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'

Rebelleadersh p
rejects talks offer
MOSCOW (AP) - Russian warplanes reportedly bombed rebel
Cbedmya today, a day after Cbecben leaders rejecled President
Boris YeltsiD' s offer of new peace talks.
'Jbe ITAR-Tass news agency said Russian combat aircraft cleliv·
ered a missile strike onlbe oucskirts of Gromy, lbe capilal, Ill 9 a.m.
Aootber air auack was made on lbe village of Ursus-Martao soulh
of tbe city. Casualties were reported in tbat attaCk, but no derails
were imJDI'diately available.
·
,
Today' s attacks came after Cbecbnya' ~ rebel govemme~t, i.ts
forces badly outnumbered, showed no s1gn of comprom1se. 1n
response 10 YellS in's announcement that he would end the bombmg
ofGrozny.
Yeltsin called a bait to tbe air strikes on lbe capital and proposed
new peace talks in a nati~wide ~~ Tuesday.
. .
Officials in lhe separaust reg100 10 lbe Caucasus Mountams dis·
missed bis speech because it failed to meet their main demand:
withdrawal.
"It's clear the Russian president doesn't want to change bis
plans and wilhdraw troops," Ruslan Cbimayev, Cbecbnya' s deputy
· foreign minister, was quoted by ~ussian media as saring T~~Y·
"But a military victory over the uny Cbecben Repubhc won t bnng
Russia laurels."
In a speech that could he characterized heuer by a clenched fist
than by an extended olive branch, Yeltsin declared that ground
forces would spare no effon to restore onltt. and end ."tbe outra~e
of gangsterism" in Checbnya. a mostly Muslim republic of 1.2 mil·
lion people.
,, y .
'd . Tu
''The ring around Gromy bas tightened,
elts10 s:u 10 esday's address. "The armed units have been bloclred. The actions of
gangs tbat offer resistance will still be severely suppressed.''
An analyst for a leading newspaper, Pavel Felgengauer of
Segodnya, called the speech "very belligerent" and said. i! demon·
straled Russia's intent to use more f1rep0wer 10 end the cnsJS.
Even as the president spoke, tbe Cbechens claimed new Russian
aerial auacks on lbree villages south of the capilal, Grozny.
Cbecben fighters have. vowed never to surrender, even th~gb
they are only severnl lbousand against as maDy as 40,000 Russ1811
uoops who entered lbe breakaway region on Dec. II to end Checb·
nya's self-proclaimed independence.
Yeltsin bas faced harsh criticism at b0111e and, to a lesser e~\ell~
abroad for a bolcbed mUitary operation tbat the Cbecbens claim has
kiUed hundreds ot civUians.

:.~~!~?..' b~,~~~!~}!~~Q~!M!!~:!."d p~~!!~~~
Asaad8ted Pna Writer

NEW YORK ~ An inventor's
boast of developing devastating
newbulletslbatcan leave baseball·
sized boles in people bas provoked
cries for a swift ban from lawmak·
ers - and skepticism from the
National Rifle Association.
David Keen probably will have
to wait at least a month before fed·
eral officials approve his applica·
lion to make and sen bis "Rbino"
bullets. But two gun-control lead·
ers promised Tuesday to introduce
legislation to block him as soon as
Congress reconvenes next week.
Earlier tbis week, Keen dis·
closed to The Associated Press bis
plans to market "strictly defensive" handgun bullets lbat would
fragment into thousands of razor·
like pieces when they strike human
flesh. A second type of bullet
would also be able to pierce bullet·
proof vests.
"The beauty behind it is that it
makes an incredible wound,''

~mist making bis fust fally into
tbe bullet business, told tbe AP.
"There's no way to stop the bleed·
ing . I don't care where it bits.
They're going down for good."
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
~-N,·Y.· said there was "somelb~g
s1ck about Keen's boasiS. He srud
be would propose legislation to ban
Keen's bulleiS if federal regulators
don't block lbem.
Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
who sponsored Ibis year's federal
crime bil~. al~ promised to intrc,J·
duce legislation to keep Keen s
bullets out f/ gu~s. "~!'s bto.od
money, plain lmd sm1ple, be satd.
Moynihan sponsored a 1986 ban
on armor-piercing "cop-killer"
b.ullets an~ shepherded an. expan·
s1on of 1t 1010 the cnme bill. Last
year, Moymhan ~t.so helped dn~c;
the Winchester Black Talon
hollow-point expandi~g bullet off
the market by proposmg. ~ 10,000
percent tax on !he am_mumuon. .
The NRA s cb1cf lobby1st,

Keen's boasts.
"This bas alllbe trappings or a
hoax,'.' sbe said in a statement.
"What we have is an outbreak of
mob journalism centering on tbe
dubious claims of a would-be maD·
ufacturer." .
Olber gun-ngbts supporters note
that at least two types of bullets
similar to the proposed RhinoAmmo already are on the market.
They deliver birdsbot in a plastic
container.
Supporters say there are two
advantages to such bullets. They
disintegrate when they, hit. human
ussue, and therefore can t bit someone else if they pass through the
target's body. And if a shot misses
lbe target, it disintegrates when it
hilS a solid object instead of ricocbeting.
Keen is lbe chief e~ecutive of
Signature Products Corp. in
Huntsville, Ala., which makes
radar-absorbing paint for stealth
aircraft, according 10 industry pub·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Sales
of previously own.ed homes fell~
lbe lowest level m 17 months 10
November as rising mortgage rateS
. pushed ~uyers out of tbe market.
Tbe Midwest posted tbe only
advance.
. .
Tbe National Assoc1a11on. of
Realtors said today sales of exiSt·
ing single-family homes dropped
2.6 percent to a season~y adJusted
annual rate of 3.81 m1lbon, down
from 3.91 million in Oc10ber, when
sales rose 0.5 percent
The November rate was lb~ lowest since June 1993. when II

3.70 million annually.
The sales rate reached a recent
peak of 4.35 million last Decem·
ber two months before tbe Federal
R~erve began raising interest rates
to slow tbe economy and cool
inflationary pressures.
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mort·
gages averaged 9.18 percent in
November, up from 8.93 percent in
October and 7.15 percent last
February, according to surveys by
lbe Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp.
.
A jump from 7 percent to 9 per·

cent would add $209 to tbe month·
ly payment on a $150,000 mortgage.
''We expected sales 10 slow
down, given, ,the direction rates
have taken, sa1d Edmun.d .G.
Woods Jr., the Realtors assocmuon
presl!lent: .
_
A~soclallon economist John A.
T,ucctllo ~redicted funb~ .~lines,
but no~g catastrophic.
Desplle the November drop,
Woo.ds said, ~~e sales pac~
remaiOed strong,, and we expect1t
to stay that way. .
The Realtors esllmate that sales

Page 4 .

Double Cheese Pizza
•1.99
- ~55 With Coupon on lox ·
21 oz.
$1.44 Net Cost

2 LITER

Vol. 45, NO. 167
CopyrJtht 1994

for all of 1994 will reach 3.97 mil" '
lion, second·bigbest ever and wet(;
above the 3.80 million homes post·'·
ed in 1993.
The median price of an existing :
home was $108,100 in November, : .
up from $107,100 a year ago. 1be ,
median is the midpoint. meaning :
half of lbe homes cost more and' ,
half cost less.
;
Sales rose 1.9 percent in ;
·November in the Midwest to a ·
1.09 million annual rate. The ~edi· :
an price was $86,6M, up from::
$85,500 a year ea.olier.
·:'
•·

By KEVIN PINSON
OVP Newa Staff
Tbe ~James M. Gavin Power
Plant in Cheshire will be off-Hue
for four to six weeks while workers
make $5 million worth of repaus to
a l'unlace whicb imploded Dec. 15.
Two contractors, Union Boiler
Service of Niao. W.Va.,~ Kbem
Power of Akron, arc making the
repairs - replacing buckled s~port beams and damag~d tubmg
and checking for cracks m lbe fur·
nace's boUer. .
.
Mike Williams, producuon
su~isor at Gavin, said 1be implosion occurred when a coal fire 10
lbe .boiler burned off alllbe oxygen
and~ a vacuum.
.
Tbe vacuum inside the bOJier
was like an invisible band ~ing a soda can. Williams s:ud 18inch steel support beams around
the boiler buckled as much as 24
inches from their original plane.
The implosion was felt tbn_lu~t
the plant, but no one was mJured,
be added.
• _
The damaged furnace 1s one. of
tw~ 1,300-megaw~u generatmg
umts for 1be newly-mstalled scrubbers. Tbe .damag.ed u.nu was
brought on line earher tb1s month;

CALIFORNIA

Chicken or Beef Broth

Nqvel Oranges

$1
0~
4
MOUNTAINEER

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Sausage

Beef Chuck Roast

69c

LB.

FRESH .

Bakery Donuts

$1''

$ 99

3 _LIS.

DOZ.

Star·Kist Tuna
$ 00
601.

Patio Burrito
.$ 00
5 oz.

Alsoc~ ~Writer

The Daily S~lllinel office will
close at noon Saturday. The
newspaper will not be published
Monday so that its employees
may observe the Christmas boli·
day.
Regular publicalion and business hours resume Tuesday.

reporting to work during tbe ·
repairs.
"We have no concerns about tbe
ability to supply our customers
with power," he said. "And there .
will be no effect on employment
levels."
The repairs should he complet·
ed sometime in February. Consumers will not have to bear tbe
expense tbrougb their electric biDs,
Hagelin said.
·
"It appears that much of the
expense will be covered by insur·
ance" he said. "The effect on rates,
if any, will be insignificant"
The scrubber, tecbniCally called
a flue-gas desulfurization system,
represents the chief component of
tbe company's clean air compli·
ance plan to meet requirementa of
tbe u.S. Clean Air Act.
It is designed to remove 95 percent of the sulfur dioxide from the
exhaust of the 20-year-old coal·
fired electric gener,Jting plant
The plant accounts for 25 per·
cent of American Electric Power's
sulfur dioxide emissions.
Prior to lbe inciden~ the saubber installalion project was ruoning
eight mootbs ahead ot scbedule and
$130 to $140 million under budget

.

. '

Hubbard tiiet today with lbe fust vice
of foreign affairs, Kang
Sok Ju, according to North KIJ4Illl'&amp;.!){flcial K~ Central News Agen·
. cy, ·'mii"'i&amp;e~ .in T.cibp._N.O iJCw,ls -~ot.~- ""tinl~in
PyOng~Uie N&amp;ili'Kbrean cap~~~~.
·_
HaD was captured Dec. 17 after bis bellcopler went down in North
Korean territory. His co-pilot died and bis body was returned last week.
Korea News Service in Tokyo, a po-Nortb agency, today released a
photograph of lbe handwritten statement it said it bad obrained from
North Korea.
The seven,page statement is headlined "CONFESSION." Only lbe
first and last pages are clearly visible. U.S. officials bad no immediate
comment on w!Jctber it'appeared 10 be Hall's handwriting.
In lbe statement released by lbe North's official news agency, Hall said
be was on a reconnaissance mission when his OH-58A-C helicopter
"deviated from lbe route" and crossed into North Korea

fession'

. He did not admit to spying and gave no explanation for the deviation.
but said "I admit 111at this criminal action is inexcusable and unpardon·
;Jill\\•.~wc;yer, at borne my parenu,.JVif4: ,aocl~,ap;,I!!Hjou~ w~
for my return to them.
,
"I only hope, and it is my desire, tbatlbe Korean People's Army will '
leniently forgive me. for my illegal inuusion so tbat I may return lo my .
home and be with my family again."
'
After Hall's statement was released, a Clinton administration official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, aclcnowledged tbatlbc helicopter
could be viewed as having illegally entering North Korean air space, but
reiterated that lbe action was accidental and not pan of a spying mission.
U.S. officials have expressed regret over lbe incident.
In Washington on Wednesday. Clinton denied Hall's helicopter was
involved in espionage. " He was on a routine training mission. That's
all," lbe president said.
·

Clinton launches search for new· CIA director
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
AlsodJded Prall Writer
WASHINGTON ~ President
Clinton is opening a search for a
new CIA cbier to polish the spy
agency's image in tbe aftermalb of
nearly a decade or treachery by
Russian mole Aldrich Ames.
James Woolsey, 53, resigned
Wednesday after two tumultuous
years as CIA director during wbicb
he was dogged by tiJe· Ames affair,
congressional criticism of the agen·
cy's bloated budget and post-Cold
War resbUCturing.
Woolsey cited personal and
fami,ly considerations, and tbe
Wbi~ House insisted be was not
foraid from office.
Deputy Defense Secretary John
Deutch, the No. 2 official at lbe
Pentagon, was said to be bigb on
tbe list of possible successors.
White House officials said, bowev·
er, it was too early to speculate on
front-runners.
Deulcll, 56, bas a ~potation as a
demanding taskmaster 11nd a
shrewd political and strategic
adviser to tbe Wblte House. He bas
been at tbc center of maDy of tbe
administration'~&gt; most sensitive
decisions on tbe use of military
force, particularly lbe operation in

GRADE A

Medium Eggs
100
DOZ.

Haiti.
Haunting lbe selettion process
is lbe case of Ames, lbe 31-year
CIA veteran sentenced to life
imprisonment after confessing be
served as a paid Russian agent for
eight years, turning..over secrets
said to have caused Moscow to
execute several key U.S. intelli·
gence agents.
.
Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D·
Ariz., the outgoing cbairman of tbe
Senate Intelligence Committee, bad
complained that Woolsey's actions
in clearing the wreckage left by tbe
Ames affair were weak and inade·
quate.
But be called Deutch "a very
competent fellow'' and said be
would be an excellent choice to
bead lbe agency.
The White House officials said
Clinton soon will begin to concen·
trate on bis choice and said it is
likely be hopes to conclude the
search in the next few weeks.
Woolsey agreed to stay tbrougb lhe
end of January if necessary.
The Ames artair dealt
Woolsey's agency a morale and
public relations wallop as well as
an intelligence setback.
Allbough most of the Ames spying 100~ place before Woolsey

"The reprimimdi that Woolsey
gave to tbe individuals wbo were
singled out (in the Ames case) ...
were not couunenswat.e with what
should have been given those indi·
viduals; and indeed were not conmensurate with what Rublic opin·
ion felt was oecessary, ' be said.
Tbe neat director, WatDCf said,
should be someone "who has
inslallt aedibility across America
as a person wbo bas acb.ieved
recognition in lbe area of national
secuity.'"

JAMES WOOLSEY
assumea command of tbe CIA
early in 1993, bis decision ool to
severely punisb lbe CIA official~
for whom A'mes worked stirred a
storm on Capitol Hill.
Sen. Jobn· Warner, R· Va., current vice chairman of the Senate
Intelligence CommiUee and possi.
bly its next chairman, said Woolsey
made "errors in judgment."

Woolsey also faced congres·
sional fue for lbe agency's estimaled $3 billion budget, a costly secret
building project for its spy satellite
division and allegations of sexual
harassment inside tbe agency.
Woolsey's successor will have
plenty of direction on lbe future of
the ajjeJJCy.
A commission to be beaded by
foriner Defense Secretary Les
Aspio will soon begin examining
lbe missions and roles of tbe agency. Clinton's National Security
Cpuncil already bas launched a
similar review. The House and
Senate intelligence commiuccs are
expected to examine tbe same
ground in bearings and to look
again at lbe Ames case.

Legislative leaders to consider gas tax hike

I

PRICES EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 29, 1994 ONLY

Monday

It wasn't clear wbelber tbe statement was an indication -lbat Nonb
Korea is ready ro free Bobby Hall or an attempt 10 intensify pressure for a
public u.s. apology.
It was imposaible to lcnow whetber Hall wrote and signed 1be statement
as tbe Nol1b Koreans claim, or if be did, under wbat type of-~ure. .
1be statement, dated CbrilllllliS Day, was released after mconcluSJVe
talks Wednesday between Nonb Korean officials and U.S. diplomat
Thomas Hubbard. Another session was scheduled for today m
Pyongyang, lbe North Korean capital.

'

298 -SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

N0 paper

·-r-'-SEdttt;Sooil' icdt'ra'...;:;.-ffOiiis ·after President ·Olii(oniJemanded the
"'fi!&amp;ur~Haii'-Nft·tcbmt COUDta'ed today wii!Fa lilloiiWriueo
swemcot purporlt!dly from tbe Ameri£an pilot asking forgiveness for "a
tlap'ant violalion ot mternationallaw."
·

$119

Crisco Short_ening

lbe other is out of service while
·being booked up to the second
scrubber, wbicb is expecied to he
operational in March.
The plant is not producing any
electricity while the repairs ar~
underway, Ohio ·g_ower Co.
spokesman David H~ elin said.
Other plants in lbe ppalacbian
Electric Power netw
are supply
electricity to lbe region.
Hagelin said lbe plants are not
, being strained by lbe increased output and Gavin employees are still

By PAUL ALEXANDER

99c

4 LB. BAG

r---Ready for recyclin

pilot's
North Korea stirs pot with release
of
minister

59c

SWEET SUE

1 Section, tO Pogeo 35 cen18
A Multimedia Inc. Newo_..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Decamber 29, 1994

Gavin plant off line
for furnace repairs

Potato Chips
REG•.$1.09

High Ill 40..

en tine

MIKE SELLS

soz.

