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".-."
..
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"'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Amtrak cutting routes,
jobs to stay profitable
WASIHNGI'ON (AP) - Offi- of these operations to have their
cials in Mobile, Ala., lobbied bard routes be profitable."
for tbc Gulf Breeze, cxpccdDg tbc
Amtrak said It will save $!1 DillOur public bcariD&amp; cilncerniD&amp; sented casea In which business and train to mng extra touriat dollars to
lion
a year but scuttling the Gulf
tbc 992 elChaoae ill Oblo llld tbc nature worked well to~etbcr. The lbeir blalllric bayside city. Two disBreeze,
which runs from MObile to
773 ud 882 excblllaes Ia West Nature Conservancy as there to appointing yean later, Amtrak Ia
Binnlngbam
when: It cmnccQ with
Virgillla provided a perked houiO help business overcome environ- dropping lbe service.
the
New
Orleans-to-New
York
for the representatives of the mental obstacles; such as building
Buffeted by airline fare wars Crescent
PUCO uu1 GTE. RcaldeoU ud housing subdivisions where ani- and fearing an end to Its federal
"Sometimes it's full, sometimes
bu•loeaa owaen liiiD bolb aides ~ mals on die endangered species list subsidy, Amtrak said Wednesday It there's a half-dozen people on it,"
the river atteadcd ud provided are living. 1be Nawre Conservancy was sbeddins more 1bao a fifth of said John Smith, a baagagc bancDer
sworn testimony wbli:h was ailed takes unique approaches to seem- iiS routes and firinB S,SOO workers and ticket seller In liirmingbam,
by CableVision. Now we must walt ingly uncooquerable situations with to cut cosiS.
·
Ala
three DIODths before tbc PUCO will !be aid of think tanks. They have
Officials of the puseoser railAmtrak remains a serious canmake a declsioa on our case. If we . wodccd to protect tbc Darby Creek road said !bey would begin reduc- petitor with airlines In tbc Northdo not approve ~ tbc decisioo, we near Columbus and other areas ing the frequency of some routes east, but limited service in other
have llllly 30 days to 111JPC81. I have across die world when: endangered on Feb. I and start eUmlnatlog oth- areas and the time.it takea to travel
since requested the forms necessary animals thrive, by buying thou- ers two monlbs laJI:r, rcducins ser- long distances by rail have taken
to inllillc a complaint for the other sands of acres of their habitat or vice by 21 percent.
their toll.
exchanges within our county that thinking tbcir way out of the box.
"We fought very bard to get
"In !be past we bave tried to be
must make a long distance call to
Our Suategic Planning Commit- that service, but if it's not prof- every place all the time," Amtrak
the county seat
tee is nearly finished compiling our itable I don't lrnow bow long we President Thomas M. Downs said
As for upgrading our services white papen. We met Nov. 22 and can expect them to keep it in during a news conference to
and choices we have had several listened to the education, infras- place," said Mike Dow, mayor of announce the cuts. But be said
ncw business openings. Ohio Val- tructure,. housing, elderly care and Alabama's second largest city. "I "rail passenger services can't
ley Fire Equipment Inc., Tbe Vic- parks and tourism white papers. hope it stays, because I believe it afford that anymore ... In a rapidly
toriao Parlor, Super Sundry, Your Don Poole of Tuppers Plains- can become a viable service. But changing transportation environNeighborhood Lender and Coun- Chester Water District presented I'm also understaodiog of the needs ment.''
· tryside Ceramics. Please be sure to tbc infnlstruclllre paper, which was
stop in and visit them. Remember extremely comprehensive and
to shop locally first! You save eXBCt widl many good ideas for us
time, money and help O'!f IXliDDIU· to Implement in the future. The
nity by doing so. Besides you will members are and have woatcd dilibe slll)lrised to fmd the wide selec- &amp;cody on their own time to ~ile
lion, low prices and friendly staff. I Meigs County's existing n!'5oura:s
have noticed that our merchanu and to develop strategies to overhave beautiful window displays come our _..onfalls. I appreciate
whlcb far surpass those of die malls their dedication to our county's
and large shopping milefl.
dcvelOIJIIICDl One recent developCatliy Crow and I attended a DICIItfor u.. aJUDty Is tbc certificaCPA conference In Columbus this tloa notice for Meigs County's
mooth which fcatllred many speak- Rural Enterprise Zone that I
en. 1be major tbcme presented by received last week from the Ohio
the speakers and their opinioos of Department of Development Now
today' s business trends. 1be major we have one more of the needed
· and consistent theme presented by enticements to 111tract business and
the speakers is that todays tmploy- induslry.
en arc seeking quality people, periThe next industrial attraclion ·
od. They can train anyone but tbc · workshop is ·scheduled for at 6:30
pers011 has to be of quality to begin p.m. Dec. 14 at the Carleton
~,,
with. Quality to the employer School. I hope you can attend or
1~
means dependability, neat appear- send a represenlalive of your COOIaoce, being oo time, positive attl- munity. I would like to thank Steve
tude at all times and enthusiasm to Beha for allowing us to use the
Jearn and wert as a team member. CarleiOO School for these meetings.
A shortasc of such .employa.ble
This month's quote: "We cannot
people seems to exist today.
direct the wind ... But we can
ST. RT. 7 N.
· The Nature Conservancy pre- adjust tbc sails."
GALLIPOLIS

Bucks
•
Win
game
in overtime
1994 LINCOLN

CQ"TINENTAL
4ii;to., Climate Conilrol.
un, crul•, AIIIJFM
PS, Pli~ PW, power

v-a, auto., air cond.,

locka;''jlowar •et, laatlhar
Interior, white.

erul•, AM!FM cat utta,
PS, PB, PW, power
locka, · power -t,
1,000 miiH, white.

8:30 P.M.·1 A.M.

-\{~~~

.

locka, U cruiH, AM/FM
caiUilll. ·

24Mt. ~ · SJ69 *

PapMif.;

.

..•..

$15,949 .

1992 FORD

RAtfGER XLT .

Long 11!11· 3.0L v-e, 5
apaed, jr condiUonlng,
power ..,lng, power
brakH, AliJFM C&amp;Mette.

:;,$144 ~

24Mo.
ra,....

w.

1992 MERCURY

GRAND MARQUIS

as, v-e,

automatic, air
cond., un, crul•, AM/FM
cuHlla, PS, PB, power
windows, power door
locka, power IUt.

24 ... 5215
,.,..
...

*

1992 FORD

ESCORT LX

Stetlon wagon, 4 cylinder,
automllllc, air condiUonlng, ··
power ' atearlng, power
brakaa, AMJFM, more.

24Mo.
,.,..,...

$162. Mo.*

........

R- TllrtiWIP D IIPIIIY lilt

High gear lor speed, low gear lor power.
4-whoel spring suspension. 14" long. 27 or 49 ·

caaino video poker.

MHz:. ,.g. 4U8 IJI0..41318P

Plays the same as the
big casino games.

v-e, a~.. air cond.,

teiH14328P

Two In one-plaY ~traight poker
or practice belling with pro

poker. 160·2'-lOBP

cauatte, ttn, crul•, PS,

[IIW, (IOW!I' door locka,
araut,black.

.I.CI ClllnD Prll'lll•
"

Stock ft0131

27 or 49 MHZ . ·~ · 5!1 119 f60 ·41t38P

..._

Realistic arcade sour.d1

1991 FORD
.ROBE

and vlbfallng action.
t80·24118P

Challenges players to repeat
lighl·and sound paltarns.
rtg

11 W •60· 2482DP

.

··Iff
· truck
lllfcan't be
This tough

Four-way thumb control,
missile and bomb buttons.

tamed. SV•" long, 27 MHZ.
"10·4122tlf'

Dr.,,.,

~
cylinder;
air CcindiUonlng,
~·power brakH,
erul_, AII/FM

$3,949
'

34•
. _ ..... II

~·

Tames thetoughntterratn. 12~~t•long. 27 or
49 UHz. f«&lt; •• ,_,.

Chlld -llle, bltt~-powerod . Alto
sharpens crayons.

"111'111'' .-1 lh Pill
FlalhUghl pr:ojed:a star pattern

We can wrap a gift, add a card and ship It
·anywhofe in lhe US via FedEx• deli"''ry
eervk:e. For a store near you or to order, call

1-Boo-THE-SHACK•

•

llad~elhaell

You 've

questions. We've got answers••

1990 CHEV.
LUMINA EURO

4 DR. v-e, air condiUonlng,
PS, PB, power windows,
power door locka, un,
crul•, AIIJFM cuutte.

I.CIIIIIII:IIIIJia

Handhekl Clr race game with
sound effectt. TWo game~,
10 skill levels. ,.g;_1ut ftiO·NteBP

me~.

and plays 1Winkle. Twinkle.·

v-e, auto., air cond.,
caaaatta, trlt, cruiM,
PB, PW, power door
poweruall,rad.

$6,949

••

Great Stocking SluDer Gllll

1.111111.. FJII

1991 FORD
T·BIRD LX

$8,949

11111.1111 u:u

Leaves me compet1110n in the dust.
High and 10w gears. 13" long.

ByRON FOURNIER
·Associated Press Writer
WASmNGTON - Casling his
·net for millions of middle-income
voters, President Clinton is offering
a few hundred dollan in tax cuts to
Americans raising children, paying
tuition and saving for retirement
. The middle class needs help, he
·said, because, "All is not well with
:America.''
. Clinton said the economy is
·booming but "more jobs are ~ot
enough. We have to ra1se
·incomes."
Republicans mocked Clinton's
:attempt to move toward the
·political center and join a bidding
'war for middle-class support after
Democrats were drubbed in the
November midtenn elections.
"We welcome the president to
help us lead in a new direction,"
GOP Sen. Fred Thompson of
Tennessee said. "But if he wiD not,
we welcome the president to
follow."
With Republicans firmly in
control of Congress and Democrats
asserting their independence from
·their politically hamstrung

. ..e!l·25!&amp;8P

1987 CHEV.
CAVALIER
4 ~•• 4 cylinder, lutolilatlc,
air condltl0f1lng, , power
atearlng, power brakH,
AM/FM alarto, whlta.

