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                  <text>:Page t2 • The Dally Sentinel
'

Wednesday, January 17, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

·eastern girl
cagers defeat ·
Waterford ·

Few.people understand how
drugs interact
with each other
.
By EUZABETH NEUS
Gannett New1 Service
WASHINGTON- Drinking and
driving don't mix, and neither do
drinking and Tylenol, acombination
that can cause serious, permanent liver damage.
And neither do Tylenol and AZT;
grapefruit juice and anti-organ rejection medication; and some antihistamines and antibiotics.
Surprised? You are not alone.
Few realize that drugs can interact
with each other and cause sometimes
dangerous effects that would not
occur if the drugs were taken alone.
"It's something that most people
and most physicians don't think
about," said Joe Graedon, co-author

of a new book called "The People's
Guide to Dangerous Drug Interactions."

"There's been this belief that you
can pop any number of herbs, minerals, vitamins, whatever, without any
consequence or interaction," he said.
''But there are (an estimated) 125,000
deaths each year from medical mistakes - wrong dose, wrong combination of drugs. That's a 747 every
day going down. "
Boston Globe columnist Betsy
Lehman died last year after she was
given an overdos" of a strong cancer
drug; studies coincidentally published soon after found ihat most
medical mistakes ai:e due to problems
with the way hospitals are run, not

Free immunizations fQr all area
children from birth through middle
school, and pneumonia shots for
adults 50 years and older, will be provided by the QhiQ University College
of Osteopathic Medicine Childhood
Immunization Program (CHIP), a
mobile health program, on Monday
from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Wilkesville
Volunteer Fire Department.
Childhood immunizations must
begin at birth and most vaccinations

BIONIC BOVINE • C0111puters monitor cows
·as they are milked at Dan Jenaen'a Lawhurst
Dairy Oct 31, 19951n Stanley, N.Y. With the help

are completed by two years of age.
By immunizing on time, children are·
protected from being infested with
potentially serious childhood diseases and prevent infecting other children at day care or school in addition
to routine immunizations. The clinic
can also administer the Hepatiti~ B.
vaccine series at no charge to chililren
born after Nov. 22, 1991.
The clinic is provided by .Jhe
Ohio University College of Osi\.o-

pathi~

Medicine Childhood Immunization Program's community
mobile health unit and the Ohio
Department of Health in cooperation
with the Vinton County Health
Depan,nent. Parents are reminded to
take their children's shot records. For
more information about the immunization program, residents may call
:toll free 1-800-844-2654, or secure
information through the Meigs County Health Department.

.

.

insemination is one reason. Another
is better nutrition, arranged by timing
the alfalfa and field com harvests
more accurately.
Add more sophisticated mechanical equipment and medicines to
minimize the risk of infection, and
you have animals that are 200 to 300
pounds bigger than those of a few
decades ago.
In modern barns, cows are
allowed to roam freely, choosing
where to eat and sleep, instead of
being chained into stalls.
"A contented cow is a more productive cow," said Bruce Hawley,
administrator of the New York Farm
Bureau. "It means treating the animal
li~e a gifted athlete."
Jensen embraces the changes and
presses ahead, knowing that his father
shared his enthusiasm. He remembers
bringing photographs of the newly
expanded free-stall bam to the hospital shonly before his father died in
December 1994 at age 75. ·
"One of the last things he said
was, 'It's beautifuf!' " Jensen said.
"He lay there with the tears running
down his cheeks. He lived anti
breathed the farm. That was- his
life."
.
And someday, Jensen hopes, there
will be a robust business to pass
along to his son and two daughters.
" There's ,two directions every
business goes - backwards or forwards," he said. "Nothing can staod
still, unfonunately."

.

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
likely to be fatal, and its incidence is
AP Medical.Writer
n.O! known.
'
·
• . . 'CHJCAQO (AP) - Doctors are
More lhan 200 people in the Unitlaqidng for an easy-to.use lab teslfor ed Sbites- mostly in the Midwest
a· newly recognized and sometimes and tbe Northeast- have been diagdel.,n; tick-borne infection that
nosed with HGE sine 1990. At least
~di~cult to distinguish from Lyme · four of them died, according to
dtso:ase.
HGE's co-discoverer. Dr. Johan
, . .·-.The newer threat - human gran- Bakken of Duluth, Minn. His D-uluth
ulpcytic ehrlichiosis, or HGE - is Clinic maintains a registry of cases.
sptejld by the deer tick, the sali'Ie
Bakken believes HGE existed
ipSjlCtthat carries Lyme disease.
before 1990, when he saw the ftrst
Lyme disease is b '.ieved to be known case, but the infection previm.uch more common, aftlicting an ously went unrecognized.
"-1 ~stlmated 10,000 Americans each
"Everywhere you find Lyme dis. • Y.e.t!T· It is almost never fatal, unless ea•e. yo11'll need to look for this,"
t~re
ate complications. but ~akken said in a telephone interview.
·&amp;:searchers say HGE is much more
~ He and his colleagues describe
-

can

~

'~ ~.,ev~,W~hiP. ·s~ats
~ {II '

Vol. 46, NO. 184
.2 Becllona, 12 P8gea

',

~·

'

their expenence with 41 HGE cases
in today's Journal of the American
Medical Association.
So far, the main distinguishing
characteristic between Lyme disease
and HGE is that the symptoms of
HGE come on much more suddenly, ·
Bakken said.
People infected with HGE may
wake up feeling fine, but by afternoon be suffering from high fever,
chills, muscle aches and headaches.
Lyme disease symptoms tend to
worsen over a couple of,days.
To further complicale the job of
diagnosis, another rare infection babesiosis - also is carried by the
deer tick.

new officers

Low In 20a tonight .
Windy, rein. Friday, pertly
cloudy, hlghe In 20a.

35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 18, 1996

A Gannett Co.

N-apoper

High court may expedite, school funding case
By Wire and Staff Reportl
_
COLUMBUS- Adversaries in a state school funding lawsuit may consider asking the Ohio Supreme
Coun to put the case on a faster track.
·
Justices agm:d on Wednesday to decide if the shared
state-local financing plan was constitutional even
though spending disparities exist among 611 districts.
The vote was 6-1 to accept the case for oral arguments. Justice Craig Wright dissented.·
Buckley comments
Meigs Local Schools superintendent Bill Buckley,
. · whose' district is a me111ber of the coalition seeking
. changes in school funt!ing, feels that the disparities in
.funding are obvious, pocticularly in .southeast Ohio.
"The state withholds moi1,Cy from our district and
others because they say schools in this pan of the state
are not doing their fair share. Voters in our district just

passed their first tax levy in over 20 years, but yet the
state takes nearly $250,000 away from us each year
because we don't allocate the state mandated millage
for operations monies.
"I think the Supreme Coun is do.ing the right thing
by hearing the case. I don't know how they'll rule, but
it does give us another opportunity to bring about
change in the funding system," said Buckley
- "If the coun rules in favor of the schools,.basically
they are going to rule that education is a right for kids
in the state of Ohio and that current funding methods
are unconstitutional. In a similar case in Kentucky, the
coun system kept jurisdiction after ruling in favor of
schools over the state. When the legislature asked to
bring laws, rules, regulations into effect, the coun system had to approve each one. That's what q'uite po,ssibly could. happen in Ohio," s:jid Buckley.

that we at this point we would ask legal counsel to pursue that avenue . Now, legal counsel might advise us
against it," Phillis said.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery's office represents the state in the case. Spokesman Mark Weaver
said any tactical decision such as an expedited hearing
request would depend on consultation with clients.
"That includes the governor, the Legislature. the
education depanment and the Board of Education.
Based on their input we'll make our next move,"
Weaver said.
Judge Linton Lewis Jr. in Perry County Common
Pleas Coun ruled in 1994that the funding system was
inequitable, inadequate and unconstitutional. ,,
In August, the 5th Ohio District Coun of Appeals
in Canton ovenurned Lewis' decision, handing the state .
a victory with a ruling that the school funding system
was constitutional.

Won't mle out early timetable
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer said he doubted the
court would hear the case before a summer recess, but
would not rule out an early timetable.
·
"It is possible, if the coun wants to expedite it, that
we could-do it earlier. The earliest would be late May
or early June. That' would mean we would have to move
it ahead of other cases," Moyer said in an interview.
The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding filed the lawsuit. Most of the state's
school districts are coalition members.
William Phillis. executive director, said the possibility of asking for an expedited hearing probably
would come -up during a meeting of the group's steering committee Friday.
"Our interest all along has been to move this case
as rapidly as possible and so it would be my opinion

Southern Ohio no haven from crime
WEST UNION (AP) - City
crime remains more prevalent than
rural crime, but the countryside is
becoming a more dangerous place
than it once was .
Two men wearing ski masks and
carrying guns kicked in the door of a
house in rural Adams County on
Sunday, shot to death two men and
made ·off with drugs and money,

/

police said.
Three 18-year-old men, including
a rHan purponed to be the getaway
car driver, were arraigned Tuesday on
charges they committed or aided in
killing and robbing the two victims.
"What's striking to me about this
is that it's our fifth drug-related
homicide in three years," Adams
County Prosecutor Greg Carroll told

The Cincinnati Post for a story publish~d Wednesday. The county has a
population of 25,000.
"You wouldn 't expect this kind of
crime here, would you? But you have
to call it for what it is. And what it is.
is sad," he said.
The FBI said there were 812 violent crimes per 100.000 city residents
in 1994, compared with 237 per

100,000 rural residents. But violent
rural crime increased 4.3 percent
from 1993 to I ~94 .
"Any problem you find in the city,
you can now fmd in rural areas, .. said
Michael Lee. director of the Ohio
Office of Criminal Justice Serv ices
Lee is a fonner shenff of Paulding County, with a population of
20.000.

Body found in creek may
be that of kidnapped girl
HOUSE CORDONED OFF- The houee on Riley Hollow Road
near W•t Un~ Wll cordoned off by the Adlma County SherIff's Department attar three teena kHied two men In 'what Is
thought to be a drug ret.t.d robbery gone bid Sundly.

APR
FIXED RATE
FINANCING
OR '
$600 CASH BACK
SELEO i96 MODELS
:t ·

.

Qoctors working on test for newly
~ecognized tick-borne infection

/'1•

Pick 4:
3516
Super Lotto:
15-16-24-37-39-42
Kicker:
087634

of high-tech equipment, New York produce•
twice aa much milk with haH ae meny cowa as
a century ago. (AP Photo)

fun. It's a very fast-moving economy
By BEN DOBBIN
out here."
Alloclated Pnt11 Writer
In 1992, he computerized his
. STANLEY, N.Y. (AP) - Some
people get e•mail. Don Jensen gets e- milking parlor and went from two
mil kings a day to three. His herd has
moos.
.
Instead of bells, Jensen's 800 grown from 150 to 800 an~ he's takdrury cows wear computer transpon- en on eight employees in place of one
ders around their nec((s, enabling at his 1,000-acre farm in undulating
weighing meters to measure how Finger Lakes country.
much milk each produces. The data
Jensen is convinced that many
feed into a computer in his mud-spat- dairy farms that fall behind their
tered office.
neighbors in efficiency won't be
"We know quickly which cows - around in another generation. And the
are making us money and which ones indispensable tool of the 21st centu-1
aren't," Jensen said. Automatic gates ry, he said, will be the computer.
send some to the ·veterinarian, some
Jensel) 's system cost $50,000 and
to the breeder and others to the butch- he believes it has already paid for
~r.:
itself by raising his milk yield per
. And that is one·reason why Jensen cow by an estimated·5 pounds a day.
squeezes four or ~ve times as much He gets 25,000 pounds of milk a year
mi]k from each Holstein as his grand- from each cow, well above the record
far_her did in 1925.
statewide average of 15,900 pounds
· The modem dairy may look the in 1994.
same from the highway, but it's
By 1997, he expects to complete
nothing like it was. Today's 1,500- the farm's transfonnation into one of
pound bionic Q&lt;lvines are better bred, · the most sophisticated and productive
better fed and better cared for.
dairies in New York, the nation's No. ·
· 'Today's dairy farmers are different 3 milk-producing state after Califorcreatures. Ask Jensen. While his nia and Wisconsin.
grandfather and his father had a
His ·annual sales have already
hand in all the chores, this 41-year- jumped from $300,000 to more than
old dairyman is too busy managing a $1.5 million and profits are edging
carefully calibrated operation to even expenses. This is no easy field, condO·any milking himself.
sidering milk prices have climbed
."When I was young, it was very less than 75 cents a gallon in the last
relaxed," he said. "But· this world 20 years.
,
·
sped on! We're way better off than
The cow that gives all that milk is
we were, b\Jt I lJuess it isn't as much a very different -animal. Anificial

'

251

•j

The Wonder of an age: Many
fewer cows but much more milk

.....

Pick 3:

Sports, Page 5

individual errors by incompetent
staff.
" If that's in a hospital, where pre- .
sumably you've got people looking
over your shoulder, imagine what i~'s
like in the hinterlands," Graedon satd.
"The problem must he humongous."
The book, co-written with his
wife, Teresa, outlines in frightening
detail the number of ways drugs can
interact with food. alcohol, vitamins,
and each other.
Women taking birth control pills,
for example, might find themselves
pregnant if they also are taking penicillin and · its relatives, anti-seizure
medication, or anti-fungal drugs.
Those drugs reduce the effectiveness
of oral contraceptives.

OU COM program to ()ff~r free
immunization, pneumonia shots

Ohio Lottery

CHOOSE FROM THE FOLLOWING:
•ESCORT
•PROBE
•CONTOUR
• T-BIRD
•TAURUS

•TRACER

•AEROSTAR

• MYSTIQUE
• SABLE
•COUGAR
• GRAND MARQUlS
• VIL_
LAGER

• WINDSTAR
• ECONOLINE RV
•RANGER
•CLUB WAGON

Commissioners weigh
conservation proposals
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel lt.lf
Members of the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners met Monday with representatives from 'Honeywell inc. and Landis &amp; Gyr Powers Inc. concerning energy-saving
upgrade proposals for county-owned
buildings, particularly the county
counhouse, under Ohio Senate Bill
300.
Bill Maynor of Honeywell said his
company proposes to upgrade the
lighting and conven the existing
electric boiler in the courthouse to a
gas-fired unit. Later, Robert Priest of
Landis &amp; Gyr also proposed lighting
upgrades, coupled with more sophisticated temperature control devices.
Under the program, county governments can make energy-saving
upgrades to be paid for over a 10-year

period using money realized from the
energy savings. Officials from both
comp,anies guaranteed savings to the
county.
Senate Bill 300 is similar to the
House Bill 264 program which is
designed ·to encourage energy conservation in schools. Company representatives did not go into detail
ahout their respective proposals, due
t~ the competitive nature of the program.
Co~missioners said they would
evaluate both proposals and likely
arrive ~.la decision at next Monday's
meebng.
In other business, the hoard:
-- Authorized paying $1,060 for
membership in the Ohio Human Services Director's Association and
$3,500 to Teeters Consulting and
Continued on page 3
~

Hartenbach eyes re-election
Incumbent Republican Bob dren, Stephen Hartenbach and Debra
Hartenbach has announced his bid for lean Grueser, both of Chester Town~is parry's nomination for the coon- ship, and three grandchildren.
A Navy veteran of World War II,
ty commission seat commencing Jan.
he
is a member of the Veterans of
1997.
Foreign
Wars Post 4464 of Gallipo: He is now serving his founh year
lis,
American
Legion Post 39 of
qf his first term on the board of counBuckeye
State S()erift's
Pomeroy,
the
ty commissioners.
: Son of the late Otto and Anna Association, the County CommisMcintosh Hartenbach of Minersville. sioners Association of Ohio, the
He resides in Chester Township with National Rifle Association and Ducks
his wife, Viola. They have two chit- Unlimited.

s.

ORDERED UNITS GET AIY 11 noc1 cuoR TRUCIAt •49 .:::.
OR ORDER AIY FORD, UNCOLI, OR MERCURY TO
NO EXTRA CHARGEYOUR SPECIFICAUOIS 11110 EIIU CHARGE!
.

.

Morris seeks commission pos.t
. . Clyde R. Morris of Keno, Chester
· Township, announced today his
intention to seek the Dem(JCratic
: Party nomination for c.ounty com. mission seal expiring Jan. 5, 1997..
: Morris is a 30-yeir member of the
bttemational Brotherhood of Electrical Wotts and is making his first foray into elect¢ politics.
: He currently working at the Shell
(:hemical Plant in Belpre and i~ a
member of the Shade River Lodge of
Cbestct Scottish Rite, and the Forked
Run S~inens Club. He is an avid
outdoot'sman, hunter and angler.
., He and wife, Metri Angela M!lr·
ris, liive five cliildicn and four ~
children.

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - A tentatively feel that this is going to be
body fllund tloating--f~¥=e down jn a the body of Amber Hagerman,"
creek behind an ~pl!hment complex Anderson said. "We feel that by the
has been tentatively identified as a 9- size , weight , hair ... everything
year-old girl who was abducted while appears to be matching from everything we've seen."
riding her bike on Saturday.
The body was found late WednesPositive identification wai; expectday
by a man walking his dog. The
ed later today by the Tarrant County
area
was quickly cordoned off by
medical examiner's office, police ·
police who began recovering the
spokesman Dee Anderson said.
Amber Hagennan was last seen as body and searching for clues. The
she was dragged, fighting and i'ort Wonh Star-Telegram reponed
screaming, from her bicycle by a man today that the body was nude.
Anderson said they have not deterwho drove a dark-colored pickup
truck. The brown-haired, blue-eyed mined where the body entered the
third-grader, a Girl Scout, had been creek. It was found only a shon time
playing near her grandparents' home. after a line of strong thunderstonns
"From every description and ph&lt;r moved through the are.a and might
to graphs that we've looked at, we

have been moved by· rushing water,
he said.
"We are all a little numb," Anderson said. "We cenainly didn't want
this outcome. I'm not going to say we
are shocked or amazed. but we are
really disappointed."
Around the home of Amber's
grandparents, Glenda and Jimmie
Whitson, neighbors had decorated
their homes and cars with ribbons and
balloons in her favorite color, pink.
State 'prison officials said they
were assisting the investigation by
searching records of recently released
child se x offenders in Nonh Texas.
Anderson also said police were questioning known sex offenders and kidnappers.

Comment period for pulp
r=. b 6
mI•11 perm./•t WI•11_end re
.

. ~
The Staff from the West Virginia neenng ormulas, also contains gen·
Division of Environmental Protection era! infonnation on the mill's patenwill be at Hannan High School Mon· tial impact on air quality and human
day to receive comments on the air health. It is the final permit needed by
qualitY permit submitted by the Apple the company before it can begin conGrove Pulp and Paper Company, Inc . struction.
.
Staff will be available at the
Apple Grove Pulp and Paper submitted the application for a pennit to school between noon and 8 p.m. to
construct a l:raft pulp and paper receive both written and oral com·
manufacturing facility at Apple ments on the application, as well as
Grove. The proposed facility will the DEP's preliminary determinati on
. consist of two ~.raft pulp mills, two and draft permit. At least 50 com· bleach plants, and two chlorine diox- . ment• have been received so far by
ide plants when .fully constructed. the Slate Dl·v,·s,·on of Envt'ronmental
Start of consttuction of the first Protection's Office of Air Quality,
phase of the mill. which includes one according to a.DEP spokesman.
pulp mill. one bleach plant and one
Parsons &amp; Whittemore, parent_
chlorine dioxin plant is projected to company of Apple Grove Pulp and
occur in September 1997, Final com- Paper, started working with the state
pletion and start-up of a permitted in 1988 to build the $1.2 billion pulp
operation is anticipated in March and paper mill. The company was
2000.
gran led a SOli-d waste and waste · water
The air quality pennit, mostly a discharge permit from the state. The
technical document filled with engi- water pennit is being appealed.

Jeanne Chandler, information offi.
cer with the DEP, said there will be
no informational session on Monday
as there was in December. _Rooms
will be set aside for people wishing
to make comments.
Written nublic comments on the
pcnnit appl.cation and the office of
air quality's preliminary detcnnination and draft pennit are being solicit·
ed and will be accepted until 4:30
p.m. on Feb. 6, Chandler said . Written comments can either be taken to
h h' h h 1 · M d
t e tg sc oo on on ay, or sent
to West Virginia Office of Air Quality, c/o W. Leonard Womble. 1558
Washington Street East, Charleston,
WV 25311.
Copies of all documents, including the draft permit, are available for
public inspection during nonnal business hours at both the Mason County Library and Hannan Library,
Chandler concluded.

Senate OKs change in Ohio's wiretap law
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Senate unworkable as a result of changes in
has approved a change in Ohio's the federal law.
Sen. Dennis Kucinich, D-Clevewiretap law that backers said would
give law enforcement a needed tool land, opposed the bill because of the
to fight crime. An opponent saw the · potential for abuse. ·
"I have voted for each and every
bill as a threat to privacy.
Senators voted 31·2 on Wednes- crime bill in the year that I've been
day for a House bill to let more than here. But this bill carries with it the
300 common pleas judges statewide risk of attacking constitutional rights
issue warrants for police monitoring guaranteed to the people," Kucinich
of phone calls or other electronic said.. ,
"lnadvenently we inove toward a
communication.
Currently, only a designated judge police state." ·
Sen. Judy Sheerer, D-Shaker
in each of the state's 12 appeals coun
Heights, joined Kucinich in voting
districts may order wiretaps.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Bruce -· against the llill.
Johnson said he did not expect the
Johnson, R-Westerville, said the bill
.
numller
of wiretaps would grow sim·
would bring Ohio's. 1987 wiretap law
ply
because
more judges had authorinto line with ·federal law.
The current state code was seen as lily to order them.

" I think the law enforcement offi-

cials who wanted a wiretap before,
and needed a wiretap before, took the
time, energy and effon to go the extra
mile to get it," he said.
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy,
0-Columbus, tried to amend the bill
so that only four common pl~as
judges in each of the state's 12 coun
districts could grant wiretap requests.
"It does require higher scrutiny,"
Espy said as he contrasted a wiretap
with a search warrant that spells out
specific evidence sought. "We have
something ~ailed protection of the
private citizen in this country."
Espy's amendment lost on a I 9-14
vote.

