<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8706" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/8706?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T15:16:40+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19128">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/871904bd00709397c3a5476d5b379b68.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b9660994b4475acffa867ecca588ba9c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28076">
                  <text>•

Curt Flood
.

Ohio Lottery

'

I

Pick 3:
9-6-2
Plck4:
3-8-9-3
Buckeye 5:
1-10..11-14-25
. ....

'

.

.•
.•'

Partl,. cloud,. tonight,
chanc• of ahow•ra lata,
lows
In
tha
40s.
W•dn-.Jday, show•rs,
highs In thaSOS,

•·

•
f.,

•

'I

••••

.,

•

llaiL 117. NO. ', .
oti!IJ. 0111ct Vlllir N:lllllng CciR r

•

nv

2 'S aotlo&lt;-.12......,31-

Pomeroy·Middlaport, Ohio, Tualday, January 21, 1997

••

A GMnett Co. N11 ; ;

~omer.oy CQunCil stlJdies additional streetlights
.

'

8y JiM FREEMAN · ·
liuii:NI ...W. Stafl

be completed by the end of April, he said.
.
"It's going to be the fastest and easiest way to do it," hi: said.
· : ··Future work on parts of lhe Pomeroy Downtown Revitalization Project ·
Parker ConstiUction of Parkersburg, W.Va., is the contractor for lhe promay be less disruptive to motorists, it was revealed at Monday night's meet- ject, which was bid at $37,775. ,
.
.
In addition; Musser said the bulbs in the new lights will be switched over
ifli of Pomeroy Villqe Couacil.
· : To install additional streetlights in the downtown area, village .officials to incandescent bulbs to make them more flood resistant
· ~ye cot\sidered widening 1011\e sidewalks and pouring concrete over new
Ori the subject of yillage trash service, Mayor Frank Vaughan said he is
.~6.1 conduit instead of tearing up the existing sidewalk ln front pf busischeduling a couple of public hearings on the subject.
nesses.
,
.
Village residents have approached Vaughan and-council members want: 11\c new lights are to be installed on Main Stn:et between Butternut Avenue ing officials to consider contracting with a single waste hauler to help reduce
and $)'C!!IIIore Stn:ct, and on Court and Linn stn:cts, Council President John trash bills.
~usSer explaiRed.
. ·
.
..
.
· .
"I want the people that are telling me that lhey are being robbed to come
. · .. ·~ ·is quicker and would disrupt traffic less." Musser said. "All tjle work in and talk to the people they are putting out of business," said Vaughan ..
Wjll be dfme il) lhe evenins with the exception of pourins lhe con~te. This
Currently there are six trash haulers who have franchises to work in the
. Will &lt;1\SrDPIIhe downtown area as little as'possible during the daytime."
village, V~ughan said.
·
.
·
.
·..
.
·:&gt; The ":ject :would make lhe ~idewalks IS inches wider and w~~~ must . Counc1l agreed to make a S2~01XJ donauon to the Metgs County Tounsm

5 SPEED, AIR, AM/FM CASS, LS PKG .
AS
LOW
·AS:
·
•'

'

.

Board to help promote tourism ID the county, the same as last year.
"(County) commissioners are not helping them at all," Musser Said.
In a related matter, Councilman Larry Wehrung discussed the need for a
county economic development director to replace Julia l;loudashelt. who
resigned in December.
"Somebody needs to do something," he said.
··
Musser said county commissioners have allocated $40,000 toward economic development, but have not.done anything toward getting a new director.·
· "1bey agree we need to do something, but they want (the'economic development director) at the courthouse," he said.
Musser noted !hat the Chamber of Commerce·has been getting calls from
people that H&lt;iudashelt had contacted, but they do not want to talk to the commissionerS at lhe courthouse .
Companies do not want to discuss business with counties or villages
(Continued on l'l!ge 3)
' ·

Cl1nto.~ aban~o~ns r~velry ·
tQ
. ~get down to.· business

.
j

.

.'
.'
I

•

•I

.,
I

AS '.
"

'

LbW

'

,
•

.•

I
I

I

••
I'
I

AS:

I

I

'
.'
•'
I

'

,,~-.
.I'

,

•j

i
I

'
I

••

t

'•.
.•'
,I
I

•

. '~
I

l

'•'
:
.~,
\

.'
•

l
'.
~

•I

•

-~:c.
DIAMOND
Clinton, who has done same read· Jones.- against Bill Clinton.
·
PNaa Wtllllf
ing on lhe largely dismal ·record of
High on Clinton's second term ·
·, · WASHINGTON- Warmed by a second-term presidents, planned to agenda was tightening procedures for
qiiht of in1111gural revelry, President begin work today fighting the Repub: access to the White House. The pres- ·
Cllnton today c~ged from tuxedo lican. push for a balanc¢ budget ident wants no repeat of the ethbar.to: business suit 1111d plunged into a amendment to the Constitution.
rassing stories about a Chinese' arms.
~ond term that confronts bim with
He also was to urge tou/lhCr earn- dealer and a convicted felon being
:ethical, budgetary and intpnatidnal · paign finance rules during a speech among the While House guests at
lisPblems.
·
· to the Democratic National Commit- campaign events.
Clinton also was to meet with
: • "It's better the · second titne tee, a group basking in &gt;p,residential
IQ'Ound," a jt~bilant Clinton declared victory but staring at lhe •prospect of aides ' on education, one of the few
late Monday, ,only a few hours into a Republican-dominated Congress specific issues he mentioned in his
lhe cov~ second term that bas . poised to investigat&lt;: i!J acceptance inaugural address .
eluded Democrats for six decades.
-and returil- offorefi campaign
Later in the week. Clinton focus. . "We know. that we can make , contri,bution~. .
.·
es Ql\, foreig!l wHey, meeting in · ·
America betteJ:AiKf'"'PFlallY. 11:0w · Republicanshitflproblemsoftheit Washingrop on Thursday with U.N.
. ...that'fikno,w;t;"--'·ha~eAO.:fl!(C;':,._. !J:'ND.J!I,IIJI:. ~~ w~ .to.vot~~Y ~~~~~ J5.Rf+;~..Qth·
· e:Jintop tolfl reyelel'f as lie
first on a.resoluuon to' reJll1m4nd House '· ~~ fi?~•gn pohcy_w~ Jnclude the
. \iiiY Hillary Rodhain Clinton raced Spelker Newt Gingri~b.for ethical , ~til bf · RuSsian' Pmi!lent Boris
. ihroilgh IS inaugUral balls .and got misconduct and assess · a $300,000 Yeltsin, ' which could seuttle a U.S:
back to lhe Whill: House by I :40 a.m. penalty:
summit planned for this spring.
· EST - two full hours ahe!'rl of
Ointon began his seeond term in
On Monday, Ointon's secretary of
·schedule.
.
no position to cluck over 'the speak- state nominee, Madeleine Albright.
· Republicans, who will have a er's difficulties.
became lhe first of Clinton's new
CALL FOR UNITY- P. .ldent WIHillm Jefferson Clinton dellv·
~deal to say about how muc:h betA special 'counsel c'Ofttinues to Cabinet to pass. committee sc~tiny, .
erect
an lnauguralllddresl calling for 'unity llfbtr he wa ewom In
ter Clibton 's second term wtll be,_ investigate the president's involve- winning unanimous approval from
for
a
sacond tarm In tha White HouH Monday at tha Capitol.
applauded lhe tqpe of bipartisanship ment in the Whitewater real estate the Senate Foreign Relations Com·
(GNS)
'
that Ointon wove into his remarks on matter. GOP lawmakers say they will mittee. 11Je full Senate was expected
lhe first day of his second term, but investigate questionable Clinton cam- to confirm her quickly.
.
sdid they would believe it when they paign .fund-raising pra~tices and
Further down the road, Clinton is · of this morning, Clinton put those caught up with Mom and Dad at the
s,w it:
,White House.abuse of FBI files. And supPOSed to deliver a fiscal1998 bud- cares aside, donned formal wear and · Arkansas ball. ·
.,
,
. ·' •· ''OiiiY' tlmtr wilf tell whether or one ofthe c&amp;Ses on the de'sll of Chief getto Congress on Feb. 6. Among the celebr.ited:
Clinton resisted several offers to
With the bands playing "Unfor. : not he tf\e&amp;lts it or it was metoric," Jusiice William H. P,ehn4uist, ~ho · expected major items of contention
play
the saxophone but did blow his
said ' Rep; 'Bob Livingston, R-La., · wished Clinton ·"good l~ck" after are trimming Medicare and defense gettable;" Clinton danced with Mrs .
own
hom just a bit at the PennsylvaClinton. Dlljlghter Chelsea did her
, chairinan of the House Appropria· swearing him in Motiday, 1~ the sex- . spending.
nia-Ohio
ball.
· i. t~ns Cbmmiuee.
:
ual harassment lawsuit of one Paula
But for a night, at least, and part own party-hopping with friends, then

.

·Flegional ·lawmakers
agree-with
presidential
themes
.
'

-PAUL BARTON .
Qll'lnflt Haws Service

WASHINGTON-Tristate mem·
ben of .Congress echoed qreement
Motiday with many of the broad
·'themes in President Clinton's inau·
1imd speech while reserving jpdg·
:11\ent'on how goals will be accom·
·1·tS,r,·
h..t
p
.
,
· In jliuticular, lhe noted the pt'esi·
• dent's ,call ·for Americans to come
·· tQgeiher 'and to look for answers
~thin themselves to many of the
natiqn's ptoblems.
~

Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky:1 said the approach'for an inaugural speech." of the public policies that are p~r·
.Strickland and other area law- sued. I don't think we ought to back
president "gave us a loti bf cbai.
makers
took special note of the pres- off ftom that debate."
lenges."
ident's
call
·for an end to partisan
Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Ford said he particularly applaudChester, the chairman of the House
ed ~president's call for Americans bickering.But Strickland said he hoped the Republican Conference, congratuto come from behind dosed lioors to
. play a role in solving c~munit~ president wasn't calling for a "blur- lated the presi~nt on his second term
ring of ideolofoies" between Repub- but wondered just what his call for
problems.
.
1 ·
"He seemed to be. ·saying we can licans and Democrats.
·
· bipartisan cooperation will mean.
"I don'tthink we ougl)tto try to
"It's appropriate that President
only accomplish what we want to
accomplish if we all start caring about minimize our differences in terms of Clinton spoke of unity and biparti·
each other," Rep. Ted Strickland, D· policy commiiments," , Strickland . sanship, because our first major consaid.
gressional effort will be a bipartisan
Lu~~ville, said ..
"A great deal is at stake in terms one- passage of-the balanced bud·
That was kind of an unusual
amend!mc&gt;n~" Boehner said of the

. "'March, boycott m.ark .
I

.

'

'

. ·:k ing Day observation

· ;~:COLUMBUS (AI')- The Mar; . UDF Vice President Frank
· ' :~tin Luther King Jr. holiday.· was. Cogliano was not ~vailable ·for. com; miulced by a protest at a convenience
where managers have been
.&amp;ccilscd :of discrimination and a
~Qiarch that was tainted because some
··' black leaders refused to participate.
··.: • About ISO IJCOP.Ie protested
~~efully Monday outside a south· side I]aile&lt;! Dairy Farmers. Two for,.~ ~mployees have sued the com·
. : ~y,' alleging they were fl[ed after
·. COII!pan
. y offitcials told store man~,'ftri ·nlittQ;hire an~ more blacks.
. 'l;r :~tr(ni~ ~d ' i't invesligat¢' and
found no discrimination.
· '
; ~ ~ ProteJten gathered a~ross the
SO;ett from !he store. and hstened to
. toe~ civil ri&amp;hiJ leaden speak. Th~y
t8ter ~ notes of nonsupPort
iOto a·baibt that wa's brought into the

· sU&gt;re

ment Monday, satd a woman \who
answered the phone at his Cincinnati
office and would not give her name.
No one else was authorized to ~omment, she said. '
I
. The !'&lt;'ycoll is being led by the
Interractal Leadership Council, a,
group of clergy members and ~om­
m~mty
leaders, · . . and 1 ~h~
R,arnbow/PUSH Coalmon, .a orvtl
nghts group headed by Jesse Jac~n.
Later MQnday, Mayor
reg
Lashptkah~ll¢ Ieall a mt!£cll &lt;ll"··
Ci~ ttall to Veterans' Mem&lt;irial
auditori~ni Where speakers qajed
about Kin1. ·
The mayor, marching with local
leaders, said the boycot.t was ntlt a
1'
concern.

' iiture.

"I have no comment. We are all
, : "I hQpe and pray they know we
obsCrvin•
this day in our own way,"
- serious abOul discrimination i.n
he
said.
·•
1t1e workplace," said Gloria Kilgore,
A
man
dressed
in
il
shirt
embja-'
• ;l-5. "It's cl01e to 30 years after the
: death 'or ~artin Luther )&lt;in.. and zoned with a swastika tried to stop
': c(mlponlea still are pncticinl .di•' , lhe m11ri:hen·by jumpin1 in front pf ' Black lctlden b,o~cottcd becau!!«'
imminltion! ll is real; it is n~ a Iii- . lhem. l'olice moved the man and 1~ they believe inveattgations led by
muchen proceeded.
;tl..
. .
:.. .liteot
. ' of llut imqinatlon:" .
•

•.'

·.~

J

statement.
Rep. Steve Chabot, R-CincinQati.
said he found himself agreeing with
many of the themes of the speech.
"President Clinton 's speech· set a
good tone,I think. Government e&lt;ists
·to be the servant of the people, not
our · master; and the president
acknowledged that fact," Chabot
said.
"I was encouraged by his call for
a smaller federal government that
will live within its means. I certainly intend to help the president reach
that goal."

Budget
•
rev1ew
reveals
cutbacks
A comparison of this y~s and
last year's annual appropriations resolution, approved earlier by the ·
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, shows some offices took
budget cuts, while others realiZed
budget increases.
Figures for 1997 are given first.
followed by 1996 figures:
county commission/economic
development, cut, $177,597 froriJ ·
.$183,4~, . '
,,..
County auditor, cut, $200,812
from $201 ;377;
County treasurer, increase,
$101,324 from $98,460;
Prosecuting attorney, increase,
$217,209 from $183,538;
Planning commission, cut, $0
from $2,200;
Common pleas court, cut, $93,638
from $112,038;
Juvenile and 'probate court (combined), increase, $85,038 from
$83,838;
Clerk of court, S100,962 (including transfers made Jan. 13) from
$99,7i0; .
Coroner, c~t. $25,041 from
$26,853;
.
County court, cut, $91,623 from
$99,738;
Board of elections, cut, $104,916
from S120,950;
' Capital improvements, cut, $0
from $20,000;
Maintenance and operations, cut,
$162,000 from $175,500:
Sheriff, increase, $469.978 from
$458,365;
•
·Recorder, increase, $77,996 from
$77,972; .
Disaster services, $7,000 from
$7,000; .
Public defender, cut, $33,000 from
$37,000;
Extension office, ·increase,
$117,900 from $116,490;
(Continued on PliJ9 3)

Analyst ·confirms developers'
reason to shelve pulp plant
By MARTHA BRYSON' HODEL
Associated Pre.. ·Wrltar
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Wild
price swings and too much papermanufacturing capability worldwide
have led deveh/J&gt;ers to shelve plans
for a $1.1 billion pulp and paper mill
in Mason County, state officials said.
-·· John Brown, spokesman for Gov.
Cecil Underwood, said Monday he
had confirmed the decision of Parsons &amp; Whittemore hie. of Rye
Brooke, N.Y.• to postpone the project
indefinitely.
" It. was a decision made by the
company and base!! on market conditions in the industry," Brown said.
· ,"That is the reason they have given
, and we have to take them at their
word."
The pulp and paper industcy is one
more business that has become globalized in the last decade, said Katie
Cutler, 5enior vice president for corporate communications for Crown
Vantage, a paper producer that formerly was ·part of James River Corp.,
of Richmond, Va.
~'These days, all paper manufacl.ashutka were tinged with·discriml- lurers are play ins in a slobal market.
"'·
nation.
rather t~an just dealina with whatev-

.

.'

er thei~ homeland is," Ms. Cutler
said.
·
Evadna Lynn. a pulp induslr)l
analyst for Dean Witter Reynol&lt;ls in
New York City, agreed and pointed to
the rise of the pulp and paper indus- ·
try in South America, where produc·
tion costs average roughly $.100 a ton
less than in the United States.
"The basic problem is we've been
seeing a huge surge in capacity in the
Sou~hern Hemisphere," Ms. Lynn
said.
After a down cycle in 1993 and
1994, in which price~ reached SQ.
year lows, paper prices hit an all·time
high early tn 1996.
., .
. As prices ,rose lhr9ugh 1995, Ms..
Cutler said, p,aper c0nsumen stoc.kpiled considerably moo: than they
needed, and demand and prices both
fell again in 1996.
.
The price swin1s; global comp;tition and concerns ·abobt lhe envtronment at home all ha'lc combined ·
to make it difficult to build aew facil·
ities, Ms. Cutler. said.
"There's a cenain aiiiOUIII of cag,.
11011 out ttiere," abe said. "Pnntly,l
have some dollbt whlther(dll! Plfl*) ·•
(~ 011 Pill~

•

�••

••• •

•

oy

.

•• •
•'

•

.

Tulldty, Jllnuary21, 1917

.

~.:commentary

.

Tuuc'lly, Jan_, 21, 11t7

~·-·

B011rd members cotpplete training

..

1....

rule. but cbs siJ11111 the (ail~~~e of
'The tbiJt&amp; tbll uadeaitktlel home Co1UIIIbia.1befive-memberboardis
lbelf·,O-- ill w.hiJiiton. Ia rule 111011 is the r.ihae of local offi. appoinied by lhe president lind
a.WASHING10N-Bi110iaton
... "".... Idee
lnlth, this city wa pven 1 bad dell . cials to do a .,00 job with the ICCOUIItable to Congress. not .Dislrict
hils a plan to pull lhe District of whel:l control of IIUIIIiciplllfrairs wu l'eiOIII'CCI tbcy.ha¥e. School h•iklinp voteis or lhe city's elected officials. ; ·
111 Cowt 8t., ~.Ohio
Columbia back fiom lhe brink' of turned over to •locally elected sov- ill this city -crumbling not beciUse
Its creatioa was tbe beginning of·
1.:14412-2158 • f:a: 912-2157
ernment.
fmiiiiCial collapse:
of budlet short-falls, but rUl.er the eild for Washington's most recent:
If lhe president gets his way, lhe
Alons with home rule, city offi- becluse ltop-Jap aid 1Jom Consren experiment with home rule.
:
JOVemmeill will take over lhe oper- cials also were gi~n responsibility to fix them was. not well spent Tbe . ,1be irony here is that. just a few•
••
ati(in of'lhe city's prison system, col- for administerins ·• partially funded elected school board members have yea,rs aso.4bil city was awash with:
lect local income taxes, pay .a bigger pension fund for municipil e~oy­ bloaled IIIIIs and iDfllted sai.Kies'for lllk. of st ' d Je
A Gannett CO. Newspaper
share of Medicaid costs, make up the ees. This built-in financial wOe wu their pill-time ~itioas that divert · sweep i.., ..._.. fg)lif Clliiclitt~'
short-fall in the city's pension fund compounded by the city's inability to badly needed funds away from class- 1989 and the ~loWbtf,lll!lll' ru
"
ROBERT L WINGETT
and repair roads and bridges in the levy and collect property taxes on the : room instruction.
the cerellllllliiJJIOII of" &amp;to -.,; -..
Publllher
nation's capital.
scores of federal office buildinss in
And over the yean in the face of ator" --a po@tion be llid
;.,U
Washington.
As
compensation,
ConRepublic1111
opponents
say
the
mounting
budget
deficitS,
the
mayor
use
to
lobby
Consress
forMARGARET LEHEW
plan is too (;()Sdy.
. sress gives tbe city an annual pay- and city council have been unable to
Bu\ his push to make Washington'
Conlrolllt'
• •
Home-rule advocates complain ment that has been stuck at $600 mil- mike tousb decisions about the lhe nation's 51st state was 8lalled by ·
that fedenl takeover of these pro- lion for y~. It falls far sbqn of what spendiRI cuts ~to brins Wash- lhe city's powing financial problems
,..S...IInd ;
grams will brins an end to the limit- Washington woUld take in if it could ington's fiscal affairs into ~ance. To and the local goveinment's inability
l/so--tJI-.pciT"c4
Jn-t....,. _,.Ja&amp;wiMII .. _,,_....,_
7"'
ed self-sovemment Consress grant- tax these propenies.
· overc~ tlieir inertia, ConJre5s to manage basiC'Services :ulcQ Jnow
... ....., Mlldl,.. , . , . ....... ~· . , . ,....~ ......... ,.,.,.
'
ed
city
.residents
during
the
'19705.
But
moneyOf lack of it - is
established a.F'mancial Conaol Board ·~moval and road. repaiQ. ·
._-.,-_..,-*'~~so-.
111 CcMtl&amp;,
On both'counts, critics are wrong. not the city's only problem. It's not two years qo with sweeping powers
P1
O)J CMio 46711; cv, MY ID 11~61.
Potholes are a way oflifc in Wash_Clinton's proposal does not end home 'even itS bisgest problem.
· to manage sJ!!:nding in the District of ington. S,o. too, are Ieins lilies arid
'
poor service at the tity'~ illotor'vehi~
cle administration. Emergency ambo•
lance sel'\lice is slow· and crimjnals :
..
in this city are bnu.en. Recently, a '
srouP of thus~ stopped ll!lllnbulace
..:r:q;, I ·~IIT)'ins a man they had just gtmned ,.. ,
•oo
WAS' THAT A
down and demanded tu see the body :
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG ·
.
to make'sui-e he W!IS dead.
SLAPONM WRisT
A810C1111ed Presl Writer
·Ciiy officials who. pined for stile, WASHINGlON -Advice for President Clinton as he begins the four
OR AH16H
hood
failed to manage WasHington '
;x,ears likely to determine his pl~ee in history: Think globally. learn rrom the
well
under
the limited home-rule they
' two Roosevelts and be thankful your "'ictory was far short of a landslide.
were
granted.
Noll' instead·of getting
.· · for Clinton, the phrase "four more years takes on new meaning today,
more control over the affairs 'o f this
·'.Something more like "your last four years to make }'i!ur mark."
city,
they will have less. '
=~ Does fin!ling a niche in history inlnlde on Clinton's thoughts?
proposed help does not
Clinton's
;.;.. "Actually, I read a book not very Ions aso ... on second-term presiden,
come
free
of
charge.
cies," he told a news conference I 0 days after his re-election. The news was
For example, in return for taking ,
;!!Ol particularly encouraging. Any book about second terms is largely a study
over
Washington's prison system, the
~f failure.
·
·
president
is demanding tougher fed· .. '
'": "I'm very mindful of history's difficulties and I'm going to try and '1eat
eral
sen~ing
pidelines he used on : ,
.!hem," Clinton said:
convicted
felons,
Thai will wipe' out
'"' "Everywhere you look, second terms have not been kind to people in
the authority of the' city council to ...
";6.merican history," said Louis Gould, a historian at the University of Texas.
make
laws dealing with. crime. ·
...It makes you wonder why people run for second terms."
Combined
with the powers given
-,.; Histonlins generally rank Franklin D. Roosevelt with George Washins·the
Financial
· Control Boaro, the •
ton and Abraham Lincoln as the grestest of presidents. But Roosevelt enjlured
'
~on~essions
Clinton's
· rescue' plan
what historian Robc;rl Dalleck called "a pretty stumbling second term." His
requires reduces local officials to lit- · '
..plan to restructure the Supreme Court collapsed under furious public oppotie
niore than spectators in the gov- ·
; :fltion and unemployment rose asain.
.
.
'
eming
of the.nation's capital-. a sad
~·.:; But unlike any other president, .Roo'!"velt was re-elected to third and
state
of
affairs they brought .upon
:;1,9w:th terms. The onset of World War II gave him the chance to aSsert the
themselves..
" ·
i
.leadership that assured his rank among the sreatest of presidents. .
~ ~ His second term might also have reflected the curse of landslides.
" Roosevelt's troubles began shortly after he was re-elected in 1936 in one
'61' tbe 'sreat landslides in . politi~al history. He carried ev~ry state but Maine
and Vermont.
A recent New York nmes ··story· how ~s a producer going to get any be loving, might be contemptuous -- ica.
• v • Two years after the biggest popular vote margin in history, Lyndon JohnJpn saw his.standing plunge as Vietnam War casualties rose. RiChard Nixon about "Jerry Masuire," the critical- schmoozing done?
it doesn't matter. Bottom line? Your
In another time, these people .,
Al)d'Whatabout his un~rlings? If experie!ICC means nothins, You are a would' have· been viewed as. honor··suffered the biggest fall after ~ landslide re-election when the Waterallte scan- ly ICclaimed new vehicle that lets
dal forced hiin to become the only president to r11sig~. · •.
· ·. Tom Cruise discoyer what it's really a producer told me, not to ~ettle for fool who' must,be either .cajoled or . able; Now, I suspect they'n: largely .,
'·;' "Clinton may be better served by the fact that he got only 49 percent o( like to bt Tom Crui~e, tonllined the ··
bullie4 into col!lpetence..
seen as sap$. Reader's Digest, -llaul
quotation
from
the vote," Dalleck said. "He has to .be very attentive to the political con- ·following
No wonder f*lple are running Hi~n!ey and the Siturday Evening
writer/director Cameron ·Crowe,
':Siraints on.him. That's not a bad thing." ·
amok at worksj!aces all across ·the · Post don't have the cultural influence
. At the midpoint of the eight years allowed him in the White House, Clil)- "When we began, the one bit of anytliing less than the best version of&gt; country. No 1&gt;\'0nder we have so !hey once did. Nowadays, we get out
, jori cannot yet claim a.crowning achievement that would assure him rank- advice that (producer) Jim Brooks each line, frankly. I'd grab him by the many homeless · people, most of ethical guidelines from "Seinfeld," •
·: \!'1! among the near-greats, presidentsJLke Thomas JeffersoiJ and Andrew 'gave· me was 'Don't settle for any- lapels and throw him out.the window. whom are very etrocient in their indi- David Letterman, and. the Internet.
thins less than the best version of
Well, OK, I probl!,bly wouldn't. · gence, with only indifferent bureau- Sarcasm is all.
liCkson. Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman. .
· ·
each line, the way you hearo it in
. How do presidents achieve sreatness?
.
.
But looJ&lt;, I'd be making-- what? crats, enraged ideologues, and conSo how do we eKpect people to
'" Wars are a big help- the Civil War in Lincoln's case.,World War I for your head when you.wrote it.' That. Upper five figures, maybe even upper cerned ,pundits to tell them they're react when money falls into their
got me through, because l wouldn't siK figures. If Hollywood types did- doing It all wrong. No. wonder I'm laps? They're suppose.l to give it
: Wilson and the Second World War for Franklin Roosevelt.
.give
up."
" ' Clinton's awareness of the role·of wars in presidential standing is aitestn't think I knew what I was doins self-employed.
· .
back? Why, it's pennies from heav:
This, to me, is. another nutshell when they coughed up that ]kind of.
All of thi" might serve to shed 'en, manna, winning the lottery, man::~:!1 to by former political adviser Dick Moms in his book, "Behind .the Oval
indicator of what's wrong with Amer- dough, why' d they even hire me?
some light on recent events in Over- ey for notllins.
•
··Office.''
ica
today.
Without
this
encourageWell, 0K, they didn't.
town. Fla. Last week a Brinks lfi!Ck
In·our' strange mix of romanticism,
, Accotding to Morris, whose relationship with a prostitute forced hlm to
B.ut if. they had, believe me, I'd ~verturned, spilling out nearly a mil' feelings of entitlementj contempt (or
..R5ign his post, he offered Clinton his views on presidential greatness in a ment, would a writer naturally gn~v­
itate
towaro
the
worst
version
of
each
give
them a piece of my mind.
hon dollars worth'offood stamps and pretty muc~ cverytl'ling. even for.that
· ·.
, .~lephone conversation.one Sunday morning last August.
line?
And
what
are
poor
people
supcurrency
(in bills and coins),.into the · on which we, lavish a great deal of ·
, •· "In t)le fii'St tier arc presidentS who did great things but also did them in
Does a producer. now have to posed to think, reading a story like streets of uat!Jer poor I)Cighborhood. money. is it any wonder.that a rain of
. p t times," Morris said he told Clinton. "I do~'t thfnk you can get: onto
spend each waking hour going round this? (Assuming they relld the New 1be Los Angeles nmes called it, in cash would be seen as some kind of
the first tier unless you have the nght backdrop.
to the·crew, saying, "Don't settle for York nmes, an iffy premise.) Well, fact, "impoverished."
.miracle? A rain of money, really, is .;
, : He quoted Clinton as responding, "You mean a war or somethjng like
anything less than the ·bcst possible this is the'message I get: No matter
Well, these poor people did what · the only kind of miracle we even
.. that?"
.
lighting for this scene." Does he have . how much money you make, orl'low you'dexpectpoorpeOpletodowhen believe in any more.
.,:~ Later in the conversation, Morris said Clinton asked him, "Where-do I
to hover over the craft sel'\lices table much skill you posS&lt;;SS. or what great a truckful of money explodes in !heir
(To receive a complimentary lan
,, ~.
u&amp;ln ?'"
•. ·
_
demanding nothing but the finest in ideas you have, there's always going midst -- they took it. Despite the Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989- •·
!::; "Right now, to be honest," the consultant replied, "I think you are borjelly doughnuts and bran muffins? Is to be somebody lookins over your . eiToriS of pblice ~nd lectures by talk- DUCK or write Duclc&gt;'s Breath, 408
~Jerline third tier.''
·
it laue or nothing at the coffee urn?
"~- Dalleck. a professor of history at Boston Jlniversity 'and a bio~pher ~f If he's going to spend all his time urg- shoulder. telling you how to do what . show hosts:'only about $2S have been Broad St., Ne~ada City, CA 95959.)
Ian Sboales Is 1 syodlcated
.. Lyndon Johnson, said the pattern among pressdents who succeed dunng the1r . ing his underlings to do their utmost, you do best. This somebody might be, returned, by a single mother, and a
might
be
scolding.
might
boy.1be
last
honest
·
peopl~
inAplcr-·
writer
for Newspaper .Enterprise
solicitous.
-.:.Cond terms is to focus on foreign affairs.
·
Assoc:la!Jon.
.~ "On the domestic side, I don't think historians are going to lopk back
oclllld see Clinton as heroic because the budget is coming into balance," he

