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                  <text>The Daily. Sentinel

ByThe.Bend

Monday, December 20, 1993~
.Page-10·

Community
calendar

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
.girls top

Pick 3:
585
Pick 4:
1587
BuckeyeS:
2-14-21-30-34

Southern

'

'

PageS

Low tonight In lOs. Ponly
doudy. Wtdntsday, hlgb In
mld·30s. Snow nurrles.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure pubUcation in the calen·
dar.
MONDAY
. Vol. 44, NO. 11'1

RACINE • Judging will take
place tonight in the Racine Christ·
mas "Show .of Lights" contest
sponsored by the Racine Area
Community Organization.
RACINE ·The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the high school.
POMEROY • The Fraternal
Order of the Eagles Auxiliary 2171
will accept donations of food bas·
kets through Tuesday at the Eagles
Club.

•

KKK cross

,

.
:survives
'

.•.

NOW THAT'S BIG! -Herbert L, Miller or Letart
bad a :
bumper crop or turnips .this year. His biggest one was this &amp;!x ;.
pound, 22 ounce one which be grew from a tiny seed planted 1D : •
July.

RACINE • Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 1
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

PARTNERS IN EDUCATION- Sixth grade
class officers at Rutland Elementary receive a
check rrom Bank ODe of Rutland. Tbe money is
being loaned to the class in order for It to run a
school store. The bank and Rutland Elementary
are participating in tbe coua1y-wide Partners in

Education program. From left to right, Brooke
Williams, Adrianne TiUey, Sara lble and TifFany
Halfhill are shown accepting the check from
Joan May, branch manager of Bank One iD Rut·
land.

Bank One sponsors
mentoring program
By LEIGH ANN REDOVIAN
Sentinel News Stall'
Sixth grnders from Rutland Ele·
mentary are cashing in on experience by learning what it takes 10
start a business with the help of
officials from Bank One of Rut·
land.
Bank One and Rutland Elementary are participating in the Panners in Education program, a coun·
ty-wide program designed to
encourage community businesses
and schools to work together in
educating area srudents.
The class received a $50 loan
from Bank One of Rutland to open
a school store. The store opened in
early November 1993, and through

planning and hard work, the stu·
dents have now made enough profit
to order new supplies.
According to sixth grade teacher
Bettyann Wolfe, the students are
fmding that cooperation plays a big
pan in running a successful busi·
ness.
"The whole class participates in
running the store, from tounting
money, to advertising the store, to
actually selling the products."
Wolfe said. "Everybody's doing
something."
Wolfe also says that she lets the
srudents make their own decisions
about what is best for the store dur·
ing class meetings held each week.
The students are planning a

NEW OFFICERS • Newly elected ofllcers for
. the Lltdles Mlsslonar:y Fellowship Qf the Victory
Baptist Cbnrcb are, from the left, Lois Hawley,

school trip with their overall profits
at the end of the year. They are
also going to leave some money for
next year's sixth grade class.
Bank One of Rutland's Branch
Manager, Joan May .said that the
students went through all the loan
processes beginning with ftlling out
a loan application.
"This is an opportunity for students to meet members ,of the public and to work with them in learning about their future," May said.
Students have written letters to
bank officials as well as visited the
bank to make withdraws and payments.
"It helps us learn more about
what older people do,'' said sixth
grader, Adrienne Tilley.

treasurer, Angle Hall, secretary, Sandy Lauder· .
milt, vice president, and Betty Barker, presi·
dent.

LETART· The Letan Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building.
HOCKINGPORT · Special
recognition will be given to bands
and others who supported Moriday
night music at the Reynolds build·
ing at Hockingpon, State Route
124, Monday at 6:30 p.m. Take
covered dish. All bands welcome.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club will
hold a potluck Christmas dinner ,at
noon at the townhouse Tuesday.
There will be a gift exchange. In
the event of inclement weather the
event will be canceled.
BEDFORD • The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depan·
ment committee will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall. Resi·
dents are urged to attend.

The La';lies MissiOD!~fY Fellow·
ship of V1ctory Bapust Church,
Middleport, held its Christmas din·
ner on Dec. 6 at the home of Mrs.
Betty . Barker. Her home w.as
extenstvely decorated for the dtn·
ner which she hosted.
During the evening there was a
new secret prayer pals drawing and
those for 1993 were revealed.
The ladies ai:W made a contribu·
tion to the bwlding fund.

. The past officers were recog-

n~zed for 1993 and they were

Tammy Ball, president: Myrtle
Quillen, vice president; Angie
McClure, secretary and Phyllis
Hudliall,tteasurer.
New officers elected for 1994
were B!ltty Barker, president;
~d.Y Laudennilt, Vice President;
Angte Hall, secretary and Lois
Hawley, treasurer.

Those attending the dinner were
Betty Barker Nancy Larkins Phyl·
lis Hudnall 'Tammy Ball MyrUe
. Quillen , Linda Keesee, 'shirley
Roush, Lois Hawley, Sandy Laudermih Margaret , Nunn sue
Adkins' Verinna Batkman Sherry
Jarvis Wanda Ashley Lu~y Hendrixs, 'Jennifer and Jessica Ashley,
Pastor James Keesee and Herbert
Barker.

\

'·
(

---Christmas is----. Council

OKs
bid for new
water tank

.first day in
:Queen City
By Tbe Associated Press
A Ku Klux Klan cross survived
its flfst day in downtown Cincin·
nati without incident, drawing only
jeers and gawks from Christmas
shoppers.
Meanwhile, in Columbus, .a
state board denied permission for
the Klan to erect a cross at tbe Ohio
··Statehouse.
A Klan group acting UDder protection of a fedeml cowt order put
up the 10-foot-tall white cross
shortly before 6 a.m. Monday oii
Fountain Square, tbe main gather·
ing place in doWntown Cincinnati.
About a dozen protesters taunted
the three Klansmen, but stayed
away from the cross.
Last year, a Klan cross was
knocked down shonly after it went
up on Fountain Square. It repeated·
ly was toppled and defaced during
the holidays, and 81 least 10 people
were charged with disorderly con·
dueL
Police stood guard Monday and
put up metal banicades to keep the
pubhc away from ihe cross.
Passers-by stopped to look 81 the
cross, wh1ch features a Bible verse
but no reference to the Klan.
'
have no respect for
Cinc:in~tti," said
Kirk·
tear

in prole~
· .. .
The city tried to stop the Klan
cross by passing a law that forbids
"fighting words" on the square.
The American Civil Liberties
Union filed suit on behalf of the
Knight Riders, saying the group
was being .fingled out for exclu·
sion, airid u;s. Oistrict' Judge Carl
Rubin granted permission for the
cross last week.
"We wan.t the same rights as
everybody else," Klan spokesman
Tony Gamble said as the cross was
erected Monday momin~ .

KEEPSAKE ~OVERLETS • Coverlets sucb ,
as tbls one used by Chillicothe iD Its bicentennial
celebration may be designed and sold by the
Meigs County 175tb Anniversary Committee.
Tbe coverlets would sell for about $40 and
would depict racets or Mel11s Couo~'s develop·

In an effon to provide our reade.rship wi~ current news, the &lt;;Jal·
hJ!Ohs Daily Tnbune and Senunel
w1ll not accept weddings after 60
days from the date ~f the event
All c.lub '!'eeungs .and ot~er
news articles m the SOCIC\)' secbon
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submiired within 42 days of the
occurence.
:"JI !Mter!al submi~~ for publicauon IS subject to ediUmg.

Social Security Hints for business owners offered
wages and those who are self· level of retirement. Additional evi·
By ED PETERSON
employed.
If you are age 70 qr den~e would be necessary if you
Social Securit:y Manager, Athens
over,
there
are
no earnings limits.
are:
Olrtee
When you work for wages, its
• involved in a family business
easy
for
us
to
detei')Dine
whether
or
another family member is
If you own a business and
you
re
"retired."
Your
earnings
assuming
some, or all, of your
you're getting ready to retire, .
record
tells
the
whole
story.
But
duties.
Social Security has some hints to
• continuing to render services
.help you prepare to me your claim when you are self-employed, it's
not
as
simple.
or
example,
if
you
for
the business at a reduced rate of
for benefits.
decide
to
file
for
benefits
but
con·
compensation.
In taking your claim for bene·
• still the owner, or part-owner
fits, we will need to know whether tinue to work part time in the business,
you
could
be
in
a
position
to
of
a
business and own stock in the
you'll be completely retired or
control
your
earnings.
In
that
case,
business.
splitting wages with
whether you plan to continue some
we
probably
will
ask
you
for
addi·
others
(dividing
former salary
involvementm the business. To get
all of your Social Security retire· tiona! information-such as ta'x between )lOu and your spouse or
ment biencftll, you mutt rewe. or at return• or corporate records. This children, for example).
H~re's an example of a siruation
least reduce your earningi below wiil ~ us 10 decide whether you
cenaillllmill. Othe!rWise,IIOI)Io-or have reduced your services in ,~e that would require an extensive
all-of your benefits will be with· business to match the reduction iD interview and documentation
helci. Here'&amp; how it 1oes: iD 1994, rour i~me. In. other words, th.e because the person is retiring from
if you are under age 6!1. you can. mcome you recetve from the busi· his or her own business. Let's say
earn up to $8,040. For every $2 ness must mardi the'wotk you do. Mr. Davenpon owns and ll)~es
You ~ over this limit, $1 il with· you CIIIIIOl simply pay yourself a a furniture sure. His net profit was
held frOm your benefitJ. For people small lll1ary to stay under Social $6S,OOO last year. He turns 62 in
Security's earnings limits.
· 1994 and plans to me for Social
ag~~6S dlloush fl), the 1994 limit il
When you ftle for Sccial Securi· · Security retirement benefits. He
$11,16a. For every $3 you earn
the busines$,
over this limit, $1 il withheld from ty benefits, several situations decides to ·
require
additional
information
and
namiDg
hi~resjdent,
his
your benelill. 1beae JimltJ apply to
evtdence
to
help
us
decide
your
oldest
son
as
vice-president,
and
everyone: people who work for

'

'
.
kept il silent vigil

Fellowship reveals secret prayer pals News policy .
·

A NICE SURPRISE • Tea year old Kacy Ervin or Racine was
the winner or a pedal tractor and trailer given in a rund raiser by
the Bi&amp; Bead Farm Antiques Club. The equipment was delivered
to Kacy Wednesday afternoon by Dale Kautz, an active member of
the Antiques Club.

declares himself treasurer--jlaying
himself $8,000 so he will he under
Social Security's earnings limit.
But he intends to continue to control and manage the business just as
he did before he incorporated.
While Davenport makes the
arrangements with the best of
intentions, only when he talks with
a Social Se~urity representative
does he learn that his arrangements
may be imprQper. The representa·
live explains that Mr. Davenport
cannot simply reduce his income in
order to receive Social Security
without alao reducing the services
htl provides to the business. Fonunately, Mr. Davenport talked to
Social Security before he }tad to
·file amended laX repons and before
we would have had to.makc adjustments·to his Social Securil)' reCord.
All of these actions could have
delayed the processing of his retirement claim.
, ·
encourage you to check with
tis well before rding for benefits•to
make sure rou are aware of the
documentation you will need for
the interview.

We

State board
approves loan

meat over the past 175 years. Public interest will
determine whether the committee moves forward on tbe project. Displaying the coverlet
bere are tbe Rev. William Mlddleswartb and
Margaret Parker, bicentennial committee om.
cers.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The S1llle Controlling Board unani·
mously approved a $7.2 million
loan to help bail Columbiana
County out of II'Oblcms aeated by
the loss of $10 million in invest·
ments by the former county trea·
surer.
But one board member said
Monday he was concerned that
other governments that had prob·
lem investments would look to the
state for help. ,
Columbiana County Commissioner William Gotschall told
members of the board that the
county government would come to
a standstill in two weeb without
the' loan. He said auditors bad
found the county would be eco·
nomically unsound for the budget
year that begins Jan. 1.
·
Rep. Robert Corbin, R-Day1on,
said approv•l of the loan might
lead other local governments to
look 10 the state for help, haviD~
invested iD similar "interest-only'
securities.

FREEINSPECTI&lt;&gt;N
'

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
Same Day Service
All Parts Extm
lncludcis: Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments, Greasing.

TUESDAY, DEQMBER 21, 2:30PM-4:30PM

FRUTH PHARMACY

,

GET ACQUAINTED CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

..

Mlcldleport, o•IO

THill •AYS Olltr

·

.....,,......., • WttiHid•y
Dece....r 20, 21, 22- 1:00 P.M. to 4:00P.M.
. ALUMJN~· CANS 30c PER POUND lilo Dealers.

.

~

Also Buying Cl.n Alumtnum Scrap, Copper, Bra11, Radiators.
Accepting on DoniiiOn: Gl•l, Plastic, Tin Cans, Newspapers,
/
~Paper, Office Peper.
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(614) 1112-31184. '
992~3194
CLOSED DEC, 23rd THRU JAN. 2nd

Paige Slnltb Cleek reads the story wbich never
loses Its m:1;.~ for children to ber 13-month-old
dauabter,
nab Elizabeth. The Corbet Cleek
family resides in the Lochary Home on High
Street in Pomeroy.

Seniors still failing state test
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stan
The latest results of the ninth
grade proficiency test show 14
Meigs High School seniors faiUng
one or more of the four parts
required for graduation, Supt. Bill
Buckley told members of the
Meigs Local Board of Education at
Monday's meeting.
The superintendent advised
board members that remedial work ,
is continuing with the srudents on
the parts of the test they failed.
"Those students will have two
men opportunities to take the test,"
Buckler said. He went on to point
out that according to state law, 11
student must paas all four parts to
gJaduate. Math ,is the one section
giving the students the most problems here and statewide. according
to the superintendent
Buckley said he was advising
the board members of the profi·
ciency test status because he
expects that parents will soon be
complaining to them. "But it's a
State law - students cannot grndu·
ate unless they pass all four sections of the ninth grade proficiency
test," Buckley said.
PenoDDel
Certified and non-certified per-

sonnet was hired and parent volunteer lists from two schools were
approved during the lnecting.
Mike Kennedy resigned as head
girls' track coach and was hired as
head boys' track coach.

Sheila Harris, Karlita Stump,
Linda Dye, and Mary Felts were
added to the substitute teachers' list
for the remainder of the year, and
Patricia Baer was hired as a reader
COntinued on Page 3

CHRISTMAS

1
'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall'
Pomeroy Village Council
approved a bid for the water
department's new water tank at its
regular meeting Mondar night
Welding Inc. - w1th a bid of
$88,000- bcal out two other corn·
panics for the projett, Pomeroy
May~ Bruce Reed said.
The village decided to replace
the villa&amp;e's old water reservoir on
Lincoln Heights with an entirely
new water tank, Reed said.
''The EPA demanded we put on
a new roof. For the same amount of
money and with Issue 2 monet we
just went with a new tank, he
added.
Th9 two other bids were
$91,230 by Mid-Atlantic Storage
of Washinjton Court House, Ohio,
and $166,932 by United States Fil·
tel' Corp. or warrendale, Pa.
Village council also unanimously accepted bids for insurance.
For health insurance, the village
will continue with its fonuer insur·
er, Wiseman Insurance of Gallipolis, spending $4,688 .38 on a
monthly basis. Reed said.
"We'll renew it on a month-tomonth basis and we expect in a few
mootbs to rebid it," Reed added.
The viilage will continue with
Wiseman until recently-incurred
costs are paid off, Clerk/treasurer
Kathy Hysell said.
Council turned down two other
bids: $3,460.47 per month from
Brogan-Warner Insurance Services
and $2,266 per month from Dennis
Horkman Insurance.
"We knew nothing about that
company (Hortman) and we chose

Clinton's budget may
cut social programs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal spending limits arc forcing the
Clinton administration to consider
deep cuts in some programs that
help poor families, such as heating
and emergency food, say advocates
and congressional aides.
The White House and its Office
of Management and Budget are
making the final 1995 budget deci·
sions. The administration hopes to
unveil the budget in early February.
Some programs helping the poor
may not see budgets grow as quick·
ly as Clinton envisioned, according
to lawmakers, congressional aides,
and advocates.
Slower growth is seen in pro·
grams such as Head Stan, an early
childhood development program,
and WIC, a supplemental feeding
program for low-income pregnant
and nursing women, infants and
children.
The budgets of some social pro·
grams were still undecided Monday

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Bob Barton, left, Meigs
Local Board or Editcatloa member ror tbe past 13 years, was rec·
ognlzecl for bls service at Monday nljbt's board meeting. He was
~~ted a plaque by Larry Rupe, president, on behalf of the

'

~

because of disagreement between
departments and the White House,
an administration official said,
speaking on condition of anonymi·
ty.

Because of congressional spending limits, advocates and congres.
sional aides say the administration
must cut in one place if it wants to
increase in another.
Unaffected by the budget caps
arc the country's entitlement programs, such as Social Security,
Medicare and Aid to Families with
Dependent Children, the primary
welfare program for families with
children.
Among the likely budget casualties:
- The Emergency Food Assistance Program , or TEFAP. The
$120 million a year program supplies commodities to food banks,
soup kitchens, rescue missions ,
homes for the elderly, and mealson-wheels programs.

Wayne White, director of the every school in Gallla, Jackson,
Ohio Appalachian Center for High· Meias and Vinton counties by proer Education, recently presented a viding tu10ring, intervention, home
check for $35,0!)0 to Dr. Barry encouragement, ~tention programs
Donoy, pesident of the University and other lltiCessary suppon to eleof Rio Grande and Rio Grande menwy and secondary students.
CommunitY CoJJcie to fiiDd Project
A native of Perry Count~
CHAMP, a community outreach now I resident of Olllipoli1,
program designed to 'increase the has wcrted iD Adult Basic Educa·
college going tara of area youth.
lion, taught and coached in OaiUa
Jake Baru· director or the County schools, taUght at URG and
instructiona media center on the holds graduate faculty status at
Rio Grande camjlus, will coordi· · . Marshall University,
nate Project CHAMJ&gt;. According to
"I am Uvllta proof that a native
Bapst, CHAMP will impact on the of this area can succeed in the
academic careers of students In world with the educatkinal cipportunitlea provided in this area,"

Bapst said.
Area schools should expect a
call from URO in the ne•t month to
establish Project CHAMP pro·
grams.
"We want every child, parent
and citizen in this areilto know that
they are important and can succeed.• Bapst said.
Students and/Or staff and school
administnttn may call 245-73S6
for more iaform8110l1.
The projec~ .il supported by the
Ohio Appalacllian Center for High.
er Education with funds provided
by the Ohio General Assembly and
URG.

christmas paper slated for Friday
The Daily Sentinel will publish its Chris1mas edition Friday. No
Sunday Times-Sentinel will be published.
Offices of the paper will be closed that afternoon and Saturday in
observation of the Chrisllllas holiday.

