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:Page 1o•The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

~Hig~ p.rincipl(es not the scime as being square:

Dear Ann LanderS: lim a male, in
my mid-30s, never married and am
' seeing a divorced woman with two
children, one a teen.-ager, one a preteen. We have been ,together for
nearly a year, and Ol!f relationship is
heallhy and strong. I like her childreu,
and they like me. They are wenadjusted and well-m11nnered and
their mother has done a fine job raising theJ11.
There are times when she would
like me to stay overnight at her place,
but I feel uncomfonable because of
her children. Our times alone have
been at my house, where there are no
complica!ions.
I've. told her that I'm not sure what
the children would think of 1\Cf if I
spent the night -- to say nothing of her
neighbors. TJVs is a small town, and
I value. our reputations. Also, I

believe it could become legal fodder
for the ex-husband. who-is mostly out
of t~ picture.
11le children know we arc committed to one another, but I don't
think we should do anything that
might make them think less of us. Am
I "square," as one of my colleagues
has suggested? Maybe I'm not seeing
things clearly. Please set me straight.
-- MlOWEST ANN
DEVOTEE .
DEAR MIDWEST: Square?
Absolutely not. You sound like a man
who has high principles, and I
applaud your' good judgment and
restraint. .
.
· Childn:n judge lheir parents not by
what they say but what they do. Your
companion is fonunate to have a man
of your _caliber. I hope she appreciates
you.
Dear Ann landers: My wife and
I have become increasingly annoyed
and, more recently down-right dis.gusted With the deteriorati9n in dress
code standards in generid and especially in many top-scale restaurant&amp;.
We just returned from San ,Francisco where we had dinner in an ele-

gant (and expe.;sij e) French cafe.
Most of the guests were nicely
dressed. However, i member of the
. party seated at the 'next _
table was
we~ng a. T-shirt, no coat, running
/
shoes and a baaebaJI cap.
Last weekend, we had Sunday
brunch at a weu:Jcnown (als~expen­
sive) restaurant with a panoramic
view of the city. Again, a couple was.
seated ne~tto us, the man wearing a
T-shirt, shorts and tennis shoes. His
hair was almost waist-length and kept
getting in his face and food.
I realize some restaurants are
huning and .don't want to tum away
business. However, if this keeps up,
they won't have any business. Right?

-- DENVER DINER
DEAR D.O.: The wave of the
future seems to. favor the casual
look. There is, however, a definite
line between casual and sloppygross. The maitre d' or hostess in
charge of seating should know better
than to seat people in tank·tops and
cutoffs next to individuals. who have
dressed up for their luncheon or dinner.
Restaurants that have high stan-

· dards will lose their up-scale clients
if they do too much compromisinJr
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like you.to
share one of my pe\ peeves·with 'your
many readers. H'opefully, it will save
some women a great deal of trouble.
Often in the supermarket, I see 'a
purse ·plopped on top of a can, left
unattended while the woman is
pinching the tomatoes and sampling
the grapes. Many times, the purse is
wide open and the billfold is visible,
just waiting for a thief.
Please, women, put your bag over
your shoulder or under your jlflll.
- CORPUS CHRISTI
DEAR CHRISTI: Great advice. I
hope they lisicn before they learn
from experiel\cc.
Lonesome? Talce charge of your
life and tum it aroun4. Write for Ann
Londers'IU!w booklet, "How to Malee
Friends and Stop Being Lonely"
Send a se/f-Dildrrmed, long, busiMsssize envelope and check or money
order for $4.25 (this ineludes posttlge ·
and handling) to: Friends. do Ann
Lontkrs, P. 0. Box JI562, Chicago,
Ill. 606JJ-0562. (In Canada.
$5.15.)
l ...

v........ cand., .,.,.,.

PI, P8, pciwer wlrldow•,
power ct.r IOcka,·IIIOI'e•

door . IOcU. . power .....

'IJ ~

Clllltte, Ult, criiiH, P8,
P8, ...... wlnclowa, pDWW'

'

.$14,949

..School students
·Christmas. play

'

Majority
of Ohio
seniors
passed
exams

_Fowler declares candidacy for 94th seat

T·IJRD

were two years ago. There are not
more Jobs in southeastern Ohio.
There is not better educational oppor·. Declaring that the people of southeast Ohio' ileed better representation
ll!nities for southeast Ohio~There
is not a finn commitment o ·high·to provide the same opponunities for
ways
in this area," he adde
area residents as o!her Ohioans, edu' "In order for job opportunities to
cator Jeff Fowler officially kicked off
be created in southeastern Ohio, we
his bid Thursday for the 94th House
need better educational opponunities
Dislrict seat currently. held by Rep.
and new hi,:hways," Fowler continJohn A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston •
ued. "Without higbways, possible
Fowler made ltis announcement
industrial
sites are going to remain
during a reception held by Meigs
barren strips of rural land. We have
County Democratft Pany at the Carto push for funding ~;ommitments for
penter's Union Hall. in Pomeroy.
highway construction to create an
The 30-year old Fowler, a Crown
economic impact on this area." ·'
City area ·resident. will seek the
Fowler said that education, parDemocratic nomination in the March
ticularly
tbe issue of equal funding
l 9 Primary. He has served two tenns
for
all
Ohio
schools, must become a
as Guyan Township clerk, and has
priority issue in the legislature.
been a school teacher at Trimble High
;'It is not fair to southeast Ohio
School, Glous~r. for nine years:
JetTFowler
· · Raised as a beef and tobaeco
schools that need state funding to be
farmer in rural' Q~lia County, Fowler Social Sciences degree.
penalized because of a shonage in
· is a 1983 graduate of Hennan 'fiace
"Southeastern Ohio is not being state monies. Education in the state of
·High School and a 1987 graduate of well represented in the Statehouse at ohioispublic.butitisnotequat, The
the University of Rio Grande with this time," Fowler said.
children in Meigs County and the rest
cum laude honors and a bachelors of
"We are not any better otT than we
(Contla,ued on Page 3)

TALO,N,ES .
'

FIRST IN '96- Tyler Allen Franklin Madden, Infant son of Kenneth and .j(rJatie Madden, Is the winner in Melg• County'a First
Baby of 1996 contest. He was born Wednesday morning at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Jiv'er
••a""'~'~en named .
T II
IVIt
UUI

f
·Meigs' first baby 0 '96

Kenneth and Kristie Madden of
Zuspan Road, Middleport, are the
winners of Meigs County's First
Baby of 1996 contest, co-sponsored
.
.
.
by
local merchliJltS and The Daily
c1·eate jobs in high unemployment
State Rep. John'A. Cllf\ly Jr., RSentinel.
areas .
. Wellston, announced Thursday that
· A report of the binh of Mr. and
Carey says he has worked hard to
: he will seek a second term reprejobs to southern Ohio in his Mrs. Madden's son at 8:08 a.m. on
senting the 94th House Dislrict, com·
previ01us
p&lt;lsitions, both as mayor of Jan. 10 at Pleasant Valley Hospital
pri$611' of Gallja, Jackson and Meigs ·
~- ~~c:_JI:I!'Jrl _( 198~,!!4) and as an aide to. W'\5 the only one filed with the newscounties,
.Jill"..,. e.astem
La~¥reoce
~ ·~
~ !'\•
Clarence Miller in 1981 - paper'by Wednesday's contest dead...ounty.
.
.
.
line.
·
. "It liN ~n an honor to serye Qlis
The
baby
weighed
eight
pounds,
In order to provide·access for all
pan 'o f the state: I have done my best
of his constituents, the 36-year-old IS ounces and was 21 inches long.
to ll\8ke.sure the concerns of this area
·Republican holds open door meet- Named Tyler Allen Franklin Madden,
are heard." Carey said.
ings, public meetings, and legislative he is the couple's first child.
. -~Y has been an advocate for' .·
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
forums.
progress on area transponation proKenneth
Madden Jr., Middleport.
"I am very pleased that I have
jects, including State Route 32. U.S.
and
Emil
Thompson,
Cheshire. Mary
been able to provide opponunities for
33 and 3S, well as the Chesapealte
Madden
of
,Middleport
is a greatBypass and Ravenswood Connector
hundreds of citizens in lhe 94th Disgrandmother.
projects.
trict to have a direct voice in state
As the winner of the First Baby of
government," Carey said.
The first-tenn representative ~as
1996
contest 18 gifts will be award influential in gaining equity funding
Carey has not missed a floor vote
ed
to
Mr.
and Mrs. Madden and their
for Ohio's poorer school dislricts, and
in the House, and serves on the fol·
John A. Ctirey Jr.
sponsored H.B. 86 and H.B. 280,
lowing comminees: Transponation infant son.
Gifts include a bear from the Ohio
which have become law.
and Public Safety, Economic DevelRiver
Bear Company, Middleport; a
H.B. 86 allows municipalities and hJve passed in the House and are cur- . opment and Small Business; Family
counties to establish n:serve accounts rently pending in the Senate.
Services· and Insurance. In addition,
H.B.
35~
provides
for
streamlinfor jails and safety equipment, and
he serVes on the Ohio Board of
H.B. 280 will provide $5 million in ing and greater efficiency in the Ohio Unclaimed Slrip Mines.
capital improvement funds for Depanment' of Development. By
Carey and his wife Lynley, who is
Appalachia. including more than e~tablishing a low-interest revolving a teacher for the Meigs Local School
loan fund to assist distressed rural District, live in Wellston, where-they
$500.000 to the 94th District.
Carey has sponsm;e d two addi· counties, H.B. 440 will allow for the recently celebrated the binh of their
tional pieces of legislation which construction of industrial parks to first son, Justin.

Private school
passage rate
higher, latest
results reveal
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -The latest scores
froni Ohio's high schoo! proficiency
tests show 92 percent of this year's
seniors have passed the exams needed to graduate.

case of Gerber baby food from Big
Bend Foodland, Pomeroy; a stainless
State School Superintendent John
steel sipper cup from Acquisitions Goff said Thursday that results of
Fine Jewelry. Middlepon; a $5 gift tests in reading, writi~g. mathematcertificate from the Fabric Shop; a . ics and citizenship taken in October
free meal for the parents from Crow's demonstrate !!he Class of 1996 has
RestauFant, Pomeroy; a $10 savings perfonned at the same level as last
account from Racine Home Nation- year's seniors.
al Ban~: a $20 gift cenificate from
"Even !hough the percentage i~
Powell~ Super Vatu, Pomeroy; a $20 .. the same I thiilklhere is an intereStgift .cemficate from Fruth Phannacy, ing point in here,'' Goff said at a news
Middleport; a $10 gift cen1ficate conference.
from Middleport Department Store;
"We have about 2,000 more ·
A $15 gift cenificate from The
seniors
this year than last year who
Shoe Place in Middleport; a $50 savhave
passed
all the tests. We believe
ings bond from Fanners Bank; $25
wonh of baby fonnula from Kroger's. that speaks to the staying power of•
Pomeroy. a $10 gift certificate from these youngsters. They're staying in ·
Swisher-LohsG Phannacv. Pomerov : school, not leaving, and we have that
a baby arrangement from the many more now passing," he said.
Seniors who still must pass one or
Pomeroy A ower Shop; a $10 gift cermore
tests may take the exams again
tificate from Buttons and Bows,
in
March
and May. .
Pomeroy; an ice cream cake from
Dairy Queen, Middleport; a $25 gif~
But the latest scores also show that
certificate from Vaughan's Cardinal
ninth
grade students in private
and a three-piece feeder set from K
schools
outperfanned their public
&amp; C Jewelers, Pomeroy.
system counterparts.
Results of tests taken last March
and/or October show 48 percent of
137,556 ninth-grade public school
students had passed all the exams
after one or two tries.
In private schools, 72 percent of.
the 14,725 ninth graders had passed
all four ~~ams after the same number
of attempts.
Goff commended nonpublic
James L. Davis, Minersville, has
schools for the achievement. "It's terrific," he said.
announced his intention to seek the
Democratic nomination for lhe Meigs
There was no ready explanation
. County Commission seat cprrently
for the disparity, but Goff sai&lt;i he
held by Democratic incumbent Janel
believed there was more intense
• To Republicans, the papers sug· Howard, whose tenn commences
parental involvement across the nongested that Mrs. Clinton ordered the Jan. I, 1997.
public system than in public schools .
May 19, 1993, purge of the travel
Davis is retired from the U.S.
"I think parental involvement is. ·
office staff and that she did substan- Army Corps of Engineers with 27
an extremely important piece of this
tial legal work for Madison Guaran- years of service. He served in the
whole picture," he said.
ty Savings and Loan while living in U.S. Navy frpm 1954 until 1958, and
"When you get past that, I'm not
· Arkansas- two charges she denies. also served 18 months with the Pressure
i have an explanation other than
James L. Davis
in his first full-scale news confer- idential Honor Guard in Washington .
the commiunent on the part of the
ence since August. the president D.C. .
Davis civic activities include family and the student, based on the
indignantly denied charges that the
Davis and his wife, Mary Donna. membership with the Daughters of decision made by the family to go to
White House has withheld sensitive have been lifelong residents of the America, Guiding Star Council 124; that school, probably carries some
infonnation from investigators. area and have resided in Meigs Fraternal Order of Elks. Athens; weight. I can only do that-anecdotal"We're in the cooperation business," County for the last I 5 years.
· · American Legion Fecncy-Benneu ly," Goff said.
he said.
He is a member of the United Post, Middleport; VFW Post 9053.
In the Roman Catholic Diocese of.
But he stopped short of commit- Brotherhood of Carpenters Local Tuppers Plains; Forked Run Sports- Columbus, the percentage of ninth
ting the first lady to testifying in per- 650, Pomeroy; a co-founder and man's Club; Shade River Masomc graders who passed all four tests after ·
son before congressional committees chairperson of the Big Bend Stern- Lodge; Scottish Rite Valley, Colum- two lries reached 74.4 percent 'file
investiga.tirig the affairs.
wheel Festival Committee; trustee of bus; White Shrine of Jerusalem, Gal- diocese covers 23 of the stat~ 's ~8
"She wilt' do whatever is nece§- the American Stemwheel Associa, lipolis; Aladdin Temple Shrine, counties and includes II 1high
sary to answer all lhe appropriate lion: and a member of the U.S. Coast Columbus; and Horsetraders Degree, schools.
questions," Clinton said.
Guard Flotilla 3-10, Pomeroy.
' Valerie Wilsqn, diocese public
Kentucky.
He dismissed speculation that his ·
relations director, said most of the
wife has suddenly become a political
class of 1999 took the exams last
liability. "She will continue to be an
March as eighth graders. Si~ty-six
enonnous positive force in this counpe~ent passed all four on the first try.
try," he predicted.
My sense would be the tests
. The news conference was pan of
reflect the sound curriculum that ·
Jeff Harris was re-elected presiThe board set the second Thursday
a fledgling campaign at the White
we've developed over the years. I
dent
of
lhe
Meigs
County
Educaof
each
month at 7 p.m. for the reg- can't mike any comparison to the
House lo salvage Mrs. Clinton's reputation. She iJ embarking on a high- tional Service Center Board during its ular meeting date.
public ~chQbJs," Wilson said.
,
Howard Caldwell was named to
profile book.tour next week, planning organizational meeting Thursday
She agreed with Ooff .aliout the
serve as (he b6ard's legislative liaison
to •answer questions on the travel night.
importa~e of pa~trital invol;t~;ment. ,
Re-elected vice president was to the Ohio School Boards Associaoffice and Whitewater:
. "We have ex~l!~nt c~tion .·
Bob
Banon.
tion.
In his testimony Thursday;
The meeting was held at
John Riebel Sr., superintendent, wtth the parents.J thmk ~s, kOJ[: - 1 , ;
Massey said Vincent Foster ordered
factor.. They cboo~ to put ~ar stu- .
t.·
him to tum over the.campaign papers. McClure's Restaurant in. Pomeroy · discussed the special education dents In lhe sC_hoo(s sometune&amp; at. &gt;· · ~
Foster, later a deputy counsel at the due to a power outage at the board . review report and staff contracts financial hardship," Wil$0l! siud,
. · ''
\llhich will be up for renewal this
White House, comnlitted suicide ih · offices.
~
"'
~~· .~
. r,
July 1993, a tragedy that fed specu- _ Harris and 1.0. McCoy, wh0 are ·year. No.actib.n on either matter was
Students mus( 'paSs ' ~· l!ilith-:"'"·'·',.f~i-ff'
latiOII about tbe taligie of Whitewa- beginning new four-year tenns, were taken. Bills were approved for pay- arade tests' ilnd 'meet ~ ·~ .
given the oath of office by Treasurer ment following-the utas'urer's report ments in order io PI~ ITdm
ter-related developn1ents.
~ Carol Gilkey.
school.
·
•"
...... . 1
~

:Incumbent Carey will seek second term .

as

sp,~CJE SIHI n I L... - Th• Space Shuttle Ende8Vour thund4irs off
Launch Pilei 38-B lll'ly Thursday·mornlng beginning a nine-day
ml••lon. (AP Photo)
·
·

'

•

35AGennett Co. N1w 1j1per

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 12, 1996

District race heats up

a

1994 FORD ·

ing it quits after Septemhl:r.
derful nine-year run and has been 11
Despite improved ratings in a less tremendous asset to Twentieth Tetetawdry format, "Affair" won:t be vision," said Rick Jacobson, th~
returning for the 1996-97 season, . company's president . "The show is
Twentielh Tel~vision, the show's dis· as good as it's ever been right now.··
lributor, announced Wednesday.
However, "'Affair," the nation's
"'ACurrenfAffalr' has had a won- fll'st syndicated tabloid .show .and
long the ra.ti'!gs leader, had in recent
years slipped to No. 3 position behind
the shows it inspired: "Hard Copj"
'
and·current front-runner "Inside EdiWilliatns was. ;el~tcd v.ice piesident. tion.-'' _ .
'
·
Joe Bolin is the 'third trustee. Meetings will be held on the 'first Thursday of ta.;h month at 6: IS p.m. at the "
Rutland Fire Station.

OFFICER.JiiLEq'ION
. Officers . wcte elcc~ w(len.•,the
. ~es Auxiliary qf.Oiive ToW!tship
Fire Depanment met Tuesday riight
·at the hall.
··
. Elected were Connie Smilh, president; Jody Bethel, vice president; .
OSU .HONOR ROLL
Elizabeth Smith, secretary; and
PaUline Brewer. treaSurer.
·
Si~ M1igs Countians were listed
.'Plans were discussed for a dinner on the honor roll for the autumn
to be held at a later date and for a quarter at Ohio State University.
Valentine package as a February
Those honored received a grade
.fund raiser. lt will include dinner for point average of at least 3.5 and were
~wo, a movie; and chdcolatcs.
enrolled for at least 12 credit hours.
. ·.
· ,
- '
On the list from here were Barbara
~LE&lt;Jrilp PJWjSJDENTS
Joan Anderson, Sarah Elizabeth
Charles }liiiTett, k was Fleclell. : Anderson, Jeremy William Buckley,
· ~~- ~~~of the ltutland ToWIIship ' Cleon Reginald Pratt Ill, Andrew
when thl:y met 'for an orga- David Wolf, all of Pomeroy, and
· meeting recently Charles Robyn Ann Stout of Syracuse.

Vol. 48, NO. 1110
1 Sectton, 10 l'llgw

By :roM 11UNTER
Sentinel News Staff

-.Society
.scrapbook...
~

.Low In 20. tonight. hrtiJ
cloudy. Saturday, moatly
cloudy, hlghaln mlcl-30..

•

1995 MERCURY
SABLE

4 dr., 4 cyl.,· auto., llr cand.,
AM/FII caa..aa, Ult, cruiH,

:'A Cl!lrrent Affair' c~lls it quit, won't ·return next fall
By FRAZIER MOORE
lP Television Writer.
: NEW YORK (AP)- Ka-chung!
''A Current Affair" has been cut.
The graitddaddy of syndicated
news magazines, wilh its pyramid
logo and wind-whistling intro, is call-

789
Pick 4:
4909
BuckeyeS
1-2-3-21-30

Sports, Page 4

Eanh. The satellite was soaring over
Australia when Endeavour blasted
off, more than 9,000 IJ)iles al)ead.
The 4-ton reusable satellite holds
two dead newts - they died shortly
after being launched from Japan last
March - and fertilized newt eggs, all
pan of a biological experiment. It
also contains crystal-growlh furnaces
and.infrared telescopes.
Duffy and his crew will release
and relrievc a U.S. science satellite
during the nine-day mission. Two
spacewalks also are scheduled to
practice station-style work; three
men wiiiJ!O outside next week, two
at a time, to build up crucial spacewalking experience.
American astronauts alone will
have to perform 200 to 250 hours of
spacewalks per year from 1999
through 2001 to assemble the international space station. Japan is one of
the station panners, and is aiming for
a manned moon base of its own by
the middle of the next century.
Endeavour is due back at Kenoedy
Space Center on Jan. 20. ·
Shuttle manager Loren Shriver
said it was a "fantastic first launch of
1996." He warned JIIASA may have
to slow down aDd'perhaps even halt
w.otk on upcoming missions if the
federal budget impasse drags into late
January or beyond. Eight shuttle
- flights arc planned this year, one
more than 1995.
At Mission Control, 'flight director Bryan Austin formally kicked off
the mission by painting in one of two
eyes·on a red, ball-shaped Japanese
doll, a good-luck s!Wiol despite its
menacing look. He ;!It paint in the
remaining eye once the satellite is
captured, in keeping with Japanese
tradition.

Pic~ 3:

Miami hire.s
Johnson as
new coach

Endeavour blasts off,
begif/S satellite chase
By MARCI-l' DUNN ·
· AP Aerospace Writer
. ·; CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
. -;- Space shuttle Endeavour and its
' crew rocketed into orbit today and
began chasing a 'Japanese satellite
loaded with dead newt~. crystals and
telescopes that mied to be returned to
Earth.
"It was a great ride uphill," commander Brian Duffy said.
The 2,000-(on spaceship rose from
its seaside pad at 4:41 a.m., lighting
the sky for miles around. Liftoff was
delayed 23 minutes.by an assortment
of communication-system problems.
"Sorry it took us a couple of extra
minutes to get tlie engines stancd.
But once you tumed·the key, you sure
put on a great show," Mission Controltold the six astronauts.
It was 44 degrees at liftoff, warm
. enough under the rules established
·after the 1986 Challenger disaster.
'NASA used heaters to protect crucial
shuttle parts.
The temperature was 36 degrees,
·the coldest ever for a shuttle launch,
when Challenger exploded 10 years
,.go this. month, killing all seven crew
members. Investigators found that ihe
cold had stiffened the 0'rings in the
shut~'sbooster rockets, allowing hot
·gas tQ seep out.
After the accident, NASA adopted an elaborate fonnula involvinglow temperature, wind and humidity
in detennining whether it is safe to
launch. Heaters also were added to
protect the joints and O~ring seals in
the boosters and other components.
On Saturday, the five U.S. and one
Japanese astronauts will use the shuttie robot ann to relrieve the Japanese
satellite nearly 300 miles above

..

Thursday~ January 11, 19tJ8

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

In a highly competitive programing marketplace, the sbow's continued presence in cenain key cities was
in doubt. "It wasn't economic~ly
feasible to prog'nlm under those circumstances,'' Jacobson said.
Launched nationally on · F'lxowned stations in June 1987, the
show was re-introduced in Septem~
as "The New .A Current Affair,"
ilnchOred former "Dateline NJIC"
·
·
· Jon Scott.'
·

Got· A C

'

Room

In Your ome?
• Heat up to 500 11Q- ft.
• Uses 50% less electricity than corwentional
heating systems .
• No flames, no fumes ' ",,...,.
• Ph~ lnt9 110 Outlet · .
• · Purifies the air all ' ·

· year rwnd. · ' · .
1
•.

Furniture C!lbihel '
serves as functional
end·tabl~
·
'

''

Heat Whl'rP You Wan l It For Just A Dolla r A Doy.

1995 FORD
WINDSTAR GL

1995 FORD
FlSb 412
I cyl.; I •P.•d, air ..........,
PS,

PI, " tilt,

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ca..ea.,

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.~

'•

3,949

new complications are arising

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119'94'.. 1FORD ·.
F150 4X2

' XLT, I cyt, 5' ipiled,

cOnct., ~·· .,...,

U10 c:niie,;. .:....IIIMtt•,
''I•
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Minersville
man·seeks
seat on
commission
As Clinton tries to mute criticism,
0

v.e,
.... ~'~··
PB' Ali/fiji
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...... delogge'r, ~.

