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'l

Ohio Lottery

Bengals,
Browns cop
NFL wins

Pick 3:

781
Pick 4:
4136
Super Lotto:
9-15- 21 -22-35-43
Kicker:

PageS

557361

Low tonight in 20s. Snow.
Tuesday, high In 20s. Cha nce or
snow 70 percent.

I

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'Vol. 44, NO. 171
:Copyrigh11993

2 Sec:tions, 16 PagM 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. N.wspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 27, 1993

•

Voinovich may put campaign finance reform on ballot
•'
•
•

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich may try
~ place a campaign fmance reform plan before vot·
·'ers next year if legislators fail to acL He has talked
.with a leader of 1992's term limits drive about help' ing.
· Voinovich did not identify the organizations he
· was working with about the possible constitutional
·:amendlitent to control campaign costs.
-~· But John Jazwa of Westlake, a leader in the
·Ohioans for Term Limits drive that backed a consti,(utional an~endment limiting terms of legislators and
of Congress, said there have been prelimi,'fnembers
.

committee tluit so far has been unable to reach common ground.
There are no contribution or expenditure limits at
present The panel resumes deliberations Jan. 6.
Voinovich is heading into a campaign next year
for election to a second four-year term.
"I'd like to be the last governor to go through a
campaign in this wild and wooly west environment
of fmance lhat we have here in the state of Ohio," he
said.
On olher matters, Voinovich said he:
- Will ask legislators next year to consider earmarking a percentage of the state budget for primary
and secondary education. He said legislators also

nlll}: talks with Voinovich.
·
'We haven't formulated anylhing. We're very
interested. People are very interested in this," Jazwa
said.
Voinovich said in a year-end interview lhat negotiations were under way with a number of groups
interested in campaign reform about an appropriale
proposal lhat likely would be different than one he
has offered.
"I am willing to compromise with those organizations to put the issue on the ballot in the event that
the Legislature refuses to take this one on," he said.
Separale plans involving limits on contributions or
spending are pending in a House-Senate conference

should examine the concept of revenue pooling in
which some future growth from commercial and utility propeny taxes are combined for redistribution
among school districts.
- Has not decided how much extra money may
be sought to expand lhe state prison system, now the
nation's most overcrowded.
- Will outline a jobs-creation package in his Jan.
5 State of lhe Stale speech that will include unspecified incentives for business to locate and expand in
the stale.
His grealest frustration after lhnle years in office?
" It takes a lot longer to do things titan I'd like."

_a• ig Wheel seeks to halt operations
-~ Approximately 41 full- and part·

lime employees of the Fishers Big
Wheel Store in Pomeroy may be
looking for new employment next

..:ear.

· Fishers Big Wheel Inc., New
astle, Pa, filed a motion with the
. ankruptcy coun in Delaware to
quidate its inventory and discon[inue retail operati0ns. A hearing
~r the motion has been scheduled
· twlan. 5.
· ~ • All stores will be closed if lhe
lh:Otion is approved, a company
~keswoman said this morning.

t

"Any speculation on when the
stores will close would just be a
guess on my part," she added.
On July 8, the company filed for
protection under Chapter 11 of the
federal bankruptcy laws wilh the
United States Bankruptcy Court for
the District of Delaware.
Based on lhe difficult business
environment and the position of its
creditors' committee, Fishers
decided to seek coun approval to
permit and immediately commence
the orderly liquidation of its assets,

thereby generating revenues suffi.
cient to pay all Chapter 11 expenses and maximize recoveries for all
creditors, a press release stated.
The ·company plans to conduct a
series of sales events to achieve
this end, the release continued.
The company expects to honor
it post-filing obligations to suppliers of goods and services, according to the press release.
The company operates 54 stores
within a seven state region and
employs approximately 2,300.

~

FUTURE UNCERTAIN -The future of the
Pomeroy Fishers Big Wheel Store remains
unclear roUowing an announcment by the company that It bas filed a motion to liquidate its

inventory and discontinue retail operations. A
company SP.okeswoman said all the company's
54 stores will close if the motion is granted.

.

Temperatures tumble around nation
B)'.LISA~~ .,. .•.•

WHITE CHRISTMAS • A father and his
walk their sled back up a biU at Cleveland's
~dlge,wat1er Park today. The first substantial
·lltor'm or the winter blasted Ohio and the northCbris1tDUIS Day, dumping as much as two

feet or snow In some areas. In the Trl-County
Area, up to two Inches or the white stuff was
reported, making It the second year In a row
southern Ohioans enjoyed a white Christmas.
(AP)

res slash prices as
~hoppers look for bargains
; NEW YORK (AP) - Shoppers
*re up early lhe day after Christntas to hunt ror bargains as stores
C\lt prices to try to prolong a profitable holiday season.
~ Many stores opened hours early
S)mday - and -customers were
~ting. Cars lined up outside lhe
J¥1cing lot at the Glendale Galleria
ntar Los Angeles at 7:30 am., half
a0 hour
before the stores opened.
4
:'1t was a feeding frenzy. It was
like someone had won the $90 miltlon lottery. It was actually scary,"
.o\11drca Ell!\ucr said as she shopped
aC Dillard s store in Mesa, Ariz.
· Shoppers came out in the East
~[pite frigid weather.
doesn't affect me that it was
a;S1~ndlily and lhe cold hasn't bothme - although I did buy a
of gloves to wear out to the
•' said Pamela Senese of
\Jelleslc:y, Mass., who alsO bought
coats at a downtown Boston

a

people who pref~rr~d. to
in lhe warmth of thetr bvmg
r()Qms, Home Shopping Network
QVC were running their own
lhe appliance department of a
in Fayetteville, Ark., cussnappcd up washers, dryers
at sale prices. And
deparqlaent store in
Ariz., some shop~rs
gifts for higher-pnced
Brand said.
coming in foe aale
~chandi!te, come in now because

'

AsSoc:~ Press Writer
Arctic weather gripped much of
the country today, malting afterChristmas travel and shopping
excursions an ordeal. Shelters were
fiUed to capacity as homeless people sought relief from frigid conditions.
In Ohio's Geauga County, commissioners declared a snow emer·
gency for Sunday and today as people struggled to dig out from under
more than 30 inches that fell lhere
over the weekend. All county
offices were closed and residents
were urged .to stay off lhe roads.
In Syracuse, N.Y., the winds
. were so fierce on Sunday that a
plane preparing for take-off slid ofT
lhe runway at Hancock International Airpon, police said. There were
no injuries or damage to the plane.
Police also reported about 20
traffic accidents in Lewis County,
N.Y., as snow and winds gusting to
40 miles per hour made for treacherous driving.
A section of Interstate 271, the
beltway around Cleveland, was
closed part of Sunday by snow
drifts and ice. Up to 15 inches of
snow fell in 24 hours in the eastern

---Local

su~udls o{ ~~vF~

. . . . . •.
Sault Ste. Ma(;e, Mich., chilled
to 31 below zero Sunday, a record
for the monlh, the National Weather Service said.
By early this morning, the reading had risen to 12 degrees below
zero.
"We were way overdue for
lhis," Sault Ste. Marie police dispatcher Bill Payment said of Sunday's record low. "It's still about
20 below (at I p.m.) and people are
out running around without hats on.
We're used to lhis."
Detroit Metro Airport was the
state's "hot spot" Sunday with a
high of 12.
City shelters reported an
increase in people seeking a warm
bed.
''You get a lot of people coming
in in this kind of weather," John
Evcrette, director of security at the
Salvation Army' s Harbor Light
Center in Detroit, said.
Everette said on a typical winter
night the center houses 40 to 50

hQJ11~~$.S..Q®t!le.

SatUiday. night

liJp center had 85 people.

In Aleron, Ohio, lhe Haven of
Rest Ministries men 's shelter wa5
filled to capacity with 52 homeless
people and 18 m&gt;idents, said supervisor Gary Meeks. An additional
40 people were referred to a second
shelter.
Sunday's low temperature for
lhe Lower 48 staleS was 50 below
zero at the tiny Iron Range town of
Tower in nonheastem Minnesota,
the weather service said. And the
Lake Superior shore town of Grand
Marais had a wind chill of 68
below.
" We're a tough breed up here in
Tower," said Judy Perala, who
works at a convenience store in the
Minnesota town.
For many people trying to get
home after Christmas, the cold
weather meant delays. The Minnesota State Patrol and the Minnesota AAA reported hundreds of
stalled cars.

briefs~__,

Middleport man cited in wreck

A Middleport man spun his car complelely around, hitting the
this stuff is selling like crazy," she
left rear corner of a parked car with the left rear comer of his 1985
said.
Nissan truck at 4:13 p.m. Sunday, according to Middleport Police
People stormed inl(l stores look·
records.
ing for huge markdowns on wrapJohn M. Mattea was not injured in the accident and was cited for
ping paper, holiday giftware and
failure to maintain control, according to police repons.
winter clothes. Newspapers were
Larry J. Pettit, of Middlepon, had light damage to his 1982
full of sale ads, even for pricey
Chrysler while it was parked near the intersection of Park and
stores like Cartier and Burberrys.
Broadway streets. Mattea's turck was not damaged, according to
"We've been hit in our clearreports.
ance sales on Christmas decorations," said Eric Luther, an
•
employee at the Kmart in Grand
Island, Neb. ''The artificial trees
The Leading Creek Conservancy District offices will close
. ....
are really selling, since we've got
Thursday and Friday for year-end inventory and in observance of
them at half-price."
lhe holidays. In case of emergencies, call 742-2597.
The post-Christmas sales
capped a generally good holiday
shopping season. Industry-wide
sales were up 5.5 percent from the
strong showing a year earlier.
according to the investment firm
Salomon Brolhers Inc. Individual
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An feel stress for days at a time
retailers had varied success
Ohio
State University clinical psy- because they are not following
depending on what they sold.
The holiday season is critical for chologist says holiday pressures their daily routines.
.
. "~everal days spent m COmJlBI!y
retailers because they hope to make could add enough stress to the
immune syslem to make someone wtth m-laws may ~rovoke a .certain
half their annual earnings :hen stress response, ' Ms. Ktecolt·
even though they would like to more likely to get sick.
Glaser said. " If that's the case,
spread it out inore evenly.
Not so, says her husband. also a they might see an immune response
"No matter what they do, it's
change.
make or bn:ak time,'' said retailing researcher at the university.
" For those people who are feelClinic~! psychologist Janice
analyst and consultant Walter
Kiecolt-Giaser based her lhoughts ing down or more stressed, and it
Loeb.
Last year's Christmas season about holidar stress on a study of doesn't get any betler, we expect
ORING" 1
B
r
, ·e kin,d of,physiolog. ical pro- • mE "B
L FE? • Harter. orlng, o Paaevllle, stokes
was strong. This year's was 400 medica students lhe couple the sam
she id.
the outside nre In his front yard with wood he coUects along the
respectable, although some retailers conducted from 1982 to 1992.
CCS:.~
mic~oiogy and highways. This 55-year-old mau who has never been married and
were disappointed. '1'¥ most suc- . The siUdents' immune functions ·
f
R
ld
has no pets uld he Is not lonely. Boring said he eajoya tinkering
cessful merchants were those sell· · were impaired when they were Jmmuno1ogy pro essor ona
with his trucks and likes his quiet ure not meddHn&amp;ID other peoing ilems for ~ home, including studying and ta= tests. She Giaser, said young, heallhy pc:o~e
pie's business. He Is building a shed for bls truck this winter. (Sentom ·
housewares, eleetronics, appliances believes that is a
should be able to snap back qwc Y tlnel Photo by G""""e Abate.)
to the holidays, w · peopre: from holiday pressures.
· -· •
and furnishings.

LCCD offices closed Dec. 30 and 31

Experts debate health
impact of holiday stress

=::

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Commentary
The D8ily Sentinel
Ill eo-t Stle~

Poaeror. o111o

WVOI&amp;D TO 1'ID IHIEWTS or TID DIQ8.11AS01f

•n•

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publilller
~HOEFLICH

General Mu.ger

MARGARET LEHEW

Coatnlller

Without much notice,
Clinton starts war on coal
No171Uln Kilpatrick

v...-.,

The year 1.993 - c:oa1 people livinc in Soutllem Ohio and Muon
Coaaly, Wat
wiD a tbree-year bailie to keep the Mel · Minea of
Sucllm Ollio CCIII-. 'I1Iil Yictory- the mult or uniry ~- lbc
COil •
ol -~ Obio, lbc United Mine Worlcas or America.
local t ·
Mea'*" and (from 1992 on) American Electric Power. AI
aD tiiiiN lbc noiitirl' leadeubip of Obio deserve c;edit for taking lhe right

JW-COIII~

Your raderllikely know the story I refer to; as local coal interests
pined lhe iDjljJtCI or A.EP.IO scrub lbc Gavin Power flant, during1991,
llld defeated I faction o{Jbe ~- Club, ~ 1992, whicb tried to
block U.S. Cw~~pnecn approval or a
at Gavin vital to the
ICI1Ibber plan.
· 1m the last phase of the baal~ was won as ·lhe
Meip '31 Mine ' waraed; over olljec:lioos from three federal agen·Ciea and aeW(Il ea~itooma~
'
~it was flooded
,
However, your laden ·
missed the fact (as did aD the national
-•l!ledla) lblt on Ocdler I , 1993, l'leaide!lt W'illiam J. Clinu!n and
Vice P: a'dn Albert Oc. Jr. launched thdr rust diJm auact on lbc use
or American coal. Iii a White House IDDOIIncelilent of their Climate

'*'

CI.IF Aalan Plan.
Orie crilical

'

ollbc SO-point poposal that claims to be intended to
decrePring ~peenhouse effect" gas e!lliJiions to their 1990 levels, is
Adion Plan 24. It ea1ls for "The Administration (10) aggressively proIDOte lbe • •omer
of nantrll gas in utility coal and oil plaots and in
industrial facililielas111 innovative,low-Qlll NOX redQ!:Iion.strategy."
I atlm• ._ ~ WOIIld eliminate 30 to 40 of the coal bum at most
coal-fired power plants; le1s at industrial boiler facilities tllat don't
reip""d to weather elltremell as much as power plants do. AI the James
Gavin l'lanl.rbis would meao lhe loss of some 2.4 illil1ioo tons of'coal at a
plant that Neeived allliost six million IOrul during i 992.
The 50-PQint p:ogram presen~ by·GORI aod Clinton last October goes
dllectl~"piDII the word of the Mamas governor who claimed he wanted
America
bactCo.
10 work."
and lhe
Tennessee
formerto
Creek Goal
head Albert
Gore
Sr.) whosenator
pulled (son
in hisofaoti-

ase

P~ge

-.

2-TN Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ..
Monday, Dtcembtr 1:1, 1893 •

Inman's first battle will be··with Panetta
WASHINGTON - Bollby Ray
IniiWI fac:a a dawning array of
ll&lt;haaaiea ~ lbc next~ or
defense: North Korea, Saddam
Huasein, Somalian warlords,
Haitian military rulers and Leon
Paneaa.
As 111e direcJor or lbc Office or
Manaiement and Budget, Panetta
is playing the pan of villainous
budJet cutter. Critics say he"s
puumg deficit reduction ahead of
national defense. His alliea salute
him as a tnJe deficit-hawk. holding
the line on spc:nding. Durin4 an
interview wllh us last spnng,
Panetta bid a fcreboclinc tba1 this
family fend would empL It was
even a top!c or c:ooYerlllion when
tbeo·PieW!ent-ela:t CliDIOII interviewed 1Im fer lbc job:
"I told the president that in
some wa~ to do this iob right I've
JOt to be )'OIIr s.o.b. f've got to be
able to say no and you may not

then lnmaa will iDberit I positioll Aspin was fiied, lbc White House
thai may force bim m pict I 'fi&amp;bl jiggered IDIDC numbers - revising
witb Panetta. "He' s got to regain some inf1alion fincaJts - and disthe support of the military, wbieb ~ered that a $50 billion defeiiiC
sbortfai1 shrunt-aimoll overnigllt to

~

. ·,
. I

get. Reaardless of !he impact of. ;'
further cull on readiness or capa- .
bilities, the administration will :
likely remain committed to fully · "
funding Its domeatic program."
.;
CominJ into office. Panetta
knew he bad to play bad BUY· but . .
not without cover: "They (agen- . ;
cies) don't wtint to be told they ;
can't spend it. Looic. d!e ~dent :;
is my cover. On Capatol Hill to •
some extent it's the leadership.,. ,'
that gives you some cover. Here ~ .'
the president is my .only ·cover. I; ,

approximalel $31 billion.
InDian w:h be asked to explain
lhe adminisll'ltion's arithmetic at
his Senate confirmation hearings
neuiDODih. Many of hiJ IIUJIPOI'Ier8
believe that fighting for more
.......
. .
- IIIOIIey would be a mcnle-builder
was not """ case witbJ4 Aspin." wilbia lbc mili
whale relations
said one close friend of Inman's. wirb lhe CW!I~·iaH:hief 11e at
"He will have to be ao ~vocate of a low ebb. Even if Inman .escues
~
a strong national defense, and not SS billioo of fundins it would be a ::~f.;":ic~R~~
CLEAN
GOVERNMENT
,;
be perceived as someone who is great man1 victory.' Don't expect
Interior
Department
employee
1o1m
·
"
just going along with Leon ~- Paoeaa. on the ClCber band. to blink
C.
Katbmaon
saved
taxpayers
from
,
,
ta. _. He's a ~lliaot mao. I hope be first in an~brinkmansbip.
undenlands II.''
Even the
• know beaer. getting taken til the cl~- Next, :
. .;
The baule has been
by A memo j&amp;qwed by a staffer for a time he'D know better.
Two years ago, the Interior ·
Les • . In the days
· g up Republic8n member of the Senate
to bas ouster from the Pentagon, Armed Services Committee pre- Department uansferred Kathmaon . ,
Aspin was engaging in heated diets:
1ion1 Ne'fl Mexico JO West Virginia.".;
and
)laid him ao allowance to live ;:
de~s. with Panetta !JVer nearly
"With Aspin's resignation, I
'IIIDlto Sly DO.''
billion he wanted lidded to the don't think we can expect to see ~ !=J08fY qua:teil. Since~- , ,'
u Ptmetta is jut doing his job, $SO
defense budget. Two days after aoy additions to the defense bud· mann was without a washmg ...
machil\e, Interior reimbursed his ·~
costly dry cleanlnl bills. Kalhmann · ·•
C!lltfJ , _ , . _ 9wocl--raer.,. ••E:rl1or
saw taxpayer dollars going down ,
lfUIJiE
lhe drain. When his wife eventually .;
. iDed him ..........
... _ • ....-.~
PIJTITIK
JO
....,. to 'w all the . ..
clothes at a local laundromat. The :~
IT HI6A
REV~'
couple bought laundry supplies in ·'
'
REVER$E?
bulk at a wholesate·ctub: $24~85 .
worth of detergeJJt,' fabric softener ·~
aod a special degre,aser since Katb·:~
maon does field work for nor s '
surface mining division.
Wheia 1\e submitted a receipt for . ..
the suds, his superiors were in a ·~.\
latber. They said it was ao unreasonable amount or supplies to buy : 2
- eVen though it was a piuance of '•I
what Kathmaon was paying at the
.
dry cleaners - and refused .to · i:,
reimburse him. Kathman becime ·:.
the focus of. a two-year probe by . ·~
government auditors before being ,;
certified cleao.
•,"
"Who knows bow maoy thou- .;\
sands. of dol.lan it COSt the gover)l· : 'l
ment to tonk at it,:• Kathn&lt;ai\D told ·,.•
us. "They finally decided it would '~.
. be cost-efficient for ·the govern- · ,;,
ment if ~le did their own laun- • :~
dry instead of dry-cleaoing every- .•,
.
thmg ..
.(\
Jack Anderson and Michaei.•S
· ...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J Blostein are writers for United ··~~
Feature Syndlcale, Inc.

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein

p:esi·:

l'::ct

.

