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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 20 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 22, 1995

Plan will put U.S. troops in Bosnia ·by Christmas
By ROBERT BURNS
AP Military Writer
WASHINOTON - Thousands
of U.S. soldterx wtll be in wintry
Bosnia before Chnstmas helpmg
NATO keep the newly declared
peace. tf all goes according to a
plan awaum g President Clmton's
approval
In all , about 20,000 Amencan
troops arc hkel y to participate
Tbeir mtss ton: to ensure the separation of Serb, Croat and Bosman
armed forc es as called for in the
peace accord mtlialed by the_three
parttcs Tuesday in Oh10.
The total force, composed of
troops from other NATO member
countnes as well as non-NATO
European and probably some Musltm couutncs. ts expec ted to be
about 60,000 It would be command ed by U S. Army Gen .
George Joulwan, who is chtef of all
&lt;\merican forces in Europe a' well
as NATO's Supreme Alhed Commander Europe
Congress has been highly critical of Clmton' s mststence that U.S
forces lead the NATO peacekecpmg misston Just moments after the
prestdent announced the acc ord.
Sen Strom Thurmond , R-S.C ..
chatrman ot the Senate Armed Servtces Commtllec, declared htmself
"sltll not convmccd" that the Unued Stales has enou gh at stake to
IU Sitl y rt skmg th e lt vcs ot tis
troops
"Prestdcnl Chnton should come
before Congress and explam lully
the scope. length and anttctpated
costs ol the J cploymenl before
sendm{ · ,my troops, l hurmonJ
satd
Hou&gt;e Speaker Newt Gmgnch,
R-Ga. s:uo Tucsoay Uutl he looked

at the U.S tronp deployment
" skepucally but with an open
ound" anu would hold hearings
next week
A small number of Amen can
troops, as pan of NATO survey
learns. have already been m Bosma
as part of the peace mission planning . In addition. a few hundred
U.S. soldtcrs wtll pamctpate in an
" enabhng force" expected to head
for Bosma next week to smooth the
way for the main body of th e
peacekecptng Ioree
The m:un U S conungen~ however. wtll not go to Bosnta unul
Chnton g1ves the final go-ahead

and asks Congress for an expresston of suppon. NATO' s political
arm, the North Atlantic Council,
must also gtve its OK in advance.
The way ts expected to be clear
to begm the NATO misston by
somelune next week, U.S. officials
satd , although Congress probably
wtll take longer to act
It ts not clear whether Chnton
would proceed without congres sional suppon.
Another obstacle to be over come ts a U.S.-Russian disagree ment over who would exercise
pohttcal control over tile NATOled peacekeeptng mission . The

sur vey ed had an op11110n ahoul

Ml Y c1 gh '~ guill or mnocence . •md
95 percent nl them thought he wa'
gut lty But onl y 18 per ce nt
cKpresseJ abs olute confidence 111
thetr opmton
" Whtlc the percentage of people lltal bchevc McVetgh ts gutlty
is not drrnnaucally htghcr 111 L&lt;twlon, the mtenslly wllh which that
optnton ts held ts dr amattcally
h1gher there," Jones wrote
Also on Tuesday, a magtstrate
unsealed several documents in the
case, including McVeigh ' s financial affidavit
On it, McVetgh stated that he
had only $255 in cash and listed his
$800 ptstol as his most valuable
possession He valued hts 1977
Mercury Marquts at only $500

Ne.vs Hotline

992-2156

with th~ks. anillery and other
heavy weapons they might need if
peace falls apan.
"We do not see this as a war
we' re going in to fight," he told
reporters recently.
Most of the U.S. forces designated for Bosnia duly are in the
Army's 1st Armored Dtvision 1be
soldiers have been 10 mtensive
training for the mtsston thts month
m Germany, stmulaung the condttions and hazards they expect to
face in Bosma
The notonously harsh Balkan
winter ts a chtef worry of U.S milItary planners. Snow and cold will

tmpede the peacekeepers' agility
and make it harder for spy aircraft
to surveil troops and weapons
movement on the ground.
Other major hazards anticipated
by US. planners include the untold
thousands of land mmes strewn
across the Bosnian countrystde including many whose locatton wa'
not recorded.
~
Perry has said US. forces probably would stay in Bosma no more
than one year, although Chnton has
withheld a time commitment until
be rev1cws the final plan. He has
told Congress a one-year operation
would cost about $1.5 billion

Rebel Serbs vow defiance of new peace pact
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC
Associated Press Writer
BELGRAD E. YugoslaviaEven before the pre sidents of
Bosnia, Serbta and Croatia tntUaled
a peace plan for Bosnia, rebel
Serbs reJected 11 Their deftanCe has
scuulcd prcvtous plans, and could
be crucial once more.
Although the Bosnian Serb leader, Rado van Karadztc, was con sptcuously silent about the accord,
his No. 2 man, Momcilo Krajisnik.
wasted no ltme condemnmg tl.
KraJtsnik wa' pari of a Serb del egalton to the peace talks in Dayton, Ohto, led by Serb Prestdent
Slobodan M1loscvtc Havmg won
the nghl 10 negotwte on behalf of
the Bosmatl Serbs. sources mdicated that Mtlosevtc sunply ignored
their ObJCCitOns
Sources close to the Serb dele gallon m Ohto srud Mtlosevtc hter-

ally' threw three Bosnian Serb officials out of the room when the final
draft of' U1e peace agreement wa~
discussed
•
Miloscvtc called the agreement
"historic" and said it meant the
end ol the war. But moments after
the agreement was announced,
KraJtsmk satd the ''maps arc bad,
blackmaihng and servtle "
' 'We have warned President
Mtlosevtc that no one has the right
10 stgn such a plan,'' Kraji sntk
sa1d "Our delegation has not
accepted the plan, and we were
unarumous on thai."

Krajtsuik satd the Bosman Serb
leadership reJected the Dayton plan
because 11 kept SaraJevo unified.
allowed a land corridor linkmg the
Bosman captlal wtth the government-controlled enclave of
Gorazde and did not give the Serbs
a wtder comdor lmkmg their lands

Trial location
change filed r---West Virginia Briefs:-by attorneys Youth killed when struck by car
By PAUL QUEAR\'
Associated Pres.• Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY - Argu ing that a flood of news stories
-about the federal build10g bomb10g
has escalated "lhe fevered passiOn
of the commumty of Oklahoma"
agatnst Ttmolhy McVetgh, ht~
lawyer asked a Judge Tuesday to
move the lrlal out ol Oklahoma.
McVetgh and Terry Ntchol s
could lace death t! convtcted ol
murder and consptracy 10 the Apnl
19 bombmg Utal killed 169 people.
U.S . Dtstrtcl Judge Wayne
Alley has set a May 17 trial in
Lawton, about 90 mtles southwest
of the bomb sue
"Ttmothy McVetgh has been
trted, convicted, and sentenced to
death by the media m Oklahoma,"
auorney Stephen Jones wrote ul court papers Michael Ttgar, the
lead auorney for Nichols, filed a
stmilar mouon
Ttgar and Jones have argued lor
alternate sues mcludmg San Franctsco . Denv er and Charleston.
W Va Bmh men contend that tnals
have been moved great distances
with far less cause
Defense auomeys wheeled thousands of pages of exhtbtL' in on a
cart Mnst were local televtston
news transcnpts and newspaper
aruclcs about Ute c:L'e
" Upon a cursory vtew. we do
not see anyUung Ut.U would suggest
to us that a l:m tnal could not be
held m Oklaltoma." satd Asstslanl
U S. Atwrney Steve Mullins . "I
think thai you're gmng to lind that
tJus case ha~ had extensive coverage all over the country "
Prosccuwrs want the ICtal held
111 Oklahoma Ill allow vtcUms and
thetr famtlies easy acce» to the
proceedmgs Because the government is seekmg capital pumshment
vtcluns can gtvc sL&lt;llements dunng
the penalty phase
Jones also presented the results
ot a survey th.ll qucsttoned 1.600
prospecuve Jurors 111 Lawton. Denver, Kans:c' Ctty, Kan , ami Albuquerque, N M
01 the 400 Jurors quesuoned m
Lawton. 44 percent had fanned an
opuuon about McVetgh 's guilt or
mnocencc 0 1 that 44 percent, 96
percent satu the~ belteved he was
gutlty. rutd 54 percent of those who
beheved he was gmlty had absolute
confidence m thetr opmmn
In Denver. 40 percent ol those

Russians have agreed to put 1,000
to 2,000 of tlleir troops in a U.S .
Army division that would operate
in eastern Bosnia, but tlley oppose
having NATO's North Atlantic
Council exercise full polttical
authority over the peace force.
Defense Secretary William
Perry announced Tuesday he will
meet his Russian counterpart at
NATO beadquaners in Brussels
next week liJ try to resolve the matter.
Perry has stressed that the U.S.
and other NATO troops are not on
a combat mis siOn in Bosnia,
allhough they wtll be equipped

CLARKSBURG - A 9-year-old Harrison County girl was
struck and killed after she stepped in front of a car, authorities said.
Gma Karsetter was being dropped off at a relative's borne near
Clarksburg on Saturday and wa~ struck as she walked behind the
car and mlo the path of another vehicle driven by a 16-year-old
male, said sheriffs Sgt. Kevin Haught.
"He didn ' t even see her," Haught said.
The gul died Sunday at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown
The name of the driver was not relea&lt;;ed because of hts age. No
charges were immedtately filed. said Chief Deputy Gary Wine.

Coal freight derails near river
BROWNSVILLE, Pa. -A fretghttram loaded wtth West Vtrginia coal derailed and spilled pan of lis payload on the banks of the
Monongahela River Nobody was hurt.
Twenty cars der:uled about4:20 am Monday, knocking over 18
empty freight cars situng on an adjacent track.
The coal spilled out of nine or 10 fretght cars, but none of the
coal or other wreckage reached the water, according to Conrail
spokesman Bob Sullivan
- The train, headed for Baltimore, origmated at a Consolidation
Coal Co mme m FaifVIew, W Va.
Sulhvan said the lme may reopen today Only one other coal
train was affected

Workers return after walkout
DANVILLE - More than 250 umon mmers at a Boone County
mming complex returned to work after a five -day walkout , a
spokeswoman s:ud.
The workers f:uled to report for the 12:0i am. shift last Wednesday at Hobet Mining Co.'s No. 2I mine because they were upset
about a new mine manager transferred from Hobet No. 7 in Logan
County, smd United Mine Workers Local 2286 Vtee President John
Spinks.
AI the request of Hobet' s parent company, Ashland Coal Inc.,
U.S Dtstrtcl Judge Charleston Haden in Charleston issued a temporary restrrunmg order Thursday directing the miners back to wodc,
but they tgnoreu hun
Umon and company oflicials met last week to dtscuss ll•e situauon IIobei spokeswoman Ruth Sullivan said the workers returned
atl2·0l am Monday.

County plans hike and bike trail
FAIRMONT - Marton County will tum 16 miles of abandoned
ratlline uuo a tr:ul for bikers. hikers and horse riderx.
The Parks and RetTealion Commission has purchased the track
along the West Fork R1ver bestde U.S. 19 from ShiiUiston to Fairmont from CSX Transportauon for $66,000. with $50,000 coming
from fcdcrallunds, said Ralph LaRue, director of the commission
The Irati should be open by midswruner and will combine with a
I S-mile Irati m Monongalia County to run almost conunuously
from Shmnston to the Pennsylvania line .
But LaRue said there are no plans to connect the two trails
because " tt' s JUSI not economtcally feasible."

Man sentenced for two arsons
MARTINSBURG - A Gerrardstown man has been sentenced to
between two m1d 20 years in prison for selling fire to two buildings
last year 111 Berkeley County.
Roger W Adams, 28. who pleaded no contest in August to two
counts ol arson, was sentenced Monday by Circuit Judge Chnstopher Wtlkes
Adam s had been charged wtth 13 counts The olhers were
droppeu tn a plea barg:un
Delcnsc anomey Ron Reece soughtlcmency, say10g Adams ts a
pyromaniac and could be treated. But Wtlkes cited more than
$I 00,000 m damage the fires caused and said they also could have
injured or ktlled people.
Adams did not speak Monday but wept after being sentenced.
A dozen buildings and abandoned homes around Gerrardstown
were damaged m the tires. Police say Adams set the fires using a
ctgarette lighter

pry cleaning fums face lawsuit
CHARLESTON - Twenty women are sumg 13 dry cleaners in
the Charleston area alleging that they charged women two or three
umes what they charge men.
The lawsutl filed Monday in Kanawha County Circuit Court
alleges that the dry cleaners are violating the West Virginia Human
Rights Act, whtch bars businesses from discriminate on the basis of
gender
It satd the prices charged to women "ts based on the sex of the
individual and not the size or the difficulty of laundenng, cleaning
or pressing" their clothes. '
The cleaners charge about $1.45 to dry clean a man's shirt and
, up 10$4..50 for a woman's shirt, tile women's lawyers contend
- The Associated Press

in the east and west
skittish Amcncan' on the NATO
KraJtsnik's statement revealed a mission
major rift wtthin the Serb delegaAlthough weakened by a lack of
tion in Dayton.
asststance from Milosevic and batThat is important, because tlefield losses to their Croat and
Bosnian Se:·bs have defied Milose- government foes, the Bosntan
vic in the past Kraj tsnik' s state- Serbs sttll can gather formidable
ment indicates they were prepared forces m places, and could mOict
to continue domg so. The Serbtan casualties on NATO
president had accepted two prevtIndependent military analysts
ous intemauonal peace agreements, have estimated that despuc their
which were re1ected by the Bosnian recent losses, Bosnian Serbs could
Serbs' self-styled parliament That continue ftghting for years even
always led to lltc escalauon of the without Milosevic's dtrecl backing.
lighting m Bosma.
That might be especially appealIt couiJ become cnucally mg to people who feel they have
tmportanl with tens of thousands of hule or nothing to gain from the
NATO troops, includmg U.S. sol- peace deal.
diers, on the ground in Bosnia.
Angered by the Bosnian Serbs'
NATO intends to arrive wtth defiance. Milosevic in August 1994
overwhelming firepower to dis- announced he was culling all lies
courage liJlY auacks that might lead with the Bosnian Serb leadership
to casualties. But it may not take and said he would not help them
many killed or wounded to sour

militanly This August, Miloscvic
scored a major political victory by
naming htmself the chief Serb
negotiator wtth llte casting vote.
It was not immedtately clear
how Milosevtc would crush the
new Bosnian Serb deliance, especially because thetr chief leaders,
Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic,
have nothing to lose by continuing
their opposition.
Both have been indicted for war
crimes, and according to the agreements would be banned fmm postlions of power.
U S Assistant Secretary of State
Rtchard Holbrooke, who spearheaded the U.S. peace effort, told
reporters after the aBrecmcm was
miualed that Karadzic and Mladic
faced bleak prospects
"I don'tthink their future's very
bn~hl," he said.

Blue chip stock rally sends
Dow Jones past 5,000 mark
By RACHEL BECK
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - A rally of bluechip stocks sent the Dow Jones
industrtal average hurtling into
record territory Tuesday, closing
above the milestone 5,000 mark for
the first time.
The Dow Jones industrial average surged 40 46 points 10
5,023.55, brushing past its. previous
closing record of 4.989.95 set last
Friday h was the 60th record close
m the Dow average for the year.
The NYSE' s composite index
and the Standard &amp; Poor' s 500stock mdex also advanced to allLime highs
"lnslituuonal, name-brand
stocks were characteristic of this
advance ," said Eugene Peroni,
director of technical 'research at
Janney Montgomery Scou Inc. in
Philadelphia. "Investors were
seeking the safer haven and were
looking for a less volatile area than
technology stocks."
On the New \'ark Stock
Exchange, advancing issues led
declines by nearly 5 to 4, with volume totaling 405.86 million shares
as of 4 p.m., vs. 335 48 milhon on
Monday.
The NYS E' s composite index
rose IJ I to 320.23, topping the
record 320.12 close set on Friday,
while the Standard &amp; Poor's 500stock index was up 3.39 to 600.24.
up from the record 600.07 also
achieved Friday.
The Nasdaq composite index

dropped 4.48 to 1,024.99, weighed
down by a sell-off of technology
shares The Amencan Stock
Exchange's market value mdex
slipped 3.04 to 528.55.
Fuehng the record-breakmg nse '
was a rally by a number of Dow
components . Analysts also said
some computer-generated buymg
helped thrust the Dow average to a
new htgh.
Heavy-equtpment maker Caterpillar led the dnve, closing up 3 3/4
at 59 3/8. The Peona, IlL-based
company was upgraded by Smith
Barney and may be neanng an end
to a 17-month stnke wtth the United Auto Workers.
Other blue-chip stocks also sent
the Dow mdustrials soarmg. IBM
rose I 1/2 at 94 1/2, Aluminum Co.
of Amenca jumped 2 3/4 at 55 118,
Coca-Cola gained I 112 at 76 3/4
and General Motors was altead I
3/8 314'1
The Dow had been weighed
down for much of tile day by a selloff of technology stock.~ amid protit takmg
"I think the Dow was held back
by the Nasdaq and technology
shares, whtch were getting a
whacking," said Larry Wachtel,
vtce prestdcnt at Prudenual Secunties Inc m New York. "But then
they started to tum arouqd and that
gave the clearance for the blue
chips to rise again."
Morgan Stanley &amp; Co.'s downgrade of Dell Computer spurred
some of lhe sell-off. The personal

computer maker late Monday
reponed strong thtrd-quaner earnings, but said its profits may not
rise in the next quarter. Dell closed
down I 1/R at40 114.
Other technology issues were
also under selhng pressure, includmg Sun Microsystems, down I 7/8
at 79 3/4, and Allera Corp., dropping 3 1/4 at 51 7/8.
But once investors started
replacmg their technology shares
with blue-chip stocks, which are
percetved as beuer able to weather
an economic or political stonn, th~
s wmg toward the record was
unstoppable
''Many mvestors arc looking for
more conservaltve stocks right
now," as they steer clear of the
technology sector, whtch has come
under mtense selltng pressure
recenUy, Wachtel satd.
Some of the movement away
from the technology sector headed
into oil stocks, whtch were ahead
for much of the day as the wmter
weather approaches and OPEC
ministers meet in Austna to debate
how much oil to pump next year.
Brllish Petroleum's ADRs rose
2 at 94 1/2, Chevron wa~ up 7/8 at
50 7/8, Exxon rose 3/8 at 79 3/4
and Royal Dutch Shell chmbed I
5/Rat 131 1/2
In overseas stock markets, the
N1kkci average in Tokyo was virtually unchanged, closing up just half
a point. Frankfurt's DAX mdex lost
0.6 percent and Fr-SE 100 index m
London fell 0.68 percent

California, Florida plan to seek
extradition for alleged murderer
By CHARL&amp;'&gt; WOLFE
Associated PreS\ Writer
RICHMOND, Ky. - Tabloid
television wants Glen Edward
Rogers. So do authorities in California and Florida, two of the stops
on what police described as a trail
of killings .
A prosecutor said Tuesday that
Californta and Flonda have begun
the paperwork necessary to request
Rogers' extraditwn, and il could
reach Kentucky m a few weeks.
Police ha vc satd Rogers, a
dnfter from Hamtllon, Obto, had
connecuons to lour women whose
stabbed or strangled bodtes were
found 10 Caltfornta, Loutstana,
Mtsstsstppt and Flonda.
Pollee m Ohto also sought to
question Rogers about the death of
a man he once hved wtth.
Hts court-appo10ted attorney,
Erme Lewis, said Rogers would
rests! extradition.
Rogers, 33, was Ught-lipped at a
arrargnment Tuesday. He pleaded
innocent to three felonies - two
counts of wanton endangerment.
one count or cnmmal mischief resultmg from the police chase that
ended in his capture Nov. 13 .
Inside Judge William Jennings'
Madtson County courtroom.
Rogers blew a kiss to a woman in
the front row of spectators. As he
left, be gave her a clenched-fist
salute. The woman, who appeared
to be near tears, refused to identify
herself before putting on sunglasses
and hurrying from the courthouse.
The Cincinnati Post reported
Tuesday that Rogers crisscrossed

the country, workmg a circutl of
carnivals ami counly fatrs. Police
have desnibcd hun as a charmet
who found tl easy 10 ingmtiatc himself with women
On Sept 28, he met Sandra Gallagher 111 a bar m the Los Angeles
suburb ol Van Nuys , Calil., accordmg to the bar's owner. Gallagher's
body w:L' found early the next day
tn her burnmg p1ckup. She had
been strangled.
Police said Rogerx was traced to
Jackson, Miss., where the body of
Linda Price wa' found Nov. 3; and
to Tampa, Fla., where Tina Marie
Cribbs was found slain Nov 7.
Both women were stabbed to death
and left nude in bathtubs, Tampa
Police Sgt. George McNamara said
last week
The last hody was lound Nov. 9
in Bosster City, La. The victim wa'
Andy Jiles Suuon, whom Rogers
allegedly met m a bar a week earher.
Officials for Los Angeles County District Attorney Gil Garcetti
confirmed that extradition papers
were being prepared.
In Tampa, Assistant District
Attorney Karen Cox bad begun
paper-Work that would be required
for an extradition request,
spokesman Steve LaBour said.
In Mississippi, the Price case is
still under investigation by the

Jackson Police Depanmem and
Rogers has not been charged,
according to officials in District
Attorney Ed Peters' office.
In Louisiana, Rogers faces a
charge of second-degree murder in
Bossier Pansh, District Auorney
Jim Bulb s said. Conviction would
automaltcally carry a sentence of
hfe without parole, he said.
Ohio authorities have tried to ·
question Rogers about lhe death of
Mark Peters 01 Hamtlton. Peters'
deco1f1posed body was found in
January 1994 near Beauyville, Ky.,
tied lo a chair in a shack owned by
members of Roger.;' family.
Lewts complained that sheriffs
de~uties from Clermont County,
Ohm, came to the Madison County
Detention Center on Monday and
insisted on questioning Rogers
against his will.
Lewis said Rogers has been "in
a very vulnerable state of mind''
because he has been kept in an isolation cell
Lewis also said some tabloid
TV shows have been clamoring for
interviews with Rogers and that
other news media organizations
have been similarly "unprofessional. ••

"Some of the media have been
writing very personalleuers to him
saying, 'We'll tell your story. W~
wtll not hurt you,"' Lewis said.

Ohio Lottery

Lions, Dallas
· ·post football
victories

Pick 3:
0-4-3
Pick 4:
1-0-6-7
Buckeye 5:
1-21-27-32-37

Sports, Page 4

Increasing cloudiness tonight,

lows In the 20s. Saturday, partly
cloudy. Highs In the 40s.

•

enttne
Vol. 46, NO. 147

2 Sections, 16 Pages 35 cen~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 24, 1995

Copyright 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

White House, GOP gear for budget climax
ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
WAS HlNGTON - Heading 1010 tile climax of thts year's budget
drama, Republican leaders and lhe Clinton admmistralion are both looking to avoid a repeal of the 1990 budget summtt that featured too many
people, too many leaks and, finally, too many taxes
Negotiations begin next week on the Republicans' seven-year budgetbalancing package of spending cuts and tax reductions.
Learning from the lessons of 1990, both sides already have started
internal discussions about bow big the negouaung teams sbould be, who
should be involved and what their strategies should be on resolvmg dtspules over tax reductions and squeezmg savmgs out of Medtcare, Medicaid, welfare and other programs.
Repubbcans also are trying to figure out how to keep the talks on a
schedule that would have them completed by the tune the government's
temporary spendmg authonty runs out Dec. IS.

Privately, however, many of the parlictpants are predicting that the
negoliauons wtll go beyond that deadline, lasting at least a week longer
an&lt;) then perhaps resuming after lhe congressional Christmas recess.
The marathon 1990 budget talks are perhaps best remembered by the
10-day retreat by negotiators at Andrews Atr Force Base just outside
Washington
Those talks were revtled by parlictpants from both parucs. The negouations dragged from May through October as hu ge bargaming teams,
sometimes numbering 20 or more people per side, proved unwieldy and
prone to leaks to reporters.
Leaders of both sides were embarrassed when their mitial compromtse,
a bipanisan package of spending cuts and tax increases, was rejected by
the House - with one of the bargainers, current Speaker Newt Gmgnch.
R-Ga , helping lead the opposition.
And Republicans in panicular hale the 1990 summit because of the lax

.~MCA

announces
Christmas season
kick-off activities

.Coolville resident
dies, families left
homeless in fires
From AP, Staff Reports
Thanksgiving Day fires killed
an Alberts County man, left at least
five Meigs County families homeless lind resulted in several injuries.
Firefighters believe the ftre that
killed a Coolville resident Thursday was caused by an electrical
problem.
Coolville Fire Chief Coleman
Gallagher said Ray Depoy, 87, was
found dead in the kitchen in the
back of his house.
The front of the home was fully
engulfed when ftrefighters arrived.
according to repons.
Firefighters believe the fire
began in a bedroom and spread to
the attic.
There were no other injuries. -An autopsy is being conducted
on Depoy to determme the cause of
death.
Fi~efighters from the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department were
summoned around 7:I5 a.m. Thursday to the Pomeroy Cliffs Apartmenls for a blaze that destroyed
four apartments.
The lire wa~ apparently caused
by an electncal problem 10 the
attic , according to Fire Chtef
Danny ZtrkJe.
"All four apartments were going

-

mcreases 11 produ ced. wl11ch led direclly to the defeat of Prestdent Bush
two years later
So far. no linal dco smtt' have been made on how or where thts year's
talks wtll be held But hoth stdes are leanmg toward the Captlol, whtch
offers runple space . pn vacy and convemcnce when votes occur m the
House and Senate
The negotiations themselves seem hkcly to begm 'I uesday or Wednesday, though preliminary talk s about logtsltcs may occur Monday.
Repuhhcan leaders are talking about small bargammg teams, wtth four
lor each side bemg the most frequenlly used figure . DemocraL~ say they
may want more Utan that Other lawmakers, such a~ comrnntee chatrmen,
would be mvnl ved m subgroups 10 work out delatls of parucular prognuns
" Small 1&gt; :~ways beucr than large wtth pohltctans, who have a lot of
opmwns." saul Hou se Budget Commtllce Chauman John Kastch , ROhm

at the same time," he said.
"We had one lady in an apanment in the wheelchair. Shannon
Spaun from the water company
brought her out," he satd.
"The rest were able to get out on
their own. Four families," Zirkle
added.
None of th e residents were
injured, be said. But several lirefighters were treated for minor
injuries.
The Pomeroy squad of the
Meigs County Emergency Medtcal
Service treated firefighter Todd
Smith on the scene for bums to his
neck He was later treated at VMH.
Ftrefighters Kevin VanMeter
COMBATING BLAZE- At least five families were len homeand Michael VanMeter made it out
less following fires in Meigs County Thursday. Pomeroy firefight- on tlleir own after the roof and wall
ers, above, battle a fire that destroyed four apartments. Another
fell on them, Zirkle said. They
fire in Columbia Towmhip len an ll·year·old girl in critical con·
were treated for minor'injunes on
dition with third-degree burns. (Sentinel photo by Dan Harris)
the scene.
Tile Pomeroy VFD responded
An I !-year-old girl was trans- engulfed upon arnval, accordmg to
with three trucks, 25 firefighters ported to Children's Hospttal in Fire Chief James Gaston
and two cadet firefighters. The Columbus for treatment of third"The ftre had progressed quite a
Middleport and Rutland VFDs degree burns following a fire in while before the alarm was sent in.
responded with two trucks and 10 Columbia Townsbtp around I :40 they had no phone and the restdents
men each. The Syracuse VFD bad p.m.
had to walk for help," Gaston said.
12 volunteers on standby, but was " Columbia Townshtp volunteer
"It was destroyed, all contents
not called.
ftrefighters, respooding to the Den- lost," he added.
The Red Cross was contacted in ms Tolley reMdence on Stale Route
The injuied youth, who was not
an effort to secure temporary shei- 143 found the structure, conststin~ iden ti lied, was transported by priter for the families.
(Continued on Pa~:e 3)
of two Stde-by-side trailers, fully

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The Mtdul eport Communtly
Association has announced plans
for the Chnsumt' sca,on, includmg
the annual Mtddlcport Chrisllnas
Parade schcuulcd for 'lbursday at 6
p.m .. Conunumty AssoCiation Prestdent Tom Dooley s:ud earlier this
week
The parade wtll hcgin 10 the
Dairy Queen parking lot on North
Ftrsl Avenue, and proceed through
downtown on North Second
Avenue. Groups that would like to
partictpatc in the IJarade are asked
to call 992-5458 for more mformation.
All chtldren wtll be gtven a treat
and have the opporlumly for a free
ptclure wtlh Santa Claus tmmcdi ately followmg the parade, comphments of Peoples Bank The photo
session wtll take place mside the
bank's lobby on North Second
Avenue. Dooley said
New to the parade thts year wtll
be the Big ]l end Cloggcrs, who
will entertam the parade watchers
with a perlormance on the Peoples
Bank parkmg lot tmm~dtalely lollowmg the parade
Work on holtday street decorations and hghtmg ts undeiWay now.
with that work to be hopefully be

completed by Sunday, Dooley
explrnned.
Middleport busmesses will hold
an open hou se for shoppers on Sunday from I to 5 p.m. to officially
kick-off the holiday shoppmg season .

"Thts .wtll gtvc our business
community a chance to ring in the
holiday season wtlh festive Orur,"
Dooley smd.
Dunng the open house, the lint
111 a senes of holiday drawings will
take place. Parucipaung businesses
will olfer several hundred dollars.
m gtft certtlicates for lhe drawings,whi ch will be drawn for each
Thursday throughout the holiday
season Cll'lomers of the businesses must register each week for that
week 's drawing, to be eligible.
"The drawmgs are a great way
to promote local shopping throughout the hohdays The businesses of
Mtddleporl have a lot to offer area
shoppers, :md local shoppmg benetits everyone a' the money is kept
in the cpmmunity," Dooley said.
Middleport busmesses will contmuc Sunday hours through Dec.
17, from I to S p m Begmning
Monday Dec II. businesses will
extend hours and stay open until 8
p m lbe late tu ghl shoppmg hours
wtll be m ellect uuul Dec. 23.

