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                  <text>. Pqr

•

to-n. Dlllly S.nlh..a

·Ohio Lottery

I

. ... . 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

�-.
'

.

.

Tuesday, December 15, 1992

Commentary
.

.Two from Gallia-Meigs area win Buckeye Five

WeVMdiJ, Dee.16
Acat-W Vlbnlcut b daytime cmditkn md

Tueaday, December 15, 199:1

Two residents of the GalliaMeigs area bit the $100,000 jackpol recendy when they picked the
correct five nwnbers for the Ohio
Lottery's Buckeye Five game, a
Iotta)' Official saidIn four to six weeks, Danny S.
ThornJ)SOO, 35, of Rio Grande, and

MICH.

Stra1:1ss-Yeltsin friendship s1poothed transition

prompdy called Yeltsin through an ;
WASHINGTON - Nearly 8 develop," Strauss said. "He and I strong Bush man.
"He never thought Bush was mterprctu to extend the invitation, :
million visitors stream into the liked each other and he related well
~oing to lose," Strauss told us.
figuring Yeltsin would furnish al
Smithsonian Institution's Air an!] to me~· ·
'He never believed m.e. When I guest list for a dinner the followins ;
Strauss shared some of lhe outSpace Museum each year, but in
DJW01'a) TO 'l'gllft'UDTII 01' TD IRJQ8-IIA801'1 ARltA.
1989 Boris Yeltsin and his
told hiln there was a chance Ge&lt;rge month.
'
•
entolll1lge had trouble getting tickBusll could lose, and wllen I felt
Yeltsin stunned Strauss by say-;
ets because of national security
pretty cenain George Bush was ing he desired a dinner with the:
concerns.
going to lose, I didn 'I say I (was) twa men and their wivea alone the•
One of Ye!tsin's traveling comabsolutely convinced. I JUSt said, next ~t to "}lf'Ctice my Ameri-!
panions phoned a friend, Washing'you have to be ready for this."' can diplOinacy.
·
·
,
ROBQT L. WINGEIT
ton
superlawyer
Robert
Strauss,
for
we
were
preparing
for:
·
"When
But
Strauss
says.
Yeltsin
accused
Publilller
help. The message was passed to
him of being "prejudiced" sin~e the summit trip, he really looked•
StraUSs
is a Democrat, and YellSln · forward to having a big succe~s;
Strauss
that
Yeltsin
was
insulted
,
PAT Wllli'EIIEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
and
that
America
should
be
more
of
his
16-month
odyssey
as
noted
that
"Republicans always do here, and he has total confidence an:
takes
A I tel fUM 'rrfCoatroller
General MIID8&amp;er
his ability," Strauss said. "But this,
respectful of Yeltsin, then just a U.S. Ambassador to Russia during well !ate."
political maverick, because he a recent interview with"us. With
Though Sttauss says that "the apPearance before the joint session
LEnBllS OP OPINIO~ are wel()()lllli. They lbiJuld be leaa than 300 ' might l;le someone more imponant Russia's revolution unfolding .by jury is still out on whether Russia was the only part that really bu~ed;
warda. All lett.n are •~oct to edilin&amp; and mull be signed with name,
in the future.
the day, Strauss' job often resem- · and the reforms make it or not," he him. Nothing else worried him. '
llldJeu and telopboDe oumber. No Wlli&amp;Qod lelten will ~ publisbed. Letten
Yeltsin "almost had a ftt" when
"The security people wouldn't bled. a diplomatic survival course !leparted Russia revering Yeltsio as
lllloiJld be ill &amp;Qod taa!B, llldretllill&amp; iuuea, not penonalitieo.
let him visit the space center and with instinct and impfovisation a man who has "the guts of a sky- Sttauss told him that his speech to'
that's crazy in itself because there serving as his besr weapons. There diver." In fact, Strauss says that Congress would be conseeutive;.
are no secrets there," Strauss was no manual to explain how to only one thing ever outwardly . not simultaneOus, translation. "He
recalls. "Any spy in the world can handle a superpower coming apart spooked Yeltsin - his appearance kept sayinf to me, 'How do y,ou
go walking in there. I called (White at the seams.
before a joint session of Congress put umph m !"e. speech?"'. said
House national security adviser)
Ambassador Strauss' real port- this past June during the first offi. Strauss, who tmttated Yeltsm by
punchins the air. "He felt about
Brent Scowcroft' and · said, folio, the one mattering most to cia! Russian-American swnmit
· 'Scowcroft, · tliis is the craziest Yeltsin, was his proximity to power
· The Russian P."esident ~ this joi,.nt session like most people
· thing in the world. Straighten it -Strauss' ability to interrupt a for the summit like it was an audi- feel about things they don't utw!er-;..
out '"
meeting with Yeltsin and get Presi- lion for ·the opening of a Broadway stand and know nothing about" . .
By WALTER R. MEARS
Dwinllthe final tutorial, Yeltstn
Strauss'
intervention
forged
a
dent
Bush or Secretary of State play. During sevemlloog sessions,
.
AP Special Correspondent ·
inquired
about one more part of the
bond
between
him
and
Yeltsin
that
James.
Baker
on
the
line
almost'
Strauss
and
Yeltsin
choreographed
WASHINGTON - Political attention spans often are brief, measured
joint
session.
"What abo,ut t~~ .·
later
paid
hefty
dividends.
But
at
instantly.
the
visit
do)VIIto
the
last
detail,
and
problem to problem, diverted as soon as one issue ebbs and another arises.
question
and
answer
penod? "{
the
time,
neither
man
had
an
It
was
also
the
more
intangible
Yeltsin
was
a!
ways
eager
to
President..eJect Clinton is trying to avoid that risk with a mini-campaign
asked.
.,,
Yeltsin
inkling
that
two
years
later
they
.
personal
chemistry
that
allowed
rehearse.
One
day,
for
example,
a
meant to keep up the pressure for his economic revival plan even if things ·
. · Strauss regretfully informed ·
would
have
a
rendezvous
with
hisbOth
men
to
tease
one
other.
espeYeltsin
aide
called
Strauss'
office
ll'C getting better without it
'
The economic statistics are heartening, he says, but that doesn't mean tory - Yeltsin the unlikely hero cially when the topic of conversa- to broadly hint that it would please Yeltsin that they "hal;l a lot more
tion turned to the American presi- . Yeltsin to receive a dinner invita· worlc to do," and invited himself
that the problems are ftxed. Besides, Clinton said, there is no evidence the and Strauss the unlikely diplomat.
"It's
interesting
how
relationships
dential
election. Yeltsin was a .. lion from the ambassadOr. Strauss out to Yeltsin's dacha for one more .•
country really is coming out Qf the slwnp.
·
session. This time he brousht
I
The improved statistiCs could provide more leeway as Clinton decides
videotapes of. speeches before.joint ;
on details of his shon-terni economic program. But the situation also
sessions
deltver.ed by President·
could ease the pressure Congress to act prompdy on his proposals next
Bush
and
Vaclav Havel, president,
year, and that's what he is trying to avoid.
of
Czechoslovakia.
·:
Hence his wary, even pessimistic appraisals during two days of appearsaw
those
twoc
•
·
"When
Yeltsin
ances Chicago and Washington, a message likely to be reSiated Montapes,
all
of
a
sudden
his
eyes··
Tuesday when Clinton holds his economic confe!'9!ce with about
opened and lle understood." recalls,
business, academic, labor and business leaders in Linle Rock.
Strauss. "Now of all the things I_
That would be an antidote to the idea Clinton lamented in Washington,
told bim about this trip - how you :
when he Complained that some people were saying "maybe you !]on 't
handle the p~ss, what do you';
need to do anrJting about this economy because the unemployment rate is
expect
from Congress, what Busll
going down, and housing starts are up, and everything' s just hunky ·
is
go
ins
to say about this and what ;•
'dory." He said that's wrong, that "we are nowhere near to knowing" the
'you
can
say about that ~ none of '
slwnp is over, and even if it is, loog-term problems demand immediate
that
impressed
him as much as ,
action.
those
tapes.
He
later
told President:
Clinton said that's what be was elected to deliver, and the incoming
Bush
that
he
played
the tape 10: ~
Congress is pretty mucll in 'llamess to help him do iL Now he's going to
times
on
the
way
over
(to
the Unit; ;
keep the .urgency and momentum going, and avoid letting signs of better
.
ed
States),
and
whim
he
walked,:
times shift the focus·from his priorities.
.
into
the
ioint
session
he
was
righi
When attention drifts, one day's emergency legislation can become the
home.
'
In
fact,
Y
eltsin'
s
address
'
at
next week's afu:rthought
.
drew
13
standing
ovations.
.
·
:
After the Los Angeles riots last spring, Presid'ent Bush and the DenloThough the Boris &amp; Bob Show ·,
cralic C:ongrasionai leaders pledged swift, cooperative action on measures
has
come to a formal end, Stra~ ·
to help American cities cope with economic problems and crime. Urgency
plans
to remain an ambassad\if• !
yielded to bickering over ll~nns, the bill-was delayed, and when it did
without-ponfolio for Yel~:.tf''
pass, it caried a tax increase so Bush vetoed it .
for the cause of a free and • ;;.
When Jimmy Carter took olfK:C in 1977, a sweeping energy progmm
ous Russia. But Strauss wanis di8t 1
was OiiC or his top F,ocities. He said.the problem demanded ''the mom!
"the CIOCk IS
. b1.;AJug
._,..,_ fast." ... , . ,,'
equivalent of war,' but a harsh winter's energy shortages passed, the
Jack
Anderson
and Mkb.;fl '
nation was between energy crises and gssoline lines, and it took mooths to
Blostein
are
writers
for Ualted~;
get a WltaM down versioo of the Carter plan though Cor:tgress.
Feature Syndicate, In~.
"We're too dependent still, in my judgment, oo foreign energy, we're
toO ineflicient in the use of o.ur energy," Ointon said Tuesday. He said.
OREGON'S ENDANGERED SPECIES
that il OiiC of the things undermining U.S. economic strength.
,·
..
But that's well down the IJCDda. His economic program priorities are
ln1IOCSIIDCDt incentives, job training, health care reform, alon11 with shortterm recovery~ including public works ~ding and, probably, a ·
middle-income tax cut. He wants top-bracket tax increases to offset !he '
Thomas Jefferson used to say ing System's "Frontline." Another crimination suit against the Chica- "has finished school, she fillS ' ;
cmts.
'
'"lbele is no difference in my mind between my shon-term economic that this peculiar institution - as exception is the work of Pame_la go Housing Authority resulted in degree, she's in the· Navy and lbC :
.;
suate8Y and a long-term economic strategy, with one single exception, he called constitutional democracy Hill. For 10 years she was lD the court mandating that seme fam- went in as an officer."
ilies from the projects had to be
What made the difference? Says
and that il: Should the deficit be ini::reased with a real stimulus in the -would survive only if the citi- charge of ABC-TV's bold and farzenry were well enough informed
· ·
moved out to racially integrated Cora McPhee: "Staying in school ,
shod run?" Clinton said. Should the signs of economic recovery continue. he will have the option of erasing the exceptioo and trying to trim the to govern themselves. And that was
neighborlloods- some in the city, and w~g came,~ ~use. ~
deficit his flfSl year.
the job of the press. Jefferson came
ento~ff
some in the suburbs.
now this IS all they re ~..
to despise the press but even in
·
'JJ
"Over 4 000 families have been
ln terms of cost effecuveness,
Clinton's cautious pessimism has an ironic ring. Not loog ago, Bush
m~ved so far the ·rent subsidized subsidizing the rent of the families was complaining that Clinton was peddling gloom and doom, try in' to later years, he forced himself to
admit there was no other way for
•
by the city." The' l4th Amendment in the Jli'OIPliii!S cost Olicago about
convince voters t11at "things are really bad, worse than they really are. '
Bush kept saying the ecooQmy was poised for a comebaclc. Now some the people to have some idea of mngin~ investi~ative documentary _ ~ual prolection under the laws half of what it would to keep the
unit, ' Closeup. ' Now She is exec- .- stiU has some life lefl
same families in a public housing ~
of his supporters are saying they told you so. And whil~ the new president what was going on,
sunds to gain the political benefits of an inaugural ecooomic rebound, it
For a long time, most print jour, utive produc~r of CNN's Special
A 10-year study of the families project.
!
complicares his quest fm urgent congressional action on the most impor- nalists regarded themselves clearly Assignment Unit, where she keeps who moved from the glletto to the
What this pu:t of the~ docu- '
tanl jJroposals of his campaign.
.
as the primary couriers of essential the spirit of Ed Murrow alive.
.
suburbs under this court ruling mentary shows IS tl_lat there IS a lot .,
As part of a CNN series, found that "90 percent of.their of unknown po!CJ~tial among those·;
· ''hople lL'lk me all the time, everywhere I go, and I read in the paper facts and analyses. Television
reporters skimmed the news and "Democracy in America," under children were in college or worlc- w~M? are so ,c;asily and coldly.~. ;
the advice I'm geuing, not .to do anything verr .serious about the economy
anyway, had no time to dig long Hill's aegts, Kathy Slobogin mg· and 95 percent had graduated JOnzed as the underclass. Its
·because we're coming out of the recession, ' Clinton told Gannett Co.
pub!isbl!rs and executives. ''And I note that almost all of these articles are and deep.
·
· recently produced "A house from high school. In fact, across u;nportant to write ~bo~t this, bu( ::_'
Then came Edward R. Murrow, Divided,"· a penetrating look at the board, the children from the smee !19 ~y ~get muc.h· '
Wriiral interviewing people who were better off in 1990 than they were in
whose documentaries brought Detroit- which during the paSt 30 projects who moved to the suburbs' · o_f th~u mfo!ma~on from t~lt!v1- , ,
1980."
stoop laborers right into American years has lost 80 percent of its dramatically outperformed a simi- 51!&gt;0, JO~maltsts like Pam Hill are "
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· living room~ and so deflated Joe white population to the suburbs. Jar group in the city. And parents . vt~ally Important among tho~e!
McCanhy that the pall of fear he Out there, the whites who fled who had never had jobs before pnnt ~broadcast, who are doing :~
alai lor Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
had cast for so long began to dis- "have staned removing public bas- were 50 percent more likely to be what Jefferson hoped would be-..aiollal polities for more than 30 years.
solve.
ketball hoops to keep outsiders worldng than those in city."
done by the press.
·~
I saw Muqow once "live." from coming in." Among those
Cora McPhee, who was thus
Cora McPhee, by the way, wu :
Chain-smoking, he was about to do who had to stay - not only in able to leave the projects, is first once. a pr~gnant teenager on wei- ':
a radio commentary:. I was not Detroit but in other ghettos at well seen driving her children in the fare m Ch1~go. Sh~ now. owns her .;
often in awe of anyone, liut that - the nation's "twO'class scllool (!hetto, and pointing to a gray own house m a mctally mtegrated
night, looking through the glass system ... leaves minority cllildren shack: "Where that black garbage suburb.
·
into the studio,- I felt as I did in the three to fou'r years behmd white can is, that's where Selena found
Ntat Hen torr ls a ntitlo .. ny ]
presence of Dulce Ellington .
children."
that dead body. If you don't stay in renowned authority oa the 'lrst 1
The networks seldom do the
On. the other hand, in Chicago school and get grades, you're Amendment and the rest of the
Murrow kind of documedtaries there is actual evidence the Ameri, gonna end up living back here."
Bill of Rights and a syndicated
anymore - the kind that people can apartheid can be broken
Her 16-year-old daughter is on writer for Newspaper Enterprise ,
talk a~ut !he next daf at worlt:. An
through. Fifteen years ago, the the Honor Roll, as is her son. The Association.
· ;·
excepbon IS th~ Pubhc ~roadcast- CNN documentary repons, a 'dis- oldest daughter, her mother says,
.
·1

111 Coart; Staeet
.._.IOJ,Oblo ·

on

m

tsllllld

.

In the spirit of Edward R. Murrow .

·:

Nat H

J

Berry's World

Fre~dom

falls victim to drug testing .

There are ·tirites, fellow Ameii· and Attorney General A. Mitchell
cans, when I wond~r whether we Palm.er launched nationwide dragdeserve the freedoms with which nets for ''dangerous radicals." He
we have been blessed, and I despair hauled in 10,000 suspects, the
of our ability to preserve them.
Here are some truths that I hold
1
to be self-evident That each of us .
J
has the right to privacy; that we
have the nght to be secure in oW: country applauded, and The Wash·
persons, houses, papers and effects, ington Post offered editorial blessagainst unreasonable searches and ings: "There is no time to wasre on
seizures; that we have the right to hairsplitting over infringement of
be preswned innocent until proven liberty." During the J95(ls, another.
guilty. But two-thirds of you, by Red Scare brou~ht on Joseph
some polls,l!fC willing to give up McCarthy, blackliSts and loyalty
some of these fundamental rights if oaths, and peopl! -abjectly went
it would help the authorities a10
enforce the law.
;:?~w co"mes the Drug Menace,
Oh, it would help. As decapita- and once again we seem ready to
lion staunches receding hairlines, it set aside the Bill of Rights to fight
W&lt;?uld llelp.
"
·it Since Ronald Reagan announced
Americans seem to relax their in 1986 that. he was goinlto 8118•
vigil every time they perceive a lyze the urine of 345,52 federal
threat to the public security. In employees, randpm drug tests have .
1920, the United States was become commo.Wiace in the COipogripped by a Red Menace hysteria, 'mte and government worlds. Test-

·
osep h S.pear

"~y. let me 're-conneqt you with the govflro-

ment. • -,..you got"

,,

ing of public servants is ·theoretically limited to ·~safety sensitive"
pos 1tions, but secretaries, clerks
and warehouse workers are routinely asked to repair to the resttooms
and provide "samoles.".
In the past 3 i/2 years, by my
calculations, Americans have spent
96,250,000 work bours urinating In
specimen botdes _ not to provide
evidence of guilt, but to prove their
innocence. That is an appalling
assault 011 our right to privacy and
sen~of dlf!til}'.
·
In Aprtl 1989, the Supreme
Court endoned the use of drug
courier "prorue.," and now narcotics agenti bing out in airline tcr·
minals and train slatioos, looking
for people ..:.. mostly blacks and
Hispanics, it seems - ·who appear
to be in a burry or who clash 10 a
telephone booth immediately upon
disembarking. About one suspicious soul in 10, by some esti.

w

\

mates, is round to be carrying : ,
drugs, but all who resist ~ng . :.
questions are preswned guilty. That,, :
galls me almost beyond words.
·· •
Across the Coufttry, police have I
been boarding buses and randomly 1
demanding idenlifJcation and ask~:. 1
ing questions of passengers. Some- · 1
times, the cops ask to search lug- ,
gsse -all of this, mind you, with- : :
out wamit~ ~ without any ~- ;
sonable lllllpiCIOn o{ wrongdomg ; •
-and the courts are rou= , :
upbolding the lellllkY of this
-: :
cable praclice. fwo -bunclred years
ago, the Founding Fllhers drew up:.
the Fourth Amendment to guaran. ·.
tee that the king'• soltlien would :
never apin 1011rch the people llld, :
their bclongingl at-ranllom. Now&lt; :
our judges are blithely returning~! •
the commission to the crown.
.• :
' U we must abide tbclo lrievous··; I
enaoaclunents 011 our bllfc rights; • 1
we should.at leut inJist that they •• :
be administered fairly.
.
t

·1

Thompson is an •unemployed die Ra•easwood Care Center,
Teamstu wbo purcbaiJcd !!is tidl:l Rae woad. W .Va. She. ~ .
at Go Mart Food Store, &amp;sun a tidl:la Ella's Gulf, Racine . .
Avenue, Gallipolis_ He dd laaely Sloe . t l a ' 'w..t Kawwdl have :
agents he plans 10 U9C
10 .-.e ~ea _, plan to use the :
WJ 10 t.y aliCW llroose, the lot· •
purchase:)
- - a DJ
Shu erlJC?ItiC
IS a land..
DUISIJ~g w~
•lffi ~.. Slid..
:

the_,

••

1

Divorce lfanted
An action for divorce bas been
granted in Meigs County Common
Pleas 'Court to Terrence Lee Clark
from Traci Lynn Clark.