The (expl.etive)' h· it~. the fan, :again

coal homs during camjllign stopS in West Virginia and olher coal states.
Its "execudvo ~· is filled with .lhe extremist statements found
in GORI'I 1992 book, Earth in the Balanee, in which he. claims the world
wiD beat up Ill a de8dly degree if carbon dioxide from coal buming and
Giber "pee•t~ pa" il DOt-cut Nfk j mmcdi•tely. ('lbJ ''ft!!bogM"
Caa ~WI GM::-·.-lia
theory is that'an holds beat from sunlight striking the eNttr ani! keeps it feeding frenzy. that 'will harm
Did
IS
from tellocdng beet into space, as lhe stass in a g.eenhouse does at near America at a time of hope?
. · whether the late Vince Poster's lyillg now? Not about Gennifer they belonf.
.·
.. . "
surface levels.)
·
·,
· ,
As I write thil the new scandal diaries and ,Jegah'ecqrds disap- ·Flowers; tba~'s. almost irr
.
•
elevaoL
\Ve
~Just
beiinnbi.CUSeries.~(
·~
President Clinton and Go.e introduce their program, for example, with is on the front
of tbe Wash.
.
.
"'!!et
all,
·
Amencan
.
~
elected
.
~
nltiona1
de68tes
1
1
crime,
~
the Slatetnenl that, '"llie buildup of greenhouse gases threatens to change ington Post. lhe
Angeles Times
1IT.-..ue
ham
.after.
the
famous
1
·60
Min,
welflll'!l.
hei1tb
care.
deficits,
·trade
~
~
the globll climate system, raise sea levels and inundate coastal areas, aod the Washington Times. It is
.
rruu•
.
utes"
foter.
v
iew
In
'which
he
-"d
much
more:
For
1bc
recOrd.
I
::
inOict·irrevedib1e damalge to ecoiystems, aod de-stabilize agricultural ~uriecl by lhe ~ew Yor1c Ttmes aod
aciiOOwledged prior sex&amp;it misbe· tend to disagree mo.e than agree'···•
•'
production."
.
·
ignored by lhe Wall Street Journal. peared suspicioUsly.
havior. But the storY tltCn. was !bat with what Clinton bas done so rad
This 10ft of science-faction promotion of the 100-year-{)ld·aod.more On television OIN and ABC do it
It
won't
go
away
quiciCly.
Tate'
w.as patched· up, bci!W~n the but I thinlc he might well now be
ugreen~~ouse" theory leelils to be a continuation not only of lhe theme of
up big. NBC reports it. CBS just the "Sexpte 1' stoey. There are all.
Chntons.
Hovn:ver, ~ordina 1,0 headed in the right direction on . •
GOre's book, but also of the 1991-1993 ,IJIO-greenbouse campaign by a ignores IL It is big oil Rush Lim:
partS
that
wiD
be
foUowed
.up
.•
For
lhe
lOlleD
lroOJ*S, Clil)ton 's phi- . maoy issues.
.1
~
11r1111C J10UP of bedfellows which includes 1be Sierra Club, lhe Ameri- baugh. The New York tabloids example:
·
landering
C!Jntinued
aftCt
he
ltad
·:..
clll Gaa Auoc:iation, the pro-nuclear power U.S. Council for Energy Jeport "Bill's New Sexgate" and
Are the squealin.g Arkan,sas ~ ele~ presidenL Aml!ricans
There is danger in these'~
Awueneu. the National 'Wildlife Federation and General Electric Com- · "Bill's Cupid Troopeaa"
.
State
Troopers
·who
claim
they
didnotvOtefortbaL
'''
•
farestnnnmomentsforthepublicto
.
pany (a mllior nuclear maoufacturer).
•
The WashinJ!On Post quotes a facilitated Clinton •s extra-marital
And:·If the troopcn '• right, is jettison ~Hey for prurience. Pur:
I beeline very awuc of lhe gas industry interest in killing off coal White House aide as saying "Not
affairs
telling
the
troth?·
If
so,
did
·
CHnto~
compulsive, or self· test now ..as w~ether we cao' walk:-)
when. during 1992, I aueived a phone call and what I considered a direct this (eXpletive) all over. again."
the
squealers
break
state
laws
in
desiiucuve
or what?)Under lhe and chew gum at the same dme.
DIIIOIIII dueat to my finance~ and person, just before and at the CortJS of
It now seems likely that this doing what they did? If it's true, weU-Imown·- post-Gary
Hart
.n potiti.Face it: Americans wiD be fasci· '·;
&amp;pn.s bearing on the Gavin scrullber docl: proposal, held in March of (explelive) will not only get on tO
did
tben·Gov.
Clinton
act
iDe
gaily
cal
rules,
p~ing
around•
wltifc
run-·
nated
by every new farestorm tidbit · ~
that year. My sin bad been IP mendon lhe AGA pro-greenhouse campaign aU the front pages, but break out
In a "letter" to another Ohio newspaper aod in my presentation at the into a big-time media firestorm, by using the troopers as he used Ding for PJeS~deht wiD sibk a candi· that dribbles ouL But let's aiso J;IBY
them? Will sucb poJential (and dacy. Was Clinton willing to risk attention to what 'Clinton is trymg }
COrDI hearina in OaDia County.
that is, a set of linbd stories, scan- probably minor) legal traosgres- bis presidene'y for sexual thrills? . to do subslaotivell;..cyWben Scaridats ·'
• What .iJ clever .al)out all Ibis is that Gore aod Clinton have developed dal-driven, that endlessly domi·
1!1 smirk at. ~
this p:opoeed !~~ajar ahift in America's energy mix in such a way that it naiCI the news, ending up - who sions be followed up in the What does tbat say about his judg- hit there is a ten
Arkansas legal system? (A U.S. ment7
policy initiatives, and~rt tbem ..,
WiD eae1p0 Conplllional hearings. Thus, the Science aod Envlroru\lental , ,kllows wbere?
senator
i~
T~xas
is
un~er
indict.
Alas,,
there
100
many
.questions
as
if lhey ware desi
10 divert:·~
Polley Project, fer example, will never ~et to sbow that "...geGiogical eviIt's scandal time. The big one men£ regardmg an inctdent that m the BIT to go away qwckly, aod attention from the treStorm. This ·"
dence poinl(s) to a DROP rather than a nse in sea level." .
(for the-moment) cancerns lhe'alle.. time let's try real hard to concen-'"~
However, while lhe Gore-Clinton program has been P.R.ed as "volun- gations about President Clinton •s started out by allegedly ·misusinll we cao't even blame lhC press.
state
employeea.)
.
It
y.ill
be
a
major
test
for
the
trate on two things al once. · . - ,:
fii'J," a aection of Action Plan 24 so~ It will not be. This pan indi· sexual behavior• .eported in the
Two
or
lhe
troopers
claim
Clio,
American
people.
·'
.
·
· ·~
cates Title I of the existing Cleao Aar Act will be Uled by lhe Clinton· American Spectator itory "His
ton
promiaed
a
federal
.iOb
to.
bush
There
is
soitlething
•imJ!C?rlaot
to
Ben
Watteilbera,
a
senior
tel.~
Oc. Bnvlronmental Proloction Aaency to enforce Action Plan 2A against Cheatin' Heart," by David Brock.
up
the
BldcyWill
there
be
a
federal
say
about
!he
Clintori
presadency
110
tow
altb
A
..v.
E
·
•-~plants in nii:Oien ollic;le and QZODC non-attainment areas.
But lhe New Yorlc Times wanu to investigation? (Sen: Packw,ood is far. Whether y' u .,_ wr' th what
me. "'""1°
nterprlk
u ....-lnatitale, els aulhor
Of "The
First :""
These Include
and Wood County in West Virginia, according know whether the president and
to a 1991 calculation.by the U.S. Environmental Protecdon Agency, now Mrs. Clinton did somethi~g very accused !If !Omething different' on Clinton has been proposing or dis· Ualvenal Nation," published by ;
the job front. but· not wholly dis-- agree, he deserves. a salute for The FJ:ee Prell.
·
·1
loaded with "true believers" in the greenhouse theory. They also include
the Cleve~ Dayt011, Toledo and Cincinnati ucas in Ohio.
Well, the Je8der lilaf ask, what is wrong with cleaner air, unless you
care about the coel resaons? WeD, besides the fact lbat lhe science does
not 111ppor1 Oc.'s extreme beliefs about coal buniing, which is why be
youa.e like mOSt peopt~ you
"S' 1 .. Mar
"d "I d.0
lb. ..a
I "gh d ell
and Clliiton dcJI't waot public bearings on their plan, it will cost everyone willIftate
life as it
j in 1994
amp e, ·
ly ~ •
JIC?P e. ma 1 0 w to
But there Ia such 1 ihing as real· ~.
In that
comes , need
m~ best to pack the wmner. But adopt Many s pliiloloplly.
istic hope. 11 would be reatiitic·to'i
-·~
.
Action Plan 24 admjts thC huge amounll of IIIIUI'al gas needed to lllb- philnr.nhy of tif[011 won I
a w, en I pay my two bucq, at the . Do your best~ expect nothing hope that, whlle ~· may DOl"' ~
llilllte for coal in just the summer will raise the price of all narural gas.
:-utr.
if.
·
ha
hao
wmdow, I consider the""""'"' """a· m Jelllnl. But don I1lear up lhe tick· "1
. tonight, one · )l" wiD
•
B
you waot to ve a
d
et
you
hold
on
life
s
race.
That
·
·
·
•
1be coat just to elcctric utilities is slated to be S460 million by 2000
1
don't beconie cynical IJ'be.e m~s, b I can~ realthinl&amp;tip to hope that '
"reflecting the price p.emiulil of .natural gas relative to coal and th~ in. shapin$whar the New Year
br!ngs,
havmg
a
philosophy
of
life
eorge
R.
p
be surprises in store. •
y owe!::'tim gs may be for Y!lll
impact of higher gas use on gas prices."
·
WID
help.
On
Chris
Clild
I
.
DOW,
, es In on the way. · '
So while those of us who use gl$ in our homes or businesses get hit
H~re are three philo110phies to -just'as 1 would if 1 bad s,pent il ago w! this
got a year ~is not justa way ofldclding; ~
hard by the beUcl the vice president has in the "g.eenholl'IC" myth, we get
hiJher electric bills from aoolher 110urce.
conTHI!sader:RAILBIRD'S PHILOSO on a box of cigars or for gewng my
•'To believe in Ood is to ltnow
To a .large Cit tent, we sha,.:.. the •
washed.
I
never
expect
to
see
It
•"- will be - -.....~··
·
..
...........
'""
11!at II because, IID!Dentioned In Action Plan 24, it wiD cost billions (I PHY - I have ltnown niany horse- ·car
again."
u""'"
, wuuuonw s~ses.
~...., oullinea our life wiD l8ke ..:.... ,
estimate around SSOO miUion 11 James Gavin alone) to Jetrofit coal-fared
players, partipularly during my
Then be added quickly: "Of NancyN!t~~ya SyourigPH~ r~ afhanott the clay~'!r.r!'&amp;Y ~altsize !Jy· .,,.
~er plants to bum 100 percent narural g_as durina the summer.
sportswriung days.
course, I never tear up my ticket whose nhUosophrwas "Eltpect the ·w
cons........ Y vasu
for . &gt;
0
sta!tu~~=t~n/.e~~ Marty ~!~~-~just might surprise me worst.:;·She. Sll!d it shielaed her ur:o:SMAN
VINCENT, ,.;
He never· ~teemed de,:...,..:. h
Th
I
from disappoanJmenL
PEALE'S PHILOSOPHY - Y·
a horse he bad bet cin I~ en
c reason manh peop e are
For example, she would teD her· "Expect the best and Ibis will tend • :.1
I asked him what system he unhappy is that they eel life hasn't self ever:y Saturday night, like a magllet, to draw the best lei
d b
h h
.I
• been.(air to them- that it hasn't "Nobody waD call me for a date.. you..
• ,;
Dear Editor,
'tioned ao1mal rights advocates silo- ~f:,s to eat t e orse Payer s repaid them for the goodtll!ly have If nobody did, she was not disaPPeale's philoso hy of positive
Due ., the m:em lambasting an ply lack knowledge concerning the
·
done.
pointed like somebody who sat by , tbinldng seems 10 ~ve wortced for·"'
uca trapper has received, I feel a ways of wild aoimals. Rare is the
th~ phone al~ evening waiting in somepeople.butnotforolben.
need to take pen in paw to write a wild creature .that pasaes from this
II
vam for it to nng.
The people who are 111cceasful
few U..ln defenae of JC!'m Helzer life in tranquility in its old age.
Many people have Nancy's phi- with it realize, no doubt that .
IIICI nppenancl hllillalm pnetal. Naturo'~ way is. a violent death ·in
By The Aasoclated Preas ·
losophy. They set their hopes aod expecting the beat is somethi~g like . ·
Mr.· Hetzer hil· IPQIIt COIIIitlesa lhe jaws of a pre4ator or an qoniz.
~oday II Monday, Dec. 2V,the 361st day of 19!13. There are four days
their goals so low that they never expecting a baby.
,
·•
houri In edncidna Y,OUDJ, pcilaltlil i lng death by starvation and/Or dis- left m the year.
·
.
~ve
to
.risk
the chance they will be
·The
expectant
mother
doe
so
•
t!
:
woodtmen to bcicom, conaclen- ·Qaae.
'
,
Today'a Hla!illiht in Hisla'y:
·
dillllpJ!Omt.ed.
.
have a baby simply by etpecting it •
tlo.u1, oahlcal trappera. He has
Bv.etblcal: hun~g liiCIIrllpping
On~- 21,''!831, nalllralisi Chadcs Ditrwln set out on a voyage to die
.Tiiis really i~n't a ~ausfal:tory She does something about having a ;
allelldld 111111/.:""ty laiil • well lhe ,Gilllllfe ~ will remain Paoific abOird the HMS Beagle. Darwin's diiCOVeries during the voyage P!'ilosophy of hfe. lb~ is a big baby· and becomes ao expectaot ~
a the Ohio
Pllr enllatuenlbJ • bealtby and ~thin ptoper controlt. helped form the bUis of his theories on evolution.
difference between happmess aod mother.
the paiJI4o l1lout the role'cirllippCIU Sadly, Jhos~ who clamor for
On this dat.O:
merely keeping disappointment · Exper.dng the best in. life can be'
In ~llnl wUd fllr·bearing pop- humane treatment of wild animals
In 1822, scientist Louis Pasteur was born in Dole, Fraoce.
from
the do&lt;l-.
a good philosophy - if it com- •
uladona. Mr. Hetzer gives of h1s will never see the pictuJe clearll
In 1892, the cornerstone was laid for the Cathedral Church or St John
What
Nancy
.should
have
said
10
blnes doing what is required for .:
time in tbcleendeavorrfreely.
until lhey remove their "rose co. the Divine in New York City.
herself
w~,
"Maybe
nobody
will
!iving
a successful life with keep- :
My father was an avid .trilpper orecl glasses". The most inhlimane
In
~900,
militant
prohibitionist
Carry
Nation
carried
out
hc:r
farst
public
call
me
tomght,
but
somewhere
out
ang
an
expectant attitude toward ·•
IIICI btllllllr lllllil hil death at lhe ~e . act to wildlife would be to ..emove , smashang-of a bar, at the Carey Hotel in Wichita, Kan
·
there
is
the man of my dJeams your
own
suecess.
:
ol
He onjoyecl immensely has hunting aod trapping seasons.
ln.1927,
the
musical
play
"Show
Boat,"
with
m~sic
b~
Jerome
Kern
and
when
be~,
I'U
be
ready."
Georae
PlaJenz
Iu
syndlctt·
.
;
d:nl IOIIIIInc the hll1l in pursuit of
Gary Reed, and lib.etul ~y Oscar Hammerstein II, opened at the Ziegteld Theater in
Naocy was nght not to get her eel wrller for Newspaper Enler· 1!11 !I'*'Y·
These well-in ten·
ReedsviDe New York Cuy.
J
.
hopes up unrealistically.
prise Association. .
,, .
•.I

:::::~ ~e:.: t,~;r;:::;~ ~ lim::~;

e:

Ben

·

~lint~n ij,~? b~ ~~ :s:=~~~ '~

· ' .
nberg

t

Pu-

What's.your ·p hilosophy fo·r :.1~·94? ·

:- :~

cue

a··

Letters to the editor
Defends trapping and'hunting

farenz.

.=ae:

te

rae':

I

T.oday •. " h··story

as.

..

'

'

"

•

•

11

..

''

....

Monday, December 'Z7, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnel~age 3

--Area
deaths-University enrollments show decline
Mary Arnold
~::.~Bliss

Business College,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rising showed declines.
Surviving is a son and dau~tu­
Mary Irene Arnold 85
tuition
reduced course offerACE officials attributed the
Pomeroy, died Friday, D~c. 24: in-law, Vern L. and June Smath of ings ucaod
contributing
to
a
decline
in
enrollment
decline to reduced
1993, at O'Bleness Memorial Hos- Bath; t11ree granddaughters. Rachel college and university enrollment. course offerings,
tuition increases
StanSbury of Chagrin Falls, Rebecpital in Athens.
says
the
American
CQunci1
of
Eduand
enrollment
caps
~tsociated
Born Oct. 10, 1908, in Fountain ca Vao Wie of Binghampton, N.Y., cation, whose poll finds falling with stale budget constraints
and td
City, Tenn., daughter or the late and Deborah Lyons of Costa Rica; eruollment in a dozen states.
increased
~opporurilies
ICCOIII·
John. aod Rose Smilh Maples. She seven great-grandchildren.
" We feel pretty confident that paoying the economic aecovery.
Also surviving are sisters,
was a member of the Zion Churcli
this
does represent a national
Merkowitz said the shrinldng
of. Christ, a cook for the Har- Alberta Hawse of Doylestown and trend,''
pool
of 18- to 2A-year-olds "may
said
David
Mcrkowitz,
risonville School aod a homemak- Glenna Rummel of Asbury Parle,
spokesman
farbe
council.
be
a
factor
but not mueh of one" in
N.Y., and several nieces and
er.
nephews.
,
Mertowitz
said
the
16
states
the
declining
eruollments. He said
She is survived by four sons and
responding
to
lhe
survey
represent
40
percent
of
today's college stu·
She was preceded in death by
daughters-in-law, John and Ethel
more
than
40
percent
of
the
student
den'are
"non-traditional"
Edmonds of Huntington, W.Va. , hez husband.
body
at
two-year
and
four-year
otc~er.
attending
pan-lime
and
sup-,
Services will be held at I p.m.
Walter and Bonnie Edmonds of
Wednesday
at ·Goss Memorial publlc and private colleges and uni- poruns dependents.
Duncanville, Texas, Dan an.d Pat
Of the 16 states pt'OViding cornArnold and Bobby and Bonnie Church in Barberton with the Revs. venities. Twelve of those states
Lee
BeUeman
and
Estey
Palch
offiArnold; aU of Pomeroy; two daughters and sons-in-law, Anna and ciating. Burial will follow in
Charles Bennett of Cresthill, Ill., Greenlawn Memorial Parle.
Units of the Meigs County por1Cd io VMH.
Friends may .call at the Bacher
and Betty and Ronald Barrier of
Emergency
Medical Services
Sunday - 12:32 a.m. Syracuse
Funeral
Home
in
Norton
Tuesday
Ashville, N.C.; 12 grandchildren
respcnded
to
16
calls
for
assistance
to
State
Route 12A for Allen Wilfrom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
and seven great-graodchildnm.
during the Christmas weekend. son who was treated at the scene;
Also surviving is a brolher, Her· Harold W.son
Uni!S responding Included:
11:42 a.m. Middleport to
man Maples of Knoxville, Tenn.; a
Friday
3:34
p.m.
Racine
to
Stonewood
Aparunents for John
Harold Watson, 81, of Eden
sister, Mae Smith of Canton; and
Wells
Run
Road
for
Pearl
Metzger
who
was traosported to
Place, Adieus, diCd Saturday. Dec.
several nieces and nephews.
Hawthorne
who
was~
to
VMH;
I:S2
p.m
. Middleport to
She was preceded in death by 25, 1993, at his I!Qme foUowing a Veterans' Memorial Hospatai; 6:15 Lincoln Street for Howard Pennell
·.;
her' first husband, Roy Cbarles brief iUness.
He
was
born
On
May 5, 1912 in p.m. Middleport to Ove.rbrook who was transporlell to PVH; 2:16
Edm~nds, in 19.37, and by. her sec,·
East
Liverpool,
jhe
'aon of lhe late Nursing Center for Lena McAIIis· p.m. Rudand to Side Hill Road for
ond liusband. Raymond Arnold, in
ter who was traosportcd ro Plealint Lona Hatfaeld who was traniPOIIed
1975;' three bfothers, James; Bert Arthur and Effie Wakely WIUSOD.
·
to Holzez Medical Center; 9Silll.m·
He was a maJ¥111er m the auto· Valley Hospital.
and Clarence Maples, and a sister,
Sallltday
7;27
a.m.
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
to Monkey Run for Linda
mobile business for many years
Johnnie Seals.
·
to
Wehe
Terrece
for
Paul
Myer
who
was transported to
Setvices wiD be held Tuesday at and lu!d been employed in various . HoUdasbelt who was ttansported to HMC: 10:31 p.m. Racine 10 Valley
II B.ljl. at Fisher Funeral Home in manager positions with FJed R. VMH; 6:40 a.m. Pomeroy Volun· Bell Road for Argyle Deeter who
Middleport' with Tom Runion offi- Beasley, Roger Dean, Ray Riggs, teer Fire Depat:l!i1ent and Squad to was transported to VMH; 11:49
ciating. Burial will follow at John Jones, and Wade Brady.
He was rcare4 in TupJI!IIll Plains RocksprinJS Road for a motor p:m. Racine tb Yellowbush Road
Homc'r Hill Cemetery in Pomeroy.
and
bad ·been a resident of Eden vehicle accadent;" I:03 p.m. ~yra- for Thelma Windland who was
Friends may call today ftom 6-9
Place
for 35 years. He attended cuse to Spring Avenue for Neva transported to VMH.
p.m. at the funeral home. .
Owl Hollow School in Orange Moore who was transported to ' Monday - 12:45 a.m. Racine
Township, Meigs County. He was VMHi 2,:S3 p.m. ~omeroy VFD to State Route 338 for Key Robens
Marcella l;ggleton
an avid gardener 11nd hunter. He and Squad to Kingsbury Road fer a who was transported to PVH; 7:08
Milrce)la Eggleton. 76, ·Of Bid- served in the Army and Navy dpr· . motot vehicle accident; 7:31 p.m. a.m. Syracuse to Letart ·falls for
weD, died Sundaj,,'Qec;:. 26, 1993 at ing World War IL . .
Middleport to High Street 'for Willis Morris who was transported
'
HOlzer Medical Center.
He is survived by .his wife, ,Dorothy C~ldwell who was trans- to.VMH. .
Sho was born on Jao. :z. 19~7 at Helen MorrOw WBISOII; 1 daughter, '
Bladen, daughter of the late Ita and Betty Hall of Grayson, Ky.; a son,
M~(S~)Green. ·
.
Mike of Alhens; a son aJid daughSurvivors include five sons ter-in-law, Roger and Connie of
(Richanl and Ira Eggtetoil or Bid· Athens; four grandchildren, JenweU, Dudley Eggleton of Colum- nifer Hall of Grayson, Ky., aod
bus, Carl Eggleton of Lafayette, Whitney, Lindsay aod Jill WatsOn.
Ind. and John Eggleton of Indi- all of Athens: a sister, Mrs. Lester
anapolis, Ind.), four daughters (Wilma) Seamao of Barlow; and
'(Judy Halfelt of Ballipolii, Sara two brothers, Clrl or .Scottsdale,
Bailey of MiddlepOrt, Teresa Elia· Ariz., and Bill ofReedsvi11c.
son of Elyria aod Jan~ Setlifl of
Besides his parents, be was pre- ·
CQOI Ridge, W.Va.), U grandchil· ceded in death by two sisters, G~- •
dten, 2A great-grandchil~n. one net .B.arthelcimy and •Dorothy
sister (Jane Rucker of Gallipc;llis) Robinson, and two brothers.
,·
,
aod three brothers (Grover Green Evc.ett aod Ol"YiUe.
of Crown City; Harold Green of
Funeral services will be held
SOFIS ••••~~•••••••••••••••••••••• Startlll at
Eurckaland Jra .Green of Hunting· Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. aUagers and '
·
·
Sons Funeral HolDe with Dr. Dick
HIDE•A·IED
SOFU
.......... Startlng at
·
ton!. W.'ola.).
:.he was preceded in death by · Damron officiating. Burial will be
her husband, Woodrow Wilson in TUJlpers Plains Christian Ceme·
I;ggleton, one son. one lf80dson, tery.
. .·
three brothers and three sisters.
Friends may call Monday from
The funeral will be Wedneaday . 4 to 9 p.m. at lhe funeral home.
111 II a.m·. at Kings CbapCJ Olurc:h
.,
in 'Bladen. Pasldr Lewis Michael
'
.
.
will officiate. Burial will be at Meigs 81ln011ncements
ncafby Campaign Cemetery.
Frietlds may ~ MeCoy-MoOre ToWIIIbip Trustees tO 111CCt
Funeral Home in Vinton Tuesday . . Chtster Township Tf11Stees wiD
fmm 2 ,to 4 p.m. i!nd from 7 to 9 . meet in the year-end meeting 7
p.m ... ,
. p.m. Tuesday (Dec. 28) at tile
~ Camel Back • Traditional • Country
Ella Shinn
Chester Town Halt.
·

plete enrollment information, only
Georgia, New Jersey, Tennessee
and Thus :qJOI'Ied increases.
"We've been makin$ efforts to
lnc.ease the coUege-goiJII rate in
the state, ineludlnga pablicily campaign in the middle and high
schools." said Joe SzuiZ, assistant
vice cbanceUor for planning for the
Board of Regents of the University
System of Georgia. College and
university enroUment in tbe state
was up 2.6 percenL
Enrollment drops ranged from
2.5 percent in Mississippi to 0.1
percent in Maryland.

EMS responds tO 16 calls

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. 37 1{1.
Ashland Oil.. ...................... 33 1/4
AT&amp;T ....... ............ .. ... 54 1/4
Bank One ........................... 38 3/4
Bob Evans.......................... 21 3/8
Channing Shop .................. IO 3/4
Champion Ind.......................... 19
City Holding ................ .. ....32 l/4
Federal Mogul ........................ 28
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. .45 1/4
Lands End .................. ......44 5!8
Limited Inc . ~ ........................ .... I?
Multimedia Inc.................. 34 1/4
Point Bancorp ...:...................... 15
Reliance Electric ................ 17 1(2

Robbins&amp;M yers ................ 1 ~ l/4

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL .
Friday admissions - Allen E.
Dill, Pomeroy.
Friday discharses - Jack
Whiteman, Pomeroy.
Saturday admissions - Paul
Houdasbelt, Pomeroy.
Sallltday dilcbarges - none.
Sunday - no admissions or discharges.
Holzer Medklll Cenler
Dec. 24 dlscharJel - Bryan
Kirby, Whitley Sigman, Mrs. Tim·
oth~ Nelson and daughter, Ruth
Smuh, Mattie Jenkins, Robert
Cochran. Michael McWilliams,
Mrs. STeve McGhee and daughter,
Heather Atkins and Vernie
Salmons.
Dec. l5 dlscbarae - Patricia

Shoncy's Inc ............. .. ...... .24 1(2
Saar Bank ........ ....... .. ..........35 114
Wendy lm 'L ...............:.... 17 118
Wonilington Ind ................ 19 3/4

Stock reports ar~ the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Man:inko.

Dec. u discbarae- Lynn Singleton
Dec. u birth.- Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Powell, son, Apple Grove,
W.Va. ' ·

-

..ftREWIDE 20% TO 50% OFF

$399"
$499"

'

Ella L, Shinn, 9S, formerly of
Hemlock Grove. died Sunday, Dec.
26; 1993, 11 Hickory C.eek Honing Home in'Tbe Plains.
Born Oct. II, 1898, in
Beallsville, daughter of the late
William E. and Melzenia Truex
Palmer, she was a housewife. a
seamstreS$ aod attended the Hemlock Grove Christian Churth.
.Suri-ivors include two daughters, M,arie Bro\l'n of Toronto,
Ohio, &amp;Rd Velma McDougle or
Clarington; one stepdaughter,
Wanda Thomas of Stockpon; two
sons, Clark Vanesf of Reynoldsburg and Robert Shinn of Nelsonville; one stepson, Warner D.
Shinn of Dalton, and several grand·
children, great-~dchildren and
grcat-great·granc!ehildren.
She was preceded in death by
her first 1hiisband, David Vanest,
and her'· second husband. Dean
Shinn; two ~ns. Earl •d.O!tward
Vanest; one: stepson, Wendell
Shinn; three brothers; seven sisters;
one graodson and one graoddaugh·
ter.
Services will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. al Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with the Rev.
Donald Davisson officiating. Burial
will follow in Hemlock Grove
Cemetery., .
·
FriCJIIIS may call Tuesday from
4·8 p.m. at the funeral )lome.

