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•

Pa_ge 28--The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'-

Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
capture
69-67 win

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

Pick 3:

958
Pick 4:

3978
Buckeye 5:
3-15-17-23-35

Page4

Low tonlgbt In 20.. Snow.
Christ mas Day, high In 30s.
Chance of snow 60 percent.

FIRST-COME-FIRST-SERVED BASIS!
NO DEALERS PLEASE!

Sale Begins Dec. 27th at 9a.m. Ends Dec. 31st, 2p.m.
LIVE REMOTE f\1;\Gic 1 0 1 DE~. 27TH, 3PM~&amp; PM

_;;

-·....,
· ·~
.........
'

' '·
A•~·

, Vol. 44, N0. 170
Copyright 1993

·~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 24, 1993

2 Sectiona, 14 Pa9M 35 ..,Is
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

---Christmas is... - ..... Clinton yields, releases real estate file
WASHINGTON (AP) -Under
increasing demands for disclosure,
President Clinton is giving 1he Jus·
lice Depanment personal records of
a real eS1ate vooture 1hat is part of a
broad federal inquiry of a failed
savings and Joan.
White House officials predicted
the move would stem a growing
conttoversy over lhe lies between
Climon, first lady HiUary Rodham
Clinton and James McDougal, lhe
owner of an Arkansas savings and
loan that failed in 1989 at a cost to
taxpayers of $47 million.
Clinton spokesman Mark Gearan said Thursday the president and
his wife were releasing the documen1S voluntarily. Federal investigators had not requested lhem, he
said.
"At no lime did anyone, anywhere, anyhow ever remotely suggest that there was any impropriety
re11arding lhe president and Mrs.
Chnton 's investments," Gearan
said.
..
Federal lnvestiga1ors are look·

,'Y-.1:.;

OILY tDI&amp;Dill•htl!liO, Y.a311tq.,lir,
Cllilt. MIAI

Stodc • t&amp;440, 2 doorl. - · e 1:1'1..
auto., PS, PB, PW, POL, 1
· · c:ruloo,
AINFM
buCket
18810, rear
win.110defog. - · ·---

Pill,*""'""

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bod._...,*"""· ......
10110., PS, I'll. PW,

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Stockle4013,, Y-l.lir,WJD.,PS, PB, PW,
POl, lilt wllool, c:ruloo,AMIFM • - - ·
112 ton,long- bod, OUJtluol-. aiding

-·

-ar-.

IIADAIIETM.

lOW.,

IIADAIIETM.

1986 ARJES WAGON......................*I6·4t.OO
1980CHm.PICKUP......................*114t.OO
1971 FOlD PICIUP........................*1549.00
1987 CHm CHMnE••••••••••••••••••••• *549.00
1917 FORD ESCORT..........................*549.00
1986 PONTIAC 1·1 000.....................*449.00
1915 OlDS CIEU WAGON................*349.00
FORD

lOW *II

;:

Contract
agreement
settled lawsuits

REM~~IBEIUNIG • A Christmas tree
with red
• bows
poinsettias a~d topped wilh an angel marks the
: grave oi'Tammy Kennedy in Meigs Memory Gardus.
It was placed there last week by Xavier University radiology
classmates and friends at Cincinnati's Bethesda Oaks Hospital
in memory of the vivacious young woman who was killed on
Oct. 23 in an automobUe accident.
A memorial plaque stands attbe base of tbe h'ee.
Debbie Baker, Missie Smith, and Lynn Hellman took time
rrom school finals and preparations for the holiday season to
come to Meip County to pay tribute to their triend.
Tbey brought lhe live tree rrom Cincinnati and spent tiine at
the cemetery decorating it. From tbere tbey went to the
Kennedy borne In Tuppers Plains to present gilts and cards to
.Tammy's parents.

stocic , ·,8032. 2 c~oo~a. - · l!onl:whlol
drive. 6 cyl., llir, &amp;ltD., PS, PB,
- 1. c:ruioo, AMIFM 1111&lt;10 - ·
rear win. defog., go-.
IIADAIIETAIL

Stodc I

NOW s

3011281.1!cnl- dri.,.., I

atard. nna .. PS, PB, AMIFM ll8tiO

r-.-wtn.detog., -

·

drift, e cyl.,

*• aulD., PS.

Stodc I 3114711,4 doola, - · Y-l,llr,
auto., PS, PB, PW, POL, - . lit
wllool, . . - . AINFM ltlriO IIPt. radilla.

- · cruloo, AINFM 1tor10 topo,

-.-wln.defog.

~':All 10w•l ~-~~~•••n
'91 PONTIAC FIIEBIRD
COHYEATIILI

-·-·-·

Stodc 1 IM1121, V-8, w, - .. PB,
PW, POL, lilt wllool, c:ruloo, AINFM

•

Slack. 303511, 2 dooR, 6 cyt.,
aulli., PS, PB, AMIFM &amp;IOnia 1ape.

N.WRETAIL

NOW *I

'91 DODGE DAYTONA

Dlscount............1~K='·uu DlscoMnt............3794.00
Com. Acct. ..........soo.oo
Free Tank Of Fuel
Free Tank Of Fuel
.+ 49
+49

' fOUIPIICf

514,999 00

clamoring for investigations and said the Foster file wu removed
editorial wri1ers demanding 1he before they examined iL
release of the flies, lhe public rela·
A senior adminiMition official,
lions wing of the Wbite House per· speaking on condition of anonymisuaded Clinton and Mrs. Clinron to ty, said the Wbite House was
tum the documen1S loose.
forced into action by tbose
The decision was finalized in a accouniS, which made the White
No paper Sunday late-afternoon meeting in Oearan 's House look like it was hiding
office. Attending were White somethin¥. " !think i1's just to
The Times-Sentinel will no1
House counsel Bernard Nussbaum clear the Ill'," the official satd.
be published Sunday to allow
and lOp aides to cbief of staff Mack
Asked why the file was not
employees of the Ohio Valley
McLarty and Mrs. Clinton.
released to reponers, the official
Publishing Company to enjoy
Gearan said Clinton's order for said, "I lhink lhe Clintons have a
lhe Chris1mas holiday weekend
release of lhe files included " all right to personal docwiloo1S. 11hinlt
Many of the usual Sunday
documen1S relating to the Whitewa· anyone would agree these are perfeatures, including columns,
ter Development Corp.. " including sonal documents any president
will appear in today's paper.
those that were removed from should maintain.''
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
White House deputy counsel Vin·
Mrs . Clinton , who as a Little
will be published as usual on
cent Foster's office two days after Rock, Ark., attorney represented
Jan. 2.
his suicide last July 20.
the lhrift and handled the bulk of
The documen1s were removed . her family's transactions, said
were illegally diverted to Whitewa· from Foster's office by Nussbaum Tuesday she was "bewildered" by
ter Development Corp. - owned and turned over to the Clintons' lhe interest in a real eslilte deal she
jointly by the Clintons and McDou· personal attorney in Washington, said costlhe family $69,000.
gal - and whelher any money was David Kendall.
McDougal, an old Clinton pal
rouled to Clin10n's 1984 guberna·
The clamor for lhe files staned and PDiilical-..._&lt;bongbl Mwlil!lft
after federal investigators, quoted after leaving Clin10n' s adminisaatorial campaign.
With congressional Republicans anonymously jn press accounts, 6on' in the early 1980s.

ing into the costly collapse of
McDougal's 1hrift, the Madison
Guaranty Savings and Loan Asso·
ciation. They also are said to be
examining whelher any lhrifl funds

A Daily Sentinel exclusive

An interview with Santa Claus

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Two coal operators have agreed
to settle racketeering lawsuits
against the United Mine Workers,
offacials said.
The settlements are part of an
agreement that ended the union's
seven·momh strike against mem •
bers or lhe Biwminous Coal Operators Association, officials said.
A vote Dec. 14 approving a
new, five,-year conttact ended lhe
s1rike, which lhe union said included about 17,500 miners in seven
slates, including Ohio.
Blair Gardener, a spokesman for
St. Louis·based Arch Mineral
Corp., said the company's subsidiary, Apogee Coal Co., will drop
a lawsuit i1 filed July 29 in U.S .
District Court in Charleston.
Charleston·based Eastern Associated Coal Corp. has settled a similar lawsuit filed against lhe union
lhe same monlh.
"The seUlement contains a con·
fidentiality provision," company

By JIM FREEMAN
l s it difficult when a yoU/Igsrer wants something for
Sentinel News Starr
Christnws that you know rhey will uvu get?
For about 45 years, Orville "Curly" Wiles, who
"You don't make the promise. You can usually tell,
lives on Wolfe Drive in Pomeroy, has served as Meigs especially if the parent is s1anding there and they nod.
County's unofticial Santa Oaus.
Sometimes lhe BB guns are hard 10 come by."
The retiree of lhe form er Foote Mineral plant in
Are BB guns one af tht things a lor of liltle boys ask
New Haven, W.Va .. who now keeps busy as a handy· for?
man, is perhaps best known lhrough his role as Santa
"Yeah, and lhatreally dishlrbs me this day and time."
Claus to several generations of Meigs Countians.
What do the girls ask for?
The Daily Sentinel briefly intervie·.ved SanUl Claus
"Doll babies. Doll babies and clothes."
(Wiles) on Dec. 11 during the Breakfast with Santa
Do a lor of kids ask for high·ttch,plasric·rype things?
event at the Meigs County Museum.
"Yeah, and you really have to keep up 011 the roy ads
During breaks between youngsters, Wiles, loung· to know what new roys are coming out, because if you
ing in his ttademark red, fur· lined outfit complete don't, they are asking you for things you don't even
wilh bells, related some of his experiences and re- know anything about.
sponded to the
"There is
following ques·
nothing tha1gives
lions about his
me more pleasure
career a~ Santa
than to see their
Claus, starting a1
eyes light up.
Elberfeld's De·
When their eyes
partment S10re in
light up, you
Pomeroy.
know you are
How did you
doing good."
get started?
W h a r
"(Alfr e d)
dots Santa ClallS
Elberfeld con·
do during rht
tacted me and
SU~n~Tter'
said he needed a
"Rest.''
Santa for hi s
W h a r
store, and that's
about kids that
where I got
come up and are
started at. "
a lillie llti'\IOIIS at
first?
How long did
you do that?
wsome of
"Almost 30
themaretenified.
CURLYWlLES
years. I '"as there
I hate when a parlong enough that kids that used to sit on my lap were ent takes a child tha1 is absolmcly terrified and forces
bringing kids in to sit on my lap.
him to sit on your knee and I he poorchtld is absolutely ...
"One other thing that really sticks wi th me• I was this is not right Goodness grncious."
in Racine at the ch urch, 1he Methodist ch urch, and
Are there any tricks to pur the children at ease '
this little boy was silting on my lap and he had a list
"Let him alone fora while,just stand back and le1 him
a mile long . And he '"as going lhrough lhis list and he watch the olher children come and si t on my knee. First
lhing you know they'll come up."
never batted an eye.
"He never let on anylhing happened, but I fe lt
When do Jcidsfirsr know about Santa ClallS?
myself growing '"arm anddampand that boy drowned
"After the fll'St grade. Once they go to school and are
me right there. And when he got done he never batted in the f rrst grade. Then lhey know ... then they know."
an eye. He got orr my lap and walked away like
Wltal do )I&lt;IU tell Jcids that age ?
nolhing happened.
"WelL anything is possible if you really believe.
Meigs County's you ngsters are pretty sharp, Wiles They've entered an age where they're not sure, but they
are afraid not to believe."
related.
"They don' t miss anything.! made the mistake one
Do kids and adults nud Sanla ClaiiS?
\
"Yes.
day of wearing lhe wrong shoes and one little boy"&amp;ot
up on my lap and the fii'SI thing he said was 'San1a
"The only thing that worries me about San1a Claus is
Claus, how come you have on brown shoes?' because that I' m afraid people forllet the real meaning or Christ·
I made the mistake of wearing lhe wrong colored mas... lhey forget lhe real meaning ofChrisunas.
shoes. They don '1 miss anylhing."
"People are hearing Santa Claus and they get lhe gifts
I' msure ir' srwtalwaysaneasyjob. What are some and 1ha1 makes it so easy for children 10 believe in. lfthc
parents would just take time to teach 'em the real
of the hardest things about the job'
"There are no hard pans to this job."
meaning of Christmas.
How do you explain being in different places at the
"I think everybody needs San1a Claus. I lhink every.
same rime ?
body needs San1a Claus but lhey shouldn '1 forge1 about
Well I have lots of helpers, and sometimes it gets 1he real meaning of Chris 1m as."
to lhe point I can't be everyw here.

COntinued on Page 3

--··

Stodcl3011802,1rant--. lc:jl.,llr,
- .• PSPB,dhwllooi,CNIH,AMIFiololo-

·C ountry star visits Racine students
: Students at Racine Elementary
Sl:hool were treated recently with
the personal a~ee of counttywestern sw L1onel Cartwright
His appearance and impromptu
c011cert at lhe school were ananged
by his aunt Ruth Smith who is a
cus10dian ai lhe school. Cartwright
and his mother, Eileen, were visit·
ing his grandmolher, Benha John·
son, on Oak Grove Road and
slOpped at lhe school before leav·

fOUl PRICf 5)7,66700 ·

WBY PAY MORfiN 1 94." ?

11

ing for the Columbus airport to
re111111 to Nashville.
Cartwright played the pi,ano and
sang one of his favorites, ' A Leap
of Failh". He also sang"! Saw It on
lhe Radio" after telling lhe studen1S
1hat he and his co-writer used to
listen to the old transistor radios
when growing up. He also sang and
1old the students about the song
"Family Tree" that was written
after he had ~n an old photo of

hts great.grandlather.
For h•s.~core, he san~ ~~ cho·
rus from ~ ~ap ~f Fanh wtlh
the ch~dren )OIDmgm.
Dunng hiS lalk 10 lhe assembly,
he encouraged the studen1S "follow
your dreams ... work hard ... and
pray." We went on to tell ~e studen1S that when he was 8!0WIDg up
other lctds li!Ughed and kidded h1m
about wantin!liO play the gmtar

Continued on Page 3

From Mustang To Town Car, Escort To
Cougar, F·S.rles To Mark YIU ••• It Makes lo
Difference What You Order, There Is lo
"Extra Charge•. Place Your Order At Any
nme And You Pay Only 1 49~00 Over Invoice
For The Car Or Truck Of Your Choice!
APPUCAIILE REBATE, IF Alf'f, AT TIME OF DELNERY GOES TO CUSTOMER

• DECORAT£D HOME- Many bomes .
:ibrougbout Melp Conaty are brightly decont·
·:ed now tbat Cbrllltmas -Eve bu arrived. Tbla

not·•o·t:nilcal example or bou1e dec:oratlne
belonp tO Roger Muley of Middleport.

··• -

..

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I

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�Friday, December 24, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court StJeet
Pomeroy, Ohlo
DEVOTED TO 111E INTERESTS OF 11IE IIEJG8-IIASON AREA

~:'y~~o~ ~?:n~ ~o=·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be looo tban 300
words . All letters are subject to editins aod must be siped with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, oot personalities.

Didn't they pay attention?
Alcohol-impaired driving is still lhe number one cause of &lt;JelU!I for
young people in America, killing about 8 children and adolescc:niS daily.
Sure about five times that number, 21 and over, also die thts way
every day But it's those young lives lost we grieve the most.
All those seasons missed, all those birthdays an~ holidays not celebrat·
· ed. AU the moments and years never known, cherished, or remem~
Never 10 see their own children crawl, then wallc. And learn 10 '!rive.
Never 10 suffer the anxiety of a mother or falher who knows that a lhird of
12th-graders binge drink at least once every ~o weeks, and half of lOth
graders ride with drivers who have been drinking or usmg oth~ ~gs.
· Never 10 wonder if their daughler or son ts one of the 7 million u:ens
. who say lhey buy their own alcohol in spite of the law. Never to fear the
· ringing of lhe phone when their children are not at ho!'le.
Weren't these children paying auention? We d1d warn them .about
drinking and driving, didn 'I we? Even if they saw grown-ups like ~s
(maybe even us) not bein$ the best role models: We eve~ told them, that If
they were drunk, a state m which some. expenenced drinkers can 1 even
remember the way home, they should remember 10 get someone else to
drive.
· m
· schools, wh'l
We were 100% behind alcohol educauon
1ewe le t th em
. be barraged by messages encouraging them to drink. We took them .to the
convenience store to observe lhe dilemma of lhe underaged clerl&lt;: mStde
when another u:enager placed a S!x-pack on the counter. When underage
drinking came up we said we dido 't really approve. But, If they were
determined 10 brei.Jc the law anyway, we'd help them do it or look the
other way, so long as "they were not on drugs."
Why couldn't they be content with what we provided? We took them
to sports events or encouraged lhem to watch them with us at home. We
taught them 10 read the scoreboards, emblazoned with the name of a popular brew. and tuned in the sports news, where they could admire the
world's faslesl drivers in uniforms and vehicles promoting alcohol brands.
We even got them rock concert tickets to see their favorile performers
sponsored by some beer or w!ne cooler.
. .
.
How could our children have ended up deadman alcohol-related highway crash? Didn'tthey pay atlention?
Submitted by Ohio Crime Prevention Council.

Letters to the editor
flpset with thief
Dear Editor,

cnqugh that it was stolen, but it's
It is really a shame when you not even paid for yet.
Please,
don't feel safe leaving certain if anyone knows about this, notify
things outside. Our son's XRJOO the police.
motorcycle was taken right off his.
Cecil and Debbie Maynard
grandfather's porch. It's bad
Racine

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Friday, Dec. 24, the 358th day of 1993. There are seven days
left in the year. This is Christmas Eve.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 24, 1814, the War of 1812 officially ended as the Uniled
. States and Britain signed the Treaty of Ghent m Belgtum. However,
because of t.he slowness of communications, both countries fought the
· Battle of New Orleans the following month.
On this date:
,
In 1524, Portuguese navigak?f V~o da Gama.- who had discovered
a sea route around Africa to India - died m Cochin, India.
· In 185~; fire devastaled the Library of Congress in Washington D.C.,
deslroying about 35,000 volumes.
·
. In 1865, veterans of lhe Confederale Army formed a private, social club
. in Pulaski, Tenn., called lhe Ku Klux Klan.
In 1871 Giuseppe Verdi's opera "Aida" had its world premiere in
Cairo E&amp;YPt, 10 celebrate lhe openin~ of the Suez Canal.
In '1906 Canadian physicist Regmald A. Fessenden became the first
person to b~cast a music program over radio, from Brant Rock, Mass.
In 1920 Enrico Caruso P,:ve his last public performance, singing in
·Jacques Haicvy's "LaJuive ··~lthe Melropolitan OJ?era in New Y~rk.
• In 1943, 50 years ago, Prestdent R~velt appomted Gen. Dwight,D.
'Eisenhower supreme commander of Alhed forces as pan of Operauon
Overlord.
n
.. .
· In 1968 the Apollo V I asii'Oitallts, orbitmg the moon, read passages
irom the Old Testament Book of Genesis doring a Christmas Eve televi·
Sion broadcast.
.
· In 1980, Amqicans remembered the U.S. hostages m Iran by burning
Oaruues or shining lights for 417 seconds - one second for each day of
CaptiVity.

.

~------------------,

Berry's World

Page-2-l'he Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, December 24, _1993

'

-

'

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Couples receive
marriage licenses

.

