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                  <text>Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 16, 1993

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

Ohio Lottery

Cavaliers

Football93

•
WID

Catch All The
Excitement!

•

PageS

Prescription

INGELS
992-2635

For AD Your Prescription and

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PAll ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

The Top Twenty MaJor Conege T11ms
e - NEBRASKA
7 ·WEST YIIGINIA

1 - FlORIOASTATE

2 ·TENNESSEE
3· TEXASUII
4 - NOT!IE DAilE
$-FlORIDA

e-ucu

I-AUBURN

10- MICHIGAN

Friday, Dec. 17
LAS VEGAS BOWl
F~day, Dec. 2&gt;4
JOifj HANCOCK BOWl
Sa!Ur9r, Doc. 25
ALOHA BOWl
T....,,Doc.21
LIIERTY BOWl
.......,,Dt•. 21
COPPER BOWL
T!Hndoy, Doc. 30
HOLDAYBOWI.
FREEOOII BOWl
,Frldoy, Doc. 31
INDEPENDENCE BOWL
PEACH BOWl
GATOR BOWl
ALAIIOBOWl

11-IIIAIII
12 ·SOUTHERN CAI.FORNIA
13- PENN STATE
14- OHIO STATE

11· WISCONSIN
17- BOSTON COllEGE

15- ALABAMA

20- WASHINGTON

II· COLORADO
11 • NORrH CAIIOUIA

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Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2342

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~

PEOPLE SAY,

Oklahoma ............- ............... ___ 28

Ttxll Tech ..................... _, 'D

Colofldo ----··--------- 31

Fr11no Sllta --··--------· 24

Laulevllle ·---·-----·-----··-- 22

Mlchlgtn Sllta -·--··-·-··--·11

Kanus State ···-----·-----·-- 28

Wyoming ·······-------- 21

Ohio Sllta ............................. 29
Southern Ctl ............................ 32

Brigham Young ---------· 14
Utah .................- ....---·-··· 18

Vlrglnll Tech ............................... 24
Clemson ............................... 30
Alabeml .................................. 17
Ctlllornla .................................... 21

1nc11na ...............- ......- ....- ..... 22 ·

Iowa ...................._...................... 12

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION

llchlgan .........................--·-- 34
TenneltH ---·--·--·----···· 28
llaml -·----· ·----·-----··- 29
Boaton College . ...................... 23
No1rt Damt ....................... ____ 20
UCLA ............................. _ ..,... 'D
Southern U......................_ ..... 21
Florida Sllta --·-----..----··· 24
Florida ·-----·----·..···--···- 26

North Ctrollna Sllll -·----- 1T
Penn Sllta ·--------··-----14

... c.........

Ktnluckp ·------·-------- 'D
North Ctrallna ·-----------· 18

A(lz~na ........:...·-·----- 22
Vlrglnl• ...........-----·------ 16
TIUI A&amp;ll ----·-·-····---11

1 - Scu-!em ............................................................. 94.3
2- Pacifio-10 ............................................................. 94.0
3-BigTen ...................................................................... ~t . a
4 - Big Eight .... .. .. .. ............ .. ............ ........
.. .. ~1 . 2
5- Atlantic CoasL ................ ......... ........ ............... 90.7
6- Big Easl . .. . .. .......... ....... ..
....... 87.6
• 7- Scuflwosl ...... ............................
.. .............. 86.2
8 - W.llm .. ....................................... .. . .. ..... .t .... 82.8
g- Sl1y ...............................................................:...... 70.~

West ................................................................... 70.3

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in the sin rou IIHd
at a price pou'll like.

Utah Sllta --···------· 2D

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992-3671

WARNER
HEAnNG
AND
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W11conaln ................._ ...___ 24

South Ctroll111 Sllta -··-··- 18
Ntbrlllul ·-----·----·----- 10
Will VIrginia ·· -··-·---- 23

HIGHLIGHTS
When Wnl Vuginia coad1 Don Nehlen ~ ihat ~ hla MollllainMs dido, ge11he chance to play Nebraska for
lhe na1lonal ~. k would be ,he biggest crime aver perpetrated on a cofJega loolball team,' k -ed lha1
he'd gonen a snuk peak II our mathemalical rankings. Ollhl six learns we have ranked abovt llle undelealed
MOU01aineer1, llle one !hey migllt c:ome dDsest 10 beating II Nebfllka. The way lhiRgs Sllnl, 1ht Onrtlge Bcwoi m.
wil be declared the nalional chan1Mon. and In tht unlikaly evl011ha1 West Vorglnla llampiH FDrida In the •
Bowl,
Nehlen and his boopl wil have '*Y ~ to llake a dalm of tholir own. We're slicfdng wilh Florida Sllla, 1M wk!W
playofls and wilh 1 COIII1Ion ihat lsn1 8CIXII11plishlng mudl. 1htrt'l no war to " - lor surt. Just ttri how ugly flings
might haw~ I URCIIf8818d Alilum were aligiJfl for a~ gt1111t.
The wcrd 'Caali1iorl' conlinues to IICCIIll1aly desallt llle teams !hal show up in postseason bowl games. 01 the 36
leams lhat played In bowls 11111 year, 20 ol1hllmll't returning 1hll year. Far bal1er or worH, 1 winning prog11111in major·
co1ege IDDibal ~~~ms10 bt llll'fiiiPIIuatng.
0\K lorecasting average remained consislenUy high !his season. Because olthe _ ..xpanding Oivislon I·AA, we
picked. e rec:ord IOial ol 2.370 games. 40 ol which tACfed in lies. We were r9tton 1,749 of llle rtmalnlng 2.330. a
peroen!age ol .751 .
Finally, hera's our annual ranking of the lop 20 c:olagt conferences, based on the avorage of our JIDWII' quolientslor
!he leams In each of 70 conlerencas. The Pac·IO !ought i1s war lo lhe top of lhe list 11111 season, bu1 lhls year the
So~Mleas11m Conference Is back on top lhiWlks lo !he s1renglh ol Tannessee. Florida, Album and Allbama. Here's lhe
breakdown:

10-

Ill~
••
DISCOVER WHY
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11 - Scutland ............................................................... 68.7

12- Mid-American ......................................................... 68.6
13-Yanliat ................................................................... 64.1
14-Soul1em ................................................................. 63.1
15 - Ga1eway ................................................................. 61 .11
16 - American W..t ............... .................................... 511.8
17 - Nol1h Central .......................................................... 58.5
18 • Gulf Sou1l! ..... ..................................................... 58.1
111- Mid·Easllm ............................................................ 5$.7
20 - l.ont Sllr ............................................................... 52.8

(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN
' POMEROY
992-5432

fiE BOB lARMON PRO FDRECIIT
Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Dec. 18-20,

••a

(Saturday)
DALLAS .............................. 11
**N.Y. JETS ••••..•..•..•.•.. t4
This series stands a14-l in the Cowboys' favor, though !he Je1S won !heir most recent game three years ago- and
Dallas has never played this good a Jets ream. N.Y.'s weakness is pass defense.
DENVER •••••••••.••. "...............ll
**CHICAG0 ................ 20
Tbe Bean bave bearen the Broncos four out of !he last five times lbey've played, including a 16-13 OT win in
'90. This one looks close, because Denver will find ittouglr to pass against Ibis D.
ATLANTA............................!?
.. WASHINGTON ...... 13
.
(Sunday)

In a baule of teams !hat bave swapped altitudes since last year, Atlanta wiU end Washingt&lt;in's four-game winning
streak. An omen: In last year's 24·17loss, Neon Deion returned to Ieick 99 yards.
••CLEVELAND................l3
NEW ENGLAND......... 16
Tbe Browns almost always beat !he Pattlots, but they seldom dominate: Last year !hey needed Mike Tomczak's
TD pass with 31 seconds left to win 19·17. N.E.'s offense is allergic 10 end wnes.
**GREEN BAY ...................24
MINNESOTA ...............21
Wben the Packers and VIkings met at the Metrodom&amp;, Minnesola won 15-13 on five Faud Reveiz field goals, !he
las1 one witb four seconds left The Pack won'tlose i1S fourth in a row 10 1he Vikes.
• **KANSAS CITY ............... 31
SAN DIEGO .................... 19 .
In e fmal minutes of tbeir forst game wilb the Chargers nine_ weeks ago, Joe Monlarulled the Chiefs 80 yards to be
winning TD - !he 27111 comeback win of bis career. At borne they'll cruise.
·
J
••L.A. RA.IDERS ................ 20
TAMPA PA)' .................14
Tbes~ two ~s haven't met since the Rai~ ':"ere in Oakland and beat lhe Buccaneers in '76 and '81. Thmpa
Bay IS weak m every category,but L.A. really ISO t much better, winning wllb defense.
'
LA.RAMS .......................... IO
**CINCINNATI .............9
The Beogals bave won four of 1heir six ganies against !be Rams, including a wild 34-31 OT game in '90. They're
almost-dead even, making Cincy the logical pick at horne, but we see a mild upset.
••MJAMioooH...HH000HoHOoOoooooool9
BUFFAL0oooooooooooooooooooo 2:3
~L
In late September Miami dominaled 1he offensive and defensive lines and beat Buffalo 22-13 in a game !hat wasn' 1
as close as the scoo:. Witb playoff bome fields a1 stake, Miamt needs Ibis one.

PIDLADELPIDA .........." •• 18
**INDIANAPOLIS...... l3
'
The Eagles and CoUs haven't played In tbrce yean. Afrer battling Dallas and·Buffalo and before tryi~ to prepare
for New Orleans and S.F., Pbilly will welcome !he chance to beat up on someone.
~.
PBOENIX. ......."''!"''"'""'"'.. 26
••SEATILE................. 17
)('
S~ is 0-3 against lhe Cardinals, wbom !bey last lost to in '89. Phoenix can move !he ball and sco're poinls, bul
11 s lost a lot of dose galll\lS. Tbe SeabawkS'tan't keep Ibis one close.
'
••Pl'ITSBUKGH ................ l7
HOUSTON ................... 24
.
~weeks ago Warren Moon dlrew for 295 yards and Houston's defense s&amp;:ked Piusburgh QB's six times as the
Oilers shut down the Stee!m 23-3. Wldl HousiOn on a tear, Piusburgh has to win.
'
.
SAN FKANCISC0 ••• - ........32
••DETKOIT ................l l
In two games in '91 and '92 the 49en outscored m Lions 59-9. For what It's wonlt, bolh were played in S.F., and
1lle lasllime 1lle 49crs came to Deuoit (in '85), tbey lost Not Ibis lime.
·
(Monday)
N.Y. GIANTS ..""""'""""""""28
**NEW ORLEANS '""24
It's been five years since 1be Gian1S and Sain1S last met. N.Y.'s running game is among·lhe best in !he NFL, wbilc
N.O.'s, defense is among 1he league's worst against !he rusb. Bolh need a win ..

MIDDLEPOft

1--11111!1-------------•
992·5627

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1994
Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
255 Mill

s,.

•

MOSCOW (AP) - The Uniled
States and Russia signed space and
investment accords and traded
promises of goodwill Thursday,
determined to show that political
tumult would not .stymie Russia's
reforms or friendship with the
WesL
"The mood and spirit of our
deliberations has been exttaordinary," Vice President AI Gore said
as !he ink dried on 17 agrcemen1S,
including a 300-pa~e contract
adding Russia to !he mrema1ional
space sta1ion projecL "I foiDld the
Russian leadership in a positive,
determined and confident mood,
commitred to moving ahead witb
democracy and refonn."
For all !he fanfare, !he space
cooperation deal was s1rUck monlhs
ago and Thwsday's ceremony was
arranged merely to sign tbe contract. And the new Investment
accords were relatively modest,
including a $125 million grant for
Russia to buy energy efficiency
equipmenl and new jomt U.S.-Russian ventwes in gold mining, heavy
engine manufacturing and nuclear
power plant safety.
So tbe leaders emphasized !he
symbolism of their meeting as
proof Russia was maturinjl as a
dem~, able 10 Carry on 11S foreign affans even as it copes wi lh
inretnal p01i1ical upheaval.
To make that point, Russian
Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin closed a news conference
by lhrowing his fist in 1he air and
deliverin~ a .personal message to
!he American people, not wi1h !he
scowl !hal accompanied !hat ges.
ture in !he Colil War days but the
wann smile ot an old Criend.
"There is no need 10 be afraid
of Russia, no reason to fear Russia," Chernomyrdin said.
Still, Gore took tbe Oll!K&gt;rtunity
to rebuke Vladimir Zhuinovslcy
again. The na1ionalistleader' s anureform party scored surprising sue. cess in elections for Russia's new
parliamcnL
"Neilher I nor my counb'y can
remain sUent about !he ouuageous
and reprehensible views with
which he has associated himself,"
Gore said, before comparing Zhirinovsky wi1h Hitler.
"I feel compelled to say !hat
given all of 1he experience of !his
century, anytime someone emerges
on 1he scene wi1h a claim to a share
of power and popular appeal, who
talks cavalierly about mass dea1h,
the world cannot remain silent,"
Gore said. "This is a challenge for
Russia, and 1his is a challenge for
1he world."
Zhirinovsky has advocated
reviving the Russian empire and
has said he would not hesi tare to
use nuclear weapons. The attacks
on him are designed to isolate him
as an extremist and make olhers in
!he newly elecled parliament reluc1alll to join him in any anti-Yei1Sin
coalition and risk Western economic aid.
Although he attacked Zhirinovsky, Gore said !he election
resul1S were getting belter for President Boris Yel1Sin by !he day, as
reformers and moderare independen1S make gains in parliament ballo1ing.

Middleport

992·3345

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 17, 1993

MuiUmedlalnc.

•• ,

Ball Stilt ···-···-·-·-···--- 21

Sa1uiday, JilT. I

HALL OF FAilE BOWl
CITRUS BOWl
FIESTA BOWl
CAROUEST BOWl
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ROSE BOWL
HERITAGE BOWl
ORANGE BOWl
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Vol. 44, NO. 165

Sundry Seeds See Us"

THE HARMON FORECAST

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OFFERING PRE-NEED
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Shop

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

108 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

Pick 3:
876
Pick 4:
5999
Buckeye 5:
6-9-12-17-26

UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

..---Christmas is... --......,

Planning continues
for Meigs' 175th
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SendDel News Statr

THE JOY OF GIVING • Many Meigs
County businesses aild Individuals are con·
tributlng to making Christmas brlgbt for dis·
advantaged boys and girls through the Meigs
County Department of Human Services'

"angel tree" project. Betsy Jones, Lowry
Casci, and Sberry Cbapman, left to right,
· bandied the cbUdren's gills for Oblo Eta Pbl
Chapter or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.

•
Plans for Meigs
County's 1751h
anniversary observance were furlhered Thursday when 1he committee met at the Meigs Museum to
discuss celebration plans, fund raising aclivitics and special projec1S.
Margaret Parter, chainnan, presented to tbe committee a mission
statement which was adopted. It
nores thai. tbe commiuee will give
periodic reports to !he Meigs County Commissioners and the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, Inc. on planned programs.
and designated thai. all fund raising
will be done in the name of the
1751h AMiversary Committee.
Rev. William Middleswartb was
elecled treasurer for 1he committee
and il was decided !hat all funds
raised will be kept separate from
funds of !he sponsormg agency.
Once 1he year of activi1ies is over,
then any funds remaining will be
turned over to !he Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society.
Besides Parker and Middleswarth, o1her officers elecred
were Cindy Oliveri, secretary,
Karen Werry and Mary Powell,
publicis1S.
Four new members were added
to the committee at Thursday's
mee1ing. They are Roy Holter, represcn1in~ 1he Sons of !he American
Revoluuon, Dana Kessinger, Meigs

County schools, Susan Oli:ver,
Senior Citizens Ccnrer. and Rutb
Power, Meigs Librarian. ·
.
Those four join 1he officers and
Jeanette Thomas, Joyce Davis,
Rosalie Story. Dave Oloec~.
Dawn Spalding and Charlene Hoeflich to make up 1he committee.
A sample of a CUS101Dized COY•
erlet was displayed at tbc meeting
but action on whelher to design a
coverlet and use it as a fund nisei'
was postponed until the Jan. 13
meellllg. The coverle1S ue 46 x 61
inches and sell for about $40 and
must be order in a minimum number of 225. Whether there is
enough inrerest in purchasing !he
coverlets will be a deciding factol'
in
1he projecL II 1he com:miuee
·des 10 ~ ahead wilh die
project. tben a design will be devct:
oped and colors selecled.
lnfonnation from Open Window
on wood replicas of Meigs County
buildings was presented wilh no
action being taken. It was popostd
thai. once !he logo ~ been devel•
oped !hat perhaps it could be put 011
one side of the wooden piece, and a
shon history of Meigs County on ·
!he reverse side.
Parker reported that no logo
suggestions have been received. A
committee of Dawn Spalding;
Mary Wise and Parker will work
on developing a logo and repon at
COntinued on Page 3

takinu

Inman eyes easy Senate confirmation, hard Pentagon problems
WASHINGTON(AP)-Retired
Adm. Bobby Inman is wiMing waves
of eager suppon on Qlpitol Hill as
Presidem Clinton's choice to be his
new defense secretary. He would be
the firs! civilian Penlagon chief in
more !han 40 years who previously
had a full career in unifonn.
In announcing his selection to
replace Les Aspin, who is leaving in
January, Clinton said Thursday he
believed Inman was 1he rightleaderto
help the adminisuation forge a consensus in Congress on national securi1y priorities.
"He brings to this job 1he kind of
character all Americans respect,"
Clinton said, noting Inman's upbringing as !he son of a gas station owner in
the tiny east Texas town of
Rhonesboro. He graduated from hi gh
school at age 15.
"He rose to distinction and sue·
cess on !he basis of his brains. his
talent and his hard work," Clinton
said in a Rose Garden appearance
with an unsmiling Aspin at his side.

Inman, 62, said the JOb- which good person for the job."
Sen. John Warner, R-Va .. who
he neilher sought nor initially wanted
-"won't be easy" in a time when said he has known Inman for more
many Americans think defense spend· than 20 years, said his selection indicates Ointon is "moving wward a
ing is a poor invesunent.
One of his first problems, if con- morebipanisanapproach" to increas·
firmed. will be reconciling an esti- ingly vexing problems of seuing namaled $50 billion gap between what tional security priorities.
Inman will confront many wugh
the White House says the Pentagon
can spend over !he next five years and issues, including an immediate crisis
what Aspin had said was needed for over North Korea 's suspected nuclear
weapons program, the impending
the nation's defense.
The budget problem IS believed withdrawal of thousandsofU.S. uoops
from Somalia and the worsening civil
to be one reason Aspin resigned.
Key members of Congress from strife in Bosnia.
In his Rose Garden remarks,
bothpartieslavishedpraiseon Inman.
who has held-level high positions in however, Inman said his first focus
defense and intelligence under Re· would be on the Penlagon itse lf: setpublican and Democratic presidents. ting i1 on a course thai would restore
Sen. Sam Nunn , D-Ga., chai r- public confidence.
The last career military offi cer to
man of the Armed Services Commithold
the post of defense secre1ary was
tee, welcomed !he nominatiQn and
said he intended 10 hold hearings as Army Gen. George S. Marshall m
soon as Congress reconvenes on Jan. 1950-51. By law, a military officer
has to have been out of th e service for
25.
at
leas! 10 years tO hold the post.
Senate Republican leader Bob
Dole of Kansas called Inman "a very Inman retired in 19R2

AsifiOunderscore his independence. Inman
declared that he
had vo1ed for
George Bush in the
1992 election even
!hough he did not
like Bush's eco·
nomic policies.
He went on w
say he had not
sought the job and
OUTGOING defense secretary Le5 Aspin, left,
did not waDI it, but and Presiden1 Clinlon lislen to retired Adm. Bobby'
accepleditoutof a Inman Thursday when il was announced Inman._
sense of obligation would replace Aspin, who resigned Wednesclay.(AP):
to "duty and coun try" and what he fel t was the presi- porate boards and · 'ught at the Unident's "absolutecomm1 tmen1" to build versity of Texa&lt;
bipartisan support for a mili1ary pol- .
He served in the Carter admmistration m the late 1970s as the naicy.
Af1er retinng from the Navy in tion' s you ngest head of the super
1982, Inman ran two Austin, Texas- secret National Security Agency.
based defense companies. More re- Pres1dent Reagan chose him as No.2
cently he has remai ned 1n Austin and man at the CIA. a post he resigned in
done cons ultin g work. . served on cor - 1982.

U.S. begins pulling combat troops out of Somalia
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
-The Uniled Swes hegan pulling
combat troops out of Somalia
today, starting with !he baualion
that fought in the battle !hat persuaded President Clinton to bring
U.S . forces home.
In a gray, humid hangar at the
Mogadishu airport, about 450
members of the U.S . Army's 2nd
Battalion· 14th Infan1ry Regiment
lined up in full battle dress for a
brief deparlure ceremony. They
!hen boarded a Boeing 74 7 for !he

by March 31 after an Oc1. 3
ambush of U.S. Army Rangers by
Somali militiamen Jcilled 18 Amencans and wounded 75 near the site
of a downed U.S. helicopter.
Three hundred Somalis were
reponed Jcilled during 1he 12-hour
fiJ'CfJght.
The 2nd Battalion, moving
through heavy gun and rocket-propelled grenade fire in a densely
populated section of south
Mogadishu, rescued 100 Rangers
and carried out the dead. Two sol-

overnight flighl10 Fort Drum, N.Y.
"I have mixed feelings
myself," said Maj . Gen. Thomas
Montgomery, commander of U.S.
forces here. "It's hard when you
come here to feed people and you
wind up fighting for your life.''
Although some support units
left Thursday and !he carrier USS
America left two weeks ago, the
2nd Battalion was the ftrSt combat
unit among the more lhan 8,000
U.S. soldiers 10 leave.
Clinton ordered U.S. troops out

Man giving $500 million for education reform
W~SHINGTON (AP) - Fulfilling a pledge to help primary and
secondary education, philanthropist
Walter Annenberg is award1ng
what is described as the largest
grant ever made to public educa·
lion reform.
A Whire House ceremony was
the selling for today's formal
announcement of !he grant, ex~t·
ed to to1al $500 million. PreSident
Clinton, Education Secretary
Richard Riley and olhers planned
toaltelld
The ~rant comes on top of a
$365 m11lion gift !hat Annenberg
gave 10 three universities and a col·
lege .prep school in Itme.
"I kept on reading about so
many youngsters witb knives and
revolvers and lhreatening !he lives
of teachers and !hat began to upset
me," Annenberg told The New
York Times in a story in loday's
editions.

"I felt I had to drop a bomb on
the situa1ion to show the public
what needs 10 be done,'' he added
Annenberg told Tbe Tinies !hit
$50 million will go to !he Coalition
of Essential Schools at Brown University, a network of more than 500
secondary public schools. The
coalition's founder, Theodore R.
Sizer, proposes !hat schools give
teachers and sluden1S more freedoms to teach and learn in their
own s1yles and lbat schools involve
paren1S to a gn:arer degree.
The rest of the grant wUl be disttlbuled:
-$50 million to go 10 !he New
American Schools Developmenl
Corp., !he Times reporled. It is an
independent, DOn·profit group created by federal legislation under
1he Bush
.
. adminisuation,
b
dipromot1ng
mnovauon y awar ng pan1S to
encourage new educatton programs. Annenberg was among

•

those appoinled 10 lhe ftrSt board of
directors.
--$1 S million to !he Education
Commission of !he Stares to help
state and territorial governments
carry ou1 education reform, The
Washington Post reponed today.
-The remainder will go to edu·
cation organizations and associations to overhaul school bweaucrades and improve curriculums,
teaching and student achievement,
the Times said. These organizations have not been selecled.
A news conterence was scheduled £ollowing !he White House
ceremony with Theodore Sizer,
director of the National Institure for
School Refonn at Brown Universi·
ty, and David Keams, chairman of
1he New American Schools Development Corp•

diers Jcilled and 32 wounded were
attached to !he baualion.
The bloody debacle that
stretched into !he morning of OcL 4
was a low point in !he mission thai
began on Dec. 9, 1992, when U.S.Ied multinational forces landed to
protect relief suwlies to a country
where 350,000 died last year from
famine and clan warfare.
The humanitarian mission
turned into combat when clan leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid began
opposing U.N. efforts 10 organize a

new government and launched
ambushes and attacks from June
until !he October baules, when he
declared a cease-fire.
About 2,500 U.S. troops, 30
pcrcenl of !he total force, ue 10
depart before Christmas. Two of
the three U.S. bases will close next
month. U.N. military commanders
have been scrambling to replace
the formidable air power, intelligence ne1work, and logistics sup.
port the Americans will 1ake wilh
them.

....---Local briefs-vinton woman cited in crash
A Vinton woman was ciled on charges of driving under the influ·
ence and failure to con1rol afrer a one-car crash on Price S1rong
Road in Salem Township this morning around 4:46.
Belinda R. Roush, 29, 27376 Price S1r00g Road, was southbound
when her car went off !he righl side of 1he road and crashed into a
ditch, according to a report from the Meigs Coun1y Sheriff's
Deparunent. The wreck took place about one-half mile from S.R.
124.
No injuries were reported. Damage to Roush's 1978 Chevrolet
Malibu was listed as modenlre and disabling.

Youth's car hits utility pole
A Middleport youlh was 1rcalcd for minor injuries following a
one-car accident on West Main Sttect in fron1 of the G'lll Telephone office in Pomeroy around 12:04 a.m. Friday.
James P. Coun1S, I7, Middle Street, was westbound when his car
slruck a relephone pole after he momenlarily reached for an object
on !he Jl8SSCIII'CI' side. according to Pomeroy police reports.
He was D"1JIISPOifcd by 1he Pomeroy squad of the Me~s County
Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Ho5p1tal where
he was treated and ~eleascd. The entire front passcnaer side of !lis
COntinued on Page 3

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:C ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stleet
Pomenlf, Oblo
DBVOTBD TO 1'IIB INTIJIBSTI OF111E IIEIG8-IIASON ARitA

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Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

U!Tll!RS OF OP!NION are welcome. They lbould be leu 1ban 300
words. All lenen ""' subject to editing 111d must be signed with name,
addross and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letren
should be ill good taste. addlouilla i.uues, not personalities.