$2,949

~~~~
,

.

Low tonl&amp;bt ID 3GI, raiDy.
Saturday, efoudy. Hlp 1D mid
401.

...

.

~

A

president, whatever tax cut
emerges in 1995 likely will bear
little resemblance to the package
Clinton unveiled on television
Thursday night
And the president stands to lose
more than gain in the upcoming
battle: He will be aiticized if a tax
cut hurts the economy and may be
forced to watch Republicans seize
credit if it's a success:.
Calling his $60 billion package
a "middle-c!ass Bill of Ri,hts!"
Clinton prom1sed to pay for 11 With
deep budget cuts that hurt
programs, not people. "I want a
leaner, not a meaner government,"
he said.
Playing catchup with Capitol
Hill, Clinton proposed · a
smorgasbord of tax ~reak~ and
deductions that would BJVC mllldleclass families:
• Up to a $500-per-child tax
credit for all children below age 13
in households earning up to
$75,000 a year.
• A tax deduction of up to
$ 10,000 a year for college or ~ther
post-high school cducauon,
Families making less than

-Flattening site__, It's

Harry Lyons and Larry Wolfe
were named as the council's
representatives on the Firemen's
Dependency Board. The fire
department had earlier named
Doug Reese and Robert Joh!lson as
members. A fifth member will be
selected from the community.
Mayor Jeff Thornton noted that
the meeting was serving as the
required discussion time for the
second stage of the application for
the state funding requirement for
the miniature ~If course.
Meeting w1th council were Mr.
and Mrs. Hilton Wolfe Jr. on a
claim for damage done by a limb
from a village tree.
The claim had been rejected by
the village insurance, and agent

$12(},000 qualify.
• A tax deduction of Ul,l to
$2,000 for putting money 1nto
individual retirement accounts.
Families making up to $100,000
qualify, lip from SSO,OO(l now.
• Flexibility to withdraw money
from IRA accOWits without penalty
to pay for college education,
purchase a first home, cope with
catastrophic illness or care for an
elderly parent
• Job training vouchers worth
$2,000 to $3,000 for workers to use
at the job center of lbeir choice.
Republican.s could hard! y
restrain their derision.
.
"He gives a $500 per child tax
credit until the child's 13. Lord
have mercy, it's just at that poiqt
that they start getting really
expensive," said incoming House
Majority Leader Dick Armey, RTexas.
The pilckage was billed by the
White House as a follow-up to
Clinton's 1993 efforts to extend
earned-income tax credits to the
worlr::ing poor - part of his overall
p~ to make the tax system more
f811'.

by the Racine Area Community Orglinizatloo,
ror a little Christmas camaraderie, which
included choirs and storytelliDg by the bonftn, a
live nativity scene ud Free bot chocolate and
cookies.

had purchased a new overhead
door for the water building and
asked council to purchase a door
opener since other villag_e
equipment is kept there. Counc1i
approved the purchase. Fire Chief
John Hohnan was given permtss1on
to purchase a 1m jackel ·

Board backs
mill's permit
for landfill

Jacks9n jail closing may
aid regional grant attempt

CHARLESTON, W.Vi.(AP)
- The state Environmental
Quality Board upheld an industriallandfdi permit for a New
York companr that wanu to
build a $1 biUaoo pulp mill In
Mason Cwnty.
The board Wccbiesday ruled
that the Division of Environmental ProteCtion acted propc:rly
in awardln~ the permit to Parsons &amp; Whutemorc Inc. of Rye
Brae&amp;, N.Y.
The Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundation, a labor
group, and Mont)' Jl!.w!~~ C?.f
Hminngtori aped ille J!Cf~Dll
They said it did not reqwre the
company to obtain a federal permit to destroy wetlands on the
landfill .site beside the Ohio
River at Apple Grove.
The state agcocy said it slipulate&lt;l that Parsons &amp; Whiuenlore
could not build the landflllwtll
it obtained that permit from the
u.s. Aimy Corps of Engineers.
•'The issue had more to do
with IJnlCCdure than 111bilance,"
said Environmental Protection
Dir~tor David 'Callaghan.

KEVIN KELLY
EditcJr
ov~ - CIOIUI'C of the
ksoo c
Jail has lent IIOIIIC
Jac
:::'Corrections ComUTjle~cy
Oh · •
mtssaon of Sou~eute.m
•o.s
b~m::'~!.,8 regional jail built m
"''· ·
· b 1••-' ·
The comm1ss10D su m ~au
applicatio!'. to fund a $6 mallion, 80-bcdfacllitytothestaleOif~of
Criminal Justice Services Thunday the same day a federal court
o~rcd the 123-year-old JIICkson
jailshutdown,effectiveJan.l.
... The closing is the result of-afederal class actiolllawsuit 'fded In
1991 ·by former prisoners who
claimed lhe' jail did not ~ conslitulional standards, Jackson Shcriff Gregg Kiefer el!,plained•.The
order was signed br Judge Jolin D.
Holschuh of the U.S. Dislric:t Court
Southern Divisioo
Tbe move will icave only two of
the four counties in the commiaion
consmium. Gallia and MciiJ, with
operating jails. Vinton County, a11o
a member of the aroup, has been
without a jail since 1982. . Officials attending lburaday' s
By

In other action, council
approved payment of the Chamber
of Commerce fee, appropnated
$400 to the park-museum account,
being money donated for the Cross
Mill prpject. and authorized
Thornton to secure infonnation on
(Continued on Page 3)

commission meeting were in agree~ince then, Meigs officials have
ment that the only good thing about
dectdcd to pursue .a .stale grant for a
the closing is thal it S!"C~gtbens !he
on~-c~~~ty .fac!IUy to rep!•~:
case for iiS granta_pJ)licalion.
Me!gs JWI,,butlt m 1894 and limn
''The only posiuve to come out ed m capact~y to less than 10 IX:JS·
oners. Officials stressed the Me1gs
0 f th · is that it stresseS the need,
h' hs.
fthefactorsthatwill
application would not affect the
1
;e ; n~i::e':. • Jackson County
commission's auernpt at funding.
co~ml'ssione: ·Bob
Willis who
MS Consultants of Youngstown,
·
'd '
which has researched costs and
chairs the~~~:·,:;...;, coor- procedures ·for the regional jail,
James......., .... r•.v...- h
·
h · ·1 'II
1
dinator who hand-dehv~red t. e esumates t e J&amp;l w1 c~s
application to stale officials, saad S800,000 annual!~ 10.operate, With
the commissio~ should know about each cwnty conuibuung a share ci
funding by m1d-~ebruary. He fek _the cost.
.
thb-need factor will boost the com~
- ~-;· Durin~ the mcellllj!. county offl. ·
mission's,chances.
cials ~ucd $Uidymg a proposed
"I doo. t ~ ho~ they have any ~~uonlprocedure manual for the
other cho1~, . he said.
_ jail, drafted by ~ consul18DIS l!"d
If funding _IS approved, construe
based on ~ODS at a Mahorung
lion costs w1ll be covered br, !iJe County facility.
. .
grant, ~eckner said: The S6 ~on
B~kncr told ~e comm1~slon
sought m the grant JS the maxunum that ~ the manual IS &amp;pp'O":ed and
for funding, he added.
submitted by January, u will take
The commission aKJccd N~v• 30 tbc project put the first pbase of .a
to put the regional jaU 011 a Site o~ seven-step, state-mandated )Btl
State Route 160 ncar Hober ¥eel!- Pia!Jning ~val. process.
cal Center. The secondary Jltc IS
If we re ~ng an attempt to
near Salem Center on land owned put our d.ll:ks m ~ row, .that could .
by Meigs County.
be the swmg vote, he said.
' ·
II

~

By KEVIN PINSON
••
OVPNewsStalr
GALLIPOLIS - If tbc GaiJia.
County Agricultural Society"::
prepares tbe sit.c, they will come. ••
"Our management has becJl!:
given permission to so ahead wittt-:
this project," sa1d MicbellC..
Callihan of Producers Livestoclt-:Association 's
corporate:. .
communications.
PLA' s COCf.?rate board vote&amp;'
Thursday it will build a stockyard .
on land adjacent to the fairgrwld$·
if the Gallia County AgricultUJat.
Society prepares the site and a
lease agreement can be reached:'
between the two parties.
;:
Site preparations include on,
road improveiiiC!Its, a bridge over~
McCormick Creek and the·
installation of utilities. The GCAS '
is pursuing $325,000 in grants to~
fund the improvcmcniS.
:
A project profile is on file with
the Ohio Valley Regionaf.'
Development Commission. A lena"
of commibnent from PLA will now._
.bring the grant application to active_::
status.
"Everything looks good, we've.
got a green light," fair boardmember Mite McCalla said
Thursday night at the board' S:
regular -meeting. But the job's fat"
from comple&amp;e, be added.
~.
"We've got some answers-·
tonight but that doesn't mean we'll have a s~~~ard tomorrow," hC::
said. "We · haVe a lot of hurdle(
to clear."
,~
· R.V. "Buddy" Graham,
executive director of the Regional .
Economic
Development
Association, said the next step is to .
match the site's needs with the. state and federal funds that arc
available.
~
"What 'Ye have to do in this.
type of project is to evaluate t!Je.;
objective ... to see what funds they
need to do what with," be said. "I._
think it's a tremendous poject and_it certainly merits funding. It _
certain! y will serve a big need iO: ·
the local economy."
:
The fair board met in executive;.
session Thursday to discuss a lease-.
proposal from PLA. No decisions:
were reached. Board member Skip~.
Meadows said this morning the~
board and PLA will meet with theil::.
attorneys to work out the contract •
"As far as the board, we don'C
foresee any problems (reaching II('
agreement)," he said ·
;·
Fair Board President David·
Mills said a letter writing campaign::
by the pro-stockyard Agriculturat
Coalition may have played a role in: ·
PLA 's decision.

Christmas

0

,,

~­

»

CANDLELIGHT WALK - Approximately
100 people partklpated Ia a Cllrislmas C811dleligbt walk as part of Racine's Christmas In the
Park restlvldes Thursday Digbt. Approximately
250 area residents llteaded the event, sponsored
against the viUage must g0 through
the victim's insurance company
fii'Sl
A representative from Da":isQuickel was pot present. Acuon
was postponed until January'.
Street Commissioner Glenn
Rizer reported that the water board

a go ~~

with Gallia site
for stockyard

pr_~~-~~~j9.,.: contr~t~

Bernard Kinder ~vialld the .wo~es
that. they m~ rust filo.aclaim with
,th,elr ow~ msurance compa_ny.
Kinder ~d that sta!O law IJII!V!des
that . c.la_1ms agam~t, pohucal
subdiVISions must farst ~e made
through a homc~wne~ s o':Vn
insurance and the village s policy
w11l thll!l pay the deductible.
Dav1d Spencer _asked a.bout the
ord1~~nce deahng ~!th . the
condibon of rental properues m the
village. H~ also spoke of the need
for a full-nme officer.
An ordinance authorizing ~he
Ohio Department of ~boo
~ resurface Stale Route I m the
village .next summer was approvec!.
There 1s no cost to the vallage, It
was~~
and Bob Crow of
amer
.
Bro~-W~ Insurance met-w1th
council to d1scuss coverase that
their company could pro~1de the
v11lage. The ':Ost w~s gtvcn .as
$13,251, ~ot mcludmg ~~e fue
department s gun shoot facility. nor
the ~nds for the ma~or and clerk.
K1nder also .discussed t~e
village's prese~t msurance, Oh1o
Government ~1sk Management,
and gave an esumBie of $11,983, .It
was nol~d. by Warn~r that bts
company s I"Surance IS govCf!!ed
by state law and that any claams

Newapaper -h

PLA to proceed;.

iRacine approves fire

De~e:nl

Hold, draw and bel just like

1993 FORD
T4JIRD LX

I

2 Secllona, 12 Pegn 3 5 - :,
N0.1 59
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 16, 19~4
Mulllmedlalnc.
- ~C~op:y:rl~gh:1~1~~------------~---------------------------------------~~::::~::==~~~~~~~~:_~::~-=~~~-:------------~~~--------------~~~~----=----=~~~~:
Vol. 45,

1\ire protection c:optracu 'tor
sutton, Lewi · and Lebanon
·townships were · approved by ,
Racine Village Council when it
m earlier this wock.
~ contnctiprovide that Letart
pay 100 percertt' of the 1-mill 1m
levy to Rae~ Village; Sutton will
pay 40 perc·ent, to Racine, 40
t to Syracuse and 20 percent
~han; and that_Lebanon pay
Racine Village 60 percent of the
levy proceeds, with the remaining
40
t to go to. the Basban Fue

18•
'IWI-1111,..111111

!0% Off

,

w

Republicans scorn
Clinton tax cut plan

14)3 FORD
MUSTANG CONY.
4 cyl., automatic., air condlllofllng, JS, PB, power
wlndOWJ, · power .door

\~

en tine

T·BIRD

V-t,

$23,949

(tiMl

'li '

•

1994 FORD

GOLD DUST

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, .DEC. 16 &amp;.17

Pick 3:
796
Pick 4:
4214
Buckeye 5:
1-3-16-23-27

PageS

The Holiday Inn presents

BAND

Ohio Lottery

HANGING THE CHRISTMAS STOCKJNG - Fift-1ftJ'•
old Alaorette Marie Saller, 11a11as a IIIOCkiaaat tlac llreplae Ia
the bome of ller pudp~natl, ~ ud Kea McC..... fl
Mulberry Aveaae,Pa.uOJ. ~'slhrl:\jolalllae of
her motller, La11n1 Saller, ud aadel, Kea ufd tewa McC...
lou1h.

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. Friday, December 16, .1994

Commentar
· 111 Court Street
Pollle!OJ, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGB'IT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOiiJLICB
GeMnl Manager ·

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~2-The

Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio
Friday, December 16, 19$4

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

U!Tl'I!RS OF OPINION are weloome. They lbould be less than 300

wordltooa. AU teu.n are 111bject to editi•&amp; and must be sisned with name,
ldchu and telepbooe number. No llllli&amp;ned teuen will be publilhed. l..etten
abould be in &amp;ood tute, lddreuina iuues, not penonalilioa.

Tryil'!g to r~define state .
relat1ons With Congress
!J.r~TERR.~
r~
WASHIN~- ODe day oext mODib, each or tbc SO swe lepsla-

WASHINGTON - AD explosive report by tbc Seoatc Eammmcotlllld Publlc Worts C'liD!Diaee
raises fresb questions about
Supreme Court Justice Stepben G.'
Breyer's role iD die coastruct1oo of
a $222 million federal courdlouse
in Boston.
Last May, we reported that
Breyer was a key player iD approving tbe site and design of an opulent new courthouse while be was
chief judge of the Flnt U.S. Cin:uit
Court of Appeals In Boston. Dwiog
bls confirmation bearings, Breyer
side-stepped questions about the
project - dubbed tbe Taj Mabal
for its six -story atrium, 61 pivate
bathrooms, 3 7 separate law
libraries and 33 private ldtcbens.
But a draft report of die Senale
committee's six-month investigation of courthouse construction
across the country claims thai
Breyer and bis former brethren
"ran roughshod over cost-eftlclen·
cy requirements.'' Breyer refused
canment
Some of the injudicious spending delailed in the report iocludes:
$105,000 for private kitchens for
each judge; $330,000 for omamen·
tal court seals and carvinas;

be asked to join a campaign to cllange IILl way tbal states do
bu5loeaa with tbc fcdcra1 goVCIIIIIICilt.
A sponsor of tbc movement says tbe piopooeots want an equal paJtllet·
alllP to replace tbc "masla'-sttvaDt relatioosbip" wilb Coogress. .. .
Not dial swe leaden haven't been 1811ciDg about II for years. This woe
DI~NTI£D
II will be different, said Gov. Mike Leavitt of Utah, because tbc states
iDIGDd to do IKliJlClbing about It, togetber, in a forum lhat'.s oever been
EMPLO~S
ltled before, a oonfereoce of 200 govemon and legislators to seek ftmdamcolal dlaose iD tbc power "'dance.
"SillieS are oot a speda1 lnta'Cst, and we're DOt lobbyists." said Leav. Ill, chairman of tbc Republlam Govemon Auoclalloo. He and a Demoa81ic colleague, Gov. Ben Nelsoo of Ncbnllb, .-c leadln&amp; die drive·to be
ioduded iD congressional actloo lbat affects die SillieS.
· "Now you've goc to go iD and lobby diem, geoerally oo a bill tbat's
already been written," Nelson said in a joint lelepbone interview with
Leavill "We ought to be parties to the process from die begillniog."
NelsOn and l.,eavitt seek to convene a Coofercoce or tbe States next
summer, before the 1996 presidential campaign, because they want it kept
biparUS811 and deVoted tO the SlrUCiilre or governing, rathet than to bag·
gllog about delails.
And die delails are,bearing down in a bUIT)', with leaders of die new
Republican-run House planning a Jan. 19 vote on a coostitutional amend·
mcot to require balanced federal budgets. In the GOP Senate, there'll be
an early 'YOle to bar unfunded mandates, tbe congressional habit of passiD&amp; bills thai cost the slates money without providing offsetting federal
suppon.
The govemon favor both measures, but Nelson said the more impor·
tanl question Is of slate and federal roles, of defining wbat each level of
government ought to be doing instead of debating wbo ougbt to be paying.
Gov. Howard Dean of Vermont, a Democrat and chairman of the
National Governors' Association, bas said it's bypoaisy for Republicans
in Coogress to p111b a balanced budget ameudmcot witljout a constitutional @IBrlll:ltee tbat the price won'tjust be forwarded to the slates.
Rcpublic:an aovemors agree. Leavitt said it is almost "nanimous that
the 11a1e ~: would nllher bave an amendmcot coverin&amp; botb points.
"But we also bave received very clear signals from the leadership of
Coogress thatlbey doo't see thai as ~litically practical," be said. ·
Can Presidellt CIIDton acwally
In fact, the balanced budget amendment may be put on bold in tbc
win tile nomination iD 19967 It
states untildley see a separate coustitutional safegwud against sbifting the
sounds wUdly Implausible, but at
costs to their treasuries. Nelson said be doubted the states would ratify
the moment It appears that be •a
one without the otber, and it lakes tbree-quarters of them to cbange die going to try.
Constitution.
.
I am refenill&amp; of COti'SC, to lbe
Loog before tbat could happen, they seek to bave the states convene a Republican Jlllllli"elioo. Mter Eleci:alference like none before, to re-bal•m: die federal system. Eacb slate tioo Day, Mr. Ointon'a IDllial Me- ·
)Vould bave one vote; with a majority, they could present Congress with a
lion was to exbibil the first of tbc
states' petition for action, nOt legally binding but, the governors bope, five classic responses of a patient
unexpectedly facing dealb: dellial.
poHdcally polelll. ·
, "With the likely prospect of a balanced budset amendment and tax Now be bas )II'08I'CIIed to bargain·
~:uts oo the borizon, states are at cousiderable risk !bat Congress could
ing, abd be is maldng a most ioterpush Its budget problezils down to the stales," warns a paper approved by estin&amp; offer.
tile CouncU of State Governments. "No matter wblcb party controls
Tbe voters want Republican
Congress, it is not likely to relinquisb power without feeling the pressure policies? OK, be'll give tbem
ilf an electorate tbat demands it.''
.
Republican policies. In the past
• Nebfaska's Nelson said be bas yet to talk with a fellow governor or a couple of weeks be bas announced
$tate legislator wbo doesn't agree with wbat be and Leavitt are pusbiog. a $25 billion increase iD the Pen·
Most of them want to get started rigbt away, be said.
·
lagon budget, fired Surgeon Geller·
: .So they are planning an all-state sendoff in January, with resolutions of al Joycclyn FJ&amp;rs, started looking
.plltidpcltion in tbc Conference of the States to be inttoduced everywbere for wbole £ablnet departments
(HUD, Commerce, F.(lucalion?) to
po a single day.
eliminate, dropped bls Insistence
• It's a novel idea. but notblng extreme, Nelson said.
·: Aod Leavitt added a note from history, quoting James Madison In on universal bealth care, sworn
~ 'The Federalist" papen:
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(again) to eliminate "welfare as we
• ••Ambitious encroacbments of tbc federal aovemment on die aulbority . know it," and ordered bis aides to
1&gt;f the state governments would not excite die opposition of a sin&amp;)e state, exhume tbat middle-class 1M- cut
«a few stales only. Tbey. woulcl be signals of general alarm ....
be J)I'IXIIised iD 1992.
; •'Plana of resistance would be coocerted.''
'rbe problem, of course, is that
: Nelson and Leavitt are campaigning to make it bappen.
everybody, Including tbe voters,
knows very well wbat inspired Mr.
: EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· Clinton's cooversion, and how long
:alit for Tile Associated Press, baa reported on Wasblngton and it's likely to last. He bas no more
credibility than a drunkard beggiog
:;padoul polltla f~ more t1wJ 30 yan.
money for "a cup of coffee."

$89,000 to decorate courtroom
ceillngs; and $232,000 for abovestandard ceiling lighting In the
judges' cbambCrs. AI $319,000, a

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
up of a courtroom
was created at tbe judge's inslstence so tbe f1na1 product conveys
tbe "ambience of courtroom
design."
"Tbe judges' attention to delai1
for tbe Boston project even extended to tbeir insistence on using
EngHsh Brown Oak for courtroom
panelliog" at a price tag of $1.4
million, tbe report states. "Tbls
type of wood comes from Euro·
pean White Oalc trees wbicb are .
affected by a fun10s found ooly in
England and France. Only a small
percentage of Engllsb Oak trees
produce the coloration desired by
the judges... "
Tbe Senate report says that the
Boston project is part of a nation·
wide spendin&amp; spree in whicb $Sll
full-scale mock

million iD unnecessary costs bave
been incul'ml for courthouses since
1980. "CQUrtbouses are supposed
to be balls of justice; not bastions
of government waste and opu·
lence," Sen. Max Baucus, DMonl, the committee's cbalrman,
told us. ·
Breyer and U.S. District Court
Judge Douglas Woodlock craveled
bere and abroad to view buildings
designed by some of the most prestlgious architectural firms in the .
United States. Viocent Flanaaan.
executive for the lint circuit court,
told us be accompanied the two
judges and a design consultant in
Mardi of 1991 oo a four-day tour
from New York to Ottawa at taxpayer expense.
. "We didn't just want a building
tbat's pretty," Flanagan told our
aaaociate Ed Henry. "We wanted
ooe tbal wmts"
Although Pianagan says lhit die
judges IDq1illed about beatinJ sys·
1ems during their cravela, otber evi~ence auggesta lbat temperature
cmttol was not the centml concern.
According to a memo prepared by
tbe deslan consultaDt, wbicb is
included iD tbc Senate report, Breyer and Woodlock wanted tbeir

tmes will

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US. POST
OFF\CI;

GOP is in search of a candidate

.

Tbe Cbriatmu aplril geu IU
severest test not In tbc wcet after
Cbristmas or in the bleak montbs of
January and February, but on
Christmas aflcmooo.
Robert Bcncbley bas captured
the letdown that sets in even before
Cbrlstmu Day Is 0\'CI' iDa bmnarous short story written In a Dicken·
sian vein, tided "Christmas Mter-.
noou."
It begins, "Wbat an aftemoon!
Mr. Gu~mldge aald tbat, In bls
estimation there never bad been
such an afternoon since the world
beaan, a sentiment wblcb was
heartily endorsed by Mrs. Gummidge and all tbc Bille Gnmmldges
-not to mentioil tbc relatives wbo
luid come over from Jersey for tbc
day.
"In the fust place. lbere was tbc
.ennui. A heavy, overpowering
. ennui such as results from partlclpalion iD dpl tDIIIRI of steamy,
gravied food, ~elf with sailed
nuta _c an ennui Wbicb ~:~!fried with
it a retinue of yawos and tblnly
veiled insults and wblcb ended In
ruP!ures of the clan spirit serious
enoUgh to last throughout the glad
new year."
As for die cbildrell, "tbree-and·

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'THEY are going to cut your
Social Security benefits. '

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William A. Rusher

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'the-Republican Party, perfectly
reflective of that mood. (Foi'mer
coogressman Yin Weber, at tbc onentation session for freshman
Republican conaressmen, wlsecradced, "This is die lint time I've
felt like a moderate.") But wbere Is
the presidential candidate of tile
conservalive movemcot? Amazingly eDOugh, the possibilities are rela·
lively few.
.
Of course, most of those under
discussion would probably tell you
they are conservative. Govs. Whitman of New iersey and Weld of
MassacbuseiiS would be the least
plausible iD doing so, but·for that
very reason tbey are probably
doomed to consideration for ·tile
vice presidency only. Sen. Robert
Dole of Kansas, Gov. Pete Wllsoo
. of California and former Educatloo
Secretary lJunar Alexander, though
insistin&amp; on dlelr conservallsm. all
prefer to avoid identification as
'movement conservalives," and
tbe movement cbeerfully cooperates.
Govs. Thompson of Wisconsin

and Engler of Micbigan are warmly
admired by eonservitives, but bave
th111 far cboSen to rack up splendid
records in tbelr respective states
and avoid identification as conservative llllldll'd-bean:n on national
isal1C5. Colin Powell is, quite simply, an untoowo quantity.
Diet OleDey Ia a true-blue COD·
servildve, but su«cn from bis ideo·
liflcation wilb ~~ Busb, wbo
wasil't Jadt Kemp
bas a membenblp- calli In tbc movement, but
almost abot his right foot entirely
off by pritoollly qJpi)Siog, iD die
reeenl tJectkla, Califum1a Proposition 187, whicb was the voters'
declaralloo of war on paying the
upkeep of llle&amp;allmmigranta ooe of die hOliest 8lld most legitimate lsaues iD Amerh;a today. (It
passed. S9 perc:eDt to 41 percent)
That lea~ just lbree otber possible candidales wbo bave a senous
claim to the status of a movement
conservative, and hence on tbat
movement~ s fraternal support for
tbc II()I'Oinadoo. ODe is former Vice
President Dan Quayle, wbose
bandlcaps are well known but wbo
indisputably knows both tbc words
and lbe music of the movement.
AnQtber •• Sen. Pbil Gramm,
wbose (belpful) campaign bankroll
Is as thick as bls (harmful) Texas
drawl. Aolldle tblrd, of course. is

Newt Gingrich of Georgia, wbo is
probably going to be too "controversial," and in any case too busy,
to get into the 1996 nomination

baUle.

Well, does it really matter
wbetller tbe GOP nominee is a
"movement conservative"? Tbe
nominatim will go, after all, to the
winner of tbe presidential prl·
maries. wboever !bat may be. But
the COf\Servative movement Is a
formidable force in the Republican
Party today, and it can certainly
veto any candidate it seriously dislikes. Wbat it must decide now is
wbelber it is prepared to look outside its own ranks.
CORRECTION: It was, of
COUISC, Oliver Twist and DOl David
Copperfield (as I erroneously
asserted in a 'recent column) wbo
begged uns'!C(essfully for 'lmore''
food iD lbat. Victorian orphanage.
In one of Newt's, be would bave
gotten il
Willlam Rusher II a DIIIID·
guisbed Fellow of tlae ClaremOnt
lmlitute fOI' the Study of States·
mansblp and Political Pbllo110·
P·Y·

(For Information on bow to
communicate elcctronkally wltla
tbls columnist and otlaen, COD·
tact America Onlne by allllna •·
IJ00.827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Christmas bestows message of love

Berry•s World

- - _L_

So the Republican nomination is
safe - but for wbom 7 Here Is tbc
nation, In pedlaps tbc most conservative mood iD 6S years. Here Is

toe and presents round tbe tree" tired, bOney. I'll 'get up dais lime.'
and in the Cbrisunas carols.
Romance can't last. Love can't
Tbe trouble is, romance and belp lasting."
wonder die soon aflel tbe anticipaChristmas is like love. !tis the
lion is over. There is little to lhri1l excitement of knowln' wbat we
George R. Pia_genz ' us in the return of the wise mco to am expect from God. It IS knowing
tbelr own country or In discarded thai God, wbo came "as man with
bc·because we didn't know tbe Cbristmas wrappings. Our mistake man to dwell'' on this dlly,loves us
tots."
bas been not to realize that Cbrtst- with a love that "can't belp last·
AI tbe end of tbe afternoon, mas Is more love story tban in g." It is knowing we are cber"Mrs. Gummldge passed the candy romance. There is a bl&amp; difference isbed by one wbo "fmds beauty in
around. I no more believe abe · between tbe two, as author Mar- us no matter bow we look."
·
tbougbt anybody wanted tbat jorie Holmcs bas been perceptive
11 is knowing there is one wbo
Cbristmas candy than I believe abe to see.
waits iii anguisb until be learns we
tbougbt tbey wanted lbe cpld
"Romance Ia tiD&amp;ling excite- are bappy and safe. It is knowiog
turkey sbe later ·suggested. My DICIIt," abe saya. "Love Is tender, tbat wben we are weary and our
opinion is thai abe wanled to drive oeu, cous1811Cy, being cberisbed. beariS are beavy laden, tllere ;8 one
them bonie.''
.
·
Romance Is eaaer striving always wbo will say, "You're
Here.:
Wbat bappens to tbc maalc and to appear attractive to each otber. let me help you."
·
anticipation of tbe nlgbt before Love Is two people wbo find beau- . · Tbis realization of beio' loved
Christmas by tbe time Cbristmu ty In eadl other DO ma1ter bow lbey ·and cared for am bring ~xatement
afternoon rolls around?
look. RO!D!IIIC'A! Is flattering atten· Into our Cbristmu aflemoons _
There Is, to be sure, romance tiODS. Love is aeouioe lbougbtful· and DOt only our Christmas afterand wonder in the Cbriscmas story. ness,
.
,
noms, but all our 8fternoons until
Ao expectant mother wlio can find
''Romance Ia tile anguisb of . the end of time.
no room in .the inn gives blrtb 10 waiting for tile pbone to ring to
George Plagenz 11 a ~ted
ber baby In a stable lis wise men bring you a voice that will utter writer for Newspaper Enterprile
from lbe East come to.pay bomage · eudearmenll. Love Is the ingulsb Alsodatlon.
· to bim and ansels on high sing out of waiting for a call tba1 will assure
(For lnfor-tloa .oa bow to
the good news thai a Savior Is bml you someone else Is bappy and COIIIJDunicate elcctl'otlk:dy wltla :
to mankind.
safe.
lbll colulllllllt and otben, con-:
Tbere is mucb wonder and
"Romance is dancing In tbe .tact .America Onlloe by ealUillll·:
romance too in "snow 8lld mistle- IIIOIIIligbl Love Is sayinl, 'You're . 800-127-6364, ext. 8317.)
.
a-quarter-dozen toys to be divided
among seven children, surely
enough, you or I might say, to sat·
isfy the little tots. But tbat would

tired:

Accu-~ fom:ast for.

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Trial ends in guilty plea

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Aaial BuffiollnD, SS, ol Detroit, Mich., died Tuelday, Dec. 13, 1994
at Grace Hospital In Decroit.
Bom ~Y 2, 1939 in Pomeaoy, the 1011 of tbc laic Joe and Rulb James
Buff'mgton. he was a self"CCJJPPoyed tire repairman. He was a member of
the Naomi Baptbt Cbun:b and al'!lmeroy High School pluaiC.
He is Silrvived by bls wife, Carla Bunch Auffinglon of Detroit; daughter, CherYl Buffington of Detroit; dau&amp;bt« IDd 1011-ID-Iaw, Tracey and
AoiOilio Ortiz of lfouston, Tew; 1011, Cbad Buflinlton of Dclroit: sisters
and brothen·in-law, J0111111 and Charles Martin of Cllli1 Winchesrer, and
Patricia and Carlos Thom)JIIOII of The Plains;.liltlcr, Shlron Buffington of
Long Bottom; brolhers and aisfen.in-law, the Rev. Edward and Karen
Buff'mgton of Oallipolli, and Danny and Donna Buffington of Pomeroy;
brothers, Charles Buffington of Detroit, M1d Don Buflinaton of Portland;
two grandcbildren; and aeveral aunts, uncles, nieces llld JieDhews.
. Services will be II a.m. Saturday at tbe Ewin&amp; Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Arius Hwt officiating. Burial will foUow in the
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends may call between 7 and 9 p.m. today at ·
the funeral hol)le.

Mary E. Chapman

Wet night will yield clouds,
highs in 30s on Saturday

Mary Elizabeth Chapman, 80, Pomeroy, died Thunday, Dec. IS, 1994
at Vetaans Memorial Hospital.
·
A retired acbool' teacher, sbo was born J~!l-4, iD Pomeroy,
daughter or lbe 1aae Pnlnk and M~rgwet cabi1l
.
S'he was an adminlllrative assistant at Ohio University for IS years and
tau&amp;htatRudmld andMeip bigb acboola until berretirementin 1974.
She atiCnded tbc Trinity Olurch in Pomeroy and was a member of the
Friendly Circle ~ there. In addition, she was a member of the Obio
State Teacbers AIJSOC!alion and the Meiga Senior Cilizens.
She is survived by special mends, Martha and James Vennari of
Pomeroy.
No calling hours are acbeduled. In lieu of Dowers, donalions should be
made to the Meigs County Humane S&lt;x:iety.
·
ArrangeiiiCIIII are by the EwiD&amp; Funeral Home, Pameroy.

Jack D. Cleland

Meigs announcements
Cbrlstmaa PJ'OII"DI
· A Christmas program will be
'held at the Mount Hermon U.B.
Chun:h, Texas Community, at 7:30
p.m. Sunday. ·
.
··
Trustea to meet
. The Letart Township Truatceswill meet Mooday at 6 p.m. aldie
office building.
Live Nadvity
· A live nadvity scene will be pre.
sented at tbe Bradford Chun:b of
Christ, Crossroads of Bradbury
Road and State Route 124,

Stocks

----..33
Asbtand OU ----------.33 Ill
·-------------.51318
Am Ele Power ·--...--..

Akm ·------------.54 5/1
AT&amp;T

Bauk One·--•--------.16 314
Bob Evana------ ---.20 518

Champion Ind. --------24118

CbarmlJig SbDP------.6114
City Holdtna- - - --------..33
Federal M~ul - --------19 7/1
Goodyeor.TIIR
518
K-mart ..... _ .. ____ ..... - ..--.. It
Lauds End -·----·------.13 7/1
Limited Inc.----------·191/4
Multimedia Inc-.:...-------..2'7
Point Bancnrp
Reliance Electric
7/1
RobblDI &amp; Myen- ·- -------17
Royal Dultb-----..···-··-1061/4
Shoney'slnc.
- - ---Star Bank __·---, __.. _____
.JS-13
liZ
Wendy lnt'l. ----.. ------14 318
Worthington lnd, ___ :___ _ .lO 112

·-------.33

·-·----------19
--·-··---.30

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Stock reporiB are tbe 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Advest ot

Pomeroy mayor's court

The following individuals
appeared in the Pomeroy ~yor's
Wednesday and Thursday nights Court of Jobn Blaettnar recently.
from 7-9 p.m.
• Fined were: Keith Musser, Portland, $213 plus costs for assaull;
F&amp;AM special act
• Dwigl!t Hon~. CoolvUie, $44
A special mcclin&amp;of Middleport plus c.osts for speed; Teny Bell,
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will Ill! beld at I Racine, $63 plus costs for expired
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at tbe Middle- tags; Beatrice Williamson,
. port Masonic Temple. Work wUI Pomeroy, $4S plus costs for speed. .
be mthe entered apprentice degree. $63 plus costs for driving under
suspension; Richard Dean Srewart,
Syracuse CouneU tg meet
Pomeroy, $63 plus costs for disor·
Syracuse Village Council will derly: Amy Fnend, Pomeroy, $41
meet in continued ~on. Monday plus costs for s.peed; Elizabeth
al 7 p.m. at village ball
Gloyd, Ponland, $39 plus costs for
speed; Malcolm Gumther, SyraSenlces announced ·
cuse, $47 plus costs for speed; and
A cantata entitled ''The Christ- James Hawley, Pomeroy; $63 plus
mas Stranger" will ~ presented .at costs for driVIDg under suspension.
7 p.m. Sunday at thC;f'usl Baptist
Forfeited were: Freddie Baisen,
Church in Racine. The children's Brook Pmt, $395 for DUI, $63 for
program wiU be at 7 p.m Wednes- stop sign; Jacqueline Whitlach,
day, and the Cbrisbnas Day service Coolville, $61 for speed; Brian Jenat 10 a.m.
nings, Pomeroy, $66 for speed;
Bridget Wells, Vinton, $62 for
speed; Caroline Atkins, Racine,
Middleport court $63
for _speed; Dorothy Bentz,
·l
Racine, $67 for speed; Leo ZwillThe following individuals ing, Pomeroy, $66 for speed; David
appeared in the 'Middleport Toundas, Pomeroy, $62 for speed;
Mayor's Court of Dewey Horton Nonnan Price Jr., Pomeroy, $67 for
recently.
Fined were: Vincent L. Reiber,
Pomeroy, $2S plus costs for running a red light; .Eric E. Lawson,
(Contlnuecl from Page 1)
Middleport, $2S plus colts for failure to maintain assured clear dis· the COPS Fast applicatioo to see if
tance; and Almena L. Bentz, Mid- funds may be used to pay the
dleport, $2S plus costs for fictitious present officer.
lagS.
The meeting recessed until 7
Forfeited were: Davi4 L. Nance, p.m. Monday, the session to be
Woodstock, SSOO for reckless oper- held 81 the annex in Racine since
ation; and Denver H. Nelsorl, Mid· auditors will be·using the Slar Mill
dieport, $60 for failure til conttol.
Park offiCes.

MIDDLEPORT MERt:;UANTS

• (USPS 113-%0)
Publisbed every nflernoon, Monday through
Friday. I l l Coun St .. P&lt;1meroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio Vnlley Publishina Company/Multimedill
Inc., Po~roy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 156.
Second clu5 ~stage paid ot Pomeroy, Ohio.
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questioned, TCDOJiia said.
He was recovered 10011 after by the Middleport Police ~·
ment, Tenoglia said. Barker eventually pi~ guilty to nusdemeanor sex OffCDIICI, be lddod.
Judge Fred W. C~w mpresided over the trial in the Meigs •
County Court d Commoo Pleas.
.
.
B&amp;lker facea a maximum sentence of 18 months in prison with
sentencing set for Jan. 23 at 10 a.m. He was represented by public
defender Wi11lam H. Safranek, while Tenoglia represented the state ,..
'
of Ohio.

.Meigs LEPC recognized

· The Meiga County Local Emergency Planning Commiuee was
one .of 4g recognized by the Slate Emergency Response Commission at a ceremony ill Col11mbu Tuesday.
The Bmeraency Pl•nnina and Community Rigbt-~Know program requires anyone wbo lllDra, Ides or generates hazardous IIIIIJe..
rials to report the materiall' location and volume to SERC, the
LEPC and local fire dqatmed.
Based on the inforlllllion provided,.tbc LEPC develops countywide plans to deal witb emersencies involviog tbcse subsllmcea.

Death ruled due to natural causes
Meigs County Coroner Douglas Hunter ruled a Middlepon
man's death Thursday was due to natural causes.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sberifl' s OffJCC were summoned
to the Noble-Summit Road residence of Luther Oldaker, 85, aflel
neighbors found bim dead in a chair on the front porch of his residence.
•
The body was transported to Foglesong Funeral Home
1

Deputies probe one-vehicle wreck
No injuries were reported followiilg a one-vebicle wreck on For·
est Run Road near Pomeroy Thursday around 4:30p.m.
According to a report from lhe Meigs County Sheriffs Department, John lhle, Racine, was ~!bound wben he swerved to avoid a
deer. His 1991 GMC pickup tnJCk then scraped a guardrail, causing
moderate damage to the right side of tile lrUCk.

Man held for alleged rape
A 32-year-old Middleport .man IIIX:used of mping a 9-year-old
child is being held in the Meigs County Jail ifter being arrested
Thursday night by Meigs County sllcriff's deputies.
Russell M. Roush was arrested without incident at his 648 S.
Second Ave. residenee, said Meiga County Sheriff James ·M. Soulsby.
The arrest followed an investigation by the sheriff's department
and the State F'~n: Marsbal's olf~ee, said assistant Prosecutor Ouis
Tenoglia Other charges will likely be filed, be added.
In Ohio, rape ol person less than 13 years of ase is an aggravated
rust-degree felony punisbabiC by life imprisonmenL
T
lin said Rousb ma make an initial
this afiCI. nooo~~Meigs County
Judge Patrick~en.

Cowt

AU.JIIIIII_ --

DIRJYAMI:
I IIi

COLONY THEATRE

7: 20, 9 : 20 DIIJt.r
S .~T j
SUN

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FRI. THRU THURS.
WILLIAM SHATNER,
PATRICK STEWART IN

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speed; Margaret Keifer, Atbens,
$67 for speed; Monty J. RifOe,
South Webster, $30 for seat belt
violalion; Adeline Baker, Pomeroy,
$65 for speed; Joseph Rousb Jr.,
Syrac'Use, $83 for traffic light; Barbara Frye, Pomeroy, $59 for speed;
Larry Holder, Canal Winchester,
$68 for speed; Rita White,
Cheshire, $66 for speed; Gregory
Hoffman, Bidwell, $60 for speed;
and Donna Buffrngton, Pomeroy,
$63 failure to yield.

,

A llia1 for a 40-yar~ Middlepon man facing a felony eacapc
charge came !0 •llltprile end W')'Cineaday afternoon whco be ~·
ed guilty to the clilqje while the jury wu in deliberation.
•
.
Jack R. Buker was oriBIDaUY charged witb groSs sexual imposition, said ..,.,..., l'nllccutor
Teoo&amp;)ia. On Sept. 18, Balta' ·
ran out the back door of Middleport Council chambers while being .

Each LEPC must conduct an annual mock exercise to practice
implementation of lbe plan and update iL
Robert Dyer, cbainilan of the Meigs LEPC, received a plaque at
the ceremony.

low was -14 in 19SI.
Sunset today will be at S:og
p.m. Sunrise on Saturday will be at
7:47am.
Jack Dwaine Qeland, 48, of Main Street, Rutland,' died Wednesday,
Weather forecast:
Today ...Cloudy. Rain develop- Dec. 14, 1994 at Obio State University Medical Center, Columbus,
ing southwest and spmlding north- . foUowiD&amp; an extended illness.
Born on Nov. 27, 1946 in Della', be was the 1011 of Sylvan and Dolly
east. Highs today mainly in the 40s.
Tonighl..Periods of rain. Lows Jaoks Cleland of Rutland. He was a production specialiSt at Lancaster
Paper Mills. .
.
mid 30s to around 40.
Besides bls JllreiiiS, he is survived by bls wife of 18 years, Alana Rose
Saturday...OOiJc!r.. !- 'cbance of
morning rain east. HighS upper 30s Cleland; a daughter, Elizabeth R. Gloyd of Portland; five soos, Jackie and .
through tbe 40s.
·
Dwaine Qeland, Jr., both of Mason, Oliio, Palric1t S. Oe1and of Pomeroy,
Extended forecast:
and Jobn D. and Justin J. Cleland, both of Rutland; two sisters and
Sunday ...Chance of snow brothers-in-law, Mildred R. and Hurley Rife of Colllton, and Georgia and
east.. .Fair west. Lowa in the lower George O'Rourke of Atbens; ~brothers and sisters-in-law, Sylvan and
30s. Highs from the upper 30s lo Barbara Cleland of Columbll'l, Cbarles and Nellie Cleland Of Lancaster,
mid40s. .
and Melvin and Rose Cleland of NeiW Knoxville; tbnle grandchildren; and
Monday ... Scattered flurries several nieces and nephews.
norllleasl ..Otherwile fair. Lows in
He was preceded in death by a son. Jerry Cleland.
.
the 20s. Higbs in tbe lower id:1111dServices will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Bircbfield Funeral Home,
dle 30s.
Rutland, with Pastor Isaiah Crump officiating. Burial will be in Robinson
east.
Cemetery
at Deller. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-,
T~y
..
.Fair.
Lows
in
the
20s.
: The record high temperature for
9
p.m.
Saturday.
Highs
in
the
upper
30s
and
lower
this date at the Colum6us weather
station was 64 in 1984. The record 40s.

By Tbe Allocllted Prell
Rain is expected to develop ovei
southwest Obio later today. The
rain will sp-ead north and east during the afttmoon. II is expected to
cover the elllire III8IC by evCI}ing.
Temperatures wi111&gt;c' mild.
Highs will range from lbe lowet
40s in tbe northwest to near SO
degrees IICrol8 IDitheasl Ohio.
Periods of rain will continuo
statewide lonighL The rain will
besin tapering Off from southwest
to northiast after midnight
By late Saturday morning,
· cloudy but dry conditions should
exist statewide. Lows tonight will
be in tbe middle and upper 30s.
.Highs Salwday wiU J'lllge from the
upper 30s in northwest Ohio to
.near SO degrees across the south·

'. 1

,,

Local News .in Brief:

Aaron Buffington

MICH.

'

(

-Area deaths--

courthouse to emulaiC 1001e of tbc
most glamorous buildings In tjle
world.
"(lbe judges said)... the architeCtural models to wbich we sbou1d
aspire were Hampton Court,
Grq:nwlcb Observatory, the Palais
Royal, die Royal Courts of Justice
on the Strand," the memo reads.
"In addition. there was a vaaue
reference to Scandinavian architecture and an oft-stated requirement
tbat eicb judge bave an Engllsb
~~~ opened onto by Frencb

