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Monday, December 13, 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

O,hio Lottery

~-

Steelers
beat
Dolphins

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
DEC. 14 - Belpre - Hom~.~
DEC. 17 - Miller - Away
DEC. 21 -Waterford- Home
GIRLS
,DEC. 13 - Miller - Home
DEC. 20 - Southern - Away
DEC. 23 - Waterford - Away
BOYS
DEC. 14 - Vinton County - Home
DEC.17 - Alexander - Away
DEC. 18 - Unioto - Away

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEPULE

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 14 ....................................... BELPRE
DEC. 17...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 21 ......: ........................WATERFORD
JAN. 7 .................................... SOUTHERN
JAN. 11 .......: .......................... WELLSTON
JAN. 14................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15 ............................... AT OAK HILL
JAN. 18................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 21 ................................ AT TRIMBLE·
JAN. 25 ................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 28 .....................................AT MEIGS
FEB. 1..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. 4........................................... MILLER
FEB. 8 .............................. AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 11 ..............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18 ...................................... TRIMBLE
FEB. 19.......................... AT WATERFORD
Coach- Tony Deem

DEC. 13 ........................................ MILLER
·DEC. 20 ............................ ATSOUTHERN
DEC. 23 ......................... AT WATERFORD
JAN.-3 .............................. ATWELLSTON
JAN. 6................ AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 12 ................................ ATWARREN
JAN. 13...................................... TRIMBLE
JAN. 19 ............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 20............ AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 24 .......................................... MElOS
JAN. 27 .......................... AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 31 ...................: ............... AT MILLER
FEB. 2........................................ WARREN
FEB. 3....................................SOUTHERN
FEB. 7 ..................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 10 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
Coach -Scott Wolfe

GIRLS
DEC. 13 - Alexander - Home
DEC. 16- Nelsonville-York- Home
DEC. 20 - Eastern - Home

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE .
DEC. 13 ............................... ALEXANDER
DEC. 16................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 20 .................................... EASTERN
DEC. 30............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 3 ....................................... AT MEIGS
JAN. 6 ..................................... AT MIUER
JAN. 10 .......... ~ ........................... BELPRE
JAN. 13 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 22 ..........................AT WATERFORD
JAN. 24 ..................................WELLSTON
JAN. 27 ......................: ............... TRIMBLE
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 31 .....:.................... AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 3 ................................. AT EASTERN
FEB. 7......................... :................. MII,.LER
FEB. 10.............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
Coach- Jenny Roush

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

JAN. 8 ....................................... WAHAMA
JAN.11 ............................ ATSOUTHERN
JAN. 14 .................................. AT BELPRE

JAN. 18 ......................................TRIMBLE
JAN. 21 ........................ VINTON COUNTY

JAN. 28 .....................................EASTERN
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY

GIRLS
DEC. 13 - Wellston - ~way
DEC. 16 - Miller - Away
DEC. 18 - River Valley - Home
Put One Under Your Tree This
Christmas

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Where America Goes 1b Relax··

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INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELE_RS
AND RADIO SHACK
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

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We Will' Ta•e ,Care Of All
I
Yourlnsura..ee Needs!
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLERN
MUSSER IN$UUNCE
110 SECOND AVE.

POMEROY

992·2635

555 PARI ST.

992-6611.

MIDDUNRT, OliO

POMEROY

JAN. 24 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 27............ AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 3 1.................................WELLSTON
FEB. 7 ....................................AT BELPRE
FEB. 9 ............................ AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 17.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
Coach- Ron Logan

Mar.'I think the vote will re-

flect a lot of study and introspection of the miners that's
been on strike," said William
Yockey, president of UMW
District II in Indiana. "I be-

Peoples

''

Bank

SECONDSTREn

JACKSON AVL

5TH STREET

Maso11, W.Va.
304-773·5514

Pt. Pleasalit, W. Va.
304·675·1121

New Have11, W. Va.
3.04-882·2136

•

1.2HlVE.

miners may be back on the job
as early as Wednesday.
"If nor, we'll get back into
negotiations," he said.
The chief negotiator for the
Bituminous Coal Operators

he expected a prompt return to
work if 1the miners ratify the
contract.
"We plan to return to a
normal working situation as
quickly as possible," Brown

Appointment of Dr. Nick
Robinson to a seat on Middleport
Village Council and recognition of
the service of long-time Council
member Jack Sauerfield highlighted Council's Monday night meeting at the hall.
Robinson was appointed to fill
the full term of office on Council to
which Dewey Horton was elected
last month. Horlon vacated that
seat since he is now mayor of Middleport by virtue of moving 10 that
position when former mayor Fred
Hoffman was named a Meigs
County commissioner. Robinson
will begin the four year term of
offiCe in January.
Satterfield was recognized for
work during his 14 years on Middleport Village Council. During
that time he has never missed a
regular meeting. Council presented
him with an engraved clock. A
social hour with refreshments was
held in his honor following lhc
meeting.
.
Resolutions in support of h1gh-

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAUUNT
'

'

228 WEST
MAIN ST.

MIDDUPORT

992·5432

POMEROY
A TRIBUTE FOR SERVICE. ''lllappreclalion to Jack Satterfield ror uudrlng dedication to
making ·Middleport a better place In which to
live" was the Inscription on a clock ,...nted to
Satterfield by Middleport viUige ofl!cllils Mon-

day night. s8tterfteld;thlrd from left, ser\'td 14
years and uever missed a regular meeting, He Is
pictured here with Mayor Dewey Horton, left,
and Bob Gilmore and Judy Crooks, eounell
members.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The

are present, the {Constitution)

war on drugs docs not override rlll\ltreS the government to afford

141

For All Your Prescription and Sundry
N~eds. - See Us!

iiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii~~~;.iiii;iil:liil:liil:li.!J~'~s.3~N~.~sE~co~•:•=~·~•2·6669 iiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii

"From what I've seen thus
far, it looks like most miners
are receiving it favorably," said
Howard Green, a member of
the union's governing board
from District 17, which covers
southern West Virginia and
eastern Kentucky.
"About the only th ing that
I heard was people ... rrymg to
get more information," Green
said.
It was difficult io get
through to the UMW' s Washington, D.C., headquarters
Monday . A woman who an swered the telephone butdidn 't
give her name said repealed
busy signals were 1he result of
miners swamping the office
with telephone call s to a tollfree line set up 10 an swer question s abou t the proposed con -

rract.
"! don' t agree with every-

thing, but you don't alwar,s get
everything that you want, 'said
Delano GibSOn, an employee
of Eastern Associated" Coal
Corp.'s Wells Complex in
Whanon. "I don't understand
all the medical, (and) I'm worried that you may end up with a
doctor you don ' 1like."
But he also said he thought
it would pass.
For laid-off miners, the new
contract would give union
members first opponunity at 60
percent of the jobs at new mines
opened by their employers, the
parent company or any related
subsidiaries or affiliates. Companies have agreed not to file a
legal challenge to thai pan of
the contract.

ways were P.BSSed during lhe meeting. Counctlman Paul Gerard will
prepare a letter to go to Gov.
George Voinovich, Jerry Wray,
Ohio Departmenl of Tmnsponation
and lo the Route 33 Committee,
Sieve S10ry and David Lieser, cochairmen.
A resolution was also passed in
support of the State Route 7 corridar from Chesapeake nonh lhrough
lhe Big Bend area It was reported
thai Joe Leach, Gallia Coumy engineer, is heading up a move to get
the Route 7 corridor included in
state highway planning.
It was decided at lhe meeting to
apply for Issue 2 monies for pavi ng
of South Fourth to Mill and on to
1he Meigs Junior High Sch ool
parking lol, and SoUih Fiflh from
Milito Lincoln Slreets.
On lhe recommendation of Gcrard, Council voled to ex lend 1he
two hour free parking through the
end of January.
A report was given by Mary
Wise of the Middleport Arts Coun-

cil on that group's wort during the
past year. On recommendation
from the board, Council approved
1he appointment of Emma Paugh 1o
replace Marilyn Meier on the Arts
Council board. Council voted 10
amend the Ans Council ordinance
setting a minimum of seven members and a maximum of nine members for the board.
Middleport's bicentennia! 10 be
celebrated in I 997 was discussed
and Council voted to name the Arts
Council to head up the steering
committee for the observance
Wise reported that both the Ohio
Arts Council and Nancy Hollister
of the Ohio Department of Development have volunteered to offer
expertise in the bicentennial observance planning.
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association. reponed that James L. Hartzler of Canal Winchester has been
hir~ as a consultant for Middlepons revuahzauon plan.
Continued on Page 3

Court upholds property rights in drug seizure case

FISHER FUNERAL ,HOME

'

outside council wltb commissioners Janet
Howard Tackett and Robert Harteubach. Also
preseut, but not shown, was Commissioner Fred
Hofrmau. Tackett voted against Leutes' representing tbe commisslou in the matter.

_,,.,ointed to Middleport Council; Satterfield recognized

Prescr_ip-tion
shop

STIHC.
.._..ilill!l-..._
Dealer
w

..

Ro~inson

IIIICE FISHER- OWMr/Operlltor

Establieh 1913

Your Local

.,, • •

said. "I am sure that both
management and the employees want to recapture the marketplace momentum that was
lost &lt;luring the strike."
There will be little time lost
in getting up to speed, most
miners say, because the operators have maintained some coal
production with salaried employees throughout the strike,
wh1ch began May 10.
About 17,500 miners have
been on strike in seven states in
Appalachia and the Midwest.
However, an estimated 60,000
UMW members will be eligible to vote in today' selection
under union rules. Any miner
who will work under the agreement, or who is laid-off from
an employer covered by the
contract, is eligible to vote .

l' 'f•,,

Ewing Funeral-Home
VALLEY LUMBER

DISCUSS OPTIONS - The Meigs County
Board or Commissiooers voted 1-1 Monday
af'ternooa to have Proseeuting Attorney Joltn R.
Len tes continue to repraent them in the face of
a rederal review or alleged Improper wages.
Here, Lentes, front, discusses the possibility of

lieve they 'II vote their con- Association, CONSOL Inc.
chairman B.R. Brown, said
science."
officials in Appalachia and the
If they approve the agree- when the tentative agreement
Midwest expect to know the ment, Yockey said working was announced last week that
outcOillc of a secret ballot elecril-ln~Jra
nroP,6•..A new a'""\\;
.
'~&gt;rl' \lc~·i~.&lt;- , ... ·~ 'b· -.,•.v ment ...,~ore ffilw•tg t.
"I think the vote-will reflect a lot of
' Union · members were
scheduled to vote in their local
· study and introspection of the miners
union· halls today on the prothat's been on strike. I believe they'll
posal that could end · the unton's seven-month strike.
vote their conscience.,
The miners can vote to
- William Yockey,
approve the contract, or they
can vote it down and return to
President, UMW District 11
the picket lines they set up last

"Dfpit' and Snviee Alwa,s"

105 MULBERRY AVE.
992·2121

·

3 LOCATIONS

"Family Owned and Operated for 48 Year•"

742·2211

· "I don't want to have to
defend ... the way lhe commission is
handling Ibis other than as a strictly
legal matter," he added.
"Our main concern right now,"
Commissioner Fred Hoffman said,
"is the response to the Ohio
Department of Oevelopment on the
monitoring review. I think this
should be your job in preparing
what kind of response we need to
give to them ."
"I would like to see some
options from you as to whether we
should pay it back or whelher we
shouldn't pay it back ~~:Dd if we do

pay it back what are die recove~
options or are there any options,
Hoffman added.
"The cmnmissioners need, to
make a dectsion_on whelh.er thev
want to allow th1s to conunu_e ~o
fester in the pub!ic... t~atlhl~ .IS
somehow mvolvmg thtngs other
than a straight fmding from the federal ~overnment that we owe
mone, l.elltes said.
. .
"In my profession, ~o~ onl~ IS
impropriety a problem, 11 IS havmg
lhe appearance of impropljety,_ and
I would not want yqu as my cl!ents
10 be held up in the paper agam as
doing something for reasons other
chan strictly proper procedure try·
ing to collect money chat ~ar be
due and owed to lhe commiSSion,"
he explained.
.
.
"I can't see paymg outSide
counsel when you represent_ us. I'm
satisfied wilh you represenUng us,"
Hartenbach said.
"As long as lhe three of yo~ ':'fe
satisfied that there are no poliucs
involved, I don't have a problem
with it," Lentes said.
"I feel that if you (Lentes) want
to get outside counsel... I feel ~e
sbouldbackyouup,"saidCommlssioner Janet Howard Tackett
Hoffman and Hartenbach voted
Continued o_n Page 3

(AP)- United Mine Workers

JAN. 20 ................................ALEXANDER

FEB.1 ................... NELSONVILLE·YORK
FEB. 4 .............................. ATWELLSTON
FEB. B................... AT POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 11 ........................................BI:LPRE
FEB. 15.......................AT RIVER VALLEY .
FEB. 1B...................AT VINTON COUNTY
FEB.19................................ ATWAHAMA
Coach -Jeff Skinner

wilh Meigs County.
"Thats my recommendation -at
this point"
"In other words, you don't want
to represent us?" Commission President Robert Hartenbach asked.
"U ~he commissioners ask me
to, I will ~o forward and represen~
the commiSSion," Lentes said.
"I think we'd like that," Hartenbach said.
'
"I want to make sure that the
commissioners understand my conCC!Jl. I chink you all read the newspaper anicles and saw lhe accusations that were made against the
commission in the way Ibis was
handled," Lentes said.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.

DEC. 13............................ AT WELLSTON
DEC. 16...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 18............................RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 3.................................... SOUTHERN
JAN. 6 ................,........................ BELPRE
JAN. 10 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 13................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.17 ................................ GALUPOUS

JAN. 4 ............................ /lt;f ALEXANDER

A Multimedia Inc. N-opoper

United Mine Workers mull over proposed contract

1993·1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 21 •••.•·................................... MILLER

BOYS
DEC. 14 - Federal Hocking - Away
DEC. 17 - Wellston - Home
·DEC. 21 - Miller - Home

1 Section, 10 " - • 35 eento .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 14, 1993

By JIM FREEMAN
Senthiel News Starr
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners voted 2·1 Monday
to have Prosecuting Auomey John
R. Lentes represent them in a current review of a Community Deve!opment Block Grunt in which aud1tors claim the commission must
pay lhe state $10,925 by the end of
the year.
During the meeting, Lentes, discussed the pbssibility of getting
outside counsel to represent the
commissioners.
"My feeling is that it would be
&amp;WXOptiate 10 hire outside counsel
to detennine 'What our options are
regarding this $10,925 and anr,
·other monies that might be owed, •
said Lentes. ·
''There have been statements in
the newspaper as well as in the
commumty in general that the
attempt by the commission to collect this money is somehow been
gone about in an improper manner
orthathassomeulteriormotive.
"In order io lalce it completely
outside lhe realm of politics, I chink
it is necessary 10 get in~ndent
counseiiO do this. I think 11 needs
10 be counsel outside of the county
and I think it needs 10 be someone
who has no connection whatsoever

MEIGS MARAUDERS
DEC. 14 ............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 17 ................................. WELLSTON

Low tonight In mid 30..
. Rai ny. Wednesday, high In 40s.

Prosecutor to represent ·county during review

DEC. 14 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 17 ................,......... AT ALEXANQER
DEC. 18 .................................... AT UNICO
DEC. 21 ........... AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 28.............................CHESAPEAKE
DEC. 30 ........................ AT COAL GROVE
JAN. 7 ....................................... EASTERN
JAN. 11 ........................................... MEIGS
JAN. 14 ......................................... MILL.ER
JAN. 18 ..................................AT BELPRE
JAN. 21 ..............AT FEDERAL_HOCKING
JAN. 28 ............................ ATWEU.STON
FEB. 1 .................................. AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. 11 ................................... AT MILLER
FEB. 18................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19 ................................ GALLIPOLIS
Coach -Howle Caldwell

MEIGS MARAUDERS

BAUM LUMBER

Vol. 44, NO. 162
Multimedia Inc.

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

FEB. 8....................................... EASTERN

4-13-17-24-25

PageS

SOU'I'BERN .

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

0-2-4
Pick 4:
6-9-8-8

Buckeye 5:

BAILES

THIS WEE
GAMES

Pick 3:

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

property rights, the Supreme Court nOli~ and a meaninsful '!PJlOf'Wii·
said Milndly in barring the govern- ty 10 be ~ before setztng real
ment from seizing real estate linked p'roperty subject to civil forfei·
to illegal drug sales unless the tore," Kennedy said
owner flat gets a court bearing.
Chief Justice William H. RehnThe S-4 ruling in a cese fro111 quist dissented. calling tho decision
Hawaii marlai the second time Ibis ''ill-considered and disruptive."
year the high court has limited the The property seizure in the Hawaii
government's authority to take case "serves important ~ovempm~y It contends .was used in menllll ~in combawng illecommitting a dn!ll crime.
gal drugs,' he wrote.
"At stake in this and many
.Attome&gt;: General Janel Reno
other forfeilllre cesea 8ftl the !ICCU· satd the ruliug would not hobble
rity and privacy of· the home and . !he Justice Depanment's asset forthose who tako shelter within it," feiture prup-ani.
Justice Anlhony M. Kennedy wrote
The court also:
for the court.
-Ruled 6-3 that a federal pen"Unless exigent circumstances sion-protktion law, lhe Employee

111-

Retirement Income Security Act of
1974, can be used to keep a closer
watch on how insurance companies
manaae hundreds of biUions of dolIars in workers' pensions.
-Backed out of using a Tennessee death penalty case 10 decide
whether states cen make it easier
for P,ooec1110rs 10 obtain dealh sentences for people who tiD someone
during another crime, such as robbery.
-Left intact a ruling that
fe9uires Florida 10 provide Medicetd coverage for a 19-month-old
boy who doctors say won't survive
without a liver-bowel transplant.
In the drug-forfeiture case, lhe
court said James Daniel Good was
entitled to be notified and given a

hearing before his Hawaii home
was seized.
But the jus1ices ruled ~nani mously chat courts cannot dism1ss
forfeiwre actions filed with a fiveyear time limit set by fedetal law.
Clint Bolick of the conservative
Instiwtc for Justice called the ruling "a triumph of private property
rights." He said it also wDI apply
to civil forfeitures of real estate
used in ocher ~of crimes, such
as illegal gambhng.
!Joocl was arrested in 1985 _after
police found 89 pounds of manJuana and vials of hashish at his house
in Keaau on lhe island of Hawaii.
He pleaded guilty to promoting a
harrilful drug and served a year in
prison.

'

In 1989, federal agems seized
the house and four-acre property
where the drugs ~ad ~n found.
Good was hvmg m Ntcaragua at
th e ume and had remed lhe home
lo lenants.
He challenged lhe seizure, contendmg he was enutled 10 be nolified before •tiOOk place and should
~ave been g~ven a chance 10 Clptlose
•t.

, The Supreme Coun agreed.
Th~ n~ht to prior notice and a
~ear;tng IS cenu-al to tbe Constiruuon s command of due process "
Kennedy said.
'
. Othe~wise, there is 100 much
nsk an 1nnocent person's property
wiU be lalcen, he said.

'

�'

Tuesday,Decernber14,1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
PomerGJ, Oblo

DltVOTBD TO THE INTZRESTS or THE IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGETf
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

sbould be leu thaD 300
subject 10 editins and must be signed with name,

LETlllRS OF OPINION are welcome. They

wonll. All letters 1110
address and rolepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good turo, oddreasing issues, not personalities.

