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entertains
car club

POLAR BEARS • About two dozen Racine, Wis., high school
students plunge into Lake Michigan Sunday in their fourth annual
Polar Bear Plunge to raise mouey lor area homeless. They jumped
Into the water to honor their pledges. (AP Photo, Journal Times,
Charles S. Vallone)

CompDed 117:
Emm
Holllteln CDDJO
Recor~elp Count)' Ohio
Dwaine A. Jordln, Ruby F. Jor·
dan tracts 10 Dwaine A. Jordan,
TruSteeS Ruby F. J~. Trustcc,
Dwaine A.. &amp; Ruby F. Jordan. Uv·
in Trust, Mei ..cotumbia.
gFoster G. lfday, dec'd, affid.,to
Rosy L. Niday, by ally-in-fact,
Olive.
Carl Hysell, parcel, to David W.
Hysell and Penny K. Hysell. Rut·
land Village.
Wilbert J. McClain, 38A, to Roy
A. Marshall and Debra L. Marshall,
Sutton.
Alan Giglio, parcels, to Paul
Strauss Rudand
.
. •
In. I
Pt. Lo 117
R1verboat n, nc.,
t
•
to CarlL. Tennant and Rhonda J.
Tennant, Middleport Village.
Joseph Masters and Barbara F.
Masters, Corrective Deed, to
Michael .Tra~asso, Peggy L. Tra·
passo, Rita . Tra.JlasSO and Raymond ~rapasso, Olive.
.
Kevm N. Buckley and Diana L.
Buckley . Rtw to Glenn Stout,
Chester.
EUsworth J. Holden .and Ann F.
Hol.den, parcels, to Bobby Gene
Wh1te, Salem.
George W. Hall and Amy Sue
Hall, parcels, to Ge'!rge W. Hall
and ~.Y Sue Hall, Olive. ,
'Y•lliam D. Stewlrl; dec d. and
LoUise L. Stewart. dec d, affid, to,
Robert W. Stewart. Sutton.
Joseph W. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Lot 8, to James A.
Moore and Mildred s. Moore,
Olive.
Joseph w Masters and Barbara
F Masters Lot 6 to Ronald James
S~mpson: Trustee and Ronald
James Sampson Family Trust,
0 live.
Joseph W. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Corrective Deed, to
Marlene Held, Olive.
Joseph w. Masters and Barbara
F. Masters, Corrective Deed, to
.
Ronald Charles McCrady and Vli·
giniaRoseMcCrady,Olive.
Charles Grueser and Ruby
Grueser, parcels, to David A. Kuns
and Ch
. ery I L. Kuns; Sutton, Mi nersville
Gle~ E. Robinson, 1/10 A, to
Marlene Donovan, Orange.
Ernest F. Baker, dec'd, affid., to

Third Middleport
holiday givea·way
winners announced·
'customers may register in !he
participating stores. To be eligible
shoppers must fill out new stubs
each week wilh one of the 20 mer·
chants because prizes will be
awarded based on only those tick·
eiS submitted that weeic.
Tbe winners were Connie Fields
for Dairy Queen. Carolyn Bachner
for Millie's Restaurant; Clarence
Lee for Ingels Carpel; Edna Ables

for Fruth Pharmacy'; Mazie Han·
nabs for Dan's, Ray Smith for Val·
ter Lumber, Rhonda Hag~y for
Mill Sueet Books, Audra N1ce for
Trolley Station Crafts, Janet
Reeves for Vaughan's Cardinal.
Steve Price for Locker 219/Shoe
Place; Wilma McGraw for Bahr
Clothier; John Ord for Mill End
Fabrics. Derek Stump for Ingels
Electronics, Gene McDaniel for
Johnson's Variety, Betty Pooler for
Middlepon Deparunent Store. Amy
Wagner for Inge.Is Furniture, Max·
inc Little f&lt;r Big Bend Health and
Fibless~L. .B. Foreman for Acquisi·
lions Fme Jewelty, Cecil Kin!\ for
Farmers Bank, and Phyllis Gilkey
for Sears.

Joseph Loftis and Cora Loftis, '
3.266 acres, to Salisbury TownshilJ
Trustees, Salisbury.
.
William J. pooler and Sharon A. :
Pooler, 1.02 acres, to Terry A. :
Pooler and Deborah K. Pooler, !.
Chester.
•
Lyman Stanley, parcel, 10 Wet• ~
zel Phillips and Sandra Phillips, I·
Bedford.
, i
Lawrence R. Wolfe, Dolore' ::
Wolfe, Helen J. Pickens , Ora E. •
Hill and Fannie L. Lee, Sutton.
:
fMaryA. ~enhe•mg.gec.!.cert
Henry L. Hunter and Mary J. ;
~ transL to ~e R.' e~ dmg, Hunter, 44A, to, Lawrence Hay· •·
Ketbtly ou deapn, . ~c ~ If · man and Jennie Hayman, Lebanon. ;:
0 c,
0 entz an
atncla
William T. Gruescr, by P.O.A; :
Chester.
.
Flora Dell Grueser, Lot 39, to Don·
Betty Lou Dean , Rlchard.J?. a!dShafer,PomeroyVillagc.
j,
Koblentz, CIOdy Koblentz. Patocl8
R ger D Cotterill and Robyn •·
Wolf, Gary Wolf, parcel, to George
o
.
I
W d R •·
C G nhi
Ch ter
Cotterill, parce s, to an a .. •
· Geoe emCerG. nhes . ·
to Wyeth and Robert Wellman, Sci·_:·
rgc · e e•me~. parce1•
pio.
:
Water Dist., Lebanon.
Betty Lou Dean , ~•9hard ~Barbara Jean Rose, nka, Barbara •
rahE~~~=: ~ Cu~~~~: Koblentz and Patncll Wol • . Jean Birtcher and Teena Rane~ ;.
Whittington and Barbara Whitting· Ch~~~encc P. Spurrier dec'd, Birtcher, 2 1{2 A, to Harold Rose, ~·
ton, Scipio.
affid to Steven Surlier and Mary Sutton.
:
Judith A. Sams and Robert E. Ann Spurrier, Salisbury.
ld,a Cowd~ry. l.OOA, to Roger ;
Sams. parcels, to William E. MilJ J Detweiller En~rises Inc
Holsmger, Ohve.
·
dren,Jr., Orange.
traci #io. to Todd M. Price, Scipio'.'
Clement L. Cowderyt~ndi~Y~ :
Virginia Graham, by guard, lo~
Lawrence Hayman and Jennie Cowdery • _l.OOA ,
g •
to Everett C. Foreman and Linda Hayman, 6.9A, to Charles F. Hols10ger, Ohve.
:
Foreman, Middleport·Village.
Ohlinger, Lebanon.
Wanda R. Wyeth and Donald ~.
Eunice L. Jones and Roy Jones
Col Soulhern
Wyelh by POA, 2.466A, to Kather· :
Jr., parcels, to Roy Jones Jr. and
S~dard Oil Co lots to B p
ine Mae Stover, Bedford.
:
Euruce L. Jones. Chesters.
Exploration &amp; Oil I~.• Oninge.
Wanda R. Wyeth ~Pl!. Dorw.td i
Chester Church of God, agree &amp;
MononlUihila Power Co.
Wyeth by POA, parcels, to Ray l
case., to Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Roger R. Roush.and Christy L, Wellman, Bedford.
1
Inc. and Columbia Gas Trans. Roush parcel to Jack Morrow
G · nfi
d n.. 1 fi
:
Corp., Chester.
•
•
•
ail I nger an vwY· n nger, .,
Claudia A. Eisenmann, parcel, Letart
Corrective Deed; to Waters Edge of •
toClaudiaA.EisenmannandCarol
Bobby Joe Adal!ls• Jr. Trustee, Syrac~LimitedPtnShjp,Sui!O~· j·
L Co Ol'
4.3469A, to Melame Adams, Sut·
Marvm Keebaugh and Mllrjorie -1·
' Ge~d~vi, Fugate, Dec'd and ton. .
.
Keebaugh, 6.0 A, to James Powell 1
Frank M. Fugate, dec'd, affid, to
Behnda S. Gray parcel, to Vm- andDebmPowcll,Olive.
-,
Eva Mae Emerson, Pomeroy Vii- .cent D. Gray, Lebanon.
Leah J. Arbaugh Hawkins, lot, ·
lage.
C~les M. Werry, dec'd, affid., to Linda C. Bales, Orange.
.: ,
Eva Mac Emerson, lot 7, to to LllhanErnesune Werry, Sahs·
Tessie Evans, paroels, to Cecil·:
W. Rowan and Corene Rowan,
Howard P. Logan and Eleanor J. bury·.
·
••
Logan, Pomeroy Village.
· V~lage of Pomeroy, Lot 303,to Sutton.
'
Rodney Griffin and Sanda Grif- W•lhs H. Durst. and Sharon S.
Edna L. ·Foster, Tracts. to~ i
fin, R/W, to Buckeye Rural Elect Durst, Pom~y V1Uage.
.
Jane Carr, George C. Foster, Jo;y, ·
,..A I C 1 b"
Ruby Amta Bu_rke, by atty·m· Anno Ellis, Miriam R. Comph· &gt;
.....,..Lartyop
. n~: E~:~.~d Margaret fact, parcels, to Michael T. Burke, ment, Letart.
Service Station Holdin~s Inc., :
M. Edwards, R{W, to, Buckeye Orange·
Rural Elect C
I Rd d
Robert S. Montgomery and BPExploration &amp;Oil Inc., ots.l &amp; !.
Rufus E: ~'f~f;Ed!r~Dn· Aretta M. Monrgo~ery, l.OOA par· 2, to John W. Clark Oil Co., Inc.,
ton and Marine Anne Dillon , eel, t~ Robert Ke•th Montgomery Orange.
Lee Sarlin~ Jeffers, etal by'·.·
24.80A., to Warren Taylor aka and Lmda K· Montgomery
·
: Letart ·
Warren B., and Victoria Mitchell
Avety C. St. Chur, dec d, affid., POA, Mary Je fers, ctal by POA. ..
to Ola Leona SL Clair, Bedford.
Mary Kathleen Jordan, Lavern Jor· :
Taylor, aka, Victoria M., Scipio.
Ala Leona St. Cl~1r, 15A, to dan, Janet Anne Dunham, John ·
Charles L. Butcher, dec'd, Don L Lambert and Tma A Lam
Dunham, Rich••d Lester Jeffers :
affid., to Alpha G. Butcher, Scipio. bert, B.edford,
·
- and Lois Jane 'effcrs,
...
parcels, to :
Andrew Grueser, dec'd., affid., Christopher D. Young, Elaine K. ·
to Allie Grueser, Louise Lehew, Young, Scipio.
:
I 1
Calherine Wince, Selma Fedor, and
Ralph D. Shain and Maxine ·
Terence W. Grueser, Salisbury.
Shain, parcels, to Ralph David
AllieGrueser.EthetW. Grueser, Shain,Letart.
Louise Lehew. Catherine Wince,
Bob R. Moore and Ruth M.
parcels, to Aloysions A. Grueser, Moore, parcels, to John W. Ran:dolph and Bobbie Lou ~dolph;
her theme. Readings included Jr., Salisbury.
"
..
John
•Grueser,
dec'd,
affid,
to
Sutton, • .
t
_''li111!PDse"· and "Keepina,Christ·
Selma Fedor and Terence W.
Wilbur L. Moore and Eileell":
mas·.
Riebel Moore, parcels, to Steven R.
Golda Reed read "Uncle Simm Grueser, Salisbury.
Selma
Fedor,
Bernard
Fedor,
Dill and Joanne DiU, Cheslel'.
·
Christmas Sermon, and Helen
parcels,
Aloysius
A.
Grueser,
Jr.,
Virginia
Stallworth,
dec'd,cef1:,
Quivey read ''No Tiny Tim Among
Salisbury.
to Beverly Crosby, Middleport Vii· Us."
'fll!l Repon on National Grange Jack Kerwood, parcel, to Dim· lage.
Don M. Erwin and Cathy Q.
was g1ven by Rosalie Story, It was pte Eakins and Larry F. Eakins.
.
Erwin, lA, to Jeffrey Mark Harvey _
noted !hat Keith Ashley, represent- Salisbury.
Ruth Emma Stout, Dec' d, by and Sharon Lorene Harvey, Sutton. ;
in.s West Virginia, was an adult
adm .. 5/6 Int,to Glenn Stout, Bed·
Jeffrey Mark Harvey and •
wmner on a talent show.
Sharon Lorene Harvey, parcels, to ·
Members enjoyed a gift ford.
Cecil Maynard, lots 3 &amp; 4. to Earl W. Cleek and Janice C. Oeek, !
exchange and refreshments were
served,
Racine ViUage.
Raben Hill, Racine Village.

Connolly; Debbie Uensley imd her
guest, Todd Musser, Jess"ica
Hensley, Ryan Hawley and his
friend, Timmy Gheen, Rachel
Hawley, and her guest, Wesley
Hol.lcr.
MarY and Tom Musser and son
Scotty, Tom and April Smilh and
their familv members, Paige and
Cork Cleek, and daughter Hannah,
Todd and Nancy Smith, and

.f.

Food for Chrisbnas baskets for

~.IJr.ahqQ.,&amp;!l~CooOr-

era'iivcl"msll was prcscnt'Ca~6y
members of Hemlock Orange 2049
at a recent meeting beld at the haD.
Master, Rosalie Story presiding
at the meeting during which time
Muriel B~ord .g!l~e a report for
the women s actiVIties committee.
Plans were made for a soup supper
to be held at 6;30 p.m. at the next
meeting. Janitor for the month will
be Ziba Midkiff.
. .
A report was made on hvtng
wills and nursing borne care.
The delegates from Meigs
CountY. to the State Grange meet·
ing will give a report at the next
meeting. Ziba Midkiff will be jani•
tor for !he nMt meeting.
Sick reported were Octa Ward,
Leo Story, Elizabeth Roberts, Vada
Hazelton, Midge Shumway and
James WebCr.
The literary program was pre·
· sented by lecturer, Jessie White
who used the Christmas spirit as

Peter Marshall. Tbe ~.~what I
Need for Christmas, was read by
Betty Newell. The program ended
by thc group singing "SDent !'ligbt"
led by Newell.
'A gift exchange was enjoyed
and Rl'rcsluhents were served.
.It was announced that the Fire
~biiCIIt Christmas party will be
d Sllllday at ~:00 p.M. Tberc wil
be a~ dish dllmer for fire-,
m~. lilxiliary members, their fam.

J'8I)Cd.

Commission
discusses
part-time help
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Meigs County B.oard of
COmmissioners, during its regular
weekly meeting Tuesday, took no
action on ll:quests from the county
infirmary llllil the recorder's office
. for r!lrl·time help, opting to wait
unti the fust Qf the year until mak·
ing a decision.
·
ReCorder Emmogene Hamilton
requested·part·time help for 2 1(2
hours a day for S3.S7S a year. A
letter from the infinnary indicated
they arc Interested lntaeSted in hir·
ing part-time help up to 20 hours a
wCek while two employees arc off
sick.
Commissioners decided to have
GTE analyze !he courthouse telephone sys~ and make a TCCOm·
mendation based on the needs of
coarlhouse employees. The decl·
sion resulted from letters from
coarlhouse offices desiring more
phone lines.
·.
In addition, acting up!)n . a
request from Gallia County En~i·
neer Joseph Leach, the comm1s·
sioncrs approved a resolution supporting ihc upgrading of State
Route 7 corridor to a ~or four·
lane highway. The' resolution will
tie-sent 10 Jerry Wn.y. direclor of
the Ohio DeJ!artme'nt of Trans·

Cherry w/quilt top ......... Sales429
Reg. $659

top_..... Sale s529

,,

9:30 to 5

'To Quolftld ApJ~Iclmll

COntinued P11 Page '

''

Chris1mas
. Delvery

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

'

·

COI~lAC~ VIM'E - United Mine Work·
ers' member Jeff Hale, left,,prep,l l'el to vcite
Tuesday at UMW Local 2286 Iii Danville,
W.Va., on tbt UDIOli'S proposed nn-year COD·

Coal contract ratified;

miners return to wo·r k
· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Up to 17,500minen on strike in
seven states begin heading back to
work tonight after approving a
five-year CIJ!Ibacl with some of the
1181ion;s.biagest I;(JI!l,compmies. .
"lt~to~w that wo
a

spanofmostUMWmines.
major stockpiles and maintained a
"Our members can go back ·to portion of their production using
the mines with their heads held supervisors.
high, 'mowing that we beat the . The strike began. MaY. 10 against
(/dds aixl woo a strong contract !hat members of the !JI!'JIDI~ous. ~a!
~~ Ollf right£? job.llPJI01IU· O~tors Assoc:i8U9n. m Illino1s,
mues," Umted Mme Workers Indiana, Ken~.· Ohio, Pennsyl·
·b ..so ' · · ' !' hue
'' •'" mone~we'.,..,,......., • 've . . . p1 ' " ...
&amp; r lt'RI"kei'd.,.-·-'-·
JO
~--·- ·"·-....... id.
~ yoftlo.,Wat.JlLN&gt;onlo..and
___ ...., '
- o--·:y;...:rua·
-o· •
w..d · ,__.....;..,
·"- ·•· ... · ' t · ... ' .-.... · ·
·
·
·
It
claimed
one
life'
ihat
-of a
we~.,.,.,..~ tt """'"! .
IQias,
be·contract was worked out
..
·
•
said. James, PBrsons, I ~S·yi:8r"'id last 'week durlng ta11cs overseen 'by nonuniOn. Worker•~ho Wl!9 shot. 10
mmer from Foster.
.
a special mediator appointed by ~eath wh~e .~s10g a p1cket bne
· About 6S percent of eligible Labor Secrctaty Robert Reich.
10 W~t Vtrgm~
miners voted Tuesday in favor of
The miners are expected tO'
Mmers rece1ved $150 weekly
the conbact, wblch ends a seven· be~in reporting for work with slriltc benefits but nothing close. to
month walkout. An estimated torught's midnight shift.
what tbey.normally earn. Tbe strike
60,000 members of the United
Tom Hoffman, a spokesman for also took Its toU on food banks and
Mine Workers union were eligible the companies, said union members other social-service agencies.
to vote.
will be recalled mine by mine as
Under the new contract, UMW
The union won its key demand, each company gears up for full pro- members arc eligible for 60 percent
guaranteed access to future jobs. duction.
of new jobs created by their
" We think that everyone is anx· employer or its subsidiaries. The
Without that, the union said, its
members face widespread unem• ious to get back to as normal situa· union had ai:cused the coal compa·
ployment in !he next seven to 10 tion as we can," he said. Most coal nies of robbing its members of jobs
years, .the average remaining life companies entered the strike with by creating nonunion subsidiaries.

t:

Federal plan may upgrade
Ohio's non-interstate highways
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
federal highway official said
Ohio •s transportation system will
be gready improved if Congress
passes a bill designating the routes
that make up the new Nationrll
Highway Syslem.
· Rodney Slater, U.S. highway
administrator, explained the pro·
posal at a news conference Tues·
day.
He said the system would consist of 1S8,700 miles of the
nation's most important mads.
It would linlt interstates, mili·
tary ba&lt;Jes, urban centers and trans·
portatioo facilities such as aiJports
and train stations. Slater said at a
news conference.
Slater said U.S . 23, between
Toledo and P~mouth, is one of
the non-interstate routes that would
qualify for federal funding of as
much as 80 percent of improve·
ment costs. Tbe statc would pay the
rest.
U.S. 3S in southern Ohio and
U.S. 30 in the north also were list·
ed.
Tbe entire
would consist
of 1~8,700 m1les of the nation's
most important roads, linking inlet·
states, military bases, cities and
transportation centers such as·air·
pons and train stations, Slater said.
He said' the lllost of the system
wouk.l be existing highways. Only

sxstcm

Proposed
highway
system plan
By The AIIOClated Press
A lS9,QOO.mUcNational High·
way System plan before Congress
would include the following routes
in Ohio. More may be added;
• All Ohio interstates
• U.S. 23 from Toledo to
Portsmoulh
• U.S. 35, Dayton to Gallipillis
• U.S. 33,norlhwestofLimaiO'
Pomeroy. ·
· '• U.S. 30, Pennsylvania line to
Indiana, north of Lima
• Ohio 13, Newark to Mansfield
·
• Ohio 16, Newark to Interstatc
77 south of Alcron..canton.
2 percent of the-project involves
new construction. Each will be
upgraded based on sr:cial needs
that each state will he p determine,
he said.
The Improvements could
include widening two-lane high·
ways, Slater said. He said !hat in
some instances adding or widening

shoulders, or adding -lights, would
be enough.
Interstate highways primarily
are down for maintenance under
the plan. Slater said new conslrnc·
tion was not being ruled OUL
He said passage of the legisla·
tion, subm1tted to Congress last
week, would be a s~ toward linking aU of the nation s transporta·
tion forms into a sysle!D that is economically efficient and environ·
mentally sound.
Slater said the system would
enhance access to 104 major ports,
143 ail)?orts, 321 Amtrak stations,
191 r&amp;ll and truck terminals and
242 military and dcfense·rclated
inSWJations nationwide.
In .Ohio, planned highway
improvements would help serve
.military bases in Dayton and..
Columbus and airports m Colum·
bus, Cleveland, Dayton, Toledo,
Cin~innati and Akron-Canton, he
said.
Slater said the plans would help
implement the North American
Free Trade Agreement
He said trucks carry 60 percent
to 80 percent or all freight shipments from the U.S. to Mexico and
Canada, with Interstate 7S as one
or the key routes to Canada.
"The ~sielll will serve this traffic by linking with the Mexican and
Canadian highway systems,"
Slater said.

