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'

.

. .. ' .
''•
'·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

ESCORT SPORT

Sunday, December 17, 199$

EXPLORER'S

Ohio Lottery

Browns end
slump, down
Bengals 26-10

F150 XLT "4x4"

Pick 3:

711
Pick 4:
0250
Super Lotto:

1·3-U-24-25-37
Kicker:
521812

Sports, Page 4

Low tonight In upp er JOs ,
heavy rain. Tuesday, rain . High
In lower 40s.

•

• Air Cond
• Rear Defrost
• Light Group
• Power Mirrors
• Power Brakes
• Sport Appearance Group
·Spoiler

• Power Steering
• AM/FM Cass
• Conv. Group
• A1r bags Dual
• Tinted Glass
· LOADED!!

MSRP TOTAL Before Discounts 13,165
5

"POWER SEATS~'

• XLTTrim
• Cruise
• Tilt
• Air Cond
• Light Group
• Power Steering
·Air Bag

XLT'S- SPORTS- EDDIE BAUER-

"ALL IN STOCK"
SOME HAVE LEATHER,
POWER MOONROOF, CD
PLAYERS.

00

ent1ne

• AM/FM Cass
• Interior Enhancement
• Chrome Bumper
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Power Brakes
• Tinted Glass

:vot. 46, NO. 163
2 Sections, 12 Pages

MSRP TOTAL Before Discounts S21 ,864 00

about proposed pulp mill permit
From AP, staff reports
attended. Neither spoke out.
ASHTON, W.Va. - State Divi·
About half or those attending
sian of Environmental Protecf.ion
were members of environmental
officials said they have done (heir
associations, with the remainder
best to ensure regulations were folbeing made up of residents who
lowed in drafting an air pollution
live near the proposed mill site. No
permit for a proposed Mason Counone present spoke out in favor of
the mill.
ty pulp mill.
About 50 West Virginians
"We have rules and regulations
voiced concerns about the permit at we have to make our decisions
a four-hour meeting Saturday, say· upon," said Dale Farley, the diviing the permit is not strict enough.
sion's air quality chief. "We can't
Absent were any Mason County make things up as we go."
officials, altbongh Dick Waybright, · The $1.1 billion project is
a lobbyist for the state's timber. expected to be built in Apple Grove
indusiry, and Rolland Phillips, a along the Ohio River. Environmentop state economic developer, talists have contended tbe mill

MORE ON THE WAY

"GREAT SELECTION"

"8 Units In Stock At This Price"

AEROSTAR EXT XLT WAGON 4x4 WINDSTAR LX WAGON
• XLTTrim
• Privacy Glass
· ·• XLT Convenience Group .
• Electric Rear Window Defrost
• Power Convenience Group .
• Elec AM/FM Stereo/Cass/Ciock
• 4.0L Engine
· Automatic 0/D Transmission
• P215/70R·14SL BSW All-Season
3.73 Ratio Limited Slip Axle

Clearcoat Paint
Front license Plate Bracket
Quad Capt Chairs w/set Bed
Engine Block Heater
Floor Console
Trailer Towing Package
High·Cap Air Cond · CFC Free
Light Group
Luggage Rack
Forged Aluminum Wheels

·Floor Mats
· Electric·Rear Window Defrost
• LX 7·Pass LD·Back Quad Bucket
• l.uggage Rack
• Privacy Glass
• Remote Entry
·Two-Tone Paint
'
• Speed Controlmlt Strg Whl
• 15" x 6.0 Aluminum Wheels
• 3.8L SPI Engine
• 4 Spd Auto 0/0 Transmission
• P215/7 or· 15 BSW
• Keyless Entry

MSRP TOTAL Before Discounts $27,202 00

• Anti-Theft
• Heated Power Mirrors
Electronic Instrumentation
Engine Block Heater
Floor Console
Conventional Spare Ttre
Trailer Towing Package
High·Cap Air Cond · CFC Free
Prem AM/FM Disc Player/Clock
Fog Lamps
Anti·Spin Traction Brakes
Leather Seats
JBLAutdio

STOCKINGS HUNG BY THE CHIMNEY -Christian Woods,
three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Woods, Pomeroy,
hangs her Christmas stocking. on the fireplace mantel at the home
of her grandmother, Mila Wood. (Photo by Charlene Hoenich)

:state civil rights
group under fire
AT THIS PRICE

WE WOULD LOVE TO THANK
EACH AND EVERY CUSTOMER
INDIVIDUALLY FOR THEIR
BUSINESS, BUT THAT WOULD
TAKE FOREVER. SO HERE'S A
BIG 'THANKS" TO ALL OF YOU,
BECAUSE WE DO APPRECIATE
YOUR BUSINESS.
GO ON, PICK UP THE PHONE
AND CALL US. YOU KNOW EACH
OF US BY OUR FIRST NAME.
JUST BECAUSE YOU'RE
DRIVING OUR VEHICLES
DOESN'T MEAN THAT OUR
RELATIONSHIP IS OVER, IT'S
JUST BEGINNING. NO MATIER
WHAT YOU NEED, FEEL FREE
TO CALL. WE'LL BE THERE!!!

1-800-964-3673

"TOP OF THE LINE"

1995 DODGE AVENGER, AUTO, AIR, SUNROOF, ES MODEL... $16,995.00
1995 MUSTANG LX, 6 CYL, AUT0 ................................................ $13,995.00
1995 FORD F350 4X4, XLT, DIESEL, 14,000 MILES, DRW .......... $23,995.00
1995 TAURUS GL, 4DR, LOADED ................................................ $14,495.00
1995 MERCURY MYSTIQUE, AUTO, LOADED .............................$12,495.00
1994 PONTIAC SUN BIRD, AUTO, AIR, SPORT PKG ...................$ 8,995.00
1994 FORD F250 4X4, AUTO, AIR .................................................$14,995.00
1994 FORD ESCORT WAGON, AUTO, AIR .................................. $ 8,495.00
1994 MUSTANG GT, AUTO, AIR, LOADED ...........~ ....................... $14,995.00
1993 CHEV C1500, 350 ENGINE, AUTO, AIR .............................,.$12,495.00
1993 EXPLORER, EDDIE BAUER, LOADED, 4DR .......................$17,995.00
19.93 PROBE SE, ONE OWNER, AIR, AM/FM CASS .................... $ 8,995.00
1992 COUGAR LS, AUTO, AIR, LOADED ..................................... $ 7,995.00
1991 CHEV CONVERSION VAN, MK Ill, LOADED ....................... $ 8,495.00
1991 OLDS CUTLASS INTERNATIONAL, LOADED .................... $ 7,995.00
1991 PONT GRAND PRIX, AUTO, LOADED ................................. $ 7,800.00
1991 MAZDA B2600, 4X4 TRK, AIR, ONE OWNER ......................$ 8,995.00
1990 FORD E250 CLUB WAGON, 12 PASSENGER, SHARP ...... $ 7,500.00
1990 PONT SUNBIRD, AIR ............................................................ $ 4,995.00
1990 FORD F150 4X4, XLT, AUTO .................................................$ 9,995.00
1990 FORD F150 XLT, ONE OWNER, V8 ...................................... $ 7,995.00
1990 T·BIRD SUPER COUPE, 25TH ANNIVERSARY...................$ 9,995.00
1989 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, SIGNATURE, SHARP ..................... $ 7,800.00

• Automatic
• Air Cond
• Cruise
• Ti~
• Power Seat
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Rear Defrost
• Alum Wheels

HEAVY TRUCKS
IN .STOCK!!
1-F-Super Duty, _Diesel, Auto, XLT
1-F250, 4 x4, Auto, V8, XLT
1-F-Super Duty, Diesel, M/T, XLT
1-F350, 4x4, Mt, Regular Pickup
1-F250, 4x4, MT, XL, Air, V8
1-F350, .4x4, auto, XLT, Pickup
1-F350, 4x4, MT, Air, Pickup

THESE HARD TO FIND
BID TRUCKS ARE IN
STOCK READY TO TAKE
HOME.

NO WAITING!!!

•AM/FM Cass

• VB Engine
• H.D. Battery
• Floor Mats
• Luxury Bucket
Seats
• Tinted Glass
• Intermit Wipers
• LOADED!!!

would further pollute the river with
dioxin, a byproduct or the bleach·
ing process. Dioxin has been linked
to cancer and other illnesses.
DEP officials admitted that,
according to their preliminary
study, odors from the mill will be
noticeable.
Gov. Gaston Capen on is back·
ing the mill, saying it would create
jobs.
"All we hear is jobs this and
jobs that," said Shirley Gue. "Can
you tell me if it is healthy for my
kids?"
"I can't tell you it's not
healthy," replied Renu Chakrabar·

ty, a division engineer.
Gue repeated, "Can you tell me
it is healthy for my kids?"
"No," Chakrabarty said.
''The people in Roane County
are not going to permit this pulp
mill to get in here;" said Chuck
Wyrostok of nearby Roane County.
Wyrostok said be fears his coun·
ty would be clear cut to feed the
mill.
Lewis Baker said he felt soil
should be tested for dioxin before
and after the mill is built, as well as
the raw milk in Mason County.
"Milk has been round to contain
dioxin," Baker said.

HEAP funds released by administration

MSRP TOTAL Before Discounts 530,72000

"2 UNITS IN STOCK"

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

,...--Christmas is-_, West Virginians voice concern

LOADED!!!

10 UNITS IN STOCK NOW
AT RIPLEY LOCATION.
"6 Units In Stock At This Price"

35 cents

Pomeroy-MiCtdleport, Ohio, Monday, December 18, 1995

MSRPTOTAL
Before Discounts
5

WASHINGTON (AP)- Defy·
ing a House plan to klll the program, the administration on Sunday
released $578 million to assist low·
income families pay their heating
bills.
The funding, ·said Office of
Management
and
Budget
spokesman Lawrence Haas, "will
go to meet tlle energy needs oflow·
income homeowners across the
country who are already feeling the
effects of winter."
. The Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, is
&lt;me of the points of contention that
have held up congressional action
on a $250 billion bill to fund the
departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services and Education in

1996.
The House version of the LaborHHS bill does not fund the pro·
gram. The Senate has proposed
$900 million - $100 million less
than curren1 spending set in tlle
1995 budget for 1996 programs.
Haas said OMB released the
money to HHS based on tlle past
practice of allocating 90 percent of
the funding during the first six
montlls of the fiscal year, during
the cold months.of October through
March.
The OMB has already released
$232 miUion under the two tempo·
rary spending measures that
expired last Friday. The $578 million would put funding at 90 percent of the Senate budget proposal.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The a high turnover here," said Robin
Ohio Civil Rights Commission, Wilson Jones, a 14 -year veteran
overwhelmed by about 6,000 who works in the Toledo office.
charges of discrimination filed
"Not only do you work every
every year, is drowning in bureau- day knowing you're dealing with
cracy, ac~ording to some former . people's livelihoods, but you bring
and current investigators.
it home knowing tbat you wanted
More tban a dozen curreut and to get the information but didn't
dl·sap~near.s
former investigators admir they have time to get it and thinking: 1'-l
I U
I"
have routinely dismissed cases with How can our agency be in law
little or no investigation to meet enforcement and not allow you the
t'~tehouse
·case quotas and avoid discipline, time to get the information you , I 1
Cl
The Plain Dealer reponed Sunday.
need?''
COLUMBUS (AP)- Members persons unknown, said Sgt. John
"I would say a great nwnber of
On the advice of the Ohio attorof
the Ku Klux Klan erected an 8· Born.
investigators have had to do that. ney general' s office, commission ·
A man then hung a red noose on
foot
cross on the Statehouse
and that's partly why there is such
Continued on page 3
grounds, but it disappeared several the cross which troopers took off.
hours later, the State Highway observers said.
patrol said.
About 2 p.m .. a group of six to
The wooden cross at tlle south- eight people knocked the cross
west comer of the Statehouse lawn down and stomped on it. breaking
was knocked down about 10:30 pans or it, Born said.
a.m.
Sunday, tllen put back up by
A sticker bearing the slogan
Motorists driving along Main Street in Pomeroy should see some
"Stop
Racism" was affixed to it.
relief this week from traffic congestion stenuning from a water line
By
5:30
p.m., troopers reponed ·
replacement project in the village, according to Pomeroy Mayor
IT'S TH E THOUGHT THAT
tlle
cross
missing.
John W. Blaettnar.
COUNTS .
The patrol is investigating, Born
Blaettnar said village officials have reached an agreement with
said.
the contractor which should allow traffic to proceed unhindered.
There were no arrests in Sun- ,
The project itself is coming along nicely, said Blaettnar. The con·
day's actions, but one person,
tractor is about ready to cover up the work with concrete.
Stephen Cross, was detained on a
previous traffic misdemeanor warrant.
The Capitol Square Review and
Two minor injwies were reported following a two-vehicle colliAdvisory
Board on Friday
sion at the intersection of Rowe and East Letart road s in Letart
the
Klan's $20 permit
approved
Township Sunday around 9:30a.m.
aftJ;r
the
group
submitted a refundWalter F. Laudermilt, 48, Racine, was northbound on Rowe
able
$75
bond.
The cross was to
Road when be ran a stop sign at the intersection of East Letart Road,
remain
in
place
through Wednescausing a car driven by Carrie A. Gloeckner, 21, Racine. to strike
day.
his pickup truck, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Dcparunent
The Klan also has state permisrepon.
Dec.18
sion
to hold a rally at the StateGloeckner was trnnsported by the Racine squad or the Meigs
house
on Jan. 6. It will be the third
7 shopping
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
such event at the Capitol in recent
where she was treated and released. A passenger in her car, 2-yeardays to Christmas
years.
old Catherine C. Maynard, also of Racine, was treated at the scene.
Damage to Laudermilt's 1981 Dodge pickup and Gloeckner's
1987 Plymouth was listed as heavy. Laudennilt was cited on a
charge of running a stop sign.

House Republicans say that
LIHEAP is a relic of the oil crisis
in the 1970s when sharply rising
beating costs caused widespread
hardships in northern state~. But
their claims that the program has
outlived its usefulness have been
resisted by Democrats and many
northern state Republicans.
Rep. Bernard Sanders, an inde·
pendent from Vermont, praised the
White House for releasing the
funding in preparation for a freezing winter. The heating assistance

program includes $3.2 million for .
Vermont
"What we didn ' t want to see
happening was that in the midst of
all the squabbling in Congress,
people going cold and finally this
money being released in July,"
Sanders said. "I'm really delighted
that the president has responded as
quickly as he has."
HHS says that in 1993 the program helped 5.6 million people pay
their utility bills.

Vlan cr"SS
fJ·rom ·Oh10
• s

--Local briefs-......,
Motorists may see break in traffic

Two-car accident reported

One-car wrecks probed

00

19,580

No injwies were reported following two one-car accidents Sun·
day.
In the fust accident, Thomas H. Herben, 26, Racine, was nonhbound on Pine Grove Road near Amberger Road around 12:10 a.m.
· when be lost control of his 1986 Dodge, according to a Meigs Coun·
ty Sberifr s report. The car went off the right side or the road before
coming to rest in a ditch, the report stated. The car was towed from
the scene.
·
In tlle second accident, Teresa L. WiUiams, 30, Pomeroy, east·
bound on state Route 124 in Salisbury Township aroWJd 10:30 p.m.
w,ben a deer struck tlle side of ber 1990 Pontiac Grand Am, causing
light damage.

"6. Units In Stock At This Price"

Middleport accident investigated ·
·

Middleport police cited one person in a Saturday morning acci. dent at tlle intersection of South Third Avenue and Main Street,
according to chief officer Bruce Swift.
According to police reports, the accident occurred at 11:52 a.m.,
when Sherry J. Gates, 34, of Pomeroy was traveling soutb on Soutb
Third Avenue in her 1978 Mercury . Mary R. Powell, 61, of
Pomeroy failed to yield the right of. way, striking Gates with her
1991 Chevy Corsica.
· Damage to Gates' vehicle was light, wbile damage to Powell's
vehicle was rooderate. Powell cited for failure to yield the right of
way.

BREAKFAST WITH SANTA· Santa paid at least one final visit
to Meig§ County on Saturday berore returning to the North Pole,
ror the annual 'Breakfast with Santa' at the Meigs County Muse.
urn. Nearly 40 parents and children turned out for the breakfast,
with the children giving Santa some final gift-giving Ideas. Pictured
with 01' Saint Nick (a.k.a. Curly Wiles) are Hannah Cleek (seat.
ed), and Molly Smith (left). (Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)

Voinovich will fight gambling issue

CLEVELAND (AP) - Forces
on both sides of the casilfo gambling issue plan to take their cases
to tlle public next year, and both
sides expect tlle struggle for sup.
port to be intense, The Plain Dealer
reported.
"We think information is gold·
en, and once people realize what
tllis means to them and their commWJities, tbey'U support it, " said
Thomas Manion Jr., who is orga·
nizing pro-gambling forces for a
Cleveland-area company, Buckeye
Extravaganza.
"They might nJt condone gambling, and we respect that, but tbey
are in favor of creating jobs and·
keeping taxes down. By bringing
gaming to Obio, we can help do
tllose things."
However, Gov. George
Voinovicb bas assembled a coali·
lion that be said will spend the year
campaigning against those who
want to allow slot machines, black·
jack tables and video poker in

Ohio.
"We're going to clobber them,"
Voinovich told the newspaper in a
story published Sunday. "This will
make (Mayor) Mike White's crusade to save the (Cleveland)
Browns look like child's play."
Manion said be will begin hiring
staff for Ohio in early January,
opening three or four offices
around the state. At least 10 full·
time employees will be hired, plus
many part-time petition gatllerers,
to collect 500,000 signatures. A
total of 335,000 signatures will be
needed to put a proposed constitutional amendment on next Novem- ·
ber's ballot.
Lorain developer Alan Spitzer
said last week that he also was
leaning toward another attempt to
put the gambling question before
Ohio voters next year. He collected
enough signatures to put a casino
issue on the ballot in November
1990, but voters turned it down.
Voinovich has conceded there

I

will be a showdown with gambling
interests on the November ballot.
" We're going 10 be meeting lhe
first week of January," the gover·
nor said . " I'm not taking any
chances.''

Voinovich said he will be creating a nonprofit group to lead the
anti-gambling attack, helping to
raise enough money to finance it
and to hire a full-time director to
manage the drive. He said casinos
are just a way of transferring
money from middle-class people to
casino owners.
"What happens is you see large
portions or discretionary dollars
going into gambling and less
money for sports events and entertainment and other cultural activities," Voinovich said.
Dave Zanotti, a member of
Voinovicb's coalition, said an
aggressive campaign is planned for
the fii'St 120 days of next year.
"Our strategy is not to wait,"
be said.

Manion said Buckeye Extravaganza does not want to gambling a
personal issue with the governor.
" We just want. to tell people .
what our proposal IS about: bring- .
ing real jobs to their communities, ·
creating revenue for roads and
· schools and whatever else they
need," Manion said.
Buckeye Extravaganza's pr()·
posed constitutional amendment
authorizes up to I 0 riverboat casinos on Ohio's waterways: one in
Fairport Harbor on the Grand
River; one in Lorain on the Black
River; three in Cleveland on the
Cuyahoga River; three near or in
Cincinnati on the Ohio Rivei'; and
two to be determined by the Legislature.
A 20 percent tax would be
assessed on the gross revenues of
eacl1 casino, with the money to be
used for education, sports facilities,
treatment of compulsive gambling
or general government purposes.

-·

�Monday, December 18, 1995

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION arc welcome . They should be les' th"n JOO
words long. All lett er~ are subject to editing and must be signed wi th nann~.
address and telephone uumber. No unsigned letters will be publi ~ hed . L l'ncr~
should be in good taste. addressing issues. not personal ities.

Farm agency pays
state taxes, says it
shouldn't have to

OHIO Weather
Monday, December 18, 1

in history

: : By The Associated Press
·:
Today is Monday, Dec. 18, tlie 352nd day of 1995. There are 13'days
: · left in the year.
.
Today\ Highlight in History:
On Dec. 18th, 1865, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
abolishing slavery, was declared in effect.
· On !his date:
In 1737, the most renowned violin-maker in history, Antonio Stradivari, died in Cremona, Italy.
In 1787, New Jersey became tbe lhird state to ratify tbe U.S. Constitu. lion.
· In I813, lhe British took Fort Niagara in the War of 1812.
In 1892. "The Nutcracker Suite" by Peter llyich Tcbaikovsky publicly
premiered in St. Petersburg. Russia.
"
In 1915, President Wilson, widowed the year before, married Edith
Bolling Galt at her Washington home.
In 1940. Adolf Hitler signed a secret directive ordering preparations
for a Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. Operation Barbarossa was
launched llle following June.
In 1944, in a pair of decisions, lhe Supreme Court upheld the wartime
relocation of Japanese-Americans. but also said undeniably loyal U.S. citizens of Japanese ancestry could not be detained.
In 1956, Japan was admitted to llle United Nations.
In 1957. the Shippingport Atomic Power Station in Pennsylvania, the
fll1it nuclear facility to generate electricity in tile United States, went on
line. It was taken out of service in 1982.
In 1957, "Bridge on llle River Kwai," David Lean's film version of
Pierre Boulle's World War II novel. premiered at the RKO Palace Theater
in New York.
In 1969. Bri~1in 's Parliament abolished the death penalty for murder.
In 1980, former Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin died at age 76. His
death was not publicly announced for two days.
. Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a
resolution condemning ''all acts of hostage-taking and abduction.''
Five years ago: Less than a month before a U.N. deadline for Iraq to
withdraw from Kuwait, President Bush told reporters he believed Americans would support a military strike, if one proved ncccssary. ln Baghdad,
the ruling Revolutionary Command Council said Iraq was "ready for the
decisive showdown."

Berry's World
0

WASHINGTON - U.S. Trade
Representative Mickey Kantor
wants to field his own dream team
- a group of trade experts brought
wgether to make America' s foreign
competitors play the rules.
In a speech this week. Kantor
will announce the creation of a new
enforcement section at his agency.
The new office will be charged
with holding foreign nations ' feet
to the fire on trade pacts such as
NAFT A and GATT -and imposing sanctions on those who flaunt
the agreements. Bolh NAFTA and
GAIT were unpopular wilh many
American middle-class workers.
who view foreign competition as a
threat to their job security. Administration. officials hope lhe new initiative will help deflect some of the
political fallout from its support of
free trade.
Kantor says he will eslablish his
own dream team - trade experts
melded into a single unit in ordec to
pul tremendous pressure on foreign
competitors who don· t play by the
rules.
With the office's budget at a relatively modest $21 million-

which must cover costs to police
some $2 trillion in trade - Kantor
is quietly negotiating wilh congressional leaders for more money. In

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
lhe meantime, the office will be
beaded by White Hou se lawyer
Jane Bradley, who will initially
preside over a staff of four until
Kantor can ''borrow lawyers from
other agencies." .
Bradley has already been given
her marching orders: Identify lhe
sectors of the economy with the
greatest potential for export growth
to create high-wage, high-skill
jobs, and stand up for lhe small and
medium-sized businesses that arc
usually disadvantaged in foreign
competition.
The new office will file its first
cases in mid-January, and China is
expected to be at the top of the hit
list. Its violations of agricultural
and intellectual property rights

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"HO, HO, HO - NOT LONG TO GO!" .

•
ficult week and he let it rip
standing up for American workers.
I still think. given tbe situation and
emotion, it's as good a speech as
thi s president has ever made ever."
Kantor points to an intriguing
parallel: In the last few month s,
Clinton has begun to show a similar level of purpose and passion which may again save his political
life. A year ago, when Clinton wa1
written off in the wake of the
Republican landslide. Kantor and
Clinton spent many hours talking
privately about the need to recon nect with American workers and
reassure them that free trade is a
fight being waged on their behalf.
Twelve million American workers
currently owe tl1eir jobs to exporL'
-jobs which pay. on average, up
to 17 percent more !han non-trade
related jobs.
But free trade has sometimes
been difficult to sell to workers ,
who hear increasingly demagogic
attacks from Republican presiden.
tial candidate Pat Buchanan and
political gadlly Ross Perot. Organized labor and many senior
Democrats have also helped turn
lhe issue against Clinton.
Kan10r argues that enforcemem
has never been stronger than under
t11e Clinton administration, yet it's
also clear that attacks from lhc left
and right have hurt the administration politically.
"When you reach a trade agreement , it is of little moment and
tends to be cosmetic if it's not
monitored and enforced," he
explains. "We need to grow our
standard of living by competing in
other markets .... Just as important
is building ... credibility with the
American public. (It's important
for !hem to know) that we're going
to stand up for their imerests and
(that) therefore they can trust tl1is
administration for the next five

As one of the administration· s
shrewdest politicians, Kantor
understands that his old friend's reelection may rest on persuading
voters once again that Clinton will
be with them "until the last dog
dies."