n

~·

Pomeroy pollee report accident

IND.

.
...-·

.!lr

a:

~·

'

-----·--J/so. --L

'''''

&amp;oltMoMIII---•.,

..

FIVE?

'i

Money for ·nothing_ _ _ _~- r.
lanShoales

a

.. l!llid.

.

.

'

: Clinton has said he would like te be compared to Theodore Roosevelt,
compiled an enviable recotd on both domestic and foreign affairs. He
"J!!lShed for antitrus.t legislation and laws protecting the environment. The Pure
· J!ood and Drug Act also was enacted during his second term. Roosevelt's
~: Mediation led to a treaty ending a war between Russia and Japan, and won
ffim a Nobel Peace Pri~e.
·
;·~; Gould of the University of Texas suggested Dwight Eisenhower as anothrole model.
·
.
"If.£;!in!On can be in .the league with Eisenhower- eight years of peace,® int&amp;iilt!ional involvements that go sour. leaves the _country as ~ood or
tietter than' he found it and the economy roars on for e1ght years-- m the
.i{ormal course of things, that ought to get you a pretty good place in Amerivan history.'~
•
.
EDJToR'S 'NOTE: Donald M. ,Rothberg bas covered Jl!litlooal and
,......donlll all'aln ror The Auoeiated Prealn \YIIshlngtoo
,
for 30 yean.

f)lo

A less~n- in self-su~ic,iencv~-~~

When Nancy Greenan started ,the money, the loan, but the. whole international Microcrcdit. Sum.mit, comprehensive program," says Boz.e.
repairipg jewelry in her home, she · support system they liave given me is · which will be held in WaShington, man, wbo points out that problems ·'
D.C., staning Feb. 2.
with housing and health care have
didn't sec herself as an entrepreneur. really great."
Perhaps
most
important,
the
proFor
Donna
Fabiani,
director
of
been two primary deterrents to
"I didn' t think of it as a business.
:
It wasn't a job. I didn 't call it any: gram has helped Greenan like herself U.S. programs for RNCA, one of the would-be microentrepreneurs.
Now that the rhetoric of self-suf' :
goals is to create a more centralized ·
thing," says. Greenan. A mother of
source o.f funding. Currently, most fic~ncy and personal responsibiliiy is '
five, Greenan could not afford to
Stirs
Eckfl
microlending programs are support- at an all-time high, the federal govwork outside the home ~- "I wouldn't bring anything home: I'd be pay- . and her work seriously. "The more ed by a Atchwork ofprivateoand sov,. . emment shoold .he iilteres~ in pro- ;
ing the baby sitter," -- so stringing you think of yourself as a business, emment . ajencies. ,"There ·a~ all gta~ns that.fostiirsucb respunsi~ili'Y· ; : ·
beads was how she.helped keep her the better you.do," she says. Indeed, these little ·pots of money, but there t•It's a really exCiting time right ' ~
family aOoat. However, even when a. year after entering the prosram; jsn'.t' any coherent strategy in the now," says Fabiani'. "We've com· p)eted the first phase, but in order to ' 1; : .
combined with her husband'·s night Greenan has' more than doubled her United States." says Fabiani .
Pamela Bozeman, the prosram move into the second phase we'll :
job, Greenan's work, which brQught profits. She.has recently paid back the ·
in about $80 a ·week, seemed an . firsr loan, and is planning to take out managqf for . the 10-year•Oid , need a lot Of Commitment from the : I
' Women's Self-Employment Projcl:t, both the public and the private Sec·' ·. :
unlikelymeansofgettingherfamily' alarger 'loanshortly.
off public 'assistance· (her family
FINCA, which has ~ opCratiRJ one of the nation's pioneer tors."
.
·
, ,
receives housing subsidies alld food in the United Stales for two years, is microleiidiitgefforts,takesitone'step
Send commentS to the author in ,.
further.... Whether you have a local ~ of this newspaper or send her e&lt;henan saw an articl: in·
commuliity effort or somethins that mall at saraeumaol.com.
ni.,, Editor,
What does this "nice'' ~~ sui!- .her housing newsletter that described The coqcept comes not from a uni" . the ~I govem.ment compiles and
~ara Eckel Is a syndl~ated
cOnfused.
can
yoli
please
gest
he
do
now?
Can
~
nde
m
their
a
new
community
microlcnding
proversity
think
tank
or
a
sovernment
alloca~~
money
for,
it
has
tu
be
.
a
writer
for Ne...paper Enterprise
Aaodallon.
.
'-it 7110
yaro when the ground 1s .wet? Can~ gram, she was very interested. The commission, bui from the Thitd·
!" ~ live ill Tupperii Plains, a town "hang out" a_! their bouse 'wllen he ts program, created by the Foundation ~orld. Twenty years .ago. ,Muham'
~
,.t_ there is nblhinJ for children to bored and sur cr¥y? Or maybe ~y for Internatipnul Community Assis- mad Yunus, a Bangladeshi econom,, '
.Z,':'"~
will o!'"n a racll1ty for ~-~n kids.- tance, loans small amounts of mon- ics professor, . dis¢ove~d that
~. ~
. ,, 5o for~- my respOnsible ·'
Things could ·~
lie could ey to low-.oin,come i~dividuals f~ the extrc~ly poor women could not
' I ~
::1
•okhoit .,t ~ go-;cart A very be 1 vandal, or a thtef, or bini out on pui'JIOH
starttng a bus mess. . only lift themselves ou1 of poverty ; By the AIIOCINcl PNI8
. .
..
1
•
•
I. l ~ . .
the street ~rs $(nokin1 or wlw- Through RNCA, Green1n was' able . via very small' lpans -- some as low · • . Tbday is Thesday. Jan: 21, the "1st dly of 1m. 111ere are 344 dlys left
.=I
ever else he wants. But no, he's a to Jet a '.SSOO ·Ioan to &amp;py· beads, . as$1-- theywerealsoexcel~ntcred­ ! 10 the ,.ear. .
' .
. ~.l'
llfler Cbr~Janas somO- Joocl kid.
which she hils 'U$ed to repair more it risks. Yunus found:that more than
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
'' l
• naa llllled tfll 'lherilf on
I jll$! wanted to tell whoever jewelry III,CIIiso create her own line. 9S percent of the women to whom he
On J1n. 21, 1793, durin11 the French Revolution, King Louis XVI, con·- .i'l .
liD forS!~dllll*l(wt liw oti thank you. and ; .may~ •.orne. dly She has also rec_Cived instruction in loaned money returned it with inter- demned for treason, was executed on the auilloline. .
••
' imlll
ll*l). .
· IOII)COIIC wtll rum theu childlpndo- . some of the buies of entrcprenelir- est.
.
On this dale:
.
•
·~ . N . . . to- 111 Clll' 110 lonpr child's Chriaanui
ship -- tax laws, zoning.laws, m~rU.S. microlenders '-vc had simiIa· 1861, Jefferson Davis of Miuiuippi and 'four o~r Southerners • ••
1
' •• e. -...;. •
ftllll . . inpllt
(( rs t 0111!1111, ketinJ strateliei - and joined i ccim- l~rly hilh repayment rates, althooJh roli~ from lhe Senate.
.
..
\: ~
~his""'
· "
·
,
1l!JsnM I '!'unityofother~Jiins"'!'ineu-· tbeCOiloftrainir.,lltdadmiriillt1itlon
Ill 1901, New Yqrlt City'• Bclllll of Aldirme11 passed an OnliRIIIIce that :. .
· 1 . .; t "
: '• : • ~ . .,.....- IVIIIia Ia . women, whose
tnclude hal me~at thttl the proJl8111S llillllltllt e~wly ~blted WOIIICII from 1111okln1 in publk:. ~owever1 the moaJIIWI ~,-a-:t:.IH .!..._
~
~iiiJ, ·~ud loa~ l4llk l'undi•J ft'om· outside soun:es, IIUIWirns vOtoocl by 1-tayor Oecqo B. MeOc!llln Jr.
; :. .\ .
·.
·
,
01
hvzh*JAT·'
••
•· •
lllleetelepl)onesalea.''ll's~pY-- WheN this . 1\tndlns should come . ln ' l91~, the fint 1Clw1nis Clllb w_. founded, in Detroit
.·
.......... 411 ; JMI!Wtt.r
lllff'lltniRJ w~a. ~l&amp;ltubon- en me a lot." says &lt;henan. ''Notjull · from will be one of the topiCJ of lhe
-In 1924, Ru111Gt revolutiiiMI')' Vladimir lly.ic:h Lenin diCd at aae S4.

·e.r

~orothy

s~~lhen

·Meigs

.

'

rr

,. n:'.t,

,

.,..

~:Pomeroy

.

wane'

-EMS units log eight calls
~

Budget review

!•

to share Buckeye 5

.

Sell your home

'Ho·spltal news

Ofllo Val loy PWtllhiftl C.0-10- Co.,
Fomeiot'. ()hlo 43769, Ph. m -m6. Second
pold lll'oMoro)l, O!do.

i:

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

II

tore::..

:i•--

coun.;

.

"

·

~

.

.

~

.

.'

.

"

i

;•

.

.

•

,.,

~

U.S. Dolly .

. Sto~ks

•

..wms correcdona fO

SUISCIIIPTION llATES
Canlorw - - $2.00
OM - k11r
..................................................

Ooe ~ ........................................ ......IJ.'IU
Ooe·Yar ............................................... $1,04.00

SINGLII COPY PRICE
Dolly .................................................... !j c.~

.... dnlrloJ .. the-witt
l ::::=r::
::~~~:::;,l~dl~ra:s~.,•..,. Dolly S.n:lnol
ml)'

ply

f

bui• Qedls

be

lo''

.. Weekly

Am Ele Power ........................42'1.
Akzo ·~....................................

s•.r
Aahlal1d 011 ........~ .................. 43 ~

newspapers
. or s~oppers

ATAT ................................"'! ... 31'~
Bank OM •....•••.•..••.••.....•....... 42\
lob Ivana ............................ 11~
a~wanw

74%

ne)¥.1paper•

'

I Coom St., Poonetoy,

TV

Mlgulnlt

............:............40\

Ct~Mnplon ............................. 2!r.f.
bh.nnlng Shope ...................4 ..
City Holclrtg ..........................21'At
FecMrel Mogul .......................22;4
Ganraett .................................74.

Yellow l'lgn

-.

Q'irect mail

OtoetY-r ................... v ..........14\

K-fllllrt ..... .'.................~ ....... r.-···11~
Landll!nct.........................~~~.2~ ·

Umfted ..,..........~ ............·~········,,.)
01110 v..Jey Bank................. .as'lt.

OM Valtey ...............................Hl

Peoplu .................................21\

Pretn Flnl...............................1~

;sJ

Auokwall ...............................

RD-11*1 ..............................1

...,.................................. 7\

MAILI\~ 8 Pi~

ll

·-Mollo~

" ' - - g ; ,,N0000 .. 000 000_0 .. U 0-0U !I&lt; .... MU0 .. 00t:r7030

.

:lll-..................l ...,,_,..,....- .........ISI.I2

'fllllelca.,,,, .. .,,,,,,.,.,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,.,,.,.,,.,LIJQSJ6

;•

bus•-

in a b.uyer's market.

BRill&amp; IN

•

~·

Council .studies

.

ill

Analyst confirms developers' ·

! ··

...

Today in .hlstory

announ~ements

Murlei .A. Spires

~:;~ :::;\~r:s~r~fs'::n":.

TJ

TP-C plans shutdown Wednesdsy

Dorothy Bi!Jotti Shaeffer, 74, Pomeroy, diect at her residence Mondly,
Jan. 20, 1997.
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Districi plans a shutdown of water
Born in Middleport on May I, 1922, she was the dlughter' of the late Leroy
seryice in Lctm:t Township on Wednesday from 9 a.m. to noon.
and Nella Menchini Barsotti. She was a local business owner for many years,
When the water.service is restored, there will be boil water advisory
and a member of the S~M:red Heart Catholic Church of Pomeroy and the
in effect until a sample can be drawn and tests for bacteria.After the results
.By The Allocltlled Pr811
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy...Then Catholic Women's Club.
are known to be safe, the advisory will he lifted, it was reported. The roads
She is survived by her husl)and, Francis Shaeffer; three dlughters and sons.. nie mild spell will continue for cloudy with a chance Of showers late.
and areas affected are Hill Road, State Route 338, Adams Road, and all ·
uOhio tODisht and Wednesdly. along Low from the upper 30s tcfthe low- in•law, Ziti and Kenny Shuford of Lawtey, Fla., Remalee and Myron Franof Letart Falls.
.
chowiak
of
Middleport,
and
nna
and
J.D.
Story
of
Pomeroy;
a
brother
and
.
The
rea.son
for
the
shutdown
is to tie into the existing main line with
;''with .some rain, the National Weath-. er 40s. South winds 5 to I 5 mph.
sister-in-law,
Enzo
and
Jean
Barsotti
of
Fresno.
Calif.:
and
seven
grand,
·
an additional line, offiCials reported.
·
· ~r ·service said.
Chance of rain 30 percent..
,; Rail' will develop in lhe 'west ear- . Wednesday...Showers: ~ftighs in· children.
Besides her parents, ·she was preceded in death by a brother, Carlo John ·
·: lytonightandspreadintotheeastby the lower and mid .SOs. C.Jlance of.
Barsotti.
~daybreak., It will remain breezy with . rain 90 percent.
l ·
Mass of Christian burial will be 10:30 a.m. Thursday in the Sacred Heart
',:'mild"tCmjleflllures. ·
Wednesday night... Sholjlers likely.
ed in tiaveling is invited to attend.
Church,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Robert Mascolini officiating: Burial will be Sellior tour meedog · · ·
~· Lows tonight will be .40-45.
Lows from the upper 30s tp the low·~ •Sbowen will continue across the · er 40s, •
}.
' - in the Sacred Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy. Frie:lds may call~~ the Fisher Funer- ' Brenda Roush of Leo's Cruise and
POit to -et
. "state on Wednesday as a cold front
Exlellded forec:ll;t:
· al Home, Middleport, from 2-4 and·7-~ 'p.m. Wednesday. A vigil service '!'ill Tiavel, and Joanne Williams of Farm- VFW
VFW
Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, 1
ers
·
B
ank
&amp;
Savings
Co.
will
be
at
the
:'llpp!'I18Ches. It will he windy ahead of
Thursday... Mostly clot\dy wit)! a he held in the tltnetal home at 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.
will
meet
at7:30 p.m Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center Thursday at I
the front with highs in the SOs.
chance of showers. Highs in the
hall.
p.m. to discuss tours planned for
;, The record-high temperature for upper 40s.
·.
1997. A variety of one-day. 'two-day
, tJiis dlte at the ColuJ11bus weather
Friday... A chance of showers.
Muriel
Annette
Spires1
89,
Kyger,
died
Monday,
Jan.
20,
1997
in.
Holzer
·and
extended overnight trips are · Library board
:.station was 72 desrees'in 1906 while Lows in the low 30s and highs in the
Meigs County Public Library ,.
Medical Center.
'
· ·
·.
scheduled.' and brochures giving
; .jhe record low was 16 btlow zero in . mid 405.
.
•• .
BC~Brd
of Trustees will meet at I p.m . .
She was born Sept. 10. 1908 in Gallia County, daughter of the late William. details of the trips will be available.
Saturday... A chance llf shoW4JS.
: :1 985. Sunset toniaht will be at S:38
Thursday
at the library. ·
(
:·p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:48 Lows in thelow j05 and ~ig~s in the R. and Elizab4ith Hannah Athey. .She was a bomemaker, and a. meniber of All tri'ps will be by motorcoach, with
the Pomeroy Seventh Day Adventist Church and the Disabled American Vet- · pickup in Pomeroy. Anyone intercst.. .a.m. _.
lower 40s.
..
erans Auxiliary.
·
~..
' Weatber foreeast:
),
She is survived by dlughters arid sons-in-law, Irma Bales of Kyger, Ardath
and Walt~ Zwies of PensKola. Fla .• and Rita and Joseph White of Kyger;
(Continued from Page 1)
Ms. Forinan said she wants to hear
sons and a daughter-in-law, Dennis M. Spires of Cheshire, and Rodney and
industry
will
ever
again
be
.able
to
it
from
the company directly.
Patsy Spires of Kyser; II grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren; and sev(Continued
trii.m'
Page
1)
build a brand new pulp and paper mill
Parsons &amp; Whittemore had said it
.
eral nieces and nephews. ·
·
·
in
this
country
from
the
ground
up."
planned
to use a chlorine dioxide
-~ because of laws that require sovemment dealings be done in public, VaughShe was also preceded in death in 1.971 by her husband, Dennis Leroy
Parsons
&amp;
Whittemore
Vice
Presbleaching
process at the plant, lead' .an explained.
·
Spires, whom she married in September 1930; a son, Meredith Allen Spires;
ident
C.
Kenneth
Goddard,
who
has
.
·
.ing
to
concerns
about how much .
Lester Erritt, general maraser of CableVision, inet with codJI(jil to explain a sister, Mary M~aret Lynch; and im aunt and a granddaughter.
headed
up
the
project
in·
West
Virdioxin
would
be
released
into the air
· aa oipcomins rate increase.
.
,. '
Services wi)l be 2 p.m. Thursday in the. Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·Erritt said CableVision has added new'sel'\lices and recentlyocompleted a port, with Elder Roy Lawinsky officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill gini&amp;, could not be reached Monday. and into the water of the Ohio River. .
, ,$5 '!Iii lion up&amp;rade of the system, including the installation of fiber optic lines. · Ce!1Jelery, Cheshire. Friends ·may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. · An answering SCI'\/ icc said Parsons Dioxin is a by-product of the bleach&amp; Whittemore waS closed Monday, a ing process.
"'&lt; •:we are raisins rates just enough tQ provide sel'\lice and relllain a viable Wednesday, .
federal holiday,lllid Goddard was not
;.,~usirn;ss,".Erritt said. '
·
,
· •·
·
at home in Stamford, Conn.
: c!QIIJICilman Bill Young said council cannot replate cable teilevision fees.
'' The company's West Virginia
. : ~ ·Vaughan said Pomeroy will host ~onal members of the Mayors' Part,
.
lawyer.
Da:;id Flannery of
nership.in March or Ap\'il. Tl;le mayor$' visit will include a tour of tbe downUnits of the Meigs County Emer'8:27a.m., Eden Ridge Road, Tina
.. .-.10wn area.
,., .
Charleston, said·he had not heard of
gency Medical Service recorded eight Parker, St. Joseph's Hospital, the plans. He declined further com.. ,. ·Council approved a request by Musser to apply for a $7,500 ·grant from calls for assistance Monday. Units Reedsville squad assisted;
ment.
~. the Federal Office of Criminal Justice to pay·overtime for polite officers.
responding included:
12:15 p,m,, Overbrook Nursing
Point Pleasant economic officials
In other business, council:
·.
"
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Center, Lenore 1enkins, Veterans were disappointed by the announce''" • Approved tl!e minutes of the Jan. 6 meeting.
I :24 a.m., Zuspan Hollow Road, Memorial Hospital; .
" " • Ag~ll(l to sell an old police car. .
.
·'
•
Sara Jones, Holzer Medical Center;·
6:50 p.m., Park Street, Thelma ment.
"
fhate
that
they're
putting
this
on
., _ • Discussed db!:ge 1nd slip "roblems on Pleasant Ridge Street and a
Barnhart. VMH, Middleport squad
the back burner," said John Mus~:water leak at the
of Lincoln Hill.
·'
.
·assisted .
grave, director of the Mason County
~;~ • Noted that two homes on State Route 7 in the villag~ have' been con-·
MIDDLEPORT
,rjemned 1 with the county paying h~lf of the cost of'demolition. '
(Contlnuldlrom Peg~1)
I :51 p.m:,' volunteer fire depart-. Economic Development Authority.
Opponents were skeptical.
'.' Also present were Clerk Kathy Hysell and· councti members Geri Wal· Soldier's relief and veterans. ment to State Route·554, Cheshire.
"We've heard this before and
•' 'ion. Scott Dillon and Gedrge Wrig'ht. The Rev. Bob.R9binson of the Pomeroy- affairs, increase, $104,708 from rekindfed structure fire.
·
take
it with a grain of salt," said Lau_, United Methodist Church opened the meeting with prayer. · · i
.
.. POMEROY
$96,800;
'
I
ra
Forman,
an organizer with the
9:29p.m .. Rocksprings Rchabili•
Tax map office, increase; $48,400 .
Ohio
Valley
Environmental Coali· ~our
p~ize ·,.
tation Center, Anne Krivcsti, VMH.
'
from $42,000;
tion, one of the chief opponents of the
.
RUTLAND
Co~nty home, increase, $68,200
CLEVELAND (AP)- Four Ohio 44 570' with .two of the numbtrs are
9:22p.m.• College Avenue, Melis- project. ·
from $60,000;
.lottery tickets show. the risht five- each worth $1.
Total general fund, increase. sa Barrett, VMH.
The Ohiq Lottery will, pay out
::l'lumber combination in 'Buckeye 5,
. SYRACUSE
:' lind each entitles the owner to claim $688,658 to winners in Monday's $3,069,463.70 from $3,066,888.70.
6:58 p.m., Cherry Street. David
Changes
in
the
two
large~!
special
'"ll · $100,00() prize, the louery .' Pick 3 Numbers dlily game. Sales
Lawson, VMH.
revenue funds were:
totaled $1,206.853.50.'
'I
::iinnounced today.
. ·
Mental retardation/develOpmen' t
. · 1be winning tickets were sold in
France's King 'Henri IV, a Protestal disability, S1,502,500 from
Belpre, Dayton, WestCarrplltonand
$1,282,000, and public assistance • . tant, converted to Roman Catholi" 'Englewood.
·
cism in 1593.
$4.288,514 from $3,852,711..
· Veteraas Memorial
· . ··•• .Sales in Buckeye 5 to!aled ·
~ $355,318.
Monday admissicins - no e.
:"'. The 140 Buckeye 5 game tickets
Monday discharges - Reva
When you're ready to sell, advertise your home in
11 '
'"'Vfith four of the numbers are each' Smith,Middleport.
the newspaper. People rely-on newspapers most
, ~orth $250. The 4,760 with three of '
Holzer Medical Cente~ '
"i!'e numbers are each worth$ 10. 1be Dlso;baraes Jan. lO - Stewart
when they're ready to bJJy.
SUPER IOWL IIYUWAY
Puckett, Mrs. David Long and son,
.Register For A ~ne
Clarence Freeman.
Robert Cooper,
.
'
The Daily S~ntinel Jack Meek.
Recliner
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
The source peopre rely on most for
(USPS 21)-t.)
Wells, daughter, 11Klkson.
real estate ads•
Published every '*"'oon, Noftdly 1hrou1h
(PIIbllsbl=d wltll penntssiOn)
Fridoy. til Coasi ,S l, Pornoloy, Oblo, by olle

:~

Neighbors ruin kid's Christmas

Barsotti .Shaeffer

·:.Mild ·conditions, rainfall
;~set -f or area Wednesd~y

r;

etters
t.
o
the
~· dl·- tor .
1.

