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November 28,1883

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~OI!'It Pleasant, WV

Page E8 Suncflly 11met Sentinel

Bengals
win first
game16-10

MuiU··aged dance troupe teaches diverSity
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) The last time Elizabeth Shames
went to dance class she was in New
York City, and it was 193S.
Now, more than half a century
later, arter a career as a textile
designer and weaver, two marriages, three children and four
grandchildren, she's back in a Panland dance studio laking classes,
rehearsin_g and perfonning with 50
others m an unconventional,
""multigenerational"' dance company named Perennial Effects.
They don't do ballroom or ballet, but a free-form style of modem
dance. The dancers - ranging
from 8 to 78 - have jobs, go to
school, collect pension checks.
There is a grocery store clerk, an
executive. retirees and school kids.
'"It is intimidating to see this
wide range of both boys and girls
and men and women. My feeling
was they would look at me and say,
'What's that little old lady doing
here? ' " said Shames, a greatgrandmother in her 70s.
·
Instead, the diversity draws
dancers together. Once people start
going to class and 'perfonnmg ·they
rarely drop out, Betsy Dunphy, the

group's founder and director, said.
She lists multigenerational
'"It doesn't feel like a dance dance groups in places . likerehearsal. It's sort of like a family Portsmouth, N.H., Portland, Ore.,
reunion," said Emily Ainsworth, and New York City. In Burlington,
Vt., there's one that calls itself
II, who is in sixth grade.
The group puts on about six ' 'Cradle to Grave" dancers.
" I think that it's good for young
public perfonnances a year, includpeople
to see that grandmas can
ing one at the Maine Arts festival.
dance,"
said Priscilla Green, who
Once a year they put on a show of
·
is
"over
65""
and works as a voluntheir own; this year, they're taking
teer
coordinator
at the Southern
their act to schools.
Maine
Agency
on
Aging.
There are similar groups all over
The dancers poke fun at shopthe United States, says Ltz Lerman,
ping
with a piece called "Paper or
a Washington, D.C., choreographer
Plastic."
'"The Picnic" lampoons
who lectures about incorporating
high
society.
all ages in dance.

beca11se basically ·they could be up fmetuning.
"Sometimes they're fun and
there with us," she wd.
funny
and goofy ... then there are
After performing all summer
ones
that
are really personal ...
and taking the month of Septeniber
some
are
heart-breaking,"
Dunphy
off, preparation for the company's
said.
fourth season has begun.
Dancers say they stick wilh the
The moderl\ 'ttance method
~up
because they like the crtativevolved from ballet and still uses
tty,
the
exercise, the camaraderie
classic moves like pointed toes and
·
and
the
chance
to ~onn.
knee bends called plies. ~J~a~d
"It's a little b1t like llCrlllission
of music goes - from B · ' to
Scottish fiddle to folk, the Four to be a kid in this adult serious
Tops, James Taylor, country West- world I work and live in," John
Leddy, 53, said. Leddy, wbo worts
em,
swing and jazz.
reason.
at a social service agency, began
Dancers-come
up
with
ideas
for
' 'There's a lot of resonance with
the audience, they can relate. to it choreography; DunphY, does the dancing at age 50.

" Fire in the Meltinll Pot" is
about the Los Angeles ndts. Dunphy says it's intended to $how the
audience how easy television made
it for the nation to distance itself
from the tragedy. Dancers pretend
to fildlt while others watch through
mdck TV screens made by fonning
squares with their fmgers.
Kate Bohrson, 35, who danced
professionally before marriage and
children, thinks performances
attract crowds for an uncommon

.

Pick 3:
913
Pick 4:
4152
Super Lotto:
3-12-28-30-38-41
Kicker:

Page4

060551

Vol...... N0.151

Getting into the spirit----..

:Withrow
·off to D.C.
'

.

Ohio treasurer
.takes federal job
-·

COLUMB.US, Ohio (AP) State Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow used to hand out tiny bags of
shredded money during promotional StopS at county fairs. In her new
job as U.S. Treasurer, she will put
her signature on the bills.
President Clinton nominated the
Marion County Democrat to oversee the Bureau of Engraving and
Printing, the Mint and the Savings
Bond nromun.
"IhaiiSI:inating job really,"
Withrow said in anticipa!ion of her
move to Washington. "It's. man·
agement and PR. Anythi.ng that
would represent the need for promotion with the money would be

WASHINGTON (,\f) - Children may get yet another shot when
they go to the doctor next spring, as
the government gets set to IIJ'Pl1)Ve
a vaccine to prevent that itchy rite
of childhood called chic~ pox.
And doctors are predicting a
rush for the vaccine - not because
parents know the d.jsease ~ills
about~ ~lea y~. bllt-.l!ecause

i

The appointment marks the !at·
est achievement in a political
career that began in 1969 when
Withrow was the first woman
elected to her local school board.
· "I ran so well that that's what
got me into partisan politics. Then I
ran for clerk of courts in '72 and
got beat," she said.
' "That's what kept me always
working hard so that never happened again. That was not f1 fun
.experience. It got in my blood,
though. I couldn't get it out,"
Withrow said.
Withrow, 63, was elected Marion Copnty .treasurer in 1976, and
was first elected state treasurer in
1982. ~he rolled up !ROle votes in
· · ·.a thiid.terin'·i!l.l990 !J!M

Downtown Pomeroy was
packed Sunday afternoon for
the merchant's open house and.
Christmas parade. Following a
chilling parade, above, Santa
(Curly Wiles) was made avail·
able to youngsters, some witb
lengthy Christmas lists. At Iert,
6-year-old Frank "Butchie"
Shamblin, Columbus, gives
Santa his wish Ust which COD•
tains a toy amhulanc.e, a dartboafd, a ~~d,l~t,.,B IUD
.:...allll movies :lf~,le, bl­
.~ vOiiiOVi'Crt'd!GuicaP: tbe county visltina relatives this
turing lhe&lt;sov~·s office. ·
:week, said be bas· beeti a goo.c~.
Withrow wiD move Ul Washin$boy but admittt!d ltd being
ton in .early Fa!ruary afiU what 1s
ornery on occasslo•. See Page 3
expected to be routine Senate con- · for m·ore parade highlights.
flllilatiOn of her appointment.
(Photos by Jim Freeman)
She acknowledged that some
people may view the job as ceremonial, but said she is not among
them.
'"There's a lot to be involved
with. They're constantly concerned
about the counterfeinng, so ·that
probably wiD be a big issue on how
to control it," she said. "They're
looking at changing the money,.
they're looking at changing ... the
type of paper that we use."
Withrow .credits an employee
with the idea to hand out souvenir
bags of shredded money. ·
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
"There was only one lime
Supreme Court is examining the
somebody made fun of it," she
way judges impose contempt-ofsaid. ''The very fnt fair they made
court fines in considering whether
some kind or a smart remark about
the United Mine Workers·of Amerit, 'The state treasurer is passing
ica must pay $52 million related 1o
out money at the fair.'''
a violent 1989 labor strike in VirThe g~mmiclt: was pollular with
ginia.
tl)e public. "School children are
The union is asking the high
wrinng all the time wanting enough court to lift the fines, which were
for the class."'
believed to be the largest civil conA political and fiScal conservatempt sanction ever imposed by an
tive, Withrow was elected to the
American court. After hearing
Qemocralic National Committee in
arguments today, the justices are
1984 and has been on its executive expected to rule by next July.
committee since 1988.
The union contends the conHer husband, Norman, is a teml?t proceeding actually was
retired rural mail carrier. They have crimmal in nature and thus should
four daughters and four grandchil- have provided greater constitutiondren.
al proteCtions. The union also says
the fines were unconstitutionally
There was a time in the mid·
1970s when she thought, however
neetingly. of abandoning politics.
She was ~ motor vehicle depqty
regi!ttar at the time.
•'I pulled out of the parlcing lot
where I had the license bureau and
somebody ran into me. I came
home and I told Norman, 'I'm done
with politics.' But it wasn't done
with me. You just get sucked right
back into it," Withrow said.

cine,"

About 3.9 million Americans,
mostly' children, get chicken pox
every year. Caused by the highly
con~ous varicella virus, it typically JUSI causes severe itching and

rash-.

••a•a.~•

2 Dr. Spqrt C0~1 P/B, 5 Sp. Manual Transmission,
Custom ClotltBUCI&lt;et SealS. Steel Belted Tires.
GMAC First Turw iJu1w

l"""li.. (If Oualiflold) ..... . -$tOO

·

rom-Disc................ -11292

34 lawmakers admit
to taking free trips

Supreme Court reviewing
contempt fine in ·uMW case

Fa&lt;:lr!ry flellte..... ,.......... ·$1/XXJ

IIJf . . IWIII
Auto, Air, PiS, P/8, Rear Window Defroster, AM/FM Cassette,

.

Till. Cruise, P/Windows, P/Door Locks, P/Orive·r Seat,

Aluminum Wheels, Prestige Option Package, Loaded!

· ~~~ .. 11,18
8

excessive.
The Clinton administration is
supporting the two coal companies
targeted by the strike. They argue
that the fines were properly
imposed in a civil proceeding
intended to coerce the union into
stopping violent activity.
The fines stemmed from a strike
by the union and its District 28
a~ainst two affiliated coal compantes, Clinchfield Coal and Sea
'"B" Mining Co., from April
through December 1989. The union
said it was protesting unfair labor
practices.
The strike drew international
auention and labor support because
of the use of women, children and
non-miner supporters in sit-down
demonstrations and because 99

miners took over a coal processing
plant for several days.
But it also included violent tactics to disrupt shipments and intimidate replacement workers. State
court hearings included testimony
about rock throwing, shots fired
into vehicles, spikes· placed on
roads, equipment sabotaged with
dynamite, and '"scabs" routinely
beaten up.
Early in the strilre, a state judge
barred the union from certain
unlawful conduct and ordered
union officials to stop acts of vio·
lence and intimidation by union
members.
The judge held eight contempt
hearings and imposed fines totaling
$64 million by the time the strike
was settled Jan. 1, 1990.

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'" Tlllllll 1-111-IZl-:lfll ~ 112·2144·•·M-114~·· fZZ-1111
• Taxes,

Title Pees extra. Rebate included in sale price

Mll.lj ~ lltlriJ 1.:11 tll:ll

. III.IJJ:I'b1:1

I listed where applicable :on approved credit'. Nol responsible IQf lypOgrapliicat errors. ·

CHRISTMAS

•.
'

'"

Court to review
separation of
church, state
WASHINGTON (AP) - The 1971 ruling. But today's order
Supreme Court today agreed to reflected no such limitation.
reconsider its longstanding rule for
The high court has allowed the
enforcing the constitutionally district to continue upenlling pendrequired separation of church and ing fmal action in the case.
The court's 1971 ruling in
State.
The court voted to use a case Lemon vs. K urtzrnan said laws or
involving a New York school dis- government practices are unconstitrict created for children of a tutional if they have a religious
Hasidic Jewish community to re- purpose, primarily advance or proexamine its landmark 1971 ruling mote religion, or excessively entanon how far government may go to gle government and religion.
New York legislators created
accommodate religious beliefs or
the Kiryas Joel district in 1989 10
practices.
The high .:ourt has relied on that resolve a dispute over how to eduruling in deciding many church- cate disabled children in the
Orange County village.
state issues over the past 22 years.
Almost all village residents are
In the case accepted for review
today. New York courts ruled that members of the Satmar Hasidic
lhe creation of the Kiryas Joel Vii• sect, a devoutly religious group that
lage School District was an uncon- maintains an insular community
stitutional government endorse- . where religious ritual and distinctive dress are observed, Yiddish is
ment of religion. '
The justices could have granted often spoken instead of English,
review and limited the issues in the and girls and boys are educated
case to avoid reconsidering the
Continued on Page 3

my~L''

ther, think 11 IS sw:h 'a nuisance.
'Some people liaV'c WOIIdcr¢ if
the gain is worth the cOst of a vaccine .for chicken pox," said Dr.
Samuel Katz a pediatrician at
Duke University 1\iedical Center.
"But parents are knocking on the
door Sl!yingrthey want this vac-

1 Section, 10 , . _ :II .....
A Mullltllecla Inc. Newa......,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 29, 1993

Multlmeclllino.

But about 9,000 peot~velop
complications rangmg
blood
infections to brain damage. An
average of 92 died each year from
1987 to 1991. Children with weak
immune systems and adults are
most at risk.
Christopher Chinnes, 12, was
one of those victims. The steroids
the North Carolina boy was taking .
for a severe asthma attack sup·
pressed his immune system, allow·
ing chicken pox to shut down his
organs one by one.
"It would have been kinder to
shoot ruin in the head than the way
he died," said his mother, Rebecca
Cole, who haS lobbie4 for vaccine
approval sinCe Christopher's death
in 1988. "If we bad had a vaccine,
he would be here today.''
Mrs. Cole's lobbying may pay
off soon. The Food and Drug
Adminislfllion is in the fmal StageS
of investigating Varivax, a chicken
pox vaccine developed by Merck &amp;
Co. An a4v~ commiuee is writing its conclUSIOIIS DOW, and FDA
could approve t\le, vaccine by
spring,
-A:.. V ' .
ill .
Doctors ..,.~t anvax w cut
chicken pox to 240,000 cases a
year with only four deaths. And a
study sponsorell by the federal
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention found Varivax would
cost $157 million a '!.ear but would
save almost $700 million a year in
medical bills and wort lost by parents of sick children.
Japan and Europe ~ave used a
version of the vaccine ~sflilly
since the mid·l980s.
.
But its development here bas
been very slow. Doctors disliked
giving healthy childrep a live vic·
cine for an illness that is usUally
mild. Others questioned whethCt: It
was needed when less than half the
nation's preschoolers are inoculaied against more serioqs diseases
like measles.
Varivax is m&amp;de from a weak·
eoed varicella virus that exposes
someone to very mild chicken pox,
enoup to build annbodies against
the dtsease.
Merck lias test vaccinated
11,000 people since 1981. Almost
every child developed immunity:
adulta needed twO doses.

Lmo IOnJabt In 1- 2&amp;, clear.
Tucsdaysuony blgb ID low 401.

'

Chickenpox
vaccine on
the horizon

WASffiNGTON (AP) - California and many East Coast swes
are still struggling to shake off the
recession in contrast with a nearbOOm across parts of the y.'estem
Plains and Rocky Mo.unlains.
·
californians, hard hit .~ layoffs
in the defense and aaospiCe
u-ies, saw their incomes srow the
least of any state over the 12·
months ending in the·aecond quarter of this year, the Commerce
. l)eparlment said Thursday. .
:
J?enonal inc:Omis ~W ·just 3.2
: pe;cet~t, ·ihere, compared with i ·
nationll average increaiC of S. s
· · percent. Meanwhile, in ldjoining
Nevalla, incomes shol up 10.7 per·
· cent; the best in the nation.

Ohio Lottery

ANTLERS GALORE - 'Game protectors
Keith Wood, left. aDd Charles StbDe Sunday displayed some of tbe atitlers, ftrearma . .d deer
meat seized from suspected SJ\otlllhlers Friday
morning. Landowners In the Alfred area of

Melp County were cruelallll tbe arrest of three
Athens County men suspected of poacbinJ.
More tban 40 sets of ..tiel's were confiscated.
(SenttDel photo b.f Jim Freeman).

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Nearly
half of the..state lawmakefl!· who
talked about the matter said they
accepted trips from special interest
groups, but 61 of Ohio's 132 lawmakers did not respond to a newspaper survey on the issue.
The Beacon Journal asked legislators what trips they had taken at
someone else's ·expense since
1991. They also were asked if they
took guests and the estimated value
of the trips.
The newspaper said Sunday that
34 of the 71 legislators who
responded said that since 1991,
lhey had taken trips that were paid
for in fuU or in part by lobbyists or
private organizations.
The remaining 37 respondents
said they took no such trips, while
61 lawmakers did not respond.
Locally, Senator Jan Michael
Long, D-Circleville, did not
respond to the survey and State
Representative Mark Malone, OSoulh Point, reported he has not
accepted any free trips.
The newspaper said legislators
were given 1wo weeks 10 respond
to the survey. It did not specify
how the survey was taken.
The Ohio House recently passed
a bill requiring disclosure of all
gifts worth more than $7S. In the
case of travel, they would be
required 10 identify the source, the
value of the lodging and air fare
and the date, destination and purpose of uavel. The bill is awaiting
Senate action.
Ohio law requires that legisla-

tors disclose travel-related gifts
valued at~ than $500 from any
group m a smgle year. On any trip
with expenses of more than $500,
lawmakers must report that such an
expenditure was made but not how
much or for what purpose.
Sen. Robert Boggs, D-Jeffcrson,
was the survey respondent who
reported the most free travel. He
said he took 10 trips which had a
total value of $6, 135.43.
Boggs could not be reached for
comment Sunday nighL There was
no answer at hiS Columbus telephone, which is also the only number listed for him in the Jefferson
directory.
Boggs reported accepting trips
to the Hall of Fame Bowl in 1991
and the Florida Citrus Bowl in
1992 that were paid for by Ohio
State University. The combined
value of the trips was $2,207 .94.
Ohio State recently adopted a
policy banning free bowl trips for
lawmakers.
. The state representative reporttng the most free travel was Priscilla Mead, R-Columbus, who has
been in office less than a year, She
did not report the value of the eight
trips to the newspaper.
""if I never got outside Franklin
County to see how things are done
how can I make an informed deci:
sion?" she told the newspaper. Ms.
Mead could not be reached for
comment Sunday night. Messages
were left on her home and office
answering machines.

Activists say Ohio could
do more to combat DUis
CINCINNATI (AP) -Ohio is
doing a good job in trying to crac;k
down on drunken drivers, say
activists who would like even
stiffer penalties to be considered.
Andrea Rehkamp, of Mothers
Against Drunk Dnving, was in
Columbus last week urging state
legislators to pass tougher laws,
even though Ohio already has some
of the toughest DUI laws in the
nation.
Ms . Rehkamp and other
activists are pushing for legislation
that would offer additional prot.ection and compensation to victims
of drunken drivers.
Efforts to further punish DUI
offenders eamed Ohio a B-plus rating in a MADD study. The grade
was shared with Arizona, New
Mexico and North Carolina. Only
Illinois ranked higher.
"We're pleased Ohio is rated so
high, '' said Ms. Rehkamp,
MADD's director of victim assistance in Cincinnati. "But there is
still more that needs to be done."'
Activists and law enforcement
offiCials said Ohio earned the high
marks because of extensive public

awareness campaigns, stringent
state laws and a willingness to
make DUI enforcement a top priority.
MADD praised Ohio for imposing penalties on drivers who refuse
to take sobriety tests and for backing public information campaigns
such as "Ride Sober."'
A state law passed three years
ago allows police to suspend a
driver's license on the spot if the
person is intoxicated or refuses to
lake a sobriety test. The law also
calls for confiSCation of any vehicle
driven by someone in their fourth
DUI offense.
MADD has campaigned to
increase public awareness about the
dan~ers of drunken driving.
' We've been successful in
reaching the public because we've
been able to personalize the victims," Ms. Rehkamp said. "We've
put a name and a face to the statis'

tics.··

The federal government says
32.6 percent of the 1.4311
deaths in Ohio last year involved
alcohol.

traffic

�Monday, November 29, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

l.ETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name,

address ahd telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
. .
ExceqltS of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide mterest:
The Cluclnnati Enquirer, Nov. lO .
.
..
.
ContraJy to conventional pundit w1sdom. the b1gges1 polibcal w1~~er
in the turbo-hyped NAFTA race was not President Clinton. The coali~n
that passed the North American Fn:e Trade Agreement was actually a v•ctory for all the Americans who thought they were electing a moderate
"New Demoaat" when they voted for Clinton in 1992.
But to keep that pomise, he had to b~ others:
.
- He turned his back on the left wmg of his own party. and mstead
appealed to moderate Democrats and Republican, who delivered the
majority of votes.
.
.
. .
- He split with the big bibor umons that helped put h1m mto office:
_ And once again, Clin1011 betrayed his promises 10 vo~ to dehver
cleaner government. The giveaways, the handouts and spec1al favors he
passed out to buy NAFT A voteS are only beginning to ~merge.
.
If Clinton applies his !llrong rhetoric about compeUbon to. change. h1~
own flawed pbins for health care and bigger government; if he seiZes
upon the moderate, centrist ~ilion tha~ won NAf!~ to s~ down the
middle instead of v~ left mill the ditch of socialism- if that happens, the nation may get IS New Democrat after all.

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohln
Monday, November 29, 1993

Low-income U.S. women priced out of' Norplant
WASHINGTON - Rep. Ron
Wyden, D-Ore., hopes that when
the health care system is reformed,
the government can afford to treat
American women as well as it
treats women in Third World countries.
Last year, the Agency for International Devefopment spent $4.5
million on Norplant contraceptive
devices for 167,000 Third World
women, yet the government could
not afford to prov ide the same
device to many lower income
American women. This lime, however, the government is not entirely
at faull : AID can purchase each
contraceptive from its Finnish manufacturer for $23, yet American
women have to pay a U.S . drug
company $365. Mter medical fees
are figured •n , the contraceptive
can cost American women up to
$1 ,000.
Adding insull 10 injury is this:
American taxpayers have already
paid over $16 million 10 help
develop Norplant, a contracepbve
that expertS ~stimate only costs $16
to make.
"It's one thing if a private seclor company shoulders all the risk

themselves," Wyden, chairman of
the small business subcommittee
on regulation, business opportunities and technology, told our as so-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ciate Andrew Conte. "That's free
enterprise and deserves 10 be handsomely rewarded. It's quite another
when the taxpayer does much of
the heavy lifting.
"It' s sad when you've got thousands of women in this countrr
who can't get access 10 (Norplant)
while U.S. tax dollars are used 10
subsidize the purchase of the dru~
overseas at one-tenth the price,'
added Wyden.
The domestic price of Norplant
is set by pharmaceutical giant
Wyeth -Ayerst, which holds the
rights to Levonorgestrel, the ~ain
ingredient in oral contracepuves
and Norplant. Family planning
activists 8rJ!IIe that Wyeth-Ayerst's
main contnbulion 10 Norplant's 25-

Portsmouth Daily Times, Nov. 17
A recent look at President CliniOn ·s first year in office showed. that he
.is having his way with Congress more ofien than any other preS&gt;dent m
the bist 50 years.
.
1
After analyzing all roll call votes through Sept. 14, CongressiOnal
Quarterly found that the president received congressional support 88.6
pereent or the time.
While the repon is encouraging for the p~ident and r&gt;c:mocrat-controUed Congress, we find it to be both predicnve and potentially danger-

Law professor Nadine Strossen; campuses, and she has declared
president of the American Civil that attempts to have her exchange
Liberties Union, is also an active views with First Amenllment femimember of Feminists for Free nists is "the pimps' current sttateExpression. That group of writers
and scholars vigorously disagree
with Catharine MacKinnon's dis'JJ
missal of the First Amendment in
her jihad'against pornography, very gy fo{ legitimizing a slave trade in
broadly defined . In her new book women. I do not need to be sucked
ed If
States.
· mtent
·
d
the Justice Department follows u~uug.h on .•ts
~ pursue epor""Only Words," MacKinnon in10 the pornographers' strategy."
tatior! based on Demjanjuk's lying on •mm•grabon forms, 11 should do so attacks the notion "that we must
In a letter circulated Ill a number
procet:t ideas regardless of the mis- of women judge$.Nadine Strossen
q~.resolulion or this case should not occur on the stree1 in _front. of chief they do in the world."
knows - mcluding Justice Ruth
Demjanjuk's home, or on any other stage of protesL No~ should ling~g
Last year, Strossen was invited Bader Ginsburg ....,. Strossen said
questions be allowed 10 fade unanswered. At long, laborious bist, the arne
10 speak at the 1993 ,convention of she was "disttessed that such an
has come for the final legal episode of john Demjanjuk's battles 10 be
the National Association of important and inOuential group (as
wriaen.
Women Judges . (Also in auen- was at the convention) should hear
dance would be women lawyers only one feminist position" on
The Columbus Dispatch, Nov. 21
·
not on the bench.) This summer. pornography and censorship.
The Statehouse OlristmaS aee and menorah display that have become
when Strossen called to double"Too many people," she added,
a joyful tradition of the holiday season should be allowed this year as in check the date, she was told she "assume that MacKinnon speaks
thepasL
'
had beeq disinvited.
for ail feminists. It is particubirly
The CapiiOI Square Review and Advisory Board members understandIt is Strossen 's indignant belief unfortunate that this misconception
ably are cOncerned that if the state displays a Chrisunas ~ and. a me'!O- that she was turned away because should have been propounded
rah, it might in lime he forced lo allow other symbols - mcluding those · the women judges had been able to among your members, g•ven their
of the Ku Klux Klan.
·· ·
.
. .
engage another law professor, the elevated stature and significant
The state of Ohio does not have 10 abandon the overwheimmg majonty renowned Catharine MacKinnon. power in our society."
of its citi2cns and bend its knee 10 a ragtag band of provokers.
Why not have a debate between the
Organizers of the convention
Gov. George Voinovich's response was blunt
..
.
.
two? Through the years. MacKin- deny that the judges, star struck at
"Tbe board's initial decision 10 not .have the ttadin~al ~!•day disnon has made it clea~ ~ she will , the prospect of seei~g and li~ing
plays was a mistake. I trust this matter w1U be resolved qwcldy.
not share a platform With femmtsts 10 MacKinnon, dec•ded to JCtbSOn
The governor and legislative leaders are on the mark. Back off the ban. placing free expression above the Suossen. There had simply been a
Let the Chrisanas tree and the menorah each stand in a place of honor.
pervasive dangers to women of misunderstanding, they say, and in
pornography.
·
any case, MacKinnon had placed
MacKinnon has bll'lled down an no conditions on her appearance.
offer from a lecture agency to
Yet, one of the judges on the
debate Nadine Strossen on college committe~ to select the speaker

NaJ Ben'to•«

·k-

Letters to the editor
.
were

Reedsville when i see lliis lady thai
built a brand new home. She was
ready 10 throw her garbage l)ver a
bank. She'd rather throw her
garbage over a hill than dirty her
new house or vehicle.
These people are just plain lazy
and thoughtless of others when
they Utter. How difficult is it 10 lift
a hd on a trash can? You people
who !hrow out garbage are lost in
life. This is the age of video, do
keep smiling and have a liuer free
day.
LindaAym
. Reedsville

vm.