Eastern Board approves employment of bond counsel for levy
The Eastern Local Board of
Education hired Peck, Shaffer &amp;
WiUiams to act as a bond counsel
for the March building assistance
levy, Eastern Superintendent
Ronald Minard conftrmed Wednesday.
The board made the decision at
its regular meeting Monday night.
The board continued public discussion on the need for a new
building for the district. The board
also approved submiual of documentation to the Meigs County
auditor's office pursuant to submitting a bond issue to voters for
building construction and improvements.
Athletic Director Pam Douthilt
addressed the board on the need for

additional coach11s. Douthill also
reported to the board on repairs to
the football bleachers at the high '
school stadium.
The board approved and accepted the resignation of teacher.
Fredrick J. Kessinger, effective at
th~ end of lhe Dec. 8 teaching day.
The board also approved and
accepted the resignation of Ginger
Siders as varsity cheerleading advisor, and Lolita Morrow as junior
high cbeerleading advisor.
Approval was given by the
board to Trea~urer Eloise Boston to
advenise for bids for the purchase
for as many. as three new buses.
Several personnel matters were
discussed, including:
• the followmg teachers were

~pproved

for the substitute list on
an as- needed basis for the 1995-96
school year: Melanie VanMeter
Quillen, Jennifer Shuler, Lester
Manuel and Michael Thompson
• approved job description and
employed Carissa Bailey as DPIA
tutor for the remainder of the
school year, conditional on funds
available.
- approved creating two additional paid supplementary positions: assistant girls basketball
coach and assistant boys basketball
coach.
• employed the followmg individuals on a one-year supplemental
contract for the school year: Ron
Hill, Drug Free grant coordinator;
Mandi Sheets, volunteer cheerlead-

•
er advisor, Momca Chadwell, volunteer varsity cheerleader advtsor.
Tim Bissell, volunteer boys basketball coach , Chtts Stout, asststanl
boys basketball coach , Brian
Weaver, assistant boys basketball
coach; Joe Bailey, assistant boys
basketball coach, Pam Coffey,
assistant girls basketball coach.
• approved a request for two
days of unpaid leave of absence for
a teacher in the dtstricL
• approved opening the substitute cooks list for new applicants.
• approved the employment of
Michelle Gillian as a tutor for two
students to be home instructed.
The board approved an agreement between the Tuppers PlainsChester Water District and the

Tuppers Plain s Youth Athletic
Associauon to provide a water tap
for the outside concession stand to
be metered and paid for by the
association
In other mailers, the board:
• discussed the new Neola policy revistons, and approved the final
readmg and draft of the Neola
Board Pohcy Manual.
• heard complamts from restdents ol the dtstrtcl
o heard a report on corporal punishment as a pan of current pohcy
• approved payment of a btll to
Modem Sanitation of Pomeroy
• approved an agreement with
SileScan Inc . to provide profesSional services to the district for the
school year

• approv ed parttctpation m the
Jobs Grant for Ohio Students and
the OhiO Department of Health
gnml
• approved the purcba'e of 150
foldmg chain; for lhe high schooL
o approved bills from the Hocking Valley Community Rcstdential
Center for the educatton of a distrtcl student
o approved a permanent appropnalton resolutiOn and a spendmg
plan for fiscal year 1996
• approved membershtp m the
OSBA for calendar year 1996
• approved the state audttor' s
orfice provtding assistance m convertmg to GAAP accoun110g system
(Continued on Page J)

Kroger out to revamp stores, services
CINCINNATI (AP)- Kroger
Co., lhe nation's biggest supermar·
kel operator, is in the middle of its
largest capttal investment plan in
its 112-year history.
The goal is to attract new shoppen and keep the current clientele
from flocking to one-stop-shopping
competitors such as Wal-Man.
"You always keep running. The
bear is always right behind you,"
said Joseph Pichler, chainnan and
chief executive officer the Cincinnati-based company.
Kroger plans to spend $650 million next year remodeling, relocat•
ing, expanding and building stores
across the oountry.
Six years ago, the debt-laden
Kroger could not consider capital
expenses of this magnitude. Its debt
reached a high or $5.3 billion after
Kroger fought off a 1988 takeover
attempt by the Haft family of
Maryland and New York invest·
ment firm Kohlberg Kravis &amp;
Roberts Co.
Kroger invested $131 million in
1989 to revamp 26 stores. This

year, the company wtll spend
almost five times that much on 45
new stores, 35 relocations and 51
expansions
"Before the takeover anempt,
we spent about $400 (million) to
$450 million a year on stores in
capital building," Pichler said.
But that expenditure dwindled
as the company focused on chipping away its debt, which now
stands at $3 .4 billion.
!(roger accumulated the debt by
pulling together its own refmanclng
plan to avert takeover attempts. It
involved paying shareholders a
special dividend to retain conlrol of
the company.
"After that. we devoted most or
our c~sh flow to paying interest,
paying down debt and refinancing," Pichler said.
But competitors were active
during the early 1990s. By continuing to build stores, some gained
ground while Kroger whittled its
debt.
As part of its restructuriJ!g,
Kroger issued $630 million in 15.5

percent JUnior subordinated debentures. The company recalled the
notes in October 1993, before 11
bad to begm paymg 15.5 percent
interest on them
That freed Kroger to concentrate
on building and improving stores
again. The company began an
ambitious plan to expand retail
square footage by 5 percent to 6
percent a year from 1994 through
1996
Kroger's management said 11
has met or will meet that goal for
1994 and 1995 and expects to
exceed it next year.
Analysts credit Kroger's strict
adherence to a policy of allocating
half of its "free" cash flow money left after paying regular
debt obligations and other e1lpertses
- 10 debt reduction and the other
half to store improvements.
"Debt is always going to be an
issue, but they've done a nice job
of refmancing that debt," said analyst Jeffrey S. Thomison with JJ .B.
Hilliard, W.L. Lyons Inc . in
LouisviUe, Ky.

TREE DECORATING- Pomeroy Elementary School students were busy decorating
Christmas trees In front or Pomeroy businesses
earUer this ~eek. This particular bunch of sec-

ond graders from Mrs. Carpenter's class is par·
Ucularly proud of their decorating skills, having
prepared a banner to label witb which to label
their tree. (Sentinel photo)

�Friday, November 24, 1995

·c ommentary

OHIO Weather

Page2

Squads ·log 16 holiday calhf

'Saturday, Nov. 25

Friday, November 24,1995-

Accu Wealber~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

WASHINGTON - The man
who's chiefly responsible for Serbian atrocities in Bosnia was
described in a confidential United
Nations cable last year as "the
hUes who loves flowers ."
.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Ratko Mladic, the brutal miliPublisher
tary leader of the -Bosnian Serbs
who is under indictment by a U.N.
war crimes triliumil, was described
MARGARET LEHEW
in this cable as a "diligent, ambiCHARLENE HOEFLICH
tious , but narrow-minded" man
CQntroller
General Manager
who delights in planting gardens
·
near bis barracks.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Thev should be less than' 300
The profile also describes
words long. All Jeuers are suhject to editing and "must be signed with name ,
Mladic's habit or disappearing and
address and telephone number. No unsigned lencrs will be published. Leners
reappearing like a magician, someshould be in good taste. addressing issues. not personalitieS.
thing tliat bas served "to build up
his personal myth - which , with
time, has caused the foreign media
to change tbeir attitude from disgust to admiration." The cable
added tbat it is not unoommon for
him to ''simultaneous!/ give an
interview to the journalist on his
left, while commanding gunmen on
his right" to shell some hapless
Bosnian Muslim enclave.
His comrade in carnage, Bosnifar.
Dear Editor.
Let's stand up for our rights. If an Serb "President" Radovan
I agree 100 per,ent with Mr.
Dodson . Mrs . Stivers probably we no longer have a say in who is
thinks her business is sec ure picking up our trash, what are they
b«ause she is on the (Middlepon going to decide next that we have
Village Council) . Wbal happens no say in" Where does it end0
Monday, Nov . 27, is th e next
someday when you are not?
Wouldn't it be nice if Middle- council meeting at 7:30 p.m . The
pon were a dry community? Now town should make it a point to let
there' s somelhing worth voting on .
the mayor and council lrnow just
oti,/'lo!
And Mr. Gilmore. what if all the how we feel.
I LefT
people needing trophies and such
Reb«ca Lyncb
Middlepon
were to go across the river for lhis
MY~i~G
service'! Point Pleasant is not that
GL3S9!S3f

L...-----------------------'
Letters to the Editor
Upset over trash contract

Council had no choice
low bid. It came lime to award the
Dear Editor,
I am writing in response ·to the bid and we rejected all tbe bids. We
c0111ments in Monday's Daily Sen- were not allowed to reject just the
line/ by Mr. Daniel M. Dodson. I low bid, so we rejected all bids .
don't nonnally try to answer every Our law director informed us that if
co mment ma~e abo ut me. Mr. we didn't rebid th e contract we
Dodson, but you a'ked me specific could be sued by the low bidder.
questions ;md I shall try to address and lhat we would lose the case.
We di~ what we were obliged
them.
To begin with, no one except by stale law to do. We rebid. We
Mr. Manley (who is my nephew bad previously buill in a local five
therefore prohibiting me from hav- percent cushion for all village bid
ing a vote on tbe issue), and his procedures . It was not enough.
employees were more distressed Manley\ bid was still not lhe low
lhan the Middlepon Village Coun- bid. We took the only action allowcil at the action forced upon us. It able by Ohio State Law.
was brought lo council's allenlion
We, as a village council, deeply
some three years ago by then- regret sending any business out of
Councilman Paul Gerard that town. and I cenainly am pmonally
because the contrac t was for more distressed at seeing my family lose
than $5,000, we were operating a business. There was bcanbreak in
illegally by not having it put up for the decision for all concerned. We
bid. Sad to say. he was right. It's did not take it ligbdy. I would like
the law of the state of Ohio - not for everyone to understand that it
Middlepon Village Council law .
was not a choice. We didn't make
We stalled . We renewed hiS" - the Jaws under which we have to
contract without a bid . We did abide, and we didn' t bid the coneverything we could to procrasti- tract
nate . Eventually, our village law
Bob Gilmore, president
director told us lhat we bad to bid
Middleport Village Council
it. We did . Manley's was not the

Leah Carrie Nease

B_
o snian Serb 'criminals' remain defiant

Pomeroy, Ohio

T}je eM3aSSY!

•

representatives could make no deal tiona! Humanilllrian Law CoDWiitwithout their approvaL Cynics ; ted in lhe Territory of the Former
believe that the only way to secure ' Yugoslavia Since 1991.
A major obstaCle to its success
a peace in the region will be to give
is
f)lnding
. After paying the I I
amnesty to Mladic and Karadzic.
international
judges, prosecutors
The United States, meanwhile ,
has said lhat lhey must be removed and administrative staffers, litde is
By Jack Anderson from power as a condition for an left over for looking into the atrociAmerican-enforced peace accord. ti es the tribunal was formed to
and
But the tbugs aren ' t budging . In investigate. Anti yet the prosecufact
, the Bosnian Serb news agency tors arc supposed to develop eviMichael Binstein SRNA
reported nothing but defi· dence on tens of lhousands of murquickly to prominence and has ance on the part of Mladic and ders, rapes and assaults.
It shouldn't surprise anyone that
since become intoxicated by his Karadzic.
lhe
biggest culprits in this bloody
power. He is fond of fast living,
The pair remains unmoved by
which includes spending hours on their indictment for war crimes hy conflict are like Iy to eseape the tnend at his favorite Belgrade casino. the first world criminal tribunal bunal. These are the very war crimWhen not planting Oowers or since Nuremberg - a U.N . group inals with whom the U.N . bas to
gambling, these two men have run of judges now si lling in The negotiate an end to the European
up a string of atrocities not seen in Hague . The first trial , of a Bosnian conOict - and the ones who have
Europe since World War II. And . Serb arrested in Germany and blood on their hands dating back to
now these unrepentant killers hold charged willl torture and murder, is the heinous swnmer of 1992, when
"ethnic cleansing" of Bosnia's
the trump card in the 3-year-old expected to begin next May.
by its Serbs was at its
Muslims
quest for peace in the former
The tribunal was created in
height.
Yugoslavia.
1993 but critics have feared that its
Identification of many of the
Neither man was invited to lhe lega~y will fade away faster than
"ethnically impure" men was simpeace talks held at Wngbt-Patter- anyone can say its full U.N. name:
ple - they were stripped naked to
son Atr Force Base rn Dayton. The International Tribunal for the
check
for circumcision. The lucky
Ohio. But their presence was felt -Prosecution of Persons Responsible
ones
left
alive were shipped off in
nonethele ss, as the Bosnian Serb for Serious Violations of Internacrowded, locked railway cars as
refugees 10 Austria, Hungary and.
elsewhere. The unlucky were
i1fitH(
rounded up and interred in dozens
of concentration camps.
TRaDe $&lt;ltfGTioi(S
Imprisoned behind barbed wire,
~l(e CRueL?
men, women and children were tor-.
TRY GiViNG llP
tured, bea ten, suffocated and
CiG&lt;lRS!
starved to dealh. Cruel games were
play ed: Serbian guards would.
secretly spray insecticide on the,
prisoners' meager rations, then
watch as their captives vomited
what they had eaten.
TH;/oiK I
The 14,000 United Nations
NeeDMoRe
troops in the region were of lillie··
F;BeR.
help. When Bosnian Deputy .Prime
8a&lt;::KD~$?
Minister
Hakija Turajlic was being
Do Tli€1( KNoW
transported in a U.N. annored vehiWHaT I'M
cle, Serbian soldiers ordered the_
P:3YIN6 iN
marked vehicle to stop, and
clearly
WHaT'S
O:ll.iMONY?
exec
uted
Turajlic in front of his
THe PoitiT
helpless French escort.
OF IT at.L,
The same thin blue line that
at~vwav?
failed to protect Turajlic is now trying to bring peace to that bauered
region. Whether justice will follow
remains in serious doubt.
(Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are columnists for Unil· .
ed Feature Syndl&lt;ate,)

Karadzic, is described by intelligence sources a chronic gambler
who is believed to owe moq: lhan
$1 million from various losses. A
fonner psychiatrist, Karadzic rose

PA.

as

INO

.. . ..
43'

•

.,

Berry's World

l

bow to make lhe most of the space
- at an incalculable price in mis· ery. Tempers turned raw and we
soon bad 10 learn that many lhings
said in tbe night had best he forgotten in lhe morning.''
This is a good metaplulf for the
problems in marriage and how to
"c0111e through."
THE ROPE TRICK - Happily
married couples depend on each
other fC'r their happiness . It is lhis
interdependence that accounts for
the strength of their marriage.
Whenever I officiate at a wedding, I iUusuate Ibis point with an
8-incb length of heavy-duty rope
- the kind tugs use to pull giant
ships in and out of the harbor. I
show how tbin and frail t;ach strand
of .rope is but bow, when the

The following actions to end
marriage were filed recently in the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer:
· Dissolutions asked - Misty
Kirkendall and Andrew Kirkendall,
Pomeroy, Nov. 21; Eric L Stover
Jr. and Julia F. Stover, Racine ,
Nov. 21; Mabel Ann Sheets,
Racine, and Gregory Charles

notes that '; The relativists have
indeed their own comprehensive
moral age nda. Repugnant alike to
tbe claims of reason and revelation,
it is built upon hollow preferences
or naked will. ltlhreatens our liberty and our goodness alike, b«ause
it destroys lhe basis for both, and
offers in their stead only dissolution and misery - underwritten by
government."
The Claremont manifesto con•
eludes: "This developing conflict
over culture is a bailie for the soul
of America. We call upon all likeminded Americans to fight il. an~
to win it."
The lang~age of the manifesto is
necessarily general, but the agen(la
it lays down is breathtaking in its
scope and specificity. II is the most
powerful trumpet yet sounded in
the opening stages of the final.
struggle for America.
Copies are obtainable without
cost from The Claremoat Institute.
250 W. First Sl., Suite 330. Clare- · ~
mont, Calif. 91711.
(William A. Rusher Is a Dis- ·&gt;
linguished Fellow of the Claremont Institute for the Study of :~
Statosmunship and Political Phi· .
losophy.)
·. j
'

.. ~

strands arc twisted together, they : j
make a piece of rope that can pull -•
an ocean-going freighter.
: :•
Happily married couples, I will ~:
tell Roger and Cindy - as I bave . ::
told the other couples I have mar- ,:
rted - arc like lhat. When tbeir • :•
live s, thin and fragile by them- &gt;'i
selves, arc entwined with each :-:'.
other, lhey can pull the marriage :
bar.k. through the choppiest waters. : :'
I ben I gtve them lhe piece of .~:
rope 11s a wedding present. If they -:.
don'tlose it - and it is not an easy ~::,
th~ng to lose - they will have a ·. .:
hlclong reminder of what it is that • "'
makes 11 good marriage.
:=.~
(GeufJ1e R. Plagenz Is a colum· ·~
nlst for Newspaper Enterprise :'"]
Assudatlon.)
...

.,.-·,

·.:,&amp;

:~

By The ~~led Press
·:,j
. Today ts Friday, Nov. 24, the 328tb day of 1995. There are 37 days left ·'"
m lbe year.
·
·~
Toclay's Highlight in Histrxy:
On Nov . 24, 1987, .the United ~tales 3ild the Soviet Union~ 10 &gt;;i
~ sbater- ~ mednm~-range ousslles tn tbe first SuperpOwer treaty 10 .-;.2
: eliminate an eobre class of nuclear weapons.
·_,.,

f

On~~

.~

In. I 784, Zachary Taylor, !be 12th president of the United States, was :~
born m Orang~ ~ounty, v~.
·
.
~..;
In_18~. B~ush na~ .Charles Darwin published "On the Origin of • '
Speaes, which explained his theory of evolution.
.

•

Weather fore&lt;asl:
Tonight...Clear early, then
increasing cloudiness from lhe west
overnight. A chance for light snow
norlh after midnight. Lows in lhe
20s.
Saturday ... Becoming breezy and
warmer. Partly cloudy south to
mosdy cloudy norlh. A chance of
snow in the northwest in lhe morning and U1c nonheasl through midday . Highs around 40 norllleast to
Ule upper 40s south.
Extended forecast:
Sunday ... A ch:mce ofrain nonb .
Fair south . Lows in the lower 30s
northeast to the upper 30s southwest. Highs from around 50 nonbeast to near 60 soulh .
Monday ... A chance of rain .
Lows 35 to 40. Highs in lhe 50s.
Tuesuay ... Rain likely . Lows 35
to 40 . Highs in th e mid 40s to
lower 50s.

Sheets, Pomeroy, Nov. 20; Ferrel
W. Day. Rutland, and Patricia Kay
Day. Middleport, Nov . I 7; Lisa
Dawn Robinson, Bidwell, and John
Thomas Robin son, S1eubenville.
Nov . 16; John M. Van Meter, Rutland, and Chandra S. Van Meter,
Long Bottom, Nov . 16.
Divorces asked - Kenneth E.
Stewarl, Middleport, from Jennifer
S. Stewart, Glouster, Nov . 14;
Pamela S. Fitzpatrick, Pomeroy,
from Donald W. Fitzpatrick, Chillicothe, Nov . 14; Maryrose Darst
Am Ele Power ..............................37 -frorJ! James A. Darst, Albany, Nov .
Akw ............., .........................55 314
14; Penny S. Priddy from William
Ashland 011 ........................... .33 114
S.
Priddy, Racine, Nov: 14; Janice
AT&amp;T............................................6S
Baker
from Rodney Baker, bolh or
Bank One ............................... -37 7/8
Reedsville, Nov. 9.
Bob Evans ............................... ! 7 Ill
Dissolutions granted - E. DarBorg-Warner......................... .30 318
Champion lud ........................221/l
lene Tillis and Jerry L Tillis, Nov .
Charming Shop ........................21/l
13; Elmer Benjamin Parsons Jr.
City Holdlng .......................... .223/4
and Judy l&lt;ay Parsons, Nov. 13;
Federal Mogu1. ....................... 19 1/4
Richard K. Harmon and Belly
Go nnett ...................................60 Sill
Karen Harmon, Nov. 13; Ted R.
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. .,.......421/4
Stake
and Marcia K. Stake, Nov.
K-mart ......................................? 7/8
13;
James
E. Bush and Sandra K.
Lands End .................................... 15
Bush,
Nov.
16; Edward Miller and
Limited loc.......................... j"'"'"l8
Michelle Miller, Nov. 20.
Multimedia Inc ......................44 Sill
Divorces granted - Claude D.
People's ..................................21 5/8
Ohio Valley Bonk ................. .36 Ill
Eblin from Suzanne Eblin, Nov .
One Valley ............................. .31 3/4
14; Wilson Junior Putnam II from
RO&lt;kwell ................................48 7/8
Maxine L . Putnam, Nov. 14; Jewell
Rollblns &amp; Myers .................. .Jl Ill
A. Laudermill from Bronson L.
Royal OulA:h/Shell ................130 1/8
Laudermilt, Nov. 16; Bobby
Sboney'sloc.................................!!
Star Bank ,.. ,..............:............56 7/8 McConaha from Carla McConaha.
Wendy lnt'I........................... .20 3/8 Nov. I 6; Roland Morris from
Alcena F. Morris, Nov. 16; Thelma
Worthington lnd .................... !8 114
Catberimi Cotterill from Denver
StO&lt;k reports are the 10:30 a.m. Ray Cotterill, Nov. 12; Db ronda .
quotes provided by Advest or Ritchie from Charles Ritchie, Nov.
Gallipolis.
20.

Stocks

Today in history .

;

By The Associated Press
Most of Ohio should see a
pleasant weekend with temperatures wllrming to ncar 60 degrees
by Sunday, the National Weatber
Service said.
Light snow or rain is possible
over northern Ohio in U1e early
morning hours of Saturday and
Sunday.
. The warmer temperatures will
result from a frontal system passing
over Ohio tonight and bringing
southwestly winds into lhe state,
according to the NWS. The winds
could b«ome gu sty on Saturday.
Clear skies tonight will allow
temperatures to dip into the mid20s. Highs on Saturday will be 4045.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1931
while the record low was 7 in 1950.

Actions to end marriage filed

Battle to re-arm America morally is vital

On weathering the rough tides of marriage

•

Highs will near 60 Sunday

Tj.IE U.N. Ai So

What is going on?

I

Via Associated Pr9ss GraphicsN9t

r

assert that ''Our problem today
consists simply in this : Many of
our leaders - intellectual. cultural
and political - have abandoned
lhe moral and natural law. If we do
not repudiat e thi s error, we will
suffer a collapse tl1a1 is holh complete and irrecoverable."
The manifesto next warns that
the limitation of government ·'is
essential for thi s re stor atio n of
morality .... Continued expansion
of the administrative stat e
inevitahly diminishes the spheres
of self-governing citizenship anti
responsible personal morality .. ..
We must recognize lhat the administrative levialhan is an enemy not
only of freedom but of vinuc.' '
But the manifesto also recognizes that " much of the work to
restore America's cultural and
moral health must be 'done outside
the realm of government .... Therefore, without forgetting lhe key role
of laws in shaping. civic character,
we must encourage the deve lopment of a vibrant and vinuous civil
society, and resist the balerul influence of those who preach that tbere
is no truth or vinue."
Of such people, the manifesto

•

,.;::•:k •lcolumbusj40'

Leah Canie Nease, 100, Racine, died Thursday, Nov. 23, 1995 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing 'Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

Lillian Gail Zerkle
Lillian Gail Zerlcle, 83, Middleport, died Wednesday, Nov. 22, 199S in
the Overbrook Nursing Center, Middlepon.
Blirn Sept. 24, 1912 in Gallia County, daughter of the late Eura and
Mary Neal Saunders, she was a member of the Heath United Methodi st
Church in Middlepon, where she beld the office of financial secretary for
30 years. She was also a member of Evangeline Chapter I 72, Order of U1e
Eastern star.
Surviving are a sisl~r-in-law, Nellie Zerkle of Middleport; a nephew;
several great-nieces and great-nephews and cousins.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, John Zerkle; a sister.
Gladys Dailey; and a sister-in-law, Hallie Zerkle.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in lhe Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, wilh the Rev. Vernagaye Sullivan officiating. Burial will be in Ule
Riverview Cemetery, Middlepon. Friends may call at lhe funeral home
from 6-9 p.m. Saturday.

One-car crash injures two

You

It'is tempting to stay focused on (which I had the honor to chair)
the details of the budget batde now sponsored early thi s year by the
being waged between the president Claremont Institute. Now lhe Instiand Congress. It is a ferocious bat- tute bas issued a manifesto that
tle, and a great deal binges on its summarizes the conference 's conoutcome. But it will go on for
month s, and meanwhile a major
William A. Rusher
step has just been taken to explain
what is at stake in an even bigges elusions. It is a major step toward a
battle. one that will go on for definition of the cultural war, and a
decades and that will probably powerful blow for conservative
Dear Editor,
law should be acted upon by its decide in the long run whether this victory in that war.
The Claremont manifesto (just
country survives or not
Well it's lime to look at what is self.
Tbat bigger battle is what has two typewfi lien pages. doublegoing on in Washington.
What we are seeing is one
It loo ks like they are playing esse ntial bill with a number of come to be known as " lhe cultural , spaced) is signed by all of the
high stakes no matter who it other bills attached to it. The deal is war." The phrase is reasonably impressive array of conservatives
affects . Is this the two factions if you want one, you have to accept accurate. but it doesn't begin to do - political leaders, writers, and
justice to the importance of tile bat- academics - lhat anended lhe conusing their power and building them aiL Which is wrong.
We've seen this almost happen tle . Polls indicate that most Ameri- ference . including former Attorney
their egos1
This is not a pro or con situa- in our state legislature.
cans believe !bat lhe nation's deep- General Edwin Meese. Jersey City
I believe I read where a law was est problems are not economic, but Mayor Bret Schundler, Hollywood
tion, but just expressing an opinion.
I think what we see here going on passed raising the salaries of sher- moral. Many political leaders. critic Michael Medved, Christran
is what causes "pork barrel" situa- iffs, trustees and other county offi - including most conservatives. Coalition executive director Ralph
cials but an amendment was added would agree . The cultural war is Reed, National Review senior editions.
I havt "! way s believed that giving the legislators a raise also.
the battle over whether, and bow, tor Richard Brookbiser, Republican
"leaders" should look at situations
Now this in not the way it is to re-establish the nation's moral presidential aspirant Alan Keyes,
with an open mind therefore being supposed to work
foundations, which many people and 1I olher prominent and articuVirgil Walker · believe are eroding.
able to adjust their aims on each
late conservatives.
But who are the combatants in
side to come to an agreement Each
It opens with the statement that
Racine
this battle. and what, (Xecisely, are Ibis nation was founded on ''a
the issues' Those are the questions moral law": "the laws of nature
lhat
were addressed at a conference and nature· s God." It goes on to
Today's Binhdays: Producer-writer Garson Kanin is 83. Columnist
William F. Buckley is 70. U.S. Rep . Ron Dellums, D-Calif .. is 60. Former
White House news secretary Marlin Fitzwater is 53 . Agriculture· Secretary
Dan Glickman is 51 .
Thought f&lt;X Today: "There is a great deal of difference in believing
something still, and believ ing it again.··- W.H. Auden. British poet
(1907-1973).
Notes for my pre-marital coun- quick.' I was wrong. Love is usualseling session with Roger and ly a very comfortable way of life
Cindy:
- a cozy he art, ki,sses on the
Recommended reading - So cheek, 'Wear your rubbers and
Your Happily Ever Afttr lsn '1, by blow your nose.' And what keeps
Sheri Tepper. We have grown up
on "the mytb of happy," says Tep- George R. Plagenz
per. No marriage can live up to that
myth and wben it doesn't we think love so cozy? The fact tbat every
something is wrong.
so often love is tempe stuous.
Rather than reaching for the tumultuous, 'Kiss me quick."·
" highs " in marriage (which is a
RULES OF THUMB - You
ooce-in-awbile condition), what we can't keep the secre ts of a good
ought to be striving for is "com- marriage on 3-by-5 cards in a
fortable " -1l011Dl11 in-the-middle- recipe index file, but it helps to
ness in which, she says, there will have some rules of tbumb at your
be highs but only occasionally.
beck and call. I must ask Roger and
If you have a comfortable rela- Cindy what they think of my two
tionship that is wann and nourish- favorite rules:
ing, you can have something even
1. Give in a lot: In John Marbetter lhan bigh, says Sheri Tepper. quand's novel, Tht Lalt George
All that is true. But I must Apley, George had bis own reasons
remind Roger and Cindy that there : for making concessions in .his maris a danger of taking all the riage.ln a letter be wrote, "I fwd it
romance out of marriage by being . just as well to do what Catherine
too reasonable and too realistic. · (his wife) wants. It saves such a
Unless there is some of the story- great deal of trouble.''
book, fairy-tale quality about mar2. Overlook a lot: In Capt. Eddie
riage, it wiU lack the sense of woo- Rickenbacker's saga, Seven Came
der that every successful marriage Through, about being lost at sea
enterprise is built on.
during World War n, Rickenbadcer
We must not leave passion out · recounts the story or desperate men
of married life. I must be sure to fighting for their lives aboard a
·As a kicl I had to wait my tum ·to use the
share with Roger and Cindy this drifting raft in the Pacific. He says;
bathroom. NOW, I have to w'ait my tum to use
insight by novelist Lois Wy~;
·
"Wbeneva you turned or twistthe family computer. •
"Once I thought that love was ed in the raft, you forced others to
tempestuous, tumultuous, 'Kiss me turn and twist It took days to learn

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-·-·-

Two Racine area residents were
injured in a one-car crash Wednesday on County Road 31 (Bald
Knob). lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe
State Highway Patrol reponed.
Transported from lhe scene to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Meigs EMS were driver Jessica K.
Capehart, 19, and passeng.er Don
A. Stephenson, 22, both of 29001
Bashan Road.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions - none.
Wednesday discharges - Ira
VanCooney, Pomeroy; Vivienne
Waddell. Middlepon.
Thursday admissions -110ne.
Thursday discharges -none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Nov . 22 - Seth
Taylor, William Meek, Norma
Fowler, Belinda Porter, Amy
Woodall, Daryl Shoemaker, Mindy
Saunders, Mrs. Clifford Ward and
daughter.
Birth -Mr. and Mrs. James
Hupp, daughter, Racine.
Discharges Nov. 23 - Michael
McWilliams, Weston Fife, Mrs.
Rodney Perry and son, Mrs. Larry
Gmbh and son.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie
Sroufe, son, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Timothy Conwell, daughter,
Crown City.
(Published with permission)

Coolville resident
(Continued from Page 1)
vatc car to O'Biehess Memorial
Hospital in Athens. She was later
transferred to Children's Hospital
where she is listed in critical condition, Ga~ton said.
Gaston said lhe fire originated
· around a wood burner.
"There is scme speculation Ulat
fuel may have been spilled near lhe
fire- chainsaw gas," be said.
Fifteen ftrefighters responded to
the scene. One, Derrick Jordan,
was transported by the Ruiland
EMS squad to 0' Bleness Memorial
Hospital for treatment for an
injured knee.

Stephenson was treated and
released, a bsopital spokesperson
said, but Capehart was held
overnight for observation and was
released Thursday.
Troopers said Capehart was
eastbound, ,( .9 miles east of County
Road 28 (Bashan) in Lebanon
Township at 6: II p.m. when her
car went off the right side of the
road.
Capehart lost control of the car,
which crossed lhe roadway, went
off the tefl side and struck two
trees, according to Ule repon.
The car wa&gt; severely damaged,
and Capehart was cited for failure
lo control, no seatbell and underage
consumption.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Friday, by the U.S .
Depanmenl of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to SO
cents higher; demand moderate to
good.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs .. country
points 38.S0-40.SO; plants 40.5042.00, a few to 40.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. country
points 34.00-38.50.
Sows: steady to 50 cents higher.
U.S . 1-3 300-450 lbs., 27.0029.50; 450-500 lbs. 29.00-32.50,
Sj)0-6SO lbs. 3 I. SO-34.SO.
" Boars: 24.00-26.50.
Week: Darrows and gilts 1-1.50
higher; sows steady to SO cents
higher.
Btimatcd weekend receipts:
48,000.
Prices were not available Friday
from The Producers Livestock
Association.

Units of the Meigs Co unty
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 16 calls for assistance
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. UniL&gt; responding included:
COLUMBIA TWP.
1:40 p.m. Thursday, structure
fire at Dennis Tolley residence on
State Route 143, Derrick Jordan
transponed to 0' Bleness Me'morial
Hospital by Rutland sq uad (see
related story).
MII)DLEI'ORT
12:40 p.m. Tue sday, Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center. Florence Henegar. Veterans Memorial
Hospil1l;
11 :48 a.m. Thursday, volunteer
tire deparUn elllto Syc;unore Street,
stove fire al Jim Rey nold s res idence.
·
POMEROY
7:18a. m. Thursday . vo lun teer
fire department and squad . struc ture fire at Pomeroy Cl iffs Apartments , Todd Smith . Mik e Van Meter. Ke vin VanM eter treated at
the scene, Middleport and Rutland
assisted (see related story):
10:38 p.m . T hurslla y, La urel
Cliff Road. David Jdfm, treated at
lhe scene.
RACINE
6:10 p.m. Wednesday. volunteer
lire department and squall In Bald

Real Estate
Appraisal
42994 Sr. 124 , Pomeroy,
Business Phone: 992-42161

FAX: MJ00-861 -9392

sce ne ;

,

4:37 p.m. Weunesday, Pageville
Roau, Joseph D'Auguslino, O'Bic;
ness Mcmori;~ Hospital :
:
2:57a.m. Thursday, LeadinB
Creek Road. Belly Lemley , PVII; :
6:37 p.m. Thursday , Cro user
Road. Daniel Shane. treated at Ule
scene.
SYRACUSE
9:SO a.m. Wedncsuay, Town;
ship Road 232. Tuko Palo, treated
at the scene:

4:01 p.m. Wednesuay, Yellow
Bush Road. Virginia Hendricks:
VMII :
6: 17p .m. Wednesday, Dald
Knob-Stiversville Road to assist
Racine with motor-vehicle accident, Jessica Capch&lt;lfl. VMII:
9:30 a.m. Thursday, Broadway
Street. Linua Grimm, VMH .