Low IOillgbtiD the 2415, portly
doudy. Frldoy, mootly doudy.

•

THURSDAY, ·. DECEMBER 29, 1994 ONLY
RC Cola ·or
Diet Rite

Super Lotto:
4-11-16-35-37-45
Kicker:
8-1-2-0-0-4
Pick 3:
S-9.0
Plck4:
2-4-8-1

lOth

.

CHEF IOY·AR·DEE

Ohio Lottery

Bullets for

edly busy ~y,
.:
Keen S81d b1s bullets would ~:
sold only to law enforcement agen.,:
cies and federally hcensed guq._
dealers. But there are about a QUBrf
ter million such U.S. dealers;&gt;
according to the B~au of Alco~ :
hoi, Tobacco and F1rearms, and : .
gun-control advocates and some ·
police officials fear that the ammu.,_
nition would fall into criminals~
bl~Dl!fo.
-:
"We don't need them, in my
opinion, even for ~w ~~ment
off1cers to carry, sa1d R1chard
~rye, sheriff O.f At.~.an~ C~~nt:Y.
m Nonb Carolina. It s JUSt nd1cu-·
lous that someone would come out:
~ith a ~ullet of Ibis type and ntag· :
mtude.
. .
,
Keen appbed 10 late November
for lice~~ to l!lanufacture and sen
anunuruuon, s:ud Susan McCanon;
an ATFspokeswoma~. She sai~ ·
sucb hc~ns~s typ1cally are
~ppro.ved 10 about 60 days, an.~ :
they re almost always approved. ::

Prices In Effect While
Quantities Last
.

1 Ll. ROLL OR
10 OZ. UIIIS

'

Cavs beat

Previously-owned home sales ·drop sharply )

No Rain Checks
Will Be Issued

14.5 oz.

'''

Ohio

Sentinel

'

••

•

drained for the State Highway
Davidson said Voinovicb's idea
Patrol, tax credits for ethanol and of putting the question 10 voters at
a statewide ·election was not an
other purposes.
Another $ISO million a year is unusual ap[XOIICh.
"As 1 traveled around tbe state
needed to lceep bigbway ConSiruC·
lion from baiting within I\VO years, Ibis year ... it became perfectly
the agency said. An increase of 3 clear to me tbat most of tbc smaller
centa a gaDon in the gas tax would and middle-size communities
believe that tiew construction of
raise; that amount
'
• Voinovich bas said that voters highways is absolutely fundamen- not state legislators - 7 sbould tal to economic development in
decide If tbe aarent 22-~:ents·a·gal· their areas,'' DavidsoP said.
"I think asking tbc peop1.e to.
lon tax is inaeased.
.
AroDoff declined at a news COil· decide on it is sometlting I certainly.
terence Wednesday to speculate would waat to kd at,'' she said.
1
about
the cbiJICeS for an iDcrcase.
Voinovicb, Aronoff IIIII David· ·
~tiQ.
.
'
'I'm
sure
it
will
be
an
issue
that
son
agreed to plaec a $1 billion
1be Obio Department of TI'IIIS·
will
be
discussed."
lie
said.
"It's
statewide
sctlool ballot issue and an
, portation warned e8rlier Ibis DIOIIIb
premature,
but
I'm
willing'
to
anti·c$Je
package at tbc top of
that the share of gas tas money
.
their
qenda
for tbc new session .
used to build roads was being
By JOHN CHALFANT
Allocletecl Prall Writer
.
COLUMBUS - Republicans
wbo rootrol t!Jc Howe -*Senate
in tbe legislalivc session thlil opens
Tuesday said they are willing to.
consider asking vocers to raise tbe
state gasoline tax.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff or Cincinnati and House
Speakcr-elcct.Jo Ann Davidaon ot
Reynoldsburg said they did not talk
about such au iDaeaSe in a private
J!leetlng Wednesday with Gov.
Gecqc Voillovicb aboutlcgislalive

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

,[

.l•
'

'

Voinovicb said tbe leaders
agreed to introduce resolutions ~~
would Jll!lce befon; voters a COOSU·
tutiooal amendment to borrow $1
billion over 10 years to renovate
and build scbools in the state's
neediest districts.
W'Jlliam PbiUis, bead of a sciJool
· roalitioo that is cballenging
tate sdlool rUoding system in
said tbe l)rOII05ed bond issue
was too small. lie ·Slid a 1990 state
study pcued sdtool building needs
at $10.2 bTllioo.
voioovicb said tbe crime padt.
ag1e would deal with weapous,
juvenile violcoce, cutting appeals
in dl:alb pculty CIIC8, ..S tougher
pcllllties for repcll violcllt offend·
'
.

era.

•.

TESTING THE TRAMPOLINE - Rutland's Tony• MiUer '
bolmcecl iJJlo tM air Wec!r mlay willa ber family's Cltristauts preseat- • DeW lnmpolilll. EnJoYinl lite near ~ -Iller,
MOler uld tM lnmpollne can aa:OJJJIIIOda~ live people at onc:e.
Tile Melp Jllalor 111111 eiiiJIIl p-ader 111id sbe tried 111p.-c IlliCit,
bat pu.Ctlcaly broke 1m' aedL (Sentinel plJoto by G-. Abate)

I

�.. . ..... .
'

Commentar
rhe Daily Sentinel

Page-2.:....The Dally Sentinel

the most critical assessment of
Clintonomics was delivered by the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office.

spin control for the White House,
not even be would be so charitable
as to describe the second year of
the Clinton presidency as the best
of times and the worst of times.
There are no best of times when
the president's party surrenders
By 1997, it predicted in its midcontrol of Congress for tile first session review, every major ecotime in 40 years, when be fmds his nomic indicawr (including unemown administration in diSarray.
ployment, inflation, gross domestic
Maybe Clinton can overcome product) will be worse than they
his sophomore slump and give otherwise would have been if the
himself a fighting chance to win a Clinton economic program bad
second term of office. But grading been rejected by Congress ' last
his job performance so far, in sev- year. Midterm grade: D.
eral major areas of public policy,
- Health care. The American
this seems an unlikely prospect.
people liked the idea of health 'Care
- Economics. In his recent reform. But they feared the big
televised address to the American government takeover that tbe presipeople, Clinton boasted that be bas dent and fJCSt lady proposed in their
"cut the deficit by $700 billion," monstrous 1,364-page plan.
while also creating nearly 4.5 milThe Clintons insisted that the
lion new jobs.
foremost goal of health reform had
But there's less to these to be "universal coverage," to
"accomplishments" than meets the bring into the system the 15 percent
eye . The president actually bas of Americans who lack health
ADDED more than $330 billion to insurance ;~t any given time.
the national debt during his two
But it hardly seemed reasonable
years in the Oval Office. He wants to the 85 percent of Americans who
credit for not adding even more red have health insurance, and who are
ink 10 !he federal books.
mostly satisfied with the quality of
Whether Clinton or Bush or care they receive, that the governPerot bad won' the White House ment completely reshape the
two years ago, the growing U.S. nation's health care system to
economy would have churned out accommodate the 15 percent of
new jobs. The question is bow uninsured Americans (who
many. Under Clinton, there have nonetheless receive medical care).
been 1.2 million fewer jobs created
Clinton staked much of his
!han what is normal during a typi- political capital on health care
cal economic expansion. Perhaps reform . By the time Congress

Joseph Perkins

ROBERT L. WINGE'fT
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEfLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welco!ne. They abould be le11 than 300
words long. Alllellcn ue aubject to editing and mwt be aigoed witb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letter~
sbould be in good Wte, lddressin&amp; luuea, riot pcnooalities.

State workers
help trim budget
ByPAULSOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
.
COLUMBUS -Despite all the recent bluster from politicians promising to trim waste from the budget, the concept is nothing new to state
workers.
.
Since 1972, suggestions from state employees have saved taxpayers
$17.8 million, according to the Ohio Department of Administrative Services.
•'The laXpayers have demanded !hat government change,'' said department spokeswoman Gretchen Hull. "Employees who are working in a job
are the best ones to challenge the system.''
This year, more than 3,000 ideas were .subDiitted 10 the Ohio Innovation program, the successor 10 the State Employee Suggestion Award Program.
.
.
.
.
Workers whose ideas are adopted recetve awards rangmg from OhiOmade products to cash awards of up 10 $5,000. ·
Ben Kunze, an administrative assistant for the Department of Transportation, picked up a check for $5,000 for his recommendations to
change the way the department obtains bonds in conslruction projects.
The McCoooellsviUe resident bas worked for the state for more than
three years. His idea saved tjle state more than S128,000 this year.
"This administration is defmitely paying attention to the employees,
because they know their jobs best." Kunze said.
He said employees take tbe program seriously.
"There's always plenty of suggestions, and I've seen improvements
·since I've been here," be said.
Other recent ideas included:
- Using the postal service to pick up mail at the Rehabilitation Services Commission instead of a private delivery service, for an annual savings of $3,000.
.
- Eliminating a form used to summanze sales. tax collected by vendors. The change will save the Department of Taxauon $15,478 a year. ·
- Changing the way employer payments to the Bureau of Employment Services are deposited. That will increase interest on the money by
more than $73,000.
.
Ms. Hull said that saving money is but one of the goals.
"In addition there have been many suggestions that have improved
safety. improved efficiency and have enabled the state to provide better
customer service,-" she said.
The program is part of Gov. Georg~ Voinovich' s ~ve to incorporate
the business philosophy of Total Quality Management mto state govern- ·
ment.
· ·
.
The state's Quality Services Through Partnership initiativel:lllpbasizes
a team approach to problem-solving and increased cooperation between
.labor and management. Ms: Hull said.
"State employees want to be part of re-inventing government," she

srud.~-------------------------------;

Berry's World

adjourned for tbe year, the Democratic majority bad declined even
to vote on the president's misbegotten plan. Grade: F.
- Crime. The narrow passage
of the $30 billion crime bill was
one of the president's few bright
spots in 1994. But the American
people will be disappointed if they
expect to see a precipitous decline ·
in the level of crime and violence
throughout the land. ·
M ucb bas been made of the
bill's provision that supposedly
puts an additional 100,000 police
on the street The reality is !hat !he
bill fully funds only 20,000 new
cops, and the number pounding the
beat at any one time will be some- .
thing like 2,000.
Nearly one-third of the crime
bill's funding goes to social programs mislabeled as "crime prevention," including recreation and
job training and after-school programs. These items should have
been funded through the labor and
.human services budgets.
There is a redeeming provision
of the crime bill. It sets aside $8.7
billion in grants to states to build
prisons and boot camps. This effectively offsets the 30 percent funding cut in prison construction that
Clinton proposed in his 1995 budget Grade: C.
·
- Welfare. CliniOn promised to
"end welfare as we know it." But
be is no closer to this goal than
when be took office. In faet, during
his watch, the ranks of the nation's

Fri-.~30
MICH.

•

•

42"

•

lcs

Joseph Spear ·

lelm

I

er ep·

iD an ad backf4 by
People for the Ethical Trealmeot of
· Animals and bared·all of it in Play,.f.!oy lllll8'azioe.
- Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D.,
who opposes funding or public
television because of the "political

twist (it) puts on things.'' Example:
PBS featured a Democratic governor who talked about his minor
league baseball career. ''I was
watching this nice baseball series,"
Pressler said, "and, God, every
night I'd have to listen to Mario
Cuomo tell about his boyhood:"
Yes, the OP rules do permit the
nomination of those wbose aaoia1
matter could be used to pave driveways.

The following cases were
Theresa L. Alderson. Middleresolved Wednesday in the Meigs port, disorderly conduct, $100 fine
County Courl of Judge Patrick H. suspended, costs, restraining order
O'Brien.
issued; Carla M. DeWeese.
Fined were: Bethany A. Harris, Cheshire, seat belt, $2$ plus costs;
Fhindi:tsZ.N'J .. speed, $30 plus Peggy J. Rei~ire, Pomeroy; n~
co51S! RiChanfL. Tbixnpson, South OL, S150 plus costs, thfee days JIUI
Point, seat belt, $25 plus costs; an~ $75 of the fine ~u~pended 1f
Dinesb Dbamija, Athens, speed·,, · val1!1 OL cresented w1thm 90 days;
$30 plus costs; Paul D. Aukke, speed, $2 plus costs; seat belt, $25
Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus costs; plus costs; Tracy L. Eaton, Akron.
Dwayne Priddy, Middlepoit. seat wrongful entrust~e~t, $100 plus
belt, $15 plus costs; Gregory R. costs, three d~ys Jail suspended,
Jeffers, The Plruns, seat belt, $25 one year probauon;
plus costs; Gary L. Bowling,
Eleanor L. Well, Shade, assured
Coshocton, seat belt, $25 plus clear distance, $30 plus costs;
costs; Larry G. Spees, Gallipolis, Michael L. Conley, l,'ortland, no
speed, $30 plus costs;
motorcycle endorsement, $100 plus
Darlene Cunningham, Letart, costs, three days Jail suspended.
W.Va .• speed, $30 plus costs: seat one year proballon; Pete T. Cohee,
belt, $25 plus costs; Donald R. Syracuse, no OL, costs only; CleoMiller, Reynoldsburg, speed, $30 nie M. Halcomb, Hartford, W.Va.,
plus costs; Henry W. Rider, left of center, $15 plus costs; seat
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; belt, $25 plus costs; Jobn~y
Angela D. Welch, Coolville, failure Adkins, Pomeroy, two cou11ts dtsto yield $20 plus costs; Rebecca orderly conduct, $100 suspended to
Edw~. Long Bottom, speed, $30 $25 on each, restrain_ing order
plus costs; Sandra Lee Bauer, issued, one year probatiOn; TIUloCoolville, speed, $30 plus costs; thy W. Morris, Rutland, seat belt,
Thomas TheiSS, Racine, speed. $30 $25 plus costs.
Forfeiting bond was Norman
plus costs; Roger D. Coates.
Pomeroy, seat bel~ $25 plus costs;
Snider, Cincinnati, seat belt •. $45
Jerry L. Preston, Kenova , plus costs.
W.Va, speed. $30 plus costs; Dana
R. Williams Jr., Langsville. no
operator's license, $150 plus costs,
three days jrul and $75 of tbe fme
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
suspended if valid OL presented direct bog prices at selected buying
within 60 days, one year probation; points Thursday; by the U.S.
failure to control, $l0 plus costs; Department of Agriculttire Market
failure to display valid registration, News:
costs only; Jacqueline Salcedo,
Barrows and gilts: steady to
Gallipolis, disorderly conduct, 50.00 higher; 32.00-33.50; a few at ·
$100 suspended, costs, restraining 33.75.
.
order issued;
U.S. 1•3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 32.50-33.50, a few 34.00. ·
U.S. 2-3. 230·260 lbs .. country
points 28.00-31.50; 210-230 lbs .•
The
Sentinel 26.00-28.50. Plants 33.50·35.25, a
(USP!i ZIJ.960)
few 35.75.
Sows: steady-50.00 higher.

.;

..
.)
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Daily

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Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohio
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I

lation of forward pointing business
barometers was equally split, with
five components showing strength
and five subtracting from the overalltotal.
The biggest source of strength
in the leading index came from a
rise in orders for new plant and
equipment, which posted its best
gain in a year.
Otber);omponents showing
strengilf'I!Vere gains in factory
orders for consumer goods, a rise
in unfilled orders for durble goods,
a decline for the month in the average weekly unemployment claims
and a rise in sensitive material
prices.
The biggest negative faciOr was
a slowdown in growth of the
money supply followed by a fall in
stock prices, a drop in building permits, changes in business deliveries
imd a drop in consumer expectations.
·
One component, the length of
the average "{Orkweek, was
unchanged last month.
A variety of statistics have
shown !hat 1994 was ending on a
strong note with retail sales up and
!he jobless rate dipping to a fouryear low of 5.6 percent
Many economists believe that
overall economic growth, as measured by !he gross domestic product. will come in above 4 percent at
an annual rate for the final three
months of this year, contributing to
the strongest growth for the U.S .
economy in perhaps a decade.

.

