs
will be_for sale. Approximately
50 of tbe coverlets in Williamsburg blue and bunter green are
still available at $50 eacb. The
mugs, wbicb depict the 17Sih
anniversaty logo and lbeme, are
for sale at $6 eacb. Tbe commemorative publication of The
Daily Sentinel will also be available. Tbe anniversary quilt, not
yet completed, will be displayed
at the museum later.
Refreshments will be served
and several recognitions will be
made at the reception. County
groups that used !be theme in
various public programs will be
recognized for their contributions to tbe celebration.
·
For !hose wbo fmd the winding stairway to the lhird floor of
tbe 1850 courthouse too difficult
to· climb, the elevator will be
operating.

blamed for the deaths of most of fundamentalists.
tit~ 75 foreigners killed in Algeria
Frencb officials said Tuesday
in lhe past15 monlhs.
tltey bad evidence the hijackers had
On Tuesday, four Catholic intended to explode the 1\irbus
priests - three Frenchmen and a A300 in lhe air over Paris.
Belgian - wbo were ~ot to deatb
French nights and passenger
guered country's oil industry.
in Tizi-Ouzou. 60 m1les east of ferries between tbe two countries
Tbe four hijackers, shot dead by
Algiers. The gunmen escape~ .il!ld will remain sbut down for several
commandos wbo stonned me plane
mere was no claim of respons1ba1Ity days while new security measures
at th~ Marseille airport on Monday,
or immediate indication if tbe . are put into place, Transport Minis·
belonged to the Armed Islamic
Shooting was related .to me hijack· ter Beman! Bosson said.
Group, lhe most radical of the funing.
Authorities already have tight damentalist organizations fighting
More
than
11,000
people
bave
ened
airport security in tbe past two
to instaU Islamic rule in Algeria
been
killed
in
lhc
past
lhree
years
monlhs,
requiring double identity
Tbe group, which wants to
in
clashes
between
Algeria's
milic~
and
more thorough baggage
purge the North African nation of
Western influences left from . tary-installed government - tacitly SCiQ'Cbes: Officials are considering
supported by France -and Islamic putting plainclotbes and. uniformed
France's 114-year colonial rule, is

U.S. diplomat wQrking to win . pilot's ·release
\

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JUMBO
~WiYJ~o

\
'

IN TN[ !:NUL .

MIXED
NUTS
100Z.

By PAUL ALEXANDER
Associated Prea Writer
SEOOL. Soulh Korea- A u.s.
diplomat Crossed over tbe Demili·
llirized Zone into North Korea Ibis
morning to seek the release of
American pilot Bobby Hall.
. Thomas Hubbard, a deputy
issiatant seaetarY of sllite wbo has
ne_godated with· North Korea
before, is trying to defuse an
. ~y diffirult international incident that bas taken a sudden tum

tor !be worse.

(

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· ~·

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o'l/lii

Clinton taps soon
to be ex-lawmaker
as agriculture chief
WASHINGTON (AP) - In bis
fll'st major appointment since tbe
November congressional elections,
President Clinton is turning to a
defeated veteran Democratic congressman to serve as bis agrirulture
secretary.
Rep. Dan Glickman of Kansas,
turned out of Congress by a Republican wbo capitalized on Clinton's
unpopularity, was to be named to
tbe Cabinet in a Rose Garden ceremony today, said administration
officials who spolce on condition of
anonymity.
He will replace Mike Espy, a
former Mississippi congressman
wbo is leaving tbe Cabinet under
an elhical cloud.
Glickman's selection comes at a
time of retrenchment at lhe Agri·
culture ~ent The sprawling
bureaucracy is being forced to trim
its staff by 11,000. reduce spending
by up to $3.5 !billion and close
nearly 1.100 of its 3,600 county
offices.
As a nine-term congressman
wilh lhree farm bills behind bim.
Glickman brings valuable experience as Congress goes about writing lhe five-year farm legislation in
1995.
Glickman, 50, edged out Deputy
Seaetary Richard E. Rominger and
Rep. E. "Kika" de Ia Garza, DTexas, chairman of tbe House
Agriculture Committee. for tbe
Cabinet job.
Glickman parted company with

DAN GLICKMAN
Clinton earlier this year by voting
against the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade, lhe new world
trade pact the administration says
wiU boost U.S. farm exports.
He also blamed lhe president's
low popularity for his surprise election defeat. Republican state Sen.
Todd 'tiabrt, running ads tyiag
Gliclcman to Clinton, beat the better-rmanced incumbent.
"The anti· Washington mood is
strong," Glickman said after the
election. "Clinton was relatively
unflOllular."

hijack

SOME FOR
~OliDAY

·

· Ohio operates tbe nation's fifth-largest prison system.
Wilkinson said tougher prison policies are catching up.
·'That's not a bad thing. I lbink it makes Obio safer. But at tbe same
lime. tbe reality is selling in tbal we're going to pay for it," be said.
Existing state taxes are expected to produce an additional $585 milliOIJ
next year lbrough natural economic growlh. Mike Dawson, the governor' 5
press seaetary, said last week lh8l prisons would eat up about 35 percent
of me revenue growth, or $200 millioo.
Wilkinson said in a budget status repon to Voinovicb tbat tbe system
bad for tbe most part successfully coped wilh me bigber number of
inm3tes.
'
The ratio of inmates 10 guards in •"e state system was 8.2-to-1 as of
J 1 -~--A bjntu..t · tbe nauon· bebind ALl~~-an.A biriaig
· """""""
..,... m
expansion
authorized after tbe VUdUUU"'·
1993 riot at tbe Soutbem Obio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville lowered !be ratio to 7-to-1 as of Nov.
11.

.

· Hall bas been held since his
U.S. Army OH-SBC helicopter
1\lent down Dec. 17 in North Korean territory. Fellow Chief Warrant
Officer David Hiiemon died. His
flody was I'ClliTIICld last 'flnarsdlly.
' At the time, there were bopea .
Han would be released by Christ- '
inas as pan of a deal negotiated by
'IJ.S. Rep. Bnt IUc:banlson.
• But as the holiday came aod
4
went, concerns grew. T~en on

Tuesday, North Korea accused Hall
of spying and demanded that
Washington apologize.
U.S. officials bave claimed tbe
helicopter was on an unarmed
training mission and crossed into.
North Korea accidentally.
In another ominous develop· .
ment, a Soulh Korean newspaper
quoted a senior Nof!h Korean
diplomat at tbe United Nations as
saying Hall is holding up itS investigation by refusing to cooperate.
North Korea has said be won'\ be
freed until its probe is complete.
"If Warrant Officer Hall does
not tell !be trulh and continues to
be tmCoqJeralive, tbe investigation
will take a conilderably long
time," the Har~tyo.reh Shirtmun
newspaper quoted lhe diplolftSI as
saying.
Washington sent Hubbard, who
. was tbe No. 2 man in negotiating a
nuclear accord with Pyongyang
signed two months ago, botb

because of bis experience in dealing wilh tbe North and his sl81Us as
a mid-level offiCial.
Washington is trying to ' keep
from raising the level of contact
with Pyongyang wl!ile still addressing a request. through its U.N. mis·
sion, for a visit by a ranking U.S.
enVI/Y·
The two countties, wbicb fought
on opposite sides in the 1950-53
Korean War, have no diplomatic
relations.
Hubbard !lid not appear in public in South Korea. and reporters
were barred fu&gt;m vbserving his
arrival and bis departure to tbe
North. Tbti NOIIb's official Korean
Central News Agency announced
his aarival in a one-paragraph stale·
ment
He was accpmpanied by State ·
Department official Dick Cbristial)son, who.accompanied Rlcbardson
to Pyongyang and also went witb
U.S. Sens. Frank Murkowski and

police on French planes, a source.
said.
French Interior Minister Charles
Pasqua said aulhorities feared lite
hijackers bad planned a "suicide
operation over Paris.''
Pasqua told a news conference
mat 20 sticks of dynamite discovered on tbe plane " would bave
caused tbe disintegration of me
plane in mid-Higbt."
An unidentified passenger told
Frencb television lbat lhe bijacken
wanted to blow lite plane up eitber
over Orly ,Airport on lhe outskirts
of the city or over Paris itself.
The hijackers commandeered

lhe plane Saturday in Algiers aad
killed three passncgers before fore·
ing it to fly to the French port city
of Marseille early Monday wilh
173 passengers and crew aboard.
The hijackers demanded lhat lhe
plane be refueled and flown to
Paris, where lhey said lhey wanted
to hold a news conference.
French commandos raided me
plane Monday evening at the Mar;
seille aiaporl. Thirteen passengers,
three crew members and nine commandos were injured in lhe raid, i,n
which all four hijackers were
killed. There were no otber fatalities.

Truck blaze.
in Minford
flames out

Paul Simon wbcn tbey visited earli- ·
er this montb.
There are indications lh8l Hall ·
may be caught in a tug-of-war
between the communist North's
civilian lcadets and militarY bardMINFORD (AP) - A propane
liners. North Korea's bard-line
truck that crashed and exploded
position 011 .eleasing Hall reflects
into a fireball burned for 30 hours
such 111 iDtcmal struggle. Ricbanlbefore the fuel was gone, a disson saidTucaday.
patcher said.
"Tbere' s a split between the
Driver James Burchell 43 of
civilian side ... that I tbink wants to
Lucasville, died after th~ truck
resolve this Issue, and tbe military,
wbicb was carrying 2,400 galloo~
wbicb unfortunately doesn't ... and
of propane, aasbed at about 2 p.m.
is upping the ante and is most
Monday. Burchett made it out of
recalcitrant in dealing wilh the
tbe truck oot was caught in tbe file.
United States," be told·NBC's
ball as be stood near tbe wm:Qge.
Todo.y show.
TOM HUBBARD
. · State Highway Patrol DispatdJWben tbe North's longtime try.
lead« Kim D Suns died July 8, bis
Secretary of State Warren er Ernie Messer said tbe ftre burned
son Kll!l1ooa n was bis designated Cbristopber warned last weelc that . o.ut &amp;!&gt;Rut 8:50 p.m. Tuesday and
successor. But the younger Kim failure to ·.elease Hall soon could fuef1gbt~rs were preparing to
has not bCen l!eell in publlc In two endanger Wasbington' s agreemen1 remove tbe wn:ckage.
Tbe truck bC1onged to Arrick
months aad bas Dot olficlally taten to provide oil. a nuclear reactor and
power, nisin&amp; qtiCilioas about wbo diplomatic ties in exchange for the Bottled Gas Service Inc . of
Lucasville.
.is in charge in !be reclusive
., coon- . Nortb freezing its nuclear program.

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel ~
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 2~. 1994

Commentar
The Dally Sentinel

WASHINGTON - With his more !ban Cbecbens."
.decision to invade the rebeUious
The Muslim Cbecbens have lbe
southern republic of Cbecbnya, repuwion of being renacious fightRussian President Boris Yeltsinbas ers, and indeed, tbeir flas bears lbe
put himself in a classic no-win situation that could eventually tear
apart several sections of his coun-

111 Co1l1't Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

·~NC.

try.

ROBERT L. WINGE'I'T
Pwblkber
CHARLENE HOEfLICH
Genenl Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OP OPINION "" welcome. They should be less tban 300
words long. Alllcuas am subje&lt;:t to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be published. U:tlers
should be in good task, addRssing issues, not personalities.

Letter to the Editor
We want justice
To the Editor:
made you drop all original charges.
Lets deal witb what actually
The Wednesday, November 30
Sentinel had a front page article in happened!
tt whose he&lt;ldlines said suspects in
I . Sheriff and P.A . charged
Robbery and Rape given probation. three young men with crimes that
Thi s has been a well publicized • could have gotten them seveJ11Ycase, thanks to the Meigs County five years in prison.
Prosecuting Attorney, Meigs Coun2. No one pled guilty to any of
ty Sheriff and Tbe Daily Sentinel:
these charges.
That's why we are writing this
3. A trial wouhtbave cost thouletter. Tb e last thing that w.e sands more than I had to spend.
thought we would be reading, that
4. Tbe Prosecuting Attorney
tlte young men were Robbers, Kid- could not prove the charges. Never
nappers, Rapists, one was Arsonist. could - Never did! BECAUSE
Although now that we think about THEY DIDN'T TAKE PLACE.
i ~ it seems par for the course.
5. The Prosecutor and Sheriff
When tlte three young men were told everyone David and Mr. Willis
first arrested all we read about was were outlaws and made a lot of
· how the Sheriff and Prosecuti.ng statements to the press about bow
Attorney Celt. That this was the bad they were when the charges
worst Meigs County crime since were filed.
the double murder case a couple of
6. Tbe P.A.-and Sheriffs offtees
years ago. They made statements, did not call the paper or TV stawhicb made all three appear worse lions when the charges were
than John Dillinger. They even dropped and admit that they bad
called in TV Stations and told them made a mistake. They said the
what terrible people all three boys infonnation changed.
were. 1 guess they thought it might
7. The plea bargain was. too
help them get re-elected to capture good to ttltn down . Why would
three desperados.
anybody spend tbousands of dollars
All charged with very serious to take a chance of getting 75 years
crimes: Aggravated Rape, Robbery (even though you know you are not
and Kidnapping; they faced 75 guilty), when you can say you
years in )rison or more. They were obstructed justice and get probapoor kids fighting the Sheriff and tion. David never gave a starement
Prosecuting Attorney with no and be bad constitutional right not
money . The ~beriff and P.A. to, especially when someone is try·
thought tbat the boys would be ing to put you in prison.
scared enough to plead guilty in a
8. The P.A. recommended to the
plea bargain. What they didn't Judge that probation be given. Why
count on was that one of the young would the P.A. make such a recom·
men bad family aild friends' sup- mendation, ifbe.lboughtDavidbad
port and refused to plead guilty 10 done any of the things be charged
those terrible charges. Being inDO'- - him. with. IC the P.A. bad not reccent bad a lot to do with it also.
ommended the probation, David
Public officials wbo charge a would not have pled guilty to anyperson with aggravated Rape, Rob- thing. The Judge followed the recbery, Kidnapping and Arson should · ommendation and granted probabe able to prove i~ (some evidence, tion.
not just based on the word or one
• 9. David did not obstruct anyperson) or they shouldn't be charg- thing, he didn't bide or lie about
ing them. They shouldn't be pub- anything, so 2nd challenge to P.A.,
licity hounds, if they can't prove it. exacdy bow did David obstruct jusThey may have t&lt;i eat their words tice?
or try to lie about statements lbat
I 0. A question for the public!
were made. Here they are trying to You be the Judge: Who is guilty of
lie out of it. ·
obstruction of justice? Is it tbe poor
Besides costing our family thou- innocent one who must lie in court
sands of dollars, they have ruined and pled guilty to obstructing justhe boys' reputation. with charges lice to keep from getting 75 years
and statements they couldn' t take in prison for a crime be did not
back.
commit (only evidence, word of an
Did any of the boys plead guilt)' angry female) or is itlbe ones who
to rape, robbery or kidnapping'! filed charges they can't prove or is
The answer is NO.
it the ones that won't put a rich
Now let' s deal with David, our friend in jail that was senrenced to
son. He never pled guilty to any of eighteen months in prison sevc;ral
tho se serious charges . He pled years ago for allegedly taking a
innocent from the start. Tbe fact is, · quarrer of a million'dollars.
Mr. Lentes , David's statement
We realize this letter is longer
never changed from day one. He lban the paper wants; but since Mr.
never gave you or Mr. Souls by a · Souls by and Mr. Lentes quotes
statement. He had a constitutional bave been in tbe paper for lbe last
right not to talk to someone who is six months, we personally feel that
trying to put him in prison for 75 our family should be given a like
years. We might not be attorneys, chance to tell our side. They got
but th at's the law . Since David their publicity, we want our justice.
never changed bis statements, what
Janet Sigman
new information did Mr. Lentes
Paul Stgman
come up with, as he was quoted as
Middleport
saying. We doubt that he came up
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Timothy
with any!!!! Shouldn' t be have got- Willis and David Sjgman bad sixten that information (what ever it month jail sentences tor felony
was) before he ruined two young olptrucling justice suspended to
men' s lives.
five years probation. The third
· A challenge to Mr. Lentes person Involved In the Incident
Tell us wbat larer information you was Bengy Rhoades, who entered
~o t. ·How it changed things and
a plu or guilty to charges nr
where and wben yoti goi this new gross sexualiJ,DPG81tlon and theft
information. What new information and Is now setvtng a three-to-five
. ~
year sentence.) -

When Russian troops invaded
lbe tiny republic of 1.3 million people with tanks and troops two
weeks ago, it marked the largest
Russian military action in 15 years,
dating back to the Soviet invasion .
of Afghanistan. The Russian forces
have been making a slow drive
toward the Cbecben capital of
Grozny, which is 1,000 miles south
of Moscow. Yet all indications are
that the capture or Grozny will do
little to dampen the fighting spirit ,
of the Cbecbens.
''This could be their
Afghanistan and our Vietnam all
rolled into one - except it's practically a civil war," one American
intelligence analyst told us. " The
mountainous region will favor
guerrilla fiflbting for years to come.
And there s no one Russians fear

Today in history
By The Associated Press ,
·
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 28, the 362nd day of 1994. There are three
days left in tbe year.
,
·Today's Highlight in HistOry:
_
.
_
Fifty yeats ago, on Dec. 28, 1944, tbe musical On the Town, with
music by Leonard Bernstein and book and lyrics by Betty Comden and
Ado,lpb Green. opened CD Broadway.
'
On this date:
In 1694,300 years ago, Queen Mary n of England died atttzfive years ·
of joint
with ber husband. King William m.
. _ ·
In 1832, Jolm C. Calboun bec8me tbe fu:!l vice )RSidellt of tile United
States to resign, stepping down over differences wilb President Jackscin.
In 1846, Iowa became the 291b stare to be admitted to tbe Union.
In 1856, lbe 281b president of tbe United States, Thomas Woodrow
Wilson, was born in Staunton, Va.
·
· In 1869, William Finley Se'l,lple of Mount Vernon, Ohio, patented
cbewing gum.
In 1917,1be New Yorlc Evening Mail publiShed a facetious- as well
as fictitious - essay by H.L. Mencken on th,e history of bathtubs in
America. ,

"*

~

••

r

·By Jack Anderson and
Michael Binstein

image of a wolf. Cbecbnya is a
land where karate champions. are
revered, and gangster fedoras and
bandoleers are the favored fashion.
It's a place where, Cbechens swear,
the people run toward lbe sound of
gunfire, not away from it.
It is also a place wbere blOod
feuds are a cultural given. Murder
is acceptable along a prescribed
code of vengeance. Nobody
seemed to mind, for instance, when
tbree opposition figures were killed
last summer and lbeir beads were
placed on pites and paraded
around lbe maio square in Grozny ·
- whose very name translates as
"terrible" in Russian.
In many respects, tbe current

•

ists to beat tbe Cbecbens into s~b­
mission. Yeltsin fltSt tried to overthrow the outlaw Cbecben regime
of President Dzbokhar Dudayev by
lending covert support in lbe form
of money and arms to tbree OJJPOSIlion groups. Still, the groups failed
bitterly in their attempt to over·
!brow D11dayev.
Russian nationalisll in Parliament and in Yeltsin' s administration are now warning that if b~
doesn't force Cbecbnya to submtt
to Russian rule, other etbnft
enclaves within Russia' s borders
will soon follow the Cbecben lead.
Russian liberals, meanwhile, consider the whole affair a ploy by
Yeltsin's right-wing opponents to
create political turmoil leading up
to the 1996 elections. They believe
that a prolonged battle in Chechnya
will erode any support be bas left
from the human-ngbts, )lro-d~ocracy forces that helped bun wm lbe
presidency in the fJtSt place.
Even before the Russians
auacked, Checb~ya bad become a
lawless repubhc, a place where
thugs and murderers have sought
safe haven from Russian authorities. In the last several years,
Grozny bas become a center for
arms and drug smuggling, and an
3itonisbingly large stolen car market. Until Chechnya's borders were
closed earlier this year, practically
every passenger and freight train
- was beld up and robbed while pass. ing through - some as many as
dozen times in one journey .
Altbougb organized crime is prevalent throughout Russia, it is particularly active in Cbecbnya.
And that is why this conflict
appears to have· no end in sight.
·Muscovites are already being told
- over loudspeakers in the subway
system - to beware of Cbecben
terrorism. Even Checbnya' s foreign
minister, Shamsedin Yusef, was
quoted before the invasion with a
chilling warning; "If lbey come,
look out for what w.e will do in
Russia, to the nuclear power sta·

