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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

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,,All
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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.
·

�·c ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DBVOTBD TO THE ll'fTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

. ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETil!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words . All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
address and ~elepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
sboukl be in good taslt:, addressing issues. not personalities.

~· Tracing the relationship
~· between

polls and cynicism

o, 1993

•

Friday, December 1
Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, December.,O, 1993

But on matters of principle having to do with Castro's repression
and his turn toward 'the Soviet
Union, Frankie defected from the

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
revolution and became a long-shot
gambler against the house. There·
after, he risked his neck against
Castro in the doomed ventures of
Cuban "freedom lighters."
He progressed from the Bay of
Pigs to the Watergate burglary, in
which he believed he was seeking
evidence that Castro was contributing to the 1972 Democratic presi·
dential campaign.
By chance. we encountered
Frankie and his fellow Cuban burglars at Washington National Airpan a few hours before the Watergate break-in. Frankie was asked
what he was up to. He lidgeted and
mumbled.
"Secret busi ness," he· finally

blurted out nervously . He left
quickly, and it wasn't until !he next
morning's newspapers that we
learned what Frankie's "secret
business" really was.
Those four Cubans fully
deserved their sentences for their
role in the break-in, but their plight
has always been overshadowed by
the political dimensions of the
scandal. They thought they were
serving their adoptive counuy, and
were motivated by a misguided
sense of patrimism. Three of the
four. including Frankie, had been
trained by the Central Intelligence
Agency and had risked their lives

on its missions.
They wound up behind bars
while those who plotted the Watergate crimes remained free . H.R .
Haldeman (who died last month)
and John Ehrlichman, even after
their dismissal from the White
House, were chauffeured to the
grand jury in White House
limousines. Franlcie 811d his accomplices were brought in manacles by
federal marshals.
The White House left the
Cubans out in the cold. In contrast

John Wilson, the attorney for
Haldeman and Ehrlichman, conferred personally with the pre~i­
dent Haldeman waS even permll·
ted to use secret White House tapes
to help prepare his defense - Lhe
same tapes !hat had been refused to
the Watergate prosecutors and Senate investigators.
A reported $460.000 was
slipped to several Watergate defen dants and their lawyers to buy theu
silence. Yet only a paltry few dollars flltered down to the Cubans less than $14,000 to help them
maintain their families, and
$13 000 for their attorney.
FnuJkie·s share was just $2,500 in
expenses.
Sturgis attributed the death of
his mother-to the Watergate reaction, and he owed $3,000 in hospital and funeral bills. His wife.
Janet, worked furious!~ to pay the
bills while he was in jad.
"We now know we did
wrong," Sturgis said in 1973. "But
as God is our judge, we thought at
the time we were se;ving Lh..: country." Sturgis always felt that the
more Americans learned about
Watergate, the more they would
believe that he was one of the innocents.
He expressed this sentiment in a
Icuer he wrote his wife from prison
in the fall of 1973. In the letter, he
referred to the fact that E. Howard
Hunt, the White House aide and
ex-CIA official, had been taken
away to testify on the scandal.
"Howard has not returned as
yet," Frankie reported. "Everybody thinks he is talking his bull
off. If he is, he can only help us
and not hun us.
"We still may win this yet,"
Slurgis wound up !he letter.
"Keep the faith , honey! I love
you always."
Frankie died last weekend with
his Don Quixote boots on. He
ignored wracking pain from lung
cancer and flew to WaShinjlton last
month to tell us about hts latest
escapade. He said he was training
guerrillas in the Florida Everglades
to overthrow Castro.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Hinstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
. , WASHINGTON - Reflecting on his calling, pollster Louis Harris
&gt;observed that wiih the rise of polling as a campaign 100!, there also has
.: been a climb in political cynicism. He said he hoped it wasn't cause and
:· effect
• But there's obviously a connection too clear to discount as coinci• dence.
• Since candidates began using polls to shape strategy. which Harris
: traces back 33 years to his work for John F. Kennedy, people have come
:. to suspect that those who seek to lead !hem often begin by following the
MeT
: public opinion discerned by campaign pollstm.
THe
· : Politicians deny i~ as did Harris and three other presidential pollsters
:: at a forum on Wednesday. After all. the "Profiles in Courage" in
: Kennedy's Pulitzer Prize-winning book were ligures who led against the
· popular current, risking political rejection to do what they deemed right
:· It reflects a suain as old as dernocracy,the question of whether a leader
: is elected to make decisions on principle, even when voters differ, or
. should be guided by what the voters want The customary answer is both,
·sUtc:e losers don't get to make political decisions on either basis.
· Nowadays, opinion pollsters nO! only help candidates on the way to the
:whire House, they become off-staff advisers to presidents.
·: Four who did- Harris to Kennedy, Patrick Caddell to Jimmy Carter,
.Richard Winhlin to Ronald Reagan, and now Stanley Greenberg to Presi.dent Clinron - talked about the role in a panel on polls at the American
'Entetprise lnsliwte for Public Policy Research.
. To a man, they said they didn't uy to affect policy, although each had
·an impact on slJB!egy in office, as in the campaigns.
Greenberg said he considers his principal task to be keeping Clinton in
·touch with America Greenbe~ did Clinton's 1992 campaign polling and
now advises him on public op•nion matters as a consultant to the Democratic National Committee.
· He said the public opinion data isn ' t used to formula positions on
:issues but, rather, to help Clinton in gaining suppon for the policies he's
;aln:ady set Greenberg said he tries to keep the president and his White
·House aides in constarlliOUCh with the mood of the counuy.
: With the decline of political parties and other organizations that once
·rellected that mood, Greenberg said, the public is fragmented, and somc·times alienated, and a president needs poUing data for information and
:perspective on what people think.
He also said' Clinton can't get his major measures through Congress
Since it's the Christmas season, . Three Kings" because it Is unscrip- according to one story:
siah" was being performed, the
."without a public mobilization" to suppon them, and that requires data here are a variety of Yuletide tural.
King George 11 of England was king had to sit for two hours. Then
:on what people think about his proposals.
thoughts- on the star of BethleBut! wonder whether they real· in the audience when Handel's the Hallelujah Chorus was sung.
• Greenberg said polling "plays almost no role" in the president's deci- hem, the Wise Men and the Hal- ize that our celebration of Christ- majestic composition was first per- Feeling the need to stretch his legs,
;ions on what do to, although he then suggested it had been a factor when lelujah Chorus of "The Messiah"
formed in London. Jbe monarch is he got up. The audience saw the
:CUnron was weighing the taxes \hat are in his economic plan, and the oratorio by Handel.
said to have been so moved by !he king stand. It followed protocol and
'StepS he seeks to finance health care. .
From Sarah P. of Boston:
b
Hallelujah Chorus that he involun- rose to its fee~ 100.
·. "When I listen to you speak, Stan. it sounds like you all are running a "Some of my teachers say the star mas on the date of Dec .
is
tarily rose from his seat. Out of
Whichever story is true, a tradi25
.campaign there," said Caddell, whose 20 years as a Democratic pollster lhat appeared at the time of Jesus'
respect, the other members of the tion was born.
-wen: punctUated by public partings with candidates who didn't heed his birth was J'ust a bright light that unscriptural,IOO.
"
PI
·
d'
· th k
h J ·
The date of Christ's Mass was audience rose, too.
"eorge agenz IS a syn •cat·
peared
10
:advice.
ap
e s Y w en upuer, dec'!.ted on by Christians some 300
Another story: During his visit ed writer ror Newspaper Enter: No, countered Greenberg, it isn't a campaign, but an elfon to gain sup- Mars and Saturn came close
"'
.
th
· hall h "TheMes
prise •····iatiO'n.
w ere
·
,._,.
i'Orl for "a very aggressive agenda" sought by a minority president dcal- together. 1 always thought God put years after the birth of Jesus. It was to e music
mg with a balky Congress in a period of public cynicism.
the star there to guide the Wise an effort to replace the pagan
Men. Who is right?"
~oman fesuval of the sun (Saturna•. The distinCtion is a fine line.
Dcar
Sarah:
You
and
your
...
ha), which fell on Dec. 25.
.
It's been that way since Harris counseled Kennedy, as pollster and
teacheiS
might
all
be
righL
Fmally,
ever
smce
1_743.
a~d•·
By The Associated Press
~:.Strategist in the 1960 presidential campaign, informal adviser afterwards.
Astrologers
in
ancient
times
ences
have
been
standmg
d.~nng
Today
is
Friday,
Dec.
10, the 344th day of 1993. There are 21 days left
~;larris said his poll-based advice led Kennedy to write off all but 18
believed that important events were the Hal!~lujah Chorus of The in ~oclaf~ Highlight in History:
··states, neither campaigning nor advertising in the other 32.
:: He said he advised Kennedy on campaign themes, persuaded the fust announced in the heavens. They Messiah oratono by Handel. Do
On Dec. 10. 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt became the first
be
ded th N
p
r
:·R.oman catholic president to confront the religious issue directly when were acquainted with Hebrew lore you kno~ why?
that said a star would be a sign of
Here IS how the custom started, ~n~~~ ~usso-~::OOse .:ar abel cace Prize, •Of helping mediate an
· Raben Kennedy, his brother and campaign manager. objected.
: Harris said he briefed Kennedy daily during that campaign, usually at
So when Jupiter, representing
: tub-side while the candidate was soaking his bad back in the hot baths he thebirlhoflheMessiah.
Public Notice
Public Notice
•.lOOk three limes a day. He was an outside adviser to the presiden~ not an the highest god and ruler of the
Public Notice
Public Notice
universe, came in conjunction with
1~ Harris said it is a conflict of interest to a poll taker to woiic for the
Saturn, regarded by the ancients as
:otrteeholders he helps to elect.
is the only road that eaat 28 roda and 17 linkalo road; thence north 48
PUBUC NOTICE
.: Winhlin ~ ~WJ always latelY what he wanted to do as president. "the defender of Palestine , that
NOtiCE.,, Htreby Olven bordera the real estate. The the center of a spring; degrees weal 22 rods;
meant to the astrologers that a lhal on Saturday, December plat mapa ahow no other thence eoulh 25 degrees thence we1.t 11 roda to
~)nd that the pollsrer's role was to advise him on how best to get it done.
; He said he considered his role to be rmdinjl out what the average Ameri- divine and cosmic ruler was to 111h, 1993, at 10:00 a.m., a road tront.ge of the real eaat 15 rode and B links to Shivler's line; thence on
public oale wlll be held at eatate. The cloaeat road the center of Cheater and • said line to the place of
appear in Palestine .
..can would like to rell the presiden~ and rellmg him.
The appearance of the bright 211 Welt Second, Pomeroy, located weal of the real Rutland Road; thence wnt beginning, containing 4
; • In tum, each pollster said his president was interested in knowing what
lo Epple Road, along aald road to the ploco acrao, more or looa. ,
planet Mars close to Jupiter and Ohio, to oell lor caah the oolala
~le thought about issues, and each insisted that policy-making was not
Townohlp Rood 408. Tho of beginning, containing 4·
ALSO: The following real
following
collateral:
Saturn would have produced a
•lffected.
1991 GMC Sonoma closest road 'ocated eeat of 53/100 acrea, more or leas. estate, 'sitUate In Section
:- "I don't know whether this is all good for democracy or good for quite spectacular celestial light. Pickup
ALSO: The following real No. 34, Town 3, Range 12 of
SNjt tho roal aolllte io Lakewood
Rood, Townohlp Road 85. A ntata, beginning 172 rodo tho Ohio Compony'o
5'America," Greenberg said of his counsel to Clinton. "I think it is good Perhaps it looked like one tremen- 1GTCS14A3M2532983
1993 CHEVY 3500 Pickup complete legll doocrlptlon north and 30 rodo oaot ol Purchuo, and bounded and
dously bright star.
·for the president"
of the real estate Ia 11 southeast corner of the deacrlbed aa tollowa, vir.
Was it just an accident that the SNt 1GCHC34F5PE208897
lollowo:
aoulhwest quarter of Beginning 44 rodo north of
The
Farmer•
Bank
1nd
:. EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· birth of Jesus Christ occurred at the
Tho following roal eetate, Socllon No. 35 Town 3 tho center ol oald Section,
Sovlngo
Company
,
; ills! for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
time when this asuological sign Pomoroy, Ohio, rHWVH lhe ailueled In tho County of Ra!)ge 12, at 'sophron~ 11 ourvoyed by Spencer
appeared in the heavens?
;DatkJIIal politics for more tban 30 years.
rlghllo bid atthlo ule, and Meigs, In the Stille of Ohio, Doyle'e northwest corner; Haymon; thence north elxly·
Whatever the answer, we can to wllhdraw tho above and In the Township of lhonce w•t30 rodo to John olx rodo to tho oouthweol
say that Jesus' birth was an event collatorol prior to eale. Chootar, and bounded and Rldonour'e lond· thenco comer of George Schelbtr'l
oouth 172 rod&amp; to'lh• aouUI lot; lhenco eaot twenty·
of great magnitude. Not only did Furthor, Tba Former• Bank deocribed aalollowo:
Beginning
at
I
he
olaec:tion; thence oaot eight' (28) rods to the
and
Sovtngo
Company
people· from all over - from rich rnorvee tho right to reject norlhweat corner of the llna
46 roc1a .,d 1611nka· th.,ce northwest corner of a lot
wise men to poor shepherds northoMt quartor of Section north 102 rodo to ~ cornor haratolort -old to Gaorgo
C.0~6fl!~f.t\AN, t\OW 'DID
ony or all bldo oubmlnod.
make their way to Bethlehem. Even
Further,
tht 1bove No . 34'" Town No. 3 and of Sophrona Ooyle'a land; Mora; thei\Oe along the
· YooR PRo· NMi" VC7f€.
the stars in the heavens "looked colloteral win bt oold In the R1110• No. 12, of the Ohlo lhonca•weat 13 rode; thence Pomeroy and Ch•tar Rood,
Purch•••i northly down c:reek to aa follows; South 26 1/2
condlllon It Ia In, with no Company"a
in''
and added their brighmess.
W~K ovT fo~ 'fov"
·thence
South
lilly-three Sophrona E. Doyle'o dagrooo, Weal 11 rods;
oxpreu
or
Implied
'
Yes, Sarah, there was a star, or a
rode .to the center of the northwest earner to the South 5 1/2 degreee. Weat
warranties
given.
heavenly light that looked very
Far Further Information, Cheotar and RuUond Road; ploce of boglnnlng, 24 rode; South 18 degraoo,
,:!"LIST GRE.A'T!
•••
much like a bright slar. Wise men contact
Jell Gilkey at 992- thence eaat twanty·four containing 50 acraa, mora Weal 14 roda: South 42
·of old followed it. And wise men 213e.
roda and len Iinke; .t henoe or lese.
degraea, Weet 26 roda, to
1.
60,~IG 51JC:KS
•
and women still follow the symbol- (12) 8, 9,10; 3TC
north 61 dog•••• out 10 ALSO: The following reol tho placa · of beginning,
rodo and 3 IInke; lhonco oalllto, beginning at the S.E. containing 7 ocrn a~d 55
FOR ONE Of 1'/\'f
ic traces of that star today.
·north 25
waat to corner of the 8outhweal perchea.•
Now, for anodter matter: There
PEi P~~TS
tho
north
Ina
.of
aald quar[llr ofaticUon,lown.ond
SAVE ·AND EXCEPT: Tho
Public
Notice
are perhaps three historical errors
oection;
thence
wnl
8
rods
ronga
afor•ald:
th•nco
following
daocrlbed rul
A~f&gt; At\ l~'lliA­
in the first line of the Christmas
i•nd
21
lnko
to tho placl of north 56 rodo to Walker'• ntalo, olluota In Chellar
NOTICE OF SAL£
carol "We Three Kings (which
beginning conllllnlng 7 112 Run: thence South •• Townohlp, Malgo County, tn
TIOt-1 'To /&gt;.. S1"1tie
••
By
virtue
of an Order or ICrM, more or Ina.
waat 32 rode to the the Stale. of Ohio , and In ;
begins "We, three kings of Orient
Solo luued out of tho
Pl~~e.R A'"'\ '"'ft\~
ALSO: The following real north of a drain: th1nc 0 Section 35, Town. 3, Range,
are"). Can yoii name them?
Common Pleaa Court or
1. The number of wise men who Maftlo County, Ohio, ln the aatalo, beginning 11 the eoulh35 rodototheeection 12,1n tho Ohio Company'• '
Wl-\ 1-t"~ 1-\ou'!.E..
oo~lheaot corner ofi .NYon Uno: thence eaol on aald Purchna, ond bounded ond i
made the trip to Bethlehem is not caoe or Richard A. Rodford, and
on·helf lo~ beginning In Una · to the place of cleocrlbod nlollowo,to-wll: :
\
known . The Bible says only , Plolnllff, vo. Alla May the contor of the Chaoter boglnnlng, containing 7 Beginning litho ..ulh Una .
·:wlsecmen calile from the easL" It MOrg~~n, et al., ~endllnt., and Rudond Aoed end In ocrao, more or !no.
of oald Sac lion 35, In tho ;
• JudamOIII lhoreln the nOflheoet quartor of
is li'aditioo that has established the upon
ALSO:
The following· real old Pomeroy roll!; thence '
rendered,\ btlng Cou No.
number as three.
' 83-CY-154 In aald Court,, I Section No. 34, Town 3, Hlala, beginning 41 rode running wool !Waive (12) ;
•
2. They were not )dngs but wlil off• lor life II tlio Iron! Rongo 12, of tho Qhlo ond 16 llnka ..ollrom tho rode to 1 whlla olk tr"" '
COmpany'o
Purcha .. ; oouthweet. corner of tho .,.nce011IIWI!iva(12),.. :
members,of an old and powerful door of .t~~e Courllo"'" In thane•
·••'
'!Orth'
25 degr.-• aoutheu.t quorter of to tho old Pomoroy ~d: o
priestly caste and probably ~eroy, ~Uelg• County, waot on John P. Shlvler'o · $lcllon No. 35,\Town 3, and Ulence .loli!&gt;Wlng 11lcl rood :
Ohio,
on
·lh•i
14th
doy
of
schooled in astrOlogy. .'
',..
JerWirY, 1tl4, -at 10:00 a.m., aootiiM flfty-thr" rods ond Range 12; llionco oaat on , to the piece of·l!o;lnn)ng, l
3. They were not fi:om the Ori- tho following Iondo ~•nd 12 Anko to the north 11.. ol 11ld lin• 21 ·rodo ond 15 ~ontalnlng two (2) acree, ,
·'
ent (thi.t is, 'what we Imow today as tenemonto, port ol wh~h lo elld a110tloni thenoe ... t lln.k• lo the center of lh• . more or 1111. See deed t
olxtoen rode to • cher,Y tr• ChHtor end Rutiond 'ROod; giyan to . Ho~ry Mora and :
the Far East). Tbey likely came b"'4!'ded on U.e north oild eight
'
In dlomatar; U.enc• North 30 degr- IS Mary A. Mora, data&lt;l April •
oouth by County Road 25, thencelncheo
from lran,lhen called Ptnia.
eoulh
33 degrNO rodoond 161hiko alon11 ·aald 30, 1131, Melgo County ;
•
By the way, one religious radio Pomeroy Plko Road, which
(Continued on Page 7)
.
station !know of won ' t play "We

We HaVe.

eNeMY.

Yes, Sarah, there really was a star
Georue R. Plo.genz

liod ay •. n h•. story

r::::::::::::::::r:::::::::::::::=1::::=::::::::::::r::::::::::::::::

·-

Berry's World

--Area deaths.- - .Winter storm watch issued for northeast Ohio .
.Jefferson Adkins

Ruth Lewis

Ser:tjces for 'Jefferson D.
Adkins. 41, of Huron, who died
Friday, Dec. 3, 1993, of an apparent hean attack while deer hunting
near Ponland, were held Tuesday
at the Foos and Son Funeral Home
in Bellevue.
.
Atlkins was born March 4,
1951, in Sutton, W.Va., and
worked for the Ford Motor Company Ohio Assembly Plant at Avon
Lake since 1973 where he served
as the vice president of the.United
Auto Workers Loca12000.
He was a m!:lllber of the Bc;liCOD
Baptist Church in Lorain and was
an avid sportsman who especially
enjoyed hunting lind fiShing.
Survivors include a son, Jefferson Davis D of Vermillion; daughters Panda Jo of Nashvllle, Tenn.,
Sherrie ~ of South Amberst and
Haley Maria of Lorain; brothers
Alvy M. of Lorain, James M. of
Bellevue and Evelyn D. Trotter of
Mansfield. He was preceded in
death by his father; three brothers
and grand~nts.
.
He is alsd survived by special
friends Jan ·Smith of Huron; Dave,
Debbie,J amie, Andrew and Andrea
Parsons, Jim and Edna Ables, Roy
Smith and Ann' Boso and family,
aU of the Penland area.