Scandal could become
issue in governor's race
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich was ready wilh damage con·
trol when a slate investigation revealed the Equal ~ity Center was
riddled with wrongdoing more lhan two years iniO his adminislllltion.
But a Democrat who wants to run against Voinovich next year said the
Republican governor came up siKxt and the matter is not over.
Aides were waiting with lists of improvements already made at the
EOC when Inspector General David Stunz released his scathing repon
Wednesday.
The following day, Voinovich reminded reponers he appointed a new
EOC director last spring who had discovered the problems, corrected
some of them and was working to solve others.
·
SturU's 138-puge report. which followed a seven-month investigation,
listed alleged thefts, mismanagement, favoritism and other problems in
the agency that certifiCS minority contractors for state contracts.
State Sen. Raben Bwcb, D-Dover, who is running ((II' the Democratic
nomination for governor, criticized Voinovich for ~inting Booker Tall
as EOC director. Stunz hlained most of the agency s problems on Tall,
who tOot a leave of absence as director in Man:h, citing health problems.
Tall was an assistant to Voinovich when Voino~ich was mayor of
Cleveland in the 1980s. Later, Tall was a minority business consultant for
the Cleveland Office of Equal Opportunity. which had problems similar to
those at the EOC.
Burch said the new scandal follows a pattern in which Voinovich fills
an imponant post with a political crony who abuses power, then has to
defend his acuons and uy to cover up the problem.
•'The administration reP. laces the wrongdoer and continues to alibi and
tries to dodge its responstbility ," Burch said. "George Voinovich must
ultimately be held accountable.••
SturU said the EOC was aware the Cleveland office had almost the
same problems that surfaced in Columbus but did nothing about it.
"It was apparent Booker Tall was given the benefit of the doubt for
longer than he should have been," the report said. It also said the lack of
action against Tall "seems to be predicated on his friendship with and
loyalty to Gov. Voinovich."
The governor said he was not aware of the problems Tall was having
because the office was achieving results. "We were not aware of the
problems in adrninis~on." he said.
. .
He said the new director, Carolyn Harper, has done an outstanding JOb
and will follow up on recommendations in SIW1Z' repon.
The State Highway Patrol conducted a separate criminal investigation
that resulted in four EOC employees being charged with felonies that
included theft and the awarding of illegal conllllcts. The patrol's repon
has been turned over to the Franklin County prosecutor.

Today in history
.
By Tbe Associaml Press
Today is Tuesday. Dec. 14, the 348th day of 1993. There are l7 days
left in jhe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 14, 1799, the fli'SI president of the United Slates, George WashingiDII, died at his Mount Vernon home at age 67. nearly three years after
leaving orru:e.
·
On this date:
1n 1819, Alabamaj;;.,ed the Union as lhe 22nd state.
1n 1861 Prince AI
husband of Queen Victoria. died in London.
In 1911' Norwegian explorer Roald Amnndaen became the fli'SI man 10
rt&lt;~Ch the ~th Pole, beating oUI an expedition led by Roben F. Scott
In 1939, the Soviet Union was drO~ from til¢ League ofNatiops.
In 1945 Josef Kramer, known as 'the beastofBelsen," and ten others
were hanged in Hamelin for crimes commined at the Belsen and
Auschwitz Nazi concentration camps.
In 1946. the United Nations GCneral Assembly voted to establish the
u N 's beadquaners in New York.
· ~ 1962. the U.S. space orobe Mariner Two approached Venus, trans·
milling information about ihe planet's atmosphere and surface tempera-

~~ 1975 six South Moluccan lemlrists surrendered to police after hold·
ing 23 per8ons hostage for 12 days on a train near lhe Dutch town of

Beil~i9Bl, Israel annexed the Golan Heights, which it bad seized from
Syria in 1967.
IIi 1986. the experimental airctafl Voyagr:r, piloted by Dick Rutan and
Jeane Yeager, took off from Edwards Air Forte Base in California on the
filii JIOII·SIOP· non-refueled flight around the wOrld.
ID i989, Nobel peace laureate Andrei D. Sakharov died in Moscow at

age.{!· years ago: The U.S. ballleship New Jersey turned its big guns on

SyriaD positions in Lebanon for the fli'SI time after American P-14 reconnaissance flights were flted on.

Berry's World
&gt;~

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0

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
1Uesda~~ber14,1993

Wednesday, Dec.15

Was drug lord killed by death squad? ~
It was made up of tillera hired by
the Cali cartel, members of the
families of people slain by Escobar
and the Medellin cartel, and by
·

WASHINGTON (NEA) According to high-level intelligence sources here, the tilling of
Colombian drug cartel kingpin
Pablo Escobar Gaviria, 44, did not
take place, .as Colombian officials
have reported, while trying to
escape from a police unit. Rather
Escobll!' was hunted down and
killed by a semi-official death
squad after his location was uncovered b)' U.S. drug and intelligence
operauves using sophisticated spy
technology.
For months, Escobar has been
sought by a paramilitary death
squad· that has
h had semi-official
lied . If
slandmg. T e group ca
11se
"People Persecuted by Pablo Escobar" (PEPES), and it offered a
huge reward for information lead·
ing to the death- not the arrestofEscobor.
In Colombia, the exact ll!akeup
of PEPES has ~n the SU~JCCI of
much speculatt!!n. Intelligence
sources here say 11 was sponsored
and. finan~ed by members of ~
Cah cocatne c~tel - t~e chtef
nvals of Escobar s Medellin cartel.

Accu· Wealher" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

critical in evaluating what happened to Escobar on the morning of
Dec. 2.
According to the official
Colombian version, early in the
t:r~onuno . morning a Colombian anti-drug
police learned that Escobar and one
or more bodyauards were Jtidin&amp; in
members of military and police a bouse in Medellin. A raid was
units that had colleagueS murdered quickly organized. As a massive
br Escobar and his Medellin subor· force of police swept into the house
dmar.es.
Escobar and a bodyguard fled to
PEPES had only one mission: the roof. When theh were cornered,
Hunt down and kill Escobar.
Because or this, it was welllmown the two tried to s oot it out with
that Escobar feared PEPES much their pursuers, and both were shot

Robert].. '"•on-•

more than
regularforpolice
and
military.
Hethe
believed,
good rea·
son, that the Colombian justice sys.
tern could deal with him if he was
ever captured. He was, in fact, in
th 'ds 10f
· · ~ h'
e ml
negouaung or •s sur·
render, asking only that his family
receive proteCtion from other drug
lords and asylum in another coun·
try According 10 intelligence
sources here _ and they are very
familiar wilh the current situation
in Colombia _ the latter fact is
,.

wear clutching a gun would have :
been that he recognized all or pan •
of the raiders as PEPES , and he :
knew they were there to kill him :
and not arrest him."
When asked to comment, even :
off the record, sources within the ·
Drug Enforcement Adminislllltion :
only smile and stick to the official ·
story . On the record they freely .
admit Escobar was located tluough .
the use of U.S. " technical means." ·
but other intelligence sources say :
that bland phrase does not even ;
begin to tell the story.
dead.
Escobar's location was discovMany m
· I he m
· teII'tgence com- ered after be had made several
munity here don't buy that story.
phone calls to his family during his ·
''Pablo Escobar was not the surrender negotiations. The calls .
you'll never take me alive' kind of were monitored and traced through ·
guy," says one very lmowledge- theuseofsorneofthemostmodem
able intelligence source. "Heck, he U.S . spy technology, almost cer- .
had spent the past month uying to tainly operated by specialists from
work out an agreement 10 give him- the super-secret National Security
self uea and his first concern was Agency, which operates all our
not w I was going to happen to nation's most sophisticated spy
him, but his wife and kids. The satellites and electronic bugging .
only thing that would have sent apparatus.
,him fleeing to the roof in his under- .
"The equipment they had on the
ground in Medellin was absolutely
state-of-the-art, .. saxs the same .
intelligence source. ' It is not the :
kind of stuff you loan 10 local gov- :
emments, no matter how friendly. ·
It is also the kind of equipment that :
does not work in a vacuum . You ·
have to have a prelly good idea :
where you are looking even in a :
city as small as Medellin. That ·
means top-flight satellite worlc and :
big computers to crunch a lot of :
data to separate one call from ·
another."
:
The almost universal opinion .
surfacing within the intelligence ·
community is that when the U.S. :
intercept pinpointed Escobar's ·
location, the information was
passed along to PEPES with the :
knowledge of Colombian authorities. The last thing the government
in Bogota wanted was Pablo Escobar back in jail and then on-trial.
"This was the way to do it,"
says the Washington source. "It
was an execution, and one that was
long overdue."
Robert Wagman Is a syndicated writer ror Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Showers T-storms Rain

Ice

Sunny Pr. Cloudy Cloudy
©1993 Accu-Weather. Inc .

Rain tonight; temps
to be above normal

level Wkite House assistants who produce universal coverage and being .president "requires the
came out of the DLC and its think lower cost, better ·quality C!P'C," accommodation of vanous intertank, the Progressive Policy Insti- Clinton. said. "I agree with. that.:· I ests." One~ again, what he sa!d .
tute.
would JUSt ur$e you to suck w1th was true- tt's what he left unsmd
what was m 'Mandate for that bad upset his old pals.
Change.'"
Behind hiin, sitting oo the 'dais,But Clinton didn't stick with were a number of prominent' DLC .
Rosner's plan, nor Rosner. The Democrats who've felt the lash of .
Jeremy Rosner, Bruce Reed, people that Hill~ry Clinto~ s!lr- the Clint~?n White House- Sen. ·.
Elaine Kamartk.- Bill Galston _
rounded herself With wouldn t giVe John Breaux, La.; Reps. Dave ·
the
e ho hold
n1 ·
the self-effacing Rosner any n&gt;le McCurdy, Okla., and Jim ~. •
thJ:.:wn~holdsn:;~fr:x,tJ~ on her health care team, ~v~n Tenn.,;andothqswho'dadvocated l
way Clinton extols their virtues though he was one of the nauon s more moderate approaches on bud- :
you •d think they were the Four foremost expertsJ His marlcet-based geting or health.
.
·
•
Horsemen, carrying his team 10 plan, which eschewed all forms of
'Fhese savvy members of Clio·
price controls, was insufficiendy ton's extended family of New
v•~·don't get carried away just liberal. (Weeks later, National Democrats undersi8Dd the necessi- :
because your president did. For Security Adviser Anthony Lake, ty of political compromise. But :
what Clinton left unsaid was that operating in. an entirely different they and their friend&amp; are tired of 1
these mid-level deputies merited loop, offered Rosner his present having Clintonian "accommoda- 1
top-level jobs _ but at least· three mid-level job writing foreign poli- lions~' delivered with a back of the i
were n:~ted by the presideJlt or cy speeches.)
band.
)
his semor advisers. That all 'four
On stage at the DLC convenMartin Schram is a syndicated ,
are making major contribuilons lion. Clinton pleaded for political writer ror Newspaper Enterprise . •
today is testimony 10 their gJe8t 111- understanding, explaining that Association.
:
ents,nottheirgreatjobs.PPI'stivo
leading luminaries. rresment wtll
Marsball (who framed the idcoi....V
::
a·m1011 celebratea)
and
.,.,
'
.
economist
Five yean 1180: ln a dramatic polil:y shift, President Reasan anthorized •
Robert Shaptro got no jobs.
the U.S. to entt.r in10 a "lllbetimlive dialogue" with the Palestine Libera- :
Take special·notice of Clinton's lion Organlzl,tlon, lflao chalrman Yaaaer Ararat said he was renouncing · :
praiae of Jeremy ROIIICI' .-:It is a "all fonris 6fterrorisn1."
.
·
·•
monument of IOUd!em·fricd chutzOnc 'year qo: Presldent~lect Clinton opened a two-day conference in · :
pah. 'Clintoo palllid Rosner's inllO- Litile Jtock, Art:, on the nalioo's economiC problems. RUssian President . :
vative ~-bucid health refO;"D Boris .Yeltsin lost a battle with hard-liners as lie was forced to abandon his . :
plan; oudllled In the .Progress~;~~e refonnlSIV''~Chernommini!t.eynlinr,
"regor Gaidar in favor of Cornmlinist-era tech- · ;
l'olicy !Datitute's book "~ nocrat .,....,
.
•
1
for qw.ge." (foil\1 of J!ro!~
Today's Birtlldays: Former U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith, R- 1
conOict: lwu Its oo-editot).
Maine, II 96. Comedian-IICIOr Morey Amsterdam is 79. Country singer : :
· "In 'Mandate for Chanae' ... Charlie Rich is 61. Singer Abbe Lane ia 61. Actor-director George Furth • :
Jeremy Rosner (wtOte that) ... we is6l'.'ActtessPaltyDukcis47.
•
,
.•
should be ablo 10 change ~rules
Thought for Today: "Experience is a godd teacher, but she sends in • :
of the pivate heallh care marlcelto terrific blUs." -Mlrina Antrim, American writer(l8S6-19SO).

A house on New Street in PomerQy owned by the late Mary
Qualls was damaged in a f1te late Monday morning.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle said that one of men residing
in the house put hot ashes from a wood burner into a bucke~ set the
bucket on carpeting, and then left the house. The fire burned
through the carpeting and the noor. Damage was confined to a
small area in the one room. There was heavy smoke butlinle water
damage, Zirlcle said.
The Pomeroy Fire Depanment was caUed at 11 :16 a.m . and
responded with three trucks and 14 men. Middlepon came in with
one truck and four men.

Door, window breaking probed
Officers of the Pomeroy Police Depanment are investigating the
breaking of a window and a door on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy
during the weekend.
Saturday, Thomas McClung, reponed a window was broken out
at his residence. Sunday afternoon, Dale Taylor reponed the front
door of his home was broken into. Nothing was reported missing.

Coolville mayor forces referendum
Coolville Mayor Howard Russell announced he had enough sig-'
natures to force a referendum of a nuisance ordinance next Nov em-·
her at Coolville Village Council meeting last Thursday, officials
said Tuesday.
The mayor's action negated the need for a special meeting Saturday that council had set to override lhe mayor's veto cf the nuisance
ordinance, said Travis Thome, a member of the Citizens of the
CoolviUe Area. a group lighting to keep a medical waste incinerator
from moving into this southeast Athens county town.
RusseU said the council members were not representing the people they were elected to, adding that the end of the year bills could
not be paid.
A quorum of village council members was not present so the
meeting was not held, Thome added.
The ordinance would penalize individuals or companies who
cause a nuisance - including smoke, odors, fumes, dust, noise and
waste water.
Even though the mayor's action will delay the ordinance's passage, Thome said he is confident enough people in the community
would pass lhe rule.
The next village council meeting will be at 7: 30p.m. Jan. 13.

Prosecutor... eon11nued from Page 1
to retam Lentes while Tackett
voted against the motion.
Background
During 1992, the former com missioner's clerk, identified as
MaryHobstetter, was overpaid
$10,925 for her duties as a grants
writer, according to an analysis of
an audit by the Ohio Depanment of
Development.
'The clerk was paid $7 .81 an
hour as clerk while at the same
time she was paid $14 Wl hour for
writing the grants, which violates
federal wage laws, according to a
report by Mike Hiler and Lisa PanMcDaniel or the ODD, who were
present at Monday's meeting. The
two completed !his repon as pan of
an annual review of the county's
handling of state and federal grants,
called Community Development
Block Grants.
The ODD audit analysis stated:
"The county cleric is responsible
for maintaining the financial
ledgers and overseeing the admin·
istration of the program. For the
FY ·'91 CDBG Form,ula Allocation
Program, the clerk maintained
weekly time sheets documenting
the number of hours worked and
duties performed on CDBG activi·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-Ht)

Publ ished evtry afteraoo11 , Mouday throu&amp;h
Friday, Il l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Val!ey F\lblilhlng Compqy/Multlmedla
Ine., Pomeroy, Ohio 4H69, Ph . 992-2156.

Second clall poataae paid ar. Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Auociated Preu. aDd the Ohio !
Newspaper Aaodalion, Natiooal AdvertiJiD&amp;
Rcprc~enlative, Branham New1paper Sale.,
733 Third Avenue, New Yori, New YCC'i
10017.
POSTMAS'IER: Scn&lt;llddrett cl!.anaea to The

Daily SoaUoel, 111 Coi.W't St. Pomeroy, OhJo .

;·:

45769.
SUJISCIUPI10N IIATES

BJ ctni• or Motol' Route

&lt;Joe Woet... ... ,. .."'"""'"' '''' ' '''' " '""'' ' " " '''.$1 .60
ODe Month. .................... .......................... .$6.9$
Oao y,........................................... -

·

'J

Home damaged by fire

By The Associated Pres.~
Rain will conunuc tonight in Around the nation
Ihe southern and central parts of
Cold rain or wct snow fell across
Ohio. It w1ll be cloudy in Ihe north . much of the nation early today, and
Temperatures will stay relatively high winds whipped across parts of the
warm , from 35 to 40 statewide. Midwest and Plains .
Theseovemightlows will be around
Snow blanketed Kansas City ,
15 degrees above normal.
Kan .,Omaha,Neb .. andBismark,N.D .•
On Wednesday, rain will he while rain fell in Chicago, Atlanta and
scattered across Ohio with the best San Francisco.
chance across the southern half of
Rain was forecast throughout the
the state. Temperatures will be cooler day across the Ohio and Mississippi
wi lh hi ghs in the lower 40s.
valleys. northern New England and
The extended. outlook for parts of the South.
Thursdaythrough Saturday includes
Rain also was ex peeled to persist
fair skies on Thursday with cloudy in the Nonhwest, and heavy snow was
skies and ram for Friday and Satur- forecast in the Sierra and Cascade
day. High temperatures will remain mountains . Showers were expected to
in the 40s and lows will be in the diminish in California. Dry weather
30s. No arctic blasts arc in store for was forecast in most of Texas and the
Ohio thi s week.
Southwest.
The record high Icmperature
Wet snow was expecled 10 confor thisdatcal !he Columbus wealher Iinue in portions of the Midwest, espestauon was 65 degrees in 190 I. The cially lowa ~ Missouri and Kansas.
record low was minus 7 in 1960.
The nauon's high temperature
Sunriseihismorningwasai7:46 Monday was 85 at Brownsville and
a.m. Sunsc1will be at 5:07 p.m.
McAllen in Texas.
Southern Ohin
Today's highs were forecast in the
Tonight...Occasional rain. Low 40s and 50s across much of the East,
35 to 40. Northeast winds 10 to 15 Northwest, Midwest and Plains, with
mph . Chance of rain 80 percent.
20s and 30s in the northern Great Lakes
Wedncsda y...Rain likeIy. High states and 50s and 60s in the Southwest
in Ihe lower 40s. Chance of rain 70 and California.
percent

Martin Schram

chilinllan .until lie quit to run for·
president. (Never mind .that his
White House ancladnlini4tration
are JlOPulated with inany who ~
fer to CaJ1 the DLC "them" -1- jUst
another insufflclenlly liberal
enemy.) _
·
Nobody here but us New
Demdcrats, Clinton is slyinJ. And
he drops the names of four mid-

Flumes

Via AssociaTed PrfJss GraphicsNe/

Why the New Democrats are wary

ilp(Jropriate since be tmed' IO be Ita

Officers of the Pomeroy Police Depanment recently in.vestigated
two minor accidents. No injuries or citations were reponed.
The fll'St accident occured Friday at 10:47 a.m. on East Second
Street in front of the Pomeroy Post Office.
According to police, James Quivey, 76, of Pomeroy was parking
when he accidentally struck the rear of a parked car owned by
George Horak of Pomeroy. Light damage was reported to Horak's
1989 Oldsmobile and Quivey's 1991 Mercury Marquis.
The second accident occured Saturday at 3:13 p.m. on Unii&gt;n
Avenue.
Robert Hickle, 69, Hanford, W.Va., was attempiing to pass a
parked car occupied by Rodney Holman , 38, Racine, and struck
mirrors. Damage to Holman's 1985 Chevrolet and Hickle's 1977
Chevrolet truck was reponed as light.

W VA

s.near

:;~~~;!:Y.· 0LC~=~

POMEROY - Mary F. Bone·
cutter, A. Prances Shrimplin, Golda
Mae Reed, Margaret E. Douglas.
Etizaheth Irene Ohlinger, Sharon J.
Jewell.
RACIN E - Melis sa Mari e
Teaford, Mary D. Roush, Shirley
Jean Johnson.
REEDSVILLE - Lorraine
Osborne, Brenda Sue King.
RU TLAND - Kevin Paul
Musser, Carol E. Hamon, Robert T.
Calhoun Jr.
SYRACUSE - Richard 0 .
Friend.
VINTON - Judith C. Gannaway.