Leona Mae "Dolly'' Etlewine Bailey, 79, of Springfield, died Sunday,
25, 1994 in Mercy Medical Center, Springfield.
om July 26, 191S in Middlepon. tbe dauaJiter of tbe late Werner aDd
·
Mllboan Erle'wine, sbe was a bomemakn. Sbe was also a member
tbe Ftnt United Cbqrcb.of Cbrilt, a SUDday school reacher at tbe Grace
. United Cbuldl of Christ, Plat preaidCPt of tbe Gray Hill School PTA. a
former treas~lbe Urbatla Literary Guild and a 1934 Middleport
Higb Sdlool
. - .
.
Sbe is survi~ by ber husband of Sl years, Clarence Bailey; sons ul
dattghters·in·law•. Dt. Ricbanl and Sandra bailey of Indianapolis, Ind.,
I,Jd Michael~tnd C8role Bailey of Springfield; brother, Eugene Edcwine
Of Long Bottopl; sister, Farie Kennedy Mlddlepon; and several nieces,
nepllcws and cousins.
.
Sbe was preaded'in death by ber sisters, Thelma Sbirk. Winnie Marie
. Gi16ert and Lucy Lake.
•
:· " Service!~ will be I p.m. Thursday in lbe F'JtSttlnited Cburcb of Christ
' of•Springt1eld, with ,tiie Rev. Dean Eiam offtciating. Burial will follow in
tbe ·Rose Hill Cemetel')'. Friends may call between 4-8 p.m. Wednesday at
the Jooos-Kenney,Zecbtitan Fun«al Home, SP,iogfield.
.•

Charles Leo Price

So much for a mild winter:

~:~~lp on~~~~-

Ameritech to switch way
of dialing long-distance

The conservatives' new poster boy

;Emergency HEAP application
:period enters secdnd month

I've been listening to a new l&lt;d: at the history of Portugal with stop their mess.age from being between Michael Douglas and ut~
talk-show host in San Francisco. any grim sense that history might beard (as if there's any other mes- · ruin, near as. I can tell, is the
He calls himself Michael Savage, be repeating itself. As a rnatrer of sage being beard out there in AM motion picture industry . Yes, it
and his show "Savage Nation." fact, no offense to the Ponuguese, radioland) . They truly believe look.s like even· the 'Holfyw9'?~
there's a sitii~ter cabal of hotbed 'o f liberalism bas inkile' a
He's Jtind of like a Rusb Limbaugh
Marxist/Leninist
gender studies contract wilb America TherefOre; I
without the prerense of a sense of
professors
whose
influence
on lbe suggest for Mr. Douglas' next pichumor.
culture at large can only be coun- ture, "Prince Henry.'! Happy and
I've beanl bim recommend lbat
the police do door-to-door searches it's bard for me to look at the histo- tered by dittoheads. In their view, conrent wilb his wife and family in
the Blame-the-Victim mentality in Lisbon, he succumbs to the
for illegal weapons in high-crime ry of Pmugal, period.
In
that
sense
I
guess
Michael
America b8$ obscured the fate of advances of Lucrezia Borgia
(i.e. poor) neighborboods, describe
Savase
is
pctforming
a
public
serthe GATT treaty as shorthand for
lbe true victims in America: while (Sharon Stone), who plans to steal ·
I
his astrolabe Cor tbe head of the
vice.
And
be
does
do
his
thankless
men.
''General Alliance of Treason and
West
India Company (Rutger
chores
with
a
certain
amount
of
I've
been
melting
my
brain
tryTraitors," and warn that if Speaker
of the California Assembly Willie WaJt~( -~!nf.!!~JI:jLit fl~!r .. He ing to fi~ure ou1 what white men Hauer) and fey English investment ·
Brown (a black man and politick· sounds a constant note of relendess these w_bile men 'are talking about. bankers (Anthony Hopkins, Ralph
·
ing liberal) is re-elected as speaker, urgency. and often talks of walldng In today's cultural climate this Fiennes).
the
foggy
streets
of
San
Francisco
·J
have
a
screenplay
for
sale, if
blood will flow in the streets of
would be a bandy thing to know. I
you're
in
his
fedora,
vowing
never
to
let
interested.
Because
wlth
think I've finally figured it out. The
California. His main theme (andthe
liberals
drive
bim
out.
0
galber
you,
America:
Let's
throw
history
subject of a ,pamphlet be's _
ultimate conservative poster boy is:
to tbe wind, and make us .some
authored) is lbat white men are in that liberals swarm around the Michael Douglas.
In movie after movie, be plays money. We white guys must stick
danger. We must act now or radio studio every night after his
program, ropes and torches in the ultimate victim. He's success- together.
become extinct!
(To receive a complimentary
Emboldened by his own band, ready to transport. him ful, but be could fail at any moment
lan
Shoales newsletter, call 1rhetoric, I've even beanl him warn forcibly to Orange County. I don't ("Wall Street," "Disclosure").
800-989-DUCK
or write Duck's
know
bow
be
keeps
escaping
their
Insane feminists are trying to
that the United States might go lbe
Breath,
408
Broad
St., Nevada
He
wouldn't
be
clutches,
though.
way of Portugal, if we lion' t
destroy him ("Fatal Atuaction,"
City,
CA
95959.)
bard
to
miss.
How
many
fedora"Basic
Instinct,"
"DISCLOchange our ways. I haven't listened
Ian Shoales Is a syndicated
to him enough to be sure what he sporting white guys can there be at SURE"). Vicious Japanese are trying to destroy him ("Black Rain"). writer for Ne.wspaper Enterprise
could possibly mean by Ibis; I sup- KGO?)
I must gr11dgingly admire the Los Angeles is trying to destroy · Association.
pose it bas something to do with
the Golden Age of Exploration, self-importance conservatives can bim ("Falling Down" ). Our mod- ., (For information on bo-w t11
Prince Henry tbe Navigator and the· muster. They rival the Chicago em rebel is a middle-level execu- communicate electronically wltli
astrolabe. It's true that lbe Japanese Seven in their inflated sense of tive whose two-car garage is being Ibis columnist and others, conare way ahead of us in astrolabe self-worth. They natter on con· threarened by barbarian encroach- tact America Online by calUng 1~
production, but it's bard for me to stantly about the forces trying to ments. Tbe only thing standing 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Hunter charged

Jan Shoales

: :=:,=a:~ro::: ~a:~~~lif';,~;~:.: 81.aze destroys garage

I'm

Morton Kondracl&lt;e
Democrats - Kerrey was offering
pain and sacrifice, albeit phased-in
over a long period, to ensure the
nation's ftscal beallb.
His proposals as co-cbalrman of
the bi)l!ll'lisan Commission on Entitlements and Tax Reform - to
' 'privatize'' pan of Social Security,
increase the retirement age, means
test M;edicare benefits, and cap
mortgase interest and other deductions for the .wealthy - were
attacked by many of lbe most powerful inrerest groups in lbe country,
including the AARP, AFL-CIO,
and the real estate and medical
provider lobbies.
Kerrey, while unable to fashion
a commission consensus aromd lbe
_pro~sals be drew up along with
rebring Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo.,
nevertheless plans to mate his
ideas tbe basis of a national campaign to convince Americans that
tbe national economy and the
Social Security system eventually
, will go bankrupt unless entitlement
. growlb is curbed.
.
Kerrey said in an' interview lbat
he and Danforth were thinking of
founding a new organization to
promote tbeir ideas. He said be also
hopes to fonn a bipartiJan group in

Announcements

leport mayor's court

·:-::,:of

for 2000

Congress, including commission
members Sen. Alan Simpson.. RWyo., and Rep. Porter Goss, RFla., to propose legislation to protect the nation's fiscal health over a
30· year time frame insiead of the
five years normally addressed· in
lbe budget.
. He said be definitely opposes
current middle-class tax cut proposals, wbicb he said "from a 30year perspective, look awful.' '
As erie top Democratic budget
expert observed, "It's hard to see
bow you get elected president on a
platform of cutting Social Security
and Medicare." But that' s only
true in the sbort term.
Kerrey, already a Congressional
Medal of Honor winner in Vietnam, could emerge a hero asain if
be is successful in persuading
Americans that.their future security
depends on joint-sacrifice, if be's
seen as willin~ to touch tbe socalled "third rail of American politics," and if he beats back powerful special interests on behalf of
national inrerests.
Already, Kerrey has got elite
opinion focused seriously on longterm problems - America's
pathetic savings rare (2 percent of
GDP comPared wilb nearly 20 percent iii Japan), a deficit set· to
explode after 2010, and lbe probable insolvency of tbe Medicare system by 2001 and lbe Social Security system after 2Q13 as fewer
workers try to pay benefits for

increasing numbers of retirees.
Kerrey's particular solutions to
the problems he's identified aren' t
necessarily the best available. For
instance, he neglects cuts in socalled "corporate welfare" - sub- .
sidies and tax breaks for industry,
including agriculture -and con•.
sumptio~based tax reform propos-i
als that would encourage people to•
save more.
,
Refming his program and build-·
ing support for it will take time, far:
more than the few months from:
now to decision time for a 1996;
presidential race.
;
The difficulty involvj:d is:
demonstrated by tbe fact that Ker-)
rey himself didn't come up with his\
specific proposals until 'after he'd\
been re-elected in Nebraska.
'
The difficulty is further drama- I
tized by tbe fact lliat both tbe Clin:'
ton·administration and Republicans I
bave declared Social Security "orrl
the table" in determining bow tol
balance the federal budget ~ even1
tbougb practically every economist,
agrees that by 2030, .entitlements:
will absorb every penny of federal•
revenue.
:
It's pretty obvious that no politi- i
cian worried about an election in l
two years win lead tbe way in solv-•
ing America's big~est problems. I
But .somebody wttb a s)!«-year•
&amp;m!_e_plan just migbL
'
;
(Morton .Jeonilracke II exeeu-·1
tin editor of RoD CaD, the ntWI• !
paper or Capitol DIU.)
\
r·

I

Columbia Gas users
lose in warm weather
of

"'v

As other politicians were balcing
Cbrisunas cookie~ for voters $500 per child for Republicans,
possibly $300 per family for

bead the (OOIIDjltH: .
And the Human Services ud
Aging Committee was created out
of tbe Health &amp; Human Services
Committee and pan of tbe Educalioo. Retirement &amp; Agillg Committee. Sen. Merle Kearns of SpriDJfield will lead the committee.
Other committees and their
cbaiJpeople:
• Agriculture - Sen. M. Ben
Gaeth of Deftance.
• Economic Development. Technology &amp; Aerospace - Sen.
Chuck Hom of KeuerinJ• Education &amp; Retuement Sen. Cooper Snyder of Hillsboro.
·• Energy, Natural Resources &amp;.
Environment Sen . Gary ·
Subadolnilc of Strongsville.
• Health - Sen. Grace Drake of
Solon.
• Highways A: Transportation Sen. Scott Oelsl•ger of canton.
• Judiciary- Sen. B~ Levey
ofMiddletowD.
• Stare u1 Local ~m-omeot &amp;.
Veteran's Affairl - Sen. Richard
Scbafratb of Loudonville.
• Reference &amp; Oversight- Sen.
Gene Waus of Galloway.
• Rules - Aronoff of Cincin-

sion to step down from tbe GOP
leadenbip riJiib paid off fa Sell.
Roy Ray, wbo bas been giveu tbe
powerful post of Senate Finance
Ownm~ cbairolaD.
Ray, who wu the founh-raoking Smale Rqlublican, will play a
la:y role in writing tile state's twoyear budget once tile Senate recotJ·
veoes in Juuary, Senare Presidcot
Stanley Aronoff laid Tuesday.
"I have every confidence that
Sen. Ray will approach Ibis important posiliQo pndently, wilb an -eye
toward a \)alanced and well· .
thought-out budget,'' Aronoff said.
Republicans retained their 20-13
Senare majority in tbe Nov. 8 election aDd thereby control committee
cbairmaosbipa.
Ray, of Akron, replaces former
Sen. Robert Ney, R-St. Clairsville,
wbo won a seat in tbe U.S. House
or
Repesentatives.
William Hillum died Wednt!sday, Dec. 28, 1994 in Springfteld.
Aronoff announ~ two other
Arrangements will be announced by lbe Ewing Funeral Home.
changes in the upcoming committee structure.
Tbe Commerce &amp; Labor and
Financial IDstibttillii;S &amp; Insurance
•
committees were merged into tbe
Charles Leo Price, 65, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died Tuesday, Dec. new Financial Institutions, Insur- ·
ance and Commerce Committee. nati.
·27,1994atbisbome.
• He wils a retired mariDc: engineer wilb the Ohio River Co., wbere be Sen. Robert Cupp of Lima will , • Ways &amp; Means - Sen .
·Ricbard Finan of Evendale.
bad worked for 27 years.
. · Born May 21, 1929 in Hogsett, W.Va. be was a son of Cora Persinger
Price of Gallipolis Ferry and tbe late Jolm Price. In addition to his father,
• Accelerating weather systems isbing by mid-morning .. Mostly be was also JXeCeded in death by a sisrer, Sharon Lynn Price.
will produce a sbarp change In ~unny nor~west. half tbts m?mIn addition to his mother, be is survived hy bis wife, Erma Dunt'P.rice;
Obio conditloos by the wedtend, mg ...Then mcreasmg clouds. Highs a son and daughter-in-law, David and Cbarloue Price of Gallipolis Ferry;
fCJRCaa~m said.
from the lower 40s to the lower 'lbree danghrers and sons-in-law, Marsha and Mike Lee of Point Pleasant.
Cold taDpcnlurel and IIIOW 11\l SOs.
W.Va, Sandra and John Dailey, and AntmPrice, all of Gallipolis Ferry;
TOLEDO (AP) - Columbia · monthly bills in the winter and
likely to p-eetNew Year's ~\'elm,
Tonil!ht .. . Partly to mostly lbree sisters, Betty Simpkins and Mary
onds, both of Apple Grove,
tbe Nallollal Weadler ServiCC Slid. cloudy. Lows from the mid 20s W.Va. and Dorothy WIIISOII of Point Pleasant; six brothers, Gene Price,
Gas of Obio customers wbo are small ones in tbe summer.
Columbia Gas bas about one
'Temperatures on Sunday are DC)t oortllto the lower 30s south.
. Dou~as Price and John Price, all of Point Pleasant. Harvey Price and pan of an experimental billing p1aD
. Tburs~ay ... Partly to mostly Marlin Price, both of Apple, Grove and Kenoeth Price of Lesage, W.Va; may be wisbina for colder tempera- miUioo Obio customen, mostly in
·expected to climb out oftbe 20s.
lures. Terms tbe plan are malting tbe Toledo, Columbus, and Parma
. Tonight, lows qain will be in sunny. Htgbs f11111 the upper 30s and three grandchildren.
.
them Jose IJIODe)' wben tbe weather areas. The impact of the new
tbe mld-20s IIOftb to low 30s IIIUib. oortllto tbe middle 40s far SOIJib.
Services will -be 2 p.m. Friday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
is
moderate, even though !bey are billing plan falls heaviest on lbe SO
:Mostly IIIDDY aldea are f~ fa
, . Extended r~~:
Point Pleasant, with Rev. Marlin Campbell and Rev. Eddie Kinniard offiThltnday wJ1b blgbs moatly in tbe
Friday ... A dlance of ram soulb- ciating. Burial will follow in the Apple Grove Memorial Gardens. Friends 'using Jess gu than in a more typi- percent of cus1001ers wbo chose it
cal winter.
instead of budget billing.
;&lt;401.
west in the afternoon. Fair else- may call at lbe fWICral home Thursday (1om 6-9 p.m.
The plan bases the amount !)f
The main reason fa basing bills
'Ibe reaxd-bigll temperabd'C fa When:. Lows mid 20s to lower 30s.
each monlb's bill on a canbinalion on averages rather than actual tern'tbia dale ll '-: CollODbus weather Highs from~ middle 30s nonhof current gas use and tbe 20-year peratures is to provide tbe comoany
:atatlon was 68 deJrees in 1984 west to tbe oUddie ~ south.
average of winter temperatures, with a steady cash flow , said
'while the record low was -10 in
Saturday...Soow likely. Lows 25
which are mucb colder than this Columbia spokesman Craig
' 19~. Sunset tonight wiU be at 5:14 to 30. !-figbs lower 30s nonbwest to
year's early winter weather bas · Bergman. He said extreme remperp.m uiiUDriae 'lbunday ll 7:53 upper 30s f• south.
been.
atures such ulast year's bitter cold
:a.m:
New Year's Day... Snow likely
&gt;
As a resul~ custaners using tbe cause dramatic rises and falls in
·
W•IIMr roncua.
north ... A chance of snow south.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Starting 9, lbe company will be operating
--"y wuuu
A'--'y Lows In tile teens. Highs in the 20s. Sunday, Amerilecb Obio CUSt!Diers under a new set of state regula· plan are paying the company more company revenues.
. .........
auuay......_.
nuuy- to ....-.
than they otberwise would have in
The new plan will be in effect
will have to dial 1-614 when mak- lions.
·IOIIIlaat blllf.. .Deoae fog far south
a
mild
winter,
but
Jess
than
they
from
December to March and will
· Tbe first thing the regional teleing long-disJ.ance calls within the
would
have
if
it
bad
been
colder.
be
reviewed
next s)ring by a panel
6I4 area code.
phone company' s 3.5 million Ohio
Tbe
plan
works
similar
to
of
conswilers,
business and utility
customers
may
notice
is
a
$1.25
In ~ past, long-distance numbers in that iirea could be reached decrease in their monthly basic Columbia's budget bimng option, representatives and members of tbe
by dialing a I before the number phone charges. Charges for basic which tries to average out a cus - Public Utilities of Conunission of
wilbout having to diallbe area code phone service eventually will drop tomer' s annual bills to avoid big Ohio.
. F.mciJeocY HEAP for the 1994- three people, S18,480; four people, as well. Tbe (!14 area code covers by $2.8(!, in pan because of elimiBergttian said 'that u nder the
' 95 applk:tljm periOd is bdo ltuec- $22,200; ·r.ve pciople, $2S,920; six . most ofrentral and southeast Obio. nation of tbe $1.80 touch -tone
plan,
the gas bill for a I ,500·
charge.
The
cut
will
take
six
years.
The change is necessary because
OIIIIDOIIIb and Qllltitibea tbrollah people. $29,640.
square-foot
bouse from Nov. 14 to
Tbe
company
has
agreed
not
to
.MII'Cl 31, Gdia-Meigs COJIIIIIII!IiHouseholds with more than six an overload Of telephone lines from
WOODSflELD (AP) - A man Dec.' l5 wouldbave.been $75.93. If
increase
basic
rates
during
tbat
fax
machines,
computers
a'lld
· ty Action Aaency officials people. should add $3,720 to the
be .mgned next week in con- the plan bad not been in effect, it
relecommunications devices means time. In return , tbe state gave will
·~
yearly mame.
nection
wilb tbe accidental death of would bave been $73 _28 _
Tbe f~ly-fundcd program _Applications for bolb programs Ameritech must give its switching Ameritecb authority to introduce a deer bunter.
Jack McAvinew, 62, of Akron,
Weather for lbal period was 24
, offen be•;!:J, aaslatatfce on an can be made ll the CAA office at equipment more numbers so calls new optional telecommunications
service and set its own prices.
was cbBrged Dec. 16 wilb negligent percent warmer tban normal.
: !/OIIICigeocy
for eliaible boule- Cbesbire, Monday through Thurs- can be channeled correctly.
"I think you'll see some prod- bunting, said Tom Hampton, Mon- Bergman said that if it bad been 24
Callers in tbe "216" area code
•ibolda whole beat-related utilities day, 9:30 a.m.-noon and 1-3:30
percent rolder lban normal, tbe bilt
have
bad
to
dial
1,
!ben·
the
area
ucts
and services come out relative;are dllconncc:ccd, threatened with p:m. Tbe Gallia County Outreach
roe
County
ISiistant
prosecuta.
for the same bouse would have
ly
soon,
probably
January
or
Febru·
code
since
October.
: cliacooDec:t or bulk fuel supply is Office, 863 Porter Road, Porter,
The
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
·
been $70.10 while under the budget .
Ameritecb has other changes ary," Ameritecb spokesman David
' Jess IbiD 10 days.
and the Meigs County •utreacb
of
Wildlife
plan, it would have been $72 no
Resources'
Division
: Tbe Regular HEAP program Office, 39350 Union Ave., coming in the new year. As of Jan. · Kandel said.
filed tbe misdemeanor charge matter what the weather.
against McAvinew' who will be
Most customers first learned of
anaigned Jan. 4 in Monroe County . the new program through a four: bousebolda to defray the cost of noon and 1-3:30 p.m. No applicaC~ief Deputy Sheriff Denzil senrence statement on their last bill.
: home beat1n1. the appliCation tions are t~en at the Cheshire
.
Knowlton said McAvioew was try- Bergman said this angered inany
· deadline for Reaular HEAP Is office on Fridays.
I
A garase owned by Qyde Harri- cost estiniate on damage.
Fifteen firemen from the Rut- ing 10 shoot a deeund failed to see people and they have called ·the
: Mardl31.
Additiooal infmn.aion on these ~on of Rt. I, Middleport, along
: Income gnldtlines for both pro- programs am be obtai.ed by call· with two tractors and a bulldozer land department took three trucks another member of his bunting canpany to canplain.
: graJDI is the IIUiie, but ~egular ing the Cheshire CAA office ~~ inside, were detroyed by ftre Tues- and tbe squad to the scene, and party, Burris Cbrislman, 54, of
were lbere for about two boors.
. HEAP requires the prevtoual2 367-734.1 or 992-66~; tbe Gallta. day afternoon.
·
Woodsfield.
'!bey were assisted by both the
; montba' illcome, while the past County Outreach Office at 388A spokesman for the Rutland
Cbrislman was shot to death
~ lbree IIICIIdll' iJM:r4De is acceptable 8232; or the Meigs~ounty Out· Fire Department said that the 30- Pomeroy and Middleport Fire Nov. 28, tbe first day of tbe six-day
: fa Fmeqency HEAP.
. reacb Office at992-S60S.
by-40 garage was engulfed wilb Departments. Pomeroy was on tbe gun bunting season.
, - 1be 1l- or tbree-IIIQIIth ~od
Tbe 1011,-free number for Regu- fire when the firemen arrived on scene with one truck and eight fire:for the i3Cllllle test is detemined Jar HEAP Inquiries is 1-800-282- the 'scene at 1:36 p.m. Cause was · men, and Middleport was there
: from the dale of applicalion, mak· 0880, or for lbe bearing-impaired undetermined, and there was no with one truck and 10 f'!'emen.
~ lng It possible for some witb
with a telecommunication device
Special servn
•decreased income during these for the deaf (TDD) at 1-800-686·
Special services will be beld at
·periods to qualify later in the pro- IS57.
tbe Racine Church of the Nazarene.
: pll!ll· E•amplee of lbese situalions
following cases recently Mayor's Court of Dewey Horton.
Tyree Boulevard, Jan. 4-8. Dave
; mclude liyoff, strike, retirement,
F'med were:
were beard in the Middlep&amp;rt
Canfield, commissioned evangelist
Charles R. McCloud, Middle- ror the Church of the Nazarene,
a spouse or
port, $200 for resisting arrest, $100 will be lbe speaker. Services at 7
' Tbe following income levels by
for disorderly conduct, $100 for p.m. Wednesday through Saturday;
:household size should be used to
criminal trespass; Serena B. Robin- Sunday, 10:30am. and6p.m.
Units .pf tbe. Ml:igs County
: cletenDine eligibility. The income Emergency Medft:al Service
Am Ele Pmrer
son, Racine, $25 piu s costs for
Abo-----------56314
expired driver's license; Patricia A. oma to c:lole early
:.anidelines represent tile 1SO per- recorded four calls for assistance
Atb1aDd ou
114
·cent calculation and are rev1sed Tuesday. Units responding includMorgan, Gallipolis, $25 plus costs . The Leading Creek ConservanAT&amp;T --·-----J1311
.......lly. Allowable -ual illalllle ed:
for running a stop sign ; David cy District office will close at noon
•
Blok One.
--25 314
Tor a one-person bouaebold is
Pierce, Pomeroy, $50 plus costs for Friday Cor year-end inventory and
RUTLAND A
1ktb 11::za 112
· $11,040; two persons, $14,760;
assault; Charles J. Thomas, Mid- reports . In observance of New
1:38 p;m., Rutland V'FD and
Cllamploo IDCI.-;_--21lll
squad. LcllliDg €reek Road. garase
CUnnltJa Sllop------' 112 dleport, $200 plus costs for leaving Year's Day, tbe office wiD ~o be
fire, Qyde Harrison Jli'OI)Crty, Mid- . CIIJ Holdbta----------lll
the scene of an accident, $25 for closed on Jan. 2. EmergencteS can
dleport
and
Pooleroy
VFDs
JISSislfailure
to maintain control, $10 for be bandied by calling 742-2597.
Fedenl
MCJPI----1!1
511
The
Sentinel ed.
.
Good7eu Ta:R
511
no insurance.
K-auort-----12 SIB
COifS ZU.!Nt)
SYRACUSE
"
LaDdl Ead--------14
12:56 p.m., State Route 124,
Forfeited were;
Publhhed ..ery llflenlooo, Mondlly lllrouJb
Umlt.d IDe..
---17 314
Lmnie Tayla, VMH.
Jason
M. Boothe. Middleport,
Fridll'. I t I C&lt;)on St, Pomeroy, ()Uo, by die
DABOG,
MuiJimMia IDe
---..211
Olllo Wily~ ~y/MolliDIOdi&amp;
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Pllbtt
.
.
_
,
.
tJ
$60
for
expired
tags and $64 for
to&lt;., Pomeroy, Obio 45169, Pt.. 992-21~.
. 7:34 a.m., Bellville Locks aDd
running a stop sign; Larry Mitch
Rt!h- Eledrlc:-----....30 314
.....,.,.. _IM\cl .. .........,·Ohio.
FACOG, FACS
Dam, Patty Cechran, CamdenJr., Middleport, $150 for disorderly
Raloblalll: M71n
-17
--.nc"-1_. ......_ ... die Ohio Clark Memorial Hospital;
ROJal Du!cb
----1117 7/1
manner.
Neo;Q· 8:59 p.m., Arbaugh Addition,
Sbonef'•IDc..-----12 314
Star Blok ----.37118
Rose Peterman. St. Joseph's Hospi·
POITMAI'I"BB1 s-t Jddreu canectiolls to
WetldJ' Jat'L ·
-14 114
·nc Dolty Seadlll. ut Court St. - . , . tal.
Ohio4l169.
W01111iap.ltad.~--20 114