Saturday, Dec. 25

Clinton's prpmises kept and unke·p t
WASHINGTON- Bill Clin!On
made more than 150 specific campaign Y,romises last year covering
everything from Penlagon procurebo ·
· u1
H'
;
"
"
Clan. made
and
Mack . Me
'f,
one
he
become an irnperial chief of staff- no delusions of
de
jeal
gate keeping
no lm~::Sgs In~ he
00 urroyal,
Joh '
B
wou~dn't .be ohn s.unuMcnuC.lary
keepmg
thiS one
promtse,
ty has helped
Clinton
register an•
impressive legislative record in a
year full of missteps and mayhem.
Nor is McClarty like James
Baker- George Bush's good
friend but a consummate self-promater. McClarty will be in the
bunker with Clinton until the biller
end_ just as in 1974 when the
two rode alone in a car carrying
Clinton to a concession speech
afler a lost congressional mce. ll's
not on any official schedule, but
McClarty says that "we'll have
about five minutes at least every
day" for reminiscence, to keep in

~~~~uldn't

:i

touch .with their roots.
Sipping co~fee out of a sty~ofoam c~p du~mg a recent Whu~
House mtervtew, McClarty said.

..z
By Jack Anuerson
ll.zc'

H'.il

and .
hael Bm'stez'n

"You have 10 be careful (as chief
of staff) not to get caught up in
self-importance. You've got ·to use
good judgment. I do drive myself
10 work, but if I have a busy sched·
ule, with lots of SlOpS, I do use the
(govemmeni·J?rovided) car. And I
will use the pnVate plane,"
After a life spent in the cozy
corporate climate in Arkansas,
where private planes were a way of
life, Mc()any's life has probably
changed.ilmost as much as Clioton's since last year.
From the first day on the job,
when he and senior adviser George
Stephanopoulos got lost on their
10 the ftrSI family's residence

. wt'th crmton, th'.~
for ~ !'lee~;tng
admmtstrabon has worked by 111
~nd error. R~ly has there been
ume for reflecuon.
. the . b
"About two weeks mto
JO ,
1 walked up there (to the Oval
Office) one day I remember I was
lkinf up the' steps And it just
o hit
I feit like I
going to. wotk m my office. It JUSt
took a httle bme 10 feel that way.
Its just such a great privilege to
serve."
It's been a year of policv
. al any
· preS!·'
accompli'shments 10 nv
dent's first.year! yet one where
man&gt;: promiseS he ~wn to the
wayside, b.roken o~ ~unply for~tten: Gays m the mthtary1
!D1d·
die-class tax cut, economic s~uIus" and meaningful ca!Dpatgn
finance reform are all promises that
have been retracled, abandoned or
both.
Some Clinton promises. e'fen
seem quaint afler a Y~· This IS a
president who promised to ~nd
~nlimited "~.fl mane&gt;:" contr1buuons to pohucal rarues, yet has
made the rounds o the Hollywood

;i~d

m~.

~as

'!tf

Accu-Weatbel" forecast for
MICH.

fund ~raisers·
a president
d :Oake
lobbyists who
dis·
10
prom~aibutions members of a
10
~~: ressional committee
before
the gcan ••su'fy It's been an upside
~

PA.

d~":n year•. ye~.111l1~undits are
Willing to gtve un c 1. . .
Y

•

.

•• •
•

"Certainly very few Cittze.ns
would be
steps..(Chd Th~mas Mann of the
year, sat
. .
"Th
Brookings Inabandosltluii~. hi . ~
0
charges that he
scam
paign promises largely comes
down
to the fact tax
lhat he
abandoned
. idd1
L"
his m e-c1ass cu
Though ill-faled haircuiS and a
troubled tax package have at times
left Clin!On with historically low
approval mtings, the past ~ear .has
produced a plethom of leg•slauon :
The Motor Voter bill, the Family
and Medical Leave Act, the nepea1
of the gag rule in family pl.anning
clinics, higher taxes on the nch, tax
credits for the working poor and
pilot programs .for student loan
reform and natiOnal service, to
name a few.
Though his title is chief of staff,
McClarty's job defies description.
He is a soother of egos, II'Ouble·
shoo~r and an adminisuation lobbyist. The man nicknamed "Mack
the Nice" was also assigned by
Clinton the job of secretly planning
the replacement of Defense Secretary Les Aspin nearly six weeks
before his ouster.
"The president asked me to
develop a list of candidates of pos·
sible successors to Les. He said,
'Mack, I'm having discussions
with Les. I've not made a decision.
But I'd like you to put together a
list."' This is how McLarty spent
his "free time" this fall, and why
even nice guys throw people out of
their office.

·~~~0~Yi:"lis"';l{~~

•

FredW. Crow
gnme. We have all received a .~'
deal of happiness out ~f gtym_g
Christmas presents 10 vanous mdi·
viduals. For example, one of the
first gifiS I gave Ted Reed was a
manure spreader. Someone located
this gift for me and it was placed
outside of the Reed househpld. For
several days it remained there but
finally the neighbors complained
about the odors coming from it. I
never did fmd out what he did with
this special gift.
Christmas today is overplayed
in my book. II has gotten entirely
100 commercial. One organization
sent me a calendar and literature I
could never use. This material was
tossed in the waste paper basket.
Later I received a call from the
organization wanting 10 know if I
inlended to use lhe cards and if so,
where was the money that I was
supposed 10 donale for the cause.
He was 'told that I could not use
either the calendar or lhe cards, and
I was not going 10 send him any
money for this malerial. This is one
way that various promoters have 10
extract funds from the public. It
should be stopped. In this many of
us have received at least 30
requesiS for money hom diff~rent
organizations. It gets 10 be qwte a
problem . My main contributions
are tooc7 Grace EP,iscopal Church,
the I
Humane Society and the
local Salvation Anny. These organizations put the money to good

use.
There are many charity organi ·
zations where the top offtcials are
overpaid and where administrative
costs are excessive. II strikes me as
odd that many of the heads of char·
ities are geuing paid well over one
hundred thousand dollars in salary.
Seems like this money could be
beller spent.
Then there is the question of
sending Christmas cards. At one
time I cut off all local cards, but I
am gradually working back to the
old routine. I see no reason for
sending a card 10 a person that you
see at least once a week.
This week I made a horrible
mistake. I have a friend who lives
in New York. In my card 10 him I
gave the wrong ftrSI name for his
wife. That is a horrible thing to do.
I will apologize at the appropriate
time.
My favorile song doring the holidays is the one entilled, "Grandma
got run over by a Reindeer." This
song is very significant to me since
I wrote a play entitled, "Trial of
Santa Claus." Prancer's hoof priniS
were on Grandma's head. Santa
was tried for manslaughter but
there is a happy ending. Santa is
acquiued by a Jury of nine relatives
of Grandma.
Have you seen the wonderful
lights that can be seen in the vari·
ous villages in this county. Syracuse has quite a number of well·
lighted homes. It is indeed a plea·
sure 10 drive about the village and
see these lights. I am gain¥ 10 try to
get to see Walt Manley s home.
People say it is beautiful.
I have not had the opportunity 10
see Pomeroy, Middleport, Racine
or Rutland at night. I am sure they

I

..
I

I

,.

• IColumbus l2s• I

.

The following couples recently
received marriage licensea in the
Meigs County Probate Coun pf
JIIUe Robert Buck.
lteceiving licenses were: James
~d Schuler, 60, and Alice Vir·
ginta Walton, 41, both of Middleport; Janod Lee Hill, 23, and Leigh
Leach, 23, both or Racine; K.ennfth
William Hickman, 22, and Angela
Dawn Francis, 21, both of Long
Bouom; Mack Alvin McCarthy,
23, ancl Tami Kay Pasquale, 2S,
both or Pomeroy.

Announcements

'

Tu oflice closed
The Middlepon Village income
tall office wilf be' closed all next
week.

Payments may be made by mail to
P. 0. Box 106, Middleport.
Year-end meeting scheduled
••

The Bedford Township Trustees
will have their year-end meeting
Dec. 31 all p.m. at the town hall.
Trustees to meet

W.VA .

ctm

Forecasters ,promise
a white Christmas
By The Associated Press
Freshsnowandcolderlempera- Around tbe na'tloa
.
tlD'l:s will make for a white Christ·
SnowfellacrosspartsoftheGreat
mas iii Ohio.
Lakes stales and upper Mississippi
The exlreme northern counties Valley today, and unseasonably cold
may receive as much as three inches weather moved into the Northeast.
of snow today. Snow may taper off
The National Weather Service said
early tonight but will pick up again lake effect snow in upper Michigan
after midnighL
. could produ~ as much as a foot of ne:-v
Lows tonight will dip into the snow . by tomght. It also snowed m
!fens. Highs on Christmas will be in Missouri, Jowa, th.e Dakotas and the
the 20s. Colder air wiD move in by northern Appalachtans.
Saturdayeveningandlowswilldrop
Blizzards and wind chills of 75
into the single digits by early Sun· degrees below zero struck parts of
day.
Alaska early today.
Therecordhightemperaturefor
DensefogsettledintoCalifomia's
this date at the Columbus weather centralvalley,maltingroadshazardous
station was 66 in 1889. The record near San Francisco early today. Portlow was- 12 in 1983.
land and Seallle also were fog-bound.
Sunset today will be at 5:11 . A cold front in the Nonhenst was
p.m. Sunrise on Saturday will be at expected to bring a dusting of snow to
7:52a.m.
some areas during the day, then clear,
Southern Ohio
frigid weather tonight Thick clouds
Tonight... Snow likely... Espe- behind a stationary front covered most
cially after midnight Low 20 to 25. of the Southeast. .
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
OnThursdaymght,scaueredsnow
Chance of snow 60 percent.
fell across areas from the central AUanChristmas day ...Snow likely. tic Coast to the Rocky Mountains and
High near 30. Chance of snow 60 northern Plains.
percent.
Eureka, Calif., warmed to 68
Outlook for Sunday ... Snow Thursday and broke its high tem~­
likely. Cold with a low around 10 lure record for the dale of 66 set m
and a high near 25.
1919. The holieSt spot in the lower 48
Extended forecast
stales Thursday was Miami, at 84.
Sunday... Snowlikely.Coldwith ·
Today's highs were expected in
lows 5 to 10. Highs 20 to 25.
the 20s and 30s for much of the NorthMondayandtuesday.. .Achance east, Midwest and Plains, with ~orne
ofsnoweachday. Lows in the u:ens. lOs in theGreatLakesstales~40s mthe
Highs in the 20s.
Northwest and 60s and 70s m pans of

also have many well decorated
homes. The individuals who have
jlORe to so much trouble in display·
mg their lights should be compli ·
mented.
·
I received seveml interesting
Christmas _cards and they are
appreciated. I finally got 10 be a
judge when I received a card from
Tip and Mary Dye addressed to
I udge Fred W. .Crow at l Frog
Blvd., Syracuse. I did not realize
some think that I had "gradualed,"
but this has not happened. Both my
father and my son have been or is
the Common Pleas Judge in this
county. Maybe it was an honest
mistake.

Contract
...
Comlnued from Page 1

We should not forget those people who are lonely and sad at
Christmas time and all of us should
visit one or two of them during the
holiday season. There are many of
us who receive far too many gifts
at Christmas time. Then there are
those who receive nothing. In the
later case, there is much understandable sadness that exists.
Unfonunatcly, this should not happen, but it does. With that, the writer wishes all of his readers, friends
and relatives a Merry Christmas.
Thank God for the many blessings
He has bestowed on this writer.
In God we trust.
Carryon.

Continued from Page 1

and sing. He had the dream and
worked to make it come true.
Because of his rushed schedule,
he' was unable to sign autographs,
but asked the,teachers to send the
siudents names and he would see
that each one received a photograph.
Accompanying him to the
school were his mother, .grand·
mother and three aunts. Cartwright
told the students that his mother
and aunts were Racine alumni.
Several students at the school are
his cousins.
Principal Robert Beegle report·
ed that one student, in writing
about the visit, wrote that a
"National Si Liberty" (celebrity)
visited our school today.
The principal and staff thanked
Cartwright for the generous shanpg
of his talent and time in visiting the
school and talking and singing to
the students.
"We are sure thai this will help
motivate and encourage our students. This is something they will
always remember," said Beegle.
A number of photogmphs were
taken and will be permanently dis·
played at the school. Beegle said.

Chuck Stone
Island, N.Y.. by a Jamaican-born
son of a businessman; in Aurora,
Colo., by a fired pizza worker; in
Oxnard,. Calif., by an unemployed
compuler engineer; in suburban St.
Louis by unknown persons.
Only when a heartless beast
inside a human skin commits just
one cru~lly calculated mQTder do
we react in horror. In Mi!WIIIIkee, a
teen-ager blows away the face of a
lcneelina mother aud then explains,
"I'm die big man. I JOI the gun.
Why does slie have thts auitude?"
In California, a 39-year.,old career
criminal abducts 12-year-old Polly
Klaas from her bedroom and then
kills her.
In the nation's capital, drive-by

k:iUings in black neighborhoods are
as normal as legislative deliberations; ·
We'll nevrz be able to SlOp violence or murders. But we can do a
far more efficient job of containing
both, just as Australia, Canada,
Great Britain, Sweden and Switzer·
land do. In 1990, these counaies'
combined deaths by handguns were
only one-third of the United States'
deaths by handguns. The reason:
stroni gun conii'OIIaws.
· We' must restore a reciprocity of
civiJ!4y: a reciprocity that the gu,nowning NRA (Neanderthalic Rifle
Asiniles) helps to Violate.
The work has already begun.
For the first time in history, the
American people tose up in a righ·
tenus .wrath and demanded their
Congress pass a gun control bill.
The passing of the Brady bill
was a loilg overdue defeat for an
organization that is as politically
responsible for the proliferation of

TONIGHT THAU THURS.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2.00

BU.GAIW IU.'PI . . . . DfdLI'

lery.
Friends may call Tuesday from
6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the Forest Run
United Methodist Church.

Helen Grinstead
Helen L. Grinslead, 79, of Letart.
died Thursday. December 23, 1993.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Augustl4, 1914 in Graham
Station, she was a daughler of the
late William W. and Bertha E.
(Hoffman) Clark. She was a member of the Broad Run Zion
Lutheran Church, was a former
employee of New Haven Porcelain
Company and retired as a cook
from the Philip Sporn Plant.
She was also preceded in dealh
by her first husband, Hcrbcn W.
Johnson; her second husband, Clo y
C. Grinstead; five brothers, ~vc sis·
1ers and a great-granddaughter
Survivors include two daugh ters
and sons-in-law. Shirley A. and
Charles "Larry" Sullivan of West .
Columbia, and Bernice J. and Her·
ben L. Clarke of Cheshire, Ohio;
two slep-sons, Raymond E.
Grinslead of Mason and Willie
"Joe" GrinStead of Banow, FL; a

IAIIGa.t• •1Gin'

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POSTMASTER: Sead d1nu ctwaa• to The
Daily Seolinel, 1J I Court SL, Pom«&lt;y, Ohio ,

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pna Cllrier etdl wett.
~ ~bacripdou by r...n pcrmittod Ia IIUI

ALL SALES
ANAL

STOREWIDE AFTER CHRISTMAS SAL~

Publitbed every afternooo, Monday Uuough
Friday, Ill Court Sl. , Pomeroy, Ohio ~y the
ado Vllley PubU.hiD.a Co~yiMult&amp;medll
lac., Pomeroy, Ohio •15769, Pb. 992·2156.
S«.ond claU pos111e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

~=~:

Ivan E. Loftis, 58, of St. Peters,
Mo., died Dec. 10, 1993, ol a massive coronary.
He was employed by Sabrelines
Corp. as a senior syslems supervisor of engineering on aircraft.
He is survived by his wife, Bar·
bara Kennedy Loftts; two daugh •
ters Katie and Kelly, all of St.
Peters, Mo.; his mother-in-law·,
Pauline Kennedy of Pomeroy, and
a sisler Helen Schaefer of Dallas,
Texas.
.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday, Dec. 14, with burial in SL
Pe~rs.
.
Cards may b~ sent to Mrs;
Loftis, 6 Walnut Park Court, St.
Pelers, Mo. 63376.

&amp;UDNIMD

'•

.

Ivan Loftis

I GROUP
OF

PRI . 1: 15, l:lO AT. J: 15,9:10 li'G-UI
... din! JM l. 1:15,1:28, 7115,9:»

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - Merle
Davis, Rutland.
. . .
Thursday discharges - V1f8!ma
Michael, Pomeroy; Ola Smtth,
Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec. 23 • Mrs.
Tony Greene and daughler, Debra
Spencer, Keneth Biggs, Donald
Click and Raymond Walker.
Births, Dec. 23 • Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Atkins, son, Gallipolis, and
Steve McGhee, daugh1er, Gallipolis.

Dai)y............. .................... .......--3S

of Hurricane and Harry Clark of
Bear Creek, Alabama; five
grandchildren;
10
great·
grandchildren; and five step·
grandchildren.
Service will be held on Sunday,
December 26, at I :30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home, M~son,
wilh Rev. George C. Wemck
officiating. Burial will be in the
Hoffman Cemelery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. on Saturday.

GROUP OF

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CASUAL SPORT
SHOES

IOJ.ltl.\1' Gl" CD't1PICA1'U AYAILULII

Hospital news

violence as are lhe criminals.
On the long journey 10 reclaiming OW' humanity, the Brady bill is
oilly a small step. Here are the next
three s~ps: I) Require that all guns
be licensed. 2) Slap a heavy - and
I mean, painfully heav~ - tait on
all ammunition. 3) Challenge the
unproven theory thai the Constitution permits individiiAJ ownership
of guns.
·
It doesn't And those who resist
this truth are no different from
those Americans who believed the
Constitution supported slavery and
denied vores 10 women.
Somewhere in this nation of 206
million Bl!ults; there must be one
- just one - adult who is prepared to challenge the NRA's ·misInterpretation of the Second
Amendment. This person must go
to the Supreme Coun.

ersville, died Wednesday, Dec. 22,
1993, at Kimes Convalescent Center in Athens.
Born May 22, 1909, in Minersville, 110n of the late Theodore E.
and Stella Houdashelt Grueser, he
was an employee of the former
Pomeroy Mo10r Company's auto
body repair and painting depart·
ment.
In addition, he attended the Forest Run United Methodist Church
and was a member of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau.
Surviving are daughters and
sons-in-law, Lela and Walter Ervin
of Millfield and Pamela and Arie
Korporaal of Whittier, Calif.; sons
and daughlers-in-law, Thomas and
Suzanne Grueser of Whittier and
John and Juanita Grueser of
Racine; five grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Other survivors include a sister,
Helen Maag of Minersville, and
two brothers, Elmer Grueser of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and William
Grueser of Middleport.
He was preceded in death by
two infant daughters, Helen Joan
and Dora Jean Grueser.
Services will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Ewing Ful_!eral

' AT CHAPMAN SHOES
STARTS MONDAY, DECEMBER 27TH
FROM 8:00 A.M. UNTIL 6:00 P.M.

.

Edlior's note • Long-time
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the
contributor of a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, crlt·
iclze or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
encouraged to write to Mr.
Crow, in care of tbls newspaper.

Cop)Tightl993 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Ohio Valley Publlablna Co. Leave your Dame,
address and telephone n11111ber with your card ·
or letter. No telephone calls wUI be accepted. All
contest eatrles should be turoed ia to tbe news· .
paper oflice by 4 p.m. eiiCb Wednesday. In case
of a tie, tbe winner will be chOAen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallla County farm will be realured by the Gallla SoD ud Water Conservation

THE BIG SALE

COLONY THEATRE

=~~;;44UII2~3~

spokesman Terry Whill said.
"Therefore, Eastern Associated
Coal cannot disclose the conteniS
of the selllement agreement."
. Both lawsuits alleged the union
and iiS members "engaged in aciS
of violence and intimidation." The
actions included attacks on property and personnel, the lawsuits said.

Storm of violence corrodes humanity
In the last two- week period,
multiple murders have been committed: in San Diego, by a brilliant
young . naval officer; on Long

45631, and you may wiD a $5 prize from tbe

wnr".:e!cw~='::fZ38s:.!~ __....;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ Area dDeistria'cl.t h s - - - - - - - - - Home in Pomeroy with the Rev. step-daughler, Doris J. Yonker of
John E. Grueser
Country...
Deroo Newman offiCiating. Burial Letart; two brothers, William Clark
John Edmond Orueser, 84, Min- wiD follow in Beech Grove Ceme-

.!USPS liJ.ll60)

When Defense Secretary Les
Aspin bungled America's miniwars around the world, President
Clinton's loss of confidence
prompted Aspin to resign. Now,
the president needs to sead a similar message to at least three of his
10p domestic-policy advisers. ~ul
10 qUOie a current street CllpresSIOn,
Clinton just doesn't understand.
Americans do, but nobody is listening to !heir anguished cries. At
least not yet.
Put aside this column for a
moment and glance through your
newspaper. Sqmcwhere on those
pages Is a grisly account of an
unusual murder or murders, not
necessarily in your community•.but
in cities or towns like yours.
Murders are equal-opportunity
savage~. No region of the country,
includmg yours, ·and no race,
including yours, is exempt from
lhese atrocities, some of which are
almost too sickening to comprehend.

MYSTERY PARM -This week's mystery
farm, featured b7 the Mela• Soli aDd Water
COIIServatklll Dlstrlet, Is located somewhere In
Mel11s Colillty. lDdlvlduals wlshiDg lo partlcipate In the weekly CODtest may do 110 by guessing
tbe farm'&amp; owner. Just mall, or drop ofr your
guess to the Dally Seatlnel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 815 Third Ave., ~allipolis, Ohio,

at the Pageville town hall.

Yuletide season reflections, observations
homes, only coal which meant
using the shovel several times each
day.
Today, it is a different ball

•

IND.

"I'm a lillie more terse, a little
more businesslike with ~pie than
I was in my prior life, ' McClarty
says. "My time is just a lillie more
pressed and I expect answers. 'Get
to the point, get it done, goodbye,
great 10 see you, but lets move on.
YQU have to do that in this job."
Ja.ck Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

•

There have been many inlerest·
ing things that have occurred in my
lifetime during the Christmas season. This Story is about when I was
younger and the type of gifts
received when I was a kid. The ftrSt
gift that I remember was when
Santa brought to Richard and
myself a case of orange pop. We
were both quite young and my,
how good that pop tasted.
The one gift that really comes 10
mind was when my father purchased for me a fielder's baseball
glove. Before Christmas this glove
was prominenlly displayed in the
window of Biggs Hardware in
Pomeroy. Each time I went by this
store I admired it My father apparently knew about this glove and
spent his hard earned money on it.
You cannot imagine how I felt. I
guess I was 8 or 9 when I received
lhe glove. Rupe, do rou remember
the rU'SI gift you received? Rupette,
I' ll bet the first gift that you
remember was a doll.
In my pre-high school days
there was a great deal of snow each
year and as a result there was much
sleigh riding. I had an old flexible
Hyer which I used. For some reason this sleigh would not su:er very
easily and I would usually wind up
in a snow bank. The village offi•
cials roped off several streets for
this activity. 1bere was also some
ice skating that took place during
the winter. At one time there was a
large ice skating area on the ground
where
the
Don
Tate
Chevrolet/Cadillac agency is now
located. Unfortunalely I could not
ice ska~ and therefore did not own
skales. At this point in time winters
were very severe. There were no
gas or electric . furnaces to heat

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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THEFABRIC SHOP
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992-2284

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..

Sports

The .Daily Sentinel
·

In the Warren Duals held on
December 23, Meigs recorded a
second place finish, falling to Warren Local in the fllllls. Olhcr teaniS
participating were Shenandoah,
Caldwell, Crooksville. Philo, Utica.
and Waterford. Outstanding
wrestlers for Mcias al Wlfi'CII were
Josh Wandling, third 11 103
