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Pomeroy--Mid~leport-Galllpolls,

D8 Sunday limes-Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Ohio corn crops show progress

Farm Flashes
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GAUJPOLIS- Ohio crop farmm made good progress in harvesting during the week ending
December 6. At that point an estimated three-fourths of the states
com crop has been harves!ed.
Much of the remaining a~e
w!ll need frozen ground to aid 10
harvest of wet fields. Farmers in
cast central Ohio reported deer
damage to crops. Perhaps we
should invite them to our area to ·
show them real damage. Winler

storms often disrupt livestock marketing patterns and cause price
swings. Severe weather in major
cattle feeding areas often reduce
gain and delays marketing. Recent
weather could limit the expected
weakness in the cattle market
expected fa December.
Heavy precipitation in the
southwest part of the U.S. will
eventually improve wheat pasture
prospects. As a result, the market
for feed er calVes may do a little ·
· .
.

The Galiia County Extension
better tJuin previously expected in
Service
is iD the process of moving
early 1993. Seasonal odds also
to
the
new
Agricultural Center
favor moderate strength into Janlocation
on
Jackson Pike. There
uary.
will
probably
be some inconveWe have had several calls
niences
witb
telephone
or just fmdreganling ~vatc pesticide applica-·
ing
things
for
a
wfiile.
Give us a
tor recertification. Sessions are
couple
of
days
to
get
organized
planned in Gallia County on January 27 in the afternoon and then stop by. A formal dedication
evening. A silililar session win be of the Agricuhural Center is
in Meigs Couniy on January 28. planned for January 9.
Edward Vollboril Is Gallla
We will have exact lime and locaCounty
Agent, agriculture. ·
tion in a couple of weeks.
•

~arming could become vital part of GATT.
By KIM HARLESS
1 GALLIPOLIS - Have you ever
:played by the rules, achieved sueII:CSS, then for some reason the rules
4:hanged? Most farmers would
1probably say,_''Welcome to agricul11n in the '90s."
. 11le aftermath of World War II
:lielped establish the "American
•

Era" For the most pan, American
business and agriculture refitted
from war production to meet consumer need here and abroad. Wilh
Europe and Asia under n!construetion, America was the exP?rt market. Its abundant productiOn was
cootributed to needy counaies too.
While American agricullure. was

enjoying' an export boom in the
'70s and '80s, conditions slowly
changed for otbet industries.
Reconstruction was completed.
Olher countties invested in manufactoring and jlgriculturf? By _the
late '80s export competttton
became lhe rule.
Major traders wanted. balance.
Complex deals on steel, auto, _tex·

;Lewis family announces
~~n:.r~:~=~ili~r~e:!i
p,ening of liew restaurant.. .tcfl~~nts
n.·

;

iACKSON _ The Lewis family
iof Oak Hill announces the opening
1of their new restaurant, located at
ithe Tri-City complex in Jackson
• Since 1956, Edward and
loorothy Lewis and their family
]lave operated Lewis ' Turkey
;Farms ncar Centerville. A restau18Rt was added to the families ven;twes in 1979.
1
In June of 1992, the Oak Hill
) ocatioo was sold and plans were
)llade to move to Jackson. Mter
many months of preparation, lhe
new Lewis' Family Restaurant is
:readY to serve area residents.
" Lewis' Family Restaurant will
~ontinue to feature their fresh
i~Rey poducts as weU as _fresh cut
beef ad POlk and homemade pies.
:Banc~uet faculties are ready to serve
hmily and business meeting needs.
For more information, contact
Margie Lewis Kiefer at 286-5413.
; The hew restaurant location is at
J1te comer of State Routes 93 and
;32, next to the New Days Inn
Motel.
• Restaurant hours are ·from Monday through Saturday 6:30 a.m.- 9
p.m. and Sunday 8 'S.m.- 8 p.m. A
~ is featured daily and buffets

·.

Propose revision

: WASHlNGTON (AP) - The
:Agriculture Department is proposing to revise gypsy moth regula'tions in an effort to prevent further
spread of lhe tree-destroying pest
' The revisions would allow the
department to begin regulating the
interstate movement of Christmas
irees and other cut trees. They also
.would add further restrictions on
!he interstate movement of eutdoor
household articles from regulated

are open Friday, Saturday and Sunday·

on Tariffs and Trade
GAIT addresses trade imbalances and unfair advantages. It's
structured so !hat trade disagree-

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKf;T, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
November 28, 1992
STOCK STEERS:
65.00-132.50
300-under
55.00-90.00.
300-500
57.00-80.00
500-700
47.00-71.00
800-over
STOCK HEIFERS:
300-under
65.00-85 .00
300-500
58.00-80.00
500-700
5 UlO· 77.50
800-over
51.00-65.00
STOCK BULLS:
300.undu
68.00-102.00
300-500
51.00-90.00
500-700
63.00-76.00
Slaughter Bulls
46.00-54.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
425.00-8)0.00
Bred Cows By II
40.00-51.00
BredCowsBH
300.00;640.00
Slaughter Cows:
High Dressing
46.00-51.00
Utility
39.0046.00
Canner &amp; Cutter
25.00-38.50
VEAL:
Choice
105.00-132.00
Medium
85.00-108.00
Good
70.00-85.00
Sheep- Ewes
22.00-28.00
Rams
20.00-26.00
Feeders
44.00-62.50

li6Gs:

200-250
300-500
Male Hogs
Pigs
Goats
.
BRED COW SALE - Sat. Dec. 12, 2 pm
HORSE &amp; TACK SALE- Fri. Dec. 18,6 D;m.

ments in. one area can stan chain
reactions that affect others. Using
this approach, a nation's entir~
trading bloc works as a team .
Under earlier GAIT negotiations,
agriculture was excluded. However, today's Uruguay R!)lllld focuses
heavily on agriculture.
· Twice in lhe past five years the
European Community has violated
GAIT rules on subsidies to oilseed
processors and exporters. Followmg international trade rules, the
United States finally anno·unced
tariffs to begin rectifying the damase done. The fact that this action
dtd riot result in retaliation, but
appears to have restar~ negotiations demonstrates why international trade rules are important
Current figures show that the
United States still holds a lion's
share of ag export markets. More·
over, American agriculture has
never had a trac!e deficit. Given
these factors, farming could
become a vital part or !he OAIT
team. It helps provide clout to get
international trade conflicts solved
- and olher nations know it.
Eventually trading nations will
call-for new GAIT rounds. They'll
work on deals that could weaken
agriculture's effectiv(\ness.
How will farmers ensure this
important competitive edge? Some
farmers need to forget lhe "American Era" way of thinking . Each
farmer needs to plan for what the
competition might have in store.
How is your marketing strategy
affected by export competition? Is your tarmmg operation prepared to
meet the challenges imposed by
today's new set of rules? Will it be
ready for changes tomorrow? Will
your farm help agriculture be pan
of the GAIT team?
,
Kim Harless is organization
director or the Ohio Farm
Bur.eau Federation.

USDA to gather more 4ta on sbeep

WASHINGTON (AP) ·- The
Agriculture Department is planning
to publish more information
designed to help tbe slieep industry.
Early next year, the depart·
ment' s National Agricultural
Sta~stics Service will begi':' estima~mg raw w~ol sto~ks tn the
Umted States, 1t satd m a recent
announcement.
It also will begin publishing
more data about Iambs on feed,
Iambs in feedlots
Placements of
.
. .
.
and marketmgs of lambs for
slaughter.
For the survey on raw wool
stocks, thi: agency will contact
about 800 wool warehouses pools
7

'

Bengafs
lose to
Chargers

mills, buyen ud prac •as ill
mid-January to de•elop oftiri•l
~ .
ide
__...
' The liiDOO•
-: ...er ....

UIC

I''*"'! eel ~··••••-' a.

pho~~ tnqumes to :n~ die

~ ~-.:;;,! .,.. Slid..

be published by tbe
. . . ___, __,
VlCle

m 111 ...,.. -

will

• .

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1-4-U.Jt~

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7-7-4-1

n:JIO!l

next M~h 30 and by _US~A s
Econonuc Rwcadt ~ • tk
Couou and Wool S•~ ud
Outlook report in-t.&amp;y
"Esdmalel fill"dtc i• ., , s..11 deal ~ ...... ~..:... -'-~ _
~
wt
waw ·~ . . - appar~l wool :" aad ~
•
~ IS of f~ W dl , 8 CDgtn,' ' the •!IIIOI!P 1M •llid.

•
Vat.~

No.1e3

c ........ 19t2

ILAZEI .

V6, aut1111.... llir
conditioning, A•llllifFI'IIIII

s

OILY

co--.

5995

BJ MARTIN CRUTSINGER

1988 DODGE

, ARIES·
Automatic, air eondltioning,
AMIFr.A, clean.

s .

• ONLY

2995
19.2 PLYIIOITII

IELIIIII

53.cm
one--

Automatic, llir, AIIIRI,
mllee,

.OILY

51395

AP Ecuaomics Writer
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Part
lOWD mce'!:fi· part teach-in and
J11R Didio
-in program, Presideut-clect Clinton's national economic: conference is designed to
· showcase his newly formed team
ol top acMllei'S and help flU in !he ·
delails of his economic revival
plan_
Ointoo was scheduled to deliver
npming n:marts as lhe sessions got
tmdcr way today and tben moderate
llle two days of talks with more
dim 320 executives from businesses lxllb larJ!e and small, labor leaden. community activists and aca........,. from all 50 stales,
The. hotly sought invitations
WCill ... only to the heaids of some
ol America's biggest corporations
- Xerox, Dow Chemieal and Citicap- but llso ·io small-business

people such as Kathleen Piper, who
runs the Pied Piper Flower Shop in
Yankton, S.D.
The talks were being held in Little Rock's largest convention center, which was set up so !hat rotating panels of 32 participants could
sit on stage at a huge oval desk
with Clinton 1\Dd Vice President·
elect AI Gore.
Also attending wiD be Clinton's
economic team, led by Treasury
Secretary-designate Lloyd BeniSen,
Rep. Leon Pan'etta, chosen as
White House budget director, and
Labor Secretary-designate Roben
Reich.
After ex;~mining lhe domestic
economy in a discussion that will
include presentations by Robert
Solow, Nobel prize winning
economist at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and John
White, the economist who drew up

•

32.00-45.00
27.00-35.00
22.00-30.00
8.00-22.00
26.00-54.00

Rideno·ur

·
·
EAGLI!!BURGER AND KOZYREV • Secretary or State
Law • P'lk"'rger, right, arrives with his Russian counterpart
~ ltuajltt, ror a news courerence at the Russian Embassy iD
Stockllol•, Suuday. With 11n eye on a shaky power-sharing
ua 11 cal ill MOIICOW, Eagleburger tr!ed Sunday.to pin doW!' a
1111Jar . .1nr miSsile reduction treaty With Russia to leave behmd
• , BAlli iidllliDistratioa milestone accomplishment. (AP photo)

'

TV &amp; APPliANCE
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

Up
1b

CHESTER
•

Back*
On
New

~~

1:00 P.M. - 4:00P.M.

Friday, Decem~er 18, 1992
"' .321 Upper River Road
GaUipolts, Obto 45631

TEL
®

Select
Park
Avenues...

Please join us for tours,
complimentary '
hors d'oeuvres and
door prizes.

1900 Eastern Ave.

At least eight people died in
traffi&amp;: aa:idems over lhe weekend,
the State Hjghway Patrol said
today. 11le patrol counts fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight

. Sllllday

Tbcbi:

SUNDAY
·~
MARION - Brenda S. Raymood. 3S, of Pros)leet, 'when her
ar went oiJ a Marion County road
IIIII bit. a tree.
BELLEFONTA1NE - Terry E.
Williamson, 33, of Bellefontaine,
wfiCo ltis ar was hit by anolher car
011 U.S. 68 in Logan County.
. MANSFIELD - .Ruth I.
Womer, 52, of Lexington, a pasla&amp;CI' in • two-car clash on a city

. SATURDAY
ELYRIA - Driver Chad R.
Coon, 18. and a passenger, Scott
M. WriPI. 17, both of Wellington,
whl:a t&amp;ir cu tried to cross the
llldls 0111 Lorain Cciunty road and
'fl! lit by I uain.
liLYlllA - Jose A. Latorres,
28, orOewdud, when his car was
llitby a w:liicle thai ran a stop sign
011 ~303 ill Lorain County.
GRANVILLE - Jerry E.
c ·a . n. ol patnhla, in a one·
ear cruh oil Ohio 16 in Licking

.0

Gallipolis, OH.

'For cash back you must-take delivery from dealer
•.

That has led Russia to malce
proposals, such as retaining old 'SS18 missile-silos, that the !United
States considers questionable from
its straJegic standpoint
And yet, Kozyrev replied wi!b
an unqualified "yes" when asked
at·a joint news conference whether
the treaty could be ftnished bCf~~re
the Bush administration lenes
offtce Jan. 20.
Kozyrev was due to fly back to
Moscow shortly; U.S. officials said
they did not know when Eagleburger might meet wilh him again.
The meeting Sunday was held
with an eye on a tenuous powersharing arrangement in Moscow.•
but also with Bush's hope to leave
lhe post-Cold War treaty behind as
a milestone accomplishment.
The idea is to slash long-1'311ge
nuclear missiles on both sides far
beyond the cuts mandated by the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.
For instance, that pact cuts total
strate~ic warheads to 6,000 from
today s combined level of about
11,000. The new treaty would slaSh
lhe arsenals still further, to 3,000 to
3,500 by 2003 or earlier. ·
From the U.S. standpoint, its

U.S. ·chief says disarming
o~:~=:::::d warring clans not his mission

--

SMITH .BUICK·PONTIAC

614-446-8080
For Toll Free Reservations: 1-800-800-8000
•

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
,- ·ST0C&amp;HOLM,· -5weden
Reaching a landmark nuclear missile-reduction treaty before the
Bush administration closes down
"is possible, but by no means
assured," says Secretary of State
Lawrence S. Eagleburger.
With a little more than five
weelcs'left in office, President Bush
would like to wrap up the pact with
Russia, but agreement eludes lhe
two sides.
"We are not there yet," Eagleburger said Sunday after a threehour meeting wilh Russian Foreign
Minister Andrei Kozyrev at the
· Russian Embassy.
They claimed progress, and
agreed !hey would probably have
to meet agllin after experts made
fresh evaluatioos of the two sides'
positions on technical sticking
points.
Significantly, Kozyrev said economic as well as technical issu~s
stood in lhe way. It was a reference
to lhe large construction and dismantling costs of implementing lhc
lreaty and rejiggering the Russian
nuclear arsenal
·

Eight killed ·

GRAND OPENING
.
.
.
OPEN
HOUSE,
.....

"'~

u-.

a•ioc It tk J.ao llild. Ark.,, airport Sunday:
~·,;.. ..... -ICaden rrom busitles$,
....... ...
5 - lit a two-day confereuce Ia
l..i!llt a.l; k&amp;iM•Iaf, todity; hosted by Pres!;
5
7 •a
{.UO plioto),
:

PARTICIPANTS ARRIVE- ~jll X President Peterson Za'b,.~eft
Xaap
Nation f,coiiOmic Devel~ellt li!Y..,....;,e ·D ii!fttor Rodger Boyd, rigllt eeater, :aU N:adlp
Nation Council DeleRate Dai!&lt;id .L. Jala., fi&amp;W,

.

WE ARE YOUR ZENITH
SALES AND SERVICI
HEADQUARTERS
TOSHIBA &amp; DRAKE
, SATELLITE SYSTEM
SALES AND SERVICE
'

Ross Perot's austere deficit reduc- ·
lion plan, lhe conference will tum
in lhe afternoon Ill the international
economy.
Most of Tuesday was to be
focused on short-terril and ·longterm initiatives for improving the
country's growlh prospeets, as well
as such specialized topics as lhe
environment and recommendations
for overhauling !he way lhe government does business. .
Aides said a principal goal .o f
the conference was to educate lhe
American people about Clinton's
economic program, but that the
talks also would be used to help lhe
administrl!tion put the finishing
touc bes on the program Clinton
will present Congress in January.
Among the items yet to be
nailed down are lhe exact size of
the shon-term stimulus program,
how to craft Clinton's promised
middle-class taX cut so tt doesn't
bUsi lhe bUdget

Bush ad:ritinistration
drive
to curb
.
.
nuclear weapons goes down to wire

areas.

Thomas ·Flanigan of USDA's
Animal and Plant Heallh Inspection
Service said the states now regulated in !heir entirety for gypsy moths
are Miline, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, R)lode
lsland, Connecticut, New f ork,
Pennsylvania, , New Jersey,
Delaware and Maryland.
Also regulated are partS of Vir- ·
ginia, North Cawl~n~. Michigan,
Ohio and West Vtrgtrua, he sa1d.
Under the proposal, anyone
moving interstate from !he regulated areas would need documentation
!hat outdoor household articl'es
such as barbecue grills, boats or
doll houses had been inspected and
found free of gypsy moth eggs,
Aid Thomas Flanigan of USDA's
Animal and Plant Heallh 'nspection
Service.
.• The proposal would require that
before tbrlstmas trees or olher cut
't rees could be moved interstate
from regulated areas, !hey must be
inspected and. certified as being
free of gypsy molhs.
•

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25 c:enta
A MuiUmedla Inc. -11111111'

Pomeroy-•ddleport, Ohio, Monday, December 14, 1992

Clinton opens two-day
economic conference

1916Cim

..

cz

" r' _ -

Page4

me, _._

, -

Obi~LoUery

l j.

.

FRIDAY
1'HOitNVJlLE - Christopher
WaJJare. 13, of )llew Salem, pas.scacer ill a one-car accident on
Ollio 188 in Pt:rry County.

by January 24, 1993.

·,

By RJll) G. MILLER
relief agencies, who say the
Associated Press Writer
Marines are not moving quickly
MOGADISHU, Somalia - The enough to where the need is greatMarine general who commands the est
U,S. fortes in Somalia disputes lhe
The agencies ' criticism has
U.N..secretary -general's assertion focused on the Marines' slow move
that the AmericanS have been sent toward Baidoa, a city at lhe bean of
to !his desperate land to disarm its the regions where the famine is
militias and bandits.
most severe and relief officials say
The leathernecks who arrived more than 100 people are dying
last week wc:re the advance guard daily.
of a multinational ·military mission
Baidoa, 120 miles norlhwest of
-now numbering more than 4,000 Mogadishu, also is wraclcel! by viotroops - that airns to end the law- lence.
lessness that has kept food from
CARE International on Sunday
Somalia's starving.
·
U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, ill a letter to President Bush, has indicated he under·stands the Americans ' role to
include disarmament ·
.But Lt Gen. RobertJI. Johnston
told reporters Sunday !hat his mission is clearly delineated: get fOod
safely to !he hungry. ·
. "The notion !hat you can disarm Somalia is an enormous ctiallenge," he told reporters. The
Americans are leading the U.N.endorsed effort.
Johnston's position was supported by Secretary of State
Lawrence Eagleburger, who told a
news conference at a foreign minis·
ters' galhering in Sweden that "We
are not there as a permanent police
force, a pacifier."
Johnston complained that overly
h i~h expecliltions also are being
la1d on the American forces by
I~

sent six truckloads of food without
armed guards to a viUage 25 miles
away, ~ !he ftrst time in months an
aid convoy has moved without protection. .
Rick Grant, a CARE spokesman
in Mogadishu, said today !hat he
did not know why the ,workers
decided to shun armed protectors.
Johnstoo said he would .not send
Marines into Baidoa, where more
than half the 100,000 people are
refugees from famine-stricken villliges, .without sufficient troop ·
strength.
"I'm going to get ther.e as
quickly as I can, But there's an
assumption !hat if you get there
quickly that's all you have to do, ~
he said, adding !hat he feared sending in lhe few score Marines currently available would be inviting
confrontration.
Consolidating a forward position halfway be~ween Mogadi_shu
and Baidoa, helicopters depostted
200 Marines at the former Soviet
airsttip called Beli Dogie. Cobra
attack helicopters and A-6 Intruder
jets provided cover.
An hour later, a C-130 cargo
plane full of food arrived. Beli
Dogie is to be a main food-distribution point
In the capital, Marines escorted
food convoys to both sides of lhc
divided city, and relief of~cials
worked to restore water serv1oe to
Mogadishu for lhe ftrst time in two
years.

main, prl!70iiGilim \1MilDll JCII!IIii= 1k
Russians 11111 1llfll1llll'lll u u.s; s.&gt;nill

liD~ ..jjmjjl\ct; lh:f-

pmiittnil llm llU:IID lllllllll:lr SIMJ['_
IB\1111 :affila Hlmll :llldl lll"9'iiwm
IPmUmn Bmriili K YdlliJI illt,?Md
iin hme 11m lftle dtlo:p:n CIIIS, I@ ~niiqdl
p\ll•low&lt; lrilqrW e 111K1!J 1D ill imrfll81 ttn:IIIJ'-

'llk nUll "'!iirtim&amp; pUn ii1;

IWibelil:or 1111: Rmuiins lll'ill1l lie

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Sil~ '&gt;llliidl!
lll!illdldllik Ill» -~
lfmr~ B-Zil'liieillrs

·

'lrliirc: is concern within the ·
lllfmiirtisiiation that the tenuous
11"lJN.et'sl!ariitg. arrangement Yeltsin
lias; neacli.ed with. his opponents
~tauf~ eome apart. The "creeping
&lt;t:CiiUJil"" thai the Russian leader
..amedl about 41st week might
J:~:IIJmllliani'Iiners to power.
As; 3l result, !here is new incentive fun·!he Bush administration to
W1iapJ up&gt; !lie treaty and get the mismm: redW:tions started, The presi,
di:DlJ lias; made completing it a high~· iiem for his last weeks in

lilJ&amp;eo.

ll1be .........lla 10'!IIlllllloll 1M: Eluli wsenior U.S. official said
liko'ly \11!1 SJn'ii1&lt;e ill l'l'dl:"a." ~
l'l\e
negetialions still were being
!thor.e,. bm !lac amra tJIIIMIHI@h!Min il!ll
licfdl
witlltcare.
.
as dim ,.,.,i,lllfliiiMiii• 111111 tbl~B~zli: ..We
are
not
going
there
wilh
·
&lt;C01llltn1Ciiillm ~ dal ii!QIQflcjl
auE rongues lianging out to try to
m;u1tlfmm . ~ lllle !Jik.
AMI'her IIIIIJI!ill lllllll::llliiM iii11B gj!'1l ta.dane !letween now .and !he
ris Ucdllcr IRwBGiJl • BE r, . , d 21ili!iJGfi!anuary," he said•.
111ic afficial, who insisted on
t 11 mawct1! iilb; m-'III•IA 4 SS-119
atiDII'Jllnily,
said he hoped lhe dis- .
m'igSi'cs liD Sirmfte w 8 ao!!
~ments over treaty provisions
The lllin'i'WI $1aars,, lDiW»'ife..
is llrf.i1lg 11111 illlllh'l !llllllll» h • tlw s 111ut1 ""mdli!' are !JOt over lhe fundamen- :
cd$dW were agreed in June."
• ~
IW.OJll ll'll) bJlp IOillmY llliiiCIIaa'
ElgJeliurger would like to com""'~ lmtiClDlilll k m-.'l'll"'d iill ill
b !lie lreaty to cap his 32-year
llli'1Sii.
C3Relt irn !lie U.S. foreign service
A;paill lil;mm iDMkgjil D lliilttt.
tllatl spanned most of the Cold War
ciia'l c oniiiler.Jiliimm&lt;;. allle .,.llllltJ' andl oo.w tlie·onset of
friendly
patiltiN::al ..UaarMimm iiml II!I!Glilt1DNOV
rd'aliensliip llelween lhe two old
~ a MY ICid CliiOltllic llaJrad'&lt;et'Saries:. He will retire at the
JBaWiiqgUIIilc.
cudlof tlie•Bush administration, '
N

.,

;

new,

11W.....,

.