.•,

Youth
sentenced
in robbery
Will remain in
jail until he's 21
A 14-year-old Middlepon boy,
will spend the remainder of hi s youth
behind bars for robbing two elderly
women at the Mei gs County Salva:ion Army Monday evening.
Joshua Paul Cremeans pleaded
gu ilty Wednesday to one count each
_o f robbery, kidnapping 'lnd burglary.
He was sentenced by Ju~ nile Coun
Judge Robert Buck to the maximum
sentence of a term in an Ohio Departmcnt of Youth Services facility until
he reaches the age of 2l.
1
h
A so c arged in the robbery is
Brad Robinson , 26, of Pomeroy who
faces two counts of kidnapping, and
one count of robbery and burglary, all .
aggravated second-degree felonies ,'.
according to Meigs County Prose- :
cuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Dora Wining, 90, and her daugh· .
ter, Helen Townsend, were hound and .
gagged wi th duct tape at Wining's :
residence at 115 Butternut Ave. in :
Pomeroy. The house was robbed of ·

~r~i.sc~~:i~;m~a~"t~~~:~~ the ~

an
Meigs County Salvation AQlly from :
the home.
The two were not injured in the :
robbery.
·
Robinson is in the Meigs County :
Jail on $300,000 bond, set at an •
arraignment held Tuesday before :
County Court Judge Patrick H. :
·
O'Brien.
, If found guilty of all four charges, .
Robtnson could face a maximum. ·
:.
_prison term of 32-to-60 years.
Lentes said he anticipates Robin- :
son will remain in jail pending trial. :
The arrests followed a joint inve5- ·
ligation of the Meigs County Prose- •
curing Attorney's OtfJCe, the Pomeroy
Police Department and ~ohn Perry of •
the Ohio Bureau of Crit!tinal InvCS: "'
tigation.
·

'.
'

�Thursday, January 18, 1996

Page2 : ·

Commentary

Thu~,JinU1fY18,1Ipl

OHIO Weather
AccuWeathere fore&lt;:ast for

B Ben W8ttllnbJg
,.
yA yoUng audior is pik:billg his
political novel to a major publisher.
"Here's the story," he says. "There is
this wife of the president. She's
smart, she knows everything, and lets
you know it. Back when her husband
was governor, she was one of America's top 100 lawyers; she did a terrific job on education and she made
a bundle in commodities. One of her
clients was a vety shady, ethically
challenged bank, but she says she did-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
111~2156 • Fu: 992·2157·

£
A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oenerai·M-ger

I

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

•.

.The endorsement -game
ByTOMRAUM
Auocltdad Preu Writer

WASHINGTON- If politicians were products, Bob Dole would win
the endorsement sweepstakes hands down. But, as with sneakers, tennis rackcis, or cleiuinghouse magazines, beayY endOfSCII!ents do not necessarily
translate into big sales.
Political consultants salute front-runner Dole's ability 'o line up so many
. endorsements, especially from governors. The Senate majority leader is
backtd by 21 of the nation's 31 GOP governors and predicts "four or five
more.''

· ''The governors are the practical soldiers of the Republican revolution.
And their endorsement dCmonslnltes they believe Bob Dole is the most com·
petent field colllii)llllder to take back the White House from Bill Clinton,"
said Dole campaign spokesman Nelson Warfi.eld.

Washington Today

MICH.

n't know il"

·

dse

Ibis time
Republican Conpus
illvcatiaalci. The Republicus . s.y
the finr lady did very bad things,
mostly that she co~cred-up and lied."
'

Ben Wattenberg
.

·

\

j

"But it's still not such a areat stOry," says the publisher.
"But it's also about the president
and what he did and about policy,"
says the author.
"What did he do~" asks the publisher.
,
"He's aot a history, too. They say
he dodgCll the .draft and ran around
with lots of babes. Then a young
. woman says that while he was governor, he got her in a hotel room and
made, uh, like, inappropriate moves.
This president is also very smart and
lellj you know it He 'says it's a lie. His
enemies say he's a bi&amp;liar and she's
a congenital liar."
"~t sounds weird to me," says the
pu~!•sher. . ,
.
,
.
Hey, II s ficuon. There s also a
really tragic part," says the author.

"A whole hour on Brinkley? It's
mady a lnl£edy," says the publisher. .
·
,
"The best friend$ are a lnlgedy.
They eame to Washington to belp the
presi~nt ~d the wife. ane of the~
commtls SWCI&lt;Ie, andlher, the -ISIOCI·
ate attorney g~ncral, goes to jail,
another is fired because he li~ the
first helicopter to go shoot around of
1golf. Other best friends are accUsed of
!perjury. The lawyers come. Soon
. legal fees bankrupt the fJrst couple.
The wife goes on a book tour to tell
. people how to rai~ children. She
knows best. He knows best; They
know best."
"Shakespearean, hub? But we
don't publish Shakespeare." says the
publisher.
.
"But there's more," says the
author. "The Republicans think they
can win an election on it because it
proves that Democrats are sanctimonious, hypocritical, liberal twils. The
presidel)t needs protcc\01'5 ~ $nugales up to the libetals. Thc hberals
don't want him to sip a bud~t to

By Slllff and Wjre R~

\MS CM;ED

.

. .. ...
~

W.VA. ,

Showers T-SII&gt;ml$ Raih

IHEARD

L------------'------------...,..,.------------_J

·Gephardt vo~s fight on 'principle'

cu-

t1ere··

· A sad experience

'

'

'The Good Life and its
By GEORGE

w..

F; WILL

When I returned to the store in
hlngton PMt
. · Dear Ejlitor
, .
,-, ,There ~ a lot of honest ~le in approximately five to 10 minutes, I
W~H.ING1PN--In 1930 in
;iii;,world tbtn ~ are the oth- ' wutoldoflbeabove·Ji~Rlcninjaand America •~eragolife expectancy at
who she was alld wbeR she lived. I birth was S8 years for men,' 61 for
,. en.
'
' ,1bcite' incident to !his effect on drove to her residence and asked her women. By 1990 it was 71 and 79
bj!c. 23, 99S wbilc grocecy .shop- about it and Jot a reply as to the effect .respectively. Until the 1930s the averplaa at
. in J&gt;ometoy, I lost tbatshebad~tbcmo~y.and aae !Danlifacturina worQI'. toiled!
;c,.
wbile ellith:rg the store. named a fipre wliicb was about~ , nearly SO lioUra a weelc 'with few.
k ........ ~bat really~ buildre!l dollll1 short: btwhalllost. ·rii)dl or beneliia. Ia 1996'about 80
NMOIBl il itot importallt. as.to what
WI1im the witaealel,wtn of percebt of all WOibn have emplqy:hill: answer, they lltiled iticft was er-pald 'h elltb insurailce.
men . .y banded to her thin. ilbe ... In 1940 most Amenclns were
sllildln4
tbcY cOuld. not !JIIIievc · renters, most households had neithcf
abe
Wolita
do
that.
'· .
. a refriaetator nor central heating, 30
1
• It could ~vc ~n a lot wone tf. percent lac~ illlidc rilllnina w~.
ood.o. • ~:.
o:.~.::.~.!l:r ~~ w~ft)eWISI~~~mostand
~..~_i:.to~..

' did not have a telephOI)e. In .1994

,(when the typical new 1\ome WiS 4Q
l ~rcent lqer than its t979t~&gt;un.terpart), 81 percent of housObol~lild
.VCRs, 37 percent bad pel:SODal.com1pulers. As late u 1948 tetiremcnt was
no certainty: about half the men over
65worked. ln 199S,a{terdcc$1e~of
sujlpoled : "deindustril!llzatioq,''
industrial production was liO ~
higber'lban in 1980, 90percenthiab·
cr than in .J 970, 3S6 pcn:eni higher
than in 1950.1a 1964 there were few•
er than I00 black•elected· officials
111ationwide; by the early 19901 ~
iwere about7,000, B~ 1929 and
' !933 output dec~ ~:.:-.. ..., . \-'.~
.,.,._
"""'.
uuu
'!"'-"'"'
.._.,_ •centlntbeworstpoltww
· ons
~'Gil•'tore:::' Jcl-.~...,.we. ,
;-c- T'' MorelbanafiftbofMlcric:insliv~ (1973-:7S and 1981-82)- output
=~
'A.• I atei1t was lltld!s J;)' ~ on famu •. leaa. than atbW of which J decliniidjust4.9and3~ttapecoae tD the~:- "I~ ahe can badclec!ficliJ!Itaandonlyatentbhad · iiw:ly.la 1976theavenaesupenlllll'............. ,.
, ·
fluahtoilltl.
'
·
, btciire!ed 9,~: IS yean
.
M. L.-~ · · Ia 1940- 11120 ~ llld lllllrlt c&amp;ed
· We are richer,

. ao

told

"*

~

.,

· ·' ·

.

'

~- ~=~r.~~liol~:~. :.::r:~~~f:e~·
.
.

'

'

'

.

~

'.
•'. '

C~_ntents'

..'.·,. :·' !

So why durin&amp; this $poch of .decline in the sen~ ofresponsibili~.
unprecedented achievement has . Stanuclsonbelievesthatthemobl- .
AmeriCa become ~ with lization of society for the Sei;ond · :
'perceived f~lure? Thai ~011 is World War blurred the distl~~on · ·:
subtly answered in Roben' samuel- between aovemmental and pr)Vate
son's new !look "The Good Life and ~bili~ The postwllr qendl
Its'Discontcnll: The~ DrUm of unideolqpcal "problcm-solvina"
in the f\ae of ~t, &gt;194S- politicseruedlhedistinciionbet\w.en
t99S." Slmue,llon, 0. ~·"* ~blotps tiUtl can be tlolved ~ c:oa,. ~
and Wilbinatoll J'ejt . ~ "·~ ~ .ol\lit 'bJe · ~ ·~ . . '~&lt;­
sbouldhaveSecrct~pr•40 ~·- :eumPle. tn 197Q the mill who had · )
becme if anythina hlppenno hbn, ~. ~ J~ra Cblet ~ ,"
we are sunk.
· "' • .. ,
11011llC ll4vtscr said ~ou n · •
1
He says postWar propc$1 ~ an 1"fundlmentally Pfe~. lllcuir- ' ~ ·
entidemeat tnentallty which in wm\·Jplanc crubea and ual~~~- !'
bred .di.ibiDtcttt tblf, the natiOn ·1 AJ Samuellon say-. ·
.- !10 , .
was ftot liViiiJ:.'~ ' -~ unattainable· ' lonaer aood enouJI\.'; .~ Lyndon ' • '
p.c:.;Thlbillef-'WBSthatwe\'tlerc I~said,ithadtoliiia~ ·:
entittccl.towhtfe¥W--is~ilile;' ... Soeitty.Andwby, IIOI,Jobii~Ca)Dedy "'&lt;
a rape!,~ .Dd .• leaa hav~said. ~l\ttlll~labil~a, ~-:
UM:ra.iajiiUijJ.iiity.isplllli_ble,ancl . the power to ab9iilb Ill forma of :"
!tblt 1UCb paOIJ)Ici(y'
bMisb lunlp pa~.".- - · .
- '. ~ !111011 ICJCill.illa. Sanlueliotl tay~ dU
Wdl,a G - • - . W ' I iJ '' ·, ;

-.w

;=.

:.-~b/! ;=.:~rGt:rt{-=
'
,,-

•

-

.

-

I·

gency Management Agency.
Dyer, ~oolsby comment
. "The flood watch currently in
effect is for the southern part of the
state, and not for this area. It looks as
if we could get some heavy rain over
the weekend. Our main concern ·is
that some of the small streams that
have still have chuncks of ice in them
could back up and cause some isolated floodin,g," said Bob Byer, director of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services.
Officials feared a "quick release,''
· where rushing water pushes the ice
away in one quick flurry, breaking the
ice jam and rapidly raising the water
level, Quinlin said.

For the last two years, the Middleport High School Class of 1950 memhers.. a few of them. at least--have handled staging the annual M.H.S. reunion
in the spring. However, the few grew weary.
Jean Craig who had been on~ of the "few" got on the telephon~ and recruited leadership to stage the 1996 reunion and it IQOks like smooth sailing.
Diane VanCooney Lynch and Marilyn Stumbo Meier have been named
co-chairpersons of the ·1996 reunion wh ile Mari lyn Swan Anderson and Char· ·
lene David Batey will share the treasurer's duties with Celeste Ault Coates
to serve as secretary. Sounds like a good group to me and I'm confident
they'll get the job done.
1be alumni-association treasury is in excellent condition and alumni lists
have been updated so the new leadership should. he able to roll right along.
Pomeroy's Ralph Graves, a Middleponer really from way back, helps me
often. His memory is excellent. He has a gr~l recollection of the local scene of yesteryear.
·
Ralph advises me th'at the musician who joined the Sammy Kaye band .
was none other than Paul Cunningham. Mrs. Kathleen Davis of Middle-·
port, a musician in her own right in day s gone by, also came up with Paul's ·
identification .
.
As I remember it, Paul was a whiz on the tuba with the Middleport High .:
School Band. Small wonder that he was able to go big time. Paul is the
older brother of Tip Cunningham wholfl many of you I'm sure will remem- ..
ber al so. Tip, I believe, resides ln Lima these days.
..

'

·By The Assoca.'teci Pres~
Today ... Becol)ling windy with
showers developing. Thunderstonns
possible with locally heavy rains by
late afternoon. Mild. High in the low· er 60s. Mainly south winds increasing ,to 20 to 30 mph and gusty.
Chance of rain is 80 percent.
Tonight...tontinued windy with
showers and possible thunderstonns..
Rain possibly heavy at times. Turning colder with the low in the mid
20s. South wi.nds becoming sbuth·
wc•t 20 to . 30 . mph ... Then

IT. .

·. cetters·to ·the ed~tor '

Don'tlet those warm temperatures fool ya. It's probably only the calm
before the stonn. However, the warm weather has provided melting of most
of.the snow and gives a chance for a "second wind" before the crunch returns.
And, as you pro~ably know. temperatures are expected to head down again
for the weekend.
·

Flurries

'

SOUTHlRN ·

Wbl"

by Bob Hoeflich

Today's weather forecast · ·

BLIZZARD

JET

Officials in two Ohi&lt;l counties are
keeping tabs on ice-clogged waterways, fearful that ice .iams would
break and,cause flooding.
In Belmont County in southeast
Ohio, several streams backed up on
Wednesday. But by early this mom·
ing, all but one had cleared.
. Meanwhile, residents along the
Chagrin River in Lake County near
Cleveland were urged to leave their
homes, but fe~ heeded the advice,
authorities said.
About I 112 miles of the Captina
Creek near Powhatan ·Point was
frozen, said Richard Quinlin, coordi·
nator of the Belmont County Emer·

IND.

"So what?" says the publisher.
"Why should I publish it?"
"Then she comes to Washington,"
the author says. "She tries to act
cronies some ·business 'io the White
House by firing·old-timers. She says
she never did it. Then a close friend
from the old law firm, worlcing at the
White House, commits sui.cidc. Some
papers disappear. Slic says she bad
nothing to do with it. Then the Con·
gress starts investigating some old
land deals. She says she did nothing
wrong. The Congress 1\olds hearings,
covered by big-time television. They
do a whole hour about it on Brink- ,--------------~--'---------------~----,
ley."
"The Congress?" asks t!le publisher. "Television? Why?"
"That's the way they do things.
·'
THI~
They know people watch it. There
was once a Republican president
BY A
who said 'I am not a crook,' and the
SHIFT IN THE
S~EAM.
Democratic Congress tried to prove
that he was. And get this: She worked
on the Congress team, nailing the
HMM ...
Republican president The Democrats
said that the president did very bad
HILLARY CUNTON
things, mostly that be covered-up and
CAU~ED
lied. The Republicans said it was all
politics."
"So what else is new?" says the :
publisher.
.
'
"So the Conaress set up new regulations about money, lobbying and
ethics, and set up inspectors and independent counsels, and investigative
sections for public integrity. That
made it easier to expose evil. So there
was more evil exposed, even tiny
evils. The press loved it. They were
tbe'OJily good guys left, exposing evil.
It sold papers and got good ratings. i
But then, later on, wouldn't you
guess, there was a Democratic presi·
dent and a Republican Conaress, and

I HEARD

Beat of the Bend ...

Streams a,e backed up in
Belmont and Lake Counties

· open the aovernment."
' "The government is closed?" asks
', the publisher. "That IOIInds aazy."
"There's a reason. The'Democ:ratl
say lhe RcpubliCIIDS want to starve old
people and put· them out on the
street." .
"Do they?"
.
"Nobody knows. But that's what
the president says. And it's a very
im~t election. For America and
the world. It's about whether Ameri· _..
ca can change course."
· "It better. So how does it end?"
asks the publisher.
"That's the point," says the llllhor.
"It nevd ends. Everybody is iitvesti•
aatina everybody. It never encls." "1bat's ridiculous," says the publisher. "Novels always end. I'm not
going to publish it. I don't publish
,novels with sad endings."
' BeaWatteallerc,a-'orlellow
'at tbe .U.rteaa Eqterprile ~
,tate, Ia tbe author of a ~ book, ·
,"V.- Matter Moat," IUld II tbe
at ol the weddy public . . . . . .
proanm. "Tbluk Taak."

But whether these endorsements can translate into votes .is open to question.
· Despite winning more and more endorsements, Dole is seeing his lelid
shrink in recent polls.
Magazine publisher Steve Forbes has been gaining with few endorsements. Even former Forbes classmate and longtime friend, New Jersey Gov.
Christie Whitman. went with Dole instead.
Although he'd probably blanch at the comparison, Dole is following the
course taken in 1984 by then-vice President Walter Mondale.
Mondale won the endorsement of most of the nation's Democratic governors and paraded them - just as Dole is doing with GOP governors.
Like Dole, Mondale drew criticism from other Democrats for being too
close to the Washington establishment.
·
. , Mondale catered to special Democratic interest factions to help him win
'· the nomination: organized labor and women's and civii-Qshts organizations,
'for inslaJice. Dole has done the same with conservati-.:e grolips, courting gun
owners and the religious right
Mondale faced a spirited challenge from then-Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado.
And be got pununclled in the general election by incumbent President Ronald
Reagan.
•• .
"EDdorsemenis are pro~ly more important as an indicator of strength
than as a source of strength," said TQm Mann, a political scientist at Brookings Institution. I'There's not a shrCll of evidence that suggests support of
a govch)or helps in the direct sense that voters take that inl!l consideration."
By Morton Kondracke
aging the program, he said, but will March, Democrats will have an "failed Republican strategy" of clos"Usually an endorsement is valuable in helping to keep your opponent
After spending the last year goin* not permit a "tace to the bottom" "agenda" that will tell voters "what ing down the federal government · .
from 'aetting it,"said .Democratic pallster Mark Mellman. "But that's all it
negative, House Democrats are start- where a Missouri governor would be can happen" if they choose to ~in-' caused Aritericans to "remcmbet that ·
Usl!ally means."
·
ing
to take the offensive on the fed- free to slash benefits and "tell people state Democrats to cona,ressiona),. some of govemm~,n.t. t!'CY.. ~· ~1. .~
But Mellman, Mann BJ)d othet political analysts say a governor's backera!
budget ·and plan to construct a ' to move to Illinois."
power
· · like Mc:d~ ""' '.ii!M: U d"lll!il. · ··
ing,can be important organizationally.
positive
policy
agenda
io
rulJ
on
in
The
size
of
Republican
tax
cuts..
Bui.
said
another
Deinlicrkiic'"
' tlley. iille' tdul:~hoif.'~' · ~· Y_ · ..
It can't burt Dole, for instance, that both New Hampshire Gov. Steve MerNovember.
$177 billion in their latest proposal - leader, "We certainly won 'I call it a
The Dc~c agenda "wili haVe
rill and .Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad endorse him. He's also backed by GQv.
Minority
Leader
Richard - "lies !It the heart" of the confiict conlnlct."
values content," but be indi~ :
David Beasley of South Carolina, with its March 2 first-in-the-South pri·
Gephardt, 0-Mo., slilrted the cam- with Democrats, practically requiring
Whatever its name, Gephardt said doubts about the effectiveness of : ·
mary.
withapressbriefinain
structural
changes
to
save
money
in
that
the document is-being preparCd Republican atlal;ks on 'Hollywood _
paiprecently
In 1988, New Hampsbii-e Gov. John Sununu's endorsement and active .
Washington
and
a
speech
in
St.
Louis
Medicare,
Medicaid
and
welfare,
he
by
leadership
committees ov~n by movies and daytime 'IV. "l don't ' ·
support of Bush helped bury Dole in New Hampshire.
preparing
the
ground
for
the
possible
said.
·
Rep.
David
Obey,
0-Wis., and will be think the govemmem can run a ecn- .
"In the final analysis, endorsements are nice to have. But it really comes
failure of budget talks.
Gephardt also said that he does not designed to address"the central prob- sorship program." he said.
down to how tWd that endorsee works on your behalf," said Gary Koops,
"I'm
not
ready
to
concede
that
an
oppose
"scientific" reduction of. the lem in our society... bow to get wages
1b cope w'th the problem of lack · :
a spokesman for Texas •Sen. Phil Gramm's campaign.
is
impossible,"
he
told
a
consumerpriceindexbutdoesoppose
growing
again."
·
of
supervision of children in two- ·
agreement
Gramm has Jined.up two governors: Arizona's Fife Symington and Texas
While details of the agenda ~ far worker households, Gephanlt said;
group of journalists, "but it may well "arbitrary" cuts that would save
. Gov. George Bush.
.
be."
·
money by reducing, Social Security from sellled, Oephardt's comments "wearen'tgoingtobeabletopulone
Among the others, only former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander has a
He
said
that
'_'~
.
differences
are
cost-of-livin~ adjustments. , ~her ,indicate that Democrats' tiR ,niovina parent back in the home. We can't go
. gubematorial · en~':5CIDent, a single one- from Tennessee's prese~t gov"!uch greater than JUSt numbers. The Democrats J,X&gt;tnt ~~that trade uruons ?nly slightl~ to the center in prepar- back to the 19SOs."
ernor; Don Sundqwst. ·
d1fferences
are much deeper and -- Gepbardt s poltucal base.-- oppose mg for an eptc battle to regain control
But Oephardt has solne ideas 'for
Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt on Monday became the 21st GOP governor to
moie
fundamental."
CPI
.
adjustments
to
·protect
their
of
the
House.
reversing
social pro)llems. "lfl were
endorse Dole, praising the veteran Kansas lawmaker as "tbe right man" for
Den:'ocrats ~ave been accused ~f COLAs. ·
'
What's more, Gepbardt's speech a aeneral fighting a war with the ; ;
the job.
.
defendmg Med1car:e solelY_ for poht·
If budget talks do fail, Gepbardt indicates that any positive program breakdown of civil society, I'd use as
Recent polls show that Dole's support -like Mondale's in 1984- is
1cal ~ons, Gepbarc!t .sail!,. but he S81d, the 8?,Vemmen~ f~ces two alte~; will go hand-in-hand with attacks on a major asset the fact that every comwide but shallow.
asserted
tba! ~party s pos1Uon was na~ves -- manag~ d1sagreement, Rep~blicans' "radical ravaging' of muhlty has a school building and a
A new Boston Globe poll showed that while Dole remained comfortably'
.
based
on
pnn~~ple..
.
..
which lnlnsla~s 1~to passag~ of a Medicare"to pay for "bu~_cuts staff. You 'Can tum it into an ouis; a :
in the•lead in New Hampshire, half of those who support him said they could
Inst~
of
sav~ng
Med•~arc:·
.
as
year-long
contmumg resol~tion to for the wealthy" and With pledgea .·familY center," be .said; "in emy ,
chanac their minds before the prlmary Feb. 20.
clmm,
Republicans
are
ms1sbng
keep
the
government goma, or never to "sell out the middle 'class to school district in the country"
they
Polls sho"' him in •. statistical dead beat wi\h Forbes in Dela~are and
on
"disagaregation"
of
the
program
':Balkan
war,"
involving
continued
get
a
deal."
.
lt;s
aooc1
that
Gephaidt
~Oilier
with Sen. Phil Gramm 10 Tc!xas.
~ its orig~nal concept of guaran- co~~ict over spending and the debt
While RepubliCIIDII will campaign 'House Democrats have something·
Dole may feel confident with his overwhelming lead in the endorsement
tce•.ng
a
baste
level
of
~
to
all
ceJiing_lhrough
the
1
~6
~lecuon.
on
the popultr cause of balancing the positive to say in 1996, but how
contest. But, if he runs into trouble, he could fmd, as then-Sen. Edmund
scruors. GOP Jl.l~s to _allow 'people
Unhke Senate MIQOnty Leader budget, Gephardt said that ieducing Jy it will come through remains to be
Muskie did in 1972, that endorsements can be fleeting.
.
who
are
beal~y
and
ha~e
more
mooTom
Daschle, ;I&gt;-S.D,~ who has chal- . the f~eral deficit is "part ·of" the seen. After all, the centerpiece of
Once Muskie's campaign for the Democratic nomination began to fall
ey
to
have
a
different
kind
of
benefit
lenged
Republicans With creauvc and soluuon to the stagnant w•""s prob- Gephardt's speech · St Lo ' ·
.apart •.the dozens of Democratic govctnors and other party leaders he'd lintd
"•n .. will uIumate
.
I nd
'
. bud
'
"6W
10 •
WS WIS a
pac-e
Y.
u
eflll:lne
centnst
get, welfare, fann and reg- lem but that "we ovcntate the impor- pledp that "when it comes to · our
.
,up _began ~eserting him in droves.
popular support for Med1care entire- ulatory reform alternatives, _Gepbardt tance of balancing tl)c budget. You Medicare and Social Security
he ~barged.
. •
,
and O!her House Democrauc leaders can't&amp;~t bung up on~" .. , ·
·. Will ·be no sutrender.''
'
EDITOR'S NOTE -'Ibm a.- coven tbe
u- and 1111tion· ,ly, ~moctats
are wllhn~ to_eslabbs~ . have ,largely ~n contentto lash'out
And while R~~ .blime ~....~ ~ J1 ~ i· ~~ • • '
· al)olltiQ for The ~ted Pftu.
tnd•v•duaJ. caps on,,~c&amp;ld and to at the GOP.
government for :eausi,na nlost of '
v1 Rol c1.o, tbe DE · •·
, l
~
1
.
give states "total flexibility" in man- , However, Gephardt said thaLby America's woes,'' ~. llii!f.the , -or eapitallllll.)
· • ' ~ ' .""..- '

·f'tid

conditions

.

