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Page 14 • The Daily Sentlne~

WedneSday, December 13, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 14, 1995

~ongress :partially backs troop deployment

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.Jiy JOHN DIAMOND
Associated Press Writer
.
... · WASHINGTON - Congress gave the White House partial backing
;ror its Bosnia policy after casting a jiiDible of votes that both supponed
'lind opposed the deployment of American troops to the region.
· " The key vote came with Senate passage late Wednesday of a measure
.' j)ermitting President Clinton to "fulfill his commilment" to send the
. peacekeepers.
., · It wasn't much, but it was enough for Clinton to assert that be took his
policy to Capitol Hill and came away with a favaable vote.
. "I was quite pleased with where the Congress came out yesterday,
'Coolpared with wbere they were just a month ago," Clinton said today at
a meeting with three Balkan· leaders at the U.S. Embassy residence in
l&gt;aris. ''The time for debate is over. The time for decision is at band, and I
believe the United States Congress will rally behind our troops in this
· iilission."

·1

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. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)

+- The state Development Office

plans to appeal to the nate
Supreme Court an order requiring
cbe asency to hand over more docUments cooceming efforts to lure a
pulp mill to Mason County.
- Assistant Attorney General Don
. Darling said hC plans to ~ ~
rillinl! by Kanawha County Circuit

ROU

Franks .............~~!:~!~..

1udp. l:fe~

Gl1!¥14Y· ~ j~dge

cin Wednesday did not indicate
llow many or which documents be
.would'lllljkc lifJbUC. . · ' "· ·

FISCHER BREAKFAST

S129
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. The action stelilllled from a lawsuit filed io May by The Charlestoii
t/t1Zttlt after agency of{icials
111fused to release documenti-relat·
iag to the $1.1 billion project
Apple Grove, along the

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s199

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; Canady said be would hold the
recOrds until Tuesday.
: Also Wedllesday, Canady ruled
tile development office must pay
m:ore than $5,000 in fees to
Cjlarleston attorney Tom Hayes,
who belped Canady review contestee documents.
::.Opponents of the project conlllild the mill would furtber pollute
till river with dioxin, a byproduct
of 'the bleaching process that causes
cincer. Gov. Gaston Caperton is
b4cking the mill, saying it would .
ceatejobs.

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PARKAY

• The agency bas claimed the doc·
11111ents can be withheld under ibe
ftderal Freedom of Information
%t beawse they are in1emal memOfllllda or letters.
• According to other records
already released, Parsons &amp; Whit·
tc1more Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y ..
~quested $200 million in state
IQBIIs, tax credits and exemptions to
bUild the mill.
; The newspaper is seeking the
off~ce's replies to those requcsu.
·: Darling requested the documents not be released for 30 days
lli give him time to file the appeal.
B.ut Suzanne Wiese, the newspa·
per's attorney, contended the office
bas bad seven months to explain
Why the documents should be witb·
bllld.
.

HEINZ
SQUEEZE
KETCHUP
28

FIELD TRIAL
CHUNK DOG
FOOD

..

By TOM BUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Students .at Chester Elementary are gettiilg a fmt·band loot
at aspects of theatre production,
courtesy of a program funded
through the Ohio Arts and the
Riverbend Am COWK:ils.
With a twist of local history
thrown into the aeative mix, the
students have poduced their ftrst
original theatrical work which
focuses on the infamous "Morgan's Raid."
.
The march through the mall
Meigs Coon~ villagtl d!U'ing the
Civil War wiq be depleted by students In a"'jj'resentation at 7
tonight at the school.
Steven Anderson, co-founder
and artistic dllb:tor of ColUDibus'
Phoenix Theatre Circle, has
wprked daily with the students
since Dec. 4 on the arts progllllll.
Anderson,' ·a well•recognized
children's p~Ji.iwright, bas played
an active part the Ohio Theatre
Alliance, the ~erican Theatre .
Alliance for Theatre and Educa·
lion, and the Ailsociation for The·
aue and Disability. He bas also
been recogn~ by the ColiiDibus
City Couocil fdr his ongoing contribution 'to theatre for young
audiences in Clintral Ohio.
Anderson :Said the students
have worked ·o'n the three major
aspects of th~aue: cooperation,
concentration and a certain
amount of imajlination, as well as
learning the g~neral as~cts of
theatre ~rodudil&gt;o and wnung.
"We ve tried to move the kids
into learningra new way. We
allowed ibem iii concentrate more
on getting· their ideas down on
paper. A certain amount of cooperation, concenlration and imagi- .
nation is required in ibeatre, and
also in the learning process in
education. Whafwe're doing here
is working togt;ther," Anderson
explained.
··
The students have prepared
their presentations usmg local
history and folklore as background informatlon, accmling to
teacher Pat Sbrilm.
Seniors who reside in the community have visited the school to
pass on stories that have come
down through the generations on
the Civil War raid that destroyed
the bridge over. Shade River at

1

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Also discussed during the meetSentinel News Stair
ing conducted by Jim Andersop,
Plans for a Christmas program president, was the traffic light at
to be held Monday evening on the Court and Main which has been
stage in Pomeroy's upper parking malfunctioning for the past week.
lot were made during Wednesday's
Bill Quickel described it as a
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants dangerous situation not only to
Association.
motorists but also to pedestrians
The program will get underway trying to get back and forth across
at 7 p.m., with Jim Soulsby as the street without the benefit of the
emcee.
stop light.
•
Included on the progllllll will be
Pomeroy Village Councilman
a medley of holiday music by an George Wright advised the merensemble from the Meigs Higb , chants that the light needs repair ·.
School Marauder Band directed by work and that the part l!as been..
Toney Dingess, selections by a ordered.
men's choral group, entenainment
It was proposed that the interby Vivian May and the Big Bend section be turned into a four-way
Cloggers doing their Country stop street until the repair is m.'Jde.
Cbrisunas program in lighted cos- Wright said he would check with
tuming, a Christmas vocal by the appropriate officials to see if
Soulsby, and a visit from Santa that is feasible, and if the light can
with treats for the youngsters.
be progranuned to make it blink
Stores will remain open until 8 red in all four directions.
p.m. for the convenience of shopTbe petitions to have parking
pers.
meters removed in the village preProgress on the revitalization · sented to Pomeroy Village Council
project was discussed during the Monday night were not from the
meeting. It was noted that work is .Pomeroy Merchants Association,
progressing nicely on the prome- Anderson said.
nade and ibe gazebo in the upper
The petitions were circulated by
parking lot.
business people, but not on behalf
The water line installation on of the association, it was noted by
West Main Street, the traffic tie up the president.
it is causing, and the way it is
As for the annual election of
adversely affecting business in the officers, it was postponed until the
village was discussed. .
. January meeting.

m

THEATRE STUDENTS- Steven Anderson,·co-rounder and
artbtlc director of Columbus' Phoenix Theatre Circle, works
with students at Chester Elementary during a concentration
exercise Tuesday. Anderson bas been working with the s.tudenls
for two weeks as part of a pl'flf!l'am that Introduces the students
to the aspects of theatre production. (Sentinel photo)
Chester, and saw Union Army
troops cross the shallowest part
of the river to continue their
marcb.

"Writing on Morgan's Raid
has really given the kids an
opportunity to look at this area
from the sense of pride and history that really does exists here.
Oftentimes. we overlook what we

have in a community. I think tl1e
kids never before grasped the
idea that 'something was here
before I was here.' It's really
been interesting," said Anderson.
The students took a first-hand
look behind the scenes of an actual theatre production when they
visited the Riffe Center in
(Continued on Page 3)

two deaths are attributed
(o slippery road conditions

20LB.

It Tbe ~-led Preas

"': Winter is still a week away, but
oans got a preview as ice and
zing rain covered pans of the
llite, causing fender·benden and at
ll:list one fatal accident,
~ · A sllldent driver and his lnstrucIii; were killed when their car spun
Oilt of conuol on an icy stretch of
Obio 72 in Orecoc County about 4
)!.in. Wednesday and bit an Ohio
~partment of Transponation salt
tiai:k, the State Highway Patrol
said.
· ; · kjtled were David Harber Jr.,
!!:~or Enon, and his iastructor,
I:'IUflCia Hawes, 47, of Cedarville,
slid Karol Holloway, a dispatclw
a.t .thc patrol's Xenia post. The
!flick d~lvcr waa not seriously
iliJ!Irecl, she said. ·
'
·•Frcc;zing rain bit Cinclnnali durin&amp; rush hour Wednesday momill&amp;,
bill m01t of lite ice on the roads had
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''It does su~ .our men and wome~ in uniform.'' By helping the Bosnians, Dole ~d, W~MUve prov1ded an exit strategy, a way to extricate Amencan&amp;.J&gt;y
g and trammg the Bosnians so that they can be
an illdependent fOI'Ce d we can go borne.'·
But the House passed its own measure, 287-141, raising "concerns
and opposition to the president's policy." And when word of the Sena,te
passage of the Dole-McCain measure reached the House Wednesday
evening and Democrats asked that it be considered today, Republicans
rejected that proposal.
In contrast to ibe Senate suppon for rearming the Bosnian government,
the House-passed measure states that the United States must remain strictly neutral.
Reps. Stephen Buyer, R-Ind., and Ike Skelton, D-Mo .. authors of the
House-passed measure, argued that if the United States takes sides, 'ils
peacekeepers will be threatened.

.

·pulp mill data
·:Still confidential

THORNAPPLE VALLEY

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As weary lawmakers ftled borne, Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole
said, "He can fairly say, certainly, be's got congressional support."
The only issue on which both the House and Senate agreed after 15
hours of debate was that Congress would not cut off funding for the
troops. Such a cutoff grew increasingly impr!!bable as television news
sbowed images of record snow falling on the first U.S. troops arriving in
Bosnia.
Today's treaty signing in Paris sets in motion tl1c.main body of tlie
NATO deployment, which wiU consist of 60,000 NATO troops, a third of
them American.
The key Senate resolution, crafted by Dole and Sen. John McCain, RAriz., and approved 69-30, expressed grudging acceptance of the deployment of 20,000 U.S. ground bOOps. It noted that the mission should last
oo longer than about a year and that the United States must help rcann the
Bosnian government.
•'This resolution does not endorse the president's decision,'' Dole said.

.A ppeal
Program allows Chester Association plans
.Jn works students to take to stage Pomeroy holiday
·oevelopment
program Monday
office maintains

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turned to slush by mid-afternoon.
No serious .accidents were
reported, but th.e re were many
minor CIISbes as the freezing rain
left even the sUg4~st incline diffi.
cult to master.
,.
Chad Payne, 17. spent a half
bout trying to get his car up a mall
bill on his way to classes at St.
Xavier High School, In Cincinnati.
His car slid sideways, nearly bitting
two parked vehicles before coming
to rest perpendicular to the sidewall:.

"Man, this is wild," Payne said
after a balf-dozen.people helped
push his car al!ainst the curb. "I
didn't thlilk it waa ever going to
stopslidiog."
,
·
Debbie Self, disparchef with the
patrol's Sprinafteld post, said the
freezing conditions bad forced
many vehicles off of 1-70 into
ditches.

•

BATILING ICE - A USAlr employee de-Iced a plane at Port
Columbus International Airport Wednesday after the area was It
with snow, then later freezlna rain, prompting the de-Icing.
Although lllOW wu on tbe around, temperatures are expected to
be near 5I later Ibis week. (AP)
.

•

Gannett's Piedmont
newspaper division
·to be led by Mebane
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - Former Multimedia Inc. executive
William deB. "Bern" Mebane bas been named senior group president of
Gannett Co. Inc.'s new Piedmont Newspaper Group.
Gannett. ibe nation's largest newspaper publisher, bought Multimedia
in a $1.7 billion deal that closed Dec. 4.
The Piedmont ~roup includes The Daily Seminel of Pomeroy-Middlepon, the Gllllipo/Js Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant (W.Va) Register, and
other former Multimedia newspapers in Greenville, S.C.; Asheville, N.C.;
Montgomery, Ala.; Staunton, Va.; and Mountain Home, Ark.
It also includes_ th~ regionai.Gannett newspapers: The Huntington
(W.Va.) HertJid-DupaJch, the Manella T11nes and the Chillicothe Gautte.
Mebane, 46, joined Multimedia In 1971 and bad served a~ president of
the subsidiary Multimedia Newspaper Co. since 1979. He will continue to
be. based in Greenville, S.C.

Consumer group seeking
refund from Columbia Gas
COLUMBUS (AP) -The CitiCitizen Action says the plan was
zen Action consumer watchdog a ripoff.
sroup bas asked slate regulators to
"ConslDilers should get the full
order Columbia Gas of Ohio to amount of the overcharges, at least
refund customers $13.2 million it $13.2 million," the group said in a
says they were ovescbarged during statement.
a trial billing plan last winter.
. Columbia Gas spokesman Jim
Citizen Action flied a complaint :Vitak_ said the company has no
on Wedneday with the Public Utili· mtent10n of refunding $13.2 milties Commission of Ohio over lion. "We're at a loss to find anyColumbia's "weather nonnaliza· thing like $13 million."
lion plan," adopted as pan of a $47
He said the weather normalizamillion rate Increase but abandoned tion adjustment cost the average
after a public outcry.
residential customer $2.38 over
The plan was designed to level five months.
out the peaks and valleys in
Vitak said that if the program
Columbia's Income by adding was in effect this winter - which
Slllall charges to natural gas bills bas been on an aveflllle 20 percent
during warmer winter weather and colder than last year - gas bills
reducing biUs sllghtly during colder would have been slightly lower
weather.
than they have been.
Custllfllets could not wtderstand
PUCO spokesman Dick Kimwhy their bills went up during mins said Columbia will have 20
unseasonably warm weather last days to respond to the complaint
winter. Columbia halted the pro- The commission must then deci&lt;k
gram but kept the add-on charges.
if it will investigate the complaint
or throw it out.

\~

'()

�•

Commentar

· Page2

Thursday, l)ecember 14, 1995.

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. The) should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to cdiung and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wil l be publi shed. Letters
should be in good taste. addressing issues. not persona lities.

~ Clinton's balancing act
~ on Bosnia and budget

Local News in Brief:

Friday, Dec. 15

You wiD bear it said on New
Year's Day that the first baby
boom baby bas reached age SO.
Like so much else about that
cussed cobon, it will be wrong.
World War II didn't end until
August of 1945 . It toot a few
mooths to get the Gls out of armed
service, and into parental service.
America dido 't go into beat until
late 1945. And so, tbe first of the
boomers wasn't born until autumn
of 1946. So just wait a while to celel:nte, or deprecate, the 50th binb;
day of the fust boomers.
In any event. they're ooming a1
us. Their advent caused problems.
Now their oncoming maturity is
causing other problems. (Luckily, I
have a partial solution.)
Problems are what come when
there are 50 million binbs during
the 18 years from 1927 to 1945 and then 76 million birtbs in the
next 18 years, from 1946 to 1964.
During the boom, pregnancy
became contagious, lasting far
~ond any p051-w~ catcb.-up.

Upon arrival, tbe boomers creat- Security and Medicare get strained.
ed a housing shortage. America ·Therc:'s ·nothing inherently wrong
created suburbia. They flooded the with a Ponzi game. Life itself is
elementary sebools. America built such a game. Parents take care of
children. The children grow up and
take care of their own children,
Ben Wattenberg
directly, and their own parents,
schools . They went to college. indirectly, through Social Security
America built colleges. Some and Medicare taxes.
But what happens when lol.'i of
boomer activists modestly
children
grow up and bear few chilannounced that they were the
dren
1
When
the big cobon reaches
smanest generation ever, and that
America was immoral. America age 65, there will not be enough
worker bees to support them in the
stopped a war for them.
Then something funny hap- fashion they ·expect. Tbat means
pened. As the boomers began either increased taxes on the workreaching adulthood, American fer- er bees or less benefits for the
tility rates sank rapidly. At the retired bees. "Less benefits" is
baby boom's peak (1957), women what is driving the current debate
were bearing an average of 3.8 about Medicare reform. When th;lt
children over the course of a life- is finished, we will start arguin~
lime. A ge!Mlration later (1976), the about " less benefits" in Social
Security.
rate was down to I.7!
The reforms !Mled not be dracoThat birth dearth caused a
demographic deficit which ulti- nian. Retiring a couple of years
mately translates into a long-term later is not a disaster, particularly
budget deficit. Why? Because the because adults are living so much
cbaia letter games called Social _longer. But boaners are not accus-

ANO~'S NOT
QlbN\Ut~tN'
SANDAL~.

:added.

~~be's doing pretty wen·. It seems his message bas been clear,

,US appear$1Ces have been planned and have direction. I would judge last
mooth to be the best of his presidency," Fitzwater said.
: Clintoo, wllose fascinalioo and immersion in budget details once drove
)leDiii staff members to distraction, is putting some of the same attention
to detail into Bosnia, his chief spokesman, Mike McCurry, said.
: "He's focused on the U.S. forces overseas. He asks very specific ques).ions on deployment,'' McCurry said.
· Clintoo bas delegated most of the budget negotiations with the GOPled Congress to his chief of staff, Leon Panetta, suitably positioned by
:v;rtue of having been chairman of the House Budget Committee.
· By contrast, Bush chief of staff John Sununu bad little experience in
negotiating with Congress and wound up alienating congressi&lt;lrtal budget
writers of both parties.
Clinton begins most days with a briefing from bis national security
adviser, Antbooy Lake.
.
He's rearranged his time to leave afternoons free from appointrnenl.'i or
public appearances and now spends most afternoons on the phone, "75
pen:ent to 85 pen;ent devoted to Bosnia," McCurry said. "He also bas
regular meetings with Panella and Lake and makes lime available to talk
to (Seaetary of State Warren) Christopher as needed.''
"I think his mind is concentrated very heavily on the fact that be is
sending people into harm's way. The budget follies loot less important."
the spokesman said.
Busb, whom Clinton criticized in the campaign for spending too much
time oo international policy, could empathize with tha~ Fitzwater suggested.

"It's the most personal bond between a president and the people of his
country. Mothers and fathers entrust the lives of their sons and daughters
to the president- and be feels it, ' ' Bush's former spokesman said.
Clinton's decision is not without political dauger. Even though he's
woo the suppM of Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole and former Presidenl.'i Busb and Carter, ~ericans remain deeply skeptical.
Conservative GOP candidates Phil Gramm and Pat Bucbanan are daily
beating up on both Clinton and Dole for the move. ''I've fonnd almost no
support for putting an American army in Bosnia l"ve seen great disappointment." Buchanan said Tuesday.
"I think be's doing what he thinks is the right thing," said University
ofTexas political scientist Bruce Buchanan (no relation). "It's risky. He's
out there without a net. But it's the kind of thing that, in the long run, if it
works out. will make him look courageous."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers the White House and national
politics for The Associated Press.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Dec. 14, the 348th day of 1995. There are 17 days
left in the year. ·
Today' s Highlight in History:
,
On Dec. 14, 1799, the fust president of the United States, George Washington, died at his Mount Vernon bane at age 67, nearly three years after
leaving offtce.
On Ibis dale:
In 1819, Alabama joined the Uoioo ~~2nd stale.
In 1911, Norwegian explorer Roald A!pdOOsen becariMl the flfSt man to
reach tbe South Pole, beating out an expedition led by Raben F. Scott
In 1939, tbe Sovicl Union was dropped frooi tbe League of Nations.
In 1945, Josef Klamer, known as "the beast of Belsen,'.' and 10 others
were banged in Hameln for crimes committed at the Belsen and
Auschwitz Nazi ooncenuation camps.
1Ji 1946, the United Nations General Assembly voted to establish the
U.N.'s headquarters in New York.
In 1962, the U.S. space probe Mariner II approached Venus, transmitting information about the planet's atmosphere and surface temperature.
In 1975, six South Moluccan extremisl.'i surrendered to police after
holding 23 persons hostage for 12 days on a train near the Dutch town of
Beileo.
In 1981 , Israel annexed the Golan Heights. which it bad seized from
Syria in 1967.
In 1986. the experimental airaaft Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan and
Jeana Yeager, took off from Edwards Air Force Base in California on the
f'U1t noo-stop, 11011-refueled llight around the world.
Ten years ago: Former New York Yankees outfielder Roger Maris,
wbo bit61 home nms during the 1961 stawn,'died in Houston at age 51.
W'llma Mankiller became the fiiSI woman to lead a major American Indian tribe as she formally took office as principal chief of the Cherokee
Nation of Oklaboma.