Ruth Lewis, 70, of Point
Pleasant, died Wednesday, Dec. 8,
1993, in Point Pleasant after a long

d1r•••

...
.

.

....

)

.

charges pending on man

Company reports theft

-Meigs announcements-

will

Edward Kelly
Edward A. 'Kelly, 71, Syracuse,
died Thursday, Dec. 9, 1993, at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center near Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 25, 1921, in Costonia, son of the late William and
Verona Povicb Kelly, he was a
retired employee of the WheelingPittsbur~
Steel
Company
Steubenville Plant, a fanner trustee
of Wells Township in Jefferson
County and an Army Air Corps
veteran of World War II and the
Korean Conflict.
In addition he was a member of
the Brilliant United Methodist
Church, American l:.egion Post 573
and the Brilliant Lions Club. In
addition Jie·was a Jelli:rsQII Couilty
RSVP Volunteer and a member of
the Meigs County Senior Qtizens.
Survivors include his wife,
·Helen June Fox Kelly; two daugh.ters and sons-in-law, Judith and
Craig Harrison of Racine and Deborah and Mark Goldfarb of El
Paso, Texas. and four grandchildren.
. Also surviving are ihree sisters,
Virginia Amos of Louisville, Nellie
Cantrell and Nancy McConnell,
both of EasLCIIicago, Ind.
He was preeeded in death by
three brothers and two sisters.
Services will be held Saturday
at 1:30 p.m. at the Wheeler Funeral
Home in Brilliant with Pastor Burl
Baum officiating. Burial will follow in Fan Steuben Burial Estates
in Wintersville.
Friends may call SaiUrday from
• 10 a.m. until time of services at the
funeral home.
,
Memorial contributions may be
. made to the Brilliant United
.Methodist Church.

EMS.responds
to seven calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered seven calls for assistance
Thursday and early Friday morning.
Units responding included:
Thursday- 10:04 a.m. Rutland
to State Route ffJ2 for Jim Cavender who was transported to
O'Blenness Memorial Hospital;
12:44 p.m. Rutland to College
Road for Bradley Searles who was
transported to Pleasant Valley; I :09
p.m. Rutland to Dexter Road for
Sherry lndestad's home for a structure fue and there were no injuries;
1:58 p.m. Middlepon to Lincoln
Avenue for Shirley Roush who was
transported to Pleasant Valley; 8:23
p.m. MiddleponotLincoln Avenue
for Howard Pinnell who was transpaned to Pleasant Valley; 11:12
p.m. Rutland Squad to Stare Route
124 for Debra Priddy who was
transported to Holzer Medical Clinic.
Friday- 6:21 p.m. Pomeroy to
Wehe Terrace for Paul Houdashell
who was transponed to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

'

/!:$

.
Mtdwcst and West.
A c&lt;ild
headed down from the Great
,
to the SOttiheast.
'
i
An artie front that plunged intq
the upper Mississippi Valley OIJ
Thursday was expected to drive~
southeast toward the Aptll!lachian~
today. It was expected to bring rai~
to parts of the Midwest and'Sotilh~
east from the eastern Great Lake!!
south to the centp~l Gulf Coast.

•

Hospital news .:
VETERANS MEMOIUAL . •
Thursday admissions Rought, Pomeroy.
:·
Thursday discharges - Gre~
Riffle, Racine, D.o ttie Sizemore~
·Middlepon, and Dwayne Adkin~.
Athens.
·
:

Geraia

Stocks

WINTER IS COMING•••
Don't Forget Our Feathered
Friends...

•Black Sunflower Seeds
25 lb.

$6 15 50 1111. $11 65

•Stripped Sunflower Seeds
251111.

s7u

50 Ill. S13 65

•Wild Bird Seed
10 lb., 251111 &amp; 50 Ill.

, ,.. , . •Witite-MiU.t •Nipr .Seed;. , .,.;
•Fine Cracked Corn
Roasted ln·Shell Peanuts

$1 10 Ill. Saltetl anti Unsalted

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MULBERRY AVE.

POMEROY

GALLIPOLIS-MIDDLEPORT

WRAP- UP
CHRISTMAS!
GOLD "S" BAR

DIAMOND BRACELET
Reg. 499
'14 Ct.

$199
REG. '29g

1 Ct. Only
Reg. $699

.

The Oaily Sentinel

SALE 1499

Hundreds of &amp;Jautiful Christmas Ideas- All On Sale!

(IJSPSZil·"''

I

Publllhecl every aftenlooa. MoDday lhrouJil
111 Court ,St.. Pomeroy, Oblo by lbe

~ friday.

Ohio Valley

~blllhl111

C9mpanj/MultiiDIIdla

·[ac., Pomeroy, Ohio 45169, Ph . 992-21.56.

. S.CO.d- -pald·•fl&gt;meroy,Q!IIo.

•

; Member: The Anocilted Preu, lZid lbe Oblo !
New1pap« AJioc:IIIJoa, Natioual A4Yeltlllq

: '"Reprc~Kotathe , Brulwrl' NeWiplper Salel,
! 733 T~lrd Avenue, New York. New "Y:ort
10011.
I'
I POSNASTBR: Send addrau ch.uJra to The
,Dally Sentinel, 11~ Court SL, Pomcwoy, Ohio .

New

ShiP,ment has
just arrived!!

'From Mfg. Sugg. Retail
T. W. Ia total diamond weight.

,45169.
SUBSCIUP'I'ION ~TES
l7 Curl• _. Ml)tor Route

,•

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co. Year............................... ""'" ''"'-..$13.20 .
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PRICI
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:aaa thf'le,lil or ll moalh bllil. Cmllt will be
;_
'No IUbiCripdOill '-J 1 ~1 pe~Ued Ia ftM
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IMide M. . l:....,.

tU Weell ............................................... .$21 .14
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w-................................................ .sat.76

•
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13 Wooll .......... :......................,.........,.,..$23.&lt;1()

fllcquisitions J'ine :Jewe[ry

•·

Stop by now lor best selection
'I

TWO LOCATIONS

MIDD.LEPORT
DEPARTMENT.
STORE
..
•

151 Second Ave., Gallipolis

•

446·2842

•

and

91 Mill Street, Middleport

~

Shop Mon-Frl tll ·8 pm
Sattil6 pm , ·,
Sundi!)l 1-5 pm .

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.,
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52 w,w;.....~..,...............................MUO

,,

.

,. .

'•

·

Am Ele Power ................... 36 1/4
Ashland Oil... ..................... 32 3/4
AT&amp;T ......................... :...... S4 5/8
Bank One ........................... 37 7/8
Bob Evans.......................... 21 1!8
Charming Shop .................. II 3/4
Champion Ind ................. .........16
City Holding ................. ..... 32 1(1
Federal Mogul ................... 28 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ........ ..... 46 1/8
Lands End .......................... 41 1/8
Limited Inc............................. .18
Multimedia Inc ... ........ ..... .. 36 1/4
Point Bancorp ...... ....................15
Reliance Electric .... ............ ..... .17
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15 1(1
Shoney's Inc ..... ................. 22 5/8
Star Bank ........................... 33 l/4
Wendy lnt'.l. ................. ...... l6 7/8
Worthington Ind ................ 18 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
or Gallipolis.

....

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
'·· Dec. 9 discbarg_es -;:- Ashley
1'ayne, Lenna Oberhilzer, Mrs;
Joseph Shepherd and son, Carolyn
.Cundiff, Nancy Feustel, Connie
Clarke, Mrs. Cori Biggs and
daughrer, Gamet Duncan, Mildred
Spencer, Brandon Montgomery,
j\lnold Rife, Francis Huston, Regi!ia Osborne, Marilyn Martin and
Betty HunL
.
.

will be 10me lingering flurries in
the nonheast. Temperatures will
remain cold with highs in the 30s
and lows in the 20s.
·
The record high remperaWre for
this date at the Columbus weather
statioo W89 72degrecs in 197t:The
record low w89 minus 8 in 1958.
Sunrise this morning was at 7:42
a.m. Sunset will lie at 5:06p.m.
Around the nation
Clouds dimmed much of the
nation this morning, with showers
scattered through the eastern pan of
the counuy and patchy fog in the

IAIIIIAIN MAnP'HJ fAt. A SUN.
IIAJIOI,IN NM1HT 'IWSDAY

:Hospital news

,, . ...
.1

Weather

has issued a winter storm watch in
effect late tonight and Saturday in
extreme northeast Ohio.
Snow and flurries will develop
tonight in western Ohio but no signtflcant accumulations are expected. In eastern ·Ohio, snow will
develop as temperatures continue'
to fall into the 20s.
Some snow accumulations are
expected in northeast Ohio by Saturday morning. Snow and squalls
will continue on Saiurday in eastem Ohio and flurries are likely in
the western ~ of the stare. Temperatures will remain in the ntid20s to around 30.statewide, plus
strong nonherly winds will produce
dangerous wind chills.
·
On Sunday, skies will clear
across most of the state but there

Local·briefs--

Calling hours at the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy, for
Edward Allen Hayes, 39, of Vin"
ton, Va, formerly of Meigs County, will be held both Saturday and
Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m. Mr. Hayes
died Wednesday, Dec. 8, 1993, at
Community Hospital in Roanoke,
Va.
'
Funeral services will be held at
II a.m. Monday at the. funeral
home.
AI Hartson
officiate and
burial will be Graham Cemetery at
Letart, W, Va

dtgr••

.
...

By The Associated Press '
The N31ional Weather Seryice

Soutia-Central Ohio
Windy
and moclj colder tonight
She. was .a lif~lon&amp; resident of
Mason C01111ty; a retired beautician, with snow flurries Uicly. Low in
having owned aild operated her the middle 20s. Northwest winds
increasin~ to 20 to 30 mph. Chance
own sbop in Point Pleasant for 41
Yet!fS. She attended Point Pleasant of snow Is 60 percent. Saturday,
High School and' Mertz's Beauty cold with flumes' likely. High tn
Sc!iQol. A m!:lllber of Trinity the lower 30s. Chance of snow 60
United Me~ ,Church, she was percent.
Extended forecast
past Senior Regent of the Women
Sunday-Flurries likely northof the Moose; past State President
or the W~ Vlfliinia Hai~rs . east. Fair elsewhere. Lows in the
ABsoc:ialion; past President or the 20s. Highs in the 30s. Monday·Fair
American Legion Auxiliary No. 23; and warmer. Lows in the 30s.
and a member of the Order of the Highs middle 40s to lower 50s.
Eastern Star, Point Pleasant Chap- Tuesday-Fair. Lows 40 to 45 .
Highs upper 40s to lower 50s.
ter 75.
Born July 9, 1923, in West
Columbia, she was a daughter of
the late Charles Bedford Cochran
and Mabel (Johnson) ' Cochran
Crowder. She was Ql~ preceded in
death by · her husband, James A,
Charges are pending against an unidentified Reedsville-area man
Lewis; son, lames M. Lewis; two
for allegedly pointipg a ~un at another man, Sheriff James M.
brothers, Raben and David
Soulsby reported this mommg.
.
Cochran; sisler, Pauline Thylor; and
The man allegedly poipted a gun at 19-year-old Jeremy Cline
grandson, Jay Micbael Wedge.
while traveling on State Route 7 Wednesday after II p.m .
Surviving ~ a daughter and
No other details are available at this lime, the report stated.
son-in-law, Diana and Kent Bragg
of Point Pleasant; daughter-in-law,
Alice Lewis of Point PJeasant; sis·
let, Jean Woodyard of Point
Texas Eastern Gas Transmission workers reported Thursday that
Pleasant; four grandchildren, Brian
·the
bucket was stolen from their Ford tractor on Buck Run Road
P. Wedge, DeeAnn (Wedge)
sometime since Dec. I.
Groves, Michele (Lewis) Williams
and Debra (Lewis) Roush; five
great-grandchildren and many
nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be Saturday, II
a.m.. at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Board or Electioos to meet
will hold a regular meeting MonHome with the Rev. Steven E. DorThe Meigs County Board or day, at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
sey officiating. Burial will be ·in the Elections regular meeting will be
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
held at 4:30 p.m. ;Tuesday at the Breakfast with Santa
Breakfast with Santa will be
Friends may· call at the funeral board office on Mulbeny Avenue,
held
at the Meigs Museum Satur·
home Friday, 6 to 9 p.m. In lieu of Pomeroy.
day
from
8 to 11 a.m. For children
flowers, contributions may be made
under
I
0
years of age, the charge
to Trinity U.M. Church Scholarship Hymn sinJ to be held
will
be
$2.50,
while for children
Fund, 615 Viand Street, Point
The Fatthful Gospel Church in
over
I
0
and
adults,
the charge will
Pleasant, WV 25550.
Long Bottom will have a hymn be $3.50. A variety of
foods will be
sin~ at 7 p.m. Friday featuring the
Herman Moore
served
and
the
price
includes all
Da1ly Family Singers and other
anyone
can
eat.
Herman E. "Brother" Moore, local talenL
75, of Pomeroy died Wednesday, Pastor Steve Reed invites !he pubIzaak Walton League
Dec. 8, 1993, at a Huntington, lic. Fellowship will follow.
The first muzzle loading shoot
W.Va., Veterans Administration
of
the
Izaak Walton League will be
facility.
40&amp;8
to
have
holiday
dinner
held
at
I p.m. Sunday at the farm.
Born Sept. 10, 1918, in Meigs
40&amp;8
will
have
Meigs
Courity
County, son of the late Charles and its annual Chrisunas dinner at the
Gardeners to meet
Florence Eblin Moore, be was
The Middlepon Amateur Garaffiliated with the Victory Baptist Pomeroy Legion hall Tuesday.
There
wlll
be
social
hour
at
6
p.m.
deners
Club will met Wednesday at
Church in Middleport and was an following by a prime rib dinner.
6 p.m. at the holllC of Jean Moore
Army veteran of World War D. He Members may take guests.
for a potluck dinner.
was also a retired coal miner and
laborer.
Dance to be held
Candlelight vigil
Surviv:;!
'n are two sons, Charles
A round and SQWII'J: dance .will
The Mothers Against Drunk
and Paul, · Springfield; daughter,
be
held
Saturday
from
8
to
11
p.m.
Driving
candlelight vigil scheduled
Bertice core, of, Springfield; at the Russell building in Millfield
step-mother, Neva Moore, of witb music ·by·Oor ofothe B'lue
:~6,l PiNb'!!J,1~l~~~ l~f'.~9i~
~omeroy; :brolher-'ill' law, A:lex Band
Pomeroy City hall auditorium. The
May, or Po'meroy; seVeial grandexpected
inclement weather is the
children, a niece and a.!ltPhew.
Live Nativity at Chester
reason
for
the move indoors.
Bc:Sides his parents, he was pre·
There
will
be
a
live
nativity
ceded in detth by a sister, Becky scene with children and animals in
Jacks.
"'
· ·
COLONY THEATRE
the parking lot by the Chester UnitServices ir.&gt;lll be held at 11 am. ed Methodist Church Sunday from
FRI. THRU THURS.
Saturday at Birchfield Funeral 6 to 7 p.m. The public is invited to
JOHN TRAVOLTA, KtRSnE ALLEY
Home in Rutland. Rev. James drive by or stop, Sharon Hausman,
IN
Keesee will be officiating.
LOOK
WHO'S
TALKING NOW
pastor, announced.
Burial will be in Miles Ceme·
PG13
tery, Rutland·. Calling hours will be Trustees to meet
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
from 2-4 p.m, and 7-9 p.m. today at · The Bedford Township trustees
AOMlSSION $2.00
the funeral home.
44&amp;-01123

illness.

Edward Hayes

1

. -~

.

~

Renowned Watergate burglar dies
WASHINGTON- The death
of Watergate burglar Prank St)ll'gis
passed last weekend with barely a
whimper in the press. He was one
of the four Cubans recrui!ed to do
the dirty work, and were all but forgotten in the wreckage of Watergate.
But we can't let this event pass
without telling you Frankie's story.
Long before he joined the world's
most celebrated burglary crew, he
was a close friend of this column,
Frankie was a soldier of fonune,
forever chasing adventure but usually fmding misadventure. He was
also a Don Quixote, square jaw set
against the enemy, drawn irresistibly to such calamities as the
Bay of Pigs and Watergate.
In his youth, he confounded the
odds and became part of a legend,
one of the ragged few who persevered in the mountains of Cuba
with revolulionaty leader Fidel
Castro. After their incredible victory, he could be seen on Havana's
streets in the regalia of an air marshal. He became Castro's man in
charge of " liberated" gambling
casinos and luxury hotels.

'

The Dilly Sentinel Page· 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

�'

:Friday, _December 10, 1993 .

·sports

The· Daily Sentinel
In theNBA,

points, Lee Henderson and Amber
Blackwell added five points each.
Joy O'Brien added four and
Heather HudsoQ and Melissa Clif·
ford added two points each.
The Marauden hit only 14 of 40
from the noor including one of
eight from three point range for
30%. Meigs was icc-cold from the
line, cannins 12 of 28 (42%).
Meigs pulled m 29 rebounds, with
Compston grabbing seven and
Hudson and Clifford getting six
each. Meigs turned the ball over 29
times and had nine assists, led by
O'Brien with six.
Mal'lluder reserves will
In the reserve contest, Meigs
overcame a 10-1 deficit at the end
of the first period to post a 22-21
victory. Meigs now owns a perfect
3-0 record. The Marauders afso had
to survive Federal Hocking's missing five shots in the fmal 12 seconds to hang on for the win.
Laura Easunan and Cheryl Jewell led Meigs with six each. Jessica
Mahorney led the Lancers with
eight
Fedel'lll Hocking
(6-ll-11-13""3)
Mariah McAfee 3-0·2=8, Erin
Snedden 0-0-2=2, Alison Pierson
3-0-4=10, Tracy Bentley 3-0-0=6,
Lisa Mahorney 1-0-3=5, Debbie
Buck 2-0-1=5, Grerchan Linscott
3-0-0=6, Lindsay Hart 0-0-1=1.
Totals: 15-0-13""3
Me las
(9-1l-9-f1""1)
Lee Henderson 2-0-1=5, Joy
O'Brien 2..Q-.0.4, Helaher Hudson
0-0-2=2, Amber Blackwell 2-01=5, Vanessa Compston 6-1-8=23,
Melissa Cliffrod 1-0-0=2. Totals:
13-1-12=41

Belpre posts 69-50
win over Eastern
By SCOTT WOLFE
Eastern Helld Coacb
Outscoring Eastern 39-15 in the
first an4 third frames, Belpre
1 opened up 56-30 lead after three
,. frames and went on to claim a 69i 50 Tri-Valley Conference girls'
basketball game over Easter-n
Thursday night at Belpre.
In the secood and fourth frames
Eastern outscored Belpre 35-30,
I but the damage had already ~n

r

i

I

Idone.
Eastern (0-3) has now played
1

1 teams with a combined 9-1 1111111&lt; to
:start the season (Alexander 3-0,
I Meigs 3-1 and Belpre 3-0).
• Eastern was ted by good efforts
from its seniors Jaime Wilson and
~cuny Ae~er. Aeiker bad a c:areerlJigh 17 pomts 8Qd a team-high 18
~e6ounds, earnilig high praise from
her coach for excellent hustle
throughout the game. Wilson
1 poured in 18 points 10 lead Eastern.
1 Belpre was led by returning let' terman Jamie Co,lebanks, who
: wured in a game-high 34 points
' and had 16 rebounds before fouling
out of·lhe conrest. Freshman guard
Kathy Coyncil notched 13 points,
and Erin Huml))uey added six.
Belpre too~ a 16-6 lead at the
end of the font quarta" as Eastern's
demise, an abllCJOUS passing game,
· began to take effect ln the ~
period, Eastern began a great
11 comeback bid, pulling to within
four at 24-20, only to suffer a mental breakdow·n and three straight
turnovers. The turnovers lead to a
30-20 defiCit and ultimately a 33- ·
21 score at the half.
Ovetall, Eastern made a whopping 34 wmovcrs, many of which
were iDade in the Belpre backcourt,
whe~ Col~ stole the ball and
cashed in foe the ~.
Turnovers-killed the Eagles in
the third frame, when Colebank
scored 14 of her 34 points off steals
on the press and rebounds underneath.
Belpre rolled to a 56-30 lead,
then after Colebank and Rhodes
had fouled out, Eastern made a dramatic comeback bid, outscoring
. Belpre 20-13 in the final stretch.
Eastern hit 16-67 from' the field
and Belpre hit 30-83, neither of
which is a mark to brag about.
Bastem hit 18-31 from the line,
while Belpre hit9-13.
j Eastern .rabbed 49 rebounds,
tied by Aeoker's 18 and Tara
,Congo's 13. Colebanks had 16 of
IBelpre's 41. Belpre had 16
ltllfii()VIn and 26 fouls, while EHS

Rockets, Sonics,
Hawks win; Hornets
sting Cavs 95-93
By The Aasoclated Press
Houston, Seaule and Atlanlll are
still nying high as befits their nick-.
names.
All three strengthened their
claim as the NBA's hottest team
Thursday night. The Rockets beat
Miami lt5-109 in overtime to
improve their .league-best record 10
18-1; the SuperSonics crushed Oatlas 125-93, giving them a 16-1
mark and s~ ~live victories;
and the HawkB tripped San Antonio
105-95 to mau:h ·their club record
with 12 straight wins.
Houston came the closest to
being derailed as Vernon Maxwell
beat .the regulation buzzer with a
30-foot desperation shot that forced
the overtime.
"I've been lucky, very lucky.
When I gt!l home, I'm going 10 fall
on mr knees," coach Rudy Tomjanovoch said.
The Rockets, who got 28 points
and 16 rebounds .from Hakeem
Otajuwon, 25 points from Mario
Elie and 23 from Otis Thorpe,
scored the forst nine points of overtime.
"We had them and let them get
away," saidGlenRice, who scored
a season-high 40 points, but miSsed
a free throw that would have given
the Heat a four-point lead with 3.1
seconds left in regulation. "We had
the game in our l{nisp if I had made
Soorts briefs
.
the free throw. It was incredible
---C~o~tte-ge~tb-as~k-et_b
_ all
Tennis
.
that Maxwell hit that shot"
INDIANAPOUS (AP) _ The
MUNit:;H. Germany (AP) .Seattle had the easiest time,
Midwestern Collegiate Conference, Michael S!!th, defending champoon handing Diillas its 14th consecutive
which has lost three members and and No. 2 m the world, came from loss and keeping the Mavericks
its automatic bid to the NCAA bas- behind to beat Brett Steven 5-7, 6- winless in nine home games.
ketball tournament, announced an 4, 6-4 in the quarterfinals of the
The Sanies took control .by
expansion with six schools from Grand Slam Cup.
outscoring DallaS 37-18 in the secthe Mid-Continent Conference.
Stefan Edber~ •. No. 2, a~ so ond quaner, giving them a 61-45
The move gives the MCC at reached the semofonats, beaung halftime lead that they extended to
least nine members through the Wayne Ferreira 6-7 (5-7), 6-l, 6·0. 9S-7l after three periods.

had 37 turnovers, eight steals and
13 fouls.
After leading 17-10 at the half,
Eastern lost the reserve game 2923.
Crystal Holsinger led EHS with
12, wlofle Angie Rouse had 11 for
Belpre.