W. VA.

It»

SUiin

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been.
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Randall Warreri Roach,
32, Pomeroy, and Tina Marie
Collins, 36, Pomeroy; Todd D.
Eads, 29, Rutland, and Penny Jean
Williams, 34, Rutland; and to Timothy Elmer Stone, 21 , Dexter, and
Kelly Renee Hamilton, 20, Rutland.

Pl. Cloudy Cloudy ' ·•

SERVICE AWARDS .'These four members
or the Women's Auxiliary or Veterans Memorial
Hospital were presented 500-hour service pins
when the Auxiliary's annual Christmas party
was held Friday evening in -the hospital cafeteria. From the left are Scott Lucas, hospital
administrator, presenter; Grace Warner, Joan
McLain, Jeanette Lawrence and Vinas Lee.
Wanda Wolfe wiD receive a 100 hour service pin

.

~*~A=·-='""=~'~:_:(b~"';.:~~co~:..,:,=:::....;;.;;;;.....:;-....-~r01~11112;;;k:..~. . ~:-..:::.,c·,.;,o:...... Lottery' num hers

----.;._-Weather-----' South-Central Ohio
· Tonight, rain likely. Low 45 to
50. Chance of rain 60 ~rcent.
Wednesday, rain liketr. Htgh in the
low 50s. Chance of ram 60 percent
t Extended forecast:

Thllrsllay tBrou'b Saturday:
Thursday, rain likely. Lows iri
the mid to upper 30s. Highs in the
40s. Friday, a chance of snow.
Lows around 30. Highs in the low
to mid 30s. Saturday, fair. Lows in
the 20s. Highs between 35 and 40.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Monday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
9-9-0
(nine, nine, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers .
2-2-7-2
(two, two, seven, two)

------Area deaths:----Voger Buckley

·;Roger Buckley, 55, of Texas
Rbad in Ponilltoy, died on Monday,
December 14, 1992 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
. - He was born on August 23, .
1937 in Reedsville, son of the late
~jamin and Hazel Martin Bucklev. He was a construction worker
ru\d a laborer. He attended Mt. Hernton United Brethren in Christ
Chun:h
· He i~ surviv~ by his wife, Dar·
leyte Bailey Buckley, Pomeroy; a
daughter, Mrs. Tim (Renee) Buckley, Beckley, W.Va.; two sons,
Kevin (Diana) Buckley, Long Bot!Om, and Bryce (Pamela) Buckley,
pt&gt;meroy; six sisters: 'hl!lise Lodwick, West Jeff~rson, Vivian
Humpllley, Reedsville, Martha c;&gt;rr.
C_pluJ!Ibus,, Betty Metedll~ ,
J&gt;!Ioemx, ~· · and Zelah McCarn '
and ~anlyn Coulson, both of
Coolvdle; two brothers, George
Buckle~. liJ!d.C~.~~ckl~y. both
of· Ree'dsviile; a son-1n · l~w',
T,homas Ball, Syracuse; mne
grandchildren; and several aunts,
uilcles, nieces and nephews.
Bes!'JCS his' parenlS, he was JM:C·
ceded m death by a daughter,I.\Jitta
Ball; a brodler, James Buckley;"and
a sistu, Florence Cowdery.
Services will be held on Thursday at3 p.~. at ~t Hermon Uni~ .
· Brethren m Chnst Church, wtth
t_tev. Bud Ha~e~d and R~v. R_obert
Sanders olftctating..Burial Will be
in Mt. Hermon Cemetery.
; Friends may c~ll at the Ewing
Funeral Home m Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
6:30 to 'fp.m.

Agnes Mowery
Agnes L. Mowery, 70, of State
Route 143, Pomeroy, died Monday,
Dec. )4, 1992, at St Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
.Born on Dec. 29, 192I at
Pomeroy, she .was the daughter of
the late John H. Wilson and Maggi~ Hudson Wilson. She was a
hOusewife and belonged to the First
Cliun:h of God, Gallipolis.
S!Je is survived by two daughters, Linda R~ of Alabama and So
Ann •WeeG of Middleport; four
sons, James Mowery of Columbus,
John Mowery of Woodsfield, and'
Kenny Mowery and Jack Mowery,
Pomeroy; three sisters, Ethel
Hysell of Delaware, Delsie Mathias
of Caled9nia, and Mary Voss of
!'omeroy; and three brothers,

The Daily Senlinel
(UIPIJI~

•

l'lllllicbod ' """f .n.r-, Moaday
"""""' Friday; lll Coact 81. . ...........,.
Ohio by lbe Ohio Valloy Pobliolli . .

Company/Maltimedia

IDC.,

PcwaaU),

Ohio ~?till. I'll. 11112-211!6. 8ocond . .
pootop poi&lt;loll\iawnf), OhM.

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Mtlllber: fte Al•a~ated PNI, Md the ·
Ohio Newapopr ~I lb, Nollaaol

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'

.40

arols.

A Racine woman's vehicle sustained light damage Monday afternoon and was towed after she
reponedly braked to miss a deer
and slid off the left side of the road
into a ditch.
According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Pamala M. Wise,
38, 51610 State Route 338, Racine,
was southbound· on Lebanon
Township Road 131 at the time of
the incident. No injuries were
•
reponed.

Hospital news

::i!fa

SEVEN THOUSAND HOURS - 'IIII:R hnt ae.llen of the
Women' s Alllliliary at Ve~Ba~Is ~tc.ai:oillaspilal•epnsea t a
h 7"74 "**Ott- l'id1md receivtotal or 7,000 •houos ia " ' '
ing their service pias Friday •iJ:•t at die Auiliary's: annual
Christmas party are BeUy SaJR,
•
"'-5 s&amp;vice, and
Libby F'ISher, Auxiliary I* ''gaf,. ~ "'-s. 1k stnia pins
were presented by Hospital Aitlaiaistratar Saltt Lucas. who
extended apprecialioll vi tile twtire h 5-, 4 51111' for die WOFk done
by the auxiliary. Later, awards wiD lie ,.-esealtd f() Mildnd ·.
Wells, 2,000 hours, and Bouie Owk, ~ "'-s..

s.e-

Mt. Alto woma-n killed in accident

along U.s.-33 in Jackson_County

:r.:~verview Cemdery in Mid-

--Meigs announcements--

Friends may call at the funeml
home Wednesda from 24 and 7 9
y
p.m.

Resides affhe Plains
Sweet shop planned
Heath United Methodist Chun:h
Ella Shinn, formerly of Hem·
will hold a sweet shop Saturday lock Grove, is now residing at the
Lydia Stultz
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Mid· Hickory Creek Nursing Center, 51
Fpneral services fur L~a Stultz dleport Arts Council building. E. Fourth St., The Plains, Ohio.
of Belniimt, W.Va., who died CakesandCilndywiUbeavailable.
Tickets on sale
Monday,_Dec. 14, 1992 at Care
Christmas dinner planned
·
Member.ship tickets for the
Haven in Belmo111 will be held
Wildwood Garden Club will
Meigs
County Agricultural Society
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Murray hold ilS Christmas dinner Wednesand
season
tickets for the 1993
Funeral Home in Greenfield.
day at 6 p.m. at Mason Family
County
Fair went on sale
Meigs
Friends may call at the funeml Restaurant
today
at
the
Sugar
Run Flour Mill.
home Wednesday from 5 to 9 p.m.
Live nativity to be presented
Dan
Smith,
president,
said that
Memorial ·contributions may be
The Bradford Church of Christ
membership
tickets
are
restricted
to
made to the Highland"County will present a live nativity scene on
those
over
18
years
of
age
and
resi·
Senior Citizens Center at Hillsboro, Dec. 22 and 23 from 7-9 p.m .
45133.
nightly. The church is located at dents of Meigs County, while anyStultz was a retired 25-year the cOmer of Route 124 and Bmd- one can purchase a season ticket.
employee of the U.S. Shoe Corp. of . bury Road. All - ~ invited to drive The Meigs County Fair will be held
Au~ . 16-2 1.
Greenfield. Among those who pre- by m: SIOJl and vtew the scene.
ceded her in death was her stepmother, Mamie Miller.

Robert Vineyard

Aoonao,

later. Die Aa•T J _ . &amp;: d5 eajo}ed a din·
oer ud a,. .... -.,~ Sa}R.Jessie White
:aiJd Liblty llidii!r. " ' ' w i¥4iM &amp;ifts were pre·
sented by MIS. llilller, A1Di1i1r:J president, to
Lucas, tile ..._- - hallll; R'oada Dailey, RN,
·uSN, dii«&lt;Ir .r aarsia&amp;. ud Bob Hoenich,
pablk; • ,. s diitna _.door priZes were
:aurded.. MIS. D , J IIIII tiie r,roap singbtg of

Patrol investigates ·
one-car accident

Leonard Wilson of St. Augustine, wife, Phyilis Young Vineyard, and
Fla., and Walter Wilson and John three brothers, Coy, Virgil and Earl
Wilson, Jr., Pomeroy; 15 ·grand- Vineyard.
ch!ldren, and seven great-grandA memorial service will be Satchildre~ .
urday at 11 a.m. at the Bigony-JorBestd~s ~~~arents, she was dan Funeml Home in Albany with
preceded m
by her husband, Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Mr.
Willard Mowery, a dau_ghter, Judy Vineyard was cremated at his
Van Cooney, and an mfant son, requesL
Rol)ert Eugene ~owery..
In lieu of flowers contributions
_Funeral services wtll be h~ld may be made to the American CanFnday at 11 a.m. at the Ewmg cer Society, P.O. Box 866, Athens,
F~neral ~orne. The R~v. P~ul V~ Ohio, 45701.
Will offiCiate an~ burial wtll be 10 Caslr Zimmerman
Veterans Memorial
.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS th~ Rock Spnngs Cemetery.
Cash Zimmerman, 97, of West
Fnends
call at the funeral Main Street in Rutland, died on Inez Snyder, Middleport, and Betty
ho9e Th · Y f!:om 3 to 5 and 7 Tuesday, December 15, 1992 at Jane Imboden, Pomeroy.
MONDAY DISCHARGES to p.m.
Darst ' s Private Care Home in
Virginia
Hedrick.
Carl Roach
Pomeroy following a brief illness.
Carl Thomas Roach, 68, Wright
He was born on October 1, 1895
HOLZE.R MEDICAL CENTER
Street, Pomeroy, died Monday, in Athens County, son of the late
Disc harges, Dec. 14. - Edgar
Dec. 14, 1992 at the Raymond Heruy and Jedida MCI"CCr Zimmer- Scarberrji, Ruth Holland, Aurilla
Roach residence.
man. He was a retired track mainte· Miller, Frances Jakeway, Jacquelin
·Born May 15, 1924 in West nance worker for the rail system Salcedo, Justin Hall, Anna Walker,
Colwnbia, W.Va., he was a son of and a member of the Brother)lood Perry Hubert, Ashley Fmley, Patri·
th~ late G.,-1 and Marie Francis of Maintenance of Way.
·cia Long, and Richard Walker.
Roaeh. He was a mechanic with ' He is liurvived by a daughter,
NAPA. A member of the West Vir- Alice Nonhup of Zanesville; a
ginia National Guard Mr. Roach granddaughter, Charlotte Harper,
was a decorated veteran of World Milldleport; three grandsons: Clyde
War II, a Bronze Star recipienl'and Harrison, MiddleP.ort, Paul
a member of the. National Rifle Northup, Jr., Zanesxtlle, and Jim
Association.
Northup of Pickerington; a sister,
Mr. Roach is survived by his Maude Tedrow, Columbus; a sis·
A 43-year-old ML Alto woman
wife of 41 years, Dorothy Miller ter-in-law, Sylvia Zimmerman of was killed in a two vehicle accident
Roach, Pomeroy; a son, Randall Stewan; 12 great-grandchildren;
which occurred Monday morning
Roach, Logan, three sons and and several nieces and nephews.
on U.S. 33, one mile east of Gay..
daughters-in-law. Thomas and
Besides his parents, he was pre· Road in Jackson County.
Faith Roach, Racine, Raymond and ceded in death by his wife, Emma
According
to
information
Pamela Roach, and Darin and Van Bibber Zimmerman in 1981; received by the Register, Sharon
Donna Roach, all of Pomeroy; a two daughters, Marcia Harrison
daughter, Trudy Williams, and Margot Stillwater; a greatPomeroy; grandchildren, Ashley grandson; five sisters and three EMS units answer calls
and Charla Roach, Kasey and Jor- brothers.
Units of Meigs Emergency Serdan Williams, Bmwn Herman and
Services will be Thursday at II
vices
answered the following calls:
Brandon and Jacob Carl Roach; a.m. at Birchfield Funeral Home in
MONDAY,
12:04 p.m., Pomeroy
and a brother, Raymond Stewan, Rutland, with Rev. Samuel Basye
.
unit
to
Texas
Road, Roger Buckley
Galli~lis.
officiating. Burial wiii!J!' in Meigs
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital;
M1litary graveside rites will be Memory Garden.
lleld.
·
Friends may call at the funeml TUESDAY , 7:26a.m., Pomeroy
Services will be Thursday at 1 home on Wednesday from 5 to 8 s9uad to Mulberry Avenue, Cash
Zunmerman, dead on arrival.
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with p.m. ·
AI Hanson officiating. Burial will

Roben L. Vineyard, 61, Route
33, Shade, died Sunday, Dec. 13,
1992 at the Veterans Administra·
lion Hos(lital. Cincin!ll'ti.
Born m Looneyville, Vf.Va., he
was the son of the late Wade and
Fannie (Sarver) Vineyard. He was
a retired construction worker and
an Air Force Veteran of the Korean
Conflict.
Mr. Vineyard is survived by two
daughtus and sons-in-law, Dedria
and Mike Turrill, Albany, Bobbie
and. David Campbell, .Fairborn;
three ltf8IIdchildren, baita and Jami
TurriU, Robert Campbell; two sis·
ters, Gayle Hutchmon, Ft. Wasil·
ington, Md., Opal Mirguet, Tucoma Parle, Md.; three brothers, Hoy
Vineyard, Arnoldsburg, W.Va.,
Ralph Vineyard and Ross Vineyard, bolh.ofLooneyVille, w.v~
Besides liis I'Bfents, Mr. Vmeyard was JRCII(Ied in death by his

Stocks

Am Ele Power................... .31 3/4
Ashland 011 ...................... .25 3/4
AT.tT.................................48 118
Bank Clllc.. ..........................48 lfl
Bob Evans .........................19 1/2
Cltanning Shop.................. l6 S/8
~lding ...................... 19
Mol!ul..................• 17 1/8

Christopher Columbus planted the first lemon trees In
America In 1493.

Key Cen~ ...................20 314

,-.~~

O&lt;Jcxl~ 1'lR ..................(/J

112

l.alldl Bncl..........................26 1/4

I.imjiOd Inc. ....................... 27 3/4
Mullimedia Inc. ........... ~ .....28 114

Rax Rell:aurant. ....... ;.......... l/8
Roliance Electric................1 8 1/2
~yas ................ l7
Sboney•sine......................25 318
Star Bank ...........................33 1/4
Wendy lnt'l... ................... .l2 7/8
Worthington Ind................22 1/2
Stock reports are the 10:30
LDI. quotes provided by Blnnt,
EWa llld Loewl fl Gallipolis,

'
. I

; .

Ruth G. Shuler, 41, of Racine wUI
each receive a lump sum of
$76,500- $100,000 minus the
government's 'Share.
Thompson and Shuler were the
only two people to correctly pick
the five numbezs drawn Dec. 11.

Court news

By Jack Anderson
and
· Michael Binstein

·Clinton tries to keep
spotlight on economic plan

The Dilur Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO WeathPt

2-The Dally 9entlnel
Pomeroy Middleport, OhiO

Page

;

The Daily. Sentinel

..·'

.

.. ....