A Pomeroy woman was treated and released from Veterans
Memorial Hospital early today following a one-vehicle accident on
County Road 40 (Burlingham) in Bedford Township, the GalliaMe:t,:1::0st of tbe State Highway Patrol reported.
y V. Shockey, 42, 400 Lasley St., was transported by tbe
Meigs EMS following the 4 am. accident that occwred t!Jree..tenths
of a mile north of State Route 681. the patrol said.
According to the report, Shockey was a passenger in a pickup
truck driven by Charles W. Curfman, 65, 48495 State Route 124,
Racine, that was northbound wben it went off the right side of the
road, went over an embankment and and overturned onto its top.
Curfman was not injured and the pickup was moderately dam·
aged, the patrol said.

Carey slates swearing-in session
John A. Carey Jr.. newly-elected state representative for the 94th
House District. will be sworn in Saturday at 1 p.m. at WellsiOn' s
Railroad Depot in Pride Park.
Judge Roy GiUiland, a former state representative. will conduct
the swearing-in. Carey will formally be sworn in during a ceremony
in Columbus on Jan. 3 in the temporary Ohio House chambers, 65
S. Front St.
Both ceremonies are open to the public .

Open registration underway at SBC
Open registration is underway at Southeastern Business CoUege
in Gallipolis, J. Brent Patterson, director of education, announced.
Winter quarter begins Jan. 9. For more information. call 4464367.

Glickman tackles new
assignment at USDA

By ROBERT GREENE
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON - Dan Glickman begins the transition today
from nine-tenn congressman and
frequent defender of farm programs
to an agriculture secretary who
may preside over cuts in crop subsidies and other politically sensitive
farm suppoits.
Glickman was to meet today
with the man be replaces, Mike
Espy. and his policy advisers to get
a better sense of where the administration is beaded as debate on tlie
1995 farm bill approaches. Espy
leaves office this week because of
an ongoing ethics investigation into
his conduct as secretary.
The five-year farm bill covers
agriculture, conservation, nutrition
and forestry programs that make up
the bulk of the department's 1995
budget of moce than $67 billion.
Glickman bas helped write three
farm bills during his 18 years as a
House member from Kansas. a
leading wheat and cattle state. But
the 1995 debate may be !he mosf
difficult, with both Republicans
and Democrats expected to respond
to voter demands to cut government spending.
CLEVELAND (AP)- State million.
His nomination Wednesday by
officials said losses by local govThe state investigation bas President Clinton was welcomed
ernments and school districts may shown !hat at least 16 govemments by a wide spectrum of farm and
be more than twice the $3.4 million · and districts bought high-risk secu, consumer groups who view Glickestimated in a Securities and rities.
man as an independent,minded
Exchange Commission lawsuit
Six bought securities through moderate Democrat able to work
against a broker.
Schulte and have been ordered by closely with Republicans.
A complaint filed Tuesday in the state 10 repay their losses. They
But Glickman will come under
U.S. District Court in Cleveland are: Danbury Local School District pressure to cut farm payments,
against Kenneth Schulte did not list in Ottawa County; Vennilion Local which are expected 10 jump 40 per,
the governments or school districts School District in Erie County; cent in 1995 to Sl2 billion The
that lost money.
Strongsville City.School District in outlays largely renecJ higher pay,
John Conley, a spokesman for Cuyahoga County ; the village of ments 10 com fanners to make up
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson, said Chardon; the city of Jackson; and for lower prices brought on by a
Wednesday that state audits show the Harrison Hills City School Dis, . record harVest.
the losses could be as high as $8 trict in Harrison County.
"The office or secretary of agri·
culture is not a symbolic political
position," Sen. Richard Lugar, R·
Ind .. said pointedly. Lugar has
seized the debate on the farm bill
by promising that every aspect of
Dewey King invites the public.
Trustees to meet
agricultural, nutrition and forestry
Salisbury Township trustees
policy will be questioned in hear,
will meet Jan. 3, 5 p.m. at the Office to close early
The Leading Creek Conservan- ings next year.
township ball in Rock Springs.
cy District office_will close at noon
Friday for year-end inventory and
New Year's service set
Harrisonville Community reports. In observance of New
Church will have a New Year'.s Year's Day, the office will also be
TOLEDO (AP) - A State Eve service at 7 p.m . with Bob closed on Jan. 2. Emergencies can Highway Patrol trooper remained
Manley and Bud Herdman speaker. be handled by calling 742-2597.
in serious condition after crashing
Pastor Theron Durham invites the
her cruiser on an icy stretch of
Round, square dance
public.
road.
A New Year' s Eve round and
Trooper Joyce C. Roberson. 30,
square
dance wiU be held Saturday
Special senolce
.
was
in serious condition Wednes·
The Faith Full Gospel Church at 8 p.m. at the Tuppers Plruns Vet- day night at St. Vincent Medical
erans
of
Foreign
Wars
with
the
will have special services at 7 p.m.
Center, said a hospital switchboard
Friday, and a New Year's Eve ser- Smoky Mountain Drifters. Potluck operator who would not give her
al 6:30 p.m., bring your own dish.
vice 9 p.m. 10 after midnigbl.
name.
Admission $5 couples, $3 singles.
Roberson suffered bead injuries
Rose of Sbaron service
and
burns in the 8:15a.m. acciden~
A New Year's Eve service will New Year's Eve party
A New Year's Eve 'party wiU be patrol Sgt John Born said.
be held at tbe Rose of Sharon Holi·
Troopers said a preliminary
ness Church near Rutland. 7 p.m. held Saturday at the old Legion investigation indicated that Rober·
Saturday . There will be special Hall in Middleport. Band starts at 9 son. who was responding to a
singing and preaching. Pastor p.m.
reported injury accident, was north·
bound on a Lucas County road

SEC files complaint against
broker for misleading towns

Meigs announcements

Lugar. as new chairman or the ~
Senate Agriculture Committee, will
preside over Glickman 's confirmalion bearing, expected next month.
In addition to asking detailed ques- ,r
tions on fann programs, Lugar also
will ask for Glickman's views on " ·
the more than a dozen. nutrition
programs run by the department at ·
a cost of $40 billion in 1995. ·
House Republicans want to
combine the plans, return the "
money to the states in a lump sum.
and cap overall spending.
Glickman suggested Wednesday
he would take a close look at farm
programs, 100, but with less apparent thirst for an overhaul.
"I don ' t want to do anything
that radically changes the situation,'' be said, noting that farm
programs have provided American
consumers and overseas customers
with cheap, abundant food.
While on the House Agriculture
Committee, Glickman voted for "
enough traditional farm programs
to win the support of the larger. ..
more conservative American Farm Bureau Federation. and the smaller,
more liberal National Farmers
Union.
The Farmers Union called
Glickman "an independent decision-maker."
Glickman has voted to rruse the ..
amount growers can borrow from
the governmenJ while keeping
crops in storage and restore funding for farmers who have been victims of racial or ethnic discrimination, and against means testing for
farmers to receive program benefits, the Farmers Union said.
The group oppQses means testing because of th~ snooping into
farmers' privale lives that would.be
involved . Lugar bas raised the
prospect of.imposing means tests.
Republican Sen . Bob Dole of
Kansas. the new majority leader,
and Rep . Pal Roberts. R-Kan ..
chrunnan of the House Agriculture
Committee. have shown more support for tradiJional programs that
benefit wheat growers in their state.

Trooper 'serious' after crash

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
eight calls for assistance Wednes'day . Units responding included:
BASHANVFD
·
1:30 p.m., brush fire on Tom
Bosi property, Eagle IUdge Road.

»

Federal~

Geodye

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - The government's main forecasting gauge
of future economic activity posted
a 0.3 peroent rise in November, signaling to analysts that !he recovery
is in no current danger of stalling
·
out
The Commerce Department
report today said that last month's
gain in the Index of Leadinj! Indicators was the strongest since a 0.5
percent rise in August It followed
a 0.1 percent drop in October,
which bad been tbe first decline in
the index in 15 months.
In a second report today, the
Labor Department said that the
number of Americans filing firsttime claims for unemployment benefits feU by 3,000 last week, more
than erasing a gain of 2,000 the
previous week. The claims figure
bas remruned in the low 300,000
range in recent m9nths, reflecting
basic strength in job markets, analysts said.
Cynthia Latta, an economist at
DRI-McGraw Hill Inc., said the
rise in the leading index, while
slightly higher than predicted, was
still pointing to an economic slowdown next year.
''The gruns in tbe index over the
past six months have been lower
than the gruns in tile first part of
1994, indicating the economy will
slow next year, which is what we
want to happen," she said.
Tbe rcporl noted that the compi·

Squads record eight c~lls

Stocks

po••

Sublcribcn n01 desiring to pay tbe carrier may
remit in advance dirtct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three lix. or 12 month bns.ia. Credit will be
Jivcn
each week.
.

In 1170, Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered In Canterbury · ;
.
In _1808, ·the I 7th presideol of~ Uniled Slates, Andrew lolmsoo: was ,:
hom m RaleiRb, N.C.
·
••

•

Published every afra-noon, Monday throogh
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156.
Second class
paid 01 Pomeroy, Ohio.

f

Cathedtal iD England.

Cloudy

Meigs C,ounty court news

Send your nominations to me, .: j
care of the Newspaper Enterprise -'
Association, 200 Park Ave, New · ·:
York, NY 10166.
. ·:
Joseph Spur Is a syndicated ,· :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise '
Auoclallon: J'
(For lnfor~tlon on how to
~ommunlCIIte electroalcally with
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thla colunmlst and othen, ton· 1
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.

S:my Pt. Cloudy

p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:53
By The Associated Press
Obio will enjoy one more day of a.m.
Weather forecast:
dry weather before it turns nasty,
Today
... Cloudy
this
forecasters sai\1.
moming
...
Partial
clearing
this
afterSkies will be partly cloudy
tonight with lows in the 20s, the noon. Highs from the upper 30s
National Weather Service said. The · north to the middle 40s extreme
·
sun will peek from behind the south.
Tonigbt ... Partly cloudy and
clouds occasionally on Friday,
when temperatures will hover in colder. Lows 15 to 25.
Friday ... Mostly cloudy south.
tbe40s.
Partly
Cloudy elsewhere. Highs in
But cold and wet conditions will
the
upper
30s to mid 40s.
develop on Saturday as a complex
Extended
forecast:
storm system moves into the area.
...
Rrun
or snow likely
Saturday
Temperatures will get colder progressively through the weekend north and rain likely south. Lows
and rain or snow is expected 30 to 35. Highs 40 to 45.
New Year's Day ... A chance of
through Monday.
snow
showers south half. Snow
Highs on Monday are likely to
likely
north half. Lows 20 to 25.
be in the 20s.
Highs
25
to 30.
The record-high temperature for
Monday
... A chance of snow
this date at the Columbus weather
showers
south
half. Snow likely
station was 67 degrees in 1889
while the record low was ·10 in north half. Lows 15 to 20. Highs 20
1880. Sunset tonight will be at 5:15 to25 .

,
..

Today in history
On~-:

Leading indicators
post 0.3% increase

Wet, cold weather to enter
scene in time for weekend ·

'

By The AUodatedZ!'ess
'
_ _]'O!Ia)'b TbursdayLDec~ 29, the 363~!1ay gf 1994. Th~Rue two days
left iD the year:
.
Today's Higbligbt in Hlstay:
.
On Dec. 29, 1890, tbe Wounded Knee massacre took place in South
Dakota. Some 300 Sioux li)dians were killed by U.S. troops sent to disarm
them. About 30 of the soldiers were slain.

I

C111e4Accu-W..tflor,lnc.

Last call for OP award nominees.----------ble. We prefer to recognize the recognizable, but the contest is open
to all. Thus we have accepted ~
nomination or a Racine, Wis.,
prison inmate, Adrian Scott
Williams, who is suing,localjudges
for $10 billion because they reject.ed his petition to let him change his
name to Romanceo Sir Tasty Maxibillion.
Rule Five is that Joe Spear is
not eligible. I issued this .edicllast
year to thwart a buocb. of Limbapgb dittobeads who were coospiring to make me the winner of
· my own contest. Tough noogies,
.noodlebeads. Go play in some imi. llll!on OP game.~ - _ .
S~~tVIS,~..:c~ Rca~an dau=wbo will bare IIIOtlt of

FA.

W.VA.

..

This month America says good- column fonnat, to find the philo- York City. 'All these choices for need for family, tradition and stabye to Anna Quindlen' s weekly sophical tum that no one else bas you.' I smiled and she sighed. 'I bility:
newspaper column. I'm feeling as yet taken. But she also bas a unique feel so sorry for you,' she added,
"Sometimes this makes oil and
sad as the time radio personality ability, like no other columnist I've and I smiled agrun, for I knew she water of my life: getting married in
was right"
Garrison Keillor put "A Prairie
Alencon lace and pearls, and yet
Quindlen, who won a Pulitz~r keeping my own name; answering
Home Companion" to bed several
Prize for her columns m 1992, 1s all my sons' questions absolutely
years ago and hoping that, like
Keillor, Quindlen will someday read, to look at the small, everyday leaving The New York Times to truthfully, and then assuring them
incidences of life and relate them to become a full-time novelist and that Santa does exist; questioning
return to her old haunt.
spend more time with her young cburcb teachings in my mind, and
Anna Quindlen' s is a literary larger truths.
One of my favorite Quindlen children. She bad decided to quit yet reading the Christmas Gospel
voice we bear only rarely: uncom·
promisingly brave and honest, and passages was an anecdote she relat- once before when she was pregnant in cbilrcb and feeling the puwer of
brutally personal. I use the word ed about contrasting her life with with her Second child, and Times its message in my heart...
· "brutal" because no other word her mother's: "My mother began executive eclllor Abe Rosenthal
"The echo I bear is the sound of
seems to better describe a colum- to die on the cusp of the •60s and gave her a column so she could tbe years passing: a little girl in a
nist's knowing that even though '70s, at the same time that the reli- work only part-time. Three years navy-blue wool coat with a velvet
there may rise up a cry among gion :ind the rules that bad circum- later she tried to leave again, and collar, a teen-ager in a camel' s-bair
readers for dogs to drag your rot- scribed her life and mine died, too. .be gave ber a berth on the op-ed coat with big bone buttons, a
ting carcass through the streets, that And I was left with a self to do page, something unprecedented for woman in fur, in tears. enamored of
if you write the truth, there is with what I pleased. I felt as though a woman in her late 30s.
the ridiculous notion that. some
someone out there feeling the same soineone bad handed me a grenade
Also
unprecedented
is things need never change, that
Quindlen. s candidacy for manag- • some things are safe, holding the
things and that what y9u write will with the pin pulled. ,. '• :.
''Now I know that I was one ing ediiOr of the TWles, the paper haild of her firstborn son in the
enrich that reader's life.
The late New York Times sports among many, that all over America which was sued in the late 1970s blood-red shadows of stained
columnist Red Smith once said that and indeed the world women were by a group of women reporters. glass."
·
writing a column is easy; you just beginning to feel this same way, She is walldng away from a shot at
Sarah Overstreet Is Assoctate
sit down at the typewriter and open beginning to feel !he great blessing one of the most powerful positions Editorial Pa1e Editor at the
up a vein.
·
and horrible curse of enonnous in American joumalism.
Sprllll!fleld (Mo.) News-Leader.
I didn't always agree with ber, possibility. 'Ob, you girls,' an
One Christmas Qu indlen elo(For Information on how to
but I took from Quindlen's elderly woman once sighed, talking quently described the contradic- communicate electronically with
columns tl)e gift of seeing an old to me of my job and looking down tions so many woman feel today, this columttlst and others, con·
issue in a new light. Perhaps !hat is at my belly big witb child as we sat the professional ambition and love tact America Online by CIIIUIJil·
her greatest gift when writiog in a together in a nursing home in New for the new, playing against the li00-827-6364, ext 8317.)

• lcolumbusl4o•

Woma~ treated after accident

William E. Hallam, 80, of Springfield, died Wednesday, Dec. 28, 1994
at his b001e.
Born Oct. 17, 1914 in Pomeroy, tbe son of the late Wayne and Melissa
Jobes Hallam, be was a retired engine assemblyman. He was a member of
the St. John's Lutheran Church in Springfield and the Eagles Lodge No.
397 in SpringfielcJ.
He is survived by his wife, Helen MaGruder Hallam of Springf!Cld;
daughter and son-in-law, Betty and Jay Potts of Springfield; sons and
daughter-in-law, Bill Hallam of Springfield, and Wayne and Debbie Hallam of Livingston. Tenn.; 10 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by three sisters.
·
Serilices will be 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with tbe
Rev. Dawn Spalding officiating. Burial wiU foUow in the Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may call between noon and the hour of the service Friday at
the funeral home.