Tbe Senate re)iort also alleges
that Breyer and Woodlock "served
on panels along with General Services Admillistratloo (GSA) officials tba1 selected oontracton without using competitive procure·
ment." According to the report.
"the judges' insistence oo baviog
GSA procure an lntematlooally
renowned architectural firm" more
than doubled the piOject' a design
costs, wbicb were supposed to be
$6.7 million.
AI tbe request of tile judges.
GSA awarded a noncoll\petltlve
'design contract to Pei, Cobb, Fl!led
and Partners. Tbe flfDI's principal
partner, I.M. Pe~ is one of the most
Influential architects of the 20tb
century. Flanagan told us it is
"absolutely false" to suggest !be
contract was noncompetitive. He
added tbal the judges, "absolutely
100 percent were not insisting"
that Pel get the contract.
Tbe committee report says a
questionable contract was also
awarded to a firm represented by
Thomas P. O'Neill m, son of the
late House speaker. GSA gave a
$145,081 contract to a Boston f11111,
McDermott/O'Neill, for public
relations work related to die project
. - even though GSA already bas a
· public~affairs offJCC for sucb pur·
poses.
.
Tbe Senate report also reveals
tbat a separate lnve$1igatlon by
GSA's inspector general found tbat
tbe judges "pressed" GSA 10
award tbe contract to O'Neill's
firm at a bigb cost, and that the
judges "may bave fqstered
(O'Neill's) flfDI to do the work"
because of bis political connections. A spokeswoman Cot O'Neill
says be ·bad no role in the project.
Jack Anderson and Mlcbael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentlne(......op~g• 3

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

OHIO Wea ther
Saturday, Dec. 17

Senate report slams Justice Breyer

The Daily Sentinel

'

Special Holiday offer e.nds
December 31, 1994.

• • • • • ·Holld..y Gift Subscription Coupon •
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111 COURT ST~ POMERqY, OHIO 45768

~

�.

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-

Sports

.The Daily Sentfuel
· .

··

.

.

lntheNBA,

Friday, ~mtilr 16, 191M

.

,.

Clippers defeat
Warriors;' Mavericks
and Sonics also win

PIQI.' A4

UNLV routs Cen'tral Michigan.52-24 · in·Las·Vegas ·Bowl ; .~, .
By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Brian
Pruitt sat out and Henry Bailey
Stood OUL The result Wll Ill lllleX·
pected blowout of Central Michigan by UNLV in the Las Vegas
Bowl.
With Pruiu, an outstanding running back, unable to play because
of a bruised knee, Central Michigan couldn't get its running game
unttacked. UNLV's running baclcs
were healthy, but it was a wide
receiver who led lhe Rebels on lhe
ground.
Bailey scoled three IOUchdowns
running and added anolher with a
46-yard reception Thursday night
as UNL V celebrated its fust Las

Vegas Bowl appearance with a 5224 rout of Central Michigan. .
"I felt I had a lot to prove,"
Bailey said. "I came in here with a
lot of confidence, a lot of confi·
dence."
Bailey, who scacd three of the
five times he lined up in the back·
field , rushed for 79 yards and
caught passes for 101 more as,
UNLV opened a 31 -10 halftime
lead and cruised to the win over the
Chippewas.
"We've always wanted to do
that with Henry," UNLV coach
Jeff Horton said: "Once No. 33
gets a step on you, look ouL"
Bailey, who scacd the first two
times UNLV had the ball, had only

rushed 16 times for 50 yards ail
season.
Central Michigan was playing
without PruiU. who rushed for 274
yards when the Chip{'Cwas beat
UNLV 35-23 earlier this season in
Michigan. Pruitt bruised a 1cnec in
practice and was listed as questionable for the game.
"We decided at the beginning
of the game after warmups when be
couldn't cut like he wanted to that
he wouldn't play," Centtal Michigan coach Diclc Flynn said.
Playing before a llome crowd of
17,562 that included as many Centtal Michigan fans as from UNLV,
the Rebels ·scored 3g consecutive
points to open the major college

Scoreboard
~A standings
Allullc Dl...lao

~

. .:. . . . . . n ~ ~

Now Yc111&lt; ............. 12

7

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P.U•delphi• ............1
Now Jono1 ............9
We+'np ....... 6
Milllli ................... !5

12
14
12
14

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5.7 IS 5

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4.0 46 20

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M' ll JlltraU. 12:30 p.Dt
O...otS..Jinnciooo,4pm.

.

5

~

Sunday, Dec.18aama
A11anu .w. are. Bay at Milnllkoe, 1
p.m.
LA. a.m. ••OUeeao. I p.m.
N... ...,..... .. w....,J p.DL
S..D!QioO\N.Y. .r.r., !p.m.

6J

Miari\1 II laditllapollo, 4 p.m.
CINCINNATI al Arila:l.a, ~p.m.

LA. CU.,.0 ...... ...3 II .143

lloultmat ~- C~y. -~p.m.
N.Y. Gionu al'hilo4olpNo. 4 p.m.
qJM!LAND 01 PiiUbwJb, 4 pm.
LA. Roidcrsi\S..lllo,lp.m . .

10

Mooday, Dec:.19games

DaJ1u al New Odeana. 9 p.m.

Transactions

2
2
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CLEVELAND INDIANS: Apood

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Tc.y Femandez. ialie1Mr,

O...!OI, Mioild99
Dollu 122,- 113

LA.LWoa97. - M
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CIJIVI!LAND " AU.dolpllio, 7:30
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All.ANfA HAWKS: Rcloued Sqci
&amp;WOYU:h. ....... Sipod
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DENVER NUOOI!TS: AcllYIIed Rea·
aio WWlomi, rorwo.S, r.... thO laj.....S
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ltin11, pard, and Roa Oraftdiaon, for·

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LA. LoUa .. s.. """'""' 1:50 p.m.

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LA. Clippaa •• Auohcim.

Colli., !0:30p.m.

Mil-'

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NoUoooJJ'oallloiiLuouo
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CAROUNA PANTHER): Sianed
Tony Smbb, Wallie On:al and EQt; Weir,
wido .,.;nn; lady Qalbbcrl, IWlllin&amp;

Saalll

ConoplooU 56. r -

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FoolllaU

Major college scores
43

btct; Mlllhew Campbellud Llwyor
Tillman, tiaht ends; Darryl Moore end
Codooa LeomiJi, ,....., .... Miko FiM
lftd K.win Fl.t'U lletlet.
DENVER BRONCOS: Pllced
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l.adoiml Tocb 74. Oooop S\. 71
IIL·B. -.as, W"llmill&amp;fa\.DoL43

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OHIO ST. 14, 11f-Ch1111a...o 13

IOOl, lllillail74. S E - 72

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IAC1SONVJLLB IAOUARS: SiCbrio 'flillioml, Jidty s-.'- su..
meN, End.e Lopa aacl Ferric Co1lon1,
dorlllli..
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Football

oqllld.
NBW YOU: OIANTS: N-.1 J...,
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AMERICAN CONFERENCE
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8
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lladoder, Rli......391 ZlZ
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the second half to pull away from a with five each. Meigs had 20
. nine-point halftime lead llld defeat turnovers and 13 assists, led by
: Miller 65-39 in girls' TVC basket· _ Cotterill and BlackweU wilh four
•ball action Thursday evening at each. Couerill and Eastman had
: Meigs High School's Larry R. four steals each.
.
:Morrison Gymnasium.
Jenny Plant led Miller with 12
: Amber Blackwell scored 10 points. No other statistics were
• fli'St-period points as the Marauden available on the Falcons.
: (3-3 overall and 2-2 in the TVC's
Meigs will host Alexander on
:ohio Division) went on top 20-17,
:Vanessa Compston added six Wednesday, Dec. 21.
•points for the maroon and gold.
Reserve DOles: Meigs outscored
: Haley Berry scored eight for Miller Miller 19-4 in the fmaJ .period to go
:(0-6 overall &amp; 0-4 in the TVC's on a post a 34-1g win over MiUer.
:Hocking Division) in the period.
Carissa Ash led Meigs with a game
• Laura Eaatman got the hot hand high 15 points, eight in lhe final
: for Meigs in the second period period.
; scoring eight points in the period as
_._._._
; the Marauders went into the loclcer
Melp
• room with a 34-25 lead.
(20·14-13-18::65)
: · Meigs used a balanced scoring
Amber Blackwell 3-2·0=12,
~ attack in the third period pla~:ing Laura Eastman 4-0-6=:14, Melissa
.~ six players in the scoring column in Cliffonl 1-0-0=2, Cynthia Cotterill
! the third period as the Marauders 5-0-2=12, Vanessa Compston 5-0• held a 47-32 tead heading into the 5=15, Anne Brown 2-0-0=4 ,
: final eight minutes.
Cheryl Jewell 0-0·1=1 , Kristen
: Meigs was able to putlhe Lady Dassarlva 1.0-1=3, Taryn Doidge
•Falcons awav in the fmal period 1-0-0=2, Jaclyn Swaru 1-0-".2,
••ouiScoring Miller
'· 18·7 behindCyn·· Totals: U -:Z-15=65
""'
CotteriU's eight points.
: Meigs placed four players in
MUier
•double figures led by Compston' s
(17-8-7-7=39)
}16, Eastman's 14 and 12-point
Sandy Hem 3-0-0:::6, Julie Lan·
, efforts from BlaclcweU and Cotter- ning 3-0-1=7. Jenny Plant 3-2-

:lhia

hit 24 of 54 from the ~;~·M~;~~~~~~-~=;y
tfloor, including two of eight from 4-0-0=8, Totals: 16·:Z..1=39

pn. Meigs

GENESIS
BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning

1Oam • 11 am

Ash Street
Freewill
Bapt1'st Church

~
BOOM! - New York ceoter Patridl Ewing (33) jams iD l'rollt ol
Sacrameoto's Brian Graul (33) durln11 the.rtnt quarter or Tbunda:y
night's NBA contest In Sacramento, Calif., where tbe Knil:ks won 11484. (AP)

Wyoming to entertain
Cincinnati men Satu~day
By MAlT KOHLMAN
Associated Press Writer
Wyoming coach Joby Wright
takes a long pause when asked
what wealcness of No. 17 Cincinnati he can exploit during the Cowboys' home game Saturday.
He then answers: "I'm trying to
pay off the bus driver to sec if he
can get lost fran the Holiday Inn
over here, but in Laramie I lhinlc
that would he pretty hard to c!o.
· "I 'm really reaching for sttaws
when you say wealcness," Wright
said. " They're just a really, really
fine basketball team."