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstgein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Somebody say something for the children
PORT HURON, Mich . - The
Rev. Imelda Brown preached one
heck of a sermon last Sunday. It
was the kind of sermon that makes
you think. It was the kind of sermon that touches your heart
It touched mine. And I'm not
the church-going type.
When the Rev. Brown took the
pulpit before the small, predominantly black congregation at Interfaith Community Church, her audience hung on every word.
The dealh of Elisa Izquierdo
was her text. The 6-year-old,
allegedly murdered by her mother,
is a tragic story known to most of
us now. Elisa's brief, agonizing life
carried expectations of one thing
only: the certainty of physical
abuse.
Though her pain was known to
most neighbors of the Izquierdo
family, to New York's Child Welfare Administration, to social service workers, and even to private
agencies pledged to defend abused
children, Elisa slowly and melhodically had every ounce of life beaten
out of her.
The Rev. Brown didn't recount
'this story with lhe obligatory dose
of histrionics and theatrical bombast some preachers routinely use.
She didn't need to.
All the Rev. Brown did was
recount Elisa· s story and let the

actions of its principals speak for
themselves. When their inaction
was as deafening as !heir silence,
the Rev. Brown concluded the

Tom Walker

something.
Tbe dangers of physical abuse
are alarming enough. Tbe systematic neglect of children is insidious
and perhaps as deadly.

One in four American children
story wilh one simple statement:
under the age of 6 live in poverty.
"Somebody should have said Twenty-five percent of the homesomething.'·
less population in 30 major cities
Elisa Izquierdo is gone. Nothing are children, according to the
anyone could do now will ever National Conference of Mayors .
bring her back. Given the life she The conference estimates the
lived, death may have bee n the homeless population of those cities
kindest thing that could have hap- as somewhere between 600,000
pened.
and 3 million.
At least death did something.
Michigan's Department of EduThere are many more American cation has conducted its own surchildren who still face the same vey. It estimates the state· s homemortal danger Elisa faced. Between less children at between 72,000 and
1,200 ami' 1,400 lives are snuffed 137,000- more than I percent of
out each year by parents or adult Michigan's entire population. Their
caretakers, family violence experts numbers wo~ld fill the University
report. A far greater number are of Mtch•gan s football stadium 1o
caught in some form of physical, overflow.
mental or sexual abuse.
Somebody should have said
Less !han two years ago, a child somelhing.
was routinely chained to her bed by
The statistics aren't the Rev.
her parents in Deckerville, Mich., a Brown's. They are mine.
small community 60 miles north of
But maybe it took a fema le
Port Huron . She was ill-fed , in preacher to sound the alarm. The
mental distress and forced to live in plight of our children cle ar ly
her own excrement. Social Services moved right-wing ideologue Mona
was aw:lfe of her situation and did Charco to speak out.
not act.
"Though I am a conservative
Somebody should have said and gencrall y opposed to bureau-

cracy. preventing child abuse is an
exception," Charen wrote in reac tion to the Izquierdo murder.
"Who else but the government can
intervene to protect these chi 1dren?''

The plight of our children is just
that critical.
But our attention is directed
elsewhere. We worry about crime.
We fret over government shutdowns. We wring .our hands about
the national debt.
Politicians tell us the budget
battles are about our new generation's future.
Our future is being beaten
behind closed doors. Our future
doesn · t get enough food to eat or
enough clolhes to wear. Our future
is trying to exist on some sidewalk
or in lhe backseat of a 10-year-old
car.
The Rev. Brown delivered a
wake· up call. Mona Charco made it
louder.
Their message doesn't take a \Ot
of tl10ught. It simply boils down to
one unavoidable conclusion:
Somebody has to say something .
.
Tom Walker is a Port Huron '
(M_irh.) Times Herald community
ed1tor and columnist. Write to
him at P.O. Box 5009, Port
Huron, Mich. 48061-5009.

A modest proposal for executions _ _ __

den. ''

0

agreements remain a serious prob·
lem. More importantly. lhe admmistration hopes the new toughness
will help dispel the impression that
Uncle Sam often gets suckered by
not enforcing trade agreements.
Kantor' s initiative also attempts
to make good on a promise Clinton
made four years ago. at a t1m e
when his presidential candidacy
was floundering amid allegauons
of draft dodging and marital infi·
delity. The speech Clinton dchvered on a dark day in New Hampshire continues to serve as instruc·
lion and inspiration for those who
witnessed it. Kantor sti ll keeps a
copy of the speech next to his
home VCR, and treats it as a sort of
war cry for lhe administration.
Ralher than drop out of tile race,
Kantor recalls, Clinton seemed
stra.ngely re-focused and re-cner·
gized by bis troubles. As Kantor
and other top aides looked on,
Clinton pledged to American .~ork­
ers he would stick by 1hem unlll
lhe last dog dies."
"It was obviously orr the cuff,
without notes," Kantor recalled
recently . "We were in a fairly dif-

years.''

During his visit to New York in
1842, Charles Dickens. the journalist, went to the Tombs. the city's
a)JIIy named prison. "In the prison
yard- this narrow, grave-like
place - men are brought out to
die,'' he wrote.
Dickens noted that ''the law
requires tbat there be present at Ibis
dismal spectacle, the judge. the
jury, and citizens to lhe amount of
25. From the community it is hid-

0

0

0

MICH .

Kantor oversees NAFTA, GATT watchdogs

Executions in New York and all
other states witb lhe death penalty
are still hidden from the community. In September. the state of New
York, for example, reinstituted the
dealh penalty, allhough its murder
rate was less than that of most
states that already had executioners
on the payroll. The people wanted
finality , and the new governor,
George Pataki. was elected on a
pledge to get lhe death machinery
going again.
The new rules state that :he prisoner shall be terminated in a "suitable and efficient facility, enclosed
from public view .... That facility
shall contain the apparatus and
equipment necessary for the carrying out of executions by legal
injection ."
Before 1835, executions in New

York were open to the public but
they were then moved inside prison
walls . As time went on. the jury
and the judge who presided over

NatHentoff ·
the trial were no longer required to
attend. And to further make the
killings impersonal - under the
new procedures in New York lhe final disposition of the prisoner
is done by what the law describes
as "execution technicians whose
names ... shall never be disclosed."
Although capital punishment is
administered in the name of the
public. and much of the public
would not feel fulfilled without it,
the execution ceremonies in New
York and elsewhere are all performed outside the view of the general public.
·
It is highly unlikely that there
will again be public executions .
Such spectacles, it is said. coarsen
the citizenry. But there is another
way in which those people most
directly responsible for making the
final judgment can see tbe end of
t.(le story.
Jeremy Epstein, a former assistant United Stales attorney, is bead
of litigation at New York's Shear-

•

man &amp; Sterling and has handled
dealh penalty cases.
In a recent issue of The National
Law Journal, Epstein proposes !hat
"New York should reinstate the
practice requiring the presence of
the judge and jury at executions as was the practice when Charles
Dickens vi sited the Tombs in
1842." And, I would add, in every
~tate with capital punishment, the
Judge and jury at the trial of the
condemned should be present to
say goodbye to the prisoner.
''Requiring the prese nce of
judge and jury at all executions
would have many beneficial consequences," says Epstein. "It would
focus the at~ention of !hose imp&lt;ismg tb_e pumshment on the gravity
of tbeu acL Jurors could not simply
depart from the courtroom and
leave the state wilh the unpleasant
task of disposing of the defe ndant."
Epstein coolly adds that "if the
experience of witnessing an execution is traumatic and leaves an
impression that lasts a lifetime, so
muc_h liK; better. The impact of lhe
act IS at least as traumatic on the
defendant and will also last for
what remains of his life."
Tbere is furtlrer logic in the

Epstein proposal: "One of the purposes of anv penal system is to
te~ch that ac s have consequences:
cnme, 10 short, leads to punish·
ment. It is no less fitting that judge
and Jury understand tbat their acts;
taken in the isolation of the court;
room, have consequences that
reverberate far beyond it."
:
Epstein, making another poin(
- m the spirit of some of Charles·
pickens' novels - says that "a
JUdge and jury's involvement in the
actual execution might also remove :
from public debate some of the ·
detachment with which the death :
penalty is beginning to be viewed. :
"Although executions are not :
yet a daily occurrence in tile Uniled '
States," he notes, "tl~ey are taking :
place Wllh far greater frequency : '
and are at the point of being con, ·
s1dered routine. The taking of a :
human life by the state should :
never be considered a routine ·
event. no matter how often it :

occurs.''

Martha E. Barton
PA.

..

IND.

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

•

.................
•

•

0

. •lr:C-ol-um-b-us'l-38-,..,,

••

Martha E. Barton, 74, Columbus, died Saturday. Dec. 16, 1995, at
Riverside Hospital, Columbus.
A bomemakec, she was born Jan. 13. 1921. in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Henry and Sarah Findley lble, and was a member of the Columbus
Baptist Temple .
Surviving is ber husband of 43 years, Frank Bruce Barton of Columbus; a sister, Christine Beegle of Pomeroy; and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by three brothers and six sisters.
Services wiD be beld Wednesday, 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Sam Bayse Jr. Burial will follow in Riverview
Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 P.m. at lhe funeral home.

James Cottrell
W.VA .

· KY.

*

~
"¥ ltiB
· Showers T-sforms Rain

Fluffies

Ice

V1a Associalod Pross Graph1csNa r

'ifi.&amp;i

~

SIHiny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
ttl 19tJ5 AccuWaather, Inc.

Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Oblo
Today ... Rain. Higb in the lower
40s. East wind 5 to 10 mpb.
Tonigbt ... Rain ... Could be heavy.
Little drop in temperature. Low in
· .the upper 30s. East wind 5 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 90 percenL
· Tue~day ... Rain. High in the
lower 40s. Chance of rain 90 per-

cent.
Extended forecast
Wednesday ... A chance of snow.
Lows in the 20s. Highs upper 20s
to lower 30s.
Thursday and Friday ... A chance
of snow showers. Lows 20 to 25.
Highs 25 to 30.

Freezing rain forecast
for northern part of Ohio
By The Associated Press
With little letup of rain today
and freezing temperatures across
portions of lhe state, winter weather advisories were in effect for cen'tral and west-central Ohio this
morning and all day for portions of
northern Ohio.
Some significant ice buildup is
possible over lhe norlh.
Temperatures today will range
from the lower 30s to the north into
tbe middle 40s over the south.
Tonight, rain will continue over
southern and central Ohio with
freezing rain over the north. Temperatures will range from the upper

iOs over the north to the upper 30s
over the soulh.
On Tuesday, freezing rain over
northern and central Ohio will
change to snow which could be
heavy at times. Rain over tbe south
will continue.
Temperatures will range from
the lower 30s over the north to the
upper 40s over the south. ·
The record high 1emperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 63 in 1967. Tbe record
low temperature was .7 in 1989.
Sunset today will be at 5:08
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at
7:48a.m.

Holiday program will be
.held on parking lot tonight
The sights and sounds of Christ-

mas will be presented in a "Holiday
Higblites" program on lhe Pomeroy
.parking lot stage tonight (Monday)
at 7 p.m.
Opening the program sponsored
by lhe Pomecoy Merchants Association will be a medley of traditional
and contemponiry holiday music
by the Meigs Marauder band under
. ·!he direction of Toney Dingess.
A men's choral group from the
United Melhodist Church will sing,
. and the Big Bend Cloggers in llleir
attractive red and white costuming
accented with twinkling lights will
do several routines. Director of !hat
popular group is Vivian May.
James Soulsby, who will be
emcee, will be also be singing in
lhe program which will conclude
wilh a visit frorp Santa with candy

canes for the children.
During the program refresh·
ments will be served by Bobbie
Karr of Hartwell House, samples of
bot chocolate. and Annie Chapman
of the Pomeroy Bulk Store, pret·
zels.
The stage area bas been decorated by Sarah Fisher for tbe holiday
season and to add 11 warm touch to
the cool evening air Pomeroy
Councilman George Wright has
created half-drums containers for
burning wood.
Village merchants will be
observing special holiday shopping
boors remaining open until 8 p.m.
Several will be offering special discounts to shoppers from 5 to 8 p.m.
In the event of rain, tbe program
wiD be canceled.

·EMS logs 11
weekend calls
10:15 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Fred Bias, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
5:22 p.m. Saturday, Peach Circle, Brandon Bachner, Holzer Medical Center.
~------~----~~
POMEROY
6:54
a.m.
Baum AddiThe Daily SentU,.el tion, Glenna Saturday,
Riebel, Camden-Clark
(USPS llJ-960)
Memorial Hospital;
10:11 a.m . Saturday, state Roule
Published ever)' afternOon. Monday through
681, Floyd Brickles, 0' Bleness
Friday, Ill Court 'SL Po111t:my, Ohio. by the
Ohio Volley Publishing Company/Gnnnell Co ..
Memorial Hospital.
'Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second
RACINE
.cla~s ~tage paid ~~ Pomeroy, Ohio.
7:30 p.m. Saturday, state Route
Membn": The As ~ i ated Pn:u, and the Ohio
124. Everett Warner, treated at the
Newspaper As\ociation.
scene;
r&lt;&gt;STMASTE R: Send address corm:tions to
II :20 p.m. Saturday, Lovett
The Daily Se ntinel , Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Road, Gamet Jobnson, HMC;
Ohio 45769.
9:41p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department· and squad, motor-vehiSUBSCRIPTION RATES
Dy Carrtn or Motor Roult
cle accident on East Letart Road,
·ont Wetk ...
..... ..... ............. $2.00
. Carrie Gloeclmer, VMH.
One Month .....
....... $8.70
:one Year ...
. . ... ........ $104.00
RUTLAND
I:
19
p.m.
Saqmlay, Main Street,
SINGLE COPV PRICE
Kathleen
Tillis,
Pleasant Valley
Daily ................................................ 35 Cc'nu
Hospital;
Subscribers nO. desiring to JIOY lhe carrier nuty
3:26 a.m. S.niday, Crouser
n:mit in advance direct to lbe Daily Sentinel
Road; Daniel Shane, treated at the
·on a three, six or 12 monltl basis. Credit will be
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
II calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
,'. ,

liven carrier each week.

No s•bscri ption by mail permitted in areas
Where home earlier service is available.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskle· Mefp County
13 Wecks ................................................. $2730
26 w.. ks .....................
.. ........ ...lll82

ll We&lt;b .................................. . ....... $10l.l6
Rilla Outside Mefp COunty

Nat . Hentorr is a natlo~U~ll)' :
renowned authority on the First ·
Amendment and the rest or the ·
Bill of Rights•

•

IMansfield 136° I•
1.2:=:12!.~

13 w.. t&lt;s .
.. ..........129.25
26 Weck.o .
.. ..............$l6.68
S2 Weeks ......................................... $109.72

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

At least 8 killed on Ohio
roads over weekend

Tuesday, Dec. 19
AccuWealher' forecas1 for da.1tirr1e

By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNA11 - An agency tbat makes loans to fanners in Ohio and
three other states is paying hundreds of lhousands of dollars in taxes each
year to those states, even though it says it shouldn ' t have to.
Farm Credit Services of Mid-America is lighting two of the states in
courts while it continues to pay llle taxes.
.
Farm Credit Services argued it should not have to pay state taxes
because Congress created the agency and the federal government regulates 11. The agency has been has been paying taxes since 1989 to Ohio,
Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee, where it has 65.000 member fanners.
Tbe Louisville, Ky.-based agency sued Ohio in U.S. District Court in
April. It argued it should not have to pay corpornte franchise taxes that
will total about $900,000 this year. The lawsuit is pending in Cincinnati.
Since then, lhe agency has sued Indiana to challenge payments of more
than $1 million a year in state income taxes. That lawsuit also is pending.
"None of !hem give up easily," said William Lankswert, chief financial officer of Farm Credit Services.
The agency will continue to pay the taxes until the lawsuits are
resolved, Lankswert said.
: Jim Lawrence, head of the Ohio Department of Taxation's legal divi: · sion, said the state has continued to acce)JI the agency's tax payments.
· Ohio imposes the corporate franchise tax on all for-profit corporallons
on llle basis of thelf net mcome or assets. whichever is higher.
.
The agency's income before taxes last year was about $52 million,
· . compared with $73 million the previous year. It is one of a network of
: :credit associations nationwide formed to loan fanners money.
: . Farm Credit Services resulted from the merger of a production credit
·: association and a land bank association, both federally regulated entities.
: :A federal law in 1988 allowed such mergers if participants thought it was
:. necessary to improve serVice to fanners.
. Lankswert wants to see a legal issue resolved. Federal land bank asso: :ciations were tax-exempt. Production credit associations were taxable.

!~ Today

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

scene.

SCIPIO TWP VFD
5:42 p.m. Saturday, Kingsbury
Road. chimney fue at John Eblm
residence, Jobn Eblin and Shirley
Migbl ueated at tbe scene, Rutland
squad and VFD assisted.
SYRACUSE
12:16 p.m. Sunday, RockSprings
Rehabilitation Center, Stanle·y
Komcroski, VMH.

Jam_es Cottrell, 87, Syracuse, died Friday, Dec. 15, 1995 , at St.
Josephs Hosp1ta1 m Parkersburg. W.Va.
A Tetired carpenter. he was born Feb. 16, 1908, in Calhoun County
W.Va., son of the late William and Lucy Karr Cottrell and attended th~
Nazarene Church in Syracuse.
He is survived by several nieces and nephews.
Preceding him in death were his wife, Mannie Flo Vannoy Cottrell·
two sisters and one brother.
'
Services. will be held Wednesday, II a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy w1th the Rev. Lemar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will follow in
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 at the funeral home.

George -W. Roush
George Washington Roush, 62. of New Haven, W.Va. died Saturday,
Dec. 16, 1995 at bis residence.
Born Dec. 16, 1995 in Letart, W.Va .. be was the son of the late Taylor
C. and Alta A. Blessing Roush. He was a retired end loader from Foote
Mineral Co.. New Haven. and a member of United Steelworkers of America Local #5 171. He was a member or American Legion Smitb-Capehan
Post #140, New Haven, and a United States Air Force veteran.
He is survived by two brothers: Clarence Cedi Roush and Taylor C.
Roush, Jr., both of New Haven: one sister, Betty Webster of Pomeroy, and
several meces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by one sister, Frances V. SchmidL
Services will be Wednesday, I p.m .. at Foglesong Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Va,, with lhe Rev . James W. Lewis officiating. Graveside military rites and burial will follow in Hoffman Cemetery.
Calling hours will be Wednesday, from II a.m. to I p.m .. at lhe funeral
home.

By The A~ociated Press
. At least eight people have died
m traffic accidents on Ohio roads
this weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said today.
Tbe patrol counts fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
Tbe dead:
SUNDAY
·
. MIAMISBURG - Timolhy D.
B1shop, 34. of Miami sburg. driver
in a two-vehicle accident on state
Route 4 in Montgomery County.
CRESTLINE- Carla R. Gaybart, 25, of Crestline, driver in a
one-car accident on Ohio 61 in
Crawford County.
SATURDAY
FARMINGTON - Kenneth R.
Horton. 34, of Southington, driver

in a one-vehicle accident on Ohio
88 in Trumbull County .
CANFIELD - Jeffrey W. Pitts,
18, of Kensington, driver in a twovehicle accident on Ohio 46 in
Mahoning County.
TIFFIN - Larry C. Whitacker,
30, of Fostoria, dri ve r in a onevehicle accident on Ohio 38 in
Seneca County.
COLUMBUS - Spencer L.
Morgan, 23, of Columbus, driver in
a one-vehicle accident on a city
street in Franklin County.
FRIDAY
WARREN- John R. Bishop
Jr. , 26, of Warren , driver, and Janet
M. Gctsy. 42. of Hubbard. passenger in a two-car accident on Ohio
26 in Trumbull County.

State civil rights..c.ontlnued1rompag•1
Executive Director Jo seph T.
Carmichael Jr . turned down
requests for an interview with lhe
newspaper. Reached by telephone
at his Columbus-area home on
Sunday, he said he had not read tbe
article and declined to comment.
But Francis W. Smith, director
of administration. defended the
commission, saying it is a
"stepchild" agency that is doing a
good job considering its meager
$11.9 million budget.
"Based on the budget ... we arc
doing probably the No. I or 2 job
in the country handling this kind of
operation," he said.
The Plain Dealer also reported:
- Since 1988, commission
employees have filed nearly 50
lawsuits and admiuistrative complaints that accuse the agency of
violating !heir civil rights.
-The agency 's office in a
decrepit building at the Ohio
School for the Blind is in violation
of the Americans With Disabilities
Act, which the commission
enforces, because the 59-space

parking lot only has two handi ·
capped-parking spaces . The law
requires one for every 25 spaces, as
well as a van-accessible space.
which lhe commission lacks.
- or the 5,878 charges filed
last year, the commission found
that discrimination occurred in just
388 cases, or 6.6 percent. In 666
others. or 11.3 percent, se ttlements
were negotiated in which the person who filed the complaint
received some benefit - anything
from money to a neutral letter of
reference.
By comparison, the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission found merit in 10,921 of the
91,774 -or 11.9 percent - or
cases filed during the 1994-95 fi scal year.
- Employees accuse the commission's chairman, the Rev . E.
Theophilus Caviness, of making
political hires, noting that the commission has hired six parishioners
from his Cleveland church as
investigators.

Meigs area
announcements

Ora Yeater
Ora Yeater, 65, Coolville, died Saturday, Dec. 16, 1995, at Arcadia
Nursing Center. Coolville.
.
Born March 31. 1930. in Coolville. son of the late Brant and Stella
Baker Yeater. He was a U.S. Army veteran of !he Korean War and retired
from Pioneer City Casting Company as a molder.
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Christy and Roger Jordan
of Wilmington and Cathy and Arthur Kibble of Coolville; a son and
daughter-in-law, Douglas and Kelli Yeater of New Straitsville; seven
grandchildren; one great-grandson; a brother, Ted Yeater of Stewart and a
sister, Audry Young of Athens.
" He was preceded in death by two brothers. Willard and Donald Yeater:
and two sisters, Pauline Burton and Dora Mae Frost.
Services will be held Tuesday, II a.m. at the White-Blower Funeral
Home in Coolville wilh the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will
follow in Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 24 and 7-9 today at the funeral home.

Toy distribution slated
Makeup days for pickup of toys
from the Meigs County Bikers
Association will be Tuesday and
Wednesday at the Meigs County
Health Department in Pomeroy.
Alzheimers group to meet
The Alzheimers and Related
Disorders Support Group will meet
Wednesday. 1-3 p.m. at lhe Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior Center. Featured will be a general
review of 1995 and plans for the
1996.

----Hospital news---VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admssions - none.
Saturday discharges - Mabel
Brace, Racine .
Sunday admissions- none.
Sunday discharges- none .

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................39 318
Alao ....................................... 5S 518
Ashland 011 ...........................35 718

AT&amp;T .....................................67 Ill
Bank One .....................................38
Bob Evans ...............................17 313
Borg-Wamer......................... -30 J/4
Champion Ind ........................ll J/4
Charming Shop ....................... .J 114
City Holdlng .......................... .ll3/4
Federal Mogu1........................20 J/4
Gannett ...................................60 Ill
Goodyear T&amp;R ............................45
K-mart ......................................i 114
Lands End ..............................13 718

HOLZER MEDiCAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. IS - Misti
Fout, John Witherell, Amy Sbrivec,
Tara Abrams, Tasha Blackstock,
Destinie Rucker. Enoch Vance,
Steven Ebert, Jason Dawkins.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brumfield, son, Rutland; Mr, and
Mrs . Greg Burnem, daughter.
Langsville.

RAYMOND JAMES &amp; ASSOCIATES, Inc.

Discharges Dec. 16- James
Cart, Cheryl Saunders, Dorothy
Grow. Mrs. Steven Brumfield and
son, Shawn Northup, Mrs. Greg
Bumem and daughter.

Annuities •Insurance·
Retirement Planning

Discharges Dec. 17 - Jeremy
Nichols, Eslller Foehrenbach.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Stone, daughter, Gallipolis.
(Published wilh permission)

l

OneValley
..............................Jt
Ill
Rockwell ................................
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�Sports

The Daily Sent~~~
Monday, December 18, 1995

Browns beat Bengals 26-19
By CHUCK MELVlN
CLEVELAND· (AP) - For the
time being, they're simply the
Drowns.
Not the Cleveland Browns. Not
the Baltimore Browns. Just the
Browns.
Believing they may have been
playing their last game ever at
Cleveland Stadium, the Browns
beat the Cincinnati Bengals 26-10
Sunday before 55,875 rowdy fans
who didn ' t want to leave when it
was over.

•.
•
:-

&lt;·

: :
:; :
•:
: ·:
•; ·

"It was a happy crowd, but I
noticed many who had tears running down their face," said Earnest
Byncr, who gave the Browns their
lirst 100-yard rushing performance
of the year. "I fell the energies
from the crowd."
The Drowns (5- 10) close lbeir
season at Jacksonville next week,
and owner Art Modell plans to
move the 50-year-old franchise to
Baltimore next year.
Although there were about
12,000 unsold tickets and nearly
I I ,000 no -s hows, the "Dawg
Pound" bleachers at the east end of
the stadium were packed until lbc
end. Fans there ripped up some of
the long bencb seats and tossed
them toward 'the field late in the

: : : game.

: :
Arter two firecrackers exploded
·: · in the end zone near the blcacbers
: •: during ~•c fourth quarter, the ofli, • · cials twice had the teams switch
::: directions so the action would be
:-: farther away. At the final gun,
· · · about a dozen Browns players .
· : : : sprinted to t.hc bleachers to shake
::: hands with the fans .