. Middleport pollee issue citation

W.VA.

,.-*'... ___ .... ___ ....

I•

lal M1e Ricbnl Howud, 90, New Haven, W.Va., died Monday, J1n. 20,
1!197 in 'the Wortbin. . . Muor, PlltenburJ, W.Va.
Born Sept. I, 1906 in Letart, W.Va., daughter of the late Reuben and Attie
Mile Hoffman Riclwd, she was 1 former teacher in the Mason Co11nty school
system.
. .
Site was a Sunday ScbQol teacher. for the Livewire Class, a member of
the New Haven United Methodist Church, a former Sundly School te~M:her
. at the Hartford (W,Va.) Biptist Church. and a helper for Christopher's Gang
No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident on the
at the New Haven IJnited Methodist Church. She was also a member of the
Pomeroy
Parking Lot Monday around 10:18 a.m. .
.
New Haven Senior Citizens.•.
~
Esther E. Haroen, 7S, Syracuse, was westbound in the parkinslot and
She was also preceded in ileath by her husband, Stephen Leon Howaro,
stnick a parlted vehicle belonging to Charles Wheeler, 57, Albany, accord-·.
on .Feb. 16, 1996; a granddaushter, Kathy Mae Howaro; a sreat-grandson,
ing to a Pomeroy Police Department report ..
Gabriel Ohlinger; and three brothers and three siSiers.
Damage to the pass~nger side front Qf Harden's 1985 Pontiac anc! the
Surviving are a son, Rupert (Dorothy) Howaro of Hartford; four daughpassenger
side rear of Wheelel's 1994 Chevrolet was listed as light, accordters, Georaia (John) Milhoan of Plrkersburg, Barbara (Bob} Gilland of New
ing
to
the
report.
Haven, Marjorie (Glen) Strickl1nd of Lubeck, W.Va., an!! Alice (Jim) Leach
No citations were issued.
of Washington, W.Va.; IS grandchildren, 17 sreat-grandchildren and two
~!-great-grandchildren ; a brother, James ".Buster" Rickaro of Albany; and ·
three sisters, Velma Rickard of Jackson, Ruby Thomas of Parkersburg, and
· A Pomeroy man was cited after a two-vehicle acci~nt on General
Lucy·-Thomas of Greenville, S.C.
·
Hartinger Parkway in Middleport around II : 18 a.m. Monday.
· Sel'\lices will be I p.m. Thursday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Milson,
Keith A. White, 28. Gallipolis, was attempting to tum left on High
W:Va., with the Rev. Gregory L. Blair officiating. Burial will be in the Gra'
Street when his 1987 Ford Ringer was struck in the rear ~ a !993 Chevro- ·
ham Cemetery. Friends may ~all at the funeral home from 6-9 p;m. Wedneslet pickup truck driven Robert W. Smith. 48, according to a Middleport
day.
·
'
Police Departm~nt report.
Light damage was reported to both vehicles and Smith was cited on a "
·charge of failure to maintain assured clear distance.

....

ByDeWA,_~

: president Clinton's
place in history

Four members of the Meigs County Ba.rd of Elections recently CQ!fl·
pleted training required for elections board .-ben'.
Henry Wells. John Ihle, Bernard Gilkey and Henry Hunter completed
the training requirements, ICCordinll to SecreUry of Stile Bob Taft.
Each new bolfd member must compleie 1 specifically desiJned program within six months of appointment. Re:'PP"in~ m~~hers are
. required to attend a minimum of four hours of Instruction wtthin a two. year period. 'I):e program includes instruction c_onceming the rules, procedures and law' relating to board member dulles.

Ina Mae Howard

·~ The Daily SentiQel Clinton trying to rehabilitate Washington
'EstliNislid in 1!U8

Local News in Brief:

OHIO We&lt;!tller

'

•

The Dlllty Sentinel• hge 3

Pomeroy..• Middleport, Ohio

•'

--Mollo~

'
,

. IIURE PLU.S

SW Bel*' ..............................M'.t.
Wlll"dV'I .,.,._............ ~ ............23\.
\l(~at ...........................11\:
.

-·-·-

:;, ;:~wtdltl by~ '

&lt;•.

t

~

~

....

'

..

.

f·

The Daily Sentinel. The Welcome Medium.

~-

.-

'

.

.,

'p

'

.

c)CMNB
'
· - n.lllfll_qlm...,.r.,n,;'r"-'-· ~- .... - ........,

'

. Stock report• 1re the 10:30

\

•••

•

•

.•

..

�~

.

.

Sports

~e ~allY- Sent~~~

•

·.

In Top 25 college basketball,
By JOHN F. BONFATn
Vd-

PHILADELPHJA (AP) -

. lanova has been loolring for an
inside-outside offense · all season:
Syracwe showed lhe Wildcats how
it's dono.
,
Because the Orangemen were
lble to penetrate, lhen kick lhe ball
outside for open shots, lhey came
· away with a 62' 60 victory over lhe
12th-ranked Wildcats on Monday
night: ·
·It was the Jrind of offense that Villanova has been trying to run all season. The problem is lhe Wildcats just
iren't making those ·outside shots.
. "We're.disappointed we haven't
been shooting the ball well all sealOll/' Villanova point guard Alvin

l

Marshall men defeat
70• ·so
Georg .• a Southern
.
.
STATESBORO, Ga. (AP) Free throws and defense. Do both
'well and the wins will come despite ·
off-shooting nights.
. Marshall did both well Monday
against Georgia Southern, winning
70-.50 behind John Brannen's 27
points and a defensive effort that·
allowed the Eagles to make just 30
percent of their shots.
Brannen was only 6 of 16 shoot·
ing from the floor but made 14 6f 15
free throws. As a team, Marshall
made 26.of 31 foul shots.

I

'

I
.I.

I

NBA standings
EASTEKN CONFERENCE
Atl•nth: Division

1!: L td.

Miami .................... 28
New York .............. 28
. was~~;naion ............ 20

!ill

II .718
II .718
19 .m

Orlando .................. J6

19

...

New Jersey ............ IO 21
Bosron ......................9 27

·

!i,

10

Ccnlral Dt'f'ldon
!'i .872
DetrOII... ...... ....... ,... 28 ID .737
Allanto ....... :...... .' .... 26 II .703

Cbia,o .............. ,, ..:W

-·-

!'i~

~

wFsrEKN CONFERENCE
~·

.

Utoll ............. ,......... 27

9

.17~

n .67l

4

.. Mipnet01a ............. .l8 21 .462
12~
. oau........................ n 24 .351 16~
Denver .............. :.... 11 . 29 . .21~ . 20
San Antoaio ........... IO

21

19~,

.210

'vucouver ............... 8 3:. . I~

•.~
.'
"

,

23'h

hcllk Dlvblon
Seanle .................... 29 II ..12!1
L.A. Lakcn ......... ... 29 12 .707
Portland ................. 22 11 .!i64
S~nto ........ .... l6 24 .400
Goldefl Stale .......... 15 23 .394
L.:A. Oippen .. ....... l4 23 .378
Phaenix ............ .'.... J~ 2~ . 37~

·

Midwest

1

-i

Bmdlty 67, N. lowt~61

' 6'h
13
IJ

Cleveland St. 7~ . -N. ·minoi1 67
Crrighlon 60. S. Lftah ol9
Odroit ~. Butler 54
E. Michigan 76, Bovilintt Green 67
Mu.ine 68, St Luui~ M
Mo.-Kansas Chy 37, NE Illinois 8ol
W, Illinois ~l CeoL Cnnnc.:tkut St.

13~;

14

Mancloy'o..-

New Yotl&lt; 9~. w""'na•oo79

Milwnuk~

114, Philadell'ltlip 104
Atlailrn 106, C'llllrfone 91 ·
MinnetOCa 96, San AntOnio 81
L.A. l.alt&lt;n 109, Dallas 99
llell..,.ll2, New Ieney 12.1
Phoeni~

Southwest
Oral Robms .76, Vulparoiro 72
Prairie View 73. Southern 72
SW Texas St. 86. Stcrf~en F. Austin

89. Oelroit86

71 '

Uuth'94, CLEVELAND 74
·Seattle 112. 'vullro\lver 96

Texu Souttk:m MS •.Ah:nm St . 65
Texas TeL:h 70, OklabutiJOI St. 6-t
W. K~ntud;. y 66, T l.'llo:ts·P:m Au~ri ­

Toalpt'sg..,..

cnn ~6

Minnc10111111 Tarolllo. 7 p.m.
.
Wuhinaton 111 Orlando, 7::t0 p.m.
Allanca at Miltmi, 7:30p.m.
HouSion at Owlone. 7:JO p.m.
New Yotl&lt; a1 Cltkago. 8 p.IJI.

. . FarW..t .
Fresm Sc. 9J, UNLV M2

ll'ldiMD at Milwaukee. 8 :~&lt;1'p . m.
L.A. Cli~s 111 Pord~ ,
I 0

p.m.
Dallal ar Golden Stare:
IO:lO p.m.

Ohio men's
college scores

CASH I
Super Bowl XXXI
· will be
The outcome of-the
game will be detennlned on the
field, but YOU may have sotnethlng
at atllk~ tool Just fill out the entry
bla~ clip It out, and bring In or
,. 1 mal to The Dally Sentinel; 111
I
.
Court St, Pomeroy, by noon, .
·
January 24th for a chanee to
.{ win tsar ·All you have to do Ia ·
,predict the correct final score of
• - --.· Super ~owl XXXI ·
• '· and .the
$60 Is all. youra.
.
·On

.

in-ltousecam~ramapat

eraman he kicked during a game ing Rodman, as sayin8 Monday tal:
tors. He has not worked at either of
against the Minn~sota limber- night, ''1bcre's Dothing to report." . ·
The NBAsuspended Rodman for, t~ limberwol~s· two ~e games
wolves, The Associated Press has ·
A source told lhe AP the settle-.· at least 11 sames,lhe seCond-longest s1nce he was kicked.
·
learned.
ment was for $200,000. WCCO-TV Sl!Spension in league·history. It also
. Cam.eraman ~ugene Amos was also reported Monday night that a finedRodman$2.5,000.Thesuspen- ... Tb~ ·
~1cked m lhe SJ'OID by Rodman dur- . :six-figure out-of-court .~ttlemedt sion is without pay and will co5t .
mg a game at the Target Center last had been reached.
.
Rodman. more than $1 million.
--..-.,..
Wednesday. Am~s declined comThe Bulls·\Vere playing lhe TimAmos, filed an .ass.ault report the
. ment . Monda~ · n1ght, refemng all berwolves When Rodman stumbled ·niglltofllle game and said he intendq11eSt1ons to h1s attorney, Gale Pear- out of boon~ .over a ph9tographer. ed to punlle charges. Police said if
son.
Rodman kicked Amos. who was sit· . charges were filed t it would not be
The Star
in
nearby, .
Amos turned his
.

No11-e011ference play

Oetroir Mm:f 61, Cleveland ~t. ~I

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Akron Mnnchetter 6~. Tu1carawus
Val. ~2
Alcxander6l. VlntonCoonly !II
Barnnvillc 70. S1. Oail'lvilk ~
lkaven:lftk 62, Wayne ;16
Bellbrook 3~. Brookville 30
8ishop Donllh~ (W.Va.) !i2. Brids~

,... .

Bork.ins S3, Anna .39

Middle Tenn. 8J, £.Illinois 72
Mis1. Valley St. 6.'\, Jackson St. 62 .
Morehead St ~ ~Murray Sr. 78
N.C.-AstteviUc 81, Coastal Ca~lima

N.C..Qeensboro ~2.\.ibony 46
N.C.•WIIIIIinaton .!S6. Ri~. ~:t
S..lll Alal&gt;amo
New Orl&lt;anl S2
Tehn.-Manin 70, £. Kemuck~ 'ss .
Tenneuee Tech 86, SE Miuouri 82
Tenn.-CMnanooaa 68, Furman 47
Troy S1. ~l. ChieaAo St. 81
YMI S7, E. Ten~s.~ S1. ~
Vira,ini" Tech 57. La Salle 46
W . CuroliRA76.Cildl'~7 William ol Mary 69. V11 . Commnnw&lt;:ulth 61

'

Clllllon McKinley ~2. W. MulkiDJUm

3~

.

Ccnlei'Yille !8. Vandlllia18utlef SS
Cheahi~ Rim- Val. 64,,MW!tn S7
Circleville 55, Haiift&amp;ton U

Coal a,... .16.1lt0ropakc 4~
Col. O.Sales 61, EIJin 44
Coluinbl1 Grove SI. Fon Jenninp 43
Con~ CJeStv~ 47, VIUI We:rt:46
Doy.Canotl61, Erlac•ood ~~

•

Derlllftte nnona. 60, Continenl;ll.f9 ·

Delta63. Pettisville~
E. Can1011 ~ll. Tuslaw 43

Eastern Pike 47, New Boston Glcll·
wood42
findlay 66, Tol. Cntholk S.l
frllllklin 42, MiddlerOwa Fenwick 3~
GnJiipoli1 54. Puinr Pletualtl (W. Vn) 46
.'•
G~IIYillt 60. Onmp= 29
Hicb'llille S~ . Hilltop24
H~uton +4. Brndfon.l .17
Ja~.:ksno Center 61, Rivmid!: o11
John Mmh11ll (W.Va) ~3. Hanaib&gt;ll
R.iV\.'1'~2
,
K111lJas Lakot11 ~7. Millbury l...Qke .12
Lu..:A~~villc Val. 70. Ponamouth W. S2
MuJnolill 79, Monroe CL'Illntl ~7 ·
Macaolia Sandy Y11l. 62, fairleu 43
Miumi E. 6J; Nihon Union 37 .
Minfortl44, MCDenno11 NW JK
Minster ~7. Delphol St. John'li4K ·
New Lt!xingcun 66. Flirfield Union

~

Ncw~omeNitown 65, C~ldwell 43
Oak Hi1162. Wawrly 46
·
Old Washin&amp;ton bucke}'\' Trail ~7.
Bellaire ~I
.
.
Onawtt-Giandotf61, Kencnn 42
Pickerlntuon 61, Loyulla Acadl:my
(Ill .)

47

.

Pltllodelpltla ....... 211) t.

FlmdtL .............. 22 lliO

N.Y. Raqon ..... l.l19
New Jency ........1216.
WuhiliJIOn ........ 2021
Tampa.Bay ........ l721
N.Y. Islondm ....J;\ 2~

•

~ awa.-ct by,Tbe ,Dally Sentinel'

p.m. .

59 147;
l4 1:111
. ~2 .161
49 113
4!1 '124

6
!I
S
6 40 128
9

'
.
C.lgnry 01 TIHU!IIo. 7:30p.m.

·

J!.m.

Ill

108

_...

P.m.

Florida 111 B•tOn. 7:.~
Colomdo 1t1 Pinsbur).b, 7;30 p.m:
Vuncouvcr ac St . l.Aluii, 8: ~p.m .
Arauheim ~"· 9 p.m.

35 117 137

' NonhNoiDivPilllbur&amp;h ..........2.5 l!i ~ ' ' \rt7 IJ6
8uffnlo ...............24 17 S H 1;\J 122

Moncmal ............ l8 21 ll 44 I~J I~K
Hanfonl .......... :..l8 20 t 43 IJI 14~
Boslon ................ l6 23 . 6 l8 HI 164
Olt~j,WD .............. .14 21 8 l6 r119 128

-·-·

The 'Of 2.11i ICDIIIS in 'The Ass01:ia1ed
,._.. ftn s &amp;:OIIeJC' basketball' poll. wilh
· Rnt-pt.ce votes in parenl~scs, record!!
rt.aqh Jan. ·19, total points baled on 2~
. poiBII (or a firtl·place vOI'e lhrouth o6e
poinl for a 2Sth· pluce vore. and. la51
w.k't ranking:
.

.. r..

ln.

li4

lo
' David
three-ynr contracl.

Ill

SO 13M IO!i
46 1.37 1~1

Detroit.. .......... ,...ll 16 8

St. f.ouis ............ 2122: o4
Photftix .............. l9 23 o4

42 ll.~ I~

hdlklliYw.,
Colorudo ............ 28 10 II 64 I~
Edmonton .......... :ll 21 4 4ft.- 149
VaR(ouvet ......... 21 71 2 · ~ 143
Annhcim ............l1ll S 3~ h!~i
CuiJIU)' .............. I7 2.1 !i 39 112
Los An~t5es ....... l12.l ~ '39 124
~nnJ~ ............ .I62.1 .5 J7 ~l.l

IM
116
I~

IJI .
J&lt;t9
J.tl

Moncloy'IIICOHII

St . loUis 6. N.Y. lllandm 4
WuhiDJtDn 3, loaton ·2
Buffalo 2, Csica,o I

COI.ORADO M.OCKIES : Siatncd

Mlln

RHP Cunis L.!Jikunic 11.1 11 one-year \,-.ln. lfi!Ct.
•
'
MONTREAL EXPOS : Si,t~.lled Of .
Cliff Auyd, INF Orlantlu Cabrern, INF
Ry:in MtGuft. RHP Mike l11unn.1n' and
RH'P Sh:ve Falh:iae-k to one-year con.

1/4 mile nOI'Ih of At 7 on
Country Roitd 15
39231 EncJburv Rd.

tract

SanJOIIC I

Tonlpt'o pmeo

C'*IJUrY at Pittllburah. 7:.' 0 p.m.
Edrl'IOMIHI ~ N.Y. ~J«&lt;. 7:JO p.m.
0..11111 at Pbi~~Midphio. 7:l0 p.m.

Colomrlo,. T"""' a.,.7,,10 r.m.

New Jeney '*t Lns Anaele•. 10:3.0

Jt.nt

'
.
·Rutland Furniture

~

J5.'. ._................. 12·3

46

Tu,_

I

'

l'

CHESTER

•

106 N. 2nd' . ,

t

lltGELS C:AIP.T

\ f,'lddlepor:t

1•.N. 2nd Aw. llldtlllpll!t'Oh.
.IIIG!-7021 ' '

GRAND OPENING

'

VALLEY
LUMBE'R

at our new loc&lt;JtiOn
Located right next
door.
Coming Soon

555 Park St.
Middleport, OhiQ
992-6611
.

.FIVE POINTS
'EXPRESS

' 992-2635,.

lllaln Street, P.O. Box 188
.Rutland, OH 46775
742--2333

®i'

*Special Funclng Is
Available

R&amp;G.Feed &amp;
Store

The
With "All Klnda of
.Stuff" fOr Pets, Stable&amp;, Lltrge
&amp; Small Animal&amp;, Lewna &amp;

Geref- ;

Snow tlrM In etock

GENERAL TIRE
SALEs·

t

I

••
••

"*' RNer

.
The. 0

. ~Con1'J8flY
2113 N. 6econ&lt;l AV«&gt;ue
Mlddl4!port, Otf4S760

465 North Second Avenue

Middleport, Ohio 45180

. Rutland
Department
·Store

R

12

14
I~

22

New Hours

2~

17
23

34

s apd. power
·flares, 3· yr.,

TOHO

Local
STIHL..

'·

Dealer

balk: c0v8"1]8, .$' yr-

c::ri~e limited
. i

8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

19

Your

'97 NISSAN REG.
,.
414 TRUCK
power

::In

·J

Wheel Horae
TRAC'TORS and
.RIDING MOWERS

111~

·

.

SALES.· SERVICE· P~m

IIUM
LU.IEI
'

CHEITIR,~

Ill •101 OR 11111:10
.'

'

,, '

.... .

+ '

'

'

Ill 1101

.

.

'

••
•
I

..•

i•

••
••
•••

••
•
:•'

•••
••

:
·. •••
c

i

~ ·

MIDDI1POAT

Chutw, Ohio ·

•
t
••

!

li
N.-2NDAVE.

SUPPLY

••
•

i

,,

RIDENOUR

•••
..

..•

•Groeenes
.

••

i

992~
. '

'

i

••

over 500 Vidoes Plus

• Fresti Meats

;

JUST DO IT.

228 W~ST MAIN
POMEROY ,

'

I.

(row's
Family
Restaurant
'

:
••
•

••

.

Now

••
•
•••
•' .

We have ari ·
interest in the
New England
Patriots
Good Luck
Mike
Bartrum

Meigs County's only
Authorized Purl"a Chow
Dealer

391 w. Main 992·2164 ·
· Pomeroy, Ohio

•~
c
t
••

• Ohio Lottery

Open Monday
Saturday
10am-10pm

992-6891

Supply ·

•Wine

221 Mill St.
Middleport
992-2929
..

R&amp;G
Find lliJt more by calling...

••
•••

Carry Out

Stata Route 7
Five Points'

;;;

••

•Beer

Tony's

Wat ch for our

TIRES TIRES TIRES

BIRCHFIELD
.

NCAADI~f
'

·RIDENOUR~$

FUNERAL HOME

18

~ -t:"i ::~~·I
i~::1t~2..
Si. 2. V - k I. w.

..

..

;•'

3&lt;!:~ ,

.

j,

·Jam" C. Birchfield
Owner-Opertor

Home

..

-~.MOl.

c

FREE

-

ovte Rentals

\

··915·3307·
'

992•5141

lndiunn, Pn. 120. C~nl. St .. Ohio 70

9
. 2,

- S r .. I.SottdtemCIIII, Viap

"

'

16

121,
:16. OfiiOI ,.,
Cfla.}
t9, ·- - 111104 16. ......1 " · l'rovl·

c

I

JatnM R. AcrH Ji'., Director
Mkldleport

. and

· O . W , t - -low• UH~
Po; ,'
dlk to,
Jl.llau!h Cirlollita
S), oor:~
'' ' '46, To'!'l'kt
.U,c.l. oiO.I I

Bruce Fllbtr· Director

Non-conference ploy

9&gt;1

.

.

lngel$
.furnltur•,
Jewelry:

. Pitsburg Franklin Monroe ~.5. Twin
Val. S..~9
Shadyside 79. Sl. Mary's IW.Va.l 30
Sylvunia Soulhview 49, On:gon Cl11y

•Wine
• Ohio Lottery
• Convenience Items

I

TV &amp; APPLII,CE
GIS SERVICE

Horn•
,,

Point Pletunt. Wv
'.
675-720,1

NEW Y~RK METS : Si3ru:d C
YohaMy Vakm 10 n minor-lcaJ&amp;H: con-

Col""""' 4. Rt.;r~o 2
.

.
J

tniCII.

Har1ron1 l. Torun1o I
Montn:al 4. betroi1 I
V~vcr6,

HL'Cilv Cuna'l(u IO' ll ooc-r.~ !Ountr,~~o:t .

&lt;·

..

•

Funeral

Noll••-' Laattf

6

12:1o'lllanoYa ............... l4-l :

1 .1~

• Beer

·-

~· he
· r.:IS
· r·. l

t'INCIN~ATI ~EUS : Si~no~ RHP

147

•••
t.
••

9

9.CIIICINNAn .,........ l2·3 1.280
jO.Doloo .......... :::.::::::::: IM "1,084
II Adtono ..................to-4 · 902

)t.1\tJIII ...................... I+4 •

.

