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By
The
Bend
.

The ·Daily Sentinel

·Marauders
defeat N-Y
Buckeyes

TUesday, January ·26, 1993

Page--10 .

Man literally _lights a fire under
·his in-laws to get rid ·of them·
Dear ADD LaDders: I am enclosing a clipping from a London
newspaper and would be intaesled
in y()Uf JeiCtion. ~:~ere·s the story:
•A pensilliiU aet fim 10 his home
to gee rid of four in-laws who bad
come fm a lhnle-day visit and lllayed
fiX dtree months. Wilfred Harte, 61,

.::.!U:S
~~:m.anc:u~
London,andaenieocedtoservedtree
years in prison.

"Bebebeaetthefue.~made

sure his dog, Tweet, was safe. He

RECEIVES AWARD • Tbe Meigs Soil and .
Water Conservation District received a superior
service a~ during tile 50tb annual meeting of
tbe Ohio Federation of Soil and Water Co.-vatlon District in Columbus. Tom Theiss, left, a

then told police, 'It was a very good
blaze. 1 felt quite euphoric.'
"the court was rold tbst Harte,
married for .20 years to his wife,
Peggy, was furious at tbe behavior
of unwanlcd guests who he said had
taken over bis home. 'They never
wanted 111 11'0 to bed at, nighL 11JeY.
stayed up wa•~"'"• TV until S a.m.
on a -~·•·· !;~:-My electric bills
were
I paid lhe rent, laxes
and all the Oilier expenses and felt it
wasn't my home anymore. Finally,
when it ,dawned on me that they
might never l~ve, I decided to do
something drastic.'
• As his wife and her relatives
slept,. Harte- poured S gallons of
petrol on lhe floors and set frre to it.
The court was told thai only through
extraordinary good fortune was no
one seriously injured.•
I, too, am plagued by relatives
who come too often and stay too
long. While I would not 11'0 quite
this far, it was rr.assuring 10 know

·&amp;ubled.

supervisor for tbe MSWCD, recei11ed tbe award
from Federation President Bob RockweD, cen· .
ter. Looklne on is David Fulton, Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Compuy.
·

Meigs S&amp;WCD .receives top rating
The Mei~:s Soil and Water Conservalion Dtstrict received a superior service award during the 50th
annual meeting of the Ohio Federa·
lion of Soil and Water Conservation District in Columbus. The
award is pan of the Distinctive Service Goodyear Conservation
Awards program, ·
·
The Distinctive Service Pro·
gram. sponsored by the Goodyear
. Tire and Rubber Company, encour-

ages district supervisors to evalilllte
their natural resource conservalion
prognun on an annual basis. District programs me ranted in a number of meas of service to county
landowners and resideniS, including delivery of teclmical assistance,
conservation education and infor!Dation pro~ams and overall program planrung. This year 75 local
districiS rated superior; nine rated
excellent, and three received a

good rating.
.
.
.•
The OFSWCD was organized tn
1943 to strengthen the natural
resource conservalion progmms of
Ohio's 88 count;r based SWCDs.
The annual meetlllg pv~ soil ~
waleC conservlllion distnct su~scrs and their staffs an opportumty
to gain new insighiS intQ local prognun development as weD as learn
about natural resource management
offerings available at the county •
state and f~ level.

a

Ruritans"· will have meeting
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star MiD
Parle. AU members urged to attend.
New members welcome. Refreshments will be served.

Balderson will present the program,

SALEM CENTBR • The Salem
Township Trustees wiD meet Tues·
day at 6 p.m. at the Salem Fire
House.

Racine.

TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
The
Orange Township Trustees will'
hold an emergency meeting Tues·
POMEROY • Rabbit sub-comday at 8 p.m. at the home of the .
mittee
meeting. Tuesday. 7 p.m. at
clerk, Patty Calaway.
the Meigs County Extension
RACI!\'E • The former "Racine Office. Pomeroy.

Youth convention set
The sixth annual "Youth Auac"

Youth Convention for the Tri-state
Teens Advancing Christ will be
held at the Gallipolis Christian
Church Jan. 29-30.
This year's rally will feature
study sessions, worship. conceriS.
music, entertainment, and recreation.
Tom Lawson, professor and
writer at Kentucky Christian College, Grayson, Ky., will be the featured speaker. Tracey Tooley associated with "One-One-Ministries"
of Chesapeake, wiD be the featured
singing artist.
For more information call Mic
Bowen, youth minister, for pre-regisuation, at 446-1863.

Honor student
Melanie Jane Beegle of Racine
achieved a. 4. grade point average
for tile fall semester at Bowling
Green State University. She was
named to the Dean's Ust A graduate of Meigs High School, Beegle
is a senior at Bowling Green, She is
the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Beegle, Racine.

POMEROY • Recertification
classes for currently licensed pesticide applicators will be held at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenleC on Thursday from 1-4 p.m. and
7-IOp.m.
POMEROY· Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter. Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at the home of Eleanor
Thomas. There will be a soup supper.

WEDNESDAY
RU1LAND • A special meeting
of the Leading Creek Conservancy
District board will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at lhe office.

POMEROY -.Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
CaD 992-5763 for informatlon.

LET ART • There will be a
meeting of Letart Elementary PrO
on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Letart
Elementary for all Portland and
Letan pareniS regarding the consol·
idation.

MIDD1.EPORT • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ. Mary
Jane Wise will be the guest Speaker. Public invited.

RACINE • Southern Local
School Board wiD meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY • The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m. at the home of Doris
Grueser.

NEW YORK (AP) - Rushing
in where district attorneys chose
not to tread, the Geraldo Rivera
television talk show has presented
the case of Joey Buttafuoco to a
studio "grand jury.''
The verdicts, as seen Monday
on the syndicated "Geraldo" program:
-By 9 to 3, the pnnel said there
was enough evidence to try Butta·
fuoco for statutory rape of Amy
Fisher, the Long Island girl, now
IS, who said sbe and Buttafuoco
became lovers when she was 16. ·

RACINE • The Racine Ameri·
can Auxiliary will meet Thursday
at 7 p.m . at the post home in

POMEROY • The fma1 public ,
hearinl! on Pomeroy· s downtown
revitalization will be Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the auditorium at Pomeroy
ViUage Hall.

Landers
Tim..
' ,.
Creaton Syndlulo" ' :.

.tJiat I am not alone. Quire IIIOI'Y,
isn't it. Ann? What do you think? ••
ASOULMATBINNEWARK
DEAR NEWARl{: I think Ibis
was an ~uemdY risky aolutioo,llld
I hope it doesn't give my Rlll!cn
any ideas. Mr. Harte is lucky
nobody died in that fue. He could
have been charged witb murder.
· Dar Ann 'lo~Jiden: This is in
response' to "The Other Woman" in
Hampton Roads, Va., who is
invol\led wilh a manied man and
gave ~evcral reasons (I call litem
excuses) to justify hti behavior. 1
have two commenta - one for her
and one for yOII, Ann.
Dear OCher Woman: I agree that
the cbances of meeting a man over
30 who isn't married, alcoholic, a
moocher or gay me rather slim.
Stability and commitnieot are not
words thai are associaled with large
numbers of males tbesc days.
Your man is no beUer than the
rest of the loaen if hll is sneatiilg
around behind his wife's back. If be
chcaled on her, chances we good
thathewillcheltonyou.
Ann, why did you bave 111 remind

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THERB

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DEAR STILL LOOKING:
hope your lelia" wiD be clipped by:
all tbe 'WOIIICil who me "looldng."
Bein&amp; alone is infinitely beau than
being saddled with a Qasbing bore,
a cheat. an alcoholic or a Creel~. ·
and I have a ton or letters to prove
iL
An alcohol probltm? How c011 )1'011
Mlp )I'Ourstlfor someone )1'011 lcve?

"Alcoholism: How to Recogniu It,
How to Deal Wirh I 1, How to.
Conq11er It" will give yo11 the
aiiSWers. SetuJ a self-addressed,·
long, brulness-stu_en~loPI twJ

Pick 3:
717
Pick 4:
- 3572
BuckeyeS:
5-6-12-27-33

Page4

!he WOIIIIII that sbc is 48 and "not
gelling any )'OIIIIICr"? Sinoe w~
does youth guaranlce anything? ~y ;
pandrnolhcr m.nea a aecond ~ ;
at age 68. My mOiher remarried at ·
66. Her .husband is now ~. and sbe :
can't keep up with him.
,:
My advice to those who are look;
• for someooe __.ial wilb wbom '
lhme Jheir
sin)ple:
your sense or humor and tum,
yourself into your own !lest friend.
Would you fix your best frieail:
up widt a manied man, a moocher,;
an alcoholic or a gay man? Of•
courae not, so why choolle one for~
yourselfl- HAVING FUN AT 45; _
Bur STILL LOOKING BECAUSE:
ANN SAYS THEY'RE OUT

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Vol. 43, No. 194
• Copyrlghled 11183

. Sale of the old Pomeroy Junior
. High School property to tbe Vii·
. • ~age of Pomeroy for $35,000 was
' authorized at a meeting of the
. Meigs Local Board of Bducation
· Tuesday night at Salem Center
· School.
. The deed, according to tbe
• agreement between the Board of
• Education and Pomeroy Village,
, will specify that no permuent
·buildings or ftxtures will be con~ structed which would prevent part, ing at athletic events or· other
, schoOl nctivities taking ~ on the
: athletic field or in that VICinity.
'
It will also specify that any
• problems ·pertaining 10 the asbestos

in the building or responsibility for
i, s remOval wiD be assumed by
lhe village. Transfer of the property
is also contingent on verifiCation of
a five year lease for the superintendent's offices in the old Pomeroy
Senior High School building, now

who will estimate the value.
remainder of the schpol year in the
Turned down by the board was a areas of indu$trial technology and
request from Pomeroy Elementary driver education.
School to transfer the approximate·
Three purchased services conly $500 in !he safety patrol fund to tracts were ~warded during the
the principal's fund for the pur- meeting. Jim Carnahan was hired
chase of a laminator. The boardJelt as a driver for students to the
Yillage hall.
.
the money should be used for some Athens severe behavior class filing
· The board granlcd easements fiX specific· project benefiting the chil- a vacancy created by the resignarights of way around the Baptist dren since it was accumulated tion of .Curtis Holiday accepted at
church property and at the end of through various fund raisers carried the meeting. Sandra Tilhs and
the football f~eld behind McClures out by tlie stliden~. The money in David peem were employ~d for
to P001eroy as a part of the junior the past has been used on expenses homebOund srudent tutoring.
high sale agreement
· of the safety patrol trip to Was)lin~­
Supt. James Carpenter was
As for the sale-of timber on ton D. c;. No trip will be talren this authorized to use a substitute for
some district-owned propeny the year.
.
the learning disabled unit at the
board voted 111 posrpone any action
Michael Cockier was added to Rutland school until a regular
pending a report from a forester the substitute teacher list for the teacher can be hired.

•

"-·' ANSWERS QUESTIONS • Mike .Stroth, -~ to''$400,000 iD arant .ioaey fer enliucement of
aeeond " - rfpt, r-roy'a revitdzldloD coa- , ~ the ceatral bllllit- dlstrld.
are, 1~ultant, aaswered queatlou at tbe final pubuc:·
r, Job Muaer, revitallJatlon a
1111 for the
hearlaa reprdiD&amp; the :~':don process for
Pomeroy Merchants Assoe ation; Deanna
· · Pomeroy's dowdiUWa n
lion. A~adon .. Figlestabler wbo is working with Strntb nn the
delldllne fir the VJIIa&amp;e rl Po!Mroy Is ebnary
application; ud Pomeroy Mayor Bruc:e Reed.
5 to the Obio Departnaent of Development for up

Allor.etnred

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's final public hearing
regarding downtown revitalintion
was held Tuesday night at Pomeroy
Vii!J.«e Hall.
Mike Strolh of SBA ConsultaniS
of Jnclcson and Pomeroy's revitaJ-.
ization consul~! again answered
questions pertaining to the process
•nd informed those attending
6l111Ctly what the project involves.
- The Village of Pomeroy is
applying 10 the Ohio Depanment of
I;levelopment (ODD) for up to
$400,000 in grant money. The revitalization program, according Ill
Stroth, was started in 1985 in an
elton to enhance the lboks of centta1 business districU. The applicatiOn deadline is February S.
. ; Strodt stated tbe central business
·· district runs from Sycamore Street
to the west side of Butternut
,

Avenue and from Second Street to
lhe Ohio River. He said there me
approximlltely 40 b!lildings in the
central business district and that
commitments have already been
obtained by ova- one &lt;ben boild· ings in· the cenllal business district
A commitment from 20 pen:ent of
!he buildings in the oentra1 buainess
district must be obtained before
application to ·the ODD can be
made. John Mll88er, revitalization
spokesman for the Pomeroy Merchants Associaliori, stated that 20
percent has already been commit·
led and thai he feels thm could be
a commitment from as many Is 20
buildings.
In addition to a commitment
' from 20 percen' of tlie buildings
there must also be a 10 percent
match commitment from the viilag e. If the $400,000 would be
awarded the Villal!e of Pomeroy

•

· ,
iJ .;
Pole, equipme:nt taken

' Four-wheeler stolen

MEMBERSHIPS RECO,GNIZED - Jo. .
Holiday, left, recently received llill65-,.r • - ·
bersblp seal while bis 10n, Raymo•d Holiday,

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c:enter, reeelftd bll 50 year -Hnblp c:ertlllcate fr!IID ~ Patty D,er of Star Granae.

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NEW AU.DITOR - Naacy Campbell was appointed Meigs
County auditor at Tuesday night's meeting of tile Meigs County
Republican Central Committee. Sbe wiD filllbe uaexplred term of
the late William R. Wickline. Here CampbeD Is cOngratulated by
Bernard Gilkey, committee c:hairmu.

•
as president of Hemlock Pipeline, investors and receiving imd dis- :
Inc., keeping the corporate books, bursing oil and gas revenues. She .
preparing payrollleport.s, and man- worked for A &amp; P Drilling Co. and :
aging the office. Prior to that she Adams Drilllng Co. from 1969 to .
was employed to research oil and 1980 and prior to that did ~- : ·
gas leases in various counties by ing and secretarial funcuons for .
Proffitt's Wholesale and J.D. Roy Proffitt Wholesale, and secre- ,
Drilling Co.
tarial .and paymll functions for E. I. .;
Her experience in the oil busi- ·DuPont De Nemours and Co.
ness also extended to billings for

Ohio, West Virginia officials join in effort
to establish interstate local calling service

w::;hased

t·

· Naricy J. Campbell of Racine is
Meigs County's new auditor.
She was appointed to fill the
unexpired term of the late William
R. Wickine by a majority vote of
the Meigs County RepubliCan Central Committee at a meeting held
Tuesday night in the Common
Pleas Courtroom.
Wickline's 1erm will expire in
1994.
Canipbell was one of six appli. cants for the position which has
been. vacant since the death of
Wickline on Jan. 9; Since then
Mary Hobsteuer, clerk of ' the
Meigs County Board of County
Commissioners. has been serving
as temporary auditor. Campbell
assumed her duties today after
being sworn in Wednesday mom- .
injl by Common Pleas Judge Fredenclc W. Crow .III.
The other applicants were
Kenn·y Utt, Larry Lavender, Ray .
Pickens, Deborah Watson, Tom
Reed.
The new auditor is currently
pursuing a degree in business
administration with a -major in
accounting from Ohio University.
She is a junior there with a grade
point average of 3.96 and has been
the recipient of the Big Six In~live Award and a Dean's Scholarship.
·
A graduate of Racine High
School in 1965, Campbell the next
·year completed a 12 month secretarial course at Mountain State
Business College.
From 1983 to 1~89 she served

must match that with $40,000.
Pometoy Mayor Bruce Reed stated
village council is concerned with
where that mo~y wiD come from
but that council is committed 10 the,
project and will do what it can to
see that the plan goes through. .
Strolh stated projeciS eligible for
the grant money include exterior
upgrading. signage, roof repairs,
heating, electrical and anything to
correct a code violauon. He
stressed.however, that the money
may 1)6t be used for remodeling
pwposes.
Estimates for participating projects have been economiCal according to Stroth. He stressed these
estimates an: only ''rule of lhumb"
estimates and me not binding to the
participanL He said the state recogBy Mindy Kearns
nizes ihat the parljcipaniS are only
Officials
of lhe Mason, New
estimating the cost of the worll: to
Haven.
Pomeroy,
and Middlepon
be complelcd. Stroth stated actual
areas
left
a
meeting
on establishing
estimates from conttactors would
local lelephone service between tbe
four !Owns a liale less optimistic
1
owners that conunitmeniS must be than they were before, but vowing
persevere. .
=~ed~~O:~~~e't:!~: to Towns
officials met :rue~Y _af:
Bill Pullins of Family Homes, reported to the Meigs County
ings on the revitalization ordi- ternoon at lhe Mason Crty Building
• · Sheriff's Department on Tuesday that someone bad cut down a
nances and make a decision with represenratives from the West
• treated pole taking the electric meter, breaker box, weatherheads
whelher or not to proceed with the Virginia PSC, PUblic Utilities
and enuance cable at the pole at !he old ~andy's Auto Sales plupetapplication. Reed again stated Commission of Ohio, GTB and
ty on Route 33 at&amp;teipiiC.
·
.
council's commitment to the pro- C&amp;P Telephone companies 10 disPu!Uns ~Wed die)' bad
the property. The re~ siated
ject and the desire to see the project cuss what steps are necessary toes.. the pole bad been sawed o at the ground making tbe mtssing porthrough.
tablish local calling between the
• tionaboul10-12feetln length.
Deanna Figlestahler, who is two West Vuginia rowns of New
:
It was reported a duD colored pickup truck was seen there Tuesworking ,wilh Stroth on the grant Haven and Mason, with the Ohio
day morning.
·
·.
·
application, stated the importance rowns of Pomeroy and Middleport.
•
An inveltigalion is continuing. Pullins stated he is more inlerestof the design review board which
Dannie Wallcer · of the PSC
~ ed in recoverin~tbepole and equipment than in prosecuting.
will be set by the 'mayor. This seemed optimistic about the venboard • composed of one tepresea- ture that was 'begun five years ago
tative from council, someone with by Mason Mayor Geolge Nichols.
an archlleCtural IMickground and as He said Mason had filed a formal
.Jnck Pett:ncn, Syracuae, ~ 10 the Meigs County Sheriff's
.
many as four business people • wiU complaint with lhe PSC, at his sug-.
• Depadment on SundaY thai his four-wbeeler had been stolen from
enforce
the sl8l.dards for the cen- oestion, to get tbe local mea call·
the farm on l'ellnon llollow.
llal
business
district as passed by · ing. Wallcer said lhe complaint'
The report stated !he four-wbeeler was recovmd and charges are
ordinances
by
the village council.
wasn't an objection, but was used
pending.
An answer to the application, as a mechanism to bave an official ·
.according to Stroth, will come order in the stare.
IIIOIIIld April S with 1 111111 date for
AlaUboxesda~ged
Wallcer said local calling has
the
project
around
May
1.
He
said
recently
been expanded in West
~ Joluuon, Lovell Read, "'niJXIInnno"tedM to !he Meigs County
panlclpants
In
the
project
would
Virginia,
with
most people baving a
Sheriff's DeDartmenl that over tbe weekend some damaaed his
bave.up to 18 months to complete local calling distaricCol22miles in
mailbox by hl'tiinglt wilh a blunt objecL
wort and the project would be • circumfem~ce. The trouble with
ciOied out after 22 montha. .
New Haven and Mason callirig
Saulb concluded the '-ina by Pomeroy and Middleport locally is
savinl Pomeroy Is a "small sleep- that the call crossea the state· line.
James
Gallipolis, was &amp;mll,ed Tuesday aftanoon by
lni g1ant ready to awaken. • He Wallter aaid bolh C&amp;P and GTB
Galllpolia Police on a folaay wamnt from~ County.
,
He Wll tratwpolled 10 tbe county Une and lllnled ova- to Meigs · slaled the ObD is expecting about would bave to get a waiver to cross
30 applications with fD-12 or those !he line.
• Counly d"9!1"" wbo relayed him to !he Meip County Jail.
Wallcer said the officials ate
CODtin!led pap 3

~---.-Loca,l brie~"s ~·---.. ·co~~R~t.::~ar:::-ding

When .)I'IUn 11 'Jf!fl'S old and ,ml•ve liVed thnJIIIfh as much as lblani; even the chance ID alle1td Wwol '
is somtthing. But tot:ia)l Palani not only goes ID school, she plays tit£ cello tmd she's active in athletics, •
Thanks ID Easter Seals, Palani has gotten academic tutqring, she's gut111 ID camp, and she's rraived a ; !
whe€Jchair.ln fact, She's even p.e on lo win medals in the Junior NaJiono1 Wheelchair Games.
All of which have given her the chance every kid deserves: the chance ID.be a kid. Pa/ani is just
, •
Onl! of millions of childml and adults with disabilities that Easter Seal quality ~iliJa.
,,
lion /)rogroms have helped. Gi~ID Easter &amp;ills. QIVI! THI! POWI!" TO BI!CO_MI!.
• .

studeniS to one teacher.
Following an executive sessjmi
to consider a grievance from Faye
Manley. the board voted to pay her
four hours of overtime if lhe union
will file no more grievances concerning the use of vans unless a
driver has been conuaclcd to ta1ce a
trip and the trip is canceled.
John Lisle, principal at Salem
Center, spoke briefly on progress at
the school and the effecbve schools
program.
Larry Rupe presided at the
meeting attended by board members, Randy Humphreys, John
Hood, Roger Abboa, and Bob Bar·
ton, Supt Carpenter, and Treasurer
JaneFry.
.