Meigs announcements
Letters to Santa
Children can write letters to
Santa and mail them , postage free,
in care of Postmaster, Letter to
Santa, 212 E. Second St.. Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 . Be sure to include
name and address so Santa and
helpers can reply . In addition,
Santa will be at the Pomeroy Post
Office Dec. 2 from 9 a. m. 10 noon.
Bloodmobile to visit
The Meigs County Senior Citizens Center will host Ule American
Red Cross Bloodmobile Wednesday, 1-6 p.m. Red Cross is experiencing a blood shortage and
encourages all people to donate
blood.
Literary dub meeting

The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday , 2 p.m. atlhe
home of Mrs . Wilson Carpenter .
Mrs. Daniel Thomas will review

Divided Lmes: 7'he Pubi1C and Private Struggles of Tliree Arwm-.
plished Women, hy Elsa Walsh.
Country music night
.
Country music night will be·
held Saturday, 7 p.m. to midnight.
at the Lottridgc Community Center. All bands welcome. Refreshments available.
RACO meeting slated
The Racine Area Community .
Organization will hold a covered
dish dinner anll bu siness meeting
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

1"11'"'

.

m

~HI ~I HIS I
PICIUR!S Oil HI Y!A~ I

Oil' I '

.-..~
NICe:

l

liM!

o I

1

- 1./11 1

l t OO, .t : lO Do\1L1
IIA'fJIIDS ll't/IUif
1z00 1:10

KIRSTIE ULEI

IT TAKES

TWO

.,,,...a .,_,•• ,.,

'"''

7:10,9:10 DAILY
NATIIIDS SAT/BUill

1:10 l : 10
1:)0 DUL1
U.TIIIIllS SATISlllf
I ~

I
[1

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'"

Eastern Board
(Continued from Page I)
• approved applying for a Goals
2000 grant.
The ne&lt;l regular meeting of lhe
board was set for Thursday, Dec.
21, 1995 at 6:30p.m. in the high
school cafeteria.

• , lj

I

C\SH\0

HERBS FOR THE HOLIDAYS
Denise Arnold's

FRAGRANT FIELDS
Wreaths
Swags
Arrangements
Potpourri
Vinegars

···························••••

: COLONY THEATRE :
••
FRI.
THURS
•••
•
JONH
TRAVOLTA,
•••
••
GENE HACKMAN,
••
••
•
•
•
DANNY DEVITO IN
•••
•••
GET
SHORTY
,
•• ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30 ••
•
••
•••
441Hl923fmimiEfi ••
••••
••

.I

CPG:- 1J)

'"

1:QD,,:10 DAll.Y •
IUITIIfDII IAT/IUW
1 : 00,1 : 10

President Lyndon B. Johnson
stunned the country March 31,
1968, by announcing he would not
seek re-election.

Cuckler Consulting Inc.

Knob -S tiversville Road, motor
vehicle accident , Peggy C;truther&gt;.
trea ted · at the sce ne, Donny
Stephenson, VMII :
3:41 p.m. Thursday , Broadway
Stree(, Gary Reese and Nels Pick;
ens, VMH . Syracuse assisted;
6:49 p.m. Thursday, volunteer
fire department and squad, Charles
Heck residence, no injuries.
·
RUTLAND
.
2:2'i a.m . Wednesday , Crouser
Road. Daniel Shane, treated at the

Spices
Drying Racks
Rosemary Plants
Scented Geraniums
Dried Flowers

Saturday, Nov. 25, 10-5
Sunday, Nov. 26, 12-5
From St. Rt. 33, Go East on l'each Fork (Co. Rd. 19), turn left on
Rocksprings Rd .• (Co. Rd 20), &amp; go 1 mile (pastl'omeroy, Rehab
Center), Take right 'Y ' . Hemlock Grove Rd. - go I 2110's mile,
~~ drive on right in curve. 992-7573
fi
.Iii.

Ji\

t.lilt.»t&amp;»tlt.~ll.lt~IAI~It~~U~»t~l4»t~l•~~l41t~

MIDDLEPORt MERCHANtS OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26TH
WELCOMED BY. .•

1:00 P.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

-

':

�Friday, November 24, 1995

The Daily Sent~_sJ

Sports
Danielson's club records for both
completions (252 in 1984) and
attempts (417 in 1980) in a season.
Mitchell has completed 259 of 440
for 3,150 yards and 23 TDs so far

this season.
"We're going in every week
and realizing peopl e are going to
play us differently because of
Barry," Mitchell said. "We took .

what they gave us. We did an
excellent job of blocking up fronl
our receivers were open and we
played a sound football game all
around."

By HARRY ATKINS
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) They were buddies and teammares
in high school. Trent Zenkewicz
and Juan Porter likely will be
friends for life.
But for about three hours on

Mitchell was masterful in
spreading lhe ball around. Hennan
Moore, thrown in on defense for
the Vikings' last drive, caught eight
(See NFL on Page 5)

Division I
(Botb games 7 p.m. Saturday)
At Akron Rubber Bowl
Cleveland St. Ignatius (12-0) vs.
Boardman (10-2)
At Gahanna Lincoln Field
Brunswick (12-0) vs. Cincinnati
Colerain (12-.Q)

.,

Division D
(Both game.~ 7:30p.m. today)
At Parma Byers Field
Chardon (Il-l) vs. Akron Buchtel (Il-l)
AI Dayton Welcome Stadium
Dublin Scioto {11-1) vs. Celina

..,,
...'_'_· '._'·.·.. . .
..

...

-

.

GETTING BY Detroit punter Mark Royall Is Minnesota punt
returner David Palmer, who returned the former's punt 74 yards for
the touchdown In the second quarter of Thursday's NFC Central battle under the Silverdome in Pontiac, Micb., where the Lions won 4438. (AP)

.· .

(12-0)

.·

INJURED- Dallas running hack Emmitt
Smith (carrying the football) stumbles in the open
field before going down with a knee injury in the

Division ill
(Both games 7:30p.m. today)
At Akron Rubber Bowl
Chagrin Falls Kenston (Il-l)
vs. Poland (Il-l)
At Lima Stadium

third quarter of Thursday's game against the visiting Kansas City Chiefs, who lost 24-12. (AP)

Basketball

... . 8 l 0 .127 22l 198
...... 6 5 0 .545 215 225
lrnl i anap&lt;Jii~ . ...... 6 5 0 .545 210 210

B"ff•lu.

AUanllr Dh·blon

Orlantlo...
Miami ... .

........ 9
. .fl

Boston ...
... 4
WMhinifon ....... .... 4
New JeBey .... . . .4

Philadelphia...

. .. 2

L ra.
2 .818

2
2

4.5
6

WHiern DIYillon
Kansas CitJ ....... ro 2 o .833 277
O.kland ............... ! 3 0 .127211
Oen•er ...............6 5 0 .~45 249
Seattle ..·................ S 6 0 .455 249

Cenlnl Did16on
.... 9 1 .900
Oiicago ..

... 5

Jnd;ana....
Atlanta ....
DetroL
Milwaukee .

.. ... 6
.3
..... 3

Toronlo ...
.4
Charlotte .... ... ... 3
CLEVELAND ....... 2

4 .556
5 .545

3.5

6
6

333
.313

5.5

8 .333
8 .273
8 .200

6
6.l
7

3.5

Ur.h ..... ..

L ra.
1

.909

.. ...... 10

2

.833

San Antonio ... ...... .6

3

.666

Denvrr ......
... 2
Vancouver ....... .... 2

8

.200

MiDntsota .. ... . .... 1

H .Ill

. ... s .s .soo

DaJ1111... .

9 .182

l8l
117

OaJiu ................. IO
Philadelphia .........?
Arizona ............... .)
N.Y . Giants .......... J
Washiogton.......... 3

.500
.455

i.l
2

Gn l d~n

.. .. 3

II

.:!73

4

Stale ...

II 0 .271 199 246
8 0 .2Jl 227 268

Wcllcrn Dl•Won
A.tlaota ....... .... ...... 7 4 0 .636
Sanfranr:ilco ......7 4 0.636
St. LouiJ ..............6 .S 0 .545
Carolina ........... .... 5 6 0 .455
New Orle&amp;11&amp;.. ...... 4 7 0 .364

241
294
201
202
205

226
160
236
2 J3
152

Detroit 44, Minnesota 38

Dallu 24. Kanw c;IJI2

Nt'w York 94. CLEVELAND 84
Houston 11 5 Philadelphia 1M
Orlandu 95 , Vancouver 93
8o5ton 129, 01arlotte 124
wa.~hington 911, Detroit 97
Miami 103, Golden Stale 93
Seattl e 106. Minnesota 97
Oti cagi11 03. San Antollio 94
Milwaukee 96, Toronto Rfi
UWh 116, Sacramento 95
Phoenill 117, AUantall2
L.A. Clippers 125. New Jer.;ey 92

Sunday's games
Miami at Indianapolis, I p.m.

91
64
62
46
66
51

58
ll
ll
M
6\J

76

Btl
Bn
74
78
54
45

1(,

67
51
62
SK
73
69
llli
75
77

ti l 101

Wednesday's scores
Hartford 4, Montreat 2
N.Y. Rangers 4, Pitt~hu r gh 3
Winnipeg 3, Ottawa I
N.Y. Islanders S. Los Angeles 2

Thursday's score
Vancouwr 3, St . l...uuis 2

Today'• games
Los Angeles al Boston. noon
Detroil at Philadetrh ia, I p.m
Qica~ at Anaheim. 4 p.m.
N.Y. hlanden ar Burfa!o, 7:30p.m.
T~uqm B"Y Ill Wa.~ hingtun,

7·'0 p.m.
Hartford at Torontu, 7:30 run.
Edmonton at Calgary. 9:30p.m.

Saturday's games
Washington at Hartford, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islander1. 7 p.m
Colorado at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
Buffalo at Pi!Uburgh, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Rangen; at Detroit, 7:30p.m

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Sl Pomeroy, OH.
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS
Open

Tuesday-Friday 9:00.5:00
Saturday 9:00-3:00
Cloaed Monday

11IE
GRAVELY

SYSTEM

New England at Buffalo, I p.m.
ONCINNATI at Jack.mnville. I p.m.
01icagoal N.Y. Gi3nts . I p.m
Philadelphia at Wa.~hin~t o n, I p.m
'ian'f'a Bay at Grllt'n Bay, I r rn.
Denver at Housto n, 4 r .m.
N.Y. Jets at Se.~~ l\le, 4 p.m.
Pill5burgh at CLEVELAND, 4 p.m.
St. L.oui5 at San Francisco, 4 p.m.
Atlanta at Arlzona . 4 p. m
Carolina ar New Orleans . 8 p.m.

Thursday's score
11 5. Indiana 108

Monday's

Tonight's games .

game

NCAA Division I scores
South
Georgia I 8. Gea-g1a Tech 17

Southwest
lew 21. Baylor 13

Saturday's games
Houston :II New York. 1 p.m
Gulden State at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Orhullhl m Washinttton, 7:30p.m.
Vanwuvrr at Miami, 7:30p. m
TowtJ!u at Artama. 7 30 p.m.
M i lwau~er ut CLEVELAND . 7· Jfl

The Daily Sentinel~

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Sunday's games
Omrlurte ar Boston, 7 p.m.
HliUsron OJ! Detroit, 1 p.m
MiMeMita OJ! Milwaukee, 1 p.m.
Qucagu ar St!aU ie, 8 p.m.
New Jersty at Sacr.une11to, 9 p.m.

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MAILSUISCRIPTtONS

Football
1

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

•.

1 - Melp County
13 Weeks ...............................................$27.30
26 Weeb ................................... ........... ~3 . 82
s2 w..u ............................................... $105.56
Rot.,Ou.-MelpCounly
I J Weeb........................... , ................ $29.25

26 Weeks.......
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passes for 127 yards, Brett Perriman tied a club record with 12
catches for 153 yards, and Johnnie
Morton caught seven for 102 yards.
MOO!I's first inter~eption led to
. Mitchell's 27-yard touchdown pass
to Moore late in the third quarter.
That gave Detroit a 34-31 lead the
Lions didn't relinquish.
Moon •s second interception
came on the final play of the gaJDe
when be just missed on a desperalion pass to Cris Carter in the end
zone.
·. Moon completed 30-of-47 pass.ps 'or 384 yards and three touch~ '' He has 14 touchdown tossdOwns.
es in bis last four games. Jake Reed
bad six receptions for a seasonhigh 149 yards.
· "I don't know if I have been in
a• game !'ike this since grade
school," Mooo said. "I've been in
games that were this high-scoring,
l&gt;ut never when there were three
touchdowns taken off the board..
·This could have been a 100-point
:same."
. . Tbe Vikings bad two touchdowns nullified by penalties. The
!:.ions lost one to a penalty.
.: Mitchell threw touchdowns of
:,,.. o and 20 yards Perriman a 16,w
·
yarder to Morton and a 27-yard
'$trike 10 Moore. Jason Ha 9son
:lbcked field goals of 32, 40 and 39
'.,.ards for Detroit.
&gt;: Moon hooked up with Reed for
(55-yard scoring play and throw
~oring passes of 10 and seven
jards to Carter.
j The Vikings got two TDs in a
Jpan of 14 seconds from special
~s in the second quarter. David
Palmer returned a punt 74 yards for
score and, on the ensuing kickoff,
Orlando Thomas romped in from
1'7 yards out witll'a recovered fum·b'te.
,;. Fuad Reveiz added a 49-yard
field goal for the Vikings, who saw
()leir three-game wmnrng streak
mapped.
=:: "We had plenty of offense •. we
jlist needed some poise," V1kmgs
e(Jach Dennis Green said. "Our
tQtal team pass defense failed. You
fiive to be able to sack the quarterback, and we let him sit in there
a'jtd get comfonable."
l!ut part of the reason for that
was Sanders.
: "They have a ~r~t scheme and
a; lot of weapons,' Vikings defenslve coordinator Tony Dungy said.
'!You have 10 stop Barry. and ·that
n)eans giving them a chance to hurt
you outside with those rcce1vers.
At the end, we had to blitz to stop
tile pass, and Barry hit us with a
couple big runs."
: Cowboys 24, Chiefs 12
: At Irving, Teus, the Dallas
Cawboys now have the best record
iti the NFL. Whether they still have
t~e NFL' s best running back
rtllllains to be seen.
: After beating the Kansas City
Qliefs 24-12 in a Thanksgiving
Dey showdown, the Cowbo.ys now
might face a more demandmg !est
-+ the possibility of playing w1thoilt Smith who was wheeled off
ttie field ~ith a knee injury late in
t1Je third quarter.
·
,· He is to have an MRI exam
tdday, and the entire Cowboys'
otganization is not about to rest
easy until tbe preliminary diagnOfiiS
o£-a sprain is confumed. Anything
wOrse could doom a shot :JI another
S(jper Bowl
~ "I just pray to the good Lord
O:y man is OK " said running
bib coad1 Joe
·~Dallas ended Kansas City's
stiven-game winning streak and a
cliance to clin~.b a playoff berth

a

Oakland at San Die(!o, 9 p.rn

Miami Y5 . wa,.hinaton at Baltunore.
7:30p.m
Vancouver at Charlotte , 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
G&lt;llden State at Bo"-OD, 8 p.m ' '
Orl ando~ Minn~ta , I p.m.
01icagu ill Utah. 8 p.m
De n\ler at Dul tw;. 8:30p.m.
New Jersey at Portland. 10 p.m.
San Antonio at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Sacramento at L.A. Laker!!, 10:30 p.m.

~AA

110

Pacin != Divhion
... 14 4 3 Jl
· Colorado
Los Ange les .... 10 7 5 25
Anaheim ........... 11 12 0 22
Vancouver ......... G 10 6 Ill
Edrronton ......... 6 10 ~ 17
Calgary .......... 3 14 4 10
San Jose ............ .. 2 16 4 S

79
72
54
SO

Best Wishes To All Our
Meigs County
Winter Sports Programs

Thursday's scores

Wednesday's scores

Huu~&gt;tu n

77

2 22
J 21
S I!J
2 18

8 0 .273 111 289

Chicago ................ 6 S 0 .S4S 297 269
Tampa Bay .. ........6 5 0 .545 175 191
DetroiL ...............6 6 0 .lOll 304 302

.l
.l
I

6

61

54

9
9
7
tI

Dall:u; 4, VancoUYt!t 3
Co\Clrotloll, Oticago 2
Edmonton 2, Anal1rim 0

2 0 .833 343 214
4 0 .636 235 248

Central DI.Uka
Grecm Bay ...........7 4 0 .636 'I17 236

7.5
g
8

5

16

10 51

~3

lit' liA

5 2 26 76 49
(, J 25 71 (ll

Toronto at St. Louis, 7:30p.m
Boslon al Ottawa, 8 p.m.
New Jersey at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Vancouver al San Jo~e, l0:30 p.m.

.!\' L I .&amp; fE fA

Ium

•n

.. 5
.. 5

4

2

30

25
24
e,rrmo ..........9 9 1 t 9
Hanford ............. 8 10 1 17
Boston ... .. ....... 7 9 3 17
Ottawu ... .... ........6 14 0 12

Minnewta ..........6 6 0 .500 300 293

Pho~lll ll ..

54
54
67

2
2
I

33

.!\' L I &amp;

Detroit... ........... 12
Toronto ............. !!
Winnipeg ...
10
Chicago ............ .!J
· Da ll as. ...
.. ... .7
St. L..oui'" ............ .8

TafTlla Bay 3. New Jersey I
Detroit 5. San Jo.~:e 2

Euterra O.•Won

.l
3

PurllanJ . ..

79
82
28 82
22 5H
21 53

Piltsbwt[h .. .. .. I I S 3
Mootre•l .......... 12 8 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

1111

Padn.: DI,.IAon
Sacrarnentu ........... 7 4 .636
LA . Chppen .......... 7 S ..S83
Senlllt' .. .
..... 7 S ..S83
LA. L.akers .
... 6 S .545

I

4

Northu!tl Dlvhlnn

5.5

Midwul DiYbkJn

n
. . .. I 0

:!YLI&amp;la'liA

Aorida ............ 16 5
Philadelphia ...... 13 6
N.Y. Ranger~ .... 13 7
NewJ erscy ...... 10 9
WBShington....... 10 9
Tampa Day ........ li 10
N.Y.IsiWJders ..... 413

201
273
San Diego ............ 4 7 0 .364 196 238

WF..STERN CONFERENCE

rum
HOUilon ... ..

Tum

Howlon .. ........... 4 • 7 0 .J64 231 223
Ja.:borlVIIIe ........ ] 8 0 .273 184 2SO

4
4

5 ..444
6 .400
7 ·.222

Atlantic Dlvllion

Pillllnrlllt . ..........1 4 0 .636 277 242
C!Nrn/NA11 ......4 1 0 .364 269 2n
CLEVELAN0 ..... 4 1 0 .364 201 244

1.5

S .444

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Central Dhillon

1111

.818
750

NHL standings

New Englant.l ..... .4 7 0 .364 177 242
N.Y. Jets ... .. .... 2 9 0 .182 16.1 285

EASTERN CONFERENCE

n
..... 9

Ctntnl Divi~lon

llim

Miami .. ...

NBA standings

rum
New York ......

Hockey·

.!\' L I ·&amp; fl' fA

llim

WESTERN CONFERENCE

"
J

'

~;

THE DAILY SENTINEL
..

Clyde (II : I) vs. Hamilton
Badin (11-1)
Division IV
(Both games Saturday)
At Zanesvllle
Sulsberger Memorial Stadium
Orrville (12-0) vs. BeUaire (120), ?p.m .
At Dayton Welcome Stadium ·
VersaiUes (12-0) vs. IRONTON
(10-2), 1:30 p.m.
Division V
(Bo.th games 7:30p.m. today)
At Louisville Stadium
Apple Creek Waynedale (11-1)
vs. Lisbon (12-0)
At Troy Memorial Stadium
Coldwater ( 10-2) vs . Cincinnati
Mariemont (12-0)
Division VI
(Both games 7 p.m. Saturday)
At Berea Finnie Stadium
Independence (11-1) vs. New
Washington Buckeye Central (120)
At Dayton Welcome Stadium
St. Henry (12-0) vs. Cincinnati
Country Day (11-1)

NFL action. ~C~ntinued frOIII Page 4)

Scoreboard
Ea!ltnl Division

Saturday, all of thai wiU be put on
the shelf.
Zenlcewicz and Porrer played at
Cleveland St. Ignatius . But that
was tllen.
' Zenkewicz now is a defensive
tackle for Michigan. Porrer centers

Ohio high school· football
playoff pairings posted
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here are semifinal pairings for the
24th state bigb school football
playoffs, released Sunday by the
Obio High School AtlJietic Association:

,,~\'f.,..,

•

Undefeated Ohio State has history &amp; talent on its side

Friday, November 24, 1995

TDs with one interception. Along
the way, he shattered Bobby
Layn·e's single-game record of 374
yards which bad stood since 1950.
Mitchell also broke Gary

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

In Saturday's battle with Michigan,

Lions edge Vikiln gs 44-38; Cowboys beat Chiefs 24-12
.
PONTIAC, Mich . (AP)- The
word around the NFL used to be
that if you stop Barry Sanders, you
stop
Lions. That may
not bethe
trueDetroit
any more.
Minnesota held Sanders to just
one yard in the fm;t half Thursday.
By then, however, Scott Mitchell
had thrown three touchdown passes.
Mitchell finished with record
numbers and the Lions held on for
a 44-38 victory over the Vikings.
And. guess what? Sanders got
his numbers anyway. He finished
with 13 8 yards on 24 carries,
including a 50-yard touchdown
scamper that gave the Lions a 10point lead with 5: I R left 10 the
game.
"Everyone, when they talk
about tlJe Lions. it's, 'Stop Barry
Sanders," ' tackle Lomas Bro~n
sa id . "The thing is now we re
making big plays we didn,'l make
earlier, and that's why w7, re wmning some football games.
.
The Lions (6-6) also were ruded
by the first mistakes in almost a
month by Warrtn Moon . Moon,
who turned 39 last Saturday, hadn't
thrown an interception in his last
four games. 13ut he was picked off
twice by tJ1e Liom and each was
costly to Minnesota (6-6). . . ..
"This is real ly thsappomung,
Moon said . "We made enough
plays 10 win il. We just hurt ourselves with mistakes."
With the Vikings stacking
sometimes eight men at the line of
scrinunage, Mitchell completed 30
of 45 passes for 410 yards and four

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

....
,,

Brodsky.

•
•

I:

t:
I,

the Obio State line . They will
pound on one another when the No.
2 Buckeyes (11-0, 8-0 Big Ten)
take on the No. 18 Wolverines (83, 4-3) in one of coUege football's
greatest rivalries.
"We shake hands before tlle
game," Zenkewicz said. "But then
it's a batlle. I want to kick his butt
as bard as be wants to kick mine.
Then we'll hug and shake hands
after the gaJDe.''
It is a must-win game for Ohio
State. Tbe Wolverines have lost
two of their last three games. They
are playing mostly for pride.
"The national chaJDpionship is
in the back of our minds," Porrer
said. " But we bave to go through
Michigan to have a shot at the
national championship.''
Two y~ars ago, the Buckeyes
were 9-0-l, ranked No. 5 in the
nation. Then they came to Ann
Arbor and were banded a 28-0
thrashing that sent them spiraling
out of the Top 10. It also sent Wisconsin to the Rose Bowl.
'T 11 guarantee we're going to
the Rose Bowl," Ohio State
flanker Terry Glenn said Ibis week.
A victory would give the Buckeyes a share of their 27th Big Ten
championship and send them to the
Rose Bowl for the first time since
the 1984 season. Northwestern (101. 8-0) has already assured itself at
least a share of the conference title.
That leaves the Buckeyes with
no wiggle room.
"We're on the brink of having
one of those Cinderella seasons and
we've obviously got to beat Michigan to finish it off," Ohio State
coach John Cooper said.
Clearly, the Buckeyes have the
weapons to do it.
- Tailback Eddie George
recorded his lOth straight I 00-yard
game last week , picking up 130
yards a11d scoring two touchdowns

with the big win, but Smith's injury
made for one gloomy locker room.
''Emmitt thinks the knee is
going to be OK, '' said Dallas
coach BaiTy Switzer.
Dallas also lost center Ray Donaldson, who will undergo surgery
today for a broken ankle.
"Losing Ray and Emmitt are
big losses," said Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman.
Dallas improved to 10-2 while
the Chiefs, off to their best start,
dropped to 10-2 in a clash of the
teaJDs with the best NFL records.
· d t hc f'trst
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Vinny
When S m1'th mtSse
· a Testaverde stiU doesn't know if be
two games of the 1994 season m
contract dispute Wl'th owner Jerry will be the starting quarterback
Jones, t he Cow boys 1ost bot h against Pittsburgh Sunday,
tb hut be
·th
s
·th
saidbewillbepreparedei
erway.
1
d
games. J ones sell e WI
ml
On Wednesday, coach
Bill
and the Cowboys went on 10 win Belicbick still had not announced
the Super Bowl.
.
his decision on whether Testaverde
Smith, the NFL's leading run. 100-yard rusb'mg quarterback.
or Eric Zeier would be the starting
ner, bas had mne
games this year. Bothered by barnB·u
and
_string injuries last year, he had
"It's hard to figure 1 out
that's one thing I don't try to do,"
beet\ injury free this season.
Testa verde said Wednesday.
But with_ 1:24 left in the. third "When you're wasting time trying
qu!""er, Smttb w!l"t d~wn wttbout _ to figure somebody out, you can be
bemg tackled wh~ 111.''"8 to make
.
.
a cutback on the artifiCial turf.
spending that ume prepanng your"Emmitt has made that cut self in other ways. I m not going to
1,000 times," said offensive tackle try to guess what he's thinking."
Testa verde said the fact
Nate, Newton. "~is time the kn~ Belichick won'l tell him if he'll
dido t bold up. II JUSt shakes you.
stan does bother him some.
Smith was walking in the locker
"It bothers you a little bit, but
room after the game. Tmmer Kevm the way the year's gone, I just kind
&lt;?'Neill called th~t a ''positive of take it in stride and don't let it
Sign. Sull, we don ~know exactly affect me. You look at it and say
what IS wrong unttl we have an 'Well, that's the kind of year we're
MRI 0 Friday. We're calling it a having,' 'so you let this one roll off
spram ~ntll we find out sometbmg your back and move forward," be
different."
'd
6
Smith rushed for 5 yards and sru Testaverde said Belichick did
scored a touchdown on a 15-yard not tell him or Zeier when he was
run before he was injured. Aikmim going 10 make his announcement.
threw two touchdo'Y" passes of 33
"We're clueless. 1 guess he'll
yards each to light end Jay go on his years' experience in
Novacek and Michael irvin..
coaching. I'd like to feel like I
'_'We've done a good JOb of know without even going out and
bouncing back from our loss to San. taking a snap, but I didn't think I
Francisco and we feel greal about was going to get benched four or
our position but we have a big con- five weeks ago either. It's hard to
cern ~bo.ut Emmitt," Aikman ~d. say."
" We ll JUSt have 10 keep our fmTestaverde said splitting snaps
gcrs crossed.
is not fair to the starter - if
"I've bad a sprained knee and 1 Belicbick has made his mind up. ·
know it was hard to com~ back,
"The starter needs more work,"
and I can tmag1ne how hardttls for said Testa verde. "That's the
a running back. (Substitute back) biggest thing about not knowing .
Sherman Williams is a good player, The other thing is just getting .your
but we're a much better team with mind set - like what happened to
Emmitt in tbe_re;, We'll just have 10 me when 1 was benched. I bad to
fight through .tt..
get my mind set on being a backup
Kansas Ctty s only touchdown and going in the game under those
came on a 45-yard pass from Steve circumstances, and that does take
Bono to Lake Dawson.
some preparation.".
"This was a tough loss because
Testaverde p1ade a strong case
we didn't show our. true selves," for himself, based largely on bis
said Bono. "But there's no ques- 244-yard, two touchdown perfortion that Dallas is the best team. mance in the second half of last
And they've been able to maln!:Jin week's loss to Green Bay. The
that level, for several years now . . game improved his quarterback ratSmith s touchdown run was htS ing 10 92.5. fourth in the AR:. He
21st of the year, just three behind has thrown 12 touchdowns and
John Riggins' NFL season record.
four interceptions. But he was 0-3
Irvin caught II passes for 121 against Pittsburgh last season.
yards, and Aikman hit 21 of 29
"I went out and played pretty
passes for 192 yards.
good football the second half,"
. "Nobody do~s .~t h~uer than Testaverde said. "Other than two
Aikman and Irvm, sa1d K~nsas or· three throws, 1 felt like I made
City coach Marty ScbottenheiDier. all the right reads and went to the
"You can talk about Rice and right people and played smart footYoung but when it comes down to ball. Like I said Sunday, I never
timing, nobody does 11 better than should've been taken out and I'll
those two.
stand by that."
. "ballas was cl~ly the better
Defensive end Rob Burnett
team_ We co"ld~ t stop tbe~r made no bones about wbo should
offense : When Atkman ge~s h1s start.
rhythm going he's bat;~ 10 dtsrupt
"I think Vinny's the guy this
Dallas IS a great ~am.
week,· • be said. •'Why? Because of
The lucky tbmg for· the Cow· his performance last week against
boys is that they have 10 days to . GreeJt Bay. He kept us in the game.
get ready for their next opponent, He brou$ht us back. He deserves a
the Washington Redskins, w~om sbol.l think be can move this team .
tbe play ~- 3 at Texas StadiUm.:
"Eric has a bright future, but
The Redskms beat Dallas 27-23 on Vinny is still one of the top-ranked
Oct 1.
·quarterbacks in the AFC. "

Testaverde
unsure
if Browns
will start him
vs. Steelers

°

on 26 carries against Indiana.
- Quartefback Bob Hoying ha~
reclaimed the lead in the national
passing efficiency derby with a mting of 182.6. He also is 16th in
total offense with an average of
252 yards per gaJDe.
- Glenn is third in the nation in
receiving yards, averaging 124 per
game. He also is fifth in scoring at
10.4 points per gaJDe. Glenn also is
averaging an eye-popping 23.47
yards per catch:
"1 think Obio State could·beat

•
any team in tbe country right
now," Zenkewicz said.
But this is the type of game
IMichigan sometimes finds a way to

l

win.
"It bas nothing to do with

Northwestern, or denying Eddie
George the Heisman Trophy ,"
Zenkewicz said. " It bas nothing to
do with any of that. We want to
win this game for ourselves.··
The Wolverines still have some
bowl aspirations. A victory over
the Buckeyes might cam them an

invitation to the Outback Bowl in :
T31Dpa on New Year's Day.
.
"We haven't bad the best season," Zenkewicz said . " But a win
in this gaJDe would make il memorable. We're not going to be happy·
with the season we have. But this ·
would make it a little easier to live ·
with."
This will be the II th time since
1944 that Ohio State has taken an
undefeated team into the Michigan ·
gaJDe. The Buckeyes are 7-2-1 in
those games.

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Friday, November 24, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

In the Great Alaska Shootout,

.