.

RAWUNGS.(OATS·

)\.'111' (jlllfr'.M!I .

••

•,•

··~

"'

10
II
7
4
ll,

, ·7. MIIr)'ltttd ......c.......... l~·2 I,JI~
I.MI-a ................ l6-2 i.JOO
1

1

Ph. No. _______...___..._...,

,.

trac1.
lURONTO BLUE JAY!ii : Agreed to
tcrnu0 with OF JDCob Brumr.ehl ota-u one·

Chic:!JO...............I7 23 II 42 122 129
T~mo .............. 11 .~ 0 34 139 lfi2

Engla~d

New

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

•

TI!XAS RA14GERS: AI"Cd 10 1e111ts
with JB. Dean Pldrn&amp;.., t'lft • Oftl!•yeal' tOR•

J: l~k~ ................. 16-2 ,,,117 ' ~
4. W... F.................. IJ-1 l.l79 . l

• 1). MldtiPif ............... .ll-4
14.lowaSt.................. ll-l 8]8
' 1$. N. Mexlco .............. l4-l 7. 1
1!&gt;- XAVIER(OHIO) .. IH 719
.'17. Snttl'onl ................. ll -l S8.~
II. Celarodo ............. d4-l
S.l6
19. N&lt;tnltC...,Iina ....... IH .'If()
lO. Tea•Ttdt ............. ll·J 396
11. ................... 15-4 362
:11. -Colkt.. ...... l:l-3 · 226
· n. TOIIi :.................J....9-S 173

Mame--------------~-

•

I•'

J

~- ~ ......................... 12~2 1,~97
6. Lowlovilkt ................. IS·I 1,.8J

------~-W---------

necessary;

a

1

1.11~

I predict the winning.tum • ftneiiCore
'T..m ._________________

1

·

lll:L fll, .l!:aiL

rx.... c71) .............. 1s-o

SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY

.

c.u.IDiw~

:r &amp; Ill
Dllllas ...... ...........l.~ 17 ) 53 1l0

:r..

Lui

l Oanlo• ................. ,.l'6-l 1.68M

.G reen Bay
'IT .
,. s.

.1997
. SUPER BOWL

WESTERN CONFERENCE

'lbp 25 college ·
. lnen's~ll

::. ' Mo purchase

,, .

\;. '• . .

Cltwland St. 15, N. lllinni5 67

Wednesdoy'ollomes

,,

, .. ..
,,
.- .

·MILLIE'S:'
ESTAURANT

Midwestern CoiiOJliate Conr.

Phil.a:lphia at Bostoo, 7 p.m.
Detmil ar Sat.:ramento, 8 p.m. '
New Jersey at S&gt;lo Antomo, 8:JO p.m.
Vlli'ICOuVer at Deriver, 9 p.m.
Utah 111 Phoenix, 9 p.m.
,
Por1land or Seat lie. 10 p.m.

'

. ,·

Thursday's pmet

.
'

;ENTE'R and .- WI Nf

N.Y. Rqael'l at Wufnnslon, ;7;30 ·..

Philadelphia a1 Delroil, 7:JO p.m.
VancOuwr all Chicago, ti:JO. p.m.
l.oJ Anples at San Ju~e, 10;30 p.m.
New Ieney m Anaheim, 10:.30 p.m.

Ill
110
123
139

l&gt;

, ;.llglble. l;nter as
Qften.as you like.

"

NO-PURCHASE N~CESSAAY

Edmonton 111 N.Y . Is altden, 7:.30

E~STERN·.CO~CE
.
Alloli!I&lt;DI•- . .
Iaa
ll! L Do. Ill Ia

off

' ·and drop
at one of the
.,p articipating businesses.

bUatne.... are not

and ealact a. wlr!nar by I'IIIJ(Iom dtaw•tg.

·

8oston' atOtlaWU~7: JOr,.m

NHL stiutdings

clip out the .entry form below

.

.

IN, 'TOOl

,.

All ,~trl8a Must Be
Submitted Before
.
12l00 p.m. Noon on ·
Jl\fluary 24, 1997.
Employees of this
neWspaper and the
~PartJclpatlng

. .ENTER AS MANY nMES
..
.As YOU WANT!
· Predict the Winning Team
&amp; Final Score!
·The Sentinel wiR take all correct 111b 111

Florida • Hanfanl, 1 p m.
Nontromarluffalq, 7:10 p m.

YOU .CAN

;

Wednesday's ...,_

Hockey

.'

1

'
.
. . today's editions lhat ~arson .camera on . h'lm. The game was before today.
.
...
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Chica- declined to comment. The newspa- delayed for seven minutes before
· Amos, an
go Bulls stsr Dennis Rodman bas per quoted Andrew i:ugar, a Min-' Amos was carried,off on'a stretcher lhe 'Iltliet Center, said last Friday ·
agreed to pay $200,000 to lhe cam- neapolis attorney who is represent- and treated briefly at a local hospi- ·that he already ru.d ~n to IWo doc-

By RON LESKO

6.'.

lill

lll L lsi.

Houscoil ..... ;........... 31

Rodman · to_p_~y cameraman $200,000in settlement

Bowlina Green 73, ~ Mkhipn 54·

.

64

I

MhlwniDI•iMn

= ,
t'

Mkl·Amerlcaa Conference

-Appolnchlon St. 82, D:lvidson 66
Bethune-Cookman 81, N. Carolinu A&amp;T61 '
C1unpbell 84. Wofford 70
Coppin St. 85. Md.-E. Shce 79 '
Delaware St. 1~. How~d 68
Aoridn A&amp;:M 68, S. Carolinu Sl. 6J
MARSHAL'L 70, GcorJia Southern

1
Owlone ............... 12 17 . ~M
12
CLEVELAND ....... 22 17 . ~64
12
Milw:wkee ............. l9 19 ..500 14:;
lndiaaa ................... l8 19 .486
IS
Toronto .................. l3 25 .342 . 20~
•

=
E

Ohio women's
college scores

Ahaboma S1. 67, Gmmblina St. ~J ·

.270
17
.237. · li'i,
.2M
20

Philadelphia ............. !! Jl

S

.

Sooth ,

8

The DilDy Sullnll • Pilei

t

State

penetrated, I j!Qt set up (Oilllide).
''lbey did a p-eet job of llplelld- 11itL "I r..t that lhis teem is pow- • lot of losaes," he said:-"The Big :
l1le coaches j!Qt tell me to stay inl us out in lhe secoac1 half eape- iaJ. It'&amp; ubame lhiiiJ haven't been East is crazy. :Jbe players think anywide."
cially, ·IIIII..they mode 31 on us, "aid lble to be out !here and JII'OW with one can win.''
•
While lhe Orangemen were I ..,.,a, whole tam also committed . lhem."
No. JO 'Ia. Tecll 711
· shootinJ41 pCn:ent from long ranae 17 turnovers that led to 23 Syrat:UK
Syracuse coach Jim Boebeim
~St. M (01')
• (7-of-17), the . Wildcats' ou!Jide points.
.
•
. thought his lelm wain bigii'Oilble
Freshman guard Rayford Young
offense .sputtered. Syracuse played
In the only other J&amp;me involvliiJ , when they didn't score a point until scored five straight points l.ate in :11
its traditional 2-3 zone defense, col- a ranked team on Mondiy. No. 20 · almosuix minutes into the ganie. By ovenime and Tony Banie had 28 : .
lapsing on lhe inside whenever. !he Thus Tech beat Oldabo'ma State 70- lhen, the Wildcets were up 12-0.
,points and I0 rebounds to lead the . •
ball went down low.
64 tn
· o.~
- -·
'
'"When you get down lib
..tme.
. that, 'Red Raiden (13-3, .5~1 Big 12), who ;
"We ·.tried to get the ball in the •
Syracuse benefited from .the it's importlnt to get your players to !railed by 13 points early in the secpaint, but lhey kept daring us con- return of its best player, Thdd Bur- · slow it down," be said. "What we ond half. Brett Robisch lel!,&amp;be Cowtinuously to shoot the tiall," Lappas gan, who was suspended fill'.lhe pte- ' ' tried to do offensively was spread it boys (9-7, l-4) with· t..f~i~ts;JJ
said, "Ifyoumissone,youmisstwo, · vious seven games after violating out." ·
.
Young gave Texas 'Iech lhe !!Ia RiC IIi'
you miss five, it begins to affect you universily policy.
.
Boeheim said that, despite his
good at 66-64 with a lhnee-pointer • ·
on the other side of the ball."
. Burpn scored tO points on 3-for- team's lOIIgb times this season, lhe with 1:3lleft, then followed biJ DWII
Villanova (14-4, .5-3) shot a sub- . 13 shooting, but was 4-of-.5 from the Orangemen aren.' t discouraged.
miss a minute later for a fom;,point
par 40 percent, including a horrible foul line and gnbbed nine rebounds.
"This year in lhe Big East. I think 'tead.
.5-of-24 from three-point range.
"l was a little winded," BW!all · that there will be a lot of teams' with

Bucbe1169, Brown .51
Canisius S7. Loyola. Md. SO
Columbia 77. Army 72
MORIIIOUth, N.J. 78, Robm Monis 62
Rider 71, Mwist ~6
Sie1Ul66, Fairficld. ~8
St . Frnncis. NY !i4, Mount St .
Mnry 's, Md. ~2
..
St. Francis, Pa. 68, Wagner 6~
SyracuS( 62. 'Vilhmovu 60

Basketball

l:um

.
"Braanen kept taking it inside,
drew the foul and then knocked
down his free throws," said Marshall
coach Greg White. "We jumped on
them early and they weren't able to
come back."
Defensively,Marshaii(13-3,5-0
Southern Conference) forced 21
turnovers and held the Eagles to just
25..8 percent shooting in the first half.
Marshall jumped out to a 20-3
lead before Georgia Southern could
get any1hing going.

Po.Mroy. ~ddllport, Ohio

:••

•

Williams said.
Syracuse (ll -7, 2-.5 Bi1 S..,) shot
slightly below its conference averqe
. of 40 percent from lhe field, bitt ViiIanava coach Steve Lappas.said that
statistic was deceiving.
"W~ didn't do a good job of
defending lhe pain~ " Lappas said. "I
really thought !he game was lost on
their dribble penetration, lhen kicking it out for threes." ·
The chief ~ipient of those kickouts was Marius Janulis, a 39 percent
shooterfromlong-rangethisseason.
Janulis uppe&lt;j that average by going
S-of-6 from the field, all of the sh111s
from behind the ate.
. "I got great looks," said Janulis,
who seored IS points. "When we

I . 'I'Y 21, 1817

• Tua~d8y, Jenuery 21, 1117:

Syracuse beats 'nova; Texas Tech ·downs _O klahoma

I

.

'

�.
TUIIJIIy, .-.u11Y 11 1 tJtt

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In the New England Pstrlo.t s' camp, .

.

•j

"' •

. .

.

'

.

•

'!

,, I

Parcells' plans make Sup~r Bowl .focus harder :.. ~-!

By PAUL NEWBERRY

·

w"1

·aancer.

kills Flood
st59

"
'
I
· •· ~~-Ann
L.anden: I am wri~na
•~JOUI'. response. to,;'FI~nl
:1n thC Mid~Atlan.bc, a cliv~
· father ~~ !' llytnl to honor h1s
~~tbil!b~ tow~ his s~ ~~~~
• :whOle;.~~ ex-WI~ ~II d1f•ficultlqr·hi~ ~ou a:d••~ hiii,I,IO ~ .
. fonjliill ~ ~endh~ h&amp;ison w1t~
h•~ c;x·wlfe ,IInce h1s ,lawyers don t
thV,lk he lias a strona enough case to
~n custody.
.
;, I · ~ ll!l attorney and have tw'o
·-~ aaes 7 .and 11. I, completely
: u~·d this c_ountry .s abhorrent
f~IY. law system. Hav!~g recently
- ~~~~ I can ~II you Its no won~ ~.~n ~ afraid tp speak o~t, Jet
- ~~~~--~mptto get out of abusiVe or
·un~sfJiictOr)' "~II and chain" mar·

·. &gt;'·.

{

and the need for .techniques for ·
. dl&gt;iliB family history research, the
, :¥tias County Genealogical Society
; ls encouraging residents to tune into
··"Ancestors" a 10-part series which
will air on PBS stations beginning
· S_unday;
· · •Ancestors is the first national
television series dedicated to geneal· :qgy and family history. KBYU tele:vision is ptoduclng the series with
·s"upport from Brigham Young Uni·Y.ersity and Eastman Kodak Compa. ~ny.
·
.
. ·. Sue Haser, president of the Meigs
Society, advises that locally the series

..

..

'\

1

• ., ',l

...

I

'

stores.
the fattthat :·

Drivers, Ho•
Owners lad

••••. .....

Owners Special
s.v....s.

.

· ve~

~

.

'

.

'

,

t)l' ....
i'l''

.

X
~

;~

you see them, remember we're the cellular com.f any that's built.around you- from technology

'liaming with Hall of Fame outl'leldlr Lou BI'QCk at the top of the St.
~ ,Jineup, he hit a career•high
.33~n t%1 as.the Cardinals·again .
~~s,in~even .g~soyer

ell..

~J.Ikid.31lA in 1968utheCar·
8Jalh NIChed the World
Serliti. .He hit .286 apinllt the
~t :nFra. but it wu. his miiJIIay
cia (ly ball hit by Jim Northrw in ..
!lie' lfvnli! "!nina .of a scoreless
~7
hi• otherwise
••• , illi...
llldc&lt;lllthc:Car•

Ill- •lllhir
pton~ip.
~ h'- ~. h6JJi11!11 ~ .

~·~ • • bl&gt;1 rfclilllte~ for the ·

t· "

'

.

•'

\.·:

.

~

.

•

.

.

,1, -:

t

you
'I

one of the

'

independent cellular'

'

I

'

,.'

I'

,;.i~_;t_,,~ ·

companie~-in the nation, w&amp;re here to make your life .

imp~ed communications. So when yo)l see our signs,

•

.

you'll knoW what's behind them. Cellular service that's better all
t
. .
.' ·around.
our nearest [ocatiori call toll-free 1-888-C~L-360. · 360°

For

.

go. And continue! to ~erve you ~it .l~novative telecommunications services. :N&amp; W'I ' '$.

large~t

euielthrough

{

.

.

to customer service. Qur commitment ie o surround you and s~pport you wherever

'

Ollclllaii.Aihletk:.l.
•

j

Those new signs tell you that Wireless One Network is now 360• Communications. Whenever i

. IC-pt!ICS. •
• Oil&gt; ;

;:.
.,

'

'

•.

.

iJ

.

J

,.

C~mmunl'catlons ,,

. .'
I

. ~··
....

t:

;·

~·~

'

'

I

27. 'I'he inembers 'joined in reading
"The Purpose", and officers' repans
were given. Lenora Leitbeit led in
prayer for those with concerns .
Seminars were announced for January and February for the district.
Devotions were given by Norma
Baker from St. John, and Frances
Goeglein had the .program titled
. "What The Bible is All About" and
"Understanding the Bible!' Pandora
Collins read "The Dust", and Dorothy
Jeffers had. the closing prayer.
·
Refreshments weie served by Iris
Collins and Frances Goeglein. Next
meeting will be Feb. II 'at the church.

.

I

.·

I

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAt
FEBRUARY 13TH IN

itOMES WITH·
Y 01·MESS GE·!
'

.'

Send questions to Ann Laaden,
Creaton Syndieale, 5777 W. CeDtury Blvd., Suite 700, Loe An1ela,
Calif. 90045

PICTIJRE YOUR PET
AMONGTHF.••• .
PET VAIJENTINESI

Also
seclon for In Memory Valentine
Pets.
. a special
. .
"

THE DAILY SENTINEL
•

. ONLY

'"··

$600

. ~

•

·: REEDS\1LLB -·Olive Township,

.Trustees, 6 p.m. Tuesday at the town..)hip hall. Appropriations will be
. made 'along with a business meeting.

·.o:: • BURLINGHAM •· The Bedford
&lt;; ·-township Volunteer Fire Depart--.fnen't. 7 p.in. Tuesday at the Modem
:~oodmen

hall in Burlingham. All
•tAembers
wged
to attend.
: ..... '
•• '
· ·wm~DAY

•• . MIDDLEPORT·· Middle,pon .Lit·
!erary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the

. ·"'

.t ' . .

Plans were made for an appreciation dinner to be held at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church for
those who assisted with the flash
flOod last spring.
At that time the basement had
about eight feet of water in it and the
furnishings were either destroyed or
damaged. Several members of the
church worked the night of the flood
and days afterwards to salvage what
they could, move out the rest, and
clean up the basement so that reguJar activities there could continue.
Rita Radfonl opened the meeting
with prayer and reading from Psalms

come feelings of inadequacy and
anger that he had carried since childhood. It also launched him into a successful Writing career. In Washington,
D.C., cancer survivor Carol Krause
created a family medical pedigree
that has saved not only her own life,
but prolonged her sisters' lives as
well. In a maximum security prison,
inmates are connecting to family his-·
tory through computers, giving them
a newfound sense of responsibility
that prison psychologists are calling
the most effective rehabilitation
process' they have ever seen.

...!.

he clammed up long ago bec"tiO it
was the only way he could preserve
the shell of a marnage.
,
Lad1es, 1f your husband y,:on t talk
to you, could 11 be tbal .you never
·bothered to hsten.to h1m 1n the days
when he was talking? --Been 1bere,
Done That
Dear Been There: Your m~ge
came through loud and clear. I ve
been told that ev~ryone who reads
'!'IS column sees h1m or herself at one ·
time or another. I wonder how many
of you saw yourselves today.

UMW to honor nood workers

Tlii!SDAY
· ; POMEROY •· Meigs County
. Qeneai!)Jic~ Sqciety, Tuesday; 5:15
~.m., Meigs Museum.
·,

'

f

..

eli••

_ _,! ' "•

I

;

Hi• breakout year came In 1961,
wheit hi: hit .322. He led the NL with
2 t 1 Jilts in 1964 and helped the Carreach the Worl!l Series, where
they;;jleal ihe New York Yankees in

dllt:E

'

eo.DIIniDity Cilleadar Is
]Mlbllilled ~ a free ~enk:e to DOD·
·proftt pvup11 ~lllna to announce
:m.~~nc ud caPeelaJ· eVents. Tile
~..,.,.d••ll not d*d ..... to promote
Ala or fllad riiiH!Y or q type.
.(feml an·prlnted u 1p1ee permits
:-I CIIDDOt be ~~eed to J'llD.
·Spedllt: •IIJDber of daY.,
. .

~

very green.

hobbies in the United Stales, with
more tban 100 million Americans
now exploring their own roots.
In announcing the series, Alex
Davis of OU Public Television, asks
the questions: Why do people begin
a family history search?. What do they
hope to find? How are their lives
changed in the process? H said that
"Ance$tors" goes on location to ask
these questions. The answers are
intimate and provocative, but also
universal in their insights.
Each episode be.~ins with a personal story. In California, Victor Viitasenor's research into his MexicanAmerican heritaae helped him over-

involved with such organilalions.
~ore tJnportant? fat~ers ~ to
stay ·~valved m thelf ch1ldren s hves,
es.peclallr 1f the mothens uncooperabve. Children need pos1t1ve, healthy
role m.odels. Embattled dads should
hang. ·~ there no matter what ··
lewiSVIlle, Texas
Ikar Ann Landers: Recently, you
p~bhshed yet another letter from a
Wife whose husband will ~ot .talk to
he~. C?uld 11. be that he •s ured of
bemg mterrupted 1n .the rn1ddle .of
evel')' sentence?. Or IS ~~ fed up With
havmg every op1010n nd1culed, every
easual remark taken as .a personal
af!'ront, every suggestion rudely
reJected and every weakness .magmfied and explOited? Maybe, hke me,

REICH ·ovER 18,500

.

. Tile

., ·f

..

.--.,~

.

'

.

'

will be shown at 7 p.m. on Shndays
on W9UB-TV20 in ·Athens, and
WOUCT-TV 44 in Cambridge, Ohio
University Public Television.
Each of tl)e len half-hour episodes
explores the why and how-to of
family history research through personal stories and expen · instruction
from some of the mo.st respected professional genealogjsts in the' country.
When Alex Haley unle#hed the
"Roots" pheqomenon more'!han.two '
decades ago, millions of AmerlcaJ!s
caught wh~t Hale~. affe¢\ionately
called "the genealog•cal Mg." Smce
then, family ·history research has
become one of.the fastest growing ·

:community
:calendar ·- ·

the·ne~ signs

aaclif;

.

.Meigs County's 1996 campaian in · 3.2 percent increase over holdings of tHe average of five-year markelable May I, 1995.
:)upport of United . States Sl\vings $181.2 billion the previQ,us year.
'freasury security yields. The NovemSeries Hand Series HH honds are
Bonds was suc~;ful, acCfiding to · ·The . Treasury · Olopartment ber 1996 through April 1997 Long- also not affected by these changes.
,pauJ M. ~eed, l!test~.nl/ Farmers announc~ changes in sa\lings bonds Term Savings Bond Rate is 5.53%.
Series H and HH bonds issued or
;:Bank and Savings 'Co.
that will make the pro~ easier to .
The new market-based EE Bonds entering an extended maturity since
: .. Final results showed that Meigs understand. The changes· in regula-. will increase in value every six March I, 1993 pay interest semian&lt;:oumy residents purchljsed $230,272 lions, which took effect May I, 1995, · months. This means that a bond nually at a fixed rate of four percent
· wonh of Savings Bonds dllrina the will insure that Series EE bonds-- the issued on January will increase in val- per annum.
: :oampaian year (0ctober.J995 -·Sep- most widely held •• will earn market- ue each July I and January 1.
Series f: ·bonds continue to reach
:tember 1996), Reed reported.
· \lased rates from the date Of purchase.
Savings honds will still be sold for finai maturity and stop earning inter, . The Ctunpaign encourages CO¥nty
Now, two different market-based a price half their face value or est. Bonds with issue dates of
. residents to buy U. S.Savings Bonds rates will be announced.~ach May I jlenominatidn. 'Since savings bonds ·November 1966 through May 1967
.through the payroll savings plan and November I.
' earn market-based rates, it is not cer- will stop earning interest November,
·Where they wo.rlt, and t~.ugh appliShort-Term Savings Bond Rale: ·. tain when a hood will reach face val- 1996through May 1997 respective:C!Itiori initiated at local financial Series EE bonds earn the short-term .tie. The EE bonds will continue to ly.
instituclons.
rates for the first five yean;. 'J1te short ~am .interest over .17 years at the rate
The latest United States Savings
·., Reed !las heen servina as voll!ii:- , ~ nu~ isJ15~ ot_the ·~v~~age of ~IUfl! the~. iii effect f~r extended . Bol)d~otes. Eami~~! Rep,ort and
teeru;haitrilan pf the Meigs County six~monthmarketable'rreasury secu- mii@IY ~' fO)"t( !Oiatin(cresi• ·· o~he't.·usef!lhnfprmaupn&gt;abOut savSaviligs . Bo.lids Campaign since jity yields. The November 1,996 eam'!~glife of 30.years. · . •
ings bonds. is availa~le at Public
October,.J991.
· , throughAprill997 Shq~t-Te1111 SavOutstanding Series E bonds and Debt's Internet Home Page
· . N'alionally, 1996 fiscal year saies· ings Bond Rate is 4.561. '
Savings NOles as well as Series EE (HTTP://www. ustreas.gov/trea-of Savinas Bonds totaled $6.0 billion,
,Long-Term Savings1Bond Rate: bonds issuedtlefore May I, 199S are surylbureaus/puhdebt). For current
The value of u: S. Savings Bonds Series EE bonds earn the long-term not affected by the changes and will . recorded rate information call 1·
held by Americans at the end of Sep· rate from five years through. I7 continue to earn interest under the 8()()..4US-BbND (1-800-487,2663) .
.tember 1996 reacjled $187 billion, a years. The long-term rate is 85% of teirns of the offering in effect before

4

'

'

:~aVinQS Bond campaign successful in Meigs County

·\·

Should

,If
riages. In order for a father to .,t.custody in this counlly, the wife' ljas to
be physically abusive', a dNJ addict
ot a prostitute who has just nwrdeltd
the mayor of a major city. , 1
Your advice to Mid-Atlantic was
like td1ing ~ ~atman to !!?, put ~
cork m t.he bole m the Titan•f· Unul
the f'!ffiliY law couns apply equal
riahts to both parents, we will have a
growing population .of ~~!king-_
'I

wounded fathers 'who will never tody of the kids as a weapon against
receive equal treatmem. The ex-wife their former spouses. But which has
stand$ to gain nothing by establish-.' a greater long-term impact on a child .
ing a friendlier liaison. Elephants and •• lack of money or Jack of a father
women forget nothing . •: Dall$
. figure? The profiles of notorious
Dear Dallas: You've made a good criminals make the answer 'obvious.
case for divorced dads, but you arc
Mid-Atlantic needs to know that
wrong when you say fathers have dif- the Federal Ed~cational Records Prificulty gaining custody. Recent stud- vacy Act guarantees him access to all
ies have found that fathers who fight of his child's school records, not only
for custody win sole or at least joint repon cards. He need not be kept in
custody in 70 percent of the cases.. the dark by his ex-wife.
Here's another Jetter from a father
He also should know there are
who agrees with you:
many support groups working to
· Dear Ann: I'm responding to cl!ange laws to~~~ ensure that chil"Floundering in the Mid-Atlantic," dren have conunued access to both
who was having difficulty wjth ·his parents. The best known 1s the Chitex-wife over custody.
· dren's Rights CQuncil, headquanered
Many dedicated fathers struggle in Washington, D.C .. with chapeers
againstmaJiciousmomswhousecu5- acrossthecountry.l'llthersshould.get

,

no.:::-~·,::0:,:
~·- •I\.