.Del Y a.snBS - , .. 7 poio.ged cltildrel! ill GaDia,
...., Ja-5 ... 5 pm a puty aacl &amp;ills

.. tk 5

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..

* .,.,_.
.....
.,. • ams &lt;St4,ooo Ibis
a' se:_.. l'iwldraism
•

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C:a.Ji C-pany's Meigs

'

i8 • - I •
aud payroll
....... • •
... JmaiD 'llllne of Jackson County
opllB ltil;
wllidl
*lilftellr. ._ ar, the party. He is ·
, •
...,. •
"5
7 Ditpan-. (Stwtiwcl Pltotb by Brian J,

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�,

.commentary
The Daily Sentinel
lll Coart Street
I'OIIleroy, Oblo
D&amp;VOTU TO 1.111: IN1'SilaT8 OJ 1'IB IIBJQ8-IIA80lf ARltA

ROBERT L WJNGE'IT"
Publidler

'

''

··.. PAT WlllTEIIEAD
Allllt1nt Publlslaer/CoatrGiler

•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

..

Gener~J Mlllllgft'

LETTI!RS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be Jeso lball 300
wonk. All !etten .,.. subject to ediliD8 ond moot be sisned witb name,
' lddreoo ond ~elephone numbet. No unsisnecl !etten will be published Letten
:: llbould be in good Wte, adlh•sins issues, not penoDIIilies.
.'

•'

'fax boost likely to mar season
'

·
By ROBERT E. MILLER
AssOciated Press Writer
\
:· COLUMBUS - State lawmalcers may fmd themselves in the painful
pl&gt;sition of having to mise taxes with the lilt of Christmas carols dooting
d(rough the Statehouse.
·• The capitol is decked out with brightly decorated trees and carolers are
ciming daily in the annual procession that continues right on up 10 Christmu
,
But the holiday spirit is about 10 be marred by the somber business
upstairs in the legislalive chambers.
_; ~
Tbe Senate and House convene Tuesday to consider Gov. ueorge
Voinovich's request for $200 million in unspecified taxes to help close a
$250 million deficit in the state j&gt;udget expected within six months.
Ohio's financial siblalion ap'jlalently is even worse, and the lawJDalcers
could go fUrther and authorize a ballot proposal seeking a 20 percent
bQost in the 5 ~~sales tax to solve longer-range problems.
Some olrJCials estimate that state revenues could fall $1.5 billion short
in the biennium starting July 1. A one-cent boost in the sales tax, last
increased 10 years ago, would produce $800 million a year. '
Houle Speater Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, says that despite the bittet'ptospect of having to raise taxes during a season tnown for giving, he
favors a longer-range solution.
He and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said they
aaree with the governor that the sales tax proposal should he voted on by
the people and not imposed arbitrarily by the Legislature. .
Voinovich, in bringing up the sales tax, also added a caveat, He will
nor support it unless the Legislature adopts education reforms that will
convince v01ers the money would be well spent.
"I'd have 10 be darn sure that they are gelling their money's worth,"
Voinovich said of the ballot proposal which is already drawing .endorsements from school officials and administraiOrs throughout the state.
": Voinovich and the legislative leaders were not sure late last week
about the extent of actions that the~ may undertate this weet. The governor planned 10 meet with Aronoff, Riffe and others in advance of Tuesday's session.
The administration, however, has launched an all-out effort to bring
~on lawmaters. Budget DireciOr Greg Browning, at Voinovich's
request, released last week a detailed list of spending cuts that will be neceSSBI}' if lalleS are not increased.
Education, alreldy reelinl! under earlier budget cuts ordered by
Voinovich 10 keep the budget iii balance, would be the hardest hit Prima·
ry and secondary edllcation would lose $120 million over the next six
monthl. Higher Cduc1tion would be out by $4 7.5 million, on lOp of $170.2
million it lost July 1.
·
Ted Sanders, state superintendent of public insii'uction, was among
school administrators who protested last week.
"This cut 10 education would be devutating and absolutely unacceptable.'' Sanders said He supports a tax increase, not budget cuts, 10 solve
the defiCit problem.

•

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio :
Monday, December 14,1992

anon

tant:

Berry's World
~c.ONOMI(- \-\EI&gt;.L'\1-\ CAA~

INFRI\S\f&lt;.IJC.TUR£ - A\t&gt;S'~\.1~/A .. : t'EftC.1;. J"oss6AY5 IN \~E MlL\1/1-.'-.Y·
SOMALIA.., Ll~c:liE~

\JErO-

Ei't\~IC

(.\.EP\NSING ,.,

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO
'VISIONS OF SUGARPLUMS'?
f'

By T.. A_....llted Press
Aerou~

W ASHlNG'rON - Perks,
pab"'nage, J;!Owa" lunches, and port
barrel politiCS have a bad name in
the United States, but they should
be utilized by President Boris
Yeltsin to break the anti-reform
gridlock in the Russian Co~ss.
That's the private advice Yeltsin
heard from former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Robert·Strauss.
Though some observers were concerned about Strauss' appointment
because of his tact of Russian
experience, his political and mediation skills turned that liability iniO
an asset Yeltsin relied on him a
trusted confidant, often soliciting
his views on power and politics.
"He can develop the same damn
thing that American presidents
do.' : says Strauss. "He can build
up a legislative arm, a lobbying
arm ." With new ·power centers
emerging in the Russian Congre$8,
there is growing concern that they
pose a threat 10 the Yeltsin agenda
of political and economic reform.
"He wouldn't !hint of inviting
people over for lunch, 10 guy$ sitting around, .o r tate them to his
dacha," says Strauss. "He can get
out to the areas they're elected
from and spea1c fOr them or against

as

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
them. He has jobs to give ouL He
hu rewards as any president has.
He can elect to give money to one
area as opposed to another area
(lite) pork barrel projects.''
Yeltsin recently had a reform
program he wanred passed by the
Russian Congress. But Strauss
notes that Yeltsin proceeded without a lobbying campaign or any
effective means to push his program. "The Yeltsin administration
doesn't really have lobbyists,"
says Stmuss. "He sent the program
to the Supreme Soviet two or three
months ago and they tumed it
down. The thing that amazed me
was not that it was turned down,
but he just sent this controversial
proposal up. No preliminary worlc
done on it. No one made calls as
we would mate calls on the (Capitol) Hill here." ·
Strauss b!:lieves Yeltsin ne¢5 a
beuer source network to keep him

apprised of what's tr1nspiring
among the Warring factions in the
Russian' Congress. For his part,
Strauss made a point of having
good behind-the-scenes sources
himself.
For example, Strauss assigned
one of the U.S. Embassy's most
highly regarded political officers
the job of keep.mg ·tabs on one
J!lember of the Russian Congress
because he had ''a foot in every
damn camp" and "tnew everything." Strauss describes the
embusy official as an attractive
woman who "had a fine mind and
tnew how to use every asset she
had, inrellectoal and physical."
"! .want you to .see that guy
every morning ... (and) I want you
to see bim every afternoon before
h· goes home so W\\'11 know everyday what' s going on in this
Congress," Strauss recalls telling
her.
.
One day, Strauss personally met
with this member of the Russian
Congress, probing him for the latest inside information. What he
heard in response confmned just
how effectively he had burrowed
into the Russian bureaucracy.
"You're asting me?" the Rus,

•

.'

_ ..

In Wuhington, a city that loves

Martin Schram
•

shape policies most litely to solve
our nation's problems.
Consider the proposals:
Enterprise Economics. This
comprehensive proposal goes
beyond the conservative agenda of
tax cpts, by calling upon government to .expand its investment. in
common economic ·resources that
can enablq all w~rs and firms 10
be more producllve. It g~ beyond
the liberal programs of deficit stim·
ulus and government directioq of
business, by urging enhanced freemarket competition. It would strip
away the layers of subsidies . It
forges a new compact 10 empower
America •s workers and rmns: an
Employment Insurance System for
retraining jobless people. Cost: $5
billion.
·
The Progressive Plan for Health
Care Reform. Jeremy D. Rosner's
plan for controlling costs through
managed competition mandates
universal coverage of all Americans. It rejects the i~tcremental
reform ptoposals of the conservatives. And it rejects the liberals'
proposals for global budget caps

for all health. spending, which
become, in effect, price controls
that prop up inefficient heafth
providers -thus curtailing compe.
lition.
Educating America. ~is chapter proposes a new educanon compact: I. "Charter schools," an
mnovative program that permits
teachers to form their own public
schools. 2. Youth apprentice programs for the "forgotten half"
who don't go to college. 3. A civilian G.!. Bill for voluntarY natiohal
service; youths could.get college
funding by committing to serve
their communities.
Crime. A national police cori&gt;s
would put 100,000 cops on the
streets; the government would pay
college costs for students who
commit to serve four years as
police officers. This chaDtet urges a
ban on Rambo-styfe assault
weapons 10 support our cops in a
new em of Law-and-Order Liberal·

ism.

Environment. "Green taxes" making polluters pay for their pol·
lotion- are more powerful and
efficient for protectiitg the environ·
mentthan centralized regulations.

I

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~:;

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'~

.

Replace Welfare With a Work- ,
Based Policy. A plan 10 empower !
the poor and help them liberare .
themselves from the debilitating . 1
dependence on welfare: It would l
limit welfare to two years and pro- ~
vide earned income tax cn:dit 10 lift'''
all families with a full-time worlcer ,
•
·•·.
above the poverty level.
Mating Washington Wort;'-'
Reinventing Government: 1. Elimi-:;
nate roughly I00 categorical grant
programs and consolidate 400 oth- .
ers iniO performance-blsed "chat- ;/,
lenge !P'ants.': 2. Change bureau-" I
crats' mcentives ·...:.. by permitting' !
competition, bonuses and other
incentives for saving taxpay.er. ~
funds.
•
.'
For years, Washington's foremost label malcers had monumental · ·•
difficulty figuring out the "'
Democrats. People who were not :;
left or right were labeled middle of '·
the road. But PPI's "Mandare for '
1
Change'' is not about drivinjl
the middle of the road. Th1s
builds a new road, one that can ·.'
carry the country - and perhaps •
Clin1011 - all the way iniO a new ';
century.
:·
Martin Schram Is a syndl~ted · ·
writer ror News(llper Enterprise · •·
Association.
"

=

Presidential succession and the U.N·.
Events are in the saddle from
Africa to Europe·10 the Indian subIll
continent. Measured against' them,
the careful pace of the CliniOn tran.
,
sition appears almost inconsequen- tus and quiet-moving events. The
tial, the indulgence of a system other arises from the proliferating
. designe_d for a simpler era. They disorders ' of the post-Cold War
are remmders that even new presi- world, disorders that are local or
dents cannot order the world to regional in immediate impact but
stand still.
.
global in their camulative effect.
To some degree, this is simply
First, the United States should
inevitable. History malces mock of revise its procedures for presideDprophecy, and the best laid plans tial succession so that the space
are no match for the unexpected. between election and accession to
Cnses do not anive according to a power is dramatically narrowed if
predictable timetable.
not eliminated. Second, the United
Thus President Bush could not Nations should be given the funds,
postpone a decision about what to authority and troo~ to deal.quietly
do 10 forestall even more calami- an4 effectively w1th crises that the
tous starvation in Somalia. Until Security ·Council'determines are a
Jan: 20, 1993, he is president of the · danger to world peace or involve a
Umted States, and the title carries serious violation of the U.N. Charobl.igations and responsibilities ter.
wh1ch Mr; Bush met forthrightly in
Neither idea is new. Neither
commuung 28,000 American would be easy 10 implement Neitroops 10 keep the peace in Somather is likely without strong, suslia. In making that admirable deci- tained presidentialleldcrship. Both
sion, however, he saddled the are overdue, as events illustrate
incoming administration with daily.
,
headaches it could not have anticiAs to the former, the most
paled and cannot welcome. .
seven: impec!iment is not constituTwo structural conclusions tiona! but mertial. As recently as60
arise: One spealcs to the familiar years ago inaugurations were held
tension between the lfii!ISition hia- u1 March. Thus the "traditional"

Hodding CaHer

date of Jan. 20 is, like so many
American traditions, a relatively
recent innovation. To move it back
even further, or th move the eleciion date up 10 late December or
early January, would be a surmountable legislative and constitutional hurdle - if the president
threw his muscle behind it
What that would n:quire in rum
would be more difficult, but would
substantially improve the presidential selection process. The l!arties
would have to end the current
divorce between campaigns and
governance. Presidential nominees
would have to decide the composition of their cabinets almost as
· quietlY. u they decided the .tactics
of their fall campaigns. Both are
eminently possible.
Chan&amp;ml the inaugural date
would be child's play compued to
creating a U.N. force. Even now, at
a moment when everyone pays lip
service 10 the need for collective
action, member states are $1.2 billion in arrean on 1heir regular dues
and peacelreeping assessments. The
United States and Russia account
for two-thirds·of the 10ta1, at $410
million each . The immediate
prospect is bantruptcy rather·than

~
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"

invigoration.
\
i
No less importantlJ. each '
response to localized conflagration · ' 1
'!!list be con~cted from scratch, a ·'
llme-consummg process that often "
results in too little and too late. ·
And because there is no centralized :U.N. force, the quiet respo~llli bur- ·•
den must fall on the United States, :
the one remaining world power. ' ::
But there is a limit to the number or: ;:;
times the United States can be : ~
called upon to spearhead an inter- •
national expeditionary force befone : ..
there is a negalive n:action at home &lt; ;;
and abroad.
..

i.

Today, the United Nations is
playing a mili~ role in seemingly
msoluble confl1cts in the former
Yugoslavia (13,000 lrOOjlS) 1111d
Cambodia (19,000). American
forces in Somalia are spearheading
a U.N. response.

cloudiness

is

elfpected ICIUIIS Ohio on T•~,
with a chlllce of !lin in the
west c:omcr of lhe state. .

sian repeated three times in moclc ~
amazement. "You know every- •
thing you 1cnow, plus with that girl •
you tnow everything I tnow. Why :
as1c me?"
•
· ·Strauss says that he before he !
left Russia, he and Yeltsin dis- .
cussed tbe need 10 create a political ,
party'- an idea that Yeltsin is now :
seriously considering. But Suauss
believes that it rould bring both :
gains and losses.
'
. "It's very appealing to say r:,
belong to the people, I have no ·~
party," says Strauss. ••But he ,
needs some kind of structure to '
help push through his program. I :
told him being free of a party hu ;
.its advantilges," and lila! without '
one "his allies weren't as strong or '
u organized."
·~
· Strauss say.s that he failed to •
convince Yeltsin, however, to •
mend relations with former President Mikhail Gorbachev. He ,
believes 'that the feud raging •
between the two ''proud, stubborn" m'en has actually been ..,
"understated" by the American
media
• 'When friends and allies fall
out, they fall out pretty bitterly,"
explains StraUss. He had hoped that :
a few ronciliaiOry words from Gor- ·
bachjlv would be reciprocated by · i
Yeltsin, but it wu one of the few
areas in which Strauss did not
enjoy much success. ·
·
·"'
The difference between Yeltsin and Gorbachev, Suauss says, is
that Gorbachev was "scared of
democracy" and Yeltsin is "a '
product of the old and now he has
both feet pfanted in &amp;he new." .:
Strauss expresses unstinted admiration for Yeltsin, who paid a steep "
price for leaving the Communist "
Party, Stmilss says that Yeltsin and •·
his lamily were "humiliated and ·~
degraded.'' But instead of "going '
home like a whipped dog," Stmuss '
says Yeltsin fought back and is a ·•
folk hero.
·
i
A charter member of Yeltsin's ·.'
· fan club, Strauss isn't..sanguine .
about the future, and fears that the ·~
West may blow a historic OPJIOltu·'
oity: '"fl\ey can go down the tubes
very easily tinless the West stays
fully engaged .... It talces some '
money, but not nearly as much as :
• people talk about. In terms of the
alternatives, it's chicten feed.''
.·
Jack Anderson and Michael '
Blnsteln are writers for United ·,:
Feature S)'ndlcate, Inc.
,;

'Mandate for Change' offers· ideas

More

•I

Strauss - ~rges_ Yeltsin to develop network

•!,\
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:z

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:!;

Hoddlng Carter IIi, former · •:
State Department spokesmaa
and award·wlnnln&amp; reporter, edl- '
tor and publisher, Is presldeat or · ""
MalnStreet, a Washington, D.C.·, 'i
baaed television production ~pany and a syndicated writer ror ••
NEA...
-

.;=

J

!Mansfield !s1~

Highs on Tuesday will range
from the lower 50s northwest to
near 60 IOUibeast
Partly cloudy sties were expected across Ohio tonight, with lows
ovemi&amp;ht in the middle to upper
30s.
Skies this morning were clear
across aU but the southern n:aches

I•

INO.

of Ohio, with~ J'lllling
from the upper 20s nortli to the
lower 30s south.
· The rccOd bigb tanpa-e fur
this date is 65 in 1901, with 1
n:cmllow of minus 1 in 1898.
Sunrise Tuesday will be at 7:46
a.m. and sunxt at 5:01p.m.
Aao~~dlt...-

Fiash f1oocf watches were posted
across pans of the Midwest today
as heavy rains IIIOYed up from lhe
Gulf of Mexico. In the Northeast,
sties cleared in the w1te of a limtal nor' easter' that causc4 m1jor
flooding and damage in seveflll

W. VA.

----Weather·---in the 20s and highs in the 30s.
South Central
Tonight, panty cloudy. Low in
the upper 30s. Southeast winds 10
to 15 mph becoming south. Tuesday, mostly cloudy. High 55 to 60.

----Area deaths----Anna Cline

Alleyne F. Rees

SUia.

-

n-·--tr'*wm pDUR4 bUckets

ol.- s.dty on puts of the ceohi :;!in~ ·n• Valley and southem
stlliCS - as much as S
incbes io J*1S of east Tew and
OtloJmw

Kp
City, Mo., WU Oooded
with ~ !han 3 inches, and fore-

casaea )IRdiaed more lain today
WIOuld send creeks and rivers over
their '**a in .,
•n Missouri and
putsolKa!as ll1d Teds.
Narrow '-Is of ice and snow

wae flKP"**cd mm Minnesota and

today u cold air moved south from
the hi h Plains.
A ~eavy snow warning wu up
for today in puts of Colorado.
Strong wind that lhreatened
much of the Atlantic coast Sunday
~j!'t was expected to die down
y as the sun reappeared in the
Northeast. Temperatures were
expected to be seasonably mild
except for areas with significant

•
•
:
•
:
:
•

:
:
•
:
soow cover.
•
The high tern perature for the '
continental United States on Sun- :
day was 78 at Kingsville, Texas.
•

Sooth Dakota to New Mexico

I

•

~~--~----~-----------·
Racine Christmas Lighting Contest

Private students would take
same tests as public students

Extended
Wednesday through Friday:
Wednesday, a chance of rain.
Highs 50 10 55. Thursday, a chance
of rnin or snow. Lows 35 10 40 and
highs 40 to 45. Friday, fair. Lows

.••'',

Winter weather advances in Midwest
mnditiona md high

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

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liCit

.