{=UP R.lP FLlP FUP .. FLIP ..
f\51' flOP R.~ _-~ .·:·.~L{P.... F~Qp

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tomed to geuing less. They turn
·blue and throw their rattles out of
the crib. This makes their elected
representatives !Mlrvous.
Is there a free lunch some. where? Sort of. What is needed is
an artificial generation of yourig
adults. They would pay into 111e
pension systems the moneys not
paid by the never-born children l)f
the boomers.
There is a word for an "artificial generation of young adults." It
is "immigrant.s ." They typically
arrive m Amenca at about age 25,
work bard and pay pension payroll
taxes for 40 years before retirin~ .
Tbe most recent Census Bureau
projections sbow that America wiU
have a total population of 326 million people in 2020 if immigration
rates stay roughly at current levels
(880,000 per year). But if immigration went up somewhat (1,370,000
per year), the total population
would be 342 million.
That's 16 million more people,
of whom, only I million would lie
over age 65. The rest would either
be adull.'i paying into the system Of
children who will be paying intiJ
the system in the future. That's a
lot of extra payers. Accordingly,
the idea of "less benefits" would
be diminished. It would put about
SIOO billion more into Social Security by 2020 and about $200 billion
by 2030 when the financial pres. sures on Social Security will
beoome most acute.
And so, one would think that
our elected representatives would
be working on legislation to raise
immigration . Wrong. They are
working on legislation to reduce
immigration. Silly, bub?
There are problems with the current immigration system. But extra
people is not one of them. New
immigration legislation will likely
reach the floor of Congress in early
1996. It should be re-shaped, a
topic to be explored in Ibis space
soon.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, Is the author of a new
book, "Values Matter Most,"
and is the host of the weekly pub' lie television program, "Think
'. Tank."

a document from Philip Morris
Cos. that called cigarettes a "nicotine-delivery system," giving credence to our eforts at the Food and

Michael Gartner

Helen Margaret Campbell, 67, of Branchland, W.Va., died Monday,
Dec. It, 1995 in the McCollough-Hyde Memorial Hospital, Oxford.
Born Nov. II, 1928 in Logan, W.Va_, daughter of the late Hcrben and
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Pearl Toler of Blankenship, she was a member of the Ranger Church of
Via Associated Press GraphicsNst
C ~995 Acc:uWeather, Inc:.
Christ.
She is survived by three daughters, Jennie Leach of Syracuse, and
LaDonna Baker and Kathy Carter, both of Ranger, W.Va.; two sons.
James CampbeU of Camden, and Ray "Bobby" Campbell of Ranger; 16
grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; and one sister, Cliffie Welch
of Titusville, Fla
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the McGhee-Handley Funeral Home.
The: llightmarisb driving condiTonight ... Cioudy north. Mostly
West
Hamlin, W.Va, with ministers Clifford EUis and Jesse Williamson
tions Milt ice stoiUIS Wednesday cloudy south. Lows mid 30s to mid
officiating.
Burial will follow in Highland Memory Gardens, Godby
bad c!a5ed by the morning rush hour 40s.
Heighl.'i,
W.Va.
Friends may call a1. the funeral home from 6-9 tonight
across most of Ohio because of an
Friday ...Partly to mostly cloudy.
overnight warmup. By morning, A chance of late day rain over the
temperatures were well above southeast half. Continued mild with
freezing.
highs from 40 northeast to mid 50s
The mercury had climbed to 54 far south.
.Units of tbe Meigs County ment and squad, motor vehicle
degrees at Cincinnati by 5 am.
Extended forecast:
Emergency
Medical Service accident on Rocksprings Rqad,
Temperatures will remain above
Saturday...A chance of rain or
12
calls
ror assistance Michael Barr, treated at the scene.
recorded
freezing for most of the state snow ... Mainly over the north half
Wednesday,
including
two transfer
RACINE
tonight, the National Weather Ser- and early in the day. Lows in the
calls.
Unil.'i
responding
included:
2:10p.m.
, Racine Fire House,
vice said. Highs on Friday wiD he upper 20s to lower 30s. Highs from
MIDDLEPORT
Richard
Ward
Jr., Veterans Memo- .
in the 40s.
the mid 30s northeast to the lower
5:09
p.m.,
Powell
Street,
Hospital.
rial
The record-high temperature for 40s south.
·
·
RUTLAND
.this date at the Columbus weathe[
Sunday...Fair. Lows in the 20s . Emmett Lightfoot, Holzer Medical
Center;
4:15p.m., volunteer ftre departstation waS' 65 degrees in 190, Highs mid 30s to lower 40s.
7:06 p.m ., South Fourth ment and squad, motor vehicle
while the record low was I below,
Monday ... A chance of afternoon Avenue,
Earl Denny Jr., HMC;
accident on New Lima Road,
zero in 1898.
·
rain. Lows mid 20s to lower 30s.
Lincoln Srreet. Mar- Melissa Hart, Amber Pierce and
8:16p.m.,
Highs
in
the
upper
30s.to
mid
40s.
Weather forecast:
gretta Wolfe, HMC.
Charles Neutzling, VMH.
OLIVETWP.
SYRACUSE
11 :58 a.m., State Route 681,
--'&lt;'-c«m_._unuec~
__fr_om_Pa....;,g_et_&gt;_ _ __
9:04 a.m., State Route 124,
Sylvia Curtis, St. Joseph's Hospi- DcUa Jago, treated at the scene;
tal.
Columbus this week to view enonnous cooperative effort from
5:46 p.m., Dusky Street,
POMEROY
Anderson's latl!lit work, which be the school, the Riverbend Ans
Richard Ward Jr., HMC.
3:48 p.m., volunteer fire depanwrote and produced, Emmitt Council, and the Ohio Arts CoonTUPPERS PLAlNS
Otter's Jug band Christmas.
cil. A large number of programs
4:45 a.m., Arbaugh Addition,
"One of the great experiences funded by OAC and the National
Donald Sprague, VMH.
In the Middleport Village Counfor the kids was 10 see the back- Endowment for the Arts go 10
cil story which appeared in Tues- Grange to meet
stage area. We tried to give them benefits schools such as this Wld
Racine Grange 2606 will meet
day's Daily SentiMl, it incorrectly
a little sense of how every part of can really enhance the level of
tonight
(Thursday) 7:30p.m. at the
reported that council passed an
a theatre production comes .education," Anderson said.
hall.
Members
are reminded to take
emergency reading and adopted
together," Anderson added.
According to Sbrivers, the
fruit
and
canned
village refuse rate changes from $9
Anderson said that the cooper- program will be continued under
mili'Dii!rmm-rr.m
to $1 per resident. per month.
alive effon to bring arts pro~rams the same grant next year with the
The story should have read that
such as this to the schools of students working on visual arts.
TONIGHT
a monthly rate change from $10 to
·Meigs County and southeast Ohio Sbrivers also noted that a "Meet
POWDER
PG-U
$9 per resident. per month for vilbas been terrific.
the Artist" reception will be held
ONE
EVENING
SHOW
7:3D
lage refuse servic:e was passed and
"I've been astonished with the- - for Anderson before tonight's
STARTING FRIDAV
- -· · - - ·student presentations, beginning
adopted. Senior citizens will be
KIRSTIE ALLEY.
charged $7 per month for the serSTEVE GUTTENBERG,
The Daily Sentit:~el at 6 p.m.
·
vice.
IT TAKES TWO ~
The Daily Sentinel applogizes
(USPS 213-9601
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:3D
for the error.

·,Mild temperatures, rain
ta'ke hold of Ohio weather

EMS units log 12 calls

Program

CorrectiOn

less minute you'D have to walk in tising for would-be smokers, eduthe woods, to fall in love, to read a cation for potential young smokers.
poem, to dandle a grandchild on Nearly 25 percent of all Americans
over age 12 smoke - that's nearly
your knee.
There will be those who argue 50 million people- and it's my
we cannot afford to dismantle a goal that at least three-quarters will,
huge industry - even one that have quit by the time cigarettes are•
:
kills. Tobacco taxes bring in $12 banned in four years.
Finally, I will propose new
biUion to state and federal coffers,
they say. Tobacco costs us more grams to help those who farm the;
than S20 billion a year in health · 700,000 acres of tobacco land in·
America and to help find new jobs;
care, I reply.
It wiD not be easy for Ibis nation for the 49,000 Americans who:
to quit smoking over the next four work in the factories that produce:
years. But we will try to help.
720 biUion cigarettes each year. :
I will propose that the federal
Many prOblems Ibis nation faces •
tax on cigarettes be quadrupled on are complex, but this one is not It:
Jan. I of 1996- to 64 cents a pack can be solved. And in solving it,:
- and increased by 25 cents again America can save lives - your ~
on Jan. I of 1997. 1998 and 1999. children's lives, your parents' lives, ·
'
About 3,000 teen-agers take up your own lives.
Thank you. And I wish you ;
smoking every day, and half of
them ultimately will die from happy - and smoke-free - boli- :
smoking. But if a young man or days.
woman can make it to age 20 without smoking, the chances are be or
Gartner, editor of the Ames :
she will never take up this drug. So (Iowa) Daily Tribune, Is former ;
this increase in taxes will make editor of The Louisville Courier· :
cigarettes less affordable to at least Journal and The Des Moines '
some young people.
Register and former president ot :
I will prop05C that we use this NBC News, Write to him care of
extra tax revenue to finance anti- Gannett News Service, 1000 WUsmoking pograms for the next four son Blvd., Arlington, Va_ 22229years- clinics for smokers, adver- 0001.

Am l!le Power ....................... .37 718

-cl;ns postage pa1d at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Akzo ..............................................$6

Mclnbcr: The A s~oc iated Pre ~a . and the Ohio

Newspaper As~oc im io n .
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to ·
The Duily Sentinel. II! Court SL , Pomeroy,

·oh,o4l769

SUBSCRIM'ION RATES
By Ca rrier or Motor Routt

One Week.
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One Month... .. ...... ..........
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One Year...
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Subscritx:rs not desiring to pay the carrier mny
remit in advan ce direct to The Daily Se ntinel
on a three .~ ~~ or 12 month ha~i ~. Credit wi ll he
siven carri er ca' h week.

No

GOP opponents into likenesses of
Gingrich. In 1996, Clinton may be
somewhat more subtle, portraying
himself as the protector of mode,rau: "common ground" and a check
against GOP "extremism."
Dole, the moderate deal-milker,
is bard to cast as an extremist. So,
the Clinton strategy wOib only if
Demoaats portray Dole as an aged
puooet wbo' ll be manipulated by

tbC 1'radical" Gingrich.

TV pictures showing Dole and
Gingrich together fighting Clinton
for budget supremacy are helpful to
Dole now in GOP primaries but are
likely to be replayed during the
geoeral election to make Dole ant
as Gingrich's cat's-paw.
Thus, the more extreme, petty,
onuageous, devious and dangerous
Gingrich appears, the more the
.public will be told it needs Clinton
to keep the speaker from driving
the nation off an ideological cliff.
The speaker constantly obliges
.by roaring toward precipices. In tbe
latest instance, Clinton is attanpting to show bow reasonable be is
by producing a seven-year balanced budget. but House Republl-

Alhland OU ..................................36
AT&amp;T .................................. .671/.l
Bank One............................... .38 318
Bob l!vans ............................... l7 318
Boq-Wamer.......... .....................30

Champion lad ..............................23

wb~c ript i on

by mail permiued in

a re 3~

where home cllJTicr ~rvice i ~ available.
MAll. SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside Meigs,County
1:\ Weeks...

....... $27.30

.. ........ ...... Sl3. 82

52 Wec:k ~ . .. .
.... ......... ..
.... .. .. ~I 05.56
Ratts Outside Meigs County

IJ Weeks.........
26 Weeh ... .. ...

Morton Kondracke

Stocks

. Pub l i~hc d every afternoon , Monday lhrougtJ
Fridny, I l l Coun St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
' Ohio Valley Pub l i ~ h i ng Comrumy/Gannerl Co ..
Po meroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992 -2 156. Second

26Week!. ..

cans are threatening to close down
For instance, when asked their :
the federal government over Christ- impression of GOP plans to baJ,mas because tbey don' 1 like the ance the federal budget, 46
economic assumptions be's using.
of voters have a negative view. But:
If acting out is Gingrich's strate- asked whether they'd be more Iilce~•
gy - and no one can deny that the ly to support the GOP plan if they::
speaker bas studied MachiaveUi knew th;lt it calls for Medicare ant~
it bas its risks. Conceivably, Gin- lays to rise by 6.4 percent over~
grich could do something so outra- next seven years, voters say they~
geous that Democratic congres- would, by 60 .percent to 21 percent. =
sional candidates running against
And when informed that tbeGingricb actually win back a GOP budget doesn't call for actual=
majority and deprive him of his cul.'i in 'studentloan programs,
· speakership.
ers say by 65 percent to 19 percent•
· However, DemocratS have yello that they'd be likelier IQ support:
fashion a positive program, and them.
:
nothing that Gingrich bas done or
After being exposed to a foil set •
said so far is fatal to his leadership. of GOP "facts" about the budget=
Even the ethics complaints against plan.- that it J_Dakes no changes in l
him, while they indicate that be bas Soc1al Secunty, puts states in
played fast and I005e with tax and charge of welfare, and involves •
campaign finance laws, do not to.w~ng federal outlays rrom $13 ;
seem to involve offenses capable of trillion to $12 trillion over seven C
toppling him IY restoring a Demo- years - 57 percent approve of the ~
aa1ic majority.
package and 32 percent disapprOve. :
What's more, Republicans have
The education effort. if it worts •
plans under way to persuade the presumably will help the 1996 .~
public that their legislative program GO!' presidential candidate as well
IS nowhere near as draconian as
as GOP congressional candidates
Democrats are making it 0111 to be. mating them all seem less extreme: :
GOP ads will commence soon.
If Clinton, Gingrich and Dole come ;
Tbe effort is based on a to a seven-year balanced budget •
"megapoll" of ?,200 voters ~n agreement, that also will make the =
by six GOP polling groups, which GOP look responsible not extrem-~
shows that opposition to Republi- ist.
'
can programs turns around wben
(Morton Kondracke 18 1
the f.ublic is informed of "the . tlve editor or Roll CaU, tile•:.-:: :
facts abolnlbem.
papel' of C.pitol HIU.)
..:

Services for Grover C. Bowling, 78, of Old Town, Fla., a former area
resident. will be 2 p.m. Friday in the O'Dell Funeral Home, Montgomery,
W.Va., with the Rev. Phyllis Bowling officiating.
Mr. Bowling was a retired coal miner, restaurant owner, and heavy
equipment operator. He was a veteran of World War II, having served in
the 82nd Airborne Division as a gunnery sergeant. He served in England,
France, Italy, Sicily and North Africa under Gen. Dwight Eisenhower.
Survivors include four daughters and two sons-in-law, Barbara G. and
Jimmy Still of Blackville, S.C.. Geri L. and Scott Walton of Pomeroy,
Belioda Jrooson of Middleport. and Debra L. Jeffers or Hartford, W.Va.;
a son and daughter-in-law, Brian K. and Terri Bowling of Racine; a stepdaughter, Elizabeth Bowling of Old Town; a stepson, James Johnson of
Old Town; four brothers, Ray Bowling of Gallagher, Fla., GleQ Bowling
of Deridder, La., Pearlie Bowling or Richwood, and Ralph Bowling of
Killeen, Texas; four sisters, Joan Vila~ie of Spring Hill, Fla., Bonnie
Coot of Brooksville, Fla. Lucille Mullins of Elkban, Ind .. and Juanita
Green of Chapmanville, W.Va.; and eight grandchildren and two stepgrandchildren.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight. In lieu of !lowers contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Associalion.

Helen M. Campbell

pro-:

regardless of who is nominally at
the top of the 'GOP ticket. Congressional Democrats already are 11111ning TV ads "morpbing" their

I

W.VA .

Does Newt want Clinton re-elected?
Why does House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga., snarl, say wild
things, and otherwise keep himself
in trouble? One theory is that be
can't help himself. Another is that
his misbehavior is calculated to
keep both him and President Clinton in power.
The Machiavellian theory of
Gingricbism is that the speaker
wonldn't at all mind if Clinton beat
the 1996 GOP presidential nominee
- presumably Sen. Bob Dole, RKan . - making Gingrich the
nation's pre-eminent Republican
and, possibly, tbe front-runner for
the GOP tRsidential nomination in
2000.
So, bow does it help Gingrich to
go around blaming vicious murders
on tbe "welfare state,'' self-admittedly acting "peuy" about seatinl
arrangements aboard Air Force
One, "benching" himself one day,
and predicting stock market crasla
tbe next - aU the while raisins bis
disapproval ratings to !Mlw belgllts?
It helps because the wone Gin·
gricb looks, the better Clinton
lanka as an alternative leader for
the country. Current polls sbow
'that Clinton is beating Dole by 10
points, but the last time they were:
pitted against each other, in June,
Clintoo beat Gingridl by 20 points.
Clinton .and other Democrats
clearly intend to make Gingrich
their major opponent in 1996,

Youths facing vandalism charges

Grover C. Bowling

•lcolumbusl44•

Proposes cigarette tax be increased
AMES, Iowa - A short speech
for the president:
Good evening.
I have a sbon and simple message this evening.
Tomorrow morning I will send
the Congress a proposal that will
ultimately save the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans
every year. It wiD eventually wipe
out one of the major diseases in
Ibis nation.
I will propose that the United
States ban the sale, manufacture
and importation of cigaretu:s and
other tobacco products, effective
Jan. I of the year 2000 - on the
first day of the next century.
Nicotine is the most lethal drug
in America. Each year, more than
400,000 Americans die from smoking cigarettes. That's 20 times the
number who die from illegal drugs.
Yet cigarettes remain legal. If we
were to build a memorial to list the
names of those who died from
smoking just this year, iL would be
seven times as long as the Viemam
Veterans Memorial.
There is no donbt nicotine is a
drug . Any smoker knows that.
When cigarette makers deny that.
they simply are lying . The Wall
Srreet Jqurnaf last week unearthed

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

'The demographic deficit

: ByTOMRAUM
: Associated Press Writer
, WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton is finding , as President
• Busb did before him. that sending U.S. troops into combat is ooe of the
: m06t time-consuming and exacting endeavors a president can undertake.
For a leader who once demonstrated little interest in foreign policy,
: Clintoo is seeing more and miR of his lime consumed with details of his
: plan to send 20,000 U.S. troops to B05nia.
· It's a diffteult balancing act, dividing time between a foreign crisis and
:·a domestic ooe.
• He was leaving tonight for Paris for Tbur.;day' s signing of the Bosnia
peace treaty that his administration helped orchestrate. Then he turns
around and flies right back- to be in town Friday for the latest negotiating deadli!Ml for a budget deal.
Yet. despite his keen interest in domestic issues, Clinton is spending
:miR and more time on the Bosnia peacekeeping mission and less on the
· budgel
: "I think wbeu a president sends Americans to war, with any possibility
:of dying, that becomes the dominant factor in his life," said Marlin
•Fitzwater, who was press secretary to both Presidenl.'i Busb and Reagan.
: ''The White House continues to operate. Staff people who have specif:K: responsibilities continue to work on the budget, environmental laws,
•whatever. But tbe president's mind !Mlver gets very far from the boys and
:girls, the men and women, be's sending into harm's way," Fitzwater
In his new book "Call the Briefmg," Fitzwater described Bush's lime:c:onsuming sessions on both the Panama invasion and the Persian Gulf
;War "models of decision-making in most respects.' '
Bush's activist view of America's role in world affairs "stands in stark
:cmtnlsl'' to Clinton's earlier, more indirect approach, be wrote.
: But. in an interview, Fitzwater gave Clinton high marks for his recent

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3 ·

OHIO Weather

Thursday, December 14, 1995

AccuWeather• forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ 2 Weeks.... .

.. .... SZ9.2l

.. ....... ... $56.68
... .. .. $109.72

Charming Shop·..............................3
City Holdlng .................................ll
Federal Mogul.. ..................... .lO 118
Gannett .................................. .63 118
Goodyear T&amp;R ............................45
K-mart .....................................7 314
Lands End .............................13 718
Limited lnc. ................... ......... l7 114

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 13 - Bretton
Casto-Biact, Tracy Fellure, Mrs.
Charles Wolfe and daughter, Linda
Roberts, Connie Tbiviner, Mrs.
Kevin Knox and daughter, Mrs.
Stephen Jenkins and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Billy
Kong, daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Shriver, daughter.
Cbcsbire.
(Published with permission)

Middleport Police investigated a minor two- car accident
Wednesday afternoon, according to Officer Bruce Swift.
The accident occurred at 12:20 p.m. at the Citgo parking lot on
North Second Avenue.
Brian K. Cooper, 31, Bluefield, W.Va., was pulling away from
gas pumps at the station in bis 1988 Mazda, wben John A. Clark,
22, of Mason, W.Va., struck Cooper's vehicle with his 1977 Chevy,
police reported.
Light damage was reported to both vehicles. Clark was cited by
police for failure to yield, no insuranc ~ . and no operators license.

Sheriff's office not soliciting
Meigs Cnunty Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports his dcparunent
received approximately a dozen calls Wednesday concerning telephone solicitation for donations to police/sheriffs dcpanments.
Residents were confused and thought it was the sheriffs association , Soulsby said.
"The only organization endorsed by the Meigs County Sheriffs
Dcparuncnt is that of the Duckeye State Sheriffs Association. The
association is not curremly conducting a telephone campaign," he
said.
"If you receive a telephone call asking for a donation and you do
not wish to donate, simply tell them that you arc not interested ...
and politely hang up."

•&gt;

Middleport asks for bicycle claims
Middlepon Police arc asking anyone in the village who has a
bicycle missing to claim them from the police station within ftve
days. A good dcscripition or serial number must be given to claim
the missing bikes. For more information, visit the Middleport police
station .

Two accidents are investigated
Pomeroy Police investigated
two early morning accidents j
Wednesday that were weatherrelated, according to Chief Gerald
Rought.
. Tbe first accident occurred at ,
8:09 a.m. on Lincoln Hill. Taryn '
Doidge. 16. and Vicki K. Aul~ 38, !
both of Pomeroy, were traveling 1
down Lincoln Heighl.'i on a snow
and ice covered roadway, wben
both cars slid sideways and collid- ,
ed. Light damage was reponed .
At 8:36am., Charles Blakeslee,
85, Pomeroy, was traveling east on
Lincoln Hill at Riverview Drive
when his 1985 Lincoln slid on ice
off the right side of the roadway,
striking two metal fence posts.
No citations were issued.

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
992-2588

VINTON
· Gallia County Display
155 Main St.
388-8603

Yard

Holiday Shopping...
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•••
Stock reporll ue lhe 10:30 Lm.

Middleport accident investigated

Hospital news

People's ........................................23
Ohio Valley Bank ................. .36 Ill
One Valley ............................ .31 518
RockweU ............................... .Sl 1/.l
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... .....l9
Sboney's Inc ........... .................9 718
Star Bank ...............................611/8
Wendy lnl'l . .......................... .ll 1/8.
Worthington lnd ....................18 718

Charges wiD be filed against three Rutland area youths for spray
painting at the Rutland Park late last month, according to Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
'
. According to the report. one of the juveniles shoplifted a can of
spray paint from the Rutland Department Store, and the three went '
to the park and spray painted a building there.

Open Daily 9-5, Sun. 12-5

quotes provided by Adveot o
GaUipollo.

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MIDDLEPORT

Credit line accounts subject to credit approval.

•

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•

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....

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Dece!llber 14,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:&lt;~ Thursday, December 14, 1995
'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Shop Pomeroy for the Last 9 '~days before Christmas
Christmas JL[on · rifie iver ((95"
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NATURALIZER.
MADEUNE STUART

CONNIE.

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I

i

Open •mtil 7:00p.m. l'rNy t•vtmin~ starting Der. 18.
OPEN Surrdny Der. 2·1 9:00am until 5 p.m.

6 Months
Same as Cash

by Authorized Singer Representative

...

'3
.
..·.

.:-

®

* 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE

...
' ..'
. .,

Auditions

Reg. $349

Model CM17

. c~~

. .,,
''

NOWONLY •

..

. • .o;

... .

i

'

Jo

POMEROY

992·2284
.

.. """,

-· .

~

• ' " • II • '

Pomeroys Quality Shoe Store

Berkline Reclinerss.1e Prices sran aron1ys299
. Gun Cabinets •• New shipment Huge Selection
Curio Cabinets•••AII Sizes On Sale
Wood Rockers••Sale prices start at only
$129
Glider Rockers ••Truck load Just received
as low as s239
Desks••Roll·tops and knee hole desk all on sale
for Christmas

Women's Colognes &amp;
Perfumes

YourChoic~s%

Boy &amp; Girls
Outfits
12-24 mos.

Girls Casualwear
2T to 14

30-SOo/o off

30o/o off

.·.
Il 75o/l

~--------,_

Mon. 9:30 to 8
Tues., Sat.
9:30 to 5
· To Qualified Applicants

.9Lncferson)s
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

FREE
Christmas
Delivery

Jour

*

. Large Racks of

Christmas Wrapping
Paper

J
_________J

1/2 Price
Amity Billfolds

.Ship Your

~++

0

OJJ

Mens &amp; Womens

U

1/2 Price

.P. S.
Packages

; I
I

Stop In &amp; Clied( Out .
Otfier Safes
rrfirougfwut 71ie Store
Sfwp Local, Sfiop

'Buttons &amp; 'Bows
·• •.

100 E. Main

992-5177

Pomeroy, OH •· ·

h~~~u~~~~~~~

•

- .-"

~

•

'

Electric Razors

30% off

( ----~--~~~~H~e~r~e~!!~-

~
h

off

'

{hristmas lllradquarttrs

Buy 1 Carleton Christmas
Card &amp; receive free 79¢ machine Buy 4 ounces
Get 2 ounces
Russell Stover Santa
FREE
Box of candy
Russlee Stover Milk
Chocolate Caramel Santas
Reg

55~ ONLY 39¢

Christmas Decorations
Lights, Ornaments, Garland

1/2 Price
Bradley's Birthstone
Dolls Reg. $19.95

ONLv$13.49

u......