.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3 :.

Officials watch
for flash flooding

Friday, Jan. 19

A
most
implausibl.
e
.
nov~l-. ____.___
rfhe
Daily
Sentinel
.
.

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.. ·

2S

Kenneth G. Bowers

west...Diminishin&amp; io IS to
mph
late. Chance of precipitation is near
tOO percent.
·
·
. Friday... Mostly cloudy with ~ 30
percent chance of snow showers.
High in the mid 20s
Extended forecast
Saturday... Dry and cold. Lows' 10
to IS. Highs in the 20s.
. - Sunday...A chance of snow. Lows
in the teens. Highs in the 20s.
Mo~day .. .Partly cloudy. Lows in
the teens. Highs in the 20s.

Word has been received here of the death of Kenneth G. Bowers, 59, of Massapequa, N.Y., originally from Meigs County, who died Jan. 13, 1996.
Born in Pomeroy, son ·of the late Ernest Mac and Adrie Eichinger Bowers, he is survived by his wife, Mary Ellen Bowers; children Mario, Adam
and Melissa Bowers, all of Massapequa; two children from a former marriage, Kenneth Jr. and Karen of Pennsylvania; and four grandchildren.
Also surviving are two brothers, Joseph Bowers of Reedsville and Ernest
Bowers of Columbus, and sisters Ac!a Rowe, Karen Haines and Kay Proffitt, all of Racine, Joyce Sauters of Pomeroy and Nedra Tarvin of Columbus.
·
Funeral mass was held at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Massapequa with burial following in Calverton National Cemetery.

M~re .rain On way
....-:

...

~.

•"'

By The Asaociated Press

Commissioners...continued rrom page •

Paul W. Salser, 82, of Albany died Wednesday; Jan. 17, 1996 at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
·Born Oct. 31, 1913 in Racine, he was the son of the late Benjamin and
Clair Roush Salser. He was a retired employee of Ohio University, a member of the Albany United Methodist Church, and a member of the Albany
Senior Citizens.
He is survived by two sisters: Ruth Wolfe of Racin.e, and Grace Agre of
Morris Plains, N.J.; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by one brother, Robert Salser.
Services will he held Friday, I p.m., at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, with the Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Burial will follow at Cannel
Cemetery, Sutton Township, in Meigs County.
.
Calling hours for family and friends will be held Thursday, from 6 to 8
p.m., at the funeral home.
·

----Local bri·efs

Research Service of Washington
-~Tabled approval pf adding
Court House for consultati&lt;'n; ~ _Sch'11'1 Lot Cemetery, Castor Cemi!.. Ex tendCct the period for Iicens- tery, Mount Olive Cemetery and
ing dogs to Jan . 31 ;
Ogdin Cemetery roads to mileage for
Township
pending
-- Transferred $315.07 from the Columbia
county general fund to 1~ revolving approval by the county engineer.
loan fund:'
,
'
Present were President Fred Hoff-- Paid ·weekly · bills of man, Vice-president Janei Howard,
. $3 79,821.61&gt; consisting of- 411 Commissioner Robert Harteribach
entries;
and Clerk
. Gloria Kloes.

Officers are investigating the theft of a 1966 International
Fire Department early Wednesday mom.brush tiuck from the Rutland
,,
mg.
.
The truck was located later in the afternoon in Leading Creek
under a railroad trestle.

Man cited after accident
A Racine man was cited following a one-car accident on Pine
Grove Road near state Route 124 TueSday evening, according to Meigs
Co1,1nty SJ!er,iff.James M. Soulsby..
Eddie R. Smith.;was westbound when he lost control of his
-1978 Chevrolet truck, according to-sheriffs report. The truck got in
snow along the edge of the road, slid into a creek and landed on its
side, receiving heavy damage.
Smith was cited on a charge of driving under suspension.

, meett~.{'ight (Thursday) at6:30 p.m.
for·a D)~eting and dinner.
Clink ',et
The harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet Tuesday, I0 to II :30
a.m. followed by a dinner. A blood
prcssun!iclinic will be held in conjunctiorl'with the meeting.

Deer accidents 'investigated
.
No injuries were reponed after two deer-related accidents
investigated by deputies of the Meigs County Shenffs Department.
Wednesday evening, Palma Wiles, Pomeroy. was northbound
on U.S. 33 at struck a deer that ran into the left side of her 1993 Ply -mouth, causing moderate damage.
This morning, Dorscl Bibbee, Pomeroy, was ea~tbound on
Eagle Ridge Road in Chester Township when he swerved to avoid a
deer in the road. His 1984 Chevrolet pickup went over an embankment and rolled several t(mes.

"'

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
Units of the 'Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded seven call s for a~sistance Wednesday
including two tt~nsfcr calls. Units
responding included :

Grines, VMH.
RUTLI\fi!D

9:51 ~ 1 m . , yolunteer fire department and squad, motor-vehicle accident on New Lima Road, Chelcie
MIDDLEPORT . .
Combs Br.mon, treated at the scene.
10:30 p. m ~ Village Manor Apan- , RACINE ,
ments, John Ward, Veterans Memor5:02 p.m., Apple Grove-Dorcas
ial Hospital. . '· ·
·
Road. Dar.lene Graham, VMH .
POMEROY
TUPPER~ PLAINS
9:18 p.m:,' vai_l' Street," Leah
5:01 p.m., Eden Ridge Road,
Swatzel, VMH; · .
Louella !)l,utter, Camden Clark
II :45 p.m., C~?,ndor Street, Willie Memorial Hospital.

Hospital news .
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Carol
McKenzie, Pome~oy.
Wednesday discharges- Delmar
Whaley, Middleport.
Holzer Medical Center '
Discharges Jan. 17 ~Carl Mercer, Kelley Klein, Mrs. Ronald
Lavender and son, Roger Hammon,
Donna Wyant, Clifton Vernon, Morris Martin, HarTy Hendricks, Barbara
Long, Vicki Michael, Harry Swaney,
Heather Blaclc. ·
Bl,rth - Mr. and Mrs. Nikolas
Mahone, daughter, Ravenswood,
W.Va. . .
'
(Published with permission)

The Daily Senti.Qel
!USPS 113-M)

"'.

Publi!iihc:d' every nftemoon. Mondoy. lhr®ih , , '
Frid:ly. I ll Coun St. Pomeroy, Ollio: bY 1he· •.or
~
Ohio Valley Publi!ihing CompanyiODn~l Co.. '

Member: The All!iOCioted Preu·, IUM tbe C»&gt;lo
New.'ipapt:r A .'i ~OCil'ltion.
·

Bob lv.na ............................18"

..

Champion Ind.......................22'1.

Chamilna shap.....................2"1.
City tlaklna ....;..................... 2•'1.
... F. . .L'Mo(jul .......................19'4
G.nMtt ....: ............................60\
Good)..,. taR ............~.........43\

Ohio 4 ~769.
1

~

Ont YJttk ......................... ............. (~ -- ~---··-S100
One Month ...................•R., ........ ................$8.10
One Year ............ ..... ............................ $104.00

'.

1'

subo1ntten' ..._~ri"',;, ""~!be canlefina~

remit i11,

ldv~Mt:

M41LSUBSCRIPTIONS
1 -MtiP Count,
.
il Week! ................................................ $27.30
26\\&lt;cb .............,......, ............................ $.5!.82
32-ks............................................... $i0S.S6

..... Ootslde ~c....,

.

13 -ks ..........................~ .: .................... $29.2.1

i6W..b ................................................ $.16.68

Ag~eement

reached
on pay raise bill

'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Apay raise
bill for statewide, county and township elected officials has moved a
step closer to passage.
A House-Senate conference committee reached agreement Wednesday
. • on a bill to grant 3 percent salary raises in each of the next four years .
Most of the increases would take
effect in 1997 for candidates who win
office in the Nov. 5 election.
For judges, the pay raise would
take effect March I. Sheriffs would
receive a stipend effective the same
date with money coining from fees
for extra dutieo ·they must perfonn
· under a federal gun control law.
The bill hit a roadblock late last
year when the House refu sed to go
along with a Senate proposal to
irclude legislators. The conference
committee remOved lhe provision.

..........•................. ..

: COLONY THEATR~~

..

--~

r..

FRI. THRU THURS
ROBIN WILLIAMS IN

JUMANJI ..
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

..--·
~

Progress

Savings of 20 to 70%
on Men's and Women's Fine
Wearing Apperal

Billy W011 . the voice of both Ren
•Srimpy
and Stimpy on Nickelodeon's Rnt d
does the voice of
I HoneyShow.Nutalso
Checrios bee.
·
!

the

Olw v..ll:y ••nr••o......... ............:s1 \
Rctekwell •••• ~.~ ••••...•••.•.•••..••:••15"

direct. co The llf:lily StMincl

•ra. . . . . . . . .

on a 1hljt. ahr. 01 ll mondl blsis. Credit will be
given camer e.di' ~-~--:.t
.
'

..
r "'-1 . - '
..
No subsdripd011 ~y mal' perrfl.iaed in 1"11
where hOmC ~et aaviceJi,-aVaitlb\c. . .

Bet you've even ventured forth without your hat, scarf and gloves the past
several da~ . Enjoy while you can and do keep smiling.

~ow In

TRIVIA

K-nllft ....... :~ ............................8'4.
LJtndl End ..- .........................13\
Llmllld lnc .........................:..15'1..
p.oplll ·~· .. ~ ..;.............
OhiO Y111ey a..k....................37

SINGLE COP~ PRICE
Daily.............................. - ...................... 3.S Cent,;

Ho ~ the weather will perinit your going to Athens on the evening ofTues- ·. .
day, Jan. 30, when Rodgers and Hammerstein'~ Cinderella will be perfonned ·
in Memorial Auditorium.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. for the production perfonned by a nati onal touring company. The musical has a cast of 30, brilliant sets and costumes. Tickets arc available by calling 614-593-1780 during box office hours which are
from noon to S:30 p.m.. Monday through Friday. .
'

I TER CLEARA CE 'SALE

B~Wirner .........................30\

POSTMASTER:.Send addreu corrections' w
The Doily Senli~l. Ill Courl St. Pomtro~.

By C•iTifr or Motor RWit

~

Athllnd 011 ...........................35\
AT•T .....................................88'4
Bank Qne L ..........................35\

elm po~tn~~e paid at Pomeroy. Ollie.

SUBSCRIPTION RA'Iml . ,

Stocks

Ele.~wer .......................•2'1.
Allza .........~............................!!15\

·Pomeroy. Ohio 45169, Ph. 992-2156. Scxond

...

Theft of fire truck probed

M·eigs announcements
Boil advisory .issued
.
. Lcad!~g Creek Co~servancy DtstriCI has ISSUe!~ a boil ~dViSOrj for
customers west.pf thej nte~ection of
Tuus Road and Carson Road due to
a main·Jine w~I~r.lcak. This boil advisory will he ·lh effect u~til (unl)cr
notice.
·
Legion to nieeJ
.
Post 602, American Legion will

Jim and Virginia Rees of ttic Racine area name their neighbor, Paul Cur1done , was their deep snow hero. Paul not only cleared out the Rees drive- ..
way with his irusty tractor but al so did several others in the neighborhood.
By golly, we really need people like Paul when things get rough. don't we? ·

Paul W. Salser

dictions of gusts of 40 mph.
Ap approaching low pressure syst.em -will bring an end to the recent
warm spell. forecasters said. Highs
on Friday will he 25-35.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 6 7 degrees in 1929 while
the record low was 17 below zero in
1994. Sunset tonight will he at 5:34
p.m. ~nd sunrise Friday at 7:50a.m.

Most 'O(.Otiio was under a flood
watch today .with a forecast of heavy.
rain on top of ground already saturated from melting snow.
·
The Nation.al Weather Service
also issued a flood warning for the
Scioto River at LaRue in Marion
County. h1s~id flooding should be
limited to !gw-lying areas.
A wind advisory also was in effect
for all but so~thcast Ohio with pre-

And pleasant Nora Rice of Middleport will be undergoing hip replace- ·
ment surgery at Mount Cannel East Hospital in Columbus on Friday. This .
is the third time around/ for Nora with the same operation. Both hips were .~
corrected dunng earlier surgeries but the one done in 1987 has developed a ,
problem.
,
'
I'm sure a lot of you j&lt;,Jin me in wishing Nora a most successful operation and a quick trip home. She'll be confined to the Columbus hospital for :
four or five days , a lot lesstime than was involved during the earlier surg- ::
enes.

I

"obblil* 6
ae\
. Rayl! DutcMJhell ..............131'4
'Sho.v:'• JraO. . ~.~ .....,•••_••.•••~ .. :.....:..t
Star Bank .....,.... ~ ....................s?f.
Wandy lnl'l •• ,.-...................20,•
Worthln,an lftd...................20~

'•'

-·-·-

Stock reporta are the 10:30

a.m. quotee provided by A~at
of Galllpolla.

_.

.

_32'w..b ............................................... Si09.71

.•

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~

POMEROY
.
Near Pomeray-U.IOn Bridge

992·2588

.

VINTON
0.11111 COunty,Di8play Ywcl
155 Main St.
388-8603

BARR CLOTHIERS

it.;

145 N.
2nd
MlddJeport
_,.
-- --~

~

.

.

Middleport_

�\

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.The D~Y S~ntl!r --

Sports

-

•

E·astern ~arsity girls reco.rd ·68-44 win over-Waterford

In Mld·Amerlcsn Conference hoops,

EMU downs BG; Ohio defeats Toledo
.

.

I

ByTIMPUET

Allo c-..ct Preaa Writer
Bowling Green faced a strong

Eastern Mic~gan team without three
key players, and the effect of their
absence became obvious in the sec·
ond half as the Eagles· pulled away
fi:om the Falcons.
Eastern went an a 21-0 run to take
a 63-34 lead on its way to a '77-54
victory Wednesday night, giving the ·
'Eagles a two-game lead in the MidAmericllll Conference race.
"You don't make thoSe kind of
runs i.ndividually. You make them as
a team," Eastern coach Ben Braun
said. "Our team did a verf nice job
during the run of.finding open people. That was an impressive run and
good for our players." .
Bowling Green had just five
members of its regular eight-man
rotation in unifonn. Center Dayon
Ninkovic is injured, while Shane
Komives and DeMar Moore have
not been academically certified to
play in tbe second semester and did
not make the trip to Michigan.
Bowling Green coach Jim Lar-

.

'

I '

•

ranaga said th!lt he was not sure until
Tuesday night that Komives and
MooR: would be unayailable and that
the Falcons had no chance to prepare
without them.
"We played a, very good Eastern
Michigan team on a good night,"
Larranaga said. "They ~layed very
well. They had the 1\flSWer to ev~thing we did offensively ·and defensively. The end result was· they got
off to a good stan, controlled the
tempo, played from out front_and
with a lot of confidence."
Eastern used nine players for at
least 12 minutes each while Bowling
Green stuck with its staners most of .
the way. The Eagles got balanced ,
scoring, with Brian Tolbert scoring,
17 points, Earl Boykins 15 and oCr·
rick Dial and Theron Wilson 10
apiece. Antonio Stacey scored 17 for.
the Falcons.
Eastern ( 12-1 overall) is unbeat·
en iit its fi'-;e conference games, with
-five teams- Miami of Ohio, Toledo, Bowling Green, Ball State and
'Western Michigan- all tied at 3-2. .
Kent and Ohio are 2-3, Central

Michigan 1-4 and Akron 0-5.
Iogte11led tbe Broncos with 18.
In Wednesday's o!her~nfelencc
Curtis SiJIIfiiOns was 8-for-10
matchups, Miami edged Western from the floor and finished· with I~ .
Michigan 62~1. Ohio beat Toledo points.for Ohio against Toledo, with
70-57, Ball State posted an 82-69 teammate Geno Fool scain&amp; 17. The
decision over Ce!ltral Michigan and Rockets got 18 from Craig Thames.
Kent whipped Akron 89-68.
Central Mic,bigan f~ the same
Miami coach Herb Sendek sound- problem as Bowling_ preen. The
ed a lillie like Yogi
after his Chippewas were shonhanded by
team survived a ·comeback in which four players · aj!a:inst ,Ball Swe
Western Michigan rallied from a 42• bec~U~SC of suspensions issued· by
28 deficit early in the ~ond half to coach Leonard Drake as a'result of
tie the score 61-61 with 16 seconds a locker roo.P .figh!, ·
remaining. ·
,
The Cardinals' Bonzi Wells lidded
"No game is ·over until it is truly to bis conference scoring lead with
over," Sendelc said. "Every posses- · 28 points and had 14 rebounds. Bttll
,ion bas equal weight. You just Iiave State won despi~ ihooling -39 per·
to. play \he whole game."
cent from the floor, compared with
Landon Hackim made the second S4.5 percent for Central, Charles
of two free throws· with seven sec- Macon was the Chippewas' top scoronds (jft to give Miami the victoiy. . er with 21 . . J,
· .
"Ariy time'Landon Hackim !I on
Kent
,
had
&amp;
,
~24
rebounding
the· line, I will feel confident," 1 margin in its ~tory ober Akron. D.J. •
Sendek said. "What's imPortant is Boase scored 19 points for the Goldthat he Qlade 'the secolid one after en Flashes, while the Zips were led
missing the.first."
by Ryan Anilrick,with 17.
Devin Davis scored 20 poinJ(for
', Akron has not WQII at Kent in 18
Miami, giving him 1,01·7 points for games dating back to the 1962-63 · ,
his career. Miami freshman Damon season.
Frierson had 17, while Ben Hand-

Berra

.,

....

'
BY SCOTT WOLFE ·
Ravenswood blitzed to a 45-1 5
halftime' .lead, then repelled a late
Southern rally to.clllim a 67-53 girls'
basketball triumph over the Southern
Tornadoes We!(nesday night in
Ravenswood;. W.Va.
Southern ·(6c4) was led by ace
'point guard and do-it-all player
Renee 1\irley who tipped the scales
with a 31-point cffon. Senior Jonna
Manuel n~tc~ I0 points.
Ravenswooo (8-3) was led by allstater Mary Beth Varney·~ 21 p&lt;)ints.
of whoch 15 came "in the first half.
- The Red Devils' balanced anack

.·'
,)

In Top ~5· college bflsketball, ·
..

