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                  <text>Pag&amp;-08-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

December 12,1993.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

U. S. citrus producti·on
expected to drop 7 percent

MYSTERY FARM -'Ibis week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Wat!r
Conservation Di$trict, is located somewhere m
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate in the weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop orr your
guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave,, Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the

Ohio Valley •Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
paper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be fea·
lured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Victoria Wilcox receives
oncology certification

.
I•

I
I

I
I

I

GALLIPOLIS · Victoria
Wilcox, R.N., a nurse at Holzer
: Clinic, was recently awarded her
· certification in Oncology.
: The certification process
: required a two-year long course of
· home study and on-tbe·job train. ing, capped by an all day exam. "It
was a long process," said Wilcox,
"but, well worth the effort!'
"The course taught me methods
·and procedures which wiD help me
better serve my Oncology
patients," she said. ''We are proud
of Vicki's accomplishments," said
·Ann Wickline, R.N., Holzer Clinic
Nursing Manager. "She is an out·
standing and compassionate nurse,
who is always qonsiderate of her
patients' circumstan~.·
"This course sharjlened her
skiDs and deepened her msighl into
:the needs of Oncology patients,"
Wicldine said
Wilcox has been a nurse in the
Holzer Clinic Oncology Depart·
ment since 1987. She is a graduate

of the Holzer School of Nursing.
A native of Gallipolis, she is
married
Mike Wilcox. They
have a datlghi!Cf,An1811•ila.

VICTORIA WILCOX

Dr. Strafford named to post
GALLIPOLIS • J. Craig Straf·
ford, M.D., president Holzer Oinic
Inc. Board of Directors and an
. obstetrician/gynecologist ar the
clinic, was recently elected vice
· chairman of the Ohio Section of
The American CoU~e of Obstetri·
cians and GynecologJSts.
The three-year term began in
October L993. Dr. Strafford, a
native of Portsmouth, is a 1968
graduate of Ohio U~iversity an~.
1972 graduate of Oh~o.State Um·
versity School of Medicme.
After completing his internship
and residency at Indiana University
Medical Center, he joined Holzer
Oinic in 1975. Strafford has been
president of the clinic's board of
directors since January 1990. He
also serves as the director of medi·
cal education at Holzer Medical
Center.
Dr. Strafford has served on tbe
boards of Star Bank and the Ameri·
can Group Practice Association,
holds the positions of clinical
Instructor at Ohio State University
College- of ~edicine, a~d is, a
physician adviSOr to the UruvetSlly
of Rio Grande
... College
. of.Nursing.
.

.

opened.''

Continued from D-1
perfonnance. The number of non·
current loans as a percent of total
assets in Ohio remains better than
the nation overall.
" 'Ohio also has a greater number of profitable banks-95 percent
of the state charters were profitable
last year vs. 94 percent nationwide,
he said. The number of top-rated
Stale charter, based on a 1-5 rating
system that regulators apply to
banks, showed a big jump as well,'
Thomas said. The percent receiving
a I rating-the best-increased to 44
percent from 39 percent last year.
"Thomas noted that there are no
ratings of 5, which indicates a bank
in serious trouble, in the state sysDR. J, C. STRAFFORD
tem.
"Of the state· s four regions, the
Dr. Strallora IS marned to Dr. Southeasl ·and Central region,
Becky Strafford, an Ohio Universi- including Columbus, had the highty alumnus, who is medical director est number of !-rated banks, with
at Gallipolis Development Center. 55 percent."
They have three children,
Katherine, Jessica, and Walter.

Like aIQJOd neii!hbor.
State Farm is there.
Sta te Farm Insura nce Compantes
Home Oth ces. Bl ooming to n. llhnots

WE HAVE. THE LARGEST SELECTION OF TELEVISIONS, VCR's AND

75.()().90.00
60.()(). 75.00
55.()().78:00
50.()().61.00
400.00·750.00
330.00-625.00

SQ0.700
Slaughter Bulls
Cows &amp;Calves BH
Bred Cows
Slaughter Cows:
42.00-44.00
Hip Dressing
37 .()().41.00
Ulility
I
Horse and Thck Sale first Thursda of each month· 7:00 .m.

HOLI DA1 VALUES
Low, Low Monthly
Paymants... No Payments

Tll1994

TAPES

PIONEER

SURFACE
MOUNT
SPEAKERS

6995 '

5

.

BOOM

The Racine Village Council
approved the first of three readings
to enact a three-year rate increase
by National Gas and Oil Corp.
Council met recently with
National Gas and Oil Vice Presi·
dent John Dennison, area office
manager Vicki M01tow and south·
east superintendent Bob Crumb
who made a presentation on behalf
of the proposed increase.
They reuorted the requested rate
is $2.47 tfie first year, $2.10 the
second year and $1.99 the third
year.
The three reported that even
with the requested increase the gas
rates wiD be lower than the rates in
effect when National Gas and Oil
acquired the company.
No action was taken foUowing a
proposal 'br Tammy Lyons of the
Davis-Qu1ckel Agency Inc. of
Pomeroy for the viUage to purchase
insurance through the Oh1o Public

. I

... Trust your senses.

1991 Ford Festlva-" ..-'91" ...
2 Dr., auto., AM/FM, gas

save~,

1988 BUICK SKYHAWK ..

clean.

,.

188" ...

2 Dr., 4 cyt .. aUio, air, low miles.
'

1990 CHEV. CAVAUER- '12" ...
2 Dr.. 5 spd .. om .• radio, 4 oyl .. Sharpl

1988 FORD FESTIVA 2." 162".,
2 Dr., 4 speed, air, low miles.

1991 FORD ESCORT-176" ...
2 Or., auto., AMJFM, fire engine red.

1911 DODGE

OMNI-- 163" ...

4 Dr.. auto .. air, loW miles.

1988 CHEV. CAVAUER.." 176" ... .

BEAR CAT

.14SXL

Scanner
/

4 Or., auto., air, AMIFM. clean. Gaa
Saver.

1918 CHEV. 510 PU ••- 1112" ...
1919 CHEV. lERmA ..... '99" ...
2 ~r. , 5 speed, air, low milel, clean.

MOIITH..V PA'tiiENlS BASED UPON

'1,11110.00 DOWN OR EQUAL VAW: IN
TAADE-IN ANIBAINCEFINNICCD
l.BillNO INSTllUTlONS.

FISHER DAC-2403

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·sugg. Retail
5399.95

4 cy1., 5 speed, radio, low miles.

5299.95

Entities Pool.
The fire department requested a
transfer of funds in the fire depart·
ment account so that the monitor
that activates the fli'C siren can be
replaced. The present unit has
stopped .working. The funds were
transferred as were funds· in the
genellll fund and in the refuse lund.·
Council also approved a resolution authorizing pledging not more
than $3,000 as 10 perc'ent matching
on the Round 8 State Issue II application for the storm sewer project
In addition, council approved a
resolution authorizing the filing of
an application for no-interest loan
from the Issue II fund to he used on
the grant for the waterline extension, new water well and water

meters.

In other matters, council:
- Received a report that vehi·
cles are being driven on the walking track at Star Mill Park. Two
persons were recently arrested but
1t was reported that several others
had been seen. Additional barricades are to be installed to prevent

traffic in that area of the park.
- Received a letter from Prose·
cuting Attorney John · Lentes
regarding a recent ruling regarding
the Sunshine Law which requires
public business be done at a public
meeting.
- Put up for bid the 1975
White compactor trnck that is surplus property. The bids are to be
OJI!Iled Jan.IO at 7 p.m. Minimum
b1d was set at $2,500.
- Selected Henry Bentz and
Raben Beegle to serve on the fire.
men's dependency hoard for 1994.
The fire department selects two
members then the four select the
fifth member.
-Recessed until Dec. 20.
Present were council members
Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, Scott
Hill and Doug Rees. Also present
were Mayor Jeff Thornton, Clerk
Carolyn Powell, Marshal Don Dye,
Fire Chief John Holman, Street
Commissioner G leon Rizer and
councilmen-elect Dale Hart and
Larry Wolfe.

A Langsville man was cited by the Mi!ldleport Police Depart·
ment on a charge of driving under lhe influence Saturday morning.
S...wn Games, 19, was stopped around 2 a.m. on Hysell Street in
Middleport. He is to appear in the Middleport Mayor's Court
Wednesday e'(ening.

Upper Route 1

EARTH
STATION

.Kanauga, Ohio
•

Officers probe theft

Open Eve~iQ.gs

till P.M~

State panel begins
reviewing distribution
of court imposed fines
how fines have been distributed in
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} Complaints from county and local the ~ast
' We hear from judges, sheriffs
governments about the distribution
of criminal fmes has led to a study and all ltinds of folks in the criminal justice system that we have
by a state panel.
The governments complained divvied up the fmes so much that
that the Legislature has set aside so there is nothing left to support the
much of the money that little is left court system," said Kimberly
Crawford, legislative associate for
for local use.
The Task Force on Criminal the County Commissioners Associ·
Fine Distribution includes repre- ation of Ohio.
The committees are to report in
sentatives of courts, the Legislature, law enforcement and local May to the full task force, which is
governments. The group, which to prepare a repon for the Legislawas created 10 determine how the ture by Jan. I, 1995.
system could be improved, had its
The report will outline the purfirst meeting Tuesday.
pose of noes, evaluate whether fmc
Judge Michael Close of the levels are proper and recommend
Franklin County Court of Appeals, methods 10 simplify distribution,
chainnan of the task force, divided said Rick Dove, associate director
the members in10 four committees. for legal and legislative services
They will study how much money with the Ohio Supreme Coon.
comes in from fines and wluil the
"Even the auditor's office has a
cosiS are for the coons and jails. difficult time trying to keep uack
They wiD also look at how mayors' of all this," Dove said.
courts mesh with the system and

..

Man cited on Dl./1 charge

Ch.. •l
SATELLITE

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

borhoods also were reported to have own a fireann , 53 percent of the stuready access 10 "easy-to-shoot, accu- dents surveyed and 45 percent of the
rate, reliable fireanns" including high- inmates said they could borrow guns

--Local briefs--

•'

Muter

1 Section, 10 Pa1101 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 13, 1993

Racine Village Council OKs first
reading of gas rate increase

~F.I~H~J!

PANASONIC

Vol. 44, NO. 161

Muldmodlalnc.

from drug ftealers .
ers.
drugs or worked for drug dealers.
"Controls imposed at the pomt of
But sociologists Joseph F. Shesale likely would be ineffective, at ley and James D. Wrigh·t, the repon's
The four Sllltcs were picked
least by themselves, in preventing the authors, voiced skepticism that new because 1hey reponed having probacquisition of guns by Juveniles stud- gun-control laws would keep fire- lems of youth v1olencc in mner-city
ied here because they rarely obtain arms away from criminals or youth. sthools. Thus, the results were not
"Controls imposed at the point of sale
their guns through such customary
"Mos1 of the methods of obtain- representative of the nation · s high
likely would , be ineffective
at least
by
•
'
• . •
outlets," sa1d the study commissioned ing guns reponed by the JUVcntlcs are sc hool populat•on. No ctues, sc hools
tht~ms,lves, m preventmg the acqUISitiOn
by the Justice Department.
already against the law... the report or corrccuonal fac ilities were ide nti 4
Therepart
did
nol
dircc1ly
comsaid
fted. ·
~'tr&amp;!~~':~~::s !:=, -·~··of"ggfls'·qy:-JP~Itlt§s tftiflf~:tr·nere --bement on the new five-day waiting
aocordlng to the study by two Tulane
Cause they rarely Obtain the/l'gUnS through
period for handgun purchases that
The s1udy found a high correlaThe study was commissioned
University sociologists.
SUCh CUStomary OUtletS. "
Pres1demClmton rccemly signed mto tion between gun possession and during the Bush administrauon by
law. Nor did it refer specifically to mvolvement in illegal drug trafflck· the Justice Department \ National
. In ' addition, 83 percent of 835
....... Justice Department study
Juveniles
m
the
same
age
group
who
·
were incarcerated for serious crimes _ _ _ _ _...;......;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ other gun-control proposals. such as ing with 72 percent of the Juvenile Institute of Justicc and the Offi ce of
one named last week by the Clinton inmates and I B percent of 1hc stu· Juvenile Jus1ice and De linquency
at. six detention centers said they powered revolvers and automatic and from family members. And S4 per- administration to license gun own- dents reported ei1her ~avmg dcall Prevention .
owned guns at the time of their arrest. semiautomatic handguns. the report cent of the inmalesand 37 percent of
. Guns were easily available to said.
the students said they could get guns
students and inmates, either at home
Six percent of hil(h school stu· on the street if they wanted one. ac·
or "on the street," said the study re- dents said they had possyssed a mili- cording 10 the study.
leased Sunday. It was based on re- tary·stylc assault weapo~, at the time
Beside family members. drug
sponses from schools and detention of the survey. Among the'mmmes, 35 dealers were seen as a major source of
. centers in California, New Jersey.ll- percent reported having assault weap· a firearm, lhestudysaid. Twenty -two
linois and Louisiana.
ons when they were arrested.
percent of the students and 36 percent
Youths in the inner-city neighEven if young people did not of mmates said they could gel guns

'

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9-9-6-5·1·2

WASHiNGTON (AP)- Guns
are so easy for young people to obtain
in crime-ridden urban neighborhoods
that new laws controlling their sale
probably would not reduce their
availability, a Justice Department
study concludes.
Twenty-twopercentof758 boys
at!O inner-city high schools reported

VHS

... Trust ;vour senses.

Low lonight In mid 30s.

'l'l ostly cloud y. Tuesday, high ln
40&lt;.

New laws unlikely to curb availability of guns, study says

3PACK

FISHER - 9335

PageS

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) dard, the newspaper said.
Bridges in Ohio and around the
More than 4,200 of Ohio's
nation are deteriorating faster than 30,000 bridges are deficient, and
they can be fixed because of 4,600 are obsolete. The 8.800 defidecades of neglect, the Dayton cient or obsolete bridges put Ohio
Daily News reported.
. sixth in the nation for the most bad
One in every three bridges in the bridges, the newspaper said.
country is structurally defiCient and
One of the worst bridges in the
cannot support standard loads, or is slllle is lhe West Fifth Street brid$e
too narrow or otherwise "function- over the Great Miami River m
ally obsolete," the newspaper said downtown Dayton, the Daily News
The Daily News spent four reported. The concrete that forms
months investigating bridge safety iiS arch strncture is crumbling.
using documents from the U.S .
The deterioration of bridges did
Department of 'I'ransJ)ortation. The not happen oventi~ht
newspaper reported the results in a
For decades, vtrtually the only
three-part senes that began Sunday new bridges built in OhJO were on
and continued today.
new hi$hways, said Jim Barnhart, ·
About 195,000 of the country's supervtsor of the state's bridge
585,000 bridges are considered maintenance and inspection pro·
deficient or obsolete, according to gram. When the highway money
the newspaper's analysis of the began to dry up, so did lhe money
National Bridge lnvenlllry, a com· to build bridges.
puter summary of inspections on
1n 1981, the Ohio Department of
BREAKFAST
SANTA...., roanJIIIle!s bad the opportunity
all bridges that are at least 20 feet Transportation built only 69 Saturday morolna to ba¥e briakfast witb Santa Claus at the Meigs
long.
bridges, although thousands Qf County Museum In Pomeroy. Sarah Triplett, ·10, and James A.
In Ohio, 46 million cars cross bridges in the state needed rehabili· Werry, 6, both or RaveDSWood, W.Va., todk advantage of tbe oppor·
bridges that are judg.ed substan·
tuuity to tnlk to Santa Claus, Curly Wiles or Pomeroy.
Continued on Pige 3

342s..llvt.

INSURANCE

9-24-30-31-33-38
Kicker

Newspaper says Ohio
.bridges are neglected

SNOWDEN

STATE FARM

4-1-4-7
Super Lotto:

CAIDU

are on permanent display in the
ARS National Visitor Center at
Beltsville.
ARS scientists inducted into the
Hall of Fame must either be retired
or eligible to retire and be recog·
nized for excellence by national
and international colleagues in the
scientific community.
Gorham, who is eligible for
retirement, led a research team in
1962 that developed a diagnostic
test for bluetongue, a viral llisease
that has cost U.S. ranchers minions
of dollars in lost export sales.
Gorham and a !~fBduate student
in 1973 fli'Sl descnbed a new slow
viral disease, caprine arthritis and
encephalitis.

6-9-4
Pick 4:

WID

Soil scientist, animal
researchers join hall of fame
WASHINGTON (AP)- A soil
scientist and two animal
researchers are the newest members of the Science Hall of Fame of
the Agriculture Department's Agri·
cultural Research Service.
Those honored are John R.
Gorham, a veterinarian who heads
the Animal Diseases Research Unit
at PuUman, Wash.; lhe late Sterling
B. Hendricks, a soil scientist who
worked at the Beltsville, Md., Agricultural Research Center; and Clair
E. Terrill, an animal geneticist who
did sheep research at Dubois,
Idaho, and then came to Beltsville
to manage animal research at the
center and later agencywide.
"These scientists have been
selected because of their records of
achievement in advancing scientif·
ic knowledge 10 the benefit of agri·
culture," said R. Dean Plowman,
acting assistant secretary of agriculture for science and education.
Agency plaques citing the three
researchers' accomplishments will
join the 27 others awarded to scientists since 1986 when the Hall of
Fame was established. The plaques

Pick 3:

•

cent from the August projection,
the report said. While the Washing·
ton state crop is forecast the same
as last year, in many states the har•
vest has fallen short of expectations.
Exports of apples, grapes anc!
pears dropped in 1992-93, but foreign markets still accounted for 10
percent to 25 percent of the fresh·
market sales.
" The downturn can be reversed
by continued market develop"
ment," the report said . "The
prospect for selling U.S. apples 111,
Japan has improved and the market
for U.S. table grapes in Mexico has

Gallipolis...

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mlnerlll Wells, WV
December 4, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
85.00.102.00
300-under
75.()().88.00
300.500
62.()().84.00
SQ0.700
52.oo:68.00
800-over
STOCK HEIFERS:
65.()().82.00
300-under
60.()().78.00
300-SOO
57.()().68.00
S&lt;J0.700
50.()().64.00
800-over

STOCK BUllS:
300-under
300-SOO

oranges probably will increase
from last year' s lows, the report
said.
"The 1993-94 Florida grapefruit
crop will be smaller than last year's
record, but high sugar content is
expected to result in good-eating
fruit," it said.
· Grower prices for grapefruit are
expected to be higher than hisl
year, when a bumper crop and
weak export demand resulted in
low prices.
Declines in U.S. production of
apples, Bartlett pears and grapes in
1993 supported some grower
prices.
The October forecast for the
U.S. apple crop was lowered 3pcr.

WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
citrus production is expected to
drop 7 percent in the 1993-94 crop
year from the previous year's near·
record output, the Agriculture
Department says.
Oranges are forecast to drop 7
percent, grapefruit 9 percent and
lemons I percent.
"Primarily because of a smaUer
Florida orange crop and slightly
lower juice yields, U.S. orange
juice production is expected to total
1.1 billion gallons, down 10 percent from the record set last year,"
said a situation and outlook summary prepared by USDA •s Economic Research Service.
Because higher beginning
stocks will partially offset lower
production, the U.S. orange juice
supply is expected 10 be down only
3 percent from 1992-93, it said.
Grower prices for processed

Ohio Lottery

Rio
teams

•

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

Officers of lhe MiddlepOrt l'olice Department are investigating
the reDCWd theft of a nativity iiCene item from a Middleport church.
A black sheep wq 1eportedly 110Ien froin1he display in front of
the Presbyterian church on North Fourth Avenue. The theft was
reported Sunday.

THE ANGEL TREE ·Tiie Meigs County
Department of Humaa Services is sponsoring
tbe third annual Angel Tree project in which
area businesses, oreanlzatlons and volunteers
from the commuully help provide needy chil·

dren and the elderly In the community wltb
Christmas gills. From left to right, Mary Hobstetter, Rita Ball, Barbara Chapman, Debbie
Ellis, and Jane Banks are shown putting the fin·
ishlng touches on the Angel Tree.

Angel Tree to brighten Christmas for some
By LEIGH ANN REDOVIAN

Sentinel News Starr
Christmas will lie a little
brighter for needy children and the
elderly in the community again this
year through the efforts of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services and its Angel Tree

proffe

project depends on local
businesses, service organizations,
churches, Sororities and volunteers
to provide Christmas gifts for more
than 500 children and more than SO
elderly in Meigs County.
'"!'he project embraces the lrne
spirit and meaning of the season,"
said Michael Swisher, Director of
the Meigs County DepL of Human
services. "It is a. very wonhwhile
project for the community to
become involved in."
Aocording to Swisher, the pro·

ject was insPired by area coal miners who carried out similar pro·
grams in the past.
Willing businesses and organizations are given a brief description
of a needy child or elderly restdent
and are asked to purchase a gift for
their "angel." The deadline for
gifts for those interested in spon·
soring an angel is Thursday, Dec.
15.
The gifts are brought to lhe
Dept. of Hu n Services for
employees
I
liver them.
Delivery be ·
.2 .
"Being involved in ,t project
gives yon the feeling that Christ·
mas is more about giving and helping others, than receiving gifts
yourself," said Barbara Chapman,
supervisor of the jobs unit for the
department.
Although sponsorship has

grown this year. the department
said that it is difficult to reach all of
those in need. According to Swish-·
er, the department will be concentrating more on serving the needs
of the elderly this year.
Veterans Memorial Hospital has
been a sponsor of the project for
the past two years and this year
sponsorship there has jumped from
assisting 12 to 24 children and
elderly. The project started when
several employees decided to sponsor the project in place of their annual gift exchange.
"This is a wonderful Opportunity
to let the needy in lhe community
know thai there are people who can
help them," said Sue Stone,,toordinalor of the project at Veterans.
"Our first responsibility is to the
sick, but we also help in any other
way we can."
·

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt Street
Pomeror. Oblo.

DBVOTBD TO THE ll'I'I'BJIE81'8 OJ' THE IIBJQ8.KMJON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publbher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

I .EHEW
Controller

~ARGARET

General~anager

l..E'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They obould be leu than 300
words. All letters are subject to ediling and must be lip&lt;d wilh DIDIO,
address and relepboDe number. No unaigoed lettm will be published. Lettm
should be in good tasle, addreuing iuuea, oot penonalities.