Meigs County auditor

Final he~ring held on proje·ct;
deadline for application Feb. 5

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Gladys · The bombing of Baltimore's Ft.
Thomas. Co-hostesses will be McHenry In 1814 . inspired Francis
Grace Weber and Frances Reed. Scott Key to write "The Star-Span·
Marilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne lied Banner." .

Graduation at Meigs High was
changed to May 23 due to a conflict with alumni banquet schedules.
Meeting with lhe board was Lily
Kennedy who represented fourth
grade parents at the Rutland school
She expressed concern over class
size. The. superintendent explained
thai adjustment of the open enroUment policy is expeclcd to ta1ce care
of the problem nexl year. Meigs
Local Teacbers Association president Carol Ohlinger and several
other teachers also talked about
open enrollment and asked for
input into the policy changes. The
state sets minimum standards of 25

Campbell named new

l/562,ChkGgo,IU.606Jl.(l562.(1n .

POMEROY • A Sugar. Run
Schon! meeting will be held by the
Meigs County Parle District at 6:30
p.m Thursday at Trinity Church.

A lluldmedt. Inc. Newepoper

:_Meigs board OKs sale.· of junior high school building

Alcoltol, clo AM Ltw:leTs, P.O. Boz ·

POMEROY • Free clothing day
will be held at the Salvation Army
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10
a.m. to noon. All mea residents in
need of clodting are welcome.

2s..tlona,12 Pagee25-

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio '!"'ednesday, January XI, 1993 .

11

-By 12 to 0, they said there Matvyn Kornberg, commented that :
wasn't enough evidence to charge the mock hearin~ · "oversll:ps tht;':
Buttafuoco with conspiracy to bounds of propnety" and threat~ •
shoot his wife, Mary Jo, who was ened a lawsuu for slander if it
wounded in the head by Fisher last aired. But Jeff Urdel, a publicist f(l('
May 18.
the show, said that as far as hit,
-Eight of the panelists said knew there had been no demand•
they didn't think Bua.afwx:o could that the show be stopped. and il~
get a fair trial because his reputa- . went on as scheduled.
.•
tion has been destroyed by the
As decided by a coin toss befmt; .
media.
the show was taped Jan. 14, matrl· Neither of the Buttafuocos moniallawy.er Raoul Felder acted !
appeared on the show. Fisher is as prosecuror and criminal defense··
serving a five-to-15-year prison ~ialist Barry Slotnick defended"'
term for assault
Buttafuoco.
Buttafuoco's real-life lawyer,

near 50.

'

clt«k or moMJI ordo for $3.65 (this
itrdwles pos14ge twJ llmullillg) to:·
CIJIIIJIIJJ, send $4.45.)

Partly doudy lolllgbt. Low In

30Jt Tbui'llhy, cloudy. Hlab

••

'Geraldo' show 'trial' says
Buttafuoco shouldn't be charged .

Community calendar·
Community Calendar items
appear two days before u event
and tbe day or that e~enL Items
must be received well In advance
to assure publication in tile calendar.

Ann

0 hio Lottery

. Pattersoll an-ested

ra=-.

on

faced with two taslcs. The first is 10
get both the West Vuginia and Ohio
commissions to talce lhe necessary
steps, then get lhe Department or
Justice to agree to give the waiver.
Not everyone felt the venture
would be smooth sailing-, however.
C&amp;P representative Bob Swoope
said an interstate venture hasn't
been approved since 1984 and there
would be "real road blocks 10
cross." It was noted that this will

Air Force charges
Willis in wife's murder
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP)
-The Air Force has brought mill·
tary charges of murder and
attempted murder against an airman from Ohio accused of killing
his esttanged wife at the Myrtle
Beach Air Force Base, a
spokesman says.
Senior Airman Jeromy Willis,
23, of Ironton, Ohio, already .had
been charged with civilian murder
charges In the Jan. 4 killing of .
Marie Willis at the base's legal
offtce.
The military . presented its
charges against Willis on Jan. 20,
said Dave McMahon, a spokesman
at Shaw Air Force Base. No officia! explanation was given on why
the charges were not announced
until Tuesday.
Willis is confined at a prison at

~

•

the Chatleston Naval Base, said Lt.
Cmdr. Max Allen, a Navy
spokesman. His case has been
transferred to Shaw because the .
Mynle Beach base will close in :
March.
:·
Milita!)' and civilian
tori &lt;
are negotiating who wllf:juris. :diction.
·
·
Myrtle Beach Police Chief S1111 .
Killman said he did not kilow of :·
the miliWy charges undl he was :=
informed by the news media.
-:
"I'm not sU!Priled," Killman :told The Sun News of Myrtle
Belch Tuesday.
•
Myrtle Beach police said they :·
thought they had jurisdictlon ·
because Willis was arrested In ·
Brownsville, Telias, on-Jin. 19 on a ·:
murder arrest WIITIIlt issued ,by a ~
city Judge.

-?

'

•

•

set a precedent wilh lhe justice •
departmenL
·
:
PUCO Attorney Examiner Doug
Jennings agreed. He said the Ohio
commiSSion has three inlrastate
cases . pending with the justice ·
depanment at the present time,
which has been . pending over a
year. He added the long distance
carriers inlervened in lhe cases
which made them even mo~
Continued on page 3

'

&lt;

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·c ommentary

•

•

-The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - Although
·
the
bubble burst on Japan's econo111 Court Street
my
nearly two years ago, U.S. law
Pomeroy, Ohio
enforcement officials believe that
·DEVOTED TO THE lNTEJIE8T8 01' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
substantial sums of money are
being successfully laundered m the
United States by Japanese orga·
nized crime groups, according 10 a
Senate Governmental Affairs Com·
mhtee's 15-month investigation
ROBERT L. WINGErT
intO Asian organized crime.
Publisher
Like the Japanese lijlto, electron·
ics and computer business, the
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PATWffiiEHEAD
Japanese mafia is following the
General Manager
·Assistant Publisher/Controller
blueprint of other successful ·- but
legitimate - . Japanese industries
by targeting Arnerk:an markets.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300 ·
, They've invested hun~ds of
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address 111d telepbone number. No unsigned !cotters will be published. Letters • millions of dollars worth of their
should be in good taste, ll&lt;ldRssing issues. not personalities.
iUicit profits in U.S. real estate dur·
ing the past decade - especially
golf courses . .And they are also
•
involved in murder, ex!Ortion, ille·
gal gambling, prostiiution and illegal immigration in the United
States. These Japanese crime fig·
ures are frequent visitors to Las
Veaas, Nev., and Atlantic City,
N.J., on gambling junkets.
By The Associated l're5s
U.S . Department of Justice,
• Following are excerpts from recent edi!Orial~ on national issues in which ranks Asian organized crime
!)ewspapers across the swe.
as its No. 2 priority nationwide just
after Amencan organiied crime,
has experienced little success in
Tbe Columbus Dispatch, Jan. 23:
•
• With its fmancial statement bleeding bright red, Big Blue will continue
massive resD'IlClllring program to stay alive in the computer market it
lmce dominated. International Business Machines is having a record-set·
png year, the kind that causes nightmares and early retirements for QiOs.
• IBM's embattled chairman, John F. Akers, concedes that "difficult
problems remain ahead." Bu\ optiinistic analysts. believe that with. three
·years of severe cutbacks- nearly 100,000 JObs will have been elimmated
·by the end of this year- and an unprecedented restructuring of its prod·
. uct lines a new and viable IBM will emerge.
.
.
But Sam Albert, a computer consultant and former mM executive,
warns that "1993 will be the year of the Darwinian selection process,"
meaning ffiM' s business decisions will have 10 be shrewdly devised.
- Will the new leaner; meaner IBM make a corporate comeback? It
won't be easy. The computer industry is intensely competitive and the
teehnology evolv~ so rapidly that new products are rendered obsolete
before they are scarcely out of the car10n. •

a

(Elyria) Chronicle-Telegram, Jan. 21:
. Bill Clin!On's inaugural ~h did not ring with memorable phrases,
but' it was stirring in its simpliCity.
. .· His message of confident idealism coupled with individual responsibil·
·ity and initiative has deep roots in American tradition. And h1s words
· were an encouraging departure from the Democratic Party's. standard
approach 10 f.&gt;vernment in the past.
.
. Clin!On did not promise an anay of new spending programs 10 address
Jill of society's ills. Rather, he spoke of the need for sacrifice and discipline 10 reduce the massive federal debt and pledged to offer more oppor.tunity in exchange for more responsibility.
• Clin10n' s call for Americans 10 do more 10 solve problems on their
'QWR inslead of relying on government largesse squares with the limes.
. Clin!On's best sound bite was his call for young people 10 put their idealism to work in a "season of service.'' He updated the conventional wis·
dom that young people, ~ than being. idealistic, are strongly careerQ\'iented these days b!lcause they're worried about earning a living and
buying a home.
.
·
~ If in the next 100 days be can put us on a course 10 bring mori: oppor·
lunity lhrough an expanded economy, and at the same time reduce the
growth of debt, most Americans will forgive him for not fulfilling other
c,ampl!ign promises.
(Kent-Ravenna) Rerord-Courier, Jan. 21:
A new generation has been called 10 shape the destiny of the United
.States, a generation embOdied by President Cl.inton, whC?se inaugural
address Wednesday coupled a call for renewal w1th a forthright acknowledgment of the enonnous challenges confronting his presidency and the
nation.
Clin!On' s message is a compelling one: While Americans face a host of
eoncernS which have sorely tested their confidence in their leaders, they
are blessed with an innate resowcefulness which, if properly channeled,
will enable this nation 10 come 10 terms with what it must do to build a
j)etter future;
.What's right with America? Plenty .
For all its shoru:omings, this nation stands as a citadel of democracythe peaceful transition of power from·one generation to another which we
witnessed Wednesday is a shining examP.le of that.
Our new president speaks of "sacnfice," a code word which could ·
spell new taXes or additional burdens for some of us. The legacy of our
obscene deficit, coupled with demands for increased spending in areas
tanging from bealth care and hi~hways to education and the environment,
appears 10 make some form of' revenue enhancement" a certainty during
the Clinton administration. How Americans react to this will say a lot
about their willingness to work toward shaping a better nation.

·Police-estimate official member· Economy. ~ ·
.
ship of Boryokudan groups in
This confidential witness, an
Japan to be 88,300 strong, dis· associate of several major
persed among more than 3,000 Boryokudlin groups, explained
gangs. But officials estimate that their methods to subcommittee
there may be as many as 10 times investigators: "Japanese holding
that number of other criminal asso- companies capitalize the U.S. comciates. Today's gangsters are · pan1es, which then provide the
becoming increasingly sophistical· vehicle for further investment The
ed and more aggressive, demon· . companies attempt to avoid U.S.
strating a propensity for violence, )aXes by ~ing ~ docume~ and.
far beyond that of earlier Boryoku- • false reports With the IRS, until the
dan members.
authorities catch on. As soon as the
subcommittee report warns that the ·
Though the Boryokudan reap IRS gets suspicious, the Boryoku·
"high mobility, instantaneous substantial profits and wield et\or· dan will fold the front C'!mpany
global commumcations capability · mous influence in Jaj,an, they luive and send the money, wh1ch has
and international connections" effectively branched out around the been laundered, back 10 Japan."
explain why Asian crime groups . world - particularly in global
U.S. law enforcement authori·
are seemingly invincible to pene· money laundering operations and ties ltave had almo.st no sue~ in
tration by any single country. .
1U11'C9tics tralficldn~. The Japanese dealing with the' J apailese land
The Japanese National Police National Police esumate their earn- rush, beCause it is virtually· impos·
Agency calls Japanese crime ings worldwide 10 IOta! $10 billion sible to trace the source of Japanese
grQUps the '"B!&gt;ryokudan,'' which annually, a third of which comes funds . Loopholes in the ~urrent
means ··the violent ones," These from drug trafficking:
U.S. law on money Iaun~ering
gangsters often refer to themselves
One .confidential Boryokudan makes prosecution unlikely.
as a ~ .'yakuza," which is the num· witness testified befote the sub· .. Far from operating in the dark
ber 8·9-3 in Japanese and is a los· committee that close 10 SO major shadows of society .some Boryolru·
ing hand in a popular Japanese card properties in Hawaii have 1)een dan groups at one time practiced
game.· By depicting themselves as bought with Boryokudan money. In stunning disclosure. Before a tough
the "losers" or underdogs of soci- fact, these types ofproperty P.ur· anti-gang law took effect in Japan
ety, Boryokudan have managed 10 chases in Hawaii, Nevada; Califor· in March 1992, the Boryokudan
cultivate an underdog image and nia and U.S. territories in the Pacif· groups operated in such an open
even elicit sympathy from the ic swelled during the expansion of manner that· they submitted mem·
Japanese public.
the so-called Japanese ."Bubble bership lists to the police. This
means that the NPA possesses
.--"'--....
exiensive information about
Japanese crime group members and
associates, including those who
have traveled 10 foreign countries.
My 1
is 5\l'lllf.But Justice Department off'tcials
~ Tilltk
seldom, if ever, obtain criminal
111 an:el
ClJt!I~
mtelligence information ~garding
Japanese organized crime from the
Japanese NPA. The Japanese
attribute their refusal 10 fort over
the relevant information 10 strin·
gent Japanese attitudes and taws
with respect 10 privacy. In fact, the
' subcommittee has learned of at
least ·tw(l instances where Boryolru·
dan members or associates have
sued 'the Japanese National Police
for releasing information to U.S.
officials.
In addition, Japanese police .
·operate under a "dual criminality"
standard&lt;, which means that they
will disseminate information., only
if the alleged criminal acti vtty is
also a·crime in Japan.
•
Jack Auderson and Mit:hael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate,,lnc.

i_M~

Nnl,fMi .
him

..