IToledo I 34• I

poor have grown by 1.2 million
(notwithstanding his boasts about
the economy), increasing rather
than decreasing welfare caseloads
throughout the country.
Last summer, the president
unveiled his long-awaited welfare
reform plan. He claimed it would
break the cycle of dependency by
imposing a two-ye;u limit on cash
benefits for younger recipients,
after which time they would be
expected 10 fmd a job.
The problem is that the president's reform would apply only to
welfare parents born after 1971,
who make up only one-third of
today's welfare population. It
would take more than 50 years for
every welfare recipient to be
included in the president's plan.
Grade:D.
,
- Trade. Clinton deserves
much credit for buckin~ the protectionist sentiments of bts party and
winning congressional approval
this year of the General Agreanent
'on Tariffs and Trade.
The new trade treaty lowers
worldwide tariffs by roughly onethird which will l&gt;e a boon to the
United States, wbicb will see its .
trade volmne expand exponentially. :.
The Treasury Department estimates that GATI will add as much ·;
as $200 billion a year to the national income, wbicb works out to . •
$1,700 per family . In the meantime, GATI is expected to create
250,000 new American jobs.
Grade: A.
.
-Defense. The nation's military is stretched W the limit, under- ••
taking far-flung missions from
Haiti to Kuwait. Rwanda to Bosnia
Meanwhile the General Accounting
Office estimates that the Pentagon
budget for the next five years is
$150 billion short of what is neces- ·
sary to maintain minimum force
levels called for by the Clinton
administiation's own "Bouom-Up
Review."
.
The president recently proposed
another $25 billion in "delense
funding. But be's still seeldng far
less than is necessary to peserve a · ,
strong national defense. Grade: D.
·
An A, no B's, one C, two D's •
and an F. Any college student
knows that spells probation. The .:
president bas two years remaining ,
to get his grades ur. Otherwise,
come 1996, be wit find himself
expelled by the American people.
Joseph Perkins II a columnllt ·
for The San Diego Union• Trl· bune.
(For Information ·OD how. ~ . 1
communicate eleetronically with .
this columnist •nd others, con- ~
tact America Online by callln8 1- '
1100-81'7-6364, ext. 8317.)

Bidding.farewf;!ll to a woman~ 's voice

Come on, people, give 'em bell! loves mud cause be throws it engaged in some specific, outraI'm talking about all the byp- everywhere,'' writes B.S. of Bay- geous act. Clinton antagonists can
ocrites out there who see two faces town. Texas. "We wish we could rest easy. however. Someone finalwhen they look into the mirror and have a thousand votes for Jerry Pal- ly nominated him for the distinct
are so self-infatuated they love
and tasteless act of talking about
both of them. I'm talking about
his underwear on television.
absurd, asinine. goofy, inane. preRule Two is that foreign nationposterous boors who strut across well,'' write J.R. lind W.R. of Star als are disqualified on tbe grounds
the public stage. I'm talking Junction, Pa.
that we have enough outrageous
turkey's and dogs and ring-tailed
The list of politicians, perform- characters in this country and .do
skunks. .
ers and preachers wbo have been not need to look abroad. Perbaps, if
I'm talking about the Spear . qominated also include Robert the Spear Foundation is ever flush,
Foundation's sixljl annual Outra- Dole, Atroose D' Amato, Newt we cali sponsor a special intemageous Personage contest, wbicb Gingrich, Robert Byrd, .Jesse tiona! editi~n of the~ C()ll":Sl Bill!
will come to a cloSe: when the ball Helms, J. Danforth Quayle, Douald trash the likes of L1byan dictator
falls on New Year's Eve. If you Riegle. &amp;!ward K~nnedy, Mario Muammar Qaddafi. a~d Iraqi
want to be a part of tbe origidal, the Cuomo, HillarY Clinton, Joycelyn strongman S~ Hussem.
.•
~ besr;tbc-only fully"CCllified {bfthe~Eldcra, Roseali~M&gt;, Madonna.. B.llft_ _ Rule...TbreeJS !hat groups are not
Association of Sagacious Pundits) . Rl!ynolds, Garry Shand!ing, eligible. -If so. the Chicago Board
Oullllgeous Personage col)test In . Micbael Jackson and. Parson .rat . ~r Education ~ould surely '!II~the nation, get your selections in Robc:rtaoll.
·
1nated fQt' trymg to deny disability
tbemailnow.
· . Scates of you have, suggested compensat~onwateacherwbowas
As you know, anger is in, and Bill Clinton be crowned the 1994 shot wbile attempting to save his
that means it bas been a vinlage Of•.but the n&lt;miDatlons bad w be elementary students from a gunyear for tbe OP oompetitlon. Your ciUquaJifi~ lieeaase the~ ~~ IDQ \JiaO. S~v!JlJ cbild;rel_l'~ lives was
bave been creali\'e, colorful geoerai. Coosummate !tar and not in his ;oo desaiption. the board
venOmous. Rush Limbaugh "Jcx*i "soc~st" jllsl ~·1 do it. Rule said.
.
•
.
like a bos, talks like a bog and , One 4S thai nommees must ba~e
Rule Four ts that anyone ts eligt-

William E. Hallam

Acc:u·~ Corec:aat Cor daytime CODditlons

Sarah Overstreet

"You're looking at a 'Human Orange County,
California ."'

--Area deaths-- Local News·in Brief:

OHIO We ath e r

A midter-m report card for Cl,inton
If Charles Dickens were doing

111 Court Street
PomelOJ, Ohio

Pomflf'oy-Middlepart, Ohio
Thursday, December 29, 1994

.•

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'
The Dally Sentlne..:....Page-3 ::
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions- none.
- Wednesday discharges~ nooe.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENfER
Dlscbaraes Dec. 18 - Jamie
Cavins, Josepb Wojtaszek, Manda
l(eels, Do.nald Howell, Gla&lt;ly
Tripp. Jess Adams, Emily Conger.
Belhany Vollbom, ~Pettit
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Vemie
Salmons. diugbler, Vinton.
(Publllhed wltll permlalon)

when she hit an ice patch.
Tbe cruiser slid off tbe left side
of the road and strUck a utility pole.
The vehicle then rolled over .and
caug ht fire . Passersby pulled
Roberson from !he burning car and
called for help.
.
Roberson joined the patrol as a
cadet in February and received her
commission in July.

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7:30
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11: 38 a.m., Pomeroy VFD.
smoke odor at Faye WiU residence.
Kerr Street;
.
· 12:5 1 p.m., Pomeroy VFD.
brush fire on Brenda Curfman
property, Yost Road.

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RUTLAND
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Robert McCall, 0' Bleness Memorial Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:58 a.m., State Route 681 ,
Anna Susak. St. Joseph's Hospital.

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Thursday, December 29, 1984

Sports

FamHy·auction resolves conflict when dividing heirl_ooms
beneficiary draw a number out of a
bowl arid select items in turn. He said
it would prevent bard feelings .
.Landers
So what happens when everyone
wants
the same item, and only one
"1884, L.ot.lt.ogM•
person has first choice? T~e ramily
1lmet Syndk:att and
Cruto11 Synditat••
is still feuding. And what happens to
the items that nont or them
Dear Ann Lahders: I read with want?
great interest the letter from "Been
I have a better solution-- an estate
There in Chicago." Your auction. My husband and I have been
correspondent said the best method in the auction business for more than
for dividing possessions fairly when 20 years, and there is no feud we
a family member dies is to have each haven't heard about. We know two

Ann

1

ln the NBA,

.

Cavaliers beat Bullets 91-75 to collect 1Oth straight win

By Tbe Associated Press
Nobody can get very excited
about the style of basketball the
Cleveland Cavaliers are playing
these days. On the other han11, it's
easy to get excited about the way
the"team is winning.
With Bobby Phills scoring 22
points and Tyrone Hill adding 21
points and 15 rebounds _Wednesda.Y
night, the Cavaliers cruised to the!r
lOth straight victory, a 91-75 dectsion over !be slumping Washington
Bullets.
That brought Cleveland within
one win of the franchise mark of 11
straight, set last February and
March.
As has been !be case throughout
the streak, the Cavs won with a
furious, rotating defense and a
deliberate offense - a system that
wouldn't likely be very popular if it
wasn't producing so well.
"It wasn't pretty.! don't think it
was one of our better ~ames," said

Mark Price, who sco~ 15 points. land took control wilb a 10-0 flurry
''It was a grind-it-out game, and in midway through the second period.
the second half our defense was Cleveland led 56-44 at halftime,
much better."
then demoralized the Bullets by
Washington, which has lost 10 running off the flfSt eight points of
of II games. scored just 31 points the third quaner.
in the second half, and its final totlli
Washington got no closer •ban
was a season low for the Bullets.
15 after that.
The game marked the fourth
In other NBA games Wednestime during the current streak that day night, the Chicago Bulls beat
the Cavs have yielded fewer than the Boston Celtics 105-97; the New
80 points; only one team has York Knicks stopped the Detroit
reached 100 against them during Pistons 101-93; the Utah Jazz
that span.
ripped the Indiana Pacers 117 -95;
"Their defense, obviously, is and the S~atlle SuperSonics ran
very good,'' Washington coach Jim past the Philadelphia 76ers 121Lynam said. "Not only did we 102.
miss a lot of shots, we didn't get to
Bulls I OS, Celtlcs 97
the foul line. We were in a tie game
Seven Chicago players, led by
at 37. It wasn't so much our Toni Kukoc wilb 27 points, scored ·
defense. We couldn't score."
in double figures as !be Bulls built
Calbert Cheaney led Washing- an 18-point lead, then held on for
ton with 16 points and rookie the victory.
Juwan Howard bad 15.
B.J. Armstrong, Pete Myers, and
· Washington· stayed close for Will Perdue scored 13 points
more than a quaner before Cleve-

apiece, Scottie Pippen added 12 points each in the fourth quaner,
points and 11 rebounds and Steve but Detroit, which trailed 93-90
Kerr and Bill Wennington each wilb 2: 19 to play, made just one of
scored 11 poiniS as !be Bulls won its final six shots.
their fourth straight at Boston GarHarper'~ decisive three-pointer
den.
with 45 seconds to play gave New
The Celtics dropped their fourth York a 99-92 lead.
straight game and 11th in their last
Charles Smith scored 23 points
· and Anthony Mason added 14
14.
Blue Edwards led Boston with rebounds as the Knicks won their
19 points, Eric Montross added 18, second straight after a five-game
and David Wesley and Pervis Elli- losing streak, the longest in Pat
son each scored 14.
Riley's coaching career.
Knlcklllot, Pistons 93
Jazz 117, Pacers 95
Jeff Hornacek scored 22 points
Patrick E"' ing matched his season high with 30 poiniS and Derek and Karl Malone added 21 as Utah
Harper and John Starks each bit a extended its winning streak to eight
pair of three-pointers in the final games.
minutes to help New York snap a
John Stockton bad 18 points and
three-game borne losing slreak.
12 assists as the Jazz won for the
The victory was the Knicks' 15th time in 18 games.
sixth straight against the Pistons,
Reggie Miller scored 18 points
who dropped their fourth in a row to lead visiting Indiana, which
despite 24 poiniS from Joe Dumars defeated Denver 95-91 Tuesday
and 21 from Grant Hill.
before takinR on the well-rested
Hill and Dumars scored eight

ln the Independence Bowl,

•

Jazz, who had not played since
completing a 6-0 road trip on Dec.
22.
Byron Scott scored 16 points
and Sam Mitchell 15 for the Pacers, but Utah improved its record
against Eastern Conference teams
toll-1.
SuperSonics 121, 76ers 101

SHRE VEPORT, La. (AP) Virginia buried its demons in the
rain mud and cold of !be lndepen"en'c·e Bowl, and coach George
"
We lsh and his 181b-ranked CavaIiers are delighted.
tb a..t
. "It's great to fina II Y getcks
ff
b
bowl losing sireale o our a '
Welsh said Wednesday night after
the Cavaliers used their power-

b h.,..
Ch . u·
offense to am us •eKas ns an
20 10
· ·
..
"We had a sense of urgency,
Welsh said, in part because of a
f uau·
tfl'ng of 'our bowl loss
rus ng s
''
•
es but also because Of a Seasonen,dl' ng 30· 27 loss to North Carolina State. ·
The Atlantic Coast Conference
d
hil lb
Cavaliers woun up 9. 3' w e e

on Frogs ended up 7._5.
.
Virginia end M1ke Fredenck,
vote·' the outstanding defensive .
u
player of the game, said !be victory
cured a world of intangible ills.
"It kept coming up all, year,' •. be
sa1·d. "F1"rst, we w.eren t, bea_tm_g
anyone then we couldn t wm m
November, then we couldn't win a
bowl game. But we J·ust stuck to

The Rev. Dr. William Boyd,
great-great-grandson of Pres. Lincoin's secretary of state, William
Seward, was speaker at the recent
meeting of Brooks-Grant Camp 7,
Sons of Union Veterans, held at
Hope Baptist Church annex, Middlepon.
Boyd displayed a piece of fur-

Scoreboard
Bowlins Green IOl. Tirrin 82
Butler 56 Wis.-Orren Bay 43

All0111lclliftoloo

Isa

R L &amp;!.
.538
II .400
17 .370
17 .370
17 .320

Wfllh.iqton ..............7

II

l

12

si.

7.5
ILl

Beat of the Bend ...

12

.210

14

CLEVELANl&gt; ..... :19
lDdlooa ................. .16
Chlr1otte ............... .l4
Chie~~ao ..... .............l4
AOoolll .................. .ll
Dcui&gt;lt. ...................9
Milwaukec ...............9

I
9
12
13
16
16
17

.704
.640
.:538
.SI9
.407
.360
.346

4.~

ldaho St. 73, Chapman

lil

.704
.6ol0
.609
.S20
.52~
· ~

S.ton 0•11-Mudo..t.U. Tournament

Tournaments

Texas 86, Washington St. 81
Third plate
Tcxas-EI Paso 77, Texaa-Pan American 61

51.52

6.5
7.5
10

Finl roud
Arizona95. Richmond 68
Tnas Tech 67, Penn St. 61

11

tlntrouH
Defiance 86 , Hiram Col. 11
Kenyon 82, Eureka 61

Flral round

Fairfield 78, Sacramento St. 63
Gcoraetown 83, Grumlina St. 66

Flndl•y Holl.ll)' Toui'IIDMhl
Ch ... plonohlp

Findlay 103, Sprica: Arbor 93
'lllirdpl.ce
Wesmlinster, Pa. 61. Waterloo S9

..... w.,a...
Ch1111ploa.tdp

Oregon 73 , Notre Dame 69
Thlrdplace
Georae W•tlinaton 77, Oreaon St. 70

M••h•ll Optlmbl TournMtCnl
flnl round

John Carron 91, Adrian 87
Uooaitt CIMik
Firat round

Customer Appreciation
. Day ·
Friday December 30th

n. St. Maocili ,

N. lllinoitli3, Niapn 60
Now Huqilhire II. Navy 79

Providence 93, Ollthoma St 78
Villauova 80, Ridcrffl

South

· EVERYTHING
ON SALE

Bradley 63, Millillippi 61
Fla. lnternationa186, Llmar S6
George.MBJOn 84. Miss. Valley St. 80
HartCon169, Cent. Florida 65
!OS. Georgia St. 70

Mercer 91 North Gl!(lrJill 73
MionQOta' 74, J11nkl Madison 611
Mutr~ay St. 102. Milliaun 82
South. Florida 87, Baylor 1S
Tulane 97, Bdhua~Cootn.n 66
UNL V 56. Miami SS
Va . C(lmmonwealtb 79 •. Mount St

SAVE.20%

SEOAL girls'
~age standings

Excludes Quilt Batting

League Overall

~ ~ l}
7

s
s

3

4

3

4

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MILL END FABRIC
. 270 Mill St.
Middleport, Oh

3
3

3
5
8

WeclaeiCIIly's scores
: Mllfotd 52, Logan 43 ·
.

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ToniRitt's pme .
': Meiss at GALLIPOLIS, 7 p.m.

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For The
Special
Man

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Mens Levi
Denim
Jackets

Ada .Sl, Ridacmont 43
Akron Ellet 77, Stow 52
Aktrin St. Vincent-51. Mary fil. Maple
Hts. 62
An50nia 13. St. Henry 69
Avon lake Sl, Geortdowo (S.C.) SS
Barberton 89, Cardinal Oibbo01 {N.Y.)
71
Beachwood 56, Middldield Cardinal
ll •
Berlin Hiland SS, Marion Elain 53
Bexley 64, Washinpon C.H. 52
Dis Walnut 68, Uctlna Valley 61
Cardinaton 71, Mansfield St Petm 69
Cin. LISalle 64, Wmover, Oa. S6
Cin. Lnveland 59, Cin. Turpin 49
Cin. Woodward 65, Euclid 56
Cle. Benedia:ine 103, Louisville (Ky.)
Trinity 102 (OT)
Clc. Olcnville 95, Oirard (Pa.) 66
Cle. South 90, Ravenna SO
Cle. VASJ 74, Pitllbura.h N. Cath. 52
Cot. Hartley 19,1ndian River 71
Col. Ready .SS, Quincy (Ill.} Notre
Dame SO
Connatton Val l. S2, Jewett-Scio 50
Copley 84, Mcdima Hi&amp;hland 71
Coventry 70, Crestwood 44•
COvinatou (Ky .) C•tholit 61, Day.
Chaminad&amp;-JulienDe :53
Cuyahop Htl. 73, Lake RidJe 4S
Day. Pattcaoo 14, B. Arthur Wilson

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Edgowood61, CllordooND-CLll
Elyria West 75, N. Rtdaevllle 69
Fairmont 82. Lert\(ID·MoDtOC 60

.