New Democrats adopting
crime-fighting theme

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Pomeroy+Mlddleport, Ohio .,
Monday, Dac:8m.~r 13, 1993

Alii want for Christmas...,..
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Lan;,.-.,Sh;.. ;;..;o.;.oale;.. .;.,s. __The downsizing trelld sweeping
the economy like a virtual
frrestorm has hit the toy stores at
last. The most popular toys this
holiday season are little teeny ones:
Little Pet Shops, micro-machines,
Polly Pockets.... It makes sense.
For toymakers and retailers, small·
er is definitely better. As playthings
approach microscopic levels, more
can be kept in stock. Think of the
warebouse silvings alone! But will
these savings he passed on to YQU?
Certainly, itty-bitty toys are easier on the pocketbook than a bi4·
ticket item such as, say, Barbie s
Theme Park, which would require
two Toys R Us stores just to display. On the other hand, consumers
need special lenses to fmd them.
And once they are found aDd purchased, miniatures are easily lost
Parents could buy the same cheap
little plastic hamstec or tiny dump
truck over and over again. This is

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ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspoodent
wASHINGTON -In the annals of understatement. !here ought to be
a special spot for Dr. Joycelyn Elders' remark that she didn't know all the
ramifications wben she talked about legalizing illicit dru~s.
President Clinton's surgeon general ICB:J1le&lt;! them m ~ rush from a
White House bent on taking charge of the cnme tssu~. a maJor concern of
the administration now, aDd probably of the voters 10 the 1994 state and
congressional electiOJ!S.
.
Republicans made crime one of their issues for years, calling for tough
law enforcement and often . n g that liberals -.read Democrats - are
soft on criminals. Richard NIXon set the pattern m 1968, George Bush
was still mining it 20 years later.
.
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But Clinton campaigned as a crime-fighter himself, sa)'lng .the nanon
should put 100,000 new police offi~s ~n the case, sugge:sting police
worlc for soldiers and vela'8Jls, advocallDg m~ federal81&lt;1;.
.
· He said it is imperative that Congress qu1ckly enact a cnme bill to
combat what he called an epidemic of viol~nce. .
. .
"The American people are tired of hurllllg and tired of feeling msecure
and tired of the violence," Clinton told mayors ~ police officials from
3S cities at a White House cotiference Thursday. We have to move and I
think we are pnepared to move."
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The administtation emphasis is on cnme conlrol, pohcmg the streets,
punishin' criminals. That's the New Democral approach, after years of
GOP claims that the Democrats were pennissive, more concerned about
criminals than about victims. .
The surgeon general's observation.&amp;about ~zing drugs fit the old,
Republican-fostered image of ~ocr:tts on c~e, not ~ n~w one. The
White House said CliniOn was ag81nstlt, and Bg81nst ~tudymg tL
.
While crime conlrol always has been on the Cbnton agenda, 11 ha_s
been moving up the list along with the pu~lic concern that could make It
the top issue of the coming off-year campwgn.
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The surgeon general's public thoughts on legal narcoucs don t fit the
In South Africa today, it isn't
program. It's an idea that guarantees an u~ Congress declared five the beginning of the end, but it is
ears ago that legalization would be unconsctonable surrender when there definitely the end of the beginning.
Is "no substitute for IOial victory" over iOegal drugs. But there's been no With these words, a wise and brave
white South African editor,
victory.
.
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.. Sixty percent of our most vwlent
cnmes
are associated wt'th alco- Richard
Steyn, last week summahoi i;f drug use," Dr. Elders said Tuesday at the Nati~nal Press Cl~b rized current conditions in his
when she was asked whether legalizing drugs was an opaon to fight VIO- country. Tentative as that might
lence. "So we
that there is a marked increase in drug use or alcohol souDd to anyone who knows little
use associawt with crime.
.
.
of Steyn's tortured hind, it is actu.. You know many times they're robbmg, stealing and all of these ally a statement of immense change
thing~· 10 get mo~ ~ buy drugs. And ~ do feel that we would markedly and measured hqJe.
reduce our crime rate if drugs were legalized.
As it happened, Stcyn's speech
"But 1 don't know all of lhe ramifications of this. I do feel that we was delivered in Wasltington on
need to do some studies;"' she said. . .
.
the same day thai white dominance
one ramifiCation is the political impact on Clinton's cnme control and
black exclusion from the politi·
stance - it's no help. Republicans have been looking for a way back on cal process came to a formal end in
the issue and already were aitical of cuts in the personnel and budget of South Africa. A multiracial Transi·
the drug j,olicy control office, created when Congress wanted a drug con- tional Executive Council took
trol czar m charge of the problem.
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office in Cape Town, empowered
So they seized on the Elders' comments as evtdence., Thts IS JUSt to facilitate and oversee the
another indication of the admihlstration 's retreat on all frorits of the drug nation's first universal suffrage
war '' said Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah.
.
election on April 27. With that
Sen. Bob Dole, the Republican lead~, said he ;~as "concerned wtth · election, black rule will almost cer·
this administtation 's commitment to fighting drugs.
tainly become an accomplished fact
A Democrst. Rep. Olarles Rangel of New Yotic, said he .w~ shocked in a country in which the white
and disappointed. and that legal drugs would only add to addiction among minority represents slightly less
the younJ in depressed inner cities.
than 15 percent of tbe )IOIIUlatlon.
Legal1zing drugs has come up before, always igni!i'Jg a flfCStorm of
It bas been a long,- bloody time
argument among politicians and law enfon:ers. Baltimore. Mayor Kurt coming. Virtually from the moment
Schmoke igniled one when he suggesled five years ago thst 11 ought to be · that some Dutch settlers came
siudied:
· Dr Elders was courageous and COITCCI. that prohibi lion
· docsn't ashore at Cape Town's Table Bay
He said
in 16S2, South Africa has been a
work and thai drugs should be handled as a public health problem, not a place and nation divided by race.
Long before there ·was apartheid,
Sweet, 1\ federal
court
in Neo,y YC?rlt•.igniled the· rigorous legal codification of
the debate p
in a speech four years ago tomght. sa)'IDg JUStice was white supremacy adopted by the
being overWhelmed by what is really a social phenomena, and drugs National Party government after
ought to be made legal. He, too, praised Dr. Elders.
1948, the white man's rule and
rules were supreme. While the
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. ~ean, vice presicleat and colum· Dutcb-&lt;lerived Afrikaaners and the
nld rot Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Washington and later British imperialists weze biW!r
nallonal polllles for more tlutn 30 years.

definitely to the advantage of those
megacotporations for wltom cuteness production is a means of sur·
viva!, but noi to yours.
There's a bright side. Now thst
Congress has tilled the SuperCollider project. sub-atomic particles
won't be the playthings of choice
in the near future: Any bright s.
year-old or nllCiepr pbysiciJt knows
that quarlcs and muons mate wonderful keys to unlock mysteries of
mauer and energy, but as bedtime
buddies when Mommy turns qut
the lights, their snuggle-ability fac. tor is nil. If Barney the dinosaur,
for some reason, is reassuring to
our pre•litcrate young, Quirky the
Quark would be merely b.rflin,.
By the time you hugged him he d
be gone. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle does not lend itself
to the marketing and manufacture
of fuzzy toys.
I
not have
Inner Child
.,

(1'111 on the list for Jjn experimental
Inn~r

ChiJd,cloning procedure,
though iny insurance company is
bal!:~ a1 paying for it. the greedy
w
), but I still believe bigger
must become heUer again, or we'll
never get this ·economy turned
around. I'd like to start the ball
rolling with my personal Cbrislmas
WlshLisL
',
(1) Give me the SuperCollider
project. I've always dreamed of
owning a $2 billion·· tunnel in
Texas. Won't you plesse help?
(2) I need a professionally let·
tered sign on my car, which has
been broken into seven times over
the past two years: "Nothing to
Steal," in English, Spailish, Tagalog. ChineSe, Vietnamese, )tuasian,
Korean and Espennto. (On second
thought. forget it If the sign's too
nice, someone will just break into
my car to steal it)
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(3) A contract. I don't care what

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dis~ct

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one just for the nostalgia vlilue.
(4) $1 ttillion.
·
· (S) My money back for "Age of
InnocenCe" and "Orlando." In the
former, about halfway through, 1
started screaming, "Kiss her, for
God's sake! Do something! Make
something happen!" I was forcibly.
ejected. Durmg the latter, about
halfway through, I started screaming, "Go back to sleep, become a
man ~· then get a second mongage! • This Is a hard thing tci
scream, believe me, and my effo~
were met with, once again, forcible
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ejCCbon.
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It has 'come to our attention that summer games.
· If you have been contacled by
OhiO' Special Ol)'lllpics has a tele·
mad:eting f~rm (Olimpia Publish- this telemarketing (~rm and would
ing) soliciting donations via tele- like to support Special Olympics,
phone for the State Game Program. but would like to asaure that your
This is ·a legitimate fund-raising donation is urilired to bellefu local
effort. however, we have reports Meigs County Special Olympic
that the pwp,ose is being misrepre- athletes, you may do so by mailing
your donation to: ~eigs Coun1y
sented. ·
Special
Olympics Carleton School
Local Meigs County residents
P.O.
Box
307 Syracuse, Ohio
have been told that their donation
4S779
would be returried 10 Meip County
Thank you for your continued
to support,the local Meip SJJCCial
Olympics Grogram. Tliis 1s not · ~ If you would like additionaccurate. A fuods generated will al infonnat1on, plesse cootact me.
Steve Bella (992-6681).
go to support the Ohio Special
Executive Director
Olympics STATE Game Program,
MeipCounty
whidl IGIIlC local Special Olympic
Board of ~tal Retardation,
athletes may benefit from if they
Developmental Disabilities.
. attend the Ohio Special Olympics

Support MHS girls basketball
I

Desr Editor,
I'd like 10 take this opportUnity
ttr invite you out to watch the
Meigs High School Gitl.t B•Jret·
ball Team. These ladiea wort every
bit II lUtrd ...the bojs. ~have
lhe ' ilpiri~ devoaon' 8lld ~!ion
'it tates ·to ,win111te.se.ladies ~
lllready 'IVC champs from rm 1we.
Come.0111 llld Wlll;h them Clplllre
another TVC tide thll year.. .
. M a J*l!lll and number 0110 fan

of Mei.lli High School SJlOI'!I and
activities, I feel these radlea
deserve support from pluents, fac.
ulty llld Wla ll.to. 1bere .e many
girls involved in bllketball now,
from fourth grade on .up. Let's ·
show them they are backed all the
way for their time and: commltmeiit. LliJID I laid, iet's Cbecr these
ladies to another T.VC championship tide.
Mary Hud8011
Pomeroy

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Cincinnati 44°

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(6) A month or so back, when •
Howald Stern and His Ru$hness:
were on the cover of Time, the grtl"
cer where I bought the magazine:
volunteered the information that he:
really haled Howard Stem. "I wan~
to beat the crap out of him," he'
said, "while his wife holds his
coat." I wouldn't mind seeing that
If anybody wants to set up a grudge
match between this grocer and·
Howard Stem, I'll be there. (I think
we should leave~. Stern's wife
out of it though. I'll hold the jacket)
(7) The elimination of the prefixes "cyber," "hyper" and
"sujJer." Can we get on this hyperquick?
. (8) A George Will punch balloon.
(9) A dream date with Catharine
MacKinnon. Dutch lreat, of course. ·
(10) A ~egadeath quilt for a'
queen-size' bed. Also comforter,
dust ruffie, and two plUow shams. •
You could throw in a tea cozy, ton, ,, 'I
if you like. And a queen-size bed•
would be great. Any bed, really . . ,
Sleeping on a mattress is getting· •
kindofold.
•
Ian Shoales is a syndicated.. :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise :
Association.
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claimed that his race was a key fac·· ''
tor in the state of Georgia's imposi: · ;
lion of a death penalty on him for· '
killing a white policeman. In his: ''
dissent, Justice Blackmon agreed
with McClaskey, puinting out that ··
the statistics made clear "a consti- ··
tutionally intolerable lev,el of
racially based discriminatio'! lead· '
ing to the imposition of his death :
sentence," The equal protection · :
clause of the Constitution breaks ·

W. VA .

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Blackmun told Nina Totenberg:
that he stays awake on those
"death watch" nights, "but there's ·
not much you can do eltcept make ·
a noise about iL' •
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There was not much Brennan
aDd Marshall could do either. Brennan, in particular, did continue to · (
make noises, insisting that the 1
death penalty treats "members of 1
the human' race as non~humalts." . ,
·Brennan kept emphasizing that :
~·even the vilest criminal remains a · •
human beinJ possessed of common ; :
human digmt)\"
· . •
It's a passing thought, in this "
Christmas season, for members of "
the Se~, the ·attOrney general and ,
the presJdcnL
·
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Mostly cloudy skies
bring chance of rain
II y Thr Associated Press

Ton•ght will be mostly cloudy rain . Highs 10 the 40s. Thursday, fair.
acn&gt;&lt;s southern Oh10 with a chance Lows in the 30s With high s 10 the 40s.
of showers. Temperatures will only Friclay ... A chance of rain . Lows 1n the
drop into tloc mid-30s. Auoss north· 30s and highs in the 40s.
em Ohio lows will drop into the
Arond the nation
lower 30s and skies will be mostly
The SDOW showers that visited the
cloudy, except for the northeast Northeasthavesubsided,leaving snow
where skies will be partly cloudy. cover in the mountains of New EngNormal low temperatures for this land. Snow was also on the ground in
time of year range from the lower partsoftheAppalachiansandthenorth20s m the north to them id-20s in the em Plains states.
south.
Clear skies predominated today
Tuesday will be cloudy with along the Atlantic coast and in the
showers likel y in the south and West. Clouds prevailed. however. in
mostly &lt;:loudy in the north. Tern· the Northwest and Midwest. A band of
peratures will range from the midto showers extended from the GrcmLakcs,
upper 40s. Tuesday night and south through the MisSissippi Valley,
Wednesday will be wet statewide . all the way to New Orleans .
The arctic ~i r will h&lt;1vc moved to the
Freakishly warm weekend we&lt;~th cr
c&lt;1s t s" th e precipitation will be all was followed by a winter storm that
ram .
dumped up to two feet of snow "n parts
The record h1gh temperature of Utah on Sunday.
lorth!Sdateat the Columbus weather
The heavy, wet snow brought down
swtion was 65 degrees in 1901. The power lines and resulted m nearly 60
record low was minus 7 in 1960. mmor accidents Sunday in Salt Lake
Sunrise this morning wasat7:4 5 and Utah counlies. the Utah Highway
a.m. Sunset will be ~t ~:07 p.m.
Patrol reported.
.. ..
Southern Ohio
Highs were expected to be in the
Ton1ght. mostly cloudy with a 30s in New England and across the
slight ehaneeof rain. Low in the mid Great Plains today. Highs in the 40s
30s. Southeast winds 10 to IS mph . were expected in the Upper Midwest
Chanee of rain 30 percent.
·and the Pacific Northwest.
Tuesday, rain likely. High in
The southern half of the counrry
the mid 40s. Chance of rain 70 per- was to enjoy highs in the 50s and 60s,
cent.
with only the southernmost parLs of
Extended forecast
Texas, Louisiana and Florida reaching
rain likely. Lows highs in the 70s.
m the 30s.
chance of

Pratt of Pomeroy.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Tracy H. Whaley;
daughter, Janet Whaley, and three
sisters and one brother.
Services will be held Wednes·
day at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with the Rev.
William Middleswarth officiating.
Burial will follow in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Eastern Star memorial
services will be held Tuesday at 7
p.m. by Pomeroy EOS.
Friends may call Tuesday from
2-4 and 7·9 p.m. at th e funeral
home.

Grace Whaley

Mabel M. Pearman, 68, of Middleport, died Saturday, Dec . II,
1993, at Overbrook Nursing Center
in MiddleporL
Born June 30, 192S, in Rutland,
daughter of the late Guy and Velma
Wilt Koller, she was a homemaker
and a member of the Middlepon
United Pentacostal Church.
She is survived by a son, Paul
Pearman of Middleport; a brother,
Gene KeUer of Middleport; a sister,
Eleanor Rue of Minnesota, and two
other brothers, Junior and John
Keller, address unknown, and an
aunt, Elizabeth Keller of Pomeroy.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Sam Pearman .
Services will be Tuesday at II
a.m. at Fisher Funeral home in
Middleport with the Rev. Clark
Baker officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport.
Friends may call Tuesday from
9 a.m . until time of services.

Grace M. Whaley, 83, Pomeroy,
died Monday, Dec. 13, 1993, at
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
Born March 19, 1910, she was
the daughter of the late Frank and
Bessie Cranmer Pugh and a retired
employee of the Meigs County
Treasurer's and Auditor's office.
In addition, she was a member
of the Pomeroy Order of the Eastern Star #186 and the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Survivors include a daughter
and son-in-law, June and Harvey
Van Vranken of Norfolk, Va .;
grandchildren, Scott and Sandy
Continental Style
Van Vranken of Mt. Clemens,
The word "denim" is taken from the
Mich., Janet Megahey of Athens,
Matthew Van Vranken of Braden- southern French town of de Nimes,
ton, Fla.; five great-grandchildren; whose textile mills first widely pro·
one nephew and three nieces and duced th e fab ric. And "jeans" is de·
special friends Sharon and Cleon rived from th e Italian city of Genoa.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS 213-!161)
Publiahed every aCI.eraooo, Moaday through
Friday 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Vat!ey Publilhin&amp; CompllllyiMultimedia
Inc .. Ptlmeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156.
Second cl1111 poJlale paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Sut.aibal nol desiriq to pay the cwrter may
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oa a three. 111 or ll,.moolh bada. Credit will be
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Chamber to meet
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will meet Tuesday a!
noon at the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. Speaker will
be Mick Davenport.
CouncU meeting
Rutland Village Council will
meet in regular session Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.
Harrisonville OES to meet
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star, will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the hall .
There will be a $3 to $5 gift
exchange.

Mabel Pearman

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Announcements

COMMUNITY THANKSGIVING - Thanksgiving iS a
time for sharing and for the
second year Syracuse had a
community dinner at tbe fire·
bouse.
Mary Pickens and Edna
Hunnel beaded up the group
or firemen and other volunteers wbo prepared rood for
nearly 200 Thanksgiving dinners, 117 or wblcb were deliv·
ered to elderly and shut-in
residents or the community.
The rest of tbe dinners were
served at tbe firehouse to anyone wbo came. Many or them
would bave spent the holiday
alone bad it not been for the
community dinner.
Above from the left, Liz
Rice, Dave Lawson, and Jan·
ice Lawson make ooodles for
the dinner while former
mayor Eber Pickens, Sr .,
right, peels potatoes. All of tbe
rood for the dinner was donated.

Bridges ...

for money to replace
ODOT saw the number of new
bridges increase to 204 in 1983.
Continued from Page 1
Bridge collapses that kill people
tation, the newspaper said.
are
rare. But they do occur- there
After lobbying state legislators
were two in Ohio during the 1980s.

s2

w-.............................................,..$14.76

Santa Claus
Will Be

Here
Wednesday,

December 15
7 p.m.· 8 p.m.

446·4524

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SUGAR BOWL

WVU vs. FLORIDA
THURSDAY, DEC. 30- SATURDAY, JAN. 1
Peoples Choice invites you to join us
on New Year's Eve for WVU Football New Orleans style! You'll have reserved
seat tickets as the undefeated
Mountaineers take on Florida at the
Superdome. Forget about driving just jump aboard our chartered plane
and enjoy the game!

SUrER DOME
NEW ORLEANS, LA

One low price includes:
•Two nights deluxe accommodations at the Clarion Hotel
on Canal Street, acijacent to the French Quarter
•Airfare and transfers
•Reserved seat ticket to the Sugar Bowl
Our plane departs at 7:30 a.m. on December 30th from Charleston's
Yeager Airport. We will "carpool" from Peoples Bank to the airport.
All passengers aboard the flight will be bound for the Sugar Bowl!

Call Mary today
at 675-1121 to reserve your seat!

Sunday
December 19th

$890 PER PERSON!

2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

Full payment due Immediately. Reservations accepted on a first-come.

'-1

!

NON-MEMBER FEE WAIVED
ON TIUS TRIP ONLY!

first -serve basis. Double occupancy only.

Have Your Child's Picture Taken
or Bring Your Own Camera!

· 786 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Peoples Choice. Choice travel opportunities
and choice financial benefits for persona
ISO and over.
To learn how you can become a member of Peoples
Choice, contact Mary Fowler. Coordinator, at (304)
675· 1121. Peoples Choice Is a division of the
Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant. Member FDIC.

Oulolde Meta&gt; C...ly

2e - , ..... .......... .....,...................$45.50
52W-...... .. ........ ...................... ...$88.40

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Racine lodge #461 F &amp; AM will
be holding annual Installation
of Officers and presenting a 70
year membership pin, 50 year
membership and several 25 year pins.
Tuesday, December 14, 1993 7:30
Refreshments will be served
All Master Mason Invited

Area deaths._ _ _ _ _ _ __

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"I'm not sure," he said, "the
death penalty, as admilnstcred, is
fairly adnilnistered. I think it comes
clole to Violating' the equal protcclion clauae of the Constitution."
~.ry "I'm not sure that the
death
can be constitutional·
ly imposed. I haven't taken that
positlon yet. but I am ·gettiag close
to .IL"
. ,
. ,His concern&amp;, WJtlr regard to
.
equal protection, are "the disturb.
.
lng ftlltlstlca ~~come in when one
N!!t Hen torr Is a nationally ·
conaiders !'lice.
renowned
authority on the First ·
In the 1987 case, McClaskey v. Amendment
Kemp, Warren McClaskey, black, BID of RJebta.and the rest of the. :

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Emergency ~edical
Service resPonded to 19 calls for
assistance during the weekend.
Units responding included:
Saturday - l:lS p.m. Middleport 10 Overbrook Center for Hele·
na Daniels who was tran~ to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; I :S6
p.m. Pomeroy to Kerr Street to
, check on a smoke odor at the An
·Slusher residence, Edna Slusher
' was treated at the scene; S:03 p.m.
· Middleport to Powell Street for
Goldie Lighlfoot who was transported to VMH; 5:30 p.m .
Pomeroy to Main Slleet for George
Harris who was treated at the
scene: 7:40 p.m. Syracuse to
Pomeroy Nursmg and Rehabilita·
tion Center for Francis King who
was transported to V~H : 10: 1S
p.m. Pomeroy to PNKC for Mary
Williams who was transported to
VMH; 10:26 p.m. Racine to Main
Street for Samuel Williams who
,was transported to VMH; 11:38
[p.m. Racine to New Portland Road
for Felicia Walburn who was lreated at the scene.
Sunday - 9:II a.m. Pomeroy
to Oak Street for Frank Molden
who was transported to V~H:
. 10:14 a.m . Rutland to College
Avenue for Corey Elliott who was
Itransported to Holzer ~edical Cen:ter; II :20 a.m. Middlepon to Overbrook Nursing Center for William
Grueser who was transported to
VMH; 2:14 p.m. Syracuse to State
Route 248 for Byron Watson who
was transported to VMH; 10:18
p.m. Pomeroy to Nye Avenue for
Heinz Coates who was transported
to VMH; 2:25 p.m. Columbia
Township '\lolunteer Fire Department to No'rth Run Road for a
structure fire at the Silas Mullins
property, no injuries reported; 6: II
p.m. Syracuse to State Route 338
for Macey Cleek who was transported to Jackson General Hospital
in Ripley, W.Va.; 8:18 p.m.
Pomeroy to PNRC for Mary
Williams who was transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 10:12
p.m. Middleport to Lincoln Street
for Howard Pinnell who was transported to PVH.
~onday- 4:56 a.m. Rutland to
State Route 124 for Deborah Lem·
ley who was transported to VMH:
5:32 a.m. Racine to State Route
124 for Donna Gibbs who was
dead upon arrival.
1

I

down.