OlAMON
141 DIAMOND
~BAND IIN-nfft~Y RINGS

Comic.Books

2o% off
NoNonsense Hos

30% off

I

1/2 CARAT DIAMOND BlACK HillS
HEARTPENDANT
GOlD · ~Ar·e••s

$595.00

·...------. IILD am
24 INCH
cm!IS IS.GD FRESH WA~~-

PEARLS
$49.95

25% OFf

�•
- . :

~ ~P=ag~e:6~·~T~he~D:al~ly~Se:n~t:in:e:I___________________________________
P~om
__e_ro~y~·-M__Id_d_le~p-o_rt~,-O_h_io____~

-~-cases resolved in Meigs County Court
~.

The following cases were
resolved last week in !he Meigs
County Coun of Judge Patrick H.
O' Brien .
Fined were: Paul D. Mitchell,
Pomeroy. driving under suspension. $250 plus costs, six months
'jail suspended to 30 days, two-year
· ·operator's license suspension, fiye
years probation, vehicle immobili zation; speed, $25 plus costs;
Richard DeMoss, Racine, seat belt.
$25 plus costs; Jeremy Metheny,
Vinton. speed. $30 plus costs;
David W. Hess. Pomeroy, pos.sessing an improperly tagged deer,
$50 plus costs; Elizabeth Gloeckner. Pomeroy, two counts allowing
dogs to run loose, $100 suspended
plus costs on each, one year proba·
lion; Alice Y. Levington, Rutland,
driving under tbe influence, $500
plus costs, 10 days jail suspended
to three days. 90-day OL suspension. one year probation, $250 of
· fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment pro-

: :gram;

year probation. $250 of fine and
jail suspended upon completion of
residential treatment program,
vehicle immobilization; no OL,
$100 plus costs, five days jail and
$50 suspended if valid OL presented within 90 days;
Steven R. Shuler, Pomeroy,
bunting without wearing bunter
orange, costs only; hunting while
under coun suspension or revocation, $150 plus costs, five days jail
suspended, one ye ar bunting
license suspension, two years probation, must take a hunter education course; no deer permit, $50
plus costs; no hunting license, costs
only;
John C. Brown, Columbus,
speed, $26 plus costs ; Carla J.
Roach, Crown City . passing bad
checks, $25 plus costs. rtstitution,
three days jail suspended; Wayne
Cotterill, Pomeroy, failure 10 maintain assured clear distance. $20
plus costs; Sandra K. West,
Reedsville, seat bell, $25 plus
costs; Don A. Stephenson, Racine,

Darlene Cunningham, Mason,
W.Va. speed. $30 plus costs; Carrie A. Bauer, Pomeroy, speed, $29
plus costs; Tammy J. Laud~rmilk ,
Pataskala, improper passing, $30
plus costs; fictitious registration.
$15 plus costs; Rickey L. Johnson,
Long Bouom, transport a loaded
firearm in a motor vehicle, $50
plus oosts, five days jail suspended,
one year probation; hunting deer
with an illegal firearm, $90 plus
costs, return of the firearm ; no
bunting license, $15 plus oosts; no
deer permi~ $20 plus oosts; bunting
deer during illeg al hours, costs
only;
James E. Busb, Cheshire, DUI,
$500 plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to three days. 90-day OL
suspension, $250 of fine and jail
suspended upon completion of residential treatment program; Angela
D. Tillis, Middl eport . failure 10
control, costs only ; Mark T. Reed,
Middleport. DUI, $500 plus costs,
10 days jail suspended to three
days, 90-day OL suspension, one

seal belt. $15 plus costs; · ·
Kevin J. While, Racine, DUI,
$500 plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to three days , 90-day OL
suspension, one year probation ,
$250 of fine and jail suspended
upon completion of residential
treatment program; left of center,
costs only;
Anthony W. Will, Middleport,
DUI, $750 plus costs. one-year OL
suspension, 30 days jail suspended
to 10 days, two years probation,
90-day vehicle immobilization;
driving under suspension, $100
plus costs. 30 days jail suspended
to 10 day s concurrent with DUI,
two years probation; left of center,
costs only; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Layne Gray. Long Bottom.
shoot a wild bird from a public
road, $70 plus costs; take a wild
turkey with a rifle, $60 plus costs;
take a wild turkey during closed
season, $190 plus costs; Robert
Lee, Racine, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Bridget Council, Langsville,
speed, $30 plus costs.

1 :.:

• .

'

••

AM/FM ca.. , PS, PB, PW,
PDL, crulae, dual air baga.

4 To Choose From

'

Judith L. Kriembihl , Albany;
George C. White, Pomeroy; Melissa A. Calaway, Pomeroy;
Carolyn Q. Elkins. Racine; Judy
Ann Free, Pomeroy; Gary Edward
White, Middlepon; Laura Elizabeth
Rice, Syracuse; Stephanie Michelle
Sayre , Racine; Gary E. Tillis,
Pomeroy; Corbell L. Patterson,
Syracuse; Heidi D. Elberfeld; Cornel William Childress, Portland;
Dellarain Earl Backus, Middlepon;
Waller L. Burke, Pomeroy;
Gary Jo Wolfe, Racine; Martha F.
Poole, Pomeroy; Fred L. Hoffman,
Middleport; Hilton N. Wolfe Jr.,
Racine; Rebecca J. Smith, Racine;
Tommy M. Pennington Sr., Ewington; Robert Michael Newell,
Pomeroy; Sheryl Leann Johnson,
Racine; Margaret Cade, Pomeroy;
H. Teresa Cremeans, Middleport; Virginia Belle Michael,
Pomerpy; Margaret Slay. Middleport; Shirley A. Quickel, Middlepan; Donald D. Combs, Long Bot·
tom; Roben Trenton Southern Sr.,
Middleport; Tracy Louise David- .
son , Syracuse ; Keith Albert
Collins. Long Bottom; Lillie M.
Williams, Rutland; Sharon Sue

dlepon;
Cogar, Syracuse;
Heather Ann Hovauer, MiddleRandy
Lee
Williams ,
Langsville; Shirley Lorena Pyles, port; Sarah Marilyn Ray, Albany;
Racine; William E. Brown, Syra- Donald Ray Laudcrmilt, Rutland;
cuse; Jessie Cain White, Pomeroy; Mary Ann Fowler, Racine; William
Allen Keith Page, Langsville ; Ray Brooks, Albany ; Kathryn
Kathi L. Filar, Albany; Ralph D. Eillen Robson. Pomeroy; Roben R.
Lavender, Syracuse ; John B. Harden,. Racine; Jerry Lee Cline,
Sauvage, Syracuse; Kalheryn Eliz- Pomeroy; Dawn Jennifer Foley,
abeth Dailey, Middleport; Vickie Reedsville; Janet Marie Simpson,
Pomeroy;
L. Skidmore, Rutland;
Linda M. Vaninwagen,
Freda Marie Jacks, Langsville;
Cynthia Rose Thomas, Vinton; Pomeroy; Glenn Allen Young Jr.,
Amy Marie Searls, Middleport; Racine; Brent L. Arnold, Pomeroy;
Mildred P. Long, Middleport; Fred L. Williamson, Rutland; KenGeorge William McDaniel, neth Allen Boll, Tuppers Plains;
Pomeroy; Sherry L. Randolph. Bernard Von Fultz, Middleport;
Reedsville; Teresa Sue DeLong, James E. Baer, Pomeroy; Owen E.
Pomeroy; Ann Pollard, Portland; Wiseman, Rutland; Mary Frances
Sarah Elizabeth Anderson, Bush, Racine; Jeffrey K. Bateman,
Pomeroy; Terry Nea l Waugh , Racine;
Joyce Ann Bowen, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy;
Harlan
D. Quick, Middleport;
Andrea M. Wright , Rutland;
M.
Johnson, Portland; BonLeota
Alice Faye Gardner, Pomeroy ;
Waller J . H;1ggy, Rutland; Mary nie Jean Ransom. Racine; Rulh W.
Mabel Lisle, Syracuse; David R. Allen, Rutland; Benjamin Wade
Parsons. Racine; Charles Bush, Putman, Coolville; Melvin C. MurPomeroy; Nancy Lee Lawson, phy, Reedsville; Thelma Dalton,
Portland; Glady s L. Pres ley, Rutland; Joy Renee Church, MidPomeroy; Elsie Irene Dodderer, dl eport; Marvin Eugene Allen.
Coolville; Carl Odell Manley. Mid- Portland.

By Tbe Associated Prea

Temple took away Villanova's
rbytbm, then !he Owls took away
!he Wildcats' undefeated season.
Villanova senior guard Ketry
Kittles suffered through ooe of the
poorest performances of bis career,
missing 12 of 14 shots and all nine
.attempts from three-point range
Wednesday night Tbe result was a
62·56 Temple victory and Villanova' s fustloss of the season.
"I was trying to fmd my rbytbm
and trying to create things for my
teammates," Kittles said. :'I just
wasn' 1 able to do !bat"
Blame it on coach J obn
Chaney's Owls.
"They played great defense,"

1995 FORD
T·BIRD LX
auto, air cond, AM/FM
ca11, tilt, crul1e, ·PS, PB,
PW, PDL, Pwr seat.

Several to choose
from V-6 &amp; V-8

The following land transfers
: were recorded recently in tbe office
. of Meigs County Recorder Emmo. : gene Hamilton:
: · Deed, Ella May Romine to Gene
: : E. Romine, Bedford parcels;
. Deed, Marcella Chapman to
: · Leroy and Alice Chapman. Middle:: port;
• : Deed. Darrell Lee and Wanda
: • Sellers to Nora M. Casto, Lebanon

-: 101-:

.

: • Deed, Darrell Lee and Wanda
: : Sellers to Nora M. Casto, Lebanon
-: lot ;

: · Easement, Judith A. and James
· .: A' Limbach to OMEGA JV5,
•: Cl1ester;
: • Deed, Geraldine Smallwood to
;: Bq\)by J. Smallwood, Salem trac~.
·: Peed, Barbara Sue and Dante!
: • F. p rogan to Richard L. and Bar·
·: bllfll Sue Lambe~ Salem·parcel;
:: Deed. Terry J. Bailey to Sandra
:- S. Peyton, Bedford;
: : peed, Clara Voettiner, el al. to
·: OMEGA JV5, et al .• Olive parcel;
. • j'asement. Charles E. and Mary
:: A1 Chance y to OMEGA JVS,
·: Chester;
• peed, Donald W. and Joyce E.
: M ~nuel to Robin Manuel and
: Dopita Sayre. Sunon;
• peed. Dwight W. and Elva
:Corbin to Roger L. Manley Sr.
• Tr~t, Middlepon;
:
ced, Dennie E. and Janet F.
: Hi/1 to William A. and Sbaron L.
• H~hsler, Sutton;
• Deed, Jewell Curtis and Carol
: M. and David Riggs, Pomeroy;
• Deed, Morgan A. and Lois M.
: Yates to Mark A. Yares. Olive;
• Easemen~ Paul E. and Maxine
• H9ffman to OMEGA JV5, Chester;
: Easement, David T. and Janis L.
: Hendrix to OMEGA JV5, Rutland;
Easement. Diane and Gary Nel: son to OMEGA JV5, Chester;
Deed, Ronald A. and Christine
: White to Denton A. and Lori A.
: Guthrie, Columbia;
Easement, George and Margaret
: Buckley to Monongahela Power
: Co., Olive.

Basketball

· Southwest
Art.·UWeRock 72, SWTeuiSt. 63

NBA standings

1995 MERCURY COUGAR IR7

EASTERN CONFERENCE
All•lk IN.UW..

V-8, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, till, cruise, PS, PB, PW,

Orlando ................ 17
New York.
.. 16
Miami .... ............. 12
Boston... ................ 10
New Jc:ney .. .......... 9
Wuh l ngt~n . ...........9
Philadelphia ... ........3

1993 LINCOLN
MARK VIII

1991 LINCOlN
CONTINENTAL

V-8, auto, climate control,

6 cyl, auto, air cond,

tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
PDL, Pwr seats. Remote
keylesa entry,

AM/FM can, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr
seats, Leather

1992 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR
V-8, auto, climate control,

AM/FM ca.. , lilt, crulae,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr aaat,
Leather.

~

Ium

Pwr seat.

CELL PHONE

Far West

L &amp;J.
3

Ill

.773

~

.762
.632
.500
.474
.474
.ISO

1
10
10
10

17

.5
3.5
6

6.5
6.S
13

CcnlraiiH•Won
Chlcago .................. l1
2 .895

9

. ~00

1.5

It

.476

8

12
II
12
Milwau[ee ............. ..A 12
Tomolo ................ ... 7 I.S

.4S4
.450
.400

S.S
l:.l
!1.5

.333

I').S

.318

II

Indiana ......... . .. ........ 9
Atlauta ................... IO
Charlolle ................ IO
CLEVELAND .........9
Dettoit... .......... ......... 8

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwe11 DiYlllon

Only 39,000 miles

~ L
Houston ............ ... 17 S
Utah ..................... 14 6
San Antonio ........ II 1
Denver ................. ..9 10
Oallu ......................7 12
Minnesota .......... ....6 12
Vancouver ......... ..... 2 19

Ium

1991 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

&amp;J.

lill

.474
.351

2
4
6.5
8.5

.773
.700
.ti II

.333
. .095

9
14.5

ca .., till, cruise, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr seats,
Leather

Sealtle ........... ........ 14

7

.667

L.A. I.Wts ............ ll
1'\&gt;rtiODd .................. 0
Ptloeni1 .................... &amp;
Golden State ............7
L.A. Oippen ...........7

10
9
II
13

.S4l
.l26
.421
.350

2.S
3
S
6.S

14

.333

7

Wednesday's scores
Boston 111, Aliladdphia 100
L.A. Laten 101, Detroit 98

Only 44,000 miles

Oticaao Ill . Orlando 103

Seattle U, San Antonio 83
Houston 100, Vancouver 89

Tonight's gam..

Frlday'•1•mH

Toronto at B~ton. T:30 p.m
LA. t.akm o1 Wlllllh•aton, 7:30p.m
New Jcncy a1 Detro1t, 7:30 p.Dl.
M i l - II Indiana, 7:30p.m.
llllb II Orlalldo. 8 p.m.
a..EVEIAND at MiDDOioll., I p.m.
Sac:ramentoac Ho•to1, 8:30p.m.
Ooklen State II S.Uc, IOp.m.

PRE-CHRIStMAS
SAVINGS SPECtACULAR

Pcwt.land at Vancoowr. 10 p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores

POL, tilt, cruln, AMIFM

Coooty~6

Jooal7, Rhode Uland 71
La Salle 64, .AmcriCID Univ . 62
Siena 76, Hartforo 70
St. l'da'o 61, Seton Hall 59
S)'rltC\lae 15, Bowling Oretn 64
Temple 62, Villanova 56

6 cyl, auto, air cond,

PB, PW, PDL, lilt, CIUISB. I
AMIFM cass, Flberglaa•
bedcover

LOWEST TICKETED
PRICE!
IN THE STORE!

Witteabera 93, Earlham 86
Grove City 63, Hiram Col. SO
Ohio Nonhero 84, Late E(ie 69
Ohio Wesleyan 13, Thomu More 79
Olivet 80, Blumon 7l
RIOORANDE9S, C.DL St ((lllio) 39

Al a.· Birmiogham 73, Tenn.·Chat·
taDooaa 69
Bethune-Cookman 91 , Eliubeth City
St. 76
Campbell68, Metbodi&amp;t SO
Gea-aia 94. Georgia Tech 70
LDuisville 87, E. keJitucly 70
Mai'yland 83, Rider 67
Mm:cr91 , Augutta67
Winthrop 79_. Montreat· Andenon 6~

Mldw..t

1993 DODGE
CARAVAN
7 pa..enger, 6 cyl, auto,

V-8, atuo, air cond,

air cond, power ateerli~Q •.
power brakea,
call.

caaa, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
crul1e, Pwr seals, ke~·•••sl
entry

MUCH

Cincinnati 84, Minoeaola .SO
Toledo 19, Baldwin-Wallace 52

1993 OLD$
SILHOUETTE

with Mark Par~aa. catcher, oo 1 on~ year
co ntract. D•ipated Phil Hiatt, outfielder,
ror ua lanmc~~t .
N.. lonll Leaaue
CHICAGO CUBS: Agreed to Ierma
with Rob Dibble, pitcher, on a minorleaa:ue colllract and invited him to aprlng
trainina • a non·rostu playa .
.
aNaNNATI REDS : Announced the
reaianation or Damll Rodacn . assistant
·for balebllll q&gt;mllinns.
FL.ORIDA MARLINS : Agre ed to
terms with Mark Davis , pitcher , on aminor-leap contract.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Atl1eed
to terllll with Delino DeShields, ltCOnd
baseman, on a one-year contract.

PHlLADELPmA PmWES: A&amp;reed

to lenni with Pete Incavialia, oulfielder,
on a m.loor-lcque cootnct.

Matt Harpring led the Yellow
Jackets with 24 points. and star
freshman Stephon Marbury fin ·
isbed with 13.
No. 20 Loulsville 87

E. Kentucky 70
At Louisvill e, Ti ck Rogers'
dunk off a midwurt steal in tbe
second half sparked an 11 -0 run
that carried the Cardinals (6-2)
over Eastern Kentucky.
The spun put Louisville on top
55-43, and Eastern Kentucky (3-3),
which led by as many as L2 points
in tbe first half, got no closer !ban
58-48 after !bat
Samaki Walker had 23 points
and 12 rebounds, while Alvin Sims
(See TOP 25 on Page 8)

Football
Nallonal Football Lti!ILit
NFL PLAYERS AS SOCIATION
Named Stacy Robin&amp;en director or player
development.
CAROUNA PAN'rnERS: Placed Eric
Gulirard. wide receiver-punt relurner, on
injw-ed reaerve. Releaed Jeff Fields, dcfeDiive lineman. Sisned Phil Yeboah·
Kodie , linebacker, from the pract ice
squad.
IACKSONVIU£ JAGUARS: Sipcd
Brant Boya, linebacker.
NEW YORK JETS : S igned Pat
O'Neill, punter-placelc:id:~ .

PHlLADELPltiA EAGLES: Placed
er. on Injured reserve . Sianed Rict.cy
Brady. tlaht e&gt;d.
ST. WUIS RAMS : Waived Leonlll'd
Ru11cll ruDDIDfj: back. Sianed Ashley
S~, IiaebaCUt. Placed Olril Miller,
qu.terb~ek, on injlnd reacrve.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Signed
Raody Blldwiu, n~nning back . .P!aced Jamal Willis, NDRlDI b~k , on InJured reaerve.

~1 0 NTR E A L CANA DIENS: Called
up Rory Fitzpatrick, goallend er, from
fr ede ric ton of the AIIL. Announced

" Ceolrc Molson" will be the nan1e for
their oew arena.

NEW YORK ISLANDERS Cal led up
left wmg, alkl Milan
Tichy, derenseman , rrom Utah o( the IHL,
and 1aaon Wi dmer , defen•eman, from
Worce1 ter of the AIIL.

N•llonaiiiMkry u.,ue

Gr e g ar 1 Pant.aleyev,

ANAHEIM MlGIITY DU CKS : Ao·
signed Viachealav Butuyev, center, to
Baltimore of the AHL.

IE WILL NoT BE UNDERSOLD

NHL standings

011 AllY ITEM AT ANY TIME

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Our prrces can 1 )c ~e ~l 1 We w111 malch anr lo~al p~1ce on comparable tlems, exclud ing spec1al orders

All•nlh: Divlliun

~ 1r

~LI&amp;lilli&amp;

Florida .. .......... 22 7 2

period.

Hockey

Hockey

Ium

DALLAS STA RS : Traded Trent Klatt,
forwud, to the Philadt:Jphia Flycn (or
Brent Fedyk. lefl wing,.
FLORIDA PANTH ERS: AlliiJned
Rhett Wmcner, dcfcn.eman, to the Canadian National Juni or Tea m, and David
Ne mirovsk y, right wing, to Carolina of
the AHL for a three-game conditioning

lclvin Mlrti11, wide rcc:eiver-k.ick return ~ ,

46 106
45 118

,,,nr.~•lt6 Srr,•l l f'J•~t'~IIS

11
91

N.Y. Ranaers ..... 20 8 S
Ph.ilikielphia ....... J8 8 4 40 109
TampaBay ........ 13 12 S 31 88

13
96

Norlhult Olwltioll
Pittabw-Jh .......... l9 6 l 41
Moouat ............ l412 2 30
Bullalo ............... l2 14 3 27
Botton ... ......... 10 14 4 24
Hartford .............IO 16 2 22
Ottawa ...... .. ......... 7 21 I IS

14 1 88
90 92
37 93
94 106
61

90
7) 116

WFSTERN CONFERENCE
Central DhUioa
~LI&amp;lilli&amp;
Detroit. ............... 20 1 2 42 115 67
Toronto ..... ......... l4 10 ~ 33 92 U

Ium

Chicago.............. IZ II 7

ll 100

94

St.Louia ............ l313 4

30

&amp;4

Winnipe11 .. ......... 1l 14 l
Dallu ........ ...........9 12 6

29 107 110
24
88

Pac:inc Dlvlllon
ColondD ...........I3 9 4 40
~J&gt;•Anael&lt;~ ....... lll2 6 12
Anahdm ........... 12 17 3 27
Edmootoo .......... IO Il 6 l6
VIUICOUVa" ...........9 12 8 26
Calpry ................717 6 20
SanJ ... .... .........6 20 4 16

79

n

137
102
91
83
104
32
39

99

101
liS
112
lOS
133

HI', W ~ ~I llfiiH" ~'.l

II

~0

\II SI IIIII II H 1'1

1

44~~~

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

94

11 1111', 'I l',

!All~

...:.
A

fl.

15!~
lllllllx

Weda.e .day's scores
Tu.,a Bay 3, Hartlold 2
N.Y. RanFfl 4, Boston 2
Detroit 3, Ol.icago I
Burralo 4, Colcrado 3
Calaary &amp;, Dallas 4
·VIlDOOUVet 2, Edmonton 2 {tie)
Lol Anaclea 6, O.tawa 2

fill

4

97

lllliMfl
lll*lb 1'1111
7

SZiff

Hl'1! 111 IHil II' q •,r I 1'~1 II 1111',
Sll Sli Ill I Ill' 1111~ 1 1 S

Tonight'• games

Tamca
ClrllnllrlltJ

PI~\

Florida at Boston, 7:30p.m.
Ta~Jl)aBay al Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. lilandcn ill Washington, 7:30

Fill

49~511ff

p.m.

C.la.-y 11 St. Louis, 8:30p.m.
Toronto at San l01e, 10:30 p.m.

Loctlte

Colonado atHartfotd, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Ranaen at Buffalo, 7:30p.m
New Jersey al Detroit. 8:30p.m.

Montreal a1 Chicago, &amp;: 30 p.m.
Pittabur&amp;b at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Edmomon at Wi~nipeg, 8:l0 p.m.
Ottawa at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.

Gllket IIIIIFI

•
•
741c
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Anallei{T16. Pitlibwllb 3

East

1995 FORD
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over Minnesota 84-50 , No. 20
Louisville over Eastern Kentucky
87-70 and No. 25 Syracuse over
Bowling Green 75-64.
Georgia 94
No. 19 Georgia Tech 70
At Athens, Katu Davis scored
27 points and Shandon Anderson
had 19 as Georgia (5-1) never
trai.led in breaking a three-game
lostng streak in the series . The
game was played on a campus for
the first lime since 1981 after I 4
consecutive meetings at The Omni
inAUanta.
Tech (5 -3) fell behind by 12
points in tbe first 12 minutes and
never got closer !ban seven points
tbe rest of tbe way.