T.~. ~~vy Cmm-.
t

appeared 10 have given the game
away when she told David Margolick, a law reporter for The New
York Times: "I had heard that she
was not very receptive to be with
women who disagree with her. The
general feeling was that MacKinnon would be less than pleased to
be on the program with Strossen,
so we had a choice."
The judges chose to do without
Sb'Ossen and her contrary views.
Another judge on the selection
comminee, insisting on anonymity,
told me, "I didn 'I attend most of
the meetings or the committee, but
had I known that MacKinnon
would inhibit a free exchange of
ideas, ·J would have argued against
her appearance." She paused. "I
am d•s~nssed . " And she paused
again, "I am highly distressed."
Present at MacKinnon's solo
night was Deborah Leavy, executive direc10r or the ACLU of Pennsylvania. Leavy was a leading
pourer of sunlight on Sheldon
Hackney's circumventions of the
First Amendment when he was
president of the University of
Pennsylvania. She 100 felt that the
women judges should have heard a
· response to the incandescent
MacKinnon. Panicubirly, I would
add, when some of them will have
indecency cases before them.
At the convention, MacKinnon
spolce so long that there were only
a few minutes for comments and

questions. Leavy, malcin¥ herself
heard, commended MacKinnon for
being a very effective user of the
First Amendment. She should not,
Leavy added, deny the use of the •
First Amendment to others.
MacKinnon's answer, part of
her standard anti-pornography
vocabubiry was: "I speak for all
the WOmen and children (victims of
pomoJiraphy) whose Fll'S! Amendment rights have never been
defended by the American Civil
Liberties Union." Says Leavy:
"That was it And she got cheers I"
The National,. Association of
Women Judges did provide agesture on behalf of the Fiist Amendment. There was a People for the
American Way program of readings of once-censored works by •
performers Celeste Jiolm and Eric
Bogosian.
Included wei:e passaRes from the
"Diary of AMe Franlt' and "The
Catcher in the Rye." There was no
indication that either work has
offended Catharine MacKinnon.
And there was a song from the
musical "Hair" : "Let the Sunshine In." Most of the women ,
judges present didn't get it
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights,
Nat Heatoff is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper EDterprlse
~don.
,

Will history repeat itself in Europe? _ _ __

The temptation to see hisiOry as
a closed circle of repetitive cyeles
is sometimes as overwhelming as it
is simple-minded. Fon:ing current
events to fit pnxut patterns risks
losing sight of fact in the pursuit of
theory.
Despite that caveat, I can ' t
escape a growing apprehension
about the Oow of events in Europe.
Every now and then, and never
more strongly than on the morning
after Ilaly's elections last week, my
concerns lake the form of a scene
fi'om the movie "caba:reL"
It comes in an outdoor beer garden/restaurant where a freshly
scrubbed young blond male is .
sweejly singing an evlic!ltive song.
By Tile Alloclated Press
Today is Mllnday, Nov. 29, the 333rd day of 1993. There are 32 days Tben; as the camera slowly pulls
back, yob begin to realize .that his
left in tile year.
arm comes complete with swastika
Toda 'a Hlghligbt in Hlstory:
armblnd.
Qne:by..one, and then in
on :fov. 2~. 1952, President-elect ,Eisenho:wer kept his campaign
clulllps,
IIUIIIY
of the other patrons,
piOII!ite 110 visit Korea to assess the ongomg conflict.
no
longer
the
pic~ue Gemtan
IIi 1530, Clnlinll Thomas Wolsey, onetime ndviser 10 England's King
proVinCials they origin8lly seemed,
Henry
·
so Cheyenne 1ndians m
·
rise or jump to their feet, mimick·
In 1864, died;
1 Cokndo militia killed at least I
ing the youthful party cheerleader
what blame known as the Sand Creek Massacre.
In 1924 ltlliil\comJIDSCi' Giacomo Puccini died in Brussels before he as he gives the Nazi salute.
A fogical relorl to that image is~
c-ould coniplete liil final opera, Turandot. II was finished by Fran~
a sharp, "Nonsense." The rll!:t that
LL
Richard E. Byrd radioed that he'd made the the political center disintegrated in
llaly, leaving the stage to former
fir1t i!rplae Di3Jtt over the South Pole.

Today in history

~
•lcolumbusl41 '

'nUodtJing
Carter lll
I
to the endemic corru]ition of the
Christian ·Democrats and their
Socialist allies. Somethin~ so rouen
at the cin was bound to unplode, it
can .be argued, and the extremes lire
always the first, though not necessarily the lasting, beneficiaries. It is
nol, however, necessarily or even
~~~bly the precursor of a new
st takeover.
Unfortunately, Italy is 9DIY an
ex~me manifestation of a more
generalized European disease, Its
causes include:
·
· A stagnant economy from the
Atlantic to Siberia, enervated or
irrelevant Pfniea of the center~ICI\.
and center•rlght almost every~
where, seisinic shifts in the politi,
cal landscape of the old Warsaw
Pact 'froni Moseow to G~rmany,
and 111 immigrant tide of diisimilat
folk across national borders
unknown in "Europe for hundreds of

'years.

ence in governing, and even if they :
did, the mess they inherited def1es :
overnight solutions. Bad as the old
commUnist regimes were, some of
their former subjects view them
nostalgically as models of Slllbility
compared to their~IIi Western Europe, the picture
is less bleak but the shorHerm
prospects are .not inspiring. Put
Italy aside. Tbe Conservative govemmetit in England teeters on the
edge of irrelevance and collapse. ·
The· Kohl government in Germany
presides over an economy marked
by heavy unemployment and a
newly unified nation that in many
ways is as divided today betw~
Eaat ~ WCII by economic disparity ai it once was by the Berlin
The
~ ~emmcnt
as yet to
IS way,
v~
ha Vln$ renounced ·soft-edged
~. 'and CCOIIOIIlic opportu.
socialiSm with!)ut e'l'bracing a
· nity and social stabii!IY are Iii shoit . coherent altemaUve.
supply. In Central and Eastern
Hoddlng Carter III, former
Europe, the heaily days fol)owing _
State
Depar_tment spokesman
the fall of communism and the rollback of Soviet contrpl are already and award·wlllnlne-rtporter, edi·
memories. 'There is Ito silver tor tllld pubUsher/ ls president or
bul et or magic potion for MaiDStreel, a Wasblalloa, Q.C.·
based 'television production comeconomies that'are adrift. Tlie new
pany.
denlocnttic parties have no expeiiThese earJy warning signs
should oot be exaggerated, but they
must not be ignored. "It can't happen here" is a familiar, and usually
wrong, reliain. Deniocri,cy is sustained by shallow lOOtS in much of
the new Europe. It would be idiotic
to mimic the .Manl1st-Leninists
who pretended 10 scientifiC certainty about the triumph of .communism right up 10 the point that it
colhipSed.
· There is, ho)Vever, a certain predictabi{ity about hull!an nature.
PeOple ·tte81cd the state to promote,
protect and preserve their wellbeinJ. When, a state 'fails in that
mission, the people loolt.to leaders,
patties and philosophies that
pro~ to ~ order _and prospenty.
.
, l'hat brinJ1s us back to Europe,
where ~lsm has given· way lO

;;vlill.

ft:j

liazr

I

I

truck.

W.VA.

~

- --

Sunny Pt Cloc:dy CloiJdy

Ice
Via Associatsd Press GtaphicsNst

C1993j ccu-Waathar, Inc.

Cold spell will
break Tuesday
By The Associated Press
The unseasonably cold weather covered much of the West
.
across Ohio and snow in the north
Snow blanketed Mmneapohs.
will come 10 an end on Tuesday, Detroit; Chicago and Spokane, Wash.
forecasters said. But first, lemperaShowersmSanF~anc•scoandparts
lures are 10 dip into the low 20s of no~em Cal1fomm were expected
again tonight and snow flurries will to conunue through much of the day.
linger in the northeast.
Ram also was f~recast m parts of
Skies will be mostly sunny Orego~ and WashmgiOn. .
Tuesday with highs ranging from
High pressure stretchmg from
the upper 30s to low 40s, the Na- Min~esota to .~lahama was expected
tiona! Weather Service said.
tobnng sunshme and m1lder weather
Dry weather is forecast for thlsaftemoontothePiamsand western
Wednesday and Thursday and !ern· Gulf States.
.
peratures will be closer to normal
OnSunday,ablastofsnowbnefly
with highs in the 40s.
closed the a1rp0rt m Milwaukee and
The record-high temperature snarled h•ghways carrymg ThanksglvforthisdateattheColumbusweather mg travelers home. Strong wmd and
station was 70degrees in 1927 while heavy rain brought the holiday to a
the record low was 3 in 1887. Sun- soggy close m the East.
set tonight will be at 5:08 p.m. and
Eight inches of snow was reported
sunrise Tuesday at 7:33 a.m.
at . Mitchell lntemauonal A1rp0n m
Southern Ohio
Milwaukee, while llmches fell m the
Tonight, clearing with a low in City.
.
thelow20s. Tuesday,mostlysunny
. Snow wru: a factor mat least 30
with a high in the low 40s.
acc•dentson Milwaukee-area freeways.
Extended forecast
. Temperatures today were forecast
- · Fair through the period. Lows m the 303 and 40s m IM Northeast.
in the 20s Wednesday and Thurs- Pac1fic -Northwest. Oh10 Valley and
day and the low 30s on Friday. parts of the lower.Midwesl, 20s and
Highs in the 40s.
. 30s m the Upper M1dwes1, 50s and 60s
Around the nation
m much of the Southwest.
Snow and rain fell early today . The h1gh temperature for the nain parts of the Northwest, Midwest uon Sunday was 82 m Bakersfield,
and Great Lakes stales, while clouds Cal1f.

Local brief·- ___,
Police probe wreck
A one-car accident on West Main Street in Pomeroy near the
intersection of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was investigated by
Pomeroy police Sunday morning.
. Police said that Cindy Carter, 28, of Nelsonville, struck the side
of the bridge when her vehicle slide as she pulled off or the structure on10 West Main. There was light damage 10 the driver's side
headlight area.

Cou I,•t••• Continued rrom Page 1
separately.
Most of the children in the village attend religious schools. Disabled Hasidic children had attended
class in the public Monroe-Woodbury teniral School DislricL
But their parents withdrew
them, saying they were traumatized
by going to school outside the
Kiryas Joel village.
The new public Kiryas Joel district was created to accomodate
their needs. It teaches a secular curriculum to mixed classes of girls
and boys, and all of its teachers live
outside the v.illage.
Officials of ,the New York State
School Boards Association challenged the creation or the district,

\

communists and their allies on the
one hand and rightists, separatists
and nco-Nazis on the other, is a
specifiC, almost inevitable response

Racine
Council may
withdraw
from QRM
Racine Village Council may
withdraw from the Ohio Risk Management and end its insUI'IIIlCe program with that group.
If they do Council must give 45
days notice before the in~urance
program may be canceled.
.
Meeting recently at the Star Mill
Park Council chambers, Council
discussed that option and lOOk care
of the following items of business:
• approved ~n unidentified
amount for repairs to the dump

IMansfield lar I•

Free speech and women j,udges._
. ----~

The (Cleveland) Pbiin Dealer, Nov. l2
.
.
John Demjanjuk IDIIY not have been notonous NIIZ• death camp guard
Ivan the Terrible, but questions still hover over what role he did pbiy during World War II. A ruling bist week by a federal appeals court clears the
way for some answers.
The U.S. Court or Appeals in Cincinnati rescinded a 1985 order that
allowed Demjanjuk's extradition 10 stand trial ~n charges ~r ~m.g Ivan
the Telrible. But the court left intaCt the revocabon of DemJanJuk s U.S.
citizenship for concealing his Nazi association when he entered the Umt-

daytime conditions and high lemperatures

MICH.

Federal employees log approxi- ,
mately 6 billion miles on commercial airlines annually at a cost of
$1.8 billion a year. That's 240,000
trips around the world, 4,000 round
trips 10 the moon or just 20 round
trips Ill Mars.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Biostein are writers ror Uaited
Feature Syndicate, lnc.

another major recession has been laid by this sudden reversal in U.S. poli-

Editor, • •·
I ust a)lout two weeks ago our
roadways
free of trash thanks
to the Meigs County Litter Control.
They 'brQught people doing community service out to clean our
roads in Reedsville.
I see that people do not care
about keeping our community
clean. They throw boltles, bags of
paper iOda and beer cans or whatever tbey doo't. want in the!r vehicles. If you don't want this garbage
in your vehicle, what makes you
think we want it on our roads.
· l was on my wav home to

Accu·Weathere forecast

cbiss.

ous-The results of the lOla! liberalization of U.S. policy, at.home and over-

Rpadways not a dumping ground

Tuesday, Nov. 30

year development phase was the the drug priced, out of useful~e.ss .
donation of Levonorgestrel for One orgamzauon that prov!des ·
research while the other more sig- publicly funded contraceptives
niflcant costs were covered by the -·. noted that for every ~oman who
government and private donations.
receives Norpl~nt, five or .more
At a recent hearing of Wyden's women are de,med the semce of
subcommittee one of the defenses oral contracepbves.
for Norplant:s current' price was
" I don't think what Wyeth
offered by a Wyeth-Ayerst repre- · charges (for Norplant) IS reasonsentalive who said that the compa- able," Karen Pataky . assoc1ate
ny was afraid that the contraceptive medical direciOr of Planned Parent- .
would be seen as a welfare drug. hoOd in WashingiOn, D.C..-told us. :
" If the drug came 10 be seen sim- " Norplant re~esents much of w~t .
pir as a product for public- sect~!~ does not _go nght.~•th the Amen- :
chnics and lower-income users,
can drug md~try.
.
he told the subcommittee, "we
As Congress prepares to de!'ate
knew it would not be well-accepted much of what does not ~o nght ,
anywhere." Wyeth-Aymt plans 10 with the entire health care mdUSby, :
offer a reduced price for the drug 10 Wy&amp;;n pbins_IO rea:orm !he govern- .
the public .sector when the· five- ment s relauonship ~~th Wyeth- ;
year period after government Ayerst and the w~y 11 purch.Js~s ,
approval is up.
Norplant. By buym~ the drug !n :
Until that time, Norplant bulk, he hopes 10 dr,ive a ,bargwn :
remains out of reach of many with the pharmaceubcal g1811t an~ .
potential users who are neither recover some of the taxpayers :
poor enough to qualify for public investmenL
,
assistance nor wealthy enough to
"We've got 10 learn a realles- :
afford the drug. Organizations that son that the. federal government has :
support family planning once cele- got 10 use •ts purchasing power to .
brated the development of Norplant ~.et a bet!er deal,'_' says Wyd~n . :
as a revolutionary form of conlni~yeth nght now IS JUS! thumbmg ;
ception, but now helplessly wateh theu no~ at both the taxpayers and •
thepubhc."
PENNIES FROM HEAVEN Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., thinkll
the federal govetnment could save
as much as $50 million a year if
government employees simply
enrolled in frequent flyer programs.
McCain, ranking minority member
of the governmental arrairs subcommittee, recently wrote to the
subcommittee's chairman, Sen. Jim
Sasser, .!);.Tenn., requestin' a congressional investigation mto the
government's current policy.
It "urges" federal employees to
take advantage of commercial airlines' bonus mileage plans. Many
federal employees ignore the fre~&lt; .
quent nier plans altogether because
there is little incentive to participate or they use the frequent nier
credit to upgrade their seats on
fuwre nights from coach to first

seas cannot be immediately known. But quite possibly, the foundabon for
cy-making.
· were not fWI y realized
Just as the effects of the Carter administrauon
until his final year in office - and the year after he left office -. the true
consequences of today's political decisions will not be felt unnl 1995 or
1996.

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-...)
Publi1hed every alteraooo, Monday lhr ouJh
Friday, I 1l Cowt St. Pomtroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley F\Jblilhlna Colf4'any/Multimodia
Inc., Po~roy, Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992-llS6.
Second c:lau pollace paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The AHoci.ated Pre~~ . a.ad the Ohio
New•Paper Auociati oa, N1tioaal Ad!ertlting
R.cprueatlllve, Branham New~paper Salu,
1J3 Third Aveaue , New Yort, New York
10017 .
POSTMASTER: bDd addreu dwlan to The
Dally Seadnel, lll CoLrt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio
0769.
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Subteriben not de~lrtn&amp;to pi)' the '*'"- ny
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oa albret. Uot 12 month bull. Crrdlt will be
Jlvea Clffkt NCh week.
No IUbiCripdou by mail permitted ill IteM
where hOme c:.rier ~ It • vail able.
MollS..............

1uw. Melp Co.ntr

ll w.w. ........ ,. ........ "'' '"' """ "' "" ........$21 .••
21 w..a ,. .......... ,.................................. .$1l.t6
s1 w...............................,.,. .......... ,. ......$84.76
o.a.w. Molp C..l1
ll w..a ,. ............................................. .$2l.&lt;4l
Weeb ...... ,. ................. .......... ..... .$15.50

:ze

S2.w-........................................$88.40

saying it was a constitutionally
impermissible accommodation of
the Jewish sect's beliefs.
A state judge and 111id-level
appeals court ruled that creation of
the district violated the Constitution, and the state's highest coun
agreed.
"The primary effect ... (is) to
yield 10 the demands of a religious
community whose separatist tenets
create a tension between the needs
of its handicapped children and the
need 10 adhere to certain religious
practices , .. the Slate Court or
Appeals said.

Marriage
lice·n ses issued
Two marriage licenses 'were
recently issued in the Meigs County Probate Court of Judge Robert
Buck.
Receiving licenses were: Larry
Douglas Johnson, 24, of Racine,
and Kay Short, of Middleport;
Richard Allen PeyiOn Sr., 47, and
Jane Ann Powers, 30, both of Dexter.

Divorces granted
Divorces have been granted in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow III to
Roger R. Black and Dawana L.
Black, and Harry W. Pickens Sr.
and Joanne E. Pickens.

• considered buying a used leaf
vacuum, and passed a resolu~on
which would recommend buymg
locally.
• paid $300 for the 1994 County
Emergency Management Plan fee.
• rejected Marshal Don Dye's
request to replace the renective
cruiser decals with non-reOective
ones.
• announced the cable company
has started work on that system in
Racine.
• reported that Mrs. Roberta
Thaxton will donate a Christmas
tree for the park or village.
• heard that Robin Manuel will
compete in a talent competition in
Nashville, Tenn. and noted that she
is laking donations.
The next council meeting will
be at 7 p.m. Dec. 6.

IN THE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS - Adults
and children or Trluity Church, wearing bright·
ly colored outer wear, enthusiastically greeted
the hundreds or spectators lining the streets or
Pomeroy Sunday afternoon for the annual

Announcements
VFWtomeet
Tuppers Plains Veterans
of Foreign Wars 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the post home. Members
shoWd bring Christmas candy. All
members are urged 10 attend . .
Dance to be held
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053 will
sponsor a Round and Square Dance
from 8-11 :30 p.m. Fnday at the
post. The True Country Ramblers
will provide the live music and the
caller will he Red Carr. Everybody
is welcome.
Smorgasbord to be held
A smorgasbord dinner will be
held Sarurday with serving to begin
al 5 p.m. at the Long BotiOm Community Building. The charge IS $5
for adults and $2.50 for children.
The dinner will include several
entrees, homemade noodles, vegetables, and desserts.
Trustees to meet
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet at the Rock
Springs Township hall at 7:30p.m.
Thursday.
Christmas bazaar
The Rutland EMS will have its
annual Christmas bazaar Saturday
at the Rutland Civic Center, 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Tables may be rented by
calling Marcia Elliott, 742-2233.
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees
will meet in regular sess1on Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.
Grange meeting will be held
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet in regular
session Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the
hall. Members certificates will be
presented and the balcing contest
will be held. Potluck refreshments
will be served.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....... ........ .... 36 3/8
Ashland Oil.. ..... ..... .. ...... .... 33 5/8
AT&amp;T ............... ................. 55 718
Bank One ........................... 37 l/4
Bob Evans ........................ ..19 3/8
Charming Shop .................. 12 3/4
Champion Ind .................... 15 3/8
City Holding ...................... 32 1/2
Federal Mogul .. ................. 25 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... ............ 41 3/8
Lands End ......... .. ...............42 1/8
Limited Inc ... .... ........ .... .. ... 23 1/8
Multimedia Inc ....................... .37
Point Bancorp ...... ..... ............ ... 15
Reliance Electric ...................... 17
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 16 1/2
Shoney 's Inc........... ...... .....21 5/8
Star Bank ................... .. .... ..33 1/2
Wendy lnl'l... .. ................... l5 718
Wonhington Ind ................ 17 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
or Gallipolis.

HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS- Santa
switched from a sleigh to/a white convertible for
his trip through Pomeroy at Sunday afternoon's

111 SecotMI $t.. PDIMI'OJ
YOUI IIIDEPEIIDEIIT
AGEIITS SEIVIIIG
MIIGSCOUIIn
SIIICI1161 ·

••

"Christmas Along the River'' parade sponsored
by the Pomeroy Merchants Association. (Photo
by Charlene Hoeflich)

-----Area deaths----in Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends and Phyllis Whaley , Shade, and
may call at the funeral home IOday Donald and Donna Whaley of
Homer E. Hysell, 89, of Anne (Monday) from 7 to 9 p.m. In lieu Coolville , a son, Paul Whaley of
Street, Pomeroy, died Sunday, of flowers, donations may be made Shade, 25 grandchildren, 37 greatNov. 28, 1993 at University Hospi - to St. Paul Lutheran Church or the grandchildren, a twin brother,
Harry Gilliand, another brother,
Meigs County Cancer Society.
tal, Columbus.
Born on July 4, 1904 at Rutland,
Wilbur Gilliand of JohnslOwn, and .
a sister, Mattie Pullins of Alfred
he was the son of Ellis Hysell and Ernest Tripplett
Besides her parents she was preMary Vining Hysell. He operated
Ernest Triplett, 64, of Syracuse,
Hysell Surveying and was also at died Monday, Nov. 29, t993 , at ceded in death by her husband, .
one lime the assistant county engi- Veterans Memorial Hospital in Wilbur Harley Whaley . in 1984. an .
neer . He was ·a member of the Pomeroy.
infant son, Ralph, and four broth·
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Born Feb. 4, 1929, in Portland, ers, Bill, Charles, Hubert and .
He is survived by his wife, Hal- son of the late Morgan L. Triplett Wayne Gilliand.
tie Huggins Hysell of Pome~y , a and Mary Pickens Triplelt, he was
Funeral services will be held
son and daughter-in-law, Harold a custodian at the Middleport Wednesday at I p.m. in the Shade
and
Dolores
Hysell
of School.
Methodist Church with Pas10r John
Lawrenceville, Ga., and a sister,
He is survived by his wife Eva Douglas officiating. Burial will be
Tacey Wilson, Zanesville; seven Keplar Triplett; a daughter and in the Athens County Memory Gar- .
grandchildren, 12 great-grandchil- son-in-law , Loretta and David dens.
dren , and four great-great-grand- Donahue of Syracuse; a son and
Friends may call at the Jagers
children.
daughter-in-law Clyde and Pam and Sons Funeral Home, Athens,
Besides his parents, he was pre- Triplett or Waterford; stepdaugh- on Tuesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
ceded in death by a son, Robert ter~ . Tonda Berry of Largo. Fla ..
Hysell, sisters, Ethel Ralph. Althea Joyce Cowden of Syracuse, DevoBryant and Pauline Karr.
rah Swials and Sandra Sigler of St.
Funeral services will be held Petersburg, Fla.; stepsons, Ralph
Wednesday at I p.m. al the Ewing Holdren Jr. and Rick Holdren of St
VETERANS MEMORIAL.
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. AI Hart- Petersburg, Fla .; sisters, Minnie
Salurday admissions - Rober!
son will officiate and burial will be Harris of Fremont, Gladys Miller Roush , Letart, W.Va.
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at of California. Sylvia Hayhurst of
Saturday discharges - Ocic
Cheshire. Friends may call at the Eas1 Liverpool, Mildred Elkins of Scars , Middleport; Charles
funeral home Tuesday from 5 to 9 Portbind, Ruth Brown of East Liv- McCloud, Middleport.
p.m.
erpool ; brothers, Clarence of PanSunday admissions - Carol ,
land, Lawrence of Pomeroy, John Wynes .
Middleport; Paul ·
Malcolm Mees
of Fremont, Larry of The Plains Houdashelt, Pomeroy; Ernes1
Malcolm R. (Max) Mees, 69 of and David of Ponland; 15 step- Triplett, Syracuse; and Conni e
Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov . 28, grandchildren; 1wo grandchildren; Mayer, Reedsville.
1993 at the Holzer Medical Center. one step great-grandchild and one
Sunday discharges - Frederick
great-grandchild.
Gallipolis .
Crow, Syracuse.
He was preceded in death by his
Born on Jan . 17, 1924 in
Pomeroy, he was the son of the late parents and brother. Ralph.
HOL.ZER MEDICAL. CENTER
Services will be held a1 II a.m.
Albert Mees and Genrude Smith
Nov. 26 discharges - Mary
Mees. He was a member of the St. Thursday al Ewing Funeral Home,
Adkm
s, John S10bart, Franklin
Paul Lutheran Church, and a veler- 106 Mulberry, Pomeroy, with the
Dempsey,
Martha Stiffler, Tina
an of the U. S. Army having served Rev. Fuller officiating. Burial will
Williams,
Hazel
Vancooney.
from 1952 to 1954 with a tour of follow at Meigs Memory Garden.
Nov.
26
birth
- Mr. and Mrs.
Fnends may call at the funeral
duty in Germany.
Andrew
Lawrence,
son, Gallipolis.
He is survived by his wife , home from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Nov.
27
discharges
- Leslie
Wilma Neut zling Mees of
Sheph
erd
,
Kell
y,
Wears
. Mrs .
Pomeroy; two daughters and sons- Carrie Whaley
Richard
HiD
and
son,
Teresa
Kinin-law, Edie and Tim King of MidCarrie
E.
Whaley,
79
,
form
er
naird
,
Stephen
Dee
l
and
Heloo
dleport, and Judi and Farid Masri
of Dublin; two grandchildren, resideDI of Shade, died Sunday. RusseD.
Nov. 28 discharges - Wilma
Libby and T. I . King of Middle- Nov. 28, 1993, at Veterans MemoMarc um, Mrs. Andrew Lawrence
port; a sister and brother-in-law, rial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born on July 5, 1914, at Flora, and son, Roben Rosenberry, and
Gertrude and Harold Erwin , Galshe
was the daughter of the late Jason Adkins.
lipolis, a brother and sister-in-law,
Elza
and Annie Duslcey Gilliand.
Richard and Eileen Mees of
She
is survived by four daughPomeroy, and numerous nieces and
lcrs
and
sons-in-law, Louise and
nejlhews.
George
Staats
of Tuppers Plains,
Besides his parents, he was preMallie
Mae and Morris Teaford of
ceded in death by two sisters. Phyl- Portland, Evelyn and Frank
lis Mees and Lucille Shad ; three
brothers , Frederick, Ouo, and Wingrove of Shade, and Donna
Jcan and Paul ScUm of Shade; two
Gilbert.
sons
and daughters-in-law. Charles
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2 p.m . at the Ewing
Funeral Home. PasiOr Dawn SpaldNOW OPEN FOQ
ing will officiate and burial wiD be

Homer Hysell

Hospital news

CHRI&amp;'I'MI\&amp; &amp;EAroN

Complete M•dicai/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

'

DOWIIIG CHILDS
MULLil MUSSER
IISUUNCE

Christmas parade. The noat on which they were
seated reatured a replica or the Trinity church
steeple to carr7 out the theme, " Christmas
Along the River' • (Photo by Charlene Hoefiich)

Jolin A. ada, .D•.
lablll'v.a.,Dalwa
Pt. Plllt"l, WI.
Call04-l'fl.ll441ir lilt. or laloamatiaa
......, of letH PPO &amp;leller•l ...ul PPO

PolnHttlaa 't• &amp; Up
Berried Holly TrMa '1 7"
Live Norway Spruca
1-7ft•• '28"
CUt 11 011 Llva WI'Miha
For the Lovad OIIH
Grave Blankate '18"
Artlllclal Spraye, Va-

•s.

andWrulhe
Opan Dally
Sunday• 12-s

Hubbards Greenhouse
SyrCKUse

992·5.776

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446•4524

I,~~'.', ... '7',~'

7

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

11prsladl.,.

Fo otball

UCU.115, Loyda Marvrnowt177
Utah !Ol. s...ltem Cal Call64

Iront«m ( 13-0) "'· Wauaeon (13-0),

Friday,! p.m.

Tum

W L T PeL PF PA
2 0 .118 234 186
Buffalo ........... _. 8 1 o :m 2112 1s2
N.Y. I... ........... 7 4 0 .636 2A0170

Miomi ............... 9

VemiUe. (12-1) "'· Huron ( l l-2),

Slale ftftlll

3 7 0 .300 ll4 233

.

256 180

231 196
2112 225
128 231

Gra.t Alub Shootout
Champbuhlp
Purdue 18, Pwtland 73

DlvlsloD V
At Maulll;all Paul Brown
Stadium
·

NewP.nsJand .... I 10 0 .091 126223

Ctnlral Dlvillon
Houmn ............ 1 4 0 .636
Pinlburab -········ 6 5 0 .545
CU!VELAND .. l 6 0 .45l
CINCINNATI .. 1 10 0 .091

Gonzap 90, CS NOIIhri4pl7

Saturday, I p.m..

T~~J:Weber SL 91.
·Anchonae 82

no..

Friday, Dec. 3rd
Liberty Center (Il-l) n. SLeubonville
Catholio (11·2), Fridoy,l p.m.

Fifth p i -

Snenlhpl.e
N. Carolina St. 13, Hawaii 48

WIUJ«~:~13,

DalYC:r •...••........ 7 4 0 .636 283 197

LA. IWd"" ..... 6 l 0 .l4l 194 201
- ················ 5 6 0 .455 174 186
S..l);oao ......... 4 6 0 .400 164 19l

Boi.e SL 94, ID....Qlicaao 84

Third pi""
Sien1 78, Stephen FAllllin 63

Basketball
NBA standings

SJU Tlpotr Toumarncal
Cbamplanahlp

Eutem DI•Won

Two
W L T PeL PF PA
N.Y. OW.I&amp;....... I l 0 .m 206 138

o.uu ................

7 4 0

.636 234169

Ploilodclphia .•.... l 6 0 .4ll l7l212
Ph...U. ............. 3 I 0 .273 200!95
Wubinp&gt;n ...... 2 9 0 .112 16l2l6
CentraiDI•IIkHI
Oetroil .............. 1 .. 0 .636
Orcm Bay......... 7 4 0 .636
6 5 0 .l4l
Mmneoou ......... 5 6 0 .455
T1mp1 Bay .••.... l I 0 .273

210 176

238 18B
171 147
179 217
ll3274

a,;.,... ..... .......

WMtern Dlvlllon

8 1 o .m
New Odcans ..... 7 4 0 .636
Allan11 ...•......... . 5 6 0 .4ll
L.A. Rama ........ 3 8 0 .Z1J

s.n Fnnci&lt;co ...

ll2t96
224 229

W
................ 9
Orlaftdo ............... ..... 6

L Pct.
2 .818
5 .l4l

GB

w111Ungton.............. 6

6

.500

3.5

Miami ...................... 5
New Jersey ........... ...4
Philaclclpltil ............ .4

6

.45l

4

9
9

.308
.308

6
6

NewY~

Boem ..................... .7

Ctnlh.l Dh11hlll

4

Cl.EVE1.4.ND ...•.... J
ChiCI~O................... .S
Dc:trotL ...................-5

6
7

Indian• ................... 3
Mildukec ............... 2

lSI 2A6

Sund•y's S&lt;ores

•

•

•
•

••

•

••

3

.417
.411
.2'73
.167

3.5

Scanle .................... 10

I

.909

PhoeniJ ................. 8
Portland ................. ..?

2

.800
.!583

-

23,1'1Pabturh 3

Golden State .......... 6
LA. Clippers ......... .5
LA. LUen: .............. 5

.500
ASS
.357

Slcrtmcnto .............. 4

8

.333

5

5

p.m.
MimCIIOCa at Detroit, I p.m.
Nc• En&amp;Land • Pit&amp;sburxh, I p.m.
New Oftean~at CI.EVE:l:AND, 1 p.m.
WllbinJ;IOIS at Tamr:- Bay, 1 p.m.
LA. Ranw at Pboenil, 4 p.m.
Denver .. s.n Dic:ao, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Oiantll It Miami, 4 p.m.
~City 11 Sc.We. 4 p.m.
CNCNNAn 11 San Fr-ncilco, I p.m.

5

9
11.5

6.5

Tonight's games
New Jersey at LA . Clippen, 10 :30
p.m.
Indiana It Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.

Tuesday's games

Pta. W..tl ·
I:JOII .
1
1,480
2

Sc.aalc at Phil1dr.lphia, 7:30p.m
Portland at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Bostm It Allanu., 7:30p.m. ·
DeuoitatCLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Phoatix It Chiago, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee at t-IOUJtat, 8:30p.m.
Deno.m at Utah, 9_p.m.
Dallu atOoldc:n State, 10:30 p.m.

1,.. 10

5

East

3
4
6

Htnford 6S
Colgate &amp;3, Yale 65
Columbia 85, Haverford 70
Cmncct:icut 107, Tow&amp;On SL 67
Drexel 90, Widener 38
Ouqueme 91, Roben Morris 70
Goorgmwn 14, Virginia St. 64
HUYud 67, 81bJon 62
Holy Croll 79, Brown 78 - -t.. Salle49, Princeton 43
Lehiah 84. 1J, •f•1ra 82
Muill. t7 , I L,•: .• ~u 1!0
Md.·Baltimor .: Coumy 90, WashlngUln, Md. 71
Monma11h. N.J. 91, Dcl1w1re 79
N1vy 71, Air Force 63
New Han~ 79, Danmouth 58
Pituburah 112, YllWisnown St. 66
Rutgers70, Manhanan64
Vcrmont79, Laf1yeae 12
Virginia Tech 63, Wat Virginia 58

9
7
10
12
13
14
ll
11
17
19
18
16
20
21
22
23

~

"•11:

OIIMn reaiYina
Soulhem Clil
32,l..ouinille 31, Ftano S111e 23, Cincinnati 11 V'upria 13, NOdh Canilin1 State
l2. W~ t t, Adzon1 State 4, Cllifomia 4, Wyom.ina4, Ball State 2.

South
Adwllu 41, UiV :14

N;.ttGIIISt. !OO,LSU· Sltrovooort73
Old Dominion 84, Scu.tb Carolina 80
R..df&lt;Xd 91, C.brini l4
S. Carolina SL 114, Bcyan S4
SouthAlabuna 84, Prairie View 61
llr·C..t111t00p 97, S.C.-Aiton 71

Florida AAM 71, Bethune-Cookman
SL lS. Florida 21
Oearp SOt·- 14,1!. K.crtttd' 12
Idaho 34, NE 1 .;,;n· 31
Maaholl2S, Honnl14
34, ,..,_" Mo.,. 2A
-

:;-r~t.LSt..~m · · '13

5W I

,JA, 21,

I

=id"~'i'«t. 17

Tu!ano 94,

V1. Commonwealth 88, Jamea Madi-

.,.73

Midwest

-...,31.~SLI3

BillS.. 14, MIIIC-73

T-62.V-14

811.dley 71, Mainc60
Butler 75, Indiana 71
DeP.ulltO, OUcago St 84

Tftl)' SL ~Z. SMPt"' P. A•tin 20

Mldwett
Penn. SL 31. Midlipn Sl. 31
YounpiOWII St. 56,CcnL flari.d1 30

Soatbwest

NomajCI' 1e111t ~ repodC4

F..- West

~y_,.lfi,Tau-El,_16

Cllitomi142.1bU II
Dola...... 49,,....._41
.
T&lt;lll A4M-I!;inprilo 51, lJC lloYH
21

c-..,. 77

w,omin1 43, s.. DirF SL 11

Obio H.S. playoffs
COLIJMIIUS, Oblo (AI') - Stale fi.
naliiMI ..uftnl1 ""'*'"for~ 21nd ~­
null Ohio HiP Sc:boofAdllc:tic Auocilo·

Drab 86, Simpocrt 60
EvonMlle76, SE Millolui 60
Howard 69, Kc:atuc.ky SL 62
btl 59, Cent Michi&amp;ltl 57
Loyola,lll. 78, Mo&gt;JU1 St. 76
Miami, Ohio 101, Mount Vernon
Nazuene61
M;umui 69, C'.atL Miuouri 66
N. Ulinois 93, Awan 71
Ncbrub 96, TCUJ.-San Antonio 85
Nonh'l'ei\C:Dl 94, OUcl&amp;o 43
Ohio St. 110, Mo.-St I..OuiJ 73
S. Illinail114, Tamr. 64
SW Mi11ouri SL 7 , Mo.-Kan111 City
62
W1yne., Mich. 12, Dcaroit Mercy 71
Wichita St. 81, Hudin-Simmonl.50
Wiaoonain 106. Wii.•Milwauk«&lt;l4

Southwest

lice tl&amp;aUI ~ ICIUmllnCnl:

Baylor ·14, Ncmlt Toua 66
H-6!1. ~53

Lamar IOI,Canccwdia, Tcau 51

Oral Robal&amp; 92, Milo. Valley SL 72
Tau Southem 19, Tcu.ploo 76
T,...EIPuo92,1.D,oja.N062
Tulaa 121.-Bopda63

F..-Wett
AmalaSL 106,B-Ycuaa9S
Cokndo St. 102, 'lf.Teua AAM 62

E. Wubinaton 101, Nonbwwt Coll

DivltloaU

61

-floOio

AIM-P1111-n
St. .W,.

~~1¥:o, "

toWDIAke(l' .. . . . .,.3p.m.

DivillonW

,u . . .-~~~~~~
. . . P• .tlrow•

llawaii'l'lclfic 12, Wbh.....tl 66
Mcmtan~ 99, Simon Pruer 67

N• .A:dzo6196, SW Teua St. 16

Vnion·

-77. Southern Col62
~e16,

Son Fnnoioco SL 49

Santa Clan 111, CSU-Otico SS
St. Mary's, Cs l. 78 , Notre D1me ,
Calif. 63
UC Sanr.a Barbm 66, Wcatmont49

Basl&lt;etbaU
NatJonll Bukelball Aaoclatlon
LOS ANGELES CLIPPER.S: Activated Danny Mannina, torwazd, from the injl.lftld lilt.. Placed IGncly Wood.a, guard, m
the . ·wee~ liA.
U¥AH JAZZ:.,Waived Davehmerson ,
guild.
National FOOiball Lelaue
ATLAr-ITA FALCONS : Waived An·
thony W1U1ce, running back. Signed
Chade~ Wuhington, de!Cilllivc back .
DETROIT UONS : Signed 011)' An ·

-"""'""bock.
Hockey

National Hocker Wgu.e

MONTREAL CANADIENS: Traded
Rob R1m1Le, de(cnaeman, to the
Philldclpnia Flyen for future considerationJ.
TAMPA BAY UGHI'NING: Recalled
Tim Be~J!and and Juon Ruff, Corw1rch,
from Atlanta o( the lntem1tiontl Hockey
Lugue, and Juon Wrenicre, forw•rd ,
from Milwaukee of the lnlemal1onal
Hockey Uapc.

Olympics
USA TRACK AND FIELD: Named
Erv Hu.nt 111d Deanne Vochatzcr coaches.

-

~'

l'

GREAT CATCH, JAMES!- Cincinnati linebacker STeve
Tovar (left) congratulates teammate James Francis after the latter's
interception in lbe fourth quarter of Sunday's AFC game against
the visiting Los Angeles Raiders, which the Bengals won 16-10 to
capture their first victory of the season. (AP)