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• Nancy Parker Campbell -Auditor
• Mike Swisher- Human Se.rvices
• Robert Eason • Engineer
• James Soulsby- Sheriff
• John Jacobs- Health Dept.
• Dan Nease- Map office
• Julia Houdashett- Thornton - Development
PROGRAM SUPPGRTERS
• MAYOR/COUNCIL of Middleport, Pomeroy,
Racine, Rutland, and Syracuse
• TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES of Bedlord, Chester,
Columbia, Lebanon, Letart, Olive, Orange, Rutland,
Salem, Salisbury, Scipio and Sutton
• DAILY SENTINEL AND TIMES - SENTINEL
. • WMPO AMIFM RADIO
.
• SUPT.; ADMINISTRATORS; and STAFF:.. All
Meigs County Schools
• Meigs Co. Fair Board
• Manley's Recycle Center- Middleport
• Tri-County Recycling (near Pomeroy)
• LEADERSIADVISORSIMEMBERS... Boy Scouts,
, _ Girl_ Spouts... 4;HLGarden Clubs and l?_lh,ers. .
• Cindy Oliveri, Hal Kneen, Chip Haggerty - OSU
Extension
• James Profitt· O.D.O.T ·
• Soil and Water Conservation District
• Meigs High School V.I.C.A.
• Hundred's of Individual Volunteers

145 N. 2ND
MIDDLEPORT

ADVISORY BOARP MEMBERS
• Charles Barrett, Jr. • Trustee
• Robert Bowen- Education
• Victor Brown • Historian
• David Koblentz- Community
• Roy Miller- Agriculture
•Pat O'Brien - Judicial
• John Rice- OSU Extension (Bet.)
• John Riebel· Co. School Supt.
• Keith Wood - Wildlife

'Allue Challenge

'

~ostomer

Appreciation
Days

• Ted Warner- Highway Supt.
• Dave Spencer- Highway Dept.
• Manning Roush- Highway Dept.
• John Lentes· Prosecuting Atty.
• Bob Byer- E. M.S.
• Emmogene Hamilton- Recorder
• Howard Frank -Treasurer

Friday, Dec. 30 &amp;Saturday Dec. 31

SAVE 30 to 50% off

PROGRAM CONTRIBUTORS
• Bank One- Pomeroy
• Home National Bank - Racine - Syracuse
• Farmers Bank and Savings • Pomeroy
• Peoples Banking and Trust Co. - Middleport
• Crow's Family Restaurant
• Domino's PIZza
• Herald Service Co.
• Gallla County Landfill
• lzaac Walton League
• Forked Run Sportsmen Club
• Meigs Co. Fish and Game
• McDonalds - PorJeroy
!.~psLCola.Co ~(Cbeshlre)__
• Pizza Hut
• Powell'~ Super Valu
•Vaughan's Cardinal

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./ 8 Pieces Fried Chicken
orWhole Rotisserie Chicke~

STOREWIDE INVENTORY REDUCTION
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FREE
DELIVERY
CREDIT TERMS
90 Days Same As Cash

Lav-Awaw Available
Ananclng Available
With ADoroved Credit
.,)

.t Lafge Mashed Potatoes

.

'

MEIGS COUNTY LITTER CONTROL. .. PHONE 992-6360

..

Unlimited.
The camp is preparing to for an
Auxiliary S.U.V. This group is
composed of women wbo either
descend from a Union veteran or
who are wives, daughters, mothers,
or sisters of members of the Sons
of Union Veterans.
Those interested in joining
should contact !be camp commander at 992-7874 .
The net meeting will be held
Monday, Jan. 9, at the Hope Baptist Church annex. The speaker will
be Kevin Teaford on Jenkins' Raid
into Meigs County, the fmt raid on
Uni()ol soil.

Means More Meal
For Your Money.

IJi:ML.~.. From: MEIGS COUNTY LITTER CONTROL...THANKS
~I TOGETHER WE ARE MAKING A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
SPECIAL THANKS:
DIVISION OF RECYCLING AND LITTER PREVENTION
• Paul Baldridge, Acting Chief
• NeKida Feliciano, Dis!. I Co-ordinator
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
• Fred Hoffman- President
• Janet Howard Tackett- Vice President
• Robert Hartenbach
GJMV SOLID WASTE DISTRICT
• Lance Wilson, EKecutive Director

I get on this subject, and some of il
arrives tear-stained.
Is lift passing you by? lllullto im·
provt your social skills? Ktilt for
AM Lantkrs' llt'W booldet, "How to
Makt Friends and Stop Bei11g
Lonely." Send a ulf-IJ/Jdlessed, lo11g,
business-sizt enve/opt and a check
or moMy order for $4.15 (this illeludes postage and handli11g) to:
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Boz
I1562, Chicago,I/J. 60611~562. (/11
Canada , send $5.p5.)

-Community calendar-

COUNTY OFFICIALS

Major men's
college scores

6

Tournaments
Ddl•nce Purple 6 ~old TOU"n . . enl

CSVS Capitol a..i~

LA. Cllppm• ()rlondo, 7,30 p.m.
Atlanta at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
8011on at Detroit, 8 p.m.
New York It Mlnne~C~ta, &amp; p.m,
Miami It CJUcago,I:JO p.m.
O.arlotae at MUwa.ukee, 1:30 p.m.
Ooldeo Slate It Dallu. 8:30p.m.
Putland It Deaver. 9p.m.
Houlton at Uu.h, 9 p.m.
LA. Lakm 111 Photnil, 10 p.m.
PtUiadelphla at Sacramro\11, 10:30 p.m.

3

Urbana 107, SheridaD1Ont. 89

Mississippi St. 61, Wyomiog S7
'llllrd plare
Mooroouth, NJ. 71, St. Joseph'• 62

Friday'• games

2

Non-conference action

Cowhtty Shoolout
0..-nJHonlhlp

SaD Antonio It Wuhinaton, 7:30p.m.

·wamo

Ohio men's
college scores

a... k One Fiola Bowl Oulle

OrlBndo at 0\arlotte, 8 p.m.
Golden State at H~tnn, 8:30 f'-ffi.
Denver at Portland, 10 p.m.
Seattle at LA. Laiers. 10:30 p.m.

1

UNO Chr'-tm• To•nament
Chomplonohlp

New Orleans SO, Princeton 43
Thlrdplo"
Rhode Island 17, Tex• A.t:M 68

Va!Kiub!lt 93, Oeveland St. 64

2.5
4.5

LA . Clippers at Miami. 7:l0 p.m
San Antonio Ill Atlanta. 7:30p.m.

~UPOLIS

ChMnpiOIIilhlp

a.-

Tonight'• games

.........
Logao ..................... ..4
Locai .......... J
AtbenS ...................... 2
Marietta ....................2
RIVER VALLEY .....2
Jpson .....................0

Sinn Mtdkal Cmter Sun a..k

AS\l-Trlbube
1'1,.1 round
Ariuna St. 55, Pacific 51

Chicago 10:5, Boaton 97
New York 101 , Detroil93
CLEVELAND 91, WllhlnJ(on 7S
Utah 117 ,lO&lt;Uaaa 9S
StatUe 121. Plu ladclpllia 102

~U

Flntrouacl

Seloo Hall90, Lehig)l 59
Southet.•"Cill 91, Southern Meth: 13

Fir« rouad
Pa. 80, Dick.inwn.SO
Widener 57, Hilbert 51

Wednesday's...,,...

East

n

Montana 103, Cal Poly-SLO 54
s. Utah 19, N. Arizona 65
UC Santo Barbara 91. Loyola Marymoum 72
UCLA 1:1~ . N. Carolina St. 80
Utah St. 86, Lewis-Ciart Sl. 62

Killio~ .

~

1.-A. Oippen ...........4 23 .. .148

li'lnlround

Arkansas 86, Oklahoma 84
Cincinnati 69, Georgia Tech 66

ASCO lloliday 01Wlt

2

P.c111c Dlvllloo
P11oenh: .........,........ 2J 6 .778
Seanle ....................ll 8 .692
LA. LaUn ......... ll · 9 .62l
$8Cf&amp;menlo ........... .14 12 .SJ8
Portlan&lt;l ................ .12 12 .500
GoldenState ........ ..lO IS .400

Ralnbo" aU..c

Far West

8
9
9.S

l!: L &amp;!.

Cent. CoaDeCCicul SL
N.Y . 63

Buffalo 70. N.C.-Greensboro 68
lona 82, Harvard S7

Tt:J.a~~-AIIington at SW Teus St.,ppd

2

Ml•"•l J)hoblon

Ulah ..................... .19 i
Ho,.too ................ .16 9
San Antonio ........... l4 9
Deovu .................. .l3 12
Dallu .....................l6l 129
Mlo ...... ...............,

Flntround

Soulhwe•t

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

Isa

Peptl-lona Cl. .lc

Holy Crou iS, Rice 74
.
Nicholls St. 90, Stephen f .Au1tm 84

Cet~•IIIM•lllon

•

1

fir1tround

Xavier, Ohio 77, MII. ·Balhmorc Coutl ty 58

12
13

do differently, TCU quarterback
K k h
d d ·d
Max na e s rugge an sa1 :
"I'd probably stay out of the casinos before hav_ing to get up at 8:30
..
.
theneKtmommg.

Ch.npionlhlp
Onerhein 96, Goucher 71
Third place
LaVerne 91, Susquehanna ·74

(Hb; Spunkme)'CI" CluNe

Alabama 83, Te._ Chri11ian 64
California 79, Cclumbia 43

manding of Lincoln's orders. He

also said that keeping Europe from

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

OttertMin 0 Club OaMt

New McJiiw 86, CS Northrid&amp;c 73

lllinois
82, St. Mary'5, Cal.12
Kent &amp;6, Siena 79
Miami {Ohio) 71, L.oyola,lll. 60
Purdue 89. Weber St. 75
St. t..ouia71, Au~tin Peay ~4
,

lil

.m

Orloodo ..................2l
New Y«L ..... .....H
Nd Icnoy ............ll
801101 ..... .............. .10
l'llllodelphlo ...........lO
MIAmi ..... ......... .......!

Buffalo St. 57, Scranton 58
Wooster 13. Sewanee 73

Jonn btercablt Lobo lnYitatlonal
Flr1t round
N.C. CharloUe 76, Brown Sl

Mldw&lt;SI

NBAstandings

Mo. Dole Kla"MI• a.-c
Flnl rouncl

Atk.-Uttlc Rock 'n, Peppenhne 62
lnchana 92, E, X.eotucty 49

Mary's, Md. Sj
Virginia Tech 73. Tcnnenee 64
w. Keruucky78, Ala.-Birmingham S-1

Basketball

A couple of Homed Frogs said
the riverboat revelry may have
been a factor.
"We did a little too much seeing the town,'' confessed defensive

niture owned by Seward and !be
pistol that Seward defended himself wilb when be was wounded in
the assassination attempt by the
John Wilkes Booth conspirators.
Boyd explained that the firing
on Ft. Sumter, wbich started the
Civil
·
War, was due to Seward's oounter-

The commander informed the followed by a Lincoln impersoncamp !bat a celebration in honor of ator giving the Gellysburg Address,
assisting the South was due to the 1751b birthday of Gen. William and a Civil War ball
Seward's abilities as a statesman.
T. Sherman will be held in 1995 at
Kevin Teaford gave a report on
Boyd also explained the damage Sherman House in Lancaster.. He the recent !30th anniversary reendone to Seward's reputation for will obtain the details on Ibis and actment of the Battle of Cedar
purchasing Alaska in 1867, which attempt to get the camp included in Creek, which was held on !be origiwas called "Seward's Folly." As a !be event.
nal site near Winchester, Va. He,
result, he instructed his children to
The commander reported !bat William Brown, and Ashley attendchange their names to Soward.
the upcoming history book of the ed Ibis event, which had over 4,000
Keith Asbley, commander, Sons of Union Veterans of the re-enactors participating.
presided over the large cro\Vd Civil War is being published.
The camp heard a report on !be
attending the meeting. He reported Members are urged to submit pic- refurbishing of the Civil War can!bat the Walt Disney Corporation tures of themselves and !heir Union nons on Jhc Ohio Statehouse Lawn
&lt;:) bas abandoned its plans to place a ancestor as well as a story to the by Cannons Unlimited of
large amusement park near the site publication.
by Bob Hoeflich
Coolville. The camp expressed a
of the Battle of Bull Run in VirRemembrance Day at Gel!ys- desire to obtain a tour of Cannons
ginia. Historians objected because burg, which commemorates the
of the intrusion of auxiliary busi- anniversary of Lincoln's Gel!ysnesses and access roads that would
Unfonunately, friends of Car- of Bill Thomas in lower Mason, W. have infringed on this important burg Address, will be held on Nov.
olyn Kom-and she has many- Va. If you haven't seen his dis- area. Actor Robert Duvall had even 19 . Commander Ashley will be
.will oot be Seeing her for a while.
play, do go over. It's absolutely bought a large tract of !be land to attending and acting as lead fifer
for the Sons of Veterans Reserve,
She and her husband, George, fantastic.
preserve it. Commander Ashley the military arm of the S.U. V.
have had more than their share of
Every year Thomas adds to !be sent a letter of thanks to Michael
health problems. They will need display and I'm told tha! he makes Eisner, chairman of !be Walt Dis- There will be a parade wilb 3500
Civil War re-enact.ors panicipating
your prayers and support badly at all of the pieces-and trust me, ~ey Corporation, for this decision.
this point in time.
there are some unusual ones-.
Last Wednesday Carolyn col- Cars were stopping right and left to
lapsed in !be kitchen of the Kom enjoy a view of the spectacular disborne in Pomeroy. Fortunately, play the evening I drove over. So
George was at home and sum- do be careful-but don't miss it
PORTLAND Lebanon
THURSDAY
mooed an emergency unit at once.
~·
POMEROY - Free Clothing Township Trustees, Saturday, 8
Carolyn was in bean arrest and
A nmnber of you were success- Day, Salvation Army, Thursday, 10 a.m., Saturday township building.
would not have been able to call ful in coming up with the title to a.m. to noon. All area residents in
RUTLAND - Believers Felfor help.
tune 20-1 think I earlier called it
need of clothing are welcome.
lowship Ministry, New Lima Road,
She was taken to Ve erans 19- and some new names are
POMEROY -Big Bend Girl Rutland, New Year's service,
Memorial Hospital where she was noted among those sending in the
Scout
leaders will meet Thursday, be~;inning at 6 p.m. Patty and
stabilized and then was taken to correct title.
Lenny Ministry will be featured.
7 p.m. at Trinity Church.
University Hospital in Columbus
The title is "Birlb of !be Blues"
The Rev. Peter Hollingshead, Endby the Meigs Emergency Service. and here are the readers who sent
time Singers, Conley Family,
FRIDAY
Two physicians were with her from in the correct name.of !be song:
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Town- Deloris Freeman, the Robinson
7:30 !bat evening until 2 a.m. and
Ruth Young, Middleport; Rita
ship Trustees, 6:30p.m. Friday, family and others to participate.
of course, she was in tbe intensive White, Cheshire; Betty Curfman,
Pageville Township hall. Organiza- Refreshments. Pastor Margaret
care unit.
.
Syracuse; Paul Clark, Middleport;
tional meeting to follow regular Robinson invites the public to
Presently, Carolyn is on !be spe- Dale MqGratb, Racine; Mildred
meeting.
attend.
cial medication in the coronary l.tfilbum; Middleport; Jan Durst,
care unit at the hospital and will Middleport; Rodney E. Spires,
WEDNESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
have to remain hospitalized until a Cheshire; Harold E. Hager, Racine;
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Friday, home Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
bean appears from out of !be blue Mazie Hannahs, Pomeroy; Pauline
for a transplant. Previously, she Wolfe, Racine; Vera Proffitt, Pabi- of Clerk Patty Calloway. Election Meigs County Public Libillry ...Mrs.
of officers for 1995 to be held.
had been able to visit !be Columbus ot; Martha Hoover, Pomeroy;
Richard Owen to revtew, One
hospital periodicall~ . receive the Louise Gloeckner, Pomeroy; DonWriter's Beginnings" and other
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- selected writings l&gt;y EuOOnl Welry.
llledication and then come home. aid L. Snyder, Athens; Cbarles F.
The medication kept her going Price Columbus; Bill Ault, Mid- ship trustees will bold an end of the For roll call members are to give a
okay for a while. Now, however, dleport; Loretta Beegle, Pomeroy, year meeting Friday, 7 p.m. Orga- New Year's Resolution.
nizational m, :ting will be held Jan.
she's at the end of tbe rope ani!. .and Marie Boyd, Racine.
2
at 7 p.m. at the office on Joppa
there's no solution except to
Winning the $5 prize for the
Road.
remain hospitalized and under the correct identification of .the song 1s
medication until a bean suitable for Bill Ault of Middleport who bas
ALFRED - Orange Township
•transplant to her is located.
come forth with the right answer on
trustees end-of-year meeting Fri·
There are three others at Uni- several of !be tunes so far.
day, 7:30p.m. at borne of Clerk
versity Hospital in the same situaAnd !be lines for tune 21 are:
Patty Calloway. Election of offilion and all four are at the top of
"Maybe I'm aazy to suppose,
cers
for 1995 will be held.
the list for transplants and, of
"I'd ever be the one you chose,
.course, will be given transplan_IS as
"Out of the thousand invitations
hearts are fo~nd with lb~ COJ1Stder- you'll receiv~;
.
,
SATURDAY
ation of wh1ch heart 1s deemed
"Ah, but m case I stand one litLETART- Letan Township
most suitable for the particularly tie chance,
individual.
"Here comes the jackpot ques- Trustees, Saturday, 8 a.m. for yearend meeting. Organizational meetGeorge will be staying off and lion in advance".
. .
on at Unverferth House wh1ch IS a
A· pretty timely number m v1ew ing to follow.
.nine-apartment building designated of the approach of the new year.
SYRACUSE - Sullon Townfor use of families of patients who Just send your answer to Whatsa
·are in Carolyn's condition.
Name of That Song", The Daily ship Trustees, Saturday I p.m.,
I know you will want to offer Sentinel, Box 729B, Ill Court St., Syracuse Municipal Building. linal
Carolyn, only 44, e~courageme~t. Pomeroy, or drop your answer by meeting for year. Organizational
meeting for 1995 to follow.
The address is Cardtac Care Unn. the office.
• Eighth Floor, Room 816, Rhodes
MIDDLEPORT- New Year's
Hall, University Hospital, Colum1 know all of you are looking
Eve
service at Ash Street Freewill
bus, Ohio.
forward to the chore of taking
Baptist
Church. Middleport, Saturdown the tree and putting all of that
There are boliday decorations Christmas stuff away for another day, 7:30p.m. Special singing .
Pastor Les Hayman invites public.
and there are holiday decorations year, so do keep smiling.
· but a real car stopper is the display