By RON FOURNIER
be.fore the firings with Hollywood
Aaeoc~ ~s Wljlter
producer Harry Thomason, a ~onfiWASfllNGTON ~ Caught in a dant and private adviser to Clinton.
swirl of accusationS centered on his Thomason's attorney, Robert Benwife, President Clinton is denouncing nett, said Thursday, " He did not dissuggestions of wrongdoing . in the cuss~ firings or anything related to
White;l,ater and White House travel the tr!ivel office."
office affairs.
·
.
Last &lt;week , the White ·House
"An allegation," he snapped at a r'eleased aJllemo from fonner chief
reporter, "is not the same tl1ing as a of administration David Watkins that
fact." said Mrs. Clinton had pushed for the
Clearly exasj,erated by the politi- dismissal$. White House officials
cally draining topics, Clinton com• have said It wa~ Watkins who made
plained to reponers in a rare full-scale . the decision. . .. ,
news conference Thursday: "An aileTho111asoo h~s enlerged as a cengation comes up, and we answer it. tral figure as congre~sionafRepubli­
And then people say, 'Well, here's cans seek details on whether Thomaailotlier allegation; answer this.' And son or Mrs. Clinton improperly
then, 'Here's another allegation: pressed forthe dismissals, which bolh
answer this.' ...
have denied .
·
· •."That is the way we are living
• An attorney who worked wit~
hef~: in Washington today," Clinton Mrs. Clinton cast dqubt on the first
~before flying to Nashville, T&amp;n., lady's· account of having little to do
for appearances today. Later, he Hies with legal work for an Arkansas savto Europe to visit U.S. troops in ings and loan at the center of the
Bosnia and Hungary.
Whitewater real estaie affair.
But even as he lried to mute the
In his Senate testimony, Richard
criticism, new &lt;!evelopments Thurs- · Massey also said he was ordered by
day ensur~ that life won't get any, a key Clinton aide to surrender his
eisier forthe president and his wife, Whitewater files 'dUring the 1992·
Hillary Rodharh Ointon.
·
presidential · campaign. Massey said
• Documents and interviews. he was unawaie that the files were
obtained hours before the news con- · given to the presidential campaign, a
ference showc:cJ that ClintQD knew practice he said he would have
about the finng, of seven White opposed .vigorously. ..
House . travel office employees in . After weeks of improvement . in
1993 more than a day before they public opinion polls, Clinton's polit. occ:urrcd. The presiden1 has sJ!ld.he ical fOrtunes abruptly changed last
~w , veil)' little about the matter ~week when the Whi~ House released
~fore the firings.
,
, two sets of documents that congrcsThe documents also. reveakld that sional investigators 'had sought for
the president met ,.,.ice the week months.
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School service center
board names officers

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COmmen

FridSy~J~nU.ry12,1996

·ciA sppok honors a s·ca·ry stan~ard
taiptcd infonnation should be passed

By Jilek Anderaon '

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obto

Mil MlchMI 811'181111n

What happens next in .··
budget talks is...hothing

VoU JusT

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Berry's Wor-ld.

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,.VA. ·

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Marjorie E. Watson

l·r~. ' .

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- ··1~:.5====~~::::~:=~~~~::-J::'-~~
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...,.Snowfall 'to . end tonight;
Another snowstorm gave Ohio a

glan~ing blow early today. The

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up to almost $(i trillion. ·
True enough, during our working years we had
mQney withheld frqm our wages,,allegedly to pay
for our Social SeCurity and Medicare benefits.
And if we had been allowed to invest that money
in o~inary insurance policies it ·would now be
covenng our expenses handsomely. But the great
bulk of it was spent by the government years ago,
on programs designed to make the Dcl'locrats of
that day look "compasstonate," so the btll for our
generation's old age is still piling up. ··
' And who do you suppose will wind up paying
tt? In 20or. 30 years, even the tnterest on our staggering federal debt will become unbearable. Who
will be around to suffer ~ con~uen~s. w~tever they.are -- debt repudiatton, rumous tnflatton
or worse? Our children and grandchildred, that's
who. Not .us -- we'll be six feet under and safely
out of harm's way.
That is why it is not only kind, but morally
imperative, to give a little thought to what we are
doing to future gel)erations of Americans. We are
no better than a graftdmother who is given the
·privilege of ,using her son'~ ci-edit card, runs up a
huge debt on it, aild men ~ies --leaving him noth. ing but her blessing IIPd the bill.
Is !Jtcre anybody to biBJ!IC? You bel there is:
The politicians who, across the years and c'ven
today, insist on spending more than ,the governmcnt receives in revenue ~rKI simply charging the
balance to future generattons. I am too tactful to
identify the political party that has made this cyn-

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rn 20 Or 30 years; ~Ve~ tnfl
'interest on OUf· Stilggtltfng
: 6 11
. I ·
.
.,.. re"''eral debt ~ II :bf'COIQ8
e.; unbearable. ' Who will be
.
d
._ ,._
aroun fo SUnflr tr re co,JSequences1 whatever they 'are
. · d'_..
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,
,
1
'· .,.,t repudiation,
ruinous
,, Inflation or worse? Our ch/1'
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.
dren ' end gra,clchlldren,
that'S who.
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'"'..:.:.::::.:...::....:.:..:::::.::_________.;......
ical ploy its stock in trade, but he~·s bini: Its
nlime begins wt'th '.'D." .
Nobody pretends that returning this country to
fiscal sanity will be painless. Bur until the 104th
Gongres.s carne to , Washington nobody even ·
·thought it was possible. Now we know it can be
done -~ not by .cutting paytitcnts to the elderly, or
even by refusipg to i~~~:rease 'them, but simply by
·&amp;&lt;~ucing the rate of increase. Is that too much to
..aSk?
,
·
. !'.don't believe my generation of Americans Is
. as stupid, Jet aione as greedy, as the oemix;rats
think we arc. · .:
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, . \YIIIIam A. Ruaher 11 a. QI•~~ l'fllOW
9f the Clafemont lnltltule for ·.lhe ~ Of
.'~tnmllllhlp and Polltlca! .Phlloaoflh¥••

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__.. ·of the area should have the same
L;:~ opp(lrtunities as students in wealthi::l!: • er schools in Worthington, Shaker
fl' .Heights·or Dayton."
:.0 ~. Fowler said he would suggest
f'.,...applying an i'!ternship and enlrepre·
' .- neunhip.~in Oliio's schools to
give students a feel of the working
. world.
_
{
Fo'Wlcr lllso said he will push for
,Jmproved.. technology so "our kids
- will be on an even playing field with
other stu~nts."
··
' ., "We need 5omeone in the 94th dis-;_~ uict who will think on his own and
M

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The following cases were resolved
We&lt;tnesday in the Meigs County
·:·: Coun of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
.. • Filled were: Nancy W. Swartz,
.Middlcp&lt;llt, ~~ belt,"52S plus costs;
•'•Gloria Slaytoo-Whaley, Shade, scat
. -belt,, .S2~ plu5 costs; Michael E.
'· Wolfe, Reedsville, stop sign, $20 plus
costs; John Johnson II, West Colum·
~:.: bia, W.Va~. ~n conl!liner, $30 plus
· col5ls; ·Patrick McGuire, Pomeroy,
t' 1 speed, $311. plus. ~ts; seat belt, $25
,;; ;plus costs; . . .
;,:·, Kevin.R. Whobrey, Pomeroy, seat
,, ; belt, . $2~ plus ~osts; Raschel L.
1
•. Rowe, Racine, seat belt, $15 plus
"' ', ·costs; Danny L. Robson, Pomeroy,
~' fail to control; $25 plus costs; Del' 'won Laudcrmilt, Middleport, passing
, . .. bad checks, $25 suspended, costs,
; ; rcstitu~on; Jon M. Matte~. Shade,
' 1 'recldessoperation, $100~pended to
'~'' $50 plus .costs,. one year probation;

1-. oblernaee .,.cpoaed
The 50th wedding anniversary
celebration for Ernest and Freda
Vanlnwagen of Bradbury set for ·
Sunday at the Bradbury Church of
Christ will be held Jan. 21, 2-5 p.m .
due to'

weather. .

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~~· The D.~Y Sentinel
-1.
hblished every afternoon, Mondaf through

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friday. Ill- Coun s1.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by oho
Ohio Volley I'Oblilloi,. Cooqoaooy.o-o eo.,
..........,. 0,00 457119, Ph. ll9Mt511. Second
cloltpoii!IIO plld .. Pomeroy. Ohio.
'

Mt.ber: The A,IJ(H;ialed Preis. ol'llilhc Ohio

~"'' 111e~ ~uocilllion.

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Thwsday accident i,jures two

Two Alliany area residents were j!lightly injured in a two-vehicle
accident Thursday on County Road 26 (Flatwoods). the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. .
.
Driver Pamela S. Davis, 29, and her passenger, Shayne M. Davis,
6, both of 28440 Old State Ro~te 346, were transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS. They were later treated and
· released, a hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers said Davis was southbound in Chester Township at 6 :48
a.m. when she struck another sofJthbound car owned by Eila S. Van
Meter, 45820 Pomeroy Pike, Pomewy.
Van Meter's car was stopped in the roadway after it became disabled, according to the report.
•
Damage to.1&gt;oth vehicles was moderate.

Al•a~~~o--.. ~ .

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Driver injured in accident

.not be lead around by big city polit'

tcal•nterests. We need someone who
will get the firm commitments to
bring a true change and opportunities
to all southeast Ohioans," he said.
. The son of Buddy Joe and Phyllis
Burcham Fowler, Fowler os ~ member of numerous ~tvoc org~n1zattons
as well as the Ohto Educauon Association, and was-a past president of
the Qallia County Trustees and
Clerlci association. Active in politics
for well over a decade, Fowler has
.been a central committeman and
coordinale!l several Democratic cam- ·
paigns.

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department investigated a twovehicle accident on Sand Ridge Road in Chester Township Thursday
afternoon.
·
According to a report from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Patrick L. Aeiker, 17, Pomeroy, was westbound in a 1984 Pontiac ani! slid on the snowcovered road head first into a 1991 Chevrolet Blazer driven by Alice
Hawthorne, Long Bottom.
Hawthorne saw the Pontiac was out of control and had pulled to the
right side of the road when her vehicle was struck, according to the
report.
.
Aeiker was treated at the scene by the Pomeroy squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medi£al Service. The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department also responded to the scene. .
Heavy damage was listed to ·both vehicles.

SUBSCIIPlJON RATES

One .......... ..... ,.................................. $20()'
:a~ \ ()we M.,.cll ..................................... _,........ $8.70
:~, One Yea-........... ....................................$104.00

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~jill,

SINGLE COPY I'IUCB
Dolly ................................, ................... l5 Ceota

Randolph T. North. Bidwell, driving under the influence, $500 plus
costs, 10 days jail-suspended to three
da)'s. 90-day OL suspension, $250 of
fine an"d jail suspended upon completion of residential ~atmenl program; Jane B. Ratcliff, Tuppers
Plains, failure to send child to school,
$100 bond ordered; Becky Gillilan,
Reedsville. passing bad checks, costs.
The following actions to end marrer.i!!st,it!!!u!!luo,n,.!!!!!I!!!!I!!!!I!!!!J!I!!I!!!!I!!!!I!!!II riage were filed recently in the office
ofMeigsCountyCierkofCourtsLar1'
ry Spencer:
I Divorces asked- Carla L. GrindAm Ele Power ....................:..42\ ley, Pomeroy, from Christopher A.
AkJo oooooooooouoooooono onooooooo•ooooo.56\
Aahi1M 011 ...........................35\ Grindley, Racine; Debra A. Little,
Pomeroy, from Wayne Wesley Little,
A T I T oooooooooooooooooowooooooowoooo ~ooooo85\
Bank One ................................36 Portland.
Dissolution granted .:_ 'n'acy R.
~ EVMS ..............
16\
Borg-Warner .........................30'1. Hein and Evelyn M. Hein.
Champion lncl.......................2t '!.
Divorces granted - Carrie Ann
Charming Shop........ :............ 2"1. Maynard from Jeffery Lee Maynard;
23~.
I Mogul ........................ .20~ Bonnie G. Shea and Guy A. Sltea.

The foll owmg land transfers were C. Spurlock to BREC, Columbia.
posted recently in the office of Meigs 5.03 acres;
County Recorder Emmogene HamilRight of way, Helen Swanz to
ton :
BREC, Bedford, 142.33 acre s;
Deed , Kenneth L and Rita Jean
Right of way, Drexel C. and
Yeauger to same, Salisbury parcel s: Parthenia Vance to BREC. Scipio.
Easement, Bill and Sharon Stew- 154 acres;
art to Ohio Power Co.. Rutland:
Right of way, Minter and Ruth M.
Easement, Roland and Joann Wi se Fryar to BREC, Bedford, 10 acres;
to OPC, Rutland;
Right of way. Imogene CunningEasement, Noel D. and Leona L ham to BREC, Bedford. 70 acres;
Young to Gaylyrd L. Young. Scipio
Deed. Debra S. Boston co Sam
tracts ;
Boston and t&gt;onald R. Warehime.
Deed. Donald C. Sr. and Ruth A. deceased, Salisbury parcels;
Stahler to Donald C. Stahler Jr.. RutDeed. Mary J. Warehime and
land parcel:
Donald R. Warehime, deceased , to
Deed, Terry R. and Linda Fraley Meigs County Disabled American
Cullums to Scot and Tara Gheen. Veterans Chapter, Salisbury tract s:
Bedford parcel;
Deed, Paul A. and Opal Duff to
Deed, Betty Jo Martin to Judy Jo Melvin Ray, Robin and ' Gary Lee
Hops tetter and Teresa Dawn Vorhees, Duff. Salem. 102.64 acres:
Middlepon parcel;
Deed. Paul A. and Opal Duff to
Righi of way, Gordon F and Eve- Diana Sue and Paul Phillips, Alfred
lyn J. Randolph to Buckeye Rural At lee Duff, Columbia;
Electric Cooperative, Bedford, 20
Deed. Charles W. III and Jeanene
acres;
Radford to same, Chester parcel;
Right of. way. John D. Jr. and Julie
Easement, James,Connie. Dennis
Wandling to BREC, Bedford, 15. I06 and Carrie Rucker to OMEGA JV5,
acres;
Olive;
. Right of way; Teddy E. and Ann

Detention program cancelled
· The Saturday detention program at Meigs Junior High School and
the traffic safety school at Meigs Counly Juvenile Court have been canceled because of the weather.
•

TDM IND lUCK

7: 10 oan.t . . . , _ 111!1' • •.1: 10 3:10 CPCJ

THI IMEIIUN PRESIDENT
tllO lall.W. 10

Actions to end
marriage filed

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JG.1]J .

Gin CERTJftCAT£1 AV...IU.BLE!

~I'll I II S\ 1lk

1'10 \II 1\
i!liiiiHI{Il\1

Fl'll. THRU THURS
ROBIN WILUAMS IN

•s·o·cks·

JUMANJI"'
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

44H923

JANUARY

u ............

=CIIng. . . . . . . . . . .;. .

WINTER

GMneft ....................~..............60

GoOdyear T&amp;R ......................43'&gt;
K·mart .....................................7\
Lande End .............................1 3'1.
Limited lnc: ............................ 16~•
Peoplle Bancorp........:........... 23
Ohio ~allay Bank..................35'1.
One,Valey ...............................31
Rock1ftll ................................54
Robbin• &amp; Myera .................. 28l•
ROP.I Dutch/Shill .............. 137:0
Shoftey'elnc...........................8\
Star Bank ...............................57,_.
WendY lnt'I........................... 20'.Io
wonhlngton Incl......................20

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Stoc:k repC.rta are tile 10:30
a.m. quotH pfovlded by Advwt

of Ql~lpolll.

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For more Information or p...,-eglairltlon
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~

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10.00-0ff!

To Begin

January 15th
Man:-Tu88 &amp; Thurs

Large Selection
Womens DEXTER

Womens Reebok Leader DMX

i\ERQBICS
...

...

Meigs land transfers .posted

A Pomeroy man was bound over to Meigs Coutity Common Pleas
Court on a felony Eharge Of domestic violence Thursday ~ llowing a
preliminary hearing in Meigs County Court earlier this wee~.
Ro4ney B. Miller is accused of striking his live-in girlfriend on NewYear's Eve 1995. According to the complaint, he allegedly struck her,
repeatedly causing open wounds on the back and side of her head.
The mauer is being pursued as a felony since Miller has a prior conviction for domestic violence.

POI'IMAS'I'IR: Scftd addra• corm:tions tO
Dilly Seminel, Ill Coun· St.. Pomeroy,
Oloio 4$769.
· I)' Carrirr or Mol. Reate

• TRUCK KNOCKS OUT POWER - Several hundred Pomeroy
residents were affected by a two-hour lo8B or power' •• a result
or a one-car acc:ldent on West Main Street eerly Thursday evening.
According to pollee reporta, Roblm Foreman S{. 33, Pomeroy, ~~
traveling near Riverside Motors when he failed to atop in traffic
aild swerved, striking a utility pole. The impact rrom Foreman's
1987 Toyota truck broke the top c:roas·sectlon of a utility pole,
causing tlie oulage. .Foreman was cited for failure to maintain
asaure clear dislailce. (Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)

Pomeroy man bound over

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Local News in Brief:

;-county court cases ended .

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By George R. Plagenz
Most people probably 1aren 't aware tha the Salvation Army condjlcts
You might call the Salvation Army the church with the Big Band sound. Sunday worship services b~n to alL It is best known for its wOrk amdnlfthe
It may ,even evoke memories of the days when Glenn Miller and Tomm~ needy and lh,e victims oflife's tragedies. _Whenever,disaster has $!rUCk i!l\the
Dorsey playe4 at the opulent movie palaces of the 1940s.
U.S. in the last 117 yeiis, the Salvation Army. hits been there -.- solcte..s
. The~. amid breathless anticipation in the audience, the plush curtain on marching onward ~o the drumbea.t of Cluisli;m service. This IOQ is wifere
the stage would part and we would sec ~!ftc~ hear the orchestra go into its down-and-outers find retuge "when other helpers fail and comforts llcel" .
theme song.
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! ' While all will 'finci. compassion herp, the Salvation Army is :not, ..U~ on
T)lat's
pretty·
much
how
it
was
at
this
Sal·
·
sentimeiltality. Drunks mtist submj! to~lie
1
vation Army church. '
· ··
tigid rules 'of the dttoxifi.ctjlion·p!'ogr. . if
When the 'service was about to begin, the
.they want the Army's'help. But if tltciy·!llre
red curtain on the platform opened and the
willing to do this, they havt•a p1acJ to
band came inlo view. But instead of "In the
stay;
· ·,
, •:
Mood" or "I'm Gelling Sentimental Over
For tl)ose whose problem i11lot ''detn
You." we heard the 24-picce·Salvation .Army .
rum," lttcrc 1ft chores to do to e8rn · ir
keep.
··
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brass band playing "On Christ the Solid Roc!t
I Stand." ·
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- 'The secret .o f the Salvll!lon ~·s
- Ttj)k abput a w&amp;ke·llp call to worship f
·appeal would appear to be its shllplil!ity
. The music throughout the serviCe was supe.
"-"I
and sincerity. Here is a s&lt;:ene in a Sal\oa•
. rior -- not only the Big Band .liumbers but the sincing by the.htlrt!!onizing , lion Army church as the setvicc is drawing to a close.
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ll!iJI~· q~J1U1et ('My Jesus, I Love Thee"); the 14-voice Senior S6ngsteis
A~ in a blue T•shirt .with a tattoo on his rilht forearm.,has come
and the Junior Songs~ who IAJ!I·a delightful, whimsical rilambcr, "Noah ward in ·rcsponsc t~ !he ''altar call:" He is the only one kneeling 11\eR, :
Foulldi&lt;Jrii:C in the Eycs . of.~ Lani" -- ~·s gll!lna he a .floOd, there's
"Is there ..,-one· else~" asks the pastor, "FOf8el ~the fclloJ&gt;V net( to
~ gcinaa be some water Uad,theR'a ~ita be SOI,llc·mud ... ',, ·
, -· you mii~Jt think, He can'tget yo14 into heaven. Will anyon~ else come?''•
,, '11M! ··~ bY the wjfe.Of the director Qf the c.o~JUnurii~-a~ntcr, was an
AI ibis moment ihe ~~ .player in ·the ban~ leaves 1\is fidilje ~ c~s
CJI~tioil of the David pd.OOiillb story, ·puticulirly ·the verse (I Samliiel fOrward: It turns 01!1 tic is a Salvation Ariny i'najOI', in i:hlqe of the cen,Pt
~ 7:39) Where David mules to 1'!11 on swol'd and cOlt of armor when going who is out of unlfonn this morning and dressed .In a red blazei,:playjq ~
off tO filht the pat. His I'CIIOa: ~l ..ve JKI( proved them."
'
ftddle. He kneels at the altar with tho man in the blue T·shin with die ...oo• .
'·· ,, "He wu a boy and ~ wanted to use somethiq ho knew IOIDellllDg u the putor prays.
.. . -' · ·; '
After a closinc hymn we file outA man gives ~pea firm ~hake d
llbout," said the prefiCher. "We caii'IICII otben about luut&gt;unlcss we knOw
' IOIIIC!Ihina about hliD uti have prO,ved him 111 ~ own tifc. ''
•
saya, witlfi ·bia. tilothltss sm1Jc,. "You' rc 'lookin' 10011. ·• That ~ . y
Odllli'cburcbel cOUld l..i! alcsspa fna lbi SaiVIIine Army ia • • · day.lh't hear lbll,yery much an)'1110111. · - •
·
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toplhet I~ ~:l'hicli, ,rithout lllil!l ..... wtbNiricai,IOUCbGUlli. Pl ...ll li.• .ayndhrlacl Wrll..- far HI• pllfllt .........

,

1918. Sunset tomght wtll be at 5:27
p.m. and sunnse Saturday at 7:52
a.m.
Weather Corecuto
Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Areas of
flurries or freezing drizzle developing
north. Lows in the 20s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. Area of
flurries or freezing drizzlt. northeast
in the morning. Highs mid 30s to
around 40.
Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tuesday ... A
chance of snow north and a chance of
rain Or snow soutll each day. Lows
mainly in the 20s. Highs 30s north
and !Qwer to mid 40s central and
south.'

Word has been received here of the death of Marjorie E. Watson, 71. of
Sun City, Ariz., on Sunday, Jan. 7, 1996.
She was born in Meirs County on Aug. 15, 1924. daughter of the late Reed
and Emma Enyon. Her husband was the late Ivon B. Watson.
Surviving are four sons and daughters-in-law, B§.rry and Paula Watson of
Murph~. N.C., Garry and Mary Watson of Rochester, Mich .. Marvon and
Mary Watson of Pearce, Ariz., and Bruce and Sue Watson of New Hope,
Minn.; 13 grandchildren and a granddaughter.
Other survivors include a brother and sister-in-law, Emil and Pauline Enyon of Racine; two sisters and brothers-tn-law, Wanda and Cilrroll Neigler of
Syracuse, and Wilma and Robert Reiber of Racine; and · several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
She was preceded in death by a daughter and brother. .
Services and interment were held Thursday, Jan. II, 1996 m the Sunland
Funeral Home, Sun·City.

.f.~FoWler declares candidacy

-

ea· ftie••choUI:isfew~~~do.

predicted

. . the record low was 13 below zero in

National Weather Service said accumutations were 2 inches or less, with
most of the snow falling on southern
!
and central Ohio.
~ _ The snow will taper off to flurries
~ ; ,)ly topight, mostly in northern Ohio,
~ •. , forecasters said. Northeast Ohio
~"'.: could see some more flutties on Sat;, ;urday.
·
~. • Warmer temperatures on. Sunday
.and Monday are likely to melt some
1.- .the snow. Highs will be in the 30s and
•n.. the NWS Sal·d'
""' """"'•
::..:. The record-high temperature for
~'his date at the Columbus weather
,-. 'station was 16 degrees in 1916 while

Salvatio:n .Army hits-the right -no.te ... ..:.
.

~ ;..', '·

~

/

EDITOR'S NOTE- Welter R. Meat:a, viDI pr.ldent and c:olumnllt fot
· ;n. Aleoclllled Prell, hal ntpOrted on Waahl!lllon and natloruil poll·
. : _.for IIIOI'e than 30 ynr~.
,·

~

:
:

..

l

,, ' '• '

•

Who re·a·lly· ca·re·s abo'ut t"e
1''1. ·. . cht.ldren
'
'· ' ?
'• -

:die

'.

"f L .-.

.

l

'

;:~~~:ai'V~~~:~~~~~.~~:~~~':t;a:!enont:.ill

I, -.

"'
•. '

~ . By~· Aasoclalllct Prn1

~·

Freda A. Hart, 96. New Haven, W.Va., died Thursday, Jan. I I. 1996 at
the Overbrook Center.
An employee of New Haven Porcelain Plant, she attended the New Haven
_United Methbdist Church a11d was a charter member of the Smith-Cape hart
American Legion Auxiliary of New Haven.
Born April9, 1899 in Letart, W.Va., she was a daughter of the late 1. Milford Hoffman and :lpra Jane Roush Hoffman. She was also preceded in death
by two sisters and three brot.hers.
Surviving are three daughters and sons-in-law, L. Faye and Paul Kemp
of Toledo, Loueva G. Dick of Lima, and Lois R. and Donald N. Bumgardner of New Haven; two s6ns and daughters-in-law, James L. and Sandy Hart
ofHurricane; W.Va., and Donald L. and Marge Hart of Norristown , Pa.; two
sisters, Nora F. Staats of Letart, and Mrs. Bernard (Mary A.) L.ieving; and
17 grandchildren, 27 great-grandchildren, one step-granddaughter and three
step great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va:, with the Rev. Jim Dick and Col. Bernard Lieving Jr. officiating. Burial will be in the Hoffman Cemetery., Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
'

.. .,

·~

~warming tren~

THiS.