'

'
No. :Zl Mlssilslppl St. 53
FIGHT FoR REBOUND- Nortl1wHWm'e Brian Cha(llberlaln (11)
By The A!IIOCiated
Prell
W~e Forest downed Georgia Tech five ~onds. He made a three-pointMississippi 47 .
and Ohio Stale'l Stwe Beller (34 and Jaml Boetey flghl for the
For at least one game, No. I · 66-63; Seton Hall upended No. 7 Vii· er, stole the inbounds pass and shot
Mississippi State stopped its n~bound during the.tlret half of WMI'Iadlly night'• Big T~ IMtl:hup · :
Massachusetts was able to survive · lanova 78- 73; No: 10 Nonh Caroli- another three-pointer that fell short.
Seton
Ha1178
longest
home losing streak in six In Columbue, Ohio, where the Buckeye• won 1'2·71. (AP)
··
without Marcus Camby.
. na heat Virginia 67-53; Florida State
No. 7 VUJanova 73
years as.Darryl Wilson scored five of
• ·
With .their star center still in ihe stopJl¥ No. 19 Clemson 75-62; No.
hospital, the Mi'nutemen seemed 21 Mississippi State topped Missis..
vulnerable at times Wednesday night sippi 53-47; No. 22 Georgia defeat·
.
.
,
, ..
in beating Rhode Island 77-71. ed Florida 71-46; and No. 25 Texas impressive victory in four yeilrs. The eastern Conference), who never
Camby, who collapsed before a Tech heat Baylor 75-69.
.~~~ym~:::ctJi:~s ~na• ~r:~~ ::~~·had los• three in a row at .·
gii!RC Sunday, spoke with his team·
No. 3 Cincinnati 99 \
when they defeated No. 6 Ohio State.
No. :zz Geoi'Jia·71
- ..
.
,
,
mates after the victory.
Xavier (Ohio) 90
.'
DB!Iny
Hurley
scored
18
poi~ts
,
Jilorlda
46
•
.
By
RUSTY
MILLER
the
game.
"It is a challenge because the best
. Danny Fortso)l, despite drawing
Katu Davis and Pertha Robinson
COI!.UMBUS, Ohio (AP)
"It couldn't have worlced out bet· . •,
playerin the ~ountry is not'with us," one of Cincinnati's two technic81 for SetQD Hall (8-6, 4-3). Kerry Kit·
coach John Calipari said. "I didn 't fouls, scored a career-high 40 points · des, who didn't stan because of a , cacti had five points 'durin$ a 21..() Muchhasbeenmadeofthefactthat ter,"saidYudt,whohad'played .only
groin injury, scored 15 for, visiting SJRC that helped Georgia stop a twofive of Ohio State's top six scorers a minute in the Buckeyes'lastgame
want anybody to think they had to do for tbe unbeaten Bearcats.
· game losing streak.
'
this seasOn are freshmen.
bec8use of ari injured thumb on his
too much."
Cincinnati (12-0) matched its best Viilanova (13-3, 5-2). ' · '
·No.' 10 North Carolina 67
· The Bulldogs ( 11·3, 2·2 SouthOn Wednesday night, the IQne left or non-sl\ooting hand. "We got ...
Donta Bright scored 32 points, stan in 36 years by overcoming a
Virxiula 53' .
eastern ConfeR: nee) led 50-44 with upperclassman in that group. made a great screen from (Steve) Belter. . , .,
more than double his average, for taunting crowd and two fu:st-half
Freshman Antawn Jamison 8:56 . let\ before holding Florida sure he wasn't o~er~ooked. _
Damon penetratea- it'was a gneat ,.,,
Massachusetts (15-0, 4-0 Atlantic lll)tCups on Xavier's home court.
Inserted back into tbe lineup with play by him - ouid.hc kicked it out
10). Though _thcy·remained unbeat·
Games between the crosstown became ·the ftrst !'forth Carolina ·, scon:lcss until there Were just 46 sec.
. 12..1 seconds left because of his and 1 got a good look at the l;lasket."
en, the host Minutemen struggled at rivals·have been testy in the past. The playerto get ZO rebounds ill a g~e · onds remaining.
No. 25 'IUas tech 75
experience. senior Rick Yudt.took·an , "Stringer had drawn the defense·to
'ii
times, falling behind, by nine (lllints last game at.the Cincinnati Gilrdeuts since Mike 0' Koren in 1979.
Jamison iilso sc~ 16 points as •
Baylor 69 ,
assiS!· pll$5 from fresh111an Damon l)im as. he dfOve lllt)llnd Bel~!'s • '
late·in the first half and leading just two years ago turned into a shouting
·.'''a59n Sasser·l!ad 22 ~ints. and 10 Stringer and hit a 15-footer,y.-ith two screen and into the lane, then flipped, '· S
52-51 with 10·1/2 minutes left.
match between the players, and the Tar Heels (13, 3, 4~1 ACC) dis·
appointed
Virginia's
first
'
s
ellout
.
rebound~
as ~!IS Tcchl',won'on the .sec.onds left as Phio . State ,'be
the pas~~ Yudt on:the righti~ing_ ~ ~
''When·Marcus plays, he helps us Cincinnati's Bob Huggins refused to
crowd
of
the
season.
Serge
Zwikker
road.
The
Ref~,
Raiders
(3~0
South·
Nonhwestern
n-71.
.
.
,
·
·,
"The btggestplay was the peutil;
l
win,l'saldEdgarPadilla,whosconcd• shake former Xavier coach Pete
had 14 points, Jeff Mcinnis 13 and ,west Conference)•are off to tlil!ir best·
It was'Oiiio State's first Iliad si~ Yudt, because Slringet was undet
I
14 points. "It's time for us to give Gillen's hand when it was over.
Darite Calabria 11 for Nonh Caroli· stan ever al'l3' I. ,.
..
. a 7-5 ad van tag~ t~ee ll)inutes into
(See BUCKEYES 08 J&gt;aaie 5l. ~
wins back t.o him."
No. 5 Connecticut 88
~
L
Camby was supposed to be
St. John's 73 ·
Jilorlda State 75
rete~ from' the hospital today, - - Kirk King extended his streak to
ol
No. 19 CleJIIICin 61 .
although he is not expected to play 22'straight successful shots before a
James Collins made four three·
Saturday against Duquesne. Doctors miss for host Connecticut:
pointers
in the second half and fin·
~
have not determined what caused his
Ki~g staned the night with three
ished
witlt
23
points
as
Florida
State
·
collapse, but have ruled out heart dunks. But a miss on an eight-foot
·
problems and a number ·of neuro- jumper left him short ofJ.:the NCAA won at home.
hit
three
straight
long·
Collins
logical problems.
record of25 in a row by Kay Voelkel
t
range shots after Clemson closed to
Rbode Island (9-5, 1·2) took of American' University in 1978.
.advantage of the fi..foot-11 Camby's
Travis Knight shot JG;of-11 and 49-45. Collins has scored in double ·
absenc:e by .going inside early and led scored 22 points, and Ray Allen had · figures in 46 straight games for .the ,
most · of the first half. The Rams ,26 as the Huskies (IS...!, 7:0 Big Seminoles (10-4, 2-2 ACC). Oemreele'd off runs or"9-0 and II· I in ' East) won their 14th consecutive 'son (11 -2, 2-2 :Acq lost i~ second
in a tow.
opening a 29-20 lead with 4!55 left game.
,befon: the break.
No. 6 Wake Forest 66
Josh King and "IYson Wheeler
Geoi'Jia Tech 63
each ~red 14 for Rhode Island, but
Tim Duncan had 22 points and 11 /
they combined for only eight points rebounds as Wake Forest won. the
in the second half as Massachusetts matchup between the last two teams
increased its defensive pressure.
with unbeaten m:ords in the Atlantic
''In some ways, they were more Coast Conference.
1
together wjtho!Jl Camby. The 9ther
Tony Rutland scored 26 for the
.
players step~ up," said freshman host Demon Deacons (12-1, 4-0),
,.
Antonio. Reynolds, who scored 15 who won their ninth in a row.
J
pointt for the Rams.
..
·
Freshman Stept\on Marbury
In omer games involving ranked scored 23 points for Georgia Tech
teams; No.•" 3 Cincinnati dcfe~led and almost single•handedly over·
••~
Xavier, Obio, 99-90; No. 5 Con- came a six-point deficit in \he last
'
necticut·beat St. John's 88-73; No.6
'

andA~~::'nG~aWnre~:.:/i~~~~ his,;:~~~~~(~~tg;~th-

BuckeyeS••• ·

QSU men Slip p&amp;Sf'.'
Northwestern 72 _71.

555

Pa~k

B:r TIM PUET
j\Aodated Press Writer
Things are a little less crowded
atop the North Coast C~ference
standings following Denison's victory overWodster.
I
The Big Red's 74-70 )riu111ph
· gave a boost to conference lea4,Sr
Wittenberg because it made the
r lisen the only team with one loss inh
Je.ue pl~y. ·Wit.Jenberg. ,whic
.dllfetlted Ohio Weslcy•n 74-55, is 8·
'1&gt;1~ lbe NCAC and holds a I 112:
Jllllt!' lead over Wooster at 6-2. .
. CU:y Chroust scOred 19 points
and h.d 12 rebounds, while Brj~
NiUJ!Owski Storcct.all .18 of his
pllinll in the seCoDd liatff« Detlison.
Philip Yontz led the Scots with 2Q!
• Aaihony.RObinscmofWittetiberg ·
aod J ·Jt, Shumale of:Ohio Wesleyan
led ~ir ~'ve ',teuna ~ith 16

.'

points apiece. Wittenberg . nev~r
trailed, bn:aking a 5-5 tie with a '207 run that put the ligers up 25-12.
. Allegheny dpwned Case _Western
Reserve 71-53 and Kenyon was a
,72-66 victor over Oberlin in other
NCAC games. Wednesday night ..
John Carroll (7·2 in league play)
kept a one-game lead over secondplace Capitol in the Ohio Conf~nce
by beating Baldwin-Wallace 77-61.
The Blue Streaks got 19 points from
JJ. Richardson, bu! the Yellowiack·
el$1 'Keviii Bi'aaten led both teams
with 27.
J11sew~ .in the co,nferenc~. it
was Capttal 97, Hi~ 73; Mount
Union 59, t,iarieua,tS! Muskingum
. 59, Ottetbin 43 and Ohio Northern •
67, Jfei~lhcr! 5:4· ,
..
.il Wiltningtot' npped liHilana-East
· 1~7.7 jn,a~t\CJ!I-&lt;lonfeROnce' ~- .

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Pleasnt grabbed 30 rebounds led by : ·
Trinty Willia!Q,i with nine. Doss had · ·
six of Point's 14 assist and Doss and •:
Trinity Willliams had four of their 13 -·
steals.
Ashley Roach led the Marauders - .
witti IS points, Cheryl Jewell added · .·
II for Meigs. Meigs hit 17 of 49 , ·
from the field for 35% and cashed in . "
on II of 20 from the line for 55%. · , :
The Marauders pulled in 26 " .·
rebounds with Jewell, Dassylva and
Anne Brown each grabbing seven. : ·
Meigs turned the ball over 22 times, ·.'
and had five assists led by Rebekah . ' Smith with four. Dassylva has three . :
of the Marauders six steals.
' • •·
In the reserve contest Tricia Davis ' : ·
scored 13 points and Melissa Werry •·: .
added 10 as the Lillie Marauders
picked up a 38-22 win. Vicky Grady
led Poit Pleasant with IS. ·
Meigs will travel to Vinton Coun- · ._,
ty on Thursday evening.
•
Quarter mtali
Point Pleasant ........ 15-10- 18-3=46
Meigs ................... 11· 15-9-1 0=45 ,
Point Pleasant -Amy Doss 3- • · ·
2-0=12, Tracie Drain 5-2-1=17,
Amanda Barnell 0-0-1 =I,"Ttffany
Williams 1-0-1=3. Trinity Williams ' ·
2-0-0=4. Amber Oliver 2-1-2=9.
Totals: 13-5·5=46
Meigs - Rebekah Smith 2-0- -' · ·
0=4, Cheryl Jewell 2-0-7=11. Kris- ·· ·
ten Dassylva 3-0-1=7, Anne Brown · · ·
2-0-1=5, Ashlev Roach 7-0-1=15 . . · ,
Brandi Meadows 0-0-1 =I, Taryn · · ·
Doidge 1-0-0=2, Totals: 17-0-11=45

.

EXTERIOR/

'

e.,
'•~
-=' e
••

· ,•r

'

30 ~quare Ft.
at R-19

;

(

Point Pleasant girls
slip
by Meigs
46-45
.
.

.

!

,

..

Waterford - Amy Baker 2- • ,
011=4, Laura Goins 8·2·0=22, Lc ~·
Ann Huck 3-0-212=8, Krista Neill2- •.•
0-0=4, Stephanie Cooper 1-0-0=2,
Carrie Arnold 2-0-0/1=4. Total~: , 1
18-2-214=44

BLOW·IN
.INSULATION
..

I

f.

...

and Jevon Johnson each had 10 for
Northwestern, 5- 8•and 0-4.
The victory snapped a four-game
Ohio State losing skid and extended
the Wilcj,cats' string-oflosses to five.
Nonhwestem has lost 19 of its last
21 meetings with Ohio State and
hasn''t won in Columbus since 1977.
Northwestern led by as many as
13 points in the first half and was on
top 71-68 after a Carlisle foul shot
with I :49 remaini9g.
But Don Jimtonio, who had a
career-high nine points. hit two free
throws with I:261eft. Nate Pomeday

26-0-16126=68

$tore Hours: Mon•• Fri. 7:00 a.m. • to ~:oo p.ni.1 Sat •.7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m•.

l"l

~r

Tbe future: Southern will go to
Stewart to face Federal Hocking

St. Middleport, Ohio Phone: 614·992-6611

I

·~

RHS.

&lt;Continued from Page 4 &gt; .

i

"Enrolled 10 Prac:dce a.n
the lnltt'NI! Rwenue S.Mcl."
DEPI!NDENTS NEED SOCIAL
. ·. ~EcURITY NUMBERS
My first child was born a
•few months ago. Should 1
obtain a social security number for
' bimnow?
· ·•
"
I .,
A ' Sinee . you nlust inclu~, the ,
... 'social security number of eaeh
individual boin before November ·
1, 199~; wtoom you _claim as a
deperl\lent on your mum, it would
be a gOOd idea to apply for a social
security number right away. In
fact, because of IRS rules, ir' you
want to file your return elec·
lrolj!CI\IIY, all persons listed Qn
yoilr retu!" will need a valid ..,cial .
aecurily oom~ reg&amp;rdleas of their

iune and Manuel's eight, eight assists
(Turley 3); 26 turnovers, I I fouls and
six blocks (Turley four) .
Ravenswood had 38 rebounds
(Varney 10); 20 steals. nine assists,
19 turnovers. 18 fouls. and five
blocks.
Reserve notes: Southern won the
two quarter reserve game 16-13 led
lby Kim Sayre with 5 and Erica
Arnott with four. Ashlir Davis had
four rebounds. Sarah Arrington had
six and Michele Withrow four for

continued with 13 each from Leslie
Rardin and Tracey Hendricks.. '
Ravenswood blitzed to a 24" II
first period lead, then held a 45-15
advantage at the half. So11them
fought back with a 17-9 thif!! period
to cut the score to 54-32, u&lt;en had a
late 21 -13 blitz to make a respectable
67-53 finish.
Southern hit 16-45 for 36% and
was 5-17 on threes fop 29 percent
with a' 6-16 night at the line.
Ravenswood hit19-41 for 46%.and
was 8-23 on threes with a 5-10 night
at the line. Southern had 43 rebounds
led by Brianne Proffitt'~ 10, Turley's

212=2. Jessica Brannon 5-215=12,
Amanda Milhoan 0-0-1/2=1. ToCall:

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Point Pleasant held off a Meigs
comeback attempt to slip past the
Lady Marauders 46-45 in girls nonconference ~asketball action
Wednesday evqnaing at Larry R.
10.
Morrison Gymnasium.
]?oint .Pleasant is now 5-2 on the
year, they are ranked 18th. in Class
AAA in the state of West Virginia.'
The Marauders, who fell to .3-7,
tonight, while Ravenswood goes to played for the first time in almost a
month. The last time Meigs had a
Point Pleasant.
game was on Dec. 21.
Ouartcr lllllb
It was a seesaw game from the
Southern................ II -4-17-21=53
Ravenswood .......... 24-21 - 9-13=67 start. Point Pleasant jumped out on
Southern - Becky Moore 2-0- top I:S-11 after one period as Amy
111=5, Jonna Manuel 3-1-112=10, Doss and Tracie Drain each led the
Renee Turley 8-4-3/5=31, Brianne way with five l'oints.
But Meigs came back in thi: secProffill 3-0-112=7. Totals: 16-5ond
period outscoring the Point 15(6116)=53
Ravenswood- Mary Beth Var- 10 to take a 26-25 at the half. Cheryl
ney 2-5-213=21, Leslie Rardin 5-1- Jewell led the Marauders in the peri012= 13 , Tracey Hendricks 4-1- od with five points. Krsiten Dassyl3/2= 13, Katie Alfred 4-0-112=9, Bil- va added four in th\: period for the ·
lie Hendricks 3-1-0/0=9, Sllrah maroon and gold. Doss added five
Arrington 1-0-0=2. Totals 19.g. more for Point Pleasant.
In the third period Point opened
5/10=67
up a 43-35 lead at the end of the peri·
od behind the scoring of Drain and
· Amber Oliver who each scored eight
and Carl isle each missed shots for points, including two three pointers
the Wildcats in the last minute -the from Drain . Trinity Williams added
latter giving Ohio State the ball with four for the Lady Knights.
12.1 seconds left.
But Meigs was not done, outscor-·
Yudt was inserted into the lineup ing Point Pleasnt 10-3 in the fourth
for J,antonio during a timeout. period to cut it to a one point contest.
Stringer took the inbounds pass and Meigs had one last chance to win the
brought the ball downtloor, dribbling game, but the Marauders had the ·
around a pick at the top of the key potential game winning shot stripped
and then llipping the ball to the rig~l away at the buzzer.
Drain led all scorers with 17
wing to Yudt for the winning shot.
points,
Doss added'J2. Point Pleas"I needed that - we needed
ant
hit
18
of 53 from the lloor includthat," Yudl said. "I needed a lift. I've ·
ing five of20 from three point range
been kind of down on myself
for 33%. They cashed in on only five
Maybe-this will get our confidenc&lt;
of 1.2 from the line for 42% . Point
up."

VALLEY LUMBER·&amp;·S·UPPLY·CO.

-..

'

Ouartu.tmlla
Eastem................ 18-18-14-18=68
Waterford ....... ...... . ll-12-12-9--44
Eastera - Beth Bay 0-0-4n=4,
Rebecca Evans 8-0-010=16, Jessica
Karr 7-0-4/~ 18, Nicole Nelson 0-03/4=3, Patsy Aeilter 5-011=10, Mar·
tie Holter 1-0-0:2, Tracy White 1)..

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

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• One ye~r service agreement
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Karr 3 each); I 5 turnovers, seven
assists (Jessica Karr four) and 13
fouls.
Waterford hit 18-53 twos and was
2-9 on threes with a 2-4 night at the
line. WHS had 17 rebounds led by
Huck's six; had five steals, 15
turnovets, two assists and 21 fouls.
Reserve notes: Eastern dropped
the reserve game 32-28. Waterford
was led by seven-point efforts from
Lori Milner and Katrina Greene,
while lisha Skinner added nine.
EHS (9·2) was led by 10-point
efforts from Stephanie Evans and·
Valerie Karr.
The future: Eastern will host
Trimble tonight and goes to Albany
to face Alexander on Monday, Jan.
22 . .
The EHS-Nelsonville g8111e is
set for Wednesday, Jan. 24, ahd the
Vinton County game is set for Feb.

.Southern girls 67-53

• control at the end of his drive," Ohio
Yudt, Ohio State's~ond-l~aaing
State coach Randy Ayers said. "With . scorer before 'the injury, finished
his quickness;· he can get the ball with seven points in 13 minutes.
anywhere he wants when he 's under
Stringer had a career-high 24
control."
points for ll)e Buckeyes (8-5 overall
"I was looking for the shot or to and J.j in the Big Ten), hitting 5-oftake the ballt\) the basket," Stringer 6 shots from tht;ee-point range.
said. "Rick was wide open when
"The one thing that surprised ~s
. they collapsed on me. I never was Stringer," said · Northwestern
thought about my shot. I had to pass, coach Ricky Byrdsong. "He really
as good a shot as Rick is."
hurt us. He was incredible from the
After calling timeout with .9 sec- three-point line tonight. He was the
onds left, Northwestern threw a long difference in the game."
pass to Evan Eschmeyer but his off·
Geno Carlisle scored 18 points.
balance shot from the left. baseline Craig' Duerksen 13 and Eschmeyer
was short as the buzzer sounded.

j

Wittenberg &amp; K~nyQn also
among Ohio college victo.rs

bea~s

Ravenswood

.&lt;

UMass, ·cincinnati &amp; North Carolina ·win

son, who notched three points: did a the first half and grabbed 22
great job breaking the Wllletford rebounds with an aggressive style of
press.
· play. Eastern erupted to 43-25 lead
Waterford was led by Laura early in the third frame, but Water·.
Goins with 22 points.
ford-rally to cut the lead back to 1.3
Eastern was hot from the stan and befon: Eastern rekindled its flame for
played its most consistent ball of tbe a S0-35 lead at the buzzer. 'Karr had
year. The Eagles put together a big I0 points in· the quarter.
first quarter, sharing tbe scOring ·
Waterford never again got any
· among Karr, Evans, Aeiker, Brannon closer than 15, but the Eagles couldand Bay.
n't completely put the game away.
Stagnant in' its last game, EaStern until the last two minutes, when they
was renewed with a potent fast dominated the action and blitzed
break, a mix of offensive patients Waterford 18-9.
and grea[ shot selection. Eastern led
'flu!t result sparked a ~8-44 finale
18- 11 after the first round.
led by six Evans points and five
The Eagles continued their a!laek Brannon mar~ers.
, on the tiring Wildcals, again mixing ,
Eastern hit 26-49 on twos and
'the scoring potion among its lineup. was 26-5 I overall for Ji2% and hit
Aeiker and Brannon had big quarters 16-26 free throws.
Eastern grabbed 40 rebounds to
. and the EHS bench q~ade some big
contributions to the 36-23 halftime · take a 40-17 rebounding edge (Briln.
lead. '
non 10, Evans eight, Aeiker ~ven);
· EHS
shot
16-31
from
the
flqor
in
had.
12 steals (Brannon &amp; Jessica
,

By SCOTT WOLFE 4
·• Placing nine players in the scoring column, the E~tern girls' varsity basketball team played one of its
best •games of tbe year in soundly
defeating DivisiOJl IV power Waterford 68--114 at Waterford Wednesday
evening.
·
Eastern boosts its m:ord 8-3
overall, while heading the Hocking
Divi~ion: of the Tri-Valley Conference at 7-2. Waterford drops to 7-4
overall. TWo of those losses came at
tt.e hands of Eastern. ·
.Eastero's well balanced attack
was led by Jessica Karr with· 18
poin!s lli)d four assists, while Rebecca Evans !fuplicated a big game she
had last year at Waterford, hiDing for
i 6 points and eigh,t rebounds.
.Freshman Jessica Brannon added
12 points and , I0 rebounds, while
Patsy Aeiker had ten points and seven rebounds. 'feammate Nicole Net-

Thursc18y, January 11, 1891

r •

The Dally: Sentinel • P~g~ s

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 18, 1998

•••

,,

... '

�Thursday. Januarv 18. 1996

Thursday, ~anuary 18, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 ·

Penguins shut out Sabres 1-0
By BUCKY GLEASON

,
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) ...... The
· Pitliburgh J&gt;.:nsuins have a com, fortable lead in the Nonheast Divi. sion going into the Ali-Sillr break.
Now, they have to make sure they
• don't get too cozy.
'
Pittsburgh, resting superstar
Mario Lemieu~. got an early goal
', from Jaromir Jagr and a great game
from goalie Tom Barrasso in SCI'IIIChing out a 1-0 victory over the Buf: falo Sabres on Wednesday night.
'
The victory over the less-talented
Sabres was not overly impressive,
but it snapped a three-game losing
: streak heading into the break.
"You have contributions from a
lot of aRas," Pittsburgh f~ Ron
: Francis said. "Everyone has to pick .
. up their game. We have to continue ,
: to improve or other teams will catA:h '
· us.•'
. Jagr scored his 38th of the season
just 59 seconds into the game after
catA:hing Buffalo out of position in
:Pittsburgh's end.
·: It was a big mistake for the ·

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Buffalo has lost four straight and
"We could have easily scored slipped to five games below .500
four or live goals," said Sabres for- (18-23-3), its worst record so far this
ward Brad May, who squandered. • season. The Sabres will play Harttwo good scoring opportunities. ford at home Jan. 24' before starting
"He's go~ to be happy he got the a three-game road trip.
shutout, but he can't rest on those
laurels."
Pittsburgh would have won by
'
more had it not been for Buffalo
The Penguins have an II -point goalie Dominik Hasek, who made
lead over.Montreal in the Northeast several big saves in tile third period
Division'and will resume their sea- in his second start after missing 10
son at h~ Monday against Boston. • games with a strained abdominal
muscle.
Pittsliurgh had a better hold of the
division before lapsing into lousy
Jagr scored the only goal Pittsdefensiye perfonnances against burgh needed in the opening minute.
Monirefl, San Jose and Colorado. Skating with Rusty Fitzgerald, Jagr
Against · ihe Sabres, the Penguins went untouched from his own blue
played 'solid defense and well line, made a quick fake ~nd flipped
enough on offense.
a backhander past a sprawled Hasek.
"We had so much fun on this

New HIIDPibire 72, Lllrtmoulb b'l

Basketball

.

Ruagen 78, Pinsburab 77
Setoo Hall 78. ViiiiDova 73
S1. Francis, Pa. 37; Rotlen Morris 4.5
I .. Temple 69. Fonlwn 43

EASTERN CONFERENCE
laa

Alioplk Di•illoft

l! L fa.