Eastern
(6-15-9-20=50)
Jaime Wilson 7-0;4&lt;:18. Penny
Aeiker 5-0-7=17, Tara Congo 1-02=4, Amy Redovian 1-0-2=4, Jes(See BELPRE on Pa&amp;e 5)

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES l SERVICE
204 Condors~

Pamoroy, ott

FALl AND WINTER'

HoUtS

,

Tutl -Fri. 8:00-5:00
~
, . 8,ill. a:oo-12:00
••r,.,, . -: .Cioelcl Monday
·~ ·~,_ ~~
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(Continued from Page 4)
and the Indiana reser:.es outsCOred
the Magic's beckup pta~ers4t - 18.
Orlando rallied ralhed from an
eight-point deficit to tie the game
94-94 on Dennis Scott's threepointer with 6:05 to play . But
Miller convened a three-point play
afrer driving the lane lind the Magic
di_dq' t catch up again.
Hornets 95, Cavaliers 93
Alonzo Mourning ' s 10-foot
jumper at the buzzer gave Charlotle
a victory at home over Cleveland
and snapped the Hornets' five game tosmg soreak.
The Cavaliers battled back in
the final 1:19 on consecutive three·
pointers by Mark Price, tying the
game twice. After a Hornets timeout with 10 seconds remaining,
Larry Johnson found Mourning
open on the baseline.
Johnson, averaging 7.0 points in
his previous four games, bro!'C out

Phooni1.1lDtllu,8 :3Up.m.

s. .......y

OrlaM.o at Portland, 8 p..tn.
L.A. Clippm at S.cnmemo, 9 p.m.
Golden ~late at L.A. Lake:ts, 10 p.m.

S..day, ""' 11
Buffalo at Philadelphia, I p.m.

CUcaao at Tampi :bay, I pm.

aNCfNNA11ll New ErJ&amp;land, 1 p.m.
a..EVELAND at llouJton, 1 p.m.
lndianapclli at N.Y. Gi.anb, 1 p.m
L.A. kam111 New Odcans. 1 p.m.
Dallu at Min.netcKa, 4 p.m.
K.Mu City 11 Denva, 4 p.m.
Detroit at Phoelli:l:, 4 p.m.
Seattle tt LA. Raiden, 4 p.m.

Major college scores
East
Bostoa Colleae 7S, Syracuse !58
Muuchusetts 90 , Cent . Connecucut
St63
West VitJin.ia 72, Sou th Alabama SS

Green Bay at San Diego, 8 p.m.

South
Alabam1 B~, NW LoWsiana 84
A~o~bum t 13, Troy St 86
Ccntcnuy 115, Wiley 63
Ciwdd 85, ChatleiLOn Soul.hcm 83
Ddawm~ SL 103, BOwie SL. 92
aoo11a Muon 96, Niagara ao
Nonh Camlint 89, Colors do St. 66
St PI::IQ'a 55, Md.·E. Shore 52
Vj.JJPnis 63, Coppin St. 61

Monday, 0... 13
PiuabwJb aL Miami, IJ p.m.

AFC leadeos
Quarlerbllclu
All. Com. YdL TDint.
Mon~ana, K.C .... .ll4 Ill 1408 B 2
EJway,Dat. ........420 263 3ll0 1~ 8

,._yer

&amp;Won. NYL ... l57 222 2171 14 9
O'Donnell, Piu... 339 197 2278 11 5
Kelly, Buf........... J!I.5 216 2546 16 13

"""' SL I 00, M&amp;llh&amp;ll 57
Miehipn SL I 07, E. Tcnnea.ce St. 81
Nebrula 67, Creiabton 53

3.7 21 4
4.0 38 8
4.0 39 10

Rec:tiMn

A"1.LGTD
11 .3 41 5
I U: 41 3
112 72 2

Quarterbaclu
AlLCMI. Yda. TDinL
v...,., S.F ......... 352 243 lOll 22 12
Aikman, o.J........186 191 2267 9 3
Hobct\,A\1. ......... 299 189 2180 19 12
Sirnnw,NYO ...... J07 186 2366 12 9
K.lwv, Clc.·Dal. .191 ll4 1192 8 3
Ruhen

Pla)'tr

No. Ydl. A¥&amp;• LG TO
11.1 S4 9
Rice, S.F.............. .72 1130 15.7 51 13
Rilan, All . ............ 61 9.57 14.3 53 12
ltvin,0.0 .............. 66 1011 15.3 61 '
C. Con«. MU&gt; ..... .62 694 11.2 lS

Basketball

""""'' 69,1\fmofidd (;] (Of)

Alhland Cr,striew ~6, Monroeville 40
Austintown-Fitch S4, Youns. Mooney

42

BamctVille ao. Bridaeport 55

Ball•villc 61, Shenandoah 38
Bcllain151 , EdiJon 47
BeUbroc&amp; 62. Middletown M.dison 43
BclldontMr.61 , Urbma 32
Bclprc69, Rcadtvillc Eancm SO
Benjamin Lopn 6.5, Triad 29
Berlin Center Wcatem Reserve 55 ,
sprinal...oeal 44

Bexley !19, Wa1~· C.H. !15 (On
Bia Walll\11 59. . . VaL 53
Blmche~tcr 52. New ichmond 14
Bowlina Orm146, Millbury Lake 22
Bnd(ord 63, Tri·County N. 33
Bucb)'G 56, Triway 40
Buckeye LLical64~ Un.ion Loca.l 40

Adlnlk DIYislon

Cenlnl Dlvlllon
Allan\1 ................... 13 4 .76~
Charloue .......... ........ 9 9 .500
Chi"ao................! 8 .500
CLEVELAND ......... ? 10 .412
lncliana ...... ...............7 10 Al2
Dcuoit...................!1 11 .313
MiJ.waWI:ee ...... ......... 3 14 .176

GB

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6.5
7
7

4.5
4.5

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l6. Ubcny
Cad11S~. Toronto 29

MERCHANTS'
ASSOCIATION
Would like to join
them in celebrating
the true spirit of
Christmas. You 'II
fmd old fashioned
hospitality, friendly
sales people,
affordable prices,
and a great selection
of Gift Items!
So Celebr~~:te
"Christmas Along
the River" In
DOWNTOWN
. I

•

Mkhtrst Dhillon
W L Pd.

Houlton .. .. .............18

1

.947
.722
.632

,SOCJ
.375

4.5
6
8.5
10.5

, • D.u.. .......... ..... ........ l 11

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the lire IDII ICIDBI llll.nlilllll will IDGW,

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Cin. St. Rita 51, Oh.io Dcllf 30
Cin . Taylor S6, Cin. Finneytown 43
Cin. Tu:pln S-4 , Cin . Taft 44
Cin. Unu lli1 e 48, Seton 46
Cin. Wes1cm Hill• 50, Cin. WiWow
Cin. Woodward 70, Cin. Amelia 53
Cin. W)'Ofllins 83, On. Indian Hid 20
Cin':leville58, Amandt·Ciutercdt S4
ClearFo.lk 48, Loudcn¥ille43 ·
Col. Acad11my 69, Man~natha Chr. 27
Col. Brigg• 65, MariM Frt~nlr.lin 29
Co l. ·Brookhaven 66 , Col. Linden·

"'Kin!"'

31
Col. lndc:pr.:ndenee
66, W1ln ut Ridge
Cal. South 66, Col. West 40
Coldwater 6.5, New Branen 46
Collin• Weue rn Rue rvc 47, New
Lond(ft 38

48

Cononon V• J. 48, Sk)'Y\IC 41

Ct~~hocton 44, Meadowbrook 40

Ccwlnfcm 62, Miailsinawa Val. S4
Cratvicw 59, Columbian.~ 36
Cuylhoz• Falls 44, Nordon i1 33
Cuylhoaa Val. Chr. 45, Moau!orc 43
Danbury Mi, Tol. Woodward .55
DUI¥ille61 , Cent.crburg 41
Day. C.rliJle 39, Day . Oakwood 38
Day. Curoll35, Frsnklin 33
lkwm: fiO, Cambri.djC 25
E. cantan 44, Flirle~• 32
E. U~J 73, Steubenville Cath. 36
E. P.U.WIO SO ,Locloni.o 26

CARRIERS NEEDED

I~

94 100
68 SS

331112 98
32 92 83
30 r7 79

28 100 90
Tl I 00 96
20
15

Ctntral DIYillon
Tum
W L T l'tl.
Torvntet ............. 19 7 4 42
Da.llu ................ l5 10 6
36
St. I..ouil .......... 14 9 5
J3
Detroit ............ 14 12 2 30
Winnipeg .......... 12 1.5 4 28
Chicago ............ l2IO 3 27

83 104
87 142

GF GA
113 84
113 103
92 90
122 101
\07 121
82 70

17
16
II
10

1
13
14
15

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0

S
2
918 2
S 20 5

39 Ill 86
32 94 89
T1 73 88
22 104 117 .

20
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80 110

Thursday's scores

V&amp;ncou'ler 3, 8a1t011 2 (OT)
Qucboc 3, New Jcney 2

lion in revenues ror the province

WuhinJtOn 4, Aillad el ~• 2
Detroit 3, St Louia 2
Oallu 6, Ouaw1 1

last year.

Friday's ~:ames

get overlooked, 1:ll just Jet thai t11te

care or itself,'' he said. "J can only
woory about what I can control on
the foeld."

. Williams credits his ICinllllllleS
with helpil)g inflate his IIMi•lica.
"We' re communicatins a lo1
better w i tb one another back
there,': he said. " I can improve,
JUSt woth m~ reads and setting a
good lmlk "' the ball."
~Rod Jones, the moa
experienced member of the Bengals' secondarY. with eight NFL
seasons, said Wolllams can become
one of the league's best defenders.
"I'd rate him with the best
safeties OUl there '' said JODCI. ''As
he gets more ;;;! IIICR experience,
with the talent that he has, he' s
going to be a good one.''

GAHS,Me/gs
girls sp_llt DH;
-Sports briefs-- North Gall/a boys
College rootball
sweep Southern
HOUSTON (AP) - Auburn

fran-

PadRe DIYblon
Calgary .............
VtncouYU ........
San JCIIC ............
l..ol Anplca ......
Anahcrim ...........
Edmonlal .........

Gattia Academy and the host
Meigs Marauders split a junior
high girls' basketblll doubleheader
Thursday night in MiddlepOrt.
The eighth-grade Blue Angels
(3·1) won 46-27 in part behind
Melissa Elliott's game-hiJh 14
points and April Donnally s 10.
Roach (no first name known) led
Meigs with 10.
The preceding seventh-grade
Marauders won 40-26 . Alisha
Rojas led the Angels (2-2) with 11
poonts despite suffering a sprained
left ankle that didn't keep her out
of the game . Teammate Angela
Warren had seven. No Meigs scorers were liSied.
Both GAHS teams will host
Athens on Thursday, Dec. 16
Pirates win pair
At Racine, North Gallia 's junior
high boys' basketball teams SWept
Southern.
The eighth-grade game saw the
Pirates win 52-28 in part behind
Nathan Stanley ' s game-high 20
poinrs and Nick Rocchi's II. M.
Ash (no first name known) paced
the Tornadoes with six.
The preceding seventh-grade
game saw the Pirates win 38-34.
Joey James led North with IS
points. Teammate Ben Haney had
eight. No Southern scorers were
listed
The Pirates wilt host Eastern on
Monday . Dec. 13.

:
:
_
•
:
'

.

·

Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will start having Bingo every Friday
Doors open at S:OO p.m.
.
Bingo starts at 7:00 p.m.
Except December 24th Lie. #0 128-48

~ry 11 ~~G, 7:3;r,.m.

flocida It w.....,., · ~ ,p.m.

Saturday's games
San Jo.e II Detroit, I :0.5 p.m.
Oricaaual Ba.ton, 7:0!1 p.m.
Philadelphia 11 N.Y. lllandcn. 7: 05
p.m.
Bldfalo 11 HU\ford, 7:35p.m.
Otuw1 at'Qucbcc, 7:3!1 p.m.
Edmomon 1\ New Jenr.:y, 7:35 p. m.
PiruburJh n Tampa Bay, 7 :35p.m.
Was~ 11 McmuuJ. 8:05 p.m.
Calguy at Toronm, 8:05 p.m.
St. LouiJ at U. Angela~ . 10:35 p.m.

Sunday's games
, Hanford at 801ton,7 :05 p.m.

Edmonton al Pltilld~ 7:05 p.m.

florido ot O.U...

I OS p.m.

Taronto 11 Winnipq;, 8:05 P·ft)r
Sm }~at 0Uca&amp;_
O. 8:3!1 p.m.
St. Louisa! Anahe:itn. 10:0!5 p..tn.

Transactions

Sprinpon:! S6, Hamihtll'l R.au 54
St. Claitlville57, Claymont42
St. Henry .55, New Knoxville41
St. M.uys69,Kenton42
Stow 49, Kent RooiCYCb 40
SINthen 60, Youna. Qaney 24
Strykc.r 77. Pettin1Ue 60
Swmloo 4l Montpc:liCI' 39
Sylvania Northvir.:w 47 , Orqon Cla y

Baseball
Amerlcln IMpe
NEW YORK YANKEES : Traded
Spika Owcm, 1haN&amp;Op, and 1n undilcloced
amount or cuh 'P lha Califomil Anael.l
for Jose Muas, pildter.
SEATTLE MARINERS : Agreed ~o
tennl with R•ndy Johnlon, piu:hr.:r1 on a

•

Setuthv iew 66, Anlhetny

fow-·yeu contntet.

1

NaU0111I Luaue
CINCINNATI REDS : Announced that
Donny Scou will return 11 mana&amp;er of
Billing• of lhe Pioneer League. Named
Billy Muwell trainer of Bi.llinp.
COLORADO ROCKmS : A1reed \o
temts with Hcnn Winninabam. outfielder .
on a minor-lelgu.e contract.

Bu\.ler4S

Troy 55 . Piquo 53 (01)
Twcanwas VaL 62. Akron Cove.ntry

Auto, air, amlfm stereo, rear defogger. Looka &amp; runa
great.

Football

lO
Tuslaw 56, Saru:ly Val. 30
UniOlO 65, We.tf&amp;l.l 38
Upper Sdlllll Val. 71 , BluC'ftc~~ 3S
Valley View 64, Dixie D
Vincent W1rren 43, Maricua 38
V\nlon Co. .52, Racine Southe:m S I
W. Liberty St!em H . GnJwn 31
W. Union48, Manc:hcater 17
Warren Kennedy 57, M1plewood 21
Wa'lledy .5,, NonhwM 51

Cin . Re~ding 49, Cin. Madeira 43
Cin. Roger Bacon 6!1, Cin . St. Unul11

IN POMEROY AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
INFORMATION

• ••

r . : , •.

CLEVELANDat~ao.l:30p.m .

Cin. Deer Puk S1, Loveland 38
Cin. Glen Bate 67, Cin. Anderson 58
Cin. Harrison 47 , Cin . Winton Woods

124 117
14 91
7.5 84

WESTERN CONFERENCE

W.yne 17
Teart Val. 73, Bloorn·Cmoll 36
Tecumleh ~3 , Kenton Ridp 43
TIMtl 59, Continmta14~
Tol. Otristiln 62, Ottawa Hill1 23
Tel. Scctt49, Tol.. Emanuel Bapt.46
Tol. Whltmc.r 73, F01l0ril 56
Tro~wetod · Madiaon 54, Vandali a-

Chippewa 81 , W. SaJem NonhwQLcm

_.

992-2156

r.

Saturday's games

NewlaseyatCharlotte, 7:30p.m,
~
lncli•n• at Now Yorlc, 7 :30p.m.
Atl1nt1 v•. Wuhinaton. at Baltimore,
7;30 p.m.
\
Bot:Uin at Miami, 7:30p.m.
f
Da&amp;roltat Minnelou,l p.m.

ASK ·FOR'4Dave' or Bob

l.r.: .•.

12

ll New Ieney, 7:30p.m.
SammenlO at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Bolton at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee 11 Dettai.1., I p.m.
L.A . Clippen at Minna~ou., 8 p.m.
tJllh at Denver, 9 p.m.
L.A. Laken at Ponland, 10:30 p.m,

ADV£RTISING

~

51

t

S~ J nn i a

42

8.5
9.5

0UC&amp;JO

I

THE
DAILY SENTJ-NEL
'•!~:""'

3
6.5
1

Toalabl's games

Wish all your customers and ·
friends a very Merry Christmcts
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 23rd
•

••.

941
.800
556
.529
9 .431
II .389
13 .235

26

Cin. Lalu:u 57, Cin ..Princeton 5 I
Cin. Mariemant62. Cin. cAPE 39
Cin . McNi~;ho1u SO, Cin . Purecll
Marian 25
Cin. N. College Hill 54, Ba \lvia 48
Cin. Nunhwa ~ 59, Cin. Hu&amp;ha 38
Cin. Oat Hills 59, Cin. Muunt Healthy

. Tbunday's scores

•••Oil

'•

1
3
8
8

Olulouc95, a.EVEI.AND 93
Acllnta I 05, Stn Amonio 9.5
lndlana 111, Orlando I~
S01We 12S. Dal1u 93
llouatcn Ill. MiAmi 109 (Oil
Phot!nilt 114. w..tun~ 9.5
New YOlk 94. Golden Slate 81
'

- . . . •bi•b" to yaa, ~ •lay frlads, Dill aad a,., .:
. . . . ldlld
we'l ·llwatl .....,._ Dolag
:
· basla• wllb yaa II oar peaiBII.)IIeuara!
·

.::·...

40

Paclnc Dl¥blon
.. ........... 16

Se.ule ...

PhoaUs. .................. J2
l'ln1land ................ 10
Ooldon s.... "........ ..9
L.A.Ci- ...........7
LA. Lakrn ..............7
Sact~mento ..............4

eae•p..... WII'DIUI •11 .. . . ,.._., u we ch• .... lll• .·
111•••••-t ··~·· sllai'BII QIJI ,-.,..... ror •••·•• :

~ ~: .

Gl

Ullh ......... .............. l3 5
San AnLOnio ...........12 7
Dal¥01' ""'"'"'" ,,.,,.,8 8
Miruw.da ................6 10

' •

.