pounds; Scou George, third at 112
pounds; Jerod Coole ll 130 pounds;
and Shannon S1881S, second at 189
pounds.
CWTCRdy, Meigs holds a 12-6-1
team record and hopes 10 improve
on that marie u they will !ravel 10
Gallipolis and wrestle in their
Rotary lnvilalional on Wednesday
December 29.

Waterford girls
remain unbeaten
Host Waterford, undefeated in
six games, made lhe Easlem lady
Eagles !heir prey by claimmg a 7547 non-league triumph in girls'
basketball action Thursday.
Eastern is 2-4 overall.
LcAnn Huck scored 20 points
for the Wildcats on lhe night, scoring all but two of !hose in lhe first
half. laura Goins added 12, Krista
Neilltcn and nine each from Amy
Buker, Mana Houinger, and Katie
Wainwright
Tara Congo led Eastern with
eleven points and four rebounds,
Nicole Nelson added seven, Penny
Aeiker and Jessica Karr six, and
Rebecca Evans five. Nine EHS
girls hit the scoring column.
Waterford went ahead 8-2, lhen
after a time out, Eastern pulled
back to 8-5. From that poml on,
Eastern set an all-time record for
turnovers and feU to a 30-7 def1cit.
Eastern had 23 turnovers lhc first
half.
Waterford rolled on to a 49-20
halftime lead, and led 64-28 after
three frames. Eastern's bench did a
good job in tfte final round to
outscore Waterford 18-10 and culling the fmalto 75-47.
Eastern hit 20-67 from the
floort, hit 6-11 at lhe line, had 38
rebounds, led by Penny Aeiker's
eight, had 30 turnovers, 8 ·assms,

seven sreals, and II fouls.
Waterford, who scored 19 layups, hit34-71, was 6-10 at the line,
grabbed 39 rebounds, led by Waller
wilh 8, and NeiU's 9; had 6 sreals,
16 asissts, IS turnovers, and 10
fouls.
Waterford won the ruerve game
36-20 led by Stephanie Waller with
12 and StephCooper wilh II.
Eastern was led by Crystal
Holsinger, Martie Holter, Nicole
Nelson, and Christie Grossnickle
wilh four each.
Eastern is idle untU Jan. 3 when
its goes 10 Wellson, while Waterford plays al Bealesville Monday
and 81 Southern Thursday.
Easteru 7 13 8 111=47
Jaime Wilson 1-1=3, Penny
Aeiker 3-0=(i, Tara Congo 5-1-11,
Amy Redovian 1~2.Jessica Karr
2-2=6, Jessica Radford 0-0-0,
Nicole Nelson 3-1=7, Melissa
Guess 2-0-4, Rebecca Evans 1-10=5, Patsy Aeiker 1-1=3. Totals
19-1.(6-11)=47
Waterford 30 19 16 10=75
Laura Goins 5-2=12, Katie
Wainwrighl4-1=9, Amy Baker 00-0, MAria Hollinger 3-1-0=9,
Christy Waller 4-1=9, LaAnn Huck
9-2=20, Krista Neill 5-0=10,
Stephanie Waller 3-0=4, Stephanie
Cooper 0-0-0, Carrie Arnold 0-0-0,
TotalS 33-1-(6·10)o75.

Scoreboard
U.......... ..

' NIIIonaiHacby~

S..Jmo

...... 11211 6
11211 l
E&lt;lnoadao
"' '13 5

EASTERN CONtEIIJINCE
AdanUc Dl*lon
W L T PtiGPGA

NY tw.,...
New 1c:ney

..

... 20 11 4 44123 95
AWaddphia •.. II 17 l
31136 I 39
W"'""""" ... ll 17 l
321 08 I 07
NYitlloden ... 141l 3 31120111
Aorido
....... 13 ll l
31 ~· '11
Ttmp181y
.. 10 21 4
l4 89111
NGI"theuu Dlddon
Pilu!MJh ..... t8 9 7 43129116
8&lt;Wtm
....... 16 II 1 39113102
Buffalo
....... 1715 3 Y1120 99
Momral
..... 14 14 6
34105 99
Quoboo
...... 14 16 l
331:14122
!Wifonl
...... 12 ·~ 3 Zl 9911~
Qu.awa
•••••. 825 3
191D5l'n
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctnb'll Dl¥1don
W L T
Toronto
...... 21 10 6
Dallu - ........ 18 12 7
SLI...uW:
...... 18 11 5
Dcuoit
~-····· 19 ll 2
ChK:IJO
...... 11 II 4
WimipeJ
.... 13 19 S

1

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23106133

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No~......,..w

S•adif•O.aa... a Hanford. 5:05p.m.
Buft'olo a N.Y. ......... 1m p.m.

NewS..,.nN.Y.a..pn, 7:35pm.
~ .. w.....,....,7:15p.m.

31127 149

FkQII

PodlkDM• ....
Ca!pey
····- 1913 .S
43140123
Vanoauvc:r
... 19 16 0 38117114
Anaheim
.... 13 21 2 28 94113

7;35,.....

,.

¥I. T_,. BaJ II

OriuMio. 1'11.,

au..,. tt II. J.au;, 1:35pm.
1.t:» Aqelelat Allabeim, I 0:05 p.m.

~

.

Donyell Mars hall scored 24
points and lhree teammates also
scored in double figures as Conneclicut (7-0) cruised in lhe second
half after leading only 34-28 at
intermission. Shannon Bowman
s~ 21 points for Fairf~ld (1-4),
wh1ch couldn't kCA&gt; pacem second
half due to cold shooting (10-for32, 31 percent). .

, ,
:·
"~

;.:
•.;,
.,;

·t.,
...

!

No. 16 Mlnnesola 66, San Jose St.
53
David Grim scored 15 points for
Minnesota (7-2), which shot only )I
33.8 percent but won by outre bounding San Jose State 51-35 and
limiting the Spartans to only 39.6
shooting. San Jose (3-4) was led by ,.
Terry Cannon's 16 points.
;~"·

i

-·~

1.. f

No. 17 Wisconsin US, Miss. Val- ...i
ley 79
Michael Finley scored 21 points ;,-&lt;.
and Rashard Griffith added 18 .. :points and 14 rebounds as Wiscon-' " •
sin (6-0) ran up its second-highest ,.; i
poiniiOial ever, just five shy of lhe • ·•
120itseoredagainstSMUin 1967. .· ;
Griffith, a 6-11 freshman from
Chicago, had 13 points in the first , ;.
half as the Badj!ers opened a 52-34 ~I.
lead. Mississtppi Valley (2 -4) , •;·.
which has no starter over 6-7, was ''-''
led by Dendrius Rucker with 28
points.
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Cavaliers 107, Bucks 88
•.
By Tbe Associated Press
Clippers 95; Sacramento 114, winnin~ streak.
·
Gerald Wilkins scored 20 points -.~
Ewtng and Davis scored II
The New York-Atlanta and Washington 88, and Portland 108,
points each during a 23-6 run that as Cleveland gained its third .••
Denver-Houston games were· fea- Indiana 96.
straightlopsided victory.
. ,
lured bouts, while the game
While the Mavericks were lumed the game around.
Mark Price and Brad Daugherty ' .1
between NBA doormats DallaS and relieved to finally win, there was Nuggets 106, Rockets 93
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf scored scored 15 points each for the CavaMinnesota was like ma&amp;ching a pair Gttle elation in lheir dressin~ room.
24
points .and Reggie Williams 23 liers. Todd Dar had 21 and Jon
ofaging tanken on the unden:ard.
"I guess the consecuuve-loss
for
Denver, which ended a nine- Barry a career-high 20 for Milwau- ... ·
But, as far as the record book is streak is over, but we've still golto
,,
coocemed, the 93-89 victory by the win some games, •' said Sean game road losing streak and kept kee.
Heat
109,
Lakers
92
Dallas Mavericks over Minnesota's Rooks, who had 8 career-high 26 Houston from matching the best
Steve Smith scored 23 points
Timberwolves on Thursday night points.
ever one-loss start in NBA history.
and
Glen Rice 21 to lead Miami to
was perhaps the most significant
Jim Jackson led Dallas with 28
its
fourth
straight victory. Los
event on a busy schedule.
points.
The loss was the first in II
Angeles
was
led by Nick Van
The win at Minnesota's Target Knicks 84, Hawks 75
home games this season for HousExel's
16
points.
Center snapped the Mavericks •
New York, behind the fourlh- ton, ended its seven-game winning
NBA reconl-tyiag 20-game losing quarter shooting of Patrick Ewing streak and leftlhe Rockets with a Bulls 81, Pistons 72
Scouie Pippen had 16 points, 10
streak and raised their ·season and Hubert Davis, survived an 22-2 record, keeping them from
rebounds
and 10 assists 10 pace lhe · '
record 10 23-2, with the only other eight-point third period and equaling the 23-1 stan by the 1969slreakinl!
Bulfs-to ·thei~'eigbtlP
vll:rory Coming - you guessed it · snapped Atlanta's seven-game road 70 New Ycidc Knicks.
straight
VICIOry,
- against the hapless Timber·
wolves at the Taqct Center.
''If we could play and work
hard and play Mmnesota every
night, we'd get a lot of victories,"
rookie Jumal Mashburn said with a
laugh. "But we can't play them
every nighL''
The Mavericks avoided brealcing the single-season record lhey
share with the Philadelphia 76ers,
who lost 20 straight in 1972-73.
The league record for consecutive
losses, 24, was set over two seasons by the Cleveland Cavaliers in
1981-1!2 and 1982-83.
in other games, New York beat
Allanta 84-75 in a battle of division
leaders, Denver denied Houston a
BACK ON SELECT USED CARS! ·
record with a 106-93 viciOry; and it
CALL FOR SELECTION AND DETAILS
was Orlando 122, New Jersey .112;
Miami 109, the Los Angeles LakNEW 93 NISSAN SENTRA
ers 92; Charlotte 118, Boston tOO;
Cleveland 107, Milwaukee 88;
Chiclgo 81, Detroit 72; Dallas 93,
Minnesota 89; Utah 96, San Antonio 88; Phoenix 87, Seattle 86;
Golden State 141, the Los Angeles

An

I

.·•

'/'

Dallas snaps 20-game losing streak, 93-89 ~~:

r--------------------,

I
I
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I
II
I
I

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~

ssoo. HOLIDAY CASH

Sa~=Ge
......boo.:.~,..,
...

40147120
31102 87

Team
W L TP OP
Greenfield ............ .5 0 345 239
MarieUa .................4 0 271 212
Gallipolis .............. .5 1 398 339
Wheelersburg ....... .5 I 434 341
River Valley .......... 5 2 456 438
Portsmoulh ............ 3 2 343 377
Athens ...................3 3 352 331
Logan ................. . .3 3 360 365
Vinton County ......2 2 260 272
Southern ................2 4 409 4 52
Jackson .................. ! 5 333 370
Warren Local ........ ! 5 359 465
Point Pleasant .......o 3 184 217
Fairiand .................o 3 194 224
Chesapeake ...........0 4 242 264
(SEOAL varsity)
Team
W L TP OP
Marieua .............. .3 o 200 159
Gallipolis ............ .3 I 253 210
River Valley ........2 I 175 183
Logan ..................2 2 218 207
Alheos ................. l 2 164 165
Warren Local ...... 1 2 151 200
Jackson ................o 4 t94 23t
TOTALS
1212 1355 1355
(SEOAL reserves)
Team
W L TP OP
Marietta .............. .3 0 167 116
Logan ................. .3 I 185 180
Jackson ................2 2 172 161
Warren Locai ...... J 2 140 138
River Valley ........1 2 114 127
Alhens ................. l 2 . 116 138
Gallipolis ............. ! 3 143 177
TOTALS
1211 10371037
Tbunday's pme:
Ceredo-Kenova 76Pt. Pleasant 51
Dec. 28 pmes:
GreenfiCld McClain at Gallipolis
Warren Local at Frontier
Ches8p"'Ue at Southern
Belpre at Marieaa tourney
oak Hill at Jackson
Pt. Pleasant at Ripley tourney

57

IN DECEMBER TO SELL AS MANY NEW
CHRYS
AND NISSANS AS POSSIBLE

PUCFCt\
41129101
43129 Jl1
41112110

SEOAL, area
cage standings

llrassow's tipin 81 the buzzer gave left in overtime.
No. S Kentucky a 93-92 victory
Williamson said he had trouble
over No. 13 Arimna in the champi- getting off inside shots earlier in
onship game of the Maui Invita- the second half because his defendtional.
ers, mainly small forwll!ds CoUier
In the third-place game of lhat and Kwanza Johnson, used quicktournament, Ohio State edged ness 10 deny the pass.
BosiOn College 69-67, the second No. 5 Kentuck1 93, No. 13 Ariloss in as many days for lhe 18th- zona!l2.
ranked and previously unbeaten
In a game dominaled by backEagles.
court stan, Kentucky's Travis Ford
. In olher games involving ranked scored 2S points and Tony Dellc 18,
teams, No. 15 Connecticut beat and the two combined for 10 3Fairfield 75-57, No, 16 Minnesota poinrers. Arizona's Khalid Reeves
beat San Jose State 66-53 and No. scored 31 points and Damon
17 Wisconsin bombed Mississippi Sllludamire 28 and each had four 3·
Valley 115-79.
~inlcn. Reeves bad given Arizona
"I was a little surprised how (8-1) a 92-91 lead with two free
close it was," Williamson said throws with 5.S seconds to play.
after his game-winning basket. Kenlllcky (7-1) won it when Bras"But we lcnow thai when you're sow reached up and redirected
the No. 1 team, other teams are Rodrick Rhodes' errant 3-poinler
going to come ready to r.tay. Tulsa iniO the basket inside lhe fmal seccame out like they' didn 1 care who oml
lhe No. I team was.''
Oblo St. 69, No. 18 Boston Col.
Tulsa led 5045 al halftime and 67
74-68 with 9:36 left behind the
Derek Anderson (24 points) and
play or Gary Collier, who had 30 Lawrence Funderburke (20) compoints and 14 rebounds against a bined 10 make seven free throws in
Razorbacks team forced to play the final 35 seconds as Ohio State
without6-foot-11 centers Lee Wil- (6-3) bounced back form a loss to
son and Darnell Robinson, both Kentucky in the Maui semifinals
injured.
on Wednesday night. Billy CurWith Collier and two other ley's four straight points had ~olten
Tulsa starters fouled out, Pooh the Eagles within 62-60 wnh 43
WillianJSOn hit a driving layup to seconds 10 play.
tie lhe game 91.-91 with 24 seconds No. 15 Connecticut 75, Fairfield

TAYLOR MOTORS IS
GOING ALL-OUT

11911116

ll!Zl 81

:14 I 3

TIJLSA, Okla. (A.P) - Everi as
they made his evening miserable,
Nolan Ric:hanlson had a wann feelilig for tho underdog• ffOIII Tulsa
who gave fllt)-r8llbd Artansas fits.
Corliss \\'llliam1011's junp hook
from the baseline with thR:C secoods left in overtime provided the
difference as Arkansas ed4ed the
Hurricane 93-91 Thursday rughL
"I'm proud of our team,"
Richardson said after Arkansas
improved 10 7-0. "But I'm really
proud of (Tulsa coach) Tubby
Smith. They did everything they
could to win the game.''
Tulsa played much as it did for
five glorious years under Richardson, when it won lhe NIT and three
times played in the NCAA IOurna·
ment
Tulsa's second tough defeat of
the week, follo()t~.\!?3-61 setback 10 No. 22
a State on
Monday night, gave Smith some
consolation.
·
"This week we've shown we
can play with what I believe are
two of the best baslcelball reams in
lhe country," Smilh said. "We did
lose, but playing two lop teams
down to the wire should give us
some confidence when we play
O!her good teams.''
Another highly rated Soulheaslern Conference team barely
~scaped Thursday night, wheli Jeff

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The Dally Sentlnei--Pag&amp;-5

·

Wood·son s MVP season critical to Steelers' playoff

4'

Arkansas edges Tulsa;
Buckeyes, Wildcats win

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In Sundsy's.gsme •tslnst Seshswks,

Friday, 'December 24, 1993 ;
Page

Meigs wrestling
team improves
The Meigs High School
Wrestling team continues 10
improve as team members begtn 10
took ahead to lhe state IOUIUWIICOI
this spring. Meigs ~~lly participated in the Belpre C1v1tan and lhe
warren local Duals 10urnament and
did quite well.
At the two day Belpre tournament on December 171h and 18th,
Meigs finished in fourth pl~ce
behind Logan, Wam:n, and Marietta. Other teams involved were Belpre, Nelson ville-York, Magnolia,
Vinton County, and Federal Hocking. Individual place winners for
Meigs were Jake Kennedy, second
in the heavyweigt division, and
Heath Hudson, third a the 171
pound class.

Friday, December 24, 1993

ByJIMCOVR
SEArn.E (AP) - It's considered the remotest of longshots
because quartetbacks - not cornerbacks - are mosa always considered the prime candidales for the
NFL'sMVP.
Last year, Steve Young of San
Francisco won the award. And
Young and Denver's Johri El~ay
are having outstanding seasons.
But maybe -just maybe - a
cornerback deserves to be the
league's MVP some day 8nd Pittsburgh's Rod Woodson may be that
cornerback Ibis year. There are a
lot of ~e who feel Woodson, a
four-hme Pro Bowler, is lhe best
alhlete in lhc NFL..
NFL defenses have been domi-

nan1 lhis season and PiiiSburgh has
lhe No. I defeose in the league.

;":1 28, '!t'• BOt ~~ts of time !efl

' had aeven interceptions in Pitts- but cornerbacks are receiving more said. "Deion IS playing well There
'"!ree Rtvers burgh's first six games and none in crediL
are a 101 of good comers out dlcre
The Steelers·(B-6) try 10 keep Stadium~ IJIQCiaim. .
the next six.
"I've played decently well the who are playing well. I think we're
their playoff hopes·alive Sunday
,Woodson ·~ the secll!ld·h•gh~st
"He's a great P,layer, just an past CO~!Ile J?f y_e ars/' Woodson finally geuing our due.''
when they face the Seattle Sea- patd defe~ tn NFL hiarory wtlh outstandin&amp; player, • Seaule coach
hawks (5-9).
a $3.S6 million salary thiS season. Tom Flores said. "Very complete.
After a 26-17 loss 10 Houston Green ~ay•s Reggie Yt'hite, ~th a He has tremendous apeed and
last Sunday in PiiiSburgh, the SJeel· $4:~ milbon aalary, 1s the h1ghest quiclaless and explosion. He's just
ers must- win !heir last two games patd.
'
·
a multi-tslenled guy.
to have a chance 10' make the play- ·
WoOdson is getting NFL sup"He's such a good cover man
offs. They end !heir season Jan. 2 port for MVP on his own team.
that he allows them to do other
in Piusburgh against Cleveland.
"I don~ think there's any ques- things COIIIbinations on the rut of
Woodson, the lOth player cho- lion that he should be meotioned,'' the fleid. ••
sen in the NFL draft in 1987, is tied StA:elcn coach ~U! Cowher said.
Talk about versatUity.
ATI·Regular Priced Merchandise
for second in the league with a
Teams are gtVJRg Woodson the
In addition 10 his eight intercepcareer-best eight inrerceptions. His ulumate respect . no":· too. lions, Woodson has 79 tackles, two
Except Department 56 &amp; Toms Artwork
28 career interceptions leave him Although Vfoodson. IS asst~ed to sacb, two forced rumbles, and a
.
tied with Hall or Pamtf Jack Lam- opponents lop wtde rece1vers,
field goal. And he's the
bert for seventh place tn lhe StA:el- clubs are av~idi~g ~wing passes
len' 10p punt returner (an 8.6
Selected Item
to
off
ers' history.
In Woodson s dtreeuon. Woodson
on 36 punt returns) and top
kicko rewmer (a 19.6 average on
.Rod 11 Ood,

20% OFF

g

Bengals to take o.n Glanville's
Falcons in season's last bout
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -Just
what clownlrodden Cincinnati Bengals fans need to perk them up at
the end of a bad season: a visit
from Jerrr. Olanville.
Glanvtlle in his black wardrobe
gets one of the biggest rises oul of
Riverfront Stadium crowds. During
four visits in the 1980s as the
Houston Oilers' head coach, he
was booed and beaten, serenaded
and insulted, ridiculed and reviled.
He •s coming back - still
dressed in black - with the
Allanta Falcons Suoday 10 renew a
relationship !hat's much closer 10
loalhing than loving.
"I think the league really loves
me and tries to put me in all my
favorite places,'' he said.
His fU'SI trip to Cincinnati with
the Falcons has all the makings of
anolher memorable afternoon. The
Falcons (6-8) must win to stay in
contention for a wild-card berth. A
loss to the 2-12 Bcngals would give
Glanville another reason to hate lhe
place.
There are so many already.
Many of Glanville's worst
moments as lhe Oilers' head coach
occurred at Riverfront as part of lhe
"Sam and Jerry Show" - trading
snubs with former Bengals coach
Sam Wyche.
Glanville was 1-for-4 at Riverfront in the 1980s, including his
worst loss as an NFL head coach:
61-7 on Dec. 17, 1989. Wyche purposely ran the score up in that

game, waved derisively at
Glanville as he ran off the field,
lhen called him "the biggest phony
in the NFL."
The fans got into it, 100.
Glanville had SUIIJCS!ed before the
game that Ben$Bl~_fans aren't as
loud as those m Cleveland and
-Piltsbur~h . Thousands derisively
chanled 'Jerry, Jerry" as the score
piled up.
"I do remember one year lhey
·sang 10 me. I appreciate that,"
Glanville said.
Glanville hasn't changed his
mind for his fmt trip 10 Riverfront
since the '89 game. He doesn't
lhink Bengals fans aren't the best
booers around.
"I probably gol booed better in
Pittsburgh than anywhere, and I
think Cleveland and Cincinnati
were kind or a (lraw," he said. "I
think we had a few Ohio people
who weren't booin¥ as loud as lhey
· should have been.'
Glanville got some revenge by
beating the Bengals 38-17 in
Allanta in 1990, Wyche's secondlast as head coach. The rivalry that
had developed among lhe Oilers,
Browns, Bengals and Sreelers was
beginning to soften as head coaches departed.
"I don't know if it will be
matched again," Glanville said.
"Everybody knew, I think, that
nobody really liked anybody. It
wasn't a prefab hatred. I think it
was deep 10 the cor! I don't think
anybody cared much about the

olhcr people. lloolt back and I was
fortuJtalc 10 be 118r1 of iL
"II wasn't JUSt the coaches. It
was lhe players and the cities.·'
The players have changed:
Glanville has a new team and the
Bengals have only four players left
from the '89 game. The city's OUI·
look has c:hanged,IOO. Only 36,612
showed up last Sunday for a victory over the Los Angeles Rams, an
indication of the interest level in
the NFL'S wont team.
And, players don't have that
same sease of dislike as they get
read.Y, for Glanville's return.
' I think it's over as far as the
feud, or whatever you' d call it,"
Bengals defensive lineman Tim
Krumrie said.
"I don't think anybody on
either team remembers lhat stuff,"
center Bruce Kozerski said. "Jerry
is an eccentric kind of guy ; he
doesn't make any bones about it. I
have no feelin~ one way or the
other about beating Jerry Glanville.
When you're 2-12, beating anybody is a great feeling.' •
The Bengals are tryin~ 10 end
the worst season in franchtse history with a good feeling. They've
won two of !heir last four games both at home against Los Angeles
reams - and would get some satisfaction out or a strong fmish.
"We've been talking all year
about progress," Kozerski said.
"That's ultimately the way to
prove it - win games at lhe end of

the season.''

30% 60%

~C:Oe!~hentheSteeler$
=:r:~~:.-~e:~~~
as well as rewming a punt 80 yards
15

went 11-5 and made the playoffs,

for a 10achdown.
"I just P,laY lhe game," Woodson said. ' I'm not a critic. l don't
label myself or ca~gorize mrself al
all. I'm a football player. enjoy
the game. I'm not fancy."
So how good is the versatile
Woodson, who has ~n used as a
wide receiver like Atlanta's Deion
Sanders lhis year?
"He· s had a very good year,"
Cowher said . "Each week he
draws lhe best receiver from each
team. He .has been a very productive player from his position,
which, at times , is hard to do
because you only get so many
opportunities. At ·the same time,
he's a guy who is one of lhe top
returners in lhe league."
NFL experts may stop short of
making a cornerback !heir MVP,

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• Collectibles
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Hawks -becoming a defensive
powerhouse under Wilkens

I

86) -is convinced. He says he
hasn't seen anylhinf like this during his previous I seasons in
Atlanta.
"This is the most consistent
team I've played on," sa~s 'Nique.
"We're doing all the lhmgs good
teams do."
• Have they called it quits in
Cincinnati?
Don't ask Tim Krurnrie that.
Through loss after loss, lhe oldest member of lhe Cincinnati Bengals has kept on playing his usual
brand of professional football.
Krumrie, 33, is still one or lhe
NFL's beuer nose tacld{ls.
He made All-Pro in 1988 (for
the second year in a row) when
Cincinnati won the AFC tide with a
12-4 record. And he was a key part
of the 9-7 Bengals squad lhal won
the AFC Central Div1sion champi·
onship in 1990.
Being a good loser isn't exacll y
his style.
"Krurnrie is one of !hose tough
old guys who knows how 10 keep
his molar running for all 65 plays,
whistle to whistle," says center
Jesse Sapolu of the San Francisco
49ers.
"Some great players will take 8
play off every now and then, and
you get a chance to punish lhem, or
wear lhem down," Sapolu adds.
•'But Krumrie will never, ever,
ever quit. ll's a rare quality that
you have to admire."

Figurines

• Artificial Trees

SIVEI SAVE! SAVEl ON 'ALL NEW CARS AND
NEW TRUCKS NOW IN INVENTORY UNTIL
JANUARY 1st, 1994.

Sports Probe

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world
ofsports:
• Why are the Atlanta Hawks
suddenly so defensive?
Lenny Wilkens is the reason.
Atlanta's new head coach has made
a big impact already. He's busy
inslalling his defense-oriented systern on a team thai hadn ' t been
used to doing much without the
ball.
Under WUkens, the NBA's winningest active coach, the Hawks
streaked· to lhe top of lhe Central
Division early thiS season. They
burst by the Chicago Bulls, the
defending NBA champs.
"I thought it would take a little
longer, " says Wilkens about
Atlanta's rise. No wonder. The
Hawks (43-39) fmished in lhe middie of the Central race last season
and were ousted by Chicago in
lhree straight playoff games.
Exit head coach Bob Weiss.
Enter Wilkens. He had resigned
·after seven seasons in Oeveland.
The newcomer arrived in
Allanta wilh 869 coaching victories
- second only 10 Red Auerbach's
938. Wilkens is one of lhe league's
four current coaches 10 have won
an NBA title. His came wilh Seatlie in 1979.
.
Despite Atlanta' s shootin$ skills
- top guns are vets Dommique ·
Wilkins, 33. and Kevin Willis, 31
-the Hawks didn't use to scare
many opponents.
They had a reputation for giving
up easy baskets.
The Hawks let rivals post a .496
shooting percentage last season the worst defensive performance in
lhc Eastern Division.
"I wanted them to be much