Coin club meetiD'- Khedu~
The Ob I4n Coin Cfub wit meet
Monday (tojlly) at BUrkett's Barber Shop in MiddleporL A social
hour and trading session 11 7 p.m.
will prCcedc the meeting. Refreshments wiD be served. New ·!IICm·
bers are welcome.

AND UP

• CEDAR CHEST ...... •199

00

AND UP

Salisbury trustees to meet
The Sali~bury Township
Trustees wil 'meet Thursday at 7
p.m.. at tbe tC)Y&lt;'nship ball at Rock
Spnngs.

Publllhecl every atlcnooo. Mooday lbtoulh
Fridly. Ill Court St., Po .....y. Ollio by 11\e
Oblo Volioy Pl&gt;btilbiq Co-y/Mulllmodlo
IDe., Po-y. Oblo 4fl69. Pb. ~HU6.
polcl ........, . Cillo.

-ca... . . .

·• Wall Plate Rack............... Starting at $9500
• Floor Lamps ;.~ .................Startlng at $190o
• Solid Oak Mag
Lamp Table ..................... Starting at $129
• Lamps •.•••...•••••..•.•.• !' ••••••••••• Starting at $49

DAYBED

ALL
CHRISTMAS

AND UP

REGULAR

•RECLINERS ............ '19900
AND UP

J

Reg. $10000 1/~ OFF NOW

sso

ITEMS
50% OFF

AND UP

(VSPS 31J.Kt)

• Living Room Tables ....... Starting at $ggGo

• HALL TREES ••......• '19900
• CURIOS ..................•19goo

The DtPly Sentinel

RETAIL
PRICETHRU
DEC. 31

Not Exactly As Shown

. Waterfall Daybed· .Almond

Color

==..The~oo:J~N':..~~a.:

Re-ol!tl... Brioham New$pop10 Saleo.

733 Third Anauo. New York. Now YCI't
10017.

.

Gladys L. Smith
Gladys J,.. Smith.- 93, Elmwood.
died Saturday, Dec. 2S, 1993.
Born SepL 5, 1900, in Pleasant
City, she was raised in MinersviUe
and married James S111ith of
Mason. W.Va .• on Sept. 5, 1919,
before moving to Barberton.
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
High School aod was the youngest

POSTMASTI!Ro SeiHI- cbu&amp;a 10 1be
Dolly SeoUoel. Ill CCMI SL. Po111010y, Ohio ,
45169 .
'
Sva&amp;CiUPilON liARS
17 c.m. • ,Moler a.-e
Doe Weet. ... :............................................J1.60 ,
O..Moollo. .............................................. J&lt;I95
Doe Yow....... ........ ..... .....................- .Sil.:IO •
SINGLE COPY
PRICK
Dllly................. ....................... - 3 5 Ca!J
Sublcr1ben oot dCiirioa 10 pay llle '*""IDlY
remit Ia ldvuc:e direct to The Daily SeMiHl
oo a lluoe, ail or 12 moolh baoll. c..dk will ""
lfveo Clllier eiCil weet.
No a~biCri.pllou by ruH pcrmilled Ia n .
wberehome..meroentc:oitavallable.

Mall Su-lol-

- "''"' c_.,

13 w-................................ ..............J21 .u
215 Weeb................................................~3. 16
S2 Weeb ............. .................... ...............$a..76
O.O.W.Mo~toc-o,

13 w-................................................523.40

26 Weelm ..... ....... ....... ..................... ~5.50

52 Woolci ..... ................................... J88AO

Complete Medical/Surgical.Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

John A. ·

....... ....., •.. •

. . PI.PIIIU.• I,ft
Cd.....,..ll44 . . . . . . . . . . .~
of
&amp; te.r.~

Aet•'"

'·

• DESKS .•..•.•.••••....... *199®

CASH SCARRY

All MATTRESSES
AND BOXSPRINGS
NOW ON SALE.
CHOICE OF FIRMNESS
CHOICE OF COLOR
CHOICE.OF STYLE

....,

As Sltow11

1 ONLY· Lowest price ever
•CONTEMPORARY SECTIONAL, pub back, dual
reclining
Bassett
sectional
with
storage
00
5
5
00
compartment

Reg. 1720

FREE PARKING
OPEN DAILY
1

ITEMS SUBJEO TO
PRIOR SALE

TIL 5 PM

FREE DELIVERY
446·3045
Visa~ MasterCard,

1/2 off 860

CORNER OF THIRD &amp;
OLIVE STREETS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

·

Dlscov•

'
'

�P11g1 4 The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 27, 1993

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

OHI O Weather

'Sports

Winter blast will continuet.hrough Friday

·Tuesday, Dec. 28
Accu-Wealher" forecast for

conditions and high

MICH.

•
You

l'lto.

21 °

•lco1umbus!24•

low

By The A"'I'ialed Press
No significant ~:trW in the wintry weather is seen l)lrough much
of this week, forecasters said.
TempetllluleS will remain below
freezins at least until Friday, and
men snow is likely. •
Measurable snow is possible in
the southern half of the state
tonight and Tuesday while Hurries
are likely in the north, according to
the Nlllional Weather Service.
Lows toDigbt will drop to the
single digit~ over the nonh and
around 20 in the south.
The reccld-hil!h temperature for
this date at the Colllm• weather
station was 66 degrees in 1959

I

while the record
was 14 below
zero in 1950. SWISCI tonight wiD be
at 5:13p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at
7:53 LID..
Around the nation
Arctic air from CanMa drqrped
temperatUreS below zero in sev~
northern sliltes today, and wmd
chills m.ade it feel that cold from
the mid-Atlantic COISl througli the
central Plains llid Rockies.
Snow fell across pans of the
Rockies, where the National
Weather Service said more than
eight inches could accumulate
today. Snow also fell in South
Dakota and Minnesl)la, and Hurries
were expected along the Great

Lakes and in th~ AppBJachian and
Adirondack mounlafnS.

The season's coldest weather
curved across the. lower 48 states
from Virginia, through northern
Texas and up into·the Rockies.
The coldesl spots today were
near the canadian border: Bismar·
ck, N.D., plunged to 13 degrees
below zero; Sault Ste. Marie,
Mich., hit 14 below; and Buffalo,
N.Y., was seven below.
Sunday's wind chills eased
sliglidy today in New England, but
it remained bitttrly cold, with lows
tonight expected to drop to 25
below in northern Maine.
Highs were ex~~ec~ed

only the single dijlits and teens in
the Midwest, below zero in much
of the northern Plains, and 20
depees in the Northeast Highs in
the 60s and 70s were expected
today in a narrow band froiD California through the southern
Adantic coast
The nation's high tempefllhi!C
Sunday was 75 degrees at Childress, Texas.

-NFC Central title race still
:Undecided; Ohio teams win
By BARRY WILNER
Lam beau Field.
· AP Football Writer
Five of the silt NFC playoff
·: It figures that the muddled NFC benhs hive been decided. The East
Central would be without a champion will be determined next
;crow.ned chimpion heading iniD the weel!:, when Dallas visits the New
,final week of the season.
York Giants. The Super Bowl ,
. Any secior thit has four teams chalnpiQn Cowboys r~mped ov~
~n contention for first place with
Washington 38·3, while Phoemx
·,two weeks remaining can't be beat the Giants 17-6.
:expected to setttle things easily.
San Francisco already had won
.,Two of those teams, Green Bay the West before Saturday's 10-7
. .and Detroit. simplified maum with loss to Houston, the AFC Central
' wins Sunday, _ensuring one of them champion.
•
the division title and the other a
Minnesota can' grab _the final
·. wild-catd
·
spot with a win at Washington on
, The ~cntral title will be Friday. The Vikin$S ~ 8~7 and
,setded next Sunday at the l)mtiac eliminated the possibility of a 7-~
•Silverdome.
team making the NFC playoffs
; "We're aU excired to be playing when they beat Kansas Cjty 30-10 .
·.a gaine that's .about winnmg the Sunday lliJJht. The' victory also
division. That's our whole season, knocked Chicago out Qf the race. .
-:{Jow,n to beating lhe Packers,"
'The Chiefs were banded the
·'Lions quarterback Erik Kramer AFC West crown earlier in the·day
.,said afler a 20-14 victory at Chica- when both.the Raiders and Broncos
go.
lost Denver fell to Tampa B!IY 17· "My goal is for the Packers to 10, and still seCured' a wild-card
be a coosistent playoff-caliber root- .bcrtiJ because the Jc~ and Steelers
'ball team: It's wonderful that we also were beaten; Pittsburgh lost
..made the pl11yoffs in my SCI)Ond I6--6 at Seattle.
- ~ear." coach Mike Holmgren said
. Buffalo(ll-4) took the AFC
~~unday afte'r Gteen Bay blanked East with a 16-14 decision over the
: jhcLoS Angeles Raiders 28-0 8/. icy New Yorj,: ,Jets, who lillrciy clung

Lottery·numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super Lotto jackpot
be worth
$24 million for Wednesclay's dra~·
ing, after no one picked all S!X
numbm 011 Friday when $20 million was at stake in the Ohio Lot·

will

tery game.

,.. · 1.Ohio
Soutb"'-entra

of snow 70 percent
Extended forecast
Snow likely toniaht with some
Wednesday, snow likely. Lows
aecwnulation possible.~ IIOIIIld
20. Northeast winds around I 0 in the teens and highs in the 20s to
mph. Chance of snow is 70 pertent around 30. Thursday, fair, except a
Tuesday, snow likcly in the mom-. chance of nurries northeast. Lows
ing. Mostly cloudy in the after- 10 to IS and highs near 20. Friday,
noon. High in the mid 20s. Chance fair and warmer. Lows near 20 and
• • highs around 35.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN ·,MUSSER
. IIISUUNCE . ··.

21 fined in' county court
· The following cases were costs; Belmont Baer, Columbus,
resolved Wednesday in the Meigs speed; $30 plus cosu; James J.
County Court of •Judge Patrick H. Wilton, Athens, speed~ $30 plus
costs; Ferman E. Moo~. Pomeroy,
O'Brien. ·
.
'
Fined were: Larry L. Milch Jr., · speed, $30 plus costs; Donald R.
Middleport, se"t belt, $25 plus Poynter, Ky., speed, $30 plus costs.
Forl'eiting bond WIL'I Ralph Garcosts; James D. Hemsley,
ned
1r., Rio Grande, speed, $70.
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
Becky Amberger, Rac1ne, speed,
$30 plus cos~; William R. Hall,
p.omeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
' Mary Maiey, New HaVCIII, Y(.ya.,
seat belt. SIS plus .costs; William
Zic&amp;ler; Pomeroy, failure to yield,
S:z6;plus 'COSII; ,lloiiJ!ie Neal, West
·.Columbia, posseSSion of a deer
; liken with a Jllll during closed sea' Slin $90 plus COiti:
' Plirlhs I.' Curfman, Portland,
fictituius tags, $15 plus cos~s;
: Danny P; Wean, West Colwnb11,
' w.Va., left of center, $30 plus
: costs; stop ~. $20 plus COSts;. no
: seat belt, $25 plus costs; ~g1na

,,

WINTER SCENE.· Jamie Miller, ~ Rep·

Miller tale a ride
OD tilt wild lllde while lleddllla II Froatler Park ·
.
'
'
,
'
1111 TOIM!d; ceater, ad J11011

In Erie, Pa., pn Christmas Day. The park bas
become a popalar spot tor sleddlna over the
7ean(AP)

.

'

,."

•

.

~

':..

111 s.c.l St., Pe••roy
YOUR IIDIPI-IIt
ltiiiSSI-G
MIIISCOim
SIICI-1168

~I

••

•'•

·:

· Units .of the Meigs c;:ounty
· Emergenc[ Medical Service
answered 1 calls for ailistance
between Th"rsday .and Friday
: mornings. Units included:
· . Thursday- 10:57·Lm. S)'lliCIIC
· to County Mobile Home Park m
Darwin for Rebecca Snider who
was treared at the ICeiiC; 11:44 a.m.
Rutland to State Route 689 for
Joann Gillogly who waS Lransport·
' Cd to Holzer Medical Center; 2:10
p.m. Racine to Old Portland Road
for Carol Denis who "'!!S ~­
cd to Vercrans Memorial Hosp1tal;
2:48 p.m. S~se to Basban Road
for Luvema Hayman who was
transported to VMH; 3:4 7 p.m.
. Rutland to Salem Street for Merle
· Davis who was transported to
VMH; 4:06 p.m. Tuppen Plains to
State Route 7 for Dorothy Dence
who was transported to St Josel'!t's
' Hospital· 5:31 p.m. Tuppers Plains
: to Stale Route 7 for William
: Grucscr who was transported to
' HMC; 6:41 p.m. Syracuse to Slate
: Roule 7 for Willie Jones who was
, transporte4 to Camden-Clark
' Memorial .Hospital; 8:11 p.m. Tu!&gt;; pers Plain~ io Eden Ridge Road for
I Mike Smiih who was transpa-ted to
1 St. Joseph's Hospital; 8:55 p.m.
; Middleport to Bndbury Rosd for
; Anna Frank who was uellted at the
1 scene· 10:41 p.m. Pomerox to
: Pomeroy NursinJ and Rehabilita• tion Center for Sofia Henry who
I
IOHMC.

--

r.. -

AMERICAN &lt;:_ONFERENCE

W L T Pel. PrPA
1·lloa1falo ......... ll 4 0 .73329?232
.............. 9 5 0 .llfl :IOZ273

•.• ' llewl!oWI-I-·
w

N.V. Ido .......... I 7 0 .5" .710225
I' ..... 4 11 0 .267 1793-41
411 0 .267 205ZS9

A

•

•
"
"

C-DI....... u 4 0 .733 :144231
' ~ ......... 1 1 o .s11

aNCIMIIATI .. 312 0 .200 174299

•.,

,

~

1"----.
.9
LA.---· 9

N

:

.

2942111

6 0 .600 :M3:ZSI
6 0 .600 273296

Gibson
Refrigerator

.,,,

CONFERENCE
.,•~· ·.. '·NATIONAL
',, ;... a...........
'

~

••
••
••

-••
•

••
"
••

-

•

•,.•
••
•
•
•
••
••

'

10% TO '5 0%
. OFF
.
'
BEDROOM~, &amp;. .':t)INING'·R 00'4

. I!
II

..........

Ia' p-GaAII , .

lalteokl

I

NO PAYMENTS TILL MARCH 1994 ·DON'T MISS OUT!
15% TO 40~t'OFF
CHAIRS, RECLINERS,

'Wilti APPROVED 'CREDIT
•I

'

\.

'

o .m

w- .,. __:

,_116

215119

.:.1

BY

T-Bo7 ....... S 10 0 .333 2211344

1111' • IS· Crnro

w-.• 10 S 0 .WI 439251

a-W Pn

-~--- 1 I 0 .467 29'73l0
A - .. - ...... 6 9 0 .4!10 !1063SI
LA a-·-· 4 11 o .'1G7 201 361

·-·-'"'"
'

,.

t

I

p~a,..r Midi

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Satunlay'.aiC!Irt

nou...a 10, s.n F.

.

7

Sundar••......,.

aNONNATI2l,Ailama 17
llolloll Cloicoaol4
Nowl!apaolll,lntlionapolia 0

:10:

~~=~~k'!'•I..A.
lloiAIOIIO
.
31, Now
OMuoo :16
Bu6'alo 6, N.Y. l&lt;ool4
_,6,_6
CU!Vi!IAND-42, 'LA ..... 14
-.11,N.Y.a-6
T - Bal(J1• 0..-10

t='"· .. ~'.!.·Ja, 10

Allulk-

TW L
New v................. l7 6

I'd.

Gl

OdondO................ l&lt; 11 .560
_ __........... 12 11 ..522

. 4

IS .423

7.5

a-.................... 11

........
-,,Ji11.2
.......
.,........,,p.m.
CIRVELAND

Plilllddphil .............9 15
Wuhinaton ..............7 II

OadOac ................ 14
CI...EVELAND .... _ ll
lndi&amp;na. -.............

10

o.uOi• .....................l

6.S

I~

7.5

16

3.S

,.wx&gt;

.m

--

4,....

N.Y. Jcu~tlbn:n,l p.m.

Joltollo--

tcwna41 .Ta.TCidltO

--

Sahlrday'a 1&lt;0res
Bl-cn7 Cludc
OaJ 17.Bh•ID

Cd .-AI, Ft.no Sute 30

Tuesday's pme
~7

-.,M_,Is, TtOL
Mldo;pl (6-l) ... Louilville (13),1 p.m. (ESPN)

-Wednesday's game

c.,...a.,.,.,f-,Arb.

W.......JJ!·~) n. lWau S111e (1-2·
l),lp.m. (ESPN).

CAPTION

..........
TXB11940

II

$249'5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

s.. o\-"'....... _16 11
o.n-................... 12 13

.593

~ ................1

~~;:::::l!

......... 10
L.A.Lalien....... ,_.9
L.A . ~

ll14 · ::.417
II

5

~

13

Saturday's scores
Ph...U.11l,l-91

Cllicaso 9l. Odlnclo 93

Sunday's ICOIU

Q.EVEIMIO 1(TI,lodW!o I 03 (01)

New l-_c:J 91, Atlan~al7

~IOIJ, Sacnmrr9S

Goldon S....101, - 1 0 6 (01)

S.-'l9.s-.IS
Donvw 100,- . 97

llculao Ill, L.A. Lolun 93

Table &amp; 4 Chairs
Starting at

$249'5
Must Sell $1 00,000
worth of Furniture
by
January 1st 1994

FREE DELIVERY

.. ~ 7,30,.,..
Wllhinpn II Milwouloc,l:30 p.m.
MinneMU • U\&amp;h, 9 p.m.
B•Wlllal Pbacnb, 9 p.m.
Philadclpbi'i n L.A. Clippen. 10:30
p.m.

DISPOSAL OF OLD BEDDING
•

Tuesday's &amp;ames

New Jasey alNcw l"'"Dik. 7:30p.m.
Wiooai, 7:30 1""llolloil a Ad•o,1:30 Po!!'-

Setlrtlc»na1l8 with recliners

Dettwz at lliDu. 1:30 p.m.

Starting at

PloU.ddpl&gt;illl Ooldco 11110. 10 :30

Time Is Running Out'. .. Don't Miss Your Chance ·
To Tc:tke Home A Great 'Bargain!

~

1117 2

w~
::::: 16 11 2
. 151! 3
NY
..
•

Plarlla ..---- 141!'
T_Bo, --.1 022 4

31 136139

:w us 110

•
•
•
•

8,...._.___
-

---- 1414
- -1416
u..t.i::_. l3 19
:16

~-

IJ!Ia•----· •

6
5
3
3

Open Monday 8 am til 5 pm
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
t

"124114
339491
_,.,
24 - •

-~~~-43 ~~:li.:

- . . . ....... 1110 7
------, 1611
17 16 13

sgggts

MUST DISPOSE OF EICESS
INVENTORY BEFORE
JANUARY FIRST 1994

p.m.

Transactions

~ :~ 103
-

)4 105 22~
33 l:M1
29 Ill! 121
19 1117176

Bam tll8 pm
Friday 8 am til 5 pm
FREE Delivery &amp; Set Up

Free Financing ·

••
-,

Recliners

'199'5

799" King size

Tonlcbt'saames

H-a-IOp.m.
Allaollc Dl.toloo
TW L T I'll. GFGA
NY R•-... .. 25 I ! S3 135 90
NP I-~..... 20 12 4 44 126103

Starting
'199" ea pc
Twlnslze
249'"ea. pc.
Full size
599"" set Queen
size

s.cnrn..o •t Odaru~t. 7:30 p.m.

Suo-.

$299

FREE
Financing
FREE Delivery
FREE Set Up
Big Selection

1..5

Owtauol1a....BYEL\ND, 7:30p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

FREE Springmaid Sheet Set

20.5

14.1 .

Suites
Starting at
95

Starting at

I~

10.5

5 Piece Bedroom

Wf111 PURCitiiS£ If

7.5

.333

s.....................6 11 .2lo

JANUARY IST I994
6MONTBS
FREE with
MNANCING
approved credit
FREE DELIVERY
&amp;SETUP

Samsung

PacllcDI.oaloo
Scalllc ................... :zo 3 .870
Jlhocnis. __ __________,,.19 s .792

s. Dlop" r..,. ••·
a.liqo'ot L.A.- · · p.m.
a:NefNNAn u New o.l~~~n~., 4 pm.

CLOSED
19I I COLOR
TV

9

Milwouloo ....- .........7 19 .)69

SO.Wut x.- CiiJ, 1 p.m.
Do.mirotLA.-- 4 p.m.

MiaaiiiNcw~ . l p.m.
Phoenil. • Atlanta, I p.m.

Q!

.

.I

.S60
14 .440
11

a- Bay 11 Doooio. I p.m.

Friday's ..Ore

'

-

10.1

College bowl action

J

11

Central Dlvklan
Allanla ................... l7 7 .701
Chico1,0-................. 11 I .680

Mooday,JIL3
ftril..Wphi• a s.n Fnn eM : c, 9 p.m.

CURIOS, DESKS, ROOM DIVIDERS,
'
DECORATOR-TABLE GROUPS_, LAMPS,
PICTURES, WALL DECOR
8t ALL ACCENT PIECES

8.5

.J7l
.2&amp;0

.oliO
11 .301
llollll ..........- ........2 :zs .010

"·~I p.m.

SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICES ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK!

I

Gl

DolliiKN.V. OU.U,lp.m.

It's The Biggest Savings Event Of The Yeafl,

5

TW L N.
.............. 23 3 .us
llllh - - -.......... 11 I .692

- o t W......... 3p.m.

'

:m

New '-1 ........... 10 15 ..wx&gt;

TOIII£llt's Rame
MiaiN • San fMeo. J p.m.
Week lhlar..

Biggest Selection
of
Bedroom Ever

-

C..troiDI-

-'

10% TO 50% OFF

MUST REDUCE
IT'S
INVENTORY

,.0.0. 8•7--· 9 6 0 -~ 32D:ZS2
rcllolloll .......... 9 6 o .600 w:m
Man 11.. - . . I 1 0 .533 263 211
ll1lato ........... 7 I 0 .46'/ 221210

•

ROCKERS ••• EVEN ALL HOME
ENTERTAINMENT CENTERs·
AND DELUXE WALL. SYSTEMS!

..

Pd. PI' PA

1'1111 I • I r ·-· 1 I 0 .467 2$6:111
,.....'.--..-· 6 9 0 .400 299:159
4 11 o
221 111

•••
•
•
•••
••
•• "'
••• ''t
••
••
•
•.. ' '
•• •
•• ..
• '

•

W' L T

LI!.Y:o -... n .4

••"
•••

Not Just Selec~ed Spec~ats ... Everything On
The Floor Is On Sale! if You See It Here!
You Can 'rake It-Home Fqr Up To 50% Off!

'e! . . .

T-

rllollll"--·-11 ,4_ 0,.•733

•u

ENSE~_,LES

.

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·'

NFL standings

D

- •EMS responds
:to 11 calls

football

,·

••
"•

..

to postseason aspirations.
Also eliminared from contention
was Atlanta, which lost to Cincinnati 21-17. In oth~ games, Cleve·
land routed the .Los Angeles Rams
42·14 as Vinny Tes.tavctde set an
NFL completion J)t'zccnlllge record
ror one game; Philadelpllia be-'
New Orleans 37-26 as both teams
barely stayed in the wild-card mc;e;
an.d New England routed Indi anapolis 38-0.
Tonigh~ Miami is at San Diego
and would clinch an AFC wild card
with a victory.
Lions ~o. Bears 14
Kramer was 23 for 31 for 223
yards and two touchdowns, hittin~
all six for 47 yards in the Lions
winning. touchdown drive in the
fourth quarter. Eric Lynch, filling
in for injured Barry Sanders, had
131 total yards as the Lions (9-6)
beat the Bears (7-8) for ju" the
second time in the last 10 visill to
Soldier F'Jdd.
Packers l8,'Raidtn 0
The Packers (9-6) had eight
sacks - 2 1/2 each by Reggie
White, John Jurkovic and Tony
Bennett - and Sterling Sharpe
became the ftrst pla~r with col)secutive 100-caieh ~ns.
STEPPING IDGH - Despite being held In
. Sharpe, who set an NFL record
the ball throuah the Rallis' defeue d..-JIIi SD·
the
clutcbu ot linebacker Chris Martin, Clevewith 108 catches last season,
day's IIIU In Allhelm, C1llf., where the
land runnln1 bKk Eric Metcalf steps hiJh wltb
Browns won 42-14. (AP)
caught seven Sunday, including a
23-yard touchdown.
' The kickoff temperature was
The Raiders (9-6). lost quarter- (11-4) rode their multimillionaires regained the NFL rushing lead anci
zero, the second-coldest in the his- back Jeff Ho&amp;tetler 10 a concussion to victory.
·
scored a touchdown.
tory of Lambeau Fielcj, and the in the ihird quarter. &gt;
Troy Aikman, fresh off signing
Aikman hit 16 or 20 passes ror
wind chill was minus 22 degrees,
Cowboys 31, Redskin• 3
a SSO million contract, threw two 193 yards, and Smith rushed 21
the third-coldest in the history of
Avenging an season,opening touchdown passes and Emmitt times for 153 vards. Smith, the
the fabled stadium.
loss at Washington, the Cowboys Smith, who has $13.6 million deal.
NFL•
f)

s (.() .~t• l )( ·~···()

~

•-Riee. lionlenry, Lailp;IO ~.