.,.,II

&lt;

.

•

m.agazme re~.

"Police have found marijuana
fields in Ohio state forests rigged
with bear lefl·hold traps. dynamite
and fishhooks stnmg between 1rces
at eye level." !he article said.
"Booby trapped croplands have
also been discovered by drug
enforcement officials in Indiana
and Kentucb Staleforeats."
Backpacker Is: published by
Rodale Press, Inc.
·

Tbe news brief referred to tho
on~oing investigation by state
pollee ~piing 10 locate grow,
· ers; it also m~ntions the recent
d~struclion of 'f,OOO plants in 21
sltci.throulhollt Shawnee State
ForestliCII'Pcrtsinouth.
Po_lice are warning hikers to
walk cauliously, as 111811Y sites arc
protcc!ed by bobby traps, Bac~·
packu tcpork:il

·

'

(

I

f,

'. ' .I
-

,,

•
,,••
I

·~

sel for the water district, said the
district first considered filing a
civil law suit to contest the law:
After several meetings with l!llli
representatives Malone llld ~
Abel (D.Athens) aixl State ~
Long, ~tes nl TP &amp; C Gc:Dcn1
Manager Don Poole opted instead
to propose new legislation which
woulcf shift the responsibility o(
paying fot line rr!c'Cilion.
·
•tn practical lenni. this is ari
issue which 11ldmm the ·~
of water custoliiCI'I in nu:ai communities.~ Lentes said. "As the law:
now standa, those customen ulti•
mately foot the bill for costi
incurred. Tbe costS arc •
ed 10'
the utility company, who then )1111·
the cost on to the ciiSIDDia."
:
"It only seems fair that the sate:
should .PBY for the relocation of.
utility bnea when it involves their:
project, and it would cet1ain!y seem·
only fair that the law be consistent:
when it involves rural· and urban:
areas in the SlaiC.•
"Rcpresenlative Malone and his: .
staff have been extremely helpful:
in getting this bill to this point,"· .
Lentcs said. "Wilhout his suppori
and the ·suooort of hi~ r.nllr..,,.••-•'
we wouldnlt have a chance of
changing this inequitable law."
:
Lentes noted that the legislation,:
has been endorsed by the Ohi~
Rural Water Association, an:
umbrella organization involving
rur~ water providers across the
Slate.
.
CUSIQillers •.
.COntlnUICI on.PIQI-4
Lentcs, who acts as legal coun·

POMEROY • Legislation infro.
duced Monday in the Ohio Oenenl
Assembly could save local Tuppers
Plains &amp;: Chester Water CUSlOIIlefS
thousands of doitars if pessed
. According to ~ Attor·
.ney John R. Lentes, the leg1•)'1ion,
which is being sponsored in the ·
House by State Representative
Mark Malone (D-South Point), is
aimed at shifting the cost of relo·
eating water lines from public utili·
tits to the stale wben the relocation
is required under road improvement projects.
S'* Senator Jan Michac.l Long
(D-Cin:levilk) is expected to introduce the legislation in the Ohio
Senate at a later ~As the law now Slands, the public 'utility which owns the water
lines is required to pay for any
cosiS of~those lines when
the Slate
road improve·
ments in cases when the lines arc
located outside of a municipality,
According to Lentes, the language
of the existing law effects rural
areas most dirccdy.
•
The legislation was drafted by
Lentes in ·light of the relocation of
U.S. ltoute SO in Athens County,
an ,area served by TP &amp;: C Water
District That relocation is expected
to involve approximately one,hal(
million dollars in water line reloca·
tion costs, which under existing
law. will be b,orne by TP &amp; C
Wpter District. and ·ulumatcly, i!J

I

A nationelly-dial!'J'buted oilidoor
marazi110 Is liiiJ'itin&amp; blctpecldqg
endilillllsli 10' be c,rerut wliiie, hik·
1111 t!uouJb
ttm tlhiq.
"If you're Dllndinla bllclaioull·
tty trip .to 'souJho!a'siern Ohio, be
forewarned: Y!)u~.ll b!8 tenturing
into the ·~ belt' w~ bumper
crops of lriuillJIIIUI.ate bein&amp; culti·
vatcd iUepJly on pilbliC land." the
Feb. 199"4 Issue of Backpal:ter

Aqd ,the deer are arazln'g tn tbe
lleldlllld • • lOllS up hlah
And ~llinbow !2edt II tlowinJ llld
11!i11n1 oh 10 brlibl . I . 1. ,
lt'l 1 picwre true In I ory tsa
m~10my.-

TP &amp; C customers •
·may benefit from
proposed legislation

Magazine warns··hikers to walk softly

a hillside in a valley there

SI8IICis a little while botlae
SUIIQIIIIIIed' with sWIY!Jig pine tree
and on:t.dl aiiiiOUIId
Thae iJ ....... out in the back·
yanl plaiMd In lOWS of lfCCII .
And a aoktnltlil,il lhining from a
. blue ...y 1n my d¢lm
.
.

..... ,._ . '

Vinton Cbililty aDd shot three times
before escaping.
Vamey. who was sentenced in
September, p~ guilty an~ ~a,s
sentenced to 10 to 25 years 10 jaH
on each charge. The prison terms
arc being served concurrently.

Reg. $539

My Couatry Home
By GILBERT FITZWATER JR.

'

'''.Sbe:wu lllen •talcen tli .a' ilte In

Cherry w/upholstery .....Sale 5379

----Poet's corner-~-On

A man charged with participat·
ing in the abduction, rape and
·attempted murder of a Jackson
Countl woman failed to alter his
plea o not guill}' and waa granted a
·continuance thts morning for his
trial in tl!e Gallia County Common
Pleas Court - to the surprise of
.both !he state and his defense attor·
ney.
·
Gregory S. Pickens, 27, 12283
State Route 160, Vinton, llad
pleaded not guilty to .the charges in
a heari·ng last spnng. He was
expected to alter that stance today.
But defendant did not cbanJle
h~ plea to guilty arut:a new tnal
dale was set for 9 a.m. Feb. 7.
Terrence Lyden of Columbus,
Pickens' attorney, said be had not
anticiPated the .decision to proceed
with the trial an&lt;l asked the court
for a brief continuance so that he
could adeq•ly peplm.
.
Lyden had no comment th1s
morning about the matter.
Gallia County Prosecuting
Attorney Brent Saunders also
expected-Pickens to l'lead guilty
and said he was surpnsed that the
trial will move forward.
"He has !hat right." Saunders
said. "We'D see him in court~
Pickens and Vincent H. Varney,
23 of Rt I, Ewington, - bolh for·
· mer Gallia County Sheriff's
:deputies - allegedly used a Dash·
ing emergency light to stop the
wopian on U.S. -35 near .Rio
~ ~~ted her-' li\,I!IJ!Oint

'r

~~~:.· · Anderson's

A Muttim1di1 ._ ,._..,.._

Pickens
rape trial
continued

Antique Maple_............. Sale 5319

FREE

'.

2 Sec:tiono, 14 Pagoe 35 _,II

· Multlmecl•lno.

Reg. $399

ilies and anyOne who helped at the
fair.
.
Others in altelldance at the party
included Erma Cleland, Clara Conray, Lora Damewood, Opal
Eichinger, Elsie Folmer, Dorothy
Hawk, Opal Hollon, Macy Virginia
Kautz, Marcia Keller, lnzy NeweD,
Jeannie Newell, Ethel Orr and June
Ridenour.
· Guests were Chelsea Wood,
Bvelyn Wood and Janet Ridenour.

Low 10nlghtln mid 30s.
Rainy. Thursdoy, blgh In 40s.

Vol. 44, NO. 163

Lane

Oak w

'.

a1

.'

Reg.$469

·,

•

r

~-\S1MAS S~l
~ CEDAR CHESTS ~

daughters, Amy and Molly; Sandy
and · Walter Laudetmilt and
daughter. Lena Bower and her
friend, Terry, Casey, Cyrina, Cayla
and Sammi, Amy Phalin and
dau~hter, Keisey,; Danny and Susie
Smllh and daughters, Katie and
Mandy,and a friend, Glen.
After the dinner, the group
enjoyed games with prizes being
awarded to the winners.

Pick 3:
178
Pick 4:
6385
Buckeye 5:
3·13-26-32-36

PageS

HemtOck Grange to
t
"b
t
d
b
k
·
tS
•
IS
rJ
u
e
I
00
as
e
.
d

Chester Ladies auxiliary exchanges gifts
The Chester Fire Department
Ladies Auxilary Christmas party
was held recendy at the home of
Paula Wood. Tbe home was exten·
sively deconlled for the season. ·
After the business meeting,
Christmas and get-well cards w=
signed for the community.
Tbe Christmas SIOty from Luke
was read by Darlene Newell. Oeo
Smith read a seasonal st!lrY by ·

'" Paula June Butcher, ~1._728A, to
Kodney Ray Burcber, ScipiO.
Ethel Carson and Dorothh
Pence, Lots 10 &amp; 11 • to Joscp
Masters and Barbara Masters,
Orange. .
L
,
Flossie 0. Allensworth, dec.d.
by adm., Lot, .to, Hope .B apust
Church, Inc., Middlep:m V•U~g«:.
Hemlock Grove Chmllan
Ch~!fCh,I(2 A., parcel, to James H.
Sm•th. Bedford. .
,

Phyllis E. Baker, Sutton.
Lillian Proffit, tracts of parcels,
to Freda Ferguson and Maxine
SeUcrs,SUlt011/l.ebanon.
Darrell R. Wright and Wanda L.
Wright, 3A, to Basil Lee Wright
and Florence Elizabeth Wright,
Scipio.
.
Bertha Randolph, affid, and
MaljorieJ . Kccbaugh,Meigs. ·
Joseph K. Connolly and Eloise
Connolly, RJW. to Tuppers PlainsChesterWaterDist,Orange.
Ray R. Pickens and Patty A.
Pickens, R{W, to T. P. Chester
Water Dist, Chester.
Glen Stout and Grace Stout.
RfW T p Ch
W
D'
• to . . ester ater •st.,
Chester.
Eugene o. Adkins and Jo Ann
Adkins, R{W, toT. P. Chester

Smith famify ,h,~sts holiday gathering
The annual Christmas gathering
or the family of Pete and Burton
Smith and guests was held rcccndy
at the Kyger Creek Plant banquet
hall.
.
Attendin$. were Lois Hawley
and her fam•ly, Becky and David
EUis, Aimee and Sarah Kloes, Beth
and Amber EUis, Wendy and Ron
Maxson and son, Aaron, Kcnda
Kloes, and her friend, Wade

Meigs
quintets lose

Meigs County land transfers .announceq:

Tho aruwal Ouistrnas dinner of
!he Oidics but Ooodies Car Club of
Meigs COIJIUY was beld rcccnlty at
the AmeriCan Legioo Post 128 hall
in Middleport.
Club members were joined by
family members and guests for lhe
party. Door prizes were awarded
and those attending were enter·
tained by country singer Sheela
Delayn, former Meigs Countian
now residing in Nashville. She was
accompanied on the keyboard by
SHEELA DeLAYN
Gene Austin, song writer and producer.
DeLayn has already recorded an der." Her lively music topped off
album to be released in January the afternoon of yuletide fellow·
entided "My Heart is on !he Bor· ship.

MIDDLEPORT .· Winners in
the third week of the holiday giveaway by the Middleport Communi·
ty Association have b.een
announced. Tbe total to be g1ven
away !his season is $1,400 with !he
~rograrn to continue through Dec.

..

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·'

Ohio Lottery

Tuesday, December 14, 199$'t;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag, to-The Dally Sentinel

Alleg,ed assaUant to go
before Gallia grand jury
tenced tO 30 days in jail plus one
year of probation for obstructing
offiCial business. As a condition of
his probation, he is -requited to
cooperate with law enfot:eement
offiCials in the Ralhbum case.
Rathburn's attorney, Ronald
Calboun. today asked that hiS client
be eligible for release after posting ·
I0 percent of the bond, but was
denied. According to coun offi.
cials, state attorney Mark Sheets
asked that the bond be ~ to $1
million, but was also denied.
The grand jury was in its
December session this morning.
Sources at the Gallia County Common Pleas Court were not sure if
the jury would hold a special session to hear the Rathburn case
before its regular meeting in Jan.
uary.
Rathburn allegedly shot Scott
early on the morning of Friday,
Dec. 3. Scott was discharged from
Holzer Medical Cenlel' Dec. S.
The alleged assailant Tuesday
pleaded not guilty to both counts of
attempted murder. If convicted, he
Lane.
could face up to 2S years in jail and
The student from Delaware last $10,000 in fines on each of them.
week was fined $200 and sen :

By JAMES LONG
OVPNewsStatr
A Gallipolis man charged wilh
two counta of attempted murder in
the shooting of a Cheshire woman
was bound over to lhe Gallia County Grand Jury foDowin' a prelimi·
nary hearing Monday 1ft the Gallipolis Municipal Court in which an
alleged aceoinplicc entered testi·
mony ~nst him, aulhorities said.
Chnstopher L. Rathburn, 22,
1140 I/2 Second Ave., Gallipolis,
is still being held in the Gallia
County jail on a cash bond of
$100,000. Rathburn had been
attending Marshal University in
Huntington, W.Va.
Don Bowen, special investigator
with the Gallia County sheriffs
offiCe, said today that another Mar·
shal srudent testified againS;t Ralhbum, staliDjl !hat he had admitted
to the shooung.
Charles L. Casto of Newark,
Del., reportedly drove Ralhbum to
the scene of the shooting. Casto
claims the defendant larer told him
he shot Sandra Scott, 43, Roush

,----Local briefs-Regulator blamed in power outage
A failed regulator in a Meigs County substation caused a power
outage affecting approximately 1,500 'Columbus Southern Power
customers this mommg, a company spokesman said.
In addition, Meigs Local School and Diester Elcmcntaty School
were closed this morning as a result of !he outage wh•ch occurcd
around 7 a.m.
Tbe affected area included Slate Route 7 to Tuppers Plains, U.S.
3310 Birmingham and Hemlock Grove and Statc Route 143 to Har·
risonville.
·

Pomeroy woman's gate broken
Delbert Steams, Keebaugh-Follrod Road, Pomeroy, reported
Monday sometime over the weekend someone ran into a gate on his
Bentz Cemetcty Road property. The lock was broken and the chain
was stolen, according to Meigs County Sheriff's records.

· Two car accidents reported

Two car accidents were repotted. both had no injuries, according
to Meigs Coun!)' Sheriff's Department records.
Tcrty M. Ellil, 2l,.Dover,l'la., drove his 1992 Ford pickup truck
offEllt Run Road at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, while he was heading cast
on that mad. Ellis' truck hit the ditch, roBed over once and ended on
its side against a fence.
The vehicle was heavily damaged, but no injuries were RpCJited•
In the other accident. Timothy Wyant, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, struc1c a deer with his 1991 Ford pickup lruck at 2:1~ a.m.
Tuesday on New Lima llOid four·tcntbs of a mile from ~tmon

·

COntinued on·Page·4 ·

.

�': Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Wedntlday, December 15, 1183

TM Deily lltrtlnll P 81 3

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

deaths·-· -

---~Area

Wednesday, December 15, 1993

Property taxes continue to soar

Thunday, Dec. 16
Ace~- Weather" forecast for

in1 it hlJ home. Pw.ll .ftqe.
~ 't!'iU be ano+•o;Odby Alber
!lunnl Home.

conditions and

MICH.

Ill COart Sbeet

•

Pomeroy, c;&gt;hio

DBVOTBD 10 1111: JIIITEREIITS 0~ THE IBIQ8..IIMOI'J A1UtA

\vmard E. Hines

General Menager

PICTURE
YOUR
CHILD
.
.

.

AMONG THE •••

Beilde. bia Jllll!llla he - ~
cccJod In dead! tiy bit wife, Mjldled
B.-reu Tamt, a 111.-lit:i, Cbirlel

at

p,m.

Clara Slater

MARGARJIT LEHEW
Controller

~lara Elba.belh Slatu, 88, of
Middleport. lail*ly ol The Pllilll

and JacDmvlllo, died early

n.e.-

daf. Dec. _.4,199S, ·at V~ana

LEIJERS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
words. All letton are subject to editing lll!d mull be, oiglled with riamo,
address and tolepbone number. No unoigned !etten will tie publlsbed. I.e~
sbould be in good Wto, addreuin&amp; iuua, not

~ Holpllll Extended~
Fllflil.ity in Polllefoy.
· 'lbe funenl home misllkenly ·
repill'ted a_.iil-law, Pial DameU,
waulive. He iJ decwr d

••

J.Letters to the ·e·ditor
.

Mlddleoott.

.

.

Tem.ll, aDd a Iiiier, Edith Rider.
· Funeral setvicea will be held
Fr-ld&amp;y at 11 a.m.
the Ewin1
PUneral Home; J'orlleioy, The Rev.
Tom Runyon will officiate 'and.
burill wiU be In lhe Rock Sprinp
Cein~. F~ 'may call lllhe
r~ home Thunday from 6 to 9

ROBERI' L. WINGETT
Publloher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.

ud several peat·Jrllldcbildren,
Gene Grate
.
an1t
two lilllels, Mi1dled s.-- rJ
Gene ar.te of 32 Colo Street. Letart
Pallt ud LOla Bolln1 of
MJMepon, died Wrt illy-·

Our special page(s)

"For ChUaren Only"

Pinson right about S.R~ 7

' (16 ycarl of ap or youapr)

Will be pubiuhed

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24th .
in the
The Daily Sentinel

-ONLY-

•to•m ·
•

·.

.

Per Pletare •
PrepUI

. ....

'

,._._,Ifill Ill f1 I

• 1

ot•••
re
.
·

•. ~

·

..

...

.

Oft.ieial Entry
j

,.

'

I

Form

•

at f~ilities1 .meeting roop~s. and a
catenng
~vaila~le. . .
'
· The Alphus ~- Ohrisltnson The·
ab'C offen'OutSianding musical and
·dramatic 1 perfonnance programs
and .the Es!her ADen G~r Muse·
uni -*lioVkases studenis and region-

semte

al artist wd'ks.

.

..

15 fii1ecf in Pome·roy court .
.

I.

~

•

,

4.)

s

.

F'JtWen wm lined and 14 othcn- jng, Pomeroy, $63 aDd· costs, fall. operatot'atWinse, and $133, )lOSforfeited fines in tho court of ure' to c':/ly; Gary Arnold, seui011 of a COIItrolled subltaJII:e;
Pomeroy Miyor Bruce Piahor Pomeroy.
aDd ~ faiJjJre to -Carolyn Knapp, Weal Columbaa,
Miln!larlliJiu. · · .• . .
comply; ~~ChiPman, w. Va., ~74 ~ng; Sjepb!ID
· ' Pined wetc Paul McKI!JJ!IIY. Pomeroy; SlSand ~(~lin to Sa~, New iia'Tei W. '-:L, Sl20,
l'ome!OY. $63 1M COlli; &amp;lin to · appeii; Vlclde PbiWpa, ~y. dnvingunder .suapens1on; and
comply; Beay WilbmW, ~. . Sll
. 133 .cl
• COlli, DUbllc ~liOn; .~lii~le)'', Morda, Rutland, $35.$100 and .GO!nl. IICIIIIildal .n unf!· 'ichatd •Hart, Rutlil!d, $63~ ud· ~ ~- ·
,
·
· ceilled driver 10 ilpenle lau velli· 00111, dri~ina ~ ~ of : ~
cJe; JOhn Odell Blike, Middlepolt; licenae; Walter · Scllaniger,
S2S and coall1 failure to appear; l'omeroy, $313 and CCIII, milring
. Waito.n E. T~Pleton, Pomew. ~ Sll3 ~eo.., piJblic In~·
$63 l!ld COlli, fallunr to CQ!ilpl~; . ·icatilin; Liny 'Davidian, Pomeroy, .
Anthony E• .M~. MiddleJ!On. ,'~.ciCq~U."rw""'!!fizlldUIOof
. $48 and COIQ; apee~lll&amp; S63 ·~ a motor vehicleil $263 ud costs,
.COlts. ex~ plates, and $7S~
hlt·iltip, $63 an c:osu, no ~·
costs;,~
iddlepori,'• ~ .. · tor's lic:ellae, aDd S37S 1!14 costs
. .
' Trilla HIIKIIIiolllll;' M _ ""3 DUJ •
'
.'
..
.and coati, no operiiJOI'' a.li.se, · Forfeitlnl bonds were Sheila
$SO ~d costa, no lnaur&amp;~~cel and · Hill, Racine~ 6'1; speodinl; Brenda
$63 'ud COlli, fallunr ro Control; ManUal, Racine, $75, specdins;
·Donald May, Pomuoy, SS3 and Linda Eattm•!!• Po111eroy, $69,
·costs, 1peeding; Aaron Daviai 1peedi111; · t:foal, ·Boi!OC!Itl~r •
. Pomeroy,$88· aDd~e;: Pomero1, $70, driving witjlout
tainer; Tericlii Copt,
· inaut~~~C:« Bbonda NcCco, Apple
sso and CCliiJ. ~IJI; J!'lal • . · o~ w. va..
Lori
·. ' .~~ '' •f. ·' ~~-- .. Lee ~. PQnviiD?, ~~?S, DUI,
'"- '' n.,:~ra ..i!.a.t.LJ
' aDd S4S.. aeat beh YicilatiOn; MD,
ane .,. .1 .,_.._.
RullcJI. Portland. $83, open.con'

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Ploblllhod ...., ~. ·Moldaj .__
Pridar.•Ill Court st., ~- 0111o .,_ lilt

·

~ia•llll*lr. vel)icle,and$J»,
~m7ion ofconirolled ~bltance.

Edward ·Rouah, Middleport,
$45, aeat bell Yiolttlon; Richard
Watll, Huntlilpon, W. Vii., S$3,
traffic •\e:l violation; Tracy
Th011181,
eroy, $9S, wrongful
..;....__,rlamotorvehicle;Jef·
--u.u~11o ,
ftc
. .,;
..meroy; $83, no
, , Thomaa, Po
.-

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HUIIARDS
GREJNHOUSE
112·5778
SYRACUSE
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Cover chargeiJ!clude•:
Entertainment,·anackl; pt~rty fltvora,
champagne at mklnlt!ht. Cult-Bar

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Today iJ Wednesday, pee. IS, the 349111 day of 1993. Thue are \6
ldlln the~- ' .
'
;:;»aYs
today'slfi
· In J!Utory:
·
&lt;on Dec. IS, 179 ,lhe fint ten 8111Mdmenrs· 10 lhe u.s. Constillllion • Jhe BW rJ Ripll- weal IIIIo effect following llllification by Virginia.
011.thia &amp;IIIII: • '
,
'. .
I
.'
: 1J1 189CI, Sio!lllndianrChid Siltinl BuD IIIII elcwn. other tribe momben were killed 1ft OJ1IId River, Soudi DlbU. durin&amp; a fra:as with Jndi.
in oolli:t wcxkill for die U.S. JOWIIIIIWlllt
; .ln 1893, 100 JJ!IIIIJO; AIIIDII Dwnt's Symphony No.9 in E·minor,
• OPus 9,, "Pro!D the New World." waa·pttfonned during a "public
teheanal'' at New Yodt'a Camepc Hall (lhe official world premiere was
,., nul day).
· In 1916, the French clefeaiCd the Germans in lhe World War I Battle of
' Venbl.
.
'
,

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Walk-Ina W81C9f1181

1Dlalk

Friday, Dec. u a1 3 , .a

Mail or bring the entry form to:

The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Sb ut

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

1

�•

page--4

The Dally Sentinel·

Pomeroy :Middleport; Ohio

Ps~ by

Scientist ~iscusses l\1eigs.-Coumty _
soil

.------Briefs...---...,
Continued from Pege 1

• Hollow Road.
Wyant's vehicle was moderately damaged.

A U.S. A&amp;ri&lt;;ulture IOilscientist
who mapped tbe cou,:~einll
be!Weell 1984·89 and
oevery foot oC Meia• County larid,
shared his ftndinp Monday njabt 1
at the Middleport-l'omeloy Rojiry
Club.
'
The countfs land wu formed
by three glacJer systemS - which
forced water to .swircll.from flow·
ing north to IIOUih 11 diiDs bWJred
tbe water, said Gordon Gilmore,
area .msoun:e aoilscicndll witb tbe
United States De~ of Airi·
culture. ·
.
·
The glaciers included: the
Kansas glacier whlcb .passed
through about 250,000 yCII'I ago:
then the Illinois glacier; and linally
th~ Wlscon$in glacier w.liich
amve4 15,000 yean ago and left
9,000 years aao. be IBid. ·
After tbe !flacFs. the olitwuh
ftom the mellin&amp; ice llbeets formed
river channels ·and the sand ·.and
~ravel d~ts now mined In: tbe
hio River flood plain, Gilmore
said.
·
Meigs Count· y soil is mo' stly

:Stolen truck recovered Sunday ·
A Racine woman's pick-up b'Ucli: was found wrected and was
recovered at I :30 a.m. Sunday on Royal Oak Park Road. according
to Meigs County Sheritrs Rcporls. ·

Juanill J. Sayre, State Route 338, discovered her 1985 Chevy
S10 b'Ucli: had been stolen when the sheriff's department caUcd her
Sunday. The Ohio Highway Patrol recovered the vehicle.

United Fund deadline Jan. 1
Tax exempt agencies which qualify for funding lhrollgh the United Fund for Meigs County need to apply before Jan. I, according to
Tom Dooley, treasurer.
·
At a meeting of the United Fund officers at Sonja's Kountry
Kitchen in Racine Tuesday morning, it was reported lhat tbere is a ·
considerable amount of local industrial support beilljl e~ for
the group. Dooley said that contributions are commg m and lbat
several a~encics have already applied for funding from the program . ..
Quesuons concerning applying for funds shpuld be directed to
Susan Oliver, 992-2161. Tax exempt agencies hold a SOl C3 certifi.
cate, Dooley said
Contributions are to be mailed to the United Fund for Meigs
County, c/o The Peoples Bank, North Second, MiddlepOrt.
The alloc:ations committee will meet in January to fund !bose
agencies which had applied, Dooley said

EMS r~s~non
· ·d
.
s
·
to
'
1
2
c-~
- ..l''s·.
"" I"
~- f,
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to nine calls for asaistance Tuesday and three Wednesday morning.
UniiSrespondingincluded:
TUESDAY-- Z:43 a.m. Racine
to Rowe Road for Robert Roush
who was transJ!Ortcd ~Veterans

W!ldnetday, Dec:ember 15, 19kl

Wednetciay. December 15, 1983

Holzer Medical Center; 12:02 p.m.
Racine to So.uthem High School
for Paul Flowers who wu trans·
ported to VMH: 12:50 p.m. Mid·
dleport to Middleport Police for
KevinLemleywhowastranspolled
to VMH; 5:13 p.m. Rutland t6
. Larkin SL for Paul. ~ Jr. who
was transported to
C; 10:35

•

bedrock and shale- which formed
tbe heavy clay soils. Prehistoric
lake bedl can still' be- in Meigs
County at tbe Tappen Plains and
around Salem Center, Gilmore
said
.
The Jli'OJCCt was fWidod lhro11gb
tbe Me-as Cowlty CommissionJs,
tbe MeiD Soilllld Water Co~JSU·
vatlai Dlstrict li1d tbe U.S. Depart·
ment of Aglicu1ture.
Any land owner, builder or
develojler may acc:eu the informalion. from. Gillllln's SI!Jd&gt;' by COD·
lllttillg him at lbe Meags Soil and
Water Conservation District,

By SCQTr WOLFE
SeDtlDel COI'I'tlpOIIdeat
Led by Nolan Yates game-high
33 point~. the Vinton County
Vikinas, fresh off a berlb in the
. stale football pblyoffs, blitzed ·to a
46-26 halftime lead, lhe·n had 1o
repel a great comeback: bid by
.Southern to win 84-77.
Southern (0-3 overall, 0-2 in the
TVC) was down by as much as 22
points, but came back to cut the
score to S5-52 in tbe lbird frame
tiehind one of tbe most intense full
court games in recent years. For the
TornadQCit, however, its was too
Uttle, too late.
Southerp head coach Howie
Caidwell'commented, "It's the first
time Ibis year, with lbe exception
of some scrimmages, where we've
shown any promise. The third quartee we played very, very well. V:iD-.
Co
ton unty ·was very strong, very
~~~bac~~ical; but our kids
. "A's SOiln as. we~ut four.quaiters