Middleport, Ohio
d"t d
· · · ·
re I e
Diplomas Offered.

Teacher Les Hayman

992-741 Q.
f long range, for 44%.The Mara;ud;·;.l'l'tt.ISl'l""tlfl.'!lnlill'milS8'9lilSM!OSI!l"M~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::!

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2-4 p.m.
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at_997-2i~5

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Cali1Dave or Bob ·

Wright also has been trying to
advanlllg~ of the altilude, bul
said it has little effect on Cincinnali
coach Bob Huggins.
"I just reminded him today
before he practiced, that 'You
know now, you're 8,000 feet in the
air, Hugs - g,ooo feet up!' But he
loolced at me and told me to get the
hell out of his oractice. So that
·
didn't scare him. 1'
What scares Wright is the faa
that Cincinnati (5-2) has momentum coming off a 91-88 overtime
victory Tuesday over No. II Minnesola.
lake

I.:=a I

G R Q C Ace

Santa Claus

.PM· ...

To . Plac~ Your Greeting -

+

ers hit IS of 25 from the line for
60%. Meigs pulled in 26 rebounds,
led by BlackweU and&gt;Anne Brown

SuperSollics 114
TraU Blazers 103
Shawn Kemp scored 26 points
~ Gary Payton had 23 points and
mne ass1sts .
Payton was at his best during
the lhird quarter. The Sonics led
6g-66•with 4:01 left before he
scoled seven straight points on an
18-foQt j11mper, a lay11p and a
·three-pointer. He then set up B bas·
lcet by Vincent Askew for a 77-67
lead wilh 1:521eft in the third quarter.
.
Cliff Robinson had 26 points
and I 5 rebounds and Oyde Drexler
had 26 points for visiting Portland.
Mnerldur 122, Celtlcs 113
At Dallas, Jim Ja~:kson scored
40 points and Jamlli Mashburn
added 27 as the Mavericks turned
in one of their best all-around
efforts of the season despite play·
ing without suspended forward Roy
Tarpley.
Popeye Jones. h&amp;d a career-hi11h

.... ..
+

.

'

'

....

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•'

.~•

.. +,

... +

·j

....

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£Jditioh

,,,

'

B:y•DAVE HARRIS
Selatlnel Correspoadellt
' Meigs ouiBcirml Miller 31-14 in

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

&lt;lhe 'l:Ja.ill[ Sentinel's

.

,..

KARENS
GREENHOUSE

. .. .... ..

I

992-6472

I.

.... ....
.....
....
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:

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;

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\VISCONSJN : Suopadod Doaay

Bnd,, dofouivo back. ood Syloo ProD.
'hts±w, f• lhl Hall at ' - '·Bowl f«

.

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lllllllold-. will ..alp ...

..
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Collep

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
IIIIK

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Soccer

TORONTO IOCDTS: Nomo4lock

R•hon

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p.m.

h&amp;mlatNnJ.-y, 7:30p.m.
Now Y'* al'arllud, I p.m.

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12:30-4 P.M.
On 1340111 ·

PrrJSBIJROH PIRATBS: Slpod 1&lt;lf •
lflw. third bueman, 10 a aa.)'elr fiOII·

Satunlay.. g~ma

@1!.~~f=

Uncle Dan Hayman

COWRADO ROCIJBS : Slpod Joe
Oaho. piu:htr. ........................
md lavilod him 10 'Priaa llllalaa u • •

Frlday'IIIIIIHI

Meigs girls get 65-39
triumph over Millet

{.

Live Broadcast Host•• By

25 points with 20 rebounds aiid
Jason Kidd had 10 poi1tts and 10
assists.
Dominique Wilkins scored 33
points and Sherman Douglas had
19 10 pace Boston.
Lakers 97, Rodlell94
At Ho11ston, the Lakers won
their third straight road game and
thcii lOth in 12 games overall.
Cedric Ceballos scored a seasoo-high 36 poiniS and Eddie Jones
added 16 points for the Lakers,
who held the Rockets 10 40 percent
shooting.
Houston got rid of most ofa 1()..
point defiCit in the final 6:30 and
had a chance to tie at the end, but
Robert Horry missed a three-pointer at the buzzer.
Nuggelll01, Heat 119
Rodney Rogers bit a game-winning eight-footer with three seconds left as Denver overcame 29
turnovers and a 20-point deficit to
win at Miami.
ReJ!8ie Williams, activated from
tbli inJuJed list before the game, led
Denver with 21 points. Kevin
Willis had 29 points and 12
rebounds for the Heat. who lost for
the.fifth time in six games.
Jazz !15, Bullets 85
Utah won its sixth straight road
game by defeating Washington.
Washington, which has lost four
in a row, got 21 points and 10
rebounds from Chris Webber, but
let Utah pull away in the third
quarter.
Knidcs 94, Kinp 84
Patrick Ewing had 27 points and
18 rebOunds and John Starks broke
out of a slump with 19 points for
New Yak at Saaamento.
Charles Smith added 16 points
and Anthony Mason had 14 for the
Knicks . who played without
Charles Oalcley because of a dislocated toe, ending his srrealc of consecutive regular season and playoff
games at 323.

84.

_;··

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Now Yoii M. s..z-10 M

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two-year .

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NolloaoiLoof•
CINCINNATI RBD : Sianod Hoi

l.A.~19. ~SIIt011

' at

10

wbb Dcnab Cook, pildlcr, on a

NBW YORK YANII:EBS: Siptd

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Thunday'siiCOI"fS

, .

BMellaU

.

4J

7J
12J

OSU men defeat
UJ-Chattanooga
84-83 in overtime

The publiC is Invited to drop by the Center and have Free
Refreshmer)ts, and enjoy the Overbrook Christmas Radio
Program live as it happens, hosted by Uncle Dan
Hayman of ~MPO., Throughout the afternoon, the
· Overbrook Center ·residents will celebrate the arrival ol
the 175th Christmas in Meigs County. A spec!al
broadcast of the 1933 Lum and Abner Christmas Radio
Program, as well as other popular radio shOW$ of that
time will also be aired during the Overbrook Christmas
Show. You're Invited to bring a small token glh that will be
distribUted to th~ Overbrook residents. G!FTS ARE NOT
REQUIRED TO ATTEND, BUT WOULD BE
APPRECIATED. The Center Is splendidly decorated for
the occasion, and your visit will be cherished by the
resldel)ts of Overbrook Center.

r_s.7 .,w......,..,lp.m.

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2J

7 .1150
9 J50

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fJJie Jl.nnua{ Open Jlouse Jl.t Over6roof( Center
Wi[{ 13e Jleftf fJ!iurstfay, tJJecem6er 22ntf.

Saturday'aaamea

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LA. .............. 13 7 ,1150

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913

Feb. 5 in konolulu ~ U!IIIIS guess lhat'~.whal. ~nc in lhe
represenJjbg the AFC and the league saw.
,
National~ Conference.
Hoard's IICiection C1P11 a .roller•
PerJY 8illl Metalf rcprciiCnted coaster year for bini ·dial allrtod
lhe Broiwl18t the 1994 Pro Bowl.
wilh a 60 percent pay cl!l!bllltill
De PIQ,urgh Steelers led the ranlcles him. He
pay by
AFC with ·,l.it pl&amp;yers named 10 the achieving incentives. He nn for 92
Pro Bowl.
yards in the seuon OllfiiiCl,lbell did
Hoanl'siiCicetion wu a siaprUc not receive more than 10 CllriCll in
because of his laclc of opportuni- a game until the ninlh week. He bas
ties. His 171 attempts rank lOth two tOO-yard games. and one for
among lhe (\Fe's top 10 belk.ri- 99.
ers. .But his 4.5-yanl rushing aver"Even before I was asked to
age IS second.
l8ke a pay cut, I think I decided it
"UnfOI'l!lllately, I didn't get the was time for me to do something
carries everyone else got, but the and make a difference," said
ones I got wcrc importanl," Hollnl Hoard, who is in h.is.fifth
.. ~ ~· '
said. "I made them important and I

BEREA, Obio (AP) - In one
NFL seasa1, Laoy Hoard has gone
from obscurity on the frin&amp;e of the
Cleveland Browna roster to aclec·
tion as the fullbiclc for the Ameri·
can Fontbsll Coofereoce in the Pro
BowL
Also voted to the AFC team
from the ·Browlil were defensive
tackle Michael Dean Perry, ldck
returner Eric Metcalf and safety
Eric Turner.
Four Browns were named fust
alternates - linebacker Pepper
Johnson, kiclcer Malt SlOVer, defensive end Rob Burnett and special
teamer Bennie Dan(liiOII.
·
The Pro Bowl will be played

)

. WESTERN CONFERENCE
I

45 7
3.3 19 3
3.3 27 6

By CHRIS SHElUDAN
AP Sports Writer
The Los Angelea Clippers still
have the worst recml in the NBA.
but just barely. '
By ~ the slumping Golden
State Warnors g9.32 Thursday
night, Los Angeles improved to 318 and moved to 'a half-game
behind the Minnesota Timberwolves (3· 17) in lhe IDIOfficial battle 10 avoid being labeled "Worst
Team in Professional Baskdball ••
Throw out a 46-point loss to
Portland, and it was actually quite a
positive week for the Clippers, who
won three of five games after dropping their fust 16 10 fall one loss
shon of the Miami Heat's reconl
for the worst stan to a season.
"We' re snealling up on teams
right now. We have our conftdcncc
and we're Jeady to go. We got that
fli'St win, and now we're carrying it
over," rookie Lamond Murray
said.
: CHASING L00SE BALL - UT-&lt;;•attaaooaa's Pat Heoderson
Mean while, it's been a disu·
(left) and Oblo State's Otla WIDston cbue the loolie ball ID the first
trous week for lhe Warriors, who
ball ol Thursday Dlgbt's game In Columbus, Oblo, where the Buck· lost their eighth straight one night
eyes won 114-83 In overtime. (AP)
after learning that coach Don Nelson had been hospitalized with
pneumonia. His son, assistant
coach Donn Nelson, filled in
against the Clippers.
The Clippers. who got 1g points
and II rebounds from !.A?r. Vaught
and 22 points from Malik Scaly,
never trailed after the midway
of the first quarter:
-. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - also nailed a lccy three-pointer in pointLatrell
SpreweU scored seven of
his
27
points
in the last 3:30 as the
Ohio Srate coach Randy Ayers has the overtime.
Warriors
pulled
10 81-80 with 1:28
Buckeye seniors Doug Euler remaining, but Vaught
said all season that hts walk-ons
hit a IS-foot
would have to contribute for the and ·Tony Watson had career-scor- jumper 12 seconds later and, after
ing highs, with 24 and 22 points
· ~uckeyes.
Sprewell made one of two free
. They did just that on Thursday respectively.
throws, Sealy made two free
Euler sealed the victory with throws
Qight in Ohio State's 84-83 overwith eight seconds left for a
time victory over Tcnncssec-Chat- two free throws wilh five scronds four-point Clippers' lead.
left. His three-pointer wilh l:221eft
tanooga.
In other games, Seattle beat
CUI
the lead 10 one.
Freshman wallc-on Kevin Mar·
Portland
114-103, Dallas defeated
"I thought Euler's three-point ·
t)n hit a three-pointer with 33.8
Boston
122-113,
the Los Angeles
seconds left to give Ohio State (2- basket was the key play of the Lalcers beat Houston
97-94, Denver
3) its fust lead since early in the game, but Don Jantonio and Kevin downed Miami 101-99, Utah
lllll:De. Martin had a career-high 17 Martin also made big shots," defeated Washington 95-85 and
Ayers said.
I\(liDts.
New York: topped Sacramento 94Don Jantonio, anolher wallc-on,

Browns get Hoard, Perry, Metcalf.·
and Turner on ~FC
Pro Bowl team
,.

NFL's Week 16 slate
2J3

IJub

u

Mllhilo.Atl ......... I03 1214 12J II 10
Rico, Sl'.... .........f9 I )IS 13.6 69 11
Sbupo,O.B..........Il 954 11.6 41 14
Riluo. Ad . ............74 915 13.3 69 8

9
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9

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1410
975
970

c.-, Mla......... lll I!S2 ' 10.4 65 7

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- ·-···-·····13 '6 .614
CUM!LAND ...••13 I .619
Cluloao---··--11
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R•hon

~~.u.c

Basketball

Pruitt's abflence wu felt u Cen· rout early in the ICICOIId'lillf, ~
ttai Michigan (9·3) could not con• only 41 seconds to score 011 ill fill(
trol the ball on the ground and JIOISession of the half. The RcbeiC
could not stop UNL Von defense in needed on1r five playa 10 go 7S
a game that matcbed the winners of · yards on their oext JIOIKISion 10 g6
the Mid-American and Big West ahead 45-10 midway through thd
Conferences.
, third quancr.
·· ' ·
•:
UNL V turned the game into a.

bowl season with their fust postseason win in a decade.
UNLV (7-S) ailade big play~
big play against a porous and tiring
Chippewa defense. Cenll'll Michi·
gan scored two meaningless touchdowns late in the game with
UNLV's second team on the field.

·

TOLL FREE 1-IOG-822~0417 • 372·2844 • 344·5947• 422·0756
' TU81,

Tbe Fees t xtta. Rebate irdldld .

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�PIOe ~The. Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleP«Jrt, Ohio

~ :Frl~y, December 16, 1994

~rlday, December 16, 1994

On this year's Pro Bowl team,

.); Me·igs County lan~ transfers .recorded

Harvey &amp; McG.Iockton join Rice, two Sanders &amp; Woodson
Warren ~ and Jerome Bettis of Seau of San Diego; Clevefand
lhe l:.os Ailgeles Rams on offense; Browns• Michael Dean Perry an4
Philadelphia Eagles' William Eric Turner; Kansas.City Chiefs'
Fuller, Arizona's Seth Joyner, . Derrick Thomas; Seattle Sea- '
Atlapta's Jessie Tuggle and hawks' Cortez Kennedy; and Terry
.
Philadelphia's Eric Allen on McDaniel of the Raiders.
Joining, Tasker among the spe;
de(~.
The Pittsburgh Stcelers led the cialists were kick returner Erie
volin' for the conference squad Metcalf of Cleveland, pl~cekic~et
with Silt, four of them starterS: cen- John Carney of San Otego and
•
ter DermonUi Dawson, cornerback Seanle punter Rick Tuten.
The
AFC
backups
included
Woodson, safety Carnell Lake and
linebacker Greg Lloyd. The back- Sterling Sharpe's brother, Denver.
ups were guard Duval Love and Broncos' tight end . Shannon
linebacker Kevin Greene, who Shaipe, along with teammates John
El way, Steve Atwater .and Oary
leads the NFL with 14 sacks.
1be AFC team has five Miami Zimmerman; New England's Drew
Dolphins: SJ&amp;rtm Marino at quar- · Bledsoe: Cleveland's Leroy Hoard;
terbaclt, Keith Sims and Richmond Seattle's Chris Warren, the AFC's
Webb on the offensive line, and leading rusher; Rob Moore of the
reserves Irving Fryar and Bryan New York Jets; Bruce Matthews of
the Houston Oilers; and Kansas
Cox.
•
City's
Neil Smith and Dale Carter.
Marino V(ill make his ei$hth Pro
A
4
3rd "need" player will be
Bowl appearance and thtrd in a
added
by
the coaches and must be a
row. He was selected for the sixth
linebacker
or defensive lineman.
time as a starter.
·"I've made a lot of them," The losing coaches in the confer- ·
Marino said. "It was good, coming encc championship games will hanback off an injury and J.&gt;laying dle the Pro Bowl teams.
The Cincinnati Bengals, Tampa
(even though) u'.s bothenng me.
Bay
Buccaneers, Chicago Bears
On the baseball labor scene,
That's something that makes me·
and
the
N~w york Giants had no
feel good."
representauves.
The four-time defending AFC
champion Buffalo Bills placed
By MIKE NADEL
'Listen, let's make peace for now "I'm very happy with the deei- high payrolls. The players, who · three players on lhe squad: starters
Now Open For ·
CIDCAGO (AP) -When base- and many years to come.' "
• sion."
.
won free agency prior to the 1976 Andre Ree~ at wide receiver and '
ball owners announced their willChristmas
Season
Atlanta Braves president Stan . Ownera approved their decision season, say caps and punitive taxes Smith at defensive end, plus special
i
ingness to return ., lhe blrpining Kasten, another member of the by a 25-3 vote, according to several would crush the market.
teamer Steve Taslcer.
Poinsettias-6 colors
table, the fUll inclinalion was to negotiating commil,lCC, said: "For participants, with the Baltimore
But the threat of a new system
The other offensive starters for
Poinsettia Baskets
search fiX' ullaior mocives.
months, all yo11 heard from the Orioles, New York Mets and hasn't stopped ownera from spend- lhe AFC are running back Marshall.
Foliage Baskets
. Only Wednesday, management union is, 'They have this proposed Toronto Blue Jays opposing. Balti- ing millions on free ents this off- Faullc of lhe Indianapolis Colts, the
118
Christmas
Trees
negoti.ator John Harrington said master plan, all !hey want to dO is more owner Peter Angelos, Mets season.
only rookie to make the Pro Bowl;
that talks between owners and implenienL' It's become a self-ful- president Fred Wilpon and Blue
For the loved ones "There's a lot of money in this Tim Brown and Steve Wisniewski
strilcing playera had broken down fiDing prophecy. They sit there and Jays president Paul Beeston all sport," Kasten said. "There will· of the Los Angeles Raidera; Bruce Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
and that unplemcnlalion of a salary refuse to negotiate the economic spoke out against imposition.
continue to be, whether we're Armsttong and Ben Coates of New
Grave blankets.
cap was imrninenL
core issues until there's literally
"Obviousl;t:, they want to take under a salary cap system or tax England Patriots; and Natrone
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Then Thursday carne, and the nothing else to be done.''
any linle scintilla of hope and see if system. We're just trying 10 slow Means of the San Diego Chargers. 1
owners instead decided to give
Syracuse, Ohio
Union head Donald Fehr wei- there's anything there before we down lhe escalation of salaries."
"I didn't consider the Pro Bowl, ·
their executive council authority to corned the opportUnity to resume implement." acting commissioner
992-5776
The union has been accused of bllt it's a great thing that happened
decbue an impasse if there isn't an talks, probably Monday near Bud Seli~~; said.
stalling
because
it
hopes
to
chalto me," Faulk said.
Open
Daily 9-S
agreement by Dec. 22.
. Washington. But he wouldn't preIf the process begins, it could len11e an imposed cap before the
The rest of the defensive startcra
Sunday 12-S
Why wait?
diet if playera would make a new happen in the same wcet that NHL Nauonal Labor Relations Board, included Leslie O'Neal and Junior
Were lhe owners afraid of being proposal.
commissioner Gary Beuman cantaken to court? Wem they worried
"While we do not agree that we eels the 1994-95 hockey season.
about Congress removing their are at an impasse, we do agree that That leasue 's ownera, who have
antitrust protection? Were they it is appropnate to continue talkinf, locked out playera since opening
posturing for the fans? Or were and we are encouraged by that. ' night, gave Bellman such authority
they truly interested in negotiation Fehr said. "Obviously, if thef are if a SO-game regular season can't
and not implementation?
willing to negotiate, so are we. '
be ·played. ·
The insist it's the latt«.
Mediator Bill Usery also is
Baseball owners, threatening to
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Tlis gesture," Harrington
ready.
open
lhe
'95
season
with
replace1-992-6641 1-800-8237-1094
:!lid, "is lhe olive branch to say,
" it'd be a nice Christmas pre- ment players, want the umon to
sent to the fans to give ·them, back accept a predetermined percentage
.Paseball, to open the camps ilnd of revenue or agree to a tax mechahave spring training," Usery said. nism that will penalize clubs with