~~~~~·,~~""~?$~~~:t'4·?$~!:'49?$~!:'49*~·
~.:-'
·""
.
t? . 'Z~
:-- ~ .
'

..

..

)

Clatwood 48, Rsvmaa 33

CUyoh"'la HIS. 46, Rdwnand Hu. 38
O...ville 62, Kidron 20
Doyleaown Qtippew• 10, Triw1y 55
1!. Climon 47. Wilmio
16
P.wlalr.c 61, Dcl1wam~yea 57
Eutwood 54, Millbwy Lake 23
I!Wia 80, Limo C.tlt. 40

Field S1, AknlnN. 40
Firdands 4.5, Amh~nt·Stocle 43
llanloy 53, w......w. s. 3l
lli&amp;hland 63, Cauat&gt;oq 51
Hilliard 64 Col wOllluul 36
Hollaod
411, Swanton 38

s;n..

Hwoa 76, Fftflll(d . _ 50

""
Naa11uidp
33
Eataum
l7,36,
CbaaDn
Falll42
'Ka!lltlla~or!dl .Q. &amp;aDr.rc 32
'ak wood 47, Euclid 25

l..inta Pony 39, Temple a.. ll
l..inta Slmnoee73, f~ 62
l..inta Sr. 50, W. 0.... Lokola 41
Lilllo MlamiS7,B-·To1045
LoudooYille 64, Lucaa l4
LauilvilloA~ 69, Tualaw 52
MadiJcn.JIWnJ; 64, Loadm 1:1
Mtive::m 49, It Can1oo 'ZJ
Mug"""' 93, Shelby l9
MarysvU!e63, Paisbartb 47
Muon 49, Lebmoo 24
Mu1illan Perry 60, Akron Fireaone

43

M&lt;ntor 54, Ct.yohQJI Palb l7
MiMnl Ri&lt;lp
Loolltowo l4
Minetvo 47, VDilcclLoc:al46
N. Conlon 60, Oroal 31
N. Olmoted 6!1, C1e. Manhall29
N. !Wyolton 4l, Boy lO
Nellomill•Ycnk 67, Pil&lt;""" 33
Norwood 66, Cia. lndlao Hill 27
Opm Door 41, Clouviow 2l
~a., 61, Poot ClinlOO 39
o.mn. 61, Smilhoille 33

Christmas
Greeting
__,.ditio._
1

Friday,

Deeemller u

so.

·,.

Oaawa·Gianolod69, MWerCiry 64
CluoYille 62. v... w... 40

Point Vall. 49, ~ l9
p;'*""'~""' 89, cu.. w,.....,i 4l
Riolunand Dalo SE 72, Wellotoo 21
Rock Hill 54, Jacktanll
Catlrll41. MwlieU Chr .• 41
Sanduaky St. Marya 63, Manlficld SL

s.

PeteD53

Solan 75, w. Oeaop 43
Sptina. Cotholic64,Tria420
SptinJ. Loool44,1!. Polilline 43
Teaya Vall. -48, Lanc:uk:r 47
Thomu Worthinaton '66, Sprina .

Nonh l4

Tipp Ci~y 65. Kemon Ridge 63
Tot Sccxt 6l, Tot Libbey 36
T~ ol Life 62, P!CUM' 60
Twina~ 44, Wickliff'e 43

48

Upper Sooto Vall. !JI, Muion Elgin

Vall. FarJeiO, Moclina Sl
W. Ho!mea 54, Manafidd 45
Wlyncdalco45, F.UV..33
Wratlab 69, Beta 41
Whildlllll3, Bexley 41
Willard l2, Mondield Madiaon 43

YellowS~ 67, !loy. Jell"""'" 40
ZalluvUle llOiecrana 74, Tuscuawu

Colh.33 ,

EASTI!Ri'i CONFERENCE
Alllndc DI"Woa
TW L T Pia.
N.Y.R...... .... 11 6 2
l6
Philaclelpbia .•..•. l6 9 I 33
New Ieney ....... 15 S 2
32
Wuhinpn ...... 10 12 1
21
Fbid1 .............. I 13 3
J9
N.Y. blondao ... I 13 2
18
Tunpt Bay ....... 6 16 2
14

CFGA
97 67
llliO!
85 51
67 74
63 74
79 12
l6 75

NortltaallllYIIlon
Pillablqh ......... 12 7 6
B~tm

.............. ll 6 6
Moalloll ........... ll 9 3

Buffalo.............. 9 12 2

0.-.............. Ill 4

l!ar.cctld ............ 6 IS 2
Onawa .............. 5 14 3

lO 91 87

21 76 64
25 6863
20 !716
20 IS 12
1~ 61 17
13 74106

WESTERN CONFERENCE
T-

C.tniDI-

W L T PIL CFGA
~ •
11 91 66
SL Louia ........... 12 6 5 :19 77 73
Dollu. ............... 11 9 '
27 19 16
ChiCIJO ............ 12 I 2 :16 77 63
[)......~-. ........... 11 10 2
:14 91 15
W................. 9 13 3
21 II 93

T............:...... 17

Pat:lllc lllotCa!pry ............. ll 7 3

33 93 79

Vanco.:~ver ........ l3 10 0

26 71 12

s.,. 1............... 10 13 4
Loo Anploo...... 9 12 2

:14 67 II
20 16 96

The Dally Sentln~tl P8ge . 5

Nehlen, Mountaineers not smiling about No. 3 ra~king
By RICK WARNER
~Football Writer
Flonda State !;'lay~ a tougher
schedule. West VirSJrua has a better record:
So .which team deserves to play
Nebraska for the national championship in the Orange Bowl?
The debate intensified Sunday
w~e~ ~londa S~ate edged West
VrrgmiB by ~9 pomts m the combmed Assoctated Press ~d USA
Today -CNN polls. setung up a
probable Jan. I showdown between
the Seminoles and Cornhuskers.
Tbe news delighted top-ranked
Florida Stale (11 -1) and upset No.
3 West Virginia (11-0), the only
undefeated team be.sides No . 2
Nebraska ( 11-0) ehg1ble for a
bo~.i.
.
.
You ask kids to do eve?'thmg
and they do tt and then the~ re not
rewarded. _It. makes 11 d1fflcult,"
West Vrrgml8 coach Don Nehlen

With wreaths of boDy and mistlat•, stockings b•g11y
lha fire and sc•n llla•kalad Willi snow, Cbrlstaaas .
•coalpann warmth ·a,nd aood ella• as we cllarllll the ·.

III1111Dgs we've sbarad Ibis put year. For uslt means
saying ..lbanlcs"·lo yoa, oar many friends, old Md aaw,
wbose kind sappm we'D ·always beasare. Dolag
llasinns will you Is our greatest plasural

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in our Christmas Greetings Edition
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992-2156

By ED SHEARER
ATLANTA (AP) - Atlanta
Falcons linebacker Jessie Tuggle
can't wait for the next game.
"We're starting to come together," Tuggle said. "Everybody's
getting a good feel for everyone
and we're ready to go."
Tuggle was in on 13 tackles
Sunday as the Falcons extended
their winning streak to three games,
holding on for a I 7-14 victory over
the Cleveland Browns after building a 17-0 halftime lead.
It was die third victory in a row
for the Falcons, only the lOth time
in club history Atlanta has won
three in a row.
"Things couldn't be going better right now," Tuggle said. "We
can't wait for Houston." Atlanta's
next game is a1 Houston next weekend.
Bobby Hebert built the 17-0
lead with touchdown passes of 14
yards to Andre Rison in lhe openin¥ period and eight yards to Mike
Pritchard in the second.
Rison's catch in the back of the
end zone came when he waited
until the last second to raise his

said. .
Sunday. Nebraska, Florida State
Florida State cooch Bobby Bow- and West Virginia have completed
den~ who has wo~ ev~thingbut a their regular season~, so ~·slitnatiOnal champtonshtp, satd he tie chance of a maJor shift 111 the
would welcome a title shot against poUs next week.
Nebraska.
If Florida State plays Nebraska
"I always said I wish we had a in the Orange Bowl West Virginia
chance at the end of the year," . he will go to the Coiton Bowl and
said . " Now it looks like we' ve play No . 7 Texas A&amp;M (10-1) .
fmally g.ot a chance at the end of Since West Virginia is No. 2 in the
the year. '
coaches • poll, the Mountameers
The AP media poll ranks Flori- might win a share of the national
da State !'lo: I, Nebraska No. 2 and title if Florida State beats NebrasWest Vugmta No. 3. The USA lea.
Today-CNN coaches' poll has
Bowden said Florida State
Nebraska first, followed by West earned a berth in the title game by
Virginia and Florida State.
playing one of the most difficult
In the combined polls, which schedules in the country. The
determine the major bowl Seminoles' opponents have a commatch ups. the order is Nebraska, bmed record of 77-57 . compared 10
Florida State and West Vir$inia
56-63-2 for West Virginia's f~..
Nebraska will play Flonda State
Flonda. S~ and West Vrr~ma
in the Orange Bowl if both teams staked !hell' claims ov~ the holiday ,
hold !heir positions in lhe last com- weekend by beaung. h1ghly ranked
bined poll which will be released opponents. The Sem1noles beat No.
'

9 Florida 33-21 Saturday snapping
!he Galois' 23-game ~e winning
r.treak. The Mountaineers woa 1714 on the road Friday ~nst No.
15 Boston College, wh1ch upset
Notre Dame on Nov. 20.
Nehlen's campaign for a game
against Nebraska almost paid off.
The Mountaineers rose from No. 5
10 No.3 in lhe AP poll and climbed
from No. 3 to No. 2 in USA TodayCNN but lbey remained behind
Florida State in the combined polls.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne
said Saturday be would prefer to
play West Virginia in the Orange
Bowl That's understandable considerfug lhat the Comhuskers have
lost bowl games to Florida State
three times in the past six years.
Florida State received 42 firstplace votes in the AP poll, while
the rest went to Nebraska ( 17),
Auburn (2) and west Virginia (I).
In the coaches'
Nebraska

Florida State (10), West Virginia
(8) and Notre Dame (1).
No. 4 Auburn (11-0) is the only
undefealed team besides Nebraska
and West Virginia, but the Tigers
are barred from postseason play
because of NCAA probation.
If Nebraska and Welt Virginia
lose their bowl games, Auburn
probably would f~nish second
behind Florida Stale m the AP poll.
That would give Bobby Bowden
and his son, Auburn col!'h T~rry
Bowden, the fli'St 1-2 family fmish .
The Sugar and Rose bowl
matchups won't be completed until
next weekend. The Sugar will
probably pit No. S Norre Dame
against the winner of Saturday'_s
Southeastern Conference champt onship game between Florida and
No. 16 Alabama.
.
The loser of the SEC nile game
is expected to play No. 12 North
Carolina in the Gator Bowl.
wiU
Pac-10

..·

. . ...,

arms.
"The defender was right in front
of me," Rison said. "I saw the ball
was coming. I knew lhe only way I
could catch it was to leave my arms
down until the last possible second.
It worked."
"Rison is a big-time player."
Browns coach Bill Belichick said.
"They've got some darn good
players. You just can'! stop them
aU day."
The difference came on Norm
Johnson ' s 25th consecutive sue·
cessful field goal attempt, a 51·
yarder to end lhe fli'St possession of
the game. Johnson has made his
last seven attempts of 50 yards or
more.
He's only four field goals shy of
the NFL record.
"You may lhing about it on the
sidelines, but on the field you
don't," Johnson said. "I'd like to
keep it (streak) alive a little
longer."
The Falcons had held the
Browns to only 42 yards of offense
at the time Pritchard made it 17-0.
Poor field position had hun Cleveland throughout lhe fll'st half.

The Browns, losing their fourth
in a row, rallied behind Todd
Philcox in the second half. Philcox
threw a 35-yard scoring pass to
Mark Currier on the last play of the
third quarter, then scored wilh just
fout minutes io play on a threeyard quarterback draw.
"We played a lot better in the
second half," Philcox said. "We
came in at the half and made some
adjustments. We have to play a
complete game and we have the
people to do it.''
Belichick has been under fire
from Cleveland fans since releasing
Bernie Kosar on Nov. 8. It figured
he wouldn't hear many taunts on
the road, but there were a few in
the Georgia Dome.
A small group of fans in an end
zone started a "Bill must go"
chant when the Browns ran two
plays in a row from their eight in
the final two minutes of the first
half.
"We just got to work our way
through it," Betic hick said. "We
have got to work a liule harder. We
need to make a few more plays."

EASTERN FOOTBALL AWARDS - In lieu
or a ran and winter sports banquet, Eastern Higb
School will be bosting an aU sports banquet in the
spring. In an etrort to recognize his players for
their outstanding efforts, bead coacb Dave Barr,
whose club finished at 6-4 and tbird in the Tri-

in the Role BoWl aaait!at No. lifO
WitccGsjn or No. 11 Obio Stile. .
WiJeonsjn belu May Slllle m
Tokyo on Saturday, tile BldJCH
would 80 ro ~ Obio ~would play BYU m the Hobday
Bowl and Pam Stale would meet
TenDcsw in the Citrus Bowl.
A Wisconsin lou wou~d IC'!"
Ohio S~ to the Roee, WliCOIIIIII
to the Cttrus and Penn Stale to the
Holiday.
..
.
Other ~y ~ pamnp: Ari·

zona-Miami (F~e~la); Boston Co~-

lege-Virginia (Carqueat); Michtgan-Nortll Carolina State (1W1 of
Fame);
Clem ton-Kentucky
(Peach) ; Virsinia Tech-Indiana
(lndependcilee); Te~ ~ech~­
homa (Hancock); I..ouisville-Mic:bigan Slate (Libeny); K•nsa• Slate-

Wyomtng (Copper); ColoradoFresno Slate (Aloha); Utab StateBall State
Soulbem
Cal-Utah
and IowaCalifornia (A.IIIJI(IJ.