President Bean ·counts·wrong
Immediately after ihe election,
on my precise 1-100 scale, Bill
Clinton scored a sensational 83.6.
By Inauguration Day he was 75.2.
Now he is 64.1. What accounted
for the drop?
.
My sense; mostly, is that Clin·
ton fell iniO the ""diversity" trap.
He apparently buys the line that
"'looking·like America" has 10 do
with gender and pigment. In fact, in
politics, real diversity is about
opinion.
Clinton's error has compounded
a tragic circumstance in American
life. And it has led some moderate
Democrats to use words like
.. betrayal."
Consider Clinton and the so·
called ··women's groups." They
claim· to be primarily concerned
about the interests of "women."
Wrong. They are concerned about
the interests of ' ~ liberal women."
••The women .. demanded that
one of the "top four" Cabinet
posts go to a female. Clinton
denounced such crass "bean counting" (his plirase) and then promptly started serving up the beans of
diversity, otherwise called "quotas." His prize bean, highly 'lalent·
ed, was Zoe Baird at Justice.
But she had problems: A) she

was fiOt regarded-as a liberal by lib·
erals, including the women·'s
l!roups, and B) she had acted
Improperly by hir.ing two illegal

Ben Wattenberg
immigrants. The liberals promoted
the immigrant story, and the
women's movement shoved
Woman Baird over the side.
Look at where quota-mongering
takes us. Was Baird appointed
because she was "a woman"? Or
"a moderate"? Or because she was
"the best""• Or all three?. We were
told that the Clin!On Cabinet was
picked as a !Otality, balancing vari·
ous interests. Doesn't that mean
that Baird should be replaced by
another moderate? Or, as Clin·
tonites now say, that President
Bean's next choice will be "the
.best person," regardless of ideolo-·
gy.
Quite so. In the latter phases of
his appoinanent process Clin10n is
too often ignoring ideological
diversity. The situation is still
clouded and incomplete, but here is
what seems to have happened:
Clin!On didn't have much choice
about his economic team. The mar·
kets would have gone wild if he

didn't appoint moder.a.tes. He did,
mostly. The geo-political markets
would have been equally upset if
he didn't choose a moderate hardnosed defense team. He Clid. All
that was wise, necessary, and
expecte4 from a man who was
elected because he was seen as an
activist/moderate 1 "Different
Democrat"
But where he had running room,
iii domestic policy alld in the diplomalic arena, Clin!On did not bolster .
his moderate credentials, particu·
.larly at the critical staff and sub.C.binet levels.
Thus, on the White House staff,
th ere IS
· a nny
· moderate ceII. But,
say moderates outside, most of the
rest of the staff, while highly
diverse in gender, race and ethnicity, ended up homogeneously liber·
at, as if picked by Ted Kennedy.
And so too, ideological' diversity
has been ignored at the State
Departnient and. the.National Security Council. NOt a single so-called
"neo-conservative" Demucrat has
been appointed to a serious job,
with most of the big posts already
assigned. The new officials hail
principally· from the liberal Jimmy ·
Caner White House.
There are several things wrong
with what has happened.
As in America at large, quotas

yield re~nunents. Today, in Washington, there are white males and
white females, f~rious at losing
jobs they believe they deserved just
because their sex ind,lor race were
"wrong." Long-term losers are the
"quotees" who are viewed by their
colleagues as unqualified.
.
And Clin!On will find it hard to
fulfill his promises. Recall, he proposed a radical re-structuring of the
liberal Democratic orthodoxies that
he called " brain dead."
He now seems 10 think that he
can receive a neat stream of neutral
option memos, check the box he
prefers, and then direct plilnt staff
and agency officials 10 implement
his policies. Sorry. Th8t is not the
way it works. Shock troops, staff
people, idea people with intellectual passion are needed to make
headway on Clin10n's vision of a
"re-invented government" So far
such lieutenants have not been
commissioned. Time and
slots are
1
• ·
running out.
Moderates are {Ul)ling, apPW'CDt·
ly mugged by phony diversity.
,·
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American .Enterprise
Institute, is author or "The First
Universal Nation," published by
Tbe Free Press and a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Clinton team limps over ·s tarting line . .
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Bill America. But at the last minute
Applicants in their 50s and 60s
Clin!On promised that his adminis- Miami-based anti-Castro activists believe they deserve jobs based on
tration would hit the ground run· got their allies in the Florida con· the experience many gained during
ning~ but the gen.eral, consensus is gressional delegation to place a s.ervice in the Carter ~dmin.istra·
that tt has begun limpmg badly.
uon. A younger group, m thetr late
On the morning after the inau30s 10 mid40s, who have come of
guration, a rather extraordinary
J~
age during the past 12 years while
scene was played out all across
Republicans controlled the White ·
Washington : Men and women
House, believe they deserve jobs
showed up at what they assumed hold on Baeza's nomination · beCause they' have been out in the
would be their new offices, ready because be has not been sufficient· cold all their professional lives.
to begin work, even though they ly strident in his opposition 10 Cas· Finally, there are those under 30 -.'
had not been officially named to · tro.
many of whom si~on 'early and
positions. Most came armed with
The unofficial assumption of were key players m Clin!On's camassurances from the transition per· power in so many agencies was paign - who believe they are
sonnel office that they had, in fact, made necessary btlcause the transi· . owed lOp jobs now as a payback
been chosen. So they were willing tion . was simply unable to meet for their campaign woril:.
10 go forward, even given the pos· their own schedule of having some
Add to this an attempt to bal·
sibility that some eventual snag 200 second-level appointments ance the administration ethnically
could mean they would not get the made by the time Clin!On took the and by eender, and the fact that .
final nod.
oath of office. In fact. except for ftnal dectsions'llre being q~llde by, a
That happened at the State · the· basic White House staff, tbe . very small number of people, and
Dep~rtment. Twelve high-level appointees at the State Deplrtmcnt. yo_u bave a c~c prescription for
of~tctals·IO·be - ass1~tant secre- and a small handful of otben, no gridloclt.
. .
.
tanes and undersecretaries - were one below Cabinet secretary was
Furthtz complieating matters: In
notified that their names would be named by lhauguration Day.
a few special cases the Cli~ton
released to the press the day before
, Transition penonhel officials braintrust has suddenly reahzed
the inauguration, and the day after give several reasons for this. Fore· that major policy decisioDs are COD·
th:y should be at their new desks most. among these arc the bitter tained in seemingly simple ~tbnght and early.
fights that have ensued over almost ments. .
One of those notified was Mario every available~·tmenL.
One example is the new drug
Baeza, a Cuban-American lawyer
What bas deve
is a lrind of c~ar or, more co~ect!f, a new
from New York, who was 10 be the generational clash. as~y, three . director of the Office of Drill Con·
new assistant secretary for Latin generations of Democrats have trol Policy. Bef~ a ~w appoint·
11one 10 war over available jobs. ment can be finalized, some very

Robert

.

&gt; '

«&gt;

1913 by NEA, Inc.

TODAY'S LESSON IN POLITICS
;

Wagman

.,

'

Accu-Weather• forecast for

,,

1/

'

'

"

basic decisions have to be made
about the Clin10n adniinistralion's
anti-drug policy.
. This deba~ is growing progres·
s1vely more b1tter. There is general
agreement among Clin10n 's advisers t!lat lhe drug's czar's office has
been a complete failure over the
last several years. Its job is 10 coordinate the anti-drug efforts of some
40 different federal agencies. However, under its ·current leader former Florida Gov. Robert M;fu;z
the office has developed the reputa:
lion of dtteking lOugh issues.
One example: Two .years ago
the Drug Enforcement Adniinistra·
tlon and the FBI got in10 a major
confrontation over who should take
the lead in drug investigations. This
was exactly the kind ~ policy dis· ,
pure that Congress created the drua
czar 10 solve. But Martinez retuseil
to 1fkc a position, and the matter
was left up to the attOrney general
There u alto a growin$ eon~. ,
lion among Clinton's advtsers that •
the central anti-dru&amp; policy of the ·
Reapn•Bush years - fighting the :
problem throuah a mauive ·
enforcement effort _ has not :
worked Their belief is tbat, in the :
future, more attention and more ·
money, must be spe~t on drug :
treatment.
:

By Tlte A 110e!ated Preu
Ohioans are likely 10 see some
snow or rain toniaht and Thursday,
fore.casters said. Temperatures
could reach the 50s in some pans
of the state before the colder
weather moves in.
The National Weather Service
said that by Saturday night, read·
ings could be in the .single digits.
On Sunday they probably won't
crack the freezing mark.
·
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degr,ees in 1916

MICH.

IMansfield 142" I•
IND.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

escWe

Snow and colder weather predicted for Ohio

Thursday, Jan. 28

. Wednesday, January 77, 1993.

cracking these thriving and ·surpris·
ingly open Japanese crime conglomerates. A Senate governmental
affairs permanent investigations

Excerpts from other
newspapers 3t:'ODD&lt;i: Ohio

'CAMPAIGN PROMISES

OHIO Weather

.Japanese crimegroup~ .make . inroads in U.S.

I

Berryls .World

Pag~-The Dally Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

while titi record low was 8 below
zero in 1936. SUDJCt tQnight will be
at 5:45 p.m. and sunrise Thwsday
at 7:43a.m.
Arouud tbe nation
Snow dusted pans of New England and the Midwest early today
and high wind buffeted the North·
east seaboard
·An intensifying Atlantic storm
was expected 10 rush north across
New England, where snow fell
early today. Strong wind carried
the threat of coastal flooding.
Snow feU in pans of Ohio early

today, and snow showers lingered
over Michigan, Minnesota and
North Dakota.
Gale and · flood warnings
remained in effect today along the
North Carolina coast, 'J'here 40
mph gusts and IS-foot seas idled
ferry service Tuesday.
The foul weather may luive been
responsible for an unmanned
freighter breaking loose from a tug
and drifting IOward the North Car·
olina shoals. A crew dropped by
helicopter onto the 600-foot ship

lowered its anchors early today 'and
Stopped iL ·
,
Temperatures were likely to
stick to the teens and 20s in the
upper Midwest ancl tlie 30s in a
loop stretching from the Dakotas
across 10 central Illinois and iniO
the Northeast. Much of the rest of
the nation was likely 10 have highs
in the 40s and 50s, rising to the 14
along the soutbem tier from Florida
and Georgia across to Southern
California. The high temperature
for the nation Tuesday was 85 at
Glendale, Calif.

Court news
Divorce actions
Actions for divorce has been
r.ted in the Meigs County Court of
Common PleaS by Tami G. Par·
sons, Racine, from Marl!: Alan Parsons, Pomeroy; and by Virginia
Ethel Ramsey; Rutland, frbm
William Owen Ramsey Sr., Rut·
land.

W. VA.

Foreclosure action
An action for foreclosure has
been
filed in the Meigs County
0111113 Acj:U·W.Ihor, Inc:.
Court of Common Pleas by Peoples
Bank of Point Pleasant, W:Va.,
------Weather-~---- against Terry L. Bell, Racine, Carla
Sue Bell, Pomeroy, Dale and
South Central Ohio
Friday, a chance· of flurries Wanda
Te#ord, Portlanr;l, and oth·
' Tonight, variable cloudiness. An northeast, air elsewhere. Lows in
early low near 30. Thursday, most· the low 10 mid. 20s. Highs in the ers.
ly cloudy and mild. High near 50. upper 20s to mid-30s. Saturday,
granted
:Chance of rain 20 percent
fair. LoWs 5-15. Highs in mid-20s Dissolutions
have been granted
Dissolutions
Extended forecast:
10 mid-30s. Sunday, fair. Lows 2().
by
the
Meigs
County
of
Friday through Sunday:
25. Highs in upper 30s to upper Common Pleas 10 Carol ~ Court
Ann
Ault
40s.
and Dennis Jay Ault;-and Aleshia
Shaulis and Lawrence Shaulis.
Pl.

- -·Area deaths-...........;...

. Carolyn K. Little

Ide Marie Thcker

C~lyn

K. Little, 45, of Mid·
• dleport, died Tuesday, Jan. 26,
; I 993, at the Holzer MediCal Cen·
· ter, Gallipolis, after an extended ill·

• ness.

Born on April 12, 1947, in Rut,
land, she was the daughter of the
: late Roy and Rosie Robertson
Searls. She was a former employee
i of Pinecrest Care Center in Gal, Iipolis and a homemaker.
. , She is survived by her husliand,
Sid Little, three daughters, Theresa
Rider, Rhonda Little, and Cindy
Liulo, all of Middleport; three sis·
ters, Fay Swisher and Anna Mae
• Cumbo of Langsville, and Sharon
· Whiteside of Columbus; four
brothers, Jerry Searls, Bobby
Searls, Jimmy Searls, and Roger
Searls, all of Columbus: three
grandsons and two granddaughters
; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was pre• ceded in death by two sisters and a
· brother.
.
· Funeral services will be beld
Friday at 11 a;m. at the Fisher
. Funeral Home in Middleport with
· the Rev. James Keesee offteiating.
·Burial will be in the Riverview
, Cemetery. Friends may call 'It the
funeral home on Thursday , 110 7
109p.m.

. Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
• were four tickets sold naming all
'five numbers drawn in Tuesday
··night's Buckeye S game, and each
: winning ticket is worth $100,000,
· 'the Ohio Lottery said
. :Pick 3 Numbers
7-1·7
(seven, one, seven)
. Pick 4 Numbers
• 3-5-7-2
.
(three, five, seven, two)
• Buckeye 5
5-6·12-27-33
, (five, six, twelve, twenty-seven,
• thiny·three)
: The jackpot for tonight's Super
. LotiO drawing will be $8 million.

Hospital news

••

Veteraus Memorial
' . TUESDAY ADMISSIONS James Duvall, Reedsville; Gertrude
. Stivers, Pomeroy.
·
TUESDAY DISCHARGES None.

The Daily Sentinel
(UIPB JIUII)
Publiohocl oYerY allomoon, Monday
th....h Frido,y, Ill Court Sl._ ~-·
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paotop polo ol Pameray. Oblo.
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.40

'

Divorces granted
Divorces have been granted by
the Meigs County Court of Com·
mon Pleas to Brian Ritchhart.from
Mary Ritchhart; and to Bonnie J.
Withee from James C. Withee.

Icie Marie Tucker, 77, Can~r
Road, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan.
26, 1993, at her residence.
Born Oct. 14, 1915, in Mason,
W.Va., she was a daughter of the Judpnents awarded
··
late James and Laura Hendricks . A judgment in the amount of
Birchfield. She was a housewife $7,750 luis been awarded 10 Doris
and a member of the Mt. Moriah M. Bailey, special adqlinistrator for
Church of God.
. ~
the estate of Charles P. Bailey,
. She iJ survived by five sons and from Charles E. Bailey by the
daughtezs·in·law, James and Elfrie· 'Meigs County Court of Common
da Tucker, Casaeranda, Ariz., Pleas.
Robert E. and L1llian Tucker,
Home National Bank has been
Danville, Va., Glenn A. and Anna awarded a judgment in the amount
Lee Tucker, Silec City, N.C., Rus· of $43,018.73 from Roger W.
sell and Connie Tucker, Racine, Davis by the Meigs County Coun
Terry L. and Darla Tucker, Racine; of Common Pleas.
a son, ~ G. Tucker, Racine;
five daughters and sons-in-law, Special deputies appointed
Bonni~ and Virgil Walker, ~
Special deputies appointed by
Anna M. and Phillip Wolfe, the Meigs County Court of Com·
Racine, Christina· S. and Gary mon Pleas are: Jane Beegle, James
HiGianan, Winter Garden, Fla., Soulsby, Gregory Scott Jonas,
Rebekah and James Hall, Siler Donald Eugene Dye Jr., Eleanor
City, N.C., and Cynthil\ L. and Logan, Carla Sue Soulsby, Joseph
Michael Capelwt, Siler City, N.C.; Richard Fields Jr., Terry Hawk,
36 grandcMldrert and 32 great· Gary Joe Wolfe, Keith Wood ani!
grandchildren.
David Eugene Huddleston.
Besides ber parents she was pre,
ceded in death by her husband,
Clyde B. Tucker; a son, Gary W.
Ttteker; and e!J.ht sisters.
Services will be Thursday at 1
p.m. at the MI. Moriah Church of
God with Rev. James Satterfield
officiating. Burial will be in Letart
by Bob Hoeflich
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy IOday
(Wednesday) from 6-9 p.m.
If you're a fan of the.Delta
Queen and the Mississippi
Queen-and who among us isn'tthen you're going 10 be interested
in a new addition of the Delta
Queen Steamboat Co.
According 10 a clipping provided by Bob Fisher of Racine, a vetUnits of the Meigs County eran riverman, the coml'any. has
Emergency Medical Services hired the McDermott Sh1pyard at
responded to eight calls for assis· Amelia, La., 10 build a new 420
lance on Tuesday and early passenger overnight paddle-wheel
excursion vessel. Construction will
Wednesday morning.
. On Tuesday at 10:19 a.m. the start next month.
The new boat has been tentaRacine unit went to Canter Run
tively
named the Belle of America
Road for Icie Tuclter.
and
will
be the firm's largest vesAt 5:29 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
sel.
The
Mississippi
queen accom·
unit went to Route 7 for Tony
modates
416
passengers
and the
Jones .who was tranSIKX!ed to Cam·
Delta
Queen,
176.
The
new
vessel
den Clark Memorialllospital
will
have
open
decks
similar
10 the
At 6:18 p.m. the Porileroy unit
Delta
Queen.
It
is
estimated
the
· went to Bast Main Street for
Belle
of
America
will
cost
between
Gertrude Stivers who was taken 10
50 and 60 million dollars .and is
Veterans Melporial Hospital.
The Rutland unit, at 7:28 p.m., expected to be completed in late
went 10 Malone's Run for Daryl 1994. And we hope she comes our
Thomas who was taken 10 Veter· way now and·agaip,

WORKS ON ESTABLISIDNG LOCAL PaONE SERVICE • Officials from four locals towns as .
as representatives from the West Virginia PSC, PUCO, and GTE and C&amp;P Telephone joined at the Mason
City BulldiDg Taesday The group is trying 10 estabUsb Ideal telephone service between tbe West VIrginia
towns or ~ and
Haven; and the Oblo towns of Pomeroy and MiddleporL Pictured above are
. some or those attending, including seated, ten 10 right, Dannie Walker, W.Va. PSC; W.Va. State Senator
Bob Dittmar· Susan Lawson C&amp;P: and Paula Thacker, Meigs Co. Economic Development Oftlce. Stand. ing, .Jen to rlght, Mike Swatis. GTE, MIISOII Mayor George Nichols, Doug Jennings, Attorney Euminer
With PUCO, and.Bob Swoope, C&amp;P.

New

Ohio... Continued rrom page 1
had tried to estimate the cost 10
difficulL ·
"You are less likely 10 gain ap- each C&amp;P and GTE. She stated it
proval since each area has its own would cost approximately $135,000
school district, fire and police each just 10 get the.company lines
departments an.d health services," 10 the river, with an overall projec·
Jennings said. He added a strong ted cost of $600,000 10 $700,000 10
case would have 10 be made to provide full service.
'"These communities are just a
show a community of interest. He
few
miles apart and the state line is
said without the long distance .car·
just
something
that should be overiers provi~ data 10 show just
rcome,"
Walker
said. ''There is now
how much
ing occurs between
a
22-mile
radius
from rate centers
die two areas, it will be hard for the
for
local
calling,
and I think it is
commission 10 vote in favor of the
preposterous
that
neighlxrs can't
. local calling. He also added long
distance carriers are not required 10 call neighbors."
Charlone Jenks, a member of the
f1!1!vide stteh information, but may
Silver Haired Legislature and
1f they so choose.
Jennings also noted the cost in· Mason resident, agreed. She said
volved. Swoope said his only · all parties should remember the
reservation is taking the lines human side of the story, with senior
across the Mason-Pomeroy Bridge. citizens not being able 10 call their
Susan Lawson of C&amp;P added she dociOrs in Ohio without being
charged.
.
Nichols told the group that
everyone attending the meebng is a
community leader who does not
expect things 10 happen overnighL
"We're in this for the long run." he
concluded.
Prior 10 the adjournment of the
meeting, it was axreed 10 proceed
on both sides of the river, with
honor Sunday afternoon at the
American Legion Hall in POmeroy.
Dick's brothers, children, grand·
children and great-grandchildren
Lebanlin Trustees to meet
were OR hand for the telebratjon S(/
The Lebanon Township
there was a good-sized group par· Trustees will meet Friday at 7 p.m.
ticipating.
at the !Ownship building.
.

Beat of the Bend...

Squads respond
to eight calls

ans.

.,

.

At 7:42p.m. the Middleport unit
responded 10 North Third ·Avenue
for James Powell who was taken 10
Veterans. On Wednesday at 12:30
a.m. the unit transported Powell
from Middleport 10 Pleasant valley
Hospital.
·
At 3:03 a.m. the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
David Neualing. He was taken 10
Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit, at 7:57 a.m.,
went 10 Lincoln Street in Middle·
port for Margaretha Wolfe. She
was taken 10 Holzel' MediCal Cen·
ter.

·Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dllcbart-. Ju. U - Ashley
~sher, ~~rt Taylor, Wanda Pol·
mg, Olma Miller, Mrs. Dennis
Pope and son, Kristle Thompson,
Helen Hysell, Sbonda Williams,
Rosie BeiZ, Haldor Albert, Laura
Wins10n.1Regina 1Uatlce, William
S~wart, Memll Nelson, Howard
Caldwell, Amoa Fultz, Taylor
Stepp, Judith Fyo, Danny Willi and
Joseph Evans.
·

-Meigs announcements--

. The economy is allegedly
improved but every day brings
reports of thousands of job layoffs
by big business. Since we all grew
up with Sears, the news of closings
by the company-including the
Iucal s!Ore-was a bit of a shocker.
The arrival of the Sears Chrisunas
Wish Book always caught my
attention ev
ear-1'11 miss that.
ery
Y
won't
you1

Sutton Trustees to meet
The Sut!On Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Final...

HEALTHCARE PACKAGE
EXPANDS

.

You' m1ght want 10 remember
Paul Werner, Lincoln Hill Road,
Pomeroy. Paul is confined 10 the
Holzer Medical Center as the result
of viral pneumonia.
Pomeroy's Richard Vaughan,
Sr., marked his 7Sth birthday and a
family dinner was staged in his

,.
·,
\

Lodge to meet
Tbe regular meeting of the Mid·

dleport Lodge No. 363, F &amp;AM
will meet Tuesday at 7:30
There will be a cornbread and · .
dinner following the meeting. AU
members urged 10 attend.
•

t:i

Marriage licenses Issued
Marriage licenses have been
Dance
planned
·
· county Pro bate
There will be a dance at the Rut- 1ssued by Me1gs
·
Court to Thomas E. Roush, 35,
land
American
Legion
Hall on Sat· M'ddl
,..onnie L. Smith,
d f
'd . h
1 eport, and ....
8
ur ay rl?m p.m ..to ml mg I. · 28, Middleport; and Wilber L:
Mus1c will be pro.v1~e~ by Pure VanCooney, Sl, Racine, and VieJOCountry Band. Poblic mv1ted.
ria Lytln Quillen, 40, Racine.

And the Clinton Administration j"'
made a good move in not proceed·
in!! with attempting to get Zoe
Baird a)lii'Oved as attorney general.
Continued from page 1
It would cenainly have gotten off
10 a bad start had it insisted. Not applications 10 be awarded.
many of us can work up much
All clubs and organizations as
sympathy for a woman who has an well as individuals in the commuincome of a half million a year but nity are encouraged 10 write letters
I recently advised you that May breaks laws in getting child care- of support for the project. Those
Kelly of Middleport was confined cheap child care, that is. And I letters may be sent or dropped off
10 a hospital in Chatleston, W. Va. have a feeling many of us would 10 the mayor's office in Pomeroy as
May has now been moved 10 the have had difficulty in accepting the
as possible.
Pleasant Valley Nursing Center in approval of her appointment as lOP. soon
Anyone
with questions regardPoint Pleasant, W. Va. Cards of legal eagle of our nation, don t ing the revitalization
process are
encouragement will reach her you? So, the system wor.ked for encouraged 10 direct those
calls 10
there. The room number is 109-A.
the
time
being
and
we
can
keep
Stroth's
attention
through
the
And Middleport's Ann Davis _ smiling.
off'tce
at
992-2246.
mayor's
has been returned 10 ber home following five weeks hospitalization
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She obser.ved Christmas, New
Year's and her birthday while con·
fined to the Pomeroy hospital. She
.
sends a big thanks alona for all of
your,suppon and comfort. Sbe was
Administrator Scott Lucas announces the addition
especially pleased on Christmas
of Dr. George A. Kusnir, M.D., to the .medical staff at
Eve when Rev. lames Keesee and
Veterans Memorial- Your Hometown Hospital .
one of his daughters took time from
a busy schedule and family tO visit
Dr. Kusnir is board certified in Internal Medicine
the hospital and even broughtlier a
and board entitled in Nephrology, diseases related to
gift.

Walker saying he would set up .a
public hearing in West Virginia in
the near future. The case is on the
shelf in Ohio for the time being undJ the three pending intrastate eases
are heard, Jennings said. Another
meeting was also discussed foi the
near future, inviting representatives
of the long distance carriers, AT&amp;T,
Sprint, and MCI.
.
Attending were Paulil Thacker of
the Meigs County Economic
Development Office; Middlepon ..
Mayor Fred Hoffman; Charlotte
Jenks; New Haven Councilwoman
Frances Taylor; N"ew Haven
Councilwoman ~arab Gibbs; New
Haven Mayor Kelvin Honaker; Jirh
Cochran, vice-president, Mason
County Area Chamber of Commuce: State Senator Bob Dittmai;
Mason Councilwoman Rosemary
Samsel; Pomeroy Councilman John
Blaettnar; Pomeroy Adniinistra!Or
John A. Anderson; Mason Recorder
Lois Thst: New Haven Recorder
Connie Kaylor; Doug Jennings;
Susan Lawson and Bob Swoope,
C&amp;P Telephone; Mike Swans, GTE
South; Joy Foreman, Wibna Blake
of the Mason Senior Citizens: Dannie Walker; and George Nichols.

the kidneys.
Dr. Kusnir's ·offices are located in the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent t&lt;&gt; Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
For information or an appointment, residents may
call992-7463 or 992-7579.

Buddhism was founded about 52S
B.C., reportedly near Benares, India,
and, its founder was Gautama Siddhattha.

DOWIIIII CIILDS
MUWII MUSSEl

INSIUICE

,•..•"•.'

111 S.C1.. St. P•..Y
1111111 111¥111
IIIIlS COVIn
. . . 1161

�The

sentinel ·

Sports
•
..
'

'

(Continued from l'lae 4)
the end of the fllSt perioil.
· Balanced ICOrln$ WU the key
for the M-suders an the period.
Bentley acored eight points to leld
Meigs in the period, and Cremeans
SCored six of the Marsudtts first 14
points. Other Meigs scorers includ- '
e4 Trevor Harrison with five, Jack
Stanley with four and Todd Dill
with two:
-Nelsonville-York (4·10, 3-9)
started to cbip away at the Marauder lead in the second perio&lt;l and
pulled to within 10 at the 4:4.5 :
mart when Warix drilled another 1
three-'pointer. But Aaron Drummer ·
11nswered that with a three and
Meigs built up a 20-pointlead on
!!ROther Bentley three with I :06 left
m the half. A three-pointer and a
free throw from I ason Gail in the
last seconds of the half cut the
Meigs lead. to 41-2S at intermis-

gon.

IT'S LAYUP TIME for Melp p•d Eric Waper (11), .u he
gets past an unldentlfted NelsoavWe-York player on Ills Wliy to the
hoop during Tuesday night's TVC came at Meigs Hllh School,
where the M.auden won 89-79. Wagner's attempt was Shorfolthe
mark•. (Photo by Dave Harris)

.,

Meigs posts 89-79
triumph over N-Y
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondel!l
Meigs jumped out to a 14.() lesd
and went on to post an 89-79 TriValley Conference victory over
Nelsonville-York Tuesday evening
at Larry R Morrison Gymnasium.
Mefgs (8-7 overall, 8-4 TVC)
jumped on top early, taking the 140 lead on a Jay Cremeans jumper
from the left comer with 4:27 left

in the period. A jumper in the paint
by Jasoo Gail fmally putlhe Buckeyes on the scoreboard with 3:41
left in the quarter.
John Bentley's jumper from
deep in the left comer with 1:21
left in the half gave Meigs a 23-4
advantage. Jeff Warix drained a
long three-pointer with 11 seconds
left to cut the Meigs lead to 25-9 at
(See MARAUDERS oil Page S)

'·'

"

COOK'S WHOLE 114·18-LB. AVG.J SMOKED ..

semi-Boneless

,.,
•

Ravenswood notches
69-49 win over Ea8tern
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Outscoring Eastern 19-8, the
Ravenswood Red Devils broke
away from a 31-23 halftime lead to
defeat the Eagles 69-49 during a
non-league boys' basketball contest
in ."The Pit" at Ravenswood, W.Va
Tuesday evenii!g.
Ravenswood (7-6) was led by
the school's new all-time career
scoring leader in Ryan Varney,
who tallied 26 points. Foreign
exchange student, Josep Perich,
recently at the center of a controversy between the Ravenswood
basketball program and the West
Virginia Board of Control for Secondary Schools, tallied 16. Kenny
Chambers notched II.
C.harlie Bissell led Eastern (2·
II) with 22 points and II
rebounds. The talented sophomore
. postman continues to improve his
play in all aspects of the game, and
like so many times this seasoo led
Eastern with double digit statistics.
Ravenswood led 16-8 after the
fust frame, then after a good quar- .
ter by Eastern ( 15-15) the Red
Devils slipped to a 31-23 lead at
the half. Eastern fell apart in the
third round, slipping to a S0-31
score, before falling a the finish 6949.
Eastern hit 17-44 for 39 percent,
2-5 lhree-poin~ers and was 13-25 at
the line. Ravenswood was 27-55
for 52 percent, was 4-15 from
three-point range and 11-18 over-

aU.

Eastern had 36 reb_ounds, six

assists, eight steals, 17 turnovers
and 19 fouls. Bissell had 11.
Ravenswood had 34 rebounds,
led by Varney with 16, had 17
assists (Hunt with six), 13 steals,
11 turnovers and 2S fouls.
"
Reserves wia fifth straight.
Eastern's reserves won their
fifth straight game, a 47-43 decision over the previously undefeated
(8-0) Red Imps. Ryan Buckley
sealed the victory by hitting both
ends of a bonus with five seconds
remaining in the game. Roger Bissell's Eagles had been down six af
the half and as much as eight in the
third quarter before coming back to
win.
~tern ·was led by Micah Otto .
with 13, Brian Bowen with 12 and
Eric Hi!IIO. Scott Brooks and Matt
Maresca each had 11 . for
Ravenswood.
·
Eastern's reserves are now 6-6.
Eastern hosts Southern Friday at
6:30.

.,

..

~~ Gail led four Buckeyes in .
·double figures with 18, Warix
added 16, Justin Gail 1S and Brjan
WarteD 13..No Oilier' stadStics were
available on Nelsonville.
In the reserve contest Meigs
ODCIIed up a 26-14 lesd at the end
o? the first half and went on to
defeat Nelsonville-York 58-34.
Jason Hart led the way with 14
points, and teamlll8leli Adlm Hendrix and Travis Grate added 10
points for Meigs. Other Meigs
scorers included Jered Hill with
.eight points, Benny Ewing added
seven, Scott Peterson six and Todd
Mitch added three: Richard Coe led
Nelsonville-York with 13 points.
· In other TVC a~:tion Miller
slipped past Vinton County 79-73
in overtime Belpre rolled past Fed·
eral Hocking 85-30 and Wellston
defeated Trimble 78-56. Alexander
was idle.
·
Meigs will travel to BeiJI!C on
Friday evening to tangle With the
front-running Golden Eagles,
While Nelsonville talces the night
off on Friday before traveling to ·
Athens on Saturday.

BUY ONE ·
GET ONE

SA·
L
E
See Store For

·lbs.
GOLDEN RIPE

Dole Bananas

EASTERN
(8-15-8-18=49)
Jeremy Cline 2-1-1=8, Chad
Savoy 0-1-0=3, Pat Newland 0-04=4, Jeremy Buckley 3-0-0=6,
Robert Reed 1-0-3=5, Matt Martin
0-0-1=1, Charlie Bissell 9-0-4=22.
TOTALS -15-2-13=49

we Gladly·

Accef)t Your

Federal FOOd
Stamf)S

'

NELSONVILLE-YORK .
.
(9-16-19-35=79)
Brain Warren S-1-0•13, Jeff
Warix 1-4-2=16, Milte Lewis 1-0- ·
0=2, Jason Gail S-2-2=18, Justin
Gail 6-0-3•15, Mark Wright 2-0·
1=5, Mall Call 1-0-0s2, Benny
Ogg 0-2-2=8. TOTALS- 21-910=79
.
.

RAVENSWOOD
(16-15-19-19=69)
Ryan Varney 10-0-6=26, Brad
Hunt 3-0-2=8, Jason Bailis 1-20=8, Kenny Chambers 5-0-1=11
Josep Perich 4-2-2=16. TOTALS
- 23-4-11=69

Federal Hocking girls record
58-45 victory over Southern
The Federal Hoelting Lancers
defeated Southern-58-45 in a nonleague girls' varsity basketball con. test in Racine.
Lisa Ma.homey .led the winners
with 21 pionts, followed by Alison
Pierson with nine and seven each
by Jenny Kibble, Sara Bentley and
Erin Snedden.
.
Southern was led by Amber
Ohlinger with 11, Aimee Mills
with 10, .Bea Lisle seven, Sherrie
Stover eight, Amy' Weaver four,
two each by Jessika Codner and
Janna Manuel and one by Andrea
Moore.
Southern hit 13-45 for 26 percent, 0-5 three pointers and was 1938 at the line. Federal was 15-55
and 28-51 freom the line for 55
percent.
Southern had 33 rebounds led
· by Codner with nine and Stover
with eight, had 33 fouls, two
assists, 26 turnovers, nine steals
and three blocked shots. ·
Federal had 31 rebounds led by
Pierson with seven and Bennett
with six, while having eight assists,
five steals, three blocks, 26 fouls
and 20 turnovers.
. Federal Hockiaa (58) .
Erm Snedden 2-0-3=7, Alison
Pierson 2.()-5•9, Sarah Bentley 2-

MEIGS

(~16-27-19&gt;;89)

0-3=7, Lisa Mahorncy J.(). J5,;,21 ,
Amanda Gaspers 1.()-0=2 Jenny
Kibble 3-0-1=7, Amy Bennett 0-01=1, Stacy Rogers 2.()-0=4. Totals
-15-0-28=58

--

Southern (45)
Amber Ohlinger 2-0-7=11
Aimee Mills 4-0·2=10, Bea List~
3-0-1=7, Jessika Codner 0-0-2=2
Aridrea Moore 0-0-1= 1, Sherrii
Stover 3·0·2=8, Janna Manuel 0-02=2, Amy Weaver 1-0-2=4. Totals
-13..0·19=45
'

F&lt;()ur-game cagefest
at SUS Saturday .

Jack Stanley 4-0-0=8, Todd Dill
3.0·1=7, Jay"Cremeans 6.()-0=12,
Trevor Harrison 10-1· S•28, Jolin.
Bentley 2-3-4= 17, Aaron Dnlmmer
1-1·0=5, Brad Anderson 1-0-0=2,
Bobby Johnson 2-0-0=4, Kyle
Simpson 3-0-0=6. TOTALS 22·5-10=89

24·Pak ·.

6-oz.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW OR

Lay's Potato Chips

Peps/ Cola ·

&amp;ow Prices. llntl

..

.

FTlOZEN

I.

ASSORTED VARIETIES

TOtinO'S
Pizza

,
fiECULAtn Y

S.l99 LB.

SLICED LB. .. 52. 19

~.N.:Z-oz.

, . Cit,

Hockey
CALGARY, Alberta (AP)Some help from an unexpected
soun:e- and a last-minute vote by
the. NHL' s board of governors kept Detroit coach Bryan Murray
behind the bench for the Red
Wings' !!-1 victcry over Calgary.
Mllf!BJ was susj)ended for 10
games r.&lt;~onday after forwan) Jim
Cumminp left the penalty box during a 12-player brawl in SL Louis
on Sundar. But some last-ditch
fobbying tram Chicago general.
lfiiRI&amp;er Bob Pulford IIIICI ptesidetlt
Bill Wlnz ~ted In ~:-n
voling unan!IIIOIISI)' to
a section of Rule 66(u) which calls for
tbe suspen1ion of a coacb whose
player leave~ the penalty box dur·
1n1111 alterealion. .
.
NBW YORK (APJ - SL Louis
defenscman Garth Butcher was
added to the Clmpbell Coolenmce
team for the NHL AU-Star pme.
He replacea injured teammate.Ieff

Brown.

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&gt;

Racine-Southern High School
will present a four·game boys'
cagefest Saturday,
At 3 p.m. the Southern seventhgraders wil face North Gallia
before the two schools • eighthgrade clubs tate the floor. About
6:30 p.m., Scott Wickline's
reserves will square off against
Miller before the 8 p.m. varsity
game around 8 p.m. Adults can
attend all games for the special
price of $4 an&lt;! students fqr $2.

,

Harrison poured in nine third
period points for Meigs as the
Marauders went on a 27-19 scoring
.._ run to increase· their lead to 68-44
heading into tlie fmal eight minutes. Creme$1s chipped in wilil six
in the period,
NefsonviUe clawed bact into the
cc;mtest in the fourth period by the
way of the three-pointer. The
B ucteyes connected on five bombs
in the period, but were unable to
get any closer than nine points on
two different oa:asions.ln the period Nelsonville had at least five different players score at lesst five
points each. Justin Gail led the way
with nine points, Warix added six
and Brian Warren, Jason Gail and
~Y Ogg aU added five. Harrison
paced the .Marauders with eight in
theperiod.
·
Aarrisoil led Meigs with 28
points, John Bentley continued to
find his scoring touch with 17. Cremeans gave Meigs three players in
double figures with 12. lack Stan1~ added eight points followed by
DiU with seven, Kyle Simpson with
six, Aaron Drummer five, Bobby
Johnson four and Brad Anderson
with iwo. Chris Knight played but
didn't score.
.
The Marauders hit 37 of 74
from the floor for an eve11 50%
. including five of 12 from threepoint range. The Maraudefs made
67% from the line hitting 10 of 15.
Mei~ pulled in 4 7 rebounds
Harrison gmbbing 10, Stanley nine
and Cremeans with eight. Meigs
turned tbe ball over 24 times and
had 12 steals led by Dnimmer with
four. Dill·had three of tbe Marauders 12 usists. Cremeans added five
blocked shots ·to his good overall

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~~~~~· 6 The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

.

Wedne8Ciay, January '0, 1893

Wednesday, Januilry '0, 1893

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

··The Dally sentinel Page 7

In Top 25 aetWn,

MIKE·SELLS

.No. 5 Michigan beats Ohio State 72-62

POTATO

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The·Cougars (11-3, 4-1 Southwest Conference) ran into a
mediocre Texas Tech squad that
refused to miss clutch free throws,
and they made matters worse by
going cold from beyond the 'threepoint line.
·
Lance Hughes scored 27 points
arid Will Flemons made two clutch
free throWs with eight seconds left
for the Red Raiders (9-6, t-4).
·
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TOGE.THEI••••WE• CAN DO IT AGAIN!
Please continue your support of our local
educational system by asking for "McBUCKS at
McDONALD's of
Ripley &amp;
Spencer, WV.
Pomeroy, Oh.

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·skUa .
PARK CITY, ~tab (AP) .Olympic downhill silver medalist
Hilary Lindh, injured in a highspeed spill last weekend in Austria,
will undergo surgery on Friday to
repair knee and ligament damage.
Lindh, 23, ru~ a collateraJ
ligament in her nght knee and also
sustained a slight fracture of the
tibial plare&amp;ll and cartilage damage.
· Dr. Richard Steadman said.

