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                  <text>Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, oeceinber a, 1993_
COPYRIGHT 1993 · THE KROCfR CO. ITEMS AND PI!ICES C000 SUNDAY, oec:. 5' •

Pomer!)y-Middleport, Ohio

ADVEIITISED ITEM POLIC'I-Eadl Of theSe advertised Items Is re&lt;~Uired to be readily
avallallle ror sale In each Krooer Store, except as SDeCiflcallv not ed In this ad. If we
&lt;!a ""' aut of an advertised Item, we will offer you your choice of a comparable
Item, wnen available rtfle&lt;tklll the same savings or a ralndleck which wVI entitle
vou to PUrChase the advertised Item at the advertised price within 30 days. Only
one vendor coupon wm be accepted per Item PUrchased.

THROUGH SATURDAY, OEC. 11, 1993 IN POMEROY. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT To·
• ,
liMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

..

Ohio Lottery

All-America
grid·team
announced
'

Pick 3:
348
Pick 4:
8836
Super Lotto:
11-16-26-29-37-47
Kicker:
053456

Page6

Low loolgbi In mid ..._

cloudy. Frldoy, rain, high In

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•

VoL44, NO. 1St
....ltliMC.. Inc.· ,

l

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on alleged improper

·l)isc~.·ssiO'n con:~i.nue$

.

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'
2 Secllono, 12 P - 35 -w
A Multi .......

Pomeroy·Middieport, Ohio, Thursday, December 9, 1993

.·

By JIM FREEMAN
, ~ alleged overpaymenL ·
or key conaact person tO assist in
. , aDd lltlfheportl
"It is 01!1' undcrslalldlng, in 1he pursuing this appeal; the time
The Meigs County Board of p~jsttha~ . when findings against limits for tbe pursuing of each
Commissioners 'c ontinuea its count&gt;: offices or township offices appeal; the possible effect of
discussion WedneSday on. $10,92S , hav.e been . made by the .~t~te repa.Yment of tbese· funds ·~pon
owed thi: illale for alleged IIDprope:r · auditor, lhat the county prosecuQng prevtous county grants. Will this be
wages.
· ·' · : .
,
attOrney, as litek legal advisor; may an admission of niisuse in other
Last ·Week, comrilissio~ were pursue 11!1 appeal of such fmdi!Jgs grll!lt administration funds?; if lite
informed they muse pay·.tho state m an anempt to reduce or exclude · county repays the funds what are
$10,92S, money. the state aJ!eges a theamountowe(t,"th~, le~staleS. therecoveryoptioils? .
Commissioners are reque~ting
former clerk of tlie commission · The commissio~ is seeking the
was inl(liui(!erly paid.
. . , 1followi~$ _infor~~tation: each _and. the information be S!lb!Ditttchii' .the
Dur10g
the .
meeting,, evefY. nght to ~. appeal that the . next regutar-commiSSI!ln meeting ,
commissioners presented a :~ to · commjisioners'mily have from lliis on Wednesdiy.
·
Prosccut?C Jo~n R. Lent.es ask!ng fllic!in$; the,name~ and~ Of · puz:in$ 1992, the , former ·
what the•r options are concemmg , the a~ncles l!lld dleir lldntinisiJat« commtmoner's clerk, Muy

Hobstetter, was overpaid $10,925
for her duties as a jlrants writer,
according to an analysis of an audit
by the Ohio Department of
Development.
She was paid $7.81 an hour as
clerk while at the same time she
was paid S14 an hour for writing
the grants, which violates federal
wsge laws, according to a repon by
Mike Hiler and Lisa Patterson of
· t~~e 'ODD. Thc·IWO completed this
n:pon as pu:1 of' an ann_ulll review
of the county's handling of state
and, federal, grants, called
Community Development Block

.

Grants:

Last week, Hobsteuer said there
was no impropriety on her pait.
She said she had to attend grants
writing meetings in the evenings
and had to take work home at
nights.
·
Commissioners and Lentes
indicated interest in obtaining
indelJCndent council to investigate
lite sllWition.
"We want to keep this
investigation as independent as
possible," said Commission Vicepresident Janet Howard Tackett.

Inc.-......-•

.

wage~

"Reports on audits ar.C
con(idential until· the parties ~
allo:wed to respond," Hobstettet
told The Daily Sentinel last wCCL
"It would lead one to think dlere.is
an attempt at s·ome kind of
character assassination here."

'•

Commissioners commcnled lhit
a mecling will be held Jan. 28 at 10
a.m . at the Meigs County Publi~
Library in Pomeroy to discuss'·a
proposed industrial developmelit
site located at Great Bend.
.· ,.

COntinued

on page 4

:"

Planning for US 33
~
project well underway.r
By GEORGE ABATE

Sentbiel News Stair

A 13-mile section of U.S. Route
33 is not expected to be completed .
until fall1998, but the planning for
this project is already well
underway, engineering officials
reported Wednesday during a
meeting in Athens.
Route 33 will be expanded to a
four-lane highway in the section
be1ween .Athens and .Darwin and
will cost about $4-S million a mile,
said Joseph Leindeck« of Sverdrup
in Columbus. Sverdrup is the
consultJ!nt for this

'

"So far we have not found·an~~:
that will be a big problem wtth the;.
othi:r agencies."
~
The proposed road must bC:
approved .by at least 13 federal &amp;nit
state envuonmenw groups and a..
number of state bureaus, he said. ~The actual road will wind:'
through one of the corridors an((
wiD only be 100 merers wide, saict. ·
Terry_ Winebrenner, also of.
Sverdrup.
•
The timeline for the projc:ct is: •
• January 1994 - Begin the
corridor selection process;
:
• Spring 1994 - hold pu\lli~:&lt;
meetings to discuss the corridors; :
• March 199S - complete thlt

;~:~~~~~;·a11p.row · ~:~r

f.

-acquire all the

f2-oz.
C11ns
,
.
.

.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET ~EPSI,

pi'?iii'Cila

lb. .

1

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•nd will cost about
- complete all
miliicin,'Leindeckcr said.
construction.
Two corridor routes- each 4SO
'
The bighway department has
'
DISPLAYS DIAGRAM • Jlllll!ph ·Lelildei:ll·; · Darwlli. Lellijlecll:er preseated 'the eiaiflleering
meters wide - have been chosen
study
to
a'
realonal
~llllttee
oa
blghWIIy
devel·
alrcad~
staked out some of the
ligll••y at:l)le
er, rlpt, pro.Jec* ,au~ fbi: S"enlrup Corp. in
as the best possible corridors
opment.
potenttal
corridors for this road,
dl'opPed
Colwlih~~~ts~ a; dllin!D or two pcllllble corbecause the least number ofhouses,
Leindecker
said.
rldo~s
ror
,Route
33
between
Athens
!llld
streams, archeological siies such as
.
.
"Just
because
there is a stake in
indian mounds and olher historical
1'· :.
be said.
' '
someone's
yard,
that
doesn't mean
sites are affecled, Leindecl:er said.
· Once
·· and .Musgrave
thi:
highway
will
go
through
there,~ .
Both corridors are west of the
~adfinished.their.w~&gt;rk,all _ that .
O _r .~:.
~
he added.
cturent Route 33.
renuuned was the deployment of
Steve Story. co-chair to the .
The re-routing and expansion of
the highway will have a minimal Route 33 commiuee, said the last ··
effect on the region's houses and time new construction of a
was acbedUJed tO •be released from
'
i\
You
have
to
remember
that
"
~on Friday, and the shutW~SHINPTON (AP) - lnfla·
month be~o!e. Analysis attribute properties, Leindecker said, adding highway in Meigs County tookinflation
is
a
lagging
indicator.
Just
,
, lie was set to return to Earth on tion at the prOducer level disapth1~ v~latthty to the vagaties of that some houses would have to be place was in 1968.
because
there's
good
inflation
news
moved.
"The emphasis of thiS
M~
·
peared in November.as plummeting
adJUStmg them for seasonal
todsy, that doesn't mean we'll be variations.
"The current route is not safe, (governor's) administratio n is
EartiCt in thi: mission. the crew ~ prices offset-steep increases able
to hang on to litat for very
ihstalled il set .Qf .corrective minors for food and new cars, the governThe price of children's clothing particularly in the small transportation used as an economic·:
long
if
the
economy
accelerates
too
communities." Leindecker said. development tool," Story said.
·
and a new c811!era ,with corrective ment:saidtodsy. '·'rose 2 percent.
•
much
and
bottlenecks
develop,"
optics~&amp; allow Hubble to see the
The Labor Department's ProTobacco fell 1.3 percent in
universe with a clear eye. .
. ducer Price Index, which measures • said economist Mark Zandi ·of November after rising 1.1 percent a
Hubble was launched 10 1990 .prices paid to prdducers such as Regional Financial Associates in month earlier.
with a misshapen mirror lit at pre· fanns and fai:tories, ;was unchanged West Chester, Pa.
The various changes left the
In November, energy prices fell Producer Price Index for finished
vented it rrom discerning the more on a seasonally adjusted bas!s for
remQte objects in lhe ·cosmos. A the month after falling 0.2 percent 2.7 percent, pulled down by a S.8 gQOds at 124.4 in November, up
percent drop for gasoline, the from 124.0 a year earlier. That
D!&amp;nufaclllrina error was bJamed.
in October.
.&gt;
The Endeavour erew' 8et a U.S.
It w•s the sixth .time in seven steepest in 11 months, and an 11.9 means a market basket of goods
spaccwalk ~ with its five out· months that producer price'~ have percent plunge for home heating that cost $100 in 1982 would have
ings. No pre•iOIJs NASA . mission either held steady or fallen ; For the oil, the b1ggest in 23 months.
cost $124.40 last month pod $124 a
Residential electricity fell 1.3 year before that.
lllld more thl!n four SJI!ICCWalks.
first II months, the index was
.UnHkc the spac'e~al.ks or the rising at a scant 0:4 percent annual percent, the largest one -month
Inflation also was moderate
past four days •. todsy s work was rate comPared wttli· a 1.6 percent decline on record.
earlier in the production pipeline. It
Food prices rose 0.8 percent fell 0.2 percent at the intermediate
palnpakingly ~.
· .
increase for all of 1992.
·
Musgrave arid Hoffman required
Consumer inll~tibn has been after falhng 0.5 percent a. month level and increased 0.4 percent at
three hours ,.... !)Vice as long as running at just und~r a 3 percent earlier. Vegetables jumped 18.1 lite crude level.
percent and rice was up 29.3
expected - to replace the electron- annual rate this yeatl
An example of the three
ics ·thal drive the solar panels. Tl)e
But even though price pressures percent after increasing 21.4 processing saages would be bread
.
job was one of the toughe$1 of the have been exucmel.~: well-behaved percent the month before.
for fmished, flour for intermediate
The vegetable increase included and wheat for crude.
missioil bel-anse.of the many elec· in recent months, tll.ere.' s been
trical connectiods thllt had to be increasing speculation that the . rises of 332.1 percent for
Meanwhile, in a separate report,
made. ·
Federal Reserve will nudge shan- cucumbers, 253.1 percent for the Labor Department said the
Three screws came loose.' One term interest rates higher early in squa''Sh'f' 108.2 percent for snap 011mber of Americans filing firstbeans and ·103.6 percent for time unemployment claims rose by
floated into the cargo·• bay. and the new year.
,
.
Hoffman .swooped down and
Analysts say a gentle tap now toinatoes.
13,000 last week to a seasonally
"NEITHER HAIL, NOR RAIN, NOR.... MUD?"-U.S. Postal·
Prices excluding the volatile adjusted 335,000. The report,
caught it. Musgrave·caughl the olit· on the economy's bnkes - in the
employee Dale Thoene moves • mailbOx to a new location along ; .
ers.
form of slightly h.igher interest food and energy sectors rose 0.4 which followed a 17,000 drop a
Main Street In Pomeroy near O'Dell True Value Lumber. Tile &lt; ·
pell:en1,
largely
because
of
a
2.1
. '' I'm sorry it took so 1,\)ng," 'rates - can avoid a big rate hike
week earlier, underscored lite job
postal service rarely changes locations - especially during this ·
Musgrave.said when the jqb was and a flat-out stop in·the econcimy . percent .inclll&amp;SC in new car prjces, market's uneven progress.
rusb
season -but wiU answer this request in special cases, Thoene
which had fallen 3.9 percent the
'done. "One cif thC real difficulties later.
said.
we didn't have practicing is i.hat all
the connectorS go in your face."

.

' U.S. bRADE A, TVSiilN/HOLLY FARMS

WhOle l=r,ers

. thef

U.S. GRADE A, TYSON/HOLlY FARMS CUT·UP .
OR 9-PIECE CUT.UP
•.. LB. 69¢ .

.~·~':f.s~~~a~es:~

u.s.

l 8·b
'd.epar
· t ·e·· nt'.S. p.rO
· d UCer
.
b
Price ·l:ndex unchanged in Novem er

r---Local brief

Lock up those gifts: Sheriff
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby advises Christmas
to lock packages in the trunks of their cars.
'If out of sight, thieves are less likely 10 try to break into your
car." he said.
sho~

Three begin sentence
1'hlcc men were transported by deputies from the Meigs County
Jail to the Orient Reception Center Wednesday to begin serving
sentences impose6 by the Meigs County Court or Common Pleas,
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said todsy.
Erick Adams, 19, ReedsviUe, was sentellced to 18 monlits for the
breaking and entering of Bahr's Service Saation, Tuppers Plains.
while Carl Marcum, '19, Reedsville, was sentenced to 18 months fur
the breaking and entering of Bahr' s ServiCe Station, Tuppers Plains
and reqeived an additional sentence of 18 months for the
and entering of the ~ Plains General Store.
The two are to be m\CfYiewed for possible placement in the
SEPTA Center Program in Nelsonville.
Also transported was Ronald H. Lon, 27, M.arietla, on a charge
of gross sexual imposition.

Available at your .
.friendly Kroger store~
,

.........

breaking

Caii1·80Q-409-&lt;IIFT

~

for

orders;'

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CRBISTJ.IAS

UGHTS ON THE RIVER mw 1M Ylllqe
or Pomeroy r-ble a toy CllrlltmM Y111aP to
vlewen In ~··W.Va. In t"' spirit or Clirllt·

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�Thul'tlday, December 9, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DBVOTED TO 11llt INTERESTS OP1111t IIIEIG8-IIMON AREA

•

I"'..UHDDA,NC

General~anager

Accu-Weatber" forecast

.

Page

~ARGARET

LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tboy sbould be leas &amp;han 300
to editing 111d must be signed with name,
addreu and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addres•iD8 iuues, not 1'""""alities.

words. All leuers are aubject

~nvestors: You're
ft1o Babe Ruth
•.

'·..

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
: NEW YORK (AP)- Many investors in today's securities markets are
l$ure to be disappointed, not necessarily by poor performing stocks but
•&amp;cause of their own unrealistic ~xpectations .
!. It's becrui5e'of their 8abc Ruth complex, the ~lief that they can score
:p big one, f'md lhc right stock and watch it soar. There are a lot of Babe
·Ruth-size dreams in the market today.
:: Stocks. however. scenr to have a way of proving their unpredictability
]md volatility whenever masses of investors lose their sense of lhe dan·
or when nc;w lllid untrained in~estors enrer the market in large num-

· Rush Limbaugh hardly needs opinion. Sure, Raphael IICire ani·
me to defend him against his crit· mosity t.oward Limbaugh. But if
ics. But I'm going 10 do it anyway. she could not bri!lg herself to honor
It seems he has become the target the conservative even in the presof the moment for the running dogs
of the media lefL
When piJ8ilists square off in the
ring, they are expected 10 observe
the Marquess of Queensberry rules.
When nations meet on the battle- ence· of his family, friends and
field, they are expected to follow admirers then she simply should
certain rules of engagement. But have stayed home. Her declasse
when liberals attBck conservative behavior was fairly typical of the
figures, like Limbaugh, the rules of ilk to whom Limbaugh refers as
civilized confrontation arc sus- feini-nazis. There is an unspoken
c.oilspiracy on the pan of the media
pended. Anything goes.
Consider the spectacle that left 10 e108SCulate strong conservaattended the recent mduction cere- tive figures. As Raphael demonmonies of the Radio Hall of Fame strated all too clearly, they will
in Chicago. TV talk show gabster resort 10 almost any incivility 10 cut
Sally Jessy Raphael, an acknowl- down to size perceived enemies on
edged liberal feminist, could not the right.
Recent years have seen one
bear to graciously present an award
to Limbaugh. So she tried to pull a media attack after another on
prominent conservatives. Among
LOrena Bobbitt on him. ·
The Hall of Fame chose to rec- the m9re noreworthy victims was
ognize Limbaugh for his si~ificant Robert Bork, who by all rights
contribution 10 the (Jlldio) mdustry. should ~ sining on the Supreme
But Raphael chose .to sandbag the Court.
ln the days leading up to his
honcree. Please ooie, she hissed, it
(the award) does n~t .~xpress m:t stonny confirmation beuings, Bark

-,; The dangers are always there. The COI!IJI!Illies that issue stock c~
rexperience IJilfOl'CICCII problems, the execuuves who ~ them can err m
~eir judgmcntll and the analysts who rate them can miscalculate in their
:projections.
·
. .• Mmlover, the stoc~ of c~ solid comparties -good prod~ts •.e~~el·
:~11 managemeot, sttong earnmgs - may be swept under m penodic Udal
)floods that cngtllf the market.· When storms strike, everything goes, good

~~~; then. do investors add to the hazards with ~xpectations tha~ ~is­

~ shOws, aren't likely to be met? Such as doubling One's m.~ney m .~
~ear or earning 40 percent or even 20 percent a year? Or even, a mere

'!iS percent?
.
·
;: While ~lire's no answer, and no defense against people continuing the
:IJrlll:tice, there is'evidence that might help put their dreams in ~tive.
· Since 1945, for example, the .Standard &amp; Poor's 500-SIOCk mdex has
'provided an llliD"•Iized retnn1 of! 1.7 percent.
. . .
·
&gt; yes some invesunent categnnes beat that. Small capJtabzanon stocks
·provukd 13.5 percent, but most categories didn't c;ome c.lose to tbaL Gold
:bullion? It retuined 4.9 percent. An? 8.S percent. TreasiJIY bills? 4.8.
:· Though it ·is !lluch lower thail many of IOI!ay' s ltigh expectations, that
·~&amp;P return is ncverlbelcss a fairly decent measure of the upper ran.ge ?f
jnve~t reality. It is, afrer all. suffiCient to d9uble ypur money tn SIX

'

"' ears · , , · , .
~~
,1_ ,
•.
•~ '~ llitd-liyPQihetically; tllatfiS. Then
:reality, as relited by Oeiald Perritt, a
·
·
who
'jlublishes "Investment Horizons," a
:. He figutes that if you are an active investor
s. &amp;p...50Q
:~olio, turning ovei your hold)ngs once a year, yo.u . ' (iay a
·lmlli:erage commission IQ buy and a !·percent commiSStOn to sell.
With your ailnual tellll'll nqw down to 9;1 perc_ent, you mus~ ~en
;deidtJCi from this a 28 percent taX rate on your mvestritent profi(l!, bringmg
"the POrtfolio's net~~ IUIQual return to 7 percent. .
.
~ : ~rom that you mtiit fW:tber deduct the annual rate of inflati«?D• which
::W~ 4.5 .percent jn the 1945-1992 period, to reach your bottom line of 2.5
~t real return.
. t ' At 20 peroen~ a year, which is what many investors seek, $10,000
~~ $1 144 000 in 26 years. At 2.5 percent a year, which is what
~110~ iliv~:!!tOrs ;rught gef, it would tate 187 years to reach $1 million.
~That s reality.
·,
. .
.
. .
.
. That said the ~bililies do extst for some people mvesung m cenam
~ td m~e a fO!lune in' a shon time. \'es, it can be done. it has been
iOOite and it will be done, imd that seems sufficient incentive for many
~n\-estors.
.
. . · ula lh
t: Peter Lynch beat the averages. Perritt, the stock advtser, calc tes at
~uring Lynch's IS-year tenure at Fidelity Management Fund, where he
'w.-as viewed is the Babe Ruth of pottfolio managers, he achieved a 30.5
' ' · taverage amual return. ' '
~y even llitbe Ruih couldn't handle that son of pitching.

l

' d • h'• t
~ I 0 ay In IS ory
'

,.

·As Christmas approaches, tens
of thousands of us all over the
country will ~ selecting pets as
gifts. Since the American Humane
Society has succeeded in raising
our consciousness about adoptiqg
perfectly good sheltered pets, many
such anunals will be ban$ffig out of
stockingsorbroughtoutmredban-·
danas wthe squeals of happy children. Not as many will dili this
month.
Next lllOnlh the animal shelters
will get back 10 business as usual.
In the shelter that serves the
metropOlitan area of 250,000 where
I live in soulhwest MiSsouri, they
will euthani'lc over 1,100 animals
in January i business is normal. In
fact, the growing nu·mbers of
unwanted pets brought to them
have put them in imminent danger

~~~~~n~e~:OglY=~:;J

asked to give, or the killing they
~
By The ~lated Press
hav~ to do. !'lot far away, in. St.
"" In 1608, English poet-John Milto~ was born in London. ,
•·
Louts, the antinal ·shelter death toll
~ In 1892, "Widoweq~' Houses," George -Bernard Shaw s ftrst play,
will be sqmewhete around 1,650
'.MP"ed at the Royalty Thcalei' in London.
nex1.1nonth.
""'~""::;::::.:·:.::.:.:.:.-~;.......;.7-:-7--.""'i;----------,
-::
Dependinll on witlt whom you
1
talk or what ume of year it is, from
60 percent to 90 (le\'Ctnt 6f the lllii.·
mals taken to a sltCJter will be put
!
· (
to death. Why, ·when successful

•Berry S

RC!in will be widespread across Ohio Friday

conditiODS and

By The Associated Press
A low pressure system and cold
front that moved out of the Rockies
will strengthen as it moves into the
Great Lalces tonight. As the low
and cold front moves east, clouds
will increase with rain developing
from the southwest to northeast
across lhe state.
Rain ·and drizzle will be
widespread across the state on
Friday as the cold front crosses the
area. The day will begin rather mild

MICH.

For liberal m'ed·ia, anything goes

C:

'

2::..The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio
Thul'tlday, December 9, 1993

.