....... .,

··

HulTman, wife of Ron Huff-.
sales manager for City Ice and Fuel
in Point Pleasant. was killed instantly in the 10:30 a.m. a3&gt;1L
A 38,year-old ~dSIIwg. WV
woman, Lena Bishop, is liSICd in
satisfactory condition in Owleslloa
Area Medical Center with multiple
fractures and a head injury. She
was the passenger in a 1984 Dndw:
d:iven by her husband, Freddie
dishop, 40, of Amoldsbwg.
Deputies Len Jones and HL
Faber of the Jackson Counly
Sheri IT's Depanment said Hulf~m~~

The Ohio State Palrol oriJJ join
with the lntenljll.ional A.oscri!Jiion
of Chiefs of Polipe and 49 Olber
state and participating Canadian
police and highway patrol~
in a pre-lloliday safety CUDJ11ip
encouraging motorists to be safe
and sober drivers.
The nationwide effort. inwolrill!:
all of the continental United SllalCS,
will focus on the most frequent
causes of fatal collisions - driwing
under the influence of aloobol or
drugs'and excessive :speed. ·
"We are also encour2gin
motorists to buckle !UP.~ Lt. WCJI!d·
ford, commander •Of the Gallia·
Meigs Post said.
"We. have found !hal R'&lt;traiaill£
young children in child safety 5CIIS
and taking the time to make S'IR
other occupants in .the 'vdliclc? ~
buckled up are ·the most posttn&gt;e
actions people can take to mdnl:e
the risk of death or serious injuly iD
traffic collisioos."
Officers will also ·be eatta minllful of providing roadside as&lt;iuaw c
to motorists wbo need help.
The effort, dubber me~
Holiday Season Lifesav.er Wc:d:end 1992", wiH run from this
weekend from 6 p.m. Friday

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

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY UNTIL 7 P.ll. J
THRU DEC, 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER . J
HOURS APPOINTMENT,
t

BU-rLAND nRirr1JIIE
"

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

742·2211
.

*' ...

Patrol joins safety campaign -.

, ._.
SPECIAL HOUDAY BOUIIS
~

was I h i Cll!l m U.S. 3J, when '
!!III: ,_ oO' tiie RDiway onto- the ' ·
riPtbaal..ailvelingsome 100 feet, '
She ...-aaiJ pdlalllc:r car back. ·
tk 111&amp;1, ;;ad wi:Dl imo a. skid,
tmwdiac -•Jw6S feeL As she at- ···
W1 '4rl 10 CUiietl. &amp;he skid, her . ~
1992 1'\Mi&amp; ulltSOCd inw the ·
I tmllil: lme,. and collided :·
.......,diJ!: LBisllllp lllltl head-on in a ·~aiJop appacntly attempted ,
10 aWoid 6c.uash by ~lting oiT the :
. . . benD d(cflis l:llle. .
1IIe w.• «t• !irtd up tfaffic on
U.S. D b ooer II4lur.

RUTLAND

1·BOO.a37-.1217

tJuon&amp;h aridaiz'tloo Sunday.

The ~

IACP has asked stale traffic·ar.., at ,. l@Pitics to make this •.
a m..im- eafm:emenl period; •
11
tic dral all awilable officers
wi!!--be oa the road duJing the

.......,..

\ :_

·we are joining Ibis unified,•"
IDiiamride dlall l1uause it focus.-

cs oa driYill&amp; l!e71ari0rs thai kill
aaoss aile urion - tbe.y are not
so7dy local JIIOI!leiM,~ Woodford
Slid.

Officials anti~ipate that the
Mawfltdin the Cbristmao; baliday will be c:xJJemely busy because r
of dw,p;s;. 1WW$30illr.lvelcn.
-nus is lk scaroo ol j.oy and
celcbralioa- We want people to
b:qJ ildtll way by mi¥ing alive.
Aad. we wanl litem to ~:arry the
arriYC aliYC babil into the new
JCX,- WUOIIbd Slid. .

�•

·'.

TUNc!IIJ: December 15,1992

Sports

Belpre defeats Eastern
.,. 56-38 to stay unbeaten

,.T he Daily Sentinel
•

Tuesday, December 15, 1992
Pege-4

Miami defeats L~A~ Raiders 20-7

lirclw*er Bryan Cox. .
final two games and B.uffalo loses
· By STEVEN WINE
MIAMI (AP)- This Miami
"When I'm emotional, when I once, or if Miami wins one of two
Dolphins' c!eJime is diffCRIIL
gel going, I'm in a zone," Cox games and Buffalo loses twice.
Los Angeles fell to 6-8 and
fust ask the Los Angeles said. "Wbell I'm playing thid way,
Raiders, who maJIIIC(I ODiy lSI you'd beac:r put two guys on me. •• · faces almost insurmounllble odds
yards Monday nilbt ..... Miami
Colt bad a pair of sacks, increas- in its bid for a wild-card benh.
.
"We've got to play fer pride
and lost 1.0-7. The Raiders' lone ing his season 1018110 13. Dickerscore came on a club-record 102- son managed only 25 yards in II and come away with a .SOO
yard intercepdon n:tum by Eddie carries, and Schroeder threw for record," Anderson said. "If there's
just 93 yards.
a chance at all, we have 10 keep
Andenon.
In other years, Miami's defen•
" That was one of the great fighting."
·
•
sive unit was 5oft up the middle defensive efforts;'' Miami coach
Anderson averted a shutout in
and lacked die knd fur a big play. Don Sbula said. "Just outstand- the fourth qu!lfter with his lengthThese Dolphins sbut down Eric . ing."
of-the-field interception return,
Dickerson and scored on J .B.
The performance bailed out an which tied for the third longest in
Brown's 3S-yard interception offense that continues 10 struggle NFL history.
return.
and kept Miami (9-S) in contention
"That was the only play of the
" They physically beat us, " . for iiS first AFC East· title since game we made, on offense or
Raiders quartablct Jay Sduoeder 1985. The Dolphins had lost five of defense," Raid!'fS coach An ~hell
said. " We expec:a:d 10 nm the ball their past seven
said.
and physically pound oo diem a tit"We feel a lot better about our
It was the first time his team had
tle baL They beat us to die puncb."'
team now," Shula said. "With the · crossed mid~eld. The Dolphins
Literally, at times. Miami's way we bad been playing we felt gave up only mne fliSt downs.
aggressiveness led to several Scuf. we had 10 get back on track." ·
·
"We showed we can play physifl~_s, usually involving outside
The Dolphins will clinch the cal, and that ~e have a lot of heart
division crown if they win their and talent," Brown said.

games.

.j•

•il

..
"'
"·.•
~

t.
.•

Columbus Chill drawing more fans
than cu_rrent borne-allowed to seat

' .•'
~ ·:

••••

••·,•
·.

~

i~ ~.

.''

~ I!

;;
Hl'f IN MID-AIR - Miami wide receiver
: ·;. Mark Clayton (top) is hit by L.A. Raider safeties
• ·• Dave Waymer aild Eddie Ander.son (behind)
,n

Clayton) after Clayton caught a Dan Marino
pass during Monday night's AFC game in
Miami, wblcb the Dolphins won 20·7. (AP)

~l

~~
~"
.,

• •. In the NFL...
..:G
...
~·

..
~

Eulonllnllloo
'T W L T Pet. PFPA
J·Buftolo ........... 10 4 0 .714 3l8240.
MWrU ................ 9 5 0 .643 3052ll

~~
~

" .'

7 7 o .500 179272
N.Y. I. . ............ 4 10 0 .216 203276
N..,. Pnalond ..... 2 12 0 .143 18Z327
Indi•nepoW .......

..
..
.
••

Central DhiiiOft
10 4 0 .714 273206
........... 8 6 0.571 308 241
CIJNELAND.7 '7 0.500 245 235
. CINCINNATI.... 4 10 0 .286237333

··PiObbwJh ....:..

'

•

•'••".
•

~

4.

...

w-.Dt•lolon

~·

•••

Buffllo at Boltm, 7:40p.m.,

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

'•
.,

ltaniU CitJ ....... 9 5 0 .643 28l227
San IN.Jo.......... 9 5 0 .643 268213

•

.soo 232281

Dca- .............. 7 7 0

•• •

:
!
•••

L.A.-......

6 8 0 .429 21422l
Seattle ................ ·.2 12 0 .143 !20271

••

.'' .

.

~~

••

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eukm Dlvblon
Tllll!l
W L T PeL PFPA
y·Dalbo ............. II 3 0 .786 341212
WuhinJton........ 9 5 0 .643 267217
Pbilttdclpltio ....... 9 5 0 .643 317222
N.Y. Oian• ........ S 9 0 .357 261326
4 io o .286-227309

Cenb'al Dl"lllon
... .......... 9 5 0 .643
a....
8 6 0 .571
Chicaso..............
9 o .3S7
TompaBoy ........ 410 0 .216
DeaOit. ... ... ... ...... 4 10 0 .216
-

•••

8:40p.m.
New Jersey at W'umipea, 1:40 p.m.
Tampa B1y atlol Anaelcl. 10:40 p.m.

o.,..........

s

Wutem
Y·SanFrancilco . 12
J·N..,Orleuts ... 11
Atlan11 ............... 6

Dl"lalon
2 0 .8S7
3 0 .786
8 0 .429
Rama ......... 5 9 0 .3S7
x...cl.iaehed division title
J&lt;Clind&gt;od ployolf benh

L.A.

341239

l412l6

Hartford, 7:40p.m.
Quebec at Mon~. 7:40p.m.

Atlantic Dlvldon

Tampa. Bay at San FrancUco, 4 p.m.
Suncbr, Dec. 20
BuJialo at-New Odeans, 1 p.m.
HoWI.on at Cloveland, 1 p.m.
LA. Ram~ atGmcnBay,l p.m.
MinncecM at Pi~ 1 p.m..
New Eqland • Cinann.ati, I p.m.
Phoenix atlndian.lpolli, 1 p.m.

WuhinJton 11 P!Ulodclphlo. I pm.

OlicafO It Occ:roit. 4 p.m.

San Di.p at U . lb.iden, 4 p.m.
Sctule It Darter, 4 p.m.
N.Y, leu at Miami, I p.m.

.Mon&amp;.r, Dec. 21

.• In the NHL.•.

Dallu at A1lanLI, 9 p.m.

Patrkk Dhlblon
W L T I'lL
PitubwJlt .......... 21 I 3 45
WuJUnaloo ........ 17 13 2 l6
N.Y. R...as ..... 1611 3 3S
Nowlwse)l ........ l.S 13 I 31
N.Y. Iolandm .... 11 IS 4 26
Philodclpllio ....... 10 14 4 24

Tum

GFGA
14511S
lJllll
130117
100100
116119

1011119

31 141 123
30 131113
18 86133
9 69146

Norril Dtvillon
T....
W L T 1'1&amp;.
Clticoso............. 17 11 4 38
16 11 3 35
Dcaoit ................ 16 16 I 33
r _ . . .............. 12 n 4 28

GFGA
108 91
1()4 94
137126
88 96
26 109124
24 113124

s...,.e DtYillon

Loo An1c!a ....... 20 I 3
Colpry .............. 1110 4
.......... 11 17 4

Winnipoa ........... 9 16 3
Sill,................ S 24 1

43 14Sil0

Saturday's scores
Buftolo 1,llutfonl I •rio
W = 4, N.Y.IIIondcn 3 (OT)
Pluo
6, Nnlenoy

s

Wultin.... S,~2

Tllllpllloy3,&amp;1monkllll

Mmireal S, BCIUIIIl
CoJ&amp;IIY 1. Oao•• 1, do
OtlcoP'3.~0

Qttt1tec I, Sml-7 (01)
Loo Anploo 6, St. l.ouio 3

Sunday' a ~~:ores

N.Y. Ran... l 0 , - 5
N,Y. blandM 4, Et 110111
Qtttltec 3,
tie

v - :s.

Monday's fCOrt
Calpl)' 3. Dottooil 0

.278

6 .684
Clurlotte ................ ll
9. .S50
lndima ................... ll
9 .SSO
'lAtlanta ................... lO 9 .!526
Mi.lwaukee ............. lO Hl .SOO
Cl.EVEl.M'D ....... .. 9 11 .450

De.troit ......................7 10

Cin. Olen Elto 59, Norwoocl33

l6

3

25

3.S
4.S

5
'l4

GB

L

Pc:L

6
6

9

.667
.647
.!500

Denver ... ., ........ \....... 7 12

.361

.2!14

3
5.S
6.5

.063

10

12
1!5

Phocnilt ..................l4
Port11nd ................. 13

4
6

L.A. I.oken ............ l2 6
L.A. Cuppen ......... l2 7
Se~~ttle .................... l2
7
Golden SUle ............ 8 11
Sacnmento .............. 6 12

.778
.684
.667
,632

.632
.421
.Jj3

.s

CALL Ut
TOPAVf

992·2124

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

_,..! 10

99

54

Ililbbom 63, Bethel r ... s.a
Hwston 51, New Branm 31
Huntington 92, Latham Wea;lCm 39
Jacklon60 MdJain 42
leffenon 63. Alhtabola St.John 26.
loltnotown Nonltridge 61, Liclting H11.
Kidron 47, Conottat

v.n. 33

Leb•non 43, Tnnton Ecla~wood 39

(~baty·Benton 61, ~ 40

LoroinQouvicw 51, Elryia Cotlt.45
tucuvillc v.n. 44, s . V I - 31
M.dilm 61, Conacaut 39
MlnchCiter !53, New BOlton. 44
Muion Locol49. Sponcorville 36
Mouillon 71, JCaa ~ 32
McComb !53, Vm B1m11 3!5
Maao 49 ,llaoloclt Millu 37
Mioiniobura 5 2 , - 2l
Minford 8( MdlamottNW Sl
Mos•doJo Fteltl 66, Woodridac 42

Wednesday's games

N. At!om• 72, RiPley 66

CLEVELAND at Philldolphia, 7:30
p.m.
Ullh at Cha rlottr., 7:30p.m.
AU•nu at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Bonon al lndiana, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lah:n It Dallal, 8:30p.m.
Portland at DcnVtt, 9 p.m.
Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 10:30

AP Top 25 college
basketball poll
The Top Twenty Five te.ama in the
Auoci•ted Prela' &lt;:ollep bukdball poU,
with fi.rat•p lace VOic.t in puenthe.ot,
recorda through Dec. 13, total poinu
based on 25 poinu for a rll'lt·placc vote
through one point for a lSUI· plaec \'ote
lnd previous nnking:
Lui

Team
W-L Pu. Weeil
1. Dulte (38) ................. .4.0 I ,591
1
2. K•nou (27) ...............S-0 1,582
3. Kcntucky .........., .. ,,.4.Q 1,466

2
3

4.1.ndiana ..."..................7·1 1,411
5. Nonh Cardina ..,., •., .. .S-o 1,341

4
5
6

1. s-Han ..................f&gt;.l 1.240
1
8. 1owa .......................... .S.O I,ISI
I
9. Okloix&gt;m . ..................5.0 939
11
IO.FloridaSL .................l-2 887
10
II. Geotp&lt;own ........ ,.....4.0 179
11
12. ArkiNII,,.,,.,,H0":""'3.() 134
16
13. llCLA .......................S·l 120
13
14. s,...,... ...................s.o 762
15
IS. Ati&amp;onl .....................2·1 738
14
16. Putduc ......................4-0 604
ll
17.&lt;JoorPaTeclt.......:....2·1 SIS
17
11. Tulu!e ...................... S· I 459 20
19. CINCINNATI ..........3.0 427
19
20. ................. .5.0 31!3 " 2!1
21.l.o!Uville ..........!...... ].2 318
9
22.1JNLV ......................2.0 313
22
23. MM:hipn St .............3·1 263
24
24. ContteC&lt;icta ..............3-1 144
2l. ColiComll .................3.0 104

Other• rttell'lnl wotu1 Mu~
uchutetU 11, Bri&amp;llam You.na ~. N"IW
Meake Slate .53, Vand.-bilt 5!, 0100
STATE49, Wlltc p.,... 43, M. .pbll

s.... 32. r - - 32. IWIIaUt 11. flat.

dtt 2&lt;1, lltah 23, Vuainll 21, M11-m 11,

J'uo 14, Soulhem

w.......... 6, .... 6,

Nat.ima1Trail4~. VallefView41 '

Ncllonvillc-Ycd 69, Trunble.27
Newton F.U. 47, Y01111' Libaty 35
Nootltmor S2, Mono!Wd Otr. 14
Ot.k Hill 66, Pommoud! Notze Dame.
26

Ri....ule3!
.....,....47, Bowq0nm41
Potumotttlt W. 60, Po•t.mu..th Clay
41
Ravcm, SE 51, O.notlJYille 50
Raylond Buckel"' 51, Mulloo ,_., :r7

SLClWni!le 44, W i n - 39
SLMuyo 59, Dclphoc SL John l4

Shak•H~~o LIUR141, Widilift'o 39

Stl""'' 7l, Wooclofiol4 49
.
S1atbonvillc Cotlt. 45, T.....to 27
Sw. 53. Sylvania Sou&amp;hvicw -46
ntl'ln Cllverl31, Vanlue 30
Tol ClWtion 60, Tol. Wootlwud 3S
Tol. ~ 52. Anthony W•yne 50
ToL IY!iilntcr 63, ToL SLllnul.o 32
llniol1Loco145,S-:19
v..... eo. 41, w-.. 21
w.-52.-33
w. &lt;ltatp 70, - · 6 1
•
W. \Inion Sl, I'm '"''' 27

·~assists ..

3'

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores
C...tn! BaoL 9I, Cin. SLJtili 60
I
Co. Arlo 6'1, a..- 61
Co.~,Co.Ariotiono47

·
HowtO. 53, Like Ridge

dS a...

