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CIIN
liON FilM

Ohio Lottery

College
basketball
roundup

SAT9-6

Af1'IR oa&lt;tl
51111-5

Pick 3:
5-6-5
Pick 4:
8-9-3-5
Buckeye 5:
12-22-25-27-32

ports on Page 4

Mostly clear tonight,
lows In the 30s. Saturday,
partly cloudy. Highs near

50.

•
Vol. 47, NO. 151
011116, Ohio V•lley Publlohlng Compeny

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Clinton expected to clear air
on appointments to cabinet

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to II a.m. to greet the children and
pass out candy treats, advises CharMeigs County postal workers arc lie Grim. postmaster.
Meanwhile, with just 12 days 'til
showing their holiday spirit in a variety of ways, in addition to delivering Christmas, residents arc reminded to
greeting cards and holiday pack- gel those greeting cards out and the
packages mailed.
ages.
Suggested dates are Christmas
They have already taken part in
village Christmas parades. handing · card~ by Dec. 17 ; prior.ity packages
out candy to the children as they by Dec. 21 ; express mail by Dec. 24;
moved along the route. and nc&lt;t foreign priority by Dec. 17; and forweek arc planning special events at eign ex pre" by Dec. 19.
Grim said thai only express
post offices.
An open house will be held at the overnight mail, both letters and packMiddleport Post Office on Monday ages. will he delivered on Christmas
with punch and cookies to be served Day.
According to Wayne D. Rogers,
and entertainment pro~idcd by a
l010al pianist Sunny. Postmaster Jim district manager for the Columbus
District. which indudes post offices
Sundquist announced today.
He said that in support of local in southeastern Oh(o, the "busiest
businesses, post office patrons may mail'day" will be Monday.
He said ..that nationwide, post
bring in December sales receipts
offices
will cancel approKimately
from any Pomeroy-Middleport mer- ·
.chant and receive 20 percent off new 275 million cards aod letlcrs. On a
seasonal packaging products avail, normal day. about 900,000 cards and
able at the post oflicc through Christ- . lencrs aic mailed, he said.
. The advice of postal officials is to
mas.
"mail
early in the day and early in the
' Santa will he at the Pomeroy Post
Office on Saturday. Dec. 21. from 9 season" in order to help with the

.

AluDiln Wheels, VB Vortec
·Conclt~'Power l.o&amp;s, lit,

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aides said there was a remote chance

that Clinton could opt for another
U.N. candidate at the last minute and
put Richardson at Commerce.
That would trigger a domino
effect, moving Daley to .Transporta~
tion and leaving Slater out of the picture.
Richardson, 49, has hccn playing
unofficial American ambassador to
rogue states since December 1994,
when he negotiated the release of a
U.S. airman whose Army helicopter
went down in Nonh Korea. He has
also helped captured Americans gel
out of Iraq and Bangladesh .
Daley, 48, is brother of and close
adviser to Chicago Mayor Richard
M. Daley and served as c0 -chairman
of the 1996 Democratic National
Conventi'on's host commitiee.'
With the Justice Department tied
to several White House investigations. Reno's job status became a
major issue in the transition to a sec·
ond Clinton term. If she left now,
questions would he raised about
whether she had been pushed .
The president fueled the speculation by refusing · to comment on
Reno's future.

Poll finds most citizens
satisfied with president
By RICHARD BENEDETTO
Gennett News Service

WASHINGTON- President Clinton prepares to begin his second term
with most Americans approving of the job he's doing and expressing a
higher degree of satisfaction with the course of the nation .
A USA TODAY/CNN/Galiup poll finds Clinton with 58 percent JOb
approval. up 4 percentage points from late October, .shortly before he won
re-election .
Looking ahead, the outlook is upbeat:
• 39 percent think he will do a better JOb as president in the second
term.
·
• 46 percent expect ~im to perform at about the same level as he did
in the firsllerm .
• 14 percent 'expect a worse job.
In keeping with the optimistic spirit, those who think Clinton and
Republi cans in Congress will cooperate more in the ncK! four years outnumber by over 2-1 those who think they will cooperate less. Both sides
have been talking up cooperation since the elections last month ended a
bitter campaign.
Also, 67 percent think things in the country will be better or the same
· in the next four years; 32 percent say worse.
"We're in the honeymoon period before the start of the second term
and everyone is getting the bcner" of a doubt. We' ll sec how long that
lasts," said Emory University ·political scientist Merle Black.
.
Overall. 43 percent say they arc satisfied with the way things are going
in the country, a relatively high pcrccn1agc.
'
Ever since the end of the Persian Gulf War in March 1991. when satisfaction reached 52 percent. public contentment has nose-dived. In the
more than si• years after the war, satisfaction has averaged 32 percent. It
began swinging upward again early this year as public perceptions of the
economy showed improvement.
The Dec. 9-11 poll of 813 adults nationwide has a margin of error of
plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Holiday rush ·d~esn't -s top----~easonal ~pirit at post office
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Naw1 Stiff

i AS:

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Administrator Rooney Slater would
be the strong frant-runner for transportation
seoretary;replacing FederiWASHINGTON - As President
Clinton winnowed his vacancy list, co Pena ..Slater worked for Clinton in
Democratic activist Bill Daley of Arkansas. The announcement was
Chicago emerged as the likely choice not e&lt;pected today.
• Former Federal Reserve Vice
for commerce secretary and Rep. Bill
Chairman
Alan Blinder, a Princeton
Richardson the probable pick for
U.N. ambassador. Attorney General economist, emerged as the front-runJanet Reno's fate also hung in the bal- ner to replace Joseph Stiglitz as
chairman of the Council of Economance.
Administration officials, speaking ic Advisers. One aide said Blinder
on condition of anonymity, said the was offered the job but was·demanddecisions could be announced at an ing cenain . conditions before he
would take it.
afternoon news conference today.
It was less dear who was in the
Clinton, who left Reno's.status up
running
to fill the chairmanship of the
in the air for weeks, met for 30 minNational
Economic Council. Divid- .
utes Thursday night .with his indeing
the
duties
was still a possibility,
pendent-minded attorney general.
only report,ing to aides that it was "a but not likely, aides said.
.· With Reno' s situation coming to a
· wonderful meeting."
Going into the one-on-one ses- head, Clinton still has five Cabinet
sion, senior advisers said Clinton vacancies to'fill : the departments of only Cabinet position tho.ught to be
summoned Reno to.ask her to stay- Commerce, Transportation, Energy, ready.
Clinton went round and round
Labor and Housing - in addition to
and she was expected to accept.
In a series of meetings that the two economic panels, the U.N. with the latest batch of vacancies.
dragged into the night, Clinton sig- post and several While House posi- leaving even senior aides hedging
their bets about his plans. Though the
tions.
naled to aides that:
He could fill several of the posts · Daley and Richardson choices were
· • If Daley replaces Mickey Kantor at Commerce. Federal_Highway today; though Commerce was the all but locked up Thursday night,

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By RON FOURNIER
Associated Pra11 Writer

L

2 Soctlono, 12 Paget, 35 cent. :
A GanneU Co. Newop•per :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 13, 1996

anticipated increase in mail volume.
The total volume this year is expected to be about 4.5 percent more than
last year, according to Rogers.
. To help the mail move more
quickly. these tips have hccn given by
the Postal Service:
• Write or print t\lc address neatly.
• Always include the apartmeni or
suite number in the address.
• Neyer guess a ZIP Code. Call
your local post office for the correct
one.

• When sending a package. usc filament tape to seal the package. make
sure it is well padded, that nothing
rattles, make sure the only writing on
the outside of the package is the "to
and from address" and finally. include
your return address inside the package.
• When writing to Santa. be sure
and usc a return address if you wunt
Santa to write back.
• And don't forget, we're open
Christmas Eve which means we can
get that la~l minute package delivered
Christmas Day. via Express Mail.

Rural households face major deficiencies
Gannett New• Servlca

WASHINGTON -About 9 million rural America households · induding many in the Huntington
· area- face major problems. such as
debt. overcrowding, no running water
or plumbing, a report issued by the
Housing Assistance Council conduded.
"We have seen the quality of rural housing improve. but the affordability of housinl! is a growing prof&gt;.
Jem," said Moises Loza, executive

director of the nonprofit council.
Loza said about a third of rural
households with incomes under
$1 0,000 pay more than 50 pcr~cnt of
their income for housing. '
·
Rural housing problems arc most
severe in Appalachia, the Ozarks, the
Southeast and Mississippi Della.
along the U.S.-Mexico harder. and on
Indian reservations.
In the budget-cutting atmosphere
on Capitol Hill, more federal aid for
rural housing is unlikely as Congress
'

looks for ways to balance the budget
" House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
R-Ga .. has said.it is easy to cut housing programs because they don't
have a vocal constituency." Loza
said.
·.
Rep. Bennie Thompsorl, D-Miss,
whose congressional district has a
large population of low-income residents. agreed.
"It's easy lo pick on people who
J;an 't defend themselves." Thompson
said. ·
· --

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the busy downtown shopping scena, and a few
dog biscuits as well. Pogue, who llv.a undar a
downtown highway overpass, hal been home- ·
less "too long," she says, or about two yaars.
(AP)

HOMELESS AT CHRISTMAS _:_ ' "Blue,"
deckad out In a Sanja hat and carrying a cup
tor donations, waited patiently Thursday aa
owner Rabacca Pogue adjusted tha dog's vast
on 1 Seattle streat corner. Tha homeless pair
brought In a steady stream of dollar bills amidst

De Wine will chair newly-created panel
WASHINGT0N (AP) - He's put in charge of a new panel: the jobs and on wqrkcrs.
"I'm going to be focused on
.been senator for not quite IWO years, Employment and Training Subcomthings
that affect _people, and pro- ·
'mittcc.
but, come January, call him "Mr.
grams
that
affect people and what
The scnawr told reporters it's the
Chairman."
The Senate Labor Committee assignment he had hoped for, with works and what will nul work "
Thursday completed organizational jurisdiction over job-training legisla- DeWine said. "I'm going t_o he worktasks for the coming session, and tion , pension and retireme nt issues, ing on results and what works in the
Ohio Republican Mike De Wine was and examining the effect trade has on real world.' ~

a

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Courts brace for flood -of litigation prior to tort reform implementation
By I(EVIN O'HANLON
AIIIOCiated Prall Writer

.
CINCINNATI-An avalanche of lawsuits is expected to soon hil Ohio's
courts as lawyers race against a new state law limiting damages.
The law takes effect Jan. 27.
"Thousands and thousands of lawsuits are going to be filed," Cincinnati
!rial lawyer Jeffrey Bakst said Thursday. "I alone probably will file I0 suits
Jhat I never would have filed before- I would have tried to settle them."
Cleveland lawyer Bill Bartel, whose firm specializes in personal injury
and~oducl liQbility cases, said he will file as many as 20 cases before the
•
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.
· '' e'rc going to have to jump in sooner instead of tryin1 to settle," he
said, 'Others will do the same."
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The limits placed on awards not only mean pOtentially less money for people l!'ho sue, but also for those lawyer$ whose fees are based 011 the awards.
, ..ynong the Ohio law's limits:
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• Noneconomic damages (pain and suffering): 11Je gf'l'&amp;ter of $250,000

CHEVIIOLET
• OI.DBMOBILE • LEXUS •
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or three times the economic damages (medical bills and lost wages). Maximum award, $500,000. But ~n lases ~here -the plaintiff has sustained per·
mancnt injury or loss. the limit would be the greater of $1 million or $35,000
multipl ied by the number pf years remaining in the plaintiff's life expectancy.
• Punitive damages (intended to punish the wrongdoer): Three times the
compensatory damages (all other damages combined), or $1,00,000,
whichever is less. But if the defendant has more than 25 full-time. permanent employees, the limit is the greater of $250,000 or three times the compensatory dnmages.
Injured Ohioans still will be able to collect the costs of medical care, lost
wages and other quantifiable damages.
The issue has been debated for ye;u-s.
Supporters of the new law say it' will lead 10 lower insurance premiums
and product costS. They also say it will protect Ohio businesses from frivolous lawsuits and staggering damage awards far out of proportion to the wrong
that was done - such as the $4 million ,iury owad to an Alabama doctor
'&gt;$

dissatisfied because his new BMW had been partly repainted to cover dam ·agc in sbipping.
·
. Opponents say it simply will allow businesses, ho;pitals and manufacturers to duck their responsibilities to provide safe goods and services.
Twenty-one other states, including Illinois and Michigan, have enacted
tort reform, according to Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Columbus, who sponsored the
bill.
Earlier this year, President Clinton vetoed a measure that would have Iimited ~unitive damage awards in lawsuits over faulty products.
R1ck Hoffman, who heads the issue desk for Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court said he and his staff arc expecting a rush.
· "There's going to be a big in nux."
Common Pleas Judge Thomas Crush said he feared all the extra filings
could create problems.
.
"Two or three months down the road ... it will probably cause a prcuy
·big trial backlog," Crush said.

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Frldly, o.c.mber 13, 1118

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Estll6fislid in 1948

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGm
Publllllw'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

o•...,.. ...~

Friday, December 13,1111

sleaze for which Mr. Clinton was
ultimately, and in some cases personally, responsible. Why on eanh
didn 't Sen. Dole pound the point

William A. Rusher
home? Aside from a few remarks late
in the ~ampaign, he let the "character issue" get away from him. Why'!
In one of those Now It Can Be
Told stories that sometimes surface
when a campaign is over, we may
have the answer 10 that question. Various journalists have reponed (and in
this case, for a change, the basic facts
do not s~m to be in doubt) that a
quarter of a century ago. when Sen.
Dole was still married to his first
wife, he had a protracted affair with
anOther woman.

This became known to cenain

WALTER R. MEARS
,AP Special Con'elpondent

• By

a

progress."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R Mean, vi~e president and columnist
for Tbe Aas«iated Press, has reported .., Washington and national pol·
Hies ,.,.. lnOre than 30 yean.

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Berry's World

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- SIR/ Tl18
Guff War Pen- .
lagon tog lw 11/rrlMJ up - on a tsb/6 In a IHKJ·
room at Ills White HouH. •

•

Washington reporters. (The woman in must have felt: being urged, on all
question, incidentally, acknowledged sides, to go after Mr. Clinton on the
the affair, but was appalled at the "character issue," while knowing
prospect of being dragged into pub- that to do so would bring down on his
lic vie.w during a presidential cam- head the deadly rebuttal that people
paign.) The Dole · forces promptly · who live in glass houses shouldn't
went to the top people in the organi- throw stones.
Instead, Sen. Dole never raised the
zations that had the information and
argued, apparently successfully, that Clinton sex scandals at all, confined
the matter had no direct relevance to himself to a few relatively harmless
the campaign and ought not to be complaints about FBI files and Asian
donors to the Democratic Pany, and
publicized.
But, of course, we must assume gave the whole "character issue" a
that the Clinton campaign had the pass. The Democrats (and perhaps the
information too, and were ready to media as well) responded by nor raisuse it if the president was seriously ing the subject of Dole's own past -attacked on the "character issue." probably because they calculated,
Also, Mr. Dole had to he prepared for rightly, that he was going to lose anythe topic to pop up, without warning, way. As a final precaution, Sen.
on any interview program he con- Dole refused almost all invitations to
engage in one-on-one interviews dursented to participate in. .
Imagine the torment Mr. Dole ing the campaign.
It is hard to see what else Mr. Dole
could have done, given the circumstances. At the same time, it would be
absurd to argue that, if he had felt free
to raise the character issue, the outcome of the election would have been
different. Sen. Dole's defeat was
caused by a combination of factors •
. - a relatively good economy, the
absence of any major foreign danger,
Mr. Clinton's embra~e of many con- _
scrvative Republican positions, and ~
Mr. Dole's own saturnine personali- ty. American voters were simply not :
ready to tum the White House over to him, character issue or no charac- :;;:
ter issue. Besides, they were leaving :
the Congress in Republican hands. :
So the story of Dole's Dark Secret ~
seems likely to remain a footnote to the history of the campaign. But it has ;::
a lesson for would-be presidentia1' :
candidates: Take a good look around ::; .
you before hurling that first rock. ::::
William A. Rusher iS a Distln· : ·
gu~hed Fellow .of the aaremont :
Institute for the Study ' States· "' ·
manship and Political Philosophy. :

or

Hunziker

.....

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incident leads to meaningful talk ..seas rescue missions that have by second statement was a shorter ver- communist allies in Russia and Chi- .•
now become his trademark. Just last sion of the first statement , with the
North Korca's-cconomy has nose- •

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -- America's
fragile relations with the world's last
Stalinist outpost may have been put
back on track by the reckless actions
of a confused missionary.
' Three · months ago, 26-year'old
American Evan Carl Hunziker swam
across the Yalu River from China into
Nonh Korea, where he was quickly
arrested by local farmers. Hunziker
has said he was a Christian missionary, who went to North Korea to
spread the gospel. It's more likely,
however, that he was a confused kid
who had no idea that his impulsive,
drunken act would cause an intcrna~
tional incident.
The West's relations with Nonh
l(orea had been on the skids for'
months hcforc Hunz.ikcr';-; -release'.
Tensions between the two Koreas
erupted in September. when a Nonh
Korean spy submarine ran aground
off the shore of South Korea. Shortly thcf'l'after, South Korean oflkials
abruptly halted a program of tentative
engagement with its northern nemesis, which ·wa.&lt; designed to provide
famine relief and other humanitarian
aid to the nonh.
Hunziker was released just days
before Thanksgiving, thanks to 1hc
work of Rep. Bill Richardson. DN.M.. whotruveled to ~onh Korea'to
secure his release. For Richardson, it
was one of several high-stakes nvcr-

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weekend, he traveled to southern
Sudan to secure the release of three

By Jack Anderson

and
Jan Moiler
Red Cross workers who had been
, held for five weeks by a rebel group.
Details about Hunziker 's ordeal,
obtained from sources familiar with
the trip, reveal much about the fragile state of Nonh Korea as it tries to
navigate in a world that has soundly
rejected its totalitarian ways.
Nonh Korean officials originally
demanded ·a $100,000 ransom for
Hunziker's release. Otherwise, they .
said , Hunziker would be put on trial
for espionage, which could have
resulted in a seven-year prison sentence ..

Officials in Nonh Korea told the
Americans they had a signed confession from Hunziker admitting that he
was a spy. In fact, the American delegation was shown three separate
confessions, all signed by Hunziker.
The first eo)lfession was a long,
handwritten statement describing the
circumstances that led Hunziker to
enter North Korea -- but which said
nothing about his being a spy. The

shaky handwriting indicating that it
had been written in a hurry.
The third statement, written under
obvious duress, had Huniikcr admitting that he was a spy, and that he had
been persuaded by the South Koreans
to inlihrate the country.
"The point · is, they were not
true." said a source who saw the

statements. "They were done under·
duress. "

Eventually, the Nonh Koreans
lowered their $100,000 ransom
demand to $5,o00, which were to
cover the cost of Hun1.iker's lodging ·
and incarceration over thtcc months.
The money was paid hy Hunziker's
father in Alaska.
The transaction was almost complete -- and Hunlikcr was all set" to ·
he released -- when the Nonh Koreans made one last demand of their
American visitors : They wanted an ·
additional $500 -- ostensibly to cover the cost of Hunziker's final night
of lodging, and his transponation to
the capital of Pyongyang for the trip
home.
The final demand caught the
American delegation by complete
· surprise, North Korea is an impoverished, and tightly closed country,
where one modem hotel exists to
accommodate l&lt;&gt;reigners. Rooms in
that hotel cost $200 a night.
Since being dcsencd liy its former

dived in recent years. Hard currency
is an extremely rare commodity ..
which may explain why North Korean officials hounded the American
delegation.for an extra $500. which
wu.• evcntilally paid hy Hunziker's
father.
In recent years, thC currency crisis has grown so severe that many
•ollcctive farms have begun growing
opium for the international heroin
market. There have· also hecn news
reports that Nonh Korea is trying to
holster its reserves hy counterfeiting
American currency.
. Just bei&lt;&gt;rc the American delega·
lion was set to leave f(,r Tokyo. a
repon went out that there had been·a
"glitch" in the negotiations. In li;lct,
the Nonh Korean officials just wantcd more time to press their American
visitors on other issues.
Said · a source familiar with the
trip: "By (Hunziker) being released,
and the North Koreans raising other
.issues with us thai nrc solvahlc •..
Their message is, 'We know we
screwed up on this submarine incident, hut we want to keep talking to

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When it comes to the world's most
helligcrent nation, that's progress.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Some thoughts for the Christmas season
By George R. Plagenz
Why the world needed Christmas

cr.
"When he went to investigate, he
found a nock of birds huddled miserably in the snow. They had been

for a few minutes, perhaps I could
lead them .to ·safety,'
" Just at that moment the church
bells began to ring. He stood silently fin awhile, listening to ihe hells
pealing the glad tidings nf Christmas.
'.' Then he sank to his knees in the
snow. 'Now I understand,' he whis·
percd. 'Now I sec why you had tiJ do
it. ...
DID THE KING HAVE TO
STRETCH HIS LEGS '! --Audiences
have hcen standing during the singing
of the " Hallelujah Chorus" since
1743. There arc two versions of how
this tradition began.
One version is that King George
II was attending a performance of the
. "Messiah" and had already been sit-

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Edith M. McCullough

IND.

Edith Murl Spence McCullough of Toledo, formerly of-Meigs County, died
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1996 at St. Luke Hospital in Toledo.
·
Bom in Pomeroy on Sept. 19, 1901, she was the daughter of the late Herman E. and Addie Maud Spence . She was retired from Owens-Illinois, and
was a member ofthe 0-1 Retirees Club and the Christian Fellowship ofToledo South Church.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Varian McC~IIough ; a
brother, Aoyd "Bud" Spence; and a stepdaughter, Nina McCullough Miller.
, She is survived by a niece, Carol Sisson of Pomeroy; and by a step-granddaughter and two step-grandsons.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the Chester Cemetery,
Chester. Memorial gifts may be made to Christian Fellowship of Toledo
South, 6711 Pilliod Road , Holland, Ohio, or to another charity of choice.

• IColumbus 146' I

W. VA.

Money taken from a Portland area woman's purse was recovered Thursday, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
1
Lin!la Teaford. Barringer R1dge Road , reponed that she lefl her resi!
dence at 5:45 p.m. Wednesday and had left her purse at the residence!
Shonly after 7 p.m., Barringer's father-i n-law called and advised that 11
neighbor had found her purse lying in the roadway on Barringer Ridg~
Road.
I
Later, Mrs. Teaford confronted a person who had been telling peo•pl~
he found money lying in the roadway. The person took the money but
not look in the purse for the owner's mime. according to I he repon.
He returned the money and agreed to pay back the amount that he
spent. Teaford did not file charges. The nam e of the finder was not
closed. :
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Pomeroy man arrested·on warrant

tee

Sunnr Pt. Cloudy c1ou:1y

·Clearing slated tonight
in southern Ohio skies·
By The A..oclettd Prell
The National Weather Service
· says h)gh press~re moving into the
· Tennessee Valley will bring drier and
.cooler air into Ohio forthe stan of the
· upcoming weeke.nd.
Mostly cloudy skies are forecast
for tonight in extreme northeast Ohio,
but it will be mostly clear elsewhere.
Lows will be between 30 and 35.
It willl)e partly cloudy Saturday
·with highs from the low 40s in the
north to around 50 in the south.
Light drizzle lingered in many
areas overnight as skies remained
cloudy. Light fog also was seen
.across the state but redlJ\'ed visibili'ty only slightly.
Tem~ratures held in the mid 30s ·

to low 40s with the blanket of cloud
.cover. Winds wete mostly from the
west ~t 5 to I 5 mph, but gusted to
near 20 mph at .time.s in northern
Ohio,
.
·The record higli temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 65 degrees in 190 I. The
record low was 7 degrees below zero
in 1960.
Sunset will be at 5:07p.m. Sunrise
Saturday will be at 7:46a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Tonight...Mostly cloudy extreme
nonheast. Becoming mostly clear
elsewhere. Lows 30 to 35."
Saturday... Partly cloudy, Highs
lo\"er 40s north to aroun·d 50 south.

:are

Hospital news

=lclrtg .......................... 24'1.
I Mogul ....................... 22\

Gannett ........•........................ 72,.

Goodyear ..............................48\
K-fft8rl ................................... 1o\

.