10
10.5

Bouon .......... .......... l4 22 . .l89

13.5

28

All

'.

Toy Can &amp; Trucks and
Team Franklin Sp1ort

4. ~

14
16

Dcooit.................... ll
Atl- ................... 19
O&gt;lrlone ............... 17
Milwoulioc ............ .l4
Tor&lt;llllo .......... ... :.... 10

16
17
19
22
'n

.'m

· .~19
.S21
.472
.389

.:rro

M"Y- I 18, Delaw. . So.~~
~luiui)llli 5I. 53, Mllliuippi 47
N.C.·Wil•ninat'"' 64. RK:hmood 47
•Non!&gt; Carolina 67, VifJioi• ~3
Old Dominion IOl, Georae Muon 86
s..tll Cotolin1117. Vancle!bilt 83 (OTJ
Va. Commonwealth 81, James Madi·

20

.200

~·

Georgia 71, florida 46
LouiJville 78, Ala.-BinnillJbam 70

12. ~

3 :914

:n
CLEVELAND ...... .I9
lndi......................

Aloboma62. Teo-~3
E. Tenaeuee St 9), Wofford 86
Acrida S1. 7.5. Clemson 62

llA

1

10 .~.

son70

Wake ro...t 66, Gco.gia Tech 63
Wiltiam I&lt; ':fiUY 90, VMI 49

IU

13.5
15 . ~

,

IU
23

Su Antoaio .......... .2S

%

The Regular Price of
All Exercise • ·
IUipmelnt In Stock

9

Howton ................:n
Utlh .......................22
Den~ .:................. 16
Dallu ............... ,... .l I

11

13
:t2
24
Min-. .............. 10 26
Vancouver ...............? 29

%off

.7l~

.711

.619
.421

l. ~

Soulhwat

II

.314
.278
.JM

•Art.-Unle Roc:t 91, Orunblina St. 67
' Houlton 89, Texas Christian 86
Oklalloma So. 91. CS Nnnlvidge S8
' Rice 69, Soulhern Metll. 51

14. ~

16
19

Soottrm 104. Ark.-Pine Blurf"

hdlk DIYiolon
Seonle ............. ........l6 10 .722
sac........o ............20 t3 .606
4.5
L.A. l..alu!n ............20 11 .540
6.~
Ponloncl .................. 18 18 .»:! . 8
Golden .......... 16 2t .432 '10.~
Phoali• .................. l4 20 .412
II
L.A. Ciippen ........ IS 22 .&gt;105 11..1

Slepben F. Austin 87,

~am

Houston St.

72
Texu Tech 75, Baylor 69

David Smalley, Redman head coach John
Lawhorn (receiving the $1,000 check from
Holzer Clnic representative Todd Fowler) and
Rio Grande president Barry M. Dorsey.

Cin . Taft 61, Cin. Hu~ !58

Col . Beechcrofl91. Btg Waloot61
Col . Brookhaven 68, Col . Eut 55
Col. Eoslmoor 71, Marion Franl.lin 63
Col. Mifflin 67. Col. Cemennial4S
Col. Whetslone 84. Col . LindenMcKinley42

Ohio men's
college scores

Failpcxt 7~. Grand VII . ~7
Kirtland 88, L.ediCIOOOI !II

Paden (W.Va.) City 43, Frontier 39
Point (W.Va.) Plc&amp;nnt46, Meiss 4.5
Ra~enswood. W.Vu. 67, Racine Soutb·
em 53
Reedsville Eastern 68; Wnterford 44
Revere 76, Cloverlenf 40
River View 67. Philo 51
Riverside 57, Painesville H!lr\'ey 51
Rock Hill 40, Coal Grove 34
Sheridnn 51 , New Lex..inglon 40
Solon 60. W. Geauga 18
Steube nvi lie 46, Well sv ill e 44

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Ohio Athletic Cooference

n, Blldwin-Waii~K:e 61

A1t:xiu.der 61, Nelsonville-Yark 52

Mount Union 59, Marietta 48
Mulkingum 59, ~n 43
Ohio Northcm·67, Heidelberg 54

Aahtabula Edpood 67, Ashtabula 45
Alhtabula Harbor s.t, Mad.i1011 50
Avon Lake ~3. P.lua 36
'

Barnesville 69, Shenandoah 51

Noo-conference play

Beavercreek 68. Day. Carroll 18
Brookside 56, Elyria W. .f6
Buckeye Trail 75, Newcomentown 1~
Canton McKinley 71, Akron HoNn 61
CIITolltoa 60, Caoton S. 54
Chagrin Fans 59, Kennon !51
Owdon ND-CL4J, Walsh 3S

77

Ohio women's
college scores
Mid-American Conference
Bowling Green 78, E. MichiJan n

Clc. Height. 78, Parma 29

•

Cle. Southeas1 50, Field 33
Col. Hartley 8:1. Westerville S. 15
Crestwood 51, Woodridge 34
Day. Chominade~lulien~~e 68, Keller·
ing FaJfiTIOnt3S

Keal 91, Akron 63
Toledo 8~. OHIO 7~
W. Mich'igan 87, Miami (Ohio) 66

Day. O.nbw72, Doy. Mcaddl.dale 47
Delphi» St. Johns -'6, Fon Jenninas 48
Elyria 73, Southview 39

Kenyon 77, Oberlin 19
Winenbera 79, Ohio Wesleyan65
Wooster 68. Denison ~7

Fi~lands 47. Keystone 26

Gufield HI!. 48, Slulw 37
Jeffcnon Area 63. Conneaut 23
John GleM S4, Crooksville 48
Lakewood 53. Warrensville Ht1. 33

Non-cooference play
Kcnrucky S1. 120, Wilberfora:: 21!

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
~ L I b1.
N.Y. Rangers ..... 28 II 8 64 115
Florida ............... 28 12 4 60 ISS
Philadelphia ....... 24 12 9 57 ISS
Wa.sbing1on ....... 21 18 S. 41 123
TampaB:~y
1918 7 45 131
NewJersey ........ l922 4 42116
N.Y. lsliulders ... 12 23 8 32 125

m:

Iwn

llA

IJO
116
114
112
ISO
liS
161

(OT)

Ottio Dcaf82, W. Vir&amp;inia Deaf 49
Perry 66, Briarol41
School of Science 88, Avialion 56

Den11on 74, Wooster 70
Kenyon 72, Oberlia 66
Winenberg 74. Ohio Westeyan 55

Hockey

Ohio Deaf 28, W. Virginia Deaf 27

An.s 28

Alle~y71.C.O WCilem~3

WilmingloB12~ . 1nd . -Eut

'

Martin Luther King 44, School of the

North Coast Athlelk Conf.

John Clrroll

•

Cantin~ 78. Nowbury 61
Cheshire River Val 51. Gallipolis 11

OHIO at Akron

Allesheny 78, C.0 Weslem 68

WedneldiiY'• scores

,I

Bedrord 78, Eucud 70

Lebanon 54. Xenia 43
lornin Adm. Kina 66. Cle. Rhode1 28
Louisville 52. Akron Sprin&amp;. J6
Mading1on 38. Minerva JS
Marhews 58, Maplewood ~I
Medina Highland 40. N. Royahon 38
Mentor 57. Normandy 12
Middletown S6, FWrfacld -'9
Mogado~ 64 , Warerloo :19 (0T)
Monroe Centrul76, Caldwell 54
Morgan 54, Tri-Valley 51
N. Ridgeville 54, Midview 41
Newark 45. Galloway Westlnnd 28
Newark Cath. 78, Centerburg 59
Oberlin 61. &lt;;Jearview 38

Berbbin: 61. fymatunin1 Vol. 49

Saturday's games

North Coast Athletic Coot.

Big Tho standings

Milwauble Ill, Pbi~a 100
Milmi 96. Wubinaton ~
- Jswy 97. Owiolte 9l
Allanla 102, lldiua 9l
Orl&amp;ndo 113. PboooQ !IS
.. Mia-.91,~-·· ·
HOIIJioo Ill!. De.,.;, 112 .
New Y!!JI&lt; 92. L.A' Cli-11

Pa«•rns may vary. (627836)
R09. 39.99

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Capioal 97. Hiram 73

Midwest

Bill So. 82. Cent. Midlicon 69
Cincinnati 99, Xavier (Ohio) 90
CRightoa 12, Tul11 !59
Ennsville 84, SW MiSIOUii Sl. 82
Marquette 73, DePaul 60
Nebraska 87. Mo.-Kansas Ciry 69
Sr. Louis 69, Soulh Aoricla ~

~CONFERENCE
-BINion
Iaa
l! L fa. llA

Kent 89, Akron 68

Miami 62, w. Michiaan 61
OHIO 70, Toledo ~7

Ball S1. at E. MichiJan
Toledo a1 Bowlina: Green
Miami ar Cent Michigan
Kelll ar W. Michigan

South

9 .757
13 .639
19 .46
19 .-'72
21 .417

ClliCIIo ..................32

1u1ar Price of

Rider70,Sr . Francis, N.Y. ~I

NBAslandings
Orl- .................. 28
New York .............. 23
Wuhington ............ l8
Miami ............ ........ l1
Ncwlmey ............ IS

40,. Round
Wildlife Pet Bed

TO SPONSOR GAME - Holzer Clinic will
sponsor the Rio Grende Redmen's home game
ag~~lnst Findlay today at 7:30 p.m. From left to
right are Rio Grende women's head coach

Scoreboard

Philodclphia., ...........7

%0

team," Jagr said. "We were winning,
everybody was playing lood aod we
scored a lot of goals. Then we lost
three in a row and nobody was smil- '
ing. This win has got to help."

•

The Regular Price of
All Dolls &amp; Doll
Accessories In Stock

The Regular Price
of All Action
Figures In Stock

.Sabres, who were unable to get anything past Barrasso. The 13-year '
goalie; who allowed 21 goals in his :
three previous starts, stopped 31 ,
shots en route to his first shutout this
season and 22nd of his career.

17

Steubetlville Cath. b'J. Toron1o JIJ
Tol. 8ow~he1 6J. Tul . Scott ~6
Tol. Catholic: 76, To!. Libbey 10
Tol. Rogers 60. To I. Woodward 21
Trinity 114. Olanel 22
Twin1burg 52. Wi ckl iffe 4:\
Valley Forge 57., Shaker Hts. :n
Vnlley, W.Va. 52, BeQII5\'illc: ~0
Vermilioo 49, Sandusky 41
W. Bran&lt;:b 60, Cnnal Fulton NW 25
W. Muskingum ~7 . Ma y~v ille ~;
Watkins Memorial 6~. Walnut Ridge

Wellington 42. Avon :\4
Wellst:on 64. Jackson 43
Willinmstown , W Va . 61 , Federal
Hock.ing 47
Windhwn 6:\ , Rootstown 40
You . Chaney 45 . You. Ursuline 12

'I.
D

Northeast Diwlslun
Pinsbl.l rgh ........ 28 14 J 59
Mon1renl ........... 21 18 6 48
Bosmn ................ l9 17 6 44
Buffalo ............... IS 2:\ 3 39
Hanford ............. l723 5 39
Ottaw&lt;~ .. ............... 8 34 I
17

149
140
149 152

2 18
139

129 145
118 118
97 173

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctntrtll Division

~LI&amp;iit:llA

Iwn

Detroit.. .......... J2
Oticngo ............ 23
Toromo ......... ... 22
S!. Louis ....... ... 18

9 J
15 9
17 7
19 8

Winnipeg ......... 20 22 4

Dallas ................. II 23 10

67 164

95

55 IS6 130
Sl
44
44
32

145 135
119 124
164 168

116 155

Padnc Di~ision
Colorodo .......... 24 14 8
Vancouver ......... l617 II
LosAngeles ....... l6 1911
Cnlgory .............. 1622 9
Edmonton ........ 17 n 6
Anaheim ............ 16 26 5
San Jose .......... ... IOJ2 4

56 179 IJO

43 163 151
43 1.58 15~
41 138

150

40 126 177
J7 133 160
24 . 141 2 11

No games tonight
or Friday

Saturday's game
All-Star Game at Ros10n, 8 p.m

Tonight's games
Cbicago a1 Toronto~ 1 p.m.
San Antonio at Dettoil, 7:30p.m.
Golden Stile 11 Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.

8011on a1 Hou11on. 8:30p.m.

•

CLEVELAND M VIDCOiv«, 10 p.m.

Ponlond 10 Slcnmenlo. 10:30 p.m.

Friday's games
Arlanla • Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Ylashinaton •• Balli·
mort. 7:10p.m.
Delroit at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
Owlolte at Miami. 8 p.m.
Su AMOIIio II Mianeaota, 8 p.m.

99

Botton., Dallu. 8:30p.m.
Orludo M Utah, g·p.rn.
Pbocoix. • Portlud. 10 p.m.
New York 11 SeurJe. 10 p.m.
L.A. Lakcl'l al L.A. Clippers, 10::10

SUIIday's pme

MAC Standings

p.m.

The ......._ Price All

Ertl Fann 'IWJII Ill Stock

50% Off Selected
Ertl Fan11 "lays

Black Oiled

Sunflower
Seeds

50 lb. bag. (155424)

sale ro dN/ml

Stllftina Fluid

.12' Booster
tables

10.I oz. (944'112) Reg. l.l9

.

loll

Anny81, la~He79

Bucknell 75, Brown 69
Colaate 77. Lchidl60
Connecricut 88, St. John' s n
Lon~ l•t.rld Uoiv. 79, Waancr 78
Marin 70, FairleiJh Oicki100n 57

BGSU ..... ....... 3
Ball St. ..........1

2 .6011
2 .6011

W. Micb . ...... 3

'l

Kent... ............ 2
OHIO ............ 2
Cent Mich .... I

J .400
1 .400
4 .200

Akron .......... 0

S .000

n.

MIIMchu•etu
Rhode 1s1m 11~
. Monrnoath, NJ. 82, Moun1 Sl. Mill')'' a,
Md. 77
N1Vy67. HnlyCrou63

/o-o H

. l! L l&lt;L

E. Mich. .. .... 5 ' 0 1.00
Miami ............ 3 2 · .600
Toledo .. ....... .. ] 2 .600

East

Blodt ond M domps .
with copper color
tHih. 10 giUgf.
(634048) Regj7.99

o,.... u

Ct&gt;al.

NCAA 'DIYisl.on I
men's scores

OUT

i&gt;eo)n Slate At Midlipn

.600

~

12
II

L l'd.
I .923
2 .846

10 6
8 ~
1 6
s 8
8 ~
7 9
4 9
3 10

.62.!
.61~

.~38
.3 7~
.61~

.438
.308
.211

Wednesday's scores

B~l So. 82. O:m. Mldlipo 69

E Michiaan 77, BowliDJ Greea 58

GOES!

0

Shop Acquisition's Before
Buying A DU;Jmond.
We Will Save You

Talk about a glitch. We've got Inventory we didn't even
know existed. Because of an oversight, you'll save 20%
to 7S% on soma very choice Items from some of the
finest makers. Thank goodness, quantities are limited,
eo we suggest you shop early to gat your pick of the
overetock.

'

'l1le Regular Prlut Of All
a 1111_, Csp1; 81 . , .....
Stave Bes1 lr a Fl;:rsce
1'WI Sslll Ia St .

The Regular Price
of All •• ee Stands •
i•ee S~ps In Stock

·The R•ular Price
Of All Deer Scents
In Stock

$$$$
i

TABLE LAMPS

HUll SILECT,tON OF
eSOUTII..S
eCLISDRSf"

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

•UNIYII@IY lANDS

Outstllndlnl fl+llt~· ·
Open Mondlys H

UP
TO

DINING ROOM GROUPS

75% ·~

UP
TO

5 electe d
'

All Remaining CURIOS

5lCQUISI'Il09{S ·
1'19{'£ JTWU~
151 SECOND AVE.

IIH250

.~1

Reduced
up To

&amp; CLOCKS

Reduced
UpTo

600//0 Qff list
500/
/0 off list

~

Tulldly, Wednlldly, Thurlda~ &amp; Situ~ 9-5: Frldlp N
.
.
·~·
VI•
.
Financing Available
,_ · Dla'i:over ·
1
90 Days Same A• Caah
X
M1C

.91 MLL ~STREET

BEDROOM
GROUPINGS

50o/o ~t ·

,,

LA...Z-BOY &amp; FLEXSTEEL Reduced
Up To
RECLINERS

Mason

off ·tlst

Furnitu~re

104 2nd Street, Mason, West VIrginia
(304) n3-5592

•

60%

Mon.- Wed. 9-5 Thunday 9-Noon
Fri. &amp; Sat. 9-5 -

'

�J

.

Pomeroy • Mlddlepbrt, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dtllly S1ntlnel

Thu,..Y, J1nuary 18, 1996

Thuraday, January

18, 1996 -,

Impotent men should nqt accept their cor)dition; .th~r~ is he.lp·:
Ann

Landers

De.- Ann Landers: I am a 53-yearold man who has been on high blood
pre5lliiRI medication for•several years.
As a result, I now s!lffer from erectile dysf!uiction. My urologist put me
on medication that helped some but
not,rnuch. He then said l could use
injections, which I refused.
My wife never complained or
rnade me feel guilty abo!lt not being
able to perfOllJl. In spite of ber generosity and cheerful attitude, I felt

depressed about our sex life and kept
But withorwithoutthe.illaurance,
prayiDJ for a miracle.
·
it is well worth the money. Pleue teD
A rnonth 'lO, my wife beard on your. readers about it - A NEW
the radio about a vacuum pump MAN IN KENTUCKY
device for impotent men. I phoned
DEAR NEW MAN: I'm pleased
my urologist. He recommended it and that the devK;e }\'orb so WeD for you.
ordered one. Ann, with this device
but I would not tell my readers it is
I feel like a man again, and our sex a sure bet for all males whO suffer
life is wonderful. Another unexpect- fronJ impotence.
ed dividend is that I am no longer
AcompetentUiotogistwhoiSup
depressed.
on the latest will infonn his male
My letter is to let other men know ' patients about other approaches to
about this alternative td impotence, impotence. The message from here is
The · manufacturer claims it helps
Ibis: Men who are impotent should
about 95 percent of the men who py not accept the condit,ion as a death
it. It is easy to use and can be a god- knell to their sex lives. There is -help
send.
.
,
.
With a prescription froni my urol~ for you. 1nvestiga~. '
. Dear Ann Landers: l had to laugh
ogist, my jnsurance company helped ·when I read the letter from "Ballipay for the colr of this device. · . more Betty;'' whose, f.mer-in- law

-o~bU$10.000 to produce a boy.

(She bad .just delivered her fourth
girl.)
.
If I remember my high school
lliology, it is the father's ctvomosome
that detennines the sex of the child
not the mother's. The father has both
an X and a Y sex chromosome, while
the mother has two X's. Both parents
giveonechromOSQmeeachtothefertilizdl egg. lf.the father'~ X chromosome is paired with one of the inother's X chromosomes the child will be
a girl. If the father's Ychromosome
is paired with one of the mother's X
c~osoliles,lbe child will be~ boy.
It seems that Betty's father-in-law
needs to make that offer to his son.
Sign me -- NO EXPERT, JUST A
READER WHO REMEMBERED

~~------~Community
the Community Caten(lar is

POMEROY -- Meigs County
published • a free service to non· Library Boafd, . special session,
proftt groups wishing to lliiii.OUDCe Thursday, I p.m. at the Meigs Counmeednc ud special events. The · ty Public Library to discuss person~Is not cJesiped to pn~mote
nel -matters.
sates 01' fUnd railers of any type.
I
ue printed • ipace pernilts
REEDSVILLE -• Olive Township
ud ~be paranteed to run I!· trustees, appropriations meeting,
s~ number of clays.
·
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the township
THURSDAY
hall.
BAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
Levy Committee meeting Thursday,
RUTLAND ·" Leading Creek
7:30 p.m. at the high school. Public Conservancy District, Thursday, S
urged to attend.
p.m. at the office.

I.-

HIGH SCHOOL BIOLOGY_
DEAR READER: 1was swamped
with letters from readers who also
remembered their high school biology. You all got an • A• tocby. 1
flunked.
Deai;Arin Landers: I'm hoping that
you can address my problem in your
column. My next-door neighbor,
"Ellen," leaves. her children home
.alone for 20 to 30 minutes to run *!'
eiTand. They are ages 7 month~ and
2 years. .
Ellen says she does this only
when the children are napping, but it
~till worries me. She's a gOO&lt;! neigh- .
~·devoted to hefcbi)dren aild w~teducated. My husbanlt doesn't want

me to 'say ~YihiDJ to bcr for fear of ·:
ruininc our friendship, but 1 feel 1 .
should risk-it What is your advice, : :
Ann? •• NO NAME, MASS.

DEA.R ~.N., MASS:: It takes
only a few minutes for a fire to burn
·down a house. Speak up.. If it ruins
·the friendship, il was pretty fragile.
What's the truth about pot;
cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
downers? "The Lowdown on
bas up-to-the-minute infOITD&amp;tion on
clrugs. Send a self-addressed, tong,
business-size enveiope and a check or
money order for $3.15' (this i11thides
postage and handliDJ) to: Lowdown,
clo. Ann Landers, P.d B'ox· USfi2,
Chicago, Dl. 60611-0.562. (Iii Canada, ii!ind $4.S5 .~

OneUnHNow

·
•
··
.:
:-

Av811able

.

POMEROY-- County.wiifc ~ting of the trustees and clett. Friday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
· ·

:·
··
:.
'.
··
..
••.

...'t:

..

• '

' '' ' :y •

'

'

.~

SATURDAY
POMEROY -- Burlingham Mod-

to sing at the Old Bethel Freewill
Baptist Church, S~ Route 7 and
Story's Run Road, Saturday, 7 p.m. .

New Haven, WV

·,:

..

-=-~-

$3,000 ......................,............ ~ .. .3
$500 .....................................200

$100 ........•.................:....... 1,386
$?0 ..............·...................,...9,616

- ' Fill Full

1!11.

'

·llllollm
. , $3.000 ....... :....................... .-..2
$600 .. .','.......1.. :..... :...::~ ..... ;~....•8
$300 .................................. 131
.$100 ... :.•......... ~ .............. 294

Endolllle
RalniiDW ,

$500 .............. ............219 '
$100 ,.......... ~ ... .......... 1,578 .

. Tr88Sinllld.

$1,200 ............................ 12
$200 ........................•.... 142
$100 ....... ....... :......... 2,036

ty stations ditch episode

of NBC show 'Friends'·

.

$100 ..............................613
$50 ........... ............... 10,284

'

OpporluniiJ Knocks .·

$·1,000 ..................... ~ ...... ,.27
$200 ............................ 1,205
$100 ........................ :.. ,2,601

· . PORT AimiUR, Texas (AP) -

· . Doubling DOll-.· .

$5,000 ....;................ ~ .......~ ........ 4
_. .' $2,500.·
' ......... :.... ,...
. ..... "\ '""'''''''''' 7

$200 ................ :..................... 17 .
$100 ....................................811

$50 .....................................2,756 .

. Qual-ity .. Prescription service at
Prices. We honor
.:f~iFd .,.,,':·Party Prescription .
· w~ -st0ck a complete line
i~/Kf.£~A~ · ·
l;&gt;,t4QS to .save yo~,J
Swisher &amp; Lobase '
Qhllck, Ken and

lns18111Datll'

$699 ........................................ 2
. $69 ................ :.....................933
'

•/

,

.