!!-itoPCw.51,Scanb-40
lbta't Aold. 90, C:nswacwda !57

Transactions ·

A_._
I

WI ·

BALTIMOU oaroLBs - Sillted
Iamie ~a,er, phc:her. utd Jcau C"ool•

'*'lb.-.to--...t..a-.
ontloooipod -

•= ri a'

10 •

..

cllbo In·

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Waterford Lady Wildcats
·
: picked up their second straight vic.. tory over a Meigs County team by
·defeating Southern 53-35 Monday
night !II Racine.
Waterford's win was its third
straight, boosting them to a 3-2
. mark owrall. Southern drops 10 0-3
: despite improving with , every
• game•
LeAnn Huck led the 'Cats with
·
: 17 points, while Amy Bailey and
: Christi Waller tallie&lt;! 11 each,
• Maria Hollinger ~ silt, Toni Lang
•' fo!D', and·SU!pbanie €Doper four.
·
Southern wu led by Aimee
Mills with 10, Bea Lisle with six,
: Jennifer Cross five, Aridrea Moore
: five, Sherri Stover fOur, Jonna
Manuel two, Amber Ohlinger two,
. andJes~Codnerone .
Mills 'and Cross' canned one
'
· three pointer each, while Lisle loft.{ed in two tteys .
Southern played one of its. best
defensive games of 1he year
according to head coach Jenni
, Couch. The Tornadoe~ shut down
',the Wildkittens early, but were
· unable to establish an offense of
their own.
•
Southern held Waterford's sea·
- son-long leading scorer, Christie
: Waller, to just ll points. Jessika
; Codner and Andrea Moore were ·
- credited with playing great defense
Waterford
: :against Waller.
.
(16-13-14-10=53)
Waterford broke a close game
Katie Wainwright 0-0-1=1,
open with hot shooting in the fmt Maria Hollinger 3-0-0..6, Christi
· · frame. That bot streak allowed the . Waller 4-0·3=11. LeAnn Huck 7-0visilors 10 shoot a red-hot22-of-44 2=16, Amy Bailey S-0-1=11, Toni,
: for SO% from the floor for the Lang 2-0-~. Stephanie Cooper 2. entire game.
0-Q..4. Totals - 23-0- 7=53
-: Couch said, "We played our
:: best defensive game of the year.
Southern
. ·We made some small mistakes, but
(5-4-15-11=35)
nothing'•major. We just couldn '1 put
Amber Ohlinger l-0-0=2,
. the ball in the hole. The girls really Aimee Mills 3-1·1=10, Jennifer
.hustled well. It was just a matter of Cross 0-1-2=5, Andrea Moore 2-().
'. them milking their shots. We got 1=5, Sherri StOver 2-0-~. Jessika
: down early and never came back." . Codner 0-0-1=1, Jonna Manuel 1·' Waterford rolled on to a '29-9 0-0=2. Totals- 9-4-5=35

The Easterayjunior high girls'
basketball team, coached by Paul
· Brannon, boosted its record 10 4-0
recently with wins over Kyger
· Creek and Federal Hocking.
Eastern defeated Kyger Creek
•' 32-17.
:• In the Kyger Creek' game the
~ •Eagles were led by Patsy Aeiker
.; who h!ld 12 pomts !lnd five
· •rebounds. Crystal Holsinger had
··eight poiniS and five rebounds, and
·.Laura Eastman four points and 10

IUverrT, Fton.,. 31

Cath. 27

.Waterford posts 53-35
·victory over Southern

Eastern junior high girls
undefeated after four games

Orwell 0ntto1 v.n. 46, M.tolowood 30
Oaowo·Gbndorf 67, Pauick Hauy 34
Painuvi.llc Haney 53, Paiauvillo ·

w.-s3,.....,11ottthmo3S
w.~,.72.W'n , ' 6 6
Wollavillo 56, Edi.m S.
W-32. Loaitt :14
W....46.Sia · cZJ
ZanavUie Rosecrans 70, .Newark

'

•

ttM,-.()..1

-----11111"11• W!ND

AM.Y10DAY

FURNITURE"&amp; JEWELRY, INC.
106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 992-2635
TOLL FREE (800~ 426-5581

Of*l Suncloy t-4 P.!l'.
EvenlngoiHII P.M.

Cntdlt tti!'N

l.av-o-wov•

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Vlso

Knicks top Nuggets
in NBA's lone contest

NEW YORK (AP) -Not many and was Ewin.g ·':s seventh strai.pt
people would have predicted that point. He led the Knicks with mne
Rolando Blactinan, who averaged 10 the third period.
19.2 points per game over bi! flrst
Mutombo, meanwhile, scored
10 years in Dallas, would still be 10 in the quarter but the Nuggets
awaiting a 20-point performance could pull DO closer than eight after
almost 20 games inro his fmt sea· Ewing's seven straight points. New
son with the New Yort Knicks.
York led 76-63 after tlnee quarters:'
Instead. Blactinan has struggled
The Knicks shot 65 percent in
since coming back from a presea- the third while Denver bit S6 person leg injury 10 average 8.1 points cent following a 33 percent first
per game in his l'irst 16 contesiS. A half performance.
··
49.7 !Jercent shooter with Dallas,
" We had a hQrrible shQOting
he is hitting at a 40.7 percent clip fm1 half.'' said Denver coach Dan
with the Knicks.
Issei. "If we just make our normal
Blackman scored a season-high shots, we've got !he lead at the
17 points 111Jti shot 7 for 12 til help half. They kept us down defensiveNew York defeat Denver 106-89, ly in the secdnd half and we could
the- NuggeiS' fifth straight loss, in never make a run.''
the lone NBA game played MonNew York, which has won nine
daynighL ·
of its last 12 games, improved 10
''I'm just trying 10 get to a level 11-1 at home, the best in the NBA.
of consistency," said Blackman,
acquired by the Knicks in June for
a rmt-round draft pick.
"In order for me to help this
team, I 'have 10 shoot and get some
points. I don't mean that in a selfish way, but myjob is to come off
picks and shoot the ball. I just have
10 keep working hard to reach the
:..pOMEROYt level that I've been playing at the
_lj last I 0 years."
Charles Smith scored 23 poinrs
1
. and John Starks had 17 for New
York while Herb Williams, who
spelled
Pattlck Ewing much of the
'
- - - night, added 10.
Ewing was hampered by a cold
FIGHT FOR ltEBOUND ~New York's Greg Anthony (50) gets
and sat most of the farst half with
into a fight for a rebound.wltb Denver frontmen Dikembe Mutum·
early foul trouble. He scored U
bo (behind Anthony) and LaPbonso Ellis during Monday night's
pQints and had four rebounds
NB~ game at New York's Madison Square Garden, which the
against fello'!' Georgetown ctnter
Knicks won 106-89. (AP)
Dikembe Murombo, who scored 15
and had 10 rebounds.
Chris Jackson led Denver with
26 points while Reggie Williams
added 14.
"Ro's 1\ealthr, he's in much
better condition,' said New Yort
coach Pat Riley. "And he's ready.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Montana State (2-2) on Saturday He's n:ally ready. I think we sort of
- Marshall's rivalry with Ohio and at Wyoming (3-l) on Monday.
stopped deferring to the righlness
Ohio is led by two freshmen, of what be has 10 do out there and
University is one of the oldest in
lead at the half, while continuing school hisrory. Coach Dwight Free- center Gary Trent (16 points and 10 play the game he knows how to
man, however, hopes this year's rebounds a game) and guard Gus play."
their net-ripping shooting s1reak.
Southern came back strong in game against the Bo~ars marks a JOhnson (12 points a game).
Blackman scored 13 in the fJISt
Marshall is led by senior for - half, one of the few bright spots
the third quarter by putt_in~ 1~ new chapter for the Herd.
A young Marshall team has ward Tyrone Phillips, who is aver- when the Knicks shot just 41 perpoants on the board, culling '!be
While
score to 43-24. Southern outsl:ored dominated two Division II teams, aging 26.7 poiniS and 6 rebounds a cent and led 44-39. He scored his
Waterford in the fmal round 11-10, Pitt-Johnstown and Longwood, for game. He had a career-hi·gh 38 remaining four points in the third
Supplies
but fell 10 defeat 53-35 ai the fin- its two wins thi$ season. But it lost points 11gainst Longwood last quarter when the Knicks collected
ish.
by 14 points 10 Pitt, irs only Divi- week.
Last
their fmt double-digit lead.
. Sophomore forward Malik
Southern hit 13-41 from tlie ·saon I opponent so far.
"Tonight I got great opportuniWilh tonight's game against Highrower is averaging 14.7 points ties," continued Blackman, whose
floor, connecting on 9-24 two ,
pointers and 4-17 three pointers. Ohio (0-3) at the Cam Henderson and sixth man Harold Simmons is career-high is 46 points. "If I can
They hit 5-17 at the line, while Center, the 75th in the series, Mar- averaging 13.7 points, including a get looks (at the basket) like that
oMC
shall returns 10 Division I oppo- career-high 27 against Longwood.
WHS bit 7-13.
every night, I know I can raise the
•VISA
Freeman said the Herd showed level of my game."
Southern had J9 rebounds to nents. The Bobcats lead the series
oOISC.
Waterford's 37, an area that the 39-35, including a 75-64 victory consis1ency in beating Pitt-JohnPOMEROY
· New York took its fmt 10-point
•LAY·
stown and Longwood and played lead, 61-SI, with 4:43 lefl in the
• Wildldttens dominated. Waller had last season in Athens, Ohlo,
Mot1.·$al 1:»8
AWAY
"You ~t up the schedule 10 be well in its loss 10 Pitt.
Sunay 12·5
nine and Lang eight for the winthird quarter on Ewing's three"We had an opponunity to win point play. That capped an 11-6 run
ners, while Codner and Ohlinger attractive to fans, but you want 10
had five and four respectively for have an opportunity to win," Free- against ?itt," Freeman said. "Peoman Said. "You can't play George- ple were expecting us to get beat
SHS.
town,
Syracuse, Seton Hall, Ari- by 30 and the game was much closSouthern had 29 turnovers, 14
zona
...
and be confident after er than a 14-point game. You've
steals, five assists, and 15 fouls :·.
that.'
'
got a moral victory there, but you'd
Waterford had 33 miscues, 18
Ohio
has
lost
to
Ohio
St!lte,
rather
have a win."
steals, six assists, and 16 fouls.
We can help find ·
Freeman
alsQ is pleased that
Robert
Morrif
and
Kansas
State.
After Southern led late in the
reserve game 19-13, Waterford The last two losses were by a com- Marshall bas kept ils turnovers
the investment that's
down and is playing well as a team.
outscored the hosrs 16-3 en route to bined three points.
"!don't think we have any pat- On defense, the Herd is averaging
a29-22 win.
,
right for you·
sies,''
Freeman said. "But there's a 16.7 steals a game.
Mary Alin Forshey and Cooper
·~I think we're going to have 10
each had eight for the winners, mix of teams in there. There's a
INCOME FREE
couple
of
teams
we're
supposed
10
continue
to do those things because
while Sammi Sisson and Ben Lisle
beat,
a
couple
we're
supposed
to
we're
starting
10
play
better
teams
had nine and seven respectively for
from Federal Tax, and
lose 10. The rest, it's a com ross."
day in and day out,'' Freeman said.
the Tornadoes.
After
Ohio,
t~e
Herd
plays
at
Southern wil go io River Valley
in some cases INCOME
.on Thursday.

Br SCOTT WOLFE
two of four tlnee s, and was 8-10 at
Belpn: overcame a 26-24 half· the line.
time deficit to defeat the Eastern
Both teams grabbed 31 ·
Lady Eagles 56-38 Thursday rebounds. Otto had 15 for Eastern ,
evening and remain undefeated in . Wilson six, and Aeiter seven.
five giiiiiCS.
Colebimk had eight fix Belpre,
Eastern drops to 2-4 overall. Mayne seven, and Banleu six.
Belpre is S-0.
Eastern had 23 turnovers, II
Easjj:m had led most of the fii'St steals, and 15 fouls. Belpre had 13
half, t8king a 10-9 fii'St period lend tumovers, 13 steals, and l7 fouls.
Ken Griffey, coach of the S~t·
before coasting on to a two-jx&gt;int
advanlage at the half. ·
· tie Marinerwrid former member of
Miscues. plagued Eastern the the "~ig Red Machine", was. in
second half, and in addition, the attendance ~t the game. Griffey
game became much more physical. Spends a lot of time in the Meigs"When the game gets physical Mason area with b•sketball official
and we don't draw the foul, we're Billy HollaDd.
Belpre won the reserve game
not effective. We really got hammered inside. We hit 11-14 at the · 31-10. Erin Humphrey and Rikti
line in the fJISt half and never drew Arnold each had eight for the win· the bonus until 1:34 left in the ners, while Tara Congo had four,
game. Additionally, the girls tired Micbelle Schultz two, and Melissa
out and we didn't get back on the Guess had two for Easlem.
Eastern hosts Trimble on Thursfast break, They beat us bad on the
break and that was the key to the day.
game," said EHS coach Scott
· Wolfe.
·
Eastern
(10-16-6-6=38)
Eastern was outscored 32-12 in
Stephanie Otto 3,0-4=10, Jaime
the second half.
Tabby Mayne led the winners . Wilson 2-1·7=14, Amy Redovian
with 26 points, Christy Bartlett had l-0-0=2, Penny Aeiker 0-0-2=2,
10, Beth Reck eight, Kim Arnold Tara Congo 1-0.1=3, Jessica Karr
six, Janie Colebank four, and Sheri 2-0-2=6, Nicole Nelson 0-0-1=1.
Stacy two.
Totals- 9·1·17=38 ·
Eastern was led by Jaime WilBelpre ·
son· with 14 pofnts including one
(9-15-14-18=56)
·· three pointer, Stephanie Otto with
Kim Arnold 1·0-4=6, Tabby
· 10, Jessica Karr with silt, Tara
Congo three, Amy Redovian two, Mayne 11-0-4=26, Janie Colebank
Penny Aeiker two, and .Nicole 2-0.0=4, Christy Bartlett S~IO.
Beth Reck 1-2-0=8, Sheri Stacy lNelson one.
0-0=2.
Totals- 21-2-8=56
Easlem hit just ll-49 two point(Scott Wolfe Is f;astern's head
ers, one for one three, and 17-21 at
the line. Belpre hit 21-of-61 two's, basketball coach)

----

Hard.in-Nonhan 52. Cory-Rawsm 51

6.S
I

New York illtNew Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Sillcnmento 11 Miami, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Atlanu, 7::30 p.m.
HO'Jitcn at CLEVELAND.7:JO p.m.
Boston at Minneaoc,il,l p.m.
Charlotte It Chicago, 8:30p.m.
L.A. LU.cn at Stn Ant«Uo, 8:30 p,m,
Washinaton at Pboeni.x, 9:30p.m.
Milwaukee ll Seatllc., 10 p.m.
L.A. Clipper~ 11 Golden Stale, 10:30
p.m.

Alabuna 14, Tu.•'kl

Oenaant NE 57, New Richmond 29
C!in...,.Muac 75, Lrnd&gt;""'i C.y70
CoL DcSu.. 61. CoL Eatmoor31
CoL St~~th rl, CoL Wect42
C....wood 67, Mop!""' 32
Jlly. Mcadowdalc 32. Day. Jcfferscn

Columbus could suppon an NHL
franchise some day, but added that
the city's biggest hurdle involves
getting an arena built.
'
"Right DOW, if the NHL were 10
award a franchise in Ohio, it would
have 10 go 10 Cincinnait,'' be. said.
Cincinnati has 16,000-seat River·
front Coliseum downtOwn and has
an International H()l:tey League
team that's averaging 8,694 fans
through 11 games at Cincinnati
Gardens, which seats 10,326. The
city's team, the Cyclones, are in
their first year in the IHL after
spending two seasons in the ECHL,
a lower-classification league.
"Columbus is as good a city as
Cincinnati," Maurer said. "Is the
city, the community, going to pull
together and see how far they can
take this thing, or is it a matter of
maintaining a Class Double-A
minor Ieagug, franchise here the
next 10 10 IS years? I hate 10 see
that because the potential is so
much more."

FrankJ.in..Monroe 56, Mihm-Union SO
Ga,.. Millo Hawkm l4. Aunn 37
Omiville S7, Bia Wolout33 '
Hamlltoo 71, Day. Colonc:l White 53

Tonight's games

lllinoU 7, Ooorp

Northm0l1143, Kcaerins Altu

Franklin Furnace Green 59, Coal

2.5
2.5

New Yod; 106, Denver 19

.

last minute ro go 10 a game. .
"The last thing we want is to be
an exclusive club for 5,700 ~le.
It's too good a market," he s&amp;d.
"We're missing some of last year's
crowd. There are a lot of people
who don't like IQ make a commitment for 15 glll!les or 32 games.
"I think we could average '
10.00010 12,000 a game."
The Chill has announced plans
10 build a practice facility in suburban Dublin because of limited ice
availability at the coliseum, but
there's no indication a new arena is
going 10 be built for boctey.
Mayor
Greg
Lashutka
announced in September that he
would fomi a citizens committee !o
study the arena issqe, but hasn't
named anyone to the panel. Several
.
previous attempts 10 build a down·
town ·spOrts arena haven't gotten
past the lalting $1lJ8e.
The team's public relations
director, Brent Maurer, said the
Chill's success would indicate

Oro.e19

!.S
2

Monday's score

c.y~m

DaJ. Patte~~t~~~ 12. Day. Belmont 36
Dublin 41, Grove City34
E. Livt:tpOOI 52. Lisbon 46
Eutwootl37, OtoJon Suitdt 30
Edi.m N. 46. Mioao luootioa 3S
Faiibom fil , Day. Stebbins 45
Fclic:ity 69. Williamabur&amp; 22

Mldwut Division

Team
W
Utili ....................... 12
"HOOJSLOO ......... ., .... .,ll
San Antonio ............. 9

PITISBURGH (AP) - PillSburgh _manager lim Leyland and
others praised CMI Barger's wit,
drive, kindness and negotiating
ability during a memorial service
for the president of the l'ltJI'nsion
Florida Marlias.
Barger. die Pirates• president
from 1987 to 1991. collapsed and
died Wednesday at the winter
meetings in Louisville, Ky., when a
blood vessel ruptured near his
bean. He was 62 years old.
SAN FRANCISOO (AP)- San
Francisco officials appoi.Cd a fiveyear lease coocessioos qrecmcnt
with the Giatlts in which the city
will pay the $3.1 million annual
cost 10 operatA: Candlestick Parle.
The board of SUpcl.-isoiS VOfed J().
1 in l'avor of the agreement, which
will charge the Giants $1 a year for
rent

cu.. lllnil«tl3, em. Ail:al31
Cin.l..octlaad 4S, New Miami 31
Cin. St.llanud 34, s.- Ililb 29
Cin. Sycomon: 51, Olk lli!ll34
em. Taf\49, Cin. Hupa 42
Cin. llnuline 55, Cin. l'lucell·Muim

2.S

2.5

.412

6. Mlchiaan ................... 3' 1 1,299

40 126102
37 131 92
26 87128
21 98116
11 881l l

V.noauve.- ......... 17 9 3

-

13

4l

6.S
7

p.m.
42 I3S 101
31 118100

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Tompa Boy ........ 11 19 2

.2!14

II

Central DI.Uion

WALES CONFERENCE

SLI.ouio ............ 11 15 4

12

9
9

Patine Olvlalon

KansuCityatN.Y. Cfianu, i'2:30p.m.

Minn-• ....... . .

13

PeL
GB
.650 .
.l50
2
.471
15
4
.450
.3SO
6

Chie~~ao.............. ., .. 13

Minneoo&gt;,, ................ !

~

Adanu Dt•lllon
Mono-col ............ 19 9 4
9 -................ 18 9 2
Quel&gt;oo ............... 16 10 6
Buff.Jo ............... 12 13 6
Hartronl ............. 1119 2
Oaowo ............... 3 26 3

. . . . . ." . .