· $35 plus cosis; Colin R. Maidens,
· Racine, driving under the in~u:
, ence, $~ ' plus costs, 10 days JBII
: suspended 10 three clays, .180-day
' ilpelllllr's license SUSPCDSIOn, one~ yell probation, $2~ plus jail SUS· -1
· pended upon campletiQn of residential treatment program; speed,
$20
phis costs; underage conswnp1
: tion, costs only;
.
. . Charles Hensley. Long Bottom,
' no OL, $100 plus ~. three days
·· ; jail, $50 and iail suspended if vaJ!d
· , OL presentcil by_ Jan. 15; . C~he
' Boso Porllind, diaordetly coniluct.
: $30 pluS COSIS; exp~ regislration,
: SIS plus ~i Shannon Sc:holder·
: cr, Middleport.P_Cil)' ~. ~ holn
· community servtee With Village of
: Middleport, 10 _days jail suspen~
· upon compleuon of commumty
.
: service, costa Oflly;
; · Connie Griggs, ~ville, pos. session of marijuana, $20 plus
: costs; ccinsumptirin of alcohol in a
· motor vehicle, $20 plus costs; Ken. neth E. Lunsford, Columbus, seat
; belt 525·plus costs; David R. Car·
: man, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus

Monday, December 'D, 1183

In NFL's Week 15,

Super Lotto
9-15-21-22-35-43
(nine, fifleen, twenty:-OflC, twenty-two, thirty-five, forty-three)
Kicker
5-5-7-3-6-1
.
.
(five, five, seven, three, SIX,
one)
.
BuckeyeS
6-16-19-26-28
(six, sixteen, nineteen, twenty:
six, twenty-eight)
Pkk 3 Numbers
7-8-1
(seven, eight, one) ·
Pkk 4 Numbers ·
4-1·3-6
(four, one, three, six)

---.----Weather----

The Daily Sentinel

3 Piece
Uving Room Sutlea
95
Starting at

$799

Items not exactly as

�Ohio
Monday, December 27, 1993

ockets rout Lakers; Cavs win in OT

B Tbe Aaoclated Press

Smith scored 15 points in the
final period as _the.Rockets, who
, 'Want losin~ to become a habit, and won 22 of the1r f1rs1 23 games
: .Kenny Smtih did something about before double:digit losses to Den·
: iL
ver and Phoen1x, puU~ away from
.. Smith stung by a four-point the Lakers by outsconng them 38·
: j,errorm.mce in a 20-point loss to 27 in the fourth _quarter. .
: ·Phoenix on Christmas Day, scored
"I was worried ~;bout thiS game
.·a career-hi~~ points Sunday just like I was worned _about Den·
•'night as the
ts routed the Los ver," Houston coach Rudy Tom·
:··Angeles Lakeis 11&amp;-93.
janovich said, referring to a 106-93
, · "My main goal was to come out victory by the Nugget~ over the
:·and be assertive," said Smith, who Rockets on Thursday mght. ."The
16 or 24 shots.
Lakers have talented guys, a Jump-

. . Th[ Houston Rockets didn 't

''made

'..

.,

shooting team, and it's har.~ to
cover I;'COPie all over tbe co~.
Sm1th and Hakeem OlaJuwon

In Aloha Bowl,

Colorado defeats
Fresno State 41-30
despite Dilfer's arm

combined!" sc:ore 22 of Houston's
first 26 pomts m the fourth quarter,
(See NBA on Page 7)

Meigs, River Valley girls
win in reserve cagefest
Heist Meigs and River Valley
posted wins in the first round of the
Meigs Holiday tournament for area
reserve Fis' basketball reams on
Dec. 22 m Larry R. Morrison gym·
nasium.
Meigs claimed a 37-29 win over
Eastern, while River Valley
downed Alexander 29-25.
Meigs and River Valley will
meet in lhe tournament fmals 'I'Ites·
day at 7:30 p.m. Alexander and
Eastern will meet in the consola·
lion game at 6 p.m.
The reserve tournament became
possible when Southern was unable
to field a reserve team, leavmg
these four common oppo~~~:nts two
extra games on the sehedule. The
tournament is coordinated by
Meigs athletic director Rick
Edwards and varsity coach Ron
Logan.
.
In the first game, River Valley
posted a 29-25 win over Alexander,
after trailing 15-14 at the half.
River Valier outscored the Spar·
tans 15-10 m the second half to
post the win.
The Lady Raiders were led by
Stephanie Cash's II points and six·
point efforts from Laura Queen and
Michelle Farley. Erin Conley
added four, and Rachel Polcyn had
two.
Alexander was·Jed by J. Wilson
and Crystal Vanhoos with six each,

By GORDON SAKAMOTO
HONOLULU (AP) - Fresno
State quarterbuck Trent Dilfer predieted that the team that made the
least number of turnovers would
win the Aloha Bowl.
He was right. It was the Bulldogs - who went into the game as
the No. 2 team in turnover ratioin a gift-giving mood on Christmas
Day.
As a result, Colorado wrapped
up its season with a 41·30 victory
over Fresno State.
The No. 17 Buffaloes (8·3-1)
made the BuUdop (8-4) pay dear·
ly. Colorado converted four
turnovers - two by Dilfer - into
24 points.
Stopping the run, which led to
the turnovers, was a crucial componcntto Colorado's game=
"We did consistently
them
from running the football," Col·
orado coach Bill McCartney said.
"That was going to be a key as the
game went along because when
you're one-dimensional·, even
though you can m~ a lot of yards,
it's tough to win the football game.
"I thought they used the tight
end position well to their advantage
in their passing game, but it was
our advantage in the running
game.' '
Fresno State coach Jim Sweeney
agreed.
"As I thought, Colorado was
extremely tough against the run,"
he said.
Dilfer had a career game, completing 37 of 63 passes for 523
yards and two touchdowns. But the
BuUdogs' ground game was no fac·
tor.
During the regular season, Fres·
no State averaged 221.6 yards rush-

while Amber Thompson added
five. Arlane Starling, Angie Dixon,
Jody Wilson and Judy Turrill each
added two.
In the ni~htcap, Laura East·
man's 10 pomts paced Meigs to a
37-29 win over Eastern. Eastern led
6·5 afrer one quarter, but an.effonless second period by the Eagles
aUowed Meigs to post a 21·12 half·
time lead. Eastern played a much
better second half, but could not
gain much ground as Meigs led 33·
21. Despite Eastern outscoring
Meigs 8-4 in the finale, the
Marauders held on for the win.
Cheryl JeweU, who added eight,
was followed by Taryn Doidge,
Stacey Price (six each), Ashley
Roach (four), Anna Fink (two) and
Jenny Clifford (one).
Eastern was led by Patsy Aeik·
er's 10 points and 15 rebounds,
while sophomore Rebecca Evans
tossed in nine points and had five
rebounds. Crystal Holsinger added
five, and Nicole Nelson had three,
while Martie Holter had two.
LEADS CA VS TO WIN -The Cleveland Cavaliers' Mark Price
Eastern hit 13·50 from the field,
(25)
drives past Indiana's Ken· WiUiams (left) in tbe fourth quarter
was 3-9 from the line and had 32
or
Sunday's
NBA game In Richfield, Ohio, wbere tbe Cavaliers won
rebounds. Besides Aeiker and
107-lOJin
overtime
in !'art because or Price's seven post-regulation
Evans' rebounding effort,
rmished
Wtth 21. (AP)
points.
Price
Holsinger had six. EHS had 14
turnovers, four assists, 10 steals ·
had 24 rebounds. led by Eastman's fouls.
(Aeiker five) and II fouls.
Meigs hit 16-44 from the floor eight and Jewell's five, They had
Action resumes Tuesday at 6
and 5-7 at the line. The winners six assists, three steals and 14 p.m. at Meigs.

.,.

... SNAGGED- Atlanta running back Erric Pegram (lert) is about
'-' to be Aaaed rrom behind by Ciucinnatl ddensive back Mike Brim
; durin&amp; Suuday's lnter-coatereuce game In Cincinnati, where the
'~ Benpb wllll21-17 despite Pevam's 180 yards. (AP)

','

action...

~NFL
:twJ. rushing h;ader the last two
~ns, has 1,318 yards to 1,283

. ·ror Jerome Bcuis of the Los Ange·
)esRams.

,

Ctmllaals 17, Ginats 6
~ Ron Moore got 110 of hi~ 1~5
'tushing yards and scored tw1ce m
•the second half as the Canllnals (6·
.!)) snapped New York's six-game
:winning streak and made up f~r a
)iuer 19-171oss at Giants Stadium
~lier this season.
',
Vlklnp 30, Chiers 10
;,, In a night game, host Minneso1a
,Ut itself in a strong position to
~m the fmal NFC playoff spot.
,• Jim' McMahon threw for two
to Cris Caner and has five
~uchdown passes in the last two
~ McMahon completed 17 of
25 passes for 219 yards. Scottie
Oraham, out of football three
pths ago, gained 166 yards and
(eel a team record with 33 carries.
i• 1oe Montana was 17 for 24 for
~I yards and was inrercep~ by
Anthony Parter on the game s sec·
9'd play and later by~~ Lee. ~~t
~ Chiefs stiU toot their first divl·
slPn title in 22 years.
.~ · · Buccaneers 17, Broncns 10
;'· . At Dqnver, Craig Erick~on
threw for a pair of scores agamst
the bumbling Broncos (9·6), who
$till got into the playoffs . The
Broncos lost three fum ~les and
~ing rusher Rod Bemsune, who
jjslocated his right shoulder.
.· Courtney Hawkins had eight
~tches for lOS yards and a score
p- Tampa Bay (5·10).
.· ·· 8ahawlui 16, Steelers 6
.. At Seattle, the Seahawks (6-9)
11o1ce a four-game losing s~ as
Jon Vaughn, who had only s1x car·
pes this season, replaced 1,000·
pro rusher Chris Wlmlfl and had a
career-best 131 -yards. John L.
Williams added 86 yards as the
Seahawks ran for 267 against the
NFL•s No. 1 rushing defense. .
Pittsburgh (8· 7) barely stayed m
tontention for an AFC wild-card
berth . Eric Green caught se~en
~~&amp;sses for 119 yards and Dw1ght
1011e made four receptions for 100

.tores

s

~-

Bills 16, Jets 14
In the coldest game in Bills' hislOry _ a game-time rempcrature of
nine degrees combined with a
atcady breeze for a wind chill of
28-below - Steve Christie kicked
n~Id goals and Cary Blanchard mtssed three.
. Christie, who earlier hit from 38
and 36 yards, made a 40-yardcr
with 3·48 left to win it. Blanchard
missed a 42-yarder with 53 seconds
10 play.
: Johnny Johnson had 115 total
)'ards for New York (8- 7).

-"rcc

Saturday's action
Oilers 10, 49ers 7
At San Francisco, the Oilers
(11-4) won their lOth straight,
holding the 49ers (10·~&gt; to their
lowest scoring output tilts seasoa.
Steve Young threw two end-zone
interceptions and fumbled to set up
Houston's touchdown. He spent the
linal 18 minures of the game on the
sidelines.

NOTICE
/

(
I

•'

'

Dan's - Middleport, Ohio Will be
closed December 2atll
•
Due to. Mother~&amp;
Death.
'
'
We regret any Inconvenience
this may cause.
;

.

ing. Against Colorado, however, it
managed to net three yards with
leading ball carrier Ron Rivers
being held to 37.
In the final analysis, bowever,
Sweeney said, ''The big errors in
the_.Fame, the turnovers, reaDy hurt

YEARE ·D
ON
S
''100''

08

Offensively, Colorado turned to
Rashaan Salaam, who scored on
runs of two, 40 and four yards
among his 135 yards on 23 rushes.
The ream's other scores came on a
seven-yard run by James Hill, a 28yard fumble return by Donnell
Leomiti and field goals of 44 and
49 yards by Mitch Berger.
The Buffaloes had hefty leads,
leading by as much as 18 points
late in the third quarter. But each
time Fresno State battled baek.
"I felt like we were in position
to put the game away a couple of
times, but we never really did,"
McCartney said. "I think that's ·a
tribute to the fighting spirit that
they have."
Fresno State's points came on a
27-yard field goal by Derek
Mahoney, a 68-yllid fumble return
of a kickoff by Malcolm Seabron
with one second left in the first
half, a one-yanl run by Anthony
Daigle and passes of eight and II
yards froin Dilfu to Tydus Winans.
Dilfer had a record-setting afrernoon, but was disappointed by the
myriad of miscues.
"We made a lot of mistakes in
the frrst half, dumb mistakes like
not getting plays in on time, me not
caUing them right in the huddle and
the turnovers,'' he said. ''This
football team hasn't tumed the ball
over aU year. You can't win a football game with that many
turnovers."

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Simmons' height no
detriment as passer

(Continued from PageS)

Bengals 21, Falcons 17
At Cincinnati, the Bengals (3·
12) produced their highest points
total of the season as David Klin·
gler had three touchdown passes.
The winner, a six-yarder to Carl
Pickens, carne wilh one minute left
as the Bengals drove 70 yards.
Atlanta (6·9) lost to three of lhe
league's worst teams - Tampa
Bay, Washing!O!' and Cincinn~­
this season. Erric Pegram earned a
career-high 37 times for 180 yards.
Browns 42, Rams 14
The smallest crowd for a non·
slrike game since the Rams (4-11)
moved to Anaheim from the L.A.
Coliseum in 1980, 34,155, saw
Testaverde go 21 for 23 against the
league's worst secondary. Tes·
taverde threw for 216 yards and
two scores to Keenan McCardell.
and one of his two incompletions
was intentional.
. He completed his final 13
throws, and his completion percentage of 91.3 topped the record,
based on at least 20 attempts, of
90.91 (20 of 22) set by Ken Anderson of Cincinnati on Nov. 10,
1974.
Eagles 37, Saints 26
At Philadelphia, Eric Allen tied
an NFL season record of four intcrceptioo returns for touchdowns by
getting two against the slumping
Saints. Allen had touchdown
returns of33 and 25 yards.
New Orleans quarterbacks Mike
Buck and Steve Walsh, replacing
injured Wade Wilson, were a combined 6 for 18.
Both teams are 7-8 and, yes,
alive for the playoffs.
Patriots 38, Colts 0
New England (4·11) has won
three in a row, but hasn't won in
such convincing fashion in 14
years.
Leonard Russell rushed for two
touchdowns and went over 1,000
yards ruslting this season with 138
- 97 in the first quarter - and
Drew Bledsoe passed for two more.
The smallest NFL crowd of the
season, 26,S71, shivered through a
wind chiD of minus-20 at Foxboro
Stadium.
Indianapolis (4-11) has just one
touchdown in the last 25 quarters
and has lost seven of eight.

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

'

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Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Buill· in

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Simmon$ wlll get another
chance to impress the scouts at the
Jan. 22 Senior Bowl in Mobile, his
hometown.
Simmons wasn't even supposed
to be in the game. After leading
Troy State to the Division 1-AA
semifinals, he was named an alter·
nate for-the Blue-Gray. When
Auburn's Stan White failed to heal
quickly enough from a lcnee injury,
Simmons got the call from executive director Charles "Fats" Jones.
"Fats Jones has been keeping in
touch with me, telling me about
Stan's progress, so I've been ready
to play in this game since our sea·
son ended (with a loss to Marshall
on Dec. II)," he said.
Simmons was most impressive
on a drive early in the fourth quar·
ter with the Blue leading 10.3.
He threw on six strai~ht plays,
hilling Wake Forest recetver Todd
Dixon for 17 yards, Mississippi
receiver Eddie Small for 14, baek·
to-back to Arkansas tight end Kirk
Bolkin for 12 and 15, Texas Chris·
tian running back John Oglesby for
five before returning to SmaU for a
nine-yanl gain. After finally hand·
ing otT, Simmons went baek to the
air for a three-yard touchdown pass
to Georgia Tech running back
Dorsey Levens with 10:23 remain·
ing.

..•·
See us lor ~II or lhe ar.cessOI'IP.S,
adaptP.I'S , l:lliiiiP.I:IOI'S &amp; baltei'IP.S
til at Santa lol'got tu brmg

"

1

,,•

Olajuwon had nine points ·in the
period and finished with 17 points
and 14 rebounds for Houston.
Doug Christie led the Lalcers
with 20 points, while Vlade Divac
added 16.
The Rockets had a 31-30 lead
before breaking the game open
midway through the second quarter. They ouiSCOred the Lakers 24·
14 in the final 7;51 of the half to
take a 5544 advantage.
· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Cleveland 107, Indiana 103 in
overtime; New Jersey 91, Atlanta
87; Miami 109, Sacramento 95;
Golden State 108, Portland 106 in
overtime; San Antonio 99, Boston
85 ; and Denver 100, Minnesota 97.
Warriors 108
Trail Blazers 106 (OT)
Golden State beat ·Ponland for
the first time in I 0 tries behind
4trell Sprewell's season-high 33
points and rookie Chris Webber's
24 .
' The visiting Warriors, trailing
8J- 77 aftcr three periods, led 94-93
with 4:18 left in regulation before
Strickland came back with a five·
footcr and two free throws, giving
the Trail Blazers a 97-94 edge with
1:29 remaining.
A free throw by Chris Mullin
and Webber's layup with 5.7 seconds left tied the score, and Strick·
land missed a follow shot, forcing
the overtime.
Billy Owens' jumper gave the
Warriors a 99-97 ~ead at the start of
the extra period, and' they didn't
lose it again.
·
Rod Strickland and Clifford
Robinson scored 27 points apiece
for Pontand .
Spurs 99, Celtlcs 85
David Robinson scored a sea·
son-high 46 points as San Antonio
handed .Bo~t~?n its seventh consecu·

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SPECIAL

SERVICE AND READY TO GO

· 89 MERCURY TOPAZ ......... $4,493

Was $2995.00

(ContinuedfromPage6)
tive road loss and fifth straight
defeat overall.
Robinson made 16 of 26 shots
from the field and 14 of a career·
high 23 attempts from the freethrow line to puU into a vinual tie
with Shaquille O'Neal for the NBA
scoring lead. O'Neal's exact average is 28 .600 and Robinson's
28.593.
Boston was led · by Xavier
McDaniel with 18 points.
Nugets 100, Tlmherwolves 97
Denver won its third consecu·
live game for the fli'St time this sea·
son while handing visiting Min·
nesota its rUth Slraight defeat.
Bryant Stith's 16-foot jump shot
from the lane with 25 seconds left
broke a 97-97 tie - the 17th of the
game - and Regie WiUiams converted a free throw 20 seconds
later.

Area drag racer Jeff Johnson of
Reedsville earned the honor of having his "Fast Forward" Dodge
Truck drag racer pictured on the
cover of MldwtSI Drag T?acl11g
magazine, one of drlg racing's top
trade publications.
Johnson's mount was pictured
in a full-page color layout as it
appeared coming off tbe line at KD
Dragway in Norwalk, where Johnson won $1,000 in the IHRA
Bracket World rma1s.
Johnson is sponsotcd by Baum
Lumber and Hot Spring Spa's in
Chester..A former all-district baseball player at Eastern, he is the son
of Clayton and Shirley Johnsoa of
Reedsville, where he and wife
Deanna also ~side.

"100" UNITS

SPECIAL

NBA action...

~ CG1'111ss phone with

Reg. HPJr.te Item• 2034.95 N25-1632/3025/1091 . !1126-2881431f2906

By PAUL NEWBERRY
MONTGOMERY, Aia(AP)Take that, NFL scouts.
No one seems quite sure about
the height of Troy State quarter·
back Kelvin Simmons, but one
thing is for certain; his performance in the Blue-Gray all-star
game undoubtedly earned a second
look from tllo5e wbo consider him
too short to be a pro quarterback.
"When you're short, you have
to overcome tall obstacles," said
Simmons, who was named the
Gray team's MVP in a 17-10 victo·
ry ovenhe Blue on Christmas Day.
"I think I ha~e a chance to play in
the NFL. It's Just a mauer of someone giving me a chance."
Just how rail is Simmons? That
seems to be a point of some disagreement. The Troy State media
guide listed him at 5-foot-10 last
year, but raised it to 6-0 this sea·
son. The Blue-Gray also listed him
at 6-0, but reports last week indi·
catcd he was closer to 5·9 3/4.
Simmons doesn't care which
figure is right. All he knows is he
was tall enough to see over the line
Saturday. connecting on 16 of 25
passes for 171 yards and a touch·
down. In the process, he equaled a
Blue-Gray record with seven completions in a row, though he did
suffer two inrerceptions as well.

NOW

$993

anll.teo•"

Gray

On the Spot
Financing

Was $3495.00
NOW

SJ993

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE INC.

Se~ Mike Northup - Dwight Stevers - Pete Somerville - Tom Sprague
Morris Sheets - AI Durst - Eric Blackburn.
~

UPPER RIVER ROAD

446·0842

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

' '

'

'

.,

,,

.

.,

�Monday, December 27,1993

Late-night comedy roundup with Jay Leno
Br. The ABsoelated Press
While many people slept, night
owls giggled, chortled and guffawed to the jokes made on late-

night talk shows. For those who
would rather hear from the Sandman instead of Lederman, here are
some highlights from recent mono-

Iogues:
From "The Tonl11bt Show wilb
Jay Leno"

•'The Uniled Sta~ is asldng for
an embargo against North Korea.
Intelligence sources say, this is
really scary, lhat North Korea has

developed a crude nuclear bomb.
What is a crude nuclear bomb? Is
this made out of Honda parts? How
does that work?"

'

Grog gel
promoted

FOR

J. Steven Groggel, a ·t983 graduate of Southern High School, has
recently been promoted to the auto
~!aims division of USAA. a major
worldwide insurance company.
USAA has a regional office in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he
presently resides. Mr. Groggel has
been recognized with the "Einployee of the Quarter" award.
Majoring in communications
and public relations at Regis College, Mr. Groggel has been actively
Involved in the Colorado Springs
"Drive Smart" campaign since
1989. The campaign has won the
Secrelary of lhe United States Safety Award.

SEASON

FINAlEI

Manuel
striving for
stardom

~.

: Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an neat
aad tbe day of thai eveat. Items
must be received In advance to
issure publication In the calen-

!Jar.
'•

c:1mam

V-1 PNIIIIIVII

,,•

F-SERIES

CONVERSION VANS

V-6 Power, Dnver Side Alrbag, Auto, A/C, PIS, P/8,

nn. ABS Brakes. AMifM Stereo, Rear Window

Defroster, Reclining Bucket
Seats, P/Locks, Loaded!

94 FORD RANGER PICKUP

94 FORD E-150 PICKUP

·AM/FM Casselte ·Rear Step Bumper
·Alloy Wheels •Ciearcoat Paint
•Handling Package •Full Carpeting

·Full Size Pickup
•Overdrive Transm ission
•Driver Side Air Bag

In Stock For Immediate Delivery
3 To Choose From At This Price

$9994

$11,994

$16,493

BRAND IIW '14 aiOIIlD IIIIU Elll
IIIIT 2DIIR CIUPE 1141. •10

16,994
BUICK

1994 BUICK
CENTURY
Windows
•&lt;&gt;&lt;,~nto Trunk Release

•Pn,wAr

. DIIHerec'

•Front Wheel Drive
•Full Wheel Covers
•Macpherson Strut Suspension
•Rack &amp; Pinion Steering
•Power Disc Brakes
•Full Carpeting
•Delay Wipers

'

•Halogen Headlamps
·Driver Side Air Bag
•Reclining Front Seat

$8494

IIAIIIIW '14111:1lEU.
Automatic, /riC, PIS, PIB. Rear Window Defroster, AM/fM
Cassette, Till, Cruise, Power Windows, Power Door Locks,
Power Driver Seat, Aruminum Wheels, Prestige Option
PaCkage. Loaded I

Stop By And Test Drive
The "ALL NEW"

94 TOYOTA CELICA

94 TOYOTA CAMRY LE

36 Month Lease Only ...

J

f
0

$

•

I

'J

,,

94 TOYOTA T-100 PICKUP
•3.0 SOHC V6 Engine •8 Ft. Bed
•Au1omatie/Overdrive
•Cloth Seat
•Oriver Side Air Bag
•Anti Chip
•Side Impact Beams
•Rack &amp; Pinion Steering
•Tinted Glass
•Delay Wipers.