• IColumbusl47" I

43°

:

s

Yet, as the years go by and the
mlijority of his collesgues on the
court increasingly restrict the
habeas corpus right of people on
death row to have their sentences
reviewed, Blactmun is changing
his mind.

IND.

:
:
,
:
;

,
1

that he is on the verge of changing
his position On a conlroversial constitutional issue. But that is what
Blackmon did. ,
Justice Blackmon spoke of the
"death watch" on those nights
when last-minute, desperate
appeals come in. At least 0110 clerk
from each chiDiber, lie said, is at
the court, and the Justices are It
home by the telephOne. By morning, "the clerks. look Jl!etty
exhausled and 1 am too.... Maybe
I'm not tough cnouah. I'm not as
tough 11 some of die justices are
about the dea!h PenaltY.''
Nina TotcnbCrg asked him if he
had ever cried a6out those cases.
"Figjttatively, yes," lie answered,
"but not actually.... I cringe every
time we get them."
Has he ever believed that actual·
ly innocent people were being executed?.
"Yes," the iustice said twice
.
WI'tbout eiaborati'.
_ ng,
Ail Ills year&amp; ori the court, ·
Blackmun hild becl!t unable to join ·
those constant oppbnents of th~ .
death penalty, William Brennan
and Thurgood ~arsball, who
believed that the death penalty,

~ICH

:

Hodding Carter Ill

NatHentoff

forecasrfor

:

"the end of the beginning." Unfair tribal halreds.
•
as it is for a peopfe who have suf·
But the dang~rs of the future are ;
fered fill so long, the new political as well understood as the patterns •
world in South Africa - like the of the past·were unacceptable. !•
new situation in the former Soviet Because the old pauems have been 1
Union and in. the Middle East shatteied, there is at least the possi-' ,
guarantees nothing.
bility that the long deferred prob- . :
Conveasely, the dangers are real !ems can and will be addressed. · •
the white-minority.gOve!J1111ent was aDd the obatacles 10 DesCCful evolu· Whether they will is primarily :
still .dCIJantly shouting !'never" to tlon are daunting. Oelibeaato gov- dependent on the judgment and · :
one-man, one-vote democracy.
ernment policy and the weight of maturity of the government that :
Exactly why thai changed is a history and race haVe prevented,the will be elected on April 27, but it is
question best left for historians to development of a civiC religion in at least partially dependent on the
sort out at some calmer, more South Africa. Its peoples, black and continued interest and response of ,
reflective momenL 1be most obvi· white, see themselves as Afrikaan. the West As Richard Steyn repeat· ' i
ous snapshot explanation is the ers and Englishmen, Zulus and edly emphasized in his fine talk, i
combination 9f a rising tide of Xhosa, more than they ~ them· now is no time for those outsiders , . :
black insistence, which took selves as South Africans. Tribalism who once insisted on the creation :
inc~asingly violent fonn; mount- runs ahead of nationalism.
of a new dispensation in South •
ing white exhaustion - moral,
What is perhaps even more dis- Africa to ignore its consequences ••
political and economic; and esca- turbing iS that there is no way the andneeds.
l
lating outside pressure, notably new government. presumably domForty years ago, the South ·J
including American sanctions. inaled by the ANC, will quickly be African novelist Alan Paton wrote
Whatever the reasons, the result able to meet the black majority's "Too Late the Phalarone " a sad·
is best symbolized in the public expectations. The economy, though . parable of his homeland~ 'torment' 1
conversion of President F.W. de the strongest in sub-Saharan As it turned out, the white minority ,
Klerlc from apartheid's loyal heir to Africa, is currently incapable of made its gesture of reconciliation •
reform's indispensabl.e ally. De producing enough jobs even for
Klerk released Nelson Mandela those who are qualified . for in more timely fashion than the
from prison in 1990 after the leader employment in the modem work- failed protagomst' of Paton's noveL: ·
Tragedy need not be the inevitable ,
of the African National Congress place.
.
outcome.
Indeed, at its moment of, .,
had rotted there for decades. He
~ost are not. and the yOUilg in
uncertainty,
South Africa's
greatest
proceeded to negotiate directly particular face bleak futures. Inadefuture
has
never
looked
':
with Mandela about ,the tenns of quately educated, if edpcated at all, All else has failed, which brighter.·
leaves
it
.,
white sunender. That. of eourse, is black youtll under 21 represent to democracy to succeed.
,,
not tbe, w,.,a y . the .process was well over half of the nation •s total
Hoddlng
Carter
III,
rormer·
.;
described, out that til what every- population. Each rear. more .and State Department ~pokesman
one understood it to be.
more of -them wil be insistently
award·wlnnlng reporter, edi· · '·
Unfortunately, .it is easier to end demandinJ what the economy can- and
tor
and
pubUsher, ,Is president or. ;
the old than to build the new. That not provtile. That is social and
~ainStreet,
a Washington, D.C.· : •,
iS what Richaid Steyn, the editor of political tinder ·for the already ragbased
television
production com- · . ,
the Johannesburg Star, meant about mg bonfireS of racial animosity and pany.
.•

being cruel and unusual .punisitment, violaled the Eighth Amendment.
Bqt Blackmun - like some
other jUStices who have been lroU·
bled 81 the state acting as executioner - could not find a way out
of the specific references to ca~tal
punishment in the Constitutton.
The Fifth Amendment, Blackmon
notes, "speaks of a capital crime
and speaks of one being sub~ted
to the danger of loss of hfe or
limb."

Accu·W~

,
•

antagonists, their insistence on
white dominance differed in degree
but not in kind.
It was not many years ago that

subject On "Nightline,'' Ted Koppel and Nina Totenberg spoke with
Justice Harry Blackmun. It is
unusual for a justice to say publicly

Tuesday, Dec.

••, .
it's for. It's just been so long since !
I've seen an actual contract I want

God
rest
ye
merry
executioners
Letters to the editor
Funds support state games
In its self-congratulatory celebration of frontier justice, the Senate has expanded the death penalty
to S2 federal Offenses as part of the
recently p&amp;lsed crime bill. The disappeadng attorney gen~ral commended the whole package as "a
balanced approach.·
And there has been nary a word
of criticism from the president
who, after all, as governor of
Arlcansas, presided over th~ execution ol a man so brain damaged he
didn't know the difference between
yesterday or tomorrow, life or
death.
It is said by experts in these
matters that few feloos will actually be killed under lhesC new final
federal penalties, but th~re are
those who will get their lethal
injections under the imprimatur of
the United States Senate.
Justice William Brennan - dis·
senting; .as usual, in, a capital p,tmishment case- once said that 'the
best way in which we choose who
will die rewa~.t the depth ~f mOJ'J!i
commitment among the livlilg."
Had th.Ia been qu~ted !lurinJ the
Senate debate 011 the crime bill. the
'P"4'Jcer would have beCn reganlcd
by his Coueeauea 11 IOineDDil wbo
obvioualy did not intend to run for
re-electioli. · .
This ' oilthuliastic Senate
enshrinement of c 'tal pUnishment
todt: place as a
j111tice of the
Supreme Comt gave a lemadcable
television interview on that very

EMS responds
to 19 calls

·

South. Africa's beginning of th,e ~nd

em:=;.

Monday, December 13,1993

VISA/

�•

Sports

The· Daily.Sentinel
·

. Monday, December 13,1993

With 97·96 win over Walsh,

Saturdar'• .......

NF1.. standinp
W L T Pd. PP PA
3 0 .150 24120S
• 0 .1192 236 114
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61

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$!16
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Tolllllbt's aame

Pittllm&amp;ft at l1iami, 9 p.m.

Nestweek'lllole

SahlrdaJ, Dec. II
Donvw" Cbioo... !2:30 p.m.
Dallout N.V.Itilo, 4 p.m.
Doe.J9
1 p.m.

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fhi'Me!p'd' at lncti=apclk, I p.m.

ur.a..~at,Calumbuo 10
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· - St. I!, 'Min 76

Coklado St. 75, Tolodo 5I
WJlabt $L 56

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Xatyon 79, W-67

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AUitn Pet.y 13,Akrcn 71

Public Notice
Ohio. Therefore,
no
objHtlon• r,ecelved after
Januery 11, 1914 will bo
conoldorocl by the Stole of
Ohio.
The Melgo County
Commlulonero
Courthouoe
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
(12) 13; lTC

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mall It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

By KELLY ROBINSON
Student Correspondent
The University of Rio Grande
women's basketball team added
another victory to its collection
Sabtrday, defeating the Walsh Cavaliers 78-62 on the road. The win
improved Rio Grande's overall
record to 8-2 for its fllSt Mid-Ohio
. Conference win of the season.
·
The game emphasized the point
: · that the Redwomen are a unit, Redwomen Coach David Smalley said
"'The victory against Walsh was
a team effort," he said "We are 12
players and a coaching staff pulling
m the same direction. This particu,. lar game showed the depth of this
~ basketball team."
With Stacey Ritter and Gena
Norris suffering from ankle
injuries, Rio Grande had to look to
its bench to take up the slack. Ritter
played Saturday, but was not yet
100 percent. Norris did not make

RESOLUTION 1102.93
BE IT RESOLVED by tho
Council of the VIllage of
Pomeroy, all members
concurring:
That the Cterk!Tre•aurer

ol lht Vllloge of Pomeroy,
chorge ott tho following
chockt from the bookt duo
10 being over one yeor old,
The following llot of checko
will be held In eocrow II ol a
later dale any checka need
loberolaouocl .
8-11·91 Gao Pluo, G.
Meter, t555n, $61 .50.
9.04•91 T. Zedeker, G.
Meter, SUa.
8.05·82 Anna Baxter, G.
Meler,l57098, $2.10.
$6U8
Pooaed12-3
Bruce J . RHCI, Mayor
Kethy Hyoell,
Clerk!Treuurer
larry Wohrung, Preoldenl
(12) 13; lTC

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

this road trip so that she could
nurse her anlde to prepare for the
next game.
Junior Kim Sowers stepped in
and slarted for Norris at the point
guard position. "'Kim did a tremendous job running the show, being
the point guard and getting us into
our offense," Smalley said.
Many of the players were "playing out of tradition," the coach
added, and he was pleased with the
team's efforts, particularly that
shown by the bench.
One of the factors the Redwom·
en focused on was keeping their
turnovers down after having a high
number of possession losses in last
week's game against Wilmington,
Smalley said that they had to take
better control of the basketball,
with stress on protection. He was
pleased with a much lower number
of turnovers against Walsh . The
Redwomen established control

'

•
The confines of a home coun
; always spell encouragement to a
' college basketball coach ~ and·for
.. the University of Rio Grande Red·
women's David Smalley, Lyne
Center will be a welcome sight
when his team hosts perennially·
,. strong Central State at7 p.m. Tues.. day.
Tbe Redwomen, 8-2 after Saturday's 78-62 victory over Walsh for
a 1-0 start in the Mid-Ohio Conference, have played their last six
games on the road since winning
the women's division championship of the Bevo Francis Classic
on Nov. 20. The schedule took the
., Redwomen to arenas within Ohio,
as well as West Virginia and Tennessee. As wearying as it was,
Smalley's club has emerged with a
S-2
record as an answer to its travel
.. expenses.
,.,. Rio Grande also owns wins over
·· Cumberland (Ky.) 106-100,
WilberfoR:e 120-43, West Virginia
.. Wesleyan 98-73, Tusculum (Tenn.)
·· 88-82, Fairmont State (W.Va.)
, 101 -74, West Liberty State
(W.Va.) 86-75 and Wilmington 7359. The losses were both in the
;: Lipscomb (Tenn.) Tournament in
,. Nashville Dec. 3-4, where they fell
; to Montavello (Ala.) 99-83 and
' Michigan-Dearborn 108-90.
..
The schedule has also taken its
; toll in injuries for the team, a situa' tion Smalley said he hopes will
' correct itself by the time Rio
Grande takes to the hardwood
,. against Central Stale.
The Lady Marauders, coached
·· by veteran Theresa Check, have in
the past been Rio Grande's rival for
~.· first the District 22 title, then the

· PBL results
..
(Results as or Dec. 1)
.·
ONE ITEM -ONE FREE AD PEA WEEK
(NOTE: 16 WOAD LIMIT AND YOUR SEWNG PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

NAM~----~-----------------------------------

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
(Offer Explree January 15, 1994

shootinJ effort u the team was
whi~ 24 tinles on~ f~Juls

to Rto Grtlldc's.l2.
.
The Redmen c:apitalized on the
opportunity by hilling 23 of 27
atttmpts at the line. Also, the hosts
kept pace on the rebounding,
recording 44 to the Cavaliers' 46
-a plus for the Redmen, considering Walsh was the No. 2 rebounding team in the NAIA last season.
Now 10.2, Rio Omnde travels to
Wilberforce Tuesda)'. Walsh (7-4,
0-1) plays Taylor (Mich.) in the
opening round of the Parke Hotel
Classic on Friday.

Box score:
RIO GRANDE (97) -Jeff
Hoeppner, 3-1-6-15; Walter
Stephens, 3-1..().9; Brett Coreno, 2·
1-2-9; Jack Morgan, 0-2-0-6; Matt
Powell, S-3-12·31; Larry Caudill,
0-2-2; Shawn Snyder, 9-2- 1-25 .
TOTALS l:Z.10-23-97.
WALSH (96) ~Todd Brown,
7-2-16; Doug Meyer, 5-0-10; Mar·
cellus Stroud, 4-0-8; Bob Boldon.
2-2-0-10; Scott Young, 7-3-3-26;
Derrick WiUiams, 4-1-0-11; Martin
Gottfried, 4-0-8; Gary Bouchette,
0-1-1; Michael Farrington, 1-2-4;
Paul Edwards, 1.().2. TOTALS 35·
6·8-96.
Halftime score: Walsb 50, Rio
Grande45.

early and stayed on top throughout
the game.
Lori Hamilton, last year's conference player of the year, took a
pass from Michelle Crouse and
scored in the ftrSt20 seconds of the
game. The exceptional performances of these two seniors helped
maintain Rio Grande's lead.
Hamilton totaled 20 points and
nine rebounds, while Crouse also
tallied 20 markers and dished out a
couple of assists.
Megan Winters and Tricia
Collins grabbed five and four
rebounds, respectively. Ritter
added 12 points to the scoreboard,
while Stacy Riley contributed nine
points. "I was very pleased with
our inside and outside attack,"
Smalley said.
Rio Grande outshot Walsh 50
percent from the field and 72 per·
cent from the line. The Cavalters,
now 3-3 and 0-1 in the conference,

League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standings {latest points,
season points) - Banks Constroction {7()..50), F.O.E. 2171 (65-55),
Hackett's RQOfing (62-58), No. 2
(59-61), Pinsplitters (58·62) and
Tony's Carryout {46-74).
Team hlgb series - Banks
Construction (1969)
Team hlgb game- Pinsplitters
. {716)
Women
..
lndlvldual .blgb series -June
• Mowery {504) and Debbie Sayre
~ {491)
~
Individual blab game -Mow·
;. cry {188) and Shirley Simmons
~ (174)
,.
Men
::
Individual blgb series ;: Danny Will (525) and Larry Dugan
·: (512)
:.
Individual blJb game ·: Dugan, Don Hamson and Bob
· -Hysell (aU 203)

district Division I championship,
and are now the anticipated road·
block to Rio Grande's hopes of
entering the regional playoffs under
new NAJA rules put mto effect this
season.
"We're certainly not making
excuses, but we're still feeling the
effects of our Nashville trip,"
Smalley said late last week. "Men·
tally, however, I think our kids are
as sharp as ever. It doesn't matter
who goes down with injuries or
whatever, somebody is there who
can take up the slack."
Leadership has been in evidence
from seniors Lori Hamilton (6-0,
Gallipolis), who tops the team in
scoring and rebounding, and Gena
Norris (5-3, Kingston) and
Michelle Crouse (5-6, McArthur),
the two guards who dominated the
assists. Tricia Collins (6·0,
Carlisle), a junior, is following
Hamilton on the boards, while
freshman guard Stacy Riley (5·4,
Mechanicsburg). who has received
numerous opportunities to demon·
strate her skill with the three-point
shot, has been trailing Hamilton on
scoring.
The work of freshmen Connie
Fazio (5· 7, Chillicothe) and Megan
Winters (6·0, London), and junior
Kim Sowers (5-4, Frankfort), has
also impressed Smalley, the ex.
assistant at Bowling Green and
Morehead State now serving his
second season as the Redwomen
coach.

MINE! - Rio Grande guard Brett Coreno (14) puUs down a
rebound ,in rront or teammate Jeff Hoeppner (center) and Walsh's
Scott Young (20) during Saturday's MOC game at Lyne Center,
where the Redmen won 97-96. Coreno, wbo was injured later in tbe
contest, flolsbed with nine points.

Hurley thrown from truck
in collision after Kings' loss

were 37 percent on field goals and
61 peR:ent on free throws. Smalley
was especially happy with the
team's three-point shooting, in
which Rio Grande made ei~ht of 16
atttmpts. Walsh was credited with
40 percent from the three.
The Cavaliers' Shelley Allen
produced 16 points to lead the
hosts' scoring, as Shelly Pilsitz
added 15 points and pulled down
13 rebounds, as well as three
assists. Colleen Thompson made
double figures with 10 points,
while Jodie Tekip bad nine boards
and Kari Carney added four assists.
Noting that he was glad to get
the fllSt MOC game of the season
out of the wily, Smalley said he is
excited about the rest of the season.
It may be too early to leU if Rio
Grande will repeat its conference
championship, but it is defmtely off
to the right start, he said.
"In order for us to repeat or do
as well this year, we're going to
have to have that team concept,"
Smalley added.
The Redwomen are at home
Tuesday at 7 p.m. against Central
Stale.
Box score:
WALSH (62)- Jennifer BeD,
"'This is an important time for 2-0-4; Jodie Tellip, 4-0-8; Shelly
us," he said. "We've started our Pilsitz, 5-1-2-15; Misty McMillen,
conference schedule and we are the 3-0-6; Shelley Allen, 5-1-3-16;
defending champions, which is a
Bauer, 1·1-3; Colleen Thomp·
special position for us to be in. A Karl
son, 4-2-10. TOTALS 24-2-8-62.
lot of teams will be ftred up about
RIO GRANDE (78) - Tricia
us and we will be tested, so I'm Collins, 1-2-4; Stacy Riley, 0.3-0pleased that we have the quality of 9; Lori Hamilton, 8-4-20; Kim
athletes who can handle the chal- Sowers, 1-2-4; Michelle Crouse, 4lenge mentally and physically."
4-0-20; Shannon Miller, 0-2-2;
Central State, strong in the post Stacey Ritter, 2-1-5-12; Megan
and improving its defense, will be Winters, 2-1-5; Connie Fazio, 1-0·
one of those tests, Smalley noted.
19-8·16-78.
"They have a similar style of 2. TOTALS
Halftime
Rio Grande
play to ours, and we both have 37, Walsh 26.score:
·
some great guards," he added. "We
lost to them by II points (79-68) at
their place last year, and we're bet·
ter now and we want to prove it to
them.
Probable starters for Rio Grande
will be Riley and Crouse as guards,
Collins and sophomore Stacey Rit·
ter (5·5, Sidney) at forward and
Hamilton serving at the post.
Matched against them will be Dee·
tra Berry (5-6, senior) and Genia
Warren (S-6, junior) on defense,
with the forward positions taken by
Tanya Jackson (5-8, junior) and
Janice Tillman (6·0, sophomore),
while 6-0 senior Antoinette Vinson
- who edged out Ham ilion for
Division I player of the year honors
last season- repeats as center.
Admission for the game is $3
for adults and $1 for non-Rio
Grande students. Rio Grande students, faculty and staff are admitted
free with ID.

,; Journey's end means home
~ game Tuesday for Redwomen
,.

'

Public Notice

tialleldown by Rio GIBIIde when it
performed two showboating alley
oop dunks . The Redmen onlv
reeled for a short time before
pulling themselves together and
playing intense defense to jlet back
mto the game. The coaching staff
complimented the players afler the
game, saying they really pulled
themselves up after Coreno's injury
and played with more in~ensity,
Rio Gmnde's three-point shooting was cold in the second half
(three of 15 for 20 percent), but its
free throw shooting for the game
was nearly perfect and kept them
going. Powell continued to be the
team leader in the final half and
finished as the team's top man in
scoring with 31 points and in steals
with two.
Snyder continued to show why
he is the leading scorer off the
bench by ripping down 12 boards
and providing 25 points. Hoeppner
also contributed heavily with 15
points, 10 rebounds and eight
assists. Jack Morgan also showed
unselfish hands by dishing out an
additional eight assists.
Key players for Steve Loy ' s
Cavaliers in the second half continued to be Boldon with 17 assists
and Young with 26 points. Foul
trouble killed Walsh's excellent

Redwomen hand Walsh 78-62 defeat

~

Onceland 102, Maunt Vernon

63

Young wilh IS points.
For the home team, the fllSt half
was flat at best. The coach"!f. staff
felt the Redmen were just going
through the motions." They also
felt the team needed to get fued up
and show more emotion in thetr
pia; .
Mall Powell once again kept
Rio Grande in the game by sinking
five of his 10 field goal atttmpts,
including a pair of three-pointers.
He was also three of four from the
charity stripe to give him 15 ftrst
half points. The Redmen's leading
scorer off the bench was Shawn
Snyder with 10 points, while Jeff
Hoeppner and Brett Coreno contributed with five rebounds apiece.
The late efforts of the team pulled
them to within five points of the
visitors at the half.
The second half saw the fans
become more involved in the game,
making a lot of noise and helping
to light a fire under Lawhorn's
team.
The gymnasium was abruptly
silenced after less than a minute
with a frightening injury to Coreno,
who suffered a slight concussion
and several abmsions, and who did
not return to the action. This forced
the other players to pick up the
slack and play extra minutes.
Walsh took advantage of the ini·

With help from bench,

35

•

•

.
Student Correspondent
Down by as m,any as 11 points
:.
. · dunng Saturday s home contest
al!ainst Walsh, the University of
Rto Grande Redmen found the
energ~ to suck it up and pu\1 out
the wm 9_7-96 before an 0 Dell
Lumber Ntght crowd.
Redmen me!ltor John Lawhorn
was proud of hts team 's never-saydie attitude and their "excellent
work habits," resulting in the ftrst
Mid-Ohio Con~erence victory of
the season for Rio Gmnde.
The Redmen played catch-up
for most of the filS! half, but in the
second the team pumped itself up,
focused on the goaf and played
"'good down the stretch," Lawhorn
added.
The openinjl half was controlled
by the Cavalters as the Redmen
were outsized and outplayed early.
Both teams lost much of their leadership last year as they graduated
many players, but the youth of
Walsh played more like a team
than Rio Grande did early in the
game.
This fact was exemplified by the
fact that nine of the visitors' II
players scored in the first half.
Also, Cavaliers 11uard Bob ~oldon
dished out 10 asststs. Walsh s leading first half scorer was guard Scott

Ctunberlain 48, HudiCil Weslem RcICI'VO

Pceblcl68, Adtn1. M
PbDo 93, NonhOdgo 74
Plouutt 70, l!llln 57
Pl,.,..th 72. Mohawk Sl
PrWle Shlwncc 48, Nationll TnU 46
RitloodlloSP, Spu&lt;o IIW&gt;lmd 54
R.tdy River 56, Elyria c.th. 48
Sanduaky 84, Mmmdd 7S

Ddanco 74, Tol. Wooclwud S7
llololoMiolf.._?l,AntwwpS5
B. 0... Show 73, SltWr H11. 69 (OT)
B.a-SP,ModloonPWuS6
61, Ma.toolior 50
El~ W. 53, Woaloko48
Fait!.• "· W1ynocWo 72
Fo,co?l, Mo..,.. VaL 10
Filhrz Catb. 47, Mandidd SL Pdet 46

Amando.a...a.dt 67, MillonpM 26
Alhli.IMI.54, LoAin Ki.na3t
BeavC!iiCr'OCk 61, Fairmont n
Belpre S1, Maricaa 4.5
8cru 5.5, Clev. St. AIJIUitine 32
Bc:rlin Hiland 49, TUICUIWU Cath. 28
Bethel· Tate 96, Tol. ~cot.t 55
Buley 53, Li&lt;llno Vat. 4S
BiJ Wolrwt44, W. Joll'cn0n27

-9:!
Eool 5111017, Poldlold72

Public Notice

.