POMEROY

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Botton .............. 13 9 6
Momreal ........... ll II 4
Buffalo... ........... J3 13 2
Qu.................. II 12 5
Hartford ............ 9 17 2
OU..wa .............. 6 20 3

NonbWCIIem 42

Cllr. ll

GF GA
101 73
fJ7 72

Norlhtlllt Dlvlllon

PittlbutJ.h ......... JJ 8 7

New Bosto n 65, Portsmo u ~h Not re
Dame37
New Miami 47, Cin. Landmatk 32
Nmhridge41, PmblcShawnee45
Norwaync 73, Riuman 39
Olnlno ~6. lhicl&lt;t7
Ot&amp;lwa.Ulmdcd' 65, Celina 61
Patridl Hcruy so. Dal.l.ll 44
Pemberville Eastwood 55, Elmwood
woodmon!! 42
Peny1WJ 41 , Maumee 34
Pleawn49, Cardin&amp;\Oft 2S
Paland .55, Un.uline 43
Parumooth 41, COil] ~e 3S
Rav«u~a47, Bubenon 46 (20'1')
Ridged•le 63, ......... 31
Riven:ide 70, Indian Lake 36
Rotdetrd 67, Holland SpJina. 52
Ruuia 55, Hwat.on 40
s. con~ru 66. Plymoulh 49
S. Chule~ton SE 47,Gncneview 31
Salem 7.5, Be~vu Local J3
Shadyside 47, Swubcnvillo 46
Sidney 48, W. Curolllon 24
Smi1.hville SO, Waynedtle 39
Sprina. Nonheutem 49, Gnenon 32
Spring. Shawnee 51 , Spring .

Cin. Colerain 66, Cin. AU.Cil lS
Cin. Country O,y 79, Cin. Seven Hills

10

EASTERN CONFERENCE

lO

Canton GimOak IS , Union town Lake

. 50

w....,.......Ma:::J:'

con

46
41

Willet-Hill 31, P .
34
Woao~ 61, Cllt. IS, Nooloridp
l'en&gt; ~~
·39

AdudcDhldolli
Tu111
W L T Pta.
N.Y. Rqas .... 20 6 3 43
Ncw1cne:y ....... J6 14
36
Philadelphia ...... 17 12 I
35
Walhinpn ...... 12 1-4 2
26
florid~ .............. 11 14 3
2:5
N.Y. Jdandcn ... 9 1S 3 21
Tamptl Bay ....... 9 17 ~
20

" When Rice starts dro}'ping
balls, or not carching ones he s nor·
mally 'oing 10 make, that's somethin¥,.' Lynn said.
' You can see it very vividly on
the tape, where the ball 's coming
and Rice is kind of looking like.
"Where_the heck is Darryl going to
hit me from?' He even had one
bounce off his helmet That doesn ' t
happen very often."
Rice had four catches for 82
Y11fdS against the Bengals but his
only big strike was a 43-yarder 10
stan the game.
"Darryl didn' t play those fi rst
two passe s the other night too
well," said Lynn . " Buo once he
saw the angles, he made adjust·
ments . From that point on , the y
didn' t get nearly the same things."
Williams, who calls the sec ondary 's signals, declines to talk
about his potential Pro Bowl status.
"On a 1-11 team , you tend to

coach Terry Bowden won the Bear
Bryant Award as college football' s
coach of the year.
Bowden, 37, beat out his father,
Florida State coach Bobby Bowden, and two other finalists, John
Cooper of Ohio State and Bill Snyder of Kansas Stare.
Auburn was placed on NCAA
probation for violations that
occurred before Bowden's arrival,
but went 11-0 in his first season
after going 5-5· 1 in 1992 . The
Tigers aren't eligible for postsea·
son play because of the probation.
Pro basketball
TORONTO (AP)- Ontario's
sports betting lottery could endanger Toronto's NBA expansion franchise, the league's deputy commissioner said.
"We've made it clear we
wouldn't put a franchise in Toronto
under the current situation," Russell Granik said. "I think right now
we have a serious issue."
When the NBA granted the
chise five weeks ago to a group
headed by 33-year-old restaurareur
John Bitove Jr., the league attached
a number of conditions pertaining
to minimum ticket sates and luxury
box sales and the elimination of
NBA games from the Pro line lottery, a popular Ontario betting
operation that generated $210 mil·

Wbeelcnbuta 4t, LucaM.lle Val. 44

LoJan !IS,'Athc:n~
Logan £1m 64, Hamilton Twp. ~8
London 44, J(ftathan Alder 34
Luca1 Ml, E. Kno1 26
M1diJ:on Plain• 61, Yellow Sprina• 44
MaJYem41, Tuscat~wu Calh. 34
Ml:nsfield St. Peters !IJ, Fredcridr.tetwn

Caldwell76, Woodlf"add 32
C.mpboll611, Hllbbord 53
Cw.l Winchea~cr 60, Fairfield Union

30

THEPO~ROY

22

Akron Buchtel 68, Akron Garfield 35
AkJOtl Cau·Hower 63, Fuatonc 35
Ak.ron Ellet. 60. Ai..roo K~ 23
Akron EJrna 4~. Medin• FB 32
Aluon N. Sl, A1oon E. 50
Allen E. 3%; lldplloo lolf&lt;n0n 46
Alliance .56. Camon Timken 30
Arcaa&amp;am 53, Twin ValleyS . 48
Archbold 5.7,l..ibcrtf Center 43

Bellaite. St. Jahnl4~
Bret.wn 66, Clermetnt

NMhe~~um44

MatheW1 63, Lowellville 48
McOon•ld .56, S. Range 38
Men::y 69, C~n . McAuley 62
Miamilburg 72,. Lemon· Monroe Jl
Mil•n Edilon 71, Clyde 68
Minen.\ Ridge 51, hekson Millon 48
Minford 68, Oak. Hilll 54
Mount Gilead 42, Nonhrnor 34
Nelsonville· Yodt S5, Hemlock Mill er

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Adert~50. Piketon

WelllvWe~ .

Wenern

M•pleton 58, Norwalk St. P•ul48
MUJIJ'e(tl 81, Sandwky Perkisu 34
M•non River Val64, Elain 62
Mulingtoo 58, Carroll\.on 55
Muon 46, WilmingLal 2.5
Mulillon JIC.kson 67, N. Ca.nwn 60
Musillcn Washington 60, Loui svi lle

W)'('ll'lins 87, Colorado 79

Berlin Hiland 53, Suub~ 20
Berne Un im !16. F11hct Cath. 46
8-90, WilliunobwJ 58

Tum
W L Pd.
Naw Ycllk .............. 12 4 .7!10
Orlando .................... 9
7 .!163
801\GI.................... IO 8 .!156
Mlomi ......................6 9 .400
Nqw Jcncy ............. .6 II .3!13
Wuhint,10r1 ... ...........6 12 .333
· PhiJadefpftil ... .. ....... .5 II .313

37

Montan1 63, W. Montana .54

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Twn

...

Williams is coming off a season-high 13 tackles at San Francisco last Sunday, when he made his
presence known to Jerry Rice, the
49crs All-Pro receiver.

.58 Soebrin 40

LUbon

Pus« Sound 79, E. Wuhington 7B

NBA standings

''

be...

Aquinu42

Far West

Yell. lA'1.LOTD
II U
4.6 42 3
910 !I.J 62 1
196 4.5 39 9
194 4.0 29 I
891 4.8 41 4

Sharpe. 0 .8 .......... 86 9!51

Edition
Tbartday,

CINCINNATI (AP) - Despite
their 1-11 record, the Cincinnati
Bengals think they have a player
who is havin~ a Pro Bowl year.
Darryf Wotliants, a second-year
free safety. is getting a repulation
as a big hotter. He leads the Bengals
in tackles (90) and ~ defensed
(10), lind is tied for the team lead in
interceptions (2).
·
" He 's cenainly playjng well
enou~h to be worthy of Pro Bowl
consoderation, " said defensive
coordinator Ron Lynn. "Were it
any kind of year for this team, I'm
sure he'd be a lot bigger factor in
that balloting than what he mighL

Elid1 7!1, Wapakmm44
Elmwood 51, Dllcao 38
failbanU 6l, Macbanie~burg 37
FaycM47,Edon41
Fodenl Hockina43, Meigs 41
Fon Feye S6, Fraruir.:r 43
Fort ReMVeey !18, Min1ter 18
Franklin Mcruoc 49, Tri· Vi.lllge 38
Fmnont Roa 66, Napoleon 36
Fmnont SL J01r.:ph 54, Seneca E. 43
Gallipolil95, Jaebm 28
Genoa 6) , Northwood 47
Gmrpown 6S, Latham We&amp;tcm 42
Girard 56, Niles 44
Qooh.,49,King•l0
Gran dview 38, W. Jdfenon 29
Granvil le 80, lidtins, H\1. 36
Gn:enville 54. Northmont 46
Hamillon Badin 73, Cin. M\. Nmrc:
Dame 37
He~lh68, New Albany22
Hilltop63, N. Ccntnl27
H~~~m 54, Vennilicn 4~
Jewcu-Scio 8S, NewcanCllllown 59
Llbrae6S , Willdhun 52 .
LUdJnd 56, Ridaewood 17
I..akcwood 55, J~wn 21
Liben.y Union 70, Millenpon. 35
Lima Bath 74 , Detiance 51
l.Jma Shlwnee 61, Van Wer. 31

Arilttla 88, Ulah 81

,

Receiver~

Greetlnc

Belpre
(16-17-23-13=69)
Kim Arnold 2·0-0=4, Nikki 1·0·
0=2, Jamie Colebanks 16-0-0=32,
Kath y Coyneil 4-0-8=13?, Angie
Haynes t-0-1=3,Erin Humphrey 20-0=6?, Julie Newberry 1-0·1=3,
Kristy Rhodes 2-0-0=4, Angie
Rouse 0-0-2=2. Totals: 30-09113=69

Nonh Teus76. Nevadl5 3
~~ St 89, Texu Christian 67
Texu·Arling1.0n 90, Angelo St. 83
Teui·San Antonio 88, Teus A&amp;.MKinssvillc 66

13.4 66 4
118 63 4
11 .6 66 6

Pll)'tr

Cbrlatma•

(Continued from Page 4)
sica Karr. t -0-2=4, Jessica Radford
0-0-2=2. Melissa Guess 0-0-1=1.
Rebecca Evans 1·0-0=2. Totals :
16-0·18/31=S0

Southwest

NFC leadert

. Pla)'er
Alt.
S.ndcn, Dd . ......243
E. Smilh,Dal...... l91
W•ucn. S.F........ I97
Pq:rarn, All........224
BeaU, R&amp;m~ ....... ll7

Belpre wins ...

Bulla 80, Dlinois SL !12
E.lllinoil 17, Elmhuta 64
lll.·Oiicaao96, NE minois 78

P1ayer
Att. YdJ. Ava.LGTD
Thoma, Bu£....... 270 1061
3.9 'I1 4
C. Wamn, Sea... :W 831 3. 7 20 5

·

of a slump with 26 points and 16
rebounds, while Mourning finished
with 23 points. Price led all scorers
with 28.

Midwest '

........

R~N.E.... ... lll 787
Fctter; Piu.. ....... , 117 71l
Allen. K.C .......... l67 664

'

Sunday's games

N.'y , Jeta at WllhinRton, 12:30 p.m.
SMI "PnnciAco at Atilml&amp;, 4 p.m.

Yell.
836
738
793
A. ~er. S.D....... ~7 763
Shupo. 0.. ....... ..51 730
Jeffitel, Hou. ........!17 664

Darryl Williams bright spot for Bengals

Se.ule at Houatan, I :JO p.m.
DcnYCr at San Aru.crio. 8:30p.m.
Philldclphi.lat Milwaukee, 9 p.m
Utah 11 Golden Sw~e, 10:30 p.m.

Coming NFL attractions

Pla)'er
No.
Slaughter, Hou .. ..74
Bllda:, SCII ...........64
Lan&amp;ttomc,lnd .....60

The Dally SenUnel Pagt 5

Scoreboard

Football

·. '·:=-

.-

)

f

'

Seatde coach George Karl went
to a small lineup early in the second quarter, and the Sonics' defensive pressure forced nine turnovers
in the period. Seaute converted 15
of20 shots in the quarter.
Kendall Gill finished with 23
points, Gary Payion 22 and Ricky
Pierce 20 for the Sonics. All. three
players scored eight in the pivotal
second quarter.
·
:
The Mavericks got 20 points
each from Derek Harper and Jim
Jackson, but Jamal Mashburn, th~
team's No. 1 draft choice and loJI
·scorer, went 1-for-9 from the field
and finished with two points.
.
Dominique Wilkins scored 23
points and Aodrew Lang a season:
high 20, but it was the Hawks'
improved defense that carried them
10 victory.
.
.
Stacey Augmon scored 19
points, Mookie Blaylock had 17points and nine assists and Kevin
WilliS' 18 points and 17 rebound~
for Atlanta. David Robirtson had 26
points and t 2 rebounds for the
Spurs.
.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
.Charlotte 95, Cleveland 93; lndiarui
Ill, Orlando 105; Phoenix 114;
Washington 95; and New Yml&lt; 94 1
Golden Slate 81.
:
Knicks 94, Warriors 81
•
New York improved its road
record to 7-2, holding Golden State
to37J)ercentshooling.
;
John Starks scored 27 point~
and Patrick Ewing had 20 point!
and 17 rebounds for the KniclcS
despite missinj! six minutes in ihe
first period woth a hyperextended
left knee.
:
New York took its biggest lead
of the game, 88-75, on a basket b~
Ewing with 5:48 remaining in ~
(See NBA on Pa1e 5)
' ·

t:~~~; ~~n :~:~~~i~ ~~"'~p.~·'*"'"'""""*'f','14Wf.-"'-P'""*"''If*"'lr*WfJI)I; ,lrf~

fierNew members are Cleveland . . :·'. .:
State, N&lt;Xthem Dlinois, Wisconsin- ·
Green Bay, Wisconsin-Milwsukee,
Wright State and lllinois-Chicago.
Besides Xavier, LaSalle and
Notre Dame, the current MCC
members are Butler, Oelroit Mercy,
Evansville and Loyola, Ill.
Evansville is leaving at the end of
this year to join the Missouri Vatley Conference. ·
The swill:h leaves the Mid-Continent Conference with Valperaiso,
Youngstown State, Eastern Dlinois
and Western Illinois.

games.:.

;game. The Knicks didn 't score
!88a!n for more than four minu1es,
:but 1/10 Warriors got only as close
,as seven poonts.
, Latrelt Sprewell ted Golden
:State with 22 points.
Su111 114, Bullets 95
Charles Barldey scored 15 of his
~ 22 points as Phoenix opened a 36: 15 lead over WashinJIC!n after the
;font quarter, and Kevm Johnson set
:a team record with 10 steals.
: Johnson also halj 17 poinrs and
; 13 assists. He broke a mark of nine
steals that Johnny High set against
1the Bullets on Jan. 28. 1981.
; Calbert Chemey 's 17 led th e
Bullets.
'
Pacers 111, Magic lOS
_; Indiana used depth to offset a
.career-high 49 points by Orlando's
;Shaquille O'Neal.
: Reggie Miller led eight Pacers
·in double figures with 23 points,

Friday, December 10,

Federal Hocking
:edges Meigs 43-41
By DAVE HARRIS
Seadnel Correspondent
Federal Hocking outscored
. Meigs 13-11 in the fourth period to
break a 30-all tie and went on to
'defeat the Marauders 43-41 in
·girls ' TVC action Thursday
evening at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The early season grind seemed
to take its toll on the Maraudels (3·
I), who were playing their fourth
game in seven days and seemed to
be tired down the sueu:h. In addition, several Marauders are suffer·
ing from the flu.
The Marauders jumped out to a
9-6 lead after the forst period
behind Vanessa Compston's five
.forst-period noarl&lt;ers. Federal Hock.ing (3-0) took its forst lead of the
night at the 44 second mark of the
first half when Alison Pierson
scored in the paint, giving the
Lancers a 18-17 advantage.
. But Compston hit a long three
pointer and was fouled in the pro·cess, Vanessa hit the free throw
with 23 seconds left and the
Marauders went into the locker
room with a 21-18 lead. Compston
scored 16 forst half points to lead
Meigs.
·
Federal Hock.ing regained the
lead with 3:38 left in the third
.when Tracy Bentley seared off a
steal giving the Lady Lancers a 2827 lead. Meigs was unable to
regain the lead, although they were
able to lie the game twice, at 30 at
the end of the third period and at 32
early in the fourth.
Pierson led a balanced scoring
·attaCkfor Federal HockiJ)g with 10:
No other Federal Hocking statistics
were available.
Compston led Meigs with 23

~N8A

Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

Nallunal Foatblll l..oJue
NFL : Named Georae Young , New
Yori Oimuaenerd manap , and Don
Shula, Misml DoJphln• eoach, eachairmCP o( lhe Competition Committee.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Si1ned
Bruce PickeN, de!cnsi'lle btlc:k.
NEW ORIA\NS SAINTS: Re-signed
Tamrnil: Sowm , qbt cn4.

SAlE PRICED

s4,495

r~:;~;;:l:::~:e:~~r::~-:~,

.
I

-

6undav fmm 1 - 5 pm·

(1i

.I
·

*ln~els

Carpel *Acquisitions Fine Jewelry *Ingels
. . •·urnllure and Jewelry • Johnsons Variety Stnre *The Shne
Place/Locker 219 (lil4) *Mill Street Books *Trolley Station
·.
Crulls *Middleport Department Store *l&gt;ulry Queen
*Radio Shack *D.ans •nahr Clothiers

. ·.

..

. .6UPPOQTYOUQL()Ct\L MEQCI1fiN'_I'6 .