$13 994

WITH
NO MONEY
DOWN

•2.2 4 Cylinder Twin Cam 16V EFI Engine
•Front Wheel Drive ·Power Windows &amp; Locks
•AM/FM Cassette •Power Vented Front Disc Brakes
•Wheel Independent Suspension •Floor Mats
•60/40 Rear Split Fold Down Seat
•Power Mirrors •CFC Free Air Conditioner
•Power Antenna •Auto Off Halogen Headlamps

DON WOOD TOYOTA
lEW '14 PIITIK HIIIIBIIIII
CIRillO CAIIII1

IUD.H '1411111414
10111111:11 PICIIPI

.11111rr11111• ,.,. ~ ur• ftiMik
lllnl o.•#IIIJ*al" II Til,_

I

2o9¥D
API
.T1411111b''

111 • ...,... ,
.., II, 111111111

$

•Sports Package
•For Lamps
•Aluminum Wheels
•Power Windows &amp; Locks
•Cruise Control
•AM/FM Cassette
•Floor Mats
•Loaded!

$

•Driver Side Air Bag
•Anti Lock Brakes
·Air Condrtioning
•Quad OHC Engine
•Overdrive Transmission
•AM/FM Cassette

$

•Power Sunroof
•Leather Trim
•North Star System
•Chrome Wheels
•AM/FM Cassette/
Compact Disc
·Loaded!

SAVE

$5994

14 994 16 994 12 994 Sav~:~~~s~:~:ri:!

DON WOOD BUICK OLDS
P.ONTIAC CADILLAC &amp; GMC

4 SP@Bd Automatic Transmission, Anti·Loek Brakes, Air, PIS,
P/8, Tilt, Cruise. AMIFM Casseue. P.Windows, P/Door Locks.
t 6" Aluminum Whools, Custom
Cloth Buckel Seats With
i4fisole, Loaded!

.
~

TIJESDAY ,

;;, RACINE - Tho Racine Area
Community Organization wiD mee1
It the Ponderosa in Ripley Tuesday. Those goi'!l are to meet at
$iar Mill Padt atli: IS.

•

Air conditioning, AM/FM cassette, loaded!
Retail ........... .... ............ ..... .. ....... .$11 ,401
Value Package .. .............. ...... ........ -$502
MSRP .... ...... . ..... ... ... ..... .. . $10,899
Don Wood Discount .... .. .. .......... . -$1,206
Rebate ....... ........ .... .. ..... ........ ......... -$400
Young Buyer Rebate ..................... -$300

RANGER

'

\ . v

WEDNESDAY
••
: PAGEVILLB - The Scipio
!'ownshlp·lruStees will meet at 630
J!.m. Wednelday at dtc town hall.

Air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, loaded!
Retail ....................... .............. .. ... $11 ,125
Package Discount ...... ... ...... .......... -$780
MSRP ..... ..... .............................. $10,345
Rebate ... ........... ... .......... ........ ..... ... -$300
Young Buyer Rebate ....... .. ......... ... -$3~0
Don Wood Discount ............... ....... -$351

Window Defroster
Condrtroned

Long Bottom
news notes

-Community
: calendar

1993 FORD ESCORT LX

I

NDOoq,.,-. ~·

J

1994 FORD TEMPO GL

SALE PRICE ..... s94~ SALE PRICE ..... ss993

·~

,(

A Racine woman may be only a
song away from cutting a country
album, according to a recent
release.
Robin Manuel participated ill
the Talent Seek Program Dec. 19 in
Nashville, Tenn .. at the Oprr.land
Hotel and her performance wdl air
on satellite television at 8 p.m.
Sunday (12/26) on satellite reception F-2 Transponder #7.
Manuel is singer number 62 and
whoever gets the most calls will
win a recording con0'8Ct. A number
of recording companies will be at
the session, Manuel said adding,
she ·expects to be interviewed by
recording companies.
Call 1-900-288-9919, to SUpport
this budding star.

By Melody Robens
Mrs. Ruth Stethem spent the
Thanksgiving holiday with her son
Gerald Stethem and family in Canton.
Square dances will be starting
on Friday nights beginning in January at the Long Bottom Community Building. Details will follow
later.
The Long Bottom Community
Association had its Christmas party
at Shoney's in Ripley. Sixleell were
in attendance. A gift exchange and
short business meeting followed.
Happy Birthday was sung by the
Shaner waitresses to Judy Holter,
Ada Btssell and Dorset Larkins.
Volunteers are needed £rom the
Long Bouom area to help the Olive
Township Fire Department. Anyone interested may call Clarence
Alhcrton at 985-3849 or contact a
ftrefighter .
. Ruby Brewer and Janie Fitch
visited Jake and Bernice Deem,
Vienna, W.V., recently.
Lola Delores Hawk's visitors
have been Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hunnell, Columbus: Dorothy Hawlc,
Long Bottom. The group traveled
to Parkersburg to shop and had
lunch at the Olive Garden.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Salisbury
and family, Gallil,IOiiS: Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Larldns and family.
Columbus, Mrs. Wilma Wamsley
and Beuy Loudin, Cheshire spent
the weekend with Dorsel and Phyllis Larldns.
Ernie Gri££in is now at home
recuperating from surgery.

1994 GMC
Safari Conversion
2At This Price!

Wilt fiJIIII~J. #1 llrJ, 1111, """'· fti~ .. Ill flltll ra la/1
Till liEf 1-1--11~-Hil •lll·21ff • Hf.JHl• fll-1111' '
• Taxes. Tags. Tille Fees'eXIra. Rebate Included In sate price Of new velltcle listed where applicable. On i!IIJiriivii

.......

I

�Monday, December 27, 1993

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 11

VERY
SPECIAL
SAVINGS!

POINT PLEASANT, WV
HUNTINGTON, WV
GALUPOLIS, OH.
WELLSTON, OH.
MILTON,WV

MIDDLEPORT, OH. HURRICANE, WV
NITRO, WV
WIIIAELO, WV
PROCTORVILLE, OH.CHARLESTON, WV
ATHENS, OH.
BELPRE, OH
OH.

BIG SELECTION OF

Save ,T his Christmas With Pietures!

"

AMERJO\N GREEllNGS .
:

Dear Allll Landers: Having been

· a faithful rtadta' for years, I

recall

: more than one instance where a
: lcUer wrirer was coacemed about
.. possible expenses should someone
: donate his or her organs after death.
: In every response, you said the
· dooor's survivors would never be
: charged a fee. I hope the enclosed
; clipping from lhe Fort U!uderdale
: Sun-Sentinel will shock you as it
• did me.
: · · Kalhy Bass' son Jeffrey was lying
: brain-dead in Jackson Memorial
: Hospital in: Miami after an

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1993, La. Ancel~:~
nm.. syndkaU
~Syndlcole",

asked her if she would agree to
allow them to keep Jeffrey alive long
enough to harvest his organs to
benefit others. Mrs. Bass agreed. The
lives of four people were saved as a

now She is being billed $41,000 for
expenses incurred while keeping
Jeffrey alive. That's not all. The
hospital has put a lien on the
insurance money from the accident,
and Kathy Bass doesn't have enough
to pay her son's funMII expenses.
I can hear the hospital's exctises
now: "This bill isn't for organ
removal. It is for hospital expenses
for the care provided after the
accident" I have a stamp on my
driver's license identifying me as an
organ donor, but it does not say,
"Only if I don't have to pay." Now I

donor status if it means my wife will
go broke because she chose to save
!he lives of oth!'Zll.

Jackson Memorial is a respectable,
well-lcnown teaching hospital.
Billing Mrs. Bass is an outrage.
Hippocrates would be ashamed. GARY IN FORT LAUDERDALE
DEAR GARY: I have lllCeived
hundreds of letti'Zll (with clippings
attached) about this incident Those
who wrote were incensed.
We spoke with Les Olson,
director of lhe University of Miami
Organ Procurement Organization,

affairs at Jackson Memorial
Hospital. The facts
as foUows:
"That bill for $41 ,000 never
should have been sent. It was an
absolute mistake," said Cohen. "We
are dreadfully sorry, and we hope to
learn something from it"
Kathy Bass was relieved and
grateful when she received the word.
And there was mom good news. Les
Olson told her he had reviewed the
biD and determined that all but
$2,868, the cost of normal
emergency care, will be
by the
donor bank. This means
Bass

are

whatever, since the insurance should
cover the emergency care. Olson
said it should be made
unmistakably clear that t_he !!&amp;Lion's
organ procurement orgaruzallODll III'C
responsible for aU expenses incurred
in the donation process.
Mrs. Bass said !he experience did
not embitter her toward organ
donanon, nor does she want thjs
incident to discourage other
potential donors.
And now, dear readers, I hope thjs
unfortunate publicity will not tum
vou sour on being a donor.

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

"Always your

CHRISTMAS PARTY GOODS
CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP
GIFTS AND ORNAMENTS
BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS

choice at Fmth."

3112" COLOR PRINTS SINGLE PRINTS DOUBLE PRINTS

1/2

12 EXPOSURE...........................99'......................$1.99
15 EXPOSURE •••••••••••••••••.•••••s1.99.~....................s3.59

PRICE

24 EXPOSiJRE..................... ~.s3.99 ......................s5.59
36 EXPOSURE.......................s5.99 ......................*7 .59
C-41

E CBEV.-DLDS.

.·GEl
ANNUAL INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE

$8,888

1993 CH

$19,999

CHANTILLY HAND &amp;
BODY LOTION

2 oz. COLOGNE SPRAY
c

$639

$15.00 Value SALE$

2

V-6, auto. 2 to choose from.

$14I 369

CACHET COLOGNE
SPRAY oR
U/lnd~
LOTION

CHARLIE 1.3 oz.
JONTUE 1.25 oz. or
ENJOLI 1.6 oz.

COLOGNE SPRAY
$14.50 Value$

*1 0.00 VALUE

SILKY TOUCH
NAPKINS

SALE $3ggEACH

T•k• Dff 11!.111 H•lil•y '""'~s y,,
DEXATRIM

Sale

f•i,..,l

call8tte.

LE;;~~50

V6, 5 speed, air,
more.

MAIL-IN REBATE

$149

549 Ea.

9" PAPER PLATES

OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OF
Includes
Napier and
Black Hills
Gold

MAXIMUM STRENGTH
APPETITE SUPPRESSANT
,CAPLETS
SALE PRICE

LITER

REV LON

PRINCE MATCHABELLI

$ 19

4 Door, V6, auto., stereo,
air bag.

4

99

'8.00 VALUE SALE $319

1993

4 cyl., auto., alr,tllt, cruise,

PEPSI,
DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW

12 oz.

'14.50 VALUE SALE
8 oz. HAND &amp; BODY LOTION

300 COUNT

wlndowe.

PARFUMS PARQUET

MUSK OR WHITE MUSK

"tJ 994 CHEVY CAMARO Z28

All new styling. Must see!

PROCESS

JOVAN

NOW TILL 5:00P.M., DECEMBER 31, 1993

5.7 VS, auto., air, c:irulle, pow·
er atur., stereo w/CD, power

•NOISEMAKERS •nARAS
·SQUAWKERS
.PARTY HATS
•PARTY POPPERS •CONFETTI
•BALLOONS
·FOIL HORNS

(SINGLE CARDS NOT INCLUDED)

•

RD

LOW
PRICES
EVERYDAYI

BETTA
NEW YEAR'S PARTY
SUPPLIES

100 COUNT

JEWELRY
25°/ooFF

AFTER
REBATE

For Hot or Cold Beverages
LARGE 14 OZ.

FOAM
CUPS
18 COUNT

\.:.a: I
[:. 111\
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3 PACK OF

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ALL CHRISTMAS TRIMS,
DECORATIONS, .
GIFT WRAPPING, BOWS,
RIBBONS, TAGS, SEALS, AND
BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS

CHRISTMAS PENS
'

,.

biAS:·.(IION...fRI. 9:CI0-8:0o;
. ' SAT. 9:0...:00;

DON

· ,. SUN. 1:CI0-5:00
.
PAYIIEN'rs SUB.IECT TO BANK APPROVAL

-

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..CREV.·DLDS-.·CAD.-GEO
.
308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY. OH.

.

Tax &amp; till• nollnclujlld.

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SUNPAY ·
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PKGS.
FOR

$1 QQ

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RETRActABLE PENS

1-~~--~F~OR~O~N~~~$~1.0:0~-J
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•

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JW1ERJCAN GREEllNGS

NEW YEAR'S
PARTY SUPPLIES

25%

�.;:~COUNTY, OHIO

A CHRISTMAS ROSE • The last bud on a
Peace rosebush at tbe D11le EUis' BP Station in
Middleport came into full bloom for Christmas.
An employee, Gary Johnson, Is pictured here

End-of-year reminders from Social Security
As the end of the year
approaches, there are certain Social
Security-related matters you should
know about.
Ir you have a child age one or
older who doesn't have a Social
. Security number, make sure you
get one before you file your tax
return next year. The law requites
you to list a Social Security number
on your tax return for all dependents over age one.
If you changed your name this
year (through marriage, divorce, or
any other reason), make sure your
new name is liste,d on your Social
Security card and in Social Security's records. If you don't do this,
there may be problems posting
your eammgs to Social Security's
files. (This could reduce your
·future Social Security benefits.)
Also, the Internal Revenue Service

Contest winners named
Winners of the Farmers Bank
Christmas Savings Bond drawing
were IIIIIIOUIICed Thursday.
Winning $100 savings bonds
were Felecia Grubb of Tuppers
Plains and Randy Snider of

· Pomeroy.
The contest started Dec. I.

may have problems processing
Questions &amp; Answers
your tax return.
Q: I am a new Supplemental
If you're already getting Social Security Income (SSI) recipient.
Security benefits and you moved When I looked at my calendar, l
this year, make sure we have your saw lhat January I, 1994, the date I
correct address. (Sometimes people should get my check, is a Saturday.
who have their checks sent directly Will I get my check on Friday or
to their bank forget to tell us about Monday?
a change in their mailing address.)
A: Because Friday, December
It's important we have your correct 31 is a legal ~iday, you will get
address because early next year your check on nursday, December
we're going to send you a form that 30. As a general rule, if the frrst of
shows the total benefits you the month falls on a Saturday, Sunreceived in 1993. You may need day, or legal holiday, .you'll get
this form for income laX or other your check on the banking day
purposes.
before. This general rule holds
If you receive Social Security whether you receive your benefits
and work, remember that you can by mail or you have them deposited
earn more money in 1994 before directly in your bank account
your benefits are reduced. If you're
Q: My 17-year-old daughter has
under 65, you can earn up to a summer job keeping house for a
$8,040 next year with no reduction couple of neighborhood women.
in benefits. If you're 65 to 69, you Are her earnings laXable for Social
can earn up to $11,160 in 1994 Security?
with no reduction. If you're 70 or
A: Yes. If she e&amp;ms more than
older, there is no limit on your $SO in a calendar quarter from one
earnings.
employer, her earnmgs are taxable.
If you received benefits and The employer needs to deduct
worked in 1993, you need to report Social Security taxes from her
your earnings to Social Security by check. For more information, call
April 15. 1994. The 1993 limits Social Security's toll-free number,
were $7,680 for people under 65 1-800-772-1213 and ask for the
and $10,560 for people 65-69.
fact sheet "Household Workers"
(Publication No. OS-10021).

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

loot known addraoo woo
1120 Eaot Main Stroot,
pg.,..oy, Ohio 45768 and to
Mark Allen Caoto, whooe
lao! known addreeo wao
21118
14th
Av..,ue,
Parkoroburg. Weot Vlrglnlo
21101, - you oro hereby
notiilod that you have beoro
named Delondanla In •
lop) action on•llod Marvin
L Kelly, Plolntlfl w. Hornor
H. C.oto, Et AI., O.f..,daniL
Thlo action haa boon
aaolgned Caee Number
27830 and Ia panclng In the

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

Court of Common Plee1,
ProiNito Dlvlolon ol Melgo
County,

Pomeroy,

Ohio

45769.
The obJect ol the
Complaint lo for Mlthorlty to
aell decedent'o r•l •tato
In order to pay debt. ot the
utata, which rul •tate lo
more particularly dncrlbed
In Volume 235, Page 113,
Melgo County Deed
Aacorde, reler..,ce to which
11 hereby made.
You are required to
anower the Complolnt
within 28 dayo after the lllot
publication ol thlo nollco
which will be publlohed

once ••ch WHk lOr alx
ouc. . .lve w..ke. Tho loot
publlcotlon will 1M mode on
12127, 111113 •d ... 28 dayo
for Anowor win comm..,co
on thotdata.
of your failure to
In onower or otherwlao
r•pond ao required by tho
Ohio Ruloo of Civil
Procedure, Judgment by
dotault will bo rendered .
ogelnel you for tho rellof ·
dem.ndod In tho Complaint
Dated: November 18, 1993
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Moigo County Prob*
Court
(11)22, 21, (12) 6, 13, 20, 27

Aocounl8 and vouchero
of tho iollowlng named
llduclllrt• haYo beoro lllod
In tha Probalo Court, Molge
Cou!IIV, Ohio, lor approval
..
•dN1111mont:
EITATE NO. 25136·
lleoond Current Acc""l'l of
llernlnf V. Fulb Md J-M
E. Diddle Trua._ of the
Truot Cro.tod Unclor the Will
of Aoaer Adllm1, Deer ned.
ESTATE NO, 27122· Final
w Dlolrlbullw Account of
Samuel Larry Plckeno,
e-tor ol tho Eotata ol
Samuel G. Plckeno,
Doc-..1.
ESTATE NO. 25636- Final
onct Ditlrlbulive Account ol
ClloriM E. Hall and Randall
K. Hill, Co-Admlnlotretoro
ol tho Eota)8 ol Marion A.
Hall, O.CeaMCI.
ESTATE NO .
25336·
Seventh Annual Account ol
Bobby Arnold, Truotee ol
the Trut1t Croalod by ITEM II
ol tho Laal Will and
TNtam..,l of Margaret Ella
Lawla, o-aood.
ESTATE NO. 26D95Judlth L. Allenaworth,
Admlnllllnllrlx ollhe Eatale
ol Floooio C. Allenaworth,
Doc-eel.
UniNo oxcoptlono are
filed thereto, uld accounlll
will be lor hoorlng before
oald Court on tho 31ot day
ol January, 111114, at which
lime aald account. will be
conoldered and continued
from day to day until finally
clopooodoL
Any peraon lntarootad
may lllo written exceptlono
to ooid accounto or to
mattero partainlng to the

ADVERnSEIENT FOR
BIDS
Leading Crook Conaorvancy
Dlttrlct
34481 Com Hollow Rood
Rudand, Ohio 4sns
Separate oulttd BIDS for
the Phaae II Water Line
Ext..,~lona proJect in Mttlga
County, Ohio, will be
received by the Leading
Creek Conoervancy Diatrlcl
un~l 5:00 p.m., Local Time,
January 20, 1094, and lh..,
at nid olllce publicly
opened and rood aloud.
Work under lhio project
lncludoo lnotallatlon of
approximately 29,480 lineal
leal ol water line with
appurlenancet.

be occomp.niod bt a ourety publlohed by the State ol
bond by a
ondlng Ohio popartmont ol
company authorizttd to do lnduotriol RoiaUono.
.
buolneoo In the Stall ol
Bidding by mln~roty

Ohio or by c:erUfled check, buain•••

ceohlor't check or lottor of
credit from aome eolvont
bank. Tho bid guaranty
bond ohali be lor tho full
amoun1 ol tho bid and the
cortlllod check, caohlor'o
chock or lellor ol credit
ohallbeequiolto tO percent
(10%1 ol the amount olthe
aubmltted propoool. The
ouroty bond certified
check, cahler·~ check or
leiter ol credit ohall be
payable to the Leading
Creek Conoervancy Dlttrict
a1 a guarantee that If the
propoeal Ia accepted, a
contract will be entered Into

Th •
eat i mated
conotruction coot lor thio
project io $203,000 as ol
October 19, 1993.
The BID DOCUMENTS
may be examined at the

and

following locations : SIECO ,

provlalona of the Ohio

Inc ., 134 West Main Street,
Lancaoler, Ohio 43130.

Revised Code as II rela18s
to
bid
guarantee~ .

Luding Creek Conaervancy

conditions, liabilitiaa and

Its

performance

properly oecured by a
oallolactory bond In the
amount ol one hundred
percent (100%) of the
ce&gt;ntract
price .
All

Diotrict, 34481 Corn Hollow
Road, Rutland, Ohio 45n5 .
Builders Exchange/F. W.
Dodge Reports, 1175 Dublin
Road, Columbuo, Ohio
43215.
F.W. Dodge Roporta, 405
Capitol Street, Suite 802 ,
Charleston, West Virginia
25301.
The
0 hi o
Valley

withdrawal of a bid shall be
adhered to by the
Contractor. No bidder may
withdraw hi a propooal
within aixty (60) days alter
tho actual date ol tho
opening thereof.
The proposal must be
made on lhelormo provldttd
therefor In the bid
documonto, or a copy
Construction Employee's thereof, with a price quoted
Council, Inc., 21 Armory

for the work, the price of

Drive,

labor and malerials lo be

Wheeling,

Virginia 26003.

West

· separately otated.
Each •ealed proposal
envelope mu•l indicala the

Copies of tho CONTRACT title of the project and tho
DOCUMENTS may be bidder 's name and addrMs.
obtained at the olfico of
Each Bidder mu•t insure
SIECO, Inc., 134 Wesl Main that all employeeo and
Slreet, P.O. Box 907 , applicant• lor employment
Lancael8r, Ohio 43130, are not discriminated
execution of the tru1t, not upon payment ol S50 lor against because of race,
1..1 than live dayo prior to each set. none of which ie color, religion, sex. or
the date oat for hNring.
refundable. Make chlcka natlonol origin.
The Contractor shall pay
Robart S . Buck payable to SIECO, Inc.
JUDGE
Each propooal ohall be wages to each laborer and
Common Pleoo Court, olgned by the lull name and mechanic at a rate nol leas
Probate Divlolon butln••• addreaa of each than the minimum wages
Mlllgo County, Ohio penon or company opacified In the current
(12]27
lntere•ted In the same, ehall wagte delermlnatlon as

ent~rpn•••

··
~

.
.

.·

cortiliod unlfer Divoa~on B ?' :
Section 123.151 of the Ohoo - .
Revloed
Code
Ia :·
encouragttd on thio protect . ,
The Owper reaorveo the . ·
right to acceptor reject ~ny . :
or all propo~alo; to waove
anv lr_r.egulorllleo . o~ ·:
inlormololoeo on tho blddong, · .
and to ont~ Into 1 c~lr'!Ct
with the bodder who on ota ·
contlderallon ollero the
lowest and boot propooal.
By order of Robert F.
Snowden,
Prooldent, ·

dim:. DK's

·ruFannToys
AT THE
QUAIJTY PRINT SHOP

Leading Creek Conaervancy _.

Dietrlct.
(12127, (I) 3, 10,3 tc

.:._:_ _ _ _ _ _ __

.•

PubliC Notice
PUBLIC NOnCE
The eighteen member
Gallla.Jackoon-Melgs Board
of Alcohol, Drug Addiction ·:
and Mental Heilth Servlcea · ·
io appointed by the Director :
of the Ohio Department of .'
Mental
Health
(4

Meigs Counties (10 ' .
appointees). Currently there :
is a vacancy to be fllled by ·:
the
lllelga
County ·

Southern Local Hl9h
School, Elm Street 47725

'

Individuals Interested in
being conoldered lor 1his '
appolnlment can do so by ~ ·
requesting an application ·
from:
,

Galli•· Jackoon• Mel go ,
Board ol Alcohol, Drug ,
Addiction and Mental Health
Second.

of

•

i1 replacemenl materials.

prevailing wage rates 11

•

tn

•

Carpet
Love seats
Glider Rockers
Pictures
Bedrooms
Gun Cabinets
Dining Rooms
Metal Cabinets
Cedar Chests
Dryers
Coffee Tables
Book Shelves

*
I I

Anderson's
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

Owner reserves the right to
waive any Informalities or to
reject any or all bids.