Today in history

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Pag.-2-The Dally Sentlne~

to slap old labels on new faces, a
new die must be cast For a small
but feisty !hint tanlc has preSented
President-elect Bill Clinton with a
book of bold policy prescriptions
8 Tile Allociated Press
· that, in my non-objective view,
defies al! _the old labels of Left......... · Monda n.! 14 the J4"'L da f l992. There
•.uu.Y as
y, ....... ,
7u•
yo
are 17 days Right polillcs.
left m the year. ··
.
.
"Mandate for Change," the
On Dec. 1~, 1799! the fust pres1d~t of the Uruted States, George Progressive Policy 'Institute's 380W~. died at his Mount Vernon home at age 67, nearly three years page tome Oust published by
~cfate~·
l,!erkley Boots ~d co-edited by
1n l8l9 ~~- the Union u the 22nd state.
•
PPI Pres1de!'t Will Marshall and
1861'
Priooe
AI
the
husband
fQueen
y·
·
died.
Londo
this col!'mmst), details .Prop~sals
ln
•
•
o
JCtona,
m
n. that are mtended 10 be ne1ther hberln 1911, Ncnoq~~~~.exptcnrRoald Amundlen became the fm man 10 al nor conservative neo-Jib nor
reach the South Pole, bellini out an expedition led by Raben F. ScotL
Th
'·
ln 1939, the Soviet Union wu da~ from the League of Nations.
neo-con.. ey certamly are not
,_~Knnm' tnown IS 'the beut of Be'-- .. and 10 othe
moderate, Wid none dare call them
ln 194s• J._,
•
·
"""'•
rs centnst They borrow unabashed]
were h~nged In Hameln_ for crimes commiued at the Belsen and from the best ideas of all sides .!...
AUIChWIIZ Nazi '*IICelltniiiOD CIRips.
.
.
and then add new thinking.
I!J 1~6, the U.N. _General. Assembly voted 10 establish the Umted
No doubt many will see this as
Nllllllll heldlitwbS m New Yen.
th f ' 1 f ·
f Cl'
•
e us sur acmg o . mton s
ln 1962, the U.S. I)IICe probe Mlriner 2 approached Venus, transmit• iDCOIIIIIIIon lbcllll the planet's atmosphen: 1n1 surface temperature. . roots. For the Progress1ve Pol!cy
197S six Sondl Moluccan tenaists surrendered 10 li after h ld- lnsmute was founde~ as the thmk
.
!...
•
po ce
o
tank of the Democrallc Leadership
~: penons hOstage for 12 days on a traliJ near the Dutch town of co~ncil, ,~here Clinton served as
ed the G Jan Heigh
hich · had .
chaurnan m 1990-91.
ln .1.981 • •--•
..,..,. annex
o
ts, w
It
seized from
But the authors and editors of
7· · .
Syria m.2'the
tal airaali y
.
.
this book did not offer its prescripln 1,....,
expenmen
t O)'ager, plloted_by D~ R!'tan and lions with an eye 10ward what crn1
J~ Yeqer,IOOk off from Edwards Air Force Base m Califorma on the
,
flllt --IIOP. non-Jd'ueled flight around the world.
. to~ most. wants 10. read, nor what ·
1n 1989, Nobel peace laureate Andn:i D. Slkhlirov, one of the world's Clinton 1s ffi!JSt· likely _to adopt.
IIIOIIt prominent hnman rights ldvoclles, died in Moscow at age 6R.
The1r obJeCtive was, Simply, to
-

Monday, December 14, 1992

·-

•

Sponsored by Racine Star Mill Park

COLUMBUS (AP) -The State schools.
Starting wilh the class of 1994,
Board of Education will ask state
lawmalcers to approve a proposal public high school students must
.m.t would require private school pass all four sections of the ninthstudents to tate the same proficien- grade proficiency test 10 R:lleive a
c'y tests as public school students to diploma.· Under the JIIDJIIIW, private school students wou ld be
obtain a diplomll.
The board approved the propos- required to pass the test beginning
with the class of 1997.
al13-4 at a meeting Sunday.
The statt would pay for the cost
The plan wu a last-minute revision of the board's budget request of testing, said st,ate school Superfor 1994 and 1995. The board's intendent Ted Sanders. ·
''As we move closer and closer
$9.3 billion budget request ir\cludes
to
a
performance-based syscem ...
an increase of about $1 billion in
we
ought
10 seriously consider haveach of the two years.
ing
them
play by the same set of
· Under the proposal, the 850
rules
the
public
schools are playing
non-public schools that hold state
by,"
he
said
charters would lose the charters
Board member Edwin C. Price
unless they administered ninthJr.
voted against the plan.
grade proficiency tests and similar
"We're
putting another bunleD
tests being developed for. 12&amp;h
on
private
schools
that they may
graders, sixth graders and fourth
not
want,"
he
said.
graders.
He also suggested that the plan
Chartered schools that meet criwas
a prelude to a state voucher
teria for academics and non-displan
that would use public liiOOCY
crimination are eligible for state
to
·subsidize
privale schools.
funds not available to unchartered

NAME
ADDR~E=ss=--------------

Check Ona:_REUGIOUS _NON-RELIGlOUS

Judging will be December 21 From 7 to 10 p.m.
WIUdn a two mile radius from corporation signs.
Extra en1ry forms are available at Home National
Bank. Entry deadline Is December 18.
'
Mall to Dale Hart
Box 347

Racine, Ohio 45771
Far Information, Call 949-2926.

Christmas lighting conte~t ..·
scheduled Dec. 21 in Racine···.
Racine Sw Mill Parle will hold
a OlrislmlB lighting contest. Judging will be beld on December 21

deadline for entry is December 18. ·
Questions can be directed to
Dale Hart, Box 347, Racine, Ohio'
45771, who will also receive entry •
forms. Hart can be reached at 949·
2926. Telephone entries may be' :
made through that number, or by '
calling 949-2656.
·

Anna Cline, 89, of Route 3 in
Alleyne Frances Rees, 72, of
Albany, died Sunday, December Racine, died Sunday, Dec. 13,
from 1 to 10 p.m. limits will be a
13, 1992 at Overbrook Center in 1992 ar University Hospital,
two-mile radius from corporation
Middleport.
Columbus.
signs, and Clllry ronns are available
She was born in Dexter, daughBorn on Nov. 14, 1920 at
at the Home National Bant. The
ter of the late Elsworth and Dora Maysville, Ky., she was the daughNelson Carpenter .. She was a ter of the late Juhn Edward Follmer
Louden was arrested io J..ary
COLUMBUS (AP)- A prisonhousewife. a member of the and Sally Opal Ishmael Follmer.
felonious assault cbalges. H~
Dyes ville Community Church, She was a member of the Racine er at the Franklin County jail on
wu
sentenced last month 10 1 1(1.
in
his
cell,
Sheriff
hanged
himself
Meigs County Senior Citizens, and United Methodist Church and the
Accordir.g to the report, a vehi-·•
Earl Smith's office announced years in _ia!l and was being held ~ · The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
an associate member of the Associ- United Methodist Women.
cle
operated by Elaine T. Gueltig, ..,
the Frantlin County ~ - Stale Hi,hway Patrol reported
alion of Retired Persons. She was a
She is survived by her husband today.
35,
35640 Texas Road, Pomeroy,
three acc:odents in Meigs County
Shannon K. Loudon, 23, of mg transt:er 10 ~state pnson.
1945 graduate of the Chicago of 55 years, James Scott Rees, Sr.,
·
was
stopped facing northbound •
Depulles S&amp;ld they had tall&lt;al to Friday two of wbich are deer-relat·
School of Nursing.
four sons and daughters-in-law, Columbus, was found. dead shortly Louden
when
a southbound vehicle driven&lt;·
about
10
minutes
before
.
eel
'
Surviving are a daughter; Mrs. James Scott and Virginia Rees, Jr. after 11 p.m. Sunday, said sheriffs his body was found. He was being
by
Anthony
L. Perry, 44, 36485
A Racine woman's vehicle susMax (Maxiile) Haning, a grandson, of Racine; John W. and Debbie spokesman Rick Minerd.
Lakewood
Drive,
Pomeroy, drove··.
Loudon hanged himself with a held alone in a single cell, Minder taioed moder.lre damage and was
Jimmy (Gloria) Haning, and two Ree.s and Gayle A. and Donna Rees
off
the
right
side
of
the road, strik- ··
said.
towed from the scene of a deergreat-granddaughters, Mrs. Gary . of Gahanna, and Douglas C. and bed sheet tied to a lOwe! rack.
vehicle accident Friday afternoon ing a ditch, a mailbox and a fence. ··
(Sonya) Carr and Mrs. Joe (Tanya) Phillis Rees of Racine; two daughA spokeswoman at the patrol
on
State Route 124 in .Sutton
Crouse, all of Albany; three sisters: rers and sons-in-law, Saradelle and -----Meigs announcements----post said th~ morning it appeared Township.
Evelyn Rife, Mmjorie Grueser and Myron Mack of Grove City, and
Sbawnetre M. Cunningham, 34, Perry swerved on the narrow road '
The band will pclfonn Leon JesKathleen Carpeqter, all. of Rutland; Jane Ann and Pat Eddy of Orient; 1
Potluck planned
,·
50123
PUnland Read, Racine, was 10 avoid hitting Gueltig.
se!'
s
"Parade
of
the
Wooden
Soland three brothers: Lawrence and two brothers. William Follmer and
The Rock Springs Better Health
No
injuries
were
reported
and
·not
injured
when
she
struck
and
die{S,"
"Greensleeves"
and
"'uistPerry Carpenter, both 'of Rutland, Kenneth Follmer of Maysville, Club will have its Christmas
no citations were issued. Perry's •
and Henry Carpenter of Middle- Ky.; and a sister, Jane Swartz of · potluck Thursday at the Roclc mas Bells." In addition the band killed a deer while eastbound on vehicle sustained moderate damage,
will
feature
Alfred
Reed's
"Russian
S.R.
114.
port.
., .
·
Mayslick, Ky.; 14 grandchildren, Springs United Methodist Church
·•
A Racine man's vehicle also and wu toWed from the scene,
Besides ller parei\i's, she was and three great-grandchildren.
at noon. Christmas trays for the Christmas Music" and ~Marc:b ol'
51-inc&lt;l modelale damage Friday
preceded in death by her husband,
Funeral services will be held shut-ins will be prepared and deliv- the Kinj!" by George Bizet.
night in a dca'-vebicle·accident on
William
R.
Hall,
music
direciOr.
Glenn Roy Cline; a grandson, Wednesday',at 11 am. at the Racine ered.
·
S.R. 7 in Salisbuly Township. The
invites
the
public.
Admission
is
Syracuse Elementary School · · ·
James Max Haning, Jr.; an infant United Methodist Church. The
AA group to meet
vehicle:
was driven from the scene.
free
and
doors
O)ICII
at
2:30
p.m.
will present a Christmas program
sister, Carrie Carpenter; and a Rev. Roger Grace will officiare and
The Pomeroy group of AA will
u.ny W.l'idals. Sr., 68, Main on Tuesday at 7 p.m. First, second ··
Daace pJauedJ
brother, Edgar Carpen&amp;er.
burial will be in the Letart Falls meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
The Gallia Twirlers Western Street. Rwiw:, Hi! "I""' injury when and third grades will present, "The '
Services will be Wednesday at I Cemetery. ,.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
Square
Dance Club will hold a he SIIUCt a dca' wbile northbound Little Bell That Could Not Ring", .
p.m. at Bigon,y-Jordan Funeral
Friends may call at the Evans · 992-5763for information.
dance
Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at on S.R. 7. The deer lefl the scene.
and fourth, fifth, sixth grades will
Horne in Albany, with Rev. Arthur · Funeral Home in Columbus, MonConcert set
The patml also investigated a perform "Angels, Lambs, Lady ..
the
Henderson
Community
Cala
, Crabtree officiating. Burial will be day, 6 to 8 and at the Ewing FWlerThe Easlcrn High School Music
in School Lot Cemetery.
al Home, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 Department will present its annual in Henderson, W.Va. John Waugh &amp;-.car accident Friday evening on bugs and Fireflies".
eour.y Road 82 in Olester TownFriends may call at the funeral p.m. Tuesday.
,
Christmas cone~ Sunday at 3 p.m. will be the caller.
ship.
in the school Hr;:nasium. Performhome on Tuesday from 2 10 4 P m
The Daily Sentinel
. . Lyd'~a StU ItZ
and ?'to 9 p.m
ing groups wil be· the high school
•
(VIPS 11W80)
choir and band.
Robert H. Farley
Lydia Stultz, 84, of Belmont,
Songs featured by the choir will
Veterans Memorialllospilll
PubHobed rmy alloi1!DDII, Monclay
lhiOIIIh Frklly, 111 Couri Sl ; p..,..roy, ' ·
W.Va, died on Sunday, December be "Star Carol" (from the movie
SATURDAY ADMiSSIONS •
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiohillf!
Robert H. Farley; 88, Lancaster, 13, 1992 at Chare Haven of Pleas- Home Alone), "Christ is B'orn Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy, and
C&lt;mpiulfiMullimedia Inc., p..,..roy,
died Sunday, Dec. 13, 1992, at ant in Belmont
Ohio 48768, Pb. 992·21116. Second dill
Today" by Kirby Shaw, "Calypso Agnes Mowery. Pomeroy. _,
Heartland-Fairfield Care Center,
poRip poid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
She wu born 'in Letart Falls on Carol," and "Feliz Navidad" by
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Mei&amp;s
·Emergency
Services
Lancaster.
,
.
August 26, 1908, daughter of the Jose Feliciano.
Levy Foster and Sbaron Ward.
MeJObr. The ANociated .,_,, ...d the
mJits a111owaed the folio~~week- Ohio
He -was bon\ Sept. 12, 1904 in late Bart and Mina Norris Miller.
~ Aooodatlon. Na~IXIal
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
end calls: SATURD A Y'-t" I :29 ~
~n~Pe, &amp;mMm
Salem Center, son of the late
She is survived by a daughter,
Anne Davis, Middleport.
Nea
f
P
Salea,
733 'l1Urd AYenue,
a.m.,
Pomeroy
squad
to
Pomeroy
William Henry and Nancy Ellen Mrs. Linda James of St. Marys,
SUNDAY DISCHARGES • Pike, Josla Mayes to O' Bieness Now Yon. Now Yon 10017.
Bishop Farley.
W.Va.; four grandchildren; two
Agnes Mowery.
Memorial Hospital; 4 :07 p.m., I'Oil'l'MASTBR: s - t - .... _"' .
He wu a retired quality control great-grandchildren; four sisters;
Super Lotto
Doily SeatiDol, Ill Court Sl, ,
Middleport to Bradbury Road, The
inspector for the Jeffery Manufac- Irene Hayman of Westerville;
PoiwO)I OHio &lt;&amp;5761.
'·
1-4-19-24-34-42
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CF.NTER
Mary Lathey to Holzer Medical
tunng Co., Columbus, and a mem- Cora Mae Byers of Warren, ()pal
Kicker
BUB8CIUPTION II.ATE8 .
Discharges, Dec. 11 • Andrew Cen&amp;er; 7:32 p.m., Middleport to
·, .
a., c.m.r.W-...II..Io
ber International Steel and Diddle of Racine, and Jean Fisher
4-7-0-9-6-3
.
Brown,
~pril
Moore,
Catina
Willis,
Stale
Roole
7
and
U.S.
Roure
33
,
Olio
.
...
.....................................
$I
.60
Aerospace Workers Local 1038, of Gallipolis; tliree brothers,
Pick3
Christopher Williams, Mrs. Jerry auto accidcol, Charles Eggers to Olio Moftth.-......................................$6.96
Foreman Club and 20 Year Club at William Miller of Gallipolis,
6-6-1 .
Olio Yeu...... _.................................$83.20
Perry and daughter, Mrs. Joltn ¥c1 w Memorial Hospital; SUNSINGLE COPY
Jeffery Manufacturing Co. ·
Pick4
Robert Miller of Pann Yan, N.Y.,
Cunningham and daughter. Myrna DAY, 7:36a.m., Columbia units to
PIICII
Survivors include two sons, and Fred Miller of Racine.
7-7-4-1
O.il~ ...... :..................................... 26 Ctnlo
Hanson.
Christine
Gibbeaut,
DeboRuthCiford
Road.
false
alarm;
James Farley of Lithopolis," and
Besides her parents she was prerah Mollit, Lassie Ball. Emma Jar- 12:39 p.m., Tuppers Plains units to . Bubocribonr oat cleoirinc 1o poy the ..,..;.
Kenneth Farley of Mil~rt; one ceded in death by her, husbands,
or . .y mnlt Ia adnnce dtteet w The
rell, Mrs. Riclc I audmnilt and son, Stile Route 7, rire at the John
daughter, Mrs. Barbara 'Bunny" Ora Carl Cooper on Aug. 10, 1962;
Daily Sentinel • a lbree, .t• or 12
Amelia Davis, Am)' Bias, Palrict Hopn residence; 4:38 p.m., Midrnc.&amp;lfNaia. Cndit win be Kiwn CUTier
Hanners of Carroll; eight grand- and Elmer Stultz on Feb. 16, 1973;
Gagai, Cindy Hamilton , Viviall dleport I!Dit 10 Powell Street. Eileen
children; four gte;at-grandchildren; a daughter, Sue Ann Cooper, a
Am Ele Jtower....................317/8
Moore, Mrs. William Lookado and SDidcr 1D VCiaaDS; 5:48 p.m., Rut·
No -~ by mail penmtlod in
one brother, John Farley of Aleron; brother, Lewis Miller, and a sisrer
u.a wllen home carrier •rvice i.
Ashland
00
........................
25
1!8
son,
J. Pearl Proffiu, Wanda Jud to New Lima Road. Rex
and one sister, Kathryn Lucky of in infaliCy.
....ullbla.
ATAT.................................48 7/8
Swearingen and Thelma Sergent
Hoover, treated not transported;
Parlcersburg, W.Va.
Services will be held at the MurllaU-pllo•
Bank
One
......................
:
....
48
718
Dec.
12
•
Cynthia
Discharges,
8:30
Net U to VetU·
.......1.-C....QHe was preceded in death by his ray Funeral Home, 380 Jefferson
Bob EviRS ......... ,............... 19 1(1. · Bentley, Judith Mahoney, Thomas IDS,
Mallory to St Joseph
13 Weeb. .. .- .................. ................. 121 .84
wife. Gladys R. Farley, Oct. 4, St., Greenfield. The day and time
26 Woeb. ......................................... ~-~3 . 16
BlaniOn, Reaford Ward, Maljorie HospilaL
Owming Shop..................l6 718
1987.
fi2 Weeb. ... ...................................... l84.76
will be announced later. Burial will
Stewart, Odessa Cart, Goldie
City Holding ...................... 18 J(i.
O..tolde Melp C...at;,Graveside services will be held be in the Greenfield Cemetery.
Williams, Mrs. Brian Eblin and
t3Woeb. ................................ ......... h3.40
FecSeral Mol'ul.................... 17
1 p.m. Wednesday at Nelson
HUIUID'S GIEENHOUSE
26 Woeb. ............... ........................ $45.60
Goodyear T!tR ...............,.•69 318
daughter, Mrs. John Holsinger and
Cemeiery, Salem Center, with the Robert L. Vineyard
fi2 w..u.......... ,............................... f88.40
Key Centurion ...................20 3/4
son, Misty Robinson and Mrs.
Rev. C. J. Lemley officiating.
Kenneth tyger and son.
Robert
L.
Vineyard,
61,
of
U.S.
Lands
End
..........................
26
5/8
OaislArrangements are under the
Limited
Inc
.......................
27
7/8
Dischartts, Dec. 13 • Opal
Route
33
in
Shade,
died
on
Sunday
-Sat.
direction of McCoy-Moore Funeral
Adtins, Ricbard Ash, Constance
morning, December 13, 1992 at the
Mullimedia lnc..................27 3/4
ss.~ay
Home. Vinton.
Howell, Carol Gmene, Mrs. LcstaVeterans Administration Hospital
Rax Res&amp;awanL ................. ,
Ross l\fld daugh1er, W1yoe Russell,
Reliance Electric................ 1/2
in Cincinnati.
Mrs. Ron Baisden and dluahter,
Arrangements
'
will
be
~yers
................
16
A THEATER
James ~unyan, Frant JICObs,lld
Shoney'slnc......................24 7/8
I
announced by Bigony-Jordan
.A CHOICE! Funeral Home in Albany.
Katherine Fisnagle.
Star Bank. ........................... 33 114
I I , .... lift . . Cet 'hiS.
Births, Dec. 11 - Mr. and Mrs.
Wendy lnt'L....................... 12 3ft
letlnlll..s:Ron Baisden, dlugbtet, Collton; J.fe1
Wortllingtoo Ind. ...............22 318
1 I
d
..
•
I
I ""' ...... .,.,, Stock reporll are the 10:30 Mr. and Mrs. Brian Eblin, daqbwses.
a.m. quotes proYided by Blunt, ter, Gallipolis, Mr. IIIII Mrs. Km-,
1
neth Kyger, son, Gallipolis and ML
Ellilud Loewl rl GaD1poJia.
lt&amp;J "'S, St-u, 011.
and Mrs. Lester Ross, daughter,
ft2·5776
Patriot
Estella Colburn, 76, of Shade,
was charged with failure 10 maintain control of her motor vehicle
followinF 1n accident Saturday
near the mterscction of Main , and
Court Streets.
The Tuppers Plains residence of
•EO.. lOSE &amp; 111011•'" EIIY
Pomeroy Police reported that John Hogan wiS damaged by fare
Colburn struck a car driven by on Sunday aflemoon.
•
•HEARING AIDS • BUD &amp; IIECI SRGERY
Roger Martin, 52, of Galli~ u
According to Tuppers Plains
he pulled from a parking p
on Fire.Chief Mart Boyd, the fire is
G1111llty
Fw Ye•r
West Main. There was moderate believed to have been caused by an
darn!!t!e 10 lhe ~senger side front, el~trical problem in the walls of
headlight and right quarter panel of the house. Heavy damage, '!'IS susthe Colburn vehicle, and moderate tained to the kitchen ce!lma and
darnll!e to the front end of the Mar- ·second floor bedrooms, u well u
tin car.
·
' Sinote and Will« damage.

Prisoner hangs himself in jail cell

P_atrol investiga_tes three wrecks ;:

Program planned

Hospital news

EMS units
answer calls

Lottery

---

Stocks

x;.:,Healtb

Is•·~-·
, .. s...Se••·
...

•!c;r-~-,...~·7

I~~~....,~~

=;

Shade woman
cited by police

Home damaged
during Sunday fire

E,

e...

•

D., INC.