more aggressive and play much
more up-tempo on defense, and
that's what we're doing," says
Wilkens. "My point was that when
you have the kind of alhleticism we
have, you have to use it.''
He is doing Just that. A Hall of
Fame star, Wtlkens commands
respeCt. His insistence on tougher
"D" has the Hawks flying in the
right direction.
In lhe backcourt, Mookie Blaylock·and Stacey Augmon, two of
the best young defenders in the
league, have thrived under
Wilkens.
"You're not always going to
shoot a high percentage," says
Wilkens. "But your defense can be
lhe one constant factor. ''
Even Dominique Wilkins - lhe
last 8\IY 001 named Micluiel Jordan
10 Ieail the NBA in scoring (1985-

• Light Sets
• Nativities
• Emmett Kelly

• What's so hot about lhc Toronto Blue Jays?
It isn't just that they are the ftrst
baseball team with back-to-back
world championships since the
1977-78 New York Yankees.
The Blue Jays have had II win·
ning seasons in a row, the longest
cunent streak in lhe major leagues.
II ties them with the 1978-88
Detroit Tigers.
But 13 other teams have done
even better lhrough the years. ·
The most consistently successful modem fnmchise was the 196885 Baltimore Orioles, wilh 18 winning seasons in a row.
That mark is second on the alltime list.
Who's No. 1? The Yankees, or
course.
From 1926 through 1964 during a total or 39 seasons - lhe
Bronx Bombers never had a losing
year.
So Toronto still has a ways to
go.
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HocKEY
TORONTO (AP) - Boston
defenseman Ray Bourque was the
leading vote-getter for the NHL
Eastern Conference All-Star team
for the third lime in his career and
Philadelphia's Eric Lindros beat
Piasburih's Mario Lemieux for lhe
starting center job.

I

YE •

THERE IS STILL TIME TO ENROLL
FOR WINTER QUARTER
•

BEGINNING JAN. 3

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS
Member ACICS
Reg. fl0o05-1274B

446·4367

Brinlln your best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
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FOR A GOOD DEAL..
SEE TOM MILSTEAD or BOB ROSS
Our Service Department Is Open Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. B-12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
Naw Hours In Salea Mon.-Fri. 8-7; Sat 8-3 p.m.

�·.

.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Someone suggested and I hes·
itate to name names-that it might
be nice if I wrote a Christmas column since that is something that
I've uaditionally done over the
years.
Now I'm lhe fmt to admit that
in appreciation of lhe wonderful
support you readers haYe given me
through the year, I do owe you a
red and sreen column bubbling
wilh the holiday · 'L
However,
easier said that
done.
Sure, it's the night before
Christmas but let me assure you
that visions of sugar plums are eer·
tainly not dancing in my head. I
don't even know what sugar plums
are. Nor do I know anylhing about
that "figsie pudding" lhe sin11ers
keep wanting someone to bnng.
But unless both are laced heavily
with ''the pink stuff" I'm not inter·
ested. In fact, I've been doing
chicken soup and soda cracicers for
days and that's "okay by me if it's
okay by you".
Misery loves company and I feel
that I have a lot of people right now
sharing my lack or erilhusiasm for
the holiday goodies thanks to lhe
latest virus wbich I've "enjoyed"
for the past week. If your a~te
has made lhe trip, and that s just
one of the variety of problems
involved, try to look at it optimistically. You just might lose some
weight in contrast to the general
trend during lhis season when you
put on a few pounds.
Everyone I know, it seems, has
been sick, is sick, or is getting siclc.
If you've had the whole nine
yards-the virus does seem to
spare some people a phase or two
of the misery-then you probably
feel like you've run over by a
Mack truck. This, too, shall pass

tharsr'

MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL MAYER

Goody-Mayer
POMEROY • The Trinity Con· burgundy cummerbunds and ties.
gregational Church of Pomeroy The boutonnieres were mauve silk
was the setting for the 0cL23 wed- roselluds.
ding of Angela Dawn Goody and
Flower girl was Caitlin
Michael William Mayer.
Williamson, who wore a mauve
The Rev. Roland Wildman satin tea-length dress trimmed wilh
officiated at the ceremony .with burgundy satin. She carried a
music was I?rovided by Beth white wicker basket trimmed in
Mayer. piamst. Ralph Werry, white lace, mauve and burgundy
organist, and Amy Perrin, soloisL
satin with mauve roses.
The bride is the daughter of
Bible bearer was Megan Venoy
Donna Fll!Zicr of Racine and James and she wore a tea-length dress
Goody of Jackson. The groom is identical to the nower girl. She
the son of Donald . and Linda carried a white lace covered East·
Mayer, Pomeroy.
ern Star bible belonging to the
Escorted to the altar by her gmom's molher opened to lhe love
uncle, Roy Gillrey, the bride wore a chapter and madced wilh a needlewhite sallll gown featuring cutouts point bible marker made by Mary
framed by Schiffli embroidery on Harris, denoting the date of the
tht: fro~t, back ,and ,!ileeves. The marriage. Each girl wore a wrealh
sattn s1cirt featunnll Simulated pearl ... of m,auve ,satin rQ&amp;eS and mauve
cascades !ffid appliques fell from a and green ivy.
lined bod1ce.
.
The mother of lhe bride wore a
Th~ cat~edral length tram .or pink norai dress wilh a pink jacket.
sheer 1llus1on was covered with
The groom's mother wore a
sim~~;lated pearls and sequi~ chamr:gne, mauve and burgundy
apph'lues. Scalloped Sch1ff,l1 flora dress with long sleeves.
embro1.dered hem. A large satm Bolh wore white rose corsages.
bow w1th center rosette sat below
The groom wore a black lllxedo,
the open ba~. ~he wore a finger- white vest, cummerbund and tie.
up length v~il With back pouf and His boutonniere was a white rose·
crown of s1mulat~ pearls. f!er bud.
bouquet was of p1~k and wh1te
The bride and groom gave burroses ued m lo.vers knms. She gundy red roses to each other's
wore pearl eamngs, a gift of the mother at the end of the ceremony.
grooMm.t
f h
S
The guests were registered by
a ron .o on or was 13cy Teresa Trussell.
Basham, ~nend of the bnde, and
A reception was held in the
bndesma•ds were were Lesle~ ehurch social room hosted by
Carr, cousm or. the groom, Apnl Donna Marie Carr and Cinda Har·
Nazarewrcz •. fr1end of t~e bnde, ris. The bride's heart-shaped table
and Kelh Gilkey, cousm of the featured a four-tiered cake sur·
b":"de.
rounded by four heart-shaped cakes
They. wore dresses of burgundy decorated wilh pink flowers and a
saun wuh off-the-shoul~er neck- crystal heart encircling two crystal
hnes, cape slee.ves, feaumng fitted doves as a cake top. ,
pn.ncess bod1ces with basque
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
W81Sts that ~pened to full tea-length High School and works as a clerk
slcirts.
bouquets m~e by .lhe for Fisher Big Wheel.
groom s ~other were V1cton~n
The groom is a graduate of
b~nze tuss1e bouquet holders With Meigs High School and is currently
s.'lk b~r~undy an~ mauv~ cama- in the apprenticeship program with
. uons,lil1es an~ white baby s brealh Carpenter's Local 650 . He is
ued w1th lover s knots.
employed by Waco Corporation at
Best man was J~ff Bashan and the Gavin Scrubber J?tojecL
groomsmen were l~f!~ DJ!fS~, ShanThe couple res1des at Rock·
non Spaun and RobbiC G~y. .
springs Road in Pomeroy.
They wore black tuxellos With

;roorr

•

Star Grange held its annual
Christmas dinner and party recently
at the Salem Center l'ire Station.
The potluck was enjoyed by the 53
attending.
FQllowinJ dinner, several of the
youth and juriior members went
Christmas caroling and delivered
food plates.
G~es were played during lhe
evenmg.

trees.

Attending were AI and Donna
Hanson, But and Missey Frazier,
Glen and Kathryn Evans, Clay and
Geneive Tuttle, Raymond and
Farie Cole, Gene and Dorothy
McDaniel. Willard and Nettie
Boyer, Ophy Martin, Joe Bishop,
Lester Bowers, Rosanna Manley,
Dorolhy Baker, Lo~etta Tiemeyer,
Thelma Bower, Dorothy Roach,
Mildred Long and Elsie King. •
Closing prayer WBli giYen by AI
Hartson.

··ves.'' Ms. Mankie said.

"I lhink you might be my mother,'' the voice aid.
Ms. Brooks, or Westerville,
Ohio, and her birth mother talked
for nearly two hours.
A~ at birth by LeRoy and
Elsie S1sson of Ohio, Ms. Brooks
was aided in her sean:h by Reunite,
an agency which helps adopted
children and original parents lind
each Other. ·
MI. Mmlkie and another dailghter, Mary, had P'ied before to fmd
the lost daughter.
"All the documents were
closed. We couldn't do much,"
Ms. Manlde said.
When her baby by a live-in
boyfriend was born in 1964, she

knew only that it was a girl.
"I was so confused. I wanted to
give her away yet l wanted to keep
her," Ms. Mantic said. "It was for
the best that someone could take a
lot better care or her than I could
with lhe circumstances I had.''
The boyfriend was kiUed later in
a car acc1dent, according to Ms.
Manlde. ·
She married another man, had
two more children and divorced,
then married Jim Mlnlde and had a
daughter. She told her children they
had a sister somew~.
After the phone call, Ms.
Brooks wrote her aleUer.
"I never knew if anyone else
knew about me beaides you. ·

Alfred UMC presents program
P.rayer and a children's sermon Matthew BQYica, and Dan Spenccz,
'Jesus Birthday" by Pastor Sharon and Gertrude Robin10n. The .proHausman.
gram included a nativil)' scene as
Children's recitations were Mrs. Pullins read the Christmas
given by Sharon Yost, Alan and story from Lute.
Stacie Watson, Matthew, Ashley,
Janae Boyles, born Dec. 8, was
and Jessica Boyles, and Tiffany int.roduced by PallOr Hausman. All
Spencer, there was a collection ror of the ·children were on stage as
needy families, and several read- · Lisa Rit~hie read "The Night
ings by members including Nellie Before Christmas". Santa Claus
Parker, Doris and Lloyd Dillinger, came IIIII there was an exchange of
gifts.

2 LT

Monday thru Sunday

c

8 AM·10 PM
but in heaven's
If
you haven't had the entn miserable bit, then you may reel like
only lhe front wheels of the truck
got "cha". In either circumstance.
you can look to me for sympathy
and compassion. I've been there.
It's aii "UI wind", you know, so
lhere are other posiu ve aspects if
r,ou are one of the many
'afflictees". You now have an
excuse for not getting lhe Christmas cards in lhe mail and the wrapping completely done. And any
shortcommgs 10 tbe gift giving
department can certainly be
attributed to your feeling so bad.
After all, who can "last minute"
when they have to hover close to
the aspirin, the anu'biotics, the heating pad, cough syrup and the bathroom? By the way, hasn't your
appreciation of the bathroom
soared wilh the illness?
If you're one of the luc~ people who seem immune 10 lhis current bug while everyone around
you seems to be falling ~ then I
suggest that you immediately stan
to knock on wood frequently, give
your rabbit's foot extra strokes.
find lots of pennies for your shoe
or do whatever it takes to keep
your good luck going. Trust me.
You really don't need these
Maalox moments that the rest of us
have been having.
So it's not red and green and it's
not bubbly. However, that doesn't
detract from my wish that you have
the merriest Christmas ever. And
who kn11ws? Instead of a partridge
in a pear tree or some French hens,
perhaps, Santa in his oYemight visit
wUI leave each of us a big bag of
"feelin' better". I hQpe so. Mter
aU. we "gotta" keep smiling.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC 26 THRU JAN 1, 1994Z

Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Macomber, Chip, Mike
and Stacey; Ryan WIISOII; Maxine,
Opal and Patty Dyer; Waid
Nicholson; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Nel10n t111d Randy; Pauline Rife;
ChristinC Napier; Virginia Carson;
Neva N'ICholson; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Monis; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin;
Calherine Colwell; Alan L. Smith,

RC
PRODUCTS
24 PK 12 OZ CANS

99

Knauer is a vaduatc of Bowling
Green State Uruversity is employed
by Stock Equipment of Chagrin
Falls as an electrical engineer.
A June wedding is planned.

'"

U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
l'omeiOY. OH.

Q§· · - . '

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*Lamps

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*Coffee Tables

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* Sectionals

* Bedroom Suites

*Dinettes

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* Glide Rockers

* Platform Rockers

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*Desk

* Mattresses

* Hide-A-Beds

* China Cabinets

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TV's, VCR's, and Appliances also
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$ 149
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Umlt 4 Per Customer

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AMERICA
BEAUTY
TOMATOES
160Z

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COUPON

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1

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2

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OSAGE
RAGGEDY
RIPE PEACHES

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10 ENV.

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and much, much more!

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CARNATION
HOT COCOA MIX

30% to 50%

Oo/o Interest

32 oz. Pk

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•

Rutland Furniture's
.
Year End
Inventory Clearance Sale
Every Item In The Store On Sale
Some Reduced

(

$169
Chuc·k Roast •••••••••••• ~~
BCEEFb
'tuCKSET
k ,. ,,
$2"' 49

Tues -Fri. 9:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00
. Cloaecl Monday

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.

SHOPPERS
VALUE
COOKIES

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

FALL AND WINTER
HOURS

Alan W. and Peggy; Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Midldff; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Montgomery, Eric and Chelsea;
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Spires; Mr
and Mrs. Dan Evans; Elsie McCoy;
and Mr. and Mrs. Emmeu Lo1111.
The next meeting of Srar Grange
will be held Jan. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at
Grange Hall. A potluck supper
wiD follow the meeting.

BOB EVANS PORK

49

KENTUCKY BORDER

Monk parakeets are the only
members of the parrot family lhat
build community nests in trees.
They live among bundles of twigs
that form an apanment house for
the birds.

204 Condor Sl

$

1
Spare Ribs ••••••••••••••~. 99
Weiners •••••••••••••••~!:~. 79
$
$ 59
5
Bologna....................
1
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Sirloin Steak ••••••••••••• ·

Walker-Knauer
Mr. and Mrs. James Howell
Walker of Gallipolis announce lhe
engagement of their daughter Elizabeth Bolling Walker to Robert
Douglas Knauer, son or Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Knauer of Sandusky.
Walker is a graduate of the Uni·
versity of Cincinnati where slie
received her Masters of Education
She is employed by lhe University
of Rio Grande as Director of the
Child Development Center.

1/4 PORK LOIN

Sliced•••••••••••••••••••!'....

EUZABETH WALKER

Homebuilders
celebrate
The annual Chtistmas party of
the Mlddlepon Church of Christ
Homebuilders Class was held
recently at the home of Ao Grueser
which was Clttensively decorated
for the holiday season.
Prayer p!eeeded the potluck by
ClayTutdc.
The group sang Christmas
songs, and lhere was a gueslion and
answer. guiz.
,
A gin exchange was enjoyed by
all. Thema Boyer gave favors of
handmade candles and Christmas

STORE HOURS

•
•

Star Grange hosts Christmas dinner

Daughter, mother to meet for first time

I

7UP
or DIET 7 UP

Page-:&amp;

by Bob Hoeflich

Allied United Methodist Chute~!
held i.ts Chrisanas prognm ~Y
at the church.
Susan Pullins as director of the
program which included "Silver
Belfs~ by lhe choir composed or
Osie Pollrod, Nina and Gertrude
Robinson, Lisa Rirchie, Aorence
Spencer', Susan Pullins, Philip
Boyles: and Doris and Lloyd
Dillinger. The congregation •sang
"Joy. to the World", there was

Ohio

Friday, December 24, 1993

Beat of the Bend...

NEW ALEXANDRIA, Pa. (AP)
- Alice Mankie wondeml for 29
years about the daughter she bore
and gave up for adojltlbli When she
was young and already the unwed
mother of another child.
The day after Ch.ristmas, Ms.
Manlcie wiU travel to Ohio to meet
that daughter, Rebecca Sisson
Brooks, as well as a son-in-law and
four grandchildren she did not
know she had.
·
The family reunion was made
possible by a phone call Manltie
received Dec. 16 at her home in
New Alexandria.
A female voice asked her if she
was Alice Mankie, and if she had
given up a Uttle girl for adoption in
Ohio.

Friday, December 24, 1993

5#

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Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
Offer Good Dec. 26 thru Jan. 1, 1993
Umlt 1 Per Customer

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CHARMIN

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Umlt 1 Per Cuatomor

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SOC or less ..'
•
•

SUN 12/26, MON 12/27
TUES. 12/28, WED. 12129

I

•

••

.

~

•

•"'

••

�.Friday, December 24, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Peg' 9

While--big charities t.hri·ve,. smaller ones struggle for donations
.

"'

:i.
By FRED BAYLFS
''
AP National Writer
~ It's been a tight year for the Barney Nei$flborhood House. Workers
:Were WJCd 10 write on both sides
;pf the s1a~onery - and use their
·own penctls and pens. Instead of
:catering the 92nd anniversary
'Party, staffers cooked their own
'dishes.
", With contributions to ·the senior
;citizen center in Washington, D.C.,
:barely holding even, slaff positions
·went vacant, even while the num~r of elder! y clients doubled.
~ "h's gotten tougher in the last
'}'ear or two," said Melvin Doxie,
~resident of the board of directors.
: 'It Lakes a lot longer to convince
:people to give to your organiza::Uon.''
1

Downtown at American Red
Bigger organizations with·pro- shelters, community health centen
Cross headquarters, the prognosis fessional staffs and sophisticated and other stOrefront charities across
is better. A skilled mailing cam- fund-raising campaigns do well the country are stroggling.
paign and high public profile while smaller, local charities suffer
In Kalamazoo, Mich., Salvation
brought in more money than last in an increasiogly competitive sec- · Army coffers are down 20 pereent
year.
ror.
from last year, putting in jeopardy
" We definitely get a benefit
Last year, total charilable dona- traditional ~ifts of tovs and food
over some of lhc smaller organiza- tions reached $124 billion. a gain baskets to the disadvanlaged.
tions that arc . not that well- of more than 6 percent over the
In Denver, Brothers Redevelopknown," said David Evancich, previous year. Total figures for ment, a nonprofit that mates horne
general man&amp;jler of the Red Cross' 1993 won ' t be available for repairs for elderly and low-income
donlll' marlceung section.
months.
families, faces a 30 percent shortThe differences in donations to
Those who watch the bottom fall in contributions.
the $1.5 billion Red Cross and the line say year-end holiday giving,
"We've been getting a lot of
$1.6 million Barney House illus- which accounts for half of all annu- noes where we used to get yeses,"
trate a slow and, 10 some, troubling al contributions, is doing well. One said Joe Jiron, Brothers president.
evolution in the charily world. example: last week's announceThere are several reasons for the
While total donations rise steadily, ment that publishing magnate Wal- gap: increased competition, public
even in recession years, the gap is ter Annenberg would donate $500 cynicism, even lax advanta,es.
growing between large and small million to public education.
Foremost is the public s rising
nonprofits.
But at the same time, homeless caution about who gets their
!Doney. W!U"ings about fund-raismg tampaJglls that send the needy
only pennies on each dollar have

Public Notice

DONA TED MONEY • Students at Chester

than $100 to the Salvation Army collections at
Big Wheel on Laurel Cliff Road. The program
was started by the sixth grade class, and accord·
ing to teacher, Mike Will, students from Chester

Community Calendar Items
pppear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received In advance to
.ssure publication In the calen·
par.
FRIDAY
~· REEDSVII.LE - The Reedsville
I,Jnited Methodist Church will have
aChristmas Eve service Friday at 7
R.m. Prior to the service at 6:30
p.m. the church wiU conduct a live
nativity on the church grounds.
Phillip Scarberry, pastor, invites
Jhe public to attend.

Clifton, W. Va. Sunday at 7 p.m.
Pastor M.E. McDaniel invites the
public.

corner of the Southweel

Road, Township Road 85 . A
complete legal description
of the real estate it at
follows:
The following real estate,
situated in the County ol

SUNDAY
CLIFTON - James Hobbs of
l&gt;onsmouth will be gtiCst speaker at
!he Clifton Tabernacle Church in

Real Estate General

Kaitlynn
Barr

Andy &amp; Marissa

daughter of

son &amp; daughter of

Dave &amp; Mindy
Barr

Buddy &amp; Bonnie
Me Angus

Me Angus

Jonathon
Taylor

Brandon Chase
Bostick Doyle

grandchild of
Robert &amp; Jane
Beegle

son of
Shawn &amp; Angela Doyle
Jack &amp; PoUy Bostick Sr.

Samuel
Evans
son of
Marlin &amp; Debbie
Evans.

Mem~ry

David Andrew .
Tucker

Now Accepting New Clients

205 North Second Ave .
Middlepon, OH

DENISE L. BUNCE

JtiDDLEPOAT· Sycamore Stra&amp;l· A 2 story home that has 3
bedrooms, aJuminum siding, part basement, new wiring. and
storago buik:lng.
$25 ,000

ATTORNEY AT LAW

MINERSVILLE- The woll&lt;s all done in this 3 bedroom one
bath home with aJI new wiring, rool, furnace, insulation and
hot water tank. Make your appointm&lt;&gt;nt today.
$35,000

109 W. Second St., Pomeroy, OH

GO INTO BUSINESS-With a tittle know how and a tot of
iniative you can become an Entrepreneur (Busi~ss Owner)
Own a Septic Tank SeNiee that has been 1n busmess lor 29
years. Comoo with a 1.978 Ford F600 with 35,200 actual
miles that has new radials, new po1nl JOb , 2 yrs old pump ,
new hoses and 3 porta johns. Serves se~eral counties.
$65 ,000

(in the old Stiffier's building)
992-5730

General Practice of Law including:

.. .. .

... "

. ...
....

our own

granddaughter of
Vince &amp; Susan

Knight

daughter of
Lewis B. &amp; late
Esther Lowery
McKinney

Aaron Austin
Maxson

Kayla Larae
Bachtel

son of
Bobby &amp; Bridget
Ritchie

son of

son of
Ron &amp; Wendi
Maxson

great-grandchild of

Tim &amp; Kelly

Stone

May
Mayle

Model Home Located at
Intersection or Rls. 7 &amp; 33
614-992-2478

MIDDLEPORT- A largo lot with lots of flowers and trees. A 2
story stone home with 2 bedroom&amp;, dining room ..1 112 baths.
and a full basement. Has nice cabinets in k1tchen, also
equipped kitchen , insulation and fro nt and rear po1ches

$35,000

PINE GROVE ROAD· A 2-3bedroom hom&lt;&gt; sining on a tinle
2 112 acres. Has a storage buildin g with attached
woodshed, a 20x30 workshop, hog pen, and a chicken
house.
$44,900

over

• Andersen Windows
* Georgia Pacific Doors
• 2x6 Bx1erior Walls, 16 ln. On Center
• Annsuong Solarian Aoor Tile
• Ki1chen Compac1 Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2xl0 Floor Joisl, 16 In.. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Carriage CJUPCts
• Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warrlnty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphall Shingles

MIOOU:PORT- Powell Stroet· A secluded 1 3/4 acre homo
aile With public ub~ties available.
REDUCED TO $8,000
loolng to alort your won buolnon in CHESTER? We

have lha building lor you. It hao 3600 squaro loot olaroa.
partial beS8mont. pluo a 6'x8'wol&lt; in cooler.
PRICED TO SEll AT ONlY $27,000

RACINE- Sixth Stree t-A 2 story home with 8 room , 4
bedroom and 2 baths. Has central air and a newer roof. Low

utilities.

POMEROY· Brick Street· In town· A cute and cozy home
.one possibly 2 bedrooms, also 2 baths. beltutiful deck.
cetling fans . Would be a great rental or staner home.
$25,000
RUTLAND· Beech Grove Road· Appro:. 140 acres wirh
older home . Perfect place to hunt. Has some timber land.
ONlY Sl'9,000

tllllelnlt.

POMEROY

..... c-tr ....., , ... ,...,

n.,......
,__,., .........

Pometos: "

MIDDlEPORT· S Founh· A latg&lt;~ 2 story home Wllh vinyl