992·3671

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

l

.•
.•
•
•

4·19-113-TFN

yard

,.
•

--"
' ~
ONE ITEM - ONE FREE AD PER WEEK

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! ASKING $29,500.00

SAYRE TRUCKING

RACINE· Localed on 4th Sl . 2 Slory frame home woth

314193 1 mo.

'..

..

....

NAME:-----~---------------------------------~·~
· -----------------

~ONE:-----------------------------~----------------...,..---~------------------

.

il
i. •,;J

OH .
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Whhe Pine 4' &amp; Up wilh
a great selection of
· larger treae .
Call 7 42·2143 or
742-2979

·TR 130· Gold Ridge Rd.· 54 25• acres ol vacant Iandi
Includes old 30x40 house. Mostly timber. Electric available,
Mineral righos with the property
ASKING $24,500
POMEROY· SR 7 older 2 soory lram e home wilh 3
bedrooms. bath. double hung wondows. panel walls, carpel

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

~ ~

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EVERY
SATURDAY

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Uc. No. 0051-342

QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992·7474
POMEROY, OHIO
9128/TFN

GENERAL
HAULING
Llm4tstone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

(304) 882-3336

WilHam C. James
Co-Owners

CHRISTMAS TREES

BODFORD'S

10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, OWNER
1217/n-lln

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

614-992·7643

lllo S.IIHy c....,
2112192/tfn

sweeper
Parts • Service • Bags • Belts

NOVEMBER SPECIAL

Rainbows, Kirby, Eltcaolux.
Hoover, EURka, Tn..Star,
Regina, &amp;: 11101t ocber brands!

(BEAT THE BAN)

Parta Shipped UPS
FISt • Dependable Service)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............5180
NORINCO UNI. SKS ........................ SCJS
1200 ROUNDS NON·CORROSIVE •• 5130

Call Ben Cedar at cedar Vacs

CALL AFTER 6:0&lt;'
304-415·7256
11n2193t MO.

MOIIftAGI COMPANY

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVICE
36970 Ball R1111 Road

273-4098
Dag K••els 10' xlO' x6'~££,;,,
Mite Ute Starti11g at
·
Applegote Ro•IMI Bell Fe~ees &amp; Gates
Horse TIXk &amp; Saddles

'•

Wild Bird Seed
Whi1e Sah Block 50 lbs. $4.25
TrCKe Mineral Blodt 50 lbs. $5.00
Much More At Lowest Prkes ill Meigs CoNty

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAIID,
LIMESTONE,. TOP SOIL
&amp;

FlU DIRT

992-3470
DWNIR: Jell Wlcl:..._

YOUNG'S
SERVICE

ANANCING AVAILABLE
1-800-553-3586

FURNACES
AMERICAN GENERAl liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
L!fll • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. e Agent
... 119
Mitltlloport, Oltio 45760
(614) 143·5264

5114/93o1fn

&amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. Young Ill

446-9515
CADET &amp; UNOLSTEIY CLEAIII&amp;

992-6215

Pomeroy,

101111 IISSELL
COISTIUmON
tNowHooGor.ge~~

oComplete
Remodeling

;tii:NRY E. CLELAND .................................. 992·6191
''tRACY BRINAGER .................................... 949-2439
:SHERRI HART. .............. ......... .................. ... 742·2357
·HENRY CLELAND 111 .................................. 992-61111
:itATHY CLELAND........ ...............................992-6191

Stop&amp;Co~re

FREE ESTIMATES

915-4471

OFFICE.................... ..

. '.

Cheryl A. James

$9 75 ATON SIZED LIMESTONE

McLendon

MAKE AN OFFER! $2i,VOO

'

New Haven W. V. 25265

PLUMIING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLIIIG

LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES

~IIIU,

ASKING $87,!100

•Iii:

H
'

payment. loiSize t24x1t9.

•

•
~
.. ••••
••••

..

opace , lull basement with lrull cellar, fireplace , NGFA heat
Owner may go Land Contract with reasonable down

••
~

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS
DEES

RACINE· Broadway St. 1 lloor plan brick home with 3

MIDDLEPORT· Hooker S&lt; 6 room frame home wilh 3
tiedrooms . 1 112 baths. N.G.F.A . heat , lot size approx .
:S0x 100. nice large fronr porch , cellar space. centr11l air,
)iinio deck. lenced yard CarpeUvinyl ftooring .
·•
·
ASKING $45,000

~

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

lilaC:

&amp;/1019

bedrooms . 2 baths. one car garage, enclosed rear porch,
nice wood work , built in china cabinet plenty of closet

fl ooring . central a1r storm doors and windows, carpbrt,
basement . 3-4 acres of ground

•••
.•

614-742·2138

ASKING $37,000.00

•
•.'
•.
•••

•.

"

garden aoea on lol oi62X119.

''

''

Reasonable Rates
· Joll N. Sayre

newer root and v1nyl siding, 3 bedrooms . bath. FANG heat,
built 1n dishwasher, newer bath , carpeting and drywall,
includes front &amp; rear porches attic space. garage and

•
•

(NOTE: 16 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SEWNG PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL,. TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL

. home located in Pomeroy, on Union Terrace, with 3
bedroom s, 1 balh. F.A. electric heat, central air. 1.86+
·
acres. part basement Large front porch.

~

Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Seauity Caments

HOUDAY SPECIAL

oOitcher tOump Truck

tftt

HAULING

unfinished Thi s IS a manufa ctured home

,.

Our Business is Security

CHAPMAN FEED STORE

, Longbottom- 153+ acre~ with 1 112 story frame home
appro• 2 years old w11h 3·4 bedrooms. 3 baths .
· dishwasher range . relr igeralor. disposa l. central air. etectric
heat pump , pave d street . TPC water, Eastern school
district, some fencing . Exira small home, batn shed, pond,
tree gas to small house , royalties , fruit trees. 4th. bedroom

START THE NEW YEAR OFF IN THIS I FLOOR lrame

•

H?ot /01

•Dozer •Backhoe

ASKING $39,500 .

\,
•

•
'
'•

•••a.port,
o•1o
614·992·7144

JIJIIIILIIM

ARNOLD'S

IS THIS THE NEW YEAR TO LIVE IN STYLE? Localed In

I'

,

:;;;a.

CrMkR••

refrigeraror. unique older home with large rooms , high
~ilings, large wrap around porch . View of riv~ frOm back

J.A.R.
CONSOUCTION

742-2903

fiun~ng

.,

ANYMORE- Features a 2 s1ory brick home with older
garage part fenced back yard that includes shed &amp; herb
g 0rden . Home has 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1 112 baths,
cellar &amp; attic space, carpet, wend &amp; vinyl nooring . Some
remodeling completed. 3 fireplaces , ceilong fans, blinds,

'

.
•

GUN SHOOT

6:30P.M.

Lond Claarlng, Pon&lt;M,
Water Unea, Stptlca
Llcanoe &amp; Bonded
Charl111 Hlltflald,
Operlllor

·
~
·
31904 t.•• i!lt

THE NEW YEAR IN THIS UNIQUE HISTORIC
l .:~;~~r:~~
. HOME. THER'RE NOT BUILT LIKE THIS

.•

'

·

OFFICE: 992-2259

7

POMEROY, OH.

CLUB

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM lUI~

ASKING $165,000

,.f

(Offer l:xplras January 15r 1994

(614)
667·6628

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.'·.

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

EAGLES

~

The Daily Sentinel
[ill

•TRUCKING

EVERY THURSDAY

f

I .. GultbOit

WICKS HAULING SERVICE

IIH&amp;O

BUWJ02!1!
1 .!'~CIOIOE
and TRA~ WORK

167

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY IIDGE: Tum EMt Ill
IC1t1no1ln onto RL A1, go 4ml. to Mlllpoat 13. Tum
105 Bull«nul Ave. Pomaillll
South on gntVel rood, 1% mllea to gnwe..
Coma and axparlenc:.
oiagant Food and Shops.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK
Somelhing lor -..or;ono.
Book your Cllritios now. M88ting
.,. also available.
Call 992·3466 • 992·3818
We look forward to
serving you.
36970 BALL RUN RD.

Fectory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
1111011 mo.

992·3838

.
•

TUPPERS PLAINS
B•lc obedience,
low enforcement,
peraonel protection,
kennel Mrvlce, pupa &amp;
young doge for oale.
Rottwoller &amp; Shephard
Stud Service
By 11ppt. only
614-667-PETS

•BACKHOE
• TRACK LOADER

1f71

,.
•

.•
•
•'••
&gt;•

ACIIEMY

Now has beautiul Coc:kM Sp.nlal Pl4lPI•. NJ.o
featuring a 2ft. common Bilek Tequ. LlyiWII)II·now avaiiM&gt;Ie for Cll•ilb•- s.Ja on our lllllreltock
of large aquariu1111. Many now ilame.

FRESH CUT TREES AY."LULE
OR CUT YOUR OWl

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

By order of the Southern
Local Board of Education.
(12) 13, 20, 27 (1) 3; 4TC

••

MAIL TO:--

949·2168

RESIDENDAL
CONCRETE
WORK

FREE ESTIMATES

~

5 DAYS TO SAVE • DEC. 27, 28, 29, 30, 31

pd.

LJMERSTi'iO&gt;iliiiE:..:TRUCKING

•~•
••

OPEN MONDAY TIL 8
l\JES.~T. -::. 5

, , ll/1 -

.~~m
IR~

.

TII·STA111·9

• DOXERS

Scotch, Whlla &amp;
Aualrllll Pineo, &amp;'to It.
Hlllloy Haning raoJ.
donee, 35975 Flatwoocla
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

••'
•,

'

Gutters

$-16-83-Un

AVAIJ.AIILE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE liTES and

••
•••
;o

111241111

Downspouts .
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

JIEEI-ION4H070

Open 9to6

retain the plans and
specifications and the

..••

1112-5102
Carol ' David Riggi

FREE ESTIMATES

3 dlfl-t kinde:

plans end speclflcadons In
good condition within ten
(lO) days after receipt of
bldo . The low bidder may

••

Pomeroy, Ohio

NEW-REPAIR

bidden who return the

'

PIERSON
IROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS
675-6755

H50l' Rockaprlngo Rd.
(ot oom• ot US Rl U)

ROOFING

of $50.00 per eel. The
deposit will be refu ndod lo

IS

Squirrel ...................... '55

$1 0,00 NCh

be forwarded upon receipt
ol a depoell In the amount

•

'

from

(or we'l cut I lor,.,..)

CHRISTMAS
TREES

bidder Is to designate on .

projects Is $177,400 of
which
$142,~15
Is
abatement cool and $34,785

obtained

ShoUder Mount.. .... '155
Horn Molrtl................ '22

7131/9tllfn

45771 or delivered to Elm
Street 47'725 Sl. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio 45771. Each .
the envelope thai It lo a
sealed bid ond the name of
the proJect. The name and
address of the bld.d er shall
alao be Indicated.
Bidder&amp; are advised that

be

~Md

cut your trw.

. Hom L Wlltesel

DARWIN. OHIO

SileScan, Inc. , 326 Front
Streel, Mariella, Ohio 45750.
All bidding documents will

..
.
•.
.
·..•

'

IOU

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

Abatement Contractors.

Blda shall be sealed ond

lurlher Information desired

for !rea Baltary to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchase
required to register and
don~ have
be praaant
to win.

992-7013•
992-5553•

by the aucceaolul bidder.
Blddart mull be llcenoed
by the Ohio Departmenl of
Health
••
Asbeatos
mailed
to
the
Superintendenl's Office at
P.O. Box 176 Racine; Ohio

may

Come by and register

AlliAlES &amp; IODELS

and payment bond In the
amount of 1 DO% of the
contract Is to be furnished

RillS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Riggs Tree Farm

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR

153.54 of the Ohio Revlaed
Code In the amount oliO%
of the bid. A performance

Ohio
In accordance with the
Plana and Speclflcatlcna
prepared by SiteScan, Inc.,
326 Front Street, lllarialla,
Ohio, and on lila In the
oHice of the Superintendent
altha Southern Local Board
oi Education .

aile wi II follow
the
Conference.
Copies
of
Plans,
Specificalions and Proposal
Forms together wilh any

~

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

Bldo will be received for publlahed by the Ohio
all work included under a Department of Industrial
single prime contract.
Relallons and payroll
A pre-bid conlerence .wlll record submillals are
INI held al 10;00. a.m. on applicable 10 thlo project.
Tu"day, December 28,1993
No bidder may wilhdraw
ill the cafeteria at the his bid wilhln sixty (60)
Southern Local High days after the aclual date ol
School. A lour of the project lhe ' opening thereol. The

community membero and
would welcome minority or .
lemale appllcanto.
December 24, 27 &amp; 28, 1993 :

I-ID0-714·niE

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

requirements at Section

State Route 124, Racine,

The total estimate for all

Avenue, P.O. Box 514, '
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, ,
Pho.. : 614-.,.&amp;-3022
The Board lo otrivlng 10
maintain a balanced .
representation

deposit will be refunded.
Each bid muol be
accompanied by a BID,
GUARANTY meeting tho

lmmedlalely thereafter for
the execution of:
Aabe•tos abatement and
Replacement materials at

the County Commissioners ·
in Gallia , Jackson and

414

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
' Sealed propooolo will be
recel ved by the Southern
U&gt;cel Board Education, Elm
Street 47725 St. Rt. 124,
Racine , Ohio 45n1 until
12:00 noon, prevailing local

12, 1994 and wiiiiNI opened
and
read
publicly

Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Services (4 appolnteeo) and ·

Services,

Public Notice

time, Wedneaday, January

appointees), the Director !lf ·•
the Ohio Deparlment ol

Commissioners.

PubliC Notice

••
••

Lamps
Curios
Sofas
Washers
Mattresses
TV's
End Tables
R"liners
Wardrobes
Range.s ·
Refrigerators
'Daybeds

Mid dfl pan, OhiO
GREAT SELECTION NfD
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
812-33M 1:30-4 Mon.-Fri.
742-3020 Altlor 5:00
Hn t-noon 11ot. til

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

lAIII
33151 .... """ ....
' ... .... OWe, 45771
614-'H·5344
l&amp;l

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
• LIGHT,HAULING
•FIREWOOd

BILL SLACK
992·2269

USED RAILROAD TIES
12.oo-92-TFN

"

HENDERSON AND MASON STORE

WILL BE CLOSING DEC. 25TH
THROUGH JAN. 2, 1994
FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
Very Merry Christmas and A Very
Happy New Year - God Bless!

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAU

w. give t:.arpllt and

WV013372

upllolatary tlta

Waapecl..aln:

"SPECIAL CARE"
they dt lllftll

FIRE&amp;WA11:R

...

)

DAII•GE
RESTOftA11()N.
INSURANCE Ct ftiiiS

24Hour
Ell*gsney ltr'•ice

•
•
•

••
•

••
•

..•

�Monday, December 27,1993.

:: Monday, December 27, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

0

..

0

'

(102)154--.

0

••

Giveaway

$10,000; 114-1112·3034Ford 9N Troct~Drtglnol Condi·
lion, 114-446-4 .
_;_
Low pricing on Husqvarna chain
AWl 6 ICCH80f"'ft, ltforll Y~
buy lnvMwO II"!J....CIII Ull 304871-'Jitfl or 1-800-..-r/-3117.
,

Porlor Elomontory $20,000 Firm
114-3118-8165.

•

0
0

0
0

0

64

•

7 Month Old LHter Traln.d,
Declawed, Btack !White, Cat &amp;M--

•Kt
tJ2

n

Boogie; l14-1192-t208.

Autos for

h..-2-J

..

On•

Rentals
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

41

ALl Vard S.l.. Muat Be Paid In

Ad110neo. DEADLINEo 2o00 p.m.

Sunday -lon • 2:00 p.m.
FriUy. Mondoy edRion • 2o00

sare

9

&amp;

coauiiplate

Ua-

Wool VIrginia, 304-

Anllques and UMd twnlturt, no
Mom too Iorge or too omoll, will
ltuy one pieCe or complete
hoi•ahold, also wanted· old
.bicYclea, c•ll O.by M1rtln, 114·
toi-"JM1.

~oralecl atOMWIIrw, w.ll ,.._.
,....,.., old Iampo,__ old lhor·
tnomet:tta, ok:l ctocq, antique
tumhure. Alverl,. Anllquaa.
AuM Moen, owner. 151""99:2·
2&amp;21. W.. buy • • • •; ; &amp; ·o· ;; AU.~ Po.i. ~ s;.~~·~··
•
l!ao buying iunk cara I true • ·
~ 773-5343
Junk
• Auto'a To
• Buy Will Pic:k·Up
j,pplllncn, Any Other Metals

Fres, 6'M-',..."'N28 B•tore g P.M.

r::::~:~:=:==.=====i-======:::==1
11

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

11

ACTIVITY DIRECTOR
Eneraetlc and 1nthual11tlc in-

Office Managar wanlad for doc·
tor's offlc•, start part.tlma,

mail

dlvkf"u.t naedlld to coordlnal• r11uma to: 2903 Parrish Ave, Pt.
the Ktlvhlea program tor our Pluunl, WV 25550.
100 bod nurllng ctntor. A
bachelor'• degrM In recrea- Want•d- 1 omaon• to bruah hog

tiOnal lherapy or two yeara
recent experl•nce in a pa~tlent
acttvlt.. , program In a huhh
lOlling p..torred. Excollont
I wrm10 and oral communication
....mill, Thle nnaltlon at•-que btneftl
prog,.m,
and opI compMHive
salary,
port unity tor career growth. For

1

8111 Bin, Pomeroy Nural~ &amp;

W.nlltcl To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call

Allhab. Center,

~.~Y· l:t"-388-9303.

367SSI Rock·

:~:S"I~O:.d., Pomero~.

OH

18

Wanted to Do

""":-:=:-::=:::=::--::--=
TREE SERVICE. Topping,

General Malnlenance, Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed

G~o~qers Cle1ned Llgh1 Hauling,
~::':.~:::.. Residenfill , Stave:

W.nled to buy ; junk motor5, $5

--.

• """· 114143 5265.
W.nlod To euyo 91ondlng Tlmlw I Ptne, Good Pricea, 614-

~op

Georges Portab .. Sawmill, don't
haul your logs lo tht mill just

Avon Sells hHII At Work Or call 304-675-1957.
HorM. AVIrl91 $8 •$14 ~

Door·To-Door Optionol. 1
1112-4738;

Pr- Pllld: All Old U.S.

~.Gold

Ringo, Sll- Coins,

Golll Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop.
1St

~Avenue,

Galllpolia.

wAHTID: l;ngln•

for IV88 Fonl
foollvo, 4"1!.1 1.3 lher, nolded
ASAP, coli llo-102·2155, 8o30om·
1:00pm. or 814·992·2428 oftor
1:00pm.

Employment Services
11

Help

Wanted

.,...,.,_...,..__

AVON · I AI A-1 I Shirley

AYDN! All ...... oxtro
or . . nt a carwr, .tlhlr
. ~oil~~· 304ol82·2845
~

or.1..-....2

.

Depoalt 6 Aef•lllCH Required,
No lnaldt Pete, 614-446-2320.

A Double Troller Lolln Ch11hlro Olive St., Galllpoila. Naw &amp; Uaad
For Atnl, Call Attar 5, 614-387- fumllure, hutara, Wntam &amp;

poi, Booting &amp; Flllllng, $400/Mo.

Nlco 3 bodroom liouoo In Pl.
Ptuunt, call &amp;14-H2-&amp;858.
Small 3br. home, baHmenl,

CLASSIFIED AD

Work boot1. 614-446-3159.

0181.

Mlsa Paula's ~ay C.ra

pill. 304-1175-1016.

3br. trailer, $275/mo. 304-67561188.

country living, Jim
-l.wy., ACI

Mobil Home,

Hill Ad,
f221/mo., d-'1 ooliono
wlpod ra•r.na. 3Q4.e'1&amp;..1828.

Goods

Sorlouo lnqulrloo Only, 114-37119887.

Fan Uack RockJng Chair $58;
Gardan Arch Way'a S129.00

Bedding •Twirl MOll Sol $89, Full
S99 SO!, Ou11n S149 se~: 4
Drawer \fhlet 144.95; C.r Bed's,
Bunk Bed's, Poeter Bsd .. Full

Line Of Southwntem va...
Starting At$20.00; lnclana Many
Shape's I Slz.. Starting At
$5.00. 2 L.owtlorio -Bookll ~ilo
Auction Or 4 Miles ~ 141.
Open 9 A.M. To 6 P.ll. Mon •Sol.

Houra; Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614-446·
0322, 3 mills out Bulavln• Rd .
FtM Delivery.

NewAJaed
HouHhold lumlshlng. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. PINNnl, WV,

call 304-675-1450.

ant to:
PIN down EXTRA

appoiiUnlly bMII.

Real Estate

31

Ho. nes for Sale

I lodr-11 Trolllr For Solo, Nlw
Corpo1 I Fumlohod, Chnply
-814-3881118Anytlllll.
3 or 4br., n!co 1 - outbulkllng,
.....
~ Now
lal Hlv.n.
·AldiiCOCI
· - · price,
LoriO

...,.,500

11112-31514.

norHIIgGIIoblo. 614-

4 Yn,. Old, Olldod, Port
Wllkor, $100 DBD
441-11143.

Buy or HU. Riverlna Antiques,

1124 E. Main Slreat, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00

0:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

p

614-102 2521

.m.
•
·
Will Buy One Item Or Estates.
Dove's Nut AnliqUH, 336

26'1nch Girls new 3sp. Huffy

Blcyclo_S100 614-367·71;:
23~----,-

L.ood $50, 614-211~ .
Avon boiUn; electric tout mas-

mite Items; $100 OBO, 614·912·

1642.

Caller 10 box, 14 memory, tnnd

new, $39.95, 114·992-t1116.
Chrome hoapU•I type btdralll,
adjuats twin to qu.n alu , like
ntw, $100, 614-992·5561.

ba•
turner

a,

channel
614·

' $100,

Ml-3050, IN\10 molllf9o.

Used Sofa's $50, 614-245·5152
After 6 P.M.

::~~r!..~~J~~i

72

must drive to appreciate, $57001
814·1112·2803.
·:
1DB3 Chevy Sllver~do , AC, PS ·
crul11, 1111, rally wh•l(
libsrglase topper, 74,000MI., V-1,
auto., $4500, 814~992-6407.
.

--- ---1994 Ford F150 61,000

304-6,75-5460.

=

duty electric mo&amp;or,
a pulley, by cabl•, 1 112

hp., $75, 614·992·3540.
Hlgtl black lealh•r snow boots,
wat•rproot, eize 7, Ptffect condillon, S5, 614·1149·2&amp;22.
Huffy exerclae bike, h11 ehain
guard, uud vary lhtle, $45, 614·
992~236.

Willi

bed,

114oll92~368 .

good
.

WOULD YOU BE OFFENDED IF
I EXCHANGED THE PRESENT
GAVE ME FOR CHRISTMAS?

sa ·~of

I DIDN'T 61VE 't'OU A

c .....ce

HIIIL In
IIHrld

PRESENT FOR Ci-IRISTMAS ..

:n:r.

lime
12-A*
13 llu8lcal
group Of ntne
M Dl'llllllerd

DOWN
1 Vlin people
2 Gazelle

3 Cronr

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

4 Allllltr to
bend

Mllee1

367·7113.
1g88 Chevy pickup, Silverado;

388-1305.
'
198V F..-d A111111r Whllo WH~
lluo lnlorlor, 5 Speed, V-6, Ac;;
Till Whlll, CNIM Control, Ex;
eolian!
Condhlon,
Alklng.
$2,800, 01ye: 814-245-585,.-t
Ev•nings : 614-245-5992.
·

BORN LOSER

$4,200, 814-441.0731.

V l"AAT

1990 Mazda Dick-up truck, 111.1!1."
cab, 54,0ooall., Sip., AC, Jv~

~'(

N-1'1'
MORf. ...I'll\ GOIN6

sttrto, bed llnw w/cenva"cover, 15700, 114--'N2-2803.
'-4

Vans

&amp; 4 WD's

WCiol'f !'£

TC ~ M'( t-IE".W

SOOW et.OWEF.!

,,
••
I

61.-4414731.

Available. 614-371-2728.

Today is the 36Jst
day af 1993 and the
1eventh day of

-

Aeglaterecl
Femate
Schnauzer With Cage, S75, 614·
AKC

75 Boats &amp; Motors

76

Auto Parts

Smos.
old
houH
1n,
mother Bull ~•rrler, father mlnl-

atu,. Box•r, S1S, 814-843-5188.