NewJersey ........ l)\4 3 29 77 74
Wuhinaton ........ n 13 3 27 76 7S
N.Y. Ialandm ......7 19 l 17 81 116

P•ltk Dlvt.ton
SiiCI'llffitJitO ......... ...13 6 .684

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Sravne11to St 82,1daho St. 71
Wuhilpn St. 9&amp;, Moatana 17
Wii.·OrceD Bay &amp;1·, Orcsoo 71 (OT)
WycmiDi 13, Colorado II

Non-conference play

bdlau a1 TQfOnto, 7 p.m.
De1verat.New Ycwt, 7:30p.m.
Olicago at AU-. 7;30 p.m.
S.. Antonio II Dolllo, 8:30 p.QI.
&lt;lrw!Oitc ot Portl..,d, lO p.m
Miami II L.A. Olpp&lt;n,IO:JO p.m.

DAYS ONLY!
FRI., DEC. 15 &amp; SAT., DEC. 16

about two minutes left in the flfSt
Villanova coach Steve Lappas :stop Temple's powllr game.
Down 55-47 with 2:49 left in balf. He fmisbed the half with three
even !bough it might have looked the game, the Wildcats rallied points, and things dido' l gel any
lilr.e it"
·
behind Kittles to close to 56-54 better until !he game's final two
minutes, when he scored five of his
Chaney said the victory will with 1:08 remaining.
"Down the stretch, we made a 10 points.
mean more for Temple when it
run and the game got close, and I
Eric Eberz bad 19 points and
comes time for March Madness.
"I think it was bigger for them. thought we really bad a sbot," Kit- Alvin Williams 13 for Villanova.
which shot only 28 percent from
but it ~obably will be big for us tles said.
later,' Chaney said. "They're
But Temple's Levan Alston tbe floor in scoring well below its
going to be in tbe NCAAs. We're grabbed an offensive rebound with average of 73 points.
going to need wins like Ibis to get • 3 I seconds left and was fouled .
Derrick Batlie, Marc Jackson
into tbe NCAAs."
Alston made a free throw to and Lynard Stewan each scored 12
Temple's match -up zone increase Temple's lead to three. points for Temple.
defense kept the Wildcats from get- !ben stole the ball from Villanova
One other ranked team was
ting tbe shots they wanted. And the freshman John Celestand with 24 .upset Wednesday night as Georgia
smaller Owls scored I 0 of their seconds left to wrap up tbe victory.
beat No. 19 Georgia Tech 94-70.
Kittles missed his first eight
flfSt 12 second-half points from in
In other games involving ranked
close as Villanova was unable to shots before final...!L ~orin!! with teams. i!. W.!lj No. U Cincinnati
admitted. "They didn't surprise us,

Scoreboard

Keyless Entry

~· Land transfers

·

Temple shocks Villanova; Louisville &amp; Cincinnati also win

~:Potential petit jurors listed for ·county court
The following county residents
were named as potential petit jurors
for tbe January 1996 term of the
Meigs County Court:
Sally Donaldson, Ponland; Mar·
garet E. Cottrill, Syracuse; Carrol
D. Woodgerd, Pomeroy; John L.
Werner, Middlepon; Nev S. White,
Pomeroy ; Ronald Bruce Grimm,
Racine; Muriel Whaley Bradford,
Coolville; Carl E. Qualls, Pomeroy;
Phyllis E. Baker, Racine; Paul T.
Yameli. Rutland;
Steven C. Petrovic, Sbade; Herben E. Shields, Racine; James R.
• • . Cunningham, Racine; Manin Day,
\:; Pomeroy; Dawn Sheree Spalding,
i: • Pomeroy; Charles 0. Neal Jr. , Port·
: •: land; Aaron Bmdley Card, Racine;
::: Kevin D. Greene, Pomeroy;.Teresa
.; · L. Pullins, Pomeroy; Wtlham N.
: •: Robinette, Pomeroy;
::: Crystal E. Simpson, Middleport;
•: • Freda C. Mahr. Pomeroy; Aossie
i-: M. Nelson, Pomeroy; Doris Ann
:. :- Starcher, Rutland ; Larry Gene
::: Lemley, Rutland; Linda Powell
: · : Burrelli, Coolville; Michael L.
·:· Barr. Pomeroy; Charles L. Spires,
::: Rutland; Clara E. Davis, Middle:·· port; Jody Ann Goeglein, Long
·: Bottom;
:
Donald W. Barnett Sr.,
::. Langsville; Marcia E. Qualls, Mid.: dlepon; Evelyn Mae Lusher, Vin.• ton ; Deborah Lynn Dingey, Middleport; Jack D. Sorden, Rutland;
Patricia M. Hetzer, Reedsville;
. • Joseph D. Rose, Racine; Charles C.
Calaway, Reedsville; Clair E. Foil. • rod. Pomeroy; Kelly Brian Chapman , Rutland;
•
:•. Retba M .Day, Coolville; Don
: · All en Couerill, Rutland ; TbOlll3S
•. : Jennings Wallace, Pomeroy; Beat- ·
· : rice Elenor Williamson, Pomeroy;
: · Brenda S. Cunningham. Pomeroy;
· : Mi chael
Anthony
Shuler,
: Langsville; Clara M. Ellis, Rutland;
• Marisa Ann Gray, Racine; Tricia
A. Michael, Pomeroy; Roger Clinton Turner Jr .. Pomeroy;
•
Mark E. Smith, Reedsville;
: : Myron S. Franckowiak, Middle. : port; Kenneth L. Longstreth, Rut: · land; James Robert Foble, Albany;
· : Cynthia Ann Roush, Rutland;
· : David D. Campbell, Pomeroy;
: : Connie Louise Roush, Middlepon;

Thursday, December 14, 1995

In Top 25 college basketball,

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:~~ge 8 • The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 14, 1995
.'·~~~~~==------------------------~--~~------------------~~-------.

.- thu~ay, December 14,1995

:Jordan
&amp;
Van
Exe:
l
lead
Bulls
&amp;
Lakers
to
w1ns;
Rockets
tr1umph
..

. . Coffey reaches milestone; Ducks end Penguins' win streak

'

: fn the NBA,

I

' By The A.!soc:&amp;.ted PreiS

• : · Michael Jordan redeemed him• Self against the Orlando Magic. •
. Nick Van Exel just plain redeemed
. himself.
' '
. : . Still stinging from a mere 23. p!&gt;int effort in a Nov. 14 loss at
· Orlando, Jordan got the best of
· Anfemee Hardaway on Wednesday
DJght, outscoring lbe Magic guard
· 33·26 and leading the Chicago
: Bulls to a 112-103 win.
· : . "I came in a liUle more pumped
. ~p." Jordan said. "I'd be aazy if I
. didn't come in here to really
i'edeem myself in terms of lbe way
I played last game against this
: team."

Van Exel, one of the best young
guards in the NBA last season. bas
: slumped Ibis season, shooting just
36 percent. One night after a 3-for: 13 outing, be rebounded with a sea. son-bigh 30 points in the Lakers'
101-98 victory at the Palace at
: Auburn Hills.
:: " That's a really nice arena,"
· :Van E~el said. "It has really big
rims, and I've always felt really
. amfortable here."
: The Magic had won four
. ~ traight regular -seas on games
· :against Chicago and eliminated the

'Top 25 hoops...
.

(Continued from Page 7)
a career-high 22 points as
: Louisville won its fourth consecutive game.
: · DeMarkus Doss topped Eastern
Kentucky with 25 points.
No. ZS Syracuse 75
Bowling Green 64
At Syracuse, John Wallace and
; Otis Hill controlled the inside in
: lbe second balf as the Orangemen
· aowned stubborn Bowling Green.
• · Wallace scored 10 of his 17
: jx&gt;ints and Hill II of his 13 in the
• ~econd half as Syracuse (7-0) fend·
• ed off the Falcons (4-3), who twice
: cut Syracuse's lead to eight points
in the final half and never trailed
: by more than 15 until the final
·ininute.
~ : Anthony Stacey led the Falcons
' wilb 22 points.
No. 1l Cincinnati 84
Minnesota SO
At Cincinnati, playmaker Keith
:LeGree scored a career-high 19
-points as Cincinnati (5-0) romped
' past Minnesota (5-2).
Mark Jones had 15 points for
·!be Gophers, who suffered their
worst defeat since a 99-65 loss at
.Iowa
. State in
. December 1992. '·
~qualed

Bulls in the playoffs. Orlando woa
lbe first meeting this season, 94-88,
as Hardaway outscored Jordan 3623.
"They were thinkilig this is
kind of a revenge g31J\e," Hard·
away said. "Tbey were trying to
show the nation - and also ourselves - that. they were for real,
and maybe the fii'St game was kind
of a fluke."
Orlando probably played its last
game without Sbaquille O'Neal,
who is ex pected back when the
Magic will meet Utah on Friday .
Even though O'Neal bas missed all
seasoo with a broken thumb, Orlan·
do is 17-5.
.
Tbe only NBA team with a bet·

ter record is Chicago, which bas
won seven straight and is undefeated at borne.
Dennis Scott scored 24 points
for Orlando, including a threepointer that made it 103-97 with
1:21 to play. But Scottie Pippen
responded with a three-pointer and
the Bulls clinched the win with six
free throws.
Pippen scored 26 points and
Tooi Kukoc 21 for Chicago, which
got 19 rebounds from Dennis Rodman.
In other NB A games, it was
Qoston lll, Philadelphia 100;
Seattle 88, San Antonio 83; and
Houston 100, Vancouver S9.

Tyson promises memorable
effort vs. Mathis Saturday

•

•

Rockets 100, Grizzlies 89
lime, but collapsed in the third . ·
Hakeem
Olajuwon bad 15
period as the Lakers went ahead
points, 14 rebounds and 10 blocks,
with a 164 run.
Allan Houston missed a jumper and Vancouver lost its 19th in a
with 10 seconds to play, and the row.
The Grizzlies already bold the
rebound went out of bounds off
NBA record for most consecutive
Grant Hill's bands.
Cedric Ceballos finished with losses by an expansion team and
21 for Los Angeles. Hill led the would tie the record for lbe longest
Pistons with 25 and Houston added single-season losing streak by
falling to the Portland Trail Blazers
19.
SuperSonics 88, Spun 83
on Friday night. Tbe record for
Shawn Kemp bad 30 points' and futility currently is shared by the
16 rebounds as Seattle dealt San · 1972-73 Pbiladelpbia 76ers and
Antonio its third straight loss.
1992-93 Dallas Mavencks.
The Sonics, who rallied from an
Roben Horry bad 20 points for
8-point deficit in lbe foiD'lh quarter, visiting Houston, and Clyde
got 20 points from Sam Perkins Drexler and Sam Cassell added 16
and 14 from Gary Payton.
each.
The Spurs were led by David
Vancouver !lOt 19 points from
Robinson's 23 points, while Sean Blue Edwards, 18 from Greg
Elliott and Avery Johnson had 12 Anthony and a season-high 13
from reserve Ashraf Amaya.
apiece.

Celtlcs 111, 76ers 100
Dino Radja scored 21 points as
Bosto11 banded Philadelphia its
15th loss in 16 games.
The loss was the 12th by at least
11 points for Pbiladelpbia. Tbe
Celtics reached .500 for the first
time since they were 7-7 after los, ing to Pboenix on Dec. 2, 1994.
Rookie Eric Williams scored a
season-high 20 points and Rick
Fox added 15 for Boston . The
76ers were led by Jerry Stackhouse
with 26 and Sbarone Wright with
22.
The 76ers lostlbeir lith straight
road game.
Lakers 101, Pistons 98
Tbe Los Angeles Lakers beat
Detroit for lbe second time in four
days and snapped their road losing
streak at four games.
Tbe Pistons led 59-48 at half-

lf""~~4($~"41'~""4l'~"~~~~"!J

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
training.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Mike
Doctors said at the time it would
Tyson promises an entertaining be four to six weeks before Tyson
night, not necessarily a long one, could begin sparring, but be
on Saturday.
resumed sparring in about three
Asked for a prediction for his weeks.
scheduled 12-round match against
"I just wanted to fight," said'
Buster Mathis Jr. at lbe Spectrum, Tyson, wbo was out of action for
the former undisputed champion more than four years before be
said, ''I'm not a predictor, but trust fought McNeeley. "I just want to
me, I'm going to give you some- keep progressing.''
FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR LIST, STOP IN LOCKER
thing Philadelphia will never forTyson, who served three years
AND The SHOE PLACE FOR LAST MINUTE GIFTS AND
gel."
in prison on a:,rape conviction, is
It doesn't sound like Tyson is scheduled to get a shot at becoming
STOCKING STOFFERS.
thinking decision against the out· a champion again with a challenge
gunned Mathis, wbo bas si~ knock- to WBC champion Frank Bruno of
outs on his 20-0 record, with one Britain on March 16 at the MOM
•ATHLETIC, DRESS AND CASUAL,
no contest and one no decision.
Grand.
WORK BOOTS AND SLIPPERS.
"I want to do what works for
Bruno, WBA champion Bruce
I
me," Mathis said. Obviously, Seldon of Atlantic City and IBF
GYM
BAGS,
BALL
CAPS, NIKE T-SHIRTS,
Mathis doesn' t plan on charging champion Franz Botha of South
right at Tyson, as Peter McNeeley Mrica are scheduled to anend SatSOCKS, JACKETS, TEAM WASTEBASKETS
did in his 89-second loss to Ty8oo , urday night's fight. All three are
~ SPORT TINS, PENNANTS, POSTERS,
on Aug. 19. But without punching promoted by Don King, Tyson's
power, bow long can Mathis bold promoter. WBO champion Riddick
WALL PLAQUES &amp; CLOCKS, AND PURSES.
Iron Mike at bay~
is not tied to King.
Mathis got through lbree round&amp;
The Tyson-Malbis fight is to
against wild-swinging Riddick televised free on Fox. Part of the
Ill
Bowe on Aug. 13, 1994, but Bowe live telecast from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
found lbe range in the fourth, only EST will be a_junior middleweight
to foul Mathis by bitting him when title match between WBC champibe was down. Referee Arlbur Mer- on Terry Nonis and IBF champion
cante ruled the punch was inten- Paul Vaden.
OFFERING NIKE, REEBOK, ASICS, DEXTER, EASTLAND &amp; MORE... •· ·.·
tional, but the New Jersey Alblelic
In another title match , Carl
Control Boanl called the fight a no- Daniels, the WBA junior mid·
The
contest instead of disqualifyting dleweight champion, will fight
Bowe.
Julio Cesar Vasquez of Argentina.
Mathis won his next six fights
and was picked as Tyson· s second
Horse 111clng
fl;
comeback opponent for a Nov. 4
INGOOWOOD, Calif. (AP) ~
bout at the MGM Grand in Las
992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OHa
Vegas. That fight was called off Main Slew, $5.60, beat Expensive ~219 N. SECOND AVE.
Oct 31 because of a fracture to the Star by III21englbs in lbe S26,000 . ~U~~~~·~~W~iidij~dJ.w#l'lliii!tAAi«AAd*\11-*
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

- In theNHL,
,; By The Associated l'rel8
~
Until Paul Coffey, the NHL bad
• never bad a defenseman wilb 1,000

with," be said. "I WBIIted to do it
at home. It came in a big game.
The la8l CXltlple of days I was hoping it would be on a nioc play and a
big goal, and I got my wisb."
Detroit spoiled Bob Proben's
return to Joe Louis Arena. Probert,
one of the NHL's top goons during
his years with the Red Wings, was
making his first appearance in
Detroit since tbe Red Wings
released him following the 1993-94

ing and a little luck helped New
York stretch its bome unbeaten
streak to 14 (12-0-2),
'
. • career asstats.
Richier made 31 saves, inclod.). On Wednesday night, Coffey
ing four key stops during a Bruins
; became the first detenseman to
power play late in the seallld peri·
' reach the mileatone, joining Wayne
od.
.
.: Gretzky, Gordie Howe and Mart-el
The Range~. 13-2-2 at the Gar~ Dionne. Coffey's drop pass set up a
den this seasoo, last lost at home on
,:goal by Igor Lariooov late in the
Oct. 22, 4-2 to Ottawa. Tbe
k [trst period, helping the Detroit Red
Rangers got goals from Mark
:!Wings beat the Chicago BlackMessier, Ray Ferraro, Nick Kypre~ bawb 3·1.
season.
os and an empty-neuer from
~
"Wayne called me between the
"I thoug!U they'd cheer him Stepbane Matteau.
~first and second periods," said m&lt;R," Dino Ciccarelli of the Red
Boston outsbot New York 33~Coffey, who got many of his assists Wings said. "There were some-22.
Ted Donato and Ray Bourque
:;playing with Gretzky on Edmon· boos. Thalldnd of surprised·me.''
scored for lbe Bruins.
~ ton's great teams oflbe 1980s.
In other NHL games, New Yor1c
Sabres 4, Avalancbe 3
:;,; "He said 'You've only gtit beat Boston 4·2, Buffalo defeated · Randy Burridge scored a power•about five or sit hundred more to Colorado 4-3, Tampa Bay edged
~go until you caleb me.' If I Hartford 3·2, Calgary routed Dallas play goal with 8:30 left as Buffalo
won after wasting a lbree-goallead
. ::Would've been thinking, 1 8-4, Los Angeles stopped Ottawa put
together by the Sabres in the
..;-would've said, 'Ob, I thought It 6-2, Anaheim defeated Pittsburgh game's
first nine minutes.
~,:was the president. Who are you?' "
6-3 and Edmonton and Vancouver
Burridge picked up a loose puck
-:: Coffey also leads defensemen in played a 2-2 lie.
in front of the crease and ~ut it over
.career goals (361) an4 points.
Rangers 4, Bruins l
Patrick Roy's glove, stavmg off an
; "It's a relief to get it over
Mike Richter's sharp goaltend- Avalanche comeback.

.

••

Pat LaFontaine scored two goals
for Buffalo and Dixon Ward bad
one goal. Craig Wolanin, Claude
Lemieux and Scou Young scored
for visiting Colorado.
Lightning 3, Whalers l
Michel Petit broke a 2-2 tie
when be scored unassisted with 28
seconds remaining . It was the
fourth straight win for Tampa Bay,
and the third straight loss for Hartford.
Petit's first goal of the year
came ori a slap shot from tbe right
point and went through the legs of
goaltender Sean Burlce.
Visiting Tampa tied the game
I :06 earlier when a soft shot by
Petr Klima went ovi:r Burke's
stick, his 300tb career goal.
Flames 8, Stars 4
German Titov had two goals
and two assists and Theoren Fleury
(ldded one goal and four assists for
visiting Calgary. Dallas lost its fifth
straight.
Mike Sullivan and Fleury scored

~-

short-banded goals, and Titov,
Steve Chiasson and Pbil Housley
scored on the power play for the

Flames.

Zarley Zalapslr.i and Ron Stem
also s.cored for Calgary, climbing
back Into contention after starting
the season 0-7. 3.
Mike Modano, Grant Marshall,
Brent Gilchrist and Guy Carbonneau scored from the Stars, wbo
returned bome after a season-long
six-game road trip.
Kings 6, Senators 2
Marty McSorley landed several
punches and scored twice, inchKI·
tog a short-banded goal for his
300th NHL career point.
McSorley sparked three-goal
outbursts in the second and third
periods to send visiting Ottawa to
its third straight loss.
Tbe 32-year-old defenseman
wasn't around for tbe end of the
game, getting ejected at 14:31 of
the third after instigating a fight
with Dennis Vial, who also was

tossed for his third game miscon·
duct.
Mighty Ducks 6, Penguins 3
Anaheim ended its nine-game
winless streak and Pittsburgh's
eight-game winning streak as Paul
Kariya bad two goals and two
assists.
'
Joe Sacco and younger brother
David also scored for the Ducb,
who got another goal from Todd
Krygier en route to their first win
since Nov. 21 at Calgary.
Mario Lemieux and Ron Francis
scored power-play goals for visiting Pittsburgh, and Bryan Smolinski bad an even-strength goal.
Ollen 2, Canucks :Z (tie)
Rookie Brian Loney got the tie
for visiting Vancouver when be:
scored his first career goal with
I :02 left, stopping Edmonton's
lbree-game winning sueak.
Edmonton took a 2-0 lead on
goals by Boris Mironov and David
Oliver. Alex Mogilny scored fo(
the Canucks in the second period.

',)n the upcoming NCAA 1-AA final,

~~Quarterba·cks' · sagas one facet of Marshall-Montana clash
~lly MATT HARVEY

· ::

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
~- The NCAA 1-AA tille game
·~llere Saturday bas all the feel-good
~:vibes of a 1960s Walt Disney Rick.
· ~. For those wbo like a good
:Underdog role, there's Marshall
;_-quarterback Chad Pennington. The
.._freshman was "clipboarding it" as
::the third-stringer at the beginning
the season. But be soon fouild
: :himself staning because of injuries
!;JO the fl!St-stringer and lbe reserve. .
;. . Wb~t mus~ier. endin)! than to
;;;JJave this steadily tmprovmg roolde
~ead the Thundering Herd to its
·~ title in school history?
~: Well, try lh!s. on for ~umpb:&lt;&gt;f·
.;;'lhe:buman-~pmt potenual: gntty
.;-1!en1or who s done almost every:;:thing else finishes his college
! :career ~Y le~ling bis team to its
: .fi!'Stnational Utle.
--\_. Montana quarterback Dave
~Dickenson, who has 26 school
. )mJrds Blld is in the top five in four
: i-AA career statistical categories,
:'fits that ~ushy saipt
'.: One mterested viewer will be
;-Marsball's Tony Petersen, who as a
~player in 1987, led the Herd to an
--amprobable 1-AA runner-up ftnish,
·: ·bqt that's another story. These
::days, Petersen, Marshall's quarter·
"backs coach, is more into the Pen':nington-Dickenson drama that's
·~about to unfold.
~ · ~.'l.tllln~..the,key. thing with
·(Chad) is just tryiltf to keep bini in
·:the mindset of it s just Bllotlier
~ football game ... even !bough it's

::-or

..

'

not," Peti:rsen said. '"lbe beuer be
can treat it thai way, lbe better it's

Parker,lbe fifth-leading rusher in 1AAbistory.
Dickenson bas been much more
central to the success of the Big
Sky's Grizzlies (12-2). The 5-foot-

going to be for him.
"This is it for (Dickenson), but
I think be's gouo do the same
!bing," Petersen said. "He's got to
go out and treat it as another · r--~==::-

ll, 175-pound senior bas thrown
for 5,395 yards and 49 touchdowns
this season. Marshall has bad only
one quarterback, Petersen with
4,902 yards in 1987, come close to

Dickenson's passing yardage for a
season.
For his career, Dickenson bas
averaged 316.3 yards passing per
game and 328.9 yards tot.al offense

per game, both third-best in 1-AA:
history . Dickenson's 96 careei
touchdown passes is also third-best
in the division, while his passing
efficiency of 166.2 is second-best :

....--------------------------------------.;.

game."