Middleport man cited for DUI
Gary Michael Smith, 43, Middleport, was cited by officers of the
Middlepon Police Depanment for driving under the influence and
failure to dim lights 11 9:S7 p.m. Monday when he was traveling
nonh on Third Avenue. Smith must appear in mayor's court tonight
on the charges.

Courthouse closed Friday

Offices in the Meias County Courthouse will be closed Friday in
observance of Christmu.
.
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow m
noted that the Ohio Revised Code provides tluu, in the event a holiday falls on a Saturdar, as Christmas does this year, it shall be
observed on the Friday unmedia!dy preceding.
In addition, the Meigs County Clerk of Court's office, legal and
title divisions, will be closed Thundly at noon.
The courtbouse wiU be open for business as usual on Monday
between 8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m.

.\

Wiseman because of our currem
health situations," Reed said.
For its general liability insurance, COWJCil chose a private insur·
er over a public ,insurance pool of
viHages despite the increased cost,
Reed said.
The public entities pool would
have cost $13,355 per year, while
council chose Downing-Childs·
Mullen-Musser Insurance of
Pomeroy which charged $20,901
per year.
"There are no funds backin~ the
insurance company while m a
pool," he added.
The only other non-pool bid was
presented by Brogan·Warner Insurance Services, also ·of Pomeroy,
which bid $39,437.95 per year.
"It would maintain a reasonable .
cost and ensure insureability for
everyone," Reed said of why council made its decision.
In other business, council:
- Unanimously promoted
James Stacy from lieutenant to captain in the Pomeroy Police Depart·
ment.
-Moved the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Depanment's ladder ttuck into
the village's ttuck fund.
·- Bowed their heads in a
moment of illence for the city's
former water clert, Rhea A. Deem,
46, who died Sunday 81 Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus.
"She will be sadly missed"
Reed said.
'
Attending were councilmembers
John Blaettnar, Scott Dillon,
Thomas Werry, Larry Wehrung
and Bill Young, Reed and Hysell.
N01 attending was Councilwoman
Betty Baronick.

--Local briefs---

URG receives $35,000 grant

MANLEY$ RECYCLE CENTER

soJ Mill s.....,

1 Section, 10 Pagn 35 c..t.
AMu111m.... lnc. NMapoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 21, 1993

Multlm.ch Inc.

\.

�Commentary

Tunday, December21,1993

Page-2-The ~lly Sentinel
PomeroY-Middlapqrt, OhiO
Tuetday, December21 ,' 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Forecasters say white Chri~tmas is possible .

OHIO Weather
.WedDelday, Dec. ll

By The Auocilted Press
A blanket. of snow gmeted lhe
first
of winter over much or
Ohio
y.
Overnight snowfall amoun~s
ranged from about two inches 10
northern Ohio to a dusting in the
south, the National Wealher Service said.
The snow was to taper orr to
flurries today as a cold rront

Aceu·Wealher- forecast

The Dally Sentinel
111 Coart Stnet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DBVc::tmD TO THB JN'I'BRBSTS OP T8B IIBIGII-IL\SON AREA

ROBERTL WINGET!'
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET I.EBEW
Controller

LETll!RS OP OPINION are welcomo. They abould be lela !ban 300
woJds. All !ellen are subject to odiling and must be ligned with name,
address and telephone number. No unliped letters will be published. Leaen
sbould be in good tule, llddrelaing iuueo, not personalities.

Cracking down on
welfare fraud in Ohio
, By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cuyahoga County, Ohio's largest, is ~e .
worst at controlling welfare fraud, while ~ third-largest county JS
one of lhc best, stale Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said:
Hamilton County, which has 866,000 residents, is vigorous in
cracldng down on cheats, Ferguson said while traveling the state
thisweeL
.
Cuyahoga County has about lA million residents; Frankl10
County has 961 ,000, according to the 1990 census.
Cuyahoga County has been the wo~ at catching welf~ cheats
since lhc auditor's off'JCC began comparmg state tax data With county welfare records in 1987, Ferguson said.
Cuyahoga County had 18 percent of lhe state's Aid to Famili75
with Dependent Children caseload, but almost half of lhe $8S million in improper welfare payments from around lhe state.
In comparison Franklin County had 10 percent of the state's
AFDC caseload mid 13 percent of the cases cited.
HamilJOn County has about 9 pen:ent of lhc state's AFDC recipi·
ents, but only 5 ~t of lhc improper payment cases from around
lhe state, Ferguson S81d.
Fea-11'50n said lhc latest audit of the Hamilton C~~ty Depart·
ment of Human Services found that 578 AFDC rec1p1ents money
had received $1.1S million in benefits to which they were not enb·
tied. The county was investigating 139 cases by the time lhe state
audit was issued, he said
Cuyahoga County Human Services Director Joseph Gareia chal·
lenged Ferguson's fmdings. He said federal auditors found Cuyahoga's error rate to be about avetage for Ohio's big-city counties.
•'I've seen his press releases, but I've never seen his document&amp;·
lion," Gareia said.
In many of the cases auditors cited statewide, recipien!S who
went on welfare and lhen obtained jobs did not infonn the state and
have continued receiving welfare checks.
Ferguson said lhe audit information is relayed 10 county prosecu·
tots who decide whethea- to prosecute to recover improper welfare
paymen~
.
State audiiOI"S used computers to compare state 10come tax data
from 1988 and 1989 with county welfare records.
Ferguson's spokesman, Jolin Conley, said the tax data was.l;he
latest available bec'nse it takes several years for lhc state to certify
tax information.
Garcia said he and other county welfare directors have been urg·
ing lhe state to help establish an early-dct.ection system.
The system would enable county welfare departments to see a
welfart1 applicant's most recent tax return and determine whet!'cr
the person owned a vehicle or was receiving worlcers' compensallon
payments.

Letters to the editor
Christmas event missed
You missed Ibis one. Individu·
als donated Ughts, cookies. cross,
moner. hot chocolate, coffee. treats
and bme to make Racine's First
Annual Christmas in lhe Park a
success. More than 250 children
and adult$ attended. I gave the Sen·
tine! office a copy of our program
:to be put in paper on Wednesday. I
·was contacted by a member of lhc
:Staff and was assnred it would be in
:the paper, but no one was available
from the staff to cover lhe event.
they were aware of the event as it
bad been written up in Beat of
£end on two different occaslo'ls.
: Over 100 individuals carried
J;andles waited lhe one-half mile
walldnj track, singing Christmas
carols. Choirs from Methodist
:;outhem Cluster Churches and
Baptist Church sang carols. The

Nazarene minister reid lhc Christ·
mas story. There was a live Nativity scelie. RepUcas of village buildings were on diaplay wilh a Ughled
cross and tree.
Santa and Mrs. Santa arrived
and presented treats to the children.
We invite you to come next year
and enjoy Otristmas in lhe l'alt.
Dale E. Hart, President
Star Mill Park Board
Racine
P.S. Our coverage in paper was
in community even!S on Tuesday
which had an incorrect starting
time and community calendar on
Wednesday. We'll continue contacting Beat or Bend writer.l never
listed any names in my article as
my last leuer was rejected because
I thanltcd some bands for helping at
the park.

Berryls World

r.

and materialism of the Reagan
years. Even now there are those
who seek political capital before
solutions.

Hot/ding Carter Ill
It is not an altoget,her unworthy
objective. In a country of represen·
tative government and democratic
accountability, placing responsibil·
ity is a legitimate exercise. If there
are no consequences for failure,
dereliction or duty or abuse of
power, all three become lhe nonn.
But most Americans instinctive·
ly know that lhe responsibility is
shared. We see it in our daily lives.
from the hours spent with our chil·
dren to the moments not spent in
lhe voting booth to lhe comers cut
in lhe marketplace. We feel it in
our bones and, more frequentlr
than we lite to admit, expenence 11
in our daily lives. ••And there is no
health in us" is an old litur~:l
~ which, though .out of
•
1on in the church which once
embraced it, cuts through self-delusion to a truth millions of Ameri •
cans privately recogilize.

And so die public commentary
has begun 10 shift. William Ben·
nett. former secrc1ary of education
and a happy warrior of lhe hard
right, gave a speech to lhe Heritage
Foundation not long ago lhat cut
deeply and llroadly into the national ca11cer. You do not have to
accept all or his prescriptions to
appreciate lhe acuity of his diagnoSIS.

'

About lhe same time, Bill Clinton went before a black church in
Memphis, Tenn., to reassert an old
truth: Tools to ·build community
anew can and should be P!ovided at
least in part by government, but
only those within the community
can fashion an endurinf structure.
It was not a white man s paiiOIIizing putdown of the blaclt condition
but a thoughtful president's attempt
to accelerate a dialogue already
begun by Americans of every race
and creed.
As I write this, I have just finished reading a manuscript copv of
"The Religious Critic in Amezfcan
Culture" by Professor William
Dean, a theologian. Soon to be
published by State University of
New York Press, it is a densely rea-

-

WASHINGTON Yetta
Adams likely spent the night of
Sept. 30 sleeping on a bus bench
across the street from the Depart·
ment of Housing and Urban Development, huddling against lhe night
with newspapers and shopping
bags. The 43-year-old homeless
woman died on that bench nearly
two months later, prompting HUD
Secretary Henry Cisneros 10 eulogize: "Adams' death jarred me and
all of my colleagues at HUD,
reminding us that our society is
becoming an increasingly hostile
environment for the homeless."
But on the night of Sept. 30,
some HUD officials were jarred by
something else: It was lhc last day
or the government's fiscal year,
and HUD's Office of Public
Affairs was 'rushin~J to spend
$50,000 on new television equipment. Considering that Cisneros is
now being hailed for granting
$250,000 in emergency aid to
Washington's homeless in the
walce of Adams' death, SSO,OOO is
rial mone7.. Homelessness may be
HUD's • top priority," but the
$50,000 was spent on broadcast
equipment - not beds or bread.
This kind of curious s_pending
should come as no swprise to Vice
President AI Gore. His National
Perfonnance Review has called it
the September "spending frenzy."
Unspent money gets returned to the
federal treasury at the end of lhe

. ~·ssayit,'s I960,and~devll
has JUSt appo10ted a comm\ttee !0
worsen the problem of cnme 10
America to the point of unendurability. What steps might lhe com·
miuec take?
.
One obvious step would be to
· persuade lhe Supreme~ to out·
law, as unconstitutional under lhe
First Amendment, the vagrancy
laws that the police had froin time
immemorial uaed to maintain civil
order. Under them, suspicions
types hanging around on streete«·
ners could be.queatiol)ed. searellcd
for illegal ~· aild arrested or
sent on thea way.
Thanks to the Warren Court,
those days are 0'11:1'. "HIIIgin' out"
is a '!f&amp;Y ()f life, and iherc art1 bwns,
VertlcaliJid ~', alJ OVa' lhe
streets of Amet'J!)Is .ciues.
.
A~ ,Cir!Y !!CP would ,be to
add tlie pat1en11 .JD the nauon's
.mental ~ 10 thc mix of flot·
sam and 1etsam alrea~y. on the
s_treets.. The AmeriCIII Cml. Uberues Union and other ~s of
individual rights were happy to

f1~ 'D '(OUR
Ct&gt;M~N\S

ASoUl

FRU\TCAKtS
Vf~'(

Ah\U~ II\\ t'$.

I

start.

••••

••

I

.

probl~m

--Area deaths-.Forrest Hargraves

forrest W. Haniiiaves, 70, a resi·
dent or West CoTumbia, W. Va.,
died Monday, December 20. 1993,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born May S, 19~3, in Red
House, W. Va., he was the son of
lhe late Jesse H. Hargraves and Lil·
!ian E. "Bass" Hargraves.
Mr. Hargraves was a construe·
tion Iabore&amp;' and a member of International Laborer's Union Local
No. 1085, Parlcersburg, W.Va.
He is survived by his wife,
Phyllis L. Olivea- Hargraves, West
Columbia; one son and daughter·
in-law, Rev. Charles W. and San·
dra L. Hargraves, New Haven, W.
Va.; one granddaughter, Hcathea- D.
Hargraves, New Haven; one sister,
Mammie Volz, Mansfield, Ohio
and one step-sisrer, Betty Vaughn,
Tucson, Arizona. One grandchild
survives.
He was preceded in death by
one son, Larry Eugene Hargraves,
one grandson, Charles W. ''Chod"
Hargraves, one sister, Bula Marie
Hoffman, and one brother, James
H. Hargraves.
Services will be held 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Foglesong ·
Funeral Home with Rev. Clyde
Fields officiating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Alma Roberts
Alma B. "Dimples" RobertS, 79,
of Point Pleasant, died Monday,
December 20, 1993 at lhe Charles·
tal Area Medical Center following
a short illness.
Boot April 8, 1914 in Bedford
Township, Ohio, she was a
daughter of tho late Eldon J. and
Lena V. Clark. She was a member
of lhe Church of Christ in Henderson and was retired from La1cin
State Hospital.
She was also preceded in death
by her husband, William G.
Roberts and a sister, Gladys Mulligan.
Survivors include two sons and
daughters·in·law, William E. "Bill"
and Frances Roberts of Tampa. FL
and Bruce C. and Jean Roberts of
Point Pleasant; a sister, Reba I.
Hall of San Diego, CA; four
grandchildren and four great·
granddlildren.
Service will be held at 11 a.m.
Thtnday, Decembef 23, at the
Church of Christ in Henderson with
Evangelist L.H. "Sam" Gwinn.
Burial will be in the· Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pomeroy,' Ohio.
VIsiting hours will be Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. at lhe Wilcoxen
Funeral Home and one hour prior
to the service at the church
Thursday.

... __

' .Or.S
Seni

j

Continued trom Page 1

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

and suide for Curtis Gilbert, a visu·
ally impaired student. The board
also corrected earlier contracts for
tutoring given to Joe Hall and
Susan Arnold. Gary Canterbury
was hired as a substitute bus driver
on an as-needed basis for the
remainder of the year.
Rosetta Jenkins and Juanita
Oiler were hired to transport students to the Ohio School for the
Blind in Columbus. ·
Parent volunteerS approved at
Salisbury were Angie Brickles,
Lola O'Brien, Denise Arnold, Shari
Garnes, Katheryn Lewis, Sharon
Warner, Sandy Banks, Connie
Collins, Mary Felts. June Haning,
Martha Gilkey, Jeanie Witherell,
Faye Clifford, Coleen Whaley,
Eddie Whaley, Janet Peavley, and
Beverly Blair.
Ap{lroved as parent volunteers
at Middleport were Melinda
Venoy, Lora Rawson. Beth Lynch.
Donna HartJon, I.~dy H~~;ggerty,
Barbara Oliver, Tamm1 Cole,
Howard Jeffers, Patricia Preece,
Peggy Carpenter, Cathy Haning,

Jacqueline Hoover, Mary Whan,
Gina Phillips, Bonnie Shea and
Pam Johnson.
Other Business
A leak insurance contract wilh
the Leading Creek Conservancy
Disbict was approved by the board,
and a service contract with E. C.
Babbert, Inc. for sewage treatment
plant a' Meigs High School was
tabled pending more information.
Treasurer Jane Fry gave routine
financial reports, including some
transfer of funds. She reported that
sbe is waiting on additional fiBI'I'CS
from the auditor's office to complete lhe 1994 appropriations for
lhe districL
Bob Barton who goes off the
board this month was recognized
for his 13 years of service to the
district and was presented a plaque
in appreciation.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Buckley, boar.d members,
Larry Rupe, president, John Hood,
Barton, Roger AbboU and Randy
Humphreys, along wilh Scott Walton, member-elect

The Daily Sentinel

Contest winners
are announced

(VSPS ZIJ.M)
Publiabed every .rteraooa, Mooclay throuah
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomotoy, Cillo by tlio
Ohio Vlllley Publllhlna Qo-y!Multlmodia
be., Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769, PI!. 992-21l6.
SOCOIId - · pold II PoiDOIOy, Ohio.

Member: Tho Allodlllld ..._ IUid lbo Oblo ·
. Newap..... -ltlOI, Natloul M -l't
Repreaeatathe, BraDham Newapip« Salea,
733 Third Avea.ue, New Yorlt, New Y«k
t0017.
POSTMASTEil: Sead lddteN dwl&amp;et lo The
Dally ~atiHI, Ill Cowl St, Pomorvy, Ohio .
05169.

lllBSCIIIPI'ION IIATES

117 Canltr orM- • -

One Weet. .................................... -......... ..$1.ro
One Moolb. ........................... ..................J6.9S
One Yeor....:............................ ........_ .. $13.20 •

and 201.

The record-high temperallln: fm:
Ibis .date at the Columbus _weatbel'

stall on was 64 degrees tn 1967.
"'hi~ the record low ~ 11 ~OW:
zero m 11142. Sunset ~ght will be;
at 5:10
and sunnse Wcdnes-.