NlNNI!SatA TWINS - Aped to
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half for arping
the officials.
Brown said il was the lint time
he had ever been lOlled.

1

OLE. SOUTHERN .BRAND PA~IES

hit six straight me throws in the
.final I :46 end finished with a
caieer·hi&amp;h 16 poiJds.

I

.-~•beye Steak.................La.

s 1 ~9

$4 99

The Hurricanes (S-10, 3-5 Big
East) hit nine three-point shots,
including four during a 16-0 finthalf run, 8nd Conneclicut (9-S, 4-4
Big East) was unable to get closer
than
in the SeCOnd half.
Teus Tech 71
No. 25 Houston 74
Houston worked all season to
make it into the Top 2S, but it took ·
jQSt one night for lhem to look like

HARRISON HONORED- Trevor lferrl.n- llonored Tues- :
dly Dieht before the 1f11De betwtea Melp IDCI Nellollvllle-York For ·
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Art his latest pilrsuit as a radio talkbecoming Meigs Hl&amp;h School's eD·tinle leldiD&amp; sc:orer. lfllrrlsoa
Schlichter said liis gambling addic- show host.
· broke the record of 1,068 points, previously bid by former
Mlr1uder great Mike CUnce7 (Ciall of '86), in list Jlridl7'1 86-71
lion is reiUnlina eomo payoffs in
The former Ohio State and Indiwin
at Miller. CllaaceJ, e -her of tile Oblo UalvenltJ foolbllll
anapolis Colts quarterback, once
stal'f,
presented the 6.foot·2 sealor wltb tile pme bill from MUter ·
suspended by the NFL for gamthat
Harrison
used tbe break the record. Hurlson seored 28 Ill
bling, has a drive-time weekday
Tuesday's
win
over Nelloll'rille-York to &amp;lve blm 1 tolll or 1,1U .
slot and a Sunday morning show on
polats
ror
his
career.
(Photo by Dave Harris)
.·
Cincinnati station WSAI .
" I hate to say {the gambling)
elevated my knowledge of spons,
Palm~ero
but it reaUy did," Schlichter told
The Indianapolis News.
"When you gamble on sports,
NEW YORK (AP) - Rafael filed are expected to seute before
you pay attention to it. And that Palmeiro agreed on a one-year, hearings are beld
gets you to a point where, even if $4 .55 million contract with tbe
:&gt;outhern Photo'•
you're not gambling on it, you still Texas Rangers, canceling what
rea.d the paper and dissect it the would have been the richest arbisame way," he said.
tration hearing this winter.
Schlichter, released by lhe Colts
Palmeiro, who won $3.85 milOLOR
in 1985, started at WSAI after his lion in an arbitralllr's decisiOn last
PORTRAITS
retirement last summer from · the year, reached agreement Tuesday.
Cincinnati entry in the Arena Foot- The settlement was halfway
•400':'
ball League. Within days after his between the $4.85 million he asked
wt. portal~~ Ott.....
- .....1
irrst show, the station moved him for - the most of any player this
to the 3 to 6 p.m. slot because of winter - and the $4.2S million
the audience's sttong response.
Texas offered.
• Schlichter, 32, said he !ropes
Palmeiro hi.t .268 last season someday to carve out a big-time a 54-point drop from, 1991 ...,. with
position in broadcasting. He and 16 homers end 58 RB!s.
· listeners discuss University of
Two other players settled TuesCincinnati basketball, the Cincin- day, leaving 91 players left in arbinati Bengals, Reds owner Marge tration. Pitcher Milte Maddux and
Schott and other topics.
the New York Mets agreed to ·a
"The format is subtle," said two-year
contract
worth
Schlichter, who takes a softer $2,375,000, and outfielder Kevin
approach that the combative style Reimer and the Milwaukee Brewpracticed by commentators at ers agreed to a one-year contract
WLW across town. "We're not worth $725,000.
trying to make people ffillll."
Maddux, a 31-rear-old right·
l01N. POimWT COUICI1CIN N:WDII:
· Schlichter hit bOttom .with his bander, was 2-2 w1th a 2.37 ERA
2•8X10'1
4·5XT"I 4•3XI'I
gambling habit in 1983 and was and five saves for the Padres last
24 GIANT WALLITS
·suspended from the NFL by then- season, when he made $510,000.
COII,Iminioner Pete Rozelle. After a The new deal calls for $900,000 in
ACICeliiOUMDa: 1111 JIIIAOITM*M. If toi'IIC * MAIOIIM
year of treatment and counselinj!. 1993 and $1.25 rnillion in 1994. He •R&lt;NI'I 11.11 L\CH ADOITIOMAI. - C r
let II •All.. li'OIIf1111111f IWAII.o\M.I
Schlichter rejoined the Colts m had asked for $1.35 million in arbi1984 but failed to develo,P as !K&gt;Jled tration and the Mets had orfered . ,o•••• ...... ()- •••• ,,,.. •••,
when· the club made h1m a 1982 $910,000.
and
fll'St-round pick.
Reimer, 28, was acquired from
Schlichter, who blew most of the Colorado Rockies afler the
his Colts •contract on six-figure expansion draft in November for
100 E. M•i• StNet
gambling losses, still visits weeldy outfielder Dante Bicheue. Reimer
11 Polliloroy
with a specialist in compulsive played for Texas last season, hitWED., FEI. 3, 1993
gambling.
.
ting :2.67 with 16 home runs and S8
"Pe&lt;iple will call in and we'll RBis . He is expected to be the
2:00 , ... 'til 7:00 , ..
talk abOut the wambling) lines, .. Brewers designated hitter in 1993..
"Cwe The Gift. • .
said Schlichter. • It's kind of a runArbitration hearings are schedThat •••
ning joke. People say they'U JllSt uled to begin next week and continGwes AU Year"
pick the opposite of whetllike. '
ue through the flat three weeks of
A show hosted by fonner Reds February. Most of the players who
manager Pete Rose, who was
banned from baseball because of a
similar gambling addiction, follows
Schlichter's program on WSAI ·
from 6 to 8 p.m. The station bills
TOGETHEI •••McDONALD'S &amp;
D011....
Schlichter and Rose as "the daily
double."
oror $6200 to local sclloolgroupsl• 1992!

L

REG. $2.49.SIZE

US~A CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

short hoot shots.

Schlichter cashing in on. past.
~=~~j~~s::=::, . l=..~~~w~u;::~ as host of two radio talk shows

R

298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY. CH.
.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., Jill. 24 thru liN. 30, 1993

That' s why Michigan coach
Steve Fashec wasn'ttoo upeet tbat
his fifth-l'llllked Wolverines almost
blew 1 19-point lead in the ICCOIId
half in a 72-62 win Tueadly over
Ohio Stale.
The Budtcyes cut the deficit to
four .points with 1:1l remllining,
but tbe Wolverines scored the
&amp;ame'slastsixpolRts.
. . "I'm not diSilJibcd at all," FISher said. "I'm proud. The thing 1
.likeil is tlw we wen: able to turn
the dde and get that victmy. You
see that all the time. This is e game
of swings, and you see teams that
Can't bold them off.
" ''I'll take IllY Chances with a 19·
point lead any time."
It WliS Rob PeJinka wbo finally
took charge for tb~ Wolveri~es
(16-2 ovetaU. S-1 B11 Ten). Pelin-

A

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8 AM-10 PM

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The Buckeyes (9-6, 2-4) trailed
It was the worst lois furLSU
43-24 e.ly in the second balf, but (13-S, 3-3) since falling 1Q0.62 to
baskets by Greg Simpson, - Auburn in the 19(16..87 season, and
Lawrence Fundc:rbwke and Jamie Kentucky's biggest SEC victory
Skelton cut it to 43 ,31 and the since beating Florida 102-48 In
chase was on.
·
1980-81. '
·
·.
A three-pointer by Derek
No.7 Duke 117
Anderson off a turnover by Chris
. San Fr1~ 73
Webber cut the Wol~ lead to
At Durham, N.C., Bobby Hurley
66-62 with l:llleA, but the Bud- keyed en 18-2 fli'St-halfrun, Cheroeyes never sand again. Mlchipn kee Parks had a carcer-bill:h 21
got two free throws from Juwan points·and Duke placed seven play~
Howard, a jam from Webber and ers in .double f1gurcs to post an
two free throws from Pelinka to easy wm.
.
finisboutthe.sccrin..
The·Btue Dev1ls (14-3) shot
.In other sames Til the Top 25, 62,5~nt in banding the Dons
No. 4 Kentucky routed LSU lOS· (12·7) their wprst loss of the sea67, No. 7 Duke aushed San Fran- son.
ciscclll7·73,Miami topped No. 22 Milml ~· N.o.lZ Coanectlcu165
Connecticut 80-65 ancfteus TIICh . At M!Bm•, sophomore cen.tcr
downed No. 2S Houston 78-74 ·
Constanlin Popa had a career-high
No.4 Kenhldy 105,LSU 67
21 po!"ts and added 12 ~bolll!ds
At Lexingtoo, Ky., Jamal Masb- a!'d f1ve blocks. Sbooung With
bum scored 27 points and the Keil- e1thcr hand, tb.e 7;foot-3 Popa
. tucky defense fon:cd 29 turnovers scored five of his nme baskets on
as the Wildcets (14-1 •. 5-1 S~C)
coasted to a JOS-67 v1ctory 1n a
.

Q

•

B7 HARRY ATKINS
' ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)B•Jrrtbell is e aa- of swm,s and
spurts., and the good teams .survive

l~ '

$3.00 Miu. Purchau.
lltrmypo !J/31/93

�The Dal!y Sentlne~ge

By,-Tbe Bend

The Daily .Sentinel
Wednesday, January 'Z7, 1993
Page-8

.

AND TilE WINNER IS • Sbiii'OD Smith of
· ·&amp;eecb Grove, RutlaDd, will tbe winner of a 52
Mapovu bi&amp; streen television set in a c:on. test wbkb took place at tile Rutland Furniture
•

: :luc:b

: Co. Tuesday. Tbe winner's name was selected
: by Rutland Marshal Ben Davidson from the
: lbousaads of tickets placed in a rotatin2 dnm.

· Customers siped tickets in both the Rutland
store and Rutlanc! Home Furnishings at The
Plsins. Purchases were not required to enter.
Here BiU Coy, manager _
or The Plains store, left,
and David Grate of tbe Rutland store look on IS
Davidson picks tbe winner.

.·.

;~&amp;WCD

essay contest
)opic
is
announced
..

Reedsville
personals

.

yOur benefits.
Disability claims take longer to
process because an individualized
medical •valuation is needed. You
may be able to speed up tbe process. by bringing copies of y,our
medical records with you whel! yotl
apply and the names, addresses,
and phone numbers of all ~tors,
hospitals, and clinics that have
treated you. Even if you don't have
all the ~ocuments you ':leed for
your clatm, ~u should still me as
soon as pos&amp;lble:
. If Y9U kno~ m advance that you
will be applym~ for benefits, you
should call S~18l Security ahead
of time to request the appropriate
booklet for your type of'Claim. The
information rou receive may save
you a lot o time and make the
ci1im~ process seem much less
complicated.
For more information, call
Social Security's toll-free number,
1-800,772-1213, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
business days, or call or visit the
Athens Social Security ·office at
221 l{l N. Columbus Rd. (phone
592-4448).

Days

When you apply for Social
Security benefits, you should~
by obtaining IS much informauon
as you can about the_particular type
of c.laim you're filhig . You may
obtain free publications about each
of the major Social Security programs, Retirement, Disability, Sur- .
vivors, and Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), br calling or visiting
the Athens Social Security office.
We also provide a free booklet
about Medicare.
DARCI BISSELL
These booklets explain the programs and what you'll need to have
available when you apply for benefits .
Generplly, filing for Social
Security retirement or survivor
benefits is a siinple process. You
can usually provide the application
information for a c~m by JliK!ne.
A · birthday party was held
The completed application IS then
recently
in observance of the .ftrSt
. mailed to you for verification, sig·
birthday
of
Darei Ann Bissell a.t the
nature, and return to our office for
home of her pareDIS, Brian and Jodi
processing. Your binh certificate,
BisseD. '
proof of recent wages, 111\d other
A Big Bird theme was carried
documents (depending on the type
out.
of claim) will be needed at this .On
Attending were Doug, Carolyn,
stage. You may bring the original
Matthew and Tim Bissell, Penny
·documents to our office; where
Six Meigs County students Aeiker, Jenny Reynolds, Sandy,
they will be photocopied and
anending Ohio State University as Tommy, Sylvia and Georg~
~turned to you. Or, you can mail
· McDonald, Kevin Shadra, Anna
them to the office and the same undergraduates were named to the and A:es Jenkins, Missy ·Bun:hett..
honor 1011 for the autumn quarter.
procedure wiD be foUowed.
Maldng
a grade point average of at Mark and Connie Smith. Dale
In a few weeks, you'll be notiThelma Smith, Willard and Jean
fied by mail of your Social Security least 3.5 were Andrea Leigh Cle- Davis.
·
;
monthly benefit amount and the land, Long Bottom, Walter Edward
Sending
gifts
were
John,
Teresa,
date it will begin. You'll also Crooks, Middlepon; Nicola Dawn Brandon and Melissa Smith, Albett
receive a•Social Security booklet Pickens, Pomeroy; Carol Lynn and Sue Pooler, Julee, Ed ancj
explaining your rights and respon· Fisher, Racine; David Eugene Rice, Amanda Young and Melvin and
sibilities as a beneficiary and how Reedsville, and Tamara Lynne Olive Smith.
to report changes that may affect Theiss, Syracuse.

Darci Bissell
observes first
birthday

1

3

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Poper
Tuooday Poper
W..m.loy Poper
Thundly Paper
Friday Poper

Call992-2156
MoN. tbru Fa1. 8A.Ir.-5i'.M•• S.t'r.B-12

CLosED SuNDAY
• Ado- .... _.,.,.... "" ........ ~oo propold
• .~.. dlooo... ,.,. """ paid Ia od..-.
• F_ ,y,, Ci-wayudFOOOIICiodouodor15-nlo..Wioo

Gllllla County

• Prieo o1 od for al u.pitolloaon lo daublo priDe of od -•
• 7 pobd
ooly uod
• s..- .. - ............. for on&lt;on ollor r - cloy (~k
"'• onorollnt day ad ....,Ia popor). Calloolero J:IMI p.,;,.
cla7 Jt. paWk·dx • ..U oou.e~Ma
• Ado ........... pold .. . . t -....
Card r1 n...u
Bappr Ado

llrio.,..

$.20
$.30

$ .42

I I I: I I , I 1'1'

$ .60

Rates are for tolllllCUtive runs, broken up days wiD be
charged for each day as eeparate ad1.

,._..,,

ploood lo the Colllpollo n.tJ,
T...._ (...... Clooolllod Dloplay, B•.._ Card ori.pl
N•-) will oloo .,....Ia the Pobtt-1 B...... ud
lloo Doit,-S..IIoool, ...w..o-11,000 ..._
I

458 ' • •

381-Yblloo

985 0., rtnr

$'76 •• , I I

:MS..... Grad&amp;
256-G.ru llloL

843-Pc&gt;l'llaod

7711-11. . .
182-N...
895 • .., ....
937-B.Irolo

u...

247-'-'tFolo

""-•·-

Ml b H• DML.
379-'I'.W.

G......

742........... .
667-Caohilo

:!3- r .... for Solo

u-k

a., a c....

34---B'l!LI ...

U- Lou A " " -

SoodAF-

:----~ 36- a-J Eotalll 'l'utod

Aa.,. for Solo .

T...... lor!lolo

41-a-forllool
41-llol.llo u- for Roat

v... A4Wil'o

Mo......,..... '
a..t.AMo-forSalo

4$--F.... ,.,rROIII
~Aport-.tfor R-

-

2-la.M-ry
67~-

992-111~

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

Sl-llot.llo ' a - "'• Solo .

Melp Coaaty MMDD Co., WV

446-Gollpolo
S67A ''ire

1I '

,\ I I \ I ' : I &gt;t I'

$.05/day

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

YudSoloo

BULLETIN
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

and

SHRUB &amp; TREE
, TRIM and ·
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

JUNiORS "Class of 1994'
Studio Armassador MODELS
Wanted from All
Area High Schools.
For An Application Call:
PUTN~.Y P.HOTOGRAPHY

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

(304) 676-2387

3.-.Au•nie
-•·
4-GI-way
5Ado
6-Lootoad Fouad
7-Loot.,.d Fouad
1-l'laWic Sol. A
Aaetioa
!I- ... utod .. a..,

JJ-Jielp.' l ' 13- Sttaotlo• 'l'aatod
13-1-

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

a.,,.

Auto P.rto

F\onloiHd " Spuo for~-·

a .t.....ri-il

Au10 llopolr
C..P!Dc &amp;pi,_..

47- Wulod .. a...
4$-- Eqoi,...t lor R...t

1 4 , - - Trolaillc

ll&gt;-S...... AJ-...-

16- ~.TV a CB Repair
17-Mir 'h""111
11- Waalod To Do

sz- S,rbs Gootlo
53-AailquM

~- llooclooodioe

Sl&gt;- a.r~LBnc s.,p~~eo

PiCKENS

·HARDWARE

Golden Rule
Class has
meeting

PLUMBING

·; a

F&amp;A TREE ·sERVICE
Topping, Trimming,
Removal

31904 Leading
Creek load
llillllleport, Ohio
614-992·7144

Roaonable lima
Fully lnoured
742-2360

HAULING
Kristi

LIMESTONE,

Look Who~ ·
24!

GRAVEL ' COAL
Reasonaltle Rates

From lhe gang at
tM Middleport

JOE N. SAYRE

L_..:!.=:~J.S~Io~~::!:e:!J!

5

SAYRE TRUCKING

Ads

614-742-21
UCINE GUN

Heavens
Tlu!se Twins

CLUB

GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS .

Are 27!
Love, Audry
&amp;GirU

H&amp;R 'BLOCK

..

~

I

'•

EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

Speclai _Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thlo ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 00$1·32

ILLI!IIIIS
lrl"1-/t Ia Or We

lEN'S 1~JtiANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
915-3561

........_ •• ,om.• .
217LS.C.... St.
POMEROY, OHIO

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK ·
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

316/90/lfn

6181'92/1

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
COIISTRUCTION
•NewHoMeJ
•Gar•
•Co111p te .

FOREVER
BRONZE

mo.

MicheUe

a:•

leinodeliag

stor. &amp; c:zare
f lElSY

E~

985·4473
667·6179

~tt. ~hoe &amp;.

~~r:..:o

TANNING
B11h•n ••·• Racine
Swltlh~~rt SpHlal
14 SESSIOIS- 114
Llmll2 Per

Leat.;e

~~
~1

Shoe

Qualit_y
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637 ·
St. II. 7
C.ts.ire, OH.

WOLFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING
elncome Tax Prep••tion

-Bookkuplng
•Payroll

SERVING INDIVIDUALS
ond BUSINESSES

QPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUt&gt;E ONLY
FACTOR" CHOKE

113Y. W. SECOND ST.

PGMI!ROY, OH. 45769

.....,

CAirovo lelf WlirHr
~-

992·6193

Rspalr .
HOURS .·

Sunaav · Monda y - Cl o sect
·
TUesday - Wednesday- F rida y - 9 : 30a.m .. S: JQ o .m .

Thu rsda y ' Sa1urday - 10:00 a.m . . J,: o o· p .m .

20

104 Mulberry A venue
Pomerov . OH 45769

1127JD3

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOLIDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.

614-992-7523.

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

CLUB·

Snodgrass Upholstery

SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON

"Helping You To Recover Your lnileslment'' .
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only
11).111-92

YOUNG'S

UCINE,OHIO

614·949·2202

·. 6·4-742·2996

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

CARPENTER SERVICE

NliiW Homes • VInyl Siding

•.
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
·

Ackltlone
-Gu-Work
-Eiectrlcol and Plumbing
-RooII,.
-lnt.rlor &amp; ExllriOJ
ADOIII

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Polndt\

(FREE

~

FREE ESTIMATES

TIMATES)

614-949·2101. 949·2160 .
or 915·3139

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9924215

(No s.Mitty Cilia)

P-ay,OIIio

2112192/lfn

9-1 D-92-lfn

OFFICE 992·2886 ·

205 North Second

992·2259

' NEW UITINQ • Syracu. . - 1988 modular with 4 bad·
roomo, 2 bath1, FANG haa~ - g , s1orage building,
.centlll oir. $47.~.
.

REEDSVILLE - 1 floor block home with 2 badraom1, 1
bath, ono cer garago, pnxluco ~ng, llNlr ocrMned
poidl, on .8051 OCN. Affordably prloed II $18,000.

MIOOLEPORT - Powoll StrOll- 2 ono acr. lotslo&lt;:aled
In a nl.. neighborhood with cily wator 1nd oewage available. Could bll uood for yoor draam houN. BUY ONE
LOT FOR $7,000.00
or both lor only $12,000.00.

.1UPPERI i&gt;L.AINS - 2 siOry home 3-4 badiOOIIIt, 1
bath, 11u had oomo •modolinel complelld. 2
ba~ chandoliora, 1+ acl8 with t.nced back yard.

n,...,._.,

LANOIVILLE - You'llloYo 10 come homo io i81ox In tha
ex&gt;unll)i In 1111 2 bedroom nrnch with lqulplled kllchon all
ollling on 13 ..,..1. II you onjoy hunting lhlolo 1M p1aoo
lor you.
$42,800.00
RUTLAND- A Cof!* Buo"""o- Opened 3 v-ta ogo,
but II doing a thriving buolnooo. Everylhing you need to
operall a video Nnlll, oolt .. , . loo ......,, hot dogo,
ole. 1hl bu'"- ccmeo with .,. building, opprox. 2300
. 'ou,..,l vldtol, VCR'1, Nlnlondo gem•, 2 let c,....,
moohlnoo, and much mo... Lock. Stock, ll1d a.n-1.
ONLYS 116,000.00

.

IALI!M 10WNMP - Boautilul bllc:k ..nch home with 3
badio0ri1o, 2ll batho, till8ci1ed 2 cor - · luH finlohod ·
. b a - ' . at1ic 11p101, ftNp-. applianco1, bamo,
pond, flnolntl. extJa nllar hook-up on 22+ aero. Hollltop
· iblld. Centnil loadml llflPRJX. 30 min. hom G..poio,
Ponoeii!Y, lack- I Alhlno. t13e,600 (may oaal).

WI! N1!D IJ81IIGS OF ALL IHAPEI I IIZEI FROM
. IVERY /11/eA Of liiiGI COUNTYIIF YOU WANT TO
. IELLCIVI!UIACALL.. WE'LL GEt YOU REIULTSI

..111.-.

IRIIIDA "I!PP
---·"···-····.......
'DARLIIIITIWART..-··-··-·"·- -·-MI.esal

OFACL------·-----••a••
)I

I

'

SERVICE

Life • Medicare.• Cancer • Fire • Health •

36970 Ball R1a RIIIKI
Pomeroy, o•Jo

SIZED . LIMESTONE

992·3470
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or
1·100.137-1460
LawnUa hi1J 1
F-Iling, W~ .,d

.........

lllvub and T- Trimming

a "-novot
Ptt11 .... &amp; Cali..,...,.l
FrM Elllmii:M

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

',

·Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C~U. • Agent
Bo• 189
Mi.dleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 143·5264 1120193/lfn
HELP THE EffOIT TO IUILD A PROSPEROUS
FUTUIE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUI ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOR
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 to 6 ACRES Of RElATIVELY FLAT lAND:'
(I) Ne - · tJ. 61f, tAl I II .........
12) Willi s-r (3) Alii . ..
PHOIE: PattJ er by 'idle••
tU-4231 • Pwtly's

..._e:
TROUEY STAnON CRAFTS
992·2Mt

HAULING

POOR BOY TIRES

FLIDID WORI

liASOII, WV. lcreu tn. ... PedIIR11
· We S..chtiiHII
11m· Al......tl •·IDwda

LOI UUUH,
LIM.I,er
In State or Out'
Of State.

S &amp;L

DCm1ll TURN\':i._........... - .......- ...Cift . .1

lANDY IU'R:HIIL.~------...tiNI71
.tiiiiY 8PRAIIj.lt0..---•·--..(104JIIN411

I~

HAULING

AMERICAN ~ENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

WICK'S

12/J1/92Jtfn

RACINE - BASHAN ROAD - Thia threa bedroom , 2
bath home naec1t wolf&lt; but could bll made nica wilh the
· ~I toendyman'o 1ouch. It sits on a linlo over an acre.
Hu olantaolic viow oltho counlrysido.
$17,000.00

NEW UaTINO - I'Gmoroy - 1 floor fNmo horne with 3
beclroOmo, 1 bath, lull finiohod baaamont on lol of
100X160. ASKING $10,000.

V.JY pNI!y homtl $40,900..

A~•-

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- App10x. 7 acl8s of vacant land.
Mosl io.hay land and has a g18al'buikling alto . W.ler and
eloctric available . Owner will finance with reuonabla
down poymant
$1 o,soo.oo

$48,900.

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
ALL HARDWOOD
~ Seasoned
40.00 a Load
'
. Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

Middlaport, OH

REDUCED - Bpi~ Ioyer home I6Cel8d near Albany, 4
bediDOll11, 2.blltho, garage, appliances, baoamenllwoik·
llhop, INK . liMo, shad on 8.35 aCID. NOW ASKING

to~~~

111241'9211fn

1:00 P.M.

PLACE: Big Bend Health and Fitness
. Mechanic St., Pomeroy
DURATION: 8 Weeks .
&amp; Wed. 6·7 p.m;

I
I

EVERY THURSDAY

10/11112

=:::::==:==::==:==:==:====:::===::==::;:=:=:::=:;:::::;::i::: .

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

(614)
667·6628
. .·

El~!.'!lllni

Community calendar

Wedaesday,

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
BINGO,

DIET .CLASS

l.st

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING .

"

.: Potluck supper
jfeatures grange meet

r

6
10
Monthly

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

Claaified page• Cotler the
!mz-inB eelephoM e%clumge....

.... s ...,. ............

• A clooollW od••ll .

DAYBERlRI!PUBLICATION ·
1:00 P.lft. Wurday
1:00 p.m. Mcmday
1:00 p.m. n..1ay
1:00 p.111. Weclnooday
lOOp.~~~. Thunday
l:OOp.m. Prldoy

Sun4lry Poper

POUCif.S

Family
Medicine

I

15
15
15
15
15

Over 15 Words

Rate

Words

osu honor roll

Recent visitors of Mrs. Ada
Congrove
were Mrs. Grace Daw·
: · The 1993 Conservation Essay second place and $10 10 third
son,
daughter
and granddaughter
· Contest co-sponsol'ed by the Ohio place. In addition, tbe first place
Ohio University
SandyviDe,
w.va;
Pam and Angie
"Federation of SOil and Water Con- · winner will be sent on to the area
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Tuppers Plains; and Forest
. lervation Distrkts and the Meigs level for judging where ftrst place Chaney,
Kibble.
·
•
· Soil and WaJJ:r Conservation Dis- is $200. From there the winner will
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Martin,
: tin:t is being 811l10unced.
go to the state level for judging
Columbus,
visited with his parents
. Tbe 1993 topic is ''Who pays for where first place is $300.
:Pollution?." It is for students in
The deadline for submitting Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin and
•
grades 9-12 all over the state of eSsays for this contest is March 1 to Matthew. .
Sarah Fry_drnan ~r Washington,
Ohio.
the MSWCD. Further information
J;&gt;.C.,
spent lier holiday break witb
Tbe entries must be typed. don· may be obtained by checking with·
her
grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs.
ble spaced Entries should not be your local English teacher, guidJohn C. Wolf, D.O.
Ernest
Wh1tehead.
Also
visiting a.t
less than two nor mor than three ance counselor, high school princiAssociate Professor
pages in length, singled sided, on pal or the MSWCD office at 992- the Whitehend home were grandof Family Medjcine
standard letter size paper.
664 7 or stop by the MSWCD children, Lisa Hensch, Canal Fulton, and Eddie and Matthew Hen· Tbe MSWCD wilt give a $50 Office at 33101 Hiland Road, sch,
Question; -The last time I went small degree of BS!igmatis!Jl (about
Canton.
.
savings bond to. the fltSI place win· Pomeroy.
to
the
eye doctor I was given a pre- 0.50 diopters) produces eye disGarrel Chevalier, Fredericksner in Meigs County; $15 to the
scription
for glasses for the first comfort in as litlle'as 25 mmutes-of
burg, spent a weekend with his
time.
I
had
noticed that thin(!S in work on the compute{. This level
mother, Mrs. Lona Chevalier.
the
distance
seemed to be geumg a , of astigmatism isn't strong enough
Kathryn Dietz, Belpre; spent a
little
blurry.
so I'in not surprised to interfere with ·visual acuity, but
weekend with Lillian Pickens.
·
that
the
doctor
said I needed glass- it is enough to cause eye strain.
The quick, MaY WIIJ to .cof.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise visited
es.
Your astigmatism is probably at
with Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Poster of
orful decorating achemea
What surprised me was that he least 0.50 diopters, so your glasses
Belpre.
without ob)ectlonllble pillnt
said
1 still have 20/20 vision but will also help prevent eye strain
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
.
odora.
For alllnt.rtor w.lla.
that my blurred vision is caused by when you are doing close work,
· Approximately 41 people Youth Group are subordinate Lyle Balderson were Mr. and Mrs
w.-ahule.
: enjoyed the recent potluck supper grange members between the ages Bill Dietz and Katy, Columbus; an astigmatism. Could you exJ!Iain such as looking at a computer
what
astigmatism
is
and
how
one
screen, as weD as clear up the blur: and fun night activities of Star of 14 and 40. Further information and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Long and
could
have
this
problem
and
still
Counney,
Vincent.
riness
of distant objects.
· Grange held recently at the grange may be obtained by calling Pi!IIY .
have
20/W
vision?
"Family
Medicme" is a weekly
; hall.
Dyer at 446-3575 or Opal Dyer at
Answer:
The
curved
transparent
column.
To
submit questions, write
: A meelinl! was set for ·Saturday 742-2805 . .
surface
of
the
front
of
the
eye,
the
to
John
C.
Wolf,
D.O., Ohio Uni·
• for the Me1gs County Gran~e
The next meeting of Star Grange
cornea,
and
the
lens
inside
the
eye
versitr
College
of Osteopathic
: Youth Group. It will begin ·vnth will be Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.m. at the
together
are
responsible
for
focusMedicme. Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
W.VA.
· supper at Ponderosa in Gallipolis at ~nge halL Refreshments following the incoming light onto the reti- Ohio45701.
•
·
6:30 p.m. and continue with a busi- mg the meeting include soup to
na, the light sensitive structure in
: ness meeting at Patty Dyer's resi- which everyone is to contribute.
the back_of the eye that sends visu·
.dence at 8 p.m. Members eligible ingredients.
a1
signals to the brain. The curva; for the Meigs County Grange
ture of the cornea does most of the
Several projects were discussed focusing while the lens contributes
at the recent meeting of the Golden the fine adjusunents that are necesRule Sunday School Class of the sary to focus on things up cl09e. In
~ The most effec.t ive way to decr"se body
First Baptist Church of MiddleporL
the common visual problem known
fat and improve health is through a combl·
Dinner at Crow's preceded the as ~gmatism, whicb affects about
meeting hefd at .the home of 17 percent of tbe population, the
nation of diet and exercise. This class conCommunity Calendar items • at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Lawrence and Barbara Eblin.
light coming into the eye is not
sists of ~oth a diet plan .and exercise pro·
:appear two days before an eveot Call992-5763 for infonnation.
Marjorie Walburn presided at focused perfectly. This occurs
•and the day of tbat event. Items
the meeting. Jean Thomas had because of a problem with the cur·
gram that is fun and effective.
:must be received weD in advance . MIDDLEPORT • Meigs County devotions from "Our Daily Bread" vature of the cornea.
' to assure publication in the cal· Women's Fellowship will meet entitled "The Friendly Skies of
To understand astigmatism you
endar.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mid- Faith."
need to imagine a clock face paint- r
dleport Church of Christ. Mary
Active visitation will be a pro· ed on a magnifying glass. The Jane
Wise
will
be
the
guest
speakject
of the group for the year. .
WEDNESDAY
stren~th of ~ normal magnifying
er.
Public
invited.
MaMing
and June Kloes were glass IS the same no mauer through
· ·. LETART • There will be a
complimented on a "job weU done" which part of the glass you look. In
:meeting of Letart Elementary PI'O
on the Christmas tree ,which they astigmatism tbe magnification is
POMEROY
·
Free
clothing
day
·on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Letart
constructed
for display in the greater along one· axis of the clock
wiU
be
held
at
the
Salvation
Army
:Elementary for all Ponland and
~ERINGS:_ Mon.
church
sanctuary.
in
Pomeroy
on
Thursday
from
10
.Letart parents regarding the consolface,
such
as
from
one
o'clock
to
Several names were plsced on · six o'clock. So, when an individual
a.m. to noon. All area residents in
COst: $99 (llcWas 8 Weelaxerdse ......,..,
idation.
need of clothing are welcome.
the prayer list. .
has an astigmatism, part of the
Y11 CGI pay as yoa gol
prayer by John Riebel closed image projected onto die retina can
RACINE • Southern Local
'
POMEROY • A Sugar Run the meeting.
:school Board wiD meet WednesCall992·2849 for detaHs.
be in sharp focus. but not all of it at
A surprise birthday cake was the
School meeting will be held by the
:day 817 p.m. at the high schooL
same
time.
This occurs because
Meigs County Park District at 6:30 presented to Barbara Eblin. Cake, the lens is not able to com~nsate
Meeting:
Jan. ~7th at 6:00p.m.
p.m. Thursday at Trinity Church.
1ce Cl'C8111, pie, cooties and bever- for the focusing error caused by the
. THURSDAY ages were served by the Eblin's to
REEDSVILLE • The Riverview
shape of the cornea MIDDLEPORT· The Meigs John and Marilyn Fultz, Donna imperfect
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
the
astigmatism.
;7:30 p.m. at tbe home of Gladys Local OAPSE Chapter will meet Grinstead, Manning and June
The process of vision is rather
•Thomas. Co-hostesses will be Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior Kloes, John and Glenna Riebel, complex. I've l8lked about some of
:Grace Weber and Frances Reed. High School in MiddleporL
Jean Thomas, Dale and Marjorie the workings of tbe eyes; but the
·
•
WHAT IS THE EARNED INCOME
I
Walburn, Rev. James Seddon and brain is also an important part of
;Marilyn Han~um and Ruth Anne
CREDIT AND HOW DO I
.
·Balderson wlll present the pro-'
THURSDAY • The Tuppers Sharon.
DUAUFY FOil IT?
the visual process. The brain
The next meeting will be Feb. receives information from the eye
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
:gram.
The ••rnH Jncome credll 11 ~
de1lgned to lielp lower-Income
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. a.t the 18 at HoDy Hill Inn.
in the form of nerve im~ and
I
working Amerlcena. In recent yeare
; RACINE • The Racine Ameri- post home. All members are urged
processes
them into the 11118/1CS we
h crMit ho1- lnc,..ood and lho ,
, can Auxiliary will meet Thursday toallend.
Prom dress exchange
requlrementa for olelmlng II hiYt
call vision. In your case the utig•at 7 p.m. at the post home in
Qhangld,
.IOO.
I
TUPPERS l&gt;LAINS - A prom matism is not hindered by other
:Racine.
FRIDAY
Vou
"'"'
qu1llly
lor
the
oornod
•
exchange will be sponsored vision problems, and Ibis mikes it
INomo ci'MIIII YOIII odjUIIod II'Dh :
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- dress
by
the
ladies auxiliary of the Tup- possible for your brain to 1atber
lnoai'M and . .ned lnoome tor 1112
; .POMEROY' · RecenUication pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
sufficient infotm11tion to lot you ·
. .,. lu1 lhon 112,81'0 IIIICI you lllrocl
:cia*&amp; for c~~~m~tly !iceOied peiti- Ladies Auxiliary wiD hold a round pezs ·Plains VFW Post 9053 on Feb. idenlify lhe !etten on the %J(1J) line
0110 ol1110111 Clllllllyt,. olllchn In
the post home.
h · Mnll hOlM In, lho United ltltaa
cide appiicalcln will be held • the and square dance Friday from 8- 6 atCheck-in
time for dresses will of the eye chart even dlou8h all of
lor....,. hn 1 1 x - or 1M,..,
Meigs'County Senior Citizens Cen- 11:30 p.m. Muaic will be by Herthe letters aron 't in c_r_isp_ focua.
be
9·11
am.
and
a$}
fee
per
dreiS
(tho onllre ,.., II llo qullllyt,. child
ter on Tbunday from 1-4 p.m. and
itage Express. Everyone is wel- ·wiD be charged. lf a dreaa il sold This is Why you have 20I1ll vision
. ,
II your laollr ahlkll.
come.
:7-10 p.m:
Tho olorocll to which \'IIU
the owner keeps the money. All and ltll1 haVt tho mUc! blurring in
1111iH d II lrellod II I DjAIW,lmllllll111 of Ill lhll will l'ftWidl )'1111 with 0 '-lor
'
your dillllll vi1ion.
sizes
are
needed
Dreaes
mllll
be
........... _ofiU)'IIU wouldollorwiN ....
: POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
, SATURDAY
1picked up by 5 p.m. on tho clay d
· Bven a relalively IIIIIIIIIIIKiunl refund
Wlwi4UW
yau hMM . . . . . . IIINiul how lhe 1MN ..,.., your relurn aall
·Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
POMEROY • The Belles and
locol Hill lloak alfloo. yet, IIGfl by lho OM nNNII you. Wo•:. ho'!:"'to
of
aligmaliln:l
can
eye
lllrBin
:the
sale
unless
other
111W1plllelltl
,Sorority wiD meet Tbllfl(lay at 6 . Beaus Square Dance Club will
hllpyou.
.
in
IOIDCIIilulllonl.
Your
blurring
of
are made. Accesloriel wiD llao be
p.m. at the home of Eleanor sponsor a half-way dance Slllllnlay •accepted.
A dreuing area wiD be . dilllllt vllion Is 8 aood -pic of '1
l'hom8L There will be a 110up sup- . from 8-11 p.m. a.t the Senior Ciuaviilable
u well u someone to thil. Aoodlet COmmon uemp1e Is
zens Center in Pomeroy. Billy
pet.
eye 1tr11a from lnotlna at !:OIIIJIU!·
care of minor alterllions.
Gene Evans wUI be the caller. takeFurther
,
information may be cr screena. Accordina to recenl
· POMEROY • Pomeroy Group: Western style dancers invited . · obtained by calling
resean:b
llone
at
lhe
Univeniiy
of
6111AST
lUll
992
..
6674
POMEROY
Merrilee Bryant
:cif AA will meet Thursday 817 p.m. Rel'realunents.
Alabama School of Optometry, a · .__.._~-------..;;;.;;...._..;..;;.,;;;;;:;:.:.,:-'
. a.t 985-3376.
. .