~

ss

Cllio'lom'd •n7t,u.t.u56
Rio Onado 71, Wlloh 62

:·

..,
~

GIris' action-Saturday
Abon Hoban 56, Akron Catt.-1-lower

o....,o,
!':t:""'"
Flnoloy95,
91

Ito · epprovol, tho Molgo
Admlnlotrallon, CDBG County C..mlaalonen may
Formula, Melgo County, uoe the Community
$7,100.
Development Block Gront
Environmental Review Progr~m funda, and lhe
Recordo regarding the Melgo
County
aforementioned ProJect• Commloolonere will hove
Ponona:
On or ebout December 22, hove boen mado by the oatloftocl Ito reoponolbllltleo ·
1113, tho above named obovo nomed Uoige County under
tho Nollonol
The Envlronmentol Polley Aal of
Uolgo
County Commlulonoro.
Rovlow 1MI,aaan.ndocl.
Commlulonert will roquoal Environment
the Stale of Ohio to rei••• Record• ore on lllo, Obl:illon to tha State ol
Fed.,.l !undo under Tille 1 botw- the houra of 8:00 011 R.....ool
of tho Houolng and a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday
Tho Btato of Ohio win
Community Dovolopmonl through Friday (except a-pt an oblaotlon to 111
Aot. (P.L. 13·383), oo holldayo) at lho obavo app(ovol of the reteaoe of
a~. 10 1111 ueecl lor the addrfto and Ia ovaltoblo lor fundo and aoceptanoe of tho
• lallowlng proJeCt•:
public .el8mlnollon and oardlloatlon only It lo on
1
Rutland VFO, Fire copying, upon roquoot.
one of tho two following
~
The Melgo County 1111-: (a) tho oertlllolltlan
Protection Equlpmonl I
will ••• not, In leot, eaeouted
~ Focllltloo, 1 ploco of Commloolonoro
~
equlpmonl,
Rutland undertake the proleota by tho Stole'o Certifying
,
Townohlp and Rullond deoorlbed above wllh Ollloer; or (b) that tho
1 YRtege, lloige County, Ohio, Community Development State'• anvlronmenttl
Block Grant (CDSG)Iuncta, review .-cllor the prolaot
r stzo.:zae.
~
Racine VIllage, Curb• and under Tille I altho Hauolng lndlootoo omloolon ol a
Community required deololon, nndlng,
, lldewolkl, 1175 L. F., ond
'
Raolno VIllage, Melgo Development Act ol 1874, or otep opplloabte 10 the
•• omonded. Tho Melgo llroloot In the environmental
~ County, Ohio, .1 5,000.
'
llilltl• County Engineer, County Comml11lonoro ore r.v~ew,_
ObJootlon m uot be
~ Street lmpre-lo, 2.01 certifying to tho Stole ol
Robart pr. .rocl and oubmltted In
I
mil eo, Sutton TIIWnohlp, Ohio, · lhtl
!• Mel.g l County, Ohio, Hartonbotoh, Certifying aooordanoo with tho
OHI-, In oHiolol oopoclty, roquhw prooaclure (IN CFR·
~ m,ue..
,
sutton Townahlp, Street con11nt to accept tho Part 51), ~nd moy be
~
tmprovemonto, .07 milo, Jurladlcllon of Fedora!' oddrHNd to the State of
~ Yoot
Road,
Sutton oourto II an action lo Ohio; Ollloo of Looal
~ T-nohlp, Melga County, brought
to enforce Oovarnment Servtoeo; n
r•ponolbllltlea In relation South Hlah S-; P.O. Bo1
Ohio S24,132.
Ll!lianon Tawnohlp, SlrMI to envlronntent11 review•, 1001, fotumbuo, Ohio
, IMpro-nio, 2.02 mlleo, deololon-maklng, and 432H.0101. ObJootlono -to
Barringer Rood, Lebanon eolian; and that then tho Reloooo of Fundo on
Town•hlp, llelgo County, rHponalbllltleo hava been booeo other than thooo
oatloflocl. Tile legal elleca ol ototocl above will not be
0111011 t,t22.
Folr
Houolna
Actlvltlee,
tho
oartlftoatlon lo that upon oonoldarocl by the Stall of
••

NOTICE II
NOTICE OF INTENT OF
REQUEST A RELEASE
OF FUNDS
To
All lnterootad
Agencleo, Groupo ond

•
1
•
•
•

Whooltnbura 5s, Min!ua 4]
WUlo-Hill Cbr. 41, Faltport Hardin&amp;
35
,.
Woodrow W"abm S7, Wcllnille SS

Mad:iJen S6, Hilliard S3
Maoo!Wd MadHon so, Hilliml53

Clev. VASJ94,Akmn 5LV·Sc.M72
Cloltforl&lt;67. Donvillo 62
CNrvicw 60, CoWna Woatcm Rcsmvc 56
Clinton-MaaieM, Ycll.ow Sprinp 59
CoL ,.._.6. Illy. p,..,... 63
Cal St. Cbut. 60, Col. Acldcmy 47
Coldwot«ll,..........,43
Cohnboo a..... 90, IWdin NOllltcm
10
Continontal63, Unoolnviow 49
Cnodine 71. $. Cattnl69
Croltvicw•S, Marion Loctl33
Cuylhoaa Palla 67, Lyndhurst Bru1h
62
Cuyahap Val Chr. S7, Kidron Chr.
48
Day. CoiiiiiOl Whltel30, Sklnoy 122
Day. Dunbu 96. O.y. Jeffcnon 62
Day. MoMowdale 91. Day. Nonhmont

Wotklno Manodoi7S, OlentanaY 62
Wayne Tn.ce 69, Ptuldina 53

Mld.ObloC•-

Wloooaoin 91, Toou Toclt II

PUblic Notice
Metgo Counly, 14,000.

82

a.- lOll, I.Ual!rio 54

.,..'

'f.•

Utica 71, W . ldfenm S6

Valley VIeW 63, W. Caaolhon S8
Vondalil B-66. T - S2
Vcrmilim 68, Pod. Clinton 60
w.pakon"" 02, a-ville S9
W~mn Haniinl 90, Ow. Wat TKh

"""""'"" 75, McDonald 41
Lcuclonvillo 51, Ftecloricldown 40

Prinea.an 67, Md.-Baltimoro County

O.laCWeeace
Boldwm·Wollaoo S9, Muolthtpn S6
lloidel~
Mulouo13
IJinm 67,
tJnioa 61
Oltlo-?I,Joloo Conall13

:t::

69

55

Ohio college scores

sm61

Youna- Boardman 69, Swlbm: !iS
YounJ. Raym 7S, Clcv. Eut 53
Youna- Wilton 57, Wel1Mlle5S

Li... M;oml12, Sorinabuo 64
Lo&amp;m Elm 66, WCaloli 62
Lonm Cotlt. 12, Wollin
36
Lonin S.Utltvlew 16,
l!ut Toch

("g...Hto. 92, Oufiold U... 43

..

Tot. Dttiltlltt 67, Limo T....... 62
•
Tol St. JobnJ S., Urtivertaly School
Doooi142
Tot. Woito69,Flidl66(on
Tuolow 47, Canol Fu1toa NW 44
Twin Valley S. 16, Middlclown Mad.i·

lJml &amp;lh 59, Ada~
Uma Cotb. 61, Pad t.nmio 43

h~lp

?4,1llioitU S1. 72

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Lanout.. 31, Clnwopod !2
Leoin... ?!. W.....W.S.63
LibOI\y llaltoo 80, Ri-olo 39

Calitamia I!,
70
Third .......

Men's Ktlon-Satunlay

B.llllacio?4,
1Dln.U69
B......W.17,Vr69
Iowa SL 16,lowa
Konou 91, AJ!&lt;..UJdo- 63
KonouSc ?I,Novodl52
- 1 2 . - ... Motlt.17
Na.W !14, Wldll11 Sc 72
NOlllt--76. IAyola, DL l2
OIUo?4,RoboltM&lt;mUl2
s.llllacio !14, ............ yl6 ll on
~""
sc liS
.~7 DL.QDcaao71
Wio..o..it Boy 52,
0.... 49
Wio.·Mllwa.U. 12, Now mpollhe

ICdaintl Altcz 59, Illy. Ookwood 4S
!Ciop 45, Moooo 42

n.1n~r..
C&lt;4ate74, Yolo6
01111 ~_,., c1. .1e

-·
=-13.

NBA standings

Indiaa VIL 61, Oln.way 51
Jacbaa Ccmar 53, Si ..ey l.chman 46
~ton~-. 80, Abon Hobao 59

Chal,-&amp;llp

Bwlor?~ladlmoSc52

Basketball

Hamiltal Twp. 40. Clnndviow ll
Hldlorillo 67;1!don 41

ScJohn'•70.~42

yM,B.nst. n

w.

Alounclor 6~~...... 57
Alloa B. 62, ....,.Ill..... 59
AIN. 52, New Xnm.ville :50
AR:bbcld 67. Kalida 66
M"-l9, !fapowoU 39
Belltooolt 16, Illy. Ciuioliln 51
61, Tillln Cohnbion 60
Bntnfm•n 69, Sczulhcn 55
B-..m.13,N...tonloSS
Bril&amp;ol 66 BJoom&amp;eJd 47
B~ 61, w- Koanody,.
BuckoyoCattn17S, ....,._51
B"'""ye Tnil44, Cahi..U 36
Cuttoo Cotlt. 75, LouiiYille 42
Cuttoo GlonOolt 73, Cuttoo s. 46
Cuttoo McKhtley 17,0... Hay 55
Conlin.,..74, N. um... 63
Ccduville: 7l,Greeaovicw 56
Cin. Colonia 72, Cin. Wilma Hillo S6
Cin. HuJb• 73. Cin. Hilla Chriltian
Ac.ad. 32
Cin. Nonhwut 10, Cin. N. Colleae
IIU1?4
Cl.ev. Collin.WOGd 61 , To!. Libbey S7

Toum~~ments
Lapehact M.....,... Taurnam~;nt

N. Cantlin• S" 10. N.C.·Aohovill• Sl
Oldllomlnlon76, VUJ!oio69
Rodlm119, VM161
s. C...U.. Sc 17, Oallin 1S
Solahl'lctridoM,PlaNIISt.63
Sc-'•12,0ocqow.-Bt

va. 0.. lay at Mllwaubo, l pm.
- Eql.oad It aJ!VELAND, l pm.
l'booni&amp; II S..olo, 4 J'-01.

Sin p,

IF1nt round
llolitn S2, YlloSl
SL John's 92. C~ate 79
Red Auerbach oh•lll Claalc
Clto01p-lf.
CJeorac W•Jhin&amp;too 94, aOOoa St. 74
Tltlrdplaco
Howud U. 67,Lm&amp;llland U. 41
Rumln' Joe Clualc
ClutOiplonllllp
"""""St. 64, sunr.m 62 &lt;on
Third~
SE Miaouri 100,
o Viow 63

Saturday's acdon
IIIII
Booton CoUor 154, Bulfolo 51

L.A. Rami ........ ' 9 0 .308 114 304
y-dJa&lt;:hod playolr ......

-

Third ..
T...,_ooTotlt99,0nlR-.o7l

Major college scores

W•llriiDiwilloa
Sao Fnociloo ... 9 4 0 .1192 317 231
New~. ... 1 6 0 .531 257 26!1
AtloNI.............. 6 7 0 .&gt;162 272 301

k

lndlauClulk
ChaWipionllllp
lndian1'79, Wuhin= St. 64

Orlando at S..Wo. I p.m.

...... ....... I S 0 .Oil 231 2m
au..., ............ 1 • 0 .531 211 117
- - ········· • 1 0 .&gt;162 212 254

San~ 11

Dlnl

Cho01plonlllt'f
IllincU 108,American . 84
Tltlrdfa:co
Morr.hcad St. 12. am.. MArtin n

J...A. LU.en at Detroil. 7:30p.m.
1\ laclima. 7:30p.m.

-

r.a.n-a

Dr.·=

-Mlmaloulat
.. - Cb-rla'"
7:30r;m.
:30!Qm.

PP PA
2A5 lSI
294 206
199 :!A$
:ZS2 2l6
111216

Ch·-~·····

BJiabam Yaq I, Oll&amp;hm~oa BaptiR

la't'tlaUonaJ
ClaDIIalp
Baylor 66, Wobor St. 64
Nrdplaco
Pepporotine Tl , S~ F.A...U. S3

Ttwd•l,'• ~omes

::::::r-

Boys' actlon..Saturday

44

Thlrdplaco
N'&gt;dlollo St. 93, Onpo Sc 16

llrlllwlr •• Nft' Cit, :30 p.m.

C-DI.WO.
llooon Boy ........ I 5 0 .6!5 21l23l

LA, Rami It

76

ToDlaJit'o pmes

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

I

c.....,. a-le

PbibdeJphi• .. a--. 7:30p.m.
Miami Ill New Jenoy, 7:30p.m.
5Ift ADICIDio II thab. 9 ~.m.
Mllwankee 1.1 Phoanis. p.m.

Atl.anUI at CLBVELAND, 7:

A\larU a1

Balle St. 53, O.W

'*

Donvw •...•.•••... I l 0 .61S 320 231
San IM&amp;a·····-·· 6 1 0 .&gt;162 221 ~
S..olo. .............. 5 I 0 .315 lllUI

I!II... DI......
W L T Pd.
~·ow...... 10 3 0 .769
.•...••..•••... 9 4 0 .1192
Alllodolp!U ...... 5 I 0 .315
- · ··-········ 4 9 0 .301
w................ 310 0 .231

Ch····
lbltee£1"r
n.w:;:6St.

CjNinn"i 7'

Sunday'sO&lt;ons

W•..,.DI""'-

Ohio H.S. scores

.......ICloulc

Odlado 103, l'onllod II
LA . ~ 112. SKftlftlldo 102
Golden
100. L.A. Lilt. . 97

301 21.
241210
236 257
131 :rJ9

St. 71

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m. Utah m &lt;on

""""City ...... 9 4 0 .1192 256 213
LA. IWdon ..... I S 0 .615 2A6 241

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U\ah SL 101,

~99,Mllwouk•i6

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S..AnaliolQIJ,I)oa.,.IOO
l'llooois 114, Dollu 103
-12,Sooltle7!

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···-·······
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CINCNNATI ..

UCIMoe9:l,CSNmluiAI~I2

w•'l'Q 101

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AMERICAN CONFERENCE
T,..

CII?S.Nooo Doo»64
lwlf.... 12, s- C...?O(OI')

Clsuloao lOll.- 1 - 99
New Yom 91,1o&amp;aa,.
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Faot&lt;tdo S.:Wendelin 71, B1tt111&lt;n l7
Fremont St. Joupb 15, Cardin1 l
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O.Uipt:llil 67, au..peake 66 (2 on
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0oo1toa 75, w~ 67
Onbom 66, lleo Lolon 41
an.ti.tld MAin11 PUnt Val 41

-

·

Redmen get first MOC win of season

Monday, O.mber 13,1993
Page 4

By TIM BREHM

Footbdll

Ohio

By DAVID MORRIS
handful of Kings fans gathered at
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) the hospital to await word of the
Sacramento Kings point guard former Dulce Univmity star's conBobby Hurley was critically dition.
injured in a car accident but a team
Isaac Cmmer, 21, drove straight
spokesman said his injuries did not to the hospitai after hearing about
appear to be life-threatening.
the accident as he was leaving the
.
Hurley was thrown from his Arco Arena parking lot.
Toyota 4-Runner truck Sunday
"This is the last thing the Kings
night in a two-car collision that need the way their season is
happened about an hour after the going," he said.
Kings lost to the Los Angeles ClipHe and a small group of fans
held vigil in the emer_gency room
pers, 112-102.
The Kings classified Hurley •·s waiting area. along wtth reporters
and other patients waiting for care.
condition as critical but stable.
Head coach Garry St. Jean was
A spokeswoman at the Universi·
ty of California-Davis Medical not at the ~ital .
"Saint's JUSt as concerned as
Center said the hospital would not
discuss Hurley's condition until everyone else, but there's only so
doctors finished treating him. He much you can do here," Stanley
was still being treated and evaluat- said.
Police and hospital officials said
ed in the emergency room early
the unidentified driver of the other
today.
Team spokesman Travis Stanley vehicle was in fair condition with a
said Hurley, 22, had two collapsed fractured leg.
lungs, several broken ribs and other
head, neck and back injuries. He
said general manager Jerry
NOW OPEN fOQ
Reynolds. who left the hospital
without commenting, was "just

CHQloTMA&amp; oEMlON

relieved (the injuries) were not
more serious than they are."
Reynolds, some of Hurley's
teammates, his girlfriend and a

PolnHtlla1 &gt;!• &amp; Up
Berried Holly TrMS "17"
Live Norway Spruce

6-7ft. -'28"

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 SecoiiCI St,. Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

Cut TIMs-l.lve Wl'lllths

·For the Loved Onea
Grave Blankets "Ill"
ArtHlclal Sprays, VIand Wreattw
Open Dally 11-5, Sundays 12-li

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Syracuse
992-5776

11

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This year buy a ~ that ia

cuatom made for anyone on

IE': . I

CARRIERS NEEDED

GIYe • gift that cornea than once a year.

Send In the lolowing coupon,

IN POMEROY AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
INFORMATION

ancl get 20% oflthe
albtc:riptlon price.

Special Holiday offer ends
December 31 , 1993

• • • • ·Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon - • - • -

Con~plete

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For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

John A.

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Pla•••t, WV.

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C I T Y - - - - - - - STATE ___ ZIP---

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12 Months '66.56 _

START DELIVERY DATE------

The Daily Sentinel

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Mt .....r of Itt•• PPO &amp; )i4tn~l

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PPO

111 COURT ST., POMEROY, ot10 467811
\

�Monday, December 13, 1993
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 1

Celebrates birthday

Al-fandred

Samantha Larie Cummings celebrated her second birthday recently at her home with a party hosted
by her parents Brian and Delani
Cummings. A Barney theme was
carried out with refreshments of
cake, ice cream, chips and punch
being served.

Osie

-•

!»Wile Notice

::~:~:==~~~~-and everyone IS welcome to attend.

at tbe presentation are, I to r, Rlionda Dalley,
RN, BSN, director of nursing; Libby Fisher,
auxlliary president, and honorees Edna Triplett,
2,000 hours; Jeanette Lawrence, 1,000 hours,
and Joan McLain, 1,000 hours.

Presentation of service awards
features annual Christmas party

1

is now offering
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with each purchase o'l

record

·:

and

1

100 hours , and Abbie Strauon,
2,000 hours. They were not
present
The Christmas Story was read
by &lt;;:arne Kennedy and poems
r~laung to the holiday season were
given by Grace Warner. On behalf
o~ the volunteer organization, Mrs.
Fish~r. presented gifts to
Admm1stra~or Luc_as, Doris Ihle,
· ad~mlstrauve ass1stant; Rhonda
Da1I_ey, RN, BSN, director of
nurs~ng and Bob Hoeflich, public
relauons direCtor.
Mrs. Lawrence presented Mrs.
Fisher an anniversary clock from
members of the organization in

appreciation of her work as
president Poinsettias used on the
red and green covered tables went
to Mrs. Kennedy, Wanda Wolf,
Mae Weber, Mildred Wells, Jessie
White and Louise Bearhs. A door
pnze was awarded to Juanita
Roush. Closing the party was the
singing of several Christmas carols
led by Mrs. Dailey.
In lieu of a personal gift
exchange, members took food
Il~ms to the party and these items
will
be
combined
with
contributions from bospltal
employees
to
held
the
underprivileged during the holiday
season.

focus on new houseplants
Jlighlights
garden club meeting
-.

;. A focus on new houseplants was
the feature of a recent meeting of
ihe Rutland Garden Club held at
!he home of Mrs. Albert Woodard
in Langsville.
~ Mrs. Robert Canaday said that
l)lany houseplants now have a fresh
JGlw look. The latest introductions
ke improved varieties of old
filvorites . Mentioned were the
Infra- Red Syngonium which is
known for its' variegated green
leaves and miniature crown-ofJhoms where the plant grows only
J2 inches tall and with the proper
care, will produce festive red blos~ms year round.
• · Also mentioned were small miracle miniature roses, which grow
approximately 18 inches and produces an abundance of two inch
diame.ter white blossoms. The
Patti-Anne Anthurium has pastel
pink blossoms or orange, red and
white blossoms, while the Emerald
Gem Homalomina's charms make
it a tropical jewel amon~ plants.
J&gt;lants for dormitones, offices,
libraries and halls should have a
n1nural ability to bring life to a
room, Mrs. Canaday said. Some
eumples she listed were the spider
nt, philodendron, wandering
w, Swedish ivy, English ivy and
t iron plant
Mrs. Cecil Blackwood from her
cle called "Think Spring", said
at bulbs can yet be planted.

e

Instead of planting bulbs in beds or
borders, scatter clumps of favorite
varieties under shrubs, around trees
and in the lawn. This process is
called "naturalizing" and works
best with daffodils, crocuses,
anemones and other small bulbs.
Mrs. James Nicholson spoke on
using fall herbs from the garden
and dried. Certain herbs lend more
rearlily to fall decorations because
their colors reflect the glorious
reds, yellows, faded greens and
oranges of nature. A handout was
distributed with instructed for a fall
wreath and Christmas potpourri.
Material for a wreath was displayed.
Mrs. Woodard used for devotions from Guideposts the true
prayer written in prison by Mary
Stuart, Queen of Scots, which is
part of club' s collect, a poem of
thanks as something God asks us to
give him and a lesson for the flfSt
Sunday of Advent
President Atkins opened the
meeting with roll call naming herbs
grown by members. A winter
arrangement for Overbrook and
visits to florists' open house were
discussed. The secretary's and treasurer's repons were given and the
traveling prize from Ann Webster
was drawn by Margaret Parsons.
Arrangements were taken to
churches by Pauline Aikins, Neva
Nicholson and Marcia Denison .