William Hallum

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers tor United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

be's ofren mentioned as
a potential cballenger to President
Clinton, Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.,
bas virtually taken himself out of
contention for the presidency in
1996 wilb bis courageous proposals
on entitlement reform.
Bu1 be may haVe made himself a
leading candidate for 2000.
· While House Republicans,
House Democratic Leader Ricliard
Gepbardt. D-Mo., aDd (it appears)
President Clinton are offering competing beer-and-pretzels tax cuts to
' lbe restive milldle c~s. Kerrey is
trying to fashion programs to
ensure that Americans in lbe next
century bave a sound econany and
money to retire on.
Now that Clinton bas joined the
Republican-Gepharclt tax-cut bidding war in his TV speech, lbat war
may eScalate, and even tbe current
economic recovery could be in
danger.·
That's because Federal Reserve
CbairmaD Alan Greenspan, already
intent on raising interest rates again
10 stifle invisible inflationary treDds
in tbe ec.'onollly. is likely to boost
rates even higher if Conjrcss and
lbe White House stan stimulating
tbe economy wJib tax cuts.
What's more, ·if tax cuts aren't
paid for wilb spending reductions
- or if tbe Republicans 11y to bide
deficit expansion with non-credible
claims for economic growth - lbe
bond and stock markets are likely
to quake, menacing lbe recovery.

.The deci-

of

tions. ''

Tbou~b

COL~US (AP) -

of

a

Kerrey a leading candidate

P11111 I

New committee chairs
--Areardeaths-,.
named in. state Senate
Le a Mae·Bailey

Yeltsin ventures onto thin.ice in Chechnya
hostilities are an exrension of ceo·
,turies of animosities between Rus- .
sians and ·Checbens . Tbe two
regions have been fighting, off and
on, for more than 300 years. It took
40 years of battle for Imperial Russia to seize Cbecbnya in the 19th
century. During World War II,
Cbecben separatists rose up against
Josef Stalin, which Stalin used as
an excuse to deport most of them to
Kazakhstan, hundreds of miles ·
away. Half the Cbechens died of starvation or the elements.
Tbis bloody history undoubtedly
fueled the intense separatist desires
that culminated in Checbnya
declaring ils independence in 1991,
shortly after the Soviet Union !ell
apart. The Chechens crave freedom. When a Checben asks " How
are you?'' it-translates literally as
"Are you free and bealthy?"
Keenly aware of history, and
mindful of the risk of' violence,
Yeltsin tried to wash bis bands of
the problem until this year, allowing _the Cbecbens their de .facto
independence. Now be is under
pressure from right-wing national-

n. Dilly iantlnll

Pomeroy-Middlepoft, Ohio

I

1

.1

••

Squads 199 4 calls

Stocks
----------33
---------34

Daily

-·----.33

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·- ~~

-5~:.=: : : : : : : : ::::: : : : : : : : : : ::~~
.,

.IINOLI con PIIICB

ll-.... ---.....

Dolty ................................................... 3$ Ccoll

i t lbal ... - . . .. PlY . . coriior lillY
.... io - - .. no Doily Soolilel
·ooo-. *or
Q'ltlwlll be
•.... -(llioo

bJ IIIII ponoiuod

io -

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.,';!!::
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-Oolll* Molpc.-,.
40
·==:: : : :::::::·:::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : :5~~: •:

Stock nporii8N 1111 1•.30 ...._
quat•• praYided b7 Adnat a

Hospital news

GaiiJI!IIII.

.

·

,.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Elizabeth Mclntolb. Pcmeroy.
Tuesday dUcharaea - Lola
Cllrt. Pomeroy; Diuoa Robetta.

DOWNING CHiLDS

HOLZEII MEDICAL CENTER

IIISUUIICE

Kai:IDC.

.

....... Dee..27- Adr'MlDer, Ethel Rlfe?Jinlmic Hensley;
Johnny Brandon, Jeulca Kiser,
Ada Rickard, Hattie Gothard,
Norene Lay~e. Noami Colvin,
Edna EVIJJS, Mn. David Harris IIIII
daughter, Shirley Carter, Jimmy
Fidey, Tracy Arrowood.
(hiM hd wltlli* 111 loa)

t '.

MULL~II MUS~EI
111 Second Sl, Pomeroy

YOUIIIIDEPEIIDEIII
AGEIIIS SEIYIIIG
MEIGS COUIIIY
SIIIC. 1161
'

Thomas P. Price, M.D.
announces the relocation
of his office from the Holzer Clinic to
the Medical Plaza, 936 State Rt.· 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio after Janua,ry 1, 1995.
He will be associated there with Drs.
Abels, Subbiah and Vallee. He will
continue his hospital practice at the
Holzer. Hospital. Medical Plaza offers
laboratory, X-ray, and A.C.R.
accredited and FDA approved
mammography. Appointments can be
made by calling (614) 446-9620.

I

I

l

�•
Page 4

'

the Deily SentiMa

'

Ohio

Sports

'

-PlPSt:........
PRODUCTS

Daily Special In Our Ba~er:y, ·
10 am until 2 · Man- Sat.·
Hot Dogs 21s1.00
~~ce 3fS1.00 plain

.....

STORE HOURS

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8AM·10PM
291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

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PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Closed Christmas Day so employees
Holiday

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

Brad Badgley's free throw with
7 4 seconds remaining gave bost
Greenr~eld McClain a 49-48 comerrom-bebind non-~agu~ hardwood
victory over Gallipolis Tuesday

night
Jim Osborne's underdog Blue
Devils led. most of tbe 32-minute
contes~ but tbe loss.of Terry QuaJ!s
and Josb Cook on personal fouls m

Meigs girls top Southern 47-39

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Steak or Roast ...~~•••••

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CRACKERS

$ J19·

~;::::•••••.•••••~......sJ39 Cheese...................... .
LONGHORN COLBY

BUCKET CU.BED

lb.

Renee Turley led Soutbem with
13, Jonna Manuel and Jess Codner
·eacb bad seven and four each from
Brianne Proffitt, Bea Lisle, and
Sammi Sisson. Meigs hit IS-41
from l.be field, bit 6-14 at the line
and bad 24 rebounds led by Clifford and Compston with seven
each. Meigs bad 30 hlrnovers, five
assists, eight steals and 23 fouls.
Southern hitl2-41, bit 6-16 ~
throws and bad 31 rebounds, led by
Manuel's seven and six eacb from
Codner and Turley. Southern bad
six assists, nine steals, led by Cod,
ners' four, five blocked sbois and
21tumovers.
Reserve notes: Meigs won 2420 despite eight-point effons from
Je.nny Roush and Cynthia CaldwelL Meigs was led by six-point
efforts by Candace Miller and
Brandi Meadows.

LI.IOX

Steak ••••••••••••••••••••••~·

NBAstandings
X..

Atltndt Diritloa

»:

D01ton. ..: ................ IO
l'lllladelphoa ..... .... .. lO

I-,

Sa sage ······lb.·····~··········

GB

.520
.400

8
1 LS

.315

11 .5

.385

11 .5

.815

16
16

.MWni .....................a 11 320
Wllbina:ton..............7 17 .292

CARNATION
HOT COCOA
MIX

HOMEMADE PORK

L l!d.

Orludo .. ................22 5
..,. Now Y«i .... .......... / 3 12
~ New JerRy .. .......... 12 I&amp;

OLE CAROLINA ·

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••••~~

,

Basketball

99c

$249

·

· Southern's girls again took
Meigs right down to tbe wire, but
serveral desperation fouls late in
the game widened tbe score as
Meigs ilefeated South.ern for tbe
second time this year 47-39. in
girls' bigh school basketball acuon
in Racine on Dec. 22.
Meigs took an 11-8 lead, lben
led 16-14 at the half. In l.be third
round, Meigs toOk a 27-23 advantage, but late in tbe foW1b quarter.
Southern cut the lead to one and
bad tbe ball. Southern turned the
ball over and Meigs' capitalized en
route to tbe 47-39 win.
Amber BlackweU led all scorers
with 21 points, including five
three-pointers, while Vanessa
t:omnpston bad 16. Teammate
Melissa Clifford bad six, wbile two
each came from Laura Eastman
and Ashley Roach.

$ 59

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF RIBEYS4

-:- put together great g~ in bitung do~le figures and adding balance to tbe SHS attack.
Southern led 59-39 after three
frnmes, .then conunuf!) on for the
78-55 wm.
.
Southern bll 30-~2 t~o.s and
was 4-14 on treys wblle btutng 613 at the line . SHS grabbed 20
rebounds, led by _Fisher's eigb~ bad
17 steals (Wtlhams. seven),. bad
n~ne turnovers, 15 ass1sts (Williams
elgbt) and 12 fouls.
Coal Grove ~it 2l~2 and was 21 on threes while b1utng 7-9 at tbe

Jason Lucas J~S.2S, Dutty:
Smith 2-0-I•S, Didc Wallen S-1· ~
0:13, LaiJy ConD 0-1.0.3, Jcta~~y ;
Dickess 0-0-1:1, Sbaoe Gossett 5- _
0-0:10. ToCals: 22-2-7"-55
·
•
SOlJI'HERN
:
Soutbem won tbe reserve game
(18-19-ll-Jfoo71)
•
44-40 led by Danny Sayre's eight
Jeremy Hill 8-2-0•22, Ryu :
and Adam Roush's seven. Jeremy Williams 5-2-0=16, Jamie 2-0-5-9, ;
Hall bad 16 for Coal Grove.
Jason Shuler 3-0-0=6, Mason firb- :
-•-•-•er 9-0-1=19, Kevin Ihle 1-0-()..2, •
COAL GROVE
Tyson Buckley 2-0-0=4. Toa.b: :
( 4-8fi=S5)
30-4-&amp;'13=78
•
1 17•1
•
line. Tbe Hornets grabbed 32
rebounds, ted by Lucas' 11, wbile
collecting eight steals, 21 turnovers
and 12 fouls.
Southern will host Chesapeake
Friday in Racine.

13
13.S

Ccntrlll Dh·bion

CLEVELAND ....... /8 I
IDdiana .................. 16 I
CborloUc ............... 14 12
Cllicoao .................. IJ l3
Allonla .................. 11

16
De&lt;roit.. ..................9 15
Milwauku ....... ..... .9 17

.692·
.667
.5l8

.soo

.407
.375
.346

I
4

·

Tonight's p ..H

Clllcaao 11: Boaton, 7:30p.m.
Detroil .at New York., 7:30p.m.
WaJhiDiton 11 CLEVELAND, 7:30
p.m
tndiua It U..,. 9 p.m
Phlll!delpllia 11 Sealtl~ l 0 p.m

Thunday'o gamH
L.A. Clippers lll~iami, 7:30p.m

SWl ADlonio II Atllmta.7:30 p.m.
Orledo • Olwtone. I p:m '

Gok!en State at Houston, 8:30 r .m.
Denver ll Portland, 10 p.m.
SealtJe at LA. La.bn, I0:30p .D1.

Richie Price's two charity tosses
wilb 2:36 left put the Tigers ahead
for keeps. Price lben scored on a
layup following a steal, and canned
two charity tosses with 1:33 left to
give GHS a 46-40 lead, its biggest
of tbe night.
Rucker bit a layup witb I :30
left, and Mark Clark a tbree·pointer
at the 1:01 mark to cut the Tigers'
lead to 46-45. Andy Smil.b's two
charity tosses gave tbe Tigers a 48·
4S lead witb 16 seconds lef~ and
tben came Badley's free throw with
7.4 secoritls left to make it 49-45.
Rucker's tbree-pointrer at the
buzzer reduced Greenfield· s final
victory margin to one.
GAHS bad a chance to win or
tie l.be game with 20 seconds left,
but missed a sbo~ got the rebound,
then lost the ball out-of-bounds.
Qualls sat out nine minutes of
the game because of foul trouble.
He fouled out with 2:36 left to play
and GAHS leading 40-38. Cook
fouled out with I: 17 left to play
and Greenfield on top 46-42.
Osborne praised lbe defensive
play of Ryan Barnes and Setb
Davis, wbo held the Tigers' top
scorers, Andy Smith and Troy

S. O.UC· dnt rouad
TelM M Texa~-Pan American 13
Wuliinfo• St. 10, Te1111-EI Piasa S4

Seely, to 15 and fiVe points respeetivelt. Smith got 13 of his IS in tbe
second half wltb Qualls on the
bencb .. Smith W35 averaging 25 a
game, while Seely was averaging
15.
Price, however, toot up tbe
slack fol' Greeofield, popping in 13
marken. He also bad six of Greenfield's 12 steals, and three of the
Tigers eight assists.
Greenfield was 17 of 38 from
!be field, 13 of 23 at the line, bad
21 rebounds, eight by Smilb and
six by Price, committed 14
turnovers and bad 12 personals..
Qualls led GAHS witb 16
points. Ruclcer added IS and Cook
nine. The Blue Devils were 19 of
35 fi'om tbe field, seven of 11 at lbe
line, bad . 19 personals, 33
rebounds, l4 by Quails and seven
by Cook, and 27 turnovers. Tbe
Gallians bad seven assists, four by
Davis and
steals, three by
Davis.
Gallipolis It- st Athens on
Jan. 6 in its next ou g. Greenfield
will play at Fairli
sburg Friday.
.
In Tuesda
inary

sil

reserve game, Gallipolis rallied : '
from a IS-2 fmt bait deficit to poll ~
within one point on four differeat :
occasions in the fmal period befcxe •
losing 4():.36.
:.
Greenfield canned 12 sttalgbt ~
free throws in the fmaltwo przlods :
to ice tbe victory.
,
Greenfield led 13-2, 19-1211ld •
26-23 at tbe quarliCrtiUIIb.
:
Isaac Saunders and Healb MdC· .
Inniss eacb tallied 12 for !be Blue ::
Imps, DOW 2-5. Malt CJylgn bad Dine and Swart Beatty bad eigbt to pace tbe 4-3 Cubs.
:

-·-·-·-

GALUPOLJS
(11-10-7-20=48)
Mark Clark 0-1 -0=3; Dave
Rucker 4-1-4=15; Ryan Barnes 10-0=2; Seth Davis 0-1-0=3; Josb
Cook 3-0-3:9; Terry Qualls 8-00=16. Totalll: 16-3-7,..q

Matt Johnson 0-2-0=6; Blaine
Bergstrom 1-0-2=4; Troy Seely 20-1=5; Richie Price 4-0-Szl3;
Andy Smith 6-0-3=15; Bl'ld Bldgley 2-0-2=6. Totals:1&gt;Z..13=49

Lorain Brookside 10, Avon S4
Lonio c.ob. 70, Fmmot St.