It '

Cartoonists
:._chronicle 1993
~:with art, wit
By Andrew BeDell
Jab, poke, stick, skewer, Jl1)d, pinch, slice, dice, cu~ lambaste,
lampoon, chortle, belittle, smack, slap, wallop, ridicule, scorn,
mourn, embrace, crilicize, satirize and eulogize. This is the spiritual
vocabuJarr of an elite group of newspaper men and women: editorial cartoomsts.
It is an unusual !alent to combine art and a line or two of prose to
express an opinion oo current events that is winy, succinc~ and
more often than not, humc:rous.
Ninclccn ninety-three offered fodder aplenty for !he ink cannon
of editorial cartoOnists. I'Msident Clinton •s inauguration and his
mercurial first few months in office, Hillary Rodham Clinton's
active role in the administnlion; deployrpent and death of American
·- troops in Somalin; continued human tragedy in Bosnia; heallh-care
'· reform; the economy;_ the aagic events in Waco, Texas; gays In !he
" mililll'y; the Brady bill, youth violence; and NAFTA are just a few
of the events that shaped the year.
Ed Stein, editorial cartoonist for the Rocky Mountain News. says
of all the prominent events and people of 1993, the Clinton presidency has to be the big story, startmg with Clinton's lofty goals.
"Right from the beginning, the Clinton administration had such
high hopes, then an inept start. Then came a period of recovery, and
now it's solid," says Stein. "This is the most enduringly interesting
Story to watch."
For Jeff Stahler, cartoonist for !he Cincinnati Post, the CliniOn
presidency also holds special interesL "This was my first opponunity 10 wuness an inaugmalion," he says. "I !hint thai's a justifiable top story." Crossing media, on the mornin¥ of the inauguration, Stahler was a guest on "CBS This Morning ' and drew on the
air.
"The one thing lhat stuck with me was giving Clinton a bit of a
honeymoon," say Dan Lynch, of the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette.
"We're terribly tough on guys." But on the other hand: "I miss
Bush and Quayle. They were letlifyiljg me." But,give Clinton time,
he adds. "I'm looting forward to a fUll year."
The a:onomy and health care are two subjects that are here for
the IODJ. nm. "The economy is the one iSsue I focus on the most,"
. says William Costello. "I feel the angst of my generation." Castel:· to, 26, who does not have a posilion ata newspaper, says, "You go
· to college, F_Ct a degree and an: unable to fmd a job... that's the
· economy. It s the most imponant issue of my generatioo."
Editmial cartoonists return apin and qain to address the health- care crisis, and thenl's no end in sigbL "!think we'D see some kind
• . of refoim in thO coming year," says Stein. "It won't be all at once,
: but I think the ecoaomy will improve enough to mate healdl care
• :not hurt so much." ·
·
lf there Is one threa!1 that nms through all editorial canoonists'
work, it is the ability to cuttingly address socielal problems, including P!'!erty. violence, guns
cults.
• The most distreSSing story to deal with was the tragedy in
- WfltXI," says Ella Hulme, of the Fort Wirth Star Telegram. Hulme
says Texans were particularly sensitive, but as with olher political
cartoOIIiats, she rnanaacd to seize on an idea of relevance. ''My last
ClKIOOII (on cult leaa' David Koresh) was !hat the children of die
·Branch Davidianl had no say. They were victimized.''
Calvin OIOildahl, of the Ogden Standard Examiner, sees guns
and glin-related violence as a key story that will continue to evolve.
"People are weakening on the gun issue. The NRA is tiring,"
Grondahl says. As a cartoonist in a Western state, Grondahl has
many readers who believe in the rights of the individual to bear
arms. TIWI, he says, mates gun control an even more important subject for him. "But die problem is just not in the big cities anymore,
and people are starting to realize that, too," he explains.
With the passage of the Brady bill into law, Dan Lynch sees
some imminent actioo. "The gloves are really going to come off
with the NRA in the coming year," he says. "It's going to happen.''
.
It's not all gloom and doom for the editorial cartoonists, however. Don't forget all the fads, fashions and !rends they give their own
~spin to. Jim Berry ("Berry's World") says he likes to keep
m toUCh with "average folks." •
··
.

ana

Let's I8'J it'• 1!160: ~the devil
.A sr.c~·early.~ welllld ~' ;a
has jliSl appointed a comm~ttee !0 add tbe pa~eilts iil-lhli_padan's
worsen the problem of cnme tn mealal hospillll to die mtx 1!1 f1ot..
~erica to the point. of unend!D'tl· sam and jetsam a~ready on the
bt!tty. What steps mtght the committee lake?
.
One obvious. step would be to "• HUn ._,
,.
.
persuade the S~ Court to OUI·
law, as unconsutuuonal under the streets. The
Civil Libi:l-First Amendme!JI. the vagra~cy lies Union and otb.et gqir:dians oflaws thst_the pollee had.fnl!n "!DC individual rights were h1ppy to
tmmemorial used to ~ ?vii .lead this crusade. Psychopaths of
order. Under them, susptc1ous every variety are now on the loose.
types hanging~ on street cor- Third, the committee would surely
ners could be quesnoned, searched recommend e~ lhe·USC of
for iDegal ~capons, and arrested or · drugs - ·first manj11ana (which
sent on dlea way.
could be pooh-poohed as hatmleSs)
Thanks to the Warren Court, and then a nood of harder drugs
those days~ over. "Hangin' out" culminating ii'l· C1''1-~k . cocaine,
ts a way of tife, !ffid there are bums, whose users. wdl kill to finance
vertical and ~nta! •. all over the their habit and thea till&amp;&amp;ain under
streets of Amenca s c1ues.
the drug's malignant influence.

Americ'an

Agrees with Freeman's column

..,Ide

Where the heart is...

...

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· ,· · · :. . Page . 2-;~ ~ly $entln.el
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Bul ~ measures -~~ m~g
life. bi America•UJ)iei ilid'riSkier,
couldn't be expected to have their '
. maximum irn)liCI without the coop- ··
eratioft of the penal system. so the ·
committee would get to wort on
the judicjal JliDCqiS..:.... matiAI: plea ·
bargains; 11nder whiell felons are·
allowed to plead goUty to misde· •·
routine, and substi!U,ling·
parole and probation for haid ume.
to the po\nt where murderers are
sentenced to IS or 20 years in
priion btn serve on)y fl\'e or six.
Under tbis all-forgiv.lng system
Damian Williams, who slammed a
brick into Reginald Denny's sJrull ·
during the Los Angeles riots (and
.who aow admits he -hadn'-t even
·heard about the poUce acqultlals at
the time, but was simply ''!)aughl
up in the rap_lltiC~'). was SC~~te!!Ced
. •.

meanors;

Satul,'day, Dec. 18 · · ·

. .

Accu· Wealhcr" forecast ror

dow. The dark sty had already
paled a little in its frame of c~­
pint chintz. Eternity framed m
domesticity. Never mind. One had

eternal values, so do we loot
year: The handle of her bedroom
around at llie·family scenes ln ()U(
door being turned just loudly
homes oi'l Christmas morning. Lite
enough to wake her up but softly
Mrs. Miniver, we find "elemity
enough not 10 cotDJt as waking her
framed in domesticity." And we
up on purpose.
get our surest intimation !hat earth
"'Toby! It's only
after six. I
and heaven are one.
did say not till sevea. .
On another note, here's a loving
"A few moments later another to frame it in somelhing, ui see it at- recollection by a woman named
head appeared round the door.... all!'
Agnes:
And then a third. The old transpar·
That would mate a good Iitle "I had always dreamed of openent stratagem had worked to per- "Eternity framed in domesticity" ing my presents on Christmas
fection once more. There was noth- - for the fnt Christmas in Bethle- morning and fmding a fur coat in
ing for it but to switch on the hem, when, BCCOI'I!ing to Christian one of the brighdy wrapped' packlights, shut the windows and admit beliefs, God toot up his abode with ages. But fur coats are exoen•iv-.
that Christmas Day had insidiously the human family.
and I knew my husband couldn 't
but definitely begun.••
Of that first ChriS!mas, Phillips affcmone.
These are the opening lines from Broolcs once said: "A father and a
"On this Chrisunas morning, I
the chapter "Three Stockings" in mother and a child were there. And was more sure than ever there
Jan Struther's 1939 novel "Mrs. the animals. No religion !hat began would be no fur coat under the lree.
Miniver," the StoJY. of a middle- like that could ever lose its charac- My husband had been ill with heart
class English fam1ly just before ter. tt
trouble for much of the year.
World Warn.
For those of us who are Chris"So after I had opened a 5Here is more from !hat passage tians, it is the same with our own potDJd box of chocolates, a pair of
on Chrisunas morning:
Christmases. It is at this lime of fine tid gloves and a sheer nightie
"This was one of the moments, year that we surround ourselves (John had never lost that gleam in
thought Mrs. Miniver, which paid with the intimate tokens of home his eye), I went over to put my
off at a single stroke all the accu- and family - the simple pleasures arms around him and thank him.
mulations on the debit side of par- and the special people m our lives.
'"There's another box for you
enthood.
As it was in Bethlehem, the behind the big chair,' he said as I
"She looked toward the win- Christian world's fountainhead of

F

Geotge R. Plagenz

PA.

oil~

'''
•' 'IColull!buS
14 s• I

WVA .

ftlc.__

Dreary weather to
stay through Saturday
By The Associated Press

.

Cloudy skies will cover Ohio snow showers. Lo~s 25 to 30. Highs io
tonight along with a good chance of the middie 30s.
rain. Lows IOnighL will be mainly in ArOWid the nation
the upper 30s.
· The ftrst flakes of what promised
The dreary weather will con· tobecomealhinblanketofsnowstarted
linue for most of the stale SaUtrday. falling today over the Rockies and
Light rain or drizzle is expected Plains as remperatures wrned cooler
over most regionS of Ohio. A litde throughoul the nation.
snow is possible over !he northem
Blowing and drifting snow was
and weslem portions of the state expected in Wyoming, Nebraska, !he
., doring the afternoon as colder air Dakotas and Minnesota. Snow was
spreads in. Highs will range from already falling this morning in Casper,
around 40 over the nonhwest to the Wyo., North Platte. Neb. and Bismark,
mid-40s over the southeast
N.D. One to five inches was expected.
The reoord high temperature
Meanwhile, temperawres plum·
forthisdateattheColumbuswcather meted across the nation as Arctic air
station was 67 degrees in 1984. The thathasbeenrestrictedtoCanadamade
record low was minus 12 in 1989. its way south.
Sunrise this morning wasat7:48
There will be sunshine in the East,
a.m. Sunset will be at5:08 p.m.
but a large area of clouds will cover
Soutbem Ohio
most are;~s, from the ndl:them Rockies
Tonight ..Cioudy wilhachance to tl!e Mississippi and Ohio valleys.
South
Most of the West was expected 10
of rain. Low in the upper
; winds Sto 10 mph becoming south- be dry and tranqil, with offshore wind
: wesL Chance of rain is 40 percent. bringing sunshine to the coaslal North·
'
Saturday ... Cioudy with a west.
chance of rain or drizzle. High in the
•Temperarures were forecast in the
~~:~:40s. Chance of min is 40
and 30s across much' bfthe Norlh,
reaching into the 40s in southern New
forecast
England and the Ohio and Mississippi
Sunday ... A' chance of snow. River valleys. Highs in the 50s and 60s
1u&gt;ws around 30. Highs 35 to 40. were expected across the South and
Monday ...A chance of rain or California.
;I srtow showers. Lows around 30.
The high temperature for the na·
Highs around 40.
lion Wednesday wus 78 degrees at
chance of rain or
Texas.

'

hu!!f.ed him.
' It was a big .box - the lcind a
fur coal would come in. But I knew
it couldn't be. But it wast And il
was beautiful.
'"Pul lt on,' he said. My hair
was up in curlers and I had a
bathrobe on. I was just about to
mate breatfasl for us.
'
'"Oh, not now, John,' I said.
'I'll y;ear it for you when we go out
tomorrow night.'
"8111 he insisted. And so I made
breakfast thst Chrisunas morning
in my house slippers and fur coat!
"I am glad I did. That was the
only lime John was to see me in the
gift I had waited for so long- and
the gift he had wailed for so long 10
get me.
"l tool: him to the hospilal that
night. He died the next morning.
"It was my saddest Christmas.
And my happiest. The'memory of a
day like lhat can last a lifetime.~ ·
As Dostoevsky said, "Even one
good memory can be the means of
saving us."
Copyrlghl1993 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

30s.

20s

1

~ EMS responds

to 12 calls

:

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
; responded 10 12 calls for assistance
; between Wednesday and Thursday
; mornings. Units responding includ·
. ed:
; . Wednesday 8:44 a.m.
: Pomeroy to Children's Home Road
• for Della Norton who was trans·
: ported to VMH; 9:27 a.m. Rolland
: to Meigs Mine 2for Orville Clonch
who was treated at the scene; 11:20
. a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing
. and Rehabilation Center for Mabel
· Pickens who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospilal; 12:48
· p.m. Pomeroy to Welc~ Town Hill
: Road for Travis Lee Klein who was
transponed to VMH; 2:10 p.m.
· Middleport to Rutland Street for
Noel Herman who wis transported
to Holzer Medical Center; 2:27
p_.m. Bas}lan Volunteer Fire
Department to Perry Run Road for
an electrical fire at the Gerald
Moore residence; 4:47p.m. Rut·
land to Swick Road for Rufus Well
who was transported to VMH; 9:20
p.m. Rudand to Salem Stteet for
Lena Carpenter whO was transpon·

Consider this rough truth: Most
of today's labor chiefs call them·
selves liberals, but react with
unabashed cOnservatism when confronted with change. They would
do well to lake a course from Professor Fraser. "!tell my class
'Never ~esi~!. new technology 0 ;
automauon, says Fraser. "You
have to accept the inevitability of
change. Labor's fighl today must
be to mate change wadi: oo behalf
of the working men and women. ••
Copyrlghll993 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

The Daily Sentinel

Berry's World

F\lblithed ,.,..,. .n.nooa. Moaday tbrouab
Prldoy, tlt CNt St., .......,.. Oblo by tho
Oldo V.U., Mlllblq Coqwy/Mt•''"Md'•

lllo.,

ro.....,,

-

Oltlo

4'769, Pll. !19:Z.2 U6.

oJ.-pald IIPoiDIIOy,ottlo.

Tho Auocillttd Prill, IDd !111 01tJo
- - AltodalloD, N.UOUI Ad-iq
-

.... .

._,1111,., B...twa Newtp.- - ·

Yet that 2-ton nuance was lost
oo Kirtland and his labor luminaries. Somewhere in the battle, the
once-enlightened AFL-CIO president began viewin!J darkly all who
dared disagree With him. Union
leaders thteatened to CUI off Sup·
port of aU who YOlC&lt;I for NAFTA,
and when Clinton properly criticized that, Kiltland blasted him for
havina "abdicated his role" as
head of the Democratic Party. Now
the AFL-ClO warns It might challenge Ointon for president in 1996.
Meanwhile, labor hopes Clinton
will support reforms including a
ban on permanent rep14cement of

slriters.

gning to let bygones be bygones as
far as NAFTA is concerned. I am
not giving a dime to any candidate
who voted for NAFTA, and am
going to redooble efforts for those
who actually suiJIX)rled us. I am not
going to forget Iii'AFTA.''
Clearly, Doug Fraser is, to his
very core, pro-union, pro-working
men and women. Why are Kirk·
land, Bywater &amp; Company unable
to accepl that President Clinton
was motivated by the same concerns?

t:,•

Area

-----Briefs... ---...,

Why union·s must labor to c_
hange
would benefit gready by getting rid
of Mexico's 25 percent tariffs on
lrUCks and its strict Mexican-amtent requirements. ·
"Now, I know I'm arguing
against the auto union,'' Fraser
_said. "But !think back to the days
of Waller Reuther, and I ask
m~self: How would he have argued
thts? And I think he'd have said
!hat a rich nation has an obligation
to help developing nations. And as
!hat develcping natioo prospezs, iiS
people will become tremendous
cusromers for the United Slates."
So, the IJOSpel according 10
Fruser containS this crucial lesson
for his one-time fellow labor
chiefs: No side in the NAFTA War
had a monopoly on serving work'ing middle-class Americans.
NAPrA was not a test to determine
who was the greatest friend of or enemy of- labor's rank-and-

Th~ follow\na caa.e• were Bentley, C'olumbua, speed. $30 reaponsibUity ection sUI(Ielllio11, P"''*"~ to-line dayi $250 i:l. &amp;»
resolved Wedneldiy In tfle. Wd&amp;l r~ll; WUiiam L. Abllfll:k, · $200 plaa coati, aix mQath~ and til'ef dayt jlilllWI"J'~"'!:
County COurt of Judge Patrick It """i(;it£' lOll belt. $2!1 plua COIM;
~ to 1hrec daya, two
completiaa rll'CiillaltJ.IInlllllleiJI
~·-~=~ were; Teuy Wa~Jh,
. A. Slsaon; Jdiddlepon, ~·9&lt;?-daY vehicle i~- pqrm, 110--day OL llilpenlillli. ,
Pom.ero.y, llitoounf a cJeer froill a rxl1 'pu~,l«~, SIOO pl111 CWII; · _, 530• rellltution; Callare to coa- one ye~~r P"""tim;
~
leC!It 'c aiW, $35 plua COlli; Man ""'•
J)IUI ~ Jlllles Menon
'l1tomU SWiil, Racine, uuuJC,.
fi!OIOr ·vehicle, $· 00 pi~ c:o'ats; Lewis, MiadJ,epoJi domeltic: vio- Jr., Pomeroy. unufo vehicle, S!l six montha iusp:qded to 16 dayt:
.f~na~ ~~~~~:.:;~~= lenc:e, $100 pluS costs, 10 Clays WJ Jlut coati; Jobn E. Schultz, · credit fir time arived, COlli oaly;
hun~gdeeroc· ·"''ft"~llllidng ·suspended with credit for time'
orumouth, ·~· belt, S~S
Jnteph Pa)'IIC, St. Albini, w.va;,"
-f..
•
rerve~ • . one year probation, COltS; W~ Smith,~.
• draa pu:aphcmalia, $100 plutt
in lite htinlina o ~ Without a restratnmg order; K1mberly E. ed firearm in mo10r veh1cle, $40 coati; WiiUP! H. Howard, Bi(£.;
valid 4eer permit, $25 plua c_olll; H 1 A·"
... ·
J.ohn 0 . Prindle, Collllllbua,. seat
a e; ...ens, speed, $30 plus PI~ COif-·..
well, .peed; $30 plus costs; WaYJt;
· bell, . 525 pl_us cosll; Victoria . cosll; B.icbard A. Moore, Racine,
Kyle Woodl. Pomeroy, failure B. Brown, )fillinaron, Mich t,pPndle, Columbua, seat belt, SIS ieat belt, $ZS plus COlts; Patricia A. to confrQ!, SIOO plua cosll; Kathy apee4, $30 plus coati; Kathy If
plus eostl; Josep~ D. Covey, Net- Ro~1on, Atllcns, speed, SlO"plas ~· PointPlCU811t,J)OSaston Gf Martin, Cam~ridge, speed1 $3p:
son ville. no hunters cilllitge, $2!1 costs; _Larry L. MCgrath,· Shade, illepl ~parts, SSOO plus COSU. plua COlli; J-o11 A. W:alker. Pickett
plus costs; Yvonne M. Wil1on, seat belt; SIS JIIUI COlli;
$250 of fme suapended, 60 days mgton, seat belt, ·$1!1 plus colt$;
· Wilbur D. Barnes, New Lexing- jaitltl8pCIIded, huntinllicenle
.
1111- Jack R. Walter, Pickerington,·
Point Pleasant, W:Va., ·assured
clear ilistancc. sib plus COilS;
ton, S)ll)ed, $30 plus COlli; Michlel pe~~ded' two yem, inuat complete SJ1C11!!, $30 plus to11a;
:
Chartes· P. EsterJy, Cincianati, Bolin n, The Plains, failare 10 con- hunte~ safety coutiC before license
FOrfeiting bonds were Jasocir:
s)&gt;CC!I, $39 plus cost$; Brenda S. ~.$)plus COI!Ii Norma TClltCI, . can b'e obtained;.spotllght-lnd Park, SL Mary's, W.V.a., log bOok.
Berry,. Logan, speed, $30 plus Middl~ SP,Oed. S3ll plus cos11; · firearm forfeited; spotlighting, violation, $85; Kadlleen Schwa~ .·
costs; David Anthony Jergons, Larry Eakins. Pomeroy, seat belt. COlli oaly; Allen KinJ n. Middle- Jackson, speed, $68; Tiinothf
New Bfiihron, Pa., apeed. $30 plus $2!1J.lus COlli: Lee Cidle, Cllfton, poit. driving under the infl~e, Neutzling, Racine, speed. $70 pit$:
costs; Rober! It Johnston, (;olum- W• a•• speejl., $'20 plus costs; SSOO plus cosll, .10 days jail sus- costs. · ·
•
bus, - ·... , $30_plus costs·, Bryan Christine Oruour, The Plilins,
·
•.,...,.
·
speed, $20 plul costs; Tammy Bar30
deaths.------~-·
~s~rK';th~K.Tc~w~• J~ ley, assured clear distance, $20
plus costs;
son, speed, S30plus costs; Michael
Keith Barrett, Pomeroy_, _s_eat Charles Hatfield
Rufus Jewell
W. Phalen , fturricane , W.Va., belt, $2S plus costs; Ronald Eakins,
speCd, $30 plus costs; Matthew S. Racine, driving under financial
Charlet R. Halfleld, 47, of RutRufus Britton Jewell, Sl, of.
land, died Thursday, Dec. 16, 1993,
at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Middleport, died-'Thot'llday, Dec ·
16, 1993, at Pkalmt Vllley HialpiPomeroy.
Born in Mason, W.Va., March tal in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born May 8, 1935, in Duc...MI:
Continued from ~•ae 1
S, 1946, son of Bertha Eileen
non
County, Va., son of die late
1983 Olevrolet was heavily damaged, accoiding to pollee reports.
Eskew Half'!eld and the late RayHenry
C. and Bertha Mae Pruitt
CouniS was cited for failure to maintain conuol and no proof of
mond Hatfield, -he wu the owner
insurance, according to the Pomeroy Police dispatcher.
and opera1or of an excavating busi- Jewell, he wu a coat miner for
ness, a Rutlind businessman and Southern Ohio Coal Co. at Meigs
was a veteran of the U.S. Army, Mine31.
serving from 1963-66.
He is aorvived by hiS wife, EveA Mason, W.Va., man was injured Thlnllay morning when his
Besides
his
mother
he
is
sur·
lyn
Fae Hale Jewell rl Middlqlort;
vehicle struek another vehicle and an embankment, the Galliavived
by his ftanee, Jane Rope of son and dauglll.er-in·JaTi, Ryan and
Meigs Post of the Slate Hidtway Patrol reported.
Rolland; a son, Michael Hatfield of Carol Mabr I( MiddlepOrt; daueb·
. David K. Neutzling, 40, Mason, W.Va., was transported by
Rutland; a daughter and son-in- ter and son-in-law, Loretta IDtl JJirMeigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial
law, Darla and Gene Humphre&gt;: of ney Reed of Chattanoop. Tenn.,
Hospital where he was treated and released.
Pomeroy, and two daughters, Kim- and a grantlaon, John, also or Cbal·
A~rding to the accident report, Neulzling was eastbound on
berly Hatfield llld Charlene Renee tanoop; four brothcn: JOieph H.
State Route 12A in Rolland Township, following a vehicle driven by
Hatfield both of Goldsborough, and Harold Jewell, both of Indiana,
TerriL. Haynes, 36, 31685 Noble Summit Road, MiddleporL
N.C.; three grandchildren; two sis· and Henry C. and Curtis Jewell,
Haynes stopped for a westbound school bus loading children.
ter and brodier-in-laws, Judy and both of Michigan; five sisters&lt;
Neulzling was unable to stop in time and struck the rear of Haynes'
Dick Simon of Brookville, and Daisy WalletS, of Colorado, Bulah
vehicle. He then lost control and ran off the right side of the road.
and Duane I ohnson of Hill:h, of Indiana, Mable White and
Joyce
The vehiclo struck an embankment and overturned onto iiS side .
Chanute, Kan.; a stepdaughter Gay Smith, both of Virginia, and
Neulz~ was cited for failure to maintain an assured, clear disKathy Rupe of Rolland; stepsons Mary York. of Michigan.
tance ah . His vehicle sustained light damage and was towed
Bobby Rupe of Rutland, Paul Rope
from the scene; Haynes' sustained moderate damage and was driven
Besides his parents he was pre·
of Fort Polk, La., and Kyle Rope of
away.
ceded
in death by three brothers,
White Haven, Pa., and several
and
two
sisiNS.
nieces and nephews. .
Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are published as
Services
will be held at I p.m.
Services will be held at II a.m.
they appear In ol1iclal reports.
Sunday
at
FISher
Furtelal Home in
Monday at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport
with
Bub Herdman
Middieport with the Rev. Lamor
officiating.
Burial
will
be at Meigs
O'Bryant offiCiating. Burial will be
Burial
Gardcns.
al Riverview Cemetery in MiddleFriends may call between 3-5
Christmas program Sunday at 7 pan.
Christmas proarain to be held
and
7-9 p.m. Saturday at the funer.
Friends may call 3-S and 7-9
The Long Bottom United p.m. The public is invited to attend.
al
home.
p.m. Sunday.
Methodist Church will have its Play to be preRDted
The Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church will host its annual Otrist·
mas play at 7:30 J&gt;.m. Saturday at
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
the church In Mtddlepon. Trina
VETERANS MEMORIAL
446·4524
Thursday admissions - Lena Davis will direct the play and the
Carpenter, Rutland; Albert Martin, public is invited.
Pomeroy; Patricia Pullins, Racine;
Etta Collums, Pomeroy; Mary Twirlers 10 bave dance
The Oallia Twirlers will bold a
Kopczinsty, Pomeroy.
western
style dance froll). 8 to I
Thursday discharges - Anna
p.m.
at
the
Henderson Community
Williams,
Pomeroy;
Paul
Cenler
in
Henderson,
W. Va., SatHoudashelt, Pomeroy; William
urday.
Caller
will
be
John
Waugh.
Grueser, Middleport.

3

'I'll be home for Ch-ristmas ... '
"It began in the same way every

conditions and

to 10 )'CIII1 in prison, bll;l wiii serve
just 3 lfl: As a mii!'Cf of filet, 20
people a day In this country are
gunDe4 ~ . b)' criminals,"'!' on
parole or:(lilce. .Polly Klaas killer)
llut me devil's committee would
be too sl)l:ewd not to Jta_ve a fall·
bact po,$(UOn when pubbc OUirage
at ~t forces our sluggis~ politi·
cians 10 act .. For 11ne '!lung, all
attempts to u~te~ up the penal
process - by hmtting piCa bill"·
gains and paroles, and building
more J1risons to house.criminals -·
would he' met b,&gt;; profeSlS thai SUCh
meaSures are 'too expe11slve."
{Nobody mentions what these
criminals cost societ)r if they are
left on !he too.se -· let alllPti puts a
price on the lives of die slauJ\1~
children of St. Louis, or .the bullelriddled commuters on. ~~~e Long
Island Railroad.)
·
·.
Bullhe devil's commlqee has a
second fall·back JIOSi!i~ Gun donuol There are 200-milliQilll!JilS Oitt
there, the vast majori!f. of them in
lawftll and responoble hands.
(Only I ~nt of all guns ure used
iii c.nines·, and five out of~ six
guns so used were obtaineJI.jjlegatly.) But "gun.controllaw~" are the
easy 'way O\lt for every )llllitician
who feels pressure from his constituents to reduce crime. Some
chiid is tilled
. . and .it makes the
papers nauonwide? PasS a gun control law. Some nut lite Colin Ferguson {!he ftrst polilically correct
II!BSS murderer - he hates whites,
Asians and conservative blacks)
tills five !rain passengers? Pass
another gun control law.
The .beauty is that nobody can
say these ••won't work,'' to some
minUScule extenL They are, however, a genuinely cruel delusion that
serves just one real purpose: to give
politictans an excuse for avoiding
the real solutions.
(C)1993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

7lJ Third Av•ue, New Yort. New Yart
lCIOt7.

_.......,to

our

Man injured in accident

---Announcements - - - Hospital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER.
Dec. 16 discharges - Donna
Shong, Elmer Bailey, Freda Bass,
Mrs. Michael Johnson and son,
Mi-s. Daniel Fogelsong and son,
James Craft, Hattie Huss, Inez
Denney and Nannie Hill.
Dec. 16 births · Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Betzing, tdaughter of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Robbie
Cundiff, son of Hartford, W.Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Jones, son of
Radcliff, Mr. and Mrs. Loyal
Kazee, daughter of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Anthon McGrath, daughler of RuUand and Micahel Pethtel,
daUj!hterofPointPieasnt, W.Va.

ed to VMH; 11:28 p:m. Tuppers
Plains to State Route 7 for Leota
Massar .who was transported to
Camden-Ciarlt Hospital in Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
Thursday - 7:44 a.m. Middle·
port to General Hartln#r Parkway
for Brandy Pratt who ·was transported to VMH; 7:SO a;in. Rolland
Volunteer Fire Deparlinent and
Squad to State Route 124 for a
motor vehicle accident in which
David Neutzling was bal).lported to
VMH; 8: 19 a.m. ~ Plains to
State Route 7 for Albert Martin
spring, special emphasis on Meigs
who was transoorted to VMH.
County's heritage during regular
celebration, such as Heritage Day,
•••
·
Showcase Meigs County, and the
ntlnutd from Page 1
Buffington Island Civil War rethe next meetmg.
Members were asked 10 contact enai:bnenL
organizations and chuJ:C;hes for
Organizations planning celebrashort hislDries which might be used tions are asked to conlaCI the I75th
in a souvenir publication. ,
.
Anniversary Committee so that
Plans call for an Educatton activities can be coordinated and
Week with the newspaper and included in promotional materials,
schools involved sometime in !he Ptder said.

7

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
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WESLEY SHIPES IN

DEMOLmON MAN R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION 12.00

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December 19th
2 p.m. to 3-p.m.