INGELS

1

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGB~.o-~

10110120 Two Place Jumbo Incliner Slc:tlonal
Upholstered in Firework Blossom Telllurecl or Majestic Blue 100%

$

.NylonVet.et

&amp;.In S450

Introductory Special

888

Early American or
Plush Contemporary Sola
$21i
Loveseal .. .. $259
Chair .. ...... $189

Mrs. Canaday reported on attending the Festival of Lights in downtown Columbus.
The county Christmas show
with the theme of "Jingle Bells"
held at Carleton School was
reviewed. Rulland members who
entered arrangements were :
Pauline, "Making Spirits Bright",
using a traditional Madonna and
which was awarded second place
of red; Neva, "Bells on Bobtail
Ring"; and Pearl in "Dashing
Through the Snow" . Marcia
entered an ornament, Clotine and
Ann Webster wrapped packages,
Kathy Dalton showed African Violets and her daughter, Kelly, had
branches and dried material in the
junior horticulture division and
Dorothy had holly branch. Kathy
and Dorothy were awarded blue
ribbons, while Kathy and Kelly
from the Rutland club placed ribbons and served as clerks. Margaret
Weber furnished sandwiches and
Stella Atkins furnished cookies.
A letter from Roberta Wilson
was read and three ill members
were reponed on. The Chrisunas
dinner at Weber's was planned
with a gift exchange on Dec. 13 at
5:00p.m. Donna and Sarah Jenkins
were also present. Atkins and
Woodard read Thanksgiving poems
for closing. Margaret Parson was
co-hostess.

3pc.
!IiLII• T•ltlel,

•••ny

169.95 Sat

or ....."""......... 1

Community Calendar Items
~ppear two days before an event
pod the day or that event. Items
joust be received in advance to
assure publication in the calen-

·.irar.
•

MONDAY

" - KYGER
~-

CREEK - Women
~}Jive Chrisi!Das dinner will be held
$it the Kyger Creek Club House
~onday at 7 p.m. There will be a
llevotional spealcer.

•

•
' POMEROY - The Bedford
Township trustees will hold a regular meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Jewn hall.

3 Piece Vinyl
Living Room '
Suite
All11tree O•ly

$488

•

: POMEROY - Disabled AmeriCan Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary
!"ill have a meeting and Chris1mas
lfnner, Monday at 7 p.m. at the
There will be a gift exchange
;vith men to take ~ifts for men, and
fiomen to take gifts for women.

OaJI.
..

i

BRADFORD - The Bradford
~burch of Christ's children's choir
fill present "Not a Creature was
~limng", the story of the Feline
"d McMouse families, Sunday. at
'fp.m. at the church located at the
~rossroads of State Route 124 and
fradbury Road.

-

at 5 : 15p.m . at the Carpenter's
Hall. Public is invited to attend.

YOUR CHOICE
Cherry or Oak

$269

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections' regular
meeting will be held at 4 :30 Tuesday afternoon at the board office,
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Meigs County
40&amp;8 will have its annual Christmas dinner at the Pomeroy Legion
hall Tuesday. There will be a social
hour at 6 p.m. following by a dinner. Members may take guests.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F. and A. M. will have its annual
installation of officers at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Membership
pins will also be presented, one 70
year, one 50 year, and three 25 year
pins, by the district deputy .
Refreshments will be served
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m . Wednesday at the home of
Betsy Parson. Sibley Slack will
review "The Other Wise Man" and
Sarah Owen will present a Christmas collection, "Home for Christ-

mas".

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle•
: CHESTER - The Chester Vol- . port Amateur Gardeners will meet
~nteer Fire Department will have at the home of Jean Moore for a
~s annual ChriStmas dinner at 5 polluck dinner Wednesday at 6
q.m. at the firehouse for all com- p.m.
munity individuals and families
· .J.ho helped at the fair booth and at
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
tlte fli'Chouse in 1993. Meal will be Homemakers Club will meet
(lunished and those attending are to Wednesday at the Presbyterian
Church Annex for their annual
tjke a covered dish.
Christmas dinner, 12:30 p.m. There
:_ POMEROY • The BiJ. Bend will be a program and gift
Stemwheel Association will meet exchange.

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER

BRmANYLANCE

Brittany Lance
celebrates first
birthday
Bnuany Marie Lance celebrated
her frrst birthday recently at the
home of her grandparents, Roger
and Bertie Lance of Pomeroy. A
bear theme was carried out.
Those attending were her parents, Chris and Toni Lance, Jennifer and Amber Lance, Barbara
and Amy Young, Erica and Fred
Haughton, Ruth Ann Lance and
Amanda Griffin.
Those sending gifts but unable
to attend were Cindy Haughton,
Mike Dot and Traci Lance, Lisa
and Steve Nutter.

How can you tell a hare from a
rabbit• Typically, rabbits have shorter, smaller ears, smaller feet and legs
that are more equal to each other in
length than hares do.

31• W. Black finish,
Brass Trim .

s2gess.i.VE
$20
The idea.l size for your TV

~­

and VCA ... Rolls on hidden casters... Finished in

·,....··

American Oak.

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
3 1· W. Milroted trQnl ,
swivet base
~lt!Ck

~---.

w1:h b ru ss · n

$169.95

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
DIAROHDS
----9·9-9-9-9----

'llplltting Hares

ESTATE OF~ M.
KELLY, DECEAIED
CAllE NO. 27UO
DOCKET 13 PAGE 436
NOTICE OF FlUNG OF
COUPt.AINT FOR
AUTHOIITY TO tELL
DECEDE8l'S REAL
ESTATE TO PAY DE8TI
THE S.,.• ...., OF OHIO
MEIGS
COURT OF
COM yON
PLEAS,
PROBA1E DIVISION
To John w. c.eo whoM .
laot known IICiclrftl wa1
1120 Eaat Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457•1111d eo
Mark Allan cuto, whou
laat known addre11 wao
26398 14th . - - .
Porkenburg, W..t VIrginia
28101, you are horebll
notified lhal you have ~
named Dafondanto In a
logol aallon Mtlllled Marvin
L. Kelly, PWntift w. Hom•
H. cuto, Et AI., Doflndllnla.
Thle action h•• been
aaalgned Caaa Number
27830 lllld lo penclng In the
Court of Common Piau,
Probata Dlvielan of Molga
Coun1y, Pomeroy, Ohla
457•.
The abject of the

coUNTv,

~mplalntlo for Mllhorlty to

Gommunity calendar
:

PubliC Notice

,. IU r ·l K 1111 D C HAile I

••Makes It Easy!

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 992·2635 • TOLL FREE 800-426·5581
Holiday Hours: Mon.- Fri. 9 am-8 pm;

Bat 9-6; Sun. 1-5

oell daudanr• r... •lata
In order eo par dllbll of the
utato, which rNI •tate II
more particularly daacrlbed
In Volume 235, Pogo t13,
Molge County Deed
Aocordll, releronco lo which
Ia hereby IIUide.
You are required to

::;:r:.·~. ::. =l!·~~~

publication of thlo notice
which wUI be publlohiKI
once each wuk lor 1111
ouooeeolvo w..U. The teet
publlc811on wlM be made on
t2127, 111113 Wid lho 28 deya
for Anoww wlU commence
on that U...
In coa41 of your failure eo
anawor or atherWIII
reor:ncl u required by the
Oh o Rulli of Civil
Procedure, Judgment br
default will be rendered
lflllnat rou for tho rollel ·
.......,did In the CompWnL
Dated: November II, 111113
Robart E. Buck, Judgta
Molgl County Prabat.
Court
(11)22, 2t, (12) I, 13, 20, 27
PubliC Notice
NOllCE OF SHERIFPS
FORECLOSURE 8ALE
UPONVAWABLEREAL
EBTA1E
Purouant to an ORDER
oF SALE MteriKI In Cue
No. U-CV-28 In the
Common PI••• Court of
Molgo County, Ohio, otyled
•Aoaoalateo Fln•nclel
sarvlaeo CoMpany of
America, lno., et al,
Plelntlffa, va. Norman J.
Hamilton,
at
al,
Dolendante." and pureuonl
' to that certain Mortgage
doled the 21th day ol
FobruMY, 1982, whereby
NORMAN J. HAMILlON lllld
VIVIAN l-E E HAMILTON
huoband end wile:
oonvey!fd tho hereinafter
dNoriiMcl "-! Ealalelo the
ofornald Plalnutf,lo -uro
a proitll•oory no~j which
oald 110r1gap It C! record
tn tht 0f11ae of tho Roaordllr
of Molp County, Ohio, In
Mor.t g 11111_Volume 117jj at
Pogo ·1'73, the 8horl of
Molga County, Ohio, will
offer for ••I• at public
oualion lo the hlghllt
blcfdllr at the front door of
M• Igo
coun ty
tho
CourlhcMieo, Court Street,
,_oy, Ohio, on tho 30th
dey of Doc., 111111, at 10:00
o'clock, Lm. the following
lb• d A•• I E1 t • 11
doaar
oltuat. Mil
bolng In Molga
Count;, Ohio, and more
1 r1 d
lbed
pard ou 1 Y ••or
••
~-NG 1 rotleond 11
lee! ••t ol the eoutheaot
corner ol William . c.
Turnw'• fond In Soo11on 12
of hieN T-ahlp, .....
Coun1y, Ohio, running
lhonce 10.112 rode In •
ooulhoMiw'ly clnollon to a
atone oorner: thericti In a

,.

are

Passed 12-6·93

Bruce J. Reed,
Mayor
Kathy Hyooll,

deye 1her the actual date of

Clerk!Treaeurer

Tll•ft'•1•9
Al5

ACADEMY

TUPPERS PLAINS
Bulcobedlence,
tawanforceniMII,
pe....,nal prcn.c:tl!ln,
kennel Hrv'--, pup• •
"'"'
youngdou-lorMle.
Rotlwliler&amp;8h-'-d
.,.._
Stud hrvlce
By eppt. only
614-667-PETS

~==:i\3C:::lii

ARNOLD'S
PLUMIING,
HEAnNG &amp;
COOliNG

tho opening lhorool. The
Larry Wehrung , President
Owner r-rvoo the right to
lTC
21
11 1 3
waive any lnlarmalltln or to ~
....:___
;------ll
roject any or all bldo.
By order al the Southern
PUBUC NOTICE
Local Boord of Eduaotlan.
The VIllage ol Middleport
2) 3 20 27 (1) 3 4TC
public water supply hoo
QUALITY WORK
(1 1 • •
;
completed the monitoring
.,
cycle lor volatile organic
PubliC Notice
&amp;GOOD RATES
chemicals (VOCo) u
DAVID ARNOLD
required by chapter 3745-81
RESOLUTION 1103.93
(614) 992-7474
ol the Ohio Admlnlolrallve
BE IT RESOLVED by tho Code(OAC).
POMEROY, OHIO
Council ol the Village of
Upon complellon of eao;h
,....,...;·;_ 11'21111n
Pomeroy, all members VOC monllorlng cyclt, lltte 11---..,.
thereto concurring :
. regulaliona also require the
T.hat, the Mayor, Bruce J . owner or operator of a
Reed be aulhorlzed to sign public water supply to
village property deed, In notify Its consumers of the
behtll of lhe VIllage ol avallablllly ol lhe VOC

PollyAnna Ceramics
25%sale
December 13-16
Greenware &amp; bisque in slock
SR 7 in Tuppers Plains, Oh
614-667-Q045

FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELRY

1Ubmftt811

appllcoble to thla prolect.
No bidder moy wllhdrow
hi a bid wllhln olxty (60)

Big Kids &amp;. Baby Program
for 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.

•

: The presentation of service
ay;ards and gifts was among the
highltghts T~esday mght when the
annual ~hnstmas party of the
:W orne~ s Au~Ihary, Veterans
t-femorial H~Ital, was held m the
hospital cafetena.
.
. . Prec~dmg the.~uffet di!'ner,
l-Ibby Fisher, au_x1bary president,
presented a Ch~Istm_as poem and
Jlraye_r. Follo:-v~ng dmner she and
l:;lospital Adm~tusttator Scott Lucas
gave serv1ce awards to Jeanette
~awrence, I ,000 hour pm; Joan
McLam, 1,000 hour pin,
Edna
tri~leu, _2,000 hour pin. Other
¥&gt;mce pms go to Becky Mankin ,

moiled
to
the
RESOLUTION 110U3
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Suptrinlt!l!'*'t"o Olllco at
P.O. Box 178 Roclno, Ohio Council at Ihe Vlllogo ol
45771 or dttlvered to Elm Pomeroy, oil mombero
StrMt 47725 St . R~ 124, concurring :
Racloo, Ohio 45771 . Eoch
Thoi tho Clerk!Traoourer
bidder lo to deolgnoto on ol lho VIllage al Pomeroy
tho envelope thlt II Ia I lronaler the aum al
-led bid ond tho nome of s45 ,ooo.oo (Forty·llve
tho prolect. Tho nama and thou..nd dallaro) from the
o,ddrfto altho bidder oholl General Fund to tho Street
oloo be Indicated.
Bkldoro ·eroadvloodthat Fund ond $2 1•000 · 00
.
(jwe nty•one thouund
prevailing wage rotoo ao donora) lrom the Generol
published by the Ohio Fund to tho Utility Fund lor
Doportmonl of Industrial Iho opera lion at curreni
RoloUono and payroll expenaaa.

Clair Follrod hosted a ;

family dinner on Thanksgiving. ·
Attending were Clara Follrod and !
Nina Robinson, Kathy, Dave, Sta- :
cie and Alan Watson. all local: :
Karen, Steve, Katie, Brannon and •
Brian Follrod, Athens. Marguerite ~
and Delbert Steams spent Thanks- '
giving with their daughter, April }
Neely and family in Fairborn. :
Sarah Caldwell attended Thanks- ·
giving dinner at the home of her :
daughter and son-in-law, Janice :
and Steve Weber, Eagle Ridge.
.
The Alfred United Methodist :
Church Christmas program is :
scheduled for_Dec.19 at 7:30 p.m. ;

Attending or sending gifts were
Robert and Karen Baker, Luther
Boothe, Cathy Van Ness, Dixie
Sovel, Daren and Rhonda Cogar,
David and Erick Spencer, Betty
Millhone, Chad, Amy and Seth
Cummings, Jim and Kay Lyons,
Joe, Nancy, Joey and Rachaef
Stotts, Peggy and Kathryn Cum mings.
LONG SERVICE - Three volunteers or the
Women's AuxiUary at Veterans Memorial Hos, ' pital were presented service pins ror a combined
;: 4,000 hours of volunteer service at the auxilC iary•s Christmas party Tuesday night. Pictured

1993 •

Pomeroy, over to Willie analytical reaulta for the
Dural for the property period 1e1ted. Penona
loealed on Cave Street
wanting to review the VOC

PubliC Notice

Paued 11-15-93
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Kalhy Hysell,
Clerk/Treaaurer
Larry Wehrung, Presldenl
(12J13; lTC

southw•terty direction 13
rods to the Una between
JIIIIH Nliaon and Anthony
Horman at a paint 4 rode
northweat of the curve
corner on said lint to the
SHRU8&amp;mE
corner of tho oald Jam•
Noloon'a and Anthony
TRIM ••II
Harmon's land; 1honce
REMOVAL .
north two rodl eo Wlnlam c.
Tu,.,.lond; ..,_. nortll7
~IGHT HAULING
rodl alona the -~ line ol
11ld Wllllam C. Tumor'•
&lt;FIREWOOD
land; thence- 3 rodo 11
IMt; thence oouth 7 rode to
BILL SLACK
tho place of beginning,
HllmiiiMI allh,. - • · be
992·2269
the oomo more or lola.
USED RAILROAD TIES
Excepting and r•ervlng
unto former Grantor• all
12-30-110-lln
cool underlying the obovo
daacrlbedr... _te.
Reforance I• mode to
OBERT BISSELL
Oiled rocorded In Volume
213, at pogo 827, Mtlge
COISTRUCDOH
County Deed Aeco,., and
to Volume 285, p.;o 837, ltNiew Homes
Molgo County Deed
ROQarda.
-complete
BAiO PROPERTY
APPRAISEO AT $40,000.00
Remodeling
TERMS OF 8ALE: Cuh In
Stop &amp; Compare
hond on day of oalo. Bolo
will be IIUide oubJoat to all
FREj: ESTIMATES
uniNIId ....r •late
f85·4473
rlghla of wey, auemonto
and r•lrlclw covonanla of
record. Sold Sheriff may
ttdlourn aold aale by mwe I~===
oral proclomalion ol the l1
dmo and piKI ohlld oale.
DEER HEADS
· .. Jame8 M. llaulebyf
MOUNTED
Sheriff o
Molgo County, Ohio
Shoulde
.
,,__
'155
(11) 29,11216, 13
r I'IIUUitl......

-·all

PUbliC Notice

Hom Moun!................ '22

SqUI·-•

."'";;;;~~-~......

'55

446 9515

CAIPII I IPIOUTIIf CliiW'I
WV013372
ES1111ATES

VIllage ol Middleport, Mike
Ralston Supt., 237 Race
Street, l.llddleporl, Ohio
45760, (614) 992-5571
992·5711.
lTC

Emergency Servlea

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES

Berry, OwneriTlm F81Mc, t.tan.ger
C.rtllled tachnlclana on avery job.

Chooeelllld
cut your tree.
(or we'l CUI MlOr you]

Riggs Tree Farm
31507 Rocbprlngo Rd.
(ot camw of US Rt 33)
Pomoroy, Ohio

Mobile and Doublewlde owners ...

992-5702

FURNACES .

Coroll Dtvid

........"" ............

lnlllllltd camp!N with
I

DAVIDSON'S
Gel~'~·-~..

S25.00 mo.

c.........

Middleport, Oltio

WHALEY'S AUIO
PAITS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; . . . PAIII FOI '
lllll&amp;lll &amp; IIOHIS

-~= EBTlMATEII) .

V.C, YOUNG Ill ,

.

992-6215
f&gt;omoroy, Ohio
•

992;701101
·992·5$$1
011011 ••••
I·IOQ-141.0070
IIARWIII, OHIO

f'IO.t2~1n

CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks

~
-

OOFING

992-3470

'GENEUl

GuttanJ

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

HAULING

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG -.

-

POOR BOYS TIRES
60 and 70 Series

• Low, wide 60 and 70 • SeitH . Spacial RIWIL D111t!on
parfotmiUIC8 profllee.
Truckload SALE
• Two otrong ~bel~
*
• Aggrt~~lve treed ctolign
_._Jt1\
• Smooth riding polyutar cord ~.a..J-~~
bo&lt;t(.

CALL

4-19-93-tln

~nJ.-5533

Open B Day's A Week

TREES
Wholeaale
&amp; Retail
upRIIallat
Bob Snowdon'• latin
Rutland, Oh.
'Wholeaele $10 at farm,
$12 dellvncl. Retail lot
wll be opMt t o.m. eo I
p.m. olw'tlng Nov. 241h.
TrHooroS'IoW.
Call &amp;14e7.C:!-3051

Now has beautWul Cocker Spaniel Puppies. Al10
leaturing a 2 II. corrmon Black Tequ. Layaways are
now available lor Chriatmaa. Sale on our entire stock
of large aquariums .. Many new ifams.

167

14. Otelltlrt Olt

sweeper
Parts • Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,

~

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL
SAYRE TRUCKING

I.A.R.
CONSTRUCTION

-..11 or Toll F,_I..-.T.I-6117 .

Daytona Radial

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl, SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

HAULING

G=n~:-:9

HEADIIG AIID COOUNG

Galllpalla, OIL

36970 laD Rua Road

NEW - Rf••IR
I"A
I"

4/29/93

SERVICE

7n 1 mo.

·HowriLWdtueJ

.614·992·7144

mo.

can BEllMEn'S MOilLE HOME

(614)
667·6628

j·~- ~92-7878

GUN SHOOT

McLendon

JAMES ALARM SEBVICE

Hoover, Eurdca, Tri-Star,
Regina, &amp; most allier brands!
Part. Shipped UPS
Fut • Dependabl• S.rvlcal

.

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs ·

NOVDOIER SPECIAl.
(BEAT THE BAN)

NOR INCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............ 5180
NORINCO UNI. SKS. ..'" ..................
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE.. 5130
CALL AFTER 6:00
304-485·7256
111121931 MO.

CHRISTMAS TREES

BRADFORD'S
FRESH CUT TREES AVAIUBlE
01 CUT YOUI OWII
UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Turn Eaat at
lt[lanlrin onto RL 681, go 4 mi. to Milepost 13. Turn
South on gravel road, 1~ mllea 1o grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS; 10 'TIL DARK

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

ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(Ho

Sullllay Calla!