•

QuanerbackMike Grob hit wide
receiver Tyrone Davis with a pivotal 37-yard toucbdowo j)ass in the
third period, and the Cavaliers
pounded the Horned Frogs with the
running of Kevin Brooks and
Charles May.
"When we hit for that touch·'
,_
ld
..
uown, we a..uew we coo re1ax, .
Davis said. "We knew we could

sisters who haven't spoken to each preferred the money to the family service-oriented and are equipped to
other in a decade because they bolb heirlooms? Not one of them showed do all the setting. up, advertising,
wanted their mother's ice-cream up ror the auction.
marketing and cleaning up. This takes
scoop.
When an estate auction is held, it all the responsibility olf the shouldas
Several years ago, we knew a leaves the bidding open 10 everyone, of the family members. Please let
family of 10 children who were in a including the public. The items then your readers know. --GREEN BAY,
bitter fight over the same possessions. fetch the highest possible prices. The WIS., AUCTIONEERS
Finally, the mother said she would heirs not only have the option of
DEAR GREEN BAY: Thank you
have an auction and give each of the obtaining the items most valuable to for a letter that deserves to be clipped
siblings enough money so they could them, but they are able 10 share in the and put in the family Bible. It could
bid on the purchases they wanted. profits at the end of the auction. At save a great many family fights and
The highest bidders would be the an auction, t~uything is sold, prevent a lot of hard feelings. You
winners. Well, Ann, would you including the ·unwanted" items.
would not believe the amount of mail
believe that each of the 10 children
Many auction firms are

Sons of Union Veterans hear presentation on Seward's descenqant

Kendall Gill scored five of his
25 poiniS in !be final 3:34, leading
a late 17-5 surge as SeaUie pulled
away from Philadelphia
Led by Dana Barros and Willie
Burton, the 76ers trimmed a 23point deficit to 104-97 before Gill,
Gary Payton and Deller Schrempf
sparked Seattle's big fmish.
·
Payton and Scbrempf scored 23
points apiece for the Sonics, who
won their 131b straight home game.
Sarunas Marciulionis came off tbe
bench to score 20 points.
Barros led tbe 76ers witb 26
points.

Virginia en,~~,,~~~~. ,~~~~~~__:;!;a~Y!~~ . 20-~oo!~,~~~~e~;g~-"-"
By MIKE COCHRAN

The Daily Sentinel--Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..-:

0\o\Og setS '{3~\es Ch&amp;\tS

-

-

··-

-

----

RUTLAND FURNITURE
.
11

7
Showrooms

742·22111-&amp;0o-837-8217 Warehouses
MAIN STREET• RUTLAND, OHIO

,.

./ Large Cole Slaw
.t Large Baked Beans

./ 6 Hot Wings' Pieces
./ 4 Biscuits
./ Double Chocolate Chip Cake

Available only at participating KFC"' restatJrants. Include s wMeldarx pl8(es. No Coupon Necessary. Limited t1me offer.
C&gt;&lt;FC 199&amp;

.

TV's and Appliances ~eluded
.

./ Large Gravy

CR~O'W'S

'-

••
il

FAMILY ,RESTAURANT
[

228 West Main
992·5432
,I

t?

�Page &amp;rThe Dally Sentinel

Thurada~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

December29,1894

. · .: ·.

appy

Thanks to All My
Customer!) &amp; Fri~nds for
the Gifts &amp; Cards I
Received for Christmas. ·
Bernice Durst

.e-vv '-T
'
-'-ear.

Prices Effective Dec. 29 • 30 • 31 • Jan. I, I 99 5

JIMMY'S
SPORT BAR
NEW YEAR'S EVE
PARTY
Music by Tom Hunter of
Prime Time Mobile D.J.
9:30 until 1995

Open New- Year's Eve •tillO p.m. •New- Year's Day 7 a.m. to Midnight
.·

Lb.

Boneless &amp;
Skinless

Champagne, Food,
Hats &amp; Horns.

Howard ... Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
&amp;'1MM n:N

-AMBERWOOD

·~~

Cocker Span lela .
·
Brad lot
Quality and
·
Temperament
Speolalizing In Part~
lor show and IX&gt;IIlpanlona.
Stud aorv"'- a pupJ&gt;Ma,
young edulta for aale.
48760 Mile Hill Rd.
Raclne,Oh
114-148-2487

lEST IICEPTIOII

'UJILIIICI

C&amp;J
FURNITURE

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Just below Hobson
on State Route 7
New &amp; Used

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

992· 7508
New 2 piece living
room seJs 1300.00

·o&amp;E ELEC'IBI~ ·

BINGO

Dll'l

For the best In satemte
sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Rec:epdon.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
-Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types.
- Best prices all around
the area.
992-2903 or 992-6320

.,....

111110

For All..,

Und&amp;,,n.•cn
for S.le
c,ll
614-992·5515
1Wt1,.

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Call949·2734

Raclna Amertcan
Legion Poet 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Stanlng 6:45 pm
Doore open 4:30 pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ed for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

OUR PRICES WII,.L NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Smalt Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-7162
992-5251
Doug
John

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
• · New Home&amp; • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddiUons • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL "'
. FREE ESTIMATFS

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. -Wed. - Fri.- Set.
1-41

• Craftaman Toola
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell•Trade

61 ..992'7643
(No Sunday Calla)

992·2060 10/5/1

0.
~

Chicken Breasts

We wish to thank our
customers, for all the
cards, candies, and gifts
during Chrfstmas. We
hope you have a very
healthy and prosperous
New Year.

.•

Thank
Gary and Debbie Mct(niaht
Sentinel r.~ """r I

Lb.

New Year's Eve Ball
Round &amp; Square Dance
VFW, Tuppers Plains
Bring Potluck-6:30 pin
Dance - 8 pm - after midnight
$5 couple
$3 Single

Sliced Pork
Loin Roast or

Country Style Ribs
'• •.
'' .

..,._rpe Cooked

Shr1mp

.,

Sweat &amp; Tender
Previously Frozen
41 to 50 Count

Big Bear Grade A

us

Split

Idaho

Chicken

10 Lb.
Bag

Breasts

..-

Baking

..--·

-

Lb•

'
I

I .
I

BUY
orr ONE
FREE

.
I

'&gt;-

12 Pack
Coca
Colaeu.eo....

.

except Beef - 1 Lb. Pkg.

Except Beef - 1 Lb. Pkg.

Eckrich

Oscar Mayer

'IJII

~ 't11"rn1
Jli II ~ ~~~ ~~ ~~~~~~
I
I

'

Meat
Bologna

Franks

•
•

••
•
•

·~

Cleese -Tray: 1

-ll
· 1I
I

.!

Meat or
.

.

1137 Wl6,..
""-... ••...._
«o.. .
,. 1

.~

~.-As.·-

uta, -

-•- .

.w r n, Mit c.,- v.w Jrw I·J-ff

.

,I 1I

1- 1

Holiday

· i

aa3a ,..,_,_,•
w-• .,.•-=,.,Ja.
ol a.~
· "11':-d - $..".
~

-

IWf rr,. ww. Ceui-

I'I

... ....,,

v.w """ 1-1-91

•

I

~----•-------•---------------------------~ L---------------~--------------------~---~ 1

••

Gift wrappings were judged
before the exchange with prizes
. going to the winners when lbe Middl~pprt Child Conservation League
met Thursday for a holiday polluclt,
at . the&lt; Rock Springs United
Ma*oclist Church.
'
' 'Wibning prizes were Peggy
-Harris, prettiest; Helen Blackston,
most original; Linda Br6Cierlck,
and most unusual. Secret sisters
were revealed witb tbe gift
exchange and . new names were ·
~wn.,

...,. " -

In Memory

In Memory of
ELDON R. KRAEUTER
who passed away one
year ago today,
Dec. 29, 199_3

May we find .comfdrt
In remembering
All the guidance,
strength and love
Whh which our fa1her
touched our lives
Those are precious
gifts that will always
live on In us.
Daughters~ Dolores
Wolfe and family
Roberta Maidens and
family
PubliC Notice

Charlie's
Lime Stone
Delivery
Service
992·7553

JAY'S EXCAVATING
DOZER &amp; BACKHOE
SERVICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Roam Addition•
oNewGa,.gea
-Electrical &amp; P!umblng
-Roofing
tlnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.&lt;;. YOUNG Ul

Kenny's Auto Rental
leany's is the place t~ come
w~en you need a car reatal.

Septic Tanks
Leach Bed• Installed
Basaments, Foot11111
Mobile Home Set·upa
Land Clearing
Roed Building
Free Eallmatea

992-41216

We IJaYe

Kenny'• Auto c.nt.r

1 (614)9115-4495

Pomeroy, Ohio

121ZW1

llft\W2tfn

F&amp;A Tree Service

Dtacrlptlon: Woatewattr,
AppUcotlon No 08-4324
Thla final tctlon not
preceded by propoaod
action and Ia ~ppttlablt to
EBR.
Groundwater
Trtttment Syatom with
aurlace dlacherge.
(12) 211; 1TC

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
Free Estimates

•NawHornn

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Remodeling ,
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.

011 Stip C.11pl1tt A•t• Bt4y Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE·
614-892-4223
Chuck StOtts
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

-Garages
-complete

614·992-4447

.

'1119 group aiSQ bad an ornament
exchange.
. Patti Arnold was welcomed into
db~ organization as a new PJember.
A Christmas potluck pr~eded
tbe meeting witb prayer by Nancy .
Morris: Kitty Darst led In the
..,.~

.

1-1100..86-1590

Bus. (814) 446-9971

Gallipolill, OH 45631

mo.

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Public Notice

c.,. .,,. V••l

26t.Upper River Rd.

'
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4473

Stale Rt. 33
D.wln, Ohio

·-

Ugtlt Hauling,
Purauent to Ohio revlaed
cod aectlon 3745.04, a 11n11
Public Notice
Shrubs Shapped
action mty be eppoalod to
tho environmental board ol
and Removed
111'1 IPPLIIIICI ·
ravlow (EBR) by • poraon -HOUSING REHABILITATION
Mls. Jobs.
III'IICI
who" waa 1 perty to a APPUCATION PERIOD
ofactory Authorized P procoadlng before tha EXTENDED
Bill Slack
a service
director by flUng an appetl
The Melgl County
•AU M- -42 Yura
within 30 dtya of notlca of Community Houtlng
992·2269
ofut Relloble S.ovlce
the flnaltcUon. Pureuant to Improvement Progrem In
•Waahera · Dryers •
Ohio rovlaed code aectlon the village of racine Ia
lEW &amp; USED
ofltfrlgeratoro of'ruzero
3745.07 • e flnel action extending the dttdllnt tor.
oDIIII\wllhtra
IIUIS
loaulng, denying, modifying, Houalng Rehtblllta.tlon 1 C8rd Of Thanks
revoking, or renewing a Appllcatlona. Houaeholda
otj.W,Jit.ll~
- nt:lc:MI Thfrd
. .lci'OWIVH • • ..,.
· permit, llcenao, or verlenca who 1re vary low/low
I
would
like
to
extend
Middleport
•Thenlcti
Melgo
I
which It not precadad by • Income m1y apply until
Surrounding Area
Hours: 10:01' A.M.
THANKS to all our
propoaed ectlon, mey be Jenuary 30, 1995 .
(614) 985-3561 or
appealed to tho EBR by .AppllcaUona •r• evalltble at
to 4:00 P.M. Dally
many Friends who
• 992-5335 1211 ....
filing en 1ppe11 within 30 the Recine FlrohouH Every
showed so much
daya of laoutnca of tho flntl Monday end appllctnta mey
action. EBR tppaala mull mtkt an. appointment to
kindness to my
be flltd with: Environmental aubmlt the eppllcatlon at
HUSJIAND, ARTHUR
Botrd of Rovlaw, 236 Eaat · thtt tlmt. Information may
C. BARR. Special
Town Strttl, Room· 300, bt obtained by ceiling 149Columbua, Ohio 43215. A 2296 on Mondaya or 992THANKS to Dr.
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
~opy of the tppttl muat be 6782 on Wadn..ctay1.
GUN SHOOTS
Witherell,
Stall' at
aerved on tho dlractor
Pertlclpatlon Ia btatd on
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
within 3 deya tHor filing the Income qualification• and
Veterans Hosp., Staff
FRIDAY NIGHTS
eppeel with tho EBR.
type of houalng repelr
at Overbrook Center,
Resident and Smalt Electrical Repair
Flnel laouenct of pormlt ~eaded.
6:30P.M.
to lnatlll
Home Health Care
J..nTruastll
(Lamps Welcome)
STARTING DEC. 30
· Aahland Ptlroleum
Vllloge of Middleport
Nurse
Claudie
Comptny, Mlneravllle, OH, CHIP Grenta Admlnlatrator
Home Repair Also
12 Gauge Only
Thomas, Ministers
loaue Dllt 12/20/94, Feclllty (12) 28, 29, 30; 3TC
992-7162
992-5251
Umited: 740
Rev. Neville, Rev.
Doug
John
Backbore, 680 front
Myers, Singers Mr. &amp;
12121/04111n
Mrs. Eblin, those who ·
sent food, Rowers,
money, and EWING
FUNERAL HOME,
and Pall Bearers.
Thanks again
Wife, Sibyl Dorst Barr
Plans for the annual "caring and
sharing" and "good neighbor" projects were completetl at lhe oyster ;5==Ha:-r:PP:Y:A:d:s=:::;
Joei.S.yre
soup supper and holiday party of
Modern Woodmen of America,
SAYRE TRUCKING
· Camp 10900 held at the ball.
The projects are in keeping with
614·742·2131
Ule ·Modem Woodmen's philosophy which stresses the impor1ance
of
families and individuals making
JESSE WHI'ITINGTON
p;positive contributions through
POMEROY, OHIO
WHALEY'S AUTO
Cindy, Jenny, Carrie, and Kim setvicc to othe!Ji and to the tommuSeptic .tanks cleaned a portable toilets rented.
PARTS
Mayle, David and Mik:e Bing, nity.
Dally, weekly a monthly rental l'llles.
David, Pat and Ian Hindy. There
Specializing In Cuatom
Foll&lt;lwing a prayer by the Rev
Job
sites • Camp Sltet • F1111lly Reunlonll Parties
was a special visit from Santa. Helen Cline, Coolville, United
·Freme Rlpelr
Sending gift were Ruth Priddy. I. Methodist Chun:h. the Woodmen's
NOW OFFERIN G GENERA L HA Ul
NEW I DPARTS FOR
D. Whittington, and Melissa creed service was led by· Alice
Llmestona, Sind, Gravel and Coal
Downing.
ALL IIAKE,(l.IO.DEIAI
Elliot of Alfred, Bill Jackson of
Games were played by tbc chil- Belpre. and Donald Dunfee of LitWE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR S ALE
1
dren. Refreshments including cake tle Hock:ing. Proce~ds of a silver
lsn 't It grest or
UcenHd a Bonded ' 20 ara ex .
' ·-t12-55530R
and ice cream were setved.
march were went to the Salvation
does It mske you
992·3954
TOLL FREE 1-lot-141·1D11
blue? Doing the
Anny, CARE, and the Red Cross.
E rnPrgt't' C')- Pi1 0t1(' ~&lt;85 1 11 S
· t .,
DARIIII, OHIO
Camp members reported their
same
thing
st
521
,
· progress with planting flowers and
7131..1 TFN
Love You, Sis
1
M
•5 Pra
d ed · 0 fall
shrubs, and otber ·beautification
other
yer an pi ge
e- activities in Coolville and surglance. A Chrlsbnas letter from tbc
'. •
state president was read followed rounding communities. .
8
Public Sale
q • Custo• Ill de
by devotions by Mrs. Monis.
A reci tation "The Christmas
1
&amp; Auction
. Linda Brodericlt read "Say Yes ' Mouse" was given by Roberta Ker. • Solid vinyl
at Christmas," "For Christmas" and eel, Coolville, and Bryan and Kat'
..A Miracle Called Friendship."
lyn Thome, Coolvill~, led the cbii- ..----.-u-c~.i~
rtplaCIIIIInt
The group played "Jingle, Jin- dren in singing "C is f(J' tbe Christ
windows
.
gle," P game created by former Cbild Born on Christmas Day."
member Eloise White in 1967 Marjorie Malone of Coolville led
,Eatlmates
wbicb has been . played at every ·m smgmg.
· ·
• $200 Installed
Chrislmas party smce.
•It was reported lbatJn January,_
.
. .
Call For-bet• II• _
John Gooldin will speak on organ
Named as officers fol' the new
202 N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio
donating and anyone interested in year . were Jo.hn Bredl~ve,
tbe subject .is invited to attend. Coolvtlle, con~ul, Gamer Griffin
"VVSrr OUR SHOWROQif'i ·
.
Consignments taken Friday at Noon,
Guest s at tbe meeting were Ann and. Don. C. Elliott, !X&gt;tb of Aif!ed.
,
110
Court
St.
~
•.
owe.·:-_.
..
Colburn and a friend, Sleglinde adviSors, Jesse DaVIS of Cool~
·
Sunday at 11 :00 A.M.
''Look for. die Red·tiil WldteA. . . .
Miller, Pomeroy, and Kelly Snider Donald Dun~ of Little Hocltmg,
of Raleigh, N.C.
and Sharon tillogley of Albany,
trustees .