-Indiana and Duke defeat host club &amp; Old Dominion---ANCIIORAGE, Alaska (AP)Th~ Great Alaska SboOIOUI bas a
iong history of bringing highly
regarded t~ams crashing to eanh.
lnd tana. ranked No. 23 . pulled
out of a tai lspin with four seconds
left agai nst Division II Alaska
,\ nchoragc, iUld limped off with a ,
bruised rcputllion and a 84-79 vicwry in the fir.&lt;~ round of the 18th
.Shootoul .

In the other first-round game
rhursday night. Duke got 18 pointS
~r" m Greg New ton as the Blue
th·v lis cele brated tbe return of
cuach M1 kc Kryzyzewski with a
1,.~5 bl"wout over Old Dominion.
Indiana coach Bobby Knight
"e'ecd hi.s Hoosiers were less than
i 11\ flfl' ~.\ i \ 'L'

"'Let me tell yo u ... the wrong
team won We got outplayed, outhustle d and ont·cvcrythinged,"
Knif hl ,aid. " It 's JUSt an absolute
.s l~; un e th,·y lost the game. I'd feel
t&gt;c ttcr il Lltcy had won.
" We' re not very good , and I
do n' t 1nea n th at in any way to

detract from the other kids, because
they made us nO! good."
Not until Todd Lindeman
grabbed his missed free throw and
muscled in a shot at the buzzer was
Indiana's victory assured. Anchorage closed to 82-79 on a tip-in by
Rick Stafford with four seconds
1en.
" I' ve never been as proud of a
team in my 16 ye ars here ,"
Anchorage coach Charlie Bruns
said . " This is what you want a
team to be like. This ts the way the
game should be played.··
The Seawolvcs (4-1) fell behind
by II . but scratched back and led
58-57 with 10:43 left. The game
was. tied at 67 with 6:31 to go, but
the Hoosiers· superior height
enabled tltcm to hold off the Seawolves.
Brian Ev;ms led L11c Hoosiers (1.o) witll 23 points and Neil Reed
bad 19, includin g four three-pointers.
Ryan Williams, the only Sea wolves player as taU as 6-foot-7,

matched Evans with 23 points .
Stafford had 12 in the second half
and 20 overall.
Indiana plays Duke and No. 6
Connecticut faces No. 10 Iowa in
tonight's semifinals.
Duke showed its familiar intensity with Krzyzewski back on the
bench after missing the Blue Devils" last 19 gruncs with back problems.
' 'I'm happy to be back, but I
was a little nervous," Knyzewski
acknowledged . ' 'I was nervous
about the kids . I'm not nervous
about winning or losing."
Krzyzewski said be tried not to
show that nervousness because he
was afraid it would rub off on his
young team. But he said the Blue
Devils were jittery and it showed in
the first half.
The teams traded the lead six
times and were tied three times in
the ftrst half before Duke's defense
.began forcing costly Monarch
turnovers. The Blue Devils raced
from a 31-26 halftime lead to a 20-

point edge with 12: II to go.
"We're not world-beaters by
any stretch of the imagination, but!
think we have a chance to be a
good team," Knyzewski said.
Duke (1-0) got a strong inside
game from Newton. who finished
with 18 points and a team-high six
rebounds. Ricky Price chipped in
16, 14 of them in the first half. Jeff
Capel, whose father coaches Old
Dominion, helped sink the Monarchs with 12 points.
"I think Capel's perfonnance
was outManding considering the
circumstances,'' Knyzewski said.
Capel's father, Jeff, said it was
hard on both of them to play one
another. "I knew what he was
going to do and I just didn't want
to see i~" the elder Capel said of
several times when his son took off
for thundering dunks. "I've seen it
enough. He dropped a three in front
of us and that really bun."
The Monarch's committed 23
turnovers against Duke· s aggres-

sive man-to-man defense. Mike
Byers scored 16 points for Old
Dominion (0-1) and Joe Bunn bad

in the final minuics and executed
effectively on offense for a 115108 comeback victory over the
Pacers in the only NBA game
played Thursday night.
"You've got to give them credit, they know how to win," said
Indiana guard Mark Jackson.
" They knocked down shots when
they had to . They're great when
Meigs to play
they scramble. and that's what they
do
best. You have to give their
Logan in Shrine
defense credit. They didn't let anything keep them from getting the
Preview tonight
job done."
The Pacers were playing their
Th e annual Athens County
first
game in live .days, while the
Shrine Basketball Preview will be
Rockets
were playing their fourth
held today at Athens High School
in
as
many
nights.
in -ntc Plains.
But
this
is a normal November
In the opener, the Federal Hockfor
the
Rockets.
They've won
ir g La ncers will play Jay Rees'
seven
straigh~ including five on the
Alexander Sparta.ns at 7 p.m. In the
seco nd conte st, Jeff Skinner's road, and arc 10-1 for the month.
Meigs Marauders will play the Houston. which set a league record
d\:fcndin g SoutlJeastem Ohio Ath- by opening the 1993-94 season
with 14 consecutive victories in
let ic League co-champion Logan November,
is 34-4 in the month
Chiclbiu s at 7:45 p.m.
over
the
last
three
seasons.
: The third rontest will pit the
The
Rockets,
who
were playing
1:nmhlc Tomcats and the Vinton ·
back·to-back
games
after
defeating
County Vikings against each other
Philadelphia
115-106
on
Wcdncsai 8:30 p.m. The final contest will
day,
forced
eight
tumovers
in the
hjlve Nelsonville-York and the host
final
period
by
Indiana
and
limited
1\tllcns Bulldogs at 9:15p.m.
: All scrimmages will be two- the Pacers to just one field goal in
the fina14:36.
4~art cr affairs.

The Pacers failed to capitalize
on foul problems which kept
Hakeem Olajuwon on the bench for
12 minutes in the first three quar·
ters, and the Rockets utilized a balanced scoring attack that saw
Mario Elie come off the bench to
score 18 points and lead an offense
that had eight players in double fig·
ures.
"We don'! blow anybody out.
we just try to keep it close the last
live minutes. Our balanced scoring
makes it hard for anybody to beat
us. This team is better than the last
two because of desire," said Kenny
Smith, who contributed 17 points
to the victory.
"It's time everyone realizes
these guys are for real. They didn't
win two championships just on reputation . They're a good team,'·
said Indiana's Eddie Johnson.
. "I told our guys, these guys
play like it's a playoff game every
game. They have so many physical
players,·· Houston coach Rudy
Tomjanovich said . "That's why we
have Mario Elie. He goes out and
takes the toughest assignment coming off the bench. He' s amazing.''
Houston also had trouble scoring in the fourth quarter. The Rockets led 96-91 when Elie made a
layup with 9:13 to play.

Olajuwon reenlered the game
with live fouls and his team trailing
101-96 with 5:32 remaining. He bit
two free throws with 5: 17 left and a
slam dunk for Houston's ftrSt field
goal in nearly five minutes, cutting
Indiana's edge to 103-100 with
4:17 remaining.
A three-point play by Elie tied
the game 103-103 with 3: 11 left.
Olajuwon. who scored 15 points
and bad only seven rebounds in 31
minutes, then blocked a shot by
Ricky Pierce and made a short
book to put the Rockets ahead to
stay.
''Our defense was good, but our
offense was also sweet. We shot
the ball great. Execution couldn 'I
have been better for a back-to-back
game," Tomjanovich said.
A 14-foot jumper by Elie and a
three-pointer by Sam Cassell gave
Houston a 110-103 lead with 1:28
to play and the Pacers g01 no closer
than four pointS again.
·'They played pretty good and
made shots. The second half they
made a lot of big threes and we had
some key turn.overs down the
stretch," Indiana coach Larry
Brown said . • 'They're tough,
they're good. They seem to find
guys who come in and do terrific
things. 'That's wby they're a chaml'ionsbip t~."

The Daily Sentinel • Page 1

Pomeroy ' Middleport, Ohio

Old fashioned lady blames feminists f_
or standing on the bus

!3. In today's consolation games,
Old Dominion faces Anchorage
and Texas Christian plays ObtO.

Ann
Landers
"1!195, Loo Angelet
llmn Syndk:lle and
C&lt;oat&lt;n SyndlcaiO"

Dear A•• Laaderl: I'd like 10
comment on the Jeuer from
"Dilguatod in Long Island." wbo
complained about having 10 stand on
the bua while men sat, some
pretending to be uleep, others
blalantly refusing Ill give up their
ICIIs.

Women bave screamed for years
that thel want to be treated as
"equals. They call men "piss."
blame them for aU that is wrong in

lhe wcrldand insist 011 being included
in aD-male clubs, particiJllllios in
IIICII's spa1s mlllkingjobl that were
meant for men only, such u fue
lighting and law emorccmcnl They
now IUC if there's a")rooiem" gcUing
in. And they've been winning. I don't
get it.
Our family R'lCallly went Ill Disney
World with my sister and her 20something, liberated, feminist
daughter. As we blveled bact Ill our
room on a crowded trtun, IIOid my
teen-age &amp;On to otrer his seat 10 a
woman who sot on at one of the
SlOpS. My niece haslelled 10 criticize
me. She said, "Why should be?That's

three 10111 give up lllcir tiCIIS for
women llld the elderly because it is
the right thing to do. When I
CKJICiicDcc a bd of ClODiidcrllion on
the bus, I wiD point the ICCtlling
fingm at the feminilts who insist on
baviog tbe rigbt to III8Dd.. -PROUD
TO BE AN OLD-FASHIONED

sexist!"
I will COIItinue 10 insist that my

LADY
DEAR PROUD: I applaud the
pogras womc:u bave made In lbe
WCllkplat:c. We've come alooa way
since Rosie lhe Ri~ but I cannot
IIUppOit ef£011110 remove all batrien
and make every club uailcx.
The Citadel •• fiiiC. Too bad
Shannon Faulkner didn't mate it, but
some otbct yOWJg WOIIWl wiiiiQliL
And that's a it should be. ThcCiladel

is a tax-supponed insliwtion. But a
word of caulioo: Womm who want
to be treated u 100 percent equals
should be willina Ill sive up IJOIJIC
of lbe perks fonnerly ICCOtded 10
the "weaker sex. • Keep reading
for another letter on the same
subject.
Dear An Landera: I have 10
rcspotld to your Rader who uked if
chivalry is dead. Chivalry may be
dead. indeed, but tinclne8s is alive
llld well.
Last week, while boarding an
airplane, I was canying my luggage
llld that of a colleague who was on
crotches. As I auempltld 10 negotiale
that humongous load up a flight of
Slain, none other than Peter Jc:nninp

appeared at\d insisted on helping.

IOnce 011 boanllhe plane, be bclpcd
i another Jl8SSCII8tz. who was also 011

COle. And handsome, too.

Dear Readers: Remember .the old
Bunna Shave signs along the road?
Here's one of my favorites. It's as
good today as it was 40 years ago:
Don'tlosc your head
To gain a minute.
You need your head.
Your brains are in iL
Do you llavt q~sriciiS about sa,
bUIIIO OM to tali to? AM La/lders'
booklet, "Se:t aJUJ tltt Teen-Ager," is
frank aJUJ ro rite poinr. Stnd a ulf-

'crutches, get her luggage stowed in
·tbe overhead companmcnl
, I have been a longtime fan of Peter
; Jennings, the newacas~er, but now I
' am also a fan of Peter Jennings. the
:peoon. Perllaps it's his tboushtfulness that makes him such an
·exceptional news anchor.
Too bad lhere aren't more people
like Mr. Jennings. The world could
use his kind of civility. -- A PAN addrtssed, long, business-size
tlllltlopt aJUJa check: or rao~~~:yolfler
FOREVER IN DALLAS
DEAR FOREVER: Thank you for for $3.75 (IIW includes po.!lagt aJUJ
a lovely lettet I, too, am a fan of Peter handling) 10: 'UtiiS, c/o Ann lAIIders,
Jenninp and can altesllll the fact that P.O.Bo% 1156Z, Clticago.l/1. 60611be's a class act- a gentleman 10 lbe 0561. (In Canada. und $4.55.)

Highway safety discussed at DAR meeting

Rockets come back to beat Pacers 115-108
fly HANK LOWENKRON
INDI ANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana learned the hard way why the
lln ustou Ro ckets are two-time
defending NBA champions and the
Pacers ar~ JUS! contenders .
Faci n~ a rare November defeat.
tlle RockcLs tightened their defense

friday, November 24, 1995

·.~·

WHO'S THAT MASKED MAN? - Alaska-Anchorage's Burt
WaUace (left) may have asked hhmelf that question while he was battling Indiana's Harts Mujezlnovlc - the latter's mask is in place to
protect a broken jaw - for the loose ball during Thursday night's
Great Alaska Shootout nrst-round game in Anchorage, Alaska,
where the visiting Hoosiers won 84-79. (AP)

Patrolman Rick Brown of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol addressed safety
on the highway for women at the
November meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, held
at the Meigs County Public Library
in Pomeroy.
Patrolman Brown is one of nine
troopers working from the GalliaMeigs Post and responds to
approximately 100 highway auto
crashes per year in the area. He
indicated that the number one
cause of accidents on the highway
is speed.
fie said that the speed is not
necessarily high speed bul rather
speed in relation to road conditions,
curves and traffic. He also noted
that deer ~Tasbes are a major factor
in accidents in this area. Speed
should be controlled lo allow for
assured clear distance for sudden
emergencies.
· He distribuled "On-Road Assis-

Sorority

CROSS COUNTRY HONOREES - Receiving cross country
awards at the Meigs fall sports banquet were Jessica Johnson (left)
and Jake D11vls. Not pictured is Adam White.

tance Kit&gt;" to DAR members.
In case of a highway emergency. he said, drivers should get off
the road, use flashers and headlights to alen other drivers and signal for help. PaJ!sengers should exit
the car on the non-traffic side, lift
the hood and stay in tbe car and if
they have one, put a "Call .Police"
sign in the window.
Patrolman Brown discourages
people walking for help. If you
leave the scene of a breakdown.
one may risk car the(t and personal
injury. He also encourages people
to be selective about help; don't
unlock the doors or accept help _
from anyone but a unifonned law
enforcement officer. If possible.
equip your car with a cellular
phone and in cold weather, carry
warm clothing, blanketS, flares and
sand.
Other common sense safety
measures were discussed: 1) keep
doors locked at all times and windows rolled up at least half way; 2)

when driving alone at night ignore
The chapter adopted a resolution
what you would consider an in tell- in remembrance of Frederick W.
tiona! bump 1o the rear of your car Crow. Jr .• for bis outstanding conand continue on until you reach a tributions to the Pomeroy commu·
gas station, etc. ; 3) If you think nity and throughout Ohio and to
someone in trailing you, don't award him, posthumously, a DAR
drive to your bouse but instead go Outstanding Community Leader
to a police station or gas station; 4) Award.
In a shopping mall parking lot try
The next meeting of the Return
not to park near a ~an or truck and Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR will
always stand sideways and look be beld Dec. 9 at the Meigs County
around while unlocking your vehi- Public Library in Pomeroy. The
cle; 5) and always have your keys program will include a tour of the
ready when approaching your car · library, a presentation on the IOOth
and look in the windows of your anniversary of the National Society
car before unlocking and entering Daughters of the American Ljbrary
yourcar.
in Washington , D.C. Christmas
Be alert and always use com- music and a presentation by Mary
moo sense precautions, he advised. Tuttle Rose on music boxes will
The meeting was conducted by also be included in the program.
the regen!, Palricia Holler. She . Members are asked to bring their
welcomed a new member. Clara · favorite music box for sharing.
Conroy, to the chapter. Miss
Hostesses for the November
Eleanor Smith, chaplain, gave a meeting were: Mrs. Gerald Powell,
memorial remembrance for Rose Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Larry
Reynolds, also a new chapter mem- Wiley and Mrs. Harold Sar~ent.
ber, who died ,during the past
month.

holds-~Thanksgiving

Alpha Omicron chapter of Delta.
Kappa Gamma met recently al
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. A
turkey dinner was served by the
ladies of the church, with tables
decora:ed in a Thanksgiving motil
of baskets and fall leaves.
Gay Perritt gave the invocation,
with Donna Jenkins presenting a
music program. Sarah Dawn Jenkins played the piano selections
"Swans on the Lake" and "Hark the
HeraJd ·Angels Sing". Jenkins, Alison Hayes, and Amber Snowden
signed the song "Love in Any Language". Snowden played "Marines
Hymn" and "America the Beauti·
ful" on the clarinet. Hayes played..
the piano selections "It Came Upon
A Midnight Clear" and "We Gather
Together".
Scholarship committee chairman Rosalie Story and committee
member Rebecca Zurclier conduct·
ed the silent auction. Miss Story

HIGHWAY 'SAFETY- Members of the Return Jonathan
Meip Chapter, Daughters of tho American Revolution, addressed
safety on the highway for women at tbelr November meeting.
Here, DAR members Mrs. Rae Reynolds, Mrs. Pauline ·Atkins,
Mrs. Patricia Holter, regent, and new member Clara Conroy display an emergency road sign to be used in case of breakdown.

dinner

auctioned the items not receiving beth Lantz who died Nov. 12.
bids.
Table baskets were given to every
During the business meeting, tenth member who registered. They
President Fern Grimm announced were Emma Ashley, Judy
that hostesses from the chapter will Fetherolf, and Dian Partlow.
be needed for the state convention,
Grimm gave lace angels honorMay 3-5, 19%, in Toledo. She dis- ing attendance to those attending
tributed questionnaires on strategic all meetings in 94-95 year: Myrtle
planning to be filled out and Fri. Dian Partlow, Fern Grimm,
returned by next meeting.·
Rosalie Story, Deborah Hammond,
Grimm announced that biannual Elizabeth Lantz. and NeUie Parker;
reports by committee chairmen are and to those missing only meeting:
due by Feb, I, 1996. Grimm also Eileen Cottrill, Susan Will, Cynthia
announced that Serenity House and Bateman, and Betty Jenkins.
My Sisters Place would be happy
Those attending from Meigs
to receive children's books for their County were Emma Ashley. Suzy
facilities. Next month, the group Carpe~ter, Twila Childs, Pam
_will give Christmas gifts for Crow, Mrujory Fetty, Fern Grimm,
women and children in place of Pauline Horton, Donna Jenkins,
paper products.
· Nellie Parker, Gay Perrin, Carolyn
Secretary Nellie Parker read Snowden, R,osalie Story, Saundra
greetings from Jod¥ Fetherolf and Tillis, Dorothy Woodard, and
thanks from Seremty House. The Rebecca Zurcher.
chapter sent a sympathy card to
The next meeting will be Dec. 9.
Margaret Bobzien, sister of Eliza· 11 a.m., at the Hamden Masonic
'
Lodge .

•

OVER

CI1QI&amp;TMA&amp; GQEETING EDITION
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With wreaths of holly and mistletoe~ stockings hung by
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blessings we"'e shared this past year. For us it means
saying '-.hanks" to you, our many frlen~ old and
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The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
anno11nce meeting and special
events. Tbe calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type, Items
are, printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
spedlk number of days.
SATURDAY
HOBSON- Special singing by
Canterbury Singers Sahlrday, 7:30
p.m. at Old Bethel Freewill Baptist
Cbun:h at state Route 7 and Story's
'Run Road.

Till HIE 1-IIOIHI!!-11417 • 872·2844
•42!-G768
· Tues. Tags, n1e Fees extra. Rebateincfuded lr1 talapri;:eol new whi::le kied ~~. On ~credit. NolrelpOnlble tor~ emn.

MlllllldIYY • IIIII 11): I • • 8 IIIII
III diY:-·811111

Meigs High School. From left to right are Stacie
Reed, Cindi Stewart, Teresa Simpson, Sue Hen·
dcrson and Lori Russell.

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CHEERLEADER AWARDS PRESENTED These MeiW' cheerleaders receives special awards
during Tuesday evening's fall sports banquet at

SUNDAY
HOBSON- Special singing by
The Conqueror's Quartet Sunday,
7:30 p.m. at Hobson Christian Fellowship Chun:h.

POMEROY - Holiday concen
Sunday, 3 p.m. at Trinity Church
following,Pomeroy parade.
MIDDLEPORT - Ground
breaking ceremony Sunday. 3 p.m.
for .the new Middleport Church of
the Nazarene at the new site at the
corner of' General Hartinger Drive
and Page Street&gt;.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission.
7:30p.m. Monday at tbe Veterans
Service Office, Mulberry Avenue.
POMEROY ~ A representative
from "1./.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans
wiD be at the Meigs County Court-

house Monday. from 9-9:50 a.m. in
the commissioners' office.
POMEROY - An informational meeting of building owners and
business people regarding the
Downtown Revitalization Project
will be held Monday. 7 p.m. in the
Trinity Church Basement.
RACINE - Southern Local
OAPSE 453 meeting Monday, 6:30
p.m. at the high school.

W!.Sh aU your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 22nd

•

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE or BOB
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINE

TUESDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Building Committee meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria. All district residents urged to
attend.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Christmas Parade, 2 p.m. downtown.

· · · - ·~· · ·

·

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~

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�•'

Page,8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 1995

Friday, November 24, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Middle-port-Pomera.y Rotarians hold Thanksgiving meeting
"Thanksgiving" was the theme
for the annual Thanksgiving meet,
ing for Middleport-Pomeroy Rotarians and their spouses at the club's
regular Monday night meeting at
Heath United Methodist Church in
M•ddleport
Robbie Shields, program chrurman, bad arranged for table decom,
t1ons of cactuses and comucop~as
These were used as door prizes and
were won by Da1sy Blakes lee.

Lmda Warner, KarenJriplett.
Albert Dettwiller, David Snyder
and Howard Fmnk,
lbe mformal program included
readings by club president Lloyd
!llackwood, "A Thanksgiving
Prayer," and by Robbie Shields,
"Thanksgivmg Thoughts" All the
Rotanans and thelf spouses were
g•ven the opportunity to e~press
thc•r th oughts about thmgs they
were tbrulkful for.

Hal Kneen led the group in
singing Thanksgiving hymns to
open the meeting. The Rev. Falher
Walter Heinz gave the invocation,
The meeting bad been billed as
"Ugly Tie and Beautiful Ladies
Night." Winning the ugly tie contest was Harold Newell. Honorable
mention was awarded to Gene
Tnplett and Lloyd Blackwood. All
women present were declared win-

ners of the beautiful ladies contest.
Allendmg were: Mr. and Mrs
Lloyd Blackwood, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Young, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Newell , Howard Frank, Randy
Hays,' Mr and Mrs. Dick Owen.
Mr. and Mrs Eldred Parsons, Mr.
and Mrs. Chuck Blakeslee: Mr and
Mrs. Karl Kebler Ill, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Detwiller, Jennifer Sheets,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Warner and sons

David and Jay, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Beegle, John Anderson, Hal
Kneen, J onalban Perrin and daugble( Emma Rose, Walter Heinz, Mr.
and Mrs. ' Richard Vaughan, David
Snyder, Rotary exchange student
Caroline Magne, Robbie Shields,
Susan Oliver, Mr and Mrs. Gene
Tnplett, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Fultz and his mother Ruby Fomasb
and guest Maxine Price.

Home Health Week observed
The long-establtsbed Horne
Health Care Service of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will observe
National Home Healtb Week, Nov
27 -Dec. I. witb spec tal activiues to
be held.
Having been founded 1n I 'J7 L
llle bospitalUs Home Health Care
Serv•cc bas been one of the fastest
growing departments of tbe msututton m recent years smce the current emphasis is on keeping aging
res1dents m the comfort of the1r
own homes for as long as possible.
RWe pride ourselves on our reputation with pati en ts. families .
phySICians, and the comrnunny we
have served smce 197 1 All of our
registered nurse s are dually
licensed 111 Ohw and West V•rgm•a. and all staff providing patient
care are required to meet the h•ghest standards of the mdustry.S comments Paula E!Chmger, BSN, RN,
who is coordmator of the hospltalUs Home Health Serv1ce

The two veterans of the local
home health operatiOn With the
longest years of serv1ce are Bonnie
Da•ley, ol the Pomeroy area, an
aule, ami Sharon Stewart. RN, Rutland Each of the women have 17
1/2 years serv1ce with the department.
The two employees point out
that not only has there been a sizable increase in staff and pat1ents
over the long years of Ule service
operatiOn but that technical skills
have changed through which
employees are perfonning a wider
range of more skilled services for
theu pauents. Also these days a
considerable amount Q[ education
1s go1ng on through the Home
Health Serv1ce. Not only are
patients taught techniques to help
tbernselves but farmly members are
also being given education and
traming so that they. too. can ass1st
m the care of patients involved
with the program.
Personnel of

the department have previously
worked m a wide area of patient
care before moving into Home
Health Care thereby providing versatility m caring for patients.
In observance of National Home
Health Week, representatives of the
hospitalUs service will be meeting
the public and providing free blood
pressure testing at VaughanUs Cardmal m Middleport and the Kroger
Store in Pomeroy botll on Tuesday,
Nov . 28, and Thursday, Nov . 30,
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., both days
On Wednesday, Nov. 28. an
open house will be held at tbe servicesU headquarters from 2 to 4
p.rn, in the Me1gs Medical Building adJacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Patients and thetr fami lies, prospective patients and their
families and others in interested in
borne health care are cordially
mv1ted to the open house. Refreshments will be served.

MAKES PLANS - Paula Ekhlnger, RN, BSN, Coordinator of
the Home Health Service at Veterans Memorial Qospital, standing,
makes plans for the observance of National Home Health Week by
the department, Nov. 27-Dec:. 1, With her are two veteran employees each with 17 1/2 years of service with the department. On th~
lert Is Sharon Stewart, RN, and right is Bonnie Daily, an aide.
Free blood pressure testing will be provided by the department
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at VaughanUs Cardinal in Middleport and
at the Pomeroy Kroger Store both on Tuesday, Nov. 28, and
Thursday, Nov. 30. An open house will be staged from 2 to 4 p.m.
aJ the service headquarters on Wednesday. Nov. 211.

First parting of Red Sea occurred 34 million years ago
By RANDOLPH E- SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHING1DN (AP)- When
Moses parted the Red Sea he likely
d•dn' t reahze the land where be
stood had 1tsell separated millions
of years earlier to make way for the
salty waters
Geologists researching the still
growing nft Ulal created the long.
narrow sea believe it can teach
them about the processes that
helped form the Atlantic and Pac1tic oceans hundreds of millions ol
years earlier.
Geologists Gomaa' Ornar of the
University of Pennsylvania and
)l.fichael Steckler of the Lamont,
Doherty Earth Observatory con -

elude m tb1s week's ed1tion of the
journal Science that the Earth's
crust separated like the rig1d leaves
of a table 34 nullion years ago to
create the opening for the Red Sea.
Their findings contradict the
previous Uleory that the sea opened
gradually - more or less like a
zipper - from soutJl to north.
Instead, they believe continental
movemen~ combined with volcanism, began a long process of separating Africa and Arabia That process still IS going on, as shown by
the earthquake that struck the
regton Wednesday
When Moses parted the Red Sea
3.300 years ago "he didn't realize
11 was parted before, 34 m1lhon

years earlier," Omar said in a telephone interview.
The partmgs, of course, were
vastly different
Moses led the Jews through an
opemng m the water caused either
by divine intervention, winds. a
great wave or some other phenomenon, depending on whom one
chooses to believe
The partmg analyzed by Omru
and Steckler was a slow, massive
separation of the land that created
the opening for Ule sea itself.
"There are a lot of things happening now we don't even notice.
The Red Sea is still opening, but
we don' t notice ... Eventually it will
be an ocean," srud Ornar.

Still widening at about one-half
inch per year, the rift is the
youngest region of continental
breakup on the planet, allowing the
geologists to learn about processes
that occurred in the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans hundreds of millions
of years earlier, he explained.
Scientists had thought that the
Red Sea opened gradually from
soutJl to north because the process
of developing oceanic crust on the
sea floor followed that pattern.
occurring about 5 m1lhon years
ago, Ornar saitl.
Bu• Ornar and Steckler d1spute
that, based on studies called
"apatite fission tracking." Apatite

is a common mineral in Ule molten
rocks that rose through lbe cracks
in the Earth. It contains small
amounts of uranium 238 that
change into otller types of uranium
at a constant rate, leaving a trace in
the structure of the rock crystals, he
said.
The concentration of these
tracks "tells when Ule mountam on
both sides of Red Sea came up,"
Ornar explained. That led to their
concluston that the m11ial breakup
occuned all along the sea at about
the same. Omar cautioned, however, that to a geologist, the phrase
"at the same time," means over
the span of 1 million to 2 million
years.

The inevitable Christmas shopping season is finally here
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
But they will nonetheless go to
AP Business Writer
the stores over the long weekend,
Thanksgiving leftovers are no crowdmg malls to drop a few bitmatch for Christmas shoppmg.
lion bucks.
Millions of Americans begin the
Retailers won' t know how well
next holiday ntual today, flooding. _they'll do based on the flfst weekmalls to kick off Ule busiest buying end: There's always a big burst of
season,
spending between Thursday and
This year is supposed to be Sunday, then_ shopping trails_ off as
~ough for the nallon's retailers
the rrocrastmators start thmkmg
Consumers have been miserly they II do 1t next week. The last 10
shoppers the past few months, and days are frenellc
tliey're expected to be more frugal . It's that mterval between the
this holiday sea.•on Ulan they were fhanksg1vmg weekend and the seaa:year ago.
son's climax that unnerves already

anxious retailers. If they feel busi- everyone 'cuts back by just two preness 1sn' I coming m the way Uley sents.
Analysts believe that retailers
expected they'll start slashing
wbo sell what are known as bard
prices.
There are other variables that lines - computers, televisions,
can affect how well retailers do, .,..tereos and borne appliances including tbe weather If it's too llave little to fear this season.
warm, no one will buy sweaters. If Americans' hunger tor new equipthere are blizzards, people may not ment, and the belief that a bigscreen television or a new computbe able to shop
Still, it is Chrisunas and every- er would be a good present for the
one will be buymg presents for whole frunily, will keep stores like
friends and family. But retailers Sears 311d Circuit City happy.
Software retailers are expected
worry about all tbe money that
won't be made 1f, for example, to do well too, thanks to Windows
95,

Happy Th-th-thanksgiving at chilly Macy's parade
By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Two
mammoth balloons got winded and
2 million spectators got Ule chills,
but what would you expect - it
was the Macy's lbanksgiving Day
Parade.
Despite temperatures in the 30s,
gusting wmds and overcast skies,
Danny Bonet kept a fam1ly tradi tion alive anti packed up the kids
for the 69th annual parade on
Thursday.
•'My mom used to bring me
Now I bring them. It's their tum to
freeze their buns off," said Bonet,
alongside his daughters, 9-year-old
lillian and 6-year-old Janelle.
"It's too cold," sniffed lillian,
who was more mterested m seemg

hunky sitcom star Joey Lawrence
than the parade's trademark si~­
story balloons of Spiderman, The
Cat 10 the Hat and Bart St1J1pson.
Two of t11e balloons, includmg
one makmg lis Broadway debut,
were done in by the gusty winds.
Dudley the Dragon, Canada's
answer to Ilamey and the parade's
lead balloon, whacked a lamp post
and deflated. Some the Hedgehog
suffered a s1milar fate lor Ule second time m three years.
The Dudley acctdent showered
broken glass down on the crowd.
and one person was treated for
mmor mJunes
There were other balloon casualties: Sky Dancer, a popular k1d's
action doll, suffered a deflated face
on the way downtown, and parade

Hudson places
in pageant
Sierra Dawn Hudson, daughter
of Daniel and Ronnea Hudson of
Pomeroy, won the prettiest eyes
contest in the 1995 Ohio Sunburst
USA International Beauty and
Baby Contest
She was also selected as overall
runner up in the event. She won. a
trophy and ber entry fee of $200 to
participate in the state finals whtch
are held in early May over a fourday period. She will be entering m
the categories of batJlmg beautle.s,
sportswear, side awards, photogenic, composite and portfolio

Now Available
In
Pints &amp; Quarts
It\ •:;H •,

'·,, ,' J I HI ~ '•

; , 1 · 1 ',lJ !l 1-1

I!AREN'S GREENHOUSE
,' .... :

,__
I

'

Kathleen Kelly.
lbe chilly weather didn't bother
them, but it was tough on many at
the parade. Many spectators had
both hands full: One witll a camcorder, the other with a bot coffee.
Michael Travis blamed his
frozen feet on Macaulay Culkin.
After repeated viewings of "Horne
Alone II," his four kids - ages 4
to 8 - wanted to visit New York.
They carne down Wednesday mgbt
from Plvrnouth. Mas.~" and headed
to the parade.
"They said it was going to be
cold, but it's colder here than in
New England," be said through
cbattenng teeth.
About 200 people died in a 1940
dance ball fire in Natchez, Miss.