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE •nd
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

WICKS HAULING SERVICE

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

HOUDAY SPECIAL

Mltltlltport, o•1o 45760
(614) 143•5264

•

RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hour

results should conract:

'949·2168

r'VFarmloys

DAMAGE

992·3138

LU nRE lAIN
NOTICE 10 BIDDERS
Stolid propooola will be
Palnllfll
33151 PIH Grovel-'
received by the Southern
BROTHERS
FREE
EST'
...
"ES
Rlllfat, OW. 45771
Local Boord Educollon, Elm
"""I
614-992-$344
Street 47725 St. Rt. 124,
SPORTING GOODS
Recine, Ohio 45n1 until
,
7f1/trro.
1-aoG-714-nRE
12:00 noon, prevailing local
675-6755
3-1&amp;-83-lfn -======~~ j
lime. Wodnooday, Janu!2 '::;:::;::=~~~~:\ Jl .!:;:::::~;.::,;::::;:=~~~~·
12, 11194 and will be ope..... 1
and
rood
publicly
Come by and register
!
-liNGO
lmmedlttoly therealtar lor
for
free Battery to be
the exacutlon of:
· EVERY THURSDAY
RACINE
given
away December
Aobnlao abatement and
EAGLES
24,
1993.
No purchase
Roploooment moterltlo at
FIRE DEPT.
Southern Locol High
required to register and
CLUB
School, Elm Street 47725
EVERY
don't have to be present
IN POMEROY
Stott Route 124, Racine
to
win.
8:45p.m.
Ohio
SATURDAY
Reasonable.Rales
Special Earty Bird
In accordance with the
Jo&amp; N. Sayre
6:30P.M.
Pion a and Speciflcatlone
$tOO Payoff
prepored by SlteScon, Inc.
Factory Choke
This ad good lor 1
Wt oow hava•IOO .....
326 Front StrHI, Morletta,
12 Gauge Shol
FREE card.
lor fM coo"'-co
Ohio. and on file In tho
614-742·2138
Strlclly
Enforced
Lie.
No.
0051-342
oHlce ol the Superintendent
1-800-784-nRE
314&lt;113 t mo.
1112-4/92111n
11 the Southern Loco I Boord
11111111 - ol Educallon.
The total eollmate lor all
projacta Ia $177,400 of
which
$142,615
to
abtlernent coot and $34,785
MORTGAGE COMPANY
Ia replacement motarlala .
•Dozer •Backhoe
Bldo will be received lor
all work Included under a
oQitcher o0ul!"4) Truck
single prime contract.
A pro-bid canlerance wll
Land Clearing, Ponde,
be held 11 10;00 a.m. on
Wilier Line•, Septlca
Tunday, December 28,1913 1
Llcenee &amp; Bonded
In tho cafeteria ot tho
Southern Local High
Charlie Hatfield,
School. A tour of the projec
Financing Available
Operator
aile will follow the
742-2903
1-800-553-3586
conlorenco.
1111011 mo.
Copleo ol
Plano,
Speclflcatlono and Proposal
Forma 1oga1hor with any
OpenlqSooa
WEIER'S
further lnlormellan' desired
.
"5qln•BOUH
may ba oblalned lrom
CHRISTMAS
Our Business is Security
SlteScan, Inc., 326 Fron
of TNaura"
SltMt, Morletto, Ohio 45750
TREES
Alarm Systems
105 Bunamul Ave . Pomeroy
All blddlnu documents will
ILANU,OH.
bo lorworded upon receipt
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras
Homegrown-Carelully
of a dopaolt In tho omount
Sheared Scolch &amp;
ol $50 .00 per oel. Tho
New Haven W. V. 25265
dapatlt will be rtlundod to
WhRe Pine 4' &amp; Up with
blddort who return the
a great selection ol
Cheryl A. James
pltno and apoclflcatlono In
largertreea.
(304) 882-3336
good condition within ten
William C. James
(10) days ohor receipt of
C&amp;ll742·2143 or
blda. The low bidder mty
Co-Owners
retain the plena
opeclllootlono
and and
tho ~~~====~~~~- ~ L:::::~S
dopaolt will be ralunded.
-.;
Eooh bid muat be
CHRISTMAS
accomponltd by • BID
GUARANTY metllng tho
TREES
requirements of Section
153.54 of tho Ohio Aovlaed
$10.00each
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
ATIHE
Code In tho tmount of 10%
of tho bid. A perlormonoo
Open9to6
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgtge •
ond .poyment be&gt;nd In the
Ohio
· 3 tllfwwnt kindll:
amount e&gt;l 1DO% ol the
AND
llcolch, Whir. •
controct Ia to be lurnlshed
Au•trlall PlnM, 6' to 8'.
by the ouocooolul blflder.
lox 189 Bidder• muot ba llconlled
Hilley Hanlnt I'MIIINIM
1:»4
llon..frL
by tho Ohio DoportmMOt of
donco, la71 Flalwaa do
742-11120 AfW 1:110
Hulth
•• ·Aoboolao
Rd., Pomoroy, Ohio
Hre f.Mon Sat. ••
AbatomMOt Conlrtctoro.
6I14183Mn
11111111 --pd.
Bids oholl be oeoled tnd

dim.. DK's

We epaclllla In:
RRElWATEA

36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

$9 75 ATON SIZED LIMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM
JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

�Page B The Dally Sentinel
BEATI'IE BLVD.•" by Bruce Bea ttie

Announceme r1! s

3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Apanment
fo r Ftenl ___
Six Room 1 112 Bathe, J---..:.::::..;~:.;:.
Glolood In Back Poroh, Ciao Fumlohecl, s -., &amp; Both.
Fum- Garage, Aloo, Hal Two Vary C'"!!~, Wlllr &amp; Traoh Paid,
S R09ftl- Collagoo Each, Com- 130~.oa 1114 388 1aao.
plolo!J FunllahWd, ~ n Cantor Of
Oollli\OIIo, ~54:1.
Fumlohod
Efficiency,
701
THOUSANDS
BELOW
AP- Fourth, Gaiiii&gt;OIIo, Sha.. Both,
PRAISED VAWE Immaculata 3 t~no/~~~~:.· Paid, 814-446·
Btdroom R1nch, MlnutH From
Holzor, On 1.8 Acrao, l50'o. 614- Ont Bedroom Apartmem For
S7'il.fl442.
Ront In Rio Granda, $325 Por
Month. Which Include• Utllftltt,
32 Mobile Homes
.,50 Oopoof~ Phone: 814-24511082.
for Sale
Ont
bedroom apartrn~~nts,
188t Shultz 12x60, 2 Bedroome, $2:25/mo.
fncludu utllltiM, $100
Llko Now Through 0111, Must -utny depoe~
. no pota; 614M2-2218.
Sot To BalliVo HI 814-441o0175.

D.W.M., 53, _ ... "SSim" lot relallonohlp. 304-875-2188 a~
Ia&lt; 5:30pm -~.

11- aklnnlng1 cutting, wrap-

plna,lrMzlng - · Allo making
hk:i'ory...mO\ed d•r JM!;y,
..,mmer u uuge, tr.ll bok)gna.
Crawlood'o Groce&lt;y, Hand_.,.,

'/o'V. 304-87!-5404.

G iveaway
6Zk old pupplol~ paronto Go~

den Retriever &amp; ulk Lab pup•
have thotl hair, If by Chf.l81maa
thoy do not havo homH thoy

Iilii be dntroyod. 304-875-1845
aller4pm .

11173 For- Park, 1Zd5 2 Bod-

room, WIB

Chrlt tmae
PupDin
To
Qlveaway: Mother ~ull Blooded
l;ngllah Seller, 614·25&amp;-17'&amp;5.

' malt Miniature Schnauzer, 4
V.art Old, l14 .. 46-47"37.
0

NouH Trained flmt le Cocker
Spanlel.t. To Good Hom•. 614·

446-7111u.

Pupploo, Chow

&amp;

BOOGI• mtr,

took llkt Chow, black. 304·675·

t.==========-1=========:-i
Wanted to Buy

J.:..-.:...:.:...:.::..::.::...::.:.!..__

614·992·2934.
Wont ad To Buy: Junk Caro a
Two s monl n old Golden Labs, 1 True kI AI Tof. Pri ct &amp; R••·
temalt and 1 malt, 614·992· tora bl eCart, S 4•366"111•5••
' "·

6256.

6

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Wlthou'l Motora. Call

Lost &amp; Found

LIIny Uvely. 614-3aa..9303.
FOund : Siamese Cat, VIcinity: Wanted To Buy : Aatt Tarrier
Second Avenue, 614-446-1209.
Either Young Or Pu-y. 614 _379-

Loel ' black and Ian Gannon :::
2:72
.:S::·...,.,~,_---,-.,--..,Shephard named Buster. Wt ar• Wanted To Buy : Standing TimhH rtbroken. It found call 614· ber &amp; Pint, Good Prlc11 , 614·

949·2170.

388·9906.

:::,:~:::..-.,.-....,-,-,..,....,.Lost: blac k l ab puppy, 4mo. Top Prlcaa Paid: All Old U.S.

old, Rt. 2, near Maplewood Drlve Coins, Gold Rln¥'• Sliver Coins,
Gold Colno. M..8 . Coin Shop,
Inn. 304-875-2735.
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Lost: large malt Beagle, blue
collar, ~ag le Rldget Bashan Wanled To Buy: storm door to fit
area, lamlly pet, 614·94,.2800.
mobllt
home;
For Sale:
Lost: ma.. black Lab, orange CoBTIUem:.._noo1ral61o5roootuma~~ ~~Jooo
collar, Loop Rd. area, answer•
• "'' : •
warm
to Outct't , reward, 814·'1112·2801.
Momlng gll.htattr, $20Q; 20gal.
tlactrlc fiot w1ter hnter, $40;
Lost : Yellow Llbf'ador, Holzer couch &amp; chair, $100; 614·992-

Modlcal Cantor Aroa, 51 R1 160, :301
:,:::·=~~-,..---RJ. 35, An~nfonnatlon PIIISI WANTED: engine for 1988 Ford
,;.11 614-44 250, Chip.
FesUva, 4ep., 1.3 Iller, needed
f1ew.,d $1001 No Oueatlons As· ASAP, c•tl814-i92-215!i, 8:30amked Misting A 5 Month Old Rot· 5:00pm. or 614-992-2428 after
lwallar, His ~ame Is CaJun, 614- 5:00pm.
3S8-11012.
0

Employment Services

Ya rd Sa Ie

7

0

"Have you cons ide red making this a
bed-and-breakfast du rl' ng the o ff season?"

1264.
Seven year old f1male gray
Poodla
to
aood homo, 9

hous•broktn, nof • child'• pet ,

•

11

Help Wanted

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AVON I All Areas I Shlrtey
Spears, 304-875-1429.

ALL Yard Sa .. s Mull Sa Paid In
Ad\lanee. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

money or want a career, either

AVON! AH areas. NHd eXIra

11

Help Wanted

NON-SMOKING AND DRUG
FREE ENVIRONMENT

8

'1112-4738.
CAREER SALES
National Company Seeks Saln

Rick Pearson Auction Ccmpany, Proftnlonals With Thrwt To
full time auctioneer, com~ett Five Yura Experlance For The
auction aervfce.
UctnNd Ponsmouth • Gallipolis • Jack·
M66 ,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304-

m-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Anllquoo and uood lurn~uro, no
ham too large, or too email, will
buy on• Pltce or compl.tt
houa:thold, , • • Wlnted· old
blcycl.. , call Osby Martin, 614·
992·7441.

ton Arva. Salary Plus Commit·

alon. Exc1llant Banafhs. TrainIng. Call Marlbolh, SUCCESS
Emp~monl SoNico, 1814) 221·

8125 Or Fax Ruuma (614) 22a.

8330.

'

Ea~ World Exallent Payl As1o Prod 1 •• H
~-11
um
uc • ome. ~

Toll FrH, 1-800-467-5566, Ext.
313 ·
Group And Family Home Need
Otcorated etoniWII'I, wall lele- Ctrtlfled Hum Aid For Partphonn, old l1mpa, old thtr· Tl
9 AM • 00 PM 13945
momettra, old clocks, lnllqu8
mt
· · -.,:
· ·
tumlture. Rlvertnt Antkluea. S111e Route 218, Crown City.
Run ,Moore, owner. 814·912· Rnldent manager nttdtd tor
2526. We buy e81atea.
mlnl-ttorlgt unlta 111 Ave
=:::...::.:.:===::....--1
Point-. Pomeroy, 614·992·5251
J &amp; D'a Auto Parts and Salvage, or 304-522-7867.
alto buying junk Cllra &amp; lruclta.
304-:..:..;173-.:.:.,:5:.:34.:.3.::.....______ Shipping a Recolvlng Clerk,
:.
1 COL Llctnu Pr-.farriNI. Apply In
Junk Aulo'o To Buy Will Plck·Up Poraon
At:
Bu~llo
011
Appllancao, Any Olhor Motalo &lt;aa
,.!l'f"'
, 11o,) Monday ·friday,
Ff'H, 6~~46-1'128 Before UP.M . 7 _.... 30

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA8H?!!

Lela Th1n One V11r. Excelltnl

Condition,
Mull Sao
To Appreciate. Call
&amp;'14-247·2032
Leave Mnngtlf No Anewer.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

13 112 AC Nlco Pond 1,000 lb.
Tobbaco Ban, Rural Water,
a small lol: In Racine , 614·94S:. Eltctrlc, Sept_lc Tanks, Tr~ller
2940 aher 5:30pm.
Ronlod), 5 MIIH From Qa~
Ipolio, $12,500, S14-446-6987.
18 Wanted to Do
1_:;:.__:_..::;_.:..:_:...:,:._.....:___ 15 acr11, building ahn, woodt
Babyalnlng In My Home, I Uve road frQfltage, city Wllttr, prlc;.d
In Cheshire Area, Have Refaran- for quick u11. Somerville
en, $1.50 Hr., Per Child, 614-367- Really, 304-875-3030 or 675-3431.
0532.
2 112 Acru MIL Dozad For
EaR TREE SERVICE. Topping., Homos~a. Rural Wale• Sopllc,
Ealobllahod Drivowoy, ~. R . 218,
Trimming, Tr11 Removal, Hickle 814·256-6'1112,
614-446-8834.
Trimming. Froo EoUmaloal 6f4·
387-795TAftor 4p.m.
Lote approx 300 ft ott AI. 2,
County Water, electric, 10 mlln
General Malnlenance, Palnt!Jig 1 aouth
of Po1nt ,PiuHnt, 304Yard Work Wlndowt Watnea
Gutterw Cleaned ·Light Hauling, 575-2894.
Wanted- som.-one to brush hog

I

Commtrical, R11ldlntlal, Stan:

614-446-1S58.

Georges Por1ablt Sawmill, don't

Holiday

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Range, Poroh~1 J!!.~~~nl
lncludod. 814·2,...,,...,
8834.
1192 Nania 111&lt;60 Trallor. Hugo
Spaclouo Roome WHh Calhoilral CaUinll! l h r a - lhrae
Bedroom, TWo Batli. Huge Qa,..
den Tub In Maeter Bl1fi, Ov.r
1200 Sq. Fl. I.Dio Of Storo~o.
Hao All Tho Extrao. LIVed In

=;,.-

Friday. Monday ltd!Uon • 2:00

Homt. Average $8 ·$14 Hourly.
Door-To-Door Optional. 1-BQ0-

Elootrlc,

JOIN AWINNING TEAM
cludu oklrtlng, otopo, blocko.
A. A La. d.r In Th. Rn. nc'·al 5yr, warran1, nomaowner.
1 ~ 1In-•.....,·rvl•... es Aroa, Beln~ A Mom•·r
•uranct,
an n11 ~ur
o niluot
""'
n1 11 lor
T71
1
0 Y
Of Our Coneumer F nanc• Ttam re • 1
mo., ca •
Moans Having A Good Place To 800-8374238, Ilk for Mike.
Start. Art YOu Sell-Motivated, Fire dunagld 12x65 trailer, unAsstrtlve And Enjoy Dealing der bath fub, make affw, 114-With Ptopla? A Pleasant Par- 992-8594.
sonallty And Good Phone Skills I:::..::::::~-----Are A Mu.t. Rt~ponslbllhl" In· 33 Farms for Sale
elude Acllvllloa Rolalod To 1;;:;.-:..:::..::.;:.:..:::.:.;.
·
Credll,
Salts,
Account 409 1cre1, houn a bulldl:l!g
Ma nag~ment And Accounting. toblcco lotmanl. · 304-576For lmmadlata Consideration or 57'5-2376.
Contact; Guy Morrow At 614·
448·2208.
50 Acre Farm, Ewlngton Araa, &amp;
Roomt 1: Bath Bam &amp; Outbulld·
EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY lng, $S5,000, B14-446-8554, S14o
EMPLOYER M/F/H
245-5818.

haul your loge to the m111 Jult

p.m. Saturdly.

Tolal

1994 Redman 14170, 3bdrm., ln-

way-call Marilyn. 304-882-2645
the day before the ad Is to run. or 1-8~992oo6358 .
Sunday IHJitlon - 2:00 p.m.

Avon Sella huff AI Work Or

call304-875·1957.

SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Molga Count~, Salam Twp.
$8501 acre. Romola, beautiful
land; woods, pl8turw and hllle.
Call tar good map. 1.ti14-Sn..
8545, Alhono,OH.

Will Oo
Housec:leanlng
&amp;
Office,
Raftrenen Avallab~e.r. O.pen•
dable, &amp; Honnt, 614-aul-9921.
Cl•anlng.

Min Paula'• Day Cart Center

M·F 8 A.M. .s:30 P.M. auallly
Loving

c.,..

For All Chlklntn

Our •1 001!1. Part·T1mt, Full·
llmo, fad. Aaolalanco Available.
Call ror Information Or Vltll. lnlont ITodclor 614-4-227. p,..
School,
Schoolago,
B&amp;A
School, 814-446-8224:
T 1: T lawn Service, lawn,
landecaalng, etump l'lmoval,
and teat cfunup. 304·773·!5t02
or 1.SOO.S38-1440.
Will cart lor your child In your
~~;e:.· Pltaaant area. 304--

Rentals
41 Houses Ior Rent
2 13 Bedroom, Edae Of Gal·
II polio, C~y Schocfo, RoforanCM &amp; Sec, Deposit RequlrH,

$32!!/Mo. 814-446-4447.
3 Bodroomo, 2 Bollia, $375/Mo.
DopooM &amp; Rofaroncao, R•
qulrtd, 814-448-3292.

Parking.

Porch,

Ptll,

No

Aeftrtnce Required. $275/Mo.
Call Earl Topii, 814-446-0161.

Business
Opponunlty

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends lhat you do bual·
ness wllh people you know, and
NOT to stnd monty througn lht
mall until you have lnvestigattd
lht offering.
Grocery Store, same 1ocatlop
3Syr.., 4000aq. ft . plus 4000sq.
ft. vary nlct basement, brick
lace bkl&lt;:k building, paved park·
lng lot appox. 12"0x200tt., fully
llockod, $12!t~ nag. 304·682·
3300 or 8S2·~&lt;11.

14160 2 Br, 1 mile South of
Eureka, on St. Rt.7. No pets,

reterencn . 614·256-e089.
2 bedroom 1rollor1 rol I dop, Rl.
62 N. locl,fst Ra on right , no
polo. 304-875-1076.
Mobile Homo, Fumlohod, 2 Br,
92il Fourth Avonuo, Galllpoils'l
$320/Mo., 614-MS-4418 Aftor
P.M.
Fumlthtd nery cl11n 2 BR.
Watsrttrash peld; In Porter 1r1a,

$300.oo month. Oopoan. S14366-8000
Two bedroom mobile homn for
renl, alao spacn tor rent sten.
lng 11 $85/mo., S14-992·2167.
Two bedroom, total lltclric,
$225/mo., Pomaro~ aNa , 614·

992-2312.

Al1'881811ala

aaven~&amp;~ng

_..rs

In

thla ...
IUbjoc:t to
1hl Federal Fair HooUig Ac1
ol1ll68 which " llogal
to adverllao •any praforance,
lmllallon or claatnilllllon
based on raoa, cdor, relglon,

sax IIII'AIIItllua or nalloNII

Tum your clutter into ctuih,
SeU it the eau way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Plo.ce your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 day&amp;,
3 papers, $5.40 paid in advance.

1-------------------2.
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _
3._

_

_ _ __

_

_

5. __________________

6~-----------------7. _____ _ _ _ ___
_

_

io«atlon ordlscrlm;wlon:

_ ___

9. _ _ _ __ _ _ __

10~-----------------11.~·------------------

12------------------

13 .___________________

14· ~--~--------~---

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

446-2342 1 992-2156
675:.1333

Apanment
lor Rent

2 Large Btdroome, 2 Floora,
CA, 1 112 Boti!J 2 Poolo, Pallo,
$320JMo, No t'tts, Lun Plus
Socu~ty
DopoaM Roqulrad,
Daya 614~46-3481. Evenlngsi 810 P.M. 114-367·7650.
2 Btdrooma, AC, In CblllpoUa,

na nawepaper wll not

I

Dopoo~

2br. all tltctrlc, eppllancu fur.
; nlshtcl, on ehe manag•ment.

Lau.. and Apt8., Ntw
unty_ll.,.._._ ..1.WV.
EOH 304-862·3716

. . . . ... oppoo
. .n
11

31 Homes for Sale
1t83 doublt wide on acre lot,

total electric, flraplace, Oal·
llpollo Forry, $33,000. 304-871-

7217.

Haven

2 cane and punldn high blclc

c:halrs 1 cent glau top couch
tabla. $200.oo 304-875-2237
VI'RA FURNITURE
61-t-446-3158 Or 614-448-4428
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH

OR RENT-2-0WN (NO .DEPOSIT)

Ex-

MnU.

52 Sponlng Goods
Thompson /Center Hawken .45
Cal. Rille, Beautiful W•lnut
Stock, Brand New Condlllonl
$275, 614-379-2801.

53

Antiques

Buy or tell. Riverine Antique.,
1124 E. Main Slrool, on Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. Hour.: M.T.W. 10:00
t .m. to 6:00 p.m., Sundly 1:00
lo 6:00 p.m. 61.4-V92·2528.
WUI B1.1y One Hem Or Eatatn.

336
Second Avenue, Galllpolla, 614446-8776, Mon ..S.t., 9:3().5,

Dovt'a
F~day

Nqt

Anllqun,

9:30-8.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
AAA,

S.aoonod Flrowood,
Delivered And Stacked P.U.
Load $50, 614-28&amp;.a766.
Artificial Chriotmoo !r::s Euralla
Upright swoepor, a1
·2857.
Oanhy, 14k gold, blue uphlre
rtng, sin 6, $50. Great
ChOttmaa Prnentl 304-7735638.
Brown co.., Imitation fur, ala
mtc:llum, very pretty, like new,
$5, 614-1411-2522.
Car Sao~ llko now, $45. 304-882·
2444.

lulek Al¥io&lt;a, . 1 Owner, '
nl Condllfoil, - - ;

'

•

e..._ '

1m CbovroiOI -

•u
• u7 u
NORTH

v.a, '

Aulomollc, Loodad, Bloc~ Wllh
Rod Trim, SOrloUo lnquMM

~&amp;MEEK

Only! te.aoo, eu ue •os.

Mlloo, For M- Info 8 - '

:
1HI Tornpo GL, . aUio, 4dr., :
load8d, f5800. 1-IOOotiM-3173, ,

,
.
loaded,

1112 . Mudl Pralegt,
I
S79D5 . . 1-800.11114·3873, Rlploy, ~

-·1

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Hardwood for oolo, i«J.oo a
load dollvorad. can:614-446-0770
Liko now, twin alz• bod
3 pi~ ttt of shHts, al blue.
$15, 814,992-2563.
Mens Drns Slacks, Slaz1r Wllh

..

~rf!u::O: s:::~ ~T~::';:;

Eloctrlc Typowrflor S25il· Bon
Body Maooagor $20; lc~clo
130; Carpal Cloanor 145, 614245-1171.
New a •• Hoi Water Hla1er, $100.
45 I 55 Gallon, 614-245-11152 AI·
tor 8 P.M.

.H
•u

.AQJIOH I

•u

11t3 MRoublohl E~o,
Ripley. WV.
oharp,
$11,119!. 1
11114'3673,
-Soy
~. ..:;For:._d-::T:-K:-m
~
oi-or~
:ioo-.,.
it-75-. .
56 Pets for Sale
1185 Buick Llm~od Edlllon ~
good ahapo, ... 400. 4 tlrao 16':._i! ,
rag a 2 muatanow, sso. 304-8,.. '
Floh Tank, 2413 Jacllaon Avo. 6512.
Point Pl-nl, 304-8711-208:1.
1!llial. tank .......... .,1.118. 72 - Tlucks for Sale
Young
Para-,
114.11.
Hamalora, sue 1 14.11. 1m Ch.. y Plck.Up, 314 Toni :
Everyday low prleea.
1171 Dod- Box Vln, Will Sel ~
Full blooded Siberian Huollv Or Trada, 814 ue· 3243 After 6 •
puppl11, S:71u.ch, 814-182-aM: P.M.
'
HAPPY JACK TRIVEAMICIDE: 111711 Chov C2! Conv.,.,.., Van, ,
R-nlzad Sola a Eflacllve By only sa,-.,1., $21JD5. , _ ,
U.S. Conlw For VllorlnatY 11114-3673, Ripley, WV.
•
Modlclno A~ol..t Hook. ROIOIIl 1G82 Chevy truck. 3141on,
&amp; Tapowormt In !lop I Colo. ohopo, IHIIo r11al, 11800 304:-n:J. "

P aa

Paao

Paa

URIAH II

Paao

HAVE YOU
GOT ENNY
MAIL FER
ME?

chain, $5i ~14-)12-239'7.