TJ~&amp;c
·
.

••'!

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Continued frilm

l,

Page1
WhUe t4e lcslslation .was draft·

GORDON GIU'IORE

w.r

~in ligbt .of a rilrill
.C!isrnct
Lentes noted that tbe biU, if
passed, Will also include watetshed
districts, soil and' watei tonservatioit 4istticts; CQliSCI'Vllll!:y dislfictS,
munlcinal corpo·rations co'unu'es
.-'
•
townsbtps, special Wiler cldtricts,

·GOODWIN'S AUTO SALES·

ISSUe,

'

1551 NYE AVE. . .
,

·

. .

992·2148

..

.

·

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!

.POMEROY., OliiO
''

LOCII!ed ~the Bucon &amp;tat!Qn and tha 7-33 _Ca.......OI!I.

...

·

tog~er.like we 'd lbe laSt two,
we'D !Ia~ a Boo.cl baU.tlub."
One thiilg iS worse. than .a team
that
is big, and , that'~ a big team
·that Clll fast brealc. Vmton CoUnty
received high mitts in the big~
gory anand also"' h ~...... · the f
liiakiri
-.ug m...... ·m,.. ast
· : ·seni~d 1\ndy ilo'oth led
the f1t,st breafi, hittitpg .either Nolaft
Yat.es, Scott Braden, or· Jason
Snider on the,scoring end 9r t~e

Th' fOIIO\Vfng cars 811 h8V8 ill 6 moJ6,000· ••mfle

-r:~~ districtS. ~nd 'iewcrdis-

.:Fhe propose.d legisla,tion, if,
pa8$Cd, WQtdd tie retroactive tO
mcludc tbe \I.S. ~Wute 'SO PIO.iel:t.
which means lhlt tbe state woqld ·
be forted to pay the~ invtilved
in that ~lei: linerelocalion.
·

8

·I""-

_w•"•"ty
'~eluded '"th&amp; alreac~~:'o'w ~·"price! .
.POim
. ··• CSUNII·R·DSE __
.. ·...,_
. - -·ON l . ..

1~Iv :&gt; 31 80
21lr~ a!IID4. 81r, .,It 11111111, AMIFM caellltle, only 74,000 mue1 .

1987

n I lA

.n

1986 FORD MUSTANG lv·

4 c;yl;, 4 ..,.,

$
LA--------··
2480
whMie, cruln ~trol, Rower door lockl,

AMIFUc•iana,·,only·&amp;1,ociOmiiH. · 1
1986 OIMOUT QIUDITY
. · 1 • .,..~,. "·""" ..
4 Dr., V-t, 81r, _, dehoet, only 80,000 mUee. ·

·

ONLY $2480
-

·

··

,

~

.

19.81 FORDlUiPO ,GL~;;.._,....__.. _,.,ONLY $2080

· By ScO'rT WOLFE

' o·

·

~

SeDtilleiC~dent
Belc;.' siie iuad lineup. much

·
intact · itS trip to the state tournament last year, proved 10 be a lit·
tie too much for tbe Bastem Eagles
tbe Golden Eag1ef rolleCI to an ~
48 boys' Tri-~alley Conference
win over &amp;stem 'I'uesd(ly night
Belpre's dominate size JIIVVcd
to be an inliiilidatiCJ!I faelor. aPillil
the much smaller EasteJ'II five,
hoWever, Eastern (1"t) iliiYed weD
much of the first half. .Iielpre's
lineup towered 6-6, 6-7 and 6-10
agailllt Eastern's tallest man Of 6-3.
· Eastern head coach 'rony Deem
said, "Their size intimidated us.
we were. outsized. and very mismatc~ across the boird. We put
forth another gol!d effort, but
we'-ve got to shoot tbe ball bette~
apd talte advantage of the good
shotswbenwegcttbem."
Belpre .&lt;t-0) "!as led by 6-10
center .Chri~ Hopkins, who no~
22· pomts m a ·perf~tlO,for;-19

: ;·

1 .6.~
Spea._ker: Don't let diet,darken
holi.
d
.
ays,·
.~n?p':~4:~b!'::~::c~/.
!!!~a~~!:~~~,!~~~~~---O~Lr
S.
.
llld se«rey Bryant Mundy. 2ll lild
1987 CH..·Ro
,.
By GEORGE ABATE
Se!ttinel News Staff

acquiring sugar Cliabetes beCause
the body will ~-more glucose
and need less msuhn, he added.
~ may_also be a !iftk't!etween .
exemseandredu&lt;:ednskofcancer,
Davenport said
The body also builds more cap\llaries to h~ndle th~ increas~d
blood flow With exen:IBC, he SBid
If someone were ·to have a heart '
attack; lbey Would lllte}J have a
much ~ serious IIIIICk iftbe e~ .
capilliries COUld' bandle the bldod;
he said
· ·
I.n ~lber business; some mem•

People should nOL worry about
throwing their diets and resolutions
aside duri.ng the holidays, Miclt
Davenport told about 25 people at
the monthly Chamber of Commerce meeting Tuesday.
"Don't deny yourself during lbe
holidays becauseJO!I will get a
negative attitude · you're eating
carrot sticks while everyone else
eats turkey and gravy." said Davenport, owner Qf Big Bend Health
and Fitness in Middlepon. "But if
you start now you can avoid the
hoUday bulge."
·
Davenport suggested a number
oftips:
·
• don't start a serious weight training/exercise program in the fall
because there will be no time to
continue with it during the hectic

D:rlny Gallann 1enidns,.21, bolb
, . l'f LET SPE\1KUM:----. qNLY $1980
COID'IIittee wl!ich· will ' choose tho ofPomemy. · ·
" · .
4 Dr., II ip aid, MI/FM
only 611,000 Qlllo..
next Cjlunly economic ~~~
'
·
•.
MORE CA.as AND TRUC s TO "" 0 ·
director, said Paul Reed. clwrlber
. • Veterllll Meaiorlll
.
.'"
K
"H SE F.ROM '
vice president
·
·.
Monday admissions- Roben. ' ';. · '
The Meigs Cou!lty, Commia- Roush, Racine; I, act Whiteman,
.
, '
sionerl haw received 48 ·iiPPJII;a. Polperoy; "and·Lora Imboden, Rut· · Any vehlcie purchaall!letl'lllght out (without .
lions · the
~ it-~ land
.'
•
lqw
p~e during .tha month. of D.camber, ·
be
tbe beginahngl of
Mpnday diiCbarges - Ivor Farlnel,!ldt.t~•ln ~ .•II tltlil.!Hii 11111~ • ..,...,-;ery
1994
h1 ., ' ., · · ·
rar,Pomeroy
· ···
•--~~~·----··. .................
~
. also '
.
&gt;
future'
hire
hers of the chamber will be on tbe

11411'....,

CJIR1&amp;l'JIAS &amp;Ai,l'

.

,_..,_.""""JIIioo.,l

~

"

-

. . .

-F

&lt;

llflo•itl ',

+ '

l

·'s!lt.?tr: ~· i ·
Host~~~~

Meigs 49-22 in tbe g half·~
"' ·
overcome a onc-))!&gt;int halftime
deficit and defeat the Marauders
87-62 in hasketball action T·-·"~ .
secOnd
.

CONNIE.

!

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·. N.tl R S E

; M'A T ES . ,

ru-P.:IGUW.

t;

.• ~PPEW~

,,;.

\~

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•

·

•

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•

-J

evet!ref&amp;s (0-3) jumped out to an
early S-0 lead on a three-pointer by
Jason Hart and a bucket by G
Stan!
'th 7·071elt · th

::J.
t.f!:ig~Yin~ .the t!J tO?:.,~

two Hart me thfuws witb 4·03 left
in the period.
· .
But Federal Hoelting (2-2) bat-

OFF

,•;

tied back
Jea4 to
14-13 :.
wid!
2:54 and
1efl cut
on athebask:ei
!7·Iere:.
Dotaon. Nadian Gilders layup
wailt three seconds Jeff cut the·
Marauder lead to 20-19 after one

mr

period.

'

Both lean!s traded bl}!:k:eiS in the
second period but thel..ancers took:
'
-

!

~

.

1

t.#.~ .i+.

·~'-,

·•~·

......

• ..

't ·"': •

I'.

.

4T

\ti1 -"

1-"--~-'"""-""'

&lt;f.

their faist lead:o( th~ nlght wlt)l seconds left in lhC period 10 cut .tbe
7:20 left the period wheniCtiM ; Lancer lead back: to 10 (61-Sl)
'Nelson ·• scored on a IS-footer to heading into the fmal eight min· a· 23 •22 contest.
·
Th
ma~~:·e It
. e utes ·
. .
,.
MIJ!Iuders c!IDie ·back and took a · Afl!:r hnung 13 of 28 from the
32-27lead walb 4:05 left in the half · floor an tl!e first h~f for a warm
when Travis Orate drilled a 'tlirce- 47%, tbe roof caved in for Meigs in
pointer from the left wing. Meip tbe !bird period. The Marauders
took ·a 40-38 lesd into the locker went .on i~ . cold in the qilaner hit·
room at the half.
· ling only three of 16 frilm the floor
·Scou PelersOII gave the Maraud· for a·frigid '"'·
era tliCir last ie8d of the night when
Fe~eral ~oclting hild all !he
he liit twolrce !brows wilb 6:33 momeatum m the contest heading
left !n'lbe period to give Meigs a into !fie final p,eri~ and put the
42-41 advantage. But Nathali game away Ol!l~!lg the ~ud-

m

Gilders
Chad Nelsoli
hit backto-back: and
three-painters
10 give
Federa! Hock:inglbe lead for good at
49~42 .at tbe 5:03 mark. The
Lancers increased lbe lead to 61-48
on a DolSOn bucket in the pain·t
with. 1:08 left in the period Benny
Ewing hit a three-pointer with '21
·
·

• Continued from Page 1

•

pdrtation.
:Commissioners approved the
. '
following money traufers:
$29,826.98 within human services;
$925 .47 within dog and ~nne!: ~-~---l!iial•i~!-•-!-•~JII!I!l!IJI!It._~l!ll!l---.
sj90.57 wilbin tbe part district; .
S:l24.70 within.tbe sheriff's depart11
ment: $305:14 wilbin oounty gen1 • •
etil; $158.28 withi~ the lrcaSurer's
olfice: $62.14 within coromon
. To
pitas: SSO within county coun.
. , · '
. ,·

.

~26-11
wm. . ,' ···topostats ~ndstraight
.

(/

'

·1-n,
l ir:: '

.

WI

• ·

•

30% OFF. CIIC JEAN$''_,·
FROM-•16!9
.

~.

hit 18 of 62 from the
five of 12 from,
for 29%. Meigs

floor

'· .

I

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•

•

290 N. SECOND
' ..

MIDDLEPOR'r

WOMEN'S

•I'S&amp;W0-1'5

Thurallay I A.M.·12 P.M.

50% OFF

COLOGNES &amp;
PERFUMES

27C

ADVERTISING

'.

ASK

FO~ ~ O,.ve

I .

or )lob

992·2156

.

DAILY SENTINEL
.
'

CAN

COMPLETE STOCK

BYPASSES DEFENDER - Melp auard Travis Grate (rlgbt)
b)'Jiaisei Federal' Hocldnc's Jeremy Dotson (2Z) and Mark Wbltinc
(0) durinc Tuerclay night's TVC affair at Stewart, where tbe host
Lancera won 87-62.

Find
'

TIMEX WATCHES

COVEll GIRL
PRODUCTS

'

CAR·RIERS 'NEEDED
I I

-IN POMEROY AREA ..·

BIRCHf.IELD

.

CALL 992Mo215S FOR

.INFORMATION

40% OFF

more by C(llliiiJI .. .

Jamea c. BlrCh1Jeld

.

ClACCIFIED ADl Fill THE Bill

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

COLD
POP

'

REJECTED - WbUe Eastern forward Rol!ert Reed (24) watch- "
es tbe action ·and prepares to.catcb the ball, Belpre's Chris Hopkins
(42) and Brett Cowdery (40, 10 Hopkins' left) block tbe shot of East- ·
ern's Wes Arbaugh (center) during Tuesday night's TVC game at
Eastern High School, w~ere the Golden Eagles won 86-48.

•

1

1

.'

. ~ Lancers hll32 of 69 mcl~mg fave of 12 from three pomt
range from tbc ,floor for a warm
47% and 20 of 33lrom the 1inci fer ;
61%. The Lancers grabbed .20
:rebollnds, wilb Mark Whiting ·get·

-Y2 PRICE

Wuh all your custo~rs and,
friends a very Merry Christmas
·in our ChriStmas ·Greetings .Edition
on,Deceiiilier 23rd

.

.

· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ; . ...

An idea that makes sense .
for YIJU ~U~d those you love.

trial site si~ comJIIitl.ee will meet

Jan. 28 it 10 a.m. at the Meigs
· CoUIIlY-Public L~
,
.;;.. bccided!to repair, instead of
---tepl,ace, two sililts in 'a women's
lavii!IJey in the coiuthouse.
VteaMt were Commillion Presi·
dent Robett Hlrtenbach, Vice PMick!nt Jarie« Howard. ComJnialioiler
, Fi'ecl Hoffman and Clert· Oloria
. Kl~.
'·

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. ' Fle.OM
•
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10

_~t:; :fr.83~t: ~ SVIEITSHI-IS.by I•J &amp; Carlla~tt .
colmty home, respoc:tivelf.
' ln other action, tomJrussioners:
:.,_ Approved MCitly bills consi~g .of 297 items in the amount
of $222,844.83:
- h.glml to consider I le(jUest
by ·the piobllte/jl!venile court fOJ a
new copier;
·
-'- Accepted lbe resipation of
Jon D. 'JacObs, health def1arunent
dnector, from the GaDla.1actsoa, ·
Mel-s Board of Alcohol,. Drug ·
Ad.,diction and Mental Health Servi~ efJ'cctivc at the conclusion of
bOiird business on Dec. 13;
;- Approved a requcit from
Emergericy 1Services Director
Robett Byer 10 advertise for a 1994
chllsis on which to build 1 new
ambulance which will be for tbe
S~ sqtllld 'of the EinerBcncy
. M~ $etviceS; .
- NOted the Oreal Bend Indus-

.,

e1gs

· canned 21 of 2Hrom the line for a
Wl'flllll:t%. The MaraudcQI 01!~­
e::ferlbLancers ~2th·~0•
fii?unthilcdG the
wad R rate.1 p ng e way
. WI
an . eggae . ratt 'ottm' seven.
MetfiS lill!l sax ass1sts .wath Pratt
leading wath tbree..Hart had ~ec
of the .Marautted
ders,' Sll{ steals. Meigs
com1 ma h 24 turnovers.
M .
. n t e reserve game, eags
i:!mped OQI to an ~ly lead and
ld ~ff Federal ~ down~e
slleU: to post a
VICtory.
e
(Se LANCERS
p
7)
e
on age

226/ OfF'
· IlPPER.
, HOODED
1

''

.Galde.rs and l:&gt;O\SOn le~ fave
~era m double figures wath 16
!X?IDthtslSeach. Hart led the Marauders

MIIIDDL'EPORI . .

th~ prosec'utor' s office and the

J

g· •
ic·

,Federal Hoc.l&lt;ing gei!$S ·-62 w1n over

tommission .
..