Ohio State's 110-73 win over
Missouri-St. Louis misleading
beat up on a le3ll1 that has lost 43 two points in a game, had six
of its last 46 games against NCAA points in the opening 17-0 run.
Division I opponentS.
"I think young inside guys
Eleven players scored in the fust worry a lot about blocked shots.
half as Oh1o State built leads of up But now Nare's going to the basket
to 32 points.
well. He combines size wilh a nice
Nare Wilbourne, who scored all touch inside," Ayers said.
of nine points last ~n. led Ohio
"Wilbourne was ton big for us,
State with 17. Derek Anderson had but big people always are tough for
16, Greg Simpson 15, Rickey Dud- us," said Meclcfessel. "It's hard to
Icy had 12 and Jamie Skelton 10 to gauge how good he is."
Eaker, a redshirt freslunail playgo wilh eight assists.
The victory marlc:ed Ohio State's ing his frrst college game, had 13
281h sllaight win in a home opener. rebounds, eight points and seven
The Buckeyes are coming off a 15· blocked shots.
13 record a year ago in which they
Ohio Stare led 40-8 at one point
lost to Miami of Ohio in the open- on the way to a lackluster 62-34
ing round of lhe National Invitation lead at the break, coming within
Tournament.
seven points of the school record
But a lot of those memories for points in a half.
The Buckeyes !hen spurted midwere erased by a full-coun pressure
!hat snuffed any wild hopes the way through the second half, hitRivermen might have had of ting 9 out of 10 shots from the
pulling an upset. The visitors fin- field, capped by Lawrence Funderished with 31 turnovers; it seemed burke's dunk to go up 92-48 by lhe
as if there were lha1 many early in II :32 marie.
the game.
The Rivennen, who beat Harris"If you listed all 1he sins of Stowe earlier in the week, dropped
attacking the press, we probably to 1-1.
did them all in the fli'SI five minThe Buckeyes bit 41 of 81 shots
utes," said Missouri-St. Louis (51 percent) from the field 10 27 of
coach Rich Meclcfessel.
73 (44 percent) by the Rivennen.
Other Buckeye bright spots There were 55 turnovers in 1he
included the play of big men game, 31 by Missouri-St Lou_is.
Wilbourne and Gerald Eaker.
All 12 Buckeyes scored m lhe
The game was decided early. the game.
Rivermen going scoreless over the
"That was a good way to open
fli'St 4:28.
.
the year," Ayers said. "Wbenever
Wilbourne, a sophomore center everybody plays and scores, you
who had never scored more than feel good."

Benga/s' first win ...

tn
•

lfl

•

e IS

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eontlnuedtrom ,page4

snowy afternoon, Jaeger pushed an hadn'tlost was hope.
onside kick too far and too hard.
"It proved we could play,..
sending it out of bounds. The Ben- linebacker James Francis said. "I
gals had ended the longest losing knew this team could play, but this
streak in franchise hislory wilb a year hasn't been a real good year
16-10 victory over the bungling for us. There's a lol of talent on
Raiders.
this team, especially on the
On the Bengals' sideline, relief. defense. I think u's just a matter of
"Finally, Murphy's Law didn't time before we can get this team
bite us," cornerback Mike Brim together."
said.
The Raiders (6-5) are running
' 'This is real sweet,'· said coach out of time to get into lhe playoffs.
Dave Shula, who hugged his assis- The loss dropped !hem into third
cants as the clock ran down. "I place in the AFC West, two games
can't tell you how proud I am of beh_ind Kansas Cily and a game
this group of people that were a behmd Denver.
pan of th1s. It's been a long time.
This was a game they needed to
The guys are VCI)' resilienL"
win, but gave away wilh their slow
On lhe Raiders' sideline, disbe- stan and sloppy ending. At least
lief.
one Raider thou$ht they took the 0"Bverythfug that could go 10 Bengals too lightly.
wrong, d1d," said Jaeger, who
"Unfortunately, we didn't come
missed four field goals in a out ready to play them," Jell said.
swirling wind, one more than he'd "We came back in the second half,
missed all season.
but things didn't go our way."
"Just terrible," Brown said. "It
The same could be said of the
was a miserable day out ~- As fli'St half, when Jaeger - 22 of 2S
far as I'm concerned, it was the this season - was wide left on
worstgameofmyaueer."
kictsof41,44and 31 yards. This,
For the 1-10 Bengal$, it was a one week after Jaeger kicked four
chance to aem•lly c:c1c1n1c 30111e- field goals to beat San Diego 12-7.
thing for the rust time since last
"Off my foot, I thought I'd
Dec. 20. They'd lost II straight made them," Jaeger said. "I wish I
since lhc:n, the~ slump in,lhe knew."
franchise' s 26 years. They only
"I think Jeff had a lot of uoub!~
thing the NR.'s only winless team today just because of the wmd,

'

Valley Conference, pranated lla.on to fOIII' olllll
key players. Thele JOIIDIIDell earDed Yarto. allconference and all-district bOilors. Plctared Ire
all-TVC nominees Pat Newland, JUOII Slleeu,
Barr, Jared RideDOar and TVC b._..ble-mention selection CbarUe Billell

•

According to Ayers,

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, ObiD (AP)- To
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers. his
team's 110-73 battering of Division
II Missouri-SL Louis was misleading.
The Buckeyes scored lhe first 17
points and could have waltzed to
the finish with only lhree players
on the floor.
But Ayers saw more than the
final score.
"We can't tum the ball over 24
times and be successful down the
road," Ayers sai.
That could become evident as
quickly as tonight when the Buckeyes come right back to host Penn
at SL John Arena
While Ohio State was flexing its
muscles against a Missouri-St.
Louis team whose tallest player
was 6-foot-7, the Quakers were
beating a very good Soulhem Cal
team 77-62 in Los Angeles Saturday nighL
Penn flew out of L.A. right after
that game, spent the night in
Columbus and went through a
shootaround at St. John on Sunday.
·Penn returns five starters from a
1e3111 that went 22-5 a year ago and
has won its last 14 regular-season
games. The defending Ivy League
champions are led by Jerome
Allen, the co-player of the year in
the league last year.
The good news for the Buckeyes was that they won and did so
convincingly, even though they

Fairview 6l, Welling10031

Ala.·Bitmingham 61, Tuu-ArlinglOn

Alabwa SL 94, F•u.lkner S4
CoU. of Otulcatm 88, Webber 59
D1vidson 1(J2, Sewanee 78
Duke 86, Northcutcm 12
E. Kentucky t 00, Cline!\ Valley 83
Ocorje Muon 129, Troy St. 119
Geor;ia SL 91, MorN Brown 64
Jac.klon SL 128, Arbnaas B1ptist 68
Jaehonv:ille 9S, SIC&amp;IOn fiJ
KCJltucky 78, louiaville 70
Muyl1t1d 92, Comell41
N.C.·Om:n&amp;boro 70, Middle Tenn. 56

B-baD
American Laaue
NEW YORK YANKEES : Tr1ded
Dominao Jo1n, pitcher, ar;d Andy
Stltlkiewil:z. infieldar, to \be Hcu.AOa A.0'01 forXavicrH=''dcz,. pitcher.

li

61

-Univ. 27, N.J.... 21 (2 Ul')

ltfcaooltioSLI7

Cin, OU Hi1.1a 69, Cin. Tlylor47
Cin. Oakwood SO, Middletown Fenwick 14
Cin. St. Bemltd S7, Cin. OJriAian 4
Cin. Twpin 42, Cin. Non!twat 40
Col. Ready 68, Spri.na. Notthcutcm

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Atlanta edges Cleveland 17-14

Transactions

Cin. Coonuy Day S6, Cin. FlMC)'lOwn

31

South

East

·

Canfield 64, Youn&amp;- Momey 48
Canton C1th. 63, Cantm Timkcm 15
Canllln OlcnOak 56, LouiJvillc 49
Cantan S. 44, Sandy Vlll. 38
CarrolliOn 59, EdUon 42
O.ampion 64, Nils Z1
Oill1iC:othc 56, Wattcnon 42

8Cilta\ College 90,

Major college scores

-St.

C.nal Winchcacr 76, lOlllthan Alder

36

Major college scores

1,366
1,339
1.255
1,139
I. Miomi .....................9·:Z.O 1,075
9. Flmida....................9·2.0 1,029
10. WUcanlin ............. 1·1· 1 1,011
11 . 0hioSL .................9-l-l 878
12. North Carolin.1 .... 10-W 844
13. Plotn SL ............. - ..9·2-0 810
14. vcu. ............... _..8-l-0 720
1 5 . - eon.,• ..... 8-J.O 694
IIi Alabuna ............- ..1· 2-1 630
17. ............. - ..9·2-0 l51
11. Coloado ... ........ - ..7-3-1 476
19. otlallorna .. ............ l·l-0 423
20. Kanau SL .... .........1-:1-1 314
21. ~ .................. l·l-0 321
22. Vqinla Toch ........ l ·l-0 2Al
23 JtlidliFo ...............7-4.() 2lO
2A: Cioaaa ............... 8·l-O 1~
25. MidliplS\. ..........6-+0

8

Belpnl•41, Ytncent Wma140
Dlafta..ter 66, Clin""'-Maaoio l6
BodkiJII 54,1Uvonide50
Brcc:Uville6S, Gufidd Hta. 2A
BNrli'Widr. 4S, Keyttone 'J1
Bucll:eye48, Midpuk 30
B"cbye Looo152, Indian C""* 46
c..u. 34, s...bonYille C.til. l2

5
6.5

Sunday's scores

Lui

Akron Ellct 47, Abun Mauchalw 33
Aullintown-FiiCh 15, You.na. Olancy

Bcl1aiJc 70, Cimbrld,e43

1.5

G.lldcn Stat.e 91, Dewit 88
Portland 120, Sacnmemo 109

nc Top 2!5 ~in The Aaaociatcd
Preaa 1993 college football poll, with
fll"'l·pl1ce \I'GCa in parmthcaea, records
tluoup N... 'II,_, poin~a bucd oo 25
poinll for 1 firll·plloe voc.e lbroul!' ~e
paint for a 25th-place \I'CU., 111d ranbnJ 1D
the ptOVioua poll'

22

31

3.5
4.5

Milwaukee at San Antooio , 8:30p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll

N.Y. RaDac:u at New lct~ey , 7:3.5 p.m.

DaUu ltCalauY. 9:35p.m.
Winnipea It Lol AnJc:lel, 10:35 p.m.

Football

Ohio high school
girls' scores

6.5

New Yozk 112, Detroit 85
Miami 114, Cllar1ottc 100
Ad1ma 111. Philadelphia 79
CLEVELAND 101, Seattle 90
L.A. l..tkc:n 96, Minncsoll 92
Wuhingtm 112, Orl111do 110
San Antwio 104, DAllu 80
Denver Ill, New Jersey 89
Milwaukee 89, 80111:n 8.5
PhocniJ. 120, Utah 98
Howtcn 82, LA . Clippen; 80

suc~a,, Dee. 5
Atlmt. .tlloumm, I p.m.
Orten Bty M OU.C.ao. I p.m.
lltdiiJ11pOiilll N.Y. leiS. 1 p.m.

-a

Athlet:a In Action 87, 0reaon St. 76
Idaho SL I 02, Spu\ak·Mo&amp;k112
llJawam, Auru.lia 87, Cllllcnia 80
lllinoio 109, Kiev Buba 6!1
DiinoU: St. 103, Slovakia Nationll 74
New Mu.ico 104, Fort Sill. Okla. 68
New Mexico SL &amp;7, MAtldl.M Oil79
SW Lc:ari&amp;ilna 9J, em., Portupl 89

6.5

CD

Adoan&amp;U B...,... 16. M .·Linle Rod&lt;

Belldanlline 49,1nd~~n I.ake 28

5
6
6
9

Next week's slate

Tea.
W-L T
1. FicoidaSL(42) ..•.. 11-J.O
2.
(17)....... 11.0.0
3. WsVirpni1(l) .ll-0-0
4.Atbont(7) .... - .....li.Q.O
5. N..,. Dame. .........IO.I-0
6. T~..... - .......9-J.I
1. Tuu AAM ......... 10-1..0

13

3.~

Saturday's scores

Monday, Dec.'
AaiJ.Iddphia 1t Dallu , 9 p.m.

•

.455

Pacific: Dlvl&amp;lon

LA. Raiden at Buffalo., I

'

l

Allama 17, aJlVElAND 14
CINClNNATI 16. L..A. Ra.idcu 10
New Orloana 17, MianCIIOla 14
N.Y. 1... 6, New Enpd 0
a...n Bay 13, Tampa Bay 10
Phila:'fta17, Wllbinpn 14
Dcotva.7,Soaulo9
ICanaaa Ciqr 23, B.rfalo 7
N.Y. ClWt1a 19,1'1toonU17
s.,. Fnnciaco 35, LA. Ranu 10

San Dicao atlndi.an~polis, 9 p.m.

•
•
•

7
I
10

ExhibidOD

.692
.615

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Tonight's game

•'
•

s

Midwest Divbcloo
Tc1m
W L PeL
Hoonon ...... ........... l3 0 1.000
San Antonio ............. &amp; 5 .61 5
Ul.lh ................ ......... 8 5 .615
Denver ... __
... 6 6 .500
Minnesou ....... ......... 3 8 .273
Dallas ....................... ! 11 .083

Miuni 16, Dallu{4

•

3

221250

Thursday's scores
~ 1 o. Decroit 6

•

San Juaa Shooeoul
Snnlftnall
M.uauc:ue 81, E. Tcmc.cc SL 12
Wuhinston SL 76, Michi&amp;111 SL 7)
c... ~.lloa brac:bt
American U., P.R.. 61, Wriatn SL 61
Coppin St. 86, Pac::i!c: U. Tl

3

6 .538

Atlanta ...... ..............9
Charlotte .................. &amp;

Wuhinaton u N.Y. lsilnders , 7:3S

p.m.

Third plate
S111 Francitco 123, Dclaw~ St. 75

Atlantic Dlvlllon

Tum

J. UCMIIIJ' Ill I;MlUC:I!'l

Bc.t.cl:llt Queboc, 7:35p.m.

SL1oaeph'a87, W1gnctS6

EASTERN CONFERENCE
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

being touched~ Raghi~ Ismail let a
critical pass shp off hiS hands, and
Tim Brown bobbled the ball away,
and the Los Angeles Raiders
thou~ht Uh-oh.
Ftnally , with both sidelines
frozen at attention Sunday on a
(See WIN on Page 5)

Hartford 11 OUawa, 7;3S p.m.

Champlon~hlp

Youq. UmWne 1

ByJOEKAV
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff
Jaeger missed field goal attempts
over and over and over and over,
and each time the winless Cincinnati Bengals thought This might
finally be the day.
James Jett fumbled without

ToDigbt's games

Real Dairy Clalc

lmotm29, Va11ey VlCW 9

Wtltern Dl•lllon

KaaouCily ...... s 1 o .m 204 170

Cincinnati beats
L.A. Raiders 16-10

Deouit 4, N.Y.Iolanden I
w· . 4, SL Louia 3
N.~po 3, Wuhinl""'l

(Ul')

DIYW011m

66 ll
64 94

Sunday's scores

Wake Fmwt 61 , WU.-Ore.at Bay S8

Saturday's semlllnal scores

II
II

N.Y. Wutden6,N.Y. Ronaen 4
o....it 10, Dallu 4
~. l'lori4a 0
Saa JOIC 1, AJWw:im 0
oa. wa 2. Pilubwah 2. tie
Bulfalo 2, Quebec 2, tie
Philaclelpbia 4, Tompo Bo, 3 (Ul')
Tcromo4,.8CII\0112
EdmCIIIlcl:l '2. Vancouw::r I
MmtreaJ 4, l..ol AnseLm 0

Champk!Mhlp
Stanford 69, San JOK St. !58
Third pl...

Tlatr Stadium

Euttn Dh·lllon

l

Saturday's scores

FrT'alnritalklaal

Slateft1111ll
At Mualllon Paul Brown

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

lndlaMpolia ......

TournameDts

Dlvlsloo IV

NFL standings

Anlll&lt;im ... -...... SIS 2
E4mantm -------- 4 II

Monday, November 29, 1

Monday, November 29, 1993

said Cincinnati's Doug Pelfrey,
who made three of his four
anempts. " It was never consis1en1.
It seemed like it was always blowing across lhe field, but it was also
in your face."
The Raiders also had a major
defensive mistake in the frrs&lt; half:
A facemasl: penally that nullified a
fumble recovery and lei lhe Bengals continue on for !heir touchdown, a one-yard run by Eric Ball.
Jeff Hosretler's four-yard run on
a quarterback draw made it 13-7
early in the fourth quarter, but Pelfrey kicked a 44-yarder !hat made il
16-7 wilh 6:161eft.
While Raiders owner AI Davis
sat in lhe press box and cussed. lhe
Raiders squandered chance after
chance to pull it out in lbe final
minutes.
Jaegec was short from 48 yards
away with S:3S left. On the next
pc;&gt;ssession, Brown let a pass
bounce off his hands and Francis
intercepted at the Bengals' 26.
"The ball just kind of bounced
ourwayforomi,"FilUICissaid.
Ismail dropped a pass at the
Ben$als' 12 on lhe next possession,
forcmg Los Angeles to settle for
Jaeger's 34-yard field goal. Finally,
Jaeger's onside ldck tumbled out of
bounds, giving the ball to Cincinnati to run out lhe clock.

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·T he Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, ·Pomeroy, Ohio
(Offer Expires January 15, 1994

�• Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Monday, November 29, 1993

Monday, November 29, 1993

~~.M
__E_I_G_S_C,_O_U_N_T_Y_D..,..E_L_IN_Q....:::.._U....,.E_N_T_L_A_N_D,_T_l\_X_N_O..,..T_I_C_E___:~:::se~=;..gs~=::~e:;~~u=dit:.:.:.or.:..;;,Nan~cy_ca....:.mp_bel-1~
TIMI ........ lola- p - Lynn, s.ct. 25 NW 114 of NW

I

~

of Lola I'W.Imed o.linquonl 114 40A $214.10.
: by the Tr_u,... of Metgo
07-00180.000,

·,. .__Ia-

, Caunty, with the Tuee,
Ponoltlee
: chorgod thereon ......,ly
' to low, ore COfltllned and
: deocrlbed In the following
' lio~ viz:
• (Nome, Ooocrlptlon,
; Acr . . ,
Tot•l
TuM,
• Ala_,_talllld PenoltiM)
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
IEIGS LSD
~ 0 1· 000U.OOO, Bentley
, Jerry llor Donno, w prL lot
21 Ex 20A Ex 41.HA Ex 92
i SA Ex 11.58A 40.5028A Ex
( 5.84IA,S171.83.
• 01~.000,
: Blonkenohlp, Morgoret,
• SecL 35 SW Pori Ex. lOA W
: out of 11 OA • 1.0013A.,
. $70.37.
'

Deeter,
Argyle L, SecL 30 E. Port of
109AEx. SA 15A, 5133.92.
07·00181.000, Deeter,
Argyle L, SecL 30 E. Une w
'11:1 Ex 75A NE Cor Ex 10A
Ex 10.0017A Ex 5.00A
14.2483A,SS0.89.
07·00112.000, Deeter,
Argyle L. 1/or Florence,
SecL 36 (640) S Side BW 1/4
20A, 154.52.
07-00183.000, Outer,
Argyle L 1/or Florence,
Socl 36 (640) S 11:1 f N 112
oiSW 1/4 35A, 5115.3:
07·00184.000, Deeter,
Argyle L &amp;lor Florence,
S.CL 36 f11 112 of s 112 of SW
114 40A, $416.07.
07-00231 .000, Flinn,
Howord Lee Jr., &amp;lor Llndi

;Soo~r.o~r~k·:~ointerO.:t"~'&amp; ~;'l ~~~8~~~· ~-~~·

111 na. ·43·
• 01-00505.000, Morlln,
; John E. &amp;lor Judilh E., S.CL
, 13·11 T.3 R.13 on W Line SW
: ot0Wh
1 0• 01ev
50-6250A.00S2.98.Martl
'
•
•
•
n,
; John E. &amp;lor Judith E. Lot7
~30R1.1030,5S017150,8300. M II
•
•
•
•
or n,

••w

: ~~~~:i~~udl!hE, Lota

: • or:o053S.002, McOodo,
; woyne Lee &amp;lor Morllee,
, Sect21 -T3H R13W 2.00A out
; or Q.OOA 2.00A, 56.115.
, 01·00637.000, McOodo,
; woyne Lee llor Morlloe,
• S.CL 21, Frac. 30 8A out of
' 80A, 512550
; 01 · 000B5:ooo, Meeka
: Gregory 1/or Rein ceo, S.CL
• 17NeorMidonUneofN112
', OF SW 114 • _61 A $271.45 •
, 01 -ooua.ooo-;' Scrlppo,
:Jiorgorot E., Sect. 13 NW
-corner 10A Out of 105.82, A
; lOA, 708·60•
007 2
: 01·
2 . 000, Smith,
• flobecco, lo1 Secl 27 Mid
: on E Line EX. 12A NW PI
• 1.14A, S380.12.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
;
EASTERN LSD
: Wlo 3·00)i2.~0Z,&amp;/ Br0ejer,
l
om
arM or ano
; Sue. Free, 7, T4, R12, 20A
: outof21A,571.00.
• 0300866.001, Dovlo, John
; M 1/or BHHo A., Secl32, T4
• R12 1.584A out of U8.26A,
: '127.20.
, 03·00678.000, Koutz,
._ Robert L. Sr A George
• Frederick, Sect. 23 (640)
" Mla:-t&gt;f N 112 W Port Of SE
. 1/4 90.50A, $224.83.
: . 03·00610.000, Kou1z,
• Robert L Sr., a George
; Fredorlc:k, SecL 11(840ion
• N Uno of NE 1/4 NW of Rd.

•
$871.22.

· "" ·
•
07-00054 .000, Fronclo,
ChHter M &amp;lor Kothy N.,
S.CL 20 S. Pori oi76A W Prt
o fi.1~76ANEPrtEx 1A2A,
07-00765.000, Juotlo,
Ferrie M. llor M~rgoret,
SecL22-28mldofWIInoE
s ev eyA.S622 .~3A Ex Cool
•
· •·
UETARTTOWNSHIP
SOUTHERN LSD
08·00473.001, Ourot,
Lorry, 100A lot 271 a 272
3.186Afn Lot27111.0415A
In Lot272 4.2075A, S28.83.
08·00430.000, Ourot, R
Lorry, Secl1·7 .30A of 5.50A
W End Along Bull Cone
Ra.d.BOA,$41.33.
Ol-00431 .000, Duro~ R.
Lorry, S.CL 12 ·1 · 7 Mid of
Rd ox Coai26.58A, $108.80.
011-00432.000, Duro!, R.
Lorry Sect 12 1 7 on N
Line E' of Rd. Ex c. A~I4.~A,
~
$2115.20.
08•00505.000, Pickeno,
Elmer, Lot 16 (640) W of Rd
In NW Prt 1.90A, $$2.51.
01·00264.000, Wolle,
Fronltlln A, SecL 12-31 (16011841 ·NW Pt of Ex. Cool
18A.,$245.11.
08-o0462.000, Woodyard,
JomH H., SecL 35 (220) E
End Ex 1.24A Highway Ex.
t4.01A Ex 1.30A 10.70A,
$442.72.
OUVE TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
08·00071.000, Borber,
William Roy llor Rebecco
Irene, Lo1123 .75A of 70A
Lo1t123 SW PI A .eel/ mew
ourv.y .75A, $44.37,
08-00072.000, Barber,
Wllllom Roy &amp;lor Rebecco
Irene, Lot 123 .SOA of 70A
Lot 1123 Bet. Rd a River
.SOA, $2.84.
09·00346.001, De flay,
leonard E &amp;lor Jennl, Sect
33 FR32 T4W R11W 7A out
of 25A 7.00A, $24.84.
08·00814.000, Evone,
Michael A. &amp;lor Lori, SecL
33-34 E. End .872A of 39.15
.87 2A, $491.48.
09·01484.006,
Fink,
Charlet &amp;lor Sherrie, Sect.
36 T3 R11 NE COR 1.98A
Out of 94.36A 1.98A, $56.62.
08·00662.000, Hugheo,
Eclword E. llor Ealher J,
S24 T4, R11 NW Corner of
SW 1/4 1.DD7A out of
35.442A 1.897A, $54.56.
08·00688 .000, Nutter,
Jomot T llor Shirley M.,
Sect. 8 .42A out of .88A W

12

22 75

18

11 · 00065 .000 , Hoyeo,
Thoo&lt;lore P., Secl 36 E port
of NW 114 Ex 40A SE &amp; NW
of NW 114 Ex 16.32A 28.88A,
$73.73.
11 · 00427.000, Hoyos,
Theodore P., Lot Socl. 14·8
1.50 out of 33.38 1.50A,
$46.98.
11·00137.000, Jenklno,
Robert E., Sect. 29 SW cor
oeet.28 NW oor Sect. 1 4·28
NE of NW 114 43.033A,
$103.22.
11-G1144.000, Johnson,
Lyne B &amp;lor Linda S., Sect
30 NW 114 Ex 14 Vein Coal
160A, $544.30.
11.01145.000, Johnson,
Lyne B. &amp;lor Linda S., Sect.
30 7A on N Line of SW 114
Ex 14 Vein Coai 7 A, 42 . 19.
11.o 1146 .ooo, Johnoon,
Lyne B. &amp;lor Linda s., Seer.

SAUSBURYTOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
14.00483.000, Batey, Judy
Etol, Sect 32 S part of SE 114
1.36A, $19.13.
14·00228.000, Colli no,
Glenn R. Jr, &amp;lor Connie,
Sect 18 NW part of 72A W
Part of NW 11411A, $270.69.
14·00255.000, Dolley,
Jomoo Jr &amp;lor Bomie, Sect
32 (640) InN PartE of Rd Ex
oooiB.SOA, $382.69.
U • 00256.000, Dailey,
Jomoo Jr. llor Bonnie, Sect
33 (640) Mid of S dne of SE
114 of SW 114 .SOA, S3.83.
14·00484.000, Goldberg
Jerome Family Truot, Etal,
Sect. 8 (640) Schoollot N of
M Do vis .12A, $2.31.
14·00690.000, Hyooll,
Harold E., Sect. 8 (640) NE
of w 112 of NW 114 on Willi•

3000NAES12146Ex
60A NE of Rd
1
1 .07.
•
11.01147.000, Johnson,
Lyne B. &amp;lor Unda s., Sect.
30 Sa 114 Ex 33A SW 120A,
$360.13.
11-G1148.000, Johnson,
Lyne B. &amp;lor Undo S., Sect.
36 NE cor 221.75A Ex #4
Vein Coat, 20A, $84.04.
11-G1149 .000, Johnson,
LyneBS.&amp;Lio runfdaSEs. , SeeEl.
11
1
114
•
on , · no 0
14 Vein Coai1 .40A, $2.37.
11 .0 1156·000,
~~:~~c:u:~. •SR~~-e;t

Gary
'
'
'
A. &amp;lor Sandra K. , Sect. 35
(640) at moulh of Wolf Pen
Run Ex .96A .81A, $358.55.
14-G1399.000, Pennlnglon,
Charles, Sec. 21 (262) Neor
Mid In S Prt of S of Rd ex
.776A 0.9107A (New Sur),
$89.23.
14.Q1168.000,
Price,
MRadr1 ordl"s' Soct 8A($64o) 26
25
11 5 90
8 1or
urv..
•
· •
14.Q1117.000,
Price,
Norman Jr., Sect. 8 In NW
~;· ~ W 112 of N 1l2 2·70A,
· ·
14-G1169.000,
Prlc6,
~:;m:n \ Jri'1~1 8 ;~ ~1
o
nc. •
•
$159.39.
14.01170 . 000,
Price,
.Norman L. Jr., SectS of N
prt of 4.28A 1.44A, $230.43.
14·01~000, StolcheW
Ada A.,
I 8 (640) ~ N
11414oi0Sec1871880.3070A, $4St.3te' of
•
·
•
a
Ohio, Sec. 26 (640) Prt of 1A
S aide E 112 ol SW 11ol of SW
114 .SOA, $15.27.
14·01968.000, State of
Ohio, Sect. 15 (262) Near
Mid of N 112 4.75A, $43.16.
14·0060 4 .000, Vanover,

s

:e ::

Gardner .42AC, $51.89.
11 08 9 01
P ~ : · ~\ h K
oc ngon, u t ·• eel.
9 S End Ex .. 70A out of
97.75A 32A., $1,027.28.
11 · 00067.000, Porter,
Dixie I, Soct16 .83A SW Cor
of 82.32A on Twp Rd .83A,
$552.36.
D 111·00J921.000, Roush,
an e1 · &amp;lor Esthor L., Lot
S
eeL 9 mid part 2.519A out
of 3, 20A 2.519A, $68.27.
11·00922.000, Houoh,
Daniel J &amp;lor Es1her
Louise, Lot FR 2 T.6 R.14
.279A out of 1.001A,.279A,
S3.76.
11·00937.000, Ruasell,
Vicky L. &amp;lor Sheridan T.,
Lot 2FR 4 T-6N R·14W Clair
MarEst.1 .3426AC,$551.82.
11·00782.000, Slmpklno,
Lee Roy, SR, Lot (7) LUH'o
add. ·4, $233.67.
11·01019.000, Smith,
Carla Sue, Eta I, Lot, Sect •
14 on N Line Mid . of E112
Ex. Coai4.75A, $11.32.
11·01020. 000, Smith,
Carla Sue, Etal, Lot Sect. •
14 W pt of E 112 (oul of
42.43A) 38.16A, $401 .96.
11·01021.000, Smllh ,
Carla Sue, Etal, Lol Socl. •
' M. SI.A.
14 Mid. 6.92A out ol 95.98A
:- 03.01012.000, Redford,
6.92A, $12.37.
! Rlcllord Elll, SecL 34 on w
11·00155.000, Smith
• Una of NE 1/4 W of Rd
Rolland E. &amp;lor Karon 0 .,
: t6.16A, $45.12.
Sect. 2 E part of 2.09A Ex
• 03·01013.000, Radford,
Right of Way 1.12A, $131 .84.
Etol, SecL 35 (640)
11·00141 .001, Slarcher,
• Wof SE 1/4 I BE of BW 1/4
Ruasoll, Sect ' 35 T6 R14 E
2A 58A, f167.&amp;:!.
Part ol SE 114 2.543 out of
• 03·01014.000, Radford.
77A 2.543A, $60.02.
: Richerd Etal, Sect. 34 (640)
11·00128.001, Tobin,
• ., NE prt of NE 114 on SocL
Arthur A. &amp;/or Mary L., Sect
I Une3A, 56.53.
12 R14 T5 .735A ou1 of
• 03· 00482.002, Smith,
1.09A 735A, $55.21.
! Helen T llor Swain, Sharon
11.01168.000,
Vance,
• J., SecL 18 T3H R12W 1.19A
Robert E., Lot Socl 13 Mid
; out of 14.01A 1.18A, 1168.17.
Sec. of W Cr Ex Minerals Ex
• 03.01230.000, Storcher,
11.2813A 73.4083A, $274.72.
:..Ado, 84 1.14A out of 53.07A
11-G1195.000,
Warner,
•- • of Sept of 89A Mid Pt E
John Henry Jr., Sect 9 w
,..·1/21.14A, 1168.71.
End of 62.37A In N prt ex
~ 03·01231.000, Storchor,
564 .69A, $6.23.
0 AcM.S4(840)T2R132.65A End .42A,$348.~
11·01592 . 000, Weara,
"'CIUt oi51.83A Joining 1.14A
09-01152.001, Nutter, Corrie, Royalty Int. Herald
;:.,21A, $5.8t.
Jameo T &amp;lor Shirley M., Oil &amp; Gaa Co Carrie Woaro
•
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Sect.8, T4, R11, .343A out Lend Owner,$9.78.
-;:_
MEIGS LSD
oi9.56A.343A, $2.84.
11·01243.001, Wllliamo,
o 04·00080.002, Jacko,
09·01216.000, She:r,ord, Dana, Sect2 T6 R14 SEcor
~bert Eugene llor OOflno Earl, Sect 23 E Sl e of 5.00A out of 22.15A 5.00A,
-:: Yvonne SecL 12 T2 R13, 75.56A SPort SW 1/4 Ex 2A $71.38.
"lllcl on 112 1,735A, Out of E Side 53.36A, $483.83.
RUTLAND VILLAGE
·~,t24.10A, $351•011 •
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
• 04-00112.000, Stonier, Jack
12·00076.000, Dudding,
:;,R. llor Koren J., Sect. 10
EASTERN LSD
W.H., 2 Fallono Add. 2 Trl W
• (2821 T.2 R.131.02A Out of
10·00758.000, Merlnar, Side 10' N end to Pt at S
· ~aoA 1.02A, $55L14.
NLormsan L. 5112or Emwlleelll. , end, $4.24.
: . COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
ol oct. 1 • 1 on
ne
12·00180.000, Howell,
8.54A, $60.59.
Ke11h K. &amp;lor VIrginia, Lol
•
A' .,.. • .,DER LSD
•
~
1.0·00683.003, Swain, Lee
05-00100.000, Brloker, Un, T s
3 T4N R1 2 1 037 A 38 • 532 ·61 ·
; SecL tO 50' x of Lotl27, •·· oct.
12·00181.000, Howell,
·
• .UA, $5.11.
~k of 61 · 517A, 1·037 A, Keith K. &amp;lor VIrginia, Soc
' 05·00123.000, Chrlollon
• ·
14 15 (262) 3x8rda W of Lot
M
S 1 2 T9N
10·00145.000, Wiggins,
•
'
• Ex•
••, ec. ' . ' PhiUI W &amp;f 0 b
h G
3.15A, $170.53.
: ILISW, 15.08A out qf 90A
P · or e ora
·•
12.00307.000, Searls, Paul
SLobdl1117w• H 1 ~kory, EAcre~ R. &amp;lor Jacklyn B., Sect. 8
• t5.08A, 5127.03.
; ' 05-00312.000, Chrlollon, Nu538'v.$485 79 x 464 100
(640) N PI .75A E of Rd . lo
• E'xo Moe, Sect. 2 W 112 of
•
· ·
c 40A $429 79
$E f/4 Ex. 10A SW 70A,
1 O·OOt46.ooo, Wiggins, · ri2.oii3o8.otio, S.arlo, Paul
" $111.35.
Phillip W. &amp;lor Deborah G., R. &amp;.or Jocklyn B, Socl. 8
: OS-00313.000, Chrlotlon. t;:.• !!1.•~~lr"~r~~o~~~:;'; (840) E of Rd. to Cr. Hotollol
• Exo ..... SecL 2 8 112 of SW
ex, 40A N pi ,35A, $34.73 .
: t/4 a 10A WPT of SW 1/4 LotR~rtt'ti1\oWNSHIP
12·00302 .00d, Smith,
' 74.12A., $235.M.
MEIGS LSD
Carlo Sue, Etal, .15A oH N
end of Lot.15A, $45.40.
' - 01·00141.000, Don lei,
·a . - ~~or Judy, Sect. 18 11·000S5.000,
Bing , Leo
12·00046.000, VanMeter,
t1A Out of Center ol3 16A M. 1 Caroline, Sect. 6 NW Mary C., Sect 8 (640) Near
•t1A, , 19.22.
'
Port Ex 1.50 Ex 3A EX7.06 Mid on s Uno of NW 114 Ex
• Q5.0CM73.000, L..... , Miry 34A 18.5568A, $86.44. F ,
1.05A 1.05A, $80.27.
SALEM TOWNSHIP
C Sect. 23 W PL of N 1/4 Ex. 11 .002 66.000, Doy, errel
OIIA, Out of 128 48A, W. &amp;lor Patricia K., F.12 T.6
MEIGS LSD
.oesA, $2.7t.
'
R.14 E Side Public Rd. NW
13·00351 .000, Aahburn,
- Q5.0CM74 000, Lcwelf'Mory Cor. 1· 2673 A, S15·08 ·
Larry D. &amp;lor Bolly S., Secl
; -c SecL
N. Cen1roi'PL of 11 .00267.000, Day, Ferrel 31 T8 R15 Mod on W line of
1/4 2.031A out of 10.50A W. &amp;lor Patricia K., Sect. 9· W 112 ex 9A Ex 2.50, 6.50A,
Z.03!A, S218 11.
10 1.03A out of 57.8546A $42 .46•
13·00423 .000, Dovlo,
05..Q0823.0o1, Sondero, 1·03A,$441 .86·
Ronald L llor Audrey J.,
11·01282.000, Elllo, Walter Robert E. 1/or Hozol E.,
.Sect20 F- 25 E Port .188A &amp;lor Tholmo, Sect. 21 out of Sect 18 SW of N 200A Ex.
'liUI of :12.50A .188A, $1.20. ·3A 130' Wide &amp; 22 Rd N out M4 Vein Coal .992A of 15A
05..Q0822.001, londero, of 3A 1A, $32.57.
.992A, $217.52.
Ronold L llor Audrey J.,
11·00315 . 000,
Faw,
13.Q0281.000, Hart, Rondy
- ...,1 20 Free 18 N Part Mlchoel Shoy, Sect. 24N line &amp;lor Sherrie, Sect. 15 ·18
""t::A out of 88A 1.78A, of NE 114 7.37A, $17.49.
NW Cor Ex N SOA N 1BA,
~
11.
•
11·00318 . 000 ,
Faw, 5128.88.
w ~152.000, Woodgerd, Mlchoel Shoy, Sect. 24 SE
13•00777.000, Hayeo,
:=. rouph, 7, Stol45.
Port Ex •. 23A E 141.25A, Theodore P., Sect. 18 T8
• ~1U.-, Waadgud, $705.18.
R.15 Neer Mid. on N Uno out
I ·20 W Side of N 11·00845.000, Fronklln, oi94.06A S.03A,$53.59.
13·00778.000, Hoyeo
• 112,511.11.
Eothor Mae, Etol, Se&lt;:t. 8
• 01-410164.000, Woodgord, Mulchler Add. 1e .42A, Theodore P. Sect. 18 Near
: Joeoph,l, $14.48.
$5.15.
Mid. on Uno piN of Rd out
, 05-410111.-, Woodgerd,
11·00846.000, Franklin, oi99.53A 5.47A,$488.00.
; Jouph, 1 IO'x100'E Side, Eother Moe, Etal, Sect. 9
13·00338.000, Johnllon,
• 125.81.
Mulch lor Add. 15 .42A, Cecil E., Sec118, 12.72A out
'
UEBANON TOWNSHIP
$113.11 .
of 30A 12.72A, $358.43.
:
IIOUTHIERN LSD
11.01184.000, Fronklln,
13.00442.000, McClellen,
; 07·000ot.OOO, AdldM, .Eath• Moe, Etal, Sect. i No Kenneth, Secl 6 SEcor. ox
• E....... 0 lrld JiNinn, Sect O..C:. .SOA, $8.17.
14 Vein Coal 6.25A, $14.85.
: 21 I Pri of lOA E Side of 11·00787. 000, Ho1fleld, 13·00&amp;eO.OOO, Smith,
• .,. H 112 of 8W 1/4 .12A, Anno Moude, Lot Sact. 111 Elaine Marie, Sect. 32 NW of
' ....
Hutchl~ton, Subdlv, 88.77' X SW 114 Ex 14 Vein Cool Ex
: g7:oooor.ooo, .........; 80.45' x 141.84' x 2oo ·. 2suA, 568.84.
"1!....- 0 lrld JOontt, le'ct. $425.48.
13·00704.000, Swon,
: BE 112ofiW1/4~flllol 11·00004.000, Hayeo, Lindo K., Lol28, Longstreth
:·lOA 2-'IA of lOA 2.31A, Theodore P., 936 W PI of Add., $136.69.
NW1/4Ex40,t,SEaNWCor
13·00705.000, Swon,
~ 07·00747.000, Adlclno, of NW 114 EX 12·03 A 13·03A, Linda K., Lot 29 Longotrelh
Roger Dole 1/or Tamara S3! .2l .
Add., $9.77.

*

18

:llohord
:ex

1

W

1 25

i

1

.i4A

IE

at

i ....,.,

E

·-.37'.

s

Hl~4~;:,•6'g~"jones

Add,$890.27.
18·02074 .000, Dnla ,
Steven W. Etol, lot12 Nyeo
AddS 5', $11 .09.

Debro L, Lo1480, $19.78.
16·01294.000, Thomoo,
Debra L, Lot 479 50'x150',
$359.92.
16-01826.000, WIIH, John
H, Lot 89 891 12 Sub 12
4V.40' x 97.68' 50' x 87.36',
$13.80.
16-01929.000, Wllto, J ohn
H, Lot 89 Sub 2 57,04' x
112.21 ' &amp; 70' • 97.68',
$60.77.

16·00534 . 000 , Flo her,
Thocdoro, Lot 48 D. Add.
Sub. 2 ex. Trl. 6' on NE olde,
$209.87.
16·09535.000, Floher,
Thoodono, Lot70' x 20' back
of oub 4a5 of lot 148
Dabney add .. 015A, $6.70.
16·00644.000, Goldberg,
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
Jerome Fomlly Truat, otal,
MEIGS LSD
101 257 23 ·22A E Part ox lolo
1 7·00831.001 , Allen,
23.22A, $45.48.
Robert, Seer 30 4.556A out
J 16·006~5.0~0,loldborg, of 12.687A ox 1.0001A
erome am ly ruol, olal, 2.0752A,$16.61 .
Lol 257 Near mid on W line,
17 ·008 31.002,
Allen,
$2.~~
G
ldb
Robart,
Sect
30
T7N
R14W
1
·000 • 0
erg, 1.0001A, out of 3.0753A,
Jerome Family Trust, Etal, 1.0001A, $105.32.
f~~ 57 ~~· :~rip on W Uno
17·00941 . 000 ,
Allen,

0646

t

ts-~647..000,

Goldberg,
Jerome
Family
Truol,
Etal,
L 54
5 $

~~:i\::,•;4.~~- .34A

L Jr, Sect. 3 2.37A S of Rd
out of 9A E end ex. cool
2.37A, $16.25.
18·00474 000, Goldberg
Jerome Family Trusl, Elal,
Sect. 1 (160·1223) Mid of lot
1223 N of Rd .12A, $67.39.
18·00475.000, Goldberg
Jerome Family Truol, Eral,
Sect.1·1223(100)Sprt47A
ex 1.877A 45.12A, $183.56.
18·00476.000, Goldberg
Jerome Family Trusl, Eta I,
Sect. 31 SW corner 60A ,
$162.67.
18·00477.000, Goldberg
Jeromo Family Trust, Eta I,
Sect. 1 bank end of 49.90A
28.40A, $115.42.
18·01382.000, Goldberg
Jeromo Family Truot, Eta I,
St 1 T 2 R. 13 160A Lot1223
Ex e:146A Ex 245A Ex. 329A
24.330A, $107.02.

SE 26.27A. $18.53.
17·00944.000 , Hickmon,
Helen M., Lot Sect · 25 Und
1121ntln coal und 1/08A NW
bor of 18A .54A, $.36.
11· 00945 .000, Hickman,
Helen M., Lol ooc ·25 Und
112 lntln coal und 21 .46A pt
of 74A 10.73A, $6.83.
17·00946.000, Hickman ,
Helen M., Lot Sect ·25 Und
112 In tin coal und 16,92A
und N PI Se 114 6.46A,
$5.40 .
17·00543.001, Howard,
Gerold W &amp;lor Barbara A.
Sect12 T7 R14 1.24A oul of
93.32A 1.24A, $69.66.
17·00491 .000, King ,
William E &amp;lor Brendo, Sect
14·15 (262) Fr. 6 T.7 R.14
.582A , $244.38.
17·00779.000, Paroono,
Arnold &amp;lor Shirley, Lot

Open 9to6
3 dlllwitulldnca;

is now offering

Public

5

24

4

j1. ,f

w

12

29

3

5

26

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESUI.TS • FAST!

15·01 609.000, Dellavolle,
Michael, lot 128 P Jonoo
3rd AddS Side, $186.64.
15·00459.000, Eborsbach,
Jerenna M &amp;lor Tlmothy R.,
Lol Prt Lot 110 30x120 Prt
Lot 111 30x120 Bosworth
Add., $400.95.
15·00426.000, Elllo Oren
L. &amp;/or Peggy L., Lot 15
Harlan &amp; Bosworth Add.,
$48.28.
15·01532.000, Landers,

Lot 452 Sub. 11 12-2112,
$104.39.
16·01264.000, Chapman,
Craig T &amp;lor Sherry S, Lot
595, $10.44. '
16·01265.000, Chopman,
Craig T. 1/or Sherry S, Lot
596,$273.19.
16-G0284.000, Cheatham,
. Mary, Lot 6 1755 Cheller
Rd., Trolno odd lot 6, $79.76.
16-00386.000, Dovlo,
Lorenzo D. Jr, Etal, Lot 8·9
S112 of oub 16, $4.10.
16·00387.000, Dovlo,
Steven W. Etal, Lot 255 Sub.
8 112, $2.80,
te·00388.000, Dovlo,
Steven W. Et~l. Lot 9 Nyeo
Add. 20' Nor1h, $14.53,
16·00319.(!00, Dovlo,
Sloven w, Elll, Lot 255, Lot
101Ex. 10' N Side, $4.45.
16· 02072.000, Dovla ,
Steven W. Etol, Lo110 NYES
Add 10' N Side, $22.16.
16 ·02073 .000, Oovlo,
Sloven W. Elal, Lor 11 Nyeo

In Memory '

2

WILLIAM (BILL)
FOLMER
on hla birthday

Nov. 20

To place an ad

Call992-2156

Lot 62 Bohan Add . W 112
68'x96', $411 .35.

John L. &amp;/or Wanda Sue,

NOTICE 10 ODN'TRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
Novomber It, 11183
Contrroct ..... ~· Copy
No. 83-111115
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
BRF-93-8(4) .
SHied propooolo will be
.......,ed ot the office of tho
director of the Ohio
Ooputment
of
Troneportotlon, Columbuo,
Ohio, until10:00 &amp;m.
TUNdlly, Decemblr 21 11183
lor lmprovemenla In: Meloo
Caunty, Ohio for Improving
oecti011 MEG-124-8.78, Stow
Route 124 In Solem
Townahlp, by gr•dlng,
drolnlng, povlng with
aaphalt concrete on
bltumlnouo oggnogot. booo
end by constructing bridge
No. MI:G-124.o&amp;79, • olngle
opon
compoolte
preetrea1ed c6ncrete box
boom with copped pile
abutmenlo (open 45 ·0"
center to center brg1,;
roedwoy 34'.0" min.) over
Melloono Creek.
Bidding 11
Bldclng on thlo proJocl lo
reotrlcted to Dludvonllgo
Bulin••• Enterprl1e1
(OBEo) oortified • DBEo In
accordance with , the
Surface
Tr-portotion
Uniform
Relocation
Aoolotonce Act of 1987, 1nd
48 CFR, Port 23 ond
qualified to bid wllh ODOT
undor Ch1ptor 5525 of the
Ohio Revloed Code.
The Ohio O~portment of
Trlnoportotlon hereby
notllleo oil blddero tho! It
wll offlrmotively lnoure lhot
In 1ny contrect entered Into
purauanl
to
lhlo
odvertloement, minority
bUo-• .,tooprloeo will be
olforded full opportunity lo
oubmlt bldo In rHponoo to
IIIIo lnvi11Uon ond will not
be dlacrlminoled ooolnot on
lhe groJundo of roco, color,
or notlonol origin In
conolderellon for en -ord.
Minimum waee rat. for
thlo prolecf hove b"n
predetermined eo required
by l1w ond ore eel forth In
lhe bid propoool. "The dolo
oet for compleUon of thlo
work 1holl be oet forth In
lhe bidding propoael."
Plono and Spoclllcation•
ore on file In the

In Loving Memory ot

Roberl E. &amp;lor Margaret A.,

15-01154.000, Roach ,
Catherine M &amp;lor James F
D, Lot 49 Coalport 30' E
End, $158.78.
15-01182.000, Roush,
Thomu R &amp;lor Dorothy
Mae, Lot4, $133.37.
15·01065.001, Smllh,
Lorry M. Sect 29 TIN R13W
75.41' x 50' out of 140' x 50'
(lol294), $221 .11.
15·01343.000, Taylor,
John L. Etol, lot 24 Behan
2nd add, $45.89.
15·01966.000, Wandling,
Londlo K. &amp;lor Agneo, Sect.
29 on N Una of Sect 29 Ex
1.31SA 5.685A, $76.25.
15·00987.000, Winnings,
Graoo &amp;lor Mlllor, Unda, lot
68 Bohan Add., $54.43.
15·00837 . 000,
Wise,
Charlll &amp;lor Betty, Lol 413
Pom Add 25' W 112, $99.12.
POMEROY VILLAGE
MEic&amp;LSD
16·00031.000, Arnott,
John L. &amp;lor Wanda Sue,
Lot452 Sub. 3 112 40' x 150',
$672.36.
1 6·00032.000, Arnell,

•

Notice

MoN. lhru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad1 ouLiide lhe county )'GUr ad runa mUit be prepa1d
• Receive diac:ouat for ada paid in advaDCe
• Free Ada: Cive.way and Found ada under 15 word• wall be
run 3 day• at no charge.
• Prtee of ad for aU c:apitallettera ia double prate of ad coal
• 1 pomt lane type only uted
• Sentinel11 not raponaible for f! I'TOrl after (iut day (cheek
for erron flrll day ad run• in paper) Call before 2:00p .m
day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that mUll be paid in advance are:
Card of Thank..
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A clu1ified adwertiaement placed in lhe The Daily Se ntinel
(except Clauified 011play 1 Bu11n~ Card or Legal
Nottcet) will.allo appear m the Point Pleuant Reguler and
the Calbpolit Daily Tribune, reaching over 18,000 Mrnea

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper
Sunday Paper

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 00 p m. Saturday
1 00 p m Monday
1·00 p m. Tuesday
1 00 pm. Wednesday
100pm Thwsday
1 00 p m. Fnday

RATES
Days

Words

1

15
15

3
6

10

15

Rate Over 15 Words
$ 4.00
$ .20
$ 6.00
$ JO
$ 9.00
s ,42

15
15

C::LASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!
Pell for Sale
Mwieal I rutrumenlll

5758- Fru;,. &amp; Veietal.l.,
For S.le or Trade

Gallia County

Meigs Counly Maoon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
367-CheoiUre
• 388-Vlnton
24$-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Ditl,
643-Arol.la Dill.
379-Walnul

992-M;ddleport/
Pomeroy

985-£he.ler
843-Portland
247-Le~an

r.u.

949-Raclne
742-Ru~ond

675-PL. Ple..ant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grave
773-Muon
882-New H.ven
895-Lelart

937-Bullalo ,

667-CoolviUe

2-ln Memory
S..:.... Announcemenll
4- Civeaway
S-Happy Ado
6--l.oat and Found
7- Loll and Found
...,_ 8- Publ;. Sale &amp;
L

Auction
9- Wanted to Buy

11-HelpWanled
12- SituaUom Wanted

I· \ li\1 'I 1'1'1 11 ~
.'\ I 1\ I .~ 1111 r,
Holftel for Sale
33- Farma for Sale

n. q pmeal
Wanled to Buy

Livutoek

34- BWiineu lkulcHnp
3s....iLob &amp; Acreage

Hay &amp; Gratn
Seed &amp; FertiU.er

X..:. Real Eatate Wanted

I I{ I \ ' I' &lt;II( I I I I&lt;1\

l:l ,\' 1 \1 ...

• •-· "'"'"' for Sale
41- Houaea for Rent
72- Trueb for Sale
42- Mobile Homu for Rent 73- vana &amp; 4 WD11
43- Far"'' for Rent
74-- Motoreycl~
44- Apartment for Rent
7S- Beata &amp; Moton for Sale
45-- Furnithed Room•
7(,.... Auto Parb &amp; ""'"'o'rieol
46- Space lor Rent
11- Auto Repair
47- Wanted to Rent
78- CampiniJ Equipaenl
48- Equipmeht for Renl

&gt;lli\1&lt;1 ,

•

lnturance

14- Bualne.la Tra1n1ng
15- Schoola &amp;: lnatruction
16- Rad1o , TV &amp; CB Repur
11- Milcellaneou1
18-- Wanted To Do

60

Monlhly
$1.30/day
$ 05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card ......$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board.... .$6.00/lnch per day

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ••.

446-Go~u..,u,

s

$1300

po

PlumbiniJ a Heaajns

Excu•lins ,
84- El.. lrical &amp; Relrifleral&gt;&gt;rl

52- Sp.ortln« Goode
53- ilnliqueo
54- Mm:. Merch•nd11e
55- Bu1ldint Supplict

•

85- General Haullng
86-- Mobile~ Home Repair

87- Uphololery

.Huablncland Dad
You Wlt'M't the type
lo alt, and do
nothing
Rath« you ware
Inside or out
On the go conatanlly
But Just when we
thought
Wa had the bull by
the horns
You - . 10 relax.ct
and from us you
w-tomandwlth
your Jut brallth

Aa hard aa you drew
We all knew In our
hNIU
That
we'd alwaya

love you
Though your not
with us

Your

memory

llvaa

on
And In your lamlly
A grandiOI'I

Ia bom

and on

my w.ckllng
you ware to

day
glva me away and
h - 1M VOWI the
Jeff and I would aay
But I know you'll ba
there In your own
little way

lt'a
hard
to
undwltancl
Why you had to go
away And with your
naw grandiOI'I and
yoiM' IOII•In-lllw too

They will each INm
mora maybe and
grow to love you

too.
Happy

Birthday

walovayou

Erma Folrn• and
Jart and Anita
Ruanll

Scolch, Whit. •
Auttrlon Pin. ., 5' to
Hlll'ley Haning ,..,.
donee, 35175 Aatwoodo
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

r.

Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink w~h each purchase of

0

6

1

IIOilTGAGE COMPANY

~':"~i~5 !,~6~/n~ww"::i 4~~~A J.;:~~3::~~~:·rr:::d~~~f

of
17·00014 .000, Althouse, $2617
·
' S ect 160 ·1 223 3.SA ou
' 1 o r'
· ··
°~ 6 . 00~~~ ~~~ ~'oaJ:::g, Elmer W, Lot (51), $18.75 .
11·00778 .000, Phillips,
51A NE cor. E of Rd 3.24A,
17·0° 015 · 000 • Althouse, Myrtle, Lot Secl. ·15 (262)
Jerome Family Trust, Eta I,
$47.27.
Lot 34 112 Horton Add Sub El~ro~o}:.to(~~~· S~~~:.s~se, Part of SAW Uno Near Mid.
18·01450.000, Goldberg
34 112,$4.10.
Elmer W Lot (S 7 ) Ex . S .S0 A,S3.2 1.
pI
Jerome Family Trusl, Etal,
3
1 7 • 0 0 6 4 5 · 001 •
'
r c 0 • Sect 31 CoaiSOA, $36.79.
119
62
16· 0086 2. 000,
II eo, Side, $ · ·
Albert H &amp;lor Phillips,
18·01451.000, Goldberg
Bernice A., Eta I, Lot 20·21· St!;;~OE6r6M~~~C ~o~~~· Eugene 3J2r~, E Prt ol 11Ltot6622 Jerome Family Trull, Elal,
•
22Ex.15'oiiNSide,$25.37,
' ·•
• 55' x 1
oul 0 0
Secl 1 Coals 112 60A,
16· 00863 . 000,
Ilea, ~~ ~g:_o) SW Cor. 19 ·179A, $13.08.
s43 .91 .
Bernice A., Etal, Lot 23
17-00674. 000, Beha,
17-00654.000 , Reeves,
18·01452.000, Goldberg
Nayora Run 15' N Side, Steven E &amp; Mary c ., Lot Eugene W &amp;lor Juanita M.,
Jerg_me Family Trust, Etal,
$10.82.
Sect ·24 (640) wPart of 50 A Lol Secl ·9·10 near mid. on
Coal E Part of SW 114
B~r~j:~8:.4, · ~~:..· l~:e a , S of NW 114 20A, $878.47. S llne 3.27A, $16.59.R
71.11A, $52.27.
17·00675.000, Beha,
17· 0 06 5 5.000 ,
eaves,
18·00263.000, Jarrell,
Nayloro Run Ex . 15' off N Steven E &amp;lor Mary C., Lot Eugene 'tl &amp;lor Juanita M., Dallas 0 &amp;lor Kimberly,
Sid:, ~~~Vs.
aeot. 24 2.432A, $79.95.
Lot Sec!. ·1 o mid. on s line Sect 17 SE cor. of SE 114
1 •
8 .001, Jenklna,
17·00740. 000, Bogga, IOA,$34.65.
Ex ooai114A $30836.
Rober! E. Etal, Pel 54 1.25A Michael D &amp;lor Sharon K,
17·00656.000, Reevea,
i8-00707.000, J~hnson,
oul of 3.94A 1.25A, $125.33. Sect. ·15 NE of Pagevllle Eugene W &amp;lor Juonlta M.,
Jimmie w &amp;lor Belinda J,
40 A$ 273
Lo1Sect-10SEcor. Ex.40A
Sect. 16 153 &amp; 6 1A,
. .
16·02578.002, Jenklno, · 1 0•0 4 ; .ODO, Boggs, east End ZOA, 549_52 .
5186 27
Robert E., Elal, Pel 3 Pom Michael D &amp;lor Sharon K,
Robert,
A
.
.
,
17 01071 000
Branch River Lending Kerro Sect. ·15 NE of Pogevllle Crissinger Inc., Working
RACINE VILLAGE
R75(FAor$7N5ul2o6) .662A of 1.413A 3.3489A, $268.86.
Interest Charles Arnold #1
SOUTHERN LSD
•
•
· ·
17 00454 001 B 10 kl
Lend Owner $20 85
16 02578
•
·
• r
es,
'
· ·
19·00061.000, Ball ,
•
.003, Jenklno, Ray A &amp;lor Charlottel, Sect
17.00611 .000, Robertson,
Rober! E., Etal, Pci551.50A 16 (6401
of Rd . 337 A out Alberto Lot31 $133 56
Timothy L &amp;lor Brenda L.,
Pom. Branch land lor track 1 OOOA 337A $ 4
I7·0D6 12.0o0, Roberison, Sect. 16 Lot 5 .505A out of
03
to Pomeroy Salt Alloc. 600, o 117.0011l.001', ~·ut~her, Alberta, Lot34, $18.75.
.73A .505A, $97.19.
$156.64.
Rodney Ray, &amp;lor Paulo
17·00613.000, Robertson,
19.00119.000 , Curtis,
16.01160.000, Mitchell, June, Sect. 33 T7 R14 AIJ&gt;orta, Lot35, $18.75.
Charles T, Sect 16 (640) Part
Gertrude S., Lot 422 50' E 59.723A out of 85.46A
17·00614.000, Robertson, In Wend 1.20A, $388.84.
~rlettakt s:.,c~ 13j;8E ~~:oJ end, $245.68.
59.72lA, 1147. 86.
Alberta, Lot36, $18.75.
19·00229.000, Jarrell,
earm ·
o
17.00116.001, Bulcher,
17·00884 000, Wlllla, Estella &amp;lor Dallas, Lot 28
o.l Rd .740A, $57.77.
16·01633.000, Spencer, Rodney Ray, &amp;lor Paula Harold Jr &amp;lor Rhea J, Sect 25 112 x 50' SE Corner,
14·00838.000, Waller, Donna Rae, Lot439 Trl Lot Juno, FRAC. 33 T7 Rr
33(640)N1 12oiSE11483A, $4.18.
Hilda &amp; Swloher Mlna, Socl. 11,$178.33.
.o25 A out of ,
A.
A,4 $304.58.
19·00230.000, Jarrell,
17 921 025
~0 (1~~ :,::~ 123 Penny o~r~.02t~~-9~~, -~~~~e ~r. u 6 .
17·00885.000, Willis, Eslella &amp;lor Dallas, Lol 28
urv. •
· ·
17.00118.002, Butcher, Harold, Jr &amp;lor Rhea J., Sect ex. SE comer, $13.40.
14·00639.000, Waller, Lending In front of 293·294· Rodney Ray, &amp;lor Paula 27 (262) w Psrl of sw
19·00231 .000, Jarrell,
Hilda &amp; Swloher Mlna, Socl. 295, $6.87.
June, Sec I. 32 T7 R14 84.42A Ex SA 42.92A,
Estella &amp;lor Dallas, lot 18 Fr
2:~~0) N~ ~~~·Jf&lt; SE pi
16·02578.006, State of 31.98A out of 85. 7951A $378.84.
of Lol N of Su~. #7, $79.99.
o
114 ·
•
· ·
Ohio, Sect. 8 T2 R13 So Cor 31 .98A, $925.70.
19·00232.000, Jarrell,
14·00640.000, Waller, of Lot 112 VB Horton Add
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
Estella &amp;lor Dallas, lot 18
Hilda a Swloher Mlna, Socl. .115A oul of 5.84A, $2.23.
11·00184.000, Dalton,
SOUTHERN LSD
60' Front Sub. G, $5.86,
35 ~100·320) 213 8AStrlp 30'
16·01644 .000, Stoborl, Cletls, Lo1(3) 42 112' S aide,
C
WI o.58A, $3.30.
Torry W., Lot 159 Dabney $19.45.
Ch1 8 j 00283
'[ ·000. urt 1'j 19.00411 .000, Walker, Don
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
Add.,$14.91.
17·00316.000, Gibson,
ares ., Sect 16 Part o Lee &amp;lor Iva Marie, 16 1116,
MEIGS LSD
16·01646.000, Stobar1, Arthur C. Jr, Lot Secl ·30 10.64A Tract W of Wolf Run $27.24.
15.00031 .000, Armolrong, Terry W., Lot 158 Dabney (640) Mid of N Line of SW 3A, $32.53.
19.00412.000, Walker;Don
LA Jean, Lot (15) Riverview Add, $72.49.
Part of SE 62A 90A, $608.41 .
18·00401.000, Evans, Lee &amp;lor Iva Marie, 17 117,
Acroo Subdlvlolon, $372.58.
16.00121.000, Teoford, G.
11·00366.000, Hayes, Kimberly L &amp; Evans Johnle $489.99.
15·00898.000, Basham, Bruce, Lot 138 5' W Side, Theodore P, Sect! T·7 R·14
Jeffery E., Lot 65 Sub? In $5.23.
2.10 out of 81 .23 2.1A,
lot 65 44' off E. oldo of aub
16.00122.000, Tealora, G. $13.08.
lot21nlot65,$298.89.
Bruce, Lo1139 1T E Side,
17·00943.000, Hickman,
15·00686.000, Birchfield $105.11.
Helen M., Lot ;:loc1·25 Und
Tereoa K. &amp;lor Robert L, Lot
16·01293.000, Thomu 1/2 lnt In coal und 52.54 A
Pl. of Lot 1477 40x70.3 off ~---_.__;__ _ _.J.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
SW Pt. of 477 Pomeroy
Add., $143.83.
15·00400.000, Carpenter,
Lorry, Dlv. Joneo Est 21 ex
otrlp Joining Com 2A Eat,
$13.40.
15·00386.000,! Casey,
James W. JR 1/ot Rhonda
L., Lol 80, Boaworth Add.
Ex. 20' Prt Lot, $403.54.

1

Mclendon ·

CHRISTMAS
TREES
$10.00-h

Financing Available
1.S00..553-3586

JAMES ALARM SIDICE

Department
of
Tronoportallon and tho
office of tho District Deputy
Director.
,
JerryWroy
Dlrec1or of Tranoportotion
(11) 2V (12) 6

Our Business is Security

Public Notice
NOTlCE OF SHERIFPS
FORECLOSURE SAUE
UPON VAWABUE REAL
ESTATE
Purouonl to on ORDER
OF SALE entered In C11e
No. 13·CV·21 In the
Common PI••• Court of
Melgo County, Ohio, otyled
"Aoooclotoo Flnonclal
Servlcea Company of
America, Inc., et al,
Plolntlflo, vo. Norman J .
Hamilton,
et
al,
O.fondenll. • ond purouont
to lhol cerloln Mortgoge
doted tho 28th doy of
February, 1892, whereby
NORMAN J. HAMILTON end

Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sundar Callsl

2112192/tfn

HAMILTON,~===;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:==~

VIVIAN LEE end
huoband
wile,
conveyed the herelnoftor
doocribed Raol Ealato to the
olor-ld Plaintiff, to oecuro
o.r.romlaaory nole, which
• d Mortgoge lo of Tecord
In tho Office of the Recorder
of Malgo County, Ohio, In
Mortgoge Volume 187, ot
Poge 173, tho Sheriff of
Molgo County, Ohio, will
offer lor ule ot r.ubllc
auction to the h gheot
bidder at lhe front door of
the
Melgo
Countr
Courthouoe, Court Stroe1,
Pomeroy, Ohio, on the 3oth
day of Dec., 11193, at 10:00
o'clock, o.m. tho following
doocrlbod Real Eotate
oltuato end being In Melgo
County, Ohio, and more
particularly deocrlbed oo
follows:
BEGINNING 3 roda and 1I
feet eoot of the oouthooot
corner of William C.
Turnor'a land In Section 12
of Solem Townohlp, Melgo
County, Ohio, running
thence 10.112 rodo In 1
oouf!l~terly direction to 1
atone comw; thence In •
ooulhweeterly direollon 13
rodo 1o the Uno between
JomH Neloon ond Anthony
Harmon at a point 4 rode
northweot of 1ho curve
corn• on aald line to the
corner of the oald Jomeo
Nelt6n'o
and Anthony
Harmon'• land ; thence
north two roda to William C.
Turner• land; thence north 7
rodo along tho ooot llno of
oald William C. Turner'•
lend; lhence e11t 3 rodo 11
leelj thence aouth 7 roct. to
the place of beginning,
Hllmotod ollhroe acroo, be
the a-.ne more or Jeaa.
Excepting ond reoerving
unto farmer Grantora all
coal underlying the above
deacrlbed realeatate.
Relerenca lo made to
Deed recorded In Volume
293, at pogo 927, Melgo
County Deed Rocordo, and
to Volume 295, pogo 637,
Molgo County
Deed
Rocordo.
SAID PROPERTY
APPRAISED AT 540,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh In
hand on day ol aale. Sale
will bo mado oubJocl to all
unpaid reol eotole tuoo, oil
rlghla of way, eaaementa
end reotrlctive covenonll of
record. Said Sheriff may
adjourn tald tole by mere
oral proclamation at the
time and ploce of oeld ollie.
Jomeo M. Souloby
SheriHof
Melgo County, Ohio
(11) 29, (12) 6, 13

446·9515
CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
..---1:....:·1:..:0:.=;0...:;·300·9515
We give carpet end
upholetery the
"SPECIAL CAllE"
they daaervell
l"dropeiy (on olte)

·Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Series
Low, wide 60 and 7D • Series
performance proHies.
• Two alrong fiberglass beltt'
• Aggressive tread design
• Smooth riding polrester cord

Special RIW/L Day!on
Tnucldoad SALE Prices

law anfon:amant,
par.onal protection,
young doge for Mia.
By eppt. only
614-667-PETS
11WW1mo.

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES
ChOCIHend
cut your tree.
(tlf .... cut ft tor !fOUl

Riggs Tree Farm
311507 Rockoprlngo Rd.
(at com• of US RL 33)
Pomoroy, Ohio
892-5702
Carol a liavld Rlggo
1112-

EICAYATIIIG
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

304· 773·5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

l' l nRE lAIN
338SII'Itit Gtovt Road
Radtlt, OW. 45771

614·992·5344
l·BOG-784-nRE

~

Come by and reg1ster
for free Battery lo be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchaa&amp;
required 1o regisler and
don'l have 10 be present

to win

Wo IIOW . . . . . 100 iMIIIIMr

laryMcOI..-.

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS
675-6755

992·6215
Pomeroy. Ohio
f.1CI-92~fn

Public Notice

for lmprovemM'IIIIn:
Melgo County, Ohio lor
Improving Ylrloua eectlona
of Slota Route 881, by llnHr
grodlng, povement repolr,
and reeurf1clng with
II concrete.
"The dolo ool for
complollon of thlo work
oholl be •• oel forth In the
bidding propoul."
Plono ond Spoclllcollono
ore on Hie In the Deportmenr
of Tranoportotlon ond the
offlce of the Dlotrlcl Deputy
Diroclor.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATlON
(11) 22, 29; 2TC

••ph•

AUTO
PARTS

.............
AL&amp;UUJ••••w

Specializing In CUllom
Frame Repair

t92•7012Gr
tt2•SJ52
GriOU •111
...00.141.0070
IAIWII, OHIO

915-4473

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

SATURDAY

R..-ble.RIIH
JOlt N. Sayre

6:30P.M.
Fectory Choke

I 2 Gauge Shot

SAYRE TRUCKING

Strictly Enforced

614-742-2138

nnonmo.p&amp;

FOISIU
ltyo...r

Call1149-2244
after 8 p.m.

1012811 mo. pd.

~1113 1 ""' •

J.A.R.
COIISTIUCnOI

HOME
Located on VIne St. In
Recine. Ample lot,
fenced Y•rd, w•lklng
dlatence to Rhool or
church: ldeel for
young family.

HAUUIIG
UMESTONE,
GRAVEL,. TOPSOIL_
, _COAL

FIRE DEPT.
EVERY

7131/91/lln

Wholuale
&amp; Retail
upRIIIIII.Iil
Bob Snowcrdan'elot In
RuUIIId, Oh.

WhoiOOIIe $10 Ill f8rm,
$12 delivered. Rlllllllot
will be open a
to t
p.m. ollrtlng Nov. 24111.
TrHiareS'tor.

•.m.

eon

•Dozer •Bickhoe
oO~cher oDump Truck ·

Land Clearing, Ponca,·
Water Unae, hptlca :
UcenH•Bondlld
Charlie Ha1flald,
Opctnllor
742·2803
11/IM mo. ,

rilma. DK's r'W Far11 Toys

GENERAL
HAUliNG

MQICOifU

MOIIIS
CO-UIIICITIOIIS
SYRACUSE, OH.
619-982..166
Reeld1nllal &amp;
Comrnerclel
lnollllatlono of uJecka • Phon• • FAX

K.ylyollm
Olf-PrernloM EXL • Data
FREE ESTIMATES
Jaff Morrlo • 15 Yr. Exp.
Tri-County Ar..

AT THE
QUlun PIINT SHOP
Midiltp art, Ohio
.
GREAT IEUECTION AND.
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
812-3384 1:3().4 Mon.-Fri.
742-3020 ,.,.., 5:00
Hra 1-noon SoL UA

Boas•
ofTr•...,r••"

105 BunernuiAva. Porreroy
Come and axperiWtce our
elegant Food and Shops
Somelliing for everyone
Book your Chnstmas Parties now Meeting rooms
am also avwla~a .
Call 992·3466 • 992·3818
We look foiWard lo
salVing you.

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ROOFING
Guttare
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Palntlnt

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
3-16-83·Un

HAUUNG
SERVIa
36970 Ball R• Road
"-oy, Oltlo
GRAVEl, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470

OWNER: .left Wlclt.,.._

167

...

Oli 367·01

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURAIICE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •·
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Middleport, o•io 45760
(6141 843·5264 Sit

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

CHRISTMAS TREES

992-7878

Box 189

BRADFORD'S
FRESH CUI TREES AVAILABLE

OR CUI YOUR OWN
Bill GO
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45 p.m.
· Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card
Uc. No. 0051-342

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6621
4-19-113-tfn

1112lltlll

Howard. L Wrltesel

Now has beaut~ul Cocker Spamel Puppiea. Alto
learuring a 2 fl. common Black Tequ. Layaways are
now available for ChriStmas . Sale on our entire stock
of large aquariums.
new "ems.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

.Opemnc 5ooft
"~Ins

l.l.sPETUID

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

7f7 1

NEW-REPAIR
614-915·:1961,0/26

FREE ESTIMATES
7122/f3

YOUNG'S

THE COUNTY QUI

JOHN TEAFORD

.._o•a.

~.._

7f1/1mo.

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992·7474
POMEROY, OHIO

Ploquoo

CI'Mkl•l

992-7878

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

UNdGolf
Cluba,
'li'ophl. .

Remodeling
Stop l Cornpua

31904Lellllll••

Gravel

1-800-784-nRE

GoiiCiubo
Ropalr,

-.;a·

Dirt

V.C. YOUNG Ill

CALL

1-Niew Homes

.l!Yt'Jllln9

Limestone

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
-GuU..r Work
-Eiectrlcolond Plumbing
-Roofing
-kitorlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESTlMATESI

bodr.

Public Notice

TUPPERS PLAINS
Baalc obedience,

Shoulder Mount ...... '155
Hom Mount.. ........... '22
Squinel............... .. .. '55

20 years o1
satisfied

notified lhat you have been
named Oelendanta in a
legal Klion entitled Marvin
L. Kelly, Plllntill vo. Homer
H. Cotto, El AI., Defendanla.
Thi't action hu boon
111lgnod C11e Number
27830 and io pending In tho
Court of tommon Pleaa,
Probate Divlalon of Mel9•
County, Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769.
The object of the
Complolntlo lor oulhorlty to
1111 decedlnfo r01l nllta
In order to poy dobto or the
ot1oll, which r011 Hlole lo
more porUcularly doocrlbed
In Volume 235, Pogo 113,
Melgo County Deed
Recordo, rolaronce to which
lo hereby modo.
You ore required to
onower tho Complaint
wllhln 28 deya ofter the laot
publlcotlon of thlo notice
which will bo publlahod
Public l)lotlce
once each week for alx
aucceaalve weeka. The la•t
PROBATE COURT OF
publlclllon wil be mode on
MEIGS COliNT't OtiO
12127, 11183 ond tho 28 dayo
ESTATE OF BURNALENE M. for Anawer wll commence
KELLY, DECEASED
on that doll.
CASE NO, 21l3o
In caae of your failure 1o
DOCKET 13 PAGE 436
an1wer or otherwlae
NOnCE OF FlUNG OF
reopond 11 required by lhe
CO~PLAINT FOR
Ohio Ruleo of Civil
AUTHORITY TO SELL
Procedure, Judgmen!' by
DECEDENT'S REAL
defoul1 will be rendered
ESTATE TO PAY DEBTS
ogolnot you for the relief
THE STATE OF OHIO, dom.,dod In the ComplllnL
MEIGB COUNTY, COURT OF Doted: November 18, 1993
COMMON
PLEAS,
Robert E. Buck, Judge
PROBATE DIVISION
Mel go County Probote
To John W. Ceeto whoM
Court
known addr.eaa waa (11)22, 29, (12) 6, 13, 20, 27
E11l Moln Street,
Po~ner••'f, Ohio 45768 1nd to - - - - - - - Cooto, whooo 1_ _,;_P.;:ub:.I;;.:IC:..:.:N.;:ot:;,lce=._ _
addreoo w•• 1·
4
t:eot ~- :::'~ NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
P.rkerobur!
m
STATE OF OHIO
21101, you ar1 hereby
DEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
Ads
5
November 12, 1683
Conlroct SoiH
Legol Copy No. 83-1040
Swlfty Is now
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Seoled
propoulo will be
the big "30".
r-Ived otthe olllce of the
Happy Birthday dlraclor of the Ohio
Deporlmonl
of
Love you, Tren1portat1on,
Columbue,
Family &amp; Friends Ohio, until 10 :00 o.m.
Tuesday, December 7, 1993

81

WV013372
We opeclallze In:
ARE &amp; WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATION·
INSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hour
Emergency Sarvlca

l•.,.•na&lt;ral cleaning
l•ntln• 1reatmen1

TRI·STATE 1·9
ACADEMY
kennel urvlce, pupa I

(304) 882-3336

COISIUCIIOI ·

PLUMIIIIO

mo. p&amp;

11ntil

Public Notice

· IOIIII'IIMU.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM•••
REMOVAL
.•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-12-lln

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES
OH.
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
WhHe Pine 4' &amp; Up whh
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 7 42·2143 or
742·2979
I L..Oii'OU

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHEll flY RIDGE: Tum Eaa1a1
Darwin onto R1. 661, go 4 mi.ro Milepoot 13. Turn
SoU1h on gravel road, 1'11 mileo to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'nL DARK

NOVEMBER SPECIAL.
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n-..........sl80
NORINCO UNI. SKS •• -.................... ~5
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE.. s130•
CALL AmR 6:00
304-415-7256

1 t/121113 1 110.

sweeper Repairs
Parts • Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Hoover, Eureka, Tri.Siar,
Regina, lk. most otller brands!
Parte Shipped UPS
Feat• Dependable S.rvlc:el

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
273-4098

Mobile and Doublewlde owners...

FURNACES
IMIIIIed 00111pleeo with
ftnanclng•ellallle.

�iPiiag~aiiiiaiiii;;The;;;;Da;;;;ll;;y;Senr:t:-ln~e:l:::=::::-:-:-""""::-:~---"T;;:;:;P;o;m;ero;;y-Middleport, Ohio
BEATJ'JE BLVD."' by Brute Beattie - - - -..•
"

-Rr

0

0

0

44

0

•

All--..,. . . . .

0

0

0

0

In
t~ neAl F.,., II lUblN to

thiF-FIIrl-.gA/1.
&lt;11881--tlllgll
to.twa. . "My . . . . . 101.
lrNIIIIon or
iiii6wl
bMed on rw., cc*tr, r.lglon,
- -lloluoorMiorwl
ortgln, or ony lrUntlon to

0

Monday, November 29, 1193

~~ Monday,

November 29, 1993

Aplrtment
for Rent

The .

Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®.by Larry Wright
I'l-l ~T li.t.vl!
PIPALI U,..NT

·----··2bdrm. oplo., Iaiii - · IP'
p i - · himllilld, loundrJ

TH'

CAPITAL .~

ACROSS

In town. ~- onllobto
II: VlttaaO~cfftiioft AIR 1141 or
celt 11'1441124711. EOH.

' PHILLIP
ALDER

Columbll, wv. -773-2~83.

..... Our ....... -

30

Trained, 8

w..b

Old, C.11 81C..

211·1114 Botoro 8 P.M.

7 - ·oomo
mostlY
Gormon
Shopord,
Colllo. 3043017 or805-3013.

ASAP-.oboolutoly

opoclol,

ac:IOI'IIb.. pupplft to give awar
to good homo, Llb'Aolrtovor
mix. 304-182-3781.

Frw Khtena, To Good Home
Onlyl Call After 5:30 P.M. 114245..5151.
Puam-, 3 t.maiM, appaJ:. 2rno.
old.' vory odot'lblo, grell
w/chllclron, noodo good hOmo.
304.a82-2381 ottor 7pm.
Shrodclod Popor, Good For
Pocking Or Boddlng Anlmolo,
Con ll&lt;i Plckod Up At Tho Oot·
flpollo Dotty Trtbuno, 125 Third
Avonuo, llllllpollo, OH 41131.
Slblrlon Huoky 11111, Blue Eyoo,
To Clood - · 114 Ul 1121.
Small puppy,bflclc w-n I
white,

temitr.,

882·2011,

6

&amp;wkl. old. 304-

ne •r-rer

9

Wanted to Buy

11

Refwl'lncn A•
qulrocl Apply At: Pllry Ouoon,
181 Upper Rlvor Rood, Go~

J I D't au.o Parte and Salvag~~,
oloo buvtna Junk cere &amp; tovcb.

PART·TIME DIETARY AIDES

304--s. ·
Junk Autoo, App &amp; Junk Molol
or Any Kind, 114~ ..11121.
Wont to buy: WCW Wrlllllng
topo, "BaHfo Bowl", - n Ba!,
N()y 20. Wilt poy $20 piUI 00
dollvory. 304-112·2431.
Wontod To Buy: e To 70 HP
u..d Farm Tractor, Wide Front

N. . .d: C.ke Decorator, Ex·

pert•nced I

llpolla, No Phone Calla

PINH.