..•

1'allrs
.
"r

$1 ,ooo,ooo·.. :..................... 1

$50,000.................................... 5
$25.000.... ooooov·ooooooooooooooooooooooo 7
$10,~ .......... ~ ...,... ~ ................ 1~
$7,500....:.... ,...................._. ~ ....
:. ~,9C)Il....... t·..... . . .......•....... ....... 22
'. $2·,5:CX).............. ·. ~ .........·.....:..... 43
!'

,o .

.··

. $1,~....................................74
$500 ...............:..... :.............. 381

$250 ............... .................. ~ .. 664
$100, .,,,;·,.,~ ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,. .. pooooo2,168

$75 ....................................3,994'$50 .....................,.,............. 8,;:!7$

.

.

, :5Cirii·CIIh
'·
.

~

·

'

$1 ,500 .................................... 24
$200 . ...........................:.:.....438

$5,000... ~:·...................:........... 12
$500 ......:......·........................21·7

: $100 ........................... ::.....1.oa2
' $50 .. ,..., ................... ;............2, 125

~·$1 .Yr~~· ~ -~ .... :..................._
.......476

'

.

~ · •• , ...... ~ ..... 1'........... . . ...... ~465

()() "

• ' ; "('

·&gt;

-~ ·'.

.t

&gt;

,·

'

Willi

$499 ....................................... 11
$199 ....................................292. '

1

•.•.

t'

$100 .....·............. ;................. 195
$99 ..........'...... l •••• ~ ... : ••• ,.1,023
!• • • : . .

. ....
.,

'

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE
IIOME

Card of Thllnka

PUBUC NOTICE
t f J t-•
Sealed bide -for the 11111
The fa"!~Y 0 )ID "'
of purchaee of a four (4) Lee Hunt would like to
door four wheel drive (4WD) think ev1ryona tar
all purpo11 11ehlcle ·will be the!r klndna11~: food
received by·· \he,- Melpa a...,,.,.__ ,_ du....., his
COUJIIy ComffiJ!tin,r. .It
'"' ..,""'"'
V!'W
their olllce, c/o v•;tlle:....... rent ; dalth. S'peclll
County Courtliollu, 'Yhlrd · h k t
&lt;; y · H
Floor S
d St
t
I an I
0 u. , .
Pom.:.oy. ~c;,~: 45789 '::IIi ' employes, the faquad,
1:00 p.m., January .a, 1!1111 . ~wing Fune111l Home
and opened at 1:00 p.m. on
d· R
Sh
that data and·at uld office. . an
ev.
aron
Bide will be opened end Holllntln.
J?
reed aloud for the followint~. · ·
The amity
Speclflcatlo~e . fqr . e,al!f , _
.__ _ _ _.,..,.._ _
vehicle ean . be obtal.nedfrom the M~ll!! COUIIty.I - -..P-u~b-~ll-c~N':"o-tTI
'c-e-~
Emergency Siii'JIIoee,. POB L--.;....;;;~;..;..;""'i-.;.....-748, Mulberry ·Helghta,
Pomeroy, · Ohio 45769,
OHIODEPA~-OF
phone (614) 992-6617.
NATURAL RESGURCES
Ail bldcle18 muat UH tllelr DIVISION OF liNES AND
own bid form. · Bide ahllll be
RECLAMATION
H&amp;:ed and marked aa "Bid
A propoaal for the
for EMA 4WD Vehicle".
funding of the co,.tructlon
The · Malga County pheee of the Pllphent
Commlnlon.,. rep.,, the RI!;I!IRI~Ion Proie.Ct will be
right to reJ•c:t:!"Y I!P!foi.•n preten!ed to thll ,l!loard .,
blda or any .-.thereOf llnCI ·u,n r~cll!lmad Stt!P , Mlped
to waive any~lnfonne!lty In ldinda by tha· l!!irlalon of ·
any proposal ' ··
Mine• lin.d · Rect•m1t1on.
(1) 11,18 2TC .
Thla propoaal will be

atop the Mid-American Conference.
Turning back the han!ls of time to
Slack. among the nation's leaders
fOJ'IY-five years ago this weelc in in rebounding, ended his Marshall
1951, the front career with 1,916 rebounds from
pages of The [)aily .1952-1956, set an existing NCAA
Sentinel read that record of 25.6 rebounds per g&amp;J:De in
after ·six years of the 1954-55 season.
work by local offiOn this week in 1961, Midwest
cials, State Repre- Steel Corporation, Charleston,
sentalive George W.Va., announced they would open
A.
Meinhart their existing Tracks Division facitiannounced
that ty in the former Parkersburg Rig and
, "
bids would be Reel, Co. plant on East Main Street
advertised for the new Forked Run in Pomeroy. Parkersburg .Rig and
Lake .and Oam project at Reedsville. Reel produced heavy castings at the
Funding for the project was set aside facility for nearly 60 years, before
by the state aftet a local committee the plant shutdown in 1959.
headed ·by Pomeroy dentist K.D. Pomeroy businessmen and Chamber
Amsbary, a former. head of the lzaak of Commerce members pledged a
Walton .League, met with Ohio Gov- total of $10,000 during a 48-hour
emor Frank Lausche to discuss the fund -raising drive to help Midwest
project.
Steel move their equipment into,the
Long before the days of newspa- faeility.
pers and magazines setting up user
.Remember when, in, 1966: Gasoareas on the internet, The Daily Sen- line was only 29.9 cents a gallon al
til)el began a foray in19 radio with a lhe new Certified Service Station on
daily show broadcast on WJEH AM, 538' W. Main Street in Pomeroy; ·
Gallipalis, on Jan. 20, 1951. The Elbetfelds jn Pomeroy had Men's
show, hosted by J~k Cowie, ori~i- Wrangler jeans 0n sale for $3.98 a
. nated from hts Mtddlepon studi~s . pair; and Cuclder Realty advertised
and featured coiTCspondents, cam- -. 110 acres for sate·in Chester Towners, shop w~kers, a_nd advertisers. ship with .,600 feet of road frontage
The first Senune.l ndio program was along state Route 7 for only $8,000.
broadcast at 2: I0 p.m., .Monday, Jan.
Thirty years ago this week, Bill2~. 1951,_ and featured_ an mtervr~w board Magazine named Pomeroy
w1th Senunel sports edttor Paul Cbf- native Jim Lohse the top disc jockey
ford. ,
in the Columbus market in a nationDuring ~is week in 1956, the at survey of. record promotion per- Oatly · Sentmel sports pages were sonnet, distributors, and recording
highlighted with the efforts of companies. Lohse, son of Mr. and ,
P9~eroy's Charlie . Slack and Mid- Mrs. Harold Lohse, was a giaduate '"
dl~&gt;port's Bob Ashfey1 ·who were of Pomeroy High School and began
. leading the Matshall College Btg his career locally at WMPO AM
Green to -nine wins in Marshall's around 1960. Lohse was then music
tii-st · eleven games and first place director/disc jockey at WlVN AM.

882·2996
eon....,..-..,....
1/'lr.wt-.,.

~· 112·211116

Women have Recipe
Books for Sale for $7.00.
Cal1992·3334,992·7580

,.

-:_. •

MINI STORAGE

Da(s-Water I ..... .

Roc~springs. U.M.C.
\•

By TOM HUNTER

, Super Bowl special.
" A "Ftien&lt;!s;" episode that depicts a
"We do not believe the episode of
.. lesbian,wedding cet:erilony is getting 'F~e!'ds' meets prevailing standards
adecidedly ll!lfriendl}: reception from of goixl taste in our community," Ron
. Kelly, KJAC vice presil;lent and gen· at least one television station.
('' !The
· .~liai-e iqAC is pre- eral Jllanager, said in a prepared stateinstallll)Cilt~M&lt;heduled 10 , ment issued Wednesday.
"We are the Super Bowl station
saying_it is unsuitable for
and
interest in the Dallas Cowboys is
falliily viewing ..The popprogram will be ~laced with a · very high," he said.

Jan. 19 &amp; 20, Live Entertainment
By Popular Demand

MIDDLEPORT, OHlO

Bend Area Reflections

'

·c.... w.terSylt...

Presents BLITZKRIEG
Fri. &amp; Sat, 9:30 PM
$3.00 per person, $5.00 per person.

LONG BOTI'OM ,.. Faith Full · -. RACINE .. Rac,10e ,American ; :
Gospel Church will host Bvanjelisi LC,ion 602, ~y. ~:30 p.m., l!l ~J:
Dean Shyder Friday, 7 p.m: Pastot the.hall. .
• "' ~~
Steve Reed invites the public:.

MIDDL$'&lt;&gt;1lt -- Can~'s

~75·9915

WAYNE'S PLACE

1m1 Woodmen, soups~, 6:30p.m.

at the hall. Those. attending to take
dessert. salad or relish. EVeryone wetcome.

SPRIIISOfT ·

Rt. 2, Point Pleasant, WV

calendar--....................---· -..-.-- ..

CHESTER -- Shade Rjver LOdge urday, I p.m. at town hall.
453 F&amp;AM special meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall for
POMEROY -- Pomeroy Group of
work in the F.C. de-gree. Refresh- Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday, 7
ments. ·
• p.m. in the. basell!ent of the S~red
Heart Catholic Church on Mulberry
ROCK SPIUNGS .; 'Middleport Ave.
Child &lt;::onservation League ineeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
FRIDAY
United Methodist Church.
RACINE -- Racine Board ofPublic Affairs, 10:30 a.m. Friday,
POMEROY-- Bedford Township rescheduled meeting.
'Ihlstees, organizational meeting, Sat-

Cunim lullclng I Rernodollng
•NewHom11
•Adclltlona.
•NewGaragea
•RemDdellng
•Siding
•Roofing
•Palming
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 912·5535
114 912·2753

1Ox28 , $15 per mo.

DoPe'' '

I would like to take
thla opportunity to
· thank my f1mlly,
frlenda, neighbors,
Rav. Keith Rider;
church flmlly, ths
doctors 1nd nu,._ It
Holzer HOipltal and 111
the staH 11 the
Pomerqy Nu111lng 1nd
RehlbllHatlon Centsr
· for _Ill the · c1rds,
wordi of encour·
agement, flowe111, food
1nd m1ny klndneHII
extended to me during
my recent holpltal·
tzatlan' ilnd confine·
ment 11 the Pomeroy
N!lrslng 1nd Rehab
· Center.
May God bleu IICh
and every one.
Sincerely,
P1ndarl Collins.

Openlnga for 2.
Chrlatlan
atmoaphere far
elderly care tn a
norHmoklng home.

614-992-3200
LOST
Golden Mix
Cocker name
· "GOLDIE"
Fla1Wood1&amp;
OldSR 33
REWARD
. '!

·, 30 Announcements

I
I

. !

Forked Run

'
' .•

Sportsman Club
Shooting Match
Sunday Starts
Public Notice
12 noon
preeented on ·Monday,
Free Hotdogs
January 22, 18t8, It 1:30 ·
p.m. at the following
Factory choke guns
location: Civic Center, c-11
only 12 gauge
Conference Room, &amp;5 South
Front Street, Cotumbua,
Fresh Butchered .
Ohio 43215.
The prolect Ia located In Meat Every Sunday
tile city of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio. If funcflngla
Public Notice
approved, the Dlvlalon of
Mlnea and Reclamation will dwelling.
procHd with the dealgn
If
you have any
and conatructlon ph••'!' of queatlone, rou may contect
the p.rojact for · the Terry Van OHeren of the
abatement of acid mine . Division 6f Mines and
dr1lnage
from an Reclamation at (1114) 2&amp;5·
abandoned mine that Ia 1094.
auplng Into an ocoupled (1) 18 1TC

'

be women along with the men,
who would go to the fields in the
morning, hoeing, replanting, and
. uncovering coni thai the horse drawn
cultiva\Qr had torn out, . or been
tramped on by tJ1e horse. When noon
came, 'it. was back to the h?use• prepare to noon meal, wash dtshes, and.
then back to the fields until evening,
at which time lhe day was about over,
except for preparing the evening
meal. cleaning up the house, seeing
everyone· to bed, and then up at the
crack of dawn fQI" the same thing ov~r
· again. This also weni on dupng harvest time. cutting hay, and putting in
the bam for winter, culling com, hiter on hustiing and putting it in the crib
for feed.
Everyone pitched in and did their
part as one big family should. Some
of these things are done ioday, but in
a different )Vay, with modem machinery making a big difference. Everyone still does their share, but a lot casier than the manual labor involved
back then.
Another ~thing thill was done then
lly the women, and is still done today,
but not a necessity like it was then,
was.the pic~ing of berries, cherries,
plums, peaches, pears and anything in
t~Je fruit line, and canning and preparing it for winter. Men helped occasionally, but were usually busy with
other farm duties. This also took in
garden vegetables as they fell due
during the summer.
·Another big job usually done by
the women was the making of apple
butter to be used during the winter. It
is still done today, but more of a hobby than a neceSsity. The peeling, coring, cutting up the apples, along with
stirring, tending the fire under the big
kettle outside, laking off and canning
when done was all in the day's work.
Once in a white, a neighbor would

TII•STITE Wli'EI SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatmoot company cordially lnYites you to

participate In a free, no obligetlon. comprehensive water
analysis. WI WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardnan, Iron, PH.
Plaau call Rai..Soft at 11112-4472 or 1--..ol 3313
to HI up your frM water analyala.
,_

ol. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

WICKS
HAULING
'

(Specialize In
Driveway Spreading)
Umestcme,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS

SUN. I PM ·

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

New At King Hardware

Clhe ~tame
eo'ihe'i
Picture Frame, Mats

&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 99l!~· ?.O!~

=

col laWai:

.....

~ltUHDEReiRD

;

.

SAWMill

.

32124 Hippy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy Brlcklta
614-742-2193
111131111

.
.

mO. .

URftiiLL
BQDSI
REG , HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30
Fri.-Sat. 10-4:30
Closed
Thura. &amp; Sun .
102 Eaat Main
Pomeroy

.

.

..

.-.'

WE OFFER GENERAl HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; ·water

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

.'

992·3954 or 985-3418 , .'··
Authorized Ul Distributor
Welding Suppliea • Industrial Gases • Steel
sates &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
Aluminum/Stain!. .
Machine Shop .

.,. Jllll11 ...........,

\ -·~

· Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium all stzea Medical Grade 0.
P!l?PIIne Trtmht Ullrl Mix Mig Welders

rax.ft

•1

St. Mason, WV

UP·TO·DATE
SPOm

- FIIIIIICE .
STOCKS
AND MORElli
1-900.3~1·1100
Eat. :il40
$2.99 per min .
Must be 11yra.
Touch tone phone
required.
Serv-U (1114) 645 1434

, lt'1-.

BISSELL BUI-LDERS, INC.
.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
· Garages • Replacement Windows

.'
• -

'

t

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643
(No

One Step Cemplete Aute Body Rep•lr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
614-992-6223
Chuck Stotts
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
Do~rwln,

Ohio

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Dlddla
Treckhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump True k ,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septiC
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512
_!BI~~A~IO!N~~~~'l~'~RAIIS~~~--=~::J

L______

ofltulllonl

RUIORible Prlcll

c.nm-n47

. Afl..-4pm
During Wftkdaya
lme on WHktndl

and Removed,

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

,.

••
•
•

•

•••

Po:~:.~lo
·
•~

;;:::-=====:::::::
ROIJRT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnOII

912-4405

985 44:73

f'or Frw Eatfmetee

•

.

,.

·'

•Room Addltlona
··New Gar111181
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concl8te Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
v.c. YOUNG 111

lnau...,. .. Experlena•d

Call Wayne Naif

..

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER sERVICE

•New' Homes
•Garagn
•Complete
Remodeling
.stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Houu Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Xltchan I Bath
· Remodeling
Room Aclcfltlona
Siding, Rooftng, P1111oa
Reaaonable

.
' .

·992·2269

J.D. Drilling Company

•Wtcldlngi/Recaptfone
-&lt;:oupona
(Engegement Plcturee)

.. '

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped

lill Slack

10121..-..Mn

Need a Photographer for
your Speriaf Occatio~t?

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Misc. Jobs

State Rt. 33

Historiqal pre~entatioQ given·at SAR meeting .:~:.:::::~~.~;~ · ·Family

,_,taat

H&amp;H

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Cammerc:lal or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned 11o Portable Toilets Reiltld.
Dally, weeidy &amp; monthly rental rates;

•AnnlvtrHrlea
-Groupe

~ ===·too:~o~ ; . • : :
·and to wHhdiiiW the above
·ooflateral prior to ..1•.
' FUI1her. The Ferrne.. Bank
·and
.,.., 1 , Savlnge
the rightCompany
to reject
11
•IDJDI811bld. ..ubmltled.
: further, tha above
oollelnl ,.til be aokfln the
oondltlon It le In, With ..no
expreea
or _ Implied
_ ,11 1 glvcli.
for fwt1Mr Jnforlllatfon, .
111111•11111124136.
(1) 17, 11, 1g 3TC

1NWI meL

1212311 mo

Ire You Ready
CalllowiiU

Mon, lhru Sat.

992-7696

'Ntc o. sY.Mt a

·111114 FORD

.

28543 BASHAN'RD.
R1clne, Ohio 45771
(614) 9411-3013 Phone
(114) 9411-201e FAX
1114 594-2008 NIGHT

n. tts 1171

a-IIQWor•

Plck.Up discarded
washerl, dryera, hot
water tanka, stovn,
lumlces, and many
metal materials
Call 992-4025
between 8 am-B pm

PortaWe
.
lantlsaw Mill .

108 Pomeroy

bring in some apples and help, just to
I. D. CONSTRUOION
get a few jars of the finished product.
Siding, Parches,
Today if needed, you can run to the
Decka,
store and buy a jar ready made, a lot
Home
Improvements,
cheaper than you can make it.
Remodeling,
Another thing that fell to the
Add.On's,
Roofing
women was the spinning wheel, the
Satlaf/ICI/on
loom, the making of rugs, woven, rag
Guarantod
rugs. and c:tc. which all felt pretty
Bill Doerter
. good during the winter on the bare
(614)
992-2979
floors in some of the older homes, as
wall to wall covering was not done
like itis today. Mosrall ofthe,things
mentioned thus far, fell to the women
For Love?
who were kept busy during the daylight hours and far into the night by
the light of the kerosene lamp. Anoth1·900.255·2700
~r thing done then, due to the absence
of medical doctors, was helping
Ellt.9402
neighbors who were sick, or with the
$2.99 parmtn.
.diseases of children; and in some casMuat be 18 y,.,
es during childbirth. In other words,
Touch
tone phone
· the women then had to be a jack of
.
required.
all trades to help survive.
Ser{-u &amp;11 &amp;45 8434
. My last topic -will be washday. It
was not quite like today, where you
put everything in the washer, and
J&amp;L INSULAnON
when done transfer.it to the dryer, or
137 BRYAN PLACE
go to the laundramat and sit around
MIDDLEPORT 992-2m
reading or visiting with others while
Ofllce·Houi8: -Mon.-Frt.
the automatic washers and dryers do
8:00 l.m.-3:30 p.m.
the job. Back then, it was gather all
VInyl a Alum. Siding,
the dirty clothes, sort them, and if in
Vll)yl AapiKement,
the summer, take them out to the tub
WindoM, Blown
and washboard and do a job of band
Insulation, Storm
washing, then to the big iron kettle to
Doo111, Storm
boil. then rinse them and hang them
Windowe, Gal"lfiN.
out to dry. If the weather was bad, this
Frw Eatlhad to be done inside and the Clothes · l:==_:~~~ ~~
hung up on lines stretched all over the
house. It was a nice day's work and
Public NotiCe
is still done today, by a lot of women.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Those women did a good jol&gt; then, · , NOTICE Ia 'hereby given
as the worncn are doing a good job 1that on Saturday, Jcnuary
now, only under dif,Iereittconditions. .20, 18t8, at 10:00 a.m., a
Hoping no one has been offended I public ule will be held It
.
.
'
211 Wut Second Street,
)VIII close for I!OW unul a later date. :Pomeroy, Ohio, to eell tor
caah the following

· Me111hers of Ewings Chapter, ttl~ 1996 cale~dar year duriDJ the the selection ot Rod Hojat of OatSons of the .American Revolution, meetin&amp; held ati1he Meigs Museum· lipolis as the chapter's wiooer. The
heard an his~opc:al ' pre~ntapon by and preil!ded of.er by John. Kauff, : entry will be forwarded to the Ohio
-or. llay S~~ ~of Pliketsbl!ll on president.
Society for entry in the state selection
·
· Metts
· ' ICounty · ·.'Dennis Hoc km an made a pre..,n·-" process.
·
points of mteres~
.Jn
·
leftbytheltldi.lujs. .
. ; ' t'ation of .,vemment investments
-Dr. John J. Evans of Newark'
. · Those pi~ \nc:ll!de&lt;llndi...lllpl~ ~for-the,chaptei"-With the chapter vor- .requested a membership transfer to
prehistoric _inollnds, and pai~ted ing .to pl!JCe !ts (llnds in that type of the Bell,jamjn Franklin Chapter of
trees. _Dr. Swtclf, a m~ber o~BwtDgs investment:
ColumbUs. ·
·
·
'
•
'"" .... A f .L. Bl
·
.
,
the
. : Ch~pler, is -:r."~ .o u"' eli'_lel'
. Leland Parker, c~nnan o~ the' . ·. The next meel!_IIB ,or.
Bfllup
· : , ~IISSOtt lslahd HistQn(;al;Par~.~ ~ , · .. Eagle-Scout Scholarship Comnuttee, wdLbe Jill. 2~,.at the Metgs County
' , 11le report _of the nQIIIInauons bas completed· his year's work with -Museum.
.
. ccommittee waS read ind approved tor .

949-2512

(Lime StonH.oW Rata1)

years ago, their .customs
to

Dutributed b

CALL
614·949·25 12

RettfeMoe't1ng wohlen ,.of
t:ly OLEN D. HARRISON
I am going to continue on the
women of several years ago in this
article, and with the probleDJS and
hardships they had to put up with,
that very few oftoday's women have
experienced.
1'11 admit, there are a few things
done yet today that were everyday
duties then. 'I ·am not saying that
women of today could not do those
things, but time and change in
lifestyle' has made a big difference.
Back then, it was a must on most of
the things I am going to cover at this
time.
The big disadvantage then was
that you could not run to the stoie and
buy whatever you happened to need
or run out of. Going to town used.to
be a weekly or monthly duty, where
by you would stock up on the stable
articles you could ;not make or grow,
plus the fact that money was hard to
come by, and the dollar had to be
stretched to its utmost to make ends
meet. Also the method of travel was
different than the modem way we
have and use today.
Back then, you usually hitched
Old Dobbin, or the team of horses to
the wagon and off to town you went.
II was, mosl of the time then, a family affair; and when you rellehelltOwn
it was everyone far himself untir time
. to go home. Then ·you had to hunt
everyone up and back to the farm
until the next -time. This is still done
today. but in a different way and a Jot
more often.! "ave be!:n relating a few
of these things to get everyone in the
mood of the old times of years ago.
The first thing I am going to cov.· er, along with several ~ that were
done as regular duties, was the work
done in the fiO:Ids ..Com, hay, wheat,
oats and etc. It was lin all out effort
by all members of the family. It used

Water
6 1.J'.f- TreatMent
~ ~qulp111ent

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY FOR
SALE.