"That was all just spur of the
moment," said Vinny Testaverde,
wbo threw two touchdown passes.
"Everybody ran out there to tlle
Dawg Pound. It's been a great tradition in Cleveland the last decade
or so. You can feel the excitement
down on the field."
The city of Cleveland has challenged the team' s move in court
because Modell's lease runs
through I 998. A trial is set for
February, but the Browns bave
already opened an office in Baltimore .
The victory ended the Browns'
six-game losing streak, which
began the week news of the move
broke, and it finished off the Bengals' last remaining playoff hopes.
Even wit.h a win, Cincinnati (6-9)
would have been a long shot to
capture a wild-card spot.
"When it was all over, I was a
little angry," said Bengals president Mike Brown, whose father,
Paul. founded both the Browns and
Bcngals. "And lben I thought for a
minule that maybe !.his was the best
way. They get to go out on a bigb
note, and they and !.heir crowd love
each other."
Testaverde, listed as questionable because of a sore hip, started
for Cleveland and passed for 24 I
yards. Matt Stover. who last week
surpassed Nick Lowery as t.he most
accurate kicker in NFL history ,
added four field goals for a teamrecord total of 29 !.his year.
Byner ran 31 limes for 12l
yards, his first 100-yard game since
1992.

Working against the worst .
defense in the league, Testaverde ·
completed 22 of 32 passes, including a one -yard scoring pass to
Frank Hartley on lbe frrst play of
t.he second quarter and a 16-yarder
to Keenan McCardell with 19 Seconds left in the half.
The Bengals got a 30-yard field
goal from Doug Pelfrey in the second quarter, but Pelfrey also had a '
22-yard attempt blocked by Rob
Burnett. who has blocked three
field goals this season.
Cincinnati didn't threaten again
until late in the third quarter, when
Jeff Illake threw an incomplete
pass on fourth-and-short at the
Cleveland 19. The Bengals finally
got a touchdown on Eric B ieniemy's one-yard run in the fourth,
set up by Carl Pickens' 47-yard
reception.
Pickens received a mild concussion when he was tackled on a
shon pass later in the drive, but he
walked off after lying on the
ground for several minutes.
Police and security guards
ringed the field during the game,
and a second line of guards
appeared during the fourth quarter
to prevent fans from running onto
the field. Many fans remained in
the stands, clauering lbe seats, long
after t.he game ended.
''Words can't express bow I feel
about this city and the support
they've given our team and me,"
ESCAPES DEFENDER - Cleveland quarterback VInny Tessaid Testaverde. "We wanted to go taverde (U) escapes Cincinnati linebacker Ricardo McDonald on a
out wilb a win and show lbe fans
nine-yard run In the sec:ond quarter of Sunday's AFC Central bout In
the appreciation !.hey deserve for Cleveland, where the Browns won 26-10. (AP)
standing behind us all year long."

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YTyson prepares for Bruno after knocking out Mathis
~

-• By JOHN NELSON

Ope11 DailY, 9-5, Sun. 12-5

:.; PHILADELPHIA (AP) ~
·&gt;Bring 'em on!
::: That's Mike Tyson's new
:.; motto. He's tired of fighting pat::: sics.
·: ·
" I don't care who it is. I'm not
:.; afraid of anybody. I'll fight any::: where." Tyson said after knocking
·:·out Buster Mathis Jr. Saturday
:.; night in his second light since get: : ting out of prison.
•
He won't have to wait long. On
• · Sunday. promoter Don King
•
announced that Tyson is set to light
WBC champion Frank Bruno on
March 16 at the MGM Grand in
Las Vegas. Unlike the Mathis light,
which was broadcast on free 1V by
Fox. tllc championship bout will be
.•
pay-per-view.
_
"I won ' t be denied,'' Tyson
to ld Bruno at the announcement.
:'On March 16, you will be minus
your championship."
After that, King said, "Mike
wants to unify the world. He bas
; dropped the gauntlet. He told me to
• • get anyone. He's ready."
The other heavyweight championships are held by Bruce Seldon
· (WBA) and Francois Botha (IBF),
: "and as soon as he is undisputed
. c hampion, he wants Riddick
· Bowe." Kmg S31d.
" It looks like 1996 is going to
'
be a great year because the Tyson
• • • machine is on the move ."
:;; •:
The Tyson machine was impres~·&gt; ~ive, if just a spot rusty in the
;:;:Mathis fight. With Mathis mauling

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and bobbing and weaving, Tyson
missed many potentially dangerous
left books and uppercuts in the first
two rounds before finally decking
Malbis with a pair of piston-like
right hands.
Mathis hit lbe canvas and was
counted out at 2:32 of the third
round by referee Frank Cappuccino
before he could lurch to his feet. In
his previous light, Tyson knocked
out Peter McNeeley 89 seconds
into t.he frrst round on Aug. I 9 in
Las Vegas, so he has fought less
than four rounds since his comeback.
Tyson was to have fought Mathis on Nov. 4 in Las Vegas, but that
fight was postponed because Tyson
injured his right lbumb. Asked bow
it felt after the fight, he said,
· "Sore. pretty sore.''
Nex~ Tyson will fa~e a man in
Bruno whom he knocked out in t.he
fifth round on Feb. 25, 1989, while
h.e was still undisputed heavyweight champion. Now , Bruno is
the champion.
"I'm 210 percent better lban I
was." Bruno said, "Mike Tyson
does not look right He looks very
rusty. I'm a totally different person
since I fought Mike Tyson. I
haven ' t been in prison three years.
I've been working."
Tyson, of course, disagreed wit.h
Bruno's assessment.
"The ftrst figbt was just to feel
t.he atmosphere of being back in the
ring. But !.his fight, my faculties
were !.here, my timing was there,

my confidence was lbere," Tyson
said. "I could have gone all
night."
So, what about all those missed
punches?

" There was a reason why I
missed the left hook. I kind of lullabied him. I put him to sleep
believing I was goin_g to do !.hat.

But what did I knock him out with?
The right hand,'' Tyson said.
''It was all a plot. It was a setup,
just like Ibis society is a setup."

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By The Associated Press
Kentucky set one school record,
•· tied another and generally had its
way with Morehead State.
The fourth-ranked Wildcats (51) were devastating on defense Saturday night in a 96-32 -vietory over
their intrastate rival, tying the
school record with 16 blocked
shots and setting the mark for
opponent's shooting percentage as
the Eagles (3-4) were 9-of-65 from
the field (14 percent).
"Anything that happened happened because of Kentucky, • •
Morehead Stale coach Dick Fick
said after his team's third straigilt
loss.
Kentucky, which led 50- 14 at
halftime, scored 38 points off 26
turnovers.
"It's tou~h to hold any team to
14 percent, ' said Kentucky forward Antoine Walker who had 22
points, 10 rebounds and four
blocks. "Even if the ot.her team
was a Division II opponent. it
would be tough.''
Morehead State entered the
game ranked seventh nationally in
scoring with 94 points a game. It
was ranked second in three-point
field goals with 12.5 a game. but
finished 4-of-17 from beyond the
arc.
"We had great defensive intensity and great discipline," Ken tucky coach Rick Pitino said.
"Sometimes you teild to play to lbe
crowd when you have a big lead,
but we did not do that on t.he defensive end."
Kentucky bad a 62-35 rebound
advantage and had II dunks.
"Everybody stuck toget.her and
played tough the entire game,"
Kentucky forward Ron Mercer
said. ''It is hard to play intense (fo~
an entire game). but we were able
to do that."
In other games involving Top
Ten teams Saturday, it was: No. I
Kansas 91, Indiana 83; No. 3 Arizona 90, Texas-EI Pa~o 70; No. 5
Memphis 57, Tennessee 56; No. 9
Cincinnati 70, Temple 49; and No.
10 Iowa liO, Texas Southern 67.
Olber ranked scores were: No.
I 1 North Carolina 96, Dartmout.h
66; No. 14 Illinois 81, Illinois:
Chicago 73; No. IS Missouri 73,
Arkansas State 63; No. 16 Mississippi State 72, Southern Mississip-

4''

What more could the crowd of
25,820 at SkyDome had asked for
than getting to see Sbaquille
O'Neal's ftrst start of the season?
How about the Toronto Raptors
knocking off Shaq and his Orlando
Magic teammates?
The NBA expan.sion team hand·
ed the Magic, the owners of the
• league's second-best record, tbeir
worst loss of the season, 110-93
Sunday .night in front of t.he secend-biggest crowd of the season.
"They usually close it down
and pour it on in the late going,"
• said Damon Stoudamire, who had
21 points and 10 assists for the
Raptors. "But I t.hougbt we really
took away their game and didn't
give lbem lbe chance to gel back in
" it."
,.
Don't blame O'Neal for that. In
his first start and second appear' ance since injuring his hand in an
: exhibition game, O'Neal bad 32
, points, I I rebounds and two blocks
in 35 minutes.
"He still has a long way to go,
j but we felt like we needed him
·' tonight," Magic coach Brian Hill
said.
•
O'Neal had no excuses after tbe
: Magic trailed 63-43 at halftime and
• were outscored 39-19 at the foul
., line.
:
"These guys played harder
' tonight," O' Neal said. "We didn't
'' play well. We'll have to learn from
~ our mistakes and get ready for our
: next game.''
•
Oliver Miller, one of six Raptors
' in double figures wit.h 16 points,
toolc t.he team's eighth victory of
• the season in stride.
•
"We did some dumb things
tonight," he said. "We just didn't
do as m:iny dumb things as we usually do."
In other NBA games Sunday
~ night, it was: Philadelphia 101,
~ Minnesota 99; Milwaukee 84, lndi~ ana 80; Cleveland 92, Denver 79,
• and Wasilington I 12, Ponland 100.

•

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;

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

..Kentucky blasts M·orehead State; Kansas &amp; UC also win
pi 69; No. I 7 Michigan 60, Washington 59; No. 18 Georgia 85, No.
22 Virginia Tech 72; No. 19 Syracuse 72, College of Charleston 61;
No. 21 Georgia Tecb 88, No. 25
Louisville 77; and No. 24 California 70, Minnesota 67.
In the only game involving a
team lbat fell from the rankings.
Marquette beat then-No . 22 Santa
Clara 78-49.
No. I Kansas IJI, Indiana 83
Paul Pierce had 2 I points and
Jerod Haase added 19 for the Jayhawks (6-0), who led 66-47 with
17:07 to play. Brian Evans had 26
points for the Hoosiers (4-4),
whose losses have all been to
r.anked teams . The game was
played at Kansas City's Kemper
Arena.
No. 3 Arizona 90, UTEP 70
Reggie Geary scored a careerhigh 21 points and handed out
seven assists as lbe Wildcats (8-0)
pulled away midway through the
second half. Carl Davis led the visiting Miners (5-I) with 20 points.
No.5 Memphis 57, Tennessee 55
Mingo Johnson scored 13 of the
Tigers' frrst 15 points in the second
half as they rallied from a 30-26
halftime deficit. Johnson finished
with 20 points for lbe Tigers (5.()),
who shot 36 percent. Steve Hamer
had I 7 points to lead the visiting
Volunteers (3-3). who had several
chances to tie t.he game in the final
two minutes.
No. IJ Cincinnati 70, Temple 49
Danny Fortson scored 19 of his
23 points in the second half and t.he
Bearcats (6-0) closed the game at
Cleveland's Gund Arena with a 214 run. The Owls (2-4). who upset
second-ranked Villanova three
days earlier, managed only two tipins over the last six minutes, both
by Marc Jackson, who finished
with 13 points.
No. 10 Iowa 110
Texas Southern 67
Russ Millard scored 20 points,
Jess Seulcs I 8 and Chris Kingsbury 15 to lead the Haw keyes (8- I)
to the home victory. Kevin Granger
had 20 points for the Tigers (4-4 ),
who had a four-game winning
streak snapped.
No. II North Carolina 96 ·
Dartmouth 66
Jeff Mcinnis scored a careerhigh 24 points and the Tar Heels

By The Associated Press

1499 999

• Up To 24 Months Fimncin~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(7-1) took a 24-5 lead as Dart-

mouth missed 15 of its first I 7
shots. Sea Lonergan. the nation's
seventh-leading scorer at 24.7 per
game, finished with 10 points for
the visiting Big Green (6-1 ), who
had the i1ation's longest winning
streak snapped at I0 g:uncs.
No. 14 Illinois 81, 111.-Chicago 73
Jerry Gee scored 24 points •md
grabbed I 7 rebounds as the Fight- ·
ing lllini (7-0), who trailed 70-69
wilb 3:23 to play. Mark Miller had
2 I points for the visiting Flames
(3-3).
No. IS Missouri 73
Arkansas St. 63
Jason Sutherland scored 20
points to lead lbe visiting Tigers (61). Bebop Walker, Jabari Myles
and Damon Nicholas each had 10
points for the Indians (1-4), who
were within 69-62 with 58 seconds
to olay.
No. 16 Mississippi St. 72
Southern Miss. 69 (OT)
Marcus Bullard keyed a 10-0
run late in regulation, !.hen scored
four of his I 7 points in overtime to
lead the visiting Bulldogs (5-1).
Damien Smilb scored eight of bis
22 points in overtime for the Golden Eagles (3-2).
No. 17 Michigan 60
Washington 59
Maceo Baston scored 23 points
and blocked a last-second jumper
by Bryant Boston to lead the
Wolverines (8-2). The visiting
Huskies (3-2) were led by Boston's
13 points.
No. 18 Georgia 8S
No. 22 Virginia Tech 72
Katu Davis scored 18 points and
Shandon Anderson added 16 for
t.he Bulldogs (6-1), who extended
their winning streak to three games
in the opener of the Jeep-Eagle
Classic at the Georgia Dome.
Damon Watlington bad 20 points
for t.he Hokies (3-1), who bad won
eight straight, five on the way to
the NIT championship last season.
No. 19 Syratuse 72
Coli. or Charleston 61
John Wallace bad 22 points for
the Orangemen (8-0), who scored
the first 11 points of the second
half. Thaddeous Delaney had I 7
points to lead the visiting Cougars
(2-1), who led by as many as 12
points in the frrst half.
No. 21 Georgia Tech 88

No. 25 Louisville 77
Matt Harpring scored 22 points
to lead the Yellow Jackets (6-3),
who snapped a two-game losing
streak in the nightcap at the Georgia Dome. Del uan Wheat ilad I 9
points to lead the Cardinals _(6-3),
who trailed by 21 with 10 manutes
remaining and got as close as 75-68
with 4: I 3 to play.

No. 24 California 70
S:un Jacobsen. who had 11 points,
Minnesota 67
missed a lbree-pointer.
Marquette 78, Santa Clara 49
Ed Gray had 22 points and Shareef Abdur-Rahim added 17 as t.he
Roney Eford scored 2 I points in
Golden Bears (4-0) withstood a late the easy win for the Golden Eagles
rally before 25.614 at th e (5 - I) at their old home, the MilMetrodome, a record crowd for the waukee Arena. Marlon Gamell and
University of Minnesota. The Steve Na~ h each had II points for
Gophers (5-3) had a chance to take the Broncos (6-2), who missed 15
t.he lead in the final six seconds, but of their first 16 shots.

Eastern's los-ing streak continues
after 69-62 loss to River Local
After opening the season like
wildfire. the Eastern Eagles have
been reduced to kindling as I Iannibal River beat Eastern 69-62 to
continue the Eagles' skid at four
straight losses.
Eastern (2-4) played another
hard game, but squandered a sixpoint halftime lead, after continuing to hold a 54-53 lead going into
the final round. Eastern slipped to
22- I 9 after a tonid first quarter. but
came on strong and played good
defense to take a 38-32 lead into
the half.
Eastern was led by Eric Hill's
24 points, while Micah Otto hrrd
14. River (2-2) was led by Brandon
Grimes' 20 and Mike Gehreig's 13.
EHS was 3-20 on lbrees, 22-47
from IW(J·point range and 9-14 at
the line. Other statistics were as
follows: 25 rebounds (Micah 8.
Hill 6), 10 steals (Hill4), six assists
(Micah Otto 2,Bowen 2). seven
turnovers and 17 fouls .
River hit 5-6 treys, 19-43 twos
and was 16 -2 1 at the line . Tile
Pilots' statistics were as follows:
25 rebounds (Darker 8. Frey 6);
four steals (Costanz." 2), II assisl'
(Grimes 4), 14 turnovers and 17
fouls.
River won the reserve game 47-

35 in overtime. No Eastem statistics were available from that g:unc.
Ed Trinohoff had I 3 for River.
Eil, tem next plays Bclrrc at
home Tucsday.-•-•EASTERN
(19-19-16-8=62)
Brian Bowen 3.0-1 =7: Eric Dil·
lard 2- 1 ·2=9, Rickie I lollon 0-0·0.
Josh Casto I -0-0-=2, Daniel Otto
1-0-2=4. Enc Hill 9-1-3=24. Micah

~e

Otto 5-1 -1=14. Michael Barnett 10=2 . Totals: 22-3-9114=62
RIVER LOCAL
(22-10-21-16=69)
Brandon Gnmes 4-3-3=20.
t&gt;:f ik e Gchre ig 3-0- 7= I 3, Ru sty
f-rey 3-0-4= 10. Mario Costanza Il -0=5 , Nathan Barker 6-0-2=14
Ed Trinohoff 0-1 -0=3, Jim Hunt 2:
0-0=4. Totals: 1'1-5-17/21:6'1

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•
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..
Boxing
ORLANDO. Fla. (AP) - Hector Camacilo was released from jail
Sunday afler the fighter's girlfriend
said she caused a fight between
them and asked tbat charges
against him be dropped.
Orange County sheriff's
deputies charged Camacho wi~
aggravated assault and domesuc
violence Saturday after witnesses
told them lbe boxer had pushed his
pregnant girlfriend, Amy Torres,
30, at his apartment Judge Carolyn
Freeman released Camacho, 33,
after listening to evidence from

:_ TOITCS.

.