•

•

Winners in Racine's "Show of
Lights" hpme decorating contest
were announced Tuesday morning
by the Racine Area Community
Organization which sponsored the
contest.
The out-of-town judges gave
first place to James and Frances
Moore and second place to Paul
Dailey, bolh located on Route 124
south or Racine; and third to Carroll and Eva Teaford, of Main
Street, Racine.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to 23 caDs for assistance
since Friday. Units responding
included:
Saturday - 1:08 p.m. Syracuse
to Court Street for Reta Shamblin
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 5:22 p.m.
Pomeroy to Beech Street for Anna
Welch who was transported to
HMC; 9:24 p.m. Racine to Station
2 for Thomas Baldwin who was
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; 11 :OS p.m. Racine to
State Route 338 for Christopher
Gilbridge who was transported to
HMC;
Sunday - 12:20 a.m. Syracuse
to Yellow Bush Road for Sheryl
Adkins who was transported to
- Rhjean
shop will specialize in smaller gifts area resi·
VMH; 12:40 a.m. Rutland 10 PriceMcClure, owner of a new Pomeroy gltt sbop,
dents desire, McClure said.
Strong Road for Katherine Heffner
organizes some of ber store's inventory. The
who was b'&amp;Dsponed to HMC; 4:38
a.m. Pomeroy to Page Street for
Gladys Parfait who was transported
to VMH; 6:59 a.m. Syracuse to
Morning Star Road for Clara
B GEORGE ABATE
herb .surprises in~ide, copper_pots, c~ling the days before Christmas a
Grueser who was transported to
Y •
s
candies,
potpoum, small anuques, trial penod.
VMH; 7:05 a.m. Middleport to
SentJ~el News tan
boulcs and hanging window dccom"Mostly we don'tlcnow what to
South Fifth Street for Francis
A new g1ft shop. opened la.st lions she added.
buy," he added. "We need more
Roush who was transported to week on East Mam Street m
The store also has a southwest· shopping places in lhe county."
HMC; 7:38 a.m. Pomeroy to Union PomRerohY· , R fl .
G' ft em goods section, featuring rugs
The store has had quite a. few
Avenue for Harold Reeves who
orean s e ecuons . 1 and bajas, McClure said.
custdmers already, McClure S81d.
was transported to VMH; 12:37 Shoppe, .owned ~y Rh&lt;?J~an
Local products such as baskets
"We've been hear.ing ~hat th_e
p.m. Rutland to New Lima Road McClure, IS located 10 thebuildi~g by Angie McClure of Pomeroy and county needs somethmg hke th1s
for Helen Combs who was trans- that formerly housed McClure s bears by Susan Balcer of Middle- for a long time," McClure said.
ported to HMC; 3:04 p.m. Tuppers Restaurant. The resta~J!anl several pon, she said.
.
lbe couple "caught the buf to
Plains to Coolville Road for Beuy m'?n!hs ago moved mto a new
Serving local customers specific try to ~n the store afrer talcing a
Long who was tnmsported to Cam- building next door..
h uld requests will be at the core of the tour w1th the Amish recently,
den-Clark Memorial Hospital; 6:16
The two establishments s o
businesses' success, McClure said. McClure said.
p.m. Middleport to Middlepon Fire co!"plement each other, McClure Also the shop will be convenient
The gift shop will feature some
Station for David Satterfield who sa1~, as she spoke of her fam1ly for those Christmas shoppers look- of Mrs. McClure's paintings and
was treated and not transported; wh1ch has operated restaurants 10 ing for that last special gift.
will eventually sell photo supplies,
8:59 p.m. Tuppers Plains 10 Kaylor lhe Bend~ for the last 37 Y~·
"We ' re Iookmg for people to she said. Art classes may also be
Road for Alice Board who was
The famtly s fmt venture IOto a come in and request items and then held.
transported to St Joseph's Hospi- bus1.ness other than the restaurant we'll order them," McClure said.
"I'm real proud of it," McClure ·
tal; 9:38 p.m . Rutland 10 State busmess h~s b~en a fhallenge,
Shoppers have already asked for said of her new busine ss. "I
Route 124 for one-car accident in McClure SBid: But Its a nat~ unicorns and tea pots, which the thought people in the area would
which Steven Shuler was transpon- progre~slon w~lh my background 10 business will be ordering, she said. enjoy il and we would enjoy it,
ed to HMC. Shuler was the only crafts,' she Slid.
McClure's husband, Sonny. is too "
-· ·
·
She has worked for several
one in lhe vehicle.
Monday - 12:04 a.m. Middle- . years in arts and has also worked at
port to Beech Street for Lori Put- craft shops in lhe area.
McClure said she plans to difney who was transported to VMH;
7:53 a.m. Racine to State Route ferentiate herself from the other
124 for Wesley Clark wh.o was cra(ts stores. ~use she will sell
transported to VMH; 11:21 a.m. more gifts and fewer hand-made
Reedsville to State Route 681 for items.
The main sales items will be
Patrick W. McDonald of the
Dorset Barringer who was transspecialty
gifts
including
cards
wilh
Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State
ported to Camden-Clark Hospital
Highway
Patrol
has been named
10 Parkersburg, W.Va.; 11:32 a.m.
1993
Trooper
of
lhe
Year, the post
Rolland to Krauser Road for Chrisannounced
Monday.
tine Shane wh.o was b'&amp;Dsportcd to
According to a press release
CLEVELAND (AP) - One
VMH; 11:33 a.m . Middleport to
from
the post, McDonald was
ticket
worth
$100,000
was
sold
Railroad Street for Hazel McHaffie
selected
in recognition of his outnaming
all
five
numbers
drawn
in
who was transported to VMH;
standing
service. Fellow officers
Monday
night's
Buckeye
5
game,
12:41 p.m. Rutland to Salem Cenat the post cho se him
stalioned
ter for Marcus Ward who was lhe Ohio Lottery said.
based
on
leadersh1p
abilities, proThe
winning
ticket
was
sold
at
transpOrted to O'Bleness Memorial
fes
sional
ethics,
work
attitude and
Frank's
Party
Shoppe
in
the
Hol;pital; 4:05 p.m. Middleport to
cooperation
wilh
s.upervisors,
peers
Youngstown
suburb
of
Struthers.
Lincoln Street for Howard Punnell
and
the
public.
who was treated at the scene; 8:32 Pick 3 Numbers
McDonald joined the post in
5-8-5
p.m. Middlepon 10 Pearl Street for
1981
and has been stationed in
(five,
eight,
five)
Ocel Senes who was b'&amp;Dsported to
Jaclcson
and Gallipolis. He lives in
Pick 4 Numbers
VMH.
Jaclcson
with
his wife, Trudi, and is
1·5-8·7
a
graduate
of
Jaclcson
High School.
(one, five, eight, seven)
BuckeyeS
2-14-21 -30-34
SPRING VALLEY ,CINEMA
(two, fourteen, twenty-one, lhir·
Am Ele Power ....... ... .. ....... 37 3/8
446·4524
. . .,
ty , thirty-four)
Ashland Oil.. ............................ 32
PATRICK
MCDONALD
The jackpot for Wednesday's
AT&amp;T.. .............................. 54 3/4
Super
Lotto drawing will be $12
Bank One ........ .......... ........ .38 3/8
million.
Bob Evans .......................... 21 7/8
Charming Shop .................. ll 5/8
Champion Ind.................... 17 l{l
City Holding ...................... 30 3/4
Federal Mogul ................... 28 lfl
Pomeroy Village offices will
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ..... .........44 lfl
close Wednesday at noon to allow
Lands End ..........................45 1{2
employees to attend funeral serLimited Inc............ ............ 16.3/4
vices for Rhea A. Deem, the vilMultimedia Inc. .................34 l{l
lage's water cleric:. Mrs. Deem died
Point Bancorp .......................... 15
Sunday. Her funeral will be held at
Reliance Elecbic................ l7 l{l
I p.m. Wednesday with the Rev.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 l{l
Alan Blackwood officiating. Burial
992-3148
Shoney's Inc ......................23 1/8
will be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Star Bank.. .................... .....35 1/4
Wendy lnt'l... ........................... 17
Worthington Ind ...................... 19
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
or Gallipolis.

New gift shop opens in Pomeroy

McDonald named
trooper of the year

Lottery numbers

Stocks

7

Offices to close

Shop Thursday
Until
Midnight
Middleport
Department Store

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions -· None.
Monday discharges - Reva
Smith, Middleport; Della Norton,
Pomeroy; Robert Roush, Racine.
Holzer Medical Center
Dec. 20 discharges: Estella
Layne
Dec:. 20 births: Mr. and Mrs.
James Keesee, daughter, Middle·
port.

SINGLICOPY
I'IIICI:

Dally.......... .-........................... _

ll C.all

Su- ... - .... PlY lbe &lt;llri&lt;fllll)'
remlllo ""- dlroot 10 '1111 Dlllr s..JHJ
oaa-.111 or 12 D&gt;Dib baoll. CMit wUl be

;veo..,......,-.

No lllllacrtitiou by mall pWJDilloclla ----~.._

' Mtllhhea';IW

...

laoldoMolp~

'!·

·,

C1993Accu· W&amp;alh1t, lne.

in the teens. High around 30.
Soath·Centi'al Ohio
Extended forecast
Considerable cloudiness tonight
Thursday, chance of snow .
with a low 20 to 25. Southwest
winds around 10 mph. Wednesday. Lows 15 to 20. Highs 20 10 25. FriCloudy wilh a chance of snow flur· day, chance of snow and cold .
ries. High 30 to 35. Chance of pre- Lows 10 to 15. Highs 15 to 20.
cipitation 40 percent. Outlook for Christmas, chance of snow. Lows
Christmas. A chance of mow. Low · in the teens. Highs 20 10 30.

:

~

CJ::udy Cloud(

-----,-..--Weather-----

~illed

··'

SIKiny Pt

lo1o Aaot:illtod Prtu Gllp/lkoNM

WiUiam A. Rusher

1

••

Ice

The prospeas or a white Christ·
mas lool! good with the possibility
of snow m the forecast for Wainesday ~gb lhe end ~f the ~- It
abo will lie. co1&lt;f:. with lows m the
teens and highs m the upper teens

EMS responds
to23 calls

• • • ••

W.VA.

· chlldten of St. Louis, or lhc bullet- :
Under this all-forgiving system riddled ~ommu~rs on the Long ;
Damian Williams, who slammed a Island Railroad:) •
_ ,
brick iniO Reginald Denny's skull
Bilt'thC devii's ~illee has a:
during the Los Angeles riots (and secood fall-back position: Gll!l con- ·
who now admits lie I)Jldnlt even tioL There are-200 mil!iori auns out:
.
heard about the police acquittals at .there, lhe vast m¥xitr of lhem in :
the time, blit wu simply "caught lawful and responsible hands. •
up in lhe raptwe"), W!IS sentenCed (Only) ~ofallguna'are Ueec1 ;
~s - first marijuana (which td 10 yean m !Don. but will ~e in criii.es, anil five ailt of evt~y six :
d be poob·poohcd as hannlc:Ss) just 3 1/2. As a matter of fact, 20 guns 10 Ulcd were obtained il)egal· ;
and then a flood of harder drugs people a day in\this country are ly.) But "gun controlla,...s" are lhe :
culminating in crack cocaine, ~down b1.,crimlilals out on easy 'illy· out fo'r every politician ·
whose users will killto 'finaacc ........... or 111t.. lly ro.s• ldllcr) who feels -••ure from his con- :
their habit and then ldll · under :;;"::V~"7'
·
stituents !O";duce crime. 'Some :
lhe drug's malian.nt
1i'tinbe
&lt;levil'a
committee
would
child
'is
and it 'Blakes the :
1
~ute m!h~-~usn:hiland'e
be 100 lhrewd dot to have a fall· ~ llatiOIIWide? Put a BUD con- .
..,,,......
back position wben public oatriiC irollaw. Some nut lib COiiJr Per- ·
couldn't be OllpCctccl to have their at !Mt forca our sluOish politi- guson (the fin&amp; pOIItiCIIly correct ·
muimum Impact fo'ithoUt the coop- ciana to act For one thing, all ··mass mUJdcla' - lid hires whites, ·
entiba. of the penal system, So !be attemtila to Uilhtca up the DCnal ~slana .llld t:f:lnaer\oative.blaeks) :
COIJ!ml.~ would get to YfOrk COD p~eu - by limiti,Ji&amp; plea bar· kills five traJD 'p&amp;lltngeta? PaSS :
the J~cial pcocess-:- ~ ]l1ea · galas aild paroles, anil building 8IIOiber gnn cootrollaw.
'
barguns, under whiCh ,.lona .are more pr1aons to bo1J1e crimitWaTho bcap~ is d)at nobody can !
allowed to plc.ad guilty· to l!lildo· WOUld'"' ~t· bx proleili that.auch say lhele ''WDII~twark;'' to 110111e
meanon, routine\ illid mbildtutlng measures ·are .'too expenaive.' • mmlliCulc extent They are, hOMv~le 1111!- piobation for hard time, (Nobody mentions wbat these ea-, a geauinely dUel delusion that ,
to the point whel'll murderers ~· criminals cost society If .tl\ey arc · serves just one rcal'(lia)lali!: to 1give 1
sentenced -to IS or 20 years 1n left on the 1ooec -let alone pull a politicians an. eicule for avOiding '
prison btuerve only five or six.
price on the liVCB of lhnlaughtercd lhe real10lutions.
I
I

I

Cincinnati

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

::=.

I

• lcolumbusl36"

Henry. "I said, 'We're not giving it
"It is not atate-of-the-art studio
back. We're 'going to take .some- equipment to run around and make
thing off our (wiSh) list that co.•k self-aggrandizing tapes of lhe secapproximately Jhat amount of retary;" Maeda said~ "He,' ·mfact.
money and IYC're going to buy it." is completely the opposiie lcind of
Like some lucky niftle wutnets, person. He has criticized us numerMaeda's offiCe: was congratulated ous times for even including a phoin an Oct. I memo - tellingly tograph of him in one of our
tagged • 'Friday Morning in the newsletters."
new Fiscal Ycar."
But Cisneros has hardly been
"Coilgratulationsl You are the the shrinldng violet of the Clinton
proud owner of a new Panasonic Cabinet. During last October's Hisend-of-the-year spendinj! rush broadcast quality television camera panic Heritage Month, for example,
abound," states Gore's Remvent- wilh a docked Betacam SP video· HUD officials ·hawked access to
ing Government report
tape recorder. It is comparable to Cisneros, whom they advertised as
· "Managers who don't exhaust the Sony and lhe camera contains a America's "leading Hispanic."
each line item at year's end usually digital signal processor. Along with Transportation Secretilry Federico
are 10ld to return lhc excess. Typi· it you got a biped and triple B&amp;W Pena, who is also Hispanic, may
cally, they get less the next ume monitor... ," reads the memo.
have disagreed. ·
arouod ... (we} received more examSince Cisneros took office, the
What's at stake is more lhan one
ples of Ibis source of waste... than public affairs shop has also been Cabinet member's lust for the Orneany odler."
lhe recipient of $23,148 in new car· light. It's also about·waste and misWhile Cimeros' department has peting, furniture and other renova- placed oriorities, which malce posbeen crying poverty in the war on tions - wilh at least $6,000 more sible a ''spending frenzy."
homelessness, some internal HUD on tap for 1994.
During an interview wilh us last
memos we've obtained paint a picThe television equipment, sping, Budget Otief Leon Panetta
ture of an agency wilh money to meanwhile, will be a nice addition talked about year-end spending,
burn. "In our rush t6 spend funds,! to a studiQ built at a cost of more which he placed in a larger context:
had requested the transfer of funds than $69,000 by" Cisneros' Jli'C!Ie· "The problem is you have a long
early 10 the day on Sept. 30," cessor, lack Kei!IP· The studio fea- history within the federal governstates one memo dated Oct 5.
tures blaclt velour curtains, a state· ment of agencies -and departmen!S
Offtcials justify the expenditures !y desk and an American flag back· playing their own games, doing
with a whiff or entitlement. "A drop, and was intended to heighten lhetr own thing, no11e of it ultimatefew hours before the fiscal year Kemp's national visibility. Cis- ly relating at times 10 how best to
was over I tli8covcrcd that we had neros may not have much iii com- serve lhc people."
several thousand dollars sitting mon with Kemp's conservatism,
Yetta Adams was among those
there," Sharon Maeda, HUD's but they both yearn for higher people.
assistant secretary for public office and have a knack for head· · ·Copyright 1!193, United Fea·
affairs, told our associate Ed line-making.
tare Syndicate, Inc.

infl:_ ·

I

INC.

fiscal year, which begins .on~ 1,
thus there are perverse mcenuves
to spend.
"Stories about the l~gendary

·
lead lhis.crusade. Psychopaths of
every vanety are now on the loose.
Third, the committee would surely
recommend eitcouraging the use of

I

••

So where are our philosophers
and theologians and intellectuals at
this moment of national· need·?
Dean quotes the brilliant black
social critic and theologian, Cornel
West, to iltdict the refusal or inability of many to "take lhe life of the
mind seriously enough to relate
ideas to the everyday life of ordinary folk." For West, too, lhe liberal left's severing of "ties to
cbun:hes, synagogues, temples and
mos9ues" is an act of specific
"political suicide," but ililpUcitly
it is suicidal for the nation as a
whole.
Which brings us back to this
par!icular season, a frantic, secularized overlay on a reUgious celebra·
tion. While I am a Christiim, it is
not necessary to be a believer to
understand how Christ's involvement in time and place speaks
directly to our current condition.
Faith in action relates now, as it
related then, to our neighbors as
well as to our God. A synthesis
which ties "internal and external
worlds" together is one which can
be the foundation for renewed
national community. .
.
As it is written in Proverbs,
"Where there is no vision, the people perish." They are old words
wilh contemporary relevance.
Copyrlght1!193 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Hoddlng Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, Is president of
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.·
based televi$lon production comP-IIY,· ... ·: '
, , r,

'

I

I

HUD goes on sanctioned ..spending spree

Dealing -with t,h·e crime

'POO''T

soned call for public intellectuals ld
refocus on the relijiiOus identity
and nature of tho nabOn. As he puiS
it in his preface, " ... tho relipous
runs through the pubUc and gjves it
a ldnd of cohetence. so that without
the reUgious the public is jeopar·
dized." As for what he means by
"religious" in Ibis context, it is "a
people's sense of the whole, a
sense that binds together lhe pariS
of a penon's internal and external
worlds.''
That is what is missing ·iii the
nation today, some version of what
the joumali$t-philosopher ~al~r
Lippmann tenned The Public Phi·
losophy in 195S. We have lost that
"sense of lhe whole," and without
it, our undertikings of national
redemption are hobbled from the

advanced from !be well.
Tempera~ will dip ~to lhe
low 20s IOIIigbt IIIII !here will be a
chance of more for die Dll'lh·
en:a half of the sta~, f~sters
sa1d. Southern. Oh10 w1ll have
skies.

:J.