'

992-4025
I

·6.. ,

SMRH'S
CONnRUCTION

..

'
•••
••
•••

.
'
••·•
••
••
•

�..

. .. . -

1998 .

Ohio

Pllge'10•The Dally SanH~

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

BEATI'IE.BLVD.~ by Bruce Beattie

--

·&lt;·..._

....

PS,

1

'12 Ford F100, 8 CJ!.• MI!ICioni. ·
P,!l ........,............. bed. ·
..., "'"' pd. 111100,' 114- 1

_

247-&gt;4282.

•

,, ·

I

C

•A. J 4
,Q 4 3
tA 7 6 2

I

EEK&amp;.MEEK

320

•Q

I

5.
EAST

THt: Ai:E:· UP!'IAL

Q 10 9 6

~TSt*S
I TILL~ IXl
RIRT'

us

2 . .,_.

•3

1

•A J 9

10 I 7 6 2
tJ 3
10 9

•AI7632

3

SOUTH
Old Call, ·1 Male, 1
814 448 81511.

Blo&lt;k Lab ShePherd Mix ·Pu!ll&gt;ios.
FrH To ·Good Home, 7 \!alto. 2
Fomaltl, el4·387- 7029, Any limo.

'

110

HelpWanted

110

' NOT ONE

. LlnLI CRUMIII

M.ercliandlle
Firewood.: tpllt hardWood. 1351
ph:)&lt;up load, you haul. Dollvory
.... ~ 304-675-5168. .

FARr.l -:ui'PI IE S

lf/HHr ....~ corn' foci. 11 po( lb.

a.,' tt.e:ra~~.. 81«85-:leo!i.
.

&amp; I IV[ '·l')l'K

·

PEANuTs

Sub-contractor• wAnted: Car·

ponlera, polntert, plumbers, ilcl·
tng &amp; concr1t1 workers. Coruact
Terry Spencer, Laureland Ap.rt·
menta, Now Havon. 304-8823151.
.

180 wanted To
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spaars, 304-875-1429.
;;.;;;&lt;;..,_"':""_ _~..,....--l

PomeroY,

::-::~j~~~~~~J

':'

Be Paid In
AdVInct.
; 1:OOpm the
day before
ad Is to ruri, Sun·
day edllilln· 1:00pm Friday, Mon·
doy.edltion 10:ooa.m. S&amp;tulday.

80

PUblic Sale

~ici&lt;~~~~~~~E~

ex· '!0

Care For The· Elderly In Their
Home Full Or Part·Tlme. 614-446·
EMcellent
oppprtunlty
to join
the 2427.
long term heahh
care neld.
s.-•.
ing part-lime LPN for rotating:
shifts fOr skilled long term care Ge~eral Maintenance, Painting,
nursing facility. Point P!euanl Yard Work Windows Wa'ahed
Nutsing &amp; Rehabilitation Center, Guuers Cleaned light Hauling,
Route t, Box 328, Pl&gt;int Pleasant, Commerical, Rtlidentlal, Slave:
'
.
WV 25550 . 304-875·3005. (A 614-388 0.29.
·Gienmark Associates Facil ity) .

EOE.

Snd Auc;tlon•

~

Bartender- night shift 400pm-midnight, $25 a shill. 814-992-9985
or614·992·6019.

I

'

Sllei~P D06 ONCE ..

DO

Blown lr,lulatlon. tnauranc1,
perinea, References, Reaso~ble
Rotoo, Call For Free Eatimatea
elH45-5755. •

Moore,

Clean late Mode'l Cars Or

TruCks, t987Models Or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Avenue, GallipOI&amp;.
J &amp; D's Auto Parra. Buying sal~ge vehJclaa. Selling pans. 304·
/73-0033.

Top Prtces Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collocdblll, Piporwei!ihts, Etc.
M.T.S. Co·ln Shop, 151 Second
"""""· G,alli~a. 6)4-446-~.
use.d furniture- antiqu,o, one
piece or complele ntatos. Osby
· Marlin, . 81 ~1112· 7~1.

Wanied to buy: •G.qd uoied wring·
., Wlb, 304-1185-,34011. ·.

Lots ' · ~eea·

Five acrea, . aerator; near
Raclrie.S 1ft,DOO e~n' finance with
,11011 dqwn, 814-948·2026i

Wanted To Buy: Junk AU!Oa Wlih
Or Without Motoro. Call larry
lively. 814-3811-0303.
· Wanted To Buy: llftle Tikes Toys.
614-24.5-5117. . r,'
.

RENTALS
a. 'E"*Phone.

Full or pait-time beautician with
Rodma far rtnl ·
Starting at·S120/mo.
81~.9580.
-

110

HelpWsnted

UDanc,raiS Top pay, flex ible
hOurs, no eJCperience necessary,
18 or ,;dar, Southtork
1304-875-!1855.
.

s-.

11 ,000 Weekly Prace11ing Mail:
F;oe l~fa. Send Self·Addraned
Stamped , Envelope: Expre11
Oept.131 , 100 East Whitestone
Blvd., SUita 1411-345. Ctdor Par1&lt; .
TX 766111.
Avon Repreaentatives
nHded. Earn monty fer Christ·
mtl biHI 11 hOmtllt work. HIOG992~8356 or 304·882-2645, Ind.
Rep.

Abtt

AGENT:f.VON SELLS ITSELF ,
Naed CASH For Winter Bills?
Earn $8 ·•15/Hr. At-Work -Homo
1-800-742-4738

Kltchenttte Table With 4 Chalra,
&amp;loaf, Floral Couch. Ctotlr, sso
Flrin For AI, 614\446-7127.
Lumber: Oak Popl-ar, Pine To· Second Culling
Place Order Call After. 6:00 304· NO.er Wet, ,2.25
578·2988, Prices: .'1Sti114j.fL To 418 4053.
.50f/Bd.Ft
TRANSPORTATION

..

Refrigerators, Stoves, W11he11
And Dryers, All "Rtcondltioned
.Md Gauran1'"dl $100 And UP.
Do!Mr. 81~-&amp;!41 , ,

'BV.!&lt;i¥"8ro, four n.,. dl'tll, · -

:~~~0:~;:1~:.1!·::~~?;;:

Need 5 Ladies To Soii 'Avon. 814·
418-3356.

New An~ue &amp;'Craft Mall ready u
open. N&amp;id&amp;d .ara .vendora ol an·
tiquoo, quality 'crafts, &amp; collecla·
bits. No Fleas please! Serious·
inquirtes only. 304·675-7624.

fe®. ~773-530!j_ after:~· .
Snoilw blade b Cub Cllllot oorllon

tractor, StDO. 814-992-3085 after

Spm: •

No Experience Necessary I SSOO
To S900· Weakly ll'oteQtlal ProcesSing Mortgage Refunds, own
Hours, Cell (909)715·2300, Ext
782, [24 Hours).

.

Tandy Multimedia Compute( \Yith
Monitor. 468 QX .2 66, Quad
Spotd CD Rom. e..c.-lent Condi·
tlon, 2' Ynrs Old·. Added Soft·
--.s7!i0,614-4411-nss,

FINAN C IA L

210

Business
OpPOrtun~

Two 1888. XR7 Cooigor'a, 1500
King Woadburner Slovt, Bricklined, $1,750, Ail 81•·448· 7583,
Alit For
&amp;a.

o-.

$3501Mo.Dapalit,

tJ!obll~

'

.

fOfRent
'While Twin Beds; Good Condi·
tlof'. 814-fl8-087e.
Jewlery 40 Piocn Fcil
Information, 414~
t

!

"

HDNJCIN(j
,

i

I :~~~;:::==========:::::":~~~~~~::-~~:·.:·:.:··:.!.0 !'"=:'!:.,:::..~"!..:;.·~Tt~l"'~A~V~£:!S"~t~~~~t:·~'~":.J o

1083 Mirida 111 Ft. Open Bow, ,)
E•tra Canvao &amp; Covert, 4.3 V~ ~ ·
.l111rl0,000,814 ~48 8.1.
-: l

"::m
-. E BORN LOSER

760

power.

1963 l.inc 0 i~down car. good
cond, llsklna·u,ooo. 304· 773·
8170. .

•

IWI.SHCI~ t.IH.D.' ~?

1

~1111\JHO~Ke: ~·

f'U:!()t.l,

amoky

1972 Cougaf XR 7 ConVertible,

GE£. ~'ft)U(.I:)lED

1-. ~ I~T

.10,500 rrileo, mai&lt;o Ollar
on priooi, 614-985-3382.
now Interior, 'now tap, 351 C-·
land, au!Dmak., PS. P8, air, riaw
point, 81t985-;41!98 . • '

.,

'(OOV£ r.orro 1£
'

all

··'

:-

.'95 Buick Regal Custom. V·8 IU·

tomatic',

KfHINP

ME.

\

1903 201
XL, 20' Stnutoo
b811 boot, 200 XPHP, 814·8877347orl14-840-2879.

In World War 1!, the Gennans used
the Enigma Machine to code mes·
sages for their U-boat captains. What
they didn't know was that the British
. had an enigma machine and, using
one of the first computers, had by 1943
broken ,the code. The British inter·
cepted and react: every message sent
to the North Atlantic lJy the Nazis.
_ in bridge, it is similar but less com·
plicated. The defenders send signals
to each other, which the declarer will
occasionally intercept and use to his
own advantage - as in today's deaL
Against,four spades, West led the
club 10: four, ace, jack. Eas! returned
the club eight: king, nine, five . To
South, it looked as though West had
Jed from a doubleton and that East
had returned a suit-preference eight,
showing an entry in hearts.
· Declarer cashed the spade king and
played a spade to dummy's jack. The
good news was that the finesse
worked; the bad news was that East
discarded a club. South appeared to
have a loser in each suit, but he spot·
ted a possibility. He led the heart
•three from .the dummy, impaling East
on Morton's Fork.
. If ~t had won with the ace, Soltth
would have discarded two diamonch
irom hand cin dummy's heart and club
·queens, thus avoiding a diamo,nd loser. Whereas when East' ducked his
ace, South won with the heart Iring,
played a apa.de .to dummy's ace and
.discarded his remaining heart on the
club queen.
Note that if West held the heart ace,
declarer would have had to start the
suit from hand. But East's lead at
trick two had given the game away.

l

N~w

011 tank1, .on• tan truck
.- . . ... lloor 111111, .... .
·D I R AliiD, Ripley, WV. 304-372·
131133 or 1-800-273-«12,11.

by Luis Campos

.f

~~:~4~~~~:.~:k ~~r'"r.!f~; II·----Home----......,;:
Ca11Tt.

' N

CXNFX!

J u

N

,
·. 1 '!~

'MWXNUA

C J XU

E P X

I

JW

J .

P XNF

EPNE

OILVW . '
UPNHXURXNIX .
N
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The author's conviCtion ls.Jhat poetry begins to
atrophy when ~ gets too far from music." - Ezra Pound:

....

'=~=-' sec~~-~
t.~s·
IWIIotl lor
Pji!WI-"-----WOlD

C&amp;AY ,I,

Reor10nge " " ' ' ol tho
0 four
ICJOmbled word1 be-

low to form four -do.

C0 T L UC

r1 r
P L I EM
I' I r I
-:::0-:H~E
~,·
r r 1 1 __
1

1 1

r---:-L

-:-:W---,1

e

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in lho milling words
you dowolop from Slip No. 3 below.

P~INT

NUMBERED
[ETTERS IN _SQUARES

SCJIAM.lETS ANSWERS

Larder· Ducat· Young • Exodus • SCENERY
Wnile growing up, I occasio!'lally heard granny tell my
Dad that sometimes people need a good change of self
instead of SCENERY.

Sovtncs You'll Find In the
Closstfled SectiOn.

Parlaanne, V·B EnAll Optiona. EXC41·
C:,ti_n&lt;litil!n·· 4 Now Tlrea, _814-

'

ITHURSDAY

Ganeral

JANUARY 18 ·I

' tenence · Painting, i
carpon~y. claora, wi-o.
homO fltlilr and """"· Far ~
fnoo ndmalo cajl Cho!, 114-9821- . ,

6323.

.

. ...

•

lliMYAll

Hona. tlnitiVtpalr.

'

01

i

1f )

. . ~·

, •
Cetlfngo telt1llrM, ,pllt1tr ropelr.
Coli Tom 304-875&lt;4186. 20 - "

_......

~

....,..._....._ jump on IKe by undmtlndlt.'.g
- - : ' - - - . . . : . . . . - - - - - - llllC!!e ,tha!govwm you In lhe

wear

'. ASTRO·ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
~ •·• '

·I

-u•r

sign.

:"H

1.110 (Julr 23-Aug. 22) The fruits of your

.

you

ltboll could yield a bountiful harvest
tqday. If the piCkings are allm, use IIIIa
elCi)lrilnCI is a lesson to tty harder the

,
,

~

AIIIU (llllt'GII 11,._ 11J You ahoUid Ilia! hla CIHtad dilcood In your houle-

1fl· 191111
· clo .W.n tn c!ompelftlve alfeniJementa · hqld IIIOIIIlb M.CM be NICIMd today.
In lhit ~ 8hlld ,au jX)uld ...... ~ ; ~ If you " - It! mind INit you 11111 .. The~ . . not- IMiy.
.
pteeauri trqrn ao.- . of thl wondtrflll •
on otlierl may led!. .
~Pio (OIIL'~t111q1. 22) thtt ~ ;
..... Iii 1111 tel ofllr. ,YOI,iwll haYt .lha ,. fAURUI (Ajirl! ~ · 11111 CondlliOill ·ptlite 01* .. 111 'mW!I.Pflllrtt.lt... IOday
giloiltillllnetolnd c:a. flteridl ~ tliiNI ~ wutj ook hopeful _!oday pertalnl!lllto, 'ind g~ve.Yau_~m ojlportunlly
ytNf/1 $ . . . . will you.
T• ; IOtMihlng yo='ll. Hllwever. JOU ~ Mrioul olf yoUr chell.
"l:IJ ft!CC Nf(IIM. INen. 11)
I · ' mull . . IIIII
peeJiwl IAGnTARIUS (Nov. 23-0M. 11) Thla
NHuww• IMll•todiWIWOY '-II '·'l~i.,_CII,_.._~IMII!IY· ' will be. go!ICI clay 10 go ahopp!ng tor
;,llltiailllt a n to*'-,....... ~ .. a.n
r'fll .,. J!lll ; as IIWiialu"dti lllml.lf yat,t--"
- ()lici . . . . . . . wau llNI IIIIa II, ;'IINIY 1\!11 rteiQ ~ ~ 'your uWI! iolion, You cen 5lrlcl willl
·i Iller will"'"*.. ~
~,t-~, 1,rtom a cunent..!~·"~ ~t· lhl&amp;. ll~m!l,.': .~'~ll.,..._yau_~ 1111an1.
'.·
l'rte!IIY,

•. • if

'

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fell. 111 II you
hope to have an old obligation repaid,
·r111111nd tha debtOr todey. There Ia a good

.-ive.a ·pei11111 pay- Mal time.
meill. '""- - ... VIRGO (Alii. 2:f.llePL 22) f.n UnfllnJC·
I ~ tFeb. ~rdl 20) Eve~. If ·" t~lad gathellng, (uil for run, could·b•
, In~ a ~~~let on JO!Ir part, 't.y to · benl(lclllfor you commerelaHy todlly.
\ Nlum ,_,. ~ by ,...,. WilD ·.Look·b PRlfit among 11\e rovellra.
'
.: - -ldn!l to you In ·the put today. 'LiMA (lepL Ill jjCI. 23) A flmlly lllul

•
•

succesa will

Send lor your Aatro-Graph predlcllons · CANCER (June 21·July 22) You will
today by mallng $2 and sAsE to A8lro- hiiYe.good !udgmenl IQday. so once you
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P .O . II'&gt;M ,, '111111ka up your mind. don't alter or adjust
1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, N( your declalons. Everything wDI woll&lt; out
10158. Make sure to alate your zodillc • lor lhe belli.

....,....,_ __._ _ chance

i

g,t
ahead..: :be men evident

¥

•aw

to--

...,11_..

•"!'""•

I·

1-

'

----~

I·

•

..

1

rT'!&gt; A FEELING- Of
WELL· BEING 'Ttl KNOW
TAAT EVERYTHitKiS
It-! GOOD WORKING
OROE!l 1• ••

'

VXNI U

•

1"\Y

FXNCXI

W N R L C X .L W

P L R X. '

I F' r I I

BIG NATE-

" .']

'

Celebrity Ciphef crypCogl'lrnlll'l CfHNd from quotations by lamou1 peoc:Mt, pqt II'ICI l)fftenl
Each lltlei fl tM c.iphtr stM1da for anothet'. Today's clue: 0 fQU8II C
·

My friend retumed from the
store and asked. "Wny do the
foods that contain less of evr--:T:-:-:H......,.I-:M':""":'R-E::----. erything. cost so- •• - • - --?"

SEfiVICF S

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
•

L.-.L-.I.-..1-..11-...JI..-...J.

198s' Dodgo Ari ..; 1184 Chav.
Citation: 1883 Ford Filrmoilt;
1984 Phy, -Horizon, A Variety
U11d Radlotoro, Auto .
, .,.,.,.,_ 614 .~46 · 7M2, 814·448··

Homes

12x8,5 1072 2 Bedrooma, Clean,
lrw.oatment Property In Gallipolia, Minutes From Holzer Hospital,
Owner May 8o Abla To Help With 10x1e· s-ga Builcling, No 1'8111,
Some FJnancing , Call. 814·797· Oepoalt Required, f.fto l 5 P.M J
814-~3838. .
4345 After 8 P.M.
'

.

..,.,.thya~

.STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
·upriGht, Ran Evans Enterpriaes,
....,....,. 0111o, 1·800-537-~.

I
I

1-----.-.- - ---

iol•'ldl. •

LAI'lf 1. IUT :r GOT Tl~f/)
oF AI./. T'HAT

counseiOf' .

I

I

•
'"
WI"
..
'80Thu.- SC, lllio door, 3.8
Se11ontd Fir.Wood $45
litre, V·8, elite model turbo, PS,
Cot&lt;l DollvoNd, 814-381-11110.
, PB, AC, 5 IPII~. power 11111
and locka,. "Great c.ar; sasoo
Saga CD ayattm w/10 gameo ~19·: e_J 4-~~2- 7478 or1B14,-0,40;

Avenue, Gallipolis.

I

1987 21 FL Rwr Wlnna 250 Sun·
t ....~ In -Out-Boanl Cuddy Ca·
f.cceuorlea, Call 814·

:t T(flff&gt; . Ltfi' IN 'f'tlt- foA.fT

6tt~ployrnent

•I

Boats , Motlh
.f or Sale

'710 AIJtOI fOf Sale "

Immediate Opening For Floral
Designer F.uii·Time Position, Pay
Basod On E•perience. Apply At:
Thai Spec;;ial Touch, 340 Second

420
EMPLOYMUH
SERVICES

JET
,
· AERATION MOTORS '
Rooolred, Now l Rebuilt In S!Dck.
eai Ron e..,., 1-800-137-9528.

Scenic V~IJeY, ~pple Grove,
beautiful'2ac·IOts, pUblit water,
Clyde Bowen Jr.. 304-5?&amp;-ZI38.

.

Overbrook .Center has part lime
pos.ilions for ~TNA's. Anyone lnlerested please come in
·
oyt an 8pplication or
·Elias, ADON lor mora inlo11m&amp;lion'l
at 614·992-6472.

TI-IEV TI-IOU61-1T I WAS
JUST 8EIN6 RUDE ! ·

2 Rlvorvlew loll 200'X101' - bond Sublvlolon Jl. RL 7, Wotar,
EltctrlciY. I PhoM, 130,000. 304528-1753 Alii&lt; 5 P.!l.

·manager's
license
and clientele,
good working
conditions.
Send relull time auctioneer,
sume CIO The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
auction
aetvlce.
i
OH 45709
ltl8,0hlo &amp; West Viiginia, 304· Box 729- 18· Pl&gt;moroy,
·
;.7:..:73-;.;5;;.7.:;85;.;0r:.;,.;;30;.4-;..7;.;73-;;.;;544'""-7;..
. - - I Home Typists, PC users needed.
$45.000 income potentiaL Call 1·
wanted
to
Buy
90
·800-513.4343 EXL 8-9368.

owner,

1 USED TO STARE AT
fi.IE SI-IEEP l.IKE TI-US.
BUT IT DIDN'T WORK ..

TRIED BEIN6 A

Bagno!d

mOIIOII'Im

The enigmatic
· problem

540 Mllc:ellaneous

Help

Chrl~n

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South ·
South Weal North East
1•
Pass 2 t
Pass
3t
Pass 3•
Pall
t•
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: •10

Galdon Rtttlovorl Border
-814-848-2113. .

....

7 Chlf 8 Mra. Man:ft
9 AclrMO Turner
10 Nowflll

5 Flying toy

6

•K 5
t K 10 9 8
•K ,I

4

~ardy

4 Conotruct

•K 8 7 52

70 ,000 BTU Empire Mtural
1
.... 014·742 2125.

Sweetpotato
F~,

tQ 54

'I

..=·''
..'

�•
P~~g~~ 12 • The Dally SeuUnel

Thursday, January 18, 1996·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

:Classes pffer,ed
.
.

Cluses in ballroom dan&lt;:ing, rib' bon embrQidery, and CPR for .pro' fessional rescuers arc being offered
by the Rio Grande Community Col· le.ae through the Office of Adult and
• Continuing Education.
· Gerald Powell of Pomeroy, a professional dance instructor, will be
teaching the course in ballroom daneing.
.
. Tbe six-week course will be held ·
on Sunday evenings beginning Feb.
II from 3 to 5 p.m. in the James A.
.Rhodes Student Center. Cost for the
' cou!"$C is $60. Registration deadline
is Tuesday, Feb. 6.

~t

University of _Rio Grande

be held Feb. 1 ~nd f'eb. 8 from·6:30
to9p.m.inAnniversaryHaii,R.oom
102. Cost for the class is $30. Preregistration and payment are necessary. l'lcregis~on deadline is Monday, Jan. 29, 1996.
•
Those enrolled will custonuze a
lamp shade for lamp with the everlasting beauty of ribbon Dowers. All
materials except scissors will be furnislied by the instructor.
Also to be offered is a course in
accommodate even for those who CPR for Professional Rescuer.
have never danced, according to
I Powell.
The two evening class will be held
The course in ribbon embroidery Tuesday, Jan. 30 and Wednesday, Jan
lamp shade, two evening classes, will . 31 from 5:30- 10:00 p.m. at Lyne
Powell began his teaching can:er
with a worldwide dance company,
conducting regional classes, workshops and dance cruises. He will be
teaching new steps and routines that
will suit the sounds of yesteryear and
popular music. Powell is known to
have the ability to tum each session
into an exciting event, as well as a
learning experience, making it atuaclive among all ag~s. The course will

a

· Center, Room 114: Cost for. the. cl~
ts$40.Preregtstrallon~tsFriday, Jan. 26, 1996.
·.
.
This course will prepare people 10
the professaonal fields as well as for
n~ing students. This is a one year
certified program.. Books can be purchased in _the Rio Grande·Bookstore.
.To regaster for any of the classes,
c.ontact the Office of ~dull and Co~­
Unumg Educauon. Umverstty of Rio
Grande, Rio Grande, OH 45674 or
call614-245-732S or toll free in Ohio
at 1-800-282-7201 ext. 7325. l'lcregistration l\fld payment are necessary.