Onl~ $3G.H for all
tux. 811 Pailnt Plue for your New

SPECIAU

~ur'a Tux.

304475-4084.

,

tuede CCM.tt and lelther coat•
for ul• $50, caii614-H2·7574.

- ·p-

61

Fann Equipment

2446.0:127

Slngla

Water

Ultd Lennox W11t Pump, 28,000
BTU, Installation Avall•ble, 1·

Doulz round bolor, $8500. Ouotz
equare blllr, 17500. DUitz et800·287-8308, 614-441-8306.
lalfi raka, .,500, Doutz 1T locJ.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch dar, $1500. Now Holland 10' dloo
200 PSI $1D.9!; 1 Inch 200 PSI bini 411, $7000. fHder wagon•
$32.50i Ron Evan• Enttrprlaae. &amp; 10 ton ~oa~, $1500. Morgan'a
Fann, Rl. 35. ..,4-1137·2018.
Joc~&lt;a&lt;&gt;n. Ohio, 1-800-53JI.D528.
WATER STORAGE
TANKS Hydraulic oll,50 gal $125. Sldaro
Above And Below Ground FDA Equlpmenl, Henderwon, WV.
Approved For Potobla Wolor, 304-875-1'121 or 1-800477·31117.
Ron Evana Enlorp~oaa, Jock·
oon, Ohio, HI00-837.e528.
63
Livestock
Now owoolohlrto, L and XL. 1'10 -11"'111"""AO=HA"""Sor-ro"'II-:G;..a.,ld""ln-a.-11""9""'12
Ach, 814-941-2106.
AQHA lnctnllvl Fund Gilding,
1112 lncon11M Fund Filly, 1tlll
55
Building
~~~Jl Sonny Ooo Bar, 814Supplies
.,........,..,..:..:::~:.:_-­ Roglllorad
Umouoln-bnd
Biook. Mck, - r plpoo, wln- cpw•, brH hllr.,.., yearling and
dowo.._llnlofo, ole. Cfoudo Win- 2 yr. old buna, 614-618-2765.

'z -

IF '(0U RE COLLECTING FOR
C~ARITV, WI-IAT CAARIT'I' ARE
COLLECTING !=OR :

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

- - --

1

1
l

good cond, 2IIDI:• of nlrat..
711,000 mllel, blue book value }

88,4D5. L. L SmMh, 105 1
M-man Clrolo, 304-875-3222.
1

•

VI

w

~

...!

1

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
10,000 ,

•

,.,

'7A

,.,

Motorcycles

:::::-:::::::::--::::::::::-:-~-:::~

,

111110 Honda XRIOR Uko - .
1900; 11181 Honda IIOR, $200,
114-441-MIS.

200cc'a Automobile Bra For Fonl
TOUR10. 814-44&amp;-:128D Doyo; 814256·1287 Aftor 7 P.M.
·
3

Whoolor

75 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

wv. .

76

Accessories
2.8 Ulor Engine, $225. • 253G, Or 614-18JI.lll1t,
5 L~ Alumlnwn Turbo WhMII,

15 lrich In Dlamolor, 11 Inch
Wide, Will Fh General Moton,
.,25. 814-378-2728.

Note the difference if declarer
plays dummy's diamond two at trick
one. A nervous East might win with
the king, making declarer's life easy.

1-~:~·~· ~-~=:~-·~-:-~.=~~~;;:t2~~~~~~~=::=~:_-------~":_JI
wins
,.BORN·LOSER
· ;· ,
... ,.
...
~ '1'00\J( &amp;.01

mER

~.I 1-1

/A£. ~ OOIT€. ~ Tl"'f AWJI

U&lt;..HT Of lHE FN-T 'IW-.T
'11\l!ll!l '11\E. ~

WAAli~A

AA 61Vll'tb ...

eight.let's
Unable
to return
a diamond,
But
suppose
be wins
with the
· East switches to a club, wblcb South
with the ace. Declarer cashes his
spade ace and heart king, plays a
heart to dummy's ace and ruffs a
heart blgh Ill lwtd. A spade to dummy's king permits another blgh heart
ruff. Declarer draws West's last
trump, plays a diamond to dummy's
ace and diacarda bls club loeer on the
~_la!&gt;ltshed heart jack. _

,.WHO ~ I TO OC~Y YOO
'&lt;OUR WI~?

PIECE.Cf n£
PIE.. AAOOioiC&gt;
IJ,~ ....

Flral

Holur

Dec. 13, 1993

·-- IJ 12111 ~ llr.lfl.l

MORTYMEEKLE &amp; ~HROP
MRS. HACI&lt;AeeR12Y e.AID
WE WERE GOINeS ON A
. FIEI.D TRIP -n::o&amp;.Y. ..

'

eo WE Au. WENTOUT!SIDE
AND eAT IN 11-IE. FIELD
eEH IND THE. ec::HCOL..,

I il-l INK llS TIME MRS.

J

___...._!

Wholei:elt, Olr.ct From The Hay, •quare biiH, $1.50 6 up.

FactOI)'. Mallo ProiH Whllo Saturday only pickup. 3DW75Laamlng. Port·llmo To ou., 31180.
Buolnaoa. Soma Solocl Marllal
Available. 1303) 7118-4135. Ext.
1000.

441·1800 Sonlor, Oloablod, I
HandlcappodL 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom
UnM~ Rllnlo 6aood On Adlu11od
ln&lt;:omo, FMHA Suboldlad', HUD
cortlflclloo Accoplod. 614-441·
180!JiaoEqual Houolng Oppor.
l .:
'u:-n'-:::.:'-::-:----:-,.,.ii
Graclouo living. 1 and 2 bodroom apartmtnle at Vlbage
Maond
Rlvaralao
Apartmonto In Mldcii-PGrL From
-=zo2. Col 614-lt2.1J85D. EOH.

Flo~da Pn&gt;Pif!Y For Salo 6

I Bedroom Near Holzar
S24S/IIo, Roloranoo &amp; DopooM
Raqulrad, 614-446-2D57.
2 Bodraom Apartment 814441-o3110
'
:,::..:::::,:·- , . - - -......- Niae 2 lodraomo, 4 112 MIIH
FOOnt OaiiiDOIIo Rolrlgontlo&lt;
Stove
Fumlthed'
iiiOiro. No POlo, 814 448 8038.'

!I

....

ASTRO·GRAPB

1182 Cafobrlty -

Shapo, In·

olda And Ouf, R..,. a .. Noodo
Work, $310, IMol!IIS-111811.

1184 Pontiac eooo LE, v.a, ...o.,
PW, PDL, PB, pc&gt;w« -Ia,
.:1000, or 1rado lor truck or ..
qual ..,.., ........3313.

1188 Cho¥y Cav-. Typo 10 2
do:"tM:t~• AC, nloa car, $120ci,
61
•11043,

PI PI-nt araa 3 ""'room, 1
full bl1h, P\~:· carport, con·
vlnllnl to oc
I ahOIIDing,
prlcod bolow 880 000, Calf bank
Olk Dry Sink. Qulft
••
1187 Pontiac·eooo, 4 cyl. auto.,
Ono Trual Dopl, iii. I'll, WV 304- Nloe 2 or 3 bodroom •-mont Hondmodo
Rack, Mama Modo to Onlir, 84- ~uol wlcaga, 880. 304-e'lllo 76,000 mlf!!1 loollolrunt goad,
871-4460.
· In Mldclloporr, 814-182-all58.
448-6888.
I :2::::::
03 2:.._
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 11:1000, 814-1'0i!ol!3tl.

Wlfu'

necessarily~

1
r01 you.
1.quite
bul nol
'
and a long, serli-a.ddrressec. stamped
you hoped . Benaflc lrends
b&lt;l Influenced by ~anges you can'l
envelope lo Matchmaker, c/o lhis news- '
paper, P.O. Box 4465, New York, N.Y. · control.
10163.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) For1ui1ous
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-..lan. 18) Friends developments might b&lt;l generated today :
BERNICE
could p~.t~y more prominent roles in your through partnership errangeme111s, espe.
affairs
al illls time than lhey have in the cially alliances which were bonded on a '
BEDEOSOL
past. lfs a period where each could be social basis.
lucky ror the other, 90 stay In touch.
LEO (July Z:t-Aug. 22) A situation that '
AQUARIUS (Jan. zo-Feb . 11) Your has bean causing you some anxiety
grearesl aaael loday 18 your ability 10 looks like It is going to work oul rather
derive ~eneflls and adv_anlages where favorable today . lnslead of producing
tV.....you have to adjust to shilling circ um· negatives, II could produce a sub&lt;ltanlial
-.uul'
stances. Your instincts will Influence your bonus.
aii....
VIRGO (Aug. Z:t-Sepl 22) One of your i
-.,.. u~
:!:~~8 (Feb. 20-March 201 Devote as friends Is a purveyor or good news, bul ;
"'iiiiaday, Dec. 14, 111113
much time as pos sible today to a new neither v,ou nor he/she wlhll b&lt;l aware of
"
lind exciting lntarell thai has recenlly lhls untl you've had a c ilnce lo talk . .
.
Your ln~•nity a"'! resourcelulness will captured your fancy. Thia venture could ~. you do, both could b&lt;l In lor a big 1
b&lt;l ranked}!rgong the major qualities lhal have greater ramnk:atlona than you rea~ surpnse.
.
I
LIBRA (Sept. Z3·0ct. 23) You're in a .
could contrlbuM 10 your eucceu In lhe lze.
year ahee~. Don't be reluctant to try ARIES (Marcil Z1·Aprfl 111) COUple your cycle and will continue to b&lt;l so for qulle ;
lhlnga you've ne:ver attempted previously. will lo win 10 your Imagination and vlsua~ some lime where you'ra profitable poaaiIAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) An lze the 1ype or and .."1'118 you desire or bUllies could b&lt;l rather ramarl&lt;ablt. If&amp; a
unusual aiTang6menllhal pre'lioully waa the type of changes you would like ld apony !rand. l'oday Ia one or those ~.
rortunete,,lqr you llnanclally looks like II make. They're doable loday.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4· Noy. ZZ) Thill Ia a
mlglrt ~ llself today. Oon1 change 'fAUIIUI (Aprfl zo.May 20) Your ability ·ravorabla period for you whe re new ;
anylhl rig5:i/iltlch worked lhe flrs l lima. 10 abeort and catalogue new (nlormallon enterprises Of endeavoro are concerned , :
Know where lo (ook for romance and and .lacts Is bellar than usual today. ~lly !hose you had a hand In con- ,
you' ll lind II. :rhe Allro · Graph · Slriva 10 use lhla gift 10 your advantage. ' oaplionallzlng.
.

J-1..,..

82

Plumbing

&amp;

,...._.,..H,.,.est..,.,....ln..;ll:.,.,,....,_ •~

,._man'a HOIIIna.And Coclflna. ;,..
lnllallalfon And llovlot. 1180 "

Coi11flod. R-Ial,

olaL 114-256-1t11.

eom- "·'
,,

I

••

I .

.

TODA\"S HISTORY: On Ibis day in
1991, North and South Korea signed a
treaty formally e nding the Korean
War - 38 years after fighting ceased .
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Heinrich
Hein e 0797-1856), poet; Alvin York
(1887-1964) , U.S. World War I hero ;
MacDonald 0915·1983) , novelist;
Van Dyke 0925-l, actor, is 68 ;
ICI~ri!ltO~Iher Plummer (1929·), actor,
--1 is 64 ·

1-V'CKAElERRYa:&gt;NSIDE:REO
ReTIREMENT.

1.---

Apartment•

ate'

30 Dbctloll

32== :·
3e Mlllllftt ·
38 Olin,..
.
3tActreuRuqs' 11
41 laallblrd
42 allbrlc
43HowiWMI :

44::

..

46Beweret~t

.......,.

46 Old lllltolclll

47 Debt , . . , . .
48 Dlillion nn1
51118o-tung.
52 - ....
.

'T S

T

HTK,

T

VMIBKO

LZAJKK

T

LYTAJ

C

CAH

DC V K . "

HTK.

Rl

KBKYWLIHW

PIF,

R I 0 H

C
UZVR

TA

IDKARKACYTCA
UZPFKY)

V . O .

FIRRKY .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Hollywood lkao my aye. They jual don't lib what
I -· I -

life

u a

lWiol

on HMII.'' -

(Oiractor) AIM Rudolpll.

-

'mzu~' S©~ci{llA-&lt;Z"E~S·
141tod
CLAY
POUAN
0 four
~a orro nge letters of tnt
scrambled word1 be·
~r

low ro form four words.

" ! T 'I .~ C ·

' fiO!lV[

,.-- I:_L_ Y_A--F......,1
5

245-8121.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Gold Sool Stool Bulldln~ 1
SIMIWOod Doolol)lhlp, Buy Hay For Solo, 614-2118-8071.

Second Avenue, Galllpolle. 61,.;

u-....r

"Student s who are su e-

~ cessful usually have one

I I" 1 I I ;:;

ters, Hlo Grandt, OH Cllll I!I'J4.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jacks on Plko
lrom $206/mo. Walk to ohop &amp;
movlos. Coli 614-445-256S. EOH.
Hooch SL Mlddlopon, Oh 1 &amp;
2br. lurnlohod apia., .. 11~1os
paid, dop. a rol. 304.IJ82·2888.

27 llenoody

Puo
Pua
Allpaao

.i

11114-3873, Ripley,

Auto Parts &amp;

u

--

H Maamlflabll -

Pua

discard.

1H3 ... ,. ., 18ft. open bow,
UL ongl~ooka br'and now,

110,500, 1

INT
!NT

r-

i
~
i

1

I

A11'08tar,

z•

~::'"-'

tain our potent
cards
until thethe
most
efficacious
moment
to extract
IIIBII·
mum benefit from them - as in
today's deal. How should South plan
the play in six spades against a diamond lead?
The declarer tried dummy's queen
at trick one. but East won with the
king and returned the diamond 10.
Now declarer couldn't make bls slam,
whether be tried the heart finesse or
attempted to set up a long heart for a

.:

11193 Sllvaradol 5 yr 1,000 milo ~
warranty. Liftt me warranty on •,

Ford

21=. . .
22 0....
23 Hlrllclc
border

Eul

:

1~ 11!1(. ,

1HI GEO Traokor 4WD, -mo
paymonlo. 304-ft5.3a01 • "'"
3851.
•
1112 Cbovy 4WD, loodod. 304- •
8'15-5332.

19tl

Nor Ill

Wbat do you do with a book when
· you have finished reading It? Do you
- - . . , lend it to a friend? Do you put II out for
recycling? Or do you slot it alpbabetl·
cally into your bookshelf? Jobn Milton
bad a great respect lor boob: 'Books
are not absolutely dead things, but do
contain a potency of life in them to be
as active as that soul was wbDSe progeny they are; nay they do praerve as
in a vial the purest efficacy and u tractlon of that llvlnc lnteUect that
bred them.'
In bridge, we must be careful to re-

l~::~~~~~~~~~:::~~~~:_j

1DIO Fonl Ranger 4 Cyll-r, 5 .
S,.ed, S4,200i 814,..41-0131.
t
111110 ~r Xl-!1 ve, olr, only .

mlloo, oxlondad worranty,
phone 814- NIOO,e-..- . ..

Alllo Chalmora 190 XT SoriH 3
Bod 1 Tractor, With Dunham &amp; Laar
Bookcatt, Hudboard, Oooa Loador, __$7,150, 5,000 Fordoon
CondMion, Call S14-446-4737 AI· Moler w11h Buah Hog, $2,350;
135 Ma_, F~:au~ni! Uko
lor 5 P.M.
New, S4,t50i 114-•
Trumpet tXC cond $200. Fuel au =c..
=.-=1::21:.;0,.::-;dl;tHI.:..:;::.:Irao
.:
.=l:.:o•::..,-::N:-ow
- I
tonk 250 gal UD. 304-882·2855.
Holland grinder mixer, New Ho ..
Two twin ol• bodoproodo. llko la~d 711. hoy bind, John Doore
now, quiMod no,.ral back· 1240 4 row planlor, AC no 1111
ground wllh lioral p~nl. wnh· planter, KraUM 12ft. traclor
dlec, 111 good cond. 304·273ablo, 126, 814-9924924.
4215.
Super

,...,,...,.,.....,...-

1

$8500. 1-800-184-3873, Rlptoy, :

point. 111,500. PIWchaaod Juno.
304.e75-788G.

Pellmlft

32 llaeDitt
33 lftlet

By Pbllllp Alder

r.

3873, Ripley, wv.

10Ro.... lo*.
11 Die. h:'t ,118111hlllllnt

Keep thy jewels
intact

1183 Chovy lon, $2.000. Craw :
Puppy Palace POl Shop. cab
Dooley, 304-875-'12111
.,
Localod In G.C. Murphy Co. Gli~
llpollo. Now opon. 814-441o0404. 1188 Dodge Ram ctwaar, 4 WD, 1:'
$2,500 OBO, 81~388-1481. Ito
Anyllmo.
Raglotorod Cockor Spaniol IH, 8 woolla old, 2 malo 4 1 - Food Club Wagon, VI, \
omala, block. $150.00, call 114- auto, low mllee, aupeF' eharp, ~ ,
185-3441 after 7pm. G- 15DD5. 1-800-1184-3873, Rlploy, .
Chrlotmn praoonto.
.
wv.
'
Rottwollor pupa, uc. podfarH, 1G88 F150 4x2, a..o, •!~"f3500· I,
pa..nro on pramlooo, $300.-_ 1-800ol64-3673, Rlploy, WY.
875-4815.
Slamaaa k~tone· S&lt;:hnauzor 1187 lauzu truck. " 800• 1pupploo; all Rogl11orad, cuh, '--3673, Ripley. WY.

$811UU.

ldiiCI
241'urcNMr
27 Wrinkle
31 Acn,t -

35~flllcl

APrV'-'UU
f~~CbfoO
, d '61Q-4T~Oi~IJ.tJ~
. q,. ~fl ,1131.__..__..,' " . ·• '•""'"~·- .',
--- -

27,000ml.,

PJ .. a,..
20W... !Mtll
22 T•• to ceurt
230M - -

Opening lead: t 3

aood .:

1!188 Chovy pickup, Silva,.,..,

o:t·

Vulnerable: Neither

.,,..,.,..;--=:-.,....,-=-=--

wv.

pNioM;Jhel

Flrtlllli

Dealer: South

==---------

1018 Bronco XLT, Y8, lotded,

1.1 Glwk

11=

.

SOVI'II

•

~'54~~~;~;;;;;;;t.:::==~~~;~~

11'•="
13=._. __
18 ..
:-.""""'"'"'"
'

.Q!OU
tK!OIS
.Q!O U

.

• ,...

llolnl

17

EAST

27M Afttr 4:30 P.M.

wv.

-H

.... Q J

• eu

1tt'l Pontlao Grand Am 1 Law ;

Rlploy, WV.

1 TilldJ
....... !let

14' llltlllk, there:

Tlr-. Ownw A Non-lmobr. '
Aoklng 112,000. Call
eoll.
"

Nlntenclo g1m1 wfgun &amp; tape.
S50. Up~~hl cool•• $150. Gao
grill, $40. Wooden Gun C.blntt
w/glaet doors, $75. 304-1756!!2.
Bedding ·Twin Matt Sol $8D, Full Nlntendo with 2 controllere,
$99 Soil, Ouoon $149 Sat; 4 zapper gun, 2 game•· Marlo
Drawer Chut $44.95i Car Bed't, l!Ouck Hoot &amp; Super C, other
Bunk Bid'•· P011tr Btda. Full gomoo oold sopa~oly, 614·148Llno Of Southwel1om Vuu 2313.
Starll~ AI $20.00; Indiana Mony
Shape • &amp; Sizes Starting At Oak Curved Glaoo China
$5.00. 2 L.ocallono ·Bnldoll,.o C.blnllo Dlk Tobin, &amp; Chalra,
Auction Or 4 Mll11 Out 141. Etc. River Valley Oak Fumlture,
Opon 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Mon -llal. 3803 Otorgn: Cr•k Road, Gal· no checu, call Sf4.H2-2107.
llpolla, OH, S14-446-4318.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Musical
Washers, dryers, r.trtg..-atora, Ouuar floor model color TV, 01
rang11. Skaggs Appllancea!. 76 noodo rapolrod; 614-1411-2985 ,..,.,.,.,....ln_st;_N;.m~e.;.nt.;.s;;_,...,..
1•
VIne StrMt, Call 614-446-7391111, 1· daya.
1
B-10 H•mmond ~n, model u,
800-4~3499.
R&amp;S Fumftura, Wo buy, aon and tuba typo, $75, 814'11115 4434.
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
lrado
anllquo
nawluood
Complete home rumlshlngs. household fumlahlnao. WUI bu~ Bundy Clarlnol Condlllon,
Hours: Mon-Sal, 11-5. S14-446- ony amount, lorgoTamall. 505 $100 614-37'9-2728.
0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd. Second St., M11on, WV. Owner·
Frao Dollvary.
Rockoy Paaroon. 304-773-5341.
Fruits &amp;
58
Living Room Sullo In Good Sears remote control Jtep. $25,
Condition, $150. 614:'44S-3548.
814-1'12-2397.
Vegetables
Mollohan Furniture Carpet, Sofa, Lovnut, 2 Ch1lr1, Lamp Appl_l,.t off Rl. 143, ono milo
$5.50 Yd &amp; VInyl $4.49, Sl4-446- Now Jull Purch-d, Gooa1 oouth of Carpenter. Rad and
11144.
Qullaly, Will Sacrafloo, 814·379- Goldan DoNcloua applu. Opon .
,
F
Ntw lbergl••• Showera, New =,94~=2.::0':--:---=--=:-::--::--=:- Saturdayw only.
Fiberglass "Showers l Tub1 New SQiollex Lea &amp; Butterfly At·
3 P.:. Showers, 614.24S~52 Af· "' tachmenle, ~xcelltnl Condition,
Farm Supp l1r s
tor 6 P.M.
Excarclao Billa, 175, 614422.
&amp; Livestock
PICKENS FURNITURE
NowAJood
Some older tablet, S15 HC:hi
call304-875·1450.

PHILLIP
ALDER

J

111110 Pontiac Trai\SPOI'l For ,
Solo. Cloan Wllh Front •

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Table WJ4 Chall"';
Fan Back Rocking Chair· $18;
Garden Arch Way't $129.~

Houuhold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jarricho Rd. pt, Pleasant, WV,

I

1""0 111 ~73. ·Riplly.·~ .

orrood,

Household
Goods

·

, . . TIIIR10 OL,-. NIOO. .;

'

2 Or 3 Bodroomo, 1 112 Baillo, 2
Car Gorago, Lar~o LDI, 37
Por1omou1h Rd, Galli!: It,
Fl nanc1ng
I Aoslllanc. Avol ablo.
614-4411o0254.
3 Bodrooma, 2 Baths, Haal
Pump, Gao Hoat, Unanaehod
Garage, On 1 Acr.. Addlton
Arso, 614·367·7267.
4br., lg dlnlngroom. 304-e'lllo
4142 or104-6711'3075.
Roome, 1 112 Balho, 2 io.j;
roomo, C.IPOOI Lot, Slza 5011So
Fl., llull Side Bradenton Florldo,
Excollonl Condhlon, Moro In!ormation, 814-372-2184.

51

•

l

2bdrm. apte., tatel electric, ap-

ldvtrl8edlntlilnMV~~p~per
119 wlllbte 0 ,,....., 8qijll

Real Estate

Merchandise

gold,f8800. -

I'

law. Our raadora . . hiiiOby
lnl01r110ld lhll allclwollngo

6711'1417.

5651, Maaon WV.

Wanted to Rent
Want&amp;na to rent· 2 or I Mdroom
ho ..o,ln cloan and good condl·
lion, pralor prlvalt olllln~. 814·
912-2428, II no anowor plaaoo
loavo mHaaga on machlna.

IIOnlo CaolO • • -

• -

••A Crouword Puzzle

Roqulrod. 114·245-

pllancoo fumlohod, laundry
room facilltln, cloH 1o achocil
In town. Applleallont avtllabte
8t : VIII. age Cretn Apte. 149 or
caiiS14-192·3711. EOii.

lolowlngly accop1
actvenlsameras tor real eatlle
wtidlls n vtolation of the

-black.

OLD C~'f PR.oVE'!i:B '· ''A WA'fc~S b
f"~Dl;) t&gt;.l ?tl NGI/~~ f'II-1-S .. ...-.....J

$27!1/Mo., Water Paid, Rtftrtnca
5893.

_

4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __

8. _ _ _ __

origin, or any lnlantlon to
.rnalolany sudl preforance,

44

- I P.M.
011Ct14-2N--.
11.000 Col AI- .
lor

Rooms for rent • welk or momh.
Slartl4f It tl201mo. Qalll• Hotel,
114 4 1580.
Sluplng rooma wllh ·cooking.
Also tralltr apace. All hook-ups.
Csl\ after 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13-

47

OhiO

Autos for Slit

71

Furnished
Rooms

For Lean Or Sale: 2 Or 3 Bid·
SWAIN
roome, 1 112 Bltha, 2 Ca.r ·
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Gar~g 11
Lara• Lot 37 Olivo
St., Oalllpoilo. Now &amp; Uood
Portomo.. h Rd, Qa{llpollo,
$400/Mo. Reference &amp; Security fumttur1, haattrl, WHttm &amp;
DIPQ8ft Required. Lilli Will Worll boola. 814-448-3151.

Ha Rtlrtg., &amp; :stove. Nice

Financial

45

KIT ' N' .CARLYLE® by Larty Wrilbt

II:'4

Option To Buy Available. 114WIII Do BobyaiUini In My Homo, ~4_:,4S:_.0:.:2::.54::..- -- - - -M-F On SR 554 • sk For Tina, . Unfurnished, Very Nlct, Small
614·38!1-G267.
Houoo In GalllpolloL With 1 BR;

21

1993

31 Homes for Salt~ · . 44

Announcements

Monday, December 13,1983

•

thrng In common ," the pro•
.
fessor told th e v e ry nervous
r - - - - - - - - - -- - - -..... fellow . "They all hav e fa ith
~~T.....!:.E....-!-\~I~L...v.!...,,........l in their own • - - • - •• •
Complete the chuck le ~uoted
by ftlling in the minong words
I._J._.J._.J._.J._.Jl,_.J
you develop trom step No. J be low

I I rI

l

8

r 1Q

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

I

. , UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
· Crispy - Depth - Viper - Thatch - THEY ARE
The people in a small tourist town can spot the lourist
very easily. Tourist are the people who travel to see
different places then complain because THEY ARE.

�Page-1G-The

Monday, December 13, 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

O,hio Lottery

~-

Steelers
beat
Dolphins

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
DEC. 14 - Belpre - Hom~.~
DEC. 17 - Miller - Away
DEC. 21 -Waterford- Home
GIRLS
,DEC. 13 - Miller - Home
DEC. 20 - Southern - Away
DEC. 23 - Waterford - Away
BOYS
DEC. 14 - Vinton County - Home
DEC.17 - Alexander - Away
DEC. 18 - Unioto - Away

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEPULE

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 14 ....................................... BELPRE
DEC. 17...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 21 ......: ........................WATERFORD
JAN. 7 .................................... SOUTHERN
JAN. 11 .......: .......................... WELLSTON
JAN. 14................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15 ............................... AT OAK HILL
JAN. 18................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 21 ................................ AT TRIMBLE·
JAN. 25 ................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 28 .....................................AT MEIGS
FEB. 1..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. 4........................................... MILLER