We're facing a crisis of faith
This is not the time ·for chin
pulling about American policy
toward the former Soviet Union or
debating lhe many facets of health
reform. It's Christmas weelc, which
should be devoted to family ingathering, gift-~ving and lhc reassertion of abiding faith. In the absence
of national crisis, the affairs of
state take a far-distant back seaL
But as there was once that
fabled star in the East lhat led the
wise men to Bethlehem, there is
today a growing mass or opinion in
America lhat in fact we do face a
national crisis of epic pmportions.
Its forerunner was a society-wide
erosion of civic f!Pth. Its regular
manifestations 8lll the polls that tell
of profound cynicism. Its most
deadly companion is a social disin·
tegration, which announces itself in
eveT,hing from the tidal wave of
iUeptimacy 10 lhe numbing repetition of casually violent crime.
Initially, there was a tendency to
treat this societal cancer as a political problem. Partisans of the right
took deliglll in pinning lhe tail on
lhe welfart1 state donkey. Spokes·
men for the left pointed to the
"I've got mine, Jack" amorality

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

13 W..U..-.. .............................. _.. ,_ .... $11.14

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~~-;;~~;;~~~~~~;~;~~~~;;:;;;u~
'

�Page 4 The

Ohio

Sentinel

21 1.993

TUesda~~ber21,1993

Pomeroy-MiddJeport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Peat . 5

Eastern girls be~t .Southern 63·41 for season's second win

WELLSTON, OH
MILTON, WV
MIDDLEPORT, OH
WAVERLY,OH

After a slow start, the Eastern
Eagles picked up the pace lhroug11out the game 10 blitz host Southern
63-41 Monday night in varsity
girls' Tri-Valley Conference basketball action at Southern High
Sch.o ol' s Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium.
The Hocking Division game left
Eastern with a 2· 3 ovemU mark and
2· 2 slate in the league. Southern
falls 10 0-5.
Eastern was led by a double·
double effort from JUnior Tara
Congo. who scored a career-high
15 points and grabbed 15 rebounds.
The junior post woman was 6-11
from the field and 3-4 at the line,
hitting both from the blockJl and the
shon jumper from the lane.
Senior Jaime Wilson, Eastern's
point guard, had perhaps her fmest
floor game, notching 13 points and
sharing a team-high four assists
with Jessica Karr, who notched 12
points. Wilson was 6-10 from the
::field in one of her best shooting
::Oights from the O~r.
-: Although W1lson had super
: offensive stats, EHS mentor Scott
·:Wolfe praised Wilson for playing a
••

MACY
POINT PLEASANT, WV
HUNnNGTON, WV
PROCTORVILLE, OH

NITRO, WV
ATHENS,OH
BELPRE,OH

HURRICANE, WV
WINFIELD, wv
CHARLESTON, WV
GALLIPOLIS, OH

Now 'Thru Christmas Eve

ALL

'

AMERICAN GREETINGS

fmc defensive game against South·
em's Amy Mills, who seared just
two points while being guarded by
Wilson.
Southern was led by Mills. who
ended the night with 10 points,
Christie COOJICC added seven, and
Amber Ohhnger and Bea Lisle
each added six. Cooper was most
impressive with a S-6 night from
the line.
Eastern took the lead on a short
Wilson jumper, but Mills tied the
score shortly thereafter. Eastern
built up a 2-4 point lead throughout
the early stages, but Southern cut it
back to 7-6. Penny Acilcer had several key rebounds and a key buclcet
in that stretch.
A Rebecca Evans turnaround
jumper from the line gave Eastern a
9-6 lead, then two free throws from
Amy Redovian and a Congo
jumper gave Eastern a 13-9 lead at
the end of the quarter.
Eastern junior Amy Redovian
played one of her best games in
posting seven points overall and
playing a steady floor game. Redovian paced the Eagles with four
ftrSt quarter points.

'-;

Eastern held the advantage
throughout the second quarter, but
could never really put the Tornadoes away. Buckets by Sammi Sis·
son, Bca Lisle and Jonna Manuel
pulled Southern to within two at
15·13, but Eastern began a gradual
inaeasc in pickinl up the tempo.
Congo, Karr and Wilson paced
the Eastern attack, while Melissa
Guess, Patsy Aeiker, Nicole Nelson
and Jessica Radford came in and
did a l!OOd job off the bench. Eastern hu 6-12 .free throws in th e
streak to lead 30.20 at the half.
Several quick steals by Karr
gave Easlem the early ed$.e in the
second half and Jaime Wilson got
hot from the floor. while also pick·
ing up several assists from Karr off
the fast break. Wilson ended the
frame with nine pointJ as Eastern
rolled to a 45-29 lead. Christie
Cooper haf four points for Southem m the stretch.
Eastern had a good fourth quarter, outscoring Southern 18-12.
Overall nine Eagles hit the scoring
column as did seven Tornadoes.
Eastern rolled on 10 the 63-41 win.
Wolfe said, "Southern is a hus·

tling team and have played some
tough teams very close. We knew
this would be a tough game if we
didn't cut down on our mistakes
and take better shotS. Tonij!:ht we
did both. We've been fighuns the
fl u, but tonight the girls played
with a lot or heart and enthusiasm."
Eastern hit 25·52 shou for 47%,
was 13-26 at the line and (lr&amp;bbcd
32 rebounds, led by Congo's 15
and Penny Aeilcer's six. EHS had
12 turnovers, nine usists, seven
steals (Karr five) : and 20 fouls.
Southern hit IS-71 overall for
21 .1%, was 11-23 from the line for
4 7% and had 39 rebounds. Lisle
and Codner led with eight each,
while Cooper and Sisson each bad
seven. Southern bad 18 turnovers,
13 assists (Ohlinger 5); 11 steals
(Ohlinger 5); and had 20 fouls.
There was no reserve game.
In other games around the area
Athens (1·6) won its ftrSt game by
beating Marietta 60-49, and Miller
downed Trimble 49-41 in a Hocking Division game.
Eas1em's reserves will travel to
Meigs Wednesday for a .holiday
tournament game with the Maraud·
ers at 7:30p.m. Eastern's varsity

goes 10 Waterford Thu rsday for a
non-teaaue game.

--

Eaatem
(13-17-1$-18=63)
Jaime Wilson 6-0-1 .. 13, Penny
Aeikcr 1-0.1 •3, Tara Congo 6-0·
3• 1S, Amy Redovian 2.().3a7,Jessica Karr 5-0-2-12, Nicole Nelson
0-0-2-2, Melina Guess 2-0-0-4,
Rebecca Evans 2-0-0a 4, Patsy

88 FORD FESTIVA

86 CHRYSLER LeBARON

Rea. 5 speed, stereo.

Gray,air, aUto ., P8 •&amp; PS.

Per

Mo.

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•••••

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Blue, 5 s~d . stereo.

..

$11239*Per
Mo •

•
••

91 CHEVY CORSICA
Wh~e. automatic, air, stereo.

25%0FF

83REUANT
FIRES AWAY - AD ualdentlfled Southern player (left) fires a
shot.over the outstretched band of Eastern's Jessie&amp; Karr (33) dar·
ing Monday niRbt's TVC game In RadDe, where the Eagles won 63·
. . 41. (Photo by Jlll Holter)
·
-

...

P·HOTO FRAMES

Teo•

Eaa-Ditl.
WLTPd.PFPA

Bufftlo ............. IO 4
9 l
N.Y. lola ........... I 6
lndianapalll ...... 4 10

loti... ...............

25% OFF

0 .571 156207

Cnotwood 53, p;dd 43
Dolphooiaft'..... 45, Aalwap 41
Padlmd 53, SUidf Vol!. 2l
Portienninp n, Crid.,.,;n, p.,.y 40
POd ltocovay45, Fort Loramie 4f
Pnmoou Sdoacph 71 ;Bouavillc 34
O.llipollt Sl, Lotan 47
Ga111way6'J, Dalton 41

Washin~ at L .A . Oippcn~, 1 D:30

Kalicb 47, Columbul Orcwo 45

5

Team
W
y·N.Y. Oilll.u •.. ll
y-Dollu ..... ..•.... IO
Pllilodelphia...... 6

L
3
4
I

T
0
0
0
- · ............ s 9 0
Wuhio- ...... 410 0

Pd.
.786
.714
.429
.1!7
.286

Cenlrtl Dlvlllon
Boy ........ 8 6 0 .l71
O....il .............. 8 6 0 .l71
MinnCICKI .. ....... 1 1 0 .SOO
Oticop;o ..•.....•.•. 7 1 0 .soo
Tampa 81)' ....... 4 10 0 .216

292 2.52
248 248
233 271
214 190

203 334

W1111m1 DhtJioft
.11• 432 241

HO·.US·EHOLD
APPLIANC·ES

•·Su Frencilco 10 • 0
N'ew OdoiM:••,;. 1 1 0
Allanta ....... .... . 6 I 0
LA. llama ........ 4 10 0
•-clinchod diriaion title
Y·•linchod plo)'O!I'benh

.500 271 293
.429 219 331
.286 117 319

Monday's•on

Pd.

GB

.762
.!191
.471
.450
.391
.364
.3CW

3.5
6
6.!1
I
8.5
10

Ctttlral Dlvlalon
Allanla ...................l6 l .762
l4 1 .636
Olarloao ............... 12 II .!121
ln4o'ana ... ................IO 12 .4lS
CI...EVEIAND ......... I 14 .364
Do:uoit ..................... 14 .364
MiJwaukee........... ,",6 11 .250

ou..,. . ....... . .

2.5
S
6.~

1.5
1.5
IIJ

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ta•

OUR COMPLETE STO(K OF
I
I

.

I

-1. . . .

II EX W JCHES

33
•••
·I

M-DI"'Iao
W L Pd.

......... ................21
I
\JIIh ...................... 17 7
Sal MAIII!o. .......... ]l '
llonYet .....................9 13
Nimeooll ................l 15
Dallu.. .....................l 2l

113% OFF

.708
.625

A09

.341
.043

cu-.........

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'
&lt;

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, Mond•&amp;l:coro

NowY. . tOl,
92
fhlh1 '1 h11 121, Detrcll ~

I
)

'(

.,S

P•clfte Dl¥111on
Sealllo .................. l9 2 .905
17 4 .JIO
Poodanol ......... ...... l4 10 .!113
' 0014ons- .........12 10 .loll
. LA.
9 13 .409
LA.LiiOa............l 16 .333
,Iii
iWIIO.-..... - ...J 17 .'Jn

(

I

South Carolina 94, S. C.uolin1 St. 89

aon
South Flarida 70, Sun HouAon St. S4
VirJi.nia Tech 80, E. Tcmr:a6t St. 61

Midwest

-N -...
u. ea... MicN&amp;tO+I
. . 16. Florida AAM 61

AU.nlk Dlvlalo.

OFF

N.C. Chulcoe 78, Old llonUnion 76
NW l..aui&amp;ian• 95 , Hcndcnon S ~J 8 1

KanwiOI , Farnwt60
Lo)'OI' llll2, 8~ 62

EASTERN CONFERENCE

0

72

Dlinoil79, l1c:ban St. 63

NBA standings

9
12
II
14
14
16

OcorJia Tech 79, ldount St. Mary'•·
Md. 62
lame~ Madison 83. AJk&amp;NU St. 67
Memphis St. 71, Teau-S.n Antonio

lo'l'al04,o..u.-b6l

Basketball

o.tanclo................. .ll
8oGDn ,..........- ....•. 11
Mioml ...................... 9
Plliladclphia .............9
NowJmoy ...... ........ l
WuhinJ1M ............. 7

South
Alabomo SL 70, Siorin&amp;Hill66
l'lolida 13, CenL Plodiia 69
flolidt SL 90, Mmpn St. 61

Chioa~ SL 9l, W. lllinaia 71
ll&lt;arod Maoy 13, F1orido Athntio: 73

N.Y.~24,New0rlouu 14

Tea..
W L
Nc"' Yodl ..............16 l

"""""' II,Md.·E. ShotoS-4
S&lt;iaaoph'a 6l, llnxei 64 &lt;on

PF PA
'UIJ 172
3:12 213
219 2.5S
212 2.53
211293

Gl

s
7
12
ll .l
20.!1

l

6.!1
7.l
10.!1
12.!1
14.5

Narthwa&amp;em 90, Haly Craa64
ObioU, YOUIIpiOWI! St. 4l
SL Loull70, Sanford 61
Toledo 79, A1oom S&lt;l3
Xavier, Ohio ll, N.C.-Ameville SS

Soutbwest

BoyiM 17. sw Louiliana 12

Okhhomi St. 13, TuJa 61
On1RoboNI5,Musha1169
Rice 14, Southem 75
Tau AAM 90, Tau Sauthmt 72

Tcua·El Puo 66, S. Utah 61
ll&lt;l.A93.-72

Far West
E. Wuhinawn 13, he. Lulhenn Sl
ldallo S&lt; 9!), Plclfoc. 0... 61
Neva4o 79, Froano
71
Now Mo:dco St. 63, New Mcrico 62
Sanll Clan 74, Soc:nm- SL 56
Sllnford 91, MeN- S&lt; 7S
UC S1nt1 B1rblr11 10, Loyola Muy·
mounL61
Weber S&lt; 116, ~ OuaN 76

s.

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Edmooton ......... 8 22 5

'I1

85 109

261 231 37
21 96 124

Monday's scores

89EAGLE

s.

Medallion Wagon , 3 seater.

Per

Tonight's games

Libcrty-Benton 76, Hardin Northcm

Ttmpl Bay 1t Piu.burJb, 7:3S p.m.

LiokUoJH~.

W~Wnaton 1t ~~dclphl1.7 :J j p.m.
Chicaao ulletroit , 7:3.5 p.m.
EdnMn.on 1l Vancouver, 10:3S p.m.

~ebol: 11 Ouaw1,

102,Libaoy0... 2

l..im.l Sh1wncc 74, Plrbtay 34

Laclltville Vall. Sl, Waverly 48

Modioon 47, Aoh&lt;obulo ~~arlo« 21
MadiJon Pllinl49. W1yneMUe 42
Malw:m S1, Nowcomcrllown 44
Jwhyf'teld 62, Nordonia 33
McComb l9, Patldon.OUboo 31
McOermon NW 63, Portsmouth W. 54
M.Wni E. 60, Triad 52
Midview 62, Kc}'delne sa
Milford l6, Cia. J'Jin"""' 32
Miller 44, Trimble41
Minford IZ. S. Wcbata 29
M"ttodorcSI, Roou10wnl&amp;
N. Olmlted 44, Elyria 28
Nelwnvillc-Yozk 67, Wdlslon 44
New BOlton 61, Rack Hill sa
New Miun.i 44, Cin. Seven Hills 37
New Philadelphia 66, COJhocton 38
Oak Hill SO, Whoclcnbwl4l
Obc:rUn 57, FJ.yria Cath. s3
~e 42, Richmond Ht1. 41
Ouoville 43, Ouawa·Olandod' 31
Peaiavillo 6l,lli&lt;I&lt;MIIo 49
Rayland Buckeye 65, Richmond Edi...,50
Reedaville Eutem 63, Racine South·
... 41
Jt;pley Sl, Oeoo!ldoWo 52

Tcchumseh 60, Day. C.nolf 42

Tinon. 76, Ntpo!con 29
Tol. BOW1her 63, Tol. Rogen 29
T ol. C'""'l71, Tol. Libbey 32
ToL ctuiltitn60, Emanuel Baptist 29
T ol. Scon 55, Tol. Woodwud l1
Tol. Start 48, To!. Wahe 21
Tu&amp;law 42. B. Canton 40
Union Locel42, BridJCP0f1. 31
Utlct 66, Newut Ca1h.-32
W . Jelrcnon 57,Hamil\on Twp , 47
W 1\edOO 41, CJe. So&amp;uhout 4o(
Windh1m 63, Sllec:Liboro 21
Youna.IJnolineSl, N;Jea 'rl
Zanoa.Wo 45 , AUlo 2l

7:35" p.m.

Transactions

AllaollcDhloloo

N... Joney ... ... l9104
Philadolpllia .. ... ll IS 2
Wuhln- .•... J' 16 2
N.Y. hfonden ... ll IS 3
Florida .............. 12 IS 5
Tampa Boy ....... 10 19 4

Pta. GF GA
49 124 14
4211717
31 134132
30 104105
29 li S 108
·29 II 95
24 12103

Norlh ... Dhlolao
9 7
39117110
Bootoo ............. l610 7 39110 98
Buffolo. ............. 16 IS 3
lS Ill 99
Mon ltllll ........... 14 12 6 34 Ul2 19
Quebec.............. 14 14 S
33 Ill l iS
llorlfont ............ 10 19 3 23 9111l
Ou..wa ..,., ......... 7 ~ 3 17 l02170

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Wednesday's games

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New Jeney 11 llutford, 7:3.5 p.m.
N.Y. bl1nden 11. Monual, 7:15p.m.
N.Y. R1nam 11 Florid•, 7:35p.m.
S•n Ja~e at Toronto, 7:35 p.m.
Calaary 1t Edmonton, 9:35p.m.
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c~ scores

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Gam:wville 49, Woodridac 42
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21

By The Bend
·•

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, Decem!Mtr 21, 1993
Pag~

A

Do thieves pay taxes on stolen money? :
Dar Alla Loden: I laid my
IICWI!IIflii dllily, and when a crime
involvina IIIOico money u reported,
I oftcll aotice the following liDe:
"The al1egcd
may ba\'e
to pay taxes ~'1!n money if