:·
f9!1.i.and
•·they won it, which is why the government is split and the budget at impasse.
. .
.
.
: But Clinton said it didn't get.to the point of campaign debate and decision
: on the specific programs at issue now.
.
.
. . By WH,IIam A. Rulher
·
·
•. It never does. But the elections of 1992. when he made the economy.his
As you have probably noticed, most of the lib:central issue; and of 1994, when R~pyblicans challenged big government, e~;~ls' crocodile tears .oVer the Republican budget
: 'dealt with the overall philosophies that arc in dispute no:w.
_ . · ·
are allegedly being shed for America's children,
·: . Gingrich said the deadlock may not be .broken and there may be no bud- who {they are forever telling us) are the special.
: pil deal' until after the Nov. 5 elections, pessimism that triggered a stock targets of those mean old Republicans. .
.
• lnatket plunge Wednesday.
But they are also cyntcally encouragmg a httle
:·
"II may just be that 'we need one more election," he said. "lt,inay liter- whisper that is already audible in geriatric circles.
: ally be that the Clinton administration cannot agree to the kind of decentral- Why, some of ~e old folks want to know, .must
. izalion and lower spending and lower taxes that we represent."
we be asked to gtve up a portion of our Medicare,
: . .Which is another way of saying that Clinton is a Democrat and they are or even--' God forbid -- our Social Security, for
: conservative Republicans.
. the sake of the next generation, or the one after
, The election isn't going 10 change that, and if the cum:nt poll outlook . that? Let them take care of themselves! There are so many false premises in that ques: llolds through the election year, the voters may well deliver another divided
. JOvcrnmcnt.
.
,
.
tion that it's hard to know where to begin, but let
. ....
While one survey put Dole and Clinton in a statistical dead.heat as prc;s- me try. . .
In the first place, of course; today's old folks
• ldential rivals, a Washington Post-ABC News poll publis~ W.ednesday
• nab.1y ahea· d.
are not in fact being asked togivc up any of their
lilted ClintOI) com.o
.
·
· With 236 seats in the House and 54 in the Senate, Republicans are in a Me4icare pay~ents,lel alone their Social Securi~cimmanding position to extend their control of CongresscThere are more ty. )Under the Republican P,lan, Medicare payllenators retiring than in.any modern election. and eight of the 12 arc Dcmoc- ments will actually incrcasc-titeadily over the next
rats, openings likely to enlarge the GOP majority. In the House, 22 Dcmoc- seven years, right up to the time when the budget
: lats have decided against running again.
is finally balanced. All the Republican plan does
.• · · Were Clinton 10 win a second term, and congressional lines to hold, the is slow the rate Of growth. (And so does President
: l'ibole dispute about priorities and policy would be replayed, liS it has been Clinton's plan, by only vecy slightly less.)
: hefore, between Republican presidents and the Democrats w~o held C&lt;!nMoreover, the bitter truth is ihat, through no
:cress until this year. The answer has been compromise. Witho'ut it, a divid· fault of its own,-the present generation of elderly
·
: 'cd .govemrnent doesn't work. .
Americans (apd I am a member of it) is not "tak1
; , "In a political system where one ~ ... does not have total control, ing care of itself. "lt is.draiaing far more from the
• .IOOner or later you have 10 ask you~lf lir¢ 'ylill going to make .the perfect ··Treasury ,than has been"set aside for the purpose.
enemy of the good," Clinton said. ·. . . ,
The government is paying us our cash benefits by
: .. Good ·question. What's missing is a good answer.
borrowing-the money and running th~ public debt

...

for

::'· ~--~~~~C=H~·----~~

level of clwificatiO!' for exbemcly within 10 points. But . Ricl)lf!ison
sensitive i9fonnation from human ·aides say he is le8!'i~g against a
sources.
·
challenge to Domemct 411d has his
WhJle the specifics of that report sights set on New Mexico's 1998
on Russia are still secret, making it gubernatorial race.
.· .
impos5ible to !mow if it affected pol·
"Richardson could be~t anybody
icy decisions. one intelligence in the state except Domenici,"
source noted that any blue border explained political iiJlalyst Charles
report that made its way to bQth Cook. "Pete's the only guy that he
~ush and Clinton was 'obviously can'ttake-'out."
llrgc;nt. At the very least, Dc11tch said
While Richardson is a member of
in the report to C9ngress, the disin· the House leadership, his promifonnation hurt our ability to upder- - nence has come from his status as a
starid Moscow's· foreign policy, part-time diplomat who secu,red the
"particularly (Boris) Yeltsin's poli- rei~ of two Americans who had
cies on nonproliferation and Russian been jured by Saddam Hussein.
involvement in the· fanner CIS Given Richardson's .penchant for
states."
,
.
foreign travel; aide$ suspect' that he
CAMPAIGN WATCH -- A pri- would grow restless in a siJI!dlouse
vate poll by the Democratic Senate- and will use a governor's.race as a
, rial Campaign, Committee reveals laullllling j)ad ' for ' a .future, Senate
that the Rep: 1 Bill Richardson, D- bid.
.
·
·
N.M., has closed the gap against
"Being on the Senate Foreign
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., in a RelationsCommitteeforhimwould
hypOthetical Noverpher matchup.
be like·dying 81\4 going fo ~e~ven,"
Domenici was leading . by 26 Cook told us. "He lives fot that."
points in a Democratic poll taken
Jodc " ' - n ~..,.loin on
exactly one year ilgo, but now is wrltwolor Unjtod..,..... ••• dlo.o.._ ....

on. .
. •
•
WASHINGTON ., Senate. Intelli"It's flabbergasting, mind-boggencc Committee Chainnan Arlen gling," one intelligence source told
Gannett Co. Newapaper
Speeter, R·Pa., has heard secret tes! our wociate Ed Henry: "It sbows
timony from a retired CIA official the CIA's mentality .and attitude.
that s~ new light 'On the mindset 'They think they know better than
that allowed the Aldrich Ames spy anybody."
ROBERT L. WINGETr
scandal
to go undetected for nine
'RI.e CIA's inspector general !)as
Pllbllaber
years.
.
declared that while. obtaining infor'.
One of the most disquieting dis- mati.on from controlled sources is a
closures
was the extent to which this fact of life in lhe intelligence world,
MARGARET
LEHEW
CIIARIJi:NE HOEFUCH
former
CIA
officer remains in deep "such disseminations ao: legitimate
Controller
Geatnl Maaqer
denial: He. rejected clait.ns that he · only i( the consumer js made aware
had a duty to warn top U.S. officials of the context of the acquisition· of
I
that. intelligence about MQscow w.S the information so that it may be
· I.El'TBRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be I~ than 300
words long, Alllencrs are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
based on infonnation from sources ev.aluated accordinj!ly."
'
address and telephone number. No u115igned lette'1 will be published. Letters . who were known or suspected of
Intelligence sources have conshould be in good taste, addressina issues. 1101 personalities.
being controlleCI 'by the Kremlin..
finned to us, for example, that one
Current CIA Ditector John of the very first intelligence reports
J,i;j!;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _,.,;. Deutch haS admitte,d that. Ames thltqJiiiCiintonreceivedaboutRushelped Moscow spread disinforma- ' sia as president-elect was based on
tion to senior l!J.s·.. polic.ymakers · tainted iAformation. In mid-January
fromAprill985·to·Februaryl994in 1993, Clihton and then-President
what Deutch calls .the "most trou- Bush each received .copies of a.
bling" part of the scandal. M~cow hand-delivered "blue border" report
used this disinfort.niltion campaign, - named for the bl,ue li~s around
to exaggerate its military might, the pages which signify the highest
which may have led to billiOI\s of
dollars of unnecessary ' defense
. · , By, WALTER R. MEARS
. ,
AP Special Correspondent
,
-spending .on the pari of the Unit~
WASHINGTON "- When Sen. Bob Dole tried to explain what happens States.
. :next in tltC balanced budget nego.tiations, he was reduced to saying that the
Specter wanted answers from the
~iT WoULD
.central thing is what "will not happen next." In tl)e illogic of this process, retired CIA repOrts officer, a 41-year
CPMeTo
what that means is nothing at all.
veteran whose specialty was Russia.
It may be hard to discern the difference between tha! and what's been High blood pres5ure and a bad heart
. aoing on for weeks, except for the fact that the government is at least open, had prevented the man, who is in his
. and largely functionit\g, throu~h Jan. 26. The well-advertised SO hours of 70s, from testifying on Capitol Hill.
.llnluous budget bargaining between leaders of the Republican Congress and fearing that the conner official's!
, l'resi~nt ClintQn cre~Cd to a halt without so much as a semantic accoril on health might deteriorate, or that he
'
· what to cilll the stalL
might grow reluctant to tell his StC)cy.
'· In everyday language, the talks broke off because they broke down. But Specter drove to the man's Virginia
Leon Panetta, Clinton's chief of staff, 'said the White House preferred to call home last November. · .
It a recess. Others, he said, 'preferred the word suspension.
Speetcr -- affingwith a committee
: "We feel the time has come for a pause," House Speaker Newt Gingrich aide, a CIA official' and a court
·said after the Tuesday talk stoppage. Dole was for recess, and said the reporter -·· debriefed the · retired
_. Republicans would be ~repared tp meet _again, no earlier than next Wednes- spook for more than two hours. The
. day, whenever tbe prestdent has· somethmj! e!se to present as a step toward fanner official, whose identity intel1
. a settlement. .
.
, .
.
.
. . .
' ligence officials asked us to keep
The Repubhcans satd they d already ytelded ground, Cltnton satd he had secret, denied he ·had acted improp,too, and both sides said they aren 'I really debatin~ dollars so much as the e.rly.
·
tole and size of the federal future.
,
He said he believed tlie in forma•
"It's not just the money here, I want to emphasize Jhat," Clinton said lion about Russia was true and that
·wednesday. "It's the policy." He said a seven-year balanced budget sol!ltion disclosing that it had come from
could be arrived at in 15 minutes, but for the ideological differences. That controlled sources would have made
.• means the issue of where to cut s~nding, how much and for whom to cut it harder to "sell" to U.S. policytaxes, what to do abput federal medtcal care programs for the elderly and the makers. The interrogators were
·needy.
.
' shocked by the arrogance of the offi: Those always have been issues between Democrats and Republicans; cial, who declared that he -- not
· Clinton said what ought to happen now is a budget accord, pres~bly '!n some senior policymaker -- should
. IIOIIICthing close to his last offer, and then a campatgn on the baste d1ffer- be the one wbo decides the circum. .enc'es over programs like Medicare, education spending and environmental stances under which potentially
protection. ·
' 1 ·
•
·
•
·

es

Saturday, Jan. 13
A~cuWellber' forecast

The Daily Sentinel
..

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s·ports

•
.•

Friday, January 12, 1996

• ' t

"

riosticators, Johnson picked Miami as
By STEVEN WINE
DAVIE, Fla. (AP! - Impatient the p~season favorite in the AFC,
' Jimmy Johnson wants to assemble a ;md even .after the team barely made
' · • championship team in Miami, begin- the playoffs, he picked them to reach
the Super Bowl.
ning yesterday.
Instead, the Dolphins were stam"We don't have a timetable,"
' .. Johnson said. "Whatever the peded at Buffalo in the first round,
timetable may be is not soon and Shull! decided five days later to
retire.
''
enough." ,
·
"On the outside, I felt they had the
In a transition that was surprisingly swift and smooth, Johnson opportunity to go all the way," John·
succeeded Don Shula as coach of the son said . "I was wrong. On the
. . Miami.Dolphins. The changing of the inside, it's going to be my responsi·
guard culminated Thursday with a bi lity to make the adjustments so we
news conference in the same room can achieve that."
where Shula announced his resignation last Friday.
The third coach in the Dolphins '
Johnson, -52, signed a four-year, 30-year history, Johnson hopes to
$8 million contract, less than expect· avoid the growing pains that came
ed, but enough to make him the high- with rebuilding teams in his previous
est-paid coach in the- NFL. He was , jobs. Along with the rough start at
delighted the Dolphins are better than Pallas, he we ~I 8-5 in his first year
• · the team he inherited at Dallas in with the Miami Hurricanes and 4-7
.1989, when the Cowboys went 1-15. his second year at Oklahoma State.
"I don't think this team needs a ·
But Johnson also won a national.
major overhaul at all," said Johnson, championship wit)! the Hurricanes
the Dallas championship ring on his and wen! 50-22 in his final four years
left hand reflecting the glare of TV wi th Dallas.
lights. "That was one of the big plus"My gut told me if we want to
cs in coming to the Miami Dolphins. win," Huizenga said, "this is the guy
There's talent on this team."
who is going to do it. "
·
. The underachieving Dolphins had
Talent such as quarterback Dan
a disappointing 9-8 record this sea- Marino lured Johnson back into
spn, stumbling to the end of an era coac hing after a two-year vacation.
when Shula retired after 26 years in He was also attracted by what he
Miami. Along with many other prog- described as owner Wayne Huizen-

..

...

In the NFC championship game,

ga's commitment to success.
'
" I saw somebody who wanted to
win as badly as I wanted to win,"
Johnson said.
It took just one four-hour meeting
Wednesday for Huizenga and Johnson to seal a deal.
" I ttiought this was going to be a
much longer process than it turned
out to be, " Hui zenga s11id. " It's hard
for me to believe."
Shula.· who is known to have
mixed feelings about Johnson, left
Thursday for vacation in Phoenix and
was un available for comment. The
team iss ued a release with comments
from a dozen players and others, l!ut
no statement· by Shu Ia.
Huizenga said he spoke with ShU.:
Ia dai)y about the search for a new
coach. Johnson said he talked with
Sh~la on Wednesday.
"Don heartily supports this decision." Huizenga said.
" I asked Don forjnput," Johnson
said. "I would think he'll be a fixture
here with 'the Miami Dolphins forever.''

Shula. frustrated by a team with
high salaries and low morale, retired
last week to end a 33-year NFL
career. His replacement led lhe Dallas Cowboys tq Super Bowl titles in
1992 and 1993, then left coaching for
television.
"I'd really like to think I've

to coach Dolp_hins

improved (as a coach) over the past
two years," Johnson said. " I could
watch every football game played, an
opponunity I didn't have with the
Dallas Cowboys.l think I'm a more
knowledgeable coach going in this
time than I was last time."

already become a running joke, and · up a doctored picture oOohnson with
at the news conference HUizenga held a shaved head.

-- -

By The Associated p.,...
The ranks of the undefeated were
nearly reduced by one:
No. 4 Cincinnati and No. 20 Penn
State were the only two of the four
remaining undefeated Top 25 teams
playing Thursday night, and both
came away with victories. Penn
State's was relatively easy; Cincin·

'•

nati 's

"I'm here to announce today we
do.not have any tickets available for
the Dolphins-Cowboys game coming
up this year," Huizenga joked before
introducing his new coach.
The teams do indeed play in 1996
at Joe Robbie Stadium.
.
· By all accounts, the relationship
WELCOME ABOARD- Miami Dolphins owner H. Wayne Hulzenbetwecn Huizenga and Johnson is off ga (right) ~!comes Jimmy Johnson to his team · shortly after
to a good start. Their contrasting hair - announcing Johnson as the Dolphins' new head coach at a news
styles - bald vs. coiffed - have conference Thursday. (APP

.

·,

And in Dallas' 34-24 win on Ocr.

points a game in those five victories,
including a, 42-31 win on Thankshelped by an early interception by giving las! season when their quarGodfrey Myles that set up thciir first terback was third-stringer Jason Gartouchdown.
rett.
But it's more than just defensive
Overall in those five games, Dalbig plays. Dallas broJ,e the first las has outscored the Packers 174-95
meeting open with a 48-yard touc:h- and averaged 422 total yards per
down pass from Troy Aikman to game.
Michael Irvin early in the third qu8rDallas, of course, says the right
1
ter, and Green Bay's late comeback thing.
·
was largely in garbage time.
" We're not overconfident," Irvin
In fact, the Green Bay defense has - said. "How can you be overconfident
simply been blown away against the . -against a team that's reached this lev'
Cowboys, who are averaging 35 el. Who cares if we've beaten them

8. the Cowboys took a 24-3 lead,

In the AFC title game,

.Steelers plan bala.n ced atta~k against upset-minded CQ,Its ..

"We're still going to run the foot·
And, of course, there was roolcie baugh became the league's most effi·
By BARRY WILNER
.PmSBURGH (AP) - Nowa- ball, and that mentality will not ·. Kardell Stewart, who in his multiple cient passer in an attack that calls for
ctays, when the scoreboard hits 20, change. But the diversity of getting roles as receiver, passer and runner . ~hart passes to the backs and rookie
the. Pittsburgq Steelers might just be the ball to the receivers and spread- became a national sensation.
tight end Ken Dilger, plus mediumI• • i
range throws to wideouts Sean
gettjng
started.
·
ing
it
around
the
decisions
were
"Everyone
said
we
lost
our
No
..
I
'•
Dawlcins,
Floyd Turner and Aaron
Until
this
season,
the
Steelers
made to create balance on offense. A receiver when (tight end) Eric Green
'··
'•~ !·· wer~ . a c.onservative, run-oriented,
Bailey.
year ago, we did not have that. I don't left," Thigpen said. "Then losing
••
They're not looking for any Diny
smash·moutti defense kind of team. think there is any question we want- ' Barry Foster (the top runner), we had
Harry action, especially with their
Shootouts were for Clint Eastwood, ed to be more consistent throwing the to look for production elsewhere.
•••
Cowher.
ball."
"The wide receivers, all four of only offensive star, Marshall Faulk,
:.•• notSoBillwhat
happened
this
season'
Indeed,
the
Steelers
were
one
of
us,
are getting the ball twice·as much out with a knee injury.
••••
"I don't think we have to play like
How did the Steclers. of all ,teams, get . the NFL's best passing teams in as we did in the previous seasons.
•••. so (jUicy, so wide-open, so willing to 1995, finishing eighth overall. Their Neil is real confident. He has a lot of Superman or anything," Harbaugh
•
passing game, particularly in the 12 confidence in himself and his pro- said. "We have to do what we can
•• gamble?
''Every year we take a look at our garn.es quarterback Neil O'Donnell t~tion and the receivers. He's taking do.''
•
• personal and try to adapt to it. I think was healthy, was more efficient than some chances and throwing down· That means a basic, ·vanilla
•• it's a development of that," coach the run.
offense, built at first around Faulk's
field a lot more."
•• Cowher said Thursday as his team
Yancey Thigpen had· a breakout
Oddly, it's the Colts who have talc· skills and now centering on a matured
• . prepared for its second straight AFC season with 85 catches and is going en on the look of typical Pittsburgh Harbaugh .
•
• championship game. On Sunday, a to the Prb Bowl. Ernie Mills had eight teams. They rarely throw long, pre"I'm getting older and have more
• yelll' arter blowing a chance at their touchd&lt;iwns among his 39 catches. ferring a more conservative approach experience,"
said Harbaugh, -who
•• first Super Bowl since after the 1979 He and Andre Hastings comple- that only gets wild when quarterback stllrted for 4 112 years in Chicago and
•• sca~on, the Steelers pi~ the lndi· mented Thigpen well.
Jim Harbaugh is scrambling. Har- most of the last two in Indy: ·"Before,
I would tuck it in four or five yards
• anapplis Colts.

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

..
!:•

.

.•

.
:- a
·. levelanders send messages to ~odell .
•

•
••

the Internet,

By RICH HARRIS

Browns' move, but said many the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Allan messages came from the same
:
Sabll bad a simple message for account.
•
Cje'FlandBrownsqwnerArtModell:
U.S. Rep. Deborah Pryce, R: . M ~ll's own wi&gt;rds.
Ohio. received about 10 e-mail mes, fbo was one of hundreds. per· sages a aay for the past three days,
•
h ·thousands, of Browns fans who spokesman Todd Eachus said. The
•
fl~d the Internet Thursday with messages were fairly civil, he said.
:
mes~ages opp,osing Modell's plan to
"The colorful language came
: • mon the Browns to Baltimore next when we were blitzed on the 'Hoot•
se11on.
·
ers girls' stuff, " he said.
-~'mail messages were sent to
Christopher said he's sure the
:
tea~ owners, sponsors and the
message is getting out. '
Na ?nal Football League office, as
"When you're getting personal
•
wei as politicians from Maryland reSponses from the Ford Motor Co.
·: .- and pbio ~d media outlets, in an and ESPN, you know you're having
:
"ln~et Day" protest organized by
an impact," he said.
•
the aye Qur Browns carnpa1gn.
Only a handful of recipients have
:
• y mpther told me when I .was complained and they were removed
: · ·11fo1f.iing up. 'Son, you are only as from the address lists, Christopher
• ., -gooCf as yopr word," ' Sabo wrote.
· said.
The Internet could handle the
:
Hjs mo,aage quoted Modell as
:
say~·
' : "We. can't hopscotch fr.an- increase in message traffic, said Russ
• '· chis' · aroljnd the country. We have Robinson, a :Spokesman for Colum:
buil this ~iness on the trust'of the bus-based CompuServe Inc. ·.
: ,fan • If. ~ treat._that as if it ~oesn 't · Compuserve has seen a 20 percent
: ' cou.l, 11 1 't 101ng to wash.
· to 25 pereent increase in usage
~·
'l~t's Qlak~ ail honest IT]an of Art recently, hut that may be because
.; ·· M ll," Sabo's ~sage ends.
people who are usually at work
•..
' s~s fluhtd across the 'net snowed in lind pllssing tl)e time by
.[: ; fro. · anatY ~~ns fa~s from surfing the : net, Robinson said.
•; • Je · udll to Geini~y to'J~n. and
Vienna, Va:-based America On
:• ·
' all over~ United Stites.
Line has 'two World Wide Web sites
.•Z'
ClfltPIIIJII.tnalilld five special and ~ ~orne pag~ ;·v,~ere sports fans
·: :': · ·
liltt, fql; B~wns backers. A . ~an· 1 express . ~If .v.1ews about the
!•Q
.eat to1ill fivo lists would be Browns move.
·
(G
w;,.
d
1d
10
i&gt;tGcal'
of
near_ly
2,000
.
'
Meanwhile,
Browns
backers
1
•:• ldtlr11111, said Galy Christopher, jncludin. Cleveland Mayor.Mich~J
~t!
c•u~iJII'slnterilet coordi~ator. . R. White iuld fO\Jner BrownS lunning
~·
MIIYiaad.' Gov. Parris 'Gietidcn- bllek'Cieo Miller- took td¥llllale
W,'a allil* llilllale Thursday lifter- of' tree cellular ·phone; service -16
• JiDanlthltl ltqll* lboot400e-mail rn8keande ~~Is to, ~ o~
;:: •••.... 111¥' dey about .the
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are

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·~..

five times? We've got to play a sixth·
game, and it's Sunday. It starts 0-0."
The Packers suggest !hat: .
'
a, They have no psychologi~al
· hurdle to climb and,
b, The law of averages is wid!
them.
·
"This is a different team," Holm·
gren says. " We're stronger now ,and
we believe in ourselves.
.
Says safety LeRo'y Butler:
"We think about the positives
how we can shock .the whole world
like we did Saturday.
"We like that kiod of stuff. "

•

~

l•

Ameritech, which has its Ohio WBAL-TV in Baltimore, told
headquarters in Cleveland,IOIIRed lhe WWWE that terms of such a settleBrowns backers a bank of cellular mut could include Modell paying
' telephones. ·
the city $9 million. Viviano cited
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said league sources he did not identify. .
no one in the office had mentioned an
A settlement also could include
unusually high number of calls from Modell agreeing to leave the Browns'
Cleveland.
teain name and colors in Cleveland,
Also on Thursday, Cleveland · Viviano told WWWE.
'
radio station WWWE reponed that
Nancy Lesic, 'a spokeswoman for
the NFL had encouraged White to . White, said Th)JJ'Sday night that she
settle a lawsuit the city filed to block · liad not been able to reach the maythe move.
or but she had talked to lhe city's
Mark Viviano, a spros reporter for · ~al counsel.

from t!!~.line . It's not a process of
seeing more things and recognizing
and getting a better feel for it."
Two of their last three wins were
10-7 games. And in the Colts' 33-20
shocker at San Diego to open the
playoffs, they got two touchdowns on
· long runs illy rook1e fullback Zack .
Crockett and had to cover only 27
yards for another score after Ray
Buchanan's 46-yard punt return.
An offensive juggernaut it's not.
But it has -been effective enough to
•I 1, '•'·

'·'o !

j, ,..: .• l

H ·,

''

·;

'

l

1

balance a defense th~t's making all
the big plays. As Buffalo showed in
its.40-2lloss to Pittsburgh last week,
Pittsburgh's defense is susceptible.
Does that mean lots of points Sunday?
" I still think you see a conserva·
live approach," Thigpen said. "We
do not say we will throw it regardless
of the situation. We don't make a lot
of stupid throws. We don't try to take
anything that is not there. ·
"But we do make things happen."

··•. '·' I l ;.,

·

. '

'.

• I .

·.

·,

..
_.'.
.;u....-.:
~

.

"-""

DON TATE MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO
1·800·83 7· 1094
614·992·6614

0

NEW '95 CIM FULL
SIZE ED. CAB PICIUP

NEW 1996.

CHEVY lWEI

..·-

SHOT PREVENTlON is the thing foremost In the mind of Cincinnati's Danny Fortson (background) In his defensive play against
Southern Mississippi's Mike Jones during Thl,trlday night's game In
Hattletburg, Min., where the fourth-ranked Bearcats won 75-70. (AP)

·.

............
.......... ... .
.-•..•
..
-. .,......
..-·'..
-..r
..-.o
........ ,.
~

$22,459

M

CLEVEL~ND

:,: . :

NBA standings
EASTERN CONIJ;RENCE
~-lllwillon

rc..
. w
Orludo .................. 26

I.. &amp;1.