.

~ gy

J

W~atyou.

A
00
Landers

&gt;i

~ :With a growing interest in genealo-

'1

Kuczynski
dies at n

TUUdly, Janu.ry 21, 1117

~~:P.B~. ,stations to air·')\ncestor' ·in .10-part series

·Falcons hire Reeves as head'coilch and director ·"'~)

~::~l:ing

hae7

:Dedicated dads struggle against malicious moms

=)"·\,. ·' .
4

.

•

f

estimation," the coach said at a Moo- Will McDonough, who knows Par- seuOII," said Chris. Slade, speakina IIUpll1ll8rlcet the dry c'-'t,
day evenina news conference dom- cells well and shares the~ ~p~~t, just a few feet away from his cOICh ever I ao," Meuen aid. ~.iJ
inated by questions aboutthe repon. Robert Fraley. Kraft pointed the lin- · at the team ·s downtown hotel. "I control Bill J'an;ells. BiB
1
"That's it. Let's leave it at that. Wily ~ 111 Fraley for ignitins a pre-Super dido '.1. know it was a sketched-in· controls Bill Parcells. Wblllever
can't you leave it at that? I'm not Bowl tempest that could make it ' stone type of thing. But unW I hear : decides to do will be the belt !hi
saying anything."
tougher forlhe Patriots to keep their him tell me he's not goiiiC, to be the for him and his JuniJy:, Me
With the Patriots mired in specu- minds fociJSe!l on Sunday's ganle.
coacri}then I'm counting on him to everyone else will have' tq live.. ;
lation aboui their coach's future,
"To me, it's unfonunatc that his be the coach next season."
it"
I•
..
Green Bay ...
'
agent, Mr. Fraley, took this time to · William Robens 1 a member of
. The Packers must he a bit P · · '
Practiced.
try to put something in the paper," Parcells' two Super Bowl champi- thlll their oppjment is hav\lls to , '
Working outdoors for the first Kraft said. "I'm not going to let any onsltip.. teams· in New York, specu- with a Super B!lwl-sized diltraC~
time since Oct. 31, the Packers rev· foolishness, or other people's agen· 1ated that he might be 'trying to divert just a few days ,before :~be gene
eled in the un-Green Bay·like 66· das, distract us from one of the great- the 5!1btlight from his players.
Holmgren, quit~ riatur4Jiy, ~ide,
degree temperatures. Quarterback est weeks in (ootball history in New
"You have to wonder," ROberts stepped questions about 'Parce}ls
Brett Favre, who grew up in nearby England."
said. "Sometimes he does things and · future, realizing that there's no· , •
Kiln, Miss., even stripped off his
Parcells left the Giarits after the you wonder why he does them."
to i~jecl himself into the Patriots'~
shirt prior to practice to run wind- 1991 Super Bowl, and New York's
Dave Meggett, another ex-Giant mod.
sprints.
oth~r team, the Jets, reportedly ·is who li:unit"\1 with Parcells in. New
"this has been · ofa
·
"It was nice being outside," said willing td pay him whatever jt t~s England, knows equally well the year in the co ·ng fraternity,''
coach Mike Holmgren, who has no I to straighten out iheir 1-15 mess.
unpredictable nature of his coach. Holmgren saidi The decisions' Bil~
intention of leaving Green Bay·after . Some of the Patriot players were Still, he sounded a bit annoyed has to make are obviously persona~
Sunday's game. "You know, it's caught off guard by the report· tbllt about being inundated with questions decisions on his part. I don't tljinkj
been a couple months since we've Parcells is leaving.
;
about an issue·that really has noth- · he's going to let· anything·be J 'dis·J
been able to do that."
.
"I knew it has been speculated ing to do.with the game itself.
traction to his footbilll t~.am at !his,
The Glob~ story was written liy about throughout the coui'Se of the '
"l'm , getting questions in the stage.:·
, . ·. ·. ·, .. ~~

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Bill
Parcells stood defiantly on the podium. His jaw muscles·flexed, his eyes
brimmed with an anger that seemed
on the verge of boiling over. Here he
was, just six days away from the
Super Bowl, and everyone wanted to
know what he's going to do the day
after the game.
Will Parcells remain the coach of
CURT FLOOD
the New England Patriots? Will he
wind up with the New York Jets?
Hardly the kind of questions conducive to game preparation. ·
Parcells' future has been the' subject of speculation all' season,
brought on by his agreement with
owner Robert Kraft to void the last
year of the coach's contract. Then
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Curt Tht Bqston Globe reported Monday
Flood was always up for a challenge. . that Parcells will leave New England
Stinding alon~ in shallow center after the Patriots meet the Green Bay
Packers in the Super Bowl!
f~eld, he would defy bailers to hit one
"There's no new . news, in my
· .over him. Flood was equally brazen
off the field, bucking baseball's
reser:Ve system to single-handedly
alterlhC game's future.
Flood, an AU-Star center fielder
of the St. Louis Cardinals who took
with the Falcons in 1977 while an to $8 million contract.
· Reeves ''brings us a ·respecf factor appearance in four ~ns. He ,hail·
his fight for baseball free agency all By TOM SALADINO
ATLANTA
(AP)
Dan
Reeves
assistant
with
the
Dallas
Cowboys.
Robbie
Tobeck,
a
two-year
staner
we haven't always had" From what a career record of 149.113•1, qlllk-{
the way to the U'.S. Supreme Coun,
was
available
20
years'
ago
when
he·
Instead,
Atlanta
hired
.Leeman.Benat
offensive
guard,
said
the
team
is
I hear, he looks you in the eye and ina him the 10tlt-winl!inaestCO..:)i1
died Monday of throat cancer. He
sought his first NFL head coaching nett. Three years later, Reeves "ready to get things rolling."
tells you the way it is, and that what NFL history.
'
' f
was 59.
job.
The
Atlanta
Falcons
didn't
offer
became
the
league's
younge~t
coach,
.
"It
gives
us
something
to
look
we
wan(
as
players."
.
.
.The
Falcons
interviewed
,IIIYJ
Flood died at the UCLA Medical
Reeves takes over a team that has • two candidates 10 succeed J 1~
Center. He had been in the hospital · it then. They did now, and he accept· taking over the Denver Broncos at forward to next year - a new
ed.
age 37.
coach, a new system," .said.Tobeck, made only five playoff appearances · '":ho still had twn Ye&amp;Q remainiri .
for several months.
Reeves agreed to a five. year deal
"I'm excited about being here, I who was in the weight rD\!!11 at the . and hilS 9nly seven winning seasons hts contract.
·
·•
• ·
·Although he was a three-time All·
d
I
add't'
t
h'
h
ca·n
tell
you
that,"
Reeves
said
after
Falcons'
train•·
ng
complex
in
the
·
·
31
·
·
·
Bobby
Ross,
a
former
GC
,.
i~,
M
1
Star and a ·seven-time Gold Glove on on ay. n . 1 1on o 1s c.oac ·
m 1ts ;Y.ear cxts ence. . , , . · Tech coaeh, took the DetroiJI Lil!l.ns~~
Reeves was fll'Cd by the New
· ·
winner, Flood was best remembered ing duties, the 53-year-old native·of arriving in Atlanta Monday by pri- AtlantasuburbofSuwanee whe.n the
Rome,
Ga.,
will
be
in
charge
of
the
vate
jet.
·
'
club
announced
the
signing
of
·
York
Giants
after
compiling
a
31•33
coaching
job last week ~ftet: .~n
for fighting baseball's long-standing
football
operation.
.
The
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
Reeves.
record
aoul
m·~'ng
only
one
playoff
ousted
at
San Diego. He' ~diY,
reserve clause - rules that prohib"Y
_.
was"
Atlanta's
li_rst.cho
. ice.. . -~~. ;' ;',
The NFL's winningest active said Reeves agreed to a$7.5 million
Linebacker Jessie Tuggle said
ited players from choosing which
coach, he takes on the task of . .--------------..;_---~----------------"-----------'-'---E--i
teams they wished to play for.
·~Every major league baseball
a team that was 3-13last
r
,· ,•'
player owes Cun Flood a debt of
Reeves, who succeeds the fired
'
·'
l&lt;.-;
ptitude that can never.be repaid,"
!I
June
Jones,
will
be
introduced
at
a
·
,.
pitchers David Cone and Tom
' :.;~
news
conference
this
afternoon
in
;.
Glavine - the current AL and NL
player representatives - said in a Atlanta at the Georgia Dome, where
.
statement. "With the .odds over- the Falcons play their home games.
,
..
Reeves originally interviewed
whelminaly against · Mm. he was
.' jI
willinR, to ~ke a stand for what he
''
knew was nght."
~·
Flood was an elegant foelder and
a key member of Cardinals teams
that.\von the World Series in 1964
ALLENTOWN, l'a. (AP)- Ben
and 1967. He hit over .300 six times
Kuczynski, the first player to appear
,.
and jlatted .293 in a career from
in
NFL
and
major
league
baseball
1956-71.
.
~
'
. · ~Baseball players have lost a true games in the same year, died Sunday
l·
.
.
.chalilpion," players' union head at Sacred Heart Hospital. He was 77.
The cause of death was not immeDonllld Fehr said. "A man of quiet
.
dignil)', Cun Flood conducted his life diately available.
•• •. '!:
In
1943,
l&lt;:ll¢~ynski
pitched
for
w
ill a ,way that sel.an example for ell
the Philadelphia Athletics and played
'• ..
wh&lt;l''~ad the privilege to know . ~ilJI.
)\'!)en it came time to take a stand, fotltball for the·· Detroit Lions, "' . ,, ·•J·
I pal personaf risk'and·sacrlf!t!!i! " becoming tl\e first to play in both!&gt;'
he Jf.oudly stood firm for what he leagues•in the same year. He also
played for the Philadelphia Eagles in
belie'ved was right."
flood's fight began after the 1969 1946.
·The former Penn captain later
seasQII, when he was \fnded along
•
.(. .
.
coached
and taught history at Catawiti!Jim McCarver. from St. Louis
IIJ
to Pbjllldelphi!l for Dick Allen in a sauqua High School, directing the
aovell-player deal. Flood, however, . football team from 1953 to 1964 and .
the ba5ebafl team from 1961 to
refuSed to report to the Phillies.
lie ·asked then-commissioner 1972. He retired from teaching in
BoWie .Kuhn to declare him a free 198S.
I··
Survivors include daoghterDon.!:lUI was'tumed down. He then
na 'and son·i·n-law Dennis Eck of
fil~ lawsuit, claiming that baseball
'
.
'
.
.~
Catasauqua, and sister Jenny Kafel
liad )'iola~ anti,trust laws. .
l He sat out the 1970 season, con- of Bensalem. His wife, . Doris M.
dnt~fng ' his fiaht against baseball, (Berry) Kuczynski, and son, Bruce,
whili. the Phillies and Cardinals preceded him in death.
Services are scheduled for II am.
w~ oUt their trade.
Thursday
at the John H. Brubaker
. A1tet the 1970 season, a deal was
Funeral Home in Catasauqua.
.I
m~to send Flood to the Washing. ~
ton!;
. tors. His comeback at age
33 •' not .go well, and he. played
· We Give Mat•re
onl 13 aames for Washington in
197f!,before retiring.
. ~~ ~~preme Court rul~4 agai'nst
..,; J •
.
'
Fl~iP 1972. But in 197S, an arbi·
' ,.. t
. '
! '·.' 1'.·
•
lt1Jtcf;•IJ'linted free agency to Andy
, .~
~:
Mesl/;enmith and Dave McNally, in
effeet ending the reserve system and
..
clearl'rill
lhe
way
for
today's
free
"·!t'
.
,qenHystem.
.
.
..
A few years ago, Flood reflected
.
'
Our
statlstlca
show
thai
mature
on Whit his battle had wrought.
.)
'
drivers and home owners have
'1
· ''All the groundwork was laid for
'
fewer and less coeUy 108888 than
the ~e who came after me. The
\\..)
other age groups. So It's only lair
S~e Court decided not to give
',,
'
to
charge you less lor your
4(· .
it to;l:nc, so IIleY gave it to two while ·
ln111rance. Insure your home and
py'i,'1 Flood ,said. "I think that's
wllh us and save even more
car
~hM'IheY were waiting for."
, I' '
with
our special · mulll·pollcy
I &lt;lhcrs, though, fully appreciated
,,
dlacou!l(s.
Pl~'al:ourage.
.
• ~~ ~
!:.11 .
~ FlOod began his' career in Cincin'l. \-:
"~at;Jh'' J956, playing a total of eight
·~1~~
.
llllllill with th~ 1!-eds before he was
;&lt;i
, P,11ft llf a five-player trade that s~nl
· him ~~o the Canlinals after the 19S7
, I
•

The ;Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

I
;

. l

.

..

' :kb~ of~rs. Ri~hardOwe.n.

· : : PO~OY •• College F.inancial
o(id 'workshop for seniors and their
P,areft~, Meigs High School c&amp;feteria,
· Yledne'sday, 7 p.m.. Representalives
·[fom Hocking College financial aid
· offiee wil~ speak. Topics to be covered include applying for federal stu·. ~nt .aid, worlc study, and student
, loans.

.:illuRSDAY
.
.
. · .: POMERO:Y' ••· Prayer and plan. ftln1 meetin1, in prepai'ation for Feb. ·
~1 co~ wi!JI the n~~tionally known
: ~tempqrary' Olrislilll music groop,
~aarvest; w~~y. 7 p.m at ~he
· Ppll)eroy fubbc Ltbrary ·meetma
.:ioom. P~tor, lay people, everyone
:l'nvited. For more information, call
Rliv. "!Of''l'lemblay, 992-41 ,2. ·
POMEROY -· Precepeor Beta
. :·hta Chapler, Beta Sip~a J&gt;hl S&lt;Jrot.
·1!)-. 6:30 p.m Thunday, Episeopal
'Pariah Houe; IINp 1upper.
' ' .' IUIEDSVlLLE -·Riverview 0.Club, 7:30 p.m Thunday 11 the

TV TIMES
AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
" TV TIMES
.

.;•.iv,

... .

,.

'

'

"PETS NAME" .

Owner's Name

your photo.

Hurry! DeDdlinJ_
Frid11y, Febru~~ry lth 111 3 p.m. ·
r------~-~-----·------------,

I1Pet's Name
VALENTINE PETS .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Iaw'ner'a Name ____________
I
.IAcfdreaa
_ ___..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

. ..

GALLIPOLIS'.

446-'
2
34~
"'
.

•e•
PT. PLEASANT, WV

1I Clty,_ _ _ , _ - • -:-----'-----Amount Encloaed:
.
for
· · pl~ures

I

llt$6each.

'

'

.

· ·

· ·

L:-----.
-----------------------.1
Deadline Friday, February 7th at.3 p.m.
Mall or bring the
entry torn,:
.

-675-1333

.

'.

110 Court St.

.992-2156.

Pomeroy, ohio 45781

j

·~ ·

••

'

The Daily·Sentinel

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

:,=-~:aThomu.Proaram by
•

Please enc;lose selfaddressed stamped
envelope to return

.

.:den
~~

PER PIOURE
·PRE-PAID .

'

~'

t·•·J.

�Tulldmy, ~ 11, 1117

.

Tunll1 ,, ........, 11, 1117 : ·

Poma1oy•lllldllpDtt, Ohio
'

~ocial · Security

explains unposted wages

•
•

Receat modlutGricubout comSince 1937, the apacy baa pol(- vice to oltalia the- .-.1 ecldit.a SacUl Seamy atllbliJhed a IMk ::
pulcrlfloblellllillp•llineal..- echlmost$44trilliolldolllnia.u- forworbn,"P ••-arln'eed
fctn:e ..tier this yar to IIUdy lbe •:
cies included astoey lboultbe Socill inp. So theunpoaed unUIIp in tbe
Top yoa u-Acl oleffo111. ~ fwdler ...S IWDmm1111~ lllltl-.!;
Security -Admiaislnlioa's
IUipCIIIC file tep aeDI Ollly one balf Social Sec::aity ~'2..1 millioa limlll ....... "bich could be
to :
file."
_
of one pen:eDI of all ellllinp e'Ver . .,... repcaM In 1995. N'mety- all NJDiDp - II:Cinllly :
uThis file contai111 eamiap we re~.
.
.
pucont of tbeat m4 Jw d by polled..The report wu reb 1r ' in : :
11e unable to post to a wage_.,
Soc tal Secunty aoea to great and number. 1lJe rwnainiq nine ~ller. Ud Social Secaalty Ia ••
record, usually bec11tse the Social le~ to locate_the ~record to . percent did DOl liuqlly JO illto .,.. already leltin1 inililtivw that ·• •
Security n!lmber provided is invalid credtt an eamtngs report before pcnse. TbrouJh nh-!ive offolls, JeCOIIIIIIellde
· ':
or bceause llJI employer's repl)rl coOl' putting the .item in a suspense file, the IIJeDCY w• able to l*l 11111011
The belt way WOiten ctnensure ..
plctely elill)inates the worlter's name Pete~n satd.
.
~ilht out of flWI'J ten a( tl!e remain· thll they 1re seuinll JliOI* clredit fDI' •
and/ot Social Security number," said
"Ftrst, we apply some tol~ces. inJ w- item~~, resultins in 1 ...5• their eaminp is by requefi'll a,.... 'Ed Peterson, manager of the Athens f~commone!fOIS, ~bas the use of pcnse ~ qf only J.S peacell( at~ · sonal Earn' udBenefitllllimllo ' •
Social Security System.
of names, or end of the
Swemeat
AilfOie
There are more than $2.50 billion transpost~g a letter·m a f11;1DC or a · . "Once an Item goes iaiO the 1115• eenned about their eaminp lhould ~.!
in unposted wages in the suspense nummt'iii the Soctal Secunty num- pcnse file it does 1101 simply remain · use the PEBBS process. People uo-. ::.
file, accordins to Peterson, who said )ler, in an attempt to matCh earnings there. We ::O..Umle to make all effcxta IIIBiiclllly receive a PEBBS •IIICmeat 't
that although there is concern about with the correct number holder. If that adminillntively feuible 10 post 11 in the yea- they tum 60. Anyone with • &lt;
unposted earnings and the effect they · doesn't work, we ai!Cmptto contact mllny w•e itemi u possible,• the Internet access can now request a :
can have on a person's Social Secu- workers and their employers to . district office ~a••F said.
.
PEBBS online at• www.ssa.sov. or ·~:
· rity eligibility or benefit amount, this resolve the discrepancy. We even
Despile " - liCCOlllplislunents, call our toll-free I!Umb'll', 1-800-772-· ~:
statistic must be viewed in context. . ...work with the Internal Revenue Ser1213, 24-houn-a-day. ·
'.
~~

'*-

mcknam~, miSSpellt~gs

Bend ..

by Bob Hoeflich
•. There's always help out there. · tions in writing to the police.
~anks to you.
..
Apparently I know little aboot the
' ; ; The response to a requesl from law. I thought when these thingS hapDick Rupe of Pomeroy for a copy of pcned the police were entitled to
·Andy Griffith's comical monologue question anyone and everyone in
·· 011 football was amazing, especially
their investigating.
sfnce Andy recorded it probably,
And the death of Ennis Cosby in
:about 40 years ago.
Califprniais certainly another tragedy
·. , Frank Case who operates a VCR and if that crime, too, ever becomes
· J'ellair shop on Powell St., in Mid- solved I will really be impressed.. It
d.!J:port after going through several appears to be almost like hunting a
·hundred recordings located ·the needle in a haystack.
m'Onologue. · John Warner who
And what has happened to Dave
milles at Park and Broadway in Mid- Thomas, the founder of Wendy's
dlqxm also found a copy. Homer who brings us those entertaining
Inxter of Pomeroy had the ~ording television commercials? Some time
in_ his, collection. And, all thiee ago he was scheduled to undergo
·offered to loan their recllfdlngs. ,, • . heart surgery at an undisclosed hosRosie Raub, Pomeroy, ·came1up· pital. If the surgery actually took
W!th a catalog t'rom a music fimi in place and his progress remain a my,s.New York which offers not only the tery and yet we were infonned fre,(lr,iffith monologue but scads ilf oth- quently when he was hospitalized.
er old recordings.
.
Since then obviously reports have
.:, .: Dick also received two calls from . gone !lftllerground.
wttmen, one who had the recording
Oh well.
.~ another who had a catalog which
offers the football bit.
·
Cassady Willford, six-year-old
.. ~ Dick opted to order a copy. from son of Ray and Kim Willford of Rutthe catalog and so is now anxiously land, wi.ll he participating in ihe state
at&lt;aiting its arrival.
·
and national kiddie tractor pulls this
;" However, ·he's holding th·' names ,co.ming weekend. ·
of•those who have the recording on . Cassady qualified through his wiil
ltAnd so if it turns out his copf does- in the kiddie trac!Or pull held at the
· n:t come in the mail, he can get in Big Bend Sternwheel Festival last
touch.
fall. He will be taking part in the five
.. Thanks--you're always so helpfuL . and six-year-old competition to be
held at the Ohio State Fairgrounds.
·· ·The national .news never fails to _Tl!erc are nice prizes to be awarded
and I know you join me in wishing
astound me.
·
·•· ll's been several weeks since the' Cassady "good lucku.
sill-year-old beauty queen was murdered in Boulder. Colorado. ApparI telephoned a major Columbus
endy right in her own home and noth- hospital Monday to see about gelling
iiig 5eems to get pinned down.
an expiring medication prescription
;.. I'm puzzled by the fact that offi- reftlled. I got an answering service
Clals haven't talked. directly to t\le par- · which advised me ttiat the cardioloc!!Rs about thf? tra~edy yet. I'm gy department was closed for the hoilll!vised that they, according to law, iday. Seem far-fetched? I thought so
dUn't !!ave to meet face to face with toti. Oh well, I'll think about that
~lice investigators. Meantime, they tomorrow, Scarlet. Meantime, we'll
m submitting their answers toques- just keep smiling.

.

T.u·.
'

0 . F r· '
ime . ut .or . IPS

By Becky Bier
~Ill County
·
lliiitenaion Agent
FMIIy and Conaumar

'

.

.

'

'

.

'

:'lo

..m

...

.

.

.

283,000chil«en nationwide an: likely to lose SSL The benefi"-would end
after July I.
. In Ohio, .52,668 children received
SSI in December 199.5, the fifth-highest in the counuy. Of those, 16,800
· may lo5e the payments.
said.
Ohio SSI families receive about
New1-estrictions on Supplemental
• Security Income - cash assistance $417 a month to help them meet
for poor children with disabilities expenses related 10 a child's disabiltake effect this summer asp~ of the ity.
welfare reform bill President Clinton
B111 parent$ have used the money
for special fOods or therapeutic
signed last year.
"Fiimilies who have children with devices or have simply relied on it as
Ieven: behavioral disorders are goinJ income so·they can stay home "!ith a
to be 'pushed that much closer to the needy child.
eilje," said Bob Mecum, executive
. The new law is designed to put an
director ofLighthouse Youth Services end to that. It requires parents 10 desin Cincinnati, a private aaency that ignate separate bank accounts for SSI
operates programs for troubled chil- benefits and to show the monev 20cs
dren:
.
,
. for purposes directly related to their
Advoc;Jlcy groups ·say nearly child's disability.

~l=

.,

•

.

move back:
"Andrew Jackson invited his Tennessee friends ·back to the White
· HouS., where they promptly trashed
theplace,"hesaid,askingthecrowd
to lielp avoid "another historical
incident." ·.
Spacey was helping oat the fire '
marshal, who was concerned aboot
' safety.
"We're, going to bring out the
whip. and i\'s not going t~ be' a pretty stght, .ana by the .way; tf you saw
tile mo~ie 'Seven' you don't wanltc;&gt;
make me an~." Sp&amp;Cey said, refer-

.

.

'

.

-

'

,t

.
The one out of two Ohi01111s who
will prepare their, own returns this
· year will find a variety of help from
the Internal Revenue Service. . ·
The IRS office at the CoWtlry Corner Mall, 70 N. Plains Road, The
Plains, is open Mondays from 9 a.m.
to noon, and I p.m. tp 3:30 p,m.
B4t taxpayers do not have io vis- .

.

By Nellie Parker
Pastor Sharon Hausman returned
J,n. 9 from a church conference at
Springfield; !II. where she was ciiordinator of the conference.
'
John Taylor was lay speaker for
Alfred and Chester United Methodist
Churches on Jan. 12. ·
Ruth and Lloyd Brooks are
announcing the birth of a grandson,
Zachary Scott, born Dec. 27 to Jim,
and P~m Brooks, Be)pre. Maternal
grandparents arc Paul and Bonnie

Announce
birth

~U

.. '

of

, ..:
1•

·• .
, ;·
•.
,.
,.

.. ..