76ers 101, Timberwolves 99
seconds left, but Johnny Newman
Vernon Maxwell scored 30 bit three of four free throws in lbe
points in Philadelphia's first road final 6.7 seconds.
victory of the season. Clarence
CavaUers 92, Nuggets 79
Weat.herspoon matched his seasonTerrell Brandon and Dan Majerhigh with 22 points for the 76els, Ie each scored 20 points as the
who had lost I I straight road Cavaliers won their third straight
games over two seasons. Christian and evened !.heir record at I I- I I
Laettner, who had 23 points, and afler starting the season with seven
J.R. Rider missed three-pointers for consecutive losses. The Nuggets,
t.he Timberwolves in t.he final sec- finishing a 2-3 road trip, had just
onds. Sixers center Sharone Wright eight players available .. Don
strained his right hamstring in the MacLean led Denver with 26
first quarter and never returned.
points.
Bucks 84, Pacers go
Bullets 112, Trail Blazers 100
Reserves Lee Mayberry and
Calbert Cheaney scored 18 of
Terry Cummings had 16 and IS his season-high 25 points in the
points, respectively, as Milwaukee first half as Washington won its
snapped a three-game losing streak founh straight. {lcorghe Muresan
and atoned for a 17-point loss at had 18 points; 17 rebound's and
Indianapolis two nights earlier. four blocks for the visiting Bullets,
Reggie Miller had 17 points and who led by at least 12 points
Mark Jackson added 16 for lndi- t.hroughout the fourth quarter. Clifana, which bad a four-game win- ford Robinson had 24 points for t.he
ning streak snapped. The visiting Blazers, while Rod Strickland had
Pacers were wit.hin 79-76 wilb 44 18 points and 13 assists.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • •

~~~~
&amp;# ~~\
.

ONE

~
,- ~

-

'

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THING
FOR YOU
TO
JuGGLE
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your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.
Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen . Just do this one thing,
and leave the juggling act to us.

All prior sales excluded. Cannot be combined .

Your Independent Agents
SeNing Meigs County Since 1868

0 Credit Terms
0 Lay-A-Ways

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
111 Second St.

Pomeroy

992-3381

representing the

The Ohio Casualty Group
of Insurance Companies
W H E A E E X T A A E F F 0 AT I S 0 U A P 0 L 1..( Y

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Mon.-Fri. 9·8
Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-5

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PLEASE SHOP LOCAL

-----

-------------------------------......----------~"""-=""- ..0

�Monday, December 18, 1995

Monday, December 18, 1995:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Jordan says. "He's made unbelievable strides. There used to be
inconsistency to his game that people criticized. But now, be's alleviated the inconsistency. He's got to
be one of the best players in the
game, if not the best.
"He•s learned bow 10 challenge

himself every night. When one
phase of his game is not clicking,
he's contributed in other areas.
That's a sign of greamess."
Lately, all phases ()f Pippen' s
game have been clicking for the
BuDs, who have won nine consecutive games and have the NBA' s

easy victory at AUanta. Wednesbest record - 19-2.
He had 33 points. 13 rebounds day, Pippen bad 26 points, eight
and six assists Saturday, when the rebounds and six assists in a win
Bulls improved to 10-0 at home over Orlando.
with a 108-88 victory over the Los
Pippen is playing better now
Angeles Lakers. Two night5 earlier, i than be did when be was clearly
Pippen's 30 points, eight rebounds ;Jordan's underling in the champiand eight assists led Chicago to an onship years of 1991 , 1992 and

1993. And he' s probably playing
even
playing better than be did as
1
!the Bulls' only superstar during
:Jordan's 17-monthretirement.
Pippen, scheduled to make his
lsecond Olympic Dream Team
·appearance next summer, i~ often '
'" a dominant player," Jackson said.

-

South fl orid a~. Aorida Allantic: 55
Simon 15, West Aorida 65
Te n n~ Tech 93, L.amhuth fo2
Troy St. I !0, Alabarm St. 93
W. Carolina 68, Pre.sbyterian 64

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AIIU!Lit Di~lli on

,,

ltllll

Or landu
New York.

n

L &amp;1.

llll

11

l
45

6 1l0

Boliton

II

Wa.stunglOil .
New Jersey

II

6
9
10
10

.. 9
.. 4

11

139
l11
.52 4
.524
.450
. 190

ll
1
12l

Dkbion
19 2 .9Ql
10 .!!24
.lOO
. .. II
.... I I ' 2 .471
.. ... II ' 3 AS I
.... 9 13 .409
..1 ' 3 .350
11 .320

8.l
9
9.l
IO.l
11.5
13

·~

MI ~Ulll

PtHladdphia ....

''

55

c~ ntral

Cllicago ....
lnd1ana ...
Cl£VELAND
ALianU ...
Char lone
Deuoit.. ..... ..
Mil wauit"C: ....
Toronlo ..

........

"

......

'

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwn l Division

n

ltllll

L &amp;1.

.11 6
1
ll
San An ton1o ...... 13 1
.. 10 ll
Denver .. ..
ll uushm

Utah .

Dallas ... .

.7

. Mmnesot.a ....
Van cou \'Cr ....

,,
14

.. 6
... 3 20

139

llll

682

Ll

.4l l
.llJ
.300

2. l
6.l
9
9.l
14

. 6 ~0

.130

PK inc DhUloe~
SealllL . .. ..... .... \!! 7 .682
Sacrame nto .. .. ... .. 14 7 .667
L.A. Laiers .......... 12 12 .SOO
Port land ..
I I I I .500
PhoeniX ....
..... 9 II .4SO
Golden State .. ........ 8 )4 .364
L.A. Oippen ....... .8 t j .348

.S
4
4
S
7
7.5

Saturday's scores
New York 86, Deuoit 82
Ulah 83. Miami 74
At lanta 95. fk nver 86
Ch1cago 108, L.A. Laken 88
Phoeni l lll. Dallu 108 (OT)
San Antonio 122, Sacramento 106
Golden State 11 6, Vancouver 83
Cllarlotte 109. L..A Clippen 99

Tonight's games
Oucago at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
UUih at New Jeney, 7:30p.m.
VaDCOuver al Sacrame11to, 10:30 p.m.

Tuesday' s games
Detroit at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Miami at New Y o r~ 7:30p.m.
Minne.ota at CLEV ELAND, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Houston, 8 p.m.
Oallai at O.icago , &amp;:30 p.m
L. A. La.ken at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Seattle at VaDCouver, 10 p.m
Portland at SliD Antonio, 10: 30 p.m.
Washington at L.A . Clipper&amp; , 10:30

p.m.

AP Top 25 men 's
college poll
Th e top 25 teatnl in The Alloc iate4
Preu' men'• colleae bas k~tbal l poll, with
firs ! · pl ac~ votes in parentheses, records
Utrou gh Dec. 17, totlll poinls baied on 25
poinls fo r a first -place vote lhrou&amp;h one
point for a 25th-place vote. and pre viow
ranking:

Lut

n::1.:I &amp;ll!a

9. CINCIIINATL .........6-0
IO. Iowa ...................... ! -!
II . North Carolina ......... 7-l
12. Wake Forest ............ 4-1
1J. Ulah .................... ... 6-1
14. lllinoiJ .. :................... 7-0
IS. Miuowi ..
.. .....6-1
16. Miu iu ippi St. ... ..... 5-l
17. Michigan ...... . ...... 8·2
ta. Georaia ....................6- I
19. S)'110111C....
.. .. 8·0

20. Duke .......

.. .... .5·2

1,617
1 ~58

I

3

\,430
!,418

4
S

l,l52

6
7
2
8

21. Georaia Tech ...........6-3
22. VirainiaTech ........... 3-l
23. Virpnia:....
.. .... J-2
24. C&amp;llfornaa ..
....... 4-0
25. Louinille .................6-3

J&lt;J1
261
251
180
170
124

Far Well
Ariz.ona 90, Tc ~.»· El Paso '70
Arizona St. 8!!, Sacramento St. 73
Baii SL 60.UN LVll
CS Nor1hridge 74, NE lllinoi' 73
E. Washi ngton 72. Carroll, Mont. 64
Fresno St. 83 , Oregon 82
Gonza ~ a 90, W. Montana 6S
Iowa St. 70. Wyo ming 66 (2 OT)
Loyola MarynmLin t 67, Cal St.-Fullertoo 63
Miami (Ohio) 69, Lo ng Beach St. 52

South
Auburn 82. Coastal Carolina 66
E. Kentucky 79, Cent. Florida 72
Vanderbilt 96, N. Carolina A&amp;T 81
Southwu t
SW Tclll.~ St. (,4, Lnyo la, N.O. 45
Tulsa 141. Prairie View 50

Ohio men's
college scores
Saturday 's action

Olarlotte at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

1.240
1,196
1,17S
1,111
1,036
1,031
911
841
722
689
S71
S39
469
350

MiloSIJUri 73. Arkansas St. 63
Okla.l1oma 87, Nicholls St. 47
SoutiJern Mclh . 84, McMu"y 42
TeJ.aS 83, Oregon St. S4
Tew A&amp;M 83. St. Mary's, Cal. 55

Mcnt an a 17 , Lewis-Clark St. 59
Montana St. 81, S. Utah 51
N. Arizona 66, Montana Tech SO
Nevada 75, CulomtSo St. 1:5
New Mexico 69. New Mexico St. 68
Pacific 76, UC Da vi~ 62
Pcppcrdinc 68 , UC S1.1nta Barbam 67
Portland 91, Cal Pul y-SLO 70
San Diego St. 79. Wtlitmont 78
Southern Cal 82, UC Irvine 79
Washln810n Sl. 66, Idaho S4
Weber St. 81, Utah St. 79 (01)

Sunday's scores

I. Kania&amp; (l1) ...... .........6·0
2. Ma..achu&lt;dl&amp; (8) .....6·0
J. Arizona ........
.. .... 8-0
4. Kentucky
........ 5-1
5 . Mempb ~ ...................5·0
6. Georgetown .............. 7-1
7. Villanova ... ............. 7-1
8. Connoclicut.. ........7· 1

So ulh ~ul

!UTI

Toro11to 11 0. Orlando 93
Philade lphia 101 , Minoeaota 99
Milwaukee &amp;4, lodiana 80
CLEVElAND 92 , Denver 79
Waahinaton 112. Penland 100

I1lm

Mldwtsl
Baylor 78, Drake 7S
Bowling Gree n 88 , Jurne&amp; Mallison 72
Bradley 71, W . Illinois 54
Californ ia 70, M i n nt~ota 67
Cincinnati 70 , Temr le 49
Cre1ahton 63, Morgan St. 56
Dayton 68, Cleve: land St. 60
DePaul 71, Northw~ern 61
Dt:trui! 65, W. Michi gan 50
Evansville 58. North Texas S4
11li no i5 81 , IlL -Chicago 73
Indiana St. 70, E. Illinois S4
Iowa 110, Tcxaa; Southcm 67
Kansas 9 t , Ind iana 83
1
Marquette 78. Santa Clara 49
Michi gan 60, Wx hington 59
Michigan St. 67, KansQil St. 54
N. Jowa 109, Nebrillika 104
Ohi o St. 105, Seton ll al \ 96
Oral Roberu 74. SE Missouri 58
Purdu e 88 . Te.11 :u; Chr istian 69
SW Missouri St. 79, NW Louisiana 68
St. Lou is 67, S ll li no1s 53
Wi chita St. 72, Miss iss ippi ~9
W1s.-Green Ray (,0, Michigan TI!Ch 52
Wri~h t St. 63, ToiL-do S7
Xa vi er (Ohio) 117, De law:u\c St. 57

)l
9
10
11
13
16
14
IS
18
25
21
19

17
23

20

Other reeel¥in1 voles: UCLA 117,
Mar~u ette 57, Stanford 52, Tul sa 44, Van·
detbllt 41 , Boston College 39, Arbllias
35. Maryland 3S, Texas Tech H , Wash·
inatoa St. 33, MIAMI (OlliO) 29, New
Melic:o 28, Santa Clara 21, Auburn 18,
OlDO ST. \8, Ark..l..itlle Rock 14, Iowa
St. 1J, Pena St. 6, Ok!Xloma St. !S, ~due
5, Clr:RIIOO 4, LSU J. Southern Cal 3, AI·
aba ma 2, E van• ville 2, W. Kentucky 2,
T ow60n St. I .

NCAA Division I
men 's scores
Saturday's action

Ohio Alhltlic Conftrrncr
Hiram 70. Heidelbcra 65
John Carroll 89, Capital 85 (2 DT)
· Marietta 7 1, Balllwin·Wal laceS6
Mount Umon 82 , Ouerbein 80
Ohio Northt,.n 7U, Muslli ogum 63
Mld.Ohlo Conrennce
• Cedarvi\lc 108, Tiffin 70
Ohio Domi nican 71, Malone 62
Shawnee :it. 8S, IUO GR.A.MJ E 82
Walsh 87. Mount Vernon Nazarene 71
Non-eonfrrence pl•y
Dayton 68, Clevc:land St. 50
Defi ance 90, Lake Erie 61
Hanover 86, Bluffton 53
Huntington 86, Find lay 83
Maine 70, Youngstown St. 54
Urbana 81, Spalding 06
Wright St. 63, Toledo :57

Ohio wome n's
college scores
Saturday's acdon
Ohio AthLetic Conference
Baldwin-Wallace 75, Marietta 66
Capilal 76, John Canol! 55
HeidelberJ 72, Hiram 48
Musk.ina:um 66. Ohio Northern 63

Landers
"1 &amp;9!S,LosAng•le&amp;

llmea Syndicate and
Crea1011 Svndicalt•

Dear ADD LaDders: I hope all

Non -eonreren~t play
Akron 85, Robert Moms 62
Blurnon 73, Siena Heii~Jts S2
Campbellsville &amp;4, Central St. 73
Dayton 65, Georgia Southern 62
Loui ~&gt; ville 60, Miami (Ohio) 47
Mount St. Joseph 73 , DePauw 61
Point Pari 9S, Notre Dame (Ohio) 73
Shawnee St. 89. Pikeville
W. Viryinia 97, Youngstown St. 91

s•

Tournamcnl action
lady JK ktl CluaJc-thMiplonahJp
Defia nce 90, Spring Alba 6S
Third place
Hope 84, Wilberforce SS

Sunday's adlon
Ohio St. 94, Detroit73

Sl

Syracuae 72, Coil . orOwiCitOR 61
TOWioJDSt. 10.1, Wllh inatoD, Md. 86
Waaner 10, Rutam 71
W• t Virtinia 94, Ohio 69
Soolh
AJabamll OO, Mcn:cr 73
Austin Peay 100, Cumberland (Tr:nn.)

70

Campbell 74, N.C.-Wilmington 52
Clemson 76, furman 61
Davi dsoQ. 96. Falrleiah Dickinson S6
Aa. International 92, Liberty 89
Aorida AAM 47, Gcoraia Southun 43
florida St 74, Aorida 52
Georae Muon I J J . W. Virginia Tech
11 0
Georgia S.S, ViriJinia Tech 72
Oeaa:ia Tech 18, Louisville 77
JackJ()n St. 90, SE Louisiana 79
Jacbonville 65 , South Alabama 53
Jacbooville St. 102, Miu . Valley St

94

Kent~Je ky

96, Mordlcad St. 32

LS U 93, Tenn .-Marth 74
LnLII ~ ia n a Tccll90, Cewenary
McNeeae St. 74, Lamar 72
Mefi1'hi• 57, TeMessee .SS
Miami (fl1.) 81 , Winthrop 56
MilliPippi St. 72 , Soulhern Min. W
(01')
Mwray St. 101, Wu tun1ton, Mo. 87.
N.C.·Aiheville 68, Samlord 60
New OrleaJI.I 69, Middle Tenn. 67
NMh Carolina 96, Dartmouth 66
Radford 87, Catholic U. 59
S. Carolina St. 6J, Charleaton Southern 57

n

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Saturday's action
Amelia S!i, Ripley 45
Arcanum 82, .Eaton 62
Aihland 60, Elyria 58
A.~h l and Crestview 71, Mohawk 52
Ath ens 62, Olesh ire River Val . !12
Ayen ville 47, Leipsic 4S
Beaver Etitern 83, W. Union 72
Bellbrook. 69, Val ley View 44
Bcllcw e 68, Perkins 66
Boardman 72 , Salem S4
Bowli ng Gree n 74, Defi ance :57
Brookville 76, Franklin-Monroe 66
Bu ckeye Central 68. Danbury Lakeside 59
Buckeye Val . 83, Grandview 71
Bucyrus 69. Ontario 64
Canal Fulton NW 7S, Fairleu S3
Canton Cath. 62, You. Unul ine 49
Cedarvil le 59, E. Clinton 58
Celina 44 , Greenville 40
Chardon 71, Garrettn ille 37
Chesapeake 60, Gallipolis 41
Cin. Colerain 72 , Cin. NorthWC6t 49
Cin. Deer P..uk 74, Cin. CltrlatJan 61
Cin . Madeira 62, Newpor t ( Ky ,)

63

Danville 53, Ce nterburg 41
Day . C llamimtde- Julienne S6, Cin
Notre Dame 41
Day. Dunbar 64 . T rotw o od - Mad i~on
l2
Day. Jeffcnon 70, Newton 46
Delaware 62 , Whitehall 32
Do~ er 71, St. Clainvi lle 42
Eaton 34, Arcanum 47
EliJin 45, Pleasant 44 (OT)
El yria3 8, Ash laod Sl
Elyria Open Door 79 , Temple Chr. 27
El yria W. S.S, Keystone 36
Erie (Pa.) Central 68. Cle. St. Au gul·
tine 28
Fredericktown 46, Wynfmd 42
Freroont Ross 63, To!. Wai te ?:J
Fl. Frye 65. Belpre 63
Ft Loramie 42, Minster 40
Gallipolis 75, Wheelersburg 63
Ga lloway We!illand 49, Groveport '3
. Garaway 83, Tuscarawas Cath . 19
Garfield Hts . 4S. Shaker I !til. 47
la rfield Ht1. Triml y 88 , Parma llts.
Holy Name 59
Grandvi ew 6 J, Olentanly 45
Greenfield 57, Min(ord 53
Grecnsbufi Gree n S9, Revere 48
Hiland 72 , Newco merstown 29
Huber llts. Wayne 49, Sprin g. NortJt
30
Hudson 61 . Medina ll ighl and 49
Jackson 58, New Phil adelphia 29
Jeffeno n 7S, ~h U\ b\J i a 27
Johnstown Nortllridge 56, Lucas 27
Kenston 70, Kent Roosevelt 50
Kf nton Ri dge 88, Spring. Shawnee 56
Kettering Alter 45, Day. Christian 43
Kettering Fairmont 56, Fai rborn 34
Lakeland 48, St.riiSburg 34
lakewood 66, Cle. St. Joseph Academy29
·
Lancaster 42, Day. Meadowda1e 34
Lima Bath 6 t , Coldwater 58
Uma Catll. I00, Kenlon 54
Logao 62 , Nelw oville· York 31
lAndon 56, Hebron LakeWood 34
lorain Cath . 46, Gilmour 35
1Auisvi11e 44, W. Branch 37
Lutheran W, 43, Beachwood 13
Madisoo 64, Paine1ville Harvey SO
Ma lvern 51 . R idt~ewood 49
Mansfield Chr. S2. Jlill£dale 36
Marion Calh . 62, Worth ington Otr. 2:5
Marion local 38, Anna 35
Mas.sillon 70, Canton Timken 211
M a~~ i llo n Jad.\O n :56, New Phil:ldelphia 29
Mai.Sillon Perr y 64, All iance 24
Ma)"Vill e68, Joh n Glen n 52
McDmnon NW 57, Lllesapea ke 4!1
Medina 49. Berea 46
Miami Trace 61, Mad ison Plains 49
Middletown 66, Lima Sr. 58
Mi lwauk ee St. Pitts H, Cle.
Coll inwood 51
Minerva fi2, Canlon S. 31
New Albony 65, Li ckin g llts . S2
New Lcxinttton 52, Tri-Vallcy 46
Ncwurk C ilh . IIJ, Mi ller 33
Northwood S4, Ge noa 49
Oberlin 54, Firelands Sl
Olmsted Falls 41, N. OlnY&gt;ted 31
Orrvilhl :56, Norwaym: 31
Ottawa llills 67, Evergretn 37
P..1dua 46. Lak.e Cath. 43
Painuv ille Rivers ide 60, Ashtabul a
Edgcwood S4
P...u rro 51, Cic . Rhodes 34
I'ICkenngton 73, Upper Arl ington SO
Porumouth W. 52. Portsmouth 42
Pymatun ing Val. 75, Fairport Harbor
lO
Richmond Etliw n 46, Steubenvi ll e
CaUl. 43
River View 55. CrooU.ville 52
Shdby 48, Norwalk 37
Sheridan 48, l"'hilo 39
Shcrwuud Fuirvicw 86 . Mill er Cit y 43
Sidney :50, Ce lina 27
S!ronl!,sville 79, Brecksville 62
Tall mad e 7:5 , Norton 44

Tecumseh 41, Greenon 43
T ho mas Worthi nl!,lon 51. Col. Independence SS
T iffin Columbian 63, Galion 34
T ipf! City 43, Piqua 34
Triad 76, Ridgl:'rnunt 22
Triway 45, Waynedale 43
Troy 48 , Miami E. 35
Uppes Sandusky 60. Willard 27
Urbana 48 , Spring. Northeastern 40
Utica 44, Jonath;:m Alder 43
Valley For11:e 61, Shaw 49
Versa ille!ii 47, New Bremen 41
W. Carrollton S9, North mont 29
W. Holmes 69, Bl ack River 32
W . Liben y·Sa lcm 55 . DeGraff RlvcrSI~e 37
W. Musk.ingum 46, Morgan 33
Wadsworth 63, Cople y S9
Warrensville Hts. SS , Normandy 26
Way net; fi eld·Goshen :58. Indian Lake
41
Well ington 39, Clearv iew 24
We,llake S5, Roc ky Ri ver 41
Woodmore 71, To\. Christ ian 46
You. Mooney S2, Austintow n Fitch 38
ZaiiCiiVille 53, C~ hoCI O n 46

St. Lcuis ..............7
Carolina ...............7
New Orleans ........ 6
a-clinched division
off berth

'don;t read your column,their wives
:should clip it out and make sure they
see iL
: My husband of almost 50 years
:iJied liUddenly from a heart auaclc two
lJIOnths ago. Hospital employees
br-ought his billfold to me from the
'Cmetgency room. Thank goodness I
didn't open it up in front of my

m

8 0 .467 217
8 0 .467 212 JOS
9 0 .400 307 348
title; y.clinched play-

Saturday's scores
PitUiburg)l41, New Ene!IUld 27
Gree n Bay 34, New Orleans 23

Tonight's game
Min neaota Ill San Fraocisco, 9 p. m

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFER ENCE
J.:,ulcrn i)h.·is ion
~

L I lli. fi !!A

x· Buffalo .... . ... 10 5
lndiannpo li s ... ..... 8 7
Miami ..
.. .. 8 i
Ntw England ..... 6 9
N.Y. JciJi ............. 3 12

0
0
0
0
0

.667
.!i 33
.5 33
.400
.200

333
321
351
287
233

307
301)
310
367
372

CC'nlnl Vi\'isinn
x-Pitt.sburgh ....... II 4 0 .733
CINCit'-.'NATL .. 6 9 0 .400
llous!on ..............6 9 0 .400
CLEVELAND ....liO 0 .333
Jacksonvill e ....... 3 12 0 .200

388
322
320
268
25 1

303
350
307
332
3113

Wu lttn Di ·&gt;'i~ iun
l -KiUL'ias Cit y .... t 2 3 0 .800
OnklantJ .............. II 7 0 .333
S::m Di ego ........ ... 8 7 0 .533
Seanle .
II 7 0 .533
Dcnvl'f .......... .. 7 8 0.467

332
320
294
35 0
35 7

238
301
306
340
3!7

Now Available
Large Selection
of Christmas
Centerpieces,
Swags, Wre;~th~,
Poinsettias

.'

Golden Rule holiday party held

EllSttrn Di\'lslon

n
y-O:dlas ............ 11

L I l'l.t. fi !!A

4 0
y-Phi laddphia .. 10 S 0
N.Y. Giants ..... ... :5 10 0
Wash ington ........ 5 10 0
Anmna .............. 4 I I 0

.733
.667
.333
.333
.267

CC'nlral Divbltm
y-Grcen Bay .. ... 10 !! 0 .667
DeuoiL ............... 9 6 0 .600
Minnesola .......... 8 6 0 .57 1
Chicago...
..8 7 0 .S 33
Tamp·aBay .........7 8 0 .467

39!1
304
273
306
262

er of the group, taking place In October. Above
are Jenny Doczl, Delbert Mitchell and Karen
Gibbs at one of the several gift-wrapping sessions which took place In preparation for distributing the toys. Makeup days for pickup of
toys are Tuesday and Wednesday at the Meigs
County Health Department.

TOYS DISTRffiUTEP- The Meigs County
.Bikers Association's lOth annual toy run was
completed Saturday with the distribution of toys
,at the Rutland American Legion Hall. Toys were
·purchased through efforts of the bikers for more
:than 600 Meigs children. Planning for the pro:Ject of remembering needy children began in
"Jnly wltb the actual toy run, the main fund-rats·

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
fum

278
318
313
342
335

Grave Blankets
Starting at 525.00

. The Golden Rule Sunday
:School class of Middleport First
Baptist Church held its Cbrisunas
potluck dinner at the home of Dale
and Marjorie Walburn recently.
Dale Walburn gave the blessing
and devolional readings were given
by Marjorie Walburn and June
Kioes. The class selected children
and older adults to be remembered
during the holiday season.
Discussions were held regarding
completion of a new Sunday

•.

ALLURING

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399 326
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228 298

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Christmas, I placed an envelope £or time is truly priceless -- and
each of my children on the tree. · something only you could give.
Inside were 10 small pieces of Tbanlc you for passing along the
colored construction papet Two said, suggestion.
"This entitles you to one overnight
Gem of the Day: Three-fourths of
stay ofbaby-sitting."Two ochers said, the Earth's surface is water, and one"This entilles you to one weekend." fourth is land. It is quite clear that the
And llix piccea o( paper said. "This good Lord inrended us 10 spend triple
entitles you 10 four boun of baby- the amount or tiJhe nslting as talcing
sitting. • The paper tickets are ~of the lawn.
Jedeemabie at the time ot service.The
Feelillg presswed to lrave wt?
time offered would depend on whal H(flll weU-infonMd tue yow? Knu
the individual grandmother feels she for AM Llllldm' bookkt"Sa IINl the
is able 10 handle. ·
Teeno(lgtr. • Send 11 self-addressed,
I hope this works for others. long, bll.Sirtess-size envelope IJIId 11
It did for me. - PHILADELPHIA chlckormoneyonkr for $3.75 {this
GRANNY
includu postage IINl handling) to :
DEAR GRANNY: What a Teens, clo Ann Landers, P.O, BoJ:
perfectly splendid idea. Your gift of 11562, Chicago,lll. 60611 .()562.

CDC develops guidelines to prevent
animal transplant diseases

Sunday's scores
Detr oit 44, Jacbonville 0
Buffalo 23 . Miami 20
Cl£VELAND 26, CINCINNATI 10
Houston 23, N.Y. Jets 6
Carolina 21. Atlanta 17
Philadelphia 21 , Arizona 20
Chicago 31, Tampa Bay. tO
Wuhingtuo 35 , St. l..oo1s 23
Kan w Cit y 20, Denver 17
San Diego 27, lndianapohJ 24
Dallas 2J, N.Y. Giants 20
Seattle 44, Oakland tO

Football

fum

you 10 wrile that leUet. I'm cenain
your sole purpose was to warn men
to be more cin;umspcct and spare
their wive~ the pain you have
endured.
I do hope ·this unfortunate
discovery wiU not compleldy tarnish
your memory of Wilmer. Many men
of high quality have a kinky side that
is extremely well-concealed. Try,
dear, to remember the good things.
Dear AnD Landen: I read your
column every day in the Pjliladelphia
Inquirer. I'd like to respond to
"Burned Out in Anytown, USA," the
grandmother who doesn't want 10
baby-sit "on demand."
As a grandmother of seven, this is
how I handled that issue. Last

about it. It would be devastating 10
When I arrived home, I looked our children if they ever found ouL I
iJ)side the billfold 10 get "Wilmer's" must live with the nighunare that
inswance &lt;:ani and was shoclced 10 somewhere there is another woman ·
fmd four packa&amp;es of condoms. You who knew about this side of Wilmer
can be eertain he wasn't using them - but who she is, I cannot imagine.
at home.
Please, Ann,lell the men who read
I also had to go through my your column 10 get rid of Ill that
husband's desk in his office and the garbage ao their wives won't have 10
things he kept iD our garage. I found go through what I did. It is
several stacks of pornographic devastating enough to lose one's
pictures, filthy books and sexual husband, but 10 endure this as well,
gadgets of all kinds . I became an alone, is almost more than I can
physically sick at the sight of them. bear. I hope my letler saves some
Wilmer was a highly respecled other widow from suffering this
professional man in our town. I am way. - SILENlLY WFEPING IN
crushed to have found all this KANSAS
DEAR fRIEND IN KANSAS: It
evidence of his infidelity, and of
counc, there is no one I can tal1c 10 must have taken a great deal out of

married men will sec this. If they

Conollon Val . 78 , Beallsvi lle 60
Coshocton 53. Zanesville 46
Covington 60, Ruuia S4
Cre~itl inc 33, Northmor 24
Cuyaf1uga FBJis 68, Twimiburs 36
Cuyaho&amp;a Htl. 47, Columbia 41
Cu yahoaa Valley Ou. 68. Kidron Chr.

School classroom. and the secretary and treasurer's reports were
given. The meeting closed with
prayer.
Attending were Dale and Marjorie Walburn, Rev . Mark and
Vickie Morrow, Lawrence Eblin,
John and Marilyn Fullz, Phyllis
Young, Manning and June Kloes,
and John and Glenna Riebel.
The January meeting will have a
westem theme and will be held at
the Holly Hill Inn.

By AJ. HOSTETLER
Associated Press Writer
Th e
ATLANTA (AP)
nation 's disease-fighting agencies
are developing guidelines to m;!ke
sure transplants of animal tissue
into humans don' t give the patients
devastating new infections.
The issue came to a head this
year when the Food and Drug
Administration delayed a transplant
of baboon tis sue into an AIDS
patient in San Francisco until it
determined the experiment's safety_
Jeff Geuy received tbe baboon
bone marrow cells on Thursday.
No.w the Centers for Disease
·Controi and Prevention is stepping
into the debate on the federal government's role in regulating crossspecies transplants, called xenotransplants.
Guidelines already exist for preventing the spread of disease by
human organs. because even virus-

es that are generally bannless can
be deadly to a transplant patient
The question of whether animal
transplants would foster new diseases among humans isn't just academic, according to Dr. Louisa
Chapman, a CDC epidcmiologis&lt;
who's working on the guidelines.
She recently wrote about the topic
in the New England Journal of
Medicine.

The Perfeet
Stoeldng Staffer
Meigs Count,'s

Holiday Cook Book

r------------·
II
I
Under New Ownership
Don and Beth Stivers

II

Tony~

I

1

Carry Out

Mill St., Middleport, OH
Stop In And See Our Large Selection of
Wine and Imported Beer for the Holidays

1

More than ISO diseases can be
transmilted from animal s to
humans, including rabies, and some
become deadlier in humans. Some
re searchers belkvc the deadly
1918-19 nu pandemic was caused
by a virus that spread from pig to
humans. and AIDS is believed to
have jumped from monkeys to
man .

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Oh!o H.S. girls ' scores

Tnis Christmas, you won't have to worry about friends and
family returning your gifts Wilh a Sentinel
subs.::ription, you'll be sure to give them something
they'll use every day.

Alaon Elms 68, Cantuo Heritage 16
Alaon Spring. :51. Marllngton SO
Ab on St.V -St.M S4, Cle. VAISJ 46
Allen E. 66, Botkins 3R
Ashtabula Harbor 44, Geneva 40
Atl1ens 62, Che.s hire River Val .·40
Aurora 40, Richmond Ill! . 32
Avon 51 , Brookside 44
Avon Lake 49, Amherst 37
Day Village 59, Fairview Park 53
Beavercreek !!2, Spring. South 23
Bellefontaine 77, Sprine. Northwestern

Mid-Ohio Conference
Cedarville 103, RIO GRANDE 93
·
Findlay 83, Walsh 63
Urbana 17, Malone 71

Eul

American Univ, 89. Howard 49
Col11ate 7S , Comell70
Duquc.ne 79 , Robert Morris 72
Maine 70, Youngstown St. 54
Manhattan 61. Fordham S8
Mari st &amp;6, Nonheastr:rn 65
Mount St. Mary 's, Md. 83., Loyo la,
Md 73
Pitl.lburgh 101, Lon&amp; Island Univ. 67
Rh od~ fsland 68 , Va. Commonwealth