GJI

New York .............. 2t II .6S6
WubinJfOn ............ l7 16 . !51~
Miami .................... 16 I§ - ~

4.5

7

.781

Boston.................... l4 19
NcwJcncy ............ o
19

.• 24
.406

Ptoit.lclphi• ........... 6

.19&gt;1

2.1

East
llc:lllWfU"C 62. O o~ ton Univ. 50
· Dreul liD. Ne.,.. H:nnpsllire 68
Fllirfteld 92, Colgate 82
Fai rleigh Dickinson 79, St francis,
N.¥ . 69
Hofstra 64. Maine 51
Marist 86, Umg lsiMd Univ . 69
Monmouth . NJ . 74, S1. Fmncis. Pn. 59
Mount St. MaJY 's, Md. 78, Rider.S6
PCM S1. 76. Mimlt:sol.:l 61
Sit:na 77. Loyola, Md. 62

9
9.5
12
12.5

19

........

12,995

·1

1987 PONT,AC BONNEVILLE ....~ .................:$2985
1983 FORD lTD nl~ car .............................. $1990
1992112 CHEV. PICKUP ............................. $10,900
1992 ~ORD TAURUS
$5445 '
....................................
1

1tea OLDS D.ELTA 88 ........................... ~....... $7965 .
2-1992 OLDS .CUTLASS .............................. $7495

1993 CAVALIE~ Z24 .................................. $10,890
1992 ASTAO&lt;:ONVERSION VAN ......... ~••. $13,490
1182 CH&amp;YY .CORSICA ............................... ~ $3965

1995

PICKUP ...:••••••.••••.•••••• ~·········: $9810·

9.5
II

17 . .485

12
0 .5

Milwoutee ........... :.ll 21 . .364
Toronto ... ,................9 2!i .265

17. 5
21

18 .471

-·-·-·-

r..

w

' ........ ................. 24

Ulllt ....................... 22

O.,.Y&lt;t .............. .. t~

I.. &amp;1.
9 .710

Towson St. 78. Northeastern 6~

W111ner 80. Rokrt Morris 76

14

South

19

-~

1 .~

:441

9

Oallu ....................... 9 2) .281
Minnesota ................ 8 25 .242
Vancouver ............... 6 l8 .176

14

ftll

IRAVILY
SYSftll

1

Butler 7 I, Writht St 68
Cleveland St. 11 ~. 111 . -Chica~o 69
Illinois St 86. SW Mi uoun Sr. 79
N.. Illinois 67, Wi 11.-Mi twmukec 64
~ [Missouri 71. Tenn.-MiV1in 61
Temple 62, Dayton 46
Wis.·Grecn Bny 64. Loyola, Ill. !i l

Tonl&amp;bt's gi11nes

Southwest

78

. S.turil•;r'• .......

F•r West

WaNgron acToromo. 6p.m.
s - o l i New York. 7::10 p.m.
Deu.;, • ·l b Jeno~7:JO p.m.

Clllilonuo 63, Soulhem c.t 60
Momua 66, N. A.rizona 64
Ore10n 70, Washinaton St 63
0..100 S1. 61, Wuhi ..... 55
S. minois 70, Ullh St. 69
San IMao II . PeppmljRO 70
San Fnoeisco 61 . Loyola Morymount

'7:JOp.011.

:lOp.m.

MiD • Va~~CC~Uver, 10 p.1n.
- , . LA. Clippon, 10:30 p.m.

Lamar ~9. South Alnbarn:l 51
North Telull 71 , Sa.m Hou!ton St. 5.9
SW Texas St. 61. Nicholl• S1. ~J
Texlli-Arlingron 88, Srcpt.en F.Au!tin

Tcua-San .A.ntoi1io 80, McNeese: St.
16 . "
Tuba 116.. Drm 64

MiDneiOII aiiDdiiDI. ");JO p.I'D.

Owlol!e 11 Dallu, 8:)0 p. ~a.
Orludo • San Alllo.io, 8:l0 p.m.
hftl.t• 0c:IYet', 9 p.m.

RIO GRANDE !1!1, C&lt;damlle7'l
Shnwnce St. 88, Urbana 86

&lt;on

Ohio Dominican 78, Ohio Valley 62

Ohio women'~
college scores
Great Lakes Intercolleciate
Ashland 69, Soginaw Vall. Sr. 6:\

Mid-Ohio Conrerence
Non-conl'erence play

51

IJCl.A 64, 5atnl011156

Tonlpt's pmes
Aorida a1 Dallas, 8:30p .m.
Hartford It WinnipeJ, 8:30p.m.
Buffalo~

Allalltk DMaion

I lll. !if llA
7

61 168 127
57 1&lt;18 109
9 ~5 152 109
4 " 117 105
7 41 119 142
~

4

40 105 106

8

J0119 15l

Northa.ll Dt•Won
p;nsbU&lt;gh .......... 27 II 3 57 202 128
Monrre:LI ............ I91 8 !li 4:l 127 IU

6
J
5
1

40 142 142
)9 124 1:16
H 106 IJJ
17 96 t66

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cttttnlllhlolon

&amp;a

' W I.. I lll. !if llA

DetroiL .............. 29 9 ) 61 ll~ 89
Toronro .............. 22 15· 1 ~ I 141 126
0o""ao ....... ..... 21 14 9 51 146 Ill
St. Lcouls ........:... t!l8 6 42112 Il l
WiMip:!J ........... I9.20 ~ 41 - IS) 156
Dallas ................. II 20 9 ll 1.04 tl2
l'ldlleDI-

-m . . . ..

C.Iondo ............ 2..11l. 7 5]
LOIMIO* ...... J6

17 10 42

168 121
149 142

16 11 l9 In 146
oiS 24 ! 1! 126 14P
COipry .............. 14 n 1 l! m 1:111
Vocou~~U ......... 14

Calgary, 9:JO P:m.

S.turday's games
N.Y. Raneerut Philadelphia. I p.m
New Jersey at Bo.scon, I:JO p.m.
San Jose at Pittsburgh, 1:30 p.m.
St. Loob ar Montreal, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Wmhinglon. 7:JO Jl .m.
Ottawa at Tampa Bay, 7:JO p.m.
V~W~Couver at Toronto. 7:JO p.m.
Buffalo a. Edmonton, IOJ Op.m.

1995 NISSAN PATHFINDER

Sunday's games

DniiGJ at New Jersey, 7:JO p.m.
Anaheim at Wian.ipeg, 7:30 p,m.
St Louis a1 N.Y. ~angm , 8 p.m.·
los Anacles at Oucqo, 8: ~ p.m.
CaiJary.AI Coloraclo, 9 p.m.

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Bo11011 ............... 1116r
Bulfolo ............. 18 20
Hanford .. :.......... 14 2..1
Onawa ................. 8 32

Air, AM/FM cassette, 4 door.

lf,lllE'fJ3: XE V6, air, sport &amp; convenience package,
automatic.

SPECIAL
SAlE:

Baseball

NUL sta~dlngs
»: I..

1996 NISSAN SENTRA

Transactions

Hockey

N.Y. Rnn&amp;ers ..... 27 II
Aoridn ............... 27 12
Philodelploio ....... 2..1 II
Washi-acon ........ 20 17
Tompo8ay ........ l717
NewJrney ........ l820
N.Y. IIInnders.... ll ~

19~

Montreal at Pinsbuq,h, 7::'0p.m.
Los Anatles ar De:troir. 7:30p.m.
A~m at Chicago, 8:30p.m

Non-conrerence play

Shawoee St 67, Moum S1. Joseph 4-'

Midwest

Thul'lilay's scores

a.;..;o·Phi-1

Mid-Ohio Conrerence
Malone 97, Tiffi1 82

It..,

11 2 169

Bos1on 7, Anaheim 2
N.Y. hlanden 4. Toronto ~
Washington 6 (0T)rawa I
San Jose 2, New Jersey I
St.Louis" Philadelphia 4 (tie)

Ashland 79, SAginaw VDII. St 711 {QTI

Knnsas 69. Aorida $4

Tulane 68. ~oolh Aorida 6J

, Jttlant187, Toronto 79
Oetroit9:1. Chartone 9:\
Indiana 96, Milwaukee 88
Phoe:nil Ill , Golden Srafe 106
L.A. Clippen 109, Minnesota 89

lotl(lftlf A1._a.

Great Lakes lnten:ollegiate

Cedarv ille 711, Ohio Dominicun 62
RI(&gt;GRANDE 76, Tiffin 74

SE Louisiana 94. Stetson 79
SW Louisi:ma96, Arkt~nsu St. 82
Samlord 62, Carnpbell SR
Tcnaeuee St. til . Austin Peay 76

9

New Yort11 Bosl®. 7:JO p.m.
Philadelphia Dl New Jersey. 7:JO p.m.
~oat Wullin&amp;tOft, 7:JO p.m.
Milwautce 111 Otlando. 11':30 p.m.
CLEVELAND •1 Den'l!f, 9 p.m.
San AlVoolo 11 Ullhi 9 p.m.
Dallu II Phoeni••9 p.m.
Miami II Scant&lt;, tO p.m.
Golden Sutce ac Vancouver, 10 p.m.
HOUlton a1 L.A. Laktr, 10:30 p.m.

Butier 71, Writht St 68
Cle'leland St Ill, 111.-Chieago 6Y

Memphis 74. DePaul 55
Middle Te"oo. 7K. TenllCliseeTech 68
New Orleans 7tl, Ark .-Utile Rock M

.

6

Midwestern Collqiate

(J OT}

.~4

22126

Thursday's scores

C?PJlin St. 72. Md.-E. Shore 69
florida Allantic 67, Mercer 59
~gia St 75. f1a. lntematioflai6R
101Ul91 . Hampton 69
'
lilCksonvilk M7. W. Kc:ntudcy BS
c ttn.'i~

2.~

i ..,
8
8.5

Centenary 84, Cent. FJoridn ,60
Cincinnati 75, Southern Miss. 70
Col i. of€hMieston 89. Jachonville .St.

Louisiono. Tech .'i6, Te1uu-Pnn Ameri-

U
18

hrHk Dtwllion

S&lt;anl&lt; .................... 2..1 w .rm
Sacrnrm~to ............ l9 II
.633
L.A. Lakn ............ l8 17 .514
Portland ................. 16 Ill .471
l'hoeNl .................. l4 17 ,4,2
OoldenSt111e .......... IS IIi. .441
LA. Cllppen ......... l5 20 .429

80

ll.B

10 .706
II .667

Edmoncon ......... 14 23 6
SanJose·....... .... 930 4

Ohio men's
college scores

Sl. Bonnn:ntufl.' ~7 . Fordhllfll ~0 ,

WESTERN CONFERENCE
M-Dhlllon

a1 Pfloc:nix. 9 p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores

o'

·.~-:

.. ~: ~

Sunday's g•me

Bas ketball

":':

1110 Aftlooio ........... 22

1995 CUTLASS
· SUPREME

·RIO GRANDE (43·33=76)Riley 6/13-214-216=20, Bostic 5/60/0-214=12, Carson 3/12-0/1 5/8=11, Smith 4/10-0/0-214=10,
Winters 4110-010-213=10, Tabor
214-1/2-010=7, Brown 213-0/0010=4, Patch 1/3-0/0-010=2. Totals:
27162-3110-13125:76
Total FG: 30-72 (41.7%)
Rebounds: 42 (Smith 12)
Blocked shots: 5 (Winters 2,
Bostic, Carson &amp; Smith I each)
Assists: 17 (Carson 7)
Steals: II (Riley 4)
Thmovers: 9
Fouls: 17

Snyder 719-3/6-0/!r-23, Caudill 1175/9-2/2=19, J. Burris 510-0/02/9= 15, Schreck 415-1/2-2/5= 13, E.
Burris 4/9-0/0-2/4=10, Morgan 0113/3-0/0=9. Kern s 0/0-0/0-3/4=3 ,
Seitz 0/1 -0/0-2/2=2, Parrish 0/00/0-112= I. TotalS&lt; 21/46-1212017/28=95
Total FG: 33-66 (50%) ·
Rebounds: 44 (Snyder 9, Caudill
8)
RIO GRANDE (49-46=95)Blocked shots: ;2. (by Caudill &amp;
Lavala )
Sports shorts~ Assists: 14 (Morgan 8)
Steals: 10
Thmovers: 22
Early training ·
Fouls: 18
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Few
sports performers . get more early
training than racehorses.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
· Horse. training begins on the
SALES &amp; SERVICE
breeding farm after foaling when the
204 Condor St
Pomeroy, OH.
horses are weaneil. Then, they are
FALL
&amp;
.WINTER
HOURS
broken to the halter, the saddle, guidOpen Tueaday·Frlday 9:00.5:00
ing and exercising.
Saturday 9:CI0-3:00
Eventually they go to the track
and work out. Some farms have their
Closed Monday
own training tracks to simulate the
race oval. Young horses must be
taught good manners especially at the
gate. They begin racing when they
are two years old.
Total FG: 31-75 (41.3%)
Rebounds: 48 (Quinn 9, Ware 8)
· Blocked shots: 5 (Ellis 4. Huffman I)
Assists: 14 (Quinn 4)
Steals: 7 (Ellis &amp; Huffman 2
each)
.
Thmovers: 23
Fouls: 23 ·
Fouled out: Woolley

Scoreboard

~

O.VIone ................ l6 ·

$24,649 .

No. 9 Memphis 74
DePaul 55
At Memphis, Lorenzen Wright led
the Tigers (10-2, 2-0 Conference
USA) with 23 points and 12
rebounds, his seventh double-double
of the season, and Mingo Johnson
finished with 2 1 points and ljteiunhigh five assists.
"We played better than we have in
some time," said Memphis coach
Larry Finch, whose team recently lost
to No. I UMass and Houston .
Bryant Bowden led DePaul (7-6,
0-2) with 17 points, while Marcus
Singer added 14 and Brian Currie 12.
Jcrmaine Watts, DePaul's leadi ng
scorer with 17-point average, was
held to 10 points on 5-for-14 shooting.
No.17UCLA64
No. 24 Stanford 56
At Los Angeles, Toby Bailey
scored 14 points and UCLA won its
eighth straight. ·
The Bruins (10-3 ) beat Stanford
for the lOth consecutive time, dropping the Cardinal (8-3, 2-1) out of
first place in the Pac-10. UCLA and
California share first with 3-0
records.
The Cardinal
was 21 -of-61 from
,
I
the noor and got outrebounded 51 -30.

.

Ati&amp;Mo ..., ................ l6

··

.

.

No. 20 Penn State 76
Minnesota 61
Nittany Lions coach Jerry Dunn
told the team at halftime to concen·
Irate . on the game- and not on the
14,852 fans in the new arena or the
television cameras.
Penn State went on a 14-2 run early in the second half, sparked by a
one-handed, fa st-break slam by
· Calvin Booth and two jumpers by
Dan Earl. The Nittany Lions led 51 38 with 12 minutes remaining, and
the Golden Gophers (9-6, 1-2) never
scrioosly threatened again.
Penn State moved to the new $55million arena after 67 years in 6,846seat Rec Hall.
No.3 Kansas 69, Florida 54
At Gainesville, Raef LaFrentz
scored 15 of his 2 1 points in the second half to help Kansas (12-1) pull
away from a six- poinl halftime lead.
Scot Pollard also also had a strong
second half, scoring 10 of his 12
points to offset the lack of offense the
Jayhawks got from Jacque Vaughn
and Jerod Haase.
Dameui Hill led Florida (5 -7) with
21 points. Greg Williams was the
only other player in double figures
for the cold-shooting Gators. hitting
a three-pointer in the final minute to
finish with 10.

-·-·-

Detroit.. ................ .l? " IS ·.~31

VVas

Fouled out: Allen

-·-·-

Chicaco ......, ............ 29 :\ .906
'trod;.... .................. 20 11. .606
CLEVELAND ....... !! \4 .~J

13450

The Rio Grande Redwomen started off O'Dell Booster Night at Lyne
Center Thursday with a 76-74 win
over visiting Mid-Ohio Conference
foe Tiffin, while the Redmen followed up with a 95-79 win over
MOC arc))rival Cedarville.
The Red women·( 11-8 overall &amp; 42 in the MOC) were led by junior Stacy Riley's 20 points and a 12-point.
five rebound effon from sophomore
center Rachel Bostic.
"The key to tonight's win -was
Rachel Bostic's good defense during
the final five minutes and that we
only turned the ball over nine times,
compared to 28 times in each of the
last tWo games," said Rio head coach
David Smalley.
Tiffins Ashley Allen led all scorers
wilh 28 points.
The future: The Redwomen will
host Malone in a MOC game Saturday at 3 p.m.

In the nightcap, the Redmen got
do1,1ble-digit offense from Shawn
Snyder, Eric Caudill, Jamaal Burris,
Tobey Schreck and Eric Burris to get
their 16-poini win over Cedarville .
Despite being outrebounded 48TIFFIN (42-32=74) - Allen 4/8- 44, Rio Gran'de got the win by the
6113·212=28., Berrier 4/6-213-010= 14,
weight of its offensive output, which
Jakubowslci 3/4--010-4/4=10, Laker
was best reflected by its shooting
4/10-010-0/!r-8, Swick 3/10-010· 60% behind the three-point line.
ln=7, Wenrick 010-113-112=4, Oman
Jason Quinn led the Yellow Jack1/5-010-1/4=3. Totals: 1!1/48-9/l0ets
with 21 points.
9/14=74
.
The future: The Redmen will
Total FG: 28-68 (41.2%)
host Urbana Saturday at I p.m .
Rebounds: 47 (Laker 12, Swick
'' ..
10) .
CEDARVILLE (36-4-3=79) ,
ACCEPTS DONATION- Rio Grande men'a head basketball coach
Blocked shots: 2 (by Barga &amp; Quinn 8/13-111-217=21, Huffman
, ·John l.ewhorn (right) accepts a donation from Ohio Valley Super· Laker)
4/10-319-212=19, Bradley 518-216markets owner Bob Eaetman In recognition of his organization's
Assists: 13 (Wenrick 5)
010=
16, Ellis 3/6-010-213=8, Ware
~hlp of Saturday's hardwood doubleheader. At 1 p.m., the
Steals: 3
2/5-0/0-4/4=8,
Krueger 1/3-1/3Rldmtn will continue thalr four-game home stand with a .Mid·Ohlo
. . Contentnce
Thmovers: I7
0/0=5,
Woolley
1/4-0/0-0/!r-2 .
HRI8 against Urbana. Then Rio Grande's women's bas- ·
Fouls: 22
Totals:
24153-7fl2.10116=79
kelbllll ttam will boat Melone at 3 p.m•

Cenlra1DM*-

Free Bedliner

tainly upset with some of the deci·
sions our .guys made there at the
end," Southern Miss coach · M.K.
Turk said. "You have to give credit
to Cincinnati because they made .
some things happen."
In other Top 25 game$, No. 3
Kansas beat Florida 69-54, No. 9
Memphis defeated DePaul74-55 and
No. 17 UCLA stopped No. 24 Stanford 64-56.
No. 4 Cincin1111.1i 75
Southern Mississippi 70 .
At Hattiesburg, Danny Fortson
hi!.d 34 pointS and 15 rebounds for
Cincinnati, going 11-for-17 from the
field and 12-for-13 from th~ free throw line.
The Bearcats won this one by
going to a full-court press in the final
minutes. Southern Mississippi (9-6,
1-2) had lhree of its II turnovers in
the final I :41.
· Darnell Burton's only field goal,
a put-back with 57 seconds left, put
Cincinnati in front 71 -70 before Fortson added four free throws.
"We knew we had to play defense
and try to force turnovers. We knew
it would work soon or later, we just
had to stick with it," said Fortson,
who has averaged 26 points the past
five games.

Rio Grande cagers beat Tiffin &amp; Cedarvil'le

..._, . .

~

..

wa~n ' t.

The Nittany Lions (12-0, 3-0 Big
Ten), playing their first game in the
new 15,000-seat Bryce Jordan center,
pulled away from Minnesota in the
second half and defeated the Golden
Gophers 76-61.
"They don 't run , any faster or
jump any higher, but they can make
shots," Minnesota coach Clem Haskins said of Penn State, which has never been undefeated this late in the season and hasn't been ranked since
1965.
Cincinnati dido 't have as easy a
time with Southern Mississippi,
which self-destructed down the
stretch and lost 75-70. The Bearcats
(I 0' 0, 2-0 Conference USA) scored
the final eight points or the game and
held the Golden Eagles to no field
goals in the final 3:37.
"We had to do a lot of good things
to ~ (in the game late), but I was cer-

Johnson met .with several players
Thursday and call~ a team meeting '
for today.
·
"The only thing he wants is to win
games and the Super Bowl," Marino
said. "That's why he has taken this
job, and that's all I want to do- win
games and have a chance to win the ·
championship. That's what makes me
happy."
.
.
•

.

Kramer, Forrest Gregg and Fuzzy
In last season's NFC title game,
Thurston..
for example, San Francisco took
"Twice we were in it, the others advantage of two turnovers early to
we were blown away by big plays," jump to a 21-0 first quarter lead over
coach Mike Holmgren said. "That's the Cowboys and held on to win 38been our emphasis all week. Things 28 .
will happen, but we don't want to
Last week, the Packers turned the'
give up big plays."
tables on the 49ers, upsetting San
Big offensive plays, of course, Francisco by j~mping to a 21-0 lead.
have been the specialty of the Cow- The first touchdown came on the
boys.
49ers' first offensive play, when
·But playoff games are decided as Wayne Simmons stripped Adam
milch by big defensive plays that Walker after a shan pass and Craig
seem to turn a, game's momentum Newsome returned it 31 yards for a
early.
touchdown.
"
·

c ·i ncinnati &amp; Penn State among victors

''

"

Johnson followed coaching great
Tom Landry in a tumultuous transition at Dallas·. Change carne more
easily in Miami, as if scripted by
Hu1zenga.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

1, Top 25 college basketball, Top 25 hoops

Packers and Cowboys bring back _memories of past ~a.ttles

••..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sent~~~.

Johnson si.g ns four-ye.il'r~ -$81V1 contract.

By DAVE GOLDBERG
IRVING, Texas (AP) - For three
seasons, the Green Bay Packers have
trudged into Texas Stadium, once
each year in the regular season and
once each year in the playoffs.
The first five times, they 've
trudged home with a loss.
Sunday, the NFC championship
game.is the sixth time, one that can
propel the Packers into their first
Super Bowl since the second one,
when Vince Lombardi was the coach
and Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor
"'ere stampeding behind Jen;y

•

Friday, Jan1.1ary 12,1996

AMtrk:M Ll:apt'

BALTIMOR£ ORIOLES: Agreed to
rerms with Mike Devc:n:aux. outfielder.
on a one-year COIItnK:t.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Aan:ed lo
lenni wilh Julian Tanru, pitcher, on 11
lhmc--)'CM' ·con~n~tl .
NEW YORK YANKEES ' Named Pwol
Mutropuquu sttn&amp;lh and conditioninJ
coooch.
TEXAS RANGERS: A•nounced they
will shnR 1 player devcklllmcn1 coatTacl
with the Tampa Bay Orvil Rays Dl Hudson VaUey of the: New Ycd-PeM Leaa.e
for 1he 1996 season. Nan.:d Gary Allenson manatct of Clt.-leston of the South
Atlanllc Leque. and Jim Byrd m.IUVIJU
and Steve Foucaull pitctuaa coach of Ihe
RD.Oaers of the Gulf Cout Leoaue
National Leapt
ATLANTA BRAVES: Named Mlke
Dunn aeneral munage'r of. Macon of the
South A.Umnt~c League.
FLORIDA M/t.RLINS : Agreed IO
1erms with Billy McMillon, outfielder.
and Aoton Small, Bryan Ward and JM'Od
Jucllaaud, pitchers, on one-year con-

u.cu.

HOUSTON .-sTROS: Named Vern
Ruhle coordinlllor. of minor•leque pitc:hina irutNCtion.
PHILADELPHIA PHIU.IES: Named
Joe Rip btolloeft c:ooclt.
. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Aar...t ••
..,.. wi11t .. &amp;mien. CIICha, on a one-

,_,x.n:C. · · ·

/

1995 NISSAN KIC 4X4
XI; V6, air,tilt, cruise,
many to choose from.

PIICED

-·1'0

�.
"'·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Friday, Ja"uary 12, 1996
~

\'

.

r ••,.,w...... a.... ora.n.

c..a
t1 J - C11r1o1 tl'
VuZandii!MIWord .

33226 Childrea'a H- Rd.
SUDday School - 11 a.m.
Wanhop • !Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:&amp;· 7 p.m.

II 1

l'lolor: J.,.. Millet
Sundoy School.- 10:30 Lm.
EveninJ. 7:30p.m.
w......,.,~ .
7·30 ia

.
.
'•

t ~f

A~;·;L•rnbly

'

oiGod

Lane

''
I
I

:

•

.
...
t' '

I~S~I-,~~f.;!:'"')

•

•

••• ••
••
•

.' ' '
·-·
''

..
••

Sunday School • ~30 a.m.
Wooship • 10:45 a.m.
r-rvy Flnl Bapllol
Pulor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wooship • 10:30 a.m.
F1n1 SM..... llllpCiol
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
•Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wooship. 10:45 a.m., 7:0Q p.m.
' Wedneaday S&lt;:rvicea ·7:00p.m.
FlniBapllot Cltarc•
Pastor: Mark Morrc&gt;W
6lh and Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worahip • 10: l s a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00 p.m.
\

'

'

'525 N. ,2!111 Sl. Middleport
l'u!Ai:·Jaines B. Keesee
Wonhlp. IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnpday Services • 7 p.m.
Railroocl Sl., Mu,on
School- 10 a.m.
'I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Servi&lt;e~ • 7 p.m.

w':".z.

i

'

r.,L MoriiJ!,~
Fourth It Main SI.,'·Midd_leport
-Putor: Rev. OU11ei1Cn•g. Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.