One-car accident produces no injuries
No injuries were reported fo llowing._a on c~c ar. accident on State
7 near Chester Thursday around 6:50a.m.
· Thomas E. Allen. Portland. was nonhbound when he lost control
his 1988 ChevroletAslro ·on the rain- s.l1ck road.way. The vehicle went
the road on the right, went into a dit ch and ov erturned, according to
Meigs County .Sherifrs Department report.
Allen's passenger, James Coltrill of Syracuse. also escaped injury. Damage to tbe van was listed as heavy.
•
c

· Gloria "Kay" Wolfe, 53, Racine, died Friday, Dec. 13, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
·
Born Feb. 25, 1943 in Huntington, W.Va., daughter of Erma Wood, and
the late Nathan R. Wood, she was' a member of the Jordan Baptist Church
and attended the Antiquity Baptist Church.
She is survived by her husband, George E. Wolfe; children, Renee (Joe)
Henry, Jack (Donna) Wolfe, Laura (Steve) Bobbins and Tony (Lori) Wolfe;
five grandchildren; and two sisters, Joyce (John) McCain and Sue (Lowell)
Allen.
..
She was also preceded in death by one grandchild.
'Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Ewing Funeral ~orne, Pomeroy,
0.
In 8 I
with the R~v . O'Dell Bush officiating. Burial will follow in the Letart Falls
NEWARK, N.J. (AP)- A federCemetery. .Friends may call at the funeral !tome from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sat' · al judge rejected a bid by Unabombcr
urday.
·
suspect Theodore 1. Kac~ynski 10 .
have charges he. killed a New Jersey
advenising executive tried in California, where he is charged with two
other deaths.
COLUMBUS .(AP) - Indiana- ducers Livestock Association auc·
Saying cases must generally be
Ohio direct hog prices at selected lions at Bucyrus:
tried .in the federal district where an
Hogs: 4.25 lower.
~uying points Thursday as provided
offense was committed, U.S. Districl
Butcher hogs: 44.25-51.75.
by the U.S. Depanment of Agricul Judge Dickinson R. Debevoisc found
Cattle:
Sharply lower.
ture Market News:
that the December 1994 death of
Slaughter steers: choice 62.00- Thomas J. Mosser in North Caldwell
Barrows and gilts: mostly .50
lower; instances 1.00 lower; demand 69.75; select 57.00-62.00.
probably had nothing to do with
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.00- Sacramento, Calif., where Kaqyos·and supplies light to moderate .
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country 67.00; select 55.00-61.00.
ki wanted the case moved .
Cows: . 1.00-2.00 lower; all cows
points 51.50-52.50, a few at 51.00,
plants 52.00-53. 50. U.S. 2-3, 230-260 34.00 and down: ·
Bull s: 1.00-2.00 lower; all bulls·
45.00-5 t .00 .
35
.75
and dowo.
Sows: steady to weak, U.S. 1-3
Sheep
and lambs: steady; choice
300-450 lbs. 41.00-45.50, few at
· Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Diswools
84.50-91.00;
choice clips
40.00; 450-550 lbs. 45.00-46.50,
trict
customers along Eden Ridge
86.00-92..00; feeder lambs 92.50 and
500-650 lbs. 47.00-51.00.
Road
from Marcinko Road to State
down; aged sheep 34.00 and down .
Boars: 38.00-40.00 .
Route 124 and SR 124 from
For the week: 'barrows and gilts
Reedsville to Hockingport, not
2.00-3.00 lower; sows unevenly
including Reedsville, ate under a boil
steady;
advisory
following a·main water.line
Estimated receipts: 36,000.
leak
on
Eden
Ridge Road
Sum?'ary of Thursday's Pro·
All customers are asked to boil
STEUBENVILLE ·(AP) . - A any walcr for human consuplption for
Lithonia, Ga., woman admitted aban- three minutes.
doning her newborn after a medical
Units of the Meigs County Emer- examination confirmed she had
gency Medical Service recorded five. recently given birth, the Jefferson
FRI. THRU THURS
calls for u..sistancc. Units responding County sheriff said.
PATRIPK STEWART IN
included:
STAR TREK: FIRST
Courtney R. Belcher, 19. was
POMEROY
CONTACT,..,
arraigned Thursday on a charge of
9:45 a.m., Sordcn Road,. Mona attempted murder for allegedly abanONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Sordcn, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
doning the boy in a field. He was
5:36p.m., Kerr Street, Harry Gar- found Tuesday
nes, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
RACINE
12:19 a.m., state routes 338 and
124, ·Jim McHaffie, treated at the

JUdge rejeCtS bid
for suspect's trial
t b · ' C l'f
'
e
0rn1a ·

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Today's livestock report

'

••
l

•

issues boil order

Grange 878 will' hold its annual
Christmas dinner and open meeting
on Dec. 21, at 6:30p.m. at the grange
hall, located on County Road I nonh
of Salem Center. The public is invited to attend the potluck dinner and
are asked to bring a covered dish.
Trustees to meet
, The Rutland Township Trustees There will be games and crafts fol1win hold their year-end meeting on low.ing the meeting.
'
Wednesday, 5:30p.m. at the Rutland
Southern Board
, Fire Station.
The Southern Boar.d of Education
Christmas dinner sel
- will f!1eet at 7 p.rn. Monday at South·
Star Orange 778 and Star Junior em High School.
Onl&amp;ie
1997 membership tickets for the
Meigs County Agricultural Society
on sale at the Sugar Run Mill,
.Pomeroy.

..

I

I

TP·C District

:Meigs announcements

Stocks

••

Dan~y C. Buffington, 38 , Pomeroy, was arrested Thursday night b~
the Meigs County Sherifrs Depanmcnl on a Meigs County Coun war&gt;
rant alleging he violated terms on his bond by going against a cou"· ·
protective order.
Buffington was out on bond on charges of criminal damaging
as,sauh. He was lodged in the coun1y jail pending a hearing in Counl:~
Coun.'
·

.Gloria. 'Kay' W9lfe .

,Am Ell Po- ....................... 311'!.
Akzo ......................................65'!.
A1hl1nd 011 .....................,.......44
ATAT ............................ ~ ........ 38\
B•nk One ................................4~
Bob' Evans •••••••. :................... 12f.
Borg-Werner ......................... 3U
Champion ...............................22
Charming Shope ...................5'1..

Mother charged
with dumping
newborn child

Meigs EMS runs

.•
•

..-3

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions- none .
Thursday discharges - Woodrow
Hall , Racine.
Holzer Medical Center
DiSch$rges Dec. 12 - Patricia scene.
Smith, Mrs. Mark Porter and daughSYRACUSE
ter, Thomas Scrctin, Elva Golden.
6:19 p.m., Rocksprings RchabiliBirths- Mr. and Mrs. John Col- tat ion Center; Phyllis Haley, VMH .
ley, son, Gallipolis; Mr. ·and Mrs. .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Jason Tucker, son, Leon, W.Va.
3:15p.m., Pooler Road. Glcnois
(PubliShed with permission)
Hoffman. VMH.

Landa End .............................2&amp;\

UmHed ..................................18\
, Ohio Valley B•nk....................31
One Valley ...............................37

•.J

,; People• ........;........................ :.27

:
:
"
;
:

• Prern Flnl ............................... 13\
Rockwlll ...............................61'1.
... AD-Shell .............................. 165~
~ Shoney'a ......;..........................

+

&amp;""n

t

Star.Bank .......... .'...................
.. Wendy'• ................................ 18,.

•
•

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-·-·-

: Worthlngton .......................... 191,l,

.

;-

Stock report1 ere the 10:30
~ a.m. QUOin provided by Ad-t
, of Gllfllpolle.
·

.:u.----------------------~
,_...----....;.,;.,~

'ting for two hours by thctime the
"Hallelujah Chorus'' was sung.
Feeling ·tbe need to stretch his
legs, he got up. The audience, seeing
their king stand, followed protocol
and stood too. ·
The other· version is·that King
George was attending the oratorio's
first London performance and was so
moved by the "Hal.lclujah Chorus"
that he involuntarily rose from ·his
. scat.
Out of respect to their king, members of the audience rose too.
Whichever version you believe,
Merry Christmas!
· '
George PhiJcnz iS a syndicated
writer for Newspaper li:ntcrprite
Association.

The Daily Sentinel

The late Louis Cassels " Parable
of the Birds" has been r,eprinted
· ~·ny tim~s in the ~7 ye~rs since it.· George R. P/agenz
· f1rst appeared m the Chnstmas cdi,
tions.of new~papcrs across the·coun- C(tught in the storm, and in a despertry in 1959.
ate search for shelter h.ad tried to ny
It has also been read many iimes through the window.
on the radio. i myS&lt;:Ifbroadcast it that
'"I can'l let these poor creatures
first year over the CBS station in lie there and freeze,' he thought. 'But
Boston where I worked. Cassels was how can I help them?'
religion editor of United Press Inter" Then he remembered the ham. It
national.
would provide a warm shelter. He
"Oncf u~n a tiniC,'• the story quickly put on his coat and boots and
began. "there was a man who looked tramped through the deepening snow
upon Christmas as a lot of humbug. to the ham. He opened the doors wide
He wasn 't a Scrooge. He was a very and turned on the light.
kind and decent person , generous to
"But the birds did.n't come in .
his family, upright in all his dealings
''' Food will bring them iQ, • he
with other men.
thought. So he hurried back to the
''But he didn ''t bclicv~ all that stuff house (or bread crumbs. which he
about God becoming man, wllich sprinkled on the snow to make a trail
churches proclaim at Christmas. Why into the, barn.
By The Aaaocleted Pre11
would God want to do anything like · "To his dismay, the birds ignored
Today is Friday, Dec. 13, the A8th day of 1996. There arc 18 days left
tile bread crumbs and continued to in the year.
that?
"So when his family left to attend nop around helplessly in the snow.
TodJiy's Highlight in History:
midnight services on Christmas Eve, He tried shooing them into the bam
On Dec. 13, 1835. Phillips Brooks, the American Episcopal bishop who
he stayed home.
by walking around and waving his wrote the words to "0 Little Town of Bethlehem, " was born in Boston.
"Shonly after the family drove arms. They scattered in every dirccOn this date:
,
,
away, snow began to fall. He went to tion •• except into the warm, lighted
In I 577, Sir Francis Drake of England set out with five ships on a nearthe window and watched the nurries baril.
.
.
ly 3-year journey that would take him around the world.
getting heavier and heavier. Some
"'They find me a strange and terIn 1642. Dutch navigator Ahel Tasman arrived in present-day New
time later. as he was reading his rifying creature,' he said to himself, Zealand. .
•
newspaper by the fire, he was stanled 'and I can't seem to think of any ytay
In 1769, Danmouth College, in New Hampshire, received its chartCr.
by a thudding sound that was quick- to let them know they can trust me.•
In 1862, Union forces suffeted a major defeat to the Confederates at th&lt;i
ly followed by another. Then an~th'!'Jf only 1 could be a' bird myself · Battle of Fredericksburg.
' I

Ruby Smith· Grueser
Ruby Smith Grueser, Minersville, died Thursday, Dec. 12, 1996 in Fon
Worth, Texas.
Arrangements will be announced later by the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

,•

(!JSPS Zll-Mfl
PubiiRhed every afternoon. Monday throuJh
Friclly. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohlt:t Valley Publidlina Co~yiOanlett Co..
Pomeroy, Ohio .r4~769, Ph. 992·21!'16. Se·cond
C:lw poMOJt pojd 111 Pomeroy. Ohiv •

Saturdcay, Dec•.14, 1996 - 1:00 P.M.

MeMbtrz The Ai~hued Preu. ond the Ohio

In thelobby .of Farmers Bank in Pomeroy

~~ A~IOdarion.

POSTMASTHR: Send nddn::u correctiam: ro
The Daily Sentinel. I II Coon Sr., PomUoy,

-

Ohkl4l769.

SIJISCRirTION RATIS

., Cwrler ... ,....... .....

One w..t ..................................................$2.00
One Moooh................................................SllV

7DI•noe•

One Year ............................................... 1104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE

Stop in and bid on the dolls In our "Dress A Doll" Contest. All
proceeds will go to tne United Fund.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
Refreshments will be served. Open to the public. Call 992-2136
for: .more information•

Dlily .................................... ................ ]! Centa

-

Sublt'libml noc dealrina tO PlY the carrier moy
n:nrit In adYilnct direct 10 The Daily Sendnet
Ofla ~~. 11• « 12 month liP•. Credit wDI be

Today in hi·s tory

••

Woman's missing money recovered

MICH.

Bob Dole's hidden worry

Clinton zigzags
.back to the middle
. WASHINGTON - Back in the middle, President Clinton sounded as
thdugh he'd never lefL There was a time when centrist Democrats ·thought
• ·he had, but that rift was forgotten. The vital center. he said. will be the base
;for his second term.
. So it was a homecoming Wednesday as Clinton addressed the Democ:ratic Leadership Council, an organization he helped found I r years ago to
.~the party away from liberal habits to centrist ones.
In Democratic defeat two years ago, some of his old allies accused him
of straying leftward to the point that he became a drag on the ticket. He won
.in 1992 as a New Democrat of the center, but they complained he didn't govern as one.
• Clinton acknowledged at the time that he'd made his share of mistakes,
but disputed the centrists who had become his critics on social issues and
, :On his massive health care proposal. ·
'; The president said he had been misunderstood, not misguided, and that
- ilhe voters in 1994'didn't get the message of deficit reduction, smaller gov; -emment and economic expansion.
·
·
~: But he then set about moderating the message, moving·to the center for
: )lis re-election.campaign, emphasizing balanced budgets, crime control, the,
-welfare reform push he'd promised but postponed earlier. By campaign time,
J tepublicans were complaining that he'd e.propriated their themes.
• Dick Morris, the campaign consultant who advised him on that course
: ;before he was forced to resign over his reponed involvement with a prosti: 1ute, said in a lecture at New York University on Tuesday that Clinton tacks
: like a sailor to go with the wind.
•
·
:; It is a zigzag that ends up where he wants to go, Morris was quoted as
- ~aymg .
·
·
• Clinton prefers to chan it as a straight line. He recalled telling the DLC
"Jive years ago that their agenda was neither liberal nor conservative but both
:Jlnd.different.
,
·
·
'
• Either way it worked, .and he returned to the council Wednesday to taik
: of his plan for the second ·term in what•was billed .as a preview of his Jan.
~ 20 inaugural address.
·· He stuck with the themes of his campaign: balancing the budget, improv·
· ing education, jobs instead of welfare, crime control, an expanded family
leave law, political finance reform, SJ!Ialler, more efficient government.
• 1breading them all was his refrain o("the-vital center" common ground,
he said. for Americans of either party or of no pany. "I stand ready to forge
·a coalition of the center, of broad consensus for creative and consistent and
· unftinching action," Clinton said.
· ' He said he believes the Republican leaders of Congress share that aim.
:'All of us have heard the voters' mandate -in this election," Clinton said.
ttNOw we must acL" '·
,
: Republicans talk of cooperation and problem-solving too.
1 Still, the test of such pledges will come next month, when it'$ time for
· 'detailed proposals.
. "President Clinton won re-election on the themes of smaller government,
:family values and strengthening communities," Sen. Dan Coats of Indiana
said in a Republican radio address. "Those are fine. noble ideas ....
• "And if the president chooses to govern as he campaigned, he will find
a cooperative Congress,".Coats said. "Yet we have reached point where
this discussion must get more specific. Vague campaign promises must
become conCrete proposals."
nun's where the strains set in. But ·clinton said they can be overcome
;"if then: is a vital American center where there is cooperation across lines
of pany and philosophy." He said that is what voters demanded in the elec1ion that continYed politically divided government.
Both sides have had chastening lessons - Clinton in the Democratic
. defeat two year,; ago, Republicans in the backlash against the government
shutdowns iri 1995 budget disputes with the president.
Reason ~nough to reach toward the center, from both directions.
· Or as Clinton's chief spokesman, Mike McCurry, put it:
"As a practical matter, the president sees the future of decision-making
in Washington as a bipartisan exercise if it's to be successful, ifit's to make

I News in Brief. ·

AccuW~ forecast for daytime conditions and hip temperatures

One of the abiding mysteries of
the recent presidential campaign was
Sen. Dole's reluctance to use the
"character issue" against President
Clinton. Here was a president who
had, all too clearly, betrayed his wife
repeatedly while governor of
Arkansas -- and not just occasionally or episodically, but by conducting
affairs with other women over periods of years.
And if such sexual escapades
were to be deemed irrelevant to Mr.
Clinton's conduct as president, there
wen: the various scandals that have
rocked the Clinton White House,
from Travelgate and Filegate to !adogate, and not forJieuing th&lt;i mysteri'
ous reappearance of Mrs. Clinton's
subpoenaed billing records.
It ~~-added up to a mountain of

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Wc&lt;llher
S.tunlay,Dec.14

'• 2

By Wlll'-m A. R111hlr

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio .
814-812·2156.• Fu: 992·2157

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~Bank In#···

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

No oubtcitpdoo by malt psmllled In , _
..-borne Cllrier .-vict is halklblt;
l'ltbtltller- ... """ .. odj.uo - ...
Ina
tbt •cr'Pdon period. Sub•cripliOft rw

-

·-pdon.

. .,be ltoplomentod b]' dllnti"l dlo

donllan of lilt

__
n-.. :. . . . . . .,. . :. .
MAIL IUIICIIII'TIONS

-MolpCI l -.............................,, ..................$27.!0

26 ......... 1..........................................$5!.12

. ' l -......................... ,....................SI05.l6
,....~

13 -

............................... - ...............S29.2:1

.31 ......... "'-'""'''""~"'''''-''""''''''-156...

stOt.72

'

ln1els Furniture
&amp; Jewelry
101 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, CiH

tn-2835

-~
...,.

..

Sun.1-4

'

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
lll _ _ _
P.O.IOI621
~. OHol\7111

HQURS

hi.N

/•

. Member F.D.I.C.

011/992·2130

Cli:IJ--7
P.rl. b:IJ9

l_,l'laiW. OHol\783
OIW7·ll61

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�Sports

The Daily Sent~,,

UMass, TCU and Colorado get wins

After Turley scores 1,000th career point,

Southern girls beat Nelsonvil~e-York 63-61 in OT
~ lttoolcf~UqllllteiSandoneover­

lime, but when tile dust hid finally
cleared in Buchtel, Southern's gin'
bukctball team (3-3) stood alone in
victory with a hard-fought63-61 TriVallcy Conference victory over tile
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes (2-5)
Thursday night in girls' lVC haslletball aclion.
.
, Soutilern's win ' was hallmarked
by l'1e I,OOOth career point by seniQr
auw Renee Turley, who notched a
.-me-high 33 points, and is now
averag.ing 27.5 points per game.
; Behind Thrley's 33-point, I 0-

rebojlnd, six-steal perfonnance came
I0 poinl&lt; from Erica Amou and K.im
Sayre.
N-Y was led by a 24-point effort
from Heather Cagg, while Michelh!
Johnson added 10.
Southern burst into a 14-6 lead,
led by six EricaAmou points and six
Turley markers. Turley canned eight
in the second quaner, however, Nelsonville got six Johnson points, and
a well-balanced effort to cut Southem's advantage to 28·21 at the half.
A hard -fought tllird round
all owed Southern to gain one on the
Buckeyes at 42-34, but a 21- 13 out-

burst by the hosts in the final rouod
ended things at 55-SS after four
rounds.
AI the I :45 mark in the · fourth
quaner, Renee Thrley scored her
IOOOth carur poin·l. Coming into the
game the senior ballhandler need 24
points to set the mark. and achieved
the goal with a short trademark
jumper. Critchfield killed the Tornadoes with eight fourth-quarter points,
her total for the game, all of which
came in the final round.
When the going got tough, however, Southern rose to the occassion.
as Amott hit two free throws to help

secure the win. Thrley hit six points
in overtime to seal the 63-61 Southem win.
Southern hit 24-55 for 55% and
was 0-8 on threes while hitting 1522 at the line with 35 rebounds (Thrley 10, Amott 6, Horst 4). Southern
had 17 steals (Turley 6, Sayre 4); 10
assists (Thrley 4, Caldwell 3); 24
turnovers, 15 fouls and five blocks
(Turley 3).
· •
N-Yhit23-47 for 49% and was 47 from the three-point line. N-Y hit
11-17 at the line with 17 rebounds,
five steals, . five assists, ' 16
tumovers,and 21 fouls.

AMHERST, Mau. (AP) Cbdon a.t&amp; ac:ored 11 poiJQ u

Homed FI'Ois' points in lhe frenetic it 65-63 and lhen Edmonds scored
final two min-. TCU (6-1) !Jailed seven of lhe next nine CU points.
~o.--alonalint­ the 1l=nien (5-2) 78-73 after two flee
The Buffs led 74-65 with 32 sechalf scorina famine to tum back 'throws by Boston 's Thnji Awojohi onds left.
Drexel 69-48 in an independent with I :35 left.
'
Colorado had opened up at llmatchup Thursday.
But Johnson made 1 three-point- pointlead,.S6-45, at 12:43 of !he secUMus (3-3) went 8 1/2 min~tes er from tile top of tile key at I :22 and ond half, but the Rams exploded for
between il&lt; first and second haskets another three-pointer from lhe right 12 of the next 14 poinu to close to
but still managed 1o lead 27-21 at wing to pull !he Frogs within one at 58-57 with 7:46 left.
halftime. In lhe second half, tile Min- 80-79 with 56 seconds to play.
That run was keyed by James
utemen used a 15-2 run in tile rtrSt
Boston couldn't convert a three- Smith, who donated eight poinl.&lt;.
four minUtes to seallhe victory.
point auempt with 19 seconds to go,
Other scoring leaders for ColThe putaw1y surge by UMass and TCU's Damian Walker pulled Orado were Martice Moore ( 13 ),
included back-te&gt;-back tine-pointers down lhe rebound, setting tile stage Alan Barksdale ( 12) and Greg Jensen
by Edllar Padilla. Lari ~ner added for Johnsvn's winning goal.
. (10).
.
13 points, followed by Cannelo
The Terriers called time out with
Bryan Christiansen led CSU scorTravieso with II.
·
5.9 seconds remaining to set up !heir ing with 16, followed by Smith (12),
While lhe Minutemen were in final sho~ but point guani LeVar .and Mall Bameu and Jameel Mahlheirdrough~ Drexel (3-3, 2.0AmerFolk's wild 35-footer at lhe buzzer mud (10 each).
ica East) made 12 s!Jaight points to bounced away.
CU coach Ricardo Pallon said lhe
go in front 14-2.
·
Awojobi led all scorers with 26 key was tile Buffs' ability in the secBut the Minutemen lhen scored poinl&lt;. James Penny backed Johnson ond half to penetrate the Rams' zone
lhe next I0 to stan tileir comeback. with 23 points and 12 rebounds.
defense.
UMass shot .~71 from lhe field and
Colondo76
''The Rams used the zone defense
Drexel was .292 before intermission.
·Colol'llllo St 69
to keep us on the perimeter (in the
Jeff Myers had 12 points and Joe
At B&lt;&gt;ulder, Colo., Colorado first half), and the one thing I felt we
Lindennen H for Drexel,
outscored Colorado State 13-6 in the weren'tdoi~g was penetrating. In tlje
Twll Christian 81
last five minutes, including seven second half we were able to do that,"
Boston Ualversary
points from scoring .leader .fred he said.
At Fort Worth, Texas, Malcolm
Edmonds, for a 76-69 victory here
·Edmoods said the Buffs really
Johnson scored 17 of his 23 points in
Thursday night.
didn't feel comfortable, even with an
the second half, including a 17-footThe Colorado Buffaloes (6-2) 11 -pointlead.
,
er with 12.5 seconds remaining,
last were tied with Colorado State (6"There's no quit in them (CSU),"
leading Texas Christian past Boston
2j at 63 with 5:08 remaining.
he said.
·
University, 81-80, Thursday night
The Buffs took lhe lead .for good
CSU coach Stew Morrill said it
Johnson scored all eight of the
on a shot by Ronnie DeGray to make · came down to a few bounces of the

Reserve notes: Nelsonville won
the reserve game 24-13. For South·
em Stacy Lyons .and K.im Ihle had
four each.
The future: Southern hosts Eastem on Monday, Dec. 16.
Ouarter l!dllll
Southern ·
14-14-14-13-8=63
Nei.-York
6- 15 · 1 ·3 -21-6~61
RENEE TURLEY
Nelsonvme-York: McClelland 2·
0-0=4, T. Critchfield 4-0-0=8, John·
son 5-0-0=10, H. Cagg 3-4-6=24,
Shafer 1-0-0=2, A. Dalton 1 -0-2~4 .
Shafer 1-0-2=4, Adams 2-0- 1=5.
Totals: 19-4-11117=61

Southern: Turley 11411/17=33, '.
Caldwell 1-0-0=2, Sayre 4-0-2= 10, ,
Friend 1-0-0=2, Horst 3-0-0=6,
Arnou 4-0-2= I0. Totals: :W-015/22=63
.

"'eigs girls beat Miller 41-26.to get fourth str~ight victory
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Corrapondent
The Meigs Marauders jumped out
to a 14-2 lead after one period and
coasted to a 41-26 win over Miller in
girls'lVC basketball action Thursday evening 'at Larry R. Morrison
G~nasium.
.
,
• ·The win is lhe fourth in a row for
lb,e Marauders and runs their reconi
to 4-2 overall and 4-1 in the lVC's
.
.

Ohio Division. The win could have
been a costly one for Meigs, as 5•
foot-10 sophomore Tracy Coffey
went down early in the game with an
ankle injury.. U. is not known at this
time how serious the injury is.
Meigs jumped out on top early
building a I 7-41ead early in the second period. The Lady Falcons were
able to pull to within 24-8 at the half.

In the second half the Falcons
tried to chip away at the Marauder
lead oul&lt;coring Meigs 13- 11 to pull
to within 35-21 heading into the final
period.
Meigs was held to only field goal
in the final eight minutes outscoring
Miller 6-5 in the period to make the
final score 41-26. The game was also
closer because the Marauders were

.