stdmg end 2700 square feet of livmg space . Large ltving
room, huge bedroom downstairs and 3 bedrooms upstairs.
Has 2 baths, fireplace, wraparound pon::h , side porch. patio .
and 2 lots.
$53,000
PORTLAN~ StiversviiJe Road- Great stanlitr home, r&amp;nlaJ ,
or waekQfld get away. A 2 bedroom, 1 bath, one story home
sitting on approximately 5 acres.
$18,500

gambrel rool. storage bu1ldtng , ntce front porch WJth a view of
the nver. Sttting on approx. 2 acres, has part bassment, and
comes with a country charm cast 1ron alactric stove . $65,000

RUTLAND- Main Street- A vacant lol with city sewage and
water available. Nice for a mobile home. etc .
SS,OOO

• 10 Year StiUCnual Warranty On The Home
.loe

WILLS HILL ROAD- A small home that can be fixed up
mcely. Has a cathedral ceil mg. large ltvtng room . dtmng area.
l(itchen . one bedroom, uttltty area . New heat pump.mosdy
drywalled. All new wtnng and plumbtng .
REDUCED TO $25,000

STATE ROUTE 124- Approx. 8 miles from the Ravenswood
Bridge- A 3 bedroom ruslic home that is block with newer log
stdmg. Ha s new thormopane w_indows , cuts gazebo, large

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

DOmE TURNER, Brokor ..................................... lll2-5682
BRENDA JEFFERS .............................................. 1112-3056
SANDY BUTCHER ................................ ................. 1112-5371
JERRY SPRADliNG .................................... (304) 882·3-llitl
OFACE ................................................................... III2·2116

Model Home VIewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Tue-Sat or by appointmeni Call "4-992-%478

1112-IAI

I

MIDDlEPORT· S. Fourth Ave . - Need a lot lor a mobile
home or a hou se . Lot is level and is 50X100 . JUST SB,OOO

POMEROY- Wnght Street· Always wanted an A-frame
home? Well we have just the one for you. It has over 3,000
square feet and ts 3 stones tall. Has 5 bedrooms .. 2 baths,
gigantic family room and master bedroom . Decks on &amp;ach
level , 2 car garage with worhhop above. pavad drive and is
nesd&amp;d tn the hollow
JUST Sts,OOO

t»aodit lenni- Wo

T. Cole
Stone

HARRISONVIllE- A very well maintained 1984 three
bedroom mobile home sitting on 1.43 acres. May buy all for
$25,500 or Juat the land for $12,000

MIDDLEPORT- Brownell Ave .- A home to grow in 1s thi s 2
story older home with 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room,
kitchen and a beautiful open stai!Way. If you want a house 1n
town at an affordabla price, check this one out
ONlY $24,900

son of
Larry &amp; Wendy
Tucker

Jesse Dylan
Richie

pound Tobacoo base. Large yard and 36 1/2 acres . $79,500

MIOOU:PORT·Hobart Streel·2 bedroom . 1 bath. 1 story
home wlvinyl siding.
$10,500

~

Pomeroy, OH

NEAR ATHENS COUNTY- Sand Ridgo Road· A 1 112 story
capa cod with 3 Dormers , vinyl siding. wraparound porch,
deck , 4 bedrooms, famil:' room, living room with beautiful
view. Has a 3·4 car garage, Tobacco bam , and a 4,200

RACINE-Main Street-Look ing for comfortable living in
Racine? Here it is! A doublewide sitting on a 72K72 lot
Home has vaulted ceilings in tha living room and kitchen
also 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. PRICEO TO SELl $2!J,500

Domestic ·Relations, Real Estate &amp; Business

That Lasts Forever

nvenient

Meagan Renee
McKinney

(Contlnuecl'on Pago 11)

ANNOUNCEMENT

·A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features

Summer
Knight

•a

Real Estate General

TIJESDAY

FAMILY HOMES INC.

The

range aforeaald; thence
north 56 rode to Wolkar's
Run; thence South
dogr- wool 32 rods to the
north of a drain ; thence
eoulh 35 rode to the aection
line; thence eaet on eaid
line to the place ol
beginning, containing 7
acres, more or 1.-a.
ALSO: Tho following real
ealate, beginning 46 rods
and 16 llnka east from the
aouthweet corner of the
aoutheaat quarter of
Section No. 35, Town 3, and
Range 12; thence east on
aaid line 21 roda and 15
Iinke to the center of the
Cheoter and Rutlond Road;
thence North 30 dogr- 15
rode and 1&amp; linka along uid
road; thence north 41
degree• weel 22 rode;
thence weal 11 rods to
Shivter'• line; thence on
said line ta the place of
beginning, contolnlng 4
aerea, more or .....
AlSO: The following real
eatate, tituale in Section
No. 34, Town 3 , Range 12 ol
tho Ohio
Compony 's

RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
CHESTER • The lzaalc Walton at the Ponderosa in Ripley TuesClub will have a muzzle loading day. Those going are to meet at
shot Sunday at 1 p.m.
S!ar Mill Park at 6: IS .

: RACINE - St. John Lutheran
Cllurch on. Pine Grove Road,
Jl,acine, will have a Christmas Eve
~rvice at8:30 p.m.
: RUTLAND • The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will be
closed Thursday and Friday for the
thristmas holiday. Any emergen.Cies can be handled by calling 7421597. Normal office hours will
resume the Dec. 27 of 8:30a.m.

said eeetion; thence eaat
eixteen roda to a cherry tree
Chester, and bounded and eight inchea in diameter;
thence aouth 33 degree•
described a• followa:
Beginning
ot
the oaot 28 rods and 17 links to
northwe1t corner of the tho center of a spring;
northeut qllllrt• of Section thence south 25 degrHI
No. 34, Town No. 3 •nd east 15 rods and 8 links to
Range No. 12, of lhe Ohio the center of Chetter and
Company'•
Purch••• ; Rudand Road; thence weal
thence South lilly-throe along &amp;aid road to the pl.ce
roda to the center of the ol beginning, containing 4·
Choolor and RuU.nd Rood; 53/100 acret, more or leaa.
thenc• eaat twenty-lour
AlSO: The following real
rod• and ten linkt; thence estate, beginning 172 rods
north 61 degree• eeet 10 norlh and 30 roda eaat of
roda and 3 linka; thence aoulheaat corner of the
north 25 d~r••• well to aouthweat quarter of
the north line of aaid Section No. 35, Town 3,
section: thence west 8 rods Range 12, at Sophrona
and 21 links to tho ptaco ol Doyle'• northwnt corner;
beginning contolnlng 7 1/2 lhenc:o woot30 rodo to John
acres, more or Jeu.
Ridenour'• land; thence
ALSO: Tho following real south 172 roda to the aauth
estate, beginning at the line ol section; thence aut
southeast corner of a seven 46 roda .,d 161inka; th.,ce
and on-hall lot, beginning in north 102 rode to' a comer
the center ol the Cheater of Sophrona Doyle'• land;
and Rutland Road and in lhenc:e west 13 rode; thence
the northeast quarler of northly down creek to
Section No. 34, Town 3, Sophrona E. Doyle'•
Range 12, or tho Ohio northweat corner to the
Company't
Purchase; place
of beginning ,
lhence north 25 degrees contlllnlng 50 acrn, more
welt on John P. Shivler's orleae.
eatt line lifty-three rodt and
ALSO: The following real
12 Iinke to the north line of estola, beginning at tho S.E.

PubliC Notice
quwter of •-=tion, town and

cloteat road located eaet of
the real atata It Lakewood

Community calendar

•

Public Notice

Meigs, In tho Stole ol Ohio,

Sale lsaued out or the
Common Pleaa Court ol
Moiga County, Ohio, In tho
case of Richard A. Radford,
Plaintiff, va. Alto May
Morgan, et al., Dtfendanlll,
upon a Judgment therein
rendered, being Cate No.
113-CV-154 In said Court, I
wUI oflor lor uta at tho Iron!
door ol tho Courthouoe In
Pomeroy, Molga County,
Ohio, on tho 14th day ol
Janu.-y, 1994, at 10:00 a.m.,
tho following lands and
tenements, part of which is
bounded on the north and
south by County Road 25,
Pomeroy Pike Road, which
11 the only road that
borders ihe real eatole. The
plat mapa ahow no other
road fronlage of the real
estate. The cloeest road
located weal ol tho real
eatate is Epple Road,
Township Road 408. Tho

Elementary saved their extra snack money to
donate to the Salvation Army. Shown with Salvation Army volunteer, Joseph Steven Morgan,
are WID and Chester Elementary students, Leah
Well, Adam WUJ, Jon WUJ, Josh Will and Eric
Smith.

Public Notice

lions of property, art work or
stocks and bonds at their current
value. Previously, such contributions were valued only at their orig·
ina! pwclta!e ·ce.
That bene~ the recipients, usually larger nonprofits such as universities, museums and land conSCJ:Vation grotqJS, but allows donors
to take their tax breaks and not
seek wider opjlOI'IIdlities for charity.
Sotre 20,000 new charities are
formed every year, and the increasing competition hurts mostly the
smaller ones. Foundations often
shift their grants from one charity
to another, leaving the original
grantees in Hnancial IW'lllOil. And
local officials report a growing
encroachment of larger well·
financed, fund-raising campaigns
on smaller charities' turf.

By virtue of an Order of and In the Townohlp ol

NOTICE OF SALE

~ Elementary Wednesday anemoon donated more

made people wary about less familiar programs.
Another body blow to small
charities: last year's revelations
about $442,000 in salary and pezks
for the head of die United Way of
America. That much-publicized
scandal cut into contributions. So
did layoffs at corporations whose
employees give to United Way
through their paycha:lcs. The result
was a $100 million drop in donations that hun the small charities
dependent on local United Way.
" We've had to decrease funding
an average of 33 percent," said
Carol Anna, spokeswoman for
Mile High United Way of Denver.
"Many of our agencies had to scale
back programs."
Still another disadvantage to
small charities arose from a change
in the federal tax code. Wealthy
donors. may now deduct contribu-

I

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, December ;!4, 1993 .:.

Pomeroy Mldc!!epo$ Ohio

.
,
..

t; .
' ·.

....
, ·• t

'
'

Apostolic

Churc h of Chn st

Ep tscopal

ChurdlrA Jesus Chrill A-olk
VanZand1 and Ward Rd.

Pom«oJ.Churdl or Chrill
212 W. MainSL

Forest RMn
Pastor: Deron Newm•n

Sunday School • 10 a.m
Worship - 9 a.m.

Pastor: James Miller

Pastor: Andre w Miles

Grace ~a ... Cllllrdl
326 E.
. SL, Puneroy
Rce1or. Fr. BiD Lyle
Holy Eucharill.,d S~mday ScMol II a.m.
Coffee hour lollowJn&amp;

Ch-r Chlll'dl or ... Nazarene
Poaoor: Rev. Hem.rt On1e
Sunday Schuol • 9:30a.m.
Wonliip · II a.m., 6 p.m.

Thursday Services - 6:30p.m .

Wcdncaday Service• - 7 p.m.

Hoa .. (Micldltp&lt;Ht)
P111or: Frmk Smith ·
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 6 p.m ,

Rutland Ourdl tithe Nazarene
Pu10r. Samuel Buye
Sunday Schuol . 9:30 am.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Se~Yic&amp;t -7 p.m.

School- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School- 9:-30a.m.
Worship- 10:30a.m ., 7 p.m.
We~esday Services - 7 p.m.
Pomero y Westside Church of Christ

33226 Children 's Home Rd.
Sun day School - I J a.m.
Woahip - lOa.m., 6 p.m

R.,.. or Sharon Holt- Cllurcll
New Uma Road , Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;

Wednesda y Servi ces - 7 p.m .

Surn:lly school- 9:30a.m .
S unday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetina- 1 p.m.

Paslor: Deron Newman
Sunday School · 9 • .m .

Pine Grove Bible Hollaess Church

Pearl Ch1pel

~iddlcporl

Church of C hrist
5th and Main
P:ts tor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8: 1S,1 0 :30a.m ., 7p.m
Wedn esday Services - 7 p.m .

St..
l'astor: Rev . DaVId
Sund.wy school · 9:45a .m .
W oN h.lr . ll ~:un . and 7 p .m
Wedne sday ScrvH:c - 7 p .m

Fret' Will Haplisl C hurc h
A.~ h Su cct, M 1ddleport

Pas tor: Mark Morrow
Saturda y Se rvice - 7·30 p m.

k eno Churc.il or C hriSI
Worship - 9:30a .m .
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m
Ucarwallow Ridge Church ot Christ
Pastor: J.a ck Coleg rove
Sunday School -9 :30a.m.
Worshtp - I 0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m .

Worship - II a.m.,
Wed ne!&gt;day Scrvicc -7 :30 p.m.

Rulland Firsl Baptist C hurch
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
Worstup - 10:45 a.m .
Pomeroy First Blllptlsl
Jlastor: Pau.J Stmson
E~tsl Mam St.
Su nday School - 9:30 1:1.m
Worsh.ip · 10:30 a.m.
F'irst Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: IT. Lamar O'Bryant
Sund11y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7{X) p .m .
Wednesday Services - 7:CX) p m

First Baptist Churda
6th and Palmer St, Mtddlcpnn

!'as tor : U.c v. Jamt:s A. Seddon
.Sundll)' School - 9: 15a.m .
Worship - Jll:I S a.m., 7:00p.m.

A.R.Y.- 5:30p.m .
l..: 1rd's Supper In Sunday of e very m(m\h .
W cdncsd11y Scrvi.;;c- 7 :00p.m .

Racine First lbplist
llaslOr: Steve Fuller
Youth PasLOr: 1\aron Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
Wor ship - 10:40 a.m ., 7:00p.m
Wcdncsd~ty Services- 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
SWlday School- IOa .m
Worsh:ip - lla.m ., 7:30 p.m .
Wednesda y Serv1cc ~- 7 ·30 p.m

Zion Ch.,rch of Christ
Pomeroy, Hmis:onville Rd . (Rt. 143)
Pastor: Rog~r Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.rrt
Tuppcl'S PI• in Church of Christ
Pasto r: Bill Wines:
Sunday School - 9 a. m _
Wm ~hip - 9 :45a.m .. 6 :30p.m
bradbury Church

f»usuu : Joe N. Sayre
School -9:45a .m

Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday

Service ~

- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem IJapllst
: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
~a stor

Pastor: Tom Runyon

Rutland Chun:h of Chrlsl
P&lt;~.stor : Eugene E_Underwood
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Dradrord Church or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Ev&lt;~.ngciJSI : Derek Stump
Youth \-iinmcr: MHrk Nolter
Sunday S.;;hwl · 9 :10a.m.
Wnrshtp H:((l a.m., ]() :)() a. m .• 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvu_:c ~ 7:30p.m
Hickory Hills Church of C h,risl
!,as tor: Joseph B. Hoskill s
Sunday School - 9 a.m .
Worship - 10 a.m ., 1 p.m
Wedne§day Services · 1 p.m.

Liberty Chrlstl1n Chureh

Dexter
Pastor: Woody CaU
Sunday Evening -6:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Wo~hip · 10 :30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviu: 7:30p.m .

Worship -9:30a.m.
"Jhursday Services - 7:30 p.m .
Old Bethel Free Will H•ptisl Church

2K60 I St Rt 7, M;ddlcpon
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evening - 1:3() p.m
'lltunday

Service~ ·

7:10

i-llllsid4.! Uaptisl Church
S1. KL 143 just uff K1. 7
l '&lt;~ s tor : Rev . hmc ~ It Acree. Sr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

II a.m .. 6 p.m.

Wor~hip -

or Christ

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30a.m .
Youth MccLin~ - 5:30p.m.
Evening Servtce · 7 p.m.
Wednesday , Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Mt. Union IJ11ptisl
Suild~:~y

Hemlock Grove Chureh

PaslQI': Cbadu ~
Sunday school - f0:30 a.m .
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Reedsville Church &lt;A C~rill
Pa1tor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
WonhipService: 10:30Lm.
Bible Sludy, Wednelday, 6:30p.m.

Chr istian Union

Wcdnc§day Scl"ootccs -1 p_m

Hartford Qlur:dl or Chrillln

Victory Baplisllndependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pa~&gt;tor : Jamc~ IT. Kec ~cc
Worsh1p · IOa.m .. 1 p.m.

Hanford. W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sw.day School • 11 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 o.m.. 7:30p.m.

Wcdnc ~da y

Scrv1a:s - 7 p.m.

Faith Hapllst Church
Railroad St., Ma ~on
.Sundlty School · 10 a.m .

W()rsh1p · II &lt;1.m.. 6 p.m.
W c dnc ~d11y Scrvtcc~ · 7 p.m

Chriltlan Union

Wednel(lay Servicet • 7:30p.m.
Hob10t1 Christian Unkm

-

Middlc:pon.. Ohio
Sunday School, 10 a.m .

Sunday evening, 7:30 p.m.
Wcdnes4ay, 7:30p.m.

ML Moriah BapliSI
Founh &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.

Sllllday School · 9:30a.m.

Rlcine
Pastor: Rev. )amel Sltterficld
S~mday School - 9:45 a.m.

Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p .m.

Wonhip · 10:45 il.m .

RuU.ad Church of God
Pastor: John E Corronn

Anllqully BapdSI

Swulay School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Smith

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m .

Wednc:aday Services - 7 p.m.

Thursday Services · 7 :30p.m .

Syncuse Church of God
Apple and Se&lt;:011d Sts.

Rutland Fr« Will Bapllta
Salem S..

Pastor: Rev. David RWitell
Sunday Schoolond Wonhip-9:30o.m.
Evening Services- 7 p.m .
Wednesday Semcca · 7 p.m.

Pa:uor: Rev . Paul Taylor
Sunday School · \0 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Catholic
Socred H..rt Catholk.C... rdl
161 Mulbcny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
PasLOr: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:45-5ot5p.m.; Mu• · 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Ma n · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass- 8:30a.m .

Ourdl of God of Prophecy
0.1. While Rd. of! S.. R1. 160
Putor: Pal Heruon
Sunday School - 10 a .m .
Worship - II a.m .
Wednet day Semces - 7 p.m.
New L.lre Church

I /2 mile off RL

~

God

Chester
l'ulOJ : Gary Hines
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 6 p.m .
Wednttday Services - 1 p .m.

Portllnd Flnt Churdl

Mlnenvlllt

Wonhip - I 0 a.m.

Wednesday Serviee:1 - 7 p.m.

New Have• Chorda ol the Naurene
Pt11or: Gleodon SIR&gt;Ud
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wollhip • 10:30 Lm., 1 p.m.

l)llstor: lon:nce Sm 1Lh
Sunday Sehoul - IJ .11 .m.
Wonhip • lth.m

3~

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyaa Bible Holiness Church

75 Purl St. Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school - 9 :30a.m.

Wedneoday SeMce&amp; - 7 p.m.

Pomcruy
Putor: Eunhae (Grace) Kec
Sunday School· 9:15a.m

Ot her Church es

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7:30p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 :30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Roben Manley

Sunday School - 9,30 a.m.

RockSprtna•

Endtlme House of Prayer
(11 Burlinaham church olfRoo1e 33)

Pastor: Robert Vance

Rudand
Pastor: Arthur Cnbtree
Sunday School • 9:30am.
Wo11hip- 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Servicel • 7 p.m.
SalnCMier
Putor: Ron Eierte
s..,~~ay School 1 9:15 am.
Wo11hip • IO':IS Lm.
Soowvltlo
Putor: flormcc Smith
S~mday School - 10 am.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Laurel Cliff' Free MethodJst Chureh
Reedsville
Pastor: Peter Tremblay

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
UMYF - Smulay - 6:30 ~.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganized Chun:h or J - Chrill
In Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
PasLor: Jeny Collins
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 :30p.m.

"-vttlt Com•unlty Cllurdl
Put.or: Theron Dwhari'l
Sunday - 9:30a.m . .,d 7 p.m.
Wednclday- 7 p.m.

Pas\.or:Kealh Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worshi{' - 10 a.m.
·
Youth FeUowllhlp, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Worship · l0:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30p.m.

SWlday worship · l 0 a.m.
Wedneiday servia: - 6 :30p.m.
Trinity Congregational Cllurcb
Pastor: Rev . Roland Wildman
·O.urdl - 9:1S a.m.
·
Worship · 10:30 a.m .

The Sal..don Anny
115 BuucmutAvc., Pomeroy.
S~mday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wo11hip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Mldd~ Community

Churdl
51~ PurlS.., Middleport
Pa110r. Sam Andenon

Betha•y
Pa11or: Kennelh Baker

Sunday School tO a.m.

SUllday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9a.m.
Wcdnaday Service• - 10 a.m.

W..tneaday Service·- 7:30p.m.

Evening - 7:30p.m.

Fallb Tabema&lt;le Chord&gt;
Bailey Run Ruad
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

C•nnel:

Luthera n

Pastor: Kerutelh Baker

St. John Lu.. eran Churdl

SUllday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;. 4lh S~m)

Pine GroYe
Pastor: ~awn. Spalding
Wonh1p - 9 .30 a.m .
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Evcnina 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Graham United Metllodlll
Worship · 9:30a.m. (hi&amp;. 2nd S101),
7:30 p.m. (lid .t 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
MI. Oll•e Unk..t Methodist
Ofll24 behind Wilkesville
P.ttoh 0\arlet Jonea-

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonh:r.
· - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thun y Sei'\IICCS - 7 p.m .

Meigs Cooper1tlve Parl~h
Northusl Cluster
Allred
l~ s tor : Sharon Hausm11n
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsh1p - II a .m.. 6 :30p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St.• Syracuse
Pa1tor: Roy (Mike) Thompson

Sunday School-tO a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: - 7 p.m.

SuUon
l,ll,.Wr: KcrmeLh lJaker
Sund.11y Scl'lool - 9:30a.m .
Wonhip · 10:4S 1:1 .m. (ht&amp; 3rd s_.n)

Hazel C•munll)' Church

Euc Letart

OIIRLI24
PaslOt': Edsel H•rt

Paslor: Ken Molter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Wonhip · lla.m.

United Methodist

SyriiCIIse Mlalon

Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Worsh1p · I 0 :30a.m.
Tllur5d.ll)' Scrvia:s - 7:10p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School · 1}:45 a.m.

Sunday School - 9 :30a .m .
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Oyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Racine
Putor: Ken Moller
S101day School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - It a.m. and 7 pm.

Christian Fellowolllp Center
Salem SL, Rulland
P1stor: Robert E. Muuer

Rutland Bible Methodlat
Pt1tor: Rev. Ivan Myen

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II :15 a.m., 7 p.in.
Wednetday Service - 7 p .m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
I: venin&amp; - 1 p.m .
Wednesday Serviots
- 7 p.m.
-

.

. .....

M- Chapel Chordl
Larry Faw, Superintendent
Sunday IChool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.

Cool•llle Unlled Mftllod!SI Parloll
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cool .. le Chun:h
Main &amp;. Fiflh S..
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m .

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bouom

Worshi{'- 9 a.m.
Tue5day Semccs - 7 p.m.

Sunda)l School - 9:30 a.m.

Bethel Church

Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.,7:30 p.m.

Township Rd., 468C

Wedne~day 7:30p.m .

Sunday School - 9 a.m .
Worsh1p - 10 a.m .
Wodne~ day Services - 10 a.m .

Che!&lt;.1er
l)aslor: Sharon Hau!'Oman
Worship - 9 11 .m .
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thuuday Services - 7 p.m

Mt. Olin Community Church
P11tor: lawrence Bush

Putor: Brenda Weber
Wonhip - 9:30a.m .
Swtday School - 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday SeNiccs - 7 :30p.m.

Long Bottom

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63
SUIIday School - 9:30a.m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Scl"i&lt;e - 7 p.m.

Naza rene

!'astor: Rev . Phillip Scarberry
Worsh1p · 9:30 1.m .
1st &amp; Jrd Sunday - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

MlddJepon Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m .

Tuppers Plains St. Paul

Wcdnciday Services: · 7 p .m.

Pasto r: Sharon Hau1man
Sunday School - 9 JJ.m .
Worship - 10 a.m .
Tuc!'Oday Services - 7 :30p.m
Central Cluster
Asbury (Synu~u~)

Full Gospel Ughlhousc
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pa1tor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuelday .t Thunday - 7:30 p.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a .m.
Worship - 9 a.m .

Soulh Bethd N~w Testamcnl
Sil'\ICr Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydmsuiclc.cr

Wonh1p · 10:30 a.m .. 6 30 p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wol1hip-10a.m.,7p.m .
Wednesday Servia: - 7 p.m

Reecla•llle Fetlo-lp
Churdl rA the Nazarene
Pastor: John W. Doualu
S~mday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - !0:45a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

J. M1rCU1 Fultz
MiNger
Ph. tt2·2101

..I .....
171llertlo
SeeM~~

,.rt,

ll•••
Ollie

..

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
'SAlES &amp; SEIYI(E

992-7075

172 North Soclflll Avo.
Midcll_,t, Ohio

S und~:~y School 9 :30 a.m.
Wonhtp · ll1:1.m. , 7 :30p.m.
Wednesday Se rvi ce - 7:30p.m

six roda lo the southwest

corner of George Scheiber's

GRAVElY TRAUOR SAlES
204 Condor

St.

Ponwroy, Otl.
992 ~2975

...
'

IA~Sl(OA1S

FISHER ·
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 Sollth 2nd

Middleport

POMEIOY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL

SWISHER &amp; UltSE
PHMMM:Y
.
W•FIH'Do&lt;lon'
d
Prescriptions
~

Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middl cpmt

..

Pastor: Luwrcncc Forcnun
Sunday School - )() 11.m
Wednesday Service~ - 1 p.m.
Chun:h of ,lesus Christ,

1\po•lolic Faith
l/4 m1lc past Fort M c i g~ on New Lima Rd
Pauor : William Van Meier