.

.

TRAPPED - Vinton Couaty's Bob Remy (center) rmds bitnJelf
tr~pped by Southern defenders Robert Rell)er (left) and Ryan
\vWliiDil just outSide the lane during Tnesday Bight's TVC contest
in_ ~e, wbere tbe VIkings won 84-77 to keep tl!e Tornadoes wiu~ after~~ gimes. .
•
'·

night from
floor and·a.2-for-2 · Belpre 'score1f the first four ·· pre~ led by Andy Spencer wilb
nighiattbeljlle. Thetoweringcen- points of'tbe second qulrter, but 12. T~tcs.Jasim Walker and
tcl: :also' grabbed 10 rebounds to · Eastern twice cut the lead •to len at Josh W,IBC ~ eaght each..
lead his club.·· ·
· 28-18 and 32-22. ·
'
E~ w~l go to Hemlock: to
~tate~ and taleqted poj.nt
The 32-22 ~ore ca111c at the face Miller Friday. ·
·
gii!lrd Keilt Garrett wasn't tar ·:2:49 mark of the second frame,
~inc! with. a 8-10 night -~ the howe~r, Belpre lbmed up the wick:
EASTERN
floor, UICIUding three tfiree:..pomtm and blitzed Eastern 10-2m the fmal
(ll-10-11-14=48)
and 25 points.
.
. • two minutes before the half, the
Brian Bowen 3-.1-0=9," Jeff .
Eastern was Jed liy Pat New- score 42, 24.
.
Stethem
7-0-0=14, Pat Newland 0~d.'the 5-8 point guard, wilb 11
Belprc••~ent on 10 ~ 63-35 lead
3-2=11,
Robert
Reed 0-!..().3 Eric
pomts.
and on10 wm at 86-48.
Hill
1-0-3=5,
Wes
Arbausll't-o:
. Hopkins hit a baseline jum}l\lr to
'Eastern hit just 1~2 for 22%,
1•3,
Charlie
Bissell
0-0-5•5
gave Belpre ,a 2-0 lead, then Pat was4-13 from three pomtran~W for
Micah
Otto
3.().2=8.
Total'!:
10-i
· New~ gsvc .Eas~ its !Jnly 1~ -: 30%' and ~~s 13-18 at the ;fine. 13/18=48
.
of tbe pno, a 3-2 score, when he Eas~ had only 19 rebounds, led
hit a three·poinlei." from the poinL '· by Jeff Stethem and Micab Otto
-~~~ran Eastern on a 14-0 run with five each, while .Reed'had
(24-fs~~f.~~ S6)
that pvc tbe Yisi~ a 16-3 advan- four. EHS had five steals, 15
Kent Garrett 5_3 _6=25 , Eric
tage. Eastern ·mtssed two short turnovers, 7 assists and 15·fouls.
Williams 3-0-la?, Jason Wesson
jumpers·and R~us olber shots
Belpre hit 32"5~ for ·6I%; 3-4 lo().l-4, Jon Gerldn l..()..0=2,Joe
blocked b~ Belpre s four towers, for 7S% and wss 12-16 at the line. M da 5.().. 1 11 B Co
liDd be&lt;;aniea bitgun~shy on the B:!r.re.had 31 rebounds, four ,z.lj.~ J'm 1 re~ 2 0~8:!/
offensiveendofthecourt.
s s,nmeturnoversandl4'fouls.
Ch · H'
"{f-son ' - •
· The, ~gles did fight back: and
Eastern lost the reserve game , Co~IS 2 .~~0 ~~~ 1 T~~1';~\~-~~
!lulled .to ~-13 at lbe end of the 47-~6. Jaso~- S~cets had' ~2. and · l2/l6=86
·
quartA!t. ·,
. ·
:· teammateEricDil!ard_hadSIX. Bel-. .

&gt;

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',

season:

• don "t worry about your age,
because even the oldest of citi2ens
can benefit from regular excn:ise: ·
• eat fewer high-fat foods and concentrate on consuming more complex carbohydrates and dark: green,
leafy vegetables; and
• when at panics, eat from the ve,.
etable tray before the powo chap
tray.
People who do exen:ise regular1y will lose weight more gradually
and will tend to keep that weight
off, Davenport said This exen:ise
will also mluce stress because the
bQdy will release natural chemicals
- ; endorphins- to combat 'tbe
si&amp;~~s of fatigue.
;Exercise will also help those
pefiple who may be
susceptible
..
. to

~

Belpre ro~ls "tc(86-48
victory
9'1er
~a~ter~ .
lhli

p•v ·TH' . ··
·
· ,.. · ·
19
. . · 1.1 M U CARAVELLL ....... ---.ONLY ~2480

,~ pr., IUIO., 81r,!lelaYad wlpej.l; ~IWFM redlo.

break. Booth en~ up with just silt nadOes inro tbe aaack to keep fresh rebouilds, 12 steals, 21 turnOvers
points, but did a great job running legs on the court; tlld IIII'CipOIIded · and 18 fouls.
.
the VC offense, and at much need~ accordingly. Mason F'IShcr, Robert
cd points, breaking the Southern Reiber, Cass and Trenron Cleland, · Southern y;on the reserve pne ·
press.
Ryan Willi!IIDS, Aaroli"'Drummet .S8-S4 led br Ryan Martin's 11,
' Besides Yates. 33 ~point, 18-; and Jeremy Hill were amon_g the Jamie Evans 10, Tyson Buckley's
rebound effort, ·Braden had 13, most nocicesble mixing it up m the nine, Jesse Ma~n~d' • eisbt arid
Snicjer 14 and Chad Hen&amp;rson 10 '&lt;tomd defepse,
John_Hamion seven. Iaemy Ward
as four Vikings hit double figures.
A Fisher b.ueline jumper cut the had 20 for VC, and teammate Mike
Yates hit 1S of23 faeld goals for 61 score to 56-50, tben a Kevin lhle Hatem had 12.
percent from the field. Most of follow-up cut it to 56-52. FollowSouthern goes to Alexander Fri!bose, how~ver, were power lay- ing a VC score, one of their few day.
ups, follow up shots off the against the press, a Trenron Cleland
rebound; or baseline jumpers.
jumper cur it to three at 5JI.55.
:S!&gt;uther.n was led . by .Jty~q
Southern was slo.w .in ,ge,tting
WiiUams w1th 16, 1eremy Hill wath bade as under one rillnute was left
12, Trenton Cleland 13 and Robert and Booth hit Yates in the paint for
SOUTHERN
Reiber II iiS they too placed four a 60-SS score and, SHS bepn to
(17·!1~29-22=77)
men in double figures.
.
, run out of steam. The,frame ended
Jeremy H1113· 2·0• 12, Ryan
Vinton County's height illtimi- . 60-S5.
, 1
Williams 4-2-2&amp;16, Cass Oealand
dated Southern in the early going ·'
Vinton Count[ ripped off tbc 3-0=6, Trenton Cleland 5-1-0=13,
as the .Vikings, all at least six-feet' · fii'SI four points o the loutth quae- Aaron Drurpmer 2-0-1=5, Robert
tall,.( 6-0, 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 &amp;.!ld 6-4) ltf, another nail ill the SHS come- Reiber 3·1:2-11, Muon Fisher 2used. a grelat inside power game,' baek: 'coffiil. Now trailing 64-S5, 1.0.7, Kevin lhle 2-0-0=4,Tuck:er
mosdy fueled by Yates, and a· fut Southern never got much closer Williams 2-Q-0=4. Totals: 25-7 •
.
~ to steallbe fatst half.
.
. ,, that silt the rest of the game, The 6/17:77
Vmron &lt;!:ounty (2-1, 1-1) led 31· . final ended'84-77.
17 at. tile end ,pf the first quarter,
S!&gt;llthern lilt 24-~8 for.4t pet·
tben a IS-9 Cleficit,in lbe second cent, while hitting 7-27 three point·
drop~ Soutbem to 46-26 at •the ers for 26 percent and.was just 6-18
VINTON COUNTY
half. SHS at,one point was down ·at the line. Soutbern grabbed 39
(31-15-14-U=84)
,
bY 22.. ·· ·
·:·
; rebounds, led by Robert Reiber
Andy Booth 3-0-0=6 Bob
. The lhirtl quarter was much dif- , wilif 1p, Aa~o11 Qrlammbr, with Remv. 2-o-~ Chad u~.-...:....;. 4femat,'howev&amp;, u Soutllern abscr eight; .and hl;ld If steals •. IS o~z-'io, Jaso~ Snidei'6":0-i=i4,
Iutely' lwulcuffCd thC V~gs with t~vers, 6 ass~. and 20 fouls. · ., Travis Hale 1.().()»2, Scou Braden
atleastlO stel!!s and enswng scores
Vmron Co. hat34-60 for.54? ~r- 5.().3,.13 Nolan Yates 15-0-3=33
offlbe press. . '
cent, was 0-3 on threes and hit 12·
.
'
·
• Cald_w_e u rus~ed. numerous Tor- -18 . a.t the line . T~e_y h'ad ..38 Tl!tala: 36.0.12/17=84'

Led bf Gsnett'Bnd Hopkins; ·

·

2 Dr, auto., air, del .-yael wlp•r•, AMIFM caaeette, only 81,000
mllee;
· · ' '.'
· ' .,
•
aa
·

Yate•' 33-polnt clinic, ·

V1nton County hands Southern 84-77 loss

'

~Road.