•t

unable to cash in on their foul shots
in the period. Meigs went to the line
15 times in the final period, but only
made four of the shots.
Marauder coach Ron Log~n went
to his bench early and often in the
contest as II of the 14 Marauders
dressed saw action in the first half.
Carrisa Ash led a balanced Meigs
scoring attack with 10 points. Cheryl

Jewell added seven.
Meigs hit 13 0[·35 from the tloor
including 0 of three from three-point ·
range for 38%, and 15 of34 from the
line for 44%. The Marauders pulled
in 29 rebounds, with Davis grabbing
seven. Meigs turned the ball over 27
times, had nine assists led by Ash
with three and 10 stc~ led by Davis
with three. ,
·
. Carrie Cook leo Miller with eight
points. No other statistics were available on Miller
Reserve no~. In the reserve
game, Meigs ju
d out to a 14-3
lead
and
coast
'
to
• 42-15 win.
,(Goins 7).
Tangy Laudenni led Meigs (5-I)
Eastern hBd nine steals (Evans 3,
with 16. Heather Compston led the
Karr 3); 17 turnovers, seven assists
Falcons With seven.
(Evans ~) and 13 fouls. Waterford
The future: Meigs will tmvello
had nine steals (Goins 3); 10
Point Pleasant on Wednesday and
turnovers, six assists (Goins 4) and
will hit the road .again vn Thursday
1.3 fouls.
when they take on Southern in
Eastern goes to Southern MonRacine.
day.
Quarter l!dllll
Quarter l!dllll
Miller
2-6-13-5=26
Eastern
·· 4-15-9-19=47 , Meigs
14-10-11-6=41'
Waterford
21-14-16-13=64
, Miller: Beth · Laning 1-0-0=2,
Eastern: Becky Davis 4-1 -0= II,
Kristen Plant 1-0-1=3,Angie Lucas
Stephanie Evans 2-1 -4/4= 13, Valerie
1-0·0=2, Carrie Cook 2-0-4=8,
Karr 6-0-3/4= 15, Ann Wiggins 2,00=4, Chasatie Hollon 1-0-0=2, Angi
Wolfe 1-0-0/2=2. Totals: 16·2·
711~7
.
Waterford: Kristi Offenberger 10-0=2, Jennifer Nichols 6-0-0= 12,
Lori Miller 1-0=2, Laura Goings 132-011=32, Tiffany Arnold 2-0=4,
Katrina Greene 1-0·0=2, Tisha Skinner 5-0-012= I0. Totals: 29-2-013=64

Phawny Dutiel ~-0-0=6, Christy '
Halasz 2-0-1=5. Totals: 10-0-6=26
Meigs: Becky Smith 1-0-0=2, '
Carissa Ash 4-0-2= 10, Taryn-Doidgc
2-0-0=4, Chery Jewell 2-0-0=4, Tricia Davis 0-0-6=6, Ashley Roach 20-0=4, Brandi Meadows 0-0-3=3, ~
Melissa Werry 2~0-1,5 . Totals: 13-'
0-15=41
•

Waterford ·girls beat Eastern 64-47
By SCOTT WOLFE
Eatlm Girts' Coach

(15.2 ptsl-\lame),led the Eagles with
IS points and 15 rebounds in a
Ranked 20th in the Ohio coach- tremendous effort. Sophomore guard
e$' pre-season girls' basketball poll, . Stephanie Evans tallied 13 points
the 4-1 Waterfoni Wildcats rolled to and three steals, freshman Becky
a 64-47 non-league triumph over the Davis added II points and· four
young Eastern Eagles Thursday ·rebounds.
nisht in varsity action at Eastern
The offensive fireworks were
lfigh School.
provided by Laura Goins who led the
·. Faced with the loss of point Wildcats with 32 points, hitting .15gllard Juli Hayman earlier in the sea- 25 from the floor and had seven
svn. the Eagles (2-3) suffered anoth- . rebounds and four assists . Jennifer
er blow when . post-turned-po(nt Nichols added 12 points and Tisha
guard Jessica Brannon came down Skinner had 10.
Although Eastern 'played a great
~ith the flu and missed Thursday's
same. Becky Davis and Chasatie last three quaners, the game was
Hollon, both freshmen, subbed at the decided . in the first period, when
p'oint and did anoutstanding job for ~tern went .2-13 from the field, ,
d)e yoilthful Eastern varsity.
before recovering the second frame
Despite mssing the 13.75 points with a 7-16 effort. Meanwhile,
W game punch that Brannon nor- Waterford raced to its, 21-4 lead by
ri!ally provides, Eastern scored its hitting I0-of-13 shots from the field
second highest offensive output of for 77%. The sc·orching effort broke
~season . Sophomore Valeri&lt; Karr open an 8-2 Waterford lead as Goins

ripped the nets for 15 first-period
points.
Eastern made a great comeback
bid in the second frame, once cuuing
the lead to -24-12 behind a super
effort f{om freshman guard Becky
.Davis. Davis notched a three-pointer and canned three morefield goals
to bring Eastern much closer, but
Goins again got hot and pushed
Wa\erfoni to a 35-19 halftime advantage.
· Eastern stayed close for most of
the third period, but wavered in the
last two minutes and fell to 5 I ' 28
before outscoring Waterford 19-13 .
going down the stretch.
Eastern hit 19-5 I overall for 39.2
percent, 2-5 threes and was 7-10 at
the line with 29 rebounds, led by
Karr's 15, Angie Wolfe's four and
Davis' four. Waterford hit a si1.zling
45.5 percent, hit 2-6 threes and was
0-3 at the line, with 29 rebounds

'

.

ridge for the third straight game with
23 points, helped the Matadors get
off to a 12-point lead and later return
from a I0-point deficit.
Late in the second half, Rhoden's
driving layup pulled Northridge to
within 76-73, but Trenton Cross
hurried a pass and lost t~c ball to

Ohio. Simmons stole the ball and ran
halfthe court for the game-clinching
dunk.
Co.rcy Reed stole the in-bounds
pass and scored the game's final basket.
Ohio improves to 2-2 with the
win, while Northridge drops to 1-4.

--

EASTERN CONFERENCE

r..
11:
Mlami .................... l1

NewYork .............. l4
OriMdo ...................9
WOibinJ'Oft ...... .......8
Philadelphia ............7
New Jersey ..............S
..................... ~

• NEW YORK (AP) - Four.
'three. 1Wo. One. Launch.
· With such a countdown, CNN-SI
i9ined the battle for supremacy with
&amp;sPNEWS Thursday night in the aiiS,O.U news network arena, which is
.tling more crowded by the month.
"Tonight we launc~ a new !'"ble
!flwQrk, a network dedicated to
c:Jivering sports news," CNN Sports
IIJ,IChor Nick Charles said, uttering
lite network's first wonis. "This is a
jeurnalistic endeavor."
·
: With CNN, the acclaimed allnew~ all-the-time leader in television,joining SpOrts Illustrated in this
venture, that's how CNN-SI would
ltJ&lt;e to stamp itself. journalistically
speaking. ·
And it started CNN-SI on a
cOIIrse that will result in a collision
of giants. with ESPN and Sports
Illustrated the undisputed major
hrancfnames in sports news.
"I think I'm going to feel like
pukinl-" CNN senior vice president
Jjm Walton joked as the 8 P·'l'· EST
hbur of launch drew ncar.
' The switch was thrown in Los
Anceles at the national cable 1V
lllow. CNN-Sl came on the air with
1 quick collage ·of sports scenes,
IOII1C bard-driving rock'n'roll music
and a countdown fro!ll 30 to launch.
Then, when CNN-SI went live,
lonJiime pannen Charles and Fred
tfickman were on the set, and their
finl story was the eod of Boomer
Eaiason 's one-day walkout at the
Arizona Caniinals.
"So, we begin again," said
Charles, a pioneer of the CNN
launch in 1980, "and here are lhe top
stories."
The venture represents the first
major project by lhe company created when nme Warner and Turner
B~dcasting merged. CNN-SI
hopes to create 1 unique identjty with ·
1110ft emphasis placed on story·
tllliq and less on highlights, as well
11 replarly scheduled live intema~
tianaJ spons shows from CNN's

l

London bufuu.
''Thialw beeo, for· me personally, 1 murbble ride," Walton said
I

from the CNN-SI headquarters in
Atlanta. "We've taken two very distinct cultures - the 24-hour TV
news environment of CNN and the
weekly print environment of Sports ,
Illustrated- and married them,"
In the first half· hour of the show,
Charles and Hickman threw the
broadcast to New York, where a segment had been taped earlier at the
small studio located in Sports Illustrated 's Manh~ttan office.
NcwSport, operated by Prime
SportsChannel Network, began in
February 1994, and now reaches a
potential ofaboutiOmillion homes.
,It · was without competition until
ESPNEWS launched on Nov. I to·nn

estimated 1.5 million homes, most
by a c-band satellite dish.
At the time of the CNN-SI
launch, ESPNEWS still had not
updated those figures but planned to
do so soon.
CNN-SI said Thursday that it
would start with about 4.5 million
homes, all but a half-million of ·
those via c-band dish. With a February commitment from Prime Star for
another 1.5 million, CNN-SI said it
would have at least 6 million potcnrial viewing homes by early 1997.
Speculation in the i~dustry was
that many cable systems were wait, ing until both new networks were
available, creating a more competi-

tivc pricing situation before adding
them.
Both Turner Broadcasting and
ESPN did colcnsi.vc market studies
to dctenninc the potential for an allsports news network on cable. What
those studies have not told them,
however, is whether the market will
support just one, perhaps two, or
even more such networks.
At the time of'the ESPNEWS
stan-up, ESPN president Steve Bomstein would only predict that five
years from now, ESPNEWS would
be going strong.

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Dc:troi1.................... 16 4 .800
Allabta ................... I:Z 8 .600
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LA ...................... I7 7 - .708
Seto~ .................... l6
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Ponllad ................. u 9 __,.,
GoldonSulle ....... ... 8 14 J64
LA. Clippers ......... .. 8 14 J64
Sactamealo ............. 8 14 J64
Phoenl• .................... 14 '.:100

ISis;lnature, 4 dr, PS, PB, auto, coach ;oof, AMIFM cass. with ~nrnnAcl
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in stock to choose from. 6 months 7500 miles, penn warranty. ASK
DETAILS!
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·

Chil!ltp ot Nno .Ieney, 7:)() p.m.
Denwer 1111 Wlllhinalon. 7:JO p.m.
Philadelphia all Oiarluctc. 7JO p.m.
B~lnn ot Indiana. 7:30p.m.
Gulda:n Sule 11 Cleftlllflll 8 p.m.
Phocftillll MiMCIOia.ll p.m.
OrlMdn at VIW.'fMWI', 10 p.m.
Pm:land. L.A. l..Dka'L IOJO p.AL

1.-.

'
4 dr, Power steering, PB, auto, PW, POL, AMIFM cass,

CU!~ton1l

wheels, 4 cyt EFI eng., $48QO.OO. Also 1990 Tempo with sam"
$3800. Botti' have 6 months, 7500 miles penn warranty. ASK
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Will be published

Monday, December 23rd
•
m

The Daily Sentinel
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Tuscawoarus Cent. Cath. ~~ .

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Sundcn lkt ...... l."iK
Wutt c=rs, Phil ..... JO~
Allen, WDSh ....... ;\04
E. Smith. 0;11 ..... 30:1
Jnhn.utn, C1• ...... 2!11

..

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IIM7

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12.0 39
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HURRY, DEADLINE

"There is no question it•s a

Saturday's - ·

N~w En~lantllll N.Y. Giani~ . 12;.10,

.

New Orleans ;11 SL '-•";Its· 4J\ 01.

Htmst un at Baltirtllvc. IJI.Ill
lnJinnaJkl li~ 111 (.:incilmllli . IJ1.nl.
Knns;a., Ci1y m IMfak1. I p m.
Miouni ·at N.Y. Jet~. IJI.m.
MimM.'liO!a al Gr...ocn Ba)'. I fUll .
Pin ~burgll at Carolina. IJI.m,
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Murrell. NY -1... .. 264 IB4 4.J 7K ~
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Detroit ut Suo FrnnciM."U, IJ p.m.

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piCked up Ill eeeonct elrllght Tri-VIItey
111ct Hocking Dlvlllon title In ~- In front
ere (L-A) Jayme MUIM', Cynthll C.ldwwll, Jenny
Friend, Jenny Y•gt.,, ........ Layn. and Kim
..,.. Behind tMm are Amber Th,omu, Kerl

Con,.,·

Ohio H.S. prll' scons

C.ldMII, Re- 1\lrlly, Brllnne Proffitt, Hillery
llarrle, and Emily Duhl. Senior _..,.,.,. ollhe
volleyball t11m ncttUIIy wrapped up their~
ltltllght Tri-Yiillty COn,.,. a title lind conoludo
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with a • 7 _.ll,_d.The
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I Deaclline: Mitday, Dec. 16 at 3 p.m.

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EASTERN CONFERENCE
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107fl 2~ IJ
3fi.'\O lY 15
Jfll7 2~ 10
2402 22 12
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Allanlil al Jacbunvillt'. I p.m
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NCAA Divison I
men's scores

Stardag prlee ~HO

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Form

Sunday's acames

Sundly'•P-

$100 off a day tiD sold

J:
'

Official
Entry

NFL's Week 16 slate
p.m.

T

7

Boslon :u Detroit, 7:30p.m.
WuhinJIQI, 111 Ooidal Saote, A p.m.
Vancouwer MPhoeni1., 9 p.m.
Housron 111 Pmlaad. IOp.m.

1918 •RCURY SAlLE WAGON

'

MONDAY, DEC. 16, AT 3 P.M.

p.m.

crowded marketplace, very. competitive," said Walton.
·

;

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......... K~ lOll&lt; 12.1 40
Ccnh!l'll, Ariz ........ K~ blW 7.K 31.J 6
Pelriman, Dci ....... K2 913 I 1.1 44 ~

You. Mooney 6'1. Vuu. Chllnc=y .14
You. Ro1yen ~7 . C:1mpbdl Mcmurial

Pio,: kcn:;. Cin.......... 92 1077

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WheclerJburB. 62, S. Wc=~l'"'t ~4
Wnndnw.IOft' .1M, Gibsonhut~ JO
W(IOSI\.'t ~M . Uniontown Ll1ll.e J'&gt;~
You . 81larchmn ~9. You. UNi.uhn~ Jl .

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Please enctose .se~·addressed,
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NBA standings

1989 LINCOUI TOWN CAR

ball.
"There was 1 rebOund or two we
just didn't get," he said.
Ark-Little Rock 85
Ark-Pine Bluff 77
At Pine Bluff, Ark., Malik Dixon
made seven of eight free throws late
to ice an 85-77 victory Thursday
night for Arkansas-Liule Rock over
Arkansas-Pine Bluff.
The Trojan• (3-3) captured the
lead for good with 2:10 minutes to
play, 77-76, on a bucket by
Muntrelle Dobbins. Dixon led
UALR with 23 points. .
UALR had only seven players
available for the game, and Coach
Wimp Sanderson said before the
game that it should have been canceled beca~se several of his players
were sick or recovering from a flulike illness.
UAPB (2-5) led 39-37 at the half
on a buzzer-beating three-pointer by
K.evin Soward. The Golden Lions
led early in the half but UALR went
on an 8.() run midway through the
half to take a 17-161ead with 9:30to
play.
'
The Trojans held the lead until
UALR's Shennan Lusk was called
for goaltending to tie the score 35-35
with I :30 to play. Lusk then made a
basket to give the Trojans a twopoint lead and then Sowani made a
three as the first half ended . .

Scoreboard
Bilsketball

()U men beat Cal State-Northridge·so-73
.' LOS ANGELES (AP)- Curtis _: ~ary reasons, returned to the team
Simmons came out of suspension to Thursday, but was not allowed to
stan. He carne off the bench to score
sj:ore 32 wints for Ohio, including
a; game-sealing dunk, as he led the 19 first-half points as the Bobcats (2- ·
2) struggled to keep pace with the
· Bobcal&lt; to an 80-73 victory over Cal
Matadors (1-4). Ohio trailed 39-37 at
State-Northridge on Thursday.
the half.
' Simmons, who was one of five
Gerald Rhoden , who led NorthOhio players suspended for discipli'
.

.