See us for the hard to buy for!

,., . """

..Flowers ~From!"

.

We are firing pieces daily Green ware,
bisque, finished pieces &amp; supplies for all
your ceramic pieces.

-

Gift Certificates Available.

POMEROY · ,
FLOW~R SHOP
I

:

106 B.ullemuiAve. Pomeroy, OH'

~

(614) 992-6454.

::

I

Homegrown, Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; White Pine
. 4' &amp; Up with a great selection
of larger trees.
Call 742·2143 or 742·2979

Paslor James Miller
Sunday Sctlool I 0 30 a m
Evenmf · 7.30 p m
Wednesday Semces- 7 30 p m

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly or God
P.O Box 467, Duddmg Lane
Mason, W Va
Pastor Ne ll Tennant
Sunday ServiCes- 10 00 am and 7 p m

Thursday Prayer Mecung 7 p m

Baptist
Hope Baptist Churrh (~oulht'rn)
570 Grant St, Middleport

Sunday school - 9 45 a m
Worslup - II am and 7 pm
Wednesday Serv1cc · 7 p m
Free Will Baptist Church
A~h Street, MLdd lc[X&gt;rt

PastOJ Les Hayman
Sunday Scrv•cc 7 30 p m
Su nday School - I 0 il m
Wednesday Scrvtcc-7 30 p m

Rutland Firsl n .tpiLSI C hun:h
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 1045am
1

1 omcroy Firsl lluptbl
Pastor Pau l Sunsun
East Mam St
Su nday School 9 30 am
Wor ship - 10 30 am

First Soulhern Uaplist
4 1872 Pomeroy )'i ke

Pastor E Lamar O'Oryant
Sunday School · 9 30 am
Worship - 1045am, 7 OOpm
Wcdnc!Kiay Serv1ccs · 7 00 p m

First Uaptlst Church

Pastor Marlc Morrow
6th and Palmer St, Middleport
Sunday School • 9 1S j m
Wo"h1p - tO t5 am • 7 00 p m
Wednesday Servtcc 7 00 p m
Racine Flrst Bupttst
Pastor Rev Larry llkjlcy
Youth Pastor Aaron Young

Sunday School - 9 30 a m
Worshtp 10 40a m , 7 00 p m
Wednesday Servtccs 7 00 p m
Silver Run Uaplist
Pa~tor B1ll L.tlllc
Sunday School - 1O&lt;t m
Worsh1p - ll~m, 7 30 pm
Wednesday Servtces - 7 30 p m

MI. Union Uapllsl
Pastor Joe N Sayre
School-9 45 a rn
Evcrung - 6 30 p m
Wednesday Servtccs 6 JDp rn.
Sund~y

Dcthll'hcm Uaptl~l
Racme, 011
Pastor Damcl Rerdwc
Worshtp - 9 30 11 m Su11d11y
Otble Study - 1 00 p m WcdncsdJy

Old Bethel Free Wlllllapllsl Chur&lt;h
2860 1 St R• 7, Midd lepon
Sunday School - to a m
Evcrung- 7 30 p m
Thursday Scrvtccs - 7 30

Vh:tory lhaptlst lnde1H~nd 1wl
525 N 2nd SJ M1ddl cpon
Pastor Jame s (_._ Keesee
Worship - lOam, 7 p.nt
Wednesday Scrvuxs - 7 p m

Poinsettias (5 Colors)
Poinsettia Baskets
Live Spruce Trees
Cut Christmas Trees
Monument Sprays,
Vases &amp; Grave
Blankets

Faith Baptist Chun.:h
Kwlroad St. Mason
Sunday School - I 0 ,. m
Worshtp - llam ,6pm
Wednesday ServiceS- 7 r m

Forest Run U:1ptlst
Pa stor Anus Jlun

Sunday S(;hool 10 am
Worsh1p - 11 a m

Mt. Muriuh lla(Hlst

Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 12·5

Fourth &amp; Mam S1 , MuJdlcpon
Pastor Rev Gdhcrt Cra aJ.!., Jr
Sunday S(;huul 9 10 a m
Wohhlp 10 45 a 111

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

,,ntiqullv lbpla .. t
SLU1tlay Sd101.11 ~) JO u Ill
WM-.hlp J0 4~am
llumd I )' ~CrVICC~ - 7 10 pIll

992·5776

Rull.uul Fret• ''hll IJ;lpti.,l
Salem S1
Pa~lor Rev Paul 'I ilylor
Su nd:.ty School 10 a m
[ vcnang - 7 p m
W!!dnc .. day Serv1ccs - 7 p m

KAR£N'S GR££NHOUS£ &amp;
COUNTRY MARK£T

Catholic
Sa en-d Hc.1rt Cat hulk Church
161 MulOCrry Ave ,l,omcroy, 992 -) HIJS
\)a ~ lor Rev Waller 1: ll c 1111
Sal Con 4 41 'i 15pm, M11ss - 1 lOpm
Sun Cml X 45 9 15 a Ill ,
Sun \1a~ s - 9 30 a Ill
D:u lc y \1ass 8 30 a m

MINERSVILLE

992·2289

(;race F.plscop:lll Church
326 E Mam St , Pcmeroy
Recto r Rev D A duPiant1er
Iloly Euchan~tand

Pumcruy W~:~l~ldl' C lmn:h ol ( ' hn ~l
]3220 Ct11ldn:n" llurn e Rd

Holiness

Sund.1y S\.: hu\JI II am
Wuh hlp IOJ m 6 p 111
WcdiU.:'itl.ty S~.:rv i CC' 7 r Ill

D;~nville Holiness Cltun.:h
31057 Slutc Houle 325, Langsv llc
l)astm Rev R1 ck Maloyed
Sundil)' st: hool - 9 30 am
Sund~y v.orsh1p - 1D 35 a m &amp; 7 p rn
01hlrcn ~ c hu rt:h 10 35 am Youlh 6 p m
'1\- ednt:\l.loty pr,1yer serv 1~ e 7 p rn

\1tddltpnrl ( hunh ul ( hrht
, ,h .Uid \1,JU1
P1 shH A lllurt ~on
You th 'v1 11li \1C r B1lll ra :lll:: r
Sund 1y S c h c~ol - tJ 3fl ,1 m

Wohhlp H I ~. 10 30 a Ill, 7 p 111
Wcdm:sda y Scrvii.:CS 7 Jllll
l&lt;cnu Chur~.:h ut Lhri!il
Wonh1p 1) 30 :t m
Sund.1y School 10 30 am
1'.1 ~ \0r Jclfrl:)' w.•ll acc
1st ami lrd Sllnday

He.1n1.11111\\ ~H I J-:l" Ch11nh 111 Chrbt
l'u' t" r J,ll k CDic~ruvc
SundJ) Sthuo l {) 10 a 111
Wor'h1p Ill 10 .t 1n, 0 1() p m
\\\:dn C~ll I }' S~.:rviLe.. !) 30 r II)
Z111n ( 'hurllt 11l ( hrlst
Pomeroy, l\.1m ,onv1lk Rd (RL 143)
1'1 ~ t nr

RogerW.tt'&lt;Ott
Sumlty School IJ 10 am

Wonh1p Ill 30 am . 7 !Ml pIll
W ~dn e' d I) Scrvt~c' 7 pm
Tu1t1wrs Pl.tin ('hun h HI Chris!
l'i.!,lllr Sti.l ll lc) \1ultJ.i~
Sund .ty Sthool 'J &lt;1m
Wnr ~ h~r 1) 4),. m
W o.;dnc~d.l~
7 pm
Uradhun ('hurdt ul (' hrt'it
S und t~y ·s .. hool IJ 1U ,1 111
Wur,h1p 1030 ,tm
Ymuh\11~-:cllng

'\)Opnt

I VCilll l ~ Scrvto.;C 7 rIll

Wcdncslh y, lillllc Stutly 7 r m
Kulland Chur~h ut Chrbt
Pastor I ugcm: I. LnJcrwooJ
Sunday Sdtool I) 1(] .t n1
Wor&lt;ihlp 10 10c~m,7pm
UradturtJ Chur{h ul C hnst
Comer ol ~ t l(t 124 &amp; Bradhu ry Rd
1 vangel ,q Kctth Cooper
Yuuth l\lm1,ter \-hch,td I c.1~.trdcn
Sunday Sehoul - I) 10 a rn
Worsh1p !I Otla m , 10 J0 .1m , 7 tlO pm
W cdn c'd t) Scrvt&lt;.e' 7 00 p m
Htlkurv Htll' ( hunh ul ( ' hn~l
l',t\ti.H Jmcph 1\ ll 1.1'"'111 '
S tmd:~ y Sdtoo l 1) a rn
Wor,h1p

10 il111,7pm

W t: dt ll:\J:i )' St.:f"\111.:1.:,

7 p Ill

l.1hcrty ('hrtsllan ( 'hunh
De Her
!'astor Wumly Ca ll
Sund11y I venmg ('110 p m
I hur, lluy Scrv tcc fl 10 p 111
l .a n~o:s\ille

Chrisll.ln ('hunh
:S unda y School - I) 10 a m
Wur ~ hir 1010 am 7 30 p m
Wc,lrl~..: , d.J y S~.:rv 1 ~.;t.: 7 10 p m

Hl·mlot.k {;ru\t' ( 'hunh
p,.,tm ( Jc llc Zopp ·
S und~ y .. chool
1010 ,,m
Wor~h1p IJ 10..,m. 7 pm

an llnlon
llanford, W Va
!'astor Rev Oav1d McMa111S
Sund ay St: hool 11 a m
Worshtp 9 30 am. 7 30 p m
Wednesday ScrVICCS - 7 30 r m

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church of God
Ractnc
Pu~l o r Rev l ames Sattcrf1dd
SundJy School 9 4j a m
Evcnmg - 7 p m
Wl:Jnc ~ duy Scrv t (;C~ - 1 p m
Rulbnd Churt:h orGnd
l ,a~ t or Gregory L. Scars
SurHiay School - to a m
Worsh tp 11 am, 6 p m
Wednesday Scrvaces -7 p m

S\r1lt.LJSC Firsl Churfh or God
- Apple and Scc&lt;md Su •
P .1s hu Rev OavuJ Rus~ctl
Sund11y Schoo l anJ Wor~ h1p 10 am
I vcmng Servaccs-730 r m
\VHin c~J .•y Serv1cc~- 7 30 p m
Chun.:h of (;ttd uf PniJlhecy
- 10 a m
II am

~ unday ~chool

Worsh1p

7 p 111

l'a slor Rev WIIIL.tm D llands
SunJ;~y School 9 30 am
Worsh ip 6 p m ,
Wcdncsd.ty, 7 r m f-am tly Tra1mng Hour

Hcalh (M iddlepnrl J

Wo~h•p

W or~h1 p

Ill

Other Churches

t 111

Wor~h1p

J(ulk Spnu~.:~
l',,, tul 1\.t:llh R 1du
Sund l) sl hnul \) I ') I Ill
Wur,h1p ID .1111
y,)lllh I c llo\\' ' lllp, Sund I) 6 p 111

I .mrl'l ('litl l"r~.:c \'lcthudist C hurch
P1 ~tor Peter I rcmhla y
Su nday Sc hoo l - tJ 30 a m
WlJI ~ htp - 1() 30 a m aud 7 rIll
W cdn r.:~ da y Scrvt r.:c 7 OCl r m

10 JS.1111

Snu\V\

a

992-2975

H11tl .. u11 ( hn,tt.ml · l'llm\slup Chunh
R ~: .. ( l),k 1l t: 1 1&lt;kr~on
Sundt) \Cr\ l t,;l 1000 11!1, 730 pm
Ymtth l ell ow, lllp Sun d&lt;Jy 7 00 p m
W ~.:Jm,,Lt ) \t:tv ii..C 73() pIll
J..uth Full ( :n,.IH'I ( huuh
I Ol lt!, B ,, u .~m
I' 1\hlr Stcvl Reed
Sunr l 1y Sd1ool t) 10 I Ill
W ,,r,f11 p '} 1Uu rn .md 7 p tn
\\ t:tiiiC,d I)' - 7 p nl
I nd 1) ILll,m ' h'r ~t:rv 1 cc 7 p m

till'

Sunduy Sthoul

Latter-Day Saints

\Vtlr\hlj1

IO

1)

t

rn

·ummumt v Chunh
P l'lm llll'rnn Durh.w1
Su11d ty 9 \ll 1111 md 7 p 111
\\ t: d nc:, d.t) 7 p m

H .mt , III\ VIIk (

\Ill

Rcoq:~nlr.cd Church ut' Jesus Christ

lh I h.lll I
I'.&lt;..: II lie th

or Lalter Day Saints
P h1 ur

Port1and-Racme Rd
!)astor Jam ce Danner
Sund ay School - lJ 30 am
Worshrp IO JOam
Wedne sday Scrvace s 7 30 p m

S~.h1&gt;1d

Swtdti)

I~ l~c r
J(J 1 rn

lrulltrrH' Hou'i\1.11 l'r,ntr
( 11 l\urltngh un1.ht1rth ••I f Rout e 33)

\}&lt;Jill

W ur~l11p

( .1rmd
l',t•tur K~.: n mth 1~,11\cr
Sun d 1\o St houl 11 10 a 111
W110h1p t (l 1) 111 1 f2nd &amp; 41h Sun )

or

K ~.; nndh

H 1!-. t r

I Vll llll~ 7 p 111
11111 r'd

Udl1l'l ( hurth
lo\' nsh1p Rd , 10XC

MI. Olive Unht'd Mcthodl!.1
Off 124 hehmd Wil kesvi lle
Pastor Rev Ralph Sp 1rc~
Sunday School - 9 10 a rn
Wnnh tp 10 10 am . 7 p m
fllursday Scrv1ce ~ 7 r m

Dlc'i\llll c: umltlllltiiV ('hur{h

Northcasl Cluster

Alfred

I unh ('hunh

Pa sLOr Sharon l-ht t.~man
Sund ay School - 9 30 am
Worshrr ll am,610pm

SunJ.ry Sdmu l ') 10 .1 rn
W or'h1p W 10 ;~ 111

\\onh1p

Vlur .. \ t h.tprl Ch unh
I ''I)' I '"' Sup~nnrmden t
Su ntll ) ,ch1lOI 1() t1 m
Wor,htp 7 pIll
\-\l ~ dll c ' II ) s~rvh.l

(\I J~d fl)

l•alth

Jopp•
Pastor Bob Randolph
Worsh1p - 9 30 !i m
Sunday School - 10 30 a rn

Wcdnc ~ d ay

long llollnm
Rev Charlc~ Ma ~ h
Sunday School - 9 10 a Ill
Worship - 10 30 am
Wednesday Scrv tccs 7 30 p rn

710 p m

Mt Olive Commurul y t' hunh
!•astor La wrence Bush
Sund&lt;~y School - 9 30 a rn
L vcmng - 7 fllll
' Wcdncday Scrv1cc 7 p m

Middleport Churt.h 11l I he 'lat:.tn•ne
flas tor Grego!)' 1\ C t 1nd1rr
Sund:l)' Schnu l 9 10 a rn
Worsh1p - 10 30 am, 6 10 p m
WcJI\C\lla) ScrviL.:C~ l r m

l,11. ~ 1or

{ h1mh

( ont:; Bottom

R.u.:lnc F1rsl ('hunh 11f lht.• •\ ;u,lrl'nc
J'a ,Jur \)c\l lt Ru,c
Sund ily SchDul IJ 10 am
Wonh1p l fl10 .1m . 0 p 111
Wednc,t.l,l) St:tviCCS 7 rIll

Worsh1p - 9 a m
Sunday School - 10 a m
lltursday Servtces - 7 p 111

(;u~pcl

7r m

S unday School I} 1(J a 111
Worshtp - 10 45a m , 7 311 pm

Nazarene

Chester

Pastor Sharon Hau sman

&lt;) io ,, 111
I O)() 1111 , 7p m

"sund.t) So.; h11ol

111

Hulkmgpurt Chunh
(;r,utd Strt:l·t
Su111 l1) Sd!oo l 10 a 111
Wor, fup I I t1 m
Wcdn c, do~ ) Serv t c~.:' X fl m

"cigs Coopcralive l'arish

1, lor 1{\1) (\1 1ke) lhompsun
Sund I) St h11ol 10.1 m

( umrnun1lv Chunh
Off R1 1)4
l':.~qt &gt;r I d •t:l ll&lt;~rt
Suml1y Sc hool () 10 a 111
W u r ~ htp I I)]() &lt;1111. 71 llfl rn

7 pIll

:-&gt; umLI) :it:houl 1) :.1 111
\\oor,htp 10 .1 Ill
Wc,ltlc'd 1) Serv1&lt;.C' 10 a

C.-h.tn lhhlc Chunh
Pumt:wy l' tkc Cu l~d
l'a~ IUJ ){.,;.., Bhu.:k...,otl\1
Su nda y Schuol 9 30 a m.
Wursh1p 10 10.1m 710 r rn
WcJno.:' d I) Scrvlt:C 7 10 pm
SlnersHih• Word nl F.1ilh
Jld~ l lH Dav1d Dalley
Stmday Sc hoo19 30 am
1 VCrltng - 7 p 11'1
Rcjmunj! Life C hun.:h
500 N 2n d Ave , Mnld!epon
Pa~ t o r

Lawr ence I or ~m m
School - I 0 am
We,hw sd&lt;Jy Scrv tl:CS 7 r m
Sund&lt;~y

•

Chunh ut Jesus Lhnsl.
ApusiHh( Luth
114 m1lc pa ~ 1 I 11n \1ergs on l\c\\ l1ma Rtl
Pa stor W1lh.nn V:111 M! ll r
Sundny 7 _00 p m
Wedn esday 7 00 p m
I ruJ.ty 7 00 r m
Chiton l.th&lt;.'rnal k ( ' hunh
Chiton, W Va
Stmd 1y SdHxll 10 il lll
1
Wur ~ htp
pm
l hur s J ;~y Scrvtce 7 p m

Pentecostal
l'tn! ct ust.tl/\s.."crnhl'f
S1 Rt 124 Ra ctm .
Jl ,I &gt;IUt W1lh llll J( ph,lck
SwHLt v S(; h1 xt l IIl 1 111
[ VC III!Ig 7 J1 Ill
Wc&lt;hlc,d.l) Sc r'V Il:e'i 7 p m
'\1idtlll'llurt l'l'nll•ln'l-tl
lhml /we
l'a slor Rev Cl.trk Hak cr
Sund.ty Schoo l 10 a m
l:vc run g - 6 p rn
Wt!dnc ~ d.ly ServJCC ~

7 (X) r m

Presbyterian
'n r.H U'i l ltr 'l lmttd l' n"h\hruu
1
1 .tsii.H Rtv 1\n , ul l Rt&gt;hllhllll
Su nd 1y Sd1"ol I() 1m
W•H ~ h1p II 1 111
11.1111,1111\ 1lh' l'n•sh) lln.m ('hun h
Wtll \lll p 1) I Ill
Su!~cl. 1 ~

Un1lcd Fallh ('hun:h
Kt 7 on Pom eroy Jl y p,..,s
Pastor Kcv Ruben I ~ Smtth, Sr
Su nday School - 9 30 am
Worsh1p 1030am,7pm
Wednesday {icrvacc- 7 p rn

Rt.:l'tls\ 1llc 1 cllti\\St11p
Churd1 ul the '\,tl..lrt'lll'
P,l , lor John W l)uut-:lt'
:')um l ~) St houl 1) 10 ,, 111
Wor~h l r 11 ) 4lj 'I In. 7 r Ill
Wt: dn C~\ 1.1) s~rviCC' 7 rIll

Sd11•ol

9 4S 1.1 111

\&lt;luldll rllrl Pn·sh\h•n.m

Sun.l1 y Sdh~&lt; • l

H;~1d

1) J 111

\1.;1"\ It,;\.:'

Faath ll'll11" st11p Crusade lor Chrt'il
PaHor R ~..:' l'r&lt;~r1klm Dtd:.cn'
Scrv1._c Imla y 7 p m

I vc mn ~ hpn•
WcJnc-.J.J) Scrv lt:C 7 fl m

Cuu hllll· Churlh
\1,un &amp; It fth S1
Su nU.I) SthrK! I 10 1rn

Juc, d.t)

.. llnm

Svr.ltUSl' \IIS~IUU

Cuuh Ilie Uulll'll Mcthud ast Pamh
J&gt;. 1 ~ 111r IId en 1\.lme

Graham United Methudist
Worshtp 9 30am (1st&amp; 2nd Sun ),
7 30 p m (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wc dn e~ rt&lt;ty Serv tcc 7 30 p m

7r m

1411 li n dg.t: lll .lll S1 Syrucu~c

illn

)1

Wur,lllp

S~.:f"\II&lt;.C

I )'

w~

FairvieW Uthlc Chunh
Leti!n, W Ya R1 I
Pa~tur Ra11k111 R U&lt;~c h
SunJay St: hool 10 3U " m
Wor ~ h1p 9 JU a m , 7 ()() p m
Wc::1lnc~day Scrv t(.;e 1 00 p m

!II

Jl,l, tl•r l{cv lm111 Ctl R 1"'mn
Sund 1) S&lt;huul J(J(X)&lt;t lll

P11slm Hn.ul l11r~n e"
Sund ... y Sdmol 10 ~ m

II

Sund.ty SdH~II 10 am
I ' t r•m ~,-: 7 10 r m
il ll ,,J. i) s~ n. 11,:1.:
710 p

( ' hap\'1

Cmllvdlc l&lt;uatl
Jlaqur Kev J&gt;hdhp R1dcn()ur
St mda y Sehou l 9 3() a Ill
Worship Ill 30 am
Wedtiesday Scrvu.:c - 7 p rn

I .uth l.•tHtn.1d1.• { hunh
B 1il t.:y lh111 Ru 1d

I~ .tl llll'

Unitec1 Methodist

W\Jr,IHp

I) .1m

IIJ 1111

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sl'H'IIIh-ll IV A(h t•nli~l
Vlultx: rl) li t, ·l~d , 1\•meru)
l'i.iql.)r l{i\) l..o~\1 lll ~ k)
S.tlunl t ) S~_•rv J cc"
S 1bh tth SdlntJI 2 p m
Wtthh tp 1 fil ii

United Brethren
\It Hl•rnmu l 1111l•d llrclhn•n
1

m ( hrt' l ('hun h
l !.:\ &lt;1\({llllllllHIII~

lil l CR X:!
Jl• -rur 1{\.ll\,rl S 111d ~r'
Sun d 1) 'i~.huul ') 1f! Ill\
W\Jt\ hip IO
I Ill
7 10 pIll

'(J

W~.:dne,dl\ "\"rVIu;&gt;

r .. ... .
...

l 1U pm

I dut l nth·d Brl'l hn·n111 Chn'1
2 1/2 md.:, 11unh ol 1{ ~~-: d w il k
lHI SI II C 1{\lli(C 124
l',,,lor l&lt; cv l~ uh cr l \1Mliloy
Sun,ll) St: hool Ill a Ill
Wor, htp 7 10 p 111
WcdnL''d I ) SL IV ILL\ 7 10 rIll

Full Guspel Llghlhousc
3304.5 lliJand Road, l,omcroy
Pa stor Roy llunler
SunJay School - I 0 am
Evcnmg 7 30 p m
I ucsday &amp; llwr sday 7 30 p m

Craw's Family Restaurant
"Fealuring Kentucky Fned Chicken "!

FUNERAL HOME
992·5141

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

\\ u

I '"I I l'l11rt
1'.1\lllf 1\n ,tn llr rkm"
Su ndt) Sc ho11l I0 H rn
\\ or'h1 p 1) .1 m
\V etlnt:,dty 7 pm

\\oors h1p

Cmpl'l Mis!&lt;iiun
Bald K11ub, 0 11 Cu Rd 31
Pa s10r Rev RDgc r Wtllford
Su nday Schoo l \) 30,. m
Wursh 1p 104 5a m ,7 pm
Wed ne sday Scrv1tc 7 r m

\luhllq,urt ( umr 11111111 y CI1Unh
'i7) l'e ul St vtuld lt po n
l'l , h&lt;r S 1ml\lhlf ' lll1

Sun1Lt) Sd111UI 'I lt! t 111
\A,H, hlp 10 4~ 1111 (J, tS lr, I Sun)

Sf J•aul Lulheran Ctwn:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St , Pom c w~
l •t~stor Dawn Spa lding
Sunday School - 9 45 a rn
Worship II am

F'rl~dorn

I l111r ' d 1) 7 pIll
St1ml1y 7 p m

Sutton

l'.r.. l\lr

Jcfr Sn111h
Sunday School 1J 30" 111
WorShip Scrv tt:C IU 30" rn
Worslup Scrv tt e 1st and JrJ Sunday, 7 p m
Nu Wedne sday I v~:mng Scrvn;c

L'IH S,ti\ ,1\IIJII /\run

Sund ~ ~ S\h\)&lt;&gt;1 IJ 4'i &lt;till
\V mo,; h1p Ill 10 1m
llH1r, d,l}1 Str'VIl.:l' 7 m r 111

Sl John Lutheran Chun.·h
llmc Grove
llaslor D111wn Spa ldtng
Worshtp - 9 00 a m
S1mday School - l 0 00 a m

Km~shury 1&lt;\ ~&lt;td
P&lt;:~s tur

I I) llu\l ~.: mu l Av~.: Ponit.:m}
S .~lu rd.1y
Il l a 111

\1on1111J.: :-iltr
l'a'OI\lr 1\umt: lh H 1kl' r

Lutheran

Carlllun lnllrdcnumtnatum al ( hunh · ..

p,, .. ,, Rl&gt;hen V tnc~.:
Sund 1)' \~u r, hlp \0 am
Wcdnl ,,,I\ ~U'V I CI.: h 1() rIll

l !lo~m

\V cdll l:,.J I\ Scn. 11. 1'

'I hi.! C hun h or J csus
Chri~t
Latter-Day Srunts
St R1 160,446,6247 o r 446 74R6
Sunday School 10 20 II a 111
Rd,cf Soc1cty/Pncstho00 11 05 12 00 1Hio11
Sacr.tment Scrv1cc 9-10 IS a m
Homemakmg mccung, 1st !hun 7 p m

rIll

7

I ht lldH·Hr,· ll'lluwshlf&gt; \lnu~lry
\ l I\ l 1111 e Rd , Ruil.Hid
I' , ,Jur l{ ~.:v \I ng.Hl! l J \{\ )hlll~on
Si.:rYt l t.:' Wednc,J.J)', 7 )Up m
Sumli) 2 10 p tn

S.th•m C l•nlt•r
l•.tslor 1{,.,11 I 1cr&lt;:e
S llll d&lt;~ y St houl 9 I :'i 1111
\V o r~ h1p

111 5 &lt;~tn. 7 pm

Wcdnc'd ty ScrvlcC

Kull.ntd
Sunday Sdt\llll 1) :\0 .1 rn
W1.lrsh1p I () 10 ,, m
I hur\J ,Iy Scrvu.:e~ 7 p m

Hutl.md Curnrnunih C huntl
Pa ~ tor Rev Roy M~.:Cany
Sund11y School 9 30 a m
Sunda y Evemng - 7 p m
Wcdnc,day Scrvacc~- 7 p m

l'cllow~hip

C&lt;.'ntcr
Salem SL, Rutlund
l1.hh•t R,·l~n I \llu ~sn
S111Hb) St: hool I fla m

Punuru y
l'.h!IH R uh~ n l J{ .,hu~;,wl
"lund.:!) Sd1 I\ &gt;I ') \ 'i 1 Ill
Wur,Jup I !I W 1m
B1hle Swdy luc,d a) 101 m

H\'&gt;clll{un Hulntcs~ C hunh
P:t , lur Robcn !VIanlcy
Su ml &lt;~)' Sc hool 9 30 a m
WlJT'i hlp - I 0 45 am , 7 p m
l111.1r"d ty Scrvu.;c 7 30 p rn

\O]()Jm 7 pm

W!!t.lncsJa y S!!rvi CCS 7 r m

Chrast1.m

Soult1 llcthcl \'ew Tc~bmcnt
Sdvcr f{ 1dgc
!)astor Robcn Jlarhcr
Su nda y s~hool tJ am
Wunh1p 10" rn , 7 p m
Wcdnc,da~ Scrv11.:c 1 pIll

\\' hill-·~

i\e" HaHn ( hunh uf the i\;mncnc
Jla ,\m Glen&lt;lon Stroud
Sunda) Schuol 9 30 a 111

{ 'h,11al
Slh\kl l 9 a 111

~umlty

7 pm

St~ml.t) S~ hool IOOO~rn
W or~h 1p h30pm
W c Jn e~ d ay Scrv ii.:C'i 7 p m

\1tlllrs\ 11lc
Jl,lqllr Dcr11rl \cv.m.111
Sum!J v Sd10o l - 1) a rn
\Vtmlup J() am

75 Pc.Jrl Sl , \1tddlcpun
l•a ~ t\lr Re v lohn ~cv!l lc
Sumlil) ~t.:tloo l 9 30 a m
Wor,htp HI 30 a m , 7 30 r m
W e d nc~ da y Scrv tcc 7 30 fl tn

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
1050 Cartetr Road, Shade, OH

992-5432

Business Phooe 614-992--4216or

Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE~·
SERVICES =J;__

7pm

l'urll.t!Hl l1r -;t ( hunh ul II IL' \,,~:arcnc
l'a,hH Juhn \V Dnugl;~s

P~.trl

264 South 2nd

Pomeroy, OH

W ~.: dn l·wlay S..:rv1ce~

Jla , lur S,unuc l II "Yt'
Sch1lol I) 30 am
Wur,h!p ID 10 a rn , fll{) r 111

RAWLINGS-COATS
FISHER

204 Condor St.

Porm·ruy C hunh ulthL' i\:a~:arcnc
P:.J&gt;.Ior Rl:v I hDm&lt;H McC lung
Suml.1y Sehoul 9 30 a rn
Wors htp I 0 JU .1m ami 0 p rn

Sund:~y

l'a ~ lur \'crnagi)C StJih\,111
~un d .1 y SchLIOI \) 1!l &lt;1 rn
W\H .. hlp
to]{) I 111

lllhlc !Jr,hncss Ch unh

Wc.rship - 9 30 • m

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

•

Wldlll,.rlt ) Sc n.1te'

Cro\Jc llihlc Holiness C hurch
l fl mtlc off Kt 325
I' ,qor Kcv 0 Dell M.ml c:r
Sunday St:hoo l - 9 30 a m
\Vorsh1p - 10 JO am, 7 30 p rn
\\-etlnc,.duy Sc rvt cc 7 30 p m

Second &amp; Lynn , Pomeroy

212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy

11 1'&lt;\llr

J{utl.uut C hunh ut thL' \aJar&lt;.'nc

lures\ ~un
Paslor Dc ron ~cw m ,m
Sunday School I 0 a m
Worshtp 9 a m
l'hursday Scrvt cc~ 6 10 r m