63
St. Peter's 79, Md .. Baltimore County

Catholic 55
Ci n. MiUord 87, G~hen 61
Ci n. Summit 93. N. Co llea e llill 79
(OT)
Clc. llcights 62, Canton McKinley 48
Cle. Urritagc 61 , VIctory Olr. 42
Cle. St. Ig natius 83, Warren Hardine
10
Cle. Univers ity SS, Gilmour SJ
Cle. VA/SJ 78, Altoona, Pa. 73 (2 OT)
Clinton ·Massie 68, Wilmingtoo 50
CoL Acade my H. Hawken 4S
Conotton Val. 51. Fairport Harbor 40
Convoy Crc&amp;lview 44, R. R«:o very 21
Cortland Lak c vi~:w n. Maplewood 31
Coventry 74, CUy-.thoga Valley L1lf. 66
Crelitline 7 3, Plymouth 62
Cuyahnga Falls 77, Akron Buchtel 7S
Day. Be lmont 87, Day. Jdferson 78
D&gt;~y . White 75, Tol. Start 67
Day. Stebbiru 84, Letoo n-Monroe 8l
IXlphos St. John's 48. St. Marys 42
Delta 61, Hi \hop S2
Di lie6 t , Miami Val. S6
E. Canton 88, Canton Heritage S4
E. Knox 72, Ut1ca 64
Elyria First Bapt . 77, La~e Ridge 67
Elyna Open Door 59, Temple Chr. 47
Evergree n 69, Anthony Wayne 54
Fairfield 69, Cin . Oilk Hill !i 68
f ire lands 59. Lorain CaUl. 44
Greenfield S2, llill ~boro 47
Harrison 49, Ross 45
ll ilhdalc 4H, Loudo nvi lle 42
Holl and Spring. 80, Oregon Clay 67
Kalida K9, Delphos Jefferson 57
K~nlo n (J4 , Marion River VaL 56
Kidron 0 1r. 65, Ritt ma11 59
Lcuu:a.,tcr 80, Wl1itchal1 3S
Lebanon 92, Carlisle S!!
U x i n~ !O n 66, Shelby 44
Libcn y. Benton 56, Ada 32
Lickintt Val. 53, NcwW'k Cath. 41
Lim ~ ~haw nee 68, Allen E. 57
Lima Sr. 74, Day. Meadowdale !!2
lnck.Jand 62, Cin. Seven Hills 49
Logan 49, Aleunder 47
Lorain King 62, Clc. Rhodu 44
Madison Plai ns 85. Greeneview 61
Mansfi el d 67, Tel. Libbey 62
Maru;fi el d Chr. 69. Center burg 43
Marietta 62, Parker&amp;burg, W.Va. 59
Mary1vi lle 70, D..iblin Scioto 48
Massillon Perry 4.S , Mm illon 38
Maumee Val. 79 . Monroe vill~ 74
McDonnld 57 , Petersburg Spring. 53
Miarni E. 49, Piqua 43
Midd letown Fenwi ck 65, Middlet own
Madison 43
Montpelier 49, Pettisvil le 43
Mt. Gilead 74, Danville 54
Mt. Veroon 58, Marwfield Madiso11 47
N. Adams 78, Md)enmtt NW SO
Newark 75, Marion Calh. 68
Northroonl 81. Millon-Unioo 6 1
Nonon 76, Akron Srring. 61
Norwalk St . Paul 79, Mansfield St. Peter'' 59
O.t.awa-Giamlorf :5!, Lima Calh . 3S
Pa1nesv11le R1vcrside 66, Paine.sv ill e
Harvey 4ll
Parkwav S8, AMen ia 53
Patrick i lcnry 63, Tin ora 58 (OT)
Port srnou lh Notr e Da me 77.
Por!smouth W. 12
Ridgedale 93, Mari on Cath. 43
River 69, Reeds ville Eastern 62
S. Charl elilon Southea5lern 42 , Waynesville 34
•
Sl1erwood Fairview 74, Bryan 38
S1dney 92 . Xenia 7S
Southi naton 7J , Warren Kennedy SS
Spencerville 72, H•din Northern S9
Sporina. Catholic 34, Cia. Moeller .s 1
Sprine. Northwestern &amp;0, Umdon 66
Sprinaboro 61 , Fran.k.lin 48
St. Henry 91. Wapakon e!Jl 59
Tipp Cit y 59, Day. Oakwood 57
Tel. St. John'&amp; 64, l.atewood St. Ed ·
ward Sl
Tri-County N. 71 . Preble Sh11wnee. 61
iOT)
Twin Vall eyS . 92, I&gt;oy. Nurthridge 46
Uniontown lake 52, Wooster 44
Van Wert 5.S. Pauldi ca 52
Vermi lion SS, Clearview 51
Vcnaillu 80, Tri-V illage S4
W. O!ester lakota 66 , Hamilton 60
Walsh Jesuil 84, Akron N. 50
Wayne Trace 54. Coldwater 50
We11ston 73, Oak. Hill 70
Welitfall 72, Paint VaL62
Wh eeling (W.Va .) Par~ 110, Indian
Creek 74
Will md 6:5, Clyde 49
Wynford 76, Upper Sandusky 69
Yellow Springs 63, Middletown Chr.
l'
ZJlne Trace SO, Piketon 48
Zanesville 73, Pickerington 45

' children.

Ann

Scoreboard
Basketball

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Widow sifts throu·gh husbands secret life of infidelity

Pippen's improvement in various areas of game earns praise from Jordan _ _ _ _ _ __
By MIKE NADEL
CHI CAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan went into this season determined to show that be's still the
best basketball player in the world.
As it turns ou~ he may not even be
the best in Chicago.
" It's Scottie Pippen's team,"

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Biy Walnut :53, W. Jef(erson «;
Boardman 63, Solon S9
Bristol S9, Ledgemont 2S
• Brookfield 64, Badger 39
Brunsw ick 57 , N. Royalton 21
Buckeye Central 65 , Colonel Crawford
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Canal Winchet&gt;ter S6, Col. Ready 47
Canton McKinley S2, Stow 40
Cardinal 41, Kin land 30
Carrollto n 42, Canal Fulton NW 38
Cenlrnille 49, Xenia 42
Oiardon ND-CL 60, Elyria Clllh. 37
Cin . Mercy 65, Col. Wallenon 58
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111 COURT ST, POMEROY, OHIO 45769

•

Monday • saturday: 9 am - 9 pm

Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

�Page

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 18,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Local students included in Who's Who publication
A total of 114 students from this
area are included in the 29th annual
Edition of Who's Who Among
American High School Students,
1994-1995 .
Who' s Who, published by Educational Communications, Inc ..
Lake Forest, Ill. is the largest high
school recognition publication in
the country. Students are nominated by high school principals and
guidan ce counselors , national
youth groups, cfiurches and educational organi zations based upon
students· academic achievement
and involvement in extracurricular

acuvtues Traditionally, 99 percent
Albany - Jerod L. Hollon ,
of Who's Who students have a Patrick J. Lang; Chester - Melissa
grade point average of "B" or bet- Dempsey , Brandi N. Reeves;
ter and 97 percent are college Langsville - Adam Barret~ RyanS.
bound.
Crisp, Kimberly Janey, Rebecca A.
The 29th edition of Who' s Who , Scott, Anthony Barrett, Jennifer
published in 18 regional volumes, Ervin, Timmy Lewis; Long Bottom
features nearly 750,000 students or - Jam es P. Clifford , Crystal L.
just 6 percent of the nation ' s 12 Morri s. Faith J. Rose, Heather
million high school stud ent s. Well, Tara L. Congo, Heather D .
Who's Who students also compete Naylor, Kell y D. Spencer; Middle for over $1 50,000 in scholarship port - Casey Booth, David A.
awards and participate in the publi· Grimm , Am y D. llill , Conni e
cation's annual opinion poll of teen Mash . 1\rnhcr Slaven, Nan cy L .
Whaley. Alison R. Gerlach . Cynattitudes.
Local students selected include: thia R. ll&amp;wkins, Liberty King.

Sorority gathers for
holiday celebration
The Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter Sharon Stewart. Debbie Toundas,
of Beta Stgma Phi Sorority held its Susan Well, Judy Williams, Susie
annual Chrisunas dinner and pany Casto, Terry Fife. Julia 1-Joudashelt
and Phyllis Hackett.
at the home of Sue Maison.
The November meeting was
A holiday motif decorated the
held
at the Meigs County ProsecuMaison home for the pany. Canned
tor's
office in Pomeroy, with 15
food wa~ brought by member to fill
baskets for the needy. Each mem- members and two pledges attendber also brought a gift for a sele&lt;:t· ing.
Plan s were discussed for a
ed family .
Secret sisters were revealed with scholarship fund. Since other chapa gift exchange . Members al so ters have not indicated interest, Xi
enjoyed a Christmas ornament Gamma Epsilon will proceed
alone.
exchange.
Discussion of the Meigs County
The sorority's sponsor, Mrs .
Chamber
of Commerce brick pro Phyllis HaCkett, presented the
members with angel replicas and ject was held. The bricks will be
handed out se&lt;:ret sister envelopes used in the new Pomeroy rivetfront
amphitlteater, and will be engraved
for 1996.
Celesta Coates gave handcrafted and personalized. For more inforangel ornament to the members, mation , members are to contact
and each one received a Christmas Judy Williams or Julia Houdashelt. ·
Jenny Smith also mentioned that
mug with cocoa mix as a favor.
Attending were Bernie Ander- Our House in Gallipolis is providson. Vicki Ault, Patti Circle, Kathy ing meals at the facility and asked
Cleland, Celesta Coates, Kathy if the chapter would be interested
Cummings, Connie Dodson, Linda in meeting there sometime in the
Faulk, Beth Gaul, Brenda Hill, near future.
The next meeting will be held
Ronda Ketchum, Christi Lynch,
Jan.
8 at the home of Judy
Sue Maison, Eleanor McKelvey,
Williams.
Patsy Ogdin, Patty Pickens, Carol
Shank, Jenny Smith, Darla Staats,

r-----

Michelle Miller. Darrick St. Clair,
Walter Williams; Pomeroy - Stefani K. Bearhs, Dianna R. Carman,
Meredith L. Crow, Justin M.
Fields, Betsy Houd~shelt, Cheryl
L. Jewell, Donita D . McClinti c,
Shilo Moore , Matthew Morris,
Jamie Ord, Erin Sexton, Amy M.
Smith , Shannon D. Staats, Jason
Taylor, Meli ssa C. Whaley, Anna
C. Wolf, Lisa M. Yeaugcr, Jason
Brockert, Cynthia Cotterill, Taryn
Doid ge , Tara M. Grueser , Erin
Krawsczyn . Joshua Howard , Jess ica McElroy, Jennifer Mora, Nicole
D. Nelson, Stacey Price, Teresa D.

Simpson, Crystal D. Smith, Megan
Swearin~er , Donald E. Vaughan,
Jr., Nicole D. White, Amy Yates,
Rayan E. Young; Portland - Emily
J. Dubl, David F. Pickens, Josh D.
Roush, Greyson E. Taylor; Racine
- John P. Card, Kimberly D. Cornell , Christy D. Drake, Jamie
Drake, Maria Frec~er, Jessica V.
Frederick, Devon M. Hill, Craig A.
Knigh~ Tiffany D. Lonas. Jesse R.
Maynard, Roben T. Murphy, Ryan
Norris, Amy Northup, Jessica Radford, Courtney Roush , Jason
Shuler, Nichol M. Smith, Lauren
Young ; Reedsville - David A.

"Jeff Getty is doing very well.
He ordered pizza o~t last night and
enjoyed it with his family," said
Ruthann Richter, speaking on an
information line set up by San
Francisco General Hospital, where
the marrow infusion took place
Thursday night.
.
On Sunday, "be had a btg
breakfast and a mellow morning,"

Caroline Kramer sells handmade greeting
cards at a crans fair,lteld In corridor of Manhat·
tan's Martin Luther King Jr. High School, on
Sunday In New York. Kramer a former English
teacher in Paris works full time designing the
cards In her Queens home, while her husband

Ulrich works as a part-lime record-store clerk to
supplement their income, She said that while
Christmas sales have been disappointing, their
have been some successes, most notably a man
who bought 78 cards to sell in his store. (AP
Photo)

sbe said, adding that ''his vital dure, hope the baboon's cells will
signs are stable, and he remains in reproduce in Getty's body, producing HIV -resistant cells and increasgood condition."
The reasoning behind tbe ing his ability to fight off the infecgroundbreaking experiment is that tions that often are fatal to AIDS
baboons are resistant to HIV, the patients.
The trial was approved by the
virus that causes AIDS.
Researchers from the University of . Food and Drug Administration last
California. San Francisco, and the August, despite deep concerns by
University of Pittsburgh, wbo many scientists over the possible
designed and carried out the proce- transfer into the human population
of pathogens that might be benign
to a baboon but dead! y to mankind.

Reader asks is there help for vertigo?
DR.GOTT
PETER
GOTT,M.D.

By reter H. Gott, M.D.
!)EAR DR. GOTT: Please tell
me what you can about vertigo.
Wb,jlt causes it and is there any
belJI other than me&lt;:lizine?
DEAR READER: Due to an
irri!ation within the inner ear
(wb1cb contains the mechanisms
for balance), vertigo refers to the
sen~tion of spinning or rotating. ~t
can 1&gt;e disabling if severe, and .1s
oftefl associated with n~usea, vomitinu and profound malaise.
T~e cause of most vertigo is
unlqlown. but patients may experienci~' st~dden, unexpected attacks
tha111are related to the pos_ition of
the ~ead. For example, verugo ~y
ocqtr in bed, but once the pau~nt
roliu over or sits up, the sensauon
d
'sal pears as quickly as it comes.
'orne forms of vertigo - espe·
c· y those that persist - are due

C~arities

to strokes or unusual tumors in or
around the inner ear.
Meclizine is a prescription drug
that relieves attacks of vertigo.
An ear-nose-and-throat specialist is warranted for those patients
who have repeated episodes, violent attacks, or associated symptoms, such as deafness or
headache.
DEAR DR. GOTT; I was diagnosed with shingles and was asked
to keep away from other people,
especially children for at least two
weeks, or until the blisters drained
and healed over. Tbere seems to be
some disagreement as to whether
they are contagious.
DEAR READER: Shingles,
painful skin blisters caused by a
type of herpes virus, are contagious
during the active phase of the disease; that is, while the blisters are
breaking out. At this time, treatment with anti-viral drugs, such as
Famvir, will often reduce the severity of the disease. Once the lesions
have dried up and crusted over, the
affliction cannot be spread.
Shingles are especially contagious for susceptible people,
chiefly young children and individuals with deficient immune systems. Your doctor was correct in
advising caution during the infcc-

LOVE!!!

1·900·484·2600
Ext. 9765
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
'Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U 614) 645-8434

"Baboons are not clean animals
and may harbor any number of
viruses we have not seen, " said
Jonathan Allan of the Southwest
Foundation for Biomedical
Research, which provided the animal whose marrow was used.
"It's only when a virus jumps
species that we see new viral discase," he said during an H&gt;A advisory panel meeting in July, which
was called to discuss issues surrounding the experiment.

LONDON (AP) - Basil Fawlty
and the Ministry of Silly Walks do
not make John Cleese laugb. They
make him cringe.
The former Monty Python funny
man told The Ma il on Sunday
newspaper that looking back on his
acts from the 1970s, now regarded
as comedy classics, makes him
wonder what people were laughing
at.
"It was all embarrassingly
awful," be said in the interview.
"All these years and nobody had
ever said anything. Are they being
polite, or haven't they noticed?"

BINGO

WICKS
HAULING

Auto

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

3rd St. Racine, OH

614·992-3470

&lt;lhe 'J-tzame
Cotznetz

NEW YORK (AP) - A recent·
Iy discovered short story written by
Arthur Miller when be was about
17 could be tbe birth of "Death or
a Salesman."
Tbe work titled "In Memoriam" was recently discovered in the
writer's archive at the University of
Texas, and it tells the story of an
overcoat salesman named Schoenzeit beaten down by his "dignified
slavery."
It appears to foreshadow Willy
Loman, the similarly disillusioned
subject of the 1949 Pulitzer Prizewinning play "Death of a Salesman." Loman· s suicide ends. the
play.
A note attached to "In Memoriam" says: "The real Scboenzeit of
the story threw himself in front of
an El train."
John Lahr, the drama critic: for
The New Yorker, made the find
and reports in the magazine's yearend issue that Miller himself, now
80, bad long forgotten about the
story.
Lahr said it was based on a
salesman Miller met as a boy while
working for his grandfather's coatmanufacturing business.

tious period of your illness.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report ''Viruses and Cancer." Other readers who would like
a copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope
to P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156. Be
sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I have an
ovary that is twice as large as the
other one. I've been told it is a non·
cancerous tumor. Will it enlarge?
DEAR READER: Several
benign conditions, such as cysts,
can make one ov;uy larger than the
other. Once doctors have proved
(with tests such as biopsies) that
the enlargement is hannless. it can
be ignored and simply monitored
with X-rays or ultrasound examinations. Benign ovarian enlargement
may increase or decrease with time.
Surgery is rarely necessary.
Howe...er, I must emphasize that
a large ovary is always cause for
concern, because it may harbor a
malignancy. This is why biopsies
are required before doctors can
reassure their patients that nothing's seriously wrong. In any case,
you should be closely monitored by
a gynecologist

"People have a generally good dollars at a minimum."
Overall. though , Red Cross
feeling about the way things are
and that helps in terms of donat- donations may end tlat for the fiScal year ending in June 1996
ing," he said.
Total giving by businesses, because relief efforts for the Oklafoundations and individuals rose to homa bombing and scattered hurriabout $130 billion last year, up canes inspired less giving than
slightly when adjusted for inllation tltose for the Midwest tloods and
from 1993 , after declining or the California earthquake, be said.
In contrast, bloodshed in counremaining flat in the early 1990s,
according to the American Associ- tries from Bosnia to Rwanda and
ation of Fund-Raising Counsel.
Haiti have prompted a rise in donaIndividual giving - which tions to the U.S. Committee For
makes up 88 percent of total contri- UNICEF, said Gwendolyn .Calvert
butions - has also risen slightly Baker, the group's president.
the last few y,ears, but remains
The organization's revenues
below late 198~ levels.
grew 9 percent to $54 million in
Some groups say the needs of the year ending in March, and next
the poor are greater now, despite year's donations appear likely to
the recovering economy. Catholic follow the same trend, she said.
For some charities, the aging
Charities USA, the nation's largest
private human service network, tide of baby boomers bas proved a
recently reported it helped 11.1 boon. Boomers are more interested
million peopte· Iast year, up 5 per- in their health - prompting donations to related causes.
cent from 1993.
" They are at that point in their
At the Red Cross, the surging
stock market has prompted a rush lives where they want to give
of gifts of stocks and securities, something back," says Steven
said David Evancich, general man- Dickinson of the American Cancer
ager of donor marketing.
. .. Society, which raised about $394.1
million in the year ending in
"It's kind of overwhelmmg,
he said, adding that they're " pretty September, up 3.5 percent from the
hi~b-dollar gifts, several thousand previous y.ear.

Stone Lo•

At King Hardware

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

949·2882
Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding _
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
614 992·2753

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
•.lmestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418

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

COMPARE FIRST.
YOU WONT FIND A B£TTER VALUE IN SATELLm ENTERTAINMEM':

,

...
·pr~ces

mav vary Does not include Installation or premium cnannels. Territorial restrictions and taMes may apply.

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii PRIMESI 1Jl®

~

=

iiiiiiiiiiiwJ

CALL: l-800-910-STAR

, .·.,

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

11/2Wa511 mo

Wreaths· Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT
Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051

HIOO
650-1234

OPEN NOV. 23 • 10 to 9:00

1112419511 mo.

Call your date now
1-900-255 - 1515

Laurel Limousine Service
"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

Ext. 1471

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
Salt &amp; Rellabla Night Out on the Town
Owned &amp;
Operated by
Sen/leo with

2.99/min,
Must be 18 yrs .
Touch-tone

~c~nv:ary (614) 992•4279 Jo~;~~~::~ &amp;
33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

0

phone required
Serv-U
(619) 645 -8434

1211411 mo.

......~

State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Attorneys warn
·.hosts: Don't serve
·drunken guests
;

!

I t·
I

I

1-

•

1111411 mo.

12111151 mo

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

LIVE GIRLS

NOW
1·900-484-2500
Ext. 1525
CALL

and Removed

$3.99 per min.

Misc. Jobs.

Must be 1B yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (614) 645-8434

Bill Slack
992·2269
-·------

.~

..

12 Guage

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614j 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT
·,

:.

~

.r ·• .r.

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building
9f27f95 Un

FREE

.••

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BUD FORD'S

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

'

Home or
. Trailer

NEFF REMODELING

110\\ \IW
E\C\\ \TI:\(;

SERVICE
.:
House Repair &amp;
Repairs/Additions
Remodeling
Craig 614-367-0567
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
40
Giveaway
Ca II Wayne Neff 9924405
112 Beagle Male Puppy, 614-3881100
For Free Estimates
~

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Beagle Puppies, 5 Weeks Ol d,
L~----....;"~'319:;;:::,5~~ 3Ready
To Go 614·379·911 2
- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 3 blue eyed kittons. 1 white, 1 lig·

er, 1 bluetgray, 6 wk s. old. 6 14-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

388-8595

6 Week Otd, 112 Au strai11an
Shepherd, 112 Al as kan Hus~y

614 ·245-9249.

7 Puppies, 7 Weeks Old , Pan

· ' Husky614-441 ·0725.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

8 pupp1 es , G erma n Shepha rd!
Collie mix . Ready for Ch r~s tm as .

304-675-6818.

614-992-7643

Beloved cal , mus t leave lo r
chi ld's heal th . Looktng for good
owner. 304-675-7 129 before 9pm.

( No Sunday Calls)
21 1219in1n
L,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,::,;,::;;:;;;;;-..

,~ -~

Round

OILER'S

Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

DEER SHOP

Call
614-949-2512

GU' SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, turn East at
Darwin onto At. 681 . Go 4 mHes to Cherry Ridge Rd., 1
1/2 m;les to tree lann. Watch for Sgns. 10:00 a.m. Iii dark
Nov. 24lhru Dec. 24
Wagon RideS/Ciaft Shop · Weekends

~~======~~~~~~§§~~
r

(614) _992-0643
23 Cottage Drive
Middleport, Oh. 45760

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live

HOIJ~E
7

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

Car/Heavy Truck
Repair

11129f9511 mo. pd.

Cheaper Rates

$32.00/HR.

102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614 •992 •7696

24Hr.
Wrecker Service

614·949·3027

949·2512

HYDRAULIC REPAIR

Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

t~~~-t

(Stock up on your
holiday baking
supplies)

614-742·2138

1113Mn

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

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

PENING NOVEMBER 25th

HA 1\,
D TWELL
.

1 1120195 1 mo

SAYRE TRUCKING

"• .

Light H!Juling,
Shrubs Shaped

' V'tl Iage Counci'I WI'II mee t 10
· Purchase
NOTICEotTOSchool
BIDDERS
RACINE - Ractne
Buses
recessed session Monday at 7:30 at Star Mill Parle.
lor
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
· RU11.AND- Rutland Garden Club, Monday, 6
OF EDUCATION
p.m. Christmas dinner at the borne of Margaret Bell Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Weber in Rutland.
Educallon of the Eas1ern
TUESDAy
Local School Dlatrict of
.
. Se . C'ti
ReediVllle, Ohio, by 2:45
HARRISONVILLE- Hll1'f!sonvdle .mor I _zcns p.m. on January 2, and at
blood pressure clinic and meeung for Cbnstmas dmner "hat time opened by the
and gift exchange, Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Treasurer of said Board as
lded by law lor as many
(3) 71-72 passenger
WEDNESDAY
· chool buses according to
POMEROY -South Bethel New Testament Church eclllcatlons of said board
choir to present cantata. ''Oh Little Town" at the church ·of education.
Wednesday, 7 p.m. and at 10 am. Sunday in conjunc- Speclflcatlona and
lion with children's program.
· Instructions to bidders may
be obtained at the office of
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist Church, Route 143, 1the Treasurer, Eas~ern High
. tmas Adven · School
building.
Pomeroy, "No Greater G'f
t 1 and "A Chns
A certified
check payable.
ture" to be presented at 7 p.m. on Wednesday and Ito the Treasurer of the
Thursday nights . Choir will also present "Songs of :above 'Board ot Education
Chrisunas."
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by the bidder and
THuRSDAY
the surety company In an
l.AND
Rutland
Township
Trustees
end
r
amount
equal to aubmiHad
·
0 1
Ru1
'
wllh each bid.
year meeting, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland ftre Said Board of Education
!;lalion.
·
retervea tho rlgh1 to waive
Informalities to accept or
reject any and all or parts of
any and all bl~.
No bide may be
wilhdrawn for at Ieasllhlrty
ln an eff~rt to provide ou~ readership witb .current (30) days after the
news, the Gal/ipoltS Daily Tnbune and The Da1ly Sen· scheduled cloalng time lor
tiM/ will not accept weddln~s after 60 days from the . r-lpt of blda.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
daq: of the event.
.
.
.
OF EASTERN LOCAL
·. . All club meetings and other news artiCles m the soct·
SCHOOL DISTRICT
e¢ se&lt;:tion mqst be submitted within 30 days. of occur- Efolae Boston Treasurer of
tefl¢e. All birthdays must be submitted within 42 days
Eastern Local Schools
38900-SR7
of the occurence.
.
.
Reedavllle, Ohio 45n2
AU material Sllbmitted for publication IS subject to
(12) 4, 11 , 18,26
editting.

.

949·2512

REASONABJ.I RATES

Serv·U (619)·645·8434

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call

Touch ·Tone phone
Required

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; Hause Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

P.O. Box 587

. · . FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - With people are get. -tlltg into the holiday spiri~ party bosts need to be on the
-lookout for those who have consumed too many spirits.
It is unlawful in Indiana and Obio to serve alcohol to You'// be ncxmng on a cloud with
. ' people wbo are noticeably drunk. Attorneys warn that
the buys you'll find m the
. hosts of private or office parties who keep serving those
clossifleds.
: people open themselves up to lawsuits if an Intoxicated ,
. guest gets into an accident while driving borne.
I .---E-N_D_v'"o-u'"R""'"'--,
. And claiming ignorance does not insulate a host LONELINESS NOW!!!
· from liability, attorneys say.
"The atmosphere at m.any parties. is a lot different
There is someone for
now than it was 10 years ago," attorney John 0 . Feigh- ·
everyone. Whatever
. ner said, adding that alcohol tlowedmore freely then. .
your preference
. · . Party hosts now are more cautious because of law- Nationwide or Right Next
· suits accusing them of serving liquor to already intoxiDoor. Don't Waste
·
·
·
d
th
Another
Minute
cated people who caused damages, mJunes or ea s, i
Call NQwlll
Feighner
said.
"""'255•5454
Bars and
restaurants that serve alcohol have to abide I
1·"""'
.•by the same law, but juries and judges might hold, th. e~ I; 52 _99 perExt.
min. 4375
Must be 18 yrs.
to "a little higher standard of care because they re m i Touch-1one Phone Required