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Some ~bor leaders have shifted
from merely vcliement to venpful.
Consider International Union of
Electrical Workers President
William Bywater's comments to
The New York Times: "I am not

n -..····-··--·--........._._ ........JM-76

......

~. J23.40
IJ~.......... :..................................

· -.......................................-'45.50

UWieiii....... - ..................................AO

I

I

'

f

--------·Cof.!nty c·ourt news-·________,.

...

. ,,. . : PomerOy , Middleport, Ohio
~dey. Deceinbe~ 17~
.
'
. .. ..
...1193
.
....

~

This is the Winter of Labor's
Discontent, and President Clinton
and AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland have just held their first chilly
post-NAFTA meeting in the wrong
. room . Instead of meeting in the
Oval Office, they _should lrave
dropped hy one of the most popular
classrooms at Detroit's. Wayne
State University - for a quick les·
son in how 10 bridge their political·
ly perilous chasm.
"The Future of the Labor
Movement," is the course title.
And don't be put off when its everHere's "hall off" to Jim Free- If !hey did, tliey wouldn't be crimi- candid professor declares: "Truth
mail and his lll1lclc on crime which nals. Gun conuol plays ri$ht into is, I really don't know what the
labor movement's future is.''
· a~ in the Sunday Times-Sen- the hands of these sick criminals.
I'Msidents Clinton and Kirtland,
2. The United Stites of AmerilliiCI on Dec. 12, 1993.
We fmally hear from someone ca, after the Cold War, is slowly meet and greet Professor Douglas
in the media who has his head disarming itself and history tells us Fruser.
And take ex1ensive notes. For
suewed on Sliaight. The American that every nation that has been
people must understand two very Iaten over hy an outside force has Fraser - a leading figure of the
1mportant consequences of gun had gun control and the people labor movement who for six years
was president of the United Auto
could not protectlhemselves.
control:
Workers
- should be drafted to
Think
about
thatl
I. When 11uns are Iaten away.
serve
as
a one-man, one-lane
Kennedl
R.
King
from Jaw-abiding citizens, only
bridge
between
today's embittered
Avid
lrapshooter
and
hunter
criminlls will have guns. Criminals
labor
leaders
and
the Democratic
Middleport
don't
by the laws of the land.
president who defeated them in the
battle over the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
Publicly, Fraser had said he
Is it plllilhment or is it a means the people who live here either would have voted "no" on
of allowing a condemned pc;11011 to can't seem to mate it in your world NAFTA- because, as he told me,
or have simply just accepted this he couldn't desen his old UAW
be let tree?
I've ofren .wondered over the one and have learned to mate the rant-and-file, who had become so
y.-. w'* il would be lite 10 live most of iL Learning to accept that fearful that the accord would cost
m an llllYilulmenl fall of anaer and for which you have not control them their jobs. But: Truth is, Frashollillty, among die wone people over and changing that which you er thinks NAFTA may turn out to
thlliOCiety hal cut out. in a place can is just part of living. To be at be a great boon to America's hardwhere linie IW llo.meanlng and peace with one's self is to be where · working middle-class men and'
standi IIIII. Afret tpOIIding what your heart is and your heart can be women.
seemed lilt:o an eternity living any place it wanll to be. My heart
"In the long run, I believe
~ong thOle Jell fortunate than
has found its \)lace in this world... . NAFTA will benefit Mexico, the
cithen; I deCided 10 IX)IIIIIIO such I
Merry Otristmas.
United SlaleS llld Canida,'' he told
pllcie 10 lleC'whall could possibly
Inmate Scou me. Fraser said he thought there
Fonnerly of Meigs County was merit to the auto industry's
clllcov«.
'11rill is a world of ill own and
argument that U.S. auto workers

Letters to the editor

'

--~~-~-~=:~~~~~~~~~~----~------------~Po~m~.MW~.~D!V:!·~~~d~I~~~~~Oh~
· ~lo!-~--~~------------~--~_2The~~D~W~Iy~BI~nU~·~ne~I~P~JG!!I~3:

!.•

Deali.~g wifh ~·the::._cri:rn: e ··._p-roble~
ur;zz:,.- A Ru ..he·,··

ROBERT L WINGETI

'•

..

•

786 North Second Ave.
Midd~port, Ohio

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 EAST MAIN

892-3715

POMEROY

�Friday, December 17, 1993

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

ODOT equipme.nt~ eniplo·y.ees
ready for winter of 1·993 ·
Should 01' Man Winter come
calling, the Obio bcparunont of
Transportation Is -'l·

'

The old saying 'an ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of
cure" is espocially true of the
trucks, snow plows, salt spre8dets
and gnsders that~ the Ohio
Department of TranspQrtation •s
winter snow rempval equipment.
. The old saying is a1ao true or hish·
way worltcn.
Preve'ntive maintenance, oil
changes, grease jobs and so on are
performed throughout the year on
each piece of snow removal equipment owned by OOOT, including
trucks, snow plo:W~· salt S\)feaders
and graders.
sessrons are
also held periodica iy to u!ld!tte
employees on the safe operauon
and maintenance requirements of
each type of equipment, said
ODOT spokeswoman Nancy
Yoacham.
For example, highway workers
in District 10 gathered this week
for snow and ice schools held in
each of the district's nine counties.
During this program, employees
were updated on plowing tech-

Trammf

RECEIVES MEDAL - World War I Army
veteran Herschel Badgley of Racine waa pre·
sented the World War I Service Medal at a hrlet
ceremony at his bome Thursday night. Here,
Elmer L. Pickeas, post commander of Raclae
Post 602 of the American Legion, presents
Badgely witb tbe medal while, from left, Mlck

WHIIams, dlalrman ot the couuty Veterans Ser·
vice Commission; Roger Hayman, Post 602 ser·
vice omcer; Jolla Huaael, Post 602 chaplain;
Robert Ashley and W. Bearhs, first vice com·
maader of Post 602, look ·on. Badgley also
received coogratullltloas from State Representa·
tive Mark Malone.

Sports
.

enlists. But the volume of paper·
work and legal requirements was a
surprise and being away from his
children and grandchildren was a
stnlin, he said.
"I have no regrets other than
living in a ninth-floor apartment.
That was like cutting the wings off
of a bird," Branstool said.
Branstooi said his biggest problem while in orru:e was being away
from his 700-acre grain farm in
Utica, Ohio, all but one weekend a
month.
"Mary Jo and I left eight grand·
children back there, our icids, our
farm, and its time to go back,"
Branstool said.
Branstool
and
USDA
spokesman Steve Kinsella said the
decision was unrelated to complaints last week by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture and var-

POtential jurors selected
for common ·pleas court
The followin~ were selected as
pQtential pettit Jurors in the January, 1994,-term of the Meigs
County Common Pleas COIIIt
Selected were, by community:
ALBANY - Karen Elizabeth
Hudnall, Doiphus Daniel BIIJ'ke,
Clarence Dale Daniel, Jacqueline
M. Jeffers, John D. Wandling,
Helen Louise Stout, James T. Den·
nis.
DEXTER - Terry Wilham
Mullins, Lonnie Lee Sroufe, Susie
A. Hale.
LANGSVILLE - Leon Carol
Pierce, Erika Games, Cecil D.
Frye, James 1. Crisp, Tony G.
Jacks.
LONG BOTTOM - William
R. Call, Deborah Maria Wells,
Marilyn Jane Spencer, Martha
Chevalier, Melody Laine Roberts,
Zelma E. Grady, VirgU E. Westfall.
MIDDLEPORT - Charles M.
Ralston, Frank P. Smith, Crystal
Sue McCourt, Kristi Lee Richmond, Cheryl D. Halley, James A.
Williams, Cora B. Webb, Charles
Wise, Paul A. Scott, Ruth AQn Riffle, Cleo Kearns, David A. Acree,
Ricf Herman, Wanda Lou Ashley,
William B. Slack, Fern J. Grimm,
Mark A. McCloud, Robert G.
Swick.
Don
MINERSVILLE
Edward Rea.
POMEROY - David Arthur
Davis, Milton Gary, Georg~ S.
Carper Paul Eugene j:uto, Patsy
Ann Thoma, Mary Vio1a Simonds,
Carla Crookham Wallace, Jed
Webster Jr., Edith Joanne
Williams, Ross Kmt ~· EleaJ)or
Taylor Thomas, Donna 1C8;0 .Nelson, Steven Ray Hooyer, Phillip. D.
Cali, Diana J. Nelson, Madehne
McClung, Mary E. Bowen, Delbert
H. Bollinger, No~a R . Eason,
Sheryl E. Gibbs,, Dq~glas Alan
Harris, Gilbert M. Zwdling, Anne
Marie Williams, Mildred M.
Jacobs Joan Lcrene Tuale, Robert
B Burdette, Chad Leroy Sayre,
LOis Jean Wilson, Thelma Irene
Gillis, Barbara K. ~argent, T~dd
Keith Powell, Kevm G. Betzmg, ·
Donna June Vermillion, Nathan
Frederick Baloy, Donald L. Brick·
Ies Randall Lee Gibbs, Kevin M.
G~. Kathy Sue Jeffers, Melis·
sa A. Snyder, Lloyd E. Blackwood,
John E. Werry. Heath Hudson.
PORTLAND - James B.
Arthurs Karla I. Smith, Goldie
Pickens: Agnes Virginia Sellers,
Louis!\ H. Arthurs, Rachel Rae
Rose, John w. Henderson, Sheri
L)'illl ~.Terry L. Varney.
RACINB - Charles •E. John·
11011, 1'lin0thy Lee Ball Sr.. Comie
L. Liale, David W, f!upp, Clifford
Dale Connolly1.•H~len I. Nease,
Cl...tv 1. ~len. L1n11!1 WydcU Hill,
tl'Z! Jc. Crislip, Robert S. Davis,
~ 'S Qeinew. Lea M. Gow,
JenaJfer iaq1u1, .DPid B. Cundiff,
'I'IIIImll p, Oriily, Bretl A. Jones,
Vk!la Helen YOIInl, Clara Jean

ions Ohio cattle groups who contended the government failed to
follow the law in putting a friend of
Branstool's on an industry board.
Branstool said Thursday he
believed the Ohio Farmer's Union,
which nominated the contested
Beef Board member, followed
proper procedures.
The Ohio Caalemen' s Association and other complaining groups
said they did not believe the
Farmer's Urtion was properly certi·
fied. To qualify to make a nomina·
tion to the Beef Board, groups have
to represent a certain amount of
beef production.
"We're checking it out,"
Branstool said. "Ir they have the
right membership, I'm sure the
nomination will stand.''
Branstool was responsible for
six USDA agencies that employ
21 ,000 people.
He had been in charge of grain
inspection and food safety, includ·
ing the hiring of additional meat
inspectors after tainted meat was
found in Washington stale.

Bradford, Ralph Douglas Shain,
He also was involved in a ftght
Jeffrey James Unruh, Beverly J.
between
the department and
Cummins, Brenda K. Curfman,
Congress
over
an initiative to stop
Cynthia M. ProffiU. Edith D. Watson, Don C. Weese, Trevor Alan ~elevators from spraying water
to control dusL
Pettet
USDA wants to ban the prac·
REEDSVILLE Ira E.
Showalter, Charles W. Massar, rice, and Branstooi went to Capitol
Karen J. Showalter, Rick Causey, Hill to argue the change was necesJohn C. Rice, Frederick James sary because wet grain was more
Kessinger, Paul E. Life, Deryi E. susceptible to mold, and some buyWell, Sherrie Ann Roush, Marvin ers lhought they were being cheat·
R. Tolliver, Barbara Jeanne Barber, ed because wet grain weighs more
Mildred Virginia Brooks, Tammy than dry.
Agriculture Secrl\tary Mike
Jo Baker, Beuy Louise Jackson,
Pauline Frona Barr, Chastidy Dawn Espy issued a statement praising
Branstooi for ''positive sb'ldes forMiilhone, John Carlton Maxson.
RUTLAND - Elizabeth Ann ward in areas ranging from improvWebster, Barblira Jean Cremeans, ing the meat inspection.system to
taking steps to improve the quality
Thomas Oren Stewan.
of
America's grain."
SHADE- John Emmett Martin
Jr.
SYRACUSE - Henry A. Scbciol board to meet
The Southern Local Board of
Salser Jr., Sara E. Roush, James
Education
will meet at 7 p.m. MonHoward Vining, Judith L. Lee, Carday
at
the
high
school.
olyn Sue Roush, John P. WUiiams.
1UPPERS PLAINS - Mark E.
Boyd, Lona Emma 1ean Cozart,
"Savvy" traces its origin to the
Dennia Shane Marcinko, Edward Spanish "sabe usted," meaning "Do
L. Murphy.
you know?"
f
VINTON- Ronald G. Wright

OSWIECIM, Poland (AP) The curators of the Auschwitz
Museum have a problem: How
painfully precise should they he in
a major restoration of the Holocaust's most infamous slaughter·
house?
Their mission is to preserve the
horrific memory of the death camp,
and of the Holocaust in general,
while doing honor to the masses
who died here. Advice on how to
do it has conflicted sharply.
Sujtaestions range (rom letting
the s1te slowly rot and burning
some of its contents, such as 2 tons
of human hair, to m:onstructing its
gas chambers down to the last
detail and offering video re-enact·
ments.
The choices parallel those faced
by ftlm difector Steven Spielberg,
who selected a documenrary style,
with mostly black and white
footage, in h1s just-released movie
on the Holocaust, "Schindler's
Lisl. ''
But the 200 employees of the
Auschwitz Museum have little of
Spielberg's artistic in~dence.
Their three-year, multim1Uion-dol·
iar project is being funded by Germany, the United States and other
countries. Dozens of historians,
canip survivcn and Jewish leaders
are involved in the debate.
Some argue that the camp and
its contents should be left to a
"graceful aging," in the words ot

rtiques ~ related aspecta of snow . the state is also selected from th~
results submitted by each oC.
and Icc mnovat.

In iddition, annual winter OOOT's 12 districts.
,
In District 10, Oallia County
equipment Inspections (dry runs)
are held Cldl ran to make sure that had the best dry run for 1993.
Also at each county dry run, one
ODOT's winter equipment fleet.is
truck is selected a, the cleanest,
in ~ condition.
Dtstrict 10 of ODOT. which best maintained, and the truck
includei· Athens, Gallia, locking, o~rator is presented an OD&lt;?~
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Oistiici 10 cap by Deputy DireCW£~
Vinton jll!d Washington Counties, Dowler. This year in .Meigs.Coun ..
has atready held this year's equip- • ty, Virgil cart received the cap.
;
ment irispections.
•
November 1S thiough the end of ·
According to John Dowler, February is the normal snow and ;
deputy director of District 10, each ice control aeaam. With 1,763101al ,
county's annual inspection includes stale hildtway miles, District 10 has :
thorough mechanical checks or all more ihan 16,000 tons of salt, :
snow removal, safety and commu· 6,000 tons of cinders and 4,000 i
nications equipment. District and tons of ice grits (fine aggregate, '
state inspection team technicians about one quarter· inch in,aize), 'in :
give each piece or equipment what storage throu"out its nine counties ;
might be considered an 11nnual for usc this Winter. .
· •
physical to assure winter readiness.
Meigs County ODOT em~loy- :
During the inspeetion, a point ees are responsi~ie f~r maintaininl! :
system is used to iletermine equip- 189 stale highway nuies. Approxt· •
ment standing. Based on the point mateiy 800 tons of ~alt and 400 ~
system and the varying number .or tons of cinders are presently in ·
pieces of equi1,1111ent in each counstorage in Mei,11s c;ovnty., If it's a ;
ty, the inspecuon team selec14 the mild winter, very liule salt, cinders ;
c~nty in District 10 with the bes1
or ice grits will be needed
:
dry run. A best dry run winner in
•

Professor James loung of the University of Massachusetts. He contends that there is no honest
method of recreating the Holocaust
experience.
At the other extreme is Jean·
Claude Pressac, a French chemist
who has documented the technical
workings of Auschwitz and wants
to rebuild a gas chamber so visitors
can feel what it was like to be herd·
ed into one.
Director Jerzy Wroblewski said
the basic pmpose of the Museum is
to maintam the camp in the state in
which it was found m 1945.
Then as now, a single railroad
track passed through the brooding
gates of Birkenau, the part of the

camp where mass extermination
took place. It ends 300 yards later
on a stone platform - the end of
the line for some one million peopie,
The railroad ties are freshly
tarred, and new gravel covers the
siding where Nazi doctors separated the able-bodied from the young,
old and weak, who were sent
directly to the gas chambers.
But harsh winters and swampy
land are causing many buildings to

EMS responds to eight calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to eildtt calls for assis·
tance between Thursday and Friday
moolings. Reaponding were:
Thursday - 9:3S a.m. Pomeroy
to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Goldie Lawson
who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 10:41 a.m.
Pomeroy to Collins Road for Etta
Cullums who was transported to
VMH; 12:49 p.m. Pomeroy to
Cherry Ridge Road for Charlie
Hatfield who was transported to
VMH; ~ : 18 p.m. Middleport to

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
Dallas kept losing, Atlanta
stopped winning,

Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

VMH.

THE PERSO NAL CABLE SYSTEM
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CNBC
ESPN 1 and2
Dlacovery
Buy Before Chrlstma
BET
and Get 1 Year of
CNN
DISNEY FREE Ill

""""""'

CB

........ \5

4

.739

II
II

9
II

.550

,,

500

.8

II

.42 1

Sl

New lcncy , .. ........ .8 13
Phil4ddph i•
... I IJ

.38 1
.350

W 11hington

.286

JI()SLOIL .

Miami ......

... ....... 6 15

1

8

85

10

Central Division
ALianu. ..... ... ... .......15
5 .750
Chic1go
... II
8 .579

3.5

.. II

10

.524

4.5

.. 9

11

.450

6

CI.I:VELAND
Dctrml

.350
350

K
R

~ilw aukc.c

7 \]
7 13
...... 5 Hi

.238

10.5

Chuluuc ..
Indiana ..

I

'•

•'•
••
:
:
:
:

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Team
w L Pet.
Ho~too ... ... ........ 20
I .952
l;ta h
II 7 .682
S~ n Antomo
II
652
Denver
9 II 450
MmncsQI.a
1 13 .350
D•llas .
I 20
04i

'

P:.arilic l)ivision

11
II

Sea ale
lltlourn~

{loldcrl s~.lt:

,
:
:
,
;
:
:
:
'.
·:
:
,
••'
•

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6.'i

'

lOS
12 5

Thursd.ay's scores
Yurk lOll , 1...1\.l..akcr.. 85
!\cw Jcm:y I II, Charlow,: 95
Detroit 97, Washington 95
Miami 90, CLEVELAND 89
Indian~ 99. ALl.anu 81
s~n Antonio I 03. Dalln 89
~cw

Tonight's games
LA. LUers at Philadelphia , 7:30p.m

Denver at Chatlotlt., 7:30p.m
New Yolk ~~ Olicago. 8 p. m.
Milwaukoc ;u Seattle . I0 p.m .

p.m

Phi l•dclptmt iH Miami, 7:30p .m .
Denv er at At..lantil , 7:30p.m .

'

CLEVELAND at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
New Jcncy ulndiana, 7:30p.m.

San Antonio at Chicago. S:JO
_ p.m.
DtUu at Hw11on , 8:30p.m
LA Clippers at Phocnu., 9 p .m .

Goldcrr SUite
.\tmn~:Sm.a ~~

Sunday's games

•
{
,

:
•
••
:

Seattle, 10 p.m
Pnn.land. Hl:JO p.m

a1

I _A l .;akcr.o~ at CLEVU .AND . 7 p.m
Orl1611dn ~~ S~ cn mcntu . 9 f' m
\lltlw;au)u.;c ~I

l 1 u n.l~ml.

10:]0 p.m

Major college scores

One Size Fits All
A Sentinel subscription is the perfect gift. It's useful and fits every size and taste. Just fill .
out the coupon below, and you 'U get 2Qll oft' the subscription cost
But hurry, this offer expR&amp;
December 31, 1993
•

AJuon llutchtd SK, Akroo ·' 37
Ak ron Ccnt.-llowcr 4K. 1\krnn Kcu ·
more 11
A.k.mn Ulct 41 , Akron Ftrc..~ton c 40
Akron G.rficld 49. Akron 1·: 41
Alcundcr47 , WcUston 3R
Allen E. 78. Lim a PelT)' 30
Amell a 41. Cin . Turpin 29
/\mwcrp (,(,Blackhawk. 19
Arcan wn 64, Trl ·Cou.nty N. 23
1\ n:hb&lt;lld fJ6. l:vcrr,rccn 2J
Ashl•ncl /).!~ , Manoo Hudmg 43
Au ~ llntnwn · Ftlch

69. 'r"nuna . llnard·

W

NAME-----------------

~--------------

aTY---~A'IB.--Z1P·----

' PII(H! _______________

Butkc)'C l,.ogl 31, lnd1an Cree-k 36
Cadiz 60, Bridaepod 36,
C.ldwtll66, Btmerville 64 (01)

Ctlnry Chr. Sl, Norwood Bapt. 33
Ctntl Wincheuer 73, Amanda ·
Clcarcreelt S3
Canlon OlcnOU S4, New PhJadclphit

31

Gift to:

NAME----------------

21
Cin. Maunt Healthy S4, Cin. Aiken 2S
Cin. Oak Hilll 76, Cin. Wilhrow 311
Cin. !Wdin.a 51, Cn. Finlloytown 39
Cin. Roger B•con 57, Mett)l44
Cin. Syamore S3, Cin. Princ:«on 30
Cin. TaylM 41, Cin. MaricmonL 40
Cin. Wc.atcm Hilll 52. Cin . Colerain

cny ____ nATB---ZIP~--

ITARI'DIIl.IVBRYDATa _____

47

C111. Wyom1.111 5S, Cin. Mtde.!.rt 20
Ocar Forlt 47 , Modina Buckeye 29
Col. Academy 70, Deln.-.re Chr . 26
Clll Bcecherofl 37 . Col. Linden ·
McKinley 36
Col. Brookhaven 73 . Col. Northland
411
Cc\1. CcnLt::nn!ll ~(,,Col. Whe~ttont:: 23
C"l E... L54. Col Mimin 46
Cnl lndcpcndcnec 4"7, C.nl. l!i~unoor

Jr,

Col. Snu lh MS . Col. OriJili 33

NMEIOY
CAU 992·2901
./

01

992-6320

Col. W~ 60, Mlrioo· Frtnk.lin 19

ColdwJI.er 91, New Kno.u ille 33
Collina WCIItem Relcrwc ~3. Plrmouth

49

Sentinel

BA LTIMOR E ORIOLES : Purchucd
the t;;onullcl of M11rk Eichhnm . piLC hcr,
(rom Roc:hL::Ucr CJr 1hc lmcrnuional

l..c.lgue. ~1gna ~ Jeff Willlilms, ptlch·

er, for a .~ .~1gnmc.nL

KAN SI\S CIT Y KOYAI. .S · S1gncd
GHy GacLLi. 1h 1rd h~scm •n . ~nd Senti
Ku, kin . pnchcr. lu mmnr · lcaguc con tracts.

MINNESOTA T WINS S1gncd Scou
Leius. thtrd baseman. 10 ~on e · year con ·

Columbiana~ •.Soebrint 31}
Coohooton 56, Cimboid.. ~

Covinatm 41, Pnnktin MorttOe 30
(11)Ufttldl 72, Camt~~. Horiulaa 62
Dan.villll 6&amp;, Lucu 26
Day. Carlillo 54, Prtblo Shawnee 37
O.y. Camoll61 LloDon Mauoo 26
Ooy. C.tonol Whi.. !4.Xenlo 51
D•Y· 0Uwooc16j , Eaton 44

the club-record losing streak of 19
that the Maveticks set last season
as they went 11·71. They can
match 11 Monday at New York if
lhey also lose at Houston on Saturday.
"We've got a long way to go,"
Mavericks coach Quinn Buckner
said. "We have to rmd some people to play with commitment"
David Robinson scored 30
points, including 13 in the first
quarter and 13 more in the third.
Dale Ellis added 18 points and
Dennis Rodman had 18 rebounds
for visiting San Antonio.
''A losing streak is scary
because you never know when the
team is going to get out of it.
Sometimes a team on a losing
streak is real loose and can sneak
up on you. We didn't want them to
he loose tonigh~" RobiQson said.
Atlanta's streak carne to an end
because the Hawks couldn't hold
onto a huge lead they built in the
second quarter. Dominique Wilkins
gave the Hawks a 36-19 lead, but
the Pacers carne back with a 14-0
run.
"We were ready to play, but
things just didn't go right,"
Wilkins said. "So many times the
clock was runrting down and forced ,
us to take bad shots. They just outplayed us tonighL"
"The streak had to end sometime," Hawks coach Lenny
Wilkens said. "I just wish it had
been on the road, rather than at
home.''
It was the rii'Sl loss in 10 games
for Atlanta at the Omni. Only
10,5 51 fans showed up at the
16,510-seat arena.
In other games, New York beat
the Los Angeles Lakers 108-85,
New Jersey beat Charlotte 111-95,
Detroit beat Washington 97·95 and
Cleveland beat Miami 90-89.
Knicks 108, Lakers 85
At New York, Patrick Ewing
broke Walt Frazier's team scoring
record of 14,617 points with an ISfoot jumper in the second perind.
It wasn't ali good news for the
Knicks, however.
Starting point guard Doc Rivers
twisted his left knee while driving
to the basket. He will undergo an
MRI exam today.
Ewing finished with 27 points
and Charles Oakley had a seasonhigh 21.
Nets 111, Hornets 95
At East Rutherford, N.J., the
Nets limited Charlotte to 37 percent shooting and blocked a season-high 15 shots.
.
Chris Morris had six of h1s
team-high 19 points in a sevenpoint spurt after Charlotte closed to

IUCI.

SE "75. Yellow Spnn gs
Nallonal Lell&amp;ue

ATLANTA BRAVES : Srgned Mark
Lemke , second baseman, to a one-yetr
conU"IeL
FLORIDA MARLI NS : Signed Joe
Klink, pilchcr, 10 a onc · ~rcon !.lllct .
MONTREAL EXPOS : S18Jled SleVe
Hoc:me 1nd Shlwn Holm an, pitchers; Ben
Shehon . rir~L bueman; Eugene Jone, .
Man Suin, 1nd Aubrey Wauoner, ouL ·
fielders ; 1nd George Vlfgtllo, \nf1ddcr, 1o
mmor·lcaJLUC conlriCL..S.
NEW YORK METS : Signed Jcfr Man ·
10, tnficldcr·utchcr; l!m l .t ndcmln ~ n d
H.i cll P.r~c r . nuLfu~lders : and lon~ Lhm
Hul"!ll , ptL~hcr. tr1 m tnor·h.:,Jguc comracL,

PHILADELPHIA 1'1-lJU .tJ: s ""' ~mcd
Blll Kotrtn ~on • co~ch WI H.c~d!n~ ul the
l..c~ MI.lC

Syl11aru1 SIIUthVLCW 43, R ~5ford '24

l:utcm

Val 54. Logan Elm 47
f ccumldl 63. Gruenoo 14
Tnmhlc 35. Vintnn Co. 33 (QT)
Triway 6&amp;, Alack River45
Tru~.wood Madi.on 62, Piqua 50
Troy 41 , Day. Nonhmont 46
Tu1canwu C11h. S4, Newcomc11110wo

Nltlon•l Baskclblll As.1oclallon
/\TIANTA HAWKS: AcUv1tcd Doug
Edw01n:IS, forwJrd, born the 111jured lui\
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS· Acit ·
vatod Chri~ Mullm, frtrWard, from tile on ·

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABIG PUM;HI

92-86 with6:13 to play.
Alonzo Moumin~ led the Hornets with 24 pomts and 13
rebounds.
~oas97,Bu~95

At WashinJIIOn, Joe Dumars
took the game mto his own hands
in the fourth quarter, scoring 16 of
his 27 points to send Washington to
its ninth straight loss.
Detroit had a 80-76 lead before
Dumars made two straight buckets
to increase the margin to eight.
Washington jiOt within 90-87
before Sean 'Eihott hit a jumper.
Don MacLean then made a layup,
but Dumars hit a three-pointer for a
95-89lead.