D&amp;llu ....................... l

ReauJar-season nnales

,''

Deaver Bulan 67, Adena 46
Bdllin:l Sl , Brid&amp;ep!rt 30
Bru:knillc4S, Co. ErioYiaw 31
8-ville 72. Tli.County N. 42
BlldteJOTnil78. Cmbrid&amp;e41
C&amp;ft:)' 51, Muion Cath. 43
Curoll 55 Lemon Mqnroe 32
Cherltire Riwr Valley 64, a....pcab

EASTERN CONFERENCE
L
1

Sports
briefs ·
BaRbal .

Atwata W•Uidoo 41,
wn. 37
BimcMilc 72. Caldwelll4

1~:4().p. m .

In theNBA ...

Mllml20, LA.!Wden 7
Satl:wd.a

LeUna:::

Vancouver atEdmmton, 9:40p.m

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mobday's score

Alu.ondcr 49, Fcdoralllocking 40
Amc:Jll57. Cin. WalnDtlli!ll49
AtlinJl"ft 48, Pondono·Oilboo 47
Asht~bull Bdaewood S7.Ashtabu.IJ S4
Aah~abuia Hubor 50, Genevt 44
A1hcn1 65, New

Wednesday's games

278311
246341
2ll 305

386216
294182
283llS
262328

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

Waahinstm~at

M

· l'ltoatitt,.............

~

Toronto at Minnesoca, f :lO p.m.
N.Y.Ialanqcn: 'VI. St LoWs It Dallu.

Twn
W
N~w Yodc .............. l3
New Jeney ............ Jl
Orl.ando ..........
8
Ba~tm ......................9
· Wu!tingtoo~ ..............7
P!tilodclphi• ............ .s
MWN ......................s

"I wish we had more seats,"
said teamedknt David PaiiSOII.
"The building can't baDdle any
moo: people."
With full .season lictets at the
team's limit of 2,500 and IIIIOlber
2,500 pacl-ag'ls of lilhls for, MOCkend games sold. Paitsoo is fe.ful
of losing the fan who decides at the

Sllte 3, WIUG!IT STATE 3. HOlllloll 2.
Southwal Miuouri State 2, Temple 2,
Tnu l.

Dr:troi.t 1t Ottawa, 7:40p.m.
Ci!&amp;Ul' at N.Y. Rangao. 7:40p.m.
Philadelphia at Pitublqh, 7:40p.m.

Tampa Bay at San Joac,

aliJts games tbis _ . , ,

lowa State .S, XA VIEJl. OHIO .S. Mu·
quottc 4, B01lon CoUeJe 3, Oldahoma

Tonl&amp;ht's aames

COLUMBUS, Ohio (Al&gt;) ·The Columbus aun would Jove ro
have 11101e people atraJd its games
- if only there were somewhere 10
put them.
The team contiooes 10 be a success story in its scrond YCfl' in ihe
East Coast Hockey l.t:aguc, drawing an aVeta&amp;e of 5,8S5 people to
iiS first II gam~ at the Stale Fairgrounds Coliseum, which seats
5,700 people. The Cbill is cbwing
I 03 pereet11 of capacity and is the
only minor boc:tcy tcm~ 111 sell out

The Dally Sentinel- hge 5

-; Team_ captain Amanda Milhoan
; 'led the Eagles in rebounding with
· II, which contributed to the Eagles
·· 'fast breakinS game. Tracy White
•'had three poll)ts and silt re~unds,
• Martie Holter had three pomts and
Christy Grosnickle chi~ in one
point.
.
First year players Amanda Maynard and Erin Sex10n were c~ted
with playing good defense and are
becoming more confident with
every game according 10 Brannon.
Jennifer Martin led KC with
nine, Drema Dobbins bad si,~t,
Brandi Cremeens one, and Christi·
na Carey oqe. The Eagles won 32-

1'7.

.

.'

.

In the Federal Hocking game,
excellent rebounding and passing
contributed to 36-32 Eastern win.
Federal Hocking had taken a 32-31
lend, but Eastern buckled down to
win the game in the final seconds.
Eastman p!lved the way with
nine assists, nine rebounds, an.d
twelve points. Aeiker had 17
rebounds and 13 points; Milhoan
seven rebounds, and Holsinger II
points. HolSinger was credited with
her best game of the year, shooting
ove~ 60% from the field and the
line.
Brannon said, "It was a total
team effort. We rebounded well
and played good fundamental bastetb~ll. Wo passed unselfishly.
Marue 1-lolter, Am~ula Milhoan,
Amanda Maynard and Christy
Grossnickle played eltcellent
defense to stop Federal's outside
shooting. Aeiker, Eastman, and
Milhoan 100t care of the boards."
Gretchen Linscou led Federal
with nine points, Mirah McAfee
had seven, Debbie Buck silt, less!·
ca Mabomoy four, Erin Canol and
Heidi RaasmUSICII each with two.
Eastan goes to North Oallia on
Wednesday.

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Jewelry

Dehere, Walker major cogs
in latest Seton Hall victory
By JIM O'CONNELL
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Terry Debere and Jerry
Walker hare been playing on the
same team for eight years.
They were high school stars
together at national power St.
Anthony's iillersey City with a
point guard named Bobby Hurley.
. They came 10 Seton Hall together, and the two are having strikingly different senior seasons,
although they were both big parts
of the seventh-ranked Pirates 8854 vicrory o&gt;'er St. Peter's Monday
night.
,
.
Dehere had 27 pomts, three better than his !lverage this season,
while Walker had IS, five better
than what he had been averaging in
the fmt seven games of the season.
Walker scored 11 of his points 'in
the second half.
In the only other game involvin$ a ranked team Monday, No. 6
Machigan beat Cleveland State 88-

56.
"He's going 10 be fine," Seton
Hall coach P.J. Carlesimo said of
the 6-foot-7 Walker. "We're 7-1
and I wish Jerry was getting 20
points and 12 n:bounds, but! hon·
estly don't worry about Jary. Yes,
I was encouraged and that was a
real solid half. He's going to be
OK."
Walker's Slump has come at the
same time he moved from playing
bis usual center ·position to the
power forward spot because of the
emerg~nce of 7·2 junior Luther
Wright] .
Dehere, wl1o made 10 of 16
from the field, including 4 of 9
from thn:e-polnt range, said there
was a concerted effort 10 get Walker going in the second half,
Wright had 12 points. Oyango
MeniplaD led the Peacocks with 1S
points.
I
No. 6 Mlcbipa 88
Cleveland St. 54
Juwan Howard and Chris Web- ·

FRE.E from state tax.

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES

ber each had 21 points as the
Wolverines (4-l) cruised to the
home viciOry with a Sl-24 rebound
advantage. Howard scored six
straight points in a 10-2 run that
gave Michigan a Sl-30 lead six
minutes into the second half and
w!ls never closer than 19 the rest of
the way.

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• Registered Representative
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MASON,WV

�•

Tllaaday, December 1 18112

Ohio

Yearly mammo
~In:

I IlK dy
..a a ll*le II • local Pill*
dolc:riblq tile Iiiii of lll'lut
I

Past Councilors
tmas
program presented; winners named

save lives

care dill the _, they - r " 1
mi&amp;ht be marriCd or c:ommiaed 10
- . Bill no loDger will lldmit
C*ar. Aa, . . . . 1111,... ......
lh!l he - tbele lewd WOJDell, In
f!CI, he Ia now lying 10 me when I
ennotiO•... 'oadallipl
alone.
Ilk, "Haw yoa uy C'l 1110111
llliilpa lately?" He'll uy, "No,"
Ibldaoaorllbe .....
.........,.. ' ~
wblcb rm sure Ia ncit true.' I'm
lllld10wab-nolunlpo,10
~., I lr
• bavil!&amp; trOUble controllinl my
' family bllray, no ip'Wded..,.
or uydllna die tblllllilbt ildlillle
lhlD&amp; Ia to alert all . emotion!, Ann. PleiiC help ide. lnul ~ but wben I -.t Ia "'OJJI''I 111M IIIey m..a not ae1y Cll =OAD BURN IN VISAUA,
for a IOIIine memmopam, ...u
VISAUA: In mne .-.,.
calcificltiOili """! flllllld in my diDailr .,_alone. By die timelboy ·
lbow
up,
CIIICCir
may
be
foalbiw
this
cOuld
.....
·illled ••;,.·de'llail
breiiL A bloplythen aloq ud require mucb •ore
""'CDIIi=
. ._ . .
an immediale lumpoctomy was u!C!!ihe tnlMDWiiiL _ CA PROM eJPOili:R". or "lewd lild 1-=!Yiou
perfOIIIIOd bee-• !here wu,indeed SALEM, VA.
·
hehaVJOI', but ,the lniCker r;o.uld
8 maliplncy.
.
DEAR VA.: Thank you for a have 10 report at and I cloubt,tbll
My CIIICer wu in the milk duels · 1eacr that ilswe10 save Jivea.
many would.
with a anall area invadioa th6
And now a word 10 my female
Aclllally, the probl~ is with
lining of the walla. Becaua or tbla, rrada'S: Plea, call your doclor and you. W!JY 11ft! )'011 d
Ill abow
I have liDI:e lllld io have whit Ia ask if )'OIIIbould mab an appoint- IOJI!tlhin&amp; your IJusband 1\ltaebel
called an u•ilipuy node dia«cioo, ment for a lllllllliiiOJil nicJc IIC no ~ 10, lild )'011 can do
which mCIIIIII they bad tQ ~ mapy more "VL•1 • out lhcte, QDiy nothmg •bc?Ut? What a Wille of
: . RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSE REINDEER •
CII.JM M party .. tile Hglda, Ju, Galipolis.
PI'! of the I~ nocJes under MY, they don't know It yet.
energy!
- • ·
.
Jhla IJ'OUP or Wabama High School students
11111 oo the side C'l tbe cancer. 1bli
It was OM 11115 ads~•ted bJ the IJ'OUp.
Dear
Aan
Landers: 'I1Iia is a
Gem ?f the Day: It ISII't the thinp
rtom Mason City, W.Va., members or the
Left 10 riPt are Carl
Oris Kupp, Travis
is a JRCIIIIiOnlly IJieUft 10 mab COJilplaint as well as 1 reqUCII. 1 thN ao m one - IJid om die olher
Wabama Pantomime Team, present ''Rudolph
Joll-, wllo pla)ftl die lead; Mille V:!nMatre
swe that no cancer hal invaded the am angry with women who drive ~cauae 1rOUble. k's ~things dial
die Red Nose Reindeer" during Monday nigllt's
and.JasaaWeawr.
lymph system. I will soon Slarl down freeways and highway a go 11 ~ - · J'tl all mixed up, antl
~nnpal Ohio Valley Publishing Company's
radialion
the!'IPY to kill any ~and/or boaomlea. M bUs- then slip om the IIIOIJ!h·
.
•
, waywanl cells which may still be in band is a 1nJCt drivet and ~ tees
Do JON Nwe qWSUOIII aboJIIJU,
my breasL .
this sor1 of indece~t ·exposure -~~ M o"! lo talk·to? ~11111AitMrs:
I have jusl retutned from my constantly.
.
'foOklet, 'Su llllll 1M ~utt.,.,~r.
oncologist. who lllld me that as of
Like
all
truckers
"Bill"
WIU:lJes
IS
frattlc llllll 10 tltt poUlt. Selld a
'
,Approximately
90 people were presentation of service awards 10 Shr.ni Codwwt IJJd Janice Veazey, now there is no cancer in my . lhc can that so by 10 Jdiews the st/f-addreued, lott8, lnuitttss-siu
on)harid for the annual Ohio Valley II vetcnn employees by l'lodJ!is!Jcr Pt. PJ~t. 20 years: Tammy body and I should live 10 a ripe old monotonyofloagholnootheroad tttvelope aNI a clwck or_,
Pliblishing Company's annual Robert Wingett.
.
Moore lild Paul Barla:r, Gallipolis, age. He said that l will not need Ann is diere anything 1hat can .,C ordtr for $J.6J (this ittciNdes
~family pany at the HoliHonored were: Margaret Ldlcw, Hcmy Rayhanl, Pl. Pleasant and cllemothcrlpy and thai I do 110t need ~ legally 10 get tbe1e immoral postage llllll lltwiJittg) to: Tutt;r,
day Inn in Kanuga Monday Pomeroy, 3S years; Charleoe Hoe- David Halris, Pomeroy, 10 years; 10 continile seeing hiin. I do need to
c/o ANI Ltwkn, P.O. Bo~ 1JJ62,
eYening.
flich, Pomeroy. and Margaret Pauy Simptins and G. Spencer c:ontinue wilb yearly 11111111110gr1m women to stop?
How do 1 deal with my anpr71t Chicago.• Ill. 60611-0J62. (1n
ltighllght of the evening was the Finnicum, Gallipolis, 2S years: Osllame, C-aJ11riis, five years.
.!or ,lhc rat or my life.
bums
me that these tramps don't CIUIIJda, stlld $4.4J.)
.
F'ollowioc dinner, Morgan and
Victie Bran's Wahama Pan·
tomime Te.a pmenled lS 'Christ·
· IUood donors in Meigs County visit the Meigs Countj- SeniOI' Citi· masaas..
This year's eve.. was sponsored
being urged to take time from zens Center from I 10 S:30 p.m. 011
by
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
their busy holiday schedules to December23.
Community Calendar items care. Everyone welcome.
of Chester United Methodist
staff.
Lairy Boyer served as master
rhlwe blood next weelc:.
"Our goal of 80 units per visit is
two da,YI before u event
appear
Church
will present "Christmas
ol
ceaP:I•m••
~irian Reed, chaimum of Meigs
always difficult to reach," Reed
~ad tbe d&amp;J ot that event. Items
MIDDLEPORT
•
Special
meetComes to Lone Star Gulch" ThursPrr s twion of lifts concluded
CO!IIIty's bloodmol!ile program, said, "but I !antic!pale dill it will be
must be received weD in advance ing, Middleport Lodge No. 363 day at 7:30 p.m. at the church.
the
eveniJI&amp;'s
aelivibes..
·
sai4 that the date of December 23 especially bard this time; since it's
to assure publication in .the cal- F&amp;AM, Wednesd$y, 7 p.m. Work Everyone welcome.
·
A•~n•tiJ. wm::
is Dol a convenient one for most only two days ·before Christmas.
endar.
in
the
fellow
craft
degree.
Members
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Atleiiding were: Donald E.
cloO&lt;n, but the need is just as great But think of what a gra1 a.n.......
urged 10 allend.
Slieena
King,
Evelyn
Springs
Better Health Club will
Wrighl,
now as anytime.
gift a unit of blood could be for
,
TUESDAY
.
Wright,
Shirley
Billings,
Brian
have
its
Christmas
potluck Thursl•Most of Meigs County's regu- someone whose life dc:pc:nd• on it.·
. CHESHIRE • The Gallia-Meij!s
POMEROY
•
Meigs
Athleti~
Fred
Hoffman,
Pauline
day
at
the
Rock
Springs
Billings.
lar blood donors have to make time
The blood donation J1i0CC$S is
Community Action Agency wall . Boosters will mee1 Wednesday at Methodist Church at noon. United
Christ·
Hoffman,
Mapel
Finnic11111,
Jack
10 ilonale blood, and we appreciate relatively painless, Reed said, and
hold a free clothing day Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at the high school. All mas trays for the shut-ins will
be
Finoinw,
Tcna
Barta-,
Paul
Bad:"
that." Reed said. "However, they takes only about 30 minutes from
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high members are urged to.attend.
cr.
Shari
Coclnn,
Gary
Cochran,
prepared
and
delivered.
will have to put forth a special start to finish. Reed also emphaschool building in Cheshire.
effort to donate this month. The sized that donating blood is COJII· Henry Raybum, Judy Rayburn,
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
. __ J
THURSDAY
Maxine Snodgiass, Charles Snod·
need for blood is always great, but pletely safe.
group
or AA will meet Thursday at
CHESTER • Chester Township
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart.Catholic
"Many potential donors do 110t ~- Debbie }a!tiJ!s, Mike Jenk· Trustees will hold a special meet·
lt's~ ~ways easy to ll)ake an excuse
Plains VFW Post 9053, regular
to forego an opportunity to donare give blood because they fear the m.s, Bob W'mgeu, Pat Boyer, Larry
ing at 9 a.m. on Tuesday at Chester meetinJt on Thursday, 7:30p.m. ChUrch. Call 992-5763 for inforBoyer.
Gary
ClaJt,
Vickie
Clark,
blOOd. Unfortunately, a lot of peo- AIDS virus," Reed said. "There is
mation.
Town Hall.
Members urged to attend.
ple: fill their December schedules absolutely no risk 10 the doncr. A Jean Davison, Mill Rodgm, Betsy
Chc:ningtm, Hdeo Davis, Em1114 ·
with Christmas parties, shopping new, clean needle is used
POMEROY • American Legion
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Lou
Davis, Janil:e Vsay, JoAnn
trips and family gatherings, and time a unit of blood is aJII
1
Drew
Webster Post No. 39, Christ· Conservancy District will hold its
Errett,
Margarel
Lehew,
Bill
doa't make time to donate blood. and then the needle piopedy disIs
II*!
for
...
·.
mas
dinner,
7
p.m,
The
meeting
regular board meeting on Thursday
Tlds puts a tremendous strain on posed of. Nones at die site war Lehew,
OuisllllisSeas-. . ·.
wiU begin 8t 8 p.m.
.
at
7 p.m. at the board office. ·
Tammy
Moore,
Ed
Moore,
~lood'supply, especially in light rubber gloves. Funhcr, eacb unit or
9to 5 Moi.·Sclt.
. Sean Riffle, Debof~ .~reued&lt;demand that the blood rollect.ed is saceoed bduc Joaaie s·
SYRACusa • Sr.racuse Ele.
1 toss.~~~av
MIDDLEPORT • Members of
helidayi creare.•
being used. So thcle is no rist 10 bie. CaJi:~~e CaJl, Amy M. mentary School w•ll present a
Hope
Baptist
Church,
will
be
carolFeatw.ii
PoliiiiftQaili 7"' ·
Wedemeyer,
Raymond
'Keefer,
: The American Red Cross will the donor or the recipienL"
Chrislmas
program
011 Tuesday at 7 ing Thursday. Meet at the church at
Pam
l'lr4wm,
M'ddle
Caner,
Dan
; '
colon, P'oiutnla
~
Adtins, Amy J. Leach: Dennis p.m. First, secqnd and third grades 7p.m.
laskets.l:lofr ~ F~ ·
Carder, Helen Bush, {Jayland will present, "The· Little Bell That
MIDDLEPORT
•
Middleport
Baskets, IJvi .d (II T~
Bush, Phyllis Roach, Thomas Could Not Ring", and fourth,.fifth, Child Conservation League1annual
Ftr tlepartetllo- OleS:
ROIICb. Terri Shinn, Kiuy White; and sixth grades will perform Christmas dinner, Thursday, 6:30
"Angels,
Lambs,
Ladybugs
and
....kets. ~ SlifiYtcM
bead, "- WhildJrad, Libby Mat·
p.m. Secret pals will be revealed
,..
tox. Walta' Mlaox, Cleo Lieviag, Fireflies".
•
YIIIIS.
and there will be an ornament
: A Meigs County quilter took national. In i9?&lt;J her quili in the Norm Lieving, Mindy Kearns,
HUIIQD'S, $JraftiM, 011.
REEDSVILLE • Bastem Local exchange.
.
~lfSt in state l!lld an honorable men- pattern, "DoubiC Irish Olain" a1Jo Clu:is Klans.
.
H2·5776
,,
. in national on her quilt in the took ail honorable melllion in the
Crisli Hemphill, Kelli May, Board of Education, Tuesday, 6:30
.
CHESTER
•
Junior
high
choir
t!J Annual Grange Quilt Con- nation. In 1988 a sampler which Patricia Simpkins, Kevin Pinson, p.m., Eastern High School.
L
she made took fli'SI in the - . but Jim Fm:mw Mary Fieeman, Rick
WEDNESDAY '
Simpkins, PUa Simpkins. C.Oiyn
. Kathryn Miller of Minersville no national honors.
·
SYRACUSE
• The Syracuse
assisted in making the prize
This year Miller also entered bc:z' Young, Chip Young, PJ. Harris, Homemakers Club
will have a
· ~g quilt by Bunny Kuhl. Both "Tumbling Blocks" wall hanging io Holly Williams, Julie Dillon, Don
Christmas
party
Wedne.
sday at 1
a'U"members of the Rock Springs competitioo, and took an bonlnblc Coleman, C}'lldi Coleman, Beuy
p.m.
11
the
Syracuse
Presbyterian
mention in the state. It feabired lhc Tope. Panl Tope, Charlene Hoe- Church. There will be a potluck
Olympic colors, red, green, blue, flich. Bob HoeOitb, Kalie Crow, and
_$3 gift certifi~ate. Bring table
•• yellow and black with Olympic Fred Crow, Beverly Wilson, servace.
m or the quilL The twobinch
Hobart Wilsoo, Jr., TinJ Richard·
es ar~ in peach, green and symbols in the conta'S.
. The quilt took ·fll'st in state
In the II categories of judging son, Katlli Boggs, Dave Harris,
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
.
·
~11ge judging at Kings Island, to of Miller's quilt, 'Trip Around lhc TammiBild.
....
Literary
Club; Christmas meeting,
for the national competition World", she received an excellent
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. at the home
)eftv.er. Colo.
·
plus for the even and consistent
of·
Mrs. Oeorfe Hackett Jr. "The
is the second time that a quilting stitches, seven excelleacs
PO!!try
of Christmas" will be pre·
made by Miller has gone to two very goods, and one zood.
'
(Candlnticke, Collllr Sell, Triv.ta, Cindie Hooka, Old
sented by Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
Felhlon Mitch Dox•, lltll&amp;, Bookl!ldel
Roll call will be to "!;ing an orjgi·
nal verse for,a Christmas card.
Dllr Au