Joseph Perkins

ROBERT 1.. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

OHIO Weather
Fridayj Dec. 10

w0· rId·

could. baiely get out of his front insisted on portraying the vice
door ·without stumbling over president as some kind of cartOOn·
reponers rummaging thro.ugh hi$ tsh figure. They dissecled everytrash, looking tor ~ng materi- thing be said and did 10 reinforce
,al. Since they could fmd nothing their dishonest caricature of him as
.i'!C!'iminating in his refuse, ll)ey a man unequal to his high office.
Supreme Coun Jostice Clarence
dictded that the next best thing was
to distort his legal writings and Thomas was victim of one of the
nastiest, smears in history. Because
decisions. The Sllategy worked.
Emboldened by their successful his foes on the left could not suffihit job on Bock, the next target of ciently distort his writinf-1 and judithe media left was former Vice cial opinions to derail hts elevation
President Dan Quayle. When he. to the high court, they went after
was a little-known senator from the black conservative personally.
They got one of Thomas' fOrmer
Indiana, Quayle was regarded by
National Jou~al, the respected proteges, Anita Hill, to bear false
political magazine, as one o'f witness against ~im to the FBI.
Congress' rising stars, But wtien he Although her tesumony was supsuddenly became the heir apparent pOsed 10 be cortfidential, it somehow was leaked to reporters on the
to t~e Reagan-Bush legacy, the eve
of Thomas' conf111111ltion 'vote.
media went out: of its way to politiThus,
a man who had led an exem·
cally neuter him.
plary
public
life and blameless perAnyone who ever met Quayle
sonal
life
was
cast in the national
and engaged him in serious converpress
as
sonie
son of tawdry sex
sation, knew he was.conversant on
offender.
the range of issues. Not just
defense and foreign PQlicy, his spe- ' Now its Limbaugh's turn. His
cialties In the Senate, but also critics on the left can't stand the
fact that be has the highest-rated
doll)estic matters. ·
talk show on radio. That he's car' Of ~0Ur$e~ this
ried on more than 600 stations and
icftliiS m the national pre:ss.
reaches more than 19 million people each week. Or that his new late
nijlht television show reaches a
wtder audience than either "The
Arsenio Hall Show" or "Late
. Night With Conan O'Brien." They
· don't want to believe that so many
Americans are receptive to Lim·
baugh's conservative views..
But they arc. In the marketplace
of ideas, conservatives almost
always prevail over liberalS. This
has· not ~n apparent nritil fairly
recently because the folks who
control the media have purposely
kept conse.-vatives off the airwaves
and the editorial pages.
' -Now that conservatives have
broken throush in both broadcast
and print, liberals no longer enjoy
.an ideological monopoly over the
media. That is why the shrewish
Sally Jessy Raphael and her like- ·
minded peers on the media left
·hilve the lon~ blives out for popular cOIIservauves lilce Limbaugh.
Joseph Perkios is a columnist
for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

n-·"-·

INO.

with temperatures in the 4S to SO
degree range. The mercury will
gradually fall i n•o the 35 to 40
degree range by evening. In the
northwest counties, it may get cold
enough by evening for the rain to
change to snow.
.
A secondary cold front will
move through Ohio Friday night
which will usher arctic air mto the
repon. This will change the rain 10
snow by Saturday morning,, It will
be winterlikc ~n Saturday with

snow north and llurries south.
The record high lenlpenllllre for
Ibis date at the Columlius weather
Slalion was 66 degrees in 19,52. The
record low was minus 8 in J917.
Sunrise Ibis momiag wu II 7:42
a.m. SUillet ,.ut be a 5:06p.m.
ArOUIId tile Dation
A coastal stQrm carrying rain,
snow and at least one tornado 10 the
Pacifte Nonhwest spread into the
northern Rockies today after
knocking out electricity for more

WASHINGTON (AP) - An
independent analysis of the Clinton
health plan concludes that it can
cover everybody without a broad·
based tax increase and still reduce
the federal deficit.
11oA.-Ptoa~t
.
C19SI3 Accu-W...th•, Inc.
But the deficit redtJCtion would
be much less than the White House
forecast and the insurance
South-Central Ohio
' wests 10 15 mph:
premiums
Americans pay would
Thursday,
partly
sunny.
High
in
Tonight, cosdy clear. Low 30 10
have
10
be
higher,
accordlng to the
the
mid
50s.
35. West winds becoming south·
Extended forecast
196-pagc study issued Wednesday
Fnday, chance of rain. Morning by the health consulting firm of
The Daily .Sentinel
lows mainly in the 30s and highs Lewin-VHI.
. (USPS 113-"'l
The While House was pleased,
from the 40s to the lower SOs.
PubliJbed e"ery aflernoo•, Mouday lhtouatt
even though the study disputed
Saturday,
chance
of
snow.
Lows
Friday, Ill Coot! St., Pomoroy, Obio by the
some administrilion calculations.'
25 10 30 and highs in the 30s.
Ohio Valley Pl.lbll.r.bJ.D.a CampanyiMultlmodil.
It "essentially verifies our
lac., Pomeroy, Ohio -U769, Ph. 992~2 U6.
Sunday, fair. Lows 20 to 25 and
Secollcl clua postap pafd 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
estimateS and the soundness of the
highs in the 30s.
financing of our proposal," said
Member: The Alooci...,.l'rw, and the Oblo '
deputy budget director Alice
Newspiper Alloci.atioo; N1Uoul AdvertiliD&amp;
Repreaealative, BriGbam Ne.,.paper Salu,
Rivlin. It ''confmns that the Health
733 Third Avenue, New York, New Ylrl.
Security· Act is fully fmanced and
10017.
CLEVELAND (AP) - One ... will reduce the deftcit"
POSTMASTER: Sud 1Mrc111 chua- to The . ticket was sold nam.jng all'six hum-· .
The report by the respected
Daily SutJDel, Ill COU1. St., Pomeroy, Ohio .
bets .!lrawn in Wednesllay !light's Fairfax, Va., firm estimated that
&lt;.5769.
.
Super Lotto !lrawin,J fur S8 RUnion, Clinton's health reforms could cut
stJ1ISCIIJP'l10N IA'IU
the Ohio Lottery said.
. 1J c.ri• « r.t.ltw Roate
families' medical bills - including
ODe Weet... .............................................. .$1.60
The
jackpot
for
Saturday's
premiums and out-of-pocket costs
ODe Mooth...................... ,, .......................$6.9!
Super Lotto drawing is worth $4 -by $26 billion in 1998.
ODe Yw............. ,...........~...............- "$13.20
SINGLE COPY
million."
At the same time, businesses
I'RICI
Pick
3
Numbers
would
have to spend $29 billion
Dally...................................., ....- -35 Ceutl
3-4-8
more for health care, with vinually
Sublaibers lot d1111iri111 to PlY the c:arricr IIUI)'
(three, four, eight)
all of the extra money com in~ from .
raait iD ldl~ dU.:l to Tbe Dli.ly SeDI.iDel
Pick
4 Numbers
on a three. ala or 12 month b.U. o~ut will be
companies that now fail to msure
&amp;lveD ~ eadl week.
8-8-3-6
!heir workers.
(eight, eight, three, six)
No aubteripUou by mail permitted lD .,..
Lawrence S. Lewin, chairman of
where borne Clfrier lerVke it 1vailable.
Super Lotto
the Fairfax, Va.. firm said, "The
Mall Sullecrlptkwls
11-16-26-29-37-47
bad news is that there isn't nearly
t..~ Molp C...l7
(eleven,
sixteen, twenty-six,
as much cushion as they said there
13
$21.84
26 w..b ................................................ .$43.16
twenty-nine, thiny-seven. fortywould be. The good news is that
Slw..b .......,........................................ .$84.76
seven)
they
still haven't crossed the line
Oobldo Moip C.U.17
Kicker
I 3 Weeb ............................................ .... .$1100
into requiring new taxes."
28 WoolcB........................................ .$15.50
0-5-3-4-5-6
The study estimated that
5 2 -............... .......... ............... .$88.40
(zero, five, three, four, five, six)

Weather

Lottery numbers

w.,. . . . . ... . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .

~~miums

than SO.OOO cuslomcn in Oqan.
Most of the other lower 48
states were cloudy Md mild earl)'
today.
•
The powerful low-pressur~ ·
system dumped more snow today
on the Sierra moun~ of non1ter1t :
California and the Cascades of
Oregon · and Washington. Th~
systan also brought high winds as
far east as South Dakota anl
blowing snow to mountains iO
Montana and Wyomin8.
:

TNQ
•41 11!N1'1 GIIVI You,
A FAIULOUI GIFTI
Open M AMOWII

in 1998 would have to

--$2,732 for individuals.
--$5,464 for couples.
-$5,172 for one-parent
families.
-$5,975 for two-parent
families.
Lewin said that is 17 percent
higher than the administration is
projecting.
Kenneth . Thorpe, a deputy
assistant secretary of health,
dispUied that and satd the gap was
only 12 percent
The Lewin study estimated
Clinton's proposal would reduce
the deficit between now and the
year 2000 by $25 billion, not the
$58 billion the White House
estimated.
But assuming that Clinton's
proPQsed caps on health instuliOCe
premiums work, "then the rest of it
plays out," said Lewin. "There is
no smoke and minors here.'
"We think their estimates have
been overly optimistic, but they
still achieve deftcit reduction," he
added.
Clinton would require all
employers to help pay for health
insmance, and levy a I percent taX
on big corporations that self-insure
their workers. Everyone else would
get their coverage through giant
new insurance-purchasing pools.
The White House is counting on
big savings in Medicare and other
health spending. Its only major tax
hike would be on tobacco.
"It confirms what we've said all
along: Our numbers are on the
conservative side,'' said Thorpe.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
DUIRorfDS

...............
- 9·&lt;:1· 0 ·9 ·9 -

•t.t.kn II E.uy!

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760 ·
(614) 992·2635 • TOLL FREE 800-426-5581 Credit Terms • Lay ·A·Wiys • MaslefCan:l • Vrsa

-

•

::s~:e? campaigns have finally work in the area of animal rights
so many of us to adopt say the figure goes as bjgh as 70
sheltered animals, are ·they. losing pettent in SOII1e places.
so much l!fOUIId?

Sarah Overstreet
There· are several reasons, but
the most ironic is that their very
succ~ss has made the problem

~- ~le have.bec:()m~ so used

to there bel!lg humane shelters that
they delude themseh;es into believing a good home can he.found for
any pet they decide t~ey don: t
want. Success has bred uresponstble breeding. ·
A secondarY cause is the longS!BDding practice of not spaying or
neutering ·animals until -they pas!;
puberty. A person adopts a puppy
or kitten, pays the neutering fee
that shelters require for adoption,
and is given a coupon lD redeem
for the neutering•when the animal
is old enough. Then tile person
simply never gets around 10 bringing lhe aoiii)BI 10 have it neutered.
and the cycle of unwanted pets
begins again.
All shelters that follow this
practice have a certain percentage
of non-re&lt;!eemed neutering
coupons. Some veterinarians who

However, jlllany veterinarians
dispute tile n~ to wait until the
animal is panil!llbertY. They repon
years of ,cqmpletely successful and easier, lloth for doctor and .
patient - neutering at ages as
young as 8 weeks of age. ·
·
Both the ' American Humane
Association and the American Vet·
erinary Medical Association support early ne11tering. Using the
practice, sheliers can shuttle a
puppy or kitten tD a cooperating vet
and the new owners are not
allowed to pick up lhe animal until
afftr surgery.
·
Third, few cities have any kind
of breeding ordinances. Reluctant
to anger some breeders who oppose
the ordinances, city councils won't
enact laws as simple as requiring
that pet owners either acq!lire a free
breeding permit or have pets
. neutered.
What does a breeding ordinance
do if all it requires is that .pet owners either IIC\Iter pelS or get a per. mit if they want !0 breed thefr pets?
It forces them to learn .a litde bit
about irrespoiiSible breeding so that
it's not so
10 say: ','Oh, if ~it••

eaV

Ue Spitfue geis pregnant, we'll just ·
take them to the Humane Soctety .
and they'll find them a home. :
Besides, it'll be good for the kids 10 ·
witness the miracle of binh." They :
will learn that all the Spitfire :
Juniors will probably get a needle ·
in the hean some day shonly after :
ther've just been happily chasing :
thetJ tails.
·
. ,
Also, fming pet owners for noncompliance will force them eilher ;
10 neuter pets or think twice before :
bringing home a pet they won't :
control. Some cities arc imposing
$100 fines the
time they catch .
an animal in violation and $200 for·
the second offense. Such ordi·:
nances won't stop legitimate ani- :
ml!l breeders from raising and sell- .
ing as many anin!als as they wan~ :
yet only about· IS Ainerican cities ·
have enacted them.
:
If you love pets, the best Christ· :
mas gift you can give them is to ·
ftnd .out what your ·~ity is doing 10 ·
control irresponsible breeding of ·
animals. Don't believe it when you ·
hear !here's, nothing we can do :
about 12 million dogs euthanizcd •
each year in American shelters.
:
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndl· :
cated writer for Newspaper ·
Enterprise Association.
:

!;

""''

'•··

rtrst

NEW 1994 CHEVY CAR~A
Interior.

'9,408 or 1189 per mo.

Polo ·""""' P. bucket Mil, air, cruiM, . - 1-.tch,
P. wind., keyl..., ent,Y, 4tpd.IIUIO., 5.711111', Vo&amp;.

SHARP!

199

NEW 1994 ROYAL PALM HIGH TOP
CONVERSION VAN
Luther IINtlng, power IOfa. ,.., atereo, video
cuoette, running boarda, Wllnut caa.ette. HunylHunyiHunyl

package,

'

· NEW 1994 GEO METRO

Auto., Allll'll etertO, alr cond., great mileage.

•

The woman .who woul.d ru·le ·lran
,t

the islamic rdigion (wiu\Out coer- That same year, Maryarn also left
while p,reparin~ for the final pusli
cion), democracy and a free !1181ket for Paris, where she· married Masto Teheran. Twice, Iranian air fCJI'Ili
economy; Established in 1965 )Vith soud in 1985/
jets have .chased them back across:
Two year81Jatet, the f&gt;{Ojahedin
the Iraqi border, Some U.S. cxP,Crts'
~ '
the mission of d~ing the Shah of
',formed a N@tional Liberation
don't think they have much of a1
Army, .and Mary am was named
chance against an Iranian army of;
Deputy ~ommander in Chief. She 300,000, b111 the Mojal)edin believe·
began ·organizing training conrses
titer enjoy massive suppon inside;
·
bl'shed
u·
11
thetJ country and don't seem 10 be;
d,esta t . a m ttary. co ege. fazed
by the views of pessimistic•
· Iran.• its leaders wer!.' quickly an
the Moja!ledin's infanay was
..
,
"eP /ttJI.I.JNS THRDIIIINt!l'lt
tracked down by agents of the aSoon,
modem, mechanized force, arrried cnttcs.
. .
.
Shah~$ secret intelligence service, with Chinese, ·Soviet and British·
When Ma~yam RaJav• .~as: .
.STONE AT, J"Awte$ C'~VI.U.E"
the SAVAK. All were impisoncd. made tanks, heav.y artillery , electeil IB;St ~ugust by ~ coalttton:
Many were executed. · · .
armored personnel carriers and of 235 dustdcnt !eaders cal!ing_
Massoud Rajavi.was released &gt;nx:tetlaunchers.
·
thef!!selves tlie Nauonal Counc.tl Of:
from jail 4uriJlg the ,Shab's final
And getlltis· Half of the com- Reststaflce of Iran, she had thts to.
days, !iUI he couldn't l6elil to 118y mand staff ariil third of \he tiOOps . say: •• After the overthrow of t~e:
out of trouble. T)VO weeks afte,r
. ·· • o be 1991 • a· mullahs,
we must go to our people·
women. 1n cto ~
'th spirit of mercy and open·
Khomeini's ~ . IO ;power, Rljavi ,are
Rcutm ~t WI\!IC~ a WI a
, .
. .
•
pub&amp;tr COIICiemnod' the inwn for five-hour ,Na .parlde in' a camp neis. Let !hC jicpte v_&amp; fteely·~d ·
•
hii IDti-clomcicraJic: tendeaclel. rn jilatacroil tho Iraqi border wlllt . · mille J!l~tr own ~hotee. Le.t .there.1981, Kbomeinl CIICirCd doMt on Iran and re~ned: "Many tanks · be a spmt of mutual.~~..
woman.
··
.' ·
die Mo,llll!ldln and ~vi 'moved were driven by women in 'drab forpveness inil nali!lijal uruty, m
.:
· Her name is Mary'atn ~ajllvl, · to Plrls: · ollYO ~ IJ1d red head IC8I vt$,
pl~ce of ven.eanc;o ~nd ~atred. ;
and if tbi mulillts - llvadoou,
Meanwhile MUyam wu lead· tho umfOIID of a movement that ThiS Ia the way 10 cure ~ ~ei\ts.
lite will serve~ a~ cliiOf . lnJ "'• de-tlralioRI .pinal say's It cAUJi~ on women for .30
~ the ICill tl!ll ~mtSm bas;
executive until a new CQiiltltudon . the 'milllaha 911 the atreeta or J)eiOellt Of iu llgbtlal ro.te which inflicted on a..- tiatlon. ,,
•
is adoptld ll1d new leai*lllilllld Teheiln. A JQellllur&amp;lcaJ . _ . Is G,ltlniiiAicla up to 40,ooo;=·
Roll over,·Ruhollah.
,
a pa 111111CDt ~ are eleCred. inJ Jlllt(uate of lhe SUrit UDI-.iFmlbe ~few y(llllli !be Nl.A
· JOMPII, Spea,r. II I IJ!Idil:.ted ·
Talk about revolUU(II.
•
ty Ol TeC!molon abe nnt Pled has been ....,....,.. ~ wgell inSide Inin
writer. for Newlpa~r Enterprise
...~...
· .UIOdldoo.
;
. Maryim Raja'!'i \l'!d her ~~·· apinat the sh~: then aplnst his
band, ~ ~VI, are the JO\Dl , IUCCOISOIJ, One Of her atSters WIS
.
'
leaders of thC '*lest Iranian resJJ• killed !ly SAVAli: in 1976; another , · · 'I)ot_Jght f~ Today;. ;,Ofjgirtality and a feeling of one's own diioity ;
'tai!CO movement, know" as tile wal fOttUtiid 10 death by Khomci1
are achieved ,:lilly throi12lt work and struggle ·" - Feodor Do 10
;·1~··:__...,._;;-r---~-----:i;_________, People's Mojahe~n. It espouses lli's Revolutionary G~ in 1982. Russian
'li!Jthor (1821-181!1).
. ·
·'
s
The late and unlamented Iranian

holy man Ayatollah Ruho{lah
Khomeini must be turning over in
his grave.
·
You know what he thought of
women, of course. They were to
him (and remain 10 his fat\lltic followers) inferior creatures who
ought to sht~t up, ~tay home and
·cover their bodies from head . t~
heel when they ·hav{ ,to go llutside.
~ian women ·w!lq dared' appear
in public unveiled. ex who Otherwise defied Khomeini's risid iltan·
dards of modestf. \~(ere (a!ld still
are) routinely jatled, beaten, tor·
.tured aild raped by pri- ~ ·
· Well, guess what? lraniaQ'rebels
,who hope to dtihrone the cJerk:al
, ~ wbo sUCC'ee M' XJtomeini
have already seleclcd thO futufe
president of ltan, and she -is a

.'.

I
I

1

Joseph Spear

a

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-t...
ye._,,
.
r

.

I

.n

&lt;

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·~

HOURS: MON•.fRI\ t!OCI-8:00;
SAT. 9:0-4:00;
SUN, 1:CI0-5:00

,.,,

·oo
.

'

'

CBEV•..OLDS.-GAD·.·GEO
'

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•

Outside analysts say,
Clinton health plan can .
avoid broad tax hike

W. VA.

••

.

OPEN
SUNDAY

i:l

�Page 1 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

----Area ·d eaths---· Rev. William Anderson
The Rev. William Andcrsoll, 77.
of Pomeroy and a former resident
• of Ripley and Spencer, W.Va., died
Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1993, at Veterans
Memona! Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born in Spencer on May 7,
19 I 6, he was employed as a steel
worker at Crucible Steel Company
in Midland, Penn .. until his
retirement. He was also an
evangelist.
Following his
retiremen~ he moved to Pomeroy.
Survivors include four stepsons,
John W. Flowers of New Haven,
W.Va. , L. David Flowers of
· Conover, N.C., Guy L. Flowers of
San Gabriel , Calif., and Frank
Flowers of Panorama City, Calif.; a
stepdaughter, Betty J. Way of
Middleport. and many stepgrandchildren and step-greatgranchildren.
Also surviving is a brother,
Junior Anderson of Charleston,
W.Va .. and a sister, Dolly
Anderson of Ripley.
He was preceded in death by his
wife. Alena Rebecca Talbott
Flowers Anderson, in 1980, and by
a stepson, Kenneth Flowe~.
Services W!U be held Fnday at I
p.m. at McClure-Schaf~r Funeral
Home in Marietla wtth his stepson,
John W. Flowers, officiating.
Burial will follow in Mt. Pleasant
Cemetery in Mineral Wells, W.Va. .
Friends may call from noon
Thursday until the hour of services.

children and 19 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Anna Mae Bumgarner; three
sisters, Tyllie L. Roush, Millie B.
Bumgarner and Mabei ' Garnet
Bumgarner, and one brother, John
H. Bumgarner.
,
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday 81 the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. Rex Young officiating. Burial wiD be in Union Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 9
p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Mililary graveside rites wiU be preConned.

Helen Skaggs

Tl'lu1'8da)', December 9, 19113

I .