•

In NCAA Dlvslon I college hoops,

~~~;---------~--------------------------~------------------------------------------~Frld~e~y~,D~~~c~•~m~bH~1~3~,1~1~M~!
By SCOTT WOLFE

The Dilly Sentinel • Page !I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

d.

•~~'''
_r.:=~onc24:mon::lhr:Jea:se:·~wl=tli~t:2~,ooo=m~l=te~per~year=,
p;Ius:tu:·~d:•re: • • tt&amp;:lll:t&amp;:aa:•G~ti*ila&amp;•&amp;• . ,..
-=~tee.:.:iii
and
credit

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief:---.
Prison sweep yield no weapons, drugs
LUCASVILLE - No weapons or drugs had been found in the first
day of a lockdown at the stale's maximum-security prison, a spokeswoman
satd Thursday.
Authorities placed the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at .
Lucasville in lockdown to search for contraband, including illegal drugs
and homemade weapons, prison spokeswoman Karen Hill said.
The prison was the scene of an II -day riot in April 1993 that left a
guard and nine inmates dead.
"It's normal procedure to perform a shakedown of an inmate's cell,"
Ms. Hill said. ''This time, it happens to be the entire institution."
She said Warden Terry J. Collins had received anonymous information about a possible threat to security, but she did not know the nature
of the threat.
Authorities had searched five cellblocks, housing about 400 inmates
by late Thursday afternoon, she said. About 15 cellblocks remained to be
checked. The prison houses I,290 inrqates.
Prison officials were working' with the State Highway Patrol to conduct the search. The prison hopes to retum 1to routine activity in two to
three days, Ms . Hill said.
.,,,

Man talked out of killing himself
TOLEDO - A man walked into a hospital's psychiatric ward Thursday and threatened to kill himself, police said.
Sgt. Richard Murphy said a police negotiator was able to talk Glenn
Hathaway, 46, of Oregon, out of commining suicide. ·
Murphy said no one was ever in any danger at St. Vincent Medical Center. He said thai after Hathaway dropped his gun, he was taken loa mental health clinic for evaluation.
When he's released from the clinic, Hathaway would be charged with
carrying a concealed weapon.
Murphy said Hathaway went up the sixth floor and asked to see his
counselor. Wben he was told the counselor wasn' t available,'he pulled out
a knife and a handgun , and pointed the .38-caliber gun at his head.
There were people in the waiting room at the time- including chi!·
,dren- but they were allowed to leave, Murphy said.
''We immediately evacuated the staff and the patients," he said.
He 'said Hathaway told Jiolice that he was· down in his luck and
depressed.

Investigation nets ewer 40 arrests

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 13, 1998

Friday, December 13, 1996

Possible test contamination
arises in O.J. trial testimony
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Aeeocleted Press Writer
SANTA MONICA, Calif. - A
police technician could have contaminated blood evidence in the O.J.
Simpson case when she used dirty
tweezers to collect crime-scene samples, a scientific expen testified for
the defense.
Microbiologist John Gerdes
acknowledged, however, that except
for a couple of tests, he had "no
direct evidence" of actual contamination, only of risky collection techniques and unusual results.
And as for those questioned tests
-on blood in Simpson's Bro 0co and
on a blood drop near the bodies of
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
Goldman - Gerdes backpedaled,
noting that other tests validated these
results.
Asked specifically during cross
examination whether it appeared the
Bronco blood test was not contaminated, Gerdes said, "Yeah, I guess
you could say that."
Questions from plaintiff.anorney
Tom Lambert at the wrongful death

trial Thursday followed the defense 's
auempt to sketch out an ominous
scene of a messy police !ab.
Defense lawyer Raben Blasier
played a videotape, with narration
frqm Gerdes, of a police technician
haphazardly collecting blood samples.
The video - produced by prose'cutors in Simpson's criminal trial to
demonstrate ·police efficie!ICY shows Andrea Mazzola swabbing up
blood drops while leaning a gloved
hand on · dirty ground, touching
tweezers with tlie same hand, then
using the tweezers to manipulate a
bloody swatch.
''I'm sure she's not aware of it,"
Gerdes .testified. "Everything thai's
been brushed around with her hands
(on the ground) is now on the.tweez,
ers."
.
"Anything on the ~weezers is
contaminated," he said, "and she
uses the tweezers to pick up an evidence swatch."
Mazzola was shown failing to
change her gloves between handling

ment.

Blasier, questioning Gerdes,
pressed his point that sophisticated
DNA results from two highly respect ed labs were. worthless because they
were based on such contaminated
samples.
·
In cross·examination, however,
Gerdes acknowledged that just
because samples could be contaminated didn't mean they were.
Blasier switched gears during
redirect questioning and focused on

Air Force sugg·ests no disciplinary action
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP Military Writer .

WASHINGTON- An Air Force
TOLEDO - Police said more than 40 people were arrested in drug ·
investigation
is recommending no
raids at about 30 sites throughout the city. ·
disciplinary action be taken against
The raids ended a 4 112-month undercover operation in which police
any military personnel for the June
were aided by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, said Capt.
truck bombing ihat killed 19 U.S. airRon Spann of the police special enforcement division. ·
.
,
_
men in Saudi Arabia, a senior PentaThose taken into custody face misdemeanor and felony drug charges.
gon
official says.
No injuries were r.:poned in the raids. which began at6:30 p.m. ThursThe finding is contained in a
day and continued early today, police Capt. Michael Murphy said.
report issued by Lt. Gen. James
Police seized unspecified amounts of suspected crack cocaine,
Record, who was given the authoricocaine, marijuana, handguns and shotguns..
ty
to decide whether Brig. Gen.. TerThe investigation began Aug. I. Previous raids linked to· the in,estiry!
J. Schwalier. commander of the
gation resulted in the seizure of more than $1 million wonh of narcotics,
facility in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia,
including nearly nine pounds of cocaine and crack cocaine, 250 pounds
should be disciplined or face courtof marijuana, three ounces of heroin, more than $80,000 in U.S. currenmania! proceedings, an official with
cy, and more than 20 fireanns. About 50 people fai:e felony and misdeknowledge of the report said Wednesmeanor charges from those raids.
day.
Spann .said those arrested so far were "small dealers." He said indictThe finding by Record is in sharp
ments against larger dealers could be expected by March. ·
contrast to the Downing commission
report, conducted by retired Army
WAUSEON - Owners of a kennel near Swanton face charges of cruspecial fortes Gen. Wayne Downing,
elly to animals.
.·
. . · .
who found Schwalier "did not adeSwanton police arrested Mary Barker, 39, and Jose Vasquez, 62, and · quately protect his forces from a terremoved dozens of dogs and puppies from Mary and Joe's Petland, which
rori st attack. ''
Ms. Barker and Vasquez operate. The animals were taken to the Fulton
· Defense·Secretary William Perry
County dog pound.
·
.
or~ered the Record inveStigation in
Swanton Police Chief Homer Chapa said Ms. Barker's son, Roger, who
September, following the release of
allegedly tried to stop police from arresting his mother, was arrested and
the Downing report.
charged with interf~ring with the arrest of another person.
Nineteen
airmen
under
Complaints against the kennel began several months ago when neighSchwaller's command died in a ter'bors called to say they were upset a]1o~t barking dogs. Chapa said Thursrorist bombing that lore open an
day.
·
eight-story apartment building in the
Some customers also alleged that health records for. pets \llere inacKhobar Towers complex.
·
curate and that some of the pedigree information provided by Ms. BarkThe Los Angeles Times reported
er was false ..
in Thursday's editions thallhe ClinMs. Barker and Vasquez have posted bond and arc to be arraigned Dec.
ton ad,ministration has drawn up
I8 in ·Eastern District Court in Swanton.
plans for retaliatory measures against
At least 55 dogs were seized , said county dog warden Peter Skeldon.
Iran. including possible strikes
Several of the dogs have been placed in foster homes. Because the dogs
against militaiy installations, if offiarc coMidcrcd evidence in the casc.thc animals cannot be put up for adopcials determine that the Tehran govtion , Skcldon said.
ernment was iiwolvcd in the bomb
-The Associated Press
auack.
The newspaper quoted an anonymous Pentagon official as saying ''we
have no evidence" of direct Iranian
involvement. Saudi officials' claims
that their investigation found such
Iranian involvement have been met
with skepticism by.scveral U.S. officials.
The "wcil-advanccd" · planning
• WASHINGTON (AP) -· Ge.ner- · vehicle fleet. The money also will be
al Motors Corp. will make up for the used to convert lo electric power a includes a list of options, one of them
exhaust spewed into the air by more conveyor belt loader and 10 tow trac- strikes on facilities that would send
"a powerful and specifi.;" message to
than·a·half-million Cadillacs recalled tors now in usc at. the airport.
Tehran.
the newspaper quoted its
The projects arc expected to
in 1995 'with several cleanup projects,
sources
as
s~ying .
inclu~ing a$3 .8 million plan 10 buy reduce annual carbon monoxide'
Diplomatic. measures on the list
emissions by 2,400 Ions, hydrocarbon
.Pack 9ldcr GM vehicles.
The buy-backs will take place in emissions by 300 tons and nitrous include calling for new U.N. sanctions against Iran, among them a ban
the Phoenix-Maricopa County area of oxide emissions by 175 Ions.
on
all arms sales and nuclear tech''Carbon monoxide can cause carArizopa and in Southern California,
nology
transfers, the newspaper said.
"fCgions struggling with air ·quality diopulmonary problems and can lead
Asked about the Times rcpol1,
'problems, the Jusllcc Department · to headaches, impaired vision and a
White
House press secretary Mike
reduced
ability
to
work
and
learn,"
said Thursday.
McCurry
said "the president is nol in
the
Justice
Depanment
said
in
a
writThe anti -pollution projects will be
a
position
to consider any steps"
part of a $45 million sculcmenl OM ten statement.
against
Iran
or anyone else until the
GM oflicials did not return telesigned last year requiring the recall of
Saudi-led investigation of the bomb·
the Cadillacs, which allegedly were phone calls seeking comment.
The anti-pollution projects are the ing is linished. McCurry said U.S.
equipped with illegal devices that
final component of OM's 1995 set' military planners routinely draw up
·
defeated pollution controls.
" I am pleased that GM is stepping !lemcnt with the federal government contingency plans for every con up 10 the plate and will perform these
. Innovative pollution reduction pro•
grams." said Lois Schiffer. assistant
auorney general in charge of the Jus'ticc Department's environment and'
patural resources division. .
The projects will be undertaken in
California, Arizona, Connecticut,
New York ..Massachuscus and New
Hamp&gt;hire- stales that have serious
problems with air quality.
Ac~ording to the plan, filed Thursday In federal coun in the District of
Columbia, OM will:
· -· • Spend Sl-8 million buying and
r:ctirin8 "higher-polluti~g'' older OM
vehicles from owners tn Cahfomta
and Arizona.
• Spend more than $2. milli~n to
provide or upgrade electnc vehtcles
for usc by state and local govem'!lent
agencies in California, Connecucut,
New York. Massachuselts and New
Hampshire.
• Provide' $750,000 to the operator of ·Boston's Logan International
Airpo111o pay for new electtU: shyttlc buses, pickup trucks and an tnduc·
tive charging station for. an electric

Kennel owners face cruelty charges

Cadillac pollution target
·ot GM cleanup projects

,,

ceivable circumstance.
In hi,s rep~rt on the bombi.ng,
Record looked for culpability on the
part of U.S. military personnel "and
found none," said the senior official,
who ·-.:poke on condition his name nol
be used .
Record looked up and down the
chain of command for "dereliction of
duty," and found none, ranging from
·the most senior commander - Gen.
H. Binford Pcay,· head of the U.S.
Central Command - to 1hc military
police who guarded the compound,
•
. the official said.
''If the circumstances had pointed
to •·failure of leadership, that would
have been one thing. But he wouldn't hold somebody up as a scapegoat
just to have a seape$oat, "the official
said.
·
.
Record also determined that
Schwa! ier "had acted in a responsible and prudent fashion," and
.

OJ. a.wcta otCiarlll
212W. MaiD St.
r . -: Neill'roudfool
Soooday School • 9:30 LID.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W - y Services -7 p.m.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool • 10:30 a.m.
Pu&amp;or·Jeffrey W.U.:z
lat and 3rd Sunday

s':"l

RaUud Flnl Bopllol Cllardl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10 ~45 a.m.
Pomeror Flnl Jlopdll
Putor:-Paul Sti111011
East' Main St.
.Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Flnl Soti!Mn Baj!lbi
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putor: E: Lamar O'Bryant,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Servi&lt;es - 7:00p.m.
Flnt ~plllt Ckordl
Pastor: Muk Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School- 9:15 Lm.
WoiShip -IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scovice- 7:00p.m.

·,

Rocloe Flnt Boptll&lt; ·
Pastor: Rev. Lawrence T. Haley
• Youth Pastor:.Aaron Youna.
SUDday School- 9:)0 a.m.
Worship ·10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.ln.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

SU,.er Rua Ba,PIUI
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday Sc:hool· IOa.m.
Wonhip- 11Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services- 7:30p.m.
MLUaioaBallllll
Pastor :Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
EYening ·6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Scovi&lt;es -6:30p.m,

R•tnd Cbtudl ol Cllrlll
Plllor: Eu(ICae E. Underwood
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 1o-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

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. Mt. M-b Bopllll
Foullh 1&lt; Main St., Middlepon
Putor: Rev. Gilbert Crai&amp; Jr.
Sunday Sdlool- 9:30 a.m.
W011hip - 10:45 a.m.

LupYUJe Cllrlatlu Cllordl
Sunday Sc;hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wedne~y Scr;jc:e 7:30p.m.

HellllockGnlw Cllordl
Putor: Oa&gt;c: Zopp
Sunday ochool- 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

l

$399

Chnsttun Unton
llortford Cllum ol Clullllll
Cllrlatlu Uaioll
Hutfonl, W.Va.
Putor: Rev. David McManil
Suaday Sdlool - l1 a.m.
Wonhlp- 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedlleaday Service~ - 7:30p.m.

Cl1urch of God
ML MDrilllq..... otGod
Racme
Putor: Rev.James Satterfield
SqMiy School- 9:4S uri.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedn&lt;aday Services - 7 p.m.
llallladCIItudloiGod
. Pastor: Randy Barr
. Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wo=.t· 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Services - 7 p.m.

992-4233
1-800-795-1110

Sunday School- 10 a.10.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
.
Wedlltlday Scovices- 7 p.m.

_. ·

~

SocndlldnC.Ibolk:CII161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-S898
Putor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4S·S:IS~.m.;
S:30 p.m.
Suo. Con. -8:4S-9.1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mua- 8:30a.m.

!'fua-

. lborpaiRd Ch.... ol Jilu Cllrllt
ol uuer Day Saillla
Portland-Racine Rd.
Putor: Janice Danner
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
' Tlae Cllun:hiJIIU
Cllrlll oluuer.Doy Saillla
St Rt. 160, 446:-6247 or 44(S.7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-11 uh.
Relic£ Society/Priesthood 1t:OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina meeting, llllburt. - 7 p.m.

PuU: PJ. Otapmao
Sunday School.! 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wedaeaday Services- 7 p.m.

CltoolarCIItudlotGod
S. R. 248 I&lt; Riebel Road, Chester
P-: Rev. William D. Hinda
S\lllday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhop • 6 P..m.;
·Wcdnaday, 7 p.m. Fanuly 'lioining Houo

Luthcrun
SL J - LatMno Cllordl

Pine Grove
· Rev. George Weirick·
WoiShip ·9:00a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool- 10:00 a.m.

01U' SOYioar ullltroa Chan:~
Walaui and.Henry Sts., Ravcnawood, W.Va.
lnlrim poators: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday Sdlool· 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
SL Pial Lo..._ CHrclt
Comer Sycamore a Second Sl, Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
.
Sunday Sdlool • 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip ~ 11 a.m.

Untied Methodtsl
Grobul Uolltd M.-tst

Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (lsi I&lt; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m . (3od I&lt; 4th Sun)
Wednelday Service -7:30p.m.
ML OUve Uaited MeiWIIt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.
Melp Cooptroil.e Portab

N-CIIIIIft'

~

Microwaves

~

$129
.

and up

RUTLAND
FURNITURE CO.
...... It lltltlliMI, 011
7Q4211 HIONI7-1117
.

~

g
·~

nt Celebnlloa Cea.ter

Ro&lt;kSprllp
Putor: Keith Rader
· Suaday School· 9:1S a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowalup, Sunday- 6 p.m.
Rulllad
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
' Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Seovic:eo • 7 p.m.

ReJoldDc Ule Cbarcb
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Putor: l..awJtnce Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

HobtoD Cbristloa Fellowobip 'Cburth
Rev . Oyde Henderson
Sunday service, 10:00 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday &amp;ervice, 7:30p.m.

Saltm Ceottr
Pastor: R~ Fierce
Suaday Sdlool • 9: IS a.m . .
Worabip - 10: IS a.m.
SIIOWYWe

Cbun:b orJeius Cbrls~ ,
ApootoUc Faltb .
·
.
1/4 mile pad Fori Meigs on New Uma Rd.
Putor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00 p:m.
1\riday-7:00 p.m.

Fallb FaU Gospel Cbun:b
LongBottom
Pastor: Steve Reed .
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday-7p.m . .
Friday • rellowshtp service 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m .
Bellwly
Putor: Kenneth Baker
. Sunday Sc:hool -10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 a.m.

CUftoa Tobemode Cburcb
Clirton, W.Va.
Sundiy Sc:hoot • 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Tile Bellenn' Fellowslllp Mllllatry
New Lime R.d., Ruda~ .
Pastor: Rev. Marput J. Robinson
Servi~: Wednelday, 7:30 p,m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Conael
Pa&amp;tor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Scl&gt;ool - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • I0:4S a.m. (2nd .t: 4t~ Sun)

Morataa Star
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sdtool- 9:4S a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servia:~- 7:30p.m.

N.., Ule VIctory C..tor
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
· · Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services- 10 1.m. &amp;:. 1 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh,1 p.m.

Hm'lloaYIIIe Commulfy Chrtb

Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday- 9·:3Q a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

Eadtlnte Houe ar Pn7er

S.ttoa

Ptalt&lt;OIIal Aloembly
St Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday. Sc:hool • 10 a.m.
· Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesdly Services • 7 p.m.
Middleport Ptllt&lt;DIIII
-·· Third Ave. Pastor: Rev·. Clark BakCr
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Eveni111- 61p.m.
Wednesday Scovi&lt;ea - 7:00p.m.

(at BullinatWn church off Route 33)
·
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday woiShip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30p.m.

Pu1or: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worahlp ·\0:4S a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)
Eut Letart

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- lO a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.'
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Ml4dl&lt;porl Commualty Cbur&lt;b
S1S Pearl St., Middleport
Pastori Sam Anderson
Sunday Sdloot 10 a.m.
EOJening- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

-·

.

PIIIOI': Brian Harkneu
Sunday Sdtool· 10 a.m.
WoiShip- II a.m.

Faltb Tabernacle Chardl
Bailey R.un Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Raw50n
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Evening 1 p.m.
Thunday Serv!ce • 7 p.m.

CooiYIII&lt; Ulllltd Mttkodlll Parisb
Pa&amp;ior: Helen Kline
Coolville Clllll'tb
Main &amp;:. Fifth St.
Sunday Sc:hoot • 10 a.m.
Worahip • 9 •.m.
· Tueaday Seovices • 7 p.m.

Presb terian

Betllel Cb•n:b
Townsltip Rd., ~C
-6unday·School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m.
Wednetday Service&amp; • 10 a.m.
Grand Slreet
Sunrll!y Scl\001· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Faltb Gospel Church
LongBouom
Sunday Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:~ p.m.

Mlddltport Cllun:h ollbt Nuareoe
Pastor: Oreaory A. Cundiff
Sunday Sc:~ool- 9:30a.m .
· Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

ML OUn Commualty Chardl

~.

~

Middleport Preabylcrioa
Sunday Sc:hool- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a;m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snnlli-Day Aolvnllal
Mulberry HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawin&amp;ky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath Scliool- 2 p.m.
Worabip - 3 p.m.

DyesYHie CoiODliDtly Chun:b
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wooship-10:30a.m., 7 p.IJI.

Rldat Flnl Clnm:b ot tile Naureae
Pascor: Scott Rose
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W~dnesday Services • 7 p.m.

•

Paslor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School -10 a.m.
Worship.·lla.m.
Harriloa.W. Preabylcrllla Churcb
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.

Hom Co-aully Cbor&lt;b
Of!Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.

HocldaiJIOI'1C~ur&lt;h

1

1

Syroc.,. Mllaloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Nazarene

LoaaBottou
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m .

Slinnl'ille Wonl ol Faltb
Putor: David Dailey
Sunday.School9:30 a.m.
Evening .. 7 p.m.

CllriJiloa Fellowlllllp Ctattr
Salem St., Rutland
Putor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday Sc:hoot • 10 a.m.
Wcrship- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Scovi&lt;e- 7 p.m.

. CJiester

J-

Cal..cy Bible Cbur&lt;h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Suaday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:3Q p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Follb Cbpel ()pea Bible Cbartb
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Panaio
Sunday sc:rvice, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 7 p.m.

Morse Cbapel Cbur&lt;h· Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Paator: Bob Randolph
WoiShip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool· 10:30 a.m.

Fallll F&lt;llowahlp 'C.-d&lt; lor Cllrlst
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

.
320 E. Main St., Pomeroy
(Pomeroy Municipal Building auditorium)
Putor: Jim Codner
Worship services: Sunday, 10 a.m. dt 6 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool- 10 a.m.
Thursday Seovices -7 p.m.

Falnlew Bible C..rcb
!.elan, W.Va. RJ. I
Pastor: John Hart
Sunday Sdtool'- 9:30a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible. Study-7:00p.m.