= .... ="" ""'"""'-"'-""'·="" . . . .

d
*i
;j

l*f

cl

V-8, Auto, atr power seat, power windows, power
locks, tilt, curise, leather seats. Sharp l Save Big

~

SAlE PRICE s4,998

.I«;·
.=~&lt;••·=""'·
~
~~~
" .
.
. ' =""'""'"""
'

·.

CHRISTMAS TREES
'19°0 or

2 FOR s35

QUALITY USED CARS

c~'·

sri

.

BRING A FRIEND AND SAVE!
Poinsettias, Bulk Candy, Crafts,
Amish Jelly, 'Candy ~ Jelly Gifts.

HANDMADE BASKETS

1988 Chevrolet Spectram ............................... 51,995
1991 Chevrolet Corsica .................................. 56,995
1988 Pontiac Grand Am ................................. 54,495
1986 Pontiac Grand Am ................................. s3,495
1992 Pontiac Sunhlrd- 4 Dr.............................18,495
1993 Bnkk Skylark 4 Dr..............................5 11,495
1993 Pontiac GI'CIId Prix 4 Dr....- ................113,495

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
31/2 miles past Southern High School
St. Rt. 124, Racine, Oh.
614·949·2682.

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

.

Friday, December 10, .1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,.

.'
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III·SIAn 1·9
lCAIIMY

'

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t

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TUPPERS PLAINS
Bale oblldiHM,
t.w enforcement,
penonal proWctlon,
kennel ..,Joe, pupe Jr
young doge tor ule.
llo11Wollor ......,.,..
llud ........
By lfllll. only

I

Apostol1c

Church of Christ

Cburdo of J..., Chrltt Apostolic
VanZindr and Ward Rd.

Pomeroy Cliureh of Christ

Pomeroy Westside C hurch of C hrlsl
33226 Chihlrcn's I lome Rd .

Sunday School -

Baptist
Hope Bllpllst Church (Southern)

ll~t . m .

Sunday S~ h ool · \1:30 a.m.

~

Sunday sc hool - 9:45 lil.m.
Worship - II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCe • 7 p.m.

Wednesday St.:rvJccs - 7 p .m .

j

'

IJcarwaUow Ridge Ch ur~ h of Chrisl
Pastor: Jack Colcgro"c

F1rst Baptist Church

f

6th and Palmer St , Middl cpon

.

Pastor. Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School - 9: 15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B. Y.· BO p.m.
: Lord's Supper 1st Sunday of every mo nlh.
~
WednesrJay Scrvice-7 :00 ft.m.
R•clne First Baptist
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Youi.h Pas1or: Aaron Young
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

,

i

llnadford Ch ur~h or Chris t
Comer of S1. RL 124 &amp; llradbury Rd.
Evangeli st Derek Slump
Youttl Minister: Mark NOlter
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a.m., !0:3 0a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30 p.m.

Sll'o'rr Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School - lOa.m.

•

Hickory HIlls Church of Christ
Pastor: Joseph R. Hosk ll\s
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wors hip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sc!"o' iccs · 7 p.m.

Worship - 11a.m. , 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m

MI. Union O.ptlst
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
SW1day School-9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces · 6:30p.m.

•

'

Bethlehem Ba pti st
Pastor: Rev. Ea rl Shuler
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m.
Thunday Servi ~s - 7:30p.m.

''

•,
~

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
2860) SL R~ . 7, Midd!cpyrt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening ·7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30

!

Hillside Baptist Church

Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sundar School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Wonhip - 11 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

· Wonhip ·II a.m.

.......-

Salem Sr.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Tay l o~
Sunday School · IO.a.m.

Evcnin&amp; • 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Catholic
Heart Calholk Church
161 Mulbeny Ave., Paneroy, 992-5898
Sacrod

Pa1tor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

; s..r. Coo. U5 -HSp.m.; Ma;,.. 5,30 p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8,45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mau · 9,30 a.m.
Dailey Man · R:30 a.m.

i.

Church or God

or Prophecy

OJ. Whire Rd. off Sr. RL 160
Pastor: Pal Henson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedncsd•y Services · 7

r-m.

New Life Church of God
Otester
PaStor: Gary Hines

Main &amp; PH\.h St.
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wontlip · 9 3_
,m.
Tuesday Services - '1 p.m.
D~thel

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worshlp · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.

Co. Rd. 63

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev: Phillip Scarberry
Worshtp - 9 :3'0 a.m.
1st &amp; 3rd Sunday ·7:10p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOrship,- ~0:3 0a.m. ,

Wedne,day Services - 7:30p.m.

R11.elnc First Church or lhe Naurene
Pastor: Mark Skaggs

Sunday School · 9,30 a.m.

Worship - l0:30~~o. m. ,6 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

PaslOr: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Asbury (Syncust)
Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship · II a.m,
Wednesday Service! - 1:30 p.m.
•

Reedsville F~llowshlp
Chureh of the Nazarene
Pastor: John W. Douglas

Enterprise

Worship· 10,45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Flatwoods

Syrucu5e Church uf lht.! N:w.rcne

Wcdnc!day Services . 7 p.m.
Pastor: Rev. Rick SlUrgill
Sunday School - 9: 30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WcdnCsdRy Services · 7 ft.m.

Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m .

Account of
, Executor
VIolet H.

.

"~
•
•

1

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l

)

•

!••
••
•

Mt. Olive Community Church

United Brethren

''

,,

I

Mt. Hermon United Brethren ·

Fu II Gospel Lighthouse

In 'Christ Chun::h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert S1mdcrs
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhi p - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p. m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

I

••
•

••

Eden United Hr(... hren In Chrl!.1
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on Sutc Rou1c 124
Pastor: ReV. Robert Markley
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices - 7:30p.m.

'

•''•
I
I

''

•'

''
'I'

Nease Scttlenicnt Church
Sunday Wors~ip · 2:30p.m.;
Thursday servtces - 7:30p.m.

Clrd Of T11111k1

northoaoterly direction
lhlrty olx (38) aoroo, mora or
IIOL

01012,03-01013 and 03·
01014.
Said real eotato lo oubjel:t
to accruld real ootall tun
lor 11193.
Real Eatato ApprollldiAT:
$16,000.00. The real Millo
cannot 1M oold lor looo than
two-thlrdo tho appralood
value.

We would like to
thank the Racine and
Syrecu1e Emergency
Squedl, deputlea of
the Melg1 County
Sheriff'• Dept., Dr.
Hunter, end Ewing
Funeral Home for
their Blllltance
during th• loll ol our
apeclal friend, Jeff
Adklna, of Lorain,
Ohio. Thank·You alao
to our ralatlv81 arid
friends who extended
their eympllhy to ue.
We want to eepeclally
thank our cloee
lrlende, Jim and Edna
Abele and Roy Smith.
We know they have
lot1 a epeclal friend,
too.
Dave end Debbie
Parson• &amp; family.

dolovory ol deed.

Jomoo U. Souleby
Shorlll ol Malga Counly
12(10), 12(17J, 12(24) 31c. .

Ads

5

Relttodellng

Stop &amp;Compare
FRE~

ESTIMATES

9154473

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

,...)

11107 Ankl; II+ Ad.
( I I - ol Ul At. U)

Pom.-oy, Ohio
1112-170:1

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
Shruder Mcutt... ... '155
Hom Mount ................'22
Squirrel ...................... '55

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS

~

.

T

31904 i:Mtll!lt
Creek I••
llltl•leport, o••

4/29/t3tr.

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

Specializing In Cuatom
Frame Repair

• TOLL filii
I.JOG-141·0070
DARWIN, 01110

MH2-Ith

CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
j":' .92-787.8
I

Daytona Redll160 end 70 Serl•
•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EICAYAnNG ·

l\\\i(l 5trul

!Boof.s
93 Mill StrMt
Middleport, Ohio 417$0

GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES

I

601 EAST MAIN
f92.f2J9

P01111ror. 011.

Ph. 1112·21 01
Pomeroy

992·2975

BILL OUICKEL

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

~~!~!. l~l

204 Condor St.

Manager

POMERQY, OHI0-992-6677

ROOFING

.'

NEW- REPAIR
Guttera

Downapou&amp;
Gutter Clllllnlng

Pelntlnl

FREE ESTIMAn5

949·2168

, r-roy, Ohio
'GRAVEl. SAND,

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp;. flU

EVERYTHURSDAY

11nwt

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
&amp;:46 p.m.
Special Early Bird

$100 Payoll
Thlud good lor I
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0061-342

century!

J.A.R.
COIISTRUCnOI

Now haa beautWul Cocker Spaniel Pupplet. Aleo

DIRT
Wholeaele

992·3470

&amp; Retail
up!Witllllt
Bob lltolllllln'tlclt In
._.. .NI, OIL
'Wholeaale $10 Itt farm,

HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992.-7878
7nl1 .....

HAULING

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6 : 30 P.•M•

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;. COAL
Reasonablt.Rates
Jo&amp; N, Sayre

SAYRETRUCKING
614-742-2138
3141113 1

112 dellvarocL R-..Jiot
wfU 1M open t LIIL to t
p.m. alar1lng Nov. 24th.
TNMareS'Iol'.
Calll14-7424051

l&amp;l nRE lAIN
33151 Pile ........
.......... 45771
614-992·5344
1-IOCI-714·nRE

e

Come by and register
for lrae 'Ballery to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchaae
required to reglaler and
don~ have to be present
to win.

.. ....... 100 ....

f•y•wtl•ce

mo.

1-IOCI-714·nRE

Mclendon
MORTGAGE COIQ'.un"

•Dozer •Backhoe
tOitcher oOuq~ Truck

--.

Pres~rfPiions

ft2 -ltU

Pomeroy

Hom elite S..lws ·

Crow' s Family Rest our ont
"INIIII•tl&lt;~tlfrig Frl1d CMdtn "
221 W. ·Main ·st., Pomeroy
9CIM432

RA~NGS.COATS

FlstiER
FUNERAL HQME

'SALES &amp; SEIYICE

4192-7075·

172 North ~- An ,
~Wdh•~rt.

Ohit

~

.

I'I.ORI$'

••,.. c•...,. ow., florUI
:112 EAIT MAIN

992•5141 .

264 S"tli 2nd

· ~~

PO.AOY, OHIO 417*'
112 " ' ' ., ....,...

Middleport

214 e. Main
992·5130 Po'm eroy· ·. ,,

r

f

,.

' ' HOME
EWING FUNERAL
··n;l(,lih· nml .'tt'rl'ic·f' .· flt~ ·tru "
Establlshed 1913 · ·

992·2121

Open9to&amp;

'

Autl!llll Pinel,~· tor.
Hartly ~~~~ ......

.......111'1..

Memorial Ho~tal
'" 'U ·2104

.

ldlfM'ant klildt:
Ia alaIt, Whitt Jr

1,.,.

'.. .

.

11,1

Rd., P01n•ort Ohio
W11t1- pd.

P...,~roy

'

sweeper
• Service •

Bag~• Betti

Rainbows, Kirby, Ekctrolux,
HOOVfe, EtaW, Tri.Star,
Regina. .t most Oilier brands!
P81ta Shipped UPS
Faat • Dependable ServiceI

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

NOVEMBER SPECJ4 t
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n............5180
NORINCO UNI. SKL----·---SCJS
1200 ROUNDS NON.CORROSIVE •• 5130
CIU lFTEI 6:00
304-415·7256
111121111 MO.

CHRISTMAS TREES

. BODFORD'S

(304) 882-3336

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

614·992·7643
(No

S.ntlay Celli)

Co-Ownen

$1 0.00 ..Ch

!Mt\,
"'\57 Veterans:'. .
) fs I. Monteriii'Dr.

106 Mullttrry Au.

'

J

Cheryl A. Jlllles
WllUIDl C. J IDles

TREES

'
SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

New Haven W. V. 25265

CHRISTMAS
' 0 , 1 lj• I

now available lor Chriltmu. Salt on our entire llock
ollarge
new lema.
•

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eut at
ID-..tln onto Rl111, go 4 mi. to Mllepoat 13. Turn
South on griiYal I'Otld, 1'h mllet to grave.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'llL DARK

Alarm Systems
Closed Cln:ult TV
Security Clllleru

Call742·2143 or

leaturing a 2 ft. common Black Tequ. Layaway&amp; are

FRESH CUT TREES AYIILABLE
01 CUT' YOUI OWl

Land Clearing. Pondt,
Wiler Lin•, Stp11ca
UcenM l Bonded
Ch.tle Hlllfltld,

,..,..,.u, OH.
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine ~· &amp; Up with
a greal Mltctlon of
largertr....

CALL

6Day'aAWHk

742-2803

FU RNITURE$ HARDWARE

body.

36970 BaR R• Road

Optrlltor

RIDENOUR

I·~==
lrud
dellgn oold
.
!king
polyellar

:•l

304-na-5533

.HowdL Wlittsel

II.IGO

l
SUPPLY

804W. Mai n
9f2·2lll Pomtrov

CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

J. Marcu• Fultz

AGENl

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Columbus, 0..

. 11114) 992· 8867 - 1998-00KBJ

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

PAULEY~

Low, wide 60 and 70 • Bill•
potfonnance pro.._.
Two llrong ,.,.. gl • boltt'

(61~)

.: 7"'1

GUN SHOOT

F-ry Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Stric:tly Enforced

a. ...

DAVIDSON'S

Our Business is Security

P. J.

.......... ao-p'

11,..,.,..,. •• MII

'

U~\a

FURNACES

Corol • Olrvld fllggo
11124111

675-6755==~ ~~~~~·1:iil-83-:iith)i:11 !:====~

Dickie!
You're half a

Emlrganc:y a.mc.

ChooMMCI

POMpi!OY, OHIO

192;7011•

J&gt;o.!neroy; Ohio

'

Reel Estate Glnet'll

Carleton Interdenominational C hurch 1
King•bury Road
Pa~tor: Clyde W. Hendcnon
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evening . 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

(614) 812-7474

••.d

667·6621

·'

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydcnstricker

DAVID ARNOLD

24Hour

cut your tlw.

DIERT

h••

03·

Riggs Tree Farm

·tt2•JISI

co•mucno•

Numbera:

QUALITY WORK
lGOODRATES

.III.UIU&amp;IIOIIU

• Exlthior

1~tftl

fleloronoo Oeld: Volume
334, Pogo 113 and Volume
252, Pego 717, Uolgo loNM¥Homa.
Counly Deed Reoordo.
Tto. above deocrlbld roal
eetat•
bHn •••lgned
tho following Audltor'o

Termi Of Sale: Caah on

•
~

·Sawrday Services:

Wedne1day 7:30p.m.

·•C!"•

..

Mulbeny Hrs. Rd., Pomeroy .,
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

3304S Hiland Road, Pcmc.roy
"
Pastor: Roy Hwller
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.

Plumbing

-FIREWOOD
.BILL SLACK
992·2269
•

CHRISTMAS TREES

tr I

RIHS

FIIElWATER

DMIAQE •
REITORATJOH.;
INSURANCE Cl 'I• .

c-.Jne

PAllS

~IGHT HAULING

Locuat treej lhenae

Parcel

...,

U., ~Ill Mil

Weep eel·'· .In:

614·992·7144

Til••••
ldaOYAl .

Greenware &amp; bisque In stock
SR 7 In Tuppers Plains, Oh

J

~the

"SPEaAL CARE"

ARNOLD'S
PLUMI.IG,
HUnNI&amp;
COGJIIG

Coun,

&amp; 1111 .

PollyAnna Ceramics
25%sele
December 13·16

(Condnuld from Pap 2)
Deed flocord Book 133,
Pap471Aioo tho following
doecrlbod real oolate,
oltuatld In the Townohlp ol
ChM..,., In the Counly ol
Meiae Md the Stele ol Ohio.
In lieclon No. 34, Town No.
i, Ranga No. 12 of the Ohio
Company'•
Purchue.
llogln~lng 12 rode wnt of
the o!lr Pomeroy road In !he
north lin• of uld SeoUon
34, at a Hickory lrM; th-e
-tlhlrty thr• (33) rodo to
a Wild Cherrv-11;•; thence
oouthellt 32
to a

Seve•lh·Day Advendit

Sunday School · 9,30 a.m.
, Wu~hip · 10,45 a.m., BO p.m.

-Final

on

Peraon.
Unluo exception• are
filld thereto, oald accouilll
will 1M lor hearing bolore
111d Court on tho 11th doy
of Jonuory, 1894, ol which
timo oald account&amp;. will bo
conaldered and continued
from daY to doy undl finally
dlopoMdol.
,Any poraon lntaroolld
moy flit wrltlln oxoeptione
to aald account• or to
mottore portalnhlg lo the
exocuUon ol the lnlo~ not
1111 than ftvo daY• prior to
lho dolo 111 lor hearing.
Robert. E. Buck
Judge Common P~

USED RAILROAD nes

Wonhj.
' • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncs .Y Ser.ice - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

25~·

614-667..()()45

Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a. m.
Pa ~tor:

.

Tuesday &amp; Thursday· 7:30p.m.

Middleport Church or the Nazarene

Central Cluster

Pastor: David 03ilcy_
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Wednesday Scrvire - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Tuppers Pl.-Ins St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - iO a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

,Pastor.: Mike Matson
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Wol1hip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - '1 p.m .

Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10,30 a.m.

Sliversvllle Word of fallh

Syracuse F1rst United Presbyterian
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Womup . II a.m., 4 p.m. (lsL &amp; 3RI Sun

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School · 9 :30a.m.

Torth Church

Big Kids &amp; Baby Program
Children becoming big
Brothers &amp; Sisters
·Tues. Dec. 14 6:30 pm
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrative
Conference Room Call
675-4340 ext. 230 to
register.

'

Mlddlepor' Prcsbytcr l11n
Sunday SChooJ.- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Unlttd Faith Church

, ('

•~

Cal'o'ary Pilg_rlm Chapfl'
Harri sonVIUe Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- I 1 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne&amp;day Service ·7:30p.m.

Presbyterian

PaslOr. Lawra~ce Bush
Sunday School .- 9:30a.m.
I!vening • 7 p.m .
Wcdneday Service - 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 1I a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

II!

~~

Harrt!MMivllle Presbyrerlan Cllilrch
,Worship - 9 a.m. ' • ·
Surfday . School '~ 9 : 4~ a·.m. i :. -~ ~

Long Bouom

Church

••'•,

•

Faith Gospel Church

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m. ·
Worstlip • 10 11.m.
Wednesday Service1 - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. PhilliP, Scarberry

Pastor: John F. Corooran
...-....-----sunday School · 10 a.m.
_....--Worship· II a.m., 7 p.m.
.. .......----Wednesday Ser.ices · 7 p.m.
Syracuse Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Su.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 9:30a.m.
Evening Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Coolville Church

is now offering
Mealball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with each purchase

,,

Worship - 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church

~~~~;

!

l
Middleport Pentet.'OSilal
Third Ave.
•
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Evening . 6 p. m.
: ·J
1
Wednesday Service~ · 7;00 p.m. ;:

·Sunday School · 9,30 a.m.

Coolville Unlttd Mothodlll Parish

•

Calvary Bible Ch urch
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. BlackwoM
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wontlip 10:30 a.m., 7:]0 P·l1l·
WesJnesday Service· 7:3Q. p.m.

Pentecostal A~~mbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pascor: William Hoback
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Dycs'o'lllc Community Church

Christian FellowshiP Center
Salem St., Rudand
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School · 10a.m.
Worship - 11 :15 a. m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ • 7 p.m.

Rio Grande UnlversHy
VI .
Walsh College
Sat. Dec. 11, 7:30 pm Freetlck:eta
at all O'dellocatlons

'
•
''
t

Pentecostal

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman SL, Synteuse
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.ioc · 7 p.m .

Rutland Uible Methodist
Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myers
SWlday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
·Pattor: Helen Kline

Long Bottom

Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Roa.d
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Rawton
Swtday School · 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m .• 7:30 p.m .

Laurel C lifT Free Methodist Church
PaSlor: Peter Trcmbl11y
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
WordUp- 10:30 M.m ., 7 p.m.
Wcdne1day Service! · 7 p.m.

N~e

Cllrton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

orr Rt. 124

Worship· 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

.

Fair.' lew Bible Church .
Letart, W.Va. R1. I
Pastor: James Lewis
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship . 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.rn .

W.glve

614-687·PETS

742·2076

Frlday-?cOO p.m.

Hazel Community Church

Radne
Pas1or: Ken MolLer
SWlday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday Scliool - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7 :30p.m.

Rutland Churdt of God

RuUand Froe Will Bapllst

East Letart
Pastor: Ken Molter
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Won hip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Worship. 9:30a.m.

Racine
Panor: Rev , James Saucrfield
Sunday School - 9:45 a,m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scr.ices · 7 p.m.

Fourth&amp;. Maln SL, Middlcpon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Kcnnc\.h Baker
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Won.hip - 10:45 a.m. (ln&amp; 3rd Sun )

' Joppo

Mr. Moriah Church ol God
ML Moriah D:.ptlst

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Brenda Weber

Church of God

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchooliOJ.m.
Evening · 7 :30p.m.
Wcdne'sday Service - 7:30p.m.

Morning Scar

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

. Hobson Christian Union
Middleport, Ohio
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worship - 10:45 a. m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Pastor: Kemelh Baker

Alfred

Sunday School • II a.m.
•Wo11hip ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

57 5 Pearl St., Middlepon

Sunday School · 9,30 a.m.

'•

'

Church or J~sus Christ,
.~
Apostolic Faith
1/4 mile past Fort M eig s on New Lima Rd
Pastor: William Van Meter
~
SWlday-7:00p.m.
t
Wednesday_-7 :00 p.m.

Middleport Community Church

Carmel

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev . Phillip Ridenour
Swtday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · !0:30a.m.
Wednesday St:rvi~ · 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

The Salvation Anny
11 5 Buu.emut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worshi p - !O:OOa.m., 7:30p.m .

Rethan y
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshi p - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Northeut Cluster

Hanford, WeVa.

Harrlson.,.lllc Commuillty Church
Pa~tor: Theron Durham
Sunday ·9:30 a.m. Md 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Trinity Congregational Church
Pastor: Re.... Roland Wildman
Oturcll - 9 :1'S a.m.
Worship - 10~30 a.m.

Snow.,.JIIc
Pastor: Aorcncc Sm.ilh
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 11.. m.

Meigs Cooperathe Parish

Pastor: Rev. David McManis

Other Churches

End time House or Prayer
(at Burlingham church o£f Route 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance.
Sunday won hip · I0 a.m.
Wednesday service · 6:30p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:15 i.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m.

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: 0\arles lone1
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won~jp • 10,30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thundaf Services - 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Railroad St., Mason

.. .
,.
I.

Worshio - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

Graham United Methodist
Wonhip · 9JO a.m. (lsr &amp; 2lld Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Hartford Church or Christ In

Faith Baplltt Cbur&lt;h

Antlqully llaptlst
Pastor. KcMclh Smi\.h
Swtday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Scr.iocs- 7:10p.m.

Pastor: Arthur Crabtree

Open· HOJJH Fri. &amp; Sat.
Dec. 10· 1110 a .m.·9 p.m.
Gloria Ollar
Sr 325 Langsville

Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ
.
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
I',
Service: Friday, 1 p.rp.

Wedneaday Servipel • 7p.m.

Sunday School · 9JO a.m.

United Methodist

Christian Union

Vktory Dapllst lndependant
525 N. 2lld Sr. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday stl\001.: 9,30 a.m.

Wonhip - 10:3() a.m., .1 ~,m .

Rutland

Sl. Paul LutherAn Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - ~:4.5 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m .

Bible Study, Wednuday, 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Glendon SIIOUd

· 10 a.m..
Youth Fellowshlft, Sunday· 6 p.m.