FEB. 8 .............................. AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 11 ..............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18 ...................................... TRIMBLE
FEB. 19.......................... AT WATERFORD
Coach- Tony Deem

DEC. 13 ........................................ MILLER
·DEC. 20 ............................ ATSOUTHERN
DEC. 23 ......................... AT WATERFORD
JAN.-3 .............................. ATWELLSTON
JAN. 6................ AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 12 ................................ ATWARREN
JAN. 13...................................... TRIMBLE
JAN. 19 ............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 20............ AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 24 .......................................... MElOS
JAN. 27 .......................... AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 31 ...................: ............... AT MILLER
FEB. 2........................................ WARREN
FEB. 3....................................SOUTHERN
FEB. 7 ..................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 10 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
Coach -Scott Wolfe

GIRLS
DEC. 13 - Alexander - Home
DEC. 16- Nelsonville-York- Home
DEC. 20 - Eastern - Home

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE .
DEC. 13 ............................... ALEXANDER
DEC. 16................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 20 .................................... EASTERN
DEC. 30............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 3 ....................................... AT MEIGS
JAN. 6 ..................................... AT MIUER
JAN. 10 .......... ~ ........................... BELPRE
JAN. 13 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 22 ..........................AT WATERFORD
JAN. 24 ..................................WELLSTON
JAN. 27 ......................: ............... TRIMBLE
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 31 .....:.................... AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 3 ................................. AT EASTERN
FEB. 7......................... :................. MII,.LER
FEB. 10.............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
Coach- Jenny Roush

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

JAN. 8 ....................................... WAHAMA
JAN.11 ............................ ATSOUTHERN
JAN. 14 .................................. AT BELPRE

JAN. 18 ......................................TRIMBLE
JAN. 21 ........................ VINTON COUNTY

JAN. 28 .....................................EASTERN
JAN. 29 ............................ RIVER VALLEY

GIRLS
DEC. 13 - Wellston - ~way
DEC. 16 - Miller - Away
DEC. 18 - River Valley - Home
Put One Under Your Tree This
Christmas

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~
j HolSIJriog"
y.$11
Ebnable Spas

ANI)

BOTTLE GAS

Where America Goes 1b Relax··

CHESTER

915·3301

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELE_RS
AND RADIO SHACK
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

10611. 211D

1·800.137·1217

We Will' Ta•e ,Care Of All
I
Yourlnsura..ee Needs!
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLERN
MUSSER IN$UUNCE
110 SECOND AVE.

POMEROY

992·2635

555 PARI ST.

992-6611.

MIDDUNRT, OliO

POMEROY

JAN. 24 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 27............ AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 3 1.................................WELLSTON
FEB. 7 ....................................AT BELPRE
FEB. 9 ............................ AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 17.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
Coach- Ron Logan

Mar.'I think the vote will re-

flect a lot of study and introspection of the miners that's
been on strike," said William
Yockey, president of UMW
District II in Indiana. "I be-

Peoples

''

Bank

SECONDSTREn

JACKSON AVL

5TH STREET

Maso11, W.Va.
304-773·5514

Pt. Pleasalit, W. Va.
304·675·1121

New Have11, W. Va.
3.04-882·2136

•

1.2HlVE.

miners may be back on the job
as early as Wednesday.
"If nor, we'll get back into
negotiations," he said.
The chief negotiator for the
Bituminous Coal Operators

he expected a prompt return to
work if 1the miners ratify the
contract.
"We plan to return to a
normal working situation as
quickly as possible," Brown

Appointment of Dr. Nick
Robinson to a seat on Middleport
Village Council and recognition of
the service of long-time Council
member Jack Sauerfield highlighted Council's Monday night meeting at the hall.
Robinson was appointed to fill
the full term of office on Council to
which Dewey Horton was elected
last month. Horlon vacated that
seat since he is now mayor of Middleport by virtue of moving 10 that
position when former mayor Fred
Hoffman was named a Meigs
County commissioner. Robinson
will begin the four year term of
offiCe in January.
Satterfield was recognized for
work during his 14 years on Middleport Village Council. During
that time he has never missed a
regular meeting. Council presented
him with an engraved clock. A
social hour with refreshments was
held in his honor following lhc
meeting.
.
Resolutions in support of h1gh-

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAUUNT
'

'

228 WEST
MAIN ST.

MIDDUPORT

992·5432

POMEROY
A TRIBUTE FOR SERVICE. ''lllappreclalion to Jack Satterfield ror uudrlng dedication to
making ·Middleport a better place In which to
live" was the Inscription on a clock ,...nted to
Satterfield by Middleport viUige ofl!cllils Mon-

day night. s8tterfteld;thlrd from left, ser\'td 14
years and uever missed a regular meeting, He Is
pictured here with Mayor Dewey Horton, left,
and Bob Gilmore and Judy Crooks, eounell
members.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The

are present, the {Constitution)

war on drugs docs not override rlll\ltreS the government to afford

141

For All Your Prescription and Sundry
N~eds. - See Us!

iiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii~~~;.iiii;iil:liil:liil:li.!J~'~s.3~N~.~sE~co~•:•=~·~•2·6669 iiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii

"From what I've seen thus
far, it looks like most miners
are receiving it favorably," said
Howard Green, a member of
the union's governing board
from District 17, which covers
southern West Virginia and
eastern Kentucky.
"About the only th ing that
I heard was people ... rrymg to
get more information," Green
said.
It was difficult io get
through to the UMW' s Washington, D.C., headquarters
Monday . A woman who an swered the telephone butdidn 't
give her name said repealed
busy signals were 1he result of
miners swamping the office
with telephone call s to a tollfree line set up 10 an swer question s abou t the proposed con -

rract.
"! don' t agree with every-

thing, but you don't alwar,s get
everything that you want, 'said
Delano GibSOn, an employee
of Eastern Associated" Coal
Corp.'s Wells Complex in
Whanon. "I don't understand
all the medical, (and) I'm worried that you may end up with a
doctor you don ' 1like."
But he also said he thought
it would pass.
For laid-off miners, the new
contract would give union
members first opponunity at 60
percent of the jobs at new mines
opened by their employers, the
parent company or any related
subsidiaries or affiliates. Companies have agreed not to file a
legal challenge to thai pan of
the contract.

ways were P.BSSed during lhe meeting. Counctlman Paul Gerard will
prepare a letter to go to Gov.
George Voinovich, Jerry Wray,
Ohio Departmenl of Tmnsponation
and lo the Route 33 Committee,
Sieve S10ry and David Lieser, cochairmen.
A resolution was also passed in
support of the State Route 7 corridar from Chesapeake nonh lhrough
lhe Big Bend area It was reported
thai Joe Leach, Gallia Coumy engineer, is heading up a move to get
the Route 7 corridor included in
state highway planning.
It was decided at lhe meeting to
apply for Issue 2 monies for pavi ng
of South Fourth to Mill and on to
1he Meigs Junior High Sch ool
parking lol, and SoUih Fiflh from
Milito Lincoln Slreets.
On lhe recommendation of Gcrard, Council voled to ex lend 1he
two hour free parking through the
end of January.
A report was given by Mary
Wise of the Middleport Arts Coun-

cil on that group's wort during the
past year. On recommendation
from the board, Council approved
1he appointment of Emma Paugh 1o
replace Marilyn Meier on the Arts
Council board. Council voted 10
amend the Ans Council ordinance
setting a minimum of seven members and a maximum of nine members for the board.
Middleport's bicentennia! 10 be
celebrated in I 997 was discussed
and Council voted to name the Arts
Council to head up the steering
committee for the observance
Wise reported that both the Ohio
Arts Council and Nancy Hollister
of the Ohio Department of Development have volunteered to offer
expertise in the bicentennial observance planning.
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association. reponed that James L. Hartzler of Canal Winchester has been
hir~ as a consultant for Middlepons revuahzauon plan.
Continued on Page 3

Court upholds property rights in drug seizure case

FISHER FUNERAL ,HOME

'

outside council wltb commissioners Janet
Howard Tackett and Robert Harteubach. Also
preseut, but not shown, was Commissioner Fred
Hofrmau. Tackett voted against Leutes' representing tbe commisslou in the matter.

_,,.,ointed to Middleport Council; Satterfield recognized

Prescr_ip-tion
shop

STIHC.
.._..ilill!l-..._
Dealer
w

..

Ro~inson

IIIICE FISHER- OWMr/Operlltor

Establieh 1913

Your Local

.,, • •

said. "I am sure that both
management and the employees want to recapture the marketplace momentum that was
lost &lt;luring the strike."
There will be little time lost
in getting up to speed, most
miners say, because the operators have maintained some coal
production with salaried employees throughout the strike,
wh1ch began May 10.
About 17,500 miners have
been on strike in seven states in
Appalachia and the Midwest.
However, an estimated 60,000
UMW members will be eligible to vote in today' selection
under union rules. Any miner
who will work under the agreement, or who is laid-off from
an employer covered by the
contract, is eligible to vote .

l' 'f•,,

Ewing Funeral-Home
VALLEY LUMBER

DISCUSS OPTIONS - The Meigs County
Board or Commissiooers voted 1-1 Monday
af'ternooa to have Proseeuting Attorney Joltn R.
Len tes continue to repraent them in the face of
a rederal review or alleged Improper wages.
Here, Lentes, front, discusses the possibility of

lieve they 'II vote their con- Association, CONSOL Inc.
chairman B.R. Brown, said
science."
officials in Appalachia and the
If they approve the agree- when the tentative agreement
Midwest expect to know the ment, Yockey said working was announced last week that
outcOillc of a secret ballot elecril-ln~Jra
nroP,6•..A new a'""\\;
.
'~&gt;rl' \lc~·i~.&lt;- , ... ·~ 'b· -.,•.v ment ...,~ore ffilw•tg t.
"I think the vote-will reflect a lot of
' Union · members were
scheduled to vote in their local
· study and introspection of the miners
union· halls today on the prothat's been on strike. I believe they'll
posal that could end · the unton's seven-month strike.
vote their conscience.,
The miners can vote to
- William Yockey,
approve the contract, or they
can vote it down and return to
President, UMW District 11
the picket lines they set up last

"Dfpit' and Snviee Alwa,s"

105 MULBERRY AVE.
992·2121

·

3 LOCATIONS

"Family Owned and Operated for 48 Year•"

742·2211

· "I don't want to have to
defend ... the way lhe commission is
handling Ibis other than as a strictly
legal matter," he added.
"Our main concern right now,"
Commissioner Fred Hoffman said,
"is the response to the Ohio
Department of Oevelopment on the
monitoring review. I think this
should be your job in preparing
what kind of response we need to
give to them ."
"I would like to see some
options from you as to whether we
should pay it back or whelher we
shouldn't pay it back ~~:Dd if we do

pay it back what are die recove~
options or are there any options,
Hoffman added.
"The cmnmissioners need, to
make a dectsion_on whelh.er thev
want to allow th1s to conunu_e ~o
fester in the pub!ic... t~atlhl~ .IS
somehow mvolvmg thtngs other
than a straight fmding from the federal ~overnment that we owe
mone, l.elltes said.
. .
"In my profession, ~o~ onl~ IS
impropriety a problem, 11 IS havmg
lhe appearance of impropljety,_ and
I would not want yqu as my cl!ents
10 be held up in the paper agam as
doing something for reasons other
chan strictly proper procedure try·
ing to collect money chat ~ar be
due and owed to lhe commiSSion,"
he explained.
.
.
"I can't see paymg outSide
counsel when you represent_ us. I'm
satisfied wilh you represenUng us,"
Hartenbach said.
"As long as lhe three of yo~ ':'fe
satisfied that there are no poliucs
involved, I don't have a problem
with it," Lentes said.
"I feel that if you (Lentes) want
to get outside counsel... I feel ~e
sbouldbackyouup,"saidCommlssioner Janet Howard Tackett
Hoffman and Hartenbach voted
Continued o_n Page 3

(AP)- United Mine Workers

JAN. 20 ................................ALEXANDER

FEB.1 ................... NELSONVILLE·YORK
FEB. 4 .............................. ATWELLSTON
FEB. B................... AT POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 11 ........................................BI:LPRE
FEB. 15.......................AT RIVER VALLEY .
FEB. 1B...................AT VINTON COUNTY
FEB.19................................ ATWAHAMA
Coach -Jeff Skinner

wilh Meigs County.
"Thats my recommendation -at
this point"
"In other words, you don't want
to represent us?" Commission President Robert Hartenbach asked.
"U ~he commissioners ask me
to, I will ~o forward and represen~
the commiSSion," Lentes said.
"I think we'd like that," Hartenbach said.
'
"I want to make sure that the
commissioners understand my conCC!Jl. I chink you all read the newspaper anicles and saw lhe accusations that were made against the
commission in the way Ibis was
handled," Lentes said.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.

DEC. 13............................ AT WELLSTON
DEC. 16...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 18............................RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 3.................................... SOUTHERN
JAN. 6 ................,........................ BELPRE
JAN. 10 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 13................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.17 ................................ GALUPOUS

JAN. 4 ............................ /lt;f ALEXANDER

A Multimedia Inc. N-opoper

United Mine Workers mull over proposed contract

1993·1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 21 •••.•·................................... MILLER

BOYS
DEC. 14 - Federal Hocking - Away
DEC. 17 - Wellston - Home
·DEC. 21 - Miller - Home

1 Section, 10 " - • 35 eento .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 14, 1993

By JIM FREEMAN
Senthiel News Starr
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners voted 2·1 Monday
to have Prosecuting Auomey John
R. Lentes represent them in a current review of a Community Deve!opment Block Grunt in which aud1tors claim the commission must
pay lhe state $10,925 by the end of
the year.
During the meeting, Lentes, discussed the pbssibility of getting
outside counsel to represent the
commissioners.
"My feeling is that it would be
&amp;WXOptiate 10 hire outside counsel
to detennine 'What our options are
regarding this $10,925 and anr,
·other monies that might be owed, •
said Lentes. ·
''There have been statements in
the newspaper as well as in the
commumty in general that the
attempt by the commission to collect this money is somehow been
gone about in an improper manner
orthathassomeulteriormotive.
"In order io lalce it completely
outside lhe realm of politics, I chink
it is necessary 10 get in~ndent
counseiiO do this. I think 11 needs
10 be counsel outside of the county
and I think it needs 10 be someone
who has no connection whatsoever

MEIGS MARAUDERS
DEC. 14 ............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 17 ................................. WELLSTON

Low tonight In mid 30..
. Rai ny. Wednesday, high In 40s.

Prosecutor to represent ·county during review

DEC. 14 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 17 ................,......... AT ALEXANQER
DEC. 18 .................................... AT UNICO
DEC. 21 ........... AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 28.............................CHESAPEAKE
DEC. 30 ........................ AT COAL GROVE
JAN. 7 ....................................... EASTERN
JAN. 11 ........................................... MEIGS
JAN. 14 ......................................... MILL.ER
JAN. 18 ..................................AT BELPRE
JAN. 21 ..............AT FEDERAL_HOCKING
JAN. 28 ............................ ATWEU.STON
FEB. 1 .................................. AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. 11 ................................... AT MILLER
FEB. 18................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19 ................................ GALLIPOLIS
Coach -Howle Caldwell

MEIGS MARAUDERS

BAUM LUMBER

Vol. 44, NO. 162
Multimedia Inc.

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE

FEB. 8....................................... EASTERN

4-13-17-24-25

PageS

SOU'I'BERN .

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

0-2-4
Pick 4:
6-9-8-8

Buckeye 5:

BAILES

THIS WEE
GAMES

Pick 3:

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

property rights, the Supreme Court nOli~ and a meaninsful '!PJlOf'Wii·
said Milndly in barring the govern- ty 10 be ~ before setztng real
ment from seizing real estate linked p'roperty subject to civil forfei·
to illegal drug sales unless the tore," Kennedy said
owner flat gets a court bearing.
Chief Justice William H. RehnThe S-4 ruling in a cese fro111 quist dissented. calling tho decision
Hawaii marlai the second time Ibis ''ill-considered and disruptive."
year the high court has limited the The property seizure in the Hawaii
government's authority to take case "serves important ~ovempm~y It contends .was used in menllll ~in combawng illecommitting a dn!ll crime.
gal drugs,' he wrote.
"At stake in this and many
.Attome&gt;: General Janel Reno
other forfeilllre cesea 8ftl the !ICCU· satd the ruliug would not hobble
rity and privacy of· the home and . !he Justice Depanment's asset forthose who tako shelter within it," feiture prup-ani.
Justice Anlhony M. Kennedy wrote
The court also:
for the court.
-Ruled 6-3 that a federal pen"Unless exigent circumstances sion-protktion law, lhe Employee

111-

Retirement Income Security Act of
1974, can be used to keep a closer
watch on how insurance companies
manaae hundreds of biUions of dolIars in workers' pensions.
-Backed out of using a Tennessee death penalty case 10 decide
whether states cen make it easier
for P,ooec1110rs 10 obtain dealh sentences for people who tiD someone
during another crime, such as robbery.
-Left intact a ruling that
fe9uires Florida 10 provide Medicetd coverage for a 19-month-old
boy who doctors say won't survive
without a liver-bowel transplant.
In the drug-forfeiture case, lhe
court said James Daniel Good was
entitled to be notified and given a

hearing before his Hawaii home
was seized.
But the jus1ices ruled ~nani mously chat courts cannot dism1ss
forfeiwre actions filed with a fiveyear time limit set by fedetal law.
Clint Bolick of the conservative
Instiwtc for Justice called the ruling "a triumph of private property
rights." He said it also wDI apply
to civil forfeitures of real estate
used in ocher ~of crimes, such
as illegal gambhng.
!Joocl was arrested in 1985 _after
police found 89 pounds of manJuana and vials of hashish at his house
in Keaau on lhe island of Hawaii.
He pleaded guilty to promoting a
harrilful drug and served a year in
prison.

'

In 1989, federal agems seized
the house and four-acre property
where the drugs ~ad ~n found.
Good was hvmg m Ntcaragua at
th e ume and had remed lhe home
lo lenants.
He challenged lhe seizure, contendmg he was enutled 10 be nolified before •tiOOk place and should
~ave been g~ven a chance 10 Clptlose
•t.

, The Supreme Coun agreed.
Th~ n~ht to prior notice and a
~ear;tng IS cenu-al to tbe Constiruuon s command of due process "
Kennedy said.
'
. Othe~wise, there is 100 much
nsk an 1nnocent person's property
wiU be lalcen, he said.

'

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