Pin~

Rcc'dsvllle
Pa stor Rev Charles Mash

1r111s &amp; Stratto•
• .,., Service ftclt1lcla•
IEROSEII HEARR REPAIR
949·2104

j

Flalwnods
!•astor Kerth Rader
Sunday Sc hool I 0 a m
Worship I I am

l{nsc ul Sharun Holiness Chunh
I e,uhn g Creek Rd . Rutlan d
Pa~tor Rev Dewey Km~
Sllnd,,y sdool 9 30 a m
Sund.1y wor~ h1p -7 r m
W c Jncsd t~y praye r mecttng· 7 p m

W~.•sln.tu

9 ::~ m

Wor ~ h 1p

hunh ut tfH \a~:arcll&lt;.'
lidl SLirC'
SumL1\ Sdmul 9 10 .t m
Worsh1p 10 )0 a m , 6 p m
Wl't.Jn e~ d 1y Serv~t:cs 7 p m

SH;It, tlst' (

{ 'he..'ill'r ( hUHh ul the \,1/..trcne
l'il ,tot Rev ll erhcn Gra te
Sunday S&lt;. huul 1) 10 &lt;1m
Wor~ h1p 11 am flpm
Wcdtlt:'id I V Serv i LC~ 7 r m

[nlerpns&lt;.'
Pas10r Kc uh Rader
Sunda y School I 0 a m

( .11\.lry Ptlj.!rlrn Ch:apl•l
II &lt;Jrmunvl lk Ruad
Pa slur Rev VJd ur l{ou~h
Sunda y Schouii.J 30 am
Wuoh1p - 11 am , 7 30 p m
WcdJJc,diiy Scrv u.:c 7 30 p m

Cnngregallnnal Trinity Church

UCINE MOWER CLINIC

Portland, Ohio
843-5211

( oflcc hour rollowm g

&lt;'hester Churfh ur God

S R 24X &amp; R1chcl RoaJ , Chc~lcr

992 J978

KA,REN'S COUNTRY
' MARKET

Central Cluslcr
1\ shu ry (S y ral'usc)
Pastor Dcron Ncwm;~n
S und ay School - 9 45 am
WorshJp II am
Wednesday Sc rvu:cs -7 30 p rn

Su nd :~ySchoo110 30am

0 J Wh11e Rd tM St Rt 160
Jlast0r Jl J Chi!.p1U~n

Mtll WOI•
lab1net Mak1n~
Syracuse

-Refreshments-

Tuppers Plains St. J•iiul
Pa s1or Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sc hool 9 a m
Wor ~ h1p 10 am
I ucsda y Scrvaccs 7 30 p m

Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry Sts, Rllvenswood, W Va
lntnm pastors George C Wcanck
Sunday School 10 00 am
Worshtp- II am

!•astor Rev Roland W1ldman
Sunll :~y school and worsh1p 10 2j

Featuring our own beautiful Poinsettias
available in a variety of colors &amp; sizes
6 1/2", 8", &amp;10"
Also 10" Hanging Baskets- Fruit Baskets
- Jellies- Bulk Christmas Candy
Fresh Cut Christmas Trees - WreathsChristmas Bows.
Register to win one of the
three door prizes
Christmas Tree • Wreath • Poinsettia

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
St. Rt 124

Porneruy Churd1 of Chrlsl
212W MamSt
Pastor And rew Mtle~
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Worsh1p- 10 30am, 1 pm
Wcdn c~ J uy Servu:c~ 7 p m

Wcdne•d.a) Scrv1ce~

Come &amp; enjoy the Christmas Season
STATE ROUTE 124

Episcopal

S t Rt 143 JU St off Rt 7
Pas tor Rev James R Acroc. Sr
Sunday School - 10 a m
Worshtp 11 a m, 6p m
Wednesday Servaccs -7 fl m

Now Open For
ChristlfUls Season

Syracuse

Church of Christ

Hillside llapllsl Church

' 'I

'----..-..---- ~
(800) 433-6203

RUTLAND

Apostolic
Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandL ami Ward Rd

November 25th 9:00 - 5:00

November 26th
Open 12-noon - 5:00 pm

SIERRA HUDSON

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

Retired
teachers
hold meeting

Christmas Open House

HOLIDAY
OPEN HOU~E

•

Apple Butter

veteran Pink PantJler lost the air in
his left eye.
Even tbe survivors had a rough
sailing along the 43-block parade
route, Garfield bounced off a hgbt
post and prompted screams when a
downdraft pushed him toward
spectators.
One parade watcher was mjured
in a 20-foot plunge after a sidewalk
subway grate gave way about
halfway through the three-hour
parade . The woman suffered a
minor sbou lder injury.
There was one other btl of
untraditional action: Four anti-fur
protesters were arrested after interrupting the parade wearing nothing
but Santa hats The four streakers
were charged with public lewdness,
sa1d pollee spokeswoman Officer

Items for the home - china,
kitchen goods, bedding and the like
- sboultl do well, but after two big
Chnsunases in a row, maybe not as
well as last year.
Clothing retailers, who have
struggled for several years. are
expected to remain in their rut.
But department stores are
expected to sell plenty of clothes.
A sense of tradibon is laking many
Americans back to the stores where
they shopped as cb1ldren and teenagers, and Macy's, Scars, Lazarus,
Filene's and their counterparts
nationw1de w11l probably have a
good season.

.·

Church D~rectory

The spouses were invited back
for the Cbrisunas party to be held
Dec. 18. Children, grandchildren
and guests are also invtted and
Santa has promised to attend.

Meigs County Retired Teachers
met for a turkey dinner at Trinity
Church m Pomeroy on Nov II
The speaker was Joe Young , a
local World War II veteran.
He was 19 years old when he
!Was assigned to the 39th Army
•Division under General George S.
:Patton He spent duty m various
capacities m many areas of Europe.
After 50 years of memories, be and
'h•s son toured Europe visiting most
1
places where he bas served.
He travclctl by available meth ods including a rented car in which
he toured Austrta where he was
when the war ended. I Ie saw many
sights and sa1d that the Alps where
The Sound of Music was filmed are
beautiful.
He drove to the cemetery where
General Patton 1s buned Travels
took them to Paris anti back 10
v1ew London He noted that there
1s no speed limit m Germany and
Ulat gas is $4 per gallon.
In Pans, no one bas tbe right ol
way, he said, but Europe has good
htghways and is clean. He displayed a large collection of pictures.
Following Young's talk, Maxme
Whitehead and Abbie Strauon conducted group singing of war-time
songs.
During the business sesston, a
memorial tribute was collected for
Betty Hutchison, the most recent
deceased member . Nellie Parker
reported on the four books purchased ljlld placed in the libmry for
those deceased the past two years:
Dairy of Ann Frank for Mary E.
Chapman and Helen Smith; Best ol
Kathryn Marshall for Mary Hysell
and Carl Brannon; Poems for Betty
Roush and Thelma Dill; Iron Rose
- Rose Kennedy for Nan Moore
and Ann Hildom who were charter
members.
The same officers were retained
for another year: prestdent Vlfgm•a
Carson, vice-president Maxine
Whitehead, secretary Dorothy
Woodard and treasurer Abbie Stratton.
It was noted to increase local
dues from $2 to $3 for 1997 Ill
members were remembers with
cards: Margaret Parsons, Pauline
Myers, Carolyp Smith, Maxine
Philson, Lucille Smith, Carl
Weese, Frances Roberts and Nora
Jordan , who will be 94 years old
soon.
Dues are payable by Dec. 31
and the next meeting will be in
March. 1996.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9' · '

1-800-861-9392

Pomeroy Flower Shop ~
I06 Butternut Ave.
992·6454

--:·_--

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr Pomeroy
992-2104

P. J. PAULE'( AGENT

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignrty and ServlCt Always ''
Estabh!lhed 1913

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
992·2318 Pomeroy

992-2121
106 Mulberry Ave.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

992-2955

Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075 '
172 North Second Ave.

Pomeroy

Middleport, Oh

'

�:Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 1995

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Friday, November 24, 1995

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links spiders,·flies to lobsters
.

WASHJNGTON (AP) - Mini- .
- pedes and flies, spiders .and lobsters
- they seem 10 have little m com"
mon except l?ts of exotic legs.
Yet sCJeotJsts have argued for a
century whether these _arthropo~.
tJ;le largest an~ most. dtverse dmston of the anunal kmg~m •. were
re~Iy re!ated. Now Umversuy of
W~sconsm researchers have found
eVIdence that they all ev~Iv~ from
a common ancestor mtlhons of
Y~ a~o.
. .
.
Tbts was a mtssmg ptece of
evolution ,'' explained Wisconsin
molecular biologist Grace Pangani-

ban, chief author of a srudy appearing today in the journal Science.
Panganiban was investigating a
gene called Distal-less that causes
limbs to grow in flies and butterflies, when sbe decided to dip ink&gt;
!lJe !'Jlbropod controversy by seemgif crustaceans bad this gene too.
Each branch of each crustacean
li~b carries the same version of
Dtstal-le~ as do insect legs, Pangantban dtscoyered. ~I indicates
a smgl~ gene ts responstble for the
formauon of all arthropods' legsit just caused different-shaped legs
In different spe~ies by interacting

with their other unique genes sbe
explained.
'
That means arthropods • common ancestor probably was a
wormlike creature from whom
Distal-less helped ~volve successive generations of animals with
continually different legs, Panganiban said.
But she acknowledged the controversy won't be settled by the
finding, so she's searching possible
arthropod precursors - simpler
animals like leeches and worms for further proof.

...~·
., . Alfred UMC meet for Than~sgiving dinner

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'Alfred United Methodist Church
held its Thanksgiving dinner on
Nov. 19 following regular morning
services . Eleanor Boyles read
"Thanksgiving" and John Taylor
gave prayer before the basket dinner.
Present were Nina Robinson,
Sarah Caldwell , Richard, Florence
and Tim SpetlCer, Lloyd and Doris
Dilling e r, Marilyn Robinson,
Kathy and Stacie Watson, Osie Mai
Follrod, Thelma Henderson, Dan,
Sheila, Kirk, Danielle, and Tiffany
Spencer, Charlotte Van Meter.

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John Taylor, Joe Mayhew, Philip
and Sharon Boyles, Matt, Ashley,
Jessica, and Janae Boyles; Ruth
and Lloyd Brooks, Gary, Brenda.
and Jason Johnson, Gertrude
Robinson,
Melvin Tracy, Marlene Donovan, Nellie Parker, Starling and
Sandra Massar, Russell and Eloise
Archer, Will Poole, and Brian Taylor, all local; Clarence and Edna
Warner, Michelle Donovan,
Athens; Cindy and Richie
Dillinger, The Plains; Eleanor
Boyles, Belpre; Tishlyn Taylor,
Korea; Norma Jean Swartz, Marie!-

~

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ta; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Taylor and
daughter, Torch.
UMW president Nellie Parker
presented a special missionary
recognition certificate and pin to
Sunday school superintendent
Lloyd Dillinger in honor of his
long service to the Sunday school
and church.
The November UMW meeting
was canceled due to inclement
weather. Their Chrisllnas party will
be held Dec. 19 at 7: 15 p.m .
Osic and Clair Follrod visited
Wilma Swartz at Kiines Convalescent Center, Athens, on her 94th
birthday. They enjoyed looking
over a book of old pictures and
reminiscing .

• Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page·1•1

Meigs deputy named to
DARE adv·isory board
Meigs County Sheriffs'
Department Deputy Mony
Wood bas recently been named
to serve on the State of Ohio
DARE Grants Advisory Board
by Ohio Attorney General Betty
D. Montgomery. Tbe board,
which oversees grant monies for
the state DARE Anti-Drug campaigns, awarded $2.5 million to
Ohio law enforcement agencies
this year.
Wood, along with 14 other
appointees, will evaluate grant
applications submitted by Ohio
law enforcement agencies taking
part in the DARE Program. The
board will also recommend to
the Attorney General funding
levels for individual organiza-

tions.

1

"It's 'a big honor for me to be
on the DARE Grants Advisory
Board," Wood said.
"I grew up in Meigs County,
and. know from personal experience about the availability of
drugs and alcohol in this community. Ninety-nine percent of
lhe kids who go through our
program are positively affected .
Without DARE, a lot of these
lei~~ would grow up addicts,"
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WOOD NAMED TO BOARD - Ohio Attorney General Belly
Montgomery presents Meigs County Sheriffs' Deputy Mony Wood
with a certificate of appreciation for serving on the State DARE
Grants Advisory Board.
.
Wood added.
Funding for the DARE grants
come from Jrivers ' license rein·
statement fees and other monies
generated by Ohio's drunk driving law. llle DARE Grants Program , created through legislation in 1993, provides matching
funds to defray the cost of a
DARE officer's salary.
"The DARE Gran~~ Advisory
Doard has served a vital purpose

in helping to appropriate funds
to those law enforcement agencies taking part in the DARE
Program." Montgomery stated.
"Their enthusiasm to urge
students to reject drug s and
alcohol is a cornerstone of this
valuabl e program. I appreciate
the effort s of these dedicated
profes sionals ." Montgomery
added.

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NG WEEKEND SALE''

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ANTI-FREEZE

• Protects to ·SO'f
• Non-Toxic anti-freeze !or plumbing.
• For Mobile Homes, Co«ages,

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Ttai~rs.

Recreational
Veh1cles. Boals
and Pools .

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~: Child Conservation Club plans

NETWT.JiOl.(J£8.)

f potluck Christmas dinner
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The hostess prize was won by
Patti Arnold, and the traveling
prize by Kitty Darst. Hostesses
Helen Blackston and Peggy Harris
served refreshments.

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"lllnee&amp;Latryr01H! u.s. DOT..

FOOD CLUB :I
Grade A
rI
Large Eggs :.
Limit 1 FREE With Coupon and $10 Additional Purchase
Excluding Beer Wine an·d Tobacco Products . Valid Thru November 25, 1995

HALOGENGOLD
HEADLAMPS
OR CAPSULES

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BLACK COMPACT
QUARTZ-HAlOGEN
LIGHT SETS
• Fog or Dl1vln(l lights.
• Designed tor compact

and mld·siled vehicles.

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Dozen Carton

~COUPON

am- drDIIIIII"miCIIli'IS n

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It was noted that Angie Morris'
name was unintentionally omitted
from the list of those assisting with
children's games at the Halloween .
party.

,

88431

•12 ft Bgauge, 100% copper cables
• 200 AMP clamps
~~

of Helen Blackston. There will be a
Chrisllnas ornament exchange and
the wrapped packages will be
judged.

U.S. Dep1rtment of TrantpOrtatlon

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The Middleport Child Conser- ·
vation Club met recently at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
The meeting was opened with
the Pledge of Allegiance and the
"Mother's Prayer" led by president
Kitty Darst. Roll call was answered
with a "golden Thanksgiving
momenL"
Gifts and food collected for
ChristJnas for a needy family are to
be taken to the next meeting.
A pot luck dinner will be held at
6:30p.m. on Dec. 21 at the home

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REDEEM ALL FOUR --UPONS AT BIG BEAR WITH ONE s10 PURCHASE.
BIG BEAR &amp; BIG BEAR PLUS COUPON

IAV-1\F Limit 6.

RECEIVES AWARD - The Meigs Division of the American
Heart Association was presented the state program achievement
award In recognition of having excellent program accomplishments In addition to meeting all or Its other goals for the 1994-95
year at a meeting or the dlvislonUs board at Veterans Memorial
H011pll!ll Tuesday. In the photo, Chuck Romaine, executive director of the Ohio Amtlate or the American Heart Association, pre·
sen~ tlae aW.rd to Dr. Wilma Mansfield, current president of the
local heart association having taken over recently replacing Mrs.
Sanely JannareUI, president, who resigned.

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!:IIHII!Iit
CONTOUR
SHIELD

Outstanding hood
and windshield
protection.

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Depend On Us.

Alk ooAIIJOWOIII(S

• OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

C.-11111-llll ,..,. ...

•

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• Gallipolis ..... 392 Upper River Rd ..... Call: 446·9335

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Solo Pri&lt;os Good Tllru Sunday, November 26

1995

•FREE OIL RECYCLING •LIFETIME WARRANTY ON MOST PARTS •FREE STARTER, ALTERNATOR &amp; BATTERY TES fiNG

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Friday, November 24, 1995

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

··-· -

·rreasurer
.
.
details tax :
proposal
. COLUMBUS (AP) - State
Treasurer J. Kenneth Blackwell :
said borne ownership contributes to :
a more stable society and he favors i
continuing the home mortgage :
interest exemption if lhe tax system I
is changed.
:
Blackwell serves on the Nation-'
al Commission on Economic
Growth and Tax Reform. The 13·
member commission, which began '
meeting in June, was appointed by
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R· ,
Ga., and Senate Majority Leader
Bob Dole, R-Kansas.
Blackwell said the commission '
is to produce a "revenue neutral"
system to replace tbe current tax
structure, meaning it would not
change the amount lhe federal gov- .
errunent takes in.
He said be cannot discuss tbe .
commission· s deliberations, but be
described a system tbat be said bas '
merit.
He favors a tax rate of about 20
percent to apply to all types of
income - wages. interest or capital gains - but excluding a substantial amount, such as the first
$30,000 in income for a fanlily of
four.
That would mean that those
, with higher incomes would pay a
liigber percentage in taxes.
although the tax rate is flat.
He said excluding a substantial
amount of income from the tax
eliminates the argument that a flat
tax is unfair to the poor.
The same flat rate would apply
to corporations, with dividends
treated the same as interest
expense.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

&amp; WINDOW

REPANE

For
lnlorm1tlon,
cont1ct Deelree .t 1112·2136.
,(11) 21, 22, 24; 3TC..:.

Don and Beth Stivers

992·2549

Public Notice

TO,NY'S CARRY OUT

We sell clothing on consignment
Check with us on selling your used clothing.
We need all sizes small to extra large.
We can pick up your consignment

NEW &amp; USED CLOTHING!

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEmCE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooling
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

"I HAD NO IDEA II
WAS THIS MUCH
FUN"

GEM CLOTHING &amp; CONSIGNMENT
Middleport, Oh

992-6684
Hrs. Mon • Sat. 9-7 pm Closed Sunday

-Artificial Trees -ornaments
•Lights •Collectibles.
•Dolls •Gift Items •Candles
•And Much, Much More

MEET NEW PEOPLE
THE FUN WAY
TODAY!

On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available
Premier Cleaners

1·90D-388·0500

and Coin Laundry

•Bows •Arrowa

397 West Main St.,
Pomeroy
Under new management
New equipment

•Deerecenta

EXT. 3754

$2.99 Per min.
MustBe 18 yrs.

Stahl's

Toteh ·Tone phone
.

Reqtllrecl
Serv-U (619)-645·8434
11f20195 I

DUMP TRUCK

BACKHOE
, SERVICE
Public Notice

NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF 1'
BUILDING REGULATIONS
The Melga County
Commlt~lonera adopted .
reaolullon IJ20P235 on'
Nov. 17, 1895. Tht effective
dill of thll reeolutlon te l
November 17, 1995. Thte :
reaolullon waa adopted '
· alter public hearing a on 1
Novamber II, 1895, and ,
November 17, 1995. Tho
purpou olthla reaolutlon le ·
to eatobllah reguletlono ond j
atlnderda for building• In :
flood hazerd orau ••
ldontlflod by tht Federal
Emergancy Menagamen1 .
Agency end will oneble
rnldonte
of
the :
unincorporated araae of :
Malge County to cont1n11• to ·
receive flood lnaurence
aubeldlzed by lht federal
govornmant. Coplee of the
reguletlone end mope ollhe
areea effected ere on file
with 1he Board o1 County
Commlaalonare 11 tho Court
Houae, Pomeroy, Ohio. Thle
notice It being published ••
provided for In Sacllon
307.311 of tho Ohio Rtvlaed
Codt.
(11) 24; 1TC
1

Wrllttn commtn1a on the
area lllltd above may be
eubmltted within 10 daya
otter publication of thle
notice, to the following
addrou : The Ohio
Dapartment of Natural
R11ourcu, Dlvlalon of
Minto end Rtcltmatlon,
1855 Fountain Squere,
Building H-3, Columbuo,
Ohlo43224.
(11) 24; 1TC
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
Commlealonere reaerve the
right to waive any
lnlormelllleo or to rejec1 any .
or ell bide.
·
(11) 17, 24; (12) 1; 3TC

•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne
985-4386

992-9923
10% Discount w/Ad

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Umestone &amp;Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trciler &amp;House Sites.
Reason11ble Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

CALL YOUR
H&amp;H
SAWMILL DATE NOW!!!
Portable
Handsaw MiU
24 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742-2193

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVIa

For Love And
Affection Dial
1-900-255-5454
Ext 8417
·Must be 18 yrs ·
: $2.99 per min
: Touch Tone
Phone Required
: Serv -U (619)
645-8434

40th
Birthday

Lois Fife

your date now
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U
645-8434

·•·'-a"

Ext. 9765
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (814) 845-8434

_______.

._

CHRISTMAS TREES

Riggs Christmas Trees

BUDFORD'S

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

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live
Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, tum Eat at
Darwin onto AI. 681. Go 4 ml~ to Cherry Ridge Rd., 1
1/2 ml~ to tree farm. Watch for Signs. 10:00 a.m, til dar1&lt;
Nov. 24 lhru Dec. 24
wagon Aides/Craft Shop -Weekends

RIGGS TREE FARM
39507 Rocksprings Road (at comer of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
Carol and David Riggs

949·2882

Wreaths ·Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT
Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051
OPEN NOV. 23 • 10 to 9:00

992·2549

· Cuolom Building l Remodeling
•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
614 992-2753

1tN1 mo.

COUNTRY TANN
34480 A Rocksprings Rd.
Co. Rd. 20 North of Meigs Fairgrounds first
drive past horse barns
Is your summer tan fading?
New beds with dual face tanners
Also new High Turbo Bed in mid December.

··
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PRECISION

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2t 43 or
742-2979

Call'

614-949-2512
Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receptions,
anniversaries,
reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call992-n47.

1111411 mo.

Tree
Service

nLr::

Licensed &amp;
Insured

Free Estimates
Stump grinding

Gallipolis, OH

. . .=.

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen •
at 614·843·5327

or 614-949-2632
after 1 0·1 0·95

State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512

JLEA.SONABU RATES

·, EER SHOP
Langsville, Ohio
SR325
Skin· Cut - Wrap
&amp; Freeze
Yew Kll'em &amp; we mill'em

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

1-900-526~2500

Buut liN UUAKP PtAPLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

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ATTENTION
HUNTERS
Court St. Grill will open
at 5 a.m. during
hunting season for
your conve.nience ~
Breakfast, Coffee, Hot
Chocolate and all legal
beverages.
Open House featuring
Home Interior by Gloria i
Sat., Nov. 25 10 am-9 pm
11/, mile from Langsville
742-2076

Middleport, Presents
~BAD HABIT'
Friday, Nov. 24 &amp; Sat., Nov. 25
9;30 p.m. -1:30. $2.00 Cover

.

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Misc. Jobs.

Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

HA 1?.TWELL HOIJSE
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696
Holiday Hours : M·S 9:30. 4:30 p.m.
Sun . 12:00 · 5:00p.m.

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

=
=
=

992-3954 or 985·3418

~ ·

\lhe ~~ame
eo~ne~

Ext. 6113
$3.99 per.min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

•DATES
•••••

-= ROMANCE

Companionship

= . 1-900-2SS-1S1~
=
ht. 858)
= 2.tt
Must be t8
I
per .. in.
yrs. Touch-toM phone r.q .

Sen-U j618/ 64S·B•U4

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992·5020

COURT STREET GRILL
9·1 RIVER RATS

ANNOUNCEMENTS

YUdl.cuul J OAio. 4577 5

005

{6f 4} 742-·2630

Aoe you

95 Varieries
Call or wfile fo r a
free price guide .

HOCKINGPORT

MOBILE
HOME PARK
Mobile home sites for rent
614-667-3630
t01111951mo.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
'

.

Windows

Ca ll

qwed,

s.,.u 61H45·8434.

"=======:::========:::·lady Bug SWF 51,
r

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

eyed lady seeKing Blo
SWM
-60 ·
nde,50blue

949-2512

Send phone &amp; photo : Bo) R-20
%Pt Pleasant Register, 200 Main

St., Pt Pleasant, WV 25550.
Lonely ?? Nee d to hear a so ft.
smt ltng voice? 1-900 -484 -2 500
extension 1429, $3.99 per minute,

Cheaper Rates

mus t be 1

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

FOR SALE
Cut &amp; split
Firewood
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &amp;
l:lawmill

110\\ \IW
E\C.\\ nne
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

&lt;)&lt;) --·&gt;0.&gt;()
•) ') 0 •.) ()

30 Announcements
No Hunttng or TrespasSirlQ o f any

type , no vehrctes or 4-whe elers.
Vrolators writ be prosecuted . Ray -

mond Sm11h .'
No huntrng or trespa ss1ng on J.f
lyons property Gal Ira Co. all

prevtous huntmg permtsston ca nce~d
·

40

HOROSCOPE

22 Month Old lab Chow M ·~
Hou sebroken. Wond erlul W1t n
Children, Good Watch Dog , 614 ·

245--Q909, Leave Message
t Female Puppy, 10 Week s Old:
To Good Home. 614-446-0132

Black &amp; Wh •te Male S•b cn an
Hus ky, To Good Ho me, No Other
Dog s, No Small Chtldren , Preler

f ! .99 per min. Must be 18
yrs. Touch·tone phon. req .
•s..,.u 1619) 645·8434

'

Penned. 614 -446--86 27.
Floor model Zenllh TV to Ql\l&amp;a -

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1·900-884·9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

way, I) 14-992-6315
KITten s, 7wks old,

773·5241
One male gray k.l!len, 6 weeks old,
Iiiier tra1ned, to good home only,

614 -992-5719.
To good home, pan German

'

Shepherd p upp1es, 1 mon th old ,
call 614-992 -79 13 e\'cnings.

60

Lost and Found

Fou nd 6 month old female Scner
mu. black &amp; wh1te, Kroger park1ng
lot area, 614 - 9~9 - 31 12.

9114195 2 mo. pd.

Found : 2 Female Beagles V1cm 1- ·
ty : Clay Chapel Road, Call Aller 5

PM.614256·1702.

lo st : Eno -Kyger Ar ea . Black .
Male Spame! M1x Red Collar, 6 14 367-0411 .
l osr gr ay !~male ca t , Ma1ne ·
Coon. 1ong-ha1red. pan of ear .
m1ssmg, Cherry R1dge VICinl!y, . •
614-992-7996 .

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.

l ost : red Retri eve r, blue collar, •
Silver R1dge area. 614 -667 -6744 . • .

614-992-7643

Lo s t : two fema le Beag les
Chesler/ Eagle ~ • dge area , cati'

~

6 14-985-3416 a lter Spm.

( No Sunday Calls)

Equip11ent

Dutributed by

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

~
Wakr
~~"
~Treatment

&amp; Vicinity
All Ya rd Sales Must Be Pa 1d In
Advance . DEADLINE 2:00p.m.
the day before Ihe ad IS to run .
Sunday editiOn · 2: 00 p.m Fnday.
Mo nd ay ed1t1on . 10 :00 a .m Sal ·

urday

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS,

INC.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

The water treatment company cordial ly invites you to

participate in a free. no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH .
Please call RainS oft at 992-4472 or 1-BO&lt;Hi0&amp;-3313
to set up your free water analysis. 1.......

All Yard Sales Mu st. Be Paid In
Advanc e. Deadl me : 1:OOpm the .
day before !he ad IS to run, Sun day ed111on 1 OOpm Ft~day, Mon ·.
day ed1110n 10 OOa rh Sa!urday

----------i·
.BUB ROOnNG and

r--~"":"'.....

60

CONS,RUCftON

(614) 992-5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial
ONE CAU, DO.IS JT AU
•Plumbing

2 male, 1 fe ·

male, 10 good homes only. 304 -

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Cleaning
•Roofing

Giveaway

2 Ki!tens, To A Good Home, 6 14·
319 -2806, 614-245-1208

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CALL NOWf!f
•1-900-3 78-1800
Ext. GHS

Call Even in s """ _

touch -tone

8434

DAILY

992·6142

e years,

phone requtred , Se rv -U 619 -645 •

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

daung, posSible re1a11onsh1p .

Ia'

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

•Pressure

We have the
best window
and the best
price

Personals
'eady lao love??

no w l 1-900-484 -2600 e~\en SI On
94 73. $2 99 per m1nute must be .
18 ye&lt;IIS, tou ch -tone pho ne fG·

70
Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
•-900.255.0200
Ext. 6993
$3.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

_____.

cmA!:I.OIULUm.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New At King Hardware

Bill Slack
992·2269

'P. . 0.. r3.(14 443

81J/11n

PENING NOVEMBER 25th

Solid Vinyl ·
Replacement

FRIDAY NIGHT

··'

: ~

-

&amp;: !.pi.u

1:/vaj

.......-~

J.D. Drilling Company

1·900·255·4242
Ext. 9106
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone phone
required.
Serve-U
(619) 645-8434
10/26195

Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em Live

KARAOKE

·_,

(614) 985-4114

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

Don't get stung by hrgh prices! .
Shop the c/assi{otd 1e&lt;tion.

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

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?

BULLETIN BOARD .
1 00
7 column inch weekdays
1 00
9 column inch Sunday

-.

.-'

. Sh. aron Louks

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

~~uu~~u~~L....-.

AUTOMOTIV~

.~:::: --=:
.~-~
-·- =====10/21/04/lt=n~:::::!

OILER'S

614-441·1191

..'

-~

r~~~~"~""~
Hand crocheted
~
I
A6~htVtg 6o'l Sale
·*!
~
Shop Early For Best
j
i
....
Selection Of Patterns,
*l
it
S1zes &amp; Country Colors ~
I :
'?:&gt;etz6ect
1}
h ' · Chtzigtmas CJitt 9 li
~

992-5756

742-2076

... ;,

LIVE GIRLS
CALL NOW
f·9D0-484-2500

Local (rafters
American Made

Got Your Message Across
With AD~ily So•tinol

CONSTRUCnON
•New Homes
• Garages
.·
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE E5nMATES ·:
-'
985-4473

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp; Acceuor111
317N.2ndAve.
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon-Sat 9-5;
Evenings Mon, Thuf9,
Fri. til 8:00 p.m.
Come in and see
what we have for
Christmas.

TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS

Repairs/Additions
:Craig 614-367-0567

..

Be ACool c.ic And Ched. Out die
Sa'*'JS In die CJass/flrd Soc!Jon.

$10 &amp; Up

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Home or
Trailer ·

~-~~---1 r-R-O""'B-E-RT.._BI_S.,.SE_L.,.L"i , .

bt. 6927
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 years.
Touch-tone phone
required.
SERV·U (619) 645-8434

1-900·255-1515
~xt. 1064
$2.99/Min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
Required Ser-U
(619) 645-8434 .

Factory Choke o..l ... l
la1hu lulhll•l

4405

614-992-3470

relations~ip?

12 Guago

For Free Estlmatee

3rd St. Racine, OH

: Are you looking for
l " ...,. ·1ovt:l? ·
Longterm

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

HOUII Repair &amp;
Rernodallng
Kitchen l Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne 'Neff 992-

1900·484·2600

Public Notice

'

•Deer cella
oCiothlng and much
JOE'S .
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL MALLI
Oh.

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

One·Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Meet new people the
, fun way today.
.· Call 1·900-255-5454
'
ext. 6694
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.,
Touch-Tone J)hone
required.
.serv-U_(619) 84~~

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting at
11:00a.m .
Nov. 26
Slugs Only.
All deerhunters
welcome.
No scopes.