�:~.: .= Sports

The Daily Sentinel

-

· Athens records 62-44 ·vic~ory over Meigs

Monday, December 14,1992

·=----~~--------------~--------------------------------------------------------------~------~----------------~~~;~·~·
\t..San
. Diego beats Cincinnati 27-10 to post fifth consecutive victory
::·

By BERNIE WILSON

fo1111 pants.

SAN DIEGO (AP)- The bolt
,: is back. And it's not just the light·
; ing bolt that reappeared this season

;: Pn the San Diego Chargers' uni·•·
:•
·•
·'

,;
·
'·

In th NFL
e

tricity back following a 27-10
pounding of the Cincinnati Bengals
that gave San Diego its fust win-

~~ou~~m .............

~.;:;;f;.!,~:.,;t"" 60

weo~em DI•IIIon
Kan.JuCit) ....... 9 · 5 0 .643 2B.5227

OltioSL ~. Bow~Onooas.

L.A. Roiclcn ......

Wult. &amp;Jeff. 8J,Obedin71
w;u..boq77,CotholW1J.
75
X
•mr,Oiiio70,Miami,Oltio67

Sealllo ................

Bearut l:;luak

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

•

••

t-

~

•
•

Third place
SE Mi11ouri 74, c.._ Midaipn 61
Coaltendert-lanken Clullc:

W L T Pc:L PFPA

II 3
w................. 9 s
~ --····· 9 .5
N.Y.Giant&lt; ........ S 9
l'lioau............... 4 10
y-l&gt;allu .............

•

ChampiONhlp
~ti 91 , Gcorlia Southern S1

Idem Dl•il:l011

0 .786 341212
0 .643 261211
0 .643 311222
0 .3S7 261326
0 .216 2Z13l11

W...,..Divilloa

,.

y.s.. . 12 2 o .m 386216
y-N.. ~... il 3 o .786 294182
Alloato ..,_,........ 6 I 0 .429 2S333S
LA. ..... ......... 5 9 0 .357 262321

.•
•
•

-

I.-diDdMd cliYiaiou

•

'" h-~
4

...........

,.

Kent 12. YCMrtpuwm S.. 69

•'
;'

Satunlay
Kan.u CitJ at N.Y. Giants. 12:30'p.m.
Tampa Bi.y at San~· 4 p.m.

.

Ohio high school
boys basketball scores

Tournaments

""-41,
Dolpbollelf- '1&lt;5
-62,Mo;a44
-Boolim1le53,1Wolaaa
4.5
75, Shoclyoido 7l

.
.-.-,.

Molylancl93, La s.n. 76
N"""""""47, M-.utb, NJ. 46

Pertn St. 75,l.... l:locli0at 74 (01')
Fitllburah 12, We V" ' " 71
Siena·7l,Hardaln:l '70 1fP1M
Syracwe 104, Teu1·San AntaniD 78

. MO!IdaJ, DK.21
O.UU at Atlanta, 9 p.m..

.. In theNBA ...
,.
. EASTERN CONFERENCE

...
I

1.5

3
).5
5.S
6
6.S
2.S
2.S
3
3.S
4.S

Goo!i't
Jack

65

'

'

PacMk Olvlalon
l'boatix ................. l4 4 .778
Partluul ................. 13 6 •614
L.A. Labn ............ ll 6 .667

•

•
•

7 .632
,..... ....................12 1 .632
GoUm S&amp;aiC ............ I II
.421
s......................6 12 .3]3

L.A. CI;ppcn """"' 12

•

'.•

5

New Yodt 95,Douoit II
l'lioau. 122. Miuni 118

•
•

C1ll

•
'

..

Kall13, ~71

101. MilWitllt.. 82

SLIIe ll4, Sacramerno 12:0

Pooll""' 111, w~ 91

L.A. Clippen Ill. ' •• 101
L.A. Lakm 114, Milwaukee 96

Toal&amp;ht's ~amo

Phillcfelplti• at Qrd.uulo, 7:30p.m . .

•

'

I

'

s.cr-w at Miami. 7:30p.m.

llll:nli11tA~m..

-..

' 7:30p.m.
-at~. I !lorn.
(]w1Gae It Cbi&lt;aJo, 1: p.m.

LA. Lat.. at s.n Anlaftio, 1:30 p.m.
W:!:f: at Pboenix, 9:30p.m.

Milwa

n S.ilk, 10 p.m.

· L.A. Clippen
p.m.

tt

Gold• S"W. 10:30

''

Ohio men's·college
. ' basketball scores
'
SUIIday'sscore
Na• ...... _.
Tilla 107,

'lfllborl_,

SaiUnlay'siCOI'el
DonUon59,W-49
lton}'on 61,- 65
Oh!eC..rJloidclllal9l,-'fl

Nril c-Coot-co

•

ow. 60, u.n.. 54

Elyria C•th. 65, Huron 62 (01')

5L

MuN... 61, Bnclley 54
r.u..n-.aa, Mldcllo TauL 65

60

64

Texu Tech 12. Coloado SL 62
Tua~·El Paao 96, AbilCIIle Cluist.isn

Thllal04,0niR-.81

FarWeat
• • Arizona 11, Utah 64

Boi.oSL 70, W,.......50

62

' - 8 - SL 92. - - Cll Coli.

-

74,l'orllancl66

'

Mcluiu SL 60, Sa Jaac St. .57
No¥0da74,"'-&gt;o5t64
Ncw ·Me.Jico69, New Mnico SL 62

0...0
10, CaL
'"""'
" Villantm 64
St.
liluy'o,
65,
Stmfoni61,Sw:a noSt.33
l)QA 90, Sao Ili&lt;p 63
UNI.VI9, SaullioloSL 77
SL 13,1!. Wuhin.... 64

w-...

Mo. Oilood ~- Catb. 61
N. UaiCII "' CudU!atot 46

N.,-. 70, o.,.,-olandod 49

Cha~p

Now MiailO.Iidi- Cltr. 45

- 57
..,·--~32
~.!ol-E. 52
-'ll.Mlltoo ~59
-_ _
41,Akroa,.,.,
4l
62,,..,
47

Bripm Y~4, Oooop 64

UC Jm.. 90, Mlol. Vll!ey St. 13
•
laJI Cloollt:
Cllud ?'
lllinoiJ 51, "'""'"""' so'
Tldnl """
.
IKbon St. 107, FlariclaAAM 70

"!S:l'alt66"'*"

Ookwaod
Oboda6S.
~10,

...... Oar. 15, s. G:'76
Goldoo Cluolc
a.. p' "
x-a&amp;IOI. Mo.·~Oly 62

=

N.dla

em !il
(01')

"

'
-74:1Wiott

1J1S1ct.. St., P•nJ

-c ·

R-15,Brodfilool65

••cou1n
SliCE 1161

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

.

t (With Sausage or Bacon, Biscuit)
*Sausage Gravy over Biscuits •••••••••• .1.65 f
t *Muffin·
·····:·..••••••••..•••..•••••••..····...... .95 f
Oruge JUice, CoHee, Milk ••••
.60 ·
t
t
1 CROW'$ . LY I

""'"(On

'

'
•

~

..

I I

·.

POMEROY

-·-

..

t

University of Rio Grande starter her usual fme job for us, and GinStephanie Gudorf hit a record ger's scoring was a real plus down
, seven attempts from the three-PQint . the stretch."
Midway also got a balanced
• range Saturday to lead the Redwomen to a 94· 73 victory pver game out of its players, with Karen .
Frasure fuing in 16 markers and 12
, Midway (Ky.).
•
A 5-9 junij&gt;r forward from ,St. of the team's 35 rebounds.
Rio Grande controlled the game
Marys, Gudon also connected on
all four trips ).o the free ·throw line through its shooting, notching 59
to net 25 poJP.ts and lead aU scorers percent on 32 or 54 field goal
attempts, including 11 of 11 from
'liS Rio G~ broke away from a
the three. In addition to Gudorf' s
halftime tie J.n the second period.
Gudorf 11Nas one of four Red- accuracy, Norris was three for three
women players to hit double fig- on outside shots and Michelle
ures in beating Midway, which had Crouse made her one chance at the
fallen 98-'1'3 iO Rio Grande in the three connect. The Redwomen
championship' round of last were 68 percent,from the line, sinkmonth's Bevo Francis Classic. In ing 19 of 28, with Norris netting all
• · · spite of foul ttouble, Gena Norris six of her shots.
totaled 17 points; ·and two of the
·Although SmaUey said rebound· team's newcomers. Stacey Ritter ing statistics were not entirely
and Ginger Smith, also exploded accurate, Midway's sheet credited
for high scoring with 16 and 11, Lori Hamilton wiih seven and
respectively.
Crouse six of the visitors' 26
"We really didn 'I win it until the boards.
• last .10 minutes," Rio Grande
Midway shot40 percent (23-58)
Coach Da,ve Smalley remarked . . and had just one of its four
"But there was a team effort there attempts from the tlu'ee go through
and I think that made the difference for 33 percenL Jill Karsner sank all
because we got some great contri- eight or her shots at the fine, where
butions from the ~ch. Stacey did the hosts ended up with 84 percent
on 26 of 31 tries.
Boosting their season mark to 9·
2.
the Redwomen host Fairmont
•
State Wedliesday at 5:30p.m.
•
•
Box scone:
MIDWAY (73) - Margaret
Woodard,
3-4-10; Jill Karsner, 2·8·
•
12; Pam Buchter, 1-0-2; Jenny
Robin
Atwood, , 6-3-15;
McMur.t rel• 0·1 · 1-4; Vernita
Trapp, 1.0.:2; Karen Frasure. 5-616; Andrea Brown, 4-4-12.
I
TOTALS 22-1·26·73.
RIO GRANDE (94) - Kim
Sowers, 2-Q;,4; Gena Norris, 1·3-6''.
17; Stacey Ritter, 6-4·16; MicheUe
'
, Crouse, 3-1-0-9; Tricia Collins, 2••
0-4; Stephanie Gudorf, 0-7-4-25;
'
Lori Hamilton, 3-2-8; Ginger
Smith, 4-3-ll . TOTALS 21-11·
19-94.
.
•,
Halftime score: Rio Grande
''
42, Midway 42.
STEPHANIE qUDORF

.

992-5432

mSoad.a.eU.E.OU..

- Marshall has spent all season
looking for a chance at.redemption.

I

. . . Jlll14,h: . . . . . . . 0...

" s.a...t

"

'

fouled and hit both ends of the two
shot foul for a 36-30 EHS lead.
Following another missed Fed·
eral shot, Eastern rushed and made
two untimely turnovers. Federal's
Pierson hit an inside bucket and
was fouled on the play. She completed the three point play and
Eastern's lead was cut to 36·33.
Feder.UJnurled its shot selection
as time ticked below the four
minute mark. Otto and Wilson hit
buckets to ·put Eastern on top 4033.
·
Eastern slowed its offense at
this point in the game and went for
the sure two points. Meanwhile,
Federal went for the foul, sending
Eastem to the line where they hit 7of-10 during a crucial suetch in the
game.
Eastern went 'ln 10 win 47-38.
Wolfe said, "The ftrst h'aif was
probably the worst varsity performance I've ever seen. The girls
were just unable 10 make the neces, sary adjustments . .The seeond half
was a complete reversal. It was
~ob~bly the best. controlled effort
I; ve seen. We Qid lots. of thmgs
nght, penetrated ~ell. hit the open
man_ 8!ld cut our ~o~rs down to
a _mi~Im~m. That s _!!as•cally what
wmmng 1s all abouL
.
','I hope .we le'!rft~ som~thmg
10mg~L Bemg paUent IS a big part
of bemg successful. Our whole
club handled the ball and the pressure weD, while running some time
off the clock m !he last quarter.
This sh~uld be a big confidence
booster.
EHS hit 17 of 46 from the. floor
and 13 of 29 at the Jine, while Fed,
era1 hit 16 of 62 frOm the floor and
6 of II at the lin_e.
Eastern l~d m reb~und~ 37-29
led by Ouo s 13, Wilson s eight
and Redovian with seven. Pierson
led Federal with twelve and

Guaorf's three-poin(ers
boost Redwomen victory

YOUIIIDINIIIII
&amp;lilTS 111¥111

4

67, w.,..m.s.
((I - . . . c.ml"
+ a;, 93". Ladoa w-

'

By ~A1T HARVEY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)

~.........

Oll.w.11.-X....57

.PI
Pw

..IISUIJ..ICE
u•••••

5

National Tnj175, - Showate 46
N--SI"-ll

Clndmatl91,GooNioS"""""'S7
TbWploce
sa - 7 4 : co... MldUaoo 61
c....,.~
cu-•Ir

IOWIIII Clllis

t.
t CROW'S.FAMILY RESTAQUNT f
t .Montlay t~ru Saturday 6:30-~0:30 1M ~
Sausage B1scult·····················•········; .79 f
f *Sa•bled Eggs-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.95 f

Ma.illiXIOtr. 69, - C u. 56
MuaWon Jat.ksan 91, Cle. Glmville

J:

while Bently had six. Eastern's
Otto had six at the half.
Eastern finally adapted to the
Lancer defense in the third frame.
Wilson and Karr lOOk turns at the
point, got the needed peneuation
and hit the open man either under
, the bucket, or on the break from the
elbow.
Karr ended the frame with six
points, while Otto tallied four and
Wilson canned three. Amy Redovian played he coolest ball of the
year and iallied two ill the period.
Pierson and Maxwell went. to
the bench early in the third frame,
leaving Federal's scoring up to
Snedden, who garnered eight
points in the stretch.
Both Karr and Wilson picked up
their fourth fouls early in the third
frame, forcing~ 10 go zone.
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe said,
"The girls played a great zone
wben we needed it. We had done
the same thin~ earlier in the g_ame,
but got burnt Inside. Jessica (Karr)
and Jaime (WiiMn) nlaved aRIII'CS·
sive, but smart. with four fouls' on
them. Penny Aeiker did a good job
on the inside and our bench people
played super. Jessica Radford gave
us some defensive punch and Tara
Congo came through offensively."
Eastern pulled to within 29-28
at the end of the third period.
A Karr drive gave Eastern a 3029 advantage its first since the
beginning of die game and an Otto
rebouhd and follow-up jumper put
Eastern up 32-29. .
Federal missed its next two
scoring opportunities. EHS sophomore post player Tara. Congo then
came off the bench, where Wilson
immediately hit her for the score
inside. Snedden hit a free tl,Irow for
Federal on the transition but on the
· ensuing possession. Congo was

Mahomey had six.
Eastern had 20 turnovers, seven
assists and 16 fouls . Wilson had
three assists. Federal had 18
turnovers, three assists .and 25
fouls.
Federal won the reserve game
37-14. Kristen Lydy led the win·
ners with I 0, and Melissa Guess
had four for Eastern.
Eastern will go to Belpre
tonight.
Eastern
(5·8-15-19:47)
Stephanie 0110 7-0-1 =I 5, Jaime
Wilson 2-0·6=10, Amy Redovian
2-0·l=S, Tara Congo 1-0-2=4, Jessica Karr 5-0-3=13. Totals 17-0·
13=47·
.
Federal Hocking
(9-10-10·8=38)
Katie Maxwell 4-0-0=8. Erin
Snedden 4-0-3= 11, Alison Pierson
2-0-3=7, Tracy Bently 4-0·0=8,
Lisa Mahomey 1-0-0=2, Jenni Kibble 1·0·0=2, Missy Bemlett 1-0·
0=2. Totals 16-~=3~
(Scott Wolfe is Eastern's head
basketball coach)

...

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••

lrdANNVAL RUTLAND . 1I ,•

HOUDAY TOURNAMENT .J ~ -

Boys Basketball:. grades~, 5, 6~ 1 ~
Girls Basketball: Combined

I,

- No All Star Teams DRAWING ON DECEMBER 22
tournament Runs Dec. 26
through Jan. 3

;,

.

For more information contact:
Danny Tillis, .Tournament Director

.,
~

742-2572

·'

1

••

·,..,.~...

o'

Christmas
Greeting
Edition
.Thursda,,
DeeemiJer Z4

Youngstown State, the Herd's
NCAA I-AA title foe for the second straight year, has been busy
provirig its 1991 championship was
no fluke .
"We deserve to be where we
are right now." said Marshall
junior runnin~ back Gfenil Pedro
after leading hiS team to a semifinal
win over Delaware. ''This year was
our year. We have a ·goal to accomplish."
Herd quarterback Michael Pay·
ton also wants a second chance at
'
the title.
"Our team knows we have a lot
more work to do," he said. "We
have one game left and we will
· prepare for this game. ••
. Youngstown State coach Jim
Tressel said everyone has been
gunning for his Penguins .
"In the playoffs, we've had Vii·
lanova, which is a great team,
(played) at No . I (The Citadel),
then at No. 3 (Northern Iowa) and
now· we're at the home team's sta·
dium," Tressel said after a 19-7
semifmal win over Northern Iowa.
"So whoever wrote the script has
certai~ly challe~ged us. ••

With wreaths of boDy and mistletoe, stockiags huaglly
tile fire and sceaas lllankeled wltb sriow, ChristmU

eac•paises warmth and goad cheu as we chula the ;;
•lanlnp we've shared this past year. For uslt maa•s ,··
saying "thanks" to you, our muy friends, old and new~ ;.
..... ldad support we'D always treasure. Doing
·
llasln!ISS with ,.. Is our greatest pleasure! ·

Heidelberg beats
Marietta 91-70 ·
TIFFIN, Ohio (AP)- Heidelberg outscored winless Marietta
58-35 in the second half en route to
an easy 91-70 victory Saturday in
the Ohio Ccinference.
The Student Princes (3-4 overaU, 2·1 conference) trailed Marietta
(0-6, 0-3) by as many as eig~t in
the first half bqt managed to,go
iniO the half only down 35-33.
Heidelberg's Ml!ll Adams
opened the second half with a
jumper in the lane to give the Stu·
dent Princes its first lead at 39-38.
Marietta tied the game at 41-41
with 15:51 to play. but Brent
SwartzmiUer buried a three-pointer
from the right wing to put Heidel·
berg up for good.
Marietta's Dave Gooden led all
scorers with 18 points and grabbed
a game-high nine rebounds. Jeff
Caldwell (Soutbem '88) had 15.
Heidelberg was led by Mike
Hurst with 16 roints, while
SwartzmiUer had I .

THE MARAUDERS' SHOOTING from the field sulrered a serious setback in Saturday night's 64-44 loss to Athens at The Plain'S.
Meigs, which shot 44% from the field in Friday night's 69-51 wtn
over Miller (this photo was taken at that game), saw its field-goal
shooting drop 20 percentage points against the Bulldogs In losing lis
second game in four tries this season. (Photo by Catby Edwards)

.

~~~.
~~~~~""'~~~.
~:n
.
~ ::
, .:.~ ~

Marshall, Youngstown St. to meet
aga'n in NCAA 1-AA title game

TROY DONALDSON

AI

MadiM 76, Clc. Eut Toch S1
Mi4 £tt •n Mldi.oa: '19, Twin Valley
5. 71
'
Milleo
City~.
v .. · - 46
MlnfOid II, Oot llill13

-Ciuolc

::

t
'
I DRIVE·;::·.~~AKFAST I

~b46,AY'ftVillol6
Mood.W., Pl. l2. C&lt;nfiolcl47

Toumomonll

second

t~!!:?~--~=:~~·~~1~~:::::~

Musillon Wa1hinaton 7S Clo.
1Comed 63
•

W- !L 15, Uuh SL 10

Tltlnlplaco

~

lholU7
Lanc~aU:t 64, GtoVepOit 39
Liberty Cltr. 4S, E. Krm 42
Libaty·l!atum 85, Riverdale 51
Lid&lt;in&amp; H11. Sl.lolutatown N"""ricla•
46
Lima Bath 70, Ada S9
lim• Catlt. 51, FL lonmio 40
Lima T""Pl• 63, Tal. Chrialion 50
LJ:tcalaviow 71, Conlinootalj,l
Londcm 63, llexloy 51
Lorain Cod!. 91, lVellinaton 61
Loudonville 52, Oanway 42
Macliaon PWao 70, BiJ Walnut 46
"""-SO, S)'l!tJIIOO VIIL 36
Muon 57' Liltla 1\liuni 55
55

were not immediately available as
of presstime. Rio Grande will travel again Tuesday to face Central
State.
Box score:
WALSH (83) Corry
Appline, 8-5-21; Todd Brown, 5-010; Greg Geig, 5·2'·12; Michael
Smoot, 0-1-3-6; Sco" Young, 7-1·
3-20; Carl Rogers, 3-4-10; Tim
Debevec, 2-0-4. TOTALS 30·2·
17-83.
RIO GRANDE (70) - Matt
Powell, 3-1-0-9; Jeff Brown, 4-210; Troy Donaldson, 9-4-22; LaMontHarris, 5-2-12; Jack Morgan, 11-3; Brett Coreno, 4-0-8; Walter
Stephens, 2.().4; Tim-Christian, 1·
0-2. TOTALS 29·1·9·70•.
Halftime score: Walsh 35, Rio
Grande34.
•

; BU.,LAND nBNrrUBE

Jacbcm Center 61 , Benjamin Loaan
Jcwcu-Scio 7S, Newcomcmown 48
Kali4a 51, An:hhold 41
Kent R - 75. Akroa H""" 65
Kinp 66. sennabon&gt; ss
Lakowood ~~- Edward 72. Cle. Mu·

SW , . _ Sc 63,&lt;Jnton 5L 48
SLLouio 101, Maapn st. 16
Vllpualoo 71, Ball St. 75
WLt ,· Mllwt~oc 71, W"lJOCIDiin 12
XaW., Ohio 70, Miami, Oltio 67

Donaldson records 22
in RG's loss to Walsh

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY UNTIL 7 P.M. : .
THRU DEC. 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER
~
HOURS APPOINTMENT.