:.Dairy Barn to open Community Exhibit Saturday
The

work of two Athens artists stated in previous publications that
will ~n display at the Dairy Bam the Appalachia area ha5 "meant a
Saturday, Jan. 20 through March 3. great deal to me and must have
The Third Annual Dairy Bam Com- affected my an in many complex
·IJIUnity Gallery features the art work ways."
Murray Stem (1927-1985) was
.ofthelateAnneCiarkCulbertandthe
)ate Munay P. Stern.
born in Brooklyn and came to Athens
· , Anne Clark Culbert (1921-1994) in 1972. His mediums include paint. \¥&amp;5 born in New York City and ing, pen and pencil drawings, and
llloved to Athens in 1953. Culbert's . charcoal- drawings. In his artist's
Porcelain art work is well-kllown statement, Stem discussed how peoiflroughout the area, but she also pie easily tum on and off violence,
~orked in watercolor, oil painU,g, .but his paintings. "cannot be turned
:prints, charcoal, and pencil. (:ul}lert~!' off or the cover closed."
~

.

..

.

:Talk shoW
:pioneer Phill

Robert M. Laughery, son of
Laughery of Reedsville and
Denise Laughery of Tuppers Plains,
has joined the United States· Army
under the Delayed Enlistment Program at the U.S. Army Recruiting
. Station, Athens, Ohio.
Laughery, a senior at Eastern
High ~chool, Reedsville, will report
10 Fon Jackson, S.C., for military
basic training July 10. 1996.
Michael R. Phoenill
Michael R. Phoenix, son of Mary
and John Phoenix of Cheshire, has
arrived a1 Fort Sill, Okla.. to begin
basic military training and one station
unit training as a field artillery cannoneer.
~obert V.

calls i.t quits.

will

'

I

Eastern girls
post another ·
cage victory

9498 .

BuckeyeS:

•

.e

V.., auto, elr cond, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr ..t, tilt,
cruiM, AMJFM cua, New
Seblt Tnlde-ln

.\

.

·Val. q, NO. 185
. 1 8eotion, 10 ......

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 19, 1996

Rainfall
floods
roads

I

I

while wreckers salv.age tanker
·-

1994 PLYMOUTH
LASER

1994 EAGLE
TALON ES :~
4 cyl, 5 1pd, elr

By TOM HUNTER
"'SenUnel New1 Steff
Meigs County emergency crews
·and law enforcement hoped to have
·!he remnants of a Thursday night
tanker-truck aecident removed from
· an area along. State Route 248 in
: Chestfr by early this afternoon, offi: dais said Friday morning. ·
The accidenl occurred around I0
- p.m. l11ursday Y~hen a tanker carrying 9,200 gallons of propane over. ·turned between Baum Lumber Co.
and the Ridenour Gas Service bulk
_. IJiant. .
· The truck is owned jly Petroleum
Transport/Vidmar Transportation,
·based in Mclean, 01., according to
information provided by the Meigs
'County Sheriff's Department.
· According to accident reports,
·Gregory A. Wampler, 40, Fla1 Rock,
Ill., was eastbound on 248 when he
·allempted to make a right tum onto
· Firs! Street As Wampler was luming,
the rear wbeels on the tanker came off
"the roadway and went down an
embankment, causing the tanker trail·er to roll over onto its side.
Damage to the tanker was moder-

2 Dr, 4 ely, 5 1pd, elr
cond,PS, PB, AM/FM
Clll, rear defog, ·Low
mll11, More.

c¥tC~,

AM/FM Clll, tilt, crdlu,
PS, PB, Pwr window,
Pwr door locka. MORE .

1992 FORD
TEMPO 4 Dr. GL

.1993 FORD
TAURUS STA. WGN
AM/FM cau, tilt, erul1e,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, MORE.

ate', while the hitch on the 1989 Kenworth tractor was damaged when the
trailer broke free as it rolled to the
right side.
According to Emergency Management Director Robert Byer, no
immediate danger was posed to the
public as a result of the accident.
"The was no leakage of propane
from the tanker, and no danger was
posed to residents," he said.
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department .will ask residents in the
area to leave their residences ~¥hile
the truck is moved this afternoon,
only as a precaulionary measure.
U!!its of the Meigs Emergency Medical Servites will also assist in the
precautionary evacuation b}• removing an invalid resident, Byer said.
As a precau1ionary measure, students attending nearby Chester Elementary School were advised to sljly
home. he added.
"Where we stand right ~ow, we .
will probably start removal operations around noon," Byer said this
morning.
Arrangements were made this
morning to bring in two large wreck-

·- -

1996 NISSAN SENTRA.XE
4 door, AM/FM cassette, air,
rear defroster, power steering.

1995 NISSAN K/C 4x4

Club Cab 4x4, air, V6, cassette,
sport truck, sport wheels.

V6, air, cassette, tilt, cruise,
bed liner, power mirrors.
1
Off MSRP

Special Price:

·

$18,999

3,000

'-"!..;;;,;Prlc;; To Sill
1

1994 MERCURY
VILLAGERGS

1995 FORD&gt;
,,
WINDSTAR LX

v-e, ·auto, dual air cond;

'

V-6, auto, air cond, PS,

AM/FM CD, PS, PB, PW,
POL, Pwr lilt., ; till,
•
crulae, Lollded.
·-

PB, PW, PDL, Pwr 111t,
tilt, crulae, AM/FM CIU,
Loedltd

$18,949

51'5 ,949

'

1995 FORD F
4X2

1~~:~~~N

·1 cyl_, 1 ' apd, air, ' cond,

4 door XG, air, CBS$., II~.
cruise, factory warr.

AIIJFII - · tin, crullle,
PI, Long hd;T:CIPP.IIf!r .

:l

--~ ~·

1993 CHRYSLER
CONCORDE
3.51Her, V-6, alr,
auto., factory Wlllf!lnly.

ONLY:

'13,995

1993GMC
SONOMA

ONLY:

1991 DODGE
, CARAVAN
7 pue;, alr,lllllo.,
AMIFM caea., V-6.

.ONLY:. '8,995,

sa

~13,449

1992 FORD
RANGER 4X2.

1990FORD
V-150
V-8, auto., air,
XLT Lariat Pkg.

XLT, v.a, fluto. air coricl,
PB, PW, POL, tilt, cru•l••·
AM/FII CUI, Long btd.

a.e v.a, euto, air l!ond,

.PI, PW, PDL, tilt; cru11..
AUMCiiu,Keyllu
,.

$12,

XLT, Suparc1b; 4 cyt, II
air cond, PS, PI, ....,.,,
caaa, ahon bed. •

.; (..La,....

.•• ...

-•1-

._

•

•• '

•

--

· - · ~~

•

__

----~

-:..r .-'·
,.-....

.,_"'t

--...

,..

~

EXAMINING TANKER - In addition to copIng with nlturllamergencies overnight, emergency and law ~nforcament offlcllls also had
to contend with 0111 man-made emergency.
Above,
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby 1nd·.a deputy examine a tanker treller con·

,._lg•

telning 9,200 pounds of propane that rollltd
over Thuradey night In Chester. The village will
likely be temporarily evacuated as workers
attempt to right the trailer this afternoon: (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

ers from Emerick Brothers Garage, !railer.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
"The trailer has a full 40-lon load
'"The)' have been involved in sim- right now," he said. "If we would
ilar tanker removals in the past," said pump the tanker, we would only be
Byer.
able to get half of the load due to the
Byer said officials did not consid- tanker being on its side. It would be
er pumping the propane into ano~~er much safer to remove the tanker irom
tanker as an
in moving lhe the scene completely full, instead of

half full ."
Units who were on the scene since
last nighl included the Chester Volunteer Fire Departrneni, Meigs County Sheriffs' Department, and officials
with lhe Meigs Emergency Medical
Servi~es and Meigs Emergency Management Authority.

~$olld_ carryover

cheers

. Racine niayor, council

John R. Lentes
ha:ve been. I have issued opinions and
advised county and township officials
as they have asked me to."
"However," Lentes continued, "I
have found lhat il is not necessary to
sacrifice law enforcement effons in
(Continued on Page 3)

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New• Staff
The village of Racine just finished
its best year ever, ac~ording , to Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Financially, the village had a carryover of $277,862.68 from its 1995
budget of $658,466, Thornton reponed Thursday.
Total appropriations for l9961otal
$488,194.80 in the following funds:
general, $74,386; refuse, $38,842;
parks/museum, $312.95 ; streel,
$56,815; state highway, $5,397.31 ;
fire , $32,300; fire lruck debl,
$1 0,670.29; ' waler, $99,709 ; cemetery, $4,585; water deposits. S1,000;
Community Developmenl Block
Grant, $82,577.25; Appalachian
Regional Commission Grant,
$80,000; cemetery endowment,
$6,800.
Council recenlly discussed village
accomplishments for 1995, which

included:
• 5,000 feel on new sidewalk;
• housing rehabilitation;
• new water well and water lines;
• conslruclion of lhe Cross
Mill/Racine Museum.
The new water system is almost
completed, with 35 meters and 2,000
feel of line remaining to be inslalled,
Thornton explained.
Future plans may include putting
new sidewalk along Elm Street to
Southern High School and finishing
the downtown area sidewalks, it was
noted.
Council also discussed how
Racine seems to be growing with various new businesses going in and old
businesses being renovate~! .
Thornton and council commended village crews and residents including Bill Maynard, Rose's Construction. Tom Wolfe and J.D. Drilling for
(Continued on 'page 3)
'
.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New1 Staff
High water, caused by more than
one inch of rain that fell overnight
coupled wilh melting snow, added up
10 flooded roads in part of the counly and resulted in the closing of the
Meigs Local Schools loday.
Meigs County Emergency Services Director Roben Byer reported
more than a dozen road closings,
moslly in the western end of the
county.
Roads closed included: Dexter
Road at Malloon's Run and Jacks
Road; Stale Route 124 from state
routes 7 to 325, including the village
of Rolland; Swick Road between
Lasher and Hatfield roads; Tilus
Road between Lasher and leading
·Creek roads; Noble Summil Road at
McElhinney Hill Road; Bra!lbury
Road off Noble StJmmit Road;
SR 143 from SR 7 to Ball Run i SR
7 at Dye Road; Loop Road near New
Lima Road; SR 681 a1 SR 692; Laurel Cliff Road near SR 7; U.S. 33 at
Burlingham; Old Dexter Road; Hemlock Grove Road at Cherry Ridge
Road; Happy Hollow Road; SR 692
at SR 143; and SR 681 from U.S. 33
to SR 692.
Byer said 1.2 inches of rain fell on
the county overnight, overflowing
streams already swollen with water
from melting snow. One inch of the
tolal fell after midnight, he added .
The Eastern and Southern Local
schools are· in session today.
High wind caused problems of its
own in 1he fonn of scattered electri·
cal outages.
"We had a few scattered outages
yesterday and this morning," reported Ohio Power/Columbus Southern
Power Manager Ron McDade.
Approximately 450 Columbus
Southern Power customers were
withoul electricity for 1- 112 hours
Thursday after a tree fell on a power
line around 2: 15 p.m., breaking a uti I·
ity pole, McDade said.
Residents from Antiquity to Apple
Grove to the Bashan Road/Dorca5
area were without .power until 3:45
p.m., he explained. The outage did
affect not the village of Racine.
Two more poles were broken
around 6 p.m. in the Eagle
Ridge/Sugar Run area of Chester
Township. Ten customers were
affected in that area.
Byer reported peak gusts reached
33 miles-per-hour.
·

Southern committee eyes past
levy success for bond campaign :

Meigs United Fund
·exceeds half~ay
mark of 1996 _g oal
The 1996 fuftd-raising campaign ty, it was reponed.
for the United Fund for Meigs CounAnother agency that 'received
ty is past the half-way mark to its funding for.work wi!ll youih was the
1996 goal of $18,000.
RSVP Program for work with the
According to a report from the Yesteryear program.
agency, the amount received or
1ltc Retired Senior Volunteer Propledged exceeds SJ O,SOO.
gram conducts 1he Yestervear pro· An emphasis of funding from the gram annll8fly. Fifth graders from aJl
local agency is geared to youth orga- schools in the county are invited to
ruzations, it was reported, with dol- participate in this project, which is
.•Ill'S Joing to the Community Assault designed to teach participants slcills
.Prevention Services, the Yesteryear in cr!lfis of Yesteryear.
projeCt and Boy Scouts troops.
Program Director Alice Wolfe
Community Assault Prevention reported to the United . Fund Board
Services (CAPS) was one of the that dollars were used to purchase
.agencies that received funding from new leather tools, and provide aprons
the United Fund in 199S.
for the volunteers to wear during the
Monica Dodrill is the .executive programs.
di~tot of the CAPS program and
Two Boy Scout troops also
reponed that funding was used to received funding in 1995.
'help the asency provide trainin11 to
Troop 249, under .the direction of
students · .at Portland, Letart, Scoutmaster Don Frymyer, used·
·Riverview and Salem Cen1~r ele- - money 10 help subsidize the cost of
mcntarics, to ,conduct an activity in sumrncr camp to enable all members
Middleport and make a presentation 1o attend.
at the Gingerbread House.
1fOw 299, under the direction of
Dollars were' liNd to purchase Scoutlhaster ,Greg McCall, utilized
hllldouts, for duplic~on. training of · their funding to help with an educavolunteers (which Is required by the tional ·field lrip-for tlic membeR. •
national CAP prop11111) and transOne hundred percent of the monportatiqn·&lt;:osts. Fundins by the Unlt- ey raised by the United Fund for
td filnCI for Meiss County enlbled Meigs Cpunty is given to groups in
lhe CAPS ·progm'n to extend the Mei'gs Co!anty that haye requested
•vliltbiQiy of progrumnin1 offered support and are eligible (SOI3C stato young people throuJihout.the coun- tus) for &amp;i.xlins. a United Fund offi-

~ ··

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

..

M6igs County Prosecuting Attor- Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
ney John Lentes has announced that · in Cleveland.
·
he will seek re-election to that office.
Prior to coming to Meigs County,
He filed his petitions with the Meigs Lentes served as the law director of
County Board of Elections Wednes- Westlake, a Cleveland suburb, and
day.
acted as special counsel and a memLentes, a Democrat, was elected in ber of the legal staff in North Olmst1992. A nati\le of Detroit, Mich., he ed.
has been a resident of.Meigs County
He and his wife, Cathy, have three
for more than nine years. Prior to his children, and live near Rutland.
· election to office, he was a partner in
Lentes said that si11ce taking
the law finn of Palter, Linle, Sheets office, he has eKpanded the focus of
&amp; Len1es.
the, office to include the 'civil responHe is a graduate of Brockton High sibilities of the prosecuting anorney.
School in Boston, Mass., and ·
"During the past three years, I
received his undergraduate degree in have kept my pledge 10 township
history and classics from Miami trustees, clerks and other local offiUniversity in Oxford, Ohio.
cials," Lentes said.
I,.entes did postgraduate studies at
"During my last campaign, they
Miami University, as well as 0Kford lold. me they had been ignored, and
University and the University of were left virtually without represenLondon, both in England. He tation,'" he added. "I promised to be
received his law degree from the attentive to their needs, and I think I

•
"'""'- -:

·~ .

. Lentes seeks $econd
·term~as-·prosecutor · -

..

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

35centl
A Gannett Co. Ne•apepw

Propane truck
.wrecks
on
248
Ches.t er residents asked to leave

Y-1, auto, air cond,

1995 DODGE NEON

Lowe lletwe•n · 5·1 5
tonight. Partly cloudy.
Saturday, p•rtly cloudy,
hlghaln 201.

8-22-26-29-31

1995 FORD
T·BIRD lt

dren under 12 are free. Thursday
evenings from S p.m. to 8 p.m. are
free and sponsored by The Athens
Messenger and Larry Conrath Realty.
The Dairy Barn's Board of
Trustees Annual Meeting and the
Community Gallery's opening !Ceep_.
!ion will be Friday from 6:30 to 9
.p.m.
• Sponsors are American Electric
Power, Days Inn, OhioAns Coundl,
and Snider Fuller and Associates.

Travis Mup-aae
Army Pvt. Travis Mugrage, son of
Charlie and Peach Mugrage of
Racine, recently graduated from Fort
Knox, Ken. after completing seven
weeks of advanced individual training on maintaining and operating
armored vehicles.
.
After spending two weeks at
h.:!me, Mugrage is now stationed al
Fort Benning, Ga. The 199S Southem High School graduate joined the
Army in Augusl, 1995.
Timothy 'E. Wella
Army Pvt. Timothy E. .Wells has
completed basic training at Fort
Leonard E. Wood, Waynesville, Mo.
Wells is the son' of Joan A and
Dana R. King of Pomeroy.

Pick 3:
416
Pick 4:

•
•

Sports, Page 5

--Military. news--Robert M. Laughery

~Donahue
..y SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP T...vl1lon Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - · Phil
I!lonahue, who pioneered the audience- and issue-driven talk show,
dnly to see his )"atings yield to lowo/ow imitators and trashy topics, is
calling it quits.
·
·
"Donahue," a Peabody and
20-time national Emmy Award winner seen in more than 45 countries,
continue through the end of this
.season, his syndicator, '4ultimedia
Entertainment Inc., announced
Wednesday. .
·
· ·
"Phil Donahue essentially
slarted this company and began an
entire industry in daytime syndication," said Multimedia l'lcsident Bob
Turner. "He was the first• to intimately involve his studio an(! horne
audiences."
A nine-time Emmy winner
as tal,lc TV's outstanding host, Donahue, who turned 60 last month, will .
continue to work on TV specials and ·new projects in . broadcasting and :
c11ble, Turner said.
A spokesman for the show
said Donahue was taping a program
late Wednesday.afternoon and would
not be available for interviews.
"Donahue," which marked
its 25th anniversary ill, 1992, began
on Nov. 6, 1967, in Dayton, Ohio,
where the then-brown-haired TV personality intended to have a standard,
couch-and-desk fonnat.
,
However, a studio audience
sl!owed up for the canceled variely
show he was replacing. "Somebody
said, 'Why don't we sit 'em down
and let 'em watch the interview?"
Donahue recalled in a 1987 inteiview.
· ·
His guest, atheist Madalyn
Murray O' Hair, was questioned by
tile audience during commercials
apd Donahue lhought some of their .
questions were better than his.
"Sometime during that first week, I
jumped off my chair lllld ran into the
.
'
audience," he said.
·.
' The program moved to
pational syn~ication and the top of ·
tlie ratings - until a newcomer .
named Oprah Winfrey debuted in the
1986-87 season and knocked him out
pf rwst place.
.'

All of the art work is for sale
except Culbert's porcelain pieces.
The Culbert Family will donate the
proceeds from the sale of Anne's ~o­
dimensional art work to the Daary
Bam to help establish a scholarship
fund.
Gallery hours are Tuesday through
Sunday, II a.m.-5 p.m. wiih extended hours on Thursdays until 8 p.m.
General admission is $3; senior citizens and full-time students are $2.50;
and Dairy Barn members and chi!-

Ohio Lottery

18
IS
12

'

6
J

GOAL·

5111,000

· By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New• Staff
The Southern Local Building
Committee examined an earlier, successful levy campaign at a commiltee meeting:Wednesday at Southern
Local High School.
Committee Chainnan Dave
Spencer introduced Steve Beha."
director of Carleton School/Meigs
Industries, who directed a successful
county-wide 1.8-mill propeny taK
levy campaign for thai agency in
November 1992 .
Beha faced a daunting 1ask in that
particular campaign. Si• similar
levies had gone down defeated in the
past. The measure lost by one vote on
election day, but wound up winning
by seven votes after the absentee Mllots were counted.
"We won by· a 700 percent margin," Beha gibed. "We only needed to
win by one vote."

cer said.
In l99S, 12 groups, including the
American Cancer Society of Meigs
County, Cooperative Parish, Meigs
lniluslries, Arts Council and the
Museum ~ved funding for special
projecfs and events, it was noted.
It was' pointed out thai the United
Fund for Meigs County is not affiliated .wilh any na~~~:al ~ani~ti?n
and that all mono1 raised ts adnums' tercd by a local.board of voltinteers.
Contributions tQ the United fund are
encouraged.throush a one-lime donaASHLAND (AP) - A highway
lion, pledse or payroll deduction. . patrol trooper was shot to death earFor additional information about ly today along Interstate 71 in nonhthe Unii&amp;IFuinHOFMeigs-county or cenlral Ohio.
tQ obtain a donation or pledge form,
A suspect was apprehended, State
residents may contact President liighway P.atrol spcikesman Sgt. John
St~san Oliver at .992-2161.
Born said.
'
Donations may !JC mailed to UnitThe names of the trooper, who .
ed Fund for Meigs County, Bo~ 424, was with the Ashland post, and the
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
suspect were not immediately

The Southern Local Building
Commitlee is now seeking passage of
a 6.1-mill lax bond iss ue for constnlction of a new, stale-of-the-art, K8 elementary school and for renovations to the. high school. Total cost of
the project is $7,370,8oo, with the
state picking up $3,190,800 of the
lab.
First, Beha infonned the doze n
people attending that "there is nothing you can do to ensure passage."
Gaining support is one job, he
explained. Getting supporters to vote
is quite anotner.
"Every person you talk to is
important," he said. "Get'them to register. then gel them to vote. There are
a lol of people out there that arC"likely supponive , but they don'l vote."
Beha showed some of the promotional material used by Carleton
School/Meigs lnduslries in its levy
campaagn and suggested a blend Qf

informational outlets.
"lnfonnation is real important,
don't just count on one source of
information," he advised.
In 1992, Beha's group used radio,
newspaper letters to lhe editor, yard
11!\d utility pole signs, posters, direct
mailing and posters located near
polling places.
"There will be a lot of misinformation ou1 lhere," Beha explained.
Be ready to deal with it, he added.
lleha also actively sought endorsements in the 1992 campaign, receiving the endorsements of both politi_cal parties, many politicians and The..
Daily Sentinel and WMPO.Radio. ..
"It's not fun to ask people for more
money," he said. "This is the one""
opponunily people have to say 'no' to .
taxes."
''They're probably not opposed to ..
the program, they just don't wan1 to·
(Conllaued on Pap 3)

State trooper shot 1o death on interstate

~

rcle~sed .

An Ashland trooper, who did not
give hi s. name, told the Ashland
Times-Gazette that the-trooper was
shot in the chest af(er.stopping a dri ver for suspected drunken drivi'ng.
The shooting occurred about 3
a.m. about three miles north of Ashland.
.
The trooper told the newspaper

that the suspect, was captUred in ..
Medina County, &amp;bout 30 mil.ei to lhe · ·
northeast, ~fter qashing.the car on 1111 ,
· exit ramp to State-Routc.-18. . Born said more information would ;
be releaSed at a late I!Kll'l!inl newa •
Conference in Ashland.
.,, •
Ashland is about 70 mila ~~
east of Columbus.
. · ;"
'

e

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