Heat 90, Cavllllen 89
At Miami, the Cavaliers got a
scare when Chris Mills left the
court holding his chest and had to
have an electrocardiogram in the
ioclc.erroom. He was laler taken to a
local hospital.
Dr. Allan Herskowitz, the Heat
team physician, examined Mills.
" He is not in any distress or dan·
ger. They are going to keep him
overnight as a precautionary mea·
sure and see what the tests show,"
he said.
Steve Smith scored Miami's last
four points, including a 17-foot
jumper wilh 7.3 seconds remaining,
to g1ve the Heal the victory.

Hurley's condition making
'dramatic improvement'
hospital in a week if his recovery
By JOHN HOWARD
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)- continues at the current pace.
Hurley was throwa mto a roadSacramento Kings point guard
Bobby Hlll'iey is malcing a remark- side ditch when his light ll'Ucl&lt; was
able recovery from auto-crash hit by a station wagon Sunday
injuries and could be playing bas- night following a game with the
ketball again in less than a year, Los Angeles Clippers. He was not
wearing a safety belt.
according to doctors.
The 22-year-oid two-time All"There's no question that we
were really impressed with this American's injuries included colyoung man's recuperative pow- lapsed lungs, broken ribs, a fracers," trauma surgery chief Dr. F. tured shoulder blade, a compres- ·
William Blaisdell S81d Thursday at sion fraclllre in the lower back and ·
a briefing auended by Hurley's a soft-tissue back injury, doctors :
said.
parents and hospital officials.
The driver of the other car was
"His recovery has been as dra·
identified
as Dan Wieland, 37, a
malic as one ever sees.... In the last
house
painter.
Wieland suffered a
24 to 48 hours, it (his condition)
broken
leg.
·
has been one of dramatic· improve·
Hurley's
mother,
Christine,
said
·
men~" Blaisdell said.
her
son
was
increasingly
alert.
Dr. Richard Marder, an
orthopaedic surgeon and a Kings' "He's doing much better. Today, :
team physician, said Hlll'ley could he asked for a television VCR .
return to lhe court in "about 9 or He's actually doing therapy," she
said.
10 months" if ali goes well.
Doctors said he could leave the

Meigs girls beat Wellston
Meigs opened up a 27-14 lead at
the half and held off a furious
Wellston comeback: attempt to post
a 46-42 victory over the Lady
Rockets Monday everting at Well·
ston, according to a repQrt submitted Wednesday.
The Lady Maniuders used balanced scoring to jump on top 15-8
after one period. Joy O'Brien,
Vanessa Compston and Amber
Blackwell each scored four first
period points to pace the maroon
and gold.
O'Brien had the hot hand in the
second period, scoring eight of her
team's 12 points as Meigs
outscored the hosts 12-6 to increase
their lead to 13 at the half.
Meigs held a 37-20 lead heading
into the final eight minutes but
Wellston outscored the Marauders
22-9 in the fourth period to make a
game of it. Dana Stevison led the
comeback with eight fourth-period
points, while Mandee Argabright
added six in the period.
O'Brien led all scorers with 17
points, and Compston added 14.
Meigs hit 19 of 54 from the
noor for 35%, including zero for
eight from three-point range. The
Marauders hit only eight of 19
from the line for 42% . The

Marauders grabbed 38 rebounds, .
with Compston grabbing II.
For Wellston, Argabright led the
way with 16, while Stevison added
II. The Rockets hit 18 of 69 from
the floor for a cold 26% and six of
15 from the tine for for 40%. The
Rockets grabbed 42 rebounds, with
Nikki Downey and Angie Arthur
getting 10 each.
In the reserve game, Meigs
outscored Wellston 20-2 in the second half and defeated the Rockets
29-18. Ashley Roach led the way
with II for Meigs.
Meigs
(15·12·10·9=46)
Lee Henderson 2-0-0=4, Joy
O'Brien 7-0-3=17, Vanessa Compston 6-0-2=14; Amber Blackwell
4·0·1=9. Melissa Clifford 0-0-2=2.
Totals: 19.0·8=46
Wellstoa
(8-41-6-22=42)

Andrea Wyatt 1-0·1•3, Mandee
Argabright 6·0·4= 16, Nikki
Downey 3-0-0=6, Dana Stevision
5·0-1=11, Angie Arthur 1-0-0=2,
Lorrie Johnson 1·0-0=2, Terina
Cheatham 1-0-0=2. Totals: 18·0·
6=42

Baskotball

JUred li~ L . W•tvt:-d IX: II Dcmpt~. gua rd

l9

Tutlaw 58. TUican.wu Val. 44
Twin Vallcl S. 59, A111onia 45
Uni1ed 42, E. Palittine 31
Upper Scioto VII . 87,Adal6
Utica ~8 , Licltin&amp; Val. 39
Valley View S4, Northridge 19
Van Wen 44 , KenlDII27
Vandalia Butler S8. W. CarroJJton 4]
VUltent Warren 6S, ALhcru 46
W . Holmes 46, IAUdonvil le 23
W. Jefferson 4S,l..Mdm l4
Warren Champill n 54, Newton h1ll ~

29

Footbull
Nal!om11l Football Leaauc
INDIA NA .POUS COLTS Stgf"IC(j Don
Jooc;ji;, hnch.ckcr. to !he pratllcc !!qu~d

H&lt;&gt;&lt;:key
NHI. . Na med Rich ard Dudley ~cruor
p rcs1dl:nl 'nd ctUcf DpCriLLllg l"lffJC CT
for NHL Emerpn.se8.
DALLAS STARS . Acqu tr ed Jim
MeKcnlie. left wing , from the F1onda
l'•nLhcn; fur 1 rounh -ruund dn ft p1ck. Ali ·
•!&amp;ned Troy Gamble, go•ltcnder, to Ka l•·
muoo of the lntcrnUJOnal Ho ckey
V!CC

'

Wuhmgtoo C.ll 72, Grandview 51
Waterford 112, Wooddield 50

Wau1con 41. Bryan 40
Wayncdllc 50, Hill&amp;dJie 30
Waynca:field Go~hen 54 , Indian l..tkc

Lca!!.R_TFORD WHALERS: Traded l im
McKenzie. left wing, Lo Lhc Florida Pan·
then; for Alcundcr Godynyuj(, ddcn~c­
man.
NEW JF.RSEY OEV [l..S: Rcc.aUcd Jtm
Dowd, ccntoer, from Albany of !he American Hockey League
Pm'SBURGH PENGU[fo.."S Recall ed
Eel PatLCniOI\. rigtu w1ng, from Clcvclan11
or the lntcmauonal Hock ey l .c~guc .
TAMPA !lAY I.JlliHNINli M.c: u ·
~ 1gncd J .C: tl c.tgcrnn. goaltender , to At.·
hlftliL of Lh.: ln lcm~tonnal llnckc: y l.caguc

44

Whcclcnburg 70, Wa11erly S4
Worthinaton Ou. 68, E. Knm 26
Young . Ursuline S7, Young. Chancy

36

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanllc Olvlaloft
Tt!am

W I. T

N.Y R •n~c l"!'l . 22 6 3

Pili.

(~f

1994 BUICK REGAL CUSTOM 4 DR.

NaUon1l Hockey LcaKUl!

llJ\

47 114 75

Cin. Olen Es~e 62. Cin . Woodwud 60
Cin. Harriaon 51, NoM west 30
Cin. Hill1 Chr . Aci d. 51, Milmi Val.

AOPV"S-----------~

12 Mootba U6.56_

Can10n Md~inlcy 39, Mauillon 31

Cdint 48, Defiance 36
Cen terburg 73, Northridge 35
Cin. 1\nden:Ofl 75, Cin. T•ft S4
Cin. Deer Padt 67, Cin. lndlan Hill 43

Baseball
J\merlcan Ltaa,ue

I"Cil)'ll

M.no~ ~clt 12
II-: 6&lt;1 . l." nmllcr 44
llcl1~1rc St J11hm 42! Lnum I.• &gt;L •I ·1 ~
lldpl'\; S7 . b,.:.t.lc ulllo )(;ktn~ Jll
llcttjanun lf•~ao&gt; ~ ·1 borhit nk_' Ill
Bcrlo u Co.:ntcr W.:~l.: r n M. c~crvc 44 .

Broohillo Sl , Bollbrook l9

Transactions

SLNLhcn 6lJ. WaJTCn Kennedy 44
Sylnn1a Nnrthv1cw 47 , Tul . WhL\mcr

llCii l l ~ v ,

,Bollday Gift
Subscription Coupon

games

llullalo. 7 ]) p.m

ll V1ncouver, 5:05 p.m
Boston 11 Fl orida , 6:05p.m.
Tampa Bay 11 Buffalo, 7:05p.m
N.Y. lllandcniL Piwbullth, 7:35p.m
Ou.awa11 N.Y. R1ngcn. 7:35p.m
Phila~phit a\ New Ieney, 7:35p.m
St. Lour1 al Edmonton, 1!1:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Chicago,l:35 p.m.

Sl!Ubu!J 54, R.jdgewCKMI ] I

lhrhcr\nn f1l . Kern

l.ow1vilh:: 40
Hcrhn Hi.land 5K, Ma lvern 36
lklhci·T&amp;Lc 73. Hill1born 53
Hc•lcy 63. Jonathan Alder 20
Uig Walnut46. Johruwwn 20
Hlanche~~Ler 64, We~t12n Drown 56
IJioom CuroU 49 , Faufteld Union 4)
1\\ufflcn 50, Paulding 40
Bowlin&amp; GTUn 48, Holland Spring . 37
Broaltru~ld S4, Vouns. Ubcny I H

Ant;d~:S ~ ~

DaUa~

St.wbcnville 68, ToronLO SO
SLow S5, Nordonia 26

...

721 S

Sunday's games

Spring. Nonhwa~em 37, Onham 35
Sptlnaboro 58, Liule Miami 47
St. AuJLllline43, H11thaway8rown 27
St Bcnurd 54, New Mlami 43
St. Henry S7. P~tdt:WI)' 29
St. Ursula6\ , Cin . McNicholuS!

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

11 19 2

San J01e 11 Queboc . I :3S p.m.

Southea•ern 7S, Yellow Springsl4
Sparu Highland 60, Marion Elgin 51
SprinJ. N"ar1hoaaa~em 53, Urbana 2.5

~] . ( " ~rdm'l Stnt~ ll4 '1

11 172

32 100 104
Z1 78 98
24117 127
1A 1!12 101
19 91 111!1

Saturday's games

Slicm 57, Poland 46
Sandy Val. 4S, AlLton Mtm:hcster 'B
Seton 49, MOIJnl Notre Dame 32

On.:gon St 54, 1Jndlcy41

29112 129

Oticago at P'nilldelphia, I :OS p.m.
New feney It Quehec, 1:35 p.m.
Waahington 111 Hartford, 7:35p.m
805t0n at T1mpa D•y, 7:35p.m.
Detroit at Montretl, 8:05 p.m.
I...CI5 Angela at Toronto , 8:05p.m
Winnipeg u Calgary. 8:05 p.m

34

Fur West

34 !32 106
33 92 77

01.LJw• • L Washmgtun . X:Ct.i p .rn
lo\rtlheim at DaUu, R:3Sf.m.
Sl. Louil a!Calgary , 9:3 p.m.
S•n JOR ll Edmonton, 9:35p.m.
Winnipeg at Vancouver, 10 .3S p.m

Ro11 46, NCJnll'ood 30

S. Ilhn ot5 82. SE ,\ll.issoun 54

37 119 1]()
35 97 102

l"ouxno•L i\"Y l ~ l~nci~.:Ts.7 . JSp m
N Y. Rangers~ ~ lkl!OJI . 7 J5 p.rn

. •

Charlt~~lon

16 15 ()
II 17 5

Tonl~ht's

Los

Russia 82. F•irmont 36
S. Ccnlrl148. Norw•Lk St. Plul 34

S.

5

Thu~day's scores

Ridaodolo 55, Col'dini'M 31
River Vtl. 65 , MQWI. Gilead 34
Riw:rsida59, W. l..ibeny S•lern 51

South

Ltah

16 11 2
15 10 3
1211i s

PLI, GFGA
45 119 89

Pmsburgh 2, Ruffal o I
Pht\ad clph ia J. Quehec 2

· Patrielc Hatry 6$, SwanLon 49
Peeblel65, 1.-bwJ Fairfield 30
Pmy.bwJ 36, Millbury Lolco 'II
PcaiiVille.-44, Faycao i2
Po111moulh O.y S3, PoNmCIJth E. 45
R•venn~48, Cuytho&amp;- Falll43

l·emplc !\~. C tnc mn~u 12

Ala.· Hirmingham 69. Auburn 65
Em Cuolim 92. Funmm 61
L.SU 93, MCNCCK St. 72
NichoUs St. 140. B•ptist ChrUtiJn 62

DeLroit

Odord T•lawand11 44 , Middletown

Eust

23 16 95

15 II

36

Fenwick 33

3

St. Lou1! ..

Vancouver .....
San Jose ..
.
I.nsAngeles
Anaheim ........
Edmon\011 ... ...

New Booon"50, EaPCm Pike 49
New Bremen 34, Fod Rcwvcry 33
New London 56, Moruoellille V
'New Rief,cl 60, HopcweU l..oudon 47
Northmor 41 , Marion Plcaunt 39
Nonlvnor 41 , Pluuant 39 (OT)
Norwaync 39, D•ltuJ 37
Ohio Deaf38. Mllnn1thl Chr. 30
OlenLingy 51, L..alr.ewood 47 (OT)
0tL•wa-Gl•ndor1 58, Un;a• Sh11wnoc

Suturday's games

92 99

Pnlnc Division
C•lsary . .. .... 18 9 s 41 122 99

21i

•• WiSIUngton, 7·30 p.m

117 93

2X

25 103103

WI. T
.. 20 II 5
.. 15 II "1

W~t~ rupeg .

\cw Albany 62. MiUcrsport 42

Lt~h

~

5
2
3

Tllroo ln ..
DaUu.
Chicago .

n

Luh at Boston. 1 :30 p.m.

J

Centrtl Dlvl1ion

Tum

Hobin 55, Medin• Highl•nd 42
Holgue 56, Hidcrville 36
Holy NJrTte 5 1. Clev. West Tech 21
Howluld 40, Nilca McX.inley 23
Hubhtrd 62, Ctutl.and Lakeview 60
\n(han Val. 43, F•irleu 39
K•nsu WOUt 38, Northwood 25
Kcn1on Ridge 69. Spring. Sh1wnec 53
l.ihc.::rty Ur1 ton 93. Uclung Ht.s. 53
l.tma HaLh 79, Wapakonet.a 21
l.ngan 116, 1-&lt;lncaster 50
l.uca,villc Val. 70. S. Wcbster49
Mad1son 51 . Lcx.ingtM )9
Manctu 61. Jackson 32
Maricnl.ocal65, Minstez-34
Muon 51, K.inga 42
Mnsilloo Jadtson 68, Alliance 39
Mathews 57 , Jac:bon · Millon 46
Mawnee 4S, Anlhony Wayne 21
McClain 52. Miami Tnce 42
McDonald 52, Spring. Local 40
Meadowbrook 52. Oaymonl4 3
Mcip 49, Hemlock Miller 41
Milford 63, Middletown
Minenl Ridge 5S, S. Range 39
Mmfnrd 77. McDermoll NW 53
r\ . CanLon Si( Uniontown U.ke 54
'\ Central 50, Ed on 38
' · Cmun 52. !luck eye Val. 44
"''dMJnvLik -York 52, Ra~ inc Soulhcm

"

38 107 ~3
37 130126

4

WESTERN CONFE RENCE

Hilltop 6 1, Stryker 44

12.5

~n!!iO LIII L.A CUppcrr; , 10 .30 p. m
Orland o at Ph ocnr~. 10:30 p.m
(inldcn St.11tc HI SB ~r~mcn tn . lll ·JO

55

Elida 73, St. Marys 68
Fairview 67, K.llidJ 57
Fayetteville II, N. Adams 39
Felicity 71. William'burll 38
Fin dl•y62. To! . Bowsher42
Fon Frye 79, SkyY\Ie 61
Fosloria50,Napoleon45
Fostcu:ia St. Wendelin 49, Carey 39
Frankli n Furn~c c Green 51.
J•on.-:moulh Nmre Dame 14
h emunL Ro~s 43. Or\lgon Clay 30
1-rcmom S1. Joseph 53 , Old f"oo 46
c ;illhfHllt~ 70. Chcstun: R.!vcr V~ l 55
l!-'nway !19 . Jcwcu·SC!o 75
( ,crln• 55. Woodm e re S2
Goshen 60, W LlnungLOn 41
GunviUc 82. tJcme Umoo 33
Grccncvicw 59, Chnton·MIU!C 30
HamiltM Badin 56, Cin. Pwee.U Mui·
an 19 ,
H1m.ihon Twp. 47. Circleville 41
HaMibal River S9, Shadyside 3S
Hcalh 82, Fisher Cath. 37

Midwest

~--------~------

.BEST RECEPTION

E. Liverpool 66, Ediaon

10
14
14
15
15
18

NorUu:aat Dlviaion
PitubufJh ......... 16 8 1
39 114 104
&amp;.ton .. . ... 14 10 1
JS 103 94
32 110 96
Buffalo ............ 15 15 2
M~ua l. ....... 13 12 6
32 94 88
Quebec ............. l 3 13 5
31 112104
Hartford ..
9193
2187114
Otuwa ....
7 22 3
17 97 154

Entwood 51 , Elmwood 49

10.5

474

II

Sacramcrlln

·'

!

streak ended at 14 games as they
blew a 17-pointlead and lost 99-81
at home to the Indiana Pacers.
Dallas is only two, losses shy of

New Jers.Cy ..... .. 17
Philadelplu• ..... l!C
Aonda .. . ... 12
WIShington .... . 13
N.Y. Islanders. . II
Tamp1 Bay . .... 10

Delphos Jcffcnon 57. Columbus
lJr011e J]
Oelphoi Sl. Johru 57, LincoiJwicw 44
Dr.ILJ SO, Liberty Ccn1.er 45
Di1ic 38, Middletown M.d i.lon 34
Dover 60, St. Cllin11illc J&amp;
UoylcaLown 56, Smithville 38
E. Canton 36, AAron Covcnuy 34
E. Clinton4 1, Madiloo PIU111 T1

6

KD

Ill
I&lt; I

I _,\ L ok.:rs

55

..,

'
"' 5 45
.'\ " '"'
250

llnnl~r11J

CB

.s.so

II

1.. ,\ Chppo.:ro;

Dn't a. Without
tiN Bat ln·Bome
.
Entntainmat TINH Bol,..)'s!!

Don't Miss U.. Bowl Games
And All U.. ~.,..,,

PeL

7\cw'York

m ~n

.

W L

Or\;mdo ..

•

.

Atlanllr INvlsion

r~~am

•
•

The Mavericks' losing streak
reached 17 games Thursday night
as the San Antonio Spurs beat Dallas 103-89. Atlanta's winning

Scorehoat. d

•

Union Avenue for Harold Reeves
who was aeated at the scene; 5:25
a.m. Pomeroy to Naylors Run Road
for Martha Hill who was transported to VMH; S:49 p.m. Middleport
to North Second Avenue for Herman Redman who was transpcXted
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 8:02
p.m. Middleport to Overbrook
Nursing Center for Keitll Robertson who was transported to VMH.
Friday - 12:09 a.m. Pomeroy
to a motor-vehicle accident on
West Main Street for James P.
Counts who was transported to

Friday, December 17, 1813

Spurs beat Mavericks; Hawks fall; Cavaliers beat Heat 90-89

c~tiwn Auschwitz camp, nrst ;

set up in 1940, stands on 50 acres
of land and has about 50 mostly
brick buildinl!s. which have been
converted into museum apace.

The Daily Sentinef

In theNBA,

tl. J.

Former Ohio party chief
Curators
of
Auschwitz
quits government job
face restoration nightmare

WASHINGTON (AP)
Eugene Branstool hal} qui! his job
in lhe CLimon admuustraUon, saying he's had his ftii of Washington
after seven months and yearns for
his Ohio farm.
"I've got a house standing
empty back home and the winter's
here. It's the time for me to go,"
Branstooi said Thursday.
His resignation is effective Dec.
31.
Branstool, a former state legislator was chairman of the Ohio
Dc~ocratic Party before President
Clinton appointing him an assistant
agricuiblre secrerary.
Branstool, who made $115,700
a year, headed the Department of
Agriculture's marketing and
inspection services.
He said he enjoyed the job, particularly working with USDA sci·

'

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Pag~ee--66-The Dally Sentinel

~

•

Friday, December 17, 1~ £

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh!o

...

Athletes raking in more money outside sports than ever before §
often than not, it would be the
"New Kids on the Block," an
According to a recent report in insip!d pop group be re{lfCsented
Forbes magazine, athletes are mak- that m •ts heyday took m a cool
ing much more money on ~e field. million a week. Each and every
This is not news . News ts how week of lhc year.
much more they're making away
"I always wonder what athletes
from it.
will they be like," Woolf would
And whether it's a good thing conclude, "when they come into
probably depends on whether some real money."
you're an athlete or not. If not Now, !hanks to endorsements
which takes in most of !he rest of and the insaiiable demand for
the worlcing world - then proba- celebrities of every stripe, they
bly not.
have.
Whenever he was asked about
Tbe now-retired Michael Jordan
escalating player salaries, lhe late again topped the FOibes list at $36
sports agent Bob Woolf always million and lhe bottom-line figure
steered !he conversation Ia a differ- to be included among the maJa·
ent group of clients first. More zinc's "Super 40" was $6 million
ByJJMUTKE

AP Sports Writer

for cal~year 1993.
home pay, the less &amp;P{l&amp;rent his
Fonunately, preciselY. because incentive and lhe more hJS loyalties
of cautionarr tales hke those arc Ukely to shift. And not always
above, as wei as shrewder, more subtly.
experienced and (it must be said)
II was one thing. when Dee
moce honest agents, Woolfs worst- Brown, tryinjlto attract a sponsor,
case scenario hasn't yet· liken hold. pumped up his~ before Ilk·
Even considering Jordan's fond- mg off in lhe NBA's Slam Dunk
ness for pressing golf bers, lhe alh- conteSt a few yem back. But it was
letcs on lhe list won't - perhsps something else when Alonzo
even can't- spend themselves Mourning held lhc Charlotte Horinto the poorhouse. But !hat's not nets hostage last season because be
10 say lhere aren't a few unhappy already had a shoe deal. And when
developments for the rest of us.
Jordan draped himself in a flag on
Tbe fmt one that comes to mind the gold medal stand in a be-like·
is the increasing commercialization Nike salute at Barcelona, or when
of the games. As off-the-field Shaquille O'Neal threatens to with·
income becomes a larger and larger hold his services altogether from
proportion of a ballplayer's take· Dream Team II because be likes to

throw down Pepsi inslead of Coke.
Then again, who can blame
them? The NBA, through the
Chicago Bulls, paid Jordan $4 million last year. Nike, on the olher
hand,·provided lhe lion's share or
lhc $32 million he made away from
the court. Shaq, his likely beir,
made $3.3 million playing basketball in 1993, and almost four times
that much pretending to play basketball at photo shoots. And those
two are bardly exceptions.
On lhc average, players drew 59
percent of their income in salary
last year.
This may not be troubling in the
case of the older guys, a Wayne

Gretzky or a Joe Montana oc even =1
an Arnold Pabner, who made only .,.
$100,000 on the course last ycat :i
and $11 million away from it. \!' %
varyin-11 degrees, lh~se guys best ~
playing days arc behind them ani!: ·..
their fame and fortune arc botlf .::
well-deserved. They've returne4 ::
value dozens of times over.
~
Think you'll be able 10 say lhe -~
same some day about lhc youngu :,
crowd? Well, its worst example: :;
chronic underachiever and Bart ..
Simpson-wannabe Andre Agassi, ;.
made $400,000 ·on the courts arid ::;
$8 million off them.
·, \.
Have no illusion about who he's :•
playing for. He certainly doesn't. : .:

Aposto li c
Cllurdl of J - Cllrill A.-otic
VanZandt 1nd Ward ll.d.
P~o~wr: Jame1 Miller
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

· 7_:30 p.m.

By HAL BOCK

In what has been a devastating
year in sports, a year far too full or
tears and turmoil, this may have
been the most devastating week.
In the past seven days, death
and destruction cast a long, dark
shadow over football, basketball,
horse racing and soccer, often
occurring close by the stadiums
and arenas where the victims were
accustomed to hearing lhe cheers
of !heir fans.
It started early last Sunday
morning when 20-year-old Jayson
Gwinn, a defensive end at Ohio
State, rushed to the aid of a teammate who had been shot outside a
Columbus, Ohio nightclub. After
getting Marvin "Obie" Stillwell to
an ambulance, the distraught
Gwinn drove off. Shortly afterward, his car collided with one
driven by another Ohio State student, 21-year-old Keri Adams, and
Gwinn was lciUed.
The accident occurred about a
mile from Ohio Stadium, home of
!he Buckeyes.
That night, the Sacramento
Kings or the NBA lost a home
game to the Los Angeles Clippers.

Rookie ~uard Bobby Hurley, 22,
was drivmg home from Arco Arena
on a darkened road when his truck
collided with a station wagon.
Hurley, who was not wearing a
seat belt, was thrown face down
into a ditch and suffered punctured
lungs, broken ribs and multiple
fractures. Doctors at feared for his
life at first. By week's end, however, lhe former Duke AU-American
and first round draft choice was
making steady improvement.
Then, early Tuesday morning,
Houston Oiler defensive end Jeff
Aim and an old high school buddy.
. Sean Lynch, were returning from
dinner. Aim lost control of his
Cadillac on a Houston highway.
Tbe car struck guardrails on each
side of the road and Lynch was
thrown out and died.
Aim, 25, surveyed the scene,
then went to his car where he
retrieved a shotgun and shot him·
self to dealh.
On Wednesday, Jeff Lukas,
assistant trainer in the stable of his
father, Eclipse Award winner D.
Wayne Lukas, was in the ham area
at Santa Anita when one of the
horses broke away. The runaway,
Tabasco Cat, bowled over the

Tales from the hardwood ...

assistant trainer. Lukas, 36, sur.
fered a fracrured skull and was on a
respirator, in critical condition at
Pasadena's Huntingron Memorial
Hospital.
That same day , horse owner
Frank Whitham, 62, whose mare
BayakO.a twice won the Breeders'
Cup Distaff, was lcilled in a plane
crash while heading to his Montana
ranch to close a land deal. The nrivate plane radioed it had missed lhe
~rt in Goodland: Kan .. and was
flymg to McCook, Neb.
Also Wednesday, Russian SOC·
cer star Sergei Cherbakov suffered
a fractured skull ljlld two fractured
vertebrate when the car he was
driving smashed into two others in
Lisbon. Doctors delayed surgery on
the 21-year-old because of severe
internal bleeding.
The deaths or Gwinn and Aim
left whole teams in mourning.
Ohio State, ranked No. 11, is
preparing for lhe Holiday Bowl in
San Diego on Dec. 30. Houston,
which plays at Pittsburgh on Sun·
day. is in the thick of the AFC
playoff race. Bolh teams will wear
the players' numbers on their hel·
mets, Gwinn's No. 49 for the
Buckeyes and Aim's No. 76 for the
Oilers.
Coaches and players were dealing with the deaths in their own
ways.

.,..."'

;..

.

. ...

We Are Changing For You. STOP!