By BARRY WILNER
NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry
Rioe, Bill')' Sanclcn, Rod Wood100
and Bruce Smith Ire in the Pro
Bowl in Hooolulu jill&amp; about m.y
February. No exception Ibis time.
Joining those SWI this season
will be the likes of Mark Tuinei,
Dana Stubblefield, Chester
McGiockton and Kco Harvey.
The Dallas Cowboys placed 11
players on the AFC IC8III for the
Pro Bowl and the San Francisco
49m had fiine in voting llllliOUiad
Thwsday.
Emmitt Smith, Troy Aikman,
Michael Irvin and Charles Haley
were selected in voting by players,
coaches and fans. So were Rice,
Steve Young and Deion Sandera
from the 49en.
They'D be joined by othcl ~
stars of the NFL, including
Sander&amp;, Derrick Thomas and Dan
Marino.
The most thrilled playera were
the firat-timera, such as Cowboys
offensive tackle Tuinei, aiUilive of
Hawaii. And second-year defensive

tackle Stubblefield o( lhe 49en.
"I always go home to Hawaii
anyway, but this year it will be
even more special," Tulnei said.
"I was swpised. When I heard it, I
thought they were kidding. It's just
amazing that I'm sliD around after
12 r,ears."
'Everybody's happy for Mark
Tuinei,'' teammate Michael Irvin
said. "He's been in the league for·
ever. In Hawaii he'D be king for a
week."
"I was like, wow," said Stubblefield, lhe 1993 defensive rookie
of the year. "It's real nice, being
the first time goinj! in my second
year. That's saymg something
about a guy."
, Harvey, a seven-year veteran
who joined the Washington Redskins from the Arizona Cardinals in
the offseason, leads the NFC in
sacks with 12.
"I tol~ my wife we wouldn't go
(to Hawaii) until I went to the Pro
Bowl," he said. "I didn't know it
was going to be seven yeara, but
that was one of the goals I set for

myself."
McGlockton, 2S and in .hiS thinl
season as a defensive tackle for the
Los AnJeles Raidera, said it was
one of his biggest achievements.
"It's like somebody took a
weight off my shouldera," he said.
"When you're injured, then everybody says you're a bust, and you
dioo't do this or you didn't do that,
It's a lot of relief now when people
say you're doing a good job.".
Two other Cowboys ftrat-tuners
were defensive tackle Leon Lett
and safety Darren Woodson. Also
selected for the NFC team on
offense were Dallas' Smith, Aikman, Irvin, center Mark Stepnoski,
offensi~e
· eman Nate Newton,
tight end
Novacek and fuUback
Daryl J
n. On defense, it was
Haley, Lett
Woodson.
Smith, Newton, Stepnoski,
Haley, Lett and Woodson all will
be startcra.
Rice will be making his ninth
appearance, and will have wilh him
teammates Young and Brent Jones
as staners on offense, plus Sanders

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

: The following lan~ transfers
. · were~ receody m the office
: :of Meigs ~IY Recorder Bmmo: gene Hamilton.
· . DeedA • Maryd J. Murray to &lt;;ar: .o1Y~ : and fames W. Goodrich,
: .Annqwty, 4(10 acre; ,
. :S ~:na; K. Bailey 10 Harold
: . mt , ve,
acres;
.
· . Deed, Leta HaD, Leta Goodwm
: .to Gerald L. and Brenda R Moore,
: :Bedford ~s;
• : Deed, Rtchard and Nancy K.
: Jeffers to ~ames R. and Ruth A.
: :Priddy, Salisbu9', .1.8446 acres;
, : . Deed, MarJone E. Reuter to
; Lmda S. Barber, Ronald R. Reuter,
: Jeffrey E. Reuter, Choyrl A.
. .Reu~. Pomeroy, 11.:.8 acres;
:. Rtght of way, Richard C. Poll·
: -rod an~ Roger G•.M~rgan .to
• :Columbl8 Gas Transmission, Salis:-bw;{! 99 acres;
.·
tght of way, P~meroy Gun
: :Club Inc. to Columb11 Oas Trans· ;mission, Chester/Salisbury, 32.10
: :acre~:
.
.
.
: . Rtght of way, ~· Naomi Flo&gt;:d
: :and Kenn~ R; Miller. to Columbia
. :Gas'!ranhsmlSSton, Salis!&gt;urr;
; . Rtg t of way, Patrick f?· and
; ·Audrey. E•. Wood to Columbta Gas
_1'ransmtsaton, Chester, SO acres;
. ; : Deed, Darrell L. J:lenderson to
. Barbara A.. Young, Olive !ot;
. : Af~davll, !Carl B. DaviS Trust to
: Secunt~ Nanonal Bank, Rutland,
·. 66 acres,
.
.
. : Deed, Secunty National Bank 10
: . Mar~ A. Lechner and Deborah K.
. : Marun, Rutland, 66 acres:
:: · E!llfY. 'fickie K. to William W.
;. Harris, ~alisbury; .
·: Ceruficatc, Sy~il. A. Eberabllch,
:: ~eceased, to Tnntty Church of
:- Pomeroy,etal.• ~parcel;
, : Ease~t, Ewmg and Judy Hut:. ton to Ohto Power Company, Rut· : land:
. . Easement, Teresa L. a~d
:. Lawrence W. Stewart to Ohto
:: Power, Rutland;

' and Menon Hanks on defense. The
backups from lhe 49era are Jesse
Sapolu and Bart Oates on the
offensive line, Stubblefield and
Tim McDonald on defense.
The rest of the NFC starters on
offense will be Minnesota Vikings
wide receiver Cris Carter, who is
within one catch of tying Sterling
Sharpe's record of 112 receptions
in a season; Detniit Lions' Sanders,
the leading rusher in the league;
New Orleans Saints' William Roaf
and Detroit's Lomas Brown at
tackle; and Minnesota guard Randaii McDaniel.
On defense, it will be Harvey:
Green Bay Packers' Reggie White
and Bryce Paup; Minnesota's John
Randle; Detroit's Chris S{lielman;
and Arizona's Aeneas Williams.
Selected as specialists were
Washington punter Reggie Roby,
Minnesota J.&gt;lacekicker Fuad
Reveiz, Detroit kick returner Mel
Gray and special teamer Elbert
Shelley of the Atlanta Falcons.
The NFC backups included
Green Bay's Sharpe, Minnesota's

00

Owners' desire to talk again -questioned

'.

. Easement •.Richardand\Sandra
~iJht of way, William and
Burcher to Ohto Power, Suuon;
Patric11 McCort to LCCD Salem·
E~sement, Bonnie ~d Buddy
Right o~ way, Robert B. Titus 'to
M1i!Un McAngus to Ohto Power, LCCD, Salisbury;
Salisbury;
Deed, Southern Ohio Coal
Easement, Walter and Mary K. Company to Geraldine Smallwood
·Grueser to Ohio Power, Pomeroy;
Salem tracts;
'
Easement, Willlam·R. ,and DebCertificate, Juanita E. Carr,
orah J. Haptoostall to Ohio Power, deceasc:d, to Lawrence c. Carr,
Pomeroy;
Columb18.parcel;
Easement,.Louise M. and Jackie
Right of way, G. Phyllis Allan
L. Durst to Ohio Power, Sutton:
Alma Snider and Harold L. Nutte;
!'lasement, Jack K. Spires to to Columbus Southern Power,
Ohto Power, Sutton:
Orange;
.~ent, Mickey and Josnne J.
Right of way, Robert and KatriWtlliams to Ohio Power, Sutton;
na M Brooks to CSP, Orange;
. Easement, Charles M. and JenRtght of way, Jeremy W. and
nte Bass Canter to Ohio Power, Deborah M. Barber to CSP,
Sutton:
Oran.ge:
~asement, Kennel~ L. and
Rtght of way, Kevin Crabtree to
Sh~da A. Carsey to Ohto Power, CSP~ Columl;&gt;ia;
.
Salisbury;
Right of way, John c. Sheets 'to
Easement, J?dward W.llf.ld Ruth CSP•. Orange;
1;:. DursttoOhioPower, Salisbury;
~tght of way, Patrick L. and
Easement, Rutland Church of Julie Lawson to CSP Columbia·
God to Ohio Power, Rutland;
Right of way, ~ve and ~a
Deed,·Robert and Peggy Harris Jean .troutiO CSP, Columbia; ·
to Eleanor Roush, Lebanon; ·
Right .of way, Roger Stewart 10
Easement, Cmig E. and Brenda CSP•. SaliSbury;
K. Venoy10 state of Ohio, Chester;
R•$hl of way, Thomas E. and
Deed, C~ Lugene and Robert Conme L. Roush to CSP, SalisEug~ne R.obte to ltobert Eugene bury~
Robtc, Salisbury, 70/100 acre:
Rtght of way, James E. and
Deed, C~ Lugene and Robert Linda C. Diddle to CSP, Sutton;
Eug~ne R~bte to Robert Eugene
n
Robte, Salisbury, .412 acres:
Deed, Paul J. Pauley to Joseph
.
I"
P. and Deborah S. Brockert,
~RTAGE, Wu. (AP)- A felPomeroy lot;
!ow mma~ was cliarJP.I Thuraday
Deed, Lyne B. and Linda s. , m the slaymgs of aerial killer JefJohnson to John G. and Patricia A. frey Dahmer and another prisoner
Hudson, Rutland, 160 acres;
2-1/2 weeks.,.
.
Right of way, Maurice E. and . 1,'he. complaint was filed agamst
Margaret Johnson to Leading Christ?pher Scarvel', who had been
Creek Conservancy District; Salis- held smce shortly~ lhe Nov . .28
bury;
·
attacks .at the m~tmum-~~nty
Right~ way, Roger Stewart to Columbia C~UO!Ia' lnstituuon.
LCCD, Salisbury;
.
Dahmer died mmutcs after the
Right of way, Thomas and Con- attack, and convicted murderer
nie L. Roush to LCCD, Salisbury;
Jesse Anderson died of his injuries
Right of way, James A. and two days later.
Carol Will to LCCD, Salisbury;
The murder weapon was a steel

PICTURF; YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE...

Rigbtofway,LawrenceE.Peck
10 CSP Bedford·
Right of way: Walter A. Wright
10 CSP, Bedford; ·
Right of way, Patricia Triplett to
CSP Lebanon·
Deed, Gcor'ge J. and Pauline A.
Lease to James E. Diddle, Lebanon
parcels;

Deecj Elwood M Jones to
George Lease Lebanon.jQreels'
Deed, B~rgan C. and Ruth
Mellinger to James E. Diddle
Lebanon jQreels'
'
Deed, Ruth E. Carr to Irene M.
Dill, Pomeroy lot;
Deed, Warren H. Calaway to
Jeffrey L. Hinel and Christina M;
Ooten, Orange tracts;
Deed, Robert L. and Carolyn
Smith and Jimmie D. Allman, Sutton parcel;
Deed, Charles W. and Beulah
Cornell to William May d s _
ton 100 acres·
nar ' ut
Certificate' Charles E Rom'n
deceased, to Otillia Ro~ine ~u~:
land parcels:
'
Deed, Lee 0. 1U and Beatrice 1
Wood to Paul Strauss, Rutland.
13.31 acres:
'
Deed Exa Mae Christian and
Ellswonh J and Ann F Holden
Columbia ~Is.
'
'

.

ua hmer SUS'"ect chali'"'ed'

Our special page(s)

'"For Children Only"
(16 year;; of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
in the

~·

bar that was part of the exercise
equipment in the prison's weight
room, a complaint released today
said.
Scarver, 25, who was serving a
life tenn for a 1990 murder after a
jury rejected an insanity defense,
admitted !he attacks to authorities,
the complaint said.
Dahmer, the 34-year-old Milwaukee man who admitted killing
and dismembering 17 men and
boys, was found beaten to death in
a bathroom he had been cleaning
just off a prison gymnasium.

The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-

$}000
Per Picture Prepaid
PI18H encloH Hlf..addrtiHCI,

otompod .......,PI to retum your
plloto

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Reds &amp; Morris
OK $3.3M pact

PRI·CBRISTMAS

NHL players and owners
leaving talks up ·to lawyers

. CU&gt;!CIN~ATI (AP)- The
Cincinnati Redl couldn't afford to
re-sign both Hal Morris and Kevin
Mltcbell. g~noral manager Jim
Bowden said.
'
S M · ·n be b k
By KEN RAPPOPORT
"We're down to five or six days
o . on:u wt
, ac next
NEW YORK (AP)- The main (for saving the season)," a Dianyear• and Miu:hell won L
·- . ne&amp;.otiaJOra in the NHL labor dis- agement source told The AssociatThe Reds reached agreement putc are movt'ng to th 'd I'
ed Pres
Thuraday with fmt baseman Mor.
•
e n ~ mes,
s.
ris on a $3.3 million contract for te~y leavmg the talking up
It's generally believed that an
1995
to u"' lawyers.
agreement would have to be
Mim;s, 29, led the Reds in hitThe ]legal counsels f~ !he NHL reached before the Christmas
ling (.335) and five other calegories ~ NHL Players Associalioo, bop- weekend if there is to be a season. .
this year. He has batted .300 or I!Ct- ID$ !'&gt;clear the way form~ !JarIf there isn't, the NHL would
ter in four of his five seasons with gammg talks between ~lDISSion- become thC: ftrat 1ell8uc 10 have an
Cincinnati.
er Gary Bettman and umon boas entire season wiped ouL
The Reds won't try to re-sign · Bob G'!O"enpw, wrapped up two
"You always feel a great sense
free •aent Miu:heU, the left fielder, days of informal talks Thuraday.
of responsibility to the game and ·
~the team can't afford both
Two spokesmen, Arthur Pincus the fans," Betnnan said. "We're
salaries, Bowden said.
of the ~ and Steve McAllister comfortable with making difficult
"Unfortunately, this means that of the umon,. and a management decisions. The media and the fans
Kevin's davs as 8 Red are over" source all wd Thuraday !hey had have 10 underatand the full ramifiBowden saJ'd in Chicago, where he !IO knowledge of any further· meet- cations."
was attending a meeting of team mgs between~ lawyers.
Bellman has the authority to
owners and general managers. "I'd
The C~n.Press, however, can&lt;:CI the~ unless a new colsaid all along that we couldn't reported negOllatlons are planned lecuve bargammg agreement can
afford both and 1meant iL
over the weekend: Maple Lea~s , be reached ensuring a 50-game
"I'm disappointed that Kevin general ~~r Cliff ~rcher wd schedule and full playoffs before
and his agent didn't have more from.To"!~to. 'There will be more July 1.
interest in playing for lhe Reds. 1 meeungs. .
So far, lhe NHL has canceled 24
always loved talking hitting with
Meanwhile, there was no con- games for each team to cut the
him, as did everyone. It just came tact Thursday between Bet.tman schedule to 60. The last cut was on
down to the player who wanted to and Goodenow, although Ptncus Nov. 17.
be a Red more, would be lhe Red." confirmed they did speak briefly by
The lockout is in its 77th day
Joe Sroba, Mitchell's 118ent, had . phone late W~
, and so far, 432 games have been
a different version of his client's
Bettman and
~o~ hav~ I called off.
departure from lhe Reds.
held fa~-10-face negOllatJOns ~
Bet!J'I&amp;n called lhe work stop•'Jim's actions speak louder Dec. 6 m Chtc!f~s At that ume, .pages m both hockey and baseball
than his words," Sroba said. the&gt;: broke off
oncc the con- "a,~n~period.''
.
"What's Hal's base salary? ... $3.3 tenuous luxury tax was placed on
w~ re trying to~ up With
million on a one·year deal? The thel~gauung ~~by ~ers. .
a senstble way 'to dtStr!bute the
highest Jim ever offered (us) was
t •s the maJor Issue m the .dis- pie," Bewnan said. "We're unique
$!million base."
pute. The players hav~ remamed because we have eight franchises in
Sroba said Miu:hell could have firmly entrenched. agatns~ such 1 Canada. We are trying to make
earned about $6 million next sea- tax ?n team salanes, whtch they sure !hey will all be competitive."
son with all the incentives lhe Reds consader a cap.
offered, but he would have had to
play in ISO games, and win Jl'BCii- t-;~"'r'"r"'r'"r"'~--""'"~--"""'r '"~--"""'~'cally every offensive category in
Victory Baptist Church .
the National League, including
Most Valuable Player.
~
Invites the public to the
1
Miu:hell, a left fielder, was fifth
Christmas Canta
in the NL this year with a 326 bat- ~
ting averqe. He led the Reds in
"The Carol of Christmas"
~
home runs with 30 and was second
in runs batted in with 71.
by John W. Peterron
'·
Bowden had said the November
6unday December 18th 11:00 a.m.
~
1992 deal with lhe Seattle Mariners ~
to acquire MiiCheU in exchange fa' ~
Directed by 'Mrs. Dorothy Anthony
~
reliever Norm Charlton was one of
his bell trades.
7
Music by Mrs. francis Young
7
Mill:hell, 32, has said he would
Christmas Play
like .10~ to the San Francisco
- Giarlrs, managed by his friend,
Dusty Baker.
·
December 17th-_7 pm
, Morris led the Reds in games
"Is there any room for Jesus·
7
played (I 12), at-bats (436), hits
(146), doublci (30) and RBis (78).
f"
by E&gt;etty E&gt;arker
This year, he ranked fourth in
Directed by Angie McClure and
t
lhe National League in hitting, hilS 7
and multi-hit games (42).
~
Alberta Hysell
~
Duriag the last six years, the
pastor James Keese
t·
left-handed bitting Morris had a t
.339 avmge 118ainst right-handed
Assistant Pastor Dwi8ht Ashley
~.
pitching (508-for~ 1,SOO). That is . ~
. .lhe sec:Ood-besl m.t in .....
.
r- III8JPI1,
Middleport ~
behirid San Diego's Tony Gwynn ~ 525 N. &amp;cond
=;~urn 1,000 plate. appear- fr"'~'".,._..,.,._~..,.,._..'".,._.,~'"r"'f

~

~

'b

l

ft

~
· r~

~
~

~unday.

'&gt;

....

'

Official Entry
·Form

We're starting oir , ···
After Christmas Sqle Early! Why?
We have so many Program Cars and Trucks that we will
need more than iust one week to clear them out!
1994 CHEV.
CAVALIER OR
PONTIAC SUNBIRD

58,999
1994 CHEVY
Y2 TON 4X4
PICKUP
V-8, auto.

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9,999

1994

1994.CHEV.

CHEVY
LUMINA APY
5

LUMINA EURO
2 DR.
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ell

0

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CARS 4 'l'RUCKS

E

z"'

'

1989 CHEVY B~ER ........ ,..................................................................... $9,999.00
1990 NISSAN PICKUP ...... :.~ .........:........................................................... $5,995.00
199·1 TOYOTA 4X4 .............. r..................................................................... $9,999.00
1985 DODGE 050 PICKUP.~ .....................................................................$2,695.00
1991 GMC SONOMA •.• ~ ..............................................................................$5,995.00
1992 CHEVY S10 PICKUP ...........................~ ...........................................$7,995.00
1990 FORD F150 4X4! ........~.........................................................~ ..........$1 0,995.00
1990 CHEVY 1/2 TON PICKUP :................................................................$9,999.00
1988.FORD F150 ........................................................................................-$7,989.00
1993 PLYMOUTH SUNDAN~E .........................................'........................$7,995.00
1991 CHEVY CORSICA •••.•• ,.............................................................,....... $5,995.00
1993 DODGE CARAVAN ES, lo8ded ...................................................... $18,985.00
1992 MAZDA MIATA SE •••• ~ ..............................·.......................................$13,495.00 ·
1988 MERCEDES BENZ ..... ~ .•••.•:..............................................................$8,999.00
1991 FORD T·BIAD .............. ~ ..........._. ................................................ ~ .. ~.•.• $7,995.00
1993 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX ................................................._
•.•. :.............. $12,995.00
1991 BUICK PAR~
ULTRA.............................................:........$12,495.00

AU Used Cars &amp;

I

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DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

included.

....

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"'cOil

"0

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rebates to dealer.
TIXes&amp;loesoot

111 COURT ST. ·

992-2155

~

r:"'

The Daily Sentinel
.·

POMEROY, OH.

111 ·Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. I
,\

0

Mail or bring the entry form to: ·

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl
I

rn

....c

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.M.

The Daily Sentinel

.

•

II)

-'·J3
ell

0

II)

Must Go.

Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

-=
u
....0

Q.

17 995 13,999 '. 13,495

5

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;.:

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·--·
~ .

I

�,.

•
~The

. faae

Wonhip- 1()-30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W..m..ilay Semoea - 7 p.m.

Apostolic

Grace~ Cllordt

326 H.

33226 a.ildml'o Home ltd.

Sundar School- u a.m.
Wonbip - IOa.m., 6 p.m.

Wodnuday Scmces - 7 p.m.

Roaor: Rev. D. A. duPianlier
Colfce hour followinJ

DuYIIIe Holln. . Churdl
31057 StaaeRoute32S, Lan111111e

Putor: AI Ha!Ucll

Youth Minialer. Bill FnDcr
Sund.y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnuday Services - 7 p.m.

RCBO oiSharoa Hoii-Cburdl

ht ond 3rdSunday

Free
WUI ~~~~.::*
AahSU.C.,

Sunday S&lt;:hool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedncaday Servioet- 6130 p.m.

Pastor. Jade CoJ.gmve

0

PuiiJr:Lallaomla

Suunliy Sel\'il:e • '1:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 10 .....
Wedneoday Servi&lt;e-7:30p.m.

p_, Paul SciaiCD
Ea11 Main Sl.
Sunday Sthool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Soulhtm Bapllll
41872 Paneroy Pike
PuiOr: H. Lamar O'BIJIIIl
Sunday School- 9:30 .....
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;ea. 7:00p.m.
Fl!'ll Baplllt Cbl...
6th and Palmer St, Middlrpolt
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.·S:30p.m.
•
lord's SuiiPer Ill Sunday ol -rllllllllb.
Wediieoday Service-7:00p.m.

y...... Pt-. """"' y"""'

Wonhip - 8:00a.m., !0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
WcdncodoySemc:c.~ - 7:00p.m.