Ftoxlblo Worfllng Schtduloo,
Eocoifont Envlronmont. Contoct
Donl11 Phllflpo At: PlnocCoto Contor. EOE.

End Call, ·~2331.

r;e..mce •

Wontod To Buy: Junk C.ro I
Truckl AI
A...
torablt Cara,
.f554.
W1ntod To Buy: J~nk Autoo
With Or Wit,_ llotoro. Coli
Lorry Llvlly. 114-383-V303.
Wontod To Buy: Rill Torrlor
Elthor Young Or Puppy. lt4o37to
2721.

AHI Eltala CarHr. Pro... alonll

t,.lnlflfl.. ERA Town I Country
Rool Ellll!t Brokor, locklo
Stlln, 304-870-5548.
Stralghl INCII c:lrivan wanted,

eta.. "'0" llc.nae, ciNn phYI~
cal, clean driving rword. 304442.0310.

crNOocl

Employment Services

;;:
;..__I ,11~_,.H;.;.e,::;IP_,W..:a:.;;n..:ted,....,.,_
7 =;;;;:.;.Ya;.;.rd.;.;;;..S;;.al;.;;e
.:._
_ _;.:;;_:..,:;,:;.;___ 1 AVON I All Areoo f Shlrloy

&amp; VIcinity

cover our ln-

buof- wHh o
be horne moat
w-ndll poylhll I a - of
tho moot "'""""ltlvo In tho
chance

to

and l'ltfrwmanl plan, tor owner
oporllotO thon lo hwo pormHo,

r--~~--~---~~~p~~~.l~14~4~-~~~----~
1
1

CA&amp;H911
• ••

Tum your clutter (lito co.ah,
W it the em way...by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clp.,ified qd today!
15 word. or le.., 3 dqp;
3 pcmer•, 15,40 paUl in advance,

~.wv.

.JI097U3
3
8S

or 1.a00.131 1440.

Trl • - Troo a.m... lOPping,
trimming, tr• rwmoval, etump
removar. Fr. ...lmatn. a'M-,
1124912. If no anaw.r, tMve
m111age on machine. ,
Young Fomalo Will Work In Low
Oll1ai s.a Doyo IWook, Wogoo
Flo-. Bacnilartol Exi&gt;orlonco.
R o - loloro t P.M. Alit
For . . _.., 114-31J.'IItl.

1--------------------

1111 14x7'0 llobllo Homo For
Rant, Iaaie Wolor lncludod, Call
Allor 5 P.II.IM-388-ITit.
2

bedroom

mobile

home.

lllnorovllla 1reo 1 refotoncoo a
c1opoott requlreo, 114.oll2.a777

(

· l WONDER IF

' ~E't' !-lAVE FRACTIONS
IN 14EAVEN ..

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

THERE HAVE TO 6E
COMMA5, SIR. WE
CAN'T AVOID TfiEM

ETERNIT\"5 601N6 TO
6E LONGER THAN
1 T14 OU61-l T..

Merchandise
51

Household
Gocicls

Sohna- puppt- ..,..._,
AKC chlmplon -lnoo, Two 1rl2 Chivy Plck-UP!o •~
greot oooto, ...... &amp; worrnocl, Drinr, t I.Gok• Nood 1 ..,.
Cootvllfo, IM.087o3404.
Thio-klltt 4CII212Dovo.-.
Work; Or 114-24s.oet1 After I:ID
P.M.
Musical

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446.:1111 Or 814-448-4421
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2.()WN (NO DEPOSIT)

Instruments

-

t"• -dar.

73

Bundy Ctorlnot Clood Condition,
$100 814-3"/l.ml.
Sow. Dnlm, ua. cond. 3Q4.81S.
20'10 .... f5pm,

58

Fruita &amp;
VegetabiH
Applooo !.., oil Rt. 143, -

~~

....,., 110.00. :104-

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

•

1m Clllvy 112 TOI) 4114 ~
Running Goor - . , ~
Wortc Sf.1ao 010, 8t4-3IU!37. •

11180
a.vv ·111-1:112.
- 4x4,
304471.a4flor.

*'tof·,

-=-~r= l:l. WHJI

milo t817 llnlnc9 •• Eloollonl - h of C.rpentor. Rod ond
O-n Dotlol&lt;iuo oppflo. Opon
Soklrdoyo only.
Air COnditt
, 11:::d::l
Trantm' o'na, M.20CJ. 114-Jit

~~ao:::.:...::;r~

-.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; L1vesl uck
61

-

12 Fl. John ~ T - Dloc
uea With Cyttndot' 4 Bottom a
Point Hitch J.D. l&gt;iOWii PIS.
114--IIMI.
4154 lntornotlonot Troctor With
. . _ ll,ttiO; :140 lntomlllonot
Ptow S2.~L4020 John
DMrt$1,110, ....._..I'"
llydroutlc otf,50 go! Ntl. - .
Eq~~- Hindi,_, WV.
304 IINV1011~
John Dooro MT wl3pl. hftch
plow, -lvllor, now point i!

.._,.,_ !110.

oond, " - ·

cond. ......2-2lfltl.

63

Font Conv. Von C!!lly

''fl.\ I~

1s.ooo 1111oo. Futtr Loodod~
Of l,lno Conv. l'ttg. ~I
Lillo ""'' Aollnii. tte,CIGa, I

Farm Equipment

a
k • p1
1 woo "'" go, IU, 114-1482017.

••a.

TWtc&amp;c.oo&lt;a&gt; ~~.

4K£YOIJ

'

O'lltll

Germeny

3Le...

4 lloro

DOWN

lghU..edtd
5Fram--Z

Opemng lead: • 3

Today's deal was sent in by Dr. Jobn
Sturgul, who lives in MOIICOw. No, not
the Moscow behind the rusting lroD
Curtain, but the ooe in Idaho. Dr. Slur- ln-+-+~1gul is a lecturer at the University of
ldabo.
It is high time the one-no-trump
opening sbowinC 16-18 points, and the h..+-+--11even worse two-no-trump opening
showing 22-24 poiltts, were put out to
puture. U you ope11 One srape with a ·
balanced 21 points, you will miss a lot
of easy games.
Tbe two-beart overcaU will sbock
maet of you, but it is e11 vogue with
CELEBRITY CIPHER
c.twtty Qpfw Cf}'PtOQr.,.. . . c:.wted from Ql DlltiOi. Dy flrMUI ...... ,_. Md ~ ­
some tournament ptayera. Since they
&amp;dllttNrln me.., ~tot MlllrW. r~ ._.F.,... a
assume that !bey will never bid a
game against a strona-no-trump open'H W D
ATLTIIYZTHTDA
iltg, all overcalls promise only suit
length, not higho()llrd strength.
FDHMDOJ
L D
YJV
LG
Tbree bearts was Cue-Bid Stayman.
Tben Blackwood led to the IbiD slam.
IYHWDZ
YZD
VTISDZDJH.
From West's bid, declarer ezpected
the club finesse to work, but be saw
(GEUT'A
A E J }
VYIID
FDZZY.
that it could be beld lD reserve. DePREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"It
peopfo
tMotleve
In
yoU,
80n18ii,_
you've got to
clarer woa tbe opealng lead lD band,
glvo
up
your
fears
and
ooy
moyt&gt;e they're right." Twiggy.
drew two rounds of trumps, unblocked .
the A-K of hearts, discarding a club
from the dummy, and cashed two
more rounds of diamonds. Then he
cast adrift with a trump.
U West had woo the trick and
O A:eorronoe letters of
switcbed to a club, declarer would
fovr Kramblld word'
bave needed tbe I~ to work, But
low to form fow words.
East bad the master spade, and be was
endplayed. Either be could lead a club
iilto dummy's A-Q tenace, or be could
play a beart, coocecllng a ruff-and~
cenl oo whicb dummy's club quet!ll
would disappear.
A good example of not rusblng to a
premature COI!Clusioo - about tbe
club filleslle.

!.'-"""'"""'"""".._

DATE

/OP1'I 8tlolcor ..., 11:.4.~

Alklna:

74

tt•,ns. ·~· •• a... I

Motorcy~les

1112 KDQO Kow- clrttttk~

Today is the 333rd
day aJ 1993 and the
69th day offnll.

good-..PIO.~

1810 CR 250 II,
3202 oft• lprn.

tMOtti

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor sale

76

BOO

TO F II-ID OWf IF
Eri&lt;AND'MS GONE
HOME YET.

00 YOI..ll-le.AA FR:W\ 'rt?UR
[)6.D WHil-E. HE!SAW~
FI&lt;O'v\ t-IOY-E?

Auto Pa11s &amp;

-

•t r:.~a•rnu t.nt

••••

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1929, explorer Richard E. Byrd made
the first flight over the South Pole.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Gaetano
Donizetti (1797-1848), composer; Louisa
May Alcott U832-1888l, writer; Busby

'
~~~~~=-~-:iijim.

MONDAY

ROBOTMAN® by Jim Meddick

Serv1ces

... ~~u~~Rf&gt;.NT, H~IIDSTRONC:. 'l'o\JT\1
USII'IG DII.NCe TO COMBAT NAZI

•s.

OPPRESSIOt-1 HOi'J CDULO 1\ FA\L 7

tft11'5pm.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•

'lOur
'Birthday

"

lor you.
and a long, sell-addressed, slamped
envelope to Matchmaker, Clo this newspaper. P 0 . Box 4465. New York. N.V . 10163.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You're

now in a very good earning cycle where
rewards tor competent performance cou_ld
be larger than usual. No one will have to
tell you 10 do your best
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fob. t9) One of your
grealesl assets is your abtlily 10 gel along
with persons form all walks of life. It isn't
likely you 'll be bored wilh anyone's com·
panionshif) loday, nor willlhey with yours.
PISCES (Fob. 20.March 20) Give as much
attention as possible loday 10 an impo~ant
matter you're amdous to finalize. You're a

Tllliado Nov. 30 1993
slrong finisher and you should .be able 10
Y'
'
.
conclude things the way you env1s1on.
In .lhe lirst pa~ of your annual btNhday ' ARIE$ (March 21-~pril19) There's a poscycle, you mighl be doing more giving than slbllily you n\ight meet someone new ioday
gelling. but don'lle1111•s upsel you . There or within lhe nexl few days with whom
will be a r.ev~rsal whe~e you 'll be the one you'll have a greai deal in common . It's a
who ends up 111e rec.p1en1.
relalionship lhat could grow strong very
I)AGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D~c. 211 An quick(y.
~greement you recently negoilaled whiCh TAURUS (April :!().May 20) Opponunllios
hisn't tumed out as fair as you thought If 10 enhance your material security could
would can be readiusled today to benefit present lhemselves in an unusual manner
everyone coneemed. Know whore lo look at lhislime. Don't leellhey are lao good for
tot romance and you'll lind 11. The Aslro- you and musl be meant tor someone else .
Graph Malchmaker lnslanily (!Veals which GEMINI (May 21·June 201 Today you

by
OMI!'.t.l!!!'
to....
......
ltlmlty.
_..,..

.

AKC Llbl~·•.;toy, Pug,flto-, Potdilaooi. Cattlo,
ChoW,
- 8pontot.
Plohund,
441.o404.

tUN

-·'*

,.
' .

•

mighl
tar to one you successl ully managed
recently . The ingredients are essentially

the same. so use tactics that worked previ·

ously.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 221 Success •s
possible today in an arra"ngemenl where
you'll lean on the arm ol someone you
help. Neither of you can progress unless
you're aided by lhe other .

LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug. 22) Vou might appear
restless and impalient to others today. but.
in reality, you 'll be searching for sound
ideas and persons who can arttculate
them. Other environmeots or groups will
seem dull.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22} Vour greatest
successes today are likely to come from
involvements that ha~e human itarian ele·
lnenls. Focus on th•ngs that can benelil
groups.,
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23} tt you have a
winning attitude today your lhinking will be
reflected in all your endeavors and relation·
ships _Unfortunately, lhe oppos"e could be
true if pessimism prevails.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 221 You 're well
equipped to handle chenges ana adjuSI·
menls loday. even those you do nol per·
sooally orcheslrale. Whal you do will also
benelil olt1ers as well as yourseH.

•

al one young fellows
to be a wealthy man_
\
Gramps scolded them by
1. 1. .15
saying, "You shouid never laugh
rl-,-u--=-r-U-,-E:---R--S-----. when someone tells you their -

I

Berkeley (1895-1976) , director; C.S.
Lewis (11198-1983), writer; Adam Clayton
Powell (t9CJ8.1972), politician·minister;
Madeleine L'Engle (1918-l , writer, is 75;
{;huck Mangione (1941H, musician, is 53.

Accese orles

I

H I MU 0
~
I--,.--.,- " T-,.,,....-.I ~

Nov. 29, 1993

'

Treadmill•- __ U~for, Auto
Enottno ...., Ulco Nlw
.,. 148

'(()U ~~ Flc.N.LY

ORO€REO THE:

T.IOTE:~

44WJ1S. fM..7112BaT.
:
- ·a.to l)llo¥y 1,._ LT, W
/SIIvor, J4K...... IMdad . ,

oxc. 24 Fl. Pontoon Willi~~\':
Yamaha 30 HP 12,ttl, I

LivestOCk

,OOT

1'1\e:Re: W.T.a.INL.'( IS !

Bualhess

--

1 Swtdloh
........ggrOIIP
2 Actor-

1·

ASTRO-GRAP,H

--

28 CapeKtnn..
dy riN:kot
31 lraedcnl
32 Chttlt
caallltg
34 Flblltr

I

10~----------11~------------

15~-------------------

.,

PEANUTS

6 ___________________
7,,_______________
$. _ _ _ _ _ _.,....__ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;....._

13~----------------

56 lrench
5 7 - - . Bruit
58 SingerAdllllt
58 Hit MghUy
Impudence
(11.1
e1 Bartlett. e.g.
62 Alvtrln

By Pltllllp Alder

s.__________

12·
--------------14 _______________

GIDDY YAP,
PRINCE ! I

LET ME
TELL YOU
ABOUT MY
DREAM

Fmancial
21

To

eo

Ulltarer

.KIOU

KlniWI

Keep it
in your pocket

NCelvtr, louble caMille ....,.. Ili~~~~;#~~~
i

$4000. 304-671«101.

24Ught-luther

8ln8tr -

Allpuo

PRINCE SWOOPED ME UP
ON HIS PURTY WHITE
HOSS AN'--

.:.:.:.=-======::--

..

54

Pus
Pus

I DREMPT A HANDSOME

-

~.::r:r:r..n;'1 ~~

••u
tJI4

-Grn
1111'90

53 Relative at

HlllhwiJ
Pul up eltke
Etrlt
Uttt chlir

•Qu

~ BARNEY

*'

d::..

4&amp; llltllecllve

Eut

•-t:aieS

en•

48

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1m Trallor Nowo• Fumoco &amp;
Wotor Hutor Noodo Work
$2,000 Or llolco Otlor, 614-4414411.
1lllll Kirkwood With Loe, 3 Bocf.
roomo, Eocollont Condition,
-ly Ramodolod, IM-381-11618.
1811 Rodmon Rlvorvt.w 2 locf.
roome, 1 112 BalM. Total
Eloctrtc Sod Up On Rontod Lot
In Golllpotlo, $12,100, 114-11125111.
1812 Non1o 18xl0 Troller. Hugo
Spoclouo Roomo With Cllhoilrol Colllnll! Throughout. Throo
Badroom, Two Ioiii. Hugo Gorden Tub In ......, Balli. OVer
1200 Sq. Ft. Lots ot Stot1go.
Hlo Aft Tho Elltru. Uvod In
LHo Thon Ono Voor. Eocollonl
Condition, lluol 1M To AD-IIIo. Call lt4-247·20b
I.Nvo -oogo II No-··
1114 R.-n t411'11l, 3bdrm., If&gt;.
cludoo lltlrtlngr. otopo, blocko,
5'/t. warranty, __.nera 1,.;.
euranca. and 1 )'Mr of lrM lol
rent, all for only 11771mo., c111 1..
~37-3238, ailk far MID.
2br, 2 bllh mobil homo 3 1/2

17 Acreo More Or Looo, 4 112
Mil• From Hol~al, Rural
Wator &amp; Now Block TOP Rood,
Out t/2 IIIIo ot 110 At
Evorgreon, WIO Sill All Or 2 To 5
Acreo Troct. Wn Flnonco 7112 %

14-- Wan-

SOUTH
••Ua&amp;
.AK
tAK97
.7 52

32 Mobile Homes
for sale

Lots &amp; Acreage

45T--fro. 1M

EAST

•Jlo

~,• • MIA. ....

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS·.
Wodod- • - to brvoh hoo lnllf'Mt, Jack Neal, I'M-~ Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chalrai
• omd let In Raclno, 814-114§:
Fan Back Rocking Chair $511i
2140 oltori:IDprn.
:114::::::;1·--------. 1 Gordon Arch Woy'i t121.DO
WANTED: Fufl-tlrnl II¥O~n iflo SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
atructor nMCiad to tuch com- Molal County, Solorn Twtl.l Bidding ·Twin llllt Sll$88, Full
munity lnd _ , . 1 okllfl to M!lill oore. Ro-o, buutllu $89 Sol OUoon tMt Bat; 4
one Hutt whh devil 11rnentil lind; woodo, pollure ond hllfo. Prewar C- S44.gl; Car 8":!!'~ 1
dlooblllttoo In llolgo .Cou~~~Y. Call far goo&lt;!_ !'liP. t.a14-lr.J. Bunk Bod'o, - · llodo. ...., ~,..:.:.~:.::..,_.,.,..--=:.,.­
UnO or -hwoolom Ollt Cuovod Chino
HOURS: Monday onnlng thN IIMI,.At.._,OH.
Storti!\!! At $20.00; lndtonoll1ny C.blnOto•Goti Tobloo, &amp; Cllatro,
Soturdly morntng· - P over
Shopo o I Slroo Stortfna Al Etc. Alvor Volt~ Ook Fumlturo,
nqulrod; dorllmo r.o;;,. off. lflo
15.00. 2 Locatlona ·B•Ide "luto • 3 Oeo~ CNik R.OMJ, Qa..
Rentals
form~f aottrng. Vartouo otttto
Auction Or 4 Milo• OUt 14t flpotlo, Ott, 114-141-4318;
ond tolonto nooclod. High ochoof
dog,.., volld drlv•'• lloonoo,
Opon 9 A.M. To I P.M. lion -Sol. ~Cit!:m::=o:.:r::;-!.::::m::o::d_::ll::o::o_lo-r"'TV,..,.
aoGd drtvlna . . - , 111,.. ,..,.
Bolgo Endcllnor couch, 111co ropoiNd;
lconood cJriYing oxpottonco, 41 Houses for Rent
now, $200. 304.a75-2870.
daYL
onc1 oc~oq..,. outomobllo 1"'
....,.. 00..,.81 required. 2 Bad~, ~ Chllllcothl Now Flborglooo Showoro, "DO 0UMn Silo W...r Bad FuN
Soflry: $11.-. to Glort·l oxcoi- Rood, .....,••. 50 OopooR, Elch Flblraf- _ , , Won - .. :-",.::~ 111,_
Tub iiso Eoch, &amp;14-24Wta2 At. Sholvod
· , Nfont blnotl
II ntoroo- &amp;14-+llo1340.114-M1o3870.
lod, _....
10 II ~31- 2 Bodroorno, Bll~ll 1or 8 P.M.
Hut•, .71, t11W7Wt14.
23112 no lotor thtn 1t/30113. E- FNoum,_•: ~~~~~t
h, ;;GI::::I&gt;::::I&gt;;;-D-:USE=;;D-:A:::Po:P:-:LIANCE==s R&amp;s FurnRuro. Wo buy, loB and
qual Opportunhy Employer.
'
'
WoolfltreL.dryoro, nfltgorotoro, lnidt
lnllq~/uood
18
2 Badroorno, Porch a Dock, llu ,.._, - - Appll-. 'II houHhotd tum
. W1l buy
Wanted to Do
Fumece, Rallr.nce &amp; Dtpod Vln. StraM, Cill ~·7388, 1· any amount, ..
. ao8
~~~~==~~~
E&amp; A TREE SERVICE. 'ToDI&gt;Ing, Aoqutred. ft4 14MQB4.
_800-4.:..:.._7~~~-:-:-==·====-- lloolcoy -St.. ~r·
Trimming, T- Ramovol, HOdga 2br. houoo, '11W34t.
Hovon, WV.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Trinlrlllng. F,.. Eltlntotool 8ft.
304.a824752.
Cornptolo horn1 lu~~~~. Reallotlo oor • - omp,
361'718TAftor 4p.m.
Houro: llo~ll, 11-1. 1
10 _ . , lllco now, $4$, 114-1112·
2br. •250/mo., llml trom town 0322, 3 mlloo out Bullvlllo Rd. :ISM.
on 12_S&gt;. do!)OOH &amp; rotorenco. F- Plllvory.
304.a,....31,
;;"::7.,;..:.::,:-......,,---.--~ Bam-llomorvllto'o Army Surptuo
llolfoh1n Furnnuro C.I'PII, olnoo 1184 by !iondYVIIfo 3-4bdrm. '-oo wHh utro lot, $5.50 Yd I VInyl $4.41, 814-441- 0t11oo hlo fuR Uno co-Raclno oreo, dopooR &amp; , ...,.,.. 11144.
- lllfttor 4 to oontor
XXXL CornpoiMivo , . - . Frf.
-lllolntononoo, Potnt!ng 1 - . 1-8-2213 ovonlngo, 114PICKE~=ITU~E
SoL-8101. ,_,
Yord Wcwk W I - Woonoa 14Wml doyo.
Gutt- Clo- ~lght H1uflng, Nlco .31R R.,.h o!yfo ole, Hou.-ld tumlohtng. 112 mi. ond ._,., (FI~ -lblo 0
Cornmorlcll, Rolldontlof, Stovo: lll"f':j ~.oo month. coif col- Jorrtcho Rd. PL PI-nt. wv, orongo )a-.. - . _
114-441-11!1.
lioct
t823.
coli 304.a'IS-1450,
Ba-• lloh, .,ao.
01argea Pon1ble Sawmill. don't Six Room Houoo In llolllpollo, Rofrlaorllor a 81-, Good 1113.
houl your to tho mill )uot Gil- In Bock Porch, 1 1~&gt; Condition I Auno Woil, $120
Cllll 30M71-1157.
Bllh Now Goo Fumico, llorego Rotrlgorllor, $10 Stove, lt4-3118- Soooonod I I - lor lifo, 140
$350/llo. Roforonca a Popoon, . 8501.
por lood, 114-111-4221.
llloo Poull'o Day C. ro Cantor
1m choir, 111co now, oxc.
II·F I A.M. .0:30 P.M. Ouollty Wotor Furnl-. No PolO, 114- ----'-----==sw:::A:-:1:::-N- - - Lovl"l C.ro For All Children 441-2!54~.
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12 cond. 304471-tl24.
Our t Gool. Pori-Tlrno, Full·
Olivo St. llolflpollo. -~ Ulld stgno; Portobto chongolblo ,...
TlrnoL Fod. Alllotonco Avollobfo. 42 Mobile Homes
tumnwo, holitoro, WOIIom I t• olgn $31. F,.. IOttn ond
Call ..,. lntonnotlon Or Vlott. '"'
for Rent
Wortc - · · 114-441-31H.
dothlory. Pflltio IICtoro m. box
tant /Toddfor IM-411-8221 PfOo
School,
Schootogo,
BIA 11711 Fairmont mobil home tor
~ boo hoi. t I 13$.
Schoot,l14-t41.a224:
Nil or rent~
COVII"Id
&amp; doon,
Boundoolan ......., otoreo
T I T Llwn Sorvlco, lown, porch, now w

2, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

3 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4 . __________________

WI!ST

tilt
SW I !lpood. $371,
114-141-4tlt.
180 Iuick LoSIIIN Good CondHion, 11,300, 11+44f.71'30. ·
1883 TIA Pooo Col eo~o Talotool
-lhny:180
- -· TlRotrt\1011,
~
11oro
Porto
080-14757.

NMv Haven 2 ltory: 3 bedroom,
2 bltho, lorgo lot, ba,aoo. 3041124723.

35

1afbt=.,
MEEK

Brick Ranch 3 Bodroomt1, 2
Brlcko. Uvlng A-.., Flreploco,
O.R. Khchan, P. 7 A Lol, 2 car
Attochtd Gorogo, 11'14-381-1538.

trucking lndllltiY todly. For acres. CA, 2 cat garage, Alclne,
campony drlvon thon lo group Oh to op-Tolo, prtco
1
hulth. ltll, vlalon, lnaunnee, reauC.d.
3()4..812-2547.

Spooro, 304.a75-1421.
hiol cordi ond rn1ny rnoro '"'
AVOHI AU or- Nood olllro clclontlll. Tholr lo a Dmhod
money or w1nt • c~'bonfltr number of ooenl9 10 c1ll
NOWII.aoo.n1-laill Hk for
:."~O:~~'l:.· 3
-2145 Tlrn. Vlrafilton Pow• T,.noport,

ALL Yord SoiH Ia Pold In Baioyolnor In My Homo
Ad-. DEADUNE: 2:00
ll.f' Northup Aroo, Expootonco
tho doy b l - tho od 1o - ...... 1 And Rolotouwo Roqulrwd, 114Sundoy odHion • 2:00
t41.a124 4·7 P.M.
Frlclo~. - Y odHion •
Bobnln• noodod, 3 ochoot ogo
llurdoy.
chlldron, momlngo I:OO.t2:00
blglnnlng Jonuory 2nd, muol
Public Sale
8
have ratwr.nc•, 114-112-3211.
&amp;
Eooy Workl lxoollont Poyl ....
Mmbfo Producto At - · Calf
Totf Freo, 1.1Q0.417.0!1ee, Ext.
limo
313.
1uctlon
III,Ohlo a
r~
Chol,._
'"· ~
~P.
_,.1 -•-••·
:.:m-..: . ;.57115=-·- - - - - - - l .-oct 1or a-lng, quolny.
oonoclout donlll prectlc41. Sorid
9 Wanted to Buy
rnumo: 2124 Joclcoan A¥0, Pl.
,._,., wv 25550, Ann: I•
Antlq- ond- tumlturo, no cky.
~... too llrlltl or tao _.1, wtu
Ful Tlmo Poottlono Avolllbto
buy - . , _ or -.ploto Houro 1 P.M. -1 P.M. ".2CIO ....
hDI•ahold, .a.o •nlld- Old llo. Company Polcl boning,
blcycloo, con Ooby llorUn, 114- Polcl VOCIIIon. IIUOI Hlvo
H2·'Jit41.
Oopondlbto Aula IIObllo eon For
lntorvtow 11on Or ,._ 10 A.M.