Fish Tank, 2413 J~ekaon Ave.

Point Pleaunt, 304-a75-2063.
10g11. tonk Ml-upo, S)U9.
Young
Par~kttt:e,
$14.99.
Hlmotoro, S2.99 &amp; 54.99.
Evtryday low prlc,-.
Mall Aottweltllr/ Dobermen, 5
wllko old, &lt;Oldy Chrlotmoo
Eve.- tall cut, ••king $50, 614-

AKC champion bloodline, 614,..

1167-3404.
'Puppy

Palace

Pet

Shop.

Accessories

one melt and one · tamale,
$75ea.; one mals Jack AuMell
tenler puppy, $250; 614·"742·

2050.

57

Musical
Instruments

Alto Saxophone, Good Condition $200 814-387-7162.
Bundy Clerl1111· Good Condhlon,
$100 814-3711-2728. .

New blade lor email yard tree::-·

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Otympls OM2 cam.ra , IH at

PlnMnt Y1lley Apts., 4Q2
Crprua Court, Pt. Pltaunl. 304;
875-8735.
'
Ouaaar floor model color-~
61 Fann Equipment
nHda rtpllrtd; 614 ·949-~
doyo.
lllitdniullc oii,IIO gol $125. Sldlro
R&amp;S Furnlluro. Wo buy, Mil ond Equt;onl2t Hon&lt;Hi..on, wv.
trodl
ontlquo
-/Uitd - w or 1_
- ·,
-....,.,_
~
ho••ahold lumlahlnga. Will buy _... 'il""
.Joh~

00.0 4020 Troctor
N,SI!i 3000 Fe;:.
lOCI
Foni ..,7!50. 1142•.

\hiiiiO:

.'

'

Ulld &amp; rebuln, all typ. ., a1art.
lng It $8D; owner 6M-2•5-56n~
814-379-2935.
,

•

'•

• •
• •
• •

•

-'

•

•

•
• ••
•

'IONaUE .

•

ONCE ...

.. ' , ..

'

...' .
• ••

.••.''
0

•

•

'

. ..

• •

IT TASTED l-IKE
CRANI&lt;C60E
DRIPPINSS.

'

•

'

•

'

............ ""'
79

ROBOTMAN

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

'eosMrnc ·

1975 30' Oodgt Executive Matot·
Home, runs good , interior gOO&lt;:(·
condition, bOok value approx.
$10,000, asking $5500 080, call"
614·62-6488, ask tor Bill o·r ·

Choryl.

'SUtlltll.Y

~H

.

'

'

81

Home
Improvements

I'M IN THE h\I~ST

rve DISCOVER~() /&gt;.

Wr&gt;ll TO ALTER GENES .

10 tMKE i'EOP\f
LOOI&lt; LIK~ GREEI&lt;
GODS.. .

'·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonal lifetime guarantM. L.oeal raferenc:n tumlahed.

Call HI00.287.0578 Or 614·237·

ASTRO·ORAPH

0488 Aoge,. Waterproofing. Es-

Graph Ma1chmaker instantly revea ls
which signs are romantically pertect lor
you. Mall $2 and a long, sell-addressed,

tablished 1875.

stamped envelope to Ma1chmaker, c/o

DIYII Sewing Machine And
Vacuum Claanar Repair, Fr"

this newspaper, P .O. Box 4465 , New
York, N.Y. !Ot63.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 2Q.Feb. 11) You mighl
llave,many responsiblli!les wllh whicli !o
con!end today, so schedule your agenda
melhodically . Do what you "\'" wl!hou!
becoming !ruslrated If you can'! do everylhing at once.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.IIorch 20) Today you
mighl be privy 10 some hearsay intorma·
tlori conveyed to you by a talkative friend .
Trouble could resuh II you repaal il.to o1h·
ers wl!hou! having Ill validity Checked.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) Asaoclates
won'! think teas ol your courage today it
you dellbera1oly avoid problem areas
where 1he odds are slacl&lt;ed a~na! you.
Actually tlley'lllldmlre your judgment.
TAURUI (April 20·11ay 20) Generally
11f188klng, you're a relher good llslener whO
doesn't usually tum a deaf oar to sound
advice lrom others. Today, however, you
mlgh! eee little virtue In !lie suggestions of
pals.
GEIIIII (Mey 2t.June 20) Be su111 !o thor·
ougNy protecl yourseK today In your com·
merclal dealings II there. are persona
Involved wlfh· whOm you never dealt with

Plck·Up And Dollvory, 01..-gn

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

CrS8k Road, 61..... 46.0294.

Ron's TV Strvlce, specializing

In Zsnlttl also ..rviclng motl:
other branda. Houu cella, alao
some appli1nce rapalre. WV

304-6164:198 Ohio 614-4441-24154.
Sopilc Tonk Pumpln_g_$80._0olllo ·
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES
Jtckaon, OH 1-800-631-1521. '
Will build patio covers , dac:lla ,
scrHnld roorna, put up vinyl
aiding or lraller aklr11ng. 8M-

Oh.tr

'Birthday

2U·t152.

82

Plumbing
Heating

Tueeday,Dec. 28,1113

&amp;

F-mon"o Hllll~nd Cooling ..
lnatalllllon And
lea. ASES ,
Certtfild. Aeeldtntl I, Commtr· .
cloi.I14-ZH-1811.
·

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration ·

'

~A..
~IM~nl~l.~l~or~~~~m~,mo--~~lal '
wiring, new Mrv~ or NPIIIra.-:.
M1 . .r UcenMd elecu\clln. ,
Aklenour Elletrlcal , WV000301 \,
304471-1786.
'

Subslanllal effort migh! be spent in lhe
year ahead on bringing various segmente
I
ol your lite Into bel1er balance. Thetranal·
tiQns cOuld be dlftleun, bulthe end resuns
will be gratifying.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jtn. 18) Aa a rule
partnera/ilp arrangement usually tum out
rather fortunate tor you. Today, however,
could be an exception. Try to operate
Independently, free from alliance entan·
glements . Know where to look lor
romance and you 'll find it . The As!ro·

,,,.

--

....

winter.

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1945, tbe United Nations established
the World Bank to make loans to
member nations.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Johannes
Kepler (1571-1630), astronomer; Louio
Pasteur (1822·18951 , scientist; Sydney
Greenstreet (1879·19541, actor; Mar·
lene Dietrich (1901-1992) , actress ;
Oscar Levant (1906-19721, musician William H. Masters (1915·),
phJIBician, is 78; Lee Salk (1926·1, pay·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.lrlbrttr~O)pl
. . . . . CNilllldhMCIII
·~.::-,..,..,.-ECI..._Intt.cipMr
. . . . lor&amp;no4hsr,
••
'*I

'J

MRD

ll F

HSKNCW
ICSS

DR

DZJMEJMA

DZC

DZKD
K

..

DNHC

-·

RY

WCOHRMLO
8 R D

RY

KMLWC

llAKOOJ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "CIIrillmu Ia not I dote. h II I 11118 of mind."
-

Mary Ellen Cllue.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ··e- .... Eve gave Ac*n 1111 IIIli*:, !heN 1111
blln a mlsunderltandlnQ - • • 1111 - • abou1 glfta.
Nan

RobertiOI\.

•••
•

•••
•••
•
••
•
•
•

.•
·.

OF ldi.ORAL CRISIS .

Services

»&gt;-475-4105_

s ..,.. r•mol• control jeep,
woutd make a Nee Chrlstmaa
gift, 125, 614·l'IZ.23117.
Shepherd /Aetrl•ver Pupa For
Sola, $25 Eoch; VII Chocked,
lot Sholl And Wormocl, 8
WilkO Old, 614-446-1217 After '
P.M.
Two lull blooded Collie pupo,

0

,

B~o~dgat Prtcld Tranamisslons;

Located In G.C. Murphy Co. Ool·
lipolls. Now open. 614-441..o404 .
!l&gt;fg.2Jzs.

&amp;

•
• • •

....

1986 Pontoon,
AKC
Reglat•red
Labrldor &amp;14·912·3517.
Rstrfaver • puppiH,
gf'liat , .:.._....:.::.:...;_....:._ _ _ _ _-:

Chriotmo• gift, 614·1'12-3034.

I OI.U6HT
ONE:.ONMY

0

•

for Sale

4414523.

--- ~1C!Ur.JUIUI

'

&amp;Whht Cocker Sponlll Puppln
74 Motorcycles
lalla Docked, 0tw Cl1wa,
RamoWsd, Born; 1011'n3 Rudy
To Go Now, WID Hokt Whh
1987 Honda 70, 4 Wheeler, 614·
O.pooh, Siud Sorvleo Aloo · ~36:..1..:'08:..3:..2:...- - - - - -.,

tor, $100, 614·102-5212.

ony omounl, lorgo/amoll. 505
Socond 81., lluon, WV. Ownor·
Rockey Peo-n. 304·773-5341.

50~ etowtr
54

1988 Ford Bronco 11 Xll $6,500(

AKC Rtg~llared American llac:k

ownera' org.

41Guelo
42 F-r·o

Excellent Condition $3,500 614- .

73

Maftlse,

Chow. puppln, shots, wormed.

40Ftrunn

197SI GMC dump truck, 5-Zsp. ~
single axl•. new dump blcl1

AKC Cock11 Spent~~,

Spm ..

ACROSS

Trucks for Sale

hold, appnhMf
homes only. 304-175-5758 after
will

dtpoetl

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PEANUTS

Fof.

19113 Sllvoroclol 5 yr 10,000 milo
wan-anty, Llttl me warranty on
paint $1_!!!0- Purchased Juns ~
304-1175'1b010.
.

"MC Reg. AoUwailar pupa, exc.
.DSdiGI'II, .,.,.,., on prtmiHa.

B,

...

AKC Chlh""h"" JMipplao, $200,
1 ,._._, 2 matH, I'Ndy for
$50
mlnfmum

Chrlatmu,

614-256-1318 Evenings.
For sale: Nlntando and 11 Iapes
lor stoo; coll614·&amp;13·5233.

Call our o/Jie• for poW iA adatqnce. ryteel

'

5 ynr old ....,... l•gla, good
huntll',"$100, IM-002-3537.

Pinching
the setting trick

110119.

9po~d,

Aaglattred Chin••• Shar.Pel
pupil, 2 main, 2 famaln, 614-

$100, 614-1149-2106.

TranSport

Opening lead: • J

431nMCt
·~

Cl
With N
F~
..- • · Nn
ew r......
TlrH. Own..- A Nan-Smoktr,.
Aoklng $12,000. Coli 114-245&lt;

1990 Ford Ranger, 4 Cylinder, 6

Firswood :

GrMn wine bottle, aolld atopper, r1IHd flowers, 6 giiNII,
brought from VIIJ,..m 1963,

8810.

Po,.lac

Effigy - Knelt - Quash • Hither- HEIGHTS

.Old timer to mountain climber, "In most cases if you 're
try1ng to set a new attitude record ill usually easier if you
want to rise to new HEIGHTS ."

.UE......,ce .
47F*-

614-992~7.

1D90

SCJtAM.I.ETS AHswBs

Puo
All pus

By nilllp Alder

PB, Gagn, Pow.r Hatch, AC~
::&amp;~..:11•. Clean! $4,900. 8i~

1988 Ford Ranger 50,000 Mllesr
Excellent Condftlon, $5,000, 814-

For S.l• electric typawritw, hu

All Hardwoods Split
Delivered 140 Pick-Up load.

14·- - - --l
15-.___ _ _-l

1888 CamaPO V-6 Auto, PW, PS1

Block, brick, seww pipes, windowa, llntlla, elc. CliUda Winters, Rio Granda, OH Clll 614-

Puppl.... PoocUn, to.,._, black
and aprleol; alto Sch,..uzera,
mlnlltWM, salt and pepJMr:

985·3540.

9- - - - - - - 1
1 0 - - -- ---1
11 .. - - - - - 1
12._ _ _ _-i
13.__ _ _---1

Mllu, Sharp I Clean, 1!,000
Colli, 814-«t4820.

:ZOOSX Aulo, WHh.
1988 Nt-san
,.
Ov•rdrlve, Air, Starao, 49,000ml,
Book: $7,000, Price: 15,600, 814441-G384.
1881 Camero RS, elr, cruise, tilt,
.••••o
..er.o, 47.000MI
,
., T-1ops, .
- ,

Ill

THIEF II

Ode CutiHe Slerr•
Brvugho.'!'J 4 Doo!i. All"ll
Powor Windows, Pu, 03,000

a-1

Pou
Pou

u

1988

good cond, 21101s ot extl'lll1
7'6,000 miles, blue book VIIUI,
$5,495. L. L. Smith, 1104
Ma.ma.n Circle, 304-675-3222. 1

94tl2483.

corr.ctlon
llpo, $50, 114-992·7352.

Turn your clutter into cash,
SeU it the eau way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad toda,y!
15 word. or less, 3 da,n,
3 pqpera,$6.00

19&amp;1 Dodge Omnl, Rune Good,
$550, 614 ~48 11253.
.

Building
Supplies

(No

Firewood- IHaoned, MOIIIy
osk, 314 ton pickup, full lold.
local delivery only, $40, 8M·

1 ~-------

Con'-renco Tournament Cham,.
pions, Cop«al Unlvorslly, $36,
614-992·2924.
Uud Lennox Heat Pump, 26 ,000
BTU, Insta llation Avallabla, 1800·287-t308, 614·44&amp;-t308.

I NT

HANDS UP,
YOU LOW-DOWN
CHICKEN

But

""'

liM"

:BARNEY

1

lllulllu!, brindle mala :'JPY.

naw tapa, 1110 niiW

Tlillno....,_-.11 not

oro .._ . on Mequoi

1,.--...,.-::.:...,,-..,.-:-:--

Send RMor Aoquiradl
$1,4115: Ron Evono Enlorpriooo,
JaekoGn, Ohio 1-800-637·111121.

maktliliY- p,.r........
llmllallon Of clsalmirlallon.'

ldttfUMdln1NI,.wp•pnr

Antiques

sager, ulld with water, Iota of

MXIIIIillollloluo or lllllonol
origin, '"llrf if!lonllon to

orolilloby

53

PICKENS FURNITURE

ttr6P.M.

....... iilliOiiiiW
-..,,...,color,
rolglon,

lnfMNd tMI all d'u:MIIngl

Set of 12 giiiHI lor 197'1 Ohio

2115.

AAA,
S.o.aoned
Firewood,
Delivered And Stacked P.U.

ttjt neupap« II~ to
lhi..-J Folr Houllng A&lt;t
ol1868 which- llogol

low.

h·-· -

27'3'5655.

Rifles Also Crossbow, 614·379--

Ntw Fiberglau Showers, Ntw
Flberglaes Show.rs &amp; Tub, Nsw
3 Pc. Showars, &amp;14-245-5152 Af·

All ..l l - -...g ~

-lion
our_,.

cov•ralls,
reverslbl•
flight
jackal 135. All Christmas
U·
~·
304
ch angas In bV J an. 2,

Good Quality Shot Guns, &amp; 22

0000 USED APPLIANCES Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·
Wollhoro• drytro, rolrlgorolora, 446--8776, Mon -Sat., 9:30-5,
rang.. ~kagga Appilencee, 71 Friday 9:30-8.
VIne Si-._CIII 6,........7398, I·
800-4~...
54 Miscellaneous
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Merchandise
Compl•t• home furnishings.

CA8H?!!

l&lt;nowlngiyfor
-rtallllllt
·
advei11Mme1'1el
which II In
qlllll

Sam Somervlll•'• Army Surplus,
by Sandyville Post Office. Next
week, open noon-6pm until
Christmas. All alzu Junior·
Senlor, . camllaugs, Insulated

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chllrs;

~m~-.

By GARY LARSON

ect .. handmade
oak
h.ms. 3893 Gtargas CrHk Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh. Ph. 614-446-4316
Chftts,

24~21

VI'AA FURNITURE
.
614-446-3188 Or 614-446-4428
'110 DAY SAllE A9 CASH
OR RENH-OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

mall until you have inv•stlgated

Local Floral Bus lnns For Salt,

Solid oak iable &amp;chairs, curved
gliles ctlin1 cabinets, oak

55

Househord

NOT to stnd money through tht

the offering.

45 6 55 Gallon, 614-245-5152 AI·
tor 6 P.M.
- - - - -- - - Rfvar Valley Oak Furniture.

WATER LINE SPECIALo 3/4 lnl:h

r11erchand ISe

ratarancn. 614-256-6089.

2 bedroom 1nlller1 ret &amp; dep, At.
62 N. locutt Aa on right, no

New Gu Hot Water Heater, S'IOO,

Approved For Potable Wat•r.
Ron Ev1ns EnlerpriHs, Jack·
son, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528.

51

Corvalr M1nza 2 doaf
1port coupe, runa

1978 Dodgt Sllllon Wagon,
$400 v814·2'45-5152 Allor I P.M.

WATER
STORAGE TANKS
Above And Balow Ground FDA

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14.:60 2 Br, 1 milt South of
Eureka, on St. Rt.7. No pets,

19H

hardtop

200 PSI $19 .95; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.50; Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackson, Ohio, 1·800--537·9528.

47 Wanted to Rent

to-"'nypral-.

Till FAIIIIDI

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62

304-n:lol171111vo m111ogo.

·o-

GATIBINC DUSt
JDD" DOllARS
TO YOII POCKET
WITH A

Year

electric hNt pump, 11h20 out
building. 210 3rd StJ __ ~
Haven, $210/mo. plus a.posh.

Center
M· F 6 A.M. ·5.30 P.M. Ouolhy Two lildroom mobile " " ' - for
Loving Care For All ChlldFWI
CWical Photocopy AtpNMnll· Our ' ' G01l. Par1 ·Time, Full· Nl'll:, llao 8piOM for rent lllrtlng 01 $85/mo.. B14-112oZII7.
tiv• Medical recorda piKCocopy Tlma,
Fed . A. .istanca Available.
Mrvicl Is '"king part-time Clll For Information Or VIsit In· 1Wa bedroom trailer In Racine,
employMI for .,o.ilivn(a) In· the lonl !Toddler 114-4-227. p,. caiii'M-112•SI&amp;8.
Oefllpolla 1rea. Individuals must School,
SchOOiage,
B&amp;A
be m1tura, profnsional, and School, 61........ 224:
TWo bedroom, lOIII electric,
SZZ!IImo., POf!IOI'Dy .,.., 814cuetorner HrVica oriented.
NHd own car witt! proof or In· T &amp; T Lawn St"'iea, lawn, 1024312.
aur.nca. Send .-.suma to: Smart landscaping, stump removal,
Corporollon,
2245
Gilbert and leaf daanup. 304-713 -5902 44
Apartment
AvWiue, Stt. 303, Cincinnati, or HI00-538-1440.
Ohlo45206 .
for Rent
Wantlld to do for elderly or dis·
Eaay Wor11.! Excellent Pay! A.. ablttd : hou .. clelning, laundry, 2bdrm. apll., tCICII eltctrk:, a~
•mble Producta At Homa. Call ironing, cooking, willing to run
ptlonceo lumllhld, laundry
Toll FrM, 1·800-467-5566, Ewt
room faclllt._ ato. to .:hoOI
arnmds, wagn ntgotlabla, 614313.
102-6525 II .f.
In 1-n. &amp;pp~(c;ilono IVIilobll
01: APio. 141 or
Now accepting applications lor
coli B1441Z-3711. EOII.
part-time cashier. Must bt
Financial
18yrs. old, no ~one calla
AHonllori: . Hand!cooood, Displeut. Cl'llwford s Grocery,
• - . Senior. Did· You K.Hond.,.on, WV.
Thll II You Ara In 01 A
21
Uve-ln Aalltanl, You M•w
Business
Quality For A Now 2 Bodroom
Opportunity
Aportmonl AI: Flrol Holzer
Apartment• 553 Sec:and Ave.,
!NOTICE!
Call 114-441·1800 For
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Qolllpol!l,
lnformollori. Equol Houolng Dpo
racomnwnds that you do busi- porlunlly.
ness with people you know, and

•SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS

Froat Frae Coppertona $150;
Whirlpool Dryer $95; Maytag
Dryer $150 G.E. Dryer $125;
Wflirlpool Wash• $95; G.E.
W11har Almond $150; Maytag
W11hlr $150; Whirlpool Otsignar Wathar A Few Months Old 1

46 Space for Rent

2940 after 5:30pm.

prompt, conUdent•l conalderato :

-

Refrigerator Slde-By-5ida Coppel1one $265; Aetrtgarator Frost
FrH While $150; R"tfrlgarator 2
Door Avacado $95; Rtfrlgeralor

small lol In Racine, 614·849-

Estimates!
614unJ.~~~~~Tr~11~A~om~o=v~al~
, ~-;g•

llon. plu11 forward ·r numa

Furnished
Rooms

Layne cedar chest wfpaddad
top a monlha old. 61 4-446•7081
_________ - - ·- - --

4 Bedrooms, 2 Balha, Nnt Car-

3 or 4br., Lane St, New Haven,

CLRSSIFIED RDS

Wanted to Buy

45

LA.-.,z'""

Merch ndl
a
se

$250/mo. pluo f250 dlpoah. 114102-3564.

3
Bedroom
HOUH
NNr
Chnhlra, C.ll Aher 5 614-3&amp;70181.

Read the

Aiel&lt; Pu....., Auollon Compony,

Upotol111 Apl. 821 1/2 Socond

ev•, 2 BA, Rat.ranct. &amp;14-44621511

Vu!Derable: North-&amp;ruth

Dealer: South

'\

(,/Jfil.'l'""""

54 Ml see 11aneous

Household
G od
0
S

Warranty $250· Whlr1pool
Wa.her Heavy Duty, like New, 1
Ynr Wam~nly" _,225: Maytag
Rooms for r•nt • week or monl:h. Waatw A:tryer ::::.t'l Coppartona 1
Sllr11ng at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. YNr Warranty, $205 Elich; Hot
114-4441-11560.
Point Wastier fDrya r S.t Uka
SIHplng rooma with cooking. NN Heavy Duty, White 1 Vesr
Alao tr.Tiar spaca. All hook-upe. Warranty, $205, .Sko~gs Ap·
pllanc.., 76 VIne StrHt, GalCall after 2:00 p.m., 304·773- llpoll•,
614-446-7398, 1-800·4995851, llooGn wv.
3499.

2

Public
&amp; Auction

773-57115.

Houses for Rent

Bedroom•
102 Fourth
Avonuo, OOII{pollo, f2851Mo.
PI,. o.-n, 814-&lt;446·21157.

p.m. Satur•r-

•.Ohio

Pom•roy, Clll 014•102·5858.

2 Bedroom HouH, CloH To
School8 I Slorw, S:Z501Uo.
PI,. Ulllhlll, Rollroncoo &amp;
O.pooll Aoqulrad, 614-448-4005.

lha day before the ad Ia to run .

bodroom
open.......
$:12!1/mo. ln&lt;:ludol utlllllol, S100
HCurhy d-H. no poll; 814102-2218.
91onowooct Aponmonlo, llkl·
d..port, Ohio 11. now accepting
1ppUcaUona
and
,.ntlng
apartments for the tklerly and
hondleoppod,
614·102-3055.
EOH.
Two bedroom ap.~rtm•nt In

4212.