64

Nobouka 71, Widtila SL 64
Ohio St. 10. Bowlilla a- 54
Pltnluei4,Loyola,DL 70
s.lllinoiJ 91, N. lllinoio 62

By SCOTI WOLFE
The·Eastern Eagles girls • baslcetball team scored 34 second-half
points en route to a 47-38 comefrom-behind, non-leauge triumph
over Federal Hocking Saturday
evening in Stewart.
Eastern trailed 47-38 at the half.
Senior center Stephanie Olio led
the Eagles with 15 points and 16
. rebounds, while freshman south:
· · paw Jessica Karr notched 13
points. Junior point guard Jaime
Wilson had 10 points and eight
rebounds, while Amy Redovian
had five and Tara Congo four.
Federal Hocking was led by
Erin Snedden wllo tallied I I points,
while Katie Maxwell and Tracy
Bently each no!fhed eight, Alison
Pierson seven, Lisa Mahomey and
Jenni Kibble had two each.
·
Defensive struggle early
·.
Erin Snedden put Federal up 2. · 0. Seconds later Stephanie Otto tied
the score it 2-2. then Alison Pierson put the Lancers on top 3-2, hit·
ling the
of a two shot foul.
Both' clubs struggled to get
much o.f an offense going and addi·
tionally Eastern became careless in
protecting the ball. EHS coughed
, ' up ille ball ten times in the first
; period alone.
.
l- Meanwhile, Maxwell, Bently
and Mahorney each took turns
driving the baseline, enabling the
Lancers to take ·a 9-5 leal! at the
buzzer.
. Both clubs played near even,
: · during the second period, but again
:;.solnewhll! sloppy play tainted .the
·: offensive output for both clubs.
:• Federal led .19-13 at the half. By
;' halftime. lh~ Lancers and East. ; ern's Wilson and Karr had three
:' fouls each.
: Federal's Katie Maxwell had all
: · of her eight points in the fli'St half,

~
J

&lt;Woaono 51, WatkiN Memorial 54
Oaofiold lflo. sa; Rod&lt;y RiYor 57
o....ti VIIL !10, Calllond l.olteYirN 50
Orondvlow 63.Lidtilta VIIL S7
Hunillon 1tau 66, Go.lten S5
Hd!n!n I Ak •ood 12., Jonathan Al.det

53

Eastern girls defeat Federal Hocking 47-38

r;;i~W'HOi;iiAiiiCjii8;-· _

Foanior75, Woodofw.I 61
Fl. p,_ !1!, w...... l&lt;&gt;cll66

HcMton 104, Mian•~ 17

Tuaday's cames

•

.

.

Day. Wllito 72. Delph.. SL lo1tn •• 56
Def'YQCO 64, Pon. dilaoD 60

F.m.. 53, w,ynec~a~e 42
FairpoR-60, W'tllo-llill36
Findlay42. Lima SJta ..... 41
Firelandl74, New London Sl
Nhe&lt; Cab. 60, Newadt C""- 56
F....... SL Wcndclill76. Bluffton 62

SWTGilUSt. 11, TuuWIIIlayan 60
South Alabama 14, Nonh Teus 79

Now Yodl: al Ne.w Jc:ne)', 7:30 p.m..

..

Day. OU:wood 61, Sprina. NorthWeat·

E. Livapool Chri.alian SS, Atwater
Cltr.45
Elp77. - 6 3

IWiau St, 16, s.. -

•

O.WcratNcwYcd:, :30p.m.

''

Doy. Canull61, Doy. Stobbino 58
Doy. Dunhv 107, Doy. lelfenon62
Doy. -91,N-t92

s..tb CO!Oiin•l9, N.C.·AolwMlle 52

lowo 71, lowtt SL 51

97, Seatlk 93

'

Ooor45

~ ~: ~::;;:::~:'6fl

2.l
2.l
·6.S

· Sunday's scores

'•

er.viow 54,- Local45

CUyollop Vll!ey Cu. 77, Elyria Open

cmSI

~03, Atl1nta 96

Uuh

c.-Jlioc 69. S. Cannl64

Kcnwdty 88,lnuiaville 68 ·
N. C.rolina Art.T97, Viqinia SL 17
Olcl Dom.lnion II, V1. COamonwubb

SouH..-. 92. DL.::O..C.:,
a.Iah..... 93,
n
otJahonto SL 93, Baylor 75

Golda'~

eo.u..-

O.Uo16, Cal St, •. . . _ 73
EvWvillo 16, IIIIDoio St. 61

Otieap9S,NewJaaey89
San Ammio 113, Dallu 91

.'

Colanol Cnwfonl 69, Mm&lt;wl&lt; S2
c.ry.a..... 60, Allat E. 39
Coooally 61, Dal""' 59
63, Foida"" 46

M-t
Akron 12. Y-wn St 64
Alaako·F.-a 66, Tolodo 55

1.5
2

Oinoca---12. CodaYillo 67

Col Aeodomr 63, Col. SL Owla 62
Col DoSalao 15, WllllhinotonOu. 63

Viqinia IQO,H.,.ud U. 64

Cltarl-109, o..... 1oo

•
•

77

Vont!t:dlill!I!,SCIIlbcmMdh. 86

Saturday's scores

·•
•

o._,s:z.

14, Be&amp;hun..Caokman 63

South Florida 92. Cent. Fimdo II
Tulane 91, NW Louisiana II
Uni011, Ky. 12, Mon:::hAd SL 64

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwed Dlwlllon
w L Pet. GB
Twn
Utah ...................... 12 6 .667
H~ ................. ll
6 .647 .s
San Antonio.............9 9 .500
3
.389
Olllt\ICI' ................ .....7 II
s
Minnaota .....,_ ........5 12 .294
6.S
O.Uu ....................... l IS .063
10

.

·

53, Cin. Ttopin 42

90, N. Col!eacllill60
St. CainWle10
Cle. Colliltwood13, TaL Uberty 67
Clewlalld ""- 15, Clition M&lt;Kinloy

Cold-59·"-""' 4?

C-90,E.TeauBapia64
Clonw111 II, N.C.·a-ubooo 62
Euo Cuoliaa 109, r - Tech 94
Fla. lntomatiootal 72. FW!eialt I&gt;idift.
"""60
.
Oooqe Muon 9S, Rad!Oid 75
102. ~ s. 79 .
&lt;Jnni ' 5L 104,JOMICIWiian63

•
•

.•-•74
CiA. n- Ptlt 4.5, a.. .;-~·llill40

A11blma 16, Souttwm Mila. 76
Alabern.a St. 121, Troy St. 116

GB

,.

Cia.-Cia.--

~-Voll

Soulb

Atlanllc Dl"'loo

w L PtL
T!low Yook .............. l2 7 .'&amp;32
New Jersey ............ 11 9 .550
;. . Ollaodo ..... ...............l 9 .471
• ......................9 II .450
.3!10
~ ......... 7 13
' .............5 12 .294
·' Mlami ......................
l 13 .VI
•"•
Central Dlwldon
,.• Clliceao.................. I3 6 .614
• Chedodc ,uoUOMUM"o l l 9 .S50
Jndiana ,, ........ -....... 11 9 .550
""""' ................... 10 9 .S26
Mllwaukee ....- ....... 10 10 .SOil
CLIMli.AND .........9 II .4SO
DconHI ......................7 10 .412
'

Onph17,nam;'"75

lona 77, Fordharri sa
Maino 63, Fairfield 51

S..ule 11 Deaver, 4 P..nl.
N.Y. Jcu 11 Miami. I p.m.

•.

lut

C!-J......,fl, Md.·B. Sit.,. 54
llafYaftl 94, LoiU&amp;h 90

ll Ddmi1, 4 p.m.
San~ at LA. Raidcn, 4 p.m. •

'

CamhUclp 11. s.......,.;n. fi1
eao-llooilop 55.x.- au. so
C:....'l'iotkm67,C...O. Callt. 64
Cudlnlli1,Hawt• 63

Carolina at.Bonoa 'Colleao.
ppd.,
-""'
Illtb II, R~q. . 79

Otica,

•

«),Mmwspon$7

6 .Jd S5
Briaal66, 8'
BnoatYillo62, Td.C...yN.61
- , . Tni151. Coldwoll53
8....,. VIIL 56,N- 50
Baqn.o 69, Sbolby66

Saturday'sS&lt;OI'tll
Coa~tal

..

llollbrook56,Day. OWtian 40
U.U....S7,No.wd41

Major college
basketball scores

z•

.-::·:

'

Mtukiftpm 78, Blldwin·Willacc13
Oh.io 81,Cievcland SL 12
Rio Grandt: 94, Midway 73
Toledo 11, Detroit 10

Thlnlploco

~-kP.:. I p.m.:
BdaltuLNow
"---dCLEVE.LAND,l p.m.
l-A.Raml atGftlllft Bay, I p.m.
'MinnCIIOU It Pilllbutzh. 1 P,m.
New Enalandat aNCJNN'A'fi,l p.m.
l'boatix • '""i•nopolia, 1 p.m. ·
WuiWt..... ot l'hiWlelphla, I p.m.

·.'

N. Iowa 61, Nelnlb-Clnaha Sl

Adrian 16, Bdbaoy, W.Va. 53

Regular·5ei50D llnales

••
•

M-

Wiuat!xq 17, llofionoo42

LA. Raidcn It Miami, 9 p.m.

~

W'""""'P 91' a...w 70

Wltlonbort C1Mk
Championllllp

•
••

•

S.th

jtmeeda!'O!

ToDight's aame

;. '

-

llolc!dlxq Sl, Mmeaa51
John Canull75, arlo N&lt;rth.., 55

Wullla..... 20, 0.U.U 17
Gaaa BaJ J6. HOIIRCII14

·.·
.,

wmn;.,..
Ull, s....... a6
Cuolllia 14, H--.76

N.c..

Earllwot 76, Kenyon 4Z
Edinbcwo 113, Ohio Domiftic:.n 72 ...

S..tdel7

Niqui92.Btdhlo76
-llonio 63, c..u;,. .,
St. B CIAiiW "'1166, Haraa. SO
a

Cccluvil!e 72. Bhlll\on S7
Deniooo 65, w-.. .. (01')

Sao !Mao 27, ONCINNA'fi I 0
New Orliana 37. L.A. IWDI14
Pbilaclclpldo 20,
(01')

Millauai 1 3 , - Oll10
Obio 13,1JSA Verich llqlo 62

.

C•pilllll, Ouabcin 44

.

'

a - Col!ep 69, Coutal C. ...lina
65

Saturday's seores

10. N.Y. ,_'

E. T«uMJUUe St. 95. Court Au.tboJity

S1111clal;:.ecores

MountSt Jotqlth 65, Walsh 37

=~~ ~20
Salll'naciaco 20~ 17

•
•
•
•
•

61

aeau~ar­

Adanlal!I,T-Bay7
Ileaoi.t 214. CLEVE;L..AND 14

•
•

Dovi- I06,USA Verich llopo 62

Sunday's score

tido

Sunday's ICOI'tS

''

Elhtbldoa

Ohio women's college
basketball scores

Saturday'• ICOI'tS
Btdfolo 27, 0....17
- 1 9 . N.Y. Clioatl 0

•
•
•
••

'l'lllrd .....

Ohio 83,V.mh Rcpo 62

15

The Walsh Cavaliers succeeded
in holding down the University of
Rio Grande's leading scoring threat
Matt Powell in Canton Salul!lay on
their way to a 83-70 win over the
Redmen. .
Powell, who was bringing an
ave~e of 23 points 10 each game,
was limited 10 nine points by the
Walsh defense. However, center
Troy Donaldson made up for it by
notching 22 points 10 lead aU scorers and seven of Rio Grande',s 38
rebounds.
The Redmen got big games out
of Jeff Brown and LaMont Harris
as well, and near!' the entire bench
got in on the acuon. It took all of
those personnel and their talents to
make an impact on what. was Rio
Grande's first Mid-Ohio Confer·
ence outing of the season, and the
results were shown in the Redmon
bringing the Cavaliers to a onepoint lead at the half.
.
·
·But Walsh scoring machine
Corry Appline, netling 21 points
and nine boards. led a balanced
1 attack that saw his team break ·OUt
for a 12-point margin in the game's
botiOIII half. The Cavaliers were
aided by their control. of the
.rebounding -as they r~corded 57
boards, with Greg Gtiig bringing
down·17 and Todd Brown 12.
The Redmen were more suc·
cessful in cutting their turnovers 10
13 while Walsh suffered 17. Don·
aldson hit aU nine attempts on field
goals and was four of five from the
free throw line 10 boost the Red·
men effort
Rio Grande was 42.3 percent
from the field on 30 of 71 attempts
andAvas held to onl'y one thfCC· ·
point goal on 25 attempts. From the
line, the Redmen netted nine of 15
for 60 percent.
'
Walsh, which w~ntiO 7·1 on the
season. was 42.7 percent on shoot·
ing (32-75), but got off just two of
its nine tnes from the outside for
22 percent. The Cavaliers were
65.4 percent from the line (17·26).
The loss look the Redmen 10 8-2
overall as they traveled to Cleveland 10 face the Dyke Demons Sun·
day afternoon. Details on the game

E. Mid&gt;ipt 17,1'nirio v.... 62

·Exltlblilon

y..u.dled plo~-

•
•

a.--

Wri&amp;Jtt St U, E.-Ka.oxl&lt;y 11

E. Micllipn 87, Prairie View 62

4 10 0 .216 246341
DotooiL.............. 4 10 0 .216 2ll305.

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores

'':

U8Alr0Mik

Third place

T..,. B•y ........

:J

Gmup 77, Akom St. 67

WriaJtt SL 18; E. ~y 71

............. 9 5 0 .643 341239

u.uc-

C'h

'l'lllrd ,....

USAirCiauk
Chaml!'!&gt;lllhlp

Ceetnl Dl'ltloft

T......MarWo 12. ........ 8apia74

6l Ala.·Birmin•=-17; Teau-Artinac.oa

Champlouhlp

&lt;lrooitot Bay.......... I 6 0 .!!71 2A! 2l6
c::loioqo............ .. S 9 0 .357 278311

•

·

93, De(....,. 90 (OT)

Fnnklin

srt-l!:.

':-w.~oo~ 50
~
·~----- .•·?6,..,. •., ,.
~,,
..............

Tournameats

~

.

YNIQ.I.a!QoMS6

Colum •

the go-ahead icore.
" Stan Humphries has been
picking defenses apart," said running back Rod Bernstine, who
not won a Jot and being able 10 win · San Diego scored the final 24 scored a touchdown.i~ his return
points to improve 10 9-5, the fli'St from a seven-game IDJUfY layoff.
time it's w_on nine g~~s sinc.e • "He:s. ~ le~er ... .he was a great ·
going 10-6 m 1981. WJIIIIIng their acquiSIUon.
tiflh straight g8me kept the Charg-'
Humphries was intercepted by
ers tied with Kansas Ciiy atop the Darryl Williams late in the first
s,_lliololon4 ... n.··'"54
AFC West. Cincinnati (4-10) lost quarterandbyDavidFulcherinthe
5 ~ CUI.oUo: 91 • Sprina. Showneo
its fifth straishl gaine.
end zone midway ~'!f~ the secs~Scudo91,a-..69
Last year, H!lfllphries was the ond quarter. The Ben
used the
,.., ,;u,c.o~~.oo, wm....w~el6
third-string
quarterback
for
the
second
pickoff.
to
set
up Jim
S'owi7, A.....toftfilcbll,401'
f
8
fi Jd al ~
T;ppa.,n,T"''"'
Super Bow champion Washington Breech's 4 -yard 1e 110 or a
ToLSL1'noci&lt;49,Cie. SL lpw43
Redskins. Five days after John 10-31ead with 1:4lleft in the half.
~":'.~~,:~. c
vau.
Friesz ~enthdown with a knee
~umJ!hrieh~ imm~~te1Heybegan
S2
injury 1n I e season opener, &amp;IOning aor ISm . uau;S.
com~vi!;'::;:::
Humphries joined theCbarsers in a · pleted 6 of 7 passes to move the
W.lelroniXI61,0lonlaqyS6
trade. He's been a big reason for Chargen 75 yards in 1:26, cspping
Wlllhleollii91,Atnlll1Uohtcl43
theChargers'1!1111810UDd.
• the drive with an 11-y&amp;rd pass to
~=-;:_~=~'
Humphries was intercepted on MiUerin therightC:Ol!ICroftheend
w"""""""s . 52.~47
the Chargers' second and third . zone for a 10-10 tie 15 seconds
w..r.n 63· LooanElm 3 i
drives, but bounced back by throw· before halftime.
.
W~c6;1,EfyriaW. 34
ards Anth
Mill fi
· · has · ·
WhoolloJ(W.V•.)Linlly 60, o~ Uni·
ing 11 y
to
ony
er or·
.Humphries
direCted success~~"!~
· ... w.-...;u.s7
the tying 10uchdown and running a ful two-minute drills before half·
,..
1-yard boot!...,
· · the 1as·lt&lt;!urg8111C:S·
•
Yauna.
ey49,Boudman43
..., on fourth down for umem
y..., • . Soudtl6,(l;nrd67
z.no.,;u,61,W.MuU;naum66(0T)

........

""' ,,,."'
63 Gooop W""'-13, T - St.

Slippcr)'Rocki9,W~EricS1
um.n•II,B...a. 69

••

,.

cs ~~.:J
65 ,._ 61
a&amp;w'a..Ic

llociA-C:..Wctuok

M11... 17.faimt,.,tS&lt;54

9 s o.643 261213
7 7 o .soo 232211
62127 o
.462 20120!
o .1
43120271

69

~~
w;.~. · n. s;'cvNp ...,,_.....
.,. 5&lt;73. Lo7ok - , · - ·

,... ,, 'lp
-~Ol,~C..... ' 'tSLII

Coclmille91, Wilmin .... l6(01')
c"""'st. IIB.- l l o

room set the feeling of wi~," nine out ofiO like this, it's a weird
said quarterblck sran Humphries, feeling but it's a great feeling 10
who hasn't had 10 stcmacb yean of see these guys the way they're feellosing. "Being on ICaiiiS that have ing right now."

59

-

~~T~:'5s

~: :: L~ g :l:J ~lli

...

70

1
81~:~~

A. " .. N,
67 w:~•
~

1 6 o .m 3082AI

SaD Qqo ..........
Don- ...............

~.....

"-'""R-.~U-

MJci.OhloCool''""ce
Tilfin93,Sho.... S.. 7610
Wlllh ll,Rio&lt;lnaolc

•·Pia.bwJh~.~. .tJ 014~714 273206

,·

.._ 97~.\t:i;i 51

Oaori&gt;oin61,c.pual65

212 o .143 IB23Z7

NewEnJlmd .....

.._c.a

~~:;:::6t.J"O:c=t764

·..

:r,'y~::.::::::: ~ ~~ g~ ~m~

..

"The thing that gives me. the
most excilenw!l about it is to see
all the otbcr guys in this kx:ker

llinm?1,1ofoua&lt;1J,... 66

AMERICANCONFE~NCE
t:utemDIYIIIoll
TW L T Pd. PFPA
r·Bulfolo ........... 10 4 o .714 3512AO
Miami ................ a s o .615 215244

•

ning m:onl in a noo-SIIE season

·

The Olargers have the old clcc· . since 1981.

••

By DAVE HAIUtiS
increued the lead 10 23-18 with on and Kiger chipped in with 10. Travis Grate led Meigs with 20
Sntlllel Cta 1 up Olldent
two lll'li8bt Kiger buckets. The last Athens hit~ of SO for SO percent, points, Scgtt Peterson added 17,
. Athens outscored Meigs 2A-9 iii coming with 3:54 left in the period. including two of 12 from three Benny Ewing chipped in with 13.
the fourth period and roUcd 10 a 62· Brad Anderson's two free throws point ranf'C· Alben• hit 20 of 33 Adam Krawsczyn scored six, and
44 win over the Marauders Satur- with 2:35 cut the Athens lead to fromthelinefor61%.
Jered Hill had five . Brushwan
day evening in nOIH:OIIference bas· one (23-22) which is the way the
Wagner was the only Manluder Fletcher led Athens with 15.
ketball action at The Plains.
half ended;
in double figUres with 14. Harrison
t.{eigs will travel to Nelsonville·
Ice cold shooting was the down
Eric Wagner came up with a and Stanley added nine, John Bent- York on Tuesday.
fall for the Marauders as they hit steal and lay-up with 4:45 left in ley six, Todd Dill three, Anderson
MEIGS
on only 12 of 58 from the floor for • the third pe:nod 10 give Meigs a 31· two and Cremeans one. Aaron
(13·9·13·9!0'44)
. a frigid 24. Both teams are now 2-2 27 lead. But Athens came back and Drummer, Kyle Simpson, Bobby
Jay Cremeans 0-0-1=1 • John
· . on the year. ·
.
retook the lead. and when Tom Johnson and Chris Knight played · Bentley 2-0-2=6. Trevor Harrison
Meigs jumped outiO a 10-6 lead Hom drilled a three pointer with 2A but did not score. Meigs hit 10 of 3-0-5-=9, Todd Dill 0-0-3=3 , Eric
" thanks to red hot shooting from seconds left the Balldogs went op 58 from two-point range and four W&amp;gne\' .1-4:0=14. Brad Anderson
junior ~ard Eric Wagner. Wagn· top 38-35 heading into the final of 16 from three-point range for 0-0·2=2, Jack Stanley 4-0· l-•9.
· er's third three pointer in a row period.
24%. Meigs collected 32 rebounds TOTALS -10..4-12=44
gave Meigs the 10-61ead with 4:06
Two straight buckets by Sunny with Stanley grabbing 10. Meigs
left in the fllSI period. But Athens Kalu gave Athens a 42-35 lead at turned the ball over 16 times and
ATHENS
· caine storming back and lOOk a 14· the 6:38 mark. But the Marauders had seven steals with Cremeans
(14-9·15-24=62)
13 lead at the ~nd of the fust period were unable buy a bucket, Athens · getting two 10 lead the way.
Nick Toth 1·0·2=4, Tom Hom
on Pat McHugh •s two free throws.
went on a 8-2 run to give the host a
hi the reserve contest, Athens . 1-1·0=5, Sunny Kalu 7-0·2=16,
Meigs took a 15-14 lead on 50-37 )cad and the game was all jumped out 10 a 15-2 lead before Justin SchoU 0-1-0=3, Pat McHugh
Trevor Harrison •s bucket to begin but over.
Meigs came storming back to post 1-0-9=11, Kyle Lon·as 2-0· 1=5.
the second period: But two free
Kalu led the Bulldogs with 16 the 60-54 win. Meil!s held a 17-8 Dan Kiger 3-0-6=10, MattJGger 1·
throws by Dan Kiger gave Athens a points and 20 of the team's 43 advantage in the third period to 0-2=4, Kahleem Maxwell 1-0-0=2.
16-15 advantage. The Bulldogs rebounds. McHugh ~ed 11 points erase a five point halftime deficit. TOTALS 18-2·20=62

Wish all your customers and
friends··a very M~rry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th.
ADVERTISING
.
ASK FOR ·P.J. OR DAVE
992-2156

.