J""""

UNoauvt..

66
Lonin Cle.view 59, WellillJloD56
l..ooiaville AquiDII70, W. Brandt 55

T01n1.rnrnl·ftrtl rouncl

New ort.... 74. Rhodc!Jiand 64

Priacol&lt;&gt;a71, Tous A&amp;M 66 ~3 011

~priaa .

Spri ... South 16, !loy. -

Toi. R...,.n. ' - 1 1 l
Tot. Scott II . Doltorwoy. Art. 56
To I. St. Job ~a 62, F'ldda, fila. 41
Tri Couuy N. 41 . DWe J1

TU&amp;eanW~~ Val. Sl, C1n0lkoa 4

Twinsbwa70, Euc.iid 60
Unio ntown Lab 67, Cantoa Timbo
64

Millenpat 73, Crooknlllc 34
Miuiuinawa Val. II . WiodlCiter. lnd .

Mount Vernon 62, Mw field Mldiion

Walcrfonl 15, Beallnille 71
W11ertoo ll. Mopdon 50

72. Parma Normt~~dy )0

a.m_,

60
61

N. Royalton 66, Medina HiJ;hlud 6J
Napoleon 71, P-.riclr: Henry 61

Nelaonville-York S6, Trinmte 46
New Hanover, N.C. 66, Avon Late 59
New Phill!delphio 41. -lloa P&lt;ny .

40

New RiclumDd 81, Ludlow 12
Garfield 66
Northeast. h . 10, Campbell Memorial

Newtt~ n Falll79,

c

Wayne Trw:e n. Atcbbok161
Wellfall 55, Teays Val. 30
Willou!Jhby S. 61, kirtJud S2
Worthinatoa K.ilbourae '-· Col. 'MlctstoDe 57
Wynford II. RidpdaleSI
Xeoia 74, Wilrmafoo64
Youn1. Rayeo 74 , Hickory. I'lL 10

z.n. r.... n.t..au Elm 61 ~em
Zanesville 84, CambridF 70
Zanesville Rosq:n~~~61. Philo42

67
Nof1hrnollt 99, Tecwnleb 69
Oak Hill 67 , Jocboa66

Pll'kmt&gt;"a 62. w"'"" Hilb 59 ron

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Plrma 66, Valley Forae65

Akroa E. 44, Norwayae 40
Akroa Gwfield 67, Aboa Elm1 45
Akron St.V·St.M 63, Tol. N«re Dune

Plrn Padua 71, EJyria Cath. 66

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Glinter, D.O. (sealed), Catherine Coats. D.O.,

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BelldoataiiC SO, Bcojamia l..opD 22
Belle"" 67. WUIIrd 51

W . r e pleased co announce our

PRINGLES
POTATO
CHIPS

•

.

'
Allen £. 11 . P-.uilboo 54
Adll.. d er..v;..,
t.ucoo ..

2 SJ

$]99

KRAFT PARKAY JUMBO

Sidnev 91 . Uma Shlwaee 60

45

-

ROLL

•

BORDEN

l2

Racine Southern 18, Coal Grove SS
Richmond Hts. 78, Newbw'y 69
Rock Hilll6. fairVIeW. Ky. l4
S. Central 71 , Black River 60
Sebrina McKinley 71, Canton H«i'-ae

~.,.oo.

..

VandaliiButlet 57, fairtlon·41
Vermilioa 41, HurDD 43
W. Clfl'Olltoo 551, Troy Sl
Wopaillo... 69. foil
ol6
watn!ll Keanedy 61 , l..ordaoWa J2

Mi~art

Conaediwt 71, Ulinoi1 S6

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:

Sleubeaville SS, Ri¥11' View .fl
Tiffin CaiYC1113, OU.W. Ri.J.k Sl

M..on6S, Middletowa Madiloll S9
~-mon Jlcbon 68, Oriiliaa Broth -

ers6l
May.ville S8, Colhoctoa 53
McClain 49, Oallia Acid. 41
MedwiM::sbll'&amp; 89, Southeastern 61
Medina 70, Re¥cre 48
Mi&gt;mi £. 73. BdbcJ 41

Nortbealtem 51, B~

st M.wl&gt;41. Doy. s - TT

Malvem .l3, So~em l..oca163

Easl

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:

....9

Minetta 74, Williamltorwn, W.Va. 54
M.. illl fm)' 73. Brldaepoll 55

Cedarville 98. Sheridan ~Oat.) il

•.

~

Soulhio&amp;!"' 45. M;110r111 ~ 39
Spri... II""" 76. Sprio~ Coiholic 61

Urra Calh. 71, LincolaYitw 68

Non-eoaference action

:.;
:
::
::

Lermn· Molll'oe 63, KdteriDJ Alter 5I

Ohio men's
'COllege scores

-

GREENFIELD
(&gt;10-1~~)

..... 54

Major men's
college scores

5

1.5
8
9

the final period, plus clutch freethrow shooting by Rick Van
M31re's Tigers, carried Greenfield
to its sixth win in eight stans . .
"Our best effort of tbe year
wasn' t good enough," said
Osborne. "We were in a position to
win it in tbe end." Osborne 10ld tbe
players tbey bad nothing to be
ashamed of after Tuesday's performance, but added, "You should
never settle for second best"
The Blue Devils (2-5), behind
Qualls, Ryan Barnes, Sel.b Davis,
Josh Cook and Dave Rucker,
forged ahead 11 -5 after one period
of action.
The Blue Devils Weill up 17-10
wilb 4:30 left in the half in the
defensi~e struggle and beld a 21-15
halftime advantage.
GAHS was up 28-23 witb 3:00
left in tbe third stanza wben Qualls
picked up bis fourth personal foul
With Qualls on tbe bench and Josh
Cook in foul trouble, Greenfield
l.ben tallied six straight markers late
in tbe third stanza to take a 29-28
lead, its firSt of the. game.
· The lead exchanged bands sixt
times and the score was tied six
times in tbe final period before

10 ENV.

US #1 RUSSEn

.•

Greenfield McClain.sUps past Gallia .Academy ·boys 49-48

49

•

~outbern bead coacb Howie sive l'ressure. Southern did not
Caldwell said, "Our kids played comp"'ely s~ake Its opponent,
very, very bard tonight. or their 21 boweve~tll tb_e second canto
forced 111movers, 17 of tbem came when 11 bolstered Its 18-14 lead to
tbe first bait. We bad good defen- 37-22 at tbe bait.
.
sive pressure and intensity. This
In the first balf, Ry~ Wllli~s
was tbe type of game we needed bad numerous steals m sp~~ng
canlng off tbe toss to Ross-South- many Soutbern .f~t breaks: ptcldng
eastern . Our confidence level up a large maJonty of bts seven
wasn't too good coming into tbe s~ and eight as~ists in l.bis ~pan.
game, but after Ibis Jame it should Hill. w~:s tbe mam ~enefic1ary,
be much beller. Thts was a good casbmg mon l.bc: scormg end of l.be
win"
Williams' thefts.
Southern set the early tempo
.T~e So~tbern seniors_ with a typically aggressive clefen- Wllbams, Hlll and Mason F1sher

Southern shot out of tbe gale
quickly, then outgunned ,Coal
Grove 19-8 in the second penod to
defeat me Hornets 78-55 Tuesday
night in boys non-league bas!&gt;etball
action in Racine.
Jeremy Hill led the Tornadoes
(4-3) with 22 points, while teammale Mason Fisber added 19 and
Ryan Williams bad 16.
·
Coal Grove's J8SOI_I Lucas led
all scorers with 25 pomts. Teammate Dick Waller added 13, wbUe
Hornets Sbane Gossett and Dusty
Smil.b 13 and 10, respectively.

c

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC. 25 THRU DEC. 31, 1994.

Wedneldly, December 21. 1tN:

•
Southern boys_down Coal Grove 78-55 to get to .500 land · ~

2'LITiR

•·

The Daily s·en~ine~ .

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Pagi ~the Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, o8cember 28, 1114 '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednaaday, December 28, .1994 : .
AD'flli IBIITBI POitY- Each of U..lcMrtlsedltlms Is reqllred to be readily Mllallle fOr sale In
IICh Kroger Slore, except • ~ noted in tills ld. r • do nn out of an adVIrtlsed Item, WI
wll offer )'IIU ¥011' cldce of aCOIIIPIIIblt Item, whln Mllble, reflecting lhe same savlnlls or a
ralnehlck wtKil wll entitle you IDIMfChllt tilt ad¥et1lsed Item at the adwrUied 1111ce wltHn 50
diys, any one vendor~ wl be ICCelllld per ltllln pll'dlasl!d.

YEAR'S

EASTMAN'S

DLAND

.

.•.

·Ground Beef
c
LB.

3 LIS. OR MORE

COLA

BONE IN

Boston Style

_Pork

6 PACK .
12 OZ. CANS

VEGETABLE

99

Chi

oz.

Bananas

Willi

lnRnl
Coupon

on
Bottle

FRESH

Lbs.
FRESH "5/L VER PLATTER"

.

•·r••

;: Bone-in
.
.·Pork Steaks.....tb. ·

fa••age

FRESH CENTER CUT ·siLVER PLATTER.

Boneless
$8JJ KRocER
, . .e
Pork Loin Chops.......Jb. ~ Sauerkraut.. 14-:0z.,....,

c

BAG

II.

Pepsi
Product

Dole

Pound

Bottle

. 48 oz.
aonLE

Oil

I
6 PACKS

GOLDEN RIPE

Whole Boston Butt
. POrk ROII5t

Marked

Wesson

LIMIT

-FRESH "SILVER PLATTER"

LB.

Roast

15

'

Preferred
Selection

Potato

WIMEIYI THI! IIIGifT TO UM1T OIJAIITiru. ?lONE 101.0 TO DIALBII.

F~ESH

ASST. VARIETIES
. AND

HERR'S

KIIOCIIII co. ITKIII I'IIICU QOOO lllillllw.
DICI? 1R 21, TMIIOUQH IATUIIDAY, DEC'
• J1, 1114 .. CIAWI!IIUII
PC_,.Ol.

ALL STORES
WILL MAINTAIN REGULAR HOURS
ON NEW YEAR'S DAY.

lEW YEll'S DIY
8 1.1.·10 P.l.

E
E

COI'VIIICIHr ; .... M

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW,

RUFFLES

Plltllttl
thips

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

ASST.

Cola
Cola
Products

6-oz.

2

LITERS

·•'

ASST. FLAVORS

Velvet Super Dip
Ice Cream

Fresh
Sealtest '

Orange
Juice ~~uo•

$

~

19

BOB EVANS

Sausage Links
12

Pound

$
49
oz.

NON-ALCQHOI.IC

PIG.

GALLON

_,

Sutter Home Fre
Champagne

.

Folger's $
Coffee ::.oz.

I
I
I
I
I
I.

Velvet Super Saver Pops

1

99 : FOX DELUXE
. · .: ·Pizzas

--------------------

•

JUMBO Pl£1 · .
HOLLY FARMS

leg
We RtltfW the

ot

(

. I;

ODLAND ·

ll. .

to Umlt Quentltltl • PrieM Elfectlw Thru Sit., Dec.

GO/Q

.~!7Crovvn

.

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Crystal Clear
Sparkling water

Available only
In stores with
Pharmacy

'riJXers
1~Literstl

21Jter

gge

2/$

6 oz. -

. BIG BEND - · ,

'

·Quarters

' '

c

EASTMAN'S..

c

'

1 ·-

150m/.

SELECTED::':":,,---=
v'Af?JEnEs

.JI , __ _ _ _.....__ _ _ _ _ ____

UMIT1 WITHCOUPONANDADDmONALPURCHASE

. L-

. $ 79

12.PACK 12-cJZ. CANS $2.89

' $

Starting.at ·

. ·SUPERMARKETS

Aval/able onty In stores

I ,

11M • USDA Food

.·~

1ndWIC

Celebrate the New Year
with Party Trays

••
, Dell-Pastry Shoooe

•Not

, I

.,

·' .

I ·~

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[

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~~d~ay, December 28, 1994

Wednesday, December. 28, 18R

Poinero,_.lddleport, Ohio

__" _

Ann
Landers

...
......
c.-.,._-

Delr Ann Lllnders: My husband
and I would llpi!RlCiate your advice
on bow to respond to a recenl
solicitation we received from my
husband's nephew.
In a form leucr sent out to all tl!eir
relatives and acquaintances,
•Andrew' and his wife explained that
they are volunteering as lay
missionaries to serve in Russia for
oneyuw.
Their sponsoring organization

Support your own church, and don't
feel guilty. If this couple chooses to
make a noble sacrifice, fine, but you
need 1101 be a pan of it.
Delr Ann Landers: My husband
and I have a 6-month-old girl who is
beautiful and perfect in every way,
but she was born with a strawberryred birthmark on her forehead. It is
about the size of a pencil eraset
Since "Penelope" has fair skin and
very little hair, the birthmark is the
fust thing a person sees. My husband
and I are accustomed to it, and it
doesn't bother us in the least, but
others seem very curious aliout iL
Every time we take Penelope out
in p1,1blic, somebody asks, "What
happened to the child's head?" or
"Was your lillie girl hurt in an

your Canadian reader who was upset
because !here are so many
geographical morons in the United
States. I am a resident of Puerto Rico
wbo (eels very IIIIlCh the ame Wl)t
Puerto Rico is a commonwealdl, a
possession of the U!!ited States.
Unfortunately, most Americana do
not Jmow this. They an: also ignOI'IIIt
of !he fact that we are American
citizens and do not need a passport
to travel to the States. We use the
same currency and the aame postage,
our men fight in the aarne wars. and
we pay Social Security at the same
rate as other U.S. citizens. Please get
the word ouL I'm tired of explaining.
-- EDNA IN GUAYNABO,
PUERTO RICO
DEAR EDNA: You.,..,....,

accident?" lbcse questions are very
upsetting to us, and we wonder why
those ignoramuses don't know a
birthmark when they see one. What
should we say to people who can't
look beyond the birthmark and see
her for !he beautiful child she really
is? •• TOTALLY TICKED IN
AMHERST
DEAR TICKED: You cannot
change human nature:. So long as
Penelope has that birthmark, people
are going to make comments about
iL
Please take the child to a
derm.atologist. When she is old
enough, that birthmark can be
removed with laser SUIJlery, which is
vinually painless and perfectly safe.
Dear Ann Landers: I agree wilh

word out and I thank you. P.S. My
readers of !he San Juan Star are
among the besL
Gem of the Day: At any. moment
during a 24-hour period, onc-thjrd of
the people in the world an: u)eep.
The other two-thirda are a~ake,
making tmuble for the rest of jis.
Is alcohol ruilling yow life Dr till
life of 1:1 loved oM? "Alcoholism:
How to Recogniult, How to Dem
With It, How to COIUfUr It" CIJII nUll
things around. Send a self-addlrssed,
long, busiMss-siu envelo~ and 1:1
chlc/c or money orrkr for $3.65 (this
inc/us postage and htuuiling) to:
Alcohol, clo Ann f..tmders, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0.562 . (In .
Canada, send $4.45.)
·
'

Christmas in ·India reviewed at DAR
Members of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. Daughters of the
American Revolution, learned
about life, 11avel and Cbrisllllils llll·
ditions in India from natives of
there residing in Meigs County.
Samilel Christopher and Medue
Grabam, both formerly of India,
along witb Medue' s bus band,
David Graham. who has llllveled in
India with bis wife Medue • were
speakers at tbe rc:cent DAR meet·
ing.
Christopher noted that India is
protected on three sides by tbe sea
and mountains, the bigbesl mountain is Mt. Everest. In tbe early history of India. this protection added
security from invasion by India's
enemies. A small path through die
Himalaya Mountains, be said,
allowed migration, with Germans
coming to the IIIIIb. and aa liiiOW
from the Himalaya Mountains
melted, people were pusbed south.
Muslims also came in and Claimed
land to form small kingdoms, be

•

said
The introdiiCiioo of Cbristiallity
to India was discussed by Christopher wllo said lbat wben Jesus
directed bls twelve apostles to go
5p'Cad Cbriaimlty to 1!11 comers of
tbe world, lbe Apostle Thomas
cbose India.
St Thomas the Apostle went to
India and preached Cbrialianity. At
lbat time •. tbe government was
ruled by tbe Hindu and the Hindu
language was spoken, be said.
Thomas spoke only in Hebrew
because be was inspired by God.
Tbomas lived in the mountains
now called Thomas Mountain.
1booi8S was attacked by those who
resisted bim and his teachings,
killed witb a spear and buried in
wbat is now known as St. Tome,
according to Christopher, who said
!bat be is depicted as one of the
Twelve Apostles wbeo be bolds tbe
spear or 1~ with wbiCb be was
miKtyrc:d.

WbUe tbe British ruled for 300

Pumping iron regularly

strength~ns

spine and bip fractures in older
women," said study leader Miriam
E, Nelson, a physiologist at the
Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at
Tufts University in Boston.
"Bone density is only one ele·
ment in these fractures," sbe
ad'ded. "It may be even more
impor.tant to improve women's
muscle strength and balance to preveal falls, wbich are the greatest
risk facllr for fractures iu the elder·
ly."
said.
"Tbe shldy shows for the first · Fractures caused by osteoporotime that a siagle treatment can sis - the thinning of bones !bat
improve several risk factors for accompanies aging - strike 1.5

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
AP MediGI Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Forty minutes of inteDaive weight training
twice a week am help older women
avoid the devalllling hip and spine
fraclllreS dltllan: linked to thinning
bones, a study $1J&amp;eats.
Post-menopausal women who
followed Ibis re1imen for a year
built up dldr boDes, inaeased the
size and power r;J their muscles and
improved their balance, researcbers

REPLACEMENT· A boy looks at bla dog
; wblle sltlina .In a broken 'll'llgOD In a photo used
· In lhe new Snap-- Tooli advertilllllg aunpalp.
Tbe Ke.-ha, Wls.-based, Forlllne 500 toolmak·
: er hu abandoned the elude girlie calendars It

years, Christianity flourished, around tbe church and church sa·
Christopher said, and described vices and always bas pricrity over
bow men and women worshiped on any otber family or public llf:livity.
separate sides of the cburcb. He People gather at the church at 3:30
told of the American missionaries in tbe morning to thank God for
wbo began coming to India, men- clothes, food. and otbcr oecessiliea.
tioning one wbo brought was dis· Tbis gathering lasts about two
tressed by the many deaths of hours. They do not give or receive
women at child birth, returned to presents since tbe country is poOr
the U.S., went to medical. school and most do not have resources to
and went back to India as a medical do so. There Is no celebration of
doctor to help provide medical Santa Claus or other Christmas
S)'JI)bols.
needs for child bearing women.
David Graham spoke of bjs lnlvToday, Christians make up a
minority of tbe population in India. els in India and described the difChristopher explained. However, ferences in climate from tbe U.S.
Christians operate many colleges, Medue Graham said that she
bospitals and schools. In 1947, be attended Christian scbooiJ and was
continued, independence from allowed to pray and study the
British rule was accomplished Bible. Cliildren ane allowed to paruncler a peaceful plan. Mahatma ticipate in Christmas programs.
Gandi said be did not want to be a Families do gather for the ChristChristian but walited to be "Christ mas season for fellowship and
Like." All were united Into one reunions but do not exchange gifts.
During the business meeting
church · the Church of India.
Christopher said !bat tbe Christ· condiiCted by tbe Regent. Eleanor
mas celebration in India is c:entered Smith, members elected delegates

COUDtjea ~ has resulled in
an aYiard being made by a nalioaal

advertllinl organization to AJbland
Oil, inc. for ill JB111Cnbip witb tbe

River

Ohio
VaUey Water Sanita·
lion Commission (ORSANCO) in ·
spoosoring the cleanup.
Asbiind was one of 66 winners
recognized by the Community
Action Network (CAN)•.an adver-

and alternates to tbe State DAR
Conference to be beld in Dayton in
March and the National Continental Congress in Washington, D.C.
in April.
No DAR meeting will be held in

underwent 40-minute workouts
twice weekly with professional
trainers. They used equipment that
creates resistance with air instead
of weights. The I 9 other women
remained sedentary.
All of the women previously
bad been sedentary and none bad
taken estrogen or other medications •
known 10 strengthen bones for at
least a year before the study.
At tbe end of a year, the 20
womep wbo bad worked out
showed a I percent gain in the density of leg and back bones, compared with a 2.5 percent loss in the
19 women wbo did not train,
researcbets said.