Police investigate accidents

An 18-year-old international note on my desk. "Shadiin," it never approve of his marriage to a "If you expose this, the Soviets
mystery has been solved. The reso- said. "American spy kidnapped in foreigner, so he decided to defect. will never cooperate and I will
lotion, unfortuilately, is not a happy Vienna.... State and CIA covering The~ fled across the .Baltic in a never hear from Nick again," she
one. According to publisheil up .... Wife a doctor in Virginia"
ships launch to Sweden, then to said, tears cascading down her
reports. a former Sovtet intellithe United States and a CIA "safe face. "You bold his life in your
gence official has disclosed that a
~'ose•nh
house" in Virginis. Blanka studied hands.' • I agreed to sit on it, on the .
U.S. spy who was kidnapped by the
J 1
r
r
dentisuy and eventually set up her condition that I be given tint crack ·
KGB in 1975 died during the
own shop. Nick went to work for if something happened.
abduction. Oleg Kalugin, a former
That was it. 1 put in a call to a the Defense Intelligence Agency.
. !lost the story a year later when
major general in the KGB, said that sometimes source who lived 00 the All was well until 1966, when the Wall Street Journal broke it.
Nicholas Shadrin, a Soviet defector fringes of the espionage world. He KOB agents approached him and Still, there no word of Nick
who was working as a double agent got back 10 me a day later. •'This is asked him to spy on his new coon- Shadrin's fate. "llmow he is comfor the CIA, was so shocked on legit," he said. "You're on to try.
ing back," Blanka told me. "I have
Dec. 20, 1975, when he was something."
He went to the FBL They had a amazing intuition."
snatched off the streets of Vienna,
My source said there was even proposition: Would Nick spy for
Now. after 18 years, her voice ·
Austria, and stuffed into a car talk of spy swaps .- Shadrin for the United States while pretending still cracks when she speaks of
lrunk, that he died on the spot of a one of theirs on the bridge in to spy for the Soviet Union? It took Nick. She has accepted his death, :
bean attack.
Berlin, that·sort of thing. I decided him a year to make up his mind to but she is not satisfied. "I would )
like to know what they did with the '
Shadrin was then 47 years old. to track down .Shadrin's wife. I do it. He never told Blanka.
·
Until Kalugin's confession, his fate rifled tluough the phone ·directory
Finally came the mission to body," she says. "I think the Unit· '
was aJlPBRiltly unknown to anyone and there it was: Dr. Blanka Viell1111 in 1975. It was a dangerous ed States should request the .
in the Western world.
Shadrin, dentist. I called. Her bus· assignment, but he went, taking remains and bring him here for
Why am I .inietested in the tale band was out of town, she said. Blanka with him. They were going burial. I have his dental X-rays and ·
of Nicholas Shadrin?
Within the hour, I heard from her on a skiing trip, he told her. On his old partials. I could prove it was
.
. "
Pull up a chair, dear reader, and attorney. We had to talk, he said. Dec. 18, he met two KGB agents h1m.
let me teD you a Story:
He . showed up with Blan~a on the steps of a chwcb. Two days
"It is the least they could do,"
It was late Sprin~ 1976, and I Shadrin, and they told me thiS later, he left his bolelto meet them she says, her voice fading into a
was working as•.an mvestigative story:
again. This time, he did not come whisper. "It is the least they could
do.''
reporter for syndicated columnist
Nick Shadrin was a 30-yenr-old · back.
Jack Anderson, co~ the diplo- Russian naval captain when he met
Blanka Shadrin and her auomey
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
malic and national secunty beats. A a winsome, 21-year-old Polish girl pleaded with me not to break the writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
colleague took an anonymous named Blanka in 1958. They fell in story. ·They were working on spy- Association.
phone tip and dropped a cryptic love. He lmew the Russians would swaps and other things, they said.

l .0.d. ay
· •1n h•1sto·ry·

The follow ing were recently
. chosen as potential grand jurors for
·the January. 1994 , term or the
Meigs County Grand JID')'.
Selected, by commumty, were:
ALBANY - Wanda Celeste
Burke.
CHESTER - Harry B. Perry.
EWINGTON - Marvelea L.
Pennington.
LANGSVILLE - Walter G.
Tomblin Jr.
LONG BOTTOM - Sheridan
E. Pierce Jr. , Telitha J . Casto,
Kathy Sue McDaniel.
MIDDLEPORT- Nellie J.
Zerkle. Timothy Lee Kearns.

.....-------· Local briefs----a

A Co·l d War wound that never heals

We are witnessing a most
remarkable political !lappening right here at the ~ual con~
oi the DemocratiC Leadership
Council, that 1roup of New
Democrats that is Bill Clinton's
extended political ramily.
What we are seeina is a presi·
dent .who ~almost desperate
to wm familial approval- and an
audience that desperate~ wants to
giveiLYetitdocsn't tehappen.
And to undeistand w y, we must
look behind the rhetoric and focus
on the words that were left unspoken.
On center stage, in this 'Cavernous Washington hotel ballroom,
President Clinton is speaking with
unabashed urgency to several hundred Democrats who media scribes
often mislabel as '"centrist" what they are is "Jll'Oipessive," not
bound by old ideOlogies of left or
right.
"lhavegivenaiQ!.ofthoughtto
what! ought to say here
Clinron begins. He endones al of
the New Democrat propams and
utters all their favorite phrases:
"N w id
· _.,c ·
e
eas1": new ~cctton,.,.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Potential jurors selected
for January grand jury

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IDdar...

0

.

SINGLE COPY

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PRICE

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oa a three. ail or 12 month b•la. Credit wW be
pvea carrier eltb week.
No IUblcriptiou by mail permitted in .-eu
whlre home Cllrier MI'Vice ilanUible.
M.ollS.-Inoklo M.... t-11
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26 ... .....................................$46.60
5 2 -.........................................saaAC

ties. Several times a year, the county clerk is additionally compensated. at a rate of $14 per hour, for
total hours charged to the CDBG
program. For the FY '91 Formula
Allocation Program, the couny
expended $10,925 in payroll cost
that are attributed to the county
clerk. While administrative costs
are an eligible CDBG expenditure,
the clerk was paid $7.81 per hour.
Accounting procedures and federal
regulations prohibit an organization
from paying an employee from Iwo
or more separate sources of funds,
at different rates, for the same period of time during a work day. An
employee may only be paid 40
hours, plus approved overtime, per
work week. Therefore. the county
has improperly expended $10,925
in FY '91 CDBG formula funds."
In response to commissioners'
questions, Hiler and McDaniel
responded that federal funding
would not be withheld from the
county while the issue was being
di sc ussed "in good raith ...
As far as I am concerned . there
is no impropriety, Lentes said !his
morning. Federal forms are very
complicated, the auditors or someone else may have made a simple
mistake.
Lenr.es defend the way lhe situa·
tion has been handled to date, saying some people perhaps felt it was
inappropnate to bring the matter up
in public.
"If it wasn't discussed in public
it would have been a violation or
the Sunshine Law," he said.

Announcements
Support Group to meet
The Alzhe•mers and Related
Disorders Suport Group wiD meet
Wednesday from 1 to 3 p.m. at the
Meig Multi-purpose Sentor Center.
Dr. Rfchard Boone will lie the
guest spealcr:r. The public is invited
to attend.
Cantata to be presented
A Christmas canlata will be presented at the Tuppers Plains
Church of Christ Saturday, at 2
p.m. It is being presented by the
Walnut Street Church of Christ of
Belpre.
Methodists to present cantata
A cantata "Beloved Son" will be
presented ·by the Racine United
Methodist Church choir Sunday at
. 7 p.m. at the church. A program by
the youth of the church will follow
the cantata.

EMS responds to jive calls
A fire and two emergency calls were answered Monday and
early Tuesday morning by units of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service.
MONDAY • 11:16 a.m . Pomeroy to New Stree t for a structure
fire at the Qualls residence, there were no injuries; 7:40p.m. Racine
to Rl 124 for Becky Moore who was transported to VMH.
TIJESDAY- 2:43a.m. Racirie to Rowe Road for Robert Roush
who was transponed to VMH.

Middleport..
Dooley noted that Hanzler is a
specialist in the practice of urban
and land use planning and downtown revitalization programs. He
will begin a 10-week study of the
Middleport's downtown immediatelr in preparation for the village s application for revitalization
grant monies from the Ohio
Depanment of Development.
Cost of hiring Hartzler is
$3,750, and Dooley asked the village about contributing to the cost.
Live nativity scene next week
A live nativity scene will he featured at the Bradford Church of
Christ on Dec. 22 and 23 from 7 to
9 p.m. both evenings. The church is
located near the intersection or
Slate Route 124 and County Road

5.

SWCD ·to meet
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District will meet Friday
at 8 p.m. in the Oak Room in
Athens. This will be thermal meeting for 1993.

NOW OPEN fOQ
.CHQI6TMI\6 6EA60N
PolnMIII81 '1• A Up
Bat led Holly TrMI'17"
Live NorwiY Spr\Ee
6-711. -'29"
Cut Tl'MI-Live Wl'Nthe
·For the Loved OnM
Gran BllnUII '1P
Artificial apr.ya, YliHa
llftCI WrMtha
Open Dtllly N, Sundllya 12-5

Hubbards Greenhouse
··.: Syracase
992·5776

A GAVEL FOR THE MAYOR- Mayor Dewey Horton was
presented a gavel by senior council member, James Clatwortby, at
Monday nigbt's meeting of Middleport Vlllage Council.

.

Area deaths--

Word here has been received of
the death of Amelia M. Rose
Albril!ht, 90, or San Diego, Calif.,
and formerly of the Forked Run
area who died Dec . 11, 1993, at Clara Slater
Thornton Hospital in La Jolla.
Clara Elizabeth Slater, 88, of
Calif.
Middleport, formerly of The Plains
Born Dec. 17, 1902, in Milwau· and Jacksonville, died early Tueskee, Wise., she was the daughter of day, Dec. 14, 1993, at Veterans .
the late George and Katherine Memorial Extended Care Facility
Deungess Rose. She moved to San in Pomeroy.
Diego in 1982.
Born in Nelsonville, Oct. 12. ·
Survivors include a son, Anhur 1905. daughter of late Ben and .
Albright of San Diego; a daughter, Daisy Havghay Kirkendall, she
Betty Jean Codner of Mesa, Ariz.; was a member of the Pomeroy
six grandchildren including R.J. United Methodist Church.
"Jim" Codner of Portland and
She is survived by two sons and ·
Joanne (Codner) Clem of Belpre daughter-in-laws, Charles Edgar .
and five great-grandchildren.
and Charlene Slater Jr. of Athens,
Burial will be in El Camino and William E. and Martha E.
Memorial Parle in San Diego.
Slater of Middleport; one daughter ·
and son-in-law, Ila and Paul DarDonna Gibbs
nell of Middleport; one sister, Mrs.
Donna Louise Gibbs, 58, Tom Earlene Crawford of Cleve·
Racine, died Monday , Dec . 13, land; one brother, Carl B. Stead,
1993, at her residence.
Yorksville; seven grandchildren, 16
A housewife and homemaker. great-grandchildren and six great- .
she was born March 11 , 1935. in great-grandchildren.
Point Pleasant, W.Va., daughter of
She was preceded in death by .
Pauline Roush Huddleston her husband, Charles Edgar Slater
Greathouse of Middlepon and the Sr., who died in 1987; four brothlate Cecil Huddleston.
ers, Gardner, Kenneth, Benjamin
She was a member of the Sacred and Victor; and one sister, Elwanda
Heart Catholic Church, the Marion Lee.
Group and Catholic Women's Club
Funeral survices will be held at .
and the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of I p.m. Thursday at the Hughes·
the American Legion Auxiliary.
Blower Funeral home in Athens ·
She is survived by her husband, with Dr. Wiltiam Slater officiating.
Gary Gibbs of Racine; a son.
Burial will be in Greenlawn
Charles Gregory Gibbs of Scou Cemetery in Nelsonville. Friends
Depot, W.Va.; daughters, Sondra may call at the Hughes-Blower
Lynn Ohlinger of Cannonsburg, Funeral home between 2-4 and 7-9
Ky .. Tamara Ann Spangler of p.m. Wednesday.
Evans, W.Va., Sharon Renee Har·
In lieu of flowers, send donaris of Syracuse and Julie Marie tions to the Pomeroy United ·
Randolph of Racine; 13 grandchil- Methodist Church.
dren.
Other survivors include sisters,
Cecile Van Matte of Letart, W.Va ..
Barbara Chapman of New Haven, Racine Baptist activities
The adult choir of the Racine
W.Va., Marilyn Epple and Kathy
ChadweU, both of Middlepon, and Baptist Church will present a
a close friend. Nancy Campbell of Chrisunas Cantata under the direction of Barbara Gheen at the
Racine.
Services will be held Thursday church, Sunday at 7 p.m. Lillian
at 11 a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Hayman will be the accompanist.
Church in Pomcr9y with Father On Dec . 22 the annual children •s :
Walter Heinz officiating. Burial Christmas program will be present- ·
will follow in Letart Falls Ceme- ed.
tery.

SPRING VALLEY CI~E~A
446·4524
' . ' '"
&amp;UCIAIN

continued from Page 1

Friends may call Wednesday
from 3·5 and 7-9 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. A vigil service will
he held at the funeral home at 8:30
p.m. Wednesday.

Amelia Albright

7

.,.,._I SAT. a SUN .

IIIIIIGAIIINIGHT

No action was taken by Council at
the meeting.
A repon was given on the liquor
license hearing of Chris' Diner on
North Second St. Also discussed
was a vacant house on South Sec·
and.
AUCnding were Mayor Honon,
Miele Child s, James Clatworthy,
Judy Crooks, attending the last
meeting of her term, Bob Gilmore,
Gerard, and Satterfield, co uncil
members, and Tcri Hockman ,
clerk-treasurer.

By
Dave
Grate
of
R1tklld
f11111ittre

Santa Claus
Will Be

an )usllwo things money
n'l buy: love, and homegr own

oes.

.. .

Here

Wednesday,
December 15
7 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Sunday
December 19th
2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

down

Fall brings school expenses ;
Inter muns Christmas gills ;
lso•·lna Is In lima ; summer means
cosls . What wt need is
one season I hal 's free .

.. .
.. .

nolhing so permanent as
lamporary lax .

Have Your Child's Picture Taken
or Bring Your Own Camera!

786 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

• ••

Sltepn.a•.an..

c.........., ftelat!
7 SHOWROOMS

II WAI£110USES

Rutland Furniture
lt. 124,1111IM, Ol

742-7211

�Tuesday, December 14, 1993

"Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

•• • MIJ.h ?'EVEN~
, · Steelers' d-:rln-;- The Pinsb'jf~
A•
th
. e_ gave up .
•• . yar.., to e Miam1 Dolphms and
,,.• · soliFive
looked
grcaL
sacks
thr •-L
two k
• ee .....eaways and
helpeJYJ&gt;ft~&amp;~~~~ ~ gffl \me

Eastern girls beat Miller 53-48
Eastern held at least a 10 point
advantage for most of the founh
frame, Miller began a comeback,
too little, too late. In the last 28
seconds, Toki hit a three-pointer,
and Julie Lanning canned a jumper
to erase a 10-point EHS lead.
Eastern's main key 10 the win,
besides foul shooting was lhat EHS
cut its tilmovers 10 just eleven, its
lowest total in the last two years.
Amy Redovian, Nicole Nelson
and Rebecca Evans were credited
with playing good floor games and
also with good defensive play.
Eastern hit 12-47 field goals,
was 27-41 at the line, had 34
rebounds, eleven tilmovers, eight
assists and five steals. Congo had
10 rebounds, followed by Wilson
and Karr.
Eastern senior Penny Aeiker
was out with the flu.
The Falcons hit 20-63 field
goals and 1-6 three pointers, while .
hitting 7-11 at the line. They had
30 rebounds, led by Toki's 10. No
other stats were available.
Eastern won the reserve ~tame
25-23 led by Crystal Holsmger
with eight, Patsy Aeiker with six
and Tracy White with five. Steph
Merkle had 10 for Miller.
Eastern will ttavel 10 Raeine to
play Southern Monday.

Alexander girls top Southern
Alexander took advantage of a
28-22 halftime lead, lhen went on
Alexander
10 win a 39-36 decisioo over South(20-8-4-7=39)
ern Monday night in Tri-Valley
Kerrie McClain 2-0-0=4, Jamie
Conference action in Racine.
Andrews 4-0-2=10, Jaime Rolston
The Tornadoes (04 overall and 3-1-3=12, Joann Blair 0-0-1=1,
in lhe TVC) were led by Aimee Jamie Merckle 1-0-2=4, Misty
Mills and Christie Cooper with Markins 1-0-0=2, Lynn L'Heureux
eight points each. Al&amp;ander (4.{), 3-0-0=6. Totals: 14-1-8/16=39
3-0) was led by Jaime Rolston 's
. 12 points.
The Spartans hit 15-54 (1-2
Southem
three-pointers) from the field, 8-16
(10-12-3-11=36)
Jll the line and collected 46
Aimee Mills 4-0-0=8, Amber
:nbounds, led by L'Heureux's 10. Ohlinger 1-0-2=4, Jonna Manuell.They had 20 steals, 29 turnovers 0-2=4, Brianne Proffitt 1-0-0=2,
:and 25 fouls.
Jessika Codner 2-0-2=6, Christie
Southern stats were not avail- Cooper 2-0-4=8, Renee Turley 2-0:able at press time as Tornado head 0=4. Totals: 13-0-10/22::36
:coach lenni Roush was at the hos·.j&gt;ital with player Becky Moore,
Although they are aquatic crea:)Vho suffered a possible concussion tures, beavers do not eat fish. They
subsist instead on a vegetable diet,
.in the game,
• There was no reserve game.
mainly consisting of bark and tender
shoots.

Eastem
(16-15-9-13=53)
Jaime Wilson 2-0-2=6, Tara
Congo 2-0-3=7, Amy Redovian 00-2=2, Jessica Karr 3-0-18=24, Jessie Radford 1-0-1=3, Nicole Nelson 1·0-0=2, Melissa Guess 2-02=6, Rebecca Evans0-0-1=1, Patsy
Aeiker 1-0-0=2 . Totals : 12-029147=53

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~- Miarnirallyandpost~ 21~20 ~ic:

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' · ry Monday nighL
"F wh
or &amp;lev~ reason, ~e have
a bend-b~t-~on t-break, b•g-play,
opponun1s11c defense," Steelers
coach Blll Cow,her said. "It isn't
so~ethmg we ve dr~~n up by
_. des.tgn. J'!lere ts .~ resthency that
, typifies lh1s Jearn.
..
Rebounding from back-10-back
losses, the Steelers have now won
tw? m a ro':" by a total ~f four
pomts. They re 8-5 and trail AFC
Central le.ade_r Houston by one
game heading miO .a showdown at
home agam~tlhe OJ!ers on Sunday.
"We're m a do-die situation,"
~~arterback Neil O'Donnell said.
We have 10 wm every week. We
dug ourselves a hole early, .so we
h~ve ~ co".'~ out and play like we
d1d IOmght. .
The Dolphms (9-4) fell into a
,. · fm;t-place tie in the AFC East with
Buffalo, which plays at Miami on
•. Sunday, Don Shula's Jearn had the

December 31, 1993

MOler
(6-13-11-18=48)
Sandy Kern 4-0-1=9, Jeannie
Wylinkki 1-0-0=2, Julie Lanning 30-1=7, Tracy Doughty 2-0-0=4
Angie Merckle 1-0-0=2. Jenny
Plant 2-0-2=6, Angela Taylor 1-00=2, Erica Toki 4-1 -3=14, Haley
Berry 1-0-0a2 . Totals: 20-17111=48

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Scoreboard

...

...
.··
...
.
.',·

_______________

..
..

FH~-----------------

EMcern Dl¥1alon
Tum
W L T Pd.
MiunL............. 9 ~ 0 .692
Bull'olo ......... .... 9 4 0 .692
N.Y. loll ....... .... I 5 0 .615
lndimapoliJ .. - .. 4 9 0 .308
No.. J!nalond . .. 2 II 0 .IS4

PF PA
261226
236 114
2A9119
169290
147 lA2

Ctnlnl DIYIISon

........... 9 4 0 .692 301214
P l -......... I l 0 .61l 2m230
C11!VEJ.AND.. 6 7 0 .462 236 2l7
CINCNNATI .. I 12 0

12 Months $66..56_
SDUITD~YDKm ______

..