Ann · ·

The Put C!Juncllors Club of
Chester Co~il No. ~23, ~ughtm of Amilrica, held all Oaristmas
prop1nneceotly ll the haD.
The meal was cooked and
~ed by ~bed of the Convenuon Commmee: Jo~l)n Baum,
Nathan and Bette·J!l•ggs, Dons
Grueaer, Esther Smath u.J Betty
Spencer.
The blessing was given by Ella
Osborne. Erma Cleland and
Dorothy Myers were hostesses and
servC!( dessert.
.
In~y Newell preSJC~ed at the
meetmg. She read from St.
Matthew. The I.or~'s Prayer and
p~edge ~ the ~encan flag were
gtven 10 unniJn. ~embers
~roll call was tellin.g what
laked mo~t about Christmas.
Jo Barnnger and Thelma

we•

DEAR

.._and

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.
.
. ,
Whate gave the.off'ICCJS reports.
. Esther Smith &amp;ave hostesses
shps for 1993. Mary Jo Barringer
thanked the club for her gift and
the members who ~nt her cards.
Mary K. Holter thariked members
for ~er cards and phone calls she
receaved after she got home from
the hospital. ~appy Birthday was
sung to Ada Ba~ll.
The next lodge night will be
De&lt;:. IS ·at 6 p.m. !twill ~e the
Christmas supper .w•th meeung .to
follow. There wlll ~e a $3 g1ft
exchange and a Chnstma,s program.
Ell~ Osborne and Esther.Smith•
were m charge of the Chnstmas
program. Lo~ Damewood played
s~veral Chnstmas songs on the
p1ano and several members read
verses at the end each

t.auung 10 the meanmg ot the songs.
There was a gift exchange, silent.
prayer for the military persoMel in
Somalia Africa and closing prayer
by El'mli Cleland.
Door prizes were won by Betty ·
Young, Opal Hollon and Esther
Smith.
Attending were Sadie Trussell
Ethel Orr, Lom Damewood, Eliza:
beth Hayes Jean Frederick Erma
Cleland Marcia Keller o;,rothy
Myers, Alta Ballard, vrr'ginia Lee,
Belly Young, Laura Mae Nice, .
Margaret Amberger, Goldie Fred·
erick, Mae· McPeek, Ada Bissell,
Coru Beegle lnzy Newell Pauline
Ridenour, Ella Osborne, cipru HolJon, Charlotte Grant, Betty Roush,
Mary Jo Barringer, Faye Kirkhart,
Thelma White, Mary K. Holter,
JoAnn
Esther Smith and a

POSTER WINNERS • Winners of tbe poster
cootest, "Have a Ball with Fair' held at Chester
Elementary are, l·r, l'ront, JuU Bailey, Tllrany

•The Area's Number!
Marketplace

C·

•.,

QVP holds family Christmas party

IJ:loodmobile set for Dec. 23

Comm~nity

. are:

RATES
Days

To place an ad

calendar

::::!l,

}JON. thru FRI.

s.,..M.-5P.M. -

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Piper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Su.8-12

CLOSED SU!'IDU
POLICIES

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Salurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
••t

• Ad. o.UW. the eo-ty pur ad nm1
be pnpaid
• Recai.Ye dilcout for ad. paid in adYaDCe.
• l:reoAdo: Ci--y uol F.....! oolo uader IS worob will be
1'11D 3 da71 &amp;I DO ct.up,
• Price of !il for aU eapitalleuen II double price of !il coot
• 7 poialliioe tyr' ooly uoed
• s..;liolelio- ..,...ihle for errore.,... r......., (chock
forimon flntday!ilruaoia paper). CaJibefo,. 2:00p.m.
day altoor puhlicalioa to .W:o -liooo
• AcL that
be paid ia adYaaa are:
Card of Tloaaluo
Happy Ado
· Ia Moaoria•
· Yard Saleo
• A clu!iflod
,.oat pl!ood Ia tile Callipolio Daily
Tribuao (aHJII Ctu.lflod Dlooplay, BUlb.~ Card or Lepl
Nolie•) will aloo
Ia tloe Pola! Pleauat R.ptor aud
t1oe Doily S...liMI, .....lalat .... ta,ooo too. .

245-Rio Groade
256-G..,oa Die!.
M3-Anblo Dlol.
379-Wolnal

a..,....

992-Mtddleport/
Pomeroy
98s..a-&amp;er
1143-Porlload
247-Letofl Folo
949-Roelae
742-Radond
667 -Cooi..We

YOUHQ PEOPLE .
DO rou Med a awt
In lie?
.
11 yra Mil up. e..n aa
mueh aa you - • · tuN
or pait time from your
horne.Noc*h
IIIVWbJMII, be your
own boH, even II
you'ra atllla atuclent.
Thle 18 Income that
kMpe golni,even
whenyou n't
(814) 378-41153
1-12 and 11-10 m

.'

SMALL GD.I' ITEM ·

Names in
the news
0

LOS ANGELES (AP) "Goldeo Girl" Belly White helped
unveil a new video designed to
taid1 people how 10 identify and
J&amp;CWUUIIille IJIM the elderly.
Aboul S,IIIO alpies of the video
will be given 10 social service
aaeoeies, police ~DIS and
hospil•h in Califuma, Stale Aaorney General Dan Lungren said ·
Moilday.
.
The video, tilled "Lifeline ...
I'm~ Elder Alue," is IIBllat·
ed by Miss Wlrite, star or TV's
"The Goldeo Gills" lild "Golden
Plllce.''
J,.un&amp;lal cited a lllidy dial said
D c!Ric
1 90,000 eJdel1y people
wae al• *' ill Cali&amp; • nia. bat only
6.SOO o l d i e - - JqJOJtod.
"It is lillie 10 110p sweoeping this
problem lilldJ:r lhc rag,'' he said.
"It !I lime 111 c:ad toeiely's SIIIC of
deoiaJ. We need a totalaocietal
commitmeol to stop elder abuse

POMEROY • The Alzheimer
and Related Disorders Support
Group will meet Wednesday from
1·3 p.m. at the Meigs County
Multi-pwpose Senior Citizen Center. A video will be shown on skin
.
'.

-

~

Slale Auto's already
low.prelllium$ can be
redlaced even more by
. insuring bolh your car
•11011 home with the St...
Aula Companies.
Latus 1811 you just

how much your savings

can be.

and Ill . . . cu jJMtiiiS lild gnmd·
I*UIII widJ die •"4'&lt;U and dignily

lheJdc

December Special

. $1.00

Senior Cltlzenl $6.00

II you need lrlllh pick·
up or mote Information
eall

-

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

or

• Christmas Ornaments
• Potpourri

1

(Candlesticks, Trivets, Napkin Rings,
Christmas Ornaments, SJocklng Holders)

Needlepoint Stockings atd
Coaster Seis
• Christmas Throws .
"Musical Boxes
·~nique P~cture Frames
\
"Holday Cake Candles
"Colomal Hand Dipped Candles
• Amis• Musical Miniatures
"Gild's Rocker .
.

lftiiWIDIII'•
..
nna~YftiiiiO% liD MOll

orr •a.BiftiL.

/

'214 EAST MAIN
992-6887

.........
.1!1_.eo,..
.... ...,••
Auto .

..

Card of Thanks

The

~

we."

· POMEROY

......"

9U-4H2

" Lovely Ptwttr Accessories

.

1613rd Ave.. O.llipolle, Oh'.

Open Su,nday 1-4; W•kday• 9to 8;
Saturday 9·5

$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day · $.05/day

~1

1'1'1

'

II~ 1

·-·

,\ I I \ I ~ I I l I 1,

GET RESULTS • FASl'f

41- Ho... for Real
42- Mobile Ho.... for Rut
: . 43--- Far1111 for Reat
.*'- Apartmeat for R•t
45-'- Fumilhod.lloo...

46- Space for Rent
41- Wanled

2- Ia Memory
3-- Aaa.ouncemenll

675-Pl. PI-ani
458-Leoo
576-Apple Gro•c
773-Muoa

II- Help Woalod
12- Silllalio"' Wau ted
13- lnauraace
14-- B~.a~iaeu Tralnine;
1~ Sc:booll &amp;: ln~ll'actioa
I&amp;- Radio, TV a CB Bcpoir
17- Mi!cellaaeoUI
18- Waalold To Do

4-- Gina-way
5-HoppyAdo
6- Loll and Found
1- ~land Fouad
s.... Public sate a
Au.ctioD
9- W...lold 1+&gt; Buy

882-New Dana
' 895-Letort
937-ButT.to

t:I\T\1&gt;

I'll-· AuoiOO for Sale
Trucko for Sale
a 4 'I'D'o
Mo1010ycloo
Boa.. Mown for Solo
Auli&gt; Partt A..,,....,.ieof'
Auto Repair

a

C..t&gt;lal Equi,-

Rflllt
48-- Equipmeal for Real
49-ForLeue
lo

\11 ·.111.1 1 \\Ill:- I

a

... 1

'-11\\111'

:'

'8

.....

Pl. .hlolt

51- Uouoehold Good.
52- Spor!las Good.
53-ADtiq.,..
54- Mloc. Merohaadioe
5!&gt;-- BwLiin« Suppll•

-·.
.,.

a Hoot~es

ExcanUas

; ·~

84- Eloctrieol a Refr·ipnolio~
85- Ceaerol Houllat!
~I
86- Mobile HoMe Repair
Upholootery

' 1j
·' I

~----~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·

"'as

• Old World Santa's
"' Shiny Brass Accessories

•.

a

Fnoi.. Veptahloo
For Sale or Trade

I \I: \I

. Area

446-Golllpolh
367-a...hlre
388-Viatoo

'

M .. iealiiUitruaeall

$ .30
$ .42

Gallla County Melp County M11110n Co., WV
Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

o.J,.,,,

IJI'Y!

SALE .

$4.00
' $ 6.00
$9.00

..

Over 15 Words
$ 10

'

Clauified page• cover the
follot.ing telephone exchange, ...

••t

"-tiil

l""""' '"w~•·

Rate

32- Mobile Homea for Sale
33- Farru for SaM
Rates are for conseqitive runs, broken up days will be
34-- Bu.i.... BuiJdiaelo
charged for each day as separate ads;
35- Lo .. a Ac..,...
==:--~~-i 36- Real E...teWaulold

tOO p.m. ThW'9day
I :00 p.m. Friday

•w

Local quilter competes in
$tate, national contests

Words
1
15
3
15
6
15
10
15
Monthly 15

family of
JC~mee E. Hawl'y
who paaeed away
Nov. 20, 11192, wleh to
expr•• their thanka
and appreciation lo
everyone who Hnl
carda, food, phone
cal'•· houaa calla,
money, beau11ful
flowera, plan1era and
prayera.
Spc;clal thanka to
Rev. J - K - "
and Mr. Don Ber
Barkman for lhe
prayer• and comfort·
lng .-rda, and ear·
vic•• at the VIC1ory
Bapllal Church,
Ewing Funeral Horne
and ataff, member•
of Melga County Golf
· Couree, .. peclally
Mt'. George Ne..elI'OIICI, Pomeroy Emer·
gency Squad, Dr.
PatterMn and ataff at
Veteran• MeJDC)rlal
Ho•pltal, Pomeroy
ArnerlCin Legion for
graveelde urvleea
and apeclal thanka to
Mr. Joe61Nb~
God Bl..• each
and~one.

L.01e, a.c~~y, Debl,

Jim Joe, u.ry Beth,
grandchlld18n and all
lh1 family.

.

MOTHERS AT HOlE
Clvlatmaa Income!
Eaay-kfrom
hc).me. No calh start
up. Start at once and
you'll never have to
worry about
Chrlatmaa money
agalnllncomelhat
kaapa going when
can1.

:. ·lEVIN'S UWN
IWNTENANCE
949·2391 or
1-100·137·1460 .
Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Saedlng.
Shrub and Trw
Trlmml~ a Removal

R-

J.ou
(6 4) 378-6153

8-1
F,..EIIIrMlll

!lam -12 pm and

AREWOOD FOR SAI,E

6

&amp;-21-'e2~1n

·10

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
Noed a Gift?
Rugs, Placamats,
Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals,
of small artie las.
50¢ and up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985-4356
11-30-1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
STARTS
OCT.

_
Bl' LLETI\ B().\RD
..

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION .
SMITTY'S
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
THURSDAY, DEC. 31
'8:00 P.M. 'TIL 1993
Faad • Mutlc • Ch~ne
$15.00 Couple/$10.00 Slnglil

992·6484

L"'*ed T1ctleta Available

c

·TREES

5' 7' TALL
I

HARLEY HAlliNG
RESIDENCE
35975 Flatwoe4s Rd.
PoMeroy, Ohio
lCotnty Roatl 26)
REASOHAILE
111:l611 mo.
. OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
2 32 2nd St.,
Pomeroy
992·2036
Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12·1·2 mo. pd. ·

•u 1111 SERVICE

.....

lrti h .. TIPPIII.I_,..

Jr• rsil.id..

~~

whit .w....
742·2160

11-1:..'112·1 mo.

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Fresh Cut Daily

5' • 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.
742-3051

SR124

Ready Nov. 26

11·17-112·1 mo pd.

Cell14-tll2·71041or

11

1.

Wanted

· Overbrook Center has part
time shift openings (7:00.3:00
and 3% hr. shifts) for state
tested nurses aides. Salary
based on experience.
For more Information contact
Karla Hunter at 992·6472.
E.O.E.

.I

'"

CHRISTMAS

24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOnL£ OF LonON
132.00
Ma1y 11011 specials.
NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT t'IC:IcrTIICJt'jlTCQI

FOREVER
BRONZE
lalhan 111., Racine
939·2126
AU. SESSIONS GOOD
FOR tMONTHS
11-23-'112·1

' GRAVE
BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

$20.00
(614) 949-2058

CHARLIE'S

;a

n~~ng

. 31904 IA•dill
CrMkRoad
Middleport,

o•io ·

614·992·7144

FARM TOYS
Sholllod!l! • Coltoctlblio

'Rido,.ln Slclcl&lt;'
Spoel!l Eclllon ·ShoW PI!-

.
StoAt .
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP

255 llill St., lllddl!pod, 011.
1182-3314 Oap, 742-3020 Evt.
I 111&gt;4 pm Wookdaya
I un-12 prnSIIIIIrdaya untl
Clvi!l....,

A•klarDol•

10%·20% Off
IPuttere, Beginner Seta,
Youth Cuatom Drlvera.
Leeaona lnc;luded whh
purcha11e.
Localed on Scout Camp
Rd., Chester, PH.

.
JAMES KEESEE ·
992·2772 or
742·2097

539

992·7553

. • ICROWAYE OVEN
••dVCR REPIIR
llliUIEI
lrlnJ II In Or We
lck
KEN'S APP lANCE
SERVICE .
992·5335 or
915·3561
lctlll Jr•• Pllt Offke
217 L S.C... 11.
I'OMIIOY, o•o

ut

.