: the business," Feighner said.
. .
f
5eN·U(619)645·8434
· Mike Tapp, owner of the Acme Bar &amp; Gnll m Fort ~=====,,...~~'~-~
Wayne said his bartenders and servers are trained to ,.
look for visibly intoxicaled people.
YOUNG'S ··
Tbe entire staff has attended a seminar conducted by
CARPENTER SERVICE
state excise police on how to keep people from getting • Room Additions
drunk and to prevent serving alcohol to minors, Tapp • New Garages
said.
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
. "We are very conscious of that," he said.
• Roofing
· Bill Reitz, Pf\:Sident of Scott's Food Stores Inc., said • Interior &amp; Exterior
!lie company doesn't serve alcohol at its parties for
Painting
employees and associates.
··
.
Also Concrete Work
Liability isn't the only reason, be said. Many of hiS
(FREE ESTIMATES)
employees are underage.
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

1·900·388-0500
EXT. 3754
$2.99 Per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

factory Choke Only

J.D. Drilling Co111pany

TODAY!

7fl.~ 4

RACINE
GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots
Sun I pm
12 gauge

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
•
Insurance Work Welcome

MEET NEW PEOPLE
THE FUN WAY

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

10'21/Mitfn

~

• Digital technology for
the most advanced
picture and sound
• All available with just
one easy phone call

$10 &amp; Up

$300&amp; up

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

MONDAY
LETART - The Letart Township ttustees. Monday, - - - - - - - 6 p.m. at the office building.
Public Notice

• 95 channels in all
• The only mini-dish you
don't have to buy
• Equipment, programming, ·
and maintenance starting
at about a dollar a day*

GUITARS

One·Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

· The Community Calendar is puhll&lt;lhed as a free
service to non-profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The calendar Is not
deslghed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
iype. Items are printed as space permits and cannot
!le guaranteed to run 11 speciftc number of days.

IVE YOUR FAMILY PRIMESTAR®
AND ENJOY 95 GREAT CHANNELS.

CHRISTMAS TREES

STAR GUITAR

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

Cuotom Building &amp; Remodeling

Community calendar

are calling 1995 a pretty good year

By ~\~AGGIE JACKSON
AP!Il~Qiness Writer
Gifts of stock are rolling in so
fast ut tlle American Red Cross that
the litaff can't keep up. Sales of
UNICEF ¥reeling cards are surging.
. .
.
lq this season of gtvmg, chanties ~ looking baclc ~n a healthy
y~ with rising donauons from a
nau~ gen~rally buoyed by a stable
omy.
e piGture isn't all ro~~- The
exp osive, growth of chanties. 111
re(;4nt years has made fund-raJsmg
mie comp~titive. And federal
bu et cuts loom ahead.
.
ut despite several highly pubhcizfd scandals in the no~p.rofit
world in recent years, prehnunary
tallies show charities are slo~ly
pulling out of the laggard recess1on ·
years of the early 1990s.
"Things appear to be on an
upswing, the economy seems to be
on track, and certainly the stock
market is rising," said Jpbn Paul,
vice president of developll!e~t at
the American Heart Assoc~auon ,
which bas seen income from campaigns rise 4 percent during the last
five months of the year. Income
from bequests bas risen 6 percent.

·GUYS &amp; DOLLS
FIND YOUR

Successful crafter----, Names in
the news

AIDS patient who got baboon marrow 'doing very well,' hospital says
By ANITA MANNING
USA TODAY
A California AIDS patient, the
first person to undergo an experimental infusion of baboon bone
marrow cells in a desperale attempt
to restore his damaged immune
system, appeared to be in good
shape and good spirits three days
following the procedure.

Baker, Beth A. Bay, Angie J. Bissell, Michelle D. Caldwell, Jennie
T. Conklin, Rebecca Evans, Amber
M. Fortney, Joanna M. Gumpf,
Jeremiah C. Kehl, Crystal L. Summerfield, Alicia M. Walker; R_utland - Nathan Blackwood, Bnan
M Finkenbinder, Stacie Reed,
B~verly Stewart. Donald E. Yost.
Kristen B. Dassylva, _Mandy Jones,
Cynthia Roush. Trav1s M. Thompson; Syracuse - Chris R. Ball,
Richard E. Friend, Rachel D. Norman , Kevin C. Fields, J7nnifer R.
Lawrence, Amy M. R1zer; and
Tuppers Plains - Sean A. Maxey
and Christina Moore.

Langsville, Ohio
SR325
Skin· Cut • Wrap
&amp; Freeze
Yw Kill'em &amp;we chill'em

742-2076

=--~-----

r~-::-::==:::---~~=;----::::--:---, Female Brtttany, 4

--)

D~

lireW~almleernl

Equ1pment

Distributed by

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in ·a tree, no obligation, comprehensive water

. ~;;; grous e hu n&lt;ed, 6&lt;4·992·
9346

446

.
.
Mate, 1 Year Old, Full Blooded
Australian Shepherd, Ver y Gentl e
614 388

·

-6'~

Part Wire Terrie r Pups, Can Be
Seen At 1569 Neighborhood Rd .,
Make Good Pets.

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.

Riggs Christmas Trees

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

year s old , has

Free Fir ewood, You Cut, Ea sy
Access, Tops From Summer 614 ·

Please call Rni,.Softat992-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to set u our free water anal sis. 1015/ltn

News policy

Clothe
s To Give away, Mu st Ta"e
All614-446-3599.

Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.
RIGGS TREE FARM
39507 Rocksprings Road (at corner of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
Carol and David Riggs

To Good Home. Black Mi te
Chow, 3 Years Old , With Papers

Great For Broed;ng 304-675·7200
Aher 6pm. or Leave !Aessago.

Red Australian Shepherd Pup .
pies, 8 Weeks Old , 1 Uale &amp; 3
Females 614 -256-6259 .
To Good Home, Black 112 Ger .

man Shepherd. Great With Kids,

Good Natured, 304·675· ngg

Af·

ter 6pm or Leave Message.

Y~llow Angora 2mos old kitten , to

ntce home only. 304~75- 4650 .

60

Lost and Found

Found- box of Ch ristmas orna menrs 1219195, Rtggs Christma s
trees. Reedsville, vi cin ity, call to
10, 6\4-792·5702 .

Yard sate

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinHy
All

Yard Sales M1Jst Be Paid 1n

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00pm

.the day before the ad is to rUn.

Sunday aditio!\- . 2:00 p.m. Friday·
.!Aonday aditiO~ · 10:00 a.m. Sat:

, urday.

•

�Monday, December 18, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• : Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 18, 1995

4

''

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

BRIDGE

NEA Crnssword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

....

Sty! s Wanted Full or Pari T m~
Salary Comm ss on Call Ca o At
6 14 44 6 8922 F ne st Sty l ng Sa

All Yard Sat e s Mu s! Be Pa d In
Ad11ance Oea dl ne 1 OOom th e

day before the ad s to run Sun
day ed 1on
OO pn Fr day Ma n
day 9d to n tO OOa m Saturda~

80

_
wanted part! me Telemarketer to
work even ng hOurs Call Mon or

Tue 304 675 1726

Public Sale
and Auct1on

Wanted Part t m e Sub carr ter
For Con trac cd Ma I Ro u e If In
te ested Ca l
614 3 79 2854
E. . en ngs

R c ~ Pearson Au ct on Company
!u I 1 me auc l oneer ca mp e1e
a uc1 on
serv co
L cens ed
~r 66 Oh o &amp; Wes 1 v rg n a 304
!73 5785 Or 304 773-544 r

90

..
lc:::"-------,::-;----;-~--:::

180

wanted To Do

Blown lnsulat on Insu ran ce Ex
per nee References Rea so nab e
Rates Call For Fee Est1mates
614 24!,.5755

Wanted to Buy

Yea end sale Save S t 000 on all
new 5 ng e sectto n homes n
stock l nc ludtng several 1996
node 5 See at Mou nta n State
Homes Pt P leasant WV 304
675 1400

330

Farms for Sale

J D 450C dozer Sway ROP

S17 500 25 ooo lb owboy $1 ooo
69 mode l mob le home tote r
$700 76 mOdel I !th wheel tractor
s 4 soo SOOO wan Coleman gen
erator S375 00 614 446 8044

Chr st1an CNA Laay W u Care For
S ck And Elder y n The Home
N gn1s No Weekencs Refere nc
e s 6 4 256 6109 Leave Me s
sage
E~ tr a hand Sk lied ha ndy man
l ruc k sc ar old too s Gus ton
rna de wood bed I ames head
boards 304 675 6925

Pt Pleasant 1212 Oho
IM Oh o Rver 1ac
comm 205 Hh St ot
Ga ll po ls t 2 ac v ew
51 04

lot 12ac
Sandh It
&amp; house
304 6 75

Seen c VaHey App le Gro ve
Oeaut ful 2ac lots puOI c water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

Geo 9e s Ponabte Sawm I don 1 12 m les from Pomeroy t"WO bed
ha JI your togs 10 the m

JUS

call

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Pro fess ana l Tee Serv1ce Com
pleTe Tee Ca re Bucke Truck
Serv ce 50 fl Reach Sump Re
In
mova l Free Es l males
su ance 24 Hr E m e rgenc ~ Serv
ce Cal And Save No Tree Too
Bg 0 Too Small Bdwel Oho
614 J8S.9643 614 367 7010

t'"IP Wanted

s 1 000

weeldy Stutt ng Envel
opes F ec Into SenCI Se lf Ad
dressed Stamped En ve ope To
E)p 0 e Ocp 91 6069 Old Can
to n F-load Box 5 o Jackson MS
392 1

Rub &amp; Scrub Clean ng Serv ce
du st ng mopp ng wtndows and
more Complete serv ce or touch
ups Re fe ences on request call
Te ry al 614 992 4232 or 614
992 445

AGENT AVON SALF S
E&lt;Jrn $8 $ 15 H A Wok Home
Bene ! 5 D scoun s Fl e x ble
Hou !&gt; No lnve tory Requ red
1 8 00 7d2 d73B

Su n Va ley Nur sery School
Ch ldcare M F Sam 5 30pm Ages
2 1&lt; Young School Age Ou n ng
Summer 3 Day s per Week M n
mum614 446 3657

ADD y In Pers on Monday and
Tuesda y 9 5 At Super 8 Mole
321 Upper Rver Ad

WI do s 11 n9 w/elderly even ngs
or n ghts at your house or hosp1
tal 304 675-7541
AVO N EARN $$$ at home at
work A a eas 304 882 2645 1

FINANCIAL

BOO 992 6356 INOIREP

210

BUSINESSDIRECTOR
EARN SIX FIGURE INCOME
lXBased Co Er pandng Naton
wde SaleSJMgmi!F nance Back
ground Requ red Tra n 1n Oaf as
214680 8414

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness w lh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
rna I until you have Invest gated
The offer ng

Busy dental of! ce seek ng e
spans ble adulT for dental ass s
ng pas t on w II ng Ia Ira n Send
resume to ott ce manager PO B01
628 Po meroy Oh o 45769

Investment Property In Gall pol s
Owner May Be Able To Help W1th
Some F nanc ng Cal 614 797
434 5 Alter 6 PM

En n $1 000sweekly stu!fng en
volo poS. a nome Be your bo ss
Sta 1 now No exp lree suppl es
n!o no obi gat on Send SA S E
to P e s ge Un #l P 0 Box
g 56 09 W n er Spr ngs Fl

REAL ESTATE

ooms one bath lull basement
heat pL.Jmp d shwasher a !ached
garage s t ng oom wood burner
no pets $400/mo $400 depo sit
r eferences requ red 614 985
3900

2 Bedroom Level Lot Heat Pump
5 M1 es From Town Depos1t &amp;
References 614 445-1079
20 Second St 3bedroom l1vmg
room d1n1ng room !urn shed
k1tchen lull basemen! garage
$300/mo 1yr lease No pets 304

67!&gt;3812
3 Bedroom Can Be 4 No Pets
No Sunday Calls 614 245-5064
3bedroom Apple Grove close to
locks 304 576 2642 or 304 762

2 Bed oom Br ck Home In Gall
po s Includes Garage Cent ral
A r LR K lchen And Bath 614
446 8578

HVAC INS!ALLER
r, ow ng

Southea ste rn Oh o
1 VAC Com pany Look n9 Fo E ~
pe e'1ted Self Mot vated Instal

N ne room house lo ur bedrooms
newtv remodeled kllchen and
balh new ca paling large corner
JoT $28 000 614 992 6173 or
614 992 201 Salter ~pm

Good Pay
Good Benet s
Ret ement Plan

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2&lt;5 0437
1975 12x6S two bedroom fur
n shed mobile home $6000 614
742 3807
1977 12X65 3 be droom on 10
acres 2 sept c tanks 3 water
Due 10 ap a Y ncrea s ng bus
hookups 4 m11es from town
ness we have an opporlu mty lor a $ 18 500 614 441 0947 or 614
Med ca l Soc at Wo ker Exp er
44 1621
ence w th npal e 1 and outpatent l.:::.:..._=:.:..._----,--:::-::-;;-:ehabl tat on a pu s Must have 1986 Grandv 111e 14x7 0 2 Bed
degree and cen sed or I cen se rooms 1 Bath Total Gas Under
elgble Hours !lex ble Reply m pnnng 16x 12 Deck &amp; Frreplace
med ately to M L ndeman Rock $12 000 61 4 367 0429
spr ngs Rehab Center 36 759
Ro c ~ sp ng s Ad Pomeroy Oh o 1990 4x65 C a'(ton 3 Oedroom
&lt;~ 5769
on 3.4 acres out Sr 148 rteN cat
- - - -- - -- - - - 1pet new hoT water heater 10x20
WANTED FULL TIME COM covered l ron t porch 2 car car
MUNITY SKILL S INSTRUCTOR poll very mce $25000 neg 614
pos on ava ta ble to work w lh an 992 6440
adull w r 1\:l ar n ng mtalons n
~ e g s Co un Ty L ve n pos 1 on
mus l be able to s1ay over mghts

1993 2 Bedroom $11000 614
379 9447 or 614 379 2435

day! me hou soil Hour s 3pm
Sunday thru Sam Fr1day H1gh
school degree val d dnver s l1
cense good dr1v1ng record three
yea r s I cen sod d rvrng experr
ence and ad equate automobile
nsur ance coverage requ red
Tra n ng prov1aea Salary S5 00
hr to s1art Healt h dental n
sura ne e Oenef i! S Vacat onl s ck
leave benelts If nlerested co n
Ta ct Cec I a at 1 BOO 531 2302
Equ a Oppornm ry Employer

1995 Skyline Ur70 three bed
rooms one bath excellent shape
hea l pump available but ex tra
614 992 3891
Glenwood 10m1n !rom Rt 2 1990
3bedroom 2bath mot&gt;1le home
1acre rand c ty water $25 000
Owner f nanc1ng With $3 000
down rent for $300 couple or
$350 w th chll d and/or take land
as trade nor someth ng of equal
value 304 576 2716

jiliilili•ilillliiiliiioiititiii'"iil

New 3 Or 4 Bedrooms 2 1/2
Baths La rge K!lc hen Uti I ty
Room Heat Pump 2 Car Garage
Large Lot c ty Schoo s 4 M1les
From Gal 1pohs $550/Mo "' De
pos 1 References No Pets 614

446 8038
Small Unlurn shed 1 Bedroom
House Near K Ma t Air Cond1
t onod Gas Heat ~hcrowave
New Pam t &amp; Carpet Upstairs
Storage Available $325/ Mo .,.
Gas Electric Call Between 8 &amp; 10
PM Or Before 9 AM 614 446

1822
Small unlurn shed house stat age
bu ld ng lull basement no pets
$300 /mo plus ut I I es 6 4 949
2587 evenings
Unfurnished rwo bed room house
n ce and clean deposit requ red
no 1ns1de pets 6 t4 992 3090
Wetzga l S1reet Pomeroy WID
$350tMo Deposit 513 922 0294

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12x60 2 br 5 m1n lrom IDwn Ref
n eeded $275/month 614 256
2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet
Natural Gas Furnace Very N1ce
614 446-2003 614-446 1409
2 BR apt all elec also 2 BR tra e
with ga s heat Galllpo IS area
2 Mob le Homes On McCorm ck
Road 2 Bedr oom s 614 446

9669

3br Only $995 down $195/momh

knowllngly accept
adve rtisement&amp; for real estate
wt 1ch 1s 1n v1olal1on of the law
Ou r readers are hereby
mformed that at! dwellings
advert sed m this newspaper
dte ava1lable on an equal

opportunl1y basis

Furn shed Apartment 3 Rooms &amp;
Bath All Ubi1U&amp;s Paid Downstairs
$250/Month 919 Second Ave
614 446 ~45
Furntshed Apartment 920 Fourth
Avenue 1 Bed~oom $285/Mo
920 Fourtn Avenue Gallipolis
Oho6144464416Aite 7PM
Furn tshed Efi1C1ency $225/Mo
Ut1ht es Paid 920 Fourth Avenue
Galli pOliS 6 14 44fi 4416 Alter 7

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V llage Manor and
R1ve s1de Apartments 1n Middle
port From $232$355 Can 614

992 5064 Equal HouSing Opper
tun lies
N•ce one bedroom apartment for
rent m Pt Plea sam 614 992
5858

Rive Front Property Remodeled
12x60 Mobile Home 2 Bedrooms
Washer ! Dryer Hoo~ Up Small
Storage Bu1ldmg low Ut11it1es
N1ce Nei ghborhood Chesh e

$285/Mo 614 367-o415
Two and three bedroom mob te
homes start ng at $240 $300
sewer water and uarh nctuaed
614 992 2167

Free del1very &amp; se tup Only at
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 304

755 5885
Save $1 000 Spec1al reduct on
on new 1996 Commodore 16JC80
3bedroom 2baths Be st buy n
fown 1nctudes delivery &amp; set up
Mountam State Homes Pt Pleas-

ani WV 304 675 1400

for Rent
Furnished Efhtaency 607 Second
Ga/1pohs Share Bath $185/Uflh
11es Paid 614 446 4416 Alter

7pm

992 2218
1 bedroom apartment 1n Middle
po rt ava1lable December 1 al
uut t1es pa id $250 per month
$100 deposit 8am to 5pm 614

Spec1al year end reduction
28x60 Brookwood display 3bed 992 7806
room 2balhs den wfflreplace 2l6
wa ll s nsulated wtndows plush 1 bedroom etl1c ency apartment
carpet oak cabinets Pr ce re
utMitleS 1nduded 1314 992 S949
duced $4 000 Mounta n State
2bdrm s.pts total electr c ap
Homes PI Pleasant WV 304
phances furmshed laundry room
675 1400
laclllbes close to school In town
Year end sale 28x60 Henderson AP.phcat1ons available at '~illage
Jbedroom 2batha great room wl Green Apta 149 or call 614 992
1rep ace plush carpet B~g reduc
3711 EOH
ton lor qu1ck sale reduced
$5 000 Mountam Stal&amp; Homes Pt 2bedroom furnished utilii19S paid
Mason,
304 773-9009
Pleasant WV. 3&gt;4-875-1400

wv

Antiques

Buy or sell Rver ne Antiques
11 24 E Mam Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
600pm 614Q922526

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

25" Sylvanta conso le $199 95
25"' RCA telev1s1on console
$229 95 Magnavox 4 head VCR

$129 95 GE VCR $89 95 Sharp
VCR $89 95 FISher VCR, $74 95
Mulll tech VCR $59 95 RCA
VCR $79 95 Emerson v1deo
player $44 95 JB Technology
614 «1-0950
35 000 BTU Vented Gas Heatar
Blower &amp; Thermostat GE M1
crowave Oven Very Ntce 614
446 , 164
65 000 BTU LP gaa heater sta1n
less steel double kitchen smk wl
metal cab 30 gat Sears HW tank
elec 3 man old lull s1ze wooden

bed grame 614-388-9060
65 000 BTU LP Gas Heatar
Stainless Steel Double K1tchen
Smk With Metal Cabinat 30 Gal
lon Sears Hotwater Hea ter Tank
Electric 3 Months Old Full Stze
Wooden Bed Fra me 61 ~ 388

Bngga

Relngerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedt $100 And Up
Will Dei1Yar 614-869-6441

Peavey 6 channel PA system w
fp- 2 speakers S79S 00 614 448

Santas Chnstmas Trees State
Route 850 Between At 35 and
Rodney We Will Cut 614 245

$HlO 6 14-386-8936

Sega Genesis Mortal Kombat 3
two 6 button JOYSticks 3 bullon
pad Some 2 all 1n boxes plus 2
sports games S150 304 6 7
7891 (Danny or leave message)

s

30 X40 XQ
Galvalume
Shder 3
ERECTED

Snow Blade &amp; Attachments For
Murray Mower 614 448 9484

Grass Hay 4 xs RolJnd Bales $12

Upnght Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Oh10 1 800 537 9528
cut your own Christmas tree $15
Sr 7 top of Eastern School hill
turn on locust Grove 614 985
3435

WHITE S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison 1210 Second Ave
nue Ga hpolts Oh o 614 446

4336
Wreaths swags grave blankets
ropmg arttfic al Pomsettlas 99¢
Sues Greenhouse Rac1ne Oh

614 949 2115

550

Building
Supplies

4491 or 614 446 3888

450

614 446 7263

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rent week or month
Sta r11ng at $120/mo Ga1l1a Hotel

614 446 9580
Sleep1ng rooms wtth cooktng
Al so trai ler space on nver All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m
3)4 773-5651 Mason WV

Mob le Home Lot For Rent Must
Have Good Refere nce 614 U6

510

Household
Goods

.App 1ances
ReconditiOned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refr
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cl!y Maytag 614 446

7795
Country Furniture 304 675 6820
R1 2 N 6m1tes Pt Pleasant WV
Tues-Sat9 6 Sun 11 5

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Was hers dryers relngerators
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
Vme Street CaU 614 .446 7398

1 600 499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home furnlshmgs
Hou s Mon Sa t 9 5 6 t4 446
~322 3 miles out Bulav111e P ke
Free Delrvet'y
Mollohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
446 7444 For Carpet &amp; Vmy l

Neods

Fender Squ re Stat And Fender
S1de KICk Amp Good ConditiOn
Schwmn Mtn Bike L1ke New 614

446 0070
For sale Robotics 14 400 Sport
ster fax modem $50 614 992

7Zl9
Freeze r beef tor sale gran fed
12 13 months old call614 992
2143 or 614 992 6373 afte 5 00
ask for M1chael
Great Christmas GiftS Boots By
Redw ng Chippewa Tony lama
Guaran teed lowest Pnces AI

Shoe Cafe
HAROWOOO FLOORING
Poplar oak h1ckory ash maple
walnut c herry colon at grade
$1 20$1 50bd h Prem1um grade
$1 44 $2 61 bd It All floonng sold
3/4 th•ck Random Width &amp; ran
dom lengths 304 586 3821
Wh le quantifies last
H1 Eflec1ency l P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1

800 287 6308 614 446 6308
Duct Systems And Au Cond tlon
ers Free Estimates
tntertherm &amp; U ller Uob1le Home
Furnaces Gas 011 &amp; Electnc In
Stock large D stnbuter Buy Out
al New Mobile Home Furnaces
Bank Fmanc1ng Available Call
BenQe!ls Mobile Home HTG &amp;

CLG AI 61-4 448 9416 or 1 800
872 5967

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1 ed New &amp; Rab&lt;lill In Stock
Ca11 Ron Evans 1 8lO 537 9528
KeroSun 20 000 BTU Heater Ex
ce11en1 Cond uon Can Be Seen At

1549 Neighborhood Ad $125

KILL RATS AND MK:EI
~NFORCER® ra1 and mouse kill
ers are GUARANTEED! Avail
a~eat

CENTRAL SUPPlY
0 DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER

PICKENS FURNITURE
New !Used
3)4-6 75-1450
Rocker Reclmer Rocker Recliner
love Sea.t614 446 1171

Block bnck sewer p1pes w1nd
ows lintels etc Claude Wmters
RIO Grande OH Call 614 245

5121

Year End &gt;Sale Save B1g Bucks I
All Slea1 Bu1ld1ngs l ml!ed T me
Only Call While Supplres lasfl
Saunders Contract ng 614 ~41

0219

Groom Shop Pet Grooming Fea
tunng H~dro Beth Julie Webb

SKAGGS SPECIAL SEASON
SALE
$410 Now $375 Wl1h 90 Day
Warranty
Whirlpool Wa s.her
Was $150 Now $125 Whirlpool
Wa sher Was $125 Now $95 3
To Choose From Whirlpool Dryer

Was $125 Now $95 Maytag Dry
er Was $150 Now $125 Whl rl
pool Portable Washer Fam1ly Siza

$150 Whirlpool Dryer $95 Elec
Inc Range 30 Harvest Gold Was
$150 Now $125 Chest Freezer

19 Cu Ft $150 Skaggs Ap
pllances 76 V1ne Street Gall1po

liS OhiO 614 446 7398 1 800
499 3499
VI'RA FURNITURE
61&lt;-446-3t58
Quality Household Furniture Ard
Appllancea Great Deats On

Cash Ard Carry I REII1' 2.0WN
And Layaway Also Available

exce l ent bloodline
2126

614 94Q

AKC Registered Cocker Span els
four black and wh1 e one c ho
colate borJ11214t95 ca ll 614

742 2124

AKC Regtstered Dachshund
Puppies B~r t hday Oct 30 95
Small Deposit W1ll Hold For
Chmnmas 614-387 7705
AKC Regtstered Dalmatian pup
p1es 5 left shots &amp; wormed

$12!ioa 3l4 773-9122
AKC regiS1ored lull blooded Pe

k1ngese male puppy 614 992

5589 by 4pm
AKC Sybenan Husky Pups Blue

Peraonal1Z8d story books Your
child 1s the alar ol his/her very

2879

Regal Custom V 6 au
a ll power
smoky
10 500 mles wu sell or
over payments 614

1973 P ymouth Road Runner 316
small v 8 automatic a1r easy on
gas good f rst ca n ce ntenor
$1500 6149924111

Vans

t 980 Jeep CJ 7 6c yl 258 eke
cond 304 675 5195

1986 Jeep CJ 7
446 6959

v a $1200 614

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
ooo M1l es $6 000 Can Be
Seen At Ga llipolis Dally Tnbune
825 Th rd Avenue Gal llpol s
OhiO

72

1990 Ford 250 4.:4 51 000 Actual
M les 614-245 5288
1993 Aerosta r exc cond 304

675 2118

740

750

760

19 64 Bu1ck Regal garage kept
A 1 cond ton 26 000 o g nal
m11es loaded se nous nqu1r es
only $3 500 614 992 5322

New ga s tanks on e ton tru ck
wheels radiators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Au1o R1pley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

1984 Dodge Ar1es 4 door slallon

no

Sell $1000 080 614 441 1856

790

Copper nose puppies pure bred
no papers 6mo old $50ea 18IT'O

old $100ea. 304-67!&gt;21175

Far sale one female m1mature
Collie ready to go $150 614

742 2050
Full Blooded Ronwe11er Pupptes

Call 814-388-8043

Malamute/Husky PuppieS Ready
For Chnstmas Blue Eyes &amp;
Brown Eyes S100 or less 614

381H1962

304-875 774()

.:.:._;---::---:::-

USKC Reg1stared Au stralian
Shepherd pups Shots wormed

$50 614 256-6785
Musical
Instruments

K1mball P1ano Pme Fan taauc
Condlt1on One Ownerl $1300
Bench Sheet Mustc Provided

own book Call Joday 10 make 11 by 614 441 15011 leave Message
X mas I 614 992 5759 or 814
667 9780
Maron &amp; Gbson
Gulla,. &amp; More
Ready For Chnsrmas G~rls 26"
HOLIDAY SALE
Murray B1ke Exce tlertt Cond11Jon
HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC
Jackson Ohio

614 288 5889

51-lOP

GOING TO l-IlT
ONE NOW""

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

F,ANGINE I&gt;OfSN'T MINI'&gt; HO~Il&gt;AY
ENiff(TAINING A BIT··SHf
JUST ,0/,L.f UP tfff(
S~ftVfS, PITG~ES lliGt'fT
IN AND '-A~t.f Tt4f
GATE,fll!

810

f'\INE

Home

Auto loans Deater will arrange fi
nancfng even tf you have been
turned down elsewhere

Equtpmenl Used Cars 30•1-4561069

v1ny1
m1er1
room
614

wv 304 576 23!18

~oolmg and gutters com mercial
and res dental mmor repa rs 35
years expenence B&amp;B ROOF

Plumbing
Heating

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Street stock 83 Monte Carlo 355
engme been baJ TC trans Ford
g~ rear end cUac brakes every

Heat Pumps Air Cond1t omng II
You Don t Call Us We Both losel
Free Esumates 1 800 287 6308
6t4 446.()308
0029 5
4

Four 1 s· Chevy Wheels W th
Baauty Rmgs $150 6 14 245

not have a long
span
po h up a broken romance? The

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

THiNK

7

wv

1•:---..:.:...:.:...:.:;::.:.:::___
Restdent1al or commerc1a/ W~rmg
new serv1ce oe repa1rs Master L1
censed electnc an R1denour
Electncal WV000306 304 675

1786

J

vJ

P R

VAXNM

VHDJX

R

R

KFYVWW

E P W W

S D

J 0 Y D M

XPXWO

S D X X D

S D W N E

XUD

K V Y P R

PREVIOUS SOLUTION Berlioz had gemus w1thout talen1 "-Georges 81ze1
~Brahms too muc h beer and bea d

-

Paul DuKas

WOlD
QlMI

0

Rearrange

lellers

of

lour scrambled words
low to form lou words

I

iho
bo

PLAWOL

I I I I II

I

I~~"'
KO TE S

1--rl--r-1-.-1-r:;-il
2 ~

uL HAG

1::::,'
·

You look awfu l what s
wrong ? I asked my fnend I
I 1 I
know I m a true 1nsommac my
I
fnend replied I can I fall asleep
r ......,....,K-U_T_B_E_C-..,~ F&gt;ven when 1! s lime to
3

15 O

Comp lete 1he chuckle qu o ted
.
•
.
•
.
by Ill ng n the m1ssmg words
L_L._...J_..J._..L.-.L......J you d eve lop from !tep No 3 below

' I '

\tll\?2
~W~R'P!

Graph Malchmaker can help you under
s1and what to do to make the relal1onsh1p
work Ma1l $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o lhts
newspaper P 0 Box 1758 Murray H1ll
Slalion New York NY 10156
CAPRICORN (Oec 22-Jan 19)
Engagements wtlh tnends should work
out well loday You mi!Jhl even have an
opportumly 10 recltfy a pasl m1sunder
standmg wtlh a pal
AQUARIUS (Jon 211-Fob 19) If you pur
sue a truly stgnthcant obtectiVe today pull
ou1 all the stops Do not hold back
opportumty
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) II IS not

Tuesday Dec 19 1995
In the year ahead you m1ghl become
- deeply tnvolved II! several umque
endeavors These lnvolvemenls could
provtde you wtlh eKcttement prot11 and
new popularity
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) Do nol
procraslinate today t1 you have some
thing ltnanclaUy meamngtul on the agen
da Luck will be tn your comer but may

~

,., ~

~'If
I ~/
10
-GEMINI (May 21·June 20) II you are

because you may not have another

Freeman s Heatmg And Cooling
Instal allan And Service EPA
Cartiried Reskienllal Commerc al
614 256 1611

RSES CERTIFIEDDEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

9419Aher6PM