Auto

ll&gt;mn

Clothing for the entire family

99 Mill St. on the "T"

HAULING

1111(1 mo.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Racine VIllage hao .
1declared the 1984 Crown
VIctoria pollee crulltr VtN
·1FDYKBOU4EVA49710 aa·
· surplus propetly.
' The Racine VIllage Clark
, will receive eealed bids lor .
i the vehicle until 4:00 p.m.
Monday, December 4, 1995.
The vehicle can be aNn at :
the water building.
Council r...,... 1he right :
to accept or reject any .
and/or all blda.
Vehicle eold "AS IS" with
nowarrenty.
Terlna of aale: cash.
Minimum bid: 51000.00.
~ren Lyons
Box 375
Racine, Ohio 45771' .
(11) 10, 24 2 tc

Mill Street
Middleport ·
Domestic and Imported Beer· Large Wine Selection for
the Holidays, Lottery, Tobacco Products, Snacks
State fJIInlmum Prices

CHRISTMAS TREES

WICKS

GLASS

.I

Public Notice

fllme Stone Low Rttn)

.K.&amp;W.
Under New Ownership

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

•Tite

-carpentry
oCaipel
•Painting
oOrywall
oGuttera
oCablneta
oMaaonry
•Electrical
•Skiing
oOecke
We Have Emergency Servlc81 ,
· 7 Daya A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all WOrk guaranteed.
"Fall Specials" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
awav. Mom yards $49.00
,,
Gutters cleaned and screened,
most 1 story homea, $49.00.'
.__ _.;:O;;,;H::;:IO;.,-..;W:;;E::;ST:,:..:V;,::IR.:;G::,:;IN~I~A.;-;,:K:,:E;::NTU~C::,:KY:.:,_1;;;1W11,;;,;,;;mo,;;;.;,J

Public Sale
and Auction

Auctions everr Frlday - Sa!u rd~Y.
7pm, Mt. A1Io Auc110n, A! 2-33
"Crossroads". New merchandise
groceries &amp; lots more. Ed Fraz 1e;
930.

R;ck Pemon Auct;on Company,

lull ~ 1me auctiOnee r, compl ete ,
auct1on
serv1ce.
Licensed

t66.0h;o &amp; West v;, 9;n;a. 30&lt; - ·
773-5785 Or 304-773-&amp;&lt;&lt;7.
90 Wanted to Buy
Anliques, colleclables, estales
.l;verine Anliques, Russ Moo,e:
ownor, 614-992·2526.
Clean Late Model Cars Or .
Truc&lt;s. 1987 Models Or Newer
Smith Buick Ponliac. 1900 Eaa1:
ern Av&amp;rue, Gallipolis.

J&amp;

D's Aulo Par1s. Buying sal· .

_;~_3"-~-e-hic-le_s._s_el-ling-pa-rt_s.3-0_4·

�Friday, November 24, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
• 440
lo&gt;J Pnccs Pa rd Old US Coms
S lver ::; old Oramon ds A ll O ld
Colre1.:11 U I ~~ Paper wer9hts Etc
M 1 S Corn Snap 151 Second
1\v~•nuc Calhpol!s 61 4 446 284 2

W tr101..1 Motors Ca ll l
vey 6 1 4 388 9303

Apphcauons
avatlable
Vrllag
Green
Apts #49
or callat6 14
992·

3711 EOH

~ Joa

Stove In se rt Preler ab ly
614 256 1977 Atte
30 P M

35 wEsT

'!.

J

'~o,~.:a

"Thts serenade Is tnlended for pnvate use anty Any other
usewrthoutexpresswrtttenconsenttsstricttyprohibited"

ot! lnlo Send Self Ad

S•amoed [nvel ope To

lU"•;.oJOI
Ol d Can
qo•'IC Dcot
nov 95106069
Jack.son
MS IL:==========:-r:~~7.:::

7

1

,, , '

180

&gt; ,~" :J,qca wceil.ly Year
... n o•" H rrflg mAn
f

"

JC"

JOtHd

Will rram

~;)18752022

Wanted To Do

BabysHtmg In My Hom e lots Of
TLC Days Only Ga lltpol s Area
614 ·441-0409 Ask For Joyce

Gene ral Marntenance Parntrng
Yard Wor ~ Wr ndows Washed
{ .C'- on~ lVclliUble fO&lt;&lt; '~~;~;~d ~
Gutters Cleaned l1 ght Haulrn9
'iO' l cw 1 Co unc rl Any rr
Commerrcal Resrdentra l Steve
11 ~r n&lt;; sr'ld leiter of 1
614 446 8861
I
o
o• l ov.n Hall PO
JJ H~r oer:.on WV 25105
Georges Portable Sawmr11 don I
D&lt; .rd ne No" 27
haul your logs to the mrll JUS t call
tr, 11 r•L•l'l l.~ou canrs Co needs 304 675- 1957
r spO"'S floe person rn Pomeroy
.r tJ 11C§.Jrctess ol trarmng wrrte Prolesstonal Tree Sarv rce Com
'&gt;I ~l~aa B o ~ 696 Dayton OH plete Tree Care, Bu cket Tr uck
Serv1ce ·50 Ft Reach Stump Ae
moval
Free Es ttmatest In
siJrance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
rce Call And Savet No Tree Too
Brg Or Too Small! Btdwell Oh10
AVO!&lt; CHRISTMAS SALES
614 388 9643,614 367 7010
l arn $8 $15 1Hr At Work Home
0 sco un1s1 No Inv entory Or Door
Ruo &amp; Sc rub C lea nrng Servrce
Doo r lnd / ~ep t 800 742 4738
du strng mopprng wrndow s and
AVO N E A.f~N $$$ at home · at mo re Complete ser.rrce or touch
ups Referen ces on reques t ca ll
work All areas 304 882 2645 1
Terry a1 614 992 4232 or 614
800 992 6356 INDt ~EP
gg2 4451

CHIEF RADIOLOGY
TECHNOLOGIST
II Small llural Hosp11al located
tn Southeas1ern Ohro Is Seekrng
A Hrghl y Talented And Mot rva ted
Ch cl Rnd1ology Tech no lo grst
Pr elrencp Wrll Be Grven To Can
dr dales W!lh A BS Degr ee And
rro ... 1ous Management E •perr
t:nc e But fhey Are Not Reqwred
C&lt;lndrdatcs Wrll Be Responsrble
ror Oversee1ng And Perlormrng
C 1 Ultrasound Fluoroscopy And
l~egular X Ray Modaltt res Day To
Day Ooer&lt;!!lons Qt l he ~ad 1 ology
Department Development O f Po
l1cres And Procedures And Man
rtgernent 01 Personnel Competr
1 vc Sa lar y And Benef1ts Included
Send Resume To Human Re
~oJrce Department Oak H 1ll
Comrn un1ry Med1cal Cen ter 350
Char lo!le Avenu e Oak H1t( Oho
45656 614682 771/

Sun Valley Nurse r y School
Ch1ldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mrm
mum6 14 446 3657
Tammy s Dayca re hours Man
day th rough Frrday 6 30am
6 OOpm l ots ol tearnrng and TLC,

614 992 5388
Wrll Blow Installation Have EqV+p
ment, Insured Ekpenenced Rea
sonable Rates Free Estrmates
614 245-5755
Will do genealogy P 0 Box 403 ,
Syracuse Ohio 45779

Wrll do housekeeprng call61 4
9g2 2271

FINANCIAL

\:u3m eto lcg s1 Nee ded Ga ..H
~n tced Wago s Fu ll And Part
1 ~H~ H'" lp W;Jnted 614 446 1'2G7
Do you have room 1n tour heart
ana you r home far a needy chrld?
Decomc a Prolessronal Treatment
1-&gt;aren1 and JOin OLH team Free
tr atn rn g 24 hour su pport com
pa!J!IVC re imbursemen t and the
c~po r rufll!y 10 ma ke a drlference
rr ne lt !e at a chrld Want more rn
lorrn&lt;~t r o~? OiJr PTP recr urre r/
1 arner w111 oe rn ou r Mason Coun
'I othce located at 217 2 19 6th
~trcet P1 Pleasant WV from
10am 4p m on Nov 30 to answer
your ques11ors Stop 1n or call her
.t 304 6 75 1324 for rM rv1dual ap
po ntment 01hcr trmes call 1 BOO

f\15 5277

ff!. n $100 0s weekly sruflmg en
~ e lopes

at home Be your boss
Stdrl no w No CX !J tree suppl1es
n fo no oblr gat1on Send SASE
to P res trge Un11 #l P 0 Box
Fl
19S609 Wrnter Sprrn9s

:27 9
1

l::arn up to $1 000 weeki( stulh ng
erwelopes at home S1ar1 now no
t l pcnence hee supp lrt•s utlor
•r llJon no oolr gauon Seno sell
lOclressed stamped envelope to
rxl&gt;ress Dept 36 100 E Whne
sane Blvd Surte 14B 34S Cedar
Pa•"- rx ! 96 13
[asy Workl ( xce lt enl Pay I A s
!. P··nnte Prod uc ts at Home Call
lo11 hce I 800 467 5566 EXT

3' 3

21 0

Business
Opportunity

H.J AC Serv 1c e lectln 1cran &amp;
1 1 V1'C Snc t't Metal lrslallers E•
... , • &lt;'r'lted Onl y Appty Send Re
&lt;:&gt; 1
t
To J m Harmon Yates
'lhr 1 'G 0 Coo1 ng 296 West Col
•qt q or.rar•dP O ll~5674 No

I oont:: Cn s
LOCi-! I COIT1(Jany loo,r;mg For Drs
1)il'che r Sal ary Posrt ron Wi!h
nenei\IS f'.l rC Vacarron Etc Send
l•b ume ro CLA 366 co Gallr
~.Hll&lt;'&gt; n~ rl y lr hune 825 Third
A..,cnue G;-JI;,o ls 0114S63 1
1 r:JO ,r; 1119 for Mus c ans Fo r A
ll uf:'Qrass nand 6trt3G777 BO
Needed In modra tli Secre!ary
0!1 ce Mana9er Mu st Have Exp
On Com pu1er And In Sales Fr
nancrn g &amp; ln11entory Controt C all
For 1nterv1cw 614 4.41 1975
$500
Pro
Own
Ext

No Expenonce Necessa ry ! $500
fo $900 Weekl y ! Po tentr al Pro
cessrng Mortgage Relunds Own
Hours Call (909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours)
Postal Jobs $15 90/hr Bene fils
On JOb trarnrng For application/
nlo call 818 764 90 15 ext 410t

1994 Mobrle Home 14x60 2 Bed
rooms Never Lived ln t 614 388

9803
Prrce Busler I New 14x70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $195/monlh
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304
755 5885

Bus~ness and

340

Buildings
For Sale Or lease 5,000 Sq Ft
Commerc ral Bu1ldmg On Sta te Ro
ute 93 In Oak Hr ll Formerly
Known As Hrghway Restaurant ,
Large Customer Parkrng l o t Call
614 682 3199 After 6 PM

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 314 Acre Lot 300 Ft Road
Fron tage On Me adow Lane In
Morgan Townsh ip 614 441 0928

70acres hrlls/tarmland wood s/
open old bu1ld1ngs Crab Creek
F1ve M le Galhpol s Ferry, stato
road access $40 000 304 6 75

7217
Frve acres
ae rator
near
Racme $16 000 ca n hnance wr th
hall down, 614 949 2025
Scenrc Valley Appl e Gr ove
beaut1lu l 2ac lo ts pubhc water
Clyde Bowen Jr, :n4 576 2336

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Farms And Acreage 20
Acres And Larger, No Lrmrt, 614
775 9173

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent
701 Beech St Middleport 2bed
room unlurntshed Depo srt &amp; ref
erences 614 992 5216

!NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHI NG CO
r ecommends that you do busr
ness wrlh pe1ple you know and
NOT to se nd money lhr oug h t'le
marl until you have mve st1gated
rhe ollem19
Investment Property In Gal lrpohs
Owner May Be Able To Help W1th
Some Fman crng Call 61&lt;~ 797
4345 Alter 6 PM

Nrce Clean 3 Bedroom Home
HUD Approved Mercervrlle Area
614 256 6574
Ntce clean 1wo t&gt;edroom house tn
Pomeroy $3501mo plus deposrt
wrth oprron to buy no pets 6 14
698 7244
Small ? Bedroom Rear 238 Frrst
A.ve K tchcn wrth Stove /Ref ng
erator $325JMonth Deposru Ret
erences No Pels 614 446 4926
Unl urnrshed two bedroom house
ntce and clean cleposrt requrred
no rnsrde pets 614 992 3090

420

All rea l estate adve r1tstng tn
lhts newspaper rs subject 10
The Federal Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It 1Uegal
10 advertise ·any preterence,
lrmrtahon or discnmlnatiOn
based on race color rehg10n,
sex famllral status or national
OrJJtn or any mtenUon to
make any such preference,
llmttaHon or dlscnmtnatron ~
Thrs newspaper wlll not
knowhngly accept
advemsements lor real estate
whrch tS rn vtolallon ol the law
Our readers are hereb y
rnformed that all dwellings
advertised m thiS newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opportunrty basts

needed lor deer process rng
Crawford s Groce ry 304 6 l5
S4C4
f'orne lyp1~1~ PC u~~~s needed
'i. 5 CO O m~;ome oo 1ent1a Ca ll 1
BOO 513 '3-13 F.xt B-936 8

for Sale

Four bedroom ho us e lor rent m
Ru!land been remodeled , new
carpet etc Central a~r HUO ac
cepted pets allowed wuh depostt
two at~es Wi th n1ce yard 614
9922817

f lr&gt;lp

No Exper1ence Neces sar yr
fo $900 Weekly /Potenhal
ccssr ng Mortgage Aclunds
HJurs, Call (909 ) 715 2300
351 (24 Hours)

530

Mobile Homes
for Rent

112 Bcd10om Stove Relngerator
Tra sh / Water Pard New Carpet
$200/Mo $250 Oeposil 614 388

9686

14 X70 On 19 A On Co lonral Or
U n tu rnrshed Except For Ap
plrances 2 Mr From Hosprtal
Ban k &amp; Stores Securrty Deposr t
&amp; Relerences Requ 1red $3?51Mo
In c l udes Water Call 6t4 446

0622
2 bedroom mobile home refer
ences &amp; depos 11 requ rr cd M1
ne rsvrlle area call al!er Spm 61 4

5 Room H ouse 26 Ch1llrcothe
Road Gallrpolrs $6 800 6t 4 446
1615 614 446 1243
83 Acres 2 Bed rcom Hou se Full
Ba seme nt Large Barn Ot her
8u1ld1flQS South Ot Galli polis Oh1o
OJ! 51 At 218 614 696 6214

Beech St Middleport 1 room fu r
nrshed ellrcrency utrhtres pa1d De
posrt &amp; re lerences 304 882
2566
Country Srde Apartment l arge 1
Bedroom S325JMo Depos 1t 513

922 0294
Extra Nrce 2 BR All Elec, Furn,
Kr1 Close To Sprrng Valley Area
No Pets $3551Mo. + D 0 + Rei
614 446-6157 Alter 5 PM
For Rem 1 Bedroom AparTment
Furnrshed In Middleport, 614
4~6 309 1 614 992 2178 614

992 5304
For Ren t 2 Bedrd"om Central Gas
Heat And AC, F1rst Avenue Gal
lrpol ts Re ference Deposit 614

Buy or sell Arverrne An!lqu es
1 124 E Marn Str eet on At 124
Pomeroy H ours M T W 10 00
am to600pm ,Sunday100to
6 00 Pm 614 992 2526

7!1 Ca nad tan whil e ptne arttfr cLal
Chrrstmas tree $30 Elvrs Presley
black1 wh rle co ll ec tor plate $600
value sel l for $250 Cash on ly

304 882 2436

Babybod, dressrng table ca rseat ,
sTroller swrng 304-675--4548
Chnstma s Trees Rt 33 between
New Haven &amp; l etart, across !rom
Graham Block Church John
Bradlreld 304 882·2334
Concrete &amp; Piastre Septrc Tanks,
300 Thru 2 000 Gal lons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jack son OH

1 800 537-9528

Or sney Area 5 Days 14 Hotel
Ntghls, Use Anytrme, Pa1d $310

Furnrshed 2 Room s &amp; Bath
Downs tai rS, Utrl rlles Furn rshod,
Clean No Pets Reference, De
posrt Requ1red 6 14·446- 1519
G racrous l1 vrn9 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
R1versrde Ap artments ln Mtddle
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 E~ual Housrng Oppe r
tunrtres
3 Bed room Apartment For Rent In:
Porn! Pleasant , Fully Carpeted 1
References &amp; Deposrt Requtred
Call Alt er 6 00 P M 614 446
0041
Nrce 2 upstarr s bed room carpet
ed ap plian ces rncl uded ut1l1tr es
pard ac $3 75/mo Depos rt &amp; rot
erencas requrred 304--675-619 6
N 1ce clean ground floo r 2bed
room WID hookup Deposrt Ref
erences No pets 304 675-5 162
N1ce one bedroom apartment for
ren t rn Pt Pleasant, 61 ~ 992

5858
NICe two bedroom apartment m
Pomeroy 614 992 5858
One bedroom l urnrshed apart
ment 614 992 5304 or 614 g92
2178, or614 446 3091
Small 1 bedroom l urnrshed apt
gas hea t $200/mo, all ulil1tres
pard excep t electrtc References
&amp; de pos il requ ne d 304 675

1365
S tonewoo d Apart ments now ac
.::eptrng appl 1catrons to ' apart
ments all electrrc lor elderly and
drsabtllly FMHA SUbSidiZed ba
src tent $260 per month EOH

614 992 3055
Tw1n Arvers Tower, now accepting
applrcafrons lor 1br HUO subsrd
1zed apt lor eld er ly an d handr

capped EOH 304·675-6679
450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rent week or month
Sta rtmg at $120/mo Gallta Holel
6 14 4-16 9580
Slee ping room s w rth cookmg
Also trarler spac a on rrver All
hook· ups Ca ll alter 2 00 p m
304 773-565 1 Mason

wv

460 Space for Rent
Tra 1ler lo t For Rem , Kerr OhiO,
Must Have Good References
6 14 4460175

Household
"
Goods

7795
Country Furnrture 304 675 6820
At 2 N 6mrles Pt Pleasant, WV
Tues sat 9-6 Sun t1·5

TRANSPORTATION

Metal Aooftng &amp; Stdtng Geo Te ~
tile Fabrrc For Onveways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover Or
porary S torag e Cover,
Farm Supply, 614·245-5193

560

Fodder Shock s $2 Each And In
dtan Corn Ftve For $1 00 61 4·

245 5887

Fu el 011 Tank 275 Ga l Good
CondiTion, $50,614-367 7055

Pets tor Sale

1yr old Hrmalayan, male for stud
Sef'\JIC9 304 882 2334

AKC German Shepherd pupp1e s,
frrst shots &amp; wormed 3 femal es

Ht Effec1ency L P Or Natu ral Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1

600 287 6308, 614·446-6308,
Duct Sys1ems And Arr Cond ttron
ers Free EsTimates

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Reparred New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1 BOO 537 952ll

KILL RATS AND MICE I
ENFORCE R® rar and mouse ktll
ers are GUA RANTEED ! Avatl·
able at

CENTRAL SUPPLY
0 DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER
Ktng Stze, Wat erbed $100 614

256--6723

675-6~39

ready Nov 20. $200 304 773
9122
Puppres

We eks Old, ShoiS Up To Dal e
Beaulllul Stber ran Husky &amp; Wolf
Puppres. 5 Weeks Old $150 614

304 675 77 4()
570

Musical
Instruments

Gemernt).ard t flute used 2 years
ltk e new call alter S 30-1 773

5707
Marttn &amp; Gtbson
Guttars &amp; More

HOLIDAY SALE
HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC
Jackson Oh1o

614 286 5889

Sprnet Blac~ Wurlttzer Good Con
drlton, $600,614 446 871 5

446 6189

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

bag pu ll carl $650 614-949
2722
Pro Fo rm A scent dual acuon
electroniC mo 11va11 onal stepper
Cost $400, wtll sell lor $150 Call

Refrrgerators, St oves Washers
And Dry ers , All Recondtltoned
And Ga LJranteedl $100 And Up,
W1!1 Deliver 614 669 6441
Sa m Somervt ll e s regular Army
camouflage by Sandyvt ll e Posr
Ollrce, noon -6pm, Frr-Sun 304
273 56 55 Juntor stzes Free De
hvery p 1 Pleasant

6pm

19 84 Fo rd LTD Crown V1ctort a
V 6 aut om a trc transmrss1on
74, 000 mrles 614 992 2192 alter
Spm614 992 5741
1985 Cadilac Coupe DeV Ille NICe
C ar $1 800 ,614 441 1151 , Or
6 14 2455592After5PM

379-2370
1986 Ford Esco rt Excellent Con
dtt1on, Runs Good $1,025 1980
Ford Van Full Srze $650 1979
Toyota 5 Speed , Tra ns,
Trres, $450 Runs Good 614·245

5320

446--6865, 61 4 446-7036

baler wthyd
bale tens ron
$ 11000 00 NH 900 forage har
vaster w/metal aferl. 2 row head

$23000 00 NH 157 9' 1edder 3pl
hllch, $1795 00 NH 308 1400gal

1986 Fo rd Esco rt Good Car, No
A us ~ $500, 614 446-1528

1966 Ford Escon, 4 door, need s
some work $600. call 614-9g2

1995 Wolwwne 350 $4,000, 614
256-1288 or 256 6467
·

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for sale

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1993 20 1 Pro XL, 20' Stru to.t
l&gt;a ss boat, 200 XPHP, 61 4· 66"1

734 7 or 614-949 2879

·

Plales, 614 379 2935

198 7 Cadrllac Se dan Devtllo
good cond $2 500 304 895

3638
1987 Cou gar Nrce Car, loaded,
614 441 1151 Or 6 14 245 559 2
AlterS PM
1g97 Olds C ullass good con d
corve \le rally wheels w hrte

1990 Ford Escor! Actual 6 000
Mtles, 2 Door 614 379-2 720 AF

TER6PM

lmmafUia1e 49 5K l.t1les, $15,750,
$3.6gs T020 Ferguson, Blade &amp; Warranty 614-446-4880
Bush Ho9, $2,650, 814 288- 1992 Geo Pnsm Good Condmon
6522
32.000 M1los. $6,000, Pnco Neg
614 379 2553
POLE BUILDING SPECIAL

600·352 1045
Tobacco str~pper $350 304 6 75

4075

1992 Olds Cudass C1erra Metalftc
Blue 4 Door, Auto, PS, PB, Auto
Lad, Good CondH•on, $5,500 ,
614·985-4492
1993 Olds Achteva S 4 Door
O uad Four, PW, PO, Autoamt1c:
A rr,
Crurse, 55,000 M iles

Tobacco Stnppmg Machtne, 614

446·2109 After 5 Pl.t
Tr1-Star 22'd' 5th Wheellrve·
stock Tra1ler Good Condttton

$2 995, 614-643-2285
630

Livestock

245 Massey Ferguson D1esel
Tractor W/928 Hrs, No Massey

Ferguaon Baler, Pos1 Hole Digger,
614-367·7902.

Auto Loans Dealer Wtll arrange It
nanctng even rl you have been
turn ed down elsew here Upton
Equtpment Used Cars 304·458

1069

Work boots 614-446 3159

2•

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Pass

Pass

810

l i I~ING YOUil

·.

..

l&gt;AY?

aK

f...-+-+---1

'::~:~:~'

O

I

I

1--,.[

• ..

I

5

1

~

r

now an ······-"
Complete the chuckle

0

quoted

by frl l1ng m the mr ssr ng w ords
you develop fr om step No J be low

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Thrash · Entry · Quest · V10/tn ·ANOTHER
My daughter was upset because her lnend had lold
someone e lse a secret they had shared She learned
the hard way that a secret IS a confidence that goes m
one ear and out ANOTHER

(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237

0468 Rogers Waterproolrng Es

1975

I FRIDAY

Applianc e Parts And Servrce All
Name Brands Over 25 Yea rs Ex•
pert ence All Work Guaranteed
French Ctly Maytag, 614 · 446 ·

NOVEMBER 24 I

C&amp;C Genera l Hom e Matn
tencnco Patntrng v rnyl srdmg,
carpentry, doors wmdows , ba ths
mobile home repa1r and rmre For
free cstrmate ca ll Chet, 614-992-

6323
DRYWALL
Hang frnrsh, repatr
Cet lmgs textured, plaster repatti.
Call Tom 304-675 4186 20 year!
cxpenence
•
Earls Home Mamtenance. vmY,I
stdtng, rooftng, eX1enor and mten
or parnttng , power washrng, room
add tllons Free Esumates. 614

accumu

t

posstble

Know

where to look lor romance and you'll fmd
11 The Astro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly
reveals whiCh s1gns are romantically perfect for you Ma1l $2 75 to Matchmaker,
c/o thiS newspaper. P 0 Box t 758,
MuiT8y Hill Stat•on, New York, NY 10156
CAPRICOR 6ec. 22-Jan. 19) Treat
seriouslY. dey matters that should be
usly, but also stay loose
taken
enou
JOY a good laugh, even nH's

992-4451
Ron s TV Servtce spec1ahztng m
Zenr th also servtclng most other
brands Ho use calls 1 800 797

0015, m 304 578 2398

Roohng and gutters- commercial
and restdenllal, mmor reparrs 3S
years experrence, B&amp;B ROOF

lNG, 614 992-5041

&amp;

on yo

Freeman's Heartng And Coohng
lnstalla110n And Serv1ce EPA
Cerufied ResidenUal Commerctal

Electrical and
Refrigeration

•

flBS!dential or commercial wlrlne:-...
new aerv1ce or repatra Master ~
censed efectrtclan Aldenouf '

u.

1786

Granny returned from the
doctor "Med1c1ne has come a
long way," she s1ghed "Sc•entiStshave found that an 1tch 1s

UNSCRAMBLE L[TTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I GUESS IT'S
,_ MATIE~ OF
PERSPECTIVE

Elec!ncal, WV000308, 304-875-

I

PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS
IN THES E SQUARES

Uncondmonal hfeume guarantee
local references lurnt shed Call

Plumbing
Heating

I

~L_Y~B~O:.___:D~O.:.......--ll
6 I
I I
1
1.-...1-,-...l_...L_..J_...l_.J

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

820

S©\\.Jl)A -dG£2fS"

I

- vf.Jfl.OCI£R:iNI&gt; llffiE.Y CAN I "'~

Home
Improvements

la~!Shed

Pass

Last August m Ghent, Belg1urn, the b+--1World Bndge FederatiOn held 1ts first 1....--+--1trammg camp for players under 25
Youngsters carne from all over the L..-L-.1...world, mcluding Botswana
This was my favonte deal from the
rnmn pa1r event How should South plan
the play m four hearts, the defense be
CELEBRITY CIPHER
gmnmg WJth three rounds of spades'
South's double was for takeout Then
by Luis Campos
Celebr1ly C1ph8f ctyplograms are crealed lrom quolaiJons by famous people past afld ptesent
when North couldn't show a spade stop
Each le!ler 1n the crpher stands for anot!Jer Today s clue L equals C
per over two spades, South d1d very well
to b1d four hearts, even though he knew
they were m a 4-2 fit llf North had three
DFV
WVKC
XR H ,
SF C
' D F V
X F
hearts, he would have b1d two hearts,
nor two clubs I
Y M H XRORSH
D F V
L N Y S B H P F MT
At the table, the declarer ruffed the
th1rd spade Double dummy, he could
y K
KNRMIHD
HOHMDCNRSB
R K
still make hiS contract, but he didn't
South should diScard a d1arnond on
TYLIYRSH
the thll'(l spade If West 1s st1ll on lead
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Cookmg lip Wrap turkey lellovers 1n alum1num 1011
and perseveres With a fourth spade, de
and throw them out "- N1cole Holla nder
darer ruffs w1th dummy's heart ace,
dJScardmg h1s second d1amond loser,
drdws trumps and da1ms
WOlD
It is more hkely that East wms the
GAM I
th1rd tnck H1s only safe ex1l1s a trump
Edlrod by CLAY I. POlLAN
Declare• draws four rounds of trumps,
Rearrange letten of the
d1scardmg dmmonds from the dummy
- - -....- four xrambled words beThen he ca5hes dummy's two top dialow to form four words
monds If the queen drops, fin e If not,
he rn1ght have to guess clubs But here
that 1s easy When West shows up With
RANGEV
only one diamond, h1s hand has counted
out five spades, three hearts, one diamond and, therefore, four clubs
South plays a club to hts king, cashes
ALRUT
the club ace and finesses dummy's 10
3-=,....:1:....;......!:.........It ~
WJlh confidence

SERVICES

You Don t Call Ua We Both Lose!
Froo Esflmales, 1·800-287-6308,
614·446-6308, wv 002945
•

2115

Pass

1

Heat Pumps , Atr Condluon1ng, It ,

Ol1ve St , Gafllpohs New &amp;
lurnrture, hea ters, We stern &amp;

Db I
28
4¥

.-_N_U_R_K_T__,, :~'

ASES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Wreaths 11ve &amp; aruflcla l, grave
blankets, rop ing, Sue's Green .
house, Racine , Oh 614-949 -

Pass

1g84 Itasca 27 11211 class A mo
tor home, 454 chevy, 3 1 ,OOOmt
ac m1crowave rear bed new
trres, new relrrgerator exc cond
304·675 1429

840

SWAIN
AU CTION &amp; FURN ITURE

Pass

Pass

Parker

24 Is Indebted to
25 Furnace
26 Entreat
28- out (used
frugally)
30 Cut
.,.--+--+-1--~ 31 A Chaplin
32 Scolds
- + -1--+---1 34 Soothes
38 Small ledge
In a cliff
39 Give up
41 Card game
45 Sticky
47 Underworld
48 Disastrous
49 Holly
51 Sketched
lz,-f-- +-1,---t 52 Cosmonaut
- Gagarln
53 Above (poet )
55 Actress Weal
57 Acquired

•

614-258-1611

992 2218

1•

1•

1978 Starcraft 25 11 travel tratl er
deluxe model, ac, sleeps 7, exe
cond 304-675 1429
~

81ll Omck's Home Improvements
addition s, remodelmg roofrng
Siding , plumbrng etc Insured, call
Brll Omck, 614 992 5183

1991 Town Car, Black W1th Grey
Interior, Wtth Convertable Top,

wtfAT i~t
Ct'IANC.es A,t AGAINST

e.uy MPPINE.SS...

1991 Rocke! Chassrs race car, all
new tn '91, Wrlwood, bes t of eve
rythmg, weld, three wheels, ures,
Neal pedals, fuel cell on board
lrr&amp; system, rolhng chass1s $5000
neg Call Scott Wolle, 614·949

2879, 614-949·2045 or 614-992
6193

Pass
I ..

10 slrde · tn truck camper, excel
tent condrt to n, $800 OBO 614
992 3016
I

742 2357

Escort Automatr c, $1 000, Nrce
Carsl614·441-o584

BORN LOSER

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

G T 5 70 gram drye r T 1m Ro ck
Farm 304 675 4308

Sl rder, 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Burlders 1

•

D &amp; R Aula R&lt;ploy, wy 304 372
3933 or 1 800-273-9329

1988 Nrs sa n Sentra $800 6 14

19 89 Chevy Co rsica $2,650,
1985 Dodge 650 4 Cyhndef 1986

~ttAt.IZ~

,,
..

~

Frl&gt;ergla ss ca p for 1/2 ton sho't
bed Ch ev y or Dodge Dakot(
$200,614 66 7·3417
•

7795

30' X40'X9' Pamted Steel Stdes

eA,Tt'l. PO YOU

Budget Transmrss1ons, Used &amp;
Rebuilt, All Types, Accesstble Th
Over 10,000 Transmtssron , Als~
Parts, Clutches &amp; P ress urp

790

l&gt;AY,
fiVt

Jlt.L.IOI'I P~OPLe ON

$5800, 614·949-2754

GaiValume Steel Roo! 15 xe· Si...

YOU~
~~Nit/ ~ITt'!