Worship - II a.m.

Wonhip Service: 10:30 a. m.

t.lew Haven· Chureb of the Nazarene

Worshi~

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.

Worship ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor:Kealh Rader

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut an d Henry Su., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Co-pastors: Revs. Richard &amp;
Patricia Bonds-Krug

Hemlock Gro'o'e Church
PasLor: Charles Domigan
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a .m., 7 p.m.

Putor: William Justis

Sunday School· 9:15a.m.

St. John Lutberan Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: J:?a wn Spalding
Worstl1p - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor. Pnilip SlUnn

Sr. Rr. 143 jusr off Rt. 7

.-

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churdl

Lutheran

Lt.ngs.,.lllc Christi an Church
Sund01y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Su nday School. -10:00 a.m.

Rock Springs

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
In Lauer Day Saints
Penland -Racine Rd.
Paslor; Jeny Collins
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Uberty C hrl sli:tn Church
·
Dcx1cr
P&lt;~sLor: Wood y Call
Sunday Eveni ng · 6:30 r.m.
Thursday Se rvice - 6:30p.m.

Worship - 10 11.. m.

Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Rutland Church of Christ
!'astor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Purtland First Church of the NIWircne

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m .. 6p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church of' C hrh1

Rradbury Church or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sun day School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - !0:30a.m
Youl..h Mcctwg ·5:30p.m.
E"cnirtg Sc,...icc · 7 p.m.
Wednesday, !1iblc Study - 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Pastor: Aorence Smith
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Wednesday Services - '7 :30p.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Robcn Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
'Thunday Service • 7 :)0 p.m.

Paswr: BiU Wmcs
Sunday Schoo! - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rutland Church fllhe Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnesd•y Services · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pas lor: Eu nhae (Grace} Kee
Sunday School · 9 :15a.m.

Pastor: Rev. John Ne.,.ille
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:3 0 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

lion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonv ille Rd. (Rt. 143)
Pa!&gt;to r: Roger Wa tson
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor. E. Lamar O'Beyant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.

·r

Minersville
Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

15 Pearl SL, Middlepon.

Su nd ay School -9:30a.m .

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m .
Wednesday Sel"o'iccs- 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m

Worship . I 0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunda y School - \0:30a.m.

Rulland Arst Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:45 a.m.

'

Putor; Frank Sll\hh

Pine Grm·e Bible Hollnes!i Church
1/2 mile offRL 325
Pastor: Rev. O'DcU Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Ke no Church of' Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.

Free Will Baptist Churt'h
Ash·Street, Middleport
Pastor: Mark Monow
Saturday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Su nday Sctlool · 10 11.m.
Worstl ip · II a .m.,
Wednesday Servicc-7:30 p.m.

j

Sunday School · 9JO a.m.

326 E. lilain Sr., Pomeroy ,

Rose orShlron Holiness Churc;h
New Lima Road, Rolland
Pastor: Rev. Dcwe.r,.Kin&amp;
Sunday IChOOI· 9 : ~ a.m.
Sunday worsllip •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting-7 p.m.

Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m

,.''

Rector. Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy EucharUt and SWlday Schoollla.m.
GoRce hour followina

Chester Church or the Nazaren\'
Pas LOr: Rev . Hcrbcn Gn.tc
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces · 7 p.m.

Middlcporl Chun:h of Chri sl
5th and Mam
Pastor: Al Hartson
Youlh Minislcr: OiU Frazier

Pastor· Rev . David Bryan

,.

Heath (Middlcp0f1)

Ep1scopal

Holiness

S'70 Grant St., Middleport

.' ..

Grate EpiscOpal Church

Wednesday Servica · 7 p.m.

Wors hip - \ Oa.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Se rvices- '1 p.m .

t

'·""

Pumeroy Church of the Nuarenc
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McC1ung
SWlday School - 9:30 ~~o . m .
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

212 W. Main Sa.
PaslOr: Andrew Miles •
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Worship· 10:30 aa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

James MilleJ

.•

Forest Run
Pastor: Oeron Newman
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Worship - 9a .m.
Thunday Services - 6:30p.m.

SIUiday School · 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip ·6 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. $)
Pastor: Rev . Roger Willford
S unday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia! - 7 p.m.

2112J92/tfn

AIIIIICIN GENEUL LIFE 1nd
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

WICKS HAULING SERVICE

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

POMEROY, OH.

R.cky R. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent
lox 119
~~~~~,.,.,

o•1o 45760

(614) 143-5264

36970 BALL RUN RD.

HOUDAY SPECIAL

$9 75 ATOI SIZED LIMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF~CKERSHAM,OWNER

�-

.
BEATTIE BL VD.Tw bY. Brute Beattie

33 Fa11111 fOr S.le

46 Space lor Rent

401 ....... ...... &amp; - - ·
tobo!almont. ~
or 1'11-2111.
50 Aero Form, Ewlnglon Ani, I
Roomo • Bt1h aom &amp; OU111UIIdo
lng, SIS,OOO, 81t ue Mll4, 8'14o
241......

Troller- For Rent, In llacl-

3 Announcements
"Slim" .lldv

e.W.II. t:l, -

..; nolillonohlp. :J04ollli-211t .~

--~ :llljloi llan.frt.
No llllnd DIIMIII 1.aoo.a&amp;4IZOS bt. MM, $2.119 Per llln.
tlull:
11 VMrl, Proc:all Co,
je02) M4-11120. '

a.

110

HW111ng Of Anr Kind, No
T-puolng, No Molotblkoo 0&lt;

13

-.troezlng

:loor. Also moklng

hlciory .. mallad

dHr

;.uiiii'Mr uuaaga, trail bologna,

114....

Crawford's Grocery, Henderson

wv. 304-675-54C4.

Single Proflulonal Malt, 40't

rntaiestt lnc:iuding Arts, Sports,

·aan:r'lis Daily Tribune, 825
-Thlr

45131.
WWM 60 Voun" Seeks Lady 50
0241fJ5EJt.
After 6:'301-'.M
. MonTo
For4S,
Relat1ansh
ipJ.. 614·446-

1111 Ford

~PS,

·

hcort

.·

LX,

PHILLIP
ALDER

=·.;•l•

PB, tape otJio. o
, low mlloo. ~44G.

,,

}I

r.1erchandrse

11ft'"'""'
G~ ~ ~
1-aao-"'!-:ll?.l, lu,..,., iN"--~

Household

Condition, 114-241o.•,
IOlV.
11110 P..,olac TronSpo~ f"5,.,
Sale. Cl..., Whh Now Fronk

1110 lulclk Riviere, 1 . Ownar~

Notml

e&gt;CIIIOnt

Aololng

S12.-

.AK54
IA7&amp;4
•• 2

Call 114-2451"

Giveaway

2728.

a small lot In Racine, 614·94g:;.
2940 1ft1r 5:30pm.

To Buy: Standing nm·
blr &amp; Pine, Good Prien, 614·

Eiltlar Young Or Puppy. 614-379-

Chriatmas
PuJI'PIII
To
GIVNWay: Mothtr Full Blooded

Wanted

18

English Sttlllf, 814·256-1765.

388-9901.

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

• QJI084

0oa needt good country home Top Prices P1ld: AU Old U.S.
304o17W551.
Coin., Gold Rings, Silver Colna,
Mlddlepor1 Church of Christ hat
plano, nHds some work, mull
remove, 1114·992·2914 In mom·

Gold Colna. M.T.S. Cain Shop,
151 Second Avtnut, Gallipolis.

lng.

homes. 514-446-0175

PoodleJTarrler;

malt

Wanted to buy: used mobile

LhaH

Wanted To Buy:storm door to Ill
mobile
home;
For .Salt:
Coleman tralltr rumaceil 78,000

Apso; Poodle; 614-742-3168.

Pupplu, Chow &amp; Baagla mix,
look like Chow, black. 304-675·

BTU, $100; 65,000 BT

Warm

Morning gas heater, $200; 20g11.
eltdrle hot water heater, $'10;
couch &amp; chair, S100; 614·992·

:1284.
Puppies, Make Great Christmas
Pres•nts! 614·245..()614 Anytime
Ah•r 3.

3010.
WANTED : engine tor 1988 Ford
FesUva, 4sp., 1.3 liter, needed

Puppies, to good nome. 304·
675-5345.

ASAP, call 614·992-2155, 8:30am-

5:00pm. or 614·992-2428 aner
· 5:00pm .

Lost &amp; Found

Employment Services

Found : puppy, white with tan

yollow

collar,''Ra1",

O•k Grove Rd., Racine area,
614-94g..2469.
Fol.lf'ld: Si1mese Cat, VIcinity:
Second AvenUI, 614-446-1209.
Lost: black Lab puppy, 4mo.
old, At. 2, near M1plewood Drive
Inn. 304-675-2735.
Lost: lar_gl male Beagle, blue
collar, Eagle RidgeJ Bashan
area, lamlly pel, 614-949-2800.
Lost: McCumber Hill Rd.- black,
medium size mala Lab'Husky
mix, curly tall, "Duke", 614-742·
3300. Reward.

Help Wanted
11
·,:=~.=,;::-;=:-:-;;:;:;:::
AvoN , 1 All Areas 1 Shlrtey
~

Spears, 304-675-1429.

AVON! AU areas. Need eiCira
money or want a career, either
way-call Marilyn. 304·882·2645

or 1-800·992-6356.
AmariCare Home Care Is Currenlly Accepting Resumes For
The Posilon of Branch Manager
For Our Jackson, Otllo ONK:e.
We Seek A B.S.N. Or R.N. Wltl'l
At Least 3 Years Home. Healtl'l
Experience. Management Experience A Plus. Excalltnl

Lost: Yellow labrador, Holzer
Medical Canter Area, St Rt 160,
AI. 35, Any Information Please

Call 114-446-4250, Chip.
Yard Sale

7

Trimming, FrH Eltlmatetl 814367·7'957 Aftltl 4p.m.

.105

SOUTH

.75

•an

1ck Aoctllng Ch1ir $58;

Garden Arch Wt)''l $128.00

614-448·16511.

Georgee Portable S.wmill1 don't
haul your logs to tht mill j1.1el
call304-575-t957.

t982

Have vacancy tor lad lea tor per·
sonar care, bed patltnta prefer.
red or nml.lnvalid, 614·949-

Sal1ry And Benefits Pack1ga.
Send Resume To Linda Davla,

Amerlcare Home Care, 304 East
Maln Streit. Clrc\evllla, OH
43113 Or Call 1-800-285-9098
And Ask For Linda Davie. E.O.E.

roo_ma, 1 112 B•ths, 2 Car
Qarago,
Largo " Lo1,
37

ODtlon To Buy Avelllble.

«&lt;.0254.

Holid•y Cleaning, Will Do
Housecleaning
•
Onlce,
References A'olallable. Dependable, Ill HonHI, 614·388·9921.

UnturnlthM, Very Nice, Small

Hu Ratrig., &amp;

Porch,

Sale: December nth, Cantanary
Townhouse.

Winter Clothing,
Baby Hems Home Interior,
Glasswar•J. Toys, Irani Now
llama For \ihrlstm .. Glft.l

Jobs, 614-446-1648.

·

Will Do Babysilling In My Home,
M·F On SR 554, Ask For Tina,

&amp;14-388·92&amp;7.

Financial
Business

21

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that ·rou do busl·
nus Wlth people you know1 and

NOT to aend money througn the
mail until yo1.1 havt lnvestfgat,ct

Moving Sale-405 Fil'8t Sl., Apt.
D, Friday &amp; S..turdar, complete
hou.ahold must go.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,

full Um• auctlonHr, coinpl .. a
a1.1dlon
III'VICI.
Ucanlld
no,0111o &amp; Wn1 Vlrglnlo, 304·

77'H785.
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MI. Atto Auction Centtr, At. 2 N
&amp; At. 33, " on lop ol tht hill•. Olf·

ftron1 ·
doaloro
loll
Gtocarln,

ni;I:!11Y.
of
AN

Marbtatl sptelll. Ed Fi'azkr

no.

Wanted to Buy

45631, 81-8·7112.
JOIN A WINHING TEAM

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Start. Are YOu S.lf·Motlvat~,
Aaaar1:ift ,And EnJoy Dealing
Whh P.opll'l A P1111•nt Pe,..
tonality And Good Phone SkUll

TNs newspaper wtl no1
knowng~ a.ccepl
8ctiertlsemenll lor real estate
¥iNdl IS In lllolodon olthl
law. Our ~rs are hereby

Art A MuS1. Rtlponslbliltlll ln.

lnlormed 11111 all IIWIIIIngl
•ertiMd In lhll newspaper

etude Ac11vltl11 Rtlated To
Crtdlt,
Sat11,
Account
Management And Accoumlng.

are evalable on an equal

opporturily Dais.

For Tmmedlatt Consideration

Dally S.ntln.. , PO BOX 729H,
Desk

llt·7441.

Cltr~, ·

Otcoreted stan.war.; well ttl..
phonn, old 11mpe, old ther- ·
mom .. ,,., old doc:~l, ant1q1.11

Ex·

$300.oo month. O.poelt. 814-

Will Buy NHI
One hem
Or
Dovo'o
An11t:·
331
Second Av.nue, Qat
le, 8141448.a770, Mon ..sat., t:»S,

Ulld, $14--IIZ.e812.

irM

3 bedroom, 1

tO· Khooll a ihoDDing,
priced 150 000; COif bonlt
One Trull Dep1, iii. Ph, WV 304175-1480.
vlnant

Six Room Houte 1 112 Bathe,

GllsHd In lf(:k Porch, On
Fum1ca, Garage, AIM, Has Two

3 Room COI1ogao Each, Cornplet•IJ' FurnlaMd, In Center Of

Golllpolla, 114-448-2843.

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale
1i6t Shunz 12x00. 2 Bedroome,

2bdrm. apia., total electric, appllancll
tumlahtd,
laundry
room taclllllu, ctou to tchool
In town. AppllcaUona avaU1blt

$5, 814'141-2822.

PEANUTS

J

''

:lfl-7711.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

80'1. AFTER A GAME LIKE
T~AT IT'D BE NICE TO
; SIT IN A ~OTTU6 ..

A LOT BETTER THAN
COLD WATER DISH

....,..... ..., oil R1. 143, ono milo
- h ol Clrpon1or. llad ond
Qioldlln Dollcloua oppiH. Opon
8oiirdllra only.
.

.

'

c~wn '3uppl'h

WATER UNE SPECIAL: 114 tncfl
200 PSI f1t.ll; 1 Inch aDO PSI
a2,SO; Ron Evans EnterDftMa.

0

441-(1327

•'

Allla Cholmoro 110 XT Sarin 3
Troctot, Wl1h Dunhlm l L.oor
LooCIOr1••~7.150, 5,000 Fordoon
llolor wnh Buoh Hog, $2,380;
134 . lloMoy Ferg111011, Uko
- · $4,1110: 814-2lllol522.

C...

-

;:!.

BANI&lt;

-dorl pllpno 814-

2 manuro

1210 dleul tractor, Naw

MY! IT (.t,TAINLY
IS SMALL
FOil ITS AGE!

SAVINSS
DSPT,

Holland grlndw miJer, New Hoi·
land 1ft. hay bind, John Daer:1240 4 row pl•l)ter, AC no ua
Kf'lluH

planttr,

•

1:Zft. lriCior

••

. ,,

''

diac, all good cond. 304·273-

Building
Supplies
Biocll, brick, -or ...... windows, llntlle, etc. ClltUde Wln1oro, Rio Orontle, OH Call 114248-1121.

4215,
Hydllullc oii,SO gol $125. Sldora
Equlpmem.~.. Hoildtroon,
WV.
304..75-lllirl .. 1-800-277-31117.

63

'BORN LOSER ·

Livestock

1911 AOHA Sor-.11 Golding, 1012
AOHA lncon11ve Fund Gilding,
1912 lncontlw Fund Filly, 18111
Ma,., _.ly Sonny Dee Bar, 814211ol522.

$300.00 814-388·8000.

~MORTV MEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP

cai111
Haullna:
Anytlmo,
Anjwhlra. PLA Rllllboro 0111o,

64

Today is the 344th
day of 1993 and the
80th day of jiJll

..--....,....------.::---.

t-OW Cl:)'o,AE:. 'ttU .A!.WAY6
J"'WI;AR TJ-o\ji;T" aASE~ CAP~

rrie. AS'fMBOL.. ...

I KNOW ~T1145

I'M .MAKING- A

6TATEMeNT 1e,TCO...

6TATE:MENT.

'' I'M A l.OONY."

Hay" Grain

Hay, oquoro boloo1 $1.50 '&amp; up.
loturdlly only piCKup. 304ol71'·
31160.

I FRIDAY

Transportatron
0\1 lOOK .IT 'S
T~t VICEO OF

~At.\'~ Kl'/1/.t&lt;\~

ClV!l

Hondlcoppod 1 I 2 Bedroom
Unhl. Ron11 hHod On Adlu11od
lnc:omo. FMHA Subaldlzo&lt;l, HUD

Dlt-lNoR

Servrces

Clrtlllcet.. Acc:aptH. 614-441·

1800, Equat Houalng Oppor·

tunltlll.
Gracious living. 1 end 2 bedroom apar1menlll 1t Vllllga
Manor
and
RlversJde

quoted . Know where to look lo r romance
and you 'l l find it. Th e As tra -Graph
Matchmaker mstantly reveals whicl1 signs
are romant ically perlect lor you . Ma11 $2
and a long. sell-addressed stamped, eowelope to Matchmaker. c/o tl1 is newspaper.

Aplrltnanls In llldclllport
. . From

$202. Colll14.n2·885t. EOH.

New 1 llldraam Nur Hatzar

$24!1/Mo. Rlllllranco &amp; Dopool1
Required, 114-441-295'7.

New 2 Bed~m Apenment, 6'f4.

441.0310.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

3 ·bedrDOm a~rtmtnt

112·2218.

8834.

45

114.n2.a&amp;lll.

1100

aecurhy d.,otlt, no peta; 114-

81onlng 11 $120/mo, Gallla Hotel.
114-44f'IIID.

launching any new endeavor at thi6 time.

make sure an old one is finalized to your
satisfaction If they are allowed to overlap
in some manner. both could go don't the

lpt:rtmenta

Furnished
Rooms

P.O. Bo• 44ll5 , New Yoll&lt;, N.Y. 10163.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan. 19) Before

; e~

Now 20" I opOod ll...,.oln
bicYcio, f71LrMI nloo, 1-3531~ or 11444WI11.
·

Salurclly, Dec. 11, U93

tHE

f'lumblng &amp;
.Heating

ClACCIFIED

pipe.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 19) Your possi·
pilitlas tor achieving critical objectives are
only nominal today, because after you gain
what You go after, you might not know how
to hold onto it. Proceed cautiously.
PISCES !Feb. 20-Min:h 20) Slr!ve to con·
tro l impulsive inclinations today and do
everything at a moderate pace . II you 're

Jn the year ahead It m ight not be as lmpor~ . undisciplined . you might repeat a mistake
jant to you to have a large number o f you've prevk)usly made.

1rlends as it will be 10 have a lew close ARIES (llon:h 21 ·Aprll19) Joint ventures
vtOyal pals . However, if you do intend io tri~ might not work out 100 ~~ for Y9U 10day,
'JOUr social circle , keep on be ing nice to owing 10 a Jack of harmony rfgarding
everyone.

675-1333

objectives and purposes.

Be sura . there

is

chance, you may not ge t a third one .

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) In order to be
effective and succeed today you must use
your resource s w•sely. be they people or
thi ngs. It you don't. your etrons might au be
tn vain.

CANCER !June 21·July 22) Soc-al ly
speaki ng thmgs could be a bit awkward

today when a friend ol yours includes one
of his/her pals who you dislike. Don't do or

say anything you'll later regret.
LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) Be sure you have
approval of everyone concerned today if
you're contemplating making a change that
willaffec1 your lamily. Dissenters could ere·
ate a lingenng problem .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be very cari!ful
If you're in an authority position today
where II IS up to you 10 approve plans and
procedures. Don't pretend you know what

you're doing it you don't
LIBRA !Sept. 23.0cl. 23) Your lonancial
probabilities look good today , but your
spending habits don 't. If you're extrava-

gan1 or was1elul, what you 9ain you could
readily di88lpalo.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2'·Nov. 22) Be wary ol

· Involvements today that could impede
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dac. 21) Today accord belore making moves.
TAURUS (April 21Hiey 20) You might rour independence . It you're lree to oper·
i'!OUidn'l •boflllhing 8 you ougHt 10 keap have an opportunHy 1oday, to establish a ate as ybu choose , success is likely . If
oonlidenllil. There's a chance wh 81 rou relationship wHh someone Who trequ8n1iy you feel hampered, it's ano1her sM&gt;ry.
!lay will be Ioken 001 ot conleKI and mis · opposes you . 'If you miss 1hi8 second

JOU migllt be lndined 1o 1alk to persons you

' 992-~156

446-2342
.
'
'

'

.\
I.

·"'-

-~~
1'.&gt; f~'&lt; "'
ruw~·

ltl2-"*' ""''

"mtltiW
~
...-..,3
' M

'IITYY RMTTY
BIIGR

'

N

Nl

F B I I
X

VXI'G

Y T C' I
I Q Q

I M X IS

vxpoo
I G G

X

T C

G R G.

OR

Y X Z 0

XIIOVZ.

(YXEOJITE)
NV N C
EIYTVAII .
PREVIOUS SO~UTION: "Whoopl GOldberg II one ot 1he omarteol
I!Cir- 1 aver 1alked to , and I wu railed with them." - 8uCid
Schulberg .

I

I

SCIPRY

I HETPO I
_PT""R....,::..I_V,..:.E-r--1 ~

The people in a small tourist
town can spot lhe tourist very
easily Tourist are the people

• ,

~ 1 1
I
I
I
~~-~-~=-~=·=~..,who

I

travel to see different
places then complain because

I

CATHTH

I(i ~o~~~

~-r,--r;,.--r:,,:-rl:..._r--1
L-1...-l.-J.-J.-.l.-.J.

•• 1he chuckle ouoled

b~ l oll ,ng .r1 the m1ssmg words

you develop from stet~ No ) below

~m:l~$&lt;'-t'?.~ii# -

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1869, women won th e right to vote for
the first time in the United States, in
the territory of Wyoming.
TO DAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Emily Dick·
inson (1830· 18661, poet; Melvil Dewey
0851·19311, librarian; Dorothy
Lamour 11914·1, actress, is 79; Gloria
Loring 0946·1, singer, is 46; Susan
Dey fl952·), actress. is 41.

441·1800 Senior, Dlaabl~, I

Range, Porcht1, UnderaiMIAI

41 Publi--

Ho!Mr
42 Horaldlc
border
~ Sid 1111
45 Flbl
48 Acting award
47 Sleeping
placoa
48Umb
50 Born
52 llol dti 53Fomlnlno
aam..nt

.-

1-tl!llli':'JDD~t

paid, d11p. &amp; rot. 304-382·2516. ·

$225/mo. lnctudH U1llllln,

K

Dec. 10, 1993

utllltltl

1973 Fo.- Park, 12111 2 Bo6o
room, WJB, Total Elec1rlc,

211 T7PI ol duck
30 Conatrucllon beam
2 wdti.)
31 nqulaltlve
371....1or
FrankMn
38 ........
40 Nourlaltae

--.-+--t.....Jf-+-1'
""

MIINB

DATEB

First
Holzer • Aper1mantt,
Second Avlt'lut, Olllipolls. 614·

t.droom

tum

,

Ll-.-

FumltMcl, 3 Roome &amp; Beth.
Very Clun, W111r &amp; Treah Paid,

One

memory

24 Chicken-

Allpau

@ , _ NIWIPAN:R IIIITI:...... U .

Hotatoln BuM cau No S.ncloy
Calli, 814·3N-8624.
Polled
BUll, S 1/2yro.
old. 304-IU-3207 """ ' ·" "'·
R"'ilo1Llmouoln·con, bJod·MIIOn, - a n d
2 yr. old bulle, l'144fi.J'U

WV. EOH 304-882-3716

of

23 AlpHI from

Pus

You may also play hands dealt by
you or the computer. But as with all
computer programs, its card-playing
skills are rudimentary.
A computer should be able to play
today's deal correctly, because it involves odds.
After West has led the spade queen
against three n&lt;&gt;-lrump, South has two
options. He can play off llis three top
clubs. If they break 3-3, he is home.
Otherwise, he ducks a heart, making if
that suit is 3-3. Alternatively, he can
duck tbe first round of clubs, making
whenever the suit breaks 3-3 or t -2.
Which is better?
The chance of a 3-3 break is 3~.~
percent; the pr~ba,bility of a 4-2,split is
48.5 per&lt;e11t. So, r.y duCtlnc .Ole 111'11
round of clubs, South makes the eontract 8t percent of the time (35.5 plus
48.5). Tbe alternative line works only
58.4 percent of the time (35.5 plus 35.5
percent of the other 64 .5 percent).
Clearly the club-duck tine is much
better.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Evary lloncllly. Chuok Wllllomo,

Lliuerl•nd Apte., New Haven,

Mlddlopo~,

lglnlaa
8 Extol
8 The Haart -

Eul

error.

F, Lrvestock

=~ CrOok TNcklng, 114-245-

2br. 111 •lactrlc, •plillnctl fur·
nlahed; an lite manegement.

In

7 Singer-

25Leap
26--lboul
27Bollbll

What does "ai" mean to you' If you
are a crossword addict, you Will know
that an 'ai is a three-toed sloth. If you
are into marine tile, you will be aware
that the ai is a small edible Japanese
fish . And If you are a computer bull,
you will think "artificial intelligence.·
To most people, artificial intelli·
gence means robots. But really it is
programming a computer to team
from its own mistakes. And now there
is a computer package, called Positronic Bridge, that does just that (800·
~6&amp;-tOO~). You tell the computer to
use your favorite bidding system. And
whenever it makes a mistake, you
"teach" it so that it doesn't repeat that

coat, Imitation fur, a1u
medium, VMY pNHy, llka new,

colll14-992·3711. EOH.

Room• torrent ·WMk·or rMneh.

IN

Box Van, Will Sell ;

Or Tilde, 114-441-3243 After 6 ,
P.M.
','
Bundv Clorinot Qood Condl11on, 11175 4WD Chov.' 350 oU1o., lal~
$100 f14-3N-2728.
cand., $1850. 304oi'IS·2457.
·

Brown

et: VIllage 01'111'1 AliCe. 148 or

Nice 2

tnc:tudld. 114-2151-Sl112, f14-44f'

1m Dodg•

Lotcl no, 114-zn.t711.

Llko Now Through 0111, lluot

Soo To Bollovo ftl8~:

--loll-

21 AlpltaMt , . .
22 Artcllnt .....

1

AAA, S o . - F1..-d,
Dollvorod And llloc!&lt;od P.U.

2br. turn,ehld 1pts.,

1 Trlbol moglc
2 Information
aver •
3 Character In
11
0tht1Jo"
4 TV notwork
5 Guldo'a high
noll
6 Uqulcl waale

By Phillip Alder

11 " 0 &amp;1 .Farm Equipment

Eltiii11.1Jilc;~klon~,~Ohl~o.;~~~~~~.

8 pc. NorHakl Chlrt11 Sit,
Legtndlry Serilt, nev.r been

Booch S1. Mlddlopot1, 011, 1 I

full bldh, gal heat, carport, con-

ITt ACREAT DEAL

~$1110 r11 ~~~
. ·~.

Merchandise

Apartment
for Ritnt

BedrootM, 2 Batha, Hut

DOWN

A sloth
with speed

::U 1~

54 Miscellaneous

from $2U8lmo. W1lll to ahop I
movies. C1tl 114-446-2188. Ea-t.

3NT

1ngrly
55 11e1 nymph
SIS .._ngerot
lhogoclo
57 EMmlnalaa

1m ·Chovy Plck.Up, 314 Ton, :

Musical

_1.- .

$225/mo., Pomeroy area, 614· Friday 1:30-8.

Rnanclng Aaal~anca Av1ilable.

614-448.0254.

PI Ptaaunl

304-J73.5343.

t.....

Christmn
Oflglnal boJ:,
lubea and NVoivlng light, $200,

lipolis Forry, 133,000. . 304ol75- $115/Mo. U111111oo Pold, 114-44&amp;4411 Ahor 7 P.M.
7217.
2 Or 3 Bldrooma, 1 112 latht, 2 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
c., Ganoe. Large Lot, 37 ESTAT~~
Porttmoutfl
Ad, GaiiiPGIIII,
1 . 538 Jockoon Plko

4br, Ia dlnlngroom. 304'675414• oi~04-175-3075.

1110 bu~ng junk care I truclts.

Bur or 1111. Riverine Antlquee,
1124 E. Main Stroo~ . on At. 124,

flint,atalto
apacea
for rent at1nlng
$15/mo.,
814·992·21&amp;7.
Two bedrooln, tolal electric,

Furnished
Efficiency,
701
Fourth, Oalllpollt, Shtl'l Bath,

p ...

114 Loolllld

Opening lead: • Q

lnltruments

Work boola. 114-441-3189.

814 -167'·34l'7.

1983 doubl• wld1 on acrt lot,
total electric, llreptact, Gal--

Garage, On 1 Ac:r•, Addl10n
Artl, 614-387-7287.

J &amp; D'l Auto Parts 1nd Salvage,

a

388-8000
Two bedroom mobile homn tor

31 Homes for Sale

Pump, G11 Heal, UnattiiChld

Run MQ(KI, owntr. 614-992·
2521. W• buy 11t1111.

:d

-,.~
140
1320/Mo., 814-441"'418 Aftor 7 Pomoror. H.... : II.T.W. 10:00
~ra•, $35; Uko now, 114P.M.
a.m. 10 6:00 p.m., Sundllr 1:00
• .·
·
Fumlollod nory cloan 2 BR. 10 I :OO p.m.l1.4·112-2521.
'"""• ao OIH1II $200. fuel oil
Watarltn.sh paid; in Porter al'lla, S.v•n fool antlqLie aluminum tanll. 219 ... SIO. 104.JD.2111.

UUIHIH Paid, $185/Mo. 814-4464411Aft• 7P.II. ·

3

Antlq~o~~e.

.,-,..-===,--

Solo,
1 .,...,

Fumished
Efficiency:
607
Second, Qalllpollt, Share Bath,

Contact : Guy Morrow At 614·
44&amp;-2208.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

114·'M2·23t7.

n2·2312.

o1 1968 wlllch molioo I llogol
to IIIMKtt!a "'a~Yfprar.eta,
imllltlon or clocrilt*llilon
buod on rooo. oolor, ..aglon,
sex 1.-nlllll stilus or NIHonll
Ollgln, or llrf lftontlon 10
mokt llrf oud1 pmoronc&lt;~,
limitation or dlsalminatlon."

Sign On Bonue
Equal Opportunity

hausahold, also wanted· old
bic~lH, call Otby M•rtln, 114·

RIY•Int

Mobile HomaJ Furnished, 2 Br,
120 Fou~h Avonuo, Galllpollo,

Allraal_ ... _ l n

petitive Wagu, Olfferantal Whh

RUN HOME AN'
GIT YORE PUPPY I!

~

317-QDO.

Peddle Sl•t Gl.litar, Solid
hi, Thrw
Wood Flnloh Aalclng: 1500, 814·

SPECIAU OnlY 111.111 lol d
1ux. Sao Poln1 Pl~oe'cour53
;.:;._...;.A..;.m;,;;.;lq:.;u.,;;e.;.s.,....,....._
Yoar'l Tux. 304-1
•

11111 .._ . . aoJblld 1o
tho Fedonll Fllr Housing Acl

For Certltled Nur11 Aldea. Com-

N11ded: part time help tor busy

3 Pc. Sllowen, 114·245-5152 A~

C.metary, 114o446-~0.

lmrllfldlata Openl9 Avallabll·

'MAW !! FETCH
. ME MY CORN
SQUEEZIN'S !!

Job, Naw lnlorlof Bod .
u~....sz.100, 114-~7. .,.,_

Shaw Bud ...VIrlclr. To Slrtng

Statl remot1 control )lip,

2 bodroom 1rallerilrol &amp; clop, Rl.
62 N. Loculi R on right, no
poll. 304-1"1!-10'115.

5125 Or Fax Retume (614) 228-

IIX oHic:a. Send resume c/o The

112ol127.

New Flbllrglass Showera, New
Fiberglas Showe,. I Tub, New

2 yr ofd Kirby wJitttchemente,
$350. llrm. 304-175-1725.
4 Camo1ory Plo1o AI : Ill. Hill

8330.

EOUAL
OPPORTUNrrY
EMPLOYER MIFIH
NON·SMOKING AND DRUG
FREE ENVIRONMENT

.71.

furniture, hMiers, Wntam

44

SHE JEST

L'ARNT HOW
TO FETCH II

72 TNcka tor sar.
'
'
1MI 314 Ton Do!IIO Paint :

::=:-:~'!:!.--=-=

reflirencea. 814-258-41089.

lng. Call Morlbolh, SUCCESS
Employment Service, (614} .221-

Antique• •nd wud turnlturt, no
hem too large or too SW'IIII, will
buy an• pitcl or compltt•

turnHure.

Plio,

Real Estate

Employer. Cont•ct lh• AlliS•
11nt
Director • Of Nuralng,
Plnacrnt Clr8 Center, 170
Plnecretl Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio

&amp; VIcinity

Nice

son Area. Salary Plus Comml•
slon. Excellent Banetlta. Treln·

Available,

ELVINEY?

1102.
aiMM - Crotm111o Bod, Call
GOOD USED APPUANCES l'i4--ll
Allor 11:10,
Waohoro, dryoro, rolrlgotllor:!z
rangoo. Skaggs Applloncoo ro 1161"furnllure. w. ""'· ... and
Vlno 81-, Cill 814.,..8·73M, 1·
800 "'1144"·
.., .............. iai~. IOl
SaContl 81., I!Mo!i, wv. owRockly Paoroon. .. 4-77\l-5341,
Sa.,. Crooo Ooun1ry Sidor,
$100. Klng.olu will-.
304'.f7US45.
8iora ueroiM blkl, $20, 114-

Reference Required. $275/Mo,
Call Earl Tope, 614.,.46-0'161.

National Company Saaks Sales
Professionals Wlth Three To
Five Years Experience For The
Portsmauth • Gallipolis • J~ck·

Expartence,

Pt. Pleasant

No

NEW PUPPY,

LovooN1, 2 Cltalro,
::''c.'.:.8.:.P..:..M.:.•
Juat PUn: haNd,
M· F 6 A.M. -5,30 P.M. OIQIII1y
PICKENS FURNITURE
Qull11r, WIU Socrotlco, 114-371Loving Care For All Chlldnm•
Our 11 Goal. Part-Time, FullNow/Uood
1420.
Time Fed. Assistance Available.
Houoohold tumlohlng. 112 mi. Solotlox Lla a BU1101fty AI·
Call For lnformltlon Or Ylalt. 1.,.. 42 Mobile tlomes
Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. Pluoonl, WY, lachmoniJ, Ei&lt;collonl Condtlon,
tanl lloddlar 614,..48-6227. p....,
call304-6'1!·1450.
$710j EIC..,.IM Iilio, $71, 114tor
Rem
School,
Sehoolage,
B&amp;A
SWAIN
218 ..422.
.
School, 614-446-822(.
14180 2 lr, 1 milo Sou1h ol AUCTION 1 FURIIITURE. 12 - . ~~- SIB _,,
Small Or Large Housecleaning EurHII, on St. At.7. No pita, Olive St:, flllllpollt.'New 6 Ulld ch
. al~ $1·, IM-1112..ZHi.

CAREER SALES

ALL Yard Saln Muat 81 Pald·ln
Advanc• . CEADLINE: 2:00 p .m.
the d1y Mfore the ad 11 to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. S1turday.

Parking.

~tove.

Norell

~:.Sutrollo

45
48 Dlbonllr
51 DIIM

Four Poster W1t1r led, Kl,.a
Slza, New Ht1t1r S171, 814-441•

HouH In Golllpollo, Wl1h 1 BR,

the offering.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

t14-

Well

I I

I NT