•r•• Pl•ce'
o•io•

·1

Middleport,
.I

10/1/92 tfJt

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES CLUB
IN . POMEROY ·
6z45 P.•·
Special Early llril

s1000 ::J•"

Thlsadl
for 1
FIE 10r..
lie. No. 0050..32

Quali2
Stone o.
!

SIZID LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992~

'

6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

3123/92Ain

11137

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE

WOI~

DRIVEWAY ORI
liMEnONE
DELIVERY IERYICE
S11all Dozar Wark
$25.00 Ptr ·
IWONllll
UIU

••d

~

11f.!7

D.K.'s

Siding ·

SMALL DOZER

PLUMBING

R&amp;C EICAVATI.
BULLDOZING
PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER i
LINES
·'
BASEMENTS &amp; K
HOME SITES
:
HAULING: Llmes1one,:
01 rt, Gravel and Coal ·
LICENSED end BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

12-5-lfn

11127

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
12N1 mo. pd.

992-6215

P01111n1y, OI!Jo

CHRinMAS TREES

&amp; CRAFTS

PIES

BRADFORD'S
Fresh Cut Tre11
or Cut Your Ow1.
· . CHERRY RIDGE
Eaat of Darwin • Rt.
611 Oft . ,• .,.......

ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985·4107

l~MIIetolron.

WATCI •01 SIGNS

TROLLEY STATION

CUFTS
992·2549
ltERRY CHIIITMAS
OPE. HOUlE ·

SAT.OEC. 12-IOtol
SUN. DK. 13-lto 6
Specie! HoUday Houro

Open Until 8 Mon.·SIII.
Alter Dec. 10
Greal Homemade

WICK'S

HAULING

SERVICE

,._..,.,ow.

36970 lall RN Road ·.

J.nua.,DAY

SPECIAL!

EXCAVAnNG

BUt.LDOZE! 1_~CICHOE

and TRACMUt: WORK
AVAILAIU.

SEPTIC I'ISlE . .,
HOlE IllES and
TRAILER IllES.

LAHDCI..EAAINd
DRIV!WAYBINSTAllED
I.IME810NE-TAUCKING ·
J'REE ESTIM"-TES.

992·3838

IRIM

and ·

REMOVAL
•UGHT HAUUNG :

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK ,

•

992·2269

USED RAILROAD

•

�Ohio

II '1om II fDr ....

=-=-....:EI=I.~,

_....

32 M• Htllom11

JUT 'N' CAlLYID by Larry Wrtailt

___
=-.. -.Q\,
Apel1mlnt
for Rent

......,,
,

TUeeclay, December 15, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The

ALLEYOOP

'

I , 1\ ""'iiiiCiiMI

OReorranoe Je~rs :of
four Krambl«&lt; words
low to form four simPle words.t•&lt;

PIDLLIP
ALDER

=I

114 I

III

I

I

TIOID

I

7-CIILI

OW.U.I
•• ,
Dag).

NORTH

~

........... u..

I I I I' I

JJ.JJ.H

+KQ 1092

9942

EEl{ AND MEEK

La8t&amp;Found

+o
+a;s

I
II

+!

9 K Q J 10

+BH2
+J 10 7 6

-.-.
....
,
,
... ......... • -- In...

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity ,

- --01

Clolllpolla _ . . · -

tho., ....... tho ...
r~~,t~
,.
8 - PubliC Sale

-·

, DIADUHI: 1:00 1"'"lo

lo 'IUII,

1111- - . In GAL,
UPoul1io1n1na. Wrllo Y. II. Hopldno,
-11\ FL w-. TX 11101.

Opportunity

7:

mo. eur.oc~

~53i";~Ant[!lql~u~n~iiiii];

~-.,AI·
01uo ChiM
tl7l.

=~OMAmiUn,IM- Puowur.
=~=-=-~=-:s
Moura: l.t.w. .
.:rr.

Ro~

c:ombo,
-

-,_Good
,.,.,..

lr -

..... .. 1:00_1':0:..,"""!lJ 1:11

-

lo,I:OO II&amp; 1M- YM

,

-- .ofti.... -

Cor14111111 - -

'I 'AA FU:=. AND

ap1 ' tnli-...

,.,.-. •

54 MlaliiiiiCIUS ·
Mirehindi•

·-

lloro!
·~
........0111
OhiD,~~~~ ........

-:.,..............
·
.....":.....-..:;:.;
r

OUIOIAria~ll

II

........ r&amp;........

LAST 'fEAR I EXCHANGED
GIH5 WITJ.I A ROCK .. I

1:00 Pll, ~ .....

Real Estate

WUQ

=-------·
............. ...

I SOUGHT

r

---

Color ....~ ... Peolulnl ... '
MI,DXwhLiw~l

-.ma~-

,.,.,

ColorT.Y.'a121-Y"Cono

Employment Serv1ces

W!Rimot8 tdl. lalh barr 111
C. diU Jtl.

.,..._1211.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

=.:~-!'~·:.~·.::
lor.
ib. . . . -

.·. .

IMwn E I

_,_.,.,_,a A

...,.. ... a

•••

.

,

- ..

'

Building

.

TtiE 5POiliS ftC. TION SAYS A
f"OOLISI1 go)(~ll yl Af BITTeN

DAILY . NEWS
HEADLINE
DEPT.

A MONI'~Y· IN
Ar-1 tXtliBITION

-·.
BORNLO~ER '
,..GaX&gt; ~! I HAV€ D€C.I0£o
ca.ne.- ........... ·

lollu:o:tnf
.,
.... ....... .........

Prad ....

~

IMnlr • . . _ Ann bk •
.....
..,_
• R1lo
Aid .........,.
Tho _
.......

NYA HALL

New Homea • VInyl Siding

COMMERCIAL.and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

••• a....
PO..POM,

or

lllo Sllllllar Callsl
21121e2/tfn

z .....

Fumlohad, Contnl /loJII:

-

Zllt-, OUIIII.RI.I1!, I

AIJCI10II I I'UIININAE. a
Olive Ill., Golllpolo.- I ~

..... Dopoolll - - . . . .

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

TUMIUIIG, ...... .,. - ...
BATOI IWIIUIIG 44 Aplrtment
Special Clau H
YurOida
For Morelnfonnetlon
Cllll304-273-3721

I

for Rlnl

............... t-~

~;;~~r!====~;,
1

....-,-M-ER_I_C_A_N_G_E..:.N_E_U_L_L_IF_E_a_n_d-. af$1.!,~h,•:..,-..

...... .

ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

.

$

lrllclf!IV!!l•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1

.
Inch
F.IS h•••••••••••••••••••••••••1400 per
.

.

.Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

RUTLAND, OH.

Mlec:tlon of larger
lrees.
·Cell 742·2143 or
742:2978
11127

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

-.-

.,

•..; •

.

·-.

I

16

I

I

U

FFF

~

.,

..

'" .

·complete the ch uckle quoted

-·-

,,.. ..,+to:

I,

.

I

I

~

WHAT A
WAeTE/

61TTINEiON
THI6 R'ERCH,
w..m:Hit-IS "THAT
6"TUPIDTV,

IVEe&gt;R:NT
MY WHOLE

l,IFe.,.

Ci\~H?!!
i /~.~~-Mi. •.

.••"eel
IMIIUIIIIIIIa

I~

~I
/,~.-~.. ..

Ooit II = r l l
'AOO,IIt

...

8hM.

Serv1ces

~,q 111 ';11p,~I1P',

81

.

Home ·
llnprovllilent•
-IIENT

---............
·-r-......
--·:=. ..,...,......
-. ., ____
..............
81 F11111 Equlpm.m

-D

-

11'11

'

. ,.,.,

I Playing

marble

vl•w
34 Pa1k for wild
enlmall
35 Blather of
Jacob
36 Army unlit
39 P1111t'~

4 Ed SuiUvan,
e.g. .
9 Opp. ol max.
12 Oliveve1tment
13Tr40 Bartered
cllmblng
41 Piddle
anlmalt
•· 43 Ocean liner
14 llalet
(lbbi.)
15 Actreos
44 8etwHn NB
Fa11ow
1nd ND
16 How tweet
45- Park,
Colo.
17 Ireland
47 Direction
18 DIIC0¥41
50 Film director
IUddtnly
Jacquet(2 wda.)
51 Fattoner
20 GA't
54 Wrong (pref.)
nelghbo•
55 Showed
21 Par~
23 Layer of soil
56 Poriod of
24 Yailficollona
time
28 RUIIIan
57 Rlvt~ln
plant
Garmany
30 Actor Jack
58 Briny
59 Su~11111ve
32 Take- ending .

••••

· Anawer 10 Prewloua Puu•

DOWN
1 Dld'o mate
2 3, Roman
3 Boring (II.)
4 Genuo ofents
5 Powered
mac:henlcollr

I
I

Coi~Cir--

'

R...-

I

VAUFF

L T'W

8 A F J

CJJLCRJUG

JM

YUALMJTR,

FUEITFX,

FKMTEUG

KECNTYV

RXCLCRJULF .

WTRXCUE
LAKULJ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION:. "When I was young I was told: You'll see when
you are filly. I am fifty and I haven'l seen a thing." - E1ik Salle.
I)

1il2 fly NEA. Inc.

15

.
''

l

•

"'

j

· WATERPIIOORNQ
un.odllloiMII IIIIIIIM-"r

04U

'T

\

~

=• r

-.
. ,.

a liP - onlr. . .hill
..
C...IOW1WIZI.

I

• r

ASTRO-GRAPH

--

411.
...__.,.....IMUIMif

....._.

' " '"~

' "

.. "

-- • ~

__ ,II

· -

- · - •·.,;:,- · -·• •

,..!F,.::&amp;
........... :=-. ,::.-:::;

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

....... .,....,__
. . . . . . . . . . . .tiM&amp;

13

82

Gallipolis Dally Trlhune
446-2342
Po•eroy Dally Sentinel
882-2156
Pt.. Plea•nt Jlellllter
675·1333

~luinl»lng a
Hefting

'\bur
'Birthday
DH:18, , .

.

f .,

.. '

' ,,

Clrcul)'lotances thai might be ai:reened
lrom othtrl' view cOUld da'lllop In the
year ahtad. giving you lhe opportunity
to moke yQUr mark In 1he world. Whel
tranepi(IS will remain a mystery to your
-••tea.
IAGITTARIUI (Nov. 22-lllc. 21) You
havll the gilt today lo aee rOllS-·
oJ!!ero may juo1 - thorns. This could
enable you to capitalize on an opponu,

•

ftUIUI U .

S.agluarlus, treat yourself, lo a blr1hday GEMINI (Miy 21,June 201 ee able 1o
Qtlt Send for Saglllarlus Asfro,Graph discern between real cri11cism and conpredleliOns lor lh~ year ahead by mall, s1ruclive suggestions today. Someone
lng
$1.25 plus a long, seJI,addressed. who really likes you might oiler helpful
1
stamped envelope lo Astro-Graph, c/o
this new~paper, P.O. Box 91428.,Cieve,

1 .. .__ _ _ _ ,

ACROSS

'~

.... , ....... Ajll: 1 Ill: -

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

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzl~::;

Today'sa d:i~~e~~~ w~~n~r~ee~~
in the dark. Against lour spades,
leads a trump. How should you
the play•
If the diamond finesse . works, you
safe_But if it loses, the defenders
.
cash t,hree heart tricks. To
it harder for West; 'you •hlluld
win trick one in the dummy and immE!'
Idia!_ely take the diamond finesse.
fac_ed with an awkward guess,
Imight get 11 wrong. However, if you
two rounds of trumps first, East
an easy signal with the heart king.
Then, as they say in Jamaica, West has
"No problem, man."

TUESDAY -

OIHJ

....,_

·."
-.

)

.... Laatl ....... _............

Ann ' ' ...... •

Today's deal is another from Eddie
Kantar's useful book "Take Your
Trickll:,. ($11.9~. Griffin Publishing
j':O. Box 427, Venice, CA 90294). It
contains 556 tips that cover the key as·
pects of declarer-play.
·
, One art of declarer-play is keeping
the opponents in the dark about your
hand. For example, in the suit your
left-hand opponent leads at trick one
you hold three low cards in the dummy
and A·K· x in your hand . You want to
win this trick and, when an opponent
gets on play, you would like him to
lead it again . After you play·low from
the dummy , your right·hand opponent
puts up the queen. With which card
should you win the trick?
If it is a no-trump contract, you
should win with the king . Winning with
the ace is a giveaway that you are
strong in the suit. With A·x-x, for ex·
ample, you would make a holdup play.
But if It is a suit contract, you should
wm w1th the ace, keeping both opponents unsure who holds the king.

Q. Is LEAVES the only correct plu,
ral of LEAF? My wife and I have also
been seeing 'leafs."
A. The answer depends on how the
plural is being used. When Writing
about more than one leal on a tree,
you should use only LEAVES as the
proper pluraL Lately, though, I've noticed an occasional use of "leafs" in
sports; each member of a Maple Leal
team, lor instance, . belongs to the
' Maple Leafs." If you're not writing
about a team, make a team effort to
use LEAVES.

·1 ,

PIN do A 11 EXTRA.

.

+4

Something VOLANT ("VOH·lant")
flies or is capable of flight: "The volant creature soared over the trees."
If you're still not sure about when to
use the adjective VOLANT. wing it

4'11144 A?lw7:01,...

··-.-

Opening lead:

Pass

By Jeffrey McQuaiD

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Pass

SCRAM:I.ETS ANSWERS
'~ ,, ~
Esch~w • Juror - Maior - Patter - CUSTOMER
The clerk at the serv1ce desk was chattin\1 on the
phone. When I gave her a nasty look she sa1d to her
caller, "I'll call you back,l'm being interrupted by a CUS·
TOMER!"

Elsl
Pass

OUR LANGUAGE

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HAUUNG

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No llllla. A I aw I
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Tum your clutter into cash,
Sd it the eau way... byphone,
no need to leave your home.
Place yOur clauified qd today!
15,worda or leu, 3 dQ.v,
3 pqper1,I6.00
Call our o/Jite for paid in a+ove ,.,.,• .r

{:11M.

Reasonable rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

....

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WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
Carefully Sheared
Scolch &amp; Whitt Pine
4' &amp; Up with • greet

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Middleport, Ollio 45760
(614) 143··5264,

Deer Heads ............,;......119000

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GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

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won: lloata.114-4f1..1111.

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Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

", 12,1·'92:1 mo.

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614-949·2101 • 949·2160
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DEER CUT
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WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
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RACINE, OH.
949·2734

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WEARING
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By Phillip Alder

RCA¥" Calor Canoo1o T.V. PI

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BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

West

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Keep them
in the dark

Mu•' 'IIE.4MI.......,,IO
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.... flllnllr, 1110. -

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114 118 1121 OR~

·
New Garages • Replacement Windows
·
Room Additions • RbOflng

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by fill ing in the missing words
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lop from .step No. 3 below.

MAMA BIAit, TOO\!

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FOUND!!

41"' Round 0111 Talolo I
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noontth
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COME TO SEE

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OHIO VALLEY PUB~ CO.

&amp; Auction

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

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ALL Yonl a.IHMUOI . . PIId In TEliAI REFINERY CORP. N -

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reunion .
I. people seemed discon1ented
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conclusion tha1 when people
V, y T I l E
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land, OH 4410),3428. Be sure lo state
your zodiac: 01gn.
CAPIIICOfiH
(ft~•
. .
..... 22:JM. 11) Your
probablljllea lor suoceae look good 10day, provided you are patient and conSISienl. Your vlclory might not come un,
111 your second or third effon.
.
AQUARIUI (Jan. 20 Feb: 111 Your des1re lo grallly ~rson11 ambitions might
be stronger than u~ual loday. You mus1
conduct Y?"rllelf 'n a manner 8880:
c1alea wan t label ao unauractlve.
PIICII (l'eb. :111-Marcll 20) In a partnerllhlp arrangement loday It might be
wloa to let your cohort be the dominant
Ioree. He or llha will Instinctively know
how to be ....,..,ve l~st..d of ~Y
aggr-ve.
•
.
ARIII (Miteh 21·Aprt111) You could
be In for a pleqant ourprloa today when
~ diiCO- I d....ded development
l8n t, •• bad ea you had ontlclpated.
Don I dwell an negatives. TAURUS (April...., 20) Try not to ,
ge11nvolved In any bullness deals today
thai have chancy elemento, even lfothe
rewards ap~ar atlrective. The risk lsn'1

counsel if you keep an open mind

CANCER (June 21,July 22) People whp
are closest to your hear1 should get the
· ·s s hare of your aIteflllon
· · st~ay
~• . Be
110n
nice to everyone, bul especially to
them .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your possibilities
tor material gains look good1oday, es,
pecially if you intend to share wh81 you
gel with olll8rs. Sellishness could set
you back.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) usa a tang;,
ble token today to express your aftec,
lion tor the one you love. Asmell giH will
do. 11 doesn't ha\111 to be expensive, just
visible.
,
LIBRA (flepl. 23-0cl. 221 This could be
one ol thOse enjoyable days - • pea:
pia you 've helped In the peat will be
looking lor weya 'to do somathlno nice
lor you In return . You should mal&lt;e out
OK
IC:OtuotO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) II you g11 ·
lnvo!wd In an endeavor wllh eevaral
lriends today, don't volunteer to be the
lreaaurer ol the· operation. You mlghl
have problema keeping the account
s1raight
·

..._:t

�,...

'

.