11:57 p.m. Polneroy to Union
Avenue for Marion Rolch whO W.S
transported
Valley .Jfos.
pital.
. . '
Wednesday - _5:S4 a.m. SYfl·
''
• ' ·· ·
cuse to Buhan ROIId fOr Luvena Counlesl-ued . ·.
Hayman who wu transported· to
17
~~~
HMC; .8:24 a.m. Middleport to rnarr18Q8 C8n88S'
1
"
Cole $trcet.fof 01\lle Grato who
· ,
1 · ~-·'
r!~~ta~'TO: l~h!'t!':!; ~p.m. ~=~: ~,!~~~ =~trea~ d:::da di~Pnot neeilt·'a0
two couples· recently received
OBI
~~....,....~
·
' .
,m., ,omeroy
l!llfl'iage ·licenses in the Me'
Welchwhowur.akento
eness: to MH:Il:.S4p.m.Pomewyto Chil . n's .. a:omeJ;toaiMorQ~lla : c ·t p
c · fJ ags
11:38 a.m. Racine to Fifth SL for Union Avenue for Angie Te8ford Nonon who was traiiaponeif.to · R!:t~i~c:C: 11ate ourt 0 . udge
..
·
"'
- wm: Robert
·
Jan Norris who .was tran~..... to wh o was trp~sported
to V,MH; VMH.
Recejving
UCCI!BCI

10 Plelsant

·

Pomeror Middleport, Ohio

Owner-Operator

Early lir4 Sp•dal

Thursday &amp;Friday Only
Buy 1 Carleton Christmas
Card far SI or more &amp;
receive a FREE 79C
Russell Stover Box of
Candy. Na Limit
IUDLEY

BIRTHSTONE
DOLLS
Reg. $19.95
ONLY

Maltl !lfi:Ut, PO. BOX 188
Rutllild, Oh. 45775

,I

$

25%0 OFF

CHRISTMAS
BOWS
VARIOUS SIZE BAGS

~PRICE
DR. GRABOW

PIPES

14

30%oFF

Pharmacy
Kennelh M&lt;:Cullough, R. Ph. ChariH Rllfte, R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. lhru Sal 8:00 a.m. lo 9:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a .m. Ia 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main
Service Pomtloy, Oh .

'·

,,

9S

SWISHER LOHSE

PRICES GOOD
THROUGH
SUN.IY,
DECEMBER 20TH

FUNERAL HOME

Your
Choice

Limit 2 per Customer

....
•·. .'.

�Page 6 The Dally sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 15, 1993 .

IN arou IWCBRT ~n.~r

BIG lEND

The Dally sentinel-Page 7

~:·~

According to

GWID , SJ9tf:~
DONUIS Dozen . · !

Baskctb&lt;JII

•

lI
l

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

.j

10.12 LB. TURKEY QB
5LB. WILSON
VIRGINIA HAM
· P{us

AtlanUc DINion
Team
W L ,cL
, NowYDit .............. l4 4 .771
()rlando .................. ll
I J7&lt;J
ltOitm .................... IJ 10 ..524
Miami .....................1 11 .389
Newloney ............1 13 .350
Philadelpbia ............ .6 13 .316
w..m..a-............. .6 1~ .300

••

'
I

l

•

• 2LB. GREEHIEANS OR YAMs ·
•1 LB. HOMESTYLE GRAVY

•

•

.189

II

Dctroit. .....................6 13

.5.50
.421
.361
.316

16

.200

lndilna ..................... l

1
9

GO

~Wiukce ............. ..4

San Antonio ...........l3

9
66

4.5
4..5
7

8
9

7

10
Minnad.l ............ .... 1 . 12
flallu ...................... .l 19

.474

10

DonYCr ................. .....

.368

.0.50

(Of)
'
Cudinal Slritcb 7'1, Tiffin Calvm. 64

.824

J79

6

9
10
13
sacnmc::nco ..............5 14

.571
.381
.263

6
85
10
12

LaUra..............

30

2

Bac:m.59

56

wum.t';
=~~~=~MOT)

TouiJlht's pmes
OUcaaoa&lt;-7:30p.m.

Dc:nYcr •l Philadelphia. 1:30 p.m.
Utah al Minnemta, 8 p.m. •
Ptriand at San Antonio,l:30 p.m.

58

Oe. We~tTech 93, Cle. But Tech 67

Golden State at Phocuix, 9 p.m.
Odando a LA. Oippon, 10,30 p.~
Milwaukee It Sacramento, 10:30 p.m .

Clermont Northeastern 64, Western

BrownS!
CoL Cmtcnnia.l 53, Col. Bccchcrof\51
CoL Eut 60, Col Brookhaven 53
CoL l!uanoor 90. Col. Soulh 74
Col. Independence 14, Marion
Fnnklin 57
CoL Und.c:n-McKinley 91, Col. Wh«stone 54
Col. MiJilin 34, Col No&lt;lhland 45
Col. WolniA Ridge 1I,Col. Wea61
Columbiana 80, United 66
Conneaut 58, Atht11bull Harbor 41
Cortland-Lak.evicw 83, Grand Vall. 52
Covin4tm 68, Nl1i.onal Tt~il 60
Cra\vtcw 64, B. Palilline 47
Crsawood 65, Rsvcnna63
CrooUville61, New Lcxi.nJton 58
. Cuy•hoaalll&amp;. 63, Clo. Lu!henn W.

Thursday's pmes

L.A. Lakm 11 New York,1:30p.m.
Cbadottc at New Jcncy, 7:30 ;.m.
Delmil ll Wu!Onp, 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND II Miami. 1:30 p.m.
Indiana ll A&lt;Will, 7:30pm.
San Anlon.io at Dallu, f:30 p.m.

Major college scores
East
Ouqueano 79, Ohio 74 (OT)
FW\oip Dickinoon 75, SL P=-'• 67
Huvud 61, Datlmaudl 66
Seton Hallll, Jona S6

GeorJ;ia Sou&amp;ham 79. Valdmta Sl. 60
Nieholla SL 86, SE l...auiliana 69
South Alabama 109, Tooy Sl. 9S

Midwest

Dol'aul 82, NE llllnoU 55

Gold--Medal

Evii\IVille 75, Indiana SL 56
M;ch;aan SL 90, DI..Qtieaao 11
Ohio fL 79, UC Sanu 8~ .56

Soulhwest
Lamar 83, McNee~e Sl. 78

c

Fa~West

·10.
69, Bedfool,
Mich. ll
Frm.ller
Sk~
S1
&lt;luawayiO,:f'aoopM Lal:elaad 79 · "
Clenolll, ............ 52 .

, _ •

~l!iOl NOW~62
~
Bripant'Youna71, Utah SL 6S
-.a5,CS SanBcmanlino61

Oilm"" A&lt;:ad. 52, ~51
Olen Eao 46, NOJWaod 41

S. Ulah69,NWNa.annc61

Onluom 55. lhbono 32

Santa Can 15, Orcton 67

OnweCily 73, Col. Bliuo 62
Hcriuieo au. 81, Akron~- 63
!li1labmo 75, Felidly 62
HDly N. .o 57, Palma 56 (OJ) ·
Howl.md Cbr. 89, Bdhcll Otr. 38
Hudsat We~tem RCICII'\'e IS, Slrectl-

Ohio college sc01~
Men'sacdon
Non.ConrertMe
Ouqueano 79, Ohio 74 (0'1')
B. Km&lt;uck)75, WJi&amp;hl SL 55
&lt;»Uo State 19, UC Santa Ba.rbar~ .56
Wiumbcq 98, Ouabein 13

SAVE AS MUCH AS S1 15
DEL UONTE·11·17 OZ. -GREEN BEANS .CARROTS
.CORN oiiiXED •POTATOES oSPINACH • BEETS

bom7l

lndcpendenoe 67, All:rOnl 60

Indian~ 55, Beaver Lo.all3

Na.-Conrereme
Bald.win-Wallacc73, OrovcCity45
Ohio Daminice.7&amp;, LU.e Erie 61
Ohio SL 85, Sytacute 61
Ohio 56, Cincinnau 43
Rio Grande 96. Central SL 85

LakeYi&lt;w 13. Gron4 Vall.l2
Lebanon 56, C1110U S2
Lcmoo-Monroo 98. Edgewood 10
Libeny 51, Youna. Ean SO
Liberty Unioo 67, New Alb.any S6
1..ickins H&amp;a, 63, filhet Csth. 60

Ohio U.S. scores
Boys' action
Ak1on Buduel 64, Akron Fuatooc 62
Akron Can-Howcr 63, Akron N . .51

Lancers

l

SAVE A S MUCH AS 70c

TROPICANA 64 Oz. • 3 VARIETIES

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
ABOUT MANUFACTURER'S

Orang.e Juice

1=5, Brett Newsomel-0-0=2. Reggie Pratt 1-0·1=3, Travis Grate 2'23=13, Gary Stanley 2-1-0=7, Ben
Ewing 0-1-0=3, Totals: 13-S·

)6.

FEDERAL HOCKING
(19-19-23-26=87)
Mark Whiting 2-0-1=5, Tim
Wargo 4-0-7=15, Tim Farley 0-1·
0=3, Jeremy Dotson 8-0·0= 16,
Josh Jones 1-0-3=5, Chad Nelson
5·0·3=13, Jeremy Tolson 2-24=14, Nathan Gilders 4-2-2=16,
TnfR)s; 26·5·20=87

MEIGS
(20-20.11·11=62)

, Scou Peterson 3-0-8=14, Jason
!fart 2-1-8= 15, Ray Russell 2-0-

.••

I

•

/;H;ollilay · , $11. 99
Poinsettias 1111

$8,864.00 ...................................... Sale Price
#35708

•',.•'

..
,C.JJI1• ·~· ......... ~ ,
·Allout f,.efal Orms •..• 'I•1
• '

$.1'''

#36808
#36788

WIC Coup: • ~:qlpllll•l!at R up a,•lblto lor ~Ill!' PI~ l!nor&amp;

,,

. #36518
#36838

~

3101 E. nh Street

~

1

•

1994 SIDEKICK 4 Dr., 4 wheel drive.

14,400

5

SUPERIOR TOYOTA/SUZUKI, Inc.

'
•. '

.

Nila 67, Ou.t!!Pion 6S
Nordoni1 60, Girfi.cld Hll. 36
Olmetcd Fall.s 74, N. Ridpvillc 68

Qranae Chr. 60, McnUJr Chr. 4S

Ouqo 69, GihoonbwJ 61
Painc&amp;villc Harvey 100. Aah~.abul• SL

lohn 6.1
.
Painesville Riven: ide 73, Aahtabuls 56
Paint V1U. 16, Wcatfall71
PICrey 61, Hawi.cn 36
Pcnytburg6.5, HoU1nd SprinJ. 41
Richmond Edison 44, Steubenville
Cath. 43
Richmond Hta. .59, Columbia 45
Ridaewood .56, Malvern 55
Riverside 68, Indian Lake 44
Russia 71, Houslai 40
Shmandosh 7.5. Ws1Crford 49
Spring. Catholic 12, Tecumseh 59
Spring. Loc1li02, Ma\hcws 69
Spnn,. South 75, Spring.. Nonh 14
Stow 91, Hudsua 83
S~ 80, Berlin Hiland 'rl
s~~e82,8~~e59

Tca)'l Vall. 68, F1irfield Union 55
Thcmu Worthington 53, PiclteMgton
~

Tipp Cty 90, NonhJ:idie .57
Tol. Raam 90. Delta•"'75
TrccoCLileSI, Wellington46
Tri-VIlley S4, W. Mu&amp;kin8UJn40
Triad 81, Wayneaficld 61
Univ. School 75, Orange 68
Vin10n Co. 84, Racine Southern 71
W. Ho!me&amp;62, Coahoc:ton 59
W11J1«1n 11, Evergreen 48
Wlvctly -67, S. Wobltcr 51
¥iayne67,CCn~e56

Weuton (W.Va.) Madonna 72, D diz

63

Welhton .52, Trimblc41
Wclll:villc 52. Toronto 49
W~lc S. 62, Upper Arlington 40
WMclonb&lt;ttg62, Minfonl 60

Willoughby S. 63, K.irtlmd 42
Xenia 69, Fai.tbom 48
Youna. Chaney 6S, Hubblrd 37
YOURJ. Libcny .51, YOWlS. Eut 50
Youna- Mocmcy 64, CampbcU 60
Youna. Ursulinc62, struthers 48

· Girls' action
Akron SL V·SLM 63, Mlgnif~t 60
Aruonia 59,Padtwsy4S

Bcaummt 36, Resina 33
Bell~

31

44. W1yna~villc 31

Bcllclon\&amp;inc 43, Sprina. NoMwe~t.c:m
Bdhcl Otr. 28, Howland Ou-. 26
c - Cad,. 63. All.&lt; Holoau 53

c-~fOoM.anifteNSrt ·

-

Ciudon S. 52. Uniontown Lake 48
Curollton .57, Sandy Vall. 38
Chipp.wl 71, Dalton 49
CUI: l&gt;ccr Padt 37, Cin. Finncyto"A"n 43
Cin. Princeton 66, Cin. Withrow 63
Claymromt49,lndim Vall. 45
Clc. Collinwood 59, Clo. Baa 53
Clc. East Tech 67, Oe. Weat Tech 31
Cle. Glenville 61, Clc. Solnh 30
Clc. H1y 75, Clc. Kmncdy '1:1
Clc. Lincoln-West 63, Cle. Rhodes 31

Lulhonn E. 45, Elyria FBCS 20

Clc. Manh.U 46, Clc. Ad1m1 34

Col. Broc&amp;havcn 64, Col.. Em 32
Col. Independence 79, MuionFn.nklin 14

Col. l..inda&gt;-Mcltinley lO, Col Whel·
""""36 .
Col Northland 71,Col. Mifllin 52
CoL Soudl 69, Cal. P1'tm0D1 46
Col We~~. 58, Walnut~F53
Col Weolland S'l, Ro,noldaburJ 50
Coploy 62, Akmn K&lt;nmono Z1
~ 42., Norwalk SL Paui·40
Cayaboaa Vall. Chr. 54, Akron
Cov.cry41
Day. Chaminado-Juliennc 46, Cin.
Mount NOlle Dime 34
Doy.llunbar63, T~ CRy 31
ow. 57, Doy. C&gt;uUiian So
Doylealown 11, Dollm 49
EaUift~9.Anomum42

Oak-

EdUon 53,
29
Won 52, Monlpelioo 41
Erie lkabol21, llowlond 0\r. 26 (01')

Police check for drugs in Hurley wreck
By STEVE LAWRENCE
SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) -'
While Bobby Hurley's condition
conlinues to improve, police are
checking whether drugs played a
art in the car accident that seriousYinjured the basketball player.
Police are running blood tests 10
determine if the other driver
involved in the crash was under the
influence of drugs.
Police spokesman Michael
.Heenan said Tuesday that bospital
tests found that motorist Dan
Wieland had an undetermined
amount of amphetamine in his
blood when his station wagon col-

f,

PBL results
(Results as of Dec. 8)
League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team slaudings (latest points,
season points) -Banks Construelion (76-52), F.O.E. 2171 (67-61),
No. 2 (63-65), Hackett's Roofing
(62-66), Pinsplitters (62-66) and
Tony's Carryout (54-74).
Team high series - Banks
Construction ( 1929)
Team high game - Banks
Construction (713)
Women
J-"!4- 'l'iilllfi1Iilaill blili series - June
Mowery (499) and Wendy Maxson
(497)
Individual high game Shirley Simmons (203) and Mowery (192)
Men
Individual bigb series - Larry
Dugan (583) and Scott McKinney
(489)
Individual high game Dugan (198 and 194)

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

lided Sunday night with Hurley's
light truck.
The Sacramento Kings ' rookie
guard, an All-American at Duke,
suffered serious lung injuries in the
crash, as well as several broken
ribs, a small compression fracture
in his back and knee and wrist
injuries. He underwent eight hours
of surgery and was reported in serious but improved condition Tuesday.
Wieland suffered a broken leg.
Heenan said blood tesiS done on
Wieland at the UniveiSity of ca!ifomia Medical Centec "did show
the presence of some type of
amphetamine. That really doesn't
mean anything to our investigation.
That's why we're having the crime
lab take a look at it independently.
·'The presence of amphetamine
on the clinical report could be
explained away by diet or cold
medicine," Heenan added. "We
need 10 confmn if there's anything
illegal."
He said the hospital tests did nol
indicate how much of the drug was
present It could take weeks to get
test results from the crime lab,
Hemmsaid. .
Wieland, 37, could face criminal
charges if the tesiS show an illegal
use of drugs, Heenan added.

Wieland told the New York
Times that he hadn't taken any
drugs and he disputed a police
report that his headlights were not
on at the time of the aash.
"I had my headlights on,"
Wieland said. "Why would I be
driving in the dark without headlights?"

Gifts Por Her
SMALL

APPLIANCES
•Mixers
•Toaster$
•Electric Grill
•Roaster
•Slow Cooker

PICKENS
HARDWARE:
MASON, W. VI.

CHIPPEWA
FOR KIDS
SIZES 8'/.-13'/,
TAN &amp; BLACK
9 A.M.·8 P.M. WEEKDAYS; 12-5 ON SUNDAY

290 N. SECOND

--riel

Telephone 304-424-5122

PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

,.,.
•

"

'

MIDDLEPORT

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614·992-2478

II pl. yn!l•d o v~r •n op• n fla m e
an d a"'mh• r• d wo 1h

..

. . . . .

m uoMr noroa an d on1on o

$S2~2t

A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Andersen Windows
Georgia Pacific Doors
2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 In. On Center
Annstrong ,Solarian Aoor Tile
Kitchen Compact Cabinets
8 Foot Ceiling
2xl0 Floor Joist, 16 In. On Center
52 Gallon Water Heater
Carriage Carpets
Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

h

.~lr ~1

1.994 SIDEKICK 4 Dr., 4 wheel drive.

$16,527.00 ................................. Sale Price

/

I

'

1994 SIDEKICK 2 Dr., 4 wheel drive.

$15,567.00 .............................. ... Sale Price '13,400

"'
'.
~

:

1994 SIDEKICK 2 or., 4 ~heel drive .

$14,937.00 ....... :......................... Sale Price '12,995

•'

"

4 Wheel Drive.

$14,317...................................... Sale Price 112,500

,I

Por Parti&amp;t or Olfts.

1993 SAMURAI

$9,264.00 ...................................... Sale Price 58,995

•
,.
••,'
••.

~

9,600

5

•••
••

.•

.

SWIFT 4 Dr., standard .

#35058

•.

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7,997

5

•

Potato Chip'

New 8011D118I,lronlOD St. Joseph 68
New Miami 3.5, Cin. Lockllnd 3)
New\01'1 Fall&amp; 76, Howland 64

1994 SWIFT 3 Dr., auto.

$10,832.00......................... .. .........Sale Price

•
•

.

Wt All~l 111.tile l'llghllo UmH Ouenlltl• • PrieM l!hche Tlvu IIIII., o-nbll 11, 1113 • USDA,_ Slllnpe -

( ·

•

Snyder

58

chief investigator with the
Harris County medical euminer' s
office.
Aim was not injured in the
wreck, but neither man was wearing a seatbelt, said police
spokesman Alvin Wright
Aim, the Oil~rs· second-round
draft pick in 1990, had played in
on I y two games this year because
of a contract dispute and a broken
right leg suffered last month
against Cincinnati. His leg had
healed and he was expected to
rejoin team practices this week,
Oilers spokesma'! Chip Namias
&amp;ald.
Teammates expressed shock
about Aim's death, but several
observers said he had few close
friends among lhe Oilen and usually kept to himself. Some teammates
described him as a ''live wire'' and
others called him "quick to react"
"Jeff was an emotional guy
with highs and lows. He evidently
thought he did something wrong
and tried and convicted himself,"
said Houston coach Jack Pardee . .

FAMILY HOMES INC.

#36758

...
.•

99c

NaPOleon 51, SylvanLa Northview-40
Ncl.onvillo-Yolk 66, Hemlock Millor

Win~o.

21=62

•
•
•
•

Sna~k Cr~ckers

Fruit
Baskets

1r-$49;

BOZ. BOX

N.ltoyaltm 80, Bl\1!\lwick !SO

HOUSTON (AP)- Jeff Aim
and Sean Lynch were inseparable
friends, so close that one apparel\!·
ly could not live aft.er the other had
died.
Aim committed suicide on a
dark freeway ramp early Tuesday
morning aft.er his new car crashed
into a barrier. ejecting LY.!'Ch !'rom
the passenger seat and killing him,
authorities said.
The two, both 25, played footbaiiiOgether at Carl Sandburg High
School in Orland Park, Ill., Aim as
a star defensive lineman and Lynch
as a resezve defensive back.
Lynch, who managed his
father's restaurant aftec graduation,
was there for most games when
Aim moved on to Notre Dame and
later the HousiOn Oilers.
"They were very, very close,
but I think their relationship even
got lighter as the years went on,"
said Larry Lokanc, who coached
the two in high school.
"Sean followed Jeff's career at
Notre D~me, went 10 most of his

home games. It was not uncommon
for Sean to fly out to Houston to
see Jeff and see him play. They
were, as you'd probably say, best
friends."
The coach added: " Sean died,
and I don't know what Jeff read
into it, if he felt he couldn't exist
without him . Those are things I
can't answer."
The two were found about 2:45
a.m. Tuesday along lnt.erstate 610
in southwest Houston. police said.
Aim's body was sitting against a
guardrail near his 1993 Cadillac
Eldorado and near a shotgun .
Lynch's corpse could be seen !'rom
that spot, down a grassy embankment on a service road some 25
feet below.
"He got a shotgun . He may
have fired a couple shots in the ;ur
and then put the gun 10 his head,"
police ·spokesman .Rick Hartley
said.
Police said there was no evidence at the scene that the two had
been drinking. Toxicology reports
would take sever.ll days, said Cecil

END OF YEAR CLEARANCE
ON SUZUKI

'·'·

De~lclous

__

win gives Rick Edwards' Little
Marauders a 2-1 mark. Brett Hanson led the way with 18 points.
while teammates Nick Hanning
added II and Donald Yost had 10.
Scott Nippert led the Lancers with
17. Teammate Jeremy Roush added

'

39
A ?ttufll#tt ~•. ,

win.......,_,~;(Co=nu: .: ;'nu: :ed:. :frq: .zm: :. . :. :Pa: !;ae:.:Sl: _

· Meigs will host Wellston- the
Colden Rockets defeated Trimble
52-41 Tuesday night~ Friday.
federal Hocking will host Trimble.

N. Adunl65 , W. Union 64

Cl~

Jacboll. Ctntcr ?S, Fllidlwn 62
Jac:Uoa Mihan .51, Lowdlville 49
Jeffcmm 56. Alh.tabull Edpwood 49
Jcwea.-Scio 54, TlliCUIWII C.\h . 49 ·
!olin Gl!M 96, Sheridan -40
Kalida 51, Pandon-Oilbal39
Kanna Lakd.a 72, Northwood .51
K&lt;a.rina Aller fil, Hamikcn Bodin 53
Kinp Acad. 53, Young. Otrillian 41

Women's action

f11Jtmr \

3S

Cuyahoga Vdl. Chr. A~;:ad. 79 ,
Wooolridao49
Day. "'""""' 83, ldTcnon 80 (2 on
DeJaw•reOu. 60, Ohio peai!S8
Dover ll, Carrollt&lt;rl 36
Dublin 57, DdaWIRI S4 (01')
E. Uvapoolll, Weirton, W.v •. 46
EaRwood 66, Elmwood 63 (OJ)
F.ut&gt;anl&lt;a17, Rid-lS
F.Jrlield 61, Milfonl46
Fedonlllockin&amp; 11' Mat&gt; 62
Ftdd 70. Union1olrllt...ko 63 (01)
Foo&lt; Frye 61, c.!d..U 42
FOfiDria 64, ToL Whilm« 56
F.ranklin 71, &lt;bf'Oid Ttlawandl68
Fnnldin-Moauuo 75, Mi!Jm.Union 65

South

Fen~

Middlewwn 68, Hlmihcn 48
Middlc:t.o'llr'rl. Chr, 70, Miami Vall. 3S
!o{idpul&lt; l5. Cloverleof 36
MidYiew 71, Key~tono48
Millbury l.akc il , Anthony Wa~ 66
Mi..llenp01t 00, Granville 59
Mi.netval3, F1ideN 78
Mo1JIIl65, Philo 64
Moont Vcmon 43, Muufield Mldilon

61

E. Kentucky 7S, WriJ.bt SL 55

5 LB. BAG • 3 VARIE'nES FLOUR

Cin. St. Xavier 65, Cin. McNicholas

Cin. Summit Country Day 63 , Cin.
Landmadt 0\r. 60
Cin. Taft.65, Cin. W'1Rl0n Wooda 53
Cin. Weatcn Hilla 7~ Cin. llugheo 58
Cin. Withrow 71, Covinaton, Ky.,
Holrna10
Cle. Adam~ 62, Oe. Marahsll 45
Clc. Collinwood 81 Clc. Elll74
Cle. Olcnvill.c Tl , Oc. Sooth 67
Cc. Lincoln- We~~ 62, Cle. Rhodea42
Oc. Lutheran E. 66, Flirporl Hardin&amp;

Admla 103, CLEVELAND 92
LA. Laken 99, Ileum 93
lndiaoa 1011,
11

SAVE AS MUCH AS 90c

Owdon ND-CL 13, Cardinal7l
Oahlro.Rivc:r Vall66, Athens 65
Cilllioodlo lOl,l'orlamGIIdl 60
Cin . Mtat 81, N. C.OU.,.IIill39
Cin . Ande:aon 49, Kinp Mills Kings

Miamisburg 61, Middletown

On. 1.1Salle11, MeuM Healthy 51
Cin. Prinodon 61 'Lak... 59
Cin. Purcell-Marian 68, CUI. Roser

.

Tuesday's S&lt;ores

•

51

M.syM.lle 70, RiveMew 58
Medina 59, Bc:ra .53

~

New Yom 93, Denver 84
Houton 97, Miami 88
O!adoac 101,--., IS

•••
•

61

C...y 58, Co!y-Rawaon 50
C..Halo 63, Ookwood 51
Ccnl.rll Bapt. 69, Cin. Hi1lJ Otr. Ac:.ad.

11
18 ..5

3

a

BabiW&lt; 62, a,.p;. Follio 51 (OJ)
Bcme Unicn 56. Hcalh S4
Bt.ncheltet 71, New R.ichmm~.d 61
Bloomf..U 55, ......w-45
ltooofotd 59
Bndlfeld 60, (fuon152
Buwye 78, 0.... Dam 33
Buclr&amp;yeTnil ?9, Ncwoamcnwtvm56
Camblid_ae 11, Bamfl~Ville 74
Cani1W-.....49,a.dcvllle45
CanUIO lkrl- 71. Mtcllna PBCS 69

Dlvlll•
Sell11e ....... ....... _....t7 2 .895
Golden s............. ll
Portland ................. ll
L.A. Clippon ............
L.A.

M.uaillon 80, New Philw!cJphi.a 45
Mlumoe 71, Sylvania Socnh~ 60
M.aiUIX!C Vlll 69, Tol Emanuel Bapt.

Bowlin&amp; G.a!ft 61,

P~elftt

Phoenix ............ - ....14

MariMRiverVaU.·6~3~.~57

Bloum-Canol161, Hlmilton Twp. !SO

ll!i

.619

Ponamouth W. ll4
ldadilon
Geneva 41
Manc:hNta 61, Akn:in Sprin&amp;fteld 51
MapJc.,ood 4!, Winc!lwn 44
!Wrieoa 67, OaJijpolja 59
Marion lla!din.t ~- Maryavill&amp; 36

Bcd!aoll&lt;4.- 11

Bdplo16,ltoodMIIo- 41
BC!IIjunin LDpn II, Mech.anic:abwa

8

(or......w.41,Vall. 89,

an.

8

8.l

By MIKE DRAGO

LoWavlllc Aqu.inu S6, Roout.own 15

Av•Labfii, Obedin.5S '
Badp 61, 1..onUaown 66
Ba~ 61,
SL Bernard 56
lloaebwoootm,B-yo65.
BeavCII'l:ftllk .q, Ft.inrwlrt 43

4.5
1

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t Dtvlllon
Team
W L Pd.
GB
llouo&lt;m .... .............20 1 .952
\J\.Ih .......................14 1 .661
6

PRICES

Vegetables

AMI14,Boddnl62
AWitintown·Fiteh 56, Youna,. Rayen

Pa. 41, Pymatunin&amp; Vall.

Liabon 14, Loelonil 4l
Uttlc Miami 13, Clini.On· Mu&amp;lc ~3
Lopn 39,1a&lt;U... 37

An174, Btatkia162
Ann Atbot Pioaeor 63, Tol. Bowthir

~

3.l

.5!56

I:IJ!VIlUND.........7 12

'2495

HARDWORKING

4

Chicaao ..................IO
ChariOc:ul ....... ......... ll

Christmas Dinner

55

Line~ville ,

~

Aluon SLV· SLMlO, ...... 41

Ce•lral Dl"lllon

. ~- ................... 15

• 2 LB. CORNBREAD DREBIIItG
•12 DNIER AOUS
• CRANBERRY WALNUT DESSERT

..

Akmn Manchoot« 61, .AJu0. SprinJ.

51

·

Tight friendship fueled des.p air
that drove Oilers' Aim to suicide

Uma 70, ~. Sy&lt;amor&gt; 56
Lin&lt;aiA BopL 66, Maranailll 0\r. 51

Ako&gt;oB.62,,._~lO
Akmo lma 56, AI:Joa Oodiol4 ~5

and

"Mudd Home Vlewin1 HIKirs 1:00-5:00 p.m.
The-SaL or by appointment Call614-992·2478

... c; , . ~.. "•""•
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• •••••••••••••••••••

Chnlollcd
5iltoin Tips Dinner

$5.99 :;;~::

POIIJEKUSI\ .
,•...........

""""" ""'--

6Piece St. . Luncheon 5pcclll

~---

..::=t::~

Chnrollcd
Sirloin Tips Dinner

,_.
---

· "=S::~? , PCiallOSI\ TF~Wf=

•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

&lt;iALUPOLIS
215 Upper River Rd. - Rt. 7

-.......

(ecroaa from the airport)
efMWDMidiiSW~~~cMe•C~ '-~1m

••

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.
Poineroy-M_Iddleport, Ohio
~:-:'~~~--~~-~--...--~~.;;~~;;;.~-...-.r;!-....--..:wedneaday, DeC4!mber15, 1993
'

Page _8 The Datly Sentl.nel

~

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GROUND
.

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BEEF

-

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STOREHOuaS

MOIIIIay .... s••ay

~

•
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90

8AM-10 PM

298 SKOND ST.
POMERO'( OH.

~

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~

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•
"

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC 12 THRU DEC. 1·8, 1993

'

GROUND
CHUCK

•
•'

.
...
..

We Redeem Ftderol Food

~

33 1 Lower
.
Hamilton Whole Sm9ked

'

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90

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lb •

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FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

Pork Chops •••••••••••••~.

$

.

59

1
$ 19
Steaks or Roasts ••!!... 1

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

.
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·· ·Gol·a or

2UTER

..

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U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

LB.

HOMEMADE SANDWICH

$

(

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Bottom.Round Steak~.

U.S.D.~. CHOICE BEEF T·BONE

LB.

.

RCCOLA

..

PRODUCTS

...
..
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24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

99

51b. Bog
All Purpose

•

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$419

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JELLO
•'

3 OZ REG: oR 3 OL
SUGAR FREE

$

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Washington State

••

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Coupon Expires 12/25193

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.

DEW FRESH

20oz.

••••••••••••••

2

MUELLERS ELBO ~CARONI OR

Spaghetti ...........
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GRANUlATED suGAR : ~:

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11 lo
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11 I,

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18
2o/o Milk •••••••••••••• ::~••
Margarine..........;!••••• 99(

VALLEY BELL •

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$19.9

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Umlt1PtrCullomtr

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Bowl, Sleeve or Quarters

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GRAVY

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Limtt1

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Lim~!

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Grade A

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KETCHUP
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Ste,k........................ .
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

..... 17 oz. Can
. 'Corn, Green Beans or Peas

•"

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Spread •••••••••••••••••••••• 99~~.

179
Rump Roast ••••••••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$239

limit 2 Per Customer

.-

PORKBUn

'

Limit 1 Per Customer Wilh
A $1 0 Additional PurchaM

"'"'"" 12 9Z Cons
p iet 7-Up., A&amp;W Root Beer, Sunkist,

~

FARM FRESH CHICKEN

'

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STOVE !TOP I
DR.ESSING I

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Big Bear has over 30,000 great
gift lcleas In sto,e for you!
A Big Bear Gift Certlf•c•t• Is lcleal
lty Itself or a perfect aclclltlon to
a•y Fruit; Gift or floral ~~sket•
. Give the gift that keeps on giving.
GHt CertlflcaMs cail .lte
purchased at all 'Big lear or
Big Bear ~Ius Stores.
·

~

B52B9894 H

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tMi;

'

PlusTax

2

·~

.

Proceeds from your purchase will be danoled to
Charity Newsies and Boy Scouts of America

·Santa Doll•• Now Available at All
Ill lear anti Iii lear Plua ltarea

We offer o limited edition
. kJce. It is mint condition :..

Santa's smiling
and bankable.

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By The Bend

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•

.

Sentinel

•

J

Wec:tnelday, 'De'cember 15, 1983
·
Page 10

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A tqlOrt by Viola Gculc 011 lhe
school voucher legislalion, Senate
Bill 332, and requeus by some
school boards to allow shldeniS 10
graduate without passing proficiency tesiS, was heard by members oC
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, during a recent
meeting at the Masonic Temple,
Hamden.
President Sandra Nodruff condueled the business meeting with ·
Nellie Parker, secretary, reading

M

•

•

•
•'
(
I

'•'•
M

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'

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Christmas greetings from Serenity

She read "What is Christmas?" and
there was a prayer by ft,obert L.
SteYensoil. Tables were decorated
with Christmas candles. A red
poinsettia was on the officers •
.table. Favors were packets of
Christmas c.andy. Guests were
Helen Lackey and Lynn Benschoter.
J)qrothy Rie{!C'nhOff presented
"New Dimens1ons", a singing
11roup, who sang Christmas songs
mcluding "Joy to the World",

House.

Members signed Christmas
cards for Roberta Wilson, Rita
Hardey, Nan Moore, Lucille Smith
and Martha Greenaway. The group
congratnlated Fern Grimm on ber
newsletter, and newsletter mystery
member, Margaret Parsons, was
correctly guessed by members.
Women of the Eastern Star
served a chicken casserole lunch.
Fern Felton gave the invocation.

"Deck the Halls", "Angels We
Have Heard on High", "Jolly Old
St. Nick", New Born King", "Silent
Night" and "We Wish you a Merrj
Christmas."
"
Prcsem from Meigs County
were Fern Grimm, Gay Perrin
Dorotfly Woodward, and Nelli~ ­
Parker.
The next meeting will be a· ·
carry-in dianer at the Depot, Well- '
s10n, on Jan. 22.

•

1'1HT1111·9

ICIHIIY

•

'

Gettle presents proficiericy di·lemma:_·

'"•

T\JPP,EAI PLAINS
a-le ob «rnal,

...

~

• IIIW entorcen-t,
fliNOIIII! protection,
lral!ftiiHNice, pupa 6

..

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Ktr •lhapllard
llud . . Wiol

an ad

To

COPY'OJ!ADUNI!
Moaday l'llper
'Nooilay Poper

Call992-2156
POLICIES

•

••

••

.
;

SUCCESSFUL SHOW • The November l7 musical, Meigs
County Tllent Sbowc115e, staged by the Big Bend Minstrel Assocla·
lion at tbe Melp Junior Hlzh School In Middleport was successful
l'rom every Uped IDclndln¥ the financial help It provided for two
Meigs County or1anlzat•ons. Profit from the 'show totaled
$2,933.80 wblch wu divided equally between tbe Meigs Division of
the American Heart ASIIOCiallon and the Middleport Arts Cbuncil
Sandy lannareD~ Jell, president of the local Heart Association, and
Mary Wise, president of the Arts Council, are pictured with the
checks they received Monday wheilthe proceeds were divided.

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WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTI'OM • Evangelist
Bill Villers will speak at the Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long
Bottom, Wednesday at 7 p.m.

~

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

;· ·

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.... ....
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••

Wow! I'm really impressed by
the quantity and quality of outdoor
decorations across Meigs County
this year, aren't you? Everything
looks great
While you're touring to look
over the many, many attractive
sights, do include a trip out 10 the
Walton Manley and Joe Lance
homes on Route 681. The decorations at both homes are similar and
outstanding. Walt used over
30,000 lights this year and it tonk
10 days 10 put it all in place. Just
past htS house is the Joe Lance residence which you will also find
most attractive. Walt says he turns
his li~hts on at about 5:15 and they
remam lighted until 10 p.m. A lake
at the Manley home enhances the
setting a great deal.
Now let me 'tell you how you
get to the Manley and Lance residences. From Pomeroy you go oot
Route 7-and you'll see a lot of
nice decorations alo'!B the way-to
Tuppers Plains. In Tuppers Plains
tum right at Keebaugh's Restaurant. That puts yoo on 681 and the
homes are about two miles from
where you tum.
Incidentally, you also might
want to "cross over the bridge".
Mason has a lot of good things
going over there and you'll particularly be impressed with one home
below the Wahama High School.
Trust me, it has everything. It's
beautifully done with wishes for a
"Merry Christmas and a Happy
New Year" in big, bright letters
and accessory pieces that are out of
this world-big lighted candles, a

• r

. Red Cross
$•
•'

:• '· to make "15/t
V
, .

·

,

,

1

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.
American Red Cross Tri-State
&gt;
Regional Blood Services reminds
!- Meigs County residents they have
,,.J "one more gift 10 give this holiday
season"- making a blood dona;;
•·
tion when the Red Cross bloodmo"' • bile visits the Senior Citizens Cen·
,::_ ; ter/Meigs Multipurpose Bldg.,
1~
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
''
Wednesday Dec 22 from Ito 5·30
~ p.m .
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.
:r
,
-

!

'' ..
'

~

"In collected
the last through
year 57Tri-State
.82i&gt; of
blood
Region Blood Services was from
community blood drives," said Joy
Curry, acting director of donor
resources and public relations for
the blood center. "We depend on
community visits to help us meet
the needs of area patients in nearly
60 hospitals," Curry added. The
goal for the blood drive is 80 productive donon.
One unit of blood can heJp save
the lives of 4 hospital patiCI!ts. It
can help save or proloni the lives ·
of hean patienJS, hemophiliacs,
trauma victims and ncwboml.
Anyone 17 years of age, weighing 110 pounds or .more who
haven't donated blood in the lasl S6
days, is eligible to donate. All
blood types are needed, Red Cross
offiCials pointed out.

News policy

In an effort 10 tJrovide OlD' read·
ership
with current news, the Gll•
lipolis
Daily Tri\lune lltd Sentinel
t will llOIIICCCpt
~~~ after 60
•
daft
ftlllll
the
elite
of the event
•
, ~II club mectinas and other
•
nc;rS ai1iclel in the IIOCicty ICCdon
:' must lie submitted.within 30 days
1
of oc:currence. All blrtltdays mwt
J be subinittcd within 42 days of the
.. 1; occurence.