· Pennington and Dickenson have
distinctly different roles.
The 6-fnot-3, 195-pound Pen·
nington's job, 2,199 yards passing
notwithstanding, is to keep from
making any huge mistakes and to
bit on a selection of high percentage routes.
Marshall's defense bas been a
big part of its success, holding
opponents to 10 or fewer points
seven times this season. The Herd
(12-2) of the Southern Conference
bas given up more than 30 points tQ
just one I·AA opponent, Tennessee-Cbattanooga Pennington, in
his first start !brew six interceplions in that 3S-32 Marshall win.
The Herd also can tum to Chris

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�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

:t'hur&amp;day, December 14, 1995

Catch All The

•'
• Dear Ann Landers: How did we
:;gelourJO&gt;rities so ICI'CWed up in this
)lOUnll'y? Can you tell me?
• When I was a young man (before
~earl Harbor), I wu an amateur
~er. A trainer wanted to manage me
:brofcssionally, but I declined because
~ didn't want to get my brains
)&lt;:rambled, and I wu COJDpletcly
:lacking in the "kiiler instineL •
~ I gmduar.ed in lhe top 10 percent
'ilf my class and eventnally acquired
b bachelor's and nwtcr's degrees.
:t put in a three-year hitch in the Air
:Force, married, had two kids and
]aught science.
: For the 34 years I worked as a
;Jeacher and adminisuato~ my total
~earnings, before deductions, came to
~bout $450,000.
• Former champion and ex-convict
:MiteTyson "earned" $25 million for
:ihe 89 sealllds he spent pummeling
:lhe carefully selected, helpless
:'what's-his-IIIUIIC" in the ring. For his
~ening's wolk, Tyson was paid about
fl77,717 ~ sccond.Anolher way to
~ook at It is that Tyson was paid SS
otimes as much for his 89 seconds as I
~ived for 34 years of teaching in
~e IICR&lt;:hcs.
: I don'tregrct following my survival
llnstinctsSSyearsago,andlwouldn't
places with Tyson. I wish him
~ell and hope his jail time wiU help
:tUm become a solid citizen and stay
:;put of trouble. I offer this

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The Top Twenty Major-College Teams

I06 N. 2nd, Middleport
992-2635

1. Nebrasl&lt;a
2Flonda
3. Ohto State
4. Northwestern

5 Tennessee

EWING FUNEUL HOME
108 Mulberry Ave.· Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

Dignity and Service
Always
OFFERING PRE-NEED
COUNSELING AND
ARRANGEMENTS
Ben H.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh

6. Florida State
7. Colorado
8. Texas
9. Notre Dame
10 M1chigan

11 . Kansas State
12 Penn State
13. Virginia Tach
14. Texas A&amp;M
15 Auburn

t 6. Washington
17. Oregon
18. Miami
I 9. Southern Cal
20 Virgtnta

Thursday, Dec . I 4
LAS VEGAS BOWL

Toledo . . ...... .. ...... . ... 22

Nevada .

... 20

Monday, Dec. 25
ALOHA BOWL

U.C L.A.

. .. .... . ..... 27

Kansas .

... 23

Wednesda~ Dac. 27
COPPER BOWL

Texas Tech .

.28

Air Force

... 21

221 W. Second, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2136

•• ' UJard:
J.,.· I,,

DISCOVER WHY

II nrLJP•
..It If !&gt;"'
We have the

PEOPLE sAY,

p~

Thursday, Dec. 28
ALAMO BOWL

Michigan ......... .. .. .

Frtday. Dec. 29
HERITAGE BOWL
SUN BOWL
INDEPENDENCE BOWL
HOLIDAY BOWL

South&lt;!rn-Baton Rouge . ....... 24
Washtngton .
.21
L.S.U........... .. ......... 31
Kansas State .
. .... 26

Florida A&amp;M . .......... 16
Iowa
19
Michigan State ..
...22
Colorado State ...... . ... 15

Saturday, Dec. 30
LIBERTY BOWL
CAROUEST BOWL
PEACH BOWL

Stanlord ...... . .. .. ... .. . .. 27
Arkansas . . . . . . . .. • .... . .. 21
Virginia .. . ..... .. . . .... . .. 30

East Carolina ......... ...24
Carolina . . . . . . . . .. 20
Georg1a.. . ....
. ... 22

Sunday, Dec 31
SUGAR BOWL

Texas .......•.....• . . .. ... 22

Virginia Tech .

Penn State .................25

.. 29

Texas A&amp;M

Clemson .......... . ... ... 26
Colorado . . . . . . ........... 32
Northwestern . .. .. .. ......29
Florida State .. . . . .. ..• .... 31

Tuesday, Jan 2
FIESTA BOWL

Nebraska .... . ........ .. . 28

Florida ...... . • . . . . ..... 24

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3671

. .. ,995 , lol~
Tl..,.. Syndicllle and

Cf'Min

Syndical•~

comparison as one more example or

the weird distortion of values that
drives this nation's assignment of
wealth and acclaim,- MYSTIFIED
IN MESA. ARIZ.
DEAR MESA: Money doesn't care
who has iL And fame, !hough it may
last only IS minutes, is vlsir.ed on
, serial killers as well as Nobel
laureates. People are fascinar.ed by
the best and worst of everything.
Does a BiU Gates or a W811CD
Buffett deserve to make miUions a
year? (Neither is particularly
inreresr.ed in money.) Yes, because
they earned it. In a capitalistic
society, lhls is the way it WOib. Once
in a lifetime, a Ryne Sandberg comes
along and quits baseball because he
didn't think he deserved such a huge
salary. "Ryno" has since returned, and
rm belting he'll prove to be wonh iL
Football, basketball and hockey
stars make millions because they
draw crowds that pay big bucks to
ace them. Who pays to watch a
teacher?
Meanwhile, don't ovc:rcstimate lhe
glory of "acclaim." Sometimes the
spotlightcansettoohotforcomfort.

Ask Elb:abelh 'hylor, Woody ADen
and others.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
is 59. Seven years ago, he had a mild
heart auack. Since lhen, he has had
two angioplasty operations and a
quadruple bypass. He's doing weU but
has high blood pressure and is on
medication. The doctor said my
husband's heart problems are
hereditary and had he been 1 smoker
and not exercised, he'd be dead no111
Here's the problem. I would like to
make our bouse a "no-smoking•
zone. My brolher. who jllll had a
triple bypass, aya lhil is JUde and be
won't como to our home IS long IS
lhe "JIO.smoking" rule is in elect. My
sister, a heavy smoker, refuses to
eomc to our bouse if 111e can't smoke
bcrc.
They botb claim sccondhand
smote CIIIIIOl hwt anyone. Can you
provide infonnation to show tbat
smoking is hazardous to my
husband's health? •• SAOINAW,
MICH.
DEAR SAG.: You can get a copy
of the CeolerS for Disease Conttol's
Action Guide m Secondhand Smoke
and the Environmental Protection
Agency's Pact Sheet on Sooondhand
Smoke by calling 1-800-CDC-1311
or writing: Office on Smoking and
Heallh, CenlerS for Distase Conttol
and Prevention. 4170 Buford
Highway, N.E. (MSK·SO), Allanta,
Ga. 30341.

HEATING AND COOliNG

TRANE

MAKES A GREAT GIFT FOR FRIENDS &amp; FAMILY!

Once again this yeer, the bowl alliance has lucl&lt;ed out, at teas1 as tar as the national championship is concerned.
Thanks to Ohio State's loss to Michigan Thanksgiloing weekand, Nebraska's showdown with Florida in the Fiesta Bowl
Jan 2 will produce a clear-cut No. 1 taam, and we think the Huskers wtll solldlly the position they've held tor most of the
season with a four-point wtn. Nebraska QB Tommie Frazier and his Gator counterpart, Danny Wuerffel, are two of the
beSI·known and most talented players In the college game- they're true team leaders- and they should make the
post-season finale a memorable one.
We've been cntictzlng the bowl alliance lor a while now, but we promise to ease up if the Big Ten and Pacific-10 conferences can be persuaded to join It next season. II Ohio State or Northwestern or U.S.C. should go undefeated 1n 1996,
we'd hate to see them left out of the hunt In tho non·allied Rose Bowl. In the meantime, took lor the Bucl&lt;eyes to mix it
up with Tennessee in the second·best bowl game- the Otrus- and tor the Northwestern Wtldeats to cap their unforgettable season with a wtn over Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl.
we like to gauge the best college teams' tong-term success - and popularity - by checl&lt;ing the percentage of bowlgame returnees. This year it's down from recent years: Only 19 of the 40 teams that played in a bowl last year are back.
The other major statistic we chart Is mUCh higher. This season we plcl&lt;ed a total of 1,761 games right and 591 wrong
(with 42 ttes), a forecasting average of .749.
Finally, we present our annual list of the (op 20 college conferences. basad on tho average of our power quotients for
the teams in every conference in the country. With Ohio State and Northwestern leading the way, the Big Ton tops our
list for the second year In a row. Here's the breakdown:

Dair4

1. Big Ton . ... ..... ... .. . ......... .. . .97.6
2. Southeastern . .
. . . . . . . . 95.3
3. Big Eight . . ...... . . .• •.. • .• . .•.... . .93.3
4. Pacific-10 . . . . . . .•• . .. . . . . . . . . 92.9
5. Atlantic Coast . . . .
. .. . .. • .. . ...89.5
6 Btg East . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . 87.8
7. Southwest . . . . . . .. • .....•.. • ...... 87.4
8. Western Athletic . . . . ... . . .. . .........84.2
9. Btg Sky ... . ... . ..• .• •....... . •. . ... 76.5
10. Mid -American ... . ..... ... .. . .. ... . .. 70.2

Queen
992-3322

; BOARD VETERANS RECOGNIZED l'laques and gifts were presented to members of
!he Meigs County Council on Aging's Board of
frusteea whme lerlllllare expiring at Tuesday's
\l*tlng held at tbe Senior Citizens Center. RK·

James

MIDDLEPORT

&lt;?micron Chapter, Delta Kapp!
~ m_et Salunlay at the Ham·
"""'Masomc Lodge
:. Brenda Hall and Elaine Perry,
preschool teachers at Wellston,
~wed slides of school activities
for the 17 children of the working
~r who are in lhe two daily ses·
~ons. Th.ey noted .that meals are
$rved With the children learnmg
llble manners and sharing, puppeiS
aie used to teach about drug abuse,
$1 thei'e are songs, games, and art
~vi tics to prepare the children for

R. Acree Jr. Director
992-5141

THE NEW GOLD STANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

11 . Southland ..... . • .. ••....... . .. ... . .. 68.4
12. Big Wost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .
. .... .. 68.0
13. Yankee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . .65.3
14. Southern .. .. ...... ... . . •... . ........64.0
15. Gateway Athletic . . . . .. . . .. . . .. .
63 7
16. North Central
58.2
17. OhiO Valley . . . . . . .
. .52.8
18. 1vy . .. .. .. . . . .. .
. ....... 52.7
19. Lone Star .. .. .
.. ..... 52.6
20. Gull South .. . .. ..
.. ..... 51 .3

c. .. . . . . . . ..

: A ~gram on. Early Childhood

lld~uon was gtven wben Alpha

Fisher Funeral Home
Bruce Fisher - Director

.. .....

~-

(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN
992·5432

ognlzed for their years of service were left to
right, Charles Blakeslee, outgoing president;
Lula Hampton, Cindy Oliveri, and the Rev.
WOllam Mlddleswart. Susan Oliver, executive
director, made tbe pruentatlons.

~ducation program features session

RAWUNGHOATS

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

••
••
•

POMEROY

,•

.•..

A turkey dinner was serve to the
members by women of the Lodge
at table decorated in the Christmas
- motif. Fayors were crocber.ed staiS
and candles. Fern Feltpn gave the
invocation and read "Keeping
Christmas" by Graa: Eisley.
Fern Grimm presided at the
business meeting. It was reported
by Deborah Hammons, treasurer
that ~192 has_ been collecr.ed from
the silent auction.
Cards were signed for Lucille
S~th and Margaret Parsons, both
Me1gs County charter members,
and for Avice Frecker, Roberta
Wilson, Martha Greenaway,

Dorothy Scou and Mary Houser.
President Grimm reminded
members of the coming state and
international conventions. Nancy
Kibler announced a carry-in dinner
for January at the Wellston Depot
on Jan. 27. Jo Ann Hays. researcb
committee chairman, asked mem·
bers to return their papers to ber
this month.
~here was group singing of
Chnstmas songs led by Pauline
Burson.
Attending from Meigs County
were Mrs. Grimm, Rosalie Story,
Mrs. Hayes, and Nellie Paster.

The Regular
Price Of All
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'

Ann
Landers

HIGHLIGHTS

992·2156

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11.

WARNER

...21

Auburn . . . . . . . . • . . . ... 21
Tennessee . . . . . . • . . . . .. 27
Syracuse. . . . . . . . . . ... 24
Oregon .............. . . .25
Southern Calilornia ........ 20
Notre Dame
.. 23

:ara.

ANDERSON'S

Nort~

Monday. Jan. t
OUTBACK BOWL
CITRUS BOWL
GATOR BOWL
COTION BOWL
ROSE BOWL
ORANGE BOWL

Ohio State .. .. .. ... ...... .33

you want In the
you n10ed at a orl•~e I
you'll

.. 25

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!This is the way America's
!capitalistic system works

Football '95

Support These
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TRACTORS and
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START DELIVERY DATE _ __

985·3307

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This year buy a 9ft that Ia
custom made for anyone on
your list With home delvety,
a aub~e:tlltlon ia ideal fOf
thoae with a bull· ln curi01ily.
Give a gift that Com&amp;l more
than once a year.

FARM&amp;FLEET
Store Hours: Monday • Saturday Sam • 9pm • Sunday 9am • 6pm

Silver Bridge Plaza- 446-1221
•

••
•••
•
•
•

••
~

•

•••
•

�~~~ Community calendar
....

Tbe Community Calendar ill
: · : published as a free service to
· · non-prorit groups wishing to
• · annou nu meeting and spedal
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote 18les or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permtts and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Building Committee meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. All district residents
urged to anend.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange ball, holiday potluck, 6:30
p.m. Thursday with meat provided.
Meeting to follow.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Group
of Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m
Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church basement, Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.
RACINE - Star Mill Park
Board will sponsor Christmas in
the Park Thursday, 6:30 p~m. Santa
will arrive with treats for the chi!·
. dren. Refreshments will be served
following the candlelight walk
around the park path.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 meeting, Thursday,
refreshments 6:30 p.m.; meeting
7:30p.m.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting
and annual installation of officers,
7:30p.m Thursday. Refreshments.

Thursday, December 14, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

SATURDAY
HARTFORD - US Local
5171, Christmas dinner, 11 am. to
5:30 p.m. Saturday, at Hartford for
present and past employees of
Foote Mineral and American
Alloys.
MIDDLEPORT- Christmas
program at Old Bethel Freewill
Baptist Church, State Route 7 at
Story's Run Road, Saturday, 7:30
p.m.
RUTLAND - Meigs County
Bikers Association Toy Giveaway
Saturday, 10-6 p.m. at the American Legion Post in Rutland. Only
those who have submiued_applications ean pick up toys. No delivery.
SUNDAY
POMEROY- South Bethel
New Testament Church, Cbrisonas
program, Sunday, 6 p.m. Adult
class to present "His Name is
Jesus" and the teen class will do
"Miracle Under a Blazing Star"
Refreshments following program.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) rations, scientists are beading out in
Scientists bave revised their think- search of an ancient biosphere that
ing in the more than two decades could be obscured in underground
since the Viking missions to Mars oases that Viking missed or in minsent back no signs of moisture or eral deposits of now-dry lakebeds
life on the red planet.
aod channels.
Many now believe that perhaps
They ' ll have a few chances.
Mars bad life that became extinct Although the S1 billion Mars
They are pinning their hopes on Observer was lost in 1993 before it
new missions that will once again could radio home some of the
look for signs of water, under- answers to Mars' great mysteries.
ground hot springs and the poten- smaller missions are upcoming.
tial foc life.
NASA has a Mars Pathfihder
"After Viking, there was a feel- mission scheduled for launch in
ing we bad been there, done that. 1996, which will send a small rover
and so much for looking for life," to the Martian surface in 1997. It
said Jack Farmer, a geologist and also has Mars Global Surveyor
paleontologist with NASA's Ames missions scheduled for launch in
Research Center in Mountain 1996 and 1998 to make observaView.
tions of minerals and rocks from
In the next round of explo- orbit.
We sell clothing on consignment.
Check with us on selling your used clothing.
We need all sizes, small to extra large.
We have silk blouses, winter coats

We Are Now Doing Alterations

GEM CLOTHING &amp; CONSIGNMENT
99 Mill St.

ON THE "T"
Middleport, Oh.
992·6684
Hrs.: Mon.-Sat. 9-7 p.m. Closed Sunday

GUYS&amp;

'

.

(lime Stone Low Retu)

DOLLS

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (614) 645-8434

BOTTLE GAS

..

Wrecker Service

:,. ~··" Car/Heavy Track
•

R.3pU1r•

~

· :-- I

••
:::
:.: '

(614) 992-6643
23 Cottage Drive
Middleport, Oh. 45760

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

MIDDLEPORT

Bill Slack

~- Scientists

SO.. VER SPRlNG, Md. (AP) Millions of ulcer sufferers may
final! y get some medicine to cure
their storruw:h pains and keep them
from coming back.
Scientific advisers urged the
Food and Drug Administration on
Wednesday to approve the first
antibiotic therapies to kill the H.
pylori bacterium that causes 80
percent of the 4.5 mi~lion ulcers
diagnosed m the Umted States
~ every year.
.
H. pylori is a common in~ecuon
• ·affecting six of I 0 Amen cans.
: :although not all experience any ill·
. ness.
The first therapy consists of
. ad ding the antibiotic clar: ithromycin, sold by Abbott Labora. tories as Biaxin, to Astra Merck's
: popular acid blocker Pri_losec. ~e
:second therapy adds clarithromycm
· to a new drug by Glaxo Wellcome
called Tritec, a combination of its
popular ulcer drug Zantac and a
.stronger version of the cheuucal m
·over-the-counter Pepto Bisrnol.
Iiy using such drugs, "in two to
five years we could wipe out 90
percent of the peptic ulcers in the
United States," said Dr. Barry
Marshall, who discovered H. pylori
in Australia in the early 1980•.

. Breakfast with Santa
The annual children's breakfast
with Santa will be held Saturday
: morning at the Meigs Museum,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
The event will be held from 9
. a.m. to 11 a.m. and children may
·come anytime during that time
period. The program will include
· an all-you-can-eat breakfast, a craft
workshop, bearing the Christmas
. story, and a visit with Santa
Cost for children 12 and under
· will be $2.50 and over 12 and
adults, $3. There will be an additional charge of $2 for a picture
. with Santa
To make reservations, parents
may call 992-3810. Each session
wiU last about 45 minutes.

.•. AND A
1'1\miDbE IN
AP~CKU/

PEAR TREE/

992·2269

OILER'S

DEER SHOP

tAll''"'

'.::=======!,

111 Carat

SALE

Reg. $259

$14 9

1/4 Carat

Acquisitions Means
Low, Low Prices
Every Day!

Reg. $799

SALE

$449

Dia.
Pendant
14K

CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS • IN STOCK

1OK AND 14K GOLD CHAINS

NECKLACES • BUCELETS

50% 70%*

SAVE
TO
-cOMPARE ANYWHEREGOLD •s• BAR

DIAMOND BRACELET
1

14K Diamond
Earrings

Y. Tw.
Reg.$249

=
=
-=
=
-==
=
=
=

•

SALE

$14
~Carat

TW

$299

-

Reg.$499

ct. Total Weight

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
s_erve-U (614) 645-8434

Public Notice

Public Notice

$145

$999.

•••
At. 2, Pt. Pleasant 304-675-9915
D.J. FRI. &amp; SAT.
Featuring Mike Green
Eveoy Wednesday KARAOKE
Tues. &amp; Thurs. Pool Tournament
RUTLAND AMERICAN
LEGION BINGO
No Bingo until Jan. 3, 1996
Starburst will be $500.00 •
Four Number $200.00
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL

l Carat T. W.•••••••. Sale $145
3 Carat T.W•••.... Sale $1,299
5 Carat T. W•••.••• Sale $2,500

AT

COURT
STREET GRILL '

Dec.14
11 shopping
days to Christmas

I'

1·900·484-2500

Ext. 1525

mo.

111'3BI'21 C8EG175284
1985 Mercury Lynx Serial
11 MEBI'5424FW631478
1988 Hyundle Excel GL
Serial
IKMHLF22J1JU438648
1990 Dodge Daytona
Serial
11 B3XG24K3LG419118
1994 Pontiac Sunblrd
Serial _
11 G2JB148XR7578734
1987 Ford Bronco II Setlat
11 FMCU14T5HUA36729
460D
Farmall
tntttnatlonat Farm Tractor
The Ierma of the aata are
caah. Home National Bank
rttervea the right to bid II
the aala or to remove any or
all llama from the aate at
any time.
(12)12, 14, 19,21,26,29;6TC

LOST: Diamond Engagement
Ring in Odd Lots parking lot in
Gallipolis, Ohio on Dec. 12th.
REWARD!!! Please call30488?-3630 or 304-882·3570.

Reg. $329
Umlted Stock .

2 Ct. TW for

LIVE GIRLS
CALL NOW

Comml .. lonero, Meigs
County, Ohio, hereby give
notice that the following
root eatot•, which lnctudea
Langsville, Ohio
o realdantlat dwelling, ahell
be aotd to the hlgheat
SR325
bidder at public auction.
Skin· Cut • Wrap
The oubjoct reel tttato Ia
d11ctlbed batow:
&amp;Freeze
Situate In Bedford
Tow'
nahlp, Melga County,
Yot Kfl',., &amp; we
State of Ohio 1nd being In
Fraction 36, Town 3 North,
742-2076
Range 13 Weal of the Ohio
Compony'a Purchaae end
being deacrlbod aa lollowo:
.Public Notice
Beglnnll)g at a point E11t
_..;:.=::.:..:..:.::.=;__-1
about 1So loot from the
PUBUC NOTICE
Southwttt corner of uld
Saturday, Decemblf 30,
Fraction 36, aold point of
1995, at 10:00 a.m. the
boglnntng bolng on tho
Home National filank witt
South line of aald Fraction
offlf lor aate ill public
38 ond being merkod by an
auction on the Benk
Iron rod along a fence line;
Parking tot the following:
Public Notice
thence North 4 degree• 36
t 9117· Kenworth Model 204
mlnutee 18" Weal 1&amp;7:66
Setlat 12040112
leot
to on Iron rod; thence
PUBUCNOnCE
• 1184 Plymouth Reliant
South
degreea 55
The Board of County mlnuttt 85
Serial
31 aeconda Eeot
300 foot to a point In the
:.I 11111111111 IIII11111111111 I111111 I111111111111111 IIIIIIII IIII t:
center of Townahlp Road T= · · ·· ·- -- ~- - -· ·· · ····· · ·· -······· · · · ·· · ·· ·· · · · ··· · · · ······ · -·· 17 HE (McGrath Ro•d), uld
contet of road btlng the
Weal line of Herb (or Fred,
Rlgga; thonca South 14
degreea 22 mlnutet 01"
Wt1t 62.39 foet and South o
degreta 12' 28" Wttl 85.37
feet along the center of aeld
Townahlp Road and the
Herb (or Fred, Rl{tga W11t ,
line to tho South line of aeld
Fraction 36; thence Weal
270 foot along e fence on
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
the South line of aald
Frtctlon 36 to the point of
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
beginning, containing 1.01

FRIDAY 9-8
SATURDAY 9:6

Diamond
Engagement Ring

Lessons on
Piano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
69 N. Locust St.
Cheshlre,Oh.
614-367-0302
Roger Walker-

Wreaths ~ Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Laurel Limousine Service
"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
Sale 6 Reliable Night Out on the Town
Owned 6

~c~::;v

OPEN NOV. ..!3 • 1 0 to 9:00

1112419511 mo.