.ern

138 279

WalernDiob!on '
...... 9 4 o .692 256213
LA. Raiden ..... I S 0 .615 2A6 248
Kan~a~aty

Daw........ . .... 8 5 0 .61l 320 231
Sut Di'l" .... .... 6 7 0 .462 221 22l
Scaale ............... 5 8 0 .385 213 244

2nEASTMAIN
POMEROY

624
611

17
21

17. CINCINNA'n ..........6-1

518

20

II. Wisconain ...... ......... .A-0
19.lllinoiJ ..... .......... .......4-1

517
407

19
16

20. BOlton CoUesc.........6-0
21. Syr~CU~C ...................4-l

329

13

22. Old&lt;homo SL ............l -2
23. G. WuiUnaton ....... ..4-1

281
230

ll
lA

Wauseon 71, Delta 40

24. Vandmbilt ......... ..... ..4-1
25. LSU .......................... 3-0

176
157

23

Wellsville SO, Edison Soulh 42
W. Gcauga 63, Euclid 45

'hnur•nce Comp•nlea

Plill.oddphil ... .. l I 0 .315 199lA5
Phoeni• ............ 4 9 0 .308 lS2 226
Wuhin...., .. .... 3 10 0 .231 Iii 216

burgh 2, Tul~nc

~ .........

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
BIGGEST ZENITH SALE EVER!
JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS!

East
Maine 114, Can. Connocticut St. 87
Sien1 83, Hartford 19
Syracuse 104, Lafayette75

South
Cent. Florida

s

Exceptional Values
In Zenith Color TV

JTI 211
2l7269
212 301
184 304

Far West
Air Fort:e 89, Regis 151
Monun• 60, Cal "Poly-SLO 52

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Elm• 30

Aleundc:r 39, R1cine Southern 36

Amelil 52, Cin. Walnut Hills 33
Arlington S6, Pandora-Gilboa 47
Aahubula 35, Paineavillc Rivcnide 31
Ashubula Edgewood 44, P.inesvillc.

Al.lanllc Dlvlf:lon
L Pet.
4 .765
Odando................. J l
7 .6 t 1
Bocton .......... ........ .11 10 .524
Miuni ................... ..7 10 .412
NewJaney ..............7 13 .350
Philldclphil ........... ..6 13 .316
WaahinJ1M ............ .6 13 .316

Tum
W
New YOlk ..............13

GB
2.5
4

6
7.5
8
I

Central DMalon
5J20115S

• MTS Stereo with dbx Nolaa RtducUon •
Remote Control • On-Scr•n Monu
DlopiiiY • Auto Channel S..rch • 178
Ch•net Cap.oblllty • Chromacolor
Contra! Picture Tuba • SI•p nmer •
Video Sentry • Tel-oping Dipole
Antenna • AudloMdao lnpul.,d
Vorioble Audio Output Jacka • Euro-Style
Cabinet

MTS Stereo wllh dbx Noise
Reduction • Mulll·Brand TVNCR
Cable Remote Control • On-Screen
Menu Display • Auto Channel
Sa.ch • 178 Channel Capablllty •
Chromacolor Contraat Plctu re Tube
• VIdeo Sentry • Sleep Timer •
Flashback • Teleeeoplng Dipole
Antenna • AudloNldao Input and
Variable Audio Output Jacke • EuroStyle Cabinet

CLEVEUND ......... 7
lndi1n1 .......... ........... 7
DotmiL ..................... 6

9
II
II
12

Milwlukoe ...............4

16

' Chulouo ........... ..... IO
SJ256SS

CC27005

• MTS Sterro with dbx Noise
Reduction • Unified TVNCR Remote
control• on-screen Menu Display
• Auto Channel Search • 178 Channel
Capability • Chromncolor Contraat
Picture Tuba • VIdeo Sentry • Sleep
Tlmar • Flashback • Audio/VIdeo Input
and Variable Audio Output Jacks
• New Euro-Symmetrtcal Cabinet

• Bulll~n Closed Caption Detodlng • MTS
Stereo wllh dbx Noise Reduetlon • Unified
TVNCR Remote Control • On•Sereen Menu
Display • Auto Channel Search • 178
Channel Capability • VIdeo Santry •
Chromacolor Contrast Picture Tube
• Sleep Timer • Flashback • Audio/VIdeo
Input and Variable Audio Output Jacka
• Euro-Style Cabinet

4 .778
8 ,.!i!S6

4

.S26

4.S

.319
.389
.333
.200

1
7
8
II

Harvey 39
A van 47, Clcv. Luthcrln Wat41
Bamenillc 73, SL Cl&amp;invillc: 63
Batavil SS, Cin. Seven Hil.b 3S
Bcavc:rmlek 39, Vmdllia BuLler 30
Bcllaitt: 64, Bridacpon 34
S1, Nebonvillo-Yorl&lt; SI
Bethel-Tate il, Westcm Brown 64
Blanehoot«l2, Willi""'b'"J4I
Broci:villo 66, Tri-County North 2A
BuckcJC Local 60, Martina Ferry 17
Buckeye Tnil66, Cambridac Jj
Cadi% 58, BcllaiM SL Jdm's.f1
Canfield f/J, Suulhcn48
Carey 51, Marion Cath. 3S
C.rlisle 57, Sprinaboro S3
Olillicodle 45, Ha.miltan Twp. 34
Cin. OWtiln 57, Hcrril1ge Ouinian

&amp;1,..

2A

Cin. Nocrc Dlme49, Glen Eatc 48
Cin. Oak Hilh 52, Cin. Syc1more 49
Cin. St. Rita Sl, Centn1l B1ptist 22
Cin. W'llnon Woods 76. Cin. Tal\ 34

Mldw•t DlvW.
W L PtL

llouota0 ................ 19 I
lJtoh .... ................... 14
1
SanAntoruo ........... ll
8
Denver ........... ......... .9 9
Minnelala ....... ....... .7 11
Dallu .......................1 18

.661

S.5

.619
.SOO

6.5
9

.053

Qcv. Hawken 44, Aurol'l 38

GB

.950

.389

Pbocnix ......... ......... l4
Golden Statc ......... .II

Porolmd ................. 11

L.A. Oippon ...........l
LA . La.kera ..............7
S•c:mnento ............. .S

COLOil
PICTUIIf·lHPICTUIIf

.lli2A
.S79
.llO
.444
.350

14

.263

Conne~ut

Cn:otwood Si, Windham 46

II

CUyohopHu. 60, Open Door46

11.5

Dutbwy Lolt..ut. 61!. Old Foot 36 .
Day. Belmont 39. Day. lolfenon 34

Eulwooc173, 0oeton Striteh 11
El)'ril C•th. 53, Lorain Cleuvitw 38

LS

feclenl lloWnJ 60, Trimbto 21
Fclicty 70, New Ric:hmond 24
Ficl,d 52. Rn&gt;ann1 Southellt 47
Fo" Frye !§8, Shenandoah 31
Foot Jcnninp 64, Kolido44
Fruttiro5l. River S3 (01)

S.S
6
8
10
11.5

Oallipolia 69, Alhen~ 49

Monday's score•

O~rnuvWe 4S,

D"""" 112, Philidclphio 101

MTS Stereo with dbx Noloe Reduction
• Remota Control • On-Screen Menu
Olaplay • Auto Channel Search • 178
Channel Capability • Chromacolor
Contreat Picture Tube • Video Sentry
• Sleep Timer • Flaahbeck •
AuclaNldeo Input and Variable •
Audio Output Jacka • Maple Color
Flnleh

• Recelver/llonltoJ • IITS Stano wilh dbx
Noloe Rtductlan • Buill-In Clooed Capllon
Decoding • Unlllad TV/VCR Remota Control
• Channel Labtlo • On-ScrHn llonu Display
• 111 Channel Capability • Auto Channel
Se11ch • Audio/VIdeo Inpu11nd Variable
Audio Output Jacb
• CllttJI

Jacn • Ca1ttr1

SLS2504EW

ToniJ:ht's games

J)onvcr at Now Yodl, 7:30p.m.
IJcullon It Miami, 7:30p.m.

SJ2737RK
• SEq Audio Syslem • MTS Sterio wilh dbr NoiSe
Reducllon • Muiti ·Brand TV/VCRICablt Rtmole
Control • Full On·Serun Menu Displl¥ , Auto

Channe l Search • !78 Channel Tuning Capabilily •

Vtdeo S~ntry • Slttp Timer • Flaahback • Mulli·
Funclion Jack Pack • Swivel Base

42
HoustcD 44, New Bremen 33
Hudlm Wutem Rserve 152, Andrews

MinnCIOLI at CharloUc. 7:30p.m.
Atlantt 11 CU!VELAND, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakaa a' Detroit, 7:30p.m.
WuhinJIOn allndian1, 7:30p.m.
Pulland II Dallu,
Odmdo II SCI.ule. 1 pm.

PV46SSLK

26

Jef'fc:n:m 78, Ashtabula 73
Kidmo l9, Conouon Vol 36
Latham Weam 73. PeN. Clay 43
Lebanon 64, Daytm CuroU Jl
l...oetonitll7 Lisbon 30
Lep.ic "· Vlnlue 22
Liberty Chr. 25, Frcmanl Chr. 20
Libc:rty-Bernon 45, Areldil43
Lin,..illo, Po. S4, Pym,..,;,g Vol. XI
l..opn 86, &lt;luohbo !liver Vat 2l
Lucuvillo Valley 68, Pt.ta. Wea57

*8-"'·

• RtCtlnlfiiDIIIIDI Ill~ Elthaln SEq Alldlo Syt11m 1nd
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Yltwlnt ,htit • Slac~ lhtrl1 Serlin • Ztnllh Lnrnl•a
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FluUatk • tiltt. RtiOiiiiiOn Monllot Capability • Digital
Chatlt Clttult 11111 Oltlltl Colli• flll11 • Wolld 5ytltm
T1ltltll Dlcod1r • 10 Ot·StiHI lluu Olap11y • llulJI.

Wednesday's games

ouc:aao 1t Bollon. 7:30p.m.

Ocnv•ll Philadelpki.a, 7:30p.m.
U~h1t~, 8p~

Portllnd 11 S.n Antonio, 8:30p.m.

Futcliol AlldloiVhlto Jtck PKk • CollltllpOflfJ IIWlt.

Ooldcn State at Phoenix, 9 p.m.

L.A. Oi.ppcn, 10:30 p.m.
Milw•ukeeM S•cramerllo, 10:10 p.m.

Orl111d0 II

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Maplewood 49, Orand V1l. 43
Marion Local 53. SponooMIJe 39
Morltn&amp;ton 31, Fllrluo 32
McComb SO, Van Bwt:n 41
Mollonold 31, Minonl RidJJO 34
Moip46. Wolloton42

AP Top 25 college poll
quality goes in
before the name goes on'

4. T-Ie (2) ................. ~
l . Kor&amp;uclty .. ................. 3-1
~ Kutou ....................... 8-1
1. Miehipn ...................
Uluooeh....,. ........ ... 7-1
9.UCLA (1) ..................4-0
10. Louiovillo .................:l-1
II . Putdue .................. .... 7-0
I~ lndiono ............. .... .....4-l
13. ............ .........4-0
1&lt;. 0oo1Jia Trooh .....- .....4-1

n

11
Warehouses
•

•

"

:1

I ,41l
1.297

1.210
1.110
1.127

1.09l

~

940
112
llol

635

Rooutown l6

Onnvilla68, Belley 31
Grccnfteld McClain 66, WhiteoU 39
Hamilton S4, Day. Co\ood White 32
Hndin Nonhcm S2, Cloy R•wson 41
Harrilon 61, Cin . Aiken 2S
HiUsboro 63, Clermont Northeas tern

New Jette)' 110, Mimni lOS (2 OT)

SLS2738TR

• Color Plcturo-ln-Pictun Capability
• Sunound Sound Capability • Spatial
Equollullon (SEq) Audio Syotom • MTS
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Audio/Video lnpul and Variable Audio Oulpul

52, Genen 2S

Covin...., 48, MiMe- :u;

Utah 102. S111 Antonio 87
Phocni.l 112. Mil waukee 104
55250811

I
2
4

2B

W. Jdfcnoa 65, Canal Winchcatcr 60
WoodridJJO s2. s.....booo24
World U.....tl8, Mmnotha Chr. 29
Youna. Christi•42. Cmam~da 8

three-year conttacl el.l.cmion through

Yoona. Liberty 53, Nne. 29
Youna. Unu.liM 53. Youna. WU1on

oonlrlct.

38

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantlc Division

Tum
W L
N.Y. Rangers .. .. 21 6
New Jeney ....... 17 8
Philadclphi• ..... l7 14

T Pb. GFGA
3 4S 109 73
4
38 102 74
I
3S 127 124

Wuhingto" ... ... 13 IS 2

28

Florida.. .......... .. 12 14 4
1015 1
Tampa Day ..... 9 18 2

28 84 90
23 99102

N. Y.blandc~ ...

92 99

20 71

Norlhtall Division
8 7
15
Ra.t.on .............. ll 10 7
33
Buffalo .............. IS 14 2
32
Quebec ........ ...... 13 12
31
Montft:IJ ........... 13 12 4
30
Hartford ............ 9 18 1
21
Ottaw1 .............. 7 21 3
17
Pittsburgh ....... .. 14

s

1997.

DETROIT TIGERS: A......

wilb O.Yid

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Tnded
Randy Milliaan, ran1 ba~cman, to the
Montreal Eapo~ for a player to be namod
lat«. Named Mike YOUDA manager, FmJ

OAKLAND AT11Il!llCS, A...... to
with Bill Ttylor, pi.tc:hcr. Cl'l t Cl'lo-

~am~

year CMII'acl.

91

N•tlonall...up
108 10 1
98 90

109 94
110101
90 84
8S 109
94 149

Central Dlwfllon
Team
W L T h. GFGA
Ton:wno ............. 20 7 5 45 119 88
7
5
2
3
5

North Gallia's eighth-grade
boys' basketball team hammered
Eastern 69-30 Monday night at
Vinton Elementary.
Nathan Stanley's game-hi~h 20
points and Chris Bowman s 16
pushed the Pirates (3.{)) to the win.
Sieve Durst led the Eagles with 14.
The Pirates will host Hannan
Trace Thursday,

Ohddina phchinc cotch and Dan
Williama c:o~ch fiColumbua &lt;:1 the South
Atlantic League.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Agreed to
tenna whh Kevin Cam~ll. pitcher, and
Chito Martinet, outftcldcr, on manorleague cc::atneta .

NL: Nunod Glom W'tll&gt;wn publi&lt; rolationJ urilwlt.
LOS ANOI!LES OOOOERS: A......
W'lbon. pitch•, on •

to tcnn1 with Steo~a
one-y~

Basketball
Nallonal Buketball Auodallon
ATLANTA HAWKS: W1ived John

BoJIIey,I!Wd.

'!7 117107
94101
32 121104
11 89 1s
29 112129

Football

33

National FootbaiiiAaaue

CAROLINA PANTHERS: Named
Donnie Shell director of conununity and

player rdatioru, effective Jan. 3.

Paclnc Dlvilllon
Calgary ............. 17 9 5
39 1\4 9S
Vancouver ........ l613 0

32

San Jose ............ II 16 5
los AngclcL ... II 16 2

T1 77 95

Anlhcim ........... 10 18 2
Edmmton ......
621 S

22 79 96
17 8411 6

Hockey

94 89

24 11!1 123

Monday's scores
0tu.w1 5, 1..cs Anaclc:a 2
QueW: S, Washington J

N.Y. Rangm 2, Buffalo 0

Tonight's games
Loa Angelet at PitUburih, 7:35p.m.
New Jeney u N.Y. ftlandcn. 7:35

p.m.
Mont:rul 111. Tampa Bay ll Orlando,

Aa., 7:35p.m.
Anaheim at Detroit, 7:35p.m.
Vancrove:r al Calg1ry, 9:35 p.m.

Wednesday's games
Hutford It N.Y. Ranp:l'l, 7:3S p.m.
&amp;o.tcn at Now Jeney, 7:35p.m.
Oaaw11t T1m~ Bay, 7:35p.m.
Mmtrr.al at f1onda, 7:35_p.m.
Anaheim It Toronto. 7:35p.m.

COIIIIIC\.

NEW YORK METS: Traded Marc
Kroon, pitcher. to lbc San Diego Pad.rtl:
(a. P.blo Jrdartinc:l., •hortitop. w complete
an auJiao u.do.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Dlllu ................ !S 10
SL LouiJ ........... I4 II
Detroit. ............. IS 12
OUcaao ............ l4 to
WinnipeJ .......... 12 16

to tcnm

Wella. pitdler, an &amp;lhreo-year

Oak Hill.

N•llonal Hodcey Leque

PITTSBlJROH PENGUINS: A"igncd

P.t Nea~m, dcfcnseman, 1.0 Clcvcland of
the lnccmlt:ional Hockey League.
ST. LOlflS BLUES : RCCilled Vitali
Pro.khorov, left wing, 1nd Jim Mont aomcey, ceru.er, from PeMa or r.he Internltionll Hockey Lc1auc . Aui gned
Nath1n l•F•Jella, center, to Peoria .
Waived Ton)': Hrbe, center.

TAMPA BAY UGIITNtNG: RcooUod
Bcracron. pile. fran Atl•nll of !he

J.C.

International Hockey I...easue.

Colleg•
U:MOYNE: Named Paulllmet men't
socoe:r I:'Oi ch.
MICHIGAN : N1med Debra Belkin
womcn'IIOOOCI' COICh.

NIAGARA: NamM Jmt.. Baker worn·
en'a soccer co.ch.
RADFORD: Named John Pim:c: women 'a volleyball eo~ch .
SONOMA STATE: Announced the: retin:mall oi Dick Wal.i.er, men 's b1&amp;kctball
eoooh.

Don't Be Without the Best In-Home
.Entert11fnment These HoliiJ11~s!f
Don't Miss the Bowl G11mes
And All the Movies!

THE PERSONAL CABLE SYSTEM
Arts &amp; Entertainment
Family Channel
HBO
Nashville
Cine max
TNT
TBS-Atlanta
USA
WGN • Chicago
Headline News
CNBC
Sel-F! Channel
ESPN 1 and 2
Discovery
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CNN
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92 TOYOTA COROLLA •••••••••••• s160.14 Mo.
4 Dr., white, auto., stereo, air.

92 BUICK CENTURY •••••••••••••••• 5204.49 mo.
4 Dr., auto., stereo,air.

92 HONDA ACCORD ••••••••••••••• 5262.94 mo.
EX, 4 Dr., black, power moon roof, windows. locks,
cruise,air, high power stereo cassette.

91 CORSICA LS .......................s168.63 ....
4 Dr., white,air, power steering , power brakes.
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91 TOYOTA COROLLA ••••••••••••• 168.631110.

4 Dr., auto.

90 CHEVY CAVALIER ...............5124.35 mo.
4 Dr., blue,air, auto. , stereo.

90 CHRYSLER ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 521 0.61 ...
5th Ave. , loaded w/all colors .

89 EAGLE MEDALION •••••••••••••••• 584.77 mo.
Wagon, 3 seater, air, auto .

89 PONTIAC SUNBIRD •••••••••••• 5137.66 •.
4 Dr., air, auto.

89 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •••••• s1 54.34 ....
2 Dr.. black, air, auto, stereo.