....
'

honor roll pasted
The Ohio State University
issued its honor roll for the autumn
quarter, listing the names of undergraduate students who achieved high
Sp/4 and Mrs. Robert E. Kimes of
academic averages for their quarter's Junc~on. ~ity, Kansas are announci~g
work. Those honored received a the btrth of a daughter, Stcrra Ntcgrade point average of at least 3.5 and hole, w~ was born on Dec. 23, 1996
were enrolled for at least 12 credit . at Fort Riley, .Kansas. ,
hours.
The infltlit weighed seven · ,
Local student• named to the hon- pounds and five ounces was as 17
or roll were: Daniel Alfred Lawrence · tnches. .long.. _Grandparents III'C Mr.
Long Bottom; Sar~h Elizabeth lind. Mrs. 'Jltomas M. , j(imcs of
An~on, Pomeroy;,Jcrethy,William . ~lne.
' . · . . .
·
Buc~ey, Pomeroy; Theda Charlene : . · . "· S~4. Kim~s •• tn the .U, S.
Dailey, Reedsville; and Robyn Ann Army. He ts a graduate of Southern
Stout, Syracuse. ·
·
High School.&gt;

daughter

,.

'

.

.•
~

(

'

"''"'

Ke~~;u~~~~sicklistinthecommunity are Leonard Amos, Osie Mae

.

'

.

A MESSAG~ TO YOUR SPECJ.AL VALENTINE
Remember that -spedaliiOIIleOIIe this
Valentine:~ Day with a~ In

The ,Dally Sentinel

.

• Sweethearts e Moms &amp; Dllds • Grandparents e Teachers

.

• Batiysitte~ e friendS
.

.

·

·

. Anyone who 'lfOIIId ap~ • ~Wont from you! All Valentine · .
Het111s will be publlshed.ln the Febi'UII1l41hllne at a Colt of ollly $6.001

.

.

·.

MVST BE pPPAID!

Mtty•-••
...............
... Wltll$6.00fo:

,, '
'i

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

'

, ,. . . . . . .,

Valaaltae Hlilts
111 c.n ·sttitt
fo•aroy, OH 45769

·.

.
~

·J

•'r .
I

~_a.

t &gt;•~r

.

Throug~ Friday, shoppers in~ New

k ~- • h
.or uoli t ave te pay the 4 percent
sales t.ax on clothing and shoes under
' ··
$500·
The state expects to lose S20 mil- ·
lion in tnes ·from the experiment,
h · h
«
whic mtg t lead lo more tux•&gt;rec
days. Many places, including Nip
County and New YOrk Ci,ty, have
made the deal sweeter by also waiving local sales lax.
.ll'
v•l·
RetailerS across the s~te repili'tcd
business was up for the normally
slow January. weekend, · sai~ I ed
Potrikus, a spokesman for the Rc!lail
Council of New York State.
i;1
"Consumers have grabbed onto
this," he said.
·

· tracked Civale down and n:turned his
cash.CivalesentMs. Rodaabouquet
and a thank-you note Monday.
~'There's no good ever to be.had ·
froth taking something that doesn't
belong to you," she said.

· J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

SNOW
REMOVAL

.:

'

812-2772
8:011 a.m.-3:311 P,IIL

Wlill1ws

C811 Anytime
949·3327
591·1197

'

'

'

Long St, Rulllncl, 011.

·WI; ••ws •
' ..... , ••1. .

•
•

HAULING

•

.,.••

Umeltone,
Grav,l, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt· :

614-992-3470 :.L---------~l-n~am-n~ ~--------------_. ; .
742-2935,AakfOI'Kip

.•

,.

Kitchen Clblneta

ESERVICE
20 Yean E:scperillnce •

Oecb • Garagn
FrH E.tltMtH

614-742-3411

.....lllilat"

DEALEAS

Seale- bide lor the ·
purc1taM of a mobile meal•

del._,
received

type vehlele will ...

bJ tlte Melge
Countr c-tnlonere at
tltelr oHice, Courthouee,
leoond St'"'· Pome;oy,
Oltlo 41711 until to:oa 1.m.,
FebruaiJ 3, 11t7, and then
81 1:011 p.m. 81 nld oltlce,
opened and nad aloud for
the following:
.
"Hot lltot",· or approved
.,.ulvalenl, delivery vtltlele
eopable of having
refrlgerellon and oven
8101'111 ..... .

.

.(No Sunday Calls)

l

·101111 IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

.,,' .

•New Home•

• •·

'

•

i ··

FREE ·
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

; .•:
"~

.

ALL OHIO

,.

.; ' -

•. I

INSURANCE
Any Car
j

Authorized AGA Distributor
~
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Step&amp; • Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
·Hams,.Pianter Hangers, Trelllse~ &amp; lois of other 11,tljllll_

------

-----·

:JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
.
. -- .. I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.:
,.

-

-----------

----

-

--

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBUCI\TIOU 1

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN·BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7 PER DAY.

Any Dnver
DUI &amp; S R-22
·· D1 scou nts ·•
Co mputer Quotes

\

I ·

.'

(61 4) 992-6677
Pom e roy

'

'

..

'

·' J

BINGO '.
RAONE,OHJO
AMERICAN LEGION

·'

..'•

POST602

•'

MRYSUNDAY
Dilen Opon 4!30
O..ltlrta 1:41
1
l'lly' IIUIIII I I dltiV 10

..

'

IIUIIIber of p~aye...

Under ..............

PultiiG Wtlaome

''

,L .L
. HOLLON
.'IIUCIINI

..
. ,..

.

...

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

..

'

•

•

. UdtlllOi'lt • QI'IVII

' Dirt• s.ncl

I .J

'

·. . I

IIIUQ
Chl&amp;lw, Olllo

,

.

"'

'' '

l1'

...

r :!:&gt;
(

.

I;
•'

•.

Easy Pay Auto

......Counlr

'

.

•

-.:Oh'o
::::.J·~rr·:=dm:.::
liapartmont of -

.

•'

.

614-992·7643

Bid••

Anr 0011tract awarded
un4er atle ·lnvlleiiOtl for

'

•Complete .
;
Remodeling ·
• :
Stop &amp; Compare . , " ·

..-on,

Nlled and _,.... .. "Bid

:~

•Garages

Qu..uone concerning
- •ettlele may ... dlnctad
tp C. lueen Oliver, llelgl
Countr Council on Aging,
tne., (et•&gt; 88!'·2111.
lpeclllcallon• mer be
oblllned .from the lletge
"No Job Too urge or Too SIMII" · •
Countr Co.mmteetonere
· We will work within your'budget.
ofllee, Courtlloun, Second ·
Ph:
773-9173
•
FAX 773-51161
-Street, Pof!leror, · Ohio '
41711. (et•&gt; ..z.zees.
1011 POIIIII'Oy Stnol
WV
inuet uM their own 1
bid· tor... Bide ehal be ·
tor DeiiYirY V.ltlole" and
molted ·01 .......... to the
Melge Commt .. lonere
ot11oe 11J the afonHkl dille

At 2 l.oc:llllciM ·

614-9949-2202

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

NOTICE TO VEHICLE

..

Raclna,Oh.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Public NotlCII

SNODGUSS'
UPHOUftiY
Rutland, Oh.
614-742-2998

Owner:
Ronnla J0111t.,...

Pick lip diiCarded
appllancett, ballertea,
mony mcrtel1 &amp;
motor bii!Cka.

•

l111nr111r

Top, Trim,
• Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

Vlriyl Siding • Roofa

•

.. 111 ,.

·t~e~·l

New Conatructlon &amp;
Remodell.ng

and !line.

'

.
.
WICkS. •

w.x. eumng

•St-IIMrs&amp;

Suatet Henie .
Cenatruetlen

· The ~y. who ":liS named in cou~
records as lJaby Rtchard tq keep hts
anonymity, was taken' sobbing from
the Warburtons in April 1995 as supponelli ofthe adoptive parents, many
of them crying the.mselvcs, heckled
Kirehner with cries of "Monster!"
The Warburtons could not be
reached for comment Monday. Their
,number is not listed and they did not
retu.- calls left with a child advoca.•
•••
cy gro.up they established after the
boy was returned to the Kirchners.
Despite his father's absence, Danny is "a·happy, healthy kid," HeineIJlann·said. "He.·s·doing great. 1 saw
. hiiit yesterday as they were goiag 10 .
church."
·

..

(UmeSlLNRihta) .

;

F~ll_oj\'inpfiercecounbattle,thc

~

To plolc on od Coll992 -2 156

minor mecllenlcll
llpllr.
TUne-upa, 011 Change,

....a.c..s
eR•::• ·

~

-Etc.

•

Body worlt, C*', truck
• truck painting.

IIIIDI)LEPORT

!$;!," _.,.the '*'

l.w

'

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -

•GRUESER'S
GAUGE

1378RYAN PI.A~E

-Driveways
-Parking Lots

=•

: \4

·

nursing it, even though she is already ·.footsteps coming through some
caring for ·her own 10-month-old woodsbehindhisbooseinKnoxville;
baby.
at the foothills of the Great Smoky
It was only the second time on Mountains.
record 'that a mQther gorilla in cap"!looked up and (thought) it waS
tivity assumed the care-taking an emu or an ostrich," said Prince, a
responsibilities of another's new- Knox County School Board member.