Also, tbe women who trained
showed strength improvements in ·
leg and back muscles of 35 percent
to 76 percent above the nontrained
group. And their balance improved
14 percent as tested by walking
backward toe to heel, compared
with a 9 percent decrease in the
nontrained group.
In addition, women wbo trained
developed an appetite for exercise,
the researchers reported. Not
counting the training sessions, the
women increased their spDIIIaDCOus
physical activity an average of 27
percent, wbile tbe aontrained group
slacked off by nearly !bat much.
Though the training sessions

January.
:·
Officers will meet Jan. 14 m
complete annual reports . Tb~
February meeting will be beld Fcli.
11 at the Heath Methodist Cburcll~
Middleport. Richard Vaughan wiU
speak on World War II.
:

corporate community relations for
Ashland Oil.
"Recognition for the River
Sweep idea, along with the realization that others may pattern their
own riverbank clean-up after the
program, is extremely rewanling,"
beadded. .
The Obio River Sweep is a oneday event that rovers nearly 2,000
miles of shoreline. In 1994, the
event attracted more than 17,000

tising industry nonprol'it service

England, Colombia, GUll!elllala and
Venezuela. Ashland was one of
community social problems.
only a handful of corporations rei:Ashland received an Exception- ogoized this year for community
al Merit Media Award for its spon- betterment at an event that tradisorship of the 6th Annual Obio tionally recognizes tbe efforts or
River Sweep in June.
newspapers, magazines, television,
Winners were named at tbe net· radio and DQtdoor media.
work's recent awards luncbeon in
"It is an llonor to be counted
New York. CAN received more among those recognized for male·
than 200 entries for the annual lag a difference in their communicompelition, including entries from lies," said Bob Owen, manager of
that collects ljiiCi shares solutiona to

a

flans

aequiled a book called ''Kids' Furniture You Can Build" by David
an(l Jeanie Stiles (Chapters PublisiJing, Ltd., 1994, $17.9.5). This
large-sized paperback contains
easy-to-follow directions (tbe
authors. include a "shopping list"
of all tbe materials you'D need as
we)ij for making everything froo1 a
cbild's bathroom stool to - you
guessed it! - a loft bed.
One of our favorites is an
adjustable child's play table with
mateblng storage chair: It can be
made for about a quarter of the
priCe: one would have to pay at a
retail establisbmenL
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Do
you have, or know of, a simple
remedy to remove water stains
from finished furniture? I set a
plant on a paper plate on top of my

salt.
If you think you ' ll be having
this kind of problem again (or if tbe

above suggestions don ' I work).
Tbe Vermont Country Store, P.O..

Gail P. Dalsky, an assistant pro~
fessor of medicine at the University
of Cooneclicut Heallb Center and li
researcher on osteoporosis am),
exercise, said the fmdings ue 1J11W
and important And she agreed that
"we bave to get away from thesc!C
fancy exercise studies and go to;
something people can do at home. '·"t

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) Just when be aeeded it. a aortbem
Kentucky IDIII lilt the jackpot tor
the second time. in a Utile more
tblll a year. '

,.•
·,

=rr·

some money from bis funeral. And
"Three time' is a charm," be
my fatber was real sick.
said. "lsn'tlhat wbat they say?"
"I decided to check my Powerball ticket, lmd there it was. I said
LARGE SELECTION
to bet, 'Baby, we bit it.' It waa a

QUARTERHOR$E
BAND,
'J

g~."

DeM011, 41; of
won
DeMos&amp; plans to use bls wru= .
$100,000 In a Po
drawinl
Dings
to pay off some bills tlld die
1811 week. In Allp1993, DeMou
mortp&amp;e
on bls bouse, pay for ,his
IJIIIIKIDCCOWGibn ll die ('almlc
fatber'
~
ftmeral,
buy biJ Wife a new
Colllna Co.loiDiry ill W"Jlder Ifill
Cll'
IIIII
add
.to,
the
college fund ~ '
• 'S1 oo;ooo sne mdie QiiiUCity
IIIWted for his IS•ycar-old soo .wilb
I..oU:y Cllb .5
.
.
.)~
really . . . . . lbe Di'-Y from Ills fin&amp; jackpot.·
1
-y." DeMau lllid Hil Calber;
J?eMoaa won 1\ia .SlOO,bOO·l ,y
a.1c1 DeMola, diCid r;J IIIII c:an-. bavans five of the si'x -Powerball
ccrDcc:. 24.
..
.. nlllllbeta in lbe Dec. 21 drawing.
be would have ._a one ~.
. .•
"My wife tlld 1 ~ alllinl ill lie WOUld have won $22 milli011·•·· · ,
WATCHES
dle-iilelloa11ble lMt Tla~y," Kenb!cky Louay *.Uesman Rk:t '' ''
Datlee.: -1'1eaday. "SIIe wu Jleilm•llld.
.
l ,.beCP,. ~ hlliO IIIIIY ·. AltllOUIII be's won twice,
Middleport Dept. Store
,
My'~~ jnll died a QeMosslatenda to keep playing
n d6t w " " tlld we IIIli owec1 the ~oaery.
· "'011 tbe 'T' In Middle rt"

Wednesday, lhursday, Friday
. 8 p.m. • Midnight

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St. Rt7 N.

II

Kanauga, Ohio

,,4~1'~:1. ~ -~"'

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Family
Medicine

'

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

News Hotline

992-2155
LEGAL NOTICE

"'

Pursuant to Seclion 4913.05,
,
Revised Code, lhe Public Ulililies · ··
Commission of Ohio is conducting ~
review of Ohio Power Company's : ~
(Ohio Power's) environmenlal
...,
compliance plan. Ohio Power's
compliance plan sets forth lhe
"·
company's proposed aclions
~·~
concerning ns generaling unils , ;.
aHected by federal acid rain conlrol .:.
requiremenls (Clean Air Ac1 Amen(j;, ..
menls oil~). Ohio Power's ...:·
compliance plljn, which principally '.''
relies on Ihe conslruction of scrub- .·.'
bers at the company's Gavin
~ ..
generating slalion, was approved • ~;,
lhe commission on November 25, .;:·
1992. In accordance wilh Section ,\:,.
4913.05, Revised Code, Ohio
~'1.
Power's compliance plan is ~ing · tr
reviewed by the Co~mission in ordfl(,
to conSider Jhe con11nued appropri-~·;..
aleness of the plan, as well as lhe :. :
cost of and progress in iillplementinQT
the plan (Case No. 94-1181-EL- ~·y
ECP).
.''~
I

• ·.

. . ....

·" t'"'

Th.e Commission has sellhis mane;,:,
lor hearing commencing Janqary 11 1 ·~·
1995, al10:00 a.m., allhe offices o1 ~
lhe Commission, 180 East Broad · ·
Slreel, Columbus, Ohio 43215. ·.~~
Further inlorm&amp;tion may be obtai~::
by conlacting lh.e Public Uli'""'
~
Commis$1bn of Otlkl. · ' ' ' ·

they're powerful enough to change
the world," says the bishop.
In this ne.w kind of Pilgrim's
Progress, the little monk is sent to a
monastery in the mythical land of
Maloo where his child-like wisdom
pierces the pretense of those
around him.
Armed with his journal full of
treaSured thoughts, with bis pet cat
Purr, and with a slingshot given
him by one of the children, the lit.tie monk goes forth to challenge
the world, the flesh and the devil.
"The little monk character is
really a metaphor of that core of

.. Qhio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

·-

'

The Holiday Inn Presents...

Luck lottery smiles on family twice

Paulist Press has just released a
new book titled, "The Little
Monk," authored by Dr .. Harry
farra, wbo went through elementary school in Middleport.
Dr. Farra is now bead of the
Department of Speech/Visual
Communication at Geneva College
in Beaver Falls, Pa.
"Tbe Little Monk" is a wbimsi·
cal tale, an extended parable, about
a little monk wbo is commissioned
by bis bishop to le:im the bidden
secrets of prayer-"one lesson a
year, no more, no less."
·:.'Jbe lessons of prayer are few, but

were held in a special facility, Nel'
son said she and her colleagues
have developed comparable exer~
cises that can be done at hom~
using simple, low-cost leg weights;
and dumbbells. She is studying
wbelher such bane exercises wodi
as well.

ADANNE.NAN

Box 3000, Manchester Center, VT
0.5255-3000 carries a product
called Wbite Ring Remover, catalog 21Wl3, $5.9.5, plus shipping and
handling (for you, in Michigan,
shipping and handling would be
$4).
READER FEEDBACK: We
asked Qur readers to send us ideas
some
about what to do with shoulder ideas on
one can do with all
pads lbat bave been removed from those perfectly good scoops one
clotblng. Sharon Papin of Wilsou, receives in soap powders, drink
N.Y., sent.us Ibis great idea. She -mixes, etc. It seems wasteful to
writes: "I pin (or sew) them on die throw them out. Readers, any
hangers I bang ~eaters on. ideas?
They work like · . hangers so
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
you don't get mark&amp; from lbe bang· P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
er on your sweaters, and they are a Questions of general interest will
lot cbeaper!"
·appear in the column. l&gt;ue to the
While we're on the subject of volume of mail, personal replies
recycling, Dorothy Franks of cannot be provided.

teleVision set. A day later I noticed
it. Unfortunately it was too late! A
big white spot! Help! ~AMY
JASPER, Adrian, Mich.
DEAR AMY: Although in Ibis
politically correct age we hesitate
to SU8JCSl it, the best way to get rid
of a white ring is to dip a cork or
cloth into vegetable oil and then
into cigarette or cigar ash. Rub
with the grain, across the spot.
Keep rubbing and dipping until lbe
sput disappears.
If there are no smokers among
your friends or family, you can also
try substituling'pumice (available
in hardware and paint stores) or

Some mecbi!IICI e~tpreued
mixed feelings about Snlp.()a's
decision, but even dlllle wlio lbd
the calendar said !bey wouldtl't
dare: display it In their ~;&gt;~w•s~e~ .
"I lite &amp;iris. bull don't like tbe
calendm
because Iiley offead
customers. don't want to lose a
customer over a calendar. Tile cal·
endars don't make you money,"
said Dean Ekstrom, owner of
Dean•s Auto Repair in Madisou,
who gets numerous requests for
Snap-On's Rirlie calendar from
customers.
Gary Wille, wbo owns a ~~~;~Ville
station in Oregon, Wia., said SIIIP'
On bas notbing to be uhl!!lfd o(.
"I don't see wby they feel bad
about it. There's nolbing obscene
about it at all. It's always 'been 1
tastefully-done calendar."
Soap-On dealer Ron 1bunton
said rc:lalively few cmtomen have
complained about the calendars
beio diSC(Jltinued.
'~ was kind of surprised," be
said. " It's kind of an cod of an
era."

age units, used to distribute 1.2
million of the calendars each year
featuring fuUy-clotbed women.
The practice was stopped
because It " is not tbe image we
want to be associated witb in the
future,'' spokesman David Heide
said. adding that the calendar perpetuated tbe stereotype that
mechanics are uneducated
In Auguat. SII8JH)n lanncbed a
$2 million advertising campaign to
portray mechanica as well-educated
people with computer training and
other technical knowledge needed
to work on today"s complex auto·
mobiles.
Heide said many mechanics
aren't banging tbe calendars in
garages because !bey think it may
offend women . He denied that
pressure on the company was the
reasoo for tbe decision.
" We've beard that this is politi·
cally correct, or bowing to feminist
pressure. That's not the case. But
this isn' t Snap-On being a dogooder. It's a sman tnaJteling deci-

·r

sion,'' be said.

I'

. PREVENT NEW YEAR'S studies have shown that this is only
TRAGEDY BY RESTRICTING a "sense" of being less influenced
by alcohol. The time required to
ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
make
a decision and then react to a
Question: I don' 1 drink alcohol
driving
situation goes up with each
v.ery often, but I usually do have a
drink,
regardless
of bow accus·few drinks at our New Year's Eve
tomed
the
person
is
to drinking.
party. How many drinks does it
If
you
are
hosting
a party at
take to make a person drunk:, and is
which
alcohol
is
served,
you have a
11. any different for those who drink
·
responsibility
to
your
guests.
Su~ ­
&amp;!cobol regularly? I'm concerned
gesl
that
your
gues
ts
come
m
' bout letting our guests drive
groups
and
that
each
group
select
a
home.
"designated
driver."
Make
non·
: · Answer: It's almost lime to ring
ill the new year ..::.. an occasion that alcoholic beverages available,
dlany people will celebrate by rals- preferably served in the same type
i!!ll a few toasts. While moderate of glasses as the alcohol, for the
drinking is acceptable in our soci· designated driver and for anyone
, ety, drinking to the point of gelling else who chooses not to consume
drunk is DOl. And, when a person is alcohol. Guests should not be per·
drunk. there's absolutely no excuse s!lllded to drink, nor ridi culed if
they choose not to . Snacking
for trying to drive a car:
Statistics from the Centers for should be encouraged. Coffee
Disease ContrOl show that about 42 should be served in the last hour or
.percent of tbe fatal vehicle acci- so of the party. Although coffee
dents in Ibis country involve alto· does not counteract the alcohol as
bol, and that more than 17,000 some people believe, it does offset
Americans lost their lives in alco- drows111ess, and a lengthy period of
hol-related accidents last year. The socializing over coffee provides
number of alcohol-related deaths guests time to sober up before
has decreased sugbtly over the past beading home.
Most importantly, anybody who
few years because of public aware. ness and because of individoal and is obviously drunk should not be
Jaw enforcement efforts to keep allowed to drive under any circum·
drunk drl vers off the road. Your stances. Instead, insist that this perconcern for your guests is son stay overnight, go home with
admirable and appropriate. Every somebody else or talte a taxi. This
one of tbese accidents is a needless isn't just for the safety of the intox11118edY. You can be sure that hun- icated individual and !bat of other
dreds of people will again have motorists, but also for your prolec·
their holiday season spoiled this lion. In some states you may DOw
year by New Year' s Eve drunken "be beld legally responsible for any
injury the intoxicated person causes
drivers.
It takes the average .person one after leaving your party drunk.
By following .these steps, you
to two bo,urs to eliminate the avercan
help to assure that your 1995
age alcoholic drink, such as an
ounce of distilled liquor, a bottle o( will get off to a safe start.
On bebalf of all of us at tb e
liFc or a glass of 'wine. Given this
faet. a good, conservative rule· of Ohio University College of Osteothumb is that if you have had more pathic Medicine, I'd like to take
than one drink for each two boors tbis opportunity to wish you 'and
that you have been at a pany, don't your family a very happy, peaceful
drive. Also, remember !bat inebria- new year.
Here's to your health!
tirin is generally brought on ,quicker
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
if you drink on an empty stomach.
Regular consumption of alcohol column. To submll quelllons,
doesn't change the effect of Ibis wrlle to John C. Wolf, D.p.,
drug; bowever, the frequent drinker Ohio Unlvenlly Collep of O.teodOes develop a sense that be or sbe pathk Medicine, Grosvenor U,U,
Is less impaired by it. .Numerous Athens, Ohio 45~01,

r:

•

Medicine and a researcher on HIV
in women, said her own findings
suggest nonmedical factors play an
important role in how infected
women fare.
"It is extremely common for a
woman to say sbe wants an HIV
test but was afraid to ask the doc·
tor," Levine said in a telephone
interview. "Wben she does ask, be
says , 'No, you don ' t need one.
. you're a nice girl.' Then. sbe has to
say, 'No, I'm not a nice girl.'"
A woman also may come to the
emergency room with pneumonia.
and a doctor may not suspect it' s
related to HIV, although with a

male patient. the doctor might sus- . ty - two important factors in life
pect HIV and test for it, Levine expectancy for people witb HIV,
said. Tbe treatment for the two Sherer said.
Also, be said, "we know that
types of pneumonia is different. sbc
there's
a very bigb incidence of
noted.
Tbe study, conducted at primary domestic violence in women with
health care centers in 13 U.S. HIV - in some cases extremely
cities, is the largest and longest to bigb," and lbat may cause deatbl,
explore differences in HIV disease be said.
Causes of deatb in the study
between men and women, Sherer
said It also is one of tbe most rep- were unavailable or unknown for
resentative - .SO percent of sub- 46 percent of 105 wOIIICII wbo died
'jects were black or Hispanic, be and 36 percent of 700 men wbo
died. Since llllllly HIV patii'J!Is die
said
outside
hospitals, informalioa on
But tbe study's breadth came at
the cost of detail, including infor- causes of death is difficult to
obtain, the rc:searcbers said.
mation on bomclessoess and pover-

l=ormer Middleport resident publishes book, 'The Little ·Monk'

,•
volunteers from the six states that . to public problems, has gatherecj:
border the Ohio River. An eslimat- moo: than 1,000 tested answers for
ed 13,000 tons of trash were: col- social ills ranging from alcobo~
lected in 1994. Since its beginning abuse to unemployment.
}
in 1988, moo: !ban 100,000 volunAshland Oil Inc. is a large,\
teers bave collected about 71,000 interrelated energy and chemic~
tons of trash. The ,program 'has company engaged in petroleum
added pick-up sites and increased n:fming, transponalion and wholeits participation level every year sale marketing; retail gasoline·mar;
since its beginning.
keting; motor oil and lubricant
CAN, established as a national marketing; chemicals; coal; highclearinghouse designed 10 collect way construction; and oil and g39
and disseminate practical solutions exploration and production.
;;

Lofty ideas for easy-to-build children's furniture
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASB.cvMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Last
week, my youoa aoo came home
from spending the night with a
friend an~ now all be can talk
about is his friend' 1 loft bed. I
called bls ftlend' s parents and they
said il was tbe best investment
tbey'd·'ever 111ade. Tbe bed is
reachc41lY a lidder and undcmeatb
there Ia deep, 4-foot higb storage
and play area (aa well as room for
the futon oilwbicb my son slept).
They a1110 told me tbe price, whil:b
· is more tban 1 can afford. Would
you know wbere I could get
to make a loft bed for my son . I'm
pretty bandy but not handy enough
to draw up ~e plans myself. F.M. TAYI;.OR. Kewaakmn, Wis.
DEAR P.M.: We have recently

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
thlin the men, they just died sooner, percent of lf.S. AIDS cases, but
AP Medical Writer
said researchers led by Sandra L. women and children are the fastest
· CHICAGO (AP) - Women Melnick, an epidemiologist at tbe growing group of people with
who have tbe AIDS virus die faster University of Milmesota Scbool of AIDS. a co-author of the study, Dr.
Renslow Sherer, said in today's
than men witb the infection, a Public Health.
In women twice as often as in issue of Tbe Journal of the Ameri·
study found, and the reasons may
men, death was the first sign that can Medical Association.
be social rather than medical.
The study tracked 768 women HIV was progressing , tbe
"We're still way behind in
and 3,779 men- all HIV-positive researchers found. In men, the fust reaching women at risk national- for about 15 months. The signs of the infection's progress ly," said Sherer, director of the
women were 33 percent more like· were much moo: likely to be pneu- Cook County HIV Primary Care
ly to die !ban men who were com- monia or fungal infections.
Center in Chicago. "This study just
parably ill when they enrolled in
That led researchers to speculate . shows the devastating impact of
· the shldy.
that womeo may wait longer to HIV in women."
Dr. Alexandra Levine, chief of
No medical reason for the dif• seek care or may be treated differhematology at the University of
fi:rence was apparent. The women ently by the medical system.
didn' t seem to get sicker any faster
Women represent only about 15 Southern California School of

'SPEAKERS ON INDIA- Samuel Chrbtopber and Medue Graham, natives of lnllla Uvina In Melp County, ..and Medue's "
huband, David Gr...IIID, left to rlaht, t.lkeci on Ufe, cutoms and
Cbrktmaa, at a recent meeting .o l Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, "
Daughters of the A-rican Revolution. Pictured with them Is
Elelmor Smith, chapter regenL

Ash/a:n·d 9il nationally recognized for contributions to River Sweep
The 8IIIIUal riverbank cleanup
in which bOth Meigs and Gallia

has distributed to customers for the past 12
years and subsUillled a homespun adverlilln&amp;
campaign promoting the virtues of mechanics.
(AP PhOtoi'Snap-on Inc., ho)

By MICHAEL C. BUELOW
Allocillted Pn. Writer
MADISON, Wis. (AP) Mechanic Ron Smith doesn't see
girlie calendars in his doctor's
office, so be sees DO need for tbem
in his garage.
· Making mechanica aeem aa professional as physicians is one reason the toolmalcer SII8JH)n Inc. has
ended a 12-year tradition of dis·
tribuling calendan showing female
models displaying tbe company' s
products. Tbe 1995 calendar .bas
photos of vintage cars.
Smith, wbo owns a Madison
servia: .center, said be has never
displayed the Snap-On calendars
because they fuel tbe grease-mookey stereotype and insult female
customers.
"We're professionals. If you
walked into a doctor's or lawyer's
office, you wouldn't see those
types of things on the wall," he
said.
Kenosha-based Snap-On, wbich
makes power tools , automobile
diagnostic equipment and tool stor·

•

:Study finds women with HIV. die. sooner than infected .men

bones in older women, study finds

million Americans annually, most·
ly women. The fractures oftea lead
to long-term disability or death,
and they cost more than $10 billion
a year in direct medical expenses.
The researchers studied tbe
effects of strength training on bone
thinning in 39 post-menopausal
women ages 50 to 70. Tbe fmdinfS
were published .in Wednesday s
issue of Tbe Journal of tbe Ameri·
can Medical Association.
A related article accompanying
the shldy said Americans need to
consume more calcium in order to
build and maintain healthy bones.
In the study, 20 of tbe women

I

.uToo/maker girlie calenc!ar discontinued for better image·

Missionaries should cBrry their own weight in noble cause
requires them to raise S61,948 to
support themselves and their
children, ages 2 and 5, for the yeat
They have described a wonderful
opportunity now open to Christian
missionaries in Russia and the
urgency to act before: the doors to
God are once again closed. My
husband and I support our own
church and have other fin~ncial
obligations. How can we say no
without appearing to be less
charitable than family members who
will agree to help? Please don't
publish name or state, just sign us •.
NO CANDO
DEAR NO CAN DO: You are
under no obligation to help your
nephew and his wife do missionary
work in Russia, or anywhere else.