•

..

-

,.

big snowman, Santa and his
deer headed upward, and other
pieces all done in lights. The
whole picture is great! I gotta find
out who's responsible fur the display. It cenainly gives me a lift
I want to thank everyone for the
excellent cooperation and work that
went into the Nov. 27 Big Bend
Minstrel Meigs Talent Showcase.
Not only was the show-the
first staged by the group since
1989-weD received by a standing
room only audience but it was a big
success financiaDy. Every participant can certainly feel a bit of pride
in having taken part. The show,
staged at the Meigs Junior High
School, raised nearly $3,000
which was divided equally between
the Meigs Division of the American Hean Association and the Mid·
dlepon Ans Council. The suppon
of the appreciative audience and
local business houses made it,
indeed, quite a profitable evening
for the two sponsorina organizations. Thanks, everyone.
By the way, recently I did mention that this was the fii'St year for
the association to use women
announcers with the exception of
the late Chlorus Grimm who
announced a couple of earlier
shows. Checking back through
some ~s. I noted that I was
in error w1th that statement Nancy
Sisson Radford handled the
announcing, and quite well, way
back in 1956.
A local businessman was
appalled while taking a trip up Lancaster way last week to find gasoline selling for 94.9 a gallon. He
thinks that Meigs Countians should
have scme understandable explanation as to why gasoline is selling
for about 22 cents a gallon more
here.
I explained to the caller that 1
had attempted throu~h political
channels to get that tnformation
about a year ago. I'm still waiting
for the explanation. Keep in mind
that these politicians are the people
"serving you" and who "care about
you". As Santa says, "Ho, Ho,
Ho"
keep smiling.

Do

SAMANTHA CUMMINS

Birthday
celebrated
Samantha Larie Cummins celebrated her second binhday recently
at her home. with a,pany hosted by ·
her pareiJu Brl8n and Delanl Cum·
mins. A Barney theme wM carried
out with refreshments of cake, ice
cream, chips and punch being
served.
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
Cummins, Jim and Kay Lyons, Joe,
Nancy, Joey and Rachael StoUS and
Peggy and Kathryn Cummins.

Beta Beta
chapter 'holds
Christmas party
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
B~ta Sigma Phi held its annual
Christmas party and hiJ'key dinner
at thehomeofDonnaJones.
Each member brought a SS bag
of groceries which was donated to
the Salvation Army fot distribution.
Those attending were Martha
McPhaill, Carolyn Grueser, Jean
Powell, Dorothy Sayre, Carol
Adams, Donna Byers, Carol
McCullough, Ruth Riffle, Ann
Rupe, Jane Walton, Joan Corder,
Norma Custer. Rosie Sis son,
Roberta 0' Brien, Betty Ohlinger,
Maida Mora, Clarice Krautter,
Charlotte Elberfeld and Reva
Vaughan.

·---------~---"""'-----..
·
·

Legion Post 602, will meet at 6:30 Middleport Community Associap.m. Thursday. A World War I tion.
medal will be presented at 6 p.m.,
WELLSTON • The Gallia · ,
MIDDLEPORT • The ¥iddle- there will be a dinner ~t 6:30, and Meigs· Vinton Solid Waste Man- ·
pon Literary Club will meet at 2 · the meeting wiD take place at 7:30 agement District Board of Oirecp.m. Wednesday at the home of p.m. All members encouraged 10 tors.will meet Thursday at 6:30 atBetsy Parson. Sibley Slack will attend.
the McNally-Piosburgh Building m ·
review ''The Other WISC Man" and
Wellston.
-·
Sarah Owen will present a ChristRUTLAND • The Leading
RACINE • Free immunization
mas collection, "Home for Christ· Creek Conservancy District will clinic for children ages two months ··
mas".
hold its ·regular meeting Thursday, to ldndergarten will be held from 9"'
at S p.m. at the office. The public is to' 11 a.m. Thursday at the Racint:.
. MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- invited to attend.
Fire Department by Gleana Riebct; •
pon Amateur Gardeners will meet
R. N. Immunization records to be
at the home of Jean Moore for a
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- brought by parents.
·:..
potluck dinner Wednesday at 6 ty Library Btiard of Trustees will
CHESTER · Free immunization
p.m.
meet Thursday at I p.m . at the clinic,
I to 3 p.m. at the Chester '
library in Pomeroy.
Fire
Department
for children, age
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
two
months
to
kinderganen.
Par";·.
Homemakers Club will meet
MIDDLEPORT • Choruses ents 10 take immunization records.
Wednesday at the Presbyterian from the Meigs and Wahama High
Church Annex for their annual Schools will present an hour of
FRIDAY
••
Christmas dinner, 12:30 p.m. There Christmas music on North Second
POMEROY • The Meigs Sott
will be a program and gift Street in Mi&lt;idlepQ't Thursday 6:30 and Water Conservation Distric · ·
exchange.
to ·7:30 p.m. The program is spon- will meet FridAy at 8 p.m. in the'
sored by the Farmers Bank and the Oak Room in Athens. This wiD be: ·
POMEROY • The Alzheimers
the fmal meeting for 1993.
~
and Related Disorders Support
Group will meei Wednesday from
;;:
1 10 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multi-purpose Senior Cen1er. Dr. Richard
Boone will be the guest speaker.
The public is invited to attend.

RACINE • Racine American

3101 E. 7th Street Telephone 304-424-5122
PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

,.

Daya

Word• Rate Over 15 Warde
1
15
$ 4.00
$ .20
3
15
$ 6:00
$ .30
6
IS
$ 9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly IS
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

367...a...hlre
388-VIalon

985-a-...

67 5-1'1. Pleooonl
458-Leon
576-Apple Gro•e

245-Rio Grande
2Sc.-Guyoa DloL
64J...Aral&gt;io DloL

843-Porlland
247-l.otort Folio

773-MMOn
882-N.w Hann

949-Raelno

379-W•Inul

742-llullond

895-Le&amp;art
937-BulFoiG

ly

23- Prol-ional S...iceo

32- Mobile Homa for S.Je
33- F•rm1 for Sale
34-- BWiioea• Buildlnp
35- Loll &amp; .......1!0
36- R..J Eooaoe Wanled

I 11\ \ 1 &gt; l 1' 1' 1 II .;
,\ I I \ I :-- I I •1.1,
quapm
62- Wuled to Buy
63-U-oock

IU \' I \ I ._

.667...Coohllle

41- Ho ..... for Rent
42- Mobile Homea for Rent
43- Farm• for Rent

.
I

·Um1ite(l supply of factory singer! This Singer sewing machine dealer Is offering for
· .'~e 'to the public a limited n~mber of new spe.c;lal1'993'heavy duty zigzag and open

YOUR 'PRICE WITH AD '189, WJTHOUT AD $429
..

·.

Check, VISA,

M~starCard Welcome ·

.

3- Annou•eaent.
4-- GiveawaY

A•ooo for Sale
Tnob for Sale

WD'1

~

.........""
...• .•
'

~.

'

'

•

-14- Bwineu Traini111

1- Looo and Found
8- Public Sole &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted 10 Buy

lS- Seho.ola &amp; lnalruction
16-'- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miacellaneo11.1
18- Wanted To Do

•

POME~OY,

OHIO • 992·2284

ODEtn 9 to 5

thru

HowriLWiftesel

~Remote
Control
· TV

--

20" Receiver/Monitor TV

-

Carool SC3350

.,,.~~

The Quality Goes
In, Before The

Name Goes Onf

'

'

Stere&lt;i With Multi,.Snmd Remole

• Unified TV/VCR Remote
Control
• Closed Cflptm
• 181 Channel Caplll&gt;li1y

·-

•'

•evERY
SATURDAY

5

299~

6:30P.M.
Factory Cl\oke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
111!11n mo.

O..Fum.-

j .

CNekiH.
Mltltlleport,OIIIo

125.001110.

caiiBEIIEn'S .MOBILE HOME
HIIDIS iND COOUII

Golllpola, Oh.

-..411• Toll F-1.-.n-11111

614-992·7
NITS

Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Serite

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

•TOll fill
1..00.141-oG70
IIIWII. 01110
7131191/lfn '

•DOZERS
oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Low, wide ao and 70 • Settaa

Special RIWIL Dayton
Truckload SALE Pile•

D.A. BOSTON
EICAVATIIG ·
(614)
667-6621

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVIa

CAU

4-19-03-lfn

304-773-5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

Pomeroy, OhiD
GRAVEl. SAND,
liMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

l.l.s PE1UIID
Now has beaut~ul Cocker Spaniel Pl4lllies. Also
featuring a 2 ft. common Black Tequ. Layawaya are
now available for Christmas. Sale on our entire stock
ollarge aquariums.
new ilema.

'

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100PayoW

This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

'GENERAl
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

$12
wiU be open I a.m. to I
p.m. at.tlng Nov. 24111.
r.-,..l'~or.

Call

l&amp;l nRE lAIN
33851 .... Grwel...

R-.,OW.45771
614·"2·5344
I-I00-714·nRE

7r711

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAl
Reasonable.Rates
Jot! N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138
314193 1 mo.

111241112/dn

~

Come by and register
far free Ballery to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchase

required to register and
have to be present
to win.
don~

..,.. --..

We HW Mvt •100 .....

I-I00-714·nRE

sweeper
Parts • Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Elecuolux,
Hoover, Eurdta, Tri-Star,
Regina. &amp;: most ocher brands!
Partlo Shipped UPS
Faat• Dependable Service I

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

NOVEMBER SPECIAL
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............5110
NORINCO UNI. SKS ..- ..........--.. SCJS
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE.. 5130
CALL AFTER 6:00
304-415·7256
1111211111110.

ShciAder Molrlt.. ...,'155

•

Hom ·Mount.-........ _.. '22

GUtters
Downipo&amp;da

' ··-i
_. .
·' ....
Squi
flal .........t"'"''""'" -w

.

PIE-SON
BROTHERS
.
SPORTING GOODS
'

•.
..
,.

-.

••
'•'•
•

.

.·IIIII••• "
'

•

PlUmbing '

~;
~

~;

.•

'

::.

~
1'.

~Ohio

;·•

•

... J

~IGHT HAOLING
'
I . ' .fiREWOOD
''
U1111A'IEJ).
, BILL SUCK
V.C. YQUNG''III, .
eta-2268
~· .89'2-8215'
• USED RAILROADl'IEI

,.

;, .1-~:.....:;..::=:::J

• MasterCard •. VIS8

.•,.
'

;:,,

.

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
(614) 992.·2635 • TOLL FREE 800-426-5581 '
Credft Terms • .

'

.,
•
••.

INGEL.S FUAN·ITURE -~ JEWE~RY, ~I~C.
Makes II Euyl

•

...

~.,.ristmas

~·t~~-~-~~~-;;-

31507 Aa abpalup Rei.
(11-ofUS AUS)
Pcnslr1J)', Ohk»
112-6702

Timer

Layaway
for

DlfiRoltDS

N~~~~:R

'949-2168

• AecerverrMonb

Free

.

Riggs Tree Farm

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

Gutter 'Cleaning
· P.al~
FREE E.$TIMATES

'

• 20" Diagonal

•IITSSino..,lb

..

55- Buildi"!! Suppliot

RREDEPT.

•

· -----~
::;
t.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, ,NC.