BellllellemBapda

Lup&gt;lllt Clorlrllaa Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Racine,Oif
Paator : Rev. Bad Shuler

SL Jolla Lulll- Cll.-dt
Pine Grove

Putor: Dawn s..atdilll

WOiihip. 900 L11.Sunday Sdiool- 10:30a..m.
Our Sav..... Lu..,_ Cll.-dt
Walnut and Hmry SU., Ra_.wood, W.Va.
lnlrim pitOn: Oeonle C. Weiltdc
Sunday School - lO:OOa.m.
Wonhip - 11 am.

Hanlock Grove Church
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbool· 10 a.m.
!!venin&amp; • 7:30p.m.
Thunday Scrvi&lt;ea . 7:30

Roednllle Churell ol Cbrllt
Pastor. Philip Suum
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.

Hllllldt Bapllll a......
St RL 143 jualGft RL 7
. Putor: Rev. JIIDCI R. Aaec, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday SeMcca ·7 p.m.

Christian Union

VktorJ Bapdlllad"'-""daol
525 N. 2nd SL Mid&lt;llepCIII
Paator: James B. Keesee

Sunday School- II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30.Lm., 7:30pm.
Wedneaday Scmceo - 7:30p.m.

Faith Baptlll Cllurdo
Rlilrood Sl., MaiCD
Sunda1 School · 10 a.m.
Wonbip ·11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Servicoa • 7 p.m.

Hoboon C~rlsllari Union
Middleport, Ohio

Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening, 7:30p.m.
Wedncaday, 7:30p.m.

Forea Ru BaDIIat
P11tor: Arius Run
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Church of God
Putor. Rev. Jamea Satl&lt;rfield

ML Morloll Bapdll
,_... .l Moin Sl., Midcllrpon
' - : Rcv. Oilbort enq; Jr.
Saodly School - 9:30 .....
Wonbip • 10:45 1.11.

Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.
Evcnin8 - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semca - 7 p.m.
RuUand Churdlol God
Pa1101: o ..gory L Sean
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne.aay Servi,ces -7 p.m.

AllllquiiJ llapllot

Saaldoy Sc:bool- 9:30 .....
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m.
1bunday scm... . 7:30p.m.
SalcmS..
Pallor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Suaday School- 10 a.m.
E"""""·7p.m.
Wodaaday s.m... · 7 p.m.

Sunday School and Wonl!ip- 10 a.m.
Bvcnina Scmte~- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scmca -7 p.m.

Cathol1c

Chorch ol God ol ProphtcJ
O.J. While Rd. off St. RL 160

Paotor: Rev. Ow!a Mub

New Life Church rl God
S.R. 248 .l Riebel Road, Chcoaer
Putor. Rev. William D. Hind a
SIDtday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Semoea -7 p.m.

Ctlllr cl1 of Christ

''1
Chordlol Cbrlol
21 w. Main Sl.

)

Pt-. Andrew Miles
SIDiay Sdlool- 9:30_a.m.

.

A
Brichtldcaf

'SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

172 North Stcon4 Au.
,MiddlfiiOrl, Oftio

j

~

GRAVElY TRACTOR SALES

.

Wonbip · l0:30a..m.,6p.m.
Wcdneaday Servioeo -7 p.m.

P: J. PAULEY,

•

0

. Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0 .

n.

'

POMEROY, OHI0-992·6677

eo4 w. Maon
992-2lll Pomeroy

-' •

. "Ful,lil "IC1111e~g Frltl Chld11 "
221 W. Mllin St.,

- ,

.

214
Main
992-Sllt'·f&gt;omerov ·

''11iJCIIil .'_' and S«•rl'kt• A lw~:v., ·· .

the buys you'll find In the
dass/fleds.

Established 1913

992-2121

Middleport

.06 Mullltrry Au.
I

ofut Reliable

s.nnc.

oWaaltera - Dcyara • R•nga•
oflalrlgaraloro

op,....,.

olllahWMitera
oH.W. HNIIra
oMII:row•- oiJiapoaala
•Thltnlta Mllgtt &amp;
Surrounding Araaa
(614) 985-3581 or

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH
Cal'949·2734

&amp;92-&amp;335 1211Wn

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 17.14
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Council of tht VIllage of
Pomeroy, •II membtfl
1htrato concurring:
Tfiat lha Cl•rk!Trllaurer
, of the VIllage of Pomtooy
lncrtiH tha appropriation
In tht Gtntrel Fund by
$'23,000.00. Thla will bt
dlatrlbuted to varloua
actlvlllea that needed to be
lncre...d lor the operotlon
of current txpentae.
.PIIHd 11121/M
KAtlhy HyHII,
Clarlt/Trtaaurer
John Muaaer, Prteldtnl
(12) I, IS; 2TC

-Have had no eye examination
-within the pasuwo)'CI!IS. .
The toll-free 800 telephone
number will operate from January
3 to January 30. during the hours 7
AM to 9 PM. Those wlto lltink lhc_y
qualify may also rcqiiCSt an' applicalion by writing to: Vision USA.
243 N. LindbcJxh Blvd., SL LoUis,
Mo. 63141.
VISION USA is in its fourth
year. Last year, over 1,700 OhiOans
received eye examination in the
program. According to Or. Dculclt,
nine out of ten VISION USA
patients examined had eye health
or vision problems. "Many eye
problems· don't have noticeable
early symptoms," he said. KEven
with common vision ~lems like
nearsigblejlness, farsightedness or
astigmatism, you can become so
accustomed to the way you see
things that you ma,r not realize
what you're missi_ng.
.
· The eye examinations will be
given in optometristf offices
throughout Ohio during Save Your
Vision Week, March 5'- 11. The
optomelrists donalc their time. lltcir
employees' lime and the office ·
overhead. If glasses are needed, a
small contribution is requested

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
,

I

Ugllt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

-

O&amp;E ELEC'l.IC

Best Rec:eplion.

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

llllennd service contact
" Brymof
-We have even better
and quicker service.
- Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on aU system

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
·

--~e;'prices all around

John

FACE LIFT!

•

. . 992-7162
Doug

992-5251

the ·area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

•DDIRI SUrrA71DI

Not you. your home!
\'Viii crec1te ;1 nevJ
lnok for ;my room
using your
collcc t ~b l cs

· (Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

POMEROY, OHIO
S8ptle tanka Cleened I portable toilets rented.
Dalfv, weekly &amp; monthly rental rate~.
Job IIIII' Clmp SliM ' Ftnily Reunions &amp; Partlel

and

~JO VI

treasures.
Bnng ne v1 Will rnth
inio your homes for
the H olrd~ys

OFF ERING GENERAL HAULII

UllllltDnl, Sllncl, Gravel and coal
WE HAVE A ·l TOP SOIL FOR SAlE
'

0

992·3954

Phone 247-2206

f rnr t Jf nrv

~hr)nr&gt;

9BS-l-1 1B

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESllMATES
949-2168
1/IIIIMTfN

r"'~~
...........
- ...- -...
...
ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCTION

DAI'I
IPPLIIICI
IDIICI

.,..•

•NewHomea
oQaregu

ForAII•Ifr

. &gt;Complete

Remodeling 1

Step l Compare

FREE.ESTIMATES
tiS-4471

WANT ADS
mcK
A111 PUNCHI

, . -........- -.......""''

, . . . . . . .liCit

----~----------..
Ste~ C.11plete Aut• Beq R1~1lr

r

o..
PRECISION AU~OMOIIVE

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

forS.Ie

StaleRl33
Dnin,Ohlo

c.a .

614-992·5515
1crl111n

RillS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut it for you)

Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at comer ol US Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Oh io
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

from the patient In some cases,
optomelrists will 11e11t infections or
other disease discovtted il the eye.
"We're proud of our role bcrc in
Ohio as the family doctors of eye
care," said Dr. Larry Barger, JRSi·
dent of the Ohio Ovtomctric Association. "VISION USA is an opportunity for those who might otherwise be shut out of heallh care to
)liOfeCI the gift of eyesigll.•
Optometrists across the nation
will be participating in the program. Assistance in Ohio is proyid·
ed by optical laboratories mcluding: Bell Optical of Dayton;
Carskadden Optical of Zanesville;
Ccntntl Optical and Clasaic Optical
of Youngstown; DiWalt, Rice
Optical and Rooney Optical of
cantou: Inrcrswe Optical of Mans·
fJekl; Middlefield Optical of Middlefield; Midwest Optical of Fairborn; Opera Optical of Cincinnati;
Schmidt Labs of Mimcsota: Select
Optical and TOP Network of
Columbus: Soderberg of Dayton;
Summit Optic;al of Barberton; and
Toledo Optical of Toledo. Nationwide, lhe program is sponsored in
part by a grant from Vistakon, a
division of Johnson &amp; Johnson
Vision Products Inc.

1112tl9t

DIVE'S
SWAP SlOP
Onemlleout
143 from Rt. 7
Tue1. • Wed. • Fri. • Sal.
1-6

• Craftsman Toole
•Tova .

•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade

UNDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.
l•terlor &amp;

Exterior
. r• .,. ptln out or
ptlnllng. t.,et .. do It '"'

rou. Veryraaaanlb..

F,..Eatlnw.
Before • p.m.. ....

IISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddiUons e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·•
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992:7643

. lfllre
n••••ge.
p.in.

(No Sunday Calls)

614-IIBH180-

WEill'S

HAULING
UinestO...

...............
.........,.
&amp; Gravel

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2131

DIU
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Parelully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a greal selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or

992-20601010/1 ""·

IIOWOPEII
J&amp;D FLEA

MARKEl
NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS
711 South Third
Middleport
Hours: 10:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Dally
11121111n

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

oRoom Addition•

Racine American
Legion Post .602
Now having Bingo

every Sunclav Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people

playing the bigger

the pay-&lt;lff.
Save ad tor 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cuatom

Ani'Otncements

Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USEI) PARTS FOR

eH-C.raSIN

oEiac:trlcel a Plumbing
-Rooting
olnterlor a Exterior
Painting elao concrete

ALL IIUE.~ ~l.IID.DEI.S

m-tmoe

'
·112·55530R

work

(FREE ESTI~TES)
V.c;. YOUNG II

BINGO

CHIISTM.IS

TOLL FREE I-IU441-tf7f

DARWIN, OHIO

802-6215

74 1111 TFN

Pomeroy, Ohio

..10921fn

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BRADFORD'S

-

3 Announcomente

--·-!If_..,...
..... I . -..,..., _,
I wllf nolbe "IIIH t' lor MY

"Tony"

Jo'a c--.try C - on RT 1M
nut to Al¥11 a od ~
~ ":"';"d~~ -lloai.;
·
dial\ &amp; .,...;--.....~

tires of freedom, the American · Henry Kissinger might use his
people are the 1111e champions of diplomatic skills to negotiate a parpeace, democracy, and human dig- don for a dog sentenced to die for
Reward tor lntotnliiillkw&amp; perblln.
Ready Nov. 23
chasing mail carriers.
nity," lite former )RSidcnt said.
lng lo theft oil- atolln FRESH
CUr
TREES
lYliUBLE
"RestOre the dog to lite owner
Redmond RIO rt~ldtnoa. 243
$10&amp; Up
The award was established by
Remlng!on rtlte, boll action. 22
OR cur YOUR OWN
Congress in 1990 in honor of Mat· and tell the mailman to IUc a diflla~ln lllnl 11aa ~IlL nlcblOpen 10 am· 9pm
sunaga, a U.S. Senator from ferent route," Kissinger said Tues:12 HU piatol,
Craft Shop
Bolt Snowde•'• Lot plaled
grCpo. Jonnlnaa Otale
Hawaii and longtime JliOjlOitCIIt of day in an appearance on the TV
Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, tum East
-muuge
304..7WIIO, .....
S.R. 124
peace education.
sbow, •• American JOli'D81.. ''
Bat Darwin onto At. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Smokey, a S-year-old Labrador
Ridge Ad, 1 1/2 miles to tree farm.
Rutlo•d, Olllo
Giveaway
HONOLULU (AP) - Tom retriever, waS sentenced to dcalb by
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dar!( Nov. 251hru Oec. 24
614·742·3051
1 y- Old Female Doa. OaDd
Wa_gon rides Fri. Sat. Sun.
Cruise is gettins his moviei fDixed · lethal injection. His owner, who
With Cllllohn. To Otaoon-.
up.
was convicted of harboring a
Awoy F""" Road. 11W714411
On a recent visitlo South Korea ~ animal, has appealed.
~-==
to promote "Interview With the
Kissinger, who owns a Lab
Vampire," be revened to "Top named Amelia, said he's thinking
4 Fl. r a.at Deep r=-,
'Gun' rnoclil and took a spin in an about asking Oov. George Allen to
....... NM
387-7871.
.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Air Fon:e F-16 Falcon above Oslo gnmttheqclcmency.
• Custom lllde
F- Ki!Mno, 2 llladt, 4 - h a ,
:Ronald Reagan has been honored ' Air Force Bile. .
Kissinger's shuttle diploii!BCY
IM SUI004.
•
Solid
vinyl
: wilh a national JlCICC.~ for his----;-- Befq!C going up ~n the fish teL may_~ 1!C fiCCC!!III'Y.· Pcosc!:u~
I F- Pupplla To Goo4l HolatL
· role in nuclear arms rcducuon.
)Ct1 Cruue was required to pass a plan to .ask the Jndge to drop the
rep'ilcement- . -~
Mother lit HUIIty II.D,IIIIIIIa. 4
: Reagan received the Spark M. ~ig~t physicalllld comp•lrain- charge against Smo~ey's owner
Faniatu, Aftw I P.ll. 114o441o
OZlll.
.Matsunaga Medal of Peace on ' m~ m· life suppon, lhe Air Porce because tile law doesn t adequately
windows
,
:Thursday from the United StaleS ~d ~ its Plcific HeadqUirten define "vicious."
' Fre,e Eatlm1t11
·Institute of Peace. He shares the m HaWB11.
SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP)
:spotlight with Jimmy Carter, w~
"He understood lhe different
• $200 Installed ·
·received his awanllast monllt.
weapons systems IIlii asked smart Novelist DanieUe Steele is being
Call For bet1ll1
: The institute"commended Rca- questions. He even took the /'lid suM by a former household
Friday, Dec.
'
:pn for his WOit In limllinf nuclear · and flew scvcml IIWICIIVUS.' said employee who claims he was emo16th 6:30pm at
tionally abttJcd.
.I 6
Lolt&amp; found
:weapons, IUppOiting the tndepcll· the pi~ Capt. Tom AbboQ.
"'IISff OUR SHOWROOM"
JCICIDy Pearson, 26, says Sieele
·dent trade union movement in
CruiSC gave a thumbs-up afiOI'
Forked Run
~-;;;ro:a.;.~ ;;;,.;;;:....,;;a;; .iiit~~atk;;,..,;;:
110 Court St. Pome."'Gy, Ohio .,. ttl ....
Polllld· and bac:kins the Helsinki the fligbL "It was a dream CODIC has a history of offering employees .
Sportsman
high-paying jobs, then taking
hUman rilhts process.
·
ttuc for me,"
he said.
•'Look Jor..the Red
Wiute Awnl_nc~
1
"sadistic
pleasure"
in
making
"While I am thankful 10 have
·
Club
992-4119 Al'hModr 1-100-291·5600
them lqWnn.
I
played some I'Ole in igl!itins the .
RICHMOND. Va. (AP)· 1

•

.

'•ILift ••••n•••••

. . . . . . .,_

c....

LOADING
G111 Shoot

0

.EWING FUNERAL I:IOME

Cundiff's
. Custom
Cut

•All MakH -42 v....

lin IICIPIIGI

For the bat Ia 1111tellite

MUZZLE

Pomeroy

992-5432

1

~·11 be ~ng on a cloud with

.

. Homelite S.iws ' ·

·Crow's Family Restour cint

IAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

BILL QUICKEL

. SWISHER &amp;LOHSE -Pomeroy

RIDENOUR ·
SUPPLY

•,,,,,,.·

r

US33

ofiCioty Authorized P•rta
&amp; Service

NEW YORK (AP) - Spoken
like a true opera star: Luciano
Pavarotti would forsake cvcrytbing
for love.
"I think love is more important .
even than health," the ICIIor says
on an interview with David Frost
· thai airs today on PBS.
: "I always say, you ace movie in
· which two brothers, the)' are in
: love with the sUJ, IDd one u genet·
: ous and gives to the other. I will
·not," Pavarotti·said. " If we are
:rich, I will give to my brothct all
:my I!IDDCY. B.ut I will fight for the
· wOIIian I love."

sn-Rldp

.1.~

l

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
~alltta of Harachll H..
Badgley, DIJ:•Hd
Cell No. 28728,
Docktt13, Pagtll22 ·.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
RtvlHd Codt, Sac. 2113.08
"On Novtmbtr. 28, 11114,
In thallalga County P111bett·
Court, Caae No. 28728,
Rtlph Bldglty, 47796 SA
124, Raclnt, OH 45771 waa
appointed Admlnlatra1Qr or
tht aatatt of Har•chal H.
Bedgley, deceaaed, late of
Brotdwey St., R•clne, OH
45771."
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
(t2) t , tl, 23; 3TC

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

-Names in the news

Aem ·, . T'DPNS¥mt l@.1

'

I

W~S'ervioco-7:30p.m.

Suaday Scbool- 9:30a.m.

Preu:riptions

264 South '2nd

Edta U•llod Bra~~,.. I• Cltrlat
2 Ill mi1eo north of Reodavillc
011 &amp;JOe Roule 124
Pallor: Rev. Rllbcn Mukley
Suaday School- 10 a.m.
WonbiD -7:30p.m.

Pulor: Dame S)rdoulddcer
$Unday Sdtool· 9 LID.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi&lt;e- 7 p.m.

~

PHARMACY
w. Fill Doctors' :~
~

992-5141

Sunday School · 9:30 .....
Wonhip-10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnuday Servil:eo.-7:30pm.

Soulll Balltelii•T••·IIIt

Slllday School· 9:30a.m •

•

CLASSIFIED~

laCIIrloiCIIo.,.
Teua Cclmmuaity off CR 82
Pt-.' Robert Saadcn

PaiiOi: Rev. Thomu M&lt;CJuna

93 MHI Street
Mldtleport. Ohio 411780
11141992-18117 - 199B·OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPliES • BIBLES

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

MLa-..U-~

11'\UI Seltl•lllt Cltandt
Stu;jla7 Wonbip • 2:30p.m.;
Thunclay ICivicea -7:30p.m.

Pom.o7 Cllurcb tl tile N-...

(\\\ift :Jirul .CSoo~s

"-H259 .

Unrted Brethren

Fui1Goopoll.lpi3304S Hiland RA.d, Poutcroy
,.Pt-. Buy Hutttor
Sunday Sdtool· IP a.m.
B•cnitla 7:30 p.m.
Ttteoday .l Thunday - 7:30p.m .

s,...._
Cll.-dt tlllll Naarme
..._, Rev. Rick SltuPD

u~~

6GIWTIIAIN

·

Untied F'oltlt Cltoardt
RL 7 oo Poutcroy By-Pw
Putor. Rev. Rllbcn H. Smitb, Sr.
Sunday S&lt;:hool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~eaday SeMce • 7 p.m.

Cll.-dt rlllllll-•
..._, Joho w. DooJlu
Slllday School- 9:30 ......
Wonbip- 10:4:5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wablday Sem... -7 p.m.

Sunday Schoo1: .9:4S a.m.

CLASSIAm ADS ·. as•rmarket
lfl everything?

. Ser.....•DaJ.WYealla
Mulbeny IIU. Rd., PomeiO)'
Pt-. Buy Lawinaky
Satunlay Scrvicu:
Salll&gt;olh Scllool - 2 p.m.
Wonbip -3 p.m.

Sunday Scbool • 9:30 Lm.
Hvcnina • 7 p.m.
Wedlleday Sel\'il:e - 7 p.m.

a--.F.. IIItp

Ctti~CI-

Seventh-Day Adventist

Pallor: Lawoaioe Bllllt

Wonllip - 10:30un., MOp.m.
Wcdneaday ScrviCOI - 7 p.m.

AltburJ (87,._)
Pu tor: DcnJn Ncwmao

......,,t.rt..

Middleport
Sunday School - 9 o.m.
WOiihip - IOa.m.

ML Ollt' C-IIIJ Cloordt

Mldcloport Cb..-da olllll N111rene
Putor: o,..ory A. Cundiff
Sund.y School- 9:30 un.

Tuppen ....... St. .....
Puaor: Slwon Hauamaa
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip·IOLII.
Tttelday Semca -7:30p.m.

Wonbip -9 Lm.
Suaday·School - 9:45 l .m.

W~esday7:30p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wcdneaday Service~ - 7 p.m.

R-.tllo
Paotor: Rev. Chuleto Mull
Wonbip • 9:30 L11.
S~mday Scbool - 10:30a:m.
UMYP Smdoy 6:30p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 11 a.m. ·
Wednesday Semca -7 p.m.

•

.

a....-vlllt l'rtrbJterlaa Church

9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.

IIMIIIeJIII'II

Sunday School • 9:30 LDI.
Wonhip - ICl-.30 a.m.
Wedncaclay Semc:e. - 7:30p.m.

Putor: PJ.Ouopman

....... HoutCalllolleC.....
161 Muhny A.e., l'omeiO)', 992-5898
1'-. Rov. Waller H.llcinz
· · S..0..4:4S-S:1Sp.m.;Mua-S:30pm. ·
,
Sua. 0.. -8:4S-9:U a.m.,
'·
Sua. Mus - 9:30 .....
Dailey Muo -8:30a.m.

Sundt;-= .

Putor: Sooa Rooe

Lc&gt;otcaou..