11t2Wi51t

Service with
0

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051

1-800
650-1234

Operated by

{614) 992•4279 Jo~~J~~::~

6

33058 SR 33 • Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
1211&amp;'1 mo .

Call your date now
1-900-255-1515

Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Mu st be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

'

I

•
I

1

.,
'

POMEROY, OHIO
FEATURING
JEFF NORTH
SATURDAY, DEC. 16
9TIL?

'

-=
-

MEn NEW PEOPLE

THE FUN WAY
TODAY!
1·900.3118·0500
EXT. 3754
$2.99 Pertnin.
Must Be 18 yn.
lCMKb·be-

Relltirf4

7122194

Serv-U (619)·645-8434

RACINE
GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots
Sun 1 pm
12 gauge
Factory Choke Only

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Umeslone &amp;Grovel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp;House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Soyre

(Stock up on your

SAYRE TRUCKING

holiday baking

614·742·2138

supplies)

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, undergro!ind bores.

acrea, more or 1111•

PENING NOVEMBER 25tli
Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

Holiday Hours M-S 9:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Sun. 12:00 - 5:00 p.m.

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rales.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-t TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992·3954 or 985-3418

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(61 4) 594-2008 NIGHT
·,

·. •

12 Guagt
Factory c•okt Only
Bashan Building .

.r'

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BUDFORD'S

•

9/27!95 tin

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live

FREE

Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, turn East at
Darwin onto At 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry Ridge Rd .. 1
1/2 miles 10 tree 1arm. Walch lor Signs. 10:00 a.m. til dark
Nov. 24 thru Dec. 24
Wagon Rides/Craft Shop -Weekends

110\\\IW
E\(:.\Y\TJ!\(; .
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Horne Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

992-:~8:{8

Pick-Up discarded
washers, dryers, hot
water tanks, stoves,
furnaces, and any
metal material.
Call 992-4025
between 8 am • 8 pm
Mon thru Sal.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

Call Wayne Nef1992·

Communi ty As saul I Prevention
Services Is Seeking Dedica ted
Volunteers To Operate A Crisis For Free Estimates
1ll tfl e. Mu st Be Reliable A Few
4113195
Hours A Week . Training Will Be
. __ _ _ _......;;;,;,;:::~, ' Provided . Ben el tcial To Social
440S

Con1ae1 CAPS A1614-286-li611.
40
Giveaway

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
At King Hardware

&lt;lhe ~'lame
Co'lne'l
Picture Frame, Mals
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992-5020

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1 Black Female Pomeran1an, Not
Good W1th Kids, 614-446-0770

1/2 Beagle Male Puppy, 61-4 -3881100
3 Year Old Female Regi stered
Cocker Spariej, 614-367-7313.

4 lol.ittens, approx . 6mos tlld, to
good country home only. Save us
from the pound. 304-675-3963.

614-992-7643 (
( No Sunday Calls)

Black &amp; White Female Kittens AI ·
"rectio na te &amp; Playful 614 -446 -

··
2/12/92lltn

Using lhe Clussi[itds

Is •• E•sy •• ...

~

=
=
=
=
=
=

,lhouf'S.

The Board of County
.i:ommlaalonera or IIalga
County, Ohio reHrvll the
right to ra1u11 or ra)act any
bid lor any reaaon, and may
re-advertlll llld proparty
until the property •• eold.
No warranttea are
expreaaad or Implied aa to
,title of property.

RACINE
FIRE DEPl.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

Work And Med1cal SIUdents.

The bearing• In the above
dL acrlptlon are baaed on
the Ohio Company's
Purcheu aurvey. Above ·
Public Notice
d11crlptlon prepared by
Board of County
Robert H. Eaaon, Reg.
Commlulonora of Melgo
Surveyor No. S-06546; In
County, Ohio
Auguat, 1980.
Gloria Kloea, Clerk
EXCEPTING all coal, oil,
1111 and all other minerals (12) 14, 21, 28; 3TC
and right appurtonant
thereto outatandlng In
othera.
SUBJECT to oeaementa
of record .
· Said public auction witt
take place on Friday,
January 19, 1996, at 9:00
a.m., on the front atepa of
the Metga County
Courthoute, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768.
TERMS OF SALE: A
depoe~ of 1o percent of tho
total purchaae price will be
due on the day of 1111 In
esah or cartlflad check only.
Bal1nce wilt ba dua In 10
. daya pending the leauance
of a qult..ctalm dlld aa tltlo
to said raal eateta.
lnapactlon of tha property
may be arranged by
contacting llelga County .
Sheriff Jamaa II. Soulaby
.' during regular bualneaa

-=

1112919511 mo. pd .

Cheaper Rates

HA 1! TWELL HOUSE
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696

614-949·3027

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

P.O. Box 587

For Free estimate call949·2512
REASONABLE RAT£5
813mn

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

949-2512

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

"· .

TWO DAYS ONLY

FRIDAY 9·8
SATURDAY 9·6

$10 &amp; Up

$300 &amp; up

101211041tfn • .

Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receptions,
anniveraaries,
reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
In the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call992-n47.
11/1411

GUITARS

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

Call
614-949-2512

Light Hauling,

Racine American
Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring ad for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685

11 120195 1 mo

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

TWO DAYS ONLY

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
614 992·2753

Touch·tone Phone Required
Serv-u (Gig) 645-8434

Hr.

,: •

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 6:30p.m. home
of Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to
take items for Serenity House.

:-.are urging
:. approval of
.-ulcer drug

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

$2.99 per min. Must be 18 yrs.

U
~~tLS~AR4
:;:,r-;4 ~~

1·800·837·8217

GALLIPOLIS

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

::~·-;:::=====11211t=n~' 'r-";...,;_,__,__,__·-.....•"'..·.,

WILL CLOSE AT 3 P.M. ON
FRIDAY, DECEMBER lS'H, 1995
FOR OUR EMPLOYEE
CHRISTMAS PARTY
742·2211

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Worl&lt;
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

.~:

949·2882

END YOUR
LONELINESS NOW!!!
There is someone for
everyone. Whatever
your preference
Nationwide or Right Next
Door. Don't Waste
Another Minute
Call Now! II
1-900-255-5454
Ext. 4375

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

:· -: .:
· :· : ·
:;:
• •
:.:
::;
:-:

3rd St. Racine, OH

(Speelllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Ext. 9765

You' I
In The Claulf'-ds

Auto

HAULING

1-900-484·2600

CHRISTMAS TREES

STAR GUITAR

WICKS

FrNDYOUR
LOVEll!

.

AND

NEW &amp; USED CLOTHING!
Clothing for the entire family

,.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

&amp; wedding gowns in stock.
SPECIAL NEED FOR MEN AND WOMEN'S LARGE SIZES.

from fimilies remembered for the
holidays.
Visitors were from Star, Harrisonville, and Rock Spriass
Grange.
Pauline Atkins aod Pauline Rife.
delegates to the State Grange con·
ference, reported on their attendance there.

A program ·or" Cbrisonas read·
ings were given when Hemlock
Grange 2049 met recently at the
ball.
Linda Scboeppoa, lecturer, bad
charge of the program which
included readings, "Christmas is
Coming" by Nancy Wells; "Christ·
mas is Here" by Pauline Rife; "Festive Christmas" by Golda Reed,
and "Thanks for the Holidays" by
Rosalie Story. There was group
singing of several carols.
Oyster stew prepared by Wal·
lace an.d Muriel Bradford and potatoes prepared by Edna Clark, along
witli dessert was served preceding
the meeting. It was noted that Ziba
Midkiff will be janitor for the next
meeting . There was a gift
exchange, and thank you notes read

12111'1151 mo.

R1JI1_ANO - Senior Saints of
Rutland Church of God will meet
at the church, Thursday, 2 p.m. The
group will take a bus to Jackson for
a Christmas dinner.

13

Christmas readings
Life on Mars? Man
going back to look again Dighlight Grange session

MONDAY
RUTLAND - Christmas play
at the Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church, 1/2 mile off Depot St.,
Rutland, Monday, 7 p.m. Pastor the
Rev. Dewey King invites public.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens blood
pressure clinic and meeting for
Christmas dinner and gift
exchange, Tuesday_, I 0 a.m . to
12:30 p.m.

The Dally Sentinel• Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

You Do!t't Hove To Look For
To Spy the Best Buys In

the Closs/f/eds.

..

r---:::=::::-----:::::-=::----::::----,

L ~0~--') lirew~atmteernt_
r

Equipment

13703
iChnstmas Puppte~ . Chow &amp; Bor ·

der Collie Mix, 1 Female, 1 Ma ~.

614-446-1052.

• Cute. furry, Chnstmas pupptes .
Mothe r part Black La b 8 pa rt

Golden Retriever. Father mued .
304-675-8757

Di.1tributed by

Puppie s to giveaway, call614 ·
992-63 73 after 500.

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

small gray kiuen. &amp; large yellow

The water treatment company cordially invites you to

cat, to good home. 304 -675-7929.

participate in a free , no obligation . comprehensive water
analysis. WE WI~~ TEST FOR THE FO~LOWING:

Three month old part Husky/ part

.
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call RainSofl at 992-4472 Or 1-800-606-3313
to set u our free water anal Is. 10/5/Hn

~=======;;.;;,::;;;..:::.:;•;;.;;.-;.;;.;;;-..

Home or
Tral.ler

Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567

~; w,~·~

·, ,,

Ill the ~··«

:""

Gldss'ifieds!
.·,;.r:;,

Beagle pups oo giVeaway, 614985-4225.
Toys Do nale To Poor &amp; Needy,
614-446-6398.
Yellow Angora 2mos old killen, to
,.,.homeonly. 304-li75-&gt;46so.

so

Lost and Found

Fo und : lost Or ·oumped" Kraus

~~f: ;h~~dbo~·~~~~,;,e~o~~~

Dog Or Brinany Spaniel Type.
. •
Tan Pa1ch Over Righi Eye, GenUa
Naoured, Call 614-448-4713 II Na1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , "CiaimedWiiiGiveeway.
1 1Jfc • , ,

Riggs Christmas Trees

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

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

Found: two weeks ago, smaM wellman nered Beagle. possibly has
arthritrs, Rocksprings Rd., Pomeroy, 614-992-2791.

lost: Blue leather Jacket, 3 Pins:~
On Front Return Ptns To : Par -

sons, 905 SR 218, Gallipolis.
Lost: large male dog, cream col-

ored lace, German Shepherd ~­
orad back, Keeb"ugh Rd. area

614-985-4463.

.

_Lost Walker coon hound, white/
black/ brown, last seen 1215195

Walle Pen area, call 614·74f
~-

.

�Thursday, December 14, 1995

:~age 14 • The Dally Sentinel

_ Thursday, December 14, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Pa~e 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

420

Mobile Homes

&amp;Vicinity
Two and three bedroom mob1le

AL L Ya rd Sales Must Be Patd In
Advance DE ADLINE 2 00 p m
rile day belore th e ad 1s to ru n
Sa nday ed1t10n 2 00 p m Fndat
U onday edrt10n 10 00 a m Sat

i homes. star uno at $240 -$300.
sewer, water and trash tncluded,
614-992 2167

440

trcDay

FurniShed EffiCiency, 607 second,

Middleport

Gallipoli s, Share Bath, $185/Ullll
11es Pa1d 614 -446 -4416 Alle r

&amp; Vicinity

7pm

All Yard Sale s Must Be Pa1d In
Ad11a nce Deaa lm e 1 OOpm !he
(lay be lore the ad IS to ru n, Sun

992-22 18
1 bedroom apartment '" Middle

Public Sale

pon, ava tlable December 1, all

and Auction

utt ll !les patd $250 per month,
$100 depost t Bam to Spm 614
992-7806

every Fflday Saturd a ~ .
/ om Mt Alto Auc tion At 2- 33
Crossroaos" New m9rcB,andt se,
groctur es &amp; ols mo nt E'ff'Fre~z rer
A rre t ons

2 Bedroom Apartment, Downtown
Galhpohs, Central Heat, Atr, Ver~
Reasonable U!lhty Btlls, L1ke New,
614-886-7174

930
Rr cil Pt!ar son AuctiOn Company,
tull t rrrf! auc tronee r co mpl e te
auct ron
ser vt ce
l tcensed
1166 Ohto &amp; Wes t Vtrgtnta 304 773 5785 0· 30 4 773- 5447
Wanted to Buy

Ant ~oues

collec tables, estates,
Rrver rna An trq ues, Russ Moore,
Q.Wner 6t4 ~92 2526
Cl ea n la!e Model Cars Or
Tru cks 19B 7 Mod el s Or Newer,
Smr!ll BUICk PontiaC 1900 Easter n Avenue, Galhpolrs

J &amp; lJ s Auto Parts Buytng sal vage vehicles Sellrng parts 304 ·
7735033
lop Puces Pa rd Old US Corns,
Sil ver Go ld D1amon ds, All Old
Coll ec t ble s Pa perwetghts. Etc
M T S Co rn Shop, 151 Second
A~enue Gall ipolis 614-446-2842
Us ed fumr ture antrques , one
prece or complete estates, Osby
Ma rtm 61 4-992 7441
~ant ed To Bu~ Lrttle T1kes Toys,
fi14 245--588 7

WA NTE D BooK ·waterloo Won
ders • Contact S A Lee 682 Mo hawk St reet, Col umbus, OH
43206 61 4-444 3001
Nr ll Buy Good Clean Clothrng,
0 1shes Go spel Books Mrsc Mer
chandlse Wed Frr Sat 11 AM
4 P M 1699 McC ormic k Road ,
Gat11pohs, 61 4 446- t51 1

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 0

Help Wanted

"I

110

told you we should have wa1ted another
week The '96 calendars aren't 1n yet!"

HelpWanted

Smal l local Ftrm See~mg Part Time On Call Cleanmg Persons
Send Resume To SCC S P 0 Box
S38, Kerr, OH 45643

180

Wanted To Do

Babysmmg
In
My
Home,
Cheshire Area, 614-367-7849
Child Care In My Galltpol•s Area
Home All Ages Welcome Hot
Meals Please Call 614 441-0439
Expenenced Child Care Giver
Now Accepting Toddlers &amp; Infants, located In Galltpo lts 614441.0108
Extra ha nd Sk1 ll ed handy man
Truck . sca llotd too ts Cus tom
made wood bed frame s, head
boards 304-675 6925
General Matntenance, Pa rnttng,
Yard Work Wr ndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned l1ght Haultng,
Commenca l, Res•denttal. Steve
614-446-8861
Georges Portable Sawm1tl, don't
haul ~our logs to the mill Jt.JSt call
304-075-1957
Proless1onal Tre e Serv tce, Com
plete Tree Care , Bucket TrtJck
Servrce SO Ft Reach, StumR Aemollal, Free Esttmatesl In
surance, 24 Hr Emergency Serv
rce Call And Savel No Tree Too
B•o Or Too Small' B1dwell Ohto
614 388-9643, 614-36 7- 7010
Respons•ble College Student
Wtllrng To Babysrt Any Hour s
Startmg Dec 14th Through Jan
6th, Reasonable Ra!es 614 -4o46-

$ 1,000 Wee kly SttJiftng Envel
ope s Free ln lo Send Sell Ad
dressed Sta mped Envelope To 7538
E~ p l or e1 Dept 91 6069 Old Canon Road Box 510 Jackson , MS Rub &amp; Scrub Cleamng Servtce, dustmg, mopping, wtndows and
39211
more Complete servtce or touch
$200 $90 0 week.ly Yea r rouna ups References on request, call
pos rt1ons Hrrrng men women
Terry at 614 -992 -4232 or 614 i= ree room board Wtll tram Call 992-4451
24hrs
407 875 - 20 22
ext
Sun Valley Nursery Sc hool
0505C 49
Chlldcare_ M-F 6am-5 30pm Age s
135 000 i VA INCOME Po1en11a1
2 K, Young- Sc hool Ag e Dunng
Readrng Books Toll Free (1) 800· Summer 3 Days per Week. Mtnt
898 977e EX1 A-2814 For DelaJis
mum 614-446-3657
$40 ,000 IYR INCOME Potential
Yome T~p 1s t s I PC Users To1J
Cree ( 1) 800 -898 -9778 E xt T28 t4 FOf ll stmgs
AGE NT AVON SALES
[ern $8 -$15 /Hr At Work -Home
Be nelr tsl 01 sc ounts l Fle)Jble
l lours r No Inventory ReqUired
t 800 742-4738
ARE YOU AN AMBITIOUS,
SE LF-MOTIVATED
INDIVIDUAL?
11 You Are We Have A Untque
Opportun rty Fo r You In Route
Sates Schwa n s Sales Enterpns
es A Natrona! Frozen Food Com
puny Cll.n Olle r Excellent Oppor
1unrt1es To Sell BenefitS Include
Pa rd Tra1nmg Prolt Shartng , ln wr ance lncentr"Jes, And Excel
lent Advancement Opportunities
No Invest ment Aequ tr ed You
MJ s\ Be At Least 21 Years Old
And Havo ft. Goo d Drrvrng /Em
J loymen l Reco rd lnlervtewtng
') ec t8 19 Fot Apporntment Call
BOO 336 7569 EOE

AVON I All Areas
Spears 304 675 1429

I

Wr it Clean By Appotntmen t Only,
Res1denua1 ICommerc ral , For
More Information, Call Kns Or
Leave Message. 614 -446-4400

FINANCIAL

21 0

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bu st
ness wtrh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 unu t you have mvestrgated
lhe offering
lnvestrrent Property In Galltpohs,
Owner May Be A~e To Help Wrth
Some Ftnancmg , Call 614 -797 4345 Ahere PM

liiiiittoilliioollliiliiio-iitiiiiiiil

Sh 1rle~

AJO N EARN U$ at hom e -at
worK All areas 30 4 88 2-2645, 1
800 992-6356 INDIREP
Home Typ1st s PC users needed
$45 000 rncome potenttal Call 1
800 513 4343 Fxt B-9368
HVAC INSTALLER
Gr ow 1n9 Sou th eastern Ohro
HVA C Company LOOking For Ex
LJ N enced Sell Motrvated Install
Good Pay
Good Bene lrls
Re11remem Plan
He A lead er And Jorn Our Team
l o d&lt;1 ~ 1 Send Resume To
HVAC Installer
PO Box 806
Jaci~.SOn, OH 45640
Need someone to repatr uprtght
Hooverswccpcr, 614992202 1
No Experrence Necessary ! $500
To $900 Wee kly •Pote ntial Pro
cessr ng Mortg age Aelund s. Own
Hours Call 19091 715-2300 EXI
782, 12• Hours!
Part T1 me $9 I Hr Answ er Tela
phones , Flexr ble Hour s /Lo cal
Ar ea No Expene nce Necessary
C::~ l l 1 809-474 654Q Ert 68 1 rnt
ld toll
PARl·TIME TRJCK DRIVER
Gallipolis Area, Must Hall e
1 Year Expenence (Mn"llrrum)
COL
Good MVR
No OWl's

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Fedeml Fair Hoosklg Act
ol1968 which makes lltllegal
to adverttse ·any preference,
hm1tallon or discrimination
basad on race, color, religion,
sex lamlhal status or national
ongm , or any mtentlon to
make any socn preference,
ltmttatton or d1scnmnatlon •
This newspaper will not

know11ng1y aocep1
advertisements tor real estate
wh1ch •s m VIOlatiOn of the law
Ot.Jr reacJers are hereby
mformed that all dwellings
advertised tn this newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opportunity bas1s

~"---------1
REAL ESTATE

1---------310
Homes for Sale

GOV 'T FORECLOSED Homes
For Pennt es On $1 Deltnque nt
Tax, Repo s~ REO's Your Area
Toll Free (t) 800 -898-9778 E xt
H-2814 For Current ltstlngs
N1ne room house- klur bedrooms,
newly temodeled, krtchen and
bath, new carpebng, large corner
lot, $ 28,000, 614 ·992 -6173 or
614-992-2015a1111r 5pm

Pass Dot PhySical &amp; Drug Screen Three bedroom !'lame 1n country
Yearly
Pay
Approxt mately Whites Htll Rd , Rutland, one bath,
$30 ,000 Send Resume To
1n-grourO pool, 614-992-5067
PO Box 769
Galhpoli• OH 45631
WHY REJ.IT??
Po !ii!IO n available fo r Dental As - Remodeled ranch 1n Bashan New
s1stan t For more tn fo call 304· stdmg , wmdows , kitchen, ba th,
_77..:3-..:58.:22
= - - - - - - - - l car pt:~ t located on approx one
acre Approx S1400 down, pay
Re cepuomst for medtcal oll tce
ments under $400 per month
E xpenence pref8f'red Send writwh1ch mcludes taxes and In
ten resumes o nl~ to Off1Ge Man·
surance Realtor owned Call Ron
ager. PO Bo) 779 New Haven,
or Sue Ron Hibbard Reall y, 101~
252115
free 1 000-886-5128

wv

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

$168 per month - 1996 t4x70
home Wrll help With dell\lery 614
385 -7671, ask for TOdd
14 x7 0
2bedroom ,
1211 30
screened tn porch, lo cated rn
south ern Mason Co Shown by
appOintment 304 -453-2244
1986 Grandville 14x70 2 Bed rooms , 1 Bath, Total Gas Under
ptnnmg , t61C1 2 Deck &amp; f ireplace
$ 12 000, 614 367-0429
1987 14,~;70 Mobrle Home, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath Real N1ce, $8,900,
614 379 2884

2 Bedroom Garage Apa rt ment
$300/Mo , Wtth Water Included
$200 Secur~ty Depos11 Requtred
Located Second Avenue , Galli
polls, 614-2561972
2bdrm apt s total elect rtc ap
pllances lurntshed, laundry room
lacllt!les. close to school tn town
Appl rcatrons a11atlable at Village
Green Apts #49 or call 614 -99 2
3711 EOH
2bedroom lurntshed, utrhtles pa1d
Mason WV 304 773-9009
35 WEST - 2 BA BRICK TOWN
HOUSES - 1261 Jackson Pike Across From Crnema $295/Mo
Dep For Remal A.ppltcauons Call
614 - 446 -095 7 614 -446 0006
614-441 - 1616 Or Wrrte PO Box
994, Galhpolts, OH 45631
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwood Dnve
hom $22e to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movtes Call 614 -446 -2 568
Equal Houstng Opportunity

Limited Oller! 1996 doublewtde .
3br 2bath, $1 799 down, $ 27 51
month Free deltve r y &amp; se tup
Only at Oakwood Home s N1tf0
wv 304-755 511ll5
Beech St , Middleport, 2br fur
MUST SELL t 994 Sabre. 14•70, nrshed apt , uttllttes pard , dep &amp;
three bedroom home Ca ll 1 800- rei 304-882-2566
466 76 71, ask for Dan
Prrce Bust er! New 14 x70, 2 or
3br Only $995 down, $195/rronth
Free delr\lery &amp; setup Onl~ at
Oakwood Homes, N11ro WV 304755 5885