Sports

Coal contract could change
industry-labor relations

Helen E. "Stormy" Slcaggs, 71 ,
of Cheshire died Wednesday, Dec.
Sources said Wednesday that
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
The proposed five-year cont,ract
8, 1993, at Cbar~n Area Medithe
QMW and members of the ~tives the union 60 pen:ent of new
A
propoSed
coal
cootract
would
cal Center in Charles10n, W.Va.
Born March 27, 1922, in assure United Min~ Workers jobs , Bituminous COil Operators Associ- JObs at existing, new or newly
Edmond, W.Va., daughter of the even at nonunion miJies and could ation achieved many of the gOI!ls 8C4ij1ired mines and subsicliarie!,
late Walter Ray and Hester Arman- bring more. coopt:~alion to a histori- they wanted 11 the start of tallcJ a . including nonunion..ones, sources
year ago. The agreement was said.
da Sims Blizzard, she was a mem- cally contentious industry.
announced
Tuesday.
The 19g3 agreement, which
An
estimated
60,000
working
ber of the Cheshire Baptist Church
The
UMW
1\!ld
sought
future
expired
and
laid-off
UMW
members
who
in May, alsO promised 6o
and the Cheshire Order of the EastjOb$
for
its
me·mbers,
who
otherwould
be
covered
by
the
agreement
pertenl
of
new jobs 10 UMW minem Sw No. 450.
wise
could
be
unemployed
within
ers but did not Cll.tend 10 newly creSurviving include a son and will vote next week. A selective
·
daughter-in-law, Donald E. and strike, which began May 10 and the next seven years when the ated nonunion subsiiliaties.
The contract also ineludes •'J!C9Joan Skaggs of Charleston, W.Va.; expanded to I 7,500 miners in mines they work at arulepleted.
UMW Plu.ident Richard Trum- visions that further .strengthen
a brother, Bernard R. Blizzard of seven states, won' t end until a new
contract
is
in
place.
ka
had demi!lded 100 percent of workJ:IIace democracy and provide
Oak Hill, W.Va.; a grandsoq, John
the
jobs created by the union's for nuncrs 10 bave a rc;a1 say in the
Donald Skaggs of Charleston.
Dale E. Cole
employers,
whether they were cre- way work is performed ," Labor
She was preceded in death by
Dale E. Cole, 7 I, of Aleron, died
ated
at
unionized
or nonunion sub- Secretary Roben Reich said in a
husband, Donald Skaggs, in
Tuesday, Dec . 7, 1993, at St. her
sidiaries.
SlatemenL
1980.
Thomas Hospital in Aleron.
Services
will
be
Saturday
at
11
The proposal calls for "a neutral
Born in Coolville, son of the a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Am Ele Power ................... 36 l/4
forum
- an industry-wide, Jabotlate Ernest and Martha Foster Cole, Middlepon with the Rev. Harold
Ashland Oil... ..................... 32 1(2
management
cooperative commithe was a Troy High School gradu- Tracewell officiating. Burial will
AT&amp;T ........ ..............................55
VETERANS MEMORIAL
tee," Reich said.
·
.
ate and a World War II veterans be in Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Bank One .......... .......................38
Wednesday
admissions
John
The
committee
would
allow
having served in the South Pacific. Cheshire.
Bob Evans... :......................21 1/4
Meltori, Middleport, and Dottie miners and managers to resolve
He was a retired self-employed disCharming Shop .................. 11 7/8
Friends may call 6-9 p.m. FriSizemore, Middleport.
problems "before they face the
tributor of Melch Foods.
Champion Ind..........................16
day at the funeral home.
Wednesday
discharges
ur4ency
of an expiring contract "
Surviving is his wife or 52
City Holding ..................... .32 1(2
Edward KeUy, Syracuse. .
Retch
said.
-·
'
years, Isabelle Marschand Cole;
Federal Mo.gul ...................28 3/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. .4S 7/8
one son, Roger Cole of Pensacola.
Fla.; one daughter, Sandra Markley
Lands End ............ .............. 41 1/8
of Aleron; one brother, Leslie Cole
Limited Inc ..............................18
of Belpre; six grandchildren and
Multimedia Inc . ................. 37 3/4
Units of the Meigs County nis Rifi'Je who was transponed 10
several nieces and nephews.
Point Bancorp .......................... 15
Emergency
Medical Service VMH, Frank Bonecutter refus~d
Continued from page 1
He was preceded in death by
Reliance Electric ................ l6 7/8
calls
for assistance treatment; 7:10 p.m. Rutland 10
answered
six
one brother, Howard Cole, and one
Robbins&amp;Myers .. ................... .16
The
Great
Bend
site
consists
of
ovemighL
Units
responding
includ- Salem Street for Vera Salser wlio
infant grandson.
Shoney'slnc ............... ....... 22 1/4
ed:
about
1,266
acres
on
prope'rty
was transponed 10 VMH; 830 p.m.
Services will be held Saturday
S1ar Bank ........ .........................33
owned
by
Columbus
Southern
Wednesday-9:16a.m.
MidSyracuse
10 Arbaugh Addition for
Joyce Bartimus
at 10:30 a.m. at the Schlup Funeral
Wendy Int'l........................ l6 3/8
Power
which
was
originally
dlepon
to
Overbrook
Nursing
CenPam
Miller
who was transponed to
Worthington Ind................ 18 1/4
Joyce E. Bartimus, 52, Gallipo- Home in Akron with the jl.ev. Tom purchased as a potential site for a
·ter
for
John
Melton
who
was
transCamden-Clark
Ho5pital in Parkerslis died Wednesday, Dec. 8, 1993, Shiffiet officiating. Burial will fol - generating slation.
Stock reports are the 10:30 paned to Veterans Memorial Hosburg,
W.Va.;
11:51
p.m. Pomeroy
a.m. quotes provided by Ad vest pital; 1:24 p.m. Rutland to Meigs to County Home Mobile
at 'Holzer Medical Center in Gal- low in Greenlawn Cemetery in
In
a
letter
addressed
to
Park fOr
Aleron.
of Gallipolis.
lipolis.
Mine
3
I
for
David
Dodson
who
Commission
President
Robert
Rebecca
Snyder
who
was
treated
at
Friends may call from 2-4 and
A former employee of Star Bank
was
transported
111
,
V
MH;
4:24p.m.
the
scene.
Hanenbach, an American Electric ·
in Gallipolis, she was a 1959 grad- 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Pomeroy 1P Qnlor Stille! f~ DenPower vice-president, Larry
uate of Malla-McConnelsviUe High
'
Hoover,
indicated
the
Great
Bend
School a member of the Malta Edward Hayes
site can be made available for
United Methodist Chureh, GallipoEdward Allen Hayes, 39, Vin- industrial developmenL
lis Order of the Eastern Sw 11283, ton, Va., died Wednesday, Dec. 8,
Grace United Methodist Church in
1993, at Community Hospital in
"We will relain ownershif of the
Gallipolis and the Elizabeth Circle Roanoke, Va.
the
of Grace United Methodist Church.
An employee of m and a for- property and contro
development,
but
will
work
in
She was born Aug. 25, 1941, in mer employee of Kaiser Aluminum
Malta daughter of Bernard F. in Ravenswood, W.Va., he was partnership with state and local
Shriven Sr. of McConnelsville and born May 17, 1954, in Pomeroy. otganizauons on an overall
the late Alberta G. Loomis son of Vergil C. Hayes of Colum- development plan for the site.
'The availability of the propeny
Shrivers.
bus and the late Mildred Roush
Survivors include her husband, Hayes. He was affiliated with St. is subject to a fau market value
Roben L. Bartimus of Gallipolis; Joseph Catholic Church and the consideration, 10 an industry type
one son and daughter-in-law, Keith Pomeroy squad of the Meigs Coun- acceplable to Columbus Southern
Power and to the benefit of the
A. and Renee Bartimus of Tucker- ty Emergency Medical Service.
ton N.J.; two daughters and sonsSurvivors include three children, surrounding area. The development
in-l~w, Jolaine K. and Ricky Fulps catherine Denise, Raymond AJien of the site should provide
of Palestine, Texas, and Stacey L. and James Edward Hayes, all of maximum flexibility in order to .
and Derek Henson of Cincinnati; Bedford, Va.; sisters Pamela aecominodate a IIUiior project or a
four grandchildren, Samantha and "Penny" Holcomb of L!thopolis number of smaller industries."
-~andy®
Levi Banimus of Tuckenon and and Karen Ries of Columbus; one
Commissioners approved the
Nathan and Nikki Fulps of Pales- niece and one nephew, Tracy and
following
transfers: $1,093 within
tine.
Sharyl lfolcomb of Lithopolis, and
•the.prosecutor's
offtee; $800 within
· AJso surviving are two brotha:s severll aunts, uncles:and eousins. · ·
county
coun;
$21,010
within the
and a sister-in-law, BF. and PatnHe was preceded in death by
highway
department;
$6,587.62
logic
cia Shrivers Jr. of Pomeroy and J!ln twin sisters, Dortha and Donna
within
the
treasurer's
office
and
Randal Shrivers of Malta; two siS- Hayes.
ters and brothers-in-law, Ann and
Services will be held Monday at $16.04 within the auditor's office.
In addition, the commission
Roger Tedrow of Columbus and 11 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Sue and Jeff McKinney of Pomeroy. Friends may call· Sunday approved appropriations of$214.83
for supplies in the clerk of cou.n's
Zanesville.
from 5-9 p.m.
office pending cenilication.
Services will be held Saturday
at 2 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home in Ralph Milltu
111
Gallipolis with the Revs. Joseph L.
The commission approved
Hefner and Gregory Swann officiRalph Otto MiUer, Sr., 87, of leasing a lot and ·building at 140 N.
ating. Burial will follow in Ohio West Columbia, died Monday, Dec. Third St. in Middleport 10 the Slate
Valley Memory Gardens.
6, 1993, in Pleasant Valley Nursing for $3,654 per year for 10 years.
Friends may call Friday from 6- Care Center.
The lot and building are used by
.
.
0
9 p.m. at the funeral home.
A coostruction labor foreman, he the Meigs County Department of
was a member of the West Colum- Human Services.!
Henry Beaver
..,
.. _ _ _1 .
bia United Methodist Church and
•
lliiP;·IIItllio
'
West
Virginia
International
· Henry Richard Beaver, 88, of
'
In addition, commissioners
The pen-based Tandy PDA can slreatnline
the way ·you work,
Columbus and formerly of Chester Laborer's Union Local 543 of Hunthink
and
communicate.
To
use
it,
just
"write"
on t~e screenlease
of
the
building
continued
its
tingtOn.
died Wednesday, Dec. 8, 1993, al
it's
as
simp.
l
e
as
that!
Smart.
powerful
applications
are already
currently
occupied
by
the
Meigs
Born Dec. 8, 1905, in CharlesEasthind Care Center in Columbus.
installed
to
give
you
fast,
simple
ways
to
handle
the
details in
· A retired school teacher for the ron, he was a son of the late John County Prosecuting Attorney's
your life. 125·3100 .. ............ ........ ... .. ..... . : : ...... Eastern Local District and a Causby and Lou (Caldwell) Miller. office at $7,800 a year.
·•··•··••···································
...•.•....•..••.•~
Commissioners received a letter
Grange insurance agent, he was He was also preceded in death by a
WII H '-.W~IllH
born April 14, !90S, in West Vir- son, !alee L. MiUer, three daughters, Dale Shipley, deputy director of the
ginia son of the late George Laura Elizabeth MiUet, Clyda state adjutant general office,
•
"Peep" Fields, Eva Lou Yonker, commending the county's recently
Edward and Bertha Theiss Beaver.
•••
He was a member of the Chester two brothers, Frank Dralce and submitted hazardous ffi1lterial plan.
The Meigs Coulil)' Emergency
United Methodist Church , Shade Vaughn Miller, and a sister, Mag=-~
Planning Commtssion and
River Masonic Lodge 114S3 of deline Caldwell. •
1
which he was a past secretary, and
Surviving are his wife, Virginia Emergency Management Agency
•
D. "Patsy" Riley Miller; lhree sons Director Robert Byer are to be
the Chester Grange.
:
CD·-PCWIIII
Survivors include a daughter, and «!aughters-in-law, John P. and commended for their work, Shipley
U' ,
Sue B. Gibson of Columb,us; a son Janet 0. Miller of West Cdlumbia, • wrote.
• ' 2 ~J
and daughter-in-law, Lowell A. and Edward Lee ''Tuffy" and Judy
Nancy Beaver of Middlepon; three Miner of West Columbia, Ralph 0.
•
grandchildren; three great-grand- Jr. and Sandy S, Miller of Point 9. The plan was submitted on Nov. .
: a FaBI Kodak• ·Phota CD 00i1npalllble CD-RO
children; a brother, Clifford Beaver Pleasant; three daughters and sons: !1 WindQwi l\.1, MS-DOS 6,
Works, CD·ROM llbtary ,·;
In
other
matters,
the
of Grove City.
·
in-law, Mildred R. "Sissy"· and commission:
.....
- . H 125·1&amp;0014081
He was preceded in death by his Roben H. Compson · of Pearland,
- Appointed' Engineer Robert
wife, Navada Allison Beaver, and TCJW, Sally and Marvin G. Bland
Eason
to act as conlaCt person for
two brothers, Ralph and Dale of Letart, Judy A. @lid James P. the State
Capital Improvement
Beaver.
Young of Letart; two step sisters, Program (formerly Issue 2) projects
Services will be held Friday at I Elizabeth Drake of Charieston,
p.m .. at Ewing Funeral Home in Stella M. Neal of Charleston; two £,or Meigs Coun.ty in 1994 under
me eighth round .funding cycle and
Pomeroy with ~Rev. AJ ~n nieces, Anna tee Johnson and authorized Eason to submit a SCIP
officiallrig. Bunal wdl follow tn Bcuy Jo Gardner, both of Point
application to the Slate on behalf of
Chesler Cemetery.
Pleasant; 2I grandchik!ren. 29 the county.
Friends may call tonight from 5- great·grpndchildren, three great- Met with David Fizer of
9 p.m. at the funeral hoii)C. Mason· great-granchildren, and eight step
Pomeroy and Dog· Warden Bill
ic: services will be held at 7 p.m.
~dchildren.
Dye concerning a dog matter. It
I II
The funeral will be Friday, Dec. was agreed that Dye would !nore
Ottie T. llumgarner
: ..... Mt.n .L...., • .,.
10, I p.m., at the Foglesong cl~Jsely patrol the area around
'
•••••••••••••••••••
Ottie T. Bum$atner, 97, Rt. 2 Funeral Home with the Rev. James Fizer's home.
.
Letart, W. Va., died Tuesday, Dec. H. Lewis officiating. Burial will be
Tabled a request by
· 7 1993 at the Ravenswood Care in the Gnlham Cemetery.
Middleport Mayor Dewey Honon
Friends may call at the fuQeral that $4,800 be inclUded in the 1994
center. He was a relired farmer and
.
home Thursday, S 10 9 p:m.
World Wtr I.vetel'lll ..
Streak
,
budget
to
assist
the
Blue
. '
Bumgarner was a rnem bet of the
Cab Co. which is subsidized · to
~
Graham UnilCd Mechodist Church, Herman,Moore
provide transportation io elderly"
.... the Americall Legion Smith-Capelow-income and disabled people m , , -...; ~...
Herman E. "Brother" Moore, the county. .
hlrt Post 140 and lbe VFW Stew:
-- .
75,
ofPomeJ;O)" died Wed!tesday.
an-JohniOII Poil9926.
- R~in~ Evel-ett ·Holmes
, ...... st.H
Born Nov, 23, 1896 in Letart. he Dec. 8, .1993, •I a Hunungton, of Glouster as b~e inspector for
·..., , _
was illc son of lbe 1ate Taylor and W.Va., Veterans Administration 1994.
.
.. '
...
facility. ·
' .
,
Sanh H~ BwnP~~Cr.
- Reappomled P.atl'lcta !Holter
'• Survivors include one daughter,
Born Sept. 10, 1?18, in Meigs 10 the Meigs County Public.Ubrary
Jl. (Harry) Pickens of New County, son of the ·late Paul and Boaid at tbe request of Librarian
va.; flll!f _,.,,Edward Florence Eblin Moore, he was affil- Ruth Powers.
M1 (Uttiia ~Je) Bumsarner of iated with the Victory Baptist . Present were commissioners
u..n, Plul.l. (Miry L.) Bumgar- Cburch In Mlddleport aDd was an Fred Hoffman, Hart~n~~h an4
ner of New HaWII. ~~-(Lois Army vetenin of World War tr. H~ · Tackett and Clerk Olona l{bls. , .
~.) BDnipuer Of Lelart. lind Ger· wq also a retiJed cOal miner and
Th'i next commission. meeting
aid W. (Naricy) Bumaarrier ~f laborer.
will be held Tuesday at 2:45 p.m.
Further· arrangements. will be in the commission office on the
POliter, Mk.; one ~ro!her, Ons
' J . _,, Ltlialll:l; O~IUiill:t, Edna announced liter by Birchfield third noor of-the Meigs County
·.P. ,..., Nnt H.Pen; 12 grand- Funeral Home in ~pdand. ' .
Coorthouse.
,
'
.
..
' ..

-

The' Daily ·Sentinel
Thurtclay, December 9, 1993

With 62-47 win over Eastern,

M~igs i.nflates
undefeated mark to 3-0
.-

an

.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Connpondent
Vanessa Compston led a trio of
Meigs players in double figures to
lead the Lady Marauders 10 a 62-47
victory over Eastern Wednesday
evening.
The Marauders (3-0) opened up
an early 4-1 lead on buckets by
Heather Hudson and Vanessa
Compston, but Eastern took advantage of Jaime Wilson scoring the
fiCSt five points of lhe game 10 take
a 5-4 advantll8e at the 4: 13 marli: of
the riod.
rompston driDed a three-pointer
from the right wing to give the
Marauders the 7-5 lead. Eastern
batded back to take a 9-7 lead on a
Tara Congo bucket in the paint
with 1:53 left.
Melissa Clifford's bucket of the

Stocks

Hospital news

Discussion
continues...

EMS responds to si.x calls

Junior high Eagles
beat Hannan Trace

1!..,...,...,.=======..!1

The New

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The allllty to co•ctto the
You've read lboul n-

now come In 8nd

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..

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.....
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·-

:
NOT THIS TIME, ISIAH! - Atlanta center Kevin WUlis goes
11-o• up to block tile sbot attempt or Detroit point guard !slab Thomas in
C~: lbe first balr or Wednesday night's NBA game in Auburn Hills,
::: Mich., wbere the Hawks won 105-97. (AP)

.....
""'' theNBA,
'g,ln

~Hawks, top Pistons

rfor
11th straight win
•
:
By Tbe Associated Press
Ron Harper had !1.0 points for
: A week· after stopping Hous- the Clippers. BriclcowSki scored 20.
: ton's winning streak one game
Ce1tlcs 12,, ~IDp 115
· • short of a record. the .Atlanta . Sherman pqjlglai(liac:l_a-career( Hawks are approaching a mark of high 21 assist~ and· B'oston sent
, their own.
Sacramento to its eighth straight
: The Hawks won their I lth loss.
:
Kevin Gamble had 23 points
• slraight game Wednesday night as
: Dominique Wilkins scored 20 and Jimmy Oliver 21 for Boston.
: points in a 10S-97 victory at Mitch Richmond scored 34 for
' Detroit
. ·
Sacramento.
: Atlanta has its first 11-game
76ers95,BuUs88
winning string since the 1986-87
Shawn Bradley played his best
season. The longest winning streak game as a pro with I 7 points, I 0
: in ·franchise history is 12, set from rebounds and six bloclced shots as
' Dec. 8, 1968,to Jan. 3, 1969.
Philadelphia won in overtime at
: "Our defense right now is what home.
; is )ceeping this streak going,"
Dana Barros scored six of his 20
: W1lkins said. "I don't have to points in ovenime for the Sixers,
• score 30 or 40 points a night for us and Tim Perry had 23 points. BJ.
; to win."
Armstrong had 24 points for the
t The Pistons lost their seventh in Bulls.
, a row, matching their worst skid of
(See NBA on Page 6)

I'

The Eastern junior high girls'
basketball team started off the season with a 36-28 win over the host
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
From the tipoff, Eastern played
great defense. Head coach Paul
Brannon said his club's defense,
led by Juli Hayman and Stephanie
Evans, was the main factor in the
win.
Eastern dominated the boards,
only giving the Wildcats six offensive rebounds. Jessica Brannon led
the Eagles with I 0 points and I 0
assists. Valerie Karr led the Eagles
in rebounds and also had six points.
Michene CaldweU had six early
points before having 10 leave the
game with a fractured ankle. An~e
Wolfe came off the bencJt, sconng
five points, along with Joanna
Gumpf and Jacque Hall, who each
added two.
Paul Brannon said, "We have a
very young team. We have 13 girls
and only one, Amanda Maynard,
bas any junior high experience."
The other junior high girls are
Kim Mayle, Ann Wiggins, Vicki
Adams and Nicole While.
Brannon indicated that all 13
girls are very eager to learn and
fundamentaUy suong.

offensive boards with 1:251eft tied
the game at nine, and Amber
Blackwell's steal and shan jumper
with I :25 left gave Meigs the lead
for good 81 11-9. Rebecca Evans
hit one of two free throws with
three seconds left to cut the
Marauder lead 10 11-10 at the end
of the period.
The Marauders staned to pull
away in the second period and
opened up a 2J-12lead on a Blackwell bucket with 5:16 left in the
half. Meigs ilicreased the lead to
28-18 with 1:24 left on a Joy
O'Brien free throw. But Eastern
battled back io 30-25 on a Evans
free throw .with seven seconds left.
But Kristen Dassaylva's twopointer 81 the buzzer gave Meigs a
32-25 lead the the half.
In the third period the
Marauders led by as many as I I
poiniS. Eastern was able 10 cut the
lead to seven with :S8 seconds left
on a Jessica Karr bucketiO cut the
lead to 39-32. But Meigs took a 4333 lead into the fmal period when
O'Brien drilled a three-pointer
from the top of the key at the
buzzer. That shot drained any
momentum Eastern had gained in
the competitive third period.
Eastern turnovers plagued the
Eagles attempt at a comeback.
Easrem cut the lead several times,
but unwise passes and defensive
breakdowns kept letting Meigs

back in the game.
In the founh period Eastern
once again pulled 10 with in six at
the 2:36 mark on a Penny Aciker
free throw IOolllalce it S3-47 contesL
At this point, the Eagles full coun
press gave up three baclc-door runs
off lhe press-breaker that drove lhe
fatal pin in Eastern's coffin. The
EHS missed assignments proved 10
be very cosdy in the comeback bid
and Meigs was able 10 pull away
down the strell:h to post the win.
Compston led all scorers with
19, and O' Brien added 12, while
Blackwell had I I. Clifford came
off the beach to score eight,
Heather Hudson added six,
Dassylva four and Cynthia Couerill
two.
Wilson and Karr each had 13 for
Easrem (().2).
Meigs hit 23 of S3 from the
floor for 44% including two of six
from three point range, they cashed
in on 14 of 28 from the line. Meigs
grabbed 40 rebounds led by
Compston with II and Clifford
with seven. The Marauders IUmed
the ball over 25 times. Lee
Henderson had an outstanding Door
game for the Marauders with eight
assists. Meigs had 13 steals with
Blackwood getting four and
Henderson three. Meigs was called
for 21 fouls.
Eastern hit 17-68 from the floor,
was 13-2S at the line and had 36

rebounds, led by Congo's eight.
Aeiker and sophomore Rebecca
Evans each grabbed six rebounds.
Eastan 1lad 16 steals, 24 turnovm,
and a whopping 28 fouls.
Meigs wok advantage of a 16-4
third period and went on to post a ·
47-29 over Eastern in lhe reserve
game, Eastern had led at the half
19-17. Cheryl Jewell led Meigs
with 12, Ashley Roach added nine
and Stacey Price eight to pace
Meigs. Crystal Holsinger added 10.
In last week!s reserve win over
Nelsonville , Jewell scored six
poiniS to be co-leader in scoring
with Jenny Clifford and not Taryn
Doidge as reponed. We apologize
for this mistake.
Easteru
(10-15-8-14=47)
Jamie Wilson S-0-1=11, Penny
Aeiker 1-0-S=7, Tara Congo 3-00=6, Amy Redovian 7-0-2= 16,
Rebecca Evans 0-0 -4=4, Patsy
Aeiker 1-0-1 =3. Totals: 17-013=47
Meigs
(ll ·ll· ll-19=62)
Joy O'Brien 1-1-7=12, Heather
Hudson 3-().0=6, Amber Blaclcwell
4-0-3=11, Vanessa Compston 7-12= 19, Melima Clifford 3-0-2=8,
Cynthia Cotterill I -0-0=2;
Dassylva 2-0-Q---4. Totals: 21·2·
14=62

Sports briefs
NEW YORK (AP) - The NHL
filed suit against NHL Players
Association, claiming clubs have
the Jight to sell ream jerseys that
carry players' names.
AJso named as plaintiffs were
Buffalo Sabres and NHL
Enterprises, Inc.
The NHL said its suit comes in
response to recent threats by the
NHLPA to sue many teams and
independent retailers unless they
agreed to a fee for use of players'
names .on jerseys.
The NHLPA said it owns
exclusive worldwide rights to the
commercial marketing and sale of
current NHL players names on
hoclcey jerseys.

l• lastLast
Friday, Atlanta became the • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,
season.