United Brethren
ML H..- Ulliltd Brelllrea
II Cltrlsl Cbtudl
Texaa Community off CR 82
Putor: Robert Sanders
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
Edea Ualled llnlllrtala Cbrlat
2 1/2 mtlt1 north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Putor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Wonhop ·10:00 a.m. I&lt; 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Seovlces -7:30p.m.
Wcdnaday Yooth Seovia: -7:30p.m.

Pas1or: Lawrence Bush

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
• Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service ~ 7 p.m.

""'

RACINE PLANING MILL

g
~

Appe Ule Ceoter
"Full.-Goopel Oturch'
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Se&lt;ond Ave. MISon
773-SOI7
Service,time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

.......,,

•

Whlte'1 Cboptl WtaltJU
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Scrvi&lt;e - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

TorcbCbur&lt;b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Allred

Fretdom GospeiMJsaloa
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Will£ord
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
, Worship- 7 p.m.

Portland Firat Cburcl!l or lbe Nazanae
Putor: Mark Maoon
Wooahip - 10:30 p.m.
Sunday Sc:hoot- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Plllor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday Sc;hool· 9:1S a.m.
Worshie- 10:30 a.m.
Bible SJudy Tueaday- lO a.m.

J

&amp;.Ill isetMI New Ttltaaldl
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Ba.rbcr
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.
CarltloD .. terdtoomlaltloul Cborc~ •
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh1p Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

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

~

Tappan

.

a..a oiCIIrlal
Putor: Pbillp Stunn
. Sunday Sc:hooh 9:30 Lm.
WO!Ihip Scrvi&lt;e: 10:30 a.m.
~ Bible Sludy, W........y, 6:30p.m.
-

Clludl of God oll'ro!*&lt;Y
OJ. White Rd. of! St. Rt. 160

.

Latter-Day Saints

.

Rallud FJft Will Jlopdll
Salem St.

Catholtc

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenl111 - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Scrvioea- 7 p.m.

Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday Even ina - 6:30p.m.
Thursday Seovice - 6:30p.m.

Po•eroy

P~:Rev.PauiTaykx

Ratlllad Commaalty Cban:~
Pislor: Rev. Roy Mce.ny

Uberty Cbrtadoa Cllar&lt;'

Sunday Sdtool- 9:30a.m •
Wonhlp- 10:4S a.m.
Thunday Scrvioea- 7:30p.m.

AaJtq.IIJ Bapdot

Dishwasher ~

~
~

FDI'&lt;II Raa Bopllll ·
Putor : Ariua Hurt
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

202 1l'. 2nd St.

~Undercounter~
~

Fallb llopCiat Cllardl
Railrood Sl, Mason
Sunday Sc:hool-10 a.m.
WoiShop • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Seovices - 7 p.m.

Pallor: Peter Tl&lt;mblay
Sunday Sc:hoot • 9:30 Lm:
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedncoday Scovice - 7:00p.m.

Hldu&gt;r7 Hllll Cbum ol Chriat
Evangelist J~ B. Hoskins
Sunday Sc:hool- 9 a.m.
· Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
W - y Seovices - 7 p.m.

Syncoae F1n1 Cbon:• oiGod
Apple and Second SIS.
Pallor. Rov. David R..,.ll
Sunday School and WorshiP' 10 a.m.
Evenina Services- 7:30p.m.
Wedaeaday Services - 7:30 p:m.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jr~~~~~
~
Maytag · ~

~

VIctory Boptlot ladcp,.doal
S25 N. 2nd Sl Middlepolt
Putor: Jamu E. Keesee
Wonhip • IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneodioy ScrviCCI - 7 p.m.

LEO'S
CRUISE&amp;
TRAVEL

992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OH

rorTJw

Hllaldt Boplllt Cllan:b
St. Rt. 143 j,.t qff Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Aaee, Sr.
Sunday Sc:hool-10 a.m.
Worahip • lta.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servic:ea -7 p.m.

Gift the Gift
of ·Travel For
the Person
Who lias
Everything.
Give' A
Travel Gift
l:ertlfieate
This Year.

All

Just In Tim~

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday Sc:hool· 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday ScoviCCI· 7:30

u~~nl ClllrFne Mtlllodllt Cbur&lt;b

BrodfoniCbardlofChrlat
Comer of Sl Rl. 124 I&lt; Jlladbul)l Rd.
Evanplill: Keith Cooper ·
. Youlh Mini"": Michael Teaprden
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Ruiii.Dd Church orth Nar.areae
· Putor: Samuel Basye

Putor: Owii:s Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 19 a.m.

u.u- Cllm:b
7S Pearl Sl., Middleport.
Putor: Rev. John Neville
· Children'a service • 10 a.m.
WoiShip , 7:30 p.m.
Wednelday Service-7:30p.m .
H,..U Ru Hollo Cllan:ll
PUior: Robert Manley
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service-7:30p.m.

Pulor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc:hoot - 10 a.m.
Worship- J la.m."-- .

Mla&lt;mlll&lt;

Wea~&lt;yu Bible

Bnd~ Cllarc~ ol Cllrlat
· Pu&lt;or: Jake Copley
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Chester Clum:ll of llllt Nuareae
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday Sc:hoot - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
We&lt;lneaday Scrvi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

Heotll (Middltpon)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

112 mite off Rt. 325
Putot: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service -1:30 p.m.

lnatrumenlll
Pu&lt;or: Scol Browa
Wiinhlp Service- 9 a.m .
Communion· 10 a.m.
Su"""y Sdtool- 10: IS Lm.

Ellterprllt
Paslor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

· Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School - 10 a.m,
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tiuandly Services - 6:30 P·~·

Plae GnJn Bible HoiiMII CIIIU'Ch

'1'0_.. ftala Cllwdl ol Cllrlal

r-roy Cllardl ol .. t N.....oe
Pastor: Rev. Thomu McCiuna
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worabip- I0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Fonst R.un

-oiSUroaHoillltaiCII.....
Leadin&amp; Creek Rd., Rulland
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sundlly school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday w011hip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetlng-7 p.m.

~ Cllan:lo oiCIIrlol
Pomeroy,llmilonvitle Rd. (RL143)
.
Putor: Roser WIIIOD
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday,Scrvices · 7 p.m.

Putor: Roy Hun1er
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday·- 7:30p.m.

..,._

Huriaoavllte Road
Plllor: Rov. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wollhip·11a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Seovice - 7:30 p.m.

JUdp Cllan:ll etCIIrlol
Pallor: Jadt Cotearove
Sunday Sc:hool-9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea- 6:30p.m.

FuU Gooptl upt-

•

cat...,. Pllplm CUpel

Beorw-

Old Belllel Fne WW Baptlot Cllan:~

Footwear
T-Shirts
Sweatshirts

lloa-H-CIIordl
310S7 Stale Route 32S, Lanpvlle
Putor: Dr. J.D: v011111
Sqnday achool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m. I&lt; 7 p.m.
Wedncaday prayer service - 7 p.m.

KIM Cllan:ll ot Cllrtot

Be*lt- Boptlot
Racine,OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine .
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. Sunda'y
Bible SliMly • 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Shop

Holt ness

Pu&lt;or:AIy oudt Miaialer: Bill F'lazier
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 8:1S, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea.-7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Sc;hool • 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wedneaday Seovice - 7 p.m.
33045 Hiland Road , Pomeroy

Ceatral Cluntr
Albacy (Syro&lt;UM)
Par.l.or: Otarles Neville
Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.
Worship '" 11 a.m.
W,.!neaday Serviceo -1:30 p.m.

Colreehourfollowin&amp;

M'dd' puc. CIMirdt otcutlt
Sib and Main

Rt. 7 oo l'omuoy By·Pau

Putor: Sharon Hauaman
Sunday Sc:hoot - 9 a.m.
Worlhip • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

:r z&amp;l

Wonhtp • 10a.m., 6 p.m.
W - y Services- 7 p.m.

ulllltd r.iltll a.ordl

ll , .......... ..
Cllordl fllllle N Pulor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday Sc:hool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Seovices - 7 p.m.

Tippen Plalaa SL Pout

Gnce
c.vc.
326 E. lin ., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPianti&lt;r ·
Holy ~tat and
Stmday Sdlool10:30 a.m.

33~ Cloildrea'l H - Rd.
Suadaf Sdtool·ll LOI.

Fne Will Bapdtt Cll.,.b
Ash Stree~ Middleport
Pucar: Lts Haymaa
Sunday Service • 7:30p.m.
School . 10 a.m.
Wed
yScovice-7:30p.m.

-·llle

PaRor: Rev. Clades Muh
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - t0:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
First Sundlly of Month . 7:30p.m. service

EpiSCOpill

.,...,..,...,w..... a.. . . etCIIrtot

Air Force officials have defended
Schwalier, poi~ling oullhat security
outside the base was the responsibility of the Saudis and that the intelligence warnings lhc general re(,:civcd
were not clcar·cut.
Downing found that Schwalicr
fulfilled his main task - to launch
U.S. aircraft from four countries into
the no-lly wne in southern Iraq very well. And to the e&lt;tenl
Schwalicr focused on security, he
work,cd to prcycnl terrorist bombers
from gelling inside the perimeter of
the apartment complex .
"
Schwalier wasn't the only oflicial
criticized in the Downing report. II
said ' the Pentagon failed to issue
directives laying out base security
guidelines for prmccting forces
deployed in buildings.
· Schwaller is a 27-ycar veteran of
t~c service and graduated from the
U.S.AirForccAcadcmy in 1969.

because of that, there should be no
punishments, reprimands or other
·fot'm of mili,tary discipline, the oflicial said .
The report goes to Perry. who is
not expected to overturn the finding.
Gen. Ronald Fogleman, the chief
of staff of the Air Force, is also not
expected 10 take issue with the report.
The formal report is expected to
be released soon.
Downing found that Schwalier
·had not raised with his Saudi counterparts the problem of extending the
perimeter of the apanmcnt complex,
despite intelligence warnings that a
bomb could be placed against an outside fence.
The Downing report sparked
sharp divisions and debate inside the
Pentagon. The repon was .thought to
reflect the deeply-imbedded "culture" of ground forces, which pul a
high priority on troop protection.

Cone]! cq.t lt onal

r

Aposto!tc

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Church of CiHISI

another theory: Evidence was planted.
He suggested police not only
planted blood on a crime-scene gate
and on socks_.:._ scenarios raised in
the first trial - but that somebody
even switched the linle white control
swatches so they would back up the
test results.
·
It was like that all day for the
defense: advance and retreat. By the
end of the session , lead defense
lawyer Robert Baker surrendered,
waving a while handkerchief in coun
and agreeing to give up on a fight
over defense expert Henry Lee's
videotaped deposition., .
Instead, . Baker said, defense
lawyers would spend today and the
weekend removing the pans of Lee's
testimony that the plaintiffs didri 't
like and show the remainder of the
videotape of the testimony to the jury
on Monday.
Simpson was acquitted last year in
the killings of his e&lt;-wife and Goldman . The victims' relatives arc suing
him .

of samples, placing wet swatches in
plastic bags where Gerdes said bacteria could grow, and cleaning the
tweezers by merely wiping them
with clear water.
"As sensitive ~s this process is,
you should use 'a new sterile instrument," he said. "She uses water, and
you can't gel DNA off with water."
There were muffled gasps in the
courtroom.·as the tape played. Several jurors leaned forward to get a bet·
ter view and took copious notes as
Mnzwla brushed her hand across'the
ground as if to clean off the pave-

-

MiiiW01k
tahintl Makin~

' Child'a

~Recliner

Syr;cuse

ONLY

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy

992.ms

'79

lri1JIIIINIIH

Ingels
Furniture

•••t•l•niNW...•

IIHSIIIIUftiiiNII
Mf.JIIt

106 N 2nd Ave. .
· Middleport, Ohio ·

614-992-2635 .
.•..1-800-426-5581' ·.

ti~......
h'#!iji •
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.
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RAWLINGS-COATS

FISHER
.FUNERAL HOME
. 992-5141
264 South 2nd

UCI. MOWII CUIIC

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Cof1dor St.

Pomeroy, OH

112-2171

..., ..: '.

Middleport

'
YouDon'tHave ToLoolcFai · Crow's Family Restaurant
"Featuring Klllllucky Friflcl Chiacan•l
To Spy the Best BuyS/n the
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
Classified$
•

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
992-5130 Pomeroy

Nationwide Ins. Co. .
of Columbta, Oh. ·
804W.Maln
992~18 Pomeroy

Sfi'VERS

992-5432

h w~ I!&lt; M.ioic 'b """fAro
- . lbu r..,.rn i&gt; t11o 11e1&lt; &amp;I)"

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions :

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992•2104

992-2955

lnftOoalf/edl. ..

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

ltEfiL TIME

Vttenne
Memorial Hoapltal

SERVICES
· 214E. Main

CLASSIFIEDS .

EWING Fu

SNOUFFER
FIRE a SAFETY

HOME

"Dignity and Se.,iceA/WiJys•
Established 1913 .

SAl ES' • SERVICE

992..2121

H2 Nor1h Second Ave.

108 Mulberry Ave •

Pomeroy

192-TWS
.

Mlddllport. Oh

Pomeroy

�.

•

.

By The Bend

Pagel

Notloe~=

~;:::::::~::~~~:-i.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Memorial for loved ones
always approprl·a·te
Landers: My husband
DearA
nn
and I just celebrated our second
· anniversary. We both were married
before-- "Herman" for 43 years and
!for 32 years. Herman's wife and my
husband passed away the same
month. ·
'. Before Herman and !.married, we
put a memorial notice in the daily
paper . on the anniversary of our
deceased spouses' deaths. We did the
. same on their binhdays. After we
!narried, we decided it would be
appropriate if our children took over
and did this in remembrance of their
·parents. Herman has three grown
children, and I have four.
This year, Herman told his chi I·
dren to put the notice in the paper and
· he would pay for it. I had no problem
with ~1. I did, however, have q problem With the wording of the memor-

\

'

Public Notice
of liMo c-t.

given

•:::.,Fr• Wilt ._...
c
o1 eor- of filum

==Sb~~~

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

90

Public Malice

Notice

-llle~oiiMAih

Friday, December 13, 1991S

•

lntorootod peroone _,

lucatu a_
r 1'ruetllle
to lhe
AlhiiNet
_ ......
Chunh, Mlddllpan, Ohio
ly WI..., D. Conler
A-•r for PWIIIIoi537 lnaild Avenw
a tt ant. Olllo41111

...... wrtlllnDIHMMIDOI'

....... • publlo .......

rotllcllng draft oltlone.
com••••• or pullllo
_.ng 1'141- mUll Ill
oub nlllc' wlllln :Ill dire ol

...... ol tile dnfl action.

Want 10 buy slate pool table, 014--

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying Ill·
vag• vehicles. Selling parts.
773-5033.

"'"· "· ••• Chllllt
~OH l11111 Date

PIOIIItl'

01...

. . . . . .

9

Dlacr:::tlln: !
. . ., .

,

....

BANKRUPTCY can rslleve a

:

•

A search is underway for girl scout
and volunteer alumni in preparation
for the 8Sth anniversary in 1997 of
Girl Scouts of the U.S.A.
Meigs Countians who were
involved in scouting activities are.
encouraged to contact the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council, P. 0 . Box
S0-1, Charleston, W. Va. 253220507.
The celebration will include a
council-wide service project, girl
programs, and a search for alumnae
and former volunteers.
The annual meeting, Apnl 18 and

L~~-d~~~~ =::!t:t:~=::.

Eight area students were among
the 2!18 students receiving high academic honors for the fall term at
Washington Swe Community Col·
lege, Marietta.
.
A total of 85 students were named
· to the college's· President's List, for
maintaining a perfect 4.00 grade
point average during the quarter. In
addition, 173 students were named to
'. the college's Dean's List, for main'laining a grade point averages

Community Calendar is
published as a free servlte to nonproftt 1roups wishing to am-e
medin1 and apecilll events. The
C.Jei.dar is 110t designed to prOmote
nles or fund nisers of amy type.
• ltellllare printed as spate permits
and.caanot be pannteed to run a
speclllc number of days.
FRIDAY·
'· LONG BOTI'OM -- Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bouom, 7 p.m.
hymn sing, Friday at the church. The
Clarks and the Peacemakers to per·
form.

RACINE .. RACO home decorating contest jlK!ging Friday. 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. Judging to be done in the
yillage and within a two mile radius
of the village corporation signs, Winners to be announced in newspaper. .

POMEROY ·· Return Jonathan
MeiJs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, Saturday, 10
a.m. ar the Meigs County Library.
Members are lo take nostalgia from
a (lvislmaS past.
SUNPAY
13AST MEIGS •• Eastern High
School holiday band and 111 show. 3
·p.m Sunday al tll!' Eastern High
Schopf BYmnas1um.

'

i'OMEROY •• Big Bend Cloggers
· annual Christmas show at Grand
Cenlrll Mall in Vienna. W. Va. 7 p.m.
.Sundly.
RACINE - Children'• Christmas
piOifllll. 7 p.m. Sunday II the Firs!

BI!Piill Church in IUcine.

(]fESTER •• Chester Volunteer
· Pile Dcpettment Christmas party,

~=======~:.===

LETART .. Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday. office
building.

VOV ARE NOT /lo.
PARTRJP6c, ANP THIS 1s
NOT A PEA~ Tlia:E I

SAVE
50"·75"

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET
.Jult atr 'Bnldbury Rd.
(loolc for llgne)
lllddlap art, OH
814-4182-5371

.o.y a l!""lng ttra.
1ft'll1mo.

Deer Cut

at

d,ays to Christmas

Lake
Skit&lt;ut·Wrap
949·2734
l2JZIIIJ 1 mo. pd

DAVIS
CONTRAaiNG
-Roofing
oAemodellng

oNew Construction
oOtckl
•VInyl Siding
· ,ofnsursd

30 Announcements ·

BINGO
Post 467 R1tl.d
Mon.&amp;Wed.
·6:30P.M.
SDimt$1500
$50.00•-·

...r:..FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
FRIDAl;
DEC.I3
Is

.

ESTIMATEES

:'

RUTLAND, OHIO .
814-742-2858

Briar ProOf .
Hunting ClOthes

Cetds
...

w_,.

Under MW IMfti&amp;JIIMftl

Public

· •NewHome1

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE
Morning Stir RdJ
CR 30, Rltclne, Ohio

.,.. Calm
I.Ht!Stnps

. . . Tap
Ilui ... Llgllh

Can•Tracb
lhs &amp; llectrkl

....,..,.

llrpi.J•••· ...,.
IWil SILIClJOII
PlatlcMdels
TNia..TNiai·TNia•

Pick up dl-ded .
lflllllan-. bebr!M,
many 11111111a a
motor blocke.

''r

,.

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St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
614-985-3813 or 614-66Ni4B4
Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and Regular e· thru 36"
4" S&amp;D- pert.- solid pipe ·
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'/." &amp;'I' C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/."thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
''•: &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (t 00' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
•/, U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1"thru 2" -littings · Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line ol Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
no more needles in the catpet. We will
also bale it if you like.

Desperately S&amp;eking New Own e!sl Adorable 5 Wonderlul Pup ptes, 10 Wee~s Old, 614· 441 ·
1707.

$6ft.

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
' Sot's &amp; Sun.'a till Chrlatma1
St. Rt. 325, Denville, Oh.
Ph. 742-3149 or 11112·7285

.

(Uma StorieLow Rates)

HAULING

10 AM 10 I I'll DAilY
lllllYS1 . . 106M

Llm'tstone, •
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

. 614·992·3470

4

WEIER'S .
CHRISTMAS
TREES

RUTLAND,OH
Homegrown· C1refully
Sheared Scotch &amp; White
Pine 4' &amp; Up with agroat

-'"'-me See

· selection oflorger trees.

Call742-2143 or
742-2979
On Sale Nov 28th

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE
Now Open For

.r

Christmas Saason

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
634 E. Main St., Pomeroy

WINCHESTER
RIFLED SLUGS

---

$2.19 12, 16, 20 ga.
DEER CHECKING
STATION'

Mall Hours:

'We sell hunglng license &amp;
deer

LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250-$425

VISIT
SA-N TA

FREE DELIVERY

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. lhru Sit. 11-5; Ph. 446-'0322
3Miel0ut

Mon.-Fri. - 6 to 8pm
Saturdays -Noon to 8pm
Sundays -Noon to 6pm

Pike

SKATE·A-WAY
CHRISTMAS PARTY
DEC. 21, 7:30-1:00
New Year's Eve Party
Dec. 31, 7:30-12:30

1002 E. State St. Athens, Ohio

'6 1/2" Poinseltias (6

colois) ................ $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskels .. $7.95-$17.95
Christmas Cactus ·
.: ........... $1.75 or 2/$3
Cut Trees........ $8-$18
Small Holly Trees ......
.~ ....................... $2 .50
Wreaths .. $4.95-$9.95
Grave
etankets.......... $19.95
Cllmatary Vases.$9.95
Monument Sprays ..... ·
....................... $1~ . 95 ,
OPEN DAILY
9 e.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookies
During Christmas
Season

'992-5776
Make your wife'.s
Christmas one to

remember.
Cell

Jl COISTI8m01
lor some lde•l
John Dlln (114) IINII7
or
Dille ...... (114) •• 3031
211 )'llllfl experience

licenead &amp; IIIIU~

6 P.M.

.

Fre Cl'lristmas Puppies, To A
Good Hom&amp;\614-388-8815.
F
ree Ia loving cou('ltry home,
healthy neutered cat, gentle &amp; alfectionate , will d.eliver, 61-4 ·992 · ,

31 ao1 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

lvoltoi'W..... """
' mo. pd.

CONNOLLY'S

South of

•

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Tuppers

Plains on St.
Rt.7

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

(614) 667·3483
Open

965-4422
Ch~ster,

Evenings and

Ohio

CHRISTMAs TREES

101'lMI6 TFN

Weekends
1112211111 pel

CUSTOM BUILDING &amp;
JEMODEUNG
Nev-I Homes, Addilions,
Rooling, Painling,Barns
~arages, Concrete
' Free Estimates
2~ years experience
.. We !fix it as if it wert our
oWl!, /rome or business
Ask for
John (614) 992-3987
or Dallas/(614) 949-3036

.
.
. Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dreving • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, RaiHngs, Patio Fumilure, Fireplace
Items, Planler Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!l

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will work within your budget.
Ph. n3-9173
FAX 773·5861
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason,WV

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION

lost : Black &amp; White Ca t, 2 . 3 .
Y~a_rs_ Old Answers To Bu.ckeye,
V1C1nt1y : loWer Tllird, Avonue,
614·446-313'7.

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to run ,
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. F=rrda~.
Monday edilion · 10:00 a.m. Sat·
urday,

Top, Trim,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

All .Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Advance . Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day belore the ad rs to run, Sun ~ay &amp; Monda; adition- 1:OOpm
Frida)'.
.

Owner:
· Ronnie Joone11J.'

-Roat11 Atltlillons

80

ALL OHIO

CHRISTMAS TREES

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

j
tja

Any Car
Any Dnver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&gt; Di sco unls &lt;
Compuler Qu otes

Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave BlaDkets .

j
jffa

$10 &amp; Up
..BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

(6 14) 992-6677

Clean

Late· Model Cars o,
Trucks, 1990 -Models Or Newet
Smith BUick Pontiac, 1900 East:
ern Avenue, GalliPOlis.

Top dollar- anliques, furniture,
glaaa, china , clock!, gold, silver,
coins, watchea, &amp;slates. old stone
jart, old blue &amp; whit&amp; dishes, old
wood boxes, m1lk bottles, Moigs
County Adverlisement . Osby
Marlin, 61~·992- 7441 .

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
I

Wanted to Buy ·