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

SKAGGS SPECIAL SEASON
SALE
Ma~tag Washer /Dryer Set Was
$410 Now $375 W1th 90 Day
Warranty . Wh irlpool Washer
Was $150 Now $125 , Whirlpool
Washer Was St 25 Now $95, 3
To Choose From, Wh~rlpool Dryer
Was $125 Now $95 Maytag Dry
er Was $150 Now $1 25. Wh irl
pool Por!able Washer Fam1ly Size
$150, Whirlpool Dr~e r $95, Elec tnc Range 30• Harvest Gold Was
$150 Now $125, Chest Freezer
19 Cu F1 $150, Skaggs Ap pltances, 76 V109 Street, Galltpo hs Ohro , 614 -446 - 7398 , 1-800
499-3499
VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
Quality Household Furniture And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Ca"yl RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Also A'(ru\able
Free Deltvery Wtthtn 25 Mtles

520

Sporting
Goods

Auger 10122 rtfle &amp; 4 pa.NOr scope
$165 20 gauge s s shotgun $60
22 cal s s r1!1e $ 75 304 -6 751564
Wetder Mullt-Stauon Home Gym,
Includes Stepper $200, 614·379 2740, 614-446-4109

530

Antiques

12 mtles from Pomeroy - lwo bed rooms . one bath , lull ba sement ,
heat pump, dtshwasher. attached
garage, smmg room, wood burner,
no pets, $o400/mo , $400 deposrt,
references requtred 614 -965 3900
3Dedroom, Apple Grove, close to
locks 304 576 2642 or 304 762

2330
IN RUTLAND hou se for rent, lour
bedrooms, one bath, large rooms,
14x14 front room 14x12 kllchen,
new carpet, r9cently remodeled,
centra l em , HUD accepted, $3851
mo plus deposrt 614-992-2817

New 3 Or 4 Bedroom s, 2 112
Baths Lar~e Kllchen U!th ty
Room, Heat Pump, 2 Car Garage,
large lot, Ctty Schoo ls 4 M1les
From Gall1pol1s , $550/Mo + De post! , References, No Pels, 614
448-0038
Small Unfurntshed 1 Bedroom
House Near K-Mart Atr Condi tioned Gas Heat. Microwave,
New Patnl, &amp; Carpet Upstaus
Storage Avatlable, $325/ Mo +
Gas Electr1c, Call Berween 8 &amp; 10
P.M Or Before 9 AM 614 -4461822
Unfurnished two bedroom house,
ntce and clean. depostt requtred.
no m~11de pets, 614-g92-3090
Wetzgal Street, Pomeroy, WI D,
$350/Mo Deposn, 513-922-0294

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Be&lt;lroom Moble Home Mercer
ville Area. Reference &amp; Deposit.
614-446-1158
2 Bedroom $250/Mo , Depostt &amp;
References Requtred, 614 -387-

0032
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home At Evergreen, 614-379- 2678, No Sunday
Calls Please

apartments at Village Manor and
Atverstde Apartments tn Middle
port From $232-$355 Call 614
992· 5064 Equal Housmg Opportunrttes.
N1ce one bedroom apartment tn
Mtddleport. for smgle person only,
Juntor High area, 614-992-4140

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprtght, Ron Evans Enlerpr~ses,
Jackson, OhiO, 1-800-537-9528
SUMMERFIELD's TREE FARMcut your own Chnstmas tree, $15,
Sr 7 top of Eastern School hill,
turn on Locust Gro11e, 614-985

3435

new, used

WHITE ' S IAETAL DETECTO~S
Ron All1son, 1210 Second Ave nue Galltpolts, Ohto, 614 446 4336
.
Wreaths, swags. grave blankets,
roptng, art1frc1al Pomsemas, 9~.
Sue's Greenhouse, Racme, Oh
614-949-2115

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brtck, sewer p1pes, windows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters,
R1o G rande, OH Call 614 -245 5121
Year End Salol Save B1g Bucks!
All Steal Butldlngs Limited T1me
Only Call While Supphes lastl
Saunders Contracttng 614 -441
0219

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop ·Pet Groomtng Fea
tunng Hydro Bath Julte Webb
Call614-446-0231
AKC
Dalmatian
pupp1es
2females, shots &amp; wormed
$100ea 304-675-5553
AKC Pomerantans, Also Shelt te,

sho1S &amp; wormed 304-675-2193.

,.----'--------- 1AKC

One bedroom $225/mo, plus ut1ht1es and deposn No pets 304
675-4975

Electn c WheelchairS /Scooters,
New !Used, Scooter /Wheelchair
L1lts, Stairway Elevators, Lift
ChairS. Bowman's Homecare.
614 446-7293

Reg1stered Beagle Pups
Tn-Color, Weaned , Wormed,
Shots Started, $55 Each Can
Hold Ttll Chrtstmas Ca ll Steve
Stapleton, Work 614 446 -4172,
Home614-256·1 619

One bedroom turn1shed aparl
ment 1n Middleport 614-446 309 1
or 614 992 -5304 or 614 -992
2118

Fender Squ 1re Stat And Fender
S1de Krck Amp, Good Condition,
Schw1nn Mtn B•ke like New, 614446 0070

AKC Regtstered black and tan
mimature P1nscher puppies, three
females, ready tor Chrtstmas ,
$300, 614-985-3579 .

Twrn Rl\lers Tower, now acceptmg
apphcattons lor 1br HUD subs1d
tzed ap t for elderly and han'Ht
capped EOH 304 675-6679

Freezer beer for sale- gratn fed,
12- 13 months old, call 614-992·
2143 or 614-992 -6373 alter 5:00,
ask. lor Michael

AKC Registered Cocker Spantels,
four black and whne, one cho
colate, born 1214/ 95, call 614742-2124

Two bedroom apar tment tn Mtd·
dlepon, two baths, equ ipped
kttchen, HUD approved, reterenc
es and deposit requued 61 &lt;1·9854448 after 5:00~

Great Chnstmas Gtlts Boots By
Redwtng Ch tppewa, Tony Lama
Guaranteed lowest Pnces At
Shoe Cafe

AKC Aeg1stered Dachshund
B1rlf1day Oct 30, 1995 Small Depo sit Wtll Hold For Chrtstmas ,
Phone 614 ·367-7705

N1ce two bedroom apartment m
Pomeroy, 614-992-5858

450

Furnished
Rooms

Ctrcte Motel, Galltpohs. OH 614
446-2501 Etfec1ency Rooms, Ca
bte , A1r, Phone, Microwave &amp; Re
lngerator
Rooms for rent - week or month
Starung at S120tmo GaU1a Hotel
614 -446 95BO
Sleeptng rooms wrth cookmg
Al so tr arler space on mer All
hook -up s Call alter 2 00 p m ,
304-773 5651 , Mason WV

460

Space for Rent

Mob1le Home lot For Rent Must
Have Good Refere nce 614 -446 ·
0175

470

Wanted to Rent

STORAGE spACE NEEQEO
2,500 To 3,000 Sq Ft, Cheshlfe,
Mrddlepo t 1, Pomeroy Area Call
Gallta Merg s CAA, Weathenza
I!On, 614 -992-6629 Or 614 -367
7341

MERCHANDISE

Appliances
Recondlt toned
Washers , Dryers Ranges, Retn grators, 90 Day Guarantee !
French City Maytag, 614· 446 7795

Household
Goods

Couch &amp; Cha ir, Good Condttlon,
l•gh t Blue / Mauve Type Color,
$100, 614-367- 7115
Couch, good cond , bought at
Topes 304-675-4210 leave message.
Countr~ Furniture 304-675-6820

Rt 2 N, 6m1les, Pt Pleasant,
Tues-Sat9-6, &amp;rn 11 ·5

HARDWOOD FLOORING
Poplar, oak, htckory, ash, maple,
walnut cherry, coloma l grade,
S1 20 -$1 50bd It Prem•um grade
$1 44 -$2 e1bd It All lloonng sold
3/4" lhtck Random w1dth &amp; ran dom leng1hs 304 -See -3821
Wh1le quanttbes last
H1 -Effoctency l P. Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100.000 BTU 1·
800-287-e308, 614 -446 -e306,
Duct Systems And A1r Condtllon ers Free Esnmates.
lntertherm &amp; Miller Mob1le Home
Furnaces Gas, Otl &amp; Etectnc In
Stock l arge D1str1buter Buy Out
ol New Mobtle Home Furnaces
Bank Ftnanctng Avatlable. Call
Bennetts Mob1te Home HTG &amp;
CLG At 614 446-9416 or 1 800 872 0067
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~red, New &amp; Rebu•lt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-fnl-537·9528
KILL RATS AND MICE I
ENFORCER® rat and mouso k1ll
ers are GUARANTEED ! Avail
able at
CENTRAL SUPPLY
O'DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER
Krng Stze , Waterbed $100, 614
256--0n3

2bedroom, furntshed, all electrtc,
ac , washe1/dryer, $250 /mo plus
uttht1es No pets References &amp;
deposit 304-675-4874

River Front Property RemOdeled
12x60 Mobile Home 2 Bedroom•
Washe r tOrT.er Hook -Up, Small
Storage Bu1ldtng Low Uttlluea,
Ntce Neighborhood, Cheshire ,
$285/Mo 814· 367--()415

mghts Use any!lme Paid $310 ,
sell $100 304-353-9131

OJ system complete, speak.ers.
power amp, mu:tng board Sd1sc
Ntce one bedroom apartment for ·CD player, dual c asse tte, turn
rent 1n Pt Pleasant 614 -992 - 1able, cords . $1 , 800 304 -6 75 5858
2091 6-7pm

510

Ntce 2 bedroom mobtle home tn
Middeport, Oh , 614-992 5858.

0 1sney area 5 days/4 hote l

WV.

1.:::.::..:::.:.:.:::..::::;,.:._:::____
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrtgerators,
rangea. Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vine SlrHI, Call 814-448-7398,
1-800-4119-3-199

Relr~gerators, Stoves, Washors
And Dryers, All RecondJiloned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Will OeiJV8f 614-669.-6441

Sam Somervi l le's regular A(my
camou!lage by Sandyville Post
Office. Mon-Thur 3-6pm, Fn-Sun
12noon -6pm 304 -273 5855 Ju mor stzes Free Oe ltvery Pt
Pleasant

4KC

Reg tstered

Pomertans ,

shots &amp; wormed 304-675-54eo
AKC Yellow lab Pups, Ready For
Chnstmas, $300 614 -256-6336 ,
Allor 6 ~M
Btg beaut•ful AKC Chow pupptes,
only one blue and one black te
male lelt $200,614-992-7574
Chrtstmas lay-a -way Special!
55gal tank &amp; hood, $9g F111h
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Pomt Pleasant . 304 -675-

2063
CFA Regrstered Perstan IH 1ma
lyan Kittens Will Be Ready For
Chnstmas Taktng Depostts Nowt
614 446 1104 ,
Chnstmas Puppies AKC Shltzu
Male &amp; Female, While &amp; Black
AKC Pomerantan Pupp1es. 4
Black &amp; t Creme 614-256-13! 1.
Copper nose puppies, pure bred,
no papers 6mo old $50ea , 18mo
old$100eo 304-675-2075
Full Blooded Rottweller Pupptes
Call 814-388 8043
Mtnl lop Ear Rabbtta For Sale
$5 DO Each Or Take All $2 so
Each, 614-388-8577
Reglstered Coon Hound Pups, 3
Eng h eh Redt1ck Females, 4
Montf1s Old, First Shots, Wormed,
$75EachAher6,614-4-41 ·0731
Regtstered Sheltte (miniature coll1e pups $250), reg111ered
Siemese blue poin1 ca1 $150, call
614-992·2607
Reg1stered Wetmaraner pupptes
304-675-7740

Masse~ Ferguson 180 Tractor,

$5,950 Ma&amp;Bey Ferguson 175
$5.800 Uassey Ferguson 135
Otesel $5,495, Ferguson T020
W1th Bush Hog &amp; Blade, $2,850,
614-2116--0522

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30'X40'X9' Patnted Stee l Stdes,
Galvalume S18e1 Roof, 15'xU Steel
Sltder. 3' Man Door $6,444
ERECTED Iron Horae Butlders 1800·352-1045.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

+9

G18lls Hay 4'x5' Round Bales $12
No Sunday Cells 614-388-8524

TRANSPORTATION

71 o

'87 Chrysler New Yorker, loaded,
runs good, $1500, 614-992-7841
'89 Thundert;rd SC, 1WO door, 3 8
lttre, V-6. elite mode l turbo, PS.
PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats
and lock s, ~G r eat Car," $6500
neg, 614·992-7478 or 614 -949·
2879
'95 Bt.JIGk
tomatiC,
amethyst,
can take
985·3362

Regal Custom . V-6 auall power, smoky
10,500 mtles, Will sell or
011er payments , 614-

1966 Ford Fatrlane sedan.
tubbed, center hne wheels, roll
cage, MSD, 9" Ford rear end, B&amp;
M pro &amp;If sh1fter, trans &amp; converter, $4,500, 614·992-6407
1972 Monte Carlo, red &amp; black.
sharp, new tires &amp; brakes, vet rally&lt; $2,900 304-576-2797
1973 Camaro race car, tubbed,
roll cage, weld wheels, MSD, b1g
block motor, trans brak&amp;, all electront cs, turn key $8,500, rolltng
$5,500. 614-992-6407

w~'t' DO~'T '(OU 6ET RID
OF THAT 6ELL 50 't'OU

2Foam
3 Domed homes
4 Dakota Indian
5 Bequeot

6 Aslar know

7

Grease
8 Get
9 Fragrant
10- bear
12 Fuss
13 Overturned ·
18 AuthorLevin
21 Looting
22 Jargon
25 Made
Improperly
27 Sacka
31 Crazy
32 Feminine

-

4

North

NT

Pass

NT

..

East

pronoun

All pass
B

34 --doux
(love loner)
35 Hockey
needa
,
36 Mohommedfn
religion
38 Furnace
39 Actor Nick 40 Vapors
45 Neighbor
of Mex.
46 Women's
patriotic ooc.
48Age

CAN HEAR wHAT I

Motorcycles

198Q Honda 300 Fourtra), 2wd
$2250 080, 1989 Yamaha 100
Molo4, $1250 OBO 614 -446 0821' 614-446-0651
Boats

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

&amp; Motors

760

Auto Parts

UP WIT~
A Fft FOJ ITS
TltfATMEfiT.

Accessories
Budget Transmtsstons, Used &amp;
Rebutlt, All Types, Access1ble To
0"Jer 10,000 Transm•sston, Also
Parts. Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plaws, 614-379-2935
New gas tanks. one ton truck
wheels, radators, floor mats, etc
D &amp; R AU1o, Ripley, WV 304-3723933 or 1-600-273-9329.

no

BORN LOSER
~

Auto Repair

790

Campers

1990 Ford Escort, Actual 6,000
Mttes, 2 Door, 6 t4 -379-2720 AFTEA6PM
1990 Pont•ac Grand Am, $2,900
304-675-6091

~

1991 Geo Storm $7,000 304675-3526
1991 Rocket ChasSls race car all
new m '91, Wllwood, best of
rythtng, weld, three wheels, Dres,
Neal pedals, fuel cell , on board
ltre system, rolhng chassis $5800
neg Call Scan Wolle, e14-9492879, 6U-94Q-2045 or 614-9926193.

Motor Homes

1992 Chevrole1 Z24, loaded,
27,000 miles, very clean car, 6141192-3798.

Size 1 2 Whtte Weddmg Gown,
Floor Length Wnh Chapel Lengtf1
Train $300, 30 Volume Encylop•
dla Amer~ana, 1961 Edition, $50,
Jloadmaster StationarY, B1cycle
Wllh Spedome1er /Mileage, $50,
614-446-7e30

----.,-------1
IAaron &amp; G1boon

BIG NATE

Chevy Monzo Drag Car. Tube
Frame, 4•• Dono, 12 Point Ciao.

Jao.11son, OhiO

$8500 Roling 814-2511·1301 Afiar

614-286·5689.

olpm

STILL GIVE

"Luck 1s the res1due of des1gn " -

p

z

OPUZVR.

a gemu s " -

Eunp1des

Branch R1ckev

':~:~:~' S©\\~1A-J££!fss
ldlltd
CIAT •• POLlAN

won
GAM I

~,

0

Rearrange lttters of the
lour scrambled words be·
tow to form four words

EDROMN

I I 1~ I I I~
YETDI

3

"'
N 0 R E W I~

II

I_ I_ r't

My k 1ds don't want to s 1t at

~

_:::

the dinner tab le I belteve k id S
would eat better 11 dtnner was

I

handed to them 1n a

bag

vou

by f1ll1ng rn the mtss1ng words
develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

TO

SCRAM·I.£TS ANSWERS

THIS

HER.'

FUSIOn - Heavy - Adopt· Ledger- DRY ONES
As a kid I always put my money 1n a tm can for future

STRIK£ ABLOWN M

~RON

1-fGH PilUS. SHOP Tl-£ CLASSfi£DS.

·1THURSDAY
ROBOTMAN
Ut.l. ~Milt . '!Oil'R'e ON
'CANOl!&gt; CAMERA'' :ti-lE
CAMERA'S ~~~EN IN

•

1\-IAT &lt;:.R~CO -ROIIAN

'

~ALAt&gt;

BOWL .

6323

Earl's Home Mamtenance, vinyl
aidtng, roofing, exterior and tntanor pa1nbng, power washtng, I'OOm
additions . Free Estimates 614992-4451
'

you
Aslro-Graph pred1ct1ons loday by ma1hng
$2 and SASE to Aslro-Graph , c/o lh1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1758 , Murray H1ll
Station, New York, NY 10156 Make sure

B~RNICE

BEDE OSOL

Roolmg and guuen - commercial
and re&amp;~dentaal, m1nor repairs. 35
years expenence, B&amp;B ROOFING, 614-992 5041

to s1a1e your zod1ac s1gn
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today
you m1ght have an opportumty to rectify a
mutual mtsunderstandmg between you
and a lnend Act whtle you are both m the
mood lo forg1ve.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Feb. 19) The best

&amp;

way to get whal you wanlloday W111 be lo
av01d deal1ng w1th subordinates D1scuss
yout needs duectly W11h the head honcho

Heating
Freeman's Heating And Cooling
Installation And Service. EPA
Ctr11fiod. Reaiden•al, Commercial.
614-256-1en
Fnday,Dec 15.1995
Electrical and
Bolh luck and chance could play lavor·

Refrigeration

able roles In your afla~rs 1n the year
ahead. Rema1n alen lor opportunities lhat

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, Atr Condition ing If
You Don't Call Ua We Both loiet
Free Eettmate&amp;, 1-SOQ-287·6308,
614-448-03011,
002945.

'

..

PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) II you take
11me to weigh all aspects ol a dec1s10n,
your JUdgment w1ll be qU11e reliable today
You may regret th1ngs done 1n haste.
ARIES (M1rch 21-Aprll 19) Occas1on·

for someone else today ,
prtde tn
your ass1gnmenl and pul forth your best
effort The rewards m1ght exceed your
expeclalions
CANCER (June 2hluly 22) A number of
bnght 1deas m 1ghl come lo you loday
Each Will have menl, so try to smgularly
and collect1vely assess their value
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You shouldl..l?ft
more competent tn bus1ness matters
loday than ,you were yesterday II you've
made any errors. take measures to go
back and correct lhese m1stakes
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A conslruct•ve development may result from one ol
your social contacts today Make a po1nt
of hav1ng a sm1le and a kmd word for
everyone you encounter.
LIBRA (Sept. 23..0Ct. 23) In your bUSI-

ally, 11 1S advantageous lo call lavorable
aHent1on to ourselves. You can ga1n lhe
admirat1on of anyone you want lo

ness dealings today, you m1ght ach•eve
baiter results 11 you use an lnd1rec1
approach Do nol prematurely announce
your 1ntentlons
SCORPIO (Oc:l. 24-Nov. 22) It w1ll be

obJective today. Your chart shows lhat
achievements come lhrough consistency
and expectations. Get a jump on hie by

1mpress today.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) Your besl
assel today w1ll be your ability to lmk up
situations that appear to be unrelated.
You will know how to effechvely t1e every·

your respons1b1hty to organ1ze your
lnends during an evenl today Your peers
will not object to your tak1ng over and

underslanding

th1ng logether.

runn1ng the g1g .

come in umque gutses.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Do nol
procrasl1nate when pursuing an important

wv

'

AVTTF

SYPUZ?

TVVM

MAYBE THERE'!) !)TILL

C6C General Home Matn·
tenence· Pamttng, vmyl Sldtng ,
carpentry doors, wmdows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For
lree eallmate call Chet, 614-992-

1786

CUYPNZN

WF

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

BUT WAIT

HOPE 1 MYBE. I cAN

Rea1dent1al or commercial winng,
new serv1ce or repairs Master Ucensed electnclan . R1denour
Eleculcal, WV000306 304-675-

Z S Y F

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -The lucky person passes lor

8

Appltance Parts And ServiCe All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex M
peflence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 614-He
7795.

840

z s y

L-..1.-...1..-.1.--..1.-...J.L.......J

Home

Plumbing

zsy

A V R 'Z

GSF

LRAYURYPZS

P C VL Z

B'lMYN

WPMY

CVNVWN;

I

Improvements

820

'OYVOTY

WH 0 L 0 L
through a kitchen - - - - - I--,~-"T"~-T~-,~-.,~r:6~ G) Comple1e 1he chuck le quo1ed

8ve-

1991 Taurus Statton Wagon, Ex
Condttton, 3rd Seat, Power Seat,
locks, Windows, A1r Crutse, AMI
FM Tape $8800, Call 814 · 44e3200 After 5pm,

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher ci\'Piograms a1e crealed lrom quo1ato
ons b y lamous people pasI and present
E8d'l Jener rnthe cipl"'er stands lor anolher Today s clue L equals U

_ _

&amp;

811! Orrick's Home Improvementsaddtttons, remodeling, roofmg,
sldmg, ptumb1ng, etc Insured, call
Bill Orrick, 614-992 4240

CELEBRITY CIPHER

5

DRYWALL
1990 Ponaac Grand APl 2 Doors,
Atr, Automanc, Ttll Cru1se, StBfeo Hang, fin1sh. repatr
Casseue, New Banery, 63,000 Cetllngs teKtured, plastttr repair
Mtles,
Excellent Condlllonl Call Tom 304-675-4186 20 years
experience
$4,450,614-379--2967
1990 Sedan Deville, extra clean
loaded, $9,000 neg 304 -675:
3324 eUer 5pm

when you are 4-4 in the mmors because
you may be forced to rebtd two clubs in
some competttive auctions Here,
North opted for one club because h1s
extra strength would make it eas1er to
handle an overcall.
You have six top tricks With only two
spade stoppers, you don't have ltme to
play on hearts So, you need seven minor-suit tricks . This means that you
need to know how many club winners
you have, because that will mfluence
how you play the diamonds
After winning the first tr1ck with
dummy's spade ace, you should cash
your three top clubs ending m hand.
Did the suit break 3-3? If not, you need
four diamond tricks. You must hope
West started with the doubleton king,
Here, though, the clubs are 3-3 Now
three diamond tricks are sufficient All
plays work 1f the sutt is 3-2 But what if
it is 4-1? If East has four, you are finished But what if West has all four?
Then you should play for East to
have a smgleton e1ght nme or 10 ,
which is three times more hkely than a
singleton king You should lead the diamond queen !rom hand After West covers with the king and East plays the
nine under dummy's ace. contmue wtth
a low diamond to your stx.
When back in hand with the spade
king, you finesse in diamonds. havtng
dummy's J -7 over West 's JQ-5.