Business Services

::Los ANGEL"ES .(AP) _ 'l'he . or comedy. "
,
:DoYIIopNIII CommuniiJ
s!!'Pstick coritedy "Beverly Hills
Meanwhile, "Jerry Maguire" .J4 " 'Monday 'Wtlh final fisurcs to be :~lop11111~ Btooll Grant
•"'
bit •A • fi
1
the ·e~pccted to ·finish the four-day peti- released today:
.·
. ttNiNIL .N..... the Unltell
. nmja'' de '"" tri nt pace at
od - a traditionally slow• one i'ol'_ . I "Beverly Hills Ninji," $12.6 atat.a " no~ any of Ita
biix offiee, earnin1 $12.6 milliOit to
. :
·
· .
•De,.l11t!•nll, Allno..., or
nilrowly edge out ·Eddio Murphy's films despite til¢ national holiday tr mt 11 ton.
,
S
.
.
elllpiDJ••• 1o, or will 111, a
·•~elro." .
·,
, by tappilll lhe $100 million ll!liri. . 2. "Metro. 512• mt 11 ton.
. ..,. 111 1111e Invitation for
"Metro\'"toOk in s12:s mil.lion in The Tom Cruise comedy placed
3. "Evita," $8.6 million.
~~~~~ '"· a11y re•u111111
•-..-~ ·.:... $8 1 'll'on •or 1 st'x
4 "Jerry Mam•ire," $8.1 million.
I
,
ita del.." followed by, "Evita," which •owu• Whn . mt • ,,
•
• · "TheRe.l'c•-;: $8 -t'lllon (b'e)
Til-. Moll I Cou.IIIJ
cuwu••
'I 1'""' rnatW. .....
earned~~
ss.6million ova- the fQIIJoday week toial of$103.4 million. Crulae . ·•5.· ".,..,~am,
.,_ t.. •58 ."'
. (ti &gt; · '~~g~~~to
....
-kend lhll inchlded the Rev. Mar- ' won the Golden Globe as best actor
mt 11ton e ·
_.,.or ...... _,
ti Ludler "'•• Jr. holiday, acdxdins in a musical or comedy.
·
• 7. "Michael," 57.1 million.
· 1., 111 ltNI aiiiUor..,
•..,....
Two horror films, "The Reli~~;.
8 "The People vs. Larry Flynt," ;
)D
liNt
'::e~~~=~~Oiobe and "Scream," tied for fifth pi~ 54 ~illiOn.
·
'
411 ter. tlte tntoll411a411
4arc11 Oti'5undly, inoludlns one for · with $8 million each. , •.
•
9. ''Mother," $3.5 million (tie).
,
· . ClloriiiCioM, Clltll
~
1
leal
The top 10 filllis ~ ~ir estV ·· 9. "Jackio Chlln:s· Fl11t. Strike," · ,
..
tot"'~" . ~ . ~ 111,111 ·
$!.5 million (tie).
,
=-Iiiii ••
;;
'
7
.
'
.
.
.
., '(1) 18,1t,M;
: ',

~

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

mated Jl'O~ for FridaY 1 rou

1&amp;,.'

:

'

·
,
'
d
b
'
•
f'
t
I
·
'M
t
'
N
2
'N
. .inJa e uts 1n. 1rs. p ac~:;.l . e ro o. h .gh.

...

r.. 1

born, park spokeswoman Debra Dunbar said Monday.

the street.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - · .Alberta the
Inside was a New York driver 's gorilla spreads her love around.
license and an .10 belonging to
She quickly adopted a baby lowMichael Civale, a student at Franklin land gorilla that hail been abandoned
&amp; Marshall college in this eastern by its young mother after being born

m:~~r~:~~:.af~~~.s~~-:ea:,
dcmed and mvahdated the adoptton.

v

•.

~

;

!

.
'
,,
Sunday as she chased d!lwn the
· MEDIA, ~a.· _(AP)- John du catcher .'estate wher:e Sc~~t!tz, his swirling $100, $50 and $10 bills.
•f'9nt's lega1 insanity stntesy must go wife, Nancy, and their two chil~ren "But when you' re chasing $100
further than proving that the ~ulti- had been living for years. ., ·
bills; you have a lot of motivation,"
Schultz, 36, was !fainirig at du site said,
millionaire suffered delusions of
being the · Dalai Lama and Jesus P~t:s. el~ amateur W~;estlin_g
When she got back to her car she
Christ.
facdtttes tn hopes of repc¥ing his had $2 510 all from a y.'alletlying in
· ;. The defense team must show that gold-medal-winnins perforlitance at .
' '
au Pont's mental illness made him the _l984 Olympi~s in ~Angeles. _ Man who fought for
•ujtable to recognize that he was
Schultz, working on his car, .met
·
,
·
"{rong when he shot Olympic duPont with, "He.y, coach." DuPont Baby Rtchard moves
'Yfelller David Schultz to death near- repli.~, "You got a probllm-. with OUt /eaves boy
1 •
'l~ a year ago.
. me? He then shot Schultz once m
·
' "If he's insane, he should not be · the'llml and twice in the ell~. Mrs. behmd
punished," · said defense lawyer Schu)tzwatched in horror 'as the last
CHICAOO(AP)-'-BabyRlchard
'lltoril\15 Be~m.
bullet was fired.
. .;·
.
went home with an adoptive family
. ; One of the n~hest murder def~n~
9u Pont_re~rned_to h~s manswn · when he was 4 days old, only to be
dants in U.S. htstory goes o~ trtal and. stay~ mside-wtth hts· gu~ col- returned sobbing .three years later to
!(!day in a case tbat wtll dctermtne not l~uon whtle S~AT team hegottat~ ·. his biological parents. . . ·
wltether du Pont shot Schultz•. b~t tned to coax htm out. He. was capNow, the father who fought so
whether he was sane when he dtd 11. tured two days later.
''
. . fiercely to get llis son back has left his
, In a notice last month _of thetr
C?mmon ·Pleas Judge P~trt_c•a wife and the .5-year-old boy, the latiptention to pursue . the msantty Jenkins of Delaware ·County tntlla!· es~ twist in a case that broke hearts
defense, lawyers for the 58-year,old ly fouod him tncompetent ~stand~- and·captured headlines.
clP Pont said he suffers from severe al. Then after a two-month hospttal
Otakar Kirchner moved out sevP.\lfaiiOid schizophrenia and showed stay d~ng w~h he was ueated with eral months ago, and the bOy, now
stgns of mental problems as long as an anll-psycho~.c ·d~g, ~ was.rul":'! known as Danny Kirchner, is staying
fe.ur year,; ag?. , .
· .
competent to atd hts la,ers. tn h1s with his mother, Daniela, said Kirch" ~~~ty slnliCJY f~,..-~efense:
. .
c
ncr's former lawyer, Loren Heine. the.IIUl'den'b7 proof onto the defense. . Jenkins has satd she "'.ould allow mann, a family friend. The couple has
'fhe .burdon · is so heavy that few prosec_utors to use tape-rec!orded con- one otlter child, llJI I I.-month-old girl.
~wye.~ choose the araument.
. versauo~s between du P0111 and offi''I visit the family frtquently and
: -~ard Ohlbaum, a Thmple Um. _cc:rs dunng the sla~ofi.;S~ch e~t- for extended periOds oftime," Kirch~e~tiY law expert who has ~n f~l- dence eould undeqrune !lie msan!t,Y ner said in a statement Monday. "I
COwtng the case, satd du Pont s gudt ·defense by showmg tbat odu Pont s. love my ' children very much.
br innocence will rest pn his state of state of mind just hour5: after the Although it is pai'nflll. (or me not to
lnind before, .iluring and after the shooti"g was "negotiating,calculat~ be with them at all times."
·
I hooting:
ing," _prosecutors have said.
The mov~ comes 21 months afier
: ."~at did he say _when this w~ . Du Pont's _erratic behavior for the boy was taken from Kimberly and
aoing on· and why dtd he say tt? years had been. chalked up to the Jay Warburton, who haven't seen him
phlbJUQl said. "This guy was " eccentricities" of a rich man. He since.
~solutely bonkers mo.nths before once drove around his estate in a tank
"It's a very sad day for the justice
lhis happened and was, tn a sense, a and reportedly drove two' Lincoln · ' system to see how. we have failed this
hc;&gt;micide \tailing to happen. accord- Town Cars into a pond. 'He has iden- , child," s~id Richard Lifshitz, whq
lng 10 some."
.
\ tified himself as the Dalai Lama, ·represented the Warbunons.
: ; In· PennsyiVatlta, defendants can Jesus, the last Russtan czar and the
But he said Kirchner'~ absence
l'e. found ~uilly but mentally ill, in target of international assassins.
probably would not !le grounds torepthtch case !her m11st und_e~o menopen the custody case.
1a1 Q'eatmcnt an!l then, tf deemed. Du Pont is a great-great grandson
Mrs. Kirchner gave the boy up for
cured, serve a pri:M?n sentence. Juries . of E.l. du Pont, the French-born adoption days after his binh, believi:&amp;n also choose~ verdict of innocent industrialist who founded thtchem· ing that Kirchner had abandoned her.
, . by. reason of insanity, which allows ical company. lfe is Qne of b'ijitdrcds At lirst,.Kirchncr was led to believe
ll~fendants to go free if they are of heirs to the family fortuntC·Since· the boy had died.
l;ured.
·
·
the shooting, his siblings have sought
Two months after the child's binh,
: • .Last J~: 26, du Pont and his guardianship of du Pont.and control on leat:ning the truih, Kirchner began
l'¢yguard drove to a home. on the . 'of his estate, e~timated at $250 mil- fighting for custody. The couple~atC( married, and the case soon ·cap&lt;edge of du Pont's 800-acre Fox- lion. ·
. 1
~
tu.,d national attention.
·

: -"NIAGARA FALLS N Y (AP) ~
' "
'
·· ·
:panette Bradley was_working hard to
:lP=I the s~.lves of her Brooks Brother$ clothmg_store ~k ·~ or?er. Wtt,h
sull pourtng trl tt wasn t
S"-11
"~1'1"'
'
easy
.:H
'
•
b ·
? 1i k
k ..
. ow s usmess , a e a 1oo ' .
sat_d ,llrad!ey,_ the store manager,
pomtmg to:a ptle of sweate~ that had
been neatlr folded before cusiOIIler
ft
t""'e h filed th
h th
atacerk C?,S ;-~be-r s u ·
r~ug
e
s
· 11.. s .en awesome.
.'J'he ~n f?r the ~les boom at '
. B!~ley s s1orc tn the Nt~ara l~lf;~- .
riilional Factory Out~ettsstmple. The
state _has ~pped tl$ sales tax on
clqthtnl ';h11 week to keep shoppers
· from tleemg to New Jersey and olh- ·
er neil!hb!xiniJ tax-free states.

'

'hopes it wcuW help keep him fmancially Uloet. '
"Kida calf him handicapped,
retadtd or dummy. He's been hearinc tbat for years," said Mrs. Jennin~, 40, who.w~ part time for a
matntenance company. .
Rodney Je~~~~ings, 18, has been
frustrated in jcil interviews because
he has difficulty communicating with
interviewers, Mrs. Jennings said.
"Rodney nei:ds the money to help
him cope out there," she said.
The Social Security Administralion approved Jennings for SSI in
November 199.5. 'l:be money has
been delayed, but he is scheduled to
receive his first~payment soon, plus
back payments: Jennings WliS
approved when he was under 18, so
his case: is 10 be reviewed sometime
before Aug. 22.

ey~~~:~o;~==;~g· cars Un~~~~:t~o~~i~~Police,who hu~1~'!i:\~~n=i~g t~ u~ab~~ bacl"~:J~;.:.;asw:e~r::s:::

, . .
· f . ·kl
ne.ta!lers say tax- ree w~e .B
hEis meant
big sales·· so·tar
' , ·"
•
.·
·

LOVE IRS

.

•

thi;::~~':ol~o~i?.\,!.~!~:~ Pe~i. 1i:i:~;;,nfound a Western !a:.u~l.attheSanDiegoWildAni- r.::;:,:;.:~~:th~~c=.:=

. in du Pont murder case

:'

Lawmaken were motivlll«&lt; to
tiJhlen the prop am partly beeause of
stories about parents who were
allegedly coaching their chiJdrFn to
act abnormal to qualify for SSI bene/its.
·
"We don't want to see children
who really need these services not be
able to gain access to them because
of the fraud of a few," said Amy
Rohling, assistant executive director"
of the Ohio Association of Child Caring Agencies.
Since the children's program
began mbre than 20 years aao, it has
grown tenfold, siid Shannon Patrick,
a Social Seeurity spokesman.
Sally Jennings of Cincinnati said
her son was. taunted in scbool and
frustrated in searching for a job
because of his chronic speech impediment. So she applied for SSI in.'

•

WQman·finds $2,·510, returns it to rightful owner
LANCASTER. Pa. (AP)- Teresa R~ wu talking to her parents on
her car phone when ~ saw something tbat made her jump out and run
into lnllfte.

.jury selection set to begjn

.

Society scrapbook

·-for . . .

. file plloiO ahoWI Nancy

·

Brittany Downing, II, triect to !Jet •
Griffith to sign a cast on her arm, but •
was overwhelmed J)y . a group of :
screaming women reaching for Banderas.
Asked if she asked AI GOn: for his
signature, ·Brittany S!lid, "Was he
here 'tonight?"
1 • ·,
.

http:/www.irs.ustreas.gov. The site; and for tax questions ( 1-800-829contains answers to frequently asked 1040). ~ numbelli operate ~luring
questions, pJus forms and publica- • normal business hours, Monday
lions for download.
.
th'rough Friday.
Tax Fax allows callelli to instant. Tax . preparation help by IRSIy get tax forms viaa fax machine by ' . . trained volunteers-is also available in
calling703-487'-4160.
.. . many communities. Calll-800-8i9TeleTax offers recorded in forma- 1040 for locations.
·
tion on about ISO tax topics and
":Yearbyyear, we'remakingiteastnformattOn about the status of ier for taxpayers to get help," l)ixon
refunds, at 1-800-82~77. TeleTax,. said. ''Btit. before you pick up the
Tax Fax, and tm; IRS s Internet home . phone, or make a trip to our office,
page are all available 24 houn·a daY.,· rend your tn package instructions.
Fall OSU graduates
in St. John's Arena in Columbus:.. . 7 days a week.
·.
.
You m.Y find what you're looking for
The following area students
Receiving degrees were Charles T.
IRS also has spcctaltoll-free nurn- right there."
·
received degiees from Ttie Ohio · Pullins Jr., Long Bottom, B.S. Busi- bcrs for tax forms ( 1-800-829-3616)
·
State University at autumn quarter ness Administration; J.B. Marinkocommencemc;nt exercises on Dec. 13 Shrivers, Middlepon, Doctor of Philosophy; Michele Lynn Guess, Tuppers Plains, Associate in Applied Science.
· . , ..
''\.&gt;

'Alfred .
News
Notes

......

'

it an IRS ·office to get help, according to agency spokesperson Teri
Dixon. Many .IRS servic~s are available from the convenience of their
home's or offices, 24 hours aday.
. For example, instead of waiting io
line, go online with IRS's popular
Internet home page on the World
Wide
Web,
at

.e

· ,lchuttz
lhe cotnloita her crjlng claughter, Dan'lelle, l1llla
11*110Jia1811
llulband, formlr Olympic .wttar David
· lchultz, on Feb. 11, 18111. JtMY Mlactlon In millionaire John E.
• du Pont'1 trial for the murdar at SchultZ began today In Mellie,

At the California Ball, scores of ·
fans showed up not for the presideJI&amp;.,&gt;- .
· hut for star couple Melanie Griftl!A!
l!lld AnJonio Banderas.
', ......

.

dll' PONT TAIAL BEQINI : Tllla

'

ring 'to his rote. u ·.ll Serial killer. 1 J

Tax·help available for do,-it-yourselfers

can't spend that part of your income Follrod. Imogene and Lester Keaton,
any other way for the next few years. Marguerite ~!teams, and liamo Dorst.
Also, credit requires self-control. It is · Visitors ·of Imogene and Le'ste.r
a common . fact that people spend Keaton were her sister-in-law, KathSCiencea
'much more if they are charging their leen Kelly and granddaughters.
community
.
purchases.
Christy and Shannon, Marieua.
oav.fOP,IJ!ent
.·
··
How do you know how much is·.
Holiday guests o~Maric and Char'':Are those January bills starting to too much? Experts recommend that lie Sargent were Pai Spencer, Tupper5
Clime in? . ·
·
your credit payments be no more than Plains; Kay, Joe, Chris, .and Beau
:,Do you wonder how you ' ever 15 percent of your take-home pay, Bailey, and Carol, Steve, Jamie and
chqed thlt much over Christmas?
excluding your mortgage. Let's say Paul Erwin, Chester.
:..;..What ean you do to control the use that you have exceeded thai. What
Celebrating the first birthday of .
of credit?
can you do to help pay your debts? Tyler Barber at the home of his par,;. ~eid on for some ways to· help
First, you.shou)d have a budget or enl&lt;, Debbie and Jeremy Barber were
~Ou use credit wisely.
·
·
· a spending .plan. Your credit pay- · Kevin, Tonya, Hallie, Aaron and
• Credit means to "buy now,.pay lat- ments are considered a ~fixed" ffcather Brooks. Chester; \5ina Mur.;;.:, Our economy'is based qn credit. expense, bCcause you are oblipted to phy, Linda Kaylor arid Mildred
Most people c.ouldn't conduct their pay them. If you ·are having a hard Brooks, · Tuppers Plains; Trina
ctaily biiSiness without it
time meeting your payments, you Brooks, Ruth . and Lloyd Brooks,
: I:lciw does one apply for credit? should reduce your "tlexible" expcns- Alfred; Jim. ·Pam and Zachary ·
AJmost d•ily many of us ~.,:ivc es ·• those that go up and down each · Brooks, B~lprc; Leonard and Shirley
ci'J!dit card applic111ions in the mail. month. Maybe you can cut back or\ Barller, Reedsville; Jerrod,and Amy
Y(hat are the cr,edi! companies real- clothing, transportation\ fOod or Barber, Mansficl(l; Michelle and
ly-wanting to know? There are three . recreation (or'eliminate it altogether) 'Trevor Petrel, Lancaster; Crystal Earthinss that crc".!itors loo~ for when .to free-up some needed 111oney.
ly and Ryan, New Mp.tamoris. Others
scilqeone applies for credi!. First they
Try to pay as much on your cred- calling to send birthday wishes were
~Qt 1 Uier your character. Aie you an it card_s as yov can. If you only pay Rachel Lund, 4ncaster; and Amy
h6nell person who is willing to pay the minimum on 'a card, it will take White, Cincinnati.
the _loan? Next they think abou,t years to pay it off, even· if you don't -· --~------"'--~
YfJ!II: ci!pll(:ity. How much income do charge any other items on it. Cut up · at a lower amouni each month th&amp;n ·
)'-' hive available that will allow those cr~dit cards so you arc ~01 what the individual paymentS totaled.
y!Ma to rnaJce payments? Finally, whal tempted to charge · anymore wnh However, your payments lire over a
isJOII\i cllpital? What do you.own that them. .
.
,
. .
. longer peri(l(l of.time, so .you will end
~ CUI take in case: ~ou don't pay
.. Next, you may wa~t '? '~tstt. a up paying more money back because
!ICk their money? Thts ts also knoWn credit counselor who spcctaltzes •n · of added interest.
I(EOliAteral or security. · .
. · dealin1 with pro~lems such as tb,is/
Only liS a last resort, should you
.. ':;WJIY ~o people use credtt? There · ~. _counselor wtll be able 10 gyt.U .:me. bankruptcy. This is only done
. . dwe in1in ldvutages. YC!l! -- "'· you !n
effort to t:111b you~ use of when there is no other way out. SOme l
uii 11M Item while y01rare payinl for credtt. ·
.
. ' problems associated with barikruptcy
it!3t llllpl Olll ill limos of emeqen•
:J'IIIi: 10 your crediton,_11iey wtll include ihal·the barikruptty ~ is
ciA. 11 abo allows ~~to GOIIIC usually worlt with _you in ·allowing in your credit file for many ~­
How 111111y ·or us would be llble you to make Pll11ial paymcnll or You will not be llblc to set credit dur~
IIDIIY 1 hQule if we didn~ have ~ extend the pay-beck tuDe.
~ot ·· ioJ this time. The stipna connected
fc:nn of a nloriJqe?
hide lrom them - then lbey wtll think with bankrul*)' rui111 )'0111' finiJICiaJ,
-~-~-lllodiudvllltllftto lhlll you do 1101 Wllltto repaj .their llldpenonll reputation. Try to avoid
• c~Mt k CCIID you elllrl.-- I.a. '
it 11 all costs.
.
' ·
liD!!! •1!11 fiiiiiiOII
If lhllt lllinp 1do not
to
n ia·important to remember that
c:IIIL Wilt. J11U lilY Will II! ...., for a ;. Credit II very valuable. .bul it eu alao
-~--~~S!~!
hOOF tli'Siiiii!Qii. 'J1BIIwbell . bil I very .danJerou&amp; thil!3. Don't ,
;;
,our .... • taltieft CMr ~ a ioan · .over-extend yourself. Be sn).n wiJeil
Cl01141*1Y; Jelafltt ... OOJI. .tj bilok alinJ c:redil. " '

row:

~BS).

.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)'Tm hanging in there," the New
On the, day Dwight Gooden buried York Yankees' pitcher said.
his father, someone stole as much as
The jewelry ipc:luded watches llnd
$.50,000 in jewelry from·his home.
chains worth between $30.000 to
What's worse, police suspect the $50,000, Doniel said. Police said
thief may have been a guest at hi.s · there was no sign afforced entry into
house.
Gooden's St. Petersburg house.
"The people in his house were
friends or relatives, and someone
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi. obviously wasn'.t a friend to do that dent Clinton's, second inaugural
to someone going throitgh the death loolled like the Academy Awards
of a family m~mber," police with al~ the stars 'hobnobbing abou_t.
spokesman Bill Doniel said.
'
. Kevtn S~y popped on stage m
Gooden's father, Dan , Gooden, the middle·of tl)eTennessee Ball at
died Jan. 10 and was buried Saturday: Union Station to ·ask the crowd to

.k

1

~-

CINCINNAn (AP) - About
1,600 abused and nep.cted Ohio
cbildml who already are in foster
care or government protective supervision coitld lose their disability payments this summer, advocacr IVOIIJII

;r
Thief steals ·$50,000 in jewelry'from Gooden's home ...:, ;.~
On day of his father'S funeral,
'

1:t1eat of the

Welfare cuts makirig families
·with. disabled ·~ children nervous

.

·-JIOII•

• LETART FAU.S SCHOLARS· A atudent ol the mouth~~
- Llt8rt Felli Elementlry School wu held Jan. 15. Cl'l*ll Ulld
· ·1n dMimllnlng the IIU&lt;Ient ol the mond1are bellavlor,lllllndlnce,
:::·Citlzanahlp, acadamlc, and moat Improved. The atudlntiii!Qw'n
··pre..ntecl T-ahlrta and certlflcltee for baing ltUdant ol the
" ;,:nonttl, from left: front- Hann11h Millar, flrat grecle; Angle All!*• ··too, DH; Nicole Jonea, third grecle; - r .,.. Corey Pattaraon; Mco4111d. grade; Dan11 Copley, SBH; Zilch Conn~lly, fourth g111dei ;

~DI'IJ81illnlleP91

-~

.

,'fr"'• lI

"
I

~

~

I .

�•

..... 10. The~ a.ntlnll
1117

..

Ohio
lllliDCIK

NBA C.r oAword Puz.le

•

.............
..........
17 .....

PHILLIP
ALDER

41-v..t

• .,.--:1 ...
·-·11~ ......

.....
,__
--

11 ....... _

-~

Smell _ _ _ _ _

3 Tralora lor- 304-17S-1G'N.
Oioplar Doul!lowidtl lluot Sail
Tllouoan&lt;!t Ook -d

--

A.luka Jobol Earn Up To

-

~J!!:~~~~~!:::=--1 $30,000 In Tf1rM Months Fishing·
....
Selmon. Alto Conetruc:tion , C.nIIIIT
noriH, Oil Fieldo A.nd More. Call
NEW PEOPlE
THE -WlY
•~
181D .~.IHI
~It 9a 18 Yra. Setv-U

•••s=:'.t

111 ltiiS3t.

7 Day o 407-875-2022 E11.
05:..:.21&lt;::..;~
:.: :..:2_;__.:.__ _ ~
AVON Soler . $8 ·S15 tHr. No
Door To Door, 'Bonuses· Fun&amp;.
·
1 - ~00 - 127 - 4640 lnd/SII/

.. ....,..,__304·731-

440

tor Rent .

• 32

I•A

Weai

.

---

f MH.l SUPPLIES
&amp; Llvrs·rocK

.Sou"' . Wn&amp; Non.
aNT

••
s.

610 Farm Equipment

bricl&lt; &amp; • - wortc, 30 r-• •perienca. rMIOMbll tai:H. 3048D5-3581 aiiOr e:ODpm, no job 10
omollortOBIG. W\1-021201

18110 1-11 Ford Trocror, Good

Hydrau li C Oil S12 .S0-5gal pail.
Siders EQuipment Henderson,

NEW! Ban• R•r•·•,

---.. -

Uolhtt Pica-Poo 4 Years Old:. Nursa Aide Train ing ProgramMala Pica-Poo 11 Months Okt; 2 Rocksprings RehabiNtation Centtr
Shellila Mixed 5 Monlhs ~d can will be offering training clat181 In
Anrliml G14-388-8228
the mon1h of February. Applications are now being acc.,ted as
lox AU Slz" lor peciling 11 you 317!511 Roci&lt;xpringt Rd.;
are mov1ng or for storage. To Clas1 llze islimiled. Three refttqiu n r,. 114-441-3877.
ence pepera..,. required with ap-

1 0 - "ariy poa1a1er100.
llmltiUOn or dilcr'.mltlllk:ln

- o n race, oolor, raliglor1.

...

-oy.

=~~=:.
rlmi1A111on ... ~-·

-::607==?L:;oa:;t::.:an:.::.:d::F::ou~n-d-:-- J plication. Appll In person bll-

1111a '*''pspm Will noc · .

lOom &amp; 3pn M·F. ShJdeniS

that successf~lly comptele the
LOST: Doberm'an Pincher, black TCE dns ·wm b• el1gible Jor.em·
I rutl wt~ue collar. Vi~i nily of l ·oiO.Ir~!'~·· r\bsol'ulely no pho·ntl
R"burn Rd &amp; Rr 2. 304 :675- I'

knowingly . . . .

_,_forreal-

Our-. are

whlchlo In violl11on of lho

1215.

raw.

lOST: - l o Rod O..tnshund 1·
15-D7 lo New Haven·. 304' 8822218.

advertised In thla neuipaper
are ...ill- on en oquol

hereby
tnfOrmedthllll d' IIIII Ql

oppor1Unily bello.

'LoltrOiange I While Cat Mfst·
lng Part Of Ear. Missing Since
Jan 4th, Blening Road, Northup,
P81r101 Area, Rewatd! Catt 614·
245 · 92~4 . 814 -448 · 1417 . 51&lt;4 448-3171 .

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Yord Salol llull lie Paid In
AdVance. DEA.DliNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to run.
Sundo)- ~itio~· · 2:00 p.m. Fridel.

.._ .

llondol edition - 10:00 a.m. Sar-

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In
Ad1,1ance. Deadline: 1:OOpm rhe
~ before d'le ad js 10 run, Sunday &amp; Monday edition- 1 ;QOpm

•

PUblic Sale
and Auction
lllmley'a Auction Servic:e. Lealie
Lemley, AuotionHr. Houaeho.td,
Ea1ale. Farm Sales. Call 614·44tl·

S241, 814-3B&amp;'D"3.
Rick Pearson AuCtiOn Company,
full lii'T'!e aucuoneer, complete
IUCt1on
serv1ce .
l1censed
M&amp;,Ohio &amp; Wes1 Virgm1a. 304 ·

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

Abtolute Top Dollar: Ali U.S. SIIVtr

Bebysiltlng In my home, in the
Bidwlell arH. Chiktten ol all BQH.
Rareutnce&amp; Available Upon Request 21 Yean Experience Call

AA41 Gold Coinl, Proofaell,

Dilmondo. Anrique Jewelr1. Gold
Rlnga, Prt-1030 U.S. Currency,

Haul ·Service: Will Haul Moa1 Anything! .Call

Any~me.

Lea'tte Mes-

oage, 814-256-1037.

Avenut, ~ipolis. 614-446-~42.

Home Internet Tutoring, E-Mail,
News Groupa,. Realtime Valet,
Video C._l, For ·Mor.a lnform;ation
can &amp;14-4•1-0248.

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks; 1D90 Modeta Or Newer.

!!fttiin Iuick
J I

Ponriac. 1900 EallGalipolo.

lh

AUIO P4r1a: Bu11ng sal=~· Selling parta.

*·

lnteriClr and E11terior finishes carpentry, fireplace reliniahing, addilions, porches, decks, have
18lerene01. 300·875-1013.

Non-W,rkln~ Washers •. Dryers,
SIOftl j_Rafngerators, Fr..ttrl, llaka Home Col 814·"1-ogn
Air Cor,d1Uoner0: Color T. V.'l,
YCift. AIIO Junk Cora, 814-2!51- ProfHiioMI Tree ·S tt\lk:e, Stump
Removal. Free Esrlmltetl In·
1231. 1 ;,.
ourance, Bidwell, Ohio. &amp;1•·388Tot dohar- anliQ~ ... furnftyre. DB48, 814-3117-7010.

14-118~-7-M 1.

T. . RaluM lpoololl 1DD7 DoutMwide, 3br, 2 Hth, t -1,141

Three bedroom. twO balh, doutH
wkta on 8 112 Kres. utellile dllh.
tfH', roral eltclric, fireplace, Darwin

area, d1•-992·5142.
Two 1 bedroom ap1utmen11 tar
sale .wilh etoraoe building , Will

down, 12711/mo, 1rH dellyery a
"'"up. Only II ~ Homot.
NilrOWV. 304-755&gt;5815.

.

.

Wriy Renr? lmmatulalt 2 Bed·
ropms, .'1 Bath, Banks AppraiMd
ApprOVed To Finance, The Fir11
11.000-11.

--72115.

'1101

340 Business and
Buildings

- . . . ....... fiOIC4IIa

rer110t1, .beautllul llf'd; Mtltl

Coumy, Scipio Townlltlt&gt; SR 8D2

Quat off SR 143). Owner financing.

11500 par ocre. Coli lor good
mop. 814-5DM545.

REtHA LS

2 Bedroom In Eureka 114 ·256 ·
1408.

312 Wezgal 3 Bedrooms, Pomeroy Area, $350/Mo., Oeposn Re-

513-574-25311.

P"

.ONLY tF 'fOO carr

1De2 Ford 555-C 4x4 Bocl&lt;h~e

PW6 IT· I ~! · •

:WOO Hours Clean, Under Wa'tranty, $27,000 Firm, Ron Evana
Ent8fpriaes, Jac:ksan. 1·800-s:f79528, 1'4-218-5830.
'

1tt4

ro1a

9181 .

Nice two bedroom apafln'ilnt m

.-.,. •• ., &lt;;... '

Po-. no !&gt;110, 814·DD2-,!5158.

sell on land contract, 814-882·

deposit, c:all 8\l'tnlngs 81&amp;·898·

'

It 245 Union A...,.,e, Pao••far i1
now accepting application• lor
qne bedroom aparrmtnll• Con·
ract management 11 the ·Office
Mon~•Y. lhrough Friday, 8ilm5pm.
.

opprica119no

.,.,rmtn1.

Two bedroom
13D Burrernut, Pom110y. vary clea'n,

5:30.

Thraa btidfoom in Middlepor10
nic.,_$400 per monlh, doODIII
quired, no pels! trw~ bedf'Oam in
Pomeroy, S;iOO per mqnth, ~··
it required, no pats; twD bedroom
in Pomeray, ·S275 P8f monlh, cta-

'*

required, no para. Coli St'·
992 ·2381 MondO! lhiu Friday,

me AleUftdttl, Old Oallt, Grow
Hair&amp; Many,· Many More! 61•·
3117-74011.

TWo bedroom· house. carpttecl

Special Saplic Tank AeratiO-n

460 - Space for·Aent

Mororo nea.oo Installation
135.00 Plus Material. 6 14-4•8·

Mobile Home Space• For Rent,
2C'a Park, C.mp Conley, 8H·
m-&amp;221, .300·&amp;7»507.

4182·

STOIIA!lE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

-·Ohio. '11001

537 •05211'

SERVICE~;

lor oole.' S1500,- 814·

Houlehokl

~·

Toshiba •1110 Fax/Copier
Soullt.1110;S14-UI 1933.

TAN

.Goods
Recondili~ntd

Appliance• : .•.

420 Mciblle Homes·
for Rent

wa-o, Dr~~tt, Rangeo, Ro1rl••tort, to · l)'ay Gqlrana,el
Frtnch Cll~ llojtog, 814-•41-

ms.

bookCIIIl, .POlliO blno, ICI. Will
also do lntlde carpenrry work.
304-e75-.910.

810 .

Home·
:~·
.:. !I
lmprvvemenll . ·~~

llrHOMe

!Sly DIRECT end SAVEl
CornrnM:iaiiHom unitslrom

''"·

Low~ 'paymenta

FREE oator t:olllog

,

Comfort 01pov !illruiol Gu Witt:
Iota Hoaror Price-$175, 81.._..._ .

Wil BaWali In Mi. Homo Relliblo,
And Sxperiencod, All Shins. 2.5
Mile&amp; 0~1 211, S12 A Dt~r. Will
Take 1nlan11. 614-•4Hl80• .

8132.

'

Country FUrnilln. 304-115:.UO.
Rr·2 N, 6mi~1 Pr P1Moonr. WV.

T... Sor M. :oun n -s. · .

GOOD

predldlot• fOr the

~ASE to
newa~. P.O.

A.PPLIA.NCES
Wtlthera_i dryen, relrlgeratDrt,

ii.Tt''·

USED

$2 and

rangtl. :~k•to• Appliances; 71

Vine llrH~ CaiiS14·44&amp;·73t8,
1·800-o4DD-3411. . &gt;

3 Bedroom, dilhwalhor. g~rden
tubt 11raoe. converuenl to Pl.
Pleaaant. ao-.c .ll5·3571 Even ·

•

BERNICE

BEJ:)E OSOL

ingo

3

..

2 aa.~-mo, 11!111.... , I
Down 211, Nice, Aallla•
eo, _Depoal1 Roquirod, 11~41-

'

'

(1.

'·

I

,.

llldllll&gt;"' molll1a ' -'

•••·•1'

.

"'

"1ni·l1· Jan a2 f887

,...llhMd

by~ '· ....... today will oorretpOnd to the ellol1

Aatra'-Grlph, CIO.&lt;Iflla · you expend. If you dO 1 good jeb, you wiH
Box 1758, Mumty tllll ~"""'well; Kyou don'i, 111en1
be a

pay;;....

. , . - .."'
'
. ~· .uaf!A~~-»)Somtonewilll
,u,lb jii ._., 11~ 1a) TOday, top ·_whom you u-11y 1181 alang 'quHe . .11
pt1or11y 11hblllll' be ~&lt;to · ~ rlilght be teety today. Horilv.r, K you a..
'ID ~ youf ~. II you rplft4 IOierlnllncl utldar-ICIIIIQ, IIIIa ~notni&amp;ly
too ~ 111M playing llaund. ,_pay- .-be hlltdltll MIJIV..
check lWI be .,.._
,
.. ICOII 10 (OoL 14 fla:, 22) WCN1iwitite
. T.MipiUI c.tl. fl I Ill You . . ~~ _ , pW&gt;Inetlla - poatlble IOdly, 1Jut

-. .. b.

lwiiiOIIaluh.

.

Wlf."' IIIII ~ IMOUII~ IOday I )'1111 Clplf- • CA"Ca (.Mie 11~ II) Y~ will 11ft
Ill •111111 ... filii"· Cot,...MI), II )'IIU 1be1•1~ IOdiV II )'IIU IDIDW lw golclall
HI • 'tb Ill filii ar - . .•• Vlll11' _. . lllle. 'l:laaiC111111a • you wUd . . to Ill_,

,.

i

\

'

\

'

-- won, '

Stdoii, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10111Cl- MW iY,re
1o allite 'flU ZOdilc aJgn.
.J
VIRGO, (Auf. 2,_.... 22) Walch your
PIICU (M. IGIMarch 10) If you !,. fliiiM1' carefully todlf. ff lh8 alarta pushInvOlved tn a ~ dNI today. XOU ing !he wrong button• and pulling the
might b• both at...wd and lrlvoiOua. Wlong '-'8. 100 ahould ·be PNJ?.If'd to
HcpsfU!IY,yOu!'utta••Qid11111Mwii!'OI . maka~•- ,
•
, ~ •

- •
. '
. paahiYI fiiiiiiCiaj cyol• at thll 111114. you may .,.._ to lnlpl,. Ina ~
ln 1J1 ... ahiMtd, you 1IIWtt- lniD a . l'ioWIOIW, duil1 . II)IM an - YOII oo-11!0f011, ao IN! "'-Y dan't lmpilde
llttl· ~alclrall,andltwiiiH- ahouldoountp~.-on~. , ,,
yawpUjjlua.
. _
•'"l!llnlllld ltllllino- ,aur prmnt JT I (lllr 1 1 . lilt In I aaiiDittl,. UarTTMIUI ptlllt. IHiact. 21) Take
onl. Y•~ wiH lldmiN 1M pizazz and _. 1 oor IOday, I wll Ill belli you lllllt,· _.. notlo play lavorllel tocllry. If you ·
Clll4ila4 ol"-- alii I I . .
; ..mlilld 1w ti*lllan. YCAII WI/ Ill .tiDing . - r ane lltand with allllltlon llhh

• !9 •• • • M. ,., lwl••••

'

"'

llt)g~·

T_,...

.

,,.

five

)&gt;

'

;

'

'

'

rR-rH-ri-II=:
..,'. well_"Thedone·guynever
who·said that work
1i 1
needs
be
·1
l'-::::::
t-_,s...,I
I ·:::L::::=:~ done ·over," _sighed
my ex· .

'

r.

G E. M N

1

L

~~~s~~ ~}end;

•never

rak~d

SCIAM LETS ANSWIU
Barlled • Yours • Bagel· Lenity· YESTERDAY
After many miles in the car the man moaned to.his
wife and sighed,·"We driVe the car$ of tomorrow dn the
r11ads of YESTERDAY."

WolftT.,nlntledo

51

· ··

lfpllllln{llw 01111. you mlgiUnd up wil!l
0111- flltnd.
C' NCORII (Ow. INIII, 11) Strbclr•
,aurCMII..._ ~.IIIII do )OUr bu t

0011111' h ·~!I'll )11111111 to . ..-1 IIIII....., whll dl\' I P
10 hlfp YQUr lollld onea. You will IMI
Ul:li I; tjlt. llndiDrV11111'~vGt1411t LB~···· .,-n.re 11'111 you good.ilbtMihltllllr.
.
.

I

'

.

8 Complele. the chuckle quoted · ~
1l--,:~6~:y~.:,;,;"'l:.:....;lr:7.::.,1r-...f
1
-J..
_
_.
__
.;_L...;....L.
-.1--..1
bv lilling in 1he. missing -d• . ·
L.
you develop from llep No. 3 below. ·

UP&lt;igh~ Ron Evant Entar~rioos,

MERCHANDISF

Fobruory 11~ 1300tllo.,
014-245-5471

--

45Woft

.-f-+-1 . 47 An.ntlclft1illl:

•••

:JCM -773-58~}. Uason WV.

required. 814-992-3080.

~-

ll:nr-+--4--

~ 7~ 1 08.

Sltepiriq roorna wuh cooktng .
Also tra11er ,pace on river. All

3 Bedrooma I Gatagt Country
Sanlng Col Chrii81•-&lt;71-G1 .

·-w.n.
.............
Ma!Mnd
42 lar.nd

truckload, th•-

Sldo II Sido Ralr~"r ll&lt;own,
- , Duly G.E. Woohor, HoiiV)'
Oury Kenmare Dryer. 8 14·379·
2720 AFTER p

470 W~aclto Rent .

at·

Sharp 2r cOlor TV~ 1200 nice.

-

warHoRonr.

pm.

in Mi-•tpart, ,. Pill\

•

., EaYidl8ll
41 ACtar

'

Salt! Doll .Collect1on Sale! Any
Qa11 esD lloro Than 1 s-45 lotada·

085 a&amp;40.

ROoms

~ooil

I177,114.2JH251. ·

30 PwfomMd' \ . ' ' •
31 Edlllllti!Qii,
32
31 Sin.

to

Seatoned hardwood, delivered

81 ...46-95110. -·
·

Unfurniafted 3 Btdtoom Houae
On 40 Acres Near Twcoon lake,

2t0

at Smell- ,

Street, New York, NY 10025-71~.

ancs ttacked. S50

Fumlshacl .

450

·

28~,,. ·

DbL
Pua
Pua

1oi' 1br. HUD subaid·

HUD,

t9B2 14170 llobiie Home On 1.0
A.cro&amp;, Porche&amp;, •15,900, 513574-253D.

HVIC~S

2S Stufl

Twin Ri\t8t's Tower, rioW acctpling

no pera, 11- Room&amp; lor ront - - k or rnonrh.
c:umy diPOWI. 814·982-8818 alter Starling II •12111mo. Gallla Ho101.

end cloon, no intldo poll, *PQoil

lltJMJ ( i.\1

..
·P ua

Now·in lll8glllllimous.mood, t~ Hog
concluded, "lt.a I'have always said, you
· were perfectly right to pass.•
U you have never read uy ol these
wonderful slorlea, buy bolh boob! ·
Each is available for $11.50, JII!Btpaid, ·
from The Bridge World, 39 Weal 84th

One beclroDm af)trtm~nt in Pt.
P1taoon~ 814-Hl!-5851.
..