VALLEY BELL
2% MILK

BEACON STAll

,,

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
• Who won the Elks' "Hoop
Shoot" competition in Gallipolis?
The winners, runners-up and
third-place competitors in lhc local
cagefest, held Sunday at Gallia
Academy High School gym, were:
12-13 year-old boys
First - Steve Roderick, Gallia
Academy H.S.
Second - Aaron Bickle, Gallia
Academy H.S.
Third - Cody Lane. Washington Elem.
12-13 year-old girls
First - Sarah Ward, BidwellPorter Elem.
Second - Megan Mulford,
Kyger Creek M.S.
Third -Tessa Sibley, Washington Elem.
10.11 year-old boys
First- Josh Sanders, Washington Elem.
. Second - Grant Abbott,
Pomeroy Elem.
Third - Garret Kiser, Portland
Elem.
10·11 year-old girls
First - Chasatie Hollon.
Chester Elem. ·
Second - Megan Kilgore,
GreenEiem.
Tblrd - Holly Epling, Rio
Grande Elem.
8·9 year-old boys
First- Justin Connolly, SyracuseEiem.
Second- John Stanley, Harrisonville Elem.
Third - Nathan Williams,
Hannan Trace Elem.
8-9 year-old girls
First- Cara Dunkle, Washing·
ton Elem.
Second - Chelsea Gooch,
Ohio Valley Christian
Third - Kristin Smith, Bid·
weD-Porter Elem.
• Arc Norm Persin 's Chesapeake's Panthers easy pickings
lhese days?
"'They won't lose forever," said
River Valley varsity boys' mentor
Mike Jenkins, "but they're not
.doing ~well right now. We can
get them.
The Raiders (4·1), getting an .
extra day to catch their breaths
after losmg lhem in a heart·stopping 66-65 win over Athens Tues·
day night, will put lheir three-game
winning streak on the line at home
a~ainst the 0·3 Panthers Saturday
ntghL
Chesapeake will likely work to
keep senior forward/center Bill
Mullen, whose season-high 25
points against Athens, fueled primaiily on thzec..jxllnters; exceeded
by' IQ poillts the offense be.had in
h bf the~· J)leCedillg four
:,.. iit 'which he played. He also
· &amp;u ·at Ieut one three-pointer in
each of
Viilcy's pmcs.
.
But lcx:usin&amp; on him"and scnioc
Jonvard Chris Cncc, whoso 18.2
• Jlbi~II-,JICl·pJnc avetaac lias put
IWil alilc polnllllly or the century
milt. may prove the leiS. or deatli
ror the Panthcn if trevor Ash·

River

wonh, the 6-foot-4 senior center
whose offense has climbed from
four against Fairland and nine
against Jackson in last week's
action 10 II against Athens, contin·
ues lhe trend. Senior Paul Covey,
who hasn't seen double-digit
offense since his 19-point performance against Federal Hoelting in
the season-opening Wellston cagefest, may prove to be the hidden
ace Jenkins' charges will need if
they plan on keeping their winning
streak alive into next week.
• Whose three-peatl!:&gt; success is
helping her put her best shots fourward~

Gallia Academy center Misty
Coleman. who racked up double
figures in scoring for the third
straight game against Athens Tuesday night - she had 14 points for the first time in her career,
extended her career first by one
game with a 12-point effort against
River Valley.
• How hard are Logan's girls to
beat?
With four wins each and not a
loss between them in league play,
Gallia Academy's Blue Angels (70 overall) and Logan's Lady Chieftains (S-0) have kept pace with
each olher at the top of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League race.
Now that senior Melissa Cooper's chase for her l,OOOth career
point is behind her (she got it in the
Chieftains' 86-25 win over visiting
River Valley Monday night), Ralph
Taylor's crew will be a bit more
focused on the task at hand. If that
weren't enough motivation 10 succeed, lhe fact that the main lhunderclouds in the purple haze Cooper, Tami Hampshire and Tez
Krall ·- are on their farewell tour
and would like nothing less th8D to
knock off the up-and-coming Blue
Angels; their likely successors as
SEOAL champions, next week as a
steppingstone to a possible fifth
lea@e crown.
(Editor's note: Three-peat and
four-ward are words copywrl1bt·
ed by New York Knicks bead
coach Pat Riley)

NO

•.,

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5399'5

5169'5

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fittCdshe&lt;l
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purchase of RF*'IONIC'
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Free Will Bapdsl Churc:h
Ash Streel, Middlcpon
Panor: Mark Morrow
Salurday Service · 7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a .m.
Wonl\lp - II 11 .m .,
Wcdncsthly Servlcc-7: 30 p.m
Rutland First Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m

Wo rship · 10:45 a.m.
r•umcruy ...irst Kaptl~1
PlHtor: P11ul Stin~on
E~;~ s t M11Ul Sl.
Sunday School - 9:30 11.m
Worship - 10:30a.m .

First Southern Baptist

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. LamarO'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wo11lup · 10:4la.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~ · H)Q p.m.
flrd Bapllsl Chur&lt;b
6th and Palmer St, Middlepon

P111sLOr: Rev. James A. Seddon

Sundl:y School - 9:15 11 .m.
Wor!hip - 10:1S a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y. · 5:30p.m.
l.ord'~ Supper 1st Sunda)' of every monlh .
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m

Radne Flrsl Baptist
Pastor: Steve FuUc r
Youth Pastor: A~tron Young
Sunday School - 9:30 K.m
WoBhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m
Wcdnesd~&amp;y Services - 7:()() p.m.

MI. UnioP H•ptlsl
lla~tor : Jcx: N. Sayre
Sun d~ty School -9:45a .m.
Evening - 6:30p.m
Wednesday Sci"IIICC5 · 6:30p.m.

ORINfERES,.
,.IL JUNE 1894

Rechning Sofa
NOT $11119.95

l'omeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children '§ Home Rd .
SundHy School · It H.m .
Worship - 10a.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptlsl
Paslor: Bill LiuJc
Sunday School - IOa.m
Wmship - 1 Ja.m., 7:30p.m
WOOnesd11y Servu;cs - 7:30p.m.

CLEARUCI PRICES

TV Amoire
Oak Flnleh • by Btlaett
NotS138t.95

5699 95

Closeout Sp•efal

Executive Desk

4"' PolllseHias 60'
6Yz" Polllttllas 52.00
10* Polllsettla Baskets

Oeli Flnlah • by Bllaaett
Not $11119.81!

$6

.,

Bethlohem 81pd.,
Past.or : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Wo11lup · 9:30a.m.
·
Thursday Servil%s- 7:30p.m.

LOOK FOR

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. RL 7, Middlepo•
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Evening · 7:30p.m .
"lhursdll)' Sc:f'\liccs - 7 :30

RED TAG
SPECIALS

Hlllsldt: lbpdsl Church
St. Rt 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev . Jam es K. Acree, SJ .
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Worship - II a.m., tJ p.m.
Wcdnc~ay Scrv1oc.s -'7 p m

SOFA, LOYESEAT,
CHAIR
3Colore.

...

Not $19911.85

$1088

,.

88

Vic:lory Baptist lnde~nd~tnt
525 N. 2nd St. Middh:pml
Pastor: James E. Kee see
Worship · JOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s · 1 p.m
Faith HapliSI Church
RMilrmad St., Mason
Sunday School · ICJ H.m
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Scrvia:s 7 p.m.

By England

Many OI!Mra to Chooaa From

50" Rolltop Desk

l'ortlsl Run Haptlsl
!•astor : Ariu~ Hun

Oek Finish

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

NOT $8119.95

Worship · II a.m.

548888

MI. Moriah BapUd
Fourth &amp; Main Sa., Middlepon

BEDROO. SUITE

•

•.

Pine Flnlah, Big Poattir Bed, 5
Drawer Cheat, Door Draeaer,
Hutch, Mirror
Not $34119.95

$1888'

Pastor: Re~ . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m .

1\nllqulty Bapllsl
PaSlor: Keooea.h Smith
SWlday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -. 10:45 a.m .
Thunday Services - 7:30p.m.

Rudand Free Will Baplld
Solem St.

85
'

lncludtl Night Tibia

Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Bt81811.

or Chrlat

2 12 W. Main St
Pastor: Andrew Mile1
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
WorstUp- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

,."'..,

"How do you handle situations with. It can be weeks, monlhs, even grasp lhe reality of it You need tQ :,
like lhis?" wondered Ohio State years later. If you don't complete talk with others, share the grief; ;.
defensive coordinator Bill Young the grieving process, it can sneak They need to talk about it as a ,..
after the Buckeyes ftrSt considered up on you later."
group.
: .;;
canceling practice lhcn decided to
Reiko Schwab, associate profes"A learn is almost an extended ;:
work out. "We're trying to do sor of counselor education at Old family. People tend to withdraw ;:
what's right."
Dominion University, is a special- when there is pain and not share it. ..;
"We'll never forget Jeff," Oiler ist in dealing with loss and grief. Playing games will be most diffi ~::::
quarterback Warren Moon said of She believes the team setting can cult, but they must think of the ::;
Aim. "But we want 10 forget the !telp the players cope with the deceased and how the decease(\ 'i
tragic way he left us. We need to deaths of Gwinn and Aim.
would like them to deal with the ;.
' 'ill
get it behind us."
"The best thing is for lhem to Ioss. ..
~ ~
Andrea Grant, a clinical social get IO!!elher and share their grief,"
.
'""'
worker at Harvard University .' she said. "What is most ilnportant
The Greek philosopher and math!:
understands the difficulty.
is making lhe reality of dealh real ematician Pythagoras, who lived i~
"Looking at a traumatic inci- in lheir own minds. When death the sixth century B.C., was the fir$1;
dem at the workplace, lhe dynamic occurs suddenly. it is difficult to to assert that the Earth was a sphere:;
is like a surrogate family," she
said. ''What you are dealing with is
lhe loss of a person who was close.
The closer you identify with the
dead person, the greater the perceived loss.
Check Out Our Sandwich Bar.
"Any loss of young, healthy
people puts you in lauch with your
own mortality. You think, 'What
ha~ned to them could happen to
me. It's a little too close for comfort.
''There is a ~sical response in
terms of chem ·1 s and adrenaline.
·'
You mourn and grieve but you
must get on. The grieving can be
interrupted. There are other games
to play. That makes the burden
jlle&amp;ler. It's possible to delay griev.
Pomeroy, Oh.
RT.7&amp;33
mg but eventually, it must be dealt

Sun. M~tss · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mu1 - 8:30a.m.

l'&lt;&gt;m&lt;roy Church

&gt;,

AP Sports Writer

· So....S Hoort Colloollc Cllurdl
161 Mutbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992·~898
PaslOr:: Re\1 . Walter E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4 :45-S: lSp.m.; Mu1- 5:30p.m.
SWl. Con. ·8 :4~·9 : 15 a.m.,

Church of Chn st

~·~

Myriad of heartbreaks put damper on week~s sports scene

Catho lic

Hundreds Of
Other Deals

Middleport Church of Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: Al Hansoo
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Swtday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip· 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Wonhip ·9: 30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Panor: Jack Coleg rov~
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m .
Wc.dn e~dll)' Serv i ce~- 6:30p.m
Zioo Church of Christ
l'omcroy, Hilrn sonville l{d . (Rt.\43)

Church or God or ProphecJ
0.1. While Rd. ~f St. R1. 160
Putor: Pat Henson
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Wednesday Servicet - 7 p.m.
New Life Cllurch ol God
Chester
Pastor: Gary Hines
SlUiday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.

Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
N.ector: h Rill Lyle
Holy Eucharist and Sund1y School I Ia.m.
Coffee hour follow ina

Holiness
Rase of Sharon Hollnea Churc:h
New lima Road, Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kirtg
Sunday school - 9:30a.m
Sunday wouiUp -7 p.m
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
l fl mile off Rt 325
Pastor: Rev. O'DeU Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churdl
7l Pearl St, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - "? :30 p.m

llastm: Roger Watson
Sund11)' St.:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m

Hysell Run HoUness Church

Tuppers Pta in Church ol Christ
Pa stor: Bill Wines
Sund11y School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9:45 a.m.,6:30 p.m.

laurel ClifT Free Me1h1HIIst Church
N.cL:dsville
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sund11y Sehoul - 9:3Ua.m.

IJradhury Church or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m
Youlh Meeting · 5:30p.m .
Evening Service- 7 p.m.
Wednesday , Bible Study· 7 p.m.
Rutland Church ol Chri!Jt
E.. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pasro~ Eugen~

Bradford Church of Chrlst
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Derek Stump
Youth Minisler: Mark Notter
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00 B.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Hh.:kory Hills Church or Chrisl
llastor: Jou:ph R. Ho~&gt;kin~
Sund By School · 9 11.m.
Wur~h1p 10 a.m.:; "ji m.
Wednesday Serv ice.~ - 7 p.m

Pastor: Robert Manley
SWlday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:45a.m., 7 p.m .
lhursday Service - 7:30 p.m

Wor~hip - \0:30 11..m .
UMYF • S~N~day · 6:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
ln Lauer Day Saints
Ponland -Racine Rd.
Pastor: leny Collins
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
WednesDay Servi10es · 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
St. Jolla Lutltenn Church
Pine Grove
Spalding
Pastor:
WoBhip +9:30a.m .
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

J?awn

Our SavhJur l..ulheran Church
Walnut and Henry Su., Ra~enswood, W.Va.
Co·puton: Revs. Richard &amp;

Grallam United Methodist
Worship - 9:30a.m. (I sL &amp; 2nd Sun) ,
7:30p.m . (Jrd &amp; 41h Sun)

Wednesday Serv1ce · 7:30p.m
ML 011¥e United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesvill ~

Paswr: Charles Jones

Reedsville Church ol ChriA
Panor. Philip Sturm
SLmday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service : 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m
Thursday Serv1ces - 7 p.m.

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

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster

HobSOII ChriJIIan Unkm

~lfred

f&gt;astor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a .m.
Worship - II a.m., b:30 p.m.
C hester
f&gt;astor : Sharon Httu ~ mlt n
Worsh1p - I) a.m
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Thur~day Services · 7 p.m

Middlepoo, Ohio
Sunday School , 10 a.m.
Sunday evenina. 7:30p.m.

Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Church of God
MI. Mwlah Chur&lt;h or God
Racine
Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School - 9:45 11 .m.
Evenmg - 7 p.m
Wednesday Service ~ - 7 p.m .

P&lt;~slor :

Rutland Church ot God
P.astor : John F. Corcoran
Sunday Schoo l - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church or God
Appl~ and Second Su.
Pastor: Rev. David RuueU
Sunday School and Wonhip- 9 :30 11.m
£vcning Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Flatwoodti
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Worshlp · II a.m.

Wednesday Servic:es · 7 p.m.

Foresl Run
Pastor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services· 6:30p.m.

Healll (Middleport)
Paslor: Frank Smith
Sunday School-9:30a.m
Worship - I 0:30 11 .m.
Wednesday Services - 6 p.m.
Minersville
Pastor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m

JupiN&amp;

PastOJ: Brenda Weber
Wonhip - lJ :JO a.m
Sunday School - I 0:30a .m
Wednesday Service s · 7:30p.m.

LongBottom

Pomeroy
l,anor: Eunflae (Grace) Kec
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9: IS a m .
Wl)nhip - 10 :30 il.m .. 6 r .m
Wedne1day Services- 7:30p.m.
Rock Sprlngt

PaslOr:KE~th

Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m
Wonhi-p ·tO a.m.
Youth Fellow1hap, Sunday · 6 p.m.
Rullanil
Pastor: Arthur Crabtree
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worship - 10:30 il .m.
Thursday Serv1ce.~ - 1 p.m.

Pomeroy Church oftltt NIWirene
Pastor: Rev Thomas McClung
SWKiay School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m. and6p.m.
Wednc~day Servi~.~ - 7 p.m
Chtster Churdll ot the Nuarene
Pas\Or. Rev. Herbert GraLC
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedneld"ay Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Buye

Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
WontUp · 10:30 a.m ., 6 :30p.m.
Wt.dncsday Service ~ - 1 p .m .
Portland First Ch urch or the Na1.11rene
Pastor! William Justis
Wonhip - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Endtime House of Prayer .
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30p.m.

Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evtt~ing 7 p.m
. Thunday Service - 7 p.rn .

Hazel Community Church
Off Rs. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.

Panor: Ken Molter
S und&lt;~y School - 10 a.m.
Wor.;hip - II a.m . and 7 p m

Dyesvllle Community Church
Surtday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m

Rutland Bible Melhodlst
Pastor : Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunda)' School - 9:30a .m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces - 1 p.m.

Chri!!.1i1n FeUnw!lltlp Ccntt•r
Salem St., Rutland
11astor: Kobcn E. Mu s~er
Sunc.J~ty School · ltJ a.m .
Wursh 1p - 11 :15a.m .. 7 p.m
Wednesday Scrvit:e 1 p.m

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev . Phillip Scarberry
Worship · 9:30a.m
I Sl &amp;. 3rd SWlday - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a. m:
Wednesday Services - 7:30pm

Racine F1rst Church olthe Nazarene
PllStOf: Mark Skaggs
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:30a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Se:rvi~s · 7 p.m.

Tupptr!!i Plain!i Sl. Paul
Paslor: Sharon Hau1man
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuc~day Services · 7:3 0p.m

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
SWJday School · 9:30a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 6:30p.m
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Morse Chapel Church
Larry Paw , Superintendent
Sunday school - I 0 a.m.
Worshlp - 7 p.m
Wedn esday SeNiOC - 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Lona Bouom
Sunday School · 9 :30a .m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m ., 7:30p.m
Wedne.,day 7 :30p. m.

Rejoicing life Church
500 N . 2nd Ave ., Middlepon
11asl0r: Lawrence l;ort:m!ln
Sunday School - t'o a.m
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p.m
Church or Jesus Chrl!it,
Apostol I&lt; Faith
114 mUe pa ~ t Fon Me1gs on New L1 ma Rd.
P~stor : William Van Mete r
Sunday-700 p.m
W edn c~ day -7 : 00 p.m
l·nday -?:00 p.m
Oirt011 Tabcrn11dc Church
Cl 1hon. W Va
Su nd ayS-chou!

IOa .m

W or~ htp

· 1 p.m.
I hu rsday ScNICI! - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
l'eal.-al A...,.biJ
SL Rt 124. Rocme
PaJtOr : William Hoback
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p m
Wedne.sday Scr.,q c:c~ - 7 p.m.
M iddleporl Penlet.'OStal
Third Av~
J'a~Lor : Re~. Clark Hak cr
Sunday School - I 0 ~ m
Evening - 6 p.m
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Presbytenan
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Worship -9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9 : 45t~ . m .
Middlepon Pre.ort)yterl•n
Sunda y School - 9 ~ . m .
W o r~hip · 10 11.m
Sy r:u.'USl' Flrst lJnilt.'CI Pr~bvtt.-ri•n
Sunday School - 10 a.n;.
Wur.;htp - 1 I a.m., 4 p.m. (I st &amp; 3nl Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist
Stventh-Day Adwmd!d
Mulberry Hu . Rd ., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Scf'\'lccs :
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
WOfsh1p • 3 p.m.

United Fallh Church
Itt. 7 on Pomeroy By - Pa~ §
Pas tor: Rev. Robert E. SnUth, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won nip - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel LlehtOOusc
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunler

Sunday School · 10 lt.m
Evening 7·3(1 p.m
Tue~day &amp; 'lhumiay · 7.11J p.m
Nease SetUement C hurch
Sunday Worship - 2:30p.m .
Thu rsday se rvices - 7:30p .m

Eden United Brethren In Clwllt
2 1/2 miles north d ReedsYiUe
on Stat~ Route 124
Pasmr: Rev. Robert Marltley
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh.ip - 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 :30p.m.

~

Rocker Iechner
By Catnepper • 3 ~
Not$7$1.115

535995

•••
••

••
•
•

•

•

. . . . . . Trtes
•12.95 to 517.95

RACINE PlANING MILL
Mill Wotk
Cabmet Mak1n~
Syracuse
992 ·3978

' K&amp;C JEWELERS ·
212 E. Main Stoeet
992·3785, Pomeroy

IAWUNGS.(OATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
' 264 South 2nd

Mid41tport

~~FLORIS"

Ill•,. c......,\ ow... n.n..
112 EAaT IIAIN
POIEROY, ottO 457•
IIIII It or 1111111

Crow's Family Restaurant
"FHiurlng Kentwlry Frl«&lt; Chick"""

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
Veterans
Hospital ·

...•
~·~rua99
' ;.
ONLY·
•

112-1771 '

'

SliversriUe Word ol Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9 :30a.m
Eventng - 7 p.m. ,

United Brethren

lema. Holy&amp;

SYRACUSE '

Harri1onviUe Road
Pasmr: Re... . Victor Roush
Sunday School9 :30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Servia: - 7:30p.m .

Mt. Hermon lJnited Brttlnn
in Chrl!&lt;!1 Chun:h
I C). a s Cummunn y oH CM 82
Pu10r· Roben Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m., 7 :30p.m.
Wednc1day Servi&lt;:es - 7 :30p.m.

4.00

HUII'ARDS
GREENHOUSE .

FaJnlew Bible Church
U1.1.n , W.Va . RL 1
Pastor : Jamei Lewis
Sunday School - 1 I a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wedncsd~ty Servu,;c - 7:30 r .m.

Ml. Olive Community Church
Pas tor : Lawrence Bu1h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m .
WcdnedHy Serv1ce • 7 p.m.

5

!?pen o.lly 11-5,
Sundaya12-l ·

Coolville Rood
Pastor-: Rev. Phillip Ridenow
Sunday School - 9:30 :.a .m
Wonh tp · 10:3() a.m.
Wednesday Serv1~ - 7 p.m

Syracuse Ml.!i:Sion

lo:ast Letvrl
l)utor: Ken Moher
Sund;,y School - ]{) H.m.
Wor'(hip · 9 a.m
Wcdn c~ da)' - 7 p.m.

Tnrt:h Church
Co. Kc.J . liJ
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m .

While's Chapel Wesleyan

1411 Bridgeman Sl. , Sy01 ~use

Panor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wedne$day Service - 7 p.m.

Hocklngporl Church
Grand Streel
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service:~ - R p.m

Wonhip· 10:4S a.m.,? p.m.
Wednesday Servic:c. - 7 p.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Cllapd

Sulton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
SWJday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (hi &amp; 3rd Sun)

Belhel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - \0 a.m.

Freod- GoopeiMioolon
Bald Knob,"' Co. Rd. 31
PallOr. Rev, Rater Willrc.d
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.

Sunday ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community ChurdJ
515 llcarl St., Middlcpon
P11..~tor : Sam Andcnun
SWlday School 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wedne.sday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Coolville lJnited Methodist Pari~
P~t s tor: Helen Kline
Coolville Churth
Main &amp; Fiflh St
SWJday School - I0 a.m ,
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tue~da y Service~ - 7 p.m.

Wednuday SeMoe • 7 p.m.

Faith 1-'ellowship Crusade fur Chrisl
P~t ~tor : Rev Fflmk.Jin Dickens
~ ...... icc: Friday , 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo rshi.p - 9 a. m.
Wednesday Scrvtcts- 10 a.m .

R~u:in~

Pas10r. Clyde W. Hendertcn_
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm .
EvaDne·- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

The Salvation Army
115 Buu.emul Ave ., Pomeroy.
Sunday Scnuul - 10:3() a.m
WOJ ~ hip - 10:()) il.m ., 1 30 p.m

Pastor: Kennelh Baker

CarteiCNilnterl'!nvm'-tlonll Church
Kmalbwy Rol&lt;l

H-vllle c... monllJ Church
PanOf: Theron Durham

Snowville
Pastor : Florence Smith
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshtp - 9 a.m.

MorningStar

Silver Rid&amp;e
Pas10r: Duane Syderulricker
Sunday Sc:l\0&lt;&gt;1 • 9 o.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdne~y SeNiu: - 7 p.m.

Calvar y Bible Church
Pomeroy Pik e, Co. IM
l'a ~ Lur : Re.., lll11ckwood
Sumliiy St:houl · 9 :-\ () il 111
Worsh1p 10:){) a.rn , 1:10 p.m
Wct.lncs d~t y Sc l'"\l i!;C - 7 30 p.rn

Salem Ctntcr
Pastor: Ron Fierce
SWlday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

Cannel
Pastor: KeMelh Baker
SWJday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

South 8tthel New Ttltlment

New Haven Church ot the Naurene
Paator: Glendon Stroud
Sundoy S&lt;:hool · 9:30 o.m
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Trinity Conuegallonal Churth
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church · 9:15 a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

u tur: Rc"Y . Phillip Scarberry
Su nday School · 9:30 il.m.
Worship - JO:JO a.m
Wednesday Service~ - 7:30p.m.
11

Wonhip · 10;30 a.m., 6 p.m.

SundayS&lt;hooi · IO:OOa.m.
Pearl Chapel
Pastor: Aorencc Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m .
Worship - \0 a.m .

Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30p.m.

United Methodist

Hartford Church ofChrlst In
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Pas lOr: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.

Srracuse Church tithe N~r~.~~rene
Putor: Rev. Rick Sturcill
SWlda)' School • 9:30 a.m.

Wonhip - II a.m.

Langs"lllc Christian Churth
SW1day School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce 7:30 p.m.

Re«&lt;JVIIIe Fello-lp
Cburch of the Nazarene
Pallor: JoM W. Dougln
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - t0:4.S a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servu:e5 - 7 p.m

Enlerprtse
l'asi.OJ : Keith Ride r
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 w.m
Wouhip · 9 a.m.

Sunday School - 0:45 a.m.

.
Sunclay S&lt;:hool· 9:30a.m.
SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second S1., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - r.J:4.S a.m.
Wonhip • I I a.m.

Christian Union

Putor: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9:45 1.m
Wonhip · I I a.m.
Wednelday Services -7:30 p.m.

Pauicia. ~ds~l.'!ua

l.lbcrtv Christian Church
- Dexler
~a .slor : Woody CaU
Sunda y Evening · 6 :30p.m.
Thumiay Service - 6:30p.m.

Hemloc-k Grove Church
Paswr: Charle&amp; Domiaan
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

CenlraiCIUIIer
Asbu'7 (SJraeuoe)

'

•

....
.•.,
•••
..•

·~

'·

,.-;,

115 I. MemO&lt;ial Dr .

Pomtror

EWING FUNERAL HOME
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2975

Nationwide ln5 . Co.
of Columbus, 0 .

to• w. Mo~m

"l·U11 Pomtrov

..Di,nit~·

and .Yrt·lcP All«•ny.• "

Established 1913

992-2121
t06 Mulltrr'f A"'

,,,.....

f 27t ......

S.CMIIII
Ml&lt;hllep6rt,
Ohio

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~~~! r~i
Pre'&gt;t r1p1•ono;.

Pomeroy

991 1911

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~lES

&amp; SERVICE

992-7075
172 North Steond bt.

Ohio

•

�.

'
Page
8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentl~l

Friday, December 17, 1993

Watch
serv1ce
planned

•'

0

GOSPEL SING PLANNED • The Groups
/ 'Sounds of Praise" pictured above will appear
at the Point Pleasant High School Auditorium
Dec. 31 for the first annual New Year's Eve
Gospel Sing, starting at 8 p.m. until midnight.

Other groups to appear are The Lordsmen, Tbe
Conquerors Quartet, Reftectlons Trio, Eternity,
and soloists Kathy Stebbins and Dorsey John·
son. Concession will be avaDable and admission
is free.

We give _ , 1ti!IMI

There will be a wlllclt service at
the Betievers Fellowship Ministry,
Pomeroy, Dec . 31 beginning at
6:00p.m.
Feawred groups will include the
Endtime Singers, Patty and Lenny
Ministry, the Happy Praise Singers,
the Conley Family, the Dickens
Family, Children of the Real God
and other singers.
There will be preaching by Rev.
Tom Reffitt, Rev. I oey Walker of
Huntington W.Va., Rev. Franklin
Dickens and Evangelist Jeff Cot·
trell.
Hot meals will be served. The
public and additional singers are
invited to auend.
Additional information may be
obtained by calling (614) 9922463.

~­
"SPECIAL
CARE"
they 1

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru Fat. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12

.FRIDAY
:; LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
:Pull Gospel Church will have its
,.nnual Christmas dinner at 5:30
· :Friday evening following by a ser:vice at 7 P.·m. Special guest will be
Davie Dailey.

1UPPERS PLAINS - A Christmas cantata will be presented at the
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Saturday, at 2 p.m. It is being presented by the Walnut Street Church
of Christ of Belpre.
RUTLAND - Star Grange 778
will have its annual Christmas runner Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Salem Center Fire Station. Meat
provided; those attending to take a
covered dish. Adults to take $3
worth of food items for needy residents, and children are to take
items to be donated to other children.

. POMEROY - The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
.lvill meet Friday at 8 p.m. in the
()ak Room in Athens. This will be
the final meeting for 1993.

·.

.LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
)Viii have preaching and singing
services at 7 p.m. Fri~ at the
church. Pastor Steve R
invites
).he public. Fellowship will follow.

..
.

RUTLAND · A Christmas
Snowllake r.een dance will be held
at the Rutland Civic Center Saturday from 8 to II p.m. The charge
wiD be $3 a person or $5 a couple.

SATURDAY
: MIDDLEPORT - A round and
:square dance will be held from 8 to
KANAUGA - A Christmas play
' 1'1:30 p.m. Saturday at the old will be presented at the Silver
~merican Legion hall in MiddleMemorial Baptist Church Saturday
port. C. J. and the Country GenUe- at7 p.m.
:~en will play.
MIDDLEPORT- A Christmas

Red Cross to visit Meigs
American Red Cross Tri-State
Re$ional Blood Services reminds
Me1gs County residents they have
"ooe more gift to give this holiday
season" - making a blood donation wben the Red Cross bloodmobile visits the Senior Citizens Center/Meigs Mullipurpose Bldg. ,
lt!tulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
Wednesday, Dec. 22 from I to 5:30
p.m.
"In the last year 57.82% of
blood collected through Tri-State
Region Blood Services was from
cQIIImunity blood. drives," said Joy
.C urry, acting duector of donor
resource&amp; and public relations for
the blood center. "We depend on
community visits to help us meet
the needs of ma patients in nearly
60 hospitals," Curry added. The
goal for the blood drive is 80 productive donors.

One unit of blood can help save
the lives of 4 hospital patients. It
can help save or prolong the lives
of heart patients, hemophiliacs,
1rauma victims and newborns.
Anyone 17 years of age. weighing 110 pounds or more who
haven't donated blood in the last 56
days, is eligible to donate. All
blood types are needed, Red Cross
officials pointed OUL.

program will be presented at the
Silver Run Baptist Church Saturday at 7:30p.m.
REEDS VILLE • The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene,
Reedsville, will have a Christmas
play at 7 p.m. Saturday. There will
be a live nativity scene a t the
church from 6 to 9 p.m. on Dec. 22
and 23.
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will present a Christmas program "Come
Hear the Story" Sunday at 6 :30
p.m. followed by a candlelight service.

• Ada.outltde the eouty your ad niDimut be prtpaid
• Recebe ditcouat for ada paid ia ad•ucre.

POMEROY - The Mount Hermon United Brethren Church will
have its annual Christmas program
Stmday at 7:30p.m.
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village

IN POMEROY AREA
CALL 992·2155 FOR
INFORMATION
THE FOLLOWING MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS
WILL REMAIN OPEN
TIL 8:00P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY:
Trolley Statton Cref1a
Middleport Dapertment Store
Dalryou..n
Rlldlo Sheck
Dan'a
Furniture on the 'T"
B1hr Clothiera
l l.

•

SHARON JACKS

Jacks named ·
employee of
.the month

~ Sharon Jacts was been named
Overbrook ·Center's December
~mpiO)'ee or the month by her coYt'Uibll.

Jacks his worked in the musing
fepll'!lllent 11 Overbrook Center
11nc:e May 1989 and currently is a
C'cnificd nursing aailtanl.
• J1C:Il1 Uvea in Meigs County
~~~~ her husband, Vqil. Her hob&amp;ies ~ campill&amp; and cooking.
Jacka will receive dinner and
· ~crlliabt accommodations at the
JiittOrili Wayetlll Hotel in MaNtIa; 1 ..,..-vcd partini space at the
flcility and • cCrtificalll.
·I

The Adult Choir
oft~ Middle port
Church of Christ
cordially. invites
. .
you to JOin m
the celebration
of our Savior's
birth as they
present the Christmas
cantata:

.

•King Jesus Is His Name•

Sunday, Dec. 19th
7:00pm

•tbbltport (burtb o( lbrifllt
.1Utb at jlain
_.tbbleport, • • 992·2914

So~llon

~~.

24Hour
EmerljlncY ..,.._

'odortrMbt••t

IN07 Roobpringo RcL
(at-afUI RUI)
...... oy, Ohio

FURNACES

DA¥11101'1

"!'

Drink with each purchase of

.

992-Middleporli

388-VIatoa

985 "n rter

ro.......,.

379-W.W..t

843-Po..,ad
247-Looaro
94!1-Roelne
742-Rodood

r.u.

614-992·7144

_,_
.......
..........
......,

4/2t/tllit

Fri!M Repair

99~7011•

or 'fOil JIB
' lol01141.0070

•DOZERS
-BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. IOSTOII
EICAYADIII ·

tliWII,OIIO

(614)
667-6621

good concmion

992-6970 evenings

,_,,.

K.K.'s Pelland
Christmas Specials
Iguana, $19.99
Black Tegu, $175;
Samoyed puppies, $275;
387-Q117.

Public Notice

36970 lal •• Raatl

GRAVEl, WID,
UMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FlU DIRT

l.l.s
Now has beautKul Coeur Spaniel Puppl•.
featuring a 2 11. common Black Tequ. Layaway~
now availabt.lor Chrllllt•. Sele on our entire
of large aquariurr..
new

992·3470

3~, T~'!l!.. ~.

••rna.

OFFICE 992-2886

NEW-REPAIR
'
205 North Second Ave •.
Middleport, OH
HARRISONVILLE· A very ,..II maintained 1984 throo
bodnlam ~home tilling on 1.42 acr.s.
lllay buy • lor 121,100 or .luat llalartd lor S12,000.

.

'

Guttetll.l"
Downipollll
Gutter Clelnlng
Ptintl. .

FREE ESTIMATES

'949-2168
&amp;-11-113-tln

GO INTO IUIINI!II- With • lillie know how aod a lot ol
lnlaiYI you - becomo an Entrlp,.,.ur (Bualneu Owner).

Own a Sap4ic Tri SeMc:e flet hat been ln business lor 29
yean. Comoa w1t1t a 1978 Ford Feoo wilh 35,200 actual
mllea ttat hU now raclolo, rMiw paint job, 2 yr. old pump.
IJOW hoaH and 3 polio jchno. Servoo Mvorol oountioa.
HS,OOO

IIDOI.EPORT· Sycornor. StrMI- A2 siDry ~ thai has 3
bodrooma, •mlruon llidng, pan -~ new wiiW.g, and
..... buiklng.
$25,000.

ROCKIPRIIGI ROAD- M oldar horN with lho clownatairo
compleltly ronovatod. Haa on ononnous living room with 2
boy wlndowt and a nice atone firoptace . Tho baaulilul
ki1chon hU now oollinata with an leland, and 3 bedroom a,
with !ergo Wilk-In clolell, clnlng room, wraparound porch.
and many oulbuildlnga,littlng on t

1/2 10100.

PS,OOO

RACINE- Main Strwat- Looking lor comfortable ~ving in
Radna? HeN II lal A doublewldo aitting on a 72172 let.
Home hoa vau(tod oolllnga In tho living fl'Om ond kMchon
oiMI 3 bo-.o and 2 balhs. PRICED TO SEU S2t,SOO

Hom Moool ................ '22

992·7878

e

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAl

IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.

llenonlbii.R8tes
Jolli N. Sayre

Spaclll! Early Bird

1:ZGaug.8hot

StrJctly Enforoed

Uc. No. 0061-342

11-

1111011 -pd.

I.A.R.
CONSTIUCnON

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

Come by 111d register
lor free Battery to be
given away December
24, 1983. No pun:hue
required to reglotor and
don~ have to be prwaent
10 win.

·--·100. . .

OFRCE.----·---·----···...............8112-2186 '

NOVDOIER
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK47)."-·-" s1
NORINCO UNI. SKS..______"
1200 ROUNDS NON-cORROSIVE..51
CALL Ami 6:00
304-415·7256

J-IOC)o714·DIE

11112/N 1110.

McLendon

CHRISTMAS TREES

JIORTOAOIE.COMPANY

IUDFORD'S
FIISH CUT lUES AYAILIIU
01 CUT YOUI OWII
UIIITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eat et
8D-In onto Rt. 111, go 4 mi. to Mllepoet 13. Tum
South on lll'lftl roecl, 1% mllee to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS; 10 'TIL

Opellllllt

742-2103

ILIIM

Porches,
·Patios,
Sldew,lks
i'" Q92-7878

Rettlodellng
Stop CompiN

New Raven W. V.l5265

a

Clteryl A. Jimel
WIIUibn C. James

FREE ESTIMATES

415-4471

IIMOYAI. .

~IGHT HAULING

ofiRI!WOOb

..,_

.,••or."
Ohio
.
~

'

~~

"BILL BUCK

--~

USED RAILROAD TEl

Cit hll.bf C.l)

•••uL u•••· WICKS HAULING

.(.llf ~~~

TREES

$10.00
. ....
'

"

Openttol

IIMa•dldnda:
8ntah,. Wltlte l ·

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

Auetrten~.,IDr.
.......,..,.,

Ad,, p II

1

ESTIMATES

614-H2·764S

(304) 882•3336

71221113

......

VJ;. YOUNQ Ill ,
' ta-t215

New Homes.• VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddHiona e Roofing
COMMERCIAL end.RESIDENTIAL

.•

s•11.&amp;

EITIIA'IQ)

BISSELL ·.BUILDERS, INC.

Alarm Systems
ClcliJed On:ult TV
Security Cameras

7n

dallr••

.

Our Business is Security

WOIK

'.

Call Ban Cedar at Cedar Vacl

,.,,.. • • 11

Lend Claerlng, Ponde,
Weter Llnee, leptlce
Llcenn l Bonded
Cherllelletfllld.

COICim

..

Parte Shipped UPS
Fut • O.,.ndebll S.rvleel

.• ..., ... 45771
614offt-5344
1-IOC)o714·DIE

HAULING

$100 Payoll
Thle ad good tor 1
FREE card.

Fltctory Choka

l&amp;l DIIIAIH

Gravel

EAGLES
CLUB

HIXMI', Eurdca. Tri-8tar,

Regina, .t mcilt odJer brands!

33151 .... ..._ .....

675-6755
EVERYTMUR8DAY

•

Dirt

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORnNG GOODS

RACINE
' FIRE DEPT.
EVERY

RainboWI, JCl!tly, ElectrolUJt,

Limestone

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

liNGO

• Service • Bags • Belts

HAULING

ShWder Mcult.. .... '1 55

GUN SHOOT

SATURDAY
8:30P.M.

'GENEUL

DEER -HEADS
MOUNTED

•Dozer oBickhoe
oOitcher o0u..., Truck

clair••

I

•

Speilllzlf!9 in CUllom

4 pc. Bedroom Sulle
double bed, dresser, chest
of drawers &amp; nlghl stand,

675-1'1. P l 458-l.oa
576-A...,._G,...,.e
771-11882-New a •••
895-Utut
937-llalrala

.

.

llhl..,....,,...

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
992-3432
Sat, Dec. 18, 7:30 pm to ???
- Chrlatmaa Special-Bowling 112 prica·Free Shoe
Rentol - Door Prizes

667-Coot.llle

•••

j

lltML.I~
c.........

Case Racing Series
Collaetora Knives
$19.99 ea.
O'Dell Lumber Co.
Vine Street &amp; Third Ave. Gallipolis
834 E. Main Street Pomeroy

•

No.

INIURANCE CUIW

cutyourt-.

.

4&lt;16-G..Wpolto
367-a...t.tn

245-Rlo Crude
256-Coyao Dloo. ·
M3-Anlolo Dloo.

th1111ce following aaicl road employment u of October
·Range 12, at Sop~ rona to the place of beginning, t, 1993, ali'cfl'- lull-time
Doyla'a northwoat cornar; containing two (2) acrao, employee and aalary
thanco waat 30 rode to John more or le1s. See deed employM the aum of Two
Rldonow'a land; thonca given to Henry Mora and Hundred Dollaro (200.00),
oouth 172 rode to tho touth Mary A. Mora, dated April each employee In active
line ol aocUon; thance - t 30, 11131, Molga County port·tlmo employment the
48 rode ond 1111nko; lhanco Deed Record Book 133, tum of Ona Hundred Fifty
north 102 rode to a corner P-478.
Dollara (150.00), each
rendered, being Caae No. of Sophrona Doyle'• Iandi
Aloo tho following employoo In limited pari·
113.CV-154 In oald Court, 1 thence wotl13 roda; thence deacribed real eatate, limo employment Filly
will off• lor sale at tho front northly down crook to oituotod In tho Townohlp of Dollara (50.00), each new
door of the Courthouoo In Sophrona E. Doyle'o ChMt.r, In tho County of employee employed alter
Pomeroy, Molga County, northwoot cornar to the llelga ond tho State ol Ohio. October 1, 1993 lho aum of
Ohio, on the 14th dll}l of place ol beginning, In Section No. 34, Town No. Fifty Donora (SO.oo).
January, 1994,11 10:00 a.m., containing 50 acrn, more 3, Range No. 12 of tho Ohio
Section H: Thlo Ordinance
tho following l.anda and or laaL
Company'•
Purchaae. ohall take olloct and be In
tonomanta, part of which Ia
ALSO: Tho following real Beginning 12 rodo weal of farce on December 6th
bounded on tho north and aatate, beginning at tho S.E. the old Pomeroy road In the 1993.
.
•
south by County Road 25, oornar of tha Southwaot north llno of aald Section Altoal: Decomllor 6, 1883
Pomeroy Plko Road, which quwlar olaoction, town and 34, at a Hickory tree; thence
Kathy Hyooll,
Is Jhe only road that range alorooald; thanoo weal thirty throe (33) rodo to
Clwk!Traaurar,
bor oro tho rul oatote. Tho north 56 rode to Walk•'• 1 Wild Cherry tree; thence
VIllage ol Pomeroy,
plat mapa ahow no other Run; thanca South 41 ooutheaot 32 rodo to a
Melga Counly, Ohio
road Iron toga of tho real dogr- waat32 rode to tho Locuat trae; thence In •
Larry Wohrung, Prealdent
ealale. The oloaeat road north of a drain; thence northaaaterly direction
Betty Baronlck
located wool ol tho real aouth 35 rode to tho aoctlon thirty alx (36) acreo, more or
John Blaellnar
eolato to Epple Road, line; thence eoot on aald
Scou Dillon
Townahlp Rood 408. Tho lln·o to tho place of Reference Deed: Volume
Thomaa Weny
cloaoot rood located east of beginning, containing 7 334, Pogo 113 and Volume
William Young
the rNI •'-" la Lakewood acr•, mora or leaa.
252, Pogo 717, Molgo (12) 11; lTC
Rood, Townahlp Road 85. A
ALSO: The following real County Dood Rocordo.
complete legal doacrlptlon . estate, beginning 46 rodo Tho above deocribod roal
of tho roal eatote Ia •• and 16 IInke oaat from tha •tate haa bean eaalgned
lollowa:
aouthwoat cornar of tho the following Auditor'• ,
Public Notice
Tho following real estate, aouthoaot quarter of Parcel Numbera: 03·
altuated In tho County of Section No. 35, Town·3, and 01 012,03·01 013 and 03Molga, In the Slota of Ohio, Range 12; thence eaot on 01014.
and In tho Townahlp of aald llna 21 roda and 15 Said real estote it tubject
CONTRACT FOR
Cheater, and bounded and IInke to tho OMiler•.ol tho 10 accrued real eatote taxes
PROVIDING UGHnNG
deocrlbad aa tollowa:
ChHter and Rulanid Rood; lor 1993.
FOR STREETS AND
Beginning at tho thanca North 30 dagreea 15 ReaiJ;otato Appraloed AT:
PUBLIC PLACES IN THE
northwoat corn or of tho rode and 18ilnko olonq uld $16,000.00. The real eatate
STATE OF OliO
northeast qUII1er of Secllon road; thence north . •a connot be sold lor lo"' than
Thia contract Ia mode and
No. 34, Town No. 3 and dogrooa waat 22 rodo; two-thirds the appralood entered Into thla tilth day of
Range No. 12, of tho Ohio thane•, wool 11 rodo to value.
December,
1893•
Company'•
Purchaea; Shivlere llnaj thence on Tormo of Salo: Caoh on (horalnoflor the "ellaclive
thence South fllty-throo aold Una to tho place of detovery o f -.
data") by and botwoen
roda to tho center of the beginning, containing 4
Jamea M. Soulaby Columbua Southern Power
Chnter and Au aand Rqad; INn·•, mora or '-•·
Shorlft of Malga County Compaoy, (public ulillty
thence aut twanty·lour ·ALSO: The following roal 12(10), 12(17),12(24) 3tc.
Incorporated undar tha Iowa
rode and ton IInke; thence ootote, oltuata In Section
of tho State of .Ohio (the
north 61 dograoa ooot 10 No. 34, Town 3, Range 12 of
"Company; and the Village
Public Notice
rodo and 3 IInke; thonca tho Ohio Company'o
of Pomo.ror, Ohio (the
north 25 d,raaa wool to Pwchua, Md bounded and
Sealed bldo ore being "Cuatomor") purauant to
tho north lno of oald deacrlbed aa lollowa, viz: accopled by Racine VIllage Raaolutlon No. 1104.83 of
section; thence w•t 8 roda Beginning 44 rode north of Clark lor a 1975 While Dacambor 6,111i3.
and 21 llnko to tho pioca of tha cantor of aald Sac:Uon, compactor declared excess Wlln•Mth:
beginning containing 7 112 •• aurvoyed by Spencer machinery. Said 25 yerd Sacllon 1:
ocr•, mora or laaa.
Hll}lmon; thence north alxty· tandem
compactor
The Companr,
Ita
ALSO: Tho following rul alx roclo to tho llouthw,at compact• well, hat a 230 aucc 111or1 and •••&amp;ana, Ia
ootote, beginning at tho corMr of Oaorga Schalbor't Cumming• · mol or, air hereby voated wl!h tho right
eoutheaal comer ola aven 191; thenc• •••I twenty- brakoa, power •-ring and to light with elactrlcily the
and on-halllo\ beginning In olght (28) rod• to tho eight 1100120 Urea on reor. atreeto and othar public
tho canler of tho Cheater northwHt corner of • lot Vehlclo may be viewed at plocea In tho VIllage of
and Rutland Road and In heretofore aold 1o o-ge tho Wotor Building on Third Pomeroy, 0 h1o. Tha
tho northoaat quarter ol Mora; thence i long tho and Vina Streets In Racine, Company oholl have tho
Section No. 34, Town 3, Pomeroy and Chaater Rood, Ohio. Clerk must reoalvo oil right to charge and racelvo
Range 12, of tho Ohio . •• lotlowo; South 26 1/2 blda by 4:00 p.m., January from tho Cuatomor paymonl
Company'• Purctian·· dogreea, Waat 11 rode; 3, 1984. Bids will be opened tor a old aarvlcoo In
thence north 25 degree~ South 5 112 dogr..., Weal at January Council Meeting. aocordonca with the
weat on John P. Shlvlor'o 24 roda; South 18 ~.
Carolyn L. Powell achedu~ of rat" aat forth
aoot llrialllty-throe rode and Waat 14 rode; South 42
Raclno VIllage Clark In tho Company'o "Schedule
12 Unko to tha north Una of dagre•, WHt .~~ roda, to
527 Fifth St., P.O. Box 375 SL" tariff •• tho aama may
aald aoctlon; tho.noo eaat ·lho place o( ]ieglnnlng,
Racine, Ohio 45771 Ibo omended from .limo to
alx!Mn roda to o oharly tr• conwtnlng 7 aorM ond 55
949·24851949·21120 lime and approvod by tho
eight lnchaa In dl-otor; · parchea.
1121 11, 22, 29; 3TC .
Publlo Utllhioa Commloolon
lhance aeluth 33
SAVE AND EJ!CEPT: Tho
of Ohio (PUCO(, and tho
aoal28 roc1a iild 17 u.,.. ·10 following doaorlbod real
Cuatomor Ia tiound and
tho center ol a aprlng; aatoto, altuoto In Cha~tor 1_ _P~u~b~II~C·~
· Not..;_;;l~ce.;__ obligated by thla contract to
thanoo aoulh 25
Townahlp, Melga County, In 1ORDINANcE •
make payments In
..., 15 roda and 8 llnlca to tho ltote of Otllo, and In
An Ordinanoa to9 18
provide occordanoa with aald tariff.
tho canter of Choater and Section 35, Town 3, ~ eddlllonol companaotlon for Attoat:
Rutland Road: thence ireat 12• Iii lla Ohio Company 8· Vilage Emplo-loi tH3. CuatomM
BE IT ORDAINED by th• by
llong Mid rood to .Ilia place f'lnll;aoa. and IIOunclo!f ilr!d
Bruoa Read
of baalnnlng. contolnlilg 4- ~lnlbled • fCIIIowe, to-wit: Council of tho Villano ol
531100 aorH, more or 1aae
...,. n ng .,. the oouth llno
•
ScouDtnon
ALSO: Tho following ...;.1 of ..ld Section 35, In tho Pamaroy, two-thlrda of all
Thomaa Wray
eatole, lloglnnlng 172 roda old Pomeroy rood; l h - mambars con.c urrlng
Larry Wahrung
north and 30 rode aoat of running wool twalva (12) . _,
'
Wllllem )'oung
Section 1: That lor ·tho
aoulheaat corner 01 tho roda to a white oaf~ lr•;
TIRolloyor/Covndlman
aouthwoat quarter of lhanoa- twelve(12) roclo year 1H3, tho VIUage aholl (12) 17; 1l:C
.
to tho old Pomaroy lload; pay - h omployMinoctl..
NOTICE Of SALE .. •
By virtue·· of ·an Order or
Sale laouod out of the
Common Pleat Court of
Malga County, Ohio, In tho
caoa of Richard A. Radford,
Plaintiff, va. Alta May
Morpn, ot al., Dolandanto,
upon a Judgment therein

"fine fabrtce
"gellel'll e...,lng

,....... out .... ,...,

ie now offering
·Meatball &amp; Phil~ Steak Subs
·1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free

CaWa County Help Cotmty Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

t.;o..'l&gt;&lt;!(.,o.,..

Public Notice

DAII"OI
REITOAA110ii-

~ l Dovld C~"C·--

Clauified pase• cuver the
follouling telephone e;cchflnge•...

LET'S CELEBRATE THE
MAGIC OF
THE SEASON IN DOWNTOWN
POMEROY!

Public Notice

•ctt...., (on alte)

-.am

Days
Word• Rate Over 15 Wonla
I
15
$.4.00
$ .20
3
15
$6.00
$ .30
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
. Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Bu•in.., Cud.. • .$17.00/ inch per momth
BuUelin Board••.$6.00/inch per dav

(Check with your favorne rnert:hanta for exact hours.)

Public Notice

Riggs Tree Flinn

RATES

FREE PARkiNG AND EXTENDED
HOLIDAY HOURS.

RACINE · A cantata, "Beloved
Ireland is ·not unique in having no
Son" will be presented by the snakes native to it. The same is true
Racine UMC choir Sunday at 7 of Hawaii, Iceland, Crete, Malta, New
p.m. at the church. A program by Zealand and many other islands.
the youth wiD follow.

CARRIERS NEEDED

Big Bend HMith end Flln..a
Acqulalllone Fine Jeftlry
lngela Furniture end Je-lry
Johnaona V•'-1)&lt; Store
The Shoe Plac*Loc:ker 2111
Mill Street Boou

HOCKINGPORT - Special
recognition will be given to bands
and others who supported Monday
night music at the Reynolds building at Hockingport, State Route
124, Monday at 6:30 p.m. Take
covered dish. All hands welcome.

QUALrrYWOAK
•GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLQ
1182-7474

Ia Memodam
Yard Sal•
• A elaaified advertilemeot plactd la the Tbt Daily Sea.lioel
(mept Cluolf..d Dioplay, Buom• Card or Lop!
Notieeo) willaloo•ppur in lioo Poiat Plouaot Reptor ud
the Callipolia Daily Trlbuae, nachi~t~ ofttl' 18,000 bo•a

Because there's no need to worry
about driving In the weather or the •
hassle of shopping out of town.
You'll find something for everyone
on your Christmas Jist right here In
Pomeroy I All the stores are stocked
full of beautiful merchandise, and
for your shopping convenience,

LETART - The Letart Township
Trustees will met Monday at6 p.m.
at the office building.

IIHS
CHRISTMAS TREES

• Ada that mut be pt.id 1.111 &amp;d"ance 1re:
C.rd ol Th..lu
Happy Ado

POMEROY MERCHANTS
ASSOCIATION

Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

.ARIOLI'S
PWMIIIG,
HUDII&amp;
COOUIG

FIIE&amp;WATER

t~ll

day aflcr pubUca&amp;loa to Make COI'l"t((boe

SAYS THE

POMEROY - The Rev. Eddie
Buffmgton will be a guest minister
at the Naomi Baptist Church Sunday at 10:45 a.m. The public is
invited to anend.

POMEROY- The Hillside Baptist Church will present a Christmas cantata Sunday at the church.
The first performance will be 81 II
a.m. the second 816 p.m.

• Free Ado: Ci-way ud Fouad ado uad• 15 """'' willloo
run 3 daJI at ao cbup.
• Prlce of ad for aU capit.al laiLen ia do\&amp;ble price of ad ca.t
• 7 poiatliae type oaly \lied
• Seat.iDel il aot n~pouible lor erMn a.fUir flrat Uy (cheek
f&amp;r eiTOI'I fll'lt day ad I'WU la paper). Call Wore 2100 p.m.

Let It Snow,
Let It Snow"

11

SUNDAY

RACINE - The adult choir of
the Racine Baptist Church will presented a cantata Sunday at 7 p.m.
Barbara Gheen is the director, Lillian Hayman, the accompanist.

100 p.m. Thwodoy
1:00 p.m. Friday

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
LOTTRIDGE - The Lottridge
:appear two days before an event Community Center will have a
:and the day of that event. Items Christmas runner Saturday at 6:30
·must be received in advance to p.m. at the hall. Those attending
:assure publication in the calen- are to take a covered dish . The
:·dar.
. Center is located on Athens County
Road 53.

DA~· Bi!JORI! PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Mcndoy
I :00 p.m. Tuoodoy
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday

Wei!pllltlwln:

Ill

UJI qNo .
1111WI_ ....

W. • U1dl$n
•~~
,

• HNith ~

Acclclent~IRA•Mortaeae.

ltclly I . .. ...., D.C.U. • AIUI

. ·~····••rt,
._,n
...

38870 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

1

4S760
(614) IU.I264 .

•

S

ROUDAY SPICIAL

975 I TON SIZil LI.SIOIE
10TON IINIIIUM

=·!!!!J tt....-JE_F_FWI-C-KE_R_s_HA_M_,_o_WN_E~R
\.

I

�Pqe 1D-The Dally SenUnel

Friday,

Ohio

lEA'ITIE BLVD."' by B~ Be.tt1e

32 Mobile Homes

5I

rors.Jt

Houa1hold

~·-..-""

....

·~no - . nt...,
.... dfarquloll-. 11011111:
.
1tl4 Redmln 14x70, 3bdtm .• InNlrtlng, IIepa, bloako,
s,r. wanancy, hontacaherli ln..,....,111111-ottooolol

10,..,. ,.....,

Anent6on: Handiculled, ot...

abted SentoN Old' tou Know
Thot h You Ale In Of A

-··

~

- ...-.
-·11oM
=- --.--'
~~. 112ml.

0111-

..!!.4· Pt. - n l, WV,

,.. ....... _

=::. .

....'111.-

1124111.

Apartment AI : Fll"'t Hoflllr
Aportmonlo
113
So&lt;ond

Av.n•, Galllpolie, IS'M-4tl·1800
For lntormatlon. Equll Hou•lng
Oppor1unhy.

.. - •
'*

-

114 ........

Ren ta ls

-~·• -

AnliQuoa,

331

,.....7711,_
Friday ' "1""'.

l

Merchandise

, __;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;,:;.:.::;:;,__

Th- floa puppin, droppad off
at aur f1om1, 114·H2·5TII.

Wanted to buy: used motMIIi

6

Lost &amp; Found

af'OLI'Id
. Thankealvlng In 1M Ch..ltr
arN, 611-sta54ot83.
"Found:

1mall

dog,

Lost. F11111tt Black and Tan
Beagle With Orongo Collar. On
Blacll Hanll Rd. ott BuiovlllePortar Act Reward $40. Cont1cl
Jam.• Gllmcn 114-381-0519.
Loot ' block and ton Gormon

Shepherd named BUller. We ar•
-rtbnlkon. II found coli 614·
Hl-2770.
Reward $100! No Ountlona As·
ked Mining A 5 Month Old Rot·

twel..r, Mit "Name

Ia Cajun, 614·

388-8012.

Yard Sele

7

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Slloo Muo1 Bo Paid In
Advanct~. DEADLINE : 2:00· p.m.
the dly btfor. lht ad It lo run.
Sundoy odhlon - 2'00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edhlon - 2'00
p.m. Saturday.

Public Sale

8

&amp;Auction

hotMI . ~

WANTED' onglno lor 1111 Ford
F..tlva, 4ep., 1.3 liter, needed
ASAP, colt 614-11!12.Zt55, UOam·
O:OOpm. or 614-992-2428 after
s,oopm.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

"'Av"'ON=--'-...,...---I All Neal I ShifiiiJ
s-ra. 3Q0.875.1•ZO.
AVON! All , , _, Nttd eldra
money or want • career, etther
Wl~lll Marilyn. :JCM-882.2845
or 1..SQO.II2.a:JS&amp;.
Avon Still nHif At Work Or
-Door-Ta.Oooc
· AvoragoOptional.
$8 -$14 ~
1
1112-4738.
Eaoy Workl Exc.ilonl Payl Ae...,ble Proclucll AI Homo. Coli
Toll Frao, 1-t00-417-'!516, Erl.
313.
Group And Fomlty Homo NMd
C.~llled Nurao Aid For PI~·
Tlmo I A.M. -3,00 P.M. 13145
Slalo R - 211, c,_n CHy.
tmmeclilllo Opontno For Aa,_
81ve Sa... PtP80n. ltuat: Be").bit
To Work Fiulbla Schedule.
Av-tno 30 Hra/Wk Call hi10 a.m. And 5 p.m. For IntotVI- 114-446-2337.

Rick Purson AuGtion Company,

Nurte Aldt Trelnlng ProgramPomeroy
Nuralng
and
Rohablllollon Cantor will bo o~
loring clo- In Januory, lafllo
173-5715.
4pm. ApPIIcotlons aro , _
AUC11ona ovory Ffi.SOI, 7'00 P~ 1 bllng accepted 11 3175g Rock·
MI. Ano Auction Center, AI. 2"' oprtnga Rd., Pomeroy. Cto•
&amp; At. 33, "on top of tho hHt". Dlf· tlze r1 limited. No phone C81t..
,_,.
doalaro
nightly. · Apply In,.._. bolwoon 10afllo
Gracarlel,
loll
of
FIM :lpm, M- . Sludonta Ihoi oue&gt;
Mllket** tptelal. Ed Frazier COMiully oomploll tho TCE
clan will blellalblt to appty for
1130 .

full time IUdtonMr, complete
auction
tlf"Yk:a.
UotnMCI
ltlti,Ohlo &amp; Wnl Vlrglnlo, 304-

'1M PortaiM S.wmlll don't

luoul yow -

to tho mill lull

call304-fl5-1ll7.

M18e Priuta't Dey Care Cenler
11-F I A.M. -''110 P.M. Oualhy
Loving Cart for AI Chlldnn
Our 11 Goal. Ploi·Tlmo, Ful~
llmo~Fod.
Avallalllo.
Call ..... lntonnllllon Or 'llelt. Intoni trodd• 114 441 6Z!l p,..
School,
Schoolago,
BIA
School, 114-44N224:

-no•

T &amp; T Lown llonrloo, town,

to.-lllng, olump !!..."'!!!~
•net 111t
:JO+rr.J-ltWW

c:re;:r

or 1.aQ0..538..

Wtlnloci to do "" -.y .. oblod' houM -=:lou"*Y,
lron~n
, cooking, wll
to run
"""
·
nogotla
, 1141112
ll.f.
Will
do
any jaM'
ytrd,houel malrMtncta, will
care tor elderly, cat1 attar
114-211-1357 .

.,OOpm,

Fmanc1a l

-

=

IIIOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUIIUBHINO CO.
- - 111o1 you do bualwllh paoplo you know1 and
NOT to oond monoylhrough tho
mall unlll you han lnv•Ugaled:
lht o ..........
~-~---,--,:­
G.-y Sloro, umo location
35yra., •000oq. ft. plus - ·
ft. very .U. •-••nl, brick
, _ block bulitlll!:yood park·
lng loC appox. 12Cix200tt., fullY
otOdtod, t12.!_000 nog. - ·
3300 or 88Z-UI1.

;;:="·::::·-..

,,..llliilill•

A... - . owner. IM-112o

Want to:
PIN do"n EXTRA

=

AllriiJ--·-·In
-·lllgal
•••llllllol•

lhlua

Jlllrorll.....,.10
Ill F - F.. Ho4lOing Act

ai1MIto ....... "'fYtpi..Q.,.,
llmllllon or

----..-........

- ..--.rollglon.
7

oxtgln, or OilY klli..,t10
nalol riff I4ICit prol«wroo,

.....-.

..

_.

TN1n1 IIFilf*·,w l not

·---llllomroo•Utorrool-~~ln-alb

low. Ou!- .. hoolby

· -..... ~ 111111
aduwa
'dtnhlaa ; fl

..............,_

••rr ttl ontn....,

31 ·

Hlma':J:n ltud ..,viet, 114·
Mll-2
·
Paadin, loyo, black

Pu,..-

and apricot: also Schn~um'a,

mlnlot..,., Nit ond poppor·
AKC cltamplon blOodline, 81C:
11"-"""4.
•·Puppy
Pillet Pet
Shop.
Locatod In !).C. Murphy Co. Ga~
llpotls. - ·1 - 1 - .
•-~-~· ~~- 8ponlo
.....- - - 1I old, 2 male, 4
lwlialo, block. $1110-oo; call IM1111-3441 d11 1pm. Groot
Chrllltma pii!IWnlll.

AKC A- A-~

•o•
pupa, OIC.
= = = - · · o n - -·

ldttenaj . lahnsuzsr
IK"PJ.liOj . II !Mit!t~_!Uh,

11......_

Twot_Two

..-or -·

First
Holar
Apanmenta,
S.Cond Avenue, Galllpolla. 614·
«1·1800 Sonlor, Dtublecl, · 1
H.lndlcappad._1 I 2 Bodraom
Unho. ROnta ""'" On A-od
, _ , ·I'IIIHA luboldlzild'; HUO
Cattlllciatos Accoplod. &amp;14-4411IOOI Equal Houolng Oppor·
tunhn.

One

bedroom
aoanments,
Nzllmo. lncludM utllllin, $100
aecurtty ct.poeh, no pall; 614·

1112-2211.

OM btdroqm turnlahed apartmont1 utMhl&lt;ia paid, 1300/mo.,
NO aopoolt, 814-9411-2526.

Two

bedroom 1partment
P01n11 oy, eall114-1124851.

45

In

Furnished
Rooms

AooiM tor,.,...- or month.