The Dally Sentinel P..l

P0!111roy41ilddleport, Ohio

"

'•·

spirituality deep within each of us
that searches for God and needs
nurturing," explains Farra. Readers
soon realize that this is DOt truly a
book about monks and monasteries. It's about "the little monk" in
all of us that hungers for God.
"Then: is a little monk in the heart
of each of us," Farra notes.
The book is sprinkled with captivating episodes, engaging parables and practical insights. Numerous proverbs accent the book:
"Peace is a prayer on the lips and a
cat in ·die lap," "Dreams are often

leuers from God," "Without trust
life is a weary thing," "The Holr,
Spirit is the Great Surpriser, '
"Those wbo want to, can move
heaven and earth with their
prayers."
The book is illustrated by
Christopher Fay, wbo formerly
taught and directed drama at Gene·
va College with Dr. Farra. Fay now
lives and worq in New York City
as a freelance artist.
Paulist Press, a Catholic and
ecumenical publisher, calls Tbe
Little Monk a "crossover" book,

because it crosses denominational
lines and various age levels. It is
described as having equal appeal to
Protestants, Catholics and Orthodox alike because it deals with
those universals of faith adhered to
by all Christians.
The book also appeals to most .
age levels. Io that sense, it could
serve as a family-type "read aloud"
book, says Farra. Through the
book's symbols and subtleties,
adults will find mucb to reflect on
and ponder. Yet, the content bas
such a simplicity to it that much of

the book can be grasped easily by
children. Young people, too, will
ftnd many of their struules keyed
into in the lillie monk's ex peri·
ences, the author said.
Dr. Farra bas taught at Geneva
College for 32 years and is also die
author of a book on preaching,
"The Sermon Doctor" (Baker Boot
House, 1989). Tbe Utlle Monk
sells for S7.95 and can be mlered
through most bookstores or from
Paulist Press, 997 Macarthur
BoulevMd, Mabwab, N:J. 07430.

Middleport holiday giveaway winners named
Winners in the fmal drawing ~f
the Middleport holiday promotion
have been announced by the Middleport Community Association.
The winners and the businesses
from which they will receive their
prizes were Heather Davenport,
IJairy Queen; Teresa Camp, Millie •s Restaurant; Ida Counts, Ingels
Carpet; Paul Price, Fruth Pharmacy; Kenda White, Dan' s; Kelly
Rizer, Valley Lumber; Rhonda

Tyo, Mill Street Books; Nan Hard· Farrar, Big Bend Health and Fiter, Trolley Station Crafts; Dreame ness; Margaret Johnson , AcquisiBell, Vaughan's Cardinal ; Cathy tions Fine Jewelry; Debbie Clay,
Richmond, Locker 219 Shoe Place; Farmers Bank; Maxine Owens,
Virginia Duckworth, Babr Clothier; Western Auto; Sue Smith, MiddleHazel Turner, Mill End Fabrics; port Tropbies/feiesr Sonny Hudson,
Carl Cline, Ingels Furniture/Elec- General· Tire Sales; Jan Hawk,
tronics; Norma Custer, Johnson's King Servicestar Hardware; Dave
Variety.
Harris, Classics Cuts; James
Roscoe Wise , Middleport Lawhorn, Johnson's Video.
Department Store; Christopher
Wendi Daniels, Gingerbread
Baker, AB Cutting Cellar; Terry House; Mabel Jamison, Middleport

flower Shop; Leon Baggett, Obio
River Buw. C0111pany; Sara Owen,
Country Naturals; Diana Bing, Furniture on the T; Susie Karr, Comer
Restaurant; Virgil Lee, quality
Print Sllql; Ann Fnar, Dollie Turner Realty; Lowell Beaver; Foreman
and Abboll: Belly Knight
McClure's Family Restaurant;
Donna Hartson, People's Bank;
Emelie Pride, Ellis BP.

Child care network offers services to Meigs residents
Parents now have a much needed resource at their fmgertips in the
Child Care Resource Network
(CCRN), south-central Ohio's representative to Ohio's statewide
cbild care resource and referral sys-

Cindy Cates, district coordinator of CCRN, notes that in order to
provide a variety of child care
options in Meigs County, the network is actively recruiting persons
interested in becoming a professional child care provider in their
tem.
CCRN offers parents free refer. home.
CCRN-Iisted providers go
ra1s to child care services in Meigs
County and is a source of informa- through a process of background
tion for families seeking help with
other parenting issues.

checks and agree to meet a number
of health and safety standards to be
included in the network's registry.
Listed providers have access
through the network to reduced
bealtb care coverage, resource
materials, technical assistance from
CeRN staff, and training in early
childhood practices.
Providers ane needed to care for

all ages of cbildn:n, according to
Cates. CCRN is a program of the
Corporations for Obio Af1!alacblan
Development.
The district office is located in
Portsmouth and serves Mei's
County and 10 other counties 10
southeastern Ohio. Information on
the· program may be obtained by
calling 1-800-577-2276.

ql REDUCE ••• REUSE ••• RECYCLE

Community
calendar

~i

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non·profll groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fundralsers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed lo run a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day, Salvation Army, Thursday, 10
a.m. to noon. All area residents in
need of clothing are welcome.
POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout leaders will meet Thursday,
1 p.m. at Trinity Church.
FRIDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees, 6:_30 p.m. Fri~ay ,
Pageville Township ball. Organ•zational meeting to follow regular
meeting.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·
ship trustees will bold an end of tbe
year meeting Friday, 7 p.m. Organizational meeting will be held Jan.
2 at 7 p.m. at tbe office on Joppa
Road.

RECYCLE

DROP • OFF BOXES

• •
Box No. 1 On left Use Front Doors
Items for this box: (Lids I Caps ofi... Rinsed)
Glass Containers (Clear, Green, Brown)
Newspapers and Inserts (Bundled/Bags)
Corrugated (Flattened)
Magazines- Catalogs- Phone Books
(Bags/Bundles/Boxed)
Office/Computer Paper
Alum. Foil &amp; Trays
Note; Just open fr&lt;~nt doors and place inside
in the containers you brought materials in.

Location of
Recycle
Sites
I

SATURDAY
LETART - Letart Townsbip
Trustees, 8 a.m. for year-end meet·
ing. Organizational meeting to follow.

Funded

by:
I

...

I

[!] [!] [!] [!]
2
[!] [!J
LI:
4

~

Box No. 2-on right Use top Doors
Door No. ! ... Aluminum Cans
Door No. 2 ... Steel1Tln Cans
Door No. 3... No. 1 Green Plastic (Liter)
Door No. 4 ... No. 1 Clear Plastic (Liter)
Door No. 5 ... No. 2 Colors (Ciorox, ride, Etc.)
Door No. 6 ... Fial Cardboard '
(Cereal Box.Wrap)
Door No. 7 and 8 ... No. 2 Plastic
(Milk/Water/etc.)
All compartmenls are clearly labeled and
IHustrated.
(Lids/Caps off ... Rinsed)

.

• Syracu. .·St Rl12C ne~r old (Sutton) Stahl Pllrk.
• Cheater· Jet. ofSt Rt.2C8 l Scout c.mp AOIICI
• Litter Control Office. Union Ave• . - Pomeroy ($1tllabury
~Forked Run Stahl Plrk (NIIW Oa•il ii••lolt-~ J. ·f-\ii

Ohio Department of Natural Reaourcee
Division of fRecycllng &amp; Litter Prevention
Geor V. Volnovlch- Governor

...... c-ty Litllr Conn!
GJIIV Salld .....

\ ••• lllltlllllll)ilblct·

'··

•

/

�I

'

Page-10--The Daily Sentinel

Poineroy~iddleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 28,,19Q.4.

A P•mllr tJw11e11·,;,,
Dper•tell 5uperm•rllet
tH1erl11g tile IJest o1 5el'll1ce,
Ou•lltv anti Price, to tile
People Ill our eommunltv

WHALEY'S AUTO

PARTS

At Yhe Co•n•• of

A Cll'dlnel· A.ffllleled Supermerklt

Specializing In Cuetom
Fr1me Rep•lr
NEW I us&amp;dPARTS FOR
ALL IIAKI;~ IIO.DEWI

Thanks to All My
Customers &amp; Friends for
the Gifts &amp; Cards I
Received for Christmas.
Bernice Durst

Gen. Hafting•• Pkwy.
and PeaPI St. • Mlddlepoft

m-tufo,
j

'· ..12-5563 OR
TOLL FREE t-101·14H07t
DARWIN, OHIO

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
oRoilm Addition•
-New Ga111gee
o£lectrlc11 &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting 1110 concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG II

HAULING
Uinestone

...............
&amp; Gravel

Joel. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·21~1

1192~215

1...,.......

7J3118t TFN

..

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

~

JAY'S EXCAVATING
DOZER &amp; BACKHOE
SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

lftQID2tfn

•lldft

F&amp;A Tree Servire

septic TankS
Beds Installed
Baaemente, Footers
Mobile Home Set-upe
Land Clearing
Road Building

WillOW maus

• Cuatom llade
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
'
• Fre.e Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

Leach

JIMMY'S
SPORT BAR
NEW YEAR'S EVE
PARTY
Music by Tom Hunter of
Prime lime Mobile D.J.
9:30 until 1995

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

UCINE
GUN CLUB

•New Homes
•Garages

GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

Champagne, Food,
Hats &amp; Horns.

1 (614) 985-4495
t212311 mo.

Remodeling 1

STARTING DEC. 30
12Gauronly
Umlte • 740
Badcbore, 680 front

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4472

1212111Wn

992-4119 AI y,_Owiier l-IOG-291-56

Free Eatlmates

-complete

6:30P.M.

.

1ml0&lt;
~

-- -- .

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mlleoUJ
143from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.

,..

• Craftsman Tools

TREE l~IMMING
AND REMOVAL

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Ugtit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut
Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Bill Slack

•Toys

Public Notice
HOUSING REHABIUTAnON
APPUCATION
PERIOD
EXTENDED
Tha llalga County
Community
Houelng
Improvement Progrem In
tha village of roclna Ia
extending tha deadline lor
Housing Rehabilitation
Appllcall~l'•· Hou11holda
who ara &lt; very low/low
Income may 1pply until
January
30,
1985.
AppiiCIIIona are avalllbla at
the Ractna Flrehouaa Every
Monday 'end IJ)IIIIcanb may
make an 1ppotntmant to
aubmll tha appllca11on at
that Uma. Information may
ba obtained by caUing Mti22M on llondaya or 912·
6782 on Wadneadaya.
Participation Ia baead on
Income quallllcatlona and
type of housing repair

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

5

HappyAdl·

Salem Townehlp, Section• under the coal mining and
13, Ul, 25, 26, 30, 31, 32, 33 reclamllllon operetlona are
and 36; Fractlona 7, 13, 19 completed under the coal
and 25; Townahlp IN, mining permit leeued
Ringe 15W, Oallla County, purau1ntto thll permit. The
Huntington
Townehlp, renewal eppllcatlon will
Section 11 Townahlp IN, allow Southern Ohio Coal
Renge ISW. The pormlt Company to continue the
contain• 328.13 1crea end mining operation• on D·
Ia located on the Mulga 1nd • 0463 for up to live yearo
Wllk11vllle 7 1/2 Minute, peat the expiration date of
U.S.O.S. Quanrangle IIepa, AprilS, 1995.
approximately 2.5 mllaa
The application Ia on file
w11t of Wllkllvllle, Ohio. at the olllcee of 1he Melga
The applicant hoa obtained County Recorder, Melga
1 r08d permit to mine wHhln County Court Hou . . ,
100 feet of the right-of-way Second Street, ·Pomeroy,
of Salem Townahlp Road Ohio 45769, VInton County
333, elfactlve November e, Recorder, VInton County
1187; Wllkeavllle ·Townahlp Court Houae, Main Street
Road 4, effective December McArthur, Ohio 45851, and
12, 1973; en State Route the Gellla County Recorder,
124,. elfactlve February 28, Galli a County Court Houae,
1974, which will remain In Loculi Street, Galllpolla,
ellact until coal mining and Ohio 4U31 lor public
rectam1tlon operllllona 1re viewing. WriHen comment•
completed under the coal or requalla lor en Informal
mining and reclemetlon conference m1y be 11nt to
oper1tlona ere completed the Division of Reclamation,
1855 Founuln Square
Court, Building H·3,
Columbua, Ohio 43224
within thirty daya of the laat
data of publication or thll
notice.
(12} 21,28; (1)4, 11; 4TC

Ohio News in Brief:CALDWELL - The Noble County sberiff said the death of a
woman whose skull was found earlier this month is being treated as
a homicide.
Patsy Sparks, 19, was last~n leaving a club in Parkersburg,
W.Va., on April 22, 1992. Grouse bunters found her skuU Dec. 17
in woods offObio 564.
Sheriff Landon Smith said the Franklin County coroner's office
examined the skeletal remains and determined Sparks died atound
the time sbe disappeared.
Smith would not conunent on the possible cause of deal.b. He said the coroner's preliminary examination determined that
Sparks probably !lied where her body was discovered. He would 110!
say what was found at the scene.
.
.,
.
.
''It is way too early for me to have a mam suspect, Smtih satd.

KRAPT .

MIRACLE WHIP

Trustee suspects hoax in burning

ASSORIU VARETIEN RilL PACUIIE

SOPT &amp; GENTLE
BATH TISSUE

JACKSONTOWN- A Licking Township trustee said the possible burning of a fuefigbter's truck was part of a hoax to gain suppan for the fue chief in a dispute with trustees.
"No one in the community would do anything like that,"
Trustee Pbil Linn said in reference to the fue and to reports of death
l.breats againsi firefighters and shots fired at Fire Chief Richard
Swartz.
•
Licking County Sheriff Gerry Billy said his department was
examining the reports.
Linn and Trustee James Cormican want Swartz to resign as chief
before they renew the Licking Township Fire Department's contract
to provide fue protection and ambulance secvices to the township.
The third trustee, Ronald Acord, wants 10 work out an agreement
· TIK department is a private corporation and Swartz is elected by
the department members.
The township's fue and ambulance service contract expires Dec.
31 and is expected to be on the agenda when the trustees meet
Thursday.
Linn said the township will have a neighboring rue department
cover the area if the contract with the fire departmeDI is not
renewed.
Swartz said there is nothing wrong with the way be runs the
department and he will resign when Connican and Linn resign.

Woman killed crossing tracks
CLEVELAND - A freight uain, sounding its born furiously ,
struck and ltiUed a hearing-impaired woman as sbe was trying to
cross the tracks.
Emily Wisniewski, 73, was walking across the tracks at a crossing about II a.m. Tuesday when sbe was bit. She was dragged
aboutiOO feet before tbe train was able 10 stop.
·
Witnesses said it appeared she was walking with her bead down.
Michele Laboo, an assistant manager at a nearby convenience
store, said sbe heard the uaio wbisde ''blowing like mad" and saw ·
two men running toward the crossing trying to get the woman's
attention as the train approached.
"The bells were ringing, the ligbts were flashing, and the engi·
neer.sounded the born on the train," said police spokesman Alan
A.A. Seifullah. "But sbe apparendy didn't bear any of those warn·
logs and was struck by the uain and.was dead at the scene.''
Neighbors told police the woman was bard of bearing.
The crossing bas gates for the street, not the sidewalk.

RE8J1'EIII, ADC OR

RICH FIIEICII ROUT
12·13DI*CECAI .

/

Mayor eyes dumping city official
LORAIN - The mayor says be may fue tbe··city's oomm.unity
development director for neglecting to apply for nearly $3 million .
In federal funding.
Mayor Alex M. Olejko said be would meet with Community
Development Director Sanford Prudoff today 10 disc.uss wby the
city didn't apply for a sbare of money allocated to 103 oomm.unities
last week by the Dep;utment of Housing and Ulbao Development.
Nearby Cleveland was awarded $90 million to Improve some of
its ~neighborhoods.
·
r
'I'm going to be meeting with him 10 find out why we didn't .
apply," Olejko said. " I've got to know why we didn'tdo it l,ftbere
is a sign of mal'feasance or misfeasance, it will be dealt with. We're
1101 letting it go. This sbould not be ignored. He'd better give me

some ansWers."
I

,

•

c•

992·2269

Loads of Misc.

.

1010/1

Bred for

Quality and

Santa left rhu
me~&amp;nge

underneath our
tree, when he
$lopped by our
howe on
Ch..Utmaa Eve:
"A very special
Ho, Ho, Ho u
being sent to
C.W.O. a.
•he lurm the
Big Five-0"!

·

Temperament
Specillzing In Pan-cotoro
for ahow and companions.
Stud MIVice &amp; puppies,
young ackJHa lor aale.
41750 Mile Hill Rd.
Racine, Oh
814-0411.,2417

O&amp;E

IIOW OPEN

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

NEW &amp; USED
IIEMS
711 South Third
Middleport
Hours; 10:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Dally

IIODEBN SANITAftOI

KEII'I APPLIUCI
SIRIICI

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; 1110nthly rental rates.
Job sites ' Camp SHes • Family Reunions &amp; Parties

•Factory Authorized Parts

AUC,IDI
Antique and Collectibles
Jan. 1, 1995 - 1:00 P.M.
202 N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio
Consignments taken Friday at Noon,
Sunday at 11:00 A.M.

11 service
•All Makes -42 Years
-Faat Reliable Service

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

-Refrigerators •Freezers
•Oiahwashers

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

•H.W. Heaters
tMicroWavea •Oiapo1111
•Thanks Meigs &amp;

Licensed &amp; Bonded - 20 years experience

BINGO

Real Estate General

The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

Howard L. Writesel
ROOR~G

POMEROY - Kingsbury Rd. - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Home
on 2.196 acres. Tract W3 with house. ASKING $18,900.00.
POMEROY - Point Lane - .57 Acres of vacant ground,
paved street, utilities available. ASKING $5,000.00.
LETART - SR. 338 - VaQJ~l trailer lot with septic. Tup,pen;j
Plains - Chester water avlilable, currenU.y across the road.
ASKING $5,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Located on S. 5th Street this 1'/, story
frame home features 3 bedrooms, family room, living room,
kitchen with office area. Utility area, built·in book shelves,
ceiling fans, central air, N.G.F.A. heat, nice front perth. also
bact&lt; and side porches. Cement walks. privacy fencing, lutl
basement. Cute place ...lots of room, new furnace with a 6
year warranty. ASKING $29,000.
FOR USTING HOMES, SELUNG PROPERTY, "CALL THE
PROFESSIONALS", "CLELAND REALTY" IS THE RIGHT
PLACE :
HENRY E. CLELAND .............................................. 912-4i191
TRACY BRINAGER ...................:........................_.....949-2438

SHERRI HAAT.•"...................................................... 742·2357
HANK CLELAND ................................................~ •••••992~191
KATHY CLELAND ...................................................912-4i191

992-3954

· Sunoundlng Areas
1614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 1211Wn

Racine American
Legion Post 502
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45pm ·
Doors open 4:30 pm

REEDSVILLE- LICK SKILLET ROAD- 75 mil acres with 7
room home. 3 bedrooms, 1'!. baths, 2 kitchens, one electric &amp;
one gas. ,cJA, tree gas. satellite. pantry, utility area. Many
cabinets, well water, septic, extra hook-up for a mobile home .
2 car garage. wort&lt;shop. 1 car garage. cellar, chicken house,
implement shed, storage building. LOTS OF WOODS!
ASKING PRICE $120 ,000.