THE DAILY SENTIN·E L

.fil·iiii·flialWttli~iduii:uu~a~a~~WB!a•wl·.·:.

�~

,....-#&amp; - .. ... - - .... _.._ 4'11"..,...

. "',._,._- - ..

....,_

-- -

I

I

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 14,,1tl82

Ohio

Self-mutilator~ write
Dear Aaa Laadera: I .wa1
uunaed wllen 1 picted up Tho
Ann ·

'*

Blbnfidd Cllifomlln llld
die
lelaDr &amp;oat die 17·yelf-old airl wbo
DMllil 1 bcnelf with ruor blldes.
I tbouaJu I - die only one in die
wOOd who did lhiL
l'le ' - ' c:llllinl myself since I

was 11.1 am 22 noW llld have sellS
on my hands, 1111111, legs llld feet.
I'm not suicld•l If I evet get to that

letters to Ann

that ilaVIilable. -OREGON
-~·•
...... -

1J11i1e1 1--" --"- M
.....-..... )'
beclooln hll• .,_12 place~ where
I 11M knocked out the plait« wilh
m~
this iS a cry fer help,IJut
IIObocb' is lislrning. My IIIOIIWl" PI!YS
110 Dillion 10 me. It took her a·weelr

.

=

GRAVE

Dear Au: 1 don't au mytelf

BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Loved·One.
Handmade wHh
white pine.

:V

.:,:: ~.

~~ 2 ~
·-- •

I quit caiYiD&amp; on Diyillllf ..ty to notice dllt I had shaved one side
lla&amp;e I won't use a knife. ~ ~~e t1uee yean ,. .,, tlllllb ·10 a few ~my lad. If you R lhinlrillll'm
. beuer ways to die. A person 1:811 . people wbo
bow tdlr JIICI'IIC I auy, you R probllbly
But
always jump ou.t of a window cr in wu 11111 otfeied a band.,of f.r1e111- nollody give~ a damn. I U lip
front of a ~- The least messy is a ship. I want to 18'{ to •yooe wbo is . m)'ldf. -JUS'!' AN0IHER KOOK · .
boUle of ptUs.
into telf·m•nit•tm, plelle, when, GOING DOWN
DRMN
You told the girl who cuts herself yota are• feeling self-bate, don't
DEAR FRIEND: I gi~ · adlmn.
to get COUiliCiing. Why? I've had leach for 1 razcr or a lmife, ft11Cb Pleuc write to me at oac:e ·and
several hundred· hours of counsel· fcrdlepboncandcaU•miM•"'wbo give me your !Wile and lddleu.
ing, IJut it hun't llelped.
c.es- a friend, uclali~~e, aleleber, There Is help for you, IJut I 11M
I promised myself I wasn't going a countelor, a clergyman or a 10 know how to deliver it Apd now
to onbtd on you, so, Ann, I will ~ on die ocher end or a hOt· a ~ to all you aelf-mutilatorf: I
stop right now and simply say line. '111m: i.r help .; ~ il. You ~~e had 110 idea there were lJO many of
thanks for letting people like me lil:L I Icnow because rve nvded :you out there. My mail 1111 been
. lcnowwearen'taJone. .. O.D.DD.
that road. •• PEGGY IN IIIUCrin&amp;.Conlactacllx&lt;tor,afriend
DEAR D.D.D.D.: Thanks for BROOKLYN .
cr a coun.cfor. Tallc ID someone
letting me lcnow I helped yota in
DEAlt ~Y: Thanks for~ about what you arc doing, Xou need
Sl)me small way. I wish I could CIICOUI'Iging wools. Keep reading.
~~.orft, i~~!~
help even more. If you feel inclined Yota ha~ more souliiiiiCS than you
_.._,,
·-'6'v·~
.
.
lease
do
.
Hospital
Program
for
the
Trcatn!ent
to wnte agam, p
11.
know.
.
.
· I don't mind being dumped on.
Dear Ann: 1 too wu a self· of Sclf-lpjury tn Chicago. This is
That's what rm here for. I hope the mutilator. 1 came from a severely not 1 hotlinc, but they can dRct
nextlellel' will encourage you not 10 dysfunctional family. My father ~: ~~
~ nlJ!II·
give up.
was an alcoholic, llld my mother
Dear Ann: This is for the girl who disappeared when I wu in my
Whol CtJII You gillt lite perM»&gt; wllo
cuts herself because the physical early tccns. I got it into my head has everything? Ann ·Landus'
pain bloclcs the emotional pain that th8t sbc left because sbc didn't like booklet, "Gems," is ideal for a
she finds unbearable. She doesn't me. Salvation came from -~ llillltlsland or cofftt tablt. "Gems"
have 10 continue to do thi; 1 stopped, groups,and pen pals. I urge anyone is a colltction of .41111 Laitdtrs' most
and she can, too.
who has dtis problem 10 get the help ,rtqutsttdpottm fllld_tssays.

. $20.00

RATES

Danielle ·crow, Matt Chl(k and Lorrie Burne10;
and back, Jason WithereD, Andrea McDonald,
Amie Elliott, Marlo White and Denise Sbene·
field.

MHS students inducted into honor society
, An induction ceremony for the
:Meigs High Sclloof National Honor
Sociel}l wus conducted Wednesday
~morning for lbe student body and
:guests.
· Inducted were Lorrie Bumem,
senior; Danielle Crow, Matt Clark:,
•Arnie .I!Jliott, Tracy Fife, Andrea
:McDonald, Denise Shenefield,

Marlo White and Jason Witherell,
all juniors. The new members and
their parents were honored a receplion following the ceremony. Dana
Kessinger is the advisor.
· Lori Kelly, president of the
National Honor ·Society, gave the
welcome and Katrina Turner led
the student body in the Pledge of

l

Allegiance.
.
The fou( objectives of the society: character, leadership, service
and scholarship, were explained by
Courtney Midkiff, Michelle
Young, RandaU Johnston and Aliison Gannaway. Other members
participating were Debbie Alkire,
Linda Chapman, Kelly Doidge,
Kevin Lambert and I,orena Oiler.

- The following students have
·.)ltllde the A honorroll for the sec"Ond six weeks .at Ohio Valley
:Christian School:
~
A honor roll
: First grade : Rachel BlackwOod,
Jessica Curnutte, Tessa Haggeny,
Dianna Jarvis. Joshua Jarvis,
tvfatthew Maloyed, Ashley Alan
Pyles, Colby Richards, Crystal
'Taylor, Angie Turkovich, Lindsey
:Wheeler, Britt Wiseman, Alyssa
Zirille, Megan Adkins, Nathan
~eaver, Nathan Bowman, Hannah
Burleson, Brittany CoK, Timmy
;Ran, Beth Hill, John Moran, Clin'ton Shelton, Sarah·Smith;
; • ·Second grade: Deanna Bryan,
·Wllliam Burleson, Jeremy Evans,
:scottie Frans, Chelsea Gooch,
:s1ephen Henry, Seth Matheny,
·John Polcyn, Kelsey Salisbury,
:Christina Taylor, Maria Wagner,
achael Walker, Ryan Carter;
Third grade: Amit Agrawal,
,Stephen Bearden, Hannah Beaver,
•Ashley Brumfield, Dawn Chamber~; Cbad Dailey, Jeremy Frazie,
~Allam Holcomb, Michael Jenks,
:Molly Johnson, Ginny Miller, Sam
·Sullivan, Rachel Tucker;
1 Fourth grade: Brad Bowman,
·Tom··curnutte, Jason Holdren ,
;Erica Massie, Nicholas Mulholand,
· Melissa Rossiter, Andrea Sims,
: Amanda Wilcox, Nathan Williams;
: Fifth grade: Meredith Clark,
:Travis Frasher, Courtney Gooch,
,Jona~an Taylor, Chnsten ZITIII.e;
Sixth g~ade: Becky Btrchft~ld.

Compiled b)':
Emmogene Holstem Congo
Recorder, Meigs Cotanty, Obio
Nora L. Thomas, S. 20 &amp; 21, T8, R -15 L. 31, to Larry V. Parsons,
Sonia E. Parsons, Salem.
Garrett Watlcins, Ruth Watkins,
Parcels, to Garren Watlcins, Ruth
Watkins, Olive.
lthamer R., Neal, Mona Lee
Neal, parcel, 10 Richard Vaughan,
Ruby VII!Jghan, Midd. V.
. James Roy Steiner, Elizabeth
Steiner, parcel, to Richard W .
Vaughan, Ruby A. Vaughan, Midd
V.
Joyce E. Utsinger, Parcels,

t.

,

Sixth grade: Lisa. Bowman,
Daniel Sizemore;
·
Seventh grade: Chris Bryan,
Kerri Howard, Stephanie Jenkins,
Deanna Martin, Tony Staley,
Steven Rice, Jeremy Wolfe;
Eighth grade: J. Nathan. Smith,
Matthew Holley, Rachel Hamrick;
Ninth grade: Rachel Cochran,
Nan Williamson;
Tenth grade: Nathan Blackwood, Abby Henry, Sarah Marr,
Karen Sanders, Ashlee Saunders,
Travis Thompson, Kristin Torres;
Eleventh Grade: Jason Beaver,
Jennifer .Fleming, Amber Mont·
gomery.

S~l6m T-6, R-14, to John H.
Utsinger, Jr., Rutland. ·
•
. John H. Utsinger, Jr. , parcels,
to Joyce E. Utsinger, Rutland.
:
J.R. Jeffers, Sr. parcels. to John
D. Stumbo, Cheryl Stumbo, Salis·
bury.
·
George G. Hart,dec'd, ecrt. to
Feral M. Hart, Bedford.
Diamond Sav.&amp; Loin Co., Lot
#17,to Naomi P. Fmdlay, Rutland.
Tina•.K. Jacobs, dcc'd to Clif·
. ford Jacobs, Theo Davis, Donna
Gilmore, Wanda Eblin, ·Betty A.
JacObs, Paul Jacobs, Salisbury.
Robin Wade Elswick, Marsha

.

y•

Over 15 Words

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$13.00

$ .20

To place an ad

$.3,0

$1.30/day

PubUc Notice

Call992-_2 156

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12

Publlc.Notlce

•, IN THE
PROBATE COURT
OF ftiEIGI· COUNTY, OHIO
PAUL II. REED,
~lralor WWA
of theE- of
Katie OUIII, DecNu d
Plll!lon•
.·
LOIME 1L CONDE, at II.,
.
FltlfiORIIooota

c.e He. 27,220

Da lt t 11, ' - M7
N011CI! IIY PUB[JCAT10N
To: Diane Conde, L..t
Addroea Baltimore, Mary·
land, Current A.,_
Unknown: lhe Unknown
Heirs, Next of Kin, Devl•
•-· l.egeleH, Admini· altalore, Exeoutoro and
Aealgna of Dl111e Conde,
"""'-Unknown; Char·
IH Conde, Addr... Un·
known; the tlllknown Holre,
Next of Kln, Devlaeeo,
· Lilla._, Admlnlatra~.
Elleolllot8 and Al!algna of
Cherlee Conde, Addr-11
Unkf!-n; Robert Conde,
Adclreaa. Unknown; the
tlllicnown Hat,., Nat of Kin,
Devtoeeo, AdmlnlatraiDnl,
Exeoulora ond Al!algno of
Robart Conde, Addrwueo
Unknown; Ollie c;:onde,
Addreae Unknown; the
~ Hat,., Nat of Kin.
Devlaeea, Legetaea, A6mlnlolrltora, E-~ and
i Al!algne of Ollie Conde,
Addr•oH Unlcn-n; Ed·
• ward Conde, AddrUnknown; -the Unknown
, Helra, Next of Kin, D~~· lo ..., Leilateeo, Admon,.
· atra!ora, l!xecutoro and

Kay Elswick, paroel, to George N.
Gilben,Wendy L. Gilbert, Olive.
Kenny R. knotts, Trustee eta!,
Kenny R. Knotts, etal, VIvian
Knotts, eta!, Margaret E. Graham,
eta!, Roben Kno$15. etal, Arletta
.Knous, eta!, Vernon L. Knous, eta!,
Kathleen M. Knotts, eta!, Goldie
M. Nelson, eta!, Edwin Nelson,
eta!, Nancy G. HaU eta!, Tiniothy
R. Hall, etal, John Knotts, Marjorie V.Knotts, eta!, 20 acres Sec.
30 T·7, R15, ID Kenny R. Knotts,

Salem.

DancU A. Landon, Esther Landon.• parcels, sect 29, to Carl E.
Landon, Olive.

'

&amp; Selection At Rite Aid

.

·Arrlgno of Edward Conde,
Addrn•• J,lnknown; Sllllle
Garrlaon Cpnde, AddrMa
Unknown; the Unknown .
Helra, Next ot Kin, Devl·
••••• Legatee&amp;, Aclmlnletretora, Executor• and
Aaalgna of Sadie Garrlaon
Conde; the Unknown Hal,.,
Next of Kin, Dovtaeeo,
Legat111, Admlnlotra~.
Executoro and Aealgnr of
Katie Gulh, Dec-eel, and·
lhe Unknown Heirs, Next of
Kin, DevloHo, Legate..,
Admlnlrtratore, Exeoutore
and Aorlgna of Augurt
Conde DecHoecl. ·,
You' are hereby notlfiad
that you h""• b..n named
Defendantaln a legal action
enti!lod Paul II. Reed,
Admlnlolralor WWA of lhe
Eatate of Kolle Guth,
Doc-eel, va. Loulae R.
Condo, et at. Thlo IC!Ion hal
been ••lgnecl Ceae No.
27,220 111d Ia p•dng In ••
Common Pleaa Court of
Metga County, Ohio,
Probate Dlvltlon, Court
Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohlo

Public
. Notice

In life?
· 1S yre and up. Earn aa
much u you want, full
· or pill lime from your
home. Nocuh
inveatrnent, 'be your
own boaa, even If
you're otllla atudent
Thla Ia
that

Public Notice

twenty·elght (28) dayr lor
an•werlng wttt commence
on that date. In CIH of your
failure lo anawer or otherwlae ••pond u required
by the Ohio RuiH of Civil
Procedure, ·ludgmenl by
default will be rendered

5

Need a Gift?
Rugs, Plac:emats,
Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals,
lots of small articles.
SOc and up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985-4356
11-30-1 mo. pd.

HappyAds

Happy
Birthday
Middie
Ping
We Lo"e
You!

4576V.

Tho object of tho Petition
Ia to detormtne tho heirs,
next of kin and pereona
entttlod to the eatate of
Katie Guth, DecHaecl. tn
order that o dlatrlbutlon of
aald ntote Cl!n be made.
You are hereby required
to anrwor the Petition wllhtn twenty..,gh! (28) daya all·
er tho laol publication of
thla notice which will be
•publlohecl once o - k for
alx (6) ouccnolvo weoka.
The loot publication will be
made on .the 7th day of

Dutch, Dnie,
Beak &amp; Baby Boy

OHIO V.LLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.

MONDAY

;wiD be presented Monday at 7 p.m.
'3t Carleton School in Syracuse by
:the pre-school class, primary class,
:and senior high class, under the
&lt;direction of Kay Tackett. Public
~ nvited. Refreshments will be

Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12-1-2 mo. pd.

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10%·20% Off
IP~1ttetra, Beginner Sete,

OPEN 9-7
Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.

742-3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26
11·17.92·1 mo

99;!-6484

CHRISTMAS
&amp; CRAFTS

;

BRADFORD'S
Real Estate General

~rved.

GALLIPOLIS ·Members of the
OH KAN Coin cru.b will meet
: . ,POMEROY · Pomeroy Village Monday at Dale's in Gallipolis for
5:ouncil, special meeting, 7 p.m., to. a Christmas party. Plans will be
~scuss demolition of buildings.
made for the'March 21 coin show.

.

LOWEll C. SHINN TRACTOR

POMEROY- DAY and Ladies
iA0,.;iliary will meet Monday at 7
.\&gt;;111. A Christmas dinner will be
· ~rved. Men bring a man's oma.ment. Women bring a woman's
bmament. Cost of present should
pe$3 to $5.
•
: RACINE - Big Bend Farm
)1\ntique Club will meet Monday at
17;30 p.m. at Southern High School.
•

. :- POMEROY ·Meigs Geneologiat· Society will meet Monday at
1:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Museum in Pomeioy, wealber per·
)Dilling.
•

'

IUTI'LAND • The Rutland Gar.
~eil Club's annual Christmas meet·
-tng will be lleld at 6 p.m. Monday
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
fdembers are t~ talce favors for
Overbrook ·and corsages.
'
.
7 DARWIN. The!Bedford Town, ship Trustees will meet Monday at
·. 'I p.m. at the _town haD • .

.

tUESDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gallia-Meij!s
Community Action Agency will
hold a free clothing day Tuesday
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Cheshire.
CHESTER • Chester Townshin
Trustees will hold a special meeting at 9 a.m. on Tuesday at Chester
Town Hall.

399

DAYOUIL

liOV!CAPS ri ·s

159

THERAFLU

•

coco•cOUGH
Mf.DIC'NE If'S

289

Sllle Price
Le• Mail
In Rebllle

-1.00

Your Cost

t89

After Rebate

ALKA·SELTZER

,..•

TAIJI..ETS

.309

VISINEEY2
DROPS
1/2

oz.

..

39

CARTRIDGES
tO'S
I

fJIIrggc

'

•'

Tre11urer

ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985·4107

Sale Price
Le11Moil

in 3• or 4 • Delun Prlnll

1he rivert&gt;oatal

i

YaurCotl
ANMRobo,.

199

I

•

.'

FREE

L'OREAL STUDIO
LINE
I'RODCICrs

279

FEMCARE

-~

•,

~

CRf.W
OZ.
..1,57'5001

899

.'

PusucNoncE

f3t,IOO

IIIDDLEPORT ·VINE ST.- Remodeled frame home wi1h

yard wth fencing and atorago building.

ASKING. tzt,IOO

POMEROY • SR 3S Remodeled 2 atory home With 3
bedroomt, moat appllancet, central air, decking,
datllchad garage, large rron~ porch.
w,ooo

I ·'

DA!IVILLE· IIINI FARM: SR .325 11/2 Italy home Wi1h 2
bedroorna, 2·3 - • · pond, barn, shecl. cellar. garage,
fllnced lind. Well W8l8r.
•22,500

COKE .

-

$2,~'
'.

PRICES 0H WEeKLV SPECIALS EFFECTIVE DEC EMBER 1• THROUGH Of CEMBEA 20. IHO' •SOME ITEMS MAY NOT BE AI/AilABLE IN Al l STORES

..'

-•

300 E. Main • Pomeroy, Ohio • 992_·2586

HENRY E. CLELAND"""""'"'"""'""""""""""""'" """2.f181
TRACY BRINAOER.................................Mt-2421

~EAN

TRUIIIELL"'"'"""""""'"'""'"""""''""-·'".MweeO
ClFFICE....................................................812-2;211

v'

I

''

'

-.

,,

TROLLEY STATION
CUFIS
992·2549

MERRY CHRISTMAS
OPEII HOUSE
SAT., DEC. 12-10 to 8
. SUN. DEC. HJ-1 to 6
Sreciol lloli&lt;lay II oun
Open Until 8 Mon.·Sat.
Afler0ec.10 ~
Great Homemade ~
Giflldeao · ~

mo. pd .

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
_
REMOVAL
.
tr.

EXI'I.\li.TING

WE STILL NEED USTINGS ...WiNTER TIME DOES NOT
SLOW OUR BUYERS!
IF YOU HAVE PROPERlY AND YOU WANT IT TO
MoVE ... GIVE USA CALL TODAYI

12 PACK, 12 OZ. CANS

1211411

Blda wlllbe received until
4 P.M. on January 25, 1813
ror the ronowlng dncrlbod •LIGHT HAUUNG .
real ertote which hal "-'
.
declared o)Cceoo proparty
•FIREWOOD
by the Village of Middleport
BILL SLA
. CK
with the •nactment of Ord.
126t-82:
A 12-loot otrlp of
992-2269
stoeet rlght-or-woy,
ll
•!ttEn
RAILROAD
dtlrod on !ha aoulh by
12 ol Harting• Subdlvl~lon, ''::::;:::::
on tho ••t by Lot 10 of I•
Hartinger Subdlvlolon, on
the weol by Booviorlh S!rNt
rlghl·ol·way and on the
north by tho remainder of
'-M'fRI
the logan SL right-of-way.
BULLDO~ 1JIACKHOE
All bide muot bo eubmlt·
and TRACNtUE WORK
Jed to tha Mayor'• office,
AVAILABLE.
237 Race St., Middleport,
SEPnC IYITEIIS,
Ohio 45710.
HOME BITES and
The villa- reitervn the
TRAILER 81TES.
•·
LANDCLEARING
rtghtlo aocopt or reject any DRIVEWAYS INSTAileD
or al bide and lo waive any
UMESTONE-TRUCKIN:,G .
lnformallliMin bidding.
FREE ES11MATES
Fred Hollman, Mayor
VIllage of Mtdcleport
992·3838
~1!) 14, 21, 21; Jan. 4, 11, 18 . .__ _ __. 1:111:1111

S.. bedrooms, carport, patio, fireplace &amp; cellar. ·Nice
..ndaCI!pad

7, 14, 2te

Public Notice

HARRISONVIlLE- Vacant'groundl 28.289 aenttlocated
along paved road easy aoceul
$11,000

l

-1.99

In Roblll•

~12)

IIIDDLEPORT- Locatad on Front SL · 1 112 Italy home
wi1h 4 bedroom•. natural gaa heat, lwge lot locatad along
Ohio ri-. Home teaium a large fron1 porch lor viewing

C-4 r Proceso Color F'llm

'
BAN CLEAR
SDtiO • 1. I'! OZ OR
FRESH A DRY

'""""'

'";:f. 99

POMEROY· COMMERCIAL BUILDING- o!!lcelshowroom
space, IWO levels, Iota of 110rage ·~• Beautilul view or
river locallid on Main St. ASKING ,15,000

V.rluc s f vt·tv D.1y .1 1 H1ft' AHI

I.JOZ.