: fl!St and only team to beat Houston
• this season. The Rockets began
: with 15 siraight victories, tying the
' ~A record. The Hawks can mau:h
the team mark with a win 10night at
: home against San Antonio.
' : The Hawks had not played since
:: beating Houston, and they looked
: flesh against the Pistons. Willcins
:•Scored eight points during an 18-5
' burst that closed the first half for a
150-39 lead, and Atlanta went ahead
i 59-45 early in the third quarrer.
: Moolcie Blaylock had II points
' and 13 assists for the Hawks .
: Olden· Polynice had a career-high
i 25 rebounds and 18 points for the
: Pistons.
; In other games, Seattle defeated
• S!!D AntoQio 109-107 in overtillle,
! the Los Angeles Clippers swpped
: Milwaukee 100-97, Boston beat
: silcmmeniO 129-115, Philadelphia
• d~feaied Chicago 95-88 in
:overtime, Portland downed
; Minnesota 114-111 and Utah beat
' Washington 113-91.
SuperSonics 109, Spurs 107
. : Seattle won its fifth m a row and
: b~came the 13th team in NBA
:history 10 stan a season with a IS-I
:record . Gary Payton scored 2S
•points and Rtcky Pie!C!l had 2'! ~
lthe Sonics stopped San AniOmo s
:Cight·game winning streak.
; David Robinson had 39 points
lfor the host Spurs. Seattle held San
tAntonio to two points in the first
:Cour minutes of overtime.
: Lloyd Daniels missed a jump
-shot for the Spurs at the end of
hgulation.
In
ov~rtime,
~seeutive baslceiS bY Payton and
f'icrce oot Seatde ahead for good at
107-JOl
·
•
/ &lt;lllppers 100, Bucks 97
.: Danby Manning scored 24
ints before leaving on a.strell:her
te in the game because of ievere
,eg cramps, and Los Angeles won •
anMitwa~ .
·
! He later aald he was dehydrated.
d had the flu. .
. Vaqght's basket 'with 14
left put Los Angeles ahead
·9 . A(ter Frank Brickowski
illbsed a layup for the Bucks,
Vaught b~e loose for a dunk.

!

!

1

E

h~
I .

CARRIER:$ NEED.ED
IN POMEROY AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
INFORMATION
•'

THE 'ALL NEW' '94 FORD MUSTANG

·ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOM

*

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On AI Rlllllllq '93Modlllln SIDclcl
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�,.
••

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Page

6

The Dally Sentinel

Among AP All-America football picks,

·

.._j

•

Faulk honored tor ·third time; Taylor, Waldrop rep~at

.,.. .....•'

By RICK WARNER
NEW YORK (AP) - Marshall
Faulk three-peated, while Aaron
Ta ylor and Rob Waldrop made it
two in a row .
Faulk made The Associated
Press All-America coUege football
team for the third straight year
Wednesday, the first player to do
that sin ce Geor,gia 's Herschel
Walker from 1980-82. The San
Diego State running back, who will
skip his senior season 10 enter the
NFL draft, led the nation with 24
touchdowns. was third in all-purpose yards and No. 5 in rushing.
Taylor, the Lombardi Award
winner as lhc nation's top lineman,
and Waldrop also were repeaters
from last year's team.
Taylor, an offensive tackle from
Notre Dame, anc.hored a line that

' '

opened holes for the country's
sixth-best rushing attack. Waldrop,
a nose guard for Arizona, spearheaded a defense !hat gave up an
NCAA-low 30.1 yards per game on
the ground.
The quarterback is Heisman
Trophy favorite Charlie Ward of
Florida State, who directed the
nation's top-scoring offense. The
elusive Ward was the nation's
fourth-leading passer, completing
69 percent for 3,032 yards, 27
touchdowns and only four
inlerceptions.
Joining Ward and Faullc in lhe
backfield is Northern Illinois'
LeShon Johnson, the nation's
leading rusher with a 179.6-yard
average. Johnson twice gained over
300 yards in a game and finished
with the fourth highest rushing

10ta1 (1,976 yards) in Division I-A
The ail-purpose player is
history.
Alabama's David Palmer, who was
Another
record-setter, used as a runner, receiver,
Wyoming'·s Ryan Yarborough, quarterback, punt returner and
leads a trio or wtde receivers on the kiclcoff returner. Palmer set school
AP squad. The olher pass catchers records with 61 receptions for
are J.J. Stokes or UCLA and 1,000 yards and gained more than
Johnnie Morton of Southern Cal.
100 all-purp9se yards in every
Yarborough caught 67 passes game.
for 1,512 yards to become the
Rounding out the offense are
NCAA's all-time leader in center Jim Pyne of Virginia Tech,
receiving yardage leader with tackle Wayne Gandy of Auburn,
4,357. He fmished second in career guards Mark Dixon of Virginia and
touchdown catches with 42.
Stacy Seegars or Clemson, and
Stokes tied a UCLA mark with placekicker Bjorn Merten of
17 touchdown catches, including a UCLA.
school-record 95-yarder against
Pyne paved the way for the
Washington . Morton, Southern highest scoring team in Virginia
Cal's all-time leading receiver, tied Tech history, while Gandy
a Pac-10 record with 78 catches anchored the offensive line for
this season and set a league mark Auburn's first perfect season since
with 1,373 receiving yards.
1957. Dixon was lhe top lineman
on a unit that allowed less !han one
sack per game, and Seegars led
Clemson in knockdown blocks for
the third straight year.
Anatuun ........... 9 18 2 20 TJ _95
Merten, the only freshman on
Edmonton ......... ji 20 S lS 80 110
the squad, made 20 of 25 field goal
attempts. His 80 percent success
Wednesday's scores
Vancouver 4, Hartford 1
rare was best among kickers with at
Bu.trdo 3, Otuwa I
least
20 tries.
Newltnc)' 4, Monuu.l2
Along
with Waldrop, the
Edmontan 1, N.Y. Ransen I (lie)
w....,..s,T...,to4
defensive line includes Dan
DaUu 3, PiUStNrah Z
Wilkinson of Ohio State, Sam
F1oJic1a 6, t.o. Anscla s
Adams of Texas A&amp;M and Kevin
Toall!ht's games
Patrick of Miami.
Vanoouveraii01lM, 7:~S p.m.
The linebackers are Trev
Qu~ 01 Nowloney, Bl p.m.

Scot·eboard
Basketball

I

Thut'8day, December

Thursday, December 9, 19 .

Pomeroy-"-Middleport, Ohio

Women's action
North Coul Conrertnct
Earlham 7S, KcnyM 63
Wlaenbcq 93, Ohio WWeyan Sl

NBA standings

OhJo canrertnct
M.......... 60, Ohio Nonhcm S9

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanlk Dhillon
W L Pet.
NewYorll .............. ll 4 .733
Orlando ............ ....... .9 6 .600
Bnonon .... ................ l 0 8 -~~6
Team

Miami .... ......•... ........ 6

8

New Jersey ..............6 II
Wuhington .............. 6 11
Philadclphia .............!S Jl

GB

Mld..Contlnent Cenreraet
V&lt;ipuoiao II, A1uon 16

2

.429
.353
.353
.313

~5

Non-c:anferenee aciLon

4.5
6
6
6.5

Bowlina Chaa!. 6.5, Michigan SL 64

Ohio H.S. scores

Wuhing&amp;on It Philaddphil, i:3S p.m.
St. Lcuilal Dcuait, 7:33 p.m.
Oww1 'YI. Dallas It Min.ntllpo:U., 8:35
p.m.

Boys' action

Cenlral OlviJion
Atlanta .......... ......... 12 4 . 7~0
Chicago ..... ....... ....... .l
II . ~00
Chulotte .......... ........l
9 .471
CLEVELAND .........? 9 .438
lndiana .....................6 10 .37S
Dettoit. ..................... 11 .313
Milwaukec ...............3 14 .176

Cin. 1Jrc1:r

sa:

4.5

5

ConneaUI 73, Nanillon

6

s

Padr: 58, Mariemont S7

Cin. F'""'"""""' 16, Cin. CAPE 61
Cin. Madciil Indian Uill47
Cin. Reodina5t, Cin. T~47

4

61

a-nn. Indian River ss

1

Friday's games
C.l4•ry 11 Buffalo. 7:3S p.m.
FloQda 11 WiM!.peJ, 8:35p.m.

Luthenn E. 80, Orand River 46
N"""" 70, Aluon Sprina. l7
Ohio Deaf 51. Watc.mPa. Deaf 24

9.S

Transactions
BaseboU

Young. Raycn 74, Akron St.V-ST.M

WESTERN CONFERENCE

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Rdeued

Mldw•t Dlvblon

Team

W L

Pc:L

Houston ................. 17

1 .944

Ut1h ....................... l3

5 .722

GB
4
S

San Antoni.o ........... l2

6 .667
Denver .......... ........... !! 8 .SOO
Minnelou ................ 6 10 .375
l)allu ..
.. ..... .1 16 .059

8
10

15..5

P•ciMc Dlvlllon
Seattle .................. 15
I
Phornix ......... ... .... .. ll
3
Golden Su.tc ............ 9 7
Ponland ................. 10 8
LA . Clippen .......... .7 9
L.A. L.U.m ............. :7 It
Sacramento .............. 4 13

.938
.786
.563
.556
.438
.3 89
.235

3
6
6
8
9
l 1.5

Wednesday's scores
8011.011 129, Sacn.mcnto I I S
Philodclphi• 95, Otioogo 88 (OT)
Atlanta lOS. Ddroit 97
Portland 114, Minne~OCI Ill
L..A. Clippen: 100, Milwau.toe 97
Scaule 1~ . San Amonio 107 {01')
U11h 113, Wuhingtm 91

Amtrkn Laaue

4l

""" o..t.e., p;.eher.

Girts' octloo

Alhtabull 56, PainCIVille Rivenide 42
Bay S2. Rocky River 23

Nallonal Leaaue
CHICAGO CUBS: AJreed 1o tenns
whh Muk Ot:acc, r... t baseman, on • one·

Bolf..,~J.Bnobl6

Brillol68, Loldltowu 24
Bro&lt;Udel2, Oberlin ll
O!api.n Falls 40, Wickliffe 39
O!udon N1X1. 44, Ce. Catholic 37
Cin. Lockland 63, SL Bemud 50
Cev. HeiJbu (i], Cl~ Shaw 32
CcaleaUI SO. Alb&amp;abula Hazbar ~7

Yf111 cmtnCL ·
CINC&amp;JNA.n REDS : Announced that
Tom Nle1o, m•naae.r; Mack Jenkins,
~ eo.cb; and Torn lvctten, trainer,
Will ISW"'''to Clwbuln, W.Va., o£ the.
Soulh A.W.de ...._
.ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Apeed to~en~a~ wilh Paul Kilsua. pib:hcr, on 1 me,w·cmlnet.

1dfcaCI:16S, Alhlllbula Edgewood 53

""'""'li,Onnp29

Ma~cm 56. Ocacva 20
Mopto H•. 76, Moyfidd 41
MoJiina1on S8, Clnoll10nl5
Mcip 62. Reodlrille El1tcm 47
Midviow &amp;2, Elyria Cath. 4~
Ntlllll&amp;ndy 45, Puma Sr. 31

BasketbaU

N•tlonaJ Basktlblll Allodatlon
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Phced
Stanley Roberts, center, on the injured
lisL Activated Randy Woodl:, &amp;Uird, from
the injuftld tilL

Padua 60, Chanell2
Pline~villc Huny 54, Aahtabula St.
John
Shaker Hw. !ii2, Wammville 44
Solon SS, Otardon 34
Valley Farae. 55, Labwood 43
W~·-~·. Fairriow 41
.

so

SACRAMENTO KINOS ' Ptoocd

Randy Brown. auanl. on the injured lil\,
SiJnod Wind!.., Smilh, pml.

Football

Toni&amp;bt's eames .

, Natlonal FOGiballlAt&amp;• .
GltEEN BAY PACKERS : Cllimcd

CL.EVELAND at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio at Allanta, 7:30pm.
Orllndo •t Indiana, 7:30p.m.

Seattle at Dallas, 8::30 p.m.
Miami II HOUit.on, 8:30p.m.
Wuhingt.on at Phoenix, 9 p.m. · · ·
New Yolk al Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

Friday's games
Chicago It New Jcney, 7:30p.m.
Saenmento It Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Bostnn at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at Deuoil, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippe1111 Minnsota, 8 p.m.
Ut1h 11 Denver, 9 p.m.
L.A. LUers at Portland, 10:30 p.m.

Ohio college scores
Men's action
North Co.t Conterenee

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allaatlc DM•lon
Team
• ~t,W L T l!tJ. GFGA
N.Y.Rangen .... 20 6 3 43 107 73
Newlmcy ....... l6; 4
36 9.S 69
Philadelphia ...... 17 l1 1
35 122113
Florida .............. 11 14 3 2S 7.S 84
Wuhirt&amp;ton .;, .. 11 14 2 24 80 89
NY. blondom .. . 9 15 l
21 94 100
Tunpt Bay .. ..... 9 17 2
20 68 85
Northeut Dlvllloa
tJ 8 7 33
B01ton .... ~ ......... 13 8 6 32
Morrual ........... 13 II 4
30
Bllffllo.............. 13 I 3 2
2k
Queb« .............. tO 12 5 2l
Pi~ ........ .

Hartford ............ 9 l7 2
Otwwa :.. -......... 6 19 3

-.

Matt .LaBounty, defensive end , off
wli4-en. Placed Toode Robbins, offensive
tackle, on injurr.d reler\'C.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS:
Waivod lA.~ Hateh·, oqm~ clt , and
Bo Gilliard, wide receiver, rrom injured

......

~

NEW YORK GlANTS : Placed Perry
WilliaiTII, comerbaclr:, on injured 'I'CSCJVc.
Signed Burnell Dent, linebacker, and
placed him on the active ro~ter. Signed
Bnan Kozlowllrci,lighl end, to lhc practice
tquad .

102
90
87
I 00

98
80
79
90
9'1 94
20 83 I04
IS 86 L36

·

NEW YORK JETS : Signed Atrred

Oglesby, dcfcn aivc linem an . Ph ced
Leonucl Manhall, defensive I.ICk..l e, on in·
jured IUCJ'V~
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS ; Signed
Antht:~ny Brooks, wide receiver, to the
pru:tice "!~•d . Placed Eri_c Bt:~le~ : w1de
m;civer, on practice squad·mjured list.

Alberts of Nebraska, Derrick
Brooks of Florida .State and DanaHoward of illinois. The s~ondary
features Antonio· Langham of
Alabama, Aaron Glenn of Texas
A&amp;M, Jeff Burris of Notre Dame.
and Jaime Mendez of Kansas State.
The punter is Auburn ~s.:.Terry
Daniel, who finished second
nationally with a 46 .9-yard
avera11c;
W1lldn~on, a 6-foot-5, 300pound sophomore nicknamed "Big
Daddy," led Ohio State with 13
tackles for losses even though he
was slowed by an ankle injury and
double-teamed much of the season.
Adams led Texas A&amp;M in tackles,
sacks and quarterback pressures,
caused five fumbles and recovered
three.
Patrick was the Big East
defensive player of the year,
getting I 0 sacks and II other
tackles behind the line for the
Hurricanes.
Alberts was the defensive star
und,efeated
Nebraska,
for
registering a school-record 15
sacks before disloc.ating an elbow
in the Comhuskcrs' regular-season
finale against Oklahoma.
Despite a series of injuries that
limited his playing time, Brooks
scored three touchdowns for the
nation's stingiest defense on a pair
of intercepti(\n returns and a

.

. ·.'
.

a:

fumble return. He also blocke&lt;l
punt that was recovered for a score;:
forced two fumbles and broke ul',
five passes.
-±
Howard led the Big Ten ino
tackles with 123, his third straight!
year wilh over 100 siops.
~
. Langham intercepted seven.
passes to become Alabama's career.
leader with 19. He was dec;lared;
ineligible for the Crimson Tide's•
last two games after it was revealed:
that he signed with an age»t:
following lhe 1993 Sugar Bowl. :

'

~

Glenn was the cornerstone o~
the NCAA's No. I pass defense
and leu the nation in punt ret~
with a 19.9-yard average.
, ·l
Burris also was a multi-p~
star, intercepting three passesi
blocking a field goal, rushing fcil
six touchdowns as a goal-lin~
specialist, and returning a punt for.;
a score.
~
Mendez made 13 touchdown-.
saving tackles for Kansas Stat~
which had its best season (8-2-.1-';
smce 1931.
·. ••
-~
~

"'
Florida State, Auburn, Alabama:

UCLA, Texas A&amp;M and Nofrc:
Dame each had two players on tile:
team, which was selected by A:!';
football writer Rick Warner and ;
regional AP sports writers.
: :i
·•

Will West Virginia become home J
to three college football champs~)
By MATT HARVEY
CHARLESTON, y.t.Va. (AP)
- The only thing West Virginia
used to lead the nation in was
unemployment and hillbilly jokes.
But make no joke about it, this is
now football country.
It would take some doing, but

NBA

action...

(Continued from Page 5)
Trail Blazers 114,
Timberwolves 111
Cliff Robinson came off the
bench and scored 31 points and
Portland improved to 9-0 overall in
Minnesota.
Terry Porter had 25 points,
including six of the last seven for
the Trail Blazers.
Isaiah Rider, the fifth pick in
last summer's draft, staited m place
of injured Doug West •and 'Scored
30 points, lhe most by a Minnesota
player this season. Christian
Laettner missed a desperation
three-nninter for the Timberwolves.
· "'Jazilt!; B'iilleiS''Jl
Karl Malone had 27 points and
14 points as Utah won its fifth
straight game. Washington lost its
fifth in a row and dropped 10 1-7 on
the road this season.
Tom Chambers scored 24
points. He led a 16-4 run as the
Jazz expanded a 77-75 lead. Rex
Chapman and Calbert Cheaney
each had 16 points for the,.Bullets.

it's not inconceivable that ' West
Virginia could win lhrce national
college football championships this
season. West Virginia in Dtvision
1-A, Marshall in Divison I-AA and
Glenville State Collej~e in NAIA
Divison I all are posstble champions.
"West Virginia is exceeding on
all fronts because of its winning
attitude," Gov. Gaston Caperton
said.
West Virginia University is
ranked third in the nation and is
one of three remaining unbeaten
teams in Divison.I-A. The Moun·
taineers (11-0) play No. 8 Florida
(10-2) on New Year's Day in lhe
Sugar Bowl with a possible conational chainpionsbip on the line.
Defending champion Marshall
(10·3) plays Troy State (.J2-0-l) in
an NCAA I·AA semifp!al on Satur·
day in Htiriiington, w.va..Also
Saturday, Gjenvil!e Stale (10-2) is
at East Central, Okla., (9-3) in lhe
NAIA Division I championship
game. .
"I think it's definitely unique
that a stare that's as sparsely populated as West Virginia has three
teams this close to winning a
national championship," Glenville
State coach Rich Rodriguez said.
''The chances of it even
happening in a big state with a
large population and a lot of
schools are slim," Rodriguez said.

With about 1.8 million peop!c :
West Virginia is smaller 1d
population than Chicago and b~
bigger than HousiOn.
~ ·: ,
The state has II footba~l~ .
playing universities and college$; ,
west Virlifiia is lhe only Division:
1-A team, while Marshall is tb:e:
only Division 1-AA team.
,,.,."
So, what's the secret?
•
"I think it speaks well of the
fact that the high school football'in.
the area is excellent," said ES~l'l
analyst and fOI)Iler college footb811
coach Lee Corso.
•
West Virginia and Glenville ·
State are within driving distance Qf
Pennsylvania, which has some of
the best high school football
players if!. the country. M~ball"ls
close to Ohio and Kentucky, also·
recruiting hotbeds.
1 . Ail. ,!llr~e scbqqls. a),~o have
made successful forays far beyond
lhc state line.
·
, ·•
West Virginia spent $20 miiU~
on 63,500-seat Mountaineer Fieldin 1980 and has .stea!fily' upgraded:
it. Marshall unveiled a new, $30'
million stadium in 1991.
; ·
Marshall's posh facilities bav~'
he!,ped the Herd land nine 1-Ai'i :
playoff games a1 horne since 199 I ;
and caused one opposing coach iQ
term the plaroffs "The Ml!fsh\11.1;
Invitational.' The stadium wiU ~
site of the 1-AA championsh#E
(See TITLES 011 ~ge 7)
: ";

....•' •.

,o\lleahc:ny 91, Oberlin .52

Kenyon 98, Eadham 55

•t . ...