else for fear they would notice my IIIII I have 1lcen mmied 32 yem.
bald spots. I dreaded going to the We ba\'e four woodcrfu1 dlildren.
MyhoglwMI'amodiii'J
bway
bairdresser and being questioned.
Although anti-depressant drugs m:eil~Among her poe•'li«w
helped reduce the urge, the lidc albums of frialds llld
effr.cts were intolerable. I have family mcmbcn. The albums wm
convi&lt;:led."
benefited from behavioral therapy in divided up, IIIII my hlilbantl rec:dYCd
This boggles my mind. Docs
which the desire to pull is closcly a few thai includod ~of
Uncle Sam want a piece of the
monitored and various substitute him wilh his fint wife. They wc:tc
ICiioa? Ia the lllllen money held until
only married a short time llld had
activities Ire used.
income Illes lie paid?
how they nailed AJ Capooe for r.u
I am writing so others will know no children.
I am not a lawyer, but I am not a evasion.
I would like my husband to
thai support groups and ft8UIIellt
dwnmy, either. Please explain. ••
Dear Ann I-anden: Please help exist. · For information about desaoy the pictures of her. Before:I
NEWARK,NJ.
me ~taCh out to readers who may be
sugscst it, however, rd li1ce to ~
DEAR N.J.: If the money is suffering from a disorder called trichotillomania or a list of docrors your advice. •• INSECURE IN
ARTS COUNCIL • Representatives from the Ohio Arts Council
bained to treat this condition, your
and Dave Gaul, prinldpal or Meigs Junior High School who repre- . · recovered and returned to its trichotillomania, or compulsive hair readers can send $2 to the IOWA
.
original owner, the thief pays no puUing.
seated tbe Meigs Local School District at tbe Middleport Arts
DEAR lOWA: I cannot imagine
Trichotillomania Learning Center,
Council meeting on Friday, discuss plans for a grant proposal
taxes. However, if It is not
Those who suffer from this 1215 Mission SL, Suite 2, Santa why. after 32 years, you would r~
which could place a professional artist in one Meigs County local
rec:ovmd, the money is considered disorder pull out hair from the scalp,
Cruz, ~if. 1)5060, They will send threalened by IIOIIIC old pictuJa. The
school for two to ten weeks. Gaul is shown with Michael London
twlble income.
eyebrows, cyelasbea ~-~ m
brochure about available album c:hronicles your husblind'B lifi.
of the Ohio Arts Council.
One must pay taxes on alllalUible the body. Scmc hide the Rllulting atreatments
as well as infmnation on She was a Jl8!l of iL Let the pic~
income, whether legal or not, bald apots by wearing willo falle . other resoUrce
centers and local stay as a reminder of how lucky he
including stoiCin money, bribes and lashe~, eyebrow pentll or large
· ·
assistance. Thanks, Ann. •• was thai you came along.
drug money. u is under aJasacs; Ten mlUion people IUftcr TRICHOTILLOMANIA SUPPORT
Ann Laruitrs' latest booklet,
suspicion, the authorities can lrom this poblem- mOsdy"Nuggeu and Dooliu." lla.s ntl1GROUP
OF
THE
NATIONAL
reconstruct bis CKpenscs to They need to tnow they - IIClt
thing from· tlit o~~~ragtoiUly !lllllfJ
CAPITAL AREA
demonstrate that he must have alono.
'
DEAR FRIEND IN . D.C.: to the polgTIOIIIly iMtgll(ll. Stnd a
received income from I SOurt:C that
I ~trU~gled for ycars with the Compulsive hair pulling is more self-addrnsed. long, biiSilltSNiu
was not reported to the Inrcmal shame that c:amc from my Inability
than 111011t people would e~~Wlopt and a clltck or WtOfltY or·
Revenue Service. They may not be to stop pulliDg out my hair. The c:oaunon
•Mp"C'
Tbult
you for a leaer tbat der for $5 (tlris illcludn poMgt 111111.
tiona! and ethnic arts or visual arts. able to prove that the "other soun:e"
By LEIGH ANNE REDOVIAN
resulting
baldness
made
me
feel
11
1ure
to
help
many closet handling) to: Nuggeu, clo Ann LtulThe discipline would be deter- was illegal, but they can prove that
Times-Sentinel Starr
ugly.
For
years,
I
wouldn't
walk
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chlcago,lll.
mined by the needs of the local arts
IIUffema.
MArea srudents and adults may council, the community and the r.ucs should have been paid. This is through a door in ' front of anyone
Dear ~ ••ndel'l: My husbucl 60611-ill62. (In Ctulllda, send $6.}
have increased opportunities to local schools.
According to London, the proJearn about the liTIS as the Middle·
port Arts Council has plans to gram does not focus on an outcome
apply for a grsnt which would basis, instead he said that students
allow a professional artist to take learn the process of creating art.
"The program gives students
up residence in Meigs County and
anolher person to go to .,yithin the
teach in one local high school.
The grant is funded through the school," London said.
A program on the traditions of
Smith announced that the
Joanne Eubanks, assistant coor- Christmas in Germany was present· Dau~ters of the American RevaluOhio Arts Council's Arts in Educa·
tion short term residency program, dinator of the Arts in Education ed by Flip Muhlhoff, a German tion Patriot Index with 100 years of
which places an artist at one site program, said the residency will exchange student attending Meigs collected DAR records is now
High School, at a recent meeting of available through the DAR Nationalso benefit community members.
for two to ten weeks.
Members of the Middleport Arts
The artist would teach core Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, al office. She also announced that
•...,cit met Friday with represen- groups of students, and according Daughters of the American Revolu- the Western Reserve Society, Sons
of the American Revolution, has
.; · from the Ohio Arts Council to Eubanks the groups can also be lion,
The teenager, living here with just putilislled a Centennial Regis·
~\representative from the made up of community members
~\.neal School District to dis· interested in the area of art being Mr. and Mrs. William Radford, ter which includes '1iXn members'
talked about her hometown of patriotic ancestors and a listing of
cuss how the grant could benefit studied.
Mary Wise, president of the Munich, Germany and said that the aU the battles and skirmishes of the
the county. Representatives from
other districts were invited to Middleport Arts Council, said she hills in Meigs County remind of American Revolution. This publication is available from the West·
was pleased with the meeting, and her home in Germany.
auend.
She told the group meeting at em Reserve Chapter.
The deadline for the grant pro- that the council will.be looking for
The name of Amy Lynn Bohner,
posal is Feb. I 1994. Members of guidance from London in writing the Meigs Public Library, that she
had
dreamed
of
spending
one
of
a
member
of the Children of the
the
granL
the Middleport Arts Council expect
her
high
school
years
in
the
United
American
Revolution,
was submit·
to begin writing the proposal in
The residency program is only
States
since
she
was
in
the
fifth
ted
by
Anna
Cleland
for petition
'
.
early January, afle! they ha~e met one opponunity thatlhe Middleport
.
grade.
•
_
.
,.
.
.
•.
fo~~
m~mbership
in
.
the;
Rlawn
,DU&gt;~ER.
RUp
M~otr,
left,
a
German
acbant~e
~:
with local educauon offictals to Arts Council is looking into for
deiiti
wanpeliller
at
a'·reeenl
meelin1
or
Return
Jonathan
"Me•gs
,
Muiilhoff
saliflllat
goose
has
Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter;DAR.
determine the level of interest next year.
Chapter
•
Daughters
or
.the
American
Revolution.
She
Is
pictured
·
always
been
the
traditional
meat
The
petition
was
approved
by
among the three districts.
The Council has recently been for Christmas in her homeland, but members presenL
bere
with
Rae
Reynolds,
national
DAR
speakers
staff
member.
· The district to receive the artist named by the Middleport Village
Reynolds, DAR speakers staff,
will be included in the grant pro- Council to head up the steering that the custom is fading. Tree dec·
orations,
she
said,
are
typically
presented
and commentary
posal.
committee for the observance of birds with real feathers w•th real on the Ohioa video
DAR
Stare
Convention Jonathan Meigs Chapter were two nags are being presented by
Michael London, a consultant · ·the Middleport Bicentennial to be
candles
used
for
li~hts.
held
in
Toledo
and
the
National Eleanor Smith, Nancy VanMeter the Return Jonathan Meigs Chap~
with the Ohio Ans Council, who celebrated in 1997.
and Rae Reynolds. Alternates ter-one to the Senior Citizens
Her
parents
vistted
her
here
over
DAR
Convention
held
in
Washinghas been consulting the Middleport
Wise said the council would like the Thanksgiving holiday.
elected were: June Ashley, Roberta Center by Smith and one to the
ton,
D,C.
at
the
national
headquarArts Council for four years, said 10 begin making in depth plans for
O'Brien, Phyllis Skinner and Mary Rejoicing Life School in Middle·
The
meeting
presided
over
by
ters.
Members
who
had
not
attend·
that the goal of sharing mformation activities at the celebration and for
port by Reynolds in the name of
Kay Yost.
Eleanor
Smith
opened
in
ritualistic
ed
the
conventions
were
able
to
see
at the meeting had been accom- funding.
Lee Williams.
·
The
94th
Ohio
DAR
State
Conform
wilh
Roberta
O'Brien
deliverand
hear
rtrst
hand
the
work
and
plished.
In the past two months the ing the DAR President General's activities of the DAR on both a ference will be held in Middleburg
On
Jan.
15,
chapter
officers
will
"I have been watching the Council brought two theatre proat Grace Church Parish House
progress of this organization, and it duction to students from Meigs holiday message. The national state and national level and to view Heights, Ohio on March ll-13. meet
to
complete
year end chapter
Delegates
elected
to
represent
defense
report
was
given
by
Rae
on
video
the
Constitution
Hall
in
has become more and more stable High School, Meigs Junior High,
reports
to
state
and
national offices.
Rerum
Jonathan
Meigs
at
the
State
in the last four years," London said. and two elementary schools in the Reynolds, Phyllis Skinner and Washington where most of the conThere
will
not
be
a
January meetConference
were
Reynolds,
Anna Cleland gave reported, and vention sessiOns are held. The cur·
"The organization is ready to Meigs Local School District
ing.
The
February
meeting
wiD be
Smith,
Nancy
VanMeter
Eleanor
undertake this op~unity ."
.
The Council also has plans to Mrs. O'Brien read the 14th rent President General, Mrs. and Anna Cleland. Alternates elect· held on Feb. II, at Heath Methodist
While in restdence, the arust bring similar productions to stu- Amendment to 1he Constitution Wayne Blair, is a native of Ohio.
The 1994 National Continental ed were June Ashley, Phyllis Skin- Church in Middleport.
would focus on one of the follow- dents in other local districts, said concerning citizenship rights, privi•
ing disciplines: .dance, design 8!"S· Jeanette Thomas, vice president of leges, immunities, liberties, the due Congress will be held in Washing- ner, Alice Struble, Mary Powell,
and
Abbey
Stratton.
process of law, and the equal pro- ton, D.C., on April 18-23. Delemedia arts, muSJc, poetty, creauve the Council.
R~gent Smith announced that
tection
under the law.
gates elected to represent Return
and critical writing, theatre, trad.i-

Ami

Landers

;t:

Public Notice

Public NotiCe

~J. A publlo h-lfttl will M

nollaa whtc·h will be
btt~lnnlnl , paootng Iron
ubllehed once oiiOh - ' t
rode 11 1 40 r..t and 20&lt;f0
or
ouooit..tva w..U.
'"' and tho ..nlerllno of
•kf Townlhlp Rood 178 at ;Jh• 1. .1 publlcaUon will be
11110 l"t lor refer•nce; mod• on January 11, 18M,
containing 10,.75 ecree, end th• - t y alghl (21)
morw or 1181, ..ceptlng ell daye lor onower will
legal Eaoemenlo and Rlghto OOI!Imlll~ on U..l dote.
of\Vay.
lrt oe.. of yo• !allure 10
The baarl"'l• In lhe obov• artower or . otherwla•
daocrlpllon ore booed on ,..portd •• required by lha
the R•ferance Dtld • VoluiM Ohio Rul•• of Civil
Procedure, ludgmertt by
278, Pagee 877 and 878,
The real "lalt ducrlbed dolaull will be rendered
In tha complaint end aaJirtol you lor ih• relllf
d•ecrlbed abov• le ,lh• demal'ldad In lhe compllllnl
sama rMI e.tate ducrtbed Dlll8d ' jltcember 18113
In Deed &amp;ilok 293 , P•a•
407, Meigs Counly Daed
Recorda.
You

x ·-'d on ~beriO, 1111;

r. •I•

at 11 :00 A.M., In the
U...urer'a offtoe II E "'n
t High ScllooL l'llrpoee ollha
~b..rtng . Ia to review the
1H4-tS budget for the
'-tchool dlalrlct The budget
will ba avallabl• for
lnapHUort. All lntw"ted
,.U• •rw IIIV!IId to Mllnd.
Elolae eMion
~,.

E•tem l.oaolllollool

Dla~311100

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SFI7
AMdavtllt, o111o am
!{12)21 1 tc
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"SPECIAL CARE"

tMy du.,.u

l"drape~ry (on

alta)

aiMnlng

RJIGS
CHRISTMAS TRHS
autyl!urtrw.
(or wa'l auiRior,..,)

Rlgga Tree farm

QUAL~ WORK

...........,, Ohio

DAVID ARNOLD

==~:

Arts Council to attract
professional artist

PLUMIIKI,
HUDII &amp;
COOUIII

182-570'.

L...:c.r.t=~·~Doo==lld~~~~

HARRIS.ONVILLE • Har·
risonviUe Senior Citizens Club will
hold a pollock Christmas dinner at
noon at the townhouse Tuesday.
, There will be a gift exchange. In
1 the event of inclement weather the
1 event will be canceled.
I

: Conservation
: league gathers·
'"

"'!be annual holiday potluck of
.
the Middleport Child Conservabon
•1 League was held recently at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
' Church.
Prayer was pven
by Nancy Morris. The busmess
·: meeting was opened with the
;: pledge to the Oag and "Mother's
r Prayer" led by President Kitty
; Darst
'
Roll call was answered by the
LIVE NATIVITY· Tbe Chester United Metbodlll Church Is
members rclling their "Most Trea·
one of several ·arett churches having Uve nadvlty seenes this boD·
; sured Christmas." Devotions
day season. Tailing roles In this portrayal Sunday qht were Car• included "The Christmas Story" . rie Crow, John Kruwsczyn, Brent Buckley, Matt King, Stacey
and a humorous story, "When All
Smith, Whitney Karr, Jessica Dillon, Andy Mora, Rather Mora,
' Through the House", was given by
Adam CbevaHer, Abbie Cbevaller, and Jason King.
, Morris. A Christmas letter was
: received from stare president wish·
ing them "Happy Holidays."
• · Gifts and food was brought in
: by each member for a needy famiLinda WeD ~of diester, adop- p~gnun and crcatb'new areas such
~ ·ly.
tion supervisor for Athens County as post-adoption services which
President Darst presented each Chil~ Services, has been named SUppOrt the pamnts Of adopted C!ill·
member with a Christmas mug one of five adoptioo wotkers of the dren and. the adoptees, ev.en after
titled with candy. Judy Mattea was year by the Ohio Department of the adoption has bccl! legahrecf.
welcomed as a new member.
Human Services. .
As a way of broadening awareAn ornament exchange took
A lifetim~ Meigs County resi- ~ess or ~hat kinds of suppon &amp;!lopplace. Ncn¥ secret sisters for 1994 dent; WeD has done social wort in Uve ~amilies ~ Weii ~and other
and 1993 ICCrct sisters Southeastern Ohio for 16 years and Special ~liiJ!I ~.workers
were revealed. Before the gift has dedicated herself to placing created an i!lformab&lt;inal Yl,deo and
cllthange the pactar• ~judged children with special needs accompanymg man~ ':"h•ch they
with wilineri bcin Linda Broder· those who are mentally or physical- hOJ?C someday to dtstribute on a
ick, most origin~. 'Morris', mo.st ly chatlenged • older children and · national SCl!,le.
.
ul'lldual, and Tainniy -Muh, 'IIJCtti· sibling groups - in familieS.
Well ~Ides at Chester Wllh ¥r
est.
:·
'
Well became involved in the husband, Russell and three chd·
Clarice Kennedy, a former Special A:'Joption Program in 1?81 dren , Heather, Leah and Ashton.
member, was a pst.
and has smce helped to expand the

'
1

POMEROY,

a-, wide 80 and 70. s.teo . Speci!ll IW{/l Dayton
performance pcoll...
TNCidolld SALE Prtc•
•. '"""'IIIOna nberQi... beltf'

ACADEMY

TlJPPERS PLAINS
Baalc obadlence,

A Chrisunas candleliaht service
conducted by several officers was a
feature of the recent meeting of
HarrisonviUe Chapter 2SS, Order
of the Eastern Star.
Betty Bishop, worthy matron,
and Doug Bishop, worthy patron
presided at the meeting held at the
Masonic Temple . Gifts were
e~changed and refreshments
served.

Closeo11t Speelal
4• P•ienltn 60'
61ft• p......... ~.00

1o- Pollsettfa Baskets

$4.00

leiilld Holly &amp;

llltS,....TrHS
512.95 to '17.95

- draw

&lt;

(

\

SERVIa

pe1110n•l protection,
kennel aervlce, pupa •
young doge lor Mia.
Rotllnller. lhtpherd
Stud hnllol

By IlPPI. only
814-687-PETS

FURNACES

36970 BtiiiR• Road
Poawoy,a.
GRAVE!, WID,
. LIMEsTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; Fill DIRT

tneWIIdoom,.._wllh
ftiiMCtngiiVIIIallle.

J.I.R.
CONSIRUCnOif.
•DDDr •BackhDI!
oOitcher tOu111t Truck
LMd CIMrlng, Ponca,

44

. PAll'S

4/2t/93lfl .

w111w Un-. Septa
Llc•nn •llondMI
Chllrlle liatfMtd,

Opemor

Sp«clallzlng in Cullom
. . &amp; . . PIIUMI'

IU.! IIfll &amp;.DIIU
tt2'701Sor
tt2~S$$J

or IOU 1111
I-100-14M070
tliWII,OHIO

Open D•lly ..5,
Sundi!Y8 12-6

HUB lARDS
GREENHOUSE

SYRACUSE

insuring both your car
·and home wilh lhe S~le
Auto Companies.

.•

Let us ten you just
· haw much your savings
can be.
'

.ROGAN . ~

. ER

.~SeUJce. "

2l4 EASt MAIN
POMEROY
9.~~-6~~7

,/j
.,....,.,.ce

eo,.linles
·'

~

.. -.....

...
...

circus mty be 1 good
ltkts termltn to •·•··~ · l
Ido••• the house.

Hare's wishing you
and yours
a very Merry Christmas
and a
Happy, Healthy New Year.

IIIIOYAL

~IGHT

HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BI~L SLACK
992·2269
1~fn

HAULING

81111 IISSELL
COIImUCTIOII

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
, &amp;.COAl

iot.IR Homes

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

SAYRE TRUCKING

FAEj: ESTIMATES

614-742-2138

. fl5·4473

3/411131 ....

71Zllf13

·IIIGO

)

j

CASE NO. 83 CV 315
AndrewMoo..,

,

deceaaed, et 11,

'

Oefendanlo,

WEIER'S

· EVERY THURSDAY

CHRISTMAS
TREES

EAGLES .
CLUB
JNfiOMEROY

8:4&amp; p.m.
Special E811y Bird
$100 Payoff
Tbla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0061-342

uv•u,OH ..

Homegrown-Carefully
She~~red Scotch &amp;
Wh~e

Pine 4' &amp; Up with

a great aelectlon of
larger lren.
cat! 742·21 43 or

Dog K111els 10'• 1
Nlte Ute St..tlrta at
Applegate Ro111d ltll' FeiCes &amp; Gates
Hars1 Tack &amp;Saddles
Wid Bird Seed
White Salt Block SO Ills. $4.25
TrtKe Mlwalllock SO lbs. SS.OO
Much Mon At lowest Prices in Meigs Co11ty

CHAPMAN FEED STORE

SWIIIIIr

Parts • Ssrvlce • Bags • Belts

AHIOIIIble.Ratll

VI

COICIETE
WOII

IWnbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Hoover, EwSa. 'Iii.Star,
Regina, .t most odter brands!
Plll'llllhlpped UPS
Fut • O..,.ndlbla S.rvlcel

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

IISSELL ·.BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes.• VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows

Porches,

Room Additions • Roofing

· Patlqs,

COMMERCIAL ud..RESIDENTIAL

Sidewalks

!WEE ESTIMATES

614·H2·7643

i~:&lt;SJ92·7878

llo S.IINy Calls)

7f71

DEER HEADS ·
MOUNTED

I wOIIld like to lhri
..,.-yon• for lh• cardl,
praywa, and all the
chutah• for k.-pl"'l
me In lhtlr prayn. ,
Ruth Cltntar

l11RE
33151 .... ""' ....
............45771

,·w·nll

sorrow•

614-t92-5344

and ttudtnts
Falls

· CorM by 111d reglater
lor lrH Bdlly to be

given IIWI'/ December
24, 1ae3. NafaJ~~~=
requ~ to n
and

1nd
letnittr.

n....,ftdatl
""•
c.....
.........

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Fumiture

Rl. 124, R.W A. 742-2211

Dr.

lHuntJr. Rn. Ktn Matt,.,_
Funeral Home,
liartrs. frltmls, ami

don'l h.ve ·

p!'!IMnl

10 win.

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

I

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Shoulder r.b.Jlt.. .. ,. '155
Hom Mount............... '22
Squinel ...................... '55

Saeclal thanks to

•••

,,

.· m••••

HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

21121121ttn

card of 111anka

you live In a small town
n you write 1 cheek tnd
IIOI'atl to sign It, but the bank
1-.t•••••lt anywty.

7 SHOWROOMS

stllfe Auto .