Saltm1St.
, _ ,, Rev. Paul Tayloi
Sunday School ; \0 Lmt
Evenina • 7 p.m ...',
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m. .

..

~; .

Cltuter c • - · of God
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chesler
PUior. Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·~P.-m.;
Wedneaday, 7 p.m. Family Training Hour

c-

CJtllOI IC

Cilll rch of Chrtst
r , .., P1ore' orCIIrtal
212

w. Mali! Sl.

i'lolor: Andrew Milcl

Sunday School , 9!30 a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

·

ComJn'gJ! ion&lt;JI
• · Trlnlty Cburdl
'

Second It Lynn, Pomeroy
Paitor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and WI\PIIIjp 1,0:25

EpiSCOp&lt;JI
G.--~10..-dl

326 E. am Sl., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPianlicr
Holy Euc:harialand
Sunday Sc:hool10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour followin&amp;

Puror: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School • ~:45 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m. .

-

.

Un1ted Meth odts t

•

Cltordo oi'God of Propllccy •
0.1. While Rd. off St. Rl. 160
Pastor: PJ.Chapman
Sunday Sj:~ • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 Lm.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

•

!IMnlllltart
a.-•
161 Mulberry Ave., POmeroy, ~-5898
'
· Pulor: Rev. Walter li- H01nz
'
Sal. 0111. 4:45-S:IsP.m.; Mau- S•W p.m.
' •
Sun. Con. .g&gt;45-9:15 a.m.,
S111. MA11 • 9:30 a.in.
Dailey Mua - 8:30 a.m•

1

syn... Pint Cltun:li of God
Apple and Second SIS.
Putor: ReV: David Rusocll
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:•; 7:30 p.m.

Alldqdy . . .
Sunday School· 11&lt;30 a.m. ·
Worahip • 10:45 Lm.
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

!;

Gnboin Ua,llad Melloodlol
Worship· 9:30a.m. (!Ill It 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl It 41h Sun)
Wednesda~ Service • 7:30p.m.

'

Pastor: Gregory L SUn
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.~ .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servoces -7 p.m.

blloHFrftW•..,..

'I

Church of God

·•'

Rudud Cltar&lt;hofGod

JlaratRullllpCiol
Pastor : Arius Huil
Sunday SchoOl· 10 a.m.
.Wonl!ip. lla:ri!-'

'

' St. Poal lAt....... Cltlll'&lt;.
Corner Sycamore It Second Sl., Pomeroy

JletUay
PuiOr: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wooship-9a.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;e1- 10 a.m.
Clirmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker ·
S•nday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wo10hip • 10:4S a.m. (2nd It 4111 Sun)

Monola&amp;Stor
Putor: Kennclh Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 Lm . .
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
Thullday Servicoo • 7:30p.m.
Pastor: Ken.nelh Baker
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wooship. 10:45 a.m. (1st It 3rd Sun)
EutLowt
Pulor: Brian Harkneaa
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
= J · 9 a.m.
W
y-7p.m.

-

Pastor: Brian Harkneaa
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wonhip • !!a.m.
Cooh-Uie Uolted M..-l'lrloll
Putor: Helen Kline
CoaMlle Chordt
Man It Fifth Sl.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Serv1eea • 7 p.m.

-t

ML MGr1a11 QJU'do Of Get!,
,
Rac;:ine
Puloi: Rev~ Jamca Satterfield
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Evenin&amp; ): 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:&amp; - 7 p.m.

Sunda~

'

Qrtallaa Ullioa
Hartford, WNa.
Putor: Rev. David McManis
.
Sunday School • 11a.m.
.., Worship • 9:30 a,m., 7:30 P·ll!·
Wcdneldat SeN!i:p :.~:30 p.m•.
'•

...... llllpllol Cltarch

'

OUr Sa-rlour IAibena Cllom:h
Walnuland Henry Sis., Ravcnawood, w,Va.
lnlrim pulors: Oeurge C. Wclnck
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wanhip • II o,m.

Hlll'ltord Cllll!'&lt;b oiCUiolla

'

Su""-y School - 10 a.m.
Wooship·9a.m.

s.""" '

Pine Grove
Pas10r: Dawn Spalding
Wonhop • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Chn st1Jn Un ton

St. Rt. 143 Jllll off Rt 7
Putor: Rev. JIIIICI R. Amc, Sr.
Sunday School - IQ a.m.
Wooshop. lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

I

Lutheran
SL J..a IAIIIeroa Qun:•

Sunday School: 9::10 a.m.
Wooship Ser&gt;ice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

· Hlllilile~ Cllarch

.·.•

St R1. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sundloy Sc:hooi!O:Z0-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Prieslhood ll:OS-12:00 noon
Sacramenl Service 9-!0:IS a.m.
Homemaking meeling, lsi Thu... • 7 p.m.

Recdn-IU. Church oiClortal
Paslor: Philip Stunn

21!601 St Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
EveninJ · 7:30p.m.
Thullday Services - 7:30

•• .

Je...

The Cllurdl of
Ch~ of Laner-Do, Salall

HemlOck Grove Chlll'tll
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10::!0 Lm.
Wo10hip • 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Old Balloel Frft WW llllpdst Churdl

'

Pas\01: Janice Danix:r
Sunday School- 9::10 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

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

Racine, Oil
PaaiOr : Daniel Berdine
Worahlp • 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m. Wednesday

s.ow.tlle

ol Latter Day Salall
Portland-Racine Rd.

Laap.vllle Cltriltiaa Church

lleWellomBapllot

R•lud

Sunday SchOol • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.
Thullday Servia:&amp;· _7 p.m.
S.lemC..tor
Paslor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip ·IO:!S a.m.

Latter-Day S&lt;:nnts
RoorPabod Qurdo of J - Clol'lll

Uber)y Chriltlao Churc:•
Dexter
Paslor: Woody Coli
Sunday Evening· 6:30p.m.
\ Thursday Service· 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Servicea • 6:30p.m.

CUff Jlrtt Mtlloodlsl Cltorc•
Paslor: Peter Tremblay

Rullaad Commully'Chardl
PasiOr: Rev. Ro)l McCarty
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 7 p.m.
'wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

HkkoQ HID• Cbun:h ofCiuilt
Paslor: Joseph~- Hoskins
Sunday School· 9 a.m. ·
Wotship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Evcnina - 6:3.0 p.m.

R!&gt;ck~
Putor: Kc11h Rader
Su•y·S&lt;:hool· 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Youlh Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Bradford Cbarch of Clortal
Corner of St. Rt 124 It Bradbury Rd.
Evangelisl:' Keith Cooper
Youth Minister: Michael Teaprden
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo.Ship ·8:00a.m .. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
·
Wednesday Servi&lt;e~ · 7:00p.m.

Sunday Sc:hool-9:45 a.m.

'

La,~~nl

Put&lt;ir: Eugene E. UnderwoOd
Sunday ~1- 9::10 a.m. ·
Worship. !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Putor ; Joe N. ,Sayre .

VIdOr)' Bopllll ladtpeudut

l'omm&gt;y
.
Pulor: Robert 1!. Robin11011
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
WorshiP- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy Tuesday - 10 a.m.

Ru HoliHIIQIII'C.
Paslor: Robert Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • I 0:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

Ralload CltlU'dl oiCbrl!4

PaaiOr: Rev. Larry Haley
Youlll Plllor: Aaron Youna
SuAday School· 9:30 a.m .•
Worahlp ; 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Se..Vicea • 7:00 p.m.

'

Paslor: Re't'. Jotan Neville
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

'

lllllloiClourdo
Towmhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9a.m.
wo..hip. 10 a.m.
Wedncaday Servia:&amp;· 10 Lm.

ML Olin Uollcd
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pator: Rev. Ralph Spires
, Sunday School· ~30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuradoy Servicea • 7 p.m. •

'
'
M.... Caoptnllve l'utlll

H......,_.Ch..-dl
Oroads.-t
Sunday School· 10 Lm. ·
Worahip • II a.m.
Servicel- 8 p.m.

w-,

'

!ilortllout Culler

All'tcd
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - ~30 a.m.
wo..hlp. II a.m .• 6:30 p;m,

. 7
~
Wi lfor4 -

a.--o.ra
., .... " -=Rev. Habert OriiJ&gt;

.._, bv.

Sunday School· ~lO Li(.
11 a..m., 6 p.m, •
w
Serv..... 7 P-j"-

!':!'t;

Sundlf'

•

. . ·, .

One Unit Now
AYIIIIeble
1 OX28 , $65 per mo.
992-3181

.

Portlud Flrll O•rcll oldie J'illllnM
PaaiOr: Jolul w. ~
'
Sunday School -tll:oo Lm.
Wooship ·6:30p.m.
Wedrielday Services -1 p.m.

"BREATHE 'EASY"

F.ntowahci~ , .
Letart, W.Va. Rl. I
• .

•

New HaVta a.... olllle M...e
Putor: Olcndon Suoud ·
.
Supday School·- 9!3o a.m.
Wonhip • 10:3() Lm., 7
Weilaeraday Ser\&gt;icoa- 7 ,

Foh~ F...,wUip Cnaude for C..i.;l

Pastor: Rev. Frankhn DIC~ · ..
' Service: Friday, 7 p.m. •· ·

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd:
Pastor: Rew. Blackwood
· Suliday ,School · 9:30
Wooship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

.•·"!·

- .
H..... Clarldta. ,.......;.q.

SllweriYIIIe Word ol Fahb

' Rev. Oyde Hende11011
Sunday,ac.rvice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youlh Fellowolup Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

r.;...,·r.u Goopol O•rdl

'

.,

Apoalollc Jlalllo
'
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs .on ·New t:ima Rd.

Pasaor: William Van Meter ~ ·.;'
Sunday· 7:00p.m.
,
Wednesday-7:00p.m. . ..,
Friday-7:00p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rulland
PISior: Rev. Marptet J. Robinaon
Servicea: Wednesday,,7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
P111or: Theron Dudwn
Sunday • 9:30a.m. Uld 7 p.m.
. Wcdnesda~ • 7 p.m.. '

Middleport Pe..Keltai . t.
Third A'tie.
' 1

Pastor: Rev. Charles MUh
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm.
Wcd~ay Service&amp; • 7:30p.m.

Jleedn..

OJU'doelllleN......,..
Pastor: John W. Dou81U
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

RftdnUit

Putor: Rev .' Charles Muh
Wonllip • 9::io a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 it.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Tltppon Plalu St. Poul
Paslor:.Shlron Hausman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wo10hip • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Servia:&amp; · 7:30p.m.

Cellini Cluler
Aabui'J (Sr,roc:ue)
Putor: Char es,Neville

F..._..

S~C.ordloldoON~
I'Uior: Bill Stiles
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wdip . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicol- 7 p.m.

P

OJ CINrcil tltllo N - Putor: Rev. Thomu McCiuna
· ~1 School· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonlllp • 10'.30 L ... ud 6 P.•·
WcdnQday Servia:• • 7 p.m:

Uttllllel................11 ,131.12
AIOing ExpenMa...............
............................ 44,111.23

Servlctl Expen-..•..•......
............................ 11,171.11

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

Prop1rty~ •••..•..•..•

AIIYfttlllng ...........4,21S.S3
Aepllre ................. 4,111.11
lntUNnce ,,.,,.,,., ... 1,• •00
Aent/LeiH Explflll ••..••..•
............................;.1,141.20
c.pittll 0UIIIya .. 12,104.41
Delli Slrvlot-----11,370.74
Stnlor Fair Expenae ..........

93 MiU Street
Middleport, Ohio 457fl0
(614) 992-6657 • (988-ooka)
CHURCH SUPPUES &amp; BIBLES

GRAVELY 1'RACTOR IJAI FS
'

204 CoJ"'c:IOr St.
P~~OH .

·. ·992·2975

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbu$, Oh.
804W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy. :

Pastor: Rev. Knoana ll.!!!&gt;i.J!!!&gt;:!I

' w.Fll

.

Had . . . . .. , -.... .Cittiftl
.. .: .. ~
~

'

1411 ~eman St, Syr~&lt;use
Sundiy School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Service • 7 p.m ..

'

Beat of the Bend ...

WoUifi"· ·Lm .. '-': •..., - ~
, Sunday School • 9!4S Lm~

j

'' 'I HldlltrJtiiPr'eala~
Sunday School • Lm.
.
Worahip • 10 a.m.

· '"·I

lluel c--·••IIJ 0 -

- by Bob·HOeflich

~
i

'l,

Sevcnti1-Dily Ad vcnttst

0ifRI. 124
Pu1or: Edsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30a.m: .'
Worohip. 10:30 L~-· 7:30p.m.

" ......Doj''~ \:·' '' .
Mul~ll)'. Hia. ''Rcl, ~,rqr ~~ ~ ,~

l'ulor: Roy Lawonil&lt;y ,
Salurday Scr&gt;icel:
'.
Sabballl School- 2 p.m.
Wooship • 3 p.m. ,.

D y - Commuity CIIJU'do
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 Lm.
Worahip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

.I

.

I 0

Un1t cd t3r etl1rc·'

M - Cllapel Cll..-dl
Sundafschool • 10 a.m.
· Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wedncsday Service · 7 p.m.

MLa-UIIiled ........
Ia Cllrtal QTnas Community olf CR 82 ·. ·
PISIO&lt;: Robert Sauden,
SundaJ School· 9:30 ._m.. -- , ' {
Worahip-10:30a.m:, 7:30p.m, .,
Wcdneiday ServiCes • 7:30p.m. ' ·

.

~

Sunday School • 9:30a.m. "
Worship • 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:3() p.m.

~.

~- ···

'

..

Edlll Uohed .....,_Ia Qrtll
2 112 miles nortl; of Reeda!'111e. ,
Oil Slate RoUie 12A ' " '
"
~·-·Re
M•"'...:
' .'
,..~. · y. Robeit
'
'!"' ...."'.1
Sunday School - 10 a.m.· , · 7
Wonhlp ·7:30p.m. ..
.!
Wednesday Serv~ • 7:30 P·~·

I

Pulor: Rev. Robert E. Smidt, Sr.
Suaday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.nr., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser&gt;ice • 7 p.m.
Fall Goapel up ......
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
l'ulor: Roy Hunler
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenlna 7:30 p.m. • ..
Tuesday It Thursday • 7:30 P·'!'·

- ''

.

·l
''

lniCJit.8nd rtadied for the decorating.
.In · recenl years, the local· fire
. . . bnent and its auxiliary ha~ take.11 on the task of sharmg m the
NSpoiiSibilities of preparing for the
iltnull community feature. .
'. Nice, huh.

CutetoliJateld1aa =~.Qard

Kinpbu Road
·
l'ulor: Jefr Smilll
Sunda~ ~I - ~30 a.m,
Worthop ServK:O 10:30 a.m.
WonhipService-ht and 3rd Suqdtl~. 7 p.m.
.
No Wednesday Evening Soi'W~c:e

"'•

FURNITURE ,&amp; HARDWARE
!'lomelleSaws

FISHER ·,
FUNEI:'ALHQMI;
'·' 982-&amp;141
·.
.

.,~,

Crow'a
Restaurant
&gt;'

I'

.

EWING FUNERAL'HOME
. ..
"Dipity. tllld S~rvice AIIWI)Is"

Established 1913
',
.
' 892·2121

..

P0f118R1Y

FAIR BOARD
·
Interviews for 4-H members inter·in tervliJI on the MeiJ~ c'ouney J11nior Fair.BOIId will take_place
Feb. 26, beginning 117:30 p.m.
. The inlerviews will be held in conjlinttion
withmeeting
the Meiss
4-H
Qxnmittee.
•• Copnly
·lhel Mei1s

I

QM~ftty Extension. Office, Mul~

'

I

•

.........,

115 E. Memorlll Dr.

:,•fflJ,' l

'"'

- Pomeitly
. . ' . 892•2104 ,.. :

..

In addition, the Army distributed
118 food baskets and approximately
250 new toys to underprivileged
children.
Wow! Can you image the work
and details involved in carrying out
such a project• Appears to be staggering to me.
Most of all, of course, the Army
·extends thanks to everyone who g~ve
donations of money and food. With·
out 'you \here would have been no
project and no help for l! lot of peopie.

Ceah Bll•nce 121111/'lM........
•••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Z41.1t
Calh Bllance 11130118.........
............................... 1112.12
(1) 12; lTC

By 6.J. HOSTETLER

WELDING &amp; FAIRICATIOII
HYDUULIC REPAIR
$12.00/HI.

28583 BASHAM RD.
R1clne, Ohio 45n1
(114) 841-3013 Phont
(114) 84I-201B FAX
114 584-2008 NIGHT

BISSELL BUILDERS, tNC.
New Homes • VI"YI Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•Siding .
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