88 DODGE ARIES ••••••••••••••••••••••572.421110.
Silver. 4 Dr.

89 FORD FESTIVA ••••••••••••••••••••• 550.971110.
Red, 5 speed .

88 FORD TEMPO •••••••••••••••••••••• 595.0 1....
4 Dr., red,auto ., air.

Mi1mi1bura !SB, Middletown Fenwick
New Bolton Olen wood 71, M1nch·

MI\Mws45

NortJ.nor 51 Monoroeld Chr. 40
Dolt llill83, Mollermotl North- 63
Portom..nlt :IS. Porto. Eoot22
Portlmouth Notre llrlmo 46, Symm'-

Vol~S

Roylond Boc:byo 60. Monino l'ony 17

~

1

Recdrville Eutem !13, Millor41
Ripley sa. Nonh Ad1m1 43
SL Matya73, Delph01 SL John'• 50

I

ShU.c: Hts. 60, Clev. Onnsc 42

9

Skyvue66, Woodsfield 34

II

A•llicul.eaeM
OOCAOO WHm! SOX: Aped to
\Ciml widt ODic OuillCil, lhMatop, on a

North Gallia's eighth -grade
basketball team downed visitmg Reedsville Eastern 55-11 Monday night at Vinton Elementary.
Individually, Sarah Ward and
Susan Tackett outscored the
Eagles, racking up 18 and 12
points, respectively. Jessica Brannon and Amanda Maynard led the
Eagles with four each.
The Pirates will take their 2-0
record into Wednesday's game at
~iris'

-60
Now Middletown Sprinafield 5.5,

1

)0
11
12
14

8-NII

Wavedy57,S. Webl~.et48

28

2 .889
3
8
9
10
13

Vincent Wtna~68, Jacbon 33
Wai.Crloo 74, Mogadore 54

Ck.v. VA.SJ 85, Cle11. St. Augot tine

P•drk DI.Uion

Seatllc ........... ......... l6

Cin. Lockland 56, Cin. Country Day

50

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Team

Tran sactions

Warren Kennedy 49, Poland41

Midwest

Akron Covenuy 37, Akron lady of

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Tri.way 65, Can10n Timkcn 30
Un.im Locai40, St.cubawillc 36

Wi5Cmlin 94, E. Michisan 68

Monday's score
PiaobwJh 21, Miomi :Ill

· At1anLI ...... ........... _l4
Chie1go ..... ......... .... IO

Bethune-Cookman

Coppin SL 76, TOWICI'I SL 63
Dovul~m~ 98, Ootlclh- 63
Gec:qil SL 9S, "!'em.· Martin 61
Ste1.1oo. 94, Florida Atlantic 18

o .sn 211 111

Waltm DIYialon
San Fnncisco ... 9 4 0 .692
New O.lcuu..... 1 6 0 .l38
Atluuo .............. 6 1 0 .462
LA. Ranu: ........ 4 9 0 .308
y·clinched pi I )"'ff bel1h

n,

73

Basketball
· NBA standings

5S0837Btl

Colorado SL 1, Seton

1, Wuhington 1.

6 7 0 .462 212254
Tamp.~ Bay ....... 4 9 0 .308 183 300

• On-Screen Programing • LED
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2.

Hall I , SouthemCall,St.1nford 1, Tex11

Crnlral Dlv&amp;alon
Omen B.y ........ B S 0 .615 Z1S 231
Dotmit .......... .... 8
0 .61l 231 203

1 6

VeDOOUY« .. 8 1
Olt, 9:3S p.m.
S&lt; LouU"' loa~ 10:35 pm.

ph~ Sl 4, Santa Clara 4, low• St. 3, Pins·

E•rern Dlvla&amp;on
Team
W L T Pd. PF PA
y-N.Y. Oiutw ... 10 3 0 .169 2AS ISS
o.n................. 9 4 0 .692 294 206

The Dail Sentinel

..J!j Slate Aulo

Qlco.... DoliN, 1:35 p.m.

Tot. St. Uf'lllla 79, Tol Whitmer 56
Tol. Start 53, Evers!_CCO 30

J69

Others nctiYI•a "olea; Muquotte
127.Colii...U.l21, W. K&lt;muclty 11 . Old
Dominion 58, Florida SL 34, Va. Commonwealth 33, OHJO ST. 28, W11hington
St. 15, XAVIER, OHIO lS, Penn 14.
Florida 13, Vq.inil 10, Ala.·Birminaham
9, New Orleana 9, Oklahoma 9, Gcort~ia
7, Maryland 7, Miuouri S, New MCJ.lco
SL S, Villanova S, Georgetown 4, Mcm·

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

au.....,............

quality goes in
before the name goes on•

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

Major college scores

992-6687

Junior high Eagles fall to North Gallia

15. ... .................4-2
16. Ccnnocti.cut
S·O
N

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

crrv ____ STAIE--- ZJP·___;,--

.

NFL's best record two weeks ago, quently blitzed DeBerg. He combut now has suffered buck-10-back pleted 27 of 44 passes for 344
losses.
yards, but gave back 45 yards in
"We're still in il," Shula said, sack.s and threw two interceptions.
· 11·
"They got a 1ot or yar dage,"
• •and we•ve got 10 slarl tummg
around."
Woodson said. "Stats are good for
The Dolphins rallied in the fmal whatever, but the bollom line is
10:30. with t.wo touchdow_n~. whethery~winorlose."
mcludmg rookie 0.1. McDuffie s
72-yard punt return, But Rod
"That's the best defense in the
Woodson's eighth inlerception of
NFL,"
DeBerg said. "They came
the season ended the Dolphins'
with
every
kind of blitz. That' s an
final possession after they had
outstanding
scheme they have.''
reached their 44-yard line with 15
The
Dolphins
began to rally
seconds left.
when
Keith
J
aekson
caught a threeEarlier squandered chances hurt
yard
10uchdown
pass
from DeBerg
the Dolphins, who twice failed to
with
10:30
left
10
trim
Pittsburgh's
score afJer penelrating Pittsburgh 's
to
21-13.
lead
five-yard hne. Woodson forced a
fumble 10 end one lhreat and Chad ·
Brown sacked DeBerg to spoil
The Dolphins failed to move on
another.
their next possession, but forced
Carnell Lake's inJerception and another punt, and McDuffie
a 46-yard retilm - extended by a dodged and darted down lhe midlateral to Woodson - set up dle of lhe field untouched 10 score
O'Donnell's two-yard 10uchdown with 6:37 left.
pass 10 Merril Hoge for a 21-6lead
five seconds iniO lhe fourth quarter.
"We had our opponunities for a TOUCHDOWN BOUND- Miami wide receiver OJ. McDuffi• (81) gets past several Pittsburgh defenders
The talceaways gave Pittsburgh win late in the game," Shula said. on his way for a IOuchdown In the fourth quarter of Monday night's AFC battle in Mlam~ Fla., where the
nine in the past two games.
"We dug ourselves into a hole Steelers survived McDuffie's 74-yard scoring jaunt to win 21-20. (AP)
"Turnovers come in bunches," early by not taking advantage of
The Dolphins reached the two in auempt bounced off th e left
Woodson said.
the opportunities we had. We had
Kirby took a short DeBerg pass and
the
fU'St quarter, but Brown sacked upright.
Ranked No. I in the NFL in some excellent chances to put
broke
loose down the middle of the
DeBerg on third down and Pete
yards allowed. lhe Steelers fre- points up."
In
the
second
quarter,
Terry
field.
St
· h' 37
• al

:

Gift to:
NAME _________________
~$

Page 5

Pittsburgh tops Miami 21-20
for second straight victory

Tuesday, December 14, 1993

Page-4

Host Eastern blitzed to a 16-6
fU'St period lead, then held off a late
game rally by Miller to claim a 5348 Tri- Valley Conference win
Monday at Eastern.
Eastern (1-3 overall, 1·2 in lhe
TVC) was led by sophomore Jessica Karr's 24 pomts and six
rebounds, while junior center Tara
Congo led the team with 10
rebounds and seven points. Senior
point guard Jaime Wilson led the
Jearn wilh three steals, IOssed in six
points and grabbed six rebounds,
while Melissa Guess tossed in six
points and had four rebounds.
Miller (1-3, 0-3) was led by
Erica Toki's 14 points.
In the first quarter, Eastern
divided its scoring between Wilson
and Congo. Wilson notched four,
and Congo had five, while Guess
had three as Eastern flllled to a 166 advantage.
Eastern built its lead to 31-19,
although at one point Miller had
cut the lead to five. Karr took
.advantage of a 7-9 stint at the line
to lead the charge and ended the
night wilh super free throw shooting night of 18-26. Overall. Eastern
hit 29-47 at the line in what proved
10 be a very physical game.
Miller cut the lead to 40-30 at
the end of the third frame, but after

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

41

s. R~nac67, Berlin Cen1er W. Racrve
Stcubcnvil.le C1th. 53, Taratto 4S
S1lvani1 S(IIJ\hview 57, Swanton 41
TeL OuiJt.i1n 67, BetUYilla 13

BEST RECEPTION
POMEROY
CALL 992·2903 OR 992·6320

ATHENS HONDA
"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
81 o E. State St. • Athens, Ohio

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel;

To place an ad

Tuesday, December 14, 1993

PUblic Notice

Page-6

PubliC Notice

en

278, Pegee
and 171.
The real utate deau~Md
ln lha complaint and
daacrlbad abova Ia tha
uma. rul Hlate dHCrtMd
In Deed Book ·21:11, Page
407, Malge County Dead
Recorda.
You ara J.lqulrad to
•n-er t1ta complelnt wttlttn
....,ty llghl (28) days after
. tha 1111 publication of thla
nollca which will ba
publlihed once eech - k

Racine UMW collects offerings of thanks

. The world thank offering serVIce_was Ie:cJ by Lee~ when the
Racme Unued MethodiSt Women
met recently. 81 the chwch.
. As explained by Lee who acted
m the absence of the ~ !eader, the wo.rld th~ o~fe~ng ts an
opportumty for mdiVIduals to
respond to God's abundance and
grace with spontaneous gifts of
gratitude. The funds coUected are
u~ ~ the total program of miss1ons m the Untted States and
around the world.
.
At .the meetmg a bn~f .resw_ne
was gtven on women nus~~
who saw the needs of thetr SISters
and of society and how they minis·
tered to those needs.
.
.
Mem~ brought !hell' offenng
to a worship center. Prayer conclu~ed the servi~.
.
. "An Old-fashion~ Th~~f!ksgtvmg was .reat!, by Lo1s B~. 'Three
11u!ll!S by ~ Diddle and
ThanksgiVmg Day by Clara Mae
Sargent
· na1
. Lee also
. told abo ut th e Regto.
Dtversuy Global Commumty

9ood
: WALL OF HONOR • Students at tbe Rutland Elementary
School making A's and B's during the past nine week's grading
J!triod are putting their band prints and Initials OD tbe "Wall of
Houor'' at the school. Principal Anthony Perry initiated the proiram to honor aeademic achievers. Pictured here adding their lni·
ISaJs are Tiffany Priddy and B. J. Kennedy. Looking on are Skip
Bodson and Alison Hayes.
'

examipation, she has been
employed as a registered occupational therapist 81 the Holzer Medical Center's rehabilitation unit in
Gallipolis.
She is the daughter of Jim and
Joyce Smith of South Webster, and
the late Don Riffle. She is married
to Tim Conley.

The annual
cl,inner party
of the Past C~unctlor s Club of
Ches~r Counctl 323, Daughters of
Amenea, ":as held recenlly at Tnntty ChHarurelh mBa!PiardomerohYd-th 1 .
and'
a e b essmg
be~ the
ore
tnner was_ served.
&lt;?Pal Hollon, president, read the
C~nstmas story from St Luke 2,

an

,

the Lord s Praflyer and ~ledg~ to the
Amencan ag were 111ven m umson
·
r:or roll call ~e'!lbers told of
theu plans for Christmas.

Durin!! the business meeting bers did at the time of the death of
1994 offtcers were nommated. her month, Betty Roush.
They are JoAnn Baum, president;
Char lone Grant and Thelma
Enna Cleland, vice president; Lora White were in c.harge of the ChristDamewood , secretary; Charlotte mas program wtth several members
Grant, treasurer; Elizabeth Hayes, read'mg Ch nstmas
·
poems.
flower committee, and Goldie
Door prizes were won by
Frederick, Sentinel.
Dorothy Myers , Erma Cleland,
Cora Beegle and Alta Ballard Esther Smith, Sadie Trussell and
thanked '!'e club for gifts while in Elizabet!t Hayes.
the hospital. They also thanked
A gJft exchange was held durmembers for cards and visits.
ing the meeting.
Mary J B th L
_
. o amngm: ano.ed the
Those attend.tng were Ruth
members for everythmg the mem- · Smtih, Estlier Smtih Ella Osborne
•
•

~6to9p.m.

- No pre-registration is required
but residents who wish to have
their displays judged should have
them lighted by 6 p.m. The categories are religious, non·religious,
and doorway. Cash prizes will be
awarded to the top three in each
category.

far al1 aucceaalve wMka.

A very successful Chr~stmas
Razaar was held Dec . 4 at the
church. There were twelve table of
crafts, a bake sale and a lunch was
served.

The contest is being sponsored
by the Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
Rutland merchants, the Rutland
Fire Department and Emergency
Medical Service.
CHOIR TO PERFORM
Choral groups from Meigs and
Wahama High Schools will sing in
downtown Middleport Thursday
evening.
Sponsored by Fanners Bank, in
cooperation With other programs of
the Middleport Community Association, the hour program of Christmas music to being presented for
the enjoyment of shoppers will
begin at 6:30p.m. on North Second
Street near Hudnall ' s Plumbing
shop.

CONTESTANTS SOUGHT
Cash prizes totaling $100 will
be awarded to the winners in the
Racine Christmas "Show of
Lights" contest sponsored by the
Racine Area Community Organiza·
tion.
Wednesday is the deadline for
residents to register to earticipate
in the contest. Areas eligible to participate are all of Racine village
and two miles berond the corporation limits. The Judging win take
place on Dec. 20.
The prizes will be $50 for fmt
place, $30 for second, and $20 for
third. For questions or to register,
residents may call 949-2429.

Tha lao! publico lion will . be
made on Jonu,ry 18, 1114_,
and the !wanly eight (28)
d•ya· for an•w•r will
commanca an thet dale.
In can of your failure to

.
··
·_
..
,.

anawer

Refreshments were served by Etta
Mae Hill and Gladys Shields.
Attending were: Martha Dudding , Ruth Wolfe, Emma Jane
McClintock, Opal Diddle, Lois
Bell, Clara Mae Sargent, Chris
Hill, Margery Roush, Gladys
Shields, Dolly Wolfe, Dorothy
McKenzie, Etta Mae Hill, Jane
Molten , Tammy Hill, Carla Wallace and Lee Lee.
The next meeting will be Jan.
25, 1994 AT 7:30P.M.

'
··
,
.
•
·'
·

•

10

IW

; HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the
!!astern Star, will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p,m_ There will be a gift
tixchange.
·.

: POMEROY - The Meigs Count~ Board of Elections' regular
meeting will be held at 4:30 TuesdQy afternoon at the board office,
tYfulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
'. POMEROY - Meigs County
1
40&amp;8 will have its annual Christrims dinner at the Pomeroy Legion
liall Tuesday. There will be a social
~ur 81 6 p.m. following by a dinner. Members may take guests.
'
:. RACINE -Racine Lodge 461,
F. and A. M. will have its annual
installation of officers at 7:30 p.m.
T'uesday at the hall. Membership
pins will also be presented, one 70
'ft;ar, one SO year, and three 25 year
pjns, by the district deputy.
Refreshments will be served.

'

•
WEDNESDAY
: LONG BOTTOM • Evangelist
Jllll Villers will speak at the ML
Olive Community Church, Long
Jtouom, Wednesday at 7 p.m.
~wrence Bush, pastor, invites the
IJ!lblic to attend.

': MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
pQrt Literary Club will meet at 2

p,m. Wednes~Iay at the home ?f
Betsy Parson. Sibler Slack w1ll
rOvlew ''The Olhier Wise Man" and
Slll&amp;h Owen Win present a Christ·
mas' collection, "Home for Christ-

rrlaS".

. MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners will meet
at the home of Jean Moore for a
potluck dinner Wednesday at 6
p.m.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Homemakers Club will meet

Wednesday at the Presbyterian
Church Annex for their annual
Christmas dinner, 12:30 p.m. There
will be a program and gift
exchange.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p_m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. For more infoonation, residents may ealll-8()().333-5151.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602, will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday. A World War I
medal will be presented at 6 p.m.,
there will he a dinner at 6:30, and
the meeting will take place at 7:30
p_m.
RUTLAND • The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
hold its regular meeting Thursday,
at 5 p.m. at the office. The public is
invited to auend.
POMEROY · .The Meigs Coun·
ty Library Board of Trustees will
meet Thursday at I p.m. at the
library in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - Choruses
from the Meigs and Wahama High
Schools ·will !?resent an hour of
Christmas mus1c on North Second
Street in Middleport Thursday 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. The program is sponsored by the Fanners llanlc and the
Middleport Community Association.

thru

8ut.-5P.M.- 8AT.8-12

FRI.

CLOSED 8VNDAY

POLICIES

TUPPERS PUINI

• Ado oullid• tloo coualy ,.,.. ad 1'11111 Mllll . . pnpaid
• R~alYe diNoua.t far ~ pe.id in ad•aoe•·

• Fr. Ado: Gi-••r llDd FOuad ado uocl•l5 word. willbo
ru.a 3 dayt al DO claarp.
• ITM:8 of ld for aU capitalleuen b cloub.. price of ad e01t
• 7 poiDlliao typo oaly u.oool
• Sea.tiqel if not re1po111lhle for erron aller lint day (check
for erron rant clay ad nuu la paper). CaD Mfore 2:00p.m.
day after publication 10 make aoruction
• Ad. th.t MUll be paid in. adnnce are1
Card of Thub
Happy Ada

l11. MeMoriul

Yard Sal•
• A etuoil'...lad•oniHIMal plaeocl Ia tloo Tho Dally SeDdnel
(except ClaooirlOd Dioplay, Bum- Card or Local

a...,,_

Nolie•) wUlaJ.o appear m the Point Ploaout
aad
t.be CaUipolil Daily Trlbl.llle, reacbias over 18,000 ho111e1

I

olh•rwlae

.

CALL 992·2.155 FOR

INFORMATION

Aollwellw . . . . hord
ltudhAio!l
By IlPPI· only

. · uphill•t•'l IN
"SPECIAL CARE"
U., 1 uvell
hn..,Y(on•)
fllbrlat

FREE J!S'IliL\'1'11

614-687-PETS

992·3131.

IRIOLD'S
PLU.IIG,
HEA"NG &amp;
.CO.J.IIG

..

IIIII
CHRISTMAS 11EES
C"-811d
cutyour.trM.

...........
-,....,
Rlgga Tree Farm
(

1111107 Aut I pl1ttg1 Rd.
ALU)
Ponteroy, Ohio
112-1702
C.rol • Dwld Riggi

(at-.rua

11-

-

CWipola, Oh.

. . 111M eatl
11aovat .
~iGHT HAULING
'ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269

D.A. IOSION
EICAYAnll ·,:

.

_ _..;..;..,.;,......;.,,;.,;;.._ I -N4tw Homea

.. fl5·4473

(12) 14 1"'

lvr-IH,Ohlo

'

7fT!

. Howril Wrfltsel

DEER QEADS .
MOUN):ED

ROOFING

Shoiider McUII1.. ·•·'155
Hom Mount......... __ ....'22
Squirrel .•-..................'55

NEW-REPAIR

PIERSON
BROTHERS

Glittll' CINnlng

GUtter.

Oownlipou&amp;
..

P•Jntl..

FREE ESTIMAnS

'949-2168
·IIIlO

RACINE
FIRE .DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY

· EVERY THURSDAY

12 Glluge Shot
Strictly Enforced
11/llft1

EAGLes ·
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:46 p_m.
Spacial E'arly Bird

$100 Payotl
Thla ad good for t
FREE eard.
Lie. No. 0061-3&lt;42

nio. pel.

,,

EUL

HAULING

J.I.R.

..
•
".

CONSTiUCnON

"

Land Clearing. Ponde,

,-,

Wlltar Llnee, Septic•
LlcenH • Bonded

lit

r.rm.

,._ ..........

• Ssrvlce • f!Bgl • Belts

Cai114-7G4CIIt

Rainbows, KirtJy, Electrolux.
Hoovec, Eureb. ni-Star,
Regina, &amp; IDOit Olber brands!
Ptut8 Shipped UPS
F..t • Dependible Service!

Limestone
L&amp;L nu lAIN

Dirt

33151 ~ 8rwt IIIII
·llllle,OW.4577i

Gravel
992.·7878

.