Oh.io Dominican 16, Denilon S9

Ohio conrerenct
Capilli 80, HciddberJ 74
Hiram Cd.. 65. Otlabcia S7
John C.rroll82. Blldwin·Wtllac:e 79
Mount Union 79, Muietta 62
O!Uo Nonhcm 1S, Mulkingwn 63
Non-CGnftreDCt adlon
Detroit61, Bowlinl: Orocn .56
Miami. Ohio 87, Ylrilht'St. 53
Penn St. 71, Akmn 4!
liffm 81, Wilbe:rforee 73
West Liberty 92. Mal011e 87
Wittmbct&amp; 79, Ohio Wesleyan 57

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctnlnl Dlvlllon
Tat~~
W LT Pia. GFGA
Toronto ...
I9 7 4
42114 14
D.Uu ................ 14 10 6 34 10'7 102
SL l...oW ........... l-4 8 S 33 90 87
Dotioil .............. 13 12 2 ·28 ll9 99
w................. llll 4 28 lll712t
Chi.... ............ lliO 3 Z7 82 70
M . .. .....

Paclfk DlwiiiOn

Colpy ............

l1

7 l

Vancauvcr ...-... tS 13 0
Sudase ....... -... 11 14 5
Los _Anaelcs ...... tO IS 2

39

tll

86

30 91 r7
71 73 88
22 104117

Hockey

~-

,.,

Nallonalllockey Leaaue
BUFFALO SABRES: Auigncd Denis
T1 ~gu rov, dcfenseman, to Rochuter of

'~

"'

·•~, ......

Ute Arneriean Hockey League.
ST. LOUIS BLUES : Auigned Ke.,in
Miehm, center, to Peoria of the Intern•·

·:· ~

· •...:

tiona} Hockey Lcasue.

"-'
~ - .~

VANCOWER CANUCKS : Rcullcd

Neil Eilenhut, cenw, from Hamil\on of
lhe Amaieolllbd&lt;oy ........
·

WASHINGTON CAPITALS : Rc·
called John Slaney, delensanan, 1nd Jeff
Nelson, center, from Portland of \he
American Hod!:ey Lcasue.

REG. $429.00

Pine 6·Gun Cabinet...............sale 5349
REG. $699.00

Honey-Pine 9·Gun ................. sale 5559
REG. $799.00

Oak 9-Gun w/display .,,:..... sale 5639
REG. $1149.00

• Timex Watches

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Friday a am - 11 am 50% off

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.

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M•s 2 oz. After S~ve /Coloa•e

Christmas Cards
in Boxes

Reg:

.ts' ONlY $$,39

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Gravity Cologne
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for Men
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Down ·. .
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FOR ON.E'YEIR ,.

lPR '·

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•

Mon. 9:30 to 8
Tues., Sat.
9:30 to S
'To Quallfood Appllc•n ..

Anderson's
'

'

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

·r•

I

•••· 7ac OftLY 55 C

Light~,. ~Cirland

•••• $4.95

~~

'

Chris.mas 'Gift.loxet . .~tusiell Stover
. "ocolates Ia
2, 3, ir 4 to i ;.di••• · : AJ~ort,d
Santa lox 1.6 ,z.
.... $1.49

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· Orhamenb,

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•

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~

'

The season's Mid-Ohio
Confen:nce rlwln)• opens for !he
University of Rio Grande Redmen
at home Saturday for its ftrst and
only aamc of this month when
defending conference champion
Walsh University enters Lyne
Centtt for O'Dell Lumber NlghL
Adm!ssion (or the 7:30 p.m.
game ts free under O'Dell
Lumber's spons~ship, and free
tickets lli'e available at the firm's
Gallipolis and Pomeroy locations.
For John Lawhorn's 9-2 Rio
Grande team and Loy's 7-3
Cavaliers, the $8IIIC represents their
first opponun1ty to discover how
much on a par conference teams
will be in 1993-94 - a sentiment
heard many times in the past
several seasons, but heard with
unanimity .from MOC coaches· lhis

FR~E

Christmas
Delivery

~-

19.9 points, 5.9 rebounds) L;:
defenders, with Hoeppner (6-4,:
senior, 18.2 points, 5.6 reboundJl•
and Stephens· (10.2 points, 4.6':
assists) as lhc forwards. Coreno (6:·
5, junior,13.4 points, 6.9 rebou$lsJ:
will repeat atlhe post.
•:
Loy is expected to pit DerricK:·
Williams (6-3, senior, 6.9 pointst:
and Young (20.2 points, 6.:%:
rebounds) as guards, wilh Strou¢·
(4.6 points, 3.6 rebounds) anct:
Brown (6-4, senior, 20.9 points, 8.:Z:
rebounds) as his forwards. Mcye(.
(13 .7 points, 5.9 rebounds) willc
take center.
~-.
A concession stand will be:
operated in Lyne Center's n~
lobby by lhc University Women."1
Club and lhe game will featur-:
music from the Rio Grande P~
Band under the direction of Davil
Phillips.
;_:

kept lhcm at borne for five of their
II games so far. The Rcdmen are

shared proposition between Snydtt,
Brett Coreno (6-5, junior) at 6.9 per
undefeated in Lyne Center and game, Walter Stephens (6-4, junior,
have won four out of their six road · 4.9) and Eric Burris (6-8, freshman,
trips for a per-game average of 3.5).
On the strength of that, plus
100.4 points - a 14. 7-point
margin of victory over their notable work on assists from
opponent's combined average, and Stephens and Jack Morgan (5·9,
sophomore), the Redmen have
moe tlwJ 19 overWslsh's 81.
Scoring powerhouses for the notched viciOries over Wilberforce
Redmen have been Man PoweU 106-85, Daemen 103-89, Milligan
who bit a season high of 33 points (Tenn.) 89-73, Piedmont (Va.) 128against Mercyhurst (Pa.) Tuesday 74, West Virginia Wesleyan 102- and Jeff Hoeppner, with assist 95, Cumberland (Tenn.) 76-66,
from forward Shawn Snyder (6-6), Shawnee Stale 101-99 in overtime,
the sophomore transfer from West Virginia State 94-69 and
Youngstown State currently Mercyhurstl04-86. Losses were 10
averaging 13 .8 points and 3.5 Findlay 109-104 and Virginia
rebolfnds per game and Larry Intermont 98-97.
Caudill (6-2, junior, 11.9 points,
Potential starters for Rio Grande
3.5 rebounds), both off the bench.
will be Morgan (2.9 points, 6.3
The rebounding has been a assists) and Powell (6-4, junior,

lettermen.
Young and Brown have
alternated as Walsh's top men on
scoring and rcbot~nding in the
Cavs' 10 outings of the new
season, with some high marks from
forwards Doug Meyer (6-6;
freshman) and Marcellus Stroud (63, sophomore). Walsh owns wins
over Wilberforce 92-72, Findlay
93-92, York (Pa.) 86-80, Ashland
86-83, Seneca 93-67, Indiana
Wesleyan 92-79 and Daemen
(N.Y.) 76-73 Tuesday. Losses have
been 10 Siena Heights (Mich.) 8559, Coker (S.C.) 79-77 in overtime
and Geneva (Pa.) 74-56.
The Redmen, relying upon what
is perhaps their best bench in years
and skill on the three-point, have
kept the win-loss record in their
favor, helped by a schedule !hat has

~­

.

Nc~l~g11ooPurdue beats New Orleans to hike mark.to 6-0; UK wins

'
he went for the rebound.
By The Alsociated Press
After four lead changes and
Who says Purdue can't win
three minutes on the cloclc, Cuonzo
without Glenn Robinson?
The 11th-ranked Boilermakers Martin made two free lhrows for an
did just fine for the final 3:26 of 83-82 lead. Dedric Willoughby of
overtime after the star forward tho Privateers (1-1) missed a shot
fouled out in an 84-82 victory over . with eight seconds left and
Purdue's Matt Waddell was fouled
New Orleans on Wednesday night.
''This was a great confidence on lhe rebound and made one free
builder," Purdue coach Gene lhrow with one secOnd left.
"A year aa;o. we wouldn't have
Keady said of the win that made
!he Boilermakers 6-0 on the season. done this against a program of this
''The fact !hat we were able to win quality," Keady said.
after Robinson came out was
Purdue trailed by seven at
L"
halftime and led by as much as
grca
The 6-foot'9 junior didn't quite seven in the second half. The
live up to his hyped billing for the Boilermakers bad a four-point lead
trip south, shooting 6-for-15 and in the final minute before the
scoring 21 points, eight below his Privateers tied it 71 -71 at the end
average. His last point of the.game of regulation.
was a free lhrow with 3:26 to go in
Gerald Williams led New
overtime lhal gave Purdue a 77-76 Orleans with 20 points, five points
lead. He missed the next free throw in the last four minutes of
and was called for his ftfth foul as regulation.

·

.

Waddell had 16 points for I) wilh 20 points.
Purdue and Martin bad 15.
No. 6 Kentucky 107
In other games involving ranked
Eastern Kentucky 78
teams Wedhesday night, it was:
Travis Ford set a school record
No. I Arkansas 96, Memphis Stale with 15 assists and the Wildcats (3·
78; No. 6 Kentucky 107, Eastern I) cruised at borne as Rodney Dent
Kentucky 78; No. 7 Kansas 74, led six Kentucky players in double
North Carolina State 57; No. 9 figures. Arlando Johnson had 24
UCLA 80, Tennessee State 66; No. points 10 lead the Cplonels (3-1).
10 LouisviUe 107, Morehead State
No.7 Kansas 74
81; No. 19 Wisconsin 64,
North Carolina St. 57
Wisconsin-Milwaukee 50; No. 21
The Jayhawks (7 -1) finally
Connecticut 82, Seton Hall 66; and righted things with a 13-0 run to
No. 23 Vanderbilt91, Wake Forest close the fust half. Greg Gurley led
83.
visiting Kansas with a career-high
No. 1 Arkansas 96
- 17 points, all but two from lhree·
Mem~his St. 78
point range. The Wolfpack (2·4)
Corliss W1lliamson had 18 have lost eight straight to Kansas.
points to lead the visiting
No.9 UCLA so·
Razorbacks (4-0), who broke open
Tennessee St. 66
!heir first game as the top-ranked
Ed O'Bannon had 24 points and
team with a 17-2 run in the first seven rebounds and his little
five minutes of the second half. brolher Charles added 11 and seven
David Vaughn paced the Tigers (2· as the Bruins (3-0) held lhe visiting

Seton Hall 66
The Huskies (4-0, 1-0) went on
a 24-2 run in the second half with
freshman Ray Allen scoring 11 of
the points. Donyell Marshall had
20 points and 14 rebounds for:
Connecticut. Bryan Caver andDwight Brown each bad 15 points
for the Pirales (1-2, 0-2), who had
their 15-game home conference
winning streak broken one game
shy of Oeorgetown' s league mark.
No. 23 Vanderbilt 91
Wake Forest83
Chris Lawson bad seven of his
20 points in lhe second overtime as
the Commodores (4-1) rebounded
from their loss to Syracuse. The
visiting Demon Deacons closed a
12-point defiCit over the final 5:36
of regulation. Randolph Childress
led Wake Forest (5-2) with 28
points, eight coming in lhe final
3:47 of regulation.

Tigers to 22 points in the fust half.
Carlos Rogers led Tennessee State
(2·3) with 25 points and 18
rebounds.
No. 10 Louisville 107
Morehead St. 81
Clifford Rozier had 25 points
and the Cardinals (2-1) dominated
inside, shooting 64 percent from
the field at Freedom Hall. Marty
Cline led the Eagles (3-t) with 17
points.
No. 19 Wisconsin 64
Wis.-Milwaukee SO
The Badgers (3-0) survived an
off night by Michael Finley, who
was 14 points below his 22-point
average on 2-for-13 shooting .
Tracy Webster had 19 points for
Wisconsin, which led 25·13 at
halftime. Logan VanderVelden had
17 points to lead the Phoenix (3-3),
who have yet 10 play a1 home.
No. 21 Connecticut 82

In theNHL,

.

Brodeur's saves give New Jersey 4-2 triumph over Montreal
a key goal in the second period as goaltender Mike Richler ex1ended
. lhe Devils ended a five-game win· his unbeaten streak to 17 games.
less streak. McKay grew up near
Former Oiler Esa Tikkanen
Montreal and moved to Michigan scored midway lhrough the second
Tech before entering the-NHL in period for the Rangers.
1988.
· Jets 5, Maple Lears 4
John MacLean had two goals
Kris King and Tie Domi each
and Bobby Holik also scored for scored a goal to lcsd the J cts over
New Jersey (16-7-4), which the Maple Leafs.
jumped past Philadelphia into secDarrin Shannon, Alexei Zhamond place in the Atlantic Division. nov and Keith 1\achulc also scored
John LeClair and Gilben Dionne for Winnipeg.
scored for Montreal {13-11-4),
Glenn Anderson bad two goals,
which lost for lhe first time in foia while ' Dimiiri'N!:fronov ·and Doug
games.
Gilmour also scored for Toronto.
In other NHL games, it was the Gilmour had three assists.
New Yorl&lt; Rangers I, Edmonton I;
Sabres 3, Senators 1
Winnipeg 5,.Toronto 4; Buffalo 3,
Donald Audette scored wilh
Ottawa I; Vancouver 4, Hartford I; 2:07 remaining as the Sabres held
Dall!15 3, Pittsburgh 2, and Florida off the Sena10rs.
6, Los Angeles 5.
Yuri Khmylev and Alexander
Rangers 1, Oilers 1
Mogilny scored second-period
Bob Beers scored with 2:14 left goals for the resurgent Sabres.
BEREA, Obio '(AP)- Cleve- time, was the end of Coach Bill
land Browns majority owner Art Belichick's contract. Modell has in lhe third period to give Edmon·
Canucks 4, Whalers 1
Modell won't rule out the possibili- · since !liven Belichick a two-year ton a tie with New Yorl&lt; as RBQgers
Trevor Linden scored twice and
ty .lhal be might scll his controlling exlenston.
interest
Lerner and Modell are known 10
However, Modell has flatly be close friends. The two have
(Continued from Page 6)
denied a television report that he been shown several times this
already bad ilold !he team to Cleve- season seated together in the game on Dec. 18, even if the Herd it.
land fmancier AI Lerner, who owns owner's box during game lelecasts, doesn't panicipate.
"I think our following in the
5 percent of the team. ModeU owns and Lerner serves on the Cleveland
Glenville State, with much less state and enthusiasm for sports
53 jl!=rtC!ll
Clinic Foundation's board, which money to spend, still has spruced benefits all of our athletic
~As for next month or next
is headed by Modell.
up its field and added a modern programs," Pastilong said. "Our
year, I can't say. Who knows what
Lerner, who resides in the weight room.
people are hard workers,
tile futilre holds?" Modell said at Cleveland suburb Shaker Heights,
"Besides a good education, competi10rs and enjoy activities of
the tca·m's training facility was part of a recent effort that every kid is looking for a place this nature."
Wednesday.
sought an NFL expansion franchise where there's good morale from
West Virginia coach Don
Modell, 68, bought the Browns in Baltimore.
the standpoint or where they train Nehlen doesn't mind national
in 1961 for$4 million. At the time,
Lerner, 60, is chairman of and where they eat and where they exposure, but he's glad the school
Modell was a New York advertis- Baltimore's MBNA National Bank, lift weights," said Marshall coach is off the beaten path, just the
ing and television executive. The which launched the Master Charge Jim Donnan.
same.
following year, Modell fired leg- card in the 1970s. Now called
Mountaineers athletic director
"Thank golly a lot of people
endary coach Paul Brown, the MasterCard, the credit card Ed Pastilong, a state native who don '1 want to move in here," he
accounts for a large part of coached at West Virginia's Salem said. ''That's what makes this a
team's namesake.
Last December, Modell said he Lerner's fonune, estimated at $770 College before it dropped football, great place. Let them think we
would leave football and Cleveland million by Forbes magazine.
said pride has somelhing 10 do with don't wear shoes.''
if lhc Browns didn't make it 10 the
Super Bowl by 1995, which, at the

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
What is it about the Montreal
Canadiens that brings out the best
in an opposing player? It's no
secret. as far as New Jersey Devils
goaltender Martin Brodcl!f is COD·

been the Canadiens' team photographer for lhree decades, made 31
saves for lhe !)evils.
"I told Martin yesterday he
would start," said Devils coach
Jacques Lemaire. "I aslc:ed him if
he'd be nervous and he said: Til
be fine.' He's a very poised kid.
~~s a great win in front of all He's like his falbcr- a quiet guy
my friends," said the 21-year-old who gets lhe job done.''
The game also marked a homeMontreal-anea natiye after turning
in a big performance to help the. coming for Lemaire, who left last
Devils be.at .thc Canadiens 4-2 summer as Canal,ljens assistant
·· w~ne~tllilh.t. "It's my best ~eneral manager to ·c-oach the Devwil) so far. I was nervous at lhc tls.
While Brodeur sparl&lt;led in goal,
stan, but the pressure went down
once !he game Staned. ,,
the Devils got a good performance
Brodeur, whose falhcr Denis has for anolhcr Montreal-area native;
Randy McKay. McKay contributed

Pavel Bure bad two assists as the
Canucks broke a three-game losing
stteak.
Gino Odjick and Cliff Ronning
also scored for the Canucks, who
outshot lhe Whalers 31-22.
Zarley Zalapski scored in the
lhird period for Hartford,,spoiling
Kay Whitmore's chance for the
shuiOut. Whitmore turned away 21
shots by lhe Whalers, who failed to
score on aU five power-play oppor·
tunities.,
· Stars 3, Penguins 2
Trent Klatt scored two 11oals,
including the game-winner m the
third period, as the Sws beat the
Penguins.

Modell may sell Browns

Santa says
'Remember To Shop
Mason Furniture For
.Great Christmas Savings!'

Football ··
NEW YORK (AP) - Tim
Brown, who caught 10 passes for
183 yards to l~d the Raiders to a
25-24 upset in ~uffalo, is among
six NFL players of the week.
The AFC defensive player was
Steve Jackson of HoUSton, who bad
two interceptions in the Oilers' 3317 win over Atlanta.
The NFC offensive player was
Ron Moore or·Phocrux, who scored
four touchdowns in the Cardinals'
38-10 victory· over the Rams,
gainin' 126 yards in 29 carries.
Defc051ve player was Oanle Jones
of Chicago, who returned a fumble
32 yards for a touchdown, and
intercepted a pasS and lateralcd to
Jeremy Lincoln, who relumed it for

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The special teams players were
Dean Btasucci of Indianapolis,
whose thiee field. goals accounted
for all the Colts points in a 9-6
victor? over the Jets, and the
Giants Btad Daluiso, who bad f091'
kickoffs out Qf 'the end zone in a
19-14 win in Mlaml.
Billkelball
TQRONTO (AP) -;- The NBA
failed to convmcc. the Ontario
sovemment to remove NBA games
.from the province's sports betting
loltiiry.
. ..
TM NBA awarded Toronto a
fnsncbl110, five weeks ago on the·
contlitlcin the province withdraw
bnhoball from its Pro Unc lottery, . ~
which allow• playeri to 'bet on
games, lnclliding bask~ball.

Klan slcated up the slot and filed
Mike Modano 's pass from lhe right
side past Pittsburgh goaltender Ken
Wregget at 14:11 of the third peri- ·
od.
Panthers 6, Kings 5
Andrei Lomaldn scored twice in
less !han three minutes to snap a 22 tie in the second period and Jesse
Belanger had three assists as the
Panthers completed a 1wo-game
sweep in Southern California
T~e Panthers, who own the
NHL 's worst power play on the
road and third-worst ovcrall, scored
three times with a man advantage
to send Los Angeles 10 its lOth loss
in 12 games.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12th

Titles for West Virginia?

wens

"'

year.
Walsh was 29-S overall and 113 for fust pill:e in the MOC during
1992-93, a season which ' !w the
Cavalien batJd !he Redme two of
their five c:onf~ losses.
While it was one of Walsh's
best seasons since 1983 when it
won lhe District 22 Championship
under Bob Huggins, now of .the
University of Cincinnati, Loy
pointed out at last monlh's MDC
Media Day that much of the
success lay with several seniors,
led by the noteworthy Corry
Appline. While the absence .of
Appline and other seniors have
forced some adjustments, Loy has
the benefit of two returning starters
in guard Scott Young (6-7, SC!Iior)
and forward Todd Brown (6-4,
senior), as well as six returning

- - Sports briefs-

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Community calendar
THURSDAY
RACINE - Christmas in
lhe Park will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Racine Star Mill
Park. The community Christmas
tree will be lighted, there will be
singing of carols, a candlelight
walk, and refreshments.

POMEROY - The Rock Springs
· . Grange will meet at 6:30 p.m.
' ·Thursday at the hall . St~te
~· delegates will repon. Members are
· .to take non-perishable food items
: and there will be a white elephant
: sale.
; •

REEDSVILLE
"!?rom
Heaven 's Throne", a Christmas
cantata will be presented by the
Coolville Community Choir
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Reedsville United Methodist
, Church. The public is invited to
: ..attend.

FRIDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The KanawhaOhio Chapter ro the Attention
Deficit Disorder (A.D.D.) Suppon
Group will meet at Holzer Medical
Center at 7 p.m.. All interested
persons are invited to attend.
Fromore information call 1-800462-5255 or the the Hospital's
Pediatric Unit at446-5075.
LOTTRIDGE - Country music
night will be held at the Lottridge
community center Friday at 6 p.m.
A dinner wiU be held for the bands
who will play from 7 to midnight.
The public is invited. The Center is
located on Alhens County Road 52.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution ~will meet
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Public Library . The
program will feature a video by
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds and a talk
by a German exchange student
attending Meigs High School.

'·
RUTLAND - The Rutland
···Township Trustees will meet in
special session on Thursday at 6
p.m. at the Rutland fire station.
CHESTER - Special meeting of
State Issue 2 application for funds Shade River Lodge 453, F. and A.
will be discussed.
M. at Chester Friday, 7:30 p.m .
with work in the entered apprentice
. ~ POMEROY - Preceptor Beta degree. Refreshments.
' Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will hold its annual
SATURDAY
. Christmas dinner party at the home
MIDDLEPORT - A craft and
or Donna Jones, Thursday at 6:30 bake sale will be held by the
_p.m.
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 188
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Walnut Street in Middleport
• .Plains Post 9053 of the Veterans of Saturday.
Foreign Wars will meet Thursday
.: at 7:30p.m. at the post horne.
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus
Western StY,Ie Square Dance
•·.

-.

Club will have an open dance at the
senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy,
Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. Caller
will be Keith Rippe!D. AU western
style square dancers are invited.
Refreshments will be served.

