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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Oilers hand
Cowboys loss
at Dallas

Pick 3:
1-4-8

Pick 4:
9-5-1-5
Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

20-3-14-28-22

Mostly cloudy with a
of showers
chance
tonight, Iowa In the 50a.
Saturday, ahowera likely .
.Hlgha 60 to 85.

:

Yol. 48, NO. 158

Ring ·in
a jOyful
.
season

J

,

High winds, native Americans' .
ro*est mark.;holiday observation

READY FOR THE SEASON - Susan Clark and Tony Dlngeas
were putting the finishing touches on new Chrlstmaa bennera pur·
chased by the Pomeroy Merchanta Association on Wedneaday.
The decorations will help add to the festive envlronment.for Sun·
day's Christmas parade.
· ·
evenings and on Sundays, and merchants will participate in special promotions and drawings throughout the
season.
Clark said that the merchants arc
· planning a "Celebrate Sparkle" event
for later in the season. at which lime
the Christmas lights throughout the
district will be lighted simultaneous-

ly.
Santa will return to Pomeroy on
Satyurday, Dec. 13 from I to~ p.m..
and will meet children at the Peoples
Banking &amp; Trust Co. oflice on Court
Street. Refreshments arc planned. and
pictures will he taken with Santa at
that time.

.Disputed trustee election spurs
new probe into voting ·abuses
WAVERLY (AP) - Pike County,
elections, which have been investigated for more than a decade, arc
once again !Jnder state scrutiny. ·
The county Board of Elections
asked the state Nov. 14 to investigate
reports of ahsentte voting irregularities in Union Township after the
Nov. 4 election.
Secretary of State Boh Taft 's
office said Wednesday it is investigating the township's election results
and one of its trustees, Betty Salisbury.
Salisbury. 52. a member of the
elections hoard for two years, voted
against the investigation. She is completing the township trustee term pf
her late husband, Carl Dean Salisbury.
Her son-in-law. Carl Gregory
Slone, sought one of two township
trustees ' scats, but he was in last place
in the Nov. 4 balloting that now is
under scrutiny by the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and Investigation.
Salisbury has been charged twice
with election· fraud but never convicted. Accusations against her
amounted to harassment in retaliation
for her in vol vement in campaigns,

Weapons checkers find
no irregularities in Iraq
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - U.N. tinuc their work even on Friday, " sis between Iraq and the United
inspectors charged with overseeing INA said.
Nations, in which American in~pec­
the destruction of Iraq's weapons of
Also today. a pro-government tors were ellpelled from Iraq and the
mass destruction have visited 96 . Iraqi newspaper said Baghdad's United States escalated its military
·
sites and found nothing illegal since recent decision to allow internation- presence in the region.
After accusing . the American
resuming work late last week, the al observers to visit Iraqi Pfesident
official news agency said today .•
Saddam Hussein's palaces su!l&gt;asses inspectors of spying, Saddam forced
Eight inspection teams visited 13 Iraq's obligations toward dismantling them to leave Iraq on Nov. 13. A day
later, the United Nations withdrew
of the sites today across Iraq "with its weapons.
the full cooperation ofthe Iraqis," the
Iraq earlier said it would open the non-American inspectors in protest.
Saddam accepted the return of 75
Iraqi News Agency reported. Three palaces to U.N. Security Council repsites were under the surveillance of resentatives and the U.N. weapons inspectors - including four AmeriU.N. camera monitors.
inspection team to disprove sU'spi- cans - in exchange for Russia's
The U.N. inspectors have not cions the buildings house chemical pushing for the lifting of sanctions the
Uniied Nations imposed. on Iraq after
revealed results of their searches and biological weapons.
since they resumed Saturday.
But on Thursday. Iraqi Foreign it invaded Kuwait in 1990. The saneINA quoted an )Jnidentified Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sah- . lions have devastated the economy.
U.N. inspectors say they, must
spokesman of Iraq's National Moni- haf declared that U.N. weapons monhave access to the palaces to comtoring committee as saying inspectors itors were not invited.
"did not find or sec any activity or
The invitation "to visit the peo- plete their job of overseeing the
material out of the ordinary."
ple's palaces and command sites destruction of Iraq's weapons of
The news agency also criticized gives. the inspection commission and mass destruction, in line with condithe inspectors for going ahead with the Security Counci I more than what tions imposed at the end 'of the 1991
their work on the Muslim Sabbath.
is required to do their job," the Persian Gulf War. Only then will the
United Nations lift the sanctions.
"Having no respect for the official Zawiya newspaper said.
Iraq has refused, calling it a quesholiday of Iraq, the Arabs and MusLimited access to the palaces con•
lims, the inspectors decided to con- tributed to the recent three-week cri- tion of national sovereignty.

Sunday parade
ushers in annual
holiday activity
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Sunday's Christmas parade in
Pomeroy will usher in the community's Christmas shopping seasc;m, and
downtown merchants are anticipating
one of the biggest parades in years.
The parade will begin at 2 p.m., at
the high school football field on East
Main Street. Lineup for the parade is
at I p.m.. and pre-registration is not
necessary, according to Susan Clark
of the Pomeroy Merchants Association .
Clark said that at least 40 entries
have commiued to participating in
the parade, some of them coming
from as far as Belpre and Gallipolis.
The Eastern High School marching
band will march iri the parade as well,
for the first time in several years.
~ The theme for the parade, in
keeping with the merchants' Christf\la&amp; campaign, is "Come Home to
Pomeroy." In conjunction with the
parade, downtown merchants . will
observe their annual Open House.
Santa Claus will also make an
appearance in the parade, and will
greet boys and girls in the large minipark on Court Street.
New holiday. banners have been
purchased by the Merchants Association to complement the blue banners
on the period light fixtures in the
business district, and John and Sarah
Fisher have coordinated the placement of caroling figures in select
locations throughout the area. The
merchants have also purchased and
installed new garland and wreaths for
the light poles.
The an club at Eastern High
School. under the direction of Lolita
Morrow, has been busy painting holiday scenes on the windows of several busine~ses . The Village of
Pomeroy has arranged for a large
lighted tree to adorn the bandstand
area, and shoppers will once again be
able to tnkr advantage of two-hour
free parking in the district, Those
parking privileges will begin today.
Meters were covered on Wednesday.
and will remain covered through
New Year's Day.
Some of the merchants have
extended shopping hours in thr

2 Sections, 11 P8gel. 31 _..
A 08nnett Co. New lptlpel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 21, 1997

C11117, Ohio Valley Publllhlng Company

she said.
"Every time I have been harassed
and gone to court. I have won," she
said.
The township in southeastern Pike
Coul)ty. about ' llO miles south of
Columhus, is home to about I, 150
people - and frequent allegations of
abscntcr-voting abuses.
The agency is looking into questions ahout 185 of the 217 absentee
ballots cast in Union Township. Formal complaints have been lodged
about five of the ballots, but none of
the I ~5 in question wiU be counted
until the investigation is completed.
"We will be conducting a thorough investigation and can't speculate on when it will be compleied,"
said BCI spokeswoman Jessica Vaglienti
County Prosecutor Robert Junk
has said the complaints involve
defaced ballots and people voting
from addresses where they don't
hve.
The board has held up certifying
the results of elections for Union
Tow nship trustee, Eastern Local
school board and an Eastern Local
school bond issue until the questions
are resolved.

·· Allegations of election fraud have
become a tradition in Pike County.
Since 19!!4. the county has been
plagued hy a string of challenged hallots. accusations. state and federal
investigations. criminal charges and
one conviction. according to former
Ohio Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown. .
Brown said in 1990, after Salisbury and another Pike County
woman were indicted on federal
election fraud charges, that his office
had started closely monitoring Pike ·
'County elections in 1984 and had
begun a formal investigation in 1986.
. Brown's office later cooperated
with a federal probe that resulted in
the indictments of Salisbury and
Judy Scott of Waverly, both Republicans. They were accused of improperly directing the votes of as many as
15 people in the 6th Congressional
District primary election of 1990.
Scott was acquitted of a charge of
conspiring to vote more than once.
A third defendant pleaded guilty in
October 1990 in a plea agreement to
a vote-fixing charge stemming from
the same state-federal investigation.
Roberta Barquet of Piketon admitted
to a charge of attempting to buy votes

By The Aaaoclated Preaa
While families across the country
gorged themselves and volunteers
hc!iped feed the needy, Thanksgiving
took a nasty turn in the holiday's
birthplace and wind wreaked havoc
on the day's most famous parade.
Hours after many of the gigantic
balloons at the Macy's Thanksgiving
Day Parade were grounded by high
winds in New York City, 25 protesters at an American Indian rally were
arrested and charged with disorderly
conduct for trying to march through
Plymouth, Mass.
American Indian Chris Groden
said he obj~ctcd to a parade through
Plymouth earlier Thursday because
the people portraying Pilgrims show
up ".with a bible in one hand and a
musket in the other. And guess who
the musket was aimed at?"
Each Thanksgiving for 28 years
the United American Indians of New
England have gathered to mark what
they call the National Day of Mourning. They say the holiday is a celebration of the Pilgrim myth and the
genocide of Indians.
In New York, Big Bird was
grounded and the' Cat .m the Hat
knocked down a streetlight. injuring
four people. as wind gusts of up to 40
mph whipped through the city and
grounded most of the parade's 17 halloons. Only one injury was serious.
though it didn't appear lil'c-threatcning, authorities said.
!'We lost an car at Columbus Circle and the head in ihe theater district.
It's amazing we made it this far." said
Carmela Slivin~ki, a volunteer who
helped handle the Quik Bunny balloon. "It was a real battle. I wouldn't want to do this again."
In Philadelphia, high winds also
forced parade organizers to ground
two- and three-story balloons, iriclud·
ing Garfield, Yogi Bear and the Cat
in the Hat. Smaller balloons, in

stiapes of stars and balls, were tough
to control in winds up to 45 mph.
It wasn't balloons tumbling from
the sky near Cincinnati on Thursday,
but turkeys. In Rising Sun, Ind. just down the Ohio River from
Cincinnati - a radio station and a
casino sponsored a turkey drop, in
honor.of the 1980s sitcom "WKRP
in Cincinnati."
In one 'episode, the fictional station dropped live turkeys. not realizing the birds can 't ny. Richard
Sanders, the actor wh6 played Les
Nessman in the show. was on hand
for the re-creation. This time, hQwever, they weren't real turkeys.
In Iowa, the McCaughcys spent
their first holiday a.~ a family of 10.
Bobbi and Kenny McCaughey, who
already had one daughter. celebrated
the holiday ncar Des Moines, where
their scptuplcts were horn Nov. 19.
Alice Najarian also .knows something about large gatherings. She. has
playec\ host to a family l'ca~t in Swanton. Ohio. every year since 1937 when 30 people showed up. This
year. Mrs. Najarian. H4. needed 30
loaves of hread to make enough stuffing for 115 people.
Mrs. Najarian is nne of three fam-

ily mcmbe.rs who have made it to
each of the celebrations- which feature pinochle, football and lots of
gabbing - and she hopes to continue that streak.
"If I'm up to it, I' II try it another
year," she said.
As usual, turkeys were the guest
of honor at tables in homes across the
country, and charities and volunteers
dished out food to the less fortunate.
More than 2,400 who otherwise
might spend the holiday alcac gathered at Honolulu's Blaisdell Center,
where more than 800 volunteers for
the Salvation Army served up food
donated by local businesses.
"I don't have anything at home,"
said Elry Rawlins, who joined other
diners in eating more than 800
pounds of turkey. "I love to come
here."

A Kansas City, Mo., teen-ager
learned a lesson about the holiday:
"We're actually giving and
they're saying thanks, so it's Thanksgiving," said 16-ycar-old Gary, a resident at Kansas City's Evangelical
Children 's Home who helped feed
the hungry at a church. ''That's what
Thanksgiving means."

OU student found
face-down in river
ATHENS (AP)- The body of an
Ohio University student was found
lying face down in the Hocking River, police said.
·
The body of the 21-year-old Yamsee K. Palutla, a graduate student
from India, was discovered Wednesday near the university's golf course
by two employees from the Hocking
Conservancy District who were
checking flood gate locations.
Athens County Coroner Eric
Hasemeier examined the body and
saw no visible signs of violence.
The Franklin County coroner's
office in Columbus was conducting
an autopsy.

FEEDING THE HUNGRY - Volunteers Hf'Ved Thankaglvlng
dinner to the hungry Thursday at the Volun...,• of America In
Columbus. The agency served 300 meals at Ita facility, and alao
prepared 2,000 meals for delivery In the Columbua area. (AP)

�Commentary

.

..

-..-::"J

--------------~~E~x-t-en-t~o~f~l~ra~q~'s~~mic~r~o-be~a-~-e~n~a-ls-t~ll-lu-n~k-n~o~w~.n~~
The Daily' Sentinel

log teal weapons of this kind seem~d
Gen. Amer ai-Saadt, who was in · type of "Israel clause" tmposed by :
mnocent enough at the time The charge of the prOJect, turned to a many Arab contractors, highlighted •
RevolutiOnary Command Council respected West German company, Iraq's fear of espionage and the
turned to Izzat ai-Doun, the minister Tl!ysscn Rheinstahl Technology, htghly stratc:gic nature of the Salman :
of agncui1Ure who was also serving whKh sig.ned a cont~ac1 for 21 4 mt!- ~~k project.
· :
on the ruhng council.
han deutschemarks m 1981, ostenstA warning signal of Iraq's intc:nt '
On Nov. 2, 1974, ai-Doun stgned bly to butld a "umversity" project should have gone off when the :
a contract wtth the Paris-based lnstt- Contract documents showed that the Thyssen employees contemplated a :
tut Meneux.to set up Iraq's Arst bac- Dryala Chern teal Laboratory that project specifteatton that called for an '
tcnological laboratory. The Iraqis Thysscn but It on Salman Pak, a sub- expenstve an cleamng plant for the ;
explained that they needed to be able uri! of Suwarra, was fitted out wtth laboratories, to be built by one of the
to manufacture large quanttttes of specrahzcd manufactunng cqutpmcnt eight German subcontractors, Noskc- .
vaccmes in order to develop agricul- that was capable ofhandhng the most Kaeser 11te Iraqis were not known '
tural and ammal producuon.
toxtc substances for both chcmtcal for canng about envtronmental pro- ;
The offtcial Iraqt purchasmg and btologtcal weapons work.
tection. The only reason for such an .
agency was called the General Dtrec·
From the day ground was broken elaborate air cleanmg-sysccm was to :
torate of Vetennary Services No one at the Salman Pak plant '" late 1981. prevent the htghly volatile chemicals :
in France batted an eye. But for the , the sllc was heavtly gua.rded by Ir~qt from poisoning workers and the local '
IraqiS, the vaccine protocol was so soldiCrs. and Sovtct-butlt SA-2 mts- population.
·
important that when. French agncul- stlc battcncs were onstallcd to protect
If th 1
til 1
h '
a ~as s ' no enoug tp ,
tural mmtster Chnstian Bonnet vtsit- against atrk attack ·h
.
arouse susptcmn among the Gcnnans :
ed Iraq, he was mvtted to meet wtth . 110 rna c sure I ere were no sptcs working at the sue, then the "animal •
the vice prestdent of the RevolutiOn- ::~~r mtdst. the lraqts. kept a close house ," when: beagles and other lcs\J
ary Command t:ouncil, Saddam Hus- ac.
on . the German workers. animals were kept, should have beell.,
scm
comP.anyrng them even whqn they Once production began at Salman
Saddam became more mvolved went to . the lavatory. Thysscn Pak. thc beagles were used to test the
lure, and polcnltaliy deadly. A stnglc
vtal ol anthrax vtrus dropped tn an later on, when he ordered the con- ~mployccs and thcor subcontractors lethality of hcrvc ga~ · agchts. Thcif
urban water system ts enough strucuon of a · ~csuctdes " plant ncar ad to srgn a two-page letter ~uaran- carcasses were thrown out on a
undcrccrtaJncondtt!Ons - to launch the town of Suwatra, some 18 miles tecmg thatthctr comr.antcs had :·no [!Jlrba~c dump 10 plum vtcw.
•
afuli-scalecptdcmtc
south of Baghdad, ncar the anctent relations wuh Israel of any ktnd.
The Iraqis have admitted none
Iraq's first anempt to acqutrc bto- c11y of CtcStphon.
The letter. whtch wcntlar beyond the thts to the U.N. inspecturs. They say .
.
.
.
.
.
:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - , they ""mmenccd lnologtcal warfat~ , ~ .
1
research m 19R6, and have oomtucJ •)
(!)I!IJ1 ~OP:T woRft' ~~~ftr"r
only worktng em two htologioal war-, 'I
HULME
fare a~cnts - anthra~ and botulin
toxin In a lit ofhclpfulncss.thcy pro- ,.
vidcd samples of each to the SJ!Cctal
Commtsston But the Iraq!&lt; say theY,
abandoned the cflort 10 1990.
No mcnuon was made of nth~r
hiolog1cal agents that U.S. intclll 1
gence believes . they CXJ!Crttnentcd
wtth, includtng lyphotd. cholera.
mcn10gllts. yellow fever, tularcmt~.
rycm toxm and West Ntlc Fever
virus ~or was mcnlmn made ol NUS·
pcctcd tests wtth pulmonary anthrax
tn actual muniuons And, though
three suspected factlitics were
destroyed, no btologtcal agents were
ever found
Nevertheless, most experts tn the
field cauuon that 11 would lie very
easy- and vtrtually undetectable-;:
for Iraq to keep some biologtcllh
agents away from prymg U N. eyes
Whtch ts what makes the current sn: ·
uauon all the more cnucal.
'(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller •
are columnists for United F11tUr111 ,
Syndicate.)
'
,.

OHIO

,..,_,y,

leaders hI. p
c
•
h
I
at meetlng no e P
for him back home
.ll• nto n

ByTOMRAUM
WASHINGTON- President Clinton may have walked tall on the world
stage at thts week's summll of Pactftc Rtm natiOns, but he'll find II hard to
translate thatleadershtp mto foretgn -policy victoncs at home m 1998.
Dcsptte Chnton 's role m an Asian bailout plan 11nd hts ambttrous rhetoric
about the global economy. few recent U S. presidents have been as rebuffed
by Congress on foretgn pohcy
•
It seems unhkely hts well-rccctvcd performance at the JUSt-concluded ISnation mectmg tn V:mcouvcr, Bnttsh Columbta, wtli alter that
Clinton can cxpecltrymg limes ahead as he makes a new btd to gel Congress to renew cxptrcd fast -track trade authoruy. expand NATO by three
nauons and keep US troops tn Bosma beyo~d the current June 1998 deadfmc .
11te recent confrontatiOn wtth Iraq- since cased - helped emphasiZe
the dtfficully Clmton IS havmg tn holdmg together the frayed mtcrnattOnal
coalition thai confronted Saddam Hussem m the Pcrstan Gulf War.
Already. Republicans arc vOJctng skcptktSm about the dtmcnstons of the
Astan cconomtc stabtllzatmn program- to be admtmstercd by the IMFeven though the nauons-commtttcd no new money al thctr Vancouver meet~
mg.
"Cicarly,tflhc U S.-dcstgncd plan encounters financtal ptohlcms, ll w~uld
be hard 10 shift the financial rcsponsththly lo other countncs," satd Rep. Jtm
Saxton. R-N.J , chamnan of the congrcsstonal Jotnl Economtc Commtllcc
He plans heanngs ne&lt;l month
Clmton recctvcd three consccuuvc [orcogn-pnllcy rcpudtahOns a.s Congress
recessed for the year
Ftrsl, hiS btd for fast -trade authorlly. whtch prcstdcnts have had for more
than two decades, was thwancd tn the House Then he was dented. money
to repay the US. debt to the Umtcd Nattons ($926 mtlllon) or to finance the
Intcrnauonal Monetary Fund's currency stabtllzallon fund.
The wtthholdmg of U N dues wa.' an embarrassment w Clmton when the
Umted Stales was trying to make ns case on dealing w11h Iraq to the United Nauons earlier this month
The IMF and U N payments arc snagged tn a dispute between Clinton
and House conservattvcs over mtemattonal famtly-plannmg programs.
The fast track measure- whtch would gtve'Ciinton the power to nego·
nate trade deals wtlhout congressiOnal mlcrfcrencc- faces formtdablc opposition from House Democrats. It is strongly opposed by labor and envtron·
mental groups
. Even though Clinton has prcdtctcd eventual passage, Senate MaJority
Leader Trent Loll. R-Mtss , a fast-track supporter, satd "tl would be even
more dtfficult"to pass tt m 1998. wtth mtd-tcrm elect tons approach mg. than
11 was m 1997
11te bill became an important symbol of Clinton's second-term agenda,
and his i~abihty to hnc up support withtn hts own party was a heavy blow
to hiS prestige
George Stephanopoulos, a top Clmton atdc-turncil-televtston commentator, suggested the defeat, unless reversed. could turn the next three years onlo
"largely a rhetorical preSidency."
.
In Vancouver. Canadtan Pnmc Montstcr Jean Chrcttcn. the summ 11 host.
even alluded to fast-track, saymg "globallzatton IS a fact ol ll[e We cannot
move against th1s current ·•
Clinton had to defend his tnahilny to wm thts round. vowmg to prcvatl
in 1998 He also pledged suppon for creaun~ a h'ugc free trade zone among
the 18 Pactfic Rtm countrtcs- also rcqumng fast-track aulhonty
Clinton's previous forci~n-pollcy hanlcs wllh Congrc" mclude using U S
troops tn Hani (1994 ). loan guarantees to Mcxtco ( 1995) and U S. rnlicy '"
Bosma (I 995-prcscnl)
Furthcnnorc.lhc president fa1lcd to wm Senate conlinnalmn 1.1st summer
for his nommauon offonncr Massachusells Gov Wtlltam Weld to be amba,,.
sador to Mextco m a htgh-dcctbel clash between Weld and Senate Forctgn
Relattons Chatrman Jc"c Helms R-N C
.
Clmton 's forcign-p&lt;&gt;ltcy dtfficuhtcs arc mtenstfymg JUst as he apJICars 1o
be gcUmg more t:omlonahlc w11h the prn~.:css. "'orne analysts su{!gcst.
"For ~omchody who practH.:I.!d hcmgn ncglc~.:tloward forc•i!n pohcy m
the first several years ol h1s tcnn. he !'I goucn very aniculmc and pcrccpt•vc
an puHmg the p1cccs together: sau.J Fred Grccnstcan. a poiHH.:al sc•cnllsl at
Princeton Umvcrslty

Letter to the editor
So what about those good old days?

o.( j

SA9~AM HUS)E\N
AN~

HOSiAGE

New stadium .reveals the .s oul of its creator ;·
By MORTON KONDRACKE
Th e Was hmgton area has two
nefw sports arenas, each IS a reflectiOn
o the man who huilt it. Ahc Pollln's
MCI Center ts heauuful and generous
tn sptnl Jack Kent Cooke Stadium IS
as tmpcrsonal and cold as tis cinder
block, concrete and steel
Recently, Pol lin gave a few thousand people a ftrsl look at hts nearly
completed factltty tn downtown DC.
plus free food and VIP passes
A few were htgh-rollcrs rcnung
cxccuttve suttcs for. $100.000 a year
The rest were the consuuct&lt;on work·
ers who
d It the lacthty.thcor spousd khut
1
cs an
s. 1n a bncf. shy speech.
Pol lin thanked hts guests for thctr
work and told them thcv'd helped fulfill hiS dream ol llutldtn• an arena
"
that would be "the best of the best of
the best .
fits. And so" he Polhn "mic or .
Wa"h1ngtnn s most \'CnCrous Jlhllan-

•
throptsls Thrnuoh the I Have a
t
Dream Poundauon. he and .t lricnd
arc comnJlltcd to provtdtnn ,·a··ollcne
•
education to 59 children • m' Pnnce
Gcor&lt;&gt;c' s County.
Hee 1s also a benefactor lor Gallaude I College I or the deal a hurtle
nfauusuc chtldrcn. Chtldrcn's HosPllal. the Washmgton Boys and
Goris' Cluhs. and a pannpl)' nl Jew1~h chantic~

Thts IS a man with a soul. and 11
shows tn hts new arena. buth where
11 can belp m the cconomtc rcdcvclopmcnt of the Dtst.nct of Columhia.
Ux:.atcd ncarChmatown and Judtctary Square. the MCI
. Center wtll be,

"

bestdes an arena fOf baskel11all, hock· tcmiccc
" a 20,000-scat sta·•'I" 1un1 grcss. 1lC qu1c""I'y s«JUg11t.nnu
" '• 1ound tl.l
.•.
cy and rock concerts, a natural htslo- dcst"ncd
l!'
.
"ivc
even
the
farthest
h
h
h
e
e
sue m I c su ur s. cndmg up m 1
ry and sports museum, a shoppmg uppcr-dcck seals a close-in vtew nf Pnncc Gcnr~c's County
.'
mall and the site of spectacular act ton on the n&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;r.
cookc never hvcd to :-;cc h1s mnn~ 1
restaurants.
The scats arc cnmfortahlc and the umcnl cnmp1etcd HIS wtll lclt the ,
The factllly wtll be open I rom 9 arena ts colorful II ha.s a slalc-ol -the- maJor share ol his huge est ale Ill 11
am. to II p m. every day oftbe year an vtdco screen. the most advanced lnundattnn beanng his name, huttl s:
and surely will become a major tn any spotts arena tn the country, and not clear how much muncy wtll end.
Washington tounst attraction, bnng- Polltn plans to replace ll wuh a J-D up going tn g&lt;Mxl cau&gt;;e.s or how much ,
mg suburbamtcs downtown and ··rcscreen
thc gcs lurc .~N dcs1gnc
· d hHivm
· d tux..• )
..,
attng JObs for DC
In a gesture typtcal of Polhn's cs
The arena's National Sports thoughtfulness. the buildmg has more
It's ccrtam that Cl•okc gave lillie
Gallery will he a unique factllly con- bathroom •pace for women than for money to chanty during hts hlelllnc.
tammg rare mcmorahtlia ...: Babe men No other US. sports arena has Wh 1I P0 II
k
f' h'
c
tn IS nown or ts gcn-·
Ruth 's bijl. the Sportscasters Hall of taken such a sensihlc step. nor have crostty and JICr«&gt;nalloyalty, Cooke's:
Farne - pus
1 computer-dnven toler- most thcaters or nl hcr pu b he butld· name was synonymous wuh irasco·
acltvc games Vtsilors can try to hit mgs.
htllly and fickleness
a maJor lca•uc puch, throw to a RedOne of two maier restaurants in
0 h
II
•
'
n I C most persona cvcl. Pnlltn
skms rccctvcr, program a tenniS the MCI Center IS slluated on a hal· has been marrtcd to the same woman
match between any two star.&lt;from tbe cony ovcrlookm• the ""oris actton for ~3 years
ht · w'' 1
•
..,..
.
·
'
s he rene.,.
past or present, and play H-O·R-S-E Another has a glass wall and over: hclpcd destgn the MCI Center's 1011._
agamst Wt7.ards star Chris Webber.
looks the Wt7.ards' practice court.
nors - whtlc Cooke was married lP"
A spons promoter Wtlh values oth·
Halls and walls around the tnstdc f
d rr
l
~
h p II
our 1 crcn women an shonly '
crt an o tn's would have lnadc hts of the hutldmo arc hnghl and classy be'orc
1' hts d en th cut h"WI w nut ol
"
own teams the central anrac.;Uon in Ihe A olass C"tcrtor
provtdcs ·c ofth
h
II
e
•
. VI ws
c
IS WI
•
sports museum
Capllol and other wa.,hmgton stnhts.
C&lt;&gt;Okc'- stud
d
I '
pn1lin's
·' ·
tum IS tsllnct v ·
·
haskcthail Wtzards and And Iact ng Ch ma lown. th c bUl ld emg 's un 1ove 1Y· JUst
a lower of ramps and' v
hts hockey.
h te.am. the Capitals, get wall has an Astan nu&gt;ttf and a Chi- patnted ct'ndcr hi ne ks dcstgnc d lC)
thctr due ut the Gallery's entry way ncsc dra•&lt;&gt;n
tn 'a •"&lt;&gt;urtyard
...
r:
"'
·
prtJUur.:c
more scaung and revenue. ·
rcpltcmcs
Yan~cc. Stadtum m the
Thts
is
a
community
fa
•lilly
S
c
cats arc WI der than those at the Red- ,·
•
1'l"Os.
and othct cxhtbus honor soc- th roug
'•h and th rough· dcstgnc
· d 1" th c sk tns'lormcrhomcofRFKStadtum..
ccr. lnoth.tll .md track
spccificauons of a communnv.mmd- hut Rf'K' 1·n1·m
d
poII Ill a1so 1ormcu·' a partncrslnp
J
·
cd man.
h f ' f s Ih acy ts gnnc an so IS ·
s c ler rom l cram.
The cotltr·tsl
w&lt;th thc su hur h•m
c&lt;.~n a 1not ba1I stadium he hcauli -·
•wtth the Dtscnvcry Channel. whtch tn
~
Fchruary wtil open a three-story Maryland Jack Kent C&lt;&gt;t kc Slad'um
1 I' B 1
·
1
h
'
u
a II more IS tn the process of
1-!X 1h1t on the oceans, the earth, and
- and the mal'i ll mcmora:~hlcs d
cmonstrallng II. And Pnlhn has
sracc. lcatu11ng. among otherthmgs. .couldn't he greater
d lh 1 h k h II
,1 B -2~ hotllber and a dtnosaur s·k··le·
rrove
alsu
Cooke onntnaliy lncd t&lt;&gt;localc hts · be a 1 a .., elh ah arena
ld
•
l&lt;&gt;n
•
•
can - ' a mcnsc ut s 11. . ,
new Rcdsktns' stadtum m the Dts·
(M rt K nc1 ke 1
The MCI Center 1, pnmanly a tnct, hut '!" hen he run wnto tmuhlc editor0 olon
raelh sexecutl'l'e ;
Rollo Call
sports factllly. after all. and tts ccn- '.rom thc DC government and Con- ot Capitol Hill.) • e nawspaper ;'

Speculation abounds on ·Jesus' world travel ·i

Dear &amp;htor:
where he sat at the feel of Buddtust
I refer to Robert Weedy's Nov. 23 column on "Thankigivtng Thoughts " ByGEORGER.PLAGENZ
There
arc
more
practic
mg
Budmonks.
tmbthcd the Buddhtst pht·
Mr. Weedy closes the column by staling that "There ts a way back for
dhtsts
on
the
Untted
States
(15
millosophy
and
engaged tn the Buddhist
Amcnca. but the proc-ess wtll not be easy." A way ba&lt;k to what''
han)
than
there
arc
Eptscopahans.
prucucc of rilcdJtat~nn
Mr. Weedy quotes Theodore Roosc\•cll's swt~ at the Muckrakers
Prcshyterians.
Lutherans
and
United
He then returned to Pafcstmc
The Muckrakers. who spawned a num~r of tmnators. !""formed a valu-Cburch
of
Chnsl
members
comwhere
he rrnpagatcd the BuddhtS;
able scrvtcc to Amer1ca The im1tators. who were more mtcrcstcd m scnsabmcd
,
teachmgs
among hts Jcwtsh followuonahsm than fact-findmg. were the ones Roosevelt ,corned
Maybe
this
shouldn't
surpnse
us
ers
It fell to the Progresstves and muckrake~ 10 clean up the mess created
Kersten ts not the lorsl to say that
by Social Darwmian conservatives durmg the dark post-Cml War periOd tf we agree with those scholars who
see
a
strtkmg
resemblance
between
Jesus
traveled wtdely outstde Palcsbetween 1865 and 1900. Dunng thts pertod. judges and legtSiaturcs were on
the
teachmgs
of
Jesus
and
Buddha.
itnc.
The
Japanese have a legend that
the take. The so-called "Captams of Industry' and bankers controlled govMarcus
Borg
has
niade
a
collection
of
Jesus was not crucified '"Jorusalcm ·
ernment behtnd lhe scenes. (Actually tiiC) &gt;till do.) II was a pertod durmg
these stmilariltes in "Jesus and Bud- bul ned to Japan where he ltvcd to be
which pubhc tntegrity all but vani,hcd.
If Mr. Wee~y had lived attbe tum of the century, he definitely would have dha. The Parallel Sayings" (Ulysses 112 They can even pomt out hiS
grave
been agamst Teddy Roosevelt TR homficd conservattvcs by pushtng for Press, 1997)
Example
"Greater
love
hath
no
The lcgend 'was started tn 1935 by
pure food and drug lcgtSiauons, meat inspeclton and conservauon of naturman than thts, that a man would lay a Shtnto pncst who satd that wntmgs
al resources. He became so dtsgusted at Oarwtman Republican conservnttvc
aunudes thai he left the Repubhcan Party and formed the hberal Bull Moose down hts hfe for hts friend" (Jesus). whtch had been m hts famtly for 60
" Just as a motber would protect her generations told hQw Jesus had trad·
Progressive Pany.
only
chtld at the nsk of her own ltfe, ed places wttl&gt; his brother before hts
What is the golden era that Mr. Weedy would like to return to• Was 11
even
so cultivate a boundless love cructfixton and how hiS brother had
when conservatives swung down from the trees to fasten Prohibtllon on the
toward
all beings" (Buddha).
country? Perhaps it was when "Silent Cal" managed to muster up the whered1ed on.thc cross m hts stead
But
few
scholars go as far as Gerwithal to declare that the husincss of Amenca was business, or when Hoover
The anc1ent documents were said
man theologtan Holger Kersten, who to have told how Jesus then made hiS
promtsed a chtckcn for every pot• Hopefully. he wtll pinpojnt hts era 10 a
says Jesus was a Buddhist.
future column lnctdentally, Mr Weedy needs to kno~ that the quote annl&gt;way to Japan. a BuddhiSt country he
In hts hook. "Jesus Ltvcd 1n had first vtstted when he was n youth
utcd to de Tocqucville has been exposed as a forgery
India" (Element Press, 1994), Ker- of 18. On hiS second vtstl, he married
Jeffrey Flelde
sten says there ts cvtdencc that Jesus a Japanese woman, had three daugh·
Middleport
traveled as a young man to Indta,
ters and became a rCSJICCied teacher

~
and prophet tn Japan.
retur~cd to hts homeland When hts I
.
'
The strange story. well-known in l:on I rnntatum with the authontics
Japan, came to hght in.lhJs l:ountry m made 11 dear he would be put to
1971 when a Chtcago ncwspaJICrman death, hts younger ~ruther satd, tn
named John Justrn Smtth heard the cftcct, "You have much left to do on
story and dccJdcd ln mvcstJgutc.
earth Let me dte tn your place " He
He was taken by a gut de to a rlace dtd, and Jesus \hen returned to Japan
where, accordmg to tbe old talc. Jesus
Could ll be that Jesus was nottbe
was huncd There were two l:rosscs "homchody" we have always con- :
at the sHe. One . satd the gutdc,
1
srdcred htm to be, hut a world tra•marked the grave of Jesus: the other, · clcr~
the hunal place nJ the curs and haor
lndta, Japan .. there is even a sto·
ol' hts eruct lied hrmhcr The legend
ry
that
Jesus went once to England.
says these relics were taken hy Jesus
from the hody of hts brother after hts But I'll save that story for another
time.
cructltxton in Jerusalem and brought
(George R. Ptagenz Ia 8 colum·
by htm to Japan
nlal
tor Newspaper Enterprlae
Smtih satd many m the voltage arc
Aaaoclatlon.)
:
convtnccd the story ts true There ts
Glass fiber-optic systems, '
even a "Chnsl Festtval" every June
using
lasers no larger than a gratn '
m the comrnumty
of
sand.
can transmll 32,000
Accordtng to the legend, on hts
first vtstl to Japan, Jesus studied . times as much informatton as the
equtvaJent amount of copper
under a Shtnto rncst who taught htm
w1re.
,•
such anctcnt Japanese tnc~s as bemg
able to conceal yourscl f and throw- - The Communist Control ~ '
ing a bamboo pole mto water and
w'ent into effect m 1954, vinually
outlawmg the Communist Pany ,'
walkmg on tl.
tn the United States
•
After hts stay tn Japan, Jesus

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Mildred P. Stukey

Wc&lt;llt1CI

Saturday, Nov.l9

Scrvu:es for Mildred P. Stukey, 79, Coolville, wtll he Saturday at II a.m.
in tbe Hickory Htlls Church of Christ in Tuppers Plains, with Evangelist Ron "
Hcnn~n officiating. Burial will be in the Success Cemetc:ry.
Prtends may call today from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville.
She dtcd Wednesday, Nov. 26, 1997 m Camden-Clark Memonal Hospt1.11 in Parkershurg, W.Va.
A hnmcmakcr, she was born June 6, 1918 in Parkersburg. daughter of the
l&lt;~tc Holly and Nelia Shaver Sheets
She "survtved hy a ststcr, Mable Evans of Coolville; and several nie ces
.111d nephews
Site w," preceded m death by her husband, Earl Stukey, and b) a broth·
cr. livery Sheets

AccuWeathe~ forecul for daytime conditions and high tc:mperaturcs

Eli~abeth

MICH.