SHIUI &amp; Till

USED RAILROAD nES

742-2803

Frame Repair

&lt;

ITh,lnklna Is lht hardtst work lho,ro.J
Is probtbly why 10 few
loeooh engage in II.

reduced even more by

pil road, 1% miiM to grov..

WATCH FOR SIGNS

IW1sted tlmecen'J be rtcycltd.

Slate Auto's already
~premiums can be

CHRISTMAS TREES
FRESH CUI IllES IYIILIILE
01 CUI YOUI OWl

.992~470

(61.) .
667-6621

'

1-800-5~588

South on

D.~ BOSTON
EICIVInlfG 'i

..
...

(304) 882-3336

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Ea.t at
llt1n.rw1n onto RL 181,go 4 mi. to Mllapoat 13. Tum

Grate
of
Rltlucl
Funlture

••

New Haven W. V. 25265

BRADFORD'S

=

•TRUCKING

lhaPD41nlng, only to .dllhrent

loz 119 MltltllefOI'I, Olllo 45760
(614) 143·5264

FinanCing Available

WKK'S HAUUNG

law enforcement,

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

lht
Tht same ttilngs kup

Rocky I. H•pp, D.C.U. • ..,.,

MORTGAGE COMPANY

By
Dave

ITh,•••'• never tnylhlng new In

Acclclent •Annuity, IRA •lllortgege ·

Mclendon

•DOZERS

...

Ute·· Medicare • cancer • Fire • Hellth •

Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

bolt{.

•

Candlelight
service held

Area adoption worker honored

'

LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
tom will have a Christmas play
Wednesday at 7 p.m. ai lhe church.
There will also be special singing
and a communion service. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public .
There will be no service at the
church on Friday evening.

ICCIIIIII IISUUICI COMPAIIY

IIL:(~81:4:)992=·~74~7~4=J

Jolt N. Sayre

Freewill Baptist Church at 7 p.m.
Wednesday. The public is invited
.. RUTLAND • (\Christmas play, to attend.
The True Meanmg of Christmas"
will be presented at the Rutland Correction
A photograph cutline that
appeared in the Thursday, Dec. 1),
Daily Sentinel, inadvertently identified Jenny Bowles as Jesse Smith.
Bowles was named outstanding
student at Pomeroy Elementary
School for November.

UFI•IIII

Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
SeCurity Cantens

7ta1111•111tn I

WEDNESDAY

IIIIIICU

Our Business is Secutity

11-.AIIItlriAivetrwad dealgn
IJ!III..,.iii
rkllng poly"llnx&gt;rd

Community calendar
BEDFORD · The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department committee will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall. Residents are urged to attend.

1111... 1110.

&amp;GOOD R~TES

Exchange student
speaks at DAR meeting

TUESDAY

CALL lfTII 6:00
304 415-7256

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

.

Llm,atone
Dirt ..
Gravel
992·7878

Work

Plumbing
A Exterior

E811MATEJI ·

6:30P.M •
ftlctory Cho...
12 Gltuga Shot
Strictly Enloroad

V.C. YQUNG Ill ,
. 99'2-6215
"-oy,Ohlo

•

11/ll!n-

.111..4LWIIIIRI
,NEW-·EPA•
. oun.r.
'.

~wntipoul;

.

Gutter CINnlng
Pll. . .

FREE ESTUIATES

·"949·2168

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
. 36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

HOUDAY SPECIAL

$9 75 1 TON SIZED LIMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

CHRISTMAS

·ROOFING .

.

·aAUliN

CARP:..SERVICE

EVERY
SATURDAY

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPOiliNG GOODS
675-6755

GIN

YOUNG'S

Dl's

TREES
1D5 Bllani!IA... Pomoiay
Come and elllllileiiOe
llaglllt Food and
Somttlll~g for
8ac* your
... ·now. Unl1•
1..
Clll

. . . . .

w.

7

$10.00-h
Open 9to6
I dllf•••tld•:
8colch, Whn. •

Auetrt.n Pl-. &amp;'to r.

IWIIIr Hilling ,..._

---71Fiatw 1111
Rd., Pomwoy. Ohio
1111111

Far11
AT THE
QlWJTY PliNY SHOP
........ Ohio
GREAT IEi.EcnoN AND
YAIIETYOFQUAUTY

IIIETAL lOYI.
•

1111MH11aA.-FIL

741.aoRO.Aftori:GO
...tDDR lit. •

Hra

�December
BEATilE BLVD.no by Bruce Beattie

An nouncements

41 HOUIII for Rent

Ohio

Announcements
Funlll Sparta Trivia Oomo F~nlll
1-1100 • • at3 Ext. 1045 a ."
Pwr llln. lluot 8o 18 Yra. l&gt;focall ·
Co (11021114-llt20.

4441·70a.

ACIIOII

---

2 Qulnaa Plga, long hotrod. 304-

675477&amp;.
6 Fl. Sao

Sliding Doora, Rod &amp;

NJce, Zbr, houN, API* Gfove.

304&lt;175-1711 anar lljlm.
badr_, hauaa In
Pomeroy,
8250/mo.
plua
U11lhltt, dopoah and relarencaa

Orapn. 614--388-;ntO After 5

p.m.

f ;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;:===:::=

304&lt;175-241i.'

n~qulred ,

6M-tl2·7103.

51

'

NOilTII

+QU

1988 Whl~pool , buiH-In dlahwa-. good concl. :IOW75-

UU.

VI'RA FURNITURE

Free Puppys, 3 Males,
Females, 614-446-9310.

3

-::-"7"~-c:c-.,--:-:---:--=--=-

GIS Rang• Works, Needs To Be

Ciaanad, 614-446-1473.

"The lest drive fell like I was maneuvering a boat.
Do rats ever hy to board it when it's parked?"

t------....;.--.,.---------·1
9

Wanted to Buy

11

Help Wanted

Dealer: Soulh

A PLUMB
ROMANTICAL

Two bedroon• iYtDbUe hom. far
Nnt, 11M . _ . . for nnt 8t•rt·
log a t - · 1114412·2117.
Two blidi&amp;IOift t,.._.ln Alaclne,
0111114412 !851.

5185 .

11

Yard Sale

Help Wanted

Wanted to do for elderly or dla·
abled: houH clunlng, 11undry,
lronlng 1 cooking, willing to n.m
errands, w-an ~dlabl•, 614·
1112&lt;1828 M.f.

AVON ! All ..._. ! Shirley
Spears, 304-675--1429.
Paid In

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p .m.

lhe day befofe lht •d Ia to run.
Sunday ldlrlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edhlon • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AVON! All arus. Nllltd aX1:ra
money or want a carMr, eltMr
WIY-1::111 Marilyn . 304.a82·2645
Of 1-800.992-6356.

Trying to find
new players

44

By PldJIIp Alder

Apartment

Avon S.lls HNif At Work Or
Home. Average S8 -114 Hourly.
Door-To-Door

JII2-4738.

Optional.

,.aoo-

C.rtlfl.d

Rick Pearson Auction Company,

time auclionMr, complett
auction
service.
Ueensld
166,0hlo &amp; Wast VIrginia, 304·
773-5785.
ft.~ll

Wanted to Buy

Antiques and uaed furniture, no
11am too large or too email, will
buy one piece or compllle

household, also w•nted· old
bicycles, call Osby Martin, 614·
992·7441.

Nursing Anlatante
nMdecl. Part·tlma poaHiona. 12
hour thUle. Muat be willing to

work 7am-7pm or 7pm-7arrl.
Must be c.rltUed In I.Dng Tarm
Care. Contact Sharan Skldrncn,
Director of Nursing at PINunt

Business
Oppottunlty

recommend• ttw: ycu do bull·
n... wHh peple you know, and
NOT to 11nd money lhrough thll
mall unlll you have invntlgatec:l

lhe offering.

Rea l Estate

HouHkeeperw Wanted, Apply In

321 Upper Rl'llr Road, (NIX1 To

Bob Evans RHtraunt In Gal·
llpollo) On Wad, Doe 22. 9-11

.. 1 8 8 8 - - ~...,

1110 buying j.unk cars 6 trucks.
304-773-5343

W.nted· aomeone to bru1h hoa
1 ~m•ll tot In Raclr., 814-14f:.
29CO 1t1er 5:30pm.

10-"'lnJp-....
1rntat1on or dl&amp;ci~••lllllon
baled on n101, calor, Nllglon,

Junk Aulo's To Buy Will Pick-Up

18

MXIamllllllllut

Wanted To Buy: Junk Cars &amp;
At Top Price &amp; Res.

tor•ble Cars, 614·3U-9554 .

or-

~(· b

AKC

1Wo b.troom IPirtment
PomwoJ, 0111114-182·5858.

knowingly - ·

....,.rt-olo&lt; - -•11-oltho

lnlormedthiiiMdi ··~tgl

rrr

.,. - o n anoquo1

-'urily-.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Roomolor ront · - o r IJIO'IIh.
e::~llat$120/mo. Gallla.~al.
ly OWnara: 521 Fourth I
-·
Avooua, 3
_,
.
81
NNr School, Cant...1
~
..,..ng _,., wlh oooklng.
1
aa~ With =~·
Aleataol .1raft111ar
· All -...pa.
....... v
• w, 2:00 p.m., 104·773441, 114 4
5, 114-446- 11111, llaaon wv.
•

.

Bod,_,.H.ii"'""·

-

Hutly aun:loa bib, ' - chain
llttta, 141, -

1:::131."' ..,.,

In

Upatolra apt. ramodlod, carpal,
panty tu~ olean, qulat,
utUMiaa 6 cable paid, N~Q~mo,
:1Q4-e71-1111.

our_,. ..........,.

- 1 S 1
31 Hom..,
Or I 8

.....~, Lind

~!!!:""en'

·-~~~~-~~
114 ~·-r
1000,

53

Buy or ooll. Rl. .lna AntlqUH,
1124 E. llalri .!11-, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Houra: II .T.W. 10:00
a.m. lo 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
1o 1:00 p.m. 114·1112·2028.
54 Miscellaneous

trallaraddition,
112 -.- kltchan,ullllty
dining room, vory big
""""· manr n1111a,

14x711 Toto! Electric On 1 112
Acre Lot. 2 Mllaa From BldwallPortor Elamo!ury· $20,000 Firm
8f4.311.81M.
11173 For- Peril, 12x18 2 Bod·
room, w18
Elaclrtc,
Rango, Pore~, .!!.i!do~:"l'l'/
InclUded. 114-2....,.2, 4&gt;
8834

T'"'

··

1192 Norrio 18x80 Trailer. HUIO

~eo~noa~'*:!:.t~~":
Bod~~~~~
don Tub In -ar Batfi. Ovor
1200 Sq. Ft. LAlla Of Stor-.
Ha A -- • - ·

•••

~~~vi;_ ~=

Season!
.,

-lata. COil •-aoi:l
·L.oavallaa-WNo-.
11iMAadman 141711, 3bdrm.,lno
cluclaa okl~lng, ato.-, blocko,
5yr. warranty,
ouronco, and 1 yoar ol traa In1o1
ran!,
on
lor
ontr
S17ll'lno.,
can
100-8:17-3238, aillllor Mlka. 1·

1101:=••-

2br, 2 balh molill - · 3 112

acroo, CA, 2 car prep, la~ga
glaao
R.cl ancOh
tooun porch,
111

na,

•-

. _ a,

prloa roducod. 304-882-aafl

lloblla home wHh loi, 2 addod

roomo, 3_l";!_~k2 A~~

~:rza~·~
wtll
5, a-- r_,.bla
-Ung on.r.
Con!llct C:leltnd Raalty, lno. s1
114-1112-2211.

34

Merchandise

Want to:
PIN do--n EXT'D
,.
.L\..1:1.
.~

CAt£&gt;H(.)II
7. ••

~lorqulckoala.304-812·.

Have A
Very
Happy
and
Safe
Holiday

Antiques

Busl118$8

•
h
clutt er mto
c~ ,
~it tne eau way... by nholl§,
~
no need to leave your home.
Place your cbwified ad todpyl
15 •~or..J.
a. or fe 11, 3 d
J.l''•
'1'1.._

·

... urn._your
Q-JJ •
L_

3 pqser«, $5.4Q paid in advance.

-1---------------

2·---------------3·---------------4
-

·----------------

5
·-------------6' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,•----------~-----

·--------------

=PPol=:'~""~,::

Ofowlng AroO. Sarlouio lnqulilaa

14

Only t1t 441 tiOO Aller 7 p.ln.

•

15~------------------

Rentals

GIJ)IlpoU. Daily Tribune

'

K1nm0N1 FuU Size f!lk:rOiirtlave
$75, 112 HP Do,. Wall
Pump, $100, Fuel Tank Qo, Gu
~ Water Haatar, $35. 814-318-

014.

Hoi.•••1 fer Rent
BedroatR Houl!t, a.cutttr
and-.,..,.
l'lt 448 1271 1-..n

a.M.

a

:lo4 BR -nice , -nelahbotl
to :Gallipolla.
:d.

SUOimonth. ·-~...

.... .

-

~.-:

R...-

...,

A"""""n

Bom: 101'11111 A - To !)o
- . But WIN Rold Till
Chrlotmu With · Oopoan, Stud
Sarvtc:a Aloo Available. 814-S?II2728.

All~
Rogllllorod L a Aolrlavar
pu~,
_,

Chrlotmu gill, I 1112-3034: ·
AKC Reg- - n Huakr

puf!PIH. :IOW'IHAI.
AKC \ Shll,land

. _ . _. .1

~

..,_

7Wka.
old, ·304~

'Stlllll::J'·

h kod 1

ClhiC

-

81

,_,...,

lllbunl)

2--lhe
Mood lor
Lovo

7 Yoko I PollonITVeclof

llanta",-~~--

'"

11-11'11€. ~TCf '&lt;OOit

76

•
r''

•

.

ale. Di. R AU1o, Ripley, WV. 304·
372·3133 or 1.-,21'3't321.

.'

C8mpel'l &amp;

~~G:.:.=x.,c::t

AKC flatl. Ralloallar - · ao.
......,... - o n Jll•tl

1178 30' Dodge EXOCU1hre MotO&lt;
-condition,
runobOot!
good,value
Interior
IPIN'OICJ.
110,000, aaklng 111800 010, call

P-a . POl

lhop.

iHAT616N
~Ot~'t APPL.Y

HAyEA

TO MS ...

D05.

I DON'r

gift,

.,.... 1 nice

sa. 1'14--.

Chriii.-

I

1

;I
I'll

Motor Home.,

100&lt;11

114-1112-8411, .... !or 1111
Charyl.
.

ot

__

:;r

:&amp;,":11~,.-::t&lt;l;

=ton~*'m~~aln-

'51

•

,,••
j

Millk:al
1 at
ment

- r 'llll!ly Oak . Fumlura.
Sollcloall
tatila a ohalra, curvocl
n N
I
•~
~I-P.'u, .. NQ, 114 3.. 1112 IIO~U~ Con!lllon,
~·- . .
_._ china . - · · ~
.-~.
tGt..lwndn adt Mit
:· :rm Sc pfJI :r-,
- - G o ~Crooll Ad.
Gonlpotla, Oh. P,ILIM-441~·~ l .; r· ' tc,·k

· e.....,..._

Sam.....,, ....
1&gt;1' SarMIJvllle.- -Ofltoa. llool
A
.
ilnv

Bonlor, comiiiU(jo
--o d 81 Fann Equipment
All _ . . . , !lo•olt.u llllht llilal ollllla rack• for pickup
laollot 121. All - · ...
bod, .100.00, ., ...
:nHIII.
~ 2, - · -

Plumbing &amp;
Htltlng
Freamon'o Haatlftti And C&lt;i&amp;itll!l.
71 11M ···~ raroueon wlh lnetiiiJ.Uon And lervlce~ RIO
qat&gt;, 101 "'· 1Jtl0 - . . Cortlllod. ~tlal, Commar-•'

t'IO.OOOi 114--l!IUOM.

o111.1144'M-1t11.

~· .....llobdo!w,
"' ft2l. lldora
£Me~.
WV.

84

: 1'

,,

Electrical &amp;

304-t1J.~ • 1.eoo..tn:ltl7.

446-2342
Pomeroy DaOy Sentinel
992-2156
Pt. Pleuant Repter
675-1333

1

i

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

r----~.-----------, . CI,

:

f':J""

'

ahead by mailing $1 .25 and a long, soli·
addressed , stamped envelope lo AstroGraph, clo th1a newspaper, P.O. Box 4465,
New York , N.Y. 10163. Be sure to stale
your zodiac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20.Folo. 18) Todoy you
BERNICE
might bec:omo Involved In something imporlant where the real powe1 resides in lhe
BEDEOSOL
hands ot olhera. Oon'lflght what you can't
change. Instead try to derive banefita from
II.
,
PISCES (Fob. 20.Merch 20) HleiOfiCiilly
w11on you aubm~ lo y011r Impulsive buying
lncllnatlons you seldom walk away with a
good deal. Today might ba one of lho&amp;e
·days whore you repeal thla panem.
.._ ARII!I (lllarch 21·Aprll 111 Persona who
want I~ boln your comer mlghl become
reluctant supporters II they fool you're toe
Friondo who hove proven loyal to you In Hlf·llrvlng today. To succeed, you mull
the past wifl ba your reHable lllindbya once do for othero as ...tlaa for yoursell.
again In the year ahead. Nui'tu;, these TAUIIUB (April 20-Mey 20) Your blggeal
anoclallona and be aupportlvo of them ; Impediment todoy could ba your own lack
whenever y011 Clln.
, ol ~lief In your eapabillllos. lnstaad ot wor·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jin. ttl In your ' rylng lbout.thlngo thai may never happtn,
Involvements with friends today, be at INtlt give them a Jry.
'
ollremsly. careful not to play tavorlleo. II GEMINI (lllay 21'Jlllll 20) Not everyone
you do. knowingly or unknowingly, you'll ~~h whom you'll ba Involved today will ba
have to toke the ccnMquences. Copriccm, In accord with your way ol doing thinga .
trtat yourull to a blrthdey gift. Send for Unfortunately, your antagonitl might ba
your Aatro-Greph predlctlone for tha year very low keyed and dlfficuh lo uncover.

ABTRO·ORAPH

...

"'

"-,.

'It!'

i CANCER (Juna 21 · July 221 To day you
might find yourself in an unenviable position wl1ere others may be making decisions
lor you. If you lose conlml, it will be difficull
10 gel II back.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 221 Others who
observe you closely today might see you
as a bitter talker than a doer. This can be
ccrracted II you act first and leave the conversation until later.
VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sopt . 22) Exercise
restraint In your commercial dealing&amp;lodey
and don't lump to conclusions. Study situauonslhoroughly, both that whicli ia obvious
and lhlt which Ia beneath tho sunace.
UIIIA (Boa~. 23-0cl 23) Associates who
have to doll with you In crtlleal aHualloos
today could become unnerved 11 you are
too lndeclalva. Make your boat judgment
and abldo bJ IL
BCOf!I'IC) (Oil. 24-Nov. 22) Manage par·
sons h\ your charge with a gonlle Hand
lodey, baeaUII they will respond favorably
to klndnen. If you 're lnconaldorato or
~nret10111ble, the oppoatll will be true.
~ARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ln&amp;lead
.ot managing rour noaouroea !Oith prudence
al thla limo; you might ouccumb to your
more extravagant lmpulaes . Whal you
weste now may be needed later.
·

N

&lt;

, .

1988, Pan Am Flight 103 exploded over
Lockerbie, Scotland, in a terrorist
bombing; more than 258 people were
killed .
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Benjamin
Disraeli 0804-1881), British stalesman; Joseph Stalin 0879-1953), Soviel
dictator; Joe Palerno (1926-), football
coach, is 67; Phil Donahue (1935-),
talk -s how ho st, is 58; Jane Fonda
(1937-), actress, is 56:

ITUESDAY

. •

.

·

IH.l

ROBOTMAN

..

·~

.
TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in

MORTYMEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP

=--~-___;'' !

79

..._

=-=~ml:h.=r.i,!'

-.
_.
a.-.

first day of winter.

F""""ut 31ft. llatbad lralltr '

.

·

lllt:!Ur:Jllr.Ut

Today is the ·JSSth
day at 1993 and the

-.

::;::,&amp;"'rldlltortl,
tanka, ona ton truck
. noor mat a,

·--

De&lt;;. 21, 1993

Shopha!d IRalrlovor Pupa for
_
Servtces
wt"'
s.~e, 121 Etch; ""' Chacllad.
Ouaaar 11_ -~-· --~- 1al - · And Womiod, t
111 1411217
8 ::::---~--;....
ropatrod;"i1 4 ; - :.:" Qld,
Anor
81
Hom•
~
lllol F H' W '-'. 1Wo lull Colllo pupa,
wn ure. • "'"'' Ml and ona lnd ono -Ia,
Improvements.
~
•an!lquo
- - fJioL; ona .,... ....., A wJE~NG
~
puppy, tzso; 114-llt2U,_llllllouol lllollolt" ......... .
81.,
t•. Looll r.hwumia ~
Aocllor"'"-'· :nwMI. 1Wo milllal1n - · 2 eau
1--DI78 or 114-m
1,1a!'::l
~:
Wat..._tlng. Eot
·1171.
lciL ~1:111

"

DATE BOOK

F;;l '

Auto Parts &amp;

Tbe only cluulce for tbe defemef
II to cub tbree beart trlcb now. AI·
tboulh· It loob danlenJIII 'lrilh lhe
quee~~ln lhe dummy, East muat IWIIcll
to lhe heart four, boptD&amp; partDer bu

tbe ace. Here West comealbroqb and
lhe eootraet dies.

W/loc . ~~~ SZIOO. 304-e75- :
3Mf'or
5-6412.

114-245-HM.

-.wv.

r111 l&gt;f'RHI&gt; WE OML'/ AAV£ APIMIO

~7

Tau~l14-44&amp;-2211 O.p; eW r
a&amp;.
Atler 7 P.M.
•,

- - -.1-.

:IJI4.m.41 I 2, • - lllorto Soara ramoti - . t Drib-

WOUl.D YOO CON5IDER ~Nb AA
.~~Fat 'Jla;£ 11-1 16D

,WW., '00'1"511 LCJ{tJ.X IDEio., M ...

'88 Honda 210X, 4 Wh., llodltiod
~:

IM-371-2135.

·-

:!:·,t,;;~
~ CondMion,

. AI'Pl.IUTIOO, ~ TI\OOIN'I'l£...

Budolt Pr181d Tn~...nlsslonej ~

:::-11·=~u~=r·· trac-

Bn&gt;thera, 1, 2; • !t t;.~ ~:::0 1

BORN .LOSER

...Jj,j

ft700114-441·1111.
(
AU1~o Bre For

fruitle~~~~.

at

I

Motorcycles

1~t1on.

openluil bid ebowlnc

oer's suit. But bere that iJ

'i~ ~T OO£!&gt;TlQI.I FOR~

UOad &amp; robuiH, all lyl"'!• alan' •
lng at ..., .,._ 114-24o-5!1~ •