;

Navy Seaman Recruit Seth C.
~Stobarl, son of
R. Stobart of
~Racine, recently completed basic
&gt;training at Recruit Training Com)nand, San DiegO.
1 Dl!l'ing tlie cycle, recruits are
llaullhi general military subjects
~estgned to prepare them for fur&lt;thcr academic and on-the-job train~ng in one or the Navy's 85 occu;· .onal ftelds.
.
/*l;tudies include seamanship,
);~ drill, naval history, and
,('liSt aid:
Although the Navy· is getting
: ~:~~maller, the state-of-the-an.ships,
· lairtraft and high tech systems in
'tbclay's fleet req~ brigh~ talent·
.~young men and women to operate them . The Navy has over
ti(),OOO ,klb openings this year, most
ef which include guaranteed train-

nonna

RACINE - The Southern High
School choir will present a
Christmas concert Sunday at3 p.m.
at the high school.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before u event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
·assure publication In the
calendar.

HARTFORD - The annual
Christmas dinner for American
Alloys employees and retirees of
Foote Mineral will be held

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Gutter Cleaning

11 al.,

Palntlnt

FREE ESTIMATIS

949-2,168 of the
Houoe In
.;Pom•••Y, Ohio, on tho 13
IH3 atiO:OO
the following·
:oil ond gu underlying the
following deecrlbed .real
; ntlte:
. Sltuatod In the Township
·of Suuon, County of Melgo
·.and State of Ohio: BO!ng a
. part of Section No. 31, Town
03, Range 1Z of the Ohio
, Company'• Purchaoa, ond
· bounded and ducrlbod ••
, lollowe, to-wit Beginning at
•tho norlhwelil cornw of oald
:Soctlon·31; thence South 1. 112 deg. Weal on the Wnl

lrOfll

center to ihe place of
beginning, containing 1.2
.ere., more or fell.
Excepting ond ruorvlng
unto tho grantors herein,
their holro. and uolgne, oil
oaoomon! tor purpol• of
lngreoa and ogrua 30 fool
In wldlh along .the
Soulheoolerly 163 foQI
boundary of the property
above deot:rl-.
Said ·oil ond gao leou
wao opprsleed 81 $1163.00.
T•moofoala:cah.
Tho oil ond 1111 c.,nol be
oold lor ieu than two-thlrda
of the opprelucl votue.
·
~ line of •aid Section, ,47
JMnH
M.
Soulaby,
..chaine and 17 Iinke to •
ShoriH of lilel!l8 County,
·lleke between two white
Ohio
·oak tr... ~ thence lOUth 88~
·~
· ;,1a deg. eoot21 chol~o and. (12) 9, 16, 23; 3TC
QUALITY WORK
-.20 linko to o etako all llnko
:eouth ol . l locuet etumpj
Public Notice
&amp; GOOD RATES
•!honea North 1·112 deg. Eut
DAVID ARNOLD
'47 cholno ond 17 linkl to
·:tho North line of nld
PUBUC NOTICE
. (814) 092-7474
'Sactlon; thence North 88The Pomoroy WPOMEROY, OHIO
•'112 deg. Wnl21 cholna and Deporlmen~ 1 public water
lll2ll1ftl
.20 Iinke to the ploca of oupply, hoa complotod tho L-----...;,;.....-1
·baglnnlng, containing 100 moniiOI'Ing cycle lor volllllo
.)crea, more or
Except organic chamlcola jVOCo) .----~--....~
-one acre In the Norlhweet •• required by chapter
TII•SIIft
K•t
.~ oonar
of the sbovo 3745·81 of tho Ohio
1110
&lt;daacrlbod
promlooo Admlnlotrollvo Code (OAC).
Upon cornplollon of each
:i: onveyed to Philip
'iiioudsohall by John Karr voo montiOI'Ing cycle, .stole
TUPPERS PLAINS
'.One! Angelino Kerr by deed rogulollona oloo require the
Balle obocllonce,
'dolod Oclobeo 23, 1863, and owner or o~&gt;erltor ot •.
law enforcemen1,
.ft~ordod In Book 25, ol
public woter oupply to
,.._ftnlll protec11on,
,..•• ·J'age 357 of the Doed notify Ita coneumera of lhe
konnolaervlco, pupa I
,Record• of Malga County, oyolfoblllty of the VOC
Young doge for ule.
;phio. and axoepl alao the analytlcol r11ulta lor tho
Aollwallor llhophord
.coal underlying oald period tooled. Poroono
'
Stud ltrvlco
premlaoo ond tho right to wanting to review tho VOC
a~lno ond remove th1 umo
r•ullo should contact
By appl only
Md one ocre of the aurloc•
John A. Andaraon,
61•.......,
"'"7·•PETS
Superlnloildenl
.ol tho above deocilbed
promion on the ooulhoaot Pomeroy Water Department
aide of the 11me running 320 E. Moln St. P.O. Box 886
Pomeroy, OH 457611-0886
along a Uno located by
(614)1192~121 .
.Ebenezer Wlllioma, nld
, ..
acro being In an oblong (12) II tc
whape twice n long ao It lo
CHRISTMAS
'wide and upon which the
PubliC Notice
mine ohafl for the mining of
TREES .
)aid coal lo oltuota, uld
PUBLIC NOTicE
coal and one acre lltt'
$10.00uc:h
NOTICE
lo horoby given
deacolbaif having boon
Open 9to&amp;
i:onvor,ed by John Kerr end lhll on Saturdey, Dooemb•
.,gel ne Rorr to Ebenoz• ttth, 11t3, 1110:00 o.m., 1
' . . . . llltlndo:
Wlllloma, by dood doted publlo toto wlli bo held 11
Scolch, White •
Juno I, 1873 and recordad 211 W•J Socond, Pomeroy,
Aullrlan
Pineo, &amp;'to 8',
in Book·40 11 Page 543, of Ohio, 10 oell lor oooh tho
,IUMy
Hen!ng,..._
tho Deed Rocordl of Molgo loll-Ing ooli'!IWII:
1111 GMC Sonoma dance, 35175 F1a111J DOdl
Counly, Ohio, 1nd ••aept
.- SNI
iho oil 0ncl gao undarlylng Pickup
. Ad., Pomft,, ohio
11ld premlaae, 1nd ••m• tGTCS14A3M2532113
1tnW11113 CHEVY '31011 Pickup
hoving boon roaorvod In
thol certain dM!I modli by SNI1GCHC34FSPE208817
Tho Former• Bonk and
Angelino Korr to Thomu W.
Compony,
Karr dalod Jonuary a, 1.107, Savlrtga
and recordacl Ill BoOk 102 of Pqmoroy, Ohio, .....,. tho
tho Dud Rocordl of lllelgo right to bid olthle ulo, end
County, Ohio, ot Page 21, Jo wl1hdrow Ill• obovo
l!onlalnlng ~· 1cre1, 1 more oollot•r•l prior IG ••to. ,
or lno, Ill SUtton Townohlp, Furlhor, Tho Firmor:a Bank
•Doat tBackhol
and Iovings Compony
· ~County, Ohio.
ruorvu
INa
rlg~l
I~
.-.(~
ALIO, lho.lollpwing rN!
tOIIcher tOu~ Truck
•tall being In lleclon No • ony or oil bldo oul!ril,llod.
Further,
,
tho
obov•
Lind Clearlnta. Ponde,
11, Town 3 North, Range 12
Weal, Sulton ,Townohlp, collaloril will be aoid In tho · \VIIIer Ll1101, Slptlca
M•lgo County, Ohio, oondltloil It Ia In, wllh np
Llconoo &amp;Bonded
nprooa or Implied
1 arUildMiollowa:
Chorllo HatfiiiiCI,
worrontloo
given.
' llfitnlil!lll •ut 17S IMt
For
Funhor
lnlormotlon,
Opomor
-~ tr.. tho Nortflwoot
_ . , trclon No, 'll on oonuiot J.U Gilkey 11 tl2·
742~.
tho - ... of I'ood No. 11M.
(12)
I
,
t,
10;
3TC
30, .12 foot II riiJhl ajlgin
' '

. ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
·aunNG-&amp;
COOJIIIG

I•••·

ACADEMY

. J.A.R. .
COIISTIUCftOI

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

614-992·7643
(No S.lltlay C.tl1)

21121!12Jtfn

sweeper

• Strvlce • Bags • Belts

IISSILL
CONSTRUCnON

1-t~l- Homes

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915~4473 '

Rainbows, Kirby, Eleclrolux,

,OOZERS
oBACKHOE
•TRACK .LOADER
•TRUCKING

Hocrver, .Emdca, 1\i.Star,
Regina, a: 111011 odier brands!
Pula lhlpped UPS
Fut • D.pendlb'- Service I

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vaca

D.A. JOSTOII
EICAYAnlll
(614t
667·6621

CHRISTMAS TREES

BRADFORD'S

4-1--lfn

. Howard. L Wrltesel

w.-••aoo.-.
,.

virtue of an Order of

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

SHRUI&amp; lUI
TRia.....
REMOVAL

992·2269

CLUB

for free Ballery to be
.sjven •way December
24, 1993. Njao:,:~!:
required to rt
and
don' have
present
to win.

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

_)

-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

.Come by .,d register

$9 75 A TON SIZED LiMESTONE

A.IGHT HAULING

IllGO

e

Open House Fri. &amp; Sat
Dec. 10-11 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Gloria Oiler
Sr 325 Langsville
742·2076 '

NOTICE OF SALE

mONE _________________

; ,, · Retidentl lbould rc&amp;Jiter. ap
· joon • possible d~ '!' clail ~

11tni1Mdo111. 111010 ~ 10 rep-

• Ad. oullidt &amp;he coualy your ad ruru mut be prepaid
• Recein di.c:ount for ada paid in advaDCe.
• Fr• Adl: CiYeaway and Found ad. under- 15 worda will IN
rua 3 days at no charge.
• Priee of ad.for aU capitalletten it double pr~e of ad cCMl

Public Notice

6 cyl., air, caaaette,

'

: ler ma'f cali the Meili County
' llcahh pep~ac at 992·6626
ili«icatiDI a preference for the .
; :)foilday or 1bunlday
clais. ·
'
' J
'
'
~ ...
·'

CLOSED SUNDAY

3697q BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH. '

.- 992·7878

12-30-112-lln

Middleport, Oh

A Sentinel subscription is the perfect gift It's useful and fits every size and taste. Just flll
out the coupon below, and you 'II get 20% off the subscription cost.
But hurry, this offer expires
December 31, 1993 •

NAME

POLICIES

ThundayPoper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

WICKS HAULING SERVICE

. USED JIAILROAD nES

One Size Fits ·All

~

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12

Monday Paper
TUO!IdayPoper
Wedneodoy Poper

Read the Best

SHOE PLACE/

Jft!eight control

:: The Meigs County Health
J:lcpartment will begin a series of
llix-week classes for weight control
Mon,day and ThurW.y at 6 p.m.
there Will be a choice of nights for
ihe classes, either Monday or
thursday, and classes are free to
Meigs Cwnty ~dents.
.,- Eilch class wiD last two no11!",
~ ·attendance is required at only
ifno I.W.O ~ hour SCISIDn weekly.
[!lasicl will include nutrition edq- '
~ streSS rn~~~~gen~~ ~Y ·
W'eiili·lns, rc~lfori techniques,
rec:iPol, diet recall sheeu, exacite
tecliiili(lues and other phaaes of
Wailbt !XJI'ItrOI.
.• .'
~ 1'heie will be a limit aa to the
+u111lltr of people who can be
· ldinJUod to eacll' series of classes
, J,1Jicti p 10 be held in the confuen~ room of the Multi-Purpo~ 1
. .BIIi14linl, Mulberry lfeights,

$14,99~

Call992-2156

DAY BEFORE PlisLICATION
I :00 p.DI. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00pm. Tueoday
1:00pm. Wedneoday

I

.

slated

V-6, auto., air, caiHtte,
lilt, cruloa, power
windows, locko.
Local owner.

"' Shop LocaUy First This Season

• The 1993 graduate of Southern
~h School joined the Navy in
luly)
~
.

~lass
... .,

Supercharged V-6, air,
call., lilt, crulee, power
wlndowa, locka, power
aeat, remote entry.

CoPY DEADIJNE ·

CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department will
have its annual Christmas dinner at
5 p.m. at the firehouse for all
community individuals and
families .,who helped at the fair
booth and at the firehouse in 1993.
Meat will be furnished and those
auending are to take a covered
dish.

1

Ing.

19.93 COUGAR
RX7

U.7..A11J

Porch,.,
Patloa,
Sidewalks·

To place an ad

BRADFORD - The Bradford
Church of Christ's children's choir
will present "Not a Creature wa&gt;
Stirring", the story of the Feline
and McMouse families, Sunday at
7 p.m. at the church located at the
crossroads of State Route 124 and
Bradbury Road.

TUPPERS PLAINS ·Tuppers
Plains Post 9053 or the Veterans of
Foreign Wards and Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its potluck
Christmas dinner Saturday. All
members and families invited.
Families to take covered dish.
Santa will be there with treats for
the youngsters.

•.

~n
the service
•

SUNDAY

POMEROY - Youth group of
the Meigs County Library will hold
Kidfest Saturday from I to 4 p.m.
There will be games with prizes,
balloons, a clown,
and
refreshments. It's aU free.

local cookbook
;~recognized nationally
books," located in Colorado, Powell said.
"Because or requests locally and
across the country, 100 copies have
bee~8!!'ted. Often times we do
not
lhe affect something so
small can have, especially long
term", said Powell.
·
"Treasured Recipes of the Past"
was printed in 1990.
PoweU said that anyone looking
for a Christmas gift for someone
ntight take this opportunity 10 pick
ooe up.
.
The books are available in the
Bulk Food Store, Chapman's
Shoes, Anderson's Fumit\Ue Store
or in the Meigs County Park District Office in Pomeroy.

RUTLAND - A dance will be
bel~ at the Rutland ,American
Leg1on hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to midnighL Music .will be by Pure
Country and Then Some. The
public is invited.

BURLINGHAM - Modern
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
is sponsoring a potluck Christmas
dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
hall. The camp will be delivering
dinners late afternoon to the
elderly, sick and shu'tins or the
area.

~~'Hot"

The local cookbook 'Treasured
::·Recipes of the Past" is receiving
:· national attention because of its
-::entry in the Tabasco Mcilhenny
Company Cookbook competition,
• according to Mary PoweU, director
: of Meigs County Parks and
: Tourism.
Powell said that although the
1book was not the winning entry, a
; copy was placed in the archives in
' Washington D.C. As a resul~ sev: c:ral free lancers who write for
~ new~ and magazines such as
~ Country Living, Woman Golfer,
·~ Christian Home have requested
• infonnation on the cookbook.
•. Recently the cookbook was
• pi~J~:ed in a national cookbook cataCook .":"log, "Kitchen Counter
-· .
' '

Saturday night from II a.m. to 6
P·'l'· at the Union haU in Hanford.

POMEROY - The Royal. Oak
Dance Club will have its annual
Christmas dance at Royal Oak Park
Saturday from 8 to II p.m. Punch
and chips will be provided.

·-

Now ha bemN CoclrM SpMiel P.tppl... Allo
f..turlng a 2ft. ~1111011 Bilek Tequ.l,ayn• n
noW evlllble for CllrlltioM. Sat. on our......,. llocll
of lac~ .
11ft IIMnl.

COICim
WOII .

•

3-16-83-lfn

d&amp;m.,

DK's

CHRISTMAS
TREES

r'WFarmToys
AT THE
QUALITY PiiNT SHOP

FRESH CUT TREES IYIIUILE
OR CUT YOUR OWl
UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eaot Ill
.ltCoenoon onto R1. 681, go 4 ml.1o Mllepoat13. Turn
South on griiYel road, 1'.4. mllello grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

Middleport, Ohio ·

GREAT BELEC110N AND
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
112-3314 1:30-4 ~n.-FrL
' 742-Al'let'I:OO " "·
Hf11 &lt;H1oon Sal. II

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL
Rsa11011able.Rates

Jell N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

WhoiJJ.

r.m.

,__•..,._:Nih.
stor.

$12 dollv.r.d. Allalllot
wll be open I o.m. 10 I

NOVEMBER SPECIAL
· {BEAT THE BAN)

T,_ . .

Caii14-7.U-3051

GENEUL.

HAULING

NORINCO MAl 90 (AK4n ...- ......5 180:
NORINCO UNI. SKS ..----···- SCJS·
1200 ROUNDS NON-cORROSIVE •• 5 130
CIUAmR6:00
304-415·7256

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel .
992-7878

314/1131mo.

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS

TREES
'"""'"' OH.
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
WMe Pine 4' &amp; Up w~h
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call742·2143 or
742-2979

FURNACES

.• ·-lng

WULEl'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW&amp;IIDNIInJOI '

AUUIIU811BI

992;701:1 or
t92-555J
or lOLL flU
I•IOCI-141-0070
IUWII,OIIO

...__inlllllerh •PI k with ··
IIVallollte.

SERVICE

v

36970 laB R1111 Road
'-roy, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,

UMESTONE,. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470
OWIIER: Jolt Wlolw"-

~~

·-

GMFurn..

125.00-

C•II lElNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HE&amp;nll UD COOUII
Galllpola, Oh.

........11 or Toll F-1-.?2-$857

EICAYITIII

BUU.OOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC .SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Rocky Ia Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
loJl 189
Middle,.,., Oltlo 45760
(614) 143·5264

446-9515

CARPET I UPIOI.STERY CLWIING
We give carpet end
uphol&amp;lery the

"SPECIAL CARE"
they danrvell
"d!IJIIIIY (on ole)
"flnolabrtc.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
• Factory Choke
. 12 Gouge Shot
Strictly Enforced
11/1Dit -pd.

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED .
II·. ~~ Mcurt ...... '155

Momt................'22

Squinel ..................... '55

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPQITING GOODS

•genera~

JIMD
Our Business is Security
Alarm Syste.m
CloSed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl A. James
WJIUam C. James

ciMnlng

"odor treatmen1

(304) 882-3336

CO-Owners

Mcl.endon

WV013372
We IJ*)loN:zie In:
FIRE A WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORAllONINSUAANCE CLAIMS
24 Hour
Emergency Service

�'

'

..

,.

""

..

•

. ...

......

,. ,

,

•

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt,.Ohio

Sentinel

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrll)lt
•

33 Fannator f!llli
46
4llli iorw, .,._ l lru..._, Tr- SPice I'« Rom, In 'ROd-

BEATilE BLVD.TN by Bruce Beattie

Anrour,ccrn,•nl s

•

tolllcco lolmont ~ noy, I144-!MHS. ·
"' 51$-2:171.
so
...,. Form, Ejllnllon ArM. • 1fT wamed to Rem
A - I loth llni I Outllulldo
~000. ·~4 441 1154, 114-

1. . C 11MB

·

Wilt, lA" ~

4 VA C. IIIJII&gt;. C~~ANI1fl
&lt;, A~&amp;.~M~II ? 'fi ~A'ff' ~•fl.. Go.4 .....
'(w I~ AT, 196 /1 "?

.'
-rbllr:c:
~NT,.!I;;od='"&amp;
Llllll

-

vw lllbblt

..U7116.

11141M.
1114 Ponll.c 1000 L£, v-e,

3 Small Salt Water Ath, 614-446-

2515.

-m,

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

Trimming, TrH Removal, HMtge
Trimming. FrH Ettlmat11l 61~

41 Houses for Rent ·

3B7·7951After 4p.m.

2 13 Bsdroom, Edga 01 081--

11

Help Wanted

Spaart, 304-675-,429.
AVON! All ar.... NHd extra

6!4-371-26&amp;4.
Dog nMdl good country hom•

money or want a carMr, eHhar
way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2845

»f.615-5551.

or 1-800-992-6351.

I!Uddtepon Churctl of Chrltl has

plano, needs toms work, mutt · ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
remov•, 614·992-2914 In mom- Progfftii~M c~mp11ny snkl~g
lng.
an lndlvidual to astlat ltnlcr

3 Bedroom•, 2

Dapotlt

,.
Holiday

Do

Will

Cleaning,

M-F I A.M. -1:30 P.M. QuoiHy
Loving C.ra For All Children
auf tt GDIII. Part-Tlme, Full•

TlmsJ. Fed. Aailtanca Available.
Clll t-or lnfannstion Or Vltlt. In•
lant fTocldler 814-t46-8227. PreSchool,
Schoolsgs,
B&amp;A

comm~r~surate

w/experienca.
Pleall forward r. .uma &amp; Alary
history to ttM Pl. Pl1111nt
Artglstat, P.O. Box R-:zv: 200

FOW1d: New Haven, Coppar-

noud Bugle, hit by car, call to
ldonllly. 304-882-3495.

Main St., Pl. Plaatant, WY
25550. EOE.

Found: puppy, white with tan
patchn, rilllow cotlar,"Rat",
Oak Grova Rd., Racine ar...
81 ..94e-2469.

21

Fuml1hed

W•ttr,rnh

f3QO.oo monlh. DopooH. 614388-8000
Two badroom mobile homn for
,..Ill, alao spac• tor rani ltart•
lng 11 $851mo.,l14o902·21S7.
TWo bedroom, total atactrlc,
$22.Simo., Pomeroy arwa, 61411124312.

AllfNl-OCIYOIIIIIngln

thll "'"'...,... il JUblld to
lho Fedolol Flit HoUIIng Ad
ol1888 _ _ .......

-on-·

10-"Wtf~. -

lmhtlon or &lt;licii•*LIIr..t,

..... onylidlpNIIIVICO,
lmlllllloo or cllc:rtmln&amp;UOf\.•

46631,

JOIN AWINNING TEAM
AI A LIOdor In Tho Flnoliclol
S o - Aioo, a - A llombor
Of Our Conoumor Frrw- Toom
Moono Hoving II Cloocl Ploco To
Stan. Arl Y"ou Selt.a.otlvatlld,
Alllrta.. And Erilov Dortllni
With P...pio? A PIHiont Per·
- Y And Cloocl Pl1ono Sfllllo
Aro A11uot. Rooponolbllhloo lncluclo Acllvhln Rolllod :ro
C11dlt,
""""""'
MonogomlnlSolie
And Accounllng.
For Jmmtdlall Conaklaratlon
Contact : Guy · Morrow At 114-

441-2201.

30' 10 35' office trallsr ot 3S' to
41' mobil home, dac~nt cond
l'llliCtnable prtca, do not ;.;;I

lumH..._ :111+175-1!114 . .