.

.

•The Area's Number I
·Marke

•

Your Social s·ecuritv

By ED PETERSON
Social Seeurlty
Manager in Atbens

8

TRUCKING

9

Check our PriCe or We Balla I.-

3rtl .LOCATIOI TO 111ft J01 •1111

�1:7,1993
1:7 1993
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

-·E :M-.......
... - . -

1

!!1111' ICE;

•••asn Oldlr ..._
-f:n-~-~
~~--- ~

...,.

...

.....
...

._. 1

Two bid-· - - . .......
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· Glvaaway

4

..,.~.,.

42 Mobile Hom81

3 pullllloo: por1 eo.p, 10 '""'·
old. bl-245-tiJI.
I llonlh Old WMo Spitz

for Rent
11R

~ .a

,.,.._,

Ralscww Re.;lred. No Pelt..

F_..,l14-317·700l

....

~­

---·.......
~

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

-..._,_

•z

-.1
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~:-- -. ....

- ·

74

:t

Motorcycles

-ToRiot-Fer Wt I Ill
To llnd.CIIINIM~ IJDI.

1177 Hondi 710, cUllen .....,
e11oo. 1m Y.-..XT .~

r.lrrc··~_..nd.se

1114 -·lUI.::.. f410, Ao11

._liiCI.or-~

!Il l

KIU

tl081

26

•

.

50- Stalo

BuiPc?lng

-r

52- R019111
54 lilul

55 Trep

r.::: ,.~••

DOWN

28 .....

•A'ItQJ1017

••z
•u

32

I Milk Tw1ln'1

IIIIIIIIIM

t Unlore-n

30Fib
31 Splr

•tJ

Houllhold

.......

41.Ptlroleum

22 WINtle
24 CortiPIII pL
26 Rtfule from

.AIU
SOUTH

tarJoo.-

... Hit (Sp.J

47 Dollt on 1
•ltlnt

lA
18 Bollier
20 Oebonllr
21 Inventor
FrlllkMn

. ?, '5S

M00.1110Y....-TTIOO,

45Uncle

17 N~hborof

EAST .

IQ IIU

42 - - ntodt
43 Struck

15 Skin
lnc?tnlaUono

14'J.N

•n

WI!ST

· -..uc~es

t 1 Pollr .....
12 SF wllter

•u

......
So

41 CIMfor

ltlbtllnct

.1742
tAQJ 3

~ ......

~ WleMI

31 Per:form

'----.,I 14 Rtcolptlbbr.

~

~

bon•

38 Author -

t Dtt. . lnto
l1tt mouth

PHILLIP
ALDER

No. Go ' I Ill, 1-111 1111111,
...... ~.&amp;Aid. .....
. . . . . .,.. ... :Zl'JII_...

Co. ..,U31411.

..,___.....,
ACIIOU

!:it
.=:....";':o
mac·-.

..... Ohio

011 Fat Whllo
TIM OPAL Avolllblo

'lilil -

...

- ·Cil o:- :-:""::
.......

·b, P.

LM To ToUt With YO..
IH'OIIOETTAIL£ COit'IERSI..
Al*wwtallll
Ill
,., llln. !111111 ••Eat,
11

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.. - - . -

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............. 0...
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F. .....................
PeiMi

ALLEYOOP

45

41 Hoi Ill for Rent

3 Announcement•
w.tai: Ctdo

Ohio

e OlrlllMntt

2 Ancient city

7 .PIIInUfl
8 08 IOir?lell
I Type ol radio
10 Oor ,.,,.

3 Food fllh
4 ActorKIIIIOIII&lt;IOII

l?lbr 1nlmal

36 Chlntl Into

VWnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

Goode

t.

-

Pal&amp;
Pal&amp;

Nw•
PUI

~1
Paaa

Put

Paa

• Opening Iead:

+K

The negative
can be positive
Lost &amp; Found
Found: .._..Hound, auoc. .

6

8J PW?Jip AWe&lt;

Ad,~.

Jolm Keats, commentiq on the
Paetnlium of mystery, wrote that
"Meptlft Capabillt1' occun "wben a
IDIIl is c.opable of being in uncertain,
lies, m,.mes, doubts, wi.thout any if,
ritable reaching after fact and rea·
...... He """ton to say that Coleridge,

LOST IMg!o, I - .
8o.don TM IIIIo or01, REWARD,

~58,3153.

7"

.

Yard Sale

........ 141111, - . ......_.........,,ata'·_.._.

Ffl naii,O!e11nall ~,_.

=~-~
Rei.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

.........
only. - '
AMIM, Ohio.

nn.

t

'

111111 lo Polclln
A - . DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
lho dar • - lho Ill lo 1o run.

.

llundoY -

• 2:00 p.m.
Frtclor. llondoy lllhlon • 2:00
p.m. Solurdoy.

Rick Poo-. Aucllon Componr.
fuM tlrM aucl""-r, compllll.t
auction
··Vlrglnll,
Uc..t61,Dhlo l Woot
30477H7U.

sc···-~·
.._~
daliNd
IIIII ....
tar-1121 _ _ _

.
--·

FIRftUIE Nil

CIIAF11I

---

UoMZDI--1CI,IM-

-1422.

FRANK AND ERNEST

1BR~­
Pit
lt.
pd
rulghbof1taa II ~ -~ lllilah.
114 ttl Olllor104471-1111.

~
pw clllld or 151. tar

I

•

EllA lawn l ~tr. ~

11541.

E&amp;R TREE IERVICE. 'I'~
Jotoo
l O'o
Auto Pont oncll -trucu.
- · Trlolmlng. TIM - ·
...-tuni..,.
~.F. . ~tnll
304-mUU.

-

Uood mobllo - · Coli 114441-G175.

Aftw 4p.m.

General HeM 11 krrplng
IHorM,I1'1 3. ·~

$3D

BORN LOSER

So_..

worood To Buy: J..,k Auloo a aoo Pootllllo
don,
Whh or Whhout llotoro, Coli
.
houl
,
_
to
lho
mlu
)11111
Lorry Llvlly. 114-388-11303,
coil J04.471.111l
Top Prlca Pold: All Did U.S.
- I n mr homo
Colno, Cold AI~ Slivw Colno, Olw p~ono
bllglnl'lllia,
tdvancad
Cold Colno. II.TJt. Coin Shop, to
1111 Second A-uo, Golllpollo.
chonllng
w....
Wo Buy IIOIIgo- .. -6403
33 Fanne for Sale
My Condtdon. ttt 111 lOll
- · 11'-111,_
Odd ...... lndoo&lt;
/OuldOor
Er· -••
I lrlak S
~'!"" . $4.00 Por Hour. 114-~ BR, litho, I Fl..,._, ~uU
Employment Services -mont, 2 lomo, WOifllhop,
Crib With Shill. 1,..._2110,

~HEY,0W101XlR£,..1HE SNIT .,
~ (,MNtO l5fff U.ta&gt; TO
Til'CJIIIOTIJIO
~. '(')IIOW!

. . . . . .:rilncl--.
=.=ng.;. . .

"i ·-

1

30M71-1781.

----·
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..........
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_
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Havovocancytar~-

oon, """" oncl boord or ootlonl II ..,. _ . , with
Clrt, .._W.,I14-M~.
DOIId. VInton. CtlanW lann

Help Wanted

11

'AVON' ALL AREASI Shoro rour
limo wMh ... You'U IOvo lho
-ponr. 1-.v2-e311.
· AVON I AI Alwo I Shl~or
SpH" 304-171-142t.
Corllllod 1 - bs or Nur·
Aldol -..r tar Alemete ca... Sytteme. ·
111-2209.
Hondlco- "'"" Homo
Palnl or Ooliloollo

=·

MYou Are~"" For A-~~~ ........ - - - . Ploco For A
II Lowd OM, Oludlo, huo61a •bin. a, ownoi.

-,:M-C...

RRecl~l~ll=d~II~14-S-~·!!:121!!10.~-Forlho- .

Eldo,.,!,=

With

Dl i'xj,;r....
Ralafll a• 114-

:::211-:::..;1071.:::-=c-:--::--=--:--

114 44G 3040.

Eidarlr lion -

.........
All• ..........
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Coro. Ply MOOI!IIo.

-John

Hamo With
Aid eora1•1P1
·
4 44 1- 1040...

'!

35 · loll &amp; Acf88111

2.....,.. on ..,._ llo, Nwlh

i?o~R~II~J!Ig~h~
~II
lilt. llchocil:~-:·~-~

IE'IERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
11o1t1o c:-.tr, ,.._,
1111111 llliro. ..,;_., ~
lind; - . pootln Wid hllo.
Can for good m.p. 1~

111 • • "'03 or 111 •

T11il

a11

-·

n

·-·1221.

Rentals

Sixth ...
10:00 em
eoiprap.
_ . . .... help wanlod at Har·
rio Formo, Portlond, Ohio. Apply

Frida:;.;;:·

Financ1al

Tllnllor.
101m
tpm.

Business •
Opponunlty
INOIICEI

No

.... ,... ... -.
pooplo,......

LAW EHFOIICEIIENT DI'A. U.B.
!IIARIHALL'S lllllflg.

OHIO VALLEY PUI...,_ CO.

()ne

lt--.114ll1drar•

......--..

Fumllhed

- - I L ......... NJIO

, By GARY LARSON

.... unll,.... _

MATE.

.......
7

__
_
........

. . . . .

,.
111 • a 11p, Nor' Jll
.
.
.
71
a.r. -..,. """"
Good Cui ·w ~ 114IINOII.
..
.

'1
2 .. _ _________

l h o -...

No

. ASTRO·ORAPR

---LTD_.__
.....

111mped .,...,.,_to Matcllmaller,

3 •._ _ _ _ _ _ _......!,._

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.,. ...................... s. _________~-----

-

Real Estate

---·~

-ar;1 Lo.._IIIL

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

.

4 .._______________

~

6·-----------------7.~~------~~----

Read the Best Seier·
Read the

I

0

.,.

CLRSSIAED f\DS
(

Willi no -looldng. Konor - * I _..,
lptllllde Oft8 ftw eproula.

9
'

.

. 56

onr Ill -1odoly. 111e an1J -

P.O.

1ou

1.8M(IItiL211

Dol.,-.. a

•·

I

....... ~

In tile~ ll1eld ttterurelndlcallonl
lillY te lble 10 turn 111 -'!on or
~Into 1011~ lltlt could.....,,

111 aildttloniiWIIingl. A llbOr of loW

I

I

SLUFH

,. I I I' I
I

_H_Y_N...;..I_S___,,

"You can't buy happiness
with money." the old man told
5
, , , .
~
his grandson. "I know
gramps," the grandson re.-------.:.....~ plied, "but you can't buy
1--..-P;,-;R;,.:..I,.:,P...:;.,E,.::NTs-1 groceries wilh ······~-, either."
8
j
Q Complele the chuc~le quoled

I

l

I I I' I....J

L._..L...J,L...J,_J.__J._

8

·

•

· ltailnlm!M

·

UNSCRAMBl~ FORI

ANSWER

,

1· I I I I I I I I

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWERS
, ....
Shaker- Abuse • Wound • Choppy • UP the SHAPE
TwD old maids attended a high school reunion. While
watching lhe people dancing, one turned to the other,
"Have you noticed that a Jot of the dreamboats have
given UP the SHAPE?"
•

·.

1n

al

I

.. -

a jW

'•

,J

•

.

.

..
...

PRINT NUMBERED 11
lEITERS
,

to-..,

· ACIII....,.(...._•r•1t1Youllllghl you.,._.........,., your a 11•• 1
r,e 1 bit men rM111• thin....,.. todly , could -ae tltnletor. ·
I
and 11a1t 1 numter of J111nt11 you.,. 1101 CJNCIII (~ IWulr . , Ml a . Hkliy to ftnllh. Mt1t1o II your modi of liP" you nllliMII) deplnd on to llaak you up •
erallon ,ou'M tew 1ttl7l to lOr · In n.att11 1 mer be loOidotl? tte .....,.
your lfiorta. Trvtno IO'pllllll up I bro- oUter w.y tocl'er- you IOIICit _.- II m . .
klnrOII'oiiiOI?'fhi-AIIro:GnpltMatch- llelp. BePieperec?loi!Mdonyourwn.· mood.
mlker oan hiJP you to lllcllniMII-t LIO (.IUIJ 21-Aut· 121 If you .,_ or

.•.

~y l illing in the mis.sing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

.You-not
condltlonl.
lllely
IN II W 11 G deTAUIIUI (April.._ :IIIII would te tala1odoly, .... JOU .... 11111 t e - to
Idyllic Wyou OOtid- IIIIIQIC- .......... llfl plcltn - - end lltlke II of your • up"' 11"011- · . Pill . . ln. 81 w Ill
vanlllt. 1JnfattlniiiYtoryqu,tltllllllghl .. IAQifrMIUI(IIR.• Rw II) Innot be lite todar;
· · c1a1 ,.. Ill a todlr• ...,, CD OUI oaf
'
~ 11. . . . . ., y - Mil· your .., ., to peaple JOII ....
' dilolpllne might be put to tlie -lodlr
be ....
do
gDDd.
,ooalnt lglf'OI )I GOIICIJt*L 11:
..
•
; a ...

==·

I o

A0 T I E
. 1-.-r.-,,P.:.r-1
:::.,:,2~,..!:.,,~

tor whet thlr II'I!IY . . lllld not 1 -,.......,.
lor what !hey could te Under optimum . ~NID(OIII.M.

,

· •

••••

•-wn

coun11t

and you will be ~1.:

wou

your audience lo ...., to t • ,.
_,you lilY . . te,..... Dan'la•-·

nallvM

10~-----------

I

in llle morning
Wholely,

an hour

Richerd

ARIII (........ 11·Aprtl til
must : ~ ......, to ' I a . IS &gt;-,
te reilllalle mlklnQ lmportJnl "*Ill to •lllf ctlt
jlalt.
tudgmonta IOCII)I. EYIIuete your Iller-- JOU do 11111 1111 . . ._ a a.,.

'·:~------~-------

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Box 91428,' ~. OH 44101-3428. liolllllel'lacii(Pelt.:ll -:IIIAIIIIyZIIn· YIROO(a.a.D l1pl .,ltlonot- - P,~a wttlt conlllderllble . at lhll time t o - In • ...,,.1
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iltM JOII- - - - . .
1111 .,~~c~ng propoiiJton cauld te II liz· ·' Tltere .,. ildkalcl a J011 could zlelllld no M!telance. All! i,.-llonl .~-tltnlughlgl-. :

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do 1o ·make u.e" relatlonlhlp work.
Moll $2 piul I long, Mll-lldd..-d.

to

•

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7Um your clutter into ca~h, .
Wit the ffJU UHJy... by phone,
no need to leaH your home,
Place mur dcujtjed ad loMy/
15 1110n:l. or le.t, 3 ·do.r•,
3 pqpm, S5.4Q paid in advance.

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'IENDINO ROUTE: Col R~h
Oulclt1
Wayl lUI WI A
Good, 8tlledv, Afford~au.
- . Won1 Loot 1
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llodlooiPwl

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as in '" an intimate conversation."
sbould a?ways be pronounced "?N-tuh·
mit." Sometimes. however , INTI·
IIATE is used as a verb meaning "to
suggest or hinl": "Don'l intimate what
yau're DOt able to prove." As a verb,
it's pn&gt;IIOtlllced "?N-tuh-mate." From
now on, lee? free lo intimate lo speak·
ers that the end of lhe verb ?NT?,
MAT&amp; should be pronounced li

-note ~ll. Rca.\ ltiiiTH
THE BIONER Rli»--JN&amp;,

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dll)' hunting lor It" -

A. Perhaps INTIMATE is being
used io different ways. The adjective,

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a.,..

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=~L........,nopol8;-

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "L018

PEREGRINATION is a prolonged
IJ:ip or pi?grimage. Never trip over the
proauacialion of lhe noun PEREGRI·
NATION; it's "per·uh-grih-NAY·shun."

MORTY MEEKLE
ONLY 'W'Wiii'H

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UNPETIB

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OBTR·VMU

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Q. How should you pronounce the
wonl INTIMATE' I bear it two dil·

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and

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llloo
C.ra Conlw
1
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WMI OfDoy
tfMC
On 11 IM 'Pike Ill-¥ I A.lll. -1:30 P.ll, H
OUoiMr And Exporlo- 1o Tho
t1 Concom F« Yow Chlld'o
C.0. Coli Uo F« A Viol, lnlont
/Toddlers IU 44t 1221. PfMo

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to:
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lleart tricU.
You._ of eigbt points in the West
7lllltl: lite K-Q of clubs aad the liS:
_ _ . dia""''d kinl· West bas the
lleart Ia! u well, problbly be 'IIOIIld
711ft .,....... tbl bidding. So you must
play for Eut 10 have the aee. Put
lite llart kine· u It loaes, you will
illl two down. But if it wins, you
pntllaltiJ be ?tome.
8J
""I wbere one critical
raril llel, JOtl eoaclade wltlch oppolll!llt llallk ...... critlral c.ord. '
PerUt= - penaps.- the Penetra·
U..afiDJSierY iso't so mysterious

i

2 btdNa• tpl. taD. lftOftlh.