•

By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN'MOLLER
'E.sttlbfuli.ttf in 1948
~
As the IraqiS stalled the Umted
Nations tnspeclton teams last week,
111 Court Street, Pameroy, Ohio
and Saddam Hussem's showdown
4114-1824158 • Fax 992·2157
wllh the Untted States dragged on.
1' mtelhgence offictals came to the
conclusion that Saddarn has taken the
time to hide a cache of btological
agents he has been cookmg up for
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
years
Saddam clatms he has been abidROBERT L. WINOETI
1ing by U.N. Resolution 687, passed
Publlaher
tn Apnl1991, whtch requtres Iraq to
' ~ccept the dismantling of all traces of
11s chemtcal. nuclear or btologtcal
•
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
l weapon capactly
Controller
General Manager
But CIA, U.N. and other intelligence sources told our assoctate Dale
'11M S..IIMI - - . 10 1110 tdltor , _ - .., 1 , _ , _ ot ropa,
Van Ana the followmg story about
'7'tptdfot.
Saddam Husse10 and hiS pursutl of
. . , . _ Mdllllmoyl»- l!lld&gt; tiHJuld- • •fgnolllro, -...... I :,1'deadly m1'robes:
Md dl)'ff,. phone mnber. IIIMdfY I eM,. It thttt'l a ,.,.,..na 110 a ptWvffHII ~~
S dd
-to: 1 . - . to , . Edllor. 'TlW llonlfMI, !11 coun St,
Qhlo
a am was atlraeted early on to
01 ~~.s=m;~·~"'~·:FAX~"'::;.::'.::":;:Iflll;::;"::.'~n:·---------~=--=----..1
' bacteriologtcal weapons They were
'='
_. •
• cheap. relatively stmple to manufac-

· SholtlotfMPf/O_O&lt;_),_,.,..,_.,,.,If8pubH-.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frklly, November 28, 1887

IToledols2' I

''''

\

1

Elizabeth Sarah Bright, 77, Dusky Street, Syracuse, died Thanksgtvmg
Day, Thursday, Nov. 27, 1997 at St Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Vu ,
followmg a brief illness.
Born Dec. 6, 1919, near Five Points, she was a daughter of the laic W ('
(Carl) and Helen Crooks Edwards. She and her husband of 56 years. Leroy
Frank Brtght Sr., by whom she was preceded m death on Oct II. I!J!J7. opera~ service stations m Columbus for many years, and were lungtnnc (.;Oil ·
trlct dtstributors of the former Columbus Citizen and Citi1cn-Journal
She is survived by two sons and a daughter·tn-law. Leroy l'r.tnk Ill ·~hi
Jr. ofMandarm, Aa., and Gordon Fredenck and CHns Bnght of Slufcll. 1..1 .
a grandson whom she reared and hts wtfc, G. Scott and Conmc iln~hl of
Columbus, four ststers, Elma Weese and Emmogcnc Hamilton, hoth ol Syr.1
cuse, Ethelyn Kreisel of Galloway, and Elotsc Seely of Hopkmton . M,.,, ,
two brothers, Emmett Edwards of Grove Ctty, and Ellsworth Edward' ol I ial·
loway, several other grandchtldrcn, grcat-grandchtldrcn .md nocce' .uod
nephews.
She was also preceded tn death by two ststcrs. Esther Bukcy .md l·lc:mor
Wmgett, a brolher, Edgar, and two brothers and lJOC s1slcr Who U1ctl1n 1nlnn
cv
Servtces will be I p.m Sunday in the Pomeroy Chupcl of the h shcr I uncr·
al Home, wtth the Rev. Chad Emnck olfictallng Bunal wtll he tn Othnore
Cemetery, Mmersvillc Fncnds may call at the funeral home from !1-'1 p 111
Saturday
,
'

IColumbusIss• I

'''''

Ice

5Uflny PI Cloudy

Cloudy

Low pressure promises
warm, damp weekend
By The Aeeoclated Preaa
A slow-moving low pressure center will push warm, motSt Gulf air mto
Oh10 through the weekend. lhe Nattonal Weather Servtce said.
Rain, and posSibly thunderstorms, wtll occur through Sunday. Dayume
temperatures will reach the 50s, forecasters said. Southern Oh10 could see
some readtngs in the 60s.
The record-htgh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather station was 67 degrees m 1990 while the record low was 7 m 1930. Sunset
tomght wtll be at 5:08p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:32a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly cloudy wtth a chance of showers Lows from the upper
40• to the lower 50s West wind 5 to I0 mph. Chance of ram 50 percent.
Saturday.. Showers hkely Highs 60 to 65. Chance of ram 60 percent.
Saturday mght ... Rain likely. Lows tn the mtd and upper 40s
Extended forecast:
Sunday.. Occastonal ram. Highs in the upper 50s.
Monday. Ram likely. mainly during the day Lows m lhe mtd 40s Htghs
, m the mid 50s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy Lows 10 the mid 30s. Htghs m the mid 50s

Meigs announcements
Food basket applications
The Metgs United MethodiSt
Cooperative Parish wtll be taking
applications for low-mcome families
for Chrtstmas baskets on Dec. 2 and
3 only. 9 a.m. to I p.m. at 31 I Con·
dar Street, Pomeroy.
Meet1n1 set
Metg&gt; County was recently
declared a disaster area by the Umted States Depanment of Agnculture
due to the· heavy rains last summer.
There wtll be an informational mcetmg for all farmers who are affected
by the heavy rams of last summer.
The meetmg will be held at the Fire
Annex m Racine at I p m on Nov
29. Represcntauves from the Mctgs

Sarah Bright

County CommiSSioners office and
U.S. Sen Mtke DeWme's Qffice will
be m attendance

-----Local News in Brief:-

Ruth A. Moore Hysell
Ruth A. Moore Hysell, 71 , Pomeroy. dic'd Thursday, Nov 27, 1997 tn
Holzer Medical Center.
A homemaker, she was born on De~ 23, 1925, daughter of the late Net I
and Freda Casto Moore
She IS survtved by three daughters and son~-m-law, Charlene and Terry
LewiS of Letart, WVa, Terry Lou and Dave Sham ofRactnc, and Jacktc and
Bruce Zorkle of Pomeroy, one son and daughtcr-m-law, Charles and Hcnn etta Hysell of Racine; five grandchildren and six grcat-grandchtldrcn: five
stepgreat-grandchildren: and a sister, Latccta Ptercc of Cmcmnau.
She was preceded m death by her husband. Charles M Hysell, on Nov
21, 1997, a son, Roger Keuh Hysell, mtcrs, Betty Mossman and Eula Sctdenabel; and by a stSter-m-law, June Pullin.
Gravestde servtccs wtll be held 3 p.m Sunday m the Rtverview Ccmc·
tery, Mtddleport, with Jesse Wmgrove officmlmg No calling hours wtll he
observed and arrangements arc by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home.

Phyllis J. Leach
Phyllis Jean Leach, 66, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va, dted Thursday, Nov 27,
1997 m Pleasant Valley Hospttal, followmg a sudden illness.
Born Jan 12, 1931 m Ambrosia, W.Va, daughter of the late Harry E. and
Bertha Huffman
homemaker, and attended t~e Gospel
Ltghtj10use Church m Pomt Pleasant.
She was also preceded m death
by her husband, Charles W Leach:
a soh, Sheldon Leach: two ststers,
Kathenne McDamel and Faye
Holcomb Gray, and two brothers,
Orvm and Denctl Dunlap.
SurviVIng are six daughters and
sons-m-law, Brenda and Larry
Rainey, and Mary and Herbie
Myers, all of Galhpolls Ferry.
W.Va., Pam and Everett Rayburn,
Sandra and Rex Sayre, and Kathy
and David Selby, all of Potnt
Phyllia J. Leach
Pleasant, and Stephame and Chns
Neal of Btdwell, two sons and daughtcrs-m-law. Worthy and Donna Leach of Potnt Pleasant. and Wtlham and
Melody Leach of Mtddlcport, 16 grandchtldren and 15 great-grandchtldren,
a brother. Clyde Dunlap of Leon. W Va., and a Sister, Erma Rolhns of
Loram.
Servtccs wtll be 2 p m Sunday in the Gospel Ltghthouse Church, wtth
the Rev Wtlltam "Bill" Banks and Lloyd Mayes Jr offictaltng Bunal wtll
he m the Ktrkland Memonal Gardens. Fnends may call at the Wtlcoxen
Funeral Home. Potnt Pleasant, from 7-9 p.m Saturday, and at the church on
Sunday one hour pnor to the scrv1ccs

Accident victim in good condition
A ){acme man was rcp&lt;&gt;rtcd tn good condllton thts mornmg at Grant Medtcal Center m Cnlumllus after he was apparently ran over by a vehicle tn
/\I hens County Wednesday cvcntng
Bnan 1: Bass, age unreported , of Horsccave Road was apparently run over
alter hetng thrown from a vehtclc on Bethany Rtdge Road near the Skyhnc
SJ!Ccdway He sustatned tn)Urtcs to hts chest and legs, accordtng to an Athens
Cuunly Shcnll's Department report
Dcpultc&gt; were called to the scene after another motonsl reponed seemg
a man lymg in the road Bass wa.' tran sported by ambulance to O'Biencss
Mcmnnal Hospllal tn Athens. and later transported by helicopter ambulance
t11 Grant Medtcal Center
Sgt Rtchard Keith or the Athens County Shenffs Oftice satd thiS mornmg that the dcpartmcntts sllll mvcs11ga11ng the mctdent

AEP customers to see rate increase
Rcstdenual clcctrrc customers of Columbus Southern Power will sec an
mcreasc of 60 cents pcr month bcgmnmg Monday The rate wtll apply to each
750 kWh of clcclnclly used
The mcrca~e ts due to a change approved hy the Public Utiltl•es Com·
mas~aon m the UlJilly's clcctnc fuel t;Omponcnt, wh1ch will rcmam 1n effect

Those rates arc cstahhshcd every s1x months and arc rcvwwcd annuall y.
Uullly cnmrames arc prohthllcd by law from makmg a profit on fuel en'"· . .-·

Patrol issues citation after crash
Larry E Wtlhs, 18, 47810 Greenwood Cemetery Road , Racmc was ctt·
cd lor Iat lure to control by the Galha-Metgs Post of the Stale Htghway Patrol
followmg a one-vchtcle acctdent Thursday on County Road 28 (Bashan)
Troopers said Wtllts was southbound, three mtlcs south of State Route
248, at 5 p m when he lost control of the p1ckup truck he drove. went ofl
the nght stdc of the road and struck a porch
The vchtclc conlmued on followmg the crash. accor:dmg to the report The
ptckup was slightly damaged

Untts of the Metgs County Emergency M~dtcal Scrvtce recorded 13
calls for asststance Wednesday and
Thursday Umts responding mcluded.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
5 13 a.m. Wedne.sday, Old Dexter
Road , Eddie Ladd, Holzer Medical
Center, Rutland squad assisted:
11.41 a.m Wednesday, Ash Street,
Mtddleport. Wanda Kmdhng, refused
treatment,

Carpenter reSidence, no tnjuncs
reported, Pomeroy VFD asststcd
RUTLAND
6 07 am Wednesday. Ptnc Grove
Road, Ractnc, Lmda Brunty. VMH.
Pomeroy squad asststcd,

4·13 p m Wednesday, Overbrook
Nursmg Center. Mtddlcport Mtldred Arnold, HMC.
SYRACUSE
7 41 a m Wednesday, Dusky
Street. El11.abeth Brrtc. VMH. Central
Dtspatch squad asststcd,
I: 1I p.m Wednesday, Dusk y ' '
Street, Phyllis Hcndnx, VMH, Central DISpatch squad asststcd.
TUPPERS PLAINS
11·36 a.m. Thursday, Arbaugh
Addttton, Ray Sylvester, Selby Gcn·
cral Hospttal

----Lottery results---~a~~keyc5drawmg,thc

r----------------------.
.
--------------.
.
0PEN HOUSE

!

Publlthtd every tfkrnoon, Mond1y lhrou&amp;h 1
Friday, Ill Co•r1 Sl , Pomeroy, Oh10, by lht
Ohao V1lley Pabi1Shi11 CompanyiO•onclt Co,
Pomeroy Oh1c 4!1769, Pta. 992-2U6. Secood
class poslap paid 11 Pomeroy, Oh10.

Membtr: 'The: AS~~XIalc:d Press, and 11\e Ohio
Newspaper A5501,;tl11011
JIOSTMASTER: Send addrcn corre&lt;:llons to
The: Datly St:nunel. Ill Courl $1 , Pomeroy
Ohto 4571'19
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
B)' Carriu or Motor llotfte
OM Wtc:t
.
,., .. .

Hymn Sing
The Meigs County Coopcrauvc
Parish wtll hold a fifth Sunday hymn
smg Sunday, 7 p m. at the Sutton
Umted Methodtst Church on Bashan
Road ncar Racme. All welcome

$J fll

Q..e Month
One Yur

SH 111

SliM on

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oatly ................. , •

No IUbitrtptlon by matl permtllcd tn are11
wkre home earner aenotee tlavallable.
P\tbhlha ntlefVH the ri&amp;hl tn adjUII IIIII dur·
1n1 \he: aubKnptaon period Su.bSCrtpllon ralc
cttanae• mey be nnplcmenlcd by chanJIIIJ lht

durallon or the sublcnphon

MAtLSUa5CRtmONS
lujdo folefp Coolly
.. ~. .. ...
.
....$27 lD
• $53 H2

nw..u

...

....

.

51115$6

Rain 0.~ Met_. Cp..lJ

tl-u .
26 - · ·

s2 w..u

..

-·

..

.. .

POMEROY
- Near Pomeroy·MaoQ~rldge

992·2588
VINTON
Galli• County Dl1pl1y Y1rd
155 Meln St.

Sunday, November 30th
1 pm to 4 p
In Our Pomeroy Lobby Only!
Stop In and View our Dress a DoU Entrees
that will be auctioned off December 13th 1 pm to 4 pm

35 Cen11

Swbscrtben no1 deilrina 10 pay 11M' camc:r may
rtmll In adYan~ dnccl 10 'The Daily Seauncl
oh • lhree, uxor 12 month b1111 Credtl will be
jtven camer eacl'l wut

ll WeeD
26 WHD

FOE AuxHiary
Fraternal Order of Engles Auxiltary 2171 will hold a potluck dinner
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Brmg covered dtsh.
Meal wtll be provtded Mcetmg to
follow at 7 30 p.m.

S292l

' .... .. .. .. $56 (ott

. . .............. St09.72

I

Meigs County was recently declared a
dls,.ster area by the United States Department
of Agriculture due to the heavy rains last
summer. There will be an Informational
meeting for all farmers who were affected by
the rains. The meeting will be held at the Fire
Annex In Racine at 1 :00 p.m., Saturday,
November 29. Meigs County Commissioners'
Office and U.S. Senator Mike Dewlne's office
will be In a~endance.
•

r

EMS units answer 13 calls

Charles M. Wise

-

· ~;
'··
•
••
~

for stx months

Contest open
12 15 p m. Wednesday. Oak
The Annual Appalachtan Oh10
Street, Pomeroy, Ruth Hysell, VeterPeace Prize will be open to students
ans Memonal Hospttal, Syracuse
from Southeastern Ohto m grndes 6squad assisted:
12 A total of 10 cntnes of art, wnl2.38 p m. Wednesday, State Route
tcn work, or music wtll be selected
7, Rtok Halley, O'B leness Mcmonal
for pubhcat10n on an anthology and
Hospital,
wtll rccctvc a $50 prize. The cntrtcs
7 25 p.m Wednesday, Vtllage
can be in the fonn of essays. short
Manor Apartments, Middleport,
-.teries._pocms. drawings and songs
Helen Savage, treated at the scene.
All cntnes should be postmarked by
The average speed of a racing
Mtddlepon squad assiSted,
Feb 13, 1998.
I 31 a.m. Thursday, East Mam yacht IS only about five knots per
The theme for this year's contest
Street, Pomeroy, Randy Rohtc. hour, but some yacht s have been
ts "Local People's Struggle for Jusclocked at 25 knots
VMH,
tice and Peace," and was chosen to
5 23 p.m Thursday. South Thtrd
encourage youth to dtscovcr and
Avenue, Mtddleport, Brad Knolls,
apprcctatc the htstory of struggles for
Veterans Memorial
VMH. Mtddlepon squad assisted
JUSilcc and peace Youth arc encourWednesday ndmtssions - none
MIDDLEPORT
ROCKET MAN ""
Wednesday discharges - Goldte aged to mclddc local interviews tn
10·20
p m Thursday, volunteer
ONE
EVENING SHOW 7:30
Charles
M
WISe,
84.
Mtddleport,
dted
Tuesday,
Nov.
25,
1997
m
VeterGtlmore, Carolyn Adkins. Burdell theor entries.
fore department and squad to Bone
446-0923
ans Memonal Hospttal
Black.
Hollow Road. chimney ltrc at Randy
Oct
10,
1913
m
Cheshire,
son
of
the
late
Wilham
and
Maggie
ShoeBorn
Letter pf'Oiram
Thursday admtssions - none
The Metgs County RSVP and the maker WtSc, he was employed at the Farr Co. in IllinoiS, and was a coallninThursday dtscharges - none.
Pomeroy postmaster are workmg cr He was a rcurcd employee of the Vtllagc of Mtddlcpon.
Holzer Medical Center
Survmng arc hts wtfc of 64 years, Geneva Ltttle WtSe, sons and daugh·
Discharges Nov. 26 - Clartce together to answer letters to Santa
Waugh, Charles Styer. Mtchele Chtl- Claus Letters from ehtldrcn, whteh ters-tn-law, Charles Wtse ol Cheshtrc, Wesley Wtsc of Columbus, Lester and
Shtrlcy Wise, Gene and Sharon Wtsc, Dennis Wtsc, and Danny Wtse, all of
dress, Mickey Williams, Mrs John must mclude a return address, should
Mtddleport: a daughter and son-in-law, Fona and Larry Sm11h ofMtddlcpon,
Barnes and daughter, Nial Salser, be addressed c/o Pomeroy Postmasand 26 grandchtldrcn. 36 grcat-grandchtldrcn, stx step- grcat-grandchtldren
Justma Taylor
ter, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769. The dead·
·Births- Mr. and Mrs Mark Van- line for submttting letters ts Decem- and 10 step-great-great grandchtldren
Besides hts parents, he was preceded tn death by five brothers, two SIS·
Stckle, son, Galllpohs, Mr. and Mrs. ber 15.
tcrs , a granddaughter and a great grandson.
Rodney Smith, son, Point Pleasant,
Servtccs wtll be 2 p m. Saturday tn the M•ddlcport Chapel of the Ftsher
W.Va.
Cantata planned
Funeral
Home, with the Rev Ralph Butcher offktattng. Bunal wtll be m the
Discharges Nov. 27 - William
The Coolvtlle Commumty Chotr. Rtvcrvtcw Cemetery Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7Jeffers, Ryan Donaldson, Cmdy under the dtreclton of Sue Matheny,
Prater. Tessa Thomas, Mrs. Sammy wtll perform at the St. Paul Lutheran 9 p.m. today.
Canter and :.on. Mrs. Robert Gtlmore Church in Pomeroy on Dec 7, St.
and daughter, Jacktc Dotson, Helen Paul's Untted Methodtst Church m
cLEVELAND ( AP) - There wtth four of the numbers, and each IS
Thacker, Mrs. Rodney Smtth and son, Tuppers Plams on Dec. I I. and
Nellie Daugherty, Mrs Mark Van- Coolvtlle Elementary School on Dec. were no tickets sold nammg all live worth $250
Sickle and son
14. Perfonnances wtll begin at 7 p m. numbers selected in Thursday mght's
· (Published with pennission)
Ohto Lottery
.
Racine Council
Sales tn Buckeye 5 totaled
1
Racine Vtllage Counctl wtll meet
The Daily Sentinel Monday,
$284,716
7 p.m. at the muntctpal
There were 106 Buckeye 5uckcts
'
CUSPS ZU·Hf)
butldmg.

Hospital news

••'
•'

------.Bank In~···
Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
.............
...
,.
--QIGI&gt;Il
.__QI_ . .,
cmtlllGII .... ,
"~

Member F.D.I.C.

tlotllll-3161

..-

-=-

•

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

Friday, November 28, 1997.

probably the most powerful offense
I have ever played on, so it makes
sense that I am going to get a lot of
yards."
No other player in NFL history
has rushed for II straight 100-yard
games in a season. Marcus Allen had
an 11-game streak, but it was spread
over two seasons.
Sanders, the first player in NFL
history to rush for 1.500 yards or
more in five seasons- the last four
in a row- also moved into sole possession of second place for career
100-yard games with 65. He had
been tied with Dickerson.
" I knew Barry was a great back,
but I didn't know how great," Lions
coach Bobby Ross said. "1 don 't
know what else he can accomplish.
The guys love him. They love to
block for htm. Jt'sj ust perfect. It really is."
It was the most points ever scored
by the lions (7-6) in a regular season
game, breaking the old record of 52
which had stood for 45 years. It also
was the most points ever allowed the
Bears.
The sensational performance by
Sanders almost overshadowed the
fact that the lions, who ran otf 45
unanswered poinls, once tratled 173 and were behind 20-17 at halftime.
Sanders began the cemeback with

a 40-yard touchdown run with 47
seconds left in the second quaner.
The Bears (2-11) appeared almost
powerless to stop Sanders as he
added a 25-yard scoring dash in the
third quarter and zig-zagged his way
to the end zone from 15 yards out
early in the founh.
"Every game the guy does something that when you think you've see
it all ... " Chicago coach Dave
Wannstedt said, his words trailing off.
''You've got to give him credit."
The Bears, staning the game with
almost perfect execution on both
offense and defense, scored on three
straight possessions. Chicago led 2010 after Jeff Jaeger's second field
goal, with 1:32 left in the second
quaner.
Then Sanders took over.
It staned with a trademark 40-yard
touchdown run that narrowed Chicago's lead to 20-17 with 47 seconds
left in the half. Sanders slipped
through a hole off right tackle and
sprinted for the corner of the end
zone, pulling away from defenders.
"This is going to sound crazy, but
out of that formation. we were zeroed
m on the play," Bears coach Dave
Wannstedt said. "Our guys were
ready for it, and we couldn't get him
on the ground. It may sound crazy,
(See LIONS op l'age 5)

DRAGGED DOWN - Detroit wide i.celver
Johnnie Morton (87) Is df11gged to the turf by
Chicago linebacker Ron Cox Tn the fl..t quarter

Southern sees Ash &amp; Writesel· receive special mention
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
go-to back for the state's top team
and a pair of defensive pillars are the
top featured performers on the 1997
Associated Press Division VI allOhio high school football team
announced Wednesday.
Running back Chad Schulte of
Delphos St. John's is the offensive
player of the year, while Dalton's Phil
Ryder and Columbiana's Jason Stefanick share the defensive honors.
The coaches of ihe year, also
selected based on the recommendations of a state media panel, were
Toronto's Bob Morns, Doug Green
of Morral Ridgedale and Kinland 's ·
•
Pat McKenrick.
Among the 29 southeastern Ohio
players recetving honors were Southem seniors Michael Ash and Jason
Writesel and South Gallia senior
Steve Queen.
Schulte is a 5-foot-11, 190-pound
junior who rushed for ~.200 yards
and 25 touchdowns while averaging
S. I yards per carry. During a I0-0
campaign in which the Blue Jays fin·
ished as the stale AP poll champion,
Schulte set school records for rushing yards in a game (274) and in a
season.
Ryder is a 5-10. 200-pound senior
lineman who was in on 9\ tackles,
had seven sacks and 12 lacklcs for
lost yardage. He caused one fumhle.
recovered anot~er and caused I I
quarterback hurries for a team thai

of Thur•clay'• Thanksgiving Day ahowdown at
. the Sllverdome. Morton'1120 receiving yardland
one touchdown helped the Lions win 55-20. (API

Oilers notch 27-14 win over Cowboys
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
IRVING, Te&lt;as (AP)- The Oilers may not be in Texas anymore, but
they still know how to sour a Dallas
. Cowboys season.
Tennessee beat Dallas 27-14 on
.Thursday to put the Cowboys in dan·
.ger of missing the NFL playoffs for
the first llme in seven seasons.
It was the thlfd time the franchise
had beaten the Cowboys on Thanks·
giving day.
The Oilers now have beaten four
NFC East teams this year, including
the New York Giants, Washington
and Arizona.
·
The Oilers (7-6) intercepted Troy
Aikman three times and returned a
fumble for a touchdown. They also
recovered another fumble that killed
a Dallas drive on the
line.

Basketball

AillntkDhilien

'' .:r,Miami

'·

New York

' Orl;mdo ......

.
.

:~New Jersey ..
Boston .........
' ·Washmaton ..
·ptuladelphia

I. lao

•

4
4

.714
.692

~

64~

~

61~

.... .......... .. ... 7 7 .loa
..... ............... !'i 10 Jn
.............. ... 3

8

.273

Ctntral Dlw.-on
'
'"'tlanta. ...... .... """"""" '2 2 ·~7
Charlotte: .... : ... . .............. 9 ~ .7~
Milwaukee .
......... ..... 8 ~ .61.5
... Chic~o .
.. ·
.. ~
.!'i71
• CLE ELAND .
.7
.!'i38
• lnd•ana ......
.I&gt; 6 loa
• DetrOit .... .....
..~ 10 .311
~ Toronto
.. ...... ......... . I 11 .071

.
•

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Midwetil Division
~

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~

7
6
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6
7

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Utnh .

' Mmnesoru

6

ea.
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'62

10 . J7~
Dallas . .. ..... ...... ............ .1 10 .21 1
Denver
0 12 .000
.•

'" YMM:ouvc:r .': .... ::.:

.

',., tA

l..oakm ... .. . .. .. .......... 12

Phoent~

' · Portland

.....

..... ... .. II

8
............. 10
~

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Golden tate:

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

l!C
U 212
r.:1.
.R L4 I0 l'li.
6(,7 2!B

A.ll•nli( Divislun

.

Nl!w Jersey ......... ........ 16 1
Philndtlp!im .
. I-' K
wa~hington
13 10
N Y. hl:mdt!rs
10 10
NY. Rangers ...
Mil
Flund.1. ...... . ..... . .. 8 12
T&lt;tmpa Bay .............. 416

7 5 0 .581 260 226

Buffalo.......... . ........... .. ~ 7 0 .417 197 2!16
Indianapolis ................... .. 1 II 0 OIB 201 J2R
Cenlrtl 01~1~
Pi11sburgh ..
.. ..
8 ~ 0 667
JT&gt;~eksonvillc ... .... .. .
. 8 4 0 667
COrlCiieC' ................... . . 7 6 0 !'i:\11
&amp;!timon~ .......... ...... 4 7 I J75
CINCJNNA TI .
... 4 !I U .H l

Wutrm Dl,.lsion
Denver . ...... .........
10 2 0
K:msns C•ty .. . .......
9 J 0
Stanlc:
.
..
6 6 0
Oakl~nd
4 ~ o
Snn Diego .. . .. . . -*~ !I II

28 1 226
~05 242
2144 242
2B 2n
1::!5 Xl9

Montre:al ..
Prtt sburgh .... .
Bo~10n ........ .
Ott;awa ... .
Cnrollnot
Bulfalo

.500 264 277

JJ.l

0
~
~

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7
4
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.l l 72
29 79
24 6~
2l 67
20 ~K
II 47
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40
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70
b4
72
7l
Kl

Sunday's games
Aorida at N.Y Ran gen. I:10 p m
San JuS~: at Edmonton. K11.m .

Transactions

Northnsl Di•bion

!Ill J.'i.'i tK7
750 ::!47 20~
3) 1

l!C I. I &amp;

Itam

7 5 0 ~81 28M i16

New England. .

:m

Jl1
225 .\00

llii 7 3

11 ') ~
.... 1110 4
.. ... 10 12 4
9 12 4
7 12 4

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24
22

M2

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6J
66

IK

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bR
69
M
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Baseball

A.meriam Le..ue
TORONTO BLUE JAYS . Ag;reed to terms
w1th INF Cnug Grebl!ck o.nd INF Put Kelly on mt·
nor-k:agJtC et~~~a:racu

lam

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NY Gtant~
Washingmn
D~lla.s... . ..
Ph•ladelptu;a ..

~

Detroit
St l..ouis ...... .
Photnl~ ..... .... .

U r.:1.

.7 ~ I .fi::!.'i 211! 207
6 5 I . 54~ l:Z-1 J7b
6 7 0 462 !Ml 14CJ
. .'i 6 I 4C.M :!Oi :!.U
.. J 1J 0 .2C.O J 1Hl 262

...

ChJ~oiJO

Turonto

I want to thank the
voters of Salem
Township for supporting
me in the general
election of·Nov. 4, 1997,
as trustee of Salem
Township. I am sincerely
grateful for your vote.
Stanley Hutton

Co loro~r.Jo

Thursday's score
lndtano 106. Vo.n,OOwer 8!'i

Tonight's pmos

!I

••

•

Paid for t&gt;y the oanclidaiO: Sbulloy Hutton, 30191 Old Oox1trChull:h Rd., Dex1er, on&lt;&gt;

0 . ~UO
o .1.11
() .1l1
II Jt.7

6~
60

16

57

...... 9 13 4 22
K 12 3 lfOI

66

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63

H ~tl 74
!'i 27 Kl
!'i 2!'i 60

64
70
72

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7K

7K
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20

6

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2.8°/a APR Up To 48 Months!**

-

Otlltwa ' · Wou!iin,run I
Los Angeles 2, St. Louis 2 (tie)
Ch1cago 2. Calaary 2 (tJ~)
- Dalla.1 4. Phocnht I
•-

• 4300 Vortec v.e
•Autamllc

·~

• Air Cordtion

•PolMIWrotws
• Power LDCI&lt;s

. hut it's the truth."
Sanders opcnclJ the ."il'L'o nc.l half'
: with a 14-yard run, amlmtnuh.:~ lat• er Jnson Hanson \ 2l)-yartl field go:tl
: lied it 20-20. The Bears coultln 'l
: knnw it at the unlc. hut the rout w;ts
; on.
Scott Mitchdl found Johnnie
: Morton ahmc he hind hh1wn \:overage
:nn u 50-yard scoring play and a 27·
;20 lead with 6:57 left in ihc third

• , _ Mlm1111

•quurtcr.

• Dual Aibagl

'

SJ9,650*

SJ8,950*

Bralflrtl!l
c•rry K·lill Ell. ta• 4lf

Rmf~rw 1!91

.....

·~Condlon

Phoemx at New York. 7 JO p m.
Chicaao at Wuhington. 7·30 p m.
Milwn.ukee 111 Miami , 7 ]() p m.
Charlone at Atlama, 7 ?rO p.m
Boston :11 CLEVELAND, 7 30 p.m.
Vancouver at Minnesota, 8 p m
Dnllu at San Antonio, 8JO p m
UtahotLA Cltppers.IO::Wp,m
Houston lM Oolden State. 10:30 p.m.

• Dual Aiilllgl

•41111111BIIMI

' , _ StH1Ing

S)7,fi50*
Bnnf ~rw 1!1
P11111r Crlftf Prlt se•••

nrvyllmr

·~Condlon

•NMMcas•llt Steeri!"'J

.... a-

Sunday'opmos

I

Tom.Peden
Country

Phlllldelphia at Indiana, 5 p.m.
San Antoruo Ill Atlanta. 6 p m.
V11ncouver ar Oerroit, 7 p m
Ortondo ar Sc::mle, 8 p.m
New Ieney ar Sacmmcnro, 9 p.m.
Toranro IU L.A. I...Wn. 9 JO p.m.

but fumbled. and Robertson returned
it 42 yards for the score.
Injuries also hounded the Cowboys. Corncrba"k Dcion Sanders suffcrcd a fractured 1ight rib when he
was 'tackled on a punt return in the
second period . Running back Emmllt
Smith suffered a bruised shoulder in
the th1rd period and didn't return.
Smtih gained only 22 yards on 10
carries.
Robertson sprained an ankle mthe
second half and didn't return.
The fm.1l Dallas foul-up was a lost
fumble by Sherman Williams on the
Tennessee one-yard lincwith4:11 to

play. Williams was hil by Rayna
Stewart. and Jmm:s Rc)hersnn rccovcred to ktll•nlf all hopes nf a Dallas
mmchack
The Cowhoys h:wc three games
lcl'l and 1rml1he New York Gtant&gt; (7.
4-1) and Washmgton (6-5-1) in the
NFC East.
1
" It's a real.long shot for us to
make the playoffs nnw." Atkman
said.
The Otlcrs tmil Jacksonville and
Ptttshurgh . both H-4. m the AFC Ccntral.
" We're still in 1he race ... F1shcr
.-.aid . ··we need w ~ ccp winning .
Next up is Cmcmnat1. Nnhody knows
who we arc hut we had a hig win in
front of the r.:ntirc count1 y It gave us
a chance 10 showcase our players.
M;tyhc mo_'.'c pcorlc know ahout n,ur
team nnw ..

:· LiOnS••. (Continued from Page 4J

Thursday's scores

Sunday's games

proved 'we're a defense capable of
making big plays.".
The Oilers scored on a fourthdown play when Steve McNair rolled
. out and hi I center-guard Erik Nor; gard. who had rcpnricd in as a tight
; end, from two yards out. It was Nor; gard's second career touchdown.
"I didn'l have time to think. I JUst
: reacted:· Norgard said. "[ knew I
: would he open."
With the ball hack . Aikman
. remained off-target. and Lewis
· picked off a pass and returned il 34
: yards lo the Dallas I. drawing boos
· from the Texas Stadium (.;rowd.
· McNatr 1hcn scored on a sneak for a
· 14-0 Tennessee lead.
. Tennessee coach Jeff Ftshcr said
; the game-plan was to hlttz Atkmun
' into mistakes.
"We gol pressure on the quarterhack. and every time I looked up I
saw Troy getting otT ihc ground."
Fishcrsaid. "We had some hig plays
on defense thai really helped us. We
: :talked ahout what we had to do and
:·we went out and did il."
Aikman hit Mtchael Irvm with a
. 19-yard touchdown pass nn an KJ.
Irvin with a 37-yard touchdown pass
in the third quarter
After AI Del Green's 29-yard
: field goal made it 17-7. the Oilers
: struck with another turnover. Bjorn•, son caught Atkman's 10-yard pass

Montlll'al 6. WilllhiAr.llm ~
Colorado 3, Tampa Hny 1 (tu~)
Florida 10, BOJton ~
Detroit 4. Ottnwa I
Dallas 4,1AII Anw,dc~ I
An~hc:Jm 2. New Jcr!iCy 0

Thursday's scon~s

'
OilerS.~. (Continued from Page 4)

: yard dnvc m whrch lhc quartcrhack
wns 4-of-4 for 7H yards. He also hit

Pittsburgh J. Curolma 2
Phtl:ldtlphia J. Buffulll I,
N Y. lsl:md&amp;=n4. N.Y. RHn~on I

201 J2-l
2.\b 2~~
1S.. 2-'5
1(12 2H I

Detroit 5~. Olll'liiO 20
TermuS« 27. Dalllls 14
BoltiltlOfe at JackSOflvllk. I r m.
CINCINNAn ac Ptuladtlphin. I p.m
lt\dianapoli1 at New EnJiand. 1 r.m.
New Orirnm aJ Carolma. I p m.
Noew Yort ktl at Buffalo. I p m.

!lA

n

l"i tt

Wednesday's scores

1 0 911 29~ 14'J

6 1'1
4 li
-' li
2 10

'" 9U
'6 !I.M

.... 12 10 2 26 71

............ II 6
. . II 9
Anaheim ...
.. 10 II
SunJosc ....
. . 91~
Edmonton .. .
.7 12
V:lnCOUV« . .......
.. .. 7 14
C.algary ......................... ..4 l!'i
Lo~ Angc:I~L ..

WHit-m OlviWn

Cnrohna
Atlanrn
Nc:w Orltmns ,
St LI1Uis .... .......
X•Wtln dtVIII(lll titW

.. 17 7 4
: , 16 6 4

lkfrn~c : hson Churd1 Ccd&lt;Jnilk•. ~-II 2;!0
Sr . T.:rn•T:n tnr. Nmwalk S1 Puu l. (1. ! ~ 10. Jr . l'hd
R\dl·r 6l\h,;n 5-10 ~Oil Sr : Rnl-1 Turnl'r. K111lanrJ

.

Moments after En k Kr;uncr \
: rumble, Sanders made one of h1'
·patented dipping and dtvmg runs .
·going 25 yards (or another loud\ , down and a 34·20 lead . He added his
"third touchdown with IJ:2K lei I m the
founh quancr.
"Somchody made the comparison

thm he wa&lt; m a L:unbroghtni and I
wa&lt; 1n a Chevy' S· III," Chicago linehm:kcr Barry- Minier said. ··y, 1u c.m't
&lt;~ Sk ju:-.t onL! !:!UY to t&lt;~cklc Barry
Sandors when you're I() yards off Ihe
hall and have to catch up."
Ron Rtwrs lal:kcJ nn a 15-yurJ

touduJown run and Trw.;y Scroggins
relurned a fumble 17 yards for a
Sl'DrC

Ro1ymont Harris sl:orcd on a twoyard run iind Kramer. who complctcd 13 of 26 for 259 yards. hooked up
with Ricky Proehl for a 78-yard
touchdown. Jaeger 's licld goahi were
52 iind 32 yards.
Mitchell , who was 20 of 31 lor
2K2 yards, iilso had an eight-yard
hlul:htlown toss to Herman Moo"rc .

Fri.,· SaL: !I am ·10 Pill' Sunday: 1 pm • 8 pm

Tbunday'u&lt;Uon
FtrWIIC

...... .......................... ,..~ .......... .._ _ _ "'01 .......... ()otllldlitfi!CM

Colorado 67, Norfolk St. 56

Tbunday's IGumamenll

,...a..-...... ._. ...................

WQ'I

CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRST!
.,

I

Se&lt;ond team
Orl'l'n~e:

End5-Rynn Oetw:her. Ctn H1lls Chr.
A~mJ . ~-I 0. 160. ~~ph .. JOSH LIMO GlOUSTER
TRIM BLI ~. 6·1. ln. SR. Dust1n Koch. Bdi;'!Jrc St
Iohn. 6-1 . 170. Sr L111Cmcn-Chns Riley. Crn Sum·
mit (tluntry Day. 6-2. 2-10. St.. Scott Corbtn. Col
Gr:111dvr.:w Hts.. 6-~ . 31!'i. Sr , Adllm lndorf. Dahon
fl.~ '00. Sr. Mark Howard. Elmore Woodmorc. !'i·
10. ~01. Sr .. Snm Mun"lo. FremontSt Jo"-!ph. fl.~ .
1IJO. Sr, QuMcrb:u:k5-Colby Sm~et, Bc:llllsvtlle. 6.l 205. Sr.. l,'YLER BARBEE, RICHMOND DALE
Sr:.. 6-1. ISO. JR : Sho1y Oawron. ptflance Aycrsv1llc:.
~-9 170. Sr . Ben Tc:j;tl. Cuya. Hts.. 6-1. lll5. Jr.,
J:a~(•n Mnrm. Columbinn&lt;~. ~ - 10, 170. Sr., Nad"m
Chri~u:1n. CL-d:trvinc. 6-1. 190. Sr. Ba~ks-Na1e
WalkL-r.1'nronto. ~-9. IH~ . Soph.: J.R Miller. Cadiz..
C.· II . 17~ Sr: Ch:trli~ Marmet Danville. 5· 10, 190.
Sr : Ju~tm Yntl!~ Newbury. 6-0. 17!'i . Jr.: Ma't
Hm·hanan Kinl:md. ~·10. 170. Jr : Devin Pollick.
frl.'nlom St Jo~ph. ft.{) 190 Sr KIL·k.er-Gtt,: Jack!on. O...'GraiT Ri'lt.'nide, ~-10 142. Jr
Drf~n11e : Lmcn1Cn-Jcff Bohl. Ctn Coumry
O~y 6·1 !10 Sr: lim B&gt;~ck . Nc~~obury. 6-6 JOO. Jr
Dcnm&lt; W..•ndd St. Hl!nry 6-8 2J2 Sr : Kt:vtn Lacey.
Gn.X'nw1ch South C.:ntml. 6-2. 270 Sr Unoback·
cr~-Shad Gerken CovJngton. ~.10 180. Sr: TONY
RILI:Y HEMLOCK MILlER ~-II. 11m. SR.: Ieff
Cwus.:. Independence. 6-l 210. Sr : Scou Parker.
ln..tcp.!OO.:Dl·c. ~·II 200. Sr. Scott Benfer. Monrllt:\ 1llc. b-0. IHJ. Sr : Andy Szymanowski Frc1nom
St I·~~~T'h 6-~.105 . Sr · Doug Dendinger. Gn.-cnwJch

South Centr::tl. 6-0 21~ . Sr Bocb--Lu Gahncl
Ktnland. 6-1 . 180. Sr : lake Jakubson. lrw:ll..-p:ndcncc
~-9 . 16!'i. Sr.: Brtu F;vmrr. Mt Blanc:h:.rd R•vcrdltlc
6·2. 11~ . Sr.J i!mm- Orcu Srhusu.~r. l..nrmn. Cath
6-0. 160. Soph.; Joe C:mmesc. R1chnw1nd Hi s. f.- I
IH.U r

•

., ' .

..'

Special mention
Cr;up H~scnju~, 7.art.:~~ilk! R·~u .m' . Chm
Tnron10. Sh.1wn t-lurlcy Shady~JJc . Sc1•H l ';111·
ml;'l New Ptul Tu~..:: Cclll Culh , J (.' loyw.un.
Townto . Ju ~tm Wnght. Torootu. t:m. Mtlhn,m.
lkalh\1lh: J~ 7..t.•:tkcs. Sh:ld)'stdc. S~nll June' New
Phtl Tusc Ccnt C:tth . Jcrcow Wl.'sl. New' M.11l1·
mora~ Fronucr Tommy Mdl!'llt. Be:dlw 1IIC. Ron
B,lkcr llndpC)'l\lrt : Jnsh WJIIts. (,1,111, M1kc Knhck.
lk lt.airc St John: Matt Gntt1th. lor011h•. Ryun
Durant 7.anesvJIIc Ro~r:tns · En.:: l3itlkolcr. Stra\·
burp . Nathan Wi'lmcr Bowerston Conmton Valley.
Jim fi~hl'r Dridgcpon: TrnvJs Wtlh;tm~. Shadylldl.'
Daw Wojtas T(ll'onto· Shawn M•JI'il!f New M:~ta·
n'!Ofa~ Froot•a. Heath Hurst. Strnsbol!. C!i:td Mllfklc
BnwcntC'In ConoUon V:alle~ . Bobby Petras To"foutu
Ekm!lr Jackson. Ca,.hz: Mac Otildres~ . Nc"' M&lt;~ta·
mor&lt;t~ Fmntk-r:
Michael Gillis Ctn Coun1ry D:ty. Jusun Staten
Tri:Ki Brannon G:antz DcGrall R1wrstde . Kl'llh
So;rwlkr CJn Lockl:tnd Brad Pulfcr. lkGmff RI\'Cr·
~!de: lbct~s Walker Ud::ar¥tlle. D:.mu:n Jones.
Cednr\ Jlle. Lee Mrl~§ . Nt&gt;w M1run1· lucas Suerd•cl.;.
llrndford. Brock Swong~r. ~Gmff RJve~tdc . Gre~
Habcggt&gt;r. Ctn Summtt Coun1ry Day. N1ck S..'hl:ap·
p1. Ccdarvillt'!: Ste\e Ronch S. Charleston SE. Bn·
l\n Cro~swh11c . Ydlow Spnn@s. •
Jeremy CorcOfan M:~rion Cath Nick Snyder.
Lm~~:asler Frshcr Cath ; Paul Nl!gele. Ncwnrk Coth ..
Nt~· k Rausch Mllford Ctr. Fairbank!: Nalc Brown.
Morral R1dgc:dnle. Matt Hnnsen. Danvalk . Jar ~d
Whnc:sJde. MJifordCtr. Farrlxml!o. Derek Nicol Milford Cu. F:urbanks. Dan L:uagdoo. Da"'·dlc . OJris
McCandlish. Lancash:r F1shc:r Cath.; Mall M~KI'n­
!tc. Ncwnrk Cath . Andy RJckeus. Mom~l Rid~~ale .
Ioc AJello. Laocasler Fisher. CIUh. Mike CostanlO
Col A(ad . Kevm Hardy. Millersport. Se:~n Sutter.
Col Grandview Hts.. David Oranc. Malford Cu. Fairbanb: Andy Lipp. Lam:aster Fuller Couh . Lynn
Lyons Danville. Iu sttn Gnmbill. New Alb.1ny·
lint Bcyke. St Htnry: 0\nd Wierhen Delphos
Jefferson. Mnn Quellh.om New Bremen F..rk
Schild, Norwnlk St Pnul: Scou ~nfer. Monrorvtlle:
Ben SchmJc:sing, New Bremen: Rodney Muh ·
lenk.amp, St. Henry: Shnun Geise. Delphos St
John' s: N11than DaVis. Pandorn·Gilboa Con:y Snydtr. Arhnp.ton:

.....

Al~•s

MICHAEL ASH

. JASON WRITESEL

VAllEY
JOHN DANICKI. RICHMOND UALE SE
Derek Ca m b~ Mogndort': Joe M c Andr~w.
GREG SCHRADER. RICHMOND DALE SE .
Columbi~na Neil Fu~on Sebflnj!. . Chn s Retl'han .
JASON WRITESEL. RACINE SOUTHERN;
Mogadvre G~I.'F- Hrardin South1ngton 01nlkL-r. Tim
MIKE WILSON. WILLOW WOOD SYMMES
SJurp.tSS Lilwcllvilll.' Vmu~ Perry l..nwellvJIIt Steh
VALlf.Y. CHRIS GALLAGHER. FRANKLIN
Nie!iau ~ Dalton Chns S~hnmlt MdJooald Aryn
FURNACE
GREEN.
JOE
FlANNERY.
B~·r~ . D:~lwn: Shl\un Millt•r Mll\l!tnl Ridj!l.' S t c~o!
PORTSMOUTH EAST. BRIAN MILLER. WATERDurbm M~Oonald . Poul A!tl}mnic CCllumbmna.
FORO, ADAM KELLER. HEMLOCK MILLER.
IJn'll:k K~l1enbnch. Lcctoma D :~n Kt'ttcrmM. Bcrltn
JAROD LLOYD. RICHMOND DALE SE. HEATH
HOWDYSHELL
HEMlOCK
MILLER : Ctr We~lcrn Res Josh 'Jrt'Jmh Dnltf'ln. N1~k Gal l!•. M~DI~n.tld. JtXI Cnnl11na M1ner:tl Radp_c: A mho·
MICHAEL ASH. RACINE SOUTHERN; RUSTY
ny Malllr~ a Wmdlmm Sh:tllt' Mear.Jc. ~cwnm .
SMITH. FRANKliN FURNACE GREP".N: LUKE
John Hak ol:~. Fmrporl Harhur H:llll1ng. Bmn
DANia. PORTSMOUTH NOTRE DAME· PAT
Pru.:h.1 Cuy,1 Ht ~ . Mtd!al.'i Rnbtn~11 n Ru:hmond
McDAVID. FRANKLIN FURNACE GREEN: JOSH
H• ~ . Brul1: G:v.dc~· kr . lndcrwndcnL·c: Mau Dmric!i.
McC LELLAND. GLOUSTER TRIMDLF. WES
Ne""bury. o~,c Suva. G ~ tc~ Mtlls Gilmuur. Bn:an
WOOD. RICHMOND DALE SE· JA COB
EMMETI. PORTSMOUTH NOTRF. DAME. Durn~ . lndcpcndcnce. Mikc R1x·hc Gmcs Mill\
DEREK HAMMOND. PORTSMOUTH EAST. Gilmuur. N1ll P:~t1.:1k1 ~ H. 1~ hmn nd Hts: Ralph
ANDY MESSER PORTSMOUTH EAST MATT l'n'l.'m.m. R1dvmmd Ht~ . Gf'l.·~ Rudolph . Gate~ M1lls
CASTLE. RICHMOND DALE SC IJr\N IEI. Gt lmuur. Mall Pamon. l..ur.un CadJ lkmn Rnllml!
JONES. HEMLOCK MILLER BRAifCr\RI't:N- , l .nrpurt H.u-hu1 H :~nlJn)! . At!.un C.Jn'11rtl No!whuty
l ... 1~h W;lrrtCr. l.nrarn C:1th . Rrt•tr Munn Nl'whury
TER WILLOW WOOD SYMMES. VAU.I:Y
J u~· Klwmhl'rJ! . Gmc~· Mill ~ Gtlnmur
Clm~
STEVE QUEEN. MERCERVILU: S. GALUI\:
KIRK MANNON WILLOW WOOO SYMMJ:S Crnftl'lll'l:k. Cuy:1 Ht ~

UCLA was overpowered by North
C.1rolina, which shot 63 percent from
the lield and outreboundcd the Bruins 45-28 .
Five Tar Heels scored in double
figures. Ed Cota finished with 14,.
while Makhtar Ndiaye and Ademola
OkulaJa each had 12 for Carolina,
whtch will play Seton Hall tn Fn-

day's title game.
minute left in the lirst ~all'.
"We were very unselfish, and
Baron Davis scored 13 pmnts and
that's what we have to he 10 he a J.R. Henderson added 12 for UCLA,
good team, " Guthndgc said.
which shot 41 percent from the licld.
North Carolina broke the game
No. 19 Louisville 75
open early in the second quarter with
Hofstra 66
a 12-0 run for a 34-20 lead. The Tar
At Bayamon, Puerto Rico, freshHeels later scored 14 stratght points man Marques Mayhin scored 22
to build a 50-29 advantage with a points as the Cardmals held ofl the

Athens County Shrine Preview set for tonight
Four two period scrimmages will
be played on tonight at the 32nd
annual Athens County Shrine Club
boys basketball preview at Athens
High :&gt;chool's McAfee Gymnasium.

Ttckets for the game arc priced at
$4 each and arc available from any
Athens Cnunty Shnnc Cluh memher
or at the d\'or.
The schedule of games 1s Federal

Hockmg v, . Logan at 7 p.m , Vinlon
County vs. Tmnhlc at 7:45 p.m.
Alexander vs. Meigs at K·30 p.m,
and AI hens vs. Ncbonvillc-York al
&lt;J: 15 p.m.

Lady Marauder varsity cagers to play RVHS
Marauder head coach Ron Logan
The Meigs Marauder girls basketball team will open up the 1997- is entering his 14th sca.,on at the helm
98 basketball season on Saturday of the maroon and gold. Despite havnight with a non-conference game at mg only one senior~ Logan welcomes
hack six letter winners from last year
River Valley

led by all-TVC hoR&lt;Jrublc mention
selection Triciu Davis.
,

Thl! lip-otT lnr the reserve ~mnc ts

6p.m.

In Memory
Thanksgiving Day_
195Z
M.H.S. 49 P.H.S. 1Z
45 Years
It svtms like
yuttrday.

'

I

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

301 E. MAIN ST.
MON -FRI.
9-8

Flymg Dutchmen.
Louisvtllc (1·0) twice opened
douhlc-digit leads, only 10 have Hofstra swrm hack each tunc. With
Louisvtlle lcadmg 48-45 m the thtrd
quarter, Maybin hit'a-lhree-pointer to
thwart the last Hofstrli rally.
Roberto Gulttcns led Hnlstra (I·
2) With IK)l&lt;linl&lt;.
The Cardmals Will meet Illinois in
he sct.:ond rouml

God Bless All

'

P1cifir Dl~l~len

Central Divi~ion
Gn:rn Bay~.
. 9 l 0 7~0 .lll'l :!.l-'
Minnesola ........ .
K ~ 0 b61 21-' 1t&gt;1
Tamru Bny ....... ..
....K -1 0 M7 ~-'.:! IIJ.:!
0etf04t
.. • ..
...... 7 6 0 .!'iJM .l21 HO
. Chicago ...
... 2 II 0 ~~~!I~ .H?
x·SllnFran~r~c,• ...

~I.I&amp;!lf

Dalln~

l!a.!!lern Diviston

110. Sr

By JIM CLARKE
Lavin and the team," said North CarANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - lt olina coach Bill Guthridge. "[ think
was one of the lowest points m if they get the othcrtwo back, ihey'll
UCLA's long and glorious b:tskctball be good. They'll he a national conhistory.
tender with McCoy and Johnson."
The Bruins. who have won II
An lawn Jamison scored 23 points
national championships and pro- and Vince Carter added 22 as the Tar
duced such superstars as Kareem Heels (4-0) manhandled the Bruins.
Abdui-Jabbar and Btll Walton, were
Still, Lavin saw encouraging signs
manhandled m their season-opener from his players.
Thursday night at the Great Alaska
"The thing I liked about 1hc team
Shootout.
is they stayed together," Lavin said.
'fhc 109-68 loss to No. 4 North "No pnc pomted fingers , no one
Clll'olina was the second-worst de teat made excuses, no one pouted."
in UCLA history, just bchmd last
" [just don't want to see our playyear's 48-point loss at Stanford.
crs drop their heads," he added. "It
The No. 7 Bruins had an excuse: doesn't matter if you fall down, if you
They had to play without starters gel up."
Jclani McCoy and Kris Johnson,
In the only o1her game involving
who were suspended for violating a Top 25 team, No. 19 Louisville beat
athletic dcpanment rules. But the Hofstra 75-66 at the Puerto Rico
, defeat was s~ill embarrassing.
Shootout.
Johnson and McCoy both report"We obviously had them out·
manned. I felt sorry for coach (Steve) edly fat led drug tests. Without them,

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Antona

NCAA Division I
:men's scores
•

••

NHL standings

WA.Shington at Bo11on, 7 p.m
Colorndo :11 Carolino.. 1 p.m.
St Louis or N.Y lsl11nders. 7 p m.
Phrllldelphiu111 Tampa Bny, 1 p m
q;'.Montreal at Pinsburdl. 7..'0 p m
C1ucago at Onawa, 1::l0 p.m .
Vancouwer n1 Toronto. 7 10 p m
Phoeni .~ m Dalln~. !! p n1.
An.~hctm nt C;1lgury. 10 ..\0 p m.
New Jcrsty 111 Uu Angele~. 10·:40 p m.

OrttnH: Ench-Geori!e Lyras. l.&lt;,wcll\•tlll!, ;'i~
foot-tl 178 pou nds. Senior. (."hn~ Stcwnrt.
Bc:alls\'ille ~·II. 189. Sr.: Ryan Jmll!s. N~:wnrk Cmh .
6·0. 16!'i. Sr . T~vDr Moyer. Cre~dim:. 6·0. 170. Sr..
Gret Gr01hnus. Delphos St. Juhn ' ~. 6-7. 260, Sr l.itll'·
~n-D:md Boeckman. An5onin. (,. J. 1')~ . Sr..
NICK ARNOLD LANCASTER FISHER CATH . 61 270. SR.: J11~1in S!!!f:ankk Colurn\liana. (1-l . 19'i.
Sr . John Shal!crnss lndl'pcnd!:nn~. ~·II. 1~). Sr.
Man Z.,!in. St Henry 6-7. 1 .~0.Jr Br.uu.lnn Huchn.
Ddpho~ St John'5. tJ.~ ~JO. Sr Ouoncrtl.lcl-Milc
Kl o;: l:.~r Newark O uh 6· 1. 1~~ . Sr 0.,~~ ~-Mikc
Ott C1n Locktnnd 'i-9. 17~ . Sr. Chml SdJult~·
Ddphns St John·~ :'i-11 IlK&gt; Jr P:11 Muuulh• hk.lc·
~ndcnrc :V). 110 Sr Dnn l' ugh NPI'\\'.Jik St. l•:1ul
'i· !0 200. Sr K•ckl'r- Andrcw M.uun. Luc,L.-.. (,•.1

27-0 St.: Eric Charm~y.I~ncr . 6-2. 210.
St : Oc:vin Dempsey. Delphos Sr John'• 6-1. 200. Sr :
Dan Bc:cmn EJmore Woodrnorr. ~.JQ. 210. Sr Unc·
bnckers-7.M Shu1ler. Bellaire Sr. Iolln. ~ - 10 . IK~ .
Sr : BRADYnACE. GLOUSTER TRIMBLE. 6·2
210. JR : Jnson Src:fanick. ColumbtMII. 6-l. 19!'i. Sr..
Shnwn Gninrs. Cedarvtlle. S-10. 175. St.: Scott
St"hreiW, CuyD. Hts . 6-1. 1\Kl. Sr. Sam Wnghc. Dola
HMdin Nonhern. 6-1.220. Sr Backs-ANDY CON·
NELL. LANCASTER FISHER c,o;rH .. 6-0. loll
SR . Collin Hardwick. Cadiz. 6·2. 180. SJ.. A J Saul.
McDonnld 6-2 IM. Sr . Michael OI&gt;L'zck . lndcpcn·
tknce. ~-9. 16~ . Sr : Mikt MIMTOw. Norwalk St. Paul.
~-10. IK~ . Sr Pum~r- Kylc Sheer. Bmdfllrd. 6-4.
16~ . Sr
Olfen!Uvl' pl1yer ol tht- yt-mr: Chad Schuhc.
lklpho5 St Jo~n · s
Dc:ft-nJivt-pllyt-~ofthl' yr•r: Phil Rydl-r. Dl\J tnn: Jason Stdamcl. Columhi~na
Caachn ot tht vt-u: Bob Moni~. Tonmm:
Doug GI'CI!n. Morr&gt;~l Ridf!Cdnlc: Par McKenrick Kinl.md

North Carolina downs UCLA 109-68; Louisville also wins

Centnl Division

Saturday's pmos

•
••

NFL standings
I.umN
y Je•• .... , .

Milwaukee:,,, Orlmdo. 7 30 p m.
Cl.EVElAND 011 Olarlotte, 7.30 p.m.
Ch•c:t~.o allnd•ana. 7.JO p.m
•, New York 111 Odr011. 8 p m.
Toronto nt Dallas. II·JO p m
.,
Minnewra at Dc:nvl!t'. 9 p m
Golden State: :u Utah, 9 p.m.
Hou11on al Portland. I 0 p.m.
Sao.:ramc:nto 111 Sc:llttk. 10 p m.
Ntw Jc:uty vs L A (llpptn al Annhe!n\,
·
Cahf , I0·3o p m

1

Hockey
Eastern Dil'l!ion

2

Phoenut at Boston. 7 p m.
L.A. Uaken ut Philadelphl.L 7 10 p m

'

Saturday's games

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

L.A l..akm 118, Boston 103
Atlanm 109. Toronto 104 (2 OT)
CLEVELAND 9!'i. Phlladelphin 89
Miam1 I:W, Orlando 60
Portland 96. MtnncSOia 90
Milwauk~ 101, Vancouver82
Washin~ton 118 San AntOJUO 1M
Phocnt~ I I I. New Jersey 99
L.A. Chpper1 99, S:~er.unc:nto97

&lt;

'

~

Monday's game

Here's the 1997 Assoetated Press
Division VI all-Ohio high school
football team, based on the recommendations of a state media panel :
First team

6-~ .

Top 25 college basketball continues

OVER THE TOP- Tenneequarterbeck Steve McNair (9)
leap• over the pile of hi1 teammate~ and Dalles Cowboy• to
score a touchdown In the rr..t
quarter ol Thursday'• Thanklglvlng Day game In Irving Texe~
where the OI11r1' 27-14 'victorY
put them In ebove-.500 territory
(AP)
'

Vancouver niBoston, noon
N.Y. b landm al Philadelphia, lp m.
Colorado a1 Ronda. 4 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 1:JO p.m
N Y. RIUigc:ts at Buffalo. 7 JO p m.
Monrreolat Detroit, 7 · ~ p.m
Anuhe1m 111 Edmonton. 9 r m.
New Ieney at Still Jose. 10· ~ Jl m

went 9-1 and ended up No. 7 in the
poll.
Stefanick. who was also joined on
the team by twin brother Justin, is a
6-1, 195-pound senior. He had two
sacks, 12 tackles for minus yardage,
intercepted two passes and recovered
two fumbles for a team that held the
opposition to less than 2 points a
game.
. A Toronto team that was I -9 in
1996 was turned into a 9-1 squad that
made the playoffs under Morris '
guidance. McKenrick and Green performed similar magic, with the former going from 4-6 to 7-3 and the latter tying a school record with six victories.

'

•\

Robenson picked off Aikman's
pass into double coverage intended
for Stepfret Williams and returned lhe
ball 48 yards before Aikman husded
over to knock him out of bounds at
the Dallas II.
"That interception got the fire and
the mom~ntum going for us," Lewis
said. "We got rolling for there. We
(See OILERS OP Page 5)

Today's pmes

Green Bny at Mnmc:sota. 9 p m

Football

I
I ';

Wednesday's scores

' •
'

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

2

I
~

Puerto JUco Shootoul-fim round
Ucorgta Tech 62. Alabamo 60
llltnCiis 70, Wtchita St. ~7
Looisvlllc: 7!'i, Hofs!rn 66 •
St. Iohn'a 91 Americnn U, P R 81

';

PKifk IM\'illon

:~Ilk ...............

~·

!ia

WESTERN CONFERENCE

. lam
:' "Sun An1omo

St Louis at Washington. I p m
San Frnncisco at Kans:as Cny, I p m
A.tlnnla nr Seattle:, 4 p.m
Mmmr o.t Oakland. 4 p m.
Pittsbllrgh nt Anton:a. 4 r m
Tampa Bay at Ntw York Gumls 4 p m
Iknver nt San Otego. Rp m

North Carohnu 109, UCLA 68
Seron Ha1167. Altt5ka·AnchoragC S7 (QT)

EASTERN CONFERENCE
~
.. 10
9
, 9

there• I don't know. We have 10 days
(Carolina on Dec. 8), and we'll see if
we can get our wounded well."
Switzer said the Cowboys won't ·
just go through the motions.
"Nobody quits on this team
because it has been places no other
team has ever been,'.' he said of Dallas' three Super Bowl titles in the
1990s.
Aikman, who took a muscle relaxant to calm back spasms incurred during warmups, was unusually wild.
Entenng Thursday's game, he 'was
the second-least intercepted passer in
the NFL.
But he refused to make excuses.
"I don 't attribute that (the spasms)
to the interceptions," Aikman said.
" However, in the locker room, they
did
me
and locked me up."

Gnat Alaska Shootout-ftnl round

NBA standings
•

"We haven 't played well all season long," Aikman satd "I think we
have the talent. and the effon has
been there. MIStakes keep killing us."
, The five-time NFC East champt·
ons dropped to 6-7.
Darryll Lewis mtercepted two
passes and jarred the ball loose from
Eric Bjornson, allowing Marcus
Robenson a 42-yard fumble return
for a touchdown. Robertson also
intercepted a pass as Tennessee pro·
duced five turnovers agamst the mis·
take-prone Cowboys.
Dallas coach Barry Switzer called
the game "an embarrassment."
"You can't beat anybody if you
have five turnovers," he said. " I
don't know if we can get into the
playoffs now. I don' t
to figure
that out right
9-6 get in

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

AP names Division VI all-Ohio football teams

Page4

Lions hammer Bears 55-20 By HARRY ATKINS
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP)- Eleven
weeks. Autumn comes leaves tum
brillian~ lhen fall off the.trees. Maybe
nature could learn something from
Barry Sanders. His brilliance never
seems to fade.
"My man Barry came through
again," Detroit center Kevin Glover
said after Sanders destroyed the
Chicago Bears on 11mnksgiving Day.
"He ignited us with a big run, and
from there, everyt htng kind of
clicked."
Sanders became the second-lead·
ing rusher m NFL history with a 167yard, three-touchdown performance
as the Lions kept their shm playo(f
hopes alive with a 55-20 comeback
win.
Sanders, who had rushed for a
total of only 53 yards in the first two
games, now has I ,594 yards on the
strength of I I straight games of 100
or more yards, a streak that began
against the ~ears in Week 3. In the
process, Sanders moved past Eric
Dickerson (13,259) into second place
on the all-time NFL rushing charts
with 13,319 career-yards, and now
trails only Walter Payton (16,726).
" I haven't had to time to really
analyze it. but yeah, I guess this is the
best streak of my career," Sanders
said. "A lot of that is because this is

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 28, 1997

(614) 992·6614. (800) 837·1094

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'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Calgary 2-2.
Senators 3, Capitals 1
At Kanala, Ontario, Magnus
Arvedson and Wade Redden scored
80 seconds apart in the tirst penod as
the Ouawa Senators ~napped a mnegame winless streak.
Radek Bonk added an empty-ncl
goal with 18 seconds left in the game
for Ottawa. whtch was 0-8- 1 in ils
previOus nine games, including five
straight losses at home.
Goaltender Ron Tugnull stopped
24 shots for lhe Senators, who have
beaten the Capitals five straoght
t1mes

Kings 2, Blues 2 (OT)
AI St. Louos , Pierre Turgeon
returned after nussing 22 games wuh
a broken ann and scored his first goal
of the season for the Blues .
Pavol Demnru added a goal and
an assost tor St. Louis, while Luc
Robataille and Jozef Stumpe! scored
for 1he Kmgs.
The Blues are winle~s m theidast

four games (0-3-1 ), while the Kings
"re 4-2- 1 in the or last seven .
Blaekhawks 2
Flames 2 (OT)
At Calgary, Alherla, Theoren
Fleury scored the tying goal wnh
1·20 left in the 1h1rd penod to salvage
1he lie for 1hc Flames
Fleury one-limed a shot past an
out-of-posiuon Jeff Hackeu. Mtchacl
Nylander scored Calgary \ othet
goal.
James Black and Gary Su1er
scored for the Blackhawks.

AP honors Euclid's
Fisher as Ohio's
Mr. Football for 19.97

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) ""
Antoine "•,ony"
Fisher has made
qulle a name lor himself thts season .
Exactly what that name ts, however.
os open lo queslion.
"A lot of newspapers call me
Antoine and Tony, but Antoine ts
what my mom likes lo sec," he said.
You can also call him the lllh
annual winner of the Assocoalcd
Press Mr. Football award, emblemaile of lhc top high school player '"
Ohto.
Foshcr, a 6-foot-1, 203-pound
semor tailback, carried l8611mes for
2,130 yards (11.5 per auempt) and
scored 40 touchdowns. The yards and
the touchdowns surpassed the school·
records set by a two-time Mr. Foolball, Robert Smuh.
Smilh, now a star tailback wilh lhe '
Mmncsola Vikings, won !he award in
1988 and 1989. Euchd becomes the
first school ever represented by two
Mr. Football wmners.
Fishcr's career has risen and fallen like the stock market As a sophomore, he gamed more than 1.600
yards and was first-team all-Ohio. A
year ago, baltling a nagging leg
injury, he mustered half of thai.
But he bounced back thos year
w•lh a huge season whole lcadmg
Euclid to a 9- I record, a No. 10 rank ing 10 the final regular-season AP poll
and a playoff berth
Fisher has been able to find his
own noche at Euclid, whoch al so produccd currenl Ohoo State taolhack
Pcpc Pearson in addilion 10 Smith
" I'm a mt&lt; of them both," Fishersatd. "lcanbringalmlcpowcrand
I'm fast for my stzc, so ol's a combonauon of Rohert and Pepc. Roher!
Wll.S a slasher WhO had gOod SIZC and
Pepe was quock and fast. I think I can
do both."
It's instructive thai he frequently
goes by his full lirsl name because
thai is hts mother's wish. HIS mother, Hcrrnctta Duncan, has raised
Tony and 1wo younger siblongs (a
brother, Ricardo, 10, and sosler, Mtkila, 9) by herself She works as a

OSU's Stringer
may miss
entire season
COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP)
Damon Stringer, Ohio State's starting
poi~t guard and ·leadmg scorer last
sea50n, may miss the enlire sca.·•;;on
with a stress fracture in his lower
bacl&lt;.
poet or&lt; had hoped Stringer would
be ~eady 10 play by January, but
recant ICSIS have shown hiS hack has
not)u:aled.
~lringer, a junior from Cleveland,
averaged 15 points per game last season: Coach lorn O'Bnen satd
Wednesday he has not decided
whe!her to redshirt Stringer.
'1They don't wan I lo JUSt put me
back out !here and hope thmgs are
gos?g to be OK. They want 10 be
suro. u Stringer sa1d.
Ohio State, which has won its first
1~ games this season, has had only
seven scholarshtp players available
so /ar. 0' Brien kicked lhree other
pla~ers off the team this fall, including two slarlers.

senior sccrelary ala plant thai makes
engmes lor lighter planes.
"H e ·s a super k1d..
, saou·' Euclt d
athletics dtreclor Spencer Kane.
•H •
3
d
· e s gol a .3 gra e-poinl average
and he's never been '" any type ol
trouble Hos mom has a loghl hold on
Tony. Even though he's 18, Tony
docsn 'I dnve because his mother
doesn 'olct hom dnvc.lfTony docsn'l get good grades, he doesn 't play. "
There's plenty for Tony to do.
When he's not running track or play·
ing football, lifting wcoghts or workmg on condtltonmg, he's worktng al
hos pari-lime job at a drugs10re or
averaging 20 points, 10 rebounds,
four steals and live assosls a game for
the-Euclid varsity basketballleam.
He satd he has narrowed his college choice lo three schools: Ohio
State, Notre Dame and Mochigan
State. Even though Smtih and Pearson both wentlo Ohio Stale, Fosher
is sloll weoghing the choice.
" A IOI of people have told me I
should follow them," he saod "But
I met Robert al Ohio Stale's summer
football camp and he 10ld me to keep
an open mtnd and make sure I'm
comfortable with my decision. So
that's what I' ll do"
No maltcr where he goes. lhe
compansons with Euchd's other great
backs hkcly won't end .
"He 's a very &gt;lrong kid ,'' Kane
said, "He's physically ahead of
whc~~ Rober! .tnd Pepc were al h1 ~
age.
Ftshcr was selected lor the honor
in ballolong by,, mcdoa panel from
across 1hc stale

28, 1997

Fl'lday, November 28,

1917

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r·

The Dally Sentinel • Page

AP names Division V sii·Ohlo football teams

Stars record 4-1
win over Coyotes;·
Senators beat Caps
By The Auoc!Med Press
New goaltender, same result for
the Dallas Stars.
Manny Fernandez made 31 saves
in his first NHL start of the season as
the Stars won their fourth straighl
game, 4-1 overthe Phocm• Coyoles
on Thursday night.
Fernandez. recalled from the
International Hockey League on Nov
14, didn'l find oul he was starting
until two hours before the openmg
faceoff.
"When (coach Ken Hitchcock)
told me. lwmed it on mcnlalry. " said
Fernandez, who had made only four
previous stans m the NHL
Hitchcock decided to go wuh
Fernandez after Ed Belfour sa1d he
was ured after stanong the Stars ' previous II games.
"He (Fernandez) is a good goaltender," Hitchcock said. "Manny is
the type of goaltender thai if you
don 't score on hom early, you're not
going 10 score "
Jere Lehtonen scored two goals for
the Stars, who lead the NHL with 17
wins and 38 pomls. Dave Reid and
Bob Basscn scored the other goals for
Dallas, whoch won despite bcmg
oulshol 32-16.
Keith Tkachuk scored for the
Coyotes, who were 0-for-6 on the
power play and lost for only the second ume on 1he1r lasl mne home
games (6-2-1).
Elsewhere in the NHL, Ottawa
beal Washington 3·1, Los Angeb
toed S1. Louos 2-2, and Chtcago tied

Frldlly, November

Southeastern teams see 31
players get various honors

EDDIE ROBINSON SR.

Robinson to coach
last game Saturday

Bayou
Classic
tickets
disappear
on first
sale day
By MARY FOSTER
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Fiftysix years after Eddie Robinson
coached hos ftrst game at Grambling,
he finally arrives al his last one on
Saturday.
Grambling Stale will lake on
Southern University in the Bayou
Classoc and Robinson, the winningest
coach tn college football history, will
coach hos flllal game.

..
~

iiiiiiiiftiiiiiiillliiiii~~~~~W;~~i~p~·~l~~.m~~6~p:.m~.~~~~~~~C~~~~~Q~~~~~~~~C;u:pd~~~~~~~S~u~ndd.a~y~~~~~~-~ O~a.~m;.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~=-::~------------_:~

Fint team
Brown. Bwnes'lille; John Robuoon.. CMd Wasta.
Offtnse: EndJ-Kevin 1Jot1U1, S1dqcy L..cbman, Buckeye Trilll; STEVE CECIL. HANNIBAL RIV •
.5-foot-10, 170 pounds, Junior. Tony Hiser. Hamler ER LOCAL. Anaelo Canella, Steubenville CACh.~
Pntrick Hmry, 6-4, 190, Sr , Bea Miller. Rocky RJv- John Scllumachef, Woodifc}d MQtli'Uie Cent: Chris
er Luth Weac. 6-4, 218, Sr U~Ben W~e~hold- Shltkb. We\ln1lle; NATHAN KERN. BEVERLY
er. Veuaillet, 6-&lt;4, liS, Sr., James Vahnsky. Aman· fT. FRYE; Cn&amp;aCIInlpbe\1, Barnes..,.llk. JR. Moore.
d.ll-Cklll'creck, 5·11, 230, Sr., Ron BurJtSs, A5hlimd Old Wa.sh Buckeye Trail. J\lstin Dol.lglas. Wellsville:
Cre1!VItw, 6-*, 27!1. Sr.; Kcn:z.y Kcm. Libeny Ctr.. DUSTIN NAU. CALDWELL: ANTHONY WAR!1-10. 175, Sr : Kevia Hodloo.:k, Sulll'lllll Bhtck Riv· REN; BEVERLY FT. FRYE. Chad B•r;&amp;io,
er, 6-~. 24!1, Sr Qulll1etb~~tk-Brya.n Hieber, Hnm- Steubenville Coth.: Ryan Anael. Sua.u('rtck Gnrler 'Ptltnck Henry, 6·3, 190, Sr Backt-MIIl1t Ony, awny,
.
Cln N CclleaeHtll !1·1 1.17!1.Jr.,ErinPerdue.Ccl.
CN'dWmm.Su.:lneyLetunan,SennShaller.Cin '
Hartley. ~·7. 160. Jr.: Rnlph Ch1lds, Orwell Grund Deer Pwir., Jonathnn B~ow, Milldlc10wn Ftnw11.:k:
Vallty, ~-10, 221. Sr , Kns Gerken, Hamler Pntnck Conrod H1ndcn, Cm. Mancmom. Joho ~tullou.
Henry. 6-J, 18S, Sr.. Stan Borchers. Vena.illes. 6-2, W11Hamsbura. Brnndotl Sitch:. Cin. N. College Hill :
200, Sr. K1cker-&amp;ot!Affolter,Afl'lllnda.Cienn:reek. Adllm KcndiJ. ArcDnum, N1..:k Groll. Cin Made1r.a:
S-9, I ~li . Sr
JutllnA.ult, Calion Northmor: KC'o'm 8oTy CeoDefense: Uneme~Ray Grewell, Newccmtr· terbufJ;Andy Mc&lt;:imnis, Marion Pltalant, Ryan W1l·
ttown, li-11, 210, Sr , KeVIn Subler, Versrulleli. 6-0, i\11, Col. ReAdy, On\OC W1lson. Johnllown-Monrw,
170 Sr : Erie lkcker. Defiance Tinon, 6--2, 22.~. Sr , Andy BenUey, Marion Pltasant: Olns Covtrt, MuEnc N1chclas. Jockson -M11ton, 6-4, 240, Sr. Lme- ion Plen.uuM: Eddie Frumll. ~burg: M.llt H:tUer,
bockers-Bmd M1ller, Amanda-Ciearaeek, 6-0. 11)), Johnstown-Monroe. Chad Deny. Amnndtl·
Sr; Joe Arnold, S1dney ~hman, 6-J, 210, Sr.. Mike Clean:~k; Dust1n Goldsbury. Col RtiiLiy: Will
DnriD8, CMey, 6-!1. 220. Sr, Mau Zuercher, API11e · Adruns. Johnstown· Monroe, Ryan. Rotn. Marion
Creek Wuynedale, 6-2,214, Sr., AI Rubosky, Orwell Plensant t
Grand Vnlley, ~-10, 180, Sr Ba('ks-RICHIE
Braan Riedm.Uer, Gibsonburg. Todd Hurta
BELVILLE. COAL GROVE DAWSON-BRYANT Bucyrus Wynford: Zaeh Smuh, Gibsonburg. Mau
.5·8, 145, SR., N1ck HIIJWll', M!Uion Pleasnnt, 5-9: Wtll'lelm, Hamler Pnlrick Henry: Jim Smeltzer. A:.h160, Jr., Jeue Smith, UbenyClr, 6-1 , 11!1, Sr: Muri: hmd Crestview Ke..,.m Bosu~lman, Arthboh1: Thnd
Bunn, Columbus Gro..,.e, 6-3, 180, Sr., CLINT Forsthoefel, Coldwnter, Wade: S~hnitkey. Archbold;
MIUER, CROOKSVILLE. 6·1, 170, SR.; Nick RyM Pd~rson. Hnmter Pntnck Henry: Ben Frcm:
Mele, Warren Kennedy, !'i-8, 150, Sr Punter-Andy boogh, BLI~yrus WyJlfMI; R1cky Fl!ftt:1, Syenmore
Groom, Col Hr.tlcy, 6-2. 180, Sr.
Mohawk, John Jackson G1bsonbul): Mttrk Brun.R.
Offtnain player or lht ytllr: Bryun Hu.'bt:r.
Culdw.ater, Mllo:eChester. Sycamore Mnbnwk:
Hamh:r Pamck Henry
Matt Km1\ey. B;unbndge Pnlftl Vulley: Si.:ou

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hamler Patrick Henry quanerback
Bryan Hieber and AmandaCiearcreek linebacker/running back
Brad Miller grabbed the top accolades on the 1997 Associated Press
Division V all-Ohio high school
foolball team announced Wednesday.
Hieber, a 6-foot-3, 190-pound
senior, is the offensive player of the
year, while Miller, a 6-0, 200-pound
semor, made lhe first unil as the
defensive player of the year.
The coaches of the year were Jim
Henson of Orwell Grand Valley and
Chris Kubbs of Manon Plea~a91.
Southeastern Ohio teams I{a(j 31
players honored, tncludtng Belpre's
Willie Osburn and Josh Strothers,
Coal Grove's Richie Belville and
Brandon Keeney, Fort Frye's Nathan
Kern and Anthony Wmen and Oak
Hill's Andy Orender.
Hieber passed 236 times and was
intercepted just once. He completed
Derensin pla)'tr or the year: Brud MdiL:r.
155 of his throws for 2,398 yards and AnuandJl..Cie.an:ret:k.
COIKhnoiUte )'tar: J1m Hensun, Orwell Gr:mU
26 touchdowns. He also guided
Valley Chns Kubbs Munun Pleasant
Patrick Henry to the No.3 spot in the
'
S ' d
'
eco.n team .
final regular season AP poll.
. Offense. Ends-Bnan Hllsch. MnkllelllWn ftnA three-year staner for the Aces, WI~k. 6-0 169. Sr. Dusty Dykstra. Gate~ Mills
Miller was a rock on an A-C defepse Haw.k.en. 6-2. 20~. lr Unc::men-Oan Stmt~m:m. Cm.
Mwsemont, 6·4 260. ~r. Ike Clepper. Bat:~vm. 6-4.
that allowed jusl 28 points all sea- 290 Sr Cr.ug Pohl. S1dney L...ehman. 1'1 · 1 110. Sr .
sons. He had 54 tackles, including II Chip Jakeway. Col Hanley fl-2. 21!1 Sr.. Nmc
S~;hnubhn. Columbus Gro'le. 6-1. 200, Sr B1lll&gt;mk·
sacks. He also recovered four fum- adnlas,
N Lunn S Range. 5-10 2'0. Sr Ou:1rh:rbles and caused three others. He dou- bocb-MIKE GFJiRIG. HANNIBAL RIVER b-0.
185. SR .. CHRIS LUNDY. LUCASVILLE VALLHY.
bled up on offense by rushing for 6-1,
IN~. S~ . Todd M1ller. AppleCret:k W.ayr~-d,dc .
1,061 yards on 121 carries (8.8 ypc) 6·1. 151 Sr.. lelt Walton, G.1h:~ Mtlls H.1wkcn. 'i10. lll'i, Jr 8,a~;k~t-NathM Selk.&gt;r~. New~om.:rstuwn,
and scoring 17 touchdowns.
:'i- 10, ..,17~. Sr. Eri~ Cramer. Woodsri~ld rf1,)!1HlC
Miller woll lead Amanda- Cc:nt .. b-1, IH5, Sr; Mrk IJ.1y. 7'" N ~otlcg(' Htll.
Clearcreek, ranked second in the poll, 'i-11. 17!1. Jr, M:~rcus Colvin Sunumt Stauun Lr~:k1ng Hts, :'i·H, 174 Jr. Joe Cr.lp.l..'r. w~,,, JcOcuun, bmto Fnday's 3:30 p.m. state cham- 0. !YO, Sr • ANDY OR ENDER OAK HILL ~·10
190. SR .. CHUCK FIZlR cHEsAPEAKE. ~. ·
ptonshtp game agamst Loberty Cen- 170 SR k kc M ki:M ' C • R td c; :,· 1110c;'
1 \l1 ~. y,.· ~ · ·
1 ~"~ocr,
S •J· !&gt;I ~ rs- Li
ter.
· r., u '" SJ 1!moll'.........nAn&lt;krs11n• 6-2, IK • Sr
Henson coached Grand Valley to
Dclcnse lll'l&amp;!'mt:n-Jam,lf Stmncu, Spnn~:IIL~Id
Calh
, ~- 10, 210, Sr , R1~k. Orr Bluffttlll, 6-~. 210. Sr .
a 9-0 mark and a 23-game regular- Jun OeiTlJ•sey.
Gllles Mdh H.1wkcn, ~. II . IK~. Jr .
season wmnmg,slreak. The Mustangs NA"Y·k AsNhoftch, Avon ~- 10. I!14, Sr. Lmeb~cl:.crs-:
SA ER. HANNIBAL RIVER ~ - II. 111~. SR .
became the first Ashtabula County JDOUG
WESSON. SARAHSVILLE SHENANteam smce 1981 to make il to the OOAH. 6-1. 2.~0 SR : Ben Gnrbl~. Arc.' anum ~.Q,
16li,Sr.8riiU1Phhprn Vcrs.ullc~.6-1200 Sr.lohn
regional finals.
J.I:IUSl.'l' Col Hanley. 6-0. 1KO Sr Ant.ly S11veus. L!h·
Despite losmg many of the lop erty Cir, 6-0 190, Sr B.~t:ks-Oominick Rh~glc.
players from last year's stale cham- Ar~atlum, C.-I0 165. Sr. S~.'UU ~In len S~rln~t'JCid
Cnlh S-K 160, Sr: Mmk Monlnck Cin Muricmmll
ptonship team, Kubbs regrouped at :'i- 10 IflO Sr · Pac Re1lly Johnslown-Mnnruc 5-10.
Pleasant and guodod the Spartans lo 17~. Sr Pun1cr~- Kyte Rus~her, B.~IIIVIll 6- ~- 11U.
: Truvfs Su.~phcns. OIU W.ash But'kl"yc Tr.1il. fl-2.
a 10-0 mark and the No. I ranking in Sr
! riO Sr
the division.
Special mention

"lthonk its finally hitung people
that this is 11- !he lasl game, the last
ume Coach Rob will be there," said
Grambling athletic dtrector Robert
Piper "ll's a game everyone wants to
be able to say 'I was there."'
The Classic, which is part of a
weekend of events in New Orleans
that include a beauty pageant, parties,
job fair and concerts, IS always sold
Here's the 1997 Assoctated Press
out. This year, the 74,000 tickets
Division V all-Ohio high school
were snapped up almost instanlly.
"Wereachedaselloutlastweek," foolball learn, based on the recomsaid Southern ttckel manager David mendations of a state media panel:
Hawkins. 'The good seats went !he
ftrst day, and the more favorable tickcis went in a mauer of two days."
Southern (9-1) would be enough
to make ltckets scarce for the
Louisiana Superdome contest The
Jaguars can clatm the Southwestern
Athletic Conference championship
by bealtng Grambling - something
they've done for the pasl five years.
They have already wrapped up a slot
in the Heritage Bowl on Dec. 27.
Ordinarily that would be draw
enough. But this year the chance to
sec a bit of htslory when the 78-yearold Robinson closes oul his career
has made tickcls extra scarce.
"I wouldn't miss it," said Jack
Washonglon, 57. "Coach retiring
WBs$6,950
makes il a sentimental journey for a
lot of people mstead of just a game."
1!1!15 MIISI~Isbl Mirage
Slllek Nllllbar Ri069A
Robonson, who started coaching al
• Elcallanl fiJij
•
Rear
Window
Grambling in 1941, has a record of
Defroster
Ecooomi
408- 164- 15. Hos teams have won all
• AMifM Cassette •WaiEq~~~
or part of 17 SWAC titles and eight
black-college naloonal championshops.
Robinson's teams put the tiny .
school from northern Louisiana in the
spotlight. Grambling has sent hundreds of players 10 the pros, including four Hall of Famers and Super
Bowl quarterback Doug Wtlliams.
·- '

TODD FRY. HANNIBAL RIVER LOCAL.
Robtn Jilmes, Newcomersmwn Duke Fun~.
S1eubtnwill~ C:uh , lim H.mc:s, Barncsv1l1~. Ben
Fryt, H1nnibal Rlnr Loc:al; ROB RODGERS.
SARAHSVILLE SHENANDOAH. AnJy Anhcr.
Nl"wcumt:rsrown. Jeremy M1ller. Welho'lillc. Ja!lon
Robens. Wellmlk:: hm Bmlcy Wdlsvilk. Trnv1s

P.O. Box 467,
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10.00 a.m. and 1

)tope Boplln Chon:h (Soulloem)
Pastor: Richard Oliver

370 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m. and 7 p m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.
Frte Will Bapllll Chun:h
• Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Lts Ha:Yman
Slltlday Service-7:00p.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday S&lt;rvice-7:00 p.m

Flnt Soulhem Bo~llll
41872 Pome.roy P1ke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SeN ices. 7:00p.m
Flnl Bopllll Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepoo
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m , 7:00pm
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

M~Gu~km. Columbi;m.a Cn.:stvacw, Oans Zunn~~:r
Apple Crn:k Way111.-dall.! N11;l:. Ru~~o'fs G·trrl!llwtll•

O:wlicld, Kev 1n Schult;, 'v'JI:IIIlil M~tl:ws J.~u~~
· Waltmc. Ma~ 51 Utm Tusluw, M1k1.~ Uuwb. J:ld•;~on·
Mihoo. Andn:w Saurer. Snnthoolllc. Jcft Hl~h . w,1r.
ren Kc:nncdy Kc..,.in M1llcr Vlem 11 M;atbcw~ Bran·

'

'
'
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Jon M1- Rtllll~lown Eri~ Nichol:t\ Jacksun -Mihlln,
N1~k ·toy N linM S R.tngl.' Mit.c Kllrl W.UTcn
KI.'I'IIM!Liy. PI.'1C 81shop. Pcrun5uha Woodrid~e. Jere·
my Qu.l(l, SullivM Rlm:k RI\Ocr Stc..-c Cms11.
Culunlhlarl.l Crestvtcw. Adam A~m11.~hy. N1..owttm
h1lls. Nt~k Kn~tcci;J Sulh~nn Rinck River: M1kc
Mnp.morc. New MHlJh.•hJWil Srnnt~liclll. Enc
Medvc1l, V!l.'nna Matlli.'WI;
Den f-·11111"r. Rn~l!y Rwcr Luih West. Jim
lcnll1n. Bl"dlord Chand. S~lh M:U"Cu~. Oc~chwnod:
Stc'll" Smllh Orwdl Gr:ulll V.dlcy: 1\!tt Syntal'..
Rocky Rtvl"'' l..uth West , Jk;~d l&gt;olan. Orwell Grund

HAiskle Blptlst Church
Rl. 143 just off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m.
• Wednesday Sc,.ices ~7 p.m.

POSSIBLE .

• Poweo Door Locks

•Tiii'Cruee

• AINFM Cassette • Cuslom Clolh lnlenor
• Power WindOWs •lo8jad!

• Only 39,11XI Miles
• Air CordliOn
• Automalic
• Power Locts

Thursday, De~ember 4, 3:00pm-7:00pm
Call for details/appointment (614) 991-0060
Holzer Meig1 Clinic
88 East Memori•l Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wednesday 'Services· 7 p.m.

Rudond Church of God

MI. Moriah BapiiOI
Fourth &amp; Main St , M1ddleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10·45 a.m

'

so 350

I Was $10,950
1996 Chevy s-serl~ Pickup

Slodl Number BT77A
• Ail Cordlk&gt;n
• Tinled Glass
•LS Pkg.
• Alloy Whe~s
• AWFU Cassetle
•wan EQtippa&lt;!

$9950

-·...

Pomtroy Chun:h of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p m
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

'I Was $12,950
1!193 C~evy C·20 Comrslol Van

Pomeroy Wesulde Church or Chrlll
3322\IIChildren's Home Rd.
Sunday School - 11 a.m.

SlocUunbar 1mac

• ~Cord liOn
• Po- W1rd.A.ocks
•4 Capta•'s ChojtS
• Rear Sofa

.....

$19,950
.

Was $22,950

Sloctl Nunbar Tllt01A

•

• Air Condlon

• Aotomalle

·T~Steemg

I

• Power WiKk:IWs
• Power Door Locks

• Cruise Conlrol

A,jOOIII.tic )

•AII/FM Cassette
•TISieemg

• V-BMagrm PIJOOf
• Air Coni:! liOn
• Power WindoWs
• Power Door Lod&lt;s

• TtL'Cn.ise
• Sldi~ Rear Wnoow
• AIJmiltJn Wheels
• l.oodedl

475 South Church Street· Ripley, WV HlX}-8Z2-0417 ·372-2844

....

Ft1day · Sawroay: 9am ·10 pm- SUnday: fiini ·s"j)m

• r.... Tip. r1111 F.n.ara. PfiGwG&lt;Xld ~-~~-. Noll

tart~~Ph~Wtmn.

o

Episcop a l

•

,,. ... ,~

•

-:.:...,-

..
GS92ENC,!!S 1nc.
Bill Qulck.I
......17

•.

.,
'•'

..••
••
:••
..
.. -.·.

Sunday School · lU a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Gnce Episcopal Chufth
326 E. Main St , Pomeroy
Rector Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School10·30 am
~uffee hour following

31057 State Route 32.'1, Lan85vlle
Pastor· Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school • 9:30a.m
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedne!lday prayer service· 7 p.m.

Pastor· Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 11.m
W~rsh1p • II am .

WIJH AWANT AD

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bouom
Sunday School -9:30am
Worship- 10.45 a.m .. 7JO p.m.
• Wednesday 7:30pm.

:·I.

•'
I

•

nME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
Clean out your INrNmenf or
attic wllh the help of the
CLASSIFIED SECTION!

8

CLINIC

M Brt gg~ &amp; Stratton
aster ervlce Technician
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

SUPPLY

CLASSIFiED ADS
a s~permarket
for everything

~~~~tr ~ latttral

"Plitt ;fnr.

IMSOUihSocondAYOnue .

Mlcld•~~~.~
Bruce II. Fl""'r · DfrociOI'
5tO Eut M•ln Str"'

'

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.

'•

••

....
~

'·•
·'

. -·

Stvenlh·Day Adnnlist
Pastor· Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Serv1cts.
Sabbath School • 2 p.m
Worship· 3 p m

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brtlhren
in Christ Church
Te~~:as

Community off CR 82
Pas10r Robert Sanders
Sunday School . 9·30 am
Worship - 10:30 am., 7:30p.m.
Wedn~sday Service~ . 7:30pm
Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 112 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor· Rev Robert Markley
Sunda1 School - I I a m
Sunday Worshtp - 10·00 a.m. &amp; 7 00 p m
Wednesday Scrv1ces- 7.30 p m
Wednesday Youth Service - 7 JO p.m.

..

..
•• co

Full Gospel Ughlhouoe

Reedsville Fellowship
Church ofthe Nazarene
Pastor: Mark A Dupler
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 1 30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursdny -7:30pm

Syncuse Church or the Nazarene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen

South.Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m
Worsh1p · 10 a.m, 7 p.m
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churrh of tile Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Gnmm,Jr.
Sunday School : 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p m.
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational ChQrch
Kmgsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Sm1th
Sunday School - 9 30 am
Worship Scrv1cc 10 :m a m

Freedom Gos~l Mlslilon
Bald Knob, on Co RLI 31
· Pas1or· Rev Rogt r W1tlford
Sunday School · ~ :30 a m
Worship- 7 p m
' '

Whitt's Chapel Wtsleyan
Coolville Roa.d
Pastor· Rev Phillip Rid~n our
Sunday School · 9.3U a.m.
Wo~h 1 p - 10·10 am .
Wednesday ServiCe · 7 p.m.

Portland Finl Church oflhe Na:urene
•

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W Vu Rt I
Pi!Sior. John Hart
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m.

Wor.;hip - 10.30 p.m.
Sunday School -tip m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p m.

WorshiJl · 7.00 p.m.

Other Churche s

Wednesday Dible Study- 7 00 p m

Harvest Outreach Ministries
47439 Re1bel Rd., Chester
Pa&lt;.itor Rev Mary McDumcl
Sunday Services 10 n m. &amp; 6 p.m .

Faith fellowship Crusade ror Christ
Pastor Rev: Franklin D1ckens
Serv1ce · Friday, 7 p m

...
•

==~==

Brogan-Warner

Crow's Family

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Restaur&amp;l1t

CLEANING?

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

Clean out your basement or
attic with the help of the

228

w. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432

PWHeAFIRII.DMoActoCrs~ ~
Prescriptions
992·2955

.Pomeroy

in d hurry•• , TRY
CLASSIFIEDS

'

No Sunday or Wci.lncsday N1ght Sc:rv1cc~

Rutland Church oftM Naurtne
Pastor. Samuel Basye
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a m., fdO p m
Wednesday Se,.vtces - 7 p.m.
Pastor. Mark Malson

.

Pastor· Robcr1 Barber

Chester Churth or tht Nazare1te
Pastor. Rev. Herbert Orale
Sunday School· 9·30 am
Worship. 11 a.m . 6 p m
Wednesday Servtces. 7 p.m .

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.

985·3308

-·'

Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy

Unlled Follh Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pa.~
Pastor· Rev. Rober! E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worsh1p- 10:30 a m , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

., .

..

Seventh-Day Advenlisl

Mt. Olin ·cornmunJty Church
Pastof' Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m. •
Wedncday Service - 7 p.m

Pastor: Gregory A . Cundiff
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 10:30 a.m, 6·30 p m.

Fl•twoods

Foresi!Jun
Chad Emrick

Hoctu•gport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School - Ill a m
Worsh1p- I l am
Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.

Middleport Church of the Naurene

Tuppers Plolns Sl. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7·30 p m.

Dant&lt;llle Holinus Church

Hol1ne ss

Morse Chapel Churth
Sunday school • 10 am
Worship· 11am
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Reedsville
Worship- 9 30 a.m.
Sunday School - 1O:JO a.m .
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Fmll Sunday of Month- 7.30 p.m. ~ervice

EnterpriK
Pastor. Ke1th Rader
Sunday School· 10 am
Worship- 9 a.m.

Belhel Churth
Township Rd .. 46RC
Sunday School - 9 a.m
Worship - 10 am.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

..

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 a m .
Worship- 10 a.m

Oyrnillt Communilv Church
Sunday School - 9 ~0 .1m
Wor~h1p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p m.

Ton:h Church
,Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- 9:JO n m.
Worship. 10:30 am

LongBoUum

Wednesduy Serv1ces · 7:30p.m.

Worshtp. 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9.45 a.m

Hazel Community Church
OrtRt 124
Pa!itor. Edsel tiurt
Sunda~ School • 9 30 ,, m
Worship- 10 30 a m , 7:30p.m.

Coolville Unlled Methodise Parish
Pastor· Helen Kline
Coohille Church
M8in &amp; Fif1h St
Sunday School • 10 a.m
Worship • 9 01.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p m

,, J,

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church

Syracuse Missio•

Racine

Sunday School - 9·30 a.m
Worship. 10.30 a.m.

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syncuse)
Pastor: Otad Emrick
Sunday School -9:45a.m
Won~hip • II a.m.

Syracuse First United Pmbyterian
Pastor Rev. Knsana Robmson
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worshlp-11 am

~

\:::::::?

Memorial
Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992 2104
•

EWING FUNERAL HOME
'Dignity and Service Always"
Established 191 3

992-2121

-··

..

SPRING

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

r--.i:-:~-,--o-~i-ke-IA_ge_n_cy-In-c.1-:R~A::C:=IN::E::-:M::O=w=E::R::-+::R:::=:ID::=:E=:N~Q:=-:U:-:-::.R~+-:S:-:-W:-:-I:-:S~H~E--R:_:&amp;.:__LO-H.:_S_E_~-ri.b'J-~~~Ve~te-r-an-s-!..::=1rancis FLORIST

••

Stocl&lt; Ntrnbao7Tt3oi•A

• AWFM Cas.satle

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor; Rev Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:2S

Church announcements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

1997Dutlle IBIA 1500 4X4

1!194 Mazda MPV

Congregation J I
Trinity Church

Presbyterian

1411 Bridgeman S1., Syrucuse
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p m
Wednesday Scrvkc. 7 p m.

7 pm

.-·.

.,

Middleport Penlerosl•l
Third Ave
Pastor Rev Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m
Evening - 6 p m
Wednesday ServJctS - 7:00p.m.

Thursday Serv1ce - 7 p m.

Pastor· Brian Harkness

Meigs CooPcratln Parish
·Northtast Cluster
~I fred
Pastor· Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· ~:30 u m.
Worsh1p - 11 a.m., 6:30pm.

Joppa
Pastor· Bob Randolph
Worshtp- 9.30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10·30 a.m

Pentecostal Assembly
St Rl 124, Racine
Pa~tor. W11fiam Hoback
Sundil)' School- 10 am .
E"ll enmg • 7 p.m.
}Yednesday Serv1ces - 7 p.m

Faith Valley Tabemade Church
Batley Run Rood r
Pnstor· Rev Emmett Rawson
Suni:!ay Evenmg 7 p.m .'

EaSI Lellrt
Pastor: Brian Harkne!l.~
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worsh1p. 9 a.m.

MI. Olive United Melhodlsl
·orr 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spir~
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor!'.hip- 10 30 a.m., 1 p m
Thursday Services- 7 p m.

P:~stor:

• TtliCnisa
• Fibat!iass Alri.Bds.
• Only 47,050 Ml~
•LoadMJ

Sutton
Pastor: Dcwaync S!Utler
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Worsh1p- 10·45 a.m. (lsi &amp; 3rd Sun)

St. Paul Lutlleran Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St ., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunda) School - 9.4S a.m.
Worship-11 am

Syrocuse First Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Sts. . ·
Pastor. Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worsh1p- 10 a.m.
Eventng Services-6:30pm. ·
Wednesday Servtces- 6:30p.m

Pentecostal

Harrisonville Commu•lty Churth
Pasror· Theron Durham
Sunday· 9 30 a.m. and 7 p m.
Wednesday - 7 p m

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St , Mlddlcpon
Pal'itor. Sam Anderson
Sunday School .10 a.m.
Evemng- 7:30pm
Wedne~day Serv1cc - 7:30p.m.

MomingSIIr
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Our Sniour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sl&lt;i, Ravenswood W Va
· ln1rim pastors· Rev. Robert HuPp
Sunday School - lO.OO am
Worship· 11 am.

Sunday School- 10 am
Worilhip • II a.m.. 6 p m.'
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Church or God of Prophecy
0 J White Rd. off St. Rl. 160
Pastor· P J. Chapman
Sunday St"hool. 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Catholi c

Church of Cllri s t

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worsllip • 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Wedn~sday-

Sunday, 230 p m.

End lime House or Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30pm

Camel

Sl. Joho Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weir1ck
Worsh1p ~9:00a.m.
Sunday School- 10 00 am

Ctiester
Paslor. Sharon Huusm:m
Worship- 9 n m.
Su~day School • 10 a.m.
Thur.;day Services- 7 p m.

Pastor: Randy Barr

Rullond Free Will Baplisl
Salem St.
Pa51or: Rev. Poul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 u.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
·Wednesday Services -7 p.m

Was $12,950

'loaded'

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m

Anllqulty Boptist
Sunday School -9:30am
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday E11erung- 6:00pm.

$9 950
• Air Cordlkrl

Pastor: .Rev. James Satterfield

Forell Ran Boptlll
Pastor: Arius Hurl
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worshop • II a.m.

• N.IIFM Cassella
• TltVCn.ise
• Slylad Wheels
• Loaded!

Morill. C!-rch.ofGod
Rac111e

Sunday School- JO am.

Sloci&lt; Number 7TIIltl68

•Automatk:
• Atr Cordnon

Was$9,950

'

~L

Worship· I! a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

I Was$8.950
1!1!12 Pill lit Gran• Prix SE tiUif

Do you have an ulcer or signs and
symptoms of gastrointestinal dls88S8?

Results given Immediately.
Up to ~ of fJB(IP/t with duod J ·Ill ulcetS
have these bacteria. nIs now curable.

C lw rrh of God

Follh Boptlsl Church
Railroad St., Mason

$7,850
• AMifM Cassette
•CnMSt ContnJ
•AuiOmal~
• Power WindoWs
•lltt Sleerlrlg
• Power Door locks •Low Milas

: Hug~s
School- J J a.m.
Worship· 9·30 a.m., 7t30 p.m.
Wed&lt;teiday ScrvtC&lt;S • 7:30 P·!"·

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Margarel J. Robmson
Services. Wednesday, 7·30 p m

Pastor: Dewayne Stuller

Lutheran

Friday-7:00p.m.

New Ufe Victory Crnler
3773 Georges Creek Road, GallipoliS, OH
·
Pastor. Bill Staten
Sunday Services - I 0 a m. &amp; 7 p m
Wednesday - 7 p m &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

.ne Believers' Fellowship Ministry

BdhlnJ
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

.,

Church of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic F1ith
1/4 m1 le past Fort Me1gs on New Ltma Rd. '
Pastor· William Van Meter
Sunday · 7.00 p.m.
Wednesday -7·00 p m
Clifton Tabtrnadt Church
Clifton, W.Va .
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worsh1p - 7 p m
Wedncsdily Service • 7 p.m

Sunday School - 9:30 a m
Worship- 9.30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Frida¥ -fellowship service 7 p m

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

The Church of JHus
ChrtSI of Laller·Doy Salah
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20·11a.m.
Relid Society/Priesthood ll:OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meettng, lsi Thurs.• 7 p.m.

Rejolcin1 Ufe Chun:h

Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed

Snowville

..

.500 N. 2nd Ave., M1ddh:port
Pas10r: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.
Worship- 10 30 am
Wednesda~ Services- 7 p m

Failh Full Gospel Church

Rullood
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10·30 a.m
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor; Ron Fierce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship~ 10 15 a.m.

....

Stlvenville Word or Faith
Pastor Dav1d Dailc:y
Sunday School Q 3U a.m.
En·ning · 7 p m

Hobson ~t;l,ttlon Fellowship Church
Sunday scmce, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00pm
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Rock ~rln&amp;&amp;
Pastof' Kenh Radtr
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worsh1p • 10 a.m.
•
Youlh Fellowship, Sunday. 6 p.m.

Graham Unlled Melhodlol
Worship -.. 9;30 a.m (1st&amp;. 2nd Sun),
7 30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7.30 p.m.

VIctory Boptisllodependlal
S2S N. 2od St Middlepnn
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship· lOam., 7 p.m
Wednesday Services" 7 p m

$6 950

,
l'omtroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School -9:15am
Worsllip- 10 30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday . 10 8 m.

Reorganized Church of Jesus Chrisl
of Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Branch President . Michael Ouhl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10·30 am
Wednesday Semces- 7 30 p.m.

C.lvory Blbl• Churdl
Pomer&lt;&gt;y Ptke, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Reow Blackwood
School · 9 30 a m
wSunday
orsl11p 10.30 a.m, 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7·30 p m

Faith O..pe:l Open Bible Church
923 S Third St • Middlepon
Pastor Michael Panglo
Sunday SCPoiiCC, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 7 p m
·
·
Cllriatlln Fellowship Cenler
Salem St.,,Rudand
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· tl :15 am, 7 p m.
Wed11esday Se,.ice- 7 p.m.

Petri Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worsh1p ·10 a.m. ·

United Methodi s t

~*"St•

UFEW11HOUT
• Air ConcltiOn

IIHdsvllle Church ofChrisl
Pastor: Philip S1urm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Worship Se,.ice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Scudy, Wedneodoy, 6:30 p.m.

Thursday Services - 7:30

S..:red Heort Colhollc Church
161 Mulberry ~ve., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor· Rev Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 45-5: 15p.m.; Mass~ 5:30p.m .
Sun. Con "-8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun Mass-9:30a.m.
Oatley Mass-8:30a.m.

SIOCI&lt; Numller 1T1363A

Hemlock Grove Charch
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worsllip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Old Reibel Free Will Bapllll Church
::8601 St. Rt. 7, Mtddleport
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.

..

1!2 c•evy Asll'l CIAV!rSIII ~an

Lao1sv!He Chrtsllan Chorcb
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
We,dnesday Service 7:30p.m

Wednesday B•ble Sludy. 6:00p.m.

Oht..'l'lin. Kcvut Wolle Orwl"'l Omntl Vlll·

r--------------------------""1

NOW

Uberty Chrlsllon Chun:h
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m

Sunday School - 9:30 B.m
Sunday Worshie- 10 30 a.m &amp; 6 p.m.

ley M1chncl l&gt;rl~n~nc Bedlurd Ch:mcl : Jared
McN1.'1II)'. Andtwl.!r Pyn~atunmg V:illcy: Dw!~tht
~!1. Obctl1n.; Adam Wtlkc:IU, ~\'OR

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hlllo Church of ChrtSI
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Won;hip -10 a.m.,) p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Belhlehem Bopllll Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor . Damel Berdine .

V:tllcy, Kcvtn Kl~ikwll'l Co\umbiu: Ju~on AmmnJL~.

Rulland Church of Chrlsl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10·30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Minis1er· Doug Shamblin
Youth Minisler: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
wo.,hip ·8:00a.m., 10·30 a.m., 7·00 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Bapi!SI
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Sl:hool-9:45 a m
Everung. 6 30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6.30p.m.

Lor:un Ckarv1ew, M1kc F.ncbon, Bunnn Bcrk~hin:.
K!.'rry Ul,,tcmore. Rocky R1ver Luth •WI!!It. J~:hu

•. Rutland Communily Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday Schoof. 9:30am
Sunday Ev~nmg ·1 p.m.
Wednesda) Services- 7 p m.

Bndrord church ofCbrlll

Sliver Rua Baptist
Pastor: B1ll Little
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday·Serviccs· 7.30 p.m.

Mlncnvllle
Pasoor· Chad Emllck
Su~day ~hoo!OI- 9 a.m.
ors 1p • a.m.

Bndbucy Churdt of Chrlsl
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Corner of St. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Rttclne Flnl Boptlsl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00pm

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pasmr : Rev. Dewey KJng
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p m.

Hy&amp;ell Rua Holjneu Church
. Sunday School -9:30am.
Worship· 10.45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thu~ay Service ·7:30p.m.
Laun:l ClifT Free Melhodlll Church
Pastor: David DeWJtl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 19.30 am. and 6 p m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.

Tuppen Plain Chorcb of ChrtJt
Instrumental
Pastor. Scot Brown
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion. JO a.m.
Sunday School· 10: IS a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Rulland Flnl BapiiSI Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m
Pomeroy Flnl Bapllll
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30 a m
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Roae oiShlroo HoiiDHI Church

H..tb (Middle-rt)
pastor:
rVemaaayc Sulhvan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 1 m.

Waleyo~ Bible Hollneu Church
15 Pearl St, Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service - 10 a.m.
.
Worship. 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Zloo Church of Chrltl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsllip- 10:30 a.m., 7.00 p m.
Wednesday Scrvi~s- 7 p.m.

Wedneiday Services · 7 p.m.
• - - Ute CHier
..,.,...
•full·n...--1 Church•
- . -&amp; Pany Wade
Pasion
John
603 Second Ave . Mason
773 5017
Sc ,.,ce
. time : 5"unday 6·00 p.m

Wonhip . 9a.m.
Thursday SeNiC&lt;s. 6.30 p.m.

Pine Gron Bible Hollnes1 Chun:h
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
wo.,hip- 10·30 a.m , 7'30 p m.
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7:30p.m .

Beorwollow Rldp Churtb orChrisl
Pastor:Tcrry Srewart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30pm.
Wedneiday Services - 6:30p.m.

Evening ·1:30 p.m.

$4,850

Harrisonville Road
PIStor: Rev. Victor Routh
Sun•·y
•~-• 9 30 a.m
~ ~·IU!o.Q :
Worship • I'• a.m., 7:30~.m.
Wednesday Servic:e · 7: p.m.

'

Ben1ley, Ponsmouth We!t,SETH KELLER. CHILLICOTHE HUNTINGTON · WILLIE OSBURN
BELPRE. Tluty Hopk1ns. Portsmouth Wc~l: Jeff
B~teey, Eklprt. Cur1 Hatton. f-rnnkfon Adc!na: hDA.M
CECIL. CHESAPEAKE. RANDAll KITTS.
COAL GROVE DAWSON-IJRYANT: RYAN STALTER, CROOKSV!Ll..E. JOSH STROTHERS. BELPRE. Justin Ebhn. D&gt;1H1brid~~ P;unl V.1llcy BRANDON KEENEY. COAL GROVE llAWSONBRYANT. MARK RUNYON. CHE.'\.APF.AKE.
CHAD SCOTt, LUCASVII.LE VALLEY: Cha.J
ISIII\, u.ambndge Pam! Valley TRIWIS WA.ULK.
COAL GROVE 01\WSON-IlRYANT. RYAN HORTON, LUCASVILLE VALLEY. ELl GATRELL.
OAK HILL. Jus11n E'l'erh;.trt, Frankfort Adcn:1 Ry.111
A~rnulhy. Franktilr1 Adena: SAM MILU.:R.
LUC.\SVILLE VALLEY: M1td1 Camphdl, Rainbmlp;c Pai~ Vullcy, CURTSHOEMAKJ:R. CHILLtCOTHE HUNTINGTON . BOO LOCKE.
LUCASVILLE VALLEY. Tytus GtlhlunJ. Dam·
brn.l~e P:um V.1lley. D.m Hu•.;1cr. Frank!l&gt;rl Atkna:
JO~ ROSS, CROOKSVILL£.
0 ..1 H
A 1c C 1;, W d 1 J 1
r.m,.on ewlll, pp . r\'C ·IYDC ·• c, 1)11 1
Colllnli, Ruutstown, Jeremy Ru~cr~. Rovt~tuwn. Jctr
Murphy. Newlon Falls, J1m 0 l·bnn~an l\·n1nsul.1
WoOOnU(!e. J.D Wullt::, M,1sMII1lll ')u)l,r..v M11d1

A1~r~nn ,

.•
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
.__. ~u-• .,~~
•""' nn· '-"•.-Mldd ~
•·• d
'"'
an M11n
~or· AI H·•··
... ._..n
P-~
YOI.Uh Mlnisttr: Bill Fruler
. Sundoy
· 9:30a.m.
1• 10 30
7
. 8 School
Worsh1p- : ..1, : a.m., p.m.
Wednesday Servicea·7 p.m.
Keno Churcb ofChrtll
Worship. 9:30a.m
Sunday School- 0:)0 ll.m
1
Pastor J ff
W II
• e rey 8 ace
ISland 3rd Sunday

Apos tol1c

Meigs

..

.

.'

Counry:. Okjesr Fwrilr

152 EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769
14
6 /992·2644
614/992-6298

..
.. '

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE;

992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport. Oh

.

.

�By The Bend

The D~y Sent~-:I
Friday, November 28, 1997

\

Changes in adoption laws could mean heartache for many parents and children
Ann
Landers
IW1 l.Al' Alltrb TiiiK"I
Syn~hea~e

~rtd

Crunln

SyrodteUC

Dear Ann Landers: In the early
'60s, I had a baby nut of wedlock.
Based on the circums1ances, the best
thing I could do for my,child was to
give him up for adoption. I have
been very comfortable with that
deci sion and never doubted for a
minute that it was bes1 for everyone
involved.
Smcc that time, the adoption laws
'" many stales have changed. Now,
under ~.:crtaan co nditions, a search

can be ordered to find one's binh
parents. Well. I have been "found."
I was contacted through a mediator,
and my son and I have been
exchanging letters and pictures.
I promised myself that I would
wait at least six months before making any funher decisions. In the
meantime, I have been talking with a
psychologist Nor anothe~ soul
knows abOUI this.
The psychologist says that in her
experience, most of these reunions
are disappointing and people regret
having made the search. What arc
your views on the subject; Ann'? My
family knows nothing about this pan
of my life. and I can't see myself
coming out of the closet. -- Sleepless
in Chicago

Dear Sleepleu: My "views" are • and says. "I'm your child, and I
well known to anyone who reads my want to be part of your family."
colum.n. I do not suppon searches
Dear Ann Landen: Too many
unless both the adult adopted ch_ild people think it's OK to leave a child
and tbe binh parents agree to it. For unattended in an automobile while
every person who is happy he or she they go into a gas station or post
was found, there are at least 10 who office for "just a minute.". Whenevregret it.
er I am tempted to do this,( rememThe changing adoption Jaws have ber the day I brought my first-born
had other unintended consequences. child home from the hospital. My
I am saddened by the -thought that mother said, "Don't ever leave your
many children waiting to be adopted child in your car anywhere you
will languish in foster homes or wouldn't leave $1 miJiion c~h on
orphanages because potential par- the seat."·
'
cnts are afraid to risk having the
If you run this in your column,
child wrenched from them at a later Ann, please use my name. It would
date by the binh parents. And sadder be a wonderful tribute to my very
st ill to consider how lives can be wise motber who passed away two
damaged and families torn apart by years ago this Cl!ristmas. - Vicki
a stranger who shows up at the door Villegas Westfall, Valley Springs,

Calif. _
Dear Vkkl: Here is your letter
and a very good one at that. I might
add. It takes only a second to snatch
a child. Your mother gave you excellent advice. I hope every mother
who reads thi~ will pay attention to
her wise counsel.
Dear Ana Landers: Here's one
more story aboui stupid criminals.
This happened to my husband,
"Jim," a truck driver.
Jim was on the road one day
when two police ·cars pulled him
over. The car right behind him also
pulled over. The officers said that
the car !&gt;chind him had cal hid in a
repon that Jim was weaving all over
the road . They gave him a breathaJyzcr test and found he was perfect-

Jy sober.
Jim suggested they give.the dri ver behind him the same test. They
did and discovered he was intoxicated -- twice the legal limit. In fact, he
was so drunk, he didn't realize it
was HE who was weaving all over
the road. He actually reported him~
self! Wouldn't it be nice if more
drunk drivers reponed themselves? - His Wife
Dear Wire: It would indeed, but
don't hold your breath waiting. I've
never heard of this before and don't
expect to hear of it again .
·
•••
Send questions to Ann L~ndcrs. Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century .
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calif.
90045

Found: Lost bits of great life at the Susan B. Ant~ony House

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

So we all put our Christmas hol iday thought s for the most part .on the
hack burner to observe ThanksgivIng. I'm t..:onfidcnt that we have
plenty to be thankful for. By the
way. I hope your day was super and
now we'll head orr lull hlast into the
~u nsct-o thcrwi~c known as the
·c h ri stmas holiday season.
An event of interest to you will
be taking place in Marietta this Sunday.
The Mar-ietta Community Choir,
sponsored by Marietta College. wi II
be presenting with orchestra accompanimcnl Vivaldi's Glona and Handel's Messiah at 8 p.m. at St. Mary's
Catholic Church located at 500
Fourth St.. in Marietta. The chorus
has 60 mcmbers '-and included in the
group are Mrs. Pam Crow of ncar
Pomeroy ; her daughter, Meredith, a
student at Marietta College, and
Dick Nease. Pomeroy, who is pastor
of a church in the Marietta aTea. The
presentation is open to the public . .

means more of the collection will be ny's hair.
as evidenced by a l_cttcr wrillcn by
on display when the education cenBut she didnt find many letters Margaret Shanks. the nurse who
ter opens at 17 Madison St.
about Anthony's role in the suffrage cared for both Susan and Mary i~
Emerson spent n year sifting movement because the • museum their last days. As Mary lay dying of
through mounds of documents. pho- loaned such documents to the Uni- HodgiUn's disease. one year after
tographs. mementos and clothing.
versity of Rochester's dcpanmcnt of Susan's death. she g"vc Shanks und
She came upon some, historical rare books years ago for safekeep- the ·housekeeper no rest until they
pieces that had been lost for many ing.
agreed to join the National Ameriyears. Barnum says,
And there were no pcrsonal let- can Woman Suffrage Associmion.
They were lost because they had ters revealing the "inner" Anthony
The nurse wrote. ··I could not
been stashed for decades in closets, because her sister, Mary Anthony, refuse her last request. so join we
hathroom cupboards, drawers and burned many ol'thosc back in 189M . did."
under beds.
"One assumptio~ was (Mary) did
Emcrsons " housecleaning" may
"The result of (Emerson's) work it so no one else could write a biog- have &lt;J&lt;currcd just in time: Anthowill be that this cqllcction and the raphy of Susan,'' Emerson says.
ny 's clothes, which were in piles for
archives will be more accessible to
But the curator did locate corre- years. were in danger of permanent
the public." Barnum says.
.
spondence that revealed the intense wrinkling. A pair of her pajamas,
Emerson uneanhcd some unique dedication both Susan and Mary which had hccn on di.spiay, were
finds. like Susan B. Anthony home held for the women's movement. smudged with fingerprints an.; at
calendars, printed ip 1900 and 1901 There is the lcucr Mary wrote to a ris~ of light damage.
while the famous activist was still nephbw in 1906, shortly after
The top of Anthony's trademark
alive.
Susan's deMh from pneumonia, alligator satchel had caved in, and its
The 5-by-8-inch calendars con- informing him that Susan would not sides were held together with Scotch
tain a photograph of Anthony in be leaving each of her nieces and tape.
each room of her house and a quote nephews SIOO; as she initially
"People recognized the signififrom her. The focus of the calendars planned.
cance of Susan B. Anthony and
was Anthony and not the dates. BarMary quotes a note her famous wanted to do their best to perpetuate
num says.
sister left: "I want every cent given her memory. but didn't sec the deteOn Anthony's binhday, someone to -the suffrage cause. I have given rioration a.s it was occurring," says
had written "St. Susan's Day."
my life and all I am to it, and now I Rick Sherin, director of conservaEmerson catalogued all sons of want my last act to be to give it all I tion at Rochester's Strong Museum,
memorabilia, from a rocking chair have to the last cent.··
and an adviser to the restoration prothat generations of Anthony babies
Even on her dying breath. Mary ject. "No one can be faulted for
wcic nursed in to a lock of Antho- couldn't forget the suffragist cause, Ihat."

By DONNA JACKEL
Gannett Rochester Newspa·
pers
Loric Barnum apd Judy Emerson
stumbled across sonic unusual finds
among the dustballs at the Susan B.
Anthony House in Rochester, N.Y.
Emerson. the museum curator,
found a hand-painted silk book
given by a friend to Anthony on her
80th birthday. Each page details a
decade of her life: farmer 's daugh-

gram has been highly successful in
the past.
'

ter.

anti ~alcohol

activist . abolitionist

and . finally. suffragist.
Barnum. the museum director.
A Christmas home lighting contest has been picked up in Pomeroy found an invitation Anthony had
again this year in a cooperative received to the birthday party of the
cffon by the Pomeroy Merchants wife of President Ulysses S. Grant.
Association and the Winding Trail , It was tucked away in a file folder.
Museum officials have been siftGarden Club.
Judging will be within the village ing through Anthony memorabilia
limits and it's hoped that judges will for a year to prepare for the opening
see the entire town during a tour. of the museum's education center in
However. if you do live off the beat- July 1998.
No startling discoveries have
en path, on a side street where you
been
found, but a number of intercould be missed in, the judging.
please contact Addalou Lewis at esting historical pieces have turned
992-2924 or Alice Thompson at up.
The discoveries were there to be
992-3216 and get registered in.
made
because museum founders did
There will be· two areas of judging including religious and overall not have the space to properly orgawith three prizes to be awarded in · nize and store the collection when
each category. Judging will begin at the museum opened in 1946. The
6:30. p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 21. so $1 A million renovation project
you're asked to have your lights on
by the time.

Military News--

To encourage local shopping,
Middlepon merchants will be stayThings are moving at the Meigs ing open from Ito 5 p.m. every Sun- Daniel R. Midkiff
Mniine Master St. Daniel R. Mid-·
County Museum.
day from now through Christmas
kiff,
son of Billy R. and Bernice
The lOth annual Christmas din- and evening sh~pping hours will be
Midkiff
of Langsville, recently parncr of the Meigs Coun1y Pioneer and . maintained for those of you who
ticipated
in Exercise Bright Star '97
Historical Society has been set for work and cannot get around to the
Dec. 5.
stores in the daytime. The evening while on a six-month deployment to
The biggie. of course, will be . shopping hours stan Monday, Dec. 9 the Mediterranean Sea with the 24th
Marine
Expeditionary
Unit
·
Breakfast with Santa which will take- - and .run through Dec. 23.
aboard
the
ships
of
the
embarked
place from 9 a.m. to II a.m .• SaturUSS
Guam
Amphibious
Ready
day. Dec. 13. at the museum. ChilAnd out at Veterans Memorial
dren and any accompanying adults Hospital, members of the hospital's Group.
Midkiff's unit panicipatcd in the
will have a complete breakfast with Women's Auxiliary will be dccoratmultinational
exercise
which
Santa and there will be crafts for the ing various locations · within the
entailed
naval.
tactical
air.
amphibichildren included in the activities.
institution for the holiday season on
Reservations arc recommended Dec. 7 and, of course, arc staging a ous assault, undersea. special forces
and you can make yours by calling door decorating contest to enhance and ground combat training. U.S.
1hc muse um at 992-3810 by Thurs- the hospital's appearance during the troops from all branches nf the mili day. Dec. II. m you ·can stop by the season. The Auxiliary will hold its tary participated in the exercise
mu.&lt;cum and make your rcscrv!l,- annual Christmas pany on Tuesday. along with forces from Egypt.
France, Italy. Kuwait. the Unit~d
tions. There JS a charge. Childflilf '''Dec. 9 . ·
Arab Emirates and the United King10 and under will be $2.50 while
It certainly looks like a busy do~. Exerdsc Bright. Star . was
children over 10 and adults will pay
$:1. Pinurcs will Santa arc avai lahlc up"&gt;ming holiday season. Enjoy it . , deSigned to tmprovc umt rcadmcss
and do keep smiling.
~nd mtcr-opcrahll1ty w1th coaht10n
for an additional $2 each .
lorccs.
The Breakfast with Santa proMidkiff 's unit is an expeditionary
intervention force with the ability to
rapidly organize for combat operatics.arc cut off and hung up.
tions in vinually any environment.
Friendly Circle
The Trinity Church Friendly Cir"We never say so many tics 1n MEV's arc composed of more than
de met for the November meeting at one place." the Keatons reponed .
2.000 personneland arc divid~d into
the church.
'·
Returning cast, they toured the an Infantry battalion. an a~rcraft
Linda Mayer had the devotions Amish area ncar Redding. P:Lf squadron, a support group and a
and program. She read from Romans where they saw many fine vcgetablcv comm.and clement. With the comhi2R-30. Phill ipians 4-9 and I crops.
nation of these teams.lv\idkiiT's unit
Corinthians I 0-13. She also read
Fay and Leonard Amos have supplies and sustains itself for either
'Thanksgiving for all Things" and announced the hirth of twin grand- quic~ mission acco':'plishment or
,.Friendship Counseling" hy Cather- sons on Novemher 13 at Marietta · clcarmg the way lor lollow-nn
inc Baldwin on being steadfast and -Memorial Hospital, Kyle Austin and
. thankful , despite the changing cir- Brandon Joseph Jluckley. They arc
cumstances in life . She also read a the children of Kenny and Sahrcnna
, tory from the book. "Chicken Soup Buckley uf Parkersburg. W.Va.
fur 1hc Soul ··
Randal Burke is recovering at
Alice Gloho~a1. 1m•sident . home following nose surgery. He

Society Scrapbook

--Sermonette-Does sex ·end with menopause7 Of
.
course not -new brochure states
know the mystery of God, namely,
Christ, in whom are hidden all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
For I am absent from you in body, I
am present with you in spirit ... "
Colossians 2: 1·5 NIV.
The treasures of wisdom that
I
I. Paul speaks of are not hidden from
us, but they are for us, in Christ.
Pau I also rejoiced lhal they were
"overflowing with thankfulness."
Thanks and encouragement
Why should our gratitude spill
,By Bonnie Shiveley
over to others'? Paul tell s us, "For in
To: My Editors and friend s Christ all the fullnes s of the Deity
beyond the newspaper page . You all lives in bodily form and ¥OU have
give me reason to feel thankful. been given fullness in c;::hrist ... "
What a wonderful privilege to write What is thi s fullness? Paul answers,
good news for you each week' "When you were dead in your sins ...
Thank you for your generous feed - God made you alive with Christ. He
back. You can be sure I apprcdate

forgave us all our sins, having can~

your notes and wonls of encourage-

celed the written code ... that was
again st us ... he took it away, nailing
it to the cross ... triumphing over
them by the cross." What a reason to
rejoice and be thankful Christ Jesus
died for us to save us from our sin.
Father, thank you for editors who
realize that the public wants to heur
good news. Bless them and each
person who reads my column in his
m her 1iewspapcr. May their hcans
be lifted.

ment. I always need yo ur prayers.
I could write the

Bert G. Mash
United States Navy (E-2) Airman
Bert G. Mash. who passed in review
on Octnhcr 25. 1996. J!raduated "A"
school on April 19, 1997. A 1996
graduate of Meigs High School: he
is stati&lt;~ncd at Jacksonville. Fla.

words to

you (inserting "you" instead of

that you may be

e ncourag~d

in heart

and united in love , so that you may
have . the full riches

or .complete

understanding, in order thai you may

Letart Falls Elementary
Winter Festival planned
Letart Falls Elementary School
will be the site of a winter festival on
Dec. 6, 4-8 p.m. The festival will
include ga.mcs, cake walks, hake

sale and other adtlvi ti cs.
~
Students have selected candi -dates from first and second grade
classes to serve as prince and

princess. Candidates include: prince
-- Mikey Eng le. Chris Conley,
Bradley Stepp and Wesley Rifn c;

princess-- April Richards, Montessa
Caplinger, Erin Chapman and Ashley Krider.
·
King and queen candidates were
selected from the third and fourth
grade classes. Candidates are: king- Dustin Brinager, Cameron BrinagC[, Darrin Teaford and Dale Teaford:
queen -- Madison Hill. Amber
Hol sin ger, Amy Norville and
Stephanie Hoskins.

.

Reba sings tor Salvation Army at football game
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Two
months before the real thing, the
Dallas Cowboys and Reba McEntire .
brought a Super Bowl-like halftime
show to the Cowboys' game against
the Tennessee Oilers. ,
Ms. McEntire sang her new song
·· "What If" as part of a benefit for
The Salvation Army on Thursday.
The song was being released as a
si ngle this week.
Ms. McEntire, MCA Records and

Delbert P. Putnam, Jr.
Army Private Delbcn P. Putman ,
Jr. has graduated from basic military
training at Ft. Sill in Lawton, Okla.
During the training, students
received instruction in drill and ceremonies. weapons. map reading.
tactics, military counesy, n)ilitary
justice. first aid and Army, history
and traditions.
Putnam is the son of Tammy L.
and stepson of Randall S. Congo,
Ponland.
Leigh A. Mash
· United States Navy (E-2) Fireman Leigh A. Mash passed in
review on September 5. 1997. and
graduated Engineering Core on
Oc10bcr 6. A 1997 graduate of
Meigs High School, she is· stationed
at Port OPS Sword Division in Norfolk. Va.

sa m~

"they") that the Apostle Paul, wrote
to hi s frie,.ds at Colossc. ''I am
struggling for you .. . who have not
met me personally. My purpose is

songwr~ t er

forces.
\
He is a 1972 graduate of Meigs
High School.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 28, 1997

Diane Warren

pledged their share of sales to The
Salvation, Army. Frito-Lay, WaiMan and Sam's Club stores helped
sponsor The Salvation Army's first
national " Kettle Kick-oil" to open
the charity's annual money raising
dri vc at Christmas
The year's first kettles appcar~d
at Texas Stadium on Thanksgiving
Day. More than 20,000 Salvatio~
Army kettles were to appear across
.the country today.
·

have

By VANESSA .WILLIAMS
SNYDER
Gannett News S.rvica
Does sex end with menopause? No,
according to a new brochure produced by Prime Plus-Red Hot
Mamas, a menopa~se education
program and Pharmacia and
Upjohn.
"Women ·over 50 need to forget
the idea that hot flashes are the only
fire left in intimate relations," says
Karen Giblin, president and
founder of Prime Plus-Red Hot
Mamas.
The brochure is designed to help
women recognize menopause
symptoms including changes in
their periods, vaginal-urinary problems, psychological and sexual
changes. The brochure also
includes a checklist to help women
monitor and keep an accurate
account of, symptoms that may
occur before, during and after
menopause.
The "Sex and Menopause:
What's Age Got To Do With It?"
brochure is available free by calling
1 (888) 800-8545 or by writing to:
Sex and Menopause: What's Age
Got To Do With It?'' brochure care
of Advance Fulfillment, 1363
Grandville,' Ave., S.W. Grand
Rapids , Mich . 49509.

large to fit completely in an infant's
mouth.
- Choose electric toys with
heating elements only for children
· over the age of eight and instruct
them to play with those toys only
when there is adult supervision.
- Be cenain that arrows and
darts used by children have blunt
tips such as rubber or flexible plastic suction cups, cork or other protective points. Check to see thai tips
~re attached securely to shafts.

Pick toys safely
Remember that safety is the most
important
sele~ting

consideration

when

toys. Here's a partial safety checklist from the Toy Manufacturers of America Guide:
-Use recommended age label ing as a guide and look for warnings and other safety messages on
toy pakaging.
-Consider your home environment and the ages of oiher, particularly younger children in the family.
A toy intended for an older child
may be unsuitable and dangerous in
younger hands.
- For children under age three,
avoid sinall parts that could be
swallowed or inhaled, including
small balls and uninflated balloons,
and those )Nith sharp points or
rough edges.
Make sure soft rattles,
squeakers and teething toys in their
most compressed state, are too

-

Strict vege1arians: Require a

vitamin B 12 supplement since this
only occurs in animal products.
-

Women

who

men stru ate

heavily. Iron is often needed to prevenl anemia.
- Women of child-bearing age:
Should get folic acid daily - the
new RDA is 400 micrograms from a good multivitamin before
conception and durin g the first several months of,pregnancy. -HOT TIP: Looking for some low-

calorie substitutes to replace those
fattening holiday offerings? Check
out these suggestions from Muscle
and Fitness magazine:
- Instead of pecan or pumpkin
pie, try fresh fruit.
- Instead of buffalo chicken
wings, try raw veggies or pretzels.
- Instead of chocolates, try
hard candy.
- Instead of butter,light spread.
- Prime rib, try turkey breast or
leaner beef like eye round.
·

Menstrual cycle might affect
success of breast cancer
The risk of breast-cancer recurrence may be influenced by the
phase of a woman's men strual

cycle at. the time of surgery for the
disease, 31:cording to research from
Ohio State University's Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The study, performed on rats,
suggest that women are at highest
risk of breast cancer recurrence if
. surgerY, is done during ovulation .
That's because part of the body's
immune response is suppressed
during ovulation and further weakened by the surgery itself. As a
result of the weakened immune
response, women undergoing
surgery during ovulation may be
Jess able to control the spread of
tumor cells in their body.
Who needs multivitamin or
mineral supplements?
Unless your diet is nearly perfect from a nutritional standpoint,
you should take a daily vitamin and
mineral supplement, says Fitness
· magazine in its November issue.
But for some people, it is especially imponanl. Here are seven groups
who should take supplements:
-Anyone on a weight-loss regimen . It's impossible to get all the
recommended levels of nutrients
through food if you're eating just
1,200 calories a day.
- Athletes. Anyone who works
out 90 minutes or more a session
several times a week.
Pregnant women: Also,
women wh9 are still lactating.
- Anyone recovering from illness: whether · it's a cold or flu
infection, surgery or chronic ail-

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Holzer Meigs Clinic offering bacteria testing
Free testing fnr a hactcrial orHan-

ism known tn he prevalent in 90 percent of duudenal ulcers is being
offered hy Hulzcr Meigs Clinic .
Pomeroy, on Thursday.
,The opponunity lor life without
ulcers may truly he a p&lt;lssihility li&gt;r
many palicnt,.
·
Although many Americans suffer
from ulcers nr the stomm.:h or duodenum (U portion of the small intestine). most do not kni&gt;w that H.
Pylori. a hactcrial organism. is the
culprit in as muny as 90 percent of
duodenal ulc&lt;.·r cases. Moreover,

8hop Middleports Christmas Vi11Cl8e and Qe8ister for a part of
over $2,000 in Cash
Prizes at the ollowin8 locations...

many pc&lt;iplc with duodenal ulcers
do not even know if they have this
organism, which can he identified
by a simple blood test and cured
with appropriate therapy.
The free test involves just a lingcr-sti&lt;:k -hlmKI sample, and patients
will rct:civ their results in lcss · lhan
four minutes. Testing will he done
hy Holzer Meigs clinic stall from 3
p.m. to 7 p.m. Anyone interested in
hcin·g testing is urged to call 992(X)!\0 for funhcr details or to set up
an appointment.

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prr~idcd

over the meeting . New oiTi-

ccrs for the coming year arc Alice
Glohakar. president: Dianne HawIcy. vice prc&gt;~de nt ; Gay Perrin. secrctary. and Linda Mayer. treasurer.
The next mel'ling will he the
annual Christmas dinner at the
church on Deccmhcr 9. at 6 p.m.
The meetmg closed with the Lord's
Prayer.
Alfred News
Alfred United Methodist Church
will ho,t a holiday dinner at the
church on De&lt;cmher 7 at t 2:]0 p.m.
All arc welcome. The annual Christma.' season worship service will he
held on December 21 at 7 p.m.
The Alfred youth group will meet
on Dec. '14 at 2 p.m. fo1 a co,lkie
bake . Coo kies will be diStributed at
the Arcadia Nursing Center in
Coolville.
Imoge-ne and Lester Keaton
returned recently from a trip to Ari zona. They motored to McLean, Va.,
where they joined friends , Preston
and Helen Walker, and llew on to
Scottsdale. Ariz. While there, they
vis:ted Sedonia. Tucson, and Red
Rock County Pinnacle Peak Post.
There, if men come wearing ties. the

was rc,cnlly injured at work .

· ·. ·

Visitors at the Poole-Parker humc
recently was Jim Wuodyard of
Apple Grove.
Osic Mac and Clair Follrod
returned •·eccntly from a trip to •the
Carihbcan in NliVCmher. They new
to San Juan. sailed on the "Carnival"
and visited St. Thoma.•. Guadaloupc.
St. Lucia. Ur~nada and Santo Domingo.
Wecke11d ';sitors nf Pat and Joe
Mayhew und Katie were Pat's parcnts. Richard and Gertrude Hoffman
of Aberdeen. S.D.
utter program planned
The Meigs County Council on
Aging's Retired and Senior Vnluntcer Program (RSVP) and the
Pomeroy Post Office are working
together on a special program providing letters to children from Santa
Claus.
·
Children who write letters to
Santa Claus. c/o Postmaster,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769 and provide
their return address will receive a
reply. Letters will be 31:Cepted only
from Dec. I - Dec. 15. The post
office will also host Santa on Dec.
20 from 9:30a.m. until noon.

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�Friday, November 28, 191t'l2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 1a. The oa11y Sentinel

~day, November 28,

••

\ ...1

By SANDY SHORE
Aeeocllted Preee Writer
DENVER - Prosecutors and Terry Nichols' attorneys have big •~pee­
lations for a tiny piece of a truck panel. .
About the size of a piece of paper,
it i~ one of the pans left from the
' Ryder truck that prosecutors say was
used to haul an ammonium nitrate
and fenilizer bomb to Oklahoma
City. where it destroyed. the federal
huilding. killing 168 people.
Prosecutors believe the panel
piece will help convince Nichols'
jurors of his guilt because it contains
ammonium nitrate crystals - the
same material that prosecutors said
Nichols kept in storage bins in
Kansas.

.

vativc Center for Individual Rights tom - among tt!e lowe1t scorers- cent of the student body a decade ago. •
By CAROL MORELlO
all races arc treated simtlarly.
and
who argued the 1;1opw&lt;Kxi case.
to 25 percent this· year.
USA Today
The differences occur in the midANN ARBOR, Mich. - Jennifer He also is lead counsel in the MichiBut exactly how this was accom~ : ·
Gratz and Patrick Hamacher tigured gan lawsuit. '.'Michigan shows there dle ground, among students with plished remained out of the public - ·
they were shoo-ins when they applied arc plenty of other schools that arc grade (l&lt;&gt;int avcmgcs between 3.0 and eye until a year ago. when philosophy
just a!-. egregious as Texas:· says Pcll.
3.7 and Scholastic Assessment Test professor Carl Col)cn got hOld of the
to the University of Michigan.
scores
hctwccn 850 and· 1350.
"
If
the
court
agrees
with
us.
this
is
confidential · admissions charts
A student government leader.
going
to
send
shock
waves
thruugh
For
example.
a
white
student
with
through Freedom or Information · ~
cheerleader. and homecoming quecu
a grade roint average of 3.7 and an requests.
at her suhurban Detroit high school. the higher education ~,.:on·nnunity. •·
· '
University t&gt;flici;lls w;1m that :1 SliT score of 1270(out of 1600maxGratz earned a 3.9 grade point aver"What they revealed wa.' the uni~ ·
delcat could so dmstically reduce
imum). or an American College Test vcrsity is deliberately engaging in · ·
age on a 4.0 scale.
Hamacher played baseball. foot - minority admissi'nm. thut it (ouhJ 'core of 2M (out of 36). would likely outright discrimination." said Cohen. /
he put on a wait list. while a black, a fonner board member of the Arne,;.
ball and basketball at his Cathol1c rcscgregonc the nation\ puhlic universitic~
.
Hispunic or Native American appli- ican Civil Libenics Union and the ' ·:
high school in Flint. He took enough
" II' you were to do away with sy~­
cant with the same grades and scores author of a 1995 book called "Naked ·"
advanced placement courses lO Ut.:!•.'URacial Prc!Crcnccs: tbe Case Against ·",
mulatc II college credits. ami vol - tcms like ours. you 'd he ovcrturnin!! would he admiued.
Brown
vs.
the
Ilnard
of
Education,
..
In
annther
example.
a
white
stuunteered at a hospice.
Affirmative Action."
·•
But the homecoming queen :md !'-Uid Waller Hurrison. vi~:C president dent with a 3.Y grade average and
"I want the university to he a just ·
the star athlete didn't make the cut . for university rclatinns, citing the SATs of 1000. or an ACT score of21. place. to live up to its ideals, not to '
so they enrolled in other scho~ll s. And 1954 Supreme Court ruling that said would be rejected. while a minority betray them to accomplish a short- ,
there the story might h;tve ended. hut _,egregated schools denied black siu- applicant would be accepted.
range ohjcctive." he said. ''&lt;;onstitt(!J
dcnts
equal
protection
of
the
laws.
Harrison
said
the·
grid
is
only
a
l(n ari extracmlinary public appeal hy
tions' arc designed to pr.-,cnt 'taking ·
The University nf Michigun, a guideline for admissions counselors. shoncuts."
state ,legislators seeking to ahDiish
aflirmativc actitm at Michigan's mos1 large institution with 36.000 under- who also weigh essays and other facCohen's documents got the attcn./~
graduate and. graduate students, is tors like cxtra4.:urricula.r activities.
prestigious university.
tion of Rcpublkan legislators who"·~
Gratz and Hamacher answered the highly selective about whom it
"We can and we do usc race as a had unsuccessfully pushed biils to
call and beramc plaintiffs in a 1awsuil admits. It receives IY,OOO applicafactor in our admissions process.'' undercut racial preferences. With·"'
that could change the way puhlic col- tions a year for about 5.5fXJ places in said Harrison. "It's not the deter- Cohen's grid in hand, four Republic ... '
leges around the country select their its freshman class. and accepts mining factor. It's not the major fac- can representatives puhlicly solicited · '1
tor. It's one factor. It's legal. and wt rejected white students and passed ' ·
u ndcrgnu.Jualc cI i.L"iscs.
'13,000, knowing more thar, half will
Their suit. liled last month in U.S. opt to go elsewhere. Wi.th so manv do it because a diverse student body their names on to the Center fc1r lndl- · ; :
District Court in Detroit. contends applicants, the university has come is imponant to the education of all vidual Rights in Washington. D.C. · · ·
that Gratl. and Hamacher were dis- up with a quick methoo for catego- our students."
Between 100 and 200 students
criminated
ngaiilst
in
(avor
nf
hlack.
Began
in
1910
rizing
them.
called the lawmakers offering to be '' .
RALLY FOR FAITH - Wesley Fowler of Crossville, Ala., held
Hispanil' and Native ~mcrican appli~
Admiss·ions counselors nrc guidcc;l
The University of Michigan has· plaintiffs against the university. .. ·
up tha U.S. flag amid a group police estimated at 1,000 attendtants who wc1·c admiltcd despite in their decisions by official chans. been under pressure In increase the among them Gratz and Hamacher. ,
ing the United We Stand "Faith Rally" Thursday In the Rainsville
Hamacher. 18. attended Powers ' ··
lnwer grades and tcsl scores.
especially a grid that intersects grade number of minority students since
(Ala.) Civic Center. United We Stand is an organization of citizens
Catholic
At
the
heart
of
the
lawsuit
is
what
High School in Flint, where .. ·
point
averages
with
tcsl
scores.
Each
1970,
when
the
Black
Action
Move·
trying to get prayer back Into the claaaroom following a ruling
block
in
the
grid
has
at
leal!
two
rows
he
played
three spans, sang in the 1'
opponents of allirmativc action call
men!, a student organi7.ation, orgaby U.S. Dlatrict Court Judge Ira Dament. (AP)
the "smoking gun"- a cha11 used -one for "majority applicants," the nized a boycott of classes and the choir, anq was a hospice volunteer
hy the university's admissions office other for " underrepresented minori- administrat.ion building was occu- who tended to dying people while "' '
pied. Tite university launched the .their relatives took a break. H'e····
10 dccid~ who gels in and who does- ties .··
n't. The chart demonstrates that
At the top - among applicants Michigan Jl.landatc in 19H7, a plan for earned a 3.4 average and scored 28 '
whites and minorities with identical with the highest scores and grade social diversity that has increased on the ACT, putting him in the 94th
·; •
grades and test sc.:ores meet different point averages- and at the very hot- mino~ity enrollment from 13.5 per- percentile.
.
fates: White applicants are rejected or
... 1:..
deferred while minorities ate autoloon handlers had been warned not to
.,
,
By TOM HAYS
matically admilled.
wrap
their
ropes
around
their
arms.
Associated Press Writer
The university -dOes nOl dispule
NEW YORK- A wind-whipped for fear a gust could cau~c someone the authenticity of the chart, hut says
balloon at Macy"s 71 st Thanksgiving to lose an arm.
race is 'only one of several factors
_,'i
The handlers. mostly .Ma•fs
Day Parade knocked a piece off a
used to select a diverse student' body.
light pole· Thursday, injuring four employees and their families. also And it has hired a high-powe red law
'Q
\
were told to keep the giant balloons
spectators, two of them seriously.
,_'
firm to defend its policies.
Wind gusts of 40 mph were closer to the gro~nd than the usual
It will be years before the case is
''
reponed in the area as the parade. three to four stories up. to ~cller con- decided and. most likely, appealed.
,,.
which attracts hundreds of thousands trol them. After the accident. some of But it already is drawing attention
to sec its huge helium balloons of car- them were kept so low they almost after last week's surprise out-of'
scraped the pavement.
·
toon characters; got under way.
couJl scnlcmcnl in a New Jersey case
In
1993.
winds
caused
the
64-foot
Two women with serious head
involving a white sc hoolteacher who
injuries were taken to St. Luke·, Hos- tall Sonic the Hedgehog to crash into wa.&lt; la1d off while a black teacher was
pital after the accident, said police a lamppost and explode. The falling kept on to maintain diversity.
• I
spoke•woJl\an Officer Cheryl Cox. debris injured an off-duty police
Both proponents and opponents of
'!Wo 'lihcr·people with minor injuries officer and a 10-ycar-old girl. Winds affirnJative action say the Michigan
were being treated at another hospi· have also liftca the balloon pilots off case will be a major halllcgruund in
the ground over the years.
tal.
·
the ongoing debate over racial and
Titc parade, a holiday tradition ethnic preferences.
The 18-foot Cat in the Hat bal,
loon. based on the Dr. Seuss charm:- · staned in 1924. was ; uspended only
arc
other
cases
aJso
headed
There
ter. hit a light pole at 72nd Strt!ct and_ three times. during World War II.
toward the U.S. Supreme Court.
High wind also ca~scd problems including one involving faculty hirCentral Park West at around 10 a.m ..
' '
police said. Tbc top of the pole was in Philadelphia's parade. Organizers ing at the University of Nevada. But
knocked to the ground. hitting the there scratched the two- and three - hccaus'C the Michigan case involves
four people. The balloon character's story halloons, including Garlicld. undergraduate admissions. the ramisignature red and white striped hat Yogi Bear and the Cat in the Hat. fications could be far-reaching.
Smaller balloons. in shapes of stars
was shredded.
A long tradition
Even before the parade staned. and balls. were tough to handle in the
For
two
decades, collcpes and uni•'
one giant balloon. a nying lish. was 45 mph gusts.
versities have operated with the
Philadelphia's parade. which stanshredded by a gust of wind and
understanding that they could conknpckcd out of the parade. Two oth· ed ih 1~211 . includ"' more than 5.1X)IJ
:-.idcr
race in admissions. In the 1978
dan~l.!rs. siilgcrs :.1nd musici~ms in ·15
cr halloons had minor damage.
Bakke
case, the U.S. Supreme Court
Because of the w'ind danger. hal- marching hands and IY float, ,
ruled that universities ~.:ould not set
'
aside places for minorities hut could
,''''I
usc race and cthnicity as a " plus'' factor in determining admissions. BUt in
the Hopwond case last year, the 5th
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that
diversity docs not justify preferential '·
Wolf is halfway throu gh a lour- admissions hased on race. The ruling
By MARCIA DUNN
I
month mission aboard the Ru..,..,iap etfcctivcly ended racial preferences
AP Aerospace Writer
I
space station . He's -.chcdulcd to in ·mJmis!-.ions to the University of
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. I
I
Space shullle Columbia's astronauts return to Eat1h in lanu:.try.
Texas.
Columhia's astronauts ulso were
got a Thanksgiving Day thank' you
~' Higher cdw..:ation trl!atcd lhc
midway
through their expected 1(,. Hopwood case as a tlukc. and has
from President Clinton. who said
Wllh u·...,.lltlll of httll;t· attd ~niNII•hw. Nto•kln~"
by
their orbital work will benefit the . day mi ssion. Th~y·~rc due hack on · hccn in denial ever sim:c, .. said Tcr~
tltt" fire attd ~llefll lllnttk•INI with 11nrnv. UtriNtntoN
Dec. 5.
·
future intcrnacinnal ~pace slatilm.
cncc (lcll. a lawyer with the cnnscr"lju't wanted to call you to salute
Pneo~~tpa-11 warnllh nnd ••HMI eh-r RN we •ht-rlllllt the
yourlacriti&lt;e and thank you for what
1•1-lng... we'v• Nhaft!tl thiH paHI y•nr. t'or UN It lnf'RHN
you're doing: and cnngrutulatc you on
Monday's satellite recovery:· Clinl&lt;ln
Nn~· lnJ~ "lhnnb"' In yrm. 011r tnnriy fr ...nlk, oltl nntl ttew.
told the four Americans. one Japan\\'ltrtNP kind liiUPIHtrf \'I'P"II olwnyN ~-RNIIrP. lhtlnlll •
esc and one Ukrainian aboard ColumbttNini!NM with you 1!1 o11r ,cn-nll'flt plenNII"'l
bia.
The aslmnauts rcs\.'ucd a $10 mi 1-.

ESUS
.OVES .

he kept lighting ." Willis ' son Jame s
By MAUREEN CLARK
According to witnesses, Leonard
said after the pardon was signed. The Supernaw. a sailor from Oklahoma.
Aseocleted Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - More elder Willis is now nearly deaf. suf- threatened Willis, chased him through
fering from colon cancer and is los- the Sellstrom and beat him.
tha~ 50 years have passed since a
sailor from Oklahoma was killed in . ing his eyesight. His son, James. lis, "Supernaw was pounding Willis
a shipboard fight following a scuffie tened to the ceremony by phone and with his fists and was savagely beat·
in a small Alaska town. In all those relayed the details to his father.
ing him. Willis was no match for
"The
wait
was
definitely
worth
it.
years, James Willis always said he
Supernaw. I feared for Willis' life,"
Thanksgiving will be a real memo- said Norman Smook of Wantagh,
stabbed the man ·in self defense.
N.Y., who witnessed the auack.
Willis' quest to clear his name rable one," James Willis Jr. said.
James Willis ' problems began in Smook's . sworn statements would
fin~lly ended Wednesday, when Gov.
Tony Knowles pardoned him for the late October 1945 while he was eventually help win Willis ' pardon.
Willis managed to break away
stabbing that took place during what serving as a Coast Guard engineer
witnesses said was a racially moti- aboard the USS Sellstrom. The ves- from Supernaw long enough to
vated attack at the end of World War sel docked at the southeast Alaska retrieve a knife from his locker.
town of Wrangell for celebrations to When Supcmaw grabbed him, Willi s
II.
"Many people have waited for mark the end of World War II, and reached behind the man and stubbed
this. day. Nobody has waited longer Willis visited a dance hall packed . him in the back. Supernaw died a few
minutes later.
than James Franklin Willis," with sailors on shore leave .
Witnesses s.aid a near-riot broke
Several sailors took offense when
Knowles said.
Willis, now Ti and living in New Willis. who is black. danced with a out on the ship and Willis was badly
York City. cried tears of joy as woman who was either white or an beaten. He and the ship's three other
Knowles signed the pardon at a cer- American' Indian and a s'cufnc black crewmen were held at ajuil for
emony in Juneau, nearly 3,000 miles ensued, witnesses said. Willis made their safety while order was restored.
it back to his ·ship, but the sailors
He was later indicted on a charge
away.
of second-degree murder for Super" It's enough to hreak any man. but came looking for him.

-

..

By .RICHARD WILLING
USA Today
About one in four criminal suspeds given DNA tests by the FBI are
found not to have committed the
cril)lcs for which they are suspected,
an FBI report shows. ·
Since it staned in 1988, the FBI
crime lab's DNA analysis unit has
exqneratcd about 3,000 suspects- a
quaner of all those it has examined.
Most were rape suspects whose
gctictic characteristics were found not
. to tnatch those of the rapist when
samples of body n uid were compared.
(n addition to its own cases. the
FBI crime lab performs testing for
local police and prosecutors.
f'BI officials say the high cxoncratidn rate is evidence or the impartial~y of the FBI's crime lab and the
vaiYe (jj· DNA testing as an investigative tool.
:·There have hccn nee as ions when
wc':ve testified in behalf of the
dcl\lnsc, if a prosecutor has charged
a suhjctl and our testing has cxduded him." says Dwight Adams. who
heads the FBI crime lab's scicntil'ic
analysis section, which includes the
DN)'. unil.

.

.

CHQI~TMA&amp;

tests on it.
In McVeigh's trial, prosecutors
opted not to call either scientist, relying instead on testimony from
Burmeister.
Prosecutors say Nichols and
McVeigh. who shared a hatred of the
federal government. stuffed ammo~
nium nitrate and racing fuel oil into
barrels and packed them inside a
Ryder rental truck on April 18 , 1995,
near Herington, Kan.
McVeigh then drove the truck to
Oklahoma City and detonated it outside the federal building.
Nichols, 42, could be sentenced to
death if convicted of murder and conspiracy. McVeigh, 29, received the
death penalty after being convicted of
identical charges in June .

But a leading criminal defense
lawyer calls the exoneration rate
"shockingly" high and says it shows
how often police and prosecutors
focus on the wrong suspect.
" A gigantic percentage of those
(exonerated) had already been
charged." says New York lawyer
Gerald Lcfcoun. president of the
9.500-mcmber National Association
of Criminal Defense Lawy~rs.
"Thi~ ' is ' not a few dsst!S; we' re
talking about. As a citizen ... this is
something that clearly frightens
~ou," Lcfcoun says.
Last April, a Justice Department
investigation reported a Pl!llern of
sloppy work and erroneous testimony in three other units of the FBI's
24-unit lab.
Local .prosecutors acknowledge
the high rate of exoneration but offer
this explanation:
In rape cases, men often become
suspects based primarily on a victim's visual identification. But police
and prosecutors know such idcnti fi.
cations frequently arc inaccurate. So,
they send PNA samples to be tested
by the FBI as a check on the victim's
claims.
"Oftentimes when a subject is

excluded (l&gt;y the DNA tests) they're
not surprised," says Clay Strange. an
assistant district attorney and DNA
specialist in Travis County. Texas.
"The DNA tests arc being used in
that. way as another tool of the investigator. ··
DNA t.csts isolate the chemical
components of individual cells, highlighting genetic ICatures that ·arc
umquc.

lion sdcRL'( :-.mdhh.' in ;, dramatic

40 Varieties of
Bulk Candy

Try Our Own
Homemade .
Apple Butt~r_

SIWEN GREENHOUSES OF OUR OWN ( /IIJ
POINSE'ITii\S IN MANY COLORS

in

The Daily Sentinel

-ONLY-

(CHILD'S NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name

Per PicturePrepaid
Please enclose self-addressed:
stamped envelope to return your

In usc in American courts sin~e
1987. the tests can rule out an individual as a source of body nuids such
as blood or semen. But until last
month DNA tests could not be said to
positively "match" a suspect to an
incriminating sample.
Based on improvements in lcsting
und statistical analysis. FBI experts
have begun testifying in coun that
DNA can be matched within a "rca-

Official
Entry

o.:nnflhlf' o,;.lnlistical certainty."

THE MIDDLEPORT FAITH CHAPEL

Form

would like to thank the following people and
businesses for making our
Free Thanksgiving Dinner a Huge Success:
Joe &amp; Pat Custer, Signs and Cooker
Tina Slory, Oonaling 5 pies
Joyce Blake, Use of catering equipment
Mitch's Produce, Flowers
Big Bear, donating large cake
Helners Thrift Shop, Rolls
All Pastors and community leaders who attended
Also a Big Thank You to the Congregation and the young peopl
of Faith Chapel. Your labors were very much apprecialed.

""=
f
Q

:
1.
.

50% Off Monthly Accesst

· Cellular with all-day
battery ($300.01 value.)
• 20 number merTIOI)'

Free Advice

• Call timer

• 2 houri talk tint.
16 hours lfandlly

Convenience

ttl !16S

*

Wish all your crmomers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christ111-4s Greetings Edition
on l)ecember 24th

1~ilh

.

Security

ac&lt;ivation . llOO.ot without)

Thoughtful

Gift

Smart Call.

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE OR DON

992-2156

This holiday season. RadloShack and United States Cellular are
making cellular simple to have and simple to give.

TIIE DAILY SEN·TINEL

SOo/o ()ff Monthly Access for Three Months PLUS Free Activation!'
UNITED ITATEB

CELLUlAR.

"I'm kind of missing those sweet
potatoes with the marshmallow on
top, but we're going to do a prcuy
good job of it here." American astronaut David Wolf said in a phone conversation with NASA Administrator
Daniel Goldin.
Wolf said he also misses apple,pie.
"I tell you what, everything I
think about on the Eanh is what I
miss at that moment," he said.

..

Tuesday, December 23rd

.

course.

(

(16 years of age or younger)
Will he published

!

It••••

spaccwalk three .tays after ''' h&lt;~chcd
release frnm tbe shunlc.
•
"You know how impurtunl your
work is to the international spar.:c station and tn our entire effort. and I
can't tell you how grateful J am:·
Clinton 'Said in a twn-minulc t.:all
Thursday night from Camp David.
Md.
Cnmnmndcr Kevin Kn:gcl assur~ll
the president that while he ;tnd his
crew miss their fmnilics Unwn on
Eanh. " the six of us up here arc a
family in itself"' we're enjoying this
Thanksgiving Day "'"''·..
It was a working holiday for th~
astronauts, who sluiT~d in st:1cnc~·
experiments as well as proc.·cs:.cd
turkey dinners.
Over on the Russian 'Pal'l' station
Mir. smoked turkey was the main ·

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"

photo.

. Wednesday, December 24th

@ RadioShack.
"'"''"'r'1...._.. W.'wpiiiiWI'I.•

*
t

Adwwsfd Plitt r!O,Iifts 1 ~w activltion and minimum Strvic~ commirmtnt (usu~l~ 1. 2-or 3 ytars}, upx1 ntdi1 apP'MI. with the RadmShack authorizrd ctllul~r carrr~r w·wrr19 ~'lllr area An iKtivaiiOn lee md)' be rrqurrtd
Like yout home~ 1 month~ Sfflitf let, l~ · diit¥1Cf Itt\ and chargu l01 ~r ·t•mt ~ .tetual~ ust will tit mad!!. All t~f fus w~ ~prodlng on~~ plan you ~k ~ 10U Jermrl'lalr Sl'IVICI! be-lore compltll'lll !ll fOtA
n'llfl1ml.lll strvi!t comrnitmf!tl, yW' catrltf mar impost a llat or p-Otated ltfmillltiOn Itt Myou ttfmrnatt Stri'icr W1!hlrl 110 da,s of a&lt;:tiWi!IOO, to ill()jd a I)()() rhargt by Rad10Shack. you mu~l rtltM lllr {~Nular !)Moe.
501 off monthfr teens on srlfctfd ratt plan' for go~ Oliff mar wary and m,., I"''JI bt awrllbi~ in alllocatioos N~w oot·yt.tf U111ttd Slatl~ C~lular StiY!Ct ~!fment ttquntd OHtr walrd on!)' on {l'fl.lln col~ng plans
Roaming dllfQII. tll&lt;fl. iol&lt;l!litwiW(Ik IUICI\aogo1"l! IPIIIY-Ott-.1 ro!I!KiiO&lt;"
"119'1 ""J ii&gt;PI!·I&lt;Ait«' 10 Ci!tlt iWfoval . Not •~d "th any oti'froll• Iff ~~~• l01 d•IO&gt;I&lt; 011" .,;, 11/ltm
Pf'icft ..,ey 1t p1rtidl)ltlng RldloShiCk storts and dttlen. lnde~nt RtdioSh;Kk dttlm tnd fr~nehhttl m.y nut bt partklpatingln thh ad or stotk or spl'&lt;ill·order evrry item allvf!rtised

'

• j

I

J
J

-~

.

naw's death. -While in jail awaiting
trial , he developed a spinal infection
stemming from the injuries he suffered during the beating. Antibiotics
used to treat him damaged his hearing,
Willis says he never saw an anorncy or appeared before a judge .
Transcripts of coun proceedings say
he appeared in coun several times
and eventually pleaded guilty to
manslaughter. His allorney, Ray·mond· Zuppa, says the records were
falsitied.
Willis was sentenced to five years
in the McNeil Island Penitentiary in
Washington. A dishonorable discharge from tho. Coast Guard stripped
him of his benefits .
"S ince his release from prison,
Mr. Willis has lived a law-abiding life
while bearing the stigma of a felony
conviction. Il's time lo relieve him of
that burden." Knowles said Wednesday before signing the pardon.

-·.

GREETING EDITION

.•.• PICTURE YOUR CHILD
·.
AMONG THE...

DNA testing exonerates one out of four suspects

!1

Shuttle astronauts get
thank you from C(inton

Defense attorneys contend the othy McVeigh allegedly stored ferpanel may have been contaminated, tilizer and fuel oil before the April 19,
possibly in the FBI .lab where it was 1995, blast.
tested. They also have laid the
' Prosecutors said they likely will
groundwork for a claim that FBI analysts concentrated on the ammonium conclude their case against Nichols
nitrate-and-fuel bomb theory. dis- next week.
carding any other possibilities.
The bomb evidence has been a
The panel is one of the pieces of sore spot for prosecutors since a Jusevidence that witnesses were expect· tice Department repon issued in
ed to discuss today when testimony April criticized the FBI explosives
resumed after a one-day Thanksgiv- lab for the way some of ·the pieces
ing recess. The trial will convene for were handled.
a half day, as has been the practice
The report concluded a top exploevery Friday.
sives expert made scientifically
Prosecutors planned to call FBI invalid conclusions about the size and
chemist Steven Burmeister to di scuss components of the bomb. It criticized
lab tests done on bomb evidence. another FBI scientist for failing to
including the truck panel and Kansas examine McVeigh's shin through a
storage bins where Nichols and Tim- microscope before conducting other

PW!1!f~,-~.--..,~ W.·.IW~ -)13 -~~~~-q

WWII veteran wins pardon for long-ago killing

vou_

Parade-goers injured
by piece of light pole

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Nichols ·prosecutors hope piece
of panel truck will sway jurors

Lawsuit sets stage for con,lict ....
·over college affirmative action .,
'

1997

Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel

J

�•

Page

12 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November

28, 1997

·.·

Friday, November

.=::::===========;--=-:=-==---=--=-=-..:......:.....-----:-~-~-:-Sad but true: Zhivago's
:~
'Lara' prototype informed
0°/o ~~
on author to secret police

OPEC nations ,consider raising
ceiling on oil· production by 1

MOSCOW (AP)- ll's a letter that could shatter a legendary romantic story: 'The Russian beauty who inspired the radiant "Lara" in Boris
Pasternak's "Dr. Zhivago" informed on htm to the commumst government.

In a 1961 letter just published, Pasternak's long - tim~ agent and mistress, Olga lvinskaya, appealed from jail to then-Sovtet leader Ntktta
Khrushchev to ease her punishment. She cited servic&lt;:s rendered to help
silence the rebel author.
"I held up those Pasternak letters addressed abroad which mtghl fuel
unhealthy passions," lvinskaya said in the letter, excerpts ofwhteh were
published this month by the daily Moskovsky Komsomolets.
" People in the (Communist Party) Central Comm1ttee told me to try
to prevent Pasternak from meeting foreigners . and I have done all my
best."
.
ll's impossible to know whether she helped the government muzzle the
author. as she told Khrushchev, or whether she was merely trytng to wtn
concessions. lllC leiter's publication is the most sensational salvo in a long~
running coun battle for Pasternak's archivcs.between he irs of the author
and of lvinskaya.
Pasternak's son. Yevgeny. who is not invoil•ed in the court fight.
described the publication as an " immoral and indecent'' attempt to smear
Ivinskaya by magnifying altnk with the government that she had acknowledged. In her hook , "A Captive of Time. " lvtnskaya alluded to contacts
with authorities. but she said she always protected Pasternak.
"She wrote about all that m her book with absolute honesty.' ' Yevgeny Pasternak told The Associated Press today. "This attempt to scandalize well-known facts is disgu sting ."
In 1992, lvinskava won a lawsuit to claim property rights on some of
Pasternak's archive~. Sam..: of Paslcrnak' :-; heirs appealed the decision in
1994. and the case remains unresolved,
Natalia Pasternak. the author 's daughter-in-law, and the Russian State
Literature and Arts Archive, which has custody of the documents. arc fight ing to keep the papers in Russia .
·
They say lvinskaya's survivors only want to sell the papers.
"They don't even conceal their desire to market the documents... said
Natalia Pasternak, widow of the writer's son . Leonid.
Ivinskaya was a 34-ycar-old editor at Novy Mil literary magazine when
she met Pasternak. then 56. shortly artcr World War II. In her mem01r,
she described the encounter'" "a meeting with God. "
They soon became romantically mvolvcd, :hough the author continued tu live with his wife at a writers ' colony in Pcrcdclkino near Moscow.
He and Ivinskaya set up a separate household.
Soviet authorities. trytng to control Pasternak, arrested lvinskaya in
1949. She was sentenced to four years of hard lahar.

Italy prepares to
By DANIEL J. WAKIN
Associated Press Writer
NOVATE MILANESE, Italy For years, the bureaucrats concocting
a single currency for Europe seemed
a universe removed from the everyday concerns in shops and on factory floors.
But like a castle that suddenly
looms out of the nonhern Italian fog,
thc curo is almost here.
On Jan. I. 1999, it becomes the
official currency of the European
Union and unites a market of 370
million people.
Euros will not gd into circulation
until 2002. but banks and governmcnts will be adopting the currency
on paper 1n 13 months. Most ltahan.
government debt w1ll be ISsued m
curos. Bank accounts. mvcslmcnt
ponfol ios and ta~cs can be expressed
in curos.
The change rai'scs many questions
for Marialuisa Franzini. chairwoman
of the Salvi company. which was
founded by her uncle in 19:\2to make
gold and sil~er, cmbroidery on church
vestments. Today. the company\
hohhins spin out cahlcs for French

telephones. Italian clectrocardio·

graphs. Spanish VCRs.
What docs the euro mean lor
competition' How should Salvi 's
order ~md billing forms he changed?
What about paychecks·• Should
Franztni buy new software and try to
change the existing? How will her
hooks deal with a currency that docsn't end in a parade of zero s''
The national business associat10n . Conlindustria. launched a campaign this fall to help such companies
prepare forthe cure's arrival. It organized seminars and appointed "curo
men" at local chJpters
"I think we arc basically on
track," said Riccardo Perissich. Confmdustria's euro expert and a vice
_president at the Pirelli tire and cable
conglomerate. "I don't think that othcr countries arc more advanced than
we arc."
That is not very far along , according to a Confindustria survey earlier
this year.
About 63 percent of Italy's small
and medium companies were "little
informed," or less, about the EU's

By DIRK BEVERIDGE
AP Business Writer
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Most
OPEC ministers believe they are
about 10 raise their oil production
cetling but Iran is among those try:
ing to hold down the increase to
avoid harming prices, a delegate to
the meeting said Thursday.
With Saudi Arabia proposing a
higher official output level, some
ministers are talking about raising the
group's stated production by almost
I0 percent, to 27.5 million barrels a
day compared with the current
25.033 million barrels.
'
Iran wants to keep any new ceil·
ino below 26.5 million barrels to keep
prices propped up. according to an
OPEC delegate who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Iranians wprry that Iraq will
·pump more crude next year under a
new food-for-oil deal with the United Nations and they think that others
in OPEC arc not taking this threat
seriously enough, the delegate told

The Associated Press.
Iran. the second-biggest player in
OPEC after Saudi Arqbia. has thus far
refused to disclose precii&gt;ely how
much oil it believes OPEC can produce without risking a price collapse.
OPEC's talks about raising product·ion have started to worry traders.
Spot futures prices in London were
just a few cents higher around midday today, after plunging more than
50 cents a barrel on Wednesday.
OPEC ministers were unable to
reach any agreement in a closed-door
session this evening, but they said
thev would meet aoain Fridav.
Discord within the group is not
helping matters - with Venezuelan
oil minister Erwin Arrieta finally
offering an e.planation for why he
missed the stan of the contentious
session.
Arrieta said he was tied up with
labor talks back home in Caracas, but
that he would arrive in time for
OPEC's serious talks about production. OPEC organizers said Arrieta

would anive Friday.
Arrieta is blamed for the biggest
ponion of OPEC's current overproduction and some OPEC delegates
say privately they can't have any
meaningful talks without him.
· Iraq's ambassador to Indonesia,
Sa'doon J. AI Zubaidi, said today that
OPEC can carry for now on even
without Arrieta.
..·1 don'tthink Venezuela will be
holding us hostage." said AI Zubaidi, who is representing Iraq at the
meeting. "They are overproducing
anyway."
Speaking to reporters in
Venezuela, Arrieta took aim at others
in OPEC for "spending too m~ch
time worrying about q~otas and production. which has only caused internal problems within OPEC."
Indonesian oil minister Ida Bagus
Sudjana says the Saudis have con·
vi need most members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries that they should produce
more oil to capture a bigger share of

peace activists opposed to Israel's ISyear military presence in Lebanon arc
gaining strength - buoyed by media
reports that senior army officers
share their view.
·
Labor party lawmaker Yossi
Beilin stunned many Israelis when he
claimed Wednesday that Levine was
the unidentified general cited in
rc~.:cnl reports who was recommending a unilateral pullout. Levine convened a late-night news confcrcn~.:c in
Tel Aviv to clarify his (1'osition .
"There arc officers who think we

dist~ibute
adapt. unlike some major conglomerates like Fiat and Pirclli .
Opinion polls ·find Italians strongly favor European monetary union.
however. It is seen us a way to leave
hchind the traditionally unstable lira
and hiSiork:ally high interest rates and
inllation.

euros.

On the factory floor, amid the
steady click of spindle arms and low
machinery roar, the filaments arc
twined into threads. The raw cable is
drawn through a device that coats

them in plastic . After they pass
through
cutter, employee Luca
Colombo gathers thci11 up. Sometime
in 1999, his paycheck will have
euros next to the lira figure.
Alessandra Lonardi. a clerk in the
administrative office, will soon he
punching in the pun.:hasc price in

a

You're Invited To 1\llend
Pomeroy Merchants Association

Christmas

tlOU~E

"Come Home for Christmas
Celebrate 6parkle"
c£&gt;unday Afternoon, November 30th

Chrislmas Parade Be8ins
Al 2:00 PM and After lhe Parade &amp;.nla Claus
will be in the Mini Park for the children.
Come Join in lhe fun in Beauliful tlisloric

e

Ph. 985-4198
Ynr ,.._ wfiiiHII
..,... 1llftll thlllf•

'
•

.......

~

''

Kalherl·ne Weaver,

en Order of Sill ba laaued
Sam to tho SheriN of Motgo

Sttlnmolz, Poul Stolnmolz, County, Ohio, to epprolto,
end Ann Berrett, 1nd. II advertlto In tho Dolly
dtcouod, oil helra, devl- Sontlnol
ond ooll told reol
1111, llgltlll, IXICUtora,
elloll,
thot
tho promltet be
uecutrlxea, admlnletr•· aold frtt ond
ctoer of oil
tore, admlnletratrlxea and cl•lml, Uena end lnt•••t of
oaalgnell who11 oddrooe ony of tho partltl heroin,
are unknown, will hereby thot tho procoodo from tho
teko notlca thlt op October aele of aeld pram1111 be
I, tlt7, USDA Rural oppllod to tho PlalntiH'•
Davelopmant, fltod lit Judgmonf ond lor tuch
Complolnt In Fortcloturt othor rolltf to which USDA
lnd lll~rtltalllng of Uont In Rurol Dovolopmtnt. 11
tlta Comrnen Plno Court of
lllalga County, Ohio, bolng Sold Dalendonll ore
CoM NO. f7·CV·125 ogolntt directed to the Complaint
The Ettoto of Kothorlno whoroln notice undor the

'•

·-·

PUBUC NOTICE 1
NOTICE TO AMBULANCE
DEALERS
In occordanco with· the
Ohio Reviled code, Ho'-&lt;1
bldo wtll b• r-Ived by tho. •
Melga county Board ol 1 ,
Commllllonora In their.
office IOCIIId In thl
Courthouu, Third Floor,
Second Strtet, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 untll12 noon on
Mondoy, Dec. 15, tll97. Th• .
bldt will be opened at 1:00
p.m. on the nme and read .
oloud lor tht following 1997
or Newer Emergency
Medlcol Sarvlcoo Vllllclo.
Each bid mull "'"' tho condition•
and. ·
opeclflcttlons 11 follow• ·
ond eoch bidder muot
Include a ten .,..rcent (10'If&gt;) .
bid bond with their bid.
Spoclflcatlono may be .
obtolned rrom the Molgo
County Emergency Medleal
Servlcts Olllce, located on
OHice Box 748, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 or Phon~ (614)
992-6~17 during normot
bualneaa hourt.
Vllltlclo to be one (1) 1897
or newer Mlni·Mod typo
Emergency Ambulance

December 18, 1997, et th•

factory. stock or demo

&lt;"I

I

CLASSIFIED$/

WICKS
HAULING

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy - Acceti Regulator Repair

Limestone,

State Certified Welder
'stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill

Dirt

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

614-992-3470

"

•

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

'"FACI'ORY
DIRECT
PRICES"
Quality Window Systems
· 110 cciurt St.
WV ICM34n

Announ~ements

. - ·- '

POMEROY, OH.

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
$19.95 per room

1998 Martin Street

Nov. 20-Dsc. 20
11/11/17 1 mo; pd.

S&amp;L

RACINE, OH.

TRUCKING

614-949-3060

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

John Williams,
Owner
Licensed
Electrician

GravelLimestone-

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
StQp &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

--

-.

.

YOUNG'S

DEER
PROCESSING

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlont
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•ln1orlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-e215
.
Pomeroy, Ohio _

I
DOMNO'S PIZZA
TUESDAY NIGHT

IKE MORRISON .
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

.,

&amp; Wrapped .
$35.00

$5 extra for
skinning

MAPLEWOOD LAKE
949-2734

·- ... . ·

"FAMILY NIGHT'
'Buy one, get one FREE
Pomeroy location Only

OPEN HOUSE
Sat. Nov. 29
9 am • 9 pm
Gloria Oller
St. Rt. 325 Langsville, 0 .

Cut

PRO
Pick up dlacarded
appliances, bltlerlea,
many metela &amp;
motor blocka.

614·992-40251 ...
'

•

W. hon an 11111itn1 tel«11on of
Ibtatlilfvly tlttared Jrtts 111110 14

l'rlm 110.'20
Lan4K.,. Siodt
(Piolll aflor Chmlmas)
Spruce and Whitt I'Jnt.

S6/ft
BAFiR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sat.'! &amp; Sun'• til Chri1tmas
St. Rt. 325, Danville. Oh

•

'•
I

All Yard Salts Mutt Bt Paid In '
Adv1nce. D••dlln•: 1:00pm the
day btla'• tha ad It to run,
Sunday &amp; Mondty adltlon·
1:OOpm Friday.

Moiling sale- Decembef" 1, 9:00·?
Heated garage . Women's cloth·
mg . 11zes 3· 12 ; booka, batkets, •
Home lntenor, bike , moped, blr· ~
gains l East ol Racine on SR 124,
turn left onto CR 35 , second
gravel road on r 1ght, second
hou&amp;e ~I !aft

Auction

__ _

ANXIOUS?
10 MEET SOMEONE?

TIRED OFlHAT 01.0 BAR
SCENE?THENCALLTHE
DATELINE
100-2811-1111 EXT. 1740
On~ $2.9Q Per Minute
· Muat Be 18 Vear1 04d.
Serv.IJ 619-e4S.S434.

Chnstmas Auct ion . Sat Nov 29th
7pm &amp; Sun Nov 30th 1pm. Mt
Alto Auction Rt .2 ·33 ·cross·
roads·. Ron on Saturday night,
Roy on Sunday. Grocer1es on Fri·

..
;
,
~

day. Ed Frazier 1930.
Ohio Valley Bank Will Ofler For
Sale A t 996 Honda Fourtrax
AT\/, Serial tjh3tet900tk103183
&amp; A 1992 Chevrolet lumina, Seriel 12g1wpt4x8n9209849. Public
Auction Will Be Held At The 0\/B

Anne•. 143 T~ird Ave., Gallipolis,

OH ON 12113197 ~~ 10:00 A.M.
The A~e Will Be Sold To High· 1
est Bidder "As Is · Where Is"
Without E~~:preued Or Implied
Warranty And Ma)' Be Seen By •
Callmg Ke1th Johnson At 614 · .
441 - 1038. OVB Reserves The
Right To Accept Or Reject Any
And All Bids, And Withdra~
Property From Sale Prior To Slle.
Terms Of Sale: CASH OR CEA·

TIFIED CHECK.

Rick Pearson Auction Companr.
full t1me auctioneer, complete

ATTENT!OH
Has Your Warrlage Or Relationship Got Up I Went? Stop In
Princeu Video I Rent One Of

auction
service. Licenud
•eti,Ohlo &amp; West VirQinia, 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773·5447 .

Our Adult Yldeol, 1380'Eastern 90 Wanted to Buy
Avenue, Galllpoil, Ohio Or Call ----:,..-,.---,,=:--=814·441·5187.

Bored Ohio HousewiVes t's 1·

hi. 4585 18.
$2.991Min. 5erv·U819-64s.&amp;434.
900·285·9077,

Ftee Pag•rs AcliYation Required

1-888-93&amp;-9774.

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proofsets.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre· 1930 U.S. Currencr.
Sterling, Ere Acquisitions Jewetrr
· U .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;2842.

Ant1ques, top prices paid, Rr11er·
me Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Uoore owner, 614 -992·

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· sand

•

985-4422

992-6305

10/21/97 1 mo. pd . .

Chester, Ohio
1 0/25/96/lfn

Feel A Little Awkward, Shy, Or

Maybe Uncomfortable Is Asktng
Someone Far A Oate? Then Get
With The Pr0111m1 .
Try An Exciting Different Ap·

~--=~:-:::=-:::--.;;'I preach

r

SAYRE

'Rue KING

Hauling, Excavallng
&amp; Trenching .
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Silas
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

614-742-2138

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday· 8:00 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Salurday • 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

Big Bend .Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop
250 Condor Sireel

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· NicMis Metal, INc.
Fax: 304·773·5861
Phone: 614: 992·2406

To Finding That Specia l

Someone! The Power Is All
Youn ... At Your Oi&amp;cretion, At
Your Conv•nlence, At Your Fin·

gertipsl

1·900·289~~~ ~- · $2.99

Per Minute, Must Be 18 Yrs,

Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber

B&lt;g $ OoHors $1~14-388 · 9900 .

Wanted To Buy : T1mber And
land With Standing Timber, 614·
662·7316.
We Buy Junk AulD's In Any Con·
di!ion. Call 61•-368-9062, Or 614·

446-PART.
'

serv.u 6t9.e4S.8434

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sportl • Enttrlllnment
MCMH, Horoscopes, Financial

Catl1·900·285-9413
11 + $2.gg Min.

11 o Help wanted

E•t3278.

30 Announcements
Country Stofe Craft Sale Benefits
Greenf1~d V.F.O. &amp; Crime .Watch
DecemtM!r 5th, 6th, 7rh, Info Call
f&gt;14·379· 2449.

Craft Show· one mile south Ra¥·
enswood, WV. at interaection ol
Hemlock Rd . and Rt. 2. U.P.C.
church fellowship hall . Novembet
1Slh, S1 :OOam·S:OOpm. All era liars
inuar•sted call 304· 273-3813.
Featured crafter : Uichale Garret·

son.
No huntmg or trespassing day or
mght on Charles Yost or Robe rt
Smith !arms anyone caught will be

Giveaway

10 Week Old Beagle

perience

Necessary.

$1 ,200

Month To Start, Call Uondo.y 614....S-7441 .

AVON ·I All AreU I Sh irley
Spears, :Jl4-675-1429.
Computer Uteri Needed. Work
own l'tOIUS. S20k to SSOk/yr 18)0.348-7186 a:1508.

Oe~dable And Flexible CNA's
Needed For In Homo Care. (fall
Adrianne Or Angl At 1· 800-•81·

6334.
Eas .. Work! E•cell ent Pay I As semble Products At Home. Call
Toll Free 1- BQ0 ·-467 -5586 E1t.

proseculed.

40

• Atmntion •

180PENINGS
Due To Expansion local Company Has Various PositJcns, No Ex·

M1~, 2

Males, 2 Females. 614·367-7765.

1-80Q.&amp;a5-086a

12170.
Government Jobs Now Hum~ .
$11 Per Hour, Fu ll Benefits . For
tnfo Call 800-866-9311, Ext 7078.

5 Puppies To Good Home, 614·

HUBBARD'S

l GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh
Now Open for Chrio!Jn,.
&amp;11100

• l'al11111tlas, alltolon
'

Ia to run. Sunday
edltton • 2:00p.m.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

HUPP LANDSCAPING

Delivery Available

·Personals

7122/tfn

the
Southern
RUTLAND
Ohio Columbus
Power Company
and ,.l:=====::::::::;~:::::;:::::;:::::;;:;;"....,;~'~'"'~· ="'~
0
AMERICAN ATCH
LEGION teln
~~: Information
~0~=:~~%p~~~
·~~~:
, OILER'S
regarding
SLUG MIll
each company's projeetlon•
DEER SHOP
AT
NOV.
29
of
anllclpated
supply,
GRJUE
BLANKET$
SJll.1 •
tupply pricoo, and supply
,w
S.R. 325,
·S'('JlARTS 7: 00 P.M.
aourcea ovtr the forecast
0 ~der NOW 10r
1
the H01,'ldBYS
Langsville OH
•
period. Th~ public hearing
Open Naw &amp; Will Be
will boutn at 1o:oo a.m.,
Custom Made for You,r Loved One
BEACH GROVE RD. December
18, 1997, at the
Open During The Bow
oHicea, 180
For Details Call
GUN SHOOT SUN., Commission
E01t Broad Street, Colum&amp; Regular
NOV, 30, 1P.M. b11~·1 •2~h~~ ~:~~1~-~i93.
Ed Hupp (614) 843-5235
DHr Seasan
L,.;.;.;.._..,;.._ __.l
· '
Jon Sargent (614) 992-7312
742-2076 .

~

005

11/3197 1 mo pd

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

-- . . .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dirt
614·992·3220

BACK .HOE"
SERVI(E
Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Lines

QfAQUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day bofOIW the t&lt;f

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

Little things
art Worth A lot

Sand-

24 hr. emergency
aervlce.

No job To Small

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

wv.S04..f375· 5404.

(No Sunday Calls)

111211971 mo pel

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Att ney At Law
or
614-592•5025
Athens, Ohio

sale

Everyday. Store hours 9·5. Crawford's Flea Markel, Henderson,

614-992-7643

949-2115

Chapter 13

Yard

ATTENTION VENDORS: lndoo1
Space $5.00 Ou1doo1 $3.00 Open

FREE ESTIMATES

(C-30) Morning Star Rd.
Racine

Chapter 7

70

•

and Flea Market

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

BANKBOP!CY

•

Schnauzer •Hel di" Ph. 61 4·4464929.

80

Room Additions • Roofing

Wreathe - Swags •
Roping
Grave Blankets
$5.00 &amp; Up

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Ullllitas Commillion of Ohio haa
scheduled a pubtic hearing
In Caae Noa. 97-201-EL-FOA
and 97-202-EL-FOR to
review lha 1997 long-1orm
forecast reports filed by the

Joe Wlleon
(614 992-4277'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Garages • Replacement Windows

11

Loat: Small Lighl Grey Female

'

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

re••rv••

•

• 10:00 a.m. Saturdl)'.

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miles east of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384-6212

opportunity provisions, and
tho requirement for a
poymont bond and
performance bond for 100%
ollhe controct price.
No bidder may wllhdraw
hll bid within thlrdy (30)
doyt oftor tbt actual date of
the opening Uioroot
Metgo
County

,

wardi614·388-Q401 .

Friday. Mondoy t&lt;flllon

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Davie-Bacon
Wages,
varloue
Insurance
requirement•, varlou• aquel

torYVIniDn Area Along Road , Ra-

Remodeling

"Build Your Dream"

614-992.0077
otter good

Free Estimates

Public Notice

lost UBioon PurH, Has Dfl.,...l
licenw In Purse. Vicmitt : Ewing-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Min. 2 Rooms

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Waaon Blvd . Rewa rdl 304 -175·
0506.

M&amp;J

CORPORAL
ELECTRIC

the right to walvt any
lnformalltlta or to rtject ony
or all bidt.
Janet Howard, Pretldont
111) 17, 24,26 3 tc

A

BRAMRI MINING

Public Notice
Banda
ahall
be
accompanied by Proof or
Authority of the offlclel or
apnt signing the bond.
Sldt shall be aealed ond
marked as Bid for Chaster,
Fire Department Triple
Combination Pumper and
mailed or de!lvered to:
Metgo County
Commlsaloners
Courthoun
.P0111oroy, Ohio 45789
Attention of bidders Ia
coiled to all of the
requlromentl eontalnod In
this bid pocket, panlcutarty
to the Federal Labor
Stondardt Provtalono and

Corftmlealonera

Custom Homes

From

. - . -.

Guney· in vlcinltr ot Jtfftf'IOnf

81 Ptkt In Advanee.

Happy HolUlays

992·5583

"""- 814-44&amp;-11253.

LOST: Mlllt cat, ttrippt&lt;f tabll\'
wMhlt. ental, antwtrl 10 ·Me·

.ALl. v..d S.IH ...,,..

Houra:
7:00a.m. lhru 4:00p.m. Monday thru Friday

1-800-291-5600

lo1t: female Cat, Color Ctftm,
Lost In The Vaneo Road, Por•·

Cut Your OWn
•
Freah Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd ., 1 112 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
)'lov. 281hru Dec. 21 11124/911 mo. P&lt;l

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Soatod propont• lor the
cheater Volunttlr Fire
Doportm.ent
Triple
Combination Pumpor will be
received by the Melgt
County Commlulonoro ot
thlr office at tho
CourthouH, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 10:00 a.m.,
Dacombor B, 1e87 and then
at 1:00 p.m.. at told oHice
opened and road aloud for
t1ta following:
Tho furnlthlng and
delivery, at tpeclllod, of 1
Triple Combination Pumper
tpparatut.
Apporttut
propooed by the bidder
aholl mill the roqulromenll
of tho Natlonet Fire
ProtoctlonAaooclotlon
INFPA) ao allied In current
Phamphltt 1901 lor PumJNir
lire ·Apporatut, chaptart 1
through 12: chapter• 15 and
23 except whorl amended
htreln.
Plont, Speclflcotlono, ond
bid forma may be oecured
ot tho office of Melgt
County Commlsalonert.
Each bid mull be
accompanied by ehhar a bid
bond In an amount of 100%
of the bid amount whh a
aurety tatlalactory to tho
ofor11ald Meigs County
. Commleolonort or by
cortlfled chock, caohlero
chock, or letter ot credit
upon a aotvent bank In the
amount of not loea than
10% ol the bid amount In
favor olthe aforenld Molgo
County Commlaolonora. Bid

30

Commltslon offlcta, 180 modal.
Eoat Brood Street, ColumAll Bids Mutt Be Sealed ,
bus, Ohio 43215-3793.
and Marked "Bid For
(1_1;_)_20_;,_2_8.;,11.:2.:..1_2_3'----i Emergency Ambulance."
bidder Must Follow
_ _:.,P.:U::b:::II.:C..:N.:;O::;t::;lc:::e:___ 1 ,notructlona Encloood In
Bid PocktL
PUBUC NOTICE
. The Board of County .
FOR SALE
Commtaelontrl may accept ·
In occordanco with the the bell bid for the intended :
Ohio Revtaod Code, aoalod purpote, and reserve• tho.
blda will be received ~Y the right to reject ony or 111 bid• :
Molg• county Boord of and or any port therool, ond' ,
Commlaalonera In their to waive ony lnlormallty In: ·
office locotod tn the any proposal.
·
Courthou10, Third Floor, 111) 28, (12) 5, 12 3te
Second Slreot, Pomeroy, - - - - - - - - Ohio 45769 untll12 noon on
Public Notice
lllondoy, Dec. 15, 1897. The --:..:==::.:;::::.::::._.:...
· ··'
bldo will bo opened at 1:00
RESOLUTION 6.97
p.m. on lhl 10me day ond
BE IT RESOLVED by the .
read oloud lor tho following council of the Village ol .
u11d ombulonco no tongor Pomeroy, All membero : ·
nttided by tho Molgt . thereto concurring:
County Emergency Medico!
THAT tho Clerk/Trnaurer
Service.
or tho VIllage of Pomeroy, .
19117 E·350 Modular tranofor the tum ol
Dlttol formerly utod oo $40,000.00
IForty
Squad 44 In Autlond. Thousand) dolltrt from tho
Vohlcle, Serial Numbor Gonorat Fund to tho Stroot
1FDKE301118JHA88418, to Fund for the oporotlon o~ :
be oold oa 11 to tho hlgheot current txpon-.
:
bidder with no guortnllo or
THAT tho Clork/Treoturor .
wtrronty. NO EMS OR ol th• Vlllogo of Pomeroy, EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT tronofor the tum Of ·
WILL BE SOLD WITH THE $10,000.00 (Ton Tllou11nd) .
VEHICLE.
dollort !rom the Gonorol. ·
V.hlcjo moy be totn ot Fund to tho Copt Faat Grtnt
lht
Mol go
County Fund lor tho optrotlon or: ·
Emorguor,
Medico I currentoxpen~ta.
.·
Ssrvlcu once, locoted on
Thlt rooolutton 11 dum · ·
Mulberry Helghlt, Poet on omorgancy duo to lock of ·
Office Box 748, PomerO)', fundi
tor
current :
Ohio 45768 during normol operollont.
butlnota hourt, Mondoy
PASSED: November 17, . ·
through Frldoy.
11197 .
All Bide Must Be Seoled
ATTEST: Klthy Hyeell
and lllerked "Bid For UNCI
Clorlt!TrHturtr
Ambullnct."
Frtnk A. Voughon, llloyor
Tho Botrd ol County
John MutHr,
Commitalonert mty occopt
Prooldent of Council the ball bid and reHrvo• (11) 211 (12) 52 tc
the
to rtfecl
•ny or
on CLEAN HOUSE
bldoright
and
or ony
port
WITH THE

RADIATOR REPAIR

BRADFORD'S

•

614-992·5479
.._ _........._______.;..._ _.,. r-------.

(UmeStoneLow Rate11)

FOUND : F•rite on 2412 Mt. VII·

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

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

Lost end Found

-

CHRISTMAS TREES

13

-.oloo.Cal30&lt;1-1175-1512.

Busttwss Cm.L . S20.00/column tnch pi'r monlll

OPEN NOV. 23- 11 to 9:00

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

812-4119

To place an ad Call 992·2156

360° Communications

$10 &amp; Up

......

term forecaat report• con. Mulb•rry Helghte, Poet

thorool, ond to wolve ony
tnlormlllty tn ony bid.
211121 s, 12 3tc

....

Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

Rt. 124 Rutland, Oh!D 742·3051

3471 B St. Rt. 7

•·

loin lnformotlon regarding
each company's projections
of anticipated tuppty,
oupply prlceo, and oupply
source• over. tho lorocaal
porlod. Tho publle hearing
will begin at 10:00 a.m.,

The Dally Sentinel• Page

CELLULAR PHONES

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Handcrafted Wood
ProJects

ing frum the lim.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Public Utllltlu Commlt~lon .of Ohio hat
achodulod a public hearing
In CaH Noa.II7-201-EL-FOR
and 97·202-EL-FOR to
review the 1997 long-term
forecast repone flied by tho
Ohio. Power Company end
the Columbut Southern
Power Company. The long-

4

MY PLACE

curos on · order forms from customers. She works With one or 22 different software programs that Franzi- .
ni says will have to he changed .
Euros will he c~prcsscd in up to
two decimal phu: ~ s. and ,the rules Ctlll •
for rounding: urward when 4-'0nvcrt- ,

Public Notice
fair debt colloctlon practice
act Ia given,
.
Sold Defondonts will take
notice that tl be required to
anower 11ld Complaint on
or boforo tho ht doy ol
January, 1998 or judgment
will be rendered accordlngly.
USDA Rural Development
PlalntiH
Stephen D. Milot, Attorney
1101 30; 111) 6, 13, 20, 27;
112) 4 6tc

UPS
Shipping
Available

CHRISTMAS TREES

Holiday Hrs.
Mon-Sat.1 0-4:30
1-5 Suhday

r-=========r:=========T-=========i==========
Public Notice

Salvi . with annual revenues nf$17
million . is an exception among Italy's
Public Notice
Public Notice
small and medium husincsscs . whit::h
Tho Olivo Townohlp Weaver. praying for
arc the engines of prosperity in the
Truttooo will 1111 It public judgment In the amount of
nonh of the country. It has begun dip- auction on tho 13th dtly of $711,810.71 wllh lnterut
ping.tocs into cure waters.
. D-mber, 1e87, at 10:00 thoroon aecordlng to the
"It's logical the beginning period a.m., ot the Townohlp term• of the note from
will be full of difficulties and costs.'' gorqo on Joppo Rood, the Autuot 4, 1IV7 until pold
Item:
and for tor.cloaure of aaid
Franzini said. "But it's just as well to lollowlng
1· 1111 Ford Pumper Flrt Mortgage Deed on tho
'do it early."
·
Truck
toll.owing doacribod real
In her office on the outskirts of Auctlo.noer will bo 1.0. tllato, of which oald
Defendant, Katherine W••·
Milan . she spreads out two large McCoy.
Cooh
or
Chock/
ver,
Ia the owner of:
sheets of computer paper. This is the Rllertncot Dtly of Sole
Sllulted In the Townthlp
master plan for the company and its
For more Information of Scipio, Countr of Motgo
90 employees. wriucn in her hand. contoct any of the Olive and State of Ohio:
Columns list category. tasks and Twp. Trutttot or Fire
Being In the Village ol
Membert.
Horrltonvlllo, Molg• County,
costs - which she thinks could total OefNirlment
Minimum bid- s-.oo.
Ohio, being Lot• No. 15 and
up to $90.000.
Mortho Durst No. 16 ao thown on the llret
Take one of Salvi 's products, a 6Olive Townllltlp Clerk plat of 11ld Vlllogo.
554i8 4th Avenue Excoptlng from Lot No. 15
foot-long phone cord.
RHdtvllle,
Ohio 45n2 ·•lhet ponlon conveyed by C.
It starts as copper ingots turned
move 10ward a ~ommon currcm:y and
~on• 614-37H149 C. Cucklor to Dana Wolch
a central European hank . Ninety- into f1lamcnts by German and Turk- 111) 21 1r· 1121 5
•
by doed rtcorded In VOlume
three percent had dnnc nothing tp ish suppliers. Franzini ligures her
.222, Poge 687, Melgo
County Dood Records.
Public Notice
The grantor herein lurther
IN THE PROBATE COURT gronto unto the Grantees
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO end their 111lgna tho right
IN THE MAnER OF
to uae water from a water
THE ESTATE OF
welt on 1 lot odjacont to Log
AVANELL IRENE BASS,
No. 15, now or formerly
DECEASED
owned by Harold D. Graham
CASE:29916
NOTICEOFPUBUCATIDN and Janel K. Graham, and
OF ADMISSION OF WILL TO tho tlld Granteot thall
have tht exclusive right to
PROBATE AND
uoo tho welt until 1 public
APPOINTMENT OF
water
oupply It provldod, In
ADMINISTRATOR
To oil peroona lntereotod aceordonce with the
In the Ettato of Avontll provltlont of tho doed
Irene 8111, deCeaeed, recorded In Volume 247,
Melgo County Probate Pogo 443, of tho Melgl
County Deed Record•. Tho
Court, c- 29918.
You are hereby notified Grenteea ahall alao have
thtt the doc 0dont died on' tho right of lngrua ond
Fobruory 24, 1e87, and thlt egre11 to. enter upon tho
tho decodonl'a will wat well alte premlaea for the
admitted to proboll on May purpooo of toying, re-laying
21, 1e87, by the Probote or tnd motntolnlng told water
Mota• County, Ohio. You line to tha premlaea do·
mutt bring an octlon to ocrlbod herein.
cont11t tho validity of tho
And that Deltndanta, Tho
Will within four montht after Ettlte of Katherine W11vor,
tho Executor 11111· an unknown, helrt, devlaeea,
alfldtvlt oteilng the legateee, exacutora, IJIICU·
Executor hot given, thlt trlxu, odmlnlatrotora, od·
notice.
mlnlttrotrlxu and 111lgn·
Chrtatophtr E. Tenaglia eea, and John Doe,
Robert E. Buck, Judge Unknown Spouee . of
(11)14,21,28,3tc
Kotherlne Wuvor, Som
Steinmetz, Paul Steinmetz,
Public Notice
and Ann lklrralt, and 11
NOTICE OF PUBUCATION doceoood, oil htlrt, dovl·
1111 1 legetttl 1 •••cutora 1
Stephtn D. Mllea,
•••cutrhc:ea, admlnlatr8tore,
AttOrney ot Law
admlnletratrlxea and ••18 W. Monument Avonuo
alan••• be required to aet
Doyton, Ohio 4114112
uD env lntertlt th-_v mev
Tho Eatoto of Kothorlna heve
In aald premlua or be
Wnvtr, Unknown, holra, forever
berred. tfiet upon
dtVIIIII, ltg1t111, IXICU·
folturt
of
uld Dofondont• to
tora, executrlxee, admlnle· poy or to coun to bt poid
!retort, odmlnlotrotlxu ond aold ludgmont within throe
UIIQnHI, and John Dot, doyt !.rom Itt rendition thot
Unknown Spouat Of

OPEN

Hartwell House
'I00 East Mail, Pomeroy

should withdraw unilaterally." he hie to bring the army to the internaacknowledged . But he said that hy titlnal hnnJcr...
itself such a pullout would "send a
Levine said waiting ,lor peace
(negative) signal to hostile clements with Syria and Lchannn amounted to
about the army's staying power.·•
"accepting the casualties' hccausc
Instead. Levine said. Israel should such an accord was nnt wilhin reach
adopt "constant ag:gn::~sivc initia- for the time heing.
~
tives' ' in the short-tcm1 that would
Since carving out the buffer zone
make Hczbollah and the Lebanese in 1985, Israel has lost 217 troops in
government understand there was a combat in south Lebanon. Thiny-ninc
price to the contlict.
soldiers have been killed in comhat
That. Levine said. would "create this year, plus 73 soldiers who died ·'
a dynamic that will lead to a process when twn helicopters en route to
where. m the end ... it will he possi- Lebanon.crashed in February.

common Euro curret:lCY

,
order fonns will need to add a separat~ entry for the purchase price in

Business Services

Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. Items

Others worry about hurting th~
pncc .
.
They argue that non-OPEC ~ro­
ducers will bring more crude on-hne.
OPEC members arc Algeria,
Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait. Libya,
Nigeria. Qatar. Saudi Arabia, the
I:Jnited Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

Pomeroy .. Middleport, Ohio

eo

the growing global market.
Libyan oil minister Abdalla Salem
ci-Badri remains a holdout to the tdea
of producing more, saying prices
would be hun. And he mav not be the
only opponent of the Saudi proposal. another OPEC source said on con·
dilion of anonymity.
The idea of raising the stated production ceiling top the agenda after
OPEC's biggest player, Saudi oil
minister Ali Naimi, suggested earher in the month that it i• time for .:
OPEC to pump more.
.
The Saudis believe global demand
will call for another 2 million barrels
of oil daily next year, and they want
OPEC to get half of that new market.

Military leader proposes withdrawal of forces
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The
commander of Israel's forces in
southern Lebanon has proposed gradually withdrawing the troops with or
without a peace agreement.
In an unusual news conference
Wednesday night: Maj. Gen . Amiram
Levi nc said he ''cannot and must not
accept " the casualties Israel suffers in
the 440-squarc-mile swath of south
Lebanon it occupies to pr~ect nonhero Israeli towns from lmman-backed
Hezbollah guerrillas .
The call came at a time when

28, 1997

51.25·59.95
• Poinslllla baslttll S6.95-Si2.95
• Uvt wroaths- $10.95
• Cut lrMI · Si0.9S.SJ5.95
For the loved ones
Grave blankets, sprays,
wreaths, &amp; vases.
... honor Golden i!udl&lt;y&lt; Coni.

OpenDallyH
Sundlty 1-5

992-sne.,

llobDe Rome Furnaces
and Beat Pumps
.IN,MflfiiM. ,jji
Bank Financing I FU!'I'IIC,al *2800 1 month
- Easy

1H•,•t Pumps lnstellld''3800 a month
Fret Eltlmllll
(1'aymoms DIMd on awovect ontdll)

111118 8 CDDLII8
SeNing Sollthtutern OH &amp; WV

4·1 ·1335.

"luminum Sliding Door, 151..,245;
5095.
Cock·l ·poo ~Lood home, ins1de
pat. 304-j;l§.

FrM 10 good nome, 2yr okt male
rumting dog. Pr.ont 30•-en;.

4836 or 304·895-3342.

.

~lrl

Lib Pup • Months Old Very
Friendly In N. .d 01 A Good
Home, 814 -446-3887.

50

Hippy Ads

Rag1ater, 200 U1ln St,

'"' wv 25560.

Pt

J)ltll ·

Now hiring IOwboat captains &amp; pi-

lots. good

~&gt;~r. ttu lth

Insurance

and 401K, coll4tH68-8851 .

OR &amp; ICU E•PI&lt;iencod RN't

~nd CofTl)8torw

304·075-

60 Lost and Found
Found: 4 strips of brown vinyl sidIng, Middleport Yici nlry, O.U·G92·

2778.

MHic:,~l AsaiUanl, parr-time, IP·
prox. 2S hrstweek. Send rtaume
to Boa: UA ·21, %Pt Pill lint

Nu11ing RegiS!ry. ~ I Scheduling

Plrtltl, churchtl &amp; achoals. Pt

25550.

446·1810 Aher 5 P.M.

Wanled Fco NMy ~ping

E-AoMI
"MAGICIAN"

Plouanl, WV
t847.

Looking For A Chn1t1an Woman
To Cart For Ou, 3 C h1ldr•n In
Our Home M·F Davahih. can 6 14·

.

Compenu.Don.

P'lelse Respond To·

P.O Bca:826,
Manetta, OH ot5750
Ov•rorcok Center, 333 Page
Slr. .t, Mld61tporr. Oh1o has parr
time POiitlona la r STNA' s. all

&amp;niltl. PltaN ltop in and IHI OUt
an application or c•H tlr more ln.

brmolion, 814-QQ2-e.&lt;72. EOE

,

�P~ge14 • The

Deily Sentinel

.:'1.

Friday, November 28, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frldly, November 28, 1H7

The Dally Se!'rtlnel • Page

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

,

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

.._
~=··

.... _

ACROSS .

MT.... ...,..Di

Anewr.- to

P•ewlaut Pu.l:de

...... Jf llnclecl. hllllltlld

12 Weatk poin1
31 Certmony
1 c.,. Kennedy o40 Colunlnlll

a

320

for
PHYSICAL
tHERAPY
ASSISTANT

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS
$4,000 1 ·S Bdrm , local Gov1 &amp;
Bank Repo' s Call 1-800 522
2130, X 1709

~PRNc.,....ge

Progre11in Step Rehabtii iBtlOr'\
Services 11 Cutremly Seeking A
Ph~slcal Therapy Assistant .6.nd
PRN Coverage (OT, PT. SLP,

House and property, appro:.: 4a ~
c; r &amp;B Ideal starter home. Beech
ProgresSive Step Rehabtlltatlon St, Pomoooy OH 304·882-2077
Sefvtces Offetl Top Sahmes For
Out Clmuaans Our Benefits Near Veterans Memonal Hospt·
Package Includes 3 Weeks Pa1d tal , aU e lectr iC, recen tly remo Vacal!o n, Patd ltnnsure And deJed, rwHI root, new WindowS. new
Pro1ess1onal Membershtp Dues Siding, full basement with stove
ConUnumo Educauon, And Mo re hreplace, Cleek carpor l 6 1 4 992·
Come Jotn The Fastesl Growmg 526 7

Rehab Team In The 011101

NEW HOME under construction.
nearly completed, 1,344 sq fl , 3
bedrooms, 2 baths uull ty room,
front porch, back deck large lawn
Pagevtlle near Albany $93,000
OhiO DreamHome Builders 1
688-699 9041 614-698 040 1

naoong Avattable, 304-738 7295
WESTWOOD HOME SIIOW
Uaod &amp; Repo Sole
As L1nto As $500 Down
And $150 PO&lt; Month
Free Delivery
1·800·251·5010

For More InformatiOn, Please Call
Mtke Worley To ll Free .At 800

207-9708, Fu Your Resume To
814· 594-5207, Or E-Matl To , up·
crehab@frognetnel Equal Oppor·
1
1uMy Emplover

Pnced reduced 1n Meadowbrook
large h ~mg room 3br. full lm
1shed basemen t, ca r pet Call
Somerville Rea lty 304 -675-3030
()( 304-675-3&lt;431

I'ROGRESSIVE STEP
A£HABILITATION SERVICES
Scenic Hill s Nur11ng C enter Is
loo"-ing For State Tesled NurSing
Assistants (STNA 's) Part· T1me
PositiOns, 2 PM -10 PM And 10
PM -8 AM Apply In Person At
Scemc Hills, 31 1 Buckn dge Rei
Bidwell , OH No Phone Ca ll s

Three acres wllh th ree bedroom
houae, IWo car garage and sepa
ra te 3 car 9arag e. po ol grea1
place for ch1 ldren . ca ll 614-843·

5350

Please

Th ree bedroom house •n Sy ra
cu!le. base meru garag e new
wtndows, dock and aU remodeled
mi!de, 6 14·742·1 345, 614·992·
61 16

TEXAS Oil Company Urgently
Needs Dependable Persc n Now
In GALLIPOLIS Area, Regard·
tess 01 Tl81ntng, wme K c Hop
klns Dep1 S·451531 Bo• 711. Ft
Worlh, TX 76101.()711
WANTED IMMEDIATELY·
Cert1l1ed nurs1ng ass1s1ants for
136 b&amp;d mtermedtate care fac111
ty Contact Sandra Rettm~re, RN,
DON, Lak1n Hospttal, Lak1n, WY
304·675-0860 EXT 124 Mon-Fr1
8 00am·4 OOpm Deadline tor appty1ng •s December 5, 1g97 laM""::.::I•,:an::,:::EDE::::,.e::m:;:pl::oy:!;e::r;__ _ _
Wanted To Do

320

for 5ale
$499 DOWN
on all Single se&lt;:t10ns
$999 DOWN
on all multl secuons
Umled T1me Only I
FREEDOM HOMES ol Nitro, WV
3Q4. 755-3842

1 12x60 Mobile Home, Pr1ce 6·400

180
~c""nl"'td"'ea=-r-o"'rn"""u-y""H'""o_m_e"'M'"o-nd""a-yl
Tl'lraugh Saru'tday, Fle••ble Hours,
References Available, 6 i 4 - ~46 ·
313&amp;.
Furn1ture repa1r, ref1msh and re!l·
roration, also c:ustorr\ orders. Otuo
Valley ReNn•shmg Shop, larry
PMdhps, 814...gQ2~576
George1 Porrable Sawm•ll. don' t
haul ~ur logs lo the tNU JUS! call
304-675-1957
Rei ~red - Ready To Go Back To
Work - Have Class-A CDl614·
4..0·453&lt;1
W1ll Do Elderly Personal Care In
The Home 20 Years Expenence
Se\leral References Very Carmg
&amp; Reapons1blo $7 00 Hour ld.ui;
fW! Nurses A1de 614·367·7728
Daytime, Even•ngs - 614·446-0494
Ask For 01ane
W1ll Do Housecl61nlnQ Or Odd
Jobs, Rererences Upon Request
614·446·3261 .
W1ll haul JUnk or rraah away $3&amp;
po;lwp food. 304-675-5035

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai you do business w•th people you know, and
NOT ro send money through the
mall unt•l you have mvest1gated
111e olfenng

230

Mobile Homes

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARY • Bloek,
bntk &amp; stone work, 30 years expenence, reasonable rates 30&lt;4·
895-3591 after 6:00pm, no tob to
omall or 10 BIG WV 021206
L•v•ngston·s buemenl water·
proofing, all basement repairs
done, frte est•mates, lifetime
guaranree 10yr1 on JOb eJp&amp;fl·
...... 304·875-21&lt;5.

Set·Up On State Route 141 On
Ren1od Lot st&lt; 3843336
19 79 14x70 Buddy. Ntc e Cond •
tlon O n Rented l o t, 614 441
1327, 614-4-'6·2805

1979 Model 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Good Condition. MUst Sell! 304·
736·3409
1988, 14X70 ClayiDn S. Wood, 3
bedrooms, 2 Baths, WJHeat
PU"'l $15,000 (614) 4..0·6476

Westwood Home Show Used&amp;.
Repo Sale As little As S500.00
Down And $1501Mo, F•ee Dellv·
ery 1-800·251·5070
Wea1wood Home Show -Used &amp;
Repo Salel As Lillie As $500!
Down $150 Per Month Free De·
lwery Ht00-251 ·5070

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

10

4cres On Neighborhood
Road, 2 Miles From 141. Wcoded
lo~ W /Bu1l&lt;lng S11e, $13,000 Call
614 441-08B1
Emptw lot on Spnng Avenue 1n
Pomeroy, $3500, 614·992·2569

RENTALS
'

41 o Houses for

Rent

2 Bedroom K•tchen , LA, 238 Rear
F1rst Avenue. Gall 1pohs, No Pets,
$325/Mo., Plus Deposit &amp; Utit1t1es,
614-446-4926

2 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Hou&amp;e With
Dishwasher Bu•lt·ln Appliances,
Unl1ty Room , Fireplace, Slruared
On 20 Acres In Crown City, Now
Ava•lable , HUO Approved, 61 4·
441 ·951 1, Or614 446·3523

2114 Mon roe Ave 4br, full ba&amp;e·
ment large yard cenlral a1rlheat
$400tmo + depostt 304 -675

323\l
3 bedr oom $400tmo Oepos!l
304·6 75-46 78 1eave message

N1ce clean , newly pamted rwo
bedroom house m Pomeroy, new
wtndows, $350 per month plus de·
poSit, opt1on to buy w1th referenc·
es on contract wnh1n a year, no
pets, 614-698 -7244
Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, N•ce
Big Yard. New Furnace, $100 DePGSI1. S2501Mo • 6~4--448-9569 .
2 Bedroom trailer $275/deposlt,
12751mo References (equ~red

1no pelS ~'675-4678

2 Bedroom Tra1ler $300/0ep .
$300/Mo , Relerences Requ1red
Phon&amp; 614·367· 7272, 614 -367·
0640 After 6 P.M
2 Bedroom trailer for rent In Mid·
dleport, OH :.:14-882-3267

2 bedr.oom !taller for rent 1n Tuppers Platns, deposit requ~red ,
614·965 3813 days or 614 985
Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp; 3837 evenmgs
Accessooes , V•nyl
Sk •rt•ng
$299 95, ,Anchors $5 00 , Awn - 2 bedroom 1ra1ler lor rem m Tu p
Ings. Doors, Wmdows , Plumb)ng pers Pla1ns, $200 per month plus
Suppl•es, Water Heaters, Furnac - u~Hoos 614 667 3487
es, fiberglass Steps Call 614 ·
446 9416 Bennen' s Supply 1391 2 bedroom, quiet neighborhood
Salford Sct1ool Rd, Gal li pOliS, $200 per month , part 1ally fur ·
OM10
mshed u1tl1 t1es not 1nc luded 614

-----------------IW
..~2·::.:~::.:79~----------­
Diaplay Ooublewldea $999 Down Includes Delivery, Se!-Up, &amp; Tu- 2 bedroom, w1th vnanached ga
rage , close to town. $300 per
es. 30..136·3409
month 1 $300 depos •t, no pe l!t,
DOUBLE WIDE DISPLAY SALE
614 992 5030

$999 DOWN

Doublew1de On Land 1 250 De
posit Requ1red. 304 736 7295

Efhciency On Eastern Avenu e
Washer &amp; Dryer, Utihltes Pa• d,
$400, 61H..S·2515.
Furn11ttod Elltolonq, All Utilities
Peld, Snare Balli, $165/Mo. 919
Second AverHJe, Phone: 814·446·

3945.

2 Bedrooms, Vtnlon Area, S!ove,
Refr1geratot, Water 8 Trash Pa 1CI,
New Carpet Very Near &amp; Clean,
$250/Mo , Plus DepoSit 614·3889666

2bedroom 12x65, remod eled
wrth or Wllhout util ltl&amp;S, turn1shed
Ooublew•des Must Go ! 9 99% 1 unfurm she d On e momh free
Fn1ad Rate On Selected Models re nt lo r qua li f1ed appl• ca nt De
304-736-3409
po s1t requ•red No pets 304·882·
39 26 Offer good only thru De·
FIRST TIME BUYERS
cember
E Z Frnanc1ng
2 or 3 Btdrooms
One Bedroom tra•ler W11h Utltltw
Around $200 Per Month
Room, 5 M1nutes Fram Town
1 600 251·5070
$250 Month $200 Depos~. 2 Rei·
erences ReqUired (6, 4)446-934 2

.. All real estale advertiSing m
lnls rkJW'IIpaoer IS Sublf!c1 to
the Federal t=-.J,r Hu~·ng 4.1..1
of 1968 which makt"!s rt 1ilcyal
to adYenlse ·any preference.
limitation or discr1mlnatlon

N1ce clean 2badroom, wid hook·
up. References Oepoel1 No
pellt. 304-875-5162.
Nice One Bedroom Unfurnished
Apartment Range &amp; Ragrlgerator
Provided. Water &amp; Garbage Paid,
Oepos11 Requned , Call 61•·U6·
4345 After 8 P.M.
No(th 3rd Ava In Ulddleporl, tbr
apt, lurm1hed or unlurn111hed
~ · 882-2500.

Now Tak1ng Appt .catlons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apanments $295/Mo. , 614· 446 ·
0006.
Small One Bedroom In Country
Area Waallef IOryer, Stove, frtg ,
Very Clean, We Pay Water !Gat·
bage Tennant Pays Electnc,
$300 Depos1t, $350 /Mo., 6U ·
446 -22 05 , 614 -446 -9585, No
Srm~er&amp; No Pet&amp;.

Wedge Apartments 1br &amp; 2br, no
pelS 30 .. 675·2072.

450

Furn lshed
Rooms

C~rcle

Motel Lowest Rates In
Town , Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cmemu, Showllme &amp; D1sney
Weekly Rates, Or Uonthty Rates,
ConstruCtion Workers Welcome
14·441·5698, Gto4-44 1·5167

e

Sleep1ng rooms wilh caakmg
Alto !railer apace on nver All
hoolt-ups Call after 2·00 p m,
304-n3 5651, UasonWV.

460

Space for Rent

Building For Rent Ot Lease
40x85 Two 16 Ft. Roll Up Doors
1/2 Acre, Commerc1al B1.11ldmg,
Good For Warehouse Or Retail
Bus1noss Located Route 7 South.
614·256.e989
Lol ava ilable tor 16x80 wlapproved apphcallon K &amp; K Mob1le
Homes 30H75-3000 8am·5pm,
Mobil e home site available between Athens and Pomeroy, ca ll
614·385·4367
fwtob1le Home Space For Ren1.
614 446·36 17
Mobile Home Spaces For Rent In
2C s Park, Camp Conley, 614·
446-13221.
Trailer lot for rent, referenCes re
qu.red ~4-675-1078

MERCHANDISE

51 o

Household
Goods

Appl1 ances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers, Ranges, R....
grators 90 Day Guarantee !
Frenc h C•tv Maytag, 614·448

7795

Blue Sec:uonal Couch, 2 Full S•ze
Bedroom Su1tes, Kitchen Sets,
Washer, Dryers, Refngeraton,
TV's 614·446·4039
ELLIOTTS BIG SALE
Cont•nues Thru Monday Dec 1stl
7 Great Appliances:
• 31" Range (ElectriC]
• Refflgemtor {2 Door)
• 30· Range (Gas)

Your Cholco atll
ELL lOTTS APPLIANCE
- ELECTRONICS
614·446-6051
412 Stall Route 7
Galllpoll' ONo

Th11 newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
adverttsements tor real estate
which II In violation of the
lltW 0.. reader! are henoby
Informed that all dwellings

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wasnera, dryers, retrlgerato11 ,
ranges Skaop Appliances, 78
VIne Street, CaU 01.tl·448· 7388
•
1-800--99

--In

11111 newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity balls
apan menl Ill Pomeroy,
pt ld, no pets, 614· ii2·

REAL ESTATE

JCPenny Bed ICurtam Set, A.ll
Mmnlng Bolge Floral Print , 1
Twin Comforter, 1 Sedsklrt , 3
Standard Plllowshame, 1 Tabla
Caver, 2 DtcoratiYI Pillowe, 2
t:JIIre Curtalnt, T iebacks, 3
Vslancea, like New, SUO, 814·

37e-2510

310 Homes for Salt
a... Down Wltn A Job a Good

Potlyo -

I Uood Fumllure
We ._have Arr!ll Surptuolll
2101Jolferaonlwfl
Open 9 30 • 5:00 Mon·Sat
304-675-SOFA (71532)

Crod ltl S35,000, In Gallipolll
Aroa, et4·387· 0•03, Pogo 11 ·
1100-:55-2337 Plgat 1578
1 Acre land 2 BtGrooms, 2
Botna, 24&gt;24 Garago US,OOO,
t3,000 Dawn, S.ocl/Mo , Of Rant
f300/M0,, 1150 Depooil, 814-4..0·

0050
1888 Palm Harbour Home In
54 Ft. 4 Bad oom.,
2 Bolllo, Hao 110 ft 1100 Ft Ga·
rage, Excellenl Far Trucking Or
Warehous inG On 1 t Acres,
Muot Soo To Approclatol Loavo
.,..sage, 814-371-2410.

Counry 2.100

Used Furniture Store, 130 BulaVIIIe Pike, Galllpoha, Ohio Com·
ptete Twin Beds $115 Full Size
Complote 1135 Queen Size Com·
plate $150, Mon .fri H... 10 -4

Buy, Sell, Trade
Used &amp; Antiques
Furnture

Mleon,WV

520

Sporting
Goods

Reming ton 11 · 87 sporting clays
$5()0 Reming ton 11 -87 SpEtcial
purpose 2 barrel $650 Rem1ng
to n 870 Wlngmatter 30• full
choke $250 H I R 20 gauge, H
&amp; R 12 gauge IIIOea. 304·882·

2821

530

1\!!tlques

&lt;

Buy or uti R1ver1ne Antiques,
1124 E Ma10 Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours. M .T W 10 00
am to 6 "00 pm, Sunday 1 00 to
00 p m 614 -992- 2526, Russ
Moore owner

e

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Electr•c Furnace S395, 1 Gas
Furnaee 100,000 BTU $690, 614·
4411 6306, 1 II00-291.0Q98
1996 75 1 Bobcat S14tSQO leave
Message, 614·379-24, 0
20 • 4 Ca1e Trencher Call 6 14
694-7842 Aher 4 P.U
21" Oak console TV, stereo cabi
net, ntght stand. 304-1175·7986

RIVERSIDE MiOLESALE
New 28.&amp;0 3 or 4 btdroom
138,885 Frtt dtllvery. 1· 800·
1101-em

Ullllttts

NEW lANK REPO'S Only 3 Ioiii
304-75H1 g 1.

apartment for ra nt •n
304 8 75· 2 174 or

Oakwood 281 56 3 bedroom, 2
bath starung at 11gg permo

Aparrmenu Far Renr On Fit• I

Ca/11 -IIOO-ell1-em.

.ltietl.l&amp;, 6 14·«8·8221

11 .. 25881M

Bunk Bodo Camp 1225; Sola &amp;
Cfllw l~g ; 4 Counoy Pine Tablo
Ben&lt;h &amp; 3 Cnotro U35, 1 Pc
Codar BR 11gg, Oak Curio Cab
1150; Ponlfr, Moxlatn Blonke11
Indiana, Etc
'
7 Soolh, Crvwn City
g.~ Sat&amp; Sun

Rainbow SWHper with all anachments Including carpet shampoo·
tr, very good cond•tlon , $250 ,
614o992-7562 after 6pm
~ford Foagata 12'" subwoofers
In Rockford Foagate hatchback
box, $1 75, good cond1110n; also,
pair of a• Raaliat1c speakers In
bo•es. $45, 614-992.e955

Sam Somerville's Army Camou flage by Sandr.vllla Poet Of11ce
Noan-5pm Fr · Sun Small mdl·
vidual equipment 304-273-5655

WARM UP: High Etr1caency Natu·
rat And LP Gas Furnaces, life·
time Warranty On Heat Exchang er "If You Don' I Call Us We Beth
losel• Free Eadmatesl Add·On
Heat Pumps Ontr S/lgnry Higher
Call Us Today. 1997 Is The
Twenty Seventh Year In The
Heating &amp; Coof1ng Busmessl 614·
446.a:J06, 1·1J00.291.oo96
STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528
Waterltno Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Par 100, 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100, All Brass Com·
press•on Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ott~. 1·1100 537-9528
Woodburmng Ktndlewood Stove,
F•replace lnaerl With Fan , 36~
S!orm Door, Yellow Conver table
1965, Ew:cellenr CondiliOn ShOw
Quality, 614-446-6 137

550

B

SPECIAL
Hay Hoops And Bale llfttra fall
Cl-.rance On Shenniu TraciOJ'I.
New Holland Special Deals.
3430 Ford 40 PTO HP, 1 valve
rops &amp; canopy, 4wd, $18,500
472 7' nayblne 17.800. 488 9'
nayblne $8,500. 63• round baler
6501 elect til se,aoo 6-t4 round
baler 10001auto lilt $13,1!00 451
7 sickle mowers $3,050 130 142
B4 manure &amp;preader $4,300, 145
177 94 manure apreader $4,300.
1SS 217 84 manure spreader
$4,900 2· New Smldley attar
stutters 1oo BU $750 . 2 used
$500 each. 8 75% Financing
avatlable Keerer's Service Ctnter St Rt 87 Phone 304·895·
3874.

tmCIOf With 4' f'T'IOW!Eir and 5' blade,
614-843-5350
;,o:,u:.:r:.:;Ar.:e::a:::.,u"'e"a1"'e"r""F"'o"'r-.,Jo"h"'n· l
DeQre Skid Steet' Loadere. from
31 To 61 .HP In Stock 7.5'% Filled
Rate Ava1lable Whh John Deere
Cred11 Approval Carmlchael'a
Farm &amp; Lawn, GalllpoUt, OH 614·
446 2412, 1 800·594· 1111.

630

LivestOCk

Hay, Bred cows, hereford, here
ford Ar,tgus cross, call John or
Harley R•ce, 814-667· 3267 or
614-6673369.

640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

1500 lb hay bales. $20 a bale,
614 742-3064 or 614· 742·3089
A.lpha &amp; Orchard Grass Mixed,
Phone 614·446· 1 104 , 614·441·
0450
Hay-M1xed square bales, euy
access $1 25 per bale 30•·895·
3590
1
B
01 H
F
M xed Round ales
ay or
Sale $18 00, Srored Inside, 814
245-5506 Altere P.M .

560

o

.

and whtle p•ne 130 304 -675
4041
Concrete &amp; Plastic Seput Tanks,
300 Thtu 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Entetpnses. Jackson, OH

CFA Registered Sealed Po1nt
S1amese l&lt;1 ttens 1st Shots ,
WOfmed, Boys New 12 Speed 26w
Huffy Blcyde, Firewood, 614-367 -

1·800·537 ss28

I:1~10::5::...- - - - - - - - - - - -

ca4ch lor sate, grayish blue, excellent condition, $150, B14-992·
5788

Four Jack Russell tamer pupp1es ,
1250 each : hve Mmtature Co ll1e
Shelt•es, $125 each. Will hold un t1l
Chrtslmas w•th depos1t, 61 4· 74 2·
F~tewood For Sale $35 A Load l20=50:::...._ _ _ _ _ __ _
DeliVer, 614·256-1509
Sl'ifl.Tzu pupplel 304-882·3626
F"ewoad Spilt &amp; Oehvered, $45
Per Truck Load, $ t 25 Per , 6 Ft Two full blooded female Bassett
Trader Load, 6~4-388-Beeo
hounds, aholt and wormed, S75
oa&lt;:h. 614·GGN548
Grubb's P1ano- tumng &amp; repaus
Probloma? Naad Tuned? Call the
MUSical
ptano Dr 614·446 .. 525
Instruments

w.n

1::::;:.::;;:;:::::;,:.:::::::::....-:---570

Hol1dar Barb1o 199 1, Call 614
245·5887
Hol• day Barb1t's 1990, 199t,
1992, 19g5, $175 each 1993
Golden Winter and ·'Olna'eteUa
Sparkle Eytl Barb•e's, $100
each, 814·992·41 71 ,
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropalrod, Now &amp; Rebuilt In Sioc:k
catt Ron Evaro, HI00· 531-9526
large Fuel 0 11 Slave, Works
Goact , Greet For Healing A
Houu Or Garage. Far More In·
formation, Call 814-258·1071
Large Igloo Dog House $75, In·
vlatbla Dog Fence $75 Or 1125
For Both , OuHn Slzo Sol! Side
Somma Wa1trbtd With Wa ·
ttrbtd Frame S 100, Plarlorm
Roc:kO&lt;, 115, Call 614-44e-1810.

-

· ~·882-2638

Monument Sa lt Ouutlng Buslnesll John'a Monuments 1/3 011
Unt1i Stock Ia Sold, 130 Butavllle
Pike, Gollpo"' Ohio
Nordic Track 505 14gg New $300
Firm ; BolllngO&lt; Trim Rider SBi 00
New S35Fwm 814-446.a5911.
OutdoOr Pt.y houM, Has 3 Wlncl·
awl plul Sun Roof (614 ) 245·
5887

Per 01 Peavoy SP 2 XT speakers
With 15 Inch Black Widow
Speakers Still Under Warranty
$500, Firm, 814-3811-8436.
.

.

.' '

' &lt;

Ford F- 150 black/gold, Ed·
d1e Bauer w/camper top, exc

BARNEY

cond

·~

59,000 miles, has transferable
Ford ESP a~ttended 8tHv1ce policy, total coverage wt$0 de&lt;luct·
lble $15,000 304-882-2621

CASH OR ~HARCSI ?

MOPAA 1969 Dodge 314 Ton
Frean 383, 127 TransmiSSion,
New Tires, Pamt, Mint Condition,
$3,000 000, 614-446-·7561
U-Haul Co Has Usect Trucks Far
Sale, Call HIOO 282.a515

&amp; 4·WDs

THE BORN LOSER

198Q GMC Satan Cuslom, $4,950
814 -446 4222
19QO Chevrolet Silverado 4K4,
350 Automallc, K· 1500, Excellent
Condmon, 614·256-8347

1990 Chevy C20 Mark Ill, e11cel·
lent condition , 75,000 miles,
$6,300, 614·94g.2128
1993 Ford Econo line Van Ex client Shape, 78,000 Mtlts.
$8,500, Leave Message, At 61o4·
379-2410
1993 GMC Salan XT conwtrSion
van. fully loaded, only 88,000
m1tes, pnced reduced! $9,500
OBO 304·675·1039
199"' Ford E11plorer Eddie Bauer
loaded, PW, PS, Leather Seats.
414, Stereo System, Eltcellent
Condition 614·44e-6754 Aher 4

PM

WElL, I
C.OVlDN'T
FIND ANY
GoLF 5PIKE5
THAT FIT

1994 Jeep cnerokee country,
auto, 4x4, 4dr, all power, hitch.
$13,000 304-675-5428

f'1E .

1994 Jimmy 4x4 35.000 kM1Ies,
4 3 V-6, One Owner, $13,995,
614·446·2532
1996 Jeep Cherokee, Sport,
17,000 Miles 814-446-_j 110
89 Ford Bronco 11 , 4x4, Eddie
Bauer, loaded, excellent cond•tk.n,
$4900,614 992 2762

Agco -AI II s Tractors &amp; Hay Tool
Sale. Agco ·AIIIa 4660 2wd 52
PTO HP rad ial tlru, ~ remote
valve, 12 speed syncho rrana,
rop1. 4yr or ai ,OOO hr dnv1 tra1n 1goe black Chwroltt Monle Car
warranty, wotld lamoua air cooltd 10, POL, PW, air, lilt, CtUilt, 3 1 II·
d1tstl. 115, SOC . 4 Wheel drlllt tre 1/ 6, eJ:cellent cond1 t1on
equipped umo way $20,800. $13,900 l~rm , B14·i92· 7562 Iller
Ht111on 530-8001 ro.und baler 6pm
$7,885. Houton 540· 10001
CARS FOR $1001 Truekt, boato,
round baler t1o,eoo Ht11ton
nayblno 17,800 Round bale Sf· 4-whetlers, motor homea, turn!·
loge wreppar $8.500. 11' V pull lure, eltctronict, computers etc
rake $-', 200 T~e pasture pleaser by FBI, IRS, DE~ Available you r
12 noe no -till drill sa,goo Keel· srea now Call 1-800· 513·4343
er's Serv1ce Centtr St.
87 E•L S·9368
Pnono 30&lt; 695-3874
1980 1980 Cars For 1100111
Hydraulic oil-lowest price In
Seized And Sold
town Vanr trea gas hMters, pro.
loc:ally This Month
pane l natur~l gas. on ule now
Trudls. 4J4 s. Etc
SldOI'o Equlpmont304-1175-7421 .
1·1100-522·2130, X 3G01

r

Rr

Cred•t Problems? W1 Can Help
Euy Bank Financing For Used
Veh1clea. No Tutn Dawns, Ca ll
ViekiO, 614-448-28117

"

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25 Drying

.

28
27 Bulnmft

,.
Clolhft tlm.r.-,&gt;

28

29 Eve'a nllle

• •·

Singer

Redding

•"

C.ught
39 Engre-

By Phillip Alder
Tl)c Bots liqueur company spon·
lored II tips competitions lhtougb
the International Bridge Press Association. Each year, several expert
players and journalists were asked to
supply nugset of advice widtonc or
two !llpstrative deals. N.tlw alllhe :
articles have bei:n put into one vol·
utne. Compiled b)' Sally l'lrock, "The •
Complete Book of Bois Bridge 'lips•
(Chess and Bridge, Ltd.) also
includes thumbnail s!retches of the
tipsters.
Most advice ts aimed at advanced
players, but some is for the lower
echelons. Thts was Freddy Sheinwold's deal. See tf you can work out
the ttp
Against stx spades, you lead the
heart jack. After some thought, South
wins wtth dummy's kmg, droppmg
the queen from hand. Then comes a
spade to declarer's queen. How do
you defend?
Are you sttll thmkmg? llf so. for·
get it ·· contract made
As Shemwold counsels, if declarer takes a repealable finesse that is
losing. don't win 1he trtck Don'l
even think of winning 1he mck 1
Here, if you take trick two. declar·
er will cruise home. Say you swtlch
to a dtamond (nothmg else is beller).
Declarer lakes the club finesse. draws
trumps, returns 10 dummy wtth a dta·
mond, and repeats the club finesse.
4fler you duck smoothly, though,
declarer will surely play a dtamond
to the dummy and repeat the spade
finesse . Now you pounce with the
king and return a diamond (or your
spade nine •. In dummy for the last
ume. declarer can take onlv one clnh
finesse. He loses tncks to both blackSUit kings.
The book is $25.95 poslpatd from
Baron Barclay (800-274-2221).
~.

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47 Medieval love" •

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49 Aviation agcy.

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•••

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeboty Cipher cryplogtams are cre.ted born QUOfa!IOilS by lamous people pall and
Each leiler ll'llhe cipher :&gt;tlllnd&amp;IOI" anolhe1 Todays csu. L equ.,s Y

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION " I don I know whether I ltke 11 buill IS whal I meant " · :Ralph Vaughan W 1ll1ams, on h1s London Symphony
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TIIAT DAILY

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Rearranljle letter~ ol
Krombled word•

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We had left the theater very
d1sappornted
My date
mumbled , "Why aren'i movtes
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PR INT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

..

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

.. .

.

,,

"' '

NOVEMBER 28 I' :~

••"
••
••
•

•

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Home
Improvements

1---~==,..-BASEMENT

WATEAPAOOFIHG
Uncandlt10nallltt1lme guarantu.
local references furnlthed Q.
llbl/ohod 1975. Call (814) ••8·
0810 Or f.800·287-0576 Rogero
WBterprooflng

Appliance Parr• And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
per!ence All Work Guaranlead,
French CUy Maytag, 814 ·44e~

1795.

C&amp;C Gantral Home Main·
1tnence- Painting, vinyl 1ldln9,
carpantry, doors, W1ndow1, baths,
mobile home repair tnd mort, For
free estlmate call Chat, 814·G92·

6323
Electrical and
Refrigeration

1186

....

Shriveled
MII!Wry

-

&amp;

Residential or commercial wiring ,
or·rtpllrs Muter L•·
ce nsed electr•c:•an. R lUenour
Etoe trtcat, WV000306 , 304·675·

17
19

41
43

IFRIDAY

SERVICES

new l&amp;fVICe

,.,

12 Qulch

Twrtch · World· Power - Damask · SHARP WORD
My friend •s a non stop talker The only way I can cut
mto her lengthy conversation ts wtth a SHARP WORD

1D98 1811 Dutchman loaded,
aaay l1nancl~ 304.a75-5522.

840

--•rm•

7
8 IIOIIIed

$CJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

&amp;

"I

"'t.. '

llddlllon
11 Dtaer

!MIIdlcanl

lnflrmi!M

Building

under one roof

'

Motor Homes

810

10

21 Agel
22 Longlaolil
23 Hauler

~

Ford automatic transmission, C·6
Wllh trarolltr case, 614-843-5350

Campers

Chllrllu

."(;

I Atty.'l deg.

Putu~e

IMolllm

37

15 OYER!

Accessories

790

IN1her

5

L.lrllllrlefy
Entrgy
DtriiHned

All the tips

for 5ale

Auto Parts

1
2
3
4

••

TllANK561VING

1 g91 GEO Storm G S I air, ps,
pb, auto, e11c cond 15,000 304- ' New g11 tanks, 1 ton lruck
675-5403
wheels &amp; radlators D &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV 304·372·3933 or 1·
1991 Oldl Cutlaas Calais New
600·273-9329
T1rea, N•w Exha)ISI, New Valve

1gg5 Saturn SC2, Automatic, Air,
Cruise, AMIFM Caaseua, Trunk
Releue, $ 12,000 Call A.tt.r 5 P.U
ISertoua tnqulrloo Only II 614 ·
4..0·4015

33 .AclnU

Motors

BUDGET PRICE TAANSMIS·
StoNS, Used IRtbUIII, All Types,
A.Gceaa Over 10,000 Transmit ·
slant. &amp; Clutches61&lt;4-245-5677

1995 tmpata $1,5oo oBo 814 ·
2•5-90511.

• Q
• J 9

1993 KTM 250 Dtrl B1ke, $1 900,
614 ·388-8909

&amp;

DOWN

1

1987 Kawasaki 300 Bayou 4
wheeler, 2WO, d•fferenllal lock,
blaCk m color, 614·992-711 o

1991 Euro lumina New T1re9
New Brak11, PW, PS, P Sears,
Runs E•cellenl, $o4,295, 614·4-48·
0519 Or 814-446 -3407 Can Be
Seen 314 W~to Rood

19i2 Dodge Spirit e11c cond
good gu mileage $3,000 304 ·
773·5825

321.ight--

.

PEANUTS

Motorcycles

Boats

burden

(2 well.)

Soulb .
•AQJBS

a

1996 Ford Dakota Stereo Sy....,,
Bed Cover, A 1 Condition, 5
Speed, 614 -446-6754 Alter 4
P.M

750

127 ::.,.30 For IIIII CIM

31

19~4

1996 Honda 300 EX, Many EX
trasl E11cellent Cond1t1an 814·
446 3945

56 HltVIiig no 56 leola of

lkluld

Opening lead: • J

1993 Chevrolet Silverado 350
Eng1ne, PW, Pl., loaded, 65,000
M1les Asktng $1 1 500 614 3888047

760

Cover Gaske1 Runs Extellent,
$2, 70t , 614·•46· 0519, Or 614 ·
446·3407 Can Be Seen 314
White Road

7

Mlmll

28 1'lliclt - t

• 8 7 42

• 10 7 6 5
• K tO 9

••

ooo

740

54~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
West Nortb East
Soulb
Pass I NT
Pass
3.
Pass
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass

1980 ford F · 100 PICk·up, 351
Windsor HO, good shape, lots ol
new parts S2.000
304·7735054

Vans

(ICIII ,

24 Juet- -1

•AQJ63

19 78 GMC Pick· Up • RebuiU
Trans, New Brakes, TlreL Body 1
Bed Fair Cond1hon 350 Engine.
Runs Good, $700, Call814·448·
4514, 614·446-3703.

730

13 OnHIIMIII

• tO 2

• 8 4 3 2

1978 GMC 1 Ton Dutr Good
Shapa, New Per" Tlrea, Bodlln·
at, Flflh Wh1et Ball, Plus RHit
H1tch, $4,850,614..46-3100

19.~ Dodge Dynasty 3.3 lner, V
6, Teyl1nder Auto, 87,000 M1les,
Loaded, $2.450, OBO, 614 256
6169

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

Pla1form scales wtwelghts up to
3.000 lbt 304-576·2138 Call al·
ter epm evenl nga, any ti me wee kando

• "K 9 4

-

· 20 Allowa

East

•Jt096S
•

18 Btoldellt

AK Q

Grope ctumolly
For 1 ahort

49
52

.ti6w•tce

• 8 54 2

west

Salt

1997 landua Pro 17 40 HP Force
Fully loaded, Must Sell I 814
367-7117

1995 Cavalier loaded, 22,000
Mites,61H46.0361

Farm Equipment

t

ao...

Trucks for

18 ~

•AKS

Upton Used Cars Rt S2· 3 Milts
South or leon , WV. Fmancmg
Available
SB-1069

720

11 ·28-97

• 76 3

Rod 1988 Dodge Daytone 12,500.
614-446-6174.

1989 Plymouth Grand Voyager
1994 Chevrolet Cavalier , G14 ·
992 2178

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Norlh

Need ~ Car, No Credit? Bad
Cred11? Bankruptcy? We Can
Help! Reestabl iSh Credit, Mull
Mike $150 Weak, Take Home 10
To 20'% Down 12i Months 6
12,000 Miles, W.rrar.ty Avallllblo,
Tnla lo Bonk F1nenclng, 614-4..0·
81n. 0&lt;61+384.eo42.

::.15~H~P.-4-w-he-,~,-d-rlv_o_M
,-Ita_u_b-la-h·ll

lid I

parents females, S1 25 males
1100, 814-592·3588

A Nood A Cor? No Credit. Bod
Crod1t Bankruptq, We Can Help
RoE11abl lan Crod1t, Mull Ma~a
$1$0 Weekly Take Home, Down
Parmenta Ao Low Aa S99, To
Qualify For This Bank Flnanc!Mg,
614-44Hl607

2150 Eas~ern Ave.
Gall1poK~ Ohio 45631
614·446·9777

U
ng
Square Bale 01 Clean Wneat
Supplies
straw 1275 Bale. 61H46-o1o3
8&lt;1 2 6 Ft Barn L1kB Bu11d•ng 6 Ft I=~~...,...,,.:..::.::.::.;.:.:.;.:._..,...7 1
Walls &amp; 4 Ft loft Double Doors, Block, br•ck, sewer p1pes , w1nd · Square bales $1 50 to $2 25 1
50 Inches W1ded, Brand New, ows, hntela, etc Claude Winters, m1le N Rt2 304-675-3960.
R1o Grande, OH Call 6U ·24S
61 .. 446 9377
•
Square bales of hay lor sale, 61•·
5121 .
965-3902
a X PHEN • FEN &amp; Rodux Chants
Pets for Sale
Try Our 100'4 Sale Natural
We1ght loss Herbal Tablel, Dls
TRANSPORTATION
tnbutors Needed Now, Call 614 2 Year Old Full-Blooded Female
Blue Australian Shepherd 2 Full
441 ·1982
Blooded labrador Relr~evers, 1
Autos for 5ale
Almost new Santa sua for sale, Black Female, &amp; 1 Chocolale 71
=~~e~tno8~~~~·3590 leave Uale, 614-448·3413
1974 Volkswagen Super Beetle
A Groom Shop -Pet Groommg. With Sunroof, New T~tes, Too
Aquanums SS &amp; 20 Gallon With Fearur~ng Hydro Balh Don Many New Parts To Uatl Must
See Thtt One To Appreciate!
Equ1pmen1 &amp; Stand Both $150 , Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
Beer Dls~enser With Refngerator 614 ... 46-023 1
$4,800 N~. 614·44lh'l100
Halds 11 Gallon Keg $175, 614
AKC Chihuahua puppies, ready 1980 Plymouth Valare slant 6cyl,
446·9210 Ahof 4 P.M
December 15th, 1wo males, one auto, n1ce boclylmterlor, eJtcellent
Baby bed, s1ro1ter, high chair, car female, $240 aac:h, 614 667-3401
runner, new bauery $850 304518·9005
or 814-ee7-3830.
sea t, awing &amp; rocker. 304-675
'
4548
'
AKC Cocker Span1el pups, •mas 1981 AMC Eagle 4 WD Sport, 2
BEANIE BABIES - Both Rellred old, 2blacklwhlle tbulf vet Doors, $500, 1975 Olds Cutlass
And New, Best Offer, Call Any· records up to date , make good 350 Rocket Automaltc $300, 304·
675-4841
t1me, 61-4·446 -9787 Or leave Chnstmas presentS: $150ea
Menage
304·937·2733.
1962 Camero No Rust 11,500,
614-245-5163
Beanie Babies, hard to get sport AKC German Shepherd puppy
card msBfts. rare com1cs, hard to 14wks old, female. 1st shots &amp;
1989 Dodge Oynaaty LE 3 0 new
hnd action figures Pnced below wor- $150 304.e7S.6639
water pump &amp; radiator $2,500
current market value Just m t1me
lor Chnstmae. Call lor latesl pnce AKC m1n1 P1nsc:hers, 5 wee~s old, OBO ~ - 713·5054
quotes and details, 614·949·3008 great Chflstma!l g~lts, 10 weeks at
1984 Nlssan Maxima S W. Runs
leave message before s·oopm or Chrtstmas, $300, accepung pay
Good, Good T1res, Interior Rough
ments and deposits, 614· 949
eall between 5 30-9.00pm
Asking $500, 614-446·985:!
3026.
Beautiful Buck Stove lrlstant Un·
vented Gas F 11 eplace 1 Severe.! AKC Pomeranlans 2 White Fe- 1985 Mercury Grand Marqu1s,
Model&amp; to choose from PAINT mate $250 6 Weeks 1 Brown fe- Automatic, 302, V-8, Remanufactured Engme Has Less Than
PLUS 30 .. 675-4064
malo 18 Months $275, 614· 368
40,000 Miles, S1,200, 11il90
6642
Dodge Caravan, Automatic, 2.5l,
Boots By Redwmg, Ch1ppewa
Rocky Wotver1 ne, Sorel Tony AKC Reg Golden Retriever pups 4 Cyl , Clean, Rehabte, $3,200,
614 446·7215
Lama Guaranteed Lowest Pr•ces 6wks old ready to go 1n 2wks
Shoe Cafe, Gall1polls
3&gt;4-675-2223 or 3&gt;4 675-5537
1965 Subaru Turbo, 4 WD. 4
AKC Reg•stflred Po me raman Doors, Vety Nice In tOut, For
BUY CARS FOR $100111
Se•zed And Sold Loca lly Th1s Pup,,..s, 7 Wee~s Old, 1 Female More Info. 614 446 9873.
Month Trucks, 4x4's, Etc Bemg 2 Males, Phone 614 245 5095
1986 Monte Carlo, $1,400 O.B.O,
liquidated In Your Area Now All
Makes &amp; Models Available Call Austral•an Shepherd pups, 2 New Tires, Runs Grear, V6 4 3
Fuel lf!O&lt;Oon. (614)446-0637
Toll Free 600-522·2730 x 4420
NSOR lemalu, $75 , 61 4· 949
2128 evenmga, 3 purebred fe
19881Jodge Shadow 11,800, 614·
Camoullage Many Young Adult &amp; 1.ma::::le:.:•:.:·$:_:50::·~6:.:.1•;:,·.::696::.;
·1::2:;50::....-::-­ 446·1800.
Teen Srzes, Jackets And Pants I~
S&amp;ltlng Out, $3-5, 614-44s- 1o 12
Beagle Pupp1es, $20 Each Rae
1989 Dodge Omn1 101,000 M1les
coon Road, 614·441-4t17
Chr1stmas Trees Thomas Tree 1~::......::.:,.::...;___;_____ Clean, Runs Greall 11.400, 614
Farm · Fiatrock Cut tree $18 ball Black Cocker pups AKC , have 379·2723

llfa11y1e Cardloflt e•erclaer, like

II

304-773-5341

lombT ct
41 Ronwn . , _
42 Sod
1
'411 POll
giRIIr'o orlgln 4&amp; CruiM or
17- and dine
Co11ntr

rocll8l
14 ,.,.. oillorit
11 lei on tint
11 F.cing I

Farm Equipment

Jim's Farm Equ/prnont

9ueen s1za mononklss watarbed,
mirror headboard, e..cellenl condillon $175 ~·675-3358 .

4

&amp; burlap Norway blue spruce

Black Couch 2 Black &amp; Gold End
Tables, 1 Coffee Table, • Years
Old $200, 000 61 ...41-o804

Merchandise

A&amp;SFumhurt

GOlF CLUBS:
Taylor Made Tommy Armour Etc
Or Cu!tom Built Club!, Indian
Craelc Galt, 61 4-2AS-5747

• 7 Cu FL Freezer

sex familial status or national
origin. or any 1ntent10n to
make 8lr'/ such preference
limitatiOn or d•scrlm•naMn •

Movtng Salel Uaed Furnttute
Sloro, 130 8ulav11fe Pike, Gallipolis, Oh10 50... Off Gift Shop And
Moat Furniture. Mon -Frl, Hrs 10·

IUI'IIIdDS.

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment.
614 446.()390

610

Miscellaneous

w..

Deer Barrel For Remington 870
12 Ga N.,. Condition, $125, 61•·
4-46-3117

In New Haven 1br fum1shed apt,
dapos.lt &amp; references 304·882·
2566

540

Kenmore
har $50 Caucn &amp; Pomeroy Thrift Shop now buymg
loveseal E~tcellent Condition, lev1 letns, 10~1, children's ctoth·
$150, Twin Bed With Comforter ~ng, muar be In exceuen• condi$50. 614· 446 · 3099 Evontnga: tion, Tuesday lhrough Fnday,
61&lt;-992·3125.
Days· 614·448-3218.

apartments at Village Manor and
R1varslde Apartments In Middleport From $236·$304 Call 6 14·
992·5064. Equal Houolng Oppot·

• Heavy Duty Wuner
• E•••Larga (Heavy Dutyl Dryer
• Roper D1shwaoher

baSed on raoo, color, rehg~on

Household

Goods

GraciOUs liVIng 1 and 2 bedroom

Upsta1rs 2br apr for rent 30&lt;4·875·
2532

1997 Osl\wood Upgraded 14M i 0
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Washer &amp;
Dryer, Heat Pump, Furnished.
Very N1ce, 61o4· 379· 2291 , 614·
_3_79-...;21l;_58...;,_Loa_va_Me_o_sa..:ga
_ _ _.

SAVE ltOOO
Free Oe11very &amp; Setup
OAKWOOD HOMES NITRO
304· 755-5885

s...~ 614-386·1100

l arge Older Hou se In Cen1enary,
$350/Mo , References &amp; Deposit
Reqwed, 614·446-4053.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260·$300, sewer, water and
trash Included, 614-992·2167

lUi Doubllwlde Ropo
Never INid 1n, owner flnanctng
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•

Saturday, Nov. 19, 1997
The year ahead could be filled
wrth promrse and hope. Your recen1
bad times were mean1 to prepare you
for bigger things this year. U&gt;e what
you·v~ learned to your advantage.
SAGitTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Plans you fonnulale today could
have far-reaching, posttive .effects.
How,10ver, you musl devtse ways lo
put your tdeas mto acuon. Get aJUmp
on life by understanding the influ·
ences thai will govern you in the year
ahead. Send for your Astra-Graph
predictions by mailtng $2 to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O Box
1758, Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY. 10156. Be sure to state

(Dec. 22-Jan 19)
You arc n'ow in a unique cycle where
you can gam lhe upper hand by nol
being unduly aggressive, but by relying upon your smarts and sense of
ttmtng.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Thts 1s a great tt,me lo begin a new
proJect lhat has strong chances for
, success, espectally, tf you use progresstve pre&lt;edures. Do no1 ltmit ·
your lhtnktng.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Secret ambttionS' you've been nur·
1unng mtght s6on be realized. The
fulfilling trend could begm now , be
open to positive people and thmgs.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Solu·
tions 10 an issue that appeared to be
inconclustve could occur to you suddenly today. Your answers mighl be
triggered by the chance comments of
another.
· TAURUS (April 20.May 20) A
collecttve endeavor you share wi1h
another can make big strides forward
ioday. provided you both use tngenutly. Experiment with new procedures.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20• Your
•

is excepttonally keen today
Even tf you have 10 make dectsions
on t~e spot, they will be approprtatc
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Per·
sonal gains are probable today, but
they aren 'I aptlo come through your
us1111l channels. Be alert, somethmg
out of the ordtnary might presenl
itself.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Today you
mtght enter tnto a new arrangement
wnh someone whose tdeas and
phtlosophies complement yours. Col·
lecuvely, your visias can be eKpand·
ed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The
greatest joy you ' II derive today could
come from doing things that protect
and serve loved ones. You can have
the best lime being helpful.
LffiitA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Early in
the day you m1gh1 nol be m a social
mood, but make plans anyway. By
evemng you'll want to be wnh pab
whd know how to have a good time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22. Con·
diuons in general appear comfonably
ronunate for you today. The area
where you 're apt to be the lucktest is
in a m8terial venue .

�•
••
•

'

'J
I
~

&gt;

Along the River

Inside

Saturday's
college
football
results

'

I

AP..Iace
ctilled
fjrewerNd.

I·

• F. .tured on pege C1

•ntanlc' among
the season's
holiday film
releases
•EnttNinrMnt
Oft Pogo C1 •

• PIIQtl 81 •

•

tmts

'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

$1 oo

HI: 508

Low:40a
Rain likely

Details on
pageA2

,.

Gallipolis· Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • November 30, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 42

OBES changes mission, name
By KEVIN KELLY .
Tlmno~tlnel Steff

RIO GRANDE - For decades, it's been designated
officially and unofficially by many names, but the local
office for the state agency where Ohioans go to seek a
job or to collect benefits when out of work is now the
One-Stop Employment and Training Center.
Known as the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services
~ince 1968, the new name reflects the agency's changing
mission in putting people to work, OBES Administrator
.O.ebra R. Bowland explained.
·
"One stop employment and training ·ceqters best
describe how and what we provide to customers in the
new workforce of the coming century," Bowland said.
"It also underscores our close working relationships
with most community organizations that can help people
seeking jobs, making career changes, establishing new
businesses, or coping with unemployment."

.News Watch ·
Legislator wants
federal prison built
in southern Ohio
.

ATHEN!\- A private compa·
ny wants to build a federal prison ·
in Soutlieastern Ohio and State
· Rep. Larry Householder wants it
in his 78th District.
According to' published
reports, Householder has asked
the ~!hens County Commission··
e!S for a list of sites in the county
where the pFison might be local·
ed. He said he has made similar
requests to the commissioners in
Hocking and Perry Counties.
• "This is a aood·opportunity to
have some economic develop·
ment," Householder said. "I'm
letting you folks know that I
would like to see several sites
come out of Athens County."
The private company, which
Householder declined to identify
builds and operates prisons.
1
The facility it hopes to build
in Southeastern Ohio woulct
· ~ouse 2,500 felons from the Dis·
.. trict· of Columbia and employ
about 250 people, · Householder
said.
The company hopes to find a ·
site· and build the prison by
December 1999, Householder
said.
The prison would need about
250 acres, 30 of which are rela·
lively flat with water, sewer and
electrical service available,
Householder said.
It would pay employees at
· federal pay scales of between
$35,000 and $45,000 a year,
Householder said.
"They feel Ohio is a good
place to come into and build
some private institutioils,"
Householder said.
Householder said represent&amp;·
tives of the · company are
impressed with Hocking Col ·
lege's corrections program.
'

*PRICES INCLUDES
MANUFAOURER'S
REBATE, TAXES, TAGS,
AID FEES NOT INCLUDED.
** 60 MONTH FINANCING @ 3.9%
WITH GMAC.WITH APPROVED CREDIT.
TAXES, TAGS, FEES NOT INCLUDED
ALL PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
OOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES

......•....•....
· H-..i727-2921
.I

Today's ~ua.-.-adbld
ll Sections • lll Pages
Calendal'll
Class1Ded8
Comics
Editorials
Alon1 the River
Ohl!uar!es
Soorts

C3&amp;5

DJ.7
Insert
A4

C1
A6
BJ.8

C 1997 Oh io Valley Publishina Cg.

AND

MOTORS TOYOTA
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WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
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~----.....

r---------------------------~--------~

Funding options:

In wake of
.levy defeat,
children•s
home looks \)
to alternatives
By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlmee-Sentlnel Staff
GALI,IPOUS - . hndinll
for the Gallia County Chil·
dren's Home was goina to be
gllllranteed in .tbe November
-erection.
home's ·represen·
tatives thought the support was
there; but, overall - once the
votes were counted - the levy
issue was defeated. by a few
hundred votes.
The Children's Home repre·
sentatives said they thought
they reached enough individu·
als and groups throughout the
county that were supportive
,but· the results proved differ·
RECREATIONAL TIME - Reeldentlal cere worker Dennie DIYieon, lift,
ent.
.
llv•ln
child Jerrld and Executive Director Deanna Cook epend time In the
1
Children's Home Executi\k Oallla County Chlldren'l Home recreation area. Jerrld 18 1howlng hll talDirector Deanna Cook said the enta on while playing Nlntendo, a donated video game •v-tem.
initial reaction at the home was shock. "We were all a home, Cook decided she would try to ask for fuQding
little depressed," she said. "I was really disappointed again from them. She thought ·since the fate of the
home was on the line that they might be willing to help
bur not willing to give up. • ·
.
The .5 mill levy would be have been an additional with funding until an issue passe!).
"The
commissioners
listened
and
said
they
would
levy to insure the continued operation of the Gallia
tak.e
it
under
consideration
to
he.
l
p
us
until
we
could
County Children's Home. If the levy had passed, it was
pass
a
levy
again
but
they
made
no
commitment,"
said
going to alleviate the burden of financial support from
Cook.
"We
went
over
papers
and
showed
them
we
Gallia. County Children's Services, .which currently
need local money for a federal match."
funds part of the home's operating costs.
.The hardest part about the defeat of the issue was
Although the home houses the Galli a County name,
the
reaction of the children living \n the home. Those
the home is completely funded by the state and feder··
children
that were old enough to underst~nd that the
al government and no local money is used for the oper·
home
may
run out of money were upset.
ation of the home.
.
1
A few children approached Cook and asked what
The Gallia County Commission does however pay
was
going to happen to them. Cook said she comment·
for the executive director's salary.
ed
by
saying, "You don't need to worry about it, let us
Cook explained that Gallia County funded the home
worry
about it."
·
up until about four years ago to the tune of $400,000
·overall,
Cook
is
staying
positivethat
this
issue
will
but since then the•home has operated on state and fed·
eral funds only. The Children's Services has been fund· pass in one of n·ext year's elections that take place in
ing the home ·since the county commissioners made May, August and November.
"I truly appreciate those who understand and voted
this decision.
for
the mission we support by having a children's home
"The time . has come that we have to stop using
·in
Gallia
County," said Cook. "I would ask them to
.money from the Children's Services for the Children's
continue
their
support and tell others."
Home," said Cook. "We need to get the money from
The
Gallia
County Children's Home, which has
the commissioners, voters, someone.'
Although her initial reaction was shock, Cook said been operating for 110 years, cares for, houses, and
she will not give up on trying to get financial support protects children ages 6 to 18 that have been neglect·
for the home. She has already started working with the ed, abused or are dependents. The home places the
community to find out what wrong in November's children in foster care and adoptive homes.
The reason the levy needed to pass was for the con·
election.
"We are trying to regroup now," said Cook. "We are tinued operation of the Children's Home because on
trying to find out what our next strategy is. We are October 1, 1997, th~ home's federal funding went
going back on the ballot~n•.May. We will try to get our down by $50 per child per day. Federal funding for
mission more clearly stated prior to the May election." next year based on the bed count from last year will be
Since the county commission once funded the decreased by $190,000, explained Cook.

'rlie

1

Oh! Christmas tree
Seasonal purchase involves weighty decisions
By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Stan
POMEROY- Real tree or artificial? "Charlie Brown Special" or $100
premium tree? Long-needled pine or short-needled fir?
·
The decisions required .-- -------,--.,_;__
wheri choosing a Christmas
tree are almost as weighty as
what to buy dad for Christmas.
Now that Thanksgiving is
behind us, the sale of Christ·
mas trees will begin. to boom,
and Christmas tree experts
have begun handing out
advice.
IIEoU Ofl AlmFICIAL?
Artificial tree owners often
cite convenience as a reason
for using them. The idea of
dragging the family to a tree
farm and lugging a pine tree
home is not appealing, while
others find the yearI y trek to .
the tree farm to be a Christmas
tradition that helps instill the
Christmas spirit.
Many owners of artificial
trees like the uniform, "per·
feet" look of an artificial tree,
which when properly assem· Trw Fann on
bled, lack the bare spots, Derwtn Is one of Melg1 COunt:y'a
crooked trunks and other mat trH autlata. The tann
imperfections that others find acre• of traee, rnoetly wfllta plnn. Dtvkl
channing in real trees.
and C.arol Rlgga are pictured •• they cut
Christmas tree growers, of I well-ahapacl trH lor one of thalr cuecourse, advocate the purchase tomer1.
of a real evergreen for Christ·
mas, not only for the charming ambiance ·that a real tree adds to the home,
but also in the name of environmenull responsibility.
"What could be more simple or more natural," says Frank Antenucci,
prosident of the Ohio Christmas Tree Association. "Buying a real tree is def·
initely an environmentally sound choice."
He takes issue with people who still believe that artificial trees are a bet·
ter environmental choice.
•Artificial trees are made of plastic and aluminum. They will never break
down or decompose when they are disposed," he said. ' On the average, the
life of an artificial tree is just six years. Then it is tossed into the landfill
where it will lie in a composed state forever."
WHICH VARIETY?
For the best needle retention on a Christmas tree, it's h3rd to beat a Scotch
pin, according to Randy Heiligmann, forestry specialist at Ohio State Uni·
versity. Once cut, this tree usually holds its needles longer than any other
species. If you want shorter, softer needles, firs and Douglas fir hold their
needles very well.
If properly cared for, most Christmas tree varieties can last up to four
weeks with little needle loss, Heiligmann said. "A freshly-cut tree, properly.
cared for, will do fine from Thanksgiving through Christmas," he said.
There are four ways to tell if a tree is fresh :
•Bend a needle between thumb and forefinger. A tree is usually fresh
when the needle bends but does not break.
•Left 'the tree a few inches and bump the stump of the tree on the ground.
If many green needles fall off, the tree is not fresh. Don't worry if brown nee·
dies fall; these are old needles from the interior of the tree that arc naturally
shed.
•Feel the stump. If it's moist and sappy, the tree is fresh. If it feels dry,
look for another tree.
•Cut the tree yourself from a tree farm, if possible. If you buy a cut tree,
Continued on page A8

~L~o5c~A~L~~~~!==- c:hrllat~nae

.Businesses.vie for financial windfall from hunting season
·il'n~:le~~~=?t.n
POMEROY - Ohio's

NO DEALERS

IPEI
111.-fll. 1·1
IIli-I
Ifill ~1111:1

Good Morning

The OBES office setving Gallia, Meigs and Jackson offerings, Bowland explained.
The name chaflie for the offices
counties, located in its new center next to Buckeye Hills
Career Center, is also known as a One-Stop Employ· "more aptly" describes what OBES
does, said Todd Lightner of Archbold,
.ment and Training Center.
Local office manager Sharon'Moles admits the name a member of Ohio's Job Service
causes confusion for customers used to referring to the Employer Executive Committee,
.which works with the agency.
facility as the job center or the unemployment office.
"Proactive changes in the bureau's
"Many people don't realize we do more than pay
operations
in recent years, including
unemployment compensation claims," Moles said.
customer
service
training for all staff,
"With Ohio's current low unemployment rate, a major
upgrades
in
facilities,
an automated
part of what our professional staff does is help local job matching system, and
intelligent
NAME CHANGE -The OBES olllce nrvlng Oallla, Melgl and Jack·
employers find qualified people for open jobs.
restructuring in ·the face of Ohio eon counties, located In Ita new center next to Buckev- Hlll8 c."Ohio employers are important customers and we're employers' federal unemployment act Center, Ia now known as • On•Stcip Employment end.Trelnlng ~~·
doing everything possible to help them find the right tax dollars being returned to Ohio, make OBES one of The Pomeroy office was merged wnh the Galhpohs
person for the right job at the right time," she added.
the state's most customer-sensitive agencies," he said.
facility in the late 1980s, and further consolidation led to
While providing the same services as before, the new
The name change comes after restructuring in OBES the merger of that office with Jackson's that became
centers are looking to familiarize job seekers .and reduced the number of offices serving Ohio counties. effective with the opening of the Rio Grande center e3l1
lier this year.
employers with all available training programs and

annual
deer gun season gets underway at
exactly 7:01 Monday morning for
hunters in Gallia and Meigs coun·
ties, but for some area businesses
deer season is already here.
Local businesses are vying for .
their share of the estimated $20.67
billion the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service says is spent every year by
hunters in ·the United States on
everything from firearms and
ammunilion to clothing, lodging and
restaurants. .
Some area restaurants offer spe·
cial early morning hours to cater to
the deer hunting crowd. Signs read·
ing "Welcome deer hunters" are not
uncommon. Belva Miller, owner of

·---------

Jeff's Carry Out in Pomeroy, for the
last few years has been holding a
day-long bean dinner on the Sunday
preceding the deer gun season.
Meigs County Economic Devel·
opment Ron McDade, himself a
hunter, says it is hard to put a dollar
figure on the economic . impact of
deer hunting in a location like Meigs
._County.
McDade owns a hunting cabin in
Lel;lanon Township and hosts sever·
al out-of-town guests during ihc
deer gun season, and also during the
spring wild turkey season.
· "I know about what the people
who come into my little deer camp
spend," he said, adding that they
purchase snacks, gasoline and other
supplies while in Meigs County.

-·!\

"The economic aspect of deer · deer processing shops where they
hunting is tremendous," McDade skin, cut, wrap and freeze deer for
said .. "They close the schools; that the successful hunters.
Oiler anticipates he will butcher
tells you how important it is to the
about 200 deer next week at $40 per
people around here," he added.
The Meigs Motel is already deer, adding that local deer procesbooked for next week while Forked sors will handle at least 1,200 deer
Run State Park will alsb likely be harvest during the deer gun season
crowded with out-of-county deer .elo 0e.
He said the deer gun season
hunters .
brings
in the end-of-the-year econo·
For some people, deer season
·results in an almost-immediate my for Meigs County with people
coming in from up north or visiting
reward.
Keith Oiler, a resident of the their relatives.
One pay off cannot be counted in
Danville area in southwestern Meigs
dollars
... "just getting together with
County, supplements his income by
friends
and having a good time,"
skinning and butchering deer during
McDade
said. ·
archery and gun seasons, and he will
The counties in southeastern
be busy this upcoming week.
Continued on p1ge A8 ·
Several area entrepreneurs have

-·

'

WELCOME HUNTERS - Meny Melge end Oellle County buelnellft
are w.lcomtng hunters In entlclpetlon of the ennuel d•r gun -eon
whleh beglna MondiiY 1110rnlng. Signa ttke then outelde of Jetre Carry
Out In Pomaroy are not untyplcal.

II

I

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