Antklunlnd
ham 100

YH~· fwnl.ture,

SWAIN
AUCTION l RJRNITURE. 82
Oli ve St., Galllpollt. New

no

a.p.or 1oo IIMIII, will

Thill nawop- wii!'OI
-wing~ 1001111

"'

adiellllemlfU lOr real 6ltlle

-11111-ollho
11w.
honobf

our_,......
_,hoi

~

llltHfUMdlnthisMW l"'i*r

• .......,._on

11'1 equll

~b-.

53

1183 doubtt wide on acr• ,tat,
lOIII -ric, Uroploco Cll~

=lo

FifTY, f:t:I,OOO.

iiM-ill-

2 Or 3 Bodr0011111, 1 112 Bolho, 2
Cor Clonal, Ll'11" Lat. :17
Porlsmoulfi
Ad, CIIIMr&gt;oUo,
FlnanclftiJcAIIIIatanc. Available.
11• Ul.o254.

buy 0111 or compiOio
hotaahatd, alto wanlld- old
bloycloo, coli Ooby llortln, 114td-'11141.

a

J D'• Auto Partt and Sllv-.ge,
also buYinG junk cara &amp; lruc:b.
31)4.m:p43.

s•

PIM
P. .

Pou

PID

1 CompoHr
Joromo2 Re-IIUI

Pou
Pou

Openi.Dg lead: • 4

4br., :\o:'~· 304-el&amp;4142 or
75.
tnr, Gallflolr. I 8 t ooma, 1
Both~ Oorogo With Extn Room
~ ooth. Air,..._ IO'o, 114-4418325.

a.

HAPPY &lt;lACK TRIVERMICIDE:
Flloognlzod Solo 6 Elltcll.. By
WI. Cenlor For Vllorlnlry
,........ Agllnll Hoole, Round

I Topo- In Dop I Colo.
IIVIIIIblo O.T.C At: ~.D. North
Produced 814-44&amp;.1133.
Oueon Slzt Croftmotlc ltd. Cll .IIIII Cooii-A-Poo &amp; .mad llzt
114-317.cMN Aftor 3:30.
::-.~·--·~R&amp;S F,.nlu11. WI buy, Ill all4f
trado
houoollold1~
..m
.
·lru!rI
.ny MnOU .
• 101
Second 91., . "' Yfol. Rockly
~.
Puppy Polaet Pll Sllop.
Sean Crot:e Country ~, . LoOIIOd In o.c. M'I'I'IW co..Oil·
$100. Klng-olzo wllortiod,
$71. llpollo. ""'"opon.lio-441-IMIM.
1
I
304-171-a345.
Aoltw...r pupt, HC. pedia,...,
a... axsrciH- bib,
11-. PI""'' on .,..m~•. t300.~
m-sm
·

fo•-· ..

si(i

S.uoned Rre Wood, 140,
d-1111 In Pl. lnL

·Antiques
0&lt; . .u. Rlvtririlr Antlquoo,

·--

Sun ramoto control ltV, fl!l. Sllmau ldrteM · SChnauur
614-1112·2387.
. .
IU Roafotand, Cloh,

pu=i..
no
, e~ll ·&amp;f,a.ttz·260l

304-17WQ71. .

0001! .~=: ~~.'!!~!
. il~

I HAD LOTS OF
FUN ..YOU 6U't'5
· I-lAO !=liN, TOO, -=-~'~
DIDN'T 'I'Oll?

2 m-udl.now, $50. ;JU41Jao
1112.
.
•••
Wolllod: '84 and ......r Coll!!f!
Clolojco, Broughlmo or
4
d-,
loatlod, proflr llliih
mUMge, 114-111~3102:.
~1
~I

LS;:

v.a.

F"OR

TI-lE &amp;AME, CHUCK~

72 Trucks for Sale

'ZGXXJO

t917 •0iiii!. 1 Ton liuat Whool,

XW

fiOO,eu ue 0111.

0

11189 S-10. U:lltod. u,Ciiiiilill[,
13900.cond.,lor ......... .
tlon 30U7WB41.
'(

IIIIo
4cylb;~::-;,,A.lf.E.
r1m1, t:~ Lnlr,
llahl

Merchandlae ·

- - , lie., $5100.
2231oftor lpm.

I ,lr "1 'ilflpl C'
C , IV(''IUC~

.milO
J!rr

'

*:=·

1

wornnty. Ufol ... · - "'
PIWchoiOd

24' Fill Bad Trolllr~TIIIIO Alia,
Alklna uoo, 1114-387-7711. .

11U -

414 Pal~,

'-'"!',_
.... oond., ~';ftiU,

Auto Pane &amp;
Accessories

Block. brick. - •Clairdo"
trirato. WI,..
""'""
..... •lo Orondo. 011 Coli 114245-11121.

2.1 Ulor ~llllc.~21. 114-44f.
2531, Or • .,......,.,....,,
f

d-~ llnlolo, ole.

56

I

:::IIC&gt;RN LOSER
'
...
:~,J l!AI£ m IIV. 10 51M.IFY N.J. 0011.
f'OUDI\"(

YX,

ZOYQ

MEl

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DATE BOOK

l

g

•

·-- -

Dec . 9, 1993

-~~:::=:::::!S :....:.:::..J!

Today is the first
day of HANUKKAH.
It is the 343rd day of

M'~'

. MORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP
I 'M 60\N6 ~ ID~E
6LJA:RoloiAia&lt;ET 10 to

_..._,..,~-~. ~6;1&gt;.~
Me A PART IN OUR

CI.AeS PlAY.

eoMe F&lt;EG6'RCH.

.,--;,. 1

J

4 Cloovy 4WO, lug ralloy _,.,
boluty rlngo 10 c~_,_llll nl•
cond., $250 flrm •
l

.,...,...11M,

Pets for Sale-,.,

YGPV . '

IAGIIFDPCIL

ODUVER

lt l!llll:'l l l lUt

'

1993 and the 79th clay '

ofjaU.

TODA\"S HISTORY: On this day in
1965, "A Charlie Brown Christmas,"
the first "Peanuts" television special,
premiered.
TODA\"S BIRTHDAYS: John Milton
(1608-1674), poet; Douglas Fairbanks
Jr. (1909-J , actor-producer, is 84; Kirk
Douglas (1918· ), actor. is 75; Redd
Foxx (1922-1991), comedian ·

ARTGF

I

I

b y f,!lmg in the m•n •ng words
L.-.1-....L..-J.L-..J.L-.J.L-...1. you develop
from ste p No_ 3 below.

•

I

PRINT NUMIEREO tETTIRS
IN THESE SQUAm

UNSCRAMII.E LEnERS TO
·GET ANSWER

-

3'1WH3orl~. · .

Servrce s
R lllorecl

1_._,

. OotdOn

Rllrllvor
$1110, llrl
Sholl, Wllfllllid, ANdy Or
Will Hold For Chrl...... With

·

81

Home

''
'

$50 o.·~, . 114-J~GO ht-

.._..-.10;.

-

.....,
••

AS.TRO·ORAPH

-

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

your As!ro:Graph prediCiions Ieday by mai~
ing $1 .25 and a long , se ll -addressed
stamped, envelope lo Aslro-Graph, c/o 11\is
newspaper. P.O. .Box 4465, New York, N.
Y. ID163. Be sure to slale your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jon . 191 An
acquaintance about whom you've been
dubious wanls lo be a lriend instead of one
who opposes you. Don'! pmjudge 11\ie indi·
vidual . give him/her a chance lo be tl1eir

own person.

-

AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D-Fab. 19) Today you
mlghl have lo contend wilh !IO"'e compeli·
tion you didn't anticipate. Don't let chal·
lenges unravel .you, because !ha odds am
lined In your lavor.
PISCES (Feb, ~rch 20) Someone you
haven't heard '""" for a long time Is anx·
ious to reestablish commUiilcations with
Frl41y,Doc. 10, 1913
Signlflcanl changes in your social life are you. Peihaj)t lho connectio/1 will be made
t lndlr:aled for tile year ahead. II looks like Ieday. This could be a mOll valuable aseo~ ~ miglll become a member ola small. bul clalion
ARIES
(MIIrCh
21·Aprll11)
M endeavor in
'lxclling cllq j,e .who'll he lp broaden your
which
you're
Involved
can'
be Improved
horlzone.
upon
~
you
make
some
pe"lnenl
cnanges
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oo. 21) You'll be
more offactive in dsaljng wilh you1"peers Ieday. Maximize your adva.nlages tl1rough
.
'
, l!ld&amp;Y if you employ laelics 11181 are more edjuslrnf!nl6.
&gt;~p811ior)ale 11\an 86ffish. Analyze tl1ings TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) Your besl
·~m lho _o lher guy's perspeolive before assai !Oday Is your knack for olfocllvely
,:.!'i'IJIIOO inlo aelion. Ge l a ;ump on life by U8ing !ha skills snd lalenls a88Qelalea .bring
undertttndlng !he influences which are 1o lho !able. Evei)'OIIII will have a P'-1 and
gowmi1g you In !he year ahlod. Sand lor OVOI)'OIIII will bentlil.

-e,.

tax lur, trlmmad
~. 114-l!la-

::: . :

Ellctr:lcal a
Retrlgemlon

'hlr

'Birthday

GEMINI JMay 21-Juno 20) DilfiC&lt;J it lasks
will stimulate your ingenuity and inventiveness today. Greater success is indicated

when you free yourself from unproductive
reslrlcllons.
CANCER (Juno 21 .July 22) II behooves
you lo be as active socially as possible al
lhis lirhe, because you may bo lortunale
enough Ieday 10 meel ~ will\ w11om
you'll havt o g1111 deal in cOmmon.
LEO (July ~Aug. 22)
llf you•ra Involved In a s iluation 11\al looks
like II should yield you a profll. make IIIia
endeavor fOil' principii priority Ieday. Don'!
tiWIIch to other manor~ until this is reaolved.
VIRGo (Aug. ~ 22) Ctllck lhlnking
on your bellaff could be a .basic requirement
In your invofvemenll m41y. Don~ ba alraid
10 make snap dtclslone. because your
judgrt\enlcan be,_ upon.
UIRA (llepl 23-0ct. 23) You'ra IIIII In a
benollc !rend - . bOIIIIinanoe and cqn&gt;
""""'ora COIICIIIIllld, oo be lion~ for
ways l1i make a pro!lt or add 1o your holdIngs. YOlJI/Ingtnully llllould spot -...g.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) ~1 boat
tbout l!!e buill Ieday Myou'ra Involved In an '
· arrangom..,l tl1al can be Improved upon · ' ·
and olllr yriu graoler acMnlages. YOIJ can
get lllt·lltma you deelrt ~ you 1186rt yourMit. ol
''

.

.

l

'

·"'

.

\

I'
I

rrrl"rl'l
1111111

SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
Exceed · Usurp · Razor- Amulet • COMPUTER
One cutie to her friend. "I think he's going to pop the
question soon: "What makes you lhink so?" the friend
asked. "Oh, because he had me over to meet his COMPUTER. '

otc. Di R AoiO~"IilaliiW,"Wv. ~

AKC

I

Overheard at high powered
business meeting: "That new
executive is a lrue expert. He
doesn't have all the answers
,....--------. but knows how lo get them with
GN 0 I N G
theproper- -· · ·· · ·
l.g,....:;..I..:.:.T-1:.....;_;.l.:.:..r,l:.....,.17,.--l 0 Comp lete the chuck le qu oted

:=.,r.-......
tonlul, 0111 ton lrulill
.,. .......

01,_,

..

.,.

~·~·.,··~

· •rtmante,

Cllil(poiiL 114&lt;Mj:1100 ' 8inlo&lt; Dlliabiid " •
HandiCapPed 1 ' I 2 BedrOom
UnHo. ~nlo hnod On lldluotod .
lncomt. FMHA Suboldlzocf, HUO
CorllllcaiH /lccopttd, 114-441•
1100 0 Equol Houolng Opportunlhll.
.

my moiiW MctW..

TWIWWIM

WOII

5 1.1!9 Alumlnllft Tullio 15 lrl&lt;/1 In Dll-•· " lnali
Wldo, Will I'll -~ llolon,
1125. 114-3~.
fM
ludlll Priced Treen 'f e'a""
Uaad I -11, Ill type.;_~

Cloot
to t,OOO okl
·bollmilk.
pop, maclrclna,
fluH
Ia,.. muoi
111&lt;1111, $100, 614-812.;aoae.

.0

ICram~

I

~R"- !lOYI~

r-r-..lil·~

""'
I

Building
Supplies

55

.

TI\I~YUt ...

LOMIIIO, 114481-1711.

modlum, IIOfY proHy, llko now,
$5,114-149-2122.
; : : lnrck lranrrinlooloni 4
• lh !110·11165, $40, 14-2063.
Chriatrn~t Tren, 7' or ... 110 a
$15. 304-178-1464.

CMOIPI

MAYCI'III'I

'-"era of the
wc;&gt;rdt ~
loW to form four · wordS.

·

" " 81tveroclo 1 ,.. 1,1100

ulid, l1~~

Brown coat, Imitation fur, alu

YMFHPI

XII'

0 Ifour
.arrange

.

~

19tl OEO Troclllf 4WD, . . .""'
ilaYmOnti. 304-fN-3201 "' ....
:1111.
'
19t1 CIIIC Siano 2100 Alklna
P,lllll; 114-441-om.
.
111112 Chovy 4WO, ·loadod. :104~.

dltpOrt, Ohio.

701

IYMCYPIY

TIIAT t.\R.f
PI IlLII

54 .lscellaneaus

FOIO!h, Cllllloollo, tllloro Bolh,
$1151110. Utlflllto Pold, 614-4414416Aftor 7 P.M.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA~ 5341 Joe"-! Plko
from
/rnoi4~~k lo ohop a
movi•. Colll
~H.EOH .
h Sll Mlddlopon , Ollt 1 I
2brld
lurn lllod opll., ut 1111•
- . , clop.
pa
1 rot. 304•2·2511.

01

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've had rrpartmonll tl1al -

Fridoy 11:30-8.

4411 After 7 fi'.M.

I'UPC

ZMI

Oova't N..t Antlqu., 331
Second Avenue, .OaiUpollo, 114441-8776, Mob · -SOt., 1:30-1,

Vory Cltl_!l, Wlllr 1 Trooh Pold, Alplno Sid« Tnckor, ft~. now.
f300.oo ... .:~ee.aooo.
1304:::::-4:::7&amp;-298:::;:=·-,--,..--.,.Fumllllod. Eftlcloncy:
107 AIIIIMion: oopoclolly U. mlrbl
Second, Galllpc.lls, ShaN Bath, dN..,._ mille. Mime all for tiOO,
Utllllloo Poll!, $1111111o. 114-441- 114-1112·71142. 570 Poort, Mkf..

YGP

NXFSDI'CN

1M thMn lhl wautd 1CrMm end burwt Into teera." -

nllhlll, . .on all• mantgement.
L8uwt1rid AptL, Hew Haven, AAA, S.aeonad RfiWQOd,
WV. EOH 304-182-37'111
Dollv- Ahd Sl.-· P.U.

Hotur

T~ANKS

m.

~

Ssvtn foot anUque 1hnlnum

2br. ell tlldrlc, appllanca lur·

flo-,._,.,

=.Ford TK 1101or

!!'

E-r

C/1, .112 loth, 2 - · Pallo,
132
. No Poll, L1no Plua
-lily DtDOtlt Roqillncl,
Doyo 114-44t4481. Evanlngo; 110 P.M.1114-317·7110.
.
2bdnn. a.-., latal ellctric, 1P" 7 Pllce Lhlng Room 8UHe,
pllancoo - ·IUmllhod, laundr)' $150; Wood With a-n
~ow~=tc:l~':v:= ~T,rtd Culhlona, ,,...._
11: YIIIIQO -IJroan Aolo. 01411 or
Ollll14.f112-3?11. EOH.
S pc. Norlllkl Chino Sot,
Llgonillry Strllo, never batn

Fll"'''

~I

Chrillmoo 1roo. Orlglnol box,
tuba• and revolving Dght, 1200,
114-117·3487.
W\11 Buy One ham Dr EltltiL

~~lflopalt, up-

Efllclsncy,

lnqu~

RoC! Trim, . Sorii!U1

Ontyii&amp;.IOO,I14 U8 1805.

ill

2 ~ 81droolftl,' 2 FloOn,

Fumlthld

1HI Cho..- lollllo, 'U,
Autamatk:, ~. Black Wllh

DIISI

Jun11 /luto'o To Buy Will Plck.Up
Appllrl..... Any
Motola
Froo, 114-146-11121 Bolon I P.M.
Wlnlod To Buy: Junil Coro &amp;
Truclul AI Top PriC. I R. .
~· 114-388-11554.
Wo-' To 'Buy: Junll Autoo
Wllh Or WHhoUI llcloro. Coli
Llwy LIYoly.l14-311-11303.
W.nlod To Buy: Rott Torrlor
EIIIIO&lt; Young Or PUIIf&gt;Y. 114-:179:1721.
W.rilod To Buy: !hondlng nmbor I Plnl, llood PrieM, 114-

· . If! AGREAT DEAl·/

N-

Buy
1114 E. Moln !hrltl, on At. 124,
Pom010y. Hou11: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. lo 1:00 P.J!!-.r..Sundoy 1:00
IO 1:00 p.m. ll4·-·25211,

Fumllhed, 3 Aooma &amp; Bath.

31 Homes _for Sale

a Utld

tumltur~~, haa~'~4t ~111ern
Work boots. li1
59.

utllllleo; 114-112·7!11. .
2 lltdroom Apo•mtnl, Locolocl:
112 FoUnh Avo,.,.; llot' 411
llpollo Upolllra, 1241/Mo. $1110
Depoe;lt,' , SICP~e, Relriaen.tor,
Wolor F.~. llol-44e'3870.

OJiuln, "' ony lltonlorl"to

wanted to Buy

9

call304-675-1450.

Apartment
for Rent

126 ~- 81-.

calor,
tolglon.
tea:lafNIIIIIII.UI
01' oatlonll

.

nery clun 2 BR.
pakl: In Portar aNa,

Vinyl SA.48, &amp;14-441-

11144.
New Flbsrglan Show•rw. New
Flbo'lllln Showoro &amp; Tub. Now
3 Pc. Sloow111, 614-245~$2 Alter I P.M.
PICKENS RJRNITURE
Now/Uood
HouHhold tumlthlng. 112 mi.
Jarrlcho ·Rd. Pt. Plnunt, Wtl,

ptr lpirlmsnt, S\50/mo. ph111

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~-11:10.

LAYNE'S RJRNITUIIE
Complete N'oma. luml•hlnga.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 8-5. 8'14-4410322, 3 mllet out 8ulavllla Rd.
FIH Dollvery.
Molloh1n Furnllure CafJ)II,

poll. 304-4175-101$.
Mobil• Homo1 Furnlohod, 2 Br,
920 FOurth AvenUt, Gllllpolll,
f3201Mo.. 114-446-4416 After 7
P.M.

Business
Opportunity

Real Estate

.

Dli1od, no bu,.... premium. Ea

800-4!19-34w.

14x80 2 Br, 1 mila South of
EuNkl, on St. Rt:T. No pats,

lho ollwlng.

ALL Yonl Solie Muot Be' Pold In
Advonca. DEADUN~: 2:00 p.m.
lho cloy bofonl lho ld !0 10 run.
Suncloy odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Fridlly. lloncloy odHion • 2:00

~ta ..leoma, no Wtl1lng

11102.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera. dryart1, .ret~ar•tcwt,
11-. Sklggo Appllo,...., 711
Yin• Sl-1pill 614-446•73118, 1·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

mall until rou have lrwHITgatld

Sala, Old Conr.tlt Building,
Porter, Slate Route 554, N.

Oun -ion, Thur. Doc. t, 7pm,
MI. Allo -lon1 .At. 2 N 6 At.
31, 200 IIUI'I. OICI • niW, Ceftoo

z•

Eul

P•

flahll
lllndll

The gift of giving
-and taking

Four Poster WatM Bed. King
Size, New Hu1tr S175, 614~4f·

se:.so Yd a

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINII CO.
rKommandl thai you do bus&amp;""' wllh pooplo you know, ond
NOT to •and money ttwouan the

o.r Onty,-llridly. 12110 ln•Jde

1!0.

Re-

eact 104-568·1823.

44

- - ovory Frf.Sot, 7:00 PM,
MI. ARo Auc:llon Conlor At. 2 N
1 At. 33, "on lop oflho hill". Dlf..
clliloro
nlglltly.
Gl ~ctr1n,
lots
at
FlM
llorbloro _..1. Ed Frozlor

-

CRAYONS

DID YOU GIT
'THEM PURPLE

57 llouthoittt
AlllnhOIIdo,
58 Artcloco
IIIUIIrllor
58 Dlracllorl
eo Aonor 1nd
SuiKvan

21-rdlhol
27 ADDle centor
28 Not (IU11nto

~

Soolk'.

EATIN'

--

LIPS 7

411.0254.
Nice 3BR Ranctl tlyla ale,
ar~gs . S425.oo month. call col·

Gallipolis
&amp; YlclnHy

77W785.

HEAP OF FUN II

qulrod,I14-441-32H.
For Lono Or Solo: 2 Or 3 Bod·
roomt, 1 112 Baths, 2 C.r
Garage,
Large
lot
37
Po•omoulh Rd, Gofllpollt,

Yard Sale

Rldl .,.._. Auc:llon Compony.
full tlm1 auctlanMr, compfett!
~ur:tlon . Uconlod
III,OIIIo l Wool Vlrglnlo, 304-

LOOKS LIKE A

MAW II WHAR

55=
58 Stirling from
(2 wdl.)

22 Allllrlrle
woman
24 Clear n

Com.cllan Llttrll"
· 31 Shadllko

.AitJIOU
•AS::Q
tAQII
Vulnerable: Neltber
Dealer: South

f.

lnflllor

at:=""
31

••••

GLORY BE II THAT

2 bldroom trallerJ ref • dep, Rt.
62 N. Locust Aa on right, no

Loll: McCumber Hill Ad.- bllck,
medium till mala Lab'Husky
mil, curly tall, " Dukl.. , 614-7423300. Raw1nl.

8

+1011
t1011

SOUTII

z•

r.t.rencet. 614-258-1019.

Financial

IXctlllent typl~ &amp;
oHica organlutlon tklllt. Sal1ry

IUYI mattlat·

$37!1/Mo.