~~~~

&amp;

Camara both $250 call 614 742
23Zl

742 2323

'YOU

..~~
~r=rr-

lNG 614 992 5041

840

MNSDMX
p

v

J N X

l I' I I I

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS

STRIKE A8lOW N THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP THE ClASSFIEDS

I MONDAY

DRYWALL

79 z 28 Camara and 80 Z 28

1h1ng almosl ,_ $4500 &lt;all814

"THERE,
DONT

" -l_.., _

Hang fm1sh repa1r
Ce1l ngs tert ured plaster repair
Call Tom 304 675- 4186 20 years
expenence

Ron s TV Ser v1ce spec1aflzmg 1n
Zemth also serv1cmg most other
brands House call§ 1 800 797

24!&gt;0019 or 61&lt;0-24!&gt;5845

K M 0 V T

R XV M

LE5SON

•ro

FROM YOUR.

6323

820

v

"THERES A

NA"TE 11ERRY
CHRISTI"'AS

C&amp;C General Hom e Ma111
tene nce Pa1nt1ng v1ny1 Sldmg
carpentry doors Windows baths
mob le home repa1r and rrore For
free estimate call Chet 614 992

2879 814 949 2045 or 614 992

85 Mercury Topaz 4 Door Auto
Good Runmng Condttlon 6 14

1

SECRET SANTA 1

Earls Hom e Maintena nc e
s1d1ng roofing extenor and
or pambng powe wash ng
add111ons Fee Estimat es
992 4451

1993 Mustang ~ cyl bnght red
loaded Would make a n1ce
Chnstmas gtftt W1ll sell for loan
value 614-992-4111

S D P J H

present

BIG NATE

1991 Rocket Chassis race car all
1n 91 Wllwood best of &amp;Ye
rythmg weld lttree wheels t1res
Neal pedals fuel cell on board
fire system roll1ng chassis $5BOO
neg Call Scott Wolfe 614 949

MileS 61H46-6737

by Lu1s Campos
Celeb!" ty C p he cryplog ams a e c eated I om qu-.»a ons by lamous people pasl a d
Each ctte nlhec phe s ands lo anoth e TOddysclue TequalsM

Hts NY 11577 0169

FOR60TIEN 1-lHY I

Bill Ornck s Home Improvement s
add tlon s remodeling oofmg
Siding plumbmg etc Insured call
8111 Omck 614 992 4240

0015

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Phtll!p Alders book Get
Smarter at Bndge ts avatlable
autographed upon reques t for
$14 95 from P 0 Box 169 Roslyn

~TOAAVE.

7795

675 3526

1993 Cadillac One Owner 28 000

error
39 AuthorCaldwell
-+-f--+~ 45 --tours
(crawling)
46 Occupied a
bench
47 Stratagem
48 Concerning
(2 wds)
49 Golf pegs
51 Htsslng
sound
52 Dell sandwich
53 Pronto (abbr)
56 Actrosa West
57 WWIIarea
58 Author
Anala-

WT~OfU:'l

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Vears Er
penance All Work Guaranteed
French City May lag 614 446

1Q91 Fork Escor1 GT black 5
speed cru1se PM amltm cas
sene arc high m11eage and l1 gh1
front and r~ght damag e $4 700

1.:.-...,----,,--::--:---:---:-

•5

I

0488 Rogers Waterproolmg Es
labliShed 1975

1991 Chevy Geo Me tro 4 door

6193

Pass
Pass

T&lt;X.£TKER

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

3l 4-6 75- 21 g2

8 Footwear

East

MI:':&gt;Tl.E..TO£

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Improvements

1989 Chrysler LeBaron Convet
1ble GTC Turbo 58K M1les Load

new

UNI&gt;ERTK£

AND HERE$

ooe 1
388

199T Grand Am Fully Loaded
Excellent Cond1Uon 614 25e 1206
Ask For Mat or Amy

lo.l£ :'lTitL :':&gt;Ti\ND

SERVICES

Book $5475 Asking $4200 614

1991 Geo Storm $7 000 304

BORN LOSER

Auto Repair

2716

Jecton Auro A1r 57 000 M1les

614 992 5524

North
2t
Pass

Yellowstone 23 se ll contained
camper asking $2500 614 949

1988 N1ssan 200SX loaded
5spd 4cyl su nroof security sys
tern 1ke new $3 900 304 675
4650

1990 Pont1ac
Grand Am $2 900
3)4-6
!&gt;
7 5091

bl.-cks and ye llows excellent
hunting stoc~ or greatlamJiy dog
papers and shots $250 614
949 2411

BEFORE EACH

949 3)21

1967 Dodge- Lance r $1000 614
446 6958

CFA Registered Htmalyan Klllens

labs

~ SPECIAL '(OU
THINK A60UT

30 Ft Pace Arrow Molar Home
Generator Dual Root AC Good
Condition $16 900 OBO 614

1986 Sunb rd 4 doo r $1 20 0
s 14g925322

1990 Ford Escort Actual 6 000
Miles 2 Door 614 379 2720 AF
TEA P.M
6

AKC

I Tl-liNK TO
M'{5El.F '' 'fOU HAVEN'T
~IT A GOOD 51-lOT
ALL DA'&lt; WI-IAT MAKES
YOU THINK 'fOU'RE
SWIN6

AN'f'THIN6

Due to health a lmanc1al reasons
Cherokee Class c T1n1 ng wa s
closed October 23 1995 Persons
havtng quesuons on warrant es
please ca/1304 743-1100

448 4991 614 441-0354

81g beautiful AKC Chow puppies
only one blue and one black fe

pups

JUST BEFORE I

THEI&lt;:E

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1990 Cougar
fully load ed
57 ooom 1 11ke new $8 500 304
675 3656

Chr stmas

IS

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1984 Aud1 4000S 4 Cy nder Au
tomat c Clean lnstde &amp; Out Must

1966 BMW 325 Beautiful Car
Sunroof Cell Phone And AU 614

West
Pass
Pass

Rabbt Sam Shapiro and hts famtly
w1fe Lucyl e and daughters Elyse and
Judy had JUSt fim shed the~r Hanukkah
supp er The g1fls had been opened
everyone was feeling happy and con
tent Then the Rabbt suggested lhe1r
regular bndge game
Oh yes' exclmmed Lucyle
Knowmg lh e1r parents loved th e
game Elyse and Judy w1llmgly agreed
The bndge table was set up the deck
was shuffled and dealt The full lavoul
IS m the d1agram
The Rabbi s sequence a stron g arh
fic1al and forcmg two clubs followed bv
a JUmp to three no trump showed a
balance d l&gt; 27 pomts Ht s ace km g
doubleton of dtamonds was a drawback
bul aces and kin gs are undervalu ed at
fou1 and three pomts respectively
Elyse led th e spade ftve
Immediatel) the Rabb1 called fur dum
my s ID and Judy played the seven The
spade stx was halfway out of th e
Rabbi s hand when he paused He had
nottced the blockage m lhe dtamond
sutt Yel he needed four d1amond tncks
for ht s con tract Th1s would rcqutre a
dummy entry and there d1dn I appear
to be one
Suddenly the Rabbi saw the answer
He \\on the first tnck wtth ht s spade
kmg After unblockmg the ace kmg uf
diamonds th e Rabbi contmued With hts
spade three toward dummy s Jack
Elyse d1d the best she could wmnmg
wtth the queen and sw1tchmg to a club
but the contract was home The Rabb1
claimed mne tncks three spades four
dtamonds and two clubs
Well pla ve d darhng smd Lucyle
w1th a broad smile on her face

PF.ANUTS

toma~c $900 614 379-2435

1985 Trans Am bl ack 305 en
gme ps pb new transmiSSion
t res brakes shocks front end
alignmenr CD pla'(er S3 900
~4 576-2865

16 Astronaut a
ferry
20 And othera
(2 wds)
genus
22 - ot London
23 St•ay calves
24 Epic poem
25 Atr detenae
org
~+---4--l 26 Long garment
27 - - about
30 Unless
31 Exclude
- +--l- -1 32 Swedtsh
smgmg group
37 Secretary 1

9 Govt farm
agcy
10 Busrness attire
11 Honey bee

By Phtlhp Alder

1993 201 Pro XL 20 Strutos
ba ss boat 200 XPHP 614 667
7347 or 614 949 2879

1980 Thunderbird 2 Door Au

Arm eg
Thanks- Cry ol patn
Close rei

Think at first

on new mo

1980 Malibu ClaSSIC good frame
good mtenor 2dr 355 c u en
g1ne like new $2500 614 992

1 Information
agcy
2 Ot that kind
3 Dlvmg duck
4 Perstan
5 TV s- Rather
6 Eccentric
7 Roman 52

(81 )

35
36
38
40

A K

Openmg lead

1985 Suz uk 230 -4 Wh eeler
$1600 614 446 6958

AKC Yellow lab Pups Ready For
Chnstmas $300 614 256-6336

Will Be Ready For Chnstmas
Ready Now 1614 446 1104

l NT

Motorcycles

(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237

male left $2110 814 992 7574

BARNEY

&amp; 4-WDs

MakeUsAn0tfer614 4461575

After 6 P.M

South
2&gt;l

92 Ford Ranger 4cy 5 spd new
out aw 1 &amp; firest one rue s Alpine
CD play er blackout k I 50 000
m1les 614 245-031 9

1969 Honda 300 Fourtrar 2wd
$2250 080 1989 Yamaha tOO
Mo lo4 $1250 OBO 6 14 44 6
0821 614 446-6651

1977 Marna blue Corvene Ex
cond 47 200 m1les $9500/obo
61444 10624

ooom

• 53
•J 9 4

DOWN

28 r.ooplng on
one Side
29 Small ox
33 Earth s star
34 Not worktng

Vulnerable
Dealer South

1984 Toyota 4x4 After 4pm 614

ed Would Make A Greal Gi11

=:.:............:..:..:.__.......:.._1 570

On Bonom, 814 446-1759

e

• Q 10 9
t98 762
... Q I ll B 7

Anower to P,.vlouo Puzzle

446 8667

Pet Only Breeding Restrrcted
ti 14-446 8627

Coffee Table &amp; SFA Registered H1malayan Kll
2 End Tables Piano Dlmro Room ten~ $200 OBO 614 441 0782
Table W11h 4 Charrs &amp; Hu10h Re
cllnar Baby Crad le Mtcrowave Two Mm1ature Cothes (Shalues)
AKC RegiStered Puppies $200
Siard l:V Siand Gun Caliinel 2 614-367
0212.
Storage CICseiS 61 &lt;0-446-7600

Nice Soltd Oak Gun Cab inet
Glass Doors On Top SaUd Doors

a

89 ThunderOird SC two door 3
Ill e V elite model turbo PS
PB AC 5 speed power seats
and Jocks "Great Car~ $6500
neg 614 992 74 78 or 614 949

• 7

41 Rage
42 Caribou
1 Navy ahlp pret 43 Give - - whtrl
4 Objects ol
44 Own
worship
47 Boca9 Neighbor
Florida
ot Can
50 Buckwheat
12 Amount
54 Brln9. IntO play
13 Translator set 55 Clvlhlles
14 Olne
59 Sault - Marte
15 ot aN Atlantic 60 Caesars
nation
language
17 Roman 502
61 Mrs m Madnd
18 Luster
62 Dawn goddess
19 English poet
63 Sierra21 Weakeat
64 Soak
25 Entertainment

"' A K 6

5840

Eyes $125 One Blue Eye $100

lrvmg Room Su1te

$200 814-446-3004 After 5 P.M

Spm

95

EAST

t

1979 ~hevy 4-4 shorT bed 305
auto new parts sharp 304 773

Uncondlllonal llfet me guarantee
local references fu mshed Call

Reg1a1ered We1ma raner pupp1es

New Woodburmng Stove Caat
Iron Br1ck Uned Sold By Sears

83 Pont ac F1reb1rd t tops load
ed 75 000 actual m1les 68
Dodge Dart 614 742 2646 alter

1988 Red Camara Hop 2 8 In

lazy Boy Rocker Reel mer L1ke

1977

I

AKC Registered black la b pup
p1es W1U be 4 wee~s Chn stmas
$2110 614 446 9555
day
AKC Registered Chinese Sharp 81
puppes wormed and first shots

2879

12 18

SOUTH
• A K 6 3
•KR 73

1979 CJ 5 Jeep run s very good

-----------1 wagon $500 614 992 3952

Poodle pupp1es tiny toy males
AKC champion bloodline shots
and wormed 614 667 3404

Good White Wall T res 614 446

Froo Delivery Within 25 M1les

AKC Reg i ster ed Beagle Pups
Tr Co lo r Weaned Wormed
Shots Started $55 Each Can
Hold Til l Chustmas Call Steve
Staple ton Wo t1 614 446 4172
Homa 614-256 1619

COMPASStO'J

$3800 OBO 304 675 1409

6026

AKC Reg female lOy pood e red
6 months old 614 446 9536

1978 Chevy 4WD PICkUp good
11res and dnve line runs great
two new fenders must sell $1550
neg 614 992 7478 or 614 949

730

TRANSPORTATION

tor 304 773 5840

Pets for Sale

1970 Chevy C 60 24 Ft T1lt Bed
Excellent Condit on Low Mileage
Good Rubber Mu sl See To Ap
prec1ate 614 446 1675 or 614

No Sunday Calls 614-388 8524

1979 Z28 20

Kmg Sze Waterbed $100 614
251H!723
Brard Nawl $200 814 258 1638

Hay &amp; Grain

!185 3362

D1sney area 5 days/ 4 hotel
mghts Use anytme Pad $310

Electric Wheelchairs /Scooters
New !'Used Scooter 1Wheelch81r
lilts Stairway Elevators lift
C ha~rs Bowman s Homecare

Panted Steel S1des
Steel Roof 15 x8 Steel
Man Door $6 444
lron Horse Builders 1

800 352 1045

95 Bu1ck
tomau c
amethyst
cen take

Tw n Avers Tower now accepti ng
appl1cat1ons lor 1br HUO subs1d
zed apt lor elderly and hand

Doll Collection &amp; Dol FurMure
Cash Only 614-448..8398

POLE aiiLOING SPECIAL

SUMMERFIELD s TREE FARM

$100ea 304 675 5553

Unfurnished Aparunent For Rent
G aham School Rd 2 Bedroom
Stove &amp; Refngerator Utll rv Room
All Electnc AC $2751Month
$275 Deposll No Pets 614 446

Farm Equipment

S1ze 12 White Wedding Gown
Floor length W1th Chapel Length
Tram $300 30 Volume Encylope
d1a Amercana 1961 Ed1bon $50
Roadmaster StatiOnary Bicyc le
W1th Spedomater / Mileage $50
614 446 7~

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

1H£Y 1-iQP E:l&lt;R:)S£ AIJY
FOLiiiCIAf.J iS\1\P!ED Efr'

WEST
&gt;lQ98 52
'I A J 4

1974 Ford panel truck 460 motor
C 6 au10mauc transm ss1on 2 1/2
ton Chassy $1500 080 614
992 2143 or 614 992 6373 afte
5 00 ask lor M chael

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

640

EEK &amp;MEEK:

446 8286

20 H1llsboro Wnh 4 Dove Ta11
Gooseneck Tra1ler Exce ll ent
Condition 310 Long Trailer Low
Hours 614 256-6574

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Ga llons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH

sell $100 304 3539131

Yamaha Portasound Elecltlc
Keyboard Ctev1er 49 Key s PSS
470 Also Carry1ng Case &amp; Sland

610

NORTH
•J 10 4
• 6 5 2
Q J 1o 4
...• s 3 2

CAll BRIAN AT 614 256-639 1
IF NO ANSWER LEAVE A
MESSAGE

SIGNS Portable lighted change
able etter sign w/letters $329
Free delivery/letters Plastic let
tara $55 (Second box lree) AAA
S1gns 1 MO 533-3453 anytime

One bed room furn shed aparl
mem 1n Middleport 614 446 3091
or 614 992 5304 or 614 992
2178

capped EOH 304-675 6679

1981 FORD F 150

6561

5595

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
r

614 7422124

351m AUTOMATIC BEDLINER
TOOL
BOX
ALUMINUM
WHEELS GOOD CONDITION

New Ep phone electron c gu tar
275 watt amp w/4 12 1nch speak
ers $650 00 614-446-fl591

Sam Somerv lies reoular Army
camouflage by Sandyville Po st
Ofllt Man Thur 3 6pm Frt Sun
12noon Spm 304 273 5655 Ju
n1or Sll8S Free Deliver y Pt
Pleasant