614-992·5344
1-100-714-niE

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vaca .·
273--4098
.:'

e

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL
Reasonalile.Rates

Come by 111d regilter
for lree Ballery to be
~en away December

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

NOVDOJEJI SPECIAL
(BEAT THE BAN)

24, 1993. No purchue

required to regiater and
don' have be preaent
to win_

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............1 180
NORINCO UNI. SKS ........................ SfJS
1200 ROUNDS NON·CORROSIVE •• $130

w.-ltm•IOOlllllllllf
fw r• ca~rl•n

CALL Ami 6:00
304-415·7256

Jo&amp; N.Sayre

I-100-714·11RE

mo.

1112411WM11

..

11112mt110.

McLendon

CHRISTMAS TREE$

BRADFORD'S

•Dozer oBickhoe
oOilcher oDu~ Truck

'

Ch-'Ie HIIlflllld,

-

FRESH CUI TillS IVIIUBLE
OR Cur YOUI OWl
Financing Available
1-800-553-3686 .

,,,,••

'

'

-

•

••

Mill

Our Business is Security

.•

Alarm Systenw
Closed Cin:Wt TV
Security CUneru

LANU, OH.
Homegrown-Carefully

"
•••

,,

-~

..._,

"
,_
'"
••

IISSELL ·.BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes.e VInyl Siding
New Ganilgaa • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl
. .A. James

i Sheared Scoleh &amp;.
Whhe Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a "eat aelecllon .of
Jerger treei.
C8ll 742-2t 43 or

•"
••

UMITEO BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eaet at
o.win onto Rt. 111, go 4 mi. to Mllepoat13. Tul'l)
South on gnweii'OIId, 1% mllee to gRive.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'lll DARK

~

•

'•

NAM~------------------------------------------

Whoteule

112 dellv...S.,...... lot
wll be ojJan I a.m. lo I
p.m. •t.rllng Nov. 24111.

S.tl-113-lfll

GUN SHOOT

6:30P.M.
Fectoiy choke

..

,.i.';. 1i02n7878

i'112211i.i

SPORTING GOODS
675-6755

304-773-5533
Open 6 Day'a A Welk

Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks

. FREj: ESTIMATES

or operator of a
public watar ouply 1o nodly
Ita ooneumere .of the
anll•bJIIty ol the VOC
analyUcal rHIIlte lor the
parlod taatad. Paro 0 na
wanUng to revieW lha VOC
..... tte•ahould DOIII.al:
ByriiCU" Watar Board
Bob Moora, Buparlnllondotnl
251t Third Straat
Syi'IIO-, 0111o 45no
Phone : 112-nn
J•toa I.awaoit, Clark

CALL

CONCRDI
WORK

The Byr•euaa W- )oG:Irllgl!ll
Dlpllrtmenl'a public watar
aupply .h aa completed the
monitoring aycle ror votadla -complete
org•nlo oltemloala IVO,Cal
Relllodellng
•• required
·Stop I Compire
3745·1t ol

e1s

WllUam C. Jmnes

COMMERCIAL ancl.RESIDENTIAL
!WEE ESTIMATES

614-H;2·7643

(304) 882-3336

(loS.~ Cell•)

Co-Owners

IIAIL TO: - - - - - - - - ----------_,;_________;;,;,

r .~.

(Offer ExplraaJanuary
15, 1984
v

TREES ' .

-~

.,
,_

$10.00-h

·-.

. apenetoe .

"\
?

.,

· t cllfwlut ltlndl:
laaialto Whllll
Aunt• ,..._, l'te II'•

~~

-·
•

. ·'

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

2112182/trn I

~

HAULING

•O

The Daily Sentinel

-.eftl arT.U F-1-IIIN7:NII7 .

-DOZERS
-BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

PubliC Notice

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOTAPPLYTO YARD SALES)

:MHour
Emerg Utcy Service

(61.)
667-6621

ONE ITEM- ONE FREE AD PER WEEK

IIEI10MTION-

INIURANCE CVI.

cleenlng

USED RAilROAD TIES

·'

FIRElWATER
.DWAQE

Cell IENIEn'S IIOIILE 110111
- HEAniiiiD COOUII

..

Thlala Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or·less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mall It To Ua or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

W.tF Ill '•In:

International Calendar Hunks
Watering Hole

Marcia Keller, Goldie Frederick, .-.
Jean Frederick,lnzy Newell, Faye Kirkpatrick Ethel Orr Lora Damewood, J 0 ' Ann B~um , Sadie ~
Trussell Cora Beegle Dorothy ·
'
Myers Erma
Cleland ' Margaret ..
Amberi:er Beuy Young Alta Bal- .
lard Elizabeth Hayes Mae •
McPeek Ada Bissell Mary K. ·:
Holter, Charloue Grant, Laura Mae •
Nice Thelma White Mary Jo Bar- ;
· ' Opal H 11 'p J'ne Rt'dcnnger,
o on, au 1
nour and guests, Shirley Beegle ·
d H 1 B 11 d
an ar an a ar -

PHONE:-----......;,.--------:------

'

w. give_, .. _.

young doge for .....

--

Tlcktts on aale now
SS.oo advance· $7.00 Door

10
•

Between 1980-90, the number of licensed drivers in the United States age
70 and over increased by more than 56
percent. In contras~ the percentage of
drivers age 19 and under decreased by
nearly 20 percent.

IN POMEROY AREA ·

.,.,.onlll fii'*Otlon.

llennel..,.,loe, pupe ..

DAVID ARNOLD
(814) 1192· 7474
POMEROY, otiO

0

·CARRIERS NEEDED

Betic obulla-,

' IMp !ll!fono-...nt,

QUALITV WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

'

CHESTER · Free immunization
clinic, 1 to 3 p.m. at the Chester
Fire Department for children, age
two months to kindergarten. Parents 10 take immunization records.

WELLSTON - The Gallia·
The last word given in the 1992
Meigs- Vinton Solid Waste Man- Spelling Bee was "lyceum," which is a
agement District Board of Direc- public lecture hall. That doesn't seem
tors will meet Thursday at 6:30 at quite as tough as the 1991's champithe McNally-Pittsburgh Building in onship-determining wonl, "antipyretic,"
WellsiOn.
which is anything that reduces a fever.

IRI·ftlft 1·9
ACADEMY

Thursday
December 23rd 8:00 p.m.

RACINE - Free immunization
clinic for children ages two months
to kindergarten will be held from 9
to 11 a.m. at the Racine Fire
Department by Glenna Riebel, R.
N. Immunization records to be
brought by parents.

CELEBRATION MARKED
The Hillside Baptist Church
located on SL RL 143 in Pomeroy
will be having a New Year's Eve
service starting at 8:00 p.m. There
will be special singing and special
speakers throu~hout the evening.
Also, there w1ll be an all night
campout for kids, age 5-18, that
evening. Parents may bring their
children to the church anytime after
7:00 p.m. They will need 10 bring
a sleeping bag and a chan~e of
clothing. Departure time wtll be
between 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. the
following moniing after brealcfast
is served. For more information
call 992-6768 or 992-S70S. Pastor
Acree invites the public to attend.

MoN.

-

---Community calendar
Commauity Calendar items
appear two days before an eveat
and the day of that evenL Items
must be received Ia advance to
assure publkatioa In the caleadar.
;
TUESDAy
; RUTLAND- Rutland Village
Council will meet in regular sessl T esda at 7 p m at the Rut
cfvic ~nter. . . .
-

or

reapond •• required by the
Ohlo Ruleo of Civil
Procedure, Judgment by
dafaull will be rendered
agelnal you for the r~lef
demanded ln the complaint.
Doted: o.cember 9, 19i3
lArry Spencer,
Clerk of Cquno
Metgo County Common
PINoCqurt
II•~- Harrlaan, Deputy
(12) 1•• 21, 28;
(1) 4, 11, 18; 8TC

•

----Meigs happenings----

•
• COOKBOOKS FOR SALE
: Cookbooks are still for sale by
tbe Rutland Fire Department's
Auxiliary. They may be purchased
fbr $5.50 each 81 Buttons and Bows
in Pomeroy, at the Rolland Departrllent Store, or by calling Kimberly
'fillford, 742-2103.
t LIGHTING CONTEST SET
• Judging in the lighting contest
Q. Rutlilnd will take place Thursday

held Dec. 20 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Galli~olis Holiday Inn . Those
attending are to meet at the church
at 5:30p.m. There will be a $5 gift
exchange and Jane Molten and ·
A~ce Wolfe are in charge of the
program.
:

Offic~r$
elected
at
Chester
DAR
meeting
holi~y

Conley receives degree
. Melissa Riffle Conley of South
Webster graduated recenlly from
Eastern Kentucky University with a
bachelor of science degree in occupational therapy_
· Conley completed her required
clinicals 81 Drake Center in Cincinn)lti and Oaklawn Hospital in
Goshen. inc.
Since passing her national board

which was the theme of the first Kraeuter dinner.
working conference held in
New note packets were passed
Jamaica. Women were there from out to members. The 12 notes with
the United States, Central and envelopes per packet depict an
South America, Africa and the artist's sketch of the Racine UM
Caribbean. The focus was primari- Chun;h on the cover. They are for
lyon the problems of Wll!'len, chi!- sale for $2.50 each and may be pur·
dren and youth of the Caribbean.
chased from any UMW member.
To open the business meeting
It was dectded to wait until
Lee welcomed everyone, and all Valentine's Day to deliver fruit
joined in repealing the UMW Pur- baskets.
pose: Janice Molten gave the
"The Count Me In" assembly
operung prayer.
which will be held in Cincinnati
The .sec~tary report was given April 28-May I was explained and
by Chris Hill and correspondence . the group wanted to pay the regiswas read from Dolly Wolfe, lnltion feeforLeeifsheattends.
Frances Roberts and the FaD FesuThe successful "Campaign for
val co~miuee. A certificate.of Children" will be extended for a
recogntuon was awarded 10 Racme second phase "Making the World a
UMW and~ shown to~ .mem- Safe Place for Olildren and Youth
hers. It was m the Reeogmuon of in the 21 Century"
F~v~ Channels of Undesignated
It was noted th~t the teddy bear
GIVIng.
,
.
project is continuing.
The treasurer s report was gtven
Lee, who is one of the district •s
by Clara Mae Sargent. The pe~ny nominating committee members,
fund ~oUecuon was taken and stek recendy 8ltended the Nov. 18 execcalls hsted.
·
th D' ·
Lee
·~--'--•
bers
•
uttve
meettng
at
.
u""IA;"" mem.
•Or serv- sonagein The Plains.e tstnct parmg the Elecuon day dinner and the
The Christmas party will be

Call992-2156

.

IV

.

•

I.

•

1lta t.rlnga In Ill above

*":l.tlen
are
on
lila "
.,~ Daad: Votu~

••r.•

be....

!~

f" 111. '

,.,

(

\

....,

11171

. Ute'• lleclceN e cMc.r • fire e Hlellh ~
AoQident~,IRA•~ • .

ltckJ a. ""''
D.c:.u••.,..••• ,
' lu 119 . . . .

'

36070 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH. .

IIOUDAY SPECIAL
75
I TON SIZED LIMESTOIE ~

$.9

.......,., •• •lno

. 10 TON MINIMUM

"14) , •••JM.

·

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

•

\

�BEAITIE BLVD."' by ~ruce lea~

&amp;alDOl:

..::;,w,!c:....,..
,,.. __

3 AlliiOuncements

~~~'"*

.. ,

.
-----01'-

.....,..... ......,_
. .. . ......,. .
All,.., . . . . . . . . . . ..

Funlll Spom 1Hv1oi- Funllt

-

~ -~1\G!

=-=

-~

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

~.;t,~~-·
......... -~ lroil llotognO.

Crawford'• GrOCery, ,....Kiefeon

13Nol
57 Cllnrl fnrll

. . . . Of flrylnlot ... l ..

·-COlora

mlkt ti'PI aud\ . . . . ..
lmlllllion ordecrli•• ,.,.,.-

4

18 Dlllltll
10
11 Flud

21 . . . . .
ZIACV..Ev.

• Q7H
.75

ta

.AK5
Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer: Soutb

W..l
Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa

MY FAVORITE

YOO HOO II WHAR'S

CUP AN'

TATER HIDIN'?

Nor~

It

t•

st
st

Pua

OpeniDC lead:

I

~AVE

TO READ A

BOOK DURING C~RISTMAS
. VACATION ..

3 Eltcbllllcl

·==

DOWN

5 GrMio loland
7 ...,_,_

I Tnem drioka

1 Gulllr plrl
2 Actr-Ptrlmon

·-ltldegg
tllcrlt

Eul

P. .
P. .
P. .
P011
PUI

+Q

Every day
is different

Yard Sale

16 II.)
16 LMIItller

33'1htwontan'l
34 eo..r.d wlllt
tiiOIIbrn
311 Aclrtu E-.
37Ruteltllriver

SOO'I'II
+A KQH
.AKQI

BARNEY

14=C::z ••··

24=::

EAST

QJIOIH

12=-L»e
IS Cltc!uit

22Jeltrl

+t?S
•10112

7

42 c.ll
44 n nlcl

laldi--P.FtfM\IfWAi,
••• 5 ?Qf

llclnnlng, cuntng, -

wv. 304·6?5-5o404.

......
.
::,.... .
tl?'\l't.,

PHILLIP
ALDER

~~=

1~10G •• nn Ext. . . .,.~•
Porlllt\-BoMV...
oil
Co IIOZJ 854-'11120.

'i

31011te ....
41f....

'

...

nus

TR'(
ONE .. IT'S
A REAL I'I\6HVRNER

CELEBRITY CIPHER
t.noue.peop61;, .......

CellbrttyCipftlr O)pl ' ••• hCir'IMIICI,... • •
bctl....-lnthtdfll* . . . b.-..
I

' EG

IIRII

EDPLT

XRLPVII

MH

JRDFZRO

letters of
0 foRearrange
ur scrambled words

Goods

- :1,0111

13 112 11/J lb.
VI'AA FURNITURE
..t!.,. $40.00 I
T.._o IIIII, '' R&amp;ril Wll•,
614-·:1151 01 114 441 4428
o.,l:..,.-44f.077Q
EIOOilto ._., Tutlii, TrOIIor
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
~. T-..- Qol. OR RENT-2.0WN jNO DEPOSIT) Mono 0... ........ -With
....... ~ ... . . . . ~117.
:-For-..\,'::.a'T=:';:.,•

l

Want to:
PIN doenl EXTRA

wanted to Dq

~ml~lnM~~,IUM

In Clloohlro Alii, H1v1 R -

=~~.50 Hr.-,Por Cltlkl, .,_.,.

E1 R TREE SERVICE.. Tojlplng,
Trimming, Trw All...-, t4ec1fe
Trtmonnr. Fnoo - .. ., .114IIP-TIITAior 4p.OL

CA~H?!!

11 .... ~.. - . -;:.~~
lor qulok .....
wlllo
""""'·~or IJI.343'!.
LGII . _ . 300 . R oil Rt. 2,
Cotinly w~ ~. 10 mil•
- h o t ....... - . . . . . . . -

-ft.

=.

~~I':..I:ti

'r~':ilr•,.. lind 111111.
IMI,At.....OH.

""'

t

.

E'*Vd~J- prlceo.

...,.__
' '

Bod•-··

w-

Coo!lplll• Uvlna -

.fumlolt ....

e.....,

auno 1n

Good

Condldot,, fiiO. IU ~11 1141.

Mott0toon . F-uro

.

""""" Pol 81top.
- I n a.c. ......,.. eo. Go!-

LAYNE'S FUANirtiRE

~.

M,!O Yd I VInyl SUI, ~~
ll444.

.......
- - ·~1-.
~- c:Octoor ~porilol

o.4"4

.... • . . . . aid, 2
tomolo, - . ......00, ..... ,,....
ct; _
_.....7pm.

• .,.., ., .wor

111'1

a-

FOnl ""'-••, 10,-

extondod
..,.odJ, 'l:
18100. 514NI1105 ...,logo. . -

ULYV

RON

IZV
VUUR

IRPLV,

·:I

BDOV

~.

MotorcyCleS

·

. $1100; --1181

'

·•
~
'
•

I
i

SCf\L H

II r t

., 1'

Bro

For

WH~T

00 'IOU

YMIIhO . 100 4 W - r. $1,200,

'1•I

Aut9 Parts &amp;

•1

'

ANreAReNOT
FA.Ya.le FOR THEIR
~EM?£ CF 1-\l.WCR.

t

A!:cessorlea
I

z:e Utor Enalno, h21. 114-«e2531, Or 5~'1-llitl. .

I

5 Lug Aluminum Turbo -11,

15 Inch In D11meter, 11 ·Inch
Wide, ,WI! FM Gonorol Motoro, .
..25. ~,..,.,.2721.
Budaol Pllood Tronomlnlon1,
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MORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINfHROP

Ford ·~

TIUI'\II.._81-0-2289 Doyo; .,.,. ]
256·1201 Alhir 7P.M.
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TodDy is the 348th
day Ill' 1993 and the
84th day offall.

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TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1799, George Washington died at
Mount Vernon, Va.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS : Nos·
tradamus 0503-1566), physician·seer;
Tycho Brahe U546·1601J, astronomer;
Don Hewitt 0922-), TV·news producer; is 71; Charlie Rich &lt;1932-J, singer,
.is 61; Lee Remick 0935-1991), actress;
Patty Duke (1946-J, actress, is 47.

l "but I'm · ·· ·a · · --!'
~-,.,7,_.r,-,r.6-rl-;lrl Q Coonpleoe the chuckle

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

6~---------------7 . ____________~-----

B.;.....:.,....!...._ _ _....,:__ __
9 ...........__________..____--::--;;...

"Students who are successful usually hava one thing
in common,' the professor told the very nervous fellow .
"They all have faith in their own ABILITY."

DECEMBER14I

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Catnip - Ebony · Flaky · Levity- ABILITY

ahead by rnaiUng $1 .25 and a long, aelf· ' fohvork could be a bit higher than usual
addreaaed, etamped envelope to Aatro- l today and thlaan 88181 WliNd eflectiYIIy.
Qraph, c/o thll newspaper, P.O. Box HoiJe,..r, know your llmltallone.
4485, New York, N.Y. 10163. Be sura to CANCER (June 21•JUIJ 22) SOIIIIKlonal
BERNICE
IIIah! VQUr ZOdiac Sign.
with who"' you already have a
CAPRICORN (C.C. 22.Joon. 11) You're in ~ alliance might also begin to
BEDE OSOL
a ~· brief cycle lor l~e fuHIIIm~nl of role In your commercial affal11. It could
your current hopeo and upectatlons. prove M\IIUaiiY lldvlntageouo.
When lt'e time 10 act, you muat be clecl· LI!O (J.yiJ ,23-Aug. 22) Your Image will
Slve ancf Upecllloua.
be iubetantlally enhanced In this lime
AQUARIUS (Jlin, zo.Feb. It) Conditlon&amp;i frame Wyou follow through and do for CJIIl.
ana a lrtllti "lrntriUal IDdey In that VQU can' era that which you promised to do. Bt
btl! advance your own 1ntere1t1 by your
agent.
J1iFIIIng ~ con•*! it ol ohro fim.
Vli!(JO .(Aug. D lopL 2Z) An old fll!l;rgt
PIIPI!ia ('ell. 211-lliiroh IG) Several . .,y~'VQU
vel,blood from a1110ne, )'II
. ~r . aCNewmento.,. 'poaelble today,,. you po11e11 a .gift today for turning
but '.hey won't be attained unalde~ . unprilflltbie altuatlona Into aomtthlng
.Jn the year ahead you could be much ~ tllf gpod will ol flleadll Who haVll maiWiy rt&amp;·~·
·mort Mtectlve than ...,.1 In pnOrltlzlng prcMdld ttqlpOII.
,
Lll,.... (lepl, ~· ·II) Bt alert ror
goa lind alljecthll5. Allhough you'll have • A-1 (lliriiii21·Aprll11) In Mitt 10 be ~ ~ ~ coming from
,._ ~~rg;~~a, OOIIIcllvei&lt;J tttey1 b8 IliON IIIOQIIIIut tod!ly l'11'1tnuit be .tiMi 10 ~- lea•~ expected aourcea. Something
,~. ·
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,
. ' ce1Wi h berllllta ~ cotldltlo!ll
edvlnlllgecua might OCCUJ ~ulring an
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23rDeo. 21) II Fortunately, thli could be your t~rong tmnltdltlt deOiilon. . '
,
. you're preM~tly ,pureulc.g aomtthlng 1 point.
.
: ·.', t
ICOIPIO (qat.~· II) An andea't'OI'
',ma~ Worthj(tllle, don't be diCOul!&gt; t TAIIRiiii~.I!HIIY ~VOir lhOUid In Whlah yc.t,.IIMMd nMdlyour.lii'd'
-oedlw m1n0r Mblckl. Whlll you hope be~ tttllpu'ul ln, vour't~tciMVOII MII!P· TltiiiMI ._ t.!t ~ olllto acllltft It lullble. ~. net IOCI!Iy, y.t you might not Clll'nht_ on ill, nll!lll rnf11111 ftnl!lly _beoon)t OINIOun 10
yourltlf 10· . l*lhdly ""'' 8lntl for ~ . . fllclcln!. Don' ..000. your-····
you IOdly. ~
Aatro·Graph p•edlcllona for the year GIIIINI (11-, 11.JuM IOJ Your capiCIIy

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UN SC RAMBLE fORI
AN SWER
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tod"J'i

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quoted

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by f.ll 1ng tn the missing words
l-....L.--JL.....L.--J~..J.......J yov develop from srep No. 3 below.

Servrces

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5

B U R N E !!

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

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Dec. 14, 1993

H~VE. lO ~'(?

Aman

hispsy~C~A""r""'l..,c_E~-l~ £. chiatrist,'l to myself, Doc.·
5
"Many people talk to them.....-.L-..r.__.........J.L......J.
selves,'thepsychiatristassured
.-------------.,him. "Yea,' the man sighed,

weu_ ...

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514-182.-o.

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Hondo 50R, $200, 1
5,14 4411485.
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3 WhMter 200cc's HMcla

AUtomollll1

be-

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XRIOR Llko Now, \ :

11110 -

the

to form fouf WOfds

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1m Tinton 125, $300. - 20113 ov1nlngo.
·
1182 SuZuki GS1100Ei Molor·
cyclo, I llodoproodo, 814·3e7·
100s,
614·367·7043.
:;:~:::::::.:;,:::.::-,....----,,-1111 Ho- 25o, 4 Tru, llko
- · 304o671S-4848.
·

ClAY

r1 A R R Y 0

Po!d f·~ 4r4, 310 Engine, ·; ,1
Auto, P8, ...,, 814-4-M.
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7Um yow claUer info eoah,
W it fhs tpn IDfly... b.y phone,
no need to ·leaH your h6me,
&amp;ce
cltuHfkd ad
15 word. or le•4. 3 &lt;Lu•,
3 piJPin, 15.40 paid in t.ulwan.ce.

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HlittoJ-!811 .Mud ....... 514-

2 ,
lldao Of Qol. """"''3 Man
mllel••·
out 11-1.
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llpotlo, !*Y ......... - ...... 1!322,
- • SoC, o.NII Roqulnwd, -Dollvory.
~-114 ~

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41 I'IOIIMS for Rent

$14.11.

HAPPY JACK TRIYIRMICIOE:
Ro1ocgo;!!_:l Bo~ ~~~.!
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~VIIIiillle O.T.C AI: ~.D. North
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SEVERAL 7· ACRE 1!1\ACE(.&amp;:

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Young
PIII-I,
Hltl!ll1oro, Poll a

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1171-1184.

lond;

Floli 'l'lnli, 2413 Joe-. Avi.
"''Ill ~.c •• 111 - ·
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10gal.
tonk oot-upo,
$11.11.

Full bloodod llborton H,.kJ
EJ.atllo ~· aa· 8oR . pujlplol, m • ..,, IIM-112:at4.
• ..-. M - no·, illcvC!e HAPPY JACK TR1VERMICIDE:
I ~~ bJ
24~.oDtt
pot Cloo- 141,. ••14. ·~nllid
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45 I II Golon, 514-245-1182 AI- A¥1lloble O.T.C ol
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tor 8 P.ll.
Supply, 114-112.2184.

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2940 1ftor 5:50pm.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If I die, I dlo. I told _.ibOCIV to bring a and a mop, Jua1 In 0111." - (c.ntonarlan bungle jumper) S.L Potw.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BEllER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
Of STUFF

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POLAR BEARS • About two dozen Racine, Wis., high school
students plunge into Lake Michigan Sunday in their fourth annual
Polar Bear Plunge to raise mouey lor area homeless. They jumped
Into the water to honor their pledges. (AP Photo, Journal Times,
Charles S. Vallone)

CompDed 117:
Emm
Holllteln CDDJO
Recor~elp Count)' Ohio
Dwaine A. Jordln, Ruby F. Jor·
dan tracts 10 Dwaine A. Jordan,
TruSteeS Ruby F. J~. Trustcc,
Dwaine A.. &amp; Ruby F. Jordan. Uv·
in Trust, Mei ..cotumbia.
gFoster G. lfday, dec'd, affid.,to
Rosy L. Niday, by ally-in-fact,
Olive.
Carl Hysell, parcel, to David W.
Hysell and Penny K. Hysell. Rut·
land Village.
Wilbert J. McClain, 38A, to Roy
A. Marshall and Debra L. Marshall,
Sutton.
Alan Giglio, parcels, to Paul
Strauss Rudand
.
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In. I
Pt. Lo 117
R1verboat n, nc.,
t
•
to CarlL. Tennant and Rhonda J.
Tennant, Middleport Village.
Joseph Masters and Barbara F.
Masters, Corrective Deed, to
Michael .Tra~asso, Peggy L. Tra·
passo, Rita . Tra.JlasSO and Raymond ~rapasso, Olive.
.
Kevm N. Buckley and Diana L.
Buckley . Rtw to Glenn Stout,
Chester.
EUsworth J. Holden .and Ann F.
Hol.den, parcels, to Bobby Gene
Wh1te, Salem.
George W. Hall and Amy Sue
Hall, parcels, to Ge'!rge W. Hall
and ~.Y Sue Hall, Olive. ,
'Y•lliam D. Stewlrl; dec d. and
LoUise L. Stewart. dec d, affid, to,
Robert W. Stewart. Sutton.
Joseph W. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Lot 8, to James A.
Moore and Mildred s. Moore,
Olive.
Joseph w Masters and Barbara
F Masters Lot 6 to Ronald James
S~mpson: Trustee and Ronald
James Sampson Family Trust,
0 live.
Joseph W. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Corrective Deed, to
Marlene Held, Olive.
Joseph w. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Corrective Deed, to
.
Ronald Charles McCrady and Vli·
giniaRoseMcCrady,Olive.
Charles Grueser and Ruby
Grueser, parcels, to David A. Kuns
and Ch
. ery I L. Kuns; Sutton, Mi nersville
Gle~ E. Robinson, 1/10 A, to
Marlene Donovan, Orange.
Ernest F. Baker, dec'd, affid., to

Third Middleport
holiday givea·way
winners announced·
'customers may register in !he
participating stores. To be eligible
shoppers must fill out new stubs
each week wilh one of the 20 mer·
chants because prizes will be
awarded based on only those tick·
eiS submitted that weeic.
Tbe winners were Connie Fields
for Dairy Queen. Carolyn Bachner
for Millie's Restaurant; Clarence
Lee for Ingels Carpel; Edna Ables

for Fruth Pharmacy'; Mazie Han·
nabs for Dan's, Ray Smith for Val·
ter Lumber, Rhonda Hag~y for
Mill Sueet Books, Audra N1ce for
Trolley Station Crafts, Janet
Reeves for Vaughan's Cardinal.
Steve Price for Locker 219/Shoe
Place; Wilma McGraw for Bahr
Clothier; John Ord for Mill End
Fabrics. Derek Stump for Ingels
Electronics, Gene McDaniel for
Johnson's Variety, Betty Pooler for
Middlepon Deparunent Store. Amy
Wagner for Inge.Is Furniture, Max·
inc Little f&lt;r Big Bend Health and
Fibless~L. .B. Foreman for Acquisi·
lions Fme Jewelty, Cecil Kin!\ for
Farmers Bank, and Phyllis Gilkey
for Sears.

Joseph Loftis and Cora Loftis, '
3.266 acres, to Salisbury TownshilJ
Trustees, Salisbury.
.
William J. pooler and Sharon A. :
Pooler, 1.02 acres, to Terry A. :
Pooler and Deborah K. Pooler, !.
Chester.
•
Lyman Stanley, parcel, 10 Wet• ~
zel Phillips and Sandra Phillips, I·
Bedford.
, i
Lawrence R. Wolfe, Dolore' ::
Wolfe, Helen J. Pickens , Ora E. •
Hill and Fannie L. Lee, Sutton.
:
fMaryA. ~enhe•mg.gec.!.cert
Henry L. Hunter and Mary J. ;
~ transL to ~e R.' e~ dmg, Hunter, 44A, to, Lawrence Hay· •·
Ketbtly ou deapn, . ~c ~ If · man and Jennie Hayman, Lebanon. ;:
0 c,
0 entz an
atncla
William T. Gruescr, by P.O.A; :
Chester.
.
Flora Dell Grueser, Lot 39, to Don·
Betty Lou Dean , Rlchard.J?. a!dShafer,PomeroyVillagc.
j,
Koblentz, CIOdy Koblentz. Patocl8
R ger D Cotterill and Robyn •·
Wolf, Gary Wolf, parcel, to George
o
.
I
W d R •·
C G nhi
Ch ter
Cotterill, parce s, to an a .. •
· Geoe emCerG. nhes . ·
to Wyeth and Robert Wellman, Sci·_:·
rgc · e e•me~. parce1•
pio.
:
Water Dist., Lebanon.
Betty Lou Dean , ~•9hard ~Barbara Jean Rose, nka, Barbara •
rahE~~~=: ~ Cu~~~~: Koblentz and Patncll Wol • . Jean Birtcher and Teena Rane~ ;.
Whittington and Barbara Whitting· Ch~~~encc P. Spurrier dec'd, Birtcher, 2 1{2 A, to Harold Rose, ~·
ton, Scipio.
affid to Steven Surlier and Mary Sutton.
:
Judith A. Sams and Robert E. Ann Spurrier, Salisbury.
ld,a Cowd~ry. l.OOA, to Roger ;
Sams. parcels, to William E. MilJ J Detweiller En~rises Inc
Holsmger, Ohve.
·
dren,Jr., Orange.
traci #io. to Todd M. Price, Scipio'.'
Clement L. Cowderyt~ndi~Y~ :
Virginia Graham, by guard, lo~
Lawrence Hayman and Jennie Cowdery • _l.OOA ,
g •
to Everett C. Foreman and Linda Hayman, 6.9A, to Charles F. Hols10ger, Ohve.
:
Foreman, Middleport·Village.
Ohlinger, Lebanon.
Wanda R. Wyeth and Donald ~.
Eunice L. Jones and Roy Jones
Col Soulhern
Wyelh by POA, 2.466A, to Kather· :
Jr., parcels, to Roy Jones Jr. and
S~dard Oil Co lots to B p
ine Mae Stover, Bedford.
:
Euruce L. Jones. Chesters.
Exploration &amp; Oil I~.• Oninge.
Wanda R. Wyeth ~Pl!. Dorw.td i
Chester Church of God, agree &amp;
MononlUihila Power Co.
Wyeth by POA, parcels, to Ray l
case., to Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Roger R. Roush.and Christy L, Wellman, Bedford.
1
Inc. and Columbia Gas Trans. Roush parcel to Jack Morrow
G · nfi
d n.. 1 fi
:
Corp., Chester.
•
•
•
ail I nger an vwY· n nger, .,
Claudia A. Eisenmann, parcel, Letart
Corrective Deed; to Waters Edge of •
toClaudiaA.EisenmannandCarol
Bobby Joe Adal!ls• Jr. Trustee, Syrac~LimitedPtnShjp,Sui!O~· j·
L Co Ol'
4.3469A, to Melame Adams, Sut·
Marvm Keebaugh and Mllrjorie -1·
' Ge~d~vi, Fugate, Dec'd and ton. .
.
Keebaugh, 6.0 A, to James Powell 1
Frank M. Fugate, dec'd, affid, to
Behnda S. Gray parcel, to Vm- andDebmPowcll,Olive.
-,
Eva Mae Emerson, Pomeroy Vii- .cent D. Gray, Lebanon.
Leah J. Arbaugh Hawkins, lot, ·
lage.
C~les M. Werry, dec'd, affid., to Linda C. Bales, Orange.
.: ,
Eva Mac Emerson, lot 7, to to LllhanErnesune Werry, Sahs·
Tessie Evans, paroels, to Cecil·:
W. Rowan and Corene Rowan,
Howard P. Logan and Eleanor J. bury·.
·
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Logan, Pomeroy Village.
· V~lage of Pomeroy, Lot 303,to Sutton.
'
Rodney Griffin and Sanda Grif- W•lhs H. Durst. and Sharon S.
Edna L. ·Foster, Tracts. to~ i
fin, R/W, to Buckeye Rural Elect Durst, Pom~y V1Uage.
.
Jane Carr, George C. Foster, Jo;y, ·
,..A I C 1 b"
Ruby Amta Bu_rke, by atty·m· Anno Ellis, Miriam R. Comph· &gt;
.....,..Lartyop
. n~: E~:~.~d Margaret fact, parcels, to Michael T. Burke, ment, Letart.
Service Station Holdin~s Inc., :
M. Edwards, R{W, to, Buckeye Orange·
Rural Elect C
I Rd d
Robert S. Montgomery and BPExploration &amp;Oil Inc., ots.l &amp; !.
Rufus E: ~'f~f;Ed!r~Dn· Aretta M. Monrgo~ery, l.OOA par· 2, to John W. Clark Oil Co., Inc.,
ton and Marine Anne Dillon , eel, t~ Robert Ke•th Montgomery Orange.
Lee Sarlin~ Jeffers, etal by'·.·
24.80A., to Warren Taylor aka and Lmda K· Montgomery
·
: Letart ·
Warren B., and Victoria Mitchell
Avety C. St. Chur, dec d, affid., POA, Mary Je fers, ctal by POA. ..
to Ola Leona SL Clair, Bedford.
Mary Kathleen Jordan, Lavern Jor· :
Taylor, aka, Victoria M., Scipio.
Ala Leona St. Cl~1r, 15A, to dan, Janet Anne Dunham, John ·
Charles L. Butcher, dec'd, Don L Lambert and Tma A Lam
Dunham, Rich••d Lester Jeffers :
affid., to Alpha G. Butcher, Scipio. bert, B.edford,
·
- and Lois Jane 'effcrs,
...
parcels, to :
Andrew Grueser, dec'd., affid., Christopher D. Young, Elaine K. ·
to Allie Grueser, Louise Lehew, Young, Scipio.
:
I 1
Calherine Wince, Selma Fedor, and
Ralph D. Shain and Maxine ·
Terence W. Grueser, Salisbury.
Shain, parcels, to Ralph David
AllieGrueser.EthetW. Grueser, Shain,Letart.
Louise Lehew. Catherine Wince,
Bob R. Moore and Ruth M.
parcels, to Aloysions A. Grueser, Moore, parcels, to John W. Ran:dolph and Bobbie Lou ~dolph;
her theme. Readings included Jr., Salisbury.
"
..
John
•Grueser,
dec'd,
affid,
to
Sutton, • .
t
_''li111!PDse"· and "Keepina,Christ·
Selma Fedor and Terence W.
Wilbur L. Moore and Eileell":
mas·.
Riebel Moore, parcels, to Steven R.
Golda Reed read "Uncle Simm Grueser, Salisbury.
Selma
Fedor,
Bernard
Fedor,
Dill and Joanne DiU, Cheslel'.
·
Christmas Sermon, and Helen
parcels,
Aloysius
A.
Grueser,
Jr.,
Virginia
Stallworth,
dec'd,cef1:,
Quivey read ''No Tiny Tim Among
Salisbury.
to Beverly Crosby, Middleport Vii· Us."
'fll!l Repon on National Grange Jack Kerwood, parcel, to Dim· lage.
Don M. Erwin and Cathy Q.
was g1ven by Rosalie Story, It was pte Eakins and Larry F. Eakins.
.
Erwin, lA, to Jeffrey Mark Harvey _
noted !hat Keith Ashley, represent- Salisbury.
Ruth Emma Stout, Dec' d, by and Sharon Lorene Harvey, Sutton. ;
in.s West Virginia, was an adult
adm .. 5/6 Int,to Glenn Stout, Bed·
Jeffrey Mark Harvey and •
wmner on a talent show.
Sharon Lorene Harvey, parcels, to ·
Members enjoyed a gift ford.
Cecil Maynard, lots 3 &amp; 4. to Earl W. Cleek and Janice C. Oeek, !
exchange and refreshments were
served,
Racine ViUage.
Raben Hill, Racine Village.

Connolly; Debbie Uensley imd her
guest, Todd Musser, Jess"ica
Hensley, Ryan Hawley and his
friend, Timmy Gheen, Rachel
Hawley, and her guest, Wesley
Hol.lcr.
MarY and Tom Musser and son
Scotty, Tom and April Smilh and
their familv members, Paige and
Cork Cleek, and daughter Hannah,
Todd and Nancy Smith, and

.f.

Food for Chrisbnas baskets for

~.IJr.ahqQ.,&amp;!l~CooOr-

era'iivcl"msll was prcscnt'Ca~6y
members of Hemlock Orange 2049
at a recent meeting beld at the haD.
Master, Rosalie Story presiding
at the meeting during which time
Muriel B~ord .g!l~e a report for
the women s actiVIties committee.
Plans were made for a soup supper
to be held at 6;30 p.m. at the next
meeting. Janitor for the month will
be Ziba Midkiff.
. .
A report was made on hvtng
wills and nursing borne care.
The delegates from Meigs
CountY. to the State Grange meet·
ing will give a report at the next
meeting. Ziba Midkiff will be jani•
tor for !he nMt meeting.
Sick reported were Octa Ward,
Leo Story, Elizabeth Roberts, Vada
Hazelton, Midge Shumway and
James WebCr.
The literary program was pre·
· sented by lecturer, Jessie White
who used the Christmas spirit as

Peter Marshall. Tbe ~.~what I
Need for Christmas, was read by
Betty Newell. The program ended
by thc group singing "SDent !'ligbt"
led by Newell.
'A gift exchange was enjoyed
and Rl'rcsluhents were served.
.It was announced that the Fire
~biiCIIt Christmas party will be
d Sllllday at ~:00 p.M. Tberc wil
be a~ dish dllmer for fire-,
m~. lilxiliary members, their fam.

J'8I)Cd.

Commission
discusses
part-time help
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Meigs County B.oard of
COmmissioners, during its regular
weekly meeting Tuesday, took no
action on ll:quests from the county
infirmary llllil the recorder's office
. for r!lrl·time help, opting to wait
unti the fust Qf the year until mak·
ing a decision.
·
ReCorder Emmogene Hamilton
requested·part·time help for 2 1(2
hours a day for S3.S7S a year. A
letter from the infinnary indicated
they arc Interested lntaeSted in hir·
ing part-time help up to 20 hours a
wCek while two employees arc off
sick.
Commissioners decided to have
GTE analyze !he courthouse telephone sys~ and make a TCCOm·
mendation based on the needs of
coarlhouse employees. The decl·
sion resulted from letters from
coarlhouse offices desiring more
phone lines.
·.
In addition, acting up!)n . a
request from Gallia County En~i·
neer Joseph Leach, the comm1s·
sioncrs approved a resolution supporting ihc upgrading of State
Route 7 corridor to a ~or four·
lane highway. The' resolution will
tie-sent 10 Jerry Wn.y. direclor of
the Ohio DeJ!artme'nt of Trans·

Cherry w/quilt top ......... Sales429
Reg. $659

top_..... Sale s529

,,

9:30 to 5

'To Quolftld ApJ~Iclmll

COntinued P11 Page '

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Chris1mas
. Delvery

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

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COI~lAC~ VIM'E - United Mine Work·
ers' member Jeff Hale, left,,prep,l l'el to vcite
Tuesday at UMW Local 2286 Iii Danville,
W.Va., on tbt UDIOli'S proposed nn-year COD·

Coal contract ratified;

miners return to wo·r k
· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Up to 17,500minen on strike in
seven states begin heading back to
work tonight after approving a
five-year CIJ!Ibacl with some of the
1181ion;s.biagest I;(JI!l,compmies. .
"lt~to~w that wo
a

spanofmostUMWmines.
major stockpiles and maintained a
"Our members can go back ·to portion of their production using
the mines with their heads held supervisors.
high, 'mowing that we beat the . The strike began. MaY. 10 against
(/dds aixl woo a strong contract !hat members of the !JI!'JIDI~ous. ~a!
~~ Ollf right£? job.llPJI01IU· O~tors Assoc:i8U9n. m Illino1s,
mues," Umted Mme Workers Indiana, Ken~.· Ohio, Pennsyl·
·b ..so ' · · ' !' hue
'' •'" mone~we'.,..,,......., • 've . . . p1 ' " ...
&amp; r lt'RI"kei'd.,.-·-'-·
JO
~--·- ·"·-....... id.
~ yoftlo.,Wat.JlLN&gt;onlo..and
___ ...., '
- o--·:y;...:rua·
-o· •
w..d · ,__.....;..,
·"- ·•· ... · ' t · ... ' .-.... · ·
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It
claimed
one
life'
ihat
-of a
we~.,.,.,..~ tt """'"! .
IQias,
be·contract was worked out
..
·
•
said. James, PBrsons, I ~S·yi:8r"'id last 'week durlng ta11cs overseen 'by nonuniOn. Worker•~ho Wl!9 shot. 10
mmer from Foster.
.
a special mediator appointed by ~eath wh~e .~s10g a p1cket bne
· About 6S percent of eligible Labor Secrctaty Robert Reich.
10 W~t Vtrgm~
miners voted Tuesday in favor of
The miners are expected tO'
Mmers rece1ved $150 weekly
the conbact, wblch ends a seven· be~in reporting for work with slriltc benefits but nothing close. to
month walkout. An estimated torught's midnight shift.
what tbey.normally earn. Tbe strike
60,000 members of the United
Tom Hoffman, a spokesman for also took Its toU on food banks and
Mine Workers union were eligible the companies, said union members other social-service agencies.
to vote.
will be recalled mine by mine as
Under the new contract, UMW
The union won its key demand, each company gears up for full pro- members arc eligible for 60 percent
guaranteed access to future jobs. duction.
of new jobs created by their
" We think that everyone is anx· employer or its subsidiaries. The
Without that, the union said, its
members face widespread unem• ious to get back to as normal situa· union had ai:cused the coal compa·
ployment in !he next seven to 10 tion as we can," he said. Most coal nies of robbing its members of jobs
years, .the average remaining life companies entered the strike with by creating nonunion subsidiaries.

t:

Federal plan may upgrade
Ohio's non-interstate highways
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
federal highway official said
Ohio •s transportation system will
be gready improved if Congress
passes a bill designating the routes
that make up the new Nationrll
Highway Syslem.
· Rodney Slater, U.S. highway
administrator, explained the pro·
posal at a news conference Tues·
day.
He said the system would consist of 1S8,700 miles of the
nation's most important mads.
It would linlt interstates, mili·
tary ba&lt;Jes, urban centers and trans·
portatioo facilities such as aiJports
and train stations. Slater said at a
news conference.
Slater said U.S . 23, between
Toledo and P~mouth, is one of
the non-interstate routes that would
qualify for federal funding of as
much as 80 percent of improve·
ment costs. Tbe statc would pay the
rest.
U.S. 3S in southern Ohio and
U.S. 30 in the north also were list·
ed.
Tbe entire
would consist
of 1~8,700 m1les of the nation's
most important roads, linking inlet·
states, military bases, cities and
transportation centers such as·air·
pons and train stations, Slater said.
He said' the lllost of the system
wouk.l be existing highways. Only

sxstcm

Proposed
highway
system plan
By The AIIOClated Press
A lS9,QOO.mUcNational High·
way System plan before Congress
would include the following routes
in Ohio. More may be added;
• All Ohio interstates
• U.S. 23 from Toledo to
Portsmoulh
• U.S. 35, Dayton to Gallipillis
• U.S. 33,norlhwestofLimaiO'
Pomeroy. ·
· '• U.S. 30, Pennsylvania line to
Indiana, north of Lima
• Ohio 13, Newark to Mansfield
·
• Ohio 16, Newark to Interstatc
77 south of Alcron..canton.
2 percent of the-project involves
new construction. Each will be
upgraded based on sr:cial needs
that each state will he p determine,
he said.
The Improvements could
include widening two-lane high·
ways, Slater said. He said !hat in
some instances adding or widening

shoulders, or adding -lights, would
be enough.
Interstate highways primarily
are down for maintenance under
the plan. Slater said new conslrnc·
tion was not being ruled OUL
He said passage of the legisla·
tion, subm1tted to Congress last
week, would be a s~ toward linking aU of the nation s transporta·
tion forms into a sysle!D that is economically efficient and environ·
mentally sound.
Slater said the system would
enhance access to 104 major ports,
143 ail)?orts, 321 Amtrak stations,
191 r&amp;ll and truck terminals and
242 military and dcfense·rclated
inSWJations nationwide.
In .Ohio, planned highway
improvements would help serve
.military bases in Dayton and..
Columbus and airports m Colum·
bus, Cleveland, Dayton, Toledo,
Cin~innati and Akron-Canton, he
said.
Slater said the plans would help
implement the North American
Free Trade Agreement
He said trucks carry 60 percent
to 80 percent or all freight shipments from the U.S. to Mexico and
Canada, with Interstate 7S as one
or the key routes to Canada.
"The ~sielll will serve this traffic by linking with the Mexican and
Canadian highway systems,"
Slater said.

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m.agazme re~.

"Police have found marijuana
fields in Ohio state forests rigged
with bear lefl·hold traps. dynamite
and fishhooks stnmg between 1rces
at eye level." !he article said.
"Booby trapped croplands have
also been discovered by drug
enforcement officials in Indiana
and Kentucb Staleforeats."
Backpacker Is: published by
Rodale Press, Inc.
·

Tbe news brief referred to tho
on~oing investigation by state
pollee ~piing 10 locate grow,
· ers; it also m~ntions the recent
d~struclion of 'f,OOO plants in 21
sltci.throulhollt Shawnee State
ForestliCII'Pcrtsinouth.
Po_lice are warning hikers to
walk cauliously, as 111811Y sites arc
protcc!ed by bobby traps, Bac~·
packu tcpork:il

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sel for the water district, said the
district first considered filing a
civil law suit to contest the law:
After several meetings with l!llli
representatives Malone llld ~
Abel (D.Athens) aixl State ~
Long, ~tes nl TP &amp; C Gc:Dcn1
Manager Don Poole opted instead
to propose new legislation which
woulcf shift the responsibility o(
paying fot line rr!c'Cilion.
·
•tn practical lenni. this is ari
issue which 11ldmm the ·~
of water custoliiCI'I in nu:ai communities.~ Lentes said. "As the law:
now standa, those customen ulti•
mately foot the bill for costi
incurred. Tbe costS arc •
ed 10'
the utility company, who then )1111·
the cost on to the ciiSIDDia."
:
"It only seems fair that the sate:
should .PBY for the relocation of.
utility bnea when it involves their:
project, and it would cet1ain!y seem·
only fair that the law be consistent:
when it involves rural· and urban:
areas in the SlaiC.•
"Rcpresenlative Malone and his: .
staff have been extremely helpful:
in getting this bill to this point,"· .
Lentcs said. "Wilhout his suppori
and the ·suooort of hi~ r.nllr..,,.••-•'
we wouldnlt have a chance of
changing this inequitable law."
:
Lentes noted that the legislation,:
has been endorsed by the Ohi~
Rural Water Association, an:
umbrella organization involving
rur~ water providers across the
Slate.
.
CUSIQillers •.
.COntlnUICI on.PIQI-4
Lentcs, who acts as legal coun·

POMEROY • Legislation infro.
duced Monday in the Ohio Oenenl
Assembly could save local Tuppers
Plains &amp;: Chester Water CUSlOIIlefS
thousands of doitars if pessed
. According to ~ Attor·
.ney John R. Lentes, the leg1•)'1ion,
which is being sponsored in the ·
House by State Representative
Mark Malone (D-South Point), is
aimed at shifting the cost of relo·
eating water lines from public utili·
tits to the stale wben the relocation
is required under road improvement projects.
S'* Senator Jan Michac.l Long
(D-Cin:levilk) is expected to introduce the legislation in the Ohio
Senate at a later ~As the law now Slands, the public 'utility which owns the water
lines is required to pay for any
cosiS of~those lines when
the Slate
road improve·
ments in cases when the lines arc
located outside of a municipality,
According to Lentes, the language
of the existing law effects rural
areas most dirccdy.
•
The legislation was drafted by
Lentes in ·light of the relocation of
U.S. ltoute SO in Athens County,
an ,area served by TP &amp;: C Water
District That relocation is expected
to involve approximately one,hal(
million dollars in water line reloca·
tion costs, which under existing
law. will be b,orne by TP &amp; C
Wpter District. and ·ulumatcly, i!J

I

A nationelly-dial!'J'buted oilidoor
marazi110 Is liiiJ'itin&amp; blctpecldqg
endilillllsli 10' be c,rerut wliiie, hik·
1111 t!uouJb
ttm tlhiq.
"If you're Dllndinla bllclaioull·
tty trip .to 'souJho!a'siern Ohio, be
forewarned: Y!)u~.ll b!8 tenturing
into the ·~ belt' w~ bumper
crops of lriuillJIIIUI.ate bein&amp; culti·
vatcd iUepJly on pilbliC land." the
Feb. 199"4 Issue of Backpal:ter

Aqd ,the deer are arazln'g tn tbe
lleldlllld • • lOllS up hlah
And ~llinbow !2edt II tlowinJ llld
11!i11n1 oh 10 brlibl . I . 1. ,
lt'l 1 picwre true In I ory tsa
m~10my.-

TP &amp; C customers •
·may benefit from
proposed legislation

Magazine warns··hikers to walk softly

a hillside in a valley there

SI8IICis a little while botlae
SUIIQIIIIIIed' with sWIY!Jig pine tree
and on:t.dl aiiiiOUIId
Thae iJ ....... out in the back·
yanl plaiMd In lOWS of lfCCII .
And a aoktnltlil,il lhining from a
. blue ...y 1n my d¢lm
.
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Vinton Cbililty aDd shot three times
before escaping.
Vamey. who was sentenced in
September, p~ guilty an~ ~a,s
sentenced to 10 to 25 years 10 jaH
on each charge. The prison terms
arc being served concurrently.

Reg. $539

My Couatry Home
By GILBERT FITZWATER JR.

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'''.Sbe:wu lllen •talcen tli .a' ilte In

Cherry w/upholstery .....Sale 5379

----Poet's corner-~-On

A man charged with participat·
ing in the abduction, rape and
·attempted murder of a Jackson
Countl woman failed to alter his
plea o not guill}' and waa granted a
·continuance thts morning for his
trial in tl!e Gallia County Common
Pleas Court - to the surprise of
.both !he state and his defense attor·
ney.
·
Gregory S. Pickens, 27, 12283
State Route 160, Vinton, llad
pleaded not guilty to .the charges in
a heari·ng last spnng. He was
expected to alter that stance today.
But defendant did not cbanJle
h~ plea to guilty arut:a new tnal
dale was set for 9 a.m. Feb. 7.
Terrence Lyden of Columbus,
Pickens' attorney, said be had not
anticiPated the .decision to proceed
with the trial an&lt;l asked the court
for a brief continuance so that he
could adeq•ly peplm.
.
Lyden had no comment th1s
morning about the matter.
Gallia County Prosecuting
Attorney Brent Saunders also
expected-Pickens to l'lead guilty
and said he was surpnsed that the
trial will move forward.
"He has !hat right." Saunders
said. "We'D see him in court~
Pickens and Vincent H. Varney,
23 of Rt I, Ewington, - bolh for·
· mer Gallia County Sheriff's
:deputies - allegedly used a Dash·
ing emergency light to stop the
wopian on U.S. -35 near .Rio
~ ~~ted her-' li\,I!IJ!Oint

'r