Miss Paula's Day Ctre Center

act and Htrvard Oraphlct. Mutt

8

Battla,

Aaterencn,

Option Ta Buy Available. 814-

pGSSSII8

Milo Crook Rd. 304-115-3716

6

$400/llo. RefiNnct • Security
DopooH Roqulrod. ~au Will

mtnt. TM candld1t1 must be
~=5. 10 goad homo. 304• r,rollclonl wJLOTUS, Wonl Per·

Lost &amp; Found

.?

tKJH

zt

dabla, &amp; Honatt, 614·388-9921.

manag·amant. Poaltlon requlrn School, S14-446-ll224.
a mlnlmum of 2yra colt• d..
gre~ wlat lutt :lyre axpertencs Small Or Largs Housaclsanlng
rn a fast-paced oflice envlrcn· Jobs, 614-446·1648.

Pupplee, Mah Great Chr~mat
Prtsenttl 614·245-4614 Anytlm•
After 3.

EAST
tAQIU Z

••u
uz

$250/Mo 1200 Dspotlt. 614-448-

&amp;
Office,
=:-::-~~~~7-:;;::;::::: HquHCitanlng
AVON I All Ama I Stlll1ay Ratar.ncn Available, Dapan·

Coeklr Spaniel, Traln~~d Squirrel
Dog, MUll Auu,. Good Homa,

- ( a l.)

53,...... lo

0956.

Employment Services

eoak &amp; Woadbumlng Slovo,
614 4415-08S5.

p.m. Salurday. ,

'

$1,000l_)lf3
COIIbrHY $\1100, 114-441.. ,.. .,
1111 Fon! LTD
Oii4'.,
IOdin, Hill now cornlilon, ""'l'
Ollllon avollriblo,_now llr•. V.f,
$2500, 114-ta..nt.
:

llpoJit, City Schoolt, Ref•ran-

5:00pm.

6 yiHr old bt1ck mala lab. to a
good home, to have room to
roam . l14-446-7554 attar 9:pm

1

WEST
tltJI5

Renlals

Wanted to Do

ASAP, call 614·992-2155, 8:30am5:00pm. or &amp;M-9924428 attar

4 Glftnln Shepherd lab Pup.
pies, 8 W11kt Old, 614-24S.91S4.

7

.Ill;.,

1111 CI!Ovono,

71-2210.

51 Un-

18PIIMM1
11 Olmoulho
21 Coagulata

Wanted to buy: uHd moblat
hom ... 614-446-0175

2 gn~y kittens, 614-M&amp;-2315.

go~~t,

14 Mllllcililen

GenaNI Malntanance, Palntlng 1 cn &amp; Sac. O.poslt AM~ulred ,
Yard Work Wlndowl Wathea t32Mio. &amp;1•-441-4447.
Gullart ClaanM Light Hauling,
Commartcal, RHhHintlal, Steve: 2 Bedroom HouH, 48 ChilWANTED: angina lor 1988 Ford 614-t46o15S8.
licothe Road, Full BaHmant,
F...lva, 4sp., . 1.3 liter, nHCfed
Gas
Furnace,
Carpetad,

Giveaway

Found: brown &amp; whlta

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11 RICidl

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VI'R/1 FURNITURE
614-441-3156 Or 114-441-4426
'90 OilY SAllE AS CASH
OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

6

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2 can• and punkin high back
ctwra 1 cane glall top couch
tabla. $200.do 304-175-2237

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41 Oppo•or

1 Mlniallert

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HouseHold
Goods

Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Colna. Gold Aln¥!1 Sllvar Coln1,
Gold Coln1. M•.:::.. Coin Shop,
151 S.COnd Avanua, Oalllpollt.

BRIDOI: .

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18

OhiO

1993

I

�,.,
Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thureday; December 9, 1akr

Washb4rn recognized !\

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
I swear Miss Scarlett, I "ain't
never seen" so many Christmas
lights decorating homes in Meigs
County before. I'm impressed.
Everything looks great and those of
you so well decorated are really
keeping morale high for the rest of
us.
Only two communities that I
know of are having home decorating contests this year and those are
Racine and Middlepon so competition hasn' t been the incentive for
the widespread decorating. You'll
want to get out and look. at all of
the weU de&lt;oraLed homes. Do be
careful, however. It's prelly easy
to let the car go out of control
while you gawk.

--Before Thanksgiving gets too

far out of sight, let me mention that
Tom and Jean Ables of Pomeroy
had guests from far away places
during that weekend.
On hand for the family celebration were their daughter and· sonin-law, Carolyn and Agustin Montanez, Arecibo, Puerto Rico; Mr.
and Mrs. Agustin Montanez, Jr.,
and son, and Marlyn Battle of San
Juan, Puerto Rico; Carolee Montanez and Wolfgang Stindle of
Frankfort, Germany; Todd Mon·
tanez of Milwaukee, Wise., and
Shawn Montanez of New Haven,
Conn.
You'lllcam. When I say far
away places, I mean far away
places.
William McKinney of Middle·
port is really doing well after open
heart surgery at University Hospital
in Columbus.
Bill entered the hospital on Nov.
29 and underwent the major operation on Nov. 30. He was in inten·
sive care for only one day and
came back home on Dec. 6. On

Dec. 7, he was out and around
town and doin' good. By the way,
BiU had been putting off the operation since 1988 whe·n he had a
heart attack. Finally. his doctor
gave ·him some either/or altern&amp;·
tives and Bill went ahead With the
operation.
The Women, Infants and Children Program, known as WIC and
carried out through the Meigs
County Department Qf Health, is
prepared to accept more women,
infants and children into the pro·
gram.
.
WIC offers nutrition counseling
and supplemental foods to breastfeeding and pregnant women,
infants and children up to age five
who have a nutritional need, live in
Meigs County and fall within
income guidelines. If you fit into
the category do contact Deborah L.
Babbitt, R.N., program director at
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment, and see about getting
enrolled.
Kenya R. Jones, a senior student
and varsity cheerleader at Science
High School in Johnson City,
Tenn., was chosen through competition at the Universal Cheerleaders
Association Camp in Boone, N. C.,
this summer to travel to London,
England. Kenya was selected to
perform in the Lord Mayor of
Westminster's New Year's .Day
Parade. Kenya is the granddaughter of Hoban and Lorene Goggins
of Middleport-and her uip to England is bemg sponsored by family
and friends.

/

./~~t

1

PROMOTION TO BENEFIT CHILDREN • A promotion sponsored by Subway, Magic 101 811d Pepsi will benefit Christmas
program&amp; in Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties. For 101 minutes on
Dec. 12, those bringing in a new toy will receive a free sandwich and
drink. Pictured above are John Ralrden, left, owner or the local Sub·
ways, and T'un Maxwell, general manager for Magic 101.

Au bra Washburn, 89, of Lions Club room. Memben are~·
Coolville was presented a plaque lake • favorite Christmas .de~ •
for community service at the There will be caroljn$. door llrizet.
annual l'llaoksgiving family dinner contestS and trelliS for the clWdrerl'f ;
of Modem Woodmen of America,
Camp 10900. held recently at a
restaurant in Vienna. W.Va.
Washbl.ltli is finishing his fifth
term (20 years, as a ll'llStee in Troy
Township Athens County. Number
members of his family, some
friends, and fellow trustees were
present at the dinner. Door prizes
were won by Oscar Pennington,
Reedsville and Marsha Washburn,
GuysviUe.
Edna Forrider, representing
Torch Food Pantry, accepted a
check from the Modern Woodmen
of America for $2,500. The check
represented a matching fund
benefit supper sponsored by Camp
10900.
On Sunday at 2 p:m. the camp
will have a Christmas par.ty and
oyster soup lunch at the Coolville

Toy programs in three countiesr--N_o_w_oP.EN-r-oo____,
to benefit from promotion
cf:IRI&amp;~TMA&amp;~ &amp;~uroN
Subway Restaurants, Pepsi Cola '
Bottling and Magic 101 Radio are
joining to assist area toy banks this
holiday season.
On Sunday, Dec. 12, Subway
customers can take a new toy to
any Subway in Gallia, Meigs or
Mason County and receive a free
regular six-inch sub and a 16-ounce
Pepsi during Magic 101's broadcast
between 3 and 4:41 p.m. (101
minutes).
After the event, toys collected
will be turned over• to the Gold
Wing Road Riders in Gallia
County, the Meigs County Bikers
Group in Meigs County, Md the

Toys for Tots in Mason County.
Each group will then disuibutc the
toys as a pan of their overall toy
collection program in that area.
For more information, phone the
radio station 81446-3543.
TONIGHT

JURASSIC PARK PO 13

STARTING FRIDAY
JOHN TRAVOLTA, KIRSTIE ALLEY
IN
LOOK WHO'S TALKING NOW

PG13

ADM:=r·oo

ONEEVEN1NGSHOW7:30

Forth• Loved.Onu
Grave Blankets '111"
Arlltlclal Sprays, VaHI
• 1nd Wreaths
Open Dally D-5, SUndayl 12·5

HUbbIfd$ Gfeen hOUSe
$

yrawse..,
992·5776

Just for the red and green of i~
they could have left the song,
"Twelve Days of Christmas" out of
the holiday season for my money.
But if you like it, it's okay. You
just keep smilin'.

ltlta
11M30,
10W40

DI'6W80
MlliDI'III

1.0W80,

10W40
IM'&amp;W30
MDIIII' Ill

at. • ' •

,,All
... ,.......

100H. Still
. Athlns

Oil Filter

592-3574

SAT. DEC. 11 10am-9pm
SUN~ DEC.12 11am-6pm
.

Watc/1. A Mot/el
TTB/n Dlsplly
Being Built!

'47

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slit &lt;ttsl!
Dllil

Pick 4:

1447
Kicker:
13-27-30-31-36

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Yol.44, NO. t&amp;O

MultiiMdlolnc.

1 Section, 10 P - 35 • .,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 10, 1993

Astronauts
release
telescope

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
Arrangements have been made
to repair sections of the roofs that
leak at the Pomeroy and Harrisonville Elementary Schools.
Supt. Bill Buckley told members of the Meigs Local Board of
Education Thursday night that four
sections of roof win be replaced at
the Pomeroy Elementary School b_y
Hackeu Roofmg as soon as matenals are available. The cost will be
about $1,200 a section, according
to Buckley.
The roof at Harrisonville will be
repaired, but no part of it will be
replaced, Buckley said.
Meeting last night with the
board was Pomeroy teacher Ann
Van Meter who told a story .of
brown water running in a steady
stream down a wall and of a sagging ceiling in one section of her
classroom. Water also repor.tedly
leaks into another classroom and
the library.
Buckley said that work. on the
two schools now is geared to stop
the leaking until money is available
to do tOOII roof replacements.
"What we're saying is that these
RELEASES TELESCOPE • The Hubble
deployed rrom the spate shuttle Endeavour in a
are
'temporary fiXes'," said Board
televised view early tbis morning. (AP)
telescope leaves tbe payload bay after being
Member Randy Humphreys again
bringing up the need for a permanent improvements levy. "This is
just a stop-gap measure, not a permanent solution", he said.
Carol Ohlinger, another teacher
al ·Pomewy ·Biemencary, calked
about other things needed at the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Tennessee, New Mexico, Ohio and decomposes upon heating, releas- school, like new blinds for the
ing flammable ~ases. Organic classrooms. "We're going t.o have
John Glenn has cautioned the Ener- Idaho.
nitrates are a bas1c component of
The
Russian
waste
tank
explogy Department about the possibility
sion,
caused
by
a
chemical
reaction
some
explosives.
of a chemical explosion at some of
The Senate report said there is
its nuclear waste processing sites, after nitric acid improperly was
similar to an explosion in Russia in poured into the tank, caused radia- concern the same conditions could
tion to spew across a 47-square- arise at U.S. weapons plants during
April.
.
"The potential for explosions is mile area, according to Energy the separation and processing of
widespread throughout the entire Department officials who have vis- tons of highly radioactive wastes.
By GEORGE ABATE
DOE weapons complex," Glenn, ited the site. The extent of injuries Some of the compounds have been
Sentinel News Stair
stored for decades and their exact
D-Ohio, wrote Energy SecreUiry is not known.
Congressman
Ted Strickland,
U.S. officials have determined composition isn't known.
Hazel O'Leary on ThUtsday.
(D-Lucasville)
will
address Meigs
"There are a number of faciliGlenn emphasized that his con- the processing tank contained pluCounty residents and will seek.
cern is about the of an explosion if tonium nitrate and other fission ties in the DOE weapons complex input on the pending national
proper precautions are not lali:en. products. A combination of chemi- where 'red oil' can be a problel!l" health care refonns from 5:30-7
He acknowledged he has no evi- cals in the tank created a compound especially in the processmg phase p.m. Friday (tonight) at the
of dealing with the wastes, Glenn
dence that any of the government's scientists have called "red oil" Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitanuclear waste tanks are about to a dense, organic material that said.
tion Center on Rocksprings Road.
explode.
One of the few freshman
Investigators of Glenn's GovCongress members of the National
ernmental Affairs Committee have
Health Care Refonn Commiuee,
studied the Russian explosion at
Strickland helped draft the mental
the 'romsk·7 weapons facility in
health care aspects of the program,
Siberia in April and compared consaid
Ron Sylvester, Strickland's
A bond of $100,000 cash was set for Christopher L. Rathburn,
ditions at waste tanks and nuclear
press
secretary.
22, 1140 lP- Secood Ave., Gallipolis, early this morning in the Galprocessing sites at U.S. weapons
The federal government's work
lipolis Municipal Court of Judge WilliamS . Medley.
plants.
is expected to be the largest social
Rathburn is charged with two counts of attempted murder. He
A report by the committee conreform legislation since the estabcluded, "the potential risk is real
allegedly shot Sandra Scott, 43, Roush Lane, early on the morning
lishment of the Social Security sysand widespread" at processing
of Friday, Dec. 3. Officials at Holzer Medical Center said Scott was
tem, Sylvester said.
sites and waste tanks at a half
discharged Sunday.
The town hall meeting is part of
dozen U.S. nuclear weapons plants
Strickland's pledge to visit each
in Washington, South Carolina,
county in his district to discuss the
health care system, he said.
"The debate is just beginning
because the public has only been
exposed to a general idea of managed competition," Sylvester
added.
President Bill Clinton and
Strickland have pledRed not to

......--Local briefs-_,
Bond set for alleged assailant

PROTECTS
FORSO.OOO

dui'WIQ start-ups and

one trn~tment

ptoleets tor mora than
m1les .

-·

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store Hours: 8 a.m. to I p.m. Mond.y through Frld•y;
8 l.m. I~ 1 p.m. Salurdty, 1n.d, lt.m. to S p.m. Sundt~

flil'-l-flll
W!lh
~se

GALLIPOLIS

t5'55

209 Ujlper Rjver Road

. 446-3807

z

CBRISTltiAS

nLoLA.u'"' GOING INTO PLACE • Dale
Hart of the Parks B~d and' Aimee I'Jiesi the
artist, were amour, tile voluateen 'wlao aalsted
W~dncsday afternoon In puttln2 the old·fasb·

Icmecl flllaie Ill pllce at
MDiPark. Tonlaht
the coaamu~ ~ otlk:lall,y wekome In the hoi·
!day seasob witla a variety of activities at the
park.

'I

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About 250 area residents tnmed
out Thursday night for Racine's
first annual ''Christmas in the Parle"
celebration.
A carol sing and candlelight
walk, choral holiday music; and
lighting of the community Christmas tree, highlighted the event
which was sponsored by the Star
Mill Park. Board.
An old fashioned village was
created for the observance with the
anwork on the nine large pieces
being done by Aimee Pyles. She
was assisted with the painting by
various businesses, churches, and
school groups.
The cutouts were made from
plywood and stand four to six feet
tall. They will remain in place for
the holiday season for the enjoyment of park visi[D!S. Plaos call for
additional pieces to be added each
year.
A bon fire was a focus of the
celebration last night with choirs
from area churches presenting
Christmas music.

111'
•

compromise five Iinets of the plan,
including: universal coverage, saY·
ings, improved quality, mm: choic:·
es and Simplicity.
In particular, senior citizens will
have Medicare coverage revamped :
but will not have less, Sylvester .
said.
Young, healthy, single people :
will pay a larger portion for care, ;
but all people will not have to '
worry about losing a job and also
losing coverage and benefits, be
added.
Sylvester rejected claims that
the change could paralyze small
businesses and throw people out of
work..
"This won 'I be the big bureaucratic nightlllare that the other side
has put againsl it," he said. "You're
going to get that from peaple with
a vested interest in the system.•
Particular areas which most
need reform include the insuraoce
and pharmaceutical industries Md
the structure of doctors - shifliDJ
toward primary care and awa,
from specialists.
Rural people stand to gain from
the proposed changes, Sylvester
added.

'Christmas in the Park' draws
about 250 people in Racine

ENGINES

DAYS

to have more money", said
Ohlinger who also menlloned the
need for salary increases.
Humphrey responded to that with
the comment-"most immedlaJO
need now is gelling money '10maiotain the physical Sll'IICIInJ",
Buckley also noted that work
will have to be done to the d~
work. in the modular unit at S•l•
Center because it is falling ap11t. ··By a split vote, Christy Raml!burg was hired as a cook at the_
Harrisonville schOOl. Humphreys;
Roger Abbolt, and John Hood
voted in favor of hiring Ramsbtq.
while Bob Bartoo and Larry Rupe,
voted against the action. Bartoa
explained that he had nothiDJ
against Ramsburg but that he feiJ
the job should go !D Edie Kalr wi¥J
is 81 the top of the list in
· ·
having w&lt;Red as a substi=:,:
for the past nine years. Rupe, •
board president. said he voted "'no'C
for the same reason.
:
The board granted three dock
days to Celesta Coates.
.
Distribution of the Chapter 2
monies, $31.375, was discussed bi&lt;
Treasurer Jane Fry. She said that
$16,000 goes to the library for IIUP'
plemental materials, $10,221 for
computer equipment, and $4,800
for software.
Minor changes were made in
school policies regarding physicab
for athletes, summer school pro·
grall)s, extended school year .for
disabled SludeDIS, IDd IIDdCII
record access.
Next meeting was set for Dec.
20 at the board offtce.

Strickland will seek input
on health care reform

1 " "'" "' " "

,...,....-

AMu-lnc.-~

Meigs School Board ~:
hires Hackett.Roofing :~:
to repair leaking roofs~:

111:11 lill

299

nurrles. Soturday, blah ID 3IL

Chance of snow 60 perceat.

·.~·

SuPer·&amp;llpPIII) PTFE
SIF1155eil.

'

t- loal&amp;htln mid its. s-.

•' .

MILES ot.NO MQFlEl

~ .000

TlltRIIitiiiGIII

816

Page4

The Public Utilities Commis·
sion of Ohio Thursday approved
financing arrangements for the construction of scrubbers already
underway at Ohio Power's Gavin
Plant, PUCO officials announced
yestenlay.
·.
The decision is another step in
Ohio Power's federal Clean Air
Act Phase I Compliance Plan
which was approved by the PUCO
Nov. 25, I992. The plan includes
the construCtion of a flue gas dcsulfwization system (scrubbers) 81 the
Gavin facility as pan of a reasonable least cost strategy which will
jlennit ~ burning of Ohio's high
sulfur coal.
In a related electric fuel component case, also approved last
November. PUCO approved a stipulated agreement which placed a
cap of $815 million on the recoverable costs for the construction of
the scrubben. The agreement also
provided for the scrubbers to be
financed by a non-affiliated third
party. under a least cost leasing
arrangemenL
Thursday's PUCO action
approves the lease arrangement that
Ohio Power entered into in
September 1992 with JMG funding, Limited Pannership, a nonaffiliated, Delaware partnership .
The terms of the lease stipulate that
JMG will fund the construction of
the scrubbers at the Gavin facility
an:l lease them back to Ohio
Power.
The actual quarterly rental payments will be determined when
JMG's debt issuance,to fmance the
construction is completed. These
payments will not begin until construction of the scrubbers is completed.

STUDENTS OF THE WEEK • These Pomeroy Elementary
School students were selected as outstanding for NOvember and
were presented certificates. In the honored group were, lett to
right, front, Nicole Harper, Jesse Smith, Alisia Burton, and Jordan
Shank, and back, Andy KinDBD, Cou~tney Hicks, Andy White,
Jennifer Stepp, J, D. Grueser, and Jesse Haggy.

University Ma'i is
'(our 1-\ometr,.vn
Place for Chnst·
mas f!Jn\ You'll love
all of the model
train displays Deed
~~ &amp; ~ 2 ... A~, .
don't,forget to vtslt
Santa\

Pick 3:

lose to
Hornets

PUCO approves Glenn warns about 'potential'
funding -for
Gavin.scrubbers for~explosions at nucle~r plants.

Quaker

YOUR WHOLE FAMILY WILL LOVE
The 13th Annual Holiday

Cavs

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP)- Their repair work completed, Endeavour's asuonauts set the
Hubble SJ)llce Telescope free today
with new eyes and, they hope, a
keener view of the universe.
Swiss astronaut Claude Nicol·
Her released the refurbished Hubble
from the end of the 50-foot shuttle
arm at 5:26 a:m. EST over the
southwestern coast of Africa. Its
new golden solar wings shimmered
in the sunlight as Eodeavour slowly
backed away.
Three hours later, President
Clinton and Vice President Gore
called to congratulate the sevenmember crew on what ·Clinton
called "one of the most speclJICular
space missions in our history.''
"We're all so proud of you,"
Clintoo said.
"! wMt io thank each and every
one of you for what r&lt;!U've done,"
he said. "You made II look easy."
Shullle commander Richard
Covey replied: "As you know,
great adventures are once-in:a-lifetime opportunities, and the seven of
us were lucky to be able !D be part
of this great adventure.''
Inside Mission Control, a sigu
on a small Hubble model read:
"HST re-opened for business
(completely renovated)." ·

PolnHitlal '1• &amp; Up
Berried Holly TrHI '17"
Live Norway Spruce
6-711... '211"
cut l'r111-Live WI'Nthl

Ohio Lottery

'

Another feature of the eveninll
was a carol sing and candlelight
walk. around the track at the !lilt.
Dale Han, president of the l'ait
board said that "I 0 I people and·a
poodle" took part in the impressive
candlelight procession.
Refres1unents were served dUr-ing the evening.
Another new activity for Raclao
will be a "Show of Lights" coniCSt
to be held on Dec. IS sponsored lly
the Racine Area Community Orpnization (RACO).
Entries are to be registered wldl
RACO b~ Dec. 15. Areas ellgillle
to participate. are Racine villap
and IWO miles beyond the corporation limits.
:.
Judgin~ will lake place on Doc.
20 and pmes of $50 for first, $lO
for second, and $20 for thin! will
be awarded.
·•
To regisu:r residents 111'11 !D f1llld
their name, address and pboa:e
number to RACO, P. 0. Box 42&amp;,
Racine, 45771.
·

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