~~~~~~-·~:-_:_.4~_::.

Zolda

74

I

••

1

-ion,

On Hot Water HMtor, I1CO,
45 &amp; 55 Gallon, &amp;M-24H182 A~
lor8P.II.
Nlnlanclo NES lncluclaa n-amo: 1'~ IIU1anl
n.tlaa 1 &amp; 2 • FrldiJ The 13th,
Rod Raoar, Motor ~
-boll, T - Super !!GWJ.

11188 ~lodge eo,.von SE,. PS
PB, air, IICiod J&gt;odr, aoklng"
MODe, 114·11a2·7841.
1181 Ford Range; 4WD, olr,
5ap., SBIOO. 304&lt;175.4132 ot•

5 Lug Alumlnilm iiHbo - 1-t
18 Inch In - . r, 11 Inc~
Wkla, WIH Fh Gonetot Motora;
ft21. 114-37W721.
'

--~~~
fiOO.
114-1112-H31.. ·
IIana naw leo - ... a1Jo 8,
12

13 . Viii's &amp;4 \Viti. -:

••

IJl'OII'8IIII on your local PBS

llll""t-+-

Furtber lnlormatloo II avlllable from
lhe ACBL at 800-ZM-Z74S.) Tbe bcoU

II polnta, and a two-no-trump
promising ZZ·U J)Oinll. In
American bridge c(ubl, lhe former Is
an endangered species and tbe latter Is
- rlptly - extiDct.
Here Is one deal from the third bock,
whlcb concentrates oo deft!llle.
Declarer wins lhe flnt trick wllh
dummy's diamond queen. He dran
two rounds of trumpa and plays lhe
club king. After wiDDln&amp; wilh lhe are,
what sbould East lead?
Everyone II taugbt to return part·

I

304475-411114.

Gl'lllt to produce four bcotlllllll
vtdeota_pes esplalninl tbe buiCI
pme. (You m~Pt have aeea tbe video

one-~~&amp;-trump

I

Acceuortes

lodloo black loothar jackal with
Zip out ll'!!r., a11o -lum, 11CQ,
114 1112 88or.
.
llan'a old - - · alzo 12, Milo

·-·Jill 10.______________
ll.___________ -In"" . .
8
9 •_________....;..____

12----------18....________________

Buildings

41

'·

Mobl~~-:le:!:tioma~
~·~
·~~~~~~~~"-'"_'_".[~~~~~~~=::;--I ao,
114-'Jit2.af7.
lllllll!ry rille, aood

Mo:::.o:es

1211511
3br.,1
room,
living

au, llod, ~...a.

AH ·~·
Uko l.Nvellaa--

THOUSANDS BELOW AP. · 46 Space for Rent
PRAISED VAWE lmmacula!a 3
.
1~ g .
~.
1.1
Acroo,
&amp;6C'a.
&amp;14,_,.,
Rt.ncm. Mlnut• Frdm
37!1-9442.

32

~·

~r Spanlal Pu~ Talla
DocMd, Daw Clawo, Rllflovod,

T11lo nawopopor wll not

1dva111Mdln tiD na

h

lheUmtedS~us~~·M::·~~~~~~~-~~
Tile ACBIJ cc

weak two-bids. (But tbe reader leai'DI
that It II aU rllbl to mike a Umlt ralle
with three trumps, wblcllll tleflnltely
wro~~g.) However, they allo Include a

•

C:VJ

lmlllllon Of dlatnlnalbn.•

law.

-

~~p=~

. - I l l ) ' ouch proltii'II1CO,

Yard Wbrk Wlodawa WllhiNI
Gutters Ci11ned Light Hauling,
Commencer, Rnidentlll, Stew~~:
614-446-1658.

IL.et-(IIIUit

1 Dlttrlllulo

teacbla&amp; be broulbt

tent: for eump_le, Umlt ra'-1 8Dd

Aaklng J12,000. Coli 614-24S:1
1011.
i
.
'
For M)e or tract. 1tiS Ford •
T-po. fi90d ruMing -looJ.. 1

l ,. .

. . . . any-to

G1n11r11 M1lnlenanee, Paimln_g.l

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Whh Or WhhoUI Molorw. Call
Larry Lively. 614-388-1303.

Sate

A

-,
'11 IJIIC Siarre Clallic 314 Ton~ I
8 Yoor Qld Ponr 814-241-1012, Aa It *'He 114-3711-2110.
f!
114-245-1418.·
11184 Ford F150 H,OOC llllea, ·1
Ell ...laro Condl!lon h,SOO f143P7113.
:
ChrlltlnM,
110
lftl mum
1188
Ford
'112
ton
plcliup,
XLT
dapoolt ... hold,- . homee only. 304-17'5-mi 1ft!lr ~~ Explorw, like neW, all ••- 1
5pm ..
t~L..Iow mllaa, IUIO., 302 Y&lt;l, I
AKC tamale lllnlalura Duhund, " - · ~-..11·:
bl8ck 6 tan, lwkll., 1200. 304-- 11188
plcliup, llhreredo,
175-5731.
IICiod
, ZAola ol • .,,.,,
71.000 mUtt, blue book Yllue
AKC Garman Shopholdo, I ..,411. L. L. SmHh, toe I
-man Clrclt, 304&lt;1'1&amp;-3222. 1
.,Ftn·1111
... i14'"
.•-•.,.
""'1131
Chacllod.
..

lho F - Fllr HouMIJIAc:l

Trimming, Tr• R~mov•l, Hedge
Trimming. Fr• E•tlmates! 614·
367·7»57 After 4p.m.

--

401dage
5 .........,

DOWN

are well-written aad eoo~ln many ex·
ercl-. They bave 110111e modern ClOII·

72 . Trucks lor Sale

A I - -olldVOftlllng 11

;:;-;;-;~:-;:;:;::-;;;:::--:::-::-:-­

A

...• .,.,, $15M, 1':{-l'U--2852. ~--

lhllllllbb ,..., .... eutpd tO

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

a-,

11rea.

ADIII1menll,

A.M.

PIUMnt, WV 25550. ·

TrueD

Hot1er

Pets lor

56

tuntt ...

Russ Moore, owner. 614-992·
2526. We buy 8SIII81.

Appliances, Any Other Metals

ICc CREAM

I

1110 Ponllac Tral18potl For
Sale. Clean Wlthi.:,w Fron1

-plod.

At The Super 8 Motif,

Wanted to Do

ONE MORE
QUESTION ..

I-lOW DO 'f'OLI EAT

SCARF?

Sac:ond A...,ua, Galllpollo. 814441·1800 Santor, Dlaablod, •
HMM:Iicapped 1 &amp; 2 Badroom
U.Ha. Ranta BMail On Adlualod
Income. FIIHA Subaldlucf, HUD ,
Cartlllc.ltoo
8t4-441·
18001 Equal HoUalng Oppor·

Oflice Mlni1Jer w•nted tor doc·

Fraa, 614-446-JII28 Boloro9 P.M .

11DLIKE AN
ICE CREAM

Lauartand Apto., Naw Haven,
WV. EOH 304-IIW!'II
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BuPGET PRICES AT JACIUION
ESTATES, 1131 Jackooo\ Plko
from $201/mo. Walk to •
rnovlaa. c:.lll14 Ul :1111. EOH.
a-h St., 1!1ddlaport, 011 , '
1
2br. lurnoohecf apto., U1lltlaa
paid, dop.• rat. :I04-e82-2511.
Firat

Decorated stoneware, wall telt·
phones, old lamps old ther·
moineters, old clocks, antique
lumllure. Riverine Antiques .
J &amp; D's Auto Parta and Salvag1 ,

I!EANliTS

2bdnn. aplll., tot11 et.clrtc, •P"
pllancee fumlthed, l•undry

nllltted, on alta lftlftlgamlnt.

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

lor't office, atart Pin-lima, mall
rt~eurne to: 2903 P1rrl1h Ave, Pt

3PHI

up to date or left In tbe 1950.? 'l'be
American Cootract Bridle ~~~
wblcll 0111111zeatournameot b1

-ric.

Valier. Hotpit•l, Sand Hill Rd.,
Pt. P NHnt, WV 25550. 304-6755236. AAIEOE
~raon

Sbould brld&amp;e

room hlcllhiM ctoee lo achoot
In town. ADD~IC8tiona avallat.t.
al: Ylltoae 'Qrean Aoto. 1141 or
call8144a·3711. EOH.
2br. all
apt&gt;lla,_ fur·

Ftnanctal
21

":!:tllot

IDEE!!

lor Rent.
Employment Services

57 Dr...
58 Fllln director
Joel-

dlllurtlonce

Opening lead: • 5

Two Mdroom, lot•l lfectrlc,
$225fmo., PDfMI'OY II'N, 81411124312.

Lost &amp; Found

Losl : Middleport vicinity, Shtltle
(mini Colllt), sablt and whitt, 4
mos. old, S50 reward , 614-992-

9

$300. prmonth. .......,......,
2 bod,_, traller1 rat &amp; dop, At.
82 N. Locust Ra on right, no

23 Colllplftlon
011111
24 Rubllor city

33 leiOfl
34 Plfl olloco
38 Art doco
HIUIII'Itor

+It$
Vulllerable: Bolli ·

111'1111111
53IIMII
54 Nile

55=-

271n-.nlty
31 Sllelllllll
32 Cronin

t7t

llol&gt;lle Fumlahod, 2 Br,
1120 Founh 4-ua. Oalllpoll'!!
m0111o., ~-~411 After 7
P.ll.

Washer, Orytr,
Refrigerator.
Washer Worits, Dry•r NHds
Some Rapalr 614·4~6~938.

.ALL Yard Sales MustBe

'tO DAY-SAllE A5 CASH
OR RENT.a.OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

::::=:

22:.._.

lll.mn

20 Ounl-to ree10n

+AitJ712
.1071

. . =.

4211a••""'

pate. 304-f75-1071.

Give To Good Home : 8 Week
Old Collie / Beagle Puppy, Mele
-While, With Brown /Black
Spols, Adorable And Good WHh
C~ildren , NHds Room To Run ,
614-446-0122, (Moodys ' ~ Has
S~ots
/Almost
Had
Housebroktn.

8

14X70 moblla home, good &lt;ond
p
on 2 acre lol, oner Claok area, .

48 101111 oiCWM

SOOTH

814-4414111 Or 114 Ut 4428

Freo Chns1mao puoolas, oan
registered . 304-675-1~5.
.. _ -· .... . ..• ·- - -

1 4 = ....
15 Pot...all
trouble
18Termlllell
18 Actot -

+ 104
.KJH
Uti
+A Ill

38 Ac1of -

40 YCMIII!Ofl.
411...

.17=-..

-

ar Ac1of

12 AclofJllrlnlnp
13- -liM

+AQl
+QJ107

-a

- ...... ,.......,..Can

Household
Goods

.......

•Qu

112;00C ..... loodod,
...... :104.fll~311.

r.terchJildi S0

1Wo

Fem111 dog, all bltck, 1 1/2yrs.,
looU like miniature black lab.

7

8 Ancient

Giveaway

,... _
,.,.,.

380ulon -

1 llud
5 Gr.tlinl twig

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

2 Black I White Klttai'W, 2 Bltck
=~To Good Homa, 814·

6

NEA Cronword Pu:nle

BRIDOI

Wanted to Rent

N..tv Rem de's d 2 Bedroom
5 lllloo """" 0.11~11
1250 Month 1100 Dopooll 114-

3

4

Q

Pomeroy--Middle~rt!

1993i

CELEBRITYr CIPHER

c.t.tlyC..., G)plcjiaia . . ...._.lralrlqt
IE.II::* 11tt1r In tM Clphlr

' J T PM
IP

T~UP

XRYY

CPLHBP

R

I'UPK

JTPK

XRYY

BPZA :

URilNPKJ

•ll!Jitrnaul~ PMfMCI

_.,.lor lnOtNJ. TflfMy'• ..,_. f _ . K.
JH

BPJR ·I P ,

IM

pr...m.

CWBM
ZKA

JHICGJHKP

II'YY

CP

CZNF .

EIIINP.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Beaabell Ia ninety peroent mental; the other hilt
Ia pll)'llcll." - Yogi BerTa.
WOit
'~~~~~, s©~c(llA-~t.trs·
lAIII
ldllod
CLAY I . POLLAH _..;__ _ _ __
0 four
lefters of
~,

Rearrange
sc:rombled words
low to form four words .

I

'J '! LA ' 1 L

I s ()

L E

~I

I

-f
·~-,EI.-~·.I_,.'_P...,...I_L..,--~1
~ . :;
L

We had been sitting around
wondering whatto do. One tellow complained of being bored
I was always told that the best
I: ~ F tl L y
way to kill time was to put it to
-.-.---r-""'k-,;,........j death · - .. · ~
Coml)lete the . chuck le Quote d
I . . . _ L
.1 bv loll•ng in the m•S$Jngl words

1-·

I I I

r

0

L...-L-L-....1.-L....L_J vou develop lrom step No. 3 below.

Dismay· Trick· Yucca - Incite - MISTAKE
. Am!norflaw in our presentation lost our company a big
client Thai JUSt shows me," sighed a colleague, "thatthe
largesl projeel can be ruined by the smallest MISTAKE.•

DECEMBER 21

I

�Learning
programs
funded

Eastern,
Southern
boys win

For the eighth year in a row, students in the Alexander, Meigs
Local and Vinton County school
districts will benefit from innovative and Cllllltive learning projects
funded by Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division.
The Meigs Division recently
awarded more than $4,000 in
"mini-p1111ts" to fund II projects.
The wmners were chosen from 32
applications ~ubmitted by area
teaChers.
According to Dave Baker,
human resources manager for the
Meigs Division, Southern Ohio
Coal has contributed over $32,500
for the funding of 88 Cllllltive learning projects during the eight years
of the program.
This year's winners are:
• Mike Waggoner and Bill
Whitlatch, who teach fifth- and
sixth-grade developmenlally handicapped students at Alexander Middle School in New Marshfield,
Ohio. They have used their minigrant to purchase a "tete-trainer"
which hel-ps the students learn
communication and daily living
skills.
"I think the mini-grant program
is great," said Waggoner. "You
don't have to get a textbook out to
teach. The kids are really excited
about this, and I don't think it
would have been obtainable

Pages S-6

LOS ANGELES (AP) - If
children were ratings points, Santa
would be off the air.
Only about 20 youngsters
showed up to chat with Santa on
Sunday at the Topanga Plaza mall.
,More than 5,000 stood in line to
greet Power Ranger Tommy, a
character on the children's TV
show "Mighty Morphin Power
Rangers," according 10 police estimateS.
The line of children and theit
parents extended a quarter of a
mile, snaking through the mall and
into the parking lot
"You can always see Santa
Claus," said Fallon Grun, 9, of
Hollywood, who got up at sunrise
to see Tommy. "You can only see

l

TEACHING TOOLS - Mike Waggoner, right, and BID Whitlatch, who teach developmentally handicapped children at Alexander Middle School in New Marsbl"teld, Ohio, display the tele-tl"ainer they purchased with a mini·IJ'ant from Southern Olllo Coal
Company's Meigs Division. the tele-trainer wiU help tbe students
learn communication and dally living skiDs
through normal channels."
• Margie Blake, a Nursing
Assistant Vocational Program
instructor at Meigs High School in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Blake will use her
grant to purchase a portable teaching model that will demonstrate the
dangers of tobacco to seniors at the
high school.
• Lee Raines and Rebekah Podwill, seventh-grade English and
reading teachers at Alexander
Junior High School in Shade, Ohio.
Their project, titled "Appalachian

Utilities
regulator
resigns

Pride," will teach students about
the hisiOry of their local communities, enhancing pride and involve'
ment in southellstem Ohio.