Sund Jty-7:00 p.m.

p.m.

Fnday-7 :00 p .m .
CIIRon T1bernacle Church
Clifton ,
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wouhip · 7 p .m .
Thursd~ty Service - 7 p.m.

w_va.

'..
' .•.

...-

Pentecostal
Pt:nlemstarl A:YSembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
l)astor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 ll .m
Evening, · 7 p.m
Wednesday Scrvt~es 7 p.m .

cor:ttaining two (2) acrea,

Middleport Pcnlecnstal
Third A vc.
Pas\.or: Rev. Clurk U.11kcr
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednc1day SeJVices- 7:00 p.m .

..
I .. -

Presbyterian

.

HarrfsonvHie Presbyterian Church
Won hip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45 &lt;~.m .
Middleport Presbyterlotn
Sunday School · 9 a.m
Wor'lihir - 10 11 .m .

.

•.

Syncusc First United Presbyterian
Sunday School - 10 ~.m ,
Wonhi·p - II a.m. ,"4 p:m. (I st &amp; l rd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh ·D•y Advenlisl
Mulhcrry llu. Rd ., Jlomcroy
Pa slor: Roy l.a win sk y
Saturday Services ·
Sahb11lh School - 2 p.m.
Wonhjp - 3 p.m.

Moiga and tho Stata ol Ohio.
In Section No. 34, Town No.
3, Range No. 12 of lho Ohio
Company's
Purchase.

As to any action Including

Locust tree; thence In a
direction

lhlrly all (361 acres, more or
Ina.
Reference Deed: Volume
334, Page 113 and Volume
252, Page 717, Meigo
County Deed Recorda.
The above deacribed real

ettate hat been a••igned
the following Auditor's,
Parcel Numbers: 0301012,03-01013 and 03·
01014.
Said real estate is &amp;ubiecl
to accrued real estate taxes
lor 1993.
Real Eslale Appraised AT:
$16,000.00. The real estate
cannot be sold for leal than

Eden Unlled Brethren In Christ
2 1!2 miles nonh of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev . Robert Markley
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se rvi ce~ - 7 :30p.m .

tWo-thirds the appraised
value.
Terms of Sale: Cash on
delevery of deod.
Jamet M. Soulsby

Sheriff of Meigs Counly
12(101. 12(171. 12(24) 31c.

2

-·

In Memory

In Loving Memory
of
DAVID MARK
TALBOTT
With much love at
Chriatmat •nd •lwaya
thought• of you linger
In our heart•.
Merry Chrlatmu,
Dave
Sadly mined by
Family &amp; Friend•

"2-2955

Pomeroy

..

~i4,.. ~LOII18"

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

!

. Ham elite Siiws '

l

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

.•••• c....,.\ ow.., Fr.n.,'
UJEAITIIAIN
POMERoY, OHIO 41711
1121144 or IJ1 I IIi

-- -,-.-----· _._
__..____._________

RUSSELL and
BLANCHE
PAINTER
ROBERT PAINTER

'
••
•

··n;~nir~-

and St&gt;rl'i•·r AIMta.n ..

Established 1913

992-2121
:. l 06 ......, •••.

--- ------ -·- ··· ·-

-- ~---·

~ - --

·

-----

Sadly mla•ed by

family, children,
grandchildren &amp;
friends.

In Memory Of
I

214 E. Main
992-51 JO,Pomeroy

nurse and teacher
who passed away
Dec. 24, 1992.
Sadly missed by
father, Robert W.
Vatlghan &amp; brother,
Tom Vaughan &amp;
friends.

-~- - -

: fMi\

\27

CHARLES ALLEN
VAUGHAN,

'

Veterans _

Memorial Hospi,tal
115 (. Memorial Dr.
·n2-21o4

r0111eroy

~·
-

('

· ~ ·-

-- ·

the

complaint. If aignlllcant
public Interest er:ieta, a

nor1heasterly

United Brethren

revises/withdraws
propoted action .

deacribed real eatale.
situated in the Townahip of
Cheater, in the County of

Family Restawant
992-5432

be at the Township Garage

more or leas . See deed
given to Henry Mora and
Mary A. Mora, dated April
30, 1931, Melgo Counly
Deed Record Book 133,
Page 476.
Alao lhe following

lhe old Pomeroy rOild in tile
north line of a•ld Section
34, at I Hickory tree; thence
weollhirty lhree (33) rodo to
a Wild Cherry tree; thence
southeast 32 roda to a

.

.: "FIIIIIIIf N111111lg Fll1j Ci114u•"
: 221 W. Main St.-, Potn1roy
i

Come by and register
lor free BatleJY to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchase
required to reglater

ChooH8Rd
cut your tree.

1............... _,

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
Shoulder Mount ...... '155
Hom Mcule ................'22
Squimll ...................... '55

Riggs Tree Farm

and

be present

31507 Rockapringa Rd.
(et oom« of ua Rt. 33)

Pomeroy, Ohio
tt2-5702

Coral • O.Vld Ril9l
1112A/81

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS
675-6755

uted

abdve

does

PART$,

wo-iton•IOO .....

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

1-800-714·1111

•• , .......1. tl

7/3119t/Un

CHRISTMAS
TREES
$10.00 each
Open 9to6
3 dltlerent klnda:
Scotch, Whit• &amp;
Autlrlln Plnea, 5' to 8'.
-H•rley H•nlng rul-

dence, 35e75 Flatwooda
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio
1111111 mo. pd.

RESIDENnAL
CONCRETE
WORK

Wholeeale
&amp; Retail
upRMIIIIat
Bob Snowden'• lot In
Rutl..ct, 011.
Wholeeale $10 at farm,
$12 dallvorod. Retttll lot
will be open I a.m. to I

4-19·93-TFN

Porches,
Patios,

Information .

lnd TRACtUIQE WORK

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCDON

LANDCLEAAINu

•Dozer •Backhoe
•Ditcher oOump Truck

FREE ESTIMATES

Land Clearing, Pond•,
Water Linea, Septlca
Licente &amp; Bonded
Charlie Hatfield,
Operator

TRAILER SITE~

DRIVEWAYS INSTAllED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

992-3838
l't .-_...........~~~~"1

DJVIDSON'$
· · Jl~~J~!ng
.•

EXCAVATING
BUllDOZING

4

. ,. _ :::.:A

1 -adi•l
31904 .,.
Creek lotld

MJdtlleport, 0•1o

• •
614 992 7144

_

tfl

lhe Ohio Department ot
Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Service• (4 appolnteet) and

the County Commissioners
in Gallia , Jackson and
Meigs
Counlies
(1 0
appolnteesJ. Curren11y there

Is o vacancy to be filled by
lhe
Meigs
Counly
Commiselonera.
Individuals lnlerested In
being considered lor this
appointment can do to by
requetting an appllcallon
from :
Gaflla~ Jacbon- Meige
Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Heallh

Service•.

414

Second

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

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
3141931 mo.

Assistant$ Needed.
Part·tlme PosiUons.
12 hour shifts.
Must be wiling ., Wlllk
7a.m. to 7 p.m.
or7 p.m. m7a.m.
Must be cerlilled In
Long Term Care.
ConCacl
Sharon Sklcin018.
llrectt ol Ntning al
Pleasant Valley Hospilal,
Sand Hil Road,
Point~

wv 25550

(304) 675-5236.

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS

of

communUyo members and
would welcome mlnorlly or
female appllcont.o.
December 24, 'l7 &amp; 28, 1993

RACINE

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

COOLING
QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO
9/28/TFN

GENEUL

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeetona,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
·Uconaod .,d Bonded

TREES
IJ'II•LI,

OH.

Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared SCotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine 4' &amp;·Up with
a great seiiiC)Ion of
larger trees.
Call 742·2143 or
742·2979·

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball R111 Raad
P-oy,Ohlo
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
I. FILL DIRT

992-3470
OWNIR: .ltH WIS..._
511019

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
-Gutter Work
-Electrical and
Plumbing
·Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES}

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

Special Ea~y Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Uc. No. 0051-342

7f7/t rro.

NOVEMBER SPECIAL

oGa~agee...

aCo~lat·

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE ESTIMATES

915-4471

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
36970 BALL RUN RD.

HOUDAY SPECIAL

$9 75 A TON SIZED LIMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER
1217193-lfn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
.Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No S.nday Calls)

;!11219Vtfn

sweeperRepa

Parts • Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Eltctmlux,
Hoover. Eureka. Tri..Star,

Regina. &amp;. most olber brands!
Part. Shipped UPS
Feat • Dependable Service[

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK47) ••••••••••••$180
NORINCO UNI. SKS ···-·····-············ 595
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE .. $130
CALL AFTER 6:0~
304·485·7256
ttlt2183 t MO.

McLendon
MOR'I'GAII COMPANY

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
Dog Kettnels 10' 1 0' 1 6' ~u:J.u
Nite Ute Starting at
•99
Applegate Rcr.t•d Bell Fences &amp; Gates
Horse TtKk &amp; Saddles
Wid fwd Seed
White Sah Block SO lbs. $4.25
Trace Mineral Block 50 lbs. $5.00
Much More At lowest Prkes in Meigs County

CHAPMAN FEED STORE

FINANCING AVAILABLE
1-800-553-3586

Mobile and Doublewlde owners •••

FURNACES
AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Ntllllt.d compl1lll with
ft,_lng wollllblo.

Lila • Mlldlcara • Cancer • Fire • Health •

Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

011~'!'....

lox 119

Middleport, o•io 45760
(614)843·5264

5114/9311fn

$36.00--

C•II BENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG AND COOliNG

Golllpolla, Oh.

--..11 or Toll FrM t.-.a72-$1167

· V.C. Young Ill
992-6215 .

' ' l I

oNawHomee

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eut at
Derwin on1o Rl 681, go 4 mi. to Mllepoat 13. Turn
South on gravel road, 1% mi... to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGHS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

(BEAT THE BAN)

446-9515

Pomeroy,O

I ISS ElL
CONnRUCDON

BODFORD'S

HAULING

PH. 614·992·5591

Avenue, P.O . Box 514 ,
Gallipolio, Ohio 4563t,
Phone: 614-446-3022
The Board · Ia striving to
maintain a
balanced
repretentatlon

742·2903
t111011 mo.

PLUMBIN.~

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
G r re.JelgkhleeMn member
a 11a ac oon· eigs Board
of Alcohol , Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services
is eppoinled by the Director
ol lhe Ohio Departmenl ol
Menial
Heallh
14
appointeee), the Oireclor of

AIIIOLD'S
PlUMBING,
HUTIIIG &amp;

GUN SHOOT

6:o45 p.m.

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITEB lnd

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

CARPET &amp; UPHOUTEIY CUIIIIIIG

HENDERSON AND MASON STORE
WILL BE CLOSING DEC. 25TH
THROUGH JAN. 2, 1994
FOR THE HOLIDAYS.

• LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

Very Merry Christmas and A Very
Happy New Year- God Bless!

992·2269

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEIU

USED RAilROAD TIES

12-30·92-TFN

(304) 882-3336

POMEROY, OH.

CLUB
IN POMEROY

auL..LricJZE.f! 1.!JACKHOE

Final f1auance of Notice
ol Reglatratlon
Ashland Branded Bulk

Plan! M490, Route 124,
Minersville, OH . effective
date t2-17-93 Application
No(sl 0653000058 OOOt J
001 T001 T002 TOOl T004
.T005 T006.
1t2124: Hc

ca11 992-3466 • m-3et a
We look IOIWard to
aeNingyou.

EAGLES

EXCAVATING

Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

....,..,.,a...,.
of1'N...,NI"
•"P''"""'""

·EVERY THURSDAY

Unleea

provided Ill"
notices
of p•rtlcular
actions, all communications
shall be aenl lo: Hearing
Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box t049,
Columbus, OH, 43266-0149
PH. (614) 644·2115. Conaull
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
Chaps. 3745·47 and 3746·5
for requirements.

New Haven W. V. 25265

FRESH CUT TREES AY.,ILIBlE
OR CUT YOUR OWl

Come and
elegant
Food and
Somolhing lor
9oolc your
lies now. Meeting
111'11 also availabla.

BINGO

of
verified
complaints, any person may
obtain nolice of further
actions, and additional

Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

CHRISTMAS TREES

992·7878

receipt

Our Business is Security

Stud Service
By appt. only
614-117-PETS

105 lllllemut Aw. Pomeroy

Fectory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
11110/1 mo. pel.

Sid~walks

Now haa beautlul Cocker Spaniel Puppiel. Al8o
featuring a 2 It convnon Black Tequ. Layawaya •re
now available for Chrlolmu. Sele on our entire ltock
of large
new llemt.

Rottwaller &amp; Shepherd

Sooa

•DOXERS
•BACKHOE
• TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

(614)
667·6628

TUPPERS PLAINS
BMIC obedience•
..wenforcement,
pereonal protection,
kennel •rvlce, pupe &amp;
young cloga lor aele.

:t-tl-93-tln

Coll614-742-3051,,.,.,..

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

ICIIUIY

949-2168

p.m. atartlng Nov. 24th.
T,... are s· to I'.

public meeting may be held.

otherwise

Gutters

FREE ESTIMAn5

lOU FREE 1·100-148-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

Include receipt of a verified

NEW-REPAIR
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

AU MAlES &amp; MODELS

992-7013•
992-5SS3ar

ROOFING
Down•pouta

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR

not

JIHTilll·9

· Howcn L Wtitesel

.WHAUY'S AUTO

Pleasant View Road off
Racine Bashar Road at 12

Any
person
may
submit
comments andlor a meeting
regarding -any draft acUon
within 30 days of lhe dale
Indicated . '"ACTION", aa

Beginning 12 roda west of

I

·(row's

condition . The auction will

noon Dec. 301h 1993.
The Trustees reserve the
northwe•t corner of a lot . rlghl to re}ecl any or all
h•retofore aold to George bids.
Paul S. Moore, clerk
Mora; thence along the
Pomeroy and Chaster Road, (12) 24, 29 ; 2TC
aa follows; South 26 1/2
degrees, Weal 11 rods;
Public Notice
South 5 112 degreea, West
PUBUCNOTICE
24 rods; South 18 degreaa,
The following were
West 14 rodo; South 42
degreas, West 26 rods, to received/prepared by the
Envlronmenul
lhe place of beginning, Ohio
Protoellon
Agency COEPAI
cont1ining 7 •crea and 55
last week. Effective dales of
perches.
SAVE AND EXCEPT: The final actlona and laauance
following described real dates ol Propoaed AcUont
estate, situate in Cheeter and of Draft Action• are
Township, Meigs Counly, In slated. Final actlona may be
lhe State of Ohio, and in appealed, In wrlllng, wllllln
Section 35, Town 31 Range 30 days ol lhe dale of lhla
12, In lhe Ohio Company's notice, to the Environmental
Purchaae, and bounded and Board of Review, Rm. 300,
described aa follows, lo-wil: 236 E. Town St., Columbua,
Beginning •t the aouth line OH, 43215. Notice of any
of said Section 35, in lhe appeol shall be flied with
old Pomeroy road; thence the director wllhln 30 doya.
running wool twelve (12) Proposed actions will
rode to a white oak tree; become final unless a
lhenco eaotlwelve (t2) rodo wrlllen adjudlcotlon hNrlng
lo lhe old Pomeroy Road; requeo1 Ia submllted wllhln
thence following aaid road 30 days ot the Issuance
lo tho place of beginning, date; or the director

.. '
. ·.

RIDENOOR
SUPPLY

·.

legal Notice
Sutton Townehlp Trustee•
will offer at Public auction
one 1976 Ford Truck, lhla
truck Is not In running

eight (28) rods lo lhe

Froedom Gospel Million
Bald Knob, oo Co. Rd. 31
P1110r: Rev. Roger Willford
Sund•y School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Service - 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.

GREAT IELEC110M AND
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
1112o33M 8:30-4 Mon.-Fri.
742-3020 Allor 5:00
Hra e--n Sat. tiN

lot; thence eaat twenty-

SUYer!ivlllc Word or Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

In Memory
Of

...eroy

PIESCIImON SHOP

(ConUnuod from P,. 8)
1'\lrchaae, and bounded and
described 11 lollowa, •iz:
Beginning 44 rods north of
lhe center of sold Section,
aa surveyed by Spencer
Hayman; !hence north alxly·

Road

'

e

Mldcltp Drl, Ohio

RIMS
CHRISTMAS TREES

to win.

/)astor: Rc'll . Victor Rou5h

Wcd~ c.~ day -7: 00

l &amp; lllll lAIII
33151 .... em. .....
..•...., ow. 45771
614.f92·5344
I-I00-714·11U

don, have

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Service - 7 p .m .

SyraeuJe Chureh of the Nanrene
Pas\.or: Rev. Rick SturjiU
Sunday &amp;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ · 7 p.m.

93 MIH ltr•t
Mldcleport, Ohio 41710
Cl141992-1157- i99B·OOK8l
, CHUijCH SUPPLIES ' • lleLES

CEtm~ !NC.

"•

Kinasbwy Rood

fih
C\\\ifl j,rw (B.,.,r.,
MEIGS TIRE

'·.

P1110r: Clyde W. Hendenon

SWiday School · 9:30a.m.

Sundoy School - I 0 a.m
Worship - II a.m.

'

Cat•ary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri ~onviUe

AT THE
QUALITY PRINT SHOP

is now offering
Mealball &amp; Phllly Sreak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink w~h each purchase of

Carleton lnttrdenornlnatiORII Church

l.._nu:roy Church of the Naurene
Pas Lor: Rc..,. . 'fltonuu McClung

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader

' .
...

Nease SeUicml!nl Chun:h
Sunday WOfship - 2:30p.m .;
Thursday ,;crvil:es - 7 :3() p.rn

I'Bstor : Dcron Newman

Sunday School · 9:45 a m
Wo~hip · II a .m .
Wcdncsdwy Scrvi(;cs - 7:30p.m.

rviFannToys

rOt'

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m .

Sund•y School ·9:30a.m.
Worshlp · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

'

Faith Fellowship Crusade
Christ
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dicken s
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. Roben E. Smith , Sr.

Wedned1y Service- 1 p.m.

Evening - 7 p.m.

Racine Pint Chord&gt; of the N......,e
PliiOr: Mark stapa
Sunday School - 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6p.m.
Wedne1day Services - 7 p.m.

Reedsvillr

.

C alvlr)' Bible C hurch
Pomeroy Pike, Co. ltd.
Pu \.or: Rev . Blackwood
S11nday Scl'lool - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Servlce - 7:30p.m.

United Faltlt Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pan

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

(lrand Street
Sundill)l Sehoul - 10 •.m.

tfm... . DK's

..

Fairview Uible C hurch
l..ctan, W .Va . Rt. I
P&lt;1:.tur: James Lc wts
Sunday Sehoul - II a.m.
Wunh.ip · \):30 11 .m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc!VIcc - 7:JO p.m

Mt. Hermon United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas: Community off CR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Hockingport Church
Worship - I I •.m.
Wcdnc5LIKy Services - 8 p.m .

Joppa

Coo!Yillc Road
Putor: Rev . Phillip Rida10ur
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scrv1cc - 7 p.m .

Sunday.School· 10:00 a.m.

Morning Slar
Pas1or: Kenneth Bater

Our Snlour Lutheran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry Su., Ravenswood, W_Va
Co~paston : Re"Ys:. Richard &amp;.
Patricia Bonds-Krug
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ip - 11 a .m .

ot the N.urene

Putor: Willin Justi•
Sunday School -IOoOO a.m.
Wonhi(&gt; · 6:30p.m.

l0

Paswr: Rev . ~iUip Scarberry
Sunday School - 9 :30 11..m .
Worship · 10:30 a .m .
Wcdnc~day Services· 7 :30p.m.

Fon.~1

Run Baptisl
Pa!;tor : 1\riu ~ Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Hol ines s

..
Whtle's Chapel Wesleyan

1
WV013372
We epeclella In:
RRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS

24Hour
Emergency Service

�December

24, 1993

The Dally SenUnel Page 13 •

OhiO

BRIDOI:

NEA Cro••word

--

P11••••
'

Houllwle

Announcements

BEATTIE BLVD."' by Bruce Beattie

44

3 Announcements
Girle! Qlrts! Girta! Talk To Them
Now! t-On·1 24 Hourt A Day! 1·

1124 E. Main SII'Mt, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy. Houro: ll.tw. 10:00
a.m. to I:OG p.m., Sundly 1:00

900-.288-t155 E•t. 1864 U .H Par
Min. llutll Be 18 Yrt. ProcaU Co.

(002)

954-,.20.

.

Middle Agld White Christian
Bualneuman SMilt Female
Comptnlon Any Raca, Write
With Phclo PltoiM To: CLA 301,
CJO Galllpolil: Dilly Tribuna, 825

StOIINood Apt~r1mentl,

4563'1.

Two

Giveaway

10 puppiH, Swks. aid, mother
Registartcf. .Golden
304-675-6735

7 Month Old

Mido

dlopolt, Ohio 1o now - l n g
oppllcatlont
ond
Nntlng
oportmonto 1or '"" ~ ona
ltendk:oppod,
814-882-3055.
EOII.

Third AY.nu., C.lllpoll•, OH

4

1HO Ford Rongor, 4 CVII-. 5
lpood, 14,200, ........om. .·,

Antiques
Buy or Hit. Rivwl,. Antlq,.o,

Ratrianr.

Lktar Trained,

Oec:lawed . Black !WhHa, Ctl 614-

bldroom

apartment

Motorcycles
1987 Hondo 70, 4 Whftllr,
367-0632.

54 MIBC&amp;IIaneous

In

Merchandise

- o y . coil 8M-9i2-5858.
Upotoln Apt. 821 112 Sec:ond
~":. 2 BR, Ro'-Nitco. 814-44S-

28'1nch Olrfo ~ Hully
Blcyclo. 1100 814411·

45

Lood uo, 114-aHlM.

W,

S1110ned

firewood,

Dollvorod And Stacflod P.U.

Furnished
Rooms

245·9154 .

614-992·3517.

76

Avon batt~; •lectrlc tool muNger, ulld wtth Wiler, lots of
mite ittma; $100 080, 814-882·

.-

Two dogs· 4 mo. old tomalo """ _1__1__H~e-'lp::._W
__
an_ted
_ __
Srinany Spaniel; female part

I:L - 1'4

Chrome hotpHII type bedralls,
ad)utte twin to queen siH, Ilk•

'-~~
w.I-,1LM

•u

Beagle ; 614-992-4i208.

6

Lost &amp; Found

lost : Decamt&gt;,r 18lh· 2
Garman Shepherds, mala
tamale, SiHhill Rdl Ru11and
ar&amp;a, 6M-7112-2630.
Lost: Middleport vicinity, Sheltla

(mini Collie), Hble and whhe, 4
mos. eNd, $SO rewll'd, 61 ..992·

Clericll Photocopy Rtprestntallv• Medlc•l records photocopy
Hrvlc• Ia -11.1na pan.rtme
tmployMs for poshTon( a) in the
Ga.lllpollt area. lndlvidu11s must
be matur•, proftstlonal, and
customer
Hrvlc:t orfanttd.
NMCI own car wtth prool at In·
auranca. Send rnum• to: Smart
Corporation,
2245
Gilbert
Avenue, 9tt. 303, Cincinnati,
Ohlo45206.

51S5.

ALL Vard S.lea Mutt Bt Paid In
Advanct . DEADLINE: 2:00 p .m.
the day befora the ad is ta run.
Sunda)' edition - 2:00 p .m.
Friday. Monda)' edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.,

47 Wanted to Rent

(No

56

Wanting to rent• 2 or 3 bedroom
houee, ln claan and ~ condl·
lion, p.-for prfvoto liotllng, 814·
111124421. If no piN•

J.ockaon, Ohio 1.-.537·9528.
F:or Set• ~tctric typewriter, has

Shepherd pupploo, vot chocked,
llrot ohclo, S14-,.2-2518.

lor Sale

14x70 Total Electric On 1 ll2 Joove - g o on mocftlno.
Acra Lot. 2 Mllll From Bldwlfl•
Porter Eltm•nl•ry 120,000 Firm
814-388-8185.
Merchandise

Included. 814-256-6742. lh4

5685,HOME WEEKENDS.

Goods

8834.

Offk:a lhnager wanltd tOf doctor's otflc•. atart part-lime, mall
reaume to: 2903 Parrish Ave, Pt.
PI taunt , WV 2S550.

correction

topo, NO, 614-112o7352.

5 yur old

double

duty

pun~.

electric

motor,
by cable, 1 112

hp., 175, 8t4-fiV2-3540.

Wanted to Do
OUTSIDE

FURNISHINGS'
w_B._.
Iron Tabte W/4 Chin;
Fan •ck Rocking Chllr $58;

dopooh will hold, opprovod

homn only. 304-1154151 alter
5pm ..
AKC Cocker Spaniel, Mlltlat,
Chow puppl.., ahota. wormed.

Garden Arch Way'e $121.00

AKC Roglot.,.d Amorlcon Stock
I WhHo Coeur Spaniol Pupploo
TillS Docked, Dew Clawt,
Removed, Born : 10f'171'13 ANdy

To Go Now, Will Hold With

Hurty exercl•• bllc1, his chain

AKC
Aegl..tred
Ftlnllt
Schnauzer With Cago, 1711, 814-

. - ·-

- - ---- - - - -

DopooH,

Avllllblt.

Stud

Sorvlco

Also

614-~2128.

448-3523.

Junk Avto'a To Buy Will Pick-Up
AppUanctl, Any Other Mltalt
Frtt, 614-446-71l28 B.tort 9 P.M .

3

Bedroom

House

Near

oblod: -

IroninG,

JOU"'""'II"

1887.

42

WANTED: tngine tor 1188 Ford
Fatlva, 4ap., 1.3 lh.,, I'IMded
ASAP, c.ll 81t-912-2145, 8:30am·

Mobile Homes
lor Rent
14x80 a Br, 1 milo South of
Eu..U, on St. At.7. No poto,

Real Estate

5:00pm. or 814-992·2421 •liar

5:00pm.

,...,.lltll. tM-251-«118.

2 bodnrorn troller, rot I dop, At.
N N. Locuot Ra on rlglrl, no

Employment Serv1ces

AVON ! All Aluo · I Shl~oy
SpooN, 304-6'15-1429.
AVON! AI a,._, NMd IJflrl
mQMY or want a ca,..r, ltitt.r

. . . . . . "lnyPMfotinco,

wa~all Mlrftyn. 304-IIZ-2845

or 1..S00.112""356.

1111888 _ _ • ...,

......,or,........

,h

•

--trllluoar-

I etectrk:,
.,..., 814-

-on*"· cofof. tOiglott.

ACTIVITY DIRECTOR

Energetic and erlhusllltlc lndlvidr.lal neadld ta coordinate

the activities ~r1m for our.
100 bed Nlr.. ng cent.,. A
bachelor'a degrw In rec,...
tianll therapy or two ,_,..
recent ax,.,tence in • patient
.cthl'ltt.a program In 1 Mlllh
cara Mtttna pNferrecl. Excellent
wrhten MMJ oral cammuniCIIIIon

o111no •-lot. Thlo pooijlon o~
t•rs a competlllvt ullry, unl-

qui btntflt program, and . portr.~nity tor career growth. For
prompt, confidential c.onsiderl·
tlon
plenePomeroy
forward mume
8111 '911t,
Nural~ to:
&amp;

Rehab. Center, 36759 Rock·

PomOIOY,

OH

or 11'11- to
..... 11'11- proforwtce,
~.

n:::.::.::;:______

lmillllonOf-llon.'
Thll RIWIPIPII' wll not
lrnowlngtt IQCIIPl ·
actttl'ttMinerls tor rulllllllli
whktlllln Wildon ot thl

low. 0...- nlrorolry
~lbn..ctl'*llll';lllngil

advlfi!Md In HIM I~
.,. • ,
on 111 eqt..a

e-..

44

Apartment
for Rent

2bdrin. a,.., tataJ llltctrlc, apptloncoo tumlohod, loundry
room faciiH._ cioN to tchoOI

-lono.

7em-7pm or 7prn-11rn.
Mutt be certta.d In Ulna Ttrm
Core. ~ lllf\lfGftlllliltnoro,

Dtroolor of Nunolog II PI-nt
WillY Hc!etllllil, Sind Hill Rd.,
Pt. --~· wv 255!0. :IOU75-

3 Bedroom 014-112-H37 or 114·

441-aMO.

--to....,.,..._
~~~~--~~-~-·~~~~~