POMEROY, OHIO
..

•
t

H•arlng, Notice, Submia-

olon to the County Auditor
under Ohio Rovloed Law
5705.30 will be held on
December 21, 1992 at the
Southern High during the
regular mooting of the
School Board.
Donnie E. Hill,

992-2259

608. f~ST MAIN

A SECOND
SET OF PRINTS

£-,
For Only•..

~f'IRINggc

JITOIOZ.

GILLETTE TRAC II
r""C
II I'UJS.
OR
ATAA
l't.CJSA

•

.RITE AID

R!XL..oN

WEDNF;SDAY
. MIDDLEPOR~- Middleport
Literary Club, Chnstmas meeting,
Wednesda'f, 1:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. George Hackett Jr. "The
Poetry of Chris1mas" will be presented by Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
Roll caD will be 10 bring,all original verse for a Christmas card.

East of Darwin on Rt.
611 on Gravel Road
1V. Mila to Growe.

ko.f614) 446·1044

HOMEMADE
· PIES

PUBLIC NOTICE
Apublic inspection of the
Southern Local School
District's 1993·94 Budget,

I

POMEROY· American Legion
Prew Webster Post No. 39, Christ·
mas dinner, 7 p.m. The meeting
will begin at 8 p.m.

SANITATION
Deeember Spec:lal

$8.00
Senior cnlzena $6.00
Hyou need trash pick·
up or more information
call
Whit•

commercial

AREWOOD FOR SALE
6-.'112-lln

k'

....

I

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
· CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
eGara111

~~

· withltlut

-'CROWAVE
and VCR Pll'l

,_.,,ow.·

36970WI•RIIII

HOUDAY SPECIAL! ·

SCJ.so uo.

SIZED LIMESTONE
992·3470

$1 ooo;:off .

11tls ••
for I .
FIE card,
Uc. lo. OOSG-32 ·

STARTS

Quality ..

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992~
. 6637

I.UIIUEI

2551111 SL,lllddlopoll, Oh.
112-33M Dayr,142-a20 e...
1 ..,..pmWooltdop
t .....12 pm SoiUfdap untl

c....ArktarDa._

lrl.. lt Ia Or We
Pick UJ!•

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992•5335 or
985-3561

AcrMr ,,... l'elf Office
217 LhceH St.
POIIIIOY, O.:iili210ill92ilfnl

-- _-;;;:_.-....

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

R&amp;C
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SI:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER i,
LINES
'
BASEMENTS &amp; ;;
HOME SITES
,
HAULING: Limestone,:
Dirt, Gravel and -Coal ·

• C. YOUNG
992-6215

LICENSEO aNI BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

P-y,Ohlo

12-5-1fn

.

HAULING
Reasonable rates
WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
RUTLAND, OH.
Homegrown·
Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; While Pi~e
4' &amp; .Up with a great
selection of larger
trees.
Call742·2143 or
742·2979

11127

IIYA HALL

121911 mo. II'!·

GRAY'S TAXIDER
Deer Heads•••.•.............. !1 nnoo
Turkeys •.•....••.•.......•........ 11"7r=:-•

Fish .•...•........•.•.......•$400 per Inch
Call (304) 895-"3386
after 5 p.m.

..

• f~ ,

AMERICAN GENEUl liFE antl:
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health ·.
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

Box 189
Middleport, Oltlo 45760
(614)

LAKE
RACINE, OH.
949·2734

P.M.

OPEN TO PUBLIC :
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE ·
ENFORCED

614·742·2138

POM-POM,

All Agee Welcoma
Special Claaa 3-6
YearOida
For Mora lntormatlon
Call 304-273-3721

1:00

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

••• a.....
IUMBLING,
BATON TWIRLING

11

RACINE GUN
. CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Sldllna
New Garages • Replacement W11nck,w~~J
·
· Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOrnE OF LOTION

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

6:45 ....
.
Special Earlr llrd

t!eoAl
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP

. 985·4473

2·7·92-111 ;

IN POMEROY ·· '

Shtl llocklo • Colkolltko
'Aldin il &amp;took'
Spoclol E!ltlan • Show PlocN

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

667-6179 . .

EAGlES CLUB ··

lotttllot, 1-vll
Fr.rsiltaatu

Stop&amp;Co•PIIN
FlEE ESTIMATES

EVERY THURSDAY

F&amp;A 11EE SERY.ICE
Trl

•Complete

Reinotl•li•t

BINGO

12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only

or

. CHERRY RIDGE

Public: Notice

l/00/D·IDZ
NYOVILOR .-

FrM Eetlma'l..

Ruk:IIHIIIM l

SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS

WATCI FOR SIGNS

FLV AfYO COLD OR FW.

j

Fresh Cut Tr"s
or C1t tour Ow1.

240 .,., lhor 1._ • hlliJI!IIh, OIL 4563t

COl. GATE
TOOTHPASTE
4 8 oz. rt.l8£

(614) 378-6153

I

.6pm·1Gpm

s· ·a· Tall

Llmlled Tickets Available

r

949·2391or
1·800·837·1460

you c:an't.

e am ·12 pm and

Youth Cullom Drivere.
Leaaona included with
purc:haae.
located on Scout Camp
Rci.:Citeater, OH.

$15.00 Couple/$10.00 6"""

NYQUIL

KEVIN'S LAWII
MAINTENANCE

t.awn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

IEASOUILE

Fresh Cut Daily

RUILAND ' The Rutland Garden Club's annual Chiistmas meet·
ing will be held at 6 p.m. Monday
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
Members are to talce favors for
Overbrook and a corsage.
RUILAND • Women Alive will
have a Chrislmas banquet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the fellowship hall of
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene. Furlber information may
be obtained by contacting Ruth
DeLong at 992-2469.

HARLEY HAIINt
IESIDEIICE
25975 FlatwoOIIa
Pa•eroy, Ohio

..

MOTHERS AT HOME
Chrlalmu Income!
Ea8v work from
home. No c:uh atart
up. Sblrt at once and
you'll never have to
worry aboUt
Chi".abnaa money
~g~lnllnc:ome 1hl1t
kHpl going When

CHRISTMAS ·
TREES

-1304145.. 1752

'

5' • 7' TALL

742·2160

232 2nd St.,
Pomeroy
992·2036

SMITTY'S
" NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
THURSDAY, DEC. 31
8:00 P.M. 'TI~ 1993
Food - Music · Ch-agne '

-~ ..·Community calendar

'

TREES

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS

:;nas"

l "SYRACUSE · "Holy Night"

10/l/92111

12/1/92/tla

Bob

m

'1 • .,. I

IIW41epert, .....
614·992·7144

ICotnty load 26)

BULLEnll BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

: ' . Five members of Chester Gar- Lou Dean at the home of Mrs.
'den Club were in GaUipolis Satur· William Beegle, .Fairfield Church
attending the Christmas Flower Road.
•'Sbow of the Gallipolis Garden
Members. attending were Edtla
:Club.
· Wood, mother of Mrs. Beegle, Jean
;. , J'he "I'll Be Home for Christ- Frederick, Pauline Ridenour and
show was judged by Bette . Maye Mora.
'

Community Calendar items
;appear two days before an event
~'!d tbe day of that event. Items
· J!OISI be received well in advance
· ~to assure publication ·in the cal·
-endar.

742·2097
539 •yon Place

Do you need • atart

61 Farm _E quipment
'

•

·'~

38904 ....... :
CrMklotMI -

J10uary, 1193, and the

~-

:MemBers attend Chnstmas show
f

Rate

Ct:.OSED SUNDAY

Boliday ValuesPlus

15
15
15
15
15

Monthly

'atr

Meigs County recorder posts land transfer~

Words

1
3
6
10

:::J::

.lQhio V(ij.ley Christian School honor roll announced
G\\llrielle Blackwood; Dani Jenks;
Natalie Pyles, Stephen Roberts,
Jessica Walker, Andrew Williams;
Seventh grade: Varidana Agrawal, Jessica Carens, Suzanne Clark:,
Daniel Hall, Leah Hall, Bo Pollard,
Lisa Vollbom;
Eighth grade: Benjamin Taylor,
Billy Miller, Joy Chaksupa, Melissa Brown;
Ninth grade: Michelle Burcham,
Aaron Holley, Nathan Lusher, Jill
Mock, Amy Pollard, Shawn Rice,
Joshua Sebert, Anesa Vanmatre;
Jami Gianechini;
. Tenth grade: Emily Asbeck,
Jenny Hager, Robin Rice, Missy
Smith;
.
Eleventh grade: Andy Brumfield, Jodie Hager, Anna Hamrick,
Sarah Miller, Elizabeth Wooten;
Twelveth grade: Brian Rice,
Meredith Pollard, Christy Mock,
Sandra Adams.
The following students have
made the B honor roll ·for the second siK weeks:
•·
B honor roll
,.
Second grade: Joshua Evans,
J.P. Fetters, Kevin Queen, Amanda
Taylor;
,
Tbird grade: Jonathan Beck,
Lauren Browning, Elizabeth Rice,
Cody Smith;
Fourth grade: Seth Easton, Jooy
Johnson;
Fifth grade: April Agustin,
Amanda Brown, Mike Francis,
Laura Pollard, Erin Walker;

Days

Rates are fur consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged fur each day II" sepi!rale ads.

;a·
rt'l~

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or

11127

nm

NEW INDUCTEES • Pictured are National
' · Honor Society iaducteenapped during cere·
• monies at Meigs .High School on Wednesday
,:, morning. They are, l· r, front, Tr-acy Fife,

•Vinyl Sklng
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
ofnoulatlon

Mid.lepori, Ohio

(614) 949-2058

rif.t-.

•w

DAVIDSOII'S
PWMIIIIG

614-949·2801 • 949·2860
or 985·3839
IHo Sattdar Calls!

....

32.00

5

MallY more specials.
NEED TO BUY A

PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

fOREVER
BRONZE
loshan Rd., Racine
93,·2826
ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR I MONTHS
11·23-'82-1"'!'.

CEllUlAR

Aull!orlndAgonl

10TALLY AUTOIIOTIVE PEAFOIIIIANCE
t

1

Ill I

t I

I

t Ill I I t I I I

Been wliting for

I

I

Ill I

Ill Ill

*I

Ill

t I t 1 t II 111 111 111

r Ill

10 oorrhase acelhJII/iKini.?

....

ICounCJ

JoCIIII aervlce
fleMootlrom $18.1&amp;

per month

Ill t3111 or

-,

�•

December 14,

-

Ohio

.:.TIIA-"~-~--·I'_S
.:;;,..;:CQ~~~.~»~S·

&amp;:r~

O Rfour
oarranoa lo""" a(
terambled word1

ApertmiCt

torRent

low to form four Jimple word1.

ALDER

WE S H.E C

I'

I

• 9732

• Jio u
SOUTH

Dbl.

Z•
4•

I GOT A
#lEAVY NI45#1T .
TONIGHT, MAW--

•
East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • K

....,

WH0-0-0-0

can h~

on---••*
•••t or.,, •••• ............
·­
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n
.....
;......
.
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..-..

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141

-

per ._.,._,_._,

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

~- mo - . 1.-o;

llotM,1 _
_ _mobllo
_
Complotly
Fumllhod

Cllylon F~ ,._'11, 1
Wd"! - · No - . CA. ....
-tumloflod....... .... 121,111111.
. lift: t41 0331

PIN dotnl EXTRA

-

'"'*'
liD
Nooiloil
.......
.....,..,, -

CAeH?!!

a

tlu~h•:

-~

":

·

'-·-- .. -

llll.JMI.
.
-

45
at'oyllamo:_lla_l ....
our DI'Oduatl Mil Rm
up to PaM por - . An&gt;Dina I'MICFclld R II . . . . . . . . .
d:ilollo. ~~ 111011

"'"'*

Tnlnln;. Wrlto Y. lt. lloJ*InO.

• ..... Pt. Pit, IEool ill Q
.... - . olt Rl. N, ~ •

W:lnlod:

·-

pll,.,

.....

- 104-Tnlllncl,
-clnl......lno....,;

.-es oftor dpm.
WANTED: Pa~·Tiinl IJCENSED
PRACTICA~ NURSE (10 Hnt
/Will F• ...... Community Group
Homtt For Ponorw With

'

Call our office for paid in adwanu l'fllea!

SIIOIIIna with - . ; ,
AloO
ttollor-~-­
Col eftor 2:110 ,.,.._,
JIM:77I.
1181\IIUOIIWY-

35 LOts &amp; Acreage

1ll 11101.

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Rentals

54 ..IOIIIMIOUI
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14. _ _ __ _
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Wod; a:M ..:30 P.ll., lol
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Household

Melling; Or
M M.OO .ttl', To
lchodUiocl.
Blllry:

Goodl

1tot1. Sonil n - To Coollll

llallar, P.O. lor IM, Jookoon,
OH - · O r C o l 2302. ... For Applicalll8:
ta11111Z. Equol OpPoftunlly
~yer.

W:lnlad: ltmolo lor • - • ponlon. lluot bo 70 ,... otago
01 - ·
For ..- lntamatiOn
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iiM-388-8l:l2.

18 Wanttid to Do
UP TREE 8ERYICI..

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PLEA$ ~THieCHAI~
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1tll0 compor top lot Chooy ::
truck wll ft bMI tfOO, 1110 hltofl ,•

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'ra.l WILL HA\IE
~I I ICK ~THE: REST
CF- 'TOUI&lt; ~ ...

'srmNEr Wl'll-1 AN AUDIT
.15'( "THE INTERNAL..

Rt:~

eERVICE. •

1t

IOfMI. 114412-1711.

A1

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'

Serv1ces

I

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----------------~ -~

III'RA . FURNITURI AND ,._
PUANCU

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--:;:;;:;:------;:=::=::::;;;;;;;;::=:::::::::-- ~co
. . . . ..
ACROSS
Anew••• Prevlauo Puulo
43 Poloon alder ~·
45 - lwlnl
l'll"ftii'I'I'I'T"
1 Dwn (Scot.)
47 B1 1 .,_ 1
4 Ablorb mollora '"'P · I~~F.;tiT
tura from
•a form)
Ear (comb.
, f.rnrliiiti'
8 Puff
50 Prepare to
F.dr.&lt;f~
12 ~a;w,uage
lira
53 Bl plus one
13 ~~ al~cralt •
55 Joyo~•
14 Cry of pain
sg Cutting
15 Over (poet.)
surface
16 Two-sided
62 Exclamation
18 Donkey
63 - La Douce
20 AngiO:Suon
64 Inter _
ltlltr
65 Mouth part
21 Everyone
66 Chicken
22 Ught - chow _
luther
67 Relate
24 Actor
68 Prlnltr'l
Brynner
26 Tycoon
mlll ures
30 Soft mud
DOWN
34 Sicken
• Watched
goll hOio
child
35 Fa1t-lood
1 Vaot period
9
lillian
5
Hawaiian
words
otUma
Cuffency
garland
37 Rader ICI88n
2 Two worita ol ·
10
Gam
Image
6
Heraldic
under-.
11 Nollll
38 Haughty one
border
slandlng
17 In thll
40 Hawaiian bird
7 S.rvtla
3 Social misfit
menneo
nanarer
42 - dl FrliiCt
(II.)
19 Actor Dolley '
8 Unpleyad
23 Particle
..,_.....,,...
,,
25 Law dog_
28 Church
'

Last year,, Edd ie Kantar wrote a
book ·lull of bidding tips. Now he has
produced a .complementar y tome of
declarer,play tips called "Take Your
Tricks" ($11.95, Griffin Publishing,
P.O. Box n7 , Venice, CA 90Z94).
Tlrere are 556 practical pointers that
cover everyday aspects of declarerplay. If you can remember them all
and apply them at the table, your
game is sure to improve.
There are many example deals. Today's is from Tip 185 .
Some players would double on the
first round with that North hand, but
with minimum points and 4-3-3-3 distribution, I don't approve . South,
though , must double in the pass-out
seat. North's two-club cue-bid shows a
good hand. Three hearts is invitational; four hearts is aggressive, South
hoping to collect a vulnerable game
bonw.
thr+-4~
West starts by cashing three top
clubs, East playing in order the lour, ' 1...+~­
three and 10. West exits with the diamond jack. As declarer, you win in
hand and finesse in trumps, picking up
West's king-third . Who has the spade
queen?
.
East's plays in the club suit' show
that he began with lour to the J-10.
T.his means that West's distribution
must he 4-3-3-3 wit)) four spades. That
leaves East with only three spades. So
it seems as though it is 4-to-3 that
West has the spade queen. But check
the points. You bave seen 13 from
West. And what is the range lor their
one-no-trump opening? If it's ll&gt;-17, he
cannot have the spade queen. If it's 1&amp;- 1--1--"18, play West for the queen - but
don't be surprised if you're wron~.

...

-

llrvlCI
",,'
27 ...panell
aborigine _ ,
28 Slall
2t Concolto .
31 Tannla play~r
-

have a bet with a friend about this .
A. Yes, PLEASE can he a verb, as in
"Please yourself.• The same word,
however, can also be used as an adverb (and please forgive me if this information ruins your bet). For example, the verb in "Please call" is CALL,
and PLEASE serves as an adverb,
modifying the verb with politeness.
Please yourself with the knowledge
that PLEASE cal) be either a verb or
an adverb.
~

IMONDAY

:~

Na1t1tt

32 Wlro
ma11urea
33 Sword
38 A tlale

'•

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41 Hot cereal
44 Adorable
•a AStooga
48grandmothlr
50 Actor Tamlroff
51 Conc~rnlng

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(2 wdl.)
52Qpare

heroine
UftMiploJild
Ai1110r
ll8ba 111 Sweet
polaiQfl
60 Cooling
device
81 BaUballer
Hodgeo

54
56
67
58

,,

.,
.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,,

Celebrtty C6ptw cryp1ograma ... cr.ttecl rrom Q\j()tll ~ b~ fllncNI people, pat anct ~t.
Eech lettw In the CIPhlr ltandl lor .notner. r. ,·. Clue.· A equ.n ~.

Q. Is the word PLEASE a verb? I

:::;a:.~
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Ra~
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=~ Colodltlott--

MORTY MEE:KLE AND WINTHROP

;.

........ . ..

by f•llmg 1n the m1ssmg words
you de~elop from step No. 3 below .

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

By Jeffrey McQuain
ZORI is a flat sandal of straw or
rubber. Boot out any pronunciation of
the noun ZORI other than "ZOH-ree.•

•

.. ,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

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PREVIOUS SO~UTION: "How rortunale one is al ihe end of one's life tl ~- ~l :
see that your work has not aged wllh you." - Fred Zlnnemann.
"' I
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... ,
0 1912 TV UmthJ Inc.

Ft Worth, T)(

DECEMBER.14I

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675·1333

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Try U. Flntl l•utllul Prlnto

Pleaae eall , •• eftlee ..

Homo, 24 Hour ~ For Tho ,

Elda"l, Yoan 01 uplli.,..

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42 Mobile Homes

torRent

llloo Paulo:• DoY cor. CO..or 1
11oc11 woot 01 HliC
Plko M-F I A.ll. ..,,. P.M. W
Cuolhy And ~--- .. Tho

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Pt. Pleasant Register

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F01 Y- Chlld'o

AITRO-GRAPH

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BEPtNICE
BEDEOSOL

Deo. , .. 1112

Tetii!Ying before • Senile eubcommltlell,
!lie H8fdY boy• crack the l111n-conii'IICII1Ciel.
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LAST ..oust AT TAt E/111&gt;
Of Tttt Lllllf, ~ ttAVt TO
MY FO, A"L TttE
f~EGTrtCITY Tl'tfY $fNP
OUT Ttft,t TttAT TtlE
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ELECTRIC
CUSTOMER
SERVICE

11111,-. "
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BACK TO MV
DESK ..

'

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~~~~~~~ 11
7

FRANK AND ERNEST

-lonl-

king S4,DOII.

!'ultltl!e.
l'onl 1'100, loyl ......
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CIWI:it-1 Col ¥kiJtlll Clopon: dltlon. $1500; 114 143 . .
tor,MC P I

a.t21GD.AIIo~• 1144·~
1:00PM.
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FROM HERE IS

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W~EREWE60

Itt UI11ZI OR~,

Trimming. Tr01 ~
Trlnwnlng. Fno Ea-IHI I
•7:7115TARor 4p.m.
0 aargee Poltlble IIWinlll. dorl't
haul yow loao to Ulo ltllll juot
oollliOW'II-1trl.

Gallipolis Dally Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
992-2156

.
=

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11X

MA'AM?

'
11M Ford 314 ton pic~ till •;
engine,
~liS,
PB, · 1

w,~
Clzlll
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RI.IN.I'I.PL7-•Eolllnl 01111 ua';M';:;.';"IW
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-

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Dovalopmlr:lai Dloollllltloo In
ClaiUo
Counly
(0111110111

9·"'-----10. _ _ _ __

Rooms

Roomo lor rotd - - " ' .-11.
Stifling'
.. · - - Hotel
114 Ul-1180

TEXAS REFINERY CORP. Ill.,_ , _ _ In OALUPOUS Aroo, . . _ _ 01

w-.