11~e1 ~elri~erator,

a:~ am 10 4:00

Pau

'j

ISO Ill- L01illl .
brldge-playlng animals, They are &amp;....1"-..L..• "Bridge In the Menagerie" and
··-· "'11.
"Bridge In tbe Fourth Dimension.•
Not that I think it germinated the
idea in Victor Mollo's mind, but the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
star ·of George Orwell's • Animal
by Lull campos
Farm" i~ Napoleon, a pig, and the
'
Clllbrily
ClpMf
WIW
ere
CNII«&lt; bom tp I I w bJiamoul-peopll, pM1: lnd ...,...nt
·leading character in Vietor Mollo's
EliCh
n ... Clfii*Jil8ndl.lor .nohf.
cU:,. ..... C
menagerie stories Is the Hldeoua Hog.
This deal is clanie Mollo. When
North, tbe Rueful Rabbit, puaed CM!r ' 0 Y' B
EX Y
Z 0 P Y 0 P •C
LXK ZOE
XC
be spades, H.H. launched "on a vigorous lipeecli In whicll he neither repeat- F'X B P,
,v 0 p
Z 0 X
DKY
NPVI
ed hbneelf nor stooped to use a llirigle .
... '
Parliamentary expression:•
(SMFFMI
AXZDXLB
West, Papa the Greek, led the heart DFMYP.•
ace ~to look at the table" !rather than
FOEPVME)
OFMOEP
ELP .
the more sensible tnunpl. .
· The Hog ruffed and cashed two top
diamonds. When East dl~ H.H. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It Ia a great shock at a young· age to find -that In a
· · .
.•paused, leaving unfinished a pithy world of Gary Coopers you'are 1he Indian.• ~ James·Baldwfn.
sentence about craven cretinous
curs.• Then he spread his hand.with a
cey of trilimph. Clearly Weal had startWOII
ed with 7-1-5-0 shape. H.H. could cub
lAM I
five diamond tric~. diiiC8rding a heart
and two clubs from the dtinuny. Then a
O. lour
Reorra"'l" ten.,. of lha
crossruff would bring in five more
xc,amblad · word• botricks for l f. llf ill:' i~. apadel' ilfcl
· 'low oto· form laur wordt.

llearq.

Ont bedroom ' lpaflment , fur.
nit~ecl, ex.rra nic~ &amp; clean . No
poll. Phor1e 304-f75- 1318.

Pomeroy, 107 P1Moonr Ridgt, 3 $2751mo. plut·Qdllllot, HUO ap.
bedroom, 1·112 balh, $315 plus prw«/, a14·7~315.

two. bedroom,

••Pa11!

J.oi1iliWI&amp;ild

C8t

_111A_,._~:'_La•_•'_S_(C:_.!c!\~L:~~~s•

Plck·ur. Fou

Wl'leet' Drive 21,000 Mi 11 61 ~
441.0247

ized apr. lor elderly and hand j·
S3001 .capped. EOH 304-e75-BB7D.

8 Room house •n.C.Iiflon ,
mo + utilitie" gaa .heat. 304· 713-

Pomeroy-

::&lt;'.

PorT10111J Ci.H A,trtrnonlo, lo!Wod

410 Housn for Rent

8002.

.

101,851 $8,950, 81 ...48-7421.

Going butinooo lor 1811- Second
S1ree1, RL 33 in Muon, 31M- 7735851 .

q~rod.

Explorer Eddlo Bauer

4114 E•cellenl Condition, MH"I

Wan1
To B~y : Llnlo Tykes
Kltcho Set, Workohop, Pial- WtH do ttoust cttaninQ 1n Pi.
~~· Po".' blo Any 0111tr lillie Pl.. unt &amp; Galtipollt Qnio area.
P1MII Gill 814·245- Have references, available a,.,. ~
limo. Cai304-675-D21 .

&lt;-,f

TRANSPORTATION

polio door.-Call 614-315-8021 , .

larMiko.

Pau

3•
Pua
Dbl.
Pau

23

c:r

tanka, 74.000 milee, exc

17.800. 30-4·112-3570.

.v.rw nl,::e 1t85 1&amp;1170 with ·2
bl.th1. Large i"l'nd ldrchen with

5!158320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Taking Ordtra for hand-made

I r.H'I0Yr.1£-Nl

1988 Ford Full Size

Van, dual altiheat,

h09k-upa. Cali allor ~:oo p.m., . ~--=-'.:._·.::.M..:.____.,..

CIOdl.l, gOld, liiYer,

oolne,~ICIIH, 01111H, old a10no
jart,
blue &amp; whitt diihts, lofd
wood •••· milk bonleli, M•io•
coun1 Adveflisamanl.· Oaby

. .......

755-5115.

5 lora. aide b1 soda, $a,soo. Mt~r
tell On land conrract. .Call 30•·
1.75· 5108 anytime far more lnlormotion.

4'x18' """'" ground pool, TP wa-

MOS Electromce T.V. Repair.
VCR Repair, Salellllt Repair, We

glan, fhina,

Do- Homoo Nitro, wv. 304-

Georges Portable Sawmill. dOn't
haul your logs to the mill JUSt call
3)&amp;-675-1957.

Stifling. Etc. AcquiSitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

om Mf&gt;ue,

blowidM. UISAV~III FrH oatup I delivery.- frH central air.

122 Highland Ave: ~om. 2
bll\ rarcod air gu lurnoce, - trol ok, Ml booomont •.s,IIOO.

l dtckl, largo landacopod lot
Meadowhills
Sub-dlvltlon.
French City Homoo, Inc. S14-m9340 or 304-1175-3313.

215£:"
....,........

kir+-+-

35o Lots &amp; Acreage

sq. II., great room, 3bf. 2batha,
oak catiinets, heat pump. porch

"'* "' --

10
, Dec- haii"-Y
11.

Batsford bas tePrlnted the lint .two .\' lo:!rl-11bqoD by Vlet11r Mollo featurjnli his

-loo

310 Homes lor Salt

·
ClA 402· Clo Galll~olis .Daill 30...s7a:nz.
·Tribune, 112$ Third Ave. Gaii~U&amp;, 3 lledroon, 1 Balh, Kll&lt;:hon Ap.
01\45631
.
pliancao,_Anracallvo lnterlOI'. Full
Tho Molgo County ·Council on UnflrNtud Ba1Mnanl. 1 car GaAging, Inc. It accepting applica- rage. New vin11 Siding &amp; HHI
lions for lht poalllon of. Retired Pump. City Schoolt, 1614)•441and Senl.Qr Volunlaer Program 0951
(RSVP) Coordinaro•. Appilclllono
3br modulor, - .....
and a po1ition de~dprion can be newowner,
aaiJ cabinets, new carpel,
obtaiood hom Darla Hawt.,., Ad- new
pump. frDnt I ttlr
miniarralive Alllarant at the dKka,heat
Iaroe IDI, low down PIW·
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Cen·
ter, 112 EaSI Memorial Oriva, Po- ment. Meadowhills SUb-division.
meroy, OH. Deadline for applica - French City Homao, Inc. S14-4411tion submia~ ion ie Febr-uary 3, 9340 ... 300-e7S-3313.
1DD7.
Cedar Siding Sectional. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Full Bathl, Pool, Out170 Miscellaneous
building, Close -ro Schaal And
111111, 1992, 11193, aild 191111 Holi- Grocery. Poner Area, Evening
day Barbie's For Sole 814·378- 8 14-388-8009 or Doy 81 4-44S~3S57,000
D075
.'
House Sale; ; Ulle 'Ta GaiiiPolia,
180 Wanted To Do
3 Bodroomo. Dining, Utility, Porch,
314 Acre, Fireplace, 1 112 Balhl,
An't add Joba, painling, gutters
$45.000,
Call&amp;1•-oM&amp;-2DD1 .
cleaned. 114· 245· 5819 or 304·
675-7112.
New mig. sectional hama, 14 75

814·317·05211

wanted to Buy

10

D018 Ell 8015.

R EA L ESTA TE

. "*

.

By Phillip Alder

Muit Hll 5 di1plaw ,model Oou-

a,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

frilllrl.. .

Avail-

Secretary Receptionist needed.
Eatablithed down IOWn business.
All General Type Olllce Experi·
ence Require,d. Send ~esume

Yard Sale

70

Postal Jobs 3
I
abte, No E1perlence
For lntormaliDn. Call

• ...... c-.

5X-nty

241n1Ni111 ....

. '

owner fi -

- . y 1111-iiP. 3114-755&gt;7191.

_tho F - Fair HoualngAcl
o11- which makeo allaQII

a own.

·From Orwell to Mollo

nancing avoloblo •nwmo. Fr•

In _Pal'lon, Holiday Inn, GalipaliL

.......

3 lnfatuNd
4 llomr1n 300

Openlug lead: • A

car-. .2,000. 304-1175-1874.

wv. 30-4-e75-7421 .

Hosreu tCathier Full-Time Apply

2No

Vutnerabie: North-South
Dealer: We1t

PIOfllllon.ll
Slrvlc:el

All ,..1 advertillnll jn'
tNIIMuutptllpe'l' is aubtlelto

. ' !lalla ., JIIMt
35-feh.

·=···-

---

HA.RTS IIASONARY • -~~

· frtfe. wood scraps tor kindling HOllE COMPUTER USERS
I•• ,Clad, 101' load! Baum Lumber, NEEDED. $45,000 inc:ome potenl ial. 1-800· 513·4343 Ext.
a......
lil388 Call Fot Details.

-

.

1 Fulur,..llya.'

• lt. K Q J ~0
• A K Q J io

Steel Building Sales a Canst
Huge Profit Potential Manulactur.
tr Se(ec~~ng Deater In Availabie
Markets 303-758-4135 Ext. 8200.

12170.

.-n. 304-875-5505.

•KJ76$3
• 4
.gl71$4 .

......

33-IIIIJWY truck

34lYDeOf-'"

• AK2

Toll Free 1-800·467-5586 EXT.

Kit..,, 3-4 monlhs old, females.
Zlnilh rloor model TV. needs

·---

8Gidlt .

SIMI Building' Doolerahlp, Commorelal, Agriculrural, Rotldonrtal.
National Company Selecting
Doelor ., Open lotorkell 303-7!1e3200, Ell 51100.

230
Earn 1000's weekly ttulling envelopes al home . Be your bOss:
Starl now. No experience. Free
Beautiful Part Chow Puppies. · supRiies info. no obligarian.
Ployful ll1d Cvl0114... 1-1"7&amp;4
Send S.A.S.E. to Nugget Unit
~lo Molher lab &amp; Hu..1 Fa- 384·8 , 10151 University Btvt:l. Or·
ther Travetino $atesrftan Good lando FL 32117
Children, Bu1 Frisky Pups. 814 ·
Eaay Work! Excellenl Payl At·
4-411-0218;014-448-4787.
semble Products at Home. Call

.

ti8765

Or

rooord, o-ltnce wi1ll top 1*"Y
loada a plus. v• riliable driving
hilllorJ. 40 hout1 per $5.751
hr. Apply 11 Meigs County Ubrary
until noon 1123197.

21 Hilling IOUnd II~
22~
.
.
111m
II Ford llop
2S Hald on tltiiiiiY 17 O,Unanl ·
27 I.Ubrlcllld ·,
~
I
31 Popur. juice
DOWN ••
32SM-

01-11-17

• Q 10.
•• Q 10 g 8 4.3
• s2

1\pili'lmanll

. •Jt78543

t!.yl

Boollimobile driver· mull have
clall B or A COL , $ODd driving

1-800-S!II-1781
Ext 1221

54 Scala )unlit
.

10r ront ln Roci!&gt;o. l14-ll2·1103f,

�Ohio Lottery

Eastern
defeated
by Vikings

Plck3:
6-2·7
Pick 4;
8 4 9-1

BuckeyeS:

.

'· ••

'
•

.,

.' .
&gt;
.•

.
,.

'

.,·'

'

,..

.,

'

V6,P

AS
LOW
AS:

· ·Vot47,N0.1a

......,., Olllo,...., Publlelllntl

'

.'

~

Com~rny

2 8tcll0018, tl ........ _ . ....
AOM-Co.IIIC ~IJI'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wedneaday, Jan.,.y 22, 1887

:.t om missioners will.advertise. -Takingsha
~development diree,tor's post

,

·. SSPEED,
AS
LOW
AS:

40e•

•

·,

•

L-•
pelt-

7·13-20..27-30

Sporta on Page 5

~

A chence of •h-era
until midnight,

'·•

.,

'

I
I

'

'
t

••
'
l'

!JY JIM FREEMAN
,i,ntlllel Newe 8Uiff
•: • Mei1i County ,Commissioners
lOOk the rmt step Monday afternoon
~\(iward piling a new county ceo' nQmic development director.
·111e baird agreed to adYertise an
Opcrilng for the position, along with
' ajob·description. The advertisement
. Will call for resumes staiing. job
; experience and salary requi~nts.
· · Commission President Janet
Howard said the office will likely be
·set up toially within the auspices of
: the Meigs County Board of Com·
·triissioners.
· •· "The way it was set up last time
~didn~ work," Howard said. "It's got
:robe· for the bettenneili of the county:or we'~~: not going to do it."
• Although the office of former

· economic development director Julia
Houdashell was physically located in
the Meigs County Chamber of Comm~e, her salary was paid by the
· county commisiioners.
Howard said the office became
"too political'' wjth the. chamber and
Counnity Improvement COfJXlf*li.on,
and said Houdashelt apparclltly forgot where her paycheck carne from.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton dis·
agreed, saying the coonty needed
cooperation from the chamber and
CJC, and called for a meeting with
chamber an~ CIC officers.
Howard said commissioners were
supposed to mc;et with them Monday
afternoon at the commissioners'
meeting, but said they canceled their
appointments.
.
Commissioners agreed to set up

another meeting with the chamber ·
and CIC to discuss how the office
could be set up. with l;loward slress·
ing that it would have to be held in
public.
· .
"J. want to do this in a public
forum," sbe said.
One thing the commissioners did
not act on Monday was funding for
the Meigs County Cham~ of Commercc's Touri1111 Off'JCC.
Althou1h all three commissioners
agreed that tourism is important to
the county, they do not yet agree on
how it should be funded or to what
extenL
Hoffman said it is his belief that
the people and companies who ben·
efit from tourism should foot the bill
far its promotion, while Thornton
said the county should fund the

tourism office by the same amount it
did last year - approximately
S7,SOO, including about $2,SOO. in
advertising CXJ¥11SCS.
Howard said she is reluctant to
fund the office with taxpayers' money, but thinks the board should continuc to pay for the advertisements
which she said benefit Meigs County. Howard also noted that the county cannot.affot'l! to fund the office at
this time.
·
"Tourism is economic developmcnt," said ·Thornton. "We ·nced to
keep moving forwards ... l'm afraicf
we'll fall bllckwards."
Hoffman said private individuals
and business owners have tOld him
that taxpayers shwld not pay to promote tourism.
(Contll\ued on Pege 3)·

~~as~e.rn building plans -.prepared·for;. b,i d
: : : The 'Eastern LoCal Board of Edu-

constrUction documents will be ready
cation may be ready in . Marcil to the first week in February ,to submit
.advertise 'for bids for constrW:tion of to the Ohio Depanment of Education
·a. new elementaiy school ind reno- for review and approval, said Super;'o!&amp;tions to the ~urrent high school.
intendcnt Deryl B.·Well.
. .
Based on an .expected three-week
, · Board members were updated on re-.:iew period, 'the district hopes to
.t~ building project at their recent bid the JlfO~CI in Marcl), llydded.
regular inccting . at Basl&lt;im ·Hiah
John Rice· arid &lt;;ircll Bailey were
Sc~l· ,
. .o .. . ",. . elec~.president and ~ce PI'Cs~nt. ..
:Ji",-•··.~.
...,...-- ~&gt;&lt;· ,. • I!- ~~tlvely,lllltinllliO bcMI~ otp·
· · At,thfs ~late, the con,Struction doc• · nizaiional' me:cting .I"'Jile•M!l!io Mar'u!ftCnts are ~xim~ly 80 per~:ent tin was appointed to serve as the Ol)io
complete, it was reported.
School Board Association legislative
Jbe district anticipates that final liaison.

The first order of business duririg · • Set graduaiiori for May 2S.
the organiiational meeting "'BS the ,' • · Approved .~ district-wide proswearing-in of newly-hired Treuur· fessional development inserv.ice for
er Lisa Ritchie by James Smith. pres· Thursday ar2:1S p.m.
·ident pro tempore.
·• Will.host the county spelling bee
at Bastern High School on Feb. 19 at
In personnel matters, txw,d mc:m~ 7 p.m.
hers approved Nancy Scarbrouih to
• Approved a-resolution to declare
provide home tutoring for' a lliah three tardics cqtlalto one day's unexschool s~Q~nt. lll)d accc~ .J!!J!Cs ~~~sed ~ . .
,: . -. " , ,
'Haymaii •rid Darin Logan as sub~ti·
• .Set ffic thirll TueSday of each
tute teachen: .Thc board,:ltccepted Bill mon!h u 6:30 p.m. as.·lhe ~te and •
Blaine's ·resignation as )'earl!ook tii!IC'of its regular board ll'ieciing, and
advisor.
set tlic next meeting for Feb. 18 at ·
In other business, the board:
6:30p.m. in the hilh school library.

Fed chai·rnl'an rn.aintains flawed
CPI. ,inflatins;J cost-of·li~ving hikes
.
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Reserve.
He said one of the Fed studies put
WASHINGTON - Senior citi· the upward.bias between 0.6and I.S
ZCRS may ·,be up~et and President
percentage point with I percentage ·
C~nton may be duo:king the issue, but point the best rnid·range esti!'latc,
die man who staned it all isn't giv- very cloie to the Boskin figure of 1.1
in' up.
.
percentage point.
. .
.
•. Federal Reserie Chairman Alan
The Boskin commiSSion csumat·
Greenspan still thinks a flawed Con· ed that lowering the CPI by l.l .persulner Price Index is inflating annu- centage point would produce $ Ll
al cost-of-Jiving increases.
trillion in budget savings over I 2
&lt; Greenspan used an appearance years, putting. ~ go~emment·a long
bC:Jore the Senate Budget Committee way toward achieving the 11oal•Pres·
,on Tuesday to V.oice support for the 'ident Clinton has made the ~ pri·
'findings of on advisory panel that ority of his second .term: a balanced
issu~ .a controversial report in budgtt
·
·
: ',
~cember that estimated the index's ·
The savings come from trimming
upward bias at t. 1 percentagc 'points an·nual cost-of-living adjustments for
a year
"'
. the recipients of Social Security' and
· .Th~ Fed chainnlm said ,thc find· otherbencfitpr;osramsandbyrilising
inJs of the panel. headed by Stanford taxes through a smaller adjustment in
URivcrsity economist Michael tax brackets each year.
,
Baskin, w~re very much in line will\
However. the administration wilt
iwp Separate reviews conducted by not include any additional. CPI
slaff economists at the Federal adjustments in the budget the presi-

AP Economic• Writer

"·'
I

.,

'I
.,.
I

'

dent iends Congress on Feb. 6, arguing that more study is needed by
inflation experts.
Supporter$ of a move to trim the
CPI, however, were heartened by '
Greenspan's comments on Tuesday,
saying it showed the issue was still
very much alive in this year's budget
debate.
'
Manha Phillips, executive direetor of the Concord Coalition, an anti·
defidt group, said the. support oi
respected economists like Greenspan
would keep the issue alive through·
out what could be a long negotiating
process.
"A CPI adju!!lment is more likely
to be something that will come into
play towlirds the end of the process

afterhoth~ideshavedonceverything

that is liumanly and politically possible to balance the b~dgct but are
still coming up short," Phillips said.
Fed Vice Chairman Alice Rivlin,
Clinton's former budget · director,

Mill delay dis.appoints
Mas.on County residents
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Mason County residents say they are
disappointed by a'Ncw York compn·
ny 's plan to indefinitely postpone
building a $1.1 billion pulp mill on
the Ohio River.
"Everybody talks about new
things coming. in, and it never happens," said Carolyn Wheeler, an
Alen Grwnapln
employee of the Apple Grove Market, located in the community where
said in a published interview Tuesday Parsons &amp; Whittemore said in 1989
that it made sense for budget writ~rs it would build the mill.
to adopt a temporary 0.5 percentage · Many residents of Mason County
point trim in the annual CPI cost-of- supported the project, ·which they
living adjustment while the Bureau of hoped would alleviate the area's 10
. Labor Statistics works \'n a more per· percent unemployment. But Parsons
manent fix for its inflation gauge.
&amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye BI'()Ok,
Greenspan used a similar argu- • N.Y., said Friday it was putting the
mcnt ~fore ihe Iludgct Committee, project on hold heeause world marsaymg 11 made no sense to contmue ket conditions arc not favorable.
cla1ming there was ~o upward bias in
The privately held company is the
such areas as med1cal care s1mpiY.~arcnt firm of Apple Grove Pulp &amp;
because they could not be measured. Paper, the comJlllny that proposed to

.$1a't wa~ . not directeCI ·. :·- -,.-~---._,
:'t abortion anniversary .·
-

HARFIY DUNPHY

.

. Alieocl~ Mil! Wdter .

~he sakl ."with the force of less than

' .a. fir~~racker.' There was no explo- .

, lVASHINGTON -A small fus- s1on.
; illll ·device went off in a hotel
Cl!mlll said the man "had a:cou-·
clh,J.~Ib~'s· hand today and J!?licc pic specks of blood on ~Is hand ; i9ltially ,feljt'Cd.it was a bomb direct- n?' even cuts -:-that h~. w1ped Qff and
&lt; 1~:at a nearby Planned Parenthood
hiS ears were nngmg.
.• '..Ct (lie.
'
·
The man went hom~ and heard
; ;·, Within houn. police said there ne.ws co~crage of the mc1dent. He
' Will no evidence linking the incident called ~" employer and swd .he
,'io:the abortion i:ontrovei"Y· The lrii· · m~ght .be the person seen runnmg
tia~c01'CCms were {ueled by the fact
fronfthe scene.
.,. tOday is the 24th anniversary !If the
"He C8J!IC in and has been coopSypn;me Co.un ~~ vs. Wade dec;i, eratin1 with us," said Carroll. ,
sio11 Jeaalizlng abortion.
· .&gt;
Concerns were ra.~sed because of
l :·An eniploree of the ·Ma)'ftower '' abQnlon clinic bombmgs last "'~k m
Hb!CI wir leaVJna hit shift this morn- Tu111. ()kla., and Atlania.
inJon the wt)' to the bus and saw this ,
The incident also took place near
daxice amona some: truh on the side~ Mayftpwer Hotel w~re fi~t
WJ)Ic," said April ·Carroll, spokes·
lady, Hilllll)' QiniOrt and V1ce Prest·
~an for the Treuwy's BIII'AII of deal AI Ocin' illcl his wife, Tipper,
Ah:ohQI, Tobacco and Firearms field
~ to lllchla a 1100n luncheon
office heR.
.
11J101*nC1 by dill .Nitional Abortion
, She said · the device' wu a. fu110 1t1111ta ~on
aAcn,bly for •·practice ~ and
"No born&amp; want off inside the
is : ,1101 clluified as a desttuclive bulldiq. The ataff is line and so trCi
dev~ of any kind.
·
' the patients we arc seeing," said
. : !•'lllcre i1 a pin in it and it looks Roaeann Wiaman, preaide11t of
like.the top nte!=hanirm of a pnlllle .PIMI!Id Plnalhood Wubingt~. "It
.willlo!al the botiOnl amrde cuing,'' lllew ·up Ill his hand and be ran
Ct!roll said~ It jloppad Ia l)is hand; . away,"

Le.,....

... .
'.

!.

.

,(II

operate the mill at · Apple Grove
along the Ohio River.
Environmentalists and some labor
unions oppi&gt;sed the mill. Environ'mentalists were concerned the mill's
. blcachipg process would add to pollution in the Ohio River. Labor
unions feared the company would not
employ local workers.
Troy Lcport, who worb at Ser'vice Machine Co. in Huntington, said
the mill might have enabled him to
work closer to home. His company
moved to Huntington from Mason
County several years ago, requiring
hiin to drive 30 minutes each way to
work and back .
·The mill "would've heen real
close to home and I heard they
would have paid well ," Leport said.
"I would rather work in the county
where I ltve."
Although the company released a
(Continued on p
3)

11941

. tate nearing closure
on Lucasville lawsuits
COLUMBUS · (AP) ~ . State:
prison officials say a $4.1 million set·
tlement with prison inmates nearly
brings to a close the legal wrangling
started by ·the April 1993 riot at the
Southern Ohio Correctional facility.
The state was expected to.file the
agreement today in U.S. District
Court ·in Cincinnati. JudgeS. Arthur
Spiegel would still have to approve
the deal before ittaltes effect.
"The cost of a lengthy trial and
possible appeal woulcl far exceed the
· ·cost of settlement," Reginald Wilkin·
son, director of the O~io Dcpanment
of Rehabilita!ion 'and Correction,
said Tuesday. ·
'
He added that the state was hot '
admitting to any wrongdoing in its
handling of the . ll; d!lY riot .or the
events leading up to it.
The state spent close to $2 million
on Jeatil fees defendina aaainst riot·
nlated lawsuits, Wilkinson adcled.
The family of iii¥!~ Robert Vil. l~dinjlham; who wu killed in. the
rioting, sellled its Yii'Onpul death suit
11ainst' the ·state in J99S for
, $850,000. Othel' s.uits pendin11 in the
Ohio Coun of Claims on behalf of

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="396">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9775">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28078">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28077">
              <text>January 21, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2888">
      <name>athey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3436">
      <name>barsotti</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="499">
      <name>howard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1099">
      <name>rickard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4514">
      <name>shaeffer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="758">
      <name>spires</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