S'l&amp;-5727.

PanUac TranSport FOf
Sale. CINn With N.w Front
Owner A Non-Smoker.

1810

nree.

Alldng $12,000. Call 614-24511009.

72 Trucks fo·r Sale

&amp;

$4.ll.

Puppln- Poodlta, tD)'II, bteck
and apricol; al8o SChi'IIUHrl,
mlniJiui'M, •If and pepper;
AKC chlmplon bloodline, I14S87-34G4.

Chinese

cnll•e,

tltt,

filly

whetlt,

WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

VHr Warranty, $205 ·each; Hot
Point Wuhtr /Dryer- s.t Uke
New He1vy Duty, White 1 Year
Worroroy, $205, S!&lt;aggo Appliance•, 71 VIne Sti'Mt, Gil·

lipotlo, et4-44f.l'398, 1-I00-499-

34VV.

ConiiNnCe Tourn~~neN Cham·

o-.

Slain.... RevolVer
$245. 45 ond V !11M Ploto4o ond IJood $125 Up To 1250. 22
and 22 Magnum Revolver 1105.
Moeeblrg 500 12 ga. Vent Alb
$215. llatlbtrg 20 ga. Hunt1r
Combo lnclucfng Sfug Birr•
1215. (Peri'IC1 tor NtW Vaung
Special'

hlnd Hutton car Wallh, or Call

Evonl""' 4:30 ·10 All Doy
Frldoy, Saturdoy, Sundoy. 614·

~-~~ untvetotty,

..
...
.. .

304-675-1786.

111113 Sll,...do, 5 yr 60,000 milo

85 General Hauling

'

ed. Here West bad no reuoo to e.pect
to win the auction at a aafe Jeve~ espe-

' ~
R

......

'•

cially wUb tile llllfavwable wlMr-

,..ANI&gt;

W~ IANC.'f ~

abillty.
Tbe lllkatiw mammal il the cat,

,..
...
.lC1.la'l\ AARIVEI&gt; HL WoiiT, CJIILDml,® ~

I~

~~

WAAT TIIE.Y ~D lO EKH otVE.R
T~V~"

~

I Would Uko Pooplo to KilO'#
That I Am Still Heuling, Leroy
Coldwott 614-448-4851.

with over 100 sepante IOUIIdl. Tbllls
more than tbe chlmpauee and 1ort11a.
'Twu tbe alpt before Cbrlstmu,
wbea all tbroop the boule, not a Cl'el·
lure wu stlrriDg. oot even a mouse.
Perba.. beealltle It beard the cat on
the prowl.
---- - -

DATE BOOK
Today is the 358th
day of 1993 and til&lt;!
fourlh day of winter.

Uood .... _

BTU, lnotollotion Avll-, 1·

ue uoe.

Uood - · · uo. 614-245~52
Attor8P.ll.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: :114 Inch
aoo PSI I1U5; 1 lnolt liDO PSI
132:10i A~ Enna E.,.._.,

I

Ano s.x-.., Oood ~lo
tion S200 il4-3e7-71N.
tklndY Clorlnol Oood Condition,
$100 814471-2"121.

-·Ohio, ,_e»te:ll.

WATER ftOAAOE
TANKS
A-And-Groundi'DA
Approved Fer PDI- Wotor.
Ron EYIIto -=tooO, Jock·
ton, Ohio, 1
•21.

Farm Suppi 'PS

Building
Supplies

.

OK . l'D
JUST f££\..

'

61

.

Llt&lt;E 1 WN&gt;

Fann Equipment

IN'TRIIDING.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "'I'll write about my perenta fljaln dlsgullled fiction or u ..,toblograplly." - Patti Oovto.

not N

....

WDID
~y

5tearronge ~tten of
0 four
scrambled words

I

low tQ form four words

I

GIFYFE

I I I rI

I
1 r 1 r
S (\
I~
T L E

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Old timer to mountain
climber,"lnmostcasesilyou're
.
.I _ 1
.
trying to set a new altitude
. - - - - - - - - - . r e c o r d it's usually easier if you
T E HH 1 R
want to rise to new - - - - - - -."

I
I

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Comple-te the chuckle Quoted
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
bv fdl1ng 1n the rn1U1ng words
1-.....l-..1..-.L........L-....L.--f you develop from step No. J below

8

PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS
IN lHESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

t

I

SCRAM·LlTS ANSWERS
Jurist- Ankle - Notch - Unison - SUNSHINE
My sister always worries about what lomorrow will
bring even when she's having a good time . Gramps tells
her that the threat of clouds tomorrow shouldn't ruin
today's SUNSHINE.

IFRIDAY

@

Ut-~...:1\-\AT'S

il&lt; L1vestock

""
{f y "'~'''

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1990, for the first time since the death
of Lenin, the bells of St. Basil's Cathe·
dral on Moscow's Red Square rang to
celebrate Christmas.
TODAV'S BIRTHDAYS; Kit Carson
11809·18681, U.S. frontiersman ;
Matthew Arnold (1822·18881, poet·
critic; Howard Hughes !1905·t976), in·
dustrialist ; I.F. Stone 0907· t9891 . .
journalist; Ava Gardner !1922· t990) ,
actress.

with
cob, 105 HP, 1300 houn,
$10,000; 814-102-lOiM.
Block, brick, . . . , lllpea, wln- For lllo/U'Itdo ..ppoiOON lloro
dowe, llntetl, etc. Claude Wln- 1200 lb I yNr old . bridle
1800.00 or trwuM Jar a1Hit. 814toro, Rio Orondo, 011 CaR 614- 441·1052

55

FOR "THAT MU6rACHE TRIMMER
I &lt;:\AVE HEI2 L.A6r 'r1:AI&lt; .