Absolule Top Dollar: All U. S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Pr.oolsets,
D!amonds, Antique Jewelrv, Gold
Rmg_s. Pre- 1930 U.S. Currenc~.
Sterhng, Etc ~ Acquis1t1ons Jewelry
• M.T.S. Co1n Shop, 15 1 Sacond
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·446·2842.

New Homes •.VInyl Siding New
GaragBs • Replacement Windows
Room Additions ~ Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

&amp; truck flllntlng,
minor mechlniCII
rtpllr.
llme-upa, OH Ch1nge,
Wtx, Buffing
Long St., Rutlend, Oh.
742-2838, Alk ror Kip

R1Ck Pearson Auchon Compan~.
lull trme auctronlhu , cornptere
aucr ron
serv1ce .. L rcen S£Jd
166,0hro &amp; West V~tg1n1a , 304 773-5785 Or 304· 773 -5447.

2 Cemetery lots in Kirkl and Ce·
metery, 304--675-2195.

I BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Body WOI'II, ear, truck

Public Sale
and AuctiOn

AUCTION - Fr~dt~y night 7pm. Hart·
ford Communi!; Bvitd ing . 2 New
dea lefs, lots o! new' mere han ·
d1se. drawmgs, &amp;nd of salo drawings. Howard Beasley lt4 70.

90

At. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051
OPEN NOV. 23·l0 TO 9:00

Pomeroy

(No Sunday Calls)
I
"

Babysrtter needed lor 1 child, 4
' days e. wee~. mature, (lOn·smok~
1ng adult, references required.
304-875 -4426 Call after 5pm.
;
Babyslner needed to babysit in
our Ga!lipoll£ Ferry home for il 2
year old. Neodcd to start imme•
diaiety. 304·675-1599.·
BANKING
Ohio Valley Bank Is Se&amp;king ~·­
perienced And Oualilied lndiVV!fU·
als For Three Full-Time Poailiona
In Our Operalions Facility. F'ro·
vlding Generous Benefits Paek age Including 401(k) ~et l rament.
2 Positions: PROOF OPERATOR
•1 DavSt1ift:M·F8:15·5:15
• 1 Evening Shift: M -F 12:o'o .
9:00
JatJ Require ments:
• Sell Motivated !Dependable
··Ana lyze /Solve Transactions
•PertormRepetitiveTasks
1o K Add '
E
. Ptusl ey , rng xperienct A

OPERATOR
"
-• 1 Evening Shift M.f 12:00 ·11:00---.
Job Requirements:·
• Sell Moti'-Jated tOependabl&amp;
t
• Compu1e Figures And Anatyze J
• Enter, Commands Into Computer
System
• IBM System 36 Or AS 1400 (;.
perience A Plus!
Salary : Depends On Expenewice

l.:C'~t~o~~rit Bonus

-

:~,

4?0 Thrr&lt;l Avenue
GoUrpohs, OhtO

}
Interested? Pteaso Call Mr. Phltip
Armstrong At 'Bl-4 -446-2631 f:Jr
Se~1d Rosume To f-lR Depan~m.
Ohm Valley- Bank, Box 240, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Equal Opportunily Employer
8 rg Foo .t ,.,art
"
1n New Haven W'll
~o Takrng A~plications For Regrster And Dell Clerks On Friday's
Dec. 131h And 20th. Betw•en
10.00 A.M. And 4:00P.M.
l.

Chiroprae~ic ollice needsim .
energeuc, neat appea,lng, ptir·
sonabte Iron! desk J)erson. ~i-

Bu sy

so me daily book·
keeprng, typrng 60 wpm . Cal'l·
LOST : Black lab, brown &amp; wll ite drd atc must be aggressiv4!y
English Sener, Plain Va ll ey Rd .. /nendly, have a good ht!ad lor d.REWARD ! 304 ·895· 333:3 or 304 • ta il, and a posrtive altitude. 35 "'' ·
.$22· 1077.
wk . Absolutely top quality onlv
Ca ll 614 -992 -6449 Tuesday 08:
Los I: Red &amp; Whlte Bull White cember 17 between the hours"'
Face 550 To 600 Lb. Vac 1nrry 01 9.30 ·11 :00a.m.only.
I'
Taylor Road &amp; 775 614·379 -2275'.
Computer Users ~eede~. wo'rk
LOst: Siamese Cat In Mud Sock own !lours . $20k to $50klyr )j.
Area 011 Of While Hollow Road 800 -348-7186 •1508.
~
614·256-ti033.
Eas~ Work! Excellent Part No..
Stolen: ,Please Return Bag Full Of sombte Products at Home. c~~;n
Picwres Ot Children Thai Was Toll Free 1-800 -.467 -5566 EXT.
Stolen FroJT) 2012 Cha tham 12170.
Street, 1215/96 . No Questions
Asked leave On Porch Of Mary's HOME COMPUTER USE~S
NE~DEO . $45,000 incomt pb.
Market
tenuaL 1-800·513· 4343 Ext. 893GB Call For Details.
,
70
Yard Sale

Adv~nce .

lru1~r·ed

•ltld Gtriges
•Stom Doors &amp;
Windows

. 7/IMfn

lost- Siberran Huskres, one- whrte
female. one mal e puppy, Forest
Aun!Pine Grove vrcmrty, reward,
61-4 ·992·3085.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Year• Experience •

5371AYAN-PLACE
MIDDLEI'OAT
. 992·2772
1:00 o.m.-3::111 p.m.
eRepiacMHI W'llldaws

GRIESER'S
GAUGE

Lost and Found

lost 1210&amp;'96 large basile! of my
mothers crall items accrdanta ll y
le-ft at the corner o! Firs! and locust St. needed lor Ch risln"I&lt;IS re·
ward ~lease call 614·44e•22go or
61~ ·245-534-4 altor 5 pm

2Y. Miles

Rep.

Pupp1es, 6 Weeks, 6 14 446 -

Found: Palr Of Ch!ldrens Gloves
In Parking LOt At Senior Citizens
Center, 1167 State Route t60,
GaltiPQtis. Come To Identify. .

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Able Avon Rep'resentatillll
needed . Earn money for Christmas br ll s aT home/at work. t -8p0·
99 2·6356 or 304 ·88,2·2645, Ind.

Sa lary : Depends On Experienca

Found: Camera In Front or Rev co
Pictur&amp;s Were Developed Please
Call To Identity, 614-446·6542.

MIKE BIHG

AVON I All Areis I Shirfey
Spears, 304-675-1429.

+ Merit Bonus
1 Position: COMPUTER

60

949·.;1057

Help Wanted

7996.

T~ Good Hoine Hall Ak1ta Pup·
pres, 5: We eks, Wormed , Bta c ~
With Brendel 614 ·367-9389, £14
367·0263.

I

J

AKC registered male CocKer
Spaf\lel, bufl color : black male
dog, ~ood with loi1ds . 614 -9'192823.

3193

I
(

g Kinens, Some PtHsia n. Liller.
Trained, B w&amp;eks old, 2 Sflpenue
Mothers614·441 -0665alter6 pm

"

Prectllllllle, Oil

1·101-776.0527

8 Week Full Blooded Chow Chow
Puppies, 61-4--446·6772.

· REPAIR

110

A\lon Chfrstmas $8 -$15 IHr , No
Mrnr,mum Order, No Door -To ·
Door, /Inventory. t'-800 - 736·01f18
lndlsiS!rep.
r'

112 Brllish Spa'n1el. 304 .. 675 :
7215.
'

BING'S
AUTO

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

2' ·9week Old, Chow le ffial e pup-

7 Month Old Flulfy, all orange or
all black cats 61 &lt;4·256·6109

Christmas Trees
We hive an excollent
Hloctlon of beautllutly
sheered trees up to 14 11.
P1lces $111-$20. Call for
wholeeele prlcoa.
Landoeepo Stock
(Plant after C~rlotmao) •
Spruco and White Pine

Will buy old Marlboro Unlimiled
mi les. Will pay up to S.01 ptr
mile. (Un limited miles only!) Call
304·675·6276.
1

AVON · $8 ·$15 !Hr. No Ooor:To
Door. 'Bonuses' Fun &amp;.Easy'1 ·
800-827·4640 lndJSisiRep.

5 month old, 112 Cocker SpaMll

Carol and David Riggs

Wanted : Foot Powered Scroll
Saw. 614-4.-6--0609.
'

2 Adult Female Cats To Givea way To Good loving Homes. 614·
4-48-2393 Atmr 3 P.M,

Riggs Christmas trees

HOBBYLAND
Ollie lhltelt. 7llertl!

Giveaway

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

WICKS

...........,.....

We process deer.• make hickory
smoked hams. trarl bologna. pepperoni, jerky, summer sausagEt.
~ooler hept, clean, _sanitary. Hunt·
mg Bupplles , license &amp; game
check Station. CRAWFORp:J Hen·
OtrlonWV.

pies. :K)4-675--6620

· RIGc:JS TREE FARM
.
39507 Rocksprings Road (at corner of
US 33), Porrleroy, OH (614) 992-5702

Wanted To Buy: We Buy Aulo'a
Any Condition, 614 -388·9082, Qr
614-446 -PART.

30 Announcements

11 Month old, fema le, bla ck &amp;
1an coon hound . Shephard mix
squirrel dog. Must tak&amp; bo1h . To
good home only. 3004-773·9554.

.

•Roping •Wreaths
•Swaga
oGreva Blankata
•Artificial Polnaettla

RADIO CONTIOL

e•S-84'9-4.

40

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
LIVE.TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2 Milos North ol Sliver Bridge on SR 7
tD-8 M-F; 1-5 Sunday
Phone 446-4530

Cut Your Own
Fruh Cut/Live
Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends ·
Rt 33to Darwin, East on Rt 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles lo tree farm, Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
· Nov. 29th thru Dec. 24th

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
•Addltlono
•NowGirogeo
•Remodll!ftg
•Siding
•Roollng
•Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 912-5535
(614) 912-2753

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY
atiVYDAL.E

BUDFORD'S

•

t112&amp;1a811 1110.

SUPPLY CO.

'I

H2·6073

949-2115

· RUTLAND MilE

'

Dec. 16 thru 20 9:30am~9:30pm
Dec. 21- 9am to IOpm
Dec:·22 · lOam to 9pm
.D.ec. 23 ,. 9am to 1Opm
Dec_. 24 - 9am to 6pm

Holiday Romanca Guy/Gals, Meet
Single&amp; In Your Area . Nowlll 1·
900-484-7070 E)lt. A413, $2.99 I
Min, MU!It Be 18 Yrs. Serv-U 619·

985 4473

CHRISTMAS TREES •

Personals

005

hrwla
611 W..t 1/2 mile

number of pllyofa.

992-6711

,.

--

ANNOUNCEMENTS

CHRISTMAS TRIES
15·110

*5.00&amp;Up

FIN&amp;.....,_

&lt;

---~-......

Wanted To Buy . lillie Ty~el
KITc hen Set, Workshop, PI•~·
!louse, Pouible Any Other' Urtle
Tyke Toys, Please Call 614·2-t5·
5887

FREE

........

Doo.. Open 4:30.
Game ..,. 8:45.
Ply &lt;!ul Ia oceordlng to

RAIL FAIR
12 shopping

BUYERS
'URGE INVEHTOIIV FOR
IIIMEDIAT£ 118TAUATIONS.

I

304-675·5065.

•New Homes '
•Garagaa
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

THI! SPOT PINANCINQ

-lobleto QUAUFIED

RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
· POST602
MRYSUNDAY

last .............

December 14th &amp; 15th
• Model Railroads
•Exhibits

IOIIIT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Air Cattllllllrs . .
Atltl • llelt hllps.

FUIIIACES
_...,..,.
........,,..,.,.nto

Culloat lulkllng I~~~~.

Maplewood

..

Saturday &amp; Sunday

Wanted To Buy Used Uo~ile

BINGO

16th Annual

Dec.13

on

30&amp;·

Homes. Call. 6U ·4•6·0HS Or

7/22/lln

RACINE-- Racine Village Council, recessed session, Monday. 7 p.m.
at Star Mill Park.

· pOMEROY -- Christmas open
house and walking tour, Meigs County Historical Society, meet at museum at 6:50 p.m. Trip to Trinity
Chun:h for performance of hand hell
choir: tour of Hartwell House, return
to Museum for refreshments.

: HARJFORD ... ULSWA 5171
Christmas dinner. Union Hall, Hart·
ford. II a.m. Saturday.

·

-

now tqulpmem.

(614) 592-5025

Requires Experience to Sell New and Used Vehicles at
Local Dealership. .
,
Call Bob Ross to Inquire at
619~992·2196

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS ··Eastern Board of
Education will 'meet in regular ses•ion. Monday, 6 p.m. at Eastern
High School.

'

SATURDAY
POMEROY
Modem Woodmen, Burlingham Camp 7230,
potluck dinner, Saturday, at Woodmen hall. Meals to be delivered to
elderly and shutins.

Calif. 90045

poou

Attorney At law

SALESPERSON NEEDED

Sunday, 5:30 p.m. Anyone helping
with fun raisers invited io attend.
Take covered dish.

f!lfrra..J.

Attorney William Safranek

.

-.·
c
ommunity
calendar
.: Tlae

..... • •••• "- r....,

ot

keep e)(empt" property lor !hair peJSOnal use.
This may include a car, a house clothls and
household goods.
'
'
For Information Regalding Bankruptcy contact:

lor_,.... ·

Area students honored
at Washington .State

dabtor

flnanc:lal obligations and arrange a lair
dlat~ ol 8111111, DebtOrs In bankruptcy may

(114} 411 c•n "PropoMd Actlono• ere
tlleCDmMDn (12)T1'1~hoM:
••U'""IItiill-otllle · Thto final •otlon not
I,
13,
20,
21
4TC
Court of Melf.•
directOr'• lntlnt with . preooded by propoMd•
relplot to lhl IIIUIIICI, ................,, ..bbltto
Public Notice
dlnlol, modification, EIR. Septic tank ond
,.,.. s,..... .,., c... l:operty Into tile name of NotiOI ol Public~ on r~vocatlon, or rena: al of 1 · a.-hint 1111 fllld tor I'IYI:;
a!on Syncfic1~.
II
permit, llconM, or .,...,_ P11lnto
tile TIXIudglt
Exprooa '"'
~-Alii~
Two copl11 of the hll Written comment• ond COIIMI ...UOI ......
ial. It read: "We love you and miss
;:.._ _ _ _ _ __. Fr-111 llolpllot Church,
::
budget for tho Southern roquooto lor 1 public (12) 13; lTC
•
you." It was signed with the names
Ina.:
·
Locol
School
Dlotrlot
of moettna r1gardlng 1
of his children and "your husband, has remarried or not. If the wording Sltuoto In tho County of Roclne, In llelgo Counll', propoood oetlon mar bo
Herman."
offended you, suggest to Herman that =~,:P.,rt, ~~t!g:f Oh~! Ohio, .,. on ftllln lhl ollloo oubmlltld wtthln :Ill doyo of
When 1 saw that notice in the he compose his own notice next year being lot n..-o Ult, 1112, ol lhl Treuurer, Dennie E. notice of tho propoaod
ocllon. An odJudlo•llon
paper, it was like a knife in my heart. and not leave it to his children. Mean· 183 ond 184 tn aoow-·1 Hill of Mid dlltrlct.
hllrtng moy Ill hlkl on 1
Thooo
1r1
lor
public
Public Notice
What am 1, his mistress? What might while, don't be too upset by this. Give Add~lon In tho VIllage of lnopootlon; • publlo hllrlng propaatcl
~n If 1 hearing
our friends think when they read this? them the benefit of the doubt, and Middleport, llollng porcol on uld buclgll wUIIMI held roqu11t or obJection 11
"Poor Herman. He still loves an~ assume no harm was intended.
~~::'.'.!l'is!:i:t2 • 15• 11 thl Southorn Locel roeolvod by tho OEPA
NOTICE OF
misses his first wife. Too bad he's
Dear Ann Landers: A friend of
8lld potltlon.wlll be hllrd School D11trlct, Board of wHhln :Ill diJI oiiiiUinOI
thl propoood action.
APPLICATIONI FOR
stuck with the new one."
mine from high school has kept in J1nu1ry 13, 11197 It 12:00 EduCidlon ollloo on tile 18th or
doy of Dlcomblr, 19911 at Wrftlln com-, 1'141UIItl CHILDREN'S TRUST FUND '"
A second spouse knows there will touch with me through Christmas 11
p.m. or I I ooon thiNIIftor 7:00 o'-k p.m.
lor public m11tlnga, ond __ -~.
Cot..n&amp;.. , ___ , ~.
always be memories. good, bad, hap- cards and yearly pbone calls. "Ellen"
m- tho conven11nco
DlnniiE.HII odfudlcotlon hearing
..~ -.. --- '&gt; ........
rre.uror 1'141uaoto muot Ill aent to: Advtao'l' Board (LABI for • '
py and sad, from a previous marriage. and I are not as close as we once
In
Hoarlng Cl1rk, Ohio th• Ohio Cltlldren'a Truot '':'
(12)
6,
13
2TC
That 1s to be expected. But is it prop- were, but I do enjoy hearing from her.
Envtronm1nhlt Protection Fund (OCTF) lo ·now ·
i:r for the husband's name to appear
Recently, Ellen moved back to
Agone,, P.O. Box 104t, occopttng appllolttono lor ~
In the Loving
Public Notice
on such a memorial when he has town and is getting married for the
Columbuo, Ohio 43211-104t OCTF -nlel
Memory of Our
(Tolephona: 114-844·2121). doalgnad to roduca child ~.
remarried? __ Offended in Pennsyl· third time. She is .rushing into this
PUIUC NOTICE
"Final
Actlona: aro aetlon1 1buo• and nogllet. Locot
Mother,
The
lottowtng
vania
marriage as quickly as she did her last
of tho dlroctor which oro project lppllc•tlon(a) ~
lppllcotlono
ond/or
.-14
FLORENCE C.
Dear Pennsylvania: A memorial is one, I'm sorry to say. Nevertheless,
complelnto Wlfl rocolvod lflectlw upon luuo.- or a ohould focuo on the IamAy ~
·always appropriate, whether the man the reception is going to be large and
WILSON
ond tho following droh, ototod 11f1etlvo doll. unit and pre-lon of child ,
lavish. ·
propoaod, or final llcllono Purouant to Ohio Rovtud obuo• ond n•giiC&gt;, ~I.J •
PROFFITT
Here is my question: Do we give
wore loouod, by thl Ohio Codo Soctlon 3745.04, 1 thor• will be ato,ooo ~
Envlronm1ntol Prollctton· final 1ctlon moy bo ovolllble for SFY IHI.
and a Friend.
her yet another wedding gift? This is
to
tho Funding for SFY111119wllf lil c
Agency
(OEPA) Lilt WHk. opputed
starting lo seem a bit tacky. My husNov.29,1934
onvlronmontal boord of bllld upon a porportlonJ of ~­
"ACTIONS"
Include
the
band and I do plan lo attend the wed,.
Dec.15,1982
adoption, modlflcatlo.n, or review (ESR) by 1 poroon ovotlollll !undo.·
19, will be held at the Radisson Hotel ding to show our support for Ellen,
rovocotlon or ordoro (Other who woo 1 party to 1 Appllcotlono · moy 1111 :·
Time h• gone by
thon 1m1rgancy ordorot; proo1adlng bator• the obtotned at tho Molgo
· in Huntington to kick.off a series of but we don't know if we should send
lhl
IIIUiftCI, dtnlll, director by filing on I'Pf~UI County &amp;duclllonol Blivlco ::,.
IInce )'OU lett u1, to
reunions for current and former Girl a gift orjusl a card. Please advise. C1ntor (ESC) II 320 1/2 "
modlllcoUon
or rovocatlon within 3D doyo of notice
be with our God In
Scout members and volunteers · Unsure in the West
the llnolllcllon. Purouanl
E..t Main Street In ~
of
IICinhl,
permla,
.......
h•vtm.
Dear Unsure: These days, second
throughout the Council. A complete
Ohio RIVI- Codo 81ctlon POIMIOf. Appllolllono mull ·•
YlfiiRCII, Or Clrtllfc'l lll:
1nd tho opprovot or 3745.07, 1 llnl!.l octlon bo riturnod to the oama '
schedule of events will be available and third marriages are ·not all that
We
ml•
you
a
lot
and
.
in January. ·
·unusual, but the old rules still apply. · hearing )'Our laughter dl11pprovol of plono ·and luulng, , d1nylng, location by 4iDO p.m. on ••
opoclllcotlone. "Draft modifying, revoking, or Janull'}' 24, 11197. Loll :
"We invite Girl Scout alums to If you attend the festivities, you send
and your voice that Ill
Acttono" 1ra written ronewtng a permit, llconH, 1ppllcat1ona will not Iii •
identify themselves," commented a gift. Since this is the third one, how:.
11111manto of tho Dtr.ctor or varl1nce which Ia not conald1rwd ffH funding.
a room with love.
.S!.!san Thompson, executive director. ever, it's perfectly proper that the gift
ol
Environmental precodod by a propoood A public· hoartng to •
protiCtlon'o (Diractor'ot oetlon, may be appeolod to 1n1-·qu.tlona regarding ;::
"We hope to find out how girl scour- be somewhat modest -- but do send
You had a big heart lntont
with roopeet to tho tho EIR by flUng an 1ppul th1 application and Ill "'
ing helped you and let you know how some1hing.
and loll of love In lt.
..
u•nce,
denial, etc. of 1 wHhln 30 dayo of taeuonce lnllructtono will be held II ,.
r
Dear Ann Landers: I was surprised
exciting the program is today," she
permit, Ucenae, order, etc. of tho llnal action. EIR 3:30 p.m. on Jonuory 2, ~
how the enclosed item, written in
concluded.
.
I think about you 111
oppello muet bolllod wHh: 11197, ot the Molga Countr ::
•·
Envlronmontll Board of ESC.
·1604, is relevant even today. Please
the 111111 , and eeelng
In
RIVIaw, · 2311 Eoot Town
Junnla T•Jior ond •
print it in your column. Here it is:
your smile on .your
Slreet,
Room
300,
C-al Brewer "'
Ieee lhot lhlnea with
A custo!JI loathsome to the eye,
Cotumbuo,
Ohio
43215.
A
Mllgo
Co. LAB !;
In Memory Of Our
happln-.
hateful to the nose, · harmful to the
copy of tho oppoot muot 1111 ' ' · ·
Mlrnlllro OCTF '
Brother,
brain, dangerous to the lungs, and in
oorvod -on .tho director (12) 13; 1TC
·
:
We
keep
you
very
within 3 dayo alter ftllng the
the black stinking fume thereof, ncar' •
AARON
clellr,
close
to
our
•
est resembling the horrible Stygian
•'
hearll
and
In
·
our
BUFFINGTON
· smoke of the pit that is bottomless .•
between 3.50 and 3.99.
110 Help Wanted
memo
riel.
~ber13,1994
Area residents named to the - King James I, 1604, ACountcrblast
You heel a 1tear1 that
WSCC Presidents List included Rox· toTobacco
The flower~ we place I
•
.
. purer than gold
Right·
on,
isn't
it?
..
Toron1o
Fan
anna D. Rqpe of Coolville and Sheri
on · )'Our grave 11111y
and our love end
Dear Toronto: That was almost
L. Roush of Portland.
decay, but the mem--1 111111101'}' of )'OU will
Area residents named to the 400 years ago. and people are still
oriel of you will live
ne- grow old. We
Dean's List included: William H. puffing away and killing themselves.
on forever. That, no
.
..
me~r the good
one can take awoy
Smith and Candy M. Barnes. both of The teen-age market is the prime tar·
times
and laughs from UB.
Coolville; Richard J. Blaniar of get. The tobacco marketers know that
always
heel
on
Hockingport; Debra J. Thdrord of if they get 'em young, they 'll he
It'• not the
birthdays and holt·
Portland: Richard C.. Tuttle and Vick- hooked for good. Sad.
without
)'OU.
You
are
day1
11ntH the Lord
ie L. Metheney, both of Reedsville.
lldly mlalld a lot.
took )'OU away. Gone ·
but not forgotten.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W; Cen·
Daug~;
Sllllfa, Brothers,
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Lo5 Angeles,
Chrlltlna Wlllon
NIICn, NeplteM

Ann

Wanttd to Buy :.

992·178g,

-fllnelllleul,_of,...,.

Calling all girl scout alums

-·

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·l1on uwotves

,
~ob Opportunity
•
Ha 1r St~hst And Nail Tethnicifn
NoMad. Call 61-4· 446-6959 F'or
Mora information.
Licensed Managrng CosmetolpQISt And Erperienced Natl TeCh
Send nesurne To: P.O. ao- 7ot1'
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
'
long ,Term Care Nursing Facilllr.
Seektng EnthUSiastic Ohio StaiEi
Teste~ Nurse Aides . Exceii4J'n!
Benel11 Package Including: Vadatron, Christmas Club. 401 K Plan,
Insurance, And Mo re. Sign On
Bonus Please App ly At Pinec,est
Care Cen ter 170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis.
·
Needed E•perienced Orywa l!
Hangers And Ftnrshers With
Tools, Call614-388·8045.
P&amp;rt· Time Oabys11ter /Nanny, P.o.
Srhon Avar!able , Pay Negotrable,
Referen c es Requtrcd, 614·256·
1559.

Pa: n.'nme. Tra1n1ng Clerk 16
Hours !Week H.S. Diploma, Genera_! Ollice Skills, Data Entty,
Ma 1ntam Data Base WP Typing
Required, EMS Knowledge Helpful
Send Resume To : SEOEMS DisIf lei , P.O. Box 527, Kerr, OH
45631, By De-cember 16, 1996.
PHYSICAL THERAPIST .

Holz~r

Clinic, A Very Progressive Multi •
Specialty Group Practice With
Over 100 Providltf's E"perienclng
Over 250,000 Patienl Vltht An·
·nua!ly, Seeks And Enlhutlaatlc
Physical Therapist For Outpa6ent
Services. Ohio license Aequlrtd.
N&lt;JoN Gmduates With EligibiNty For
License In January 1997 Ate
Welcome. Compelitlve Salary
Structure, Ercellenl Fringe Benefit
And Great Retirement Plant. C111
Brenda Garrett AI 614-2Y..8782,
FBI, 1H4-448-5284, Mill (80
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH
45631), E-Mail (HolzerOzoomr.
net. net) Or Visit Us On Tt. lrtttr·
net At www.Holzercllnlc.com.

Eq..al Opporlunil)' Em,..,..

SALES PERSON NEEDED FOil
MOBILE 6 IIODULAR HOMI
CALL 0 A W HOIIU 114·211.
~101.

·

�Friday,DecendMw13,1811

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..... 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Sentinel•

Ohio

__
,.....,
·-.
·--...
--- . =__=

NBA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

·~=:::

11

1SF-..-

----------~.---1~
. ------~---540 Mllclllaneous

Elltft 11 .000 - 1 y Swttino En·
-.,.s At Homo. Stan Now. No
E'porionce. F&lt;H Supjllito. Info.

*M:E. Dopt: 1351

ODIIg•tion. 5end LSASE To :

Bo• 51~7. Ott·

~ llor. CA 81 711!&gt;

-lion• On MD1Drcr·

TMino

Clo I A T V . - RIMr Front
H,ndll. Send Resume Ta: .438

l&amp;ate Route?, Oalllpolla, Ohio

••••

-PIIGtS
Wanted L~IRIH Towbaal Op·

W.,.,

etaiOrl To Join our Compan..
Up To 1201 p., 0., De,..... On Erplrienclll. We on.r
• w 11 • A
A.• 0 1K Pro~m ,.,
• ,.,

C - SIYM Beneftt Pacluoge.
ToWt Atl S.tdom More Than
1l'lrH Llngd1l AI One Timt. Ytl.r

"aund Work With A Growing

You~ompany. Sand Re1ufM
tndv
Pfwent !Wary And Job

Hillorr o: ClA 3a8 cJD Gallpalia
Oai11 1'ribune, 825 Third Avenue,

Clelhpolo. OH •583;. Alllnqulrito
Wll a. Hold lnCI,.'idouco.
WANTED

DEUVERY PERION
Local Fumlture Co. competitl~

'-~- - • Send
resumo
~
p

Boa P-'12 . Cio ~me

""

leannt

C......,._ Famly Living
1111 Ruet.nd: a 4 bedroom house,
~

,.,.,..ted, CJA, new r.ar·
port. dDort. rww aiding, out!:luild·
lng. $28,000 060, 814-992·•514

Ho- And Lo1 For S.lt:
2 BeCiroomt, One Bath. ssoo
Dawn, W.A.C. Easy T8fml, 1·800"'-IDOO, A1k Far David.

t1ona. 304·875·5253. (no sing!..
widemquirtt pleaset

41 o Houses for Rent

ki1Chen, 3 m1nutes off of SR 33,
$eS.OOO. 814 •9 g2•425,c call after in Middleport. Reftrtnctl r•·

. dopooil S21l0. $275
7:30pmoro1..m .2850 ___ 1 qulrod
.:;::::::::.::.::.:.:..::::..:=:::..._
Mon~h . no inside peta. 304-773·
5165.

·

2 Bedrooms, Upstairs, Duplex 15
112 V1ne, Near f1rst Avenue.

S3401Mo., Water Paid, Garage,
-----------1
320 Mobile Homes
2419.
Deposit References. e 14-446·

for sale
-,.,....,.,..--_;
_ _;___ 3 Bedroom On Ko&lt;r Road, Refer·
-1.tx70 Homelle, to1aH1 remo-1enees, Deposit, 614-446-2565.

deled, gas c:aoklfumaca, ac, 3 Bedroom house tor rent on New
eleCiric: blacil steps, new doors. Haven Helghta. :JCM-882-2797. .

:...RE.:.;D::.UC~E0=-.:1304:..:....-&lt;1.:.7~5-:...83~9.:.;7___ 1For

rent or sale- two bedroom,
nice yard, run basement. 614·992·
2304.

Room, New Furnace, Air, City
Schools, $575/Mo., Call 814·44&amp;·

ciHned. 814·245·5879 or 30•· .:.:....;;;.;.:.._ _ _-:----1 =21l~~.:.5.:.A,..Ner:...:.8:00;;;.;,;._ _~..:......:..._