Furnished

.CHRISTMAS ..

BOI',TI-IAT KIND
Of: SHOOTS
A 1:'16 I-IOLE IN
THIS REPORT,
DOESN'T IT?

'*· ....

:..'C:i!.:tJ:

los 71\ Ft.

'

121,000rnl,
f.
Buy 01 MI. -Ant~ MC Ford mo
1124
E. lloln st-. 011 Rl. 12'- . . - - .- · I -· old,
, good, 13000; 1
PI, ;
Houla: II.T.W. 10:00 Jill; . · ClllhuoI I - ' iilcil-llp, lSI ........... un. to 1:00 P.~_,_, 1:00 'J 11 N'oir
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Fumlt'" tof'•tllltlng 01111 . _ _ .

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DIDN'T?

-Ford F-110, .... - . . . . !•'
2WD, uoellenl: oomlll•a. IMbO ~ '
080,114-1112.-.
,I

7

Tum your cluuer into cash,
Srll it the easy 1Dtly... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your claujtWd od today!
15 UJords or less, 3 days,
'
3 uapers,$6.00

,_.

11112-6132

r:.~·,.tkf

ll:t,:lf.,r't~~!'f?•~

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Manor
end
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tfll, CaN 114 112 IIII.IOH.
Modem 1 IR lpLI14 111 0.0

32 Mobllettomll
tor Sale

-

Pltl for Sale

-n.r. I J - " llnah Home --lvlnf.1011dl-

PEANUTS
THIS ISM'(
REPORT ON HOW
Tf.IE PILGRIMS
INVENTED

I

lo,

'

By Phillip Aider

~lne;
1172 ....... 42ft.
-~...... -lne, Ohio. . , . _

•

8
_

Prayer - Chops • Rodeo - Vanish - CRASHES ·
Political debates remind me of the stock car races .
No one watching them really cares who win s, they just
want to see the CRASHES.

Tipping
the balance

cu ow., eun.... ·.

_

7
_

ET

SCRAM:LETS ANSWERS

I BETTER START
· PRACTICIN' II _, •..•

1111 GIIC.

The clerk at the service desk
was chatting on the phone.
"i' When I gave her a nasty look
she said to h~r caller, "f'll call
lyou back, I m ~1ng Inter·

4J PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

BARNEY

T A PR

,

• K 10 5
• Q J 10 9
.A Q6
+ 982

I+
Pass
Pass
Pass

..•

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5

•s.s

Norlb
Pass
2+
3•
Pass

I I

A R M 0 J.

EAST
• ? 76

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be-

PHILLIP

NORTH
. AJ 3

WOII

Advencemenl and recognition In your
Choan fleld could come about In lhe
,.... Mead lhrougll an unusual chlln of
-11. However. lhl)l Will be preclpltll811 by your llltntl, not your luck.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Nc!¥. lt:Dec: 21) CondiiiOna In Q~Mfal are quite unusual today, and lhM'ellaatrong poealblllly you
might ciM'Ivlsome type of unexpectiod
wlndflllltrom a leailt ex1&gt;19.tod· sour...

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.

vtaiiiiRt. Know - • 10 look lor ro- to others.
mence and you'll find 11. The Aslro- · GE-l (May 21 -Juno 20) Wilh a lillie
Graph Matclvnaker Instantly reveals lmaginalion today, you can do wonders
to brighten up your surroundings, even
which signs ere romantically perlect lor
you. Mall S2 Jllus a long, sell:ad - II all you have to work wllh are someone
dreued, alamped envelope to Match- else's caslolls.
maker, c/o lhla n-aper. P.O. Box CANCER (June 21-July 22) lnslead ol
sUccumbing to pressure todav, concen9.-28, Cleveland, OH 44101-3&lt;428.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lon. 1t) Oon't trate on heightening your faculties and
resourcefulness. This will give you an
be reluc:tent 10 diiCIIFd an ouldated
program or plan In exchange tor some- edge over people with whom you'll be
Involved.
thing that II fi\OFe progressive. ~deas
you lmplemenl today have excellenl LI!O (July 23-Aug. 22) This is a very
good day to present your new ideas to
chanCillllar SUCCIIII.
AQUAIIUI (Jail, 20-Fob: 11) Today, a lhe powers that be. II your higher-ups
like lhem, and chances are this will be
quick declilon. as well u prompl acthe case. perlphe(al benefits are sure to
llon; mlghl be ..-qul,red to lace an opsurface.
portunity of a unique nature. Oon'l be
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) A chence
afraid to make anep declllono.
PIICU (Felt. IINIII'GII 20) Ideas or meeting loday with someone you resugoesllona from a friend ~ding so- cently met could turn oul to be very Interesting. You have much In common,
cial matter~ lllould be quite sound today, but in sltuatiOna pertaining to' your . and a good relationship could resuit. ·
LIIRA (&amp;opt. 23-0cl. 211 Starting tocar-. It's beatlo lhlnk lor yourself.
day,
things could begin to move off ol
Alllll CIIMIIt 11-Apltl11) Today and
dead cenlor regarding • matter you ·
tomorrow ooulcl oller aome unlque posolbUitleillor advancing your peroonallnd111m lobe vwy algnlnc111t. You may be ,
t-Is, both bualneea-wlee end soc:lalrewarded lor the Inconvenience you 've
ly. Oon'l let opportunllleo allp lhrough
sufforod.
ICOIIPIO. (Oct. M-Nov. 22) A lrlor&gt;d
1your fingers. ·
TAUIIUI (Aprii20-May 20) 11 you add
with a Ylvld lmllglnll!lon could have a laan Imaginative lwlll today to something
VQrable Inn- on your thinking tothat hulllways been e allndard procaday. Your f...n conCI!pls could succeed
dure, 11 could prove helplulto &lt;you and
·
where your stille ones lolled.
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·Ohio Lottery

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. ... . 2-1183"
I

-Dolphins
defeat
·Raiders

I

•

Pick 3:

990
Pick 4:

2272

Page4

THIS WEE '5
G

EASTERN EAGLES.
BOYS
Dl£~;._15

- Pt. Pleas.•t -IO.e.
Dec."19- F•lrla.. -Away

,

s

BOYS
DEC. 18 - Sy•. .s V•lley -Away
Dec. 19 - U•i•t• - H•••
GIRLS
DEC. 14-W•terfenl-1...
DEC. 17-River V•ller -A•r

IGS

GIRLS
DEC. 17-Belpre - lo. .
Dec. 21-Wellsto• - 1...

· Middleport, Oh.

255 Mill .St.
992·3345

915-3311

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND UDIO SHACK
10611. 2nd

WILL 71111 Clll OF ILL
YOUR IIIUIIICI IDDI

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
'·
MUSSER INSUUNCE
POMEROY

GUARDRAIL

'

SIGN UKTION

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-:-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1~AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14..:A"( MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE ,
DEC. 21-WEL.LSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN •. 7-$0UTHERN
JAN. ~~STERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 20-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1-AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. &amp;-TRIMBLE .
FEB, 11-AT EASTERN

•

RIDEIOUI SUPPlY
(

....

I. WAVE.

' MIDDlEPORT

Governor remembers accident
· in hometown that left 46 dead

3 CONVENIENI LOCAIIONS

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
5TH STREET
Mason, W•.Va. Pt. Pleasa11, W.Va. New
W.Va.

·cROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST /Ill~
.992·5432
MAIN ST• .
'

KFC.-

COVINGTON, Ky .. {AP)Every lime he crosses a bridge,
Gov . Brereton Jones says he
remembers this day 25 years-ago
when an Ohio River bridge col·
lapsed in his homeiOWD.
The accident killed 46 people,
· including some of his friends, but
Jones' aunt was saved becal)fe of a
forgotten purse.
Jones was a West Virginia slale
legislator at the time the Silver
Bridge collapsed between Point
Pleasant. W.Va., and Gallipolis,
Ohio.

He was atlending a Christmas ers and officials lost !heir jobs folparty in Huntington on Dec. 15, lowing the investigation, Jones
1967, when the 1,750-fool span said, although he doesn 't"recalf
twisted and collapsed. dumping anyone going 10 jaiL
tons Of steel siiUCture, cars, IIUcks
·'I remember it as if it were yes·
and humans into the icy Ohio lerday," lhe governor said. "I lost
· River.
some very good friends on that
His aunt, A11rilla Miller. now bridge." ·
.99, lived in West Virginia and was
Implications in lhe cpllapse had
going 10 dinner with friends in an impact in Kentucky as well.
Ohio. As the car backed out of the
Bob Mason. director of operadriveway, she remem.bered she tions for the Transit Authority of
didn't have her purse. She went Northern Kentucky, said "I was
back 10 get it.
driving a bus then, and I remember
Heavy rush-hour traffic was passengers wondering if our
backed up and stopped in both bridges were safe."
directions along lhe road leading to
Bridge inspections became a
the bridge. Stop lights also bin· greater concern nationwide after
dered her progress.
the Silver Bridge collapse.
Mrs. Miller and lhe others in the
The concern has lasted. said Bill
. car with. her were just about to Crace. chief of the Kentucky
drive onto the bridge approacl) · Transportation Cabinet's bridge
when the cable system snapped . mana~ment division.
The damaged bridge began to
Bndges are inspected annually,
sway, and feU wilhin 90 seconds.
ran~Jing from a walk over to a
As minority floor leader in the . detailed probe, depending upon the
Wesl Virginia House, Jones age and volume of traffic each span
launched an investigation and handles, Crace said.
.
learned !hat inspections consisled
\'We feel like all siiUctures are
of "inspeciOrs" driving aCross the safe. at posted capacity," Crace
span, having coffee 011 the Ohio said. "Mo\orists can cross our
s1de and then driving back.
~ bridges with confidence."
Inspectors were no more than
Greater Cincimmli's best-lcnown
"poliucal hacks" wilh no training old span, the Suspension Bridge
for the job, said Jones, who laler connecting Covington to Cincin·
changed his party affiliation to nati. is a good ex~ple. Kentucky
Democratic when he moved to spent some $9 million inspecting
Kentucky, A number of stale work- lind renovating lhe bridge in 1987,
Crace noted, and the attention continues.
"I feel real comfortable with
that bridge," he said, adding !hat
Kentucky lries to err on lhe safe
side, posting conservative load lim·
its.
activity that are vilal 10 measuring
growth in the national/regional

Business owners required
·to complete questionnaire
FISHER- Chner/O.-rater

45769

P.O. lox 683

Ms. Rapp Zimmennann said the
depanment had no record !hat anyone believed While was suicidal.
The department confmned that
While had been assaulted by the
youths and that his attackers were
facing a disciplinary hearing.
Department policy does not
require !hat parents or guardians be
notified when a youlh is uansferred
to a different unit, Ms. Rapp Zim·
mermann said.
While was convicted two years
ago of a delinquency charge of
complicity lo commit aggravaled
burglary in Gallipolis. He was
released on probation last year but
was returned in October after he
violated conditions of. his probation.
·
"Joseph ·is no angel. We don 't
want to pretend that he is," said
Mrs . McKinney . "But we've
~egged for someone 10 give him
the help he needs, not lock him up
in a filthy jaiL"

Veazey, Pl. Ple818at, 20; Tammy Moore, Gallipolis, 10 and Patty Simpkins, GaDipolis, 5. Second row • Charlene Hoentch, Pomeroy, 25;
Dave Harris, Pomeroy, tO and Shari Cochran,
Pt. Pleasant, 20. Rear ·Paul Barker, Gallipolis,
· 10 and Henry lbyburn, Pl. Pleasant 10•• Not
. pict11red • G. Spencer Os.borne, Galli palls. 5
'
years. (See story on page 6).

OVP SERVICE AWARDS • Eleven employ·
ees of the ,Ohio Valley Publlshln1 Company
were presented service· awards by Pubhsher
Robert W1D1ett during Monday night's annual
OVP Christmas party at the Holiday Inn, Gal·
Jipolis. First row, left to rleht are: Publi~her
Wlatett, ,Margaret LeheW, Pomeroyj 35 years;
Margaret Flilillcu"''• Gallipolis;· 25;'Tanice

Bank

FISHER ,FUNEUL HOME

R

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A the question of whelher he should
17 -year-old boy who tried 10 hang be involuntarily commitled.
himself said he will try it again if
The McKinneys, who are
he is returned 10 a state detention White's guardians, said they were
cenier.
concerned about lhe operation of
Joseph White of Gallipolis was TICO and worried that they had not
under guard at Mount Carmel Med- been notified that While was beatical Center after he tried to hang en there on Dec. 6 by four other
l!imself Sunday in his cell at the youlhs. The State Highway Patrol
Training Institution of Central IS investigating lhe beating.
Ohio. He was in stable condition
"They n.e ver told us when it
today.
.
happened. They never !ell us what
Hospital psychiatrists who is going on. Youth Services doesn' 1
examined him said !hey will rec- want anylhing 10 do wilh you once
ommend that White be placed in a they have your k:id," said McKinmental heallh facility, said While's ney.
grandparents. Charles and Betty
White also was transferred 10 a
McKinney.
disciplinBiy unit a few weeks ago
The Ohio Depanment of Youlh after he was caught trying to pry
Services, which oversees TICO, bricks from a wall, but lhe McKinsaid it cannot arbitrarily commit neys said they didn't lcnow about
the disciplinary action until SunWhile to a menial institution.
Department spokeswoman Carol day.
Mrs. McKinney said they had
Rapp Ziminennann said !here was
no question that White is warned TICO officials that White
depressed, but a coun must reso~ve was ~onlemplating suicide.

Peoples

PHONE
(614) 992-6451

JUST DO IT.

·'

1992·93 GIRLsr: SCHEDULE .

POMEROY

992·2342

$A1 U • SIIIICI • NilS

Gallipolis youth threatens
'Second suicide attempt

,

1121

111 SECOND AYE

992·2635

VALLEY
555 ..,.St.

1992·93 IOYS' SCHEDULE

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

1 SeciiOn, 10 Pogea 25 cenlo
A MuHimoclla lqc. Newapapor

Pomeroy·..ddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 15, 1992

..

~ouneements.

BAUM LIMBEI

Vol. 43, No. 164
Copyrlghlocl 1892

•

When The Tune Comes.•• See Us
For Your 1993 Graduation

Where America Goes "llll:Jax-

ClEmI

NOV. 31hEASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERF.ORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC, 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 20-MEIGS
JAN. 21-'-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 2&amp;-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2..:RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD .
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB.l~AT SYMMES VALLEY

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. &amp;-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. &amp;-ATHENS
JAN. 12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 15-H\.INTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. 19-AT TRIMBLE·
JAN. 22-AT MILLER .
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
,
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN
FEB. 15-VINTON CQUNTY

BOYS
DEC. 15-llelse•ville-Yerk - lway
Dec.-1Welpre- H. .e

slllol$ilici
f.~
lbitclf*.ctm

•
•

·1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. ~OUTHEASTERN
DE¢. 12-MILLER
DEC. 18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC. 19-UNIOTO
DEC. 25-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. ~AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT ~LUPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 15-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
.
JA.N. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. ~OUTH POINT
.
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB• •AT TRIMBLE

/

ERS

Put o......, , .., ....... ....
Cllrlst•••

•
•

SOIIftiERN
1992·93 JOYS' SCHEDULE

I•••

\

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
I ,.
DEC. 5-UNIOTO -1:00 p.m.
DEC. 10..AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
DEC.17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. II-AT MEIGS - 3:00 p.m.
JAN. 11-50UTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-1 :00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
.
JAN. 23-MILLER -1:00 p.m.
JAN: 27-BELPRE
• JAN. 28:-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1-AT TRIMBLE
.
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;-MEIGS ,-1:00 p.m.
FEB.1~AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
D.EC.11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC.15-PT. PLJ:ASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOU1ll POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN ·
JAN. 8-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 25-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

s_

GIRLS
DEC. 14 Belpre -Away
DEC. 17..Jri••le ...

1992·93 GilLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 IOYS' SCHEDULE

Prescr
Shop
For All Your Prescription and Sundry Needs
See Us

t.

Meigs County business owners
who receive a questionnaire from
the U.S. Buteau of the Census are
required by law 10 complete and
return them.•·
•
·
According to Paula Thacker of
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, some 200 busine!ISCS in.
Me.igs Co_u~ty will recei v~ !he
questionniW'es. pan of 3.5 million
businesses nationwide and I 50,000
iri Ohio.
The forms should arrive in mailboxes sometime this month, and
the due dale for returning the compieced forins is February 15. Busi·
nesses which have m:e~ved census
forms are re!\uired by law to
I'CSilOIId, ecconlin&amp;IO Vi,J&amp;Y Gadde
of Buckeye Hills/HOCiting Valley
Reaional Development Diltrict.
The census is conducted every five
years 10 identify uenda in business
· ~,

econFomthy.
·
"
·
or e f'1rst ·11me;
acliVIIY
1ri
finaqce, insurance, real estate.
communications, and utilities are
being measured in addition 10 secIOJ'S traditiooally covered.
Infor,mation requested in the
economic status includes nwnber
of employees. annual payroll, and
value or goods and scnices provided during 1990.
Economic census date is being
used extensively by governments,
trade assOciations, news media and
businesses receiving census fonns.
Marketing applications include the
location of retail outlets and the
design or distribulion systems.
Information is available from
either Thacker (992-5005) or
Gadde (373-9436).
y

OLD FASIDONED SATURDAY NIGHT·
These strolling carolers added a festive flair to
the "Old Fashioned Saturday Nilfht" in
Pomeroy this past weekend. The promotion was
sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Associa·

tion and partidpatlng businesses extended tbelr •
hours untO 9 p.m. The group consisted or mem· ·
hers from Trinity Church, Pomeroy United ·
Methodist Church and· St. Paul Lutheran
Church. Lois Burt-directed the carolers.

Governor to meet with
GOP-lawmakers on ta~es
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich and legislative leaders were seeking suppan today for a tax package to help
solve a $250 million budget defiCit
and raise another $902 million in
the next tWo-year budget period.
A Senate source said the package was not final yet, but the governor and leaders of bolh parues
said they hoped it could attract a
majority of votes in bolh chambers
for passage, possibly by Friday.
' Voinovich met·privately with
leaders from bulh parties for more
than two hours Monday and
planned 10 diScuss the mauer today
with individual members of the
Senate and House Republican caucus~. '

.

from lhe state sales tax and reduc·
ing a discount vendors receive for
collecting the sales tax 10 0.75 per·
cent from 1 percent. With some
other minor adjustments, these proposals would yield $54.2 million
over the next six monlhs and $265
million in the next biennium.
-Excise tax: Imposing lhe tax
on janitorial and exterminating_services and cenain supply semces,
$28.2 million over the next six
monlhs and $151.4 million over the
next biennium .
-Individual income tax:
Adding a ninth bracket 10 ~mpose a
levy of 7.5 percent on mcomes
exceeding $200,000a year, $16
million and $97.6 m1U1on.
-Alcoholic beverage tax :
Increasing the tax on beer, wine.
mixed beverage. liquor, spar~ling
wine and vermouth, $5.3 mllhon
and $25.4 million.
-Cigarette tax: Increasing 10 24

The Legislarure convened today
for a year-end cleanup session that
was expected 10 deal wilh the $250
million deficit and other matters
left pending after 'a legislative session in mid-November.
•
Senate President Stan ley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said 1he
governor is willing to meet with
Docum~ntary
other caucuses of bolh houses, but
Jason Riggs of Reedsville
there was no immediate indication · enlered a plea of no contest to three
he would be asked 10.
counts relating 10 lhe death of Vic·
Aronoff said all lhe items on the tor Will in 1990. At no time has he
WCHS-TV (Channel 8) will list of· possible tax increases are ever pled guilty to any charges
present a 30-minule documemary 7 negotiable and subject-10 counter· rclilting to the incident. It was
p.m. Dec, 1' on lhe 251h anniver- proposals, in what could be a diffi· ·incorrectly reported on Thursday
sary of the collapse of the Silver cull task 10 win enough voles for a that Riggs had entered pleas of
· Bridge. • ·-·
bill that Voinovich would agree to guilty 10 the charges in 1990, and
.
Hosted by newscasler and Gal- sign.
The Daily Sentinel regrets the
He declined release the liSI, but enor.
lipolis native B~ Harvey. the documenlary will feature interviews The Associated Press obtained a
It also bears noting that in the
with Paul Scott, one ot the dlsas· copy of the proposals, including entry flied by Judge Fred W. Crow
ter's five survivors; Chris Wraf, what would raise $203.5 million III, denying Riggs' motions for
lhe brother of one of the bridge s over the next six months. The baf- shock probation, it was stated that
victims, and wimcsses, rescue offi· anc&amp; of the $250 million deficit Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
cials and others.
would be solved with spending Story, Sheriff James M. Soulsby,
' .
.
The pro.ram will cover the CUIS.
civil defense attorneys "and others
The list.inclodes:
bridge's enttte history, from con·
slrongly requested that the defen-Sales tax: Narrowing to 13 dant be granted probation and
siiUction in 1928 10 the aftcrmalh
from 88 lhC numbe{ of exemptions reiCl~Scil from confinement. •
of the 1967 collapse,

relives
Silver Bridge history

cents from 18 cents a package and
a boost to 17 percent in other
tobacco products, $32.7 million
and $130.6 million.
-Public utility tax : Including
sales of gas and electricil): by cerlain non-utilities, $17.2 m11lion and
$89.2 million.
-Others, includin$ a one-cent
tax in 12-ounce containers of soft
drinks and non-alcoholic beer and
taxing railroads under the corporate
franchise tax inslead of the public
utilily tax. $49.9 million and
$142.7 million.
Aronoff, House Speaker Vern
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and Sena1e
Minority Leader Roben Boggs, DJcfferson. indicated that progress
was made in Monday's meeting,
which lasted more than two hours:

Correction

.

I~

day· til
Christmas

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