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAUl

•Washers • Dryers • Ranges

Bapn New Tear

OFFICE 992·2259

ELE~TRI~

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

J&amp;D FLEA
MARKET

111ZMtn

8

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Oc,wnspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Emergency Phone 985 -3418

O&amp;E

1

~ nn

ELE~'I,RI~

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
11M711!n

o.. S,top Ctmplete Autt B••Y Repolr
PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

State Rt. 33

Darwin, Ohio

~
·--=-

1QIZ1/MI1tn

BESI RECEPTION

For the best in satellite
sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.

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

·We have even better
and quicker service.
-Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types.
• Best prices all around .
the area.

We hare Cars and Vansf
Kenny's Auto Center

264.Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

992·2903 or 992-6320

Dll'l
IPPI.IIICI
IDIICI

.,....

ForAII•tor
IHtllpltlhiiCII
ferS.Ie

1·800-4QP·1590

Bus. (614)446-9971
I

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.
~

New Homes e VInyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows .
Room Additions • Roofing ·.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '
FREE ESTIMATES

c••• .

614·99217643

614-992·5515

,,......

(No Sunday Calls)
I

'

,.

949·2734

____....,._,.....992·2060 mo.
AMBERWOOD
. Cocker KENNE~
· - ··
Spaniels

Death being treated as homicide

REGULAR OR I.ITE-32 DUKE JAR

•Guns

Buy-seiJ..Trade

PUBUC NOnCE
Southern Ohio COli
Company, P. 0. Box 490,
Athena, Ohio 45701 haa
aubmltted 1 renewal
1ppllcat1on lor coal mine
Permit D-D483 to the Ohio
Department of Natur11
Raeourc11, Dlvlelon of
Reclamation. The permit
erera are located In VInton
County,
W llkeavllle
Townahlp, Sactlone 3, 15, 21
and 22, Townahlp .IN, Range
16W and 17W, Frectlona 24,
30 and 38, Townahlp 8N,
Range I&amp;W; Melga County,
Salem Townahlp, Sectlone
25, 28, 30 and 32, Townahlp
7N and IN, Range 15W; on
the property of Southern
Ohio Coel Company; with
underground worklnga In
VInton Vounty, WllkeavUie
Townahlp, Sectional , 2, 2E,
neadad.
JaanTruuell 3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 15 1 nd 16;
VIllage of Middleport Fractlona 24, 30, and 36;
CHIP Grenta Admlnlatrlllor Townahlp 8N, Ranga t&amp;W
1nd 18W; llalga county,
(12) 28, 28, 30; 3TC

r

•vtSIT OUR SHOWROOJI•
110 Court St. Pom9_rpy, Ohio "Look for the Ked liiid White Awnln"

'

.,

�December 28, 1994

The Dlllly Sentlflel P11g1 13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

BRIDOI:

ltlnciOUI

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
'

Ar'ilourlcerne nl s

BEA ITIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie .

11

Wanted

Help

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homea
for Sale
-

Autos for-Sale

71
'Ill

11\1111"11 LX. -

':

.........

--·ruf,
....... ._..
814-M~-2~2~.
. .

1HI 14170, lnclud• oldil·

Dodao

1. .

-

•J

W£ REP-LIZ£

~ HA'-'
ISA~T
\I..IITH ~RICA '

WHAT

11-tAT

1\l..t) ~AleS

f1a:M kW
iHIS fo/V'RRIJ&gt;(9€ WLD

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

~~

0

0

........

:M=.

-.
Ani~ a lA II

~

Rentals

.. . ,

ALL Y l l l l - - 8o Plld In
Advonoo. DEADLINE! 2:00 .......
lho . , ....... lho od . . . run.

8 1 - - Pooltlon II Dr. Fw : Route 7 Nollh,
.......
L.
~Ph~IOI~IO~:
1~14~4;;4~1
;2'1;11;;·..-iiijiiiift:
Ulonry, 111111 ... ,. "' Nice . . . ,..,.,..._., dlpoelt,
.....
lWn Dul:. . D......._ and
afiol... 11 og. E~,. ond 110 plio. :.O..fTHitz.
WOik•'*- 12 Hro. Wk. 111n~ :::.!:::::.;::::..:::::..::::::...___
mum w.go. liOii. Coli .,.._. aman :ziw. houoo. lumlohod,

-._nl -

"I get sick of winter just from defrosting
the freezer:·

. SundiY -

• 2:00 .......
Frldoy. ........, odllon • 2:00
p.m........y.

8

To

A~

Public Sale

_

.... _, , _ Coonpoony,

, .~
....

....Cillo.-......... -

lull llniO · .........
aucuon
...._
Ucu e1
TrWlll.

54 Miscellaneous ·
Merchandlee

Col. Ooc.- L Clloll,
......... ' ' llcooodod,
3041113430.

11111
Eoootl, a•••·
-·
IPIICI,- a-J,11MI2

•·

·-IY'

SOMETIMES A LOVE LETTER
WILL 6ET DROPPED IN THE
SNOW. AND '1'0U DON'T FIND
IT UNTIL SPRING ..

:.f .IliON iT KNOW WH'1'. 6UT
' I THOU61-1T I MIGHT 6ET
.:. A LOVE LETTER TODA'1'..

~co

THE SAME T~ING HAPPENS
WITH A HOCKE'( PUCK.

HI~t7.

Trolior 1ot ront 1n ru_.
U00 - IIICNIIh, dlpcwll
WHio llln- Plolnt,
ond ulllhloo, tM.fiT-3417.
.

?.k.""C..Mt'.::t::""o.~

p.m.

Employment Serv1ces

Apartment
for Rent

i~Trt~

YOV/~
ALGEgRA· .. IT t..oot:s t.1t:e Tt-l~nE
T~YING TO GeT YOU iAC./C IN

1 ond 2 bedroom optJimonto,
lumlohod ond unlumlohod,
-urlly do-" .-qulrod, no
pllo,fiWI2.2201.

Ftnanc 1al

z Bod.-- Aporl..- AdJocoool

gRUSt-4 UP ON
SCHOOl-.

To Un...,..r 01 Rio orondo,
&amp;M-24&amp;-seea: Alloo a eon ,,..
245-fiiiZ..
Zbdmo. ,.,.._, Iaiii 11001r1c, ..,.
plloncoo lurnlohod, leundry
,_, focllhleo cloMio ochocil

In town. ADIOIIciilonl avolllblo
tl: VIIAllie. Ml 01
coli ~412-3711. EOH.

·o_,

3 RODIIW PootiJ F -.
Wotor, Troth Pold, No Polo, Per·
tor-. 114-381-fDOO.
Fumlohod Aponmoow Shoro
llolh~ tllll.lllo., · UUIHI• Pold,
7111 I"OIIrllo Avwouo Golllpollo,
en Ul t411Aiw7 ~II.

Real Estate

W&lt;, Till~ I~ ill£

"'I

LIFE\ I'VE 1'-18Ja..

Fumlohod ApollmOid 1 Bod

"-Nil.
uo•~eol'lld,I2D
FoU'th
r:pl• ..._

"

I m£ II t-- PO! !&gt;IT TO ~'6 ..
Fl.'( Fl ~T CU,:,~!

FLOW~Ft~~

&amp;~a

........ Aa.7PJI.
•

I

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subjec1 to
tne Feaoral Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise "any preference,

'

BEAUTIFUL APAIITIIEHI8 AT
BLJIJIJEI' P111CU AT 1..,._

origin, or any Intention to

make any such preference,
llmttallon or dlscr1mlnarton."
This newspaper will not

&lt;nowllngly accept
adventsements for real estate
whiCll rs In viOiollon 'ot tho raw.
Our readers are hereby
lnlonned thai all dwellings
adVenlsod IMhls newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

__ ............... _.

Eom up to ~OOD ""'*~¥ otuftlng

.................... ,p.....

Tall FtM,

m.

-ttt. Ext.

-ooo

Manor

IINI

In

owou... s - . s -..
"""'
1n • • 1or Clvlll-. -1147.

Auto Pans a

76

~.

Nice, ea-. ' Plolllc loptlc
Pluo Tonlw. IDO Thru 2,000 - .

uor:;,Dopalll Rolflll8d..,..

•

Servrces

~- Enlnpr'v Joct.
-,OHUONS7-t121.'

1 Aero,

Home
lmpnwiments

"'""IJ---.--

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

--.................