52- Sporliaf Coodt
53- Allllquet
54- Mi.te. Meuhandi.e

t:~ACINE

'

~~~CLRSSIAED
f\DS
.
...

l

.'

51- H-hold Good.

GUN
SHOOT
"

..

THE FAB C SHOP

'I In II I· ._

\11 1\C I I\ \ 1)1, 1· i 8

5- Hoppy Ado
~LoooaadFound

: ....~:~ Read'the Best
.:.•
I
..
...R~. the

.'SEALED CARITO~ISI

cut your tr11.

167

.
:: L----------L--------~~------7-------~
..
........
..
... :...
;..
..••
..
...•..... ."
.

,. ~_........ ,...,

992·3470

:r -.·:::a'!;:~! ;,
41- Waat.ed to Rent
48-- Equip•ent for Rent
49-Forl..-ae

II- Help Wonled
12- SituLion.~ Waated
13-- ln1urance

El••••nc:w ller\1c:e

Ill IS
CHRISTMAS TREES

36970 BaU Run Road

Van~&amp;4

AEIIORATJON.
INIURANCE cu••
2AHour

PLUMBING
: ·~--···; &amp;"·
;, .··

t92:701J•
·ttH5U

I I\ \\I I I I
. Opp.&gt; .
22- Moall)' lo Lou

D. . .QE

Clorol • DtMd

a•••as

992-Middleporli
Pomeroy

446-GoiUpoUo

;

(814) 112·7474
POMEROY, OHIO

IIW&amp; ... NinJH'
AU lUlU

GaiDa County
Me. County M1110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

, ..

I&amp; GOOD R).TES
DAVID ARNOLD

ClASSDUDS
GET RESULTS • FASn

44- Apartment for Rent

ann sewing machines that are made to last, and sew on all fabrics: denim, canvas,
upholstery, nylon, stretch, vinyl, silk, EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachments
needed for buttonholes (any size). It monograms, hems, sews on buttons, salin
' stitches, overcasts, dams, appliques a total of 17 stilches. Just set dials and see
magic happen without old-fashioned cams or programmers. These Singer Heavy
puty Machines are suitable for home, professional or schoolroom sewing. Twenty,!lye year warranty. FREE Lessons included in Sale Price. FREE Gift Wrap.
'

COOUIG

(on•&gt; ·

Wupul • In:
FIRE&amp;WATER

DAVIDSON'S

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

;

.

HUniG&amp;

charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card ..... .$17.00/lndt per momth
BuUetin Board.....$6.00/lnch per day

Clauified ptJKe• t:ot/er the
follmtJing telephone e:cchangea •••

•

lRIOlD'S
PLUBIIG,
OOAL~-\YORK

RATES

•. • • ;J

•-

SUPERIOR TOYOTA/SUZUKI, Inc.

...

I

"IPEaAL CA.AE"
t!Mr 1 unell

31tcM LMI!II

Tuppers.Piains VFW Post CJOS3 . f
will start having Bingo every Friday . I
Doors open at 5:00 p.m.
l
Bingo starts at 7:00p.m.
.
Except December 24th Lie. #0 128·48 ~

TlruRSDAV
POMEROY • Pomeroy Chapter
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart 9tholic
Church. For more informauon, residents maycall1-800-333-5151.

DIED CAB •.ALl

#3369ST 1985 MAZDA RX7 Black, local trade, 5
speed, sunroof, low miles.
$4999.00 ........................................ Sale Price $3999
#3108TA 1988 CHEV. CAVALIER Blue, 2 dr., auto.,
A/C, local trade.
$4,599.00 ....................................... Sale Price $3587
#3474T 1988 MERCURY TOPAZ LTS 4 Dr., white, 5
speed.
$6,599.00 ....................................... Sale Price $4992
#3540TA 1989 DODGE COLT Blue, 3 Dr., only 62K
miles, 5 speed, A/C.
$4,999 ............................................ Sale Price $3795
#3156TC PONTIAC SUNBIRD 4 Dr.,. auto., A/C, mar·
oon LE.
$6,999.00 ..................................... Sale Price $5897
#3387T 1991 FORD E~CORT 3 Or., blue, Qnly 41K
miles, 5 speed, A/C, tape player
. .
$6,250.00 ....................................... Sale Price $5598
. #3512T 1991 HONDA CIVIC 4' Or., re~. auto. 1 A/C,
51 K miles, stereo, Xtra clean.
$8,999.00 ................................ ,...... Sale Price $8432

I

1:00 p.111. Moaday
I :00 p.m. Tu.day
1:00 p.m. Wedn.Uy
100 p.m. Thundoy
1:00 p.m. Friday

Swodoy Paper

\

• Ad. oulaide the eounty your ad ruaa . . .: M prepaid
• R.ceiYe dilcount lor W paid la advance.
• Free Ad.: G'weaway and Found ad. under 15 word. will he
' run 3 day• al 110 cbarp.
• Prtce of ad for all capilalletten it doub&amp;e priee of ad COil
• 1 poialliae type oaly u1ed
•
• Sentinel ill not rMponaihle for erron after fttll day (check
for erron lirll d•y ad run•·in pt~per). CaD before 2:00p.m.
d•y &amp;(lOr publlc•lion lo make coi-reclion
• Ad. that mull be paid in advance an:
Card ol Thank.
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yard Sal•
• A cluailied advertilomenl placed in the The Daily Sentinel
(except Clauifled lLplay, Bu•in.., Cud or l..epl
Noticee) willallo •ppoar in tbo Poinl Plcuant Repter and
the Calli polY Daily Tribune, rN.chia« over 18,000 bomea

Lawrence Bush, pastor, invites the
public 10 attend

DAY BEIJlRI! PUBLICAT10N
1:00 p.tll. Solurdoy

Wedneeclay P"J"'''
Thlllldlly Paper
Friday P"J"'''

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

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

. upho' lll)·the

ByiJIPL only
S14-667·PETS

.

'

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

= • f o r .....

..

!

CLOSED SUNDAY

•

'

D~y

The

P~ddleport, Ohio

''

CHRISTMAS
TREES

AMERICAN G.ENEUL LIFE -and
ICCIDENI INSUWCE COMPANY

$10.00-h

Life • Medlen • cancer~ Fire • Hullh •

Open9to6

s dl,_t Jdndl:
Scolth, White &amp;

Aullrlen Plllllo &amp;'toW.
Hilley Hllllngl'll!danca, 3&amp;176 FIIIVOOdl
Rd., .,_II'Oy, Ohio
11/tftl -pd.

I'

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortg'Q ·

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • AiHt

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

HOUDAY SPECIAL

loK 119 .
.......,...., o•Jo 45760

$975 A TON SIZED LIMESTONE

. (614) 1431.5264

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER

I

'

10 TON MINIMUM

'

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Wedneadly, ~mber 1

BEATriE BLVD."' by~ Bnttle

Announcernrnb

71

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by La.-ry Wrilbt

•

1st93

oALUYOOP

&lt;t171 Cui.... Stop a:• IR, AC,

_,.....,.._QeO.IDUlll·
,,_

-·

,
Mrlll ..........._.., .

..... FP' ...... IO
liell!iiAcl
ol1811
_Flll'll
__
...,.
.. -

...

..

boloodon-.-,.,......,
---atat""
mlllollf'IIUCtl

PHILLIP

111precedea

Do~!-d

ALDER

C6dlllae -

44Wn!'.

+11

••

EAST

+ns•

1114 Pontltc 8000.LE, v.e, auto.,
PW, POL, PB, power aute,

.QJ!07

12000. 01 trade for lruclc of •
qual ..tuo, 11-HB!-3313.

+10 6

• JtQ g

+A It

.Ait4

+A!0871

+117
Vulnerable: Eut·West
Dealer: South

Lost &amp; Found

heartbroken. It found call

949-2no.

304·7?3-5343.
Dlcorlted SIOMWI,., Will ~~..
ph.... , old ··:::c~.aold- thor·
momlterw, old
.
a,.lqUII

388-8012.

tumHuro. Riverine Antlquoo.
Run , Moore, owner, IM-112·
2528. We buy ••1111.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Wented To B~ : St•ndlng Timber I Pine, Good Prien, 114·
388-91106.

F-. 6M-4"-1'128 Botqro 9 P.M.

Wtnled To Buy: Junk Cars &amp;
Tr:UCics AI Top Price I A_.
tOr.bll
814--388-1554.

Friday. Mondey edition - 2:00

151~ Second Annue, Galllpolle.

p.m. Saturday.

Wenlld to buy: UHd mobile

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Ucenud
166,0hio &amp; West VIrginia , 304·

I FER60T SHE WAS

homM.614-44U175 ·
WANTED: •ntlno 111r t988 FOld
Fe.tlo, 4ep., 1.3 lhlr, needed
ASAP, call 8t4-91H155, 8:30am·

5:00pm. or 614-1192~428
5:00pm.

an..

Hetp wanted

11

1\'tfJMW or want

I

..., ..., lllriiYn.

~m~eithlr

·2848

ort-100-992-8318.
AVCIII Soh NMII AI Work Or

'(OU MEAN 11M SUPPOSED
TO READ IT WHILE 'I'OU JUST
SIT 14ERE AND LISTEN ..

T&gt;IIS 15 T~E BOOK I &gt;lAVE TO
READ FOR SCI-IOOL .. 1WANT
'(OU TO READ IT FOR ME ..

Homo. A n - ...............
Door·To-Door Optional. t~
1'12-47311.
!!.or - 1 Exoollont Pay! Ao-

can

1171

clude ActlvHioo RMtod To

EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EIIPLDYEA 11/FM
NON-SMOKING .AND DRUG
FREE ENVIROHIIEHT

... -... .,.

·Friday,

Wanted- •omeon• to bruth hoa

In Aoolno, 614-14!1:
21140 •"• 5:30pm.

1

email

lot

'
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1 . _... - . m, •* Sl
mo
2111422.

Glllo

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SPEaAU Ontr Pl.lll lor d
tw. loo l'olnl ...... tar ycurY-'eTux. 3CM.eJI-40M.

far IWit, . - .

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at

clio-

lranlna, ..-,., Ill
to run
-=-~"'""*'·
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.

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DIDWffiUT\

31 OI!Mflrl
35 Greek peak
3tl Medller·
40 LUkewarm
42 llelter·lllled
43 WOfked at (a
trede)
44 Anutoxlnt
45 Enc-ln

Nicely done,
East missed a
i chance to lure declarer down the drag
to death. On the first round of clubs, he
should have dropped the 10, not the
six. Then South would have had the option of playing lor Eut to have started
with the Q-10 doubleton.
"""- .,.. 1.11'1,., lo aord-ploy q lo PbllJJp Jtlder, lo .,.,., 111 IIIIJ .._flO'
ne,.""' bo - - a a l y - t.lo """""'·

ant

85th day offall.

, HEY J HAVEN'T ..OW HEARD~
HAL.LOWEEN'S 6EeN

~~~·171-2931.

New gu tankl,

Today is t~e 349!~
day of 1993 and the

MORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP

ttas. IM.:17H721. - ....,..--~- Priced Tronemtollono,
IJooi • Nbuift, All lyiiH, llorl·
lng at Ill; ownor l;.c..24ii-M77,

Instruments

'1t?U CAN TAKE THAT
6TL1PID /~Melt( OFf'

OVER FOR WEE\&lt;6 ...

ton trudl

NCMI.

tor I, t3828 Hannon Troco Rood.
Truck_T - , I Ft. Long, Uu
New, NO, .......3541.

Fruit• &amp;
Vegetables

79

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

l otat

rrI I I
RI

ltl!lii i'.'.I IIIUII
•••*'
Wt
®'! !$ \% •" ,...~.

~
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Wt ""~ 0M

"" i l l 2ffl'
tM fW WI! '!4 - '"1 W?l

!@ !M(t

mr,

11;::&lt;

~

{$;&lt;. -

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1890, the Sioux leader Sitting Bull was
arrested and killed by U.S. troops JUSt
south of the North Dakota -South
Dakota border.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Alexandre
Gustave Eiffel (1832·1923!, engineer;
Maxwell Anderson 0888·1959), drama·
list; John Paul Getty 0892·19761, oil
developer; Alan Freed (1922·1965!, en·
tertainer·

'I t

II
The old man celebrated his
birthday "What's your
~ secret?" someone asked him.
I
"That'seasy,"hegrinned, "have
. - - - - - - - - - , good health and a short . - •• -

I

Dec. 15, 1993

5 L~ Aluminum Turbo Wheetl,
-.,...,., 11 "!rich In Diameter, 11 Inch
R;;~.r-. ...... Wide, Wll FH - . . ........

Musical

i·l 0 0 B T Y

-

I

"

~ 1DOth

G Y II I V
~ 1 1 1

S 'l 0 E R ~·

~ -"

h,-5-;..1_,_I:;._;.1..,...,....,.-16-4 0

Co mp lete lhe chuckle Quoted

.

by hllong •n the mou•ng

.

.

•

.

•

~ P~IN T NUMBE~ED

~

LETTERS IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Armory • Clash • Mecca · Number- SUCH a BORE
A man complained to his psychiatrist, "I talk to myself,
Doc.' "Many people talk to themselves." the psychiatrist
assured him. "Yea," the man sighed, "but I'm SUCH a
BOREl "

'

ttq.-, liking - . _ _ . , Ilk far ... "'
Charyl.
. . :

--

FumftMd nery dMn 2 IR.

w.t.rJtiMh ,.ld;..ln Porter .,.,

$300.00 - h. Dopoott. • ...

F II Ill( Jl

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

BUtli'IHI '

55

'

Building

SuppiiM

Plumbing &amp;
Heating .

15~__;_--~-----

446-2342 l 992-2156
675-1333

understand what lo do to make .the rela·
tiOnshlp work. Mail $2 and a long, self·
addressed , stamped envelope to
Matcllmaker, P.O. Box 4465 , New York.

GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) Methods and
procedures a1e important today, so don't
rush Into your project wnhout first thinking
a few steps ahead . To be succe[!Sful, you

N.Y. '10163.

must consistently think ahead.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) This

:.

.C~PfiiCORN (Dec. 22-,lan. ~I) This is a
good lime 1o tty to trim waste end ·unnec-

Is not a
good day lor you to take gambles
chances on persons or things aboul
which you koow linte. The odds Indicate
you might make bad decisiOns.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Unless the
guy can make a genuine contribution, n·s
best not to tum something which Is
slngula~y successful into a joinlendeav·

e11ary expenoes from your budge!.
. Unfprtunal!i'Y, ,however, inltead o1 dOing
lhls, you mlght ·splurge and be extrava,
ganl.
AQUAIII.UB. (Jen: 20·F•b. 11) Don 't
ambllrrau yourseH tod~y by requesting
~-. lavilri:,fr!im llotahottllende: You'll "h8ve a
..uur
better chance·getting help from' paiS"who or. '
CJII...Ivl_r · don't1PQiMI5 ckxil.
,· , ' ,.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Objectives
-~ u-.,.y
PI.~J!I· ~- ~•rctt, ~~A~ of will be aecomplished today, provided you
~.,i..,,
willa may lranspi!1' wflhln ·yout Inner per· can gel others lo do your bidding .
n•
I;IJoc. 11, _1913 .
110n ~· ~QW' ~er niltUre" rillthl'lirge W~hout aaolalants you're not likely to do
ln,lfie year el*d you might expen.nce you to do or\e lht!ig.,Y\Iur ..._ noble aide mUCh about lhlngs on your own.
more orportonlllee than you ha.v~ . !o. r ~!Jl•''·r; '··&amp;,·
.' · "-~~ ·~··
LIBRA (Sapt. 23-0ct. 23) Generally
qUlti I!OfT18'~. _JiltlbecaUM :t~,{l ' . ;(,lii~S:'I\Ii.,-,"dti ,Aprll lt) ·D~:t be sptilililng your llnancial trends look
profusion of.dev•lopmen!l 1 -don't·1akll • takelt'llt'by•tf cloWoilotlmtn! tOO.,•white encoureglng In this cyde, but there could
even the.lrnallell one lor grantid. ·
an auociate dengiM a' e&amp;(rOIIJ "Ihlt t,hd bt soma Intermittent bad days .
SAGR?;~I.Iti . (Nov, , 2,3-Dec. :21) Stltfe of a Btlclc. II ~·,. naive, ~ might trot ·unlortunalely, lhis might be one of them.
lo.be.paln!Ully pragmatic today or else on illl8r 11iot unattainable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Genlng In
yciu••WIIg~t lull yourself lrito. ·a mode o! TAI!RUB (April 211-May 20)· 11 ~·be ·. the lilt word could be of enormous
,{ort',11,Jic exj,aclatlona.·Sae:develop· wl.t to avoid a t:tmptlng ,P.aflilll''*hlp · lmportanceio you today, bul it isn't likely
iof What lher acl\taly are . 'trying arrangtmer1t at lhlil time "thertll'• \:Joe. . lo provide you wllh any benefits or
to petch up a broken romance? The lible conflict ollnltr-. Tho WOI'M case advantageS. In tact, you're bener off say·
Aalre&gt;-Graph Matchmaker can help you lo scenario mlghl transpire.
lng little or nothing.

menlt

-,

'

... - .

~~·

.

'· ' '

....,

-,.-

~·

. .' .

.,

.,

~,

..

..

'.

WOfdl

L...J....__;L_...J....__J_..L_~ you develop fr om step No . 3 below.

' !

ASTRO·GRAPB

21

'

ldtloM·

13·~---------14··- ----------------

'

-r-·
c-.

61 Fann'equlpment

8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'

2tl Wid• thoe

6

7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
6~--------------

'

Pus

zt

Auto Parts &amp;
1 ,..,~.;.Ac===ce=s::so:;:.,:rle:;::s__

e.. rrn Suppi!oc,
i. lt 1rs1ock

.....,.. ~-8224: .
T l T .t.nn lerllee, lawn,

W.ntod to do lor _ . ,

Sq-•
COlumn

Eul

I'

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

11~----------------12: ______~--------

...,_,.queal

24

011,!?",-

.... I T - .......ote.l227. p,.
School, ' Scltc!ct-1
NA

11124121 ""'·

JO

Marr-

22 Doallk•
23 lillie a rell-

26 5pMcl
coniHt
2 7 - - obout
28c-dltn-

..

,.....,... full o11 Rt. M3, ono m11o
- h · 01 c:.,.nlor. lied llld -::-::::~;;.;....:;:,;~.:.,,..,..
~t\!:,;:::,- opploo, ~ ll1lm' Dadgo Eucuttvo
Homo, ritno good, - _good
-on,IIOolcVOiue
_,

14111C) 2 ·lr, 1 milo South o1
Eureko, on 81. Rt.7. No pott,
..-.. ·ar.IM4ill.eGII.

Loving COre Fcir An Children
Our 11 · CJool . . Po~mme, Fut~
nme~ Fld. -wnoo Avol .......'
Coli - -llan Or Ylolt. ln-

t-800.531-14&lt;40. .

.

C.OO.C 001...'1'

---------"-I ::z:.=·c:~~~~
58

Of

~OW. IFI

H.L ~T. ~Til'£. TO DO ~I~ ,._U~T N&lt;D
flo.'( 0\11.1~1~ 51\a&gt;Pti\6... I 0\E.CJ(fp IT TWic£ ...

11-10 Hom- orgon, - I I . whMiil r~~dlal«e floor lftlts,
otc. DI AAuto, Rlptey_,_~. 304·
IUbelypo, m, 11WI5 4434.
1'12·HUort-aoo.:m;.,__
-h. ..... Bundy Cllrlnot Qood Condition,
ttDO fi4-3'J'11.2'121.

·······-•a.

61

••-na.·ca-p'
,.,_.,,
•nd 1..t cr....,. 304·m..H02

' BORNLOSER

114-e82-0.
I:.;;;.:::;.::;:;:_
_____

Salaflea LAG &amp; Butterflv Al·

llullod ......

2. _______________;,___
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___..;.. _ _
5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

JOU&lt;Mft

gFiu-•
lnetrument
10 Golf mound
12 P•ll (1.._)
11 Auld - Srn•

..

Y1m1h1 100 4 Wheeler, $1,200,

""'noW.:L.••, call"ifWi2.zto7.

, Z . - . lflllllo.

··~-

S-4

Sf-

3tiM78-MII.

Thm your clutter into ca.h,
SeU it the epty tMy... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
•
Place your clp,jfied qd todax!
15 word. or le11, 3 dpn,
3 gager&amp;, ·15,40 paid in adwlnce.

--

CINiwtlnlil ,._...

41 Houaaa for Rent

3br. -

Mill Poulo'o Dey C.ro Cantu
M-F &amp; A.M.' -8:30 P.M. OuoiHy

..

- . - . ttJO.DO, ... 114- !;,'.,,:ttOrorl~lne, S228. 114-446111 34111 ' elor 7pm. G- - · 114-161'10111.

w..kly P1y. HlltHh lnaur~
Avtllable. 1~3'7-olr7M .

thru Dec. 23rd
Open this Sunday noon till 6 pm
Criminal Records
45 Court Street
Downtown Gallipolis

5 llrtvel rldg•

e Emptrare•

,g--

Moore
8 Yele ttuclenll

47 Ol&lt;lehom•
Bob Hope is well-known. along with
lawn
Dorothy Lamour and Bing Crosby, for
48Attornerthe "Road to" movies. One of bls jokes
...1Jan•twent like this: "To give you an idea
49 Happr New
bow fut we traveled - we left Spo50 Favorite
kane with two rabbila and when we
51 VIctory llgn
got to Topeka, we still bad only two:
In bridge, many contracta require
startln&amp; quickly down the right road, a 11....1.....1step in the wrong direction being fatal.
How would you map out the play of to'
day's tbree-ne&gt;-trump contract after
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
·
West bu led the spade queen?
.,_,
.,_
.......
,.1(1
..............
c:nMed hln"
• by famous~ ~ Md ~ .
After winning the first trick with
&amp;cll....,ln
Mndl klr IMihlr. TO*f'•C~Uk T ltQUM C.
the spade king, South saw that if be at• H J
tacked diamonds immediately, he
VB L
PH P U L
TIXL
NFV
couldn't make his game. Even if they
broke 2·1, be would be restricted to
VNOIA,
XIVVBLI,
X I G Z ,
U F Z L
eight tricks: two spades, two hearts
and four diamonds. Realizina be had
I R 0
W N B R
IN F U 0
B I C L
VN
to take strides in a different direction,
South led a low club from band.
ON
N R
VBL
WI A
ULRN
If West bad ducked, declarer would
have won with dummy's kin&amp; and,
KBNS."
WHX
XFGGIA.
with bls ninth trick In, switched to dia·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My dad ralaad me on the music ot people Uke
monds. He would lead low from the
Ella Flt2gerald, Count Bule, Sarah Yeughan end June Christy." - Toni
Ter~nlle.
durnmy_and cover East's caret Therewon with the ace and
I pllay•!d a second spade honor.
WOlD
left South with only one street
lAM I
I ~:.:!:!b He led the club jack, simul·
1.
picking up West's queen and
Now declarer bad

~~og~~~- Cocbr
s.,.n~ot old, 2 ....... t:

....... -

t

Mondor

.

. ..
·- . . . ... - - - Puppy P-· Pot Shop.
Locooodln G.C. MurohY Co. Gil~
lipotio.- - · l~t.Q404,

t:"""'
...~..~~, IIOdoteon..n'
I TrOCIOfll With A - .

7.30-4:30.

tm Honda 250, 4 T.... ttu

M

2S Vooro Old With 2 Vooro Ex·
porlonco And Good MVR. All E·

IGIIIIIpollo)

......... m-.114-..sM:

,,

"

AoUible O.T.C AI: J.D. Not1h Aut am a~lll 1,. For Ford
Prad Dtdi14-441-11D.
TIUN1 1 114-446-2281 Oep; 1114·
H=en otud ...-.too, IMo zse,12t7Aftlf7P.M.

Drlvoro, Single
Or TMm Drtverw, Muel . . OVer

Oil

711115, 814-311''1043.

~-·
U
.l. Conlw For Votortnory
.... Agolnll-.
l- · T~po-wa
In Dop l - Ce1e.

~lng For OTR

Burllle

Full bl dod llbertori H..toy

', .

HAPPY JACK . TfiiVERIIICIDE: new:304-87S-4848.

Ohio S.Md Trucking Compony

At:

,

FIM Tonk, 2411 Jocklon Avo. _74==-Mo..,....;.;..lo:,;.rcy,:.:..c:.,le..:..::.s__
.....Ill; 3044/lo210t13. "'
~ tw ....,., ttl.lt. tl?2 Tanton 126, $300. - Yoiona
..........
$14,91. 2M3 OYOntnp.
llonlolora, IZ.W l Kit. 1182 Suzuki G81100EZ IIGiorEverydoy low prlooo.
ayelo, a lodopro-. 114-31'-

r1100

PeiWil

-

/1\rftJPNfY.S

-

Hu- Aide Trolnlt!l Pn&gt;gm~t
Pon•lf' . NurMif • end
Alhlblthtton c - wtll 11o otfwrlng ct. . . . In Jtnuary, hmCpm. Appllcotlono ... .
.
bOtng __,od ot 3179 Aoc;IIUrinat Ad., .p.,_, Cl&lt;l11
olzo lio llniHod. No phone colla.
Apply In
b e - tCioon3prn, .11- . st-to that ouc_ ......, o:omp~oto tho TCE
ci011 111M be ollalblo to apply tar
omplormont. EOE.

COL "LiconH Prolorrod. Applr In

AND

f~VNT

Fonl F·:zs.!. 414, HO Englno,
Auto. PI,,.., 114-446-3114.