~~~~~~=.:,~:::.,~

PonomoU1h Rd, Galllpollo,
$400/Mo. Rotoronco &amp; Socurlty
Dopool1 Roqulrod. LolM Will

3014.

Soud!

BARNEY
HOW'S YORE

Ffif L.oooo Or Sale: 2 Or 3 Bltl-

7 Prison
tiiNdlllll
13 In good work·
Ina order

35 Concepta
38 Drou fuaaltr
37 Pontry

.AKQU
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

54 MlieellaiiiOUI
Mere..nell..

WO/Mo $200 l)opolh. 114-4410958,
3 Bodroomo; 2 Bo1he, $375/Uo.
Dopooh &amp; Rl1oro,..., R•
qlllrad, 814--3292.

General M1&amp;ntenanoa, Palnting 1
Vard Work WI,Odowa W11hea
GuHtl"' Cleaned Light Hlullng,
Commerlcal, Attldlnllal , Stevt:

Miss Paula 's Day C1ra Center

Found: brown &amp; white goat, 8
Mile Creek Rd. 304-6?5-3716
luv• massage.

pllchn,

2 ledroam Hauae, " Chillicothe Roed, Full BaHmanl,
Qu
FurRICI,
Catplt!lld,

Trimming, TrH Removal, Hldl)t

.Ql017
I KJ
.H78

1Ql05S

0

2 13 Bedroom, Edgo Dl Go~
llpollo, City SchootO, RoloroncH &amp; Soc. Dopooh Roqutrad,

$32Mio. l1~ .... 47.

EAST

•u

Rod Trim, Sorlou0 lnc!ui~H I
Onlyl $1,800, 114-441-HO$.
:

41 · Houses for Rem

wanted to Do

.,61

WEST

Autom1Uc, Lolded, Bttck With •

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wroulh' 1roo Tabll W14 Chairs:

1 ....., ••1
~~Mer....

Andi'HI
15-piiZZitl
11 m~~c~
17 Glt' club
18 Bird (pret.)
20 Oawn
goddHI
21 BrHd ol
chlck1n
25 Keeping up
wllhlho2a Cllamtcal dyo
32 Single llema
33 Dance
orchHiro
34 Thr....,ard

11·11·11

•AP

=~~·
~·~--~~~~~7
1191 Chevrolet Beretta, V-4, !

VI'RA FURNITURE
11-1-31151 Or 114-441-441!1
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
DR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

311 Uroplre
41 Not cold
44 AMirlcl

14AclrHI-

Rentals

wanted to Buy
11 Help Wanted
,;__.;;.=.;,.;..,;.;...;~--1
Wanted- 'aomaDM to brush hoa
Wanted To Bu~ : Ran Tarrier

4 German Shephard lab Puppin, 8 WMkl Old, 614·245-91!54.

9

Ev..,.. .

f2JO!!, .1114.- -,
.... o.,., .. ar e...ao.-·,:

9

4

8

llloe. nl~.

Fan

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROII

I

t-==========:r;::=;::~~~=~==-1

Frl .

6

BRIDGE

.......
e!J..;
•'- ~

1111 Clll1- Jltrio Ill,
AMftl ' CUUik,· PW.
Cnllool AC, AuloiMtlo, v.t, ll1ui -

·

.

Call tor good mop. 1-114-SVS.
8545, A1hono,DH.

"I knew he'd ·gel one eventually."

.

TlrM. o.n.r A ~~r

$8150/ IC.... Allrno4.. bllYtlfu
11nd; wood1, palture end hilll.

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

_A.LLEYOOP

AuiOI tor Sll.e

71

Goods

5-nl-2894.
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Molgo Caur&lt;y, lalorn 'l'ttp.l

Fine Dining, Looking For Single
Famal• !5-50, For Hollcfay
ChHr Raapor1d: CLA 300, e tc

by Larry Writtht

Widing ta nllll· 2 or lbMiroom
hoUie, ln c ...n 1nd' ~ condJ..

5I

County W1ter, electric, 1D mil•
aouth of Point PtHunl, 304-

(N/S. N/01 Whh Wldo Ranging

'

47 Wanted to Rent

AC Nlco Pond 1,000 lb.

2 112 AcrM 1111.. Dorocl Fot
Homoolto, Rural · W.to&lt; StPllo.
Eo,.bUohod Dttvow:r.::. 211.
614·2-1112,
Loto oppra1 SOD It oft Rl. Z,

jerky,

CARLYLE ~

112-2Ga, If no ..,..., .,.....
1oo
oachlno

I

cutting. wra~

akJnnlng

v.r

KIT 'N'

lion, """" Pli¥111 ut1111i1, 114·

Tobbllco laM, AuNI Watw,
Eloolrl~c. Sepllo Tonu, Trailer
Ron! , I lllloo FIGI!I Golo
lpollo, 2,!100, ~..-

t1otor Yahlclll Of Any Kind .
et-ymond Smhh.

lfOW

ney, 114--MMJa.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

~F~n~d~ay~,~~~~m~~~r~10~·~1~~~------------------------------~P:om::er~o~y:-:Mlldrd;le;p;o;rt;·;O;hl;o~======~r::::::::::::::::::n.~~0~·a~II~Se;n~t~l~~~~~ '

DeCember

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Sentinel

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Devour· Graft · IM!ile · Nogg1n . FUNDING
Overheard at high powered business meeting "That
new executive is a true expert He doesn 't have all the
answers but knows how to gel them with the proper

FUNDING."