Putor: Rev. David Rwaell

Fallll G~urcb

Ohio IJI*liDCirills ale extmding
a helping hand to low-htc:omeWOtten lltd their f'lmllies dlrougll
an eye care program spotlllnd by
the Ohio Optomecric AIIOCiadoo
. D!Jring the mooth of Juuary,
· !~·m&lt;:DIIIC WOibn aocl-lbcir fam·
lhes can ~ll-1100-766-4466 to
find out !f they qualify for·e_).'e
examlnauons donated by family
• eye doctors who are mcmbcn of
! the IS80Cialioo.
.
~ The volunteer propun IS c:allcd
VISION USA. "'lbis ~ is a
• way for opllliiiCirilb ID pvc aomcthi~g bac:.k to their communities
. wh•le b~lplng l~w-lncome wort: e~, .wd,Dr. RJCbard ~uiCh ~f
: Ct~cmnau, program chairman 1n
: Oh~o . He added! "These people
can t get ~ ~ ~emment
programs lite Medicmd, because
; they're wortin~ don't have
: the, JI!OIICY for
. ~th care.
This IS a re&amp;!IY big nctd.
T,o qualify for the program
applicants m~
. .
.
. -Have a job or_ live m a bou_sc·
bold where there 1s one wortmg
, member;
.
-Have~ ltcaldt IDSIII'IIIICC;
. -Have IIICOIIIC below an cstabhshed level based on household
size;

Suaday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip • II o.m.

Su.dayochooi-IOa.m.
Wonhip ' 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Service - 7 p.m.

T-CII.-dt
Co. Rd. 63
School · 9:30a.m.
Wcislhin-10'.30a..m.

Paotor: Bob lWMioiJ&gt;h
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.
S~mday Scliool- 10:30o.m.

Putor: Rev. Kriaaaa RdliaiKII

Mcne Cbaptl Chureh
Lany Faw, Supaintatdelll

GrudSIJM

Joppa

S1fa0111t Flnt Churdt tl God
Apple ond SC«JJld SU.

Ru- Free Wll Bapllot

lltiiMI Clnarcll

Towaohip Rd., 468C
Sunday SChool -9 a.m.
WonbiD • 10 a.m.
Wednerday S'ervioca - 10 un.
BockliiPGriCIIonlt

Public Notice

RESOLUTION 111.14
IE IT RESOLVED that
tiM Pomeroy Vllltge Council
hereby rtaolvta to glvt
raaponalblllty
lor
replacement •nd upktlp tu
tht OhiO Dtptrtmtnt Of
Tran•portatlon far "No
P•rklng" algna within the
Vlllltgt of Pomtroy,
Included trt the following
ligna:
Po1111roy - No
Parking Signa

-'IIPPidiiCI
IIIIICI

:Qhio optometrists extending
~·ow-i· ncom,e workers a help_
ing hand

. s,...._ Jl1nt Ualled 1'1-abJtalao

Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
Wonbip - 11 :15 Lm., 7p.m.
Wedneaday Service -7 p.m.

Stmday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 11 a.m.
Wcdneaday Serviceo - 8 p.m.

Ch.....
PaJtot: Sh'""' " - u
WOiihip - 9 a..m.
Sunday Sdiool-10 a.m.
Thunday SeiYioea • 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eveni!&gt;a - 7 p.m.
Wcdncodoy Servioer - 7 p.m.

Pallor: Bdoelllan

W~-9am.

......

12.521 R PomeroyCherry StrHI
13.052 A No Parking Htrt
Pwllc NoliCI
to Co1111r
13.120 A Handlc•pptd
RESOLUnoN 11.14
P•rktno
BE IT RESOLVED by tht
13.180 L No P•rklng
. Council of tht Vlllag• of Truclta avtriOOO lba.
Pomeroy, •II mtmbera
13.211 A H•ndlcapped

Paller: Willi... H -

Cbrlsdaa FelloWIIIIp Ceala'
Salem SL, Rutland
Pastor. Roben H. Muoaer

concurring:
Th•t tha Clerk/Truaurer
F;ree Estimates
of the VIllage of Pomerov.
,814-992-4447
charge oH tha following
check from the bol»ka due
to being over ona year old.
The following llat of chtckt
Public Notice
wll be htld In IICrow H •t a
later dille any chacke need . P•rklng
tobereltaued.
13.220 L No Pitrklng
3•23·13 Brog•n W•mer· Truclta over 1000 lbw
lne., Gtnertl Fund 1571121
13.275 R Handicapped
P•rklrig
5-18·83
Rontld
A
14.437 L No Parking lhle
Shaeffer, Genertl Fund tldt of atrlll
1118174,$1.47.
14.475 L No P•rklng
1-05-13 T1r111 Olddlt, G. Anytlmt
lllller 158411, $2.10.
Thle raaulutlon waa
$12.45 . plaatd at the ngular
P•aaed 12+14
m•tlng of Pomaooy Vlll•g•
·
Kathy HyHII, Council.
Clerk·TIUiurer P•IHd 12/5114
l.
John lluaatr, PNaldent
~y HyHII, Clerk-Tre•e
(12) e, 11; 2TC
·
John Mutatr, Prealdent
(1218, 18; 2TC

,(12)9, 18, 2TC

St RL 124, Radnc

Dy-Olt CIIDimtmltJ Clturdt
Sundiy School - 9:30 .....
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Tree Trimming and
Re.;iioval- Yard care

WIUI•m Young

Pentecostal
Pm_.A_IIIJ

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

Tucaday Saviceo - 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a..m., 6:30p.m.

Racine

Dillon
William Heptonatall
Larry Wthruno
George Wright

Hlltl CommUDIIJ Church
OffRL 124

CooiYIIt Uallod Melli- Par1s1t
Putor: Helm K1iDc
COGIYIU.CIIo...
Maia .l Piftb St.
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m.

s.ctlonll: 'l'hla Ordln•nce
ahtU takt tfttct and be In
farce on Dtcamber lllh,
11184.
AmST12/SIM

CIIII•T........... C.....
Qiftm,W.Va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonltip - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

S7racuae Mlalon
1411 Bridaernan Sl.,Syncuoe
Putor: Roy (Mike) Thompooo
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
l!vatina - 6 p.m. .
Wedneaday Servioe - 7 p.m.

RadM

Alfnd
PallOr. Shii'Oil Haursun

ML Mwlah Cburdl o1 God

Sunday-7:00p.m.
• Wcdneaday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-1:00 p.m.

Sunday.School- 10:00 a.m .
Bvenina 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m .

Put&lt;r.Kat Moltez
Sund.y School - 10 a..m.
Wonhip - II a.m. and 7 pm.

N~OU.

Paotor: William VIlli Meier

Fallll Talltmadt Cllu.,.
llailcy Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmcu Raw11011

Wonhip - !0:45a.m. (ht.l3rd Sun)
Baa Letart
Putu: Km Molter
Stmday Scbool- 10 a.m.
Wonhlp - 9 a.m.
Wodlleaday-'J.pm.
" •

'Filly dollare (tiiO.OO).

Chardt ol J - Cltrlot,
Apeollllle F'oltlt
114 mile pr11 Fort Mcia• on New Umo Rd.

.Stmclay SchoollO a.m.
Bvcnina -7:30p.m.
WednesdaY Servi&lt;e- 7:30p.m.

·Pastor. Kcmcdt Baker
Sund.y Sdtool - 9:30 ......

Melp Coopll'allto Putrlt

Wedneaday Scrvicu -7 p.m.

S7SPud&amp;, '
PallOr: Sam Andcnon

Suttoa

ML Olive Unllod Mllllllodlol
Off 124 behind Willreavine
Putor: Rev. Ratllh Spilu
Sundoy School -'9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 7p.na.
Thunday SeiYioea - 7 p.m.

PallOr. Lawratc:t:l'onltim
Sunday Scbool-10 a.ai.

Middleport Com~::~'l~,:'rch

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
WednerdayScrvicea -IOa.m.
Cannel
PUIOr: Kmtelh Baker
Stmday Scltool - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - tb:45 o.m. ('2nd It 4dt Sun)
MOI'IIIII Star
Putor: Kmtelh Baker
Sund.y School- 9:45 un.
Wonhip - l()o.30Lm.
Thunday Scmceo -7:30p.m.

Sunday Scbool: 10 a.m.
M~ W~: 11 a.m.
Evauna Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wednclday SeMce - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David McMIIIis

Wonhip • IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Servioea - 7 p.m.

'l&lt;:l Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Old Derttr Blblo Clrirllall a.-

Hartford Churdt ol Christ In
Chrlsllu Union
Hanford, W.Va.

Re]oldna Life a.-

sooN. 2nd Avo., Middleport

Tlte Saindon AnnJ
liS Buacmua Ave., PaneiO)'.
Sllliday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Putor:

GrahaDI Ualled Metllodllt
Wonhip · 9:3" a.m. (IA.l:I:Dd Sun),
7:"30 p.m. (3rd .l 4dt Stat)
Wedncaday Service,- 7:30p.m.

Wonhip Servi&lt;e: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedncaday, 6:30p.m.

Sllltday School9:30 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.

Trinity Conl"eaallaoal Cburch
Paator: Rev. Rolond Wildman
O.urch- 9:1S o.m.
Wonbip -l()o30a.m.

Wor&gt;hip -10:15 a.m.
s.....rue
Pastor. Flon:ncc Smith
Stotday S&lt;:hool - I0 a..m.
Wonbip -9a.m.

United Methodist

Sllvenvllle Word oiFallll
Paotor: David Dailey

Put&lt;r. R&lt;ben Vanoe
,Sunday wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday ocrvice -6:30p.m.

0

• ..-

SLI'It.. LutbertuaCIIurdl
Comer Sycamo" .l Second SL, Paneroy
Paator: Dawn St&gt;aldio&amp;
Sunday School • 9:45 am.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

Paotor. Gene Zcpp
Sunday achool · 10:30 am.

Old Belllel Free WIU Bapdll Cllun:ll
28601 Sl. RL 7, Middlcpon

P

Lutheran

LlbtotJ Cbrllllao Cburdl
Dater
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday H..rnn1 • 6:30 p.m.
Thunday Servi&lt;e - 6130 p.m.

Sunday School . 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Thun day Scmcca· 7:00p.m.

•

Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - ICl-.30 a..m. .
Wednesday Semc:e. -7:30p.m.

StJRd.•y S&lt;:hool9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

End .... eHOURoiPnJer

~c

Cllrlol

Harrisonvillc Road
Paotor: Rev. Victcr Rouob

H.......,.•Uie Community Church
Putor: Theron Durham
Sunday- 9:30 am. ond 7 p.m.
Wedtteaclay - 7 p.m.

Pa-. Ron Picn:c
Sttaday School·- 9:1S a.m.

Ponland·Rociatc Rd.
Putcr: Janice lloDtter

HkkorJ Hllll Cllurdt ol Christ
Paotor: JOICilh B. Hookino
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicca - 7 p.m.

MLUnlaoBa~
PUIOr : JoeN.
S~mday Scbool-9:4 a.m.
Bv..... · 6130 p.m.
Wednesday Servioet · 6130p.m.

J._

Calv117 Pllpltu Clotptl

(II Bwlinslirm churcll off Route 33)

Wonbip - 10:30 o.m.
Thunday Scrvi... -7 p.m.

Latter-Day Sa 1n ts

Dar s.w.

Stmclay Sdtool - 9: IS Lll.

lllltlud
Putor: Allltur Cralmoc
Sattday Sdtool- 9:30a.m.

RuUand c... muniiJ Church
Pu10r: Rev. Roy MtCany
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evcnina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 pm.

ot ~.a~..-

The Belle..n• Fell-p Ministry
327 Mccbanic St., PomeiO)'
Putor: Rev. MatpJ&lt;t J. Robin1&lt;11
Sem...: Wcdncaday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

'
_Wonbip - IOLII.
Youth Pcllowabip. Sattday - 6 p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30a.m. ond7p.m.
Wedneaday Scrvi&lt;e- 'T;OO p.m.

Reo'lanllad a. ..... t1

Friday- fellowohip ~ervice 7 p.m.

...=~;-:..,
"

Faith Fellowllllp Cruodt for Cltrlol·
Pastor. Rev. Pnalclin Diekeru
Servi&lt;e: Friday, 7 p.m.

W~-7p.m.

Wonbip - lo-.30 a.m.
Billie Scudy'l'uoaday - I0 a..m.

PallOr. Peler Tn:mblay ·
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

suac~ay School -9:30a.m.

Sunday Scbool · 9:30 LDI,
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

R!:.'":fR.binaon
SIDiay School - 9:15a.m.

Laurel CUir Frtt MetbodiJI Cllurch

Bradford Cllurcll ol Cbrllt
Comer ol SL RL 124 .l Bndllwy Rd.
B--"n: Dent Slump
Youth~ Michael r 011. -

Long llcaom
Pallor: Steve Rccd

1'1-.

HJocll Run Holln- Cburdt
Putor: Ruben Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Seavice - 7:30p.m.

Rullud Churdlol Christ
PillAr. Boa..,. B. Underwoad
Sunday S&lt;:hool -9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Rad.. F1nt Bapdll

•

Wakyon Bible Hull- Churdl
75 Pud Sl., MiddlcpotL
Putor. Rev. Jolm Neville
Sunday achool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;e - 7:30pm.

BradburJ Churcll II Cbrla
Pulor: r ... Runyon
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Youdl Meelina - 5:30p.m.
EV&lt;DiDa Servi&lt;e - 7 p.m.
Wcdnuday, Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Faith FuU Goopel Church

Peeat Cllapal
l'lltor: FloreacO Sotiab
Sllldoy Sdtoal · 9 a.m.
Wonltip-IOa.m.

ORDINANCE 128
An Ordinance to provide
addlll0111l compenutlon lor
VIllage Employ-lor 11184.
. BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE Council ol lht VIIIIIJI
·ot Pomeroy, two-thlrda oltll
membera concurring
thereto:
Section 1: Thtt for tha
)'ltr 11184, tha Vllltgt lhtll
jPIY tach employee In •ctlva,
tmploymtnt t1 of October.
1
1, 1184, etc~ full·tlme '
tmploytt tnd atlt.ry .
1tmployat tht aum Of Two
jHundred· Dolltra ($200.00),
111Ch ltllplo~el In •cliVI.
.part-time employment lhe
:tum of Ont Hundred Fifty
Doll•ra ($150.00), ..ch
employee In llmltad part·
tlma employment Fifty
dollara (tsa.OO), aaah
employee_·employed
October 1, 11184 tiM tum

Calv117 Bible a.....
Paneroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Paotor: Rev. Blad&lt;wood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Sel\'il:e - 7:30p.m.

Other Churches

Wonbip- 10 a..m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servi&lt;e -7:30p.m.

Tippen 1'11111 Cburdl r1 Cbrla
Paam: Sranley Minc:lco
Sund.y School - 9 un.
Wcnhip - 9:45 a.m.
Wcdnuday - 7 p.m.

.,_01'01 Jl1nt Baptlol

Sliver a.. ~~~~~
Plll&lt;lr: Bill Lialo
Sunday Sc:bool- IOLm.
Worship · lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodncadioy Servioet· 7:30p.m.

1/2 mile off RL 325
Paotor: Rev. O'Dcll Manley

l'utor: Roser Wauoo
Sunday S&lt;:hool- 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnuday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semce~- 7 p.m.

1·80().486-1580
Bua..(61-4) 446-9971

OH -45631

Fairview Bible CIILetut, W.Va. Rt I
Putor: Ranlcia Roach
Sunday School ' 10:30 Lll.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnesday.Servi&lt;e · 7:00p.m.

Putor: Glendon Stroud

Mlnemlllt
Pu10r: 0.1011 NCWIDIIII
Saaday Sc:ltoal -9 ......

Pine Grove Bible Hollnea Church

Zl• Cllurd &lt;I Cbrtlt
Pomeroy, HuriacDvillc ltd. (RL 143)

Rullancl Flnt Bapdll Cllurdo
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4:5 a.m.

·,

Wednesday pnycr mcctina ~ 7 p.m.

Kenny'a Auto Centrlr
264 .Upper River Rd.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 7 p.m.

New Hnn Churdltl the Nazarene

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.

V•••l

Whl ..'s Clu!pal WerltJ1111
Coolvillc Road
Pastor. Rev. Phillip Ridmour

Wonhit&gt;- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Semceo - 7 p.m.

Htatll (Micldloport)
Putor: vcm..ayeSuDiVOD

J...eadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey Kina

lenny'• Is the place to co11.1e
when you nHcl a car rental.
We """e Car1 and

PallOr: Rev. ...crWiD!crd
Sunday Scbool -9:30 a..m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday SeMce - 7 p.m.

PorUalld Pint Cllurcll tlllle Nuarene
Pallor: John w. lJ&lt;'u&amp;lu
Sunday Sdlool-10:00 a.m.

0

Kenny's Auto Rental -

Freedam ~ Mloaloll
Bald Kncib,on Co. ltd. 31

Rullud Cllurcll tlllll N-nn•·
1'-..S...uelBuye
Suaday School- 9:30 a.m.
We&gt;nltlp - 10:30 a..m., 6:30p.m.
WedaadlyServioet - ?p.m.

ForeaRu•
Putor. Denxt NCWIIIIII
Sunday School· 10 .....
Wonhip -9 o.m.
Thunday Servi&lt;ea -6:30p.m.

Sunday ochool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonbip - I0:35 o.m. It 7 p.m.
OUid='s churcl\-10:35 a.m. Youlh 6p.m.
Wedneoday prayer ~ervice - 7 p.m.

Pu1or-Jc1Jn:y Wallaco

....,._ Rldae Churdl ol Chrlol

o

Putor: Rev. Ride Maloyed

K011o Churdl tl Chrlot
Wonhip- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Scbool-10:30 a.m.
. _ __ , ldlool- 9:4:5 .....
· II Lm. llld 7 p.m.
odnildoy SerW:e • 7 p.m.

Flatwoada
Putor: Keilh Roder
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a..m.

Holiness

Middleport Churdl tl Cbrllt
Slhond Main

'

'

Pt-. Rev. HeJtienOnte
Suaday Scltool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip -11a.m.,6p.m.
Wedalcldiy Servicu • 7 p.m. ·

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.

Holy Euchari.q and Sunday School I Ia.m.
• •

a.- Cllwdl ol!!t• NlllftM

Putor:~Roder

Main Si., Pattcmy

Pom,rov-Middleports Ohio

Puoor: Jaf Smith
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Bvenina - 7p.m,
Wedneaday Scrvic:e • 7 p.m.

· Wonbip ; 10:30 Lm. llld 6 p.m.
Wedaadly Servioet - 7p.m.

Wonbip • II i.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;ea -7:30p.m.

Episcopal

......,, w- Cllardt o1a.rlol

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday ServiCOJ. 7:00p.m.

Friday, December 16, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

(M;J
--\;:::::::7 vet erans

·

Memorial Hospital
. 115 I. Mllnoriltl Dr.

r-rey ·

"192 -2104.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The

NEA Crossword Puz~le

BRIDOI: .
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATIIE ·BLVD.TM by Bruce Beattie
1%· 16·94

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utlllllelnOiuciMI. i ..........

ALL VIlli lllloe !lull le Pilei In
DEADLINE: 2.'1111 p.m.
the cloy bo.... the ..... to run.

Advo-.

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Fumlohod
lllolonav.
120
Founh A - Clillllollo,
t1tllllo. lllllldoo Pild, ~
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LJcenll ' .,...... • llondod,
:J0Wtii.S430.

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1Z.21111r. + - " " · ~
clolb. - .... and mllnl. Jo!bo.
For 111111 lnloramtton a lllllllcotlon .... 'IUIIo214-1eGO ut: le70,

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W.lllod: 1oc1o1 w- ......_
Or Llclneed Eltglbll. Soncl

" - - To: ._.

'PEANUTS
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IN A FIELD 8'( THE RIVER
M'f LOVE AND I DID STAND ''

Llnl Tnlto:r s """
-,-Hal
W.ter HootOI',

•s lvlritngo.

S3,IGO,

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·

~fRANK &amp; ERNEST

Coonfoo!l!r -

Dol
-Cond•lon;
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Dlltl
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\Woo ........ CINol . . yKldll Com 'TrumDII. ExCondllon; 14 Fl. TIIIIIDOI!no
Condftton, fi4-44WIS2
Or 111 111 2101

-1HI-14ll4,2, _ , Talll Ellc:ttto, Undlo plo ~
l!lng.L
,lTo
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_ On
Court. PhoM 111 141 . . ., .,...

--14m.

lncludooi .......
""' . . _ bloello, 1 ,.ar
hwillll • • ~ arid •
FREE to1 Nil!. Only
..- onc1 $114 por mo.

llni ... IIOCC good ..... ton,
.111-IIMO

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WM'f DON T '&lt;OU GIVE IT
TO SOMEONE Wi-tO
APPRECIATES POETR'f?

1m -

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~xpe- c'F'an-lr -7JII
With Ellae AppUinoo1.

PI I oolollll ,.,_ T. 35 LOts &amp; Acreage
ping a Trimming Modal Trtmo
illlriil ••mp - . . Fno &amp;. 4 ..,_ 011 Addtoon Plko. Cortllniillll 11W18-IIMJ, ......,. - ot ........ Tllll And
Rood, tM,OOO. , _ , , ....

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_..., 211 Yta. Exp.
Eollma(•. I1W41-0104
Colonel-

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Ootlo ~ Cull- 114M2DI7.

Fell Ill Supplies

&amp; LIVeStOC k

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Building

75

SUppiiU

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INOTICEI

0110 YAUEY PU.

CO.

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1111

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17 • boll, good ~
$1,100..'1\oelldlna- . .