IIOWOPffl

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J&amp;D FLEA
MARKEl

,,..,.

UCINE
GUN CLUB

Modern
Woodmen
plan projects

O&amp;E ELE~TRI~

.......

HAULING
Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

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

·-

MODERN SUfti,ON

m-tu'o'

-

I ay pa rfy
CCL h0 I.ds h0 l•d

Meat

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nolle• of the drtH ectlon.
"Propoted Actlont" are
written atetementa of the
Dlrec1or'a Intent with
ratpect to tha laauanca,
denial, modification,
revocation, or renewal of 1
permlt,llcanH, or variance.
Written commtntt 'and
requttla for 1 public
meeting ragerdlng a
propolld ectlon mty be
aubmlttad within 30 daya of
notice of tha propoaed
ectlon. An adjudication
hearlnJI mty be held on a
propo..cllctlonttehelrfng
raqu,.t or objection Ia
receiVed by the OEPA within
30 dtya of IMuence of the
propoaad tctlon. Wrfltan
com menta, raqueata for
public m.. tlnga, and
edjudlcttlon hurlng
raquette muat be aant to:
Hu~lng Clerk,
Ohio
Envlronmenltl Protection
Agency, P.O. Box 163689,
Cotumbua, Ohio 432UI-3869
(Telephone: 614-644·2129).
"Fine I Actlona: ore action a
of the director which are
affecUva upon laauence or a
alated tlltctlve date.

Jesse James Whittington
obsetved his fm&gt;t birthday on Dec. ·
20 with a pl!lty held at McDonald's
ofPqmeroy.
He is the son of Jay Whittington
and&lt;Shannon Hindy of Rutland,
3!Kllhe grandson of Patricia Hindy
of Mi\ldleport, Maxine Grinstead
of Mif:ldleport, and David Hindy of
· Rutland.
.
Attending the party and presenting gifts to the toddler were Darla
and Jake Zuspan, Angie and
Daulton Spangler, Joanne, Jennie
and Jocinda Ferguson, Jefletta
West, John, Vanessa and John
MiclJael Miller, Charles, Chazzy
and E=asey Whittington, Virginia
Hind~, Patricia Hindy, Buddy,
Lola, Michelle, Barb Whittington,

Umlt 2 ,.,

1n1P 11

PU8UC NOTICE
Th 1
, 1o 11 ow 1n g
eppllcetlona end/or verlflad
complaint• ware recalved
end tht following dreH,
propoetd, or tlnll ectlona
wtra laaued, by tha Ohio
Envlronmtntal Protection
Aga!ICY (OEPA) Ita! week.
"Actlona• Include tha
adoption, Modification, or
rtvocttlon of ordart (other .
than emergency ordero); the
lttu• nc a,
den 111,
• mcidlf~tlon or ravocttlpn
.Of ncen.... permlll, IHHI,
varltnc.., or certtflcttea;
end the approval or
dlupprovtl of plena and
eptclflcatlona. "Drift
Actlona• ara wrlttan
ittttmanta of tho diRC;tor of
onvlronmantal protection'•
(Dirtctor'a) Intent with
reapact to the laauence,
daniJI, etc. of a permit,
llcenae order
ate .
lnttreat~'ci Ptrt;na may
aubmlt wrtttan commenta or
requttt 1 public mtttlng
regarding drtH action a.
Commenta ·or public
met11n~ requaata muat be
aublllllltd within 30 deya of

birthday
observed

Coke. carralne Free Diet Coke, Sprite

Boneless
.
Str1p
,Steak

PubliC Notice

mirst

Potatoes

USDA Choice Beef Loin

'

No.1

PubliC Notice

2

IUILift

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ln.tique and Collectibles
Jan. I, 1995 • _1:00 P.M.!_

BaPPJ New Year ·

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

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All real estate advertising In
lhls newspaper Is suD)eelto
the Fodera! Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes nIllegal
to adVertise ·any preference,
limttatlon or discrimination
based on race, cotot:, religion,
89)( familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
llmltatton or discrimination:

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"Look, honey... the snow plow came!"

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TH' WELCOME

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LAYNE'I FURNITURE

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THE WORLD DOES

NOT REVOLVE
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SOMETI-IIN6 YOll
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Farm Suppli es
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l ea rn i ng i s a
ngcrou s thing . He
nearly continued: .. Play deep. or ta ste
not the Pierian spring: There shallow
drau ght s intoxica te the brain. and
bridge large ly sobers us again :·

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STRIKE ABLOW IN THE. WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSfiED~.

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

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c.mpere &amp;.

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ASTRO-GRAPH

Bullneu

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IIIOTICEJ

OliO YAurt FUB~ CO.
nca~ thll ~do IMMI_,..h
IIIII
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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

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Real Eslate

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· 't!Me'a m.klng hlaneet now .•• There I See It?
That IOIH!I+ ... He's. got hlmMH 1 Mont"
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Graph . c/o 1h1s news paper , P.O. Box to earn a reputat1on as a good guy . make
44'6 5. New York. NY ,10163 . Be Su re lo a smcere eff ort to lreat olhers as you
state your zod1ac s1gn.
woUld have them tre&lt;;~ t you. The golden
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2C!-I!Itb. 19) This might rule os the best measure today.
be a day ol substanllal achievement . . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A solutoon moght
What occurs may appear to be reason- f be found toda y for a J)roblem you·_ve been
ably easy. but you'll know better.
1 unable to solve . The answe1 w11t alfect
PISCES (Fob. 2C!-March 20) You may be 1 your entore lamoly . not 1ust the perpetra very well equipped lor deal ong wilh tor.
groups today . The larger the group. the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Even though
better you'll do.
you m1ght feel a little lonely today . you
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Today you ' should stoll choose your co mpano on~
might have to deal with two individuals carefully .
·
the world has mistreated lately . Your LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Your luck on
compassion will guide you and you ·11 financial Sllualions will be unusually good
know jus! what to say and do.
t
!today. Think logocally. bul db nol ognore
T•URUS (April 20-Moy.20) The greatest slrong hunches or inlultive perceplions.
"
.
lessons-today aren:t. apt to come.f&lt;pm ~RPlc:L(Qct. 24-Nov. 22) Over th~
te.xtbooks . Knowledge you·' acquire next few days. you might hear I rom sevthrough personal experience could prove eral frien&lt;Jbyou·ve been out oltouch with
.
bl
'
· for~u€'s ome tome . Strange cllcum lnva1ua e.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Your earning stan s could compellhem lo call
capacity could increase at this time. You ~ ITIARIUS (~ov. 23-0ec. 21) Good
.
.
d ·
are in a cycle where the service or exper·
ongs mogh t happen to you to ay lUSt
liSe you offer could yield unusually larger
a use you·ll be in the right spot at the
returns
.
,_
,
ight time. Watch for opportunities from
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) 11 you want sunup to sundown
,

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Friday. Dec. 30. !994

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The year ahead could be prosperous or .
·1
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· ed to work harder to
~ou I you ~ns pir -In care-ofprovide lor those you love. UR !l'
them will help You as well.
CAPRICORN (De~. 22-Jan. ~ 9 ) Hopes
f . h
a good chance at
and expeclatons ave
being fulfilled today i'.you approa~hGyour
. t' s in a practical manner. et a
ob jBC ove
.
h . II
' jump on lif_e by understandong lh e In U·
ences wh1ch govern you In t 8 ~~r
ahead. send for your_ Astro·Graph pr IClions today by mailing $1 .25 to Astro-

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Giving binh is like taking your lower lip and forcing 11
over your head." - Carol Burnett .

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SCRAM-LEfS ANSWERS

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Celebnty Cipher cryptogram&amp; are crea1ed !rom quol!lhons by tamous people. past and present
Eact11etter 1n the cipher stands lor another Today's clue· D eqwls S

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M1&lt;E IT
Loa&lt;. GOOD

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ll1rl, tz;M, 114 251 1704, Cl4= . I
-1111.
' I

flrll - " " · . Onllianl -

nME

OKA~ . IT:S LVNtH PERIOD
liND JENN'(~ O~ER THER£.

-

Goode

ltEfiL

BIG NATE

'·l

Houllhold

21 .

8 Declared

Complete the chuckle q-uoted
.
~
•
•
•
.
by l1ll1ng 1n the m1!.smg wor ds
"--L-L--L.-L-...L........J you develop from step No 3 be low .

4x4.114-2111U4
.
lllaii1Ciow1............... 1,

l.tcrchand1se

........ '*'-

win

7- Vega•

1--T,-T,-T,5-r~~-r~~ G)

.-.I:J

~

t WtchiM,

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

EOL Col 114-441-

2 --arme
3 Sold through
the noM

I

•• ..,... . .,

!:'{,it'of...jijj..,..~:

ciiDOIII· ....... ,...,..,,

.,_ w.p.

5 Smathel (II.)
6 Unexpected

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

MotoR!Fiel

111TKzw

lnlemollne 101 ..._ - ·

One end _ _ _

-N.

4 Apr. 15 egq.

DOWN
1 ACirHI Pma

"You are truly blessed w1th
wisdom ." an old timer lectured.
.
.
"1f you know when to speak
,..-------------, your mind and when to mind
C E T FED
'your ------."

I

I

IUE 4 W1we1 I
1111....001 .... 114-31J.liiiJ!!

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

Smell amount
58 SPMCI along
St ActrHo Luplno
60 In a line
61 Hoelery ahade
62 Aug. hrt.
63 Knoll In ~oHon
fiber
64 - out
(aupplemento)

J

u••• "( •
o11!!1!nJ

gw"IL1'1UDD.I1t
1ltl GIIC

BORN

I•

1114 T"L
... 4 WO, Allor 4 p.m.
111tt. .l7

eq·ifr

cl~k

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Who wrote .. A l i ttle lea rning i s a
dangerous thing .. ?
In today"s deal. South thou ght he
wa s putting his knowledge to good
u se. but it didn 't work out like that.
Two clubs was strong and artificial.
Two diamonds was the negative re ·
sponse. However. North ·s three
spades promised some values . With a
co mplete Ya rborough . North would
have made a double negative I of three
clubs or two no-lrump. according to
choice!. This persuaded South to
l aunch into Blackwood.
Immediately. declarer saw that if
th e diamond fin esse wa s losing. he
would have to play the trumps for no
lo se r s. H-e would cash th e ace and
king. hopin g the qu ee n-doubleton
would drop. However. if th e diamond
fine sse was winning. South could take
a safe ty-play in spades to maximize
the chances of only one loser .
South won the first tn ck in hand.
played a heart to dummy"s jack and fi.
nessed the diamond que en. It won .
Fee lin g confiden t that Wes t hadn ' t
ducked the king. South took his safetyplay. He cashed the spade ace before
leading a low spade toward the dummy.
This would have worked well if West
had started with Q· IO-x-x of spades .
Here . though. disaster struck. East won
with the queen and gave his partner a

PICI&lt;ENI FURNITURE

lllmlltn,

.......,__
Pae•oniiiieMortll
• Or.
.
. _ L -._,..
1n ,......,,
l.llnrv. 111111 ... 11 ,.,. ol
Aao. .... !Uioa -~~~ and ~
lfiott.. fng. EVNinao end
_...._ 12 lin. Wk. -

56

~-~!Ia.

o\UCIIOH l

........ .. ""'" Llonll •
•
lwa AJw:.,.. a - .

pheiHnte
52 Cauttlc
oubll8nce
55 ShljHhepiCI

~ lumnllllllllnaLIIIna&amp;.
lloln: lion-Ill, N. . . . . .

... a, Blllpale. New.~

30W7HII2.

50 Brood of

Learn from
your correct plays

Household

32 Mobile HomH .
tor Sale

no._

Guthrie

4fi Blnklryg abbr.
47 .Dan.. famHy

0 1K4 by NEA. Inc

No lppll?

ar.. ,...,....,

4-4 Folkllnger

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer: South

This newspaper will not
knowti&lt;VY accept
advertisements lor real estate
whJch Is In viOlation ollhe law.
our readere are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
adver1food In IIlia . _ ,
are &amp;'1811abla on an·equal
opportunity balls.

Nice

42~o:=

1 Pueblo Indian
PHILLIP
5 South African
ALDER
tribe
9 Grldderorg.
12 Armadillo
13 - - onlhe
beck
14 Roman 3
----Nilii'i'ir---;;;:;;;:..-; 115 Hlulng aound
12·29·94
16 AttentionaJ 9 6
getting sound
17 Female name
., K J 4
18 Actress Merkel
t 9 8765
19 Opp. of NNW
•s3
20 Gr-Ing out
22 Fib
EAST
24 Mountain lake
aQ 8
26
Poured
•10 965
29 Cloae-fiHing
tK1042
jacket
108642
aQ9 7
33 Axllke tool
34 Footleoe
SOUTH
36 Game of ~ardo
aA K 7 4 2
37 Born
., A Q 7
36 Slbllnge (abbr.)
tA Q J
39 Prejudice
40 Lock-•A K

"

Acting- Vomit · Porch- Pilfer - FIGHT
After a heated debate the two politicians shook hands.
Does that mean they are friends or !hat they have just
bequn to FIGHT?

DECEMBER 29 I

�•
Pege-10--The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
drop contest
to Gallipolis

'
Annual Liquidllion
.

·. '· I'' •. ·r•

. --

&lt;

)

Page4

$8,995

4DR- V6- AIIIO- Air-

c. .... -row. 'I"

I

h 4 - Tahoe: - AuiO - Air - Mon:

-

95

1995 CHEVY
MONTE CARLOLS

1995 GEO PRIZM
Auto - Air - Cassette Mon:

PU·AINew·~Jittt. -A81il

$8,699

I

I

I

......... .