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

WATIRPRDQfiNG

~~~-~
IlL
.............. ............

131.000·

Col , _ _ _ Or II1WD

""' ... -·· ...
__
_
---.tiC ...............

,._,.. . .,.

..__... 101 - · - ·
Olw
110
711.

hort&gt;llltl. oil good-.-

271-4211.

;;; .

·BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.........

Chit, h4 . . IIJI
_., TV ......... I I ltidota
In Z8nllh .......... 111011

--.wv

,•·

~t&gt;.~-

82

PILIIIblng I
Heating

,
I

A

'Your

~·'Birthday
Thursday. Oec. 29, 1994

•

Condilrons ro ok generally favorable l or
you for~his cycle. Resist, making changes
juSI for the sakelif change . lh~ugh .
CAPRICORN (Dee . 22-Jan. 19) You
mi~hl have dilficully keeping secrets
toqay. Unfortunately. things you should
'- keep oo yoursell may be broadcaslto the
vetY persons who shouldn't be informed .
Trfing 10 ~lch up broken rom~nce?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help
yoiJto understand whalto do to make lhe
relationship work . Mail $2 lo MatchmaKer.

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

CowioCIIY-,.._Inlll

:'-"~=
-.rt!"
. .. .

Tille"" IIUifii!O gun .

a

l!""l].."'t!!''' Cllllfpoilt,
·-""'

ht • • • •-

'

'

Pass
Pass

North
2 NT
Pass

•

J

16-

8~

4 Envi-1
atudy
5 Next to Sun.

9 lira. Chlrtes

--

ZOMI...._
22 Purple shade.
23 Group of

Choplin

v..

26Regu26 Formerly

East

27 Brings court .

Pass
Pass

Jel30 Daprlvad ol

I.

oc1loo)

31 NlmJw
opening
36 Unclolhed

'
-

38 Jewish pr.yai

...-1--t-+---1

· 42 E..,ll'-il

44 Objectl ol

-

devotion

46~1o'

the dawn
47 Fwmer Him ··

-Paul- -

50Biu~ '

51 Ollde ci Iron
52 Whet you.

..........

!55 Plgooft pea
5111acft
. 57 Bandt diF .
~rrt-+---1
Brown

••

CELEBRITY CIPHER '
by Lull Campoa
Celebrity C!phtr Cl'fP!OQ:rltnS are crealed trom quatatiOnl by latnoiA people, pas1 n

~

EaCh letter 1n !he ciPher stands Jor anothlf. Today'• ctu.: M .,qualt C

'WZFZPW

•

P.O. Box 4465. New York. NY 10163.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-Feb. 19) This is not
a good day to lry to mix business and
pl easure . II things go wrong, you might
suffer some type of loss or co mplication.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Success
could elude you today ff you iack delermi·
nation. Persistence will pay off. so keep
work ing even when lhe going Is slow.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Today you
might be inclined lo invent problems Ia
make things harder on yourself. Try 10
operate along l~e palh olleasl resrslance

jealousy might make II difficult to praise
Ihe accomplishments of a co·wor&lt;er
1oday. Th1s would be counterproductfve ..
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Someone you
know quite well is an expert manipulator
and has had you do his/her bidding in lhe
pasl . Do not arrow yourself 10 ~e a puppet
again today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapl. 22) Avoid all
types of disagreement wilh your mate
today. Small arguments mighl escalate
and cause tasting problems
LIBRA (Sapl. 23-0ct. 23) If you brush
instead .
aside tasks that demand your immediate
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Do notlreal aHenlion Ieday, you 'll be creating addi·
-the possessions or others with indiffer· tidhal problems down lhe line. .
encatoday. Make it a point to take beHar SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) Even
care of lherr things lhan you 'would your 1 though your overall financial prospects
own .
. , look good . lhls is nol the lime to be
GEMINI (Mey 2hlune 20) If asSOCiates extravagant AVIlid impulsive spending.
are not in complete accord wilh your aims SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
today, they 're npt apllo assist you . are usually a preHy good seK-staoter. bill
AHempling .. solicit their aid could be a not today. lllhere is something you want
waste ol time.
done. dO not rely on others : use y&lt;iur own
.CANCER (June 21.JUiy 22) A twinge Of inltiaiiVa.

.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'll go through life e~her firsl class or third bul never
in second." - Noel Coward.
'
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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMelf ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

A8L(}N I'.J TI-E. 'AM ON
HGH PRICES. SHOP Tl·£ CLASSf£DS.

AcCIIIOrfeS

CIC ,.. IIIII
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llld IIIII\CI 1M "" mimi rlfll."

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Guitar· Buyer· Flood· Waiter- READY for IT

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10 Singing bird

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

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24

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40 Wohor's

Motorcycles

74

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

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63 SlameM coin
24 Prim
28 lonpudence (II.)
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Antiques

54 llscellaneous

31 Homea tor Sale

-.owr.

53

1U. E.lloln 1111o1, en Rt. 124,
Pauaa,. Hour.: M.T.W. 10:00 P.M.
o.m. lo 1:00 p.111.Liundor 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-112 2528
Boollllllil IIWII. ctcl, AKC Rol·

based on race, color, religion,
sex ramilia.t status or national

61 I n - 11911

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62 Daep out

1114 Toral!l 4 WD, Allor 4 I'JII.

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23 Tum thlf page

~

37 Divulge
(-.)
39 V•r (Sp.)

When should you overbid• In today's
deal , North had all three classic situations in his favor. He was partnering a
good declarer, they were vulnerable at
rubber-bridge and most of the oppo nents' strength was in one hand.
Against three no-trump, West led his
higher heart. When the dummy was
tabled, South saw that he stood no
chance if the club finesse was losing.
Yet if the finesse was winning, his nine
tricks &lt;one heart, three diamonds and
five clubsl wouldn't be so easy to cash.
because of the blockage in diamonds.
How could he get into the dummy
without having to overtake th e diamond queen with dummy's king"
Suddenly South saw the answer. He
had to assume West held the spade
ace . If so, South could get home as
long as he played dummy's heart 10 at
trick one. &lt;If South plays low from the
dummy, East puts in the eight. This
keeps communication with his partner
and forces South to win the trick in his
hand.l
How could East defend• If he
ducked, declarer would be in the dummy. He would pick up the club kin g,
unblock his diamond honors, run the
rest of tbe clubs and cash dummy's di·
amond king as his ninth trick. So East
won with the heart queen and contin·
ued the suit. . South won the fourth
round, discarding one spade and one
diamond from the dummy. Now South
led the spade king from hand . West
ducked thi s, bult,then South overtook
his diamond queen with dummy's king
and ran the clubs. His nine tricks
were one spade, one heart, two dia·
monds and five club s.

·-

,..,....,..,---------

44

eo Employ

511 Houaahold

41 t.tomng pool

rrotlnfanll TNI a.mc, T. .
- . . . .-. . . . Inond
lho-~~~plflll ' T~ Hodao Trtm- .
inlriil. llump - · , _ &amp;- eluded. Juot 10 mlniiiH , . ,
Umoiliool 2'1 Hr. em.- Sor· Alhono, llorllng ol U40v~ceeM na 1111. ·~mo.
300/mo~ coblo onlillblo, IM-

Tribune Phol~ Anliof&gt;lo
lot Woddlnae -, Olhor Evonlo
Coil Kovln 1114-44f.1511 Alloo 5

11Rwn
11
groupe

35 Vemt

dry -

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53 French yea
54 diRIIar
5I Picnic .,..,

1/oK 4

By Phillip Alder

Comooo AooiMI

.... 'jlhlo,e_........

llobn non.mokor will bobfoll eo..-~
2 Bothe,
In mr hame' In llkkl-. onr Soii)OIIIo. • uuiJIIoo, • 4110.

Summor. f0.111 •

ell-

14 Anglo BellOn
money
15 MlnleW'I
home
17 WOOl ftber

• J 10 3

a-teo
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10001 ,. ......,
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12 Sploerlcel ~ 41 Bel In firmly
13 Bright color
41 Folldcn

If you overbid,
overplay too

,,..,1111 n StO.GDD. _ ....,...
only t\100 Neg. nc """' 01 luil'
DLiftp;
Hluln.. • 5 J

o__.. Potloblo Bowmlll, den~

Sun ·YIIIor _, . _ -

41 ..............
comm,..

Opening lead: • 5

· -onghjo
~ Cl• ....
w woo·llunp
- .:

Household
Goods

ago. ony hoon, tM-HI".UII.

I NT
3 NT

C 1994 by NEA. Inc

r.1erchal1d1Se

houl~ ,....._laat to
Clll~ltn

South

1&lt;'~1

42 Mobile Homu
tor Rent

_9_W....;.a_nt;,;;ecl,;;,;,to;:..:B.:u:.y_ 9

BARNEY
GUES.S HOW
SERVIN' MY

~•1'12-

~~-OO_d~o~p~·~-~~~~~--

&amp;Auction

'•••Ia•,...

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

aO ConvniiiiJd.
TNIIIocl. lend
_......;_ _ _ _ _ __
=~~P.o
Ul, 41 Houses for Rent
~

4 -~-Zollo
,
,_

34 lonooll elrllno

SOUTH
11oK Q 3
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Bonlo Voloy, Ajlplo Qoovo,
booutllul loCO, aoocl """·
Clyde llowon, Jr.

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!ng, lltpt, blccka, 1 yoor
hom10 1111111 lneuranaa, arid 1
monlho FREE 1oC ront. Only
$120 ond tiM • me.
Coll1-.:11-3231.

,_ ,:

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

. "I can 't waitto grow up," the teenager lamented . "The
trouble with that,· an o ld timer replied, "is that it happens
before we're READY for ITI"
·

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'

Rebelleadersh p
rejects talks offer
MOSCOW (AP) - Russian warplanes reportedly bombed rebel
Cbedmya today, a day after Cbecben leaders rejecled President
Boris YeltsiD' s offer of new peace talks.
'Jbe ITAR-Tass news agency said Russian combat aircraft cleliv·
ered a missile strike onlbe oucskirts of Gromy, lbe capilal, Ill 9 a.m.
Aootber air auack was made on lbe village of Ursus-Martao soulh
of tbe city. Casualties were reported in tbat attaCk, but no derails
were imJDI'diately available.
·
,
Today' s attacks came after Cbecbnya' ~ rebel govemme~t, i.ts
forces badly outnumbered, showed no s1gn of comprom1se. 1n
response 10 YellS in's announcement that he would end the bombmg
ofGrozny.
Yeltsin called a bait to tbe air strikes on lbe capital and proposed
new peace talks in a nati~wide ~~ Tuesday.
. .
Officials in lhe separaust reg100 10 lbe Caucasus Mountams dis·
missed bis speech because it failed to meet their main demand:
withdrawal.
"It's clear the Russian president doesn't want to change bis
plans and wilhdraw troops," Ruslan Cbimayev, Cbecbnya' s deputy
· foreign minister, was quoted by ~ussian media as saring T~~Y·
"But a military victory over the uny Cbecben Repubhc won t bnng
Russia laurels."
In a speech that could he characterized heuer by a clenched fist
than by an extended olive branch, Yeltsin declared that ground
forces would spare no effon to restore onltt. and end ."tbe outra~e
of gangsterism" in Checbnya. a mostly Muslim republic of 1.2 mil·
lion people.
,, y .
'd . Tu
''The ring around Gromy bas tightened,
elts10 s:u 10 esday's address. "The armed units have been bloclred. The actions of
gangs tbat offer resistance will still be severely suppressed.''
An analyst for a leading newspaper, Pavel Felgengauer of
Segodnya, called the speech "very belligerent" and said. i! demon·
straled Russia's intent to use more f1rep0wer 10 end the cnsJS.
Even as the president spoke, tbe Cbechens claimed new Russian
aerial auacks on lbree villages south of the capilal, Grozny.
Cbecben fighters have. vowed never to surrender, even th~gb
they are only severnl lbousand against as maDy as 40,000 Russ1811
uoops who entered lbe breakaway region on Dec. II to end Checb·
nya's self-proclaimed independence.
Yeltsin bas faced harsh criticism at b0111e and, to a lesser e~\ell~
abroad for a bolcbed mUitary operation tbat the Cbecbens claim has
kiUed hundreds ot civUians.

:.~~!~?..' b~,~~~!~}!~~Q~!M!!~:!."d p~~!!~~~
Asaad8ted Pna Writer

NEW YORK ~ An inventor's
boast of developing devastating
newbulletslbatcan leave baseball·
sized boles in people bas provoked
cries for a swift ban from lawmak·
ers - and skepticism from the
National Rifle Association.
David Keen probably will have
to wait at least a month before fed·
eral officials approve his applica·
lion to make and sen bis "Rbino"
bullets. But two gun-control lead·
ers promised Tuesday to introduce
legislation to block him as soon as
Congress reconvenes next week.
Earlier tbis week, Keen dis·
closed to The Associated Press bis
plans to market "strictly defensive" handgun bullets lbat would
fragment into thousands of razor·
like pieces when they strike human
flesh. A second type of bullet
would also be able to pierce bullet·
proof vests.
"The beauty behind it is that it
makes an incredible wound,''

~mist making bis fust fally into
tbe bullet business, told tbe AP.
"There's no way to stop the bleed·
ing . I don't care where it bits.
They're going down for good."
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
~-N,·Y.· said there was "somelb~g
s1ck about Keen's boasiS. He srud
be would propose legislation to ban
Keen's bulleiS if federal regulators
don't block lbem.
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
who sponsored Ibis year's federal
crime bil~. al~ promised to intrc,J·
duce legislation to keep Keen s
bullets out f/ gu~s. "~!'s bto.od
money, plain lmd sm1ple, be satd.
Moynihan sponsored a 1986 ban
on armor-piercing "cop-killer"
b.ullets an~ shepherded an. expan·
s1on of 1t 1010 the cnme bill. Last
year, Moymhan ~t.so helped dn~c;
the Winchester Black Talon
hollow-point expandi~g bullet off
the market by proposmg. ~ 10,000
percent tax on !he am_mumuon. .
The NRA s cb1cf lobby1st,

Keen's boasts.
"This bas alllbe trappings or a
hoax,'.' sbe said in a statement.
"What we have is an outbreak of
mob journalism centering on tbe
dubious claims of a would-be maD·
ufacturer." .
Olber gun-ngbts supporters note
that at least two types of bullets
similar to the proposed RhinoAmmo already are on the market.
They deliver birdsbot in a plastic
container.
Supporters say there are two
advantages to such bullets. They
disintegrate when they, hit. human
ussue, and therefore can t bit someone else if they pass through the
target's body. And if a shot misses
lbe target, it disintegrates when it
hilS a solid object instead of ricocbeting.
Keen is lbe chief e~ecutive of
Signature Products Corp. in
Huntsville, Ala., which makes
radar-absorbing paint for stealth
aircraft, according 10 industry pub·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Sales
of previously own.ed homes fell~
lbe lowest level m 17 months 10
November as rising mortgage rateS
. pushed ~uyers out of tbe market.
Tbe Midwest posted tbe only
advance.
. .
Tbe National Assoc1a11on. of
Realtors said today sales of exiSt·
ing single-family homes dropped
2.6 percent to a season~y adJusted
annual rate of 3.81 m1lbon, down
from 3.91 million in Oc10ber, when
sales rose 0.5 percent
The November rate was lb~ lowest since June 1993. when II

3.70 million annually.
The sales rate reached a recent
peak of 4.35 million last Decem·
ber two months before tbe Federal
R~erve began raising interest rates
to slow tbe economy and cool
inflationary pressures.
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mort·
gages averaged 9.18 percent in
November, up from 8.93 percent in
October and 7.15 percent last
February, according to surveys by
lbe Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp.
.
A jump from 7 percent to 9 per·

cent would add $209 to tbe month·
ly payment on a $150,000 mortgage.
''We expected sales 10 slow
down, given, ,the direction rates
have taken, sa1d Edmun.d .G.
Woods Jr., the Realtors assocmuon
presl!lent: .
_
A~soclallon economist John A.
T,ucctllo ~redicted funb~ .~lines,
but no~g catastrophic.
Desplle the November drop,
Woo.ds said, ~~e sales pac~
remaiOed strong,, and we expect1t
to stay that way. .
The Realtors esllmate that sales

Page 4 .

Double Cheese Pizza
•1.99
- ~55 With Coupon on lox ·
21 oz.
$1.44 Net Cost

2 LITER

Vol. 45, NO. 167
CopyrJtht 1994

for all of 1994 will reach 3.97 mil" '
lion, second·bigbest ever and wet(;
above the 3.80 million homes post·'·
ed in 1993.
The median price of an existing :
home was $108,100 in November, : .
up from $107,100 a year ago. 1be ,
median is the midpoint. meaning :
half of lbe homes cost more and' ,
half cost less.
;
Sales rose 1.9 percent in ;
·November in the Midwest to a ·
1.09 million annual rate. The ~edi· :
an price was $86,6M, up from::
$85,500 a year ea.olier.
·:'
•·

By KEVIN PINSON
OVP Newa Staff
Tbe ~James M. Gavin Power
Plant in Cheshire will be off-Hue
for four to six weeks while workers
make $5 million worth of repaus to
a l'unlace whicb imploded Dec. 15.
Two contractors, Union Boiler
Service of Niao. W.Va.,~ Kbem
Power of Akron, arc making the
repairs - replacing buckled s~port beams and damag~d tubmg
and checking for cracks m lbe fur·
nace's boUer. .
.
Mike Williams, producuon
su~isor at Gavin, said 1be implosion occurred when a coal fire 10
lbe .boiler burned off alllbe oxygen
and~ a vacuum.
.
Tbe vacuum inside the bOJier
was like an invisible band ~ing a soda can. Williams s:ud 18inch steel support beams around
the boiler buckled as much as 24
inches from their original plane.
The implosion was felt tbn_lu~t
the plant, but no one was mJured,
be added.
• _
The damaged furnace 1s one. of
tw~ 1,300-megaw~u generatmg
umts for 1be newly-mstalled scrubbers. Tbe .damag.ed u.nu was
brought on line earher tb1s month;

CALIFORNIA

Chicken or Beef Broth

Nqvel Oranges

$1
0~
4
MOUNTAINEER

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Sausage

Beef Chuck Roast

69c

LB.

FRESH .

Bakery Donuts

$1''

$ 99

3 _LIS.

DOZ.

Star·Kist Tuna
$ 00
601.

Patio Burrito
.$ 00
5 oz.

Alsoc~ ~Writer

The Daily S~lllinel office will
close at noon Saturday. The
newspaper will not be published
Monday so that its employees
may observe the Christmas boli·
day.
Regular publicalion and business hours resume Tuesday.

reporting to work during tbe ·
repairs.
"We have no concerns about tbe
ability to supply our customers
with power," he said. "And there .
will be no effect on employment
levels."
The repairs should he complet·
ed sometime in February. Consumers will not have to bear tbe
expense tbrougb their electric biDs,
Hagelin said.
·
"It appears that much of the
expense will be covered by insur·
ance" he said. "The effect on rates,
if any, will be insignificant"
The scrubber, tecbniCally called
a flue-gas desulfurization system,
represents the chief component of
tbe company's clean air compli·
ance plan to meet requirementa of
tbe u.S. Clean Air Act.
It is designed to remove 95 percent of the sulfur dioxide from the
exhaust of the 20-year-old coal·
fired electric gener,Jting plant
The plant accounts for 25 per·
cent of American Electric Power's
sulfur dioxide emissions.
Prior to lbe inciden~ the saubber installalion project was ruoning
eight mootbs ahead ot scbedule and
$130 to $140 million under budget

.

. '

Hubbard tiiet today with lbe fust vice
of foreign affairs, Kang
Sok Ju, according to North KIJ4Illl'&amp;.!){flcial K~ Central News Agen·
. cy, ·'mii"'i&amp;e~ .in T.cibp._N.O iJCw,ls -~ot.~- ""tinl~in
PyOng~Uie N&amp;ili'Kbrean cap~~~~.
·_
HaD was captured Dec. 17 after bis bellcopler went down in North
Korean territory. His co-pilot died and bis body was returned last week.
Korea News Service in Tokyo, a po-Nortb agency, today released a
photograph of lbe handwritten statement it said it bad obrained from
North Korea.
The seven,page statement is headlined "CONFESSION." Only lbe
first and last pages are clearly visible. U.S. officials bad no immediate
comment on w!Jctber it'appeared 10 be Hall's handwriting.
In lbe statement released by lbe North's official news agency, Hall said
be was on a reconnaissance mission when his OH-58A-C helicopter
"deviated from lbe route" and crossed into North Korea

fession'

. He did not admit to spying and gave no explanation for the deviation.
but said "I admit 111at this criminal action is inexcusable and unpardon·
;Jill\\•.~wc;yer, at borne my parenu,.JVif4: ,aocl~,ap;,I!!Hjou~ w~
for my return to them.
,
"I only hope, and it is my desire, tbatlbe Korean People's Army will '
leniently forgive me. for my illegal inuusion so tbat I may return lo my .
home and be with my family again."
'
After Hall's statement was released, a Clinton administration official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, aclcnowledged tbatlbc helicopter
could be viewed as having illegally entering North Korean air space, but
reiterated that lbe action was accidental and not pan of a spying mission.
U.S. officials have expressed regret over lbe incident.
In Washington on Wednesday. Clinton denied Hall's helicopter was
involved in espionage. " He was on a routine training mission. That's
all," lbe president said.
·

Clinton launches search for new· CIA director
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
AlsodJded Prall Writer
WASHINGTON ~ President
Clinton is opening a search for a
new CIA cbier to polish the spy
agency's image in tbe aftermalb of
nearly a decade or treachery by
Russian mole Aldrich Ames.
James Woolsey, 53, resigned
Wednesday after two tumultuous
years as CIA director during wbicb
he was dogged by tiJe· Ames affair,
congressional criticism of the agen·
cy's bloated budget and post-Cold
War resbUCturing.
Woolsey cited personal and
fami,ly considerations, and tbe
Wbi~ House insisted be was not
foraid from office.
Deputy Defense Secretary John
Deutch, the No. 2 official at lbe
Pentagon, was said to be bigb on
tbe list of possible successors.
White House officials said, bowev·
er, it was too early to speculate on
front-runners.
Deulcll, 56, bas a ~potation as a
demanding taskmaster 11nd a
shrewd political and strategic
adviser to tbe Wblte House. He bas
been at tbc center of maDy of tbe
administration'~&gt; most sensitive
decisions on tbe use of military
force, particularly lbe operation in

GRADE A

Medium Eggs
100
DOZ.

Haiti.
Haunting lbe selettion process
is lbe case of Ames, lbe 31-year
CIA veteran sentenced to life
imprisonment after confessing be
served as a paid Russian agent for
eight years, turning..over secrets
said to have caused Moscow to
execute several key U.S. intelli·
gence agents.
.
Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D·
Ariz., the outgoing cbairman of tbe
Senate Intelligence Committee, bad
complained that Woolsey's actions
in clearing the wreckage left by tbe
Ames affair were weak and inade·
quate.
But be called Deutch "a very
competent fellow'' and said be
would be an excellent choice to
bead lbe agency.
The White House officials said
Clinton soon will begin to concen·
trate on bis choice and said it is
likely be hopes to conclude the
search in the next few weeks.
Woolsey agreed to stay tbrougb lhe
end of January if necessary.
The Ames artair dealt
Woolsey's agency a morale and
public relations wallop as well as
an intelligence setback.
Allbough most of the Ames spying 100~ place before Woolsey

"The reprimimdi that Woolsey
gave to tbe individuals wbo were
singled out (in the Ames case) ...
were not couunenswat.e with what
should have been given those indi·
viduals; and indeed were not conmensurate with what Rublic opin·
ion felt was oecessary, ' be said.
Tbe neat director, WatDCf said,
should be someone "who has
inslallt aedibility across America
as a person wbo bas acb.ieved
recognition in lbe area of national
secuity.'"

JAMES WOOLSEY
assumea command of tbe CIA
early in 1993, bis decision ool to
severely punisb lbe CIA official~
for whom A'mes worked stirred a
storm on Capitol Hill.
Sen. Jobn· Warner, R· Va., current vice chairman of the Senate
Intelligence CommiUee and possi.
bly its next chairman, said Woolsey
made "errors in judgment."

Woolsey also faced congres·
sional fue for lbe agency's estimaled $3 billion budget, a costly secret
building project for its spy satellite
division and allegations of sexual
harassment inside tbe agency.
Woolsey's successor will have
plenty of direction on lbe future of
the ajjeJJCy.
A commission to be beaded by
foriner Defense Secretary Les
Aspio will soon begin examining
lbe missions and roles of tbe agency. Clinton's National Security
Cpuncil already bas launched a
similar review. The House and
Senate intelligence commiuccs are
expected to examine tbe same
ground in bearings and to look
again at lbe Ames case.

Legislative leaders to consider gas tax hike

I

PRICES EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 29, 1994 ONLY

Monday

It wasn't clear wbelber tbe statement was an indication -lbat Nonb
Korea is ready ro free Bobby Hall or an attempt 10 intensify pressure for a
public u.s. apology.
It was imposaible to lcnow whetber Hall wrote and signed 1be statement
as tbe Nol1b Koreans claim, or if be did, under wbat type of-~ure. .
1be statement, dated CbrilllllliS Day, was released after mconcluSJVe
talks Wednesday between Nonb Korean officials and U.S. diplomat
Thomas Hubbard. Another session was scheduled for today m
Pyongyang, lbe North Korean capital.

'

298 -SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

N0 paper

·-r-'-SEdttt;Sooil' icdt'ra'...;:;.-ffOiiis ·after President ·Olii(oniJemanded the
"'fi!&amp;ur~Haii'-Nft·tcbmt COUDta'ed today wii!Fa lilloiiWriueo
swemcot purporlt!dly from tbe Ameri£an pilot asking forgiveness for "a
tlap'ant violalion ot mternationallaw."
·

$119

Crisco Short_ening

lbe other is out of service while
·being booked up to the second
scrubber, wbicb is expecied to he
operational in March.
The plant is not producing any
electricity while the repairs ar~
underway, Ohio ·g_ower Co.
spokesman David H~ elin said.
Other plants in lbe ppalacbian
Electric Power netw
are supply
electricity to lbe region.
Hagelin said lbe plants are not
, being strained by lbe increased output and Gavin employees are still

By PAUL ALEXANDER

99c

4 LB. BAG

r---Ready for recyclin

pilot's
North Korea stirs pot with release
of
minister

59c

SWEET SUE

1 Section, tO Pogeo 35 cen18
A Multimedia Inc. Newo_..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Decamber 29, 1994

Gavin plant off line
for furnace repairs

Potato Chips
REG•.$1.09

High Ill 40..

en tine

MIKE SELLS

soz.

Low IOillgbtiD the 2415, portly
doudy. Frldoy, mootly doudy.

•

THURSDAY, ·. DECEMBER 29, 1994 ONLY
RC Cola ·or
Diet Rite

Super Lotto:
4-11-16-35-37-45
Kicker:
8-1-2-0-0-4
Pick 3:
S-9.0
Plck4:
2-4-8-1

lOth

.

CHEF IOY·AR·DEE

Ohio Lottery

Bullets for

edly busy ~y,
.:
Keen S81d b1s bullets would ~:
sold only to law enforcement agen.,:
cies and federally hcensed guq._
dealers. But there are about a QUBrf
ter million such U.S. dealers;&gt;
according to the B~au of Alco~ :
hoi, Tobacco and F1rearms, and : .
gun-control advocates and some ·
police officials fear that the ammu.,_
nition would fall into criminals~
bl~Dl!fo.
-:
"We don't need them, in my
opinion, even for ~w ~~ment
off1cers to carry, sa1d R1chard
~rye, sheriff O.f At.~.an~ C~~nt:Y.
m Nonb Carolina. It s JUSt nd1cu-·
lous that someone would come out:
~ith a ~ullet of Ibis type and ntag· :
mtude.
. .
,
Keen appbed 10 late November
for lice~~ to l!lanufacture and sen
anunuruuon, s:ud Susan McCanon;
an ATFspokeswoma~. She sai~ ·
sucb hc~ns~s typ1cally are
~ppro.ved 10 about 60 days, an.~ :
they re almost always approved. ::

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last
.

1 Ll. ROLL OR
10 OZ. UIIIS

'

Cavs beat

Previously-owned home sales ·drop sharply )

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued

14.5 oz.

'''

Ohio

Sentinel

'

••

•

drained for the State Highway
Davidson said Voinovicb's idea
Patrol, tax credits for ethanol and of putting the question 10 voters at
a statewide ·election was not an
other purposes.
Another $ISO million a year is unusual ap[XOIICh.
"As 1 traveled around tbe state
needed to lceep bigbway ConSiruC·
lion from baiting within I\VO years, Ibis year ... it became perfectly
the agency said. An increase of 3 clear to me tbat most of tbc smaller
centa a gaDon in the gas tax would and middle-size communities
believe that tiew construction of
raise; that amount
'
• Voinovich bas said that voters highways is absolutely fundamen- not state legislators - 7 sbould tal to economic development in
decide If tbe aarent 22-~:ents·a·gal· their areas,'' DavidsoP said.
"I think asking tbc peop1.e to.
lon tax is inaeased.
.
AroDoff declined at a news COil· decide on it is sometlting I certainly.
terence Wednesday to speculate would waat to kd at,'' she said.
1
about
the cbiJICeS for an iDcrcase.
Voinovicb, Aronoff IIIII David· ·
~tiQ.
.
'
'I'm
sure
it
will
be
an
issue
that
son
agreed to plaec a $1 billion
1be Obio Department of TI'IIIS·
will
be
discussed."
lie
said.
"It's
statewide
sctlool ballot issue and an
, portation warned e8rlier Ibis DIOIIIb
premature,
but
I'm
willing'
to
anti·c$Je
package at tbc top of
that the share of gas tas money
.
their
qenda
for tbc new session .
used to build roads was being
By JOHN CHALFANT
Allocletecl Prall Writer
.
COLUMBUS - Republicans
wbo rootrol t!Jc Howe -*Senate
in tbe legislalivc session thlil opens
Tuesday said they are willing to.
consider asking vocers to raise tbe
state gasoline tax.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff or Cincinnati and House
Speakcr-elcct.Jo Ann Davidaon ot
Reynoldsburg said they did not talk
about such au iDaeaSe in a private
J!leetlng Wednesday with Gov.
Gecqc Voillovicb aboutlcgislalive

......... ,
.......

,[

.l•
'

'

Voinovicb said tbe leaders
agreed to introduce resolutions ~~
would Jll!lce befon; voters a COOSU·
tutiooal amendment to borrow $1
billion over 10 years to renovate
and build scbools in the state's
neediest districts.
W'Jlliam PbiUis, bead of a sciJool
· roalitioo that is cballenging
tate sdlool rUoding system in
said tbe l)rOII05ed bond issue
was too small. lie ·Slid a 1990 state
study pcued sdtool building needs
at $10.2 bTllioo.
voioovicb said tbe crime padt.
ag1e would deal with weapous,
juvenile violcoce, cutting appeals
in dl:alb pculty CIIC8, ..S tougher
pcllllties for repcll violcllt offend·
'
.

era.

•.

TESTING THE TRAMPOLINE - Rutland's Tony• MiUer '
bolmcecl iJJlo tM air Wec!r mlay willa ber family's Cltristauts preseat- • DeW lnmpolilll. EnJoYinl lite near ~ -Iller,
MOler uld tM lnmpollne can aa:OJJJIIIOda~ live people at onc:e.
Tile Melp Jllalor 111111 eiiiJIIl p-ader 111id sbe tried 111p.-c IlliCit,
bat pu.Ctlcaly broke 1m' aedL (Sentinel plJoto by G-. Abate)

I

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