441-2208.

...-'

PVNHAM

mlloo,
olt$1500,114915- .........

For lnwMdltt• Conakt.ratkH'I
ConwCl: Guy Morrow At 614-

Slllpplng &amp; R-Iving Clerk,

truck, 414,

ao,wo.-y,

Cr11dlt,
, IIIII,
Account
Menagement And Accounting.

Gift Certificates $10· $15· $25
Criminal Records T-Shirts $12.99
Check out our new CO
Listing Booth!!!
All Sweatpants Reg. $24.99 on
sale $14.99
Casset1e singles $2.97 evetyday
Open till 1o pm Friday

JHp plclotp

l12DD, IM 1112 11&amp;~2.
tHt Fonl Aonlotor,

AN A Mull. RnponllbiUtl• In-

Leather Biker Jackets $99.119

. FRANK &amp; ERNEST

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

oonolfty And Good Phono Sldllo

634 E. Main Streal PomerOy

DOinl8

3 ~lully motl
4 Foruchr••r
(2 Wdt.)

the.,_

Of Our Conaurner Flilana11 TMm
M..na Having A Good Pia~ To
Sltr1. Art Y'ou Selt..uotlvltld,
-~~.. ·And Enlor Dooling
With People? A Plo-nt Per·

O'Dell Lumber Co.
Vine Street &amp;Third Ave. Gallipolis

1 H•rotc otorr
2 Centret

p•per

G""'p And Fomllr Homo Hood

Knlvea
S19.99ea.

DOWN

By Pllllllp Alder

Conlflld Nuroo Aid For """'"
nmo 9 A.M. .:1:00 P.M. 13945
· S..to Routo 218, Crown CHr.
JOt!{ A-NING TEAM
Ao A Loodor In Tho- Flnonolot
Slr¥11:01 Aru, Botna A Member

Col~ore

zt
PUI

58 hell•

The Road
to Contract

313.

Case Racing Series

PBBI

Norllo

--&lt;l~al

55 Ac:lrHIllerrlll
56FIIUC4It
57 Fruit dllnko

Ill-

Employment Serv tees

temtHI Productl At Home.

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

-·••

period

54

c.,.,

Toll FrM, t-800-417-55ee, Ext.

m-5785.

53Hiflollc

Opening lead: + Q

RIGHT-HANDED I!

AVON 1 AN 1 Sht~or 32 Mobile HOmtS
Top PricH Paid: All Old U.S. St&gt;ooro. :1C)4.1111.1421.
for Sale
Colne, Gold Ringe Sltver Coin..
Gold Colno. M.T.ii. Coin Shop, AVONI All - · NMCI olllro

P~id

In
Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tha day before tha ad is to run .
. Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

8

Appllaneet, Any Other Mettll

Wtnltd To Buy: Junk Auto.
Whh Or WltftoiA Motorl. Call
l..lny Llvoty. 6M-388-13113 ;

ALL Yard Sales Must Be

Soootll
It
3 NT

" ~B~A~R!!NE!::;Y~-~...--_:_---,
• WHICH HAND
I'LL TAKETH' .
DO YOU PICK,
LEFT ONE II
l.UKEY? ~c .J

Junll. Auto't To BuY' Will Plek·Up

Reward $100! No Questions At·
Iced, Missing A 5 Month Old Aot tweiter, His 'Name Is Cajun, 6~4·

7

/2. _,.,

a o·1 Auto Part• and Sllvag•,

a11o buying junk caN I hucb.

6~4·

52 Arrow poleon

211NHg..
30-al
32 Bouthem
bleckblrd
33 Conoume
34 V•nuod•3tl Food IIIII

SOUI'II

door, tuto., AC, nlc• car, $1200,

J

150 Dllcern

lmagll\ltf

+HU2

614-192·7143:

Lost. black and tan· · German

~!rift ol
WIRIW
13 Clllch light

18 Oruellop20 =;:coulln
211nt.rH1
23 OrHncoot·
lng on metal
25 . . ,lbrlc:

+JtUU

1115 Chovr C.voller, Typo to, 2

Shepherd named 'Buster. We are

-

4a:tion
811ewt

14 Fib
15 Holr lmoge
ttl Hoi

NORTII

tll2 Fonl Fairmont F:~~ 30:1
1uto., look• and Nnl
, ••~
~ c.r, atll.lf'l9 1475, 114ot12·

6

318etller
411oo1M
44 ...... food
41 HouNhold

Of

.

So-

l&gt;t1:

37 Y-ahlwk

11

t..,Toyoco Sull'e, lor piolio, tot
hoW• poll Goltl&lt;l Clwlotl&lt;ln
on Ultlo Kyger Creed
Rood.

prtjlftiiCI,

11m111on or t.

1111· OodaO Swtion
140C),w1Mof45.51SZ
Aflo!.- P.lll. ·

· 304-111-2:131.
tHO ....bini llody Qood 2
Doon, Rune Good, 1400, t14·

---10
"'*

Oflllln,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACIIOII

12.000 mtloo,' - ·

tot , .•• 5 I

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page 13

t111 car,
Coprice
·f14.loQ..
..work
run.. IISOO,

-

... "'lnj ..........

Ohio

· Wednesday, December'15, 1993

AuiOI tor Salt

'

�Page

14-The Dally Sentinel

•

•

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· ADVERnSED ITEM POLICY-Each Of these advertised ttems Is reaulred to be readily
• • - for sale In each Kroger Store, ex&lt;ept as Slle&lt;lflcally noted In th~ ad. If we
do run out Of an advertiSed Item, we wiNoHer YOU vour choice oF a comparable
~em. when available refle&lt;tlng the same savklgs or a ratnched&lt; whl&lt;h will entitle
you to purChaSe the advertised Item at the adverttse&lt;J price within 30 days. Only
one vendOr COUPOn will be accepted per Item purchased.

Ohio Lottery

IAA AllAmericans
named

Wednesday, December 15, 1993

COPYRIGHT 1993 . THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, DEC. 12

THROUGH SATUROAY, OEC. 18. 199l1N POMEROY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT OUANT!TIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

Pick 3:
2S4
Pick 4:

606l

Super Lotto:
3· 7-8-42-45-46
Kicker:
9-4-0-3-7-2

Page6

Low tonll[htln low 30s.
Frlcl•y, high In •pper

Cloudy.
40s.

•

-a t
••

fl

Vol. 44, NO. 164
· ;MuiUmldlolnc.

Aspin's

MANUFACTU ERS'

resignat~:on

WASHINGTON (AP) - Adminislnttion officials say President
CliniOn bas settled on retired Adm.
Bobby Inman 10 replace Defense
Secretary Les Aspin, whose bombsheD resignation ended a turbulent
year of budget baules, regional con.flicts and coouoversy over gays in !he
military.
_
The announcement of Inman, a
former deputy direciOr of the CIA and
ex-director of the National Security
Agency, could come as early as today, said two White House officials,
speaking late Wednesday on condition !hey not be olherwise identified.
·
In an announcement that seemed
. to catch all of Washing10n by sur. prise, Aspin said Wednesday, "It's
time forme to take a break." Standing
. .with Aspin in the Oval Office, Clin-

opens speculation on likely successor

ton accepled "wid! real sadness" !he
former Wisconsin congressman's
requestiO leave Jan. 20.
. . Aspin is the first to leave !he
CliniOn Cabinet, and his one-year
tenure will mark !he shortest for a defense secrerary in two decades. Just
last Sunday he told a TV interviewer,
"I don't !hink there's any problem"
!hat would cut shon his tenure as
Pentagon chief.
.
But White House spokesman
Mark Gearan said !he resignation had
been discussed for several weeks.
Clinron made no mention of a
possible replacement, although one
aide said one was expected soon.
Inman, 62, emerged immedi~tely
as Aspin's likely successor. The former Navy admiral most recently was
president and chief executive officer

of Microelectronics and Computer
Technology Corp.
Calls 10 his place of business in
Austin, Texas,
were not anlate
swered
Wednesday .
Other s
mentioned on
CapiiOl Hill and
elsewhere to
succeed Aspin
included CIA
Director
R.
James Woolsey ,
Sen. Sam Nunn.
INMAN
D-Ga., Deputy Defense Secretary
WiUiam Perry and Norman Augustine, head or the giant defense
contraciOr, Martin Marietta Corp.
Aspin, 55 , who had a heanpace-

maker implanled last winter after
being hospitalized with breathing difficulties , cited personal reasons for
his decision 10
quit. He dilf not
elaborate.
One Aspin aide, speaking on condition
of anonymity,
said that he had
asked the secrerary whether he
resigned because
of his health, the
AS PIN
controversy over
U.S. deaths in Somalia or Penragon
budget disagreements and that Aspin
replied, " It's all those things."
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said it
was "absolutely crucial" that a suc·

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1994
budget
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....................................•....•..•................•................................ ; ....••.••..•..•.•....................................•..•.......•...................................

A New Washer. &amp; Dryer to,.
.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Newt1 Starr
The 1994 Meigs County Litter
Control's $78,000 budget mostly
wiU be spent on recycling, !he program's manager Kenny Wiggins
said Wednesday.
Recently, the state gave the
county a $$4,000 Recycling &amp; Litter Prevention grant. The I 994
grant is $1,500 less !han !he 1993
sum, but !he county office will still
provide the same services. Wiggins
said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- because of inflation. A 1976 law
The drafters of a. plan-to levy a placed !he ceiling at 10 mills.
temporary, st:atewtde propeny tax · Joh1110n said making lhe income
· to enhance and stabilize Ohio's tax available for schools would
school funding program admit Iiley generate another $500 million to
face a big task m trying 10 sell it to $700' million.
. !he Legislature.
He acknowledged that would
The Alliance for Adequate create funlllng ·gaps for olher state
School Funding announced its pro- programs. · .
posal Wednesday.
When the mcome tax was enactThe announcement came as a ed !11''19?2;. ~~c~eds w~~.\1
,j\Mt~~&lt;vu ~Wiiltrig--S.IawSilit'tllcikPRllllbl*no-ed · · " ~~lifaiilit "!
tn •Petry Cdiiitr:y Ill IriVlllidltC'I.he thai m~y went fCl(· P,«Jti"~
current state subsidy program. That es.
• ·· • ·
· ·
lawsuit was filed by acOalition of
"I doq'! think we owe ail ~lofiveo!!hestate'spoorerdistricts.
g&gt;: for aslung for 60 percent, he
The alliance plan also would satd.
allow local property taxes to
The jropOSlll establishes $3,662
increase in line wid! inflation, now
plus
a cost-of-living factor as the
generally prohibited, and mlll&lt;e as
mini11_1um
subsidy for eyery pupil
much as 60 percent of the state
m
Ob10.
The
·figure now ts $2,871.
income tax available for schools.
The Perry County lawsuit
·If enacted, the package would
raise $1 billion-$1.2 billion a year. claims the current .system fails to
Neal Johnson, Brecksville- meet a constitutional requirement
Broadview schools superintendent for !he state to provide· a thorough
and alliance chairman, said the and efficient education Ill every
package will be hard 10 sen 10 !he swdent.
governor and Legislature, which is
Ar~uments in the case ended
not in session, because raising early tn December after a month a
testimony. Pe!l'¥ County Common
taXes isunpopular.
. "We realtze they would have 10 Pleas Judge Lmton Lewis Jr. is
malce difficult choices. But some of expected 10 rule early next year.
· mese ideas are new," Johnson said.
James Beus. !he aJiiallce's legal
The group proposed a five-year counsel, said he expects the court
property tax that would bring in 1.&lt;1 agree wilh the lllliance that !he
about $500 million a year. Pro- system is "unconstitutionally
ceeds would pay for replacing and underfunded."
repairing buildings, mostly in poorTed Sanders, state school super·
er districts.
intendent and a defendant in !he
The plan also increases to 28.5 Perry County case, was out of town
mills in !he amount of local proper- Wednesday and not available for
ty taxes that could be adjusted collllilent, his offtee said.
••

,.. 'I 'JI1~.....,.flisfl!"'l)'i

...REMEMBERING LOVED ONES - Again this year the
Meigs County Branch or lbe American Heart Association bas a
memorial tree on the Meigs County Courthouse steps. Bows in
red and green velvet with the names or deceased--loved ones
inscribed In gold adorn lbe tree. Residents making a $5 memorial contribution may have a ribbon placed on the tree and aher
Christmas receive lbe ribboo as a remembrance. Handling the
cootrlbulions are Sandy Laonerelli, Kathy Rutchi, and Nora
Rice. (Photo by Charlene Hoemcb) ·-

were no buseS to Lucasville, making it difficult for friends and relatives Ill visit prisoners, he said.
Guard Robert Vallandingham
and nine inmates died during the
siege in April at the P.rison near
Lucasville, about 60 mtles soulh of
Columbus. A grand jury in Scioto
County began meeting last week.
Vallandingham's family has
said statements by Tessa Unwin, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, were irresponsible and led to
the guard's death. The state has
denied !he claim.

advice of every expert"
"They put the prison down
there, not because it was ·torrectionlllly sound but because it was
an economic benefit 10 a county
!hat was dying on its feet," Dinitz
said in a speech at the Leo
Yassenoff Jewish Community Center in suburban Bexley.
The population of Scioto County was - and is - mostly rural
whites, but more than half of !he
prisoners are urban blacks. They
two groups speak differently, eat
different foods and dress differently, he said.
When the prison opened, there

Ms. Unwin !Old reporters that a
death t!u'eat against guards held by
inmates was a standard warning
and part of negotiations_
Dayton Detectives Dave
Michael and Frank Navarre on Friday told the Lucasville Media Task
Force !hat an autopsy showed Vallandingham died before the comments were made. The detectives
were advisers to state negotiators
during the siege.
Vallandingham's mother,
Wanda, said an autopsy showed her
son died April 15, !he day after Ms.
Unwin discussed the threats.

UMW'President Richard Trum- but he was ready to go WednCsday
ka said about 95 percent of the night.
"I got my clothes all gathered
miners would be back on the job
.
up
last night while I listened 10 the
today.
election
results," he said. "I even
The union won its key demand,
got
my
(lunch) bucket packed
a guaranteed share of any future
IOnight
so
I'll be ready to get up in
jobs when current mines are played
out in the next few years. The the morning and go back to work."
The miners received weekly
UMW had accused the coal compabenefits
of $200 during !he strike,
nies of robbing union miners of
jobs by creating nonunion sub- which was marked by !he slaying
mas. ' '
.. ·
.
· sidiaries.
of a nonunion employee who
On Tuesday, the United Mine
Wilbur England, 47, was among crossed a picket line.
Tennant said it will be hard 10
Wodcers union ratified a .flvc-ye&amp;f about 40 union miners on !he fust
contract ~th COI1IJ!IIIIielllclonsitil shift today at a Consol Inc. prepa- for~ct the past seven monlhs.
'The bosses did our Jobs while
10 the Bt•lnoui.Cfoel Openiluj· ration plant. 'It feels good," he
Association. That ended a 1ti'lli:e . said as he beaded in for the mid- we were out here standing on the
. !hat had lefll!P !D 17JO() m~ nlght-to-8 a.m. shift. "Coal min- picket line," he said, looking at the
picket shack still standing at the
tdle In Wtst Virainllt'~ Jodi• ing's in our blood."
ana, ~n~, Oltlo,' PenriaylV811a ·
t.fike Dezzutti, 36, wasn't sup- plant entrance.
COntinued on Page 3
and ~ll'gtiUII SlllCe May 10.. ,
posed· tO repott until !he day shift,
GRANVILLE., W.Va. (AP)Coal miners weary of picketing and
· paltry strike benefit checks
retiJrned to their jobs today in
seven Slltea, eager Ill work after a
billa'; seven-month :walkouL
,
"It's been hard, light," said 39YCI!f-old Bob ll'ennant, '.' It makes
me ·feel good ~- J'm goinjl bac,It
10 work and·maybO I can pvc die
family a liUlc something for Chrisl-

. Celebrate. the..
Gift.Certiflcates. rro•n

I

.o.n---

UNTIL
£BRIS'DIAS

The county 'lllas actulllly fortu- ways speak well about !he people
nate because 24 county programs that live there . We're in a
in Ohio were not funded, he added. depressed area but Meigs County
"We don't know each year if has a lot 10 offer."
In lhe new year, Wiggins said
we'll get (funded). It's competitive," Wiggins said.
he would like to see county resiThe county litter office wiU also dents:
get $12,000 from !he Meigs County
- reduce the amount of packagCommissioners, with another ing bought;
$8,000 from state recycling grants,
- buy more recycled products
which will be matched with $4,000 - because of an increase in Ohio
locaUy .
jobs;
The annual money is spent on:
- choose paper over plastic
bags when shopping: and
-administration:
- picking up trash along the
- trade in tires instead of
highway and other public property:
rolling them off a side road.
- teaching in local schools; and
County residents may continue
- enforcing !he state's dump- to get their garbage recycled
ing laws.
through the county's two recyclers,
During 1993, the litter c.ontrol Tri-County Recycling and Mandeparunent picked up 6,000 bags or ley's Recycle Center, Wiggins said.
trash, cleaned up 40 illegal dump
Also, !he county litter control
sites and expanded the number of office maintains a 24-hour drop
community groups who adopt !he box for recyclables and will collect
county's highways from five to rec yclables each two months in
nine, Wiggins said.
either Middleport, Pomeroy or the
Volunteer help - such as 338 Meigs Local High School, he said.

- - Local briefs----.
4-year-old boy hit by car
A 4-year-old Pomeroy boy was struck by a car driven by a
Racine woman on a Welch Town Road driveway at 12:48 p.m.
Wednesday, according to Pomeroy police department records.
Theresa L. Cook. 25, Horse Cave Road. told police she did not
hear anyochildten when backing out of !he driveway and stopped the
car when she heard a bump and a child's cry, police records stated.
The child, Travis Klein, Welch Town HiU, was taken 10 Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he remains in fair condition, a hospital
spokesman said.
Klein had a cut on his forehead and scratches on his left arm and
no citations had been made at press time, according to police
records.

Man starts sentence on sex charges
A 50-year-old Pomeroy man was transported to the Orient
Reception Center Wednesday to begin serving two 18-month sentences for gross sexual imposition.
Ronald Davis was transported 10 !he facility by deputies of the
Meigs County Shcrifrs Department.
Davis was arrested OcL 14 and originally charged with !he rape
of a 19-year-old woman. He pleaded guilty to the lesser two charges
on Dec. 8 in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court of Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill. Gross sexual 4mposition is a felony of the fourth
degree .
The two sentences are to be served consecutively. Davis received
credit for 56 days served in the Meigs County Jail.

Deputies probe accidents .
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated
two accidents Wednesday, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The fust accident happened at 5:25 p.m. on Pomeroy Pilce. Glenda K. Hunt, Long Bouom, was soulhbound in her 1989 Toyota and
slid off !he wet pavement in a curve before striking a sign posL
Damage to !he right-front of her vehicle was listed as moderate.
• The second accident occUI'IIld at 6:05 p.m. on State Route 124
approximately 350 feet west of Bradbury Road. Shirley M. Wilson,
Rutland, was eastbound in her 1990 Chevrolet pickup and struck
and killed a deer that ran intO !he roadway. Modente damage was
COntinued on Page 4

'
. \

iflYiles

he said. "Your high-

:Task force head says Lucasville bad prison site
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The head of a state task force that
investigated !he deadlf riot at the
Southern Ohio COJrectionlll Facilily said the prison should never
have been built in !hat pan of the
State.
· Meanwhile, the mother of a
guard killed during !he April riot
4isputed a report about ·the timing
of his death.
Simon Dinitz, a criminologist
who headed the Governor's Select
Committee on Corrections, said
Wednesday nigh 1 that the prison
was built in LucasviUe ''against the

people involved wltli the Ohio
River sweep - made this last
year's successes possible, Wiggins
said.
"It tells me people are concerned about the future of their
kids," he said. "Together we can
make a world of difference."
The largest change in attitude
about recycling has been in youlh,
Wiggins added.
Out-of-county visitors have
complimented Wiggins on the
cleanliness of the county's high-

ways, he said.
~5~!!~r~~j~wr~ 'te • more
traSh,"

Miners return after seven-month strike

.

cessor he named soon in order that the of a request rrom military commandPentagon not be in limbo while the ers in Somalia 10send more armorto
administration struggled wilh tough protect U.S. peacekeeping forces .
national security issues such as Nonh
Shortly after !hat decision, t8
Korea's nuclear program, !he war in Army soldiers were killed in a clash
Bosnia and !he 1mpendingwilhdrawal with Somali gunmen, and Aspin
or U.S. troops from Somalia.
acknowledged he had erred in nm
The job of defense secrelary IS sending the extra armor.
even more complicated now by quesIt appeared that one of !he bigtions of participating in !he growing gest issues dividing the Pentagoo
number or U.N. peacekeeping mis- and tlie White House centered on a
sions in forbidding places such as S50 billion. five-year gap in projecSomalia and Bosnia, reducing defense tions of the Defense Deparunent's
spending while trying to keep the long-term budget needs.
forces read y for combat and social
As pin m recent weeks had difissues such as women in combat and fered w1th budget director Leon Pangays in the military.
ctl8 over the problem , which arose
Aspin had heen criticized for " bcl:ausc of overly optimistic estitendency to ruminate too much and matesof the rate of inflatioo and the
act too slowly. Perhaps the most pay rdi SC Congress has ordered for
damaging incident was his rejection the military.

.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
ANY SIZE PACKAGE

-

2 Soctiono, 12 P - 35 cenlo
AMul11ml&lt;lalnc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 16, 1993

•

•

•

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