76

S ·11Jroome, Full l111ment1
- ~ a Roof, 1Acal111
OI.I!DIII ~ Umlla, No PM ..
tiiOitlo. For ~lllono CIU:

Bus1111111
Opponunlty

M'&lt;

8oate &amp; MoiOIW
for Sale

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

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~ N-1'&lt; OL'€SI'!OMSN'1U.~Of

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v •

41 Ho11181 for Rent

21

:"rIUf~E.,IfU.E. WilL 0C ~ "'

61 Fann Equipment

Fumlahecl

Help Wanted

F1nanc1al

,Tl\OF:JW'fl£. WfiD.I I

"'

Room I
"'·. ...... ... - ...... ilollllll.

Serv1ces

JIORN· WSER ···

In

Northup

Rentals

4•
6t

Pass
Pass

North
3NT
4•

52 Btula11-green

53 Pie--mode

54- contandero

22UnH or
preuura
24Genellc
materiol (abbr.)
25 Small lace mat
27 AtrociOUI
31-·-page
32Tallleoo Cllt
33Actrloo

55 Sliblo and mink

56 Bark
57 Coagulates
58 WetohiNin, e.g.

DOWN
5 Suitor

6 Wheel track•

1 - In Cincinnati
2 Period of time
3 Follower of
89th
4 Gungrp.

Jo.~nne-

34King35Backlatk

7 SuHable
8 Arizona elly

9 UnH of force
10- -the Mood

Pass
Opening lead: •

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

7

Finley Peter Dunne, the American
journalist and humorist. wrot_e. "A
man's idea in a card game i s war cool, devastating and pitiless. A lady's
idea
it is a combination of larceny,
embezzlement and burglary ." That
sums up today's deal rAther well. It occurred during the World Women 's
Pairs Championship.
After West had opened three spades,
North made the practical bid of three
no-trump. South 's lour diamonds was
natural, of course, and North contin·
ued with a four-heart cue-bid, showing
a suitable hand lor diamonds with a
control in hearts. South took a shot at
the slam .
Sitting West was Dorothy Truscott,
of Riverdale, N.Y . She has won four
world women's team titles and is one
of only two women !Helen Sobel is the
other) to have played for the United
States in the Bermuda Bowl. Truscott
found larcenous opening lead : the
club seven.
The declarer was Marijke van der
Pas , from the Netherlands, who has
won many national and international
titles. Worried that the opening lead
was a singleton, declarer called for
dummy's ace (East played the two) .
After trumps had been drawn, it
looked natural to continue with th e
spade ace and another spade, establishing dummy's queen for a club discard. II instead declarer had played a
club and West had led a singleton, a
spade switch from East would defeat
the contract.
However. van der Pas decided that
Truscott might have underled the club
king. After long thought, she led her
remaining club . Up popped We st' s
king and the contract was promptly
claimed.

If~ Mem..Y f'.

OF 51'€£0\ I

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my neighbors, " my sister com.
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pla1ned. "Well," I laughed, "just
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keep • • • -!"

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My young daughter was playing dress up with some
of my clothes . INhy is it that little girls wantto grow up and
· wear the same shoes that kill their MOTHER .?

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NUMBERED LETIERS IN
THESE SQUARES

31 Homes lor Sale ·

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Real Estate

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32 MoblleHomes
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"The engine mustbe OK ... If it were ever going
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7

31 O!mtnlllt
37 Wloconsln city

In the year ahead , try 10 interact more
often with people who can help you reach
your personal objectives. The key is lo
tiilure out what you can ao for them in
· return for the assistance you need.
$'AGITTAAIU8 (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You
rillght tend to be a bit domineering today .
This could complioale an encounter you
Will have wilh som Jne even more forcef•f' than yourself. ,Sagittarius, treat your·
to a birthday gilt. s&amp;nd for your Astro·
Graph predictions lor lhe year ahead by

..n

.W NL

I, ........ -

( .

'I

••

mailing $1 .25 to Astro·Graph , c/o this. ,
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 4465, New York, I
NY 10t63. Be sure ro state your zodiac ·
sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19) Allhough
inconvenient. meetlhe commitments you ;
made to people dependent on you. Do '
not let fllem down today, especially.
;
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Do nol .
coerce a friend into agreeing with you :
today ~his/her heart is not in accord.'You
would have reason to regret it later.
PISCES (Feb. 20~March 20) An impor·
tanl goal 1s achievable today il'you can
get past your self-doubr . To win, th1nf&lt; like
a winner.
· J
'·
1
ARIES (March 21·Aprlt 19) A healed
e•change is likely with a close friend
unless you act cautiously today. If certail\.
topics agitate him/her, avoid discussing
them today.
TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) Someon~.
who knows how to maniPIJiate you might
convince you to part with something
today that you're reluctant to release.
GEMINI (May 2t~June 20) Today you
might have ro deal with a goSS!P who
gets under your skin. Try to be tacHul and

disregard any of lhe rumors this person
maytry.tostart.
.
.
CANCER (June 21· July 221 Th1s m1ghl
become a day ol reckon~ng _concern~ng
neglected duties. Several lh1ngs .you ve
lett undone might sudden ly demand
attention .
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22~1gnore peer pres·
sure today if you're being pe_rsuaded to
act against your better tudgment.
Unpopularity is a small price to pay for
autonomy. '
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Unpleasant
news about your family might be dropped
on your doorstep today . Keep a c.ool
head and do your best to ma1nta1n har·
,many in your househOld.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·Dct. 23) You m1ght
have short luse today. Try not to blow
up over something uNmportant. ~arsh
words can leave scars .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N~v. 22) Commercial
dealings could be tncky today , so be , .
careful. Acr very cautiously especially it ·
someone who did a number on you 1n the
past is involved.
.
' lll\!94 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS~.

I

a

DECEMBER16I

�"
'

.
•I

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, December 16, '1994;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Entire family estranged because of lie

RECOGNIZED - Tbe Classics, a band wblcb performs
mootbly at tbe Senior Citizens Center, presented tbe Center a
plaque Tbundaylo appredatloD for tbe stan's commoolty service.
Susan OllYer, director, accepted tbe plaque from BW Ward, saxopboue player. Otber m•ben or tbe band are Junior Wblte, blllll,
and Rita Wblte, keyboard, and AI Wlodoa, drums.

Uear Ann Landers: You recently
printed a letter about a man who,
after many years of paying child
support, discovered that the
daughter he thought was his had been
fathered by another man.
I have two adult daughters. Their
falher and I have been divorced since
the girls were smaU. He paid child
support for both children until they
turned 18.
Until recently, neither girl was
close to ·her dad. Last summer,
however, the eldest, •Annie," took a
trip to visit him, and they "bonded."
While she was there, her father told
her there was a possibility that her
younger sister, "Jane," was not really
his daughter.
Annie waited to spring this news
until both she and Jane were visiting
their paternal grandmother in the
hospital before she died. Annie told
Jane she believes this story.
When Jane told me about it, I
confronted Annie and told her that
this was nonsense and that there was
never a possibility that Jane was
anyone's child but my ex-husband's.

Ann
Landers
10

1994, Lot AnoMt
Times SyndiCIIt and
Creator• Sylldleate"

She made it plain that she didn't
believe me. We haven't spoken since,
nor has Annie spoken to Jane.
· Jane Wf!lte her father an angry
leuer and suggested he submit to a
paternity tesL He not only ignored her
request but wrote back stating that all
letters received either from me or
from her would be returned
unopened.
Our entire family is now estnlnged
because of this lie. I don't know why
my former husband would do this or
why Ailnie would want to believe iL
It hurts when I think their
grandmother may have gone to her
grave thinking Jane was not really her
granddaughter. The cruel timing of
this wild story is the meanest act I
have ever witnessed. What do you
make of it? ·- MESA MOM

·

DEAR MOM: Unfortunately, there
is little you can do now about your
ex- husband's vicious lie.
I pray that time will work some
miracle andAnn:e will come back to
the fold on her own. Until then, no
begging or pleading. Hold your head
up, and maintain your dignity. I hope
that Annie is a reader and this
column will make a difference.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
involved with a beautiful, intelligent,
independent woman for seven
months. We get along very well and
are compatible in every way but one
•• she is 11 years older than I am.
"Charlene" is 32. I am 21. We are
attracted to one another, but we are
keeping the physical aspect to a
minimum for fear of falling in love. I
am a full-time college student and
plan to enter medical school out of
state. Charlene has an established
career and wants to settle down and
have a family. 1cannot give her that
life because of my future plans, and
she knows iL
Charlene feels she's holding me
back but cannot bring herself to let

'

me ~o. I feel I'm keeping her rrod!
finding "Mt Right, • yet I lbo cl!lni
want to break oft' our relationship. ;
Is it selfish of me to ask~ ,
to just enjoy our time together ·1114
not expect more? We work together,
which makes the situation even more
complicated.
Please advise. •• FRUSTRATED
INMICI-DGAN
DEAR MICHIGAN: You sound
more mature than your 32-year-old
friend. I suggest that you both be on
the lookout for other rom · ntic
possibilities that may or may not turn
up. Meanwhile, time is your bestall)t
You just might end up together after
all.
Is that AM l..aNkrs coiiUIIII you
clipped years ago yellow with age?
For a copy ofher most frrquelllly rt·
quested poems and essays. send a
self-addressed, long, busi11tss-size
~nvelope and a chtclc or mo11ty order for $4.85 (this includes postage
and handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611.()562 . (In Canada, send
$5.87.)

Grange winners announced
Baking contest winners were readings by Wanda Fetty,Smith,
announced when Star Grange 778 Janet Moli'is, and Larry Mont· ·
met recently at the haD.
gomery. fhe group sang "Silent
Opal Dyer took first, B~rnice Night" to close the progralil.
Midkiff, second, and Rachel AshTom and Martha Bartley were
ley , third in' the subordinate given ·the fourth degree obligation
banana cake; Opal Dyer, first, Patty and welcomed as new member.
Dyer, second, in the Young
Christmas caroling was set for
adult/marrieds carmelites; and Dec. 29 at 1 p.m at the grange ball.
Rachel Ashley, first, and Chip The grange rally was announced
Macomber, second, in youth funny · for Feb. 10·12 at Friendly Hills
fudge.
Grange Camp.
Tbe charter was draped in memNext meeting will be a Cbristory of Ivan Halliday and Ben Rife. mas party on Saturday, 6:30 at the
Vicki Smith lecturer, gave the pro- grange ball. Members are to take
gram on December which included items for tbe food bank.

The actions of repentance
Pastor Peter Tremblay
Laurel Cllrr Free Methodist
Chun:h .
, .
When will we have reVIval?
I came across Bishop William P.
Anderson's answer. Let me update
it and share some of it with you:
We will have revival when
Christians spend more time in family prayer than before the mirror;
~hen C~ristians wear out more
ures calhng on needy homes than
on pleasure trips; when Christians
stop bickering over little things,
and have pleasure in Divine love;
when Christians follow the advice
in 2 Chronicles 7: 14; when dad
stays home from the bar and the
~~~e; when mo~er ~ .that
raiStn~ Godl
_ y children IS .the _hi~h~st o caUmgs; when the car IS ft
m the garage long enough to cool
off; when the TV is turned off;
when preachers ~h the Word of
God, rather than P~~osophy, psych!)logt or the O~IDIO';IS of men;
when c urches quit trymg to hC?Id
together by means of entertammenL
J
iah · · Lam
·
erem wntes m
entatJons
3:40-41 : Let us ~h and try our
ways, and t~ agam to the ~
41 - Let US lift up ?~"' heart With
our hands unto God m the heavens
(KJV).

.

If we are to hav~ rev1val, we
must repenL 1M 8CllOnS 0~ repen- tance according to Jerem1ah are
SE~CH. TRY, TURN andLIFr.
Fust ~e . must SEARCH our
~carts. Thts IS the process ~f lookmg for weakness. In carmg for
1
1 k~
bl
h
p ants we oo or pro ems sue
as discolored leaves, wilti.ng C?r
other dama~e. The first ac~o.n m
repentance 1s to look for spmtual
weaknesses. Do I an~er easily? Do
I expect C?thers to wall on me? ~I
speak ev1lto anyone? Am I servmg
th~ .Lord? I guar~ntee, a careful
spmt~ scare~ will turn up some
need m every life..
, The second action of repentance
1s to TRY. The Hebrew word

means to examine. The diagnose
plant diseases and harmful insects,
a damaged leaf is placed under a
microscope to find the cause of the
weakness. Likewise, repentance
requires a careful examination.
· God wants us to place our lives
under the microscope of His Word
and find the problem. Is the cause
pride, selfishness, bitterness or
unfor~iveness? A careful spiritual
exan'unation with the Holy Spirit
prayer and the Word of God wili
BEVERLY MAXSON
find the cause of the problem we
located in our search.
Beverly Maxson
A holiday workshop was conducted by Marilyn Hannum and
. Third we must TURN to the
1
b
t
b'rthd
Lord. When I find that whitefly on Ce e ra eS I
ay Ruth Anne Balderson at a recent
that azalea bush I can't make
B
E
M
meeting of the Riverview Garden
excuses for it and •expect it to go
everly Uen axson, daughter Oub held at the ReedsviUe Church
away. I had to admit it's there and of Ray and Becky Maxson, of Christ.
Reedsville, recently celebrated ber
Each member made a spool d9U
apply the cure. Likewise, when a
d birthda 'th
he
careful search and examination f:;,~~.
y WI a party at . r to be worn as a pin or placed on the
shows sin in your life, only repenThe group enjoyed a hayride Christmas ttee.
Marlene Putman gave devotions
tance will cure it, not excuses. How and cookout after which cake and
many of us make excuses instead ice cream were served. Others consisting of a poem, "Let•s Be
of repenting? God forgives and attending or sending gifts besides Thankful" and The Lord's Prayer.
cleanses sin, not excuses. If we her parents and brother David
want revival we must be honest Allen, were paternal grandparents,
'th the Lord·
WI
Raymond and Bernita Maxson,
The last action of repentance is G
d Fl 1 D'll
I
to LIFT. First, the heart must be
ary an
oss e 1 ; paterna
Chelsea Holter celebrated her
lifted. When we lift our heart to great-grandmother, Eva Bennett; fli'St birthday recently at tbe bome
of her parents, Stanley and Tahya
God we are surrendering our wills. ~r:;a~D~=~
My heart is lifted up in sacrifice · Adams, Paul and Leota Wolfe; Holler.
attending were ber t.othwhen I can truly ~fly, "Not my will Randy, Tammy and Ryan Beegle; er, Others
Christopher;
her grandparents,
but Thine be done." Secondly, the Dick, Paula, Amber and Kyle ForGlenn
and
Marie
Yow1g, Bobbie,
· hands must be lifted up in sacrifiCe. tune; Jay, Judy, Jason and Joshua
The hands speak of strength, own- Limbach; Jobo F.tas, Pam Mam- Carrie and Bocca Roush, Vanessa
ership and action; aU tllat's in our bourg and Mike, John Maxson,
power. Does everything in your Tim, Mary Beth and Zach Dill;
hands belong to the Lord? Are they Chri
d Kim "A"' M'"
d
a sacn'lice
. to Him?
s an
""""ns; u.e an
Rachel Burns, Ray _and Nancy ParThe actions of repentance are to sons, Thurm arid Bonnie Garrison;
SEEK out the problem, EXAMINE BiU and Lori Little, and Kenny and
the need, tuRN to the Lord, and ._Kim Pugh.
·
LIFI' up your heart and hands to
the Lord in Heaven. I wonder
Volcanic island
today, have you searched your
LANZARUTE,
Canary Islands
heart and found it wanting? Won't
(AP)
This
banal
and mountainyou be honest with the Lord and
ous
volcanic
island
is
31 miles long
admit your need? God desires to
and
covers
323
sqwac
miles. Monstart revival in your heart but you
tana
Blanca,
its
highest
point, is
have to be :willing. Won't you pray
2,244
feet
above
sea
level.
andaskforHishelp?
Volcanic eruptions in 1730 and
1825 altered the appearance of this
hot, dry island. Dromedary camels
are used as beasts rl burden here.
at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the high
school gym featuring the high
school choir and an instrumental
music group. Public invited.

Gardners enjoy workshop

r=

LONG BOTTOM- Youth
revival with Chad Emerick, 16year-old evangelist, at Faith Full
Gospel Church, Route 124, Friday.
Special singing, dinner following
service.

CHESTER - Youth choir.
Chester United Methodist Church.
a cantata, "A Stnlnge Way to Save
the Wotld" Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
church. A live nativity
scene, "Faces at the Manger" will
foUow the program. Refreshments.
Public invited.

SATURDAY
LET ART - A greenhouse
gospel sing and social hour will be
held at the Virgil Hill and Sons
Farm in Letart Falls, just above ~
Racine Locks and Dam Saturday at
6:30 p.m. Those attending are
asked to lake a covered dish.

RACINE - Children of Racine
United Methodist Church, Christmas program, Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
They wiU be joined by adult choir
sin~ing the cantata "A Simple
Christmas".

KANAUGA - Christmas program at Silver Memorial Freewill
Baptist Church Saturday, 7 p.m.

REEDSVILLE- Christmas
cantata. Sunday, 7 p.m. Reedsville
Church of the Nazarene. Publie
invited by Pastor John Douglas.

.

.

HARTFORD, W.Va.- Live
nativity presented by Fathers
House Church, Saturday at 6 p.m.
RUTLAND- Rutland area
churches to present Living Christmu Tree concert on lawn at Rut. land Civic Center, Saturday, 7 p.m.
Live nativity.
REEDSVILLE - Fellowship
Church of Nazarene Christmas program, _6 p.m. Saturday.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Gnmge 778 and Star Junior Gnnge
878, annual Christmas diimer and
fun night, Saturday, 6:30 p.m
Members to take food items for
· food bank. All members and
friends invited.
·,

SUNDAY
RACINE - Southe.rn High
School will host a musical program

...-

Maria Lynn Meadows recently
celebrated her fourth birthday with
a party at the home of her grandparents, Roger and Coimie Manley;·
Middleport.
.
A Cinderella theme was used in
the cake decorations. Games were
played with prizes going to Erica
Haning, Michelle Haley, and
Cbalsie Manley. Others attending
were Maria's parents, Kevin Mead·
ows of Minersville, and Donna
Meadows of Middleport, Okey and
Sharon Meadows, Roger, Margie·
and Brian Manley, Sherry, Trish
and Carrie Walker, Judy LauderYoung, Chuck Jacks Dana, Kate milt, Johnnie and Nikld Roush, and
and Janet Holter, Arminta and Pat, Emily and Patrick Neville.
Sending gifts were Dorothy
Anita Norris, Bill and Joan PickMeadows, Tom and Dorothy
ens, and Carrie Roush. ·
Roush, and JoAnn Eads.

The group sang the club song,
"How Great Thou Arc".
·
Frances Reed presided at the
meeting during which time plans
were made for the Dec. 15 holiday
dinner at Jimmy Columbo's
Restaurant in Parkersburg. There .
will be a gift exchange at that time.
Gifts were brought for patients at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. A thank you card was
read from Pauline Myers for cards,
flowers and kindnesses.

MONDAY
RACINE - ·southern Local
School District Board of Educa•
lion, 7 p.m. Monday at the schooL
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday at the
annex in Racine. Auditors using
Star Mill Park council quarters,
, LETART- The l..elarl Township trustees will meet Monday, 6
p.m. at _the office building.
·

C pany
. r Bear om

.
The OhiO Rrve

·

204 N. second Avenue
Middleport. OH 45760
614/992·4055

£beck out our Interesting A unlqne shop In hlstorle
Mlddl~port. We've got gifts lor kids of .u.L agesl
Bears, Dolls, Cats, Bunnies, Hand-stitched Miniatures,
Dreamslcles, Boyd's Bearstones, Ornaments and
Lots Morel We've Got All Kinds of Stuff for
Bears to Wear••Sit On... Sieep ln•.. Ride On .•.
Row ln••. Play Wlth ••• Etc., Etc., Etc.
REMEMBER: it's never too late to have a happy childhood!

Mon.-Sat. 1N; Sun. 1-5
Vlu &amp; Mutereard. uyaway availlll!le.

'It's Christmas-time, and JEANIE, our automatic
teller, is feeling extra-generous! Every weekend
between now and Christmas, she'll give out bonus
.cash at random. That means you could receive $10
instead of $5 - or $50 instead of $20 - just for using
your JEANIE card! Look for the big blue "Bonus
Cash" sign every weekend froin now through
Christmas~ - It pays to try JEANI-E! -

LONG BOTI'OM - Faith Full
Gospel Church, L9ng Bottom,
proclamation of Christmas program, Sunday, 7 p.m. public invited.

RACINE - The Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church, children's program Sunday, 7 p.m. "Twas the Night Before Christ- ..
mas".

c:oUecdble bears

Chrtstmas Bonus!

/

·[h) Peoples

Don't Haye A JEANIE Card?
1'11ere's never been a better time to get one! JEANIE cards are provided free of charge
of all Peoples Bank checking or savings account customers. Simply ask one of our
new accounts' representatives.

l:.ilt Bclnk

,A

ORRUS.

FD
..--.···-

061r,.,-o~Pt.JW..

t,Y

- - -"""'....,""'·

Not Suri How To Uy Your JEANIE Cin!?
1
No problem! Our frien. dly new accounts representatives will be happy to demonstrateJ
JEANIE at yollr request.
·
·.
r
•

~~'IH:.-e.-e.'e."«-'B:e:.g~~~'iffl~~G~BR . . '
,,
•'

-- --- ... ·----··-

Celebrates birthday

Observes first birthday

-Community calendarFRIDAY
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary Christmas pany
Friday at 6:30p.m. at the restaurant
in Racine.

MARIA MEADOWS

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