8'-15-...:...71~1~2...,--:-:-"-:---::--:-- . 1i83 Shula 14x70 Wil!l 7&gt;21 Ex· -

=
EitctriciM tooklng lot small alec-

~icll jobl.. reasonable tales, 614•

HS-31121.

Georg~~~• Porl8ble Sawmill, don't
haul your toga ID the mil just call

panda Heat Pump, CA; Deck, One bedroom hOuse 1n MiddteAwning, Srorage Building lnclud- port, stove and refugerator, ated, Plio~ I Much Morel 114,900, tact1ed heated garage,' 61•· 992·

.&amp;14...S.23n.
1i92 14X76 Mobile Home, 3 Bedrooms, Needs t.loved, Located At

2854 or61..V92·6409.

Two bedroom house, carpeted
and dean, no inside pets, deposit

304-&lt;175-1057.
K&amp;K Mobile Park, $18,500, 814· required, 61 .. 992-3090.
Haul-: wm Houlllolf An· -2281.
420 Mobile Homes
1d1inOI C.H Anwtime, LeiW MM· New-1997 "Wod.. 1 baoh, $8991
fo R 1
:•:!••:::':.;·1.:.;1..;"..;-~.:,103
;.:..7·:...,,..,..,---1 down, 1139/mo, wittl approved
r en
fn*lor IC1CI Extorlor fin- cor· c:redit Cell H!00-691 -&lt;17n.
1'1~e70 Two Bedrooms, Private Lot
pentry,

fireplace refinl1tling, eddltlens,. porctltl, decks, have
,...,. L 304-175-10 13.

MORNINGSTAR EXPRESS· will
1ignf addrtlll

m11il Chrlstma•

holiday shopping. Rea·
-r1110t,81..- 2..S.

coni~

do

Hl97 16x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
St,3251down. 1216/mo, free atr,
wtth approved credit 1-800-691·
6TI7.
11i197 Doublewlda, 3 bedroom, 2
batn, S t ,.«Sidown, S2211rilo, free
.,,,,with approved credtt'. 1-800-

691·6777.
,lt7•14x80 w/Giamour bath .
IH9Jmo. Free delivery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro

F INANCIAL

21 o

wv. 304-755-5885.

2 Bedfooms. UnderpinnmY. Fuel
Oil Tank •. New Water Heater,

Business

Opportunity

$2.000, 814-446-8693.

!NOTICE I
OHtO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO..
rtconimertdtlhat you da bull·
nett with people you know, and
HOT to Hnd money throuah th•
mail until you have lrwntfgatad
lho olforing.
_c.--~-1
W.A·N-T.f·D
Art You Interested In A REAL
Homt Bltad Busineu? Ttlisla
The One You've Been Looking

:.:.=:::::.___

For. Fllf F&lt;H -

CIJI .,e.,7Q.

2'150.

230

Professional

Buy in December No Payment
Until March of 1997
Finane·
ing' call the Fin'a nce line 1-800·
251-5070 All Homes on 5ale Free
Oellvary anct Set Up.

e:z

BUY IN QECEMBER. No pay·

-or • BIG. 1Wl1212118

.

$100 deposi~ ed 814·992-7808.

One bedroom apartment in Pl.
Plea~t, 81~-992· 5858.

One Bedroom Apartment Firtt
Avenue t2S01Mo , Deposit, Aefefei'ICeS, 6 t 4-44, ..0400.

One bedroom furnithed apert ment in Middleport, call 614·4483091, 8141·992·21 78 or 614· 99253)4 or 614-992-SZJt _
Three bedroom, bath, large Irving
room and ldtchan, Third Street,
Racine, OH, 1285/mo. plua utili·
ties, 614-247-4.292.
Tw1n Rivers Tower, now accepting
applications for 1br. HUO subsidized apt. tor elderly ancl handi·

c:apped. EOH

304·875-8879.
VA~~EY VIEW APARTMENTS
RIO GRANDE

Now Accepting AppliC&amp;Uons For
1 And 2 Bedroom Apanmenll .
Wall To Wall Carpeting, On Si~hl
Laundry. Fenced In Playground.
On Sight Manager And Matn·
tenanca Water, Sewer, Trash

By

Owner.

FMHA IEHO.

a...

Barbie power wheels corvent,
Pets for Sale
good c:ond, rechatgeablt. battery, 560
recl1arger SI35.
Bundy Trombane wlcaae, ere 10 Uonlh old Iguana, iSgal tank\
heat rock &amp; light. $5D. 304 -675cond $200. 30..&amp;75-7830
Check out our new Gih Depl 111
Paints Plus, •Patty's Loh• Cake
decorating 1upplie1, Cendlet,
Chocolate Candy Melts, Molds,
Bulk Ctlrialmaa Candy, Radio
Flyer Wagons, Po~ket Knives,
Baars and Mora. (WE also have
Gun8f Clips for Ctvlsrmas Ughts)

Po\INT PLUS HARDWARE

304-675-4084.
Compare aoel Save Eureka Super
Broomu 5'19; San~o Canister
SB~ ; Tri Stars Recond . From
$299. Bags, Belts, Repair Service
For All Models; Used Vacs .
Great American Floor Care, 417.
Second Ava. In Gallipolis Call
814-4C8-4553 10 -5 Open Saturday tO -2

Above Pricu Are For Furnace
Only. Free Estimate To Install
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. 5 Vear
Warrant)' All Parts. Ltfet1me War·
ranty On Heat E~echanger 814446-6XI8, 1-I:KI0-291·0098.
Fast Track II Paul 1459 Wtll Sell
For 1250. 61 4-2'15·0455.
Ftre wood for sate. 304-675-7937
or 304-675·5053

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Close
To Gallipolis. $2751Mo., Includes
Water, S200 Deposit References.
614-448-8605.

Sleeping rooms w1th cooking .
Also !railer space on' river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2 00 p.m.,
30'1·773·5651, Mason WV.

Gas driVen 200amp Ltncoln
Welder $3,250 304-895-3534.

460 Space for Rent

vonngs &amp; EMtracts. W1lma Wood
Independent Otst 304-675-1090

ro pels. 304-675-2535.
2 bedroom, electric heal, 2 miles
oul of Rul1and on New ltma Rd ..
61•-7•2-2&amp;13 01' 614-742-24121.
3 bedroom rn Harllord. S25Cllmo
304 ·675·3100 or 304 ·6 75·5509
after Spm.

MERCHAND ISE

51 o

Household
Goods

8805.

.

Firewood !of ~~.,304-773-5829.

,

1602.

Golden PrtdetRawletgh Home remid!Gs-Sp~tes:Seasontngs-Fia­

71 o Autos for S&amp;le

Ptoblems? Need Tu"ed? Call the
1)1&amp;!"10 Or. 614-4C6-4525
Irregular new teans, $8.00, also
used work pants and sh1rts.
51 .00. Guido, 132 Buuernut, Pom.oy, 011~o.
.
·

Re,~ilred~, New &amp; Rebi.Hit In S!OCIC.
I Ron

1-800-537-9528.
, 12 drawers
bookcase, head

7795.

N. ....

-1t

Aim o,

ldller111fcog in'

....... i ...,.~.,
N Flir Houllng AC1
ol111118--" llogel

-on-·
--••1u1
• -

•• h

"'ny prelorenct,

I

*I Of' dilcl1lntlldion

c:olof, n!lglon,

ornalfonal
origin, 01 ony ..

- IIJMfcony
"""""'"""·
111
" orIUd1
dilcrirl*
.at10n.•
;-..ter will not
1u-oglloccep1

'"""UIA

..........,.... tor real estate
whld11e In -lion of 1he law.

011&lt; -

... hel8bj

•"""wd thlt all dwellings
udell" 11n lhll n11111~

__...,. .....

111'1'1 , hleonanequal

Muat aeu- 1997 t41170 three bed·
room, includes 6 months FREE lot
rent Only lt85.57 per monlh With

$995 clown. Call 1·800·837-3238.

New 141180 Only make 2 pay&amp; move-ln. no paymen1 af·
tar 4 yeart. lfee s•t-up &amp; deliv-

'"""t'

NEWI Bank Aepo's , Ownef flnanctno 1114iablel $179/mo . Free
dtltvary &amp; set-up. 304-755-7191
Sacrllice
J.!uat sell 5 dtsplay model Dou ·
blewides SSISAVESSS Free setup &amp; del1very, free cenlral a1r.
Oakwood Homes Nmo, wv 304 -

755·5885.
Schull 121C65. ta1r cond ., 2br, refrigerator. stove &amp; 2 window ac,
12,800 f1rm ~4 ·675-3)()()

Two Bedroom Furn1shed. On
Raccoon Creek No Pets, OepoSII.
S2501Mo , 8t41-379-2929

110 dill.
. Nluo,

440

ery. 304·755-5885.

Sectional Ho'ma 60112c 3 BR 2
Bath, 2 LR ' I, On Rented lot,
Phone: 614 ... 46·3547.

New in
move In

Nice 2 Bedrooms, $225/Mo., 8
M1les Down 218, Nice, References, Deposit Required , 614 -446 8172, 6t4-256-6251 .

Used Home Clearance make an
ontr, Kanauga Mobile Home Sate
614-446·Q002

Apartments
for Rent

2 Bedroom. 1 balh, upstairs apt,
Viand St $250 / mo + deP+U Iii.

Call304-675·5054

2bdrm apts, lotal electriC, ap·
pl1ances lurn1shed, laundry room
!3CIIilres. close to schOol rn town.
Applicatio ns available at Vtllage
Green Apts *49 or call 614-992 3711 EOH
3 Room, unfurniShed apt, ntce location, refe rences &amp; deposit required 304-675-t090
Furnished Apartment 1 Bedroom
1300/Mo., Utilities Paid, 807
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 14-.48-

3844Aflor 8 P.ll.

e

sec-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOG~T PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wettwood Drive
from S244 to $315. Wal~ .to shop
&amp; mov1BJ. Call 614·440·2568 .
Equal Housing Opporllnity.
Don't Let Tnis
One

large Selection Of Carpet Rem In
Stock Carpet &amp; Ytn~l $6.00 Yd &amp;
Up Mollohan Carpell, 614· 4467444.
Used Furniture - 130 Bu 1aville
Pike - SlOp By and see our Large
Seclection of good Used Furni ture. t-IRS.-4. 614-448-4782.
Wl'lirlpool Dryer $75; Whirlpool

1 and ? bedroom aparlments, furnished and unlurntshod, sacunt~
deposit required. no pets, 6 t 41 992·2218.

Dryer 195: G.E. Washer $95: G.E.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rlvenne Antique&amp;,
1t24 E Main Street, on Rt. t2c,
Pomeroy. ~ours : M T. W. 1 o·Oo
a.m. to e:oo p.m., Suncsay 1.oo 1o
6 :00p.m. 614 -9 92· 2526. fluss
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
6'-1_,_
.~_.:.6.0.~~..._____________

1fil96 Holiday Barbt&amp;-1125.
Parlketts t9el. 304-885-3652.
2 l

_______

Shape Fuel Tanks And

S3501Mo., 8U·U8·2205,
.WS-0585.

Pumps 55'"· Eo. $250, Fo• Bolh,
814·258-6365.
_;,;,;_;.;.;.:..

DowniOWn Ont Bedroom,

3 Pc. Whitt Potter Bedroom Su)Ia, Chest Mirror Orellar, Canop~

ed, Comptele Klk:hen, AI
81 .......3&amp;1.

Bod. 114·-81711.

40 ln'ch Snow Thrower, For t8
Horse Creflman Tractor With
Whtll Weighll IChalnt, Fill 8'
WhHII, Used Twice, $750, 814 -

388-8579.
55 Gallon Flth Aquanum Wilt!

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmtnll at V1IIIIQt Manor and
AiWra1de Aparrmtnlt In Mlddl•

Margs Co: Ltll Tnan Lot Rent ...
You Own in
Yrsl 5 Acres •
te,SOO · $1,000 Down+ $103.75

e

....... ••reoo ~~c&lt;lldlno llo. Alhenl Schools
~: 30•·87"1·3030 or

1-

., OINr: . _ - 7 On""'
• lillt. ' ~mo. Two S10r1.
...... I1...25U710.

'I

Call For Maps &amp; Ownet" ,:-inane.
ing Info. 10% Oown • Wt
Finance Balance. 10'% Ofl Caah
Purct'IIMII

port ~rcxn $23.2-$355 . CaH &amp;1•·
. g;2-50e.. Equol Houolno Oppor.

aui••·

GIFT! $850. 304·n3·5182.
N1ce weddtng ring set. 614 -7422192
Packard Bell 386 SX Computer.
$300. .
Weslo Cardto Gltde Plus . .1100
304·875-2t57
Panasoni o: Oo1 Matri• Printer hll.e
new. $100. 304-675-4612.

Elactrrc Range 30 Inch $95; 30 POLLEN 400Z W11h Propol 1s
Inch Electric Range Wh1te, $95, And Royal Jelly. Natural Energy
Ratng&amp;fator Aparlment Size Al - Booster, 150 Table1s $20, 614 ·
mand 195; Aefngera1or White. 2 446-6306. 1-800-291-0098
Door, $95; G.E.'" Frost Froe Relrigeraror $150; G .E. Side By Side RCA 27" Stureo Co lor T.V.. $200
Nice 1195: G E. Refrigerator New Entertainment Center Cab1net.
Model 1 Year Waunatr $350, 30 $50 ' E•ercise Btke $100 ; T~o~'rnt­
inch Gas Range Wh rte, $150 ; cible S2S. All Excellent Condliton.
Prices Reduced, 61 4·446-1 155
Gas Range 36 Inch Almand Nice
$175; Washer Whirlpool Heavy
, Stoves. washe1s
Duty Was $225, Now S205 1 Year
All Recondtltoned
Warranty: Ory81' Whirlpo ol Heavv And Gauranteed! $100 And Up,
Duly t Year Warran.ty $205, W1ll Oehver 614-669-6441 .
Skaggs ~pphances. 76 Vine
Street, Galllpolta, 614·'1'16 ·7398, ROVAL JELLY With Siberian
1-800-4119·3499.
Gtnseng 60 Capsutes, $20. Call

By II._ ~L-·o Haas &amp; 1996 Holida~ Barbies

lras.
ln,luded.
Garbage.
Smokers, No

Top &amp; S11nd And All Olhor A&lt;·
, .......~ 1225, 814·387-7825.
Beaut)' Shop Equlpmtnt Wet Unu
H~droUc Chair &amp; Dryet &amp; Cha ir,
814 ... 1033.

61H46-6306, 1-1100·291·0096.
Santa's Cl'lustmas Trees, 150t
S111te Route 850, 614-245-5595.
Slab WOod Cut To Preferred
Length $35 Truck Load, Dehvil"ed. 614-256-1602.

Sola And Couch ltke New, Kitch.
en Table &amp; Chairs, 3 Pc. Bedroom
Suhe, Sigler Woodburner, Sigler
Fuel Oil Stove, Rod Iron Porch
Fr.trnlture, 6t4·37~·2720 AFTEA

I P.M.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Goflon

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,

Jackion, Ohio, 1·800·537-11528.

Super Nlntendo System wllt1
Marta All Start and Mano World
games, extra ~mat available, 111
rn good condttion, call 614·949 ~13 .

Three piece living room aulll·
couch, chsir and lovaseat, good
condition, S200, 6t4-m-3000.
Venlltll g11 heaters ltlrlirtt ac
1128.85 I up. Sldert Equipm.nr
304-675-7421 .

Boots By Atdwing, Chippewa,
Aockr, Tony Lema. Guaranteed

7321Ah..-6:00 P.ll.
l

3~111'1

4 Ooeaa
rMilllhOn
I Concludl

lflm.rllll2
Mil.)

256-1233

711ecamcot.lnt

• br(comb.

'-I

·-(poet.)

10 n·e 1n the bolgl
1~Pop.

West
Pus

Solllh
I NT

BARNEY

North
3NT

~ .Gr........
•
rkltiM

&lt;C

...
,,,

"f.
"'"
.•

23 Eleclrlc8t '"It;';
24Nepl'- ••
llC~

~,,

.&amp;~
.. ..

:,::...,
1
2t "

i~~

21 A

·Eut

Allpos

..,
~;.

30 M8cabre

31 llrfl"
32

Opening lead: • 3

BUT 1 COULD
CHAW A IJUG
ON TH' WAY!!

•I • tr

llowiMdl
11-IOJoy

25 Goof
27 Cc!rftpullr

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

730 vans &amp; 4·WD$
.-

13 ActrM8

-.......

, ..

Norm•- . . ;. .;.

310illacon-

38 Tort•a dad "·'
3111ualcl8n - r• •

.The second critical
trick

RuncJa;en : ~~
40 Galoftne '! l~

..: ~

. 41 Like .......,. .,
42C....,._ ••
park '" . -;

441*-un~.­

·

FRANK. 4 EARNEST
~f'$ C.o~c.e,Nil&gt;,
• . Ttftn llltE ONI, Y TWO
,w::.___ I'INI&gt;S OF ~ttPO,TS•

liS tlllr AS'

AKC Reoistered M1n1 Oacl'lshund
Puppies, 1st Shots And Worme&lt;t ;
5250,814-388-9194.
AKC Sibertan Husky Pups,
Males, $150, Females $100,
Breedino Resmcted Prtce Ra're
Colors, 614-446-8627.

(' OVtlti&gt;Ut" IINP
" 1&gt;0 0\IEI£ "·

CFA Htmalayan Ktuens, 6 Weeks
Old, Call Aller 8 P.M. 614 -446CFA Registered Himala~an kittens, ready lor
i
two
mates, two females· two 1
one IOrty, one seal, call 61
3128.
CFA registered Himalayan kittens, 2 blue, 1 seal, mates only,
no checks, 6141·992-5073
Christmas Pupp~es, 2 Males, 2
Females, S15 Each. 614 -3881100.

Chrttty's Pats
271 N. Second Avenue
Mlddlepo~.

Oh.

· "'\'f"\f,t,...Ves '
1 QI996~NEA Inc:

1988 Nissan Pulsar, new tires,
brakes, e~~:haust, auto, ac,

$1,800.000. 304-675-5332.

1989 Berena GT Red Sunroof,
Doors, Engine &amp; Transmission,
15K $&lt;1,900 513-574-2539.
t989 Lincoln Continental,
loaded, all power. 14.000.
675-7559.
, 989 Olds Toronado
Cond1t1on. Loaded, Must See
Believe Oa~time Call M-F 9-5
leave Meuage At 614-446·

614ott2-4S14
We wtll De open 22nd, 23rd, 24th.
of December 12-12.
. SPECIA~S:

'

$10 lor pel l&gt;elh &amp; &lt;~=~:
(dogs or cats), call lor 1

•.

Wagon. 3
5 SPeed,

"Great Gttt kfeas:

Coupon
"'MERRV CHRISTMAS'"

740

1

Oalmations. Shota, No ~~~~:;:;
$,00, 141 Chambertane t:1
6 t 41-388·8922.

1990 Chevy Lum i na, Runs &amp;
looks GOOd, Good Stlape 9t,OOO
Miles, S3,995, 614-388-8706.
1990 Thunderbird, red. automa tiC,
power windows and door locks,
new lires, A- t shape, call Oavtd,
614- 742·2211 days or 6i4-9492389 eYefllnQS.

P'

r'LL e£.1 YOU AAV€1-1\ C,O'l'ttN

Mptorcycles

TI~OR\1£ W.. 'l'tT, MVE '1007

$2150, 6..·949•2211 doyl, 114·
949·2844 eve.

....

~DIDPU\Tit-1011\E.~

1994 Honda Shadow V600,
20,000 miles, minor . damage,

-+--+-~ 45 Entertalnet; ....-;
:This is the second - and last! Mitchell . · Friday the 13th of the year. So, I
46 US IOidlera·J';
.looked for a quotation including the
47 Noun sutnx •·"
word •second." The Microsoft
46Footb811
..,.
COIICh•
Bookshelf CD·ROM gave me 360.
Paraeghlan '~
-coincidentally, this was the second
50 I think, thete,!;:
one I looked at. It comes from W.C.
,"
Fields, who said, "The first thing any ''-...1-..&amp;......1-"--'
does on geUing an unsched·
ulecHaugh is to verify the state of his
CELEBRITY CIPHER
buttons; the second is to look around
by Lull C.mpoa
to see if a cat has walked out on the
c.llbrily Cipher
lf8 CfMtlod ttOm QU&lt;*IION bf' larnoul ~.!*I •M pNSIII'II
bc:tt
in fMI'ciphef llandllor ........... fodlly'• clue S ,.qua/J H
"tT
atage."
·
i'":
'
I laughed, but it bears no relevance
•
......
Z N'
TUWNIJ
·D S T W
'BJJBRWLTVVG
to this deal. How should the play go in
. ......
. ~three no-trump alter Wesl'leads his
t:~
NR
T
ETVBWWB •t&gt;OII
fourth-highest club, the three'
UNVNIJ
LJ ' EMW
At the time. East won with the club
WN
E ·TLRW
ace and, kno\l'ing that South had start·
ZLIBUWNIJ
XNI
ed with. five clubs, switched to a spade.
Unfortunately, though, he selected the
CVBRR.
0 L W S. •
J UN W W
four. Declarer guessed correctly; playing low from band. When West had to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I would ra1hor wrl1e ten thousand no1es 1han ont;:use the lli11110 drive out dummy's ace.
lener of lhe alphabel.'- LudWig van Beethoven.
,..
SOuth's jack became a second stopper.
DeClarer played on diamonds and end·
WOlD
ed with 10 tricks, losing one spade, one
"
diamond and one club.
"'
·~·
.,
_
HltH
loy
CU.Y
R.
I'OUAN
East wu on the right road in shill·
:;"'
ing to spades at trick two. But because
R-ronge ~.,. ·ol the
,,..
he had dummy's nine surrounded by
faur scrambled words be~'!
low 10 form four lfmplt words.
hill 10 (IIDd ei~ht, East 'hould have
sWitched to the spade 10~ Note the dlf·
ference this makes. South cannot do
better than duck this trick and win the
second, hoping West doesn't unblock
·his spade kil!g. But a surrounding play
promises a higher non·touchi111 honor,
so Westlmows that East has the spade
queen. This makes sacrificing the king
clear.
Good luck today!

,_ __

comedian

Jack Ruaaell
I
I
Terrier Had Shots,
Chrl~tmas, S7S 614 -3 79 - 2563 1
Miniature Schnauzers, AKC,
shots and wormed, also toy Poo·
dies, champton btoodltnes, 611.667·3'10'1.

..

Pets Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza..
(1004 orr Every Ttlng, Ever~ Oayl)•
6t41·44to0770
Puppy Palace Kennels, Board1ng,
Stud Service Puppies, Groomint:
Buy, S&amp;ll &amp; Trade , All Breeds:
Payments Welcome, 614-388•

0429.
Registered German shonhair
pointer pups, great giflfor hunters
and excellent pet tor all, $175,
614-742·3177.
'
Aouwetler Puppies, At&lt;C Registered, OSA Cenified S1re,' Both
·Parents Elecellent With Children,
Oepostt, Wtll Hold Till Chr~stmas.
$350, 6t4-24S.0433.
Two lull blooded mmiature Collie
puppies, one male, one femBte,
$t251eo., flt4-742-2050

570

Musical
Instruments

5 piece Pearl Drums, Zildpan,
Camber symbota, paid 12,000, 3
months old, sell 5800, 614~ 742-

2303.
~artin Gibson Harmony Yamaha,
Grammer, Gu1tars, Banjo, Manda·
lms, F1cklles. Electric &amp; Up, Rjght
Base. 6t4•446· 11S8.
Must Sell Immediately. Sprnet
Piano with bench $350. 304 -6757917 Ask lor Becky or leave
message.
Yahama Clavinova 88 Key Pill·
110:304-4575-8077.

S80

Fruits &amp; •
Vegetables

Ori4d 1hell corn $6.00 per tOOibs
in bulk'. 304·372·5023 From dark
til 9pm.

FARM SUPPLIES
B. LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
Agto·AIIIt tracror specilll: 4660
2 wd, !52PTO hp, radltl tirll, 1
remote vatve, 12 apetd Syntho·
Trani, 4yr or 4,000 hr drlwe JIIIIin
werrant~. World famous air

1992
Tracker 5 Speed, CO
Player, 52K M1tes. $5.500 080,
1969 Dodge Grand Caravan V-6 .
110K Miles. Exc Cond1tion,
54,000 080, 614-441 -0607, 614·
245-5592 Aftet 5 P.U.

for Sale
KL Industries, t2 Ft. Pro 120
Bali. Boat •. Spartan Trailer. Minn
Kota 3.1 .MP. Motor, Batterl t
Charger. Acces&amp;:orres, New Navar Used, $1,960, Firm, 614 -448··
•
·'
8325.

245·5677. . .

.

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

Budget Price Transmiaii'Onl,
Used /Rebuilt, All Ty~a. 0Vtf
10.000 Transmisslons, Clutches
Flywheels, Overhual Kill, 814-

24S.56n

.

"'

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

G•een, Rear Spoiler, Loaded, AMI

Jeep Wrangler sliding glass
wmdows, replaces zippers, 1500
new. asking $225, call David at
6'14-992-7375. •
..
,
La1e Model New &amp; Low Mtleage
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motor.s, ·
Transmissions, Body &amp; Suspen- .
Parts, Domestic &amp; Foreign .
SelecttQn Towerline Autp
Systems, 61.4 : 532 -'0139', Or t800-462-6260.

;;:.::.=.:.;;..::;~;....-----

790 ·

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

7g;;;9;;2~2;:;;:1-F;:;::::::::::~.~--;;~~

r

' .

Use The

:

,

•

PRINT NUMBfREO I

•

UNSCRM4at.E FORI
ANSWER
•

LETTERS

DECEMBER 131

SERVICES

HOW CAN '«lU COMPLAIN
ABOUT 81!1H6 LONEL'l

I'M JUST NOT
SURE IF I ...

IWHlEN '(01.1 HAVE AD06 '?

1
mprovements
BASEMENT

48 Chevy 2 dr. Sedan, good
WATEAPRCX&gt;Fiti!G
.
shape,. S2,400; 89 Grand Prix, 2 Uncondttional lifetime ouarancee.
dr., a~:~to, ni~e. S3, 950 , 2 large local references furntshed . E1· :
sho)IY cases , good shape, 614 • tabl1shed 1975. Call' {614) 441949-2045 or '61 4.g 49·2836.
0670 Or 1·800·287 -0576. AOgers
:;:--;-~:--,-...:....:.
Wateroroolmg ·
'
:
Black 81 Trans Am with aluminum
1
wheels &amp; T-tops, 11.500 080 or : - - ; : - - - : : - - - : - - : - - - trade tor 4 wheeler ol equal value, Appl1ance Parts And Service: All 1
6141·742-4500.
Name Brands Over 25 Years EIC·
penence All Work Guaranteed.
CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boats, French City May tag, 614 -44 6·
·
4·wheolers. motor llOmes, furm- 7795.
tur&amp;, electronics, computers etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Ava ilable your C&amp;C Gene(al Home Melnarea now. Call 1-800 -51 3 -4343 tenence · Pain ting, vtn~l tiding,
carpentry, doors, windows, 'ba1hli
E•t $·9368

J=

PS'f'CII I.,.,.R.I C
~ELP 5'*

'(OU SAID HE
WOULDN'T BE
1------\... LI.STENINI&gt;..

l

___ 1

I
ASTRO-ORAPH
.

mobile home repair sOd mOr't. fot.

720 Trucks for S&amp;le
19 70 Ford 314 Camper Special
3St Cleveland Engine, Auto
Trans, Camper Top &amp; Canle
Racks, 814-256-6574.

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

free es1imate call Chtt, 1514..S.92·

6323.

r

·

DRYWALL

Hang, f1ntsh, repaH. ' • ~
Ceilmgs textured, plaster repair,
Call Tom 30'1 -675-4 18&amp;. 20 V9lrl ,.
e~epert.mce

840 Electrlcal·apd
RefrigeratiOn
RSES CERTifiEQ DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Heat Pump't , Atr Con~ltionthg, If
Vou Oon·1 CaU Us We Both LOHI
Fret Enmatts, t · 800·2~1 - 0018,
614 ·446-13XI8,
0029.5.

wv

Reaident~&amp;l or r.6mmarclsl 'wiring

u: '11

service or repairs.. Maa~r
censed eleCtrician. Ridenour
Electrical, WVD00.308, 304·871·

new

••nt

ON~

f./

'

\
\

•

I

;j

Sllll!1dll¥. Die. 14, 111111
In the year ahaad, It will be to your
lldvaJagiiD 111m .., laiOWIIdga
or tacllniqual apptlclllle to your fllk:l.
~~... u ... - - . . be pallllblr.
IAGITTAIItUI CNov. n-oao. 11) Plan
to get out ani move around today,
et; • you _ , be ~ unau you
haw a 11u1y aahedull. Try 10 ....,.....
wiiiiiOIIwe paapla. ~ wllare 10 took lor IIIII you'l tinct M. Till A1A1oGraph Watchmaker Instantly ravalli
II

GEMINI (May 21..June 201 Compamons
which signs are roman11cally ·perfec1 lor '!till ')01 doubl your posnion on imponant
you. Maol $2.75 to Malchrnaktr. c/o 1his tssues today .' In fact , yOu'f optmons will
·
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill influence their Judgment.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Beginning
Slation. -York. NY 10156 .
CAPRtc:ORN (OK. 22.Jan. 11) Fla1her today, you may become aware of
. than forcing lhlnga to happen 1oday. let ch1nges whk:h can benefit your career.
unlok:111 their own pace. You will Walch for teiHale signals,
· tare much better Hyou ~ conditions die· LEO (July 23·Aug. 22} If you need a
favor 10day. approach pals whO have real
late lhe llmellble.
AQUAIIIUI (J1ln. 20-flb. 11) Today, rt cloul. Ttloe lnfluln11alln1ormedillnes will •
will be lmpottant lor you to anilnd social ....,. U1e at&gt;i.iily'to open doorolor you.
func110n1, becaUH man, good 1hlnga VIRGO (Aug. 23-aepl. 22) 11 mlgh1 be
could hcJPpln. TfY 1G be klnd to eve!yORe. IMler fOr you to ctooe deals 10day tllan M
PIICI!I (Fall. 20·11arch 20) In your will be tomorrow. Oo no1 neglect impor·
ldruggle to rMCh 1WO Important objec.' !ant rnaners. You mull Slrike while you
IMI. you mlghlaurpftll Clhl1l with your
IIIIICII)r loeli1y.
.
AIIIU (IIMIIII1-Apil11) You will be
e&amp;clpllonllly pttCApll.. 10Ciay. and you
wil flC1IIIR l111owledga tllrougl1 personal
llfllllllllOII. Ute lhillnlormatlon wiael)l.
TAUIIIII (April ......, 101 Today, you
wilt lwM a epactal ability to lump on 1
"" Hllhll bandloagon. Fonur.~. Olhtre will walcoml your partiCIPIIIOR and
lnpul.
I

•

have !he advantege.

'LIBRA lhPI. 23-0ct. 21) In develop·
menta 1ha1 call tor polltlc.al know·how
today. you cen hold your own Hyou Con-..._
IIIIJC111111CHoger plellorm Ulen your oppo-

nent.
IICOIIPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) A current
project could lf)lll financial gain for you
.II lhle time, and H should be glvttn 1op

priority today . Make 1his opportunity
t:OUnt.

"f

•

$10,000. 304-77~·955(

199211.600 For Bolh: 614-256·
1233. ·

IIII I II

One golfer to another, " The biggest disappointment I
ever had was when I hit a hole in one and no one SAW
ITI"

IFRIDAY

:
1

1
7t teotwood .erty ·Rasorr 1
pull behind camper, like ' new, •

2 Rebuildable Berena·s 1990 GTZ