Musical
lnSiruments

HN1 Pump, 28.000

IIOQ..287-1301, 114

I GUE6S5HE\s5TILL GETnNGe.e-J

MY AL.lNr L.UDIS IN 'r'UB.A
CITY BI!!NT Mff:: A OOl-L..
FOR CHRISTMAS.

2050.

ae, 07

DECEMBER 24

(,)00 ...
WHOA ... AW ANC.Itt-IT
LIM&amp;ERIE 1 PHoENICIAN 6ALLt.'{
Sli&gt;Vt CIITFIT ·:.

245-81U

56

.

-~~bodrock
for '":ik4~l
truck long
$100.00
•
1052

Transportat1on
Auto1 for S81e
•., Docloo 1p1r11 ES v-e ss,a50

814-~.

2217.

11110 Mozdo pick-up truck. king
cab, 54,000MI., !lap., AC, JVC
stereo, bed liner wlcanvn
cover, ,5700, 814-lll2·2803.

.

AnldlnUat
oi comrntrclll •
wiring, naw Hrvlc. or rapai,..
MIMtr Uc~nsed tlectrlclen: '
Ridenour E..clrtc:al WV00030&amp;

Sot of 12 ~ lor tm Ohio torrlor pupPJ, $250; 814-102·

71

tu.-.

Cool!..

Electrical &amp;
Refflgeratton

Two full blooded Cofllo pupo,
one male end 0n1 lemale,
$75u.; ont mill Jlok Auault

Alvlfr'l2e

d._,., on utNMtoo
S2SOimo.• saoo dopcoH, 814--

84

VNr Worronty.I._.J225; Moytog
Wo-IDryor- eo-rtono 1

Aportl1*tl• In lllddlt-. Fram
1202. Ca11814-11112·51511. EOII.

OINI bedroom apa.rtrnenl In Mkl-

F,..mon'o HNtlng And

lnatallatlon And Serva. A
Ctrtllled. R••identlal, Comm r- '
clal, 114-256-1611.

l'IJORTY MEEKLE &amp; WINfHROP

114 Uj.1J385,
-441-~. With
- · - 814-441· 814- - - HYing. 1 ond 2 bodroom apel1rntnta at Vllllal

Ntce 2 or 3 bad oom apartnwnt

~

ner Wuhlr A Few Monlhs Old 1
Vnr Warranty 1250; Whirlpool
Wlehlr Heavy Duty, Like New, 1

-1

In Mldd._,., IM-Ha-t858.

82 Plumbing &amp;
.,
H I
.,-_.,....--..:..eat:.,;._n.:.g~-.,_, •

JUl'flll\'JIIR~t

By ~: 521 Fourth - h S~IJ!Irloporl, Oft. 1 I
op10., utliMioo
""""'"'· 3 llodroomo,. Ylnyt, 211r. fur
NMr - . Conlrot 11001lng, Plki,..,_&amp; r.t. 304'1n41M .

'

• . ..

Drvor $150 G.E. Dryor $125";
Wftirtpool W.- 195;. G.E.
Wo- Almond 1150; 11oytag
Wo-r $150; Whirlpool Dnlg·

buYI-~f-

TO WillPOCKET

1988 Chivy pickup, Silverado,
aood cond, 2/lota of utr~a,
71,000 mil•, blue booll YIIUI
ll.dl. L L. • Smtih, 805
Monm1n Circle, 304-675-3222.

..,

245-9152.

Dec. 24, 1993

67S-'Il!.:ft or 1-1

and

some
WV
304·576·2398 Ohio 614-446-2454 .

Ooot' AviCIIdo $95; Rtfrlg~ralor
Froet FrM Coppertant $150;
Whirlpool Dryor SIS; Moytog

Read the Best Seller -·--·-JOU
Manor

Ron's TV Servtee, specializing
in Zenith aiM Nr'Vk:lng most
other branda. HauH calla, alao
appliance · rapalr1.

»48·2126.

Low pricing on Huoqvo,. aholn

Did, GMdld, Pl11 Tll1·
--11143.
Wolfaor. 080 814-

Plck·Up And Dollvory, Goorgto

Crook Rood, 614-446-4294.

Shar.Pei

RlflH Also Crotsbow, 814·371-

4 Yean

On today'a deal, taken from the 1985
U.S. Trials, one West couldn't resist
bidding, and be paid the price.
AI the first table, Wettt paued
throughout. Tben be led the club jack
apllllllour spades. Declarer finessed
dummys queen, of coune, but tbell
wu faced with a tricky problem.
Rather than commit lllmlelf lmmedi·
ately, South called for dummy's beart
two. East weal In with the kine and,
wllen West dropped the queen, coatln·
ued with a low beart, which West
ruffed. Later, declarer loll two diamond tricka; one don.
Wilen West Uled the Uotlltl&amp;i NoTrump, abOW'IIIg a minor two-sutter, it
wu easy for declarer to read the
belrt-queen lead u a lingleton. PlayIng West lor 2-l·ft-5 abape, declarer
W1lll immediately with dummya ace
and drew two rounds of trumpe. When
the club flneae W1lll a momeat later,
South claimed bll contract. coacediDg
ooe heart and two dlamoad tricU.
Don't bid unlesl you think you C&amp;ll
either buy lbe coatract or steer part·
ner to a good lead be WOD't find unaid-

pupo, 2 maloo, 2 lomotoo, 814-

2815 .

I :..:...oo;;.:.:..;;.;;:._;:._;:.__ _

vocabulary?

A~

Will build patio covers, dtc(it; ~
tc:rMnacl room1, put 11p vlnjt . ..
tiding or trtlltr skirting. 6Jt ~

wan"".
Aegltterld

Dovlo Sowing Mophlno

single 1xle, new dump bed,
mutt drive to apprecl... , $5700,

304~75o"ISS9.

Rotrigorotor Sldo-By-Sido Copoortono $285; Rofrlaontor Froot
J:rw White $150; A'"ttriaeralor 2

PEANUTS

Septic Tank Pumping $80!...Glllia
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jlckaon, OH 1-800-537-9528. • •

814-,.2·2403.
1113 Chevy Sltvorldo, AC, PS,

Opening lead; • Q

Wblch mammal - apart from
Homo aapieas - baB the greatest

V1cuum CINner Rep.lr, F,..,

Lu.tlma warTanty on
paint, $18,500. PUichlltd Jr.~n1.

GATIIRI8 DUSt
·ADD~ DOLLARS
'

$2,89

IMV-2483.

Ou1ur floor model color TV,
nelda r~p~lred ; 614·949-2985
days.

Home
Improvements

1089 Clmero AS, 1lr, crul-. UH,

188t Grand Prix, maroon,
IHded, price negotieble. 304·

Pill
Puo

By~pAider

Book: $7,000, Prlco: $5,100, 814441.()364.

::;tt:;;N:;-;N:;;Io"oo::-::-n~S;;:I-;d.-:-bod-;-;-pl;-c;-ku-p,
51pd., 'N,OOOmi., Nov. sticker,
book Plica 12350, aaking $1900.
John C.rtach, 304-671-5253.

HouHhotd hlmishlng. 112 mi.
Jerricho Ad. Pl. Pl1111nt, WV,
c.ll 3CM-175·M50.

441·1822.
Good Quality Shot GUns, 6 22

Hom•• lor Sale

-· TIINGS
.SUBTRACT" THOSE

523f. MIEOE

Now/Uood

Hunton). 3 Only llok-tO 1275.
Ammo For All. Uood 1100
In lawn. -~Ions avattr.tM Romlnaton Trop Grodo $025.
at: Vilaq; ...-c[t1MNI Apta. Ml or Special M-37 Hhlca 2 l.rTtl
Sup.-mo OIOQ! s-111 Ordor
coli 814.ft2.37'11. EOH.
$850. P. Hoc'!,_ 6 Blrc~ Ln., Bo-

Avon Still IIMII AI Work Or
Home. Ave~ $8 -$14 ~

Door·To-Door Opllonol. 1
1112-4738.
Cortlflod Nu!Wlng Alolotanto
, _ _ Port~lmo
12
how ohlfto. 111111 bo willinG to

PICKENS FURNITURE

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. S2
poto. 3fl4415.1071.
Otlvo St., Golllpollo.- I Uood
lbr. troller, N7111mo. 304-175- lurnttwe, hNtera, Weetern 6
11186.
Work - · · 114-448-3159.
...... --mobile lor 52 Sporting Goods
rent, aleo . . - lor ,.,. ltlrt·
lrrg .. $161ma.,l14-ft\!·2117.
Chrtetmoo Sooclol. All Now 22
Two bldroom traMtr In AKM. 11o11 "'"ion Rltto na, 22 a-..
lng lllylo Auto Rlf~l 8ooutlfut
coll814-11112.-.
Uftto
$135, -.o7 ond 31

Help Wanted
NA rut- -IIRIQ In
· 11t11 no ro~•lo Urjld to
lhiF-Fifr-.c!AD.

New FlbtraiiA Show1n1, N.w
Flf!Otglooo 'llhoworo I Tub, Now
3 Pc. Showon, S14·24So5152 AI·
terl P.M.

81

1V88 Nlooan 200SX Auto With

Floh Tank, 2413 Joe~ Avo.
Point PluuN, 304-675-2013.
1~at. tlnk Hl·u.,., tii.H.
Voung
ParakMte,
SM.OI.

-En, tallotd,
cLil, ·-llkrng Cltrfot$10, 114-

Wanled to do for tkNrty or dl•

·,

Serv1ces

Overdrive, Air, Sl1reo, 48,0oOml,

Excellent Condition $3,500 814:
3117-7113.

Evorydoy low prtcoo.
lloto Ruttwotltor/ Dobonnon, 5

cloonllli, loundry, Chllhirt, Call After 5 614·367·
coofdng. willing to run 0181.
orrond"o, nogotloblo, 614- 3 or 4br., Lane Sl, New Havtn,
Wanted To Buy: Junk Cart &amp; 882~~11-F.
$250/mo. pluo $250 dopooh. 614Truckl AI Top Prlct &amp; Ats·
m-31564.
torable Cars, &amp;14-388-9554.
F1nanc1al
4 ledruoms, 2 Bllhl, New C.r·
Wanl:ed To Buy: Junk Autos
pot, Booting I Flohlng, $400J11o.
With Or WhhoUII Motors. Cali
Dopooh I Rot•.,_ RoquiNd,
Larry uvoty. 614-388-9303.
21
No lntlde Pt11, 8M-446-2320.
8USI118111
Wa-nted -~o-b;J : .junk ~otOfs, $5
houH In Pt.
OpportunHy
a piece, 61ot.M3-5255.
call 614-992·5858.
!NOT1CEI
Wanted To Buy: Slandlng 11m· 01110 VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. Nlco 311r. ltouM, 112ml. from Pt.
ber 6 Pine, Good Prtcee, 614- recomrnanct. IMt JOU do bual- ~nt. $320/mo. ptuo .._n.
388·119011.
,_with poopfo
kMW1 ond 304-3006.
Tot' Prlcos Pold: All Old u.s. NOT to oond _ ,
tho Small 3br. home, bauTMnt,
Coinl, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins, molt uroll you .....,ln-oouod - l c hoot pump, 10X20 out
Gokl Colnt. M.T.S. Coin Shop, tlteoflorfng.
building. 210 3rd St. 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
L.ocol FIOnl Buol- For -Bolo, Hoven, $21101mo. plus dopoolt.
Wanted to buy: uNd mobile Boriouo lnqulrloo Only, 814-:ml- 304·7n-1171 leave m eg•.
homes. 614-446-0'175

448-3415

Z NT

Can you use
animal language?

1884 Dodat Omnl, AUI"'I Good,
$550, 61~48-8253.

1111 ea ..ro V~ Auto, PW, PS,
PB, a-, P - Holch, AC.
85,000 lltioo. Cloonl $0,1100. 114·

Eut
Puo

1 Milk eugar

2 Longed (lor)

TO SCHOOL!

11178 Dodgo Station Wagon,
S400 v814-:l45-S152 Aftor 8 P.M.

mother Bull Terrier, hither minJ.
ature Boxer, 171, t14-843-8188.

Hamsters,

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and Salvage,
also bu!~~ junk cars &amp;' trucks.
3.

Motor Homes

llborglooo 1-, ,.,000111., V-1,
Booutlfut, brfndto rrro1o puppy, . outo., $0500, 814-mMGl
5motr.
old,
hOutobrollort, 11114 Ford FIIO 8D DOD Millo

uHd W1111m Saddle,
betora Chriatmaa it possible.
Ask for Don or Btn, 304-6757765.

SHORTCUT

W..l

p. .

I WISH HE'D
FIND ANOTHER

Autos for Sale ·

1111 GMC dump truck, 5-28p.,

Hwky

Good

Campers &amp;

ot-o, ~:-'Ill., T-topo, $8800,
eM-m 1.

High black lealher snow boote,
w1terproat, lllzt 7, ~rftcl con·
dHion, $5, 814·11411-2522.

Decorated ltonewart, wall tel•
phonn, old lampt, old ther·
mometers, old clocks, 1nUque
furniture. Riverine Antiques.
Run Moore, own1r. 614482·
2521. Wt buy estaiiS.

won.

1 flmales, 2 1n1Je1, rudy tor
Chrtslmle,
$50
minimum

304-675-4440.

Wanted to Buy

springe Rd..
45769: EOE .

AKC Chlhuohuo pupploo, $200,

614-251-1318 Evenings. ·
For lilt: Nlnttndo lnd 11 t1p11

AnUquea and used turnhurt, no
item too large or too small, will
buy one piece or complete
household, also warded- old
bicyelta, call Osby Martin, 614·
992-7441.

11

Bugle, good
hunter, $100, 8M-112·3537,

Flrawood- 1neoMd, mostly
oak, 314 ton pickup, full load.

Huvy

773-5785.

304-m

t.ma~

Gretn wine bottle, solid atopper, n~Mcl tlowerw, 6 gla....,
brought from Vletl'\lm 1•3.
1100, 614·1141o/lt06.

Rick Pearson Aucllon Compt~ny,
full time auctionHr, complete
auction
Hf'Vi¢1.
UcenHd
166,0hia &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

9

new

nn .. Pl. also

71

Pets for Sale

3 m111 AKC Aeglller.d Otrman

tor $100, call614-&amp;43-5233.

Wanted· someone to bt'ush hog
a small 101 In Rac:lne, 614·9492940 after 5:30pm. 1

18

Sand After Required)
$1,495; Ran Ev1ns Entefl)f"IMS,

L.ocol dollvory only, 140, 814·
1185-3540.
1973 For- Pork, 12x85 2 Bod·l-------------room, W/B, Total Eloctrk:,
Fl-ood; All Hontwoado Spill
Household
Dollvorod 140 Plck·Up L.ood.
Rongo, Porehu, Undorpl"'l~"JI 51

COL Qualified 1 Ynr Varlflablt
Ttnta11vt Operalor. Good Driving
Record
1..S00-362-

Yard Sale

Prlcodl 614-388-9Q11 Anytime.

CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
t,000 Golton, 1325; N- JET sot

32 Mobile Homes

DRIVER'S laTA

7

31 Homes lor Sale

79

whh tumor

THAT
JUGHAID SMIF !!

DOWN

31 LMge opoon
33 Diary at

teu

JiiERE COMES

- -to

Pllolnfl

craat

tJtiDZ

BARNEY

58NMI
57 Bytltt-

27
lltlelltor
28 Two root
2t Ruggld
mountain

IIOUTII
tAit114

New ga links, orw ton truck
whttll, radiators, lloof m1t1,

uu,.,otiOI

24~blnea

ttl2

Auto Parts .&amp;
Accessories

54 Colortlll

12 .....)
23 Olllclwor11.,

tQU

~.!:==::::::::::::::;:====C&gt;=IIOI=or~~~-~ IIC.
0 &amp; AarAut
o, Ripley, WV.304·
372-3933
1-800-2'13-9329.

n, mille, 1100. 614848-3050, IHYI .,........

A Ooublt Trailer Lot In Chnhlre
For Rtnl, Call After S, 614·387•
1 Btdroom
For Salt,·Nftr
Carpet
6 Tr1ller
Furnlahtd,
Chllply :01.:.:81.:.:·- - - - - - - - -

21 , _ _

.JtJ171

Saulhwoll·

13 Actor-

20 llotela

tQ7

•

52

'11=-Ed-

EAST

-,.,...

151 c d ..

18 ......

Vul!terable; East·West
Dealer: North

Clllar 10 box, 14 memory, brand
n.w, $3Q.a&amp;, 614-t02-61M.

naw,

15~1-

teO. .IIIId

+AQ

eli:

41 Circuit
41 Pulllnt Itt

Girdn«

tu

7&amp;42.

$tOO, IM-912-a581.
Cobra biN ltatlon, 23 channel

14Actr--

NOIITB
tJ IDI2
.AID4SZ

tor Sale
1986 Pontoon, 24", S5HP. $3650,

•
••

IIICioiUre

13 Trick

75 · Boats &amp; Motors • ; :
0

. ...,..,

45=..

at- (¥81.)

'Vans • 4 WD's • ·
tVN Jeep CJ7 Hord Top With
Wonclr $2,800 614-318-1270. 11M Ford Bronco II XLT $6,50Q,
614-441-0731.

74

44 ery.taiiM

12 VIII peclod

73

to 8;00 p.m. 814oll2o2528.
Will Buy Ono Mom Or Eototoo.
Dove'o Antla,_ 3311
AlllttUO, GolllpotiO, 114441-1771,_ ~ .S.L, I :!!C).5,
Frldoyt;..,..,

~=r
lngndltnt

STall......
holt Donaltul
• Plot of 1011

ALDER

53

Apaitment
for Rent

31 C11111=.

~

PHILLIP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Read·the

.CLRSSIFIED RDS

'12 Dodge eo..aor 37,000 mlloo
$10,1100 114-fll.2721.
1158 Nooh lllolropolhon 2 doar
hlrdtop, runt FO&lt;f, no twt,
...., ....-bto. 81415, 814-2474292.
tVN Con/olr llonu 2 doar
lterdtop _.. ·- . runo
goad, vory -orolrtil· oloo •
convottlbto porto cor; Uri bcrlh,
814-247-4292.

Have A
Very
Happy
and
Safe
Holiday
Season!

ASTRO·ORAPH

which signs are romantically perfect tor
you. Mail $2 and a long, self-addressed.
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, rJo this

newspaper. P.O. Box 4465 , New York.
N.Y. 10163.
AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19. Diplomacy

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Two tnends
you like equalty are both more fond of you
than they are of one another. It might be

up to you to keep the peace between them
IOdey .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Be extremely cooand tact are essential requirements today mzant of what you say to others today or
when dealing with family members and in· else you might inadvertently hurt some·
laws. If you fail to use common courtesy. one's feelings. If you do. it could be a linyou could be sorry.
gering wound.
PISCES (Fib. 20·Merch 20. You might VIRGO (Aug. 23-llepl. 22) unnecessary

have a tendency today to overanalyze
things and invite indecisiveness . Thus
making what you have to do tougher than
it actually is.

obstacles could clutter your path loday
owing to negative thinking on your part.
Have at least as much faith in yourseH as

others heve In you.
ARIES (MilCh 21·Aprll 1g) Monitor your LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Commitments

expenses very carefully tcKtay or else you
may spend much more than you should .
kOurrlov Dec. 25, 1813
Fortunately. the tun things in whlcl! you'll
abilities to add to your resources enjoy participating will be the least expenrise to new heights In lhe year sive.
a~ea ·o . Don't wasta what you acquire TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20) When you
1rvoucm emavagance. because you could admit the other person has valid points to
make today, you'll be able 10 derive pol~
i~~:,:~:~~)~e;~•er,'lhlng you gain.
c
(Dtc . 22·Jan. 18) Today live results from the relationship. Keep an
might be Involved whh some person&amp; open mind.
w6o would not be companions of your GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Obllgatlone
chOice. Don't make waves. Instead see if and responsibilities could be a brt heavier
yqU can make something pleasant out of !han usual today . Use your amarts and
undesirable circumstances. Know where to team up with somebody who haa the same
lo~k tor romance and you'll find it. The problems with which to contend. It'll make
Aslf6·Graph Matchmaker lnstanlly reveals things easier lor you .

·,

you've made with business associates

should be kept today even If you are
Inconvenienced . Uelng the holidays aa an
excuse won't hold up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Guard
against lncllnatione today to preludge ott&gt;
ers unlavorably. Someone you write off
might surpriae you when you learn of
hit/her reatlntenlionl.
SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) There
could be so many things to do today you
might feel everything should be done at 1
once. Keep your head and work from an
organized agenda where things are done ·
in an ortfarty fashion.

Pups I

.,

(CCI

e...ing ,, 111e llnpll&gt;V

I

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 24,

19~

----------------------------------------------------~--.
•

DEC. 27" THRU 31

5
'

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BEFORE YOU BUY CHECK OUR DEAL 1-800-964-3673

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Rear Spoiler
AM/FM Cass.
Power Steering

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Air Cond.
Alum. Wheels
AM/FM Cass.
Rear Lug. Rack
Rear Defrost
SHARPI

1993 TAURUS LX

1993 CROWN VICTORIA LX

""..

'

"BAD TO THE BONE"

Floor Console, Gauges, Special Paint,
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I

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1993 MERCURY SABLE

1993 TOPAZ GS

1993 TAURUS GL

1993 T·BIRD LX

LOADED

AUTO., AC, LOADED

ALL OPTIONS

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1990 nso XLT
AUTO., LOW MILES
SUPER CLEAN!

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1987 S·10 4x2

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1989 TAURUS GL

1988 BUICK LESABRE

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1986 nso 4x2

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1993 TEMPO GL . 1982 LINCOLN CONT.

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V-8, VETIE WHEELS
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LIMITED, LOADED!

1989 FISO 4x4

1986 NISSAN SUPERCAB

1992 F150 SPORT

1987 ISUZU P.U.

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•

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56,000 ~CTUAL MILES
GLADIATOR CONVERSION

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1982 GRANADA

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1988 SUBARU XJ6

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..

.
..

------------------------------------------------------ ·
..

::, .

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