(114) NZ-5535
114 1192-2753

~~~-

(No Sunday Calls) ·

WI CiS

may

POMEROY, OHIO

HAULING

I'

Call 992-4025.
between 8 11'11:-8 pm
' Mon. thru Sat. .

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

,..,,,,,.

32124 Hippy Hollow Rd.
lllddlepofl, Ohio 457t0
Dlnny &amp; Peggy Brlcldll

614-742·2193
11!13115 11M.

IUI'WILL

BOUIE

REG. HOURS
Mon.·Wed. 10-4;30
Fri.•Sit. 10-4:30
Clo~ed

Thure. &amp; S.un.
102 Elst Main
Pomeroy
992·7696
1212311 mo

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. I PM
12Ga...
fictory Choke Oily

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

.

Treah Removal • Commercial or Reildentlel
Septic Tankl Cleaned &amp; Portab)e Toilet• Rented.
·Dilly, -ldy &amp; monthly rental retts.
1

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Um•tone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992·3954 or 985-3418 ....
Authorized Ill Distributor
Welding Supplltl•lndustrlal Gaea • Steel
Slltll &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
AlumlnumiStalnltsl
Mtli:hlne Shop

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

...,11171

LOST
Golden Mix
Cocker"ame
"GOI,.DIE" ·
Fletwoodsl
OldSR 33
REWARD

992-4025

Real E1tate Otritrll

SPORTS
FIUNCE
ROCKS
,.,00·371-1100

St. Mllon, WV

108Pomeroy

U~TO.DITE

liD MORElli

Oxygen Acet)1ent co.
Helium all siZIII Medical Glllde 0.
Propane Trlmlx Ultrl

Ext. 3140
$2.99 P•r min.
Muel 1M 18 yrs.
Touch lone phone
.._qulred.

Serv·U (614) 645--8434

Laurel Limousine Service ·
"Ride In s Chariot of Luxury"

'
.
For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
-· ~~e~•- Night Out on the Town Owned •

='

--

.~lly

(614) 992-4279 ~':'.':!'

33058 SR 33- * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
.

011t Stet Ct~~ttlete

Aute

Be~y

11/14/11M.

Rtt•lr

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

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed,
Mise:. Jotis ·

.

'

1111 Slack

Darwin, Ohio

y

mabll Jitaterlals

MODERN SUI!IIIOI

State Rt 33.

Kentucky visited her gtandmother,
Clara Howard, recently:
Marllyn Wilt of Lantuter wu a
m:ent visitor of Mrs. Stella·Adkins.
Robert Day ·Biizzud of Al~y
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
recently.

WlllherB, dryers,~

(Urne Stone--low A.,.a)

AtLANTA (AP) - The suicide
B. D. CONSTRUCTION
rate of Americans 65 and older
Siding, Porchle,
jumped 9 percent between. 1980 and
Dec:kl,
1992. It's a trend that expects say
Home lmprov1menta,
may renect a growing acceptance of
Remodeling, ·
suicide in America and increasing
Add.On'a, ROOfl"'l
. isolalion of the elderly.
S.U.facllotl
Gu~r•ntftd
· Elderly Americans make up abou1
13 percent of the country 's popula·
Bill Doerler
lion but account fpr about 20 percent
(614) 992-2979
of all suicides, the Cenlers for Disease Control and Prevenlion reponed Thursday.
The rate climbed from 17.6 sui- 60 Lost and Found
cides per I 00,000 people in 1980 to
21.8 in 1987. It dipped to 19.1 in
1992 but was still the highest rate of
any age group, the·COC said .
'The increase followed a long
decline in suicides among lhe elderly between 1940 and 1980, said
CDC medical epidemiologist Dr.
Alex Crosby:-

Community
calendar

Pick-up dlecardecl

,,,.,,,"' Mill

$20.00/HR.

•NewGeregea
•Remodeling

~"'"'·

AIIOCiated Pntll Writer

·. !llldMt~tsssl_toewFtyolllmrodproanvtndg.children

,.

H

CHEAPER RATES

•Add11J0111

Umntona, .
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, .Fill Dirt
6.14-992·3470

Suicide
rat~ jumps
among
·elderly

849-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC. l

(Specialize In
Drlvewey Spfeadl"'l)

aged to attend lhe meeting ~repared Va. 'They went especially to see their
to discuss why they woul~ h~e to b_e new grandson and nephew of the Vina representative on the JUmor fau , sons'.
L'
board.
·Mr. Dave Matthews of New tma
For inore · infonnll!ion, contact : Road u~derw~n~._ n_~aJ?r su11eryb at
Chip 1laggeny, Meiss County 4-H 1 Universtty H?sprtal . 1n Colum us
Exteilaioit '"ftent
at
. 992-6696:
of
&lt;&gt;e

,
tleipta, Pomeroy.
HAUISONVILLE NEWS
· 4-:lhnenibcn ( 14 yem of qcand
Mrs. Judy Coomer, Mrs. Geneva
of Jan. I, 1996)
~ly Stanphill ofDUnois, Mr.l!ld t-frs. Jon
11y COI'IIpletinS the i1ttere1t c~tlrst Scott ofMIIISfield and Vqil King of
*lllbmillllll an ~ 4-H Achieve- . Pomeroy, visited Saturday with Mr.
ii!I!Jt Record f~ pnor to the Feb. , Jnd Mrs. Jobn Vinson in Monterey,
* l ·meecina.
Applicants life encour•
· ·
'

... u

,\.

land and Powell Stores in Pomeroy
· for allowing the kettles at their stores.
Also thanks go to the bel!·ringers and
volunteers who helped regisler II!'Pii·
cants, packed baskets and loy~ ~d
distributed diem as well as prov•drng
u-ansponation to the various locations
visited during the holiday season.
The!;alvationAnnyheadquaJieredin
Pomeroy visited and took gifts to residents of the Pinecrest Nursing HOllie
in Gallipolis, 93 residents; the
Extended Care Facility at Veterans.
Memorial Hospital, 40 residents plus
remembrances for two other persons
hospitalized there; Ovemrook Center
in Middlepon, 9S residents; the
Pomeroy Health Care'and Rehabilitation Center on old Roule 33, 96 residents, and the Meigs County lnfirm&amp;l)', 13 residents.

· TRI•nATE WATER SYnEMS, INC.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

FREE
wat• tanka, stOves,
furnacH, llld many

992·2269

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free eatlmata ca'l 949-251.2

UA.ION'"' LUU
sEIYia

HIMIH Repllt &amp;
Ramo dill. .

Kllchert&amp; . . .
11tn ad 1llng
Room .. dlllona
Sldlnil, Roollnt.l'llllat
RIIIDntbll
lnaurwe ... .,.,...0 ...

Cllll ~Nell •

T lU!JI .

YOUNG'S

· CARPENTER SERVKE
•Room Additions
•NewG~regee

•Eieclrlcel &amp; Plumbing
•ROOfing
•Interior &amp; Exterior

P1lnling
A110 Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
H2-t215
Pomtroy, O"lo

-

.

'·

.ed

"F..,., K1111J1cq FriftlCAiil*ltn I
228.W.IIeln Sl, Pomeroy

106 MUlberry Ave.

•................................714.23

.......---S&lt;;&gt;ciety scrapbook---

.'. .

'

RAWUNOB • CO.I.TII

....

_

)

RIDENOUR ,_.·..._
-_. X
SUPPLY .

';

~

.............................. 3,.13
TOiel DlllburHrntlnlo ...........
•....................... 12415,420.51
Excell C.ah IIHtlpll
Over Cllh Dlellururnento ..

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free servlu to non•
· I hope you have used your snow prolitsroups wishing to announce
............
days to ,good advantage. The first of meeting and special events. The
· If you kicked in a contribution to the year is a great time to clear out the calendar is not daigned to promote
!I.e kellles of the Salvation Army accumulation of all of those pape111 sales or fund nisers of any type.
fi,cally this year, perhaps, you're that yotl save and later wonder why Items are printed as space pei'mhs
Wondering if !hie donations were put so the snow days have allowe4 time and cannot be pannteed to run a ·
, .0 good usc.
for thai. Maybe you've !lpne th&amp;ttilo. specific number of days.
,,.· Indeed, thiey were--in fact, I don't And row that they're sone, you're
tinderstand how the. Army people bound to realize tomorTOw that you MONDAY
POMEROY .. Big Bend Farm
-~them so far. By the way, !he threw out something you should
Antiques
club meeting Monday, 7:30
Army would lite tci thank Vaughan's have sived. Now lhat will make il
p.m
.
in
the Meigs High School
~ina! in Middleport and the Food- hard to .keep smiling.
Library.
.

'

POIWIOY, otiiO • ill2 81 II

aRislmas holiday season is
certainly an ideal time for the establilhment of lraditions and members
~f the Riverview Garden Club cerlainly staned a dandy 30 years ago.
Club inembers this season chalked
lip anod!er succ:essful year by de\;ohllinJ a beautiful, 30-foot communi,ty tree featuring 3.000 mini lights.
Members of the organization feel a
lot of pride tUiizing that this annual
'project has been canied out for the
past 30 years--not a single year
missed in that time.
1 The lm(. along witlt a lighted
Nativity scene, has become a center
of interest and beauty each year allhe
Belleville Locks and Dam enlraJICe in
fteedsville.
. Children as well as adults o,f the
Community look forward each year to
lhe creation .of the attractive' .selling
iltld the program held which includes
lhe offiCial lighting of the tree and a
Yisit from s.ilta who anives with
hits for ~ childten..
. The project has come a long way(
i. the paSt 30 years. In the' beginllina-bcfm planted trees were !!Vall""le for decorating--~uge trees were
~ldow!l.,...bauledJnonalowdrag

Soatb Betltal New Ttsllmeilt
Silver Riclac
Pastor: Robert ijorber .
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip' 10 a.m., 7,.m.
Wednesday ServiCe • p.m.

892·5432

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

•

. .

BILL QUiqKEL

SWISHER A LOHSE
..PHARMACY . .

.......................... ?, ·-~·
ConiHIExperiMI, ............
•.......................... 14,123.00
Junior Fllr Exponee,.........
-··-··-············· ... •••17,413.27

Equipment

Tile water treatment company cordially lnvijes you lo
participate In a lree, no ob6galion, comprehensive waler
analysis.. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, lllnerol Hardneaa, Iron, PH.
Plluo'tall ILoi..Sofl el tt2-4472 or 1. . . . . . .3313
to HI up your"" • .,., anelyolo.
,

Cualoln llulldlng a R-ng .
•NewHomea

Public Notice

•...,

Dutributed by

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

'rbu'll bf! (looting on o cloud Wlrh
the buys 'fou'/1 find In rhe
·
dosslfleds.

Sundly School - ·10 . .....; ·. . . ..., . •
Wonh!p • 11 a.m.
~

(1
.
. • • },

We Love You,
Su, Bud &amp; Dom

1

\

.v;v

61.4-992-3200

·. s1--~ Flnl u.~ Pi~iltwa'.

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENt
.
'

s~"'., ;£&amp;;.1i,

....rltti ............11,1M.72·
111Milta ............... 2,4M.50
Adrnllltetr•IIOn !xpenHI.
•••••••••••.••••••••••••••.••• 3,073.31
, . _ Expert........... $31.50
Suppllae ExpertH2,412.34

PresbytenJn

Folt• Tabt.-- Chun:b
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: ~ev . EmmeH Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evenina 7 p.m.
.
Thullday Service • 7 p.m. ·

lo!llllottom

.. ...................... 124a,134.74
CUIIDI~:

Pastor: Rev. Clark Baw "·, •
Sunday School· 10 a.m. , ' · ··-!
Evenin&amp;· 6 p.m. r~. ';
Wednesday Servia:o • 7:00.P,-al~

Mlddlepun C:O.U.ulty Clo•n:•
57S Pearl St, Middleport
Pulor: Sam AndeT!Oil
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wedncaday Service · 7:30p.m.

Folllo GOo!oe1 Qlldl '

•••••••••••••••••••••.••••.••• 1,110.41

Unrellllcled Support.......

'

")

1_;/T- TreatMent

Openings for 2.
Chrletlan
ltmoephere for
elderly care In 1
non-emoklng home.

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooal,l11,00

TOTAL CUll RHelpta: ........

~

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIYA11 CAll
. HOME

Rtltl1ctlcl SuppOrt .............

Pnlecultal.• ,.....,/'· ..

ne Sohalloa Arm3'
115 Buncmu1 Ave., Pomeroy.
Salunl.oy • 10 a.m.
Thursday • 7 p.m.
Sunday ·_7 p.m.

.

B18le Supt1011 ..... 311.-.oo

, St. Rt124, Racine ·~t, -~
PUior: William Hoback'
•
:;unday School • 10 a.m. ;, . , :
Evening - 1 p.m:
,.... .
Wednesday Scr&gt;ia:s • 7 p.m. .

Poator: Robert Vance
Sunday worahip • JO a.m.
Wednesday service. 6:30p.m.

Bfrtlula~

Local Gov't fund ............. .

•............................. 1,307.11·
Sill of Nolu........I,OOO.OO .

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY FOR
SALE.
CALL
614·949·251·2

·aapn

, .......................... 11,012.00
. . _ ................ 14,511.01

Pentecostal

Ead'Jmr n-ot Pnyar

Happy Ad

• .,.,......... fl23l011.25
Prlv4lage F -.... 23,11112.15
Rliclng .................. S,1-'0.00
Ullllllea ........................ 1.24
llernberohlp &amp; Contool

,"

(II BurlinJharn churcll offRoule 33)

~EIGS

SOCIETY FOR
THE YEAII ENDING
NOVDIBER 31, 11111
CASH RECEIPT'I:

Ollloa To........le Clo..-dl
Cliftcln, W.Va.
,
Sunday School • 10 a.m. .
Wotship • 7 p.m. · ·
Thursday Service - ·1 p.m. ·/ , ."i.

HarrisoDYIU. C-.Jty c•oirdo

s,......,._

REPORT OF THE

COUNTY AGRICULTURAL

COURT STREET GRILL
SAT., JAN. 13
KARAOKE
.
Featuring Jeff North

o ....b or J...:S c-. ..'

ne Belit..n' FeDoWihlp Mlalstry

'.

&lt;

I'·

RrJoklD&amp; ure c~~ •
SOO N. 2nd Ave., MiddleJI'!f'. "
Pallor: Lawrence F...-' : ·'
Su:;:"J. School • 10 a.m. ' · :
Wep
y Serv!c:e• • 7 p:m, , _,,

LongBoltom
Pulor: Steve R&lt;ed
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Worship • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedncsda~ • 7 p. m.
·
~riday • fellows~op scrv'!"' 7 p.m.

.

.\

I'Uior: David Dailey . • ·
Sunday School ~30 •·m:
·:
•
Evenirla· 7 p.m. :,

a...rcJ.

LEGAL NOTICE
ANNUAL FINANCIAL

McNabb, RN
Holzer Health Hotline :
Topic: Positive ideas and
seH care tips including
coping with panic attacks.
For more info call
Holzer Health Hotline
1-800-462-5255 '

Cal'fory Blblo a.~

St.,
P.utor: Robert E. .M....r · .
' Sunday School ·' 19 a,m,
Wonhip • 11:1S o.m.. 711J11.
Wednesday Service • 7·p.11.

Public Notice

Support Group
Jan.17 at 2 p.m.
Fre11Ch 500 Room
Holzer Medical Center
Speaker: Sharon

'

Putor. Rankin Rpadl ·~ ·I·
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 1.111; · •·
Worship · 9:3Q a.m .. .7:00'1&gt;:111-"
, Wednesday service· 7:00f·"!;

ML Olive Connnlly QtlU'dl
- Pastor: Lawrence Buah
Sunday School • 9130 a.m. ·
Evenirla • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

Mlddlt,all Qwcll of lilt Nuartoe
Putor: OJqory A. Cundiff
Sunday sdiool -9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;ea - 7 p.m.

.

"

OIESTEi STORAGE

~

Ualled Faith Clolll't•
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By·Paaa

Paltor:' tl:':.ndolph
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m .

"'"•\Ill

• 9.:llta.m.
Wonllip- 7 ~.m.,

Mdli·a~ W..,_,..
Coolville Road
Putor: Rev. Pkilliplti~r
Sunday Sehool • ~30 LIB. · 1
Worah~·l0;30Lm.
"''·
Wednesday Service.' 7 p.m. ···
·
~

-QJU'dollfllleNa Putor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School · 9!30 Lm.
Worahip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.ow .
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'

Q - r.
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Thullday Services • 7 p.m .

' IA•J Bollom

.

.

PeoriQopol
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

H~U

Rodao Flnllllipllll

'

~

Putor: Oeron NewmUI
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 Lm.

We~leyaa BIIJio H.U... ciourc:•
7S Pearl St., Middleport.

Bradbury Cb11rcla oiClorlsl
Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
• Worship· 10:30 a.m.

• ML Ullloa llllpdst .

'

Htatll (Middleport)
Pastor; Vernapyc Sullivan
Sunday SchoOl· 9!30 a.m.
Worahlp • 1!):30 Lm.

PIDt Gron 1111a1e H - Cbrcll
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
PulOr: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., .7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servia: - 7:30p.m.

Tltppara PlaiD Qardl of Clu111
Paalor: S1anley Mincks
Sunday School • 9 •.m.
Worship • 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

~
'
su..r Rn llllpCiol
Paator: Bill Little
Sunday School . !Oa.m.
Wooship. !!a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 p.m.

,.

•·'!'·

Pomero.•y. Hl(risonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pas1or: Roger Watson , ,
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.· .
Wooship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

R•lload Flrll llopllll c•lll'tll

F-IRu
Pulor: Deron Newman
Sunday School· 10 a.m .
Wonllip • 9 a.m.
Thullday Servia:&amp; • 6:30p.m.

. Paa1or: Rev. Dewey .Kina
. Sunday school- 9:30
Sunday wonhip •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zlooa Clton:h ofCitrlll

Ash Stree~ Middleport
'Putor: LOa Hayllllln
Sunday Service ·7:30p.m. ·
Sunday School- 10 a:m.
Wedneaday Servia:-7:30 p.'m.

PlaiWoada
Putor: Kcilh Rador
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

RaatotSIIonlaH-oardl
Lcadina Creek Rd., Rudi!MI .

Pastor: Jack Colepvc
Sunday School -9:30 Lm.
Worahip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia:o- 6:30p.m.

Frft wm Baplill c•-•

PUloc: Kcilh Rador
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

, Harrisonville Rood
l'ulor: Rev. Victor Rouah
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
w~l,·lla.m., 7:30p.m.
We
y Servia: • 7:30 p.m.

lkuwallow ~ Cllordl ofCitrial

510
Sunday school - 9:45 ' '
Wooship • II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Ea~

emu, PIIFia Qopol

KeDG c••rch ol Clorill
Wonhip - 9:30 a..m.
Sunday School · 10::10 a.m.
Putot-Jelfrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

•I

.

31057
51110R;'..
Putor:
Sunday ac:hool- 9:30
Sunday wonhip. 10:35 Lm. It 7 p.m.
Children'l churcll- IQ-.3S Lm. Youlll 6 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer aervia: • 7 p.m.

Mlddl pun Cbrdl ofCIIrtal
5th and Main .
PasiO&lt;: AI Harucn
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Wonhlp-8:,1S,I0:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Servia:&amp;. 7 p.m.

of God

••' ' •&lt;

~~~1E;~

Sunday School • 9:45 Lm.
Worship .. 11 Lm.
Wedn&lt;aday Servia:&amp; • 7:30p.m.

· ROIERT
CONSTRUCTION;
'

•Naw Homes

·q..-agea .
oComplete
·ReliiOdellno:~

'

.
1

.I

stopaCoqt,_..
FREE I;CTIIU:n:d

�'

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ F~y,JanUiry12,1~

F~y,January12,1196

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

•
AU.EYOOP

The Deily, Sentinel e Pamt9

NEA Crossword

81UDQJ:

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

••

' 1\!&lt;C. RaglaiiNd Ba11en Hound.
:male, to goOd hom&amp;. 304·182·

s.

2 Bedrooms. a~. 1 Both.
cudr, Oepoait, 111 Month's Rent.

- ~-121-..

8t-tl151r.

~C

Regiatered· male Bas sell
~ncl, ,c/'11 304·882-2208 after

home. 304·675-7407 after

4 bedroom, Huc:l approved, stove
&amp; refrigerator, S3751month, $200

~-

60

Lost

One bedroom tfflclency
mant in Mlddlepo.r t, 81
5304. 814-g82-2178 or 814·446-

and Found

deposit, Naylors Run. 814-8928011flahor 8pm ·

New IWO bedroom, two ·bath in
Horri1011YIIIe. Living rotim, dining!
tamlly room, nice kitChen wfbar.
utility roorfl and garage, water and
heat furnished. Ten miles to 0"VII.'I Power Plant, 11 miles 10
Athens, no smoking or pets. Deposit and references required ,
$3751 mo. plus utilities. 614-742·
3033.
.

Lost 115198- 12 yr. old Siamese
ca~ .bean spayed, Bell Run Rd. ~ ­

ciniry, """""""· 81 4-91)2-2794.

Lest: In Kanauga Area 2 Brittany
Spaniel Doga 1 M•le, 1 Female,
White Wilh Brown Patches, 814-

Stave,

Refriger~.tor,

eKQJI03
•K Q
tQ 9 7, ~

!993 Fonl Ranger STX. ixtencted
cOb.
- · all ....... 07,CIOOml.,
poy on bllonce. illl4 _88M8n.

Wisher, Dry-

89 6

1995 Dadg&amp; T~ucll Extended &lt;;ab
Laramie SLT, Rid, LDadod. 4 WD.
!8,400 Mileo, Movnum aeo En·
Qln. .20,000, 814-2!511-1539.

or, S3501Uo. $300 Oopoait, 1743
Centenary Roed. 814-446-2205.
Three Room Apa~ent, Next To
Llbrar~ ; S350 Pe&lt; Monlh, Oapoait
Required, No Pets; Contact Jvd~

'

'

.

~

85 510, 4X4 Pick-Up

'

At Bonard Ubrary At 814-446·
7323.

•At09874
t!O 8

1H1 Bronco. lUll oizo. ~x4. 300 6
ely•• 4 speed, troiler hitd1, 11-.850,
call 814'882-411 ;_

~~~:·d':~\'·~~'1s-~~ 510

HouNhokl

il'Omeroy,

Mitchell Road Area, Gallipolis,
S3101Mo. Water, S'eptic, Trash
Paid, Deposi!IAelerences, 814843-19 18 Altar 4 P.M.
One 3 Bedroom On McClosky
Road Near Vinton; One Bedroam Mobile Home .On ~~'"l1e
Road On Sema Loto Off
Pal&amp;, References, Ooposil,
3118-9328. •
.

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

~

Goocl
~

..._
Groat Chriotmao Gllta. Boott B~
Aedwtng, Chip-. Ton~ Lama.
Guaranteed Lawesr Prices At

Shoecatt.

~..~::.~~~~g. Live

HI-E-ICY L.P. Or Na!llral Gao
8210 Furnacoo tOO,OOO BTU 1·
800-287-1308, 814-44.-11308,
Duct Syalfml And Air Condirion·
n . F... E.,.,.to1.

NH488 Deluxe Ha~blna $4,500
And~ Adamo Dairy. 8U·379·
2744.
·

Appliances:
RKonditloned
Wuhera, Oryera, Rangoa, Rein•raroro, 90 Oaw Guaran1eot
. U~d V-30 Ditch Witch trencher.
•
•
lrtlortharm I Mlllor Mobile Home
French City lla~tag, 8!4·U8-. Furnoceo. Goa, 011 I Electric In Excellant Condition . 814 ·894·
77V5.
Stocll. Latgt Oiotrlbutor Bu~ Out 78'12
ot
New Mobile Home Futnacea.
Co~mry
Furniture. 304 ' 675-8 820. !lank Fjnanclng Avollab!o; Coiii:-:-:-~~~-:::--:--2
Rt N, &amp;niles, Pt Pleaoan~ WV. Bonnetto Mobile Homo HTG &amp; """
Hay &amp; Grain
Tu. .Setll-6, 5un1!-S.
CLG -'t114·44ll-g418 or ·1-BDO- __,

wEo~an~d~r~h~re~e~~~~~rl For
Your carper
Noedo
Molloh,n
Corpe!laAtVInyl
17 N.
814- 872-51167.
JET
sewer, WJIIef
and
homes,
starting
~448~-7~444~-~~~~~~~.1 Alpetrad,~~'·"""'
•&lt;n•~
. IIOTORS
6t4-91l2·2167.
GOOO USED
Now 6 Rll&gt;ul~ In Sl!ldt

---~--------,.. 1 Washero, dryers,

Two bedroom trailer for rent in
counb'y, depoait and referencaa
roqulrad, 8!4-94~2833.

Two bedroom, furnished, nlco Ia·
cation on the river, utilities paid,
All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
tho Federot Fell Housing Act
of 1968 which makits MIllegal

to advertise •any preference,
limitation Of discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex fsmll181 status o.r r'latlonal
ori(jn, or a'rrt intention to
make a~ such prelerence,
limitation 0&lt; dlsc:rlrnlnallon.'

- This newopeper will not
knov.11ngly accept
advertisements lor real
wl1lch 1o In VIolation of the law.
OUr readers ara her~
inlonmed thai allctNeiNngs
adveltlaed In this newapepor
are available on an equal
opportunl1y basts.

-re

3151.
Woodmen Of The' World Life InWanted To Buy: JuM Autos WiJh surance Society has c:urren t
Or Without Mofors. Call larry op~nings
for c:araer represema Livoly. 6t
Uves in Jhe Mason, Gallia and
Couiitt area. Full benefits.
Wanted To Bu~ : Lltde Tikes Toys,
comprQ'hensive education
614;245-5887.
program, lui-time or part·time. All
repties will ~e strictly confidential.
Send your personal replies to:
E~1PLOYMENT
Clay Roney, 24~3 Jackson Ave.,
SERVICES
Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550 or call
304-675-6019. EOE

4-388-93f

110

$200.$500 weakly. Assemble
products. No selling. Paid direct.
Fully guaranteed. No experience
necessary. 7 days. 407-875-2022

'

310 Homes lor Sale
3 Bed&lt;oom, 1 Bath, Gaa Hea~ Rural Water, Bulaville Pike, 614·448-

170 Mlscienaneous

HelpWanted

ext CS05H02.

REAL ESTATE

.

Able Avon Represontati-iu
need!KI. Earn money for Christ~
mas bills at homtlat VIOrk. t -800·
992·6358 or 304·882·2645, Incl.

1980 Waldon 6000 articulating 88:l2.
loader, 4 wheel drive, diesel, 3 Bedroom Doublewide Home on
buckot &amp; fork, wii ik 40001bs., &lt;le- 112 Acre $18,500 Alter 8pm 614al ror farm or contractor. $7.500. 446-6581.
614-992·4111 .
Nine room hcuse- lour bedfooms,
180 Wlnted To Do
newly remodeled, kitchen and
bath, new carpeting, large corner
Babysitting In My Home, lot. $28,000. 814-992-81 73 or
Cheshira ANNI, 81 4-36H849.
614-992-2015 aker Spm.

-Aep~.=~-=:77.::-:-::-::::-:::-:-"1 Blown Insulation,

Insurance, ExAGENT; A'ION SELLS ITSELf
perince, Relerences, Reasonable
Need CASH For Winter Bills? Rates, Call For Free Estimates
Earn $8 ·SIS Mr. At Wort&lt; -Home
814;245-5755.

1·60G-742-4738
~VON 1 All Areas 1 Shirley
SJ&gt;-•, 31!4-675-1429.

Three bedroom home in country,
Whites Hill Rd.. Ruland. one battl,
in-ground pool, 614-992-5067.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Child Care In ~~~ Gallipolis Area
Home. All Ages Welcome, Hot
"""'"; Ploaaa Caji614-44Hl439.

1972 12x85 Good Condition,
$5.000, et•-256-8335.

Maintenance, Painting ,
AVON _18 -$ 1 5/Hr. No Door To 1General
Yard Work Wlndowa Washed

O~CI!•.F!txible Haws. 1-800·827• Gutters Cleaned. light Hauling,
~ISis/Rep.
Commerical, Residential, StiJ\Ie:

AVOniB

-$15/Hr. Nci Minimum
Order No Door -To -Door, Dis·
count~. f-800-738·0168 lncl I Sla
~
Bab)'slner for newborn. Engii•h
.court arta. Man-Fri. Relerences
required. 304-875-71!39.
Eas)' Workl Excellent Pay! As·
semble Products al Home. ' Call
Toll Frte 1-800·467-5588 EXT.

313.

.

1314-386-().429.
Georges Pcrtable Sawmill, don't
haulyour logs 10 the mill just yall

1175 mobile home ,- very goad
ccndilion, furnished, asking
$6000. Uu!lt sea to appreciate,
614-742-3907.

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

304-675-1857.

Professional Tree Service, Com·
plete Tree .Care, Bucket Truck
Serv~e -50 Ft. Roach, Stump Ae·
moval, Free Estimates! In ·
a~rance, 24 Hr. Emergenay S&amp;I'V·
Ice -Call And Savel No Tree Too
Big Or Too Small! Bidwell, Ohio.
814·3118-9843, 614-367-7010.

1978 14x70 Schultz Mannchester
With 12x2@ Factor~ Add -On
Room 814-«8-6034.

t986 G'randlf'llle 14JII70 2 Bed·
rooms, Fireplace. Total Gas Un·
derpinnlng,
181C1 2
Deck.
Stt,500, 614-387-1)429 ·
1988 11trae bedroom ITQbile h&lt;ima,
cali814-i411-2880.

Exc.tlen! opportunitY to join tho
long term heelth core llold. Seak· Rub &amp; Scrub Cleaning Service- 199Q 14x65 Clayton mobile home
tng pan-time ·LPN for rotating dusting, mopping, windows and on 314 acres. out SR 143, 11&lt;4·
ohlfts lor akllled long term care more. Complete service or. rooch· 9Q2~ .
nursing lacUily. Point Pleasant ups. References on request. call 1::---:----:-----NursinG &amp; Rehabilitation Center, Terry lat 61-4·9D2· 4232 or 614 · Bank Repos. Eaay Financing. Call
Ruasllurdocll t-800-2St -5070.
Route 1, Box 328, Point-~ 992-4451 .
'IIV 25550. 304-675·3P06. (A
Sun Valle~ Nurury School. Factor~ Rebate -$1,500 Rebate
Glarlmark Aasoclates Facility). Childcare
M-F sam-5:30pm Ages On Any Schult Slngla Section
EOE;
2·K, Young School Age Our.ing Home In SJock. All Homea Are
Full ~· or part-time b8aut~lan with Summer. ~ Daya par. Week Mini- New 86 Mo!lels And lncludo Vl nyl Siding And Shingle Roof·
manager't
and clientele, rt'IJm 814-448-3857.
French Clry Homos • Galllpolla,
Will dO hOustp cleaning, experi· OH 014-4ot&amp;-8340.
ence and releranca4, 814·9928588.
Limited Ollerl 1996 doublewl!le,
3br. 2bath, S11g9 down, $2751
month. Free delivery &amp; aetup.
FINANC IAL
I
Honles, Nitro
Older 3 Badroom Trailer, Naeds
· $1 ,3)0, 814-446-1104.
Only 2-lalt. New 1998 2·3btd·
roomo. $895 doWn, $1891mo, Frea
delivery/setup. Call Ru11 Murdocll 1-600-251-5010.

814-G82·5949.

440 ·Apartments
for Rant

Mono~ . Ftr8Uion 35 Tractor
With LiV8 PTO $3,850; 185 Mao1~ Fe_rguoon U,!KIS; 20 Ferguson, 11,985; International 43-4

-!

rangea. Skagga Appliancea.
Vlnt StrHt, Call614-446-7398,
1-600-411V-3499.

lAYNE'S FUANn\IRE
Complete home turniahinga.
-Hours: Mon -Sat, 9·5. 814-448·
0322, 3 miles out Bulavllle Pike
Free Ooli-.y.
·

Call Ron E - 1-600-537·8528.

King Size Waterbed Wi th Now
Seal~ King Manreu lnoert. $300
DB0.114--44HI602.

Kirby Sweep,r Shampooer attachmen!/ Hanel auth vac. included. saoo.oo Cost srsoo.oo Handleap Eitctric 'Scooter S4oo.oo Lit·
·tlt-1;8!4-388-611111

~.

111110
01
gooc1 or 114-742• 20 par
bole, .._114-742-3018
3084·
Grouncl011 "~&lt;"· ~ur aacks. Call
304-675-2443 altor 4pm

Second Cuujf,g drchard Grass,
N..ar Wet, $2.25 Per Bale. 814·
U8 1053.
Square .llotes $1.50-$1.75. Setur•
pickup. 304-675-31160.

~only

Nearly nH aola, axe. concl.. $1~
·
,
f HA 'JS P Oill Ar iON
1 and 2 bildroom apartmen!l, fur- 080. 304-875-8722.
LT30 Woodmiaer Portable Band·
nished and unfurnished, 18CUrity
PICKENSFURNn\IRE
- -MM,8!4·258·t43t .
710 AutOS
Slle
depoa1t required, no pets, 614 Now !Used
992·2218.
304-675-r 450
Lumbtr: Oak Poplar. Pint To •111 Thundafbird. SC, 11111 doG&lt;, 3_8
Ptaco Order Call Ahor 8:00 3041 bedroom apartment in Middle·
VI'RAFURNITURE
578-2888, Prl-; .tS.IBd.Ft'To litro, V-8,' ellto model turbo, PS,
port, available December 1, all
PB, AC, 5 opted, powtr IIIII
614-448-3!58
.SDf,Bd.Fl
and locks, 'Groot Car; $8500
utilities paid, $250 per month,
DuaHry Household FumitureAnd
nov .. 8-!4·992· 7478 or 814·949·
1100 !lepolli~ Blm to Spm 81~Al'fllionc:os. Groat Deals On
21111
1192-7808.
Caah And Clrryl RENJ:.2.atVN
· Quean aiz-e sofa sleeper with
And , ·~
Stol~ Poaruropedlc mottreoa,
2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap~,_, "'.., MM&amp;bkt.
whi• with pa•· srtpes. UCIIInt '15 Ford Escort, autonwli~ JrJns- .
Pllonctl furnished, laundr~ room
RM Oollvery WI tin 2S Miei
" - · liking ~. call 81 4
million. moon roof. CO fillY*, oxlacilltloa, ctoae to school -In town.
Antiques
5pm.
= ".'condition, $8300, 814-9921124
Ae.pllcatlons availabte at: Village 530
,_
Green Apta. 149 or call 614-992· 8
Refrigerators, Stovea, Wllhlfl
R
371 r. EOH.
uy oEr •,~11 . _1vertn t AnAtlquea, 'nd ryors • 11 Recond 1.1,.0 ned 1972 Chevella, 388 new mqtor,
;:.;__:..:....;--------111241 . •an 8u...1 on t 1241, "
·
·"
15xl, Rally whJell, new tires.
35 WEST, 2 BA BRICK TOWN- Pomero~. Houro; M.T.W. 10:00 ~:=~~\:-: ·~: ~ -And Up, $4,500.304-675-2457.
' HOUSES- t28t Jackolin Piko- a.m. to 8:00p.m., Su~ , 1;00 '~
Acro11 From Cinema. $2V51Mo., 8:00p.m. 8!4-992·25211.
, Snaoned Firewood $45 Face 1872 Cougar ~R 7 Convortlb!o,
Oep. For Rental Applications 'COli
Mlscellanaous
Coni~. 81 ,._367_701 0.
now ·lnrorlor, rop, 351 Clevtland. IUIOmalic, PS, PB, air. nH
614·4•8-0957 · 814-448-0008- 540
614-441-1818 Or Wriro; P.O. Box
' Merchandise
peinl. 414-11115-4308.
994, Galipolio, OH"5631 .
~~~~~~~~~~=
100 year old antique doora, $50'
1985 Camero Z-28, Newly Aoltuto
4 112 Miles From Gallipolis, Nice each, call e 14·992-7 13e after Size 11 knH boot&amp;; size 13 Arc· Engine, New Tranamiaaion, lota
2 Bedrooms, SIDYo, Aolrigorator I 5pm.
tk:;814-1192-5282.
01Extru18!4-3l9-2135.
Water Furnished, No Pets, $2501
Pontile. Sunbird GT $600;
II~ 814-4-48-6036.
1886 small 0 odge 4X4 pickup, STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon 188e
.._446-611
58
good cond. Home gym exercise Upright, Ron Evana Enterprises, 81
93
Toyota
Truck 4x4 Hi•h
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT machine. 304-875-2358 baMet!n .tac:kaclr\ 0111o, t -800-537-8528.
1 7
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON 8-9
•
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
pm,
T..,lotalnMelgsllomoryGar·
Milas, Runs Good, Many New
from $226 to $291. Walk to ahop 2 Htalth Aldora 21nclino Boordo
dln•hrrjr-.plllqueancl
Parts, Automatic, $1 ,100,080,
1 movies. Call 814·448-2588. 5 Office DMderl, 814-448-1401 .
-a;nctuded. $4800 value- sail- -6-14_-448-811;,__2;.,7_
. -----ing at $3100 lor both. Cilll4 17·
Automatic Clothet Or~or. Woritt
111111-4874 coltcl
188g Gnsncl Prix, V8, goed cond..
Country Side Apartments, Nice 2 Good Shape, $125; Gaa Cook
$3,300.304-675-2457.
B!Kirooms, /JC , WiD, Water, Sew- Stove $80, Electric Cook Stove Wooden Round Tabla 2 •••""'':1 -'s :::-'---::--;-:-c-c----1"" 1 Rod&lt;Ot Cl-eolls nsce car, Ill
er Garabga Included, I3501.Mo. $80; Color T.V. $100, -'11 Worko I il Chalro, 814·448·2217.
,_In '111, Wilwood, ilo&amp;t of OVO·
G
Ooposh Required, 513-922-&lt;1294.
oodl 61•·379-2720 AFTER 8
Build'""'
rythlng, weld, threa ·-ola. tlreo,
550
P.M.
..,.
Neal p-Is, fuel coli, on board
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
SUpplies
Downslairs, Utilities Furnished, BAHAMA CRUISE I s ~aysl4
fire ~atom, roling cl-ea&amp;IL $5800
Clean, No Pets, Reference, De· nights, Underbookodl Mull Sell! Block, brick, _ . , plpea, wind· -neg. Call Scott Wolle. 814-948~lred, 614-448-!519.
$2781couple. Llmllad tickets. t· !!WI, linltla. ole. Claude Wintora. 2178, 814-9•9·2045 or 8 1• ·11112·
183
':-~....':.-:-;_--.,--~lso0-414-4151 ext 85811 Mon-Set Rio Grande, OH Cali814-24S- 6-.;;
..:....;
· -------Furnished Apartment. 3 Rooms &amp; 9am-1Qpm
5121
Both, All UtiHties Paid.Downottairs
·
·
19g2 Chtv~ Z24 Cavalier. aun
S2501Month, 9!9 Second Ave. Buainell computer, IBM compa- 560
Pets fOr Sale
roof, ABS brakoo, cru ise, tilt
.:.81;.,4---:448~-384~~5------:--l tibility, CTX monitor, Panosonic
whaol,
F-urniahld ~--r. 920 Four .... PX-2123 printer, keybalrd, cash .Groom Shop -Pet Grooming. Fea· ::.~e:U:o~d~~,;:'·~-=
drawer, M•c~biz reaallmre con- tu.ring Hydro Bath . Julie Webb. ._..
Avenue, 1 edroom, t285/Mo.
oller ..,.. CJkt 304-875-&amp;238.
Cal 81
~
231 ·
920 Fourth Avenue. Gallipolis, tr
' .,r&amp; ·
·
4--446-(1
~~
- ----.---1
0
,Ohio
6Aitor7P.M.
Complete
display AKC Cocker Spaniol Pupa, Shoto,
10118•
cases wilots ol extra producto. w rned Dew Cl 1
R
""" -· ~ ~••sa. ~-~
Garage Apartmenl 1 lladroom ~75- 7147_
.,;r
•
1¥~'!l"r··· 43,000 llilea, 17,70&lt;1, 080. 814·
, 29' 112 Nell -'venue, Gallipolis,
- IIOoctold,lt4-25e - :
256-15311, 4-256--8188.
S2751Mo. Utilities Paid, 81•·448- Concre10 It Ptaotic Saptic 'Tanko,· ~
•KC ""'a•hohund
puppies
oh
IS
• • 50 , • 2
• o
1g93 Ford Mustann,
4416A !tor 7P.M.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron -~-~
• 27,000
1 • 81 ~7 · · --·
miles, loaded, brinht
Evans EnterPrises, Jackson. OH •N _ , _ ,
• rod, rear
,f o r