Upton Used Cars AI 82-3 Mlles
Soutl'l ol leon , WV. Financing
AVJIUiablri. 304 -458· 1069.
.

A famous person once said
that, 'A hunch is creativity tryil'!g to tell you------ :·· ·

Ocular- Joist - Yield - Weekly - SAW IT

OBO. 614·256·6340, 614·256·
6~7. _____________ 1810
~~--~----~~
.:...;:;;..:._
Home
• i·

Need A Car, No Credit, Be.d Cred·
1!, Bankruptc~? We Can Help Re·
establish Credill Must Ma~e
$150 Wee~ly Take Home , 15%
Down In Cun Or Trade To O~.tal ·
ify For ThiS Bank F1nonCmg. 614 ·
4411-0607. '
-

..

SCUM LETS ANSWIRS

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck •
wheels &amp; radialors D &amp; R Auto, ~
Ripley, WV. 30'1 -372 ·3933 or 1800-273-9329.

19.95 New St~l&amp; Cavalter, 4 Door,
Auto, Air, 11,500 Miles, S7.300

Clean 1991 4 Door Oldsmobile
Ct&amp;ffa, '19,000 Plus Mdtt, I6,80Q,
61 4·446- 1897.

....

G pAM E

1995 Monte Carlo LS. snt"rwood

FM Cass&amp;tte, Cloth Seats, 34,000
Mtl&amp;s $15,800 . 61'1 - 441 ·0753,
_ '15-S6 .
614 2
24

•.

..•

.

1993 Ford Escort LX. 4 door,
47,000 miles, tan with 1an clolh m·
tenor, a/c, amlfm ca}isette, auto,
$4950, 614 -949·2311 da~s , 6 t4 949-26441W&amp;.
·
1993 Tempo 4 Doors, S4,500
Loaded. Aula. A~r. PS, PB. 614 ·

.•.

Ci=···

'::~::' S@~~~-l&amp;t.trs·
0

, • •

·

750 Boats &amp;.Motors

760

Corn $3.00 butJhet, white p!Cki/1g.

Surplul Army Camouflage Clolh·
rng, (lntulated cov•ralls, brown
duck bibs S35) . Sam SomervtUe's by Sandyville Poll Offic•.
Friday - Sunday Noon-5:00pm.
Other dayt call 304·2~·5155.
(JuniOr Sl~tl).

atudenl

2 Criminal

A 4

aKQt065

Washer, Or~ar, Stove EleCtric,
!
Aatrlgerator, Kenmore, Excellent cooled dltoel. Sl5,eoo. ••d 1985 Dodge 31• Ton 318, Aw · 1788.
.
L-11
Pricot
AI
Shoo
Cale,
Gal·
81ii-....Q3110.
Shape, 614- 4C6·11d Ahtr 2!30 Equipped s.-y m.eoo.·Did rom111c Topper Good Conditio",
ipoliL
$2,500, 014-378-2152.
On-doyl.
.
Resident1aj Or (:ammtrCIIl Wlr· O
~ou know tNt 70% of ali
N. 3rd. Ave Middleport, OH. 2
ptatlitfnl art Wlttr related. Kftf· 1981 Oodgo 0·50 R,m, 4Cfl, s lng, Now Serwlcll)r Rtpe~o . Ll· ·~ :
a.droom, turniahtd 1p1. Qepo111 c-11ry plot In Kirkland lltmo· Zonllh Console 21" T,V
. Excellent
cen11d E1ecrriclan. 'Wtllh Etec· '.'
condit10n .
&amp; ,ererencet requited. ~4-182- rial Garden, prict ntgolionable. Condltton, S3QO Cill eu -ue. er'a Service Centar State Rt 87 speeG uanl, oo
tric 814·4~8·9950, GaiUpoU1, It
304·773-5870.
$1,100.
:JO&gt;f-&lt;1.75·
•
Loon,
304·895-38,.,
2586 ..
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

a

1991 Dodge Stealth Garage l&lt;ept,
Low Mites, $9,900 Neg 6t4-3677117.
NEW '186 COMPUTER with
Monitor! Loaded Full Factory
Warranty. GREAT CHRIStMAS

1 T-AAII

• 10 9. 3
·t A 2

By Phillip Alder

Doberman pup, black and
male, shots and W01·mod.
weeks old, 6t4-742-2167.

Country Furniture. 30"-875·6820.
Rt 2 N, 8m1les, Pt Pleasant, WV.
Tues-Sat9-6, Sun 11-5.

DOWN

• J 72
• AKJ
• Q5

SUPPER?

mont
20%. off of llll'!!).'thing In store II ·

JET

AERATION MOTORS

-Yool1
53 Alae

ala 11ft

aQUI43

s

c.lloll(a
'*'foe)

4tl:!!":ln
51
52 -lnclnlon
Stadium,

Soulk

MAW'S FIXIN' FlliD
CHICIC.IN. JUGHAID
CAN YOU
STAY FER

Grubb':~ Piano- turMg &amp; repairs.

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, RlnQet, Refrigrators, 90 Oa~ Guarantee!
French C1ty Ma~tag. 614·446-

Blue Founta1n Motel 151 Upper
Ri11er Road. Galltpohs, Please Call
Bet:ween 3 P.M -7 P.M. ·

61'1·2~608Q

TRANSPORTATION

1994 Toyota 2wd II'Uck, maroon,
4ql, standard, 88,000mlles,

• J ••

$5,500. 304-e75·1602.

stde Or Outside, 81&lt;4-388-9065

3. Bedroom, 2 lu ll baths, S375f
mo S200/dep0sit No pets References. 304·576·4024

For
Sale . 1987 141160 2
Bedrooms, No Pets, Very Clean,

Wanted To Buy: Square 8al81 01
Hay 614·448·1052.

ABA .Registe red Amertcan Bull·

• •• 3

1992 GMC Sonoma FL~ Wittl
Ever~ Option 'NADA 17,550 Sale
Price $5,250: t001 S- 1Cl Sport
NAOA $5.000 Sale Price S3. 150,
Cook MOk)rl, 6-14-U6-Q103.

,..

Eul

5
•• 7 2

2438.

11
17

.~

a

1t Chlrillcaloulltx 54 -

7 2

WHI
a K6

1991 S-tO Tahoe v.e. 5 Speed,
93,000 Milas. $4,900, 304·576·

1994 Full S1ze DodOa Truck, 2
Whoel Dnve, 318, AuJo , Loaded,
34,Cl00 Miles, 112,500' 080: 814·

dog 16 Weeks , Papers, Shots. In·

•

256·1233.

3188.

Firewood $35 P1c~·Up Truck
Load, Split &amp; Oeli11ered 614-4'16-

1192-2187.

ABA regiatered American bulldog
pupp~. female, first shots &amp;
wormed, like ·chance~ tn movie,
Homewarel Bound, 61C-592-1!325

Square balea, S2.00aa. Allalfa,
clover, orchard gra11 mix. 304 ·
675-3960 Aher Spm.

A9

t K J 10 7 8 t

92% tiigh Erticlency Furnace,

Fi;OWOOd For Sale: Oak 135, PtckUp Load, Delivered 614·258-

Ntce 2 Bedroom Unfurnished
Tra11er Etectrrc Heat, 5 Mtnutes
From Qalltpolts Read~ To OccuPV.
No Pelt. 6t4·446·3907.

F8tturl ng H~dro Balh . Don
Sheell. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
614 -446·0231 .

Hay &amp; Grain

W11eet Drive, 88,000 Miles,
$3,000 OBO, 814·4ll8·0t59, 814-

Concrete &amp; Plasuc Saptic Tan~s,
300 Thru ,2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr~ses , Jackson, OH

60,000 BTU -$785: 80,000 BTU ·
$885; 100,000 BTU ·$995. The

Mobile home spacal tor rant, up
10 161C80't. $85 I * monlh, water,
Hwtr and trash Included, 61 4·

640

• Q6 5

a

2

0189.

Rooms
Slarbng at $120/mo. Galfia Hotel.
614·446·i580.

2 Bedroom t 112 Bath
Home, You Pay Utilirias, &amp; D~s­
it, In Poner Area I2751Mo., Refer·
ences Aequif~, 614-388-Qt62.

A Groom Shop -Pat Grooming.

1~91 Ford Ranger Standard

dem, NEW 5899 . Dehvered s11
months warranrw. Call 614-667 ~

Very ntca ground floor apartman1
in Quiet surroundings localed
three mtles from ~venswood

Furnished
Rooms
for rent • Weak or montl'l.

WV. 30...75-7421 .

role

N

Floppy, &lt;X CO ROM. 33.6 Mo·

1-800-537·9528. .
FALL SPECIAL

furrlshed with washer, df)'er, dishwastier and large kitchen w1th all
apJl'iancas. Nice bath with large
shower, large master bedroom
with a working fireplace living
area has loiS of room . At $490
pel' month With uh~ties Included. A
deposit of S400 11 required. For
more rntormatton call 814-8435343 and ....., messOQO.

7693 or 304-87S..e752

3!1~

Auro, Short ~ Bau, No f\Jsr,
$3,:JJO, 814•:J88.1l83-4 fvtninQI,

14... 28 Monitor, 8MB RAM , 1A ..

245-9170, Olftca, Hours: Tuesdays, Thursdays 9:30 -3:00 Wednesday Noon -3:00

R11di0 Bridge in 01i~ Complefc;l

Hydraulic Oil $12.50-Sgal pall.
Siders Eq~ipment, Henderson,

1987 Dodge 112 Ton • WO,

11 .....
liiOonl1aad

COMPUTER SALE Ill 100 MHZ.

2 bedroom do·uble wide rratler, 8
miles out 143, 81'1·992·3743 no
calls after 9pm. .

2 BedrOom trailer, you pay utilitieS, $100 depos!l, references,

wv. 304-755-5885.

0098.

One bedroom apartment in Midcltpon. aM utRitin plkt, S2701mo.,

Paid

Husqvarna model 51 chain saw
on sale $339 t his month onlt,
free cue &amp; free t:l'laln &amp; lree
gloves. Slden Equipment 304 675-7421 .

Protec:tion System 30 Caple ts Rio Grande, OH Cal l 614 -245·
'
$20, 81 .... 8·6308, 1-800·291· 5121.

450

For

Limited Olfe'rl 1997 doublewide,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $279/
month. Ftae delivery &amp; setup.
Only 11 Oakwood Homes , Nino

+

Ford SQOO With New Agco loader $t2,000 614-379-9381 .

ANTIOXIDANT A Super High Block. l:lt1Ck, sewer pipes, wind·
P:otency, Natural, Free Radica l ows. lintels, etc . Claude Wmters.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
staning at $260·$300, sewer, water and trash tncluded, 614·992·
2167 .

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small
Par~. Oeposil &amp; References Re·
quired, Phone 614·446-1104.

Remodeling Done, very Good
StrvlceB
Cond11ion, 61~·367·0209, 61•·
==-::-:===-•:-:::::~ I .:.:".:. -o:.:1.:.78::..
' -----HARTs MASONARY ~ Block,
twkk I ttDn, work, 30 y•rs IX·
perilnCI. reatonab6e ralat.' 304•
80$.3501 after e:oopm, no }ob to

Close to gallipohs, -No Pats, Refef&amp;nces and Deposit Required 614·
4'16-6890

manr 111 March 1997. E-Z linanclng. Call the finance line 1·800251 ·507Cl . All homes on sale
Free deliVery &amp; setup.
Sate: t98t~14x70 3 Bedroom,
1 112 Bath Mobile HOme, Lots 01

nished. No Petsl $285.00Uonth

-.r. no pe11,114-892-51151.

ly 3 1/4 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 3812.
bath, apacloua living room, large 2 Bedrooms, furnlstltd, lOCI ltd

Acrea, Porchea, $15,900, 513574-2539

Stove, Rarrigerator, water Fur-

Nice two bedroom apartment in

Rea..._ 200 Main SL PL Pletll· room, total etectuc, heat pump.
..., wv 25150.
.:.;se:::,soo=.-=.:.5ro-..:..::21l:..:•.:.6·,.---,..--l ::=-:--:------w-- d To '0
Galllpoll• Hor.tA For Rent 4 BA.
80
1
._..,,te
0
1982 14•70 l.!obile Homo On 1.6 1 112 Balh Brick Ranch, Fam
App odd jobl, painting, ounen

Centenary Area.

Oopciolt.81·---

RENTALS

N::..;;'"'::.·.:.wv::.·:...1:...-30.&lt;:::...·.:.755-::..:588
::.::5:...·---1 2 ll&amp;&lt;lroom. fun l&gt;eoemont. 205 11
2 Popl S •2 51
30 8 •
N_., built home on approximaur
ar t. • 7 mo. .4- 7a-

HJ82 14x65 Brookshire 2bed-

Niu 2 BR

14~-

Building
Supplies

Merchandise
Parcels on Rayburn Rd. Water,
paved road. reasonable rettric:·

LIMITED OFFER! New homes ao 1 Bedroom House in Rio Grande
low 11 $4118 down , no payments S235 month plus depasit will be
till March 1887. FrM d~ivery &amp; ava1latH Dec. 1o, 61 4·388-9946
set-uP. only at Oakwood Homes,

Two , bedroom apartments tor
1111 with atorage building . Will
uti on land c:onuac:t, 61~·992·
5858.

: 550

.....

1 ......

,...__

'·

,.
I

�•m FIOM IICILR,
A90 Mllun DRM FROM PIIIIISIURG IIID A15 MIIUII DRIVI F10M OIARLISTOII TO
LARGEST CAR AID TRUCK
IN WEST VIRGINIA
IT IS 0 LY A 30 MINUII DIM FROM HUNTIIIGTON, A60 MIIUII

C&amp;O

Philadelphia Eagles

edge

OTORS

••..s

WE ALWAYS HAVE OVER 1000 CARS AID IIUCKS

727·2921

LOVE

LEXUS

11 peacefulltolida,
'

•P.geB1

Kwanzaa atarta new
year with focus, Nrenlty

New York Jets

LOVE TOYOTA .......
71111ii i i 2...
7 ....
•7....7_.7....7_

I

Details on
pageA2

• FMtutwd on p.,e Cl •

•
ttntJ

.,.

I

HI: 50s
Low: 30s

:·
',.'.

,.
I
!

I

I

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
-

--

--- --

---

"
' &gt;~

'

-------·

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • December 15, 1996

Vol. 31 . No. 45

.Toyota's impact: 'It will take some time'
sponsored by the Gallia
c;ounty Chamber of
Commerce and· Rockwell Automation at the
University of Rio
Grande.
Manufacturing North Amenca.
.
By KEVIN KELLY
He discussed the
"We have a fairly mature supplier base in
n"* Sentinel Stlfl
regional
impact of ToyRIO GRANDE- Toyota's engine plant in the U.S. We're not trying to lake the wind out
eta's decision to build a
Puinam County, W.Va., will i~act on the of the sails for local suppliers, but there will
plant at Buffalo that will
uea's employment scene with the creation of be an impact, p~~rhaps I0 to 15 years later than
manufacture engines for
300 jobs, but it will be some time before the expected," Wiseman added.
the automaker's assemHe $8id p~~ople should not "fall into ihe
plant draws on local suppliers to assist its
WIHIIIIn
bly plants in Cillifomia
operations, ·
,
trap it'll happen overnight - but it wiU hapand
Canada. Toyota,
. "There are some mispen:eptiqns that sup- pen and it will' !ake s6me time:·
pliers will come to this area, and p11rbaps they . Wilimtan, baSed at TMNA's Erlanger, Ky., courted for over· a decade by West Virginia
· will over time;" said James M. Wiseman, gen- headquarters, made his comments .during · a officials to bring a plant there, formally
eral manager of publio affairs for Toyota "Business After Hours" event Thursday co· an~ounced it would build at the Buffalo site

Company exec says any potential plant
draws from local suppliers is years out

last summer.
The plant is expected to op11n in 1998. It
and the employee base is expected to swell
Toyota's North American operations, which
also include manufacturing oudets in Kentucky and Indiana.
·
The Mountain State operation is projected
to produce 300,000 engines annually, Wiseman said.
"That's the plan. If the trend keeps going
with sales and demand, it might grow beyond
that," he said.
Toyota's U.S. car sales for this year are
estimated at 1.1 million, around 30 percent of
its worldwide business.
. · Wiseman said the Buffalo plant may not be
Continued on page A2

Hunters prove beaver's best friend EPA blasts trash

disposal company

' Cf.

Grand jury Indicts three
elected public officials

95 TOYOTA 4 RUNNER 515 4X4
AUTO., AlA, Y-1 ENQ ;, SUNROOF,
PfWJNDOWS, PILOCKS. ALUM. WHEELS,

---

-$27.-

414

95
SILVERADO. I.!ATHEFI, AUTO., AIR,

ao

15

ENGINE, P/WINOOWS, P(LOCICS, P/SEAT,
U)ADED

WAS f-.-

.

: County Commissioner Del~ert .
Perry, and McArthur Village Coun·cilmen Terry Walker and James
Wooddell, were indicted on . felony
l'ch1orge1 Thursday.
· Perry is clwged wid\ il)timidation
and obstruction of justice. Walker
was indicted for alleged extortion,
·
· and compli~i­
and Wooddell, a fonner McArthur
l)la}'or. is.charged with engaging in a
pattern
activity, extortioa, .

73
AUTO.• ~-·
ALUM.
, LOADED P/l.OCIOI,

-

. . . .lll'lft

·~~

-$1t,W

96DUM.·
CHEV.
SUBWBU 414 f4
··

9210DGE CAUVAI LE
AU. WHEEL DRIVE, 7 PASS., ALITO., AIR,
IJ..6, ENG., P/WINOOWS, PII.OCKS,
LOADED, GO IN THE SHOW 1

: McARTHUR - Three Vinton
II'~=~~~~:~;~ltcin Common
officials are to appear
Pleas Court
· a.
~aring stemming from
indictments issued against them by a

AUTO.. AU\ 310 ENGM. PIWINDOWS,
PllOCI&lt;S. AWII. WHEBJI, I.Co\D£0

LOADED .

WAS$11,51t ,

.

.

.. s11,544 -$17.AUTO.,

:1110 ENG., PJWINDOWS,

_sa

Special Prosecutor Robert
Shoalak of Athens .said charges
agiinst Wooddell and Perry arose
from alleged attempts to influence
the main prosecution witness in a
trial involving McArthur Police
• ClriefJoe Drew, who was accused of
tampering with evidem:e.
Drew was acquitted of the clwge
an Athena County jury.
Walker and Wooddell were
li~h1arg1ed in connection with attemptS
allegedly influence current
IfMcArthur Mayor Frank Griffy, said
1:shoslak, who did not elaborate on
they allegedly tried to influence
mayor.

0

1.8

PILOCKS. PoiHEL OOORS.I.Co\D£0

Good Morning
Today'a ......... Kual
16 Secdo• • 194 Pqa

MCHEVS-10

16

94 FORD DPLORER LIMITED 414

....

AUTO., AIR, V-e ENG ., AWW. WHEElS, SHARP

LEATHEA, NJTO,, All, PI'Wifri)OWS,
PILOCICI. PIUAt SUNfiOO!'; LCWlEO .

_s2o 990

4 DOOR, AUTO., AIR

WAS$7495

.. s5866

96

---

Columns

LONG BED, AUTO., Ml, 3150 ENG., P/WINOOW8,
I'ILOCI&lt;S, A1.UM. WltE!LS. lDADlO

l r i Apdrg=
Jielelcp• I

A4
C4

Dprpthy Styre

Cl
C4

AND

.MCJIL..fll. ,.,
Slt9-6
AFTER CIIUIOI
SUI.I...S

MOTO
ST. ALBANS

727-2921

'

&amp; LEIUS

· POMEROY -A Pomeroy cou·
pie bowhunting for deer ended up
instead having ari adventure with
another animal native to southeastem Ohio, the beaver.
Sharon and David Hudnall were
bowhunting near their home prior
to the deer gun season when Mr.
Hudnall C)bserved a large beaver
next to a tree it hach:ul down.
When the animal remained, he
got his wi~e to come over and see
it.
··
,:
.
·"·He thought it wls
that
it wasjUJtkind ot
she said. . .
.
We got clo&amp;er

"

.
AT. 80 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM &amp;HONEY'S
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 OM DEALER SEWNO CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS

OFU I A.M. TO I 111.11, DAILY-IATURDAY I A.ll. TO I 111.11. IUIIDAY t 111.11. 10 I lUI.

beaver was pi~d to the ground
b;y the tree, Mrs,·Hudnall recalled.
The beaver had apparently cut
down the tree, about 10 inches in
diameter, when it fell down on ill;
broad, flat tail, fastening it to the
ground..
.
The Hadnalls had no idea how
long ,the. beaver had been stuck
there before their arri.val, but by
some indications, it may have been
there for a while. It had .scratched a
trench around itself and had continued cutting on the remaining
stump, Mrs, Hudnall explained."
In this instance, hunters proved
a beavet's best fri~nd. .
Mr. f!udnall left rma '·iel\tlned,·
Continued ol) 111111 A2

wins FOIA case. on proposed Mason pulp mill

State agencies that
to release
dacuments under ~s Free. dom of lnfo~ '~'i\JU!It'Jmlduce an indo*, of~uri\en'ts,·•·
the staie Supreme ~ou ' ·d, .
·
. Friday's ~uling , a! said the :
agencies should ex~lun · in detail
why each document ts exempt. ,
The mling comes from a case
where The Charleston Gazette
demanded documents the state

DeveloplliCIIt Oflke exthanged with
pcopleand ·organlza~saboutapro-

posed pulp mjU in M~ County.
The I)CWIIp8pCI', has investigated
whal tax bmtki and iucentiyes min
developer5 hilYC'Iqll&amp;ht from the state.
Th'e Supreme\. Cc?urt'·s ruling
dfrecled \he Kana'!"ha County j:ircult Coun 10 deta:mine which dOF·
umeots iho.uld be ,.released accordin8 to guidelines the Supreme Court
laid' out in i~ ruling.
.
'
'

Ha~inger··-

"We're glad that the court upheld questions to agency attorney Dana
the Gazette's belief that the public Davis, · who did not immediately
has a right to know all the tax breaks return a phone call.
The Gazette eaFiier won release
and governmental inducements that
of
some flies for the project proare offered to industries," said
posed
by Par$ODS &amp; Whittemon:
Gazette Editor Jim Haught.
".'\fter ali, it's the people's Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y.
But Kanawha County Circuit
money" involved, so they· sbould
)ujlge
Herman Canady said the Develknow how much of it is being given
opment
Offiee could withhold parts of
away," Haught said.'
44
documents
and all of 25 others.
.
Development office spokesThose files, Canady ruled,
:woman Jan Dickinson · referred

including. letters between the state
agency and ;the ~ompany, were
exempt from release under the state
Freedom of Information Act.
The Supreme Court said it
appeared the docuinents the newspaper wants do not fit I!DY of the
exemptions 10 the law 'because they
were exchanged between the
agency and the mill i:leveloper, or
betweeq the developer 111\d other
public agencies.

From One Stripe to Four Stars'

•

~

/' 16.

ntie.f

·-

'

I

ay JIM FREEMAN
TirnM4ent!MI Stlfl

been recognized on numerous occasions. In
Korean war and the f. of the General' Thomas D. White Space Tro- his honor the park in lower Middleport was
phy
and
first
recipient
of
the
Master
Space
4inVietnam.
Badge. He was given the Space Command ·named Hartinger Park and the adjacent
,.
ll
h~
General Hartinger's
1
street, General Hartinger Parkway.
military decorations . "Order of the Sword", highest award preSeveral family members still reside in
' "
I"
and awards include the sented by non-commissioned officers'. ·
Middleport,
and the General returns periodiIn
tribute
to
him
there
is
an
annual
Gen·jy ~RLI!NI! HO,EFLICH · , ' . . dleport: )li1 educatioi?'and sports ~~~vi~~· in
Defcnae Distinguished
cally
to
visit
eral
James
V.
Hartinger
Scholarship
award'IIIIIIM' lhll't •
'
''
the Muldleport IICbtlOia, and h11 IRlhtar)i
Serville Medal, Distin·
·Since his n:lirement, General Hartinger
,: MII1bll.EI'ORT - Retired Alt ~ Fcln:e career ~c~ 1pan~.five decades. .
auiahed
Service 'ed at the United States Air Force Academy.
has
served on boards and has been a consul:Oe~ ~~ v. Hartinser hu wniten a
Dunng h11 aemce time ~served tn three
Medals, · Legion of At West Point, as a· result of the General
:book lbout powin&amp; up in Middleport an~ wan and held ranla from pnvate to sergeant
Merit, Distinguished being a three-time Lacrosse All-American tant, speaker and moderator in spreading the
·m1 ilhmriout ca~eer in the United Slatel Atr to Four-Star Genel'll.
.
Plying Cron, Air and in the Lacrosse Hall of Fame, the Gen· word that "our future is in space. • ·
He is married to the fonner Mickey
Pon:e ·
His many accomplishmen'- htclade 1ervMedal with eight oak era! James V. Hartinger Trophy is annually
Christian
of Mullens, W.Va. and has three
!•Oeael'll Jim Harting« ·- from ina u commander-in-chief of the North leaf clusters, Air Force Commendation presented to West Point's Most Valullble
children, Jimmer, Kristin and Mike.
.One Slrip11 to four Stars", the book ·"t'eat on · American AelOij)ace Derense Command Medal and Combat Readinesa Medii. He is la\:rosse Player.
To obtain a copy of General Hartinger's
The
National
Security
Industrial
AssociaAte lui lllollth a1 the Chinook ~ shop, (NORAD) and first ~~clet of the Air al10 a recipient of the Korean Tan&amp;il Medal.
book,
residents may write the Chinook
tion
presents
the
t;leneral
James
V,
Hartinger
~Jill .. in Colorado Sprinp, Colo.
,
Fon;;e SpliCe Commano. He wu known u He holdi hononry doctorates in military sciBook
Shop,
Inc.. 210 North Tejon, Colorado
Space
Medallion
annually
to
the
p11rson
who·.
• • Now' redred and Uvina in Colorado the Father of Space COIIUIWid."
. ence and law.
Springs,
Colo.
contributes
11101t
to
our
nation's
space
effort.
·
i$pru.,. Hutlnpr in his book detaila p~~r- AI a career-long f!lhter pilot with over AI&lt; first Commander of USAF Space In Middleport General Hartincer· lias 999·1195. 809(13, or telephone 1·800· 'ICIIill ..:CO.tocdl!lll about bla youth in Mid· 5000 fl)'ina hours, he flew the F-84 in the Command, General J1artinger wu recipient ·

,·.'· .
I '

'We went Qut hoping to kill a deer
and wound.up saving a beaver' .

·11m•

TO' TA
.

.

'

' a trash
· GALLIPOLIS -The Ohio EPA last week blasted
collection and disposal company whose subsidiaries serve
·several local communities;
and, issued · a proposed
denial of a 1997 operating
license for a landfill the
company operates in JacksonCounty.
Cincinnati-based Rumpire Consolidated Companies
locally serves Gallipolis.
Middleport and Coalton.
The company operaies
regional offices in Wellston
and McDermott.·
.
The city . of Gallipolis
~ entered into a one-year
tract with Rumpke for
deiltial trash pickup and
recycling on Oct. I. Rumpke
trash collection, recycling and disposal operations are not
affected by the EPA's proposed action.
In addition to proposing tO deny an operating license for
the Beech Hollow Sanitary Landfill near Wellston, the EPA
proposed to deny transfer of ownership requests for three
other Rumpke sullstdiaries operating in Ohio. The EPA pro. posal was. directed at two landfills in Hamilton County and
one in C~hocton County.
The proposed denial of a 1997 operating license for the
Beech Hollow Landfill was issued to Sands Hill Waste Ser-.
vices Inc., owner of the facility which 'Rumpke· operates. ,.
Ohio EPA is the .licensing authority in Jackson Courity.
"I have ·been presented with substantial evidence that
Rumpke lac~s sufficient reliability, competence and exper~
lise, and that Rumpke does not have a history of compliance
with environmental laws," said EPA Director Donald R.
Schregardus. "As a result, I have taken these proposed steps."
This is the first time under Ohio's solid and infectious
waste regulations that the director of the EPA has prpposed to
deny ownership requests and operating licenses solely based
on a company's competence, expertise and compliance history.
.
The EPA proposals to deny came following a review of
Rumpke disclosure statements - and a subsequent investigation of company operations- by the environmental backg!'\)und investigation unit of the Attorney General's office.
The EPA charges that Rumpke has had "major ~ompliance
problems at landfills," including exceeding allowable waste ·
disposal limits; a waste landslide and several fires.
·
Continued on page A2

:Me,/fiB County natiVe uocuments ••e,
b
/ bo0 k
'CBra
..,er in new BU
.. to ,ogran ,.CB

'

OPEl

WI!,.,.

•

Prices do nf)llncluc!e doq. Ieee, tuea or .llcenll8 1181.

ALL PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER

.

'General Jim

SILVEUDO 414

NO DEALERS

wcmc.

(AP) -

.·$ega

414

BE.~VE!R - Dllvld and Sharon Hudnill of POIMFOY fOund thia beaver trappell by a fallen tree,
above, ·while bowhuntlng for dMr. Below right, Mr. Hudnall
to free the eharp-toothed rodent. The
bNwr apPtnntly cutting down:the trw which fell onto ita tail.

G
Jill SIWII

90

Agency director proposes denial of
operating license for Jackson landfill

'

-'· .

'

..
•

•

..

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