.

I.

'

Also absent

'

• Sweaters • Coats
•J
• Shirts

.Meadows
second birth
announced

cisL .

- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
utilities regulaiOr under investigation for possible conflict-of-interest
violations resigned as a probe
widened into whether he used work
phones for personal calls.
James L. Kennedy, the chief of
performance analysis for the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio, submitted his resignation Tuesday,
effective Dec. 31.
Stacie Gilg, PUCO spokeswoman, said the State Highway Patrol's
investigation of Kemedy expanded
to in~lude whether he misused a
PUCO phone and fax machine for
personal business.
The Columbus Dispatch reponed today that a random review of
phone records showed that of 23
long-distance calls made this year
from Kennedy's office, 15 appear
to be personal calls. All but two
were made during work hours, the
newspaper said.
· Three of the calls were to private businesses that are linked 10
Twenty Frrst Century, the repon
said.
Kennedy co-founded the company in November 1989 and was its
chief executive officer until he
resigned in October. He still is listed in state tax records as president.
PUCO Chairman Craig A. Glazer last week asked the patrol to
iJweltigate ~helh!!r:. KM!t~&gt;;. had a
confiict;,q f,in!Gfost. 1'bo-telceommUI!iC!ItiOns company has contracts
with Southern Oh10 Power and
Columbia Gas of Ohio, which the
PUCO regulates.
Kennedy has denied that he
used PUCO equipment for personal
matters. There was no answer early
today at a telephone number listed
under his name.
Rol1ert McAllister, his attorney,
said Kennedy might have made
-occasional long-distance phone
calls involving personal matters,
but said there is a provisio~ to
reimburse the state.
Ms. Gilg said Kennedy reimbursed the agency once this year
for a $1 call to his mother in
.Bostoo.
McAllisrer said other employees
have access to Kennedy· s phone.

Outstanding Fashion Gift Values
&amp; Plenty Of 'Em!

Tommy once ·in a while."
"Power Rangers" features six
superhero teens who battle evil.
The Fox Broadcasting Co. weekday morning series has spun off
some of the holiday season's
honest-selling toys.
Radio station KRTH-FM pro- AMANDA RAYE MEADOWS
vided a photographer to take free
photos of children with Tommy,
played by ac10r Jason Frank.
"This is phenomenal," said
Frank, who sat for hours engulfed
by squealing children.
First in line was 11-year-old
Brian Hansel, who said he made
his father roll out of bed at 5 a.m.
to take him to the mall by 7 am.
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Meadows
Brian said Santa Claus was OK, announce the birth of their second
but "I like Tommy better."
child, a daughter, Amanda Raye.
Born at Holzer Hospital on Sept
19, 1993, the infant weighed seven
pounds, 12 ounces, and was 20
Hunt for Fruth Pharmacy; Mary inches long. Maternal grandparents
Perry for Dan's, Terri Bishop for are Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manley
Valley Lumber, Earle Nelson for Sr., and paternal grandparents are
·Mill Street Books, Linda Mayer for Mr. and Mrs. Okey and Dorothy
Trolley Sta~on Cr~ts, Kim Eblin Meadows, all of Middlepon.
for Vaughan s Cardinal.
Amanda was welcomed home
Garnet Varian for Locker by a sister Maria Lynn, age 2.
219/Shoe ~lace; Sally Ervin for
Bahr Clolh!er; Jean Nof!On for Mill
End Fabncs, Jean Gtlmore for
It's enough to make a curmudgeon
Ingels Elec~onics, Lincoln. Smith
for Johnson s Vanety, Debbte Con- or anyone - those endless armies or
kle for Middleport Department wittle elves marching, marching
Store, Mary Van Meter for Ingels across the TV screen these nights.
Furniture, Sharon Pratt for Big
Something to look forward to: Those
Bend ·Health and Fitness, Tom
bills
you didn't have to pay until next
Werry for Acquisitions Fine Jewelyear
ry, June Thomas for Farmers Bank, ize it.are coming due before you realand Barbara Logan for Sears.

By RICK HAMPSON
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The
bride's tiara was borrowed, the
groom's children refused 10 attend,
and the most commonly asked
question was "How long do you
think it'lllast7"
But for one night the tabloid
saga of Donald Trump and Marla
Maples read more like a fairy tale.
After six years of exhaustively
chronicled breakups and makeups,
they gazed into each other's eyes
Monday ni2ht and - finally said, ul do:Y
,•
As she walked down the aisle in
the Grand Ballroom of Trump's
Plaza Hotel, Marla blew little air
kisses to her intended. The ceremony included the singing or "Ave_
Maria," the reading of poetry by
Kahlil Gibran and the recitation of
'
.....I
the Lord's Prayer.
"Vr::ry nicet very nice." Trump
T"i/'JN,,r . THE KNOT - Newlyweds Do01ld and Marla Trump
said hoarsely after the IS-minute
pose
for phot01fapben In The Plua Hotel after their wedding cerceremony, from which most
emooy
on Moada~ in New York. Trump llnally shrugged otr bls
reponcn wae barred
"marrla&amp;e
phobia and wed Maples, capping a sb:-year courtship
"I liked the part about 'Lead us
more
ups and downs than the Manhattan skyline. (AP
with
not iniD tem~on,' "-craclctd ~ ·
PhoiOIKathy'WWens)
sip columnist Liz Smith. She sided
with Trump's former y.'ife, Ivana,
in her biw:r split with Trumi? over right, tlie nerves take care of them- elect Rudolph Giuliani, Liza MinMarla three years ago, but to the selves."
nelli, Arnold Schwarzenegger and
When the ceremony began, Michael Jackson. For every recog~t of the season - a!ld for pub"They stared into each other's eyes nizable face, there was a beefy,
licity - she was invited anyway.
Maples, 30, a m~l and. show- as they said 'for richer or poorer, anonymous real estate man and
girl, wore a long, whue salll), off- better or worse,"' reporte'l gossip companion.
the-ihoulder gown designed by · columnist and guest Richard JohnNo-shows included Trump's
Carolina HWera. A $2 million dia- son. .
children from his first marriage.
Then came the kiss, which
mond dan 'borrowed for the occa"In discussions among our- .
Howard
Stern described as "quite selves, we decided ID stay in Aspen
sion ft0111 jeweler J:1arrY Winston
remarkable."
anchmd her~ veil.
'
with our mother and lfBildmolhsmacker " agreed er,'' 18id"Donald, 16, Ivanka, 12,
Trump, 47, wore a traditional
opJpher Tommy and Eric, 10, in a statem·e nt
tuXedo
de8ipd
by
~t~O.i.
)
.
"There was· no g)
released by tbeil' mother's publi•

it, DonaldHenry
was ·~;!~k:;
1_:~::'~
observed
t1
friend of the developer.
know
Donlld, arid I saw It in his eyes. tHe
fell a loc of~ here.''
Not Marla. "II was just right,''
she explained, "Whe_n It feels

221
Pick 4:

8410
Buckeye 5:
1-10-14-18-33

Vol. 44, NO. 1&amp;8

• And Lots More~.••

~ve ~n ~~verything

In Ladies &amp; Mens Apparel!
Even Clearance Items,
Sale Items...:EVERYTHING!

. ·. .oa\\1
.....

Trump wedding: Soap opera turned to fairy tale

(

Pick 3:

1
I
1

:Eastern
seeks bids
for buses

Eastern Local School District
school board members discussed
and aJ?Ilroved advertising for the
district s new 72-passen$er school
bus' bidding process at tts regular
meeting Dec. 15, according to a
release from the district's superintendent's office.
The district also approved the
bid of Williams &amp;. Assotiates
Insurance for fleet insurance.
In other business, the district
also:
·
• authorized the treasurer to pay
bills from Landis &amp;. Gyr and
Columbus Heating Co. for revamping the heatihg system.
• approved a warranty letter from
Landis 8i. Gyr for work completed
for a period of one year.
,· approved adding another gate to
Continued on Page 3 .

I
I
I

Good tor.in-stock merchandse only.
I
One coupon per transaction. Photo copies not accepted.
Offer not valid on purchase qf ,shoes, cosmetjcs, fragrances or jewelry. I
Customer must bring in
coupon to receive ttl$ coupon value. . ' ·1

p

I . :. ~ g::r21thru "L
~- - 1 ·
sd
I

·

a

0

F~ Decfmber ~. 1993;

I

L--~-~-~~-~---------~

I

was Tiffany, Don-

. aid and Marla's Infant daughter,
who was· home sleeping and thus
no help at all in COIISUIIIiDg the 6foot-lall wedding cake.

'•
I

..
'

,..-----Christmas is...-------.

SHARING WITH OTHERS • The Meigs
County Bikers are "sharing" folk. Through·
out the year they nlse thousands of dollars
and then give it away-sometimes to communities for parks or playiJ'ounds, to organizations ror spedal programs, to uoderprivUeged
cbildreo. During this holiday season their
concern turns to tbe hundreds of boys and

girls who might not get lifts for Christmas.
Enough money was raised through tbe toy
run aod other projects lo purchase gifts for
550 children. They were distributed this week
from the Meigs County Health Department
by the bikers, including Brenda Davis, left,
and Patsy Price.

A tries to toughen gun
"dealen-licens.ing.·proeessCINCINNATI (AP)- the federal government is trymg to make it
tougher for people with a' criminal
pas110 obtain licenses 10 sell guns.
"We get some people who are
not of the highest character with
these licenses;" said Les Stanford,
spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. "You
can have a series of misdemeanors
for being a barroom brawler, but
you're still qualified to deal in
guns.''
The United States has more
licensed gun dealers than gasoline
stations. aecordin~t to the Washing-

applicants a lot more questions.
Because of that, "some dubious
applicants are backing out," Stanford said.
But Steve Whitener, a lobbyist
license.
for
the Gun Owners of America,
Treasure Secretary Lloyd
Bentsen has said tbe Clinton said existing licensing laws are too
administration will try to ~et con- restrictive.
"Gun dealers shouldn't need
~sional approval for an mcrease
m license fees to discourage people any kind of license." Whitener
said. "You cannot license a constifrom selling firearms.
President Clinton recently tutional right."
In C'incinnati, where there is a
ordered the ATF to do what it can
under existin$ laws to toughen the · 15-day waiting period for the purprocess for licensing gun dealers. chase of guns, there are only three
Stanford said the ATF is asking gun stores. But there are 330
licensed dealers.
ton-Msec! Violence Polley Center:
ATF figures show there are
248,155 federally licensed gun
dealers . Each paid $10 for the

Outdoor slayer to be sent to Lucasville
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Serial
killer Thomas Lee Dillon will be
transferred to the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville
by Friday to serve the remainder of
his life sentence, a prison official
said.
The warden at the Warren Correctional Institution near Dayton,
where Dillon is being held, lecommended in Oc10ber that Dillon be
sent to maximum security at
Lucasville.
Dillon pleaded guilty July 12 to

killing five outdoorsmen and was
sentenced to 165 years without a
chance of parole.
Warren Warden Anthony Brigano said Tuesday he made the recommendation after a periodic
review of Dillon's status as a prisoner in protective custody.
"The inmate was put in protection due to the notoriety of his
case," Brigano told the Akron Beacon Joumal. "But we determined
that at this point he has not been
threatened and no longer requrres

protection. When you 'vc got a guy
who's killed five people, there's
not a whole lot of places you can
send him. Lucasville is it."
Dillon appealed the recommendation, saying he would fear for his
life if he were sent to Lucasville.
The Ohio Bureau of Classification tllis month denied Dillon's
appeal and agreed he should be
sent to Lucasville, said Sharron
Kornegay, spokeswoman for the
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction.

Low tonight in lOs. Cloudy.
Thursday, blgh In JOs. Snow
nurrles.

1 SecUon, 12 P - 35 coni&amp;
AMultimedia Inc. -•poper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 22, 1993

Muttimodio Inc.

Holiday winners announced
Winners in the fourth week of
the holiday give-away by the Middleport Community Association
have been 8111101111Ced. The total 10be given away this se~son is
$1 400 The give-a-way program
wlll co~clude with Friday's drawing.
.
Customers may register m the
participating stores. To be eligible
shoppers must fill out new stubs
each week with one ol the 20 merchants because prizes will be
awarded based on only those tickets submitted that week.
The winners were Jeannette
Duffy for Dairy Queen, Curtis
King for Millie's Restaurant; Juanita ·Ratliff for Ingels Carpet;Tom

Ohio Lottery

'

Power Ranger Tommy
more popular than Santa

l

December 21, 1

Ohio

Sentinel

Klan erects cross
at statehouse
COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ku
Klux Klan put up a 10-foot cross
on the Capttol lawn in downtown
Columbus early today but it toppled to the ground within hours.
There were conflicting reports
about whether it was pushed or
blown down.
In Cincinnati, police guarding a
cross erected early Monday by
another Klan group reported a quiet
night
Four Klan members erected the
white wooden cross about 12:30
a.m. at the Statehouse, said Vincent
Plneue of Cleveland, a regional
coordinator for the Knights of the
Ku Klux Klan.
No protesters were present when
the cross went up. The State Highway Patrol had two troopers there
for security - the usual overnight
detail at the Statehouse.
Lt. Sam Hamblin said he
believed the wind toppled the
cross. He said troopers were not
assigned to guard the cross. A radio
station also blamed the wind.
But Mark Nordstrom, a reporter
for WWCD-FM in Columbus, said
a man who identified himseU only
as Ron at 7:06 a.m. grabbed part of
the cross, rocked it a few times,
then pushed it over.
'"They represented what they
wanted to do and I represented
what I wanted to do," the man told
Nordstrom. "So they wanted to put
it up and I took it down. So that's
that.''

~Two J:l&amp;nsd!~tr"purure tross
back up shortly after II a.m. today.
'·Indeed the reasonable observer
... might well know by vinue of all
of the recent media covera11e that

the state of Ohio ... opposes the display ol the cross and ..y messages
whtch might reasonably be associated witli this display by the
Klan," Graham said
Pinette said he welcomed Graham's ruling.
"We feel in the Knights of the
Ku Klux Klan that there should be
equal rights for all," Pinette said.
Graham said the constitutional
right of freedom of speech would
be meaningless if not applied
equally 10 popular and unpopular
groups.
Rtchard Cordray, a lawyer for
the state, said there was an important P,rinciple at stake.
' We feel that our propcny is
not simply subject 10 anyone using
it in an;r manner they please, and
we're stmply attemptmg 10 defend
that principle," Cordray said.
The Klan originally asked to
display a cross at the Statehouse
from Dec. 8 through Dec. 24. The
Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board denied the request
Although the Klan refused to
com pi y with a permit application
reqwrement to post bond, it delivered a $50 money order to the
board Tuesday to cover any damage that might result from the display. The check was marked "paid
under protest''
Meanwhile, a cross that a separate Klan group set up in downtown Cincinnati's Fountain Square
drew j~ersfrom passersby. But
tlierf\was no repeat or-tasr year's
anem!lts to dismantle the display.
Police stood guard near the 10foot Klan cross emblazoned with
"John 3: 16," and the text of that
biblical chapter and verse.

,...----Local briefs--..
Man held following chase
A Portland man is being held on charges following a vehicle
chase Tuesday afternoon.
Charles E. Boso, 26, of 53511 State Route 338, is being held in
the Meigs County Jail on charges of driving under the influence,
expired registration, resisting arrest and eluding.
According to a repon from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a deputy responding to a complaint of reckless driving in
Racine at 3:44 p.m. pursued Boso from Racine to Boso's residence
near the Ravenswood Bridge at which point he was arrested .
Soulsby said Boso was 10 appear in the Meigs County Coun of
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien this morning.

Christmas greetings Thursday
The Chrisunas Greetings edition of The Daily Sentinel will be
published Thursday. In addition, a weekend Chrisunas edition will
be published Friday. No Sunday Times-Sentinel will be published.

Saturday wrecks reported
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Dcparuncnt investigated
two accidents Saturday.
The flrst accident occurred around 12:30 a.m. on Hudson Valley
Road near Reedsville.
According to a sheriffs reoon. Eugene V. Long, 16, State Roule
Continued on Page 3

HUD to .reJease $125
million in flood relief for
nine Midwestern states
Money is going directly to 36
WASHINGTON (AP)- Midcities
and urban counties. The nine
western communities seeking to restates
Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Minbuild from summer flooding, relocate
away from flood plains or repair nesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nonh
Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin
breached lev- also are getees can draw
ting block gran I
upon new fed ·
funds to distribera! funding Possible uses for the grant
utetoothercomfordisasterreinclude
the
constructwn
munities.
lief.
Among
N i n e
and repair of private
the
possible
uses
Midwestern
for the grants
homes, levee repair and
states are sharare:
ing $125 mil• Con lion from the elevation of structures in
suuction
of new
Department of
th.:
jWod
plain.
homes, housing
Housing and
repairsandrenoUrban Develvations.
opment's
•
Elevation
of
housing
in flood
community development block pro·
plains.
gram.
. • Repairorreplacement of levees
Congress this year gave the
and
other public works,
agency $200 million in extra block
.
• Continuing pubtic services that
grant money for disaster relief. HUD
the
flooding
might have disrupted.
provided $75 million to the Midwest
HUD encourages communities
in August.
"I think the time is righttoeKtend first to use other federal funding
this second increment of money," sources and then use the broad and
HUD _Secretary Henry Cisneros said flexible block grants "to fill in the
gaps," Cisneros said.
Tuesda~ . ·

••

GENEROUS S11JDENTS - Memben of the
Melp Hlall School St1deat Couacll bold presents Taeadlty 1fternooo that tbe student body
bought tor four county f1mllles through fund
ralslnc. The lltudents raised $4551n a week wltb

'

the most money brou1ht In by the senior IDd
freshman c!nsu, lltudent councll presldeat JoJ
O'Brien said. "Most ot tllese families woulda't
have any presents," O'Brien said.

•

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