~~~:.· · Anderson's

A Muttim1di1 ._ ,._..,.._

Pickens
rape trial
continued

Antique Maple_............. Sale 5319

FREE

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2 Sec:tiono, 14 Pagoe 35 _,II

· Multlmecl•lno.

Reg. $399

ilies and anyOne who helped at the
fair.
.
Others in altelldance at the party
included Erma Cleland, Clara Conray, Lora Damewood, Opal
Eichinger, Elsie Folmer, Dorothy
Hawk, Opal Hollon, Macy Virginia
Kautz, Marcia Keller, lnzy NeweD,
Jeannie Newell, Ethel Orr and June
Ridenour.
· Guests were Chelsea Wood,
Bvelyn Wood and Janet Ridenour.

Low 10nlghtln mid 30s.
Rainy. Thursdoy, blgh In 40s.

Vol. 44, NO. 163

Lane

Oak w

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Reg.$469

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~-\S1MAS S~l
~ CEDAR CHESTS ~

daughters, Amy and Molly; Sandy
and · Walter Laudetmilt and
daughter. Lena Bower and her
friend, Terry, Casey, Cyrina, Cayla
and Sammi, Amy Phalin and
dau~hter, Keisey,; Danny and Susie
Smllh and daughters, Katie and
Mandy,and a friend, Glen.
After the dinner, the group
enjoyed games with prizes being
awarded to the winners.

Pick 3:
178
Pick 4:
6385
Buckeye 5:
3·13-26-32-36

PageS

HemtOck Grange to
t
"b
t
d
b
k
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u
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00
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d

Chester Ladies auxiliary exchanges gifts
The Chester Fire Department
Ladies Auxilary Christmas party
was held recendy at the home of
Paula Wood. Tbe home was exten·
sively deconlled for the season. ·
After the business meeting,
Christmas and get-well cards w=
signed for the community.
Tbe Christmas SIOty from Luke
was read by Darlene Newell. Oeo
Smith read a seasonal st!lrY by ·

'" Paula June Butcher, ~1._728A, to
Kodney Ray Burcber, ScipiO.
Ethel Carson and Dorothh
Pence, Lots 10 &amp; 11 • to Joscp
Masters and Barbara Masters,
Orange. .
L
,
Flossie 0. Allensworth, dec.d.
by adm., Lot, .to, Hope .B apust
Church, Inc., Middlep:m V•U~g«:.
Hemlock Grove Chmllan
Ch~!fCh,I(2 A., parcel, to James H.
Sm•th. Bedford. .
,

Phyllis E. Baker, Sutton.
Lillian Proffit, tracts of parcels,
to Freda Ferguson and Maxine
SeUcrs,SUlt011/l.ebanon.
Darrell R. Wright and Wanda L.
Wright, 3A, to Basil Lee Wright
and Florence Elizabeth Wright,
Scipio.
.
Bertha Randolph, affid, and
MaljorieJ . Kccbaugh,Meigs. ·
Joseph K. Connolly and Eloise
Connolly, RJW. to Tuppers PlainsChesterWaterDist,Orange.
Ray R. Pickens and Patty A.
Pickens, R{W, to T. P. Chester
Water Dist, Chester.
Glen Stout and Grace Stout.
RfW T p Ch
W
D'
• to . . ester ater •st.,
Chester.
Eugene o. Adkins and Jo Ann
Adkins, R{W, toT. P. Chester

Smith famify ,h,~sts holiday gathering
The annual Christmas gathering
or the family of Pete and Burton
Smith and guests was held rcccndy
at the Kyger Creek Plant banquet
hall.
.
Attendin$. were Lois Hawley
and her fam•ly, Becky and David
EUis, Aimee and Sarah Kloes, Beth
and Amber EUis, Wendy and Ron
Maxson and son, Aaron, Kcnda
Kloes, and her friend, Wade

Meigs
quintets lose

Meigs County land transfers .announceq:

Tho aruwal Ouistrnas dinner of
!he Oidics but Ooodies Car Club of
Meigs COIJIUY was beld rcccnlty at
the AmeriCan Legioo Post 128 hall
in Middleport.
Club members were joined by
family members and guests for lhe
party. Door prizes were awarded
and those attending were enter·
tained by country singer Sheela
Delayn, former Meigs Countian
now residing in Nashville. She was
accompanied on the keyboard by
SHEELA DeLAYN
Gene Austin, song writer and producer.
DeLayn has already recorded an der." Her lively music topped off
album to be released in January the afternoon of yuletide fellow·
entided "My Heart is on !he Bor· ship.

MIDDLEPORT .· Winners in
the third week of the holiday giveaway by the Middleport Communi·
ty Association have b.een
announced. Tbe total to be g1ven
away !his season is $1,400 with !he
~rograrn to continue through Dec.

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Ohio Lottery

Tuesday, December 14, 199$'t;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag, to-The Dally Sentinel

Alleg,ed assaUant to go
before Gallia grand jury
tenced tO 30 days in jail plus one
year of probation for obstructing
offiCial business. As a condition of
his probation, he is -requited to
cooperate with law enfot:eement
offiCials in the Ralhbum case.
Rathburn's attorney, Ronald
Calboun. today asked that hiS client
be eligible for release after posting ·
I0 percent of the bond, but was
denied. According to coun offi.
cials, state attorney Mark Sheets
asked that the bond be ~ to $1
million, but was also denied.
The grand jury was in its
December session this morning.
Sources at the Gallia County Common Pleas Court were not sure if
the jury would hold a special session to hear the Rathburn case
before its regular meeting in Jan.
uary.
Rathburn allegedly shot Scott
early on the morning of Friday,
Dec. 3. Scott was discharged from
Holzer Medical Cenlel' Dec. S.
The alleged assailant Tuesday
pleaded not guilty to both counts of
attempted murder. If convicted, he
Lane.
could face up to 2S years in jail and
The student from Delaware last $10,000 in fines on each of them.
week was fined $200 and sen :

By JAMES LONG
OVPNewsStatr
A Gallipolis man charged wilh
two counta of attempted murder in
the shooting of a Cheshire woman
was bound over to lhe Gallia County Grand Jury foDowin' a prelimi·
nary hearing Monday 1ft the Gallipolis Municipal Court in which an
alleged aceoinplicc entered testi·
mony ~nst him, aulhorities said.
Chnstopher L. Rathburn, 22,
1140 I/2 Second Ave., Gallipolis,
is still being held in the Gallia
County jail on a cash bond of
$100,000. Rathburn had been
attending Marshal University in
Huntington, W.Va.
Don Bowen, special investigator
with the Gallia County sheriffs
offiCe, said today that another Mar·
shal srudent testified againS;t Ralhbum, staliDjl !hat he had admitted
to the shooung.
Charles L. Casto of Newark,
Del., reportedly drove Ralhbum to
the scene of the shooting. Casto
claims the defendant larer told him
he shot Sandra Scott, 43, Roush

,----Local briefs-Regulator blamed in power outage
A failed regulator in a Meigs County substation caused a power
outage affecting approximately 1,500 'Columbus Southern Power
customers this mommg, a company spokesman said.
In addition, Meigs Local School and Diester Elcmcntaty School
were closed this morning as a result of !he outage wh•ch occurcd
around 7 a.m.
Tbe affected area included Slate Route 7 to Tuppers Plains, U.S.
3310 Birmingham and Hemlock Grove and Statc Route 143 to Har·
risonville.
·

Pomeroy woman's gate broken
Delbert Steams, Keebaugh-Follrod Road, Pomeroy, reported
Monday sometime over the weekend someone ran into a gate on his
Bentz Cemetcty Road property. The lock was broken and the chain
was stolen, according to Meigs County Sheriff's records.

· Two car accidents reported

Two car accidents were repotted. both had no injuries, according
to Meigs Coun!)' Sheriff's Department records.
Tcrty M. Ellil, 2l,.Dover,l'la., drove his 1992 Ford pickup truck
offEllt Run Road at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, while he was heading cast
on that mad. Ellis' truck hit the ditch, roBed over once and ended on
its side against a fence.
The vehicle was heavily damaged, but no injuries were RpCJited•
In the other accident. Timothy Wyant, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, struc1c a deer with his 1991 Ford pickup lruck at 2:1~ a.m.
Tuesday on New Lima llOid four·tcntbs of a mile from ~tmon

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COntinued on·Page·4 ·

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