Of C.Ou,St IT' f NOT

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

6064
1986 Mome Carlo, Loaded Very
Ntce $2 475 614 245 5320

CAN T60 STRAIGHT OUT, CVT LEFT,
AND 60 STRAIGI-lT WHEN M'{ GLASSES ARE
WET Ar-ID I CAN'T SEE A THIN6?

PM

3874

Massey Ferguson 35 Sharp
$3,695, Massey Ferguson 65

'(OU 60 STRAI6HT
OUT, THEN CUT
LEFT, Til EN 60
5TRAI6HT, AND
Tj.iROW VOU
A PASS .•

1995 Srock 80 6 Months Owned
Sttll Under Warranty Runs Great!
$1,050, 614·367r7 850 Alter 3

1991 Ponuac Gra nd Prrx 82,000
mtles, NADA val ue $8250, askmg

Mas sey Fefguson 35 Dtesel Ltve
Power 614 -446-0327

OKAV. MARCIE,

•

tandem axle s lurry spreader
$8500 00 Keeler Serv1ce Center
St A t 87 , L eon WV 304 895

Husqvarna charn saws now on
sa le thfu November Srder s
Equ 1pm e nt 304·6 75-7421 or 1
800 277 3917

PEANUTS

New gas tanks, one Jon t r u~
wheels, radiators floor mats, etc

256e

304 675 3784
Rarnoow sweeper wtauachments
304 675 1726

1984 Butck La Sabr e. 1 own er
hrgh mrlea ge 304 675 2807 after

440 Feny Crate Hay Tater 1 Drn
Scoop, 614 379 2370

2WD, 66hp, $,8,SOO 00 6610S
4WD 76hp $26,000 00 NH 7
472 haybmd $7900 00 NH 570T

Prng Eye II golf clubs red dot,

OBO 614-742 2357

1968 FOfd Escort Sta tion Wagon,
Automatt c, AC , $1,400, 614·379

Nortrack Secq uor a 4x6 Utrhty
Tr ailer 614 446 73 15 AfTer 5
Perso nal tanntng bed , by Monte
go Bay 16 bulb s 20 mm lrme r
used very ~Uie 304 675-7747

245-5592 ANer 5 PM

6 L.A player
7 Arrow polson
8 - Musaollnl
5 Extreme
9 Seep
10- - even
keel
11 Short lll~ht
19 Commot1on
.,.,..+--11---1 21 Actress Jessica

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

1992 250X Rtdden Very Lntle, E ~
cel lent Condr!ton, $ 2,5 50 6U

610 Farm Equipment

Ford N ew Ho l la nd November
Spec ral s Ford 56105 tracto r

'

1992 Geo Tracker 4x4 soft tali,
ac, auto am lm casseue, $9,50Q
OBO 304 e82 264 7 alter Spm

$3 700 304 675 2457

2720 AFTER 6 PM

PM

$5000 614 985 3981

1g82 Suburban Srlverado Dtesel
Good Shape 614 44 1·1 151 , 614

Of Ex!ras, $2,000 060 614 256

3 Mormon State
4 ComedianCohen

No stopper,
few trumps

1990 Suzuk• Srdektck 4WD c o~
5 speed, lrght gre en

740

Q J 10

Anawer to Previou• Puzzle

7 6 I
K 8

Opening lead

STARS II

~ertrble,

6718 See To Apprectatet

198 1 Gray Camero 305, V-8 Lots

1985 Plymouth Voyager, 614

Registered Weimaraner pupptes

UNDER TH'

Ga l1 1polt s

1989 Harl ey C usTom Soft Tatl
Spnnger low m•les lots of ekt ras
$15,000 serrous rnqumes only .
1994 Pace cargo trai ler, carpet,
rnSide hghts set up for two motor
cycles, $1 ,700, 614 949 2722

Brg boautrfu l AKC Chow puppre s
only one blue and on e bl ack le
mate lelt $200 614 9g2.7574
Full Bloode-d Beagle Pups, $25
Each, 6 14388·8064

825 Th1rd Ave nue
Oh10

ROMANCIN'

8832

256 6444

lap) Fo&lt; A Mac (Newl) $300, 614

Ntce Computer Desk E•tra Nrce
Sola &amp; Charr Good Ktlchen Glass
Top Table Wrth 4 Charrs, Olflce
Cha1rs, Sma ll Drop Lea l Table
lux Arr Gas Furnace, 614 379-

1979 Honda Crvr c to many new
parts to It s! $500 f1 rm 304 67 5

1985 Olds Toronado $1, 500 Ne
got1able Dark Blue Good Ca r
614-446 8605

new $45 304 675-3540

Murray workout Slat ton $550
Queen StZe waterb&amp;d w/dressers
bedroom surte, black $350 304
675 7217

'89 Thunderbrrd SC rwo door 3 8
litr e V 6 elrte mod el lurbo, PS
PB , AC 5 speed, power seats
and loc ks $7300 neg 614 992
7478or614 949 2879

7

Prrce Aeducedl614 379-9116

Kitchen ca brnet HAAS corner
appliance garage oak pearl 11nrsh.
18 htgh 12 12 45 degree brand
Mac 14 5B Lap Top Comp ut er
Wtth Case Expanded Memor~
M1crosott Offrce (4 Software Pro
grams) Excellent Co ndr!lon,
$1 200 HP Laser Prrnter (Desk

Autos for Sale

1983 Tran s A.m, t tops $2000

AKC Aegrstered Dalmattan pups,

Rottweller

710

19 80 Ca d rllac DeVtlle 2 Doo r
Good Engrne Automat rc Tran s
mrsSion $500 61 4 446-1 528

Groom Shop -P9t Groomrng Fea·
turr ng Hyd ro Bath Julre Webb
Call 6 14·446-0231

AKC

ELVINEY AN'
LUKEY!!

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8-250
12 ooo M1los $6,000, can Be

Seen Al Galhpahs Oa&lt;ly Tnbuno

Block brrck, sewer prpes wtnd
ows, hntels etc Claude Wtnters
R1o Grande, OH Ca ll 614 2-45

AKC Pugs For Chr s1tmas Ready
After Dec 7th, Good Natured De
posr1 Requtred Females $350
Males $325, 614 446 0910

7pm

1 bedroom apartmenl 1n Mtddle
pa r r ava ilable December 1, all
u lt iHres patd, $250 per monrh
$100 depos tt, 8am to 5pm 614

Building
pplles
U

S

Electrtc Wheelcha11 s /ScooTers,
New /Used, Scooter /Wheelcharr
Lrft s, Star rway Elevators Ltft
Cha1rs Bowman s Homeca re,
614-446·7283

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments,
ntshed and unfurmshed securrty j
deposrt requ1red no pets 614

THEM TWO !I
550

6

37 Certain wall

Vulnerable· Both
Dealer Wes t
West North East
South

BARNEY

304

NJce three bedroom mobrle home
rn Mtddleport 614 992
5856

7806

196 7 Chevy As Tra Van Gr 1
Condrtton loa dod , Towrng Pkg

Sell $100 614 470-2786

~o~b~,l~e~h~o~m-e_'_n
rI ~N~&lt;C~e~2~oe~d~&lt;~oo'.:.m~m
I
Oh,6149g25a58

Three bedroom home near
Racrne, fireplace gas water,
electnc cable hookup new roof
on 314 acre, call6 14 949 2657

aQ
• K
t J
•A

leru, $2200 060, 614 992·3016

5121

Furnt shed 2 Bedroom s Garage
Apartment $325/Mo P!u5 Utrht1es
DeposrtReq utred 614 446 0001

Appliances
Recondltro ned
Was hers Dryers Ranges Relrr
graters, 90 Day Gua rant ee\
French Cr tr M aytag, 61 4· 446

M it chell noad Area Gallrpol1 s
$310 / Mo Water Sep 1rc l rash
Pard Deposrt /Rf!ferences 614
643 2916After4P M

gas healer $SO

•5 3

SOUTH

LOOK AT

~~~~~~TV

• Q 9 8 2

•J 7 6 4

$3,500 614-446 9278

614

EAST
aJ 9 3
•B 6 4 3

aAKI074
¥9 5 2
t3

1982 lull stze Bronco. 4x-4 302
automauc, solrd body, runs mrcel

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

446 1079

2bedroom mob1le home $250/mo
Includes sewer &amp; water Deposr t
&amp; rP.terences requ11ed 304 6 75
6984

Three bedroom home rn cou ntry,
Whrtes Hrll Ad , Rulland one balh,
1n ground pool 614-992 506 7

1977 Fodera! 3bodroom, $5,400
Call 304 875-1g54 slier Spm

WEST

367-7760

Orshwa sher for sale, $75, 614
992 751 1 after 6pm

MERCHANDISE

Furnrshed Etlrcrency 607 Second ,
Gallrpolrs, Share Bath $150/Utllt
ttes Pa1d 614 446 · 441 6

Mobile Homes
for sale

1979 Jee p CJ5, 304 V 8, lt ber·
glass body 4 ~ hit 35&gt;~12 50 trres,
$4,000 lrf m 614·992 3400
1980 Ch evy 4X4 314 Ton Auto.
No Bed 0 1 Ekhaust, $1 100 6 14

Antiques

Small 2bedroom Mrddleport, OH
-8-n-ck_H_o_m_e__B_:ed
_&lt;_:a_:a_:m_s_C_ed_a_r.~References &amp; securrty doposrt re •
3
qurred 304 682·3267
Closer Frrcplaco 01nrng Room Olf
lrvrng Room, Krtchen Range, Re- Trarter For Ren t &amp; Tratler Space
fr1gera1or Laundry Room Central For Rent 614 446 1279
Arr Gas Heat Garage In Crry, Kr
neon Slreet 133, Gallipolis, Sale Two and three bedroom mobrl e
By Owner, 614·446- 2573
homes, starttn g at $240 $300
sewer water and lrash mcluded
Count ry home,
4bedrooms 614-992 2167
2ba ths 2 car garage 1acre,

320

tAK105

•Q 10 9 2

Equal Housrng Oppor!unrty

510

P""'"

D

•A 7

&amp; mov 1es Call 614 446 2566

Water 1!. Trash Fu rntshed, All
Electrr c Depos 1t &amp; References
614 36 7 7745

m1nu1es hom P1 Pleasam,
440
1o sell For appo1n1mem call 304675 6557

• 8 5 2

l&lt;om S2261o $291 Walk 1o shop

2 Bedrooms 14x70 AC WID

Fe&lt;ry 304 675 4088

310 Homes for Sale

0

11-2495

NORTH

ond Avenue Galhpohs 614 446 1
4416 Alter 7 PM
1 16ft llatbed ullh ty tra tler, $1 ,000
304 675-4435
B EAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT !

992 671/

3bedroom all electrrc Ga!lrpolrs

REAL ESTATE

&amp; 4-WDs

~7:!==~~ ESTATES
BUDGET PR52
ICES
AT JACKSON
We stwood
Drrve

Mobile Homes

Wrll do housecleanrng Relerenc
es provrded 304 675 5290 leave
message

[Qf
n •wen 1ence Store Managers
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1 mty Are as
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Package Tow1ng Package, locfd
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nut Ave $260 month plus deposrt
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ue

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for Rent

ACROSS

Band
40 ~':;'lng
Instrument
42 Stag's mate
5 Thrash
43 Danca llep
soundly
44 Hardware Item
9 Companion
46 AngtO&lt;Saxon
olaah
letter
12 Obligation
48 Place lor
13 Exceptional
dancing
14 Voko 50 tnvlgorallng
15 Construction
53 Lubricate
beam
54 - sapiens
16 - - lor All
56 l'fpe ol atore
Seasons
58 Sooner than
17 Wipe out (sl.) 59 Genuine
18 Photos
60 Architect 20 Out ol bed
Saarinen
22 Ready or 61 Actor Harrison
23 GIVe - - whirl 62 Looked al
24 Alley 63 Actress
27 Gambler 's
Loralla cube
29 - Welles
DOWN
33 Male witch
1 Insecticide
35 Celebes ox
2 Maesa!llls
36 Jacob's lwm

~

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) AssiStance
from a surpns1ng source could be forthcoming today This aid mght help you get
out of a tough b1nd you've been unable to
resolve
PISCES (Feb. »Merch 20) Take some
t1me today to re-establish contact wrth
Saturday. Nov. 25, 1995
two old lnends you haven't seen lately
In 1he yeat ahead you may have another The get-toge1her will be gratllylng
opportunity to remedY a previous failure. ARIES (March 21· Aprll19) If you have a
VQu wtll receive a•d from a talenlad 1nd1· ' cnlieal maner to correcl today the more
vidual who ts finally r1111dy to help you people who understand your Intentions,
the better Vour problem will attract a
succeed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc. 21) constructive helpe•
Continue to prioritize today maners that TAURUS (April 20•May 20) Several
can enhance your material securlly If Interesting avenues for resolving a cnsts
you are motivated enough, substantial may come to your anention today Any ol

lhese paths could I
your goal
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Vour authonty
over albers Will be qu1te 8VIdent today
Vour style IS highly elfechve Wllhout

be1ng ottens1ve or too forceful
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) A negahve
development Similar to one you handled
suocesslully 1n the past may anse today
Do not alter your methods, let expenence
serve as your gwde
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) AsSOCiates Will
hold you 1n high regard loday because of
your wtlhngness to work hard for yourself
and others
VIRGO (~ug. 23·Sapt. 22) Promises
made to others wtll be upheld to the letter
today Your word Wl" be your bond, and
when you say you'll do something, you'll
mean it.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl 23) This can be a
very rewarding day nyou use your t1me,
talents and energy produchvely The
secret to personal gratification ta meanIngful mVOivements
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Today you
may finally be able lo have a serious conversat!OII with a special friend Make sura
to be forlhrightwhen say•ng what needs
to be said.

' '

•'

�- .,.. w r

•

Y,,

• : ~age 16 • The Daily Sentinel

·-

Friday, November 24, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Massive strike paralyzes French routine
lly EDUARDO CUE
Associated Press Writer
PARIS - Millions of striking workers shut banks, schools, government offices and public transpolt today to protest plans to overhaul the
&lt;;lebt-ridden social security system and partially privatize key utilities.
It was the second major strike in two months, and raised the pressure
on the 6-montb-old conservative government of Prime Minister Alain
Juppe, which is trying to cut a $64 billion budget deficit. A third strike is
planned for Tuesday.
The labor stoppages arc taking place at a time of rising tension in
France's 90 public universities, wbere many students have backed up their
demands for additional resources and teachers with weeks of strikes.
Thousands of demonstrators marched in Paris, Toulouse, Marseille,
Rennes, Bordeaux, Lyon and other cities.
In Paris, 12,000 pt:ople gathered at the Place de Ia Republique under
huge signs reading, "Together for publi c service, our status, our retiremenl~" and "Social Security is Life." Drums were banged and colorful
balloons were painted with slogans.

''This is a demonstration rich in meaning and import because it
involves an issue of considerable impoltance to the French - the protection of their social security system, •• Louis Viannet, head of the Communist-led CGT union, told Associated Press Television as he marched
through the capital.
Unions representing about 5 million public employees are upset over
plans to increase taxes and extend the number of years they must pay into
the social security system before they can retire .
Pubiic transportation ground to a near halt in Paris and several major
provincial cities. Mail and newspapers went undelivered, and most
schools, banks, museums and government offices were closed. llospit;d
services were scaled back and electrical power was reduced. IIK&gt;II~h olli cials said customers were not affected.
All commuter and long-distance traii1 trallic wa.s hallc&lt;t llus mornirog
with the exc-eption of a few high-SJll.'Cd trains. Tero ol IZ lrairos lirok iow
Paris with London under the English ('harouel were "hnlrolnl111 Olll'J:Oi c
as usual, hut protesters prevented two ol the trains lnun kav&lt;n)~ l':om th"
morning.
Only 16 percent of scheduled lli~llls opnalcot , It,. l'ml AYI:tllllll

Administration reported.
Unions represen ting workers at some private companies issued strike
calls, but it was nol inunediately clear to what extent they were being followed.
The French economy shows serious signs of slowing. It grew at an
annual rate of just I percent over the past six months, and government
experts have revised their forecast' of next year's growth down by nearly
.
a third to 2 percent.
" We need the courage to reform social security, to control our deficits,
the courage of reforming taxes and the universities." Foreign Minister
Herve de Charette told France Inter radio. " If we don't , it will get
worse
Th.c government's pr(lposals to close a $46 billion social security
deficit include tax hikes and extending the number of years a public
employee must pay into the ,,ystem from 37 112 to 40.
Working in Juppc's favor is a split within the French labor movement.
The French Democratic Confederation of Workers, one of the three
largest labor unions. supports some key clements in the government's
plan.

:S. Korean president pledges punishment for massacre
ing industrialist.s with bribing Rob
By SANG-HUN CHOE
Associated Press Writer
in exchange for lucrative governSEOUL. South Korea - Presi- ment contracts.
Public anger at lh e Kwangju
·dent Kim Young-sam said today he
. will lei two of his predecessors be massacre is still so strong that a
dcmonslration on its anniversary
prosecute~ for a 1980 attack that
killed 200 pro-democracy demon - last May drew 7,000 people who
.strators in the southern city of demanded punishment for Rob and
former President Chun Doo-hwan.
:Kwangju.
Both men were army generals in
: Kim appeared to be trying to
:distance himself from the country's 1980, and sent paratroops and tanks
former soldier-leaders and a slush 1o attack the demon strators , who
(und scandal involving one of were opposed to a military junta set
up by the pair after a coup. AI'Klut
them, Rob Tae-Woo.
Also today, news repons quoted 2,800 people also were injured.
Rob was jailed last week on
prosecutors who sa id they have
enough evidence to charge 24 lead- bribery charges, becoming the first

South Korean president to face
legal action for misdeL'Ils in office.
If convicted, he could face 10 year~
to life in prison.
Kim, who has promised to end
the corruption that flourished under
previous military governments, is
eager to put U1e scandal behind him
before April parliamentary elections.
He said his ruling Democratic
Liberal Party, which was Rob's
party, will pass a law allowing punishment for Ute K wangju attack.
Since the scandal broke last
month, prosecutors have grilled J6
business leaders about how Rob

collected the $&lt;\50 million sc~:rct saym~ .
KtM&gt; Ja-kyong of LCi. formerly
fund he has admillcd maintaining
Uoldstar, and Samsung's
Lucky
when he was president from J&lt;Jgx
Lee
Kun-hcc
allegedly were reportto 1993.
to
have
contributed lesser
ed
Prosecution oflicials refused to
comment on the reports today that amounls.
Rob has rcspooded to the corthey would charge business leaders
ruption charges by maintaining that
as early as next week .
The list of those expt:cted to be he was following the entrenched
charged includes nearly all of the practice of his predecessors when
he accepted donations from busicountry's major conglomerates.
Chung Ju-yung, founder of the nesses. Businessmen also backed
Hyundai conglomerate, and Kim Rob 's claim that the money was
Woo-choong, head of the Daewoo not bribes.
Businessmen found guilty of
Business Group, topped the list by
giving Rob $19.5 million each in offering bribes to government offibribes. prosecutors were quoted as cials could face up to five years in
prison. But news repolts said most

of the 24 businessmen would walk
away with·light punishment. except
for two or three involved in the
worst cases.

Holiday
happenings:
Creating a
festive mood

A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

.... 1n inQat
will lleve

In

Big bucks:

of
the

of the

abc

18 countltl

to

ca~norl•

lng Wildlife District_~41 ,(~~!~~
lncludel both Gallla
counties), -son c1ate1
yeilr are Monday through
2, and Dec. 4 through Dec. 8. No
Sunday hunting Ia ptlm'llftad.
Hunting hour~ statewide are
one-baH hour before sunrise to
aunaet and dear must be
chec:kadlltenofflclaldeercheck
.-uon by 8 p.m. following the
day of hsrvet l, .vllh the excepof deer ldllad on Batutdeys
muat be c:hecl!ed by 8

OPEN HOU~E
ounday, November 26th
12 pm to 5 pm

I ct Diamond
Tennis Bracelet

Middleport
•

Layaways

Big
Savint{s!

Reg. $299
2 Days
Only!!

On1ll 45

OPEN
9·8 DAILY
1·5 SUNDAY

.

Vol. 30, No. 42

nesses and a number of
carryouiS, and Brandeberry
was quick to point out the
responsibility of tavern and
restaurant owners in not allowing impaired patrons to
drive.
"I have to give them credit
through April I 995. Brandeberry sai d. At that time. the
for policing themselves. enenforce ment had not been stre ssed, he added. but incouraging people not lo drink
creased vogolance by night shifl officers has marle an
and drive and callmg cabs for
impact.
those who are in no shape to
"A very log ica l conclu sion to me bears out what thC
drive," he said.
night officers are saying: the drunks aren't there ,"
The city police depaltment
Brandeberry said.
is currently staffed with IS
"We will be working hard lu keep il up and maintain I he
full time officers and because
pressure.
of special problems encounThe chief saod Jh:H helping the apparent reduction os
tered during the night,
more public awareness of the consequences posed by
Brandeberry said he tends to
drunken driving. while the cutback in injury-related acciheavily man the after-dark
dents may be attributed to more usage of seatbelts.
shifts.
The latter has also been publici zed and enforced by
''The bottom Iine is. the im.statesheri ffs depanments and the Ohio State Hi ghway paired drivers are not oul there," Brandeberry noted. "I
Palfol.
think the impaired driver in the city may be the exception
The ci ty has nine on-site alcohol consumption busi- rather than the rule."

I

Ohio club focuses
on trophy deer

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Of all
the clubs and organizations in Ohio, at least one
highly exclusive club focuses so lely on big
bucks ... literally.
The Ohio Buckeye Big
Buck Club was formed in
1957 to bring more quality white-tailed deer to
public awareness, according to the group's
mission statement.
And now, on the eve of
Ohio's ·annual deer-gun
season, many local hunters may have their sights
set on becoming eligible
for membership in the
.cl ub.
· Jaek Sauerfield Jr. of
Pomeroy, one of the: ,
club'sofficial scorers, explained the method used
to measure a set of ant·
lers while calculating the
overall score of a deer
taken during the 1980s.
While calculating the
score of a typical set of
antlers, the first measurements are of any points
that will deduct from the
BIG
Ohio Buckeye Big
alma
white-tailed
overall score. Tines less deer to public awareness. Here, official club scorer Jack
Jr. measures a
than one-inch long. extra record book-qualifying Meigs Counfy buck In the dining room of his Pomeroy-area
tines and inconsislencies home.
in main beam length all
is ofteo widely dispul~d in some circles - some claim a
contribute to these deductions, he explained.
The rest of the job involves measurements of tine "point" is any protrusion from which a wedd in g ring will
length. circumference and the maximum inside spread, hang.
However. Satterfield said a point mu st be at least oneor distance between the antlers. The maximum outside
spread is also measured, although not scored, he com- inch l.ong with the length exceeding the width oflhe base.
On a typical set of ant lers, the scorer i.s look ing for
mented.
Continued on page A2
Exaclly what constitutes a "point'· on a deer's antlers

Meigs Online!
LAY·AWAY
ONLY 10% DOWN

290 North Second

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- November 26, 1995

GALLIPOLIS - Due 10 increased enforcement and police have conducted at undi sclosed location s have proawareness. it appears drunken driving in the city of duced fewer DUI arrests, the chief said. Only two drivers
Gallipolis is on the dec line.
were cited for DUI out of 460 stopped during the last
Statistics compi led by Police Chief Roger Brandeberry . checkpoint over the Labor Day weekend.
·show that over a six -moAth period of May through Octo"To us, thai's a phenomenal mte," Brandeberry said.
·ber, there have been no injury accidents stemming from "We'vespokentotheownerofRiverValleyTaxJbecause
drivers underthe influence. and - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - we heard the commem that
·only two hitskipaccidenls have
more drunken drivers are
been reported.during the period
• A study of a six-month period beusing cabs. The owner said
between the hours of midni ght tween May through October, shows there
that for the past severa l
and 6 a.m.
have.been no injury accidents stemming months hi s bar busi ness has
"We kind of use that as a from drivers under' the Influence, and
tripled."
measuring stick for drunks, be,
The six-month period
cause they tend to hit parked only two .hltsklp accidents have been
yielded a total of 77 DUI
cars and leave the scene." repoit~ during the period between the
arrests - the same amount
Brandeberry said.
hours of midnight and 6
for the previous reponing
Periodicsobrietycheckpoints
per iod of October 1994

Ia expectlnghunte,. to harvest
around 200,000 deer this year,
Which would ahatter laat y1111r'1
record of 170;527 deer. .
To teejp meet this goal, htint·

Annual Christmas

on Page A2

Increased DUI enforcement leads
to ·reduction in accidents, arrests

son.
· .. ·
. 1l14i OhiO Division of Wildlife

Dans

L....;;.;.;;,;.;,;~:..J

tmts--

POMEROY- Whh bhlo's recently expanded deer~n season opening Monday morning,
hunts,. here In southeastern
Ohio llboukl have plentY of opportu~ to bring.home veni-

'

Details

•

Deer-gun season
starts Monday

You're Invited to Attend

·PageA3

Michigan defeats O.S.U. • Page 81

Featured on page C·1

a.m. ·

Preservation program rescues forgotten public art

The Place For Western and Work

Landfill opens in Wellst~n

Officials hope
to establish
local/ink
. to Internet

Historical
preservation:
City to consider proposed
ordinance early in 1996
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS -- The Gallipolis City Commission will consider an historical
preservation ordinance probably by its first meeting of 1996, City Manager
Matthew Coppler
said Tuesday.
A current ordinance was tabled
Nov. 7 by the commission after commissioners became
concerned with
what it felt was severity of its language, and its impact·on the code enforcement office
and the city planning
commission.
Coppler told commissioners he had
met earlier Tuesday PRESERVATION ORDINANCE- The Gallipolis City
with Kim Sheets- Commission will consider an historical preservation
Schuelle.directorof ordinance probably by its lirst meeting of 1996,
. the Ohio Valley according to Cify Man~~er Matthew CQpp!er.
Visitors Center, and
a representative of the Ohio Historical Preservation Office.lo discuss revisions
to the legislation.
·
Both Sheets-Schuette and the OHPO agreed to remove what Coppler called :
the "more ominous" sections of the ordinance, which has undergone rev iew :
and revisions since September.
Sheels-Schuette and the OHPO, citing concern over the loss of the city's :
hi storical look, suggested 10 the commissi on in October 1994 lhe creation of:
an historical review bo~rd and procedures to preserve Gallipolis' lwo centu- ·
ries-old heritage.
·
Tuesday's meeting. Coppler explained. was to discuss the commission's:
concern over lhe proposed powers of historical review board. and to sec what ·
other communities that created similar boards have done.
·
Continued on page A2

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Through Gallia-Meigs CAA

Application period for emergency, regular HEAP continues

By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
Economics and Finance
POMEROY - Meigs
County officials are seeking
Ellltor's ChoiC!S
local user access 10 their new6ur-eolj 4 I I ran)portot 'on Stat 'st ic 1
est economic development
CangrtHional Econo•lc l eoder1hio
tool, the World Wide Web
Econo1 ic Bulletin Hoo-d
Econo•i r Conuer,ion lnl~ao ti on Exchongt
and the Internet, according to
( eono••U !So• Houston Stah U. )
Meigs County Economic De(eonot lt , - Un i eh
feda,.ol Info. E ~c hor.ge (~ (0110
velopment director Julia
f il"l&lt;lncanat (tlo tlonol Pe rlor-anc• At vl••l
~ovt .
s IUS I. Uor ld)
Houdashelt.
"Several companies world
wide use the Internet to obtain information on areas for
RESTRICTED ACCESS - Currently the
potential busi ness develop- system can only be accessed through on·
ment. The Internet has be- line services such as America On·Une and
come a valuable tool for many CompuServe, or through Ohio University In
areas across the country, and .Athen's, with long dlatance telephone
all over the world, to attract charges along with user fees.
new business and jobs to areas slich as Meigs County," Houdashelt stated.
"Home pages" on the Internet have become commonplace for economic
development and special interest groups alike . With the number of Internet
users worldwide increasing daily, the world-wide network is the next necessary step for groups seeking to improve their areas with new businesses an\f job
development.
·
A local advisory group has been set up to seek information and obtai11 grants
to set up local Internei access to the Meigs County Public Library. Currently
the system can only be accessed through on-line services such as America OnLine and CompuServe, or through Ohio University in Athens, with long
Continued on page A2
t i bo- o~!;

CHESHIRE - The application period for both
Emergency and Regular HEAP programs continues
forthe 1995 -96 heatingseason.Gallia-MeigsCommunity Action Agency announced.
Bolh programs otTer one-time assistance per heating
season to· income-eligible households.
Emergency HEAP is a crisis intervention program
designed to relieve heat-related emergencies for households experiencing di sconnection. threat of disconneclion or bulk fuel that will last no longer than 10 days.
Regular HEAP is additional heating assistance available to low-income Ohioans. Assistance in completing
these applications can also be provided by HEAP staff
at CAA' s Cheshire office orthe CAA Oulfeach offices
in Gallia and Meigs counties.
To be eligible for the program. both the income
guidelines and the emergency requirement must be
met. House hold income is defined as gross income of
all household members. except earned income of dependentJninors aged 18.
Allowable annual income for a one-person household is $11,205; two persons, $15,045: three people,
$18,885; four people, $22,725: five people, $26,565;
six people, $30,405: and for households with more
. than six members, add $3,840 for each additional

member.
Applications are
also available for • Emergency HEA" I• a crl·
the Regular HEAP sis Intervention p!'()9ram de·
program, which is algnad to relieve heat·ralafed
additional heating eme~!e8 for households;
assistanceforanon- experiericlng dlaconnec:tlon,'•
emergency nature. threat . Of dlsconnectron Or
The income guide- bulk\ fUel tt~at wll! lila( no~
lines are the same Ionge!! than 10 'dey&amp;. , ~ . ,;
for both programs.
The dead! ine for
Regular HEAP applications is March 15. 1996.
Application for both programs can be made Monday
through Thursday from 9 a.m.-noon and I-3 p.m. al either
the Gallia County CAA Outreach Office, 863 Poner Road,
Porter: the Meigs County CAA Outreach Office, 39350
Union Ave., Pomeroy;orthecentraiCAAoffice in Cheshire.
No applications are taken on Friday.
The Cheshire office can be reached at 367-7341 for
Gallia County; 992-6620 or 992-6629 for Meigs County;
the Galli a County Outreach number is 388-8232: the Meigs
County Outreach number is 992-5605.The toll-free hot line
for inquiries on Regular HEAP applications is 1-800-2820880.

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections- 234 Pages
Business
Calendars
Classifieds
.Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
C2&amp;5
D3-7
Insert
A4
A3
A6
Bl-8
Cl
A2

Columns
Jack Anderson
Jim Sands
Dorothy Savre
Bruce Williams
C JMS, Of'lio Va!Wy PuhUshlaa Ce.

State sets hearing on public release of pulp mill documents
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)- The state Development Office is sc hed- velopment Office, submitted the affidavit in response to a lawsuit filed in
uled Dec. 13 to argue why it should not refuse documents concerning efforts May by The Charleston Gazette. The newspaper is seeking the release of
to lure a company into building a $1 billion pulp mill in Mason County.
documents related to the mill in Apple Grove proposed by Parsons &amp;
Kanawha County Circuit Judge Herman Canady Jr. ordered the Develop- Whittemore of Rye Brook, N.Y.
ment Office to release an affidavit outlining why the Caperton administraDocuments withheld include-memos on "various requests for governmention wants the records kept secret.
tal and private assistance from Parsons &amp; Whitlemore and various responses,
Rolland Phillips, an industrial development representative with the De- proposal, counterproposal and information needed to be supplied."

•

I

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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31190">
              <text>November 24, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1438">
      <name>nease</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="135">
      <name>saunders</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="738">
      <name>zerkle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