1994 GMC SUBURBAN
314 IIIII - 4.54 V8 -Trailer

Don't Be Late!
.SAVE $2000!!!

.

1995 GMC SIERRA 4x4 P/U

1995 CHEVY S SERIES

1995 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC

1995 CHEVY BERETTA

$12,995

All!.- Air-

$21,995

$31,995 No Lux11f1 'IU

1995 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE

1994 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

$14,695

V8-Ielllllu·'OMIId

Quad 4 - Spoiler - Auto - Air - Cissette

lll~a ilcr

o

.._ •

Olllorrr Qud 4- nit-Cruise, Cassette, Auto- Air

' '· ~

~

.-'-"Air- Puwa winlkJws &amp;: J..octs -lilt- AirCiuenc

...

Includes Under 30 Allowance

SJ1,595 Nol..u1f1'IU

$16,495

1995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE

1994 CADILLAC . ,
SEVILLES NORTHSTAil

1994 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREMESL

VB -leederr -I...W- MSIU'-=~

V6-Auto-Air-Cassette

$17,995·

Now $33,588

L 1

'9,154

r

t•- cD pllyer - si-c fta.

$16,995

$16,440

,.._Air,,.,, ••

1994 OLDS 98 SPECIAL EDITION

1994 OLDS 88
ROYALE

$8 999 $16 995
'

$10,995

1994BUICK
CENTURY

$12,995

I cwtr.LI adwr-AIJ Power-Dual Air

...'SSO'- ,.l.. ·

W---------"--'"""""'"

$11,995

1994CHEVY
BERETTA · LUMINA AD

V-6-Auto-Air-Power
Windows

3800 V6-7 PISiellger

$12,495

$15,495

.$9,999

1995 BUICK PARK AVENUE

93 LUMINA Z·34-' nftd .. w .........-·······-······............................................. 513,985

1994CH~VY

4DR·
Ouise-Air bag

I'*

Sir :rill&amp; .........

1995 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM
V-6- Auto- Air-Loaded

OR

V-6-Auto-Air.C•rue

$13·,9.95

.

.

~

In 401 .

Hall's case was extremely sensitive because the United StaleS did not
want to undennine the nuclear accord signed in October between the U.S.
and North Korea.
It was further complicated by a lack of clear information about who is
in charge in Norlb Korea. There bave been hints of a power struggle
between civilian and military officials since North Korean dictator Kim II
Sung died in July.
·
His son, Kim Jong II, is bis preswned suceessor, but hB!I not Connally
assumed power.
In Washington, U.S. officials said they believe lbe deal tba! was eventually struck had won Kim's endorsement.
The U.S. and North Korean officials agreed on a Written starement tba!
said the U.S. helicopter inadvertently strayed imo North Korean airspace.
American officials said .
"We did offer our sincere regreL~ for the accidental intrusion," Hubbard told a news conference.

Ex-LCCD director told
to pay for his jail time
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The former director of tbe Leading Creek Conservancy District
wiD stan a jail semence a1 his own
expense - despite earlier concerns
the county's coffers could be
bankrupted by tbe action.
In a Meigs County Common
Pleas Court entry filed Thursday.
visiting Morgan County Judge Dan
Favreau ordered Jack Crisp to
begin his sentence and pay for all
the costs of his incarceration.
Crisp, wbo founded the Leading
Creek water sy stem in the 1960s,
was sentenced to 18.months in jail

Final touches put
on water line JOb
it:J Pageville area

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Eighty-five households in the
PageviUe area now bave an opportunity to do something most people
· in this country take for granted:
turn on their faucets and get clean
drinking water.
This week, workers from the
Tuppel'li Plains-Chester Water District are putting the final touches on
a $400,000 project, installing
meters on. new water lines-along
Scipio Township Road 141, and
Homer Hill, Pageville and Vance
roads.
TP-CWD Manager Don Poole
•
said funding for the project came.. A "First Baby of 1995" contest
from the Meigs County Board of
is again this year being held with
Commissioners ($28,400), an Ohio
the winner to be presented numerDepartment of Development Comous gifts by Bend area merchants.
. munity Development Block Grant
The parents of the winning fmt
($272,906), prepaid engineering
baby of the year must be legal resicosts ($8,332) and a $97,685 loan.
dents of Meigs County. They are to
Thursday afternoon. Seen are, from Jell, Dave
INSTALLING WATER METERS- Tup·
New TP.CWD customer Donald
present to The Daily Sentinel a
Ervin of Southern Ohio Excavating, Haymon
pers Plains-Chester Water District workers
Weaver said getting water service
written statement from the attendHart and Kevin Wllllam5 of the TP-CWD, and
instaUed a water meter on tbe property of forinto the area completes an eight·toing physician specifying me exact
Scipio
Township Trustee Bobby Arnold.
mer
Scipio
Township
trustee
Donald
Weaver
10 year struggle.
time of birth, the name of the
"It feels good ... we've tried
infant , th e parents and ·their
The first thing people usually do for the contractor to fill In the address.
Poole said the minimum bill for
awfully bard to get it (the water),"
when
they get water is to sell tbeir water line trenches, which will
the
Pageville-area
customers
will
the former Scipio Township trustee
That statement must he submit·
occur later, he said.
water-hauling
tank, Poole si!id. In
be
$12.90
for
3,000
gallons.
Cusled with tbe newspaper by Jan. 10.
said.
Potential future projects for the
Weaver, who bad a good water tomers will have to connect the addition to water-hauling tanks,
Announcement of the winner
.
district
indude expanding water will he made the following day.
people
often
sell
their
pumps
and
well, said the water "will help water to tbeir houses, be said.
lines into Bedford Township and
Anybody looking for a good storage tanks, be added.
Gifts include a $15 gift ccrtifi·
PageviUe more than anybody."
East
Letart, Poole commemed.
The
next
step
in
the
project
is
deal
on
a
used
water-hauling
tank'!
"I'm really tickled," be added.
,cate from The Shoe Place. Middle·
port;
a $50 savings bond from The
Farmers Bank , Pomeroy : S25
worth of baby formula fr om
A Meigs County youth is loolc- endorsement, reckless operation ing the area over Middlepo~ill, block atUnion and Mulberry, bm Krogers, Pomeroy; $10 gift ccnifi·
me cycle went around me cruiser catc from Swisher-Loh sc: baby
ing at numerous Obio and West and operating with fictitious tags Sheriff James M. Soulsby sai .
"Deputy Manning Mob! s . on the sidewalk.
Virginia charges following a high- following a 9- 112 mile chase tbat
arrangement from Pomeroy Flower
"'Ilte suspect stopped after turn· Shop, Pomeroy; S10 gift certificate
speed chase in Meigs and Mason began on Union Avenue in ted the cycle on Stale Route 7 s it
Pomeroy and ended on Farm turned onto Union Avenue," he ing onto me Farm Museum Road." from Buttons and Bows, Pomeroy:
(W.Va.) counties Thursday night.
Travis S. Arnold, 18, Pomeroy, Musewn Road. near Point Pleasant. said. "Mohler attempted to make a Soulsby continued. "A West Vtr· ice cream calce from Dairy Queen.
Officel'li checking a residence in traffic stop on Union Avenue, but ginia juvenile was on the motorcy· Middleport; $25 gift certificate
was charged by Meigs County officials with felony fleeing, no opera- Middleport for a possible felony the motorcycle took off. Deputy ere with Arnold," he added .
from Vaughan's Cardinal:
tor's license and/or motorcycle suspect noticed a motorcycle leav· Robert Bee~le attempted a road·
A three piece feeder se1 from
(Continued on Pag~ 3)

for five misdemeanor counts ofreceiving improper compensation
for bonuses last February.
This year, Favreau waited for
coumy officials to find anO!her jail
1ha1 would bouse Crisp, but no
facility would accept him. Meigs
Prosecutor John R. Lentes said.
At press time today, Crisp
remained in Rive_rside Hospital in
Colwnbus in fair condition, a bospital spokeswoman said. The hos·
pital would not reveal if Crisp bad
undergone surgery yet.
Once the operation bas been
completed, Crisp must return to the
(Continued on Page 3)

K&amp;C Jewelers; a baby cup' from
Clarks Jewelry; SS gift certificate
from Fabric Shop: a free meal for
the parents from Crow's Restaurant : $10 savings account from
Racine Home National Bank; $20
gift certificate from Powell 's of
Pomeroy: $20 gift certiftcate from
Fruth Pharmacy. Middleport: a
package of Pampers from FoO&lt;I·
land. Pomeroy; S10 gift certificate
frotp Middleport Department Store;
and a first Bible from Mill Sueet
Books, Middleport.

-No paper
Monday_'
The Daily Sentinel office will
close at noon Saturday. The
newspaper will not be published .
Monday so that its employees
may observe the New Year's
holiday.
•
Regular publication and business hours resume Tuesday .

Meigs countians express their wi$hes for new year

1\

,.

HOURS:
Monday ..

........,...--·

-

--

9AM-8PM
SatUrday
9AM-4PM

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl
•
I

I'

"As I look forward to 1!195,
my 78th year, I would rlrst
like to s~e a cure -or vaccine
for AIDS. I would abo Uke to
·"My wiJh Ia tba!_Poru__ero_r___see a _little more ~ompasslon ,
anaMells County proceeil
aiid tolerance among all peo- s~essful y with revitalization
pie.
projects ... to move forward
"And 1 would also like to
•nd develop the community
see the access •rea to the drop
alld hu.ilnas district and preboxes In front of the Pomeroy
serve our heritage and past at
Post Office kept open so that ·
the IIIIIM thne. We hne a lot
those of us who cu't negotiate
to be proud ttl."
the steps un maD a letter."
1
Joe Clark
Richard L. Colenan
Pomeroy
Long Bottom

Frld~

I

DON TA'E MOTORS,··Inc.
•

Low tonight Ia the 301, rlla.
Saturday, OOCllllonal·riiD. HJcb

'

Taxes and title fee not included.
. .
A!l ·payments subject to credit approval.
~

"He seemed naturally somewhat dazed to have emerged from 13 days
of captivity to see generals lined up on both sides of the DMZ waiting for
him to cross," said Stale Department official Thomas Hubbard, who bad
worked out the final details of Hall's release.
Hall showed no signs of injury, Hubbard said. Co-piiO! David Hilemon
was killed. His body was returned last week:.
Hall, 28, was flown ·by belicopler 10 a U.S. military base in Seoul for a
medical checkup.
"First and foremost, I would like to express iny dcepmost sympathy
for Mrs. Hilemon," Hall said in a brief statement on the tarmac at Osan
Air Force Base outside Seoul.
He also thanked Hubbard for his "speedy return back to the free
world."
Hall, from Brooksville, Fla., then boarded a U.S. military plane that
left for McDill Air Force Base in bis home state.

Pomeroy teen faces multiple · charges in chase

88 CADILLAC SEVILI.J!!- ftl&amp; .... , •• ,,,,,,,, .....................-.................... 57,995
90 rovOOA cREssiD~ r ·., · ·~·························································· '7,960
91 PONTIAC FIREBIRD ·m.ct;•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..•.••.••.• f7 ,930

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
~---

5

93 GRAND PRIX·
12,985
92 CADILLAC BROUGHA» Wlrill ......, ......................................~............ 517,990
91 BUICK PARK.AV&amp;........~~••••.•.•.~......................................................... 111,985
91 FORD T·BIRO••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~············································· '7,945
5
83 MERCEDES 190E••••••••••••••••••• ~··•····•·•············································ 8,990
92 MAZDA MIATE MXSr OIBY. lid 5 lpll.,.l,,.,.,.,.,.,,.,,,.......... ,.,. .... 513,995

90 GMC 1/2 ·:Z WI). L.WB:·BI!II~- ................................................................s9,989
90 FORD F-150 5WB XL1" l.rrnilt-Sttplll-4x4
·-·--· s10,975
90 NISSAN PU'" 5 Sflld, wlliit-..- ....................................................................ss,970
91 GMC SONOMA-5Sprled, ...............-........................................................ s5,985
93 DODGE CARAVAN GRAND ES' I an I J, waite................................. '16,940
85 PLYMOUTII VOYAGER Sf.. .....,.,............................... ,. ............... 52,930
89 S-10 BLAZ~R 4,3- .-.,._., 1. ~T.I'Iirt ••,....., ............................. s9,920
92 S-10 PICKUP S.OB" AirC n .~s ; L... .., ... ____,,.,._,,,s7,965
94 NISSAN PATIIRJ.NDER" 1 'r .,Ae .,..................., ........................~23,995
92 CHEVROLET4X4 LWB SILVERADO•-'-" v..a. .....................
:......'J4,900,
. - ,. . .

1994 OLDS
CUTLASS
SUPREME

1994CHEVY 1994CHEVY
CORSICA
LUMINA
4 Door- V-6-Auto-AirCruise

~

1994 OLDS .

Loaded- V-6-Auto-AirCruise

'

It's that time again: first
baby of year contest set

V-6- A... Air- All Power

,._....,~All!.- I &amp;IIIW

$20 95
Y-'11•

589

.1994 BUICK REGAL

I rn•r~II•••KeJIIII~"-rSelll

$36,995

$22,495

~13

1995 OLDS 88 ROYALE

·1995 CADILLAC .EI,. DERATO
V-8- Ncwd

$

1994 BUICK CENTURY
~~Ia

ByGREGMYRE
Associated Press Writer
·.
SEOUL, South Korea- U.S. pilot Bobby Hall appeared dazed by the
drama surrounding his release today, and U.S. officials quickly put him
on a plane home after his 13-day ordeal in North Korea.
Hall, captured after his helicopter went down over North Korea on
Dec. 17, was freed after the U.S. government expressed regret for wbat it
called a navigational ei'I'Of-- n!lt a spy mission as claimed by the North.
The inciden'i tbrealened the fragile relations with the bard-line communist stale that bad been improving over the past two months.
Wearing the green fligbtsuit be wore when his helicopter went down,
Hallloolced pale as he walked to freedom in Panmunjom, the border vii·
!age in the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two Koreas.' Military
officers from both North Korea and the United·States were present for the
brief, solemn ceremully on a cold and overcast moming.

No more
hauling

1995 BUICK SKYLARK

1995 OLDS ACHIEVA S COUPE

5.71itre V8- Auto- T-tops- CD Player- Dark Green

4 door- AutoTilt

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1995 PONTIAC FIREBIRD FORMULA

19940LDS
ACHIEVA

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VB - Au1o- Air- Dllll Power Saa- I '"*4 ll!ltt 0111 -V6 • till- cnlilt -Air • c r til U Olea!.

V6- Auto- Air • Airbag- Cassette -lilt Wheel

Your
Choice

SAVE!!

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

$17,595

Includes First lime Buyer Rebate

1994CHEVY
CAVALIER OR
1994·PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

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Polo Olea- v6- a&gt; J11t1YF- AI .
WIINIICnlile - Power Wi&amp;tiiwi A Lcds - r.,lelllllllly

$13,995

r

1995 GMC JIMMY

1995 CHEVY CAMARO

Hardtop · 4x4 · Air .· Cassette

l

Freed pilot on way home from Korea

49

1995 CHEVROLET S SERJES

$14,299
1995 GEO TRACKER

\

2 Sections, 14 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedlolnc. Newep~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 30, 1994

1994 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER

A Loeb- Qaiii-1Ut

!j........----1!~

I

en tine

...

1995 CHEVY LUMINA

3DR Coupe-5 speed -Great Mileage-Air CoacitioaiD1

\~ -~ ~

•

,.·

Vol. 45, NO. 168
Copyrlght1994

1995 GEO METRO

Pick 3:
9-9-3
Pick 4:
2-4-2-4
Buckeye 5:
2-12-15-17-34

I

"I hop, tbe schools will
_
continue to do well and levies
"My wish for 1995 is for
--;-"· - - - -will- be- passed.-.Also, U-a~good-bealth for all-my family. ---~·1- liolpe·for-yhleb&lt;rallflf";or-ll-"My wish is for more
teacher al Eastern, I would
. "I also wish for prosperity
myself and !ftY family. I also
industry and plants in the
like to see parents take a
for Meigs County. It would be
wish more laid-off miners
area so ·YOUIII! people can stay
greater interest In their child.
wonderful if more of our chil·
would be caUed back to work.
In Meigs County." ·
The children we are raising
dren cotald remain in the area
I've been laid olf from Mine l
Monica HOI
now will take care of us in the
and be able to nnd good jobs."
sinc:e 1992 after worJUna tMn
Syracuse
futur~."
1
for 17 years."
Betsy Jones
Becky Johnston
De. . . T. . :
Racine
Langsville
Rutland '

"
I·

I'

'I

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31851">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31850">
              <text>December 29, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6332">
      <name>hallam</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