~~~ltloti--O
.
• Ollila Holet
-~~~~­
- · AwHh
l l hook-upa.
a:oo p.m., 304·773-

D"""''"-· 2 72

'1\oo - oltl, ~ tor
••-..
_.In- t o n ... 81l Mt.zt22.

co-.. =eruo;......,..

PARSON II WHAT

COMPANY!!

YOU IN FER?

=
•==:..

-

211 Aflhmllo.lt
31 M'ap.-lftg

3&lt;1 WWI-'
36 .......

A candle
in the dark

WOP II

37 A Kal I dr
38Actao'l ......

40 IIIIDdll?

41" ; a
!'Ill or

42 IIIII &amp;Ia ant
43 lrlllllt ICitOol

==··
-==·
--

PEANUTS

Rl61o!T, I WIWTE '(OOR
BOOK REPORT FOR '1'00..
WI-IAT YOU TI-l INK ..

21

--i--iH-1 ~

-+--

AM I??

'' TillS WAS TI-lE MOST
EXCITING 6001&lt; II-lAVE
EVER READ .. I LIKED
ALL 'THE C"ARACTER5

47..._ol
acllott
411LP--'

·w

tratjj~

WI' E

...........s for Sale

GMUPIUAVE,

I L I!

w

HPYTGEP

I A

X W N P

TXIITJE

HPBSWPMU

NMAII
H p

I A

X W N P

Rl T I
DQUVPU

uu.,...

Nllun King Cab, plcku~
Sljtd., 4WD, dohi1 cab , atlctlng

u.-

B-10
M,
lubo typo, PI, 814'li8S 4434.

nlng
exc. cond, no ru11;
:J04.jl71o1111.

KTUAMMT .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I will die linglng, and I don't plan to

1181

bol,._

...r window, N:, btd mat,

the people rotlro

me

by not going

to my lhowo." -

run~

111&amp;1 DAILY
PUULII

~.,=:.,-~ton. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

..ur..

~ Cruz.

....
I&amp;NI

O four
Reorronga letters of
scrambled word1
low rc form four . words.
il'lnd MW C.ller I.D. bo.:, $31,
114-1112-1111.

Cr~ft

tuppltM . at .whai111Je

prlc.a: I " g,.""l"' wrealht,

a"

&amp; I" alraw hate, styrofoam can"
• Nit&amp;, rnllc. wood,

lwidrnado bookolo, and moro.
30&lt;·7'1SoiUI.Evorythlng .....,
go!

c rr E r s !-1

f •. 1111 St1ppi c',

a_.,,

I I IIr

.~... L l'.'(•&lt;..,fOC'I",

'

'

.

T 0 I :1 J

r
aon, Ohio, 1ol00oi37·H26.

!iilw -tlltlrt!L Land XL, 110

curtly ...... c h o i r - 1!'8. llnllque floor llittp. IHO
COrolo
-~- sol:':lrla
- ·-l typowrilor,

W ~--

·~-

· ·

DP Trim - o r ·oklar, 1100, 114-

;:llll:l=ol:-'m-:7.-.::::----:=--:-:::
Flrawood
For
lito,
flO
Dallvorad, t14-24UII7.

.,

AcCIIIOrltS

Today is the 351st day
of 1993 and the 87th

MORTYMEEKLE &amp; WINTHROP

day offall.

NGr1HEWAY
.I. PL.AY IT. .

WH41'5 'rtUI j;l.\tlRITE
e.R:OfU'l MINE 16

•

Hawk, N.C.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS' John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892), poet; Ford
Madox Ford (1873-1939), writer: Er-

skine Caldwell (1903-1987), novelist;

14

Willard F. Libby (1908·1980), chemist;
William Safire (1929-),journalist, is 64;
Bob Gueeione U931H , publisher, is 83.

Hay &amp; Oral!"

· Prc4lt Wlillo
Plll·'l'lmo To Dlhlr

•.......-..--tlllrrkot

1r.mspo11 d! 10n

FRIDAY

ROBOTMAN

instlnt1y AIV8818 whlcll signs are romanticaly partecl for you. Mall $2 and a long,

ASTRO·ORAPB

sell· addr&amp;ll&amp;d. Slamped envelope

to

Mall:hmakar, c/o lhil ..W.paper, P.O. Box

BERNICE
'
BEDEOSOL

32 Mobile HomBS

tors818 ·

.

~

.~.

12·~----------------

~--.-.-------------------

14--~--------------l$~--~------~--~
, ~palil Dally Trtb~~~~e
~ .ft46..2U2
P-rey DaDy Seadael
. . 99,2-2156
Pt•. Ple•ant RePter
• 67~1SI8

.

'IJII)'

..,

,

htt dlf, Deo. 18, 1181

••

·.

CDI..I. .I.d
. .v

:
-

--.... u-...y

44e&amp;; -YOII&lt;, N.Y. 10183.
t:APRICORN (Dao. 22·Jan . 11) Two
lrlendl could play enormo1111ly Important
rolla In your af!alll OIN lhe next laW !laYs·

One "' lndlvidulll helped you mike
• dynamic:, pollllv8 chango In lhe . :·

GEMINI (Ma, 21·Juna 20) Go all oui':
loday, because your sHorts will not go
unaaa-ledged by pe1110no who &amp;Ill peril·
nent to your~ plans. Once you gain
,their IIIPect,lhey will beoome.allel.
CAN.C;ER (June 21-.lul, 22) lmHIIion Is
lhe 11.-10rm of !iaii"'Y and today you
might be' a bH ourprilld when someone
you lhought dlolllotd you doing fiO/efY-

thing yaur way.
.
AQUARIUS (Jan.- 20·Fab. 11) Your LEO (July IS-Aug. 22) Somelhing In whldl
dllltlllor rna• ~ cOUd be you'te p1 oaenUy ll1lllllved cOUd prnc1uoe a
ra1hlr 11r0ttg IOdly, but you won~ be look· • much lar~r pa~H lhan ~u anticipate.
1ng fQr IIOt1ielhi ,g lor nolhlng. You'l be tr\Jiy Stall el8il*tlng 1ltill .,...vor from a mote
entllllcljo- you gel.
' . .
. &lt;46tliltlc bua..
PIICIS (!'ell. 20 lllaroh :10) In
to VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Generally
your aptlludllor 11*11 today, you'R •
111 lilt~ you llltoUd be tiltNI to gat along
ltri* anotltlr dlinallliotr -l httlttltOOd- ...,,illli lUll llboul ~ todiy.
you well. II) your lbllly 10- Wllllldt'l(l· Howevar, yoil anolll&lt;ely 1o be mote~

adill!l\r

vu c1t1t1 ,.._you could - gtlltlr In IIIII'IIINIY. '
'
lc daollng
oiilor and lllblllly In your lite In lhl year AIID (llarah 21,..11) Don, be Mtly bUe.

,.

"

i·

'

eesslully tested their airplane at Kitty

Building
S pile

Aval-. (IN) 'llf.41S5, lrl. .
1000.
.

.' .

·--

TODAY'S HISTORY' On this day in
1903, Orville and Wilbur Wright sue-

CSOODMI"--TON.

S.l SIMI Building: 6
1111.....
Doalerlltlp,
luy
WI lillie, Direct From TM

L.antttt.

I E

•

.U::Ili~IIIU1 ,

up S
Block, brlolt, -*ctpaa, "'"'
... 11..... .... udo wt...
, . ., "to Orondo, OH Call 11424Ht21.
footory.

WI/.

••

Auto Parts &amp;

--Con-

!55

~~

1

Dec. 17, 1993

Wolctor -Fie1 Band honto gym,
lllur - ..... 514-'1112·2131.

-h. 114o414t.zluo.
Crocltot IWoator ahowt, --h 2 lnclt ~~
$30 I!!OfiOY to' Pauloy'O, - - I I
!170
P..rt · - · lllddloport, · T.V. 'Gaod, Ani Pralty
Ohio, 41110
OIFwnltura, 1110,-01
.
Carta'" c-111'1 .... "· $25,
Gool- tocly'a grolfJ1tlk, 2pc Good Oond~lan, 114-112·1tS5.
wlntolr oult, fur oliouldor ploOo

wlmatclttng - .. Tan oholrl!ll·
,.....,, ·2 ualllng and ..- .

r

1

GA

DATE BOOK

Approncl For Poubli
Ron Evane jJ:nterprlatl,

Old Alana Alvw ~ Mlloa
FIOM Galllpalla 1 c4 Lind
On RT.7 f11.000 114-44f.1241 ~
114-1711-24111.

I

w-t-+-t--1

Mualcal
lft-ru'-ants
• - ""'

Hontt iond·....,.,-

of . . .
l4 Acknaw"..

etllllfnnlltr

Opening lead: • A

DID THEY THROW

WHAR

VI' RA FURNITURE
·--3111 Or 111 441 4428
'10 D.\Y SAllE AS CASH
OR REHT.Z.QWN (NO DEPOSIT)

&amp;. __________________

13

P ou

UP, SNUFFY II

u:::z,Yot
2111aw....

Pou
Pou
Pou

QMITWIXJ.'

57

'lid•••

22Tuo-*ot
:Is II'

l!:u1

Puo

11 fOUiu111 Rll lhN
20 lllnOU, ftat

111*11

.111)1 . . .

10 Pout

'81 OMC 8lornt C1ooa1c 314 Ton'
Aa lo $111111814~'111-21110.
-- ~

1135.

Buggy , Fa~llzor
Slain._, StHI 1471; Dul.diA ...
Fumlthtd Etlk:lancy ApartrMnt , Wood Cool Buinor, C.lltytlo
Privett, Quiet, Central ' Heal, Air
1525: Klnl:.oodburo
CondHionod, Private Porktno, eon-or
ntr, $150j Colli
$50,
Good Location, 114-446-2602.
Chlld'a Aap K11Jboonl $40, 514Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bed- . 112-1180. room a.,.nmema at VIll-a• CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
Manor
and
Rlv«1k11 1 ~ Gollon, $325; -JET Bit
1
Apa~monllln Middleport. From
(llo lond Flllllr Aoqufrod)
$202. Call 614-H2·5859. EOH.
$1,411; Ron Evan• Inti,.....,
Nlco 2 Bodroomo, 4 112 Mlln Jockoon, Ohio 1-800-53'1\-ial.

Nice 2 or 3 ~room apar1mtnt
In Mlddltpolt, 114-1112· 5856.

no cnecu. 011A tf4.191.41aUJ.

8 D'tg;d ' '

By PWip Alder

11111 Pontiac Grond Am, ~
Mil•, F• Moro lnla 81....._,
2'1!14 After . ,30 P.M.
'
'
Chrtatmao Spaclolo 1rM turtro~'
wtth wach purchMe. 1 ,
-~ 1NI Orand Prlrr 1110,
Grand ""'• 1117 - k Lo hborl
1187 N'-", 11113 Unootn Torrni
Car, 1115 Oldo Toranildo, 1~
Plymouth K oor1 _1117 Dido Clf•
c.talo, 1117 ~
1114 Llncol Coni
liT
. . _ GL,n1111 ~
...
-,.· 1'•••'
''
"
' 11113o
....,
Nlooon,
111114 Oldo Flon'tn
Cadillac Cl.......,, 1!118 ' .._
lla!tgor, 14ft honoo
naCk, olock lola of o~-:
...._ I .,..In
HC..Itnt ahaPt,
Scot1yo UMd !;ora, HovM.
WV. 304-112-Jm.
··•

r.ooo:r

-

telpDft

3Lou4- Aoa11Mit
5 Cow'•

-,.•• -

·BARNEY

1111 Nioun zaoax Auto, Wit to
Clvtldri.., Air, S l -, 41.000ml •
Boolt' t~OOO. Prt.., n,iiilii, ~~
«1 -- · · ·
""'
,.
1HO Ponlloc TranSpon .;;::
S.ll. et..n Wllh New ~
Tlnoo 0wnor
Aokl . ~2 oooA ~'!""·Sm
no •• • · ~11 114-2
·
.,;,
.1H'I Chllv«HM ltr8tta, V4r
Automatic, Loadtcl, Black WJttP
Rod Trim, Sorloua lllflulrlll/l
Only! II,IOG, 114 UIIIOI. . •

7 Plot ol 1011

VUlnerable: Neltber
Dealer:Nortb

Whlete,oao
"'"' good, tlooka
~:J.
s:aooo
k
.,.....

114 141141il. may a • trodoo,
1811 eo
88
m1ro
auto, ~·- M,
pb,pawer t.lch, ac. 11000
mltoo. ctoanl 15,400. .,......,
3411
I
1"' Chwy Cllobrlty E u -1
- - I , _ pa~a, AC, l
orlndows and tift w-, .,,000~
114-1112-7!1R
..,

11-.clt

e lllade do w111t

1Fiouen
2 Al(llllett

••

1117 Ponllac Bunblnl IE, 2.0 · I'
Brl1onlca.eunroof~
IOI ..'IIIo2tiiT.atuml"~':
door,

Goods

4 •. _________________

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

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICID£,
R~nlncl SOlo I EHocllvo By
U.S . Cenllar For Vtt•rtnary
- l n o Agolnot Hc!oft, Round
' Ta-m. In Dogoo I ~ato.
Avallolllo ().To(: AI' J.D. No~h
- d 114-446-11133.

&amp;ncvcloptdlt•

Houaehold

.1 •.....;._______________

7~·-----------------

= =...

.. - ..

of

1.1 erc hc~nd1se

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

89 ..________________
__~~----------__

-- ..

Full bloodod Slblrian Huoky
pupploo, S75 ooch, 1Mo912oi3M.

mMtt. Set

DOWN

IIOliTII
.AJHU
.Ait!DI
tQ4

HOrne. for Sile

2 .. __________________

6------------------

1
bolle"""

·o,....

• No Pets, 614-C46..ao38.

CA~H?I!
7bm yoiu clutter into cah,
&amp;II il eluJ eau ICIG)'~ .. flx
Rhone.
. 7
no need to lea11e your home.
Plqce yoyr dquifled qd tflflrul
15 word. or let~, !I dq,y«,
3 pqpeu, 15.4Q paUl in ad1~ance.l

!--·

Tapnk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
-~~~. 304-175-2003.
10gll. tank NI•Ups, $1U8.
Young
Paroknto,
$14.U
H.lnmoro, 12.18 &amp; $4.98.
Evaryday low prlcoo.

pool 1ablo

11113 Fon1 F100 ~ Truilk.
CUb- Daloot .._, - · · Oal ..ook
w Deck. 1173 Oldll•.'l14-441- GaiUpollo
hiMI.. 38t3
·Creek Rd.
'1\oo bedroom molllle homos lor 111211
011 P~ ~318
Nnl,. aleo .,.oe, tor rent etan.
'
. .
lng at 185/mo., 114-112-2167.
1191 Fonl T.- Wilt~ For SomScmot-'to\niWiulllfuo,
Woak
Old by Sandyville 'Noxt
TWD ta.droom trailer In Raclr... Automatic. 1
. - , o,.n noon tpm umll
Cllihuehlll IM-882·7130,
tolll14..12·1111.
ChriltmB. AI . _ . Junkll'·
22 ~Hot)~ olrot, 146; 22 IHio, 7 Sont•, camffe ...., lnouilllod
44
Apanment
ahot, MOj 22 ..- . $100• co"rollo,
rovororblo
flight
Benford a r oomp. on ..,..._: Jacket 835. All Chttllmu ••·
lor Rent
oloc. lranomloolon, f125: 114- In by Jan. 2, 1114. 304213-Ael.
2 Larga Bedroom•, 2 Floorl, IIII:I.ZOSO.
- SX 5 II
So
CA, 1 112 Bath, 2 Pools, Patio, ·
, 2
HZ compulor Ill
ora -~ - . , . -or.
$320/Mo. No Pttl, Le111 Plu1 :Ill
Mn ~. 4 in.g appra1. lliOOO BTU, t75; anll·
Security Do-ll
Roqulred, RAM, 40 1M1 Mrd drlvt, a 1/4 1 q111 bli,_ I hla- 1 rM;·1 .. ,...,,
Doyo 114-446-3481. Evonlngo: a. 11/Z llofriiJ iiR drln, 14' VOH 1150/pr:;., 8'2121. .. •
10 P.M. 114-367·78SO.
monh•, liar NX 11100 SPECIAU On'CI3UI lor oil
2bdrm. apte .• total electric, ap- · print•. 304o882o3711.
tux.S.Patnt
torrourptlancoa tumlshod, toundry 411 IIHobod ,.llhy troller. ·304- Yoar'o Tux. IOiollS-4~.
·
room facllhln: clott to achool 675-5lllol.
In lawn. ADPIIC;tlone available
Sluttod bNraj 75 _,. oach,
· at: VIllage
Apta. 148 or ~~" from.Santaln your home, mutt Ilks all, 14-112·1312
. .
calll14ofl2·3n1. EOH.
-··
coli 11•·111241103 or 814- 9115· • ._
coati and leothor coota
~••·
for .... tf!O, CIH 114oilt2;7fl!l.
2br. 111 tiKtrlc, apptlancn turnlahtd, on sht managMntnl. AAA,
So..Onod
FlLl.*tnd Apia., New Havan, Dallvorad And Stacked P.u: ~'='=
.c::.~ F~•ol.
I
Lo.c:l $10, 114411-1716.
.- .-WV. EOH 304o882·31t6
orohlct d - , modo in
Fuffilah8d
EHk:ltncy,
io1 Amant 11 FOOl F.I'M FI'Oit With U
~ 11
..
8
Fourth, Calllr.oli1, Share Bath, ~ Make~, AI~, eM..-.M37.
• • • ....
i
• 111n,
$11161Mo. Utll tin Paid, 6M-446_
pullover top; ts: 1 - 2 2
Boooboll and Foclboll cardo' f17.
" " Aho&lt;7 P.M.
St. mini to - r mint. Knlvoa a
twin •too - - lltr.
,_, qultod• __I'(O'itlll bock·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT chain - · 114-44&amp;-1800
ground with ,.,. prfnl, wllho
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike Bolt I - I I ._to
t2l, 114-11124124.. ·
from $206/mo. Walk to shop &amp; whh IICf'Mn, NO, C811. 114-laUood
-ltlco, M g~!!o.!,i!t
mavin. C.ll614-446-2568. EOH. 30711 botoro 10:30am.
Danh .......... bl
.
a.
....
hh,
B-h SL Mlddlopo~. Oh 1 &amp;
Yo - ...,., Ul N!lhiro 1&gt;11111 0
ana oltln,
tsloo., 1114-1112
.
2br. twniohod opla., uthHtn ring, olu I, NO.
Chi11- P-onti 104·773paid, dap. &amp; rot. 304o882·25414i.

From Galllpollt. Refrigerator,
t~ Water
Fuml1htd,

AnUquta and uMd turnttu,., no
tltm 10o larQI· or too amall, will
buy one Piece or comptltt
ttou.ehold, alto . .nttd- old
:::."~: CIH Ooby Martin, 114-

ZGI. We buy eatltH..

and lV;
1 t - and 71101-. .

•~·
A•~• ..,,oy Fumlturo.
Bollct ook
• - &amp;oobllloiOj
~ otWvod
gloM
olllno
ook

o-

Business
Opponunlty

21

wanted to Buy

Dtcorlted etonewara, wtll ....,
phonM, otot toTL,""' thor·
~ ... okl
, aNkp,ll
Jurftltura. . RIYtrlnt Antlqutl.

:'tfi

~

omploymonl. EOE.

9

AKC Regi81wtd Slberi•n Hu.ky
llniale~rict down to 175,

G•a••

a

Pets for Sale

R- Chlh·-huo __..... a- .. ..- ...,
~·
•-'!'!""'; ..... 1 =:;..::.·;;...:~~-:;::,·•;.·...,....,....-lour, - : ""'"pool an 1 :

drOi&gt;roolc. !ifM.Qi.,

Ma rchancllae

and

56

.Q71U
tJIOI
+A 10 II

All: II
ltJT

1N7 Chevstte, . _ tmual·:

t.".r.""~

Rogutotton lull -

54 Miscellaneous .

Jll

lro-alon,
11;Gocioutomat.C:
mlin ,•
'
" ' - ,motor runo ........ ....,. •
$780 ftrm, ~2.2ii."" ..........:

...

E.AIT

us

'

Sacond Avonuo, Golllpotlo, 514- 1111too;
!'on .SOL, t :3CI-I,

colllns

:::&gt;,

• llitdng

~Cantor Hawllon .48

-~.!.''.-Buy Ono hom Or Eotatoo. dryor, -

,.rt

tt7U
+QIU4

1. . . Buick · - - . $11110 ''
8-..z11_

chlir1. I~ nMdl i...iinl8ft.d
S700.oo after 5:00pm 114-441!

Puppln:
lab.814-38a-ot62

••

rura~

s II!Md.

:.a~'·

~ ook dinning room oot I
Sollct

lr•lned, 614·1Mf.29"11 .

NOBTII

•KQI

Toyota Colollo SA 5, '1'

cytlndor,

~~~~~~=:=~~~~~~c~-~.,~-~,..~~
~~~~~~~~=

:3111:=-..::11015::;.;.--:,...,:-:-:-:-.,..,..,..
;;.
oop p Pllkl' All Old U.S.
COina, Gokl Rlng!f Sltvtr ~na,
Gold C&lt;&gt;lno. M.T.:o. C&lt;&gt;ln Shop,
1!11 Socond Avenue, Golllpotlo.