11om ..... lomiiY, o011
...., lar oppolnt..n 31)4;17S-

I

Ia foUrth seat, you Open four Spa&lt;?es f
beca- :rou canaot envisage a slam
oppalte a passed partDer and you
wilb to keep the ojlpooents q.pet.
You 71oft tMee top looen: two clubs
ud one ?learl U the diamond fine- I
is 5osiac. :rou are dowu for sure. So liS:
l8llle it is workiq:. ADd if the dia1mond I
f!
is wiDDiDg. you will
game as lang as you don't lose

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

llvltloo IIIII ... I ..., .... 15

'1.-4--

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Apanment
for Rent

18 Wanted to ~ ·

,..
- . h5.
2 cnliclnft

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Padsyour
the dub
kinl· He
Apinst
fOUNpade
'llit?t lite queeD, but East
witli lite Ia! aad reltii'IIS the
tkee. S5louPd you play the jack or

Col .... lnlonnlllon, - -

Business
Training

Child Con .......... In ..,
homo,
....
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pluo _
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Wanted to Buy

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own
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Public Sale
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CDUIITRY

ALL YMI -

fOI' inst•nce, used.to be •eootent with
balf-kaowledce.• .
Wow! But I think I know what
was tryUtc to say. Look at today's

~ERE1 S THE WORLD FAMOUS
~OCKEV PLA'I'ER ON HIS
WA'T' TO THE GAME ..

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�Wedneeday, January 'Z1, 1993

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

College
basketball
results

DOUBLE

COUPONS

Pick 3:

293
Pick 4:
4046
Super.Lotto:

SAl i; STARTS SUNDAY
11111

..

1'UI

WID

I'll

tiiU

20·30·33-40-41-43
Kicker:

W

.Pagt4

Jill Jill JD )All JJUI Jll JAN

Low lmllabt Ia mid lOs.
Friday, cloudy. Hip Ia mid 30s.

071476
J

•

: Val. 43, No.. 115
:co,.,ilula... 1113

.Byer

only Ill FOODLAND

IHURRY! COUPON EXPIRES 11301931

1/2 PRICE
on ONE 32 o1.jar
ofKRAn®
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RETAILER: Mall to Kraft, Inc., CMS O.pt.
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Lllf ONE COUPON P£111 ONE ITDI PUACMAIED
CJI.\1

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TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

. Mixell
Fryer Parts
.

1

h PRICt.!

•

.

By JtJL1E E. DILLON
S JIMI News Sbllr
. Bob Dyer, director of Meigs
·CoiiJity Emcrpuc:y 'Services and
chlinun of lhe Loc:aJ ~
.Piuniog Committee
spoke at Wedarwlay's mcc:tiog of
.tfle Meiss Comity Cnmmissioocn.
• Dyer informed me new board
:about tbc func:tioas of tbc Emer;geocy M•sa&lt;•1mt and Eraeraency Services Ar,mcy in lbe CC)III!l)'
and to obtaia tbc c:ommissiollers'
•signa~~RS 011 a gqnt lpplication.
; Byer IUfl:d he Will be submit;tinJ an application for a grant
·wbicb die LEPC ill die county is
4i&amp;iblc for each year as specified
;by lhe
AmeM.IS and
·Re-dh
. Aa (SARA) Title
·m or lhe Emugwcy Plwmiog and
:Commllllity Risht·to-Know Act).
·The . , _ o f lhe gr.- Dyer ,nil

S:t:f::i

8JIPIY for tOillls $28)150. He stated
normally up 10 30 percent of lhat
aDMNIIt is funded. He said lasi year
!he county received $9,600.
Al:conling 10 Dyer, lhe money
for the grants comes from any
which suns, manufactureS
or
bazardous materials. B yer
Slated lhe J!lllllt money· goes toward
sucb projects as fue depanment
and emergency service training as
well as upgrading of computer
equipment aiJd systems.
Speaking aboutlhe LEPC, Dyer
stated Meigs County is probably
lhe ouly county ill the area lhat has
an acuve commitlee. The LEPC
wu created af~cr lhe SARA Tide
Ill Act of 1986 which mandated
that all facilitiea dealing with haz.
ardous malerials must identify
diose materials 10 lhe public. Byer
stated there are nine facililies in lhe

feci!lrs

ON ANY VARIETY (Except Cryellll) OF
24 PACK·12 OZ. CANS

PEPSI~COLA

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Gov. George Voinovich •s plan 10
conduct lhe first study of the state's
economy and tax structure in 25
Ye&amp;!S drew support from the Ohio
Council of Chmches.
But lhe council coupled iL!I support for the study with results of uts
own n:view !hat concludes
current revenue system isinailequaiC
10 '!'eet lhe state's. n~. despite ·
lax mcreases adopted last month.
"It particularly does not provide
adeqn=fel' the ver}' poor," lhe
study . said.
.
"The drastic reduction in lhe
General Assistance program and
lhe Sialic or reduced levels of funding for od!er social programs, such
as Aid for Dependent Children, are
not consistelll widr lhe slate's duly
10 protect iL!I. -citizens
nor are they
.

WHEN YOU BUY 1 LB. OR MORE OF MY OF THESE
WILSON PRODUCTS FROM OUR DEU
(WHERE AVAILABI.E)

WU80n B•e)' CUred Bam
,Wl180D VJaoPda St)'le Ham

me

Dinner Bell
Bacon

~PRICE!
Aim
Toothpaste

~ PRICE!
FOODLAND VALUABLE COUPON

18 OZ. CEREAL

·Post Toasties

Y2 PRICE
WITH COUPON
.
GENERAL FOODS, P. 0. BOX 601, .
KANKAKEE, IL. 60902

.

NEW AtJJ)ITOR SWORN IN. · Nuey hrker..Campbell,
Raclae, wa .-n Ia a lle aew Mel11 Coaty Auditor on
w~- ,., Mdp c-nty c--l'leas Judie Fred·
eridl: w.
m. J..e- appointed tom tile _,Ired term of
tile late wmt.. R. Wlddille lq a~ YOte ~die Melp Couty Repalllleaa Ceamd C..wMiw

c.-

.Americans pay $14 billion
a year on ofjbeat•medicine
BOSTON (AI')- "-iraM apead abo.t 114 billloll a year
-aa1alxlk6olal' •aae1111 '•-•ddropncton,
splrllul' Irs, .... ' It aad Gllla'Jkiq'l' opeaalla1 out·
. slde•tl I
•eT•Jee,l 1 S naald ....y.
·:.
Tlle-_·'!J'ro.dtllatA
h
n!l'•---tapploacbes
;!-~llfe;~"==':''~t;;-, tod~maedles- rar
Tile d• • • ..,.
•• 1 1 tile ...., aald tile pop•"erlty of
die aile; uw b 1 1 1Itt fer dll'lkllll-to .an ...enll IlliCit liS
brkrin llllder-ea tile .... .., autiM tPinl tllcJraaPiy to
- I f •Y raiPy wwk.
.
"We,..,, an
dala to aaytlleR,are elfec:tlve or
· wortll!at. Tllat't wlen
to ao rr.. llere," ,said Dr.
Dadl M. El •s 1111"•••'• BetPt llralllltltplta!.
A• ILII' .,., w aid tile l'act t!lat ~p!e Jlade 425 mUUoa
viiJIIIDMIO.il ll!ee!Ja &amp;piii• .. - , _ - .....Pdeittpatoa.c t!naJdodiiL
"Tile palllk's eKpealn r••••ce will ..cowve•tlo.. l
•edld• II eaae f• oar prefeuioul worry," wro1e Dr.
Edw... W. C..plaL ''.We aeed to 1
DIOI'e elfectlveSy oar dedi ••• to c:ml 1 lor ISle wiloPe pallewt - worries,
;lbiWdal.&gt;!
It •
ediiDr ~ . - New EMIPud Jounal
M1u I e, wllldl pztjl 1 tile~ Ia lilldaY'tlilwe.
Tile WWSI I A rt ILat A• kaillaftft ~ COW'ftlldoaa!
•e 'h 1M - • • !eatt • " '
II -willa IIley - • lle!p
. tor lt+•' r, 't • ' t, ..._ aad ot11et ,. ..ne.t ~doe·. .
·.
ilhe ol tlleae b I I
I - J11 oh.,. c!lery," C..pJ.
ow tlid. "Siae o1 tn.. are jwat tile A••~ wrliolt or t!le
lllaPIL ......
.......
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......,,,., cWI a;ndlr:, •
a , t•s '' 11-L1ew1 , .......
,.. • 'a' we~~•t·hn , . . - . . . . .~tiel ud oilier
m )St...._ ..... ......,. ••t•n:'l =, ...,..., puwp;,
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sioners of a possible siruation lhat
could ari'se as a result of a prosecutors' meeting in Alhens recendy. A
"trade off' situation for special
prosecu10rs between Athens, Meigs
and Washington counties, could,
accordin' 10 LenleS, save lhe county a considerable amount of money.
In such a situation, for example,
. LenleS could serve as special prosecutor in Athens or Washington
counties sod in turn those counties'
prosecu~prs could serve as special
prosecutors in Meigs Coun1y .
LenleS feels Ibis move would be m
the best inlereSt for the coun1y.
Commissioner Roben Hartenbach requested LeniU to verify in .
writin~:,! opinion on an animal
claim
October in which a dog
ldlled 35 game roosrers. The owner
of those roosters want payment
from lhe county at $100.per_ an_imal

and Hartenbac,h, on behalf of ihe will be fulling lhal vacancy as soon
commissioners, wams Lentes to as possible.
assess if lhe claim is a valid one or
David Lobo of Pottinger Insurnot. Clerk Mary Hobstetler Slated ance spoke a1 the meeting to
lhe former board of commissioners request pennission 10 give a quou:
did not acl on lhe claim because on the county's liability service.
they felt it was not a legal claim.
Commissioner Roush stated "we
Shirley Johnson, administtaiOr are very well pleased with what we
of the county's medical insurance have now." Lobo did, however,
plan, spoke 10 lhe com~ioners 10 leave informalion about what Pot-:
make the new board aware of the linger Insurance could offer.
•
cwrent plan.
In Olher mauers the commisCommissioner Manning Roush sioners approved bonds for the
was appointed 10 flU a vacancy on county recorder, cleric of courts,
lhe Area Agency on Aging which ·sheriff and engineer, and the 1er111
was left at the expiration of lhe of Hobstetler as acting auditor was
1em1 of Rich Jones as commission- canceled as a new auditor, Nancy
Parker Campbell, has been appoiriter.
A resignation was submitted by ~.
· Allending were Commissioners
Carol TannehiU for her seat on lhe
Childrens Trust Fund ·Advisory Manning Roush, Robert HartenBoard. She had been a member bachand Janet Howard, and Clerk
since 1985. The commissioners Mary Hobstetter.

:

consistent wilh lhe vision of a just
economy, which seeks til prou:ct
lhe
.. it said.
.
&amp;;ies of the study were
re~ Wednesday by lhe councU,
a statewide organization of 27
Christian
.
· David ~, director for public jlOiicy, said the council suppons
Vomovich's review as a step ~
10ward re(ormilig lhe I8X siruclllre.
. But McCoy acknowledged lhal
enacbnent of another tax inaease,
on top of lhe December package
wonh about $I billion over 30
months, is unlikely this year or
IICX~

"My own guess personally is
lhat having done what they did in
December il may seem 10 them
tllat's done now, and no more

action is needed or would be sup- Brundige said.
poned by lhe ~~Ublic," McCoy said.
"Consequently, if that belief is
" It may be !hat we're looking continued wilhoul someone slarting
not at this biennium, but atlhe next 10 say, 'We don't think it is,' lhen
biennium, I don't know," he said.
we will not swt the public debau:
The council report said that has to take place before a subincreased revenue is needed for sian live change comes about " be
•
welfare, education, day care. hous- SB1'd•
.
ing and other progrims.
. . Last mon!h's lax m~Jl!sed
i t "Offered several possible mcome taxes for people making
changes •in slate tax law to raise more than $200,000 a year
more,money, including increases in increased taxes on cigareues, sofi
the personal income and sales drinks, beer, and wine, and exlend·
taxes.
ed lhe sales tax ·10 certain services
Eugene Brundige of the West not now covered.
Ohio Conference Uniled Methodist
The council said lhe increases
Church said the council study could would not produce eriough money
be used for debate within churches 10 maintain services at Currenllevas well as lhe govemmen~
els, and would fall far shon of lhe ·
"It is our feeling that most of amount believed needed for educathe citizens of lhe state believe lhe tion and welfare refonn.
job was done in December."

Collectors snap up Sears 'Big Book'

ea..-

all Ahead For Super Bowl Party TrayOrders. We Offer Several Size~ and Varieties.

cowity that store hazardous materials and !hat lhe LEPC is aware of
and insures the safety of those
facilities.
.
B;yer Slaled in lhe event of a dis·
asler the LEPC, made up of designated people such as the EMS,
police, sheriff, fire departments,
etc.. would implement the plan to
assess and handle the situation.
Dyer stated one example of the
plan of lhe LEPC was enacted wilh
the roclc slide at Pily Me near Hobson. During that lime all lhe agencies involved with lhe LEPC came
IOgelher 10 conlrollhe situation.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John LeniU spoke to lhe
commissioners 10 investigate lhe
possibility of appointing a special
prosecu10r to upcoming cases. No
action was laken.
Lentes informed lhe commis-

Gov. Voinovich's tax study plan
draws support from church group

NO SUGAR OR LOW SALT SUCED160Z.

6.4 OZ. TUBE

•

explains LEPC functions to commiSSioners
CL ;c},

Store

2 Sectlono, 12 P8QM 25 oenlo
A Muldmodll Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January 28, 1993

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CIDCAGO (AP) - The Sears
catalog has been lhe Big Doole for
decades. Now it's the hot book.
Cus10mers around the country
are rushing 10 get lheir hands on lhe
latest general catalog, which
became an inslant collectors' ilem
when Sears, Roebuck and Co.
announced Monday lhat it was discontinuing lhe Big Book.
Thousands of complaints about
lhe demise of lhe 104-year-old cat·
alog have flooded lhe company's
suburban Schaumburg headquarrers, a Sears spotesman said.
"The catalog has become a very
beloved aiJd respecled inslitution in
America, and it is understandable
lhat people would not like to see it
go," Perry Chiao said Wednesday.
Trying 10 hall a slide in its retail
business, Sears plans to eliminate
50,000 jobs by early 1994 and
close 113 stores and some 2,000
cal8log outlets.
John Cooper, owner of a catalog
s10re in Esc111111ba in Michigan's
remote Upper PeniQsula, said cusIOmers have deluged lhe sta:e with
complaiuus. "In me.e l1lf8i arc:as, the ~:.
IOIIChcs borne a bit more," he · .
"It's a groundswell thing- people
are. asking, 'How can corporate

Area man escapes
. injury in accident
A Racine ~ eacaped with \o

appuont injuries from a onc-vehlclii accident Tuetday on County
Road 30 ~ Slar) in Sutton
Towlllhip, IICCCll'dina 10 lhe OaJJia.
Meilll Post or die State Hillbway
Patrol• .
The )Jilrol said Brneat·P. Baker,
71, 31372 ~Road, wu - bound at 7:40 a.m. as he came
around I CUM ·~n= I acboo1
bUI. The report
Baker lnbd
the vehicle wben he apotted a
· schoor bus and alid off lhe rl&amp;ht
side of'dle 10111 into • dlldl.
The vehicle eben overtunled on
iii·IO!J, c•U. . _ c!ollllll"
Biller wu ..... Ill Hal8 MedIal! Cea111r by 1be Melat EMS, the
paaolaald. .

America keep doing these lhings 10

us?·" ·

.·

· Cooper noted Sears operates
only catalog s10res in the Upper
Peninsula. A bigger store is in
Marinette, Wis., about 60 miles
away, but the neares1 full-service
Sears is probably in Green Bay,
Wis., about 120 miles away, he
said.
''You can't blame lhe customers
for being upset," he said. "I can
only imagine what it's like in
places like Montana, where lhere
may be only one full-service s10re
in the whole state."
Fo~ in urban areas, however,
were hoping 10 make a litlle money
off lhe catalog's demise.
.

'·'People aie calling up and saying, 'Can you send me 12 calalogs,
please?" ' said R~yland Luburic~.

assislant manager at a large Sears
store in Niles.

Ex-priest sentenced
STILLWATER, Minn: (AP)Former priest James Porter was
sentenced today to at least si x
months in jail for molesting his
children's baby sitter five years
ago.
Porter has been accused of
molesting dozens of children in
three states before he left I he
Roman Catholic pries.thood in
1974.
He was convicled in December
of six counts of fourth-degree crim-

inal sexual conduc1 involving his
children's leen-age baby sitter in
1987.
' Poner, 57, was sentenced in
WashingiOD Coun1y District Coun
by Judge Kenneth Maas, who also
presided over his trial. He could ·
receive additional jail time if he .
fails 10 complele sex offender !realment required as a condition of his
probation, Maas said. The probalion is 10 last fir 10 years.
.

Refresher program offered
by Meigs·TB and Health Clinic

.'
A refresher JI'Ogr&amp;m 011 identify- showing positiv_e readings and lhree negative readings.
ing luberculosis symptoms, the
lechniquc of administering sltin
leSts, and how 10 inlap(Ct them is
being offered by lhe Meip County
Tuberculosis and Health Clinic 10
~tal and nursing home personnel m Meigs Countr..
Connie Kar1chnik, R. N.. the T.
B. nur10, began lhe new program
Tuesday at Veterans. Memorial
Hospital for supervisouy personnel
from lhe hospital, Extended Care
Unit, and the Emergency Room.'
She will offer lhe 11111110 J110P1111 at
Overbrook Ccnler and die Pomeroy
Nursing and RebabiJIIIIion Cent«.
The Ohio D~~p~~ bnent ol Heallh
requires -that all palienls enterin« a
naniog facUlty be teald for tuber·
culosls. With the dlloue 't l'elllf·
gence special emphaals· is belna
placed on identifyina syqtpiOma
and prcc:auliona 10 be !Ibn shoolld
a pail,nt .have a positive readina
from a U:ID teaL
. TEACIDNG ARM • Coule Kane~R. N2 Mtip Conaty
Karscbnik talked abou~ the
T. JJ. ._, rJalt, lloldt tile "'ee ud 1o11C11 aJtllkW w111Pe :
dnllt ~ tuben:u!olls and noUid lhe
RlODda Dalley, R.N., BSN, dlncCor olallrilll&amp; at Ve• a Mt•a ,
tremendous inc:reue over the put
rllll lialpbl, !'lldt tile live,...,.. tldii 1e111q thiL Tile ..alft. ;
yet~ ia active of luben:ulolis.
.ellllarm WM rece•tlY·PU ' 1d by tPie Mtlail CilaJatJ TulerasoJ .·:
Sho lllllll.a "tee and IOUch" tnl·
ala ud Hnlt!l C . for ue Ia teadllaa lealtll JIIOI
td :; ;
ficill arm for pw::dw readlop. On
more accllrltely read tPda llltiL
lhe arm are ftve dlftaeat Sites. two
••

&gt;

I,..,.

..

...

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'

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