DECEMBER10I

�.
....'''
'
)

••'

.

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentin

Friday, December 10, 1

In addition to being a pan of the
"Twas The Night Before Christ·
mas" show cast this holiday season,
Wolfe will also be performing in
the Reson Entenainment Chrisunas
Show presented at the Contempo·
rary Resort Hotel's Convenuon
Center called "Jolly Holidays".
Earlier this year, Bruce was
selected to perform in several other
Disney shows in addition to his
performances in the park's daily
Surprise Celebration Parade, the
Spectro'Magic electrical parade,
and in Mickey's Starland Show .
These shows include the castle
show called "DisneyMania" and
"Disney World Is Your World",
which is presented at the Tomor·
rowLand Theater.
Also, in August, soon after his
appearance at the Meigs County
Fair Wolfe was chosen to perform

CHADWICK WOOTEN
Navy Petty .Offieer 2nd Class
Chadwtck Woot.en, a 1986 gradu·
ate of Kyger CrWc High School of
Cheshire, was JeCCndy commended
as a Distinguished Instructor at
Fleet Training Cent.er, Naval Sta·
tion, Norfolk, Va.
Wooten was chosen for sus·
tained arid superior classroom per·
formance.
He joined the Navy in August,
1986.

I

LONG BOTTOM · The Faithful
Gospel Church, Long Bouom will
have a h~mn sing at 7 p.m. Friday.
The Datly Family Smgers and
other local talent will be featured.
LOTIR!DGE · Country music
night wiU be held at the Lottridge
community center Friday at 6 p.m.
A dinner will be held for the bands
who will play from 7 to midnight.
The public is invited. The Center is
located on Athens 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 pro·
gram will feature a video by Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds and a talk by a
German exchange student attend·
ing Meigs High School.
CHESTER · Special meeting of
Shade River Lodge 453, F. and A.
M. at Chester Friday, 7:30p.m.
with work in the entered apprentice
degree. Refreshments.
SATURDAY
MILLFIELD · A round and
dance will be held Saturday

from 8 to II p.m. at the Russell
building in Millfield with music by
Out of the Blue Band.
MIDDLEPORT - A craft and
bake sale will be held by the Syra·
cuse Church of the Nazarene from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 188 Walnut
Street in Middlepon Saturday.
POMEROY · The Belles and
Beaus Western Style 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 Rippeto. All western
style square dancers are invited.
Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY · The Royal Oak
Dance Club will have its annual
Chrisunas dance at Royal Oak Park
Saturday from 8 to II p.m. Punch
and chips wiU be provided.
BURLINGHAM - Modern
Woodinen of America Camp 7230
is sponsoring a potluck Chrisunas
dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the Burling·
ham Modern Woodmen hall. The
camp will be delivering dinners
late afternoon to the elderly, sick
and shutins of the area.

the Meigs County Library will hold
Kidfest Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m.
There will be games with prizes,
balloon s, a clown, and refresh ·
ments. lt's all free.

CHESTER • A live nativity
scene with children and animals
will be featured in the parking lot
by the Chester United Methodist
Church Sunday, 6 to 7 p.m. Sharon
Hausman, pastor, invites the public
to drive by or stop and view the
display.

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

MONDAY
POMEROY · The Bedford
Township trustees will hold a regu·
Jar meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

HARTFORD · The annual
Christmas dinner for American
Alloys employees and retirees of
Foote Mineral will be held Satur·
day night from II a.m. to 6 p.m. at
the Union hall in Hartford.

POMEROY · Disabled Ameri ·
can Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary
will have a meeting and Chrisunas
dinner, Monday at 7 p.m. at the
hall. There will be a gift exchange
with men to take gifts for men, and
women to take gifts for women.

RUTLAND · A danc e will be
held at the Rutland American
Legion hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to midnight. Music will be by Pure
Country and Then Some. The pub·
lie is invited.

BRADFORD · The Bradford
Church of Christ's children's choir
will present "Not a Creature was
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.

SUNDAY
RACINE - The Southern High
School choir will present a Christ·
mas coneen Sunday at 3 p.m. at the
high school.

A Mull 1med1a Inc. News paper

SS,408 or S189

per mo.

.
.
DELIVER WREATHs-Alice Thompson, left, and Addillou ·.,
Lewis of the Winding Trail Garden Club Wednesday morning ·:delivered 13 wreaths provided by tb.e club for use at Veterans ;::
Memorial Hospital durmg tbe holiday season.

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 ftrehouse in 1993. Meat will be
furnished and those attending arc to
take a covered

NOW OPEN fOQ
CHQI6TMA&lt;!&gt; 6EA&amp;)N
PolnHttl.. &gt;1• &amp; Up
Berried Holly Trees '17"
Live Norway Spruce
6-7ft. - '211"
Cut Treea-Live Wreaths
For the Loved Ones
Grave Blankets &gt;111"
ArtHJclal Sprays, YaH&amp;
and Wreaths
Open Dally 9-5, Sundays 12-5

Hubbards Greenhouse
Syracuse
992-5776

. - - - - - - -.....;.;.;1

MILL STREET
BOOKS
OPEN SUNDAY
1·5 P.M.
ALL

BIBLES
REDUCED

20%
Free imprinting and
gift wrapping.
On the "T"
Middleport
992-6657

NEW 1994 ROYAL PALM HIGH TOP
CONVERSION VAN

Polo green, P. bucket seat, air, cruise, remote hatch,
P. wind., keyleu entry, 4 spd. auto., 5.71tter, V-8.

Leather seating, power sofa, rear stereo, video
caaHtte, running boards, walnut wood package,
caaoette. Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!

199

NEW 1994 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP
5
bench seat.

NEW 1993 CHEVY EXt CAB DieSEL PICKUP
6.5 turbo diesel eng., Silverado, loaded.

PRE-OWNED CARS
&amp; TRUCKS .

$22

HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:00-8:00;
SAT. 9:0-4:00;
SUN. 1:D0-5:00

. cah~·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
•

I

'

I

Hl30s

LOW
Details on
~==:=~ . page

A-2

Mrddleport·Pomeroy·Ga l lipol rs· PI. Pleasa nt· December 12. 1993

Vol. 28 , No. 42

:Strickland pushes Clinton's health plan in Me.igs

CHESTER · The Chester Vol·
unteer Fire Deparunem will have

NEW 1994 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28
5 speed trana.; air conditioning, cloth Interior.

,_-

'

Community calendar
FRIDAY

' ' .j'·

•
luttS-'

JOSEPHBAME
Navy Seaman Apprentice
Joseph W. Bame, son of Deborah J.
Young of39490 Success Road,
Reedsville, recently reported for
duty at Naval Submarine Base, San
Diego.
The 1989 graduate of Eastern
High School, Reedsville, joined the
Navy in September 1990.

BRUCE WOLFE
for Princess Diana and her children
of Wales.

River Valley wins league opener • Page C3
Pickens .trial opens Tuesday - Page A3

I

-

ln s1d0

poinsettias
PageB1

In the service

Wolfe performs at Disney
Meigs County's Bruce Wolfe.
heading towards his third year as a
performer at the Wall Disney
World Resort's Magic Kingdom,
has recently completed a touring
venue with Disney's "Twas The
Night Before Chrisunas" show that
will be a feature in the Magic
Kingdom park Dec. 3 through Dec.
25.
The show was taken on tour to
Niagara Falls, Canada, where six
shows were perfonned for standing
room only crowds as a part of
Ontario's Winter Festival Of Lights
celebration. The Disney cast, crew,
and directors were flown to Canada
for a four day stinL Among those in
the VIP audience at the Nov. 27
perfonnance were Rhea Perlman,
Jim Belushie, and John Candy as
well as several Canadian govern·
ment officials.

·Nurturing
Al onq lh C' R1vrr

OPEN
SUNDAY

By GEORGE ABATE
nma•S.ntlnal Newa Stall
.POMEROY-Local citizens should supponPresident
Bill Clinton's plan to halt the run-away costs of the health
care system, U.S. Congressman Ted Strickland, D·
l..ucasville,toldabout50peopleFridaynightatthePomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Cent.er.
·
Rural and poor residentS, such as those in Meigs County,
will only be more insecure if the current system continues,
.Strickland said.
He cited key area problems as the shonage of doctors
andunequalsharingofcostsbetweeninsuredanduninsured
:patients. ·
''To not act wiU be devastating," Stricldand said. "If we
don't. lake this opportunity we may not have another
chance." ·
Under the current system, nationwide bealth care spend·

ins is inefficient and unStrickland said. Through
wise, Strickland said.
these alliances, the aver·
Locally, only 35 per- "To not act will be devastatlng... lf we don't age citizen could negoti·
lower insurance pre·
cent of Meigs County's
take this opportunity we may not have an- ·at.e
miums and choose from
residents - 8,190 - are
several different plans.
insured. Strickland said. other chance."
James Witherell, medi·
One·fourth of the resi·
U.S.
Congresilman
cal
director of Veterans
dents are uninsured,
Ted Strickland Memorial Hospital, said
while one-fourth are on
Meditaidandtherentainhas a grasp
of
the fundamental
issues,
ing 15 ·percent are on - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Strickland
especially when the congressma.1 described people who
Medicare.
This breakdown fortes hospitals to charge the insured must choose between medical care and food.
About 70percentofVMH'spatientsare on Medicare or
patien!S more when .the remaining patients pay less or not
Medicaid, withanadditionall().20pertentuninsured,Dr.
at all, Strickland said.
The new system would provide universal care and Witherell said.
'The question is what fonn will it take and how will we
would pool citizens and businesses into health alliances,

pay for it?" Dr. Witherell asked. "On a local level there is
no place to cost-shifL"
Strickland said the health-care plan"COUld be funded by:
• eliminating the Medicaid program;
• diverting money from Medicare and Medicaid;
• cutting wast.e in the current system; '
• placing a 75-cent a pack tobacco tax; and
• taxing large companies that do not join the alliances by
I pc;rcent.
These steps would (exactly) offset the costs with the
new syst.em, Strickland added.
About two-thirds of the annual deficit is due to soaring
medical costs. Strickland said by revamping the health
care system the deficit would drop and the national det!t
would grow -slower.
Under Clinton's plan, employers would pay 80 percent
Contln11ed on page A2

·National Guard cuts:

Rickety
bridges:
Engineer
war~s of crisis;
Some units will dis.band,
.127,000 jobs will be lost seeks $3 million for replacem.ents in '94

By ROBERT BURNS
Auoclated Pra.. Wrlttr
W1\SHINGTON-The Army National Guard and Reserve willloseabout
127,000 jobs over the next six years and sume units will be disbanded as \he
.nation·' s backup combat and disaster
·
relief forces reorganize, the Pentagon
amounced Friday.
_
''We're here to talk about closing
an old chapter in the history of \he
Army and opening a11ew chapter that
will help us meet the~hallenses of the
post-Cold War world," Defense Secretary Les Aspin said in outlining the
changes.
.
.. Aspin said that although the Guard
andReSetiiewillgersmallerthey will .
~ be.!'!~-!t~cx:us¢ ~n .specific ·
watttme "''\' . _ume miSSions
·'wiU•benefil'fromt:Wliat; Anny ,~Cf •
called a new partnership with activeduty :forces. ·
,~iJrsaid his plltlf is su[ipofted by
aU tiic ley players in the military,
Delenle Sei:rllary
although itremaiqs to be seen whether
LaaAapln
the Congress wiU accept iL During
the Bush administration, the Congress kiUed numerous efforts to reduce the
reserve forces, mainly because of the job irl!p&amp;ct in m8JI'Y ccngressional
districts.
",
. Ina sign that Congress maybemorewitungto go along now, however,Rep.
G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery, D-Miss.. chainnan of the House Veterans'
Affairs Committee, said even before Aspin's announcement that he could
accept the plan, in pan because deeper cuts proposed under President Bush
had been avened.
The Bush administration had suggested cutting the Anny Guard and
Reserve to 563,000 by 1999 but met resistance from MontgOmery and other
supponers of the reserves in Congress.
The Clinton plan is to reduce the Guard to 367,000 and the Reserve to
208,000 fora total of575,000by 1999. The Guard currently iS at422,700 and
the Reserve at 279,600. The administration plans to cut the active-duty .force
to 1.4 million from 1.7 million. ·
"I would prefer no cuts ataU, but we don't have that choice,~ Montgomery
said in a statement.
Continued on page A2

By JAMES LONG
Tlme•Sentlnel News Stall
GAUIPOUS -County Engineer
Joseph Leach Thursday asked the
county commissioners for quite a
lot of money - $3 million - and
pressed1hem to bring the region's
highway needs to the attention of
stat.e leaders.
GaUia County is facing at least
two transpOnation emergencies, ac·
cording to Leach, Gallia Chamber
of Commerce President Jay
CaldweUandareabusinessmanBob
Evans.
Highways are being neglected by
lhestateandbridgcsarefallingaparL
Leach said the engineer's offtce,
. wiUneedbetweenSI3andS15inil- '
lion oV.et-..JAecMXI fiyjl·,~ to replllee·the'eo"uncy's rickety bridges.
All of the structures at issue span at
least 40 feet, the county engineer
said.
"Most of the major bridges in our
county are either obsolete, partly
obsolet.eor deficient," he told com·
missioners. ''They're beyond re·
pair."

This means replacing 21 of them
within ftve years. The engineer said
it was critical for commissioners to
help fund the project- while the
county is eligible for 80 percent
federal funding, Leach's office
needs20percentlocalmatchmoney.
In a memo presented to the board,
he wrote: "If a fast track bridge
replacement program is not funded
in 1994 by you, the consequences
would be devastating to Gallia
County. Within a five year period
our emergency vehicles, school

T..S

buses, milk trucks, logging trucks,
utility trucks, etc. will not be able to
cross many of our bridges."
Leach suggested the county could
reduce operating costs and raise taxes
to come up with their pan of the
money, which he said would amount
to about $3 million.
Commissioners said they would be
wiUing to discuss with Leach long
range planning for the funding, but

doubted that they would be able to
make the entire donation.
"We don't see any room in our
budget to fund a $3 million bridge
project out of county general,'' Com·
mission President Harold Montgom·
ery said Saturday. "We 'U have to look
at alternate means of funding."
Leach, along with Caldwell and
Evans, also asked the board to pass a
resolution asking that Stat.e Route 7

UMW officers br·iefed on new coal pact; vote
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associated Pr•n Writer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Local United Mine
Workers presidents today get their first look at a proposed
new contract with the Bituminous Coal Operators Assodation.
Meetings are scheduled throughout the coalfields this
weekend as the union's.topofficers brief local presidents,
who then will hold meetings with rank-and-file miners.
OnTuesday,aftera48-hourwaitingperiod,everybody
affected by the contract can vote on it.

Union offtcials have kept details of the proposed agree·
ment under wraps, saying they would not make public
sta!Cments ·about the agreement until union members get
a chance to see it.
However, the union's top three officers said in a leuer
sentel!flier this week to UMW families that both laid-off
and workilig UMW memberS will have a "guaranteed,
enforceable right" to claim ajobatany new mine owned
by their employer, its parent company or affiliates.
Senioritywilldetenninewhogctsthejobs.accordingto
the)euer, which was mailed alter the union announced

Photo"' ...._lAne

ONE OF SEVERAL- This bridge just off Levers Lane is one of 21 in Gallia County that will need replaced
within five years, engineer Joseph Leac:h said. Leach is seeking county funding to the tune of $3 million to help
in the project
be included in the Access Ohio plan.
Commissioners said they would
send such a leuer Thursday afternoon to Ohio Depanment or Transponation Director Jerry Wray.
A 200·mile section or S.R. 7
through the Ohio River Valley from
Chesapeake to BeUaire was not included in the final dral't oftherepon's
Macro Phase, Leach said. The plan
Continued on page A2

b~gin·s

Tuesday

Tuesday that it had reached a tentati ve agreement with the
The UMW won similar provisions in the 1988 contract,
Bituminous Coal Operators Association. A copy was but dunng the five years it was in force the two sides
obtained by The Associated Press.
argued over whether the agreement covered parent com.
Earlier, sources said the proposed contract would enti~e panies and nonunion subsidiaries. The operators 000 •
UMW members to 60 percent of the new jobs at their tended that the parent companies and subsidiaries were
employer's existing, new or newly acquired coal mines. not mcluded .
The sources said the agreement would cover any ell)~
In the letter to UMW members, the officers said the
player that signs the contract. A separate " memorandum underthepropnp i~e nt , "For the first time, laid-off
of understanding" binds an employer's parent company and acuve UMW A m bers h~ve the guaranteed, enand all subsidiaries and affiliates to the JOb sec urny forccable nght, based on sen•onty, to new jObs at new
provisions of the agreement, the sources said.
Continued on paga A2

Military jury finds Willis guilty;
declines tb impose death penalty

News capsules

SUMTER, S.C. (AP)- A military jury declined to sent.ence former Ohio
airman Jeromy Willis to death in the murder of his estranged wife.

State plans staff cuts at
Athens psychiatric hospital

The six-offrcer jury failed on Friday to reach unanimous agreement in the
death sentence recommendation, but two-thirds agreed he was guilty or
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP) - The state
premeditation in the Jan. 4 shooting at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base.
will cut staff at the Southeast Psychiat·
WiUis' defense argued during the two-week trial that the former Ironton,
ric Hospital in Athens, an Ohio Depan·
Ohio, man was not capable of premeditation because abuse as a child robbed
mentofMental Health spokesman said.
him of the ability to act rationally while under streSS.
·
Up 10 60 of the 180 jobs may be
"He did not have the cool-mind needed for premeditation, •• Maj. Bernard
eliminated,
Sam Hibbs said Friday.
Doyle said in closing arguments or Willis' coun-martlal.
He
said
some
employees may take
''Unwittingly the Air Force and Mary Ann Willis were pushing every button
early r¢tirement and others may get
he had to upset him. He was losing everything, his wife and his career," Doyle
different Slate jobs.
said.
All Slate mental health institutions
Willis pleaded guilty to kiUing of Mary Ann Willis."He faces life in prison
,
are
bei!!f downsized as the state focuses
on that charge.
·
'
on proViding treatment outside hospi·
The court-mahial panel took 3 1/2 hours t6 reach its decision. The coun
tals, he eaid.
martial is being held at Shaw Air Force Base. The Myrtle Beach baso was
The $17 million hospital opened in
closed earlier lhll year.
AthenS
in March with 80 beds.
WiUis faces sentencins Monday on.other charps n;lated 10 attach on his
.Now; the patient population is down
wife. He was fOiind guilty Friday of aggrav&amp;led auault for burning her with ·
to.IIWnd
70. The proposed staff reduction is a responpropane on Aug. 13, l.992, .00 choking her later that month. . '
sible move which will decrease costs, Hibbs said.
He also was found innocent of two counts of obsuuct!ng justice and one
He Slid talks are being ananged with hospital em·
count of communicating a threat.
p!Qyee unions and because of contracts, it will be at least
Mrs. 'WiUis, a Portsmouth, R.I., native, was shot Jan. 4 at the b&amp;1c's legal
4S days before anyone is let go.
affairs office. She was waiting to speak with auomeys about spoUSlll abuse
The ~ital serves residents in Athens, Hocking,
charges she hid filed against Willis.
·
Vinton,
GaUia, Jackson, Meigs and Washington coun·
Just before the shooting, Gabrial said Willis told an airman 011 the base, ''It's
ties.
showtirne." .

GOOD MORNING

Police officer killed in
shootout after traffic stop
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A police
officer who was killed in a shootout
after stopping a car did not say why he
was making the traffic stop.
Another man also died in the gunfrre
Friday near a housing project on the
city's nonheast side.
At least one other man ran from the
scene and was being sought by police
today.
Officer Chris Clites, 26, was shot near
the right eye aboutS a.m. and died about
2 p.m.at Ohio State University Medical
Cent.er.
A tape of his radio broadcast did not
reveal why he stopped the vel\icle. The
carwasrepooe4stolenabouttwohoursaftertheshootings.
Police said Clites exchanged gunfire with Brian E.
Davis, 29, of Columbus.
Davis was shot by anotherofftcer and died at the scene.
Clites was the 48th city police llfficer kiUed on duty.
Police said Davis had been convicted between 1983
and 1991 of possession of criminal tools, two counts of
assaul~ JeCCivins stolen propeny and grand theft.

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections. 224 Pages

Business
Cale11dars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sparts
Along the River
Weather

.

01&amp;8
83&amp;4
D2-7
Insert
A6
AJ
A7&amp;8
Cl-8
Bl
A:Z

Col umns

m•.r.r:

fred Crow

~ .· '

Bob HoeDjcb
lim Sands

-,

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