-ees-

"'*

1

1888 Chevy 4l4, 4 doot. 4speed,
hi·'top 1001 bed, lront wench, niw
1888 Ford Bronco

~p':~:~n~i~V~II=~ ~!:;":.::;

Riverside Apartments mMiddleport Froin $232·1355 . Call 81•·
992-5084. E_qual Housing Oppor-

rundos.

:----------1
Newly _redecorated, nice clean
2bed10om ground floor, Wid hookup. Aolorences. Oapo~t. No pots.
304-675-5-182.

l!V3Tit ~ ~.~~ ~-~peed,

-

1-600-537-8528.
·
Electric Whnlchaira fScooters,
Now iUtod, Scooter !Wheelcllair
Lilts, Stairway Etovatora, Lilt
Chairs, Bowman's Homocaril,
61•-4411· 7283.
-----------Firewood 140 A Pick Up Load
Del-.red S30 A Load Plclled Up
814 3711-2758.

:---:-------1 :::--·--:-:-=-:-:---:--:--·
Nice t Bedroom In Kanauga, Firewood. 304-875-8321 oi 304·
Carpeted, Appliances Included, 675-8584.
No Para. Deposit &amp; References,
$2501Mo. 614-888-7t02.
Firewood ; split hardwood. ·$351
:-~-::---------1 pickup load, you haul. Oallverr
Nice 2 Bedroom Garage
also ovallabla. 304-875-5158,
mepJ With Refrigerator &amp;
$250""0. S250. 0aposl~ 814·44E•I Good Uaed Fuel 011 Tank 2~
37!7.
Gallon, 814·251-1281 .
·

'

= n i =7= r pups, vet

•x-i.. 81 4-24&amp;-' •

9349.

'

-

.

992·4111'.

Sltotl, $300. 814-258-833&amp;, Altar · !113 Ford Rengor XLT u,ooo

6 P.M.

Female Red Dachshund Small
Breed 8 Wooka Old, 611 ·379-

2340.

Atgll!eted Male, Copper Noood
Blaglt, ·4 Montha Old, $50, 8!4445-1032.