HW..O, ~ CF LITILWVf.R:;VIlLt ?'
-rn1~ IS (,I..N)YS Tl\ORNA.ffl£
l KI...VE. ~ QL(.STI 0~ ..

Due to health &amp; f.nanctal reasons,
Cherokee Classtc Tlnung was
closed October 23, 1995 Persons
havtng que·sttons on warrant tes
~oose call304-743-1100

BASEMENT
WATERPROQFtjG
Uncondittonal ltfetlmo guarantee
local references furnished. Call
(614) 446-0870 Or (e14) 2370488 Aogt~rs Waterproohng Establ11hed 1975

1988 NISsan 2DOSX , loaded,
5spd, 4cyl, st.J nrool, securtly system, ltke new 304-675-4650

\

&amp;

1986 Chr ysler Laser Turbo Au·
1omanc. 2 2 4 Cylinder, A1r Condlboner, $1,500, 614-446-42119

1988 Ford Taurus stattonwagon,
$1800 080, e14-992 5347

viE

ff\61&gt;/CA/..
CL-INIC

1993 20t Pro XL, 20' Strutos
bess boat , 200 XPHP. 614-66 77347 or614·949-2879

810

For Sale Or Parttal Trade 1987
phrysler 5th A'.lenue, V-8, AuJamatlc, 73,000 Utles, Full Power,
614-256--0867, AI1Br 5 PM

IZ-1'1

1994 Chevy Astro, al1 wheel
very n•ce, call 614 -992
7077

t986 BMW 325 Beautiful Car,
Sunroof Cell Phone And All, 614·
446-4991,614-441 -0354

1986 Pontiac Grand Am SE Excellent Condnton, Has All Optrons, low Mileage, S•.3oo , 614446·6320

Today's deal requires clear thinking
by the declarer and mcludes a treacherous suit ccmbinalton How would you
plan the play in three no-trump after
West leads a spade m answer to h1s
partner's overcall?
It is "nonnal" to open one dtamond

WANT FOR CHRISTMAS?

1990 Travelmasler Motor Home.
t 980 Malibu Class1c, good frame, 27 Fl. Excellent Condition, 6 New
good 1ntenor, 355 c u engtne l1ke Tires., 814-440-1211
new,$2500,614-992&lt;6029
30 Ft Pace Arrow Motor Home,
1982 Olds Toronado, all power, Generator, Dual Roof AC, Good
CondiUon, $16,500 , 080, 614$900 080, 614-9g2-2559
1149-3021.
1984 Aud 40005, 4 Cylinder, Automahe. Clean Inside &amp; Out, Must
SERVICES
Sell $1000 080 614·441 -1856

Auto Loans. Dealer W1P arrange fi.

HOL~Y SAl£

1 Care

How do you
sparkle?

PEANUTS

for Sale

nanclng oven If you hove been
turned down ol10whore. Upton
Equ1pment Ultd Cars. 304·4581080.

HlJMMtjGBIAD MUSIC

West

Opening lead· •

dr~\le ,

Autos for Sale

570

Guitars&amp; Mol8

,.
3

South
I

GI.IBBLE
GOBBLE
GOO GOO

MOMM'I
DADO 'I

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250 ,
72 ,000 M1les, $6 ,000, Can Be
seen At Galhpohs Da11y Tnbune,
825 Thtrd Avenue, GallipOliS
OhiO

750

5005

Musical
Instruments

•• o 7

•J 9 8

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer North

1988 Ford Bronco, lull stze Eddte
Bauer ed1t1on, loaded, black 304·
675-1643

740

1993 C&amp;d~laC. One Owner, 26.000
M1lo' 614-44U737.

,

+KI085

DOWN

• Q6 4 2
•K 3 2

1987 Tahoe S- 10 Blazer 4x4, ·
$4,800 304-773-5109

Two M1n1a1Ure Coll1es (Shel11es)
AKC Aeg1s1ered Pupp1es, $200,
614-367-0212

Santas Chustmas Trees, State
Route 850 Between Rt 35 and
Rodney, We Will Cu1 614 -245-

•QJI0973
•A K 5

Selecting
Navy ohfp prat.
Lloten
Mauna44 Actor - Rains
47 Odora
49 Sunflower
State
50 Cyllndrl~al
51 Sully
52 Sees socially

By Phillip Alder

Lrvtng Room Surte, Coffee Table &amp;
2 End Tables, Ptano, D1n1ng Room
Table Wtth 4 Cha1rs &amp; Hutch, Rec li ner, Bab~ Crad le, M1crowave
Stand, TV S18nd, Gun CabineL 2
Storage Closets, 614-446-7600

140 pc Craftsman socket set ,
410 stngle shot . 22 Magnum nile
22 sem·automallc nfle. 380 ptstol ,
38 revolver. 20 ~a pump. 20 ga
automatiC, toy p1ano many craft
ttems reduced, electriC guttar,
$39 50 Dave's Swap Shop 8129
SR 7N, Cheshire

Dramond engagement rtng , 14K
wh ne gold, can be s•zed, apprai sal papers lor $1350, sell lor
$750 304 -675-7541

2
• 7 6 3 2

37
41
42
43

• K 6 5

Large quanti!)' of double knu matenal, 61-4·843-St 12

Extra N•ce 2 BR , All Elec . Furn
Ku , Close To Spnng Valley Area,
No Pets, $355/Mo + 0 D + Rei
614-441Hl157, Aher 5 PM

Grac1o~ s lt11rng 1 and 2 bedroom

EAST

33 Lie
35 Of some
evergreen•

•• 0 8 4

1986 Oodoe 4X4 , 112 ton , au - .
tomatlc transm1ss1on, 614 -992 - .
5891

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Merchandise

Used Furnnure, 505 N Second
St Mason, WV, 25260 Phone
304 -773-5341

2 Mobtle Homes On McCormtck
Road, 2 Bedrooms , 614 -446 9669

3 bedroom tratler, Sandhill Road ,
Muon Countr. central heaung
and cooling pr111ate sentng 304·
895-3566

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet,
Natural Gas Furnace. Very N1ce.
6 14 44e- 2003, 814-446-1409

2br . washet' &amp; dryer, all electric,
AC , Mason, no pets 304 -773 5751

540

'

"nswer to Previous Puzzle

SOUTH

Ptckup, V-8, Bedlmer,
614-256-6391 leave ·

We buy, sell, or trade.

Concrete &amp; Plastic SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Ga llon s Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH
1-800-537-9528

I

t97B Chevy 4WO ptckup, good
ttres and dnve line, runs great.
rwo new tenders, must seY, $1550
neg, 614-992-7476 or 614·9492879

~}

20 Hackneyed
22 Compaulon
23 Actor
Alntalr24 Madison Ave
worker
26 Saloo agent
28 Consume
29 Year (Sp. )

WEST

1974 Ford panel truck, 460 rootor,
C-6 automatic transmtaalon. 2 1/2
ton Chusy, $1500 080, 614 992· 2143 or e14-992-6373 aher
5 00, ask lor Mtchael

&amp; anttque lurntture, R&amp;S New &amp;

Furn1shed Efflctency $225/Mo
Ullltties Patd, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis, 614 446 -4416 Alter 7
PM

Houses for Rent

'Sfoii-T'?

19 Also

•Q J 9

.a

1970 Chevy C-60 24 F1 Tilt Bed,
Excellent Condition, low Mtleage,
Good Rubber, Must See To Appreciate 614-446 - 1675 or 614 44e-6286

A Poo/il

12 14-95

•A 4
+A J 7 3
•A Q 6 5

BUtOmattc transmiSSion,
614-742-2124

Ya~ C~U.IIJ4

Miscellaneous

Sc emc Valley, Apple Grove,
beauttlu l 2ac lots, publ tc water.
Clyde Bowen Jr , 304 576 2336

EEK&amp;MEEK

ll'ucks for Sale

om e.

WHo Afi:E'

540

Baseball &amp; foo tball sets msert
sets, msert srngles, &amp; man~ star
stngtes 1ooo·s o! m1nor stars &amp;
commons Ca11304-675-2473

NORTH

'78 Chevy 41C4, 3/4 ton, 350 en-

Country Stde Apartment, Large 1
Bedroom. $290/Mo Oepostl, 513
922-0294

Furntshed Apartment, 920 Fourth
Avenue , 1 Bedroom , ~ U851Mo
920 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis,
Ohio 614-446-4416 Alter 7 P.M

410

720

Used fuel furnace, 2 large fuel
tanks, Fuel lor sale cheep, Arc
welder . whtte Westtnghouse 3
phase $100 OBO 304-576-2802

Bear Super Stnke XLA Bow, Ourver Arrows , Cross Half S1ghts ,
like New QUiver/ Arrows To Frt
Barnell Cros s Bow, Brand New
614-446·2316

RENTALS

Four 15" Chevy Wheels With
Beauty Rmgs $ 150 , 6~&lt; · 245 9419 Ahet e PIA

Buy or sell Rl11errne Anttque s,
1124 E Mam Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W tO 00
am to 6 00 p m. Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 614 992-2526

Fu r mshed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Oownstatrs, Uttltttes Furntshed:
Clean No Pe ts. Reference, Deposit Requtred, 614-446--1519

Home Wamed 3 Bedrooms City
Schools, Some Acreage Excellent
Condttron Only FP Bas ement A
Plusl No Mobtles 614 441 - 1618
Days Only

c:{AMI;'S WIT\.\ A c.\'T':

PK:KENS FURNITURE
New /Usee
314-675-1450

Pt Pleasant 1212 Ohio, lo t 12ac
lnd Oh10 R tver 1ac Sandh tll
comm 205 7th St, lot &amp; house
Gatlrpotr s 12 ac, vtew 304 6755104

wanted

~ol\tz.t&gt;

N-.

Furntshed 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park AC. No Pets
References, Depostt, $350/Mo ,
614-446-8235, 614-446-Q577

Real Estate

WHy li 'S No F'IIN P£.1\'1 IN~

Mollohan Carpets. AI 7 N 614 4-46 - 7444 Fo r Carpet &amp; Vmyl

Ftve acres,
aerator, near
Racme $16,000 can ftnance With
hall down 614 -949-2025

360

CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can .
Help, Easy Bank Ftnanclng For ·
Used Vehicles, No Turn Downa
call RU1h, 61~211117

LAYNE"S FURNITURE
Complete home fum•ahmgs
Hours Men -Sat, 9 -5 614 -446 0322 , 3 miles out Bulav1lle P1ke
Free Delrvery

mshed and unlurn1shed, secur1ty
deposll requtred, no pets, 614

oay ed1 tron 10 OOa m Saturday

80

large nex-ateel iOia $100 Queen
box spnng &amp; Ded rrame $25
K11Chon 1Dble$15. 30HI75-7929

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur

aay t:!d lt1on 1 oopm Fnday Mon

90

Apartments
for Rent

Pomeroy,

Blazing
Underway
Pre11lng
In good
working
order
14 Ohio city
15 Llkl canned
chelrleo
16 Ear (comb.
form!
170ogn
Garfield

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

for Rent

Gallipolis

1
6
11
13

30 P.O. dept.
31 Melrlcol
otreao

..

!he Influences that govern

use "It's w1se to save for a ra1ny day," granny told me,
"but be sure to enJOY the

DRY ONES I"

DECEMBER14I

�iP•ge 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, December 14, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•We Redeem

Toledo
wins bowl
contest

Ohio Lottery

Ann Landers
Woman drinks too much • Page 8

Indians get new hurler

Federol Food

Stamp• .
Gluontity R. hts
Re .. rv~

McDowell signed by Tribe • Page 6

Sports, Page 5

Pick 3:
539
Pick 4:

5404

Buckeye_5:
2·14·20-31-37

Low IOnlghtln 30s, light rain.
Saturday, sunny . High In mld40s .

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 162
2 Sections, 12 Pages

Shutdown shadow looms
· Republicans stand firm on demand
budget be balanced in seven years

Old Smokehouse Whole

•

em1 -

Reg~lar

or Low Salt

oneless
Water Added

35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 15, 1995

congressional control in the 1994
elections.
The two sides still face a yawn·
ing gulf over how to do it. The
cuts than the administration has GOP favor s more saving s from
ByALANFRAM
proposed.
Associated Press Writer
Medicare, Medicaid, welfare and
Panetta and other Democratic domestic programs than the presiW ASHINGTOJ¥ ---:- Republicans will send PreSilfent Clinton bargainers planned to finalize their dent wants, plus a tax cut of S245
legislation temporarily keeping offer today in a meeting with Clin- billion over seven years for fami. federal agencies open, but only if ton, who was returning from Paris. lies and businesses that is more
. the White Hoose proposes a bal- Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, than double the $105 billion reduc·anced budget and a schedule for R-Kan ., said Clinton telephoned tior. Climon advoca1es.
reaching a quick deal at budget him from overseas Thursday.
When negotialions begin , the
"He said, 'I'll be back tomor- ticking sound in the background
talks, House Speaker Newt Ginrow and I'm ready to go to work," ' will be the approach of midnight
·. grich said today.
In the shadow of a possible new Dole told reporters. Dole sai~ he toni ght, after which nine Cabinet
government shutdown beginning told Clinton that it was time 10 dcparun ents and many other agen cies will lose their temporary
after midnight tonight, budget tallcs focus on the budget.
The House Budget Committee authority to spend money. The
:,were resuming with both sides
·teady to present new offers. But chairman, Rep. John Kasich, R- administration says 280.000 federal
Gingrich, R-Ga., delivered a warn- Obia, said in a brief interview that employees would be furloughed ,
Republicans would propose a $70 although most would not be affecting to Democrats.
"If we get an honest balanced billion to $75 billion reduction in ed until Monday moming.
budget from Clinton and a negoti- the savings they have proposed in
Hoping to avoid that, Senate
ating schedule" that allows con- Medicare, Medicaid, domestic pro· Chaplain Lloyd Ogilvie' s prayer
. gressional passage of a compro- grams and the earned-income tax opening today' s Senate session
. mise balanced budget by Dec. 22, credit for the working poor. He contained an offer of his own .
.the GOP would ship legislation to also said there would be "some lit·
"We know that if we trust you,
the president keeping agencies tic twcalcs" in the $245 billion tax you will be on time and in time to
operating through Tuesday as cut Republicans have proposed, but help us in the crucial hours of ·this
negotiations proceed, Gingrich told he would give no further details.
day before the midnight hour of
reporters.
The negotiations, now in their crisis," he prayed.
Republicans want Clinton's third week, have seen lit~e moveWhen Clinton and Republicans
newest offer to eliminate the deficit ment other than Clinton's embrace faced an earlier budget standoff in
by 2002 using Congressional Bud- of the concept of eliminating per- November, 800,000 civil servants
get Office economic projections, sistent federal deficits by 2002. A missed work during a six-day shutwhich are less pessimistic then seven-year balanced budget pack- down, a larger number because
White House forecasts . Those lig- age has been the chief goal of fewer spending bills bad been
ures would require deeper spending Republicans since they captured approved . That ended up hurting

Republicans in public opinion
polls, which showed people blamed
them over Clinton by about a 2-1
margin.
Senate Min ority Leader Tom
Daschle, D- S.D... and other
Democrats said 1he While House
was considering shrinking the size
of its tax cut to help find needed
savings. Panella said the administration "would try to come as close
as we can" to a balanced budget in
line with CBO projections, but tbe
package still would protect the
health-care and domestic programs
important to Clinton.
In hopes of speeding the process. the number of negotiators is
being pared to six . Republicans
will have the two Budget Committee chairmen, Sen . Pete Domenici
of New Mexico and Rep. John
Kasich of Ohio. Representing the
Democrats will be Panetta and
White House budget chief Alice
Rivlin from the administration. and
the two top budget panel
Democrats, Sen. James Exon of
Nebraska and Martin Saba or Minnesota. Each party originally bad
eight negotiators.
"By the time everybody says
hello, you've expended about a
half-hour" under the old system,
Daschle said.
Democratic and Republican
governors were negotiating at a
secret location in Washington over
reshaping Medicaid .

Ravenswood span
reopened after
coal barge mishap
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The William Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va. , was closed
to traffic for nearly four hours this morning af1cr a coal barge struck
the Ohio side pier support in heavy fog .
The accident occurred around 6 a.m ., when the Joey C. struck the
bridge pier as it was traveling north on the Ohio River. The boat,
owned and operated by the Ohio River Barge Co., Cincinnati, then
drifted toward the Ohio shore, according to Wes t Virginia law
enforcement officials.
The boat was beaded toward Pittsburgh, Pa., with 15 barges of
coal in the tow of the Joey C. at the time of the accident, according
to Steve Frazier of Ohio River Barge. Nine crew members were on
the barge at the time of the accident, with no injuries reported.
The front barges in the tow sustained heavy damage upon impact
with the bridge pier, with one barge partially sunlc, Frazier said.
Bridge inspectors from the West Virginia Deparunent of Highways' Parkersburg Control Section I arrived at the scene at 8 a.m.
10 ins peel the bridge for damage.
Af1cr the inspection revealed no major structural damage, the
bridge was reopened to traffic at 10 a.m., Ravenswood Police Chief
Edward E. Speece said.
Recovery efforts on the sunken barge are ex pected to be gm
irruncdialcly, according to Frazier.
"We have three to four salvage companies thai mke care of incidents like these along the river for us." he said. "They will come in
wi~1in the next day or two, and recover any coal that migh ~ be in the
sunken barge and malce the necessary repairs to raise tile barge.
"With the pcnnission of the Coast Guard. we'll marie the sunken
barge with buoys and the Coast Guard will issue daily bulletins to
boat operators until we raise the barge." Frazier added . " If we can
gel somebody moved in quick enough, we should hare the barge
raised within 10 days."

'Proposal allows more earnings
for recipients of Social Security
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lion is one or a number or activities in Racine
during the year In which the community comes
together In mutual celebnllon or events. Numer·
ous holiday events are also planned by organizations and churches throughout Meigs County as
the season continues. (Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)

: PREPARING FOR WALK- Racine's third
annual Christmas In the Park was kicked orr
Thursday night by a candlelight walk with
approximately 150 participants. The Rev. Aaron
Young, above, lights candia prior to the walk at
Racine's Star MiU Park. Those joining In the rel10wship walked around the park, holding can·
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COLUMBUS (AP)- When said Thursday.
Regulation of the system and
Ohio's 134-year-old Statehouse
reopens in July after a $110 million decisions about future uses of it
testoration, the building will will rest with a seven-member,
include a television studio for live nonpanisan programming committelecastS of House and Senate ses- tee. House and Senate leaders will
have lour seats on the panel.
sions.
But tile board envisions a time
Total cost of the Ohio Statehqusc Communications Center: $3 in which viewers across the state
could tap into telecasts of House
million.
. The Capitol Square Review and and Senate activities.
Other planlled uses for the State·
Advisory Board will ask the slate
house
center: teleconferencing,
Controlling Board on Tuesday to
·production
of educational videos
waive competitive bidding rules for
a $1.7 million contract with Sony and nonpolitical public service
Electronics for cameras l\Dd other announcements.
A brealcdown of the $3 million
equipment.
.
.
,
Initially, coverage w1ll cons1st projecttolal:
• $925,000 already spent for
of House and Senate voting sessions that are held two or three preparatory costs such as wiring
days a week, and select committee and lighting.
~ $1.7 million Sony contract for
b.earings.
The signal will go only to other seven cameras, two rem01e control
offices in the Statehouse, Senate studios and other gear.
• $412,000 to bire three staff
Building and Riffe State Office
members, office stan-up costs and
Tower.
· "Both the Senate and the House a maintenance fund for equipment.
Sony previously was awarded a
leadership have agreed to have the
in-house broadcasts," said Dan contract worth about $100,000 to
Sllellenbarger, review board assis· install production equipment after
submitting the lowest of five bids.
tant director.
- "We're going to be putting in
The review board proposed
remote cameras. It does cost a little waiving bids for the SL7 million
bit more to do the remote, but it contract because the new equip·
requires no slaff to operate. Wc' re ment would require integration
trying to keep our operational costs with the production unit.
as low as possible," Shellenbarger

.~

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Legislation
providing more generous Social
Security benefits to recipients who
continue working past 65 rould be
beaded to President Clinton's desk
before the holidays.
.
The Senate Rnance Committee
voted unanimously Thursday to
mise the limit on outside earnings
from the current $11 ,280 to
$14,000 next year and $30,000 by
2002.
Recipients between ages 65 and
69 lose $1 in Social Security retirement benefits for each $3 they cam
above the limit. There is no limit
for people 70 and older.
"The earnings penalty sends a
message to senior citizens that we
no longer value their experience
and expertise in the work force,"
Finance Committee Chairman
William Roth, R-Del .. said. "It's
age discrimination."

Roth said he hoped to send the
measure lD the president' s desk
before Congre ss recesses for
Chrisunas. The House passed similar legislation with minor differences on Dec. 5.
,
Sen . Alan Simpson, R-Wyo.,
said the lact that people arc living
longer and remaining healthy
enough to work means the retirement age should be increased gradually from 65 to 70.
He warned that as the generation
born after World War II begins to
retire, the surplus in the Social
SeCUfiiY Trust Fund would soon
disappear and tum into a deficit
requiring either severe benefit cuts
or huge tax increases on younger
people still working.
"I would hope this would not be
just another instance in which we
rush to provide another benefit to
an aging populalion ... without at
the same time recognizing· the burden it represents," Simpson said.

.----Christmas is~ .. --__,

CHRIST REMEMBERED - The llllliny nativities around Meigs County serve as a reminder
of the ll'ue meaning of Christmas -"For unto you a savior Is born." Five-year-old Amber Renee
Hockman, daughter of Dennis and Terl Hockman puts the finishing touch on the nativity or the
Middleport Church of Christ by placing the baby Jesus In the crib. Looking on is little Enuna
Rose Perrin, daughter of Amy and Jon Perrin. (Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

However, Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan of New York. the commince's senior Democrat, said the
earning s limit was a Depression-em
. relic enacted when most men did ·
not live to 65 and was designed to
encourage older people to make
room in the work force for younger
people at a time of 25 percent
unemployment.
''It's an obsolete provision from
another age," Moynihan said.
Sens . Kent Conrad, 0 -N. D. ;
Bob Graham, D-Fla.; and John
Chafee, R-R.l. , said they were con cerned over the cos t of the bill $7 billion over seven years would surge in later years.
But actuaries from the Social
Security Administration said the
changes .should help the trust fund
slightly over the long tenn . Recipients who lose benefits from the
earnings test later gel an increase in
their monthly checks when they
reach age 70.

Drugs, gups
convictions
thrown out
CINCINNATI (AP) - A feder·
al appeals coun threw out the drug
and firearm convictions of two
men, ruling that the State Highway
Patrol illegally detained the men
before searching their pickup truck:
Tbe 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled Thursday that U.S.
District Judge James Graham
wrongly rejected a defense motion
to suppress the four handguns and
13 grams of crack cocaine found in
the search.
Tbe evidence wa s ille gally
seized because troopers stood
between the men and the truck and
brought in a trained dog to search
for narcotics without first oblaining
a search warrant, tbe appeals court
said.
Troopers said they came across
James Buchanon and William Reed
Jr. in the stalled truck on Sept. 21 ,
1993, along U.S. 35 near Gallipolis
in southeastern Ohio.
Both men were convicted of carrying firearms while committing a
drug crime and conspiring to possess the cocaine with intent to dis·
tribute it. Reed was sentenced to 11
years and six months in prison.
Buchanon received 10 years and
three months.
The appeals court threw out
their convictions and sentences.

(

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