Wa nt t 0

help

42 - Of LoAdDn
44G.-of
rotleoU

dtrlld Ute
15 Proltlllll
18 Llvlth
londntn

Help Wanted

Docontod ot......n.W, woll toll~. otd lompo Old thtrmomoloro, otd ctocl.., ontlq..
tumnuro. RIYortno Antlquoo.
AUII Moore, owner. 11C-012·
2$25. Wo buy Olllloo.

drtnra to

---------1
Gallipolis

....

. .,

, ......ll.oo\
CltJ tLIU.1'

~~;==::;:====1r-=======::131 Homes for Sale
I:

Vlrglnlon Powor Tranoport, o
WV corrlor lo loollng lor
owrwr aparatora l eompany

"'"'*'•-

-unlly-

"Irs cruel how travel agencies advertrse
Bahamas vacations on these scrapers."

Lost &amp; Found

lott one WHk ago: Blul Healer:
fom11o,
uppor ond ol
Syrocuoo, 614-t,..·511S8.

-ru

Flro1

... . . . - ..... equo~

Giveaway

2 oct..
, .,,... plgo.
3V72,
John~
•• Loon. , . _
2 ..,..,, a..g~o ,.,._ 304-5712925.
5 Klnena, Long Hair: Lhter

htrwlll'

~:EEKAND

t171 Pfy""""h Valore, 1110,114141·7't41.
.

lnfOimld lhll .. dl lllngl
lldv.nMd In thlll

Fano
Find /SpNodo
OUt NowAnd
Up
.to ·
-Doto
ScMuch llorolll 11100 114-41203 x
Nil, S2.n Per Min., Muat B• 11
Yro., Procon eo. ta2.o1!14-lll20.

4

... not

wNc:llflln-&lt;ltho

40 F. wiiii!Owt

,..,_

..__,,.,llnoiotnott - ·......

to._ Old.Time Rovtvof,
Prwoltw JomM G. KoiiY, .Will

Wtlcler

~~lllrdt

12~'"

.... ony ouch pnolaronce,
...,._orclaalmlnotlon.'

Spice

35 Actor-

1 Tlmtltble
lllllr.
4 Center, e.g.
BAc"-FIIher

ctw•••

Thlo .._

Sentlr:-1 P liT I

6 I
•h· chuck,. quo••d
1. - e:~~P'···
I
.I
1
.
.
by ftll•ng in the m•u•ng words
'-....1...-L-....1...--''-...._---' you develop from S1ep Nc ~ b~low

.

0

.

·A
~

6

P~INI

NUMBERED lEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

UN!&gt;CRAMBl! ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

.

II I

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERr Medium - Fruit- Polio - Immune - FOUND OUT

Success has different forms for different people. For
·- some people success depends on being well known,
while for others on never bein FOUND OUT.

NOVEMBER29

�The Daily Sentinel

..By The Bend

Monday, November 29, 1993

Chargers
blank Colts

Page 10

Veterans Memorial H·ospital to
hold -open house in observance
of Nationai ·Home Care Week

A GROWING STAFF FOR A GROWING
SERVICE • Th~ are tbe nurses, Irides, technicians and omce personnel who operate the
Home Health Seryice or Veterans Memorial
Hospital and who wUI be greeting visitors at tbe
annual open bouse WednesdaY. afternoon. They
are, left to right, rroat, June Kloes, R. N., Tina
Story, R. N., Elizabeth Smith, R. N., the coordi·
nator, Claudia Thomas, R.N. and Mae Hupp, R.

N.; second row, Amy Baker, R. N., Leanne
Clark, R. N., Ann Cozart, Bonnie Dailey, and
Joan Stewart, aU aides; third row, Marty Mead·
ows, .Brenda Cunningham, Linda Fields, and
Terry Laudermilt, all aides; and back row,
office personnel, Carolyn Roush, Teresa Wilson,
Christina McGuire, and Theresa Bing, certified
medical assistant.

Social Security news

Alfred Community news
Alfred United Methodist Church
· will hold its holiday basket dinner
on Dec. 5 at 12:30 p.m. The public
is invited.
The church and community
mourn the passing of two wellknown residents: Clarence
(Tommy) Henderson and Glen
(BiD) Robinson.
Alfred UMC, aided by church
and community members, gave a
post-funeral meal for the family
and friends of Mr: Henderson.
Church and community also gave
food for the post-funeral family
meal at Mr. Robinson's home.
Nina Robinson, Nellie Parker
and Russell and Eloise Archer
attended the Northeast Cluster
Charge meeting at Chester.

An open house in observance of
National Home Care Week, Nov.
28 -Dec. 4, will be held by the
Home Health Service of Veterans
Memorial Hospital at its office in
the medical complex.
The open house will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Refreshments will be served.
"Home Care: The People's
Choice" is the theme of the week.
Home health care is undoubted·
ly the wave of the future, according
to Elizabeth Smith, home health
coordinator. People want to stay in
their own homes and receive medi·
cal care there rather than have to go
into an instibltional setting.
Among the reasons given by
health professionals f&lt;ir ·the desire
of most patients to stay in their
own homes is that it represents the
best tradition in American health
care, it keeps families together, it

Imogene and Lester Keaton
spent a week in WashingtOn, D.C.
recently. They visited his sister.
Ruby Kingsbury and friends Helen
and Prescott Walker. They toured
Washington churches, the Vietnam
Memorial and government buildings.
Kay and Larry Spencer visited
her parents, Doris and Floyd Avis.
April Neeley, Fairborn, and
Laura Cohen, Akron, visited their
parents, Marguerite and Delbert
Stearns.
Robert White is recovering at
home following major surgery in
Cleveland. He will have more
surgery later.
Meg McCartney remains hospi·
talizcd in Columbus.

Diet horror stories
shared at TOPS
Tops #OH570 Pomeroy Chapter Jean Kohler. The best Tops loser
celebrated Halloween at a recent was Jeannette McDonald. Shirley
meeting.
Yoder was runner-up.
Members sang the halloween
The Kops loser was Bernice
song, wore costumes and held a ~~ Durst with Linnie Aleshire as rundiet horror story contest. Wanda · ner-up. The teen loser was Kristen
Faulk won the diet horror story Torres.
contest. Phyllis McMillian and
The fruit basket was won by
Shirley Yoder won a Halloween Viclci Roush. The gadget gift was
maslc judging contest .
won by Jeannette McDonald.
The meeting was opened in
The Secretary's report was
prayer led by Donna Jacks. Mem· given by Wanda Faulk.
bers sang the happy song.
Nancy Manley read "One Big
The Tops pledge was led by Pumpkin." Members sang to the
best losers and were dismissed.

Submitted by
Ed Peterson,
SS manager
"If you worked for the railroad
industry, but not long enough to be
eligible for an annuity when you're
ready to retire, don't worry. Your
railroad wages will count toward
your Social Security if you had less
than 10 years of railroad service,"
according to Ed Peterson Social
Security Manager in Athens.
Generally, wages from railroad
employment are not counted for
Social Security because railroad
employees have a separate retire·
ment system that is administered
by the Railroad Retirement Board.
"But, if you have fewer than 120
months of railroad service," Peter·
son said, "your railroad credits are
transferred to Social Security upon
retirement and combined with your
wages (or self-employment
income). Those combined railroad
and Social Security earnings will
be used to determine your Social
Security benefits."
Social Security recently added
Railroad earnings to the statements
it provides individuals who want to ·
check their earnings record or ~et
an estimate of iheir Social SeciDlty
benefits. "You can get an estimate
by calling Social Security's toll·
free number, 1-800-772-1213, to
ask for a Form SSA-7004 (Request
for Earnings and Benefit Estimate
Statement)," Peterson said. "Complete and return the form in the
envelope that accompanies iL Your
Personal Earnings and Benefit Esti·
mare Statement should arrive 4-6
weeks after Social Security
receives your request"

helps in keeping the elderly inde·
pendent, it promotes healing, it
allows a maximum amount of free.
dom for the individual, it is the
most effective and efficient form of
health care, it improves the quality
of life, it extends life, and it IS less
expensive than other forms of care.
The Home Health Service of
Veterans Memorial Hospital has
experienced phenomenal growth
since its inception in 1971.
That year there were 30 skilled
nursing visits made to homebound
l?atients. Ten years later the program had grown to 2,403 skilled
nursing visits, with 225 physical .
therapy visits, and 1,581 home
health aide visits.
Last year· the agency made
13,504 skilled nursing visits, 514
physical ~y visits, and 15,522
home health md visits for a total of
29,540 visits not including 1,100

Names in the news

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Paul
McCartney says he and former
Beatles George Harrison and Ringo
Starr will regroup in January to pay
tribute to "'Yesterday."
The t1rree surviving Beades plan
a reunion in London to work on a
documentary, said McCartney, who
played over the weekend in Mexico
for his '"New World Tour."
The documentary, called '"The
Long and Winding Road," is to
include a performance by the three.
McCartney has said the documen·

tary will be "'like a big 10-part TV

series.''

The fourth Beade, John Lennon,
was murdered Dec. 8, 1980.
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Ward
wore the pants in the family, but
June· Cleaver was no ''yes
woman.''
"I know people think that June
had no brain, but in my opinion,
she was not a dislu:ag," SBld Bar·
bara Billingsley, who played the
happy homemaker on the series,
"'Leave Jtl'o Beaver."

total lab teehnician visits.
Totals for the past 21 ye~rs
come to 89,961 in s~lled nurs10g
visits, 3,660 in phys1cal therapy
visits, 78,247 in home health atde
visits for a total of 171,868. In
addition there has been a total dur·
ing that time of 17,651 lab ealls.
From 1971 to 1992 a toll\1 of
3 633 patients have been admitted
Iii the Home Health Services. · .

must be received in advance to
assure publication in tbe calendar.
MONDAY

DARWIN · There will be a pub·
lie meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday
night between the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly and the B~­
ford Township Volunteer Fue
Department and other interested
residents of Bedford· Township to
discuss the future use of the Bed·
ford Community Center at the town
hall . All residents of Bedford
Township are urged to attend.
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
ty Veterans Service Commission
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Veter·
·ans Service Office.

the Rev. James I. !&gt;ennis as evan·
gclist. There will be ~peci~l
singi~g. The Sunday semce will
begin at 6 p.m. and the .Monday
through Wednesday semces at 7
p.m. The public is invited.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • The United
Methodist Cooperative Parish, 311
Condor~ Street. Pomeroy, will have
an open house Wednesday from 9
a.m. to I p.m. The public IS invited
to attend.
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet at
6:30 p.m Wednesday at the
Pageville town haD.
MIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM 164 regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. for install&amp;·
tion of officers

Holiday activities at the Meigs
County Museum will begin with
the annual Christmas dinner on
Dec. 3 at6:30 p.m.
Cost ot the dinner is $9 a person
and reservations must be made by
Tuesday either by phqne 992·3810
or mail, to Box 145, Pomeroy.
Entertainment following the dinner
will be by the Historical Society
Singers.
·
Old Fashioned Santas are being
collected for a special exhibit and
anyone with a Santa to loan for !he
holidays is asked to contact the
museum.
Christmas open house has been
scheduled for Dec. 5 from 1 to 4
p.m. and breakfast with Santa wiD
be held on Saturday, Dec. 11 from
8 to II p.m. The museum may be
contacted for further information .
on any of the activities.

Downtown Gallipolis resembled
a war zone this morning as emergency workers from three counties
battled to keep a fire from destroy·
ing several businesses. ·
Details were sketchy at press
time and are based on eyew1mess
accounts.
The ftre apparently began in the
Womeldorff &amp; Thomas True Valoe
Hardware store, 62 Court Street,
before 9 a.m.
The cause of the fue is not yet
known, but one local business
owner reported seeing smoke and .
hearing a noise before the fire
erupted.
"A lot of smoke and then you
heard a big pop within five minutes
the flames were 30 feet outside the
building," said Steve Pyles, owner
of Coaches Corner.
Flames reportedly shot 100 feet
in the air and smoke obscured several blocks as firefighters from
Gallia Mason and Meigs counties
struggled to keep the fire from
spreading.
About one half hour after the
fire was reported, the hardware
store had collapsed into a pile of
burning, smoking rubble.
"It's the fastest fire I've ever

Ironton
airman's
trial be
ins
.;_ s .

seen," Gallipolis Police Chief
Roger Brandeberry said.
Witnesses reported hearing a
few minor explosions from the
building, possibly from paint cans
~nd other m_aterials in the. S!'Jre. It
ts unknown tf anyone was IDJured.
The fire spread to adjoining
businesses such as Althof and
Associates, but ftrefighters seemed
to have those flies under control as
of 10 a.m.
About seven businesses were
damaged, as well as some apart·
ments.
The fire also crossed two StreelS,
igniting structureS on the opposite
side of Court Street as well as
Third Avenue. Businesses involved
included Oscars Restaurant .on
Court Street and Jbe former Sears
catalog showroom.
These rues also appeared to be
under control.
.
Early accounts reported seemg
the ftre cross the streelS by way of
power lines. Most of downtown
Gallipolis was without power and
phones because .of the ftre. The
Gallipolis City Schools planned to
dism1ss at noon because of the out·
age.

tary iUll&amp;e has ruled.
But prosecutors also can use
Jeromy Willis' confession to
reporters that he was "guilty as
sin," Col. J. Jeremiah Mal!oney
ruled Monday.
Willis made the comment to ·
reporters after his arrest in
Brownsville, Texas, where he fled
after the Jan. 4 shooting at Myrtle
Beach Air Force Base.
Willis, 23, already has pleaded
guilty to fatally shooting Marie
Willis while she sat in the base
legal office. But he could be sentenced to death by lethal injection
if a jury finds the mur(\er was premeditated.
Mrs. Willis, 30, was shot as she
waited to tell lawyers about aDeged
abuse by her husband. She had
• returned to the base from Rhode
Island to press the abuse charges.
A court martial board of six
officers was selected after
Mahoney heard several motions.
They will determine whether Willis
should die. '
Mahoney ruled that defense
lawyers could use summaries of
interviews that psychologists and
counselors have held with Willis
and his family. ·
"We need to explore his mind·
set, the conditions he was facing
that set him off that might not set
off other people," said Maj.
-Bernard E. Doyle, Willis' defense
- attorney. "We will show that he
did not have a cool mind.''
· Doyle said the defense would
base its case on the contention
"that Willis suffered severe physi·
cal and mental abuse as a child and
will also put into evidence the fact
that Willis was drinlcing alcohol at
Continued on Page 3

Join us for an open house
at our offices at lOll Viand Street, Point Pleasant
Friday, December 3 •10 a.m.· 2 p.m.

~ PLEASANTVALLEYHOSPITAL

~

Home Health Service

Pleasant Valley Hospital established its Home Health Service in 1978 hO provide
skilled nursing care and personal aide services to patients who no longer require
intensive hospitalization, but who continue to require periodic nursing C&lt;!re in
their home.

Meigs • OcL 93 ·

llalgs • Sept. 93

0

FlRST KILL- Racine resident Jason Ervin

show~ his first buck, which he killed wilh one

bullet Monday morning.

Deer hu·n ting season begins
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Jason Ervin wore a broad
grin Monday evening as he
described the frrst buck he ever
shot.
.
Ervin shot his six-point deer
at 8:30 a.m. in an open field
with one bullet after the deer
walked in from behind him,
Ervin said, in his second year
hunting.
·
••t was sitting in a stand. It
was with one other doe and I
was going to shoot at the doe in
the front, but I saw the buck,"
the Racine resident said. "I was
excited. n •
Ervin's buck was just one of
the I 034 deer taken from Meigs
Cou~ty woods on the first day
of this year's season, according
to local check-in points across
the county.
·
Hunters braved the sub-freez·
ing temperatures, whic_h helped
to keep the deer movmg. satd

Eber Pickens, own~r of Eber's
Service Station in Racine.
"A deer is just like you, you
wouldn't stand too long out
there today," Pickens said. If
snow would fall later 10 the
week the chances for hunters
bagging deer would increase
because of the ability to track
the animals, he added.
If out·Of' county hunters stay
through Wednesday, the number
of deer taken from the woods
would probably top last year:s
mark because of the tncrease m
hunters spooking the animals, .
Pickens said.
Pickens said the number of
licenses he's sold jumped by 25
percent, compared to last year's
opening day.
The largest rack - a I 0·
point, with a 19 3/4-mch spread
_ has become much more rare,
Pickens added.
"Our deer are getting smaller.
To me there's too much in·
breeding," he added.

Home Medical Eq~ipment

The thickness of the antlers
especially has dropped in the
last three years, Pickens said.
Keith Woods, Meigs County
game protector, could not be
reached for comment Tuesday
morning.
The following deer check
points registered:
• Baum Lumber, Chester,
200 deer. ,
• Joe's Country Market, Rut·
land, 185.
• Ebcr.'s Service Station,
Racine, 141.
• Forked Run State Park
office, Reedsville, 112.
• Pick and Shovel Grocery,
Stare Route 124, 102.
• Odell Lumber, Pomeroy,
89.
• Ellis &amp; Sons BP, Middle·
port, 77.
• Harris Farms, Portland, 57.
• Sun-Fun Pennzoil, Racine,
41.
• Chancey's Food Mart,
Syracuse, 30.

the

19 ·
ning at 6 p.m.
.
•
freed in collect ticket siubs. To be eligible
The parade will form along
raNking ~~d ~eremain so ~~cpers must fill out new stubs
North Ftrst .Avenue bet~een Dave ear,r ovem the ear to encour·
week with one of the 20 mer·
Diles {'ark and the Dauy Queen, unlit the~d o_f Miadleport. Mini· chants because prizes will be
and will move down Nonh Seco;&gt;nd ~ge shoppmg 10
alor
rth awarded based on only those tick·
to South ·Third, to Main and up lights adorn .the trees . 0 No
ets submitted that week.
Second Street to the park. Santa Second and. aurae uve lghte~
The Middleport Arts Council
wiU be at Peoples :Bank arter ~ wreaths are 1.0 place on severa
had its headquarters operl and
parade !O gt~ 'OI! t·1Ial~!sbeto ~e'nhi~f str~~n~yth;;~~n many of the offered a v.anety of handma_de
dren. Ptctures w~
....
.
.
ed
h
crafts, candies, and merchandtse
the children w1th Santa wuhout merchants obs$,300OI_ICil ouses. ill for sale Traditional holiday
charge, a Christmas project of the b A_toial of 1over :J:~
refreshm~nts were served to the
visitors who were treated to the
bank.
·
e.gtven ..away J 1
Most of the businesses will Fndays m. the ~tdd eport ~er· smells and sounds of Chrisunas as
begin night shopping hours on Dec. chants holiday jllve-a-way• om they viewed the wide array of gifly
13 remainin~ open until 8 p.m. Donley of the Middleport CoDIIIU· ilems.

f.

PLEASANT VALLEY

11

304-615·6 100

In 1985, Pleasant Valley Ho111e Medical Equipment opened its doors to provide
quality medical equipment and producls to enable people with special needs to
lead ~ more productive and indep.:!ndent lifestyles, or hO receive appropriafc
medical care In the home setting. .

DAYS
••

CHRISTMAS

BUSINESS DESTROYED - An onlooker watches BA names
engulf WomeldoriY &amp; ThQIIlas Hardware Store on Court Street in
Gallipolis. The building was destroyed by tbe fire. (OVP photo)

Ohio • OcL t3 '

=

'

.... . . . - - - ; ; ; ; . . - - - - - - - - - ,

EBER'S

Middleport completes Christmas plans
· - • h · liours nity Association, announced today.
H said that starting Friday and
Plans have been completed for Sunday afternoon s oppmg
the annual Middleport Christmas ~m ~to Jtm·J::
~- contlnuing every Friday until
pazade to be held Thursday begin·
an w con
· Christmas Eve
merchants will

304-61~1400

,..

'

accused ·of .shooting
wife to .death can use evaluations
him and his family to try' to ~
him ftom being executed, a mili·

.

A llultlon.... tno. -•papo&lt;

Fire threatens Galli·polis

ABLAZE- Firefighlers rush to battle a fire on Court Street in
Gallipolis this morning. At least seven businesses were affected by
the fire. (OVP photo)

By bringing high-quality healthcare and support services into the home setting, home care
allows disabled and chronically ill people of all ages, as well as those recovering from surgery
or illness, the opportunity to remain with their loved ones in surroundings that are familiar 11nd
comfortable. During National Home Care Week, Pleasant Valley Hospital salutes its home care
providers for the care they deliver.
Pictured above are, front row, from left, Rcmona Shreves, home health nursing assistant, Sally
Roach, R.N., home health nurse, Betty Nehus, R.N., home health nurse, Mary Beth Carlisle, R.N.,
home health coordinator, Kay McCarty, medical secretary, Home Medical Equipment, Shana
Vanscoy, home health nursing assistant, Kim Likens, home health n1:1rsing assistant, Kathy
Wears, home health nursing assistant, Tia Wooten, R.N., home health nurse, ValerieOay, home
health clerk, and Lethia Queen, R.N., home heallh nurse; atid back row, from left, Jobr Taylor,
home heallh clerk, Cathy Wilson, L.P.N ., office coordinator, Home Medical Equipment, Cindy
Crump, clerk/typist, Home Medical Equipment, Missy Bowman, R.N., home health nurse,
Shirley Matheny, R.N., home health nurse, and Phil Russell, medical equipment technician,
Home Medical Equipment.
·
·

I Section, 10 P - 3&amp; ..,.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 30, 1993

IIIIIIIIMCI•Inc.

RICHARD KELLER
Marine Cpl. Richard H. Keller,
whose wife, Joan, is the daughter
of John and Julie Col'Cil"8ll of Rut·
land recently reported for duty ·
with,Headquarters Battalion, 2nd
Marine Division, Marine Corps
Base, Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The 1987 graduate of Onsted
High School of Onsted, Mic~ ..
joined the Manne Corps 1n
September, 1988.
DONALD MEADOWS
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
Donald c. Meadows, son of Donald
C. Meadows of Pomeroy recently
received the Navy Achievement
Medal.
Meadows was cited for superior
performance of duty while serving
aboard the submarine USS Dallas,
homeported in Groton, Conn.,
where he is currently assigned.
The 1981 graduate of Edward L.
McClain High School of Greenfield, joined the Navy in August,
1982.

November 28-December 4, 1993

Annual
- Commun1ty calendar- Christmas
Community Calendar items
MASON . Liberty Assembly of
appear two days before an event God will hold revival meetings dinner Dec. 3
and the day or that event. Items Sunday through Wednesday, with

Vat. 44, NO. 1&amp;2

In the service

HOME CARE

Low tonJ&amp;htln low ZOS, clear.
Wednesday sunny high In 50s.

Buckeye 5:
11·19-24-30-36

Page4

National Home Care Week

tlon of
work with tiie 1993 production,
Mrs. Harrison for cLoreograpby and Mrs.
Sheets as accompanist. At the same time Hoe·
fticb was presented witb a gift by Mrs. Mary
Wise alld Mrs. Sandy Iannerelll, representing
the show sponsors, the M~dleport Arts Council
and tbe Meigs Division or tbe American Heart
Association. The two groups will divide proceeds from tbe 32-number musical. (Photo by
Charlene Hoeflich)

Pick 3:
3-4·8
Pick 4:
2-2~3·3

THE ·PEOPLE's CHOICE

STANDING ROOM ONLY· It was stDnd·
ing room only at the Meigs Junior Hlgb School
in Middleport Saturday night wben tbe Big
Bend Minstrel Association presented its Meigs
Talent Sbowcase. A receptive audience or
approximately 600 res~ents was on hllll;d for the
musical. Pictured durmg a presentalton ceremony are, Ito r, Debi Buck, cast member; Bob
Hoenicb, sbow director; Paulette Harrison, an
honoree and Jennlrer Sheets, an honoree. The
two wo.:.en were presented ~Jaques in recogni·

Ohio Lottery

four

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

OCTOBER UNEMPLOYMENT • In Meigs county, 105 percent or the
workrorce was jobless in October • a decline of 2.6 percent from the
September rate of13.1 percent. Meigs County, however, remained one or
eight counties in tbestate with unemployment rates above 10 percent. The
statewide unadjusted rate for October was 6.0 percent. T~e U.S. unad·
justed rate was 6.3 percent.

Jobless rate falls
Meigs County still in top 10
Unemployment rates in Gallia
Adams County's October unemand Meigs counties · following a ployment rate of 15 percent was the
state trend • decreased in October, htghest m the stare for the mo~th .
according to figures released thts Umon County had the lowest Job·
week by the Ohio Bureau of less rate for the month at 3.8 per.
Employment Services.
cent. .
.
The October rate for Gallia
Thtrteen counues had unemstood at 8.6 percent, down from the ployment rates at or below 5 per·
September rate of 9.5 percent. In cent m Octolx7. .
.
Meigs county, 10.5 percent of the
Among ctUes With populauons
workforce was jobless in October . of more than 50.000, Youngstown
a decline of 2.6 percent from the had the highest jobless rate, 13 perSeptember rate of 13.1 percent
cent, while Kettering had the low.
Meigs County, however. est, 2.4 percent
.
remained one of eight counties in
The county and cny rates are
the state with unemployment rates unad!usted, meanmg they do. not
above 10 percent.
take mto account seasonal adJUSt·
The counties with the highest ments m employment
rates were Adams (15 percent),
The statewide unadjusted rate
Pike (14 .3 percent), Vinton (13.4 for Octo~r was 6.0 percent. The
percent), Guernsey (11.1 percent), U.S . unadjusted rare was 6.3 per.
Champaign (10. 7 percent}, Meigs cent. The adjusted rate for Ohio
(10.5 percent), Hocking (10.2 per· was 6.6 percent and the nation was
cent) and Monroe (10 percent).
6.8 percent

Local briefs--Men charged with B&amp;E
Charges of breaking and entering were filed Tuesday morning in
Meigs County Court against two Pomeroy men.
Gary Wolfe, investigatOr for Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Len res, filed the complaints ag,inst Patrick Cleland and
Mike Bums, both of East Main Street.
He also filed a complaint against Teresa Garnes, also of East
Main Street, on a charge of complicity in the breaking and entering.
Felony 4 charge~ carry a penally of six months to five years and
a maximum fine of $2,500.
Cleland and Bums allegedly broke into McClure's Reslaurant on
Nov. 10 and removed a safe. Games was charged with complicity
as a result of the same incident. The safe was later recovered along
a country road.
Once the three have been arrested, an initial appearance on the
Coillinued on Page 3

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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32943">
              <text>November 29, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4552">
      <name>gilliand</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="130">
      <name>mees</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="65">
      <name>tripplett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="921">
      <name>whaley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