'

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

Thom_.

Wanllld To lur: St...:llng Tlmbar I Pint, Oood P - . 114-

ALDER

~~

.

' • ' '"

Ml•ed breed 3 month old puppy,

PHU,IJP

· ~~~~,1100 ~

cat. AHio, leautlful Walnut
Slock, Brond Condhlonl
121'5, 814-3711-zeot.

614-11!12·7916.
Moth• C:ll wHI1 4 ktttenl, IIHer

The Dally

':":-~

IWAIN

· -i14
8Mi
I Outbutidlno, 11a.ooo.
4411554,

Uve-ln Aulotant. You MIIJ
Ouollly For A Now 2 Bodroom

Ohio

PICKINIII'URNiTuRE
•
t:lsrllttd

---~~-

33 Fanna tor Sal.e

-FI1day, December 17, 1993

'

.~

AUC1'IOII I I'UIIHITUIII. 112
Otlwlt
.• - . ,
,.,., .. .., My tl'71rmo., call 1..

- . • • lor lltb.

~

~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrilbt

G90&lt;1S

12111 trollor wl- odolllan,
IW.,t 112 - . ldlahion,ullllf

oec.mw 17, 1et3

i

.

'"'

.._. 11t1n you had lor eome ume.
D,VIItiull Ill 011apmenla t(f!H - m to 101'1
1Mti 411/N•wllliitllt,_fromyou.
IAGITTAIIUS (Ntlir. II 1110 11) In litul·
11ottt ....... you put your ~ny In lite
linda of ,.,.., fllllt, dltlhlbli ind tNulla
• 1J!o11Y ~ TNII Itt lllltal you .,.._
lljd not "' t1111ta1 ~ ...,..r to
be, KnQW wNnl 10 loot&lt; lor rontene11 .,..
you'l lind It Tlte A1tro-GteP1t _
i.lalclwitakei

'·

I

ioHh peop(e on 1

ont·to-ona
·

lttldouiiDCity !IQ8Idlng - ! ! ) I I aiiiCI LIIIIA (8lpL II Dat. 13) MaWia!IY lnd
Your m.ttal..., bel!til- Whal'a prml)ll'f llliel~y 'PI'· Jii:wp~~a oan.n-10-·loOic
·atlnlng wll make you !MI prally ~ : encouraging. TI)Ciay, however, your ·
"""" _.tod.
~ mey oiJme orlrt from apac:lal -'c
TAURUS (April· 20-llttJ 20) TQCIIy you or IINioe you plllorm.
~be twqUittd to .mike • Cldloll ~ . ~li.-..o (Oal. .Mflov. II) Parlolil )'011
; lfllct M ~- M ,.,....., nl ~ . loclalli could ptiM 10 be ....., lud&lt;y
· l'lllo"'lir 1-*1(1 lllel*. Fottunaly, your for
loday, . ••~lilly In altuatlona
judgmeQI thoul!l be morr aalute than
naad 11ta1i' halp 10 open doors
UIUII.
your - ..

.,

1--..,.T:......:.;R,...:E:.._;D....;f:.:,.~,.:1-=-l

I I I 16

~~

English professor to colleague, ' If most people had to
rely on their command of the
English language to get their
point across most ofthem would
be better off saying - - - - - - - '

IG)

Complere the cl'lucltle quoted
by f, ll. ng in the miumg words
L--L-..1........1-..L......J.__...I you develop from step No. J below.

.

.

.

.

.

.

A P~INT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
'11:1' IN THESE SQUA~ES
A UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
W GET ANSWER

I

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

water- ~t- I!IIORTH the OORK
' There's gold in the creek!' the old prospector yelled
to his partner. "So what?" his partner shrugged.'Wtth the
way prices are today it's not WORTH the WORK. '
Knight- Proud-

DECEMBER17

�..' .
••
December 17, 1~ ·

OhiO

&gt;

Along th e Rrver

Women deliver gifts to infirmary;~
Holiday projects for olhers carried out by the Laurel Cliff Free
Melhodist Women's Missionary
Society were reported on at a
recent meeting of lhe group at the
chwth. ·
The women delivered gifts to
the Meigs County lnfll1llllr}', went
caroling and delivered baskets to
shulins.
President Drema Bradley
opened lhe meeting with Ida Mar-

tin giving prayer. Roll_call and secretary's report was g1ven by Kay
Clark, the treasurer's report by
Wanda Eblin. The mission .Jiving
has been good this year. 1t was
· reported.
The group recently sent Spanish
Bibles to a Spanish Free Melhodist
Chtm:h in Cleveland.
TJ\e program was given by
Belinda Soulsby and devotions
included scriptures from Peter and

An ornament for
the White House

a reading, "~ive in Harm?R)'-:
South Amenca and the miSSion
work going on !here were high·
lig'Jt~~shments were served by
Wanda Eblin and Kay Cla1t to tlie .
•
22 presenL
.. · ·
The Chtm:h also held its ann!'I!J '
Christmas dinner in the chtm:h fel• :
lowship room, Prayer was giv~
by Pastor Peter 'l;'re~blay. , Th_~ · .
meal and fellowsh1p were enJOYCi1 ..
by lhe 40 people presenL
;,~ .

PRESENTED SERVICE AWARDS • Larry Boyer, left, and Cleo U~g right, were tw~ redpi_ents of
service awards al the Ohio Valley Pablisbln' Company Christmas dinner Monday everung. Pidu~
resenlin the awards Is Robert Wingett, publiSher. Boyer bas been with the company for 25 years, w~1~
tieving b~ been employed at OVP for 10 years. Othe~ recipients include Donald Coleman, 20 years; CriSli
HempbiU, 10 years; and Robert Shinn and Mike Jenkms, five years.

Sacred Heart women gather
for Christmas meeting
Mill STREET:. ~
Anna Blackwood handed out
The Calholic Women's Club of
Sacred Heart Chun:h in Pomeroy Christmas poems wriuen by Helen
held its annual Christmas party at Steiner Rice. They were read by
lhe home of Carol McCullough on Jane Beegle, Alice Freeman, Barb
Tuesday after a 6 p.m. Mass held Mullens and Marie Johnson. Phylat the church for all living and lis Hapkett read a passage out of
the Bible. Gifts were exchanged
deceased members of the C,W.C,
and d&lt;n" prizes awarded. The next
meeting will be Jan. II. All
Catholic women in lhe church are
encouraged to auend.

News policy

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the GallipoliS Daily Tribune and Sentinel
will not accept weddings after 60
days from the date of lhe evenL

RETIREES HONORED • Retirees or the Ohio Valley Publishing Company were presented corsaAes
and boutonnieres at the annual Christmas ~inner Monday evenls,ing att~e PoL\Diet~:Sylr~ ~= L::1eK.at~~
tured, front row,
to right, Helen Davas, Emma Lou Dav
eatr1ce IS , •
•
Crow. Back row, Donald Wright, Otbo Mattox, Charles Snodgrass, and Bob Hoefl1th.

8

ten

All club meetings and other
news articles in lhe society section
must be submitted wilhin 30 days
of occunence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editling.

Staff holds ·christmas celebratjon
Nearly 100 employees and
guests ol the Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Company galhered Monday
evening at the Point Pleasant
Moose Lodge for lhe eompany 's

annual Chrisanas dinner.
. The Point Pleasant Register was
the host of Ibis. year's event, wilh
Brian Billings, advertising director,
~asemtee.

Billings iniiOduced retirees at·
tendins including Phyllis Roac:h,
Point Pleasant Re!Pster; Kalie
Crow, The Daily Sentinel; Emma
Lou Davis, G!llliJlolis Daily
Tribune; Helen DaVIs, Gallipolis
Daily Tribune; Bea Lisle, The
Daily Sentinel; ' Otho Mauox, Gallipolis Daily Tribune; Charlie
Snodgrass.
Gallip&lt;?liS
Daily
Tribune; Bob Hoeft1ch, The Daily
Sentinel; and Donald Wright, Gal·
lipolis Daily Tribune.
The Christ Academy Handbell
Choir, under the directiOn of Bree
Ramey and iniiOduced by Pam
Casto, entellained !hose attending
during dinner. Following dinner,
the Point Pleasant High School
Show Choir presented "Santa Ma·

Libby Mattox:Diane Hill, Healh
HiD, Fred Hoffman, Pauline Hoffman, Pat Whitehead and Kiuy
Whitehead.
Pat Boyer, Larry Boyer, Joy Atwood, Bob Atwood, Terra Barker,
Paul Barker, Kim Roush, Bob
Roush, Helen Bush, Gayland Bush,
Bob Wingett. Charlton Annsttong,
Heather
Armsttong,
Richard
Saunders, LuDesla Cole, John 0'Neal, Cleo Lieving, Norm Lieving,
Amy M. Wedemeyer, and Raymond
Keefer.
Debbie Call, Dianna Lawson,
Doug Sturgeon, Lisa Peterson,
Kevin E. Kelly, Mary Lyons, Larry
Ewing, Beverly Wilson, Hoban
Wilson, Jr,, Ellen Deweese, Katie
Crow, Charlene Hoeflich, Bob
Hoeflich, Mike McQuaid. Beth
McQuaid, Georgia Alderigi, Angie
Alderigi, Ed Howard, Kimberly Allen, Amy M, Jackson, and Kevin
Pinson.
George Abate, Rebecca Green,
Brian
Green,
Leigh
Anne
Redovian •. Bea Lisle, Pam Dotson,
Dave Hanis, Julie Rice, Joanie
Simpson, and Janet Simpson.

Jazz", under "the direction of Gary
Stewart, director.
Robert Wmgett, publisher, announced service award recipients as
Larry Boyer, 25 years; Donald
Coleman, 20 years; Cleo Lieving
and Cristi Hemphill, 10 years; and
Robert Shinn and Mike Jenkins.
five years.
Prior to lhe presentation of door
prizes. employees presented Wingett and Conlroller Margaret
Lehew wilh gifts of appreciation.
Auending were Paul Tope, Beuy
To~. Jean Davison, Brian Billings,
Shirley BiUings, JoAnn Errett,
Janice Veazey, Gary Cochran, Shari
Cochran, Michele Carter, Doug
Host, Kelly Bahler, Jim Freeman,
Mary Freeman, Margarel Lehew.
Bill Lehew, Margaret Finnicum,
Jack Finnicwn, Mindy Keams, and
Chris Keams.
Maxine Snodgrass. Charles
Snodgrass, Phyllis Roach, Thomas
Roac:h, Donald E. Wright, Evelyn
Wright, Henry .Raybwn, Judy
Raybuin, Emma Lou Davis. Helen
Davis, Terry Shinn, Chip Young,
Carolyn Young, Walter Mattox,

headquarters will remain in Cotuni; :
bus. Also, that school lunche•
should be changed to leaner menu!:
Pauline Rife and Christine Napi~
er delegates to the Ohio Stale
G;ange session, gave a re_port o_d
the activities of the convenuon. .. ..
Members reported ill we~ :.
Grace Whaley and Hazel Van ·
Cooney.
·
': •
Pat Holter, lecturer, held a calh ;,
dlelight ceremony following the ·
meeting.
.., ·

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Sl

Pomeroy, OH.

FALL AND WINTER
HOURS
Tues -Fri. 9:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00
. , Closed Monday

~· TBI

- IIAIILY
.fifiiM

'

BOOKS

OPEN SUNDAY
1·5 P.M.
ALL

BIBLES
REDUCED

20% ••

'Q

Free imprinting and
gift wrapping.

On the "T"
992-6657
Middleport

'

•..

~

1993 Pontiac Sunbird

- Feature on page 81

GAHS defeats Jackson, 67-44 - Page ca

1993 Chevy Corsica LT
4 Dr., V6, auto., air, stereo, air bag.

$8,999°0
1993 Chevy 5-1 0 Blazer
4X4, 4 Door, Tahoe, loaded.

$19,995°0
1993 Olds Oera Special Ectrtion
Loaded • Save· Save- Savel

~\"

$14I 369°0

1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
OR

Contest winners
announced

First birthday
celebrated
Dalton Leo Riebel celebrated
his first birthday recently at lhe
home of his parents, Roger and
Robin Riebel. A Barney and Baby
Bop tHeme was cariicd OIIL ·
Refreshments of caJce; ice
cream, chips and koolalde were
9ei'Y~

'

· "llendii!J lhe jlarty was DaltonS
sister, Je111ca alld·brother, Justl,n,
, , Mn. IJetb Lynch and -~ JoilhU&amp;, ,,
• J~ and Jake, ~DIIICl HazUee
Riebel and M=•p= Carnallan.
· Sendiaa alfia were his grand•
mother Sandra Bele, aupi Renee .
RICbei, aunt Rhonda Riebel, and .
Sttplianie Biker.
'

OR

'

...

DALTON LEO RIEBEL

'•

$14,995°

0

1993 CHEVY.LUMINA
ALL NICELY EQUIPPED

'

Cti.Y.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO·.

ru!'ID RAISER

Winners in a fund raising pro·
ject of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, were Jeffrey
Mllhoail, Long Bottom, $300; Ed
Weey, CheSler, S200; and Linda
HatpCt, PolnemY, SUXl.
·

4X4, Tahoe, auto., air, loaded.

OR

. , HOURS: Mqn.-Frl. I:OG-8:00
.., Sat. 9:oo.4:00;
1:00-5:00

'un.

OPEN SUNDAY ·
t

Ol"f.

Dllllllon ·
pageA·3

Adopt a pet for Christmas - Page B6

Middleport-Pom e roy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- Decem ber 19, 1993

Tlm ...·S.ntlnel Stall
MIDDLEPORT · A study of downtown Middleport
businesses as a first step toward developing a blueprint for
economic renewal will get underway this week.
James L Hartzler of Canal Winchester, a planning
consultant. has been hired by the MiddlepOrt Community
Association «&gt; carry out a 10-week in-depth study of
downtown conditions from an economic perspective,
Previous studies have all dealt with the physical conditions and ex1erior appearance of buildings.
· The study made by Hartzler will be incorporated into
the 1994 application for revitalization grant funds from
· the Ohio Department of Development (ODofD),
Last year's application for ODofD funding for match
monies for improvements to downtown Middleport build, ings was not granted, When the application is submilted
early next year the bluepnm for economic renewal will
enhance the application, Jean Trussell, Middleport gran1s

coordinator, said Friday.
in his study, Hartzler will
"Down1own revital·
also make revilaliza1ion
"Downtown revitalization and economic recommendations on
ization and economic
development should go development should go hand in hand... that physical improvements
hand in hand." said
and targeting of re·
TrusselL "Now when we should be the strength of our application." sources.
submit the application for
Trussell said rhar
Mlddlepon grants coordinator
Hartzler's strategy will
revitalizauon funds, we
Jean Trussell include addressing .con·
will not only be addresscepts to attract bus mess.
ing the physical problems, bur have a plan for
She said he will deter·
economic revilalization. That should strengthen our appli- mine what is missing in the business communi1y -like
should there be grearer emphasis on tourism.
-cation."
"His analysis willrell us about existing conditions, he
She said that while the straregy wrll not be completely
developed before she submits the application for revilal- will identify ard evaluate key issues which affect ecoization funds 10 ODofD on Feb. 4, the consultant will nomic revitalization and then he will give us some working concepts," said Trussell .
provide an interim report to go in with rhe application.
The grants coordma10r sa.d th1s year she will probably
While emphasizing economic restructuring techniques

·After the destruction:

Vol 28. No . 43

.

High spirits, positive outlook
aid in recovery following fire
· By KEVIN PINSON

Tlme•S.ntlnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- A local psychologist's positive outlook and high spirits
after lhe deslrUClion of his business Nov. 30 can probably be attributed to two
factors- the helping hands of lhe community and what could be interpreted
as a sign from above.
While rescuing records
from the partially demolished Althof &amp; Associates
, counseling services thatafternoon, employees found
a novelty plaque sitting on
. the edge of a desk.
'I'he desk had been
heavily scorched by a f~re
:;· _, !l~sU:o.~ed

apply to ODofD for rhe full allowable amountof$400.000,
Local match money is required and Trussell said it appears
to be coming in.
Grant monies secured from other sources and used in
the downtown revilalization target area can be counled as
part of the local match, according to Trussell.
This means that the S 113,000 spent on the boat ramp
development can be used as match rrioney . That granr
came from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Division of Waterways.
Trussell said the village has also been granted S70,000
from the Appalachian Regional Commission for lighting
and sidewalks but that receipl of money is contingent '?n
ODofD awarding the revilalization grant this year. That
money, too,can be counted as match money, Trussell said.
The target area for revitalization ex1ends from the
Foreman and Abboll building on North Second to tjte
intersection of Second and Mill and over the river, including both the Dave Diles Park and the boating facilities'.

Meigs officials, business leaders~
tour AEP's Gavin project site
By JIM FREEMAN

.

Tlme•S.ntlnel Stall
CHESHIRE · Officials and business representatives from Meigs
County toured American Electric
Power's General James M. Gavin
electrical generating plant Thurs·
day and were updated on the progress
of the current flue gas desulfurization project
Company spokesman Mike Price
pointed out that the Gavin FGD
project,orscrubbers,ispartof AEP's
system-wide plan for compliance
with !he 1990Ciean Air Act Amend·
ment and is ahead of schedule and

.underoll~~- -'

·

· Descnbblg the construction process as taking place in "islands of
activity," Price said 16 major contractors and many sub-contractors
are working on the project
After leading the group to the top
of the plant, Price took advantage of
the viewpoim to outline the process
which will be used to remove sulfur
from the plam· s emissions.
Limestone is unloaded from
barges and transported via a conveyor bell to lime silos. The lime is
then crushed, mixed with waler and
piped as a slurry 10 1he absorber
units.
The wa1er ard lime combination
is then sprayed through nozzles into
lhe absorber units. The sulfur dioxide-laden emissions pass through the
limestone and water mist which absorbs the sulfur.
After the lime has absorbed a certainamoumof sulfur, it is sroredand
pumped 10 one of five dewatering
units. The mixlure is then further

creased gun;sales across lhe nation.
"It's quadrupled at least," concurred Jim Baldwin.
owner of Baldwin's Fine Guns on Upper River Road in
Gallipolis. "We've added extra help and extra people."
Baldwin said he sold 450 guns- where normally he
would !Cll l50 - al a show las1 weekend in Dayton, Of
tho~. 90 percent were handguns.
"They're not even squabbling over prices," he said.
They're saying, 'That's what I want. How much will it
COSI me?"'

of Scioto Co. sheriff

1992 Chevy 5-10 Blazer

1993 BUICK REGAL

LOW30.
•

I

:
,_,

T·S Photq.by Jim F.....,..,

UP ON THE ROOFTOP· Meigs County officials and business leaders got a birds-eye view of the Gavin Rue

gas desulfurization project Thursday, Here the group looks on as work continues far below.
dried in centrifuges and mixed with ation of wetland and the upgrading of
Dy ash before being transported via existing, low qualiry wetlands, Price
another conveyor belt to a landfill for said. As part of the tour. the group was
given a driYe·by view of the recently
disposal.
completed
wetland site.
Price said the scrubber for unit one
Anendmg were: Fred Hoffman ,
will go imooperauon in March, 1995,
with the second scrubber going into county commrssioner; Mary Powell ,
parks and recreation director: Howard
operation m June, 1995.
Parr of rhc plan called for the ere-

Frank. treasurer; Bruce Reed, mayor
of Pomeroy; Denver Warner. representing the Meigs County auditor's
office: Jack Fowler, Columbus
Soulhem Power area manager. and
Chuck Kitchen. Paul Reed, Judy
Williams and Dennie Evans, represeming the Meigs C6unry Chamber
of Commerce .

Citing the Brady bill for the increase in sales. Baldwin have purchased handguns from him .
said he does not believe he has sold any guns to cnminals.
Saying the five day wait will hun business. Stewart said
He explained. "People that want to buy now jusl don't he will stop selling handguns after his current stock is
want to go through the hassle of the five-day waiting exhausted.
period,"
Wayne Pullins of S&amp;W Gunsmithing near Pomeroy
Meigs merchants reported an increased interest m hand· also reponed increased handgun sales.
guns a1 their shops.
The people that normally come in and buy a riDe or
Tom Stewan, owner of Stewart's Gun and Supplies shotgun are takmg a closer look at the handguns, Pullins
near Rulland. said Friday morning that three or four said, They feel they car buy a rifle or shotgun later.
people, citing the impending Brady bill as inspJration,
Continued on page A2

City will comply with court's News capsules
decision to allow Klan cross Patrol completBs probe

1993 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME

DOORPRiiES
Door prizes were awarded at the
.recent Christmas open house of
WiUiams and Aasociates Insurance,
,~echanic Street, Pome:r,. The
wmners wcro Alberta Hy , Mid·
dleport; Greg Bailey, Pomeroy;
• Mary B~, RaCine, Bernice Ander·
son, Pomeroy, and Mark Davis,
Middlepon. '

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

nm. .s.ntlnel Stall
Local gun shop owners have reponed dramatic jumps in
handgun sales since lhe passage oflhe Brady bill, echoing
a national panern. The bill. has also drawn extensive
criticism from some camps in Gallia and Meigs counties.
The bill goes into effect Feb, 28 and will require a fiveday waiting period and police background checks before
a handgun can be bought. The Associated Press reponed
last week that the legislation is creating a wave of in·

$9,995 00

Rae Gwlazdowsky and Lois Clellaud, hospital
employees
. , I to r, are pictured wit~ the gins
turaed over to Children's Services on Wednes·
day ror dlstrlbvlion. Last year, hospital employees helped 12 youngsters but doobled their assislaDCe this :ret~r.

Hl40$

Downtown study: a first step toward renewal·

By JAMES LONG and JIM FREEMAN

Tahoe, V&amp;;alr, casseHe, more.

'

•'

Handgun sales in Gallia, Meigs jump after passage of Brady bill

1992,Chevy 5-1 0 Pickup

PROJECT SUCCESSFUL • Employees or
Veterans Memorial Hospital this year are pro·
viding Christmas sdrts for 24 local youag people
through the MeTes County Department or
Humim Services "angel tree" PfOIJ"l¥11• Chuck
Knopp, a Melp Cblldren:s Services employee;

A Multimedia Inc., Ne wspaper

Womeldorfi &amp; Thomas
hardWa.e ~StorC~nexl -dciof,
but 11\e plaque was uodam ·
ag¢ ~ Jl!Oiected !lnder a
blanket of wet insulation
which had fallen from the
ceiling,
Dr. Jim Allhof said the
plaque was an office joke
- passed around to whoT·S Pholoby Kerin Plnaon
1
ever was Complaining too
DR. JAMES, ALTHOF stands inside a
much:
"THOU SHALL NOT broken window at the former site of his
business, Althof &amp; Associates psychological
WHINE,"
services.
After a long morning of
watching firefighters from
three counties battle the neighboring blaze - l!fld seeing the hardware s1ore 's
eastern wall collapse on top of his business - the discovery of the plaque
brought everything imo perspective.
."It holds a very prwous place in our (temporary) buildong now." Althof
said.
' The day after lhe fire, the counseling service began moving into temporary
offices on Jackson Pike. Althof accredited full community support to the quick
recovery,
"'Withoutthis town coming at us from all directions with help, there is no way
we could have been where we are now," he said. "I've never been in more
positive spirits around Christmas time."
Conlln~ad on page A2

0

1 Iii;

•
xmts

w!tjc)l,

Auto., air, stereo, &amp;!larp.

STARnNGAT

-

-· ...

DON TATE CHEV.·OlDS.·CAD.·GEO
HOLIDAY SELL-A-THO"
sa,995°

...

~.

lnsrde

Grange presents state awards
Four state awards were presentGrace preceding lhe dinner was
ed when the Rock Springs Grange given by William Radford.
met recently for a holiday potluck , Barbara Fry reported on the
dinner.
county officers conference. Rock
Receiving awards were Ray Springs will visit Star Grange and
Grueser in wood crafts, Fraocis Harrisonville. The county grange
Goeglein for secretary, Pat Holter banq_uetwiU be Aprill5, 1994.
for community service, and Bunny
Opal Grueser gave lhe legislaKuhl for deaf and lecturer pro· tion report on several issues, one
grams.
being that the Ohio State Grange

.• '•

,.

CINCINNA Tl (AP) - The Ku Klux Klan may erecr a cross today on
Founlain Square, a year after a similar display on the downtown square
PORTSMOUTH, Oh10 (AP) - The
generated attacks on the cross.
Ohio Highway Patrol has completed
The City Council decided Friday not to appeal a federal judge •s order forcing
its invesrigation of a crash involving
lhe city to grant a display permit for the Klan cross,
Scioto County Sheriff Jim Sutterfield
The Klan's Knight Riders group can put up its tO-foot wooden cross as earl~
and turned over its report to local offias today under a permit !hat allows a 10-day display through Dec. 29.
cials.
The council voted 5-2, with two members absent, not to appeaL City lawyers
City Solicitor Dick Schisler said he
had told lhe panel !here appeared to be litde chance of winning a challenge.
met Thursday wilh Lt Fred Goldstein,
Councilman Dwighl Tillery, who was mayor during las1 year's cross
who led the patrol's probe, and planned
controversy, said he was disappointed the council did 001 appeal U.S . District
10 review the evidence with his staff.
Judge Carl Rubi~' s oraei:
·County P.rosecutor Lynn Grimshaw
. ''We have an obligapon to thepeopleoflhiscommunity,'' Tillery said, "We
also was going over the report, SchIsler
.have a lot of gOOd people in this town tlu!t will have to suffer through ... having
said.
·a cross erected by aha~ group,"
Schisler said th~ patrol's report will
: Rubin ruled, Tliw:sday !hat the city's effon to prohibit lhe cross under an
take several days to review, Adecision
'ordinance which bars symbols with '.'fighting words'' on the sq~ ,'would
on wtielher 10 pursue lite case will not
violate lhe first Amendment
.
.
be rna&amp; until tl!e first of the year, he said.
· Tony Gamble, a truckdriver from nesrbyCovington;Ky., toldRubiil hew~
Suuerfield wrecked his county car in Sepiember and
lhe imperial wiulrd of lhe Knight Riders, Gamble said he was pleased the city'
was cited for failure li&gt; control a motor vehicle. The
.would not aJl!leallhe judge's order, "
,
.
,
. patrOl's rejrort will determine if additional charges will
· "OreaL, .. It would be·a big waste of taxpayers' money," Gamble said.
be flied.
'
: The Rev. Frecj .Shuldeswqrth, a Cincinnati church pastor w~o l)aalell the
The s)1eriff ~ed ~to investigate the accident
.Klan ?uring i9,50s civil righ~ disputes ill Birmingham, Ala., on Friday ljl"ged
after Su'uert)eld told lhe Daily Times he had consumed
'people 10 ign\Jre the Klan,
· some alcohol prior to lhe accident .
! 'There is no kinship between the Klan in their actions and Christ,'' he said.

GOOD MORNING

Seven-month coal strike
costly to both sides
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - The
United Mine Workers spem $140 mil·
lion dunng us seven-month strike
agamst the nauein 's largest coal operators, a un1on official said.
Members of the BiiDminousCoal Operators Association that were targeted
in the strike also had substantial losses.
Howard Green, a member of 1he
union 's governing board representing
southern West Vi.rginia, would no1givc
details on how the SI40 million was
spem during the strike, which hegan
May I0 and ended Tuesday with ratification of a five-year contract
Green said most of the money came
from the union's strike fund, which paid benefits of up to
$225 a week to striking miners.
.Almost 18,000 union members were on strrke in Ohio
and six other slates a1 the peak of the walkout
Earlier-this month, London-based Hanson PLC, the
parent company of Peabody Holding Co., said its earnings had fallen $187 million this year because of the
strike.

Today~s Times·Sen'tinel
IS Sections · 176 Pages

Business

01&amp;8
85&amp;7
Dl-7
Insert

Calendars
Clas.&lt;ilieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
SJ!orts
AlooB the River
Weather

A6
A3·4

A3
Cl-8
81
A3

Columns
lack AndeCiQn
Fred Crow
Bob HoeDic:h
lim Sarid5
C 1M), Ohio V1lley hltllthlftl C&amp;.

,/

•

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