AKC
Dalmat an
pupp1es
21ema les. shots &amp; wormed

1 800 537 9528

Alvarez acoustic gu1tar Dove
Eddu 111c.e new $35000 614 446

6591

560

Boys Sunes 8 Shm 14 Husky &amp;
16 Regular614-2-45-9258

5hp

675 1043

N ce two bedroom apartment 1n
Pomeroy 614 992 5858

Maytag Washer /Dryer Set Was

1 and 2 bedroom aparlments fur
n1shed and unlurn1shed secumy
depo s 1 requ red no pe ts 614

530

Racmg Go cart

$350 61 &lt;0-992 2069

Call614 446-0231

2 dmene sets w1th hutches &amp; s1x
cha~rs 1 solid maple 1 solid oak
614 446 9538

304 67!&gt;4831

1564

78 Chevy 4x• 314 ton 350 en
g1ne automatiC tran&amp;mi&amp;SIOn

Chr stmas Trees $15 5 M1le
Road Gallipolis Fer y WV 304

'

On SA 141 Refere nces $300
Monlh $100 Depo sit Very Clean

Ruger 10122 rtlle &amp; 4 power scope
$165 20 gauges s shotgun $60
22 cal s s r fie $75 304 675

9060

2bedroom Sandh II Road 304

N1ce 2 bodroom mob1le home m
M1ddlOPOrl Oh 614-992 5a58

Ruger #1 22 250 6x 8 Redfield
sco pe (new) $700 Thompson
Cente New Englander 50 caliber
also new $200 614 742 2768

2 cemetery lots Me1gs Memory
Gardens nc ludes 2 vaults &amp; 2
markers $2 500 614-698-431 1

MERCHANDISE

M lchell Road A ea Ga I pols
$3 10/Mo Water Sep l c Tra sn
Pad Depos 1 !References 614
643 2916 Alter 4 PM

Qmm 12 shot capacity Ita/ an
government model performs hke
!tal an beretta eJCira d p new 1n
boK $325 614 441 -0558

Furn shed 2 Rooms &amp; Ba lh
Oownsta rs Ut1h 1es Furnis hed
Clea n No Pets Reference De
posit Requ1rec:l 614 446-1519

Tra1ler Space For Rent OJ Wh1te
Rd $100/Month Days 614 446
4111 Evemngs6t4 446 7157

2br wa sher &amp; dryer al electfiC
AC Ma son no pets 304 773
5751

9pm

1985 Butck Brass shower doors
Bathroom cab1net &amp; smk Tub en
closure Row1ng mach1ne Exer
e1se bike 304-675-5946

2bfCroom turn1shed al electnc
ac washer/dryer $250/mo plus
utili! es No pets References &amp;
deposit 304 675 4874

675 3834

12 gauge shot shell reloader
multi stage Pac1fic loade wllots of
extras $125 304 675 712Q belore

Furn shed 2 Bedroom Apartment
Across From Park AC No Pets
References Depos1t $3501Mo
614 446 8235 614 446 0577

0175

Two bedroom mob te home n
L m1 ed Offer I 1996 doublew de
co untry depos1t and elerences
3br 2bath $1 7Q9 down $2751 requ1red call614 949 2633
montn Free deliv ery &amp; setup
Apartments
Only at Oakwood Homes N tro
Pnce Buste rl New 14x70 2 or

nus newspaper wr t not

E-tra N ce 2 BR All Elec Furn
K 1 C ose To Spr ng Valley Area
No Pets $340/Mo + D D + Ret
614 4~157 Alter 5 P.M

Garage apt 2 BR $300/month
w th wale ncluded $200 secu 11y
deposit requ 1red Loca ted 2nd
Ave Gallipolis 614 446 8677
days 614 256 1972 ENerungs

wv 304-755 5885

to advertise ~any preference
t mltatton or dlscrtm1natlon
based on race color religion
sex famll18! statu&amp; or national
ongn or any Intention lo
make any such preference
11m1tauon or dlscnmmauon •

Country S1de Apartment large 1
Bedroom $2901Mo Depo sit 513
922 0294

IN RUTLAND house lor rent lour
bedrooms one bath large rooms
14JC14 front room 14JC12 kl!chen.
new carpet recent y remodeled
centra a1r HUD accepted $3851
mo plus deposit 614 992 2817

440

of 1968 which makes II Illegal

Beech St M ddleport 2br fur
n shed apt uul t1es pa1d dep &amp;
ref 304 882 2566

614 388 9267
1972 Moble Home 12 Wde 2
Bedroom New 200 Amp Breaker
Bo( 2x4 Walls $3800 W1tl Trade
Fo Pck up of Equal Value 614

All real estate advertiSing In
th s newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Falr Housing Act

ES TATE S 52 West wood Dr ve
from $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Call 6 4 446 256 8
Equal Hous1ng Oppo tuntty

PM

6267

Be A Leader Ana Jon Ou Team
Today Send Resume To
HVAC Installer
PO Bo x 806
l ::~ckson OH 45640

456 1! 2 Second Ave 2 BR AC
appl ances $400 month Ut ht es
paid $200 aeposlt Relerences
614 446 2129

2330

327 9
Home Typ s s PC users needed
S45 ooo nco me potent at Call 1
BOO 513 4343 Ex1 8 Q368

4 112 M1les From Galhpol s N ce
2 Bedrooms Stove Retngerator &amp;
Water Fu n shed No Pets $2501
Mo 614 446-8038

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

RENTALS

304 67 5-1957

2 BR BRICK TOWN

Aparrments lo ent n Gallipolis
614 446 7130 or 6 4 446 2t31

Ch d Care In My Ga lh pohs A ea
Home All Ag es We come Hot
Meals Please Call 614-441-0439

C ean La te Mod el Cars 0
Tr\Jcks 198 7 Mod e s Or Newer
Smuh Buck r on t ac 1900 East
ern Avenue Gal po s

35 WEST

HOUSES 1261 Jackson P1ke
.Across From C1nema $2951Mo
Dep For Rental AppliCations Call
614 446 095 7 614 446 0006
61 4441t6160rWrto PO Bar
994 GallipoliS OH 45631

"Pnnce Contender OversiZe"
Tenn1s Racket W1th Cover S15
Rollerblade "Cool Ice· lnllne
Skates Mens S1ze 10 112 $55
614 446-2359

ACROSS

a lways w1se to use tntermedtanes but
today an assoctate may contact someone

you have been unable to reach yourself
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Malena!
opportuO!Ites may spnng up tn new areas
today Examtna them carefully because
they can be ullllzed m several adVanta
geous ways
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) Beneltctal
arrangements that appear unrelated can
be linked 1ogelher II you apply yoursell
you can ltgure out how lhts works

asked to manage somethmg for someone
else today make sure to treat the matter
consc1ent1ously Your at titud e Will b e
1mportant to the outcome

CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Owck lh1nk
tng can prov1de you wtth advantages over

those who compete aga1ns1 you Ieday
Do not fear mak1ng snap deciSIOns

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Thts day can be
extremely produdtve tf you remam deter
m1ned to conclude proJects to your saus

taclion Do no1 take on more than you
can manage

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Somelhmg of
substance could develop for you through
your soctal mvolvements loday When
convers1ng wtth fne1 Js don I hesttate to

talk shop
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Gtve your
tmagtnalton tree re1n today You may
ooncetve ot an lngen1ous idea for makrng
more money Do not tear testtng your
new vtslon

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) In regard lo
somethtng that has concerned you
recently condtlions tn general look hopeful tor you today EmphasiZe the posiltve

•

Creole Emend Wrung Smtch TURN DOWN

A fnend

of mtne ts a real bargatn shopper She says
that a true bargatn ts something you don I really need at
a pnce you can I TURN DOWN

DECEMBER1BI

�-\
/,

:Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Monday, December 18, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

21 ,000 busy in nation's largest workfare program
.
'

. NEW YORK (AP) - For 26
-hours every week, Curtis Nichols
rakes leaves and picks up liner in
Central Park. He doesn't get a paycheck.
· Nichols is part of the nation· s
largest workfare program 21,000 New Yorkers who work in
exchange for welfare.
Although the jobs are menial sweeping streets, scrubbing toilets
and cleaning parks - both the city
and the workers deny it's make work.
"I lhink we' re making a difference. ll' s getting a little cleaner, a

lillie better," Nichols said as he
toiled in a six-man crew.
The debare over whether workfare works - and if it's fair - will
soon expand nationwide.
Workfare efforts involving hundreds or even a few thousand people have gone on for years across
the country. The current welfare
reform bill in the Republican-controlled Congress calls for half of
the 5 million adults who receive
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children to be on workfare within
six years. President Clinton also
supports workfare.

In New York City, only people
on home relief - welfare for
adults with no dependents - participate in 1\'0rkfare. Their jobs are
based on a simple equation: 26
hours a week at the $4.25 minimum wage is roughly equivalent to
the monthly home relief allounent
of $320 to $340 plus $I 10 in food
Su'UllpS.

" In exchange for this benefit,
you have an obligation to give
som ething back," said Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani.
Even though no active workers
are being fired and replaced by

welfare rectptents , ·workfare
unquestionably takes up the slack
in a shrinking city work force.
· For example, the city's parks
department has lost 2,500 workers,
or half its employees, since 1986
due to budget cuts. Yet the parks
remain clean - because of workfare.
"It's not like we 're taking these
jobs away from someone," insisted
Parks Commissioner Henry Stern,
whose department deploys 4,000
workfare parttcipant s to supplement 2.500 paid employees. "This
work just wouldn't be done."

Others disagree . Mauric e
Emsellem, a lawyer with the
National Employment Law Project,
fears national workfare could hurt
the job market. "It's inevitable that
people are going tp be displaced."
he said.
Since AFDC recipients are overwhelmingly female, national workfare programs would involve mostly women.
Liz Krueger, who works at
Manhattan's Community Food
Resource Center, which helps the
poor, sees workfare as exploitation .
" The govenunent gets some work

lhey want done without having to
pay for it," she said. "We're buying into slave labor."
Krueger also contends the city's
penalty for missing a day of workfare - no cash or food stamps for
90 days - is too harsh. •
Nichols, 39, did odd jobs before
going on home relief in June-. He
called workfare "a great help to
getting on my feet again," but said
he should be getting more than the
equivalent of minimum wage.
Schwartz hopes to bring 15,000.
AFDC recipients into workfare
next year.

Ohio Lottery

Eastern wins
in three OTs
over Southern

Pick 3:
133
Pick 4:
5359
Buckeye 5:
6-16-20-22-32

· Sports, Page 4

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 164
1 Section, 10 Pages

Russians
take slap at
Yeltsin's
reforms

r-

By WILLIAM F. NICHOLSON
USA TODAY
Russia's Communists. capitalizing on voter despair and anger over
President Boris Yeltsin' s free-market reforms, gained new influence
after parliamentary elections Sunday.
About 105 million voters in II
time zones across Russia went_to
the polls
The Ccmml Ele,tion Commission said partial rewrns lare Sunday
showed:
- The Communist Party with
about 23 peri::ent of the vote in 45
of 89 regions.
- Vladimir Zhirinovsky's
ultranationalist party second with
about 14 percent; worse than in
previous voting.
In the short term, Communists
and nationalists packing the 450seat Duma, or lower house, won't
affect the 'authority of Yeltsin, who
is recovering from heart problems.
The president holds the real
power. but Angela Stenl, a government professor at Georgetown University, said, "This could be seen
as a dress rehearsal for presidential
elections" to be held in June 1996.
Heavily populated cities in
European Russia that have voted
for Yeltsin and pro-reform parties
were to be counted Monday .
Reformist parties predicted they
would gain ground.
"We will have a pretty different
picture (today)," said Electoral
Commission chairman Nikolai
Ryabov.
Yeltsin, asked Sunday if a Communist comeback was likely, said.
"No, and no again."
Only half of the Duma's seats
'Ire set aside for the parties, which
must get at least 5 percent of the
vote to be seated . The rest are
directly elected.
Communist leader Gennady
Zyuganov sounded confident.
"There is absolutely no support
for the govenunent," he told Russian TV. "How could there be?
They have been cut off completely
by high prices."
Communists say they are now
social democrats, different from
bard-line Soviets.
Zyuganov " talk s from both
sides of his mouth." said Stcnt.
"We rea II y don't know what these
reformist Communists look like.
They rea lly haven't been tested

BEDROOM
'1000

President, Congress to
restart stalled budget talks
WASHINGTON (AP) - Faced
with a quarter-million federal
.. workers on furlough .and a jiuery
stock marke~ President Clinton and
Republican leaders in Congress are
cautiously moving to restart stalled _
budget talks today.
· The president scheduled a midafternoon meeting today with
House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
Senate Majority Leader Rl'bert
Dole, though aides were holding
out little hope for a breakthrough.
"Whether or not there's
progress remains to be seen,"
White House pres. secretary Mike
McCurry said. Just before the
meeting, the president planned to
veto a third GOP spending bill in
two days.
Clinton placed separate telephone calls to Gingrich and Dole
on Monday. His offer: Pass a temporary spending bill to keep the
government functioning through
the holidays, And, if Republicans
would move to his proposed spending levels for Medicare and Medicaid. he would send them a seven-.
year balanced budget using the
Congressional Budget Office economic assumptions be regards as
too pessimistic.
Or, the president told them,
resume talks, suspended since Friday. with no preconditions and he
·would personally participate.
Dole reacted positively . "It is
time the principals become
involved," he s id. "It's lime for
.adult leadership. "
. After conferring, Dole and Gingrich accepted Clinton's offer, sort
.of, saying they viewed the meeting

----- --4--- - ---

Missed deadlines
will be costly
DAYTON (AP) - Some businesses are trying 10 lure customers
by offering deferred payments and
interest into 1997.
That can be a good deal if the
balance is paid on time. But some
people may end up paying a whopping penalty for buying appliances,
home furnishings and computers
that way, according to a Dayton
Daily News analysis.
For example, a customer could
be hit with a $256 finance charge
on a $1,000 balance. That's assuming lhe interest rare is 23 percen~ a
common rare charged by retailers.
"Its a real problem," said G.
Mike Crawford, a certified finan cial planner at the LifePian Financial Group in suburban Centerville.
"All of us would love to have
infinite funds to buy anything we
wanred, but unless you have a real
game plan and lulow your goals for
the future , you are gelling yourself
in way over your head," he said.
Many consumers plan 10 pay off
the loan before the deadline, but
something unexpected often happens to prevent them from doing
Many retailers offer a 12-month
no-interest plan. a 90-day-same-ascash option or a six -month
deferred-payment plan.
The key for consumers is to
eliminate their balance before the
deadline. That way they've been
given an interest-free loan.
Financial planners recommend a
sUategy for major purchases that
will enable people to avoid loans
and excess debt.

MAKING CRAFTS - Although many beautlrul Christmas
ornaments are now available in stores during the holiday season, making homemade· Christmas ornam.ents still remain.~ a
holiday tradition ... especiaUy among the chtldren. Here, 3-year,old Colby Hayes works on a construction paper Christmas tree
under the watchrul eye or his mother, Cara Hayes. (Sentinel
photo by Jim Freeman)

not as a negotiating sesston but as a
chance for them to discuss "the
importance of getting a balanced
budget agreement this year, and
how we might achieve that goal."
Today House Majority Leader
Dick Armey. R-Texas, said he was
pessimistic budget talks could produce an agreement unless Clinton
shows willingness to compromise.
"It's going to be a very difficult
discussion between the speaker, the
majority leader and the president as
long as the president remains so
inflexible and rigid and so unwilling to get down to the hard work
that's required to get to a balanced
budget," Armey said on "CBS
This Morning."
At the White House, aides said
the meeting probably would be
scheduled today but they ftrst wanted to make sure Republicans truly
were going in without preconditions.
"If in fact we can get the clarification we wan~ we'll confirm lhe
meeting," McCurry said.
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle of South Dakota and
House Minority Leader Dick
Gephardt of Missouri will be on the
outside looking in . Clinton will
brief them later, McCurry said.
A task force of House and Senate Democrats and White House
Chief of Staff Leon Panella
planned to meet for a fourth consecutive day today in hopes of
developing a balanced budget wilh
uni tied Democratic support.
The halting sreps toward restarting negotiations came as the government went into a fourth day of a
partial shutdown

Peoples Bancorp acquires
Jocal Bank One branches
A definitive agreemen~ has been
:reached that will allow three area
branches of Bank One of Athens,
·N.A, in Pomeroy, Rutland, and
:Oallipolis to be acquired by The
:Pe(lples Banking and Trust Company, a subsidiary of Peoples Ban:cap, Inc .. officials with the Mariet-

tbt~·

$

---- ---------- ----------- -----

.

FREE
DRIVBIYI
On Major Purchases

•• wars • Par.

• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
• Heilig-Mayers Card • In-Store Creel~

FURNITURE

~1m1

We rese&lt;VO the right to lrmit quantities. ~ Helllg·Meyers Co. 1995

"Electronics and appliances not available In some stores.

Dec. 19

6 shopping
days to Christmas

ta-based financial company said
Monday afternoon.
Tbe three Bank One full-service
banking facilities assume approximately $75 million in deposits
from Bank One, Athens, N.A. The
acquisition will be contingent upon
regulatory approval and other conditions, Peoples Bank officials said.
Peoples Bancorp is a Southeastern Ohio bank holding company
headquartered in Marietta, witb
total assets in excess of $550 million. Its banking subsidiaries
include The Peoples Banking and
Trust Company with offices in
Marietta. Athens, Belpre, Lowell,
Middleport, Nelsonville, Newark,
and The Plains; and the First
National Bank of Southeastern
Ohio with offices in Caldwell,
Chesterhill, and McConnelsville,
Through its subsidiaries, Peoples Bancorp offers complete banking services and makes available
several other financial services,
such as investment and insurance
products.
)

A Gannett Co. Newspaper:

Southern board OKs proposal
for site of new grade school
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
The Southern Local Board of
Education, meeting in regular session Monday night, approved the
recommendation of the Southern
Local Building Committee concerning the location of a proposed,
new K-8 building for the district.
In addition, the board took steps
placing the issue before voters on
the March primary ballot
The board a,ccepted the site
adjacent to Soulhern High School
on property the district already
owns.

ROOM OR

~et. "

so.

Christmas is ... ---.

LIVING

OR MORE

35 cents:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 19, 1995

ANY

I
Bucks Good
Dec. 18th -Dec. 22nd I

Low tonight near 20. Snow or
sleet . Wednesday , cloudy, cold .
High In upper 20s.

Solana
takes over
NATO post
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) On bis ftrst day in office, NATO's
new Secretary General Javier
Solana pledged today to make the
. alliance s peace mission in Bosnia
a success.
Solana, Spain's former foreign
minister, assumed NATO's top
civilian job one day before the official start of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization's largest-ever
military operation.
.
At a ceremony Wednesday in
the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo,
NATO will lake over from the
United Nations to begin enforcing
the Balkan peace accord signed last
week in Paris . The alliance is
deploying 60,000 soldiers, onethird of them Americans.
' Solana vowed to give the allied
· troops in the Balkans "the support
and guidance they need to keep the
risks low, to keep the chances of
success high and to do lhe job in
the year that they will be
deployed."
·
The NATO chiers job has been
vacant for eight weeks, since Willy
Claes resigned after his name surfaced in arms-buying scandals in
his natjve Belgium. The secretary
general is responsible for managing
NATO's day-to-day affairs, chairing weeldy meetings of the NATO
ambassadors as well as twice-yearly sessions of NATO defense and
foreign ministers. ·
Apart from Bosnia, high on
NATO's agenda is a plan to open
the alliance's doors its former Sovi- .
et-bloc enemies. Solana said east-·
ward expansion was "the single
most important contribution the
alliance can make to the aim of creating a more integrated and united
Europe."
Solana, 53, a Socialist and
physicist, had been consider~d a
possible hetr to Spantsh Pnme
Minister Felipe Gonzales . He
resigned as foreign minister last
week after Spain concluded its sixmonth presidency of the European
Union.
Solana, who demonstrated
against Spanish membership in
NATO, has said he changed his
mind about the alliance

Committee chairman Dave
Spencer explained the site will give
the district's residents the most
bang for their buck, saving money
on the purchase of property, the
preparation of the property and on
travel and transportation.
In addition, the site also features
city water, sewage and uash and
would allow lhe new building, if
approved by voters, to share more
resources wilh the high school such as lawn , maintenance and
cleaning equipment.
Spencer said the commiuee considered several other sites which

were later eliminated due to high dren of the Southern Local School
cost or lack of availability.
Disuict be given an advantageous
To date . the board has main- opportunity to succeed.
"I would hope that all of us
tained a hands-off attitude in the
effort to consuucl a new el emen- could unite as one and forget our
tary school building. Earlier, the problems of yesterday until tomorboard tasked the chore of site selec- row. for today, let us be as one
tion to the provisional building suong voice in support of this levy,
for moving on into the 21st centucommine c.
In a statement to the board, ry ."
Following Spencer's presentaSpencer pointed out that it is the
community, not necessarily the tion, the board passed three related
board of education, that is responsi- resolutions, one accepting the state
school board's approval of the disble for educating children:
"II is our responsibility, it is our trict's request for new facilities,
obligation, to be sure that the chilContinued on page 3

Pomeroy Christmas program

The air was damp, and the
crowd was small, but there
'was plenty of holiday spirit
among the entertainers and
spectators at "Holiday Highlites" Monday night.
Sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, the
program restoring the sights
and sounds of Christmas was
presented on the parking lot
,
stage.
An ensemble rrom the
Meigs Marauder band directed by Toney Dingess played a
medley of familiar Christmas
so11gs, and a choral group of
United Methodist men and
Pomeroy Village officials sang
"Joy to the World".
In attractive red and white
costumes with silver vests,
accented with twinkling lights,
the Big Bend Cloggers,(bol·
tom photo) presented several
dance routines. Vivian May Is
director of the group.
Meigs County's singing
sheriff, Jim Soulshy, sang "0
Holy Night" to close the pro-

·E -r·· .&amp; .
ff ! A
gram just before Santa's
arrivul to "Here Com~s S8nta
Claus" played by the band.
Santa (top photo) gives a

candy can•.. to Shawntay Garnes or Mi··dleport. O'hotos by
Charlene lloeRich)

Proposed airport could create 6,579 new jobs
D.C., Caperton said.
By JIM ROSS
"Now it's time to put one in the
and AMY MARCHESE
center of our stare and serve people
The Herald-Dispatch
who aren't serviced by the others,"
SOUTH
CHARLESTON,
he said.
W.Va. - A regional airpon could
Rep. Bob Wise , D-W.Va., said
create 6,579 new jobs by the year
the governor forgot about another
2020, according to a study released
regional airport: Columbus. That
Monday.
airport already draws passengers
State and local officials praised
the proposed airport at a meeting of from Huntington and Parkersburg,
the West Virginia Public Port and it's starting to draw large numbers of them from Charleston, too,
Authority. ·They said it will help
retain existing jobs which rely on he said, especiaUy for the competiair service, and it would create new
tive fares.
jobs for the next generation.
Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va.,
''To reach our potential in the said building the airport is a must.
21st century, we must not only Doing nothing is not an option, as
think big, we must also think service is declining and local airregionally," Gov. Gaston Caperton ports cannot compete with .the
said.
schedules and fares of the PiusAbout 20 percent of manufac- burgh, Washington and Columbus
Wringjobs in West Virginia rely on airports. he said.
exports, and a regional airport is . "This provides lhe missing link
vital if the state is to retain them, in our transportation system adeCaperton said.
quate air service," RahaU said. "If
West Virginia already has two West Virginia is to compete in
regional airports. One is at Pitts- today's global economy, we need
burgh and the other at Washington, . this kind of infrastructure."

The study calls the airport the
Western We st Virginia Regional
Airport, but Caperton said he wanl.l
the "Western" taken out, so pco·
pie in the central and southern parts
of the state wjll think of it as their
airport. too.
The Kanawha Valley didn't
want 10 sign on to lhe airport original! y because it dido' t want to give
up an airport only 10 minutes from
downtown Charleston, Wise said.
Business people were agreeable to
the idea if a swdy could show the
new airpon would create jobs.
The new repon does shows that
Wise said.
The study says the airport would
have an annual economic impact of ·
$305 million and a payroll of $11 2
million by 2020. It would create
6,579 new jobs, both directly and
indirectly at industries and busineSses it attracts.
Converting the three existing
airports for general avialion and
military use would create an impact
of $379 million a year. The four

airports would have a total payroU
of 167 million and create 8,878
jobs.
One thing the study did not do
was recommend one of three proposed sites for the airport. One is in
southern Mason County, one in
western Putnam County and one in
northern Putnam County.
Charlie Miller, chief of operations for the governor's office, said
that decision will come when environmental studies of all three sites
are fini shed in I 997.
The study says the preliminary
planning and site selection could 1»
done by the end of I 997: Tile mas- ·
rer plan and envirorunental studies .
could be finished between I 997
and 2000. Pro]ierty could be bought •
and construction could begin •
between 2000 and 2003, and the •
first phase of construction, with a
single runway and a terminal build- .
ing, could be finisbed by 2005.
.
Some people at Monday's meet- ·
ing used lhe term "transpark" to
Continued on page 3

f

•

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