.•

By The Bend

.The Daily _S entinel

Marauders

Page

10 •

Town .still haunted 25 years after bridge collapse
By TERRY WALLACE
or417 bridges, substandard.
.
Assooiated Press Writer
States with less than 20 percent
POINT PLEASANT, w. Va.
of substandard bridges were Idaho,
Bill McConnick cannot forget the 10 percent; Nevada, II percent;
wrenching sound of twisting steel Wyoming and Utah, each with 12
and the bean-stopping sight across percent; Connecticut, 15 percent;
the Ohio River when the Silver andCalifomia, 19 percent, accordBridge fell down 25 years ago.
ing to the survey.
McCormick, Odell Hysell and
Thomas Zimmie, a professor of
others were working on a cold fuel civil engineering at Rensselaer
dock on Dec. 15, 1967, not far Polytechnic ln~titute in Troy, N.Y.,
from the two-Jane suspension said bridge inspections have
bridge connecting Ohio and West . improved in the past five years.
Virginia, about 35 miles northwest
"They've really gonen their act
of Charleston.
together," •he s;tid. "You've got
The men dashed for their boats, companies here that do nothing but ·
gunned their diesel engines and bridge inspections."
sped toward the wash of sinking
Zimmie helped investigate the
cars, tractor-trailers and collapsed April 19.87 collapse of the
metal. The river was a body-numb- Schoharie Creek Bridge on the
ing43 degrees.
New York State Thruway near
"When we went out, we saw Albany. He said 10 people died
two men hanging on to· tlieir truck when a flood undermined the
and debris. I tried to pull in one and bridge supports. a phenomenon
Odell tried to pull in another," called "scour."
McCormick said. "It was very
Zimmie agreed hazards can go
cold. In fact, the last fellow we unnoticed and unsuspected until
pulled in, a (tow boat) captain for disaster strikes.
the Ohio River Co., said ~t if we
"There's always going to be
hadn't gotten there when ·we did. something that pops up," he said.
he couldn't have held on."
"Who could have predicted.
The collapse of the U.S. 35 'scour'?"
bridge between Point Pleasant and
The 1,750-foot Silver Bridge,
Kanauga, Ohio, ldlled 46 motorisiS opened in 1928 and named for the
and their passengers.
color of iiS aluminum-based paint,
It was also a turning point in the was different from familiar suspenway American engineers think of sion bridges lilce the Golden ,Gate,
. bridges, said Lisle Williams of Broolclyn and Verrazano-Narrows.
BEFORE BRIDGE DISASTER • The Silver Bridge, left, span·
Pittsburgh, a bridge designer and
Instead of relying upon massive
from the air betore it coUapsed 25 years aigo on Dec. 15, killing 441
ning Point Pleasant, W. Va., and Kanauga, Ohio, as it appeared
chairman of next year's Interna- spun cables for suppon, the Silver
people. (AP)
tiona! Bridge Conference.
Bridg~ ·s roadway hung from car" The Silver Bridge was one of bon-steel chains, which , in tum,
The Ohio River was reopened to
about 550,000 bridges across the were supponed by two towers and barge traffic 36 hours after the collapse, but bodies continued to bti
country that basically received no were anchored on either shore.
attention once they were construct·
Officials said about 6,600 vehi- recovered as late as the end of Janed," he said. •'Once they were pu~ cles used the bridge daily. It had no nary 1968.
up, people kind of thought they'd load limit.
Wilson's voice still trembles
be there forever."
According to a National Trans- when he recalls a man who escaped
After years of corrosion and portation Safety Board report, a his car but his wife and child did
neglect, a crucial joint in the 39· joint in the chain supporting the not He remembered a brother of a
year-old bri&lt;lge:s suspension sys· roadway snapped just outside the dead man who came to remove
tern snafped, and the normal vibra· bridge's Ohio-side tower.
gifts from the wreck;tge of a car to
tions o heavy rush-hour traffic
Traffic vibrations and the 'assure the surviving family some
shook it apart. Dozens of cars and weight of the deck and the 37 vehi- son of Chrisunas.
truclcs followed the structure into cles on it, including two gravel
"Every time' I pass that site, I
the river.
trucks and five tractor-trailer rigs, think about it," Wilson said.
" You need a catastrophic fail- pulled down on the Ohio-side
President Johnson declared an
ure prior· to gaining everybody's chains and toppled the OhiQ tower, emergency the day of the collapse.
attention,· • Williams said.
the repon said.
Four days later, Sen. Jennings RanSome fear it could lwlppen"
The collapse then toppled the dolph, D-W.Va., chairman of the
again.
West Vjrginia tower and pulled the Senate Public Works Committee,
"There have .been some rest ofbridge ·into the river, accord- announced hearings that led to the
changes, but I wouldn't say that it mg to the repon,
·
first federal bridge inspection
was particularly any better' now,"
Only the bridge's West Virginia requiremeniS.
said Henry Jasny, attorney for the approach and four piers remained
The Ohio River bridge at St.
Ralph Nader-affiliated Advocates standing,
Marys, W.Va., which was of 'simifor Highway and Auto Safety in
The board.found that the Silver lar design and vintage to the Silver
Washington, D.C.
Bridge had not been thoropghly Bridge, was closed immediately,
"I'd say that lhe odds of such a inspected for 16 years. Since lhen, never to reopen.
collapse today are equal," Jasny it said, the chains we~ inspected
The Silver BridJe made' the
said.
only from the bridge deck by road intersection of Mam and Sixth
Since lhe Silver Bridge disaster, workers using binoculars.
streets one of the busiest in Point
new federal standards require
"Evidence of severe· corrosion Pleasant. Today, it is so quiet that
bridge inspections every two years. was found in many portions of l)te cars park in the middle of Sixth
But, Jasny said, the quality of bridge structure," the repon said. Street
inspections varies from state to ''Periodic complete inspections
Exactly two years after the colwould have furnished much mo~e lapse, a new Ohio River bridge was
stale .
For example, he said, a 100-foot detailed information to the state opened between Mason County,
AFTER BRIDGE DISASTER ·This Associbe~ 15, .1967, disaster at Kanauga, .Ohio and
section of the Interstate 95 bridge concerning the condition of all vital W.Va., and Gallia County, Ohio ..
ated Press me photo shows what was left of the
Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va. (AP),
over the Mianus River in Connecti- parts of the bridge."
· The 1,800-foot, four-lane Silver
collapsed Silver. Bridge one day after the Decemcut collapsed in June 1983, ldlling
Paul Wedge, an official with tbe Memorial Bridge was built just ·
three people. Investigators blamed Boilermakers' union and former south of Point Ple;tsant of a rigid
the collapse on corrosion.
·
president of the Mason County cantilever-truss design.
A survey of state engineers in school board, died with his wife in
Point Pleasant had a thriving
the November's Better Roads mag- the disaster.
downtown and was home to 5,800
azine showed that 34 percent, or
Son Jimmy Joe Wedge, later residents. Today, bypassed, Point
206,904 bridges, of the nation's Point Pleasant's mayor, was coach- Pleasant's downtown still is trying
approximately 600,750 bridges ing the Point Pleasant High School to recover from the loss of traffic,
were substandard.
basketball team and was expecting and the town's:,population is down
The survey showed 55 percent his parents at the game.
to about 5,000.
of bridges were substandard in
"The longer the game went on,
"It's not just the personal
West Virginia and Massachusetts, the harder it got to focus on it, I impact, but the overall impact on
the worst states. at 3,556 bridges guarantee you that," he said. ·
the communitY, the county and our
and 2,788 bridges, respectively.
John A. Wilson, then Mason immediate area. Our economy has
Mississippi and Maine, each County' s Civil Defense director, never recovered, •• Wilson said.
with 51 percent, and Hawaii, 50 ordered all roads into Point PleasA simple monument stands
percent, also had more than half of ant blocked to keep out speclators. where tile We!\L..Y irginia approach
their bridges rated substandard , Wilson, now 77, recalled his move to the bridge used to bti. Set in·a
according to the $1JTVey.
outraged at least one merchant who concreie semicircle, red bricks are
The survey showed the best complained of the effect on his inscribed with the names of the 46
state was Arizona, with 7 percent, ChriSunas sales.
people who died on the bridge.

..,__ /

.

~

25 YEARS AGO. A span orthe Silver Bridge
rests against a roncrete support column after it
coll~2._~ ~nto !he ObJo River 25 years ago. The

collapse of the bridge between Kanauga and
l'olnt Pleasant claimed 461ives on Dec. 15, 1967.
(AP me photo)
·

Pick 3:
190
Pick 4:
7436
Buckeye 5:
9-14-19-21-27

post 79-71
TVC victory

Tuesday, December 15, 1992
,

.Ohio Lottery

Page4

I

Vol. 43, No. 1115
Copyrighted 10t2

,.

RESCUE OPERATIONS: Rescue operationa beaaa Immediately following the collapse

or tbe Silver Bridge spanning Kanau1a and
Point Pleasant. Photo above was taken by Gal-

II polls Trlbu~e reporter Dick Thomas .i t the ·
Ohio ramp approach ..ortly after the s Jl.m.
disaster.

2 Secttana, 1&amp; Pages 25 centa
A lluhlmedla Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, !'ednesday, December 16, 1992

Final hea~ing on Middleport.downtown project Jan. 5
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ·
A final public hearing on the
downtown revitalization plan was
set for Jan. 5 by Middlepon Village
Council at its meeting Tuesday
. _ _ night
The meeting will be held in the
conference room of Peoples Bank
with both Council and Middleport
Community Association members
to meet with merchants and other
ci~ens.

The purpose will be to approve
a plan for the overall revitalization

project which will then be submitted to the Ohio Department of
Development for a grant of up to
$400,000 before the Feb. 5 deadline.
Jean Trussell, Middleport's
grant specialist, advised Council
that she is now in the process of
geiting commitments from busi nesses an~! building owners since
all monies which the state puts into
the project must be matched dollar
for dollar. "Merchants have to sign
agreements about what they will do
to their buildings,'' said Trussell.
She al~o pointed out that in

addition to that match, the village
will be required to put in 10 percent of lhe total amount. If the village has adequate commitment
from the business community for a
full $400,000 grant request, the village will be required to come up
with $40,000, Trussell said. She
emphasized, however, that the figure will depend on what the merchant or bu•lding match is.
Councilman Paul Gerard raised
the question of where the village
will get the money for the I 0 percent, in view of the fact that the village last mornh had to borrow

$200.000 becau se of financial
deficits.
Mayor Hoffman explained that
it will be spread over a period of
two years. and will be "not all cash.
but the local share of -Issue 2 project funds in the downtown can be
applied toward the local match."
."Any planned repair on th e
streets can be used for tliat match",
the grant specialist said.
Trussell explained the need for a
design review committee which
will be the group charged with
"controlling the downtown workseeing that the preservation adds

flavor, that it's all ;tppropriate." An
ordinance establishmg that committee was given a first reading by
Council. Gerard voted "no" with
the explanation that he felt Council
was "getting the cart ahead of the
horse" because of the money problem .
Trussell also reported on a
recent visit of a represenlative from
the Ohio Department of Devclopmen t and her concern about the
empty storefronts and what was
being done to fill them.
A resolution on standards and
guidelines for repair, consDllction,

and demolition. a part of the revitalization project, was tabled until
the next meeting.
Issue 2 Projects
Council agreed to submit two
projects for the Round 7, Issue 2
monies. The projects are North
Second Avenue from the north corporation limits to the Mill. Street
-r, and widening and repaving of
Park Street
.
Council passed a resolution
committing $7,721 ,11 percent of
the tolal project cost for the North
Second Avenue project. The
Continued on page 3

Monument, marker dedicated
for Silver Bridge crash victiffl,S
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Sta·rr
The collapse of the Silver
Bridge and the 46 people killed in
the disaster will be commemorated
by a monument and marker dedicated 25 years after the bridge fell
into the Ohio River.
Tlje bridge collapsed during the
evening rush hour of Dec . 15 ,
1967. It linked Kanauga, about five
·miles north of Gallipolis in southeast Ohio, and Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
About 250 people attended the
dedication ceremony Tuesdlly. at a
rest area about a mile from where
the bridge stood.
Joyce Robie and former Point
Pleasant Mayor Jimmy Joe Wedge
placed a wreath at the marker. Ms.

•'

J

Robie 's bro\her, Forest Raymond
Higley, and Wedge's parents, Paul
and Lillian Wedge, were killed in
the collapse.
Across the river in Point Pleasant, Mayor Russell Holland placed
a wreath at a bridge monument
The 2,235-foot bridge, built by
the West Virginia Ohio River
Bridge Co., was suspended on
heat-treated eye-bar chains.
According to the marker. the bridge
was the first in the world to be covered with aluminum paint, giving
the bridge its name.
·
The National Transportation
Safety Board found that a fracture
in a lower eye-bar joint, coupled
with stress and corrosion, caused
the 40-year-old bridge to collapse.
The board also found that the

Rotary's annual Christmas
program held Monday
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club held its annual Christmas program on Monday night at the Heath
United Melhodist Church.
Members , spouses, and their
children and grandchildren were
present.
A special meal was served by
the United Methodist Women .
Christmas songs were sung, and

UNCOVERING MARKER - .Gallipolis City
Manager Glenn Smith, left, and Point Pleasant,
W.Va., Councilwoman Suzanne Dickens, right,
unveiled a historic marker Tuesday morning
commemontlng the 1967 Silver Bridge Disaster.

Santa Claus dropped in to present
gifts to the children. Roses were
taken to Gene Grate and Anna
Blackwood, both of whom are
rec uperating from accidents. Mr.
Grate feli at home and hmke a hip,
and Mrs. Blackwood was involved
in a car accident' and is in St.
Joseph Hospital in Park.ersburg,
W.Va.

The front or the marker contains inf'ormation
about the ill-fated bridge while the back contains the names or the bridge's 46 victims·. (OVP
photo by Jim Freeman)

Council must outline projects
for Issue Two funds, Wingett says
Robert Wingett, grants administrator for Syracuse Village, met
with Syracuse Village Council in
recessed session on Tuesday night.
He explained that council must outline projects to be funded under the
Issue Two program for the next
five years.
Needed immediately, Wingett
said, is a detailed program for the
next project, the application for
which must be completed and flied
as soon as possible. Upon

I

taken near tile Kanaap approach nmp one day
foUowlnallle disaster by GaiUpolls Tribune editor Hobart WilJoo, Jr.

4GL

..

Wingett's advice, council outlined ed council with a set of the Ohio
an extensive culven project for the Revised Code. Approval to donate
village. Ttie culven project, which the books to council was given by
council feels has top priority, the county commissioners, Crow
includes locations, esumated cost said.
Altending were Mayor James
of material and labor, and will be
prepared and submitted to Wingett Pape; Wingett; Janice Lawson ,
by Councilman Bill Roush by Sat- · clerk/treasurer; Jim Connolly.
urday . The next four projects police chief; Council members
detailed by council will be addi- Roush, Jack Williams, Kenny
Buclcley, Katie Crow, and Dennis
tional culverts and street paving.
I Judge Fred W. Crow ITI present- Wolfe.

Woman in fair condition
after Tuesday shooting

, SEVERE CORROSION • Evidence of
severe COI'I'Giioa Wll f011nd lD many porf1ons of
the Silver BrlcJp A~ucture. Photo abov~ was

lblallkdy ...l&amp;ht. Low In
tho laid 40s. TUnday' blcll "'

A 39-year-old Wilkesville
woman was reported in fair condition this m01111nf at Cabeii-Huntington Hospita in Huntington,
W.Va., after being shot in the head
Tuesday afternoon at her residence.
Odessa Snyder was shot in the
head with a small-ealiber halldgun,
GaUia County Sheriff Dennis Salisbury said.
r
. The Oallia County Sheriff's
Department is currently investigat·

.

ing to -determine if the shooting
was self-inflicted or if Mrs. Snyder
was shot by somebody else.
Her husband, Clayton Alfred
Snyder, 58, of Wilkesville, was
arrested by the Wellston Police
Department in Jackson County
soon af~er the shOoting.
Mrs. Snyder told officials the
shooting was self-inflicted. Investigators are not·so sure, pointing out
thai a physical disability may have

... .

.

'

'

· SANTA VISITS • Santa Claus stopped by the Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club on Monday night for the club's Christmas
. party, assured all members that they had been good boys and girls,
and distributed girts to children attending. Pictured with Santa is
Richard Wells of Middleport, grandson of member Richard
Vaughan.

bridge had not been thoroughly
inspected for 16 years.
The bridge-shaped monument,
with peaks at each end, was
designed to present an image of the
bridge, said Gallipolis architect
Mark T. Epling who designed the
Continued on page 3

Middleport
employees will
get bonuses
Middlepon village employees
will get Christmas bonuses after
alL
Following a lengthy discussion
by Middlepon Village Council at
Tuesday night's regular meeting,
members agreed on a plan to provide limited Christmas bonuses to
full-time village employees.
· Earlier it was decided thai
bonuses would not be given this
year in view of the villa$e's deficit
operation which neeess1tated bor·
rowing $200,000 in November.
However, at last night's meeting
and following Council President
Dewey Horton's recommendation
for bonuses, a plan proposed by
Gerard was adopted to provide
S600. That amount will be supplemented by $400 from Vaughan's
Cardinal to provide for $50 gift
certificates for each of the 20 full- .
time employees.
The plan agreed to by all CounJ:il members provides for a pay
decrease of $5 a meeting over the
next year to come up with th e
$600. "If we' re going to spend
money,lhen let's tell residents how
we're going to pay for it," said
Gerard.
Since the pay decrease must be
handled by ordinance, the first
reading was given at last ni ght's
meeting.
In the discussion it was noted
after Councilman James Clatworthy had said employees "did not get
a raise this year", that they did, in
facl. receive a pay increase in July.
Don Becker met with Council to
encourage Christmas bonuses for
employees citing the dedication of
employees. "The bigj:est asset a . ;
community can have IS dedicated •• •
people." said Becker. Mayor Hofr: · • ·
man and all members of council • ·
agreed with that, but as stated by . • .
the mayor. "we couldn't afford to •
give the usual Christmas bonuses·. ·
this year."

..

~:~:

Man. cited in one-vehicle wreck
.

prevented her from shooting herself.
According to a sherifr s department spokesman, Mr. Snyder was
carrying a handgun of the type used
in the shooting and may face a
charge in Jackson County of carrying a concealed weapon.
He is currently being held in the
Gallia County Jail on a·warrant
from the Wellaton Police Depart·
menton a charge of passing bad
checks.

· A Pomeroy man was cited for failure to control after a one-vehicle accident on Ohio 7 in Chester Township Tuesday at ;tpprox•mately 9 a.m.
·
·
Randy J. Hysell, 36, of 32220 Bailey ~un Rd. w~ northbound
on Ohio 7 and ran off the right side pf the road into a ditch. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
The vehicle, a 1978 Mack truck owned by Forest Run R~y
Mix, then carne back onio the roadway, ovenumed onto 1ts nght
side and slid backwards off lhe left side of the road, the patrol
reported.
.
.
Hysell was transponed by the Pomeroy Squad of the Me!gs
County Emergency ~edical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where, according to a hospital ~pokeswoman, he was treated and
released.
Damage to the truck. was listed as beavy and disabling. _

•

days until
Cliristmas
•

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