•

-d•

r r ,. r r I' I

:~~E~~~~nms
I'
·~r=:=\lETTERSTPIIIII

u:s

car; S975alto
bdb,
~~~~~~~~=:::~~;=~-~~~-~~~ c:onvanlbi•r"•
good, ¥~ ..-.atorablt;
614·247-429

.;:::...:.._....,....,...,=-===:- ~ 5I
if~:.,~~:l::::
d

HrY!c•.

chuckle quOiod
by !;!i;ng ;n tho m;,.;ng
l......I..---"-L......J.L......J.L......J.L.....J )'011 dovolop lrom IIOp No. 3 below.

....

11511 Nllh MolropoiHon 2 cloot

hardtop, runa gOod, no ~
VII'/ .........ble, $1498, 814-2~

auctlonMr,

1

.Alii

Sale

"That guy wu considered a

crack pot beciUH he waa a

~--r,;,.;.j;r.::...rl_;.rl.:..,lr--1 ; c:~;~.; -~.

SOOTH

.AKQt

l'Mt dogs- 4 mo. old female part
Brittany Span._; fema._ part

tuft time
auction

·

tQ10171
.A71

I

r

I. ~~:;

lillie accena1c: one cutia told
· - · her friend. "Now he's conli&lt;J.
r'-A-R---.,.B~T~Y-E~...., erec! intelligent Iince 11e hit

•u
.QJt

TransportatiOn

81H48 8840.

I 1 r1

~!:Aft

"11-381;0.

F,_ 10 Wlllk Old Part Lab &amp;
Border Collte's 61• ~245-5654

CL 0 B K

.KQI

&amp; Grain

Hay

10 1184. 304..

Yard Sale

E L A r: P I

NOiml
~.IOIUIJ

Chrtllmoo 9-lol! 10% oft ""
hay. lluol be DlckH up by Jon,

24~.

8

I

'7i 1135 -oy-ferg.-n with
Clb, 105 HP, 1300 houri,

141711 , ..., On 1 112
&amp;c .. Lol. 2 llllol From eldwo1~

0

0

Glfto! Olitol Olrlo! Totlo To Thom
- 1 t'On-1 24 ttou.. A Illy! I·
~-~~~~Ext. - U .IO Per
llin. a. 18 v... P"""'ll eo.

7

low ro form four worda.

ALDER

Mobile Homes
tor sare

•

Announcements

4

0 lour
'*'"'not
~ "'
ocrombled PHILLIP

Anno unee me nt s

3

IIAfMti
Pllllll

BaJDOK

BIEN A. Willi.£ ..,...........,......, I'
SIJIIC.e 1'1110 tlliliN
TIIV4/I ••..•
~

previously.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) Your judgment migli1 not be up to par !oday II you're
compelled to make important decisions
under wonger than usual pressure .
Poslpone mane111 until conditions a111 more
favorable.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Aesponelbilities
you failed to afl6nd to properly In !lie posl
migh! make their preeence feh again !Oday.
This lime you won'lllave as much lamude
as you had pre\riously.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) This Is nol a
good day 10 dlamplon an unpopular causa.
II you lty 1o fon:e your views on o!llers, !lie
reosption you're likely to gel may be any·
thing but friendly.
UIRA (Sept. Z3oOct 23) II your houae·
hold Is In an uproar today, II lootclllke you
mlgli1 be the mojor contributing elemenl.
Keep lhio In mind before pointing a finger
ot
blanie Ill O!hers.
1
I ICOIIPIO (Oat.24-Nov. 22) Be e-..e~y
1careful lo&lt;fay regarding verbal commll·
· menll you maka lo alhers or thing$ you put
In writing. Your wordS, spoken or panned, ·
oould Iaior oorne back to hauli1 you.
'
SA.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) It )'011 ;
need an emlaaty or - . . t o ropmenl
you In mal1ers flat ati8CI )'010' finance&amp; or .
IIOCOJrity, be very Nlecltlle. A poor Choice
could spell problema.

�.

·p!ISie--:16--The Dally sentinel
'

Monday, December 27, 1993 . ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Ohio Lottery

Chargers
beat
Dolphins

Pick 3:

671
Pick 4:

7660
Buckeye 5:
7·12·29·32·33

Page4

L D""' tonight in the teens.

flurrie s. Wednesday, high In
20s. Three inches ol ~now by

' o\,

HURRY! HUR:RY! HURRY!

Vol. 44 , NO. 172

FIRST-COME-FIRST-SERVED BASIS!

Sale Begins Dec. 27th at 9a.m. Ends Dec. 31st, 2p.m.
LIVE REMOTE 1\iAGic 1 0 1 DEC. 27TH, 3PM·&amp; PM
&gt;

f.

•

t
·

'1

&gt;

•

• &gt;

I

1' 1

t.,. "··· .

· I
I I' I
·
Slacl&lt;f 30&amp;121, 2daorl, oaupo, I crl., llir,
, PS, PB, POl, -~ lilt wllool,

..
'

.

I ' t '(

1'

'

... '''"''''"

-~

'

I

&gt;

l

I'

1

ICI'uloo, Am.t=M l ..... llpt, rodlllil, -

r- wlrl. dtloa.

Slacl&lt;f18330,4 dooll, IOdiWI, flont1 qol., olr, IIJIO., PS, PB, PW, Pill,
-IIMI,tilwllool,aui10,AINFMI18NO
lllpO, rodlllil, -win. dofag.

•ow•l2,949

~S.:AIL •ow*l3,949

Stocl&lt;t 18310,4 daorl, lldon, flontdrlve, 4 cyl., air, auto., PS,PB,PW, POl,
powerHOt,_,t-,auiM,AINFMtape, rod! all, bucl&lt;ot ...II. -win. dofag.

Stocl&lt; 1 18470, 4 dao11, lldon, llont- · 4 cyl., air, ouiD., PS, P8, PW, POl,

OII.T tiiCIIIUISiodol183&amp;0, V-1351 ~ .• II',
Mll&gt;., PS, PI!, PW, POl. Ill_, cni1o. AMfll
.-,~&gt;~dot_ 112"~ ahot1 wldo

......

bod. ............. -

•ow•l8,949
.. .

-r-~litt-.auiii,AINFMa18rea

lllpO, rod all, ,_win. dofag.

•ow•9,549
,...,.,_......_...,..,..
Stoc:l&lt;117810,2doono,hlrd10p,-.4
cyl.,alr,auto.,PS,P&amp;,PW,II•whMI,cruiM,
AINFM 118&lt;00 tope, rodllil, ·

.......

Qodot:JIM32.4--.v.a!IIO.,..,u,s

!plOd .... nra, PS, PI!, PW, POl. Ill .....
cnitto, - - - . - . IIIIOn,iongwldo
bod. lllrlhPbilll*,--,.. gloiO.

tt 7';A1L

NOW '15,4 49

Stockfll40831, Y·B,olr,ouiD., PS,P8, PW,
POL, tlltwttool, auiM, AINFM 118&lt;00 tope,
1/2 ton, longwldobod, IIUX.fueltani&lt;, oUdlng
raar glau.

Stockt307362, 4 crl.,oir,lllnd. triN., PS,
PB, ~~ - , c:rul .., AINFM • - lllpO,
lldlllil,lhott_l_,_...,.bumpor,
g&amp;uGif, sliding !Vorglau, ftborvluo topper.

~~AIL

uo~:

Now•l1,449

Stocl&lt; I 941!81, V·B ong., duallir, aulD.,
PS, PB, PW, POL, t i t - · auloo, AA\'FM
• - tope, lldllls, TV &amp; YCR, aux. 1Uol
llllk,gougol.

Stock, 18481, 2 doors, flontwheel
..w. .... 4 "'I
., ., stand.trans ., PB' racial&amp;

..

Now•7,249

CONVERSION VAN

~':NL NOW s12,4 49

; 1986ARIES WAGON......................tl649.00 · ;
· 1980 CHEVY PICKUP.,.•••••••••••••••••••*1149.00
.·1978FORDPICKUP........................•154 9.00
..1987 CHEVY CHEVERE••••••••••••••••••••• *549.00
·1987 FORD ESCORT..........................*549 .00
..1986 PONTIAC 1·1 000 ••••••• ~ ••••••••••••.*449.00
.'1985 OlDS CIERI WAGON•••••••••••••••• *349 .00 ''
1975 FORD lTD................................*349 .00
' .,

whool, aul•, AINFM 110r00 tope, rodloll,
rear win. dolog., gouges.

Cl'uloo,AINFM IIOrOOIIpt, rodlola, IMrwln.
dofog,, gougoo, """ roof

I

Stocl&lt; t D40D01 ,4 daorl, Mdan, Iron!- SIOCkt 941611, frontwhaldrlve, 4 cyl.,
4 cyt .. oir, auto., PS, PB. dk - · air, auto., PS, PB, POL, till wheel,
cnJIIe, AINFM 118roo tape, !Varwln. defog . auise, AINFM slarao tape, radiala.

NA~~AIL NOW '12,249 ~:AIL NOW '15,449

'93
Stock t 304751,4 doora, Mdan, V·B, air, Stock I 1140441, 4 daora, - · Y-8, olr, '
auto., PS, PB, PW, POL, power 18Bt, tilt vl"'fl roof, aulD., PS, PB, PWW,POt, powet
tikwllool,aulao,AINFM11no11pt,
auiM, AINFM illroo llpt, lldlala. radllio, rear win. dolog., - ·

-1.
#94006'
. .•
#30505
'·' :
iMSRP..............'1i395.00 MSRP •••••••••••••• '21412.00 ;!
Stoc:l&lt; I 941121, Y-8, lir, IIJIO., PS, PB,
PW, POl, tit-. cni10, AINFM ,..,..
lllpO, rodlllll, gougeo.

Stock ' 303511' 2 doors, 8 cyl., air,
auto., PS, PB, AMIFM 118180 tape.

NA~~:;AIL

IIAD~·

Now•l3,949

Now•8,249
:-·

Dlscou nt. •••.•••••••1945.00 •·. •Dlscount. ...........3794.00
,.,.... Acct...........soo.oo •.··
Free Tank Of Fuel
:. Free Tank Of Fuel
+49
+ 49

• ·· YOUI PIICf 5)4,999°0
IIADA IETAIL
I$S50

Stoc:l&lt; t 301602, flont - 1 dri,.., 4cyl., air,
auto., PS PB, tik -·cruise, AINFM .,.
roo tope.

Stock I 18121 , 2 doci.., CX&gt;Upo, 4 C¥f., oir,
allnd . ~ana.,PS.PB,FW,PDL,--~

tillwttool, cruise, AINFM 11nollpt, rod•
ala, bucMI - • . -win. dofag.

:·:

·:::

JOUR PRICE 517,667°0 ••.

Stock I 307381, 4 dao11, Mdan, Y-8, air, "CARTIER" Stock I 184201, 4 doora, ...
outo., PS, PB, PW, POl, tilt-Is, crulae, dan, V-8, air, lo!nyl roof, OUIO., PS. PB, PW,
AINFM IIOrOOIIpo, radials, roar win. defog. PDL,-HOt,auiu,AINFM-IIIpO,

radials, wltl18 wall, rear win. dolog.

•ow•4,249

IWI~.:AIL

WHY PAY'MORE IN 1 94H?

11

From Mustang To Town Car, Escort To
Cougar, F·Serles To Mark Vlll ••• lt Makes No
Difference What You Order, There Is No
"Extra Charge". Place Your Order At Any
nme And You Pay Only '49 .00 Over Invoice
For The Car Or li'uck Of Your Choice!
APPUCABLE REBATE, IF ANY, AT TIME OF DEUVERY OOES TO CUSTOMER

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Sen. John Glenn broke with President Clinton on the trade treaty
with Mexico bul consistently voted
Clinton's way on almost every
other issue before the Senate in
1993, a new analysis shows.
Only two senators, Democrats
Carol Moseley-Braun of Illinois
and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, voted in accord with the White
House more often than Glenn,
according to an annual analysis by
Congressional Quanerly, an independent weekly publication.
Congressional Quarterly's count
showed that on 89 roll call votes in
which the White House had a siJlted position, Glenn's vote matched
Clinton's stand 97 percent of the
time.
Dodd voted with the president
98 percent of the time and Moseley-Braun, 99 percent. Sens. Joseph
Biden, D-Dcl. and Ted Kennedy,
D-Mass. were tied with Glenn at 97
percent.
Ohio's other senator, Democrat
Howard Metzenbaum, voted in line
with White House wishes 92 percent of the time, the magazine
reported.
Sjlokesman Dan Blair said
· Gl~l.ln: s .positions were often
ali'gfl~d ·with Clinton's in part
because so many of the bills that
moved through Congress during
1993 were revivals of legislation
that passed in years past only to be
vetoed by President Bush.
"There was a boulcneck of legislation that Senator Glenn has supported for a lot of_yearsl." Blair
Continued on Page ;,

Peace talks
enter 2nd day

Stoc:l&lt; • 18032, 2 daorl, oaupo, flont- Slad&lt;l 11221.-. flontwllooldrl ... 4
drive, 6 cyt ., oir, IUIO., PS, P8, POl, tilt cyt., oir, IIJIO., PS, P, PW, POL, tit-·

Russia policy
shaper to be No. 2
at State Department

Analysis:
Glenn top
Clinton
supporter

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

NOW •4,949

IIA'::.:AIL

NOW *5,249

CAIRO, Egypt (AI')- Mideast
peace talks resumed here today
with Israel's foreign minister optimistic about reaching agreement
wilh the PLO but refusing to budge
on security for Jewish settlements.
It's just one of the issues that
have been holding up the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the
Gaza Strip and Jericho in the West
Bank since the Dec. 13 rarget date.
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
said he believed both sides want 10
overcome their differences. But he
said Israel could not compromise
the safety of settlers.
''Otherwise we have full respect
for the Palestinian side," he said
after an hourlong meeting with
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Peres and his delegation then
left to resume talks with a Palestinian team led by Mahmoud
Abbas, a chief adviser 10 PLO chief
Yasser Arafat
Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr
Moussa said he expected the peace
talks to include two or Lhrce more
meetings and could stretch into
Wednesday. He said that without
being "rosy," he believed there
was a chance for agreement.
· "The continuation of negotiations from yesterday to today and
maybe tomorrow will give a
chance for Lhrce or four points to
be reconciled," he told reporters.
Tl\c negotiations that opened
Monday night follow meetings last
week in Paris and Oslo, Nprway.
Israel and the PLO also disagree on
who should control the borders
with Jordan and Egypt and the size
of the Jericho district
Asked about the chances for
success, Peres replied, "The hopes
arc unlimited, but time I cannot
mention."
Peres and Abbas, also known as
Abu Mazcn, began the negotiations
in Cairo last October but have not
headed the delegations since. Both
men also were involved, at least
indirectly, in secret negotiations in
Norway earlier this year that led 10
the rust real breakthrough between
the two sides.
On arrival Monday, Peres
promised "very serious negolia·
lions," bul he had said in an inter·
view earlier with the Israeli daily
Continued on Page-3

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 28, 1993

Copyright1993

SNOW WARS - Jessica Johnsoo shoves
ber young brother Derek into tbe snow after
he decked her with a snowball outside their
Bradbury home Monday anernoon. The two

were visited by cousins, who are home for the
holidays l'rom Huntington, and all said they
were having a great time (Sentinel photo by
George Abate).

Workers continue assault on snow
From staiT, wire reports
As recent ~nowfalls again
blanket the. Tri-County area,
siJlte and county snow removal
workers, along with their village
and township counterparts, are
making their third assault on
snow in almost as many days.
Few accidents were reponed
due to the weather. The GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported several
minor, weather-related accidents
but none with injuries. No
weather-related acctdents were
reported this morning by the
Meigs County Sherifrs Department
Snow prompted the closing
of the Meigs County Courthouse
at 10 a.m. but area schools were
spared due to students already
being home for Christmas
break.
The Meigs County Highway
Department had silt trucks in
action during the Christmas
weekend, Office Manager Dave
Spencer said.
Snow removal during the
weekend was difficult because
there wasn't enough accumula·
tion to throw the snow off the

roads, Spencer said. Workers
were limited to spreading fly
ash 1101Lsalt which, because of
low temperatures, wasn't always
successful, he explained.
"Our people (employees)
sacrifice all the time in weather
like this," he said. "Some of
them were leaving kids at home
on Christmas.•
"Ther have a job to do and
they do tt," Spencer added. "We
are very fortunate to have willing workers fighting (the
snow) ... and sometimes il is a
fight."
"'We have a fine bonch working here," Assistant Superintendent Manning Roush said.
In other areas, the snowstonn
caused traffic and airpon delays
today and prompted Turfway
Park in northern Kentucky 10
cancel its thoroughbred horse
raci ng for the day.
·
The stonn forced delays of
some takeoffs and landings this
morning at CincinnatiNorthem
Kentucky International Airport
in Hebron. Ky. Operations
returned to normal after the
morning rush hour for nights,
airport spokeswoman Judy

Ingram said.
, The airport had two of its
three runways open, with the
third closed because of wind
conditions, she said.
The airport has about 800
daily takeoffs and landings.
The National Weather Service said the storm dumped 4
inches of snow on Georgetown,
about 50 miles southeast of
Cincinnati, and 4 inches in the
Maysville, Ky., area. Cincinnati
had less !ban an inch of snow.
Forecaster Erik Pytlak said
Warren and Clinton counties in
southern Ohio and Switzerland
County, Ind., received 2 inches,
while 3 1/2 inches fell at Dry
Ridge, Ky. There were flurries
a1 Brookville, Ind. and
Batesville, Ind.
Pyllak said he expected the
snow to end by this afternoon.
Temperatures were around 20
degrees, but the wind chill made
it feel like it was zero, he said.
The snow made driving
tricky, but roads were passable
in southern Ohio, said Lt. Ben
Jochnlc, commander of the SLate
Highway Patrol post in Batavia.

Kidnappers' getaway foiled by engine trouble
MOSCOW (AP) - Four kidnappers who swapped a dozen
schoolchildren for $10 million in
cash had to cut their geiJlway short
when the engine of their commandeered helicopter began to stall and
smoke poured in10 the cabin.
The gunmen apparently tossed
out handfuls of $100 bills before
landing and fleeing on foot through

snowy mountains with millions
more stuffed inside heavy duffel
bags.
Police and commandos captured
all four Monday and recov~r~d
most of the ransom money. Withtn
hours. More than $500,000 rs missing.
If convicted, the gunmen could
face the death penalty.

The arrests ended a four· d~y
drama. that bl)gan Thursday wrth
the seizure of the teen-agers at a
school and. saw the krdnappers
force two military p1!ots to take the
helicopter on a zrgzag course
across southern Russia.
The final five hostages were
freed unhanncd. The children were
COntinued on Page 3

Lewis donates $1 ,000 to Middleport .
8 CHARLENE HOEFLICH
y

Sentinel News Starr

"Please use the enclosed donation to my beloved home town as
you and your associates feel best,"
wrote Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis of
Henniker, N.H. to the mayor of
Middleport.
Lewis enclosed a check for
$1,000.
.. A blessed Christmastide 10 you
and all of Middleport. I am exceedingly proud to be a grateful native
son," said Lewis in his letter.
Mayor Dewey Horton said that
the money will be put in the general fund to be used for village operating expenses.
The donation was given by Dr.
Lewis in appreciation to village
officials for honoring his brother,
Art "Pappy" Lewis, a Middleport
High School graduate who excelled
in athletics and went on to an out·
standing coaching career.
A few years ago Middleport Village Council changed the name of
Plum Street to Art Lewis St. The
street nms along Hartinger Par){
and intersects with James Hartinger

NAMED TO HONOR •
Plnm Street was renamed Art
Lewis Street several years ago
to honor tbe Middleport High
School athlete who went on to
excel athletically in college
and coaching. Last week his
brother, the Rev. Edward W.
W. Lewis, made a Christmas
donation to the village In
appreciation of tbe gesture.
Parkway.-another street named ·for
a Middlepon graduate who went on
to excel in the military.
In his letter to the village, Dr.

Lewis told ,of a trip which he, one
of Art l..ewts' son, John, who hves
in Vienna, Va. and his daughter
made to Middleport in order to see
the sign in place. He said that
enroute !bey stopped at Ohio University 10 sec the Hall of Fame and
to sec Lewis' picture in the Roll of
Honor.
Once in Middleport they went to
the old Middleport High School
Building where lhe Lewis' boys
father worked as a janitor to see the
trophies won by his sons Art,
Harold, Ed and Larry. and other
MHS athletes.
In his letter Dr. Lewis recalled
that between 1928 and 1937 MHS
won the Southeastern Ohio league
six or seven times. "Art was the
best, Larry was not too far behind
in ability, Harold had the greatest
heart, and I was the poorest player
of the four Lewis sons," wrote Dr.
Lewis.
"I have such gratitude to the
people of Mid~l~port ...... and evcrlaslmg apprcctatton 10 our parents
who did so much for us with so
very little income," concluded Dr.
Lewis.

WASHINGWN (AP)- Strobe
Talbott, onetime roommate of Pres·
ident Clinton and principal archi·
teet of U.S. policy to siJlunchly
support Russian President Boris
Yeltsin, is to be nominated to the
No. 2 post at the SIJlte Department,
administration officials say.
Talbott's move to deputy secretary of state, which vaults him past
more experienced diplomats, was
to be announced today by Secretary
of State Warren Christopher at a
Los Angeles news conference, the
officials said Monday night.
Talbott brings to the usually
gray, offsiJlge post a flair for promoting U.S. foreign policy and a
sense of how it plays in the news
media that many analysts had
found lacking in the Christopher
era.
The 47-year-old Conner journal·
ist's government career began only
last April when he was named a
roving ambassador specializing on
the fonner Soviet Union.
The administration officials,
speaking on condition they not be
named, said Talbott won out over a
trio of far more experienced diplomats: Assistant Secretary Winston
Lord, an expert on China; 1llomas
Pickering, fanner ambassador to
Israel, Jordan, the United Nations
and India, and now envoy to Russia; and Morton Abramowitz, former SIJlte Department intelligence
chief and an ex-ambassador.
The Russian -speaking former
Time magazine bureau chief and
editor-at-large has ardently championed Yeltsin and his attempts to
convert Russia into a political
democracy with a free-market system. However, he stressed last
week the Clinton administration
would back whoever promoted
refonn in Russia.
He has been helping to prepare
Clinton for a Jan. 12-15 visit to
Moscow that will focus on balanc·
ing economic and political rcfonn
with measures that might ease the
wrenching impact abrupt change
has had on the lives of ordinary
Russians. Talbott has suggested
there should be a "safety net" in
the fonn, perhaps, of a comprehensive social security system.
Talbott, a native of Dayton,
Ohio, is a Yale graduate who met
Clinton as a Rhodes scholar at
Oxford University 25 years ago.
They remained friends as Talbott
moved through a series of lOp jobs
at Time, including diplomatic
reporter, White House correspon·
dent, Washington bureau chief and
editor-at-large.

STROBE TALBOTI'
"While they've been close ever
since, the choice was very much
Christopher's, " said one of the
officials who confrnned the nomination ofTalbott
As deputy secretary of state- a
post subject to Senate confrnnation
- Talbott would be given an even
larger role in helping to shape foreign policy.
Christopher's first deputy .
Clif10n Wharton, resigned amid
reports he was dissatisfied that he
had not been given enough of consequence to do in the job beyond
such administrative tasks such as
evaluating the U.S. aid prosram.
Talbott's faith in Yeltsm 's ultimate success did not seem dampened after opponents of the Russian
leader made strong showings in the
Dec. 12 parliamentary elections.
During his trip next month,
Clinton will visit Russia and
Belarus, but not Ukraine and Kazakhstan, the other two fonner Soviet
republics that inherited nuclear
weapons.
The Clinton administration is
trying to encourage American fmns
to do business in potentially oilrich KazakhsiJln. But Ukraine has
been dragging its feet on dismantling its long-range nuclear missiles. A presidential visit to one and
not the other may have been awk.
ward diplomatically.
Talbott has written five books
and was the translator of the late
Russian
leader
Nikita
Khrushchev 's memoirs, which displeased Khrushchev 's successors
and in at least one instance resulted
in his not being given permission to
visit Russia as a journalist

----Local briefs-routh cited in accident
A Long Bottom youth was cited for failing to yield after she
apparently pulled her 1985 Ford Escort onto East Main Street and
hit another car at 2:32p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy police reported.
Michelle Maynard, 17, had light damage to her car, while James
Spaun Jr .. 60, of Racine, had moderate damage to the rear of his
1979 Pontiac, according to the report.
The accident happened in front of the Rite Aid on Eas t Main
Street.

Deputies probe accidents
No injuries were reponed in two accidents in vestigated recently
by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
An icc-slick intersection was attributed loa one-vehicle accident
at the intersection of SIJlte Route 143 and Wolfe Pen Road in Salisbury Township Sunday around 5 p.m.
James D. Howard, 35, Pomeroy, was northbound on SR 143
when he hit a patch of icc at the intersection, the reponed siJlted.
His 1983 Ford Ranger pickup went orr the left side of the road
before strilcing a post.
In an unrelated incident, light damage was reponed to two Ponland residents' vehicles following a two-vehicle acc ident on
Stiversville Road in Lebanon Township Monday around 8:09p.m.
According to a report, Donald R. Dailey, 32, was southbound in
a 1981 Ford and struck the rear of a Chevrolet driven by James E.
Sellers Jr., 41, that had slowed due 10 road conditions.

Deer/car collision reported
No injuries were reported following a deer/car collision on U.S.
33 in Salisbury Township Monday around 7:15p.m.
Richard E. Sayre, 25, Pomeroy, was ea"bound on U.S. 33 when
he struck a deer that ran in10 the roadway causing light damage to
his 1984 Plymouth Reliant.

Water offices close Thursday, Friday
· The office of the Leading Creek Conservancy District will close
Continued on Page 3
··
•'

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