61_0 Fll'lli Equipment
JIVIIEN'S FAIW EQUIP.
81~1175

1

NEW EilUPMEPfT:
Zttor. Long. &amp; Klotl Trectoro.
Load.,., Backhoes, V•rm"r I

Mlloo, ~ C"'lnclor, 5 ...... d. AMi
F
''
M CaiHite, Air Conditioning

v,.....

~~~~;,!14·44 1 -ll11·4:
-

IllS Pontiac Bonnovillo SE
Loaded. With Evor~ Option In·
eluding Automa11c Moonrool &amp;
Laatw - · 814-317·7060.
Aula IJJiuil. Dtolor will arrongo fi;
nanoing ·-on 11 you hivo bean
-• • ~turnwu .uow,-. elatwhlfe. Upton
~C::-' Used '«:~!~: 304-451·

720 ~fOr Sale
1875 Chevy Bloztt 350 Engine,
Folr Condition, 52.1100 lliloo.l14-

:tlt-41113.

._..,~Equip. '

1989 Ford Bronco Fun Size XLT.
es,ooo Mllea 4 wo,"'ei&lt;C:euonr
Shape, $10,500, 814-387-7755.

lVIII Ford F-150 4x4 PU $5,11115;
18DO Fcird F-260 ~x4 PU' $5,11115;
11189 Chov. S·!O 4X4 PU $3,185;
1985 Chov. S-!0 4x4 PU $2,11115;
IDle- Ford Ranger 4X4 PU
$3,995; t 888 To~ota 4x4 PU
15..295; 1987 s-ro B~Uot. S3,11115; 1984 Nioaan 4X4 f!U S~, 4g5;
1885 GMC Blazer 4x,4 Ot,._, B&amp;
D Auto Sales, H..,. 180 Nol1h.
81..,.-t41-8885.
~, -: ,
_

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1880 Dlidga .Ram Van 11-2'50.
12,ooo Mliea. •1.ooo., can ·ea
Sean At; Galllpollo, Oolly Trbmt,
825 Third Avenue. Gal!ipolla

J~c~'S'

Ohio.

(A NIJi.ffr!C/&lt;

1181 Niuan 4r~ Xt Loaded, LoW
Mlleo. $9.500 Or Will Take In Oi\
Trodo For Enclosed Cot Hauler, '
WhHier Or DuaiiJ Truck, eu ~
448-3100.

SlloppE

..

1810 lnternallonal Dump Trullk
With g Ft Sr. PlOW I Salt Box
Auto, P.S, V•l, Rood~ To ·Workl
114--3117412.

,..

1111 F150 4M4 Ford Flo! Bed .

• 1,700 114-3117:'IIIII

we Alta .....
.

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E41Uipmtnt lrtGI~dlnt I Rourid

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1ai1 S-10 4x4 4.3 Bedliner Air1
Crula.,e. Tilt. New Tir..••· . Yerf~

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Motorcycles

•••

,.THE BURN LUSlm
l'lU..O, DIUUJ.JC:HF Till~
e~WW~ T~loffi.£ ...

1gg, Hondo 300 4 Trak $2.800;
1985 Suzuki 230 Quad Runner
$1,500;114 418 111158.

....~ Tfl"T FlU ~T '(()() "

I~

61\Vf.. foAE- 7

750 Bolita &amp; MotOrs

ahleld
3 Nobleman
4 Having
8HirYIICinCII
5 French yea
6 Gi'n 11ng plant
7-TinTin
,

a Office furniture
9 GoalS
10 Beehive Slate
11 Tropical nut·
16 Perform

DbI.
DbI.

Phillip Aldu

If I were given-live dollar~ every
lime I saw a driver make a tum without signaling, I would have to work
only about two hours a day and would
live like a millionaire. Is this just a
New York area problem or is it nationwide? .
It is the same at the bridge .table,
wlten players refuse to make their signals as-clear-cut as possible. Today's
deal is a classic example.
A good policy for competing against
the strong no-trump is to enter the
auclion , find a lit and get out as quickly as possible, because a makable
• game contract is so unlikely. South'
, had this in mind when he bid two
hearts. However, North was worried
that they might be able to make four of
a major. ·East was happy to double
everything.
West started with the three top
clubs, dummy rufling the third. What
should East discard?
AI the tabje, East selected;lthe dia·
'lnond four; his higher spot-card as an
encouraging signal. However, the four
looked low to West. So, when South
called for dummy's spade king, West
won with the ace and continued with
the club jack. hoping fatally to undermine declarer's trump ltolding.
Happily, South rutleCI in the dummy,
discarded his two diamond losers on
the queen-jack o[ spedes and conceded
one heart trick. His nine tricks were
two 'spades. five hearts and two club
ruffs in the dummy.
East, of course, should have discarded the spade ~o a\ trick three. This
would be much clearer to West, who
would switch to diamonds aner win ning with the spade ace.

'.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce~brit)-

•J

CIJ)her cryptoorams are c:teeled trorri quo481100S by tamous people _past and present
Each leHer.lf'l the ciPher stands lor another Today's c/tJe L eQUals 0

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Give me

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laundry list and

Gioacchino Rossini.

ZJO

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DZC

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Have you ever noticed that

,.

11193 201 Pro XL 20' St t
•
ru oo
ball boot, 200 XPHP.
814-11117·
73-47 or 01-4-949·2819.

760

2 Center of

East
Pass

for Sale

5

I
I1--,.,,,-,,ra_-,,r-.,,r-_,.,-I 8

Auto Pans &amp;

0 p EEDS

Accessories

..._.,_--'-·_ , .__,.__..J.L-...1.

8
Budget TransmissiOns, Used 11Wbullt, All T~pel, Accessible·To
Over 10,000 Tranamiaaio'n,
C.li.llches, Preaaure Plates, &amp;U·
3711-2935.

NOT

1'MAT OI..P

PRINT NUMBERED

LETTERS IN SQUARES

I'

atbactkhseat
always ftno~ees
e pa rkidnver
ng space a er
you have-- .. -·- - -?

Camplere the chuck;• quo1ed
by t.lltng in the miuing words
you develop lrom S1ep No. 3 below.

.O.R~UI'\ENT

.e-G-'1 N .

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
You'll flnd In tlte
Clonlfled SectiOn.

SovlnJS

SE:RVICES

810

I FRIDAY .

......_
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IMSBIENT :·
W~ Unconclltionolllletimo ~•arantee.
Lcca1 references
·
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~rnlatlad. Call

taallllhld 1975.

~flOWEr~

·

&lt;::le.~ji~t~feaSS

'

------;----Appliance PariS Anct .Servlca; AN
Nama Bnsnclo Dv!lf 25 Yeats Ex·
,.rience All Wortr; Guaranteed,
French Ci t~ Mliyteg, 614· 44871115.

'.

C&amp;C General
tilntnco- P~~~~.=~~
~rpenrry, Cl

mobile honwo
lrteolttl. .te call
8323.

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you understand what to do to

,

trouble.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) II you and
~-~..,._ _:..._ _ MalcNI'ria~er, clo this newspaper. P.O . your male have conflicting opinions
Box'17~ ,-Murray .Hill Station, New Vorl&lt;, today, discuss the matter in the privacy of
NY 10156.
yoor home instead of airing the dispute in
. AQUA(Ius (J_
I !fl, 20-Fell. 18) Today you front of others.
might hove to adjust yoor agenda in order
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Work you expect
to surt others' preferences . Even though rt - others to finish today may 'be leh undone.
is annoring, try not to make a big deal
II you want to get something done lorcorabout"·
lain, ~ou must do rt yoorsell.
VIRGO (Aug: 23-Sept. 221 Toda~ avoid
......_....__.....,.....,~- PISCES (Fell. 20-llercll 2DI Usually
you're eaa~going and tolerani io your
laking risks H you have to count on someinvo~ts wtilllriends, bUt today ·yo~
one who bungled som8thing recently. His
might be- short-lempered and cause
or her boning average his not improved.
friend~ to ~void you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Domestic Iran·
ARIES (Marcil 21·WII 18) lllfiOr• tile
qullllty will be dlarupted today if you
ternplatlorlto behave In a showy manner
rellash old iuues with your INIIt. These
Saturday; Jan. 13, 1098
to irnprels _olhtrs_fO\Iay. AffecJing a riew . wounds stiR~ more time to'-'·
ileek·IIOCial oillltia that Will upoee you to persona -will detrac't from. rather than SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-NcW. 221. Oh!r peoand , _ conuicllln the yell ~. yiiUr lmlilge.
.
' pie mey ign&lt;n 'fOAl: plea lor ..........,.
aliMd. E!UrtlirtO your cln:te of ldende TAUR'/S, (.lpJij ao.M.y .201 ']odaY you . today Wyou dlmand lhllt lhly drop w11at
couf!l ~ ~ ~ ~ Ill dNI with aomtone whose
tbey're doing In Ofd!tr to llelp you. MaQ
1 •
tW,f!lnOe beltiltS.
•·
outtook lo !llllit~~ OPIJIIMCflo youra; lUna to Qe COI1Iiderate and~IC0RM (Die, 22~. 1.) GUard A Cltbate b• aan two cloSid minds wll, IAQITTAIIIUI (Noll.~ 21)
...... the otditiMIOir 1t1 oveiMII IOIIIly. II not procU:e iiiOIIII:ol.
•
be lmportanl to determlila In •-nee
' you-apr081*Anodtlngln00!*11t 'lo W?lii . . . ~...._IO)TNnkcanolulhow mucll you Intend to ap!lnd on ·
.y aur-..tum.GII'Jourpft:flnllll•+ 1y tocljly. . projel:llng yourseK inlo .n on. .aenttalatoday. 0111rd agaJnll
. . Ntjad, Trying Ill pilei! up II llnltleil •COl~ 11 d l j fllllll 11181 do not linoctly P!la~.
· 1,

·&gt; AI;J'R

Collfngo tt•!UIM;,pia••••· repair.:~\•.'
CaM Tom ;!04-1175-4'188. 20 ~rs
experience.
. .
.... ·~

make the relationship wor1&lt;. Mail $2 .75 to

,..
BERNICE
..
BEDEOSOL

Earl's Home Maln1enance; vinyl
sidinv, rooling, ox\llrlor and lnlt&lt;ior pelnting, power washing, raorn
addilions. Free Estimatea, eu.
1192-4451 .

0015,

' '

North
Pass
2•
Pass
Pass

I

wv 304-5711-2301.
'

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.....,....,.,1"""' . . . .

I JUST LIKE TO
REQOEST PERMISSION ..

.I

Aon'o TV Service, IIPICitllzing In
Zenith alao urvicing' most o.,_,
brancll. Hou~ eolia, 1-100·787·

'i.c:LASSIJ?;EDS .

By

'

r--

740

1 Campus area

25 Stotuo 28 --armo
Z9 Alwaya
33 Kin of mono
34 Soaks
35 Uncommon
36 Unused
38 Papal name
40 - do France

A signal
of the times? ·

I

1989 Ford Aerostar. ExCelltnl
Condition, 'LOW Mileage, t 988 Dolto 88, Royal Brouohman. Goo~
Condidon, &amp;1 ~388 13sa.
~

Clerir1. $8.500, 814-446-7880. ·

DOWN

peril

Opening lead: 8 A

.~:"/::;.4v~~-. ...~~8~~ ~~~ ~,!B~~~~:PI':~n~g~~:

Yellow Lab Pupa, Wormed, - - - - - - - - - - 1

AKC

PLA~A.~C:e c~:mRs,

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

198e T~ota ••4 Drl\16~ 1: C.~ lin·
dtr, Good Conditlon / 81'4.'-388-

"'

Mar~· Ka~

2.
3 ..

I

motor. se.ooo.a•4-IMI2-4111 .

-door locksl-.

u.....

BARNEY

West
I NT

UNCLE SNUFFY ?

8 4

-

South

AMIFM CO Player, Same Ru&amp;t ,
~1":;~ Great, $2,8~5..: 614· 448 -

5e83.

cleclslve point
59 Annoy
50 ~oln
61 Pub brew
62 Mao - tung
fi3 Father, in
Brltttln
64 Permit

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

I

~;~;~::~~~~ ~--------~r----------of ~.SHIOO,e14-V4V-22~.. ~-·;
1985 To~Gto Pick--Up ••• 5
Slotplng room• with cooking. $40 Mllcellllneoua
610 Farm Equipment
Speed. Big Tires, Mac Wheels ,
Merchlndlle

54 Motorlste' org.
55 Aoacll a

87 5 3 2

1883 F-150 Ulng Bod 9011 Mlln.
Runo 1Great (3t 8, V-81, 81 ·4-4•8 0468 Aftor 8 P.M.

altar 5pm ·

9J 52 .
tAK43
8104

73o vans &amp; ~WO.

Twin Rivet&amp; Tower, now accepting
appllcotlons tor 1br. HUO oubl!dized
handi·

2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet,
Natural Gas Furnace. Vor~ Nice. Alao troller space on rlvor. All
814-448-2003,614-446-1409.
~~j\l;;5~~~~'00 p.m.,
2bedroom, total oloctric, no peto,
1 child. S2751mo. includes trash
pickup. $200 deposit. New 1995

98 3

50 Sllewer..t dl•h

Thurmon
13 Actor and war
horo - Murphy
14 Judge
Lance 15 Scratches
17- do mer
11 La - Vita
19 Buckwllaat
grain
.
· 21 Laclclng loot

.7

tDIS Ford Ranger, 4Wii 8 cyl .• 5

OpponunHy

EAST
•9 6 4 2·

8AKQJ8
SOUTH

rg"' Ford F-1so 4x4. e c~ilnclor,
4 Speed, 12.000, 814·3&amp;e·9143
Alar 5:00P.M.''

Business

WEST .
•A 8 5
tJ62

Tru~.

Extented Cab. Tahoe PackiiQi,. 'eoki'lg13,11!'0. 814-446-658jl · ' :

«a-48e3:

21 o

01-12-!11

NORTH

3 bedroom house in Cheater. 30111 .
,_~y remodeled, security dlpoait, 11111, releren&lt;:es, call 1-814- Taking Applications For Small 1
445-91l2t aher 8pm.
Bedroom, E111ctlltnt Condition.

lfiltd brood, hall Basaell. to

;,'God

!VI1 5-10 Tl!hoo, V-1, 5 SpeaG,
Ctoth Searo. T-.tno rva. Ponlfac 1450, ~ Motol1. 814·4460103.
.~ ~
;

410 HoUHI for Rent

•

41 ThrQW
42 Poradloo
_ 43 Guided
44 .lctreaa Weld
47 !!ridge expert

1 can. prov.
4 011 one'sfcrozy)
t Diving bird
12 Actrlla

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Asthma - Queen - Flail- Vendor- HEADLINES
vVhile reading an entertainment tabloid I concluded that
celebrity marriages are usually made in HEADLINES.

JANUARY 121

�...... 10. The Qllly Sentinel

Friday, Jtlnu•ry 12, 1996

Pomeroy • 'Middleport, Ohio

,,

·chances are cheating heart' will always want it can't ·have ~
·

. my daughter, well-off financially and
fun to l5e wilh. ~ut --he &lt;Was married.
After three years, his wife found
out about me and divorced him. I
thought Wendell would surely marry
me when he was free, but he finally
admitted that he had no interest in
marrying again. This was a real blow
Our Aim I Landers: After reading -- after I had given him I 0 years of
the letter from 'Planning My Exit in · my life.
I began to suspect that he was see. Long bland," I had to respond. She
•'wu the woman who was finally liv- ing someone"else, and sure enough;
• ing with the married man she'd been I went to his home on a Sunday
•seeing. That lady really hit the nail on morning and caught him in bed with
. the bead when she said, "You are bet• another woman.
'ter off alone."
It took several months of coun' I had a relationship with "Wen- seling before I finally had the sll'englh
:dell" for several years. I, too, want- to leave him. (He wanted us both.) I
•ed this miln more than anything in the can't describe the relief I felt after I
, world. He was wonderful to me and told him that! didn't want to see him

Ann
LanderS

anyl)lore. Thank heavens 1 didl\'1
have to'deal with the guilt of break,ing up his marriage. He had a long
history of cheating and lying before
we met.
My advice to anyone considering
an involvement with a married man
is: Don't go down that road. It's not
worth the pain.· -- BEEN THERE,
DONE THAT .
DEAR B.T.D.T.: Chances are
good that a man who will cbe~t on his
wife will also cheat on his girlfriend.
This kind of man always wants what
isn't his __ until he gets it. You've
lielped a lot of. women see the light
today.
Thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: My older
brother died seven years ago in an

accident when be was 20 year$ old.
My ~iblings and parents no longer
talk about him much, but my mother
(and probably my father) must think
about him often.
Would it be appropriate to send
them a card,on the anniversary of my
brother's death, or would this be a
cruel reminder?
My family and I are not very
demonstrative, especially about matters that involve personal feelings,
but if you advise that! senll a card, I
will do so. -- ANONYMOUS IN
RALEIGH, N.C.
DEAR ANONYMOUS: Please
don't send a card on the anniversary
of your brother's death. If you ate
able to take your parents out to dinner that evening, it would lift t~eir

spirits to be with you. Mmthe effort
with no mention of the sad anniversary. You'll be glad you did .
~ar Ann Landers: This is for car
moochers -- people you pick up or ·
take home from work on ·a regular
basis who never offer to reimburse
you.
Running a car is not cheap these
days. There's the license, insurance,
tires, lube and oil changes, alignments, tune-ups and gas. And tires
wear out. ·
Some of us wouldn't bring this up
because we are friends , but maybe if
they see it i~ Ann Landers' column,
·they'll catch the drift .. -- FREE
WHEELS
DEAR WHEELS: 1hope your letter produces results. "You were goi?g

How to survive
Old 'Man Winter

anyway" doesn't cut it. A steatly pas,
sen]!er should offerto till up the tank
every few weeks or pay for a lube
job. If any of you "guest pa.•sengers"
see yourselves in the column today,
lilke the hiqt.
Gem of the Day: Insanity is here&lt;j, :
itary. Parents·get it from their chitdren.
.. •
·Ann Landers' bodklet, :'Nuggets
and Doozies, " has everything from
the• outrageously funny to tHe
poignantly insightful. Send a selfaddn:ssed,_long, business-si~ covelope and a check or money order for
$5.25 (tl)is includes posmge and handling) to: Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box II 562, Chicago, m.606110562. •(hi C:ariada, send $6.25.) .
'
·
.

Instead of through the emergency
room later," said program &lt;;oordinator Dr. Paul Taheri, medical director
of the center's trauma-bum unit

_.
Auocl8ted Prese Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -

"John Thackaberry, 14, played dead as
• ;emel'l!ency room nurses zipped him
• into a body bag. · His father sobbed
•:real tears as he contemplated losing
; ;John to.drugs and alcohol.
Later; they loured the morgue
·. with • .pathologist who showed them
the effects of trauma on human
Oll!anS - a slice of a brain, a heart,
-a liver. They saw another teen wired
· to life support in an intensive care
unit.
'
. : All of it had the desired effect on
John: For the first time, he faced his
· own mortality, that a stupid mistake
, could kill him.
"It was being .. ~ in the body hag
· :and thinking that this' can actually
.. happen, you're not immortal," John
. said Thursday. "I actually thought
about me being dead."
· . Scaring teens away from drugs
.. and alcohol with a heavy dose of real. ity is the goal of a 11ew prognun at the
· University of Michigan Medical Center.
, · Called Facing Alcohol Challenges
. :J'ogether, the program brings parents
.· and youngsters together for a half day
• of role playing and frank talk about
·: the consequences of abusing drugs
· and alcohol.
. · . "The goal is to bring kids through
the front door of the .hospital now

Role-playing scenarios have
youngsters watching sobCring scenes:
a nurse telling a mother of an accident victim that her child is dead; a ·
chaplain giving last rites to a pretend
. victim.
"It's very emotional for all
involved," said registered nurse and
program coordinator P;un Pucci.
Parents learn as well. ·
"II was an unbelievable dose of
reality," said Karen Nutting, who
went through the first run of the program Wednesday with her daughter,
Rachel.
'
Rachel, who is about to tum 13,
said she thought the .program could
help teen-agers resist Pll"r pressure to
drink and ~se drugs.
"Then: are kids in my neighborhood already caught in the drug
web," she said. "They already have
problems and they're still in middle
school."
.
Nutting said the program forced at
least one change in her behavior. She
now k~ps her rarely used liquor cabinet locked.
"You can'tjust put it all on your
children," she said. "There's things
you can do as responsible parents to
make sun: problems don't come up."

Sam Trafton pn1C1lces his classical
crou-cauntry aiding t.chnlque at the Cerrabat:
Htt
Ski Touring Center In CarrebllaHtt
Valley,
Thurtlday with cloud-covered

Crocker Mountain In the background. Trafton Ia,
a atuclent at Carrabaaaett Valley Academy. {AP ·
Photo)

Snoring may be more than annoying -habit, it may be dangerous
al seconds periodically. This frightens
me.
DR.:OOTT
DEAR READER: As I have written before, snoring often .appears in
PETER
middle age, as the tissues at the back
of
the throat sag and close off the airGOTI,M.D.
way. This may lead to sleep apnea, a
condition marked by prolonged periods during which the snorer ceases to
breathe effectively. ,This common
condition is worsened by obesity, and
the use of alcohol and sedatives.
By PEllA H. GOTT, M.D.
I can understand why you,'re
DEAR DR GOTI: My hubby
frightened.
I suggest that you encourmlly. really snores. J keep poking
age
your
husband
to seek medical
him in 'the ribs and he may stop for a
attention,
if
not
from
an otolaryngolfew minutes, but then he begins this
annoying habit again.l don 't get any ogist then at least from his family
sleep lfstening to · him •and real! y doctor. Addressing the aggravating
believe he stqps breathing for sever- factors, such as a weight problem or

alcohol use, may resolve the situation. On the other hand, your husband
may need surgery to remove the flaccid tissue that causes his snoring.
As you suspect, sleep apnea is a
potentially dangerous situation
because it can lead to cardiac irregularities, even death. Therefore, your
husband should not delay seeking
help.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "Sleep/Wake Disorders." Other readers who would like
a copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
mention the title. .

DEA~ DR. GOTT: I'm 46 and
have been desirous of changing my
sex since the age of 19.1 have always
been influenced by femininity and
femini~ beauty. I have not consulted with a doctor yet, but intend to do
so. What do you think and suggest in
my case?
· DEAR READER: Sex change
operations require an enormous
amount of preparation. The operation
itself is considered by many to be the
least troublesome aspect of genderreorientation. Patien!S wbo desire such
surgery should undergo extensive
counseling (because gender modification is clearly not the answer to
many cases of depression and general dissatisfaction); in conjunction

with hormone ll'eatments to prepare
the body for the actual change (and
· to maintain desired secorldary sex
characteristics).
. Before embarking on a course of
action thet will not only cha~ge your
life but the lives of those around you,
you should place yourself under the
care of a sensitive physician or surgeon who is familiar with gender
modification and has an appropriate
support staff. ·
· You have 'much work to do, I'm
afraid. I think that you should carefully and objectively consider all the
issues, with the help of qualified professionals.
Copyright 1995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERI,"RISE ASSN.

Device allows doctors to perform light-enhanced pap !smears
abnormalities than the regular Pap
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
test can detect alone.
AIIOCIIIad· Preas Writer
' WASHINGTON (AP)- Women
Abnormalities don't necessarily·
are aboiltlo get an e~tra step iri their mean cancer, but discovering them
next Pap smear: the insen.ion of a means women can be further tested
special light into the cervix to let doc- immediately so that if cancer is
tors actilally peer inside as they hunt forming, it is caught early enough to
cure.
for the.early signs of. cancer. •
"We're enhancing the ability of
~ Food and Drug Administration qys this light-enhanced Pap the Pap smear to pick things-up ...
smear, ·called Spcculoscopy, .allows before they develop into a serious
cloCtQrs to diagnose more cervical problem," explained Dr. Steven A.

J~inet Jackson
s.igns record
$80 million
&lt;;te~l wi~h · Virgin

Vasilev of City of Hope National
Medical Center in Duarte, Calif.
And the device may help determine that a woman who gets Paps
only every lhtee years- the standard
for many insurance companies doesn't have a problem lurkins that
could become dangerous before her
next checkup, he added. When
Vasilev tested the device, "most
women felt it was a reassuring factor."

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)
"Politically Incorrect" is . jumping
next year from cable's Comedy Central to ABC, where it will follow
"Nightline" and add 10 the late-night
competition with Jay Leno :and David
Leuerman.
··
"Politically InCorrect," hosted by
comedian Bill Maher, will beJiin airing on ABC in January 'l997, tho network anno)lnced Thursday.· .
"Nt'ghtline" already perfiorms wei_I
again~! the first hal(-~our of NBC's
"Tontght Show.'' wtih IIAito and
'CBS' "~
S.bow" ,Wiih Le"-•n,
1
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.JANET JACKSON
She is.Virgin's best-selling artist.
.Iaetooit's b!st,Virgin album, "janet.,"
has sold nearly I 0 million copies
since il$·•1992 release.
Representatives fQr Jackson and .
;v....n0 .n:fu&amp;ed tO&gt;discliss the deal.
._.
A;;~ing t9 the Tirpes, the ~
calla rorJ~~;Iclon to receive a million sislling advanee and·• Jllll'lll• .
teed advlflct•. o(.about SS n'tilli~ 'for
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to be the ' ~ be! 001 !0 J~ ~V9n Yeld lncotn~Ct" at a
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-By TOM HUNTI!R'

tlme1 SlnliMIIIIIII '

: . ATiffiNS -A Reedsville woman chljl'ged in connec•tlon with the February 1995 robbery of th~ Coolville
-Bank One' lpnch has been cleared of charges that she
.conspired llld pllticipated in the robbery of more than
$100,000 from the bank.
'
: Patricia IIJgram, 4~. pleaded guilty to obstruction of
·justice, a felciny of the fourth degree, for allowing Jamie
Ford, 22, ~!pre, and Brian Lynch, 20, Little Hocking to
remain at her ~orne after they confessed to her that they
had committed' the Coolville robbery.
Athens County Commcin Pleas Judge L. Alan Ooidsberry granted a prosecution request to dismiss seven
·other charges against ingram. The charges that were dismissed included counts of conspiracy and complicity to
robbery and kidnapping, and an additional obstruction

The Middleport Literary Club
held its first meeting of the new year
at . Pomeroy Library with Mrs.
Dwight Wallace as hostess. President
Jeanette Thoma• opened. the proceedings 'with the Club Collect and
chaired the annual business meeting.
The secretary read the minutes of the
last December m~eting and the treasurer, the financial report.'Both were
approved.
· The nominating committee, composed of Betsy Parsons. Pauline Horton and Faye Wallace, prop,osed the
following :. Martha Hoover and
Jeanne Bowen as president and vicepresident respectively; secretary, Sis.ter Fidclis and lrfasurer, Pauline
Horton to retain tlieir positions for ·
another year. As there were no additional nominations, Sara Owen made
a·motion that these be accepted; Maxinc Gaskill seconded the motion.
Before the review, several ladies
shared interesting experiences that ·
occurred over the holidays. Finally,
Ida Diehl ' introduced her report on
Ladder of Years by Anne Tyler. Mrs.
Diehl stated that while this modem
work was pun: fiction, many of the
si-tuations n:Hected real life. This is
the thirteenth novel by the popular
author and is considered by some
critics as the mostlieguiling although
she did recieve a Pulitzer Prize for an·
earlier work, Breathing Lesson.
.
The story could appeal to many a "
person's secret fantasy. Delia Gri'nstead, who as a teenager married her
physician-father's assistant, had little
opponuniry to develop a life of her
own. At the age of 40 with tluee,'
almost-grown children, she begins to .
feel a deep restlessness, as the :
reviewer told the story, and on a sudden impulse walks away from her
marriage, . hitches a ride into the
unknown and invents a new life in a
strange, little town. She broods over
old hurts and is not helped by a hus..:
hand wbo seems unable to e~press hiS:
feelings. 1\{rs. Diehl with her storytelling ability narrated the adventures,
the changed responsibilities, and the
new people in Delia's life.
One of the new people, an old man
named Nat, commented to Delia that
life is a "ladder of years". This
phrase became the title of the book
and it seems that one must climb that
ladder with the '.lulhor to find the final
resolution. Delia's explanation was·
that she became "unintentionally separated and couldn't find a way back,"
Mrs. Diehl concluded.
Je~nn.e Bowen's mother, Regina '
Mizemi:y, was a visitor from Toledo'
and participated with the iwelve
members in the lively discussion .
which followed tile book review:
Wen: Delia's thoughts and actions ·
understandable? Was she right in tak- •
ing the actions she did Each member · ·
responded to roll call with a conune(\i ,
on bemg alone.
' .
·.

BliZzard '.9·6: a continuing
Local governments, schools now
face task of adjusting budgets,
l ·sc:~hec'lul~rs disrupted by storm

Vol. 30, No. 49

Ingram's vehicle. Ingram said that they were in the ignition switch in her car, the blue one in the parking lot.
Lynch and Ford fled the scene in a dark blue Oldsmobile owned by Ingram. They later abandoned the vehicle
and picked up their own vehicle, which was parked just
outside of town . The two men continued to stay with
Ingram for a few days, during which time they confessed
the robbery to Ingram and said the money was hidden
outside in the doghouse, Huff stated.
The two suspects then Hed to North Carolina in a
truck they purchased, where they rented a storage unit to
hide the stolen money.
Ingram initially told investigators that the two men
confronted her in the parking lot and forced her back
inside the bank, according to the Athen~ County Sheriff's ·
Department.
Ford and Lynch pleaded guilty to one count of rob-

Tire recy~ling firm close .
to purchasing Scipio facility

I

the obstructing charge," Huff said.
''The state always takes a gamble when they rely on
testimony from accomplices in crimes such as this," he
added. "We just felt that the complicity was the sure
charge, and the evidence was insufficient to warrant a
conviction beyond a reasonable doubt on any of the,
other charges."
Ingram pled not guilty to charges of conspiracy to·
commit robbery, complicity to commit robbery, conspiracy to COJ11mil kidnapping, and complicity to commit.
Contlntllll on P8lll A2

By Jill FREEMAN

tyto
if It
"It
dependa on the
" E~rgency Management Agency Director Terry HembY. said. .
Temperatures wen: expected to stretch into the 40s Sunday, prompting some fears melting snow will cau'st flooding. In the event residents ever become stranded if they live
near creeks and streams, Hemby advised they follow the
same preparations for a snow storm.
·
Such preparations include having an adequate supply of
food, fuel, medication, batteries and other necessities, and
to keep posted on weather reports.
Hemby downplayed the possibility of Hooding because
temperatures are remaining close to the (reezing mark.
"If we ran into the SOs, I'd say tl!ere would be a. problem," she said. "I don't expect then:. will be a quicjt runoff
because I think the snow will be around for awhile."
Receding snow means county highway crews, on the go .
since last Saturday, will get a break. But the 'lllllliunt of
vehicle wear and tear, overtime and other costs in clearing
roads will have its impact on tho!' department's $2.4 million
lludget, County Engineer Joseph Leach said.
"The bottom line is, we may not be able to do as much
A HELPING HAND - Chief Deputy Dennie Salltbury, Sheriff Jamaa D. Tavtor, and
work in the spring with stone and gravel," he explained.
1wo county lnmete• arw 1hown 11 a Utile Bulltldn Road rw•ldence milking a wood
"Hopefully, for the halance of the winter, there won 'I be delivery. Nelghborl, concerned about the hHrt condition of 1 man oecupvtng the
-that much more severe,weather."
'
'-'tl •ncl hla family, Clllled the EMA office Friday momlng. Money to purcha11 1 load
Leach said that in contrast to the January 1994 storm of wood waa collected from Gellla County'• llectf(l offlclala.
.
that produced two feet of snow, Gallia's road-clearing effort
money in new equipment, which allowed us to handle the snow with our
last .)Week didn't rely on rented equipment to· move snow.
own
vehicles," he said.
. I:unding received from state elilergency sources allowed for the purSnow and cold played havoc with the county system two years ago once
chase of new plows "as modem as ODOT's," he added,
• ''That was nota major item in our liudget~Xcluse we have invested that
ConUnued on page ~

• Air Conditioning
• CruiH Control
•L!IIdedl

bery eiiCh iQ
March 199S. Ia
early" JU!IC, botJi
men -were sentenced to six to
IS yell'S for robbery.
• After full evaluation of the
evidence, we
felt the. best.
charge we could
prove against
Ms. Ingram will

Filing deadline nears
imp~ct
for Meigs ca_
ndidates

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmu-sendnel Staff
GAL~IPOLIS - Warmer temperatures this weekend
helped make the blizzard of 1996 and its follow up Frllay
seem like a bad memory, but dealing with the effect of
. ...c..vy saowfall is expected to continue long after it melts
away.
A winter stonn last weekend left more than a foot of
snow but also ·
on the Gallia County Highway
and diwpteCl idledules-fO( uhoOI-

''·

TtmeeoSentlnet 51811
POMEROY- As of Friday afternoon, 14 candidates had tiled petitions
seeking nominations in the March 19 primary election to run for Meigs .
County offices.
,
Seeking the nomination for the County: Commission. seat commencing
Jan. 4, 1997, arc incumbent
Janet Howard of Middleport,
Jim Davis of Minersville,
Clarence "Ed" Evans of
Salem Township and Diana
Duff Phillips of Scipio
Township. ·
-~.-:-.------------S_q:)\ing lh.e RepublicJUI nomjnation for that seat are Emc;st"lke" Spencer ·
and Joseph Stobart, both of Racine.
For the commission seat commencing Jan. 5, 1997, curtently occupied by
Republican Robert Harten bach, Gary Dill of Chester is seeking the Republican nomination while Jack Slavin of Syracuse is in the running for the
Democratic nod.
For the office of sheriff, incumbent James M. Soulsby of Pomeroy is
again seeking the Democratic nomination.
Mike Canan and Gerald Rought, both of Pomeroy, are seeking the
Republican nomination for that office.
Incumbent Engineer Robert Eason, Pomeroy, will face fellow Republican
Eugene Triplett, also of Pomeroy, in the Republican primary. No Democrats- _
have filed a petition seeking the position.
For county treasurer, Republican Ed Durst of Middleport has filed a peri~
lion seeking his party's nomination for that office, currently occupied b)"
Republican Howard Frank.
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton, a Syracuse Republican, and Latty
Spencer, a Racine Republican, have each tiled for county recorder and cleric.
of courts, respectively.
.
No petitions have been returned from candidates seeking the position of
prosecut,ng attorney. The deadline for candidates to file their petitions with
the Meigs County Board of Elections is Friday at 4 p.m.
Voters in parts of the county will also decide two issues.
Eastern Local voters will decide a 4.5 mill bond issue to benefit con- struction, reconstruction, and other improvements for buildings in the dis..: :
trict, for paying the costs for purchase of classroom facilities from the state · :
The issue would approve 23-year bonds to finance the construction of~::
new building to house the district's K-8 students, and major renovations and. ·
additions to the existing high school building.
.
In Southern Local, voters will face a 6.10 mill bond issue to finance con- '
struction, reconstruction and other improvements for buildings in the dis-' :
trict, for paying the costs for purchase of classroom facilities from the state.' .
Monies from the issue would help finance construction of a proposed'
$7.3 million building project, which includes: construction of a new 650-student K-8 building, as well as renovations and a 4,900 square foot addition to .
the east end of the existing high school.
·

News capsules

Good

By TOM HUNTIR

Qomest/c vlolenct Cfi)orts sqar. however

nia aantiiNia.tf
POMEROY -A Lima-based tin: recycling firm is close to purchasing
the former 'Whited Tire Recycling operations on Vance Road in Scipio
Township, according to Meigs County officials.
· National Tire Recycling operates a shredding, disposal and recycling
facility in Mineral Wells, W.Va., and is negotiating 10 buy the Scipio facility, ~e!=ording to Jon Jacobs of the Meigs «;ounty Health Department.
:The Scipio facility attracted attention in December when criminal
charaes wen: filed against the former owner of the propeny for illegal dumping and disposal of nearly 10,000 .tires ilher abandoning ~ fac~Jity.
' Jacobs and Olher county offictals toUred the company s Mmeral Wells
operations, and met with local and state health and environmental officillls
to diicuss the company and Its ope11!,1ic;ms in late December.
"From every indication we have, they have an excellent track record, during roughly 10 years of business," M~ Prosecuting Auorney John Lentes
said. "We have told them that the cOsta associated wi\h removal of. the
dumped tire will be their responsibility once they buy the property, and that
has been taken into.account in the neg01iatio111."
Un~s said that county officials have' discussed county_and state regulations ·covering operation ·of the facility' with the company, iilcluding a signiftcant· bond required by the.COUJity before operati0111 can begin.
"Before we allow them to come in, we'D have speciftc limits pi~ on
the number of ittcoming and 011tcoing tires the faci~ty receives," Lentes
said. "We'll also require a sipificant bond 10 go to either the health department or the cowtty. A bond wu requirecl'in the put, bitt·llll monies from the
bond were directed to ihe Ohio EPA atid not to the county for fines or possible cleanup casts."
·
Uncluaified felony charpa 'of illeglll dumpina were ftled in early
DecembOr.ag~nst Howw Whited of Amesville, ·the owner of the. former lite
sluedding f~~:ility at the site.
'
. ~'
.
Whited Tire Recycling lne. began business at the site dlirina March 1994
llld cealed operat,ions in April 1995, IICCordinaro Jacoba.
·
Conllnued on ....,. AI
.

Crime '95: Overall an average year in Gallia County

'
•

of justice chljl'ge.
The robbery occurred at a~out 8:10 a.m. Feb. 28,
1995 jus' after Ingram entered the bank to report for
work. The suspects, Lynch and Ford, ambushed Ingram
after she went out to her car to retrieve something.
She was escorted back inside and taken as a hostage
during the robbery, while one of the' suspects entered the
vault and emptied more than $104,000 into a trash bag,
according to Mike Huff, Athens County assistant prosecuting attorney.
Ford and Lynch were acquainted with Ingram over
the course of several years as customers of her former
business, Network Video in Belpre. A few months
before.the robbery, Ingram had allowed the two to begin
. staying at her home on Success Road, accOrding to Huff.
During the course of the robbery, tile two suspects
disguised their voices and demanded !he keys to
'

Hurry - Quantities Limited/ .

I

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • January 14, 1996

~ ~udge dismisses conspiracy charges
~stemming from '95 bank rob-b ery

36 Months, 15,000 mites per year, tax 'extra,
$250 security deposit.
·

..-IIOUr.'

.

.

pageA2

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

"0" DoUars Down.
,

Detlll18 on ·

tmes

.

... .

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&lt;:er early enough to cure- and ,the
tests often find precancerous changes
in cells ttiat haven't yet turned into a
tumor.
Spe~uloscopy adds a visual exam
.to help find those precancerous
changes.
In a Pap Slflear, doctors scrape
cells off the cervix and send them to
a laboratory ·to be examined for
abnormalities.

Low: .....

•

. ..

Bill Maher's SPECIAL FACTORY SPONSORED LEASE!
·sati rica I talk
show coming 96
GRAN·DAM GT
.
.
to ABC
Janu~~ry Onlylll

LOS' ANGELES . (AP) - Pop
lind Jackson has struck a deal
.. --,_.,.,c
Records that is worth an
estill!_lll!=-! $80
the Los Ailge-

••icllled

The system, approved by the FDA
· last month, was developed by Trylon
Corp. Pharmacia &amp; Upjohn Inc. will
sell it to. doctors beginning in about
a week. It will add about $2S to the
cost of a regular Pap.
.
Some 15,000 American women
are diagnosed with cervical cancer
each y.ear and about4,800 die. About
50 million Pap smears are performed·
each year to try to detect cervical can-

HI: -50

Weekly business report -Page o1

Featuted on p,g. C1

·program lets youth
.------Winter sport-------r
·,· ..... Lite:rar)' club
watch real-life horrors
,
~~~~ed~~
of drugs, _alcohol .
ot Years'
.:ay·BRIAN S. AKRE

College·basketball. Page s1

Coping:

By JILL WIWAMS
TIIIIH Sentinel Staff

GALLIPOLIS - Overall numbers seemed to be
right on average after a year-end compilation of
criminal statistics compiled by theGallia County
Sheriff's.
·
Gallia County Sheriff James D. Taylor said the
biggest suprise in the statistics was that the 1995
year did not produce any homicides. The sheriff's
department has not seen this happen since the early
1990's. In 1994, the county saw one murder and
one attempted murder.
Domesic Violenee represented a large number
of BITCSts. The number went from 29 in 1994, to
341 in 199S.
"Domestic violence is no longer being accept-

Morr~ing

Today'• ••• ·~
15 Seelioas • 1

Calendan -

a_,ma

reports
by
County S.O. deputies

Clttgorv
Theft
Domeatla
Aauult
lnclclents
Burglary
Bruldng a Enter'.ng
V•ndallem
Hai'IIIIMIIt
CrimiNII DMM1111N
Auto Ttleftl

I

f

I

It ..

......

,.
;

'

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442
341

169
108
100
95
89
50
40

Columns

.;

2~

ed," said Taylor. "More wome_n an: coming .for---------------------·-···-------G•lll• County Jail Summary report
ward and speaking out."
,
otiiCIIfOIIaliJCI
. 1,1411
Arrests made for driving under the influence
•Amtats
by
depullee
314
showed a significant decline in niunbers. Deputies
•Papera
H'
n
t~~d
2,233
issued 59 DUI's in 1995: down from 1994's number of92.
.
Taylor credited the difference~to deputies·being
more agressive, people-takins cab$ from ·bars, and desipated drivers.
tionally, two armed robberies
·"Designated drivin11 iu big' thins now, which pleases us," said Taylor. were inveati1ated.
Alao reponed to the Gallia sheriff's office were two npea, llld 11 odllr • J:i• .·k''''·'~~
Booking recOf'!ls at tbe Oallia County Jail showed that I, 149 people
found themselves behind bars; with 314 arrests made by deputies.
sex olfensea.
Tbe,office received a total of 2,120 complaints last year. Theft, bul'l!lary .
Depu~ iuued .3!10 traffic citatio_ns, and inveilipiMI lAO accidlt. ,( ••.~'l!et•.! ,
and brealcina and entering accounted for 637 of of those reports. ·Addi- ·Specdin1 ticlfets ICCounted for 162 of the citati0